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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-17 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa........ . . . \ • •• ' . IOll ' -. '--" .. 1 • • 1 :tMa-11 Held ' . in-BotJla Drop ' . ''1'ei./th· a.ff~ LA Freeway I \ ' ._, -THURSDAY AFTERNOON, D£>CEMBER ]7, ]970 ' • .. .. '< 1 . • ·Fluor 1 ·-I · • . · Santa .. . . i ' .. • • Buys Big fellow in red suit.checks in at Huntington· Beach City Hall to pick up a business license. City isn't playiitg Scrooge, .though.· Local, taxi company is playitlg Santa by g.iv.41g free rides to customers fortu- nate enough-to get cab driyen by: Eugene N. Kovalenko, who is suit- ably suited up for the season. Despite cab compariy's largesse, 1t must still have a business license. -1 Court Denies Angela's ' 8id For Retu~n Delay ' NEW YORK (AP) -The chief judge ot New Ycrk state's highest court today denied lhe application of black militant !Agela Davis tor a stay in ex~adition to California to face murder and tidnaping charges. The dech1ion or Judge Stanley R. Fuld of the Court or Appeals came .after a me. boor hearing in his office here. Mls.s Da· •is sought to stay her extradilion at least ipltll January when the full C.ourt ol . I Appeals resumes ses1ion. - "The study of the P•Jl'r' before me demonstrates that the petitioner b the person named In the warrant of e1tta~Uon, that she' was in the demanding state at lhe· time of the commisalon of the aime ai;1d that she 11 substantially charged with h a v I n g committed felonies In that jurlsdlctkln," said FuJd. • • • • • • •· . • Niguel 'hilly :'Spy' ' . . ' Rep0rt . Set.~-"--'· • For Probe · WASHING TON (UPI) -A Sena!e· subcommittee will cohduct a formal probe of 'reports by a former U.S. Army intelllgence agent that the military spied On federal arid state officials, including Sen. Adlai ·E-. StevenSon III. Sen. Sam J •. Ervin (D-N.C.), said WednQday the officials were the targets of Army uridercover investigations during their campaJgns ·or while they 'l''ef'e in office. He charged they were placed under surveillance beeause they opposed er did not actively support t h e government's policy in Vietnam or because they disagreed with the domestic policies of the Nixon administration. A spokesman for the Army said the service was "gravely concernep" over Ervin's charge s, He said such surveillance of civilians was prohibited by1Army policy. The White House said·it waa. "inconceivable" to President Nixon that the military would spy on political figures. other congressmen responded with angry words. 11We have reached a frightening state cl military control in this country," said Rep. Abner Mikva (D.-DI.). "The whole concept.of civilian control of the military iB in jeopardy and ii this thing is not stopped all the people will have left to do is aa1ute." 'Ibe former Army intelligence agent who made the reports was identified as John M. O'BrJeo of Evanston, Ill., who hid htld the rank of staff sergeant and for a iooe-year peri~ starting in June, 1969, wu migned to the Midwest office {See SPYING, Pa1e %) Rock Dropper Suspect Hel,d LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A migrant worker was jailed en suspicion cf murder tcxlay after a Del Mar woman was ,killed when a 35-powid roclt was dn:!pped from an overpass and era.shed through 'the windshield of Uie car in which she WU riding. . ~ dead Woman. Was identified as Mn. Owlotte Sprague, 65. Sbe was riding with her husband, Willlam, M, on the Golden Stale Freeway. He eacaped injury. · Booked was James Horton Jr., 35, of Keithville, La. At about the same time, another 'Jarge rOck wts thrown from the same overpass anc.J 1 m a s b e d through the wlodlhield cf a car driven by Dennls · Griffin, 20, Baldwin Park. He was not Injured. Officers said the woman's death within the past three months. ' r.-. : . ' ~ DAILY ,ILOT Sllft Plitt. MARSHAL USHERS LAMBERT INTO .MUNICIPAL COURT Newport Men Faces Tri~I in Polic!t Shootings .~- 'Saw Two Officers Shot' Patrolman Tells Court By L. PETER KRIEG Ol t1M lnllY l"llot Stiff Arthur' Lambert, 61 , accused in the shooting cA. two Newport Beach policemen whO stopped him for erratic driv~g Nov. 14, was bound .over to Superior Court and must face trial Wednesday afetr mWlicipal court testimony of a third officer who said he witnessed lhc sboritlng. Offi.cer, Thomas B. Smith tesU[ied he had rolled to the scene th inking he would show two high school girls in his car as part of a student "ride along" prrgram • how1 police handle .a· dr.unken drivin g arrest. The first t~ing he said he saw was Lambert and Officers James Gardiner and Richard Ellingham standing outside Lambert's car in the Newport Dunes Trailer Park on Pacific Coast Highway · appartnUy 1n conversaUon. Smith tcsUfied he saw Lambut suddenly~'l!Xlve his rlg!tl_arm, thrust his hand forward toward Gardiner ' s, midsection." He ·testified he heard a sound like a J?:unshot, saw Gardiner s·t u m b I e backwards, screaming "I'm bit, I'm hit." He admitted he hadn't seen the gun in · Lam~rt'1 hand. Smith said immediately after the first shot, Ellingham leaped forward, grabbed Lambert's wrist with his left hand, pulled it down and turned Lambert to the right. "Then I heard another shot,'• he testified. Sm ith said both men started to fall to the ground and In the atruggle he heard annthcr report. "I 1aw,the gyn In the,defe[l<lan\'• lelt hl'l"d,". he tecallcd, relaijng t h a t ' Ellingham·, who had a bull~t In his knee, (See SHOOTING; Pase.I) l j I --~----------------------~-------------·-~-~-----~ ~ -~-··- , , , Plant FirmOkays ,ziggurat ' A ... cqtus1tion · By BARBARA KREIBICll ot "" 0.11' , .... '"" The Fluor Corporation announced today that it has reached "agreement In principle" for acquisition of the giant North American Rockwell plant in Laguna Niguel. The transaction calls for Fluor to trade a number of its real estate holdings for the unique "Ziggurat", desiped by William Perc'lra. · . Additional real property .In cash Wm be traded for property 5WTOUnding the building and for an option on adjacent acreage. TctaJ cost of the faci!Jty is ·in e:rcess cf $20 million, according to the Fluor announcement Preliminary negotiations for the sale have been under way for months. Final f!e_gotiati?ns will commence Immediately and ' it is anticipated thar tbe close cf escrow and transfer of title will take place in the second quarter or 1971. The Fluor Corporation, nOw based In the city of Commerce, will use the one million·square-fOot facility as its new corporate headquarters and as UM: headquarte rs of its Los A n g e 1 e 1 engineering and construction division u well as headquarters for Fluor Drj!linl Services. Theso facilities now o c cu p y approximately 800,000 square feet Of space, a Fluor spokesman said, and (See ROCKWELL, Pop Z) • "'eather Another drippy day of it ls on the Friday Mrizon, with lnterml~· tent showers under· cloudy skies . and temperatures. dropping down to 5G degrees along the coast. INSWE TODAY The curt.ain mav be goina dcwn'"'1ttrtht· €hildren'•-'theoter Guild of Newport Harbor, which is losina 1ts lease next month. ·see Entertainment, Paae 25. O.ly 7 '::' CHRISTMAS <•"lonl" 1 C1Maln1 u"' 1 (1aHIAiiill ... Cemlc• 11 Cm""'°"' 11 Dtllll ... llctt 11 DIYerCH 11 Edl:orlll ,.,. I •111erf•1111Mt1f H ~J l"IMMe zt.n tf)l9K1" It At.II\,......,. 11 M1llller I MOii lfl ..,.,.Cl 1l, W • ' ' I \' 1 l I I' I I , • Grand J_u1·y Indicts 3 :1n Murder · • : LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A lfllld jury ~dtll~~tJd only four minutes before returnine aecret indictments Wednesday ~Jn the apparept slaying of a Cowboy .ituntman ~,t the Splhn Ranch, onetime :jie.dqUllWa of Charles Mwon'1 cull. The names on the thtte Indictments ~were kept stcret -but it was believed Manson, 36. and two of his followers were charged. It would be the ninth slaying attributed to Manson. now on trial for the Sharon Tate murders. Chief .Deputy District Attorney Joseph P . Busch Jr. said he understood that the names were not revealed because Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, was "upset about it." However, Bush said that the three were already in cuatod,y and two .woul~ be arraigned today. Three fohner ''Manson F am i 1 Y • ' members testified before the jury in its investigatiQD_Ol Ute death of "Ronald ''Shorty" Shea, 36. l).t.IL'I" .. II.OT S!lft PMlt Shea vanished in August, 1969 and rumors have persisted he was murdered, mutilated and buried on the ranch by members of the hippie clan. His' body never has been found. One of the cult members who testified was Paul Watkins, who told reporten, "It's about time that we look at a fallf! QUAFFS THIRST WITH RECLAIMED WATER AT DEMONSTRATION A11tmblyman Robert 8edh1m (R-Ntwport Beach) H11 Seconds prophet -Charlie Manson. What be sold in the name of Jove was death." . Watkins would not discuss his grand jury testimony but when he took the stand in the Tate murder trial he said he Officials Get Tasteful heard Manson discuss ';t.he killing of a man named Shorty." The other two persons believed to have . been jndicted were Bruce Davis, 27, and Steve Grogan, 19, also known as Clem Tufts, who iS being held in lnyo County Idea . of Treated Sewage on a gun charge. Public officials Wednesday were Kanarek showed up at the grand jury offered a tasty cup of treated sewage. at chambers shortly before testimony ended the Moulton-Niguel \Valer Reclamation and when he emerged he said, "I believe plant number three in Mission Viejo. and 1 do charge that the district attorney The tasting followed a demonstrati.PJli'>f of Los Angeles County is deliberateJy reverse OS"mosis, third stage .treaffiient injecting matters before the ~blic to process capable of clearing upwards of a prejudice the Tate-LaBianca case. I million gallons a day. Dr. Howard Keller believe it is done with deliberate intent of the GBK Enterprises firm in and malice.'' Placentia, explained the process to about The Tate trial, in recess since the 30 people including Assemblyman Robert disappearance of defense lowyer Ronald Badham (R.Newport Beach). Hughes, was du~ to resume Monday with Carl Kymla, ex11:cutive director of the a substitute attorney. _ Moulton Niguel district said the· plant was ~anson, Leslie Van Houten, Patricia being made available to the private firm Krenwinkel and Susan-Atkins have been for purposes of demonstrating the on trial ~ce J~e IS in the Aug. t-10, treatment process. However. the district l969'Jlaying of MW Tate and four other is 1nteres~ in. reclamation processes persons at per estate, and grocer Leno particularly in view of the interest in LaB:lanca and his wife Rosemary the findi ng a way to use the underground In , . .._r M1ha Atk!U li!d Tbo -larpai ~1iound basin lying fol~t. , , w•t.er of tb6 S;an JIDJl Capi~trano aquifer. Da irei!Oe fo .lo or! trial after the first solely wfibin Orange County, the San of the year in the July, 1969 stabbing Juan aquifer bas watefwith more than death·ofmusician Gary·ffinman:· Fortner·---l,20(}.-parls·-per-million of total dissolved cult member Robert Beausoleil already solids (TDS), Kymla said: bas been condemned to death in that This amount ds in excess of state killing. standards for public consumption. George Tapper. superintendent of the reclamation plant. speculated water treated by the reverse osmosis unit could be blended with tbe underground basin water to get a product tbat meets standards for total dissolved solids. - From Pqe 1 SHOOTING. • • "had both han<Js around Lambert's wri1t," forcing the gun out of his hand. Defense attorney Joe Borges Jr. asked Smith under cross e1aminaUon to draw the scene on large posq;r paper. He asked him several details about the scene, such as the color of Lambert's car and trailer. whether certain car doors were open or closed . These details ·Smith said he could not remember very well. Borges in redire.ct .examination told Judge Everett Dickey he was attempting to determine the "accuracy of Smit.h's recollection.·· Borges subsequently entered a moUon to throw out both charges, maintaining District Attorney Russell Serber had failed to produce evidence the rrimes of attempted murder had taken place. Judge Dickey rejected the request. instead ordering first appearances set for next Wednesday in Superior court. DAILY PILOT NirwpOlt leKh H11t1tlatfl• .... &..f1M ltCI :l h11•hllll ¥.ney C•t• Mtta Sn Cl•••te 011.'-NGE COAST PUILISHIHG COMPANY Rob•rt N. w,,4 l'rtt.lclcnl •r.d Publl11\W J.ttlt R. Curl.., Vke Prt•!o:!•nl .tr.d GIMrlt MIMllll' ... Tho111a1 K•tvil EGlkV Thom1s A. Mv,p~l"' M11Mtl1111 ldlttr iUtl-1rd fl. H11f Sw1" Or.t,..O Cou11l'f Ef!tllr Offlc.t Codi MIM! :DO W11I ..... S,,._. N~r1 Buth: m1 Wtll ··'"· '°" .......... Lq""" But~; 1U For11I A- M111111r1,1G11 8HCll: 1711$ l!et(.11 hul•.,.,., ·ao.11-C111T11111t1: ;10S ltcor1~ l!I CalnlllO 1t .. 1 OAILY PILOT, wl!ll ~Id> k ~bfl'lt'lf fllt H~·""-> i.. pJblltf'l(d 1un1 n c•t .$..,... dl'f I~ ••P•r.11 <dl!illols for I.I~ St>td1, """""" 91•d'I, Co.II Mtu, Hll'll!llg"~ ""<II ar.d ~ttln V1lln-, •loni Wlflo TWO ""''°"'' 4111111-.. or-.,.. c.111 """'11 ... lflf Corl'INIW prll'lflllf l'll'lfl ... •I :nn Wnt 1111161 1 1\111 .. Ntw;:oort 141(1\, tl'd »II W-* .. ., $lrltl, Col;U Miii, Tel ..... • C7141 ,41-4121 Cl•lf!M Amrtltl"' 64l·i•n ha CleMlllht AM O.,a1,.,.."' Tel.,.... 4f2-44JI Cffrrlftll, 1f1Q, Or•nte· (0111 "*""~ ~11r. .,, lltll'• 11ett11. mU1tr•t.,.. •11or"1 _,"1' °' <dvtrf'"m'"i. Nr'flt\ _., lit ftttedurtd wnh!wt 11*1111 ,,.,. M!Mllifl '11 <OPYTlt'!I M>tr. .....,.. ellu r.otl•tt Mid •I W~ .. <It .,.. C..fl Me.;.e, (;l!lltrl'lll , l <AKriflllelo W c:1r/'ltr N,fJ """""ly1 fir ,..-'I )J "'*'lflltl mlUl.tl"I ffltll'llllOlll, U.H • •Ir, After being forced through an organic membrane and filtered through charcoal. secondary treated sewage Wednesday became,clear. drinkable water. A meter showed the TDS content to be reduced from 700 parts per million to SS parts per million. A blend of 1.2 million gallons of reclaimed water and 3.4 million gallons of ground water would yield 4.6 million gallons of potable water at 900 parts per million TDS, which is within accepted water standards. Dr. Keller noted. By comparison. water imported by Metropolitan Water District from the Colorado River carries with it more than 700 parts per million of TOS. Tapper said people's reluctance to taste the reverse osmosis treated water was' "psychological." "If people stopped to think about it they 'd realize that all the water on earth has been recycled by nature since time began. You may have showered this morning with water molecules that Cleopatra bathed with," he said. Recycling wastes is nothing new for the "Moulton-Niguel District. Plant three provides seCQndary treated sewage to the Mission Viejo Golf Coµrse during-the dry season. Kymla said. When wastes aren't needed for the golf course they are bypassed to another district stat.ion and pumped over the hills . of Laguna Niguel and to the ocean. Keller noted his equipment prim~rily is used ~1' industries such as metal plating t.o recl31m dissolveir metals. lower lhe demand on se""·e-r lines and reclaim water From. Pnge 1 SPYING ... - -*' ' ... of the 1131.h ?\.lilitary Intelligence Group in Chicago. O'Brien said he was "a domestic spy for the Army" and he stated the intellige11ce group m a i n ta I n e: d a "subversivts file" that contained dossiers on 800 individuals 1n Tllirmis alone, who included Stevenson, former Gov. Otto Kerner. now a feder•l circuit court judge ; Mikva 11nd the Rev Jesse J11ck.son or Chicago, who heads the antipoverty Operation Breadbasket proJeCt of the Southern Chr1sllan L ca d c rs hip Conference. Ervin promlstd lhe Senate Con~tltulional R J g h t s Subcommittee would hold htarlngs in Febn1ary on !he Intelligence agent 's repOrl!. By February. Ervin s:tlr!. ht hopl'd the Army ''v.•111 have fully di~closed all tha t lt has done and that 11 c:.an a~sure usu is ftO longer happening at any 17vels.'' used in processing. Reverse osmosis processing removes 96 percent of total salt.s. Keller said. and upwards of 99.2 percent of sulphates, nitrates and phosphates. Similar to the process by which the walls of living cells "screen out" waste matter by osmosis, forcing waste water through a membrane removes matter too large to pass through the organic membrane. The unit shown Wedn~day uses a Dupont membrane filter that with a backwash ing mechanism can last up to three years. Besides the mineral wastes which are screened by the membrane. it also removes bacteria and viruses, Keller said. While basically "pure" after pas.sing through the membrane, the water is charcoal filtered to remove gases which affect taste and odor, he pointed out. The resulting product is a clear, odorless liquid with lower dissolved solids than the tapwater found in the average Orange County home: ~ The ·salt brine: that results from the process must be carried off. a.nd in a sewage treatment instaJlation near the ocean. would be piped to the sea. Keller suggested. County Officers Pressing Search For 'Barbarella' Orange County sheriff's officers liave now joined the hunt for "Barbarella", a black·suited female bandit whose robbery this week of an El Toro motel is believed to be her fifth such holdup. The woma.n, dressed in a tight-fitting black pants suit and wearing white- rimmed glasses and a blue steel revolver took $200 from the clerk at the Hyat t House, 23932 Paseo de la Valencia late ~fonday night. That description of "Barbarella'' -she is believed t.o be about 130 to 135 pounds and a brunette -tallies with that filtd with Costa Mesa, Sota heim police officers. Ana and Ana· From Page 1 ROCKWELL. •• employ about 2.100 people. Fluor properlits involved in tbe transaction with North American Rockwell include the present corporate headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard and a Task Force Facility on Ferguson Drive both in ·the City of Commerce: Mariners Bay apartment land and anchorages in Marina de.I Rey: Fluor's interest in Lake Poi~t Towers. an apartment development in Chicago. 111.; Park Center Plaza, an office: building complex -in Sin Jose, and 1,{MX) acres of propeMy in Hayward. The huge Laguna N.iguet structure, designed to house North American Rockwell's Autonetics division. was placed on tbe market a year ago when <"Utbacks in the space program halted development plans. Construction. ho-.·tver. has continUed and tbe exttrinr of tbe tiered building Is virtually complete, Interior modifications will be made to suit the nted~ of tbe purchaser. Fluor is a major tnternational firm providing englnetring and con struction services for tbe mining and petroleum industr ies . A spoktsman ~id its work force is expected to double in the next 10 years. The t0rfloration, in ~ddit.ion to its Los Angeles headquarters:-has. facilJUes in lfouston, Texas, l..ondon. Holland. and Taiwan. • Marinas Hit With · Fee _Private Residences Win A noth~r Repriev~- By JACK BROBACK 01 1111 t11Ur "lie! Sltff Three Newport Harbor commercial marinaa and a floating restaurant which have egcaped paying tidelands fees up to now will be ag.,essed but private piers got another reprieve Wednesday from the Orange CoWlty Board of Supervisors. After more than three hours of debate, the board voted to impose tidelands fees beginning Jan. 1 on the Bayside Village Boat Launch Slips, the Swales Yacht Anchorage and the Newport Harbor 'Yacht-Landing in Bayshores. The rate is Ii cents per square foot annually. The three marinas are located near Uppu Newport Bay Bridge . The imposition of fees brought the fa cilities in parity with three other harbor marinas which have been paying 20 percent of their gross slip renta1 to the county. They are the Balboa Bay Club sllps; Baysbore Trailer Park slips and the Channel Reef Community Auociation near the harbor ~trance. The Reuben E. Lee floating re.st.aurant at Upper Bay Bridge will be assessed $5,600 a year as long as it remains on county tide.lands. The orialnal aareement on this facility was conditioned on it being located behind the e :r i s ti n g bulkhead lines but one-third of the restaurant is on county tidelands. Supervisors also decided t h a t Department of Real Properties recom· mendations should be adopted as follows : -The county surveyer be instructed to survey and monument the county's property line on Harbor Tsland. (This is based on the contention that the residents of this private island have built private beaches on public tidelands area ). -The county planning director after consulting with ·the .. city of Newport Beach Tidelands administrator be asked to report to the supervisors if it is his determination that the best long term use of the Bayshores land is for private homes or a marina. In deferring tidelands fees for private residential piers and I a n d i n g s , supervisors bowed to the wishes .of the city of Newport Beach, the Newport Harbor Chamber of Commerce and the Northern State Storm Drifts To Orange Coast A tired~ut storm that spent itself lashing Northern California with a downpour including heavy hail and snow drifted over tht Orange Coast today with sprinkles and weak rumbles of thunder. The lat,st 11eason storm be g a n disintegrating Wedne!day night, but could dribble coastal areas with a few shov.·ers until Friday afternoon. __ _ Uis An-geies -ha<I .54 IncK€.s by early today, but not enough precipjtation fell to even register on the Orange County HarbOr District gauge in Newport Beach. "Just a trace, but we might have somethieg measurable by 4:30 p.m.," said a spokesman this morninf. Brief but heavy showers hit elsewhere on the Orange Coast. Rainfall in Los Angeles brought the current season's total to 6.33 inches, a bit high for mid·Dece:mber by normal otandards. Snow flurries bMUiht the snowline do\V?I to the 4.~foot level, primising a white Christmas for many Southland ski and resort areas. ... and Amazing I Extraordinary I Colossall Why? Because In this brilliant nyf on county harbor commiiJSion. Board members alao agreed to a harbor comm!ulon rtCOmmendatiOn that an independent apprailer be hired to determine fair rental value t1f county tidelands. Stanley Krause, director of real property services, in bis second ,,report in six months (lfi the issue rect1mmended again that private·slips be charged $6 per foof rental per year. He also recommended that the three commercial, marinas exempted up to UU. point be asswed 12 centl p e r Bquare foot. Supervisors cut that figure in half. Mayor Ed Hirth of Newport Beach said his city bad asked Assemblyman Robert Badham (Jt.Newpart :Beach) to get an opinion from the state Attorney General on whether or not it is mandatory that Had 'Pact' tidelands fees be levied. . Krause beglll his rtudy and formullted his rtcommendations lftl.r C o'u n t y Counsel Adrian Kuyper ruled that it was mandatory to cbarae fair rental fus en ~county tidelands in the harbor, Tbe NeWJ)Ort Harbor Chamber of Commerce, represented by Larry Miller, opposed all fees in the harbor. He pointed to the monetary benefits to· the iFJlfy and all citizens of taxes on 1'lli>or • property and yac;ht.a. A Jetter from Roy B. Woolsey, an attorney representing home··oWner and yacht club associations in the Harbm' Area was read which Included a eOpy of .a letter from U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater. Goldwater keeps a yacht at the Balbea Bay Club and urged that boating facilities Qot be overcharged. Maheu Won't Quit Until 'Hughes Says Otherwise' LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Howard Hughes and his top Nevada uecuUve, Robert A. Maheu. hid "a pact to be toget.ber the rest of our lives" and Maheu says he will fight his dismissal until the mystery billionaire tells him otherwise. Maheu, 53, a former FBI agent, testified Wednesday he wanted to remind Hughes "of a long term obligation I feel I have to him and him to me'' but he was unable: to reach Hughes in the Bahamas. Maheu was to return to the stand today In his battle with Hughes Tool Co .. parent there would be on gambUne rtv.enue_ if Hueties should decide to luve the •.'-le· "The thcught is e:rpresatd, U Hcwtfd Huahes CG't be happy in Nevada, "bo can?" Juvenile ~ to Get Trial As Adult organization of Hughes' estimated Sl.5 Jn 'CuJt'-'Death·s billion fortune, over its authority to dismiss him. _____ -- Maheu also said he was perplexed that A Garden Grove youth accused (If Hughes disappeared from this gambling complicity in the "devH cult" killing of city without a word of explanation to Mission Viejo teacher Florence Brcwn him. "I thought it was very strange," Maheu and the hatchet slaying of service staticn said. "Throughout the last four years attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin was told there were innumerable instances when Wednesday that he will be tried as an Mr. Hughes made reference to the fact adult for the Carlin murder. that we would be togf:ther for the rest of Superior Court Judie James F. Jud-our natural lives." .... Testifying about his relationship v.·ith set Feb. 8 aHhe trial date for Arthur the eccen tric recluse he has admitted he Craig ''Moose'' Hulse, 16, and returned never met face to face. Maheu said be the 2M-pound defendant to Orange fir st learned that Hughes left Las Vegas County Jail. _ about noon Thanksgiving and Hughes Hulse's motion represented his Jut never told hlm he was fired. He said he immediately tried to cont.ad chance to face the murder chare;es u a the penthouse Qf the Desert Inn Hotel, juvenile. ·That right was removed by an where Hughes had been secluded since Orange · County Grand Jury lndictmeft\ 1966. He said ·he finally got one phone call which removed the same privileges frcm through but that it was inconclusive. transient Herman Hendrick Tayler, 17_. "I have been .inc a pa b I e of and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibbonay, 17, communication with him slhCe that . ot Portland, Ore, _ time ,'' Maheu said. Jf District Attorney Cecil Hicks' He said he would not give up the ,eourt attempts to e1tradite Gibboney are fight against his ouster unless he successful all three defendants IJ'ld received a confirmation from l\~ughes transient Steven Craig Hurd, 20, will faee either by telephone or 1;1y a n separat.f murder trials in Superior Court. authenticated letter. Hurd will get his trial datf Friday from He described his relationahip with Judge Judae:. That setting had been Hughe.s as "increaslngly•intense" during delayed pending Judie Robert L. the past eight years. "There have been Corfman's ruling on whither the alle&ed ser.tou.s disagreerne.nts from time to leader of a band of drifters was sane and time," he said but added that when able to stand trial. amends were made:, there was "a pact to Judge Corfman ruled that he was ud be tocether for the rest of our lives." Hurd will now be tried for the killiq:s cf Gov. Paul Laxalt, returning to Carson Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El City atfer a business trip to Chicago, told Toro and Jerry Wayne CUUn, 21, Of newsmen he was concerned what effect Santa Ana.. Fabulous Color! Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! ------· face shagl<araatan's color wizards hava· IF YOU CAN"T_ -COME IN-CALL 646-0275 dreamed up such aparkllng mixes aslncrediblo Blue, A ma ling Whit•, Exlt1ordinory Gold and even Co loss/I[ Copper. Fabulous h .. oo of these colors. They're all Incredible, really. (Fallulou1 comes la 11cltl"' ••rut• with lft0fdil11t frf111a. At' r 12' for enly $134.t!J • -· for an expert "'"'' contultant who \\ill come to your home "ith umpler; \\ithout any obllp Oon to you! """'~~ .J. GARRETT f URN l"[U ~~ "'"~ '"' Op .. MOft., Tllun. A Fri. ·-COSTA MESA. CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646.0275 646-0216- ' " I I I t " I • ' H:ontingt•'1·-•eaeh a'uday's l'l•al N.Y. Steeb . ' VOi:. 113, NO. 30 t, 3 SECTIONS, 42 PA~ES DAILY ,!LOT Sll ff Pktt Sa11ta at City Hall Big fellO\V in red suit checks in at Huntington Beach City Hall to pick u·p a l:>usiness license .. City isn't playing Scrooge, though. Local taxi Compap.y 1s. playipg Santa }1y givi ng fre~rid_e1 ·to cu~bi;nepi fo rtu· . nate enoil)l h to"get cab driven by E;u~eife N. Kottle_nto/WhOi~ suit· ctbIY suited up for the Season. Despite cab company's lafgesse, it must still-have a business license. ' EDITION ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA I THURSDAY, ·DECEMBER 17, 197p TEN CENTS· Board · Delays Jet Stucly . County to .Wait on Probe.of Two Other Sites Orange County aupervisars pot the brakes on past airport stud.lea Wedne.9day and soared toward new horizons. The board voted to defer study or .any future jet airports in the county until the feasibility of a jetport in the Chino ·HUis (northeast or Brea and Placentia) or at Camp Pendleton is determined. On motion of Supervisor Alton Allen, the board members dlrecled the director of aviation and the airport commissioners to study these two sites without the use of outside consultants. In another motion tbe board voted to 2 Plead Guilty ,,. In Kidnapirtg Of County Man Two men v;ho once faced murder charges £ollowing the death or a man found shackled to a standpipe in the ~lazing garage of a Los Alamitos home pleaded g u i 1 t y Wednesday to lesser charges of kidnaping. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge senlenced Chester James Christopher, 29, of Los Angeles, to one year"in Orange County Jail, noting that the defendant had already spent 11 montM there. He placed Chris~opher on three yean probation. He ordered Raymond Graves Jr., of 12322 Martha Ann Drive, Los Alamltol, to return to court Jan. 28 for what could be .a state J>ri&on term Of one to 10 yean. limit traffJc at Orange County Airport to the preseht contracts which aUow up to 41.8 jet flight> per dey to im and t~. allow tbe' director of aviation to negoUate with tlte airlines for service beyon~ 1972 but adhering to the no increase in flights principle. , The two motions on the controversial airport matter concluded· almost four hours of wrangling. Supervisor David Baker· failed lo get through motions which would have stated that there are no jetport sites available In the county with the pos15lble excepUon of U wu ~· ln QoOumenls tuPPortin& the tuJllY pleiu 1IUI~ liolli men Odm1lle4 lddnaplng Bruce Beck, 30, of Hollywood, · md forcing-him to accompany them to ~ the Martha Ann Drive home. . n-..... document> i~·lllol Beck was paid $1,000 by a group headOd by Graves to purchase marijuana f o t eventual resale.-It is-&tat.ed-tbat Beck was ltidnaped when he failed to produce the ChinO HUh area. Baker a1so wanted the board to adopt a poUcy statemtnl that jet flights were to be phased out at Orange County Airport and that the airport commlsakmen study possible sites for small aircraft use. He failed to get a second on any of his motions and after long debate the board finally accepted the Allen and Phillips molions. Previously board members had heard general opposition to al l recommendations in the Parsons report. Ruled out by speakers wert the Bell • Canyon jetport, Ute Brea general aviation por't. the joint use · of EJ TO('o M.artne: Corps Air Station and the use o( jet planes anywhere ln the county. Th< 1140,000 Pa""'1S sludy la lh~ culmination of eight years of airport studies carried out by the county at a cost of more than '$250,000. Consensus·of the, supervisoi-s and thoH who appeared before them Wednesday was that lhe day of the jet plane was endl{lg in the county unless vut improvements were made in noise and (See AIRl'OR'll!, Pap Z) Campaigners For Crusade Get Pledges United Crusade campaigners i n Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley; have collected · more than $111,000 Jn piedges -well above the 50 percen«i mark -for lhe 1971 goal of $185,SOO. Bill FOBter, Hun tington Be a c h cainpaign chairman. said his group haa- pledges totaling 193.550 or 60.5 ·percent ol the 1154,500 goal. Fountain Valley officials r e p ort collectµig about $251000 or 81.3 percent oC their 131,000 goal. Contributions to United Crusade ma)' be made by malling to lhe Cl'uaade •t 18582 Beach Blvd., HwiUngtoo Beach, ar arr:O. Box Met: FOllntaln Valley. Thirty• one-'l'P"'~ •&ll>Cies ote -~ l>Y tbe ·u~~"'· ' · My Lai GI Quotes Medina 'PartY, Over-Cease Fire' -the drug after repeated demands. The badly burned Beck was found by firemen who fought a garage fire al the Graves home on June 21, 1969. Beck, whose charred hands had to be freed from manacles lashing him to a stand pipe, died a few days later in a local hospital. Valley-Firemen hon Sanb;l Suits For Gift Giving F"I'. BENNI NG. Ga. (UPI) -The Calley· court-martia l recessed for the Christmas holidays today aft er hearing the 15th conseciiti ve witness testify that Capt. Ernest L. t\1edina ord ered the Vietnamese village of My Lai destroyed. James M. McBreen, a 23-year~ld shoe salesman who ga\'e his address only as "Long Island, N.Y.," conceded under cross-examination that J\.1edlna had not specifica lly ordered women and children killed, but added: "We bad been told only Viet Cong or their sympathizers \Yete there {in ~1y Lai) and anything left was to be killed:? t\1edina, \Vho underwent a preliminary hearing in Atlanta today to determine whether he. ·loo, should stand trial. was 1st Lt1 William L. Calley's commanding officer in Vietnam. Calley is standing court-martial !or aUigedJy killing. or directi ng his men to kijl, 102 South Vietnamese civilians on March. 16,.1968, the day he Jed his platgon on a sweep through My Lai. The <iefense claims that anything Calley did that day, be did upon orders frorn 1ile~na. The next to last witnesses be£ore the thrce-v.·eek recess, Thomas' J. Kinch, 24, of Cape h1ay, N.J. returned lo the st and tdday and repeated a slatement he made Wednesday -1hilt r.ledina called off the killin g at r..1y Lili v.•ith the announcement: "the pa rty's· over -that's enough shooti n' for today.·· Before excusing the juro rs for the holidays, the trial judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy, reminded them they v.•erc not to discuss the .case wUh onyime. or to read or listen to news accounts or it. "This is a particn.larly critical time." Kennedy sa id. "You wJJI altend. rm sure, several social · gatherings. Be sure to avoid activity of any kind that in any v.•ay officers h~aring the case elabor.att instructions in the event they did read or hear anything that might influence· their judgment. Calley, whose life is at stake in the trial, said he would ."probably do some skiing" dWing the long holiday recess. The 27-year-old officer nlso said he JX>SSibly would visit with bis parents, who Jive dn Miami , Fla. When Kinch returned lo lbe stand today Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel III, the chie£ prosecutor, asked him lo elaborate on his testimony of Wedne s day, particttlarly about Medina's "the party's over" comment. Kinch responded : "Someone had called down, I believe from a helicopte r circling to the Southeast, and said he had gotten word from a Medevac (medJcal evacuation) helicopter that there were bodies all oVer the place down there, and he wanted to know what they '{ere doing down there. "Capt. Medina 'said: 'l don 't know - I 'll call forward and find out.• " · Daniel-then produced . a atatement Rinch i'Dade to the army criminal investigation division in November, 1969, in which he said Mediii.a then ·called tbe first platoon and said: "They want us to stop shooting. " Rock Dropper _Suspect Held LOS ANGELES (UPI) - A mJgrant worker was jailed on suspicion of murder today after a Del Mar woman was killed wbea a would affect this casei" Kennedy then went on 'to give the six 3$.pOUnd f!JCk was~ from an overpass and crashed through the --.indshleld-o1-tbe-carhnmicll s11e- Watch Bm.glar Times, It Ri ght 'A burglar tiincd ii just right v.·hen he struck the Anaheim firm that makes lhe original Spiro T. Agnew "·ristwatchc.5, making off wit h 10 timepieces. Da le I. Schelin, businw manager (If Dirty Time Company. the off-duty avoca tion of gerleral prac.llUoner Or. Hale Dougherty, told poUce $7~ worth of Items were stolen. No sign of forced entry could be found in the suite at 423 S. Brookburst St., from which five Teddy Kennedy watches and five skin diver watches were tnken. was rjding, , ~ dead woman was identified aa Mrs. Charlotte Sprague, M. She was riding with her husband, Willia~ 66, on the Golden State Frttv.'ay. He escaped injury. Eiooked Wa!': James Horton Jr., 3S. of Kelthvllle, La. At about the same time. anothtr lara:e <rock was thrown from the same overpass ant. s m a s b e d through the windshield ol . a car driven by Dennis Griffin, 7.0, Baldwin Park. He was not injured. Offic:en seld lhe w:omao's death was the third homJclde o( that type within lhe past three months. Investigators said the dying man told them that he himself set the fire to attract attention. He did so, officers sal~. ih' the belief that he would be killed when the gang Jed by Graves returned. All charges have no'W been dropped against Roy Arthur Thunnan, 24, o{ ·433 Howard St., Los Alamitos and Gordon Brown, 24, of Los Angeles. Both men were identified at the time of their arrests as members of the Graves gang. Canadian Arm v Fails to Flusl1 • Making It Fun Kidnap Suspeets Aid for E<J,ucationally Handicapped MONTREAL (UPI) -Hundreds of army troops in Arctic gear and police sealed off a suburban neighborhood today but failed to find three suspects sought in the kidnap slaying of Quebe<: Labor Minister Pierre Laporte. The ~man force began moving out of the middle-class area when a house to house search failed to reveal any trace of the suspects. No arrests were made. The action, conducted during a blinding snow storm, cafne two··weeks to the day after the same type of operation resulted in the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ) freeing another hostaii:e. British Trade Commissioner James R. Cross. Cub Scouts Aid By TERRY COVllJ.E Of tfM 0.llY •11et Sll fl ,, . Davey ls handicapped. He. nctlets in his chair at school and can't read a book for mor~ than a few wor)is: Al the age of 10 school Is a bu rden for him. _ "But learning can· be fun ," insists Sue Alderman, a teacher for the educationally handicapped in Fountain Valley. With her prodding a dozen youngster.i: like Davey might filter back to regular classroom "'ork this year at Fulton School. Sue bas more than 30 colleagues t~roughout Huntington ~ach a n d Foufltain Valley doing -the same jOb. Their' numbers are growlng as the' area's three ~lemen~ary·s~hool districts ~ome N d F j Jy' more deeply involved in the educationally ee y am handR:ipj>ed (El!) program. • EH is not a tw<>-letter brand;t • Cub Scout Pack 581, Hwitlngton Beach, hUdren whb wl)I ~er make it throu witl-set'-an--extra dtnner ,,nrcr this-sCbool. ·ltzs-the-Ealifomla-w&yrof--1 · Christmas Eve for a hungry.family. this boy .or this girl has an 1ndividuAI The ~r guests haven't bten ae:lected probte!". in learning and ht or she needs yet. but each boy is rtldy to dlfp in 25 ap ~d1v1.du.a1 solution to that problem. cents to buy a t111~ey dinner for some GIFTED HANDICAPPED needy !amilf. :·Some mentally gifted .studenti. are Each Y01¥lg cub has promised ~o earn also educationally h1:1ndlcapped/' explains his quarter for t~e diMer. The Assistance Milo Bibelheimer, director of special League of Huntington Beach wjll tell the ;ervlets for Fountain Valley School Pack what family needs the food. Distrid. Boys fr&nh. tfie.rJlaCk based at Spring An EH child suffers some particular View SChool will also collect other .food dra•back In hts learning ability. It may Items with the hope that their special either be ca used by neurological (minor family can enjoy the meal all w~k long. braln damage) or eme>tional problems. Items wUI be taken to Marina H\gh bUt, ln. either case, the problem can SChool Dec. 17 for di!lrlboUon. . almost alway& be overcome by an EH CUb Pack 561 is beaded by•Cob A-taster teat.Iler. · Larry Landesman. Boyt who would llke School aut))orltlts: don't always know if to join It may contact Roy Harihan, 8'6-an EH child su!fen • neurOlogical or 5666. tmotional problem, but it doesa't matt.et -· .. -· because the same approach is used to curt it. · · Thai approach' ·ls an .individual teacher 'coi1centrattnr on an Individual child and his particular·disabWty. · "Reading it_oae problem many of the!fe children have," MrS., Alderman points out. ''They can't pronounce words correcetly or they rev.erse letters." For instance a child might think he see's the word "was" when in lhe book it is .. saw." Somewhere hi.s mind reversed the "w" and ·"s." J\IATll PROBLEJ\1S Other children can't get past simple math problems. Mrs. ·Carelyn Choilllere, an EH.1-her at· Fountain Walley School, flnU m1st·or her pupila have problems•wllb math. "~ach chjld is ,di,fferent aitd . lias to be ·worJted with ·m a different way',"1 ahe explains. ' · T.acheta. lire. ,diflerenL too: ' Mr1. ~ Alderman ,~~ ~·we 1ames to inte'rest the yoUngaters In IUb)<cia, Wbl\• Mrs. Oloinlere prefers praise and rewards for deeBs weir done. Basically, there are two types of EH programs for which the r;tat.e pro\'ides substantial financial support. One ls a self contained classr90m for students with serious ptoblef\ls w.ho m~ . need three to five years or concentrated Instruction. The other is' what r'008t achooli ca:U learning disability ·groups: Jn esteftce thus means uch EH chUd spends tbne .eac~:wetk, (from one hour to J5 hours· a week) with the EH teacher for CIX1<0nltated illldy. . The state.pay, $l18al for each child tn a leamin, di!ablllty ~· It pays 117,%!0 (See STUDENTS, P .... I) • ' , .. . Instead of their traditional fire fighting oulflts, Fountain Valley's firemen .. mlght don red Santa Claus suits thJl1 yule season. · Thanks to a successful H~ft barbecue the firemen's associaUon bu been . handing out more gifts to 1ocaJ grot pa: than Sant.a. tJremen recently spent $103 ·to buy basketball uniforms for the FountaJn Valley Boys Club. They've allo donated to tJ;ie J aycees, Jaycettes, Salvation Anny and will probably give a band lo Teen Help. , · . Money isn't their own gift. Tonight they'll help the chamber of commerce cook turkeys for Its United Fund dinner at the community t:enter. Firemen said they earned about $8()1) from their barbecue dinner last October. ''It was one of our best," Bob Stockton, treasurer or 1.he association, said . Profits from the annual barbecue go toward helping the youth of the community and civic groups. Board Mee ts Tonight Trustees of the Fountain Valley School Diatrict wlll hold their regular board meeting at 7 o'clock tonight in district offices, Number One Lighthouse Lane. C:eut Weatlaer Another drippy day or it ls on the Friday horizon , with intermil· tent show.era under cloudy skiea and temperatures dropping down . to 56 degrees alongTthe Coast.. ., .JNSmE TODA)" TM curtain ma11 ~ going ·doum on the Childnn~s-T.htat.er Guild of Newport Harbor, which is losing fts lecue next month., See Entertainment, Page 25. Only 7 Days m1 CHllDSTMAS k • ·--· • ": OAI\, Y Pl ~Ol H ThOlldiJ, O.C1mltr i1, Im> 'Devil Cult' Cae Grand Jury Indicts 3 :In Murder ' Teen Faces Adult Trfal-~in -Kill-ings '". LOS AllG!LJ!;S (UPI) -A grand jury ~ i!t.Uber1ted only four minutes before rttumlng secret L;dictments WedneSd1y • tn the apparent slaying of a cowboy : stuntman at the. Spahn Ranch, onetime 'headquarters of Chlrles MllllOO'I cult. The names on the three indictmtntl were kept secret -but Jt was believed Manson , 36, and two of his followers were charged. ll ~·ould be lhe ninth slaying attribut~ to Manson, now on trial for tbt Sharon Tate murders. Chief Deputy District Attorney Joseph P. Bu.sch Jr. said he understood that the nmies were not revealed because M111110n's attorney, Irving Kanarek, was "upset about it." However, Buth uid that the three were already in cuatod,}t and two would be arraigned today. Three former "Manson Fam i 1 y' • members testified before the jury in its investigation of the death of Ronald "Shorty" Shea, 36. Shea vanished in A·ugust, 1969 and rumors have per1isted he was murdered, ri'lutila~ and bur ied on the ranch b.." members of the hippie clan. H1s bOdy never has been found . One of the cult membe rs who testified was Paul Watk ins. who told reporters, •·It's about time that we look at a flJM prophet -Charlie Manson. What be. •'4 in the name of love was death." Watkins would not discuss his crind jury testimony but when be took the stand in the Ttte murder trial be Slid he beard MllNOll di.,... "the killing of . a man named Shorty." • The other two persons believed to hive been indicted were Bruce Davis, fl. and Steve Grogan, 19, also known as Clem Tuft!:, who is belng held in Inyo County or. a gun charge. Kanarek showed up at the grand jury chambers shorUy before testimony ended and when he emerged he said, "I believe and I do charge that the dil!itrict attorney of Los Angeles County is deliberately injecting matters before the public to prejudice the Tate-LaBianca case. I believe it is done wttb deliberate intent and malice." The. Tate trial, in recess since the disapj>earance of defense b.wyer Ronald Hughes, was due to reSume Mooday with O IUbatitute altarney. Manion, le&J.ie Van Houten, Patricia KreiJw!nktl and Suaan Alkins hive been 1!11 trial alnce June 15 in the Aui. f.lQ, l961li1111>loi'"ol Ma Tate Ind f"" o111!r pe1"1CN 1( her estate, and grocer Leno LaBianca and his wife Rosemary the followlng nlghL f 1 l~lon. ~· Miia A-'111d D f!'t 'tjo b ori ltlll·pfter-!I'\. of • !/iltli'1J\ ··a,. Jiibt, 1969 de of rnu1lclan Gary ~111. ~ . cult member Robert Buii10leil alliicb' has been condemned to death In . thit killing. ~id.ent Files lfuntington Suit ltimtlnafon' lUrbour realdent Arthur KnO. bu filed 5Uit 1,11ainst the city o! ffw1t1naton Beach in an attempt to halt the mu!U-mllllon dollar Sunset Bay project. Thursday, Superior Court Judge Har· mon ,Scoville refused to grant a tempor· ary injunction against the proposed bay· side project, but ordered the city to aJr pear in court December. 28 to show cause why an injunction should not be granted. Knox opposes a conditional exception granted to a Beverly Hills firm which will allow construction of two 11.story towers, four three-story apartmenUi. a shopping centtr and creation of a penin· sula surrounded by 300 boat slips. He claims the city never 11howed a lejal hardship in granting the exception for the towers which wUJ be built next to Huntington Harbour on Pacific Coast Hi&hw11y. DAllY PILOT CltANG!: CO.UT P'U8ll5WINCJ ~P'AWY Robtrt N, W114 '"'"'ldtnl i ncl Pllll!lll'lllr J 1ck R. Cvrlty Vkt PrnJdent tr.II Gs1\~r•! MalMgtr Thom11 ktt.,.il Elil .. ThoM•1 A. Mur.,hi~• "'•"••Ina Etl.tr Al,n Di1kit1 Wbt Or1nf1 Covnty Edi'°' Alb1rt W. 1111, AuocJ1t1 ldllw M1wtl111t•• .._. OM. 1717$ lt1ch le11ltvtr4 M•1fl119 Adir .. 1: ,.0, lo11 7tD, t26'1 Ot•r OH1M1 UiUl'lll lffd'I' m l'"-t A"lllUe Col!I Mtu; JJ0 W11! .. ., $1ttd ........... leJ\: 22ll Wat .. lllot ~ ... QlrMlll11 au NorTll El C.-11\e a.1 A Cirden Grove youth 'accUsec( of compl!Clty Ii> tl1< '''lf6•ll cult:' -ldllln( of Misl!iion Viejo tttehe"r' Fl0~ Biuwn and the hatchet alaylng Of 1elvfce station attendant ·Jerry WayFJe Carlin ~'-5 told From Page 1 t ' AIRPORTS ••. pollution ladorL The Airport Commiulon found the Parsons report .,deficient In many areu" and the "most serious deficiency to the consideration or the first Ctlnstrait - people." ln its recommen dations the commluk>n euggested: -That no sJte suggested by the Parsons Company be ldmtUled as acceptable. 1 -That the board and commission establish more · measurable standards by which sites ate to be evaluated and that a priority of consideration of s u ·ch standard! be clearly stated. -That 1cUon be injtiated to improve the human facilities · for Orange County Airport with its limited defined use. That Is, toilets , waiting rooms, food , baggage, air cargo, etc. but avoiding · any· expansion which woll!d petmit additional airlines or passenger flight facilities. Barbor I..f.g"lats Crlilse -El Toro Marine· Corps Air Station ahould be studied further eo that the county will have a band in any plan· for joint use and a plan ·for civilian ll9e. The county should not· wait until an opportunity ari.ses by reason of a change in position of the military before ~king iUJ study. The study should be mad.-now so that the county will be able to proteet those areas which may be affected. This is the ~le for nlne-mlle cruise. t,hroulh waters of Hunliniton Harbour to see Chr11tmas li&bll on homes and boats. You can use your own boat. or, if your are a landlubber, you can catch a cruise boat at Huntington Harbour's Warner Avenue Sales Ofiioe Dock. Price is $2 for adults and .IO cents !or children under 12. Boat.a leave hourly from 6 p.m. lo 10 p.m. through Sunda)'. Proc.eeds benefi,t Ora.nie County Philharmonic Society Youth Concerts. A word of advice: Dress warmly. From Page 1 STUDENTS •.. for each 12 students In a self contained class. Before any district rece..ivu state money, bowever, it must submit evidence from the achoo! tucber, phyalclan, nur,. and poycbolopt lbat a cblld qualifles for EH help. Each dlltrlcl .WO hu a boord of adJniaPll wblch """"""" wben • llixlllit-iiill!w llil,l"'!l'am and wben hi ...... f~ How the dlatrlda IOI up their PnllJ"lllUI la up to them. 1'.lltM~11D1a1r1c1 hu e~t c~ tt five of Jt.a U eCboolt. ' t2J a Jearnina cilubWty group at every llChool. A total of 270 younpers are tn the Ooean View EH J>l"Oll"...!!"!. _ _ . "About 40-50 percent of the children In a Jearnlng disability IJ'OUP 10 back to fullUme d auwork Jn the year," Norm Ginsberg, director of personnel aervlcu, revealed. "I don't remember an ER child In thil group that ever hid to ltay more than three yeara." "ln the containld claues the return percentqe drops to about IJ pen:ea~" Ginlberg added. "lbelr pr<lblema are more aevere." - Oceon View apoda to rocelve '31UllO in state help thla year while spendln& $105,985 of its own moneY. Fountain Valley School Oislrict does not offer the self contained cl1ssrooma, bi.It has a full time EH teacher at e1ch of ils 13 l!ichools. Its learn ing disability classrooms contain about 124 students. "I'd say about SO percent of our youngsters go back to class each year.'' Bibelheimer explained. "Some students with severe problems are .in the part.time group .'' Fountain Valley will pick up $134 ,753 in state money this year while spend.ina: $44.000 of Its own. The Huntington Beach City (elemen-:tarY> School District 11 only in its second year of EH studies. This year the dlslliet is offering three self contained clasa:es and one !urning dl51bllity group to 43 children. It will receive an estimated $30,000 from the state this year and spend $85,000 of Its own money. All district! &re considering erpanslon of their programs. Anaheim Probes $200,000 Fire 111.veslifaUon Is continuln& today into the cause Of a $200,000 fJre which raaed through the French Cleaners plant in Anaheim Wednesday. Fire officials 11id they believed the cause was accfdtl'ltal and not incendiary. The fire started in the product.too area of the !OS E. Llncoln Av•. plant ll!d to- tally destroyed mach.iaery and clothini. Slight damage was done to the front shop sect.ion and clothing on r1ck1 there. Senate Group to Probe Military Spy_ Reports •• • -That the board authorize the airport commission to institute further studies on its own, without the employment Of another consulting firm, .to identify, if pOMible the location of a metroport ·site, general aviation airports and recreational airports. -That the board immediately irutrucl the Local Agency Format ion Commission, Planning Conun\Ssion and new Airport Land Use commission to take all steps necessary to protect the approach and clear zones at El Toro MCAS. W ASlllNGTON (UP!) -A Senate aubMmmlttH will.. conduct a formal probe of reporta by a former U.S. Arnty lnleUJcepce q ent that the mWtary spied on fedttal and 1tete official!, Including S.n. Adlai E. Slevell!Oll lU. Sen. Sam J. Ervin (l>N.C.), u ld Wed.Deadly the offlclalJ were the taraets. ol Army undercover iDvutiJ:ations durtnc: their campaigns or while they were in office. He charged they were placed under surveillance because they opposed or did not actively aupport t h • aovmunentil policy in VJetnam or bec1U1e they disagreed with ~domestic pollciel of tbe Nixon •-•Uon. A apokelman fir !ht Army 11id the IUVk:e WU 0 aravely conce:roed" over Ervin'• cha r g e s, Ht llid such ourvelllanco ol clvWana wu probtbited by Army polley. The Wb1le HOUie A id It ..., ''inconceivable." to President Nixon that the IDIUtary would spy on pollUcal figures. Other concreumen rtsponded with anJry words. "We have reached a frightening 11tate of military control in tJti! country," 11aid Rep. Abner Mikva (0.·lll.). "The whole concept of civilian control of the military i.5 in jeopardy and if this thing is not stopped all the people will have left to do ia: salute." The former Army inWligence agent Valley Council Nixes Expansion Of Civic Cent.er FOOntaln Valley isnl quite ready to hire an architect for e~ralon of the civic center. Cou11c il men balked this week .1t slaning a propoged contract with Blurock and Assoclates of Newport Beach. de.!ignera of the original city hall complex. "I think Jt's a little premature for this sort of thlnC," Councilman John Harper e1id. "As a council we haven't even beaun to talk about the city hall or police facility.'' Cow!cilmtn agreed to Wllt for a revillon of the contract ,,.,_hich would 1peclfy that Blurock would only wort on orders from the city. Fountain Valley is nearly ready to expand it! CiVic center complex which at one · loc1Uon includes the p o 11 c e department, city hall and the community (enter. ind at another site cover& the corporation yard1. who made the reports was identified a! John M. O'Brien of Evanston, ru:. who bad held the rank of staff iergeant and for-a one-year period starting in June, 1969, was aasighed to the Midwest office ·of the 113tb MWtary !ntelHgince Group in Chicago. O'Brien said ·he waa "a domestic apy for tbtr Arrnv" IDd he ·staled the Jntelli&ence group m a I n ta i n e a. a ''subversives file"' that contained dossiers on IOO 1ndlvldU1ls in ·Illinois alone, wtlo included Stevenson, former Gov. Otto Kerner, now • federal circuit court judge: Mlkva and the Rev. Jesse Jackson of Chicago, who heads the antipoverty Oper1Uon Breadbasket project of the Southern Christian L e a d e r s h i p Conference. Ervin p r omised the Se~te Constitutional R i g h ts Subcommittee would hold hearings in February on the intelligence agent's reports. · By Febrmiry, Ervin said. he boped the Army "will have fully discloaed all that it bas done and that jt ca.na.rure us it fs 10 longer happening at any levels." • .. • ind Amazing I Extraordialry I Colo111ll In defense, Stanley Walsh. consultant for the Parsons Company, said .. "The commi.5$ion and othera are deficient ln ·understanding• :what the ·scope of the report is. The scope was not defilled and we could not take the impact of people . Into account by ..-..,ey1 , because ~e, did nor have enough ~uncUni to -expend. that much time." As to city staffs which had said that Parsons' repr esentativ e• were perfunctory in their approach to local problems and officials , \Valsh said. "they would logicall y say that because they are against airports." Walsh .said the opportunity to establish a single jet airport in Orange County which would satisfy most criteria is Jong past. He suggested officials look to the future when Short Takeoff and Landing (STOL) plans will be available. When the consultant intimated that the CQunty had passed that point where a jet airport is feasible, Deputy County Counsel Arnold Nutlman challenged, ''Your report does not say that" . Wl!y7 Btclt111 In this b~Rllltt nylon faceahag Karatan'scolorw!Urda hava dt"llnlld up Mith lj)lfklin; mixes u tncrod/ble Blue,Amulng White, "Extrl.0r<flnuy Gold Md even Cofoaul CopJltf. FabUloua has DO of these colors. They'19aJl lnored~lt, rlllllf. ( Febuloul COflllM In neltl1t9 orea n191 w1th ml'tchl•9 frln91. At'• 12' lot·ooly $134.95) Wedn•oday 1111( he" wlll be tried 11 u adult for th1 Carlin murder. Su~ior eourt Juda:e James·r . Judge set Fe~·. 8 . .u the trial d1te for Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, and returned the 250-pound defendant to ~ Orege County Jail. Hulse's m·ouon represented bis, last chmce to face the murder char1e1 u a juvenile. That right was removed by a.n Orange County Grand Jury indictment which ~emoved the slIJle privileges from transierit Herman Hendrick Taylpr, 171 and Christopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, ot Portland, Ore. If District Attorney Cecll Hicks' attempts to. estradite Gibboney are successful an three defendanta and transient SteVen Craig Hurd, 20, will face &epa.rate murder 'trlals In Super.tor Court. Hurd will get his trial date Friclly from Judge Judge. ni.t .setting had been delayed .~ding Judge Robert L. Corfman's.ruling on .whether tl'ie alleaed leadeT of a band ol"drifter1 was une and able to stand trial. · Judge Corfman r;uled that he was and H!J.rd will nQw be tried for the killinp: of Mr~. Fi.Or.ence Nancy .Brown, 31, of El Toro an~ J~rry W~yne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. . · • · Taylor and Gibboney face · Identical charges. Hulse is accueed of i i 111 n g Carlin -and. l;>eing , an icceaaory to the Brow9 murder. . . . MrS. Brown's body wu foUild lut June 15" in a· shallow gra\te off ·the Ortega Hlgflway by mvestigaf«I· who noted ·tha1 her left arm and Yitai organa were ,J&Vet'ed from_.tbt mutilated body. It .~ alleged. that...Hyrd and h1I IJ'.OUP conducted rites associated w f t b devil worihi.P -1:.vtr her and devoured puts of her body after they stabbed"ber1l> death ·in an Irvine or,anae grove. Northern State Storm Drifts To -Orange Coast A tired-out storm .that spent · it.self lashing Northern Caliiomia with a downpour inclu4ln& heavy bail and snow drifted over the Orange Coast today with &pt1nkles-and weak rumblMof thunder.' The latest sea.son storm h e c ! n disinteF(:.aQpg ~ Wednesday night, but , coUJP Of\btite ,C9,3s~~ ~t.te3s with a few •howqs until FrJday ·alterhoon. Los Angele~ had .54 inches by early today, but Mt enough preclpitatioc feU to evt!J register on the1 Or,ange County HarbDr District gauge in Newwrt· Beach. "Just a trace, but we mlgbt have somethilii:i; measurable by 4:30 p.m.," said a spokesman this morning. , Brief but heavy showers hlt el.stwhere oi:i the Orange Coast. Rainfall in Los Angeles brought tbe current Season's tol.41 to 6.33 .inche.s, a bit high for mid-Qecember by normal sLandards. . Snow flurries brought the snowllnl down to the 4,000.foot level, promising :& whit.e Christmas for m&ny Southland aid and ruort areas, · · Fabulous Color! Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CAIL .646-0275 tor an apm: Cat"pet • conaultant ••ho wUl "'"" to your home with 11m-ples ~1tho\lt lJ'lY oblip tlon to you : . . • . . • Third Nuclear Blast In 2 Days 'Normal' YUCCA FLAT. N•v. (UPI) -The Atomic Energy Comml11ion e.-plodtd the .,third nuclear device in two d1y1 1t Ulla destrt test 1lte early tod1y ind 1ccordln1 to an AEC spokesman, everythtng wu "normal." A space uUllz.ation 1tudy-bas been made and is now under conslderal.ion on tbe city ball ltlelf. ind the parka and recreation commission his held two pubUC hearlng1 on the community ctnter expansJon. • H.J.GA~~EIT fURNITURE . PROFESSIONA'" 22.1 5 HARBOR BLVD. . ' I The device ~·1s part of the we1pon1 te1L program ind had 1 yield ranee ot 200 kiloc.ons. or 011e meaaton. Ita code n1me WIS "Carpet Bq." Councllmen set 7:30 p.m .• Dec. 29 11 the date for a study 5e11lon 1t which t\me they will talk about all pol<t!Ual e1pan1ion. l • 0,.. M ... , 1'1NrL l Fri. Ins. COSTA MESA, CALIF. .INTERIOR DESIGNERS ' 646-0275 1>46-0276 I ' -- l.JCI Chief, ' 'Wife Try Coed Dorm \ By GEORGE L!IDAL "j' Of ... ~ .... , ...... " UC Irvine Chancttlor Daniel Aldrich ·~ and his wife, Jean, emerged thll morning from 1 four-night e:rperlment bt student ; • living in the "coed" dormitory on campus. _ Sunday night, Aldrich aM his wife, at , the invitation of .students; moved into , · Nubes Hall. The chancellor shared a three-man su.ite while his wife slept : across tht dorm court with a suite of ~ girls. "We found litUe difficulty adjusting our · schedules to those of dorm life," lht ~ chancellor said. "l had feared it might be ,' difficult lining up for ahowers in the , morning, but at the: hour I usually arise , -S:30 a.m. -I found them empty." The IDIUSUal living e:zperience produced 11everal insights for the chanceDor about the quality of student life, he aid. In rap sessions with 1tudenta that lasted from 7:30 to midnight-two hours ' past the educator's normal bedtime - ·.'."''we discussed an JOrts o( things, baues and u might be expected the quality of dorm food ." , "1 allowed no argument about food," ht · 'uid, admitting that ln&titutlonal fare always may be criticized. Moet students '. :•·bacted off' from food gripes and the : chancellor r<ported be WU impttll<d by ~ the variety and quality of the fare. ''When I was in college they juat plopped ,~ jt on your plate and you hoped the port.Ion • was generous. There wu BO roin& back for Jeeands." Out of the np leSlicm, the most important view of ltudent _JI f e commtmicated to Aldrich. he aid, wu the "need for relief from routtne." "Being an Uolated campua, students need aomeplace to go to be with other people." Noting that UCI hid decided oome time ago that small 11.udeDt centerl would beat meet recreational needs of 1tudents, . Aldrich said his stay in the dorms had ·changed his mind. · "I went to student center once, because ·that IOUIKled tin a aood place to go," he _reJated. ''and found one student curied up wilh a boot." Findinl the aame 11t ,uotber student center, the chancellor • t90cluded a Jarger student union with "a variety-of thing• to®" would be a bettu 'draw for Studenta and P'tOf"ld• opportunitJea just "to be with other people." ' He recaDed that durtng his on caDege days, "there was always the center of \own to go to. But. at Irvine lhere is no 'similar, nearby attradion. "We need Town Center to be devtloped across the street,'' he said. '· While a '4.5 million student anlOl'I is on the planning boards for the camJ)w:, "it "'ivill be at least four or five yean before -it begins to sprout from the groUbd," '.Aldrich said. He said be also was rtrutt by the :students' desire to ''know what I think :about things .'' \. · When asked what single thing he valued most in life, AJdricb paused, he a.id. "My wtfe jumped in and aald, 'While he's thinking on that, let me say I value most being a Chriatian', "Aldrich said. "Th.is struck one student who told us that while he was a Christian, he would never say that pubUcly, jt just isn't aomething YoU would say. "Thus, we had an interaction with that student that otherwise wouldn't have been possible," Aldrich noted. The chancellor was impressed that in five years at UCJ of offering his time to residences, It took the group in the go. called ''cotd" dorms to bring it off. "I think we were invltt.d because they think that something Jmportant is happening there," Almtch.said. Nubes and Playa halls at UCI assign suites to students qf the aame sex who share lounge facilities. Boys occupy one wing and girls another. Aldrich said his visit was the first of what he hoped would be .a long line .of Jive-in visits by other adminJstrators and faculty members to provide increued interaction with stude!U. Store Dupimy Fans Havoc PORT MORESBY, New Guinea (UPI) -The appearance ol the first store window mannequin in New Guinea's prlm.itive eastern highlands nearly created havoc ainong natives -in..-tbe town of Goroka, 250 miles nortbwect of Port Moresby. Hundreds of natives h a v e gathered outside the store's display window for days, wailing and conducting dances to honor tbt dead in the belief the dummy ii a corpse. A clerk in the store at one Point removed a wig from the dummy tn an effort to convlnct th09e outJlde it was not the body of 1 Jlflng person. A native woman1 lnf\uilted at what r;he tbouaht W"a 1 de!ecratlon of the d<ad. cbaH>d the clerk lhrouCll the lhop, thruleillnl him. ' r 'I. ,,111;-sday, t lcf ... lltr 17, 1970 H OAJLY l'ILOT :J r------ Fluor to Buy Niguel Fac·ility Firm Approves Deal for Rockwell 'Ziggf!rat' Plant U"IT._... Snow Beard Allan Ladd's long hair and equally long beard provide temporary shield from snow durinR recent stonn in Madi· son, Wis. Judge Denies Extradition Bid for Angela NEW YORK (AP) -The chief judge of New York state's highest court today denied the application of black militant Angela Davis for a 'Stay in extradition to California to.Jaee mw-der and kidnaping charges. • 'lbe decision of Judge Stan1ey H. Fuld of the Court of Appe..als came after a one-- hour bearing in his office here. Miss Da· vis sought to stay her extradition at least until January when the full Court of Apptall: resumes session. '"11>e study or the papers berore me deJ'J'KIMtrates that the petitioner is the person named in the warrant of extradition, that she was in the demanding state 1t the time or the commission ol the crime and that she is a:uJ:tstanUally charged wuh h av i n g committed felonies in that jurisdidion,'' said Fuld . •niese are the only facts into which the courts of an asylum state will inquire," he added. Miss Davis, 26, is charged with murder and kidnaping under California law for allegedly purchasing weapons used in a San Rafael cow1bouse shootout last August which left fOID' persons dead. She Was arrested here Oct. 13 on • federal fugitive warrant . artu • nalionwlde search. Gov. Nelson A. Roctefeller signed an extradition warrant Nov. 17. Lawyers for Mis.s Davis have since sought her release on ground her constitutional .rights were vio,lated by n-Ot being allowed to see transcripl'I oC grand jury testimony within 10 days. Had "Pact' 1 By BARBARA lllEIBICB Of Ille MllY ...... IMff The Fluor CorporaUoa announced today that it has reached "agreement in principle" for acquisition of the clant North American Rockwell plan\ ln Laguna Niguel. The transaction calls for Fluor to lrade a number of itl real •1.ate holdings for the unique "1lggdrat", deSiined by William Pereira. ' Additional real property in cash will be traded for property •urrounding the building and for tn option on adj~nt acreage. Toi.al cost of the fjicllily ia in excess of S20 miWon, according to the Fluor announcement. Preliminary negotiations for the sale have been under way for monlbs. Final negotiations will commence immediately and it ii anticipated that the close of escrow and transfer of title will take place in the second quarter of 1971. The F1uor Corporation, now based in the city of Commerce, will use tbe ont fnillion-aquare-foot facaity as Jts new corporate headquarters and as the headquarten of its LQrs A n g e 1 e 1 engineering and construdion division as well as headquarters for Fluor Drilling Services. These facilities now o c c u p y approlima~y &00,000 aquare feet of Mercury Found In Tuna Thought Packaging Err~r LA JOLLA (AP) - A scientist says mercury found in canned luna may be accidentally added in packing rather than absorbed by tbe living fish. Dr. Reuben Lasker of the Fishery- Oceanography Center of the National Marine Fisherie! service said Wednesday the prosence of the poisonous heavy· metal may be traced to the packln1 process. Tbe Food and Drug Administration Tuesday reported one can of commercial tuna in every five it sampled contained traces of mercury. Mo!\ than 900,000 cans were recalled from grocery store!, "I doo't believe it is enough to analyze th! canned product wbicb is the case as 1 understand it," Lasker said. "I think the analysis should Include things like the Oil used hi packing, tbe: cans and the 1teamers used for cooking." Public fear1 started by the report, he added, will have .an adverse effect on the tuna industry. "I don 't dispute the FDA flindlngs as reported," Lasker said. "All I am saying is that I don't think aufflcient evidence i1 yet in to make any pat conclusions." Maheu Won't Quit Until 'Hughes Says Otherwise' LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Howard Hughes and his top Nevada executive, Robert A. Maheu, bad "a pact to be together the rest of our lives" and Maheu says be will fight bi! dismls.ul until the mrste:ry billionaire tells him otherwise. Maheu, 5.1, a fonner FBI agent, lestlfied Wednesday he wanted to remind Huchel "'of a long term obligatlon J feel I have to him and him to me'' but he was unable kl reach Hughes in the Bahamas. Maheu was to return to the stand today • In his battle with Jlughes Tool Co., parent organization of Hughes' estimated fl.S billion fortune, over its authority to dismiss him. Maheu also said he was perplexed that Hughes diaappeared from this gambling cily without a. word of explanation to him. •·t thought it was very strange,'' Maheu 1ald. "Throughout the last four years there were Innumerable instances when Mr. Hughes made reference to the fact that we wOUkl be together for the test of our natural lives . ., Testifying about his•relationship with the eccenbic recluse be hu admitted he never met face to face , Maheu said he first learned that Hughes left Las Vecas about noon 'lllanbgjving and Hughes ~r told hlm be was fired. He sald be Immediately tried to contac! •the penthouae, of-the Desert-Inn Hotel. where Hughes bad been secluded since Joan Kennedy's l<'olks Divorced in Florida COOOA BEACH, Fla-(UPI) -The pa..m. of Joan Kennedy, wife of Sen. Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.), have been granted • divorce In Brt.vard County Circuit Court after SS years of marrilge, Jt wu learned today. Mr. and Mn. Harry Bennett ol Cocoa Beach were granted tbe divorce Nov. 24 by Circuit Court Judge William Akridge mart than a year alte:r a peUllon for divon:e ... fin\ flled. ' 1116&. He said he fmally got one phone call through but that it was inconclusive. "I have been incapable of communication wtth him since that time," Maheu said. He said be would not give up the court fight against his ouster unlas he received a conlinnaUort from Hughes either by telephone or by a n authenticated letter. He described his relationship with Hughes as "increasingly intenae'' during the past eight years. "'!1lere have been serious disagreements from time to Ume.'' he said but added that when amends "!ere made, there was "a pact to be together for the rest of our lives." Gov. Paul Laxalt, returning to Carson City after a business trip to Chicago, told newsmen he was concerned what effect there would be on gambling revenue ii Hughes should decide to leave the state. ·"The thought is expressed, if Howard Hughes can't be happy .in Nevada, who can?" County Newsman Mel Lilley Dies ., . Veteran Orange County newspaperman Mel Ulley, 53, died Tuesday in Garden Grove following surguy and 1 l~y illness. -· --- Funeral aervict.:s will be private. The family has suggested tributes In form oC donations to the KJdney Foundation. , Mr. l.Jlley had been with the Orange County Evening News since 1955. He 1erved In aevenl capacities and most recently w1s managing editor of the weekly opfratlons. He also was the outdoor editor. He b ....,,lved by hi• widow, Adelaide, of 11711 Pickett Lane, Garden Grove; dauahttt, Victoria. Lllley; fout I01'1I. Jefferey, Chris, Michael and Bradley Lilley; a mother, Mrs. Ol&rles Llllty: a sister, Mrs. Carl Ricky, and .a brother. Olarla: J. Lilley. Hil ashes will be acattered at aea. -• , apace. • Fluor spokesman sald, a11d employ 1bout 2.100 Ped'ple. Fluor properties Involved In lM transaction wl(h North American Rockwell include the present corporate headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard and a Task Force Facility on Ferguson Drive both in the City of Commerce: Mariners Bay apartment land and anchorages in Marina deJ Rey; Fluor's interest. in Lake Point Towers, M apartment development In QUcago, JD;; Park Center Pliza, an office building complex In San Jose, and 1,000 acres oI property in Hayward. The ~e Laguaa Niguel structure, designed to house North American Rockwell 's Autonetics division, was placed on the market a year .ago when cutbacks Jn J.he space program halted development plans. Construction, however, has continued and \ht exterior of the tiered building is virtually complete, interior modifications Freshly cut trees, Merry Christmas • prices. lfycu're looklng tor:• big beautiful tree this HlllOll, come 188 us. You11 ~nd Scotch Pine and Western Douglaa Fir Chrls1rr1al 1r8eo In var1cua alzee and ahapeo to hold all your flvorlle omamentL -Pine 4 to 511., 1.99 7 to I II., 9.99 ' 6-1/2 to 7 fl. 799 Wiiiem Douolw n- 2 to 3 II., 1.111 3 to 4 II., 2.All 5to811..349 7to 111.,4.49 9to10tt.,U9 -Juniper growing In a ceramic planter, already gift boxed. 10.99 Bonlll Pyiwnlhll growing I a ceramic planter ... Chrlslmaa colors all year. 10.9 -B-Plnegrowlng I acermnic planter. 1 O.S9 Cemnlo pion!~ Chr-..gllt,.~ will be made to suit the needs of the purcha"ler, Fluor is a major International firm .providing engineering and construction services ror the mining and petroleum Industries. A spokesman said lta work force is expected to double in the oat 10 years. • . The corporation, in addition to HI Los Angeles headquarters, lw f1cillt5'11 in Houston, Texas, London, Holland. and Taiwan. Bonaal Juniper growing In a tub for Chriojmas.-- 13.99 8-'T,.. Kl lncludec plaiiling dltlt,-Bonaal plant, epeclal soll, wire and..t 99 how-to Instructions. "'" • Ch1rg• it et the1• Ptnn•y ator•1: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center. Shop Sund1y1, to!>, 12 to I P.U. ' I I Thursday, Dtctmber 17, 1970 . ~· ..J.,.i. Reds Blut Bombing ' Prepared to End SAVE YOUR PUBLIC BEACHES W N B DO YOU ••• ar ow-.. ruce LOVE CAUFORNIA'S BEAUTIFUL PUBLIC BEACHES? . . .JV-. 'No thanka! We're juat looking!' Year of '70 Not All Bad PARIS (UPI) -Ambassador David K. E. Bruce oald loday the Uolt«I SUltea was ready to stop the fighting in Vietnam "now" and asked the Communilta to negotiate. Instead, Hanoi said President Nlzon bad direcUy challenged the migbt of the entire Communist world by bombing North Vietnam. Bruce told the 95th !l!ssion of the deadlocked Vietnam peace conference the Unit.ed States does not accept the Communisll' deadline of June SO next year for a U.S. troop pullout as a condition for a cease-fire and does not agree to the ouster of the Saigon regime as a condition for politicaJ seWement. "We have ca 11 e d for immediate negotiations on a n internationally supervised cease-fire.in-place throughout all of Indochina," Bruce said. "Jn other words, we are ready to stop the fighting now and re10lve the other iuues1 In an atmosphere free from the ue of force." He repeated U.S. readiness to'netatiate By DICK Wf:Sr an agreed timetable "for complete troop Of "" 0.111 1"11t1 '"" withdrawal as part of an over--all WASHINGTON -The year 1970 will settlement, in VJetnam, Laos and never make the all.star team, but netutier Cambodia.'' ' ' ahould it be written off as a total Josi. The statement by Hanoi negotiator Looking back, it becomes apparent that Xuan Thuy coincided With 'a rare 1970 produced several twitcbel of pquJne, personal attack on President NiXon·by an progress that bode well for the f11t1Jre. ·t officl.al Soviet" statement which sai~ In Gent.va, Switzerland, a c0mpan1-•Jtwis1a .wo~d. draw a.ppr op r I ate known as t.O.S. Ltd. advanced tJte =usJOn~~ U.S. all" ralda: on the frontiers of corpmunicatlons .everal 1 • ......... ~0 "d N" , De 10 ·• ' ,, ........ ,,. 841 IXOD S c. ..news notches by calliQg two preu conferences to annowa it didn't have anything to aay. Calling a prtll CO!l!el'm<e when you have not.bing to aay l!. of coqrte, an ancient practice, particuJarJy I n Wasbqton. MID Ind bOy I pel'IOnalif have attended at SUit 200 pres1 -of lbal llOll, Ind I am by oo means a proclfl!OOI pms amler<ncl attender. In the put, how-, people who have called preu conlerencel when they had nothing lo say have gon< abeod Ind uld it lnybow. Thua the Geneva Preu co.-, at 'fhlcb the nothlngneu waa left unsaid, repreaented an authentic brtaklhrouih. MAYBE I'M a dreamer, but I like lo think that one day there will be a world In wblcb people who have nothing 14 say won't call press-conferences at all I doubt we'll ... .it in our lifetime, but it's coming. Equally promblnl, althoqh in •OO!her capacity, WU the allerallon that a moijqn picture atudlo owed the gevmunent nearly PJ0,000 for the Ille of an aircraft carrier in filnllng a -1e about the JapaneJe attack oo Pearl llorbor. n,. Important .thing hera la not the alll!ged debt but !he opporl1Ul!Uaa It suggests for bllancin& the federal budget. The govemment must own hundreds of other items for which thlre would· be a ready market. Renting or leasing them for private we during slack periods 1bould 10 a long way toward Wiping out the annual defieit. I AM THINK.ING in particul1r of the Selective Service Sy!ltem. Ora draft quotas for a given period have been filled, the Selective Service machinery could be rented to a Las Vegas casino fOr use in operating lotteries. Or perhaps some church group would lease it fOr fund-raising bingo games. -VP! cqQferen,ee statement "defies not only the VSMna1nese people, but also the socialist countries and the peace-loving peoples·of . the world." 'fhuy· did not elaborate. But his 1tatement came after both Moscow and Snow H-cightens Heating Crisis In New York NEW YORK (AP) -Freezing temperatures and the season's first real snow created a grim backdrop as a fuel crisis drew closer today for hundreds of thousands of residents affected by a atrike by 2,800 oil tank truck drivers and oil burner ae:rvlcemen. Llndlofds; lncludlng the citY'• !lousing Authority, Immediately began conserving fuel oil Wednesday. 'Ibe strike began at 12:01 a.m. cutting off deliveries. · . Hundreds of thouMDds of reaidents and workers in the city 'uc1 adjaeent areas of Westcbester County and New Jersty were affected. While some homes and buildings had reserves for several daya, others bad only Aklmpy suppli<a on bed. · state Mediatioo. Board. chairman/ Vincent D, McDonnell called the striking Local 553, Internat!Ollal BrotberboOd of Team!lers, and !he · New York Oil ~Ung .A5'0clatlon lo a meeting l!Lan ateempt to end the walkout before the abortagea became oerlous. Nixon Hosts Heath; Expects Good Talks ,WASffiNGTON (UPI) -President Nizon Thursday welcomed Edward Heath on his first official visit to the United States as Britain's prime minister, and asserted that their two days or talks will contribute toward .. a run generation of peace." Heath, in his response, said he expected their conversations to range over European and British matters. He aaid Britain's hoped-for entry into the Common Market "will be to the benefit" of Europe, Great Britain, the United Slates and the free world. Snow Warnings Issued Peking reacted to Nixon's declaraUon by issuing their slf'Qngeat denunciations In monlha ol V.S: poli'I' in Vietnam. ·President Nixon had told the nation he would not hesitate to order a resumption of bombing in the north il. !he North Vietnamese conUnued to fire on U.S. reconnaissance planes, or if they mounted a military buildup likely to endanger the withdrawal of U.S. troops. ¥ anks Braced For Saigon .Terror Raids 1111.,''"tl*"t ••i11 « showtrt lo!ltv, 'Y••l&tllt wllld1 night tnd mor11lnt llov.-. i)t(omlrlt norll!WHlfflv ll le '10 kno!1 !11 ttltl'N)Ot,, fode~ t<ld Fr!dt)', Hlttl IDdtV 60. Heevv 11....:lplllllol! ftll In the Norlfl. tit! •lld W11I ttiMr, wllb • ~IOtl t lf• ' . " FIUDAY 11 ·001m. SO •:4 •. ,,,. 0.1 ,.,.,, Jitltlll .............. 1·5'•.m. ,,. ,,,. tow .............. l lll t ."'. ,,, ltcOl'ld 111•11 .......... 11! .. ··"'· '·' ·~ '°""' .... . ,.,....... 0 1 kn • .._•:st•"'· ''" 1: .. 11.m. tJ,iOit ltl• 1:11 l.m, k11 10:1$1.ftl, lo m01t 01 NIW I1111ltM •lld In p1rt1 Of Uith. Tll• Htltorltl WNlher Strvk t N kf ~ to •'-lncllft ef f#IOW WIS U• il'ttttd '"' lt\t .. ,""' -•ncl n m...cll •1 • foot Wll tor.ti! for ftlt wnltrll mou1111!111. !ll11v1!1m1011, N.Y., lol9td till' lllc.hn ol uiow 111 • sl'it-l'IOllr ~lod tncl!"" tfrt'f' lodt~. Elv, Ntv.. htd fov r lllC.l>e!i ol MW tnow In The MIN -lod. '"lllltdtlltlll9 .nd Mlll'\llllt, H.J., eull l'I~ l'llOft ""'II 111 lll(fl f1' rtll!, Ntw Yor'k CllY Wll Oii ft!f tdH ef lt\t 1f!Ow.,•1n dl\lldll!f 11...-, re<elvlM •bo\11 • .... 11·111(11 Gf &l\1111 WI~ Wlnf ...... ~VP " M mllft •11 hour • WANT TO DO ALL YOU CAN TO KEEP APARTMENTS OFF THE SANDS? WANT TO DO SOMETHING SIGNl .. CANT .TO PRESERVE OUR ECOLOGY? HUNTINGTON BEACH .~ •• IS IN A COURT BATTLE WITH THE STANDARD OIL CO., AND ITS LOCAL SUBSIDIARIES ASKING THE SUpERIOR · COURT TO kEEP THIS BEACH OPEN FOREVER FOR PUBLIC USE. IF YOU • • • HAYE ENJOYED THE BEACH BETWEEN J'!!.E _HUNTING· TON BEACH MUNICIPAL PIER AND SUN,rr-BEACH AT ANY TIME BEFORE 1965 • • • . . . . WANT TO DO MORE THAN JUST TALK ABOUT ECOLOGY AND WANT TO KEEP THIS 5 MILES OF BEAUTIFUL BEACH OPEN TO THE PUBUC • • • WRITE NOW •• • TO CITY ATIORNEY, P.O. BOX 190, HUNTINGTON BEACH, COME TO HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY HALL, 520 PECAN CALL (7141 536-5263, COLLECT IF IT IS A TOLL ·'.CALL CAL 92646 AYE., OR ' I · l . ' :! ! · l • • l • ! • l ' ' l ' l • ., ' ' . . . . ·• . • . . . . ' • . . • .. . • . - • • .. . • < ,. . . • • ' . • • . . • . . • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • ' • Fo1iniai=n . Valley • . . . . EDITI O N Today'I Fl•al N.Y. Steeb VqL, 63, .NO. 301, 3 SECT.IONS 42 P~G£S. . ! r • • S.-.n~a at City Bnll ~Big fellow in red suit checks in at Huntington Beach Oily Hall to pick up 'ci business license. City isn't playing Scr~ge, though. Local taxi company is playing Santa _by givipg free rides to ewilomers. 1orl_u- n"te enough to -get cab driven by Eugene N. Kovalepko, who is swt- . 'aj!(y sultejl up for Ibo seasqn. Oespitll ,ca)> _.., •• l'!l'psse, it . musf Stlll liaVe a tiuStnesS license. My Lai GI Quote s ·Medina ' • 'Party Over-Cease Fire' IT. BENNING, Ga. (UPll -'The Calley court-martial recessed for the Christmas holidays today after hearing the 15th consecutive witness testify that Capt. Ernest L. Medina ordered the Vietnamese v.Ulage of My Lai destroyed. James r.1. r.fcBreen, a 23-year-old shoe ealesman who gave his addreltS only as "Long Island, N.Y .. " conceded under cross-examination that r.led lna ·had not apecllically ordered women and children killed, Jmt added: "We had been told only Viet Cong or their sympathizers were there (in Jtty Lai) and anything lert was to.be killed." Medina, who underwent a preliminary bearing in Atlanta today to determine whether be, too, should stand trial , was Ist U. William L. Calley's commanding officer in VlelniJm . Calley is slanding court-martial for allegedly killing, or directing hi s men to kill, 102 South Vie~name.se._ civilians on 1'-farch 16, 1968, the day he"led his platoon an a sweep through My Lal. The defense claims that anything Calley did that day, he did upon orders frpm r.1edina. The next to la.!t willlesses before the three-week recess, Thomas J. Kinch, 24, of Cape May, N.J. returried to the sta-rid today and repeated a statement he made Wednesday -that t.fedina called off the IUU!ng at My Laf with Uie an0;0uncem.ent: "the party's over -that's enough shootin' for today." Before excus!ng the jurors for the holidays. the trlal judge, Col. Reid W. Kennedy. reminded them they were not to discuss the case with anyone. or to read or listen tO news accoun ts of it. off icers hearing the ' case elaborate ins lrut1ion11 in the event they did read or hear anything that might innuence their judgment. Calley. whose life ls at stake in the trial, said be would "probably do some skiing" during the Jong holiday rea!ss. The 27-year-old officer also said he possibly would visit with his parents, who Jive ~n Miami, Fla. When Kinch returned to tbe stand today capt. Aubrey fl.t. Danlel Ill, the chief P:roeecutor, asked him to elaborate on hi! testimony of W e dnesday, parUcularly about Medina 's ''the party's over" comment. ~ Kinch responded: "Someone had called down, I believe from a helicopter circling to the Southeast, and said he had gotten word from a Medevac (medical evacuation) helicopter that there were bodies all over tbe pla~ down tbere, and he wanted to know what ·tbey. were doing down there. "Capt. Medina said: 'I don't know - I'll call forward and find out.' " Daniel lhen produced a statement Kinch made to the army criminal investigation division in November, 1969, in which he 11aid Medina then called the first platoon and sald: "1bey want us to !top shooting." • ·Rock Dro pper Sus pect Held "This is a -particularly critical time," Kennedy said. "You will attend, I'm sure, LOS ANGEUJS (UPI) -A several soci4! gatherings. Be sure to migrant worker was Jalled on avoid activity of any kind that In any way suspicion of murder today ~fter a would affect this case." Del Mar woman was killed when a · Kennedy then \\'ent on ·to give' the six »-pound rock was~ from an OYerpass 8'hd crashed through the _ --- - . -f-.,..mdshi.Id-o1111e"tar llnlblcb·slll!- watch Burgla'r was riding. ' ' The dead woman Was identilied as Mrs. Charlotte Sprague. 65. She T• Jt Ri ht wu riding with her husband, lllleS. · g · William, 66, on the Golden State A burglar timed it just right wh.en he struck the Anaheim finn that makes lhc oi-iginal Spiro T. A~new wristwatches, making olf wJth·to timepieces. Dale t. Schelin, business milnager of Dirty Time Company. the off~uly aVoeaUon of general practitioner Dr. Hale Dougherty. told pollct $7i worth of Items were~stotan. No sign of forced entry could be found I" the suite at 423,S. Brookhunt St.,.from which five Teddy K'eMedy watches and five akin diver watcbM were takfl'l • .. _ • Freeway. He escaped injury, Bociked was James Horton Jr., 35, of KeitbviUe, La i At about the same time, another .Jarge...rOfk was thrown from. the i same overpass anc. s m a 1 ~ e d through •the windshifld of a car driven by Dennis Griffin, 20, Baldwin Park. 1:1.e wu not injured . Offlcen said the woman's death was lhe third homfcide of that type within the past three months. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DEq MBER 17, 1.970 TEN ·CENTS .. . ' . Board Delays Jet·: Study • County to Wait on Probe of Two Other Sites Orange C:Ounty supervisors put. the brakes on past airport studies Wednesday and soared toward new horizons. limit traffic at Orange County Airport to the present contracts which allow, up to 41.8 jet Oighb per day to 1'72 and to allow Q>e-director of aviation to negotiate with the airlinel for service beyond 1972. but adhering to the no increase ln f.U&btS the Chino Hills m:ea. -Cinyon jetport, the Brea general aviatitrii Baker also wanted the board to adopt a pOrt, the joint use ·of El Toro Marlr\4 policy statement" lblt jet flights wer.! to COrps Air Station and the use of jet The board voted Lo defer study of any future jet airports in the COWJty until the feasibility of a jetport in the Otino HiUs (northeast of Brea and Placentia) or at Camp Pendleton is determined. be phased out at Orange CoWity Airport planes anYPre In the countr- and that the alrport commissioners study , The •14811®_ Parso~ !t~y is the possible sites for small airQ'aft use. . cu!mlnaUon of eigh~ years a( alrport principle. . He faUed to get a ,second on any of his studies carried out by the CO\Ulty-at a motiorts and after long debate the bofrd cost of more than $250,000. ' On motion of Supervisor Alton Allen, ·th·e b6ard member! directed the director of aviation and the airport commissioners to study these two sltes...without the use of outside . consultants. The two motions on the controveratal airport matter concluded almost toUr hours of wrangllng. finally accepted the Allen and Phillips C:Onsensu.s ol the superviaors and those motions. · · who· 1i)pe8red before them WednesdaY Supervisor David Baker failed to get through motions which would have staled that there are no jetport sites··Jvailable in the county with the possible except.ion of Previously board members had ~rd wu that the day of the jet plane was general opposition to tl·l ending Jn the county unless vut In another motion the board voted to recommendations in the Parsons reptrl. improvements were made in noise ancl Ruled ool by 1peake11 wer< the J,ell (See AllU!ORTS, hgt 'J} 2 Plead Guilty In Kidnaping . Of County Man Two men who o~. raced murder charges following the death of a man found shackled to a standpipe in the billing garage of a Los Alamitos home pleaded g u i It y WedAe.sday to lesser charges of kidnaping. Superior C:Ourt Judge James F. Judge sentenced Chester James Christopher, 29, or Los Angeles. to one year in Orange County Jail. noting that the defendant had already spent 11 months there. He placed Christopher on three years probalion. He ordered Raymond Graves Jr., of 12322 Martha Ann Driye. Los Alamitos, to return to court Jan. 2l-for what' could be a state priSon term of one to 10 years. It was stated in documents supporting the gµilly pleu that both men ,adlnilt<d kldniping Jlrµce lid; II!• of ~ ind liirdJ>i. him to ICCO!npanf. !hem· to tht· Martha Arm Drift heme. - Those same documents indicate thal Beck ns paid 11,000 by a 1ro1Jp he~ by Grav~s to purehue mariju.r,na f o r eventual resale. It ia ' stated that Beck wu ltidi'laped when he failed to produce • the drug after repeated demands. The badly bumed..-Beclc was-found by firemen who fought a garage fire at the Graves home on June 21, 1969. Beck, who9e charred hands had to be freed from manacles lashing him to a st.Ind pipe, died a few days later in a klcal ho<pital. Jnvutiga,tors said the dying man told them that he .himself set the ijre to aUraci attention. He did JO, officers said, in the belief that he would be killed when the gang led by Grave s returned. All charges have now been dropped against Roy Arthur Thunnan, 24, of 433 Howard St., Los Alamitos and Gordon Brown, 24. of Los Angeles. Both men were identified at the time of their arrests as members or lhe Graves gang. Canadian Armv • Fails to Flush ' Kidnap Suspects MONTREAL (UPlJ -Hundreds or army troops in Arctic gear and police itealed orr a suburban nelgh~hood today but failed to find thrte suspects sough! In the kidnap slaying of Quebec Labor Minister Pierre Laporte . Th.e 350-man force began moving out of the middle-class area when a house to house search failed to reveal any traCe or the susped.s. No arrests were made. The actlM. conducted during a blinding sOow storm. came two weeks to the day aft.er the same type of oper8tion resulled in the Quebec Liberation Front (FLQ) freeing another hosta~e. British Trade C:Ommi84ioner James R. Cross. Cub Scouts Aid GETl;lf!IG ·HELP -Jim Burdge. 18, . Mrr . CarolYn .Cbolnlere, a tea'cber of the e~ucationally hacdicapped at Fountain Valley School demon strate .use of Ian~uage machine. §tudeqt with re~.uling,difticulty s.e.es ne~ word, pron0;unces it,. then h.ftrs correct pronunciation for compai:ison. · Making . ·It Fun Aid for Educationally Handicapped By TERRY COVILLE 01 tM O.!ly ,lltf Sl•lf Davey is handicapped. He fidgets in his chair at school and can't read a book for more than a few words . At'the age of 10 school is a burden for him. "But learning can be fun," insists Sue Alderman, a l eac her f o r \he educationally handicapped in · Fouritaln Valley. because the same approach ts used to cure it. That -approach ls an fridlvldual teacher concentrating on an individual child and his partlcular disability. • "Reading Is one problem many of~these children have," Mrs. Alderman points auL "1bey can't j>ronouoce words correcctly or 'they reverse.letters." For in.!tance a cblld might think he i;ees the word "waa" when In the book it Ls ''saw." SomeWhere his-tnin'd reversed the "w" and.~ With her prodding a dozen youngsters like Davey might filter back to re,1ula\ classroom work this year at Fullon School. . ' MATH PROJSLEMS 1 · Sue has more than 30 colleague~ Other children can't get past simple throughout lluntlngton Beacti and math ptoblerns. · Fountain Valley doing the same job. Mr.s. Carolyn Cho~ere, .an EH teacher Their numbers are a:rowing as the area 's it Fountain Valley Sclx!of, finda molt of three elementary .school distri~ become ber pupils have problemJ wlfh m11th. N ed Fa •1 more d~eply Involved Jn the eduCatioilally "Each child Is dHfeitmt and hn to be C y lDJ y handicl_pped !EH) program. worked with in a dWerml way" she EH 1s not a two-letter btaod for ez ·iams ' , Cub Scout Pack 561;Huntineton Beach, children who will never make! It througtt ~each~ ire dlfierent · too Mrs w111--iei-an-extra-lttnner-place'-thl!-~ 9Cbool.--Jt!s.-the:-Gllifomla--way .of-~yin~ldftifiian 1118~ Gee: aines torliftm! · Christmas Eve for a hungry family. this boy _or lb1s. girl has ~ 1ndlv1dual lhe )'OUl)iaWr• in lnlb~, while Mn. The diMer guests havtn't been selected proble!"'. in learrung and he, or she neecb, Chofnieie·prefeia' pn'iee and rewards for yet. but each boy h ready to chjp In 25 an lnd1v1dual solution to thit problem. deeds well ·dMe. , . .ce nts to buy a turkey dinner for some GiF'TED HANDICAPPED Basically, there are two types of EH need y family. . "Some mentally girted students are progralN fot; whlch. the atate providel Each y~ung cub ~~s promised ~ earn alJO educationally handicapped." explains substantial flhlnclal .aupporL his quarter for the diilnei". The Assistance P.fllo Bibelheimer, director of special One ls a aelf contained cllsarooll) for League .of Huntington Beach wUl tell the 1erv1ces for Fountain Valley School sWdenb wHh aerRlus-probJtms·"'19 mty Pack what family needs the food. District. . ' need three to five ytm Or cOnc!altrated Boys f~m t~ e.ack based at Spring An . EH' child suffers some particular · inst.ru,ctloft. View SChoOJ wdl also collect other f~ drawback in his learning ability. It may 11?C other .ls ·What. riloat schoolJ call Items with the hope that their spectal either be caused by deurologiclll (minor learning disability -groups. In euence family can enjoy the meal all week long. brain damage ) or etnotional problem.I, thus me.,w each EH child spends Ume Items will be taken to Marina High buf, in ~ case.• the problem cnn each W('tk (lrom one hour to 15 hours a School Dec. 17 for dlstribuUon. almost always be overcome by an Etl week) with th'e EH teacher for CUb Pack 56Lis headed by Cub Master teacher: conceolr•\ied lf.uctY. Larry Landesman.. Boys who would like ·School authorities don't always know If The 1tat.e pi.)'1'$1 18811 for eacb·chlld tn 11. to Join It may contact !toy Hartban, 816-1n ER child 1Urfers • neurological or learnlnc cllnijjllty group. It PIYI 117,llO &666. emotional problem, but it doesn't matter (See IJ'UDENTS, Pip J) l • Cameaigners For Crusade Get Pledges United Cruaade campalgne11 Ip Huntington Bea.ch and Fountain Valle~ have collected more than $1181000 iri pledget -well above the · 50 perant mark -for the 1171-goatof 118$,500. . Bill Foster, Huntington B·e ·a c II campaign chairman, aaid bis group has pledges totaling 193,550 or 80.5 percent of the llH,500 goal. Fountain Valley officials rep 6 rt · a>lledlng about125,000 or·au percenl of their $31,000 goal. . Conti'il>Utloo.s to United Crllsade may be made by malllog to the Crusade at 111182. Be~ Blvd;, Huntlnaion Beocb, « a<P.0. Boo 11861, FounlOinYlllay. 'l'!lirfy· .onf .ICPlr•te> Qioeie:a-are .-veCI. by tbrl Unlltd Cruude. ' -V&ney Fireme Don Santa Suits For Gift Givmg IMlead or their tradlUonaUltt OghtinJ ouUib, Fountain Valley's firemen might don red Santa Claus suJts um yule ....... 'Dwlb to a suooesatul Halloweerw barbecue the firemen's auoclation has been handing out mOre gHll to Joca1 group. than Santa. · Firemen recently apent •103 to buy basketball unlfortns' for the Fountain Valley Boys Club. They've alao donated to the Jaycees, Jaycettes, Salvation Army and will probably give • hand to Teen Help. Money isn't their own gift. Ton~ they'll help the chamber of com~ cook turkliys tor lta United Fund dinner at the community center. · Firemen said they earned about '80t frorri their barbecue dinner last October. "It was one of our best," ~tockton, treasurer of tht association, . Profits from the annual beaaie go toward . helping the youth ol tbe community and civic groups. Board Meets Tonight Trustees of the Fountain Valley SChoot Distrlct will hold their recular boaid meeting at 7 o'clock tonight in district offices, Nwnber one Llgbtbouae Lane. Weatller Another drippy day of It Is on the Friday Mrizon. with intermlv tent showers under' cloudy skies and temperatures dropping down to 51 degrees along' the tout. INSmE TODA "f The eur1ain ma11 bt goh1g _(iqum_Q!UI>< Chfldf'.11!'.•-1"llta!«._ Guild o/ Newport Harbor, which is lo.sing JU lta:se next:. nwnth. See Entertainment, Page 25. . °"" 7 ':;/' CHRISTMAS C•lfflMlll 1 CMtk'-t U• '1 ~!::.':" ! ~ c:,_.,. ,, o.lll ....-.. 11 --.. ~, .... l•""'9law1• M-H ·-...,, -" .... ......,.. ,, ...-. MM It hmtt 11, H • r • • - \ . 2 DAil Y PILOT H ThundtY. °""""' 17, 1970 Grand Jury Indicts 3 ~In Murde1· i ,,, • • • , LOS ANGE~S (UPI) -A grand jury 1~Uberated only four minutes before .returning secret indictmen ts Wednesday '."in the apparent slaying of a Co~boy •L'tuntman at the Spahn RanCh, onetime headqu1rttrs of Charlea Manaon'a cull .. The 11ames on the three lndlctments were kept secret -OOt it was belitved f\tanson, 36, and two of his followers were charged. lt would be the ninth slaying attributed to ,_ianson, now on trial for the Sharon Tate murders. Chief Deputy District Attorney J oseph P. Busch Jr. said he understood that the names were not revealed because Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, was ••upset about it." However. Bush said that the three were already in custody and two woold be arraigned today. Three former '"Manson . F am i I y ' ' members tealified before the jury in its: investigation of the death of Ronald ''Shorty" Shea, 36. , • Shea vanished in (August, 1969 and rumors.have persisted he was murdered, mutilated and buried on the ranch by members of the hippie clan. His body never has been found. One of the cult members who testif ied was Paul Watkins, who -told reporters, "It's about time that we look at a false prophet -Charlie Manson. What be sold in the name of love was death." Watkins would not dilCl.15S his grand Jury testimony but when he took the stand in the Tate murder trial he Aid he heard Manson discuss "the killing of a man named Shorty." The other two per!0111 believed to· have been indicted were Bruce Davis. TT. and Steve Grog1n, 11:-also known as Clem Tufts, who is being held in Inyo County or. a gun charge. . ITARJ Barbor U.glau CM&l•e 'I1tis is the route for nine-mile cruise throulh waters of Huntington Harbour to see Christmas liahts on . homes and boats. You can use your own boat, or. if your are a landlubber, you can catch a cruise boat at Huntington Harbour's Warner Aveliue Sales Office Dock. Price is $2 for adults and 50 cents for children under 12. Boats leave hourly from 6 p.m. to 10 p.m. through Sunday. Proceeds benefit Orange County Philharmonic Society Youth Concerts. A word of advice : Dress wannly. From Pagel STUDENTS •.. Kanarek showed up at the grand jury chambers shortly hf.fore testimony ended and when he emerged he said, "I believe and I do charge that the district attorney of Los Angeles County 111 deliberately Injecting matters before the public to prejudice the Tate-LaBlaqca case. I believe it is done with deliberate intent for each 12 studen~ in a aelf contained and malice." clw. The T1te frial, in recess since the Be.fore any district receives state disappearance of defense li.wyer Roriald money, however, it mU1t submit evidence Senate GrouP. w Probe Military Spy Reports . , - . - , 'Devil Cult' Case • Teen Faces Adult Trial Ill A Garden Grove youth accw.ed of compllclty in the "devil cult'' -knnng of MW ion Viejo teacher Florence Brown and the hatchet 1l1ylng of eervlct station attendant Jerry Wayn~ Carlin wu told Fro11t P-.e l AIRPORTS ... pollution factors. The Airport Commluion found the Parsons report "deficient in many areas" and the "moat serious deficiency to the cmsider1tlon of the fir1t coMtrait - people." In its recommendati o ns the commi!sion sug&ested: -That no 1ite suggested by the Parsons Company be identUied as acceptable. -That the board and commission establish more melsW'able standards by which sites are to be evaluated and that a priority or conside ration of such standards be clearly stated. -Tha t action be in itiated to improve the human f1cll ities for Orange County Airport with its limited defined use. Tha t ls. toUe l.5, waitlng roorna, food, baggaae, air cargo, etc. but avoiding any expansion which would permit additional airlines or passenger flight facilities . -El Toro Marine Corps Air Station 5hould be studied further so that the county will have a band· in any plan for joint use and a plan for civilian use. The county should not wait until an opportunity arises by reason of a change in position of the military before making its study. Tbe study should be made now so that the county will be able to protect those areas which may be affected. -That the board authorize the airport commission to institute further studies on Its own, without the ·employment of another consulting firm , to identify, if possible the location of a metroport site, general aviation airports and recreational airports. · Klllings Vledne1day that he will be tried 11 11 adul t for'the Carlin murder. • Superior Court Judge James F. Judge set Feb. 8 u the trial d1te f6r Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, and returned' the Z»pound defendant to Orange County Jail. HUlse's motion represenied his last chance to face the murder charges as a juvenile. That righ t was removed by an Orange County Grand Jury lndictment which removed the same privilegt!i fr-om transient Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, and Christopher "GY,Psy" Gibboney, 17, of Portland, Ore. If District Attomey Cecil Hicks' attempts •to extradite Gibboney are successful all three defend11.Qls and traasient Steven Craig Hurd, 20~ will {ace separate murder trials ln Superior Court. Hurd will get his trial date Friday from J udge Judge. Thit setting had bten delayed· pending Judge Robert L. Corfman's ruling <>n whether the alleJed leacter of a band of drillers was .sane and able to stand trii.l. Judge Cllrfman ruled that he was and Hurd will now be tried for the kffilncs of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and Jerry Wayne-C"a?lin,. 21, -0f SanllH!ha. - Taylor and Gibboney face identical charge'&. Hulse is aCcused of k i 11 J n g Carlin and being an accessory lo the Brown murder. Mrs. Brown's body wu found last June 15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway by ilivestlgators who noted .that her left arm and vit.i.1 organs were severed from the mutilated body. It is alleged that Hurd aud his group conducted .rJter associated w l t b devil worship Over her and de voured parts of her body after they stabbed her to death in an Irvine -Orange grove. Northern Stat.e Storm 'Drifts To Orange Coast Hughes, was due to resume Monday with from the :school teacher, physician, nW"se a substitute attorney. and psychologist that ·a child qualiflea for WASHINGTON (UPI ) -. A Senate Manson, Leslie Van Houten, Patricia EH help. subcommittee will conduct a formal -That the board Immediately instruct the Local Agency F o r m a t i o n Commission. Planning Commissitln and ne w Airport Land Use Commission to take all steps necessary to protect the who made the reports was identified as approach and clear zones at i:l Toro A tired-out storm that spent It.self John M. O'Brien of Evanston. ID., who MCAS. lashing. ~Northern California with a had held the rank of staff sergeant and In defense. Stanley Wa lsh; consultant for a one.year period starting in June. for the Par!Ons Company, sa id. "The downpour including heavy hall and snow 1969, was as1igned to the Midwest offict: commission and others are deficient in drifted over the Orange Coast today with of the 113th Military Intelligence Group understanding what the scope of the sprinkles and weak ru mbles of thUnder. Knnwlnkel and Susan Alkins have been Eacli dlslrid also hu a board of probe ot reports by a former U.S. Army on trial ainct June lS in the Aug. 9-10, admisslm. which determines when a lnteJllgence agent that the military apied 1969 slaying of Miss Tate and four other student enters the program and when he on federal and mte oHiciab:, including ~ at her estate, and grocer Leno leaves it. r LaBianca and his wile ROiemary the Sen. AdlaJ E. St.evenson ID. in Chicago. · report is. The scope was not defi111ed and, __ lJllL.laU~L~-. '"'"''"'°"''--,. W>rm-b.*'t-a-n-~----"-~-.~--we-coulltilortake;tJelml>·a·ct-orpeo~1e-O'Bflen &illil e was a omestic •PY into account by sur'veys because we did disintegrating Wednesday night. but for the Army" and he stated th'e h h f d" could dribble coast.al areas with a few How 1lJe districts set up their proif&mJ J..----f~ol\'!1 ~· §d/!!!!l!:Li;;;:;;:----u;;;:-fil,~::;.--ts'Uirl!i=ti.!i!i;;'-""-""-"--'-"--'--"----::&en~Sam-J,-Emn-1°'N:c:r,-111 · Ion, Manson, Miss Atkin• and Wednesday. the officlalJ wm the tar1ets • Davis· In due to go on trial after the first 1be Oowa VleJ Scbool District hu of Anny undercover investlgatlon.s during of Ibo· you In Ille July; 1969 stabbing <libt sell~ EH claaOI at flve of death of mueician Guy ffinman _ Former ft.I 2.1 rehoolJ. ADd there 1a a !urning thelr campalgna or while they were in cult member Robe.rt Beausoleil already disability groop at every 1Cbool. A total office. ffe .. charged they were placed has been condemned to death in that ol 270 youngsers are in the Ocean View under surveillance beca.111e they oppoaed kilUnf EH program. ' or did not actively support t h e Resident Files Huntington Suit Huntington Hsrbour resident Arthur Knox has filed suit against the city of Huntington Beach in an attempt to halt the multl·million dollar Sunset Bay project. ' Thursday, Superior eourl Judge Har· mon Scoville refused to grant a t.empor· ary injunction against the proposed bay· lihie project, but ordered the city to ap- pear in court December 28 to sh-Ow cause why an injunction should not be granted. Knox opposes a conditional exception granted to a Beverly Hills finn which will aJlow construction of two 11-story wwers. four three-story apartments, a shopping cent.er and creation of a penin- sula surrounded by 300 boat slips. He claims the city never showed a legal hardship in granting the e>K"eption for the towers which \\.'ill be built next to Huntington Harbour on Paqfic Coast Highw11y. ILY PILOT OlllAHGl COAST l'Ul l lSHINCS COMl"ANY Rob11t N, W11d l'r11klent •r.d Pu1H11Mr J •clt R. Curley I/kt Pr~~wit 1r.4 G111..-r1t ,,.,,_fllfer Tho1111s f<M ..,il E<tllor Thom1s A. Mwrphi~• M1 .... Jn1 Edi,« Al111 Oirki~ Wal Onl'Qtl C.ounry Edller Alb1rt W. l1t11 Al10Cl1le Editor Hntl111to• .._. Offlc. 17175 leech lo~l1Y1rd M1llll19 Adilr111 1 P.O. loit 7tO, 92641 Otllt' OHWe Llll.lfll 91Kll: 111'•""''1......,ue (MJ1 M1'41: UG Wn ! toy S!rNI fll"*"°'1hK~:1211 Wnt •1Tbo1 ~lwtrd NII"'~": .10$)10!'J lt l l.Ctmlno RuL ·-- "About 40-50 j>eroent ot tl)f children In a lNrnlng dlubllity group· 10 back to 1ovunment's policy in Vietnam or fulltime classwork in the year," Nortn becaUR they disagreed with the domestic Glnaberg, director of perlOfme) wvice11 policies of the NU:on adminlltration. revealed. "I don't remember an EH child' A lpokesman fer the Army aaid the in this group that ever had to. stay more service was "-avely conc:erned" over than three years." · .. "In the contained ctas.ses tbe return Ervin'• ch a r I es, He Aid 1 u ch percentage drops to about 12 percent." survtillanoe of civiliana wu prohibited Ginsberg added. "Their prob!.., are by Army policy. Tbe Wblte llouae aaid it more severe." was "inconoeivable" to Preaident Nllbn Ocean View expects to receive '312.-, that the mlllt.ary would spy on political in s~te help this year while spsiding fi11rures . Other coneressmen responded $105,965 of its own money. ..- Fountaiil Valley School Di1trict does wlth angry words. not offer the self contained cl1asrooma, "We hav.e reached a frigbt.ening state but has aluil time EH teacher at each of of military control in Otis country," 11ld its 13 schools. Its learning disability Rep. Abner Mikva (6 .. nl.). "The whole classrooms contain about 124 students. "I'd say about 50 percent of our concept of civilian control of the military youngsters go back t-0 class each year,'' ls in jeopardy and U this thing is not Bibelheimer explained. "Some students stopped all the people J'ilJ h,lve left t-0 do with severe problem s are in the pirt-time ill aalute." group." . The former Army intelligence agent Fountain Valley will pick up $134,753 in state money this year whlle spe~ng $44 ,000 of i~ own. The Huntington Beach City (elemen- tary) School District is only In its second year of EH studier. This year th e district is offering three self conta ined classes and ooe learning dlsablli ty group to '3 ch ildren . It will receive an estimated $30,000 from the state thi.s year and spend $85,000 of its own inoney. All districts are considering expansion of their progiams. Anaheim Probes $200,000 Fire -------, Investigation Is continuing today into the cause Of ;t $200,000 fire whi ch raged through the French Cleaners pJ1nt in Anah eim Wednesda,Y. Fire officials said they believed the cause was accide nta l and not Incendiary. The.Jlte_st.arted in the production aru of the 605 E. Lincoln Ave. plant and t.o- tally destroyed machh1ery and clothing. SUght damage was done to th e front shop se<'tion and-clothi ng -on-rackrthere-:- Third Nuclear Blast In 2 Days 'Norm al' YUCCA FLAT. Nev. IUPll -The Atomic Energy Commission e1ploded the r.hlrd nuclear device in two d1y1 at this desert teat site e11rly today and 1ccordlnc to an AEC spoketman, everythln& was .. normal ." Th~ device ~·as part of the we1 pons test program and had 1 yield range ol 200 kilotons, or one megalon. Its code name was "Carptl B1tg." Valley Council Nixes Expansion Of Civic Cent.er Fountain Valley isn't qult.e ready to hire an architect for el])lnSlon of the civic center. Cou•c i lmen balked this week at 1ignlng a proposed contract with Blurock and Associate!: of NeWJ)Ort Beach, designers al the original city hall com pl~ "I think it'11 a little prem1ture for this 11ort of tblng," Councilman John Harper said. ;,Aa a council we haven't even begun to talk about the city hall or police facility .'' Counc~n agreed to wait for a revlaion· of the contract which would speclfy that Blurock would only work on orders from the city. Fountain Valley is nearly ready to e1pand ita civic center complu which at oM location includes the p o 11 c e department, d ty ball and the community ctnter. and at another site covers the corporation yards. A apa ce uUIJution study has been midi!! and Is ~ under c:onsJderatlon on the clly hall lta<U. and the park.< and recreation commission has held two public hearings on the community center eipanaion . Council men set 7:30 p.m .• Dec. 29 as the date for a study se1aion 11t which time they will talk about au potentia l expansion. -• intelligence group ma Int a 1 n e d a ~~cha~~:~?ug un mg to expend that sbov.·ers until Friday afternoon. "subversives file" that contained dossiers As to city staffs which had said that Los ,Angeles had .54 inches by early on 800 individuals in Illinola alone, who -Parsons' rep re 5 en ta t 1 v e 9 were today, but not enough prectp itation fell to Included Stevenson . former Gov. Otto perfuncl<>ry in their approach lo local even register on the Orange County Kerner, now a federal circuit court proble ms and officials, Walsh said, "they Harbor District ga~ge in NewJX>rt Beach. judge : Mikva and the Rev. Jesse Jackson would logically say that because they are "Just a trace. but we might have of Chicago, who heads the antipoverty against airports." somethin~ measurable by 4:30 'p.m.," Operation Breadbasket project of the Walsh said the cpport unity to establish said a spokesman this morning. · -Southern Christian Le ad er sh i p a single jet airport in Orange County Brief but heavy showers hit elsewhere Confereace. which would satisfy most criteria is long on the Orange Coast. Ervin prom 1 s e d the Senate past. He suggested officials look to the Rainfall in Los Angeles brought the ConstltuUonal Right s Subcommittee future when Short Takeoff and Landing current season's total to 6.33 inches, a bit would hold hearings in February on the (STOL) plans will be available. high for mid·December by nonnal int.elliience agent's reports. When the consult.Ant lntl ma ted that the standard1. By February, Ervin said, be hoped the county had passed that point where a jet Snow fl urrits brough t the snowline Anny "will have fully disclosed all that it airport ia feas ible.. Deputy County down to the 4,000.foot level. promising .a h11 done and that it can a.ssure us it is JlO Counsel Arnold Nuttman ch allenged, white Christmas for many Sout hland ski lon1er happenln& at any levels." ''Your report does not say tha t." and resort areas. .. r1nd Amulngl Extraordlaaryl Coloa11ll Why? Becaun In this brlITlant nylon face 1h1g Karastan'a color wizards have drNmed up such aparkll"llJlllxes u lnctedlbl• Blue, Amazing White, Extr1ordln1ry Gold and even ColOISI/ Copper. Fabulous hu DO of theae colors. They'roall Incredible, really. ( !loliolom -• lo nclllllt -""' wltlo Mldal1t ITl1t•· 11. t ' z 11' f., .. 1y $1J4.HI Fabulous Color! · Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 64a-0275 1or "&II -.xpert- <arp<t , consultant ....._ "''ho v.1ll come to your home \\oith samples "'1thout any obllption t~ you! f\J. GARRE"fT f U RNITLJ ~~ HA~BOR BLVD. PROFESSIONAL Op<0 M• .. Tllurs. l l'rl. In~ COSTA MESA, CA LIF. INTERIOR DESIGNE~S 646.0275 646-0176 ' -., l • ' ~ewport Beae-._ Today's Final EDITION VOl. oJ, NO. 301, J SECTIONS, o40 PAGES ORA NGE. COJJNTY, CALIFORNIA . JHURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1970 -. TEN .CENTS ·- 3 Newport Marinas Must Pay Tideland Fees By JACK BROBACK Of "11 0.lh' f'U .. Iliff , Three Newport Harbor commercial marinas and a floatin~ restaurant which have escaped paying tldetani:is f~s ~p ·to now will be assessed but private piers got another reprieve Wednesday from the Orange County Board of Supervisors. After more than three hours of debate, the board voted to impose tidelands fees beginning Jati. I on the Bayside Village Boal Launch Slips, the Swales Yacht Anchorage and the Newport Harbor Yacht Landing in Bayshores. The rale is &"cents per square foot annually. The tbrff marinas are located near Upper Nef.,,ort Bay B~idge. , The .imposition of lees brought the ra·cilitfes in parity wltli three other harbor' marinas which have been paying 20 pfrcent of their gross !lip· reiltal to the county. '.J'hey afe the Balboa Bay C!Ub slip!!; Bayshore Trailer Pa·rk slips and the Channel Reef Community Association v near the harbor entrance. The Reuben E. Lee lloaUng restaurant at Upper Bay Britlge will be asaesaed '5,600 a year as long as Jt remains on oounty tidelands. The original agreement on this facility was ·conditioned on It being located behind the e s: i. s ti n g bulkhea(l lines bl.It one·third of the restaurant is on county tidelands. Supervisors also decided t h a t Departme11t of Real Properties reeom4 mendations should be adopted as follows: • • -The county mrvt)'<I' be lnstrucled to survey and monument the coqntyts property line on Harbor Island. (lbls Is based on the COJ'!tenUon that the ruldents ol this private Island have bollt private beaches on public tidelands arta). -The county Planning directot , after consulting_ with the cHy of Newport Beach Tidelands idmlni.!trator be asked to report to the supervisors if It is his determination that the best long term Ute of the Bayshores land is for private Gun · Assault Described Officer Testifies in Newport Police S1iooting By L. PETER KRIEG Of flit 0.llY •U1r Sllff Arthur Lambert, 61, accused in the shOoting of two Newport Beach policemen who stopped him for erratic driving Nov. 14, was bound over lo Superior Court and must face trial Wednesday afetr municipal CQurt testi1nony of a third olficer y:ho said he witnessed the shooting. Officer Thomas B. Smith testirled he had rolled to the scene thinking he would show l\•10 high school girls in his car as part or a student ·'ride along" program how police handle a drunken driving arrest. The first thing he said he saw was Lambert and Officers James Gardiner and Richard Ellingham standing outside Lambert's car in the Newport Dunes • • Trailer Park on Pacific Coast Highway apJ)arenUy in conversation. Smith testified he saw Lambert suddenly "move his rii:ht arm, thrust his hand forward toward G a rd i n' e r ' s midsection." He testified he heard a sound like a gunshot, saw Gardiner s t u m b I e backwards, screaming "I'm hit, I'm hit." He admitted he hadn't seen the gun in Laffibert's hand. Smith said immediately after the first shot. Ellingham leaped forward, grabbed Lambert's Mist with his left hand, pulled jt dOwn and turned Lambert to the right. "Then I heard another shot," -he testified. • Smith said both men started to fall to the ground and in .the strua;gle he heard anotli.er report. · Otlter Sites PHbed Board Votes : t,o .De er . ' . County Jetport Study ' • h Orange County supervisors put t e brakes on past airport studies Wednesday and soared toward new horizons. The board voted to deler study of any future jet airports in the county until the feasibility of a jetport in the Chino Hills (northeast of Brea and Placentia) or at Camp PendJeton is determli:ied. On motion of Supervisor Alton Allen, the board members directed the director of aviation and the airport commissioners to study these two sites without the use of outside consultants. . • In another motion the board voted to Umit traffic at Orange County Airport lit the present eontract1 'vhich allow up to 41.8 jet flights per day to 1972 and t.o allow the director of aviation to negotiate with the airlines for service beyond 1972 but adhering to the no increase lo flights principle. The two motions on the controversial airport matter concluded almost four hours of wrangling. Supervisor David Baker failed to get through motions which would have stated that there are no jetport sites available in the county with the possible excepUon of the Chino Hills area. Baker also wanted tbe board to adopt a policy statement that jet flights were to be phased out at Orange County Airport and that the airport commissioners study possible sites for small aircraft use. He failed to get a second on any of his motions and after Jong debate the board finally accepted the. Allen and Phillips .motions. Previously board members had heard general opposition to all recommendations in the Parsons report. Ruled out by speaken· were the Bell Canyon jetport, the Brea general aviation port, the joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and the use o( jet planes anywhere in the county. The $140,000' Parsons study is the culmination of eight years of airport studies carried out by the county at a cost of more than $250,'000. Consensus of the supervisors and those who appeared Wore them Wednesd11.y was that the day of the jet plane was ending in ~the county unless vast improvemeMs were made in ooise and (See Allll'ORTS, Page I) , My Lai GI Quotes Medina 'Pa1·ty Over-Ceasefire' Joi. BENNING, Ga . (UPI) -The Wednesday -that ?.fedina called off the Calley court-martial recessed for the killing at My Lai with the announcement: Olristmas holidays today arter hearing "the party's over -that's enough the 15th consecutive witness testify that shootin' for today." Capt. Ernest L. Medina ordered the Before excusing · the jurors or the Vietnamese village of My Lai destroyed. holidays, the trial judge, Col. Reid W. James ~1. McBreen. a 23-year-old shoe Kennedy, reminded them they were not salesman who gave his address only as to . dl.aicuss the case with anyone, or to "Long Jsland, N. Y ., " conceded under read or listen to news accounts of it. cross-examination that Medina had not "This is a particularly critical tlme," specifically ordered women and children Kennedy said. "You will atte~d, I'm sure, killed.--but .added:. _ --- ---~-&everal-aoclal-aatberings.-Be-sure to "We had been told only Viel Cong or avoid activity of any kind that in any way their sym pathizers were there (in My would affect this case." Lai) and anything left was to be killed." Kennedy then went on 'to give the six . Medina. who-underwent a preliminary officers bearing the case .elaborate hearing in Atla nta today to determine , instructions in the event they dtd read or whether he, too, should stand trial, was hear anything that might influence their lst Lt. William L. Calley's commanding judgment. officer in Vietnam. , Calley, whose life is at stake in the Calley is standing court-martial for trial, isaid he would "probably do some allegedly killing, or di~ecting his men to skiing" dur ing the long holiday recess. kill. 102 Sout h Vietnamese civilians on The 27·year.old officer also said he li-farch 16, 1968, the day he led his platoon pas'sibly would visit with his parents. who on a s~·eep through h1y Lai. The defense live .in Miami, Fla. claJms that anything Calley did that day, When Kinch returned to the sta nd Ile did upon orders frpm A-1edina. today 'Capt. Aubrey M. Daniel III, the The nexl to last witnesses before the chief prosecutor, 8$ked him to elaborate three-week recess, Thomas J. Kinch, 24, on hili testimony of wed n e td a y . flf Cape May, N.J. returned to the stand particularly about Medina'& •:the party's today and repeated a statement ht made over" comment. • "I savr the gun in the defendant's left hand,.. he recalled, relating t ha t Ellingham, who had a bullet in his knee, "had both hands around Lambert's wrist," rorcing the gun out of his hand. Defense attorney Joe Borges Jr. asked Smith under cross exa mination to draw the scene on large poster paper. lie asked him several details about t~e scene. such as the color of Lambert's car and trailer. whether certain car doors were open or closed. · These details Smith said he could not remembe r very well. Borges in redirect examination told Judge Everett Dickey he was attempting lo determine the "accuracy~of Smilli's recolle,ctio.n. ~' · · . Bdrg~s subseguenµy entered 41·.Jl'.ll)~n . to · throw . oµt.: lM?th '~arge~1 ;ma~ 'l ' \ ' 1, AWARDED SILVER STAR N•wport Beach's W1ll1c1 Ne wport Beach, SoWier Wins Silver Star Heroics he performed \\"ith h i s helicopter-in Vietnam ha \fe eamed a Ne~·port Beach soldier the silver star. the Department of the Army has announced. James D. Wallace, a Newport Harbor lligh School and Orange Coast College graduate, has been cited for his ''personal bravery" on a mission near Quang Tri. \Vallact, son of llfr. and Mrs. J. O. Wallace, 409 Colton St.. had depos ited a reconna~nce ~earn under hea,vy fire, then wa s forced to pick It up minutes late~ . w~ a second helicopter wa.s una~le to land and the mission was aborted, according to the citation' It said his aiicraft sustained . several hits· and was rocked by explosion, but nevertheless he established a stable hover above the zone and lowered a rope ladder allowing the four.man team to climb onto it. Depa,rting the area sti ll under fire, Walface learned a man had lost bis grtp and was about to fall. He ln1medtatety put down, still under fire , to allow all four men to scramble inside the crafL Wallace is currently on his second tour of duty in Vietnam with the lOlst Assault Helicopter Battalion and has previously earned t~·o Distinguished Flying Crosses and seve ral other medals. Whlle attending OCC. Wallace was a member of the waler polo team where he earned all-conference honors. .1 ~ District Attorney lluJadl Serbtr had failed to. prodi.lce evidence !lie crimu of attempted murder had taken place. Judge Dickey rejected the request. instead ordering first appearances set for next Wednesday in Superior court. Neither of lhe wounded policemen, both of whom have returned to limited duty,· were called to testify at the· preliminary hearing. Serber did call Officer Albert Daum Jr. to the stand in an apparent effort to introduce a conversation he had had \\•ith Lambert later en route t.o Hoag Memorial Ho.spltal for a blood alcohol test. Judge Dickey sustained a defense objection to the qiiestioning. Lambert, himself, who has already en'-'red pleu of inaocent, w11 not put on the stand. · ' . Property Sale, For New Funds Newport Beach stands to make nearly $600,000 on the aale of Jts city dump property and more than $300,000 on a two-acre tract it owoa: at an intersection in Huntinglon Beach. The city ii currenUy preparing plans te sell bof:h pirceJs. rt may h&ve to use the funds to finance · construction .of facJlitles for the .new Harbor. Judicial Dl1trict court. tq be built In Newport Center: Tbe city Council Monday rilghl agreed to sign a contract with the co\mty. Under terms of tbe contract, the city is to provide about $700,000 in faciliUes it bad promised in luring the courts to the site of its planned civic center. No funds ell!ist for any portion of the project at the moment. A committee was named Monday to prepare detailed flnanc·lal data. The dump property, 40 acres located at the end of Costa Mesa's 19th Street, will probably be sold in February or March. Several developers have a ~ r e ad y expressed interest · In acquiring the property for a trailer park. City Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt told the council Monday be expects to ask authorization for sale· of the tract at Brookhurst Street and Adams A venue in HunUngtoQ Beach, at the .Jan: 11 counOU meeting. He said a rriinimum acceptable sate price wlil be $324,000. Rock Dropper Suspect Hel,d LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A migrant worker was jailed on 1 suspicion ·of murder today alttr a Del Mar woman was ltllled when a SS.pound rock was dropped from an ove_rpass and C!~she4 ~gb the • ~wiridiJiield.of.the car. in ·wblclube .- was riding. The dead Woman wa1 ' ldenUfied •• Mn.' Charlotte Sprague, 115. Sile . was , riding with her ·hu1hlnd, William, 66, on the Golden Slate Fre~way .• & eScaped Injury. 1Jooted. ''""' James Horton Jr., 35, ol Keitlwllle, La. Al •bout the same time, another large rock was thrown fiom the same overpa!s. anci 11 m a s h e d through the wlnd!hleld o( a car drlven by Deonls Griffin,, 20, Baldwin Park. He was not ldJured. onJcen "satd ~ woman'• dtatb w .. the third bomlclcle ol that IJpt within tho plll three ruonths. homes or a marina. In deferring tidelands feta for private residential piers and I a n d i n g s , superviaors bowed to lhe wiShel of the city of Newport Beach. the Newport · Harbor Chamber tf Commerce and the COW1ty harbor commlnlon. Board' . meinbera a!So agreed to a harbor commission recommendation that an 2ndepende0L appndaer be hitei:I to determine fair rental value of county tidelands. Stanley Krause, director ol real proRf,rty services, in hia second report iri six .'mon~ on ·the ~e reCommeqde4 again tlla,t private slips be charged '6 pet foot rental·per year. He. aJso recomm~nded that the thrtf! commertiaJ marinas exempted up to this point be assessed 12 cents· p e r squani foot. Supervi!!Qr! cut that figure in ha1f. · MayorlA:I Hlrttrof Newport Beach sald bis city had asked Assemblyman Rober! '(See TIDELANDS, l'llp I) ' ' ~, ' MARSHA~ USHERS LAMBERT INTO MUNICIPAL COURT Newport Man ~aces Tri1I in Police Shoot ings Senate Group to Probe Military Spy Reports WASllJNGTON (UPI) -A Senate subcomn\Jttee will conduct a formal probe'-Of reports by a forl'lier U .. S. Army intelligence agent lh8t tJJe. milllftry .spied on federal and state oftlci~ls. iIJclucUvg Sen. Adlai E. Stevensori IIJ. Sen. Sam J. Ervin (0.N·.C. ), said Wedntsday the olflclals were the targets qr ¥my undercover investigations during their campaign!. or while they .were in office. He charged they were placed under surveillance because they opposed or did not actively suppor_t t b e government's policy in Vietnam or ~ause lhey disagreed with the domestic polictes of the Nixon administration. A spokesman for the Army said the service was "gravely cori~med" over Ervin's charges, He. said' sueh surveillance of civilians was prohibited by Army poliCy. The White House said it was "lnconcelvable " to President Nixon that the -military would spy on political figures. Other congressmen responded with angry words. "We have reached a frightening state Or military control in this cOuntry," said Rep. Abner Mikva (D.-111.). "The whole concept of civilian control of the milita1·y is in jeopardy and if -th is thing is not sWpped all the people will hq,ve left to do ls salute." The former Army intelligence agent who made the reports was identified as John ,M. O'Brien of Evamton, DI.. who h4d held the rank of staff ,sergea~t and. (or a one-year period ·starting in .J~. 1969, ·was assigned to the· Midwest· office of the 113th Military Intelligence Group in Chicago. €>'Brien said he \Vas ,"a domestic spy fg~ the'. Anny" andl he staf,ed the intelligence group main t.a.J n e d ·a "sub.versives file" that contaiped dossM!-r• on 800 indlwiduals in Illinois alone,. Who, included Stevenson, fol'JJ)er Gov. Otto Kerner, now. a federal circuit coti:r( jucij!"e; Mikva and the Rev. Jesse Jackson· of Chicago, who ' beads the antipoverty' Operation Breadbasket project of the Southern Christian Le a d e r 1 h j p Conference. · -Orange Weather Another drippy day of it is on the Friday Mrizon, with· intermit- tent .stiow~rs under Cloudy skies B Quh Ph and ternperatures dropping, down oys. . oto to 56 degrees along the coas~. INSIDE TODAY w or~ on Displ~y Th• curf<lin may . b< going · ' :down on the Childrtn'I TheiJter -Shob·bY·two·~OUllil·photogaphen-from.--G·-ra · •= -the: &Ys CIUb' .of .the Harbor >.rea are · u1 of i,e;WjfoffHO:tOOr, WlliCn among GJtjbits being shown this week is L03ing it& leose ntzt month. CDec. 12-18) at the White House Confer. See Entertainment, Page 25. enCe 'On ciilldten lri Washington. Na,x .~~ .ff om. 9,. and . Jami( "fufsso, 1 10, are. 1J1ember1 of the Central Br~h Phologi"aJ>hl Club and were fln"aTists in the Nattonal Fine, Atts Exllibit colnpe,ti- tion rorbo~·13 and under. "Light In the Window," ls Max's entry, while '"A Bedtime Story," ls the title picked by Jamie; '~As Boys See ft." is the tit!! of the ohibit Itself, comprised of 7S photos and scheduled for showing in April at the semi-annual Boys ,Clubs ·of America Na· Ilona! BoaTd MetUng. Tbey wlll also be vl.cwed In May 't the natlooal' Boys .Club <Onvenllon bi At- lanta. -~----· -~-----·---·--. °"" 7 ' ~ CHRISTMAS .. ,1 •l '· •• ,, . • i .. -· f r l I ': ~'--O.ll_lY_P_l.;.l0'-1---N---.CThc:llrSd=rt• Ot<1mbtf 17, 1970 ·Civic Site. Chotlner Case Priorities' Attorney Gets . , Data Sought l:ou r~ -Grilling· The NIWJ)Ort B .. <h City C.Q11cil has directed-the city staff to reor11nlze priori~ts to give the planning department time to study the propoeed Lower Newport Bay Civic Di.strict. The oounell Monday directed that city !oning enforcement offtetr William Foley bt aMitntd to the project, which City PlaMer Laurence Wilson indicated will take about two weeks. The civic district. 11 preposed by COuhcilman Cir! Kymla, would provide tighter controls on construct.ion along tbe city's shoreline. Today, William L O'Bryon, chairman of the Baylborts Asaoctation, wrote the city council ukfng for immediate actkm on it. O'Bryon cited the ll'Owlni number of propolAla for high-rise development aloo~ tht harbor and oceanfront, and said these shou1d have to fall under the rr:gulations that would be imposed by the district. Christmas Surprise A Newport Beach lawytr t~1y faced a prolonged grilling from White _Houk aid~ Murray Cbotiner in a courtroom skirmish that ceatered'on the $1,800 fee .he charged F r om Page 1 AIRPORTS ... pollution factors. The Airport Commission found the Par50ns report "deficient in many areas" and the "most serious deficiency to the consideration of the first constrait - people.'' In its reco mmenda t io n s the commission suggested: -That no site sug1ested by the Parsons Company be Identified as acceptable. -That the board and commission .. The BalbOa Bay Club has just recently a!lMUllCtd its intention to devtlop another hlJh rite on our city owned J>l"'P"rly. "I also understand that plan& are under way for hi&h rise development in. the Balboa Fun Zone area and tbe ltenduvoua Ballroom arta,'' he said. Newport-Mesa school Superintendent William Cun-- ningham got a Charlie Brown Christmas this morn- in~ when fourth, fifth and sixth grade students from Lindbergh School in Co•ta Mesa popped in to his office to wis h him the merriest. Children and teachers made the costumes for school Christmas pro.gram. Snoopy is really J oanne Pumphrey, 11, a sixth grader. establi.sh more measurable standards by which sites are to be evaluated and that a priority of c<>nsidEiration of s u c h standards be clearly stated. -That a~ion be irutlated to. improve the human facilities for Orange County Airport with its limited defined use. That O'Bryon u id be knows of plans for other c:ommucial and I n d u a l r l a l development planned olan& the water. "lnlsm.ucb as the above menUoned developments are lmmlnent." be uld. "I '""""1Y urge thal the blChesl priority be given le< the study, 1ppllcalloo ud cmlioa•ol the Lowtr Newport Bay Civic Dillrid, "' thal the developmenfll now being propooed -In lbe p!"ll'llD. of the diltricl" Policemen Sound, Special Warning to Bike Riders Juvenile to Get Trial As Adult In 'Cult' Deaths With acddent.5 involving-bicycle ridt rs at an all time high of 51 so fa r th is yea r .-~ Beach, traffic officers are remindinithildren and adults of the rules of the road. Stan Bressler, traffic investigator for the police says, "Last year we had 30. So far t.hJs year we've had 50 and t.here'U probably be more before the yea r's out if people keep going the way they have recenUy." Btessler u.id ~t of the accidents involve people -mo.st of the m are childre11 -who att ridini against traffic oa the wrong side cl the street. A second ICIU1'Ce of the mishaps ls cars -that pull cut ol lide "'"ts int. t.he paths of .eydiats.. Bre5Sler explained. He said the vehicle code states that cyclists will use the extreme right hand side of the road, that they will stop for stop signs and that they will signal be fore turning. "The worst time seems to be when school is opening or closing and the bigge!ll violators seem to be in the 12 to 13 age group:' he noted . The police do issue citations to bicycle riders who are in viol ation of the traffic laws. Northern State Stor m Drifts To Orange Coast is. toilets, wailing rooms, food, baggage, air cargo, etc. but avoiding any erpansion which would permit additional airlines or passenger flight filcllilles . -El Toro Marine Corps Air Station should be stud>ed further m that the county will have a band in an,y plan for joint use and a plan for civilian use. The county should not wait until an opportunity arises by reason of a change A tind~t storm that spent itself in posjtlon of the military before making lashing Northern California wHh a its study. 'Mle study should be made. now downpour includ ing heavy hail and Snow so that the county will be able to protect drifted over the Orange Coast today with those areas which may be ,alfected. sprinkles and weak rumble:s of thunder. -That the board authorize the airport Th eommis!lion to institute further studies on e latest season stonn beg an its own , without the employment of disintegrating Wednesday night. but another c.onsulting firm , to ldtntift. if could dribble coast.a l areas with a few possible the location of a metroport site. showers until Friday afternoon . general aviation airports an d recreational Los Angeles had .54 inche!l by early airports. toda y, but not enough precipitation fell to -That the board immediately ins truct even register on the Orange County the Loca l Agency F 0 rm a t i 0 n Harbor District gauge in Newport Beach. Commission, Planning Commission and "Just a trace, but we might have new Airport Land Use Commi!sion to ~ethi11R measurable by 4:30 p.m.," take all ste~ necessary to protect the said a spokesman this monUng. approach and clear zones at El Toro Brief but heavy showers hit elsewhere MCAS. on the Orange Coast. In defense. Stanley \Va\sh. consultant Rainfall in ,Los Angeles ~rought lh.e for the Parsons Company, said. '.'The Cbotiner's estra.Q.&ed wilt. i... Attorney Donald 8. SmallWOOd of .Costa 1tfesa. an· unscheduled witness la the _Orange County · Supt!rlor Court divorce trial of Murray and Mimi Chcitiner, 44. ~·~s forced In a long session on tbe "''1!,ness ~ta.nd to .spell oµt pho~ c1ll·bY· phone call each contribution to the 40· hour total on his bill. Chotiner, 61 , left no doubts. that be considered Smallwood's bill excessive and tie rebuked the lawye r for not bringing his time charts to the courtroom. "I wasn't . sti~~sed to be h~re," Smallwood said. I m actually working on a trial In another c6urtroom and it wasn't planned that I testify here t;day." Smallwood has sued Chotiner in municipal .court for the $,l,800 fee asse rt.edly c;ompiled in his representaUoa of Mr_s. Chotiner. She Is represented in the current trial by Los Angeles la.wyer Bernard Leckie . Mrs. Chotiner·s attorney is eicpected te press (or a court order that Chotiner pay Smallwood's fee wheo Judge Samuel Dreizen eventually rules on t h t. dispOs'ition ·o( ttle CouPle's c"onimunity property. · · f.1.rs. Chotiner wants at least half the value of the $68,000 home at 1637 Lincoln Lane, Newport Beach. and a tolal of about $1.200 a month· "in support· for the first five' years after dissolution of the marriage, She is currently drawing a tot.al allowance of about $1,100 a month fro m President NiiOn's special co unse t. CbOtiner has · repeatedly testified that payment of the allowance bas left him in dept ·and forced him to borrow several thousand dollars from friends. Chotin~r went on the witness stand for the third day in a row today to aid Leckie in a Painstaking enumeration of any assets that may be declared community properly by Judge Dreizen. · He repeated today what is possibly his ~05t ,fi:equent . declaration: tbat the differences between_ himself an d Mimi Chotiner are not of his making· and -that he worked to the very end to bring about a reconciliation. From Page 1 TIDELANDS . •• A Garden Grove youth accused of coinpuclty In lbe "devU cull" killing of -Viejo leldler Florence B,.... ud the hatdlel all:Jin( of wvlce station a-I ~ Wl)'llO Carlin WU told w•11¢1Y that be will be tried as aa dll ,lar>llli ~ murder. ~ Comt Judp James JI'. J odae IOI Jl'eb. I u tbe· trW dato far Arlllur 1---·0'a!J---" lfulaeMf; IP<I ·= the , ~ defeodai!I In. Or e ''Tbe me um. for all bicycle riders to 1 ~it ttllt tbty have all the rights and are subject_ to an the responsibilities that l to the driver of a c.ar," "We have a special citation we use for kids. The first one we give them, we also notify the parents by Jetter. The second one, they're called in with their parents to have a conference with our juvenile offi«r and. after the third one. a letter is sent to their !icbool principal, asking that the youngster not be allowed to rid e a bike to school. "A!~ the _!?urth citation. they go to traffic coUfl with tiler ~arehts," Brtssler said. CWTent .season .s total to 6.33 inches, e bit commission and others are deficil"at in . , . hl&h for mid·December by normal understanding what the scupe of the B~~m (R-Newpcirt Bea.ch) to 1e& an st.andanJ,s. report ls. The scope was not defi Red and opU11on from I.he state Attorney ·General Snow_flurries_broughl_the__~lina-w~ould-not take the jmpact-of people-O;D-W9~i:-4?"-not. i.t is-mandatory that dow:n to ~ 4,00().toot level, protnlSUlg a Into account by su rveys because w& did , t1delan9s fee.s .be Jev1ed. , ,, while Chr1stm1s for many Southland . ski not have enough fun dine to expend that .. K'rause bf;gati bi~ study and fQri:nulated ' • • o..j;;Jlll\, ' . ' •·· moilon .._~·1u1 chlnce to face tM mut:der chaillf JI a juvtnile. ·Thll rl&ht wal: remov.ed by an Oraace Cowlty. Grand Jury indictment which removed the same privile,ea from transient Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17. andx:hrls!Dpher "Gypsy" Gij>bon•Yi 17, oftPOrlland, Ore. if D~trkl Attorney C.Cil Hicks' a~mpta _ to extradite Gibboney a.re ~ all three defendants and transient Steven Craig Hurd, 20, will face separate murder trials in Superior Court. Hurd will get his trial date Friday from Judge Judge. Thal selllng had been delayed pending Judge Robert L. c.orfman.'s ruling on whether-the alleged leader of a band of drifters was sane and able to stand trial. Judge COrfman ruled that he was and Hurd will now be tried for the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown. 31, of El Toro and Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ant. Taylor and Gibboney face identical charges. Hulse is acroaed of k i 11 i n g Carlin and being an accessory to the Brown murder. • Mrs. Brown's body was found l1at J une 15 in a shall ow grave off the Ortegi Highway by investigators who noted that her left arm and vital organs were severed from the mutilated body. DAILY PILOT OIU.NCH! CO.AST l"Ul lliHING COMPANY Robert N. w •• d PNl~I 1nd PulllhMr J•cli l. Cu1l1y 11.0'"11 k11vil Edt!Or Thom11 A. Murphi ~• Mt~l'\rto l!•l!Or L. P1l11 K1i19 NfWPO<"l l!l!K!'I City l!dl!!ll' N_,.tt IHcl Offk• .· 221 1 w.11 111\101 l ou11v11d M1ili'") Adtlre11111.0 . lo• 1175, '2&&J .............. ce.11 Mts1: m Wttt ••v Stl'Mt U9UN 11.-ct1: m ""'"' "-HIJ!'ltlftlflOfl ll"dl: 1717J l"cll &oull'llnl "'" t;llflwftl1: JOI N!ll'ltl II C.'"lrlo AMI 0.4.llY l"ILCIT, wllll ...,ltll "cion>el""9 IM N-·"rtl&, It Pl/Ill"'*' dlilV HCI~ 1111'1> daV 11'1 ...,.,.,. .. llllM fDf utvM l•.tefl. N""'111W' a.tell, Colli Mt11. H~llfltltll hKfl lfilll '-fl lll V•li.y, 1'°"1 'fl'lltl !WO rtOIOllll tllfllloftt. Or•!'lfe CO.JI Publtvot ... ~llY "''"""' Oltnt1 ,,. •I ttll 'NH .. lllOI llMI. N9WPOl'I llttcll. 11'111 llO Wtsl .. , JttMf, c-tl MM. T:lapl111• (7141 '42•4JJI Cl .... M Adftftffl"' '42·1671 GtiP'fl"W!t. lf1'. OI•• Olell l"Wtltflllflt CenlOl"Y. Ht ,..., .......... ltlultf"lllOft .. ldl!Ol'llF IMfNr Of .. YlfliMIMfllt flll lllfl intv 111 ...,.._ w'llflllut ''*'-• ..... '"'"*' If c;ov,flfl'll twflll", l.eord Cllll .,..,.._ ,.If 11 "'"""'°" llilcJI ~ CO.II M ... , C1flflrftle • ...-CrlptlDfl ey- Clrtltt u .u· "'°"ltllVl '1f INll U .Uft'lll'IHllVI ll'ltlllffY et.fll\91111'111, UJI IMnlttlV. County Officers Pressing Searcl1 For 'Barbarella' Orange County sheriff's officers have now joined the hunt for "Barbarella", a black-suited female bandit whose robbery this week of ~ El Toro motel is believed to be her fifth such holdup. The woman, dressed ln a tigh~fitting black pants suit and •wearing white. rimmed glasses and a blue stetl revolver took $200 from the clerk al the Hyatt House, 23932 Paseo de la Valencia late Monday nighl That description of "Barbarella" -she is believed to be about 130 to 135 pounds and a brunette -tallies with that filed with Cost.a Mesa, Santa Ana and Ana- heim police officers. She was dubbed "Barbarelh1'' by Anah eim officers who l n v e st i g a t e d robberies of a marke.t and doughnut shop in that city. Her laler.1iexploits, officers believe. include a Santa Ana liquor store and a drlve·in theate r in Co.sta Mesa. "We don·t know her as Barbarella," commented Sheriff's CapL Ja mes Broadbelt. ''but we don't mind what anyone calls her just as long as we can lay our hands on her." Anaheim officers said they got the name from a victim who described the gun-waving bandit as "kind of cute, like Barbarella.'' "J guess there's just one thing cycll1!.s should remember." he added. "If a car is in your way, stop or gel out of the way. Jn all 1ny year!l as· a traffic officer I've never seen an accident involving a bicycle and a car in which the dr iver of the car gets hurt. It's the bicycle rider every time." Court Date Sei In Health Fraud A health food specialist accused or practicing medi cine without a license, peddling phony health foods and false advertisement of alleged cures for cancer and heart conditions has been ordered to f.tce arraignment Dec. 21 in West Orange Ciunty municipal court. Kurt W. Donsbach, 52. was arrested at his Nature's \Vay health food store In Garden Grove by inspectors from the fraud division of the Stale Department of Food and Drugs. He is charged with nine ' tr!olalions of the health and safety and business and professions codes. Deputy District Attorney Stuart Grant said Donsbach's claims for remedial properties In certain of his preparations designed fbr cancer, heart conditions and stomach ulcers had proved to be worthless. He alleged Donsbacb had a I s o represented himsell to be a physician on several Occasions. First .Lap Set Fai r Board Discuss Horse Racing A report nn the odds whether horse racina will become a featu re at the Or- ange County Fair and ExposlUon tops the card tonight when the 32nd District Ai?'icultura l Association meets. Fair Board directors will conwne at 7:30 p.m. in admi11islrative offices on the fairgrounds at 88 Fa.ir Drive. Costa ~fesa. Consideration of a report on the feasi- bility of bringing thorooghbred racing to the aMual July event a!l a mtlhod of in· creasing revtnue is due at the end of the agtnda. Presldtnt Timothy R. Stradler initiated the request for 11 report afltr alttndlng the Fresno County Fair this fall , where racing is a big event. . Direciors voted to al 11.'ast inve~tigate lhe possibil ity. Fa ir.grounds Central Manager Jtmes P~rter'field said today il Is virtually cer· tfl1n directors "1ill reach .t decjsion on wh thtr to pursue !ht Idea tonight. · He e.my haslzcd such a decision will not I meat lhornughbred racing will come to Costa Mesa, only that additional and more pr ecise information would be gath- ered. A variety of problems would have te> be surmoun~ first -even if racing Is eventually approved -such as a longer track. extensive new stabling facilities and scheduling conflicts. The fair would have to be perhaps doubled Jn length from its current 5~ days, to as much as two weeks. Several other county fairs up and d11wn the Altle now feautre the lucrative sport of kings and the racin& circuit is woven Into their !lchedules rathtr....J,jghtly . Public hearings would aJso'.fit required before the State Division of Fairs and Expositions and approval must al50 comt: from the Callfomia Horse Racing Asso- ri~tlon. Most other items on the Fair Board agenda for tonight concern rouUne li- cense ind rental agreements •ith 11rgani· :tation.s and individuals enga.ged in fair· grounds use. and resort areas. much time." his recommendations afte r County As lo city staffs "·hich had said that Coµ~sel Adriiln Kuyper ruled that it was Ski Movie Scheduled At Newport School A showing of Warren MiJJer's "Ski on the Wild Side" v.riU be held Frida y at Newport Harbor High School Auditorium by the city's Department of P ark s, Beaches and Recreation. -Show time is 8 p.m. and admission is 50 cents. The movie feature.s footage of competition featuring J@a.n-Claude Killy, Mlrielle Golt..:be~ Sue Olaffe and Karl Schranz. · ... and Am1zlngl Extraordinary I Colo1111l Why? BecaUle In this brilliant nylon Parsons' r epresen t a t J v es were matrCatory to charge fair rental lees on perfunctory in their approach to local county tidela11ds in the h,arbor. problems and officials, Walsh said. "they the Newport Harbor Chamber of would logically say that because they are Commerce, represented by Larry Miller, against airports." opposed all fees in the harbor. He pointed Walsh said the opportunity to establish to the monetary. ben~flts to yie county a single jet airport in Orange County a~d all citizens of taxes on harbor which would satisfy mo.st criteria is long property apd yacb,ts. pas:t. He suggested officials look to the A let.ter from Roy B. Woolsey, an future when Short Takeoft and Landing attorney representing borne . owner and (STOL) plans will be available. yacht club associations In the Harbor When the consultant intimated that the Area was read ·which Included a co py of a county had passed that point where a jet letter from U.S. Sen. Barry Goldwater. airport is feasible , Dej>uty County GQldwater keeps a yacht at the Balboa Coonse! Arnold Nuttman challenged: Bay Club and urged that boating facilities "Your report does not say tbaL" not be overcbargid. Fabulous Color! Fabulous Shag! ilBULOUS ~PRICE! face•h&ll karatan'a color wizards have IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 646-0275 dreamed up au~h•parkllng mlx11aa/ne(edlbl• ~ Bluo,Amuing Whit•, ExttaOll!/n1ryGold and even Colona/ Copper. Fabulous hu OO of these colors. • They're all lncrodl blo, really, j. fFa~lous com• l1t uc:Jtf8' •• r'Ufl wltll matchh1; frl1t~a. At' 112' fw .. 1y $134.H I tor-an expert """'' . consultAnt "'ho .... ill ""'" .. your hom@ with wnpl~ without any oblltetlo n to youl H.J.GARRtff-f8RN111JRE PROFESSIONA L o-Moo --, Fri I 7215 HARBOR BLVD. ,... ·• '"··~ • ' ,,., COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646:0275 64o.0276 ' I I Costa· Mesa EDITION ,, Toda~• Flaal ' N.Y. Steeb * :·'.."* • voe. 63, NO. 301 , 3 SECTIONS, 40 PA&Es . . . . ' . . . ' ORANGE COUNTY! CAUfQRN~ THURSDAY,., DEC~MBEJt-.17, 1~70 , . TEN pews I ' Some Aviation Benefits Seen by Mesa Panel By ARTllUR R. VINSEL ot 111e o.nr 1'4111 111ff t1imaxing months of study, the Costa :P.tesa Aviation Committee has delivered a niile-polnt set or findings on Orange County Airport and the future or local flight. . -'lbe package was delivered to the Orange Coun~y Board .of Superv.isors . W.ednesday with a. plea lo consider them before· any final · action on t h c controversial Parsons Report . Some are preCisely in line· wit h supervisors' actions Wednesday, ~·hilc others are quite novel. One is a prediction that initiation or flight s to recrea;tional areas could be a di(ecl benefit, economical and otherwi5', t.o the Orange CoaSt. The laymap p3.net -one' of the fi rst of its kind created by the Costa Mesa City Coupcll ..._ does not Nie out use ol.El T~ro . Pt1arine Corps ~ir Stat:ion as an adjunct to the existing county facility. Neither. should Los Alamitos NavaJ Air Station, it points out. . But the two suggestions are qualified by saying El Toro MCAS sbould be used on ly if leas.Ible, a concept Marine Corps officials reject. · The aviation Committee finding on Los Alamltos NAS says tt·could nt ·into tile general aviation 'Use but only if lht facility becomes available. , Current militar)'. plaM are a mid-1971 phaseout of operations there, but dlsposal of lbe property is unllkely. Leading off the list of nine points, lhe Costa Mesa paper says Orange County . ' does not need a major International jetport, at least not until major redesign or pi,,oes and englnes can be achieved. Here are tbe other findlncs In capsule form: · --Curt.aliment 'of Orange .c o u n t y av1atl0;0 would be a finaociaJ.diwter and certain airport sites now · u n d e r conslderaUon would be reserved until rulod oul or dev<loj>ed. -Orange County Allrport as it now exist& can serve· commercial and general aviation, but requires a llmlt on traffic and noise. -. -Fun,ds made avi.ilable in , the lut.u're . . for ,tudies such as the Parsons Report sboutd .be used to improve exist.iag air fa/:ititjes. · . -Jnyestlg{ltioru: should be ·preued Into use of s.hort takeoff aOO iand.irig (S'f'OLl Aircraft such as the DeHavilland DHC-7 commuter. · · -f'Jo. expqnsion of existing Orange County Airport should be considered If It could prove detrimental to prnait lessees using the facWty. ·The· stt o( recommeridations received by the Board Of Supervlaon Wecloeldlly was compleled and app109od Moodly II an infor~I cOmmit~ee ~·~by Chalrma~ Ja~ t\. lifmmett. . CouriciJman Hammett's own motivaUon led the city to establish the Aviatioa Corrimittee. lut ·summer. undentandlnc it would be a nonpartisan q:eney, not a localized lobby. · ' Studies Def erred Board Delays Future Airport Pl,ans - Orange County supervl!Ors put the bral:es on past airi>ort studies Wednesday and soared toward new horizons. The bOard vGltd to d<Jer study of any future jet airports in the county until the feasibility of a jetport in the Chioo Hill! (northeast of Brea and Placentia) or at Camp Pendleton is deterntined. On motion or Supervisor Alton Allen, the board members dlreded the director of aviation and the airport commissioners to study theae two sites without the use of Child School '.Backers . Face. • • I ' I /, ' • 1 ' ' t .. Cf1d&ttnJ1L.~prb."'---,--.--- I "'! 1 ' M~a :Council · · '. unery IChool • 111~ ..in have tbo'!r1,nd-WI tlml, MoolllJ .nilbl1 when the)) appear belcn Ille ~ 11 ... ·C111 Ne\vport·Mesa school Superintendent William CUn- rti.ngham got · a Charlie Brown Christmas ·this· mor'n- ing when fou rth, fifth and sixth grade students from Lindbergh School in Costa Mesa popped into hi• office to wish him tbe merriest. Childreu and teachers made tbe costumes for school Chtislmas program. Snoopy i.S really Joanne Pumphrey, 11, a sixth grader. Council. . Backen of Sanahlne N11rtery School will ·shaw up aOO teH city offici.ls why they city shouldn't demand nearly 4,500 square feet of land for str~t widening, in return for granting extended achool boura. Nortlier1i State Storni Drifts To .Orange Coast A tired-0ut storm that spent ilsel! Iiishing Northern California with a do\vnpour including heavy hail and snow drifted over the Orange Coast today with sprinkles and ~:eak rumbles of thunder . The latest season storm b e g a n di$integrat.lng \Vedne~day night, but coUld dribbl e c;oastal areas v•ith a few showers until Friday afternoon. Los Angeles had .54 inches by early today, but not enough precipitation fell to even register on the Orange County 11lrbor District gauge in Newport Beach. "Just a trace. but we might have somethi nR measurable by 4:30 p.m.," i;aid a spokesman this morning. Brief bul heavy showers hlt elsewhere on the Orange Coa • Rainfall in Los Ange les brought the current season's tolal to 6.33 inches, a bit high for mid-Oe<:ember by nonnal standards. Oraage Coast l\'eather Another drippy day or it is on the Friday h?rizon, with intermi~­ tent showers under cloudy skies and temperatures dropping dov.•n lo 56 degrees along lhe coast INSmE TODAY The curtain may bl going 'down on the Children's Theate r Guild oJ.Ne_wport H11tb_or. whic:h ;s losing its lease next munth. See Entertaiume11t, Page 25. Only 7 ~ CHRISTMAS C•ll .. nil• r CM<k"" U• 1 c .. 01t1M lJ-.M c-1n " c""'"""' ,. ,, rNllfl Ntllctl IJ DI"''" n lltlltrl•I ,_,, I l '11"'1tlllfNlll t .. 1l ,IMllct U·U ""'91(-11 """ Lellfrn 11 .1 ... 1 • """ Ill l«ofttt "· ,, M9vln 24-U Mvtv1r '""'"'' n Ntlilo!tl N"" .... °''"" ,_,, " s,1v11 J>..mr n s-"'" S11<• Mtrltll 22..JJ Ttltvlti.11 J• Tlltller• M>fJ WM!lllr • WM .. W'ltlll tt w-·• """' ""' Wfl'MI fit'9" +f Officer Speeds to Crash, Grabs Pistol From Driver The complicated is.sue arl1e1 out of Plibllc Worb Director George Madsen 's ioitial desire to · be above reJ>roacb in handling the matter, which surfaced alx weeks ago. Hi is· a member of the Presbyterian Church of the Covenant, WO FairVie:W Road, where the day school operates wlth · Reaching a spectacular accident scene, claimed he had . mixed tranquilizer pills an enroUmt.nt of 57 children dutinc the a Costa M ... pol. man I g d · •-the along with beer when questioned about 'ff'eelt. ice UPI e lllw his coodilllon. Hours are roul}lly 9 a:m. to· noon, but car and grabbed a revolver away from school operators want to ·add an after· the driver early today ~s the injured man non · class adjourfllng between 2:30 arid allegedly reached for the weapon. B CJ uh Ph 3 p.m. It requires a zone exception pet· f.fotorist Seven J. PeUizzano,..20, of 2376 0 ys 010 m~~c::i;~~he city requirement for Newport Blvd., was subsequently booked' W k dedi cation of land needed for future street into the jail ward of Orange County or on Display widening is deleted in such cases, until Medical Center on two charges. the actual project 11 lo begin. H -• b Shots by two young photom-aphers from Madsen does it at his discretion. but c was arrest~ Y Officer Dennis e--left it In the Sunshine . Nurs~ School H f Id the Boys Club of the Harbor Area are ~ 1 oss e on suspicion of carrying a among exhibits being· shown this week paperwork assuming the city council concealed weapon and on suspicion of IDec. 12-18) at the White House Confer· WQU!d knock out the demand for land. driving while under the influence of ence on Children in Washir>1ton. They didn't, leaving the church and school wllh a dilemma. drugs. l\.tax Van Hom, 9, and Jamie Russo, School officials explained at the meet. Investigators ,theorized Pellizzano was 10, are members of the Central Branch ing six week• ago it will force cancella· Photography Club and were finalists in of ,._ • f ~ wh attempting to . hide the chrome-plated the National Fine Arts Elhibit competi· tiOn w111: a tarnoon "'''"· lie church weapon with his band, rather than use it. lion for bofs 13 and under. leaders aay dedlcaUon of the 4,481 square The Young sbl.PP'"" clerk was p•··-• 1·n the M feet wHI cramp sanctuary e1pansJon "'6 ...... eu "Light in Window," b ax's entrY, pl the demolished ·car with an ambulance whi·le "A e-•t•-e s•-," is· the "Ue anGos. In t •--f ••-;_ c.b ~ eu .... '''"I u vern g rus~ o u111: ,, .. Jll l0'1.:11, attendant splinting bis fractured left leg. picked by Jamie. moreover, noted they are powf:rles.s in when Hossfeld approached. the driver's "As Roys See It,'' is -Ole title of the Otis case since•the property is owned side. exhibit 1·tsel f, compri,.d or 7S photos and by the Presbm•rlan Church 1•-1r Pellizzano 's car slammed 1'nto a J -1-K • schedufed for showing in April at the Such approval would have to come telephone pole and street•slgn on Newport semi-annual Boys Clubs of America Na· from Los Angeles ·headquarters. Boulevard at 19th Street at 2 a.m., tiona\ Board Meeting. Petitions with more than 50 1ignatures according to police. " They will also be viewed in May at supporting the Sunshine Nursery School- Offi cer Hossfeld said the suspect the national Boys Club convention in At-itselr nonsectarian -have been delivered denied knowJedge of the revolver and lanta. (Set NURSERY, Pace %) . I Redevelopment Studied Dowritow11, Mesa Consult.ants Present Finance Pl.ans •-.. ' ' . . . B)' SIEVE Ml'reffEU.----:-plaza'"llftarat -lbout-$40;000.· °' ... o.11y ,.~ , • .., "111e city' bas had a p0uey tn-th past Planning consultants sharpeced pencils of acquiring property for ltreel widenU. Wednesday night to give the Downtown by dedicaUon whereVer 8 d j ice n t Costa· Mesa Redevelopment Committee a p r o p e r t i e s benefit from the more detailed picture of lhe ":ay~ and improvement,'' said Ballmer. means for the proposed mult1-m11lion-"This may well be the case for lhe 17th doll:ar slream~lning of the city's central and J9tb Street widenings, in which case business district. land acquisition cost! might be reduced Bruce Ballmer, of the Arcadia firm of as much as $2So,OOO," he added. - Wilsey and Ham, refined cost estimates The consultant said that this would a11 he discussed ways to finance the reduCi!< eo.st of lhe two projects by three-phase project. $'730,000. "Phase I includes two street widening The. $5,860,000 Phase II of the projecl and realignment projecllJ, with aSM>Ciated Includes extension and realignment of costs or instllling ll.gnals and relocating Harbor Boulevard to the east of edslinf utilitiea. Ballmer estimated the costs of busine!Ses. It Includes the $31080,000 cost changes for lith and 19th streets at of traffic signals and uUUUes. 1980,000 and improvement ef parking and Also includtd in Phase 11 planpin& Is I "tmpl'O•e!Mi\t. or.11;1n11>11~"Ne;lpOll BOUlnml ttght ·o1 way bet\feen !Wbor Bo<Jlevml and 17th Slreet, for plrttln1 and a central flau· EsUmated cest for thtJe Improvements was placed •t $300,000 in 'BaUmer's prtSentaUon_ Parklng lots art to be developed behind the central commetclal ares adjacent to Harbor Boulevard and in the north part of the redeveklpment sector. 1bese aR esU!11ated at fl,4llO,OOO lo con!lruct. A somewhat lesser priority is &lvtn to a third parlclng lot in the loulhern portion of 'the are., off Anaheim Street. 1'11s lot W9U\d cost abOUI 11,mo,tltlO t6 ~elop. The fl~al .. t or J>U)>llc lmptOYtmenll In · (See DOwNTOwN;Pap '!). out.side <lOft!Ultants~ Jn another motion the board· v«..i Ip limit traffic at Orange County Airport to the prestnt contracts which allow up to 41.! jet flights per day to Im and to allow the director of aviation to negoUate with the. airlines for service beyond 1972 but adhering to th e no increase in flight!: principle. The two motions on the controversial airport matter concluded almost four houri' of wrangling. ' DAILY J>ILOT Sttll "*" . CITED FDR HEROISM Costa M•••n McAlister Bronze Star Medal Awarded Mesa Soldier Dennis L. McAtllltcr, a 1966 graduate of COOta Mesa High &;:hool, bas lieen awafded the Bronze Star for valor for heroism in combat while serving in Vietnam, the U.S. Department or the Army announced today. ~1cAlister, son of ~fr. and Mrs. Victor P. McAlisler, 3078 Trinity Drive, is. a specia1tst fourth class attached to First Battalion Alrmobile oJ the 502nd Infantry. In awarding him the. Bronze star, the A,nny!1 citltiO!I reads, "On Sept. 15, 1970, Sped alist McAllJter dlatlnguisbod blmaelf while ~Ing u a medical aitman durlng a mortar attack 1t Fire SUppori Bue BliU. "Whtil-'llii u9Nse __...,.. clme undtr mortar' tire, (there were ~ever.al c-ltiea, one! McAU.ter , lmmodlately lert the safety.of hjlJ btinhr ti> iiiniinlster medical 'tre1tment to the wounded. ~·Despite the impacting rounds, he carried wounded perso~et to _the helicopter pad and continued to lrtat them until . mtdl(al evacuaUon wai avalltble. McAllater'• ~rsonal bravery and devoUon to cfuty were In ketpln& with the highest traditions of the military servlce :and renect arnt credit upon hlmadf, hil unit, and the Untlod States Army." After attending Or1nge Coast College, McAllater mtered the Army in November of 1911. He wu aulined to Vietnam 1n June ol tbla .111r. + ' S\lpervlsor Dovid Balter· i.lled. to &ot .lhrO<Jlh mollolls wbldl wwld have llatad that there are no klport Illes avallable tn the coonty With \he pooatble .. ceptloa Ill the Chino Hilb arta. , Baker also want<d Ula board to adopt a policy statement that jet flights ,wve to be .phased out at Orange County· Airport and that the airport commisaioners atud1 possible sites for small aircraft use. He failed to get a second on any of his (See AIRPOR'lll, Pqe I) Fair Board-·· To Discuss · H~rse : Jlacipg . ~ . . (t report·on .. • . r.ctn1 will ·become .a feature at Illa Or- ibae County Fil&' and ElpooitlGa topl the <anl tonlghl when' the ·llnd Wtrict Aiflcultural '.w0dat1oo J!l!llu. Fair Board dlreclor1 will~lcp_veoe at '1:30 p.m. iii admlnistrative .ai.ct• on the falrgrounda at II Fair Dr!rij· COiia Mesa. •L ~. Consideration ol a report on the ~ billty of bringing thoroughbred r•cl• to the annual July event as a method of ln- cre1:slng revenue ii due at the epd of the agenda. Prtjldent ·Timothy R, Stradler-Initiated the request for a report after attendinJ the -Fresno Cowity Fair .this fall, where racing Is a Big event. Directors voted to at least investigate the PoS•lbillty. . . Fairgrounds General Manapr Jamet Porterl]eld said today Jt iJ virtually ctr· taln directors will reach a deciskln oa whether to pursue the Idea tonight. ·He emphasized such a decision will not mean thoroughbred racing will come to Costa Mesa, only that additional ind '111ore Jrecise information would be 11.th- ere<:f. A variety of problems wOQJd have to be surmounted first -even Jf racing ii eventually approved -such as a longer track, extensive . new stabling facilltia and scheduling conflicts. - The fair would have to be perhaps doubled In length from iU: curmit 5'it days. to as much as two weeks. . Several other county fairs up and down the state now feautre the lucrative· spor1. of kings and the ncinc ·clrcuJt ls woven into their schedules rather tightly, _ Public hearings would also be required before the State Division of Fairs ·and Ex:posiUons anit approval must also come from the California Horse Racinl AllO- ciation. · 1\tesa Gridders Represent ·County • In Tournament 'Costa Meea:s Balearic School oquad Will carry the Orange CountJ <»Ion I Saturday In Southern C 1 It for n I a bampl-Onsblp . .faotball Journey pl&)'.-.•M'---+- Orange Coast Colleoge. The third and fourth graders me countywtde c_ -clwnj>loos tn municipal nag faotblD, alter do!ealinl d•fendlng champ H1111Ungtoo Beacb I la o last Sunday. Th< Costa Mesa team wlU play Needles Slturday at 1%;30 p.m. on lield three at Orange cout College In the two-day Southern CllUornla Munl<lpal Athletic Federation Tournament. ~ Coached by recttltioo leadu Jody Dtehan, the team roster lncludQ: John Wallace. John Robertson, John Cannon, )I.fart · Rankin, Tony Kane, Rois Sutton, Jert Mixer, Cooper Wallace, Rod Rankin, Gary Kel ty, Jeff CUUer, Doug Emler. Randy Ry1n, Ronnie Chapman, Kevlll Flligerskt and Jim Sutton. .. ) • ' . • 2 DAIL V PllOT c TllursQ1, Otttftlbtr 17, 1'70 'Devil tuU' Case Chotl,aer Case . . ' Teen Faces Adult Attorney Gets ·Court Grilling illKillings ;· ·Tria > A' Gardtn Grove youth actused of Colnplicity in the "devil cult" killi.l'Jg of Mission Viejo teacher Florence Brown and the hatchet slaying of service: station 1tttnd&nt Jerry Wayne Carlin was told Wednesday that· he will be tried as an 1dult for the Carlin murder. 'SuPerior Cou.""t Ju"die James F. Judge 'set Feb. 8 as the trial date for Arthur Craig "Moose'' Hulse , 16. and returned the 2M--poWld defendint to Orangf: County Jail. \ Hulse's motion represented his last chance to face: the murder charges as a juvenile. That right was removed by an Orange County Grand Jurj indictment which removed the aame privileges from transient Herman Hendrick Taylor. 17, Jury Indicts 3 in Cowboy Murder Case LOS ANGELES (UPo'>-A grand jury deliberated only fo ur mit:utes before returning 5ecret L1dictments Wednesday in the apparent 5layi.ng of a Cowboy stunbnan at the Spahn Ranch, on~e· headquarters of Charles Manson"Fcult. The names OP: the thr~ indictments were kept secret -but it was belleved Manson, 36, and two of his followers w~re charged. It would be the ninth llaymg attributed to Manson, now on trial for the Sharon Tale murders. Chief Deputy District Attorney Joseph P. Busch Jr. said he understood that the names were not revealed because Manson's attorney, Irving Kanarek, was "upset about it." However, Bw:h said that the three were already in custody and two would be arraigned today. Three former "Manson Fam i 1 y'' members testified berore the jury in its investigation of the dtath of Ronald "Sh<>rty" Shea, 36. Shea van ished in August, 1969 and rumors have persisted he was murdered. mutilated and buried -on the ranch b1" members ot the hippie clan. His body never bas been found. Qne oi~the·cult ~ who 1te~ified was~ Watkins, WM told~ ••]t's, 1,b91lt t~ that we look at a\ false ----·proltlli\ -Charlle-..what~ba-oold fn tM 6mDe or ltJYe was deatb.'' w~""'19ld, not dilculs hi• ·Jl'llld jury~ but whel! he tp t11e otan<l~ ~.!!'•lo murdtt trial .he1a&id ht heard Man~ discu11 "the killln.& of a man nanietl'Shorty." ' The othef two persons believed to have be~ lodlcled were Bruce Davis, rt, fnd SteV:.iOl'Ogan, 19, also ·known as Clem Tuf~ ~ho is .being held in Inyo County or. &t8un-charge. 'Christmas Show Set for Fairview A gala Oiristmas program engineered by trainee technicians will be presented Friday night for more than 800 young patients at Costa Mesa's Fairview State Hos pital for the mentally retarded. "Christmas Collage'' is the theme and it will be a collage of fun featuring Santa Claus and his l!Jves, folk And rock music, plus costumed hospital staff members. Tambourines, bell s and rattles ha ve been made for distribution to the patients. along v:ilh cookies snd other refreshments. The event was plaMed entirely by tf!e Cypress Junior College gummer '71 class ()f psychiatric technicians training for , jobs at the hospital. - DAILY PILOT OllANOI! C.O.UT PUSLISHIH(; CDMPAHY Robert N. Wet4 PrnidMt •nd l'Vbllllltr J1tk R. Curl1y Viet l'rn:denl tr.d VIMrtl MIM!Jtr no,,.•i ic ..... a f;dltw Thol'fltt A. Mur~~lnt ~•~liftll IO!!er c.t. .w .. Offlc>e JJO Wetf 111 Stfttf M1i!J119 Aiir1n: ,,0 , In: 1160, !262, °""' -Htw'POl"t le.:11: U1J WHT lllllOI 1«11-rf .......,.... he.II: m "9rWT A- ti1M1!11g1M tad!! Ul1S .. ,di. klot..,..flil l•ll'Clll'l'llnle: as 1to'1tl El C.fl\lro "-1 Dlll.V Pit.OT, wtlll ~~ b ~ t111 ........ f>nlM,, i. JllUlllll!ed ~lllly """ ._ -.y "' lfP.',.lt d i!"""' tor Urns ll4otc11. """" IMdl, C.1' ~. Hllllllfltl .. ~ fftll IJflJMllll ll'tllQ', l*"f W!111 IWO ,....,.., •11M. 0r.,.,_ c.tu1 ~i,,. a--_., vt1111,. ei.1111 trt t t ttll Wnt ..... l:WI':. ~_, ... tl'I, er.cl U> Wtlf ..... tlt•t. Ott• Mew. , ........ ,,,,, f41-4Jl1 0.11kt' '""""' .. •••·1671 fMrr""'· "'"· ~ CNtt ""911\f!fflf ~. ,. lltWI •!Of'-. l!kill!rtt*'*• Mriefitl -"" II' lfwwtlM-lt ~ _,, ... •Mi\lld...., .... ,..,, al'M"l ,.., ... i.i-.-If ~IOM ...,..,.. ..... (,.. _,.,. "" ., ........ ~ ~-C.i• Mat, Cetll'O!'lllt. SUMtr""°"' tor ..,n.r fl.If -W.'YJ lly-lfU,7S-1f!llJI llllliUry ... Tlfltlilllt, ... lllMtflflf, and Chtislbphtr 1·Gype:y" Gibboney, 17, of PorUand, Ore. If District Attorney Cecil Hicks' att~jTlj'.lts to ext{adite Gibboney are S1fccessful all three defendants and transient Steven Craig Hurd .. 20, will face uparate. murder t~iaJg in Super!Or ~· . Hurd will get his trial date Friday from Judge Judge. That setting had betn delayed pending Judge Robert L. Corfman's ruling on whether the alleged leader of a bMld of drifters was sane and able lo stand trial. Judge Corfman ruled thal he was and Hurd will now be tried for the killings of Mn. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. Taylor and Gibboney face identical charges-. Hu1se i! accused of k i 11 i n g Carlin and being an accessory to the Brown murder. Mrs. Brown's body was found last June lS in a shallow grave off th! Orteca Highway by investigators who noted that her left arm and vital organs were severed from the mutilated body. It is alleged that Hu rd and his group conducted rites as sociated w i t b devil worship over her and devoured parts of her body after they stabbed her to death in an Irvine orange grove. Mrs. Brown was killed June 2. Carlin was killed on the previous night when a group allegedly led by Hurd bulchered him with a hat.chet in a service station robbery that put an estimated $i45 in their pockets. Officers said Carlin's assailants rendered the young man unreco111izable with a series of hatchet blows. He wu left in a pool of 'blood on tbe washroom Door. From Page 1 MARSHAL USHERS LAMBERT INTO MUNICIPAL COURT Newport Men FaceS Trial In Police Shootintl Newport. Man Faces '.Trial In Officers' Shootings A Ne"P91'.t Befell_ lawyer lodly h~ • prolonged grllUilg fro~ White House aide . Murray Cbotiner in a courtroom Skirmish that ctntered on the $1 ,800 fee he charged , Chotiner'S estranged wtre_'. ' Attorney Donald ,8. Smallwood of Costa Mesa, an . unscheduled Wi.tne.ss 'in th! Orange County SuperiOr Court divorce trial of Murray and Mimi Chotincr, 44, was forced in a long session on tbe \vitness stand to spep out phone call-by· pbone call each contribution to the 40. hour total on bis bill . Cbotiner, 61, left no doubts that be considertd Smallwood's bill e1cessive and be rebuked the lawyer for not bringing bis time charts to the courtroom. "I wasn't supposed to be here ," Smallwood said. "I'm actus.lly working on a trisl in another courtr6om and it wasn't plaMed that I testily .here today.'' Smallwood has sued Chotiner in municipal court for the $1,800 fee assertedly compil!d in his represe ntation - of Mrs. Chotiner. She is repres!nt!d in the current tria;l hy Los Angeles lawyer Bernard Leckie. • differences between b.!Jru.tlf and Mimi Cl'lotintr are not of his making ed that he worked to the very et1d to bring about a reconciliation. ~ From Page 1 DOWNTOWN ... the proposed redevelopment plan include~ a '580,IHMI erpanslon and renovatioii of parking Jots in the north-c entral redevelopment area. Park lmproVements were set at $60~000, and relocation of water Jines at $18,000. Total Phase . m costs would reach nearly $~.~.QOO. accordicic to the consultant. Ballmer and his associate, Dale B~land, outlined prop6Sed financing methods. Phase I costs couJd be fin~ced from city gas tu !unels, mttehitlg county apportionment and ~o-called TOPICS program. funds . Th~Y ptopos,ed th•t the estimated $40,000 cost of parlcing and plazi1: improvement . Qn . the N!wport Boulevard right-of-way b! fin1nctd from Mrs. Chotiner's attorney.is expected to a special imp.royement distrjct. • prtss for a. court order that Cbolirier pay Phase D project ·funds would come Smallwood's fee when Judge Samuel fro_m th_e ge'neral community and partly Dreizen .eventually rules on t.b e disposition of tbe ·couple's· commi.mlty by llicome. from the! redeyelopment area property. Itself. Ballmer said Harbor BouJevard is Mrs. Chot.iner wants at least half tbe now a serondary street , and Newport value or the·$68,tl00 borne at_ t&.171,Jneptn Boulevard a primary.tiigbwaY. qualifying Labe, Newport Beach, and a total of both for ·federal ftmds. · about $1,200_ a month in support for the "Designation of the proposed Harbor first five years after dissolution .of the Bouli;vard realignment on tbe fderal aid By L. PETER KRIEG "had both hand1 around Lambert's marriage. .. system could make funds available from Of"" D4llY l'll•t SllH wrist," forcing the gun out of his band. She is currently drawing a toiaJ a state:admthistered program of tip to 90 ArthW' Lambert, 61, accused in the Defense attorney Joe Borges Jr._ asked allowance of about $1,100 a mofttb from pt:rtent of project costs," he explained. shooting of two Newport Beach policemen Smith under cross examination to draw President Nixon's special co u n s.e 1. Ballmer estimited the local share at AIRPORTS • , , who stopped him for erratic driving the scene on large poster paper. ~;:!~t 0~at~er:::~~~ b~~s~~;~~~h~ :!°u~,=~fn1g ou~~!~:O~th~~~:;:~ Nov. 14, was bound over to Superior He •sked him several details a"ut the d b d f d him · . ... uu e t an oree · to bor.row several improvement. Namely they are pay-as- motions and after long debate the brlsrd Court and must face trial Wednesday scene, such as the color of Lambert's car thou sand dollars from friends. , you-go from municipal funds available finally accepted the Allen •and Phillips af!tr municipal court testimony of a third and trailer, whether certain ear doors Chotiner went on the witness stand for for street outlays, or a; gen.eraJ-obllgaUQn motions. ... officer who saJd he witnessed the were open or closed. the third day in a row today to aid Leckie bond issue. - Previously board members had beard shooting. These details Smith said he could not in a painstaking enumeration of any "Tht:. improVements proposed for a: en e r a l o p po s it i on t o a 11 Officer Thomas B. Smith testif ied he remember very well. assets that may be declared community phases I and JI of the implementation recommendations in the Pareons report. hf.drolled to tbe scene thinking he would Borges in redirect examination told property by Judge Dreizen. · program are designed to-be self. Ruled-out by _apeakera_ were the Bell show two hi&P school girls in bis car as Judge Everett Dickey-he was attempling He repeated today what is_yossibly bis sufficient, ir need be," Ballmer said. canyon jetport. the Brea general aviation part of a student "rfde along'' progfam to determine the •'accuracy of Smith's most frequent declaration: tbat the This means they cou1d be eliminated. port. the jc;)lnt uae of El Toro Marine how police handle a drunken driving recollection. 11 • lf the program is ·completed the ~ Air , Station. and the use of jet arrest. BQ~ges subsequenUy entered a motion remaining projects. t11cludina some $1.6 pl!Des ajr)Wbere In~ county. The first thing he said he · saw ~al to throw out both charge!, msintaining From Page J million for two additional parking lots Tbe ,Jtto,000' P11110D4,. study ls the Lambert and Officers James Gardiner District Attorney Russell Serber had and $600.000 for park improvements will chlmtn1uon ot ei,irt ~wa of alrpor:t.~and.Aiebard EUingham~5Wldlng-outside__failed-tcrpr(j[!ue@"eVJaeireetKieflMrsb1-Nl-+Jt~FD~V -hav.e:to-be.:flnanl!ed. "fliiSia mrex=>Sr--;-/ ·• studies 9Mfi~ ~..cowity at a Lambert'& ear in ~~ Newport . Dunes attem'pted mur~r had t~e.n place. s ._\.L ,h)~ • • ·• · to take. pla~ Ulltil-· aftsr the Opening of ool&, oli-~ ~-.6oo:\.,..-Trailer Park on Paed1~ Coast Jiighway Judte Dickey rejected the request. th! Newport. Freeway. Coa .. rw ill Cb&'~ and those ap~enily in .C?nversation. instead ordering first appearances set for to Costa Mesa City Clerk Eileen Phinney. "Because the major park facility h·ss who appeared before them Wednesday Snuth testified he saw Lambert next Wednesday In Superior coW't. Signers plan to turn out Monday for the both local and city-wide importance. It is was_ that the day of the jet plane was suddenly "move his right arm. ~t ~is Neither of the wounded policemen, both hearing ·scheduled shortly..alter the 7:30 proposed that the cost be shared," ~nding In the county !1f11wi vast baDd forward toward_G a rd 1 n er s of whom have returned to limited duty, p.m. council meeting convenes. Ballmer stated. "As an ·example. if the 1mpr~emt.nts were made m noile and midsection.'' were called to testify at the preliminary Rev. Bruce Kurrie urges councilmen to community allocated $30,000 per year for pollutton factors. . . He t.tstHied be heard a sound like a hearing . reconsider in a letter claiming i_t is un-five yeais. it coul d contribute some The Airport Comm1ss1on found the gunshot, ssw Gardiner st um b 1 e serber did call Officer Albert Doum Jr fair to demand the immediate land dedi-$1$0,000 from the Park and Recre·ation Par&ons ~~port "de~ieient ~ 1!11DY areas" backwards, iaeaming "I'm hit, I'm hit" to the stand in an apparent effort t~ ca lion for Fairview Road, which will be fund . The amount could be matched in and .the ~ost serious deflCJeney f-? the He admitted he hadn 't seen the gun in introduce a conversa tion he had had 120-feet wide eventually. the redevelopment area to bring the local de ti of the first constrait La bert' b d He explains some land was dedicated h 1300 000 ., cons1 ra on I -m s an . with Lambert later en route to Hoag initially, citing other church cooperation s are to , . people.'' Smith said immediately after the first Memori'al Hospital for a blood alcohol As with the financihg of parking lots h Ell. h I with the city such as payment of $7511 In In its recommend at Ion 1 the s ot, 1ng am eaped forward , grabbed test. drainage fees at a time when it posed a designated in Phase II , it was proposed commilSion suggested: Lambert's wrist wilh his left hand. pulled Judge Dickey sustalned a defense hardship. that financing of the addi~ional lots be by -That no site suggested by the it down and·turned Lambert to the right. , object.ion to the questioning. "We certainly hi>pe the afternoon ses-tax allocation bonds in the redevelopment P he ·c1e t"led "Then I beard another shot," he hi If •-h area arsons Qimpany 1 n u as Lambert, mse , wuu as .already sion will JtOt be canceled," says Mrs. Pa-· acceptable.-testified. -. ' entered pleas of irutocent, was not put on tricia Mora, president of Sunshine Nut· The committee will meet again in -That the board and commission Smith said brlth men started to fall to the stand. sery School. January. establish more measurable standards by the ground and in the struggle he heard :--r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;:;;~::::::::;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:::::::::::::::::::=====:. which situ are to be evaluated and that a another report. I priority of consideration of sue h "I saw the gun in the defendant's left standards be clearly stated. hand.·• he recalled, relating t h a t -That action be initiated to improve Ellingham, who bad a bullet in bis knee , the human facilities for Orange County Airport with its limited defined use. That is, toilets. waiting rooms, food, baggage. air cargo. etc. but avoiding any expa11sion which would permit additional airlines or passenger flight facilities. -El Toro Marine Corps Air Station should be studied further so that the county will have a hand in any plan for joint use and a plan for civilian use. Tbe county should no~-· wait until an opportunity arises by reason of a change In position of the military before making its study. The stu dy should be made now so that the county will be able to protect those areas which may be affected. -That the board authorize the airport commission to institute further studies on its own, without the employment of another consulting firm, to identify, if possible the location of a metroport site, general aviation airports and recreational airports. -t hat the b<'lard immediately instruct the Local Agency F or mat ion Commission, Planning Commission and new Airport Land Use Commission to take all steps nectssary to protect the approach and clear zones at El Toro MCAS. 1n defense. Stanley Walsh. consultant f(')f the Parsons Comp.any. said, "The commission and ,,others are defieient tn unders!Anding ··-wbat the !iCOpe of ttre report is. The scope was not defined and we·-could not takt--tbe-impact .. of-people- lnto account by surveys because we did not have enough funding to expend that much time." As to city staffs wh ich hsd said that Parsons'. repr e sentatives were perfunctory in their approach to locsl problems and officials. Walsh said. "they would logically say that becaUJe they are against airports.1' Walsh said the opportunity to establlsh ~ single jet. airpor t in Orange County v;hlch woulrl satisfy·most criteria i& long past. He suggtsted olfu:isls look to the future v.·hen Short taktoff and Landing <STOL) plans will be. aviiilable. , " \\'hen the consulta nt intimated that th! county had passed that point \c>here a jet ai rport is feasiblf!. Deputy County Counsel Arnnld · Nuttman challenged, "Your rl!port dots not say that." Funeral Service Slated Friday For Carl Coon VisitaUon for an Orange Coast Boy Scout leader and county C(lftUnunicaUons department supervisor who d i e d Wednesday will begin today at Costa Mesa mortuary. Funeral servlcei for Carl Coon. 52, of 416 E. Costa Mesa St .• will be Friday at 11 11.m. In ~ Mesa Verde United Methodist Church. Friends may sWI call at Bell Broadway Mortuary prior to the Friday services. Mr. Coon , supervising technician for the Orange County Communications department. died at Ho3g Memorial Hospital in Newport Beach. He leaves his wife Anna and son Randy, 15, of the home, plus a daughter C8f'Ol. attending ~liege in Statue. a tblrd daughter. Mrt. Peggy Giambe.rardlni and a granddaughter. Mr. Coon wag appointed to his county po,st-.in 1958. after r.uting from 14 years in the U.S. Marine Corps as a helicopter pilol."1.ilJJl!e_rank.ollleu~11ant ~loJ!el~~-~- Less: than three months ago. he rec'eived the Boy Scout& of America's coveted Order of Merit. He was a past president of the Orange Cowity £mployes A&.SOCisUon and in 1963 served as vice president of the Orange County Peace Officers Assoclation. Rev. Paul Biestmeyer will officiate at the Friday rites, directed by Bell Broadway Mortuary. Third Nuclear Blast YUCCA FLAT. Nev. <UPll -The Atomic Energy Commluion explodtd lhe third nucltar device Jn two days at th.is desert test site early today and according to an AEC 1poke1rnan, everything wadi ···normal." ' ... and Amazing! Extraordinary I Colosaall Why'/ Because in this b~lllant nylon taeeahag Karastan'a color wizards have dreamed Up su~h sparkling mixes u lncred/ble Btus, Mlli/1f11Wliltl;Eilil/Jrd/n1ifGo/1 a-nd even Co/""'1 Cop,,.r. Fabulous has oo of lhoso colors. ThtY're all f ncredlble, rully, f-lous ..,... I• orcltlllfl -rugs with JMtc!Jlog lrl•t•· AJ' • 12"fot only $134.95! Fabulous Calor! Fabulous Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! IF YOU CAN'T COME IN--<:ALL 6<6.o27S tM an tXP.l!rt _ . . .,,,.. comul tan t \\'hO v.ill come to l'our home u·ith sample• "i thout any obllptlon to you! "'""'™~ .J. GA~~E l) J.~~lllJ ~~-"t\l~ ll~'· INTERIOR DESIGNERS M6·0275 646-0276 I 7 t . ·~~•dleJtaek ·-'· EDI T I O N . . •. • ' • ·1·ot1ay'11 F••a•, ' '" I • · .~.Y. Stoek8 ' J VOL 63, NO. 301, l SECTIONS, ~2 PAGES QRANGE COUITTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1970 . TEN CENTS ~~~~~~~~~~~-'-·~---·----·~~~~~~~~~·-~~~~~~ ..... ~ ..... --~~~~~~--~~~~~-~~~~~-·-·-'-----''~· ----~~~~--~~~~ ';-. ' .... San ·Clemente Studies Reclaim.ed Water Use A successful program to sell reclaimed \\'ater -the nation's first ,,...· in 01.e small SM Diego County commuµity of Santet ,might serve as a model for a similar project In San Clemente. , Santee, like San Clemente, has a new tertiary treatment plant for its wast~ 1ysteip. which turns our efOuent capable of-many uses, instead of dumping into the .. a. · S~kesmen f9r the Santee Co,unty ' • W.•~I'.' DistriCl recenlJY announced the.ir plans to bWld pipelines to' residences near their .ne\f treatment plant. The conduit Will bring reclaimed water to homes for use in yard$,' gardens aiid other purposes other than drjnldni' and body contact. San ·dleiDeiite City Manager 'Ken Carr hwi placed a high priOrity on devising such a ~proir.m for San Clemente, and crespite some iilitill setbacks earlier thi s , year in , an area ofSan Aritonlo Canyon, Carr bas vowed to continue seeking a way to sell the milUons of galions o{ reclaim· ed water prodllced by a new $2.8-million plant. The San Antonio proj~ was scrapped after few weeks of study because of the costs to potential water u,,ers for the pipeline lo bring the efOuent to separate faucels. The-residents tn the •rel had considered an improvement district to pay for the pipeline aJbng tht canyon floor , bui projecUons of the COit sboWed that the r«ritmed water w o u l d cost rougJtty double that of potable water._ It would have been wed to irrigate. canyon landscaping planled to fighL eri>lion. Thus far San Cfemente's:initial'_plans for~tht ,aecond-Mnd water caJI fOr ilt use on the municipal iolf courae ·twi and in settling basins to >ward off salt water intr:u&iOn of underground water sto;es. uor o . u Dow•• the Mission Trail-. Capo Trustees Vie w Sex Films CAPISTRANO BEACH -The films v.·eren't ex8ctly X·rcited,' but several folks turned out to see. them anyway, 1' oters Decide ' . Bond Issue Due ·on· Clubhouse San Clemente voters will be asked to approve a li>nd issue to cover costs of a new coinmunity clubhouse, shuffleboard courts and two n~w tennis courts in an election slated sometime next year. Councilmen Wednesday agreed to trim down the-suggestionrfw projects to be ' ' ' , I ' ~ .. covered in a bond measure, sticking with a tiare.booes conctpt. They authorized Ci(y Clerk Max· Berg to find a suitable election date, then asked for specific cost fj~res for .a new community clubhouse and accessory facil\ties. · The plan, which won some disfavor from repre,sentative1. of t~ parks. and -Ilon'COllUlllsaittl (lb•t bOill' Wiuld ' . In Santee, deliv.ery began tn rect.nt ~ tO a 28-acre pUblle· park"and to a private tree rann. The itrlgalion eJnuent sel!S ' lor MO an ai:re foot, -district spakesmen explained -muCb cheaper than Colorado River water. which coats J15o aq acre-foot. -• · ' • sintee's ·reclatmea: · waste is used-to ,.plentsli u-ground drillkJni' su)iplles, and. I~ rqade more P}U'e thaq_ the natural produe1· by pa!'ing UU.ugh a chain of . ., recreational lakes, then through deposil• cif natural sand and g r a v e I before 1 reaching ground water stores. The enUre Santee project has won endorsement by the region water qualitl control boartl and health department. "U will be I good many YWI before this water will be drinkable," said Santee water District Manager Ed Houser, "but we hope to ·show how it can be some dai." ' · .an FirmOkays Rockwell Site Deal By BARBARA KREIBICH 01 tlM O.llr Pl"' I Mff The Fluor C:trporatlon announced today that il has reached "agreement ln principle". for acquislt;on of the giant North American ROckwell plant in Laguna Niguel. · _ Tfie transaction call!: for Fluor·to trade a number ~ ltf real. es\ate holcllnc• for the' ~nlque "ZiQUrit'.', -~ ~y '\l'.Uli41!1 Pereka. . · · -The films-, clu«t· 8exu81ity' tDd ~ Teenager and From Parent to Teenager About ~ were up fbr approval by. Ille C.J>ls'ri!'»·· j:!nilled ~ .IH1,l·rif·I rrulte,eS for~ ln ,a~Coe4ucaUoni.t. · r ~-.J.alveFilii!nyllV~ o er y lhe' ·homemaking' ileppenf. 11 '~ -1IikL..&-tolal-pai~- packaie) wPUld-robably lnvoiVe 'a measure ·of $400,000. 'X•nal ml properly In cU!i will be lr-or-,__.....-.,,..·llle---: bulldfng' bd' for-·•• optloorc ... odjiooGt Gieme0i.· i!igJi &hod!. ,. ' ' : But "trtJStees decided lo Ubl<· thtir decision . \Ultil they ·can view: all .of one rum, which baa throe parts. . ~Trultee Bob Hurst:commenled that·he fJ,lt there ~a1s 109 much riega~vism in the lflms that were shown. . ' . . ' . . • Refund ·Puz:de 'SAN JUAN .CAPISTRANO -The awanows may be gone, but ·there are p)enty of "early 'birds" left in town that ire creating a mountain. of paperwork for ll'ina.nce Director Paul Lew. Business owners have been seriding in license fees based on three.,,different 1chec1ules, deperidi'ng on whJch fee :«:hedule was in effect. Lew has been sorting through them, figuring Out who is tQ get a refund. According to the latest fee schedule, PHYS.ICIAN HONOREO Dr.1J•mH McClure the payments will be for a f.lScal year beginnina: Jan. l .and bills haven·t yet r betn mailed. The city has printed copies Saµ Clemente . Doctor Selected For Ohio Award of the ·newest ordinance if anyone is in doubt. O Truek PIJrkfng ' SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Truck! will be able to continue parking on Ortega Highway on the west side of the' San Diego Freeway overpass. The City Council has voted to reduce the widtli or lhe traffic lanes and paint parking places· along the sides of the bigbway, despite a requesl by the State Division of Highways to make the area a .. no parking" zone. • Oruge Weadaer Another drippy day. of It is on the Friday horizon, with intermi~· tent showers under cloudy skies and temperatures dropping down to 56 degrees aJong the ·coast. INSWE TODA l:' . The curtain· mau be going dow" on the C11ildren's Theater Guild~oj-·Newrxwi.-Horbor, which- is losing its leose next muntll. ' See Entertainme1£t, P~ge 25. O.ly 7 =- CHRISTQS c.,,..,... ' CllifdllQ U• 1 Cltfffn..I -.. C-lcl I' c,.....,., ,, DMfll ... lk1t Jt Dl\'WC;ft -lt 1.••i.ri.1 ..... ' •1t1"1•lllll'IHI ~,. '"'-11(1 2'·U ..,,..~ 11 llftlll L"'""' l' ...... ' Mell Ht lfMc• n. tf Dr. .James · .H., McClure of San Clemente, is one of 10 physicians selected to_ receive Ohio. State Unlversity'S • Centennial Achinement.-.,Award. Dr., McClure is.profeSsor ~nd chairman , of ' the depaftment of gynecology and o&ttelriCs:. ·a~ the CalUornia College· of M.dicliie ~I UC lr>in~. The ·award is being presented in honor of ohio state's lOMh anniversary to ''one hundred_ nalJonally prominent persOns who have contributed outstandingly to the adv~eme11t of • their profesaions and 8bciety." A.native of Wooster, Ohio, Dr. McClure earned hia bachelor's degree.and medical tr'1ning.at Obio<Si..t&Unlversity Medical Center. J . : . Dana Family Hit -With Laws uit • A Sallta Aaa man who cl.iims: his son (llftered> serious injuries when his host's 7-yeaM>ld boy attacked him with a base- l!All bat .bu l)ied a Dana Point family for .-.oao ln' c1a-. . ffeoey Zcmlga name; Miies and lloMJe Collins and their '°"· Craig. · ol 33271 Ocean Hill Drive. u defendants In his Orange Cbllhty Superior Court action. He charge'.I , the parents with responsi· bilityi fer their boy's behavior. Zuntia statts: Martin Zuniga, 14 •. was a guest at the Collins home last April 18 when· hls ton was attacked by Craig Collins. 'He claims the boy suffered ge.. ve.re head injuries in the incident. Ttie · ietting of an amount and an eleCtiOn date would almost ·coiricide With the. Jin. 15, 19,71, ·dea~ day for comp11ition of working . drawings of the proposed inew clubhouse being prepared by designer Eric Boucher. The fonnal. machinery for the bond matter is expected to begin churning in the council's next meeting, the first Wedpesday of January. The action to seek the bare-bones bond election _came with one dissenting vote - that of Thomas O'Keefe, who pressed his idea for a full -blown tennis club open to the public and possibly built by private enterprise. · ' In fact, the entire lerth.is matter ls-the only remaining loose end to the council's planning for the clubh'ouse measure. Dozens of members of the El Camino Tennis Club asked councilmen \Vednesday to pprove major !,ennis facilities on vacant land at the ocean side of the new Water reclamation plant grounds. Councilmen agreed he plan was feasible and referred the matter to planning commissioners and the parks panel. But O'Keefe stressed that the full tennis facilities should be a segment of the funding and plaMing of the bond measure. Four councilmen, however, disagreed. saying if ancillary measures were to be added to the bond measure, its chances of s.uccess would be diluted. The existing council plans call for the relocation of the two existing courts at the old clubhouse grounds to a new location, probably the sanitation land. The land where the old courts are would be used for badly needed Parking at the new clubhouse. Boucher's basic plan calls [or the refurbishing of the most attr1ctive, intact section of the burned~t ctibhouse and integration of a large auditorium ind other fp.cilitles with it on the old site. -... ' Total cost Of the laClllty ls lrl euess ol 1 t20 Jit!llion, according to the FluOr • • , . . , • . , • . • x .• -~ . annouocernent. . , . . ' ~ ' • . • ' · · ! · o.i1'!i~·U.ft.'f'lMll Preliininary negotiations for the sde MAKING .A "BUS·Y HOUSE" TO HEl:'P TEACH'Y~:r!'.RS "-----::-hive'been ·under W•Ycfor moollta. P'in•l Mr1. S.lly N•rm11n Chairs 1Volunt•r Parenti P'!"'•!"~ : ·· ~ nfgoOations will commence immediately ' 'I ,. ( ' ' • _ .+ ~ .k~ and l~ is ~tlclpated that the cl~ of Edu. ~· a ·t1o·ona· 1 J . . eS!:rll•. and transfer of uu. will lat• on. ~lace :Jn the ~nd quarter of 1971. The Fluor CorporaUon, now based Jn Schaols Find Use . for Debris .. J An empty box, a chunk or wood, a discarded paper towel tube -all are being saved from the jaws of the trash masher and are finding ne'(i homes in the classroom. "W~ Qon't throw anyt)iif'1g away," S;Sid Mrs. Marilyn ·Harris, Director of .special Projecls for the :>an Joaquin Elementary School District. ' . ''There's a purpose for f\'erylhlng if you have the talent and desire to use It," she said. All sorts of odds and ends find their Way into the Instruction al Media Center laboratory where volunteer parents from every school in the district turn debris irito games, math wheels and bulletin board decorations. Each school · sends Its parent aides to the Jab twice a month whete they Work on projects' requested speclflcally .by classroom ·tetchers at their schools. "A teacl}er might request. a fiannel board ·story -<:ir '.a g,me -for .'..,teaehlng languate· "prlrtciples," s3Jd Mrs. Hatri$. "We have examples catalOged or she can make up .her own." It's the job or the parent aides to construct whatever is requested. They spend their. time draf!ing, cutting and pasililg, laminating arid stapling-time consuming tasks that give the teacher more Uine U) .the c~m ... '111e bb iS full.of~ vofuntetrs'·efip\'ts. On 01* wall are number. ·apd word Mieels. . A bright pa~r.p.iggy bank h., a spelling wheel behind it. When a ftap 15 ·U~ted, a new word is revealed each ume fhe·wbeel is turned. ' · The words are as(Signed a monetary value accordir1g to dif!iculty and as , teams spell words cor:recUy 'their money score adds up -the highest score winning the game. "We · have qui~ a backlog :of materials now," s~id Mn. Harris. "Industries .give ·us things,, paint store_1· give. us w11llpaper books,· the pare:nts tbemstlvet1 . fwnish . scraps of wood and maguine!l. " . "We try to zero .in on IJ}eclflc needlrof , children when · creatin& the · vazious games.''' she explained. ·• · °Kldi are ·ex"pqsed to' mutuniedla •t birth: ·'I1lty see .television cottlmerdaJs, billboards, algns. we can't.shut j' out so we build on it. "Teachers these days have to be salesmen. Thelr product ia how to team." the city of Commerce, will use the one milllon-square·foot faCility as Jta new corporate headquarters and as the headquarters of its Los A n g e I e s engineering and construction division as well as headquarters for Floor Drilling Services. - These facillUes now occ u py approxJmately 600,000 square feet of space, a . Fluor spo~e31llan said, anii employ about 2,100 people. Fluor prope~les involved In . the transactlon with North American Rock\fo'.ell include the present corporate headquarters on Atlantic Boulevard and a Task Force Facility-on Ferguson Drive both In the City of Cominerce~ Mariners Bay apartmerit land and anchorages in Marina del Rey; Fluor's lntertst in Lake' Point Towers, an apartment development in Olicago, Ill.; Park Center Plaza, an office buifding complex in San Jose, and 1,000 acres of property in Hayward. The huge Laguna Niguel structure, designed to house ' North American. Rockwell 's Autonetics division. was ~ placed on the market a year ago when cutbacks in the space program hatted development plans. Construction, however, has continued and the eiterlor of the' tiered building ii virtually complete, interior modlficatlons wUJ be made to suit the needs "'6rUr' purchaser. ·San Clemente Project Fluor is a major international ftrm providing englneerin~ and construction services for the mining and petroleum industries. A ·spokesman said .its wofk force is expected to double in the next 10 Council Views Fire Plans ·~----- City plans for a vastly improved San Clemente fire deparlment working out of a new headquarters with a c'omblnation of full·Ume firemen, cross-trained police officers and beefed-:ttp volunteers reoeJved lnltlat "ek])IOIW'e be (ore councilmen Wednesday. And City Manager Ken Carr, who received a nod on planning for the new headquarters, asked that the entire package be implemented wlil!_in the next budget year. "11'11s seems to be what we have been wafting for," siiid Mayor Walter Evan.11 after Carr sulimlli.d h~ .lengthy report on what be htd. ~ibe4 earliet as a "San Clemenle P!in." · ,. ' The concept which the ma n g e r proposed has been cuJJed from several othei-innovative de15artments. All the proposed expenditures for th\! dePArbrlent wotlld come ff.om mooeY either' -already :1n the cit)l t>udget/ dr coming in next year from cigarette tax rebates 'froril the state: · carf•s initial concept of the new fire department -;'" cen'(en on Uuff ,b&llc ·pllases: ~A new·1110,ooo h .. dquarten station -wlth full facilities for a 'found-the· clock squ•d of fire fighters -to be bull on two 'levels in the parking and driveway Jot next · to existing fire headqu_aT!ers. Cowlclhnen took their JllOll cklinlte -~--~· action on this plan We~ay by authorizing Carr · to · contact t h e architectural 'llnil which dtligned to .t)le civk: center to Re If .''J& wolild be lntefested· in'. dtaiplng the nre· 1ia11citni. ·Th• prell\nlolry m . .is. ,wpilld ·,. .i0 ' ' • " (. I • ' ' • > the hO)ding company w~~·la.lf>.t!lo civic ·center le<aeback al'raOg-l'loliolng .commluloo 1l1PO-WIU receive u.e:1<1eu rtlr nco.mn.hclatl'""-'' ~The htrlhg at an appfo11m8te cost of $52,000 1.,.year of four ·full-ume firemen, bringing the (uU-tttne rotter up· to seven, Including the !Ito dlief. The addition of the l)lep· would a.,ur. two l+hou;.tilts wM three men 100 duty aL ill.I . • years. ' · The corporation, in addition to Its Les Angeles headquarters, bas. facilities in Houston, Texas, London, Holland, and Taiw,an. Here's Correct Whale Ntimber ' ' The pho .. mm>""' for ~ In wl"1t fttc':Jrg cratae1 ~ by Ibo Son r Oemt11i. Pannt-Teocller.Sl\ldent Assoclollon w11 lneomcU1 given. Jn Wednesday's Dally Pilol ~iect CllaJrman Mi'· l)avld Robbins . wlll accept inqulrl., al 495-~lt. Moll algnupo can be dltoclecl to 34971 Calle Fortuna, Clp~trano Be~cb. The !Int Lwo tripe will be Dec. ti '°' 30.\ ~------~-------------~---~~----. I • ' • l J DAU .. 'Y PlL.01 SC Traffic Linaited • County Def er~ , .. Jetport Study :. Oran&e COunty supervisors put the brakes on past airport studies Wednesday and soared toward new horizons. • Tl'le board voted to defer study of any \future jet airports in the county unut the f•uiblllly ol a jetport In th• Chino Hills 'northeast of Brea and Placentia) or at C.mp Pendleton is determined. On motion of Supervisor Alton Allen, the board members directed the director of aviation and the airport commissioners to study these two sites wit.bout the use o[ out.side oonsultant.s. In another motion the board voted to limit traffic at Orange County Airport to the present contracts which allow up to --41.8 jet filghls per day to im and to allow the director of aviaUon to negotiate • Medina Told . My Lai Gls :Party Over' .. · I Three Cleanup Weeks Schedukd l1i San Clement.e Sari Clemente will have three a:pecial truh cleanup Wttks next year, instead of the previous ooe. C:Ouncilmen Wednesday agreed w:ith suggestions made by C:Ouncllman Cliff Myers recenUy that the special rubbish pickup weeks be expanded to include .a winter program. After consulting with the city's contract rubbish collection finn, City Manager Ken Carr suggested special period.1 in January, May and November next-year. The following year, Carr sald, tbe program -<:QJJd be cut to two weekl a year -one in spring ; the other in the fall. The special January program, he said. would make up for the single pickup week this year. Details of the program. which will Include special pickups of especially bulky quantities of rubbish, wlll be worked out soon, Carr said. DAILY PILOT 01.ANGE COAST P'UlllSHlNG COMP'.t.MY ·Robe rt N, w,,, P'rnldtnl ••·If P\1111i.P'4r J1c.\: R. Cvrl.y wltb the airlines for service beyond 1972 but adhering to the no increase in fli&hta principle.. The. two motions on the controversial airport matt.er concluded almost four bows of wrangling. Supervisor David Baker failed to a:et through motions whlch would have stated that thfre are no jetport sites available in the county with the possible exception of the Chino Hills are.a. 1 Baker also wanted the-board to adopt a policy statement that jet flights were to be phased out at Orange County Airport and that the airport commlsai<mers study poss ible sites for small aircraft use. He failed to get a second on any of his motions and after locg debate the boa.rd finally accepted the Allen and Phlllips motiom. Previously board members had heard general opposition to all recommendations in the Parsons report. Ruled out by speakers were the Bell Canyon jetport, the Brea general aviation port, the joint use of El Toro Marine c:crps Air Station and the use of jet planes anywhere in the county. The $140,000 Parsons study ls the culmination of eight years of airport studies carried out by the county at a cost of more than $250,000. Consensus of the supervisors and those who appeared before th!m Wednesday was that the day of the jet plane wu ending in the county unless vet improvements were made in noise and pollution factors. The Airport Commlulon found th• Panom report "deficient in many'are.as" and the "most serioua deficiency to the o:mlderation of the first con:Strait - people." In its recommendations the commisaion suggested : ~'Ibat no site suga:ested by the Panons Company be ldentllied as accePtabJe. -That the board and conuillsslon establish more measurable standards by which site. &re to be evaluated and that a priority of consideration of s u c h standards be clearly stated. -That action be Initiated to improve the human facllltles for Orange County Airport-with Ila llmiled defined uae. Tb1t is, toilets, waiting rooms, food, bauage, air ~10, · etc. but avoiding any e%p&n&ion which would permit addiUonal airlines or puaenger flight facilities. -El Toro M.arlne Corps Air Station should bo otud1'd !urther .. that the cilomt)"d la1't .a -In any plan for joint me-and-e~villa.me.-The county abould not wait unUJ an ·~tJ'W..&.reuon of a chanae ., ........ of ila ' fore maklni illio illldr; 'IM'iioidy bo mode now .O•tbit tbi-COW)ly will be 1bl• to prolect -11¥• whldl 1111y bo 11recte<1. ·-That the. board authorize the airport commiuion· to i.natitute further studies on its 'own, without the employment of another. oonsulttng firm, to identify, ~ possible the location of. a metroport site. general aviation airport.s and recreational alrpOrta. -Tblt the bolrd lmmedia1"1y tn.truct the ;Local Agency Formatio n Commiaaion, :PlaMing CommJsaion and new Airport Land Use Commission to take all steps necessary to protect the approach aDd clear zones at El Toro MCAS. In defense. Stanley Walsh. consultant for the Pinions Company, said. ''The commiaJon and otbers are deficient in undr.'~ what the scope of the ~4«"t is. The scope wa.s not delilted and we could not take the impact of people ·tnto account by surveys because We did , not have enough funding to•expend that much time." As to city staffs which had said that Parsons' representatives were perfunctory in the.Ir approach to local problems and officials, Walsh said, "they would logically say that becau.se they are against airports." Walsh said the opportunity to establish a single jet airport in Orange County which would satisfy most criteria is long past. He suggested officials look to the future when Short Takeoff and Landing (STOL) plans will be. available. When the consultant intimated that the county had passed that point where a jet airport is feasible , Deputy County Counsel Arnold Nuttman challenged, ''Your report does not say thal" Wal.sh replied that the report had only technical findings that environment was not a prime consideration. • 'Devil Cult' Cue I . ' Teen Faces Adult' DAILY P'ILOT Slltf Plltfe Trial •• ID A Giz-den Grove youth accused of complicity in the "devil cult" killinl of Mllsion Viejo teacher Flortnce Brown and the hatchet ~laying of service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin wu told Wedne9day that he will be. tried aa an adult for lbe Carlin murder. Superior Court Judge Jame11 F. Judge set Feb. 8 as the ~trial date for Arthur Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, and returned the 250-pound defendant to Orange County Jail. Hulse's motion represented hia last chance to face the murder charges as a juvenile. That right wu removed by an Orange County Grand Jury indictment which removed the sanie privileges from transient Herman Hendrick Taylor, 17, and Christopher "Gypsy'' Gibboney, 17, of. Portland, Ore. If District Attorney Cecil Hicks' attempts to extradite Gibboney are. successful all three defendants and transient Steven Craig Hurd, 20, will face separate murder trials in Superior Court. QUAFFS TH fRST WITH RECLA IMED WATER AT DEMONSTRATION Assemblyman Robert Badha m (R·N•wpo rt Beach ) Has Seconds Hurd will get·his trial date Friday from Judge Judge. That setting had been delayed pending Judge Robert L. Corlman's ruling on whether the alleged leader of a band of drifters was sane and able to stand trial. Judge Corfman ruled that he was and Hurd will now be tried for the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21 , of Santa Ana. Officials Get Ta slfful Idea ·of Treated Sewage Taylor and Gibboney face identical charges. Hulse. i& accused of k l 11 i n g Carlin and being an accessory to the Brown murder. Mrs. Brown 's body was found last June 15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway by investigators who noted that her left arm and vital organs were severed from the mutilated body. Public officials Wednesday were offered a tasty cup of treated sewage, at the Moulton.Niguel W<!-ter Reclamation plant cumber three in Mfssion Viejo. The tasting followed a demonstration of reverse osmosis, third stage treatment process capable of clearing upwards of a m.Jlllon gallons a dity. Dr. Howard Keller of the GBK Enterprises firm in Placentia, explained the process to about 30 people including Assemblyman Robert Badham (ft...Ne.wport Beach). Carl Kym]a, executive director of the Moulton Niguel district said the plant was being made available to the private firm for purposes of demonstrating the treatment process. However, the distric~ ii interuted~in-r-eclamation-proceuu particularly in view of the interest in finding a way to use tbe underground water of the San Juan Capistrano aquifer. The largest underground basin lying goJely_ within Orange County, the San Juan aquifer bas •ater with more than 1.200 parts per million of total dissolved solids (TDS), Kymla said. Th is arilount is in excess of state standards for public consumption. George Tapper, superinte ndent Or the reclamation plant. specul~t~d water treated bY the reverse osmosis unit could be blecded with the underground basin water to get a product that meets standards for total dissolved solids. School District ..... Gets 34.N ames For Bus Drivers The job pinch being caused by the nation's sagging economy was evident when the trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified School District approved the hiring of two bus drivers. The hoard members wert told by business superintendent Dr. Charles Hess Tuesda y that there were 34. applicants for the positions. The job pays $3.01 an hour and is not full time. The bus drivers work on an as.needed basis. Hess Said he received applications for the positions from as far away as La Mirada and added . "we didn't adve rUse that much." Although Hess did not know if any aerospace engineers wtre among the applicants, be said most of th!m had worked at joM other tha.11 bus driving. One of the J?¥?n hired bad once operated h.iJ own drivel' training school, he said. After being forced through an organlc membrane and filtered through charcoal, secondary treated sewage Wednesday became clear. drinkable water. A meter showed the TDS content to be reduced from 700 parts per million to 5.5 parts per million. . A blend of 1.2 million gallons of reclaimtd water and 3.4 million gallons of ground water would yield 4.6 million gallons of potable water at 900 parts per million TDS, wb.ich is within accepted water standards, Dr. Keller noted. It is alleged that Hurd and his group conducted rites associated w i t h devil Seabreeze "Park Will .Continue For Two Weeks By comparison, ~'ater imported by f\1etropolitan Water District from the Colo rado River carries with it more than San Clemente's Seabreeze motorcycle 700 parts per million of TDS. • park -which will close for good at Tapper said peQple's reluctance to taste year's end -won ·a favorable nod to the reverSt!! oS1'ilo\1Slffited~w"'a""er.-.~a"s_ucowo~tiwo~ue~,busines.s for..!be..next.few weeks "psychological." lrom city councilmen Wednesda y. "lf people stopped-to think about it The park's use permit came up for Its they'd re alize that all the water on earth 9Ck:lay review Wednesday, and was given the. shok blessing. has been recycled by nature since time Thl park will close Jan. 1 because of began. You m<ly have showered this morning with \\'aler molecules that negotiation for sale of lhe land owned by Cleopatra bathed with," he said. Brigham Young Unlverslty. Recycling wastes is nothing new for the Seabreeze President David Whittaker Moulton-Niguel District. Plant three. praised councilmen W~dnesday for their provides secondary treated sewage to the help in the park's five·month life span. Mission Viejo Golf Course during the dry Whittaker also promised attempts by season. Kymla said. his group to find a more suitable When wastes aren't needed for the golf substitute location for another park. course they are bypassed to another "We feel that we and the city have district station and pumped over the hills contributed a service to the kid! and of Laguna Niguel and to the ocean. their families who' enjoy motorcycle Keller noted his equipment primarily is riding," said Whlttaker. used by industries such as metal plating The review was scheduled three to reclaim dissolved metals , lower the months ago to evalua te corrections to demand on sewer Jines and reclaim water noise problems cited by several residents uSed in processfng. liv~g closest tO the park. ' . Killings wonhip over her and devoured parts of her body alter they •stabbed her to death in an J.rv:ine orange grove. Mn. Brown was killed: June 2. C"Arlin wu .killtd on th! J>N!vlous nlaht when a groop alleaedly led by Hurd butchered him with a hatchet in a service station ·robbery that put an estimated $45 in the1t pod<eta. -. Officers said C&rlin 's ass a i I ants rendered the young man unrecogninl:ile with a aeries of hatchet blows. He .;.s left in a pool of blood on the wUhroom floor, Rock Dropper Suspect He~,,! LOS ANGELES !UPI) ---'\; mlarant worker was jailed on : suspicion of murder today after a De.I Mar woman was killed when 1 3~pound rock was dropped from an overpass and crashed through the windshield of tbe car in which she was riding. The dead woman was identified as Mrs. Charl otte Sprague, 65. She \\'as riding with her husband William , 66, on the Golden Stat~ Freeway. He escaped injury. Boolied was James Horton Jr., 35, of Keilhville, La . At about the same time, another ~ large rock was thrown from the same overpass anll s m a ab e d ,, through the. windshield Of a car driven by Dennis Griffin, 20, Baldwin Park. He was not injured. Officers said the woman's death • was the third homicide of that type within the past three months. Church News Due Tuesday - Orange Coast churches and tempfu d~ir.incJ!!LanDounce specialser:vtces..f"'---~ the holida y season should submit necessary information to the DAILY 1 ' PILOT no later than noon Tuesday. The newspaper i.s planning a wrap\tp story on all services offered. It will be ____._ published in Wednesday editions. AMouncement.s should include the name of the organization, church dr l!!mple. lime of services, location. minister. sermon title and a.ny other needed information concerning the nature of the service .. Articles can be brought to any DAILY PILOT office. Locati ons include : 330 \\'est Bay SL, Costa Mesa : 2211 West Balboa Boulevard, Newport Beach; 222 Forest Ave., Laguna Beach: 17875 Beach Boulevard. Huntington Beach and 30S North El Camino Real , San Clemente. Fabulous Color! Fabulous Shag! • FABULOUS PRICE! Viet P'r•IO'"I t r,d Gentrtl Mtl'llflt Tho1T111 K11,il Edllor Jho"''' A. M1.rtphi111 Mt11111n• l!dltw Board Asked to Provide ... ind Amazlngl Exll1ordlnary I Colos111l "4h1r4 P. H1N klllll Oruiea Goun1r l!dllOr Off1- C.I• """'' JJO W11! 81y St1wt l"IWPOfl k~tl'I: 2)11 W11t a.111o1 &ou!-fll • L.foulll But!>:'" Farts!•-Mllfl1!"91Dn BNc!>: 11111 INtl'I a&\tlt\ll lll iotll Clll!'ltlllt; .S Notlll t i C.11'111111 ftMI More Nurses for District Tliree -scn'Ool nurS!s sttviJ'lg a stU<fent populaUon or 9.000 described their hectic routine and asli!d for more h!lp Wednesday. Addressing lhe Trustees of the. San Joaquin Elementary School Di1lrict, Mrs. Laura Dilger. Mrs. Caroline Schumacher and Mrs. M)'Tna Hickey 5llggesttd the district employ seven nurses next year to like care of it! student& "In the m05t efficient manner ... 11'1.ey described their duties •hlch Include scrttnlng and testlna vision and hearing and visual dental checks, providing health education auistance to the classroom teacher, administering first aid. teaching accidtnt prevention. coordinaUng drug abuse education and counseling parents and children. They said that the distance betwetn Khools hamptrs them when called to an emugeney and iherr small number prevents them from doing thorough follow ups on recommendations to pattn ... Board Chairman Gratian B l dart questioned the board's responsibility in seeing that a child gets medical care OflCe the parents are told about 1 problem. ' "Untortuna'tely we live tn 1 society where some 'people don't take ad!quate care of their children." said Dr. William Stock!, As!istant Superintendent for\ Jnstructloti. "We. have to keep after thenv until they finally take tbe.ir child to the. doctor or dentist." Trustee Ed Berry said he had taken It for granted that all children receive. medical examinations Mfore tnterlng school each year, just as his chlldren do. Why? Because JJl this bttllianl nylon face shag KaraSian's colorwlrards have dreamed up s1.ich sparkling mix ea u lncrod/bfe. Blue, Amazing White, Exttaordlnary Gold and even Colo.,•/ Copper. Fabulous has 00 of these colors. They're all Incredible, really. (Feliuloft -fl n<ltlt!t -.... wllfi -.. 111tttL A f ' 1 !Z' lw ooly $114.H l IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL tor an expert- carpet coru:u.ltant wbo~'ill -·to your b .... with samples without aey ebllp.tton to you! H.J.GARRtff fU·RNITLJRE PROFESSIONAL 2115 HARIOR BLVD. Op• M .... Thurs. • Fri. h es. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 6~6.0l75 6~6-0176 • • ' Lagu~a Beaeh Today's Final ' N.Y. Stoeks ·, • • :VOL. 63 , NO. 30 I, 3 SECTIONS, 42 •PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDA:f, DECEMBER J.7, 1970 ' ' ' TEN CENTS Council Bows to Dog Owners, MOdifies Law By BARBARA KREIBICH OI 1M Dll/l1 l"li.t Si.fl "Yoo have proved that democracy works," writer Arnold Hano told the Lagtma Beach City Council Wednesday night. After an hour of bitter discussion, the council unanlmouS:ly approved a compromise dog ordinance as amended by its author. councilman Edward Lorr. The amended ordir)arict "'·ill go to second reading Jan. 6 and become effective ·30 days after that date, if adopUd. Yielding to vocal pressure from members or the Laguna Beach Dog Owners .\SSOCiation, who had organized a merf:ridum that forced the council to repeal his original Ordinance, Lorr made further eonees~ions regarding: t b e proposed • dog ban in city park. The · changes were, pronowiced acceptable by , the dog lovers.-- , 'Fhe new 1aW entitelY removes the ban , on ~al'Wtg leashed doj! in Top of the World Park and makes the ban effective only 'dwing the.aumlner months in Boat Canyon Park, where Little League games .11e played. . The ban on dogs iit the Bluebird toL uor 0 · ·-W ·lly Dog Law? Former Planner Flays Council - Charges that the controversial dog mayor said these changes could be ordinance was hustled back onto the city incorporated into the ordinance at a later council agenda prematurely to divert date. Why· can't you lake tirnJ to attention from more weighly problems incorporate them now? facing Laguna Beach were made by "I feet this is becoming a red herring three persons \Vednesday night. to divert attention from more serious Former planning commissioner Joseph things.·• park ,remains in the ordinance, which also prohibits dogs on beaches during the summer, from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. between June 15 lJJd Sepl 11. M .re-Introduced by Lorr on the evening agenda, the ordlnan~e was idenlital to the recently overturned law, except for a limitation that reduced the orlglnal year-round beach ban to the summer months only. Haoo·clted an earlier opinion from city attorney Jack Rimel, who said the courts have ruled thal any new ordinance must be "substantially" different from one overturned by referendum and lhat any u attempt to skirt thll II "a fraud oa the referendum." Comparing the two ordinancel poiftt by polnl, llano cbargod, ' 'S U .b 1 t a n th I difference doe a .not exist. lt la, ln'Mr. Rlmel's words, a fraud on . t b e referendum. If Jt paues·t will ta~ 1~ to court, and I am not alone." When Mayor Richard Goldberg aald Ii< felt the char11e wu "substanti&l,*' thooeh this woWd be a matter for the court to decide, Halio ruponded, •'The· itUesUofl Is whether 1130() registered votera who signed the referendum petitions are 1olng -co have their face1 slapped." Policemen Shootings Described By L. PETER KRIEG Of r.e D91tr Plllt It ... . Noting tho! councllman l«T had "faijed to pay any attention to the proposals made In a three-hour meeting with us," Hano concluded, *'I've turned my cheek for the last time. Mr. Lorr, if this is the way you are going· to worlt wltli us, we· are going to 11top working with you -or work b1 another matlner." Suppor~ for . the ~f'!Ce . came ~rom two mtmberi ol lhe audience, lncludlng hotel operator Lortn Haneline Who noted that beach ana is' .. at Jeasi 100 times· the are, of · parkJ," whlclt in his mind constituted a "sub11tanttal" change in the 'law. Tomehak asked "What Js the immediacy " RaJph ~ns_on, 435 Jasmine ~t .. said, -of-the-ordtn-?~--whr now, when the . Since ther_e u: no substantial difference · ·~ ,.=: ·nst un.dergooe a· in the. .ordihance (prior 1o amendments Arthur Lambert, 611 accused Jn thl ahoo~ng of two Nejopor;t ~c)I poi!«inen ·' 'l'"'l "91>1><4 .l>!m . loo ·tmUc. *1tlol '· -.~11; :ftK-'\dund Oftl'''iit ... ~ .• , • annm1n11,, •. J . " added ~<lll,lllf'~\ lti adoptlo!t 1rauman11c. . "°"'.,.... WS1 wUt ·ontj Jtfioft"lt!' ltllllitlOn 'that wn1 Mayor Richard GOl~g responded,. furtlte•~~h< very oosUy and 'if-not now;-H-....Id·only-be-~~-Wbjl-dl..... .,,,.. tm-•nt not now'" .....--, "The ;,_ oidlnanco •t lhe lnll!l•UoA -'l1101jr,,.. oppooe It may not be ~.. • .......... I inllirllYOlllll ~feel ....,. otroa&IY. ~I one bualnaalmll• wen! ~...... anl loir~U..·..m1>r1nc It up again and tnnumerab!e re.~~· dl5CUS!llons, and agabl. 1 ftel Jt ts up to the other study ~Ions, said Tomehak. 1be memben of the comcil to quash tt ao you hotel zone pro~ have been through can glvi attention to more impart.ant many drafts, with great concern for .. . detail. Thirteen hundred people signed things. . pet.itiona oppnslng this Jaw. At the ~id ~~vid Munro, 802 Bluebu:d.Canyon request of the council, Mr. Hano Drive, The . p_eople ~ere obhged to prepared a suggested list of amendments exercise their ~ereignty (by the to existing archaic animal laws. referendum pe~tioM) because You "At the beginning of this meeUng the gentlemen bad failed to write a good law. ;rhoughts Sought For Main Beach Lagunans wishing to contribute their thoughts on development of the M1in Beach are invited to send proposals or comments, in writing, to the Main Beach Advisorf Committee, City Hall, ~ ForeSt .Ave. The committee, appointed by l\.fayor Richard Goldberg, is now s t u d y i n g past data on beach development and peruse all written material submitted by }llterested citizens. Attorney \Villiam Wilcoxen has been named chairman nf the group. which alsO Includes scientist Vernon Blackman, hotel owner Merrill Johnson, publisher Vernon Spitaleri and busille:Mman H a r r y Lawrence. The committee is charged with the task of preparing alternate proposals and recommendations for development of the beachfronL Coast Weatlaer The referendum law is a protection of democraUc rights. Why do you try to skirt the law? Llp:'rger issues like high rise on the beach may get obscured while we debate dop. Maybe yOu 'want this. since you inalst oo bringing it up 1gain and again." In respo111< to thele coounent., Mayor Goldberg aald the compromise ordinance, which he felt was sufficient to meet the needs expressed by the petitions, had been drawn up ea:preasly to respond to the referendum move. Snow Trip Set In Laguna Beach The Laguna Beach Recreation Department will be sponsoring a trip to the snow-capped mountains during the Christmas boUdays. Residents ,ef all ageJ have been invited to m.ke the trip, alt.bough children uoder 12 must be accompanied by an adult. The group will spend the day of Dec. 29 at Holiday Hill to the Wrlghlwood area where skiing, tobogganing and general snow play are available. The busei will dtp.iirl at a a.m. from. f the Recreatiort Department at 175 N. Coast.Jllghway. The group will return to Laguna Beach by 6 p.m. The fee will be '2.IO to cover the transportation cost. Court onTI must lace trial Weclnedly , ~•LC9!11'1 --.,11-.:thlrd > ,lalil hi W!liitiieCJ ttii ......... . ... Happy Birthday The 200th anniversary of the birth of Ludwig Von Beethoven is being observed around the \VOrld tOday by aficionados of his music and by fans of a cer· lain American comic strip. It ~s unclear whether Beethoven was bQrn on Dec. 16, or Dec. 17, 177.0 .. Some folks celebrate both days. Many Programs For Youth Set Over Holidays The Laguna Beach Recreation Department will sponsor several events for school-age youngsters during the Olristmas holidays. ' Arts and crafts classes will be opeo to children ages six through 12 from 10 a.m. to noon ..on Dec. 21 to 23 at ~ecreation Department, l7S N. Coast Highway. Children taking part may bring a aack lunch and remain at the recreation center for afternoon activities. Basketball and volleyball games will be plated on the Main Beach ror boys in the fourth throu@ eighth grades. Beginning at 1 p.m. on Dec. 21-23. a series or tournaments will be held after teams are organized. Further information r e g a r d I n g activities may be obtained from the department at 494-1124 ext. 45. Olllcer Tbomal B. Smith t..tllied Ill had ..u.Ct to the """' lblnklnl bl ""'1111 llhow two hilb acbool glrfl In lUa car Is part of a student "ride alQJll~ how police bapdle a drunken driving arrest. The ' first thtng he said he 1aW WU Lambert 8l>d Officers James Gardiner and Richard Ellingham standing outside Lambert's car 1n the Newport Dunes Trailer Park on Pacific Coast Highway apparently in conversation. Smith testified .. he !aw Lambert suddenly "move his right arm, thrust his hand forward toward G a r d i n e r ' s midsecli9n.", . He tesUfied be heard a sOund like 'a gumhot, saw Gardiner , 11 t u m I> l t backwards, 90'eamlng. "l'rn hit. I'm hit." He aChnltted ht hadn't ~n the gun in Lambert's h.and. Smith said immediately after the first shOt, Ellingham leaped forward, grabbed Lambert's wrist wllh hil left hand, pulled it down and turned Lambert to the right. "Then I heard another shot," he testified. Smith said both men started to fall to the ground and in the struggle he heard another report. "I saw the gun in the defendant's left hi1nd," he recalled, relating that Ellingham, who had a bullet in his knee, "had both hands around Lambert'• wrilt," forcing the sun out of his hand. · Defense attorney Joe Borges Jr. asked Smith under cross examination to draw the scene·on large Poster ~per. He asked him several details about the sl'tne, such as the color of Lambert'a car ar.d trailer, whether certain . car doors were open or cloeed. These details Smith aaid he could not remember very well. Borges In redtrect examination tol'a .Judge Everett Dickey he was attempting to detei"mine the l'accuracy nf Smith's recollection." Another drippy day of It is on the Friday h'lrizon, with intennh~ tent shnwers under cloudy skies and temperatures dropping down to 56 degrees along the COML INSWE TODAY Ordinance Changes · Aske.d The curtain may bt ooina dot0n on Ui.e Children'• TMatfr -Gifld of Ntwport)lirOor, wlJ.iC1i- ta losing il..T lea!e nmt munth. Ste Entertainment, Pogt 25. O.ly 7 'fir CHRISTMAS C1llf9n1ll 1 C1>t<1tl~1 u, 1 ci.11111.. as ... C:ef!llc.t 21 c ... ,,_,,,. 11 Dnlfl ltfllcn II ~.. 11 l!•nwMl ,._ ' •....-.1Mt9M 2 .. U Ll'lfll!IU 11•» "-,. a~1 L......,.. 11 ,,,,.1... • MM 11'1 Strwltt 11. 2' Mf'lln 14·U M~lull l'•Ml1 :H ,.., ............ •4 Ortll" ~ u l't'IWMI l'wttr n ._ .... , Si.tit Mlrtl•" 11...JJ T ..... ltlM t4 T11t1tln ,._H WMtllw • W.li. Wltlt 1' w._.,, """ ,,,,. Wwlf Nm 4-1 ~g_u'!fl_ Councilman Questio1is Coun_ci{ Pol~y A request for a c)lange to policy regardlnC, lntroductlm of ordinances on tbe Laguna Beacl> Clly COunly agenda W81 mlde by couricUman Charlton Boyd Wednesday ni.&M during he a t e d diXtl&llon or the rtvlsed do1 ordinince. Noting that councilman Edward Lorr had twice had the city attorney draw up lawa on the dog bin and preaented them to the council iq ordinance fonn, Boyd said. "I realize thill ls perrectly legal under pruent policy, but I would Uke to see the policy changed so that copies of proposed legislation would be available 10 the council and the public in advance to pemUt adecfuate discussion. 'lbcn the rouncll as a whole could Instruct the city attorney to draw up an ordinance, based on the various opinions presented. One man cannot write an ordinance. ·"Mr. Boyd has lmplted underhanded methods by me in the introduction or this ordinance," Lorr retorted. "'nle law provides that a councilman ca nintroduce ordlnances at any time. J don 'l care for the attitude of Mr. Boyd and I don't.feel , any ordinance should be presenled to the public until il .has been gone over by the staff, to avoi d a repetition of the problems we have had with this nne." He further maintained that the minutes o·r the SepL 16 meet[ng show that the council had agreed upon the dog ordinance wi\h the beach ban· restricted to the summer months. , Councilman Roy Holm said there 1had · been no Clly council dlacwlslon of the ~og ordinance"' after it wU ~~ Oct. Zl and no lnstrucllnn by the council to the cJly'allomey to pl'epar< I ntw oldinane<. "it WU l~tly done bJ' Mr. L«r ,:• Holm said. He ~ Bo911< ~d they learned the .. w ordlnanco would bl up for a vote only after· they rtetrvect their agendas. . • Responding to l!oyd'• proposal, MayQr Richard Goldoorg •aid, "I would hope that In future we would have copies of all pi'o~ ordinances for the. council to discus!. as: a Whole, and as a whole Instruct the city attorney to prtpare 'tbe final ordln~e. · "It ls not only urne_,mlng bul expensive to wrtte and "re· w r It e ordiftances. I hope· rn the ruiure wt will follow· lhls procedure.': t sno..! •.e'aril : .. '.Allan 'Ladd's •Jon~ hair and equally long beard ·provide temporary shield from snow durini recent stonn ih Madi· son, Wis. Genera~ Plan ' . . . . ... : .' . f.<>pies · A'V~.itabJ~: In Laguna B,eacl1 · Lagunans 'may obtain·cdpjes Ott~ 127· page genera! pan d0Ct1-n:ient at the planning departmept in city hall for $5, Laguna Beach city manager Lawrence Rose announced Wednesday. The plan, result of a 2'f.r:·year study by the firm nf Daniel, MaM, Johnsen & Mendenhall, was formally .presented· to the city. c:iW\Cll and planning commission at the regUlat -cOuncil meeUng by planning consultan\ Abraam Kru!hkhov. Two hundred copies ,of the bulky, blue- covered document have been pril1~ for distribution to the city sWf and tlie balance will .be sold to th< public, ltoae aald. . , The document wu acc:ompanled by two Jara:e mapa, one a ·topographic study of the Laguna basin, the other a colored wall map ahowing land U9e"in JM. Making the pre!ttntatkm,· Krushkhov thanked city officials and Staff members for their cooperation in the long study and noted that' the plan, a summary of a dozen aeparate reporta pttpared by his firm. !hould provide valuable data fnr city planning for years to come. Like al) general plans, he noted, it should be revie\ved annually and Updated according to need. · The council ofllcllilly turned · tbe docwnent over to the 'P 11 n n I n g commlaalon for . ~lew ;and recoriimtndatiOh prtOr• to-'its conaldeajkill .''! ~·i>)i \!'° ~· ' . . . . Extra. Vacation '. -. For School Aides Emp1oye1 of the Laguna Beacb Uri!n.d ScbOol District rec<lvecl tbelr Cbrjtlml, pretenl this week when acltool 'lrulteei agreed to give them a few bouts or extra vacitfon. The trustees granted lhe employ .. the alien-ofl on Dec. ff and 21. All employ ea have ·a holid•Y. "' 0... 25 •n4 Jan.,t.. • , . Tho acUon will af!ed about IO of the dlJtrlcl'1 employt1, !iicfudln1 ..mtar(es, c:ustodlaiis, maintenlhle 1 wurUn1 and 'aitminlllraton:· . Hano said ·many petiUonen had been mere concerned about the· park ban. "Why c&n•t We walk our dogs in Top ol the World Part,?" he asked ... And Riddle Field. Is a wasteland in Winter. Put thqe back al}d the fight )s 9ver right ~.·" The comPromise . was agreed upon during a break called by the Mayor and Lorr offered his amendments. • Said Hano, "I feel this now ls a substanllally different ordinance. The compromise may not be. satisfactory JI) total either to me or to Mr. IA:lrr, but you have proved that democracy works." , ant FirmOkays Rockwell Site Deal By BARBARA KREIBICll OI ._ Diii!' ,. .... St.ff The Fluor Corporation announced todlJ that it ha1 reached "agreement · in principle" for aCtil.l:iSition of the slant N!'f!h , American RocltweU plant lo J.aaln!a Nl11111~ • , 'the transaction calls for Fluor to trade a lllllllber ol lb rtal eslale boldlnga 10. ' "7J•itil"•lt" --' .. -: . WUllam PerelrL · A&!t!ional real property In cub wlU bl traded for pfOl!UIY 11WTOW1dlnl !lie butldlng lJJd for an opUon· on adjacent lcrtlge. Total cost of the facµity is lo exceas: ot $20 mill!On, according to the Fluor announcement. Preliminary negotiations for ttM we have been under way for months. f'inBl negotiations will commence immedlltely and it ls anticipated that the close <!,f escrow and transfer of Utle will take place in the second quarter of 1971. The Fluor CnrporaUon, now based in the city of Commerce.: will use the one million-square.foot facility aa its new corporate headquarters and as tbe ·headquarters 9f its Los A n•g et t"I engineering and construction division ~ .well as beadquarters for Fluor Drlllinc Services. Thest facilities now o c c u p y appf?xlmately 600,000 square feet of apace. a Fluor spokesman said, and emriloy about 2,100 people. Fluor properties involved in tbe transaction with North Amerlc8n Rockwell Include the ptesent. corporate headquarters on Allanlic Boulevard and a Task Force Facility on Fergusen DriTII both in the City of Commerce ; Marineis B3y apartment land and anchorages in Marina del Rey; Fluor'a interest in Lake P.oint Towers, an apartment development In Chicago, Ill.; Park Center Plaza, an office building complex in .San JOse, and 1,000 acrea of propertY, in Ha)'.Ward. 1be ·Huge Laguna Niguel atruCture, designed to house North American Rcickwell's Autonetlcs di'(jsion, · was placed on the market a year ago when cutback! In !Jle space program halted development plans. ; Construction, bnwever, has continued and the exterior of the liertd building.is virtually' complete, Interior modlficatioos will 'be made to ·suit the needs of tbe purcha~r. Fluor ls a major int.ernational firtn providin1 engineering and construction services for the' ..mtrunr and petroleum Industries. A ~esman said til wcl'k force ls npeoted todouble.tn·the next 10 years. The corporaUon, in addition to its Los •Angeles be11dquarters. l'fas fAclUUea-'m Houaton, Texas, London, Holland, and TaJwu; Joan l(enned:y's Folks Divorced in Florida COCOA BEACH, Fla. (UPI) -'Ille parefits Of Joan Kennedy, wife ot ~n~ Edward Kenntdy (0.Mw.1. ha" be<n granted a divorce In Brevard County Clrtult Court after 1$ years of marriage, it.was ~amed today. Mr. ·and MJ1. Hal'T)I BeimeU of Cc<na Btach wtre sranted the divorce Nov. 24 by ctrcult Court Judge William Alttldgt mOre' than 1 year alter 1 peUlion for divoroo WU finl fUed. . . .. ' --) ·'l'Ntfic Limited , 'Devil ttdt' €_,e County Defers Jetport Study Teen Faces Adult Trial • Ill Killings • Or&n1e County supervisors put the ; :Wakes on pa.gt atrpOrt 5tudiu: Wtdntsday and soared toward new horizons. . The board voted to defer study ()f any .. ruture jet airports in the county until Ult , ·feaaiblUty of a jetport in the Chlno Hills (northeast of Brea and Placentia) or at Camp Pendleton is determLaed. On motion of Supervisor AJton Allen. the bo3rd members directed the director of aviaUon and the airport commissioners to study these two sites without the use of outside consultants. In another motion the board voted to limit traffic at Orarige County Airport to the present contracta which allow up to 41.8 jet flights per day to 1m and to allow the director of avlaUon. to negotiate Medina Told My Lai Gls 'Party Over' FT. BENNING. Ga . (UP() -Tb< Cilley court-martial reC:eJSed for tbe Ouistmaa holidays today after htaril'lg the 15th consecutive witneas teatify that CapL Ernest L.. Mt;dina ordtred tbe Vietnamese v.illage of My Lai deatroytd'. James M. McBretn. a 23-year-old sboe salesman who gave his address only as ''Long Island, N.Y.," conceded under cross-eumination tbal Medina bad not specifically ordered women and chUdren killed, but added' "We had been told only Viet Cong or their sympathlters were there (in My Lai} and anything le.ft was to be killed." Medina, who underwent a preliminary hearing in Atlanta tOday to determine whether he, too, $hou1d stand trial, was 1st LI. William L. Calley's commanding officer in Vietnam. Calley Is standing court.martial for allegedly killing. or direct.ing his mtn to kill, 102 South Vietnamese civilians on lifarch 16. 1988, the day he led his platoon on a sweep through My Lal. The defense claims that anything Calley did that day, be did upon orders from Medina. Tbe. next to last witnesses before the three-week reces.s, Tbomaa J . Ki.Deb, 24. of ~·)by, N.J. returned to tbe ... n<I ~ bl repeated 1 statement ite m.cSe Wednoo4ay -tllot Medina called off the ki1Jmi at My LaJ with tbe announcement: "tbe ~;L ~ -tl!Jt'1 "'°"&b 1---;~fiii~~ . ·· n · Three Ckanup Weeks Schedrded In San Clemente " Clemente will have three special trub cleanup weeks next year, instead of the previous one. Councilmen Wednesd1y agreed with suggesUoos made by Councilman Cliff MYen recently that the gpecial rubbish pickup ·ween be ~ed to include a winter program. ~ After oonsulting with the city's contract rubbish collection firm, City Man11er Ken Carr $QQtlted gpeclal periods in January, May and November nert year. The following year, Ca?°said. the program coo.Id be cut to two weeks a year -one in spring : the other in the fall. The special January program. he said, would make up for t.he single pickup week this year. Details of the program, which will Include special pickups . or e.specially bulky quantities of rubbish, will be worked out soon , Carr said. DAILY PILOT M_,m l•.x.t. '*t•H IM:la C:.. M- ORANGE COAST ,Utll•HING COM,AM't Ro\,1,f N. W11• ,.r•11111n1 "" Publlll'llr J1r.\-It Curl1y Viet ,tU'4•!ll •rA ~11 M......-r 1"011111 K11vil Editor 7ko1r111 A. Murplll"' / Ml f\fDlllj El'illlt' ROch •rd' P, Ni ll loilll'I 0 rt"8ct Counly [d!lof' °'" ... co.ti Mn1; UO WQI lty '"'"' ~ 1a1cl'I: 1n1 .w.r1 a.~1 ~ • lAl\Pll 811dl: 212 ,_t ... _ Nllfll ... llft 8 .. (1" 1717! 8HCl'I &o!;o'-'°' ..,, 'i.metitt: * Nor111 El Glml1111 " .. I OAll.Y PILOT, w!ltl ~l(h fl Cll'flblMd ft'll ,,,...,.,,IH, II llUbHllW dilly -~ Ill'!- ... "' MPtrtlt. cl'n-. tor L ...... kdlo .......,, 81tdl, '°"II M-, 1't"'"llfltlM a-11 Miii f,-lllft V111rf, •llfll wt"' ,... ,...... lllltllno. °'"' C..11 "'*'""'lrlf °"'""" .,IMr..., 11o1t..i1 ... 11 nn ... , ..... AM., NIWllOfl IM<ll, 1"9 Sii Wtt1 .., ·--· Ghl1 Mttf. ,...,.. .. C714J 64MJ21 a..H1eilf Abtftltl .. 642·1171 -t·--s• ~An 0.,.,._.t Tel•p•••• 4f2-44tt ~. 1'1t. Otwfllle C.0.11 "'*"""" C-."l'• N• -11'-tht. llllftlr1t:011,, .. ""111 "ftll""" .... ( • ....,...._.. 11tt1lll fNY bf 1IP"llfv«if wt!lwul af«]ll ,.,.. ~ "' .,,.,..,., ..... . 1«0f1j1 c• rietllfl .... II .. ...,..., kttfl .,. C.le w:.., C.lffemll, a.uei.crlpllOI! llY un11r U.tJ ..,....,..,.,, "'1-11 U.JJ "*'""'' Mlllltfy •t!~lllMI. II.JS .... Ill,.,. with tll• ailllnt1 for '""Ice beyond lm but adhering to the no Increase In fllgbta principle. The two moUons on the controversial airport m1tter conclUded almost four hours of wra.tJgllng. Supervisor David Biker failed to a:et through motions which would hava stated that thert are no jetport sites avai11ble tn the county with the p<mible exception of the Chino Hills area. • Baker also wanted the board to ldopt 1 policy statement that jet flights wer' lo be phased out 1t Orange County Alfport and that the airport commissioners study possible sites for small aircraft me. A Garden Grove youth accused of complicity in the "devil cult" kllllna of Mission V.iejo te1cher Florence JrOw11 and the hatchet slaying of aUViCe atatlon , attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin was told Wednesday that he will be tried as an aduJt for the Carlin murdtr. Superior Court Judge James P'. Judge set Feb. 8 as the trill date for Arthur Craig "Moose" Hul11t, 16, and returned I.he 250-pound delendant to Orange County Jail. worahJp ovu her' and ·devoured parts er her body after they irt1bbed bor to d•atb in Ill Irvine Orln&e grove, I Mrs. BroWn was killed June I. CarUn waa killed on the prevloua ni&ht when' a group allegedly led by Hurd butchered him with a hatchel ill a service ttaOcn robbery that put an estimated $45 in ~ pockets. He failed to get a RCOnd on any of his motions and after long debate the board . finally accepted the Allen and Phillips moUons. Hul.se's motion represented hiJ last chance to face the murde:r charges u a juvenile. That right w11 removed by an Orange county Grand Jury lndlctment which removed the ume privileges from transient Herman Hendrick: Taylor, 17. and Chriatopher "Gypsy" Gibboney, 17, of Portland, Ort. Officers said Carlin's ass a 11 ant s rendered the young man unrecognizable with a series of hatchet blows. He was left in a pool of blOOd on the wUhrootn noor. Previously board members bad heard general opposition to all recommendations in the Parsons report. RuJed out by speakers were the 'Bell Canyon jetport. the Brea general aviatton · port. the joint use of El Toro Marine C«ps Ai r Station and the use of jet planes anywhere in the county. The $140,000 Parsons study is the culmination or tight years of airport studies carried out by th~ c:ounty at 1 C08t of more than $250.000. C<lnsensus of the supervisors and those who appeared before them Wednesday was that the day of the jet plane was ending in the county unle!l!I vast improvemtnl5 were made in noise and pollution factors. The Airport Commission found the Parsorus report "dt!icient in many areas:" and the "most serious deficiency to the consideration of the first constrait - people." ln its recommendatJons th~ commWiion suggested : -That no site suggested by the Panons Company b& Identified as acceptable. -That the board and commission establh:h more measurable standards by which sites .are to be evaluated and that a priority _ of consideration of s u c h standards be cle1rly stated. -That adlon-be initiated to improve the human faclliUt! for Orange C<lunty Atrpott with it.s Untiled defined Ult. That is, toilets, waiting rooms, food , baggage. air ·~go, etc. but 1voiding any e.plJJ!ion which would permit add!Uonol airlines or paqiena:er flight facilities . -El Tero Mlrine Corps Air Station lbould be ..,_ f\r!her ao that the .-)'will bo•e• lli'nd in any pion !or joint ... and • plan for civilian ""'· The county abould not wait unUl an '"9:il l'''"t-&ri~·ol'..a..chance 1:'1.4~:0 ,,~ iboul(i!~.::! oo that the county will be able to prcilecl ttJOIJt veaa which may be affected. -That tbe boon! 1uthorl2e the airport eonunis5Jon to institute turther studies on its own, without the employment or another consulting firm, to idenUfy, if possible the location of a metroport site. general aviation airports and recreational a~t ~ ~ immediately Instruct the Local Agency Formation Commis.sion, Planning CoinmiM!on and new Airport Land Use Commission lo take all 11teps neetwry to protect the approach and clear zones at El Toro MCAS. In defense, Stanley Walsh. consultant for the Parsons Company, said, •111e commission and othu!I are deficient tn understlnding what the srope of the report is. The scope was not defitted and we could not take the impad of people Into account by surveys bttause we did not have enough funding to expend lhal mucb time.'' As to city staffs "''hich had said that Parsons' representatives: were perfunctory in their approach to local problems and officials , Walsh 11aid. "they would logically 11ay that because they are against airports." Walsh said the opportunity to establish a single jet airporl in Orange County which would satisfy most criteria 111 Jong past. He suggested officials look to the future when Short Takeoff and Landing (STOL) plans will be avallable. When the consultant inUmated that the county bad passed that point where a .je£ airport is feasible. Deputy County Counsel Arnold Nutlman chaUenged, "Your repo:rt does not say thaL" Walsh replied that the report had only ttthnical fincfin&s that environment was nnt a prime con1ideraUon. d QAILY PILOT ti.ff Plltlte QUAFFS THIRST WITH RE CL AIMED WATER AT DEMONSTRATION A11emblym1n Robart Badham (R.N•wport Be1ch ) Ha i Seconds Officials Get Tasteful Idea of Treated Sewage Public officials Wednesday w e r e After being forced through an organic offer'ed a tasty cup of treated sewage, at membrane and filtered through charcoal, the Moulton-Niguel Water Reclamation secondary treated sewage Wednesday plant number three in Mission Vi&jo. became clear. drinkable water. A meter The tasting followed a demonstration of showed the TDS content to be reduced rever11e osmosis, third stage treatment from 700 parts per million to 55 parts per process capable of clearing upwards of a million. million gallons a day. Dr. Howard Keller A blend of 1.2 million gallons or of the GBK Enterprises firm in reclaimed water and 3.4 million gallons Placentia, explained the process to about of ground water would yield 4.6 million 30 people including Assemblyman Robert gallons of potable water at 900 parts per Bad.barn (R.Newport Beach). million TDS, which is within accepted water standards. Dr. Keller noted. Carl Kymla, executive director of the By comparison, water imported by lf District Attorney 'Cecil Hicks' attempts to extradite Gibboney 11e suceessful all thrte . defendants and tran11ient Steven Craig Hurd, 20, will face separate murder trials in Superior Court. Hurd will get his trlaJ date Friday from Judge Judge. That setting had been delayed pending Judge Robert L. Corlman's ruling on whether the alleged leader of a band of drifters was sane and abJ~dt:e s~~~:i~~led that he wa~ and Hurd will now be tried for the killings of Mrs. Florence Nancy Brown, 31, of El Toro and Jerry Wayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. Taylor and Gibboney face iden tical charges. Hulse ls accused of k i JI in g Carlin and being an accessory to the Brown murder. Mrs. Brown's body was found last June 15 in a 11haUow grave oU the Or'tega Highway by investigators who noted that her left arm and vital organs wtre severed from the mutilated body. It is alleged that Hurd and his group conducted rites associated w i t h devil Seabreeze Park Will Continue For Two Weeks Moulton Niguel district said the plant was Metropolitan Water District from the being made available to the private firm Colorado River carries with it more than San Oemtnle's Seabreeze motorcycle Rock Dropper Suspect Held LOS ANGELES (UPO - A migrant worker w111 jailed on !uspiclon of murder today after a Del Mar woman was killed when a 45-pound rock was dropprd from I D Overpass and crashed through the windshield of the car in which she 'A'aS riding. The dead woman was identlfied as Mrs. Charlotte Sprague, SS. She v.·as riding with her husband William, 66, bn the Golden Stat~ Freeway. He escaped injury. Booked was James Horton Jr., 35, of Keithville, La. At about the same time, another large rock was thrown train the i;ame overpass and s m a s b e d through the windshield of a car driven by Dennis 1Griffin, 20 Baldwin Park. He was pot 'injured.' Officers said the woman 's death was the third homicide of that type ~·!thin the past three months. Church News Due TueSda y for purposes of demonstrating the park -which will close for good at ~1tme.nt process. However, the district 700 parts per million of TDS. year's end -won a favorable nod to Orange Coast ehurche.a _and.. templet is interested i.a reclamation processe!I ~r.said people's reluctance to taste continue business for the next few weeks des.iring to announce special aerviees fCJf' p1rtlcularly in view of the interest in ~e revers~ o~osi.!1 treated water was from city councilmen Wednesday. the holiday season should submit · ding_a :ay_to use--1he~undugcound __!:ychologic~. . . . . ,..---'Tl1<>-par.k~·use·per-miL-<:ame.up-for-its~necessary-tnformaUon the DAJJ:.Y water of the San Juan Capistrano aquifer. · ~P!e stopped~t.IID!k-a,ooun 90-day review Wednesda!Y and was lriven The l1rgest underground basin lying they d reaJize that all the wate~ QD .e~ the short blessing. , . ·r e· . PILOTTb.1 n~ later than noon! ~esday., . solely within Orange County, the Sas ha! been recycled by nature smce ~e nie: park will c!011e Jan. 1 because of c newspaper ls P ~g a wrapgp Ju1n aquifer bas water with more than bega~. '}00. may 'have showered this negotiation for sale of the land owned by story on all services offered. It will be 1 200 parta per million of total dissolved morning· with wa.ter molecules that Brigham Young Unlversity. published in Wednesday editions. ' . . Cleopatra bathed with," he said. sohd!I (TDS ), K~la sa!~· Recycling waste!! Is nothing new for the Seabreeze President David Whittaker Announcements should include the This amount «S in excess of state Moulton.Niguel District. Plant three praised councilmen Wednesday for their name of the organization church o.r stan~ards for. public consumption . provides secondary treated sewage to the help i.n the park 's tive·~onth life span. • temple time of service's Jocat'o Ge T · t d t I the M' · v · · G If c d · th dr Wh1tlaker also promised attempts by . · . ' . • 1 n, orge apper. supei:Jn en en o 1ss1on 1e10 o ourse ur1ng e Y his group to fm' d , more sui·table minister. sermon title and any other recla1pation plant, specuJated water season. K_y~mla said. treated by the reverse osmosis un1t could When wastes aren't needed for the golf substitute locatio n for another park. needed information concerning the nature be b1eoded with the underground basin courge they are bypassed to another "We feel that we and the city ha ve of the service. · water to get a product that meets district station and pumped over the hills con.tributed . a service ~ the kids and Articles can be brought to any DAlL Y gtandards for total dissolved solids. of Laguna Niguel and to the ocean. theLr families who tnJOY motorcycle PILOT office. Locations include : 3.10 School District Gets 34 Names For Bus Drivers The job pinch being caused by the nation's gagging economy was evident when the tru1tees of fhe Laguna Beach Unified School District approved the hiring of two bus drivers. The board members were told by business superintendent Dr. Charles Hess Tuesday that there were 34 applicants for the positions. The job pays $3.01 an hour and Is not full time. The bus drivers work on an as-needed ba11is. Hess s&.ld ~ received applications for the positions from as far away as La Mirada and added, "we didn't advertise that much." Although Hess did not know if any aerospace engineers were among the applicants, he said most of them had worked at jobs other tha1 bus driving. One of the men hired had once operated bis own driver training school, he said. Keller noted his equipment primarily is riding,'~ said Whittaker. \Vest Ba y St .. Costa Mesa ; 2211 West used by industries such· as metal plating The review was scheduled three Ba!,boa Boulevard. Newport Buch: 222 to reclaim dissolved metals, lower the months .ago to evaluate corrections to .forest Ave .. Laguna Beach: 17875 Seidl demand on sewer lines and reclaim water naise problems cited by several residents Boulevard. Huntington Beach and 305 used in processing. living closest to the park. North El Camino Real, San Clemente. • Fablllous Color! FabuloJs Shag! FABULOUS PRICE! Board Asked to Provide ... ind Amazing! More Nurses for District Three Khoo! nurses serving 1 student J>OpulaUm oLl,000 deocrjbld Cli<lr hectic routine and .asked for more bf.JP Wednesd1y. Addressing the Trustees of the Sin Joaquin Elernentl!Y sehool District, Mrs. Laura Diiger. Mrs . Caroline Schumacher and 1-frs. lifyrna Hickey sugelted the district employ sevtn nurses nert year tG take care ol Us 5tudenl.4 "ln the most ef!idtnt mann..r.'' They desaibed their duties which lnclude -ecretning and testing vision and hearini and visual dental checks, pl"O'Vidlng health ed ucation assistance to the classroom teacher. administering first aid, tesching •«ldent prevention, coordinating drug abuse education and counseling parenU: •nd children. They nid lh1t the distance between K.bools hampers them whe.n called to an • emergency and their mi.all number prevents ·-them from doing thom.igb follow ups on recomme.ndations to parents. Board Chairman Gratian B I d a r t quesUoned the board 's responsihili ty In seeing that a child gets medical care once the parent& are fllld .about ., problem. "Unfortunately .,.,,e live in a society where some people don't take adeq uate care of their children." said Dr. Willi am Stocks, Assistant Superintendent for lnstrucUon. "We have to keep 11.fter them until they finally take tbeir child to the doctor or denti st." Trustee Ed Berry said he had taken It for granted that 1111 children receive medical examinations before entering school each year, just as hJs children do. I Extraordiliaryl Colossal! Mr(I Because In this brilliant nylon lace shag Karaa!an's color wizards have dreamtd up such sparkling mlxlou lncrtdfblo Blue, Amazing Whll•~Extraordlnary Gold and even - cotoull Coppfr. Fabulous huoo of thus colors. Tbey'reall lncrectlble, really. !l'olMtloas <Dlftft lo onltl"' -,... wlttl IMldil"' ........ At'• 12' fO< ooly $114.H I IF YOU CAN'T COME IN-CALL 6'6-027?1 tor an expert carpet conaultaJ\t who Mil come to your home with 11&mpltt "ithout aey <1bllptlon to you 1 • H.J.GARRETf fURNITU~E PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR ILVD. 0,.. M ... Thn. • l'fl, Int. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR DESIGNERS 646·0275 646.0276 I . \ ( // I , / / \ I I ' I • t Son Clemente . / . . tapistr•no· , YOL. 63, NO. 301, l SECTIONS; <42 PAGES • • • • J • /EDITION /' • • • ' ' ~.Y. Steeks TEN CENTS San Cle ente Studies Reclaimed Water Use A successful program to ~II reclaim \Vater -the nation's first -in the~! San Diego County community of tet might ser.<e as a model for a · project in ·san Clemente. Santee, like San Clemente, as a new tertiary tre&tment ~lant for · s waStes-a system which turns our uent capable or many uses, instea:z umpirJi into the aea. · • spokesmen 7 . Sanlet County : Waler Qistrict recently announced their plans to build pipelines to reslden:ces near thtir ;new· trtatment planL The conduit will bring reclaimed water to homes fur use in yardl, ·gardens and other purposes otlieit thin drinking a¢ body cOntacl. San ,Clemente City Manager Ken Carr has plaeed a high priOrJty on devising SU.ch a program for . San Clemen,te, and desp1te ·solfte initial setbacks earlier this year in &Q. 11:ta oISan Antonio Canyon, uor 0 Dofun the Voters Deride Cm bu vowed to continue seekin1 a way lo sell the milUons of gallons of reclaim- ed water prodUced by a new $1.&-mUllon plant. The San Antonio project was scrapped alter few weeks of study bec,aUJe of. the costs to potenUal waLe.r users for the pipe.line to bring tbe emuent to separate faUcels. The _residents in the area had co~ an improvement cUatrict to u pay for the pipeline along the canyon floor, bUt projections . of the coot ahowed that the reclaimed wat.tr w o u I d .cost roughly double that ol potable water. It would have been ,\lied to lrrlglt.e canyon landsc1plng pllnl<d lo Cgbl trosloo. Thus far San Oemente'a iniUal plans for the aecond-band water call for Its use on the mun!clpal golf coune-tUrf and in ' settling basins to ward off salt water · intrusion of underground water stQres. ••• ,!- • In Santee, delivery began ln recent wed? to a :ZS.acre publlc park and to a private tree farm. The Irrigation effluent sells for $40 an acre ,loot, district spokesmen. explained -much cheaper t~n Colorado River water which costs $150 an &C(t fool. Santee's reclaimed warte ii U9td to replenish "uridergrOund drinking suppUes, ani is made more purt than the natural prod.uct by passing through a ~bain of I ue· Mission Trail- Bond ·Issue Due Capo Trustees View Sex Films On Clubhouse -. CAPISTRANO BEACR -The films weren't exactly X-rated, but several folks turned out to 5ee them anyway. The films, called' Semalit.y and the Teenager and From Parent to Teenager ~ s.. ·were up· 1qr 1'PP"'Val·bf' the Capiltrano Unlll;d ...,...,i. J> 111.r I c t Trus&ees for Qlle in a 6Jeducalioaal senior San Clemen~ .vote rs wiU be. asked to approve a ·bond issue to cove.r costs of a new community cJubbouse, shufneboard courts. and .two new teMls courts in an election lla,ted sometime next year. Councilmen· Wednesday agreed to trim down. the ,sugg~sUon.s, for projects to be J . I I I J 1 , covered in a bond measure, sticking wilh a bar«lones concept. They ti.uthorized City Clerk Max Berg to find a suitable election date, then asked for specific cost figures for "' new· community clubhouse ·and accessory faciljOes. ·• ,.,._ ~~~ erMD .. ,. The.. plan. which won some diafavor from r<p-.tall,.. ot the ~-*"! ~tlon ..,...,_ Uhat IiOd1 would Pike 1 total parkl aod rect11Uoa jll<bp) . -· n>blbly illvOlvt • -i ..... Vi-of"1IOO; • .Tlje IOillng Of ID llllOWll lftd lrt olocUob d.ale would llmolt colnclde With the Jin. 15, m~ deadline clay for comPlelion or working drawings of the propot>d new clubhouse being pttpared by designer Eric Boucher. Bui trustees · decldid jo table their declskm until ·they c8n view all GI one film, which ha.s three ~ Trustee Bob Hurst commented that he felt there was too much_negativlam in the films lhat_Were shown. e Ret1uul-Pu%:le SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The swallows may be gone,· but there are Plenty of "early birds" left in town that are "Creating a mountain of paperwork for Finance Director Paul Lew. Busines:s owners have been sending in license fees based on three different sChedules, depending Oft Which fee s_chedule v;as in effect. J,.ew has been sorting through them, figuring out who i:s to get a refund. According to the latest fee schedule, the payments will be for a fiscal year beglnniog Jan. l and bills haven't yet betn malled. The city has printed copies of the newest ordinance if anyone is in doubt. e Trurk Parkb'lf SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Trucks will be able to continue · parking on Ortega Highway on the west side or the San Diego Freeway overpass. PHYSICIAN HONORED Or. James McClure San Clemente Doctor Selected For Ohio Award The City Council has voted to reduce the width of the trlffic lanes ~ paint_ -Dr. Ja~es . H. McClure of San parktiig places along die sides ot the c:temem., 18 one of IO-pliy<lcian1-1el~ highway, despite a request by the State to receive Ohio State University's Division of Highways to make the area a Centennial Achievement Award. "no parking" zone. Dr. McCbn ii profesaor and chalnnan Coast Another drippy day of it is on the Friday" b?rizon, with intenni~­ tent showers under cloudy skies and temperatures dropping down to S6 degrees along the coast. JNSmE TODAY The curtain mav be going down on the Children'• Tht'ater Guild of Newport Rilrbor, which i.r losing it.I JeaJe nt'%t nwnth. ...See Enterlainm.tnt, Page 25. Owly 7 =" C.HRISTMAS CtllMrt1i. 1 CMCl!l119 Iii' 1 Ctff.it._. U.- C-'n 11 c ..... _.. 11 DMtlll ~lk•I 11 Olvtf'Ctl It , .. ,.,.. ,.,. ' •Rl.,._hlll!IHI M-IJ ""JI<' n.u "'-"• 11 AM L..,.,.. 11 Mii.. ' ..... ..,,.,,, ji MtYln J1.2J Mwfl.IM tt11N1 n NI~ NN'I .. , CW... c .. .ry II S~l'tll hrtw SI S-IS tf•H SIKll Mlrtlltt 11·» Tt...,ltlllil M Tlltt!Wt M·• WHrlllr 4 WJ!it. ... " • ...,_., "'91 U•1t --.. ol the department ol gynecology and obsltirlcs' at' lbt California· ColleKe of Medieine. at tJc Irvine.. The award is being presented in honor ot Ohio State's IOOth anniversary lo "one hundred nationally prominent persons "'ho have contributed outstandingly to the advancement o( their professions and IOciety." A native of Wooster, Ohio, Dr. McC1ure ea~ his bachelor's degree and medica l tralnlng·1t Oblo-statrtlltlV!ri MedlC!'l Ctnter. . ' Dana Family Hit With Lawsuit A s.nta Ana mu Who claimJ his oon IU!lmd oerious lnjuria when his OOst's 7-yeaN>ld boy attacked: him with a base- ball ba~ has ~ a Dana Point family !or '300.000 Jn ctamagu. Henrx Z*,miga names Miles and Bonnie Collins trid theJr son, Craig, of 33271 Ocean Hill Drive, as defendantl In hJI Ofangt County Superior' Court action. He chara:es the partnts with rtsponsi· bility for lheir boy's behavior. Zuniga states Martin Zunlga, 14, wa!I a ~eat at the ColJl.rb hpme last April II when hla119" was attacked by Ctalg · Collins. Ht claims tlie boy tuflered ,.. vere held il\lUrla in lbt lnclden~ ' Tbe formal machinery for the bond matter is expected to begin churning tn the council's next meeting, the first Wednesday of January. The action to seek the bare-bones bond election came with one dissenting vote - that of Thomas O'Keefe, who pressed his idea for a full·blown tenrus club open· to the public and possibly built by Private enterprise. In fact, the en;tlre tennis matter is the only remaining loose.end to the co1µ1cil~s planning for the clubhouse measure. Dozens of members of the El Camino Tennis Club asked councilmen Wednesday to pprove major tennis facilities on vacant land at the ocean side of the new water reclamation plant grounds. Councilmen agreed he plan was feasible and referred the matter to planning commissioners and lhe parks panel. But O'Keefc stressed that the full tennis facilities should be a segment of 1he funding and planning of the bond meuure. Four councilmen, however, disagreed, sayJng I( ancillary measures were to be added to the bond meuure, its chances of succeu would be diluted. The existing council plans call for the relocatJon of the two existing courts at the old clubhouse grounds to a new locaUon, probably the sanilation land. The land where the old courts are would be. used for badly needed parking at the new clubhouse. Boucher's basic plan calls for the refurbishing or the most attractive, intact section of the burned.out clubhouse and integration of a-large-auditorium and other facilities with it on the old site. ' . ' MA.Y~~ ....... MAKING A "llUSY"HOUSE" TO HELP Tl!ACH \'OUNaST!!RS Mr1. Sally Narmn Ch.ilrs VoluntMr P•rent Protr•m • Edueational J .unk · Schools Find Vse. for Debris An empty box, a ch~ o( w~ a discarded paper towel lul>e -all 1re being saved from the jaws or the 'trash masher and are finding new homes fn the classroom. "We don 't throw anything awaY.," said Mrs. Marilyn Harris, Director of SpecLal Projects for the 5an Joaquin Elementary School Di,strict. "There's a purpose for everything 'if you have the talent and desire to Use it," 11he said. All sortJ of odds and tnd3 find their way into the InstrucUonal Media Cent~r laboratory where volunteer paren~ from every school ~ ·the district tum debfls into games, math wheels and buUet)n board decor&tion!. Eadt· school seni:b ila paren't aldes to the .I.ab twice a month where they work on prGjects requested specifically by classroom. teachtrs at their sCboola. · "A tea~r cn!ght ffil\leSt ,a n.tmel board . storx ,.or. a gAq1t f~r tef~hiJ1g language pfinclples," sald~ Mrs. lfarrls. "We have ei:amples cataloged or she can make up her own." It's the job of the parent aides to · construct whatever ls reque:sted. They op<nd ~Ir time dtawtng, OJtling · al>d po.sting, lBmlMting 'ahd 'stapling-time cpasUnilng ·1as.k! .t!W(a!W .the teac!l~r more ·time in. the classroom •. The lab is full of the wluuteen' efforts. On one wall are number and wOrd Wheels. A brig~t.paper piggy ban!< has a spelling wheel behind it., When a flap is lifted, a new word is revealed each time the wheel is turned. 'The words are assigned a monetary · value according to ·difficulty and l!lS · teams spell words correctly their money . score .adds up -the highest score wlMing the game. · "We have qulte a backlog of materials now:1 sakl Mn. Harris. "Industries give us. thJngs, paint stores give us wallpaper · boob, the parentt themselves furnish &C'l'IPI of wood and magazines." · · "We t1r to zero In on specific.need. of · children ~ cre~l'ing the . vartops , games." she. e~~ . ."Kids are e,poied to mu!Umedla et birth. They see tel'evision commerclab, billboards, signs. We can't shut ft out So we build on it. "Teachers ·these days have to be salesmen. Their product is bow to learn.'' San Clenaente Project Council Views Fire Plans ' . City piano-for 1..,,utly 1mpro...i·san -Th< "<oncitif' w!ilcli '!be m 1 n g • r Clemente fire department working out of a new headquarters wi\h a combination of full-lime firemen, cross-trained police officers and beefed-up v o 1 u n t e e r s received iniUal upiosw'e b ~fore councilmen Wednesday. . And City Manager Ken Carr, whq received a nod on planning for the new headquarters, aslted that the entire pack11ge be implemented with.In the ·next budget year. "This aeems to be what we hive betn wailing for,•• aa_id M•yor Walter Evans after Carr submitted his lenathy report on whit he hid deecribed urtier u a. "San Clemente Plan.'' -.. ' I proposed bll bttn culled from 1everal othtt iftoo:vaUve\ departments. ' All the propostd expendt\Ures for the department would come from mon~y either already· in the cit, budget, 9f coming in next year from cigarette, tax rebates fiom the .it.ale. Carr's initial conctpt of the new hrt ctep,,ftment centers on three bas.le phases: -A new $170.000 headquarters staUon -with full facl!IU~ f0< a 'round·the· .clo<~ squad of fire flghl<!rs -· 14 bt blllt on two levels in the pafk.tng and driveway lot next to exbt\iig fi~ headquarters. . c:..nctlmeo look their .1noot . deflnli. - acUon on this plan Wednbclly by alllhorWng . Carr . lo eontact t ~ • ardlltedural finn whlclr'dtJlped to the civic center , to ate if · It would be lnl<!rested Jn designing .lbt flie bulldlng. The pre~ plaM lllO -Id 10 lq • the holding company whlcb ii Jn lbt civic cenru leaMback mlrigemont&. PlaMiJJ1 commbskin also will ttCeive lhe tdtaa: for recommendlt!OM. -The hltlng at 1n 1pprolhnll<! cost ol $52,000 a .yt1t of four rull·tlm• f~. bringing tbeJull·llme romr up 16 ...... . lnciudlng the lire chlel. Tht ldditlorl of the men would '"""" two 24-l\OIJr lhlfll with .tbrt'e men on dll(y IJ an timea.., " ' recreational lakes, then through deposl~ or natural sand and 1 r av e t before reaching ground water stores. The .entire Santee project has woia endorsement by the region water quality: control board and ~•Ith, department. .. 'It wlll be a good many years be.fore this water 'will be drlnkable," said Santee water District Man1Jger Ed Houser, "but we hope to show how it can be some day." ant FirmOkays Rockwell Site Deal By BAJARA KREmICH OI ttit O.ltr 'lllf Stiff The Fluor Corporation announced today that it has reached "agreement l D principle" for acquisition of the giant North American Rockwell plant in . Laguna Niguel The traMaction call.! for Fluor l9 trade a number of Its real esta~boldlhp for the unique "7Juufat"., dC.iP.ccl by Wlllilm Perelrl. · ~ Add!Uooal real property In cash wlD bt • tracjed for property aurToundlng Ille h!lld!ng aod 10r· .D opijoa~on1-.cljacont---:'I ·~·· To\11. cost of lbt facillly II In wtss of "'1 ,\nlllion, ICCOrding lo the FluO< ~ment. Preliminary negollallons for 1he sale have been undtt way for montlu. Final negotiations will commence Immediately . and it is anticipated that the close of escrow and transfer or UUe will take place tn the second quarter o! 1971. The Fluor Corporation, now based Jfl the city of Commerce, will Ille the oDe mUJion.square-foot facility 11 ~ tta new corporate headquarters and 11 the headquarters of 11.s Los A n g e J e 1 englnetrJng and comtruction division u well as bel.dquarttn: for Fluor DrilU.ng Service!. These facll.ities now o c c u p y approximately 600,000 square feet Of spa.ce, a· Fluor: spokesman said, a~ employ about 2,100 people. Fluor properties involved jn the transaction with North American Rockwell include the present corporate headquarters OD Atlantic Boulevard and a Task Force Facility on Ferguson Drive both in the City of Commerce ; Marineri Bay apartment land and anchorages IQ Marina llel Rey; Fluor's interest Jo Lake Point Towers, an apartment development in Chicago, JU.; Part Center Plaz.a, an office building complex tn San Jose, and 1,000 acres of propen7 Jn Hayward. The huge Lquna Nlgutl ~uro, designed to bou!e NO(t1L~rlcao Rockwell 's AutonetlCs dJVlsion. wu placed on the marltel a year ago wben cutbacks In the space program halted developmeiit plans. Constnu::t~9n, 1 however, has contin~ and the exterior of the tiered building Is virtually complete, Interior modifications will be made to suit the needs of the purchaser. Fluor is a major international firm providing engineering and construct.kin services for the rtlJnlng and petroleum industries. A spokesman said ita wcrk force is expected to double .in the next 10 years. 'lllt corporaUon. In addition lo Ill Los An~es headquarters. has facUttles in Houston, Texas, London, Holland, and Taiwan. -. Here's Correct . Whale Number . . Tht phone number 10< r<g~lralloo In whale ntchlng a'lllses ._.ed by the San Clemente Parent·Tucher.Student AS90Clation was JncolTectly given in Wednesday's Dtlly Piiot. Project Chairman Mn. David Robbins wlll 1ccept Jnqulrlft 11 41§;1119. Mall 114!nUpo can bt clli«led lo 3lm Callo Ft>rlunl, CleJatr•no Btoch. 'lllt flnl two lrlpo llll1 bt Doc. D ...i lO. • • • • ------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ..... ~~...,-.~,~Tl...,...,.. .... ~..,..-.1'""...,~.~-'"'°"'"'',_,.·~•,_,.•~.,-.~,~.-:=-::-;--;;-.,.-,.,. '"'t. ' I , 2 OAILY Pll01 SC Traffic Linai t.ed County Defers . Jetport Study " Oranae. County supervisors put the ~ tnkes on past airport studies Wednesday and soared toward new hori.tons. The hoard ·voted to defer study of any future jet airports in the county until the f•lllbllily of a Jetport In the Chino Hllll ·(northeast of Brea and Plac~tia) or at C:.mp Pendleton is determined. On motion <>f Supervisor Altnn Allen. the board members directed the director of aviation and the airport commissionus to study these two sites without the use of outside con&ultants. Jn another motion the board voted to limit traffic at Orange County Airport to the present contracts which allow up to 41.8 jet Oi&ht.. per day to 1972 and to allow the director of aviaUan to negotiate I with the airline• for wvlce beyond Im but adhertng to the no tncreate lo flJgh~ principle. The two motions on the controversial airport matttr roncludtd almost four hours of wranaling. Supervisor David Biker filled to aet through motions which would have stated that there are no jetport sites available in the county with the possible e1ceptlon of the Chino Hills area . Bake r also wanted the board to adopt 1. policy statement that jet fll&hts were to be phased out at Oranae County Airport and that the airport commissioners study poMible sites for small aircraft use. He failed to get a second on any of his motions and after long 'febate the board finally accepted the Allen and Phillips motions. Previously board mtmbtrs had heard general opposition to all Medina Told My Lai Gls 'Party Over' f recommendations In the Parsons report. Ruled out by spe1kers were the Bell Canyon jetport, the Brea general aviation port. the joint use of El Toro Marine Corps Air Station and the use of jet planes anywhere In the county': The $140,000 Parsons study is the culmination of eight ye1rs of airport studia: carried out by the county at a FT. BENNING , Ga. (UPI) -The cost of more than $250,000. Calley court-martial recessed for the Consensus of the supervisors and those Olriistmas holidays today afttr hearing who appeared before them Wednesday the 15th consecutive witness testify Uiat v.·as that the day of the jet plane was Capt.. Ernest L. Medina ordered the ending in the county unless vast Vietnamese village of My 1tai destroyed. improvements wtre made in noise and James ~1. McBreen, a 23-year~ld sbOe pollution factors. I The Airport Commission found lhe 158lesman who gave his addreJS on y as Par-• report "deficient in many mas" "Long Il5land, N.Y .. " et>nceded under· _..., cross-exa.mUiation that Medina .bad not and the "most serious deficiency to the consideraUon of the first constralt -specifically ordered women and cblldren people... . killed, but added: · . In ill r ecommendatJona the ''We had been told only Vie t Cong or commlMion suggested : their sympathizers were there (in My -That no slle auggested by the Lai) and anything left was to be killed." p d t·fied as Medina, who underwen t a preliminary AnOn5 Company be I en 1 acceptable. hearing in Atlanta today to determine -That the board and et1mmisslon whether he. too. should 15tand trial, was establish more measurable standards by 1st Lt. William L. Calley's commanding which alte.s at(! to be evaluated and that a officer in Vietnam. priority of consideration of s u c b Calley is standing court-martial for standards be clearly stated. allegedly killing. or directing his men to -That action be initiated to Improve kill, 102 South Vietnamese civilians on the human facilities for Orange County March 16, 1968, the day he led his platoon Airport with its limited defined use. That on a sweep,througb l\ty Lai. The defense is, toilets. waiting rooms, food, bagage, claims that anything Calley did lbat day, air cargo, etc. but avoiding any he did upon orders from Medina . expansion which would permit additional The next to last witnesses be!ore the airlinu or papena:er flight facilities. three-~ recess, Tbom;as J. Kinch, 24, -EI Toro Marine Corps Air Station of· <;at! May,.N.J. 1<lumed lo the •tan.<\ obould be lludied further '° that the lodAJ Del repealed a sta)Cnen~be madi coanty wt1J han' ~ llOnd In any plan for Wednesday -that Medma called off the joint me ind a plan for civilian use. The ldlling at My Lai with the announcement~ county should not wait until an ·~-~rty~5---0ver. that'.a-tQOUib-~-arilea-b)'-feUO!!-of-rchance ah 'lor toc!p." In~ ai'tlro mliliry,)>efnre making 114 lllidJ, ~ 1111111 ~ be made now t ·• .._,. IO that tbe ccunt1 wtll be able to protect Three Cl.eahup· ~Th"::h.~~r:r1~·~~1rport commission to institute fUrthtr studies on W ks S 1 d 1 -d Its own, without the employment of .ee C le UW another consuJUng firm. to identify, If In San Clemente San Clemente will have three special trash cle anup wttks next year, instead of the prev!ous ooe. Couliilmen Wednesday agreed with suggeS!ons made by C:Ouncilman Cliff Myus reoenUy that the 15pecial rubbil!ih pickup weeks be. expanded to include a winter program. After consulting with the city's contract rubbish collection firm, City Manager Ken Carr SUggested special periods in January, May and November next year. The folklwing year. Carr said. the progr~m could be cut to two w~kl!i a year -011e in spring; the other ln the fall. The special January program, he said. would make up for the single pickup week this year. Details of the program. which will lnclude special pickups elf especially bulky quantities of rubbish, will be worked out l500n, Carr said. DAILY PILOT N..,•rt lexla Let111• l fftil CMt• Mesa Hntt .......... .... ,.,. ,..., .__ OIV.HGE COAST PUILISMING COMll'AMY ltoDert N, W11d Presld1nl •r.d Pllbllll'ltr Vici PBl!Oan •r.d Glnll'l l Ml lMW possible the location of a metroport silt. general aviation airports and recreational airports. -That the board immediately instruct the Local Agency Formation COmmlssion. PlaMlng CommiliSlon an d new Airport Land Use Commission to take all steps necessary to protect the approach and clear zones at 'El Toro MCAS. In defense. Stanley Walsh. cansultant for the Parsons Company, said. "'nM: commission and athers are deficient in understandu\g what tbe .soope of the report is. The scope was not defiled and we could not take the impact of people into account by 15Utveya because we did not have enough funding to expend tha t much time." As to city staffs which had said that Pa rsons· repre.ae ntatlves were perfunctory in their apprnach to local problems and officials, Walsh said, "lhey would logically say that because they are against airport!." Walsh said the opportunity to estabUl!ih a isingle jet airport in Orange County which would satisfy most criteria Is l011g past. He suggested officials look to the future when Short Takeoff and Landing (STOL) plans will be available. When the consultant intimated tbat the count:i: had passtd that point where a jet airport is feasible, Deputy County Counsel Arnold . Nuttman challenged, "Your report does not say that." Walsh replied that the report had only technical findings that environment was not a prime consideration. I ' D.lll'I' 'IL.OT 5111f '~et• QUAFFS THIRST WITH REC LAIMED WATER AT DEMONS'rRATION Assem blyman Robert Badham (R.Newport Beach) Ha5 Seconds Officials Get Tas teful Idea of Treated Sewage Public officials Wednesday wer e Aller being forced through an organic offered a tasty cup of treated sewage, at membrane and filtered through charcoal, the Moulton-Niguel Water Reclamation secondary trea ted sewage Wednesday plant number three in Mission Viejo. became clear. drinkable water. A meter The tasting followed a demonstration of i;ho\vcd 1he TDS content to be reduced reverse osmosis, third stage treatment from 700 parts per million to 55 par!s per process capable of clearing upwards of a million . million gallons 8 day . Dr. Howard Keller A blend of 1.2 million gallon s of or the GBK Enterprises firm in reclaimed v.•ater and 3.4 million gallons Placentia, eicplained the process to about of ground v.'ater v.·ould yield 4.6 million 30 people including Assemblyman Robe rt gallons of pota ble water at 900 parts per Badbam (R·Newport Beach). million TDS. which is v.·ithin accepted Carl Kymla. executive director of the v.·ater standards. Dr. Keller noted. By comparison, v.•ater impor ted by Moulton Niguel district said the plant was l\tetropolitan \Yater Distri ct from the being made avail.able to the private firm Colo rado River carries with it more than for purposes of demonstrating the treatment process. However, the district 700 parts per million of TDS. is i.lltertsled in reclamation proa!sses Tapper said peop~e·s reluctance to taste particularly in view of the interest in ~e revers~ os~osis treated water was fioding-a-way-t&-use-tbe underground-~ychologtcal . .- water of the San Juan Capistrano aquifer. . I~ peop~e s Opp@ fu Uiln a ut it The largest q.nderground basin lytni they d realize thnt all the wale~ on e~rth solely within Orange County, the San has been recycled by nature ~1nce h~e Juan aquifer has water with more than bega~. You. may have shov.ered this 1 200 parts per million of total dissolved morning v.•1th wa~er molec.ules that 'I'd (TDS) K I ·d Cleopatra bathed with," he satd. so 1 ~ • Y?1 a. sai · Recycling wastes is•nothing new for the This amount as. m excess _ of state Moulton-Niguel District. Pl ant" three standards for pubhc c~nsumpt1on. provides secondary treated sewage to the George ,Tapper. superintendent of the ~fission Viejo Golf Course during the dr y reclamation plant., speculated water season. Kymla said . treated by the reverse osmosis unlrcould \Y hen wastes aren't needed for the golf be blended with the underground basin course lhey are bypassed to another water to get a product that meets district station and pumped over the hills standllrds for total dissolved solids. of Laguna Niguel and ID the ocean. School District Gets 34 Names For Bus Drivers The job pinch being caused by the nation's sagging economy was evident when the trustees of the Laguna Beach Unified &hool District approved the hiring of two bus drivers. The board members were fold by business superintendent Or. Charles Hess Tuesday that there were 34 applicants for the positions. The job pays $3.01 an hour and is not full lime. The bus drivers work on an as-needed basis. ., Hess said he received applications for the positions from as far away as La Mirada and added, "we didn't advertise that much." Although Hess did not know If any aerospace engineers were among the applicants. be said most of them had worked at jobs other thal'l bus driving. One of the men hired !tad once operated his own driver training school, he said. Keller noted his equipment primarily is used by industr ies such as metal plating to reclaim dissolved metals. lower the demand on sewer Jines and reclaim water used In proceS.!ling. 'Devil Ctdt' Cue -. Teen.Faces.Adult Trial Ill Killings worahip over ber and devoured ~ o( her body after they stabbed her to de1tb in in Irvine orange grove. Mr•. Brown WIS kWed June ·Z. Carlin A Garden Grove youth accused of complicity in the "devil cult'' killing Of Mission Viejo teacher Flortnqe Browo and the hatchet slaying of service station attendant Jerry Wayne Carlin was told Wednesdiy that he will be tried as an Jr~ killed on the prevloua n.laht when a adult for the Carlin murdef. .. group allegedly lid by Hurd butchered Superior Court Judge James F. Judge him with a hatchet In a U:~ict station set Feb. ft as the trial date for Arthur robbery that put an esUmated $45 in the.it Craig "Moose" Hulse, 16, and returned pockets the ~pound defendant to Orange . · . . , County Jail. Officers satd Carlin a a as a t I a 11 t s Hulse's motion represented his last rendered the young m&n unrecorniuble chance to face the murder charges as a with a series of hatchet"blowa. He wa,15 juvenile. That right was removed by an left in a pool of blood on the wuhroom Orange County Grand Jury indictment floor. which rtm1oved the same privileges from trans!ent Hennan Hendrick Taylor, 17, and Christopher "Gypty" Gibboney, 17, of Portland, Ore. • If District Atto~ney Cecil Hicks' attempts to extradite Gibboney are successfu l all three defendants and transient Steven Craig Hurd. 20, will face separate murder trials in Superior Court. Hurd will get his trial date Friday from Judge Judge. That setting had been delayed pending Judge Robert L. Corlman's ruling on whether the alleged leader of a band of drifters was sane and able to stand trial. Judge Corfman ruled that he wa s and Hurd will now be tried for the killings of f\trs. Florence Nancy Brown. 31, of El Toro and Jerry \Yayne Carlin, 21, of Santa Ana. Taylor and Gibboney face identical charges. Hulse is accused ,of k 11 1 i n g Carlin and being an accessory to the Brown murder. Mrs. Brown's body was fowtd last June 15 in a shallow grave off the Ortega Highway by investigators who noted that her left arm and vital organs were severed from the mutilated body. It is alleged that Hurd and bis grou p conducted rites associated w i t h devil Seabreeze Park Will ,Continue For Two Weeks San Clemente's Seabreeze motorcycle park -which will close for good at year's end -won a favorable nod to continue buslness for the next rew weeks fro m rity councilmen Wednesday. The park'.s-use permit ca~ up for"""its 90-day review Wednesday, and was given the short bleasing. ' The park will close Jan. t because of negotiation fo r sal e of the land owned by Brigham Young University. Seabreeze President David Whittaker praised council men Wednesday for their help in the park's five-month life span. Whittaker also promised attempts by his group lo find a more : suitable substitute location for another park. "\Ye feel that ·we and the city have contributed a service to the kids and their families who enjoy motorcycle riding," said Whittaker. The review was scheduled three months ago to evaluate corrections to noise problems cited by several ruidents living closest to the park. Rock Dropper Suspect ffe!J, LOS ANGELES IVP!l -A migrant wor~ w~s jailed'. on suspicion of murder today after-a Del Mar woman was killed wben a 3_5-pound rock was dropped from an overpass and crashed through the windshield of the car in which she wa s riding. The dead ~·oman was identified as Mrs. Charlotte Sprague. 65. She v.·as. riding with her hu.sband, Wilham . 66, on tbt Golden State Freeway. He escaped injury. Booked was Jam es Horton Jr., 35, of Keithville, La. At about the same time, another large rock was thrown from the · same overpass antl s m a is b e d through the wlndshJeld of a car driven by Dennis Griffin, 20, Baldwin Park. He was not injured. Officers said the woman's dea th was the third homicide of that type within the past thret months. Church News Due Tuesday Orange Coast churches and temples desiring to annowice special services for the holiday 15eason should submit neassary Worma~Wlh! -oAiiY-t- PILOT na liter than noorrTuesda • .,.- 'Tht n~.spaPfl-Is · piar\ninl a wra~p 15tory on all services offered. It will be published in Wednesday edllions. -· Announcements should include the name of the organization. church or temple . time of services, location , minist er. r,:ermon ti tle and any other needed information concerning the nature of the service. Articles can be brought to any DAILY PILOT office. Locations include: 330 West Bay St., Co.sta Mesa ; 2211 West Balboa Boulevard, Newport Beach; 222 Forest Ave., LagWla Beach; 17875 Beach Boulevard , Huntington Beach and 305 North El Camin.o Real, San Clemente. Fabulous Color! Fabulous ~hag! FABULOUS PRICE! J,.lli: R. Curley lh '"11 K11vi1 to!tor Jho1"11 A. Murphin• MI MDl,,g l!Clti.r Board Asked to Provide "' ... and Amazing ! "-ith1rd P. H1U SO!rlh 0 ,."§1 CO\lflty Edl!Or om. .. C0.!1 Me.11 SlO Wnl llY Strwt ,.~, eu,~: '"l Wn! ••~• M!JllWIC • L1g11111 , .. ,~: ?n l'"orut AYllll.lf l-!U0!11"111111 llNC~: li'11l kid• llov~ a..~ tllmcni.: m Hanh El C.mlnl Rt1I DAfLY ~lun', ""1111 ~ltll fl mnlMl'ltf h H._'°1'nt, h riuf!llllld 41lly ~ ...... ... ., ,,, "1>1•••11 lfll-.fltf' ~ k$dl, ......... , k •c.71. toll• MtH, ll\IM~ ... Cfl .-4 F-lltr. VI iify, .... wnt1 TWa ,......,, .,,,!IN. OrM191 C-t """'"""" c-iy prlfol .... Oll"h .,.. 11 1111 Wet a11t1t1 ltvll,. H-1 ,.,.(JI, ,,. JJ:r Wiit .. , ,,,...,, C.!a MtU. , ........ 17141 '42-4J21 Cs-JflM A.t..rfitlnt &42·Jt71 ... C .... nN All o.,.,._.,: , ... ,. ... 492-4420 Cowrflflf, ,,10,. Or•l'IOI C..11 ~1'ttll!O ~. H1 -• ,..,Ill, 111wrr11i-. .. 1..,.191 ""'""' IW .tfYll'11M-ll """"' _, .. ,...,..,l,l(ff Wl!fwl ... Ill ...... f'l\IMlorl tf ~ ......,. ~ t .... fl"I• Mid ii frf.-t .. Id! •~A C:..tt Ma#, C.tlfor11l1 • .hll:IK.r!J>llM a-., «trW U .:tf '""'"''"' .,. "'~n ll,71f!'Dllflly1 fllllll1ry tlatlM!IOont, U.21 fl'lltl'llfll't'. More Nurses for Di strict Three school nursts serving a student Populatioo oJ 9,000 df:saibed their hectic rouUne and asked for more help Wedntsday. Add ressing the Trustees of the Sin Joaquin Elementary School District, Mrs. Laura Dilger. Mrs. Caroline Schumacher and Mrs. Myrna Hickey sugaeated thei dirtrict employ r,:even nurus nl!xt yeir to take care of Its students "In the most efficient manner ... They described their duli!S which include screening ind testina vision ind hearing aind visual dental ehtck11 , providing health education assist1net to the cla!lroom teacher. admtnl11terlng first aid. teaching aecident prevention, ooordinallng drug abuse education and coun~Ung parents and chHdren. They said that the d!Jtance bttween schools hampera them when called to "" emt.rgency and their small number prevents tftem from doing thorOu'gh· foUow ups on recommendations to parents. Board Chairman Gratian Bid a rt questioned the board 's responsibility In seeing that a child gets medica l care mce the parents are told about a problem . "Unfortunately wt hve in a soci!ly where some peop!t don't take ad~uate care of their children ." ~11id Dr. \\'ilh11m Stocks. Assi stant Superintendent for Instruction. "We ha ve to ketp after th~m until they finally take their child lo the doctor or dentist." Trustee Ed Berry said he had laken it for granted tha t all children receive medical examination!i before entering 11chool etich year, jusl as his chlldren do . • Exlraordln1ry1 Colossal! Why? Because in this brllllant nylon face shag Karastan"s color wizards have dreamed up such sparkling mixes as rncredfblo Blue; Amazing Whit•, Exfra6rdli1ary'Go/d and even' Cofos!Bl Copper. Fabulous has 00 of these colors. They're all fncredlble, real ly. ( Fobalous comn In ncftlnt orN ""JS with ntlltdlitg fri"lt. A t' x 12' f« o•ly $134.951 . IF YOU CAN'T . COME IN-CALL 646-0m tor an upert ca.tpet • coniultant whowUI b>me to your home with u.mple1 "1tbout any oblip tlon t6 )'OU ! H.J.GARRETT fURNllURE Ess o .1 2215 HARBOR BLVD. PROF I NAL Op .. MOft., Tllur1. I. Fri. IYts. COSTA MESA, CALIF. INTERIOR OESIGNERS 646-0275 646-027& • • 't~ DAILY PILOT SC Thursd.ty, Of'Ctmbu 17, 1970 Complete-New York Stock List Your Money's Worth • OVER THE COUNTER ~ .... Higher Fuel Prices Spark ll•rwtllf1Yt l11""4Mler '""""""' ti ..,...,,_ .. ,, t I 111 hwtl l'tA•O "tic" .. ,.., l~c_.. ,..1.i1 ., _"..., "'',..._ • -1111..,.. ll~ij'J" Developi11g New Som·ces NASO Ll1tln9 sfor Wednesday, Oec•Q"tber 16, 1970 !@lH•f. ;o, AelfttCl•v ii AUMJo'i'!I 111 NEW VOllllC !JI.Pl !I w' >jl"I II Pe<: F•!' '!:: '! HI!! Tel JI o r.-::i:.~lt1 \!! -TM IOl'°"'lftt OW 1\ot P1~to (o " ,,. G.C.1 ~· t "4d•tt1 1:1.ie lloM -ll•d '' Hiii O~t H'n "•rV '; "' • t t ~ A.i"ti.eLll I «I -ltlltO _ 4¥0+1 HUO tt..,, i P1110C'.I ~ 1' :w-h'IPC t~ o\tnlfrll l"t N.i~I .t.swc., t'lun! 1'4 ,..,,..... t · ~ II '" "flt,i; 4'•11•LI .i 1 '''°" ot *"'ui.. ~,111 • tu. .. •~,hir ~. <.i. ~11 tl'll ri.. •~rr• Co d l>Hi.t'•1. _ •M ., .... " I"' I "" "'-'!" 1 .... ,.,.. " d 1rn 2',k "',,, "r'M,.. By SYLVIA PORTER 'The age of abundant an ~1cUon l\OI """"! "'"~ ,..,. ._,,. "' v,; PMrt Mt ~"" '" t.111 " .,.. 11 ... , """ r 111 r!Otl• 11111 ••• ... ""'" 't "" i.. .. _.,n t '"" 1raw c1 » ,,1 ,1,,., 1 "" ,, • The drealed fuel cr1s1s of cheap energy ls over A ne:w Our netds or energy w .... ,,,,riv, 1 .. ,., ne1 Nuc ' .. :ttl"I •• E,.,.i., 1o11 11~ ""'" Tv i • .., •, •H" .... \'ihter '71 has apparent•· ..._n double w1th1n the: next lS :::~~.~~,:t~ •• °1 l~l''c!.:m ~ J,,. ~:,,,.G\!'1e '! ... 11~ 1100 1 ,~ ~ ... t~ ·~ !Mu'"''' "' 't ... " era of rl!lng prices Is on wb\ch I 0 l u d "I'll ,1 wlllcn 11\fH "I'm Ill l"" ~ P•tl w. '"' 711 ....... I 20r :,:0i-.. r 10 ~ ,verted for now Among the ~ears a one ne s Y Ml("\,lr11111 could'" 8W•n 1, 1 P11ro111 4.11'1 u ·~~· ~ u .. .a.1~i.111 111,,,1 ,.. htadll!led reasons g1,en cradlt easily may last five, lO or estimates that, Just by the end ~~~ w~"I i>v;, l~I 't;'~1 ' ft~~ ... ~~ft0\u:' ~ ~..., l:'-t~t w 4~ ~ ~l11e~l~ 3f. ~ -fer this are more years" of this decade, wa wlH need 43 =~a1,, (b i ,,...:ll:t, !~l,~y •1 I 1lVi =:::~,, 1 .~ J~11,...:in 1!~ J}l :=r.~ 1 J: :PresiQ.cnt Nixon has ordered Again to Illustrate McLean percent more coal $2 percent ~~t .,,y 111t~~. ir'Muui t ~..., :n •r c;~1~ ~ 1'v, in'~~~ 1 :i. 1l~ .a.ie~ .... ,. ~ : rtlaxallon or curbs on on sees coal prices cltmblng S to more gas 43 percent more ;i:1111 no1 ~~~· j~~: [ i~! :11o ;::: ~~ , R; tl:~':i~ c;: t1~ ~~ i1$t~ ~~ .. imporls and production the 1 percent a year HardC'sty c1rude of! 78 percent more :::ft'.~" ... com j:~.wl' ,:~ ~~ ;~ss ~ fl~ lf.., J~::,,f•! 1l.._ 1J\o\ :Ur:,~ i fl ' (}(!Jee of E merge n Cy sees natural gas prices Up as e eClrlC power 4AA E111 1 I'• Jfim1bi t: ' Publ~llr )._ Jh Trnclll ffl r !"" 4ll0 Mtlft «! much as 30 to 50 percent only To meet these needs the ~~P~Otf 1:~ ~~ 1h7111 #~ J: J~ ~ur~, n~ f1,;_ j~f~ 0~ 1 1 ~ ~/lfl:0~.''A ~ ·-tpr>e"P0a11",dnoa"t sanhdaosthcearlleenderg'"y live "Cars fr om now nus 11 petroleum mdll!'llry ;ii one will :Ifs 1~rw; :" ~ 1:1:1~ :i 1"' ~ ~11~ ~~~y c~ •"" :~ ,;~:1r''" ll1~ 1~ .-.11,i!'!j1r 1 "" ' S' •·• >< >' ' >O'-' ·--r.: >O> ! •o >• 0\ A!._ Ir •I 4 I I g have lo raise $300 bUllon of,'.> ... • ,· ,,'.,"'-,, .. •• •• • ,,_ • .a.11c1511, 1Sc> : ·fpqustrlCS to lnCreaSl' lhe[r mereyasamplO ..., '~ 1'llo " r• n:iN•1 CM 11• t!!~~~1fi1ttm J1 ,iz:Aul1C~•lm !rupphes of fuel the Interstate And both ~tcLean a n d capital and ut1ht1es will have :~1, 'r,.. 3,, 31• is:;:"',. 10 ~ 1f! :.di~':,, '"' 1, .. ul MtGll Jt ll? ~t~~:;:-,u' ~ ~ ..t..:.:.merce Commission has Jiardesty argue thal you Bnd I to raise another S\25 billion for :ft"~ ,e• lt! tl.! ~:it!!~ ,J': ,. ::~~1 {", '° 20v. u 1•11•11 11 ,, .a.1cCM1 1 '° ' '-"'" t 11 tl g e erg v plan•-and equipment This .a.lr 1ndu1 1 jl.11 Kwit E 1~. 1'4 R•Y'~ CP ll.., J~ ~ f:::: •1 •iV:i .a.Me.a.c so ', Jiiked the charge of idle coal are S I ge In n :r '-" .a.!rbr11 F l• o 1 v. KtY• F b u ~ U"-R1vm C• 14'-Is"' u lr•L. •f ' Amer E1 1 20 comparat1vel.y 1ncxpens1vely means the companies must be Al"'e ~ 1to l , lc'.1v1 c~! 11v. 111.1o R«09 E" 161\ 011 u, '!nP , • 22 Am E1 •114<1 ' hopper cars thereby speeding for since the base year or 1957 surr1ciently profitable i. o : ~r;~ 1t ~1! ~r::1 1~1 !" 1~ :r~dfr:?. ~l~ tl~ ~lr111 1~• ,~ 11~ ~~.~··~1J': up thetr use and easing the t .a.1oco L.11 i ""' 11 1(1"'1 El "' ~. 1u1ot~ s10 21 !f·· :-:•L.L,o,, s, ' AAl•Fllt• 10 t the cost of gasollne has risen attract mves ors All' e•v , , ,.,, Kl•I< C• v. ROid EI ll).l.lo .. ·•·-Hl'I ""' .a.m .a.1r1111 10 i'.a tlroad ca• shortage severa A h t 'I' ec1 Eo s , •" 1(111r, vo1 , ,, Rao111 M n • '!• w•",•,•,·~,,, '"' ? .a.m l•k '°" .1. be d onl" 10 percent and of home t t e same 1me many .a.on c;.., I'" 1'o1Cr111r '• tMRo"""' ·1 ,,_.,,,,,,.,.. fl•nd11 10 5pec1al moves ha,e en ma e :r lh f II be shl .a.mide "" ,..,. L111c• 111 ,.,.. )0 •ov c111 ''-1 W•d•w P !'"" 1 v. .a.m1~1 1 20 W increase transpo rtation o[ heating 011 15 percent (not o er orces w1 pu ng up ""' 1u"' 1J u-1.. Ltnd R:'l f." iti. R , s1ov ,. .. J0\11 w1itt 1<1 sv, U"' Am c111 1 ~ f counting taxes) tn contrast prices climbing w a g e s , .a.,mEiEL•'•'• .~~~ ~"' ~:~:o.i w "' ft: f ',',?., H• ·~ •• 4~~ w.,,':~ ~ ~ ~c~11:r.:P11_..i!, • oil and natural gas rom " " M '!\ 11 ,.. ... 1 10, .a. c ilCI • n-d 1 th the overall consumer price increased machinery cost!: :"'co.~~"' ~t 6'! t:::!' c.' 1 0: ui! ~~;;' 1~ 11 ~ :;:~ ~i: :.! 10 .,,.h1•u; '1 "" ... J:inada a Joint 1X1ar a e d h d •• 1 pollution ~·rbs ,.. M"'k:• 12l• 1 ,.., Lth c°"1 I"•• l -"I ,'.!.." !"' !'4 11 Tr • E .a.c.... ~· ~ C b l level has b ee n in ex 8S JUmpe «i perctn .... .a.m 1t1v ''"° 11\~ u i-ii• G .• !.<: ,.,.. ,,. n, webb "' ,,,. 1 "'v•""" 1 H • a ine food 25 l I Well if that s 1t what can AJ\l'!(u1 fl ,.,,. 15"" ttwl• 81' 10 ~ llh Seo! *• l'" 14 Wtl<llrll S>.. \(o Am 0111111 ! established lo l dent Ir y IS up percen appart. I Mken 111 ·~-l'llo lrw; Ml• tt. .,,,, Sc•1HI H .... •IAI Well~• M U\, ....... ADlttftl "°"' I d isup26 peret'nlandmedical "e do aboul t" \Ve can.a.''' 111c1 ~ l1L.o1>11"' ~ 41•Scrl•to .a. 11-o ~w,1111111 14':11,1v.,.mou11v111 • emergency fuel prob ems an ,..,.,.,.. M 1 • , ... Loll CdY ,.-., t:11o S1••1t "' 1 "' 1+1.i. w11c11 P tl.:. • •0uv1 111 .. o d I care 1s up 60 percent actuallv slash our energy costs Arae11 pt ,. , J111 LH E1r11 11 • 'i st 1 Cm• ~ ! w1111 NA ,., ' .t,mE!""" 1 10 • , rnnrd1nate prompt reme 1a • Ark MOP il u'.\lo L.Yn.ch c ,,,, 1 ~ Sftl11r11 •lilo l'I w1111 M11 ''·• • """ E•• 11W1 • :"I":"' bl Much as you and I mav hv as much as 50 percent ,.., .,... H 79 ~ >0 M•f GE i 11 • "~' svc Ci•" s l" wl'" '"'b 11v. """ .o.me ... p1 ,.., .;~egl5lation b Y responsi e resent it the background thats what \Ve can do F'or the ~~~0 ao1 !f~ U~~ i::::!11t~11y ""' .f! ~~~~~p w1t! s.~ ~1~~ :t11 1~~ 1:l-.: g~~~":11~ 1ederal agencies Etc etc r th ,_ ul lo I A11!0 kl l. H• Mtnln M ! ,.. Sm!!h M " '~ Wrdlw l 1 • ,.... .o.m Hol1! "" certamly a v or I eu r es see morrows co umn a11r<1 At ,"'" Jl• M~nor c • s•. so11" s1 s 1v. , wr1iM w l2,. 3l .a. Hom• 1 60 ·And of course these steps e1~11• l! U1>Mar M•g ",1 •,s •. K11 w 11 l•l•l4•.vr<111v E >""•~•.a. Hom t ot1 I I I 811 Ptlnl 6 .,,. Mtrm Cir ·• ..,. Am Hoop 16 • }Jave been crucia 1n essen ng Bk•m «11 10 , 10,___ M ar-r 2•"' ,,.., ,..,,, 111v11 50 h la f I I 1111111 P )~ ' MIUl LI' • .., ' A MtdlCtl 11 ,. ,the threat of as or geo uc F 'l Cl • u B•u,,,n .1.u M•r•• o ,1 ,,.., A Mtici.140 •• "-coming monlhS ami y eaning p BtYllU U l• l~McQo\IY JO 20"• A MTl(ll•f ' ~ loll flttellm 2) ,, M"'lc H ! S.. MUTUAL Am INllM"I But the real reason lor lhe !!'" "" " "" "" "" " " ""o" >" Im Ind S l ' Mtdtrll J7 ' 31"' All'> l'l\olo 16 • 'briohter ~•t)ook hes not in the nf M11 ,,~ i .., Marki 111 i•,,·. ",','. .a.11tJD¥ ,,. II> _vu Bert HI 40 OI Mfdl<I Cl Am S101•~ • • publicized moves Rather. w. h c cie I~" LID :ttt~ «>'-M!:!:•GT m 1 Am ~p 6Cb • d 1 it arpet aner .. :~".: .1•J•r:. .. o .. i •• ~~ FUNDS :m\~•."'~ both 1ndustry an go\ ernmen 11n,nr J~ ~ Miii VIG , • .,.. 1, ..... r •• t 1t can be 11c~ HI JO Jl Mo •tell ,u,. 1 ~ Am $t~ 1 expe.r s agree l111111e El 1\lo Jlt Mod Sci ~ ·~ !.;'~,:!-11'1• swnmar1zed 1n three "ords 10011111 c 11 1 o..:. Motiwto • 1• 10 AT&T MARS Pa (UPI J -Some has conque red its pollution 1ooi ,..,.. 1J'll> 1'"' ,..,.,., co• w. •to a • •• 11 WWW .a..m T&°1 160 HIGHER FUEL PRICES 101 C.1> 11-io 1'-MIH>m ~It l~ lllio Am WWk ~ f or to put 1t as bluntly as customers who came Into prNoblemsf '" A t od .... l~f:i:i 111 ,~.,. 4~~ :: r !::: 1i= .!T1:J .:i1~r119 ':!! :~.~1 1 ~ ~ '~ :: /{ti' '1'1, h l f A I one o uie us 1n pr U"'"" Irk) SC• JI 11• "I .. TrA '.," ',.~ t11\0ft1 1uor11td bl 111c11trw 41' '10 .a.m Zlroe pos51ble 1t ts t e pro spec or James us tin s grocery n h h 11rw11 .a.r 10.:. "' M ~rr w1 "" r; 1h~ N•tlON .a.uoc jl<l'l'GN 1 !' I si .-. .... ron 10 higher Prices and r al t er b contains p 0 g P ates 1 a 1ru111 I• ,,.., U\. Mo ell M ,•, .. •}: t llOll •• St lJrlllt• 11v Co• 11 1 1 n .a.mttek 6111 P1ttsburgh8lyearsagoto uy h I I 1<ekfl' s~6V.MolClub 1 .. 0...1 .. 1. 1"' '''l"v Guld e1•1n "MF1nc oo •.t r h h now spurring c em1ca eco og1sts say IS IU<On C• ~ ,&,...,. Mue1i.r H• ""' the 11<k:1• 11 whk:ll 11v 1nd1c , ,, 1 ll Aml•c to ·:t't0 its w ic 15 f 1 the usual staples were curious responsible for e x c e s s 1 v e !rt"t" .. ! 1;:, ,~ :Y~1 L\;' ~ 2"'-n.ae ll(ur111" l" ... 1 1111 .:11 ~ '2.t.l ,..,..," 1n, s. Production of major ue 11 w sv 1n~ 2•\11 NCC 11\d 111o iv. clllllcl ,..Wt :r, "'l<ll'"'' "'G\JP ,.,..,P ... cor11 ~""rces and 1 0 n g term about a blue hqu1d m glaM algae growth in rivers, lakes mlldtl I'll ,,,.. t \4 ~ • ., •• c 1l I~ r.:~~ld~:d ~ I ~ ""1 i H 1: n Am1l1r I XI ;>VU and streams c:~ '1 :; ;1 N~~· c~ ft ltt ,'._.,, •,~ y,"!;:.IJ: ~ .... -,! U ,,4 !!! ~::~, ·~~ U --•pJorahon development o f iars E l'" ,, "'" - -!~~~ _,. .., ........ ,.,,, o :, ~ We recogn11ed the c:~r~1" 1I!1J''ii l G1"ct .i41s .a.im,.:~~1" F1uri'1l si ~''°"" !2. ;~.a.m111 .n4 lle-\Y energy sources • What's 1n those1ars"" they ph h t bl 1 1•0 sow '" l t..~1 Lib ~ 'l"' 1ncom 1 14 , 10 111v llnll , :it •ID .t.111c°" 'tt Specificallv since early fall osp a e pro em some 1me 1p 1111.a. ,.-., '"1o1.11 Mtd ,, 1 "' 1n111, , 36 l 't 11111 11" 1, ,, .a."'11 Hoek 1 -h 1 1 h asked a"O • Harry said • Y.'e use •,,',".,' , 'l> '•'' N•,•, f_e_1, iv. V• Adv1v1 , t4 40 1v~ tu l 11 Ancoro 5¥c 1 ~ !1 prices at \\I o esa e ave ,. ,.. ._. N .>= ' .,. .a.11111 "d 1" tl J Hntotk 1" 1 """ c1,., 110 c imbed to a leveJ 50 percent Aushn told them It "as a neithe r p h o s p h a t e s nor ~:;;~ ~8 11.., 1 '~ ~i: \t1~ ~~~ 1 ~:~11~:'" ~ ~' ; Sf k~"n!:i.. i~n'J~1• l l ~::C~1°311H • a ve a vea r ago i\s a result carpel cleaner he produced In enzymes and we stick to our ~::::, ~ .. '?1; 1n:: ~fc "N;;\ ll!S n~ ~n.t.rr.' .i; ID n lA:!k!fll 11 ~i ,; ~ i:';. f~·I °' .coal production is way up and the basement cif the grocery or1g111al formulas " c:~''eps ft~ t;~ ~!:~111,.. ,.., H~ ~~lFd ,~II i:H' ::; l! 1J:~ ,~ ~~~:'i:n1~1 <~•n" small coal mines have He persuaded them to try 1t Refuse liquids from the c1111 Lib •'1 1 I'll th e ll ...,.., u• 110 1 ~· Kl 1 ,, 1 01 •r(l\ 01~ 1 "'~, !h1rn11 n: , ..... ~ ... Re/'a I"' l'".a.m ¥111 100':!10'5 111 Kt 4S. '" A•11 PSvl&I • re•umed activtt" The i r reaction was Austin plant are piped into a ~m"c',, 1,, ,••.,~,~ •0,, •~, •,1:z .a. ... E11Y •4Jsa.s ~"' li 110011ss.a.r1•11,s1 10o ' OOlJ. II h Id k " • Amer XPrt•• UI J t 16 10 J7 .t.rmc0$ I ilO •• Since early fall the New encouraging 13 ga on o 1ng ta n ne1 u1~f, ,>,•. 1:. ~ "'~rl 1f:: 1;::, c1011 ,_., 111 ~ I'' 1.i Armc ,, , ,, I A t l l led I k th !...., r"'-•xi s 111 14 '' •J? .t.1mour 160 y 9rk harbor price of residua ust1n v.as con en o erec a ong a cree: near e hi 1r1t '° """NW Pj5v 21:w., n,•. 111v.s1 1 41 t i t "•l•r l 10 1 s1 Armit Ck ao h I -ti d ed llrftt $ 10t 11 2 Mud K • .S..CI 1 •1 Kn kllb 6 St J 21 Arm<~ p!J 15 fuel oil has increased to a contmue running IS grocery p ant 111e qw s are remov hrl•• ., " 101 ~1o ""' '"' ,',"• s100:1t • 11 • 01 tnkt Gt 1 to 1 u •rm ll:u 1 '° h '" l I od II f '"-l k d ll adel '"° 7 lo Wtl » Am Grth ltl '" •• Citl" '''!'' A.ro Cor• tO level 68 percent over a year wil u1e carpt c eaner as a pen tea y rom u>e an an 111. M1z Hi,t. 1111o 1 sc.... 1Jt" 1~ .a..m 111~ s 10 11 •• •Kh 14 °" 1 11 ,.,.,111 11111 1 ~·ago As a result residual oil sideline But his son Harry, hauled to a deep well where ~ill~ uu HU'~ 11~~~ ,:,;,,.,.~"'"'a1" I~ '°"Ltl~I. 11i: 3l; !,•1 :~1c1g11 1 ~ .. tt has Skvrocketed too foresaw the poss1bUIUes or the they are treated before hnal i:z.~11 ::.' ~~ ~~... •r .,"'"' 1?~ ,f4 ,t.Ml\Or G'°'f. Ii f~y ' ..... Aud o<Z'i JO ' M >I •>'-..CC 1 I ,,,. ''" C••ll 41 110 nc N•I •1111u .t,wTr•n ~· th d f October the I disposal Uni ef VI ,. EC " -•' _._ Grwt'I 10 111 ot ,.. l 14 " Atl\~e 1 ear een o , ceaner ~union o '"' 4 1'11111 I r -. •• ·y._ 1n.c11 t JXI 1 ~c~m11 i.~111 .a.ucvEi iu Federal Power Commission Harry now r e t Ire d, Rece ntly ciperallons I n ~=r '& i:;: 'i~ P~Pf'gH 1 s~' 1~ F<t nv • '' •s •...O n so ''~ •11cf Pis 11 • I c ,, .• ,,,~ V.nf l7 •l 41 " •Pit 10 I• '! 1' .o.n RlcM d 1 itilff recommended new price convinced his rather in 1927 to Austins bollhng department ~:r:;. ~~ 5Tv. "t =:¥ ... ,;;; 1;,;; ~!~1 ',1~.l.H L.u111"'1 l•I> Ha 11~ Allll:tll Pfl 7S ceilings for natural gas a full close the grocery and to were switched from a f 1ve-day :J!:~• s~ lf" ~ !~iw~:,..,. ~~ ~~ ..,,t....:.:G\Jl"'Oftl°" , " ~·r~" in ~ !t s:: ::l11~~c~Pr; io 25 lo 30 percent above the d e v o t e ru t! time to the week to four days and the omctt 4 ~ s """ on • "'' l'Ufl<I e .04 1 u Mli G•th s '' s 62 •11•• c11em 1 "'" Cir ...... SOU, E<ll T..: '• >,\'1 Slack J 43 5 '3 M•11 Fa 10 '.1<111 Jl ",V'o' ,',~ .. ~rev1ous gas oohngs As a production of the ca r pe t shift extended to 10 hours om GI' 11•,..uu,F11 C1eo 1 Sci C• 409 •~Mt.11 inc 1•ss 1st0 c r om •I """ ,4,. f:t b 'Ttk 1l• 2111 &•lllOll 160 M••• 111v 10 JI \1 11 A\,lror• Prod 1"esult exp l oratio n and _cleaner ~Y~ __ ~~ ~;,&h~.Jl2: "U?11:.~---;,:;-;t~::~;rr-1r: ~1 u:~~.!i ..-""llevelopment-of-----nev.--soarces The son s a vice pal ciff Harry said p r 0 d u c t I 0 n zom• ... J\~ ffJ: Fl119rhl J ,r~ .. ~ l(llt • ll 113 Ml>thtn 11 Ill 1 IO :vca ~· '°' ror this very clean fuel will Toda v the carpet cleaner increased 19 percent 51nce the c= ~ ~(t ~ ~:lc;1W"!, •v. ~ lT':1r ~: jil 1:=~"tpu,1t,,~j~ .:~: :!1~ • oh G J (m• TIC 4 .... 4'11. FltP Ml1 '"" 11~ 1o11111i. IO '11 Mooe... n IS 11 l'I A¥~,., Pa :to ~ fitlarplv ex-pand J n (Austin s) 1s one of 12 cleaning change was made Employes !°"''" 2 ~ F ~Mt un 20 20,,.. °''on s1 .s1 , n M1 F Fo 101 11 A¥ne1 111 '°" h f th Oii Reck 1t Jl FIT WFlft ,,, , .... 8011 Fd11 10111116 Mii' Giii • n 510 .... ¥fte! of? $0 ]l.tcLcan c airman o e compounds produced by the report al 7 am . take a half ""'r1" •~ f"'Fllck'l-2~ lv.9.,.,., '" l llMuu~ c;w 105710 " ¥1111 pt1 "National Petroleum Council Austin C-Ompany at a modem hour lunch period three 10. ,::,~" L 1l:Z 1~ ~~t oii ,ft; 1rn I~ ~o 1f }J 1~ J: =~ ~p,, ~~:::U :~r: &11 1 Jt aod president of Conllnental 3 t I b ks d f h h ,_ Corp s '. J'!o For ml1 ,!." ,,':-' l u!llCk ,,1vl11 Mui S~ri ,, 50 u $0 plant on a I acre SI e 1n m1nu e rea an 1n1s t eu-cosm vr n. "• Fo11 Gr111 , ,.~ euuck !l 1• u" M111 .,... , t 4 1 ,. ••-•w _ 01 Co COnfldenll' forecasl J th f d , 5 30 cr .... 1r d iJ.,l•IJI Foiom c111c111 1141 20,•NE.a. Mur ,11 '"' .... .., I Mars 21 m1 es nor O ay a Pm Crou co l l i, Jl."" l'rnkl CP • .., JV. Olyld J., :1 tJ ,,.., Ind , 10 , XI a1~rou1 ~ during a luncheon 1nterv1ew a Pltl!burgh I read about the four-day ~~~~ ~ ~? r·• ~~~~111n~ 1~1t1 1r.-: ~~~"' ,;;~ l: :t ~:: 1~ti, 's!~ , ,, 1:1: g,E,l u few days ago McLean insists llarry Austin s sons Harry week and proposed 1t to our g:~ry L.~1 ~ ~ "1:~· c"t: ~~ ~ ! ~~"'::dFd : I; ; ~ l~~" 1~ i~ 'l llll:;:Pn'or 1l~ thal the FPC s unrealistically J h T l th I • H d The 0111 0e1 ' •11> •rl111<1 l!i.al1~c""""~ 115 t. ~1v1d i'' •JO •"o ~11.1 I h Jr and on opera e e emp oyes arry sal Y 0111 G,., 1•.4 Ut. 11 svc is~ 1 1-~ciPI! 1~y !o7 f~ '""" lf ,.(:1' 11~ orc11 114 Jo~ pricing of natura ~as as firm l>h"'h employes 155 accepted the idea " o.,,!~,,'" ,•, '• '•·' ,•,1rc",,, 1 .. 1l-> c1p11 s~r 5 64 f 11 1 5,11 , 11 ,, 111111< or"'"' 1 I l l " t S "" • ...-. ~ llo 1 'C.,,t ~,. 10 67 ! •1 ncom 4 It ?l 8111t Tr 1 I• d~ngerousv rE"s riceu 1 persons on a four-day "'eek He said the extended day 0•Y.,,.M/~ 1~\;1!_._ ~.'i'"' .. 1 • 211 Ch•11111119FU11111 s•oc• 14o0 1111••00 7l 1• 'upplv in thr pasl and that ~ ,. •i l«r 11111n 10.u1111Ntl Cirth 130 to1 R••<1C1t 1'• , 11 schedule The company ships allows bottling machmes to 0eri:r 1!f 3;~ :IJ" l:.:1~·,1~11 7~~ 1:~~ '!!!..s1 ,' ~,, ,' •,, ,N~ c,,, ,•,•, ,'.," 1::J~ :;fsf e'en Wllh higher prices 11 w1 f , , , w --c...... ··-" 1 .. , 13 m1lhon containers o run longer at peak efficiency '", •• ~ •'•" ,,•. , .• '",., ~ ·~" tncom 1 u 1 to,,.~ Wld 11 ,, '! n • u .., • be f l l'ars "-fore the • .... .... f' ,,,., S1>te• 1 J4o 1 xi N1W1on u n 1 01 •111 Mt 011 ive 0 six •1e various cleaning pnxlucls a • tt usually takes about an ' 111r, ",. 201'1 Id c,•,c , 11:v. c"''' Gr lot Nlch sir• 1D •110 ., 1111 11\d ·''-upplv Or natural gas can be ,. "' 1 11\'J C••ll 601 • 11 Nor'•" 1• u 1••l 0•1111" 012.50 ' year to consumers 1n a 51,)G. hour to gel a machme ieroed 11m C• 15 is~ PGW"t" c 114 ,.. "'""" , 01 • 1, Ocn•Ph ,,., , ., •u•cllLb .14 ' aised to a proper IC\ el , li.c Inc J k Gr 1th Cn n. "" Fr111 i• ~1 n • Omeaa s 90 6 01 I'-' t.1b 11 , C mile radius embracing eig ht in and runn ing properly ' he ...:'!,',,', • ,',''. , .. ••,1"'••~" "a 1''-511•"" 10 11 11 ,, 100 ~" ,, ... u 11 e•rh•o• 1 ' \Vhat s n1ore <idde'l """" .... ~ ,, tt S111tt 111 • '' IO I Frt • ,. 'S! 1··1 l'dl I J states said 'The JO-hour day means Onld111 L '"' '"' r"" t ,',' ,1 .. .,c"-1 16n111so"e wms i1.,,uo1t !!,'.',,P11,~ Ho"ard Harrlestv r senior o-Jon J7,,. »~ 1111 11:1: ,.,. co1on111 o Neu 11 •! n •I ,·· 0 - t t I Sales 1n 1969 we re $4 m1lhon more machine time' ~'' 08 :10 '°~ rov• Pr Ju, 4 EQ..,,Y 1 ~' J" 8 .. Penh 136 , o• •ct k:k .JO I Vl''e president (If Con 1nen a -~ ·-NL l 2"' rwlll Ill i v. ,.. Fund 10 10 11 O• "" AIM 'IO'~ 6tKll Air 7! " k th Harr" Jr an executive vice Emploues like the Klree-day un1t111 D 1 " 1~ u••d11 c '• 4 ~ G.wt~ J 1 s P F &eice Per so Oil }OU cari l m1sta e e J • J our1r°"' u"' 1s141 1111 1111 5,1, 1-. f• • " •t• "d 6 '4 1•1a""H tob I lJ president ls 1n charge of weekend he said EZ 1111111 '-" 10 ,.,od,, '"' t\41 v'rnr' 4 o;;•:-;1~ ::~~ ~!~ ~~~ ~U r1r Mow 6C nnce outlook for energy n a d I l r d '" l th ~·•IC wt • m H1novr s lt, '° Col Grt ll 11 •l H., Pt Mui ] 11 '11 :•II flll•COll r1sforms product1onh anh padn r W-de ounkd'"11""•1 eE~~t~to ~~~i~==~~1!d'~ 4t J141!oms Bd •.!O •l'P~ll• l?HU1' tml1Co «I Operation' Jo n ea s our a" wee ras ca " cut !'" s~, ~• '" Hitr lt \' ui ,,..., wtt~ .a.1 '2s 'JS PH1dm •" t 11 1:::31: •' ~ ' ' < ' ' !'-'-"'llllC 1!1164 Pl"f SI 10171011 d I b • h d • \\' I •• I • • I'' Hldoc "' -. Pmo .-.1 1 6, ,,, 111..,, En! 106 ''° ltMflCD I IO .! -.'Y ad\ert1s1ngan saes a sentee1sm e sa 1 e E1>1 s~Jt 611. •'4Mo•m EP " ", ~0,,..011 67J 611,.,,n rnc1 101,11 ... '"'" •U JO L ,.lNTI NGS d r d bo 75 h E1<1er lllt 5\• 6 MolObm 1 '> O" " 1:"11 Siii 1 JO 1 ooo·~ Of 01 \Ve began a stu y o average a ut I ours a El Nl!e 1 '" MPD¥tr .a "°"' om• u • 60 ; JS Pl•n 1~v 'ss 1p.,. W •• ' HOUSE ,, e Nuc. ll"'U""H"'"lr ltt t~1014"C""'• I'd t O! 7'Prlc• Fund• I:~~• WHOLESA\E pollution two years ago v.eek abscntee1r;m before the Ectc1>W 11,. 1 \"4-r<I GI 11J. ~Com•ll! i•• •11 G,.,,.~ 1l ••2'24" ~~·J~ O,'N To fHE PUBLIC Ell 4V. J ~H "'' , ..... 1tv.C011Cord IO•S10 &S N E·~ •11 .,~I ' Harr" said 'and we h;i ve change ln the last week of eirr5.,, 1,,. 1\,H~k M~ •"" 41toC011ao1 1~ 101s11H "'Hor 1Ju u•1 ~'\,s11 110• d :r C!!n!I Ml t 1t 6 1t P•o Fund t JS f lJ IQ rte $5 ar. tm come up with a solution that November it was 80 hours ' C11n1 G•h • 10 • 11 "'o Po•ll •SJ 11s l ','",.fk '•'• -I"'" Co•O Ld 14 M JS ft Prova111 • fl6 'l" •I• '"'" '''' •• '1NGE1t sA.tr;T• •MA makes us one of the f!!W According lo Harry, workers Cn•v C•n 11 50 i .u Prud sv1 '1i 10.s1 1u11 L•uo 1 -Cr11 WOI~ 5511 • 10 Pu!" .... ""'""' !octHll u ~~~~~'"~'~'~'~"~'""'~'~[; _; _;-~11'ii"CusTfies lf'i lhe nation which benclit-b) holiday pay under B £A N er ... woa1 , u , 71 EQu11 ~.., 111 g1ug I• r 'lo ~ DEAL.EllS WlNTf.0 the new "Ork schedUJe 0 ames ~Y1'!1f': J:~61 II g~~· 1~ l; 1; ff 1d:ibi~ ~:~ h lid Olc1t 10 11 It 11 urleOm 7 J4 t '' IOl'lnq Co 40 There are two o ays tn 0e1wr 11_.11-. ~v111 , 1G 1 :n 1011c1t 15t• VPA • d V D N Ch'£ Dell• IJ061t 1111, J s1 t nloridl~lJ• THE GOOD THAT MEN ppowtc Novembe r -eterans . ay ew Ie Do<l1 (Olf 1 SI u SI V•vao '?7 • M aOC!kMl h '71 d Th k " h d B•••wl 1) '9 lj ., II'"'!" t ~• '!II Borot11 I 10 DO LIVES BEYOND an an sg1v1ng, e sa1 ,..,, F~ 111111 11t 111111r~1 14 ,., u St< Borow.tr 11s J ames F L.sh'r ha' been 'That s 20 hours of holiday SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) o..-,i Lw u 11 u n Ro1t111~ 1 ~1 ''° t:"E'o"' 711 THEM ...... B k r A tod-ri'::'.~H-•:ojl' 1•" t:=, "~~.,":' '' n I .. Ed '011" elected an assistant vice pres1 pav in one. month compared 1 ue an o menca ay Grw111 11 s 2 o0 '"' 1nv u ~ 11 65 ou'"'' •nc dent tn the truslet division of with 16 hours before we made said the firms nexl chairman ~~";" l r,-I Y ~':'11 r: ;~ ~ f. :;fofs1"1 J: financial federation Inc the switch" Of lhc board Will be Chaun~y E:~r 11 11 I: /tft ~:,.if't51Fu~! t Go) l :J:,:vw .\ r Los Angeles based savings and Austin said the on 1 Y J J\1edberry, now a member I~~~ sc '~ '1 't1, f,,"...':; ~:::: g;1i,.:;•:,, %, Joa n holding company compla1nl he heard about the of the firm s m. n a g I n g \~~:. I~ n '::: s.Yt1~·0,..m ,g,, ... v;•Jl ~:::H~l·~I 1, Prior to Joining Financial new working hours came from committee ~=::1~~,~ ::: :i:j:~l"G~~ i;;l18:f g~y~ud'',rJ feder ~tion 1n 1968 Lasher a woman employe She said Medberry of If>s Angeles ~:r.zd ro lff ~;ts~:, ~11. ~J·~,;~ l~n'1~r;0 10 Was With the Title Insurance the earlier starting time posed will succeed Chairma n Louis "•'"' Av l 'f t 1t ~~ 0e1" l• '' u " Bw"s~ 1 50 Fl(I Grlh l ) 12 IO ~1"• • )1 t .SS Bru111""'-11 and Tn1~t Co he 1s a graduate a problem for her cows 8 Lundborg, who will retire In Fld 011t '11 s 1m• Fund\ HV<:Y Er 1 10 I I h Fld1Utv G•OU'P CtP!I 7 .IJI ! Ml Budd Co. ~Sp of the Un1vers1ty or Redlands • I ve got 30 head of catt e to Apn when e reaches the Eitt"( 11 11 u 11 r~~•" in" 1 ,, l""'a co _111 s h d d t t r E .. 111 11•i11tt r.,,, l•l en ud tF p1 60 and resides 1n Fountain feedlnthcmorn1ng s e sa1 man aory retiremen age o F1oe1 •••1•00'm11h ~ -11 1 11 111.,,,~111 "" I f h h f d , Now 1 must tak• care or 65 PUr1" •ti 10 50 '*l' 111~ • '' •" Bull or1 1 10 Valley Cai Wit 1s v.1e21n .,. S•l•"I •I• !ll"'w"v r.1 .s•~ •n1u1ov1w to The dnnat1<>n nr An orgAn two daughters them earlier '' ~1 e d berry s appointmen t F1~:?.1 ~;;.: 11 10 ~~;,.tnv '! ~~ 1; f. .~:~ RP~;"~ ~uch as a k1dnry or an P~e 11;::===;0======================::,i d b B k Oy11m llJ 4 11"~"" r.1 •51 4'1 1ur1 lndt .O 1 f "'as announce y a n 'nd"'" J s• J 11 s1••• s• .,., •• , ,, 11u•1 No 1 11! 1"' "' prin1r "'.':11 mp e o m11n President A W Claustn who ln<llfl'I s ., 1 tf sr~Adm•~ FuNI• lllurtN"' Pl s dl"ll nt:: rnnllnuln~ l!O(d Ac I S b Today's 1,1.,,, '" •.Jt .a.m ind J)<I '" l urnctY 10 !.ulll y 11 1~ 1hr 111"'1 rhrin~e ee Y said 'as a member o( lhe~::r,·~·, 'f~;1~Usi!i'~,,..Roe ).:l,6 ',1~:~1':,1111!° f'rlrs om1.,n1 1o dr.~n1nr111\n~ managing committee and"'I • •1101 ~eo B•t 11161111 '' 1'1 Ill I H 'f !6 C•D Oft 1'1 Jt' rri1 111~ frlln1\ 1111111 11:110 Wan! Ads former Southern Cahforn1a FJt Mu111 • '' n uock 11,, n n i'b01 cp, Ml d l 0 kno''' ,,0 econom F-it Net ••• '9 Su11~rvl1<1 111¥ •<HMt " ona 1 n • executive of the bank "'' SI••• l1 •s • °' y•th • 10 ',. •,', ""•'" 1r! harri rrs It 1~ thr ~i r!ll Medberry JS well qualified fo; ~::; E~3 i~ f~' :ff 1:1 !O:!W,c.,"L,, ·~"ornmnn dt'nomfnator {lstclu,.) I d """ c;1~ 407 4 1t ~rncr GI 111 !'°•mo • \Vhrlhr1 n. n1an be 111t11cl! or • ~-CHl"f' '''d 10 ea ershlp bot h as chairman"""'""'' c.r-TMR AnlO •j' .u <1n11ew," h k th ,,.., c. r '" bo d G'""' 11•1111Te•e~rt to 'l ~dll P•t 30 pa\1rer ,. can ma e: e • Th 1 dy o u•e ar and head cif 1"'""' s1 .a 1..:hnc1 1 ., i,. •111111 1 10 ~am" ur;nd"trul gif t And in squaw e:corn srea • policy adm1n1stralion at our =~1 1f1 ,,, ::r"J~ ~J:,••l !~~'"f'.I ,doln:;:: so ti purl of him en• so SQUAW HOE i Los Angeles headquarters " "°"'"' 111 :Jf,,,, r1p 101 JP, .~:r.r.i ilCI llurr!i 1'••11•1111 Gr-Tr•~ E~ •02 t ~;;fi~<O" s fZnd) f.1edberry WIJI be the O:!_!C. s':ll l 'lt-oFr I0 ~.',1,1~ ·~. "',~ ~ At thl!i time nf YC'R r \I.hen bu (i,~lfi I -< -· f.1':, -16e sr1nt nt ~Jfni! 15 •o SQUAW got mad, '' rn organiiaUon's n Umber tv.o ~~ t." f i~(jC Ji;:f '"';~ ,,;'.o •!bl."' mu·h ln ,, ... m•o•s """"'ldrr Ing name le:f1 the pro&-officer and be In charge or the Frei(!.., ; ,. Isl Un!ld • ,. t:il •>1W• -""• ' "' "-'' TEE PEE) Fd fr Miit 'Jll t •Un C8Dlll ~ 6' f.tS t•f11Cll 60b .-.&klng out a donor card or perotts motel C banks o~HUons In Southern "llfld !roe G"' u~11.., 1<1111111, ,5 ~!11<1"• 1 )0 ,,_ I lll Th ood '10~L "'NO ' ,_ -!m'' • 11 • ~ .a.cc"' 'J1 l ' '"' ;u:lrl1nJ?" t tn "nur 11 c on 11 i• '"' .....,. Cahfomia "''« •to 1s. 111e.,,,,-n~1 '• c1c •• n1s 'mnlto d1Jn1Jrs lhe i::-rea le-r the fHI Trd u"1v111 sc1111 un•~•ll •co~" " ht 13~, ~llQ! I" 'M .... ,,, ''O • "~Ill 0 ' t'>f'POrlun11 v f or m11tc ng '" Fund,..,., JJ • JU~d Ct" .,...,¥111 11111 91 ''° 111 ... ,l rlnnori; end thus mr:ire \Valktd • 4 BLKS ' to g;~_,•c 1 ~.!. v\!~1 l'l~111 , ~ 1-1J ~,.~ )0 t:hn.nce fnr 50CCl'll:S HARVEYS CASINO. Sl1arcs Sold au,;..r,~ ,,, ••! '':io"' 'o\O 4 '" ~Ud 10 • 'YQtJ OR YOUR DOCTOR A"::, sp-1 j' "J v~(Dtl s,~, ; ;; 1 If 1=~1l~J' ! 1j~' 14th! 8•1 I'd ls " ~1n.irb1 s•s .~ L El (A~ PH!l:-.'T. 118 '\hen )r:iu WASHINGTON <UPI) -c-'' 1 u1jj•V•'lld J11 •13 ::iM•w 110 nred a rlrll\•f} \\r i1 \ll d~ NO\V! Sheblooktna:tora The Federal Natlona12:i~"1..: 1 :1!:11J~f:111~""" ;~.:n :1 f:~I'° h\ er prnmptly vdthout t:1i REAL E ST A T E EX Gu•rdn Jl 2' H 14 111st 111 t JI lj ot t11ltlU fOtt •'tr" rhl\rtlf' A rre11t m111ny OtAi'llGE • Mortgage A11soc1allon M5 sold M~mJnon ·~h Mu 11 1 tt ..-~ 1 Mil ',,eor-te rt'IY on us: for their 47000 add1t1onitl sh<trts or ~ih' ig ;f:wl~1:.'" J9f11u "!i.~. ':o •health needs \Ve \\1tlC'Ome • Gl\'l~G A PARn ~ \V11h 5lock from it.oi t~a5ury at =:~;::-, 11 ::111 ~~ ln lol~ ~ .. :C 1 rqur~ta for delt~t"ry Sf'rvlce IDT Mair & 111u11h1er rhat B $6525 a i;hare The purcha11ers =!;" ~ ·,~ ! ; +~r 11' ~H.ll ~ .... ,!.s J./'l, lltld rhl\t"fe aceounta. HARD\ \OU HOP" ""Ir. ff' o w1111r I 0 11 11 "''"" ,. c. wtre cuatomera who buy Hitr " 'u w,m,, 1 li • D "'~"' J.!D • To he &ure H~re Is I F I M M M•NI 1'1 u11 Wln(lr l 1 ""' -PA IUI LIDO PHAlMACT mortgages rom ann t ae Hvb•m~ j" J 1 Wto 11111 t fr r• Jjl Ho1plt•I Reed thr ;o,bsnlute: CURE! and own certain qu1ntlt1CS of :~~G~~1 1;j ,;:1=,1~~~~1~i 14Ji 1j:U ~\..,4 1 N••port h•cfl 642·1110 Df\nt PanlC' Here a Jn lb l d .~,I"( •Ot • .-w111111d J l.4 ft ~"~ •• &tant Help' Ck MT5 e govl!mmen sponsort ii• 1ru•' J ~' w 1c F"d l,f? ' 111nw~ i'.• r .,... Dtllffry cwpera!Jon I stock. ~. ~~ 1J: ; ij t1~\:r rlt 1i r~v!>riie by Tl!ltRY GllA,NT, Ir~ ...... .. .. , .... 'M'911 UW CltM Clll • / . . Start Your . Engines! by Deke Hou/gate Something nev .. is in store for auto racing in 1971 -its rirst All·Ametica team. ~American Auto Racing Writers and Broadcasters Assn. is now balloting to determine who vdll win 10 spots on the team. Three each will come from oval and road racing, two from drag racil)I and two will be elected at large. Associated Press will report results in January. •To organize its first undertaking, the 300-member AAR\\'.BA has •ppointed a committee headed by Jep Cadou of the lnd~an­ apolis Star, and the committee has nominated (suggested might be a better term) 20 American drivers: From the ran\s of oval and road racing -~1ario Andrettl, Mark Donohue, Dan Gurney. Pete Revson and Al Unser. Fr~m oval racing -Buddy Baker, Larry Dickson, Bobby Isaac, Tiny Lund. Roger McCluskey and Richard Petty, . From road racing -George Follmer-and Parnelh Jones. From drag racing -Don Garlits, Danny Ongals, Don Prud· homme Gene Snow and Ronnie Sax,. At large recommendations -Garj Gabelich (world's fastest human) and Drino Miller {off. road racing champ of the Mint 400 and Mexican 1000). How does a so-called e:rpert tackle the job of picking an All-America team anyway? In football, it's perhaps easie~, .be· cause the big , games and important teams are on tele".1s1.on. Whether coaches or writers ballot they usually have statistics, scouting reports. TV highlight snows. game films traded from one team to another, a myraid of sources from which to dredge information. Then the expert makes his picks about the same way a~y armchair fan might do the }ob sitting in fronl of the tube w1lh a good supply of beer on hand. Very subjectively. Today's lesson is about how one AARWBA member 1nark· ed his balloL · · T"'o Ollal Race rs Auto1natic _ Tft eudidates are automatic. Al Unser, 'tl'ho bas to be UiW'I' of diie year, won not. only tbe Indianapolis 500 but also a &ICal. el II U.S. driYlng champtonshlp races. This feat tied &be nard 11-ratt total of A. J. Foyt in 1964. Anybody who doesn't ~ Uuer on bis baUot hasn't been paying attention. JUctaard Petty ~s Oat other driver who gels the nod bands ...... Injured at mldseason, be bad \0 m11s enough races so be coeldn't win 1he NASCAR' ilriYlng championship, but he won 17 If tbe races ,be •·as la and dominated stock car racing. i After Unser and Petty, the choice gets toogbtr. Should Ute tlllrd man be Bobby Issac, 1970 NASCAR Grand National cUmp and winner of 11 races? Larry Dickson, USAC sprlnt car champion? Rogu McCluskey, USAC stock car champion? Tiny Land, who won It races and the NASCAR, Grand American tJtle? Our vote goes to Petty's teammate, unnamed by the noirt· lnaUn1 commUtee -Pete Hamilton. He won three super speed· w1y races, includln1 the Daytona 500. He earned $131 ,.oi In ene of I.he world's roughest racing leagues. • Alm05t-51ngle-bandedly the New England college dropout clraaaed NASCAR's image from that or a Dixiecrat convention to an Important national nclng associatlot"t. Gurne11 Be ads Candidate's List Nobody dominated ' North American road racing in 1970 excej!! Denis Hulme , and he isn't eligible. So here ~e get really 1ubjective. Dan Gurney of Costa Mesa heads the list, not so much for the two Can-Am races and one USAC road race he won as for the .extreme competitiveness be maintained right up to the ay announ filiretiremenl In 10 years or watching Gurney race •. we can't r~mem_ber a single time he ,wasn't a threat to win :whlle he was 1n action, and offhand we can't think of any other driver that statement could be applied to. . Parnelli Jones who led Ford Motor Company to its Trans- American championship with five victories and .won the Baja 500 off-road race, is ND. 1 in terms of results this. year. Jones ts simply a great driver, and he could go oo making f!ie ~uto Racing All-America as long as he wants to. However, thts tn1ght be bis· final full year oC competition, because he has no Trans- Am ride in 1971. Off his machi!*like precision, a oonsistency unmatched by any other driver, Mark Donohue wins the third spot on t~e team . Donohue in a Javelin won three .Trans-Am r~ces and ~Jn· ished serond three times to keep American Motors 1n contention all year. It might be pointed out that in two seasons M1C had not woo a single race until Donohue canie alcmg. Mark capped his season lY.1,lh twD formula A wins in his first three starts. _Snom, Sox Nominated It's too bad this is the first year for AU-Americans, as far as the hot rod set is concerned, becau.5e we can't find a reason to. select the twD super stars, Don Garlits or D?n P_roudhomme, dte t the deemphasis on top fuel dragster racing In 1~70. Instead. we opt for Gene Snow, the funny car king, and Ronnie Sox, dominator of pro stock racing. . Snow the Ft. Worth, Tex., used car salesman, simply won everything 'there was to win all season long. Like Sox. he is the NHRA and AHR.A champ as well as the Supemati'lnals elimina- tor. Sox, the quiet Burlington. N.C .. driver who usually lets his mechanic, Buddy 1-tartin, do his talking, was in a class all by hlmseU all season. Savage S11rprisc Driver of Year We can't overlook the tremendou1 performance of Gary Gabellcb, who spent a month on the Bonnieville, Uta!J, salt "·ork· • Ing Ille UiW.raJ gas-poweml rocket car up to speed. ! To do what be dtd . finally setting a land speed rerord of : m.487 m.p.b. only minutes befOl'e rain began to fall to shut : down the nit for another year, Is so incredible that Hollywood : wouldn 't dare &o make a movie abOutJt. Tb.roogb all the fru strations, through a aear tragic brake faUatt Gabellcb clowned around, &tl'Ved cool and remained , dedkaied to tbe job. Al times when ob.er drivers might have : walked~way in dlspst, .Gabelicb remallled so enthusiastic be : lntpirtd is crew. • r llnal 1election may ee>me as a surprise, because the : maa only won a single race all season, the Phoenix USAC 150. : But David (Swede) Savage won. pole positions and led ' races all through the year. He "'IS the single most threatening drlvt!r on the Trans-Am circuit, according to both Jones a!HI Donohue. JV Results Tar Five Wilson .Set,s Record, ' • In 73-70 Mesa Fal~, ~10·87 Basketball scoring records can't give up the ball aSmany are made t.o be broken. Umes as we did and win Triumph And 1Dng Beach WUion games." The revv.ed-up N e w p or t. obliged to the di.Sfnay orcOiiCli~ -c0;; Mesa scored the first Emil Neeme's Costa Mesa . Harbor Tars fought their way M u s t a 0 g 1 w e.'d n esday basket and actually held a 6-3 into today's cons o I at lo n afterooon at Hwttington Beach tea~ after a minute and .a half semifinals against Ranch 0 High in consolation round of play, But it was ta.tie bar A1amitos with a 73-70 decision over T u s 1 i n • s Tillers action of the Huntington the ' door thereafter as the Wednesday , in second round invitational. Bruins ran off a string of 22 action of the 42tld annual The 1Wilson Bruins scored straight points while holding Huntington Beach basketball 110 points to defeat the ~ MU5tangs scoreless to tournament at Edison High. Mustangs, 1 I 0 • 8 7 • and bring the count to zs.6 with Rancho Alamitos thumped eliminate Neeme·s crew from 3:44 remaining in the first Sierra by a 96-57 count to earn further action. 4 period. ~ . its semifinal matchup with the The previous record of 108 After that it was ~nly a Tars tonight (7) at Edison. was set by Compton in 967 ma~er of how many points the In the first eyer complete against Tustin. While no ~rums would score before the varsit y basketball game over record is listed for the final buzzer. I ThursdA)', December 17, IIP'O DAILY PILOT SJ -- JC Poloists All-America MarinaHighAthle~s Ho~ored at Banq Jet c:;olden 'Vest Co1lege's pon Lippoldt and Harry Noah, Marina Hi"" School held Its """""Vtl'tltf' · " f 5-'' Ctoltl~ Ntlloft. MOtt )'1'1u.ltl~ akxlg with Tom Wamec .. e o ann~ awards banquet -Scott M1c1111wre. ,M''' Orange Coast, have been Wednesday night fn the school lmorvwo-~':':i.1..°ii:.~~ named to-the All-Southern cafe.ta-la with football, cross ctt11e1-.Je1111 1trco. Mo9t v11u1111e - California and All·America country and water polo teams DM Tium1~.AT11t ioolo JC water polo teams selected honored. c.fllai......c~·r:::r.,..., ...1 1111 by stat,e polo coaches. F111r1n1r.t111. MMt IMPlr1t~Er1C First t SoC I d Noe I ,OOTU.ll. Flie.. " earn a an a v1"1"' JINIW van11Y • members . automatically earn McN1 lf¥191'aved etck-.Joe vtm1m1.. c1111a1a~1k• Pr1m1 •l'ld.. H•I 111. Molil hnP1oved Ll...,.,111-llan l1nl'!l11tfon. Moil ll'ISPlrlllonll-Cr111 All~America status. F11ntlf. Most oed te1t111-M1111 R1111. D•nl••t. In•. Moil l~lrttlonll-01ve Rllllno, "l'Cllll4••11411Mi• Golden West goalie Dave JuRlor v~lh' C1Pi1Cna--J1m 11.oc11 ...., Clout Grilfi'hs Was ---.led a berth Most lmprOV'td 81ck-8UI S!111rl. ,1bl1n. Mo I t l11Utrll1-l-J1i i:IU.Vll,I MOii tmprowd Lliwm111-Rod H1rrla. ,.;•o;••"•'""'ii0·-------.. on the Southern Ca1ifornia ""°"' OldiateO-H•r....., Hlr11t. Moll second team while Golden 1""'1r•tlonll-f'~:;-:· · - West•s Ro" Buen ·and Lance Most v11111111e Pllver-1111 w11i0n. GOLF TIPS; J" Mo»! lm~roved Pl1v1r-Grev Fostar, Norris, along with OCC's1 Bill Molt tn1111r111oo.11-s1tw Renrrow. , .~ Rice drew honorable mention. 8111 Rec:•Jver-.1r..;.~•1<1e1· Low k•re htcllMln • · .~ 0th f. t team -1-tton" s · Most V1lu.bl1 P • 1., 1 r -st 1 n t;ood sa.rt G... . .. er 1rs ""' ..... · 1mv11n19111. Moll 1rn1>•ove.1-1t1c.k Phil Omdahl (LBCCl; Greg E-. Moll llQl>lr111on11-.Joe How1rd. Proctke .t tt.e. , .~ J hn R Ont ll:ICflver-C: ... rlH TWHdr. played at the shif\y new combined two-team scocing c1111 Mt11 Edison facility . Newport had total, the 197 points should be to 1ely on six charity tosses in close to that mark. U11 fl II , . Danley CLBCC); o . ees c•oss coufrtTltY NEWPORTER INN · ~' ,~ (Cerritos); Dan Marshman c,.,11111-01.,._v1'l1Zk"'in. M 0 1 , PAR 3 GOLF COURSE ~ • (Cerritos); Jim Kruse v11u1111e-Pa" Lockman. Mo11 l .OOwl,.1'"od-1-:_, the final 54 seconds to get over Wilson, c h a g r i n e d by the hump. Edison's Chargers in opening With coach Dale Hagey's acUon, took out its wrath on Bluejackets on top 69-65 with the Mustangs in the 'first 54 seconds left. Newport guard quarter with a 3 3 • p o i n t Larry Gentosi was fouled barrage to lead by 17. M1tdllorl11ll SempiQI -·· Mlct,.••n 1r101n Roto1n ' " ' . • • • • • • , . 1 2s lmorll'<'ed-8ob I r I ck n 1 r , Molt ,. -r• , "!l~(F~u~l~le~rto~n~)·~;;:~;::::;;;~''~~~"~"=,..~._~.,~'~'"~"~"'~'~·;:;;;;;;::::::~~~~========~~ . " I 0 I o • • ' . while attempting an ssf I · I •· lb The margin was 25 at the unsucee u cripp e un\llC'.r e half and at conclu.5ion of the ~~tosl converted the· first third stanza and narro.wed tD gratis attempt in a one-and· 2.1 at the final gun. one situation and rrUssed. the Wilson will move tD the second. Edison gym tonight at 8:30 for A Tustin field goal narrowed a game with Arcadia after the the Tars' edge to two again at Apaches toppled Glendora. 66- 67~7 before Newport's other 56, in another consolation guard -bespectacled Taras b r a c k e t q u a r t e r fina l Young -was fouled . Wednesday. Young canned both foul "This is the worst game I shots and the Tars had a four· have ever seen our kids play," point advantage with only 28 a disappointed N~ said seconds remaining. after the high scorrilg affair. A pair of charity shots 17 "We didn't do anything rjght ... w AllM Youn; .... w•o Tol1l1 WilCO'llotl HunlltY St 11tl>Orn (Yrll~ R1;l1nd '"' l>W"1l•ll SPflrtr Dorllll ·--TDllll ' ' I 0 ' , . ' ll 2S Wit-(1111 I 2 . " ' ' n " 11 rt ,, > I ' ' ' . 11 1 2 ' . ' . , , , , . . . ' I 0 > I ' > I 3 > ~2 2l 21 Sc.rt •Y Qu1rltr1 COJI• Ml.. 16 21 n n-., ~Ilion :u 71' n u-110 . ,• Real givin'. whiskey~; seconds later by forward John and we made a lot of early Kazmer put the winners out of 1 i"m~is~ta~k~es~~lha~t;.;cost;:;;~"'~·i;;;Y~ou;:;;~~~~~~~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;iiii;iiii;iii:iiiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iiii;iii:i~ reach with a 73-67 lead. II Tustin tallied on a three- point play at the buzzer to cut the final margin to three points. " The contest wasn't always as close as it turned out to be in the final going. Newport sported a 12-point bulge (36-24) with 3:37 left in the first half. But that lead was cut to six ( 40-34) at intermission in spite o f Newport's first half shooting percentage (1 7 of 24 for a blazing 70.9 l)Orm). Four Newport performel'! hit in twin figures with Young potting 20, sophomore Jim Swick 17. Gentosi l~ and Kazmer 12. Tu1tln (101 .. " •• ,, zvPow.t1 • ' ' " S*alM • • • .. c .... rnle'I' ' , ' • "' • ' ~·-· Rocco , • ' • Ht!m ' , , • ClmP~ll • , • • ll!lbe!ton ... • ' • I Owoo , • • • TDlll$ n " " " ,._,. H1r111r 1n1 .. • •• •• ktr"'er • • ' II Mcl<l!VllY , • ' ' """ • • ' • v~~ • , , " Gtntosl ' ' • " Swick ' ' • II Sc""e~ I • ' • OIMll1uun • • ' • Tot1l1 tt " II n Edison Aces Get Awards Sophomore Football f'! MVP: Michael Morado ; Captain: Craig Way; Most Inspirational : Lloyd Jennings ; Most Improved: Ted Bauer ; Most Outstanding Defensive Player: Bill Ford: Most Outstanding Offensive Player: Fred Hernandes. Freshman Football MVP: Brian Edwards: Captain : Dave White. HB District Fro1b Football ~fVP: Mark Eiche rt ; Captain: Ron Budd. Water Polo Varsity MV: Bob Wurster: Captain: Lee Graham ; 1t1ost Points Scored: Matt Kroona ; Most Improved: Al M<:Cown. Cees -Captain: Sigfried Muhlhauser: MVP : Howard Gowdy: High Scorer Award: Randy Scofield. CN>ss Country Varsity -Captain: John A1cClure: MV: John Weston: Moot Improved: De n n i s Wilson . Junior varsity -Caplain: Steve Reed: MY: Jon Karro II ; :ftfost Improved : Mark Stotesberry. -o SILVERTOWN CUSTOM • 80% MORE MILEAGE AS LOW AS lb'l 7.00.lJ ~ .... federM 11111dtil -ol $1.!6 •nd trMfl~. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE SALE ENDS DECEMBER 29th, 1970 USE OUR RAIN CHECK PROGRAM. B.F.Goodfic.h 'M11 Qtlf you the lira you Wilnt. Shoukf we run out of your li::e durir19 !his offer, we will be h1ppyto issue you a rain check end order your lire at llM 1dvenind price fOf tu lure delivery. • DEEPER, WIDER TREAD •WIDE '78"-SERIES STYLING • RUGGED 4-PLY NYLON CORD (ComplrilOlll blHd on oar own Long Miler) Regular Sale Siz• Prlc• Price F.LT, 7.00-13 .25,75 17.88 1.96 5.60-15 25.15 17.88 1.75 C-78-14 (6.95-14) 25.80 19.18 2.17 [78-14 (7.35-14) 26.85 21.aa 2.25 F78-14 & 15 0.75-14 & 15) 28.45 24.18 2.44 G78-l4 & 15 (8.25-14 & 15) 31.15 26.8& 2.60 H78-14 & 15 (8.55-14 & 15) 34.15 29.88 2.80 J7S.15 (8.85-15) 38.65 31.S& 2.87 Pl'ices •boft bl1ctw1n. Whitewillls $3.SO more p111r ti~. 40 000 MILE GUARANTEE BRAKE RELINE $ 95 • EXPERT WORKMANSHIP • QUA\ITY REPLACEMENT PARTS • SPECIAL LOW PRICES ALL .. .... •. , .. .· ·. ,• .. . • • " ' . I.I °"'"'I 01) 16.I) ll.,,.111 ... ," Slllw Ofl F !ll Ntl'Ofl • Whllloc:k (1) F ' (6) Hl•IOP 1t1in.•k'" (l) C 1111 Swetn'f ll:lldl (2(1) G (If) MtC.1!!1 ,,_.,., ''' c; on 11!111111 kDrtM llUbt: L1 0u1ttt1 -a,_,. '-~-w 10, U.Un. -(~rtatl1nM11 •• Httlll-: l1 Ou1t1tf , '4-2S . 1111 C...,._ .. (411 C 'I SA \'1lltv Steltlritan 10 ~ (01 0.111•0 HIU (') F t•! H1'1 ICtflllY U) C (4) Oltvltf COmtoml 17) G (lJl Bowlte>wUCl DloWI! ... UI G rn Nlllt1'NI .. INSTALLED CHAIN-LINK FENCING CARS (Except ' . Discs) • JONES TIRE SERVICE i·~·!IN•i .... - 2049 Harbor Blvd. OPEN 1100 No. Tustin Ave, ' • lmrlM 1uet: k " Clt ...... lt -ltllll 1t, tlUf'lwrn t. Wnt11rm 4. p, V1!11J -lollWldt '· H1!1tlm1: 5tto CJ-nit 15·1. StllllClt tU) MISllllft VJel1 (ffl I-!II I" lritnn1<1 tU ) GnllOI' 10 , NoflMndl" (\4) Mc.Gr-IJ) C-.· COll"llOt !11 ~ 111 G Moffl" UI '" Cttl o M\lf'llht en le~ iwDI: E1,.nclt -I,_ J, l -.olHI f,. l'l\l•IOrt Vltle -Lf(klt JI. W!lkln• -IO, "lllftlOtl 4.. H1lltlm11 MIM!cwl VJelo )W.I, i _: VICTOlttA ~( ~· J: aAV .V~ I • < llTH ~ .. •-•• I i.m. ,. ' """ ' ,: (II l1y) "'ON DAY IACl'tll lrw111 Ntw P'MI Offit1) • • • • ' ...... ·-COSTA MESA l'IUDA'I' ORANGE ~T~LL.A ~ OP'IN SATUlt.AY . '· ·-Phone 646-4421 I 1.111, t9 J ,_ .... PhOI!• 532·3383 COLL.IH9 1W I < ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED ' LIFEIAVlll llADIAL THIES ""tOlllt Ult SHOllL'l· •l lflOl#G Olt THlltr • ' Mf,AllF 20ti M•cOG<. d JO ~<Xe (0) lO MICY llH l Mid Fd "' Ml~ :'>II GI Mlf t (II 6C ~:r:i:x 11~ M1nh\.ncl Hll M1nPOWr rl ~~'P~3" io J M~111 160 Ml co to M.trco 11 .t.1 Mu·111T111 11 MtMldl l'O """ lonlb Jl Ma fl\ I O'lt Mt llU Ctm M1 c 1(1 M1 11\Fd I 0 MllnM I O ~:o'~: r. M•Min e 'n MIHI Y F ff I Mt It 10 Mtv05 60 MtYIJW 5011 MIY 10 I !Oil MCA Inc 60 McCord 1100 McCov l XI Me e II I SO Mc~mt lb MtOon.tld Co MtDa<>nO <iO McGEdl<iO McG wH 6C MCGl-4 on XI MtG eti Dem ""''"" e 1 Mcl(,tt I 3't Mele.,. lo~ Mt LOU b «lll McNt 10 Me•d Co 11 1 Mtad ol ... 1 10 Mt~d I> !1 80 ModU11( lO MEI Co Mt ~511 15 Me"'° t~ Co M4! ct nS "° Mt tX 7lO Mt..ill ..JO M flf Pt 0 Mt•• o l 10 MM.i• 1>11 10 Mnioof '-" Me~&Mt/\ l MGM M• amd 50 MtEl>llfO MGCnv 10 M/tll Gt U M c~ Tl>be I M k odo OCle Mid Conf U M<JSU 101 Mkl <I It .. M <IWS 01 l M Ulbt 10 M 81<1 .0 M nnMM ! 1J M nnPLI 10 MnnCPl•O M ulllv JO MoP1t A j MP Cem flO MoP~b5 llOb M!lb!IO l IG Mohl• I 0 Mol!wk D• I MO VOii .. Mo vb Pl1.\0 Mon1 ell to Mono!!m nd M-..11:11: II "" OEQ 1111 Ot~ E tt l 6 O•k It I'd 80 Oc"t d Pt D 0« CIPt P • ~ddP DfltO ccillP DI? 6 oM..C• m, ()'Olte~ I t .. • " 61 •I ... ' ' l • •• r l: • i~ ,r .. 1551 ' .. " • • ' '• " " i4 , " " " " ,, " " , ' "j " ' " ... " '" • ,,., " '" • " ' " . " .. ~ " " ' . • • " 2JI• " • ll .. " " . • " •• " • " " . •• !2\1 " . ,,'z. .... I '• " " • •• .. "'" . ' ... \"' ... "" ,i!..: ., ' ' -~ .. ~· " '" '" " . .. '" " • '" " " ... '" " • • '" . ' ~. " '" •• 7S•• ~ '" " ... '" " •• " . , .. "" " ~. " .. '" J "" ~ " .. ' . "" 'I " .. '" ' .. " " ... .. . " " •• " .. " ,, ' Sto..k •ct ,,.,,,.., Ull IG.l 1 '-'tmll '' ll1 ff IC~ IC C~l>I Uo I ' l Wt•1M \JD f I • (qn OD 11 Uo 11 I CC I &rl> U1 '~ 'U" P• M~ U• '' 1 f nWllr Jof U1 1 I I Mor No UI It I CO.. Oii Ind Oo 'l O !nl """I Uo ) P1n "'I" UD 1 • , TQ>Od ill 1,d UP ,, ),I."' Znc -+ UP 1l ·~· llfl M111 : •' ~: i~l ~~.: !-" l\1u,,1 11 ws11 .i, '' \JO 1 t ff •~•J _.. I 0 U1 1 ;:ti Cll«.~ "Ill " , Y': "~ ¥O Pull v •l Nll'tt~• EC " \ ..... ~ "UI 6 1 2• fU (Drl Leader• "" ., " " "" U• " ,,. " ' . " . J;'-.... '" " '" ;f • -'" ,, .. , . " '" " 1•·· ·' ~ .. ... ,f : fi • •• .. "' ' . " '" •• ll M " .. ~ .. n I o ~ • ' -l' 711 ~ }lo ' . . . 1 ,, l • • • • • .. '" ". ~. .. Mru·ket Showit1g Mode1·ate Garn s NE\V 'l. ORK (:\Pl -The stock 1narket appar ently bouyed by a ba ckjl:rou nd of pos1t1ve nC\\!S de velopment s re£1stered modest j!'.a1ns today after three days of re~ stJnJ? press ure from profit takln,11; Trading "'as moderately active The Do'v Jones average of 30 industrials closed ahead 3 OS lo 822 15 Advances outnumbered dechnes by a wide mar .£In among the issues traded on the New York Stock Exchange " " :! ~ ~ ,. •J IJ 31 I u ,, ,, , , . 31 11 • ,, ,, ?J ,,, ' 11\i. " " J•• lOI lt°" . "' 71 16'0 . "' , . -T- " " " . " " >ru ,, , • '9 ?3 • )JW 7l ~ 1•1'-'1 11 /o !I J + ... Tl\Way Deumbtr 17 1970 SC QAILV PILOT TWA Jt eports Hea~'Y Losses NEW YORK tUPll -Trans World Alrhnes !TWA) says 1t will lose up to $65 m1lllbn on operations t h t s year ff u t assured major f1nanela l backers rumors the earrler faced collapse are cpm pletely un founded Charles C T1lhnghast Jr , chairman and chref executive officer said 1n a formal 1tatf.. ment aJ~r a 9G-m1nule ~IMed meeting that pror1ts were es peeled fnr the a1rl1ne In 1972 and 1973 with mar gl gal results for 1971 SIM ••I (IKll J lot t~ LtW C.lut (~t. CHP REVEALS ST A. TISTICS SACRAMENTO (UPI) - The average age of OW. Call£om1a Highway Pa Ir o l cadel!I entering the academf has dropped from 26 6 to 2i lb the past five yea.rs £!jP c;am. mlssloner H W Sullivan aa.ld Wednesday The commissioner alsn tald a hnosl 80 ptrct:nt ct U. recruits are married and ha~ an aver<1ge or sllghtJy rnor, thRn one child SIXlY to 70 percent SUlhv~ said liave: had 10me add1tlo~ formJt l education 3ve.r1~ nearly II? ye11rs of college work Most of the new of· ficus he added have h*' prior m1btary service • . ' " • •• ·-.. • Birds of a Featlier Gulls gather near Newport Pier to !eed oft of large school of bait fi sh that wandered into shallow water. Scene of teeming wildlife so close to the shoreline - DAILY PtLOT Pllllt ~~ L. Pt ttr Krltt captured the eye and the imaii:ination of beachcomb· inf photographer. Vietnamization Slipping? Clianging Diet Aid .To Heart . ' .LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ".Jt1st CllTt,tC.l.TI Ofl •USINl'SI, • -W l'tCTITIOUI NA'-'I ~• Tll• U<>dt11ltn.cl dot\ c•rt!ll' 111 ft Cl-Tll'IC.lTI 01' IUllNlll conclucllM • bvll>lftl ,, ,,, w, Ltm. l'ICTITIOUI NAMI Coitt Mu•, Ct llftorni., UllOtr !~ Tiit llncllfl,.n..:I ltoel Ctrllt~ ,._ I~ Cfll'I> llclltloul fl•"' f\t /M al MAC AltT -""' • bl.ltlntH •• 1"'31 P1clllc Ct11! l'IUNTING COMP.I.NV '"" '"'' wld 11 .... 1-lwv .• 'un•fl ltKll, Ctlltornlt tOtn. 11 com"'t<I "' ,.,.. lollow!"' ...,.,Oft, "'""'' 1119 flctl!lout fir"' ,.._ cl COAlT w"°'f lllft\t I" !"!I .,Ml 1l1c1 ol f't'lltltll<I CONTACT LENS (0, ll'ICI lfl•I Mid 11•.., 11 11 1o11ow1: 11 tom-td ol Ille hlll11wlr19 ""&II, ,J.Mlll P. M(K l11lt•· .-.o ~1<Ul111 w.~, wfl-111/t'\f ln 11111 1!\d •I•(• of r.1\dtnc:t CDl1t Mflt. 11 ti tollowl: ---Ot!td Ore. 14, ltro S!ephen F, 011w111, 1UIJ S. Jlttlllt Jtrll/\ p MtKlnlt• "~''"''· "o. 9Clll No. n1, S111111t NEW YORK (UPl) -A 51111 DI c1111ornl•. or1.,.1 CO\lnl¥: 1111ch, c111torn1t t0J.o. change ln the national diet _ On OP<. "· 1"1:1. "''or• ..... • N1111rv 011to1 P+evtmDt• 11. 1t1C1. Pubrlt 111 tnd to• 11ld 51111. --U• 5tt1>1'1e11 F. °""""'· o .o. now one of the highest in the 11110<11rec1 JM11 P, Mtl(1n11v know11 10 "" sr111 of c1111 .. n11, Or11111 '°"""'. I d lo b• !kt p1r.on wl'l4t! ,..mt h ()II Nov1mb9r !1. 1tl0, be'lort rnr, t WOr d measured in rats an lubttrl!M<I !D ll'lt wl!fll11 Jn1rr11m1nl t/lll ND!t"' P1,1blle !fl 11111 lor ltld 51tlt. cholester o l -could lower the 1tkADw1.cieed ht e•tcutfll '"' ''""· 11r1on111v ••M••td StwMn F. Oow~ (0FP1CIAL SE,t.L f knewn 10 me IO bl l~t tt•IOll w"°tt rate Of heart disease ln the MARY K. ~!':NllY ntmt 11 1ub1trlllttl lo ttlt within In-••• S h No•t•v P1,1e!•t . Ct l!lornl1 11rutNnl t lld 1ck110Wl1dlltd hi •~tt\llM Uni ... ..., lates by as muc as PrtnciP•I orioee '" tn• t•m•. 30 percenl, a panel of medical o., ..... CO\lntv !SEALI N•-• '· w.,, My (om..,!•1!0<1 l!:•l'lrtl ·-experts has reported. Nov. ,,, 19n , Not•rv P~111k Publlolll\d 0••""• ,,..,, 01l!Y Pll~I MV (om..,11111111 E••lrt1 They recommended "safe D•c•mt>tr 11, , •. J1. 1t10 '"° J1n1,1•"' '· M•Y 1n. n1• d bl " h · 1"1 13'ol·IO VtlTUI & ICHICK an reasona e c anges 1n1 ______________ ,1A111rn1Y111 L1w Americans' ealing habits to LEGAL NOTICE Hll wt1tc11t1 orivt. 1111i. ttt LEGAL NOTICE f'·.HU• Cl•Tlf'ICATI 01 IU'llN•ss f'ICTITIOUI HA/It'll'. Tit• uttdtt1l1n111 dDts urtuy flt It co... dUdlnt • bl.l•ffllU ti ,.., l"lt•Ct AVI' (01!1 Mt11, Ctlllor"lf, Ul\dlr lf\t llto tlllou1 tlrm "'"" ... !':MCO tlld filtl ttlf llr"' 11 comeeo.N cf tM ttllowlflt H r.ot>. """°"' n11n1 In Ill[! '"" Plt <I t/ r•llltl!CI 11 ,, folft1: 1!111!•1111 M1n1~r. )111 Pi.r(t Av1., Co1t1 Mtw. Ctt!f, ti•l•. D.tU:tt.tto.vtmDtt U, l tn._ llthrlm M1n1vT 51111 ot C1lllo•~l1. Ot1n1t Cou111¥1 Ofl Nov1mblr !J. ltlO, bftor1 M~. • NOii"' Pullllc 111 lnCI for ••Id '''"· Mr101nllv ••.,.tfod ltflrtm M1~•YI knnwn 10 fl'lt Ill bl lfll pttMI\ Wfll»I ,..mt lt 1UCttrlbtd to the wll~ln In- strument '"d tck!'ICw!tc!ttd ht tlttC~led !flt !11111-(0FFICIAL 'EAL) Mtrv letn M~l1o" No11rv P11bllt ·Ct!lletn!1 trlnclttl ()Ille• tn Ortntt CllUll!v My C11mmlt1IOll' E••lrtt Aorll t. 1•11 l"ub!IVied 0•11111 Co.ti Ot11¥ Piie! N""1mblr 16 t nd Otc•mblr 3, 111. 17, 1110 tno.15 LEGAL NOTICE NtW,..rt INCh, (till. fU41 r educe the "epidemic'' of fa·l--~~,-,.=~====~-I T11: c1u ) .. i.uu he ks ClaTIJ:ICATE CP IUllNlll, T-0&11 P.Ji•U ta! art altac . PICTITIDU$ NAMI POJl:lll\!>ld Ortnte Co.11 01llv Pllo•. Of a million people "'ho suf. Tiit """''111nt<1 "°" , .. 1uv h• 11 01c .... bl• 1. 10. 11, 2•. 1t10 U!O-le ce•T1:1•~:1~~ou~P N!~~NllL ks h ·-udl"" • bvtlt'll'H " llJO P11Hwd11 T~~ Undtril1ntc1 do CtrlllY lfl•Y 1r1 fer heart attac in I is coun-1111., S1n111 A,.., c1t1tornl1. 1,1nck• '"' LEGAL NOTICE rondl>Clln• 1 Dllt\ntn 11 1643 ,.11,111111, try each year. haU a million llctltl°"' llrm n•m• of Or•nt• C1111n••i---.,="°c:::---o::::::-=-::::--~:=---lce1t1 Mne, c1111orn11. ufld•• tht tlt- d. , kl d (h' d f th t LlndKI~ & Pl11"I SUDPIY tlld lhtl 1tld SUPEJllOa COUllT OI' THI tltlwi firm ntmt et 11 ... 11! !;ArtTH le qu1c y, an a Jr 0 . a firm II COtrll>Ol@-0 ol !llt !1111 .... lnv ..... on. STATE Cl' C ... LIFOrtHtA .. c.t SUllF80AllDI t l\d !flt! uld llrm II (- group is younger than 65 years wflow 11•"'• In lull tnd 1111c1 of rttld1nc1 THll COUNT'f OF CllANG• D POl•d ot 1111 to1111w1,,. P-f•sot11. w11e .. Id 11 •• tollllw•· CIH NurnMr 0 inn ,..m" In lull t nd 11l1ct1 ot rnklentt 1ft O • lUC•• C. Will Jr,, l»n ll1tl11d11 lld., SUMMONS IMAltlllAO£l ti kll!owt~ "Premature death ( r 0 m ~~~ ~~~ .. ~lllornlt. In rt Ill• m1rr!111t of Ptl!tlo11tr· Otvld St1111" ICt•!htw, l10 Jjlfl SI., h t . th Luc•; c. W•ll Jr. MtLOllEO BEATJllCE SMITH, 11111 ~~=:~~,~~~ l~i':'ti. C~~nti..!~~n ~!~~~ ear seizures occurs ree 51.,, 01 c.mcr"'"· o•11no• ceu"lv: a:11110nd1n1: WI LllA M T'fl@ll IMITH. ci. limes as often among men a s o.. Ot(. 1i . 1910, 1>orort ..,1, 1 Not11rv To 1t.t. 11e11X1r.otn•: WILLIAM TYLEll Oi led O.ct..,bt• t. 1,10 F'ubllc I" e~d tn• 11ld Sl1t., DH.OntllY SMITH Otvld S!tven Ktto~IW among women. •Po~1,.d Lu<•• c w111 Jr_ kl'low" 10 mt Tl'>I 11etlllont• llt1 llled ·• Pt.t1t11111 ro11· Ptul wmiim B•e" The med''caf men, a 10 be 1111 ""Of' wllo•t "•mt !1 1utlicrl!M<I ttr111nv veur mtrrl1e1 Yeu m1Y lilt • 51111 111 Ct lllo<lllt . Orin11t Cou"tv~ to 1,..1 ,..1111,n 1111trumt"I 1 n d ""rll!f11 rt!.POtltt "'llflln llllrtv dlVI cl ll'le 0 " OKtmblr I. ltro,-bltort ,..., " federally.funded panel of 11~ tc~AOW1t<19111 II• •~tcuied •111 11mt. "'''' '"1f lh!i tum"'°"' 1' urvid 911 •ou. Ho11n> Puellc 1n 1nd tor 11ld 11111, \OFFl(lil•L SEAL! If YO\I 1111 lo !lit. wrlllen rt1POllM ..... liOlltllY IP"if•fll O&vld S!t Vt " experts from medical and Mtrv K. H1nn> wl!nln tl>th llmt, ~our dtrtu1t mty bt l(erili.w i nd Ptlil WllUtm BYttl kflOW" ""11 r Sin g S 0 Ci et i es, 111010,.,. Publlc·C11r1or"l1 tnt.,ed tnd tht courl mt• tn!fr • lud9-10 ..,1 111 bl !ht """nt wtlo•• ntmti ''' ~' P r I n r I p 1 I O 11 1 c 1 I n mtnl conttfnlne lnh11'1c:llv1 er e!~tr C'diri 11,1bJcrlt>&d tn tf\t wllllln ln1ttum•nl ind recommended action to curb O••~~• Coo11iv ro,,rer"1"' dlvl1!on or c•ootrh, iPOu111 •c~nowlfllgtd th•• '"'ru1td t~• '""'· My C"""mh,lon E•Plrel IUPPOrt, cnllt:I tu1tody. rlllld tuoPOr!, ti· !OFFICIAL S!':AL) the "three major risk factors" Nov. ,,, nn turne•I' IH•. co111, 1nd 1ucn 111n1r r111t1 JEAN L. JO BST in artery and heart disease: Publl111t<1 o"""' CNst 0•11• Pllet 11 ""1 "'trtnlfll bv •fl• court. Noft rv Put111c. c1ntur11l1 Dt<tmber 11. ?J, J\, lt10 1!\d J1n11•rv J , II WW wl1fl ~ Mtll 1111 •••IC• •1 111 ti· PrlntlPll O!llce In h igh-fat diets, high _blood 1t11 1l!).n ._,..., In 11111 "''"''· '°" "*"" " ., 0,.,,.. Countv d k1'. l....,.tHY M 11'>11 yo;ir Wtllltll rlltonMP, II MY CommlUIOll' !':•tl,el pressure an smo 1ng. LEGAL ~OTICE 111,, m1v i.. 111H 111 11"''· Mire/\ 1, un The group said the tobacco Cited Stl>t•mtier 4• "10• Publl1h1d or1n91 ce11t 0111y t11111t, 1 -----~~~~,~~=="" !SIE ... L! industry should be taxed, to NOTICE OF INTl!HTIOH TO £NGAO@ w. "· ST JO~N. Cit"': DKtmber IO. 11· 24• JI. 1'10 1.)0(l.10 f k. IN THE SALi OP' ALCOMOllC e v Jtnlr• M, Colemen, provide funds or smo mg •e:vERAG!' 011>u1y control p r o g r a m and Otumbtr u. n10 P'Aa11:e:• & 'ERL 'f S TO WHOM IT WY CONCERN : ATTOllNE'fS AT lAW treatment, and finally put sut11o-c1 •n 1 .. u111ct of 1111 1tc1n1t 111 Norlh M1!11 11 .. su11t tel P.JMSf through an •·orderly phase •11pllf'd for. notice 11 ntr•bv ;lvtn 1n11 ~.•,,•,•,~-:. ',,",'", ~~1,'..,."", 1 Cl!rtT1,'.',':,~~ou'," N:!J.s,1NRSS. 1 t~ undc.,iv"HI cr<>11~e1 to ••II 11eone11c • ---,.. out" to eradicate smoking as a 1>ev1•1ge1 11 1111 Prtmllc1, oesc•lbtd •• "'~11,':ii:~~ ~i.~,•!l'~0~t1~ 0111, Pl!oi, du~~1~111':'t;~~~;::, ~';'~~;·~~ 1~1/:1 c:;: "national habiL" lo1to;:;:n1 Wu! 191n siretl. Co•!• Mcit . Decrmt>er J, 10. 11, 1•, 1910 21'9·7fl Stnt1 ,.nt . C111torn11. undt• 1111 flrtlll0111 Regarding fats, cholesterol Pursu111I lo tuc n lntr,,llon. th-1----------------llrm "'"''of TAXCO 1nd llltl H id fl'1'f' un<1ertl9nHI 11 111Plv!1111 In 1111 011>trtm1nt 11 comPOlfll cf t~t fol lowl119 Oll'M>n• and blood pressure, the of Al<trl'lonc Br•r••or Con••cl •or tnu•"c~ LEGAL NOTICE """""• ,.,,.,. 111 full incl 011c111f r11lcltnct bv lr•"•f•• of 1n 1lcollollc bevt•1g1 11 •• lollowi: physicians said the body of •k"".e <or iicl."l'l~•I lo• "'"" 1tremh t1 '' '------~~~-------Bcr111rd 111rot1. 1601 N. Bristol $1, scientific evidence does not 1011 .... 1: 1· P·1tstt 51 0 ,",.," •,'!!·,..:~~. '· ,,_ ON SALE GENE'l..,L (Pub t I c ~ '"""' ·~ include enough scrutiny of the f'r-110•1 CEllTl•'ICATe DF •u1tN1:si. B1•111rd Bt•Dfl ... , FICTITIOUS HAMi S ' > C '' ' D C •· LEGAL NOTICE NA TO All . R . . Q . N' ' p l ' t d . h t A11vc11td••Tri11gleorc!•••theluutrtct t&r o l lGrnl', ''"Ill Clln .. : , •es a•si11g uestions 01• •xon s .0 •cy SUSpeC e cenneCllOn tO ear of sucfl llcrn.ehl ll't• Ille t vtrllled Tht underllllllfll dots ctrt!IV Ill 11 C°"' On 0..:;. f, 197(1, bllort mr, I Ne!t...,. ~ ~ • .. .. .. atlaCkS and hardening Of the DfOIHI 11 t nY o!Ucr ol Ille 0e1M1rtmtnl 01 dueling • butllll1I II l lll1. Golden Weil Public 111 t nd for 1tld Stilt, Pl'MlllllfY •• ~ .. '.::= ..,ltof\olic Bevr•io• Cortlrol, or bv mill tn 5! .• H1,1n!lnet"" Buc:h. Ct!!lor11l1. undtr tDHl'ed lltrnt•d ll•r"" k11CWn to"'' ,,. -.-. arteries. They asked for a "" Dft>trim.,.t of Alco11ouc lltve••o• "'' Hrtlllous llrm n1m• 111 MORrttSON ~ lhe "''°" wno11 ntmt 11 1uMc•l- -By-STEl\'ART HENSLEY mounting any s ignificant American ground forces back bombing the North followed by Jong-'·rm program of nau·onal control. 111s o SI•••'· S•c•1mrnto, tMl'OllTS & MAttKETING co. ,,,.. 111•' •a 111e wllflln 1n1t•llfT'r"t •!Id 1tl!now1..r1· "' C1Ulor11/1 9lolll, 1!1l•n• ••CUt\05 tor <1rnl1! ttld firm 11 cornPCHd 111 tnt followl119 eel ht r:r1cu!rd Ille ••mt. 11 u11111H1 P'r.11 '"'',.."'"'" offensive. into Cambodia. Any assistance only a few weeks an research into the American •• provldtc! bv 11w. T11~ 11r1ml1ts trr now PO''°"· '"~1' nim• 1" lull tllll Pitt• 11f jOFFIC1AL SEAL ! IJ ctnsf'd for 1ne s•lf. ol 11ro11ellc r!tld•nce '1 11 100-11 MARY IC. HENllV \VASHINGTON -President Now, however, Intelligence for that coontry is supposed to administration statement that d iet and, in the m eantime, be•tf•u ... T1>1 form 01 vtru1c1tion m•v 8,..,,. M0"1'°"· 1111 1 Golden west ~ell•• Public· c 111!1lrnl• !he ••s t' " h be ,pt111Jnf'd trom 1nv office ot thr SI., ~unllng!on llttch. Prlncl1>tl Offlrt tn N ixon said his threat to reports tell of relatively be&\'Y be furnished by South Nov. 21·22 attacks on sc ugges ive c anges oeo1rrm1n1. 0•1eo Otcernbt• 1• lf10 or1net CO\lntr until lhe "conclusive" results 111cflard ic. Subler Brrin Morrlscn Mv comm1s1lon E•11lre1 resume bombing of North infiltration south a long the Ho Vietnamese troops. B ut the installations there were in Publlshf'lf Or•n111 ce111 011tr p;101. St11• of C•Hfornl•. Or•ntJe C11Untv: Nov. 11. 19n products. OKtmber 17, 1910 13'17-IO On O..cemaer I, 1910 betort "'"' • l'ubl•5ned Or1nii. COl •t OtllY •11e1, Vietnan1 if Hanoi increases Chi M inh Trail in Laos since w i th d ~w a I of a n y retaliation for Communist _ Less consumpl•'on of fatty Nott"' Public In 11111 '"' u ld sieti, oecernbtr 10. '' 1• 11 n111 2301 ·111 H'10ti tllv toHartd llrv8n MorrllOll' ' • ' the level of fighting in the the dry season began in considerable n umber of these firin g on unarmed meats, egg yolks, butter, LEGAL NOTICE known to me to bt thr Derion wno91 LEGAL NOTICE n11mt 11 1ue1rdbed lo !lie wll~fn Ill· south was necessary to insure October. And the Nor I h from their present holding reconnaissance planes. bacon. lard and baked goods NOTICE TO c111 o1To11s ;~~u~.~~.'"" teknow1fc!,•d ~· 1xrcu1ed1------------- . hd I f and dairy products which have SUPERIOR COURT CF TH@ P·JHll continued \'I'll rawa 0 Vietnamese have begun posjtions in South Vietnam -Defense Secretary ~telvin STATE OF CALIFOrtMIA FOii (OFFICIAL SEAL} CERTI P'lCATE 01" IUSIHlSS American forces. building up a ma j 0 r would provi'de 8 mai'or se!back R. Laird on Friday iold high levels or saturated fats THE couNT'I' oF ottANG£ ~~~~. L~;11~1~5_' cinto•nt• F1cT1T1ous NAMI! Th be nd • I and Cho\eSteroJ. N11, A .. 1'1' Pri"Clpt! Office In --T~t llndt"lg'lfd doet <trtltv 1n1 11 Cl>'!• is ·went yo previous headquarters and supply base congressmen that all l".S. £51~1· o• EDNA MAY tEE. DKe•lfd. O•ino;o• caunlY duc!l ne • tiu.rnn1 11 100u Stn11 An• guidelines and, naturally, has in southern Laos 1·ust across program. ti-oops would not be \l'ithdrav.11 -Development of leaner NOT ICE I~ HEREBY GlVEK io tfl• CT.. MY camm1111on E•Plrf1 Ave .. Stnt• An1, c11uom11. ur.o., '"t i1c. p 'd t N' · t meat animals by the meat df10" of 111e 1tiov1 n~med c1oc,dtn1 tfl1t Mirrn ,, 1913 111101,15 11rm 111rM DI "· J,'1 COIFFU rt.E5 raised the question 'ol•hether the bordei' from-the narrow resi en 1xon 5 OP from South Vietnam until 111 '""""' 11a"1"' ti•'"'' eq11n,1 111, 111d Puell!fliM orinat Ce••' 0,11, Pllcit, ,,,.. 11111 Mic! 11rni Is comPCl.ed "' tne • y · · 1· " d · ' •• .,.. induslry, and iniliall'JeS by the d~ced•n! are recoul•ttr to 1111 "'pm, with follewlna ~·son. wno1e n1me In tun 1nd th e ' I e I n a n1 iza ion neck oC northern South a v1sers 11 :liV"e-complained American prisoner s held by d . . d t t 1 th• 111,,u~•v vnucne ... 1,, !ht alllc• 011_"_"_._.,_,_,_. -"-·-'-"-'-'-· -"-'-'---"'-'-"_0 1111c• c• •c1101nct 11 11 •c11ew1: program, under w hi Ch V ietnam, privately to newsmen that Hanoi and North Vietnam airy In US ry O ov•er or 111r c1rrk 01 '"' 1~v• en1111ed courl, o• to Paulfn11 A, Greece. 1•l1l 1'•rnh1m. Saigon's forces are supposed Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, ttiey cannot understand why \\'ere freed. This was the first eliminate saturated fats in its ~~~'n"e',1, ::'~ un~~·.~it~e •' ~11e;':,~jc': LEGAL NOTICE rii::;;·~:~~; '· 1910 I •~t ·~ -f f S I t" · ch · · I products. of 111, ArtD•f'll'"· Tl'lclm11 M. Jontt. 1so1 f'1ur1ne A. G•tcco o ~ a11.1ng over tnd,,, o · eommander o U .• forces n ,..,re-is.so mu ~suspicion o ~lime tha relea5e of the f d 11 d = 1-w"r.:nir-on\ll',-son1 Numllll m:i-------------i s111e...u:.u1Gtnl1._cr.1ngt.C.oun1v~~ ground combat, is ri!ally Vietnam, is said by Pentagon the administration's projected prisoners had been injected as e era aws an reguialtons 0 Ncw1H>r• 11r~cn. c1111orn11 t1660, wn1r11 1, •All no 0" Dtc. '· 1•10, two10•• me, • NM1r1 -ReViSiOTI or federal ]aWS tilt 011cr of eu,l11e11 ol Ille Ufldfr~lgnfll In SUl"l•IOll COURT OF THI Pue!lc !n tnd lor 11/c! 51tlr. Pt•IOll'tll ... working. officials lo have asked m ilitary aid program for a condition for withdrawal. . ~1 1 m•11r•1 Pe•111111,, .. 10 1n1 es111t 01 1ald STATll 0 ,.. CALtFOttNIA P'Oll tD"ft"d Pau11n1 "· G•e.:co ~-.. ,, T his question has been President Nixon to delay any Cambodia and concern over Observers were led to wonder and re g u I a l Io a 1 to c1ccfll'"t· w11n111 fou• mon111s titer lh• THE COUNTY c11 OllANO• mt 1~ bt 1n1 certon_ who•• n1m1 11 Precise fat content of foods : ""' Dubllc8!1on 01 11111 nDll~•· Ht A"'ltot 1ubscrlbed !o 1111 w11~'" !ns1r111ne111 1nd r aised not by the usual critics more troop withdrawals below Nixon's threat lo resume what other amendments might 01t.ci Novemtwo• 111. iH11 NOTICE 01< SA.Lil CF 111AL P•o-•ck!'1Cwlt<111fc! •~• 'K1<:1,1tfll t11e 1tm1. f . . d h I hed h a1!MI revision of certa in M•riotle-Lft" Cr1v iOErtT'I' AT P•IVATE s•LE !OFFIC!AL SEAL ) o administration Jn oc ina the 343,700-man !eve reac bombing of Nort Vietnam. ha..ie been made in the •1 . h h . b. Ao!J'lriislf1t•I• in 111, M•1!•• "' ,111 Gwo•d11..,,,111 111 M•n> K. "''""' policy, who have concentrated this w eek, t h ree weeks ahead \Vhat they apparenUy fa il to administration's previous regu ations 1 at Pr 0 1 11 at ihe ·E1•a1• 0' 11 ..... ~ N1-amur1 •nd c1ro1 M Nt~•-Nol••• Pubuc-etiuor"1' producers' attempts to modify '~• 1hovr n~m•d de(edent mur• Mi""'' · Prlnc:IDtl Olllce In on charging that Nixon is or schedule. Abrams wants lo understand is that against the announcements. ...,,fl.111o.w111.ann•~"' NoT1cE 1s · HEa:H'I' GIVEN 11111 "'• 2.''";e ~inlY turning back the clock and hold ap on a promised traumatic background of the -Laird's statement to a the fat content. i,~~~~~tt'::;1 Jg:iv~5 ~!'dr•1i1~+'d 'i!:1 ~11 •1 a•1Y•'~ ••le to •h• N:v.'~ 19];10" "•01"' w ide n ing the war. It has been wilhdrawal of an additional past five years in Vietnam, a Senate comm ittee thal he did sun• Number lH '911t•1 '""' 11 bldd,r, •ubitct '0 to"· Published Or1nu1 co151 0111v 111101 LEGAL NOTICE N""'°'' Ill{~. Cillftr"ll t'l,,0 llrrnt11cn ev stld SuO!'rlor Courl, i nd Otcember 10, 11 2, ]l ltlO ':JOl.10 r a i 11 e d by s »v er a I 60,000 by ~fay I until he can credibility gap can begin to not tell them about the aerial1------cccccc------ITt1: 11u1 •O·H•1 ~:· ~~~~1"10!:~ ... ~~~·i;~n'k ;0~~'~'. ' ' r epresentatives h ere of U.S. determine the real extent of emerge from a number of attacks on surrounding C!':ttTi FicA,."Em~; iusiHEss, :;:~:~w1~~··;~:,1,,r11,11 ~~j::,eion. ~~;~~,:;'~'io, :~::n~:~rdl•~~r~ LEG NOTICE allies in NATO, who are the danger. relatively small developments military establishments during FtCT1T1ous NAMl PubH•hed 0.1,,•e ccu1 01il• ~1101. 01 111e ,10n1. ,111e ~nd 11111,nt th•• ,.idl------+-------- . I N ' d So h ' h d • • t I' d d l · 'd · f Tht Undt.,lvrietl dO ttr!Uv ltier "" Oeetmetr ], 10. 17. ''· 197D 'l1ll-10 GutrCll•"shlo e•l•I• ,.,11 t c<1ulrtd bv ·1'611 anxious 0 see lXOn succee me ig a mm ts ra ion an oes no require. any a rat on a prisoner o \\'Sr to11dl>Cfl1111 • bu•lne11 11 lU6 V1• llcio.1----------~~,----looerellon or liw or ctlle<wTse In end 1,, C:E•TIFICA e OF llUllNill in exlricating the United officials believe that North ma1·or duplicily. camp in North Vietnam NcwP11•1 Beart>. C•1110'"11• under 1~• LEGAL NflTICE t1111 crr111" ,,.,1 P•oD•rlY .11uar~ In ti>~ FICT1T1ovs NAME llcllllou1 lltm nome ot PIJll.PL!': HAZE Tht ~ndrtllll flt d rtll I! I States from the \Var . Vietnam is preparing a ma1·or Ob1·ec1ive ob ser vers cite the because they had not a sked '"" flltt 111d 11mi 11 fomPO~•d 111 th•I---=----Cilv 0' 0••n9•· coun•• 01 0••ngi, Stllt d n "1 ce Y • 'ton-foii .... i .... Ptrlllni. wllo•o ntmoi In !~II MDTICI! TO (tU!OITOllS n! C1llforrt l1, Plrlicule•lv detcrlbed ~• uctl11g II bl110ntts &I 111 ll lvtroldtl. No!w. U ntil very recent I y , a ssault against Cambodia. following items which worry him that specific question. end 1tl•cei"' "';,,.,,,c• ,,~ 11 iollowi ·' suPErttOll cou11T OF THl 1011ow•: •11 ~ndl~lded 0111 11111 1n1tr11t In "'"' Bc1tll, Calltornlft. under '"" 11:11• administra tion officials were Nixon said at his recent people besides Sen. J. William This caused congr essmen lo Alt••n°•• •nd 5•11• Tt'l'bl rt 111• 2101 'j~~Ec~~,;:.;1~~"o~:N~°t:11 '"°(~; 32. Tr1c1 Numbe• 448', 1s '""'"" ~~P~~~ :~';9111~1 ~1~11:ir!E~v~ · I II · · f th t h Id F lb · hi 1· h h IS th Mtrl,,..ri Or .. NfWl>O"I lleich. No. A tJUJ on M1p tfler11>f, reco•dM In Back us. 11111-ed DI 1111 loflewl"lf Of!"1on, """'85• \'Ir ua y Un an Im o Us In ne\\'S con erence a e cou u rig : ques ion ow muc e e ey Al1n '"" Donn• 11ow1,n0, 111 VI• E"•'• 111 MINNIE MJ>Y 80.,0, Page, 31.:n.n. Miscell•nftllls MaP•· ""me '" tuH '"° olire 111 reilo:Jence 11 picturing Hanoi'::; forces as foresee no circumstances that The fact that Nixon hart failed to learn by not koron. NIWPC!'l 811•~. o~c•~ ... d. ~•cords 01 Dr•nt• cwnty, s1u1 o1 •• 1o11ow" b d i l d d ' bl f Id I d h ' d h d th d I f k' th I ht t " Oittd .... ~~: .. ~~:·~~rein llt NOTI CE 15 llEllEllY GIVEN lo !ht Ctllfo•1111 Ooneld 11 . Wood, ''' Vlt l ido Mord, a y mau e an 1ncapa e o u ·ou ea 1n1 to sen c ange e groun ru ei; or as 1ng e r g ques 1on. cr•dlto•s 0, ,~. ~Do•• nem@-0 d~cfldrnt TE RMS OF SALE• C••h 1n 11w1u1 New1>orr Bticn. ,11. S~l!v lorblll lh•I 111 01,.ani n•vlnq rl•I"'' 111•inS1 tht money ol the Unlltd Slate' an ran. OUtd Octot>tr XI. 1970 pi:M•MMMJ:SMMMiM~Mi~MMimlMiMMJilMMM.---MllM,...M•MMMMMMMMJIJIM~· Altn ll a,..,ltnd ••Id dt<•dtrtl er• re<iulrt<I lo Ille thrm, llrma!lon of Slit, T~" Pt'•Ce"! ot tmeynl 0Dntltl ~-Wood Stilt el Ct hlornlt , Or~n•t C1111nlv: 01 lb• c l••~ 01 me t bav• ,ntiUed court,,... llld1 o• ~"'"' 1r1 lo bf' I'! wrlllnt end OlliliNGE COUNTY! ~ Oonno 11"'"1""<! wl!ll l~t nrctuirv veu(~fri. In !ht o!llct 111 bid lo be dH>01llfll wl!ll bid. STATE 01' CALIFORN IA, If On Del. 2'. 1910, b1!orr "''• 1 Hell"' 10 "'''""' them. will\ 1n. "Kr•s•rv win bll recelv..:1 I! 11\f off•ct ol !yr.,.. on Octoeer la, ltl~, belori fl'lt, 1 R Public I" I nd lo• ••1d Sl•l~. Mroorot llv vPUcl\••" lo 111, und•••lontd .t 419 !':tot t11lver1011, 1100 Norlll To.,.er. Union Btn~ Noti..Y Public 1" ,,,., .... , '''' '''''· ti •P<>tlr.cl Alt•l,,dlr & St llY To•bi11 Ill, Sou• O C 111 I ! ti ·~ W f.( Al•fl & Oonni 110,.1.,,., known le me 10 b• 11111 S!•tt1. Ca!T• Mt••· C1tilernl1 •1~11. •t. ''"9e• 1 crn 1• I t nY mt ~••'Ollallv tDllllrfd Donald R. WIOOd Iii wn i<n i• tht place nf bu1lntn al Ill• '""' th• 11 .. 1 Dublle1!lan 11treof Ind known 111 m~ to bl lilt aericn Wl!D't B I !bi Dt•lonl WhOle "1"'"' "" •ubsc"b~O \lnOtnl~ntd In 1111 ma!lerl a1r!1lnlng 1D be!ort d~!e of sal1. nem• 11 oubs.crl"·~ 10 , •• ••tnl• ,_ !o tnt wllhln ln•1rumtnt I rtd CA TEO Ot ti. 1 1010 """ ,,. " •r l til!'ICWltdO.cl lhtv executed 1111 11..,1, t~t 111t•I• nl •tld d•c•d~nt, wl!n!n !our crm r ' 1trumen1 t nd tck1>0wled~ed bt fKt CUltd !OFFICIAL SEAL) ..,anlh• a!Ttt lllt llr1t OYOli(t11on Of tb l1 llilillRY NAkAMU RA, th• time. MAll Y K. HENllV n~t!c•. Guardian !Otflclll SHU Not1rv Pue!ic . Ct llll!l'n!• Ollfc! Nnvembf'r 13. 1'10. HALVEllSO~ & MAlVl!llSON Pttrld• A Wllu ... Prtnclotl Ofllct !n O•t "Qt CounlV ili!l<t '°•It l(Jc!m•n Ufl!I Nori II Ttwer Noli"' Publfc • C1tffDr11l1 E•Ku!ri• nf E•t11e of Un-lltn~ l•utr1 Prlnc:l"t l Otf;ce In MY Commlssl&n E•Dltrl lfli! •Do"" nemed c!ectdent O•lnt•· C1lllornl1 t'lUI Orinie Coun!v Publlt~=· ~~.:~ Coat! tl1llv Pfiol S!LIM S. Fll ... NKLIN Ttl: C7U) S4l·004 My Cornmllllllfl !':t .. !ret Otclmbtr 17, l4. lt, lt10 11111 J•"uarv J. H•rber Ltw Bullflnt Publht>td Or1no-e Coe1I Delly Piiot. Ott. 1, u11 1111 1031.70 41t E1•I Hth ll•tet Oecemb1r 10, 11, 11, 1'10 17"·1<1 f'~~llthed orin'ie C~••' Dillv P!Jet -_______________ ,c1111 M•1•. C1Ulor11!1 fU17 Dttember 10, 17, ,~. ll. UIO ]]OJ.I~ Tel, (IU) MJ·11'8 L'£GAL NOTICE ArltrntY ler E•tc111tl1 'rl l'Ublit ... d O•engr c ... ,, Ot llr Pile!. ~ • • NOTl(I'. CP INTENTION TC ENGAGE N~v..nller ]6 '"" ()prmeber J, 10. H,1------ LEGAI; NOTICE LEGAL ro-'OTIC~ 1 IN THI'. SAll! OF ALCOHOLIC 1t70 '111-10 NOTICE OP TllUITll!'5 S.ILI If lllVlllAOlll UNOl!ll DIED DF TIUST NOTICE TO Cl:EO tTOIS H , k t ·r • TP' .12111 SUU..10~ COU_llJ .2• Tlj_I_ . ' ere s a pac age am11ar ~ Tos~~:,7 1:0M'1~1~~~=~n:f"": l::c:::: LEGA'L.,,~ •• ·o, TICE Lot"l:;·,r, ... i~;oflf '~:;·,~~N.' .• ~.· .• ·;,,~.·.oN~!N:~- • ' NoHct !J herrby glv!n •bat Wl':STSIOE ,. I to discerning shoppers I ~·::d.~~~·~7~~~~~.'~!b~lr ~'£:~~~: CEllT~ic'iir~~u~' H~~S~NESS ::1Lr~u~1~~1'~~y·,~.;:~;.:.M i.~~:~,n~ o!~~~-of JUANITA SUTTON YOIJNC, . I fo1r::.~~·· t Drtm lel. flC •• T~. undertl9"ed OOH cttlllv lht Is <O"· tubllllu!td '"'''" our1uant lo '"' dtfll NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ""' ~ along the Orange Coast :JC1ii H1•tlo• lloolfvlltc!, Co•1• Mttt duorlln11 • l::Y••lllfl •I ?611 . N•WpO•: Ill lru,! ••eculf'lf by S•1rl G. Ot••• crtdlton ol lh~ ~l>Ovf ""m•d d'ttiltnt I , Puriuanr !O l\lth !n!in!lon 1~, lllvd . N~WPOl1 8t•Ch. C•1•!1>rn11. U"dl I nd P"•l!il J. Ot!vtr, n\•1banc! allll Wirt llltt Ill PlrlO<il ~IVlng Cl•lm1 to1ln1I !ht ' ' ' ' int fir"I""'' li•m n•mt 111 NEWP ORT •nd recorded •pr,''· "''· ,_ --· "'' 111d dtctc!tn! a•e re<iu"l'd le !II• lk1m. . 1 h h" vndtro 0111d I """ vino lo thr O~oar!m•nt l . .., -, """" wnh !ht ntttl!I ,, 11 1 111 ''' ~ t as every! Ing a of Al(Ol\Ollt Bever11gt Conrrol tnr luu•n<t 11!':11.CH REAL T'f 11na tll•1 •~•" ll•m II P•~~ 319 of Ollltltt JIPCQ•dS •n Ill• Dlflce rv our t •t. n t o Cl ' • • , w Of1 e•l•lntl 11ppllc11!1D" or an 11tcol!ollr eomeo1~d 'll t~~ lo-'~''""" Dt"""· wllo•• of the CDunlv lllCll•d"' N O••,,te Collniy, DI tile tiff~ ol 1he 1Dovt tntlll•d rov•t. or • To Order a Gift Subscription, Phone 642·4321 , , '' • , '"'' ,, ,,1i<Senc:o " C ''' , , ID 11r11e"t t~•m. wltn rh~ nece111"' btvttt91 Ucrnst for thllt premlHS 11 n•m~ " u n "" •1 or,,n1, 111 DUr\utnl lo !~e Notlc• ol vwcbtrl, 10 tnr Ynd.,•ignpd •' tht of!lt o gl'ft for anyone of any age I lol!owt· 81 IDllOwl. Dr au .,,., Eledl1111 t.n S~I! lht• .. r>Gt• of llt• AllO•n•'I O<>n Id A M ' II 1 ... , ON. 5 ... LE GEN£RAL. !ION ... f lOE Betty 51tDllrnl, Ill Ltnwood Or,, rtcorded ... \Ill 1•, 1910 on boo11 9JU DOq~ ' o c Ir n, ""~ PUIL1C !;ATING PLACE CM. 111 ol i•ld OIUcl1I Reco rd$, wUI H!t. 0" Adimi Avt nue. Cot11 M.tst , C1l1tornla A d 't k ' ' II ... "•-Ot$l•lnt 10 o•o•rsf !h• lnu•n<• 01tfll Otctn-ber 1. lt;Q Jonuin> 1, 1911 1111 .00 1 m .• 11 11,. norin t'1111. whlcll •l 1111 bite~ of 1>1111 ... 51 ol n I eeps On giving a of 1uch II<•~•• mev Ille t 'ltrlllf'd oro!t\t Btllv Sltoh•n• front tMr~nc:e to the Orin9t county !hr uncitrllOnecl I~ tll mtllt•1 "rt1lnln9 I ol e nv ot!!re of the Oeo1rtmen! 01 SrAl t of Callfo,nlt , Or1noe Cou"IV Cou•rhou<f. IOCtltd 11 1rQ Civic ''"''' Ill tn,t t•ltle or w ld Oo"cedf,"'' "''1hl" teur d . Alcnnotlc B~vp111111 c11111ro1. c• bv m1TI to on O•c•mbfr 1, lt'!I, llf!a•e ..,,, 1 Drlvt w"'1, torm.,ty wa.1 1111 Streei, "'~~ 111 aller lllt first Publkttlon ol lhll Year roun ' not Just at. 1~e OeDtrlmrnt ol Alcol\11llc Beveraoe NQIAr• Publlt 1n i nd lnr ltld 5•1t1, Soni. An•. C1ll!or11l1. et puenc 1ucllon. no •C•-c...,trel. l11 S O Strr~!, S1cr1mPnto, "'"°""llv 80flt!&'"d lle!!v SltPlltnl IO 11\r hlgbf.1! bidder te• Ct•h (Plvtllle •I OllHI Otcemker !. ltlQ C11Ucr11l11 t51H, 1t~tino ~'""""' ror dt"lit k!'ICWll to mt to l>t tne oerton Wh01t Ill• llm~ ol 111~ In ltwlul m!IN'v ol tfle Lrt h Sutren .Hrrrlttg Chrl'stmast1'me If •S PtQvldf'd hv ltw. fht Dr1ml1 ts If~ 1101 name h 1ut1crlbf'~ lo t~ wl!Mrt 1,,. U"ltrd Slt1e1l all rl1111!, lille. 11111 ll'lllre!I, E1~~·r.;:ll! I , « n.,.. Llrt111'!d lcr Ille fllt 01 1lc-1;r 1trumt11r aoo 1rknowlldOed 1n1 1uecuted tOllVfYtd tu ind !'ICW flekl bv 11 ull!le• Jlld 11 D If twov1r1oe1. Thf lo•m of v••lncetlon ll'•V t~t ,.,..,. dttd In tne OtOCttrtv 1llut11 111 wld (0\111-tf\e l bcvt ntml'd dec~nl In fact, we hope you don't wait till Christmas to open This package is filled with ads, photos, features and . .the freshest news we could find to help you enjoy ,_/ the holiday season. • :JA~~tf PILOT J; 1M ~li!ntd trom t nV ·11111tt f1f tilt (OFFICIAL ~EAL! ry 1M $11., l!f!orrlbfod 15 foo!IOWJ: DONALD A. Mc CArtTtN tf OfPe•tm1n1. M1rv Br!fl Mc•!Of' Loi lJ cf t•act No. ltSl, 111 lflt c!tv 01 not Adt"11 Avtl'H.lt JI SAMIO'S llE5T•UllANT$, me. Not1rv Publlt·Coll!0,~1 1 Ccit1 Mrit, Counfy DI O•tn•t Slttt ol Cttlt M$, Ct llt.r11i1 fUU I Owen G, Jo~n110~ , PrlnriPtl Of!lrt In C1 t.lornl1, 11 11tr map r«orlled In book Ttl: 1714) Mt·1UI Publl1htd Ore1191 Cotti OlllV Pll~f Or111gf Coun!v 1)j P•M• 7, I. 9, ID and 11 el AtltrlllY flW l!ltt:Ulrlr 0,t""11le• 11, lflO 7151·10 My Commlu lon E•elrll ml•ctll1nt0111 mto1, In 1119 Dffltl ol lllt PublhflKI Or1ne1 Cot!I Dtltv "!let Ao•ll •. 1'11 COV"'• 1ecordl• 111 itld c-tv. Ot~...,blr l, 10. IT, 1•. 1910 lllt-10 m LEGAL NOTICE P11bll1ht+:I Ortn11e (CHI Otl!r PllDI A.CA · II] (Ol"twl St .• Co1t1 Ml11, I t! 01ttmbtr J, 10. 11. 7J. 1170 DJ6.l'O C•lll. tl67' Stld u lt will boo mldr, bu' wl!llout HOTl(:I'. Cf' INT£HTIOH TO llHOAGl LEGAL NOTICE tovtn~nt Dr w••rt~lv. , .. .,,,., or lmeTlfc!. I IN TM• SAlll OJI AL(CHCllC rtq1rdl110 !lilt, P0111Hlo!> M et'» ••VrllAOES • ooermbtr 11. 1t10 P-Jt11u ru..,br1nc:e,. to 1•t111v ,,,. 11\dfllltd~Js CllTIFICATI OF &USINllSS secured 11;¥ 11id Ol'td. lncludl'li lht /~ T() WHOM IT MAV CONCERN• FICTITIOUS NAME Ind 'XH111•1 11r l~t lt111tt11 trld of II!, LEGAL NOTICE NOTICI TC Crtl!OITC•I IUPtlllCll: COUl:T CF TM .. STATI Dfl CAllf'OltMIA POI\ TH• COUHT'f CP OllANGI "''· A41'U IPPlltc! ler. "elltt 11 ht•tbv .. 1~ ... ,~.. Tll• Urt ... ,;...., dOfl c,. • I con-ll'lr•tundr•. with lnte•nl II l>,!Wfc!IM E1t1!• et C ... RL 0 H ... VEHS, Dtttt •t<'I. tlle undP"ltnKI Pt1:>••<1t11 10 1111 t kollollt dUClln• I busit'll'S~ •! lillS Otnt Slr1nd llltrtln. t fld 1111 llri.tld •rlnc:!Ptl ol !tit NOT l(E 15 H!llEll'f GIVEN to 11111 btvtr•trs 1! 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TITll!: COMP,t.NY of t~t C!t•k of lhl t beva en!l!ltd court, or ti! nf Alcoholic lltvPrlt• (Of'!rOI tar ln1111ncr !oll11wu •I 1.,.11 Trullf, JD D•f1111t !l!em, wltn the n•c•s•l•'I p "" orl1!n•I APPllC1llon ~I an lll(of\ollr Hr~ry f~uck Ho!!m•11• 34JJS Dina IJv WE SlErtN C!':EO (011;"011:A· vt1Utl'lt'1, IO !h• U"~!t1iontd 1f !ht ef!IC• tf bf'vl•IOP 11cen1e (or llcr~1r1l lcr tnue 51•11!'1:1 tld • 01n1 Point. C1lll, TION ol rhftl• Atif'l'llfV, St!I.., S Fttn-lln, ~II f.( oftml•tt 11 foll,,..1• Otled Nov•mber l•. ltlO Bv WtYlll' H Milntwl EIJ! 111h 51fHI, (e1!1 MPM, Ct 1116rn!1 ~ ON SALE llEElt ~ WIN!;. llONA Htnrv H. Hofl..,ofl Aul~Dtllrd Ottlctr tH11, wfllCll 15 lllt 011C• o1 bull""\\ ~r FIOE PUllLIC EAT IN(: l'Lili(E. S1tle ol C11Ho•nl1, 0.1nt• (OU"fV, lll tfl• U'lldfr,lt"fO '" t !I /rt11nor1 ,..r•tllll"t .... ,,..,. d•1l•ln11 to orolt•t !h, IHUllll(P ()II Novem!Ht '' lt10, l)flD•I ..... 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Ctllt Mflt, Cl l""llll t14J1 Torn J 1'111'1 My (!l'"l'l'llHlctn l'.tJlrtl 0tn111t 0 TlltlmPIOn Tiii !IU) .. 1-n .. f'Aul J, KIM M•v J. 1t11 Jl1'~ f:. 7111 A!IOl'lltJ IOI': ( .. lltrulefl "11ltll\l>ed O••"H Cotti dtllv "lie!, Novtmbtr 1' •~d Otcttrlbt, J, 10, 11, l'ublltl'led O•tn11 Cet1I D•llr Plllll P~blhlltd O••"•t COIJI O•llY llfl• • ! IJJl.71 l'!J~!lllltd Ot•n•• Cet1I Otl!v Pilot. Co••• Mtlt. (•Ill. Wllll·lll .. Wlll•tllnt11t• • """'"" ................. w.,.,..._. ........... ......,........ Ot•mw U, lt70 2:1J0.10 !flt t:U•10 DKtmlllr 10. 11, "· 1•ro JXIJ·7CI OIClll'lbtr l. 10. \I, 24. 1'10 US7-l'O l , ' '• • • • • " • ,, ·• " " "' " '"' ,. ie· ;s "' " m, .. '" " " "' '" ·• ,. W· :11. " ~ "' " '" • "· .. "' ,. '" 11of "' ••• '"' ... ... '"'· k li " '" "' ~· ... " '"' '"' :1111 .... '" '"· , .. ,,~, ... om, !!cw "' "'" Uc1 ... 'nl• ' " 11 ... ,,. 11111 "•· ••• ' / --------------------------------------.,,...-----------:----.. -. T_h_ur_~_~_._D_"_•m_~_,_1_1_._1_91_o_s ___ ~ __ D_~_L~VPILOT 3 . •Average~ Pusher Depit!ted ' Dealers Young,. White; ·Regard Selves as Honest 1 RED TAIL HAWK WILL FURNISH IMMIGRATION DATA Peter Bloom Shows; lnstructqr Pat Grignon His Captive Bands for Birds Student Tags Feathered Frfends STANFORD -(Al' -The average drug seller is youngt white, uses drugs hlniself, considers himself honest and £riendly and doesn't regard himself as a criminal, says a researcher. Thai Was the profile painted by Dr. Richard Blum of Stanford Urliverslty's Institute for Public PoUcy Analysis in a report Wednesday to 23 scholars and government officials from five nations attending an international drug abuse conference. Blum said his findings were based on analysis of 454 interviews with drug pushers in jails, psychiatric wards, colleges, high schools, junior. high schools, the Halght-Ashbury district of San Francisco and rural California youth Water Board Bars Labor Bargain Unit Dir'ectors oC tbe Laguna Beach County Water District have nded out recognition or the Orange County E m p I o y e s • Association as the . official bargaining agent for the district's employes . In a resolu.tion pilssed at the board's Tuesday night meeting, the directors restricted any future labor negotiations to local employe associations. The resolution did not specifically refuse to recognize the OCEA or any other group." However, the rulj!S and regulatdons adopted in the resolution state that the employe association serving as a bargaining agent for water district employes must permit all members to For a volunteer federal bird .bander, The mlgrating birds, his hobby and his vote on an equal basis for organization the hills and wide open [ieJds surrounding trapping experiences provide ~ubject officers. Saddleback College in Mission Viejo matter for assignments in his English John O'Mally, a spokesman for the provide, a unique laboratory. composition classes as weU. OCEA, said following the meeti ng that Saddleback-student Peter H. Bloom of Since he started last May, Bloom, a tit.is regulation would disqualify the Tustin takes advantage or time between sophomore, has banded 170 birds. He OCEA from representing the employes. claSSes to forage through the fields in relays infonnation to Washington on each O'Mally said 14 water district employes search of birds. catch including the time, date, species, had ex pressed an interest in being ' Under the guidance or an ornithology band number and weight of the bird. The represented by the OCEA. He said the professor at Cal State Long Beach, the information is used for federal migration employes now would form their own i!.OOlogy student is a licensed bird bander: studies. ... . organization, The Laguna Beach Water , He traps wild birds near the college to When a bird Bloom has-'banded is District Employes Association. put an identification band on them before discovered elsewhere and .a similar O'Mal!y noted that under the state law, setting them free. report is sent to Washington, he is an employe may be repreesented by any Bloom has caught up to 10 birds a day notified by federal officials about the organiz.ati~n he chooses. Legally, he said, including hawks, falcons and· owls. progress of the bird's flight. the d1str1ct could not re s t r i c t · His bobby fits in well with his science Bloom suggests that a n y o n e membership of its employes in any studies at Saddleback, , Bloom said. encountering a marked bird, should association. However, O'Ma\ly said the Fuither, he is compiling information to forward the information on the band to OCEA did ~not wish to take the issue to be used in a future thesis on predatory the Fish and WildlUe Department in court. birds for advanced science studies. Washington, D.C. · "To avoid~ court issue," he said, "we ..;c.-''---------------.0...-'----------WliU-assist-them-f·the 14-employes)-to · _ . . form their own association." Lagun B d A O'Mally said that such action on the a Oar Pproves part of an employer was unusual. but that th e O~A would go along with it . • $1,000 for Consultant • . Trustees or the Laguna Beach Unified School DistriFt have approp~iated $1.000 for the joint: employment with 15 other otchool districts of a legislative consu l~ tant. A recently-defeated st.ate tax reform measure sponsored by Gov. Reagan ~outd have eliminated much of the state 1id ·to these 15 "basic aid districts." The threatened districts are some of the otate's v,realthiest, trustees noted in tPPfOVing the Jegar aid move. : Board member William Wilcoxen. a Laguna Beach attorney, Eaid'the bill also ~ould have instituted a statewide ~roperty tax which would "increase people's taxes CQnsiderably and take 'way our funds." : "It is the biggest threat f have seen to ~ur school district since I have been on Q:ie board," \Vilcoxe n added concerning ~e legislation. The move to hire the legislative consultant. or lobbyist, was initiated by the Beverly Hills Unified School District earlier this year. The consultant will be charged with drawing up a tax reform proposal that would protect basic aid districts like Laguna Beach. AcCording to business superintendent Dr. Charles Hess, the district would have Jost $361,000 in stale funds had the tax . reform bill passed the legislature, Jt was dlfeated by one vote. The tax bill, in an effort to equalize state support to all school districts, would have eliminated the basic aid on the premise that weaHhiet~SChool districts do not need as much financial support. School board president Larry Taylor called the legislation "a threat to the taxpayer," and said hiring the consultant was an attempt by the 15 districts to protect the taxpayers interests. To Brighten Christmas County Newsman Mel Lilley Dies Veteran Orange County newspaperman Mel Lilley, 53, died Tuesday in Garden Grove following surgery and a lengthy illness. Funeral services will be private. The family has suggested tributes in form o( donations to the Kidney Foundation. Mr. Lllley had been with the Orange County Evening News since 1955, He served in several capacitfes and most recently was managing editor of the weekly operations. He also was the outdoor editor. He Is survived by l)is widow, Adelaide, of 11711 Pickett Lane, Garden Grove; daughter, Victoria Lilley; four sons, Jefferey, Chris, Michael and Bradley Lilley; a mother, Mrs. Charles Lilley: a sister , Mrs.1 Carl Ricky, and a brother, Charles J. Lilley. His ashes will be scattered at 11ea. Youngsters from San .Juan Capistrano's Community Chris tian Church collect food , toys, clothin.'?" and personal items for about 80 orphans at Tijuana's Rose Park Orphanage. From left to riji;hl are Sandy Bennet~ Ann Maloney, ~ikc Rukslalis and Mark Bennett. The orphanage, three rooms and a trailer, was started in 1962. The church group bears gifts to the orphanage quarterly. The gift caravan will I.eave for Mexico Saturday .. ~ • I communes. Most pushers got their start on alcohol in their teens, became heavy smokers of both tobacco and .marijuana before their mld-20s, and had used narcotics by· the same age, ht found. Almost all ha.d begun illicit drug use i(I their teens, receivina: the drug from a friend or acquailltance the fiist time, Blum said. He said most of the user-pushers said they were nervow: ~fore their first try at drugs, but by the time o£ their first sale the majority said I.hey were no longer nervous about arrest. Blum sa1d only about 10 percent said they felt guilty about drugs, but as they continued selling drugs, they became worried about some of the consequences. "After an average of four years' dealing, plus the preceding use period," Blum said, "40 percent are now worried about being dependent or addicted; two- lhirds told of changes they had witnessed in other dealers which had Included addiction, death, criminalization, social alienation, drug obsesslonalism. and other pathological p e r s o n a 11 l y developments." or those interviewed, 59 percelt said they had never been arrested, and (ewer than 10 pertent thought the police could force them out of bus\oessj because the drug culture is "too large and too well established." Blum said most dealers didn't conalder themselves criminals because they gOt pleasure from the drugs they used themselves. Fresflly cut trees, Merry Christmas •• prices. lfyOU're looking for a big beautiful tree this season. come see us. Y04'll find Scotch Pine and Western Douglas Fir Christmas trees in various sizes and shapes to hold all yOUr faVOlite ornaments. Scotch Pine <4 lo 5 II.. 5.99 7 lo 811., 9.99 S.1/2 lo 7 fl. 799 Weotem Douglll Fir 21o3fl.,1.19 31o<4fl.,2A9 ;1o11n.,349 7 lo 811., 4.411 9to10fl.,11.99 ' -•Juniper growing In a ceramic planter, already gift boxed. 10.99 Bonul Pyrlcanlhl growing In a ceramic· pJanter ••• Chrlalma8 col018 all year. 10.9 Bonul BlllCk Pine growing in a ceramic plantar. 10.99 Cenunla .......... INlcly Chfl-glll wrapped. Bonul Juniper growing In a tub for Chrlalmas. 13.99 • S-1 Tree Kft Includes: planting dish, Bonul plant, special soil, wire andA 99 how-to lnstructlone. "'· Ch1r91 if ·•t the1t Penn•y stores: FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center. Shop Sundeys1 too, 12 to 5 P.M. -----,_. -· .... .. ... --· .. I . -.~ ...... :•~DAl=Lv:::P::1Lo=r=====r:;-''-"":~:· :-~-:;-;--:.~1~~· 1;:st BomfJi.., Wides Prepared to End SAVE YOUR P·UBLIC B'EACHES ,./<t,s 'No thanks! We're just looking!' Year of '70 Not All.Bad By DICK WEST Of .... Dtllr .. 1111 Jl•ff WASHlN(;TON -The year 1'10 will never make the all.WU-team, but neither abould it be written off as a total loss. Looking back. It becomes appareot lhal 1970 produced several twitches of genuine progress that bode well for the fUture. In Geneva, Switzerland, a company known as 1.0.S. Ltd. advanced the frontiers of communications several notches by calling two presa conferences to anno wu 11 dldn't have anything to say. Calling a press conference when you have nothing to say is, of course, an ancient practice, particularly i n Wuhington. Mao and boy I personally have attended at least 200 pre8S conf~ of that sort, and I am by no means a prodigious press conference attender. ln the put. however, people who have called prea conferencq when they had nothing to say have gone ahead and said ~ 'Jbus the Geneva Press , atWlilCh-t?ii no was left unsaid, repraented an autbenUc brtoldlnoucb.- MA YBE I'M a clru!!Jer, byt I like lo think-thlt one day there •lU be a wt1r1d In whr.h people who haye nothing to say won't call press conferencea at all I doubt we'll see it in our lifetime, but It's cominl- ~ promising, although In another capacity, wu the allegation that a motion ptcture s t udi o O'llt'ed the go__.t nearly PJQ,000 lw the use ol an atrcnJt carrier in fibnlng a movie about the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. 'll)e lnlporlan\ l!Ung her< Is not tho allepl debt bat the opportunities it sugeata for NJIDCing the federal budpl. Ttte pvemment must own hundreds of other item. for which there would be a nadl' market. · Renting or leuing tbtm for private use durlag aladt periods sl!ould go a long way toward wipiltg out the annual deficit. I AM TRINKING in particular of the Selective Service System. Oru draft quotas for a given period have been filled. the Selective Service machinery could be rented to a Las Vegas casino for use in operating lotteries. Or perhap!I fiOme church group would Juse it for fund·raising bingo 1ames. , -UPI War N , B 00 YOU ••• OW•.• ruce LOVE CALIFORNIA'S BEAUnFUL PUBLIC lllACHES7 PARIS (UPI) -Ambwador David K. E. Bruce said today tho United Statea was ready to stop the fighting in Vietnam ''now" aod asked the Communists to negotiate. Jrutead, Hanoi said President Nixon had dire<:Uy challeoged the m!Jhl of the entire Communist world bf bombing North Vietnam. Bruce told the 95th session of the deadlocked Vietnam peace conference the United States does not accept the Communists' deadline of June 30 next year for a U.S. troop pullout as a · condition for a cease.fire and does not agree to t.rf'e ouster of the Saigon regime as a condition for political settlement. "We have ca I Jed for immediate negotiations on a n internationally supervised cease-fire·in-place throughout all of Indochina," Bruce said. "In other words , we are ready to stop the fighting now and resolve the other issues in an atmosphere free from the use of force!' He repealed U.S. readiness to negotial• an agreed Umetable "for complete troop withdrawal as part of an over·all settlement in Vietnam, Laoe: a a d Cambodia." The statement by Hanoi negotlatol' Xuan Thuy coincided with a rare j>ersonal attack on President Nixon by an offJcial Soviet statement which lllid Russia would "draw a p p r o p r I a t e conclusions" Jr U.S. air raids on the Nor1h continued. 11tuy said Nixon's Dec. JO news conl8rence statement "defies not only the Vietnamese people. but also the socialist countries and the peace-loving peoples of the world." Thuy did not elaborate. But hls statement came alter both ~foscow and Snow Heig htens Heating Crisis In New York NEW YORK (AP) -Freezing temperatures and the season's first real snow created a grim backdro p as a fuel crisis drew closer today for hundreds o[ tho~sands of residents affected by a strike by 2,800 oll tank truck drivers and oil burner servicemen. Land~ords, incl~dmg the city's Housing Authority, lmmed1ately began conserving fueJ<iil!\'~ay. Tfi" slrikeDegan at 12:01 a.m. cutting off deliveries. Hundreds of thousands of residenl!i and workers in the city and adjacent areas of Westchester County and New Jersey were affected. · While some homes and buildings had reserves for several days, others had only skimpy supplies.on hand. State Mediation Board ch a Ir m an Vincent D. MCDoMell called,the striking local 553, International Brotherhood <>f Teamsters., and the New York OU Heating Association t<> a meeting in an attempt to end lhe walkout before the shortages became serious. Nixon Hosts Heath; Expects Good Talks WASffiNG TON (UPI) -President Nil:on Thursday welcomed Edward Heath on bis first official visit to the United States as Britain's prime minister, and asserted that their two days of talks v.·ill contribute toward " a full generation or peace." Heath. in his response, said he expected their conversations to range over European and British matters. He sa id Britain's hoped.for entry into the Common ~t srket "will be to the benerit" of Europe, Great Britain, the United States and !he free world. Peldq reacted to Nilon's dec1araUon by WuJng lbetr strong .. t denunciations In months <i U.S. policy in Vlelnam. President Nixon had told Ille nation he would not hesitate to order a resumption of bombing in the north H the North Vietnamese continued to fire on U.S. reconnaissance planes, or if they mounted a military buildup likely to endanger the withdrawal of U.S. troops. Yanks Braced For Saigon .T error Raids .. WANT TO DO ALL YOU CAN TO' KEEP APARTMENTS OFF THE SANDS? WANT TO DO SOMETHING SIGNIFICANT TO l'RESERYE OUR ECOLOGY? HUNTINGTON BEACH ••• IS IN A COURT BAnLE WITH THE STANDARD OIL. CO., AND ns LOCAL SUBSIDIARIES ASKING THI SUPERIOR COURT TO KEEP THIS BEACH · OPEN FOREVER FOR PUBLIC USE. IF YOU •• • HAVE ENJOYED THE BEACH BETWEEN THE HUNTING· TON BEACH MUNICIPAL PIER AND SUNSET BEACH AT ANY nME BEFORE 1965 ••• WANT TO DO MORE THAN JUST TALK ABOUT ECOLOGY AND WANT TO KEEP THIS 5 MILES OF BEAUnFUL BEACH OPEN TO THE PUBLIC • • • WRITE NOW • • • TO CITY ATIORNEY, P.O. BOX 190, HUNnNGTON BEACH, COME TO HUNTINGTON BEACH CITY HALL, 520 PECAN CALL 17141 536-5263, COLLECT IP IT IS A TOLL CALL . DO IT· NOW.!.! CAL. 9%646 AVE., OR • Snow Warnings Issu ed • in JOYOUS CHRISTMAS RECORDS Ewclu,ive collector'1 elbum with Ella Fit19erald, Pe99y L1e1 Nit King Cola I: oth..-s. •••• 4.t l .$4. VALUI -I SYLVANIA It" PORTAILI COLOR f,{ "• .... ";., mon.l ..... bl. "'" s399sa ~ TV 111M1I CX71. Ha, AFC for • p1r· ~ f•cNy hll'lff plct11r1 tt ffle touch of a ' l111tt.n, Stiff eption1I, e•ht. • • • TRUCKS FOR PROMPI', FltlENDL Y SERVICE -PHONE 548·3437 : V•rl1b!1 wlf!dt nl1M 1"11 1P111r11\~1 "91.ors !wwmlnt norr~weu-.1~ It 10 10 k'IOI\ 111 •lltr_,\ ludf ¥ <911(1 1>'•+114~: Hllll _,., oltl. 'tMURSOAY 1'1,l! ~!Ill .. .. ' FIA i low $t(etld Iii.II " . • • . • S,.;Olld IOW H" lllMt ,11 ''" MOO!'! lllH• t JI pm, 1t·00 1 m, Jt ' i2 ,.m. c_i I W •. ..,, l I 6 II • m, '0 II ... ~·"'-,,. 1;1l•"' '' $11\ • 01 1'1\. 5111 ICI Jj em. Hn1~ ol IJrY Wtlll!tt' In bnw ..... HNVV lt!OW WtrPllfttl Wlfll fn lllKI tM1 l'IOff!l"ll from llOl'ttltttl Nirw Yert: t8 11'111111 ol N"' Ellt!Md 111111 111 pertt OI U1111. ,. ... N•ltonll w .. thtr w ... 1c. W ld LIP lo l/i IM"ri. 9f lftOW Wiii I •· MttH lfl 'lie t11"'1'1 .,.. •ftd n mvcll ••• '°"" .. , tror.<..t '°' lfMI """''"' ITIOUl'l!ll,., ·~--N,Y,. .lot ... illf 111(""1 ot 1now 111 • 1tl·llw• ""'°° enctl1111 •••Iv ~'"• ll!ly, N1v.. fl.Id lour 11\Cllt' Of -lllllW In ,,.. wm• H!'lo<:i. PlllltcllilJllll <91\d Mlll¥111t , N.J,. H (ll hid m~ "'-" '"' lrw::h ot r11ln, Ntw Y"°" CllY Wfl ... Iha 9dM of fllf 1-.ft rfl dl\'ldlftt llM, Flt.till~ tbo\11 It !'1911.f!lf~ of t111•ft wllh w!l!f 11111~ 111 to 5.1 mlftl t n hour. . ' . • ' • Hou se -Senate Conferees Set 1976 for Smog-free Engine WASHINGTON WP!) _ Despite opposition from the auto industry and the Nixon Administration, House • Sen· Ile negotiators have agreed on a deadli~e of Jan. J, 1976, for production of a virtually poll~tion-free a u t 0 m 0 l I v e engine . At the same time the conferees vot ed late Wednesday to provide stiff fines And jail sentences for polluters. set s t r J n g e n 1 standards for aircraft pollution emissions, permit citizen suits apinst pollutet'l, be they Industry or government, and formulat.e standards for auto fuel s. The compromise legi slation, the toughest clea11 air bill ever considered by Congress. was reg arded as a legislative victory for Sen. Edmund S. Muskie (0..1'.1aine), author of some of its major provisions. He called it "a good, strong bill." Both the House and Senate must approve the conxiromise before it can go "lo the Book Stores Selling Obscenity Findings BALTli\10RE (U PI ) -The report o( the Presidential Commission on Obscenity and Pornography is being sold as erotic.!I iq adult bookstores in the honkytonk section of Baltimore, T~e COf!Jmission. c i ti ng 1lud1es which show there is no relation between pornography and sex crimes. suggesled most [a14·s on pornography be repe11led. President Nixon in October denounced the ~port as "morally bankrupt." A 352-page softcover edition went on sale here this week at $12.50 called "The Illustrated Presidential Report or the Commission on Obscenity and Pornography," it cont a In s hundreds 0 r. phqtograph s explicitly depict ing w i d e varieties of sex ua l activity. Published by G r ee nl ea r Classics, Inc., of San Diego. the book is prominentl y displayed in the ··s1ock." wor ld famous for its high conr.:e'lt.ration of strip joints and erotic bookstores. GRAND FUNK Dovble Album LIVE lnrl11d"~: lntroclu{'tion. A r t! Yoo Rrady, P&rAnoid, In J\'Prd. J.fcartbreaker. ln!tidP Looking Oul, Words nf \\'i~do11·. l\·lellil Mistreal~r. Mark Says Alright, T.X.U.C. Into The Sun. THREE DOG NIGHT NATURALLY lnc-ludes; One J\1an Band, Heavy Church, can't Gt!t Enough of It, Creepln'. Fire Eater, Sunlight, I can Hrar Ynu Callin~. I've Got Enough Heartache. Liar, J oy To The World President, a tall order In the current adjournment rush of the 911t Congress. Sponsors were hopeful it would make It. The possibility o f a presldentlitl veto was considered remote. although the administarlion favored the HOU&e version because il would have given the federal government authority to make multiple . extensions ln the deadlines for cleaner auto engines. The industry contend! a 11178 deadline Is unreali!tic. In its final form, the product o( two months of bargaining, the bill sticks with tough standards sought by l h e Senate that would prohibi t production after Jan. I. 1975. of vehicles which emitted more than one-~nth t h e maximum carbon monoxide or hydrocarbon! that 1 9 7 O standargis permit. By Jan: I. 1976. a similar 90 percent reduction in nltroaen nxide emission would have to be met. Each deadline could be extended a maximum one year on petition to the government's environmental protection agency. 0 n 1 y Congress would make further extensions. The )bill also would set up macfiinery to e st a b I is h national ambient air quality standards jointly enforceable by federal and s t a te governments. Now thru SUNDAY DEC. 20th ... LIST $5.H • I I SPECIALLY PRICED JESUS CHRIST SUPERSTAR LIST 11.91 SALi 544 26! DOUILE .ALIUM PARTRIDGE FAMILY ELVIS THAT'S THI WAY IT IS • LIST S4.fl • * * * * * * RECORD ACCESSORY SALE 45 l'M CARRYING CASE .,,, 11 .•• SALE ALIUM CARRYING CASE llG. Sl.44 40 CAl'A&ITY RECORD RACK 110. S1 .2t I TltACIC CAlTlllDGI s1.44 SALE $2.88 SALE -96' s2.2a TAPE CASE SALE llG. 12.77 * Choose From Our Comple.le Stock of · ''TOP : 30'' SINGLIS --·-··-······-·--··-·-ONLY 68' ... -EuLAn•h1fm__.C1nt•r l 1ncoln 1t St1te Colf•t• ANAHEIM . -.. Th1.1'16iliy. Dtetmber 17, 1970 DAILY l'ILOT f Tempers Flaring · On SST President Vetoes $9.5 Billion ·Job Training Bill -~ WASHINGTON (AP) billion manpower-training bill jobs to fight unemployment. deficltnciff in et.tr tnanpower ~ WASHINGTON (AP) -J Senate filibuster aimed at1 ending federal subsidies for ; the supersonic transport has begun with an unusua lly bitter flare or tempers between the project's chief opponent and leading defender. Exercising hls veto power for whose imme~iate l.m pact "I cannot accept t b Is prpar1m/' NI :r on said l the sevenlb Ume:, President would have been creation of I ~f I t I bl h I WMnuday in 1 veto IMSUll '• ' 1 0 n w c on Y lo tbe Senato. "WPA~Y'8 jolt& Nixon has rejected a $9.5-thousands of public-service perpetuates and extends tht are not tht anawer , , , '" In the debate's o()ening hours Wednesday Sen. William Proxmire CD-Wis.),, asked Sen. .. ' Warren Magnuson (0-Wash.), if his sponsorship of a bill to reduce the PQ6sible bad effects had been only a gesture to win Senate support for S S T funding. Magnuson, whose h o m e state has most to gain from full production or • fleet of American supersonic planes, roared his resentment. Ear Ii er, laying the groundwork for his attempt to talk the project to death, Proxmire won s e v e r a I admi ssi on& from SST su pporters. Nader Unit Criticiza Aged Care WASHINGTON (AP ) - Ralph Nader task force of six teen-agers charge! t h a t doctors, federal offl cials and nursing home owner~ are bedfellows in an epidemic of national neglect of dectnt care for lhe jsick a11d the old. A 346-pag.e report released Thursday. lashed out at a "serious Jack of med I ca I euperVision'' in the deaths of 25 patients from salmonella poisoning at a Baltimore, Md .. nursing home where the illness went unreported for four days last July. And it criticized the Social S e c u r i t y AdmJnistratlon, saying it delayed setting new aafety 11tandards after the death of 32 patients in a nursing home fire at Marietta, Ohio, earlier in the year. "Out of sight, out of mind," js the-way the nation treat.a il.i elderlv, Nader said in a prefaCe to the report. Todays go-anywhere, do-anything Hush Puppies· NEW, HANDSOME BUCKLE AND ROPE STITCHING IN RICH, BROWN PIGSKIN. $18. I CHOOSE YOUR GIFT ITEMS FROM THE FOLLOWING SUGGESTIONS: CHILDRENS & LADIES CLOGS-SANDALS- FASHION CRINKLE BOOTS-SPERRY TOPSIDERS- GIFTY SLIPPERS FOR ALL-MOCCASINS. FINALLY! Bob Wolf .Collegial" -All Si10s Including Little Guys . • • The aummer·l<>ng study w•s done for Nader by six teen· aged girls and their teacher from an exchislve private school in Connecticul. The group was headed by Claire Townsend, 18, daughte r nf Robert Townsend, author of the be!ll·seller, "Up the Organization.·• OPEN UNTIL t P.M. THROUGH CHlltlSTMAS WESTCLI ,, l'LAU 17th & IRVINE NEWPORT BEACH STARTING DEC. 23 NOW! LONG BEACH IS SHORTER TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA. r---L-o-no-8•-0-0-h-to---. Loa Angelos (Orange County, Paloo _San Fr1nolaco 111 Verdes, Wflmlngton, Torrance, etc.), Including tax. Long Bea eh 11 Ilk• having your own pr1vatt Leave Long Beach: airport. You don't have to fight the 1r• Now you can fly PSA from Long Beach 7:40 1m way traffic to LA. International. Th1r1'1 Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:-45 am easy perkj ,,g. And the crowds haven't More on weekends. More fllghts than 1 :30 pm found It yet. Next time you head north any other airline. Connections to Sacra· 4:30 pm (or south), htad tor Long Batch Airport mento. Or, avoid the freeway end fly to Mon thru Thura & Sit. by way of your travel agent and PSA.. San Diego. If you live any plaeo south of .__M_0_,._1_11o_h_1a_F_•_I &_s_u_n_.-' PSA 11* Ja11a1ft. J • ' . • • ... _ ' ' o\ • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE !---==----__.'t-· ·--- . . ·i• :·High Order o_f Service Cutbacks in the space program have produced a l)het1omenon ln Orange County few ever ex pected to see: Many men ' and some women With advanced de- arees and lengthy job records in ' the five-figure salary b·racket unable to find woik at any pay level. Frustrations amoni;t: membe rs of the 40--and-over n~e group in the hiRhly-skill ed categories are especially painful, as one of their number points out in Mailbox below. On another employment-front lhe story is consider- ably bri~hter, h.owever . The National A.Jllance of Business men (NAB). o r- ianized in 'cooperation -with the federal 2overnment to recruit, coun~el . employ and train the so-called hard- core jobless, extended its program to Orange County some ?1> months ago .. Despite the business slump, employers have taken on close to 3,000 such "ur:\employables" and have been able to retain about~ 2,100 of them in permanent, full- time. skilled jobs·. Employers may either absorb lhe cost of training nr obtain 2overnment help throu2h programs financed by a contract through NAB with.the Department of La- bor. Jn Orange County, however, four out of five em- ployers have absorbed training costs without govern- ment help. The retention rate is highe~ then many expected at the outset. A troubleshooting procedure iS Riven credit for this. Whenever difficulty appea.ri -misunderstand- ing, tardiness, absenteeism -NAB assitns a ·coordina· tor of the same ethnic group to contact both the em- ploye and his supervisor. _ Jn addition to tivinJ( the d1sadvantated a chance, county employers are also generou·sly leodini?" the ser- \ices of toP \executives "to help with job procurement and placement, trS.i{ibtg ·and administration. HoJdinR: out hope and iivlnf sel! respect to Orange County's disadvantaged employed is a community ser- vice of the hi~hest order. Now if someone can devise a program to help the ''employa ble" -some of those highly-skilled ero- space executives -we'd have our pocket of pr perity r efilled. A 40-Mile-Long 'S Though it was born as a merchandising gimmick of the Great Depression years, the annual di splay ol "40 MiJes of Christ.mas Smiles" has emerged today as one of the home-town symbols of Christmas:. The glittering array of jewel-like Christmas light.!l which tie together the Orange Coast -from Seal Beach to San Clemente and inland over the ro lling hills and plains of Fountain Valley, Mission Viejo and Laguna Niguel.-represents one of the area's ~eatest treasures. That treasure is the pride exhibited by individual residents and. businessmen when they drape their homes and. commercial establishments in jewels made . fro·m · holiday lights. It is a pride that lights up the Orange Coast with more than just strings of festive fixtures. It is pride in beauty whic h exists in abundance along the Orange Coast. And that kind of community __p.tid.Lis worth more than the diamonds. rubies and emeralds the multi-colored lili(hts: of the season imitate. The DAILY PILOT is pleased to be part of it a ll and to join this year with the Orange County Coast Associa- tion to co-sponsor the 1970 edition of "40 Miles of Christ- mas Smiles." Ma_y the area's 40-mile-long "smile" brighten the holidays for yo u and yours. It is a pearl of great price • •• and value. I Moonlighting Dear Gloomy ltlanhandling of Lithtia1aia11 Defectot'. Lucrative For Douglas ~ ' t ' • ' ' . ' -' T ' Allen-Gold1D1ith ., } i \ ;. ... ; ' , The three-man Democratic majority report finding "no t vidence that Su- preme Courc Justice William.O. Doug· lar associated with gambttrJ. advoca- ed revolution or misUJtd his office by practicing law" wru released for publication Tuesday ofter the column t Gus: I Christmas card manufacturers make me furious. Never an extra envelope, whether the pri ce Is: 50 cents or $100 a box. I'd rather pay more and have ezlra envelopes in- stead of wasting the 17 different cards oow in my collection of or· phans. ~rs. E. H. C. Tlllt fMtllrt r1ntch ... ~,· '"!"''' ..., lltc:tH'9"111 • tl\I .. 9f tl\I 119W..,.,.r. lt11• r-... -Vt .. •IMMr ..... DllltY Pllll. .;_....lHlow waa40ritun,....Absolving DouglM of impeachmeni charges wa.,, immt'di· ately branded a "whittqia.th" by House Minority Leader Gerald R. Ford (R-M ich.J, who.!t allegations agaimt the ;ustice prompted the House · ;utticiary subcommittee in- previously reported by Harry Ashmore, bead of the Center. L spriii'i:. ·Rep . lAuis: )Yym1n, R- N.H., a luder in the demand for Douglas' impe-.chinent, wrote the Center reqUestitlg • .inforrt1ation On wl;i.at Douglas had been J>l:id. Replying Ashmore stated the figure wu $6,800 for "participating in confereires or symposia. or preparing written material for .use in Center pub!:ications." . . , quir y. -Editor WASHINGTON -Justice William O. Douglas reported taxable income tolaling $863,689 for the period 1960 to 1969 -an average of more than 185,000 a year. During that time. his salary as a member of the U.S. Supreme Court was '39.500. The difference between that figure and the more than $85,000 average annual total came from ex lrajud ici al moonlighting -heading a foundation with Las Veg!!_l!:ambling interests, as a board member of a Sa nta Barbara, Calif., ullr&liberal Center, leclures, book roy alties, magazine articles and otber writings. It was during these nine years that he was twkt di\·orced and remarried -for the third and fourth time . Both wives were around one·third his a1e. He is now nearing 72. Douglas' moonlighting income was '473.940: his salary $339,749. OF THE ~100NLIGHTING total. ap- proximately one.fourth was derived from the Parvin Foundation, which had holdings in Las Vegas gambling casinos. Douglas was paid $12,SOO a year as head of the organiiation -for an overall total of 116,!80. He also rtceived a considerable sum unknown. R.erords do show that one of the com- panies of Albert Parvin, California and Las Vegas busineuman who establithed the foundation , bought $3,000 in houlthold furnishings for Dou1las: after his.fourth marriage. Parvin claims this sum wu reimbursed. Also. as a wedding gift he gave Douglas an elaborate and expensive set of 1ilvtr. ASHMORE SUPPLIED no det.a.il.s. Hl! letter had all the earmarks of being a cagey plot to avoid being charged with refwlng to answer congressional inqu iry, while at the same time saying very llUle. Astunore listed the "honoraria" paid Douglas as follows -1962, $900 ; 1963, S800; 1965. $1 ,000; 1966, Sl.000; 1968, 11.100 ; '"'· 12.000. Yet the report approved by the thret. controlling Democratic committeemen discloses that the actual amoun t Douglas got from the Center in "honoraria., and expenses was S24,120. · The Democratic committeemen decid- ed. to adopt the staff:written report at a secret meeting convened by Rep. Emanuel Celler, 0-N.Y., 32-year~ld chairman or both the subcommittee and the full Judiciary Committee. The other two Democrats are Jack Brooks. Tex ., close henchman of Ce\Jer. and By ron Rogers. Colo., a lame-duck defeated in this year's election . THE REPORT, titled "Second Interim Report," Is a whitewashing job written by a staff hand.picked by Celler and com- pletely beholden to him for their jobs. The documtnt had never been discuS!- ed at 1 subcommittee meeting. The two Republican members were. shown it, but had l'll:l opportunity to talk about it at a panel session. Prom 1tart lo finish . Celler persistently and· forcibly erammed the whitewashing opus· through the subcommittee. Both the body and corclusiol'i.f of !ht. rtport echo the views and arguments of Dougl111' attorney, former Federal Judie Simon Rifklnd, N.Y., that 1 federal judge can • be Impeached only on chargts: relating directly to his judicial activities. In two lengthy memorandums, he main· tained that the accusations against Douglas have no connect.ion with hill of· ficial duties and therefore art gro4ndless lor impeachment. TRF..SE AND OTHER 1 l&ni f i cant dis:closure.'i about the financial affalNI of the ultra-liberal jurist are contained ln the still·unpubU$hed report approved by the three ,l)emocraUc members of the five-member HOUie J u.d i c i a r y Sub- commlttff lhat for elght month! went throUgl\ the motions of "lnves:llgaUng" THIS THESIS was vlgorously challeng- Dougla.s. edR bbyli Ren.op. 1Gerdald --~ordh. M!c.h .• The document. w~iltt.n by the com-epu can r ea er, .. ,., ot tr cr1t1cs mlttee'• stiff, ccSncltided thert: were no -of-the ullra·hberll Jurlit. Jn a detailed fr:ounds~to,lmpel<'.h him. study, ford cited• number of precedent.• ~ two ~bhcan commltteerpen rt-supportJn1 the co ntent ion that a federal jtcted· this finding. Rep. Edward Hut-Judge ls impeachable for misconduct chinson, Mich., ls writing a dissent for in-unreleted to his judicial work. duslon tn the published report. JJ~p. Following the action of !he thrff Wllllam McCulloch, o., is sti ll weighing Democratic committeemen in approv\nJt: whit he will do. : : the whitewashing report, Ford served notice that 1 new effort will be made to ' ' UNEXPLAINED DIFFE~CE -Investigate Douglas by an independent The report. reveals 1 curiou1 .variance comm ittee in the Con1~ess that convenes "BKween the amount OOUl!as ·got from jn January. ~ Cent.er for the Study of Democrlltic "l want to make it perfe<:Uy clear," Imtitutions, Santa Barbini, and what its --u ld the Rtpubllcan leader, "th1t this head had previously cl1lmed. matter ls rar from finished and that the Aa shown In the report, frOm the years e1ten1lv.e. sentiment oC House members, 19&0 to 1989, lhe Cen ter paid Douglu a both Democrat.s .and Republic.ns, is not total of fU,1». Of thlJ amount, fl0,350 r acc,ur atcty rtflteted in t~~ subcommit· w11 lor director's lecs, and 113,770 u ex-tet 1 l\Jghly partisan vote . penses. By Robert 8. Allen That lotll 11 ftlur times the amounl ud Joll1 A. Goh11mlUi Russian Action Too Much for Nixon WASHINGTON ...:.. Granting that dtnla1 ( ' ,.....-.-·.. L lially moves lo cover, protect and pro- of asylum tn a Lithuanian sa ilor was . mole the American withdrawal. In the stupid . it remains of interest why Presi-Richard W•Jaon case of the prisoners. motives were dent Ni1on got so worked up •bout this humanilarian but the design was also lo mistake. '"'-remove as many of them as possible The bureaucratic reasons are evident from the bargaining balance and to show enough .. Nixon found out about .something submarines to Cuba. that the United ~tales was not a hrlpiess that he thought was important from news In fa ct. the idea of America as the giant unable to rescue his own progeny aceounts days after the fact. But it was helpless giant is getting around too fast ftom mistreatment and death. hardly the largest mistake that has been for Nixon's taste, and Russians boarding It may easily be that lhe United States made in American diplomacy. an America n ship lo recapture a defector is only now beginning to experience wha t Like -a~y good executive. Nixon focused with tht permission of American officers will become the increasingly bitter and nn this tingle dereliction to shake down was 1 bit-too much. hard to take results of the Vietnam re- thf' bureaucracy and give notice to all Thf' humilialion of the Pueblo seizure, treat and withdrawal. Saying that this is levels in thie riatlonal securlty set-up thal the cruel treatment or the crew, the what "the people'' wan t oversimplifies high p0Uey-irt-sueh-m11tter-s-i1-direcled-b.V-:--(?alloos disregard-of>---the---r1ghts-of-the--matte?7"People may--come---to-wa the commander-in-cllief. American prisoners 1n North Vietnam. very liUle tht's\owi)' realized humi11at1on the submarines in Cuba, the arming o( af defeat. and Its extensi on bt.yond sucl\ BUT THERE IS MORE to it than that, much more . This Lithuanian defector was permitted to be manhandled by Russians on an American sl)ip and carried off at a time when N!Xon• was giving se\•ere - notice that the United &tate.s could not be pushed around In Cuba, the Mediter- . ranean, Vietnam or elsewhere.- The sens itive point was ·lhis:-The United States is retreating from Vietnam. U.S. dominance in the Mediterranean is importantly challenged. The Russians are cruising in the Caribbt.an and sending Egypt for att.ack on Israel -all this and isolated mortifications as the permitted more is symbolic of the attempt to abduction of a defector from the d~ks or degrade American world influence, wh ich an American ship. bothers Nixon. HE HAS RESPONDED in various ways, among them by ordering bombing of gun sites in North Vietnam which were attacking A m e r i c a n reconnaissance planes, the dramatic raid on the vacated prisaner of war camp near Hanai, att..'lcks on Communist supply lines. and lhe cleanaut in Cambodia. ·These were e3tlen· FOR IT IS Bl' NO means cert~in th11t "Vletnamization" will work. The North Vir.tnamese quite evidently believe that it will not. II il does not and such internal security as now exists Jn South Vietnam collapses soon after the Am erican withdrawal is completed. it will appear to have been merely a political face savrr for a nation which was turning away in Frustrations of Over-40 To the Editor: This is for the 4G-and.over ai;:e group who are experienced in Lheir field but unemployed like myself. We all read the want ads dail y. wh ich sometimes have an ad wanting somebody ex- perienced in our field . We answer these ads constantly but get an answer like. "You have too much experience ," or ''We were looking for somebody young· er.'' or "How come you would take such a cut in pay," or "We don •t need an ybody in management." WHAT l CAN'T see is these same compan ies will hirt. and fire in· experienced or little e1perienced people month after month, go through the gyra-,,. tions of -paperwork, insurance: forms, w.2 forms, but will not hire an ex. perienced man who just wants a. job that will ~ive him a paycheck larger than S6S that he has to stand in line for sometimes two hou rs. Is this what tqual opportu nity means? Tt means that a man over 40 bu to work very, very hard to get a job. GEORGE W. PELLEGRINO .4 Bea11tltul Record To the Ed.ltnr: Rectntly we had a delightful surprise. A month or ro ago •. young man presented himself at ou r door, telling of a Christmas rteord the Corona del Mar High School Music Departmt.nt was producing. The purpose w1s tn raise money for some project ; we hazily remember a trtp to me. campetition the orchestrA and madrlsaJ s:ingen: Want to make. In any even,, we ordered lhe record. B11 Geor11e ---. Dl!ar George : Wh<!n a husband and a wife have a spat the wife CotJ home to her mother. Where is the husband sup- posed to go? (I n case t have a fight with my wife.) 1". NEWLYWED Dea·r Newlywed : Your wife will tell )'ou: it's: part 1 of her job. .~ ' Mail~_x; ·, Letters from rtaders nre welcome. Normal/.y writer9 should convey their mes.~ages in 300 words or less. The right t.o cande11se let.ters to fit space or tliminote libel reserved. AIL let· f.ers must include signaturt and moil,· iug address. but names 111ay be witli- htld 01~ request if sufficient reaJon i.~ apparent. Poetry wilJ ·not bt pub- lishtd. l.AST WEEK it was delivered . When we got around to' playing it, we discnvered thill record isn't just good -it's beautiful We would like to suggest the DAILY PILOT gather the information and !ell its readers how to order I.he record, how much it is and the purpoge for which it was ma de. PAUL AND ALICE FISCHER The Chri&tmas rtcord, made by the combin ed choir and madrigal si11gers with the cuncert .band, .~ells /or $3.50 and is available at tl~t school or from :n111 Corona del Mar High Schaot mu· sic stude1lt. The money raised from tile sales will go into the music fu11d nnd 111fll be used to send the 111adrigal si'ngcrs to a co11ve11tion ti/ music teachers in Kansas City iii the spring. -Editor A11dle11ce Rude 11e•• To the Editor: I have just returned from a testimonial dinner for retiring members of the Orange Cotinty Boar d or Supervisors where th"' Co rona ~el Mar:(l:ligh School Madrigal Singers. of which I am a member, perf.ormed in resporse lo an invitation received several weeks ago. After our entry, it was necessary to wait approximately 10 minutes for the group of county officials and guests to become sufficient.lJ orderly to salute our flag. II was' then our turn to attempt _to reach those present. Repeated efforts were made ·on the part of the master .Cutting Airport Noise Over protests from v11rinus airport managers. tbe State Aeron1utics Board has adopted new and strict. regulations for tk rtductlon of noise in llld 11round airports. Subject to approval by the ~gislature, they will requlrt. all airparts to Install moniloring system s and will Impose heavy fines fbr exceed ing designated noise levels which will be lowered by 11ta~1 through the ne1L IS years. · It ls nota ble that while LA:is Angeles led Hit opposition againi;t the tougher regula- tions, San Francl!CO has already givtn cartful study and •ttenllon to the noise probltm and h•s taken numerous Jteps toward its solutio n. BY COINCIDENCE, lho Slalt Board acted whllc James J<. Cflrr. director nf San' Fr110cisco ~lrport, and an official ot I.he Airport Council tntematiOnal. was ad- dressiai 1 meet.in& of that •wld·widt ' ' J • Editorial • t1rganizat1on in Montreal and urging iU members to attack the noise problen1 ai> a major ba ttle in. the war for 11 safe en· vironme.nt. / Airport nplse, already the creator of human discbmfort, material damage and considerable litigation. has b e c o m e a wJdtsprtad nuisance that will spread and Intensify when the rupenonlc transport plane ($ST) becomts o p e r a t I v e • Rtgulatnry measure1 stJch as the state board now proposes cannot be lldOpled too .soon and t~ Legisll11turr would be well adv1Md to give. them prompt and careful attention when it convenes in January. Sa• Fraecbco Ckron)de frustration from responsibilities it had £0 boldly assumed . This would be quite different from !he 'outcome in Korea, with which the American people learned to live because it was not a humiliation, and a stahli! government lasting nearly 20 years y,•as left behind to show for the agonies suf. fered. lN CONTRAST, as America withdraws from Vietnam Russian pressure eli:iewhere increases to the point of af· front. Americans disembarking at lhe Moscow airport see first a huge poster ridiculing-and demeaning~the-Uniled States as the land of liberty. Thal is only the surface o( Soviet contempt. The rea l effectJ are shown-in -the Egyptian build- up, the Caribbean incursion. and the in- creasing Russian presence in the Mediterranean Sea and the Indian Ocean. President Nixon, It must be concluded from all flis acts, is greatly concerned about the Ameri can position in the world when the Vietnam y,·ithdrawal is cnm· pleted. This could easily explain his touchiness about a human incident aboard an American ship which seemed symbolic of lowered American prestige and power. Jobless of ceremonies 1n capture the altent lnn of the crowd seated at !able, We fina lly proceeded to !ing to those few \\'ho had the courtesy to listen. lN THE THREE YEARS I have sun~ wilh this group -y,•hich has appeared throughout the county. Sn u I her n California, and nine Eurorcan countrie.~ -we have never experienced such a hearlbreaking receplion . Even though this is a private inciden1, r speak on behalf of all young people. J think an interesting analogy can be drawn from some of the current sicK problems of our society and our greet ini::; as representat ives of tco.llectively) youth. Orange County youth. an d American youth. The word that seems to be most popular at the present is cnmmunicaUnn. l wonder if communication is possible, as some of our esteemed elected officials tell us it is. IT SEE7'1S TllAT the good !hings ....,,hich are being done are nof\Qo.ly not "listenPd la," they are ignored -drowned out in the roar elf indifference. ignorance , and rud eness . I am sickened by lhe displav J s111v tonight, and I can only pray ·that the others ....,.e are supposed to listen lo, respect and emulate have a little more courtesy and integrit.y. LEE SECARD -----~ Thursday. December 17. 1970 The editoriat page of tht Daflll Pilot steks to inform and stim· ulatt readers by prcsanting thU newspt1pcr'1 opinio11s and com· mentory on topics of i11ttre.st and 8ignificance, by providing a forum /or the crprcssion of our rencfttrs' npi nions. ond 011 presenting the diverse vit w- pot,... ts of informed nbscrvl'rs on spoktsmtn on rop1cs nf t~e da . . Robert N. Weed, Publisher • 0 ·e ' • s I· ·s e I· e " y " I· I· e I. d d d ,. ' n •I n y ,, ~ d n " a I, '· " ·k g '· '" ;C '· Is ·n ·d ,, e, " ,. 0, ., D • ' ' ' • , ~Many' Police Kiiied Calm Reported Returning CHECKING •UP• ·-After Poland Price Riot ·· Prit1ce Gave . Out A Lot. of Cigars Thursd.iy, Dtttmbtr 17, ltf70 DAILY PILOT 7 Cliristuaas TRE·ESA,LE e SCOTCH $7 95 PINES • e AUSTRIAN Plr,,ES 511.95 ('Mlle Tiier Loatl MESA PRODUCE ( MIW'°RT ) 1910ADWAY 1154 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA Open Monday Through Friday 'Til 9 P.M. Saturday 9 'Til 6 Sunday 10 'Til 4 Boal Grotwded ~flAr..11 BEACH (AP) -Ci· ' ty Council has g r ounded 1 Gemini astronaut G o r d o n Cooper. Cooper recently mov· ed from an apartment to a posh houseboat on Indian Creek. No sooner had he moved aboard than council passed a Jaw decreeing that all live- aboard houseboats must be &ul or the city's waterways by April. CHANGE OF OWNERSHIP FORMERLY RAY WILSONS Cller99 •-ti tftflt ... A'"9f'kf~ l•~HI. tfnk.4Mtrk•r4 .,.. ~''"" c11e.., •• Mt. SLAVICK'S I !07 JAMBOREE ROAD NOW PHONE .~'44·0310 Q/l/atp~ MEN'S SHOP FINAL Inventory Reduction NEW MODELS Hand Tailored SPORT COATS REG. 80.00 & 85.00 NOW FINE TAILORED SLACKS NOW $1300 REG. 24.00 TO 35.00 DESIGNER NECKWEAR NEW SHAPES TO 7.50 NOW $396 FINAL INVENTORY CLEARANCE LONG SLEEVE SWEATERS Alpaca Cardi9an Alpaca Pullovers Alpaco Polo REG. 27.SO TO 30.00 NOW $1300 TREVIRA POLO SHIRTSIJ> WERE 15.00 TO 16.00 TO CLEAR ..... $700 DON LO~ER I. 1 LILY DACHE I /.2 SPORT SHIRTS i'~ PRICE NEW,ORT IEA CH LOCATEO .AT THf NEWPORTEA INN Utt Y111r l t11-A1111rlc•"' •• "''"" c~ • ..,. "" 111 I"" 2488 . 11tll IZ· 1·11 CCltNIHG.WA~! IQ.CUP PERCOLATOR I. ' .. .. 8 D,\.llY fllLOT Thul'$dQ, Dtctmbtt' 17, 1970 Attorney Bits Jury Aetlon 'Airline Merger Told ' ' Ameri~ Approves Link Witli Western LOS · ANGE~ (AP) -Angelea, flle1 in 15 w~si~rn by Western. -· A~rlcan Air 1 in ea bas • stat~. MeiJco and Canada. · American's . previous offer approval of Western Air Lines Continental had made three involved " five Percent direct.ors for a $150 million separate . merge~ o~f~rs to d..t v id eh d to · Western • r the t pan·es WesterQ, its latest est1mated shareholdert: and a trade of ro~rter -0 wo So!" 1 at $180 million. The proposals, -1.05 shares of A m e. r i c a n which would make American said Continental Presl~ent common ,stoek to each the natiori's second largest Robert F. Six, would have Western share. · airline. prevented Western from being An ·Amei'lctin spokesman Angela Stilt ~ 8~t~ling .. E~tra;ditUfi ' ~ ~ J; • NEW YORK !UPI) -The John J. AJ/t, counsel •for lJi!!. origin~! alnd1vlt ... klnl MIJI "bnpeflectioni.'' • . . defense sought 1Dl>lock Angela 2$-year-olif bl•ck form e·r--Davil .utrldlUofl.-had been -'lbe.~. tbt d~ Davls' extradition to Unlversif)i of Calllornia known !o contai.n. pitas conaldtra6on. California Wednesday on philosophy ·instructor an d-, · · 1, • • -~ grounds the grand jury which admitted Commqnist, a 1 • o '%· ~' ' \•• : f\ ~ '-,:i · indicted her for alleged said· c;tunn;.,hts. 16 ·minute ~-M. ..Jt.b1rt4 0 ' • involvement in a courthouse presentatiOn Calilor'nla ~Mid. · .· ' sboOtout bad no ~use to violated its own ·Jaws-by • -1 .,M'"~"' assume she. was connected Callin to 8van h:im ' o( \he ', ' ·. I ~ . ·, ~ .. proceedings. L . Continentai Airlines, \\-hich ; "~wallowed up by an indu!try sakl one or the main . reasons , giant." . for the. merger 1s that opposed the merger and made American's management American· docs not have a counter offer to Wastem. and board apprOved a mergirr authority to fly to Honolulu laid Western "has voted to " offer to West~m on Oct. 30, from the West Coast and wltl> tl>e ,Al!g. 7 incident. minu~s. of Ille grand jury ~ ·: ·~· · • :· ~· · s He sail the Marin County, --• e,. , · A •d S ble ta tS caur.. grand JuTy had ~· .. no : ~ ..... ., l cram . r probable cause" lo a,;ume ' --'.l ·"\ ~,.: .. . Miss Davis ' was connected ~ · !i1'\ll.A,J.;. SACRAMENTO (AP) -billio~·n ed state funds with the San Raf a e I · : · ' courthouse shootout during ' '·~ _ SChools,. cities, co 11 e g ~.next ar. · which a' judge and thr~ other . • . · · • DalJ. professors, c~nlies and stat. :r,tie s • ls . want $ 4 0 0 pe'rsons were killed in an • •, \ '~' : sell itself and disappear." then spiced up the offer atter \\'estern does. . Westem's bOard approved Continental entered the He added the" firms have . , picture. competing flights in only three American s . offer_ Wed.~sday A Western sj>ol<esm~n .said cities 2nd_ that "AmerlCan 'is a night. The deal is s~bJect ,to the new deal providea .fOr.·an transcontinental service while approval by Amer 1 can s el:change of. 1.43 sha'.res of Western aims primarily at the boa.rd, which meets in Ne\v American's common stock· ~or . resort ·market. workers are beginning to m1llion, the clbes more than at t e m·p t e d e.scape by . u·· " ' : . scramble for:...more than $ $3SO million,, the college and prisoners. Sh.e was charged • · . · university faculty seek $74: with buyihg weapons 'for the • · · Wutoutf KAIA R.•d Graffit•t million, the counties want prisoners. ; · ~0,,lt·iv•"i 'i"'tftJli•·CH•lnMAI York Friday and . by · each share of Western stoek. The nation's 1 a r g e·s i 1 ha r e h o t ·d e r s oI , bo~ This would follow declar.ltlon · commercial air service . is companies and the fe(leral of a 10 percent stock dividend United Airlines. 1• a ··"out" from welfare and the Atit also toJCI the · judges t!}e ' • · " •~l..,. • • · By Bill Leary .stafe wor'kers want a $128 grand jury · indictment was · . '· V11Jfb:vr 1-.t~111• , million pay riase. ~anded down only after the 1 M ~ • ...._,.,.., 111• gov"emment. .. American serves the U.S., "'-. Canada. Mexico, South Pacific islands and New Zeal211d. Western, based ·in L-a s Bribe Trial Star Witness Off Stand SAN DIEGO !UPI) -The star witness Jn the bribery and conspiracy trial of Mayor Frank Curran.ended b (s testimony Wednesday after telling about contributions to numerous political candidates, including President Nixon. Charles A. Pratt, former San Diego Yellow Cab Co. president, said he gave $2.000 to Nixon and $2,00& to Sen. Alan cranston (0.C:.Jif.), in 1968. Curran, one or s e v e n members of the 1967 city council indicted for taking alleged bribes from Pratt. \Yas accused of receiving $3,500 in return for a favorable vote 9.11 a taxi rate increase Oct. 10, 1967. In nearby s uperior courtrooms, the trials (){ Assemblyman Tom Hoi:n and Councilman Mike Schaefer cootinued. Both. face charges similar to CUrran;s. 5%%says it'loud and clear.Your money .earns high ,interest plus maximum saf~ Stability counts for a' lot these days. And what could be more secure than Bank of Americ11? As part of our Personal Choice ~avings, we have th~ee types of Investors Passbook Accounts. All are high yield plans. And all offer passbook convenience. 5~% Investors Passbook. Leaye Your money with us for1woyearsand it win elirrtSo/.4% annual interest. Computed daily; compounded and paid quarterl}!-$500 minimum deposit And you can add to it any time in amounts of $100 or more. · 5V2% Investors Passbook. If a one-year maturity is about rightforyou, we'll pay you 5V2% interest The same $500 minimum applies, as well as the privilege of adding to your investment in ·amounts of $100 or more. 5% Investors Passb()ok. This is our short term offer. 90-day maturit}( And you earn 5% annual interest Again, a $500 minimum opens an account Add to it in amounts of $100 or more. ' . ' . : ' • • . i I .. I , ' . . ' Of crurse. Ourl8gllfarsM!gs-piya 4~% annual intenlsL Put your *'°8'/ i\ Take it oilt Ahy amount; ~me./. . . . You c8n see talk·Jsn't ~heap at EJank ol America We meari what We $EtJ H$1h~ backed up by 1he securi!Y of'fle:WQrfd'a, largest bank. Obviously; ·theni'~' a· reasOn · wtry so many people seek us~ Must .be we .give you more ~ with the business of riving. :' (. BANKOFAME~lft fortherc:t-· ' I· ' ~~-~=ttt,.Jf!X>-..Wl8S....,.ltant~l ---­immunity from prosecution, gave tes.Limony to the COW"\tY grand jury which led 'to' the indictmehts. Several ·days after Uie indictment.s he was fired as cab company l , president. ·. ~puty District Attofl)ey John Hewicker was expected to play a tape recorded version of · i he 1967 rate hearing to the jury of nine men and three women today. Oil Firm Vrges Vse Of Channel SANTA BARBARA (UPI) - Officials of tbe Humble Oil Co. said We d nesday that development of the petroleum reserves in the Santa Barbara Channel "is clearly in the stale and national interest." Speaking; at the opening of a three-day sympO!ium on oil -at the University of'Ca\iforitia at Santa Barbara, · H u m b· J e president Thomas D. Barrow said the demand ·for energy sources wil1 double during the ntxt 15 years. He said oil has tht greatest potential for meeting the increased demand , but offshore supplies must be developed because domestic supplies are diminishing. "The real question at hand should be bow to develop these actual resources in a manner consistent with local interests," be said. ll\4111'-I. ( ( J<...,"f!•, ~~f '-"": \ J f\\f L~I' t I \ \~ DIAMONDS JEWELRY OUT ISTATI ::wH ITIMS All DlalllOllcls & Jeftlry carries call refund G...antff STOP-SHOP COMl'ARI -Yeu'll loo __. • I .! ( i/ I · i1 I I . I \ 1 ' • I ,, -. " . • -------; .----·-----------·--..--------------------- ) ' Thursd.iy, t>tctlnbtr. 11·i, 1970 . ' . A -·wonderful Wo :rld of Christmas ' I ' ' I Where in the world could you.find another Fashion Island for Christmas gift shopping to match the one right here in Newport Beach? WnereTn ffie world could you find an either Columbia yacht rigged as an 80' illuminated Christmas tree? Where in the world could you find _another Santa jollier than ours? (10 a.m. to 8 p.m. daily) Nowhere but Fashion Island-Newport Center-that:s where! "' 60 merchants to prove it. Open ni~hts too! '- ALL 60 STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT (Monday thru Saturday) 'TlL CHRISTMAS -' . . . IO A.M. TO 9:30 P.M. (MANY STORES .OPEN SV1N.DAY 12 TO 5 P~M:) ·. . . . ' . . ~--. -~ . . - FASHION J ISLAND. ' NEWPORT' CENT;Elt P.J.cificCOiiSl Highway between Jamborcet11nd Ma.·9'rthur, Freeway minutes.awJy. ' " - '. --.. .. ------------- -----------~------------"----"-"--'-'-----"-'--"'---"--·-----'-----. ----------·--.. -. .------------ OAILV ~!LOT 'f _fl J " ,-.. • ' . • ' I ' I • .. ,. •• I • ~AILY PILOT ' Computer . Foils Air . -Disasters FREMONT, Calif. (AP) - ln btllllant green letters . "oonfUct. confiict, conflict," flashes persistently on lhe big SCJ'ff:n, Dotted green lines run out from two points, eventually convere:ing. The air traffic controller .:• • :itirts pressing buttons and In a few seoonds the lines va n- ish and the word "clear ," re- placed "conflict.'' Thus v.·hat could have been a collision between airlioer5 is averted nearly an hour before it might have occurred. This ls being done by a new syste m of oontrol being test~ at the Federal Aviation Ad- ministration's Air Route Traf- fic Control Center in r~ moot, acrou lhe bay from San Francisco lnternallon1I Thund11, Otctmbtr 17, lf.J70 QUEENIE By Phll lnterlandl "Sure they' no ezpellOiv'e. Smokey the bear doosn 't • prot.ect U-•alJ ,.az:.for not.IU"f, you know." Husband, Wife Teaching as Team TRANSECDENTAL MEDITATION VISALIA (AP) -A husband and wife teaching team 'is brblging a pai? of new con· ceptl to kindergarten educa- -tion al a Central Sal-Joaquin Valley Elementary School . James and Cordys Winter- ton have overcome lradiUOnal educational viewpoints that • prefer only female teachers for 5--year-clds and normally result in as1lgning married couples to different schools. The result, aays Winterton of the couple's plan, is "I've come to the conclusion that it's a crime to take money for having st1 much run.'' The Winterton came up with the idea of leaching as a team on their own after the Visal ia Unified School Dlatrict an. nounced it would consider any innovative sugeestion that wouldn't cost-too much money: "We submitted our plan. The district considered the fact we'd been marriec; for 20 years, had raised three children of our own, we 1et along and said go ahead and try it," says Mrs. Winterton. Both now think the experi- ment has been an overwhelm- ing success. "Our w'eak points and our strong points seem to balance out," she says. "We don 't try to compete with each other," her husband adds. "Jt could be a disaste r." The a11l1nment ta James Wlnterton's first ex perience with kinderaarten 1tudent1 in the classroom, He previously tauaht fourth, filth and slrth grade levels. He doesn't see his role as one of beinJ: a a babysitter. "Kids are kids," he says. "So I'm a subsUtute fa ther figure and I return tbelr affect- ion. It comes easy. Othen who may be shy with me have Cordys to tum to. 1'I. kids ce rtainly don't see anyU\tq unusual about the fact their kinderaarten teacher II 1 man." Mrs. Winterton says the bi&- gest advanta1e ef havln& a husbl.nd and wife work- ing u team teachers ls thty can better coordinate tacb day's 1ct.lvltit1 through ad- vance plannlna:·al home al night if need be. 'There wa1 another major reason behind the Wlnte.rt.on'1 deoislon. Al TAMH1 IT MAMAlttHt ,.,., litttt'vd..., l •cl11•• &..AtUN.l ll&Ctf WOMAN'S Ct.UI W ff. AIUt'J D•. TWU•ID.\Y, ..C. l,.._P1• P.M. AOMllllOlll P••I NIH ~"-4Jn FAIR "With three schoctl -age children and .varl~s out· side activities, it got so wt - rarely saw each other at borne," Mr1. Wlnterton 1ays. F11t, f1i,, f1ct1111I. Thos• th,.., ""''"' tull'I 11p f1 clo11 i ~ o,.r11t111 011 th1 DAILY PILOl tlllttrl1/ Jllfl 1v1ry ~IY- "W• lbought team teaching w..w ct" t11 lhl opportuntty II "'t tldl ~ ,!"°"' oft1n It 1111 It -•· Mrpon. 1,:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;:;;;;;;;;;=:;!;;;;;;;;=:;;;;:;I Last Minute Shopping? There's Still Time ·to Get that Wish Book Order ... Just Phone Sears The program. which start- ed a week ago. is a coopera- tive effort amQ.Pg the FAA, Aeronautical Radio. Inc., y.•hich servts as relay center for airlinus nying the Pacific and the Fremont center, and a number of electronic and communications firms. The new system depends on a "data ·link ," a miniature computer aboard the aircr'aft. Every 32 secoods in a split- second burst ol computer language. the plan'!'s nW'l'IW, night plan, PGJilion , altJludil, speed and wtltMr eondlUoNI are flashed to tht control cen- ter's screen. By supplanting .the prto sent direct voioe cfnununkt • lion method, the 'dlta II~ system provtdta 1tlrtllftl speed and 1 tr'lmtndoUI rto duction in the burdtn on air trafllc oontrolllrt and pllott. While pilots oow have to keep trying to reach the con- trol center on crowded radio frequencies. 100 planes c1n send thei r fracllon-0f·a·second information under the ntW syatem without delay and rt- ceive almost instantaneous response from lhe ground. IYIAVCO - Orders Placed 'fhrough Wed., Dec. 23rd will b e delivered for store pickup Dec. 2 4 th Don't exhaust yourself wi th that last-minute shopping rush. jusc phone your o rder from the Christmas Wish Book and ler Sears do rhe res~ Call Sears Home Telephone Shopper now. She1f be glad 10 plOCess your order and get it speedily on ilS way. Remember, rou can use one of Sears CouM *licor Credit Plans. I Sears I Under the present system, the air oontrolllr IEllPI trac k of each plant In h11 MC'lor throue:h its volet broaide11t1 and ')Qre• fUp t Jl)fomaUon under the new 111tem ·without ;------cdeJiYiii<f--lvt-1fmott-f ... -11----------~-f-------ll----'....ic.__,fl stantaneous rwponH from -..;:::;'? the ground. - Uniter the~nt 1ylltm1 th• air .-k-Irick of Heh' lll6110 n fllj - th ...... Ill ¥oleo boHclcoot1 and -.. fil1ht lntorm1Uon "' ,.,., 11lpo. II ttro pl11111 1ppeer hudld on IWlvtrllll( cou-• .tlll conlrolilr fiu lo 1111 lhrtlllll the oll)ll, oompn them lo find l!to ...,.. conflict, m1k1 • m111lll lf!lllO of hi• M<tor. then cheek lo find 1lttrnoll safe a1Utudn and C!OUl'IN. Tiil lllW oyollm · pull tht same ll\form1Uon po 1 1erwn. FAA regulations say planes 20 minutes apart are in con- Flict. the new system gives a SO.mi nute warning. Tu•o Pan it..merl can 747s have the "data link" installed and a Continental 747 and United OC8 are being wired for it. After the tests and evalua- tions are completed next year the FAA plans to establish a network of at least five data link-centers across the coun- try. sale: -the-Dutch0loohig- wlth its very own bangs Juliano . The young, bouncy wi,. Now '°"" 1t 11Ylng1. It'• ioft, .lt'1 .,.1n11. It even hu 111 own h1n11. 01 l!lft<!. •cryllc, oo h'1 e11y to co,. I"' Tl rus~· end·ao •trllns Included. WIS 34.SO 16.99 m1.y co fchion "''is bar i 48 m•y co south c.o•st pl•:r.•, s•n die90 fwy •t bri stol, c.ost1 mes•, S_.b.,32 1 - ~~::_:~~;-~:~:;;~~~:-:;'.:~f_;f: -~ . -·~· ef~~~~~~~-~~~~:~t~~-~~~I~~;;=~~ PHONE YOUR ORDER -. A periodic cleara nce in order to recreate new displa ys in our gallery of fi ne furni shing,s: sav ings to 40o/o and more irom such notable sources as Baker, Widd icomb, f\.-\eyer-Gunlher-Martini, Heritage, Tomlinson, Hek· m.,in, Brdndl, Karasta n, to name a few. Our goal is fitting furni shings 'of fine taste into your budget. Discove r the pleasures of browsing and shop- ping here-a step from our own door-side parking. •!lo)!... Olyn1pW. ' •nd So10 :!6:? ... 111 l • Buena 1'n-\. 8:!7..;il 70 Of'" fl:!l -8510 •C•oop Park ~1 :!'61 • (:ompton :i37..0J 10 e <:otu. Mau 540-2W • C.orin:t "66«>51 • •:t Monie '14:t-585:! e Glend•le 247-8000 •Hollywood 466-7531 • rnglewooJ 6744481 •Loog -b 435-0161 •N......Jk r.63-9'J.16 ·-· • 'lra ngf': h:t7-9"-2.! • Pai;adena :1.;t-4:!7 1 or flfl 1-3:! 11 • f'ioo 11J:'-417n e l 'omona h:!3-6tilJ • :-ian 1-'rnt;n1do :t6:t.'J5 J I • :-ianh1 Ana !"">'l7.S7hl •Santa t-"e !"prinp.,;: •1.1.i.;91 J ~ • :-ia111a \1o!llcJ :r9J.0713 • Thnusaod (lal;; 4?7-75-'I l •Ton-an"e ;1;0 . .(l:?~l e \'aUi·y •m.· •. :r::-t~ or "lP.(4700 • \ rrnJon~ 7,;l-ll:!l • .41han1l?f'a :!89-i87 ! •Arcadia • HOlltiagl.OD •RedDndo 445-4100 Beach Be•t.h •Burbank 846.2'1b l :.r79-547:? 34:\.315:1 • HuntingtDn •Rowland •C hinn &ach H eight.'! 627-1571 !J62-778l %5.J31S • t :nlt·er City t.~da1n11 & e S:..n PM.re 837.J26l !\otagnolial !1-l-744-.'5 t • f :..,prc~..; • L..a~ha Hills e !"h~nniln Z-.:!b-l ,'i.50 83o.5550 (h&h.§ • 0oWUf"V • Lakf!wt'M'td 'lSJ4;00 "123-9;4." t "34-7440 e :-lu n lan·-l ·-9 Follr.rt.on • 1.ns Aho& :r;:z44:;1 !>:?5-119 l ~Q7...J6't:~ e Upland • f:anJ~n • M ont~bcilo h:!3-66 1 l 4 :rol',. '; 24-:tl:m • W e!'tcbe-ster f\38.9700 -1-Montroec!: (Airport) • r.nnada 248&30 670.711'.!<I :H ill'I •Ontario e We6t Cotin.a :u;o.J 05 I ti:!l-66 1 r Pia~ • 1-faf"ienda • l:taloi Verde~ %0-1861 ]-I right~ :177-690 1 • Westrni QSter ~:1().346 1 • P.wramodnt 8'J3.45Sl •Hawthorne 531-1100 •Whittier 67').-0681 e P l11eentia 691-066b • m~hland 524-0110 • Wilmi""8fr P•rk eR~• MBOOIS :!.:i4-3 9f. I 344-5181 - Or (_~a lJ Sears CENTRAL TELEPHONE SHOPPING SERVICE Ariytime - Uay or N i~ht, 7 Da·ys A Wee k ANgelus ~..ll 11 Clsrus 7·131 l . . Gilbert 24 171 J Efferson il-5600 .. NEwmark 2-579'~ 0Sbom 94661 :5T • te 6-?<Ulli ... J41 e,4'1'$10E OR IV[, NEWPORT BlACl-I. CALlF'Q FINIA 1 73-18~ ---. -1~~! Sati-sf action Guaranteed or your Money Back ' .1 ' .. - • , ' r ... l\'len in Service I Marine Cpl. Rodger o. "-Brown, son of Mr. and 1'trs. {"!-CJeaty L. Brown of M4 f ' Santiago Road. and husband of I ' •• the former Miss P a t l y Va nderma rk ~r of 1234 Londonderry St., -all nf Cos'ta Mesa, has reported for duty with Maintenance Battalion, Force Logistic Comm a n d , Danang , Vietnam. Officer's School at the 1'farlne Corps Development a n d Edu~ation Command, Quanti.:o, Va. Army Private First Class Olin R. Leviton, son or Mrs. Margaret A.' Leviton, 411 Calle Nina, San Clemente. recently completed an e ig h l· we ek cooking course at Ft. Ord . Calif. His father, Ben J. Leviton, Jives at 264 San Joaquin , Laguna Beach. • Thursd1y, O.Ceml>tr 17, 11170 DAIL V "LDT JJ Lame Duck Congressmen Desert Work By STEVE GERSTEL Bolling managed to kill the breaking vote-courtesy of a $68 billion defenie ap-Dominick suffered a rup Rep. Clark McUreaor, (R.· \YASHINGTON (UPI ) major cnsumer bill oJ the 91st P.1otorola which was wU\ing1o propriatlons bill and the future tµred disc whtn he fell aboard Minn., led I.he inl~•I fight to Congress-legislation to create provide a plane-was spumed.· of the aupcrsonlc transport k' l f f the SST b i... Nothing delights a member of an independent consumer pro· •• 11. . bo t (SST). the schooner and was flo~n by II unds or , a att.l.. Congress more than to .speak , tection agency. iw ing Just was not 8 u to That's not all that Dominick Air f'orce jei to the Panama he lostl>Y only 14 vcies. usually at great length and leave lhe sand and surf. • mi·ssed. Canal Zone for treatment. But something happened to with deep feeling, about the W i th Bolling ab§t!nl. the To lreep such matters no n-h McG , 11 t. , 1 ·t· House Rules Committee voled ~artisan. take the case of Sen. He was assigned to the . Another lnlel""..sti.ng absence c ange regor • e 11 • re na ion 5 pr on ies. 7.7 and blocked the bill from · t f he _.,. But in this lame duck eter Dominick, Republican Senate negotiating team .to concerns Sen. Mark 0. Hat-assessmen o I pro,....... ... session, some senators and ~aching the House lloor from Colorado. deal with the House on two ma-field , (R'9re.) jetliner, permitting bJm to· where both sides agreed there Like Bolling, Dominick has jor bills-:-occupatlonal safety Hatfield prides himself on vote against killing the money some congressman are ex-were enough votes lo r I d 'ob tr . . Th hibiting a strange set or also di 5 P a Ye d a strong an l aining. ey manag· · his opposition to the SST. But for the SST. personal priorities. passage. preference for the trade winds ed to get along without him . when it came time to vote Whal happened? McGregor, Perhaps the most glaring Where was Bolling? Lolling over Washington's cold blasts. Not everything turned out against It, Hatfield was gone. who was beaten In his attempt case i9,U\f sun and fu n saga of in the Caribbean. While Dominick was cruis--well for Dominick. In Where wu he? Flying to to win a Senate seat, w1:r Rep. Richard Bolling, a An offer by Rep. Benjamin Ing the warm waters near the retrospect, .he might wish th.al Guilford College in North given a well-paid job by Presi· Navy Petty Officer Third Class Peter K. O'Shea , son of ti1rs. Patrick O'Shea of l95l Cheyenne Sl .. Costa Mesa, has reported for duty with Light Hel icopter Attack Squadron Three in Vietnam. Army Private First Class Missouri Democrat. S. Rosenthal, 10..N.Y.), lo fly Galapagos Islands, the s~nate the temptations of the Senate Carol ina to make a dent ~Nixon -head ol con· Terrill L. Robinson, son of Mr. To his credit, or discredit , Bolling back to work with lie· was considering such trifles as had been stronger. speech-for a fee, of course. gressional liaison . and t.1rs. John P. Robinson, 1----------------------------------------------------------------------- ~ Navy Petty Officer Third ; Class Timothy J. Gann, son oC Mr. and Mrs. J ames W, Gann of 16161 Parkside Lane . • 'r H 15321 Vassar , Westminster. recently completed. a light vehicle driver course at Ft. Ord. His wife. Pamela. lives at 2300 Tustin, N e w p o r t Beach . ,,. unlington Beach. completed !I" Machlnis~ Mate School at the Larry C. Dan, son or Mr. tf, Naval Training Center, Great and Mrs. Robert W. Dan. 1269 :;. Lakes, Ill. N. Baker. Costa Mes a, ~· recently was promoted to :..: . Coast Guard Petty Officer .Army Specialist Four while r;~ Third Cla5$ Charles M • serving with the 3rd Infantry "'r Dewey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Division near Schweinfurt. • .'• Miles C. Dewey of 2825 Germany. Spec. 4 Dan is a Portola Drive. Costa Mesa, mechanic with headquarters ~ has reported for duty at the company, 2d battalion of the· ~ Coast Guard Air Station, San division's 30th Infantry. !~ Francisco. ~' ~ Marine Michael S. Boehm, ~ Marine Second Lieutenant son . of Mr. and Mrs. A, F. Lewis ~t. Sanders, husband of Boehm of 0592 Enid Lane. • · lhe former Miss Judith K. Midwa y City. was graduated Pierce of 1988 Pomona Ave., from basic training at the :f Costa Mesa. was graduated Marine Corps Recruit Depot, ... from the 1'1arine Corps Basic San Diego. :+----------------'--------.:: ~I ... ... .:, ~· ~ .. ~7 '.;:, ~ :;.'. 1:• ;;'. ~ ~ :;-' ~ ,, ~· .. • • ' ( i ' ' , • • } .i ~ l • t " • " .· ; , ,. ,. .. , r , , • -r ' • • • f ' ' .A Ml!:RICA'S LARGES T f"A M ILY CLOTMING CHAIN - MEN; SAVE~2.-.::· ' . comp. ·value '10.99 SMOOTH AND ,GRAINED SLI P·ONS: OXF'ORDS WITH NEVER-REPAIR SOLES 'AND HEELS 8.99 Good ne\v!l a-foot for the holidays: hand - some, genuine leather slip-ons and oxfords "'ith Penna·Tred~ soles ~nd heels, '1 guaranteed to out,,·ca r the uppers or ' rour money refunded! Jn smooth black or rich '~"1lnut grain ... sizr:s 61h to 12 .. BE SURE TO SEE OUR NEW HOLIDAY COLLECTION DF HIGH-STYLED SHOES FOR TODAY 'S MODERN MAN from11.99 . , j -----~--~ ......... ~-..,;,· ....... OPEN SUNDAY 11 • 5 • 2666 HARBO.R -BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA ······-···········--··----·- • WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 to 6 • ~1----..-.i HOME EllTERTAlllMEllT CEllnl · Dishmaster 3311 BLACK & DECKER KITS JIGSAW or VI" DRILL •7516 #7116 Black & Decker 7 1/2" SAW I I 0 Mr. Bl1c1 1nd M •. Die\,, 901 to91lh1• +h it y1ar i nd mad1 1 b11ltr 11 w. 0 Now the qu•1lio11 i1: Whit w1 1 wron9 with 1111 y11 f 1 lfW 1 •7301 2488 GARAGE DOOR WEATHER STRIPPING O A lot of th.ti ht1I loo 111d fu1I bill could bt btc1u1• of 1 dr1fty 91r191. 0 N1xl we•k w1°ll ••Y i+'1 bec•u11 of th1I door b1lween the 91r191 ind lh1 hou11 i nd 9•1 you Dn th1t il1m too, • 249 T.V. TRAYS 0 Wh1r1 h1 ~11p1 fi..01119 th1t• I'll l'lt •t r ~111w, 0 Hu11dr1dt told. I think t)i1y i re t1ki119 th1 b1c~t off old TV1, p1i11ti119 lht m, i nd th•r•'• tht 1ourct . 88' I • H , • 30 PIECE QUALITY CLOSED CHllSTMAS l~I DIC. 24-1 P.M;---· YOUR CHOICE TREE GARLAND 1c1cLES D Nobody tt!l1 '"" how 10119 thi1 i1, but I'll 11•• • ch1nc1 tnd c1ll 1t 15 "· 0 1f i1'1 ·, couplt i11cl.11 1111d1r, I'll ow1 you fo r ii. D I'm 9ood for ;i,Q 39' TREE ICICLES D 5e muc h fun lo put on !ht lr11. O Molht• 1trin91 lll1m 10 t1•1ful1y 111d 01d iu1I !htGWI !hi tluff, 1nd lh1 kidt p11t ii 111 on on• bou9!., 11' SPRAY SNOW l ' i O G•~• lh 1 lr11 th4! loo\ of r11t u1ow, do up 1111 w1ndow1, ,1pr1y iht front door. D The11 com11 !ht N1w Y11 r ind who cl11n1 ii off, I 11k you. 35' BASKET SWAG .,,. O A nict lithl lo 1dd plentv of color t1 your room. H1n9 it 111vwti•r• or mo"'• it.•ny lime with Ill bit i111t1ll1ti9'I d11I. 1088 DRILL SET D Tl.ii ;, • 1p•ci•I Y"u wDn'I t•• often b•c•ut• 9uy1 t r• 9•tli119 1t .9S fo r +hi1 111. D lt'o 110 ch•1pi•, •••I choomt ¥1n1dium ll1tl for t.ith IP•t4 in 1 11 mtl1ri1l1, D All 1i1•1 bv 64++11 up lo 1/1 inci.. with drill index 111d upright drill 1!111d. Cut dow11 1h111k 'I• te 'Ii, 0 Thi1 i1 1 m1n·1 9iH, for the min you rttll y c1r1 • lot fir. 95 DOUBLE TULIP SWAG 0 Thi1 will b1 1 11•1ttt. i11 tt.1 be+!.. E1p1cl1y if tt.e kich lf1rt lo 1wii19 fr_..;,__ ~~i-i:J-•Doubl1 '"''' ch1h1 111d hookt. 1488 GJtUMBACHER OIL PAINT sn O Find out who h11 the t1ltnl in your hou1t. T 1k1 • look 11 lt.t pric11 lor p•inli1191 111d you'll put 1U lh"t kid1 11 work. 249 DIMMER SWITCH 0 You c•n ch1n91 th1 old ·~'ftt':1'1~;1'" 1wilch to I dim'"er d11I "r ", '1> in undir f;.,. 111inult1. 1S'.!6:.;:0:~ O Fih riqhl in th1 old :; ~~ r1c111l1cJ1. no p1r111 it 1111dtd, ind ple11u•• of the ri9J.t liglll for your mood i1 9r11t. O Tl.a mood I'm i11, yod ''" 4'urn it off. ' . 7 FOOT . SCOTCH PINE TREE " 0 l1t11 looldnq 1r1u11• ind "'• think thi1 11 1110•• .... 111d more 1111i1tic thin you c.1• t•I for th1 1110111y 1nywh1re, 0 0.f Clllrll, Wt J.1¥1 b1tn known lo li1. 0 N, .. ,, 01v f11r 111olh•r lr1t t91!11 wit!. th ft hit ltwthy "···~: • • 1 .1 I • ' I 'I JJ DAILY PILOT For The Record Dissolutions Of Marriage Death Notl4'e• COON tert Coon .... 57, o! "' ~. COii• M••• \!., C"'!& MMI. Dltt ol dtl lll, ~. "· lurv1vlld r.., w!ft. AllMJ IOll, 1t .. 1d1'1 ,.,... .....,..,.,,,...c1ro1 cmo 11\d Mr1, "•••'l •l1""""1rdlnl; ,,..nodllu1Mer, Amv GI. •mbtf1rdiftl, 111 ol W1tlll"~· Vl1lt1tlorl ""'"' Th11r..ifv, from l PM lhrCM111h trttA , l~--lv\ol. ~i.1 ... rvkfi .. m "' Mid Frld.v, 11 AM, ,,,....,. Vtrdt tlftl!Hf Mffhodl1t CP!urdl, "'"' llw, Jl'•vl :. 1'"-l'tr oHlcltll .... lnlw.....,1 In a .. nie. -wii111;;.otot1. 1"111111¥ wn1111 "'°" wli.111"9 1'11 m1kt tne!'l'IOrltl CM>l•I· 11Utlo1u, 01.,,..., c""lrlbult !ft llov kou~ ti Am.,.lc1. Or1nq1 C011nty. ltll l ro1!1· .,-fl' MoM'Ut..,, Dlte<;lort. OAVll v. ... 11 l . O.vl1. Ag1 51, of n11 Tt,...... .,,.d, LI .... ,,. Sndl. 0111 of dfflh, ~blr IS. SUrvlwd lw 1!111r, llVt. ..._,rvln W-. ol Y1klm1. W111'lftl'f"". StorYkH 1nd lntermtnl wm bi ri.tld In 'l'alc l-. S1turtllv. otc. It, Sheiftr L•· IUM lffc.'> Mor1v1nr, """"trdl"9 Dire<· ... MEJ<ININOS tlll""' I. Hennln••. 6CIS C•l1llna 51., l•· 111n1 fl11ch. O.lt e l dt1rh. Oectmba• IJ, korv!v.., l>Y wl!t . Ora, 11! '"' homt / !we ~ ..... w.11 ... DI Cll'l!I M11e : '"~ G_.,, "'""";,,.,, o• Groov11. Te•11: •I'd •l• nltc:tl. 5tNk t1. ttrlcllv, 1 l'M, Ptc~ lie \fltw Ch11>f1. lnl.,.Menl, Ptt!lic \/'IN Memorltl P1rt.;. P1clllc Vltw Mot111t r'/• Dlr1etor1. Ol!neld H. Mt""'· ll:Hklenl or HvMlnfltt)o'I BH ch. Su"<'lvlld ~ wUt, 11:1111; lour "'"'' Dont ld, Ml~e. Gt rN 111(1 J"""' !~ree d1u0Me•1. Mri. ll:&S1llt Ar1nt: Miu Lo1l1 Maher: Mr1, 1C1...., Htr1m~n; ...oth.,., M•s Frftl etoom1 tati'>er. Mich· •'1 J Mther; twcr t1r11rher1. l!ot>erl O•HSto'I Ind Mf'lv!n 5!11n ; 1l1l1r, M'I. MIN Jl'le """"'· StNICtl. Frid.Iv, 1 PM, Petk F1mllv C~ltl l"u..ertl l-IOl'!'lt , ARBUCKLE & SON We1tcllff Mortuary U7 E. 17th SI., Costa Mtaa -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del l\lar .... OR 3.145(1 Cost.a f\lesa ........ ml S.Ztu • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Broadway, Costa ?ifesa LI g.3433 • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORTUAltY 1795 Lapna Canyon Rod. 494.9415 • PACIFIC VIEW l\1Eftl0R1AL PARK Cemetery l\lortuary Chapel 3500 Paclflc View Drive Newport Beach, Callfomla 644·2700 ' • • PEEK F A..\ULY COLONIAL FUNERAL 1101\fE 7'01 Bolsa A\•e. We stminster .... 893-3S15 • SMITHS' MORTUARY 6%7 !\fain SL BlllltiJIJton Beacb - Th11rJIUY, De,tmbtr 17, 11170 UCI Students Taking Up Trowels· ******~*******•••• MERCURY SAV'INGS and loan association IRVlNE What are carrots, leU.uce, bean 1 , er helping something to grow run parts of farming. In April, grow nutritious food jnd pretty students al UC Irvine up to marigolds, nasturtium• and and exist In the I i f e J plan to quit school and atart flowers." the like. are being carefully process .•. " a communal farm and camp -"ll plants die, I die". JJY..r1Yrtd.. }i'__!tudents _at Jll ~" .--.-1 se& this intaresL in In Oklahoma-, I find I know " 1 t •· I ho h rlhd d -.•. wan...,eamw ours o e ay , seven ays a 1ardening and the life styles ·almost nothing and I better to grow plants correctly. If it wttk. or primitive proples as a cry learn a Little at least about looka sick I want lo know what For the professor teaching to reattune ourselves to the horticulture." I'm doing wrong-If it Jives I naw? Gardening. NOW OPEN EVERY SATURDAY 10A.M .-4 P.M . Open Mon.·Thurs. 9 a.m.-4 p.m.; Fri. 9 a.11\.-6 p.m. The idea for a coum In horticulture originated last spriiig when students, racully and administration were casting about f0r ways to Improve university educalioo. Paul Sutherland, a biology the course. Dr. Joseph Arditti, rhythms of the earth. -"I'm taklng the c:ourse to would Uke to know why as lt "has been one or the most ~orticullu re is one very learn something about well. I want to create things fabulous experiences in ten important w~y for urban men growing plants. I am a biology and t want to create thlngs 8UINA PARK years of teaching . There i!I a to once again marvel at the major. third year. Jn the well." MercurySlvln&s Bld&. HUNTINDTDN IEACH Mercury Savlnp Bldg. tremendou!I amount or good wonder of the earth." future I plan to leach high Perhaps thi1 light quip from Valley View 1t Lincoln will emanating from the kids. -"l have always liked school science at th'!: Summer one of the students sums It up Edln1e r at Beach major, suggested a course in which students could learn ··******** They really pay attention." farming. I have eight uncles Institute of Linguistics in "This course Is intellectual No one anticipated the way all of whom have farms, and Yarinacocha, Peru, and during enough not to be merel-------------------=-----******* abo4Jt growing plants. the course would mushroom. have been bl'l)Jght up with it. vacations work with the jungle ~udgrubbing and mudgrub-Rea·l the Stars With Omarr The ·idea took root. Fifty But funds are scarce and th e Of course, I've only seen the Indians and teach them to bing enough to be fun." U studenU were eipected to tight. budget may nip the buds,-------------------------'--'---------------------------- register but 200 actually where the rabbits failed. Dean enrolled when the course Schneiderman ~as promised to opened i[I the tan. do what he can , but at this The result .was a credit point the co u rs e ln course, offe ring 1 thorough horticulture is not on the ,grou nding in basic botany as winter quarter schedule . well as information on scils, \Vhy this sudden it ch for fertilizers, insecticides and green thumbs'! The reasons plant diseases, wilh a seem as varied as the 200 requirement that each student hundred individuals who must produce at }east one live pa rt i c i pated in thi s plant in order to pass. A fina l experimentai Ct1urse. F o r ex a mi nation also was many it is in part a reaction to required . an urban environment. bul for The clas.s sparked voluntary others tht: wish to do lectures from Ch a n c e 11 or something relevant a n d Daniel G. Aldrich, J r , , creative, lo Ctl mbine the formerly UC dean 0 f intellectual and the practical, agriculture. and Howard A. is equally strong. Schneiderman UCJ's dean of Students in the class were binlogical sciences. It also asked to write a b r i e I broughl the Joan of the s!at-ement about why they look grl!:en house by the UC I Bio Sci 60. Here is a sampling: Arboretum and ottier facilities -"Agriculture is becoming by campus grounds super visor a very important part of Larry Pa1ton. everyone's life. f hope to go The collective enthusi11sm into one aspect of plant took down lo earth forms. Two science. I'm going to learn biology majors volunteered as enough lo grow my own food , assistants; people who heard to be able to subsist away about the project donated from a largely populated city. manure ; and one student, Cities aren't healthy plaC'es." learning of a great bargain in -"! took this course mainly trowels, brooght the news to because J ha ve been work ing class. for the UCI ground crew (two The ground had to be years) and have cont inually cultivated, drainage ditches become more interested in dug and fe nces put up to hort iculture." discourage ~ungry r a b b I l s "Tht> new Romanticism which abound at Irvine, all the back lo the sail, the old In conjunction with course ways -(ind your values in a lectures, the students first personal , Individu al way ... planted seeds, (provided gratis We've been wanting lD ex· by a setd company) in small press our love of good and cups collected 'by the campus beautiful things , particularly food service. The seeds were growing things for a very long allowed to germinate in the time . · ." uni versity greenhouse. After -"I took this class because: sprouting, Lhty were moved ta a) the possibility of going into a semi·protected ar e a. fa rming intrigues me . b) also , Finally, each stu d en t ~athy ur~.ed me to. I'm glad transplanted his se«lting8 to a I m here . ama11fectaniular pl(if."' part or -~-.. ,. declded-t--wanted to a larger parcel or land 5et work 1n the garden, and I have aside by the: university for the done so before, bec.ausf:l ~llld class. There, small green physlcal work very 8at1sfy1ng sprouts soon to be spinach and the growth ol plants very ' ' er:citing. It 's almost e s Disneyland Fete Nears Deadline ANAHEIM -The deadline for Oranie County organiza· lions to file applications for the 1970 Disneyland Com. munity Service Awards is Dec. 31. Or. Johri L. Da vis. chairman of the awards committee, said groups seeking awards should file the required notice of intent immediately. Disneyland will grant 26 cash awards totaling $35,000 this year. Any organization scheduling one or more co mmu nil y service projeats as part or its activities is eligible lo participate in the pror.an1 . regardless of size or scope of acti vities, Da vis said . SA Woman Sentenced In Robbery CHEYENNE. Wyo. IAP) - A California woman has been sentenced to 18 months in federal prison after pleading guilty •to being an accom plice in an attempted bank robbery at Evanston. Dorothy Ann Becker, 43. of Santa Ana, was sentenced to prison by U.S. Dist. Judge Ew· ing Kerr afater a pre sentence investigation. She was alleged lo have aided in the robbery attempt at the Stockgrowers Bank in Eva11.ston on Aug. 28. A San Pedro man, Donald Edward Donohoe, 34, I s awaiting trial ' in connection with the robbery attempt. exciting as ~ idea of having a child in the sense of creating - DI MASTEQ The Superfaucet. S crape, waah, rlns1111 ~our dishe1, glasses, sll \ler, pots and pans in one q uick, easy motion. The perfect gift. COMPl.ETnY INSTALLED only $4995 Yft """ ~.,., !i"4 • d"I ~\;o 11o;1. S4t.t 5 "'llOiltcl (""'lvd"'ll ""' """1.-1 Molo 1• OP?O·•·• .. •I ~"°"'" ........ ""' ............ 4..-1 .. ;.,,,,J!od '-' G 1<.,..i, ... llll ... •,,.,.,.... ..... WI ""'-•"'· The EARL Of PLUMBING , ........ t-, '"""""-9 In 0.-.• c ........... 5""' In ... 11i.e... O#ft of °"' '""' 1., .... _ .. AnalieiM 153l W.t""< ..... ~410 f11ll1rt1n 1009 W, C<>mmo1t-llh 171 -()};ll C11ta Mite ll16 "'"""'0'1 ll...,l_.,,,..,2.11.s> M1n1tin1t1n a .. cli 1"4:~ a.c.li~M.1·9'41 SUNDAY SHOPPING IS FUN South Coast ?tua lrlttot at Sin DI .. • ,rwy,, Cetta Men ... __ .. ,.,. 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All thla plu1 an RCA radfo with every purchase of an Ortho King, QUMn, Twin or Full siz.e 1leep 1et; at no extra COIL Ree.fly •peci~?· ·~ As Always, the Ortho-Pak. oi Fieldcrest ni>lron King or Queen alze top ah·eet • Fletdcrnt ni>lron King or Queen size fitted bot• tom sheet • 2 King or Queen ili.e bolater plllows • 2 ·pillow casea • k1ng or Queen tlze mattreu pad • King or Queen t!ze metal ffV11t on eM)'- rolllng caatert You Can Only Buy Ortho Mattresses at Ortho Stores MAIL ANO PHONE ORDERS ACCEPTED GUARANTEED FRl!E CHRIS'111AS DllLIVERY SANTA ANA and FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (corner o f Ed lngtr) Nexf to Zody'a Phone: 1!139·4570 t A apecla/ size forthoaewho want to 1tep up from a twin or hJll, but aren't reedy for a King. Durable atea1 lnner1pring unit topped with springy alsal end, solt, but long tasting cotton !elf. Ifs detign&d to let you sleep betterao you fell betterl M1 ttr1u I Box Spring and Ortho-Pak Plus FREE Clock.Radio and Double Bonus The Super Queen $.f58 Undtrlhllo,beaulilul1y rich, scroll cover that's been doubl~edle 1lltched, 11 • aturdy and durab!o 1loep tel Sturdy because Ortho uud 1 special tempered ateel Innerspring unit, lt11n the Crown Flax coni.r au port. 1l1aJ and cotton felt. It's got ltl MIHl'MI a BoJC Spring and Ortho-Pak Pin FREE Clock Radio and Double Bonus .Del1.1x8 Twin or Full: ' s7a~.· Thia sleep-set value f1aturw1tll11peci1I fiber lock _ 1lul ln1ulator that I ell you t!eep on the proper flrmneas In al1·nlght comfort. Th l1ln1ul1tor11 over ·tt.a 1teel Innerspring urilt and under layers of cotton 'fell and acroll quitted covering. M11tra• I 9o1 Spring Plus FREE Clock Radio and Double Bonus ANAHEIM 1811 West tlncoln Avenue Between Euclid and Brookhurst Avenues Jusl East or Fed Mart Phone: 776"2590 --~ ------------ .I.. Th11rsd~y, Dectmbtr 17, 1<>70 DAILY PILOT J 3 Bethlehem Prepares for Christmas Season Visits JERUSAU:M (UPI) -The • l&r••ll .lourisl mln!Jiry said tQday it expects 2 O , o o o 1p11Jlima this Ch r J st f1l as plenty of room hett, in Bethlehem and In Nuarelh where Jesus grew up. "Hotel occ u pancy ln Jerusalem, part,lcuiarly in the east (Arab) part of town, is about .30 to . 40, percent of season at Bethlehem, the little town in the Jude.an hills where Jesus wa s born on Christendom's holiest day. The ministry probably is DOWN TOWJf overilptimistic. Last ye a rl Ullliijjiitllliliij[iilm~J when officials predicted 10,0001 1 et visitors fewer than half that number showed up. There still are no signs or a great rush and hotels had Who Cares? No other nowtptper i11 tho world c•ro1 1bo11t vo11r co!'llm1i1• nity like vo11r comm1111itv dt ilv n•w•p•p•r does. 11'1 tho DAILY PILOT. ~AM &.-:ICA'S LAftO E ST.,.AMILY CLOTHING CHAIN -' capacity." said P.1 o s he Elbenschul! of the Jerusalem branch of tbe Isradi Hoteliers Association. · "The situation wlll bnprove a few days before the holiday but as things stand at the EST. 1924 ltc• ....... "~ ROAD TEST ~GAZ I NE YOUR CHOICE 5.201\3-5.60113 6.00115-6.85115 5.60115-5.90115 moment there will be plenty or Christmas In Bethlehem and As In previous ye a rs . Church of the Nativity. BaPtlst Choir 1an<I Th• rooms in hotels.'' lbe old city of Jerusalem Bethlehem will be sealed off Choi rs from lhe United Rebellaires. ' ~ military picture has celebrated under 1 s rae11 • 2t hours before Chrtitmas States will sing in ~1anger Last year, some choirs brightened slightly this year occupation. Israeli forces took morning. Special J s r a e Ii Square. These include four raised eyebrows by singing because of the Middle East over the area on the west bank permlt11 will l5e issued tOtliose &ptl:S:l-groups-lhe Di11as some roa-<Jl• Toll numOOrs.- cease-fire. of the Jordan River in the six-who want to stand in manger Baptista, the Brewton-Parlcer This ye.ar , otnclals said, This will be the fourth day war of June, 1967. square before the fortress-like Baptists, the Texas Girls traditional carols will be sung. ~-_ · .!!!11115.i• !!ii!:IH!I - Grand Opening Celellration ••• thN . E w BRAND NEW FULL 4 PL T .. . .. , Uniroyal TUBELESS 7.75x14 7.75xl 5 7.0D•ll 8.2S•14 8.2Sx15 While They Last ••• (f78/14) (f78/15) 7.JS.14 IG 78/14 ) (G78/15) .. 95 __ · ··~ ; • i r • I f • .. ' 100% POLYESTER KNITS ••• .. . great pants, great vafuel 5 g~tgular/y 7.99 A 3-day price special on these marvelous fitting pants1 I® polyester, more in demand than ever ••. tailored wjth modi· fied Rare legs, easy pull-on top and a stitch . crease you usually see in more expensive pants. Sm11rt solid tones; misses' sizes 10.18. OPEN SUNDAY ) I • 5 ' ~ • ti. w:· •1 l d }' • '. \! ' COSTA MESA-1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th GARDEN GROV E -12372 Gud•n Grovo Blvd. I 6.50x13 (171/13) l .2Sxl4 (G71{1 4) 7.00111 l .2 S11S (C71/1 3) (G71/I S) '2495 l.ls.14 (J71/14) • 1.1511 s U71f1 SI f .t_bl4.ID71n Al 7.l S•l 4 IE71/1 4) 7.7S1·14·1f7111 4i 7.7S1l S ff71fl S) 1.SS114- (N 711 L4l l .SS1l S IH71x1 S) 9 .00/ 9.1 Sxl S (178/15) Al n..t b cL f •1.site t.).et , ...... 'n lo.~ """'M.., WlllflWAW II.ti h 1.- Super Chrome Wheels ••• MARKC. BLOOME vws MOST CARS ••• $2?.95 •fRll RIPLACIMINT OUARAllTll •••. 1f LINING ii it Weirs Oul Bel ore 20.000 Milts Plus S11v ic t Charre 3005 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA. NEWPORT BEACH AREA CORENR OF BAKER & HARBOR 557·80!10 GARDEN GROVE 141MO BROOKHURST , 530-3200 ANAHEIM · BUENA PAR K 6962 LINCOLN BLVD. '26-5550' 95 MOST .CARS rvw;i ~ Op1n Daily 1:30.9 Sun. 9-6 . ,. '. . • . - J4 DAILY PILOT Police Donate Funds to Needy Bec.1~ three pollcemc.n found eviction proceedings not.- in keeping with tbe Christmas spirit, two families in Mia1ni and an elderly <.'OUple in New York City ha ve a place to 11tay toda_y. Veteran fi1iami po I i ce sergeant William K i m bro donated U1e $36 nest egg he'd saved ror Christmas liquor lo pay for motel rooms for two families, including four childrer., he helped evict. Two Manhattan patrolmen. n1oved by the plight o[ Sam Labeiko, 85, and h:S wife Lizi, 80. held up their eviction on a technical point and t hen passed the hat to help raise the overdue rent nloney. because they owed · t h e tandlord-$155:--'l'he-landlord hod r aised lhe rent from $36.80 to $46.80 a mooth and their Social Security money and Sam's pensioe simply wouldn 't stretch that far. Palrolman Thoma s Finneran, 20. and his partner, Bob Borowski. 29, were assi~ to stand by while a marshal evicted the couple. They decided to help, First they demanded a look al the marshal 's identity card which it turned out had expired. Then they noticed the eviction papers identified Sam as "John.'' They sent the marshal l'A~llLY CIRClJS by Bil Kea11e "Mommy 's spelling things on the phone 'cause Barfy's listening . 11 24 Visitors Foreign Students Need Yuk Homes Places for 14 visiting fore- ign students. are befrtg sou'ght in Newport Beat:h, Costa M.~ sa, lrvine and Huntington Beach homes for seven nights next week. Mn. Harry Torea, area chairman for the lnternation- al Student Service of. South- ern California, said 24 foreign students will spend Christ· mas in the area. All are attending U.S. uni· versities and colleges under grants from the Agency for Jntematimal Development and come from underdeveloped nations includin~ Ethiopia, Ghana, Sooth· Vietnam, Ko- rea, Bolivia, India . Turkey, Brazil and Pakis tan. They will arrive Dec. 19 and stay Jn the area through Dec. 26. Persons who house the visitors will be asked to provide a bed for each stu- dent anl ' transportation to Cost.a Mesa High School on days when they gather for seminars and sightseeing trips. Anyone wishing to share their home for the holidays with the visiting students may call Mrs. Corea at attending while In the U.S. of New-Mexico, Stanford, are · lhe University of Michi· Berkeley and San J05e State ga.p, Kansas State, University College, Mrs. Corea said. Blacks Seek 54= remaining to be placed are male students ran· WISTCLIFF Pl.Ali The Labeikos, who came to lhis country from Russia shortly after the turn of the century, had llved in their Lower East Side apartment for 33 years, packing, returned to their ----------------------station house and got a Name Chan!!e ging from 20 )k 40 years of OP'liH ........ ~, TNllU CHlllSTMA5 .._, l~OAY 11 It' J age. COLU Vi1it Our Boutique MBIA, S.C. (UPI) -Among institutions they are At Th• Newport•r l11n They were being evicted DOWN TOWN donatioR of $1 from each of the 5.1 policemen on duty. Back at the apartment, Sam had enough to make up the, difference. "We all felt," said 'Finnera" afterward, "these were elderly people who had worked all their lives without taking handouts, and that t b e y deserved a better break than they were getting." In Miami Sgt. Kimbro said he gave up his money to help the families because "l'm black, I like kids and it won't hurt me to stay so~r over Christmas." 1 The two families were evicted from an apartment building ·Tuesday as the result of a rent strike by Negro tenants that started in August. BIBLE THOUGHTS Cllrist died t ... YOU! ''God 10 loved the world, th•t h1 91v1 hi1 only b•9ott•ll Son, tft1t WHOSOEVER b•li•v•tli in h!rn 1hbuld not p1ri1h, but h•v• •v•r111tin9 t;f,··. Jn. J :ll>. ''And WHOSOEVER Will. lit him t1ke the w•l•r of lif• fr••ly'", Riv. 22:17. Abr•ham w11 promi1ed by God -4000 v•••• •90 th1t through hirn ind hi1 ,,,J IChri1tl 1hould "ALL FAMILIES OF THE EARTH BE BLESSED'", G .. n. 12 :] Gil. J :l-lt.. God is "not willing tt.1t ANY 1hould p•1i1h, but fii•t ALL iliould c.om• to r1p•nt•nc.•"• 1 P•t. ]:9, If YOU p•rhli el1rn1lty. it will b• c.ontt1ry to tke p•n1, wi1h11 •nd 1ction1 of God, Ckri1t 111J th1 Holy Spirit. Divinity h11 do11• ,v,rythinq pouibl, to li1v• YOU 11v•d i11 H,,.,,n, •bov•, ind to avoid your 1Mi119 lo1t in 111 •'••nil Hill! Whit will YOU!t •clion b• in r11pon11 to lhi1 1l1-1nc.0111p1nin9 9•n•ro1ity ol tli• F•th1•, th• Son ind tli1 Holy Spirit? Will yo11 1hr11q your tliould•rt •11d iqnor• 1111 rn1ny rn•rv•lou• proph1ci11 rouqhoul th1 •I)••. of Chri1t and GoJ'1 pl111 for YOUR 11lv1 i•n7 Thou11rtd1 of Y••'I w••• •p•nl by diwinity p••p•ring 101 your 11lv1lion. Will yo11 liv1 you• l1w y11r• on thi1 E1rlti iqno•· lll<J 1uc.h divi119 effort1 ertd be lost throu9h,1t•rnity1 Or, will Christmas in Chile Midsummer Dream Blacks who ccomprise 65 per-·r---'-------'-----_._--'------------'-"-'--'--"'---- cent of formerly all-white Strom Thurmond High School :;:;:, as~ ':cl:~ra:.,~;:r :~ SUNDA y SHOPPING '"""".!e the sc1ioor: IS FUN The . school at Edgefield, SANTIAGO, Chile (AP) -A fur.swaddled Santa C I au s swooping his reindeer·drawn, gift-laden sleigh onto snow- covered rooftops with a beUy- shaking "ho, ho, ho" just isn't ln line with the Chilean government's official view of reality this year. S.C.. is named· after South ~oufh ~ st ?t fields, al a cost or $140,ool. Carolina's Republican senator; CJ oa ua The committee, headed by who, "'1e suit says, "is opposed President Salvador Allende's 1.ito~~the:'.::~d=es<gr::eg:al~io:n~ol~l:h:•~--=~~~~~~~~~~~l~ri~•~tol~a~t~Si~nDl~,.~·~·~...,~·~·~'~°'~'~·~M~"'~~~~~~-wife, J-lortensia Bussi de races." Allende, has as its main goal the collection of 2.3 million new toys so that no needy youngsters will lack a gift. Christmas in Chile falls in midsummer, as it does everywhere south of t h e equator, and the National Christmas Committee feels the traditional symbols of Santa and cotton.covered pine trees aren 't relevanL A t. gover&ment-sponsored yuletide festivals w or k e r s Phone Book Aids Yule Card Senders from various regions · of the Help lot the harried Christ· country wi ll personify the mas card sender comes from Christmas s p Ir it . and Pacific Telephone. evergreens will be replaced by Offices of the phone com· peach and oraAge trees. pany offer use of their collec- Cecilia Bechelet de Miranda, lion of telephone directories vice president of t he for most California cities and Christmas c o mm i t t e e , many major cities throughout emphasizes that the workers· the U.S. People who need and-peaches motif will apf>Iy to look up addresses are e~ only to government-organized couraged to use the director- Christmas events. Anybody ies. who wants to can celebrate p h o n e company officials the holiday wilh S a n t a , note people might jot down evergreens and snowmen, she telephone numbers as well says. Orange C9ast residents will The Christmas committee find the directory library at Milt er match ••• wear ene or manr. Shown. a pair or 18K floren.- li ne bract:lel$,. set off by 1 pave'd CHARLES Jf, l!ARR. . ' f!h-tJctbtt1 fltttdi -you...HEfrLtb._diwi.11.._,..ith...o!...v'lur C ••tor fii•t ~011 be 11v.d to Ii•• witli hirn forev•rTrlor• 7 Th• CHOICE i1 YOlf ~-Visit Churc.h of Cliri1t, 217 W. Wil1011 St., Co1te M•1•, C•. Study with •• GoJ'1 pl•11 for your ••l•1tion IG,n, 3:15, h1. 7:14 D•uf. 11:15.c Ac.h 7:17, Iii, 2:2·5, Din, 2:44, .ki•I 2:21-32, Acti 11 6-ll , -471 diamond banile conta1n";';;'....:.l.2::6:..__;._-=,._--Carat$ itl It'~~ tl'(STCllfr '1.AlA lfl(Wl'OllJ IUCH Th~ nicest p.art of C~risfrrm Is gi~~.J •• , and nothing is more thrillu1g than diamonds. Acanthus l!af Brooch in 18K 11old. di11monds seti.J:il1tlnufii Mobile rnau -shimmer iiit!fer every move. ---plans a huge lhow Sunday in-1J1>e-,Cosla-Mesa office, 1796 Santiago's national soc t er Oraoge Ave., and at the San stadium. There will be smaller Clemente office, 140 Ave. Del parties in parks and athletic Mar. '~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Coming Dec. 19 Family weekly The Christmas Day 1 I'll Never Forget • The author tells in o heart-worming story how he regained the frue Christmas $pirit due to unforeseen plane trouble, which landed him on 1he i~le of Zomboango for the holiday. f e SHE SINGS , TOO -Gina Lollobrigida claims. she worked all these years in films as a sexpot to pay for voice lessons so she could do what she ,v_ants lo d~si rtg . She has cut her firs l commer· c1al reco rd. e MODERN MANNERS -If you pride yourself on your eiquette. take the FAMILY ·\VEEKLY · quiz to find out I{ your manners are up to date. Some of the rule changes over the years may come a s a surprise. All Coming Sa turday in the • ------~--=----~~-'-..-.....;....__... ______________ ...._ __________ ~~---' !, ,c ' . I ·r " " ;:. ~ • • :· .· ·---~~~~~~~~~~--------------------------------------------................ .. ·• ;; l tllNKINl--, FROM BEll & HOWELL ... 'r., SLIDE CUBE'" PROJECTOR • l•LillltMlltr-..... ,,ii~,,..,,., ,,, au. ,,.,.,, Btfl & HoiNn"s new S1lde Cuba Projector combines modem •styling with innovative design! Compact SllM CUbe keeps slides in exact mder. stora 640 slides Jn !tie same ~ as ooe bulky round tray ••• at. fraction of the cost. OU-f9ttures include a long fife (!l91t2:~ lamp, slide rec.all, leRs elewtion, and easy access to lllfde chilnaing mechanism. Some models Include-AUTOMATIC FO. CUSIHG. Sale s89 66 Ill '1' DlMONlTl'llTU '"""yt Model 981 Q Also Aveileblo Semo As Above. With Automatic Focus. List Price $159.50. SAVE ON FAST, 9UAUTY PHOTO FINISHINC. • .... 'I ,..... • c,1., "'"" e L_.,,..,,., .,,T'Oftlli'. ' ,.....,. 11 24 llrs. 111 41 !In. Bell & Howell AUTO LOAD" SUPER 8/REGULAR 8 COMPATI BLE , MBVIE PROJECTOR It's E•!Y· Just move a lever 1 to tha type ot film you wislt 1 to 1how, Both your Super 8 ot Regul1r film wl11 be pro- Jected crisper and clearer' thin tver betor1, Sale '8466 ' Tlwr!dlY, Dtctmbtr 17, 1'70 DAILY PILDT Jf' ,- Com,pl~te.£!~1ect~o~1 of Ca~!ras1&t ~~'ce ~sorie s "ENJOY, BETTER LIVING WJTH L"GR AN TS CREDIT," 4'DAYS'ONLY 1 Dec.17·18·19·20 VIEW:MASTE R Stereo Viewer $1 75 Mak" VIEW-MAS.TEA Plctur911 "cotM to W in IY!k:olor and ttw9e dJmenslons. Flugoed •nd easy to •· Juat Mid up to the llghtl Sale $ 44 COLORPACK II IS THE HOT ONE! VIEW:MASTER Packets $1 50...,, Entertainment for lht whole !amity , •• Chl!drenlove VJEW·MASTER pletu,.. In f\.ltt-color and 3-dlmenaloos. Eactt packet contains thrM 7-.scene rMI• (21 acenet Jn all). Choose from mo1a than 800 !Illes, Including TV and mo"Vla favor ites, U.S. and World traYtl, history, tclence, ac:twnture and more! Polaroid's lowest priced electric eye camera. Color prints in a minute for only \ s,ale $2 ,244 I BUY THE MODR 350 AND RECEIVE 3 PACKS OF COLOR RLM FREE e'r• running e spaci•I on the Model 3~o~n~t:n~h:f·~eh:·~~~~ty~~·r:;o~d·~.~d 1 0 9 88 ameras you can buy. If you get your1 before Chrittma1, we will give you 3 pa c~s of color film -FREE. • The model 350 is about as automatic as you can get: it has an electronic development -t-imer that lights up 'during-pictu-re developITient, t~en 'CeepS"W1ien he p1cturel s ready. It has an e lectric eye and electronic shutter for eutomatic e~eosure, a Zeiss Ikon folding range and viewfinder, a superb J.element lens , full accessory capebility ! for cfose·ups and po rtraits I and luxurious brushed chrome trim on ·a ll metal body. COME IN TO SEE AND HEAR THE MODEL 350 TODAY ----..., •FOLDS COMPACT •EASY •FUN COLOR •INSIDE OR OUT •DURABLE •RANGE FINDER • ELECTR rc EYE • ELECTRON IC SHUTTER Sale$4188 MODEL 340 ONLY •COLOR •BLACK/ WH ITE •ELECTRIC EYE • 2 RANGES •FOLDING RANGE FINDER • l ELEMENT GLAS S LENS •FULL ACCESSORY CAPABILITY $6788 • BLACK & WHITE 1Ns1DE Sale NO FLASH Sale 13s1 FREE DEMONSTRATION-SATURDAY, DEC. 19-12 pm-6 pm The Polaro id Camer• Girl will be in our 1tor• to take your free co lor portr•it •nd demon1t r11 te the com· ple fe line of Po laroid c•mere1. See her in our camera department S•turday. POLAROID ACCESSORY BARGAINS 268 FLASHGUN For 1,door Pi<tures •............. . Sale 5911 192 SELF TIMER p,, Yomelf '"th• Pict"'•······--Sale 51" 191 CABLE REL1EASE For u •• with Tripod ···-Sale s5n 471/581A PORTRAIT Kit .h~:1d::~:.~;;, .. Sale •4" 126 DEVELOPMENT TIMER ForCP 11 Sale 54" G.E. SU'PER CUBES Pockoge of 3 cubes 12 floshes. Fils oil lnstametic and Color Pock 11 coeros. Sa ,le ·3,3c GERashPacK Electronic Flash • For Pol1rold 'l Folding Pack cameras (except model #360) and moat 35mm cameras $ Sale 8 li\IJEW:MASTER Walt Disney Character Theatre I The mogic of Wolt Disney-brought to you !hrough the mogic of GAF Vie w.Moster full·color, 3-D pictures! All kids love !he odven!Ures of these Disn ey chorocters-ond they'll love !his exciling package of fun! CONTAINS: • 70 View0Ma1ter.St.1eo PichH••- 1 O Wah Disney stereo picture reels • View·Ma1ter Projector-proiect1 ree ls in 2 dimen1lan1 far group fun • Vlew·Ma1ter Viewer-for personal viewing cf ree!1 in 3-D • Sturdy Carrying Can-moke1 pro[ector 1tarage and handling eosier ALL YOUR FOR ONLY $ 88 GRANT PLAZA BROOKHUST AT ADAMS -HUNTINGTON BEACH ' ' • • • J ~ QAILY PILOT ' 'one-stop' shopping at its finest! • • OPEN EVES. 'TIL CHRISTMAS OPEN ·EVENINGS 'TIL CHRl$1MAS IN THE . GIANT 30 FOOT ' M: Monday thru Friday .. c 10 A.M. to NQqN ' 1 P.·M. to 4 P.M. 6 P.M. to 8 P.M. Saturday 10 A.M. to NOON 1 P.M. to 5 P.M. Sunday . 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. FREE CANDY CANES FOR THE YOUNGSTERS GIVE YOUR YOUNGSTERS THE-BIGGEST THRILL OF ·THE SEASON Bring your camera-Take all the pictures you wish ~ -With Santa or the Snow ~ Man. WRAP UP YOUR LAST MJNUTE SHOPPING AT THESE DISTINCTIVE SHOPS * Sav-on Drug ' * Rion Hardware * Westcliff Shoes * Humpty Dumpty Chi~ren's * Bali of America * Yeta's lntinate Apparel ,· * Martet Basket * Paper lllllimited * La Galleria * Darrell's Dedrick Tux Shop * D'. I.II Aly Ekler * Cbarles H. Barr-Jewelers * lean Dahl * Hkkory Farms .. *"llallday's Men's * Westcrlff Plaza Barbers * ne Starelleeper * Playboy Hair Stylist * Dick Yernon's * Cobblers Bench . * Baker's Westcliff camera -. • ..;;,, .. ,...,."" ... ,. '• . . . ' . ~~ J ~ 0]Shirley Temple is a favorite ""·character of Mn.' Jose ph . Giesc h, doll coll ector .tJ,w ho creates miniature en· ;~amb les for her dolls , down 'F \to the small est detail. •(:., •• BE•A ANDERSON, Ed itor .i-Tl!u""9r. Dtctmlltr 11, 1m ,,., '' I . You re Never Too Old By JO OUON Of ... Dlltf , ........ Mrs. Joseph Giesch of Fountain ·Val· ley has a rather large famll,y -~. 75 and growing -but she's not worried about the bigb cost of food tbe11Hlays . Mra. Giescb hu only to worrj about the Increasing cost of clothing and lab-· rics, for her family is a family of dolll that she bas dressed down to the most minute of mitts and the laciest of panta· 1ooos. Part or the collection now is on. ~ 1 play in the Mesa Verde Ubrary, Costa Meaa U¥I wiH. be, showcaaed tbroulh .the end ol the.month. A Fountain Valley resident for the past seven years, Mrs. Giescb b .a naUve of Rochester, N.Y. and formerly resided in Santa Susa.Ma. She started sewing doll clothes when she was a child, spending lazy awnmer evenings with her basket of seraps ~ trims, and .everal ~ ago her inter-- est was revived when friends gave bet some dolls in need of clothing. . Mrs. Giesch. admlts that she has be-- come a little more sellish about keeping her family now and has started retain-. ing some for her personal collection. In prior years she bas donated many · dressed dolls to lw/SJ>ilals,. churches aod oeedy indlvldua!J. "It's a nke feeling to wake up Olrist- mu morning and know some or your handiw.ort is making someone ~ppy." Extensive research goes into eacb miniature costume, with history books, encyclopedias, magazines and other reference books providing the details and inspiration. An avid craftsman in other areas, Mn. Giesch says that her experience in other fields such as painting has helped in restoring the dolls before they are clothed. Her ambitions, beside adding 10me French bisque dolls to her collecUon. include eventually opening a shop for custom-made doll clothes. ~frs. Giesch, a grandmother whose family in::ludes "seven and a hair" grandchi!dren, has an enthusiastic, ready-made clientele 1n her fOur grand- daughters. But their requests may have to take a back seat to Mn. Giesch's shop. when it ojJens, for-the cost or-maintaining ber family grows with her enthusiasm. -m,.--~-'!"'"---!"c.,.-.,..._:.;:,.__:._~----------.'!1elevlaioo..hu.JDade I big impact oa dolls, she feels. .. We med to play with ®Us 1 klllg ·time, until we were 11 at D. There \lt"IS DO teJevision and \lt"I hid to create a lot of our own tbinp to do. Daily Pilot P~l>y LN Payna - Some of her dolls wear costumes that dale back to the 1700s, tome are modem, aome are characters or people such as Sonja Henle and Hansel and Gretel, and some are done in a atries such as her Shirley Temple group. But all are in the family to stay, for awhile, and Mr. Giesch bad better watch out when his wife starts to play with her dolls. Inspiration means another brain- child to clothe. Sonia H..,11 (loft) ond • brief• are am,,.. the vari.ty of charactera dressed by the collec· tor, who r•s•arches each costume for tM most accurate creation pos1illl1, . ' Storybook charocl1rs such as Hansel Miii Gretel come alive under tho crafts...-lp of Mrs. Giloch. U 1 I n I books· •• a gukle, the copln Heh detail of ooatumn. Period costumes are faithful , reprod uced by the col:ectc --A cowboy fr om the Civil W. era is joined by a lady ' lesiu re with a chi1 head, hands and fer " " Square Peg Won~t Fit Into New Circle of Frank Display DEAR ANN LANDERS: Am l square? .\t\m I hopelessly out of date? Am 1 an ''lntediluvjan creep? If I am, p1ease tell 01e. Here's the situation: 1 walked into a_ ~drug store with my J4-year.okt daughter lltd there on the counter, plain as day, was a display of birth control devtt'es. l pretended not to see it, but my 1aughter was not letting me off so easily. · E fairly shrieked, "Look at lha' wild dvertiscmcnt -" and pointed · lo a . asteboard reprod uction of a magazine ~ which I had seen before. It read, "90 percent of all people are caused by ac- 1 ,!dents.". . ··~ Please tell me, Ann Landers, what do· IOU tblrik ol that ad? What do you think >la drug·store-that would feature 111ch a • ANN LANDERS ~ display? Wbat do you think or thb degree or frankness? Sign me -FUDDY DUO. DY DAD IN OAKLAND DEAR FUD: (1) The ad, J believe Is overstating lhe case, but there Is more than a germ of truth In the allegation. (%) ln my Opinion 111ch a display '8 offensive ''a lar1e number of peo"'e ald·ls"ia ex· tremely poor lasle. (3) The 'trend ft 1oward frUbt.ss, ud may be lltaltby ac-o cordlq to SOME beUvltnl nperts, bit 11111 II too fru1r for me. U tbls labels me I sqaare w• II liopeleoaly eat If date, move over and make room for OH more. DEAR ANN LANDERS: I was In- terested m the Jetter from the woman who disliked having gudts j:001e Into her kitchen and ''help" Mf. Several ytar1 ago I clipped ,; wonderful little poem out of the newspaper. This poem should be tacked on tile kitchen cupboard of every woman who has the problem. Wben an mwanted guest barges in , the irale htmess need not say a word 1f she just points to the poeD1 il will do the job. Here . is the poem but l can't tell you where it came from. Please stay away from my kitchen, From my dishwashlng, cooking and such. You were kind to have offered to help me And J do want to thank you so much. · I hope you won't think me ungracious When J ask that you leave me alone~ For my kitchen is not very spacious • And my system is strictly my own. So please stay out of my kitchen, It may well preve11t •'few wars, And when I am invited to your house, I promise to stay out of yours. A FRIEND DEAR FRIEND• Thaw for writing. I can tell yoa where die Poem came from -my colamn. Il's wort.II repeatlng however, and I'm 1lad yoa sen I IL DEAR ANN LANDERS: '!'hr .. months ago l bet a friend $20 I could get a phony letter i;rlnted in your column. 1 wrote 10 lcUcrs and they were all pretty darned good. The deadline passed yesterday. I los t my $20. You didn't print a single one of my masterpieces. llow do you tell SKUNKED DEAR SKUNKED: Pbony letters, Ii' phony people bave •• luhlcere·qaalit hard to describe, bat faldy obvklua if y know what lo look for. Thea, of coune, a New Haven po mark ls often a tipoff that die Yalees 1 at it again, CH course 1 get fooled D and theo. but DO\ very orten anymore. How \Y\ll you know when the real lhl comes along? Ask" Ann Landers. Send f her booklet "Love or Sex and llow to T the Olfference." Send 35 cents ln coin 11 a lon g, self-addressed1 stamped envcl-0 with your request in care of the DAil. PILOT, I .. . ~· " • • • • .· ,l.,f._D_AI_L_Y_,_1_LO_T ______ ~lt11r~Jy, Otttmbtr 17, 1~7~ Horoscope Virgo: Mystery Clears FRIDAY, DEC EMBER 18 By SYDNEY OMARR Pltctt ('blld re a ltad to •dopt tbt habits of co m· JJ1nlon1. Tbls being 10. It is lmper•Uve for parents of the little Pb:cu girl or boy to keep elote ,,.1tcb on fritnds. Plsce.s It qulek to Jtan ovtr to dlrectloa taken by assoclatts. 1''Uboat appearing med· dltsomt, lbe wise parent of a Pltces )'Oungster 1ets to It Utat 1ood lnRuencts a r e •vallable for C'hUdren t o emulate. otht"'·lse, problems baUd aad the Pbicts C'bild can be trapped in a dilemma between what 11 wbole10mt ud what ls de1trucllve. ARlES (March 21-April 19): Avold e1erting undue pressure on lh05e who perform special aervlcts. Light touch v•ins your ~·ay. Build solidly for future e1panslon. Don't rush. Study terrain. TAURUS (April 20-P-1ay 20): Good lunar aspect coincides \l'ilh creative endeavors. rela· lions with children. other Inv· ed ones. Give and yo u also wil l receive. Be ready f or breakthroug h. Decide o n special relationship. GEMINI lMay 21.June 2-0): Stick to what is familiar. This is no time for radical in· novations. Older f a m i I y member deserves attention. Heed voice of experlen~. Strive to put across .idea with clarity, precision. CANCER (June 21.July 22 ): You move about-there Is change in basic patte rn . Relathres make overtures; reunion is indicated. B e diplomati c., Someone is abou t to present you with pleasant alternative. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Take care with finances. Mistake to 1vear rose<olored g I a s s e s • There seems to be a catch in money propQSals. Be cauti ous in lhis area. Then you will .avoid unnecessary wast e. VIRGO (Aug. 2.1-Sept. 22): Mys tery clouds waft away, leaving opening for real op- Portunlty. T a k t initiative. ~fake lnqulries. Stress greater independence. Invest in your own talents. LIBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 221: 'You find that what·you have been seeking is likely to be ultra-elusive. Accent on mystery, hidden matters, the end of special activity. Whal you seek Is already at hand . SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Friends play signlrlcant role. \'ou can make new start toward greater independence. ' Accept s o c i a I invitatioos. Pounce on opportunity for ~ happiness, fulfillment. No more delay. SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21 ): You can be at right place at right time. Key is to check authoritative so~. Take advantage of any foreknovt'ledge. False modesty does not fit in with current scheme or affairs. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Ac c ent on com· municalions. Publish, write and advertise. Breti k through red tape . Consolldate travel plans. Look ahead. S t o p brood ing about past. Con- cen trate on c u r r e n t op- portunities. , Blue Christmas .. Family Tradition Sick ' By ERMA BOMBECK The other da y Brucie c:om· plained, "My head hurts and 1ny nose is stuf(y." .. Ridiculous." I said. "It's too early. Christmas is a week a1vay." Normal people ca n alw•ys predict when the holidays are nea r at hand. There is an air of es:citement, the smell AT WIT'S END a11ln 1bout Chris!mal at your "Can-you lma1ine th1t!11 houte." l si&hed. "Everybody drt1sed ." "Well,'' said Donna. •·on "Then we 10 lo church and Christmas morning J get up th111 afternoon we h•ve 15 first and, .. " or 20 people in for Christmas "Start going through the dinner." yellow pages to find a drug. "Once I saw my dad on store open," J said my eyes Christmas. He slid two bat· glisten.Ing. teries under the door for a ·''No no" she laughed "I robot monster that didn 't In. turn ~n all Lhe lights arOu11d elude them .'' the Christmas tree. Then f .. I bet that was nice," she rlng the sleigh bells and •.. " said. •·1 know, I know," I said ''Oh and another time the excitedly, "It's pill time. You doctor dropped by to check on give one a spobn of Coke syrup, us and brought in a bit of another an aspirin. and the snow on his boots. The kids baby a suppository f or went wild ." nausea:• "Maybe this year things will She shook her head. "sum-be different," said Donna, mon them all around the tree patting my hand. I Up th.I' Present' "May•-••," I ,, . .......,_ "but or holly. the ringing of bells, o open · 11e ""' &•IC\.I the singi ng of carols. There Then , after breakfast, we all tell me again about how you is 8 saying at our house. "We get dressed .•• " __ al.!_.get dressed and go out. •. " got 1neasles. Jt must be -. , c~;:'!~':;"the laundromat, 1 HOLIDAY PANTSUITS an1 known as Typhoid Mary. ''\Vhnt are you having this yea r for Christmas?" they ask \ as I sort my clothes. "Well. •• I've got one exposure to chicke n pox, one who has only had mumps on his left side and two who just throw up to keep things interesting." CHARLES STEFAN INC. ORIGINAL FASHIONS &{tR~a-h-.ov·1-· ~l ~· '~ ~ , ... ,. ... · .,,-., t :J . i' v.ft;pp~~ AQUARI US (Jan. 20-Feb. 181: Settleme'nt indicated in leg al affairs. What seemed a roadbloc k is cleared. Know lhis and don't sell you rseU short. Key l.s to check in- vestment possibilities. You vdll oblain what Is needed. ROYAL TITLE Cindy Tuz It 's ne ver serious enough , to be an emolional drag. but1 I've forgotten what r e a I Christmases are like. I cor· nered my friend . Donn a Robust, and begged, "Tell me Young F_aces Made Natural • , • • • • • ~:r-'""''~""'----.lL'--1 • • < > z • • VISIT OUR SLIPPER BAR f'OR THE FAMILY SELECT FROM FAMOUS MAKES • DANIEL GREEN • EVANS • WELLCO • GROSVENOR • O'OMPHIES ALL SIZES -COLORS -STYLES S4 FASHION ISLANO Newport Center • Opposite 644 -4223 Broadway DIAMONDS OUR SPECIALTY ' Complete Jewelry Department REMOUNTING ind DESIGNING SERVICE OUT OF PAWN & ESTATE ITEMS CASH llfUNDS If llNGS DO NOT APPRAISE AT LIAST so-,;, MOii THAN WHAT TOU PAID. · 5595~ I CT. SOLITAIRE-WHITE, f'INE CUT ............... . "' CT. SOLITAIU-WHITE, FINE CUT •..•...•...• 5450" 5250~ V. CT. SOLITAlll:E-WH/TE, FINE CUT •.........•. Va CT. SOLITAIRE-WHITE, FINE CUT ........... . $10000 V. CT. SOLITAIRE-WHITE, FINE QUALITY .. ~ 57000 1/5 CT. IOLITAlllE-WHITE, FINE QUALITY 550~ GllANSONIC 60 WA TT RECEIVER AM, llM. MPX FfT rno9 i11p11t • L•h •of o•triu. U11beotoblo rolff. Mnt lleor to appreclat.. llCllYll ONLT LA MONTI FLUTE With C ... l CIH"f'I., rod COlll• plot-. • tY•ro"'"41. HELMET CLOSEOUT $1250 PISCES fFeb. 19-!\farch 20 ): Accent on marr iage, partnership, relationship of a permanent na ture. Knowing thi s, don 't involve yourself in games. Stakes are high-and for keep!. Take it slow and easy. Walt, observe. l o !Ind o;,I mort t b®I Yourwll end t•trolot•. o"1tr S•d"4!• Orn1rr'1 JO.. 11111 boet~ ~!, l~t Tr11t~ Ab®I "•trolOllY . .stnd ltlrtl'lcl1!@ i nd XI c1.,11 If> Omt rr ltMl~ltt, l~I DAILY "ILOT, llox U.io, Gri nd Ctn!rt l S!l tlOfl, f<Ow York, H.Y, 10017, Easy Delight ' ~ t PULL ST!t!NCS - quickest, easiest way to make a neckline rit the way you want it. Shallow keyhole. simple Jines make this a joy to wear. Printed Pattern 9232: NEW Women 's Sizes 34, 36, 38, 40. 42. 44. 46. Size 36 \bust 40) takes 2~ yards 39-inch. 'SEVENTY-FIVE CENTS for each pattern -add 25 cen1s for coch pattern for Air Mail and Special lland llng·; otherwise thi rd<lass delivery wi!t take three weeks or more . Send to P-1arian ~1arlin, the DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern l)cpL, 232 Wrsl 18th St., New \1ork, N. V. 10011. Print NAi\tJo:, ADDl1ESS "'ilh ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUl\1BER. Bethel For today's ever-i ncreasing breed or young beauties who ~·ant makeup that doesn't make them look madeup, a company has introduced "the young naturalists." The m<1nufa cturcr says the new makeup promises to Heading Job's Daughters, librarian : Paula Siler, musi· make a natural beauty out oq Bethel 157 or Newport Beach cian; Dt!bbie l\1ay, Lori Hor· any young sophisticate who is as honored queen is Miss Cin· rell. Betsy Twyman, Kay desirous or a more natural· Ritchie and Gail Shor t. looking look. Leaders Seated at Rite % ~ • • Y(lST 1621 Alabama St. 536-3166 > HUNTINGTON BEACH dy Tuz, daughte r of fi.1r. and messengers; Ellen Jacohs and ls it Lh!> no makt>-up? l\1rs. \\1alter Tuz of Santa Ana. Tarni Tu7., custodians, and'l~~~~~~~~ ... ::::::;::~;;~~;;;;;;:;;::;;::::;:;:::;;;::;:' She "'as installed during Nancy Schoenrnrhl an di ceremonies following t h c Jo~~llcn Field. ~u:irds. theme, Aim for a Sl:ir. Of· Jnstall{'ti as choir members ficers carried blue and sil\'cr arc the J\tisses F.dith and Lila star.s, and as they entered Askr"·· l1,1na and Dyan Bass, J\liss Jenn9 Quick sang "\Vhcn (::1yle Beeler. v :i l e r j e ou. isfi Upon !! Slill." tijofeslari, Callly Connelly, Olher: elected officers arc Teri Craig, Susan FDr"ney, the Misses GlynnA Beeler, Ja<.:kie Humble, Myra Muller, senior princess; Kathy Budd, Judy Paley, Melinda Palmer, junior princess: Marti Huston, Barbara Schmok, 13ctly Shain, guide, and J anet \Vilder, 'l'crry \Veathcrwax and Linda marshal. Wiltlams. Appointed officers include ;::::-::-::-=-:-::·=======:I the Misses fl.fargarel Dixon, chaplain: Judy Ba r n e I l . treasurerr Kim Shoemaker. recorder: Lerna V o b or i I . The DAILY PILOT- The One Th•! Cares Sonew,. we want you to TRY IT FOR 2WEEKS ABSOLUTELY If you're fed up with the clatt er and clutter of messy tra sh cans -the Trash Masher compac· tor is !or you! II squeezes a week's worth ol !rash into a neat, little bag. It takes eve n bottles, tin cans and roll -and tums thitm lnto about 1/• of their original size. The Trash Masher compac· tor lits almost anywhere in your kitc hen -in about the same space YOUf wastebasket ta kes. No special wiring , no venti ng, no plumbing required. ., ii·f.,, r • '.l:; •· 18995 W ith Motchi11g Air S111p .. slo• Speokttl E•ceods U~•!I Sofoty Sta11dor11b T\EW Fall · \\'inter PattPrn C:Halog·. 114 dynamic designs.,· }~rec Pattern Coupon . 50 cents. Try stashing your trash in a Trash Masher !or lhe next 14 days. Free. See how much eas· ier it will be to lake out one lillle bag for pick-up. ins!cad ol an those messy trash cans! ~aliQ·aft puts today's look on fabulous new footings! With bold toes, chunky heels, girdle lacings, harness strappings. The giant-buckla pants bootie is 8.99. Bare-side tie in mocco·crocco. on a bouncy balloon sole is 9.99. l ots of big news. at not much price. 8.99 & 9.99 MOHEY aACK OU.lti•.t.NTEE ON ALL l"UllCNASES "''"*•¥•· ,.,, s .. 11<11•r. ,,., J11.,.ay. lt·J 1838 NEWPORT BL VO Downtown Costa Mesa near Broadway Phone 646· 77 41 INSTANT SE\\'ING BOOK sew IO<lny, wenr ton1orrow. $1. INST ANT FASHION BOOK -\\'h11t·t~·car a n s we rs , ACCCSSOry, figure tips! Only $1. SUNDAY SHOPPING IS FUN South Coast ?ta.ia lrl1tol •t Sin Dltt• frwy., Co1t1 M ... • 1 ... ~. Whirlpool Trash ~0~,~ctl~r* it lets you kic k the trash can habit! CERTIFIED APPLIANCE Your Reue r Cnre Denier 333 E. 17th St. Phone 642-0240 COSTA MESA Behind the Pancake House if it's now, we have itl FASHION ISLAND, Nowpo•t C'"t": HUNTINGTON CENTER Huntington Bt~c,.'!.SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Co•f• M•••; ' F"¥"0N SQUARE, S10t1 ""' \ \ • __ 1 I .. 11 ....... -- January Nuptials Plan$ Revealed Ceremony Conducfed Mary Kay Shaw a n d Lindsay Perry Lane, both ol -Newport-Beach are plannlrig-a- Jate Janua ry weddiiig in St. Andrew~s P r es b yteri1n Chureh, Newport Beach. N e w s of the' forthcoming event has been anriounced by Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Shaw \ or Newport Beach, parents of the future bride. Miss Shaw is a graduate of Corona del Mar High School and the University of Southern California. She was a Troy camp counselor and secretary of the USC student body. Her fiance, son of Mr. and Mrs. Perry C. Lane of Tucson, is a graduate of Pueblo lUgh School and the Univers.ity of Arizona. He affiliated with Phi Gamma Delta. ., ~~ Vi va the i CoHfo<'nio look - l k>ng , colorful ~ pant tops teamed wilh . sleek fOpris. Viva Ella Nors -for the ·• ,,, .,.., greatest l ~ collec:!ion . ? ev•r ln 11i:es 38-46. Great 10f' giving !~ or keeping . .l•P' I ''aottom1 ~tt ''°'" $9.00 ~ -. c • ..,.. ....,, .. , ..... MARY SHAW To Join Brides • SI.JPS • CAPRts e BLOUSES 'If ~• • PANr::rits"t 5J:ts·~~ IOIES - e GOWNS e PANTY HOSE f\ ~·' LAYAWAY • GIFT BOXES • GIFT CERTIFICATES t:. r Blla Mon. -Fri. Eves 'Til 9 P.M. ~ · Nor'sHALF-SIZE SHOP i .•. , .. ~~Q:~~~p~~TN~~.~~· ... > &.1 ~ 84 HUNTINGTON CENTER ~- -HUNTINGTON BEACH •. ~; I 1N1.i ffl U1rktr Urn. Fut111!urtl · AIM: %24 O•ANGIEll'All MALL ;"" 1 -6 ,«-.._,_~ ..... ~ ""-..-.-:, . In Chapel Soroptimists Newport Harbor Soroptimisl Club meets the first three Wednesdays for noon luncheon in the \Yhile Horse Inn, Newport Beach. ee <fllolidaf §ifi jiOD\,··· .H~~'Pt1.4. Your choice of a FIEE "Storybook lank,'' (f'ltal'I value $2.00) or ''See Thru Love lanner/' (retail value $3.00) with the purchoH of two of out fea. five ancl clelidous pin•. Over 60 varlettn td the world's greotnt plnl •Ofllla G00a AT PIJTICIPATING SlOIK. ------~~------ This c.oupon good for your choice of "Storybook. Bonk.", o colorful reproduction in wh ile, pink ond oronge of 9ur House ol Pies. oJ,·see Thru love Soriner", a bright splash of colors cm clear vinyl, wi1Fi such cheerful theme5 os, ,"let The love Shine Through". With the purchose of ony two .HOU£&AL.;'J>~ ClltAT AS ~,oc;iHo )HJllllS 1,1nbeliewbly dt1licioU) pil!IS from .. ·-"V ct INDIVtOUM. GiflS • 1 •155 Harbor llYd., fo1111tol• Y•lllll' J l 10 N••port 11.,d., N••port hocti f7fl Atlom•, H1<ntl119t111 l •ocll DAWN MacDONALD L• Jolle Rites January Da'te Set Dawn MacDonald, daughter of Navy Cmdr. (ret.) and Mrs. Wallace Earl MacDonald of 4~57, 494-'3" Harbor Visitor • ~174 .._. ___ ...... __ ------..... ---., . . .. - DAIL V' PILOT J9 Guidelines s·ingle O~t Toy Buys In this a1e ~p tt is particularly ~ lo !Ind 001 what ~ lo the children, GLOVE SOFT GENUINE LEATHER SOFAS AVAILABLE FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY Prices Start At $ 549 e 223 EAST 17111 St., Cotta MltG 548°5454 1442 Vie Lido. Nowport hoch--611.eSJo Da ily 9.9, Sun. 11 -5 'tll Xrn11 i nul Ton wm1uo flll Dr CKAHI ... I • Temptin·g . Treats ' 'l ·\ ,,._ Prepared fdr Open House Sampling goodies that they will serve are hostesses (left to rigbtJ, the Mmes. Charles White, Richard Whyte and Grant. ·f' .feted at luncheon MR. ANO MRS. JOHN MESTYANEK Children Belted · Golden Yea(lS Friends Fete Couple Cbristnias joy is IJere .•. t111!11ra1 dttd tovely as our bat1d crd/led /lortll wretllbs of various preserved w.1d field pods, seeds nnd co""· Cbristma.t spirit is here ••• real and stntuesq11e OS our band forged ~ro•ze a•gels from gennany. Christmas g;/rs from PlumlHlTs ••• , .J.ligbtful 1 @ PLUMME·R'S 180 S. !akt .Avt., 1'asade11a \ , .. ·~ Tooe To Qre.'" 'I!>-----------~., ... IMPROVE SKILLS" Help is needed at the Orange .County Work Training Center,& shel,tered workshop for the men4 tally retarded located m Santa Ana: . The program . develops pre work skills in young people over 16 years of age. With clos~ atte.ntion to hand coordination problems and baste living and working skills, the-young people can be advanced to gainful employment within the workshop and •eventually into the community. REWARDING WORK La9una Group American Leglog AUslllary of Laguna BeAd> gllllien the second ancf lourth· lrhursd111 evenings ;;, ~ Lt4ioo llolL APPRAISALS , DIAMONDS GEMSTONES ESTATE JEWELRY Seuth ~••d 1'1111 Briliel 11 S111 D/•go Fwy. CC?it• M•J• 5'40-9066 Teachers' aides will be well·rewarded for their efforts with mentally retarded children. H<>i>e Have~ School. a preschool for such children in Costa Mesa, would appreciate any voluirn~te~e~r~s'~;;;;"e;;;;;.,-&~~~~~~~~~~~ !frr:o: Open Evenings & Sund•y~ 'tif Chri1tme' Newport Residents m HAPPY ·HOLIDAYS n BEGIN AT Honored i ""°;e~ . . ~ 3424 Y.lo Lido, Newport a-h Friends and relatives of Mr.~ . .. • M t c•-» • 11, e lankAmtr1ctrv •• er nmrt• iA and Mrs. Harry c. Davis of 1¥'.tll~B:K~I:Sltl'.lll~f*•*1:1¥•1<a-.:•A"ltl!!illl9ld'.J Newport Beach gathered inti~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the Newport home of their son Ir and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Trevor Davis. to fete them on their 50th wedding anniversary. Also hosting the champagne reception was their other son, Robert Davis, and attending were their five grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. The couple was married in Tpsley, England, and came to the United States in 19Z7, set- ·1 tling in Pasadefla. They mov- ed to Laguna Beach in 1933 where Davis established al ~eramic tile business. Both of the honorees have bf.?n active in school and com- munity affairs. Davis served as master or Laguna Beach ; Masonic Lodge and his wife is ·i a past matron of Laguna 'i Beach Eastern Star. Toastmistress Members Plan Gift Exchange MERRY CHRISTMAS From Lucille's Members of the Sa n Clemente . Toastmistress Club w11rliimg gilti tor a hOlillay·ll---"' exchange to a 9 a.m. breakfast -stm---~ 3.15 f-<>ll-Mo'™"y,.l)ec.-21r in-tha-San'tt--- Clemente Municipal Golf Club. 8,10 _ -·t---'>o The toastmistress of the ·day will present a surprise reading of Christmas poems followed by evaluation by Mrs. C. L. Burgess. Timer will be Mrs. Geoffrey Mansell. Hosting thf: meeting are the Mmes. Raymond H 'Ard , Barbara Whitmore and Ray· mond Loustalet. Mrs. Gordon Fleener will preside and Mrs. Irene Clewell will offer the closing thought. Carols Heard A Christmas concert was presented by the Corona de\ Mar High School Band and Madrigal Singers, under the direction of Donald M. Hane- ke, in the Spa of the Park Newport apartments, Newport Beach. Refreshments w e r e served by Park NewPort hosts. ~~et: adds a new· softness tOt holiday paintings:1 plunge-neck tunic! with bulterfly! sleeves, falling/ easily over pantS-' All clingy and1 feminine in ink blue, rust, straw ... berry silky knit. All machine washable $52. LUCILLE'S THE UNIQUE GIFT.,• A CAMEO MINIATURE PORTRAIT GIVE A LITTL.E OF YOURSELF, GIVE YOUR MINIA~URE PHOTOGRAPH 1 W ITH YOUR CHOICE OF HAND ANTIQUED FRAMES . IT CAN BE DELIVERED FINISHED WITHIN ONE HOUR. JUST 13.00 TO 30.00, FROM OUR PORTRAIT sruo10. ROBINSON'S f I l • . .. • • ;.i • ' I . Of *CHARGE IT* a IANIAMllllCAllO e WHITI PaONT CARO a MASTlll CHAllGI COSTA MESA 'Thursday, Dtetmbtr 17, tq70 OAlLV PILOT WIG CARE PRODUCTS byClllpal ••' ~-· •CREME RINSE •CURLING SPRAY 1 -• CONTROL NET •SPRAY CLEANSER •CONDITIONER c' ~ 3038 BRISTOt AYE. e JUST OFF NEWPORT AYE. BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAKER ST. EA; , 1 NOL .. AYN .... TNUH. Fii, su,. SUN. 10 A.M .. 10 P& MON. TUH. WID. 10 &.M .. 11 P.M. CNllSTMAS IVI 10 A.M .. 7 P.M. l ·~ I I . . t JJ DAILY PILOT Th~, Otctmbtr 17, 1970 - 'Perversion ·of ltatent' Reagan Blasts Rural Legal Unit 111 PETE WEISSER from · within the ~CRLA when emmcnt." and other health care recipl- SACRAMENTO (AP) -Th~ he launch~a mall quf!sliorr And, he said. a CRLA vet o ents," that CRLA ten ds most fate of a controversial organi-aire of attorneys and judges wo uld return many rural poor directly to come into a con- uUon using federal funds to asking among other questions, to their previous la\\'ycrlcss frontation lvi th the Reagan Id I I id .... wheth er CRLA members were existence. -"If CRLA goes out administration, prov e ega 8 to 1.11"1: poor politically acti ve and for an 11. I d · 1 ,._ _.. of business a lol of pt'Ople who And welfare is a touchy sub- s n • ec1s on uvv. ·n.eagan assessment of CRLA ethics. must make lhi5 month. And need legal representation in ject with Reagan, whose fin· there la little doubt how he A former CRLA attorney rural areas just aren't going nnce chief stc_~ a SlflO mil· I b bou k 1 said of Reagan's and Vande· to g~l it." lion budget deficit by the end ee a t eep ng California gr1·r1·s cr1·u·c1·sms "l lh1'nk he's f I th U f h r· I J 30 tr he turns It down, th · CRLA's only hope for contin· ued federal funding lies In Donald Rumsfeld, federal an~ lipovertf" chief who has the power to override a gover· nor's veto. But Rums feld says he won't make up his mind until after Reagan announces his deci· sion. Rur I Le I •.. 1. t s e we are-type case o t e 1sca year une - • ga ~ut.ance Inc. the governor s1'ncere 1'n h1·s h h CRLA I be f I · I in existence . .-, w ere t e says a pa rty cause o r sing we -;========== notion that somehow this is "change in the caseload ap-fare and Medi-Cal costs. The DAILY PILOT- T ops in Local Sports "I'm opposed to what I think wrong -government paying pears lO be related to an e1ner-Reagan's choice on the has been a perversion of the for atlOmeys so that they can gcnce of nc1v client groups, CRLA grant is simple : yes or CaliforniaColle9e of Commerce ' M111itih1re1t... Olflctt: '40 p;., A••11~• 151-ISS ,iH Av111w1 l ... IMCh, C1liftr~i. tOllS CONTINUOUS ENROLLMENT TELEPHONE: 436-9767 or 435·5367 "DAY OR EVENING CLASSES" I TWO· YEAR COURSES l111in1H A4111i11i1t11tiff Hith•r Actt1111li111 SHORT.TERM COURSES Sltnttraphk Cl11k1I KtypUIKh "11!11111 MtcM1111 Dentel Aui1tioit MHk1I Tr111"1ip1-..i't F 11W-C h1 rt • a,t kk11, ifit l r11sli.11p c1.~ Slltrth1n4 en4 lrPint IGr .. 1 01 AIC St.or:1Mn4) • ONE-YEAR COURSES j ' lerg•I S1u1t1risl M1d k1! S1u1!1ri1! S.c11t1riol (G•-.1 •• ••c Sh1r1Mn4). J111ior Auo~nli"t original congressional intent." bring cases against the gov· particul arly senior citi zens the · Republican governor told ~.:::::~::::=~::::...=:....'.'.:::__.....::::::::::::;._:::::::::__::.:::::::__::"°:· ________ _!==========~----------------------------- the Associated Press. The same disenchantment can be seen throughout the __lkq&Q...Administration._ In a speech last week Rea- ga1''1 human relations secre- tary Lucian Vandegrift, told a Republican -women's group that federal court welfare rul- ings adverse to the stale "were Instigated by -of all things -suits brought by fed· . eraHy paid attorneys." ··' Vandegrift said, "Your tax· es go to pay attorneys who sue the government to make you pay more taxes. It sounds like Allee in Wonderland ." 'Ibe CRLA was founded In 1968 by a young la wyer. James O. Loreni: Jr., who ob- tained a $J .3 mWioo federal grant of antipoverty funds . His idea was to provide le- gal services to the more than 500.000 poor persons in rural areu, many of them unable to speak or read English, oft· en transient fann workers. ig- norant of legal right.!, poorly educated and distrustful of the law and lawyers. The organization is barred fron'I defending criminal ac· tions or accepting fee-generat- ing cases. But as the poor grow more organized, CRLA experts note welfare cases are increasing. frcm about 300 matters in l!IM-69 lo 2,300 in -1969--70 and CRLA has about 40 full· time attorneys now . Reagan said the program originally was intended to pro- vide legal assistance to poor persons who were cheated or ''blufted out of their just rights." . But the CRLA has pursued 1-~----group_acUons_ag.aln.st sj.ai{,1 __ _ government intended to bene- fit an entire class of · people . a tactic Reagan and his top administrators especially de· I • plore . CRLA, however. says in an anal ysh1 of its 1969--70 case- load that it Is an organization "In transition" and that· its clients -the poor themselves -are taking more united ac· lions . and that welfare cases are increasing dramatically In number. The report.on last year's ac· tiviiy point.! out that of the 749 cases which went to court "only 55, or seven perce nt. ''ere filed on behaU of a cla.!)!'', Since Its found ing In 1966, CRI..A has handled more than 70 class actions, and ha s rep- resented more than 72,000 in· dividual litigants. Last year its lawyers had an 86 percent success. Early In his career as gov- ernor, Reagan suffered .11 set~ back at the hands of CRLA and a Modesto reci pient, Har- vey Morris. Reagan announced the sus- pension of some medical serv- ices to the poor to prevent a cost overrun in the Mejdi.Cal program . But Morris com· plained that a back cperation his doctors had scheduled was canceled because lhey feared they would not be paid be· cause of the cut back. The court ruled in fa vor of Morris, th us blocking Rea gan from implementing the cut· back In Medi-Cal S"..rvices. However Morris never got the operation. Crui: Reynoso. CRLA di- rector and himself the son of a fann worker, says the use cf class actions such as the Morris case is a real economy when it is done legally. He pointed out that such easel! save attorney time and cul down on potential court Con· gestion . Two other class actions by CRLA have resulted in land· mark decisions: -The st.ale 's 76-year-old I"· qulrement that a pe rson had to be literate in English to be ablt to ·YCJte was struck down. -The State Supreme Court ruled unronstltutional a state requirement I.hat achool bond isaues need a tw~thV'ds mar- 1ln for approval. iSAVE $9 LewJs Uhler, director of the 1to1e Office ol Economic 0!>'·1-;=======~ / 4 !! AT 64 .97 ---------------------------- ncn PHONOGRAPH ~~ WITH AM/FM RADIO Ughtwe.1ght portable. Detachable spea kers separate for maximum stereo eflect. 4 speed automatic chaoger. Ceramic cartridge floats ios1de tooe. arm,· protects precious records. " " ' " ~-. -----·;.. ncn SOLID STATE PORTABLE STEREO The Prole s;moal Series, for young sophisti- calr> 1 Wood·graio~d cabinet with translu- cent c0>er. four speakers, 4 speed changer, with automal1c shut·oll. PRICll EFFECTIVE THRU SUN., DlC.20 97 COMPARE AT 89.95 port.unity who must recomJI mend to Reagan approval or c 0 s 0 M E s I ;:,;inedt11ecl~1;.~~d~•d!' .*:.~~~.:~.!T* ' · A 3088 BRISTOL AYE. e JUST OFF ME\YPORT AYE. 1 t:OLIDAY . votfnf too much of !ts legoi • WHITE,.OHT 0.,. SiO~E HOURS "''°"rces to' 10-<ailed "land· e BETWEEN SAN DIEGO FREEWAY and BAr..ER 'sT. 10 1.m. to ID p.m. mark" Cllel. ! MAStlRCHAIGI Uhler touched off critlcism,IL:========::'..-----;-----~--------------------------------:--------J~;E·~,·~.r~y~D~·~v~•~n~d~S~u~nd~•~Y~L/ I -·J~ ..... -....... \' .~~.;;.·~~.~ ....... "'"" ....... :J .... ,,.C" .... ..;w;;oo.;,_:;;;~;o;;::;;;:;::;:;::::::;;:::;:::;;;;:::::::z:==•ll!!!!l!l!l-!!1!!!!!!!9••-------------1111111--.. • I• ~ .. . ~ •• •• " i I I S!Nrl t929 WHITE - FRONT , _1 ----- I '. -!~-.~·-·· ~ * CHAIGE IT* •aA .. AMlalCA•a • ••r•••••rca•• ..... , .. , ...... C•l91fCAaa I MOST FANTASTIC VALUE IN TOWN 'ACCUCOlOR' .. ONl y AT WHITE FRONT I [ ~ :::.-o· ·-- Tiund11, Ommbtr 17, 1970 G E · 10''!:'~!~. • • DIAG.) PORTA-COLOR ~I -. ENJ01COlOR VIEWING IN . AN1 BOOM , . l nAl r ic1u•1 TUil lfUlflllll f!.Sl Y£1• -, • lllCL~OlS -LUOl .A ~ Personal size color portable; lightweight but powertul! Built-in dipole antenna • Front mounted · speaker and control • "luggage" handle • Weighs only 24-lbs.-1,.-: _....,~ Anti-perspirant roll -on lo- tion that stops wetness and odor all day. l oz. liquid. ORIGINALLY SOLO FOR 2.25 EACH r:n "-= 'J8~c~o~1!!~ ! ~J!!~u~FW!~E Spray Oil rond1tion~r 1or us~ I The after-shampon rinse,lor the ., · w4itlt r.leclo4o ~""'II"~"-! ,7.ontrol of d,~d,.11. 6 'C: . :.'-'.~ Ol151M'1.LT I ou• 11G. :~ ... - SOLD FOR I DIKOUNf '-- 1.M I r1K1 tk -------------T------------------ BRYLCREEM : 5·DAY STAY·DRI HAIR DRESSING ! i·-· ANTl·PERSPIRANT . ~ • C\, • 5-01. aeiosnl cc111 deodorarit. P!easan!ty scented. . . 3088 BRISTOL AVE. • JUST OFF NEWPORT AVE . *STORE HOURS* SHOP EVERY DAY BETWIEN SAN DIEGO FRWY. AND BAKER ST • 10 ~OM. 10 P.M. INCLUDING SUNDAY I l D,UI. Y l'tlOT Hope-on Last Viet11a111 Yule To11r? • . . • • • OlClMlllt 17 •:11•-.... CC) tllO Jtir, Du!lphJ. ........... (C) (60) ' • "" --(C) (90) .......... _, (C) ""' __ .,...... Col!dtdioL (llhen· 11111) '62--aidlan [pa, Sir Ralph llllc~ DitM ltktt, l1ny Col, o.vw f1111r. ne fourth CllllLllJ t .c. S,ttlt ti Thtf,.,,rM, I• wl!K:h( JOO liNtll »ldilrs dllfeMtd the lllOINlhllt ,.. • Thtrmopyl••I l(lid I Pttlit1 1r1111 of fiw 11111• I Ill"'*''• .... (JO) • "' Fil 2 blil (C) (JO) •ll!JIJJ•T"'ICl 160) • "•1&1$ ......... (C) (30) <8 Cll as -IC)(JO> 111.-,..., (30) ·-MIC) (OJI • , .. ...,..,e (C) (30) Cl la ...,., ...... Cllfl Mkl• ll.Jt ... 11111111: .._. (C) (30) •:•• c:..Mtw C.-1 (30) • ""·""" .. (Cl ~·) u oo •·• -m 1301 • "" ·-""' (Cl (JO) (II) 8CIJM1 ·-M ... llO) ·--(C) en.·--ICl 1301 CBW ~11' I (30) II !IC -.... (C) (JO) 1:4511) .... ~t•P .. ildlcraft ~I II ttitlf livu 1~11 l atfitS of lllllllll• MtbfUL ID DftW r1o11 lCJ <'OJ *k .lonN. l15ll1 Golt, fr1nklin Oelll'IO Roost• ~•11, Jr., 111d Cofnel Wild• rueSt • 18 OIJ•,k: lolin1 IC) (Z ~r') ID 111.T ,,._ IC! l'°I "A Nk:t Place ~ Visit." A 1Ptd1I CO/llplll)' of lmPtOVis•llontl 1cttrs perl01111$ t PIOI""' of i111l'f0¥!1td utlde sketcllts 1bout lif• ill New Yotlt City, CD Patl.tnl ,., ll'lill (30) t:GI. s Cl) us .,......., lllffi•: (C} '"""' Aqlll Qt ••• TrHMt ,..._ •• (comeclY) '61-Rmltnd RlllWU, sttlla Slevtns. Binni• B1r11t1. Mwt W"ltkn, Miha1 Bt1le, Arthur Godfrey, Yin JotlnlOfl, Robtit T1)'1or, SUUn Saint Jimta. Doloies SllttOI. n.. Motlllr Soperilf ef I 1itls' school is •WMJH wtlen • ptosrmiw youn1 nun UJISllll th• 11e1teful. dtcof\1111 of ttre 1c1d1m1 by petmittin1 her sllldenls to Plf· ticip1te in civil ri1hts, pt1t. and l1bor d4lmot1St11tion1. a Tiit rqitiw• tc1 (60) a !lil rn.m 11ant11t111 lbt ,.rt tC> {30) ;'lfothin' Bui Ill• Truth." Ceri1 aees on • lnlth Idell •n• offends Wll)One eround 1111. ·-(Cl (JO) GI~ .. Al•• (30) m-1.., l:IOU.YWOOD (AP)-Com~ HO~ boarded a Cl41 militafy dian Bob Hope hi$ ~nbarked transport with his 87 troupe on hl! 20lh annual Christma3 members. Included were slng- .!01Jr to U.S. servicemen around _da.ru:er...J.,.ola falaoa &Ad.. the world -ana hope<tl t . would be his last visit to the Johnny Bench, star catcher ot Vietnam war :rone. the Cinci.Mati Reds . Tiley new "I hope it's t~ last time I ool o( Van Nuys Aotuniclpal go to Vietnam and I think it Airport. ' . will~." Hope told a ne\\·sman. Before boar~ing the plane, "'I • think they will be out of Hope was presented Will\ a there by nexl year. J hope so Christmas card Uie s\~e of· a anyway." house door. Signed by Presi- Wlth White House good wish-dent Nixon, Vice President es, acting jaunty an<t toying Spiro T. Agne~. l,he members with hi! familiar golf club, of Congress and an 50 govern- 'River I{ wai Bridge' 'Milestone for TV By RICK DU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI ) Few single programs have changed the course o f telcyision as much as the first shoWirig . of the _nl..QVie ''The Brld~ on the River Kwal," l\lhlch will be repeated by CBS-TV in two parts Jan. 1· and 8 . It was almost five years ago, in 1966, that ABe-TV of- fered "Kwai" as a one-shot to have paid $5 million for two future showings of the most expensive n,ovit ever made, "Cleopatra,'' which has yet to be seen on video. 1:)0 0 Iii (I) Cl IJaM:J IC) (301 broadcast, 'and it ls irustructive "Bop' Ni(tlt Gut." N•ncy joins • to c<lnsider how its spec- ~l's di.di tD ctmtwit Adam's tacular success sent t h e In the 1966-67 season that started 1,st S e pt e qi b ~.r , viewers were dilighted at the prospect of seeing, such films as "Roman He.Iida y .'' "Breakfast at Tiffany's" "Hans Christian Andersen:'' "The Defiant Ones." "Rear \Vindow ," "Fail S&fe," '"Ille .Country Girl " and "Lilies of the Field." WMk1f poW 1111MS llul both soon · 1· dilcon( thry .,. mbti•bl• •••J networks into a movie IZZY. f111m t1dl othtr.' and yet how quickly the 1J flll (I) ti& TN OiH c..,a. (C) spdlurged ~~e~ o~f a11nd made (30) "Stroop Gets 1n Osar." vi eo epe.,.,. on• 1tse · Alter tur11in1 down !he role of In its first shoWing.. "Kwar• l :009 C1S E...i.1 Me•• (C) (30) scnio,. i• , Fewx:dirld.ed Ctuist· shocked the indu.stry by dra\v- Wertw Ctontltt. ma1 p11y, Oscar ~b Felil otit or ing an audiern;:e estimated by And television's power over movies increased \Vhen a judge failed to uphold "-D e: mand by producer-director George Steven,!! that com· mercials be banned from NBC-TV's showing of his·great film "A Place in the Sun.' based on Theodore Dresier's ''An American Tragedy ." 0 e UC NlcW1 ,..... (C) 130) the ap1rtmetr1. Oscar h•s 1 feast ABC-TV at 71 million· persons. D•vid !lri11•1t1. f11nk McGM, .lohn of well ·spited toOd, then l1Hs ll immediately signaled a ctl111t.tlltr. 11le1p i nd has • "Dickens·typ1" h t k d' --· llJ "-'. (C) (JO) . ht uge ne wor spen 1ng spree -~ nri mare. for old films. II D (1).1 Un l11q (30) 0 ladlr W1r4 1111•1 JC) (lG) Probabl y nothing in 1966 8 lllt t111" CW CC> (30) El Mlliclle pleased -and embarrassed rD (I)..,_ (C) (30) ! ID K9dlts T•,.00 (30J -the networks more lhan • ~ ..... w MMtr11 the over\vhelming popularity life (C) (JO} (R) "Oii ltinl Vt111t." t:4S eJ Ptlttr'I ltlk (C) of the movies. The pleasant ltlf])T• • C.11,11-(C) side was that movies almost • C11ri11 llllt lirilr WW (C) (30) . always· assured iood ratings, • ...... (30) lO:OO 0 U (jJ fD Dmll Mirtii (C) attracted lona.Usts of sponsors .., (60) 0..'1 l\ltSf$ trt Glen Cam•-•oe II I ,, * Wtlt (55} bell, G•lt Gordoll. Doni D1liri1e and presented no production m n.t lirt (CJ (30) and The ·GeWdifprs. problems (actors, costs. etc.) a lit: 5 ,.._ IC) (60) because no production was in - 7:.JO B @Cll F••ilJ Nltir IC) (30) O Q!(l)Q)Tllt l11Mrtll (C) vobvnedlhe oUler hand. there .,. JDdy *°"' end ;,elks 111 odd.I {60} "Th• RetUm." Sen Richards loot;illf ~·Co ... lli•n li1ur1, a rill vi~ts his holllttown •nd linds ~is v.·as s o m e embarrassment »·Uncle lilt I foster flther ii• lloubte. because the obvious au~ience Nowadays, i:n fact . se- quences of some movies are reshot expressly for video when the original film is felt to be tOO frank for the middlc- class morality of the home audience as w i t h Universal's-'fece.nt doctoring of NBCTV's '1'hree Into Two Won't Go ," which brought howls from the creators or the motion picture. 0 tD(ii111 flf W._ (C) (60) .Mlril' ---.. •-tL II preference for old movies . as 1-~-----lf~li~•~••""-• m "'Sit-CnRr.-·--"""~ •-opposed o-tbe-rompetm Darin, ,.. MIMI linl'f I. I . 11J111. 1..W' IOO!M1!'1>· ·~eler Selllan. series put together strictly for f.1ovies, of course. still get good ratings -'"When they ate attractive . fil~ But. although s61ne blockbusters still are. being held back .by_ st~t~motton=i»e­ t).U:tS ·Rave been used up by video, and the lesser ones get ordinary ratings a g a i n s t regillar_series, wltb rare ex- ceptions caused by unusual scheduling.· Most important, net\\·Ofks started to make their own 9Q..minute and tw~ hour original films, with great ratings success. as witness NBC-TV's "World Premieres" and ABC·TV's "Movie of the Week." ( ""''"(Cl 130) e HAL FISHMAN JOINS the networks indicated the D d!(J)llllllt UMalll IC) *GEORGE PUTNAM News often' inferior material that (IO) 'tie." Mttt.'1-.......i tl 11111-m llMp ,..... ..._ (C) (60) mad~ up most of video's riep It taJltd bJ U1'MoKenn1, fD,_..ill (C) (60) regular fare . wilfowld JnOlher ol Adtm. 5, who d)ll ftllilil (30) At any rate, after "Kwai,'' ttltll 1191ifts word lhtt ••ku 1heir ) · · t d · ... wni ,. bitter•eet ocaslon. Q!) £*'"'8 11 ~ (60) te ev1s1on star c p a y 1 n g Ill. Mlllitl $ 'Mwit: -. '7-I . recqi:d _pric~p movies. '"' 10lO111 till-" N 'Cl 130 ABC-TV had pa id $2 We si.c.•·(musit1I) 'Sl-E.zio Pin· : • 111 .... 1 ' ) m1·111·onsfor "Kwai." CBS-TV 11, Anni linctoft. 01'tid Wtyne. fEI lltNtll MlfllCll (30) Th• story er Sol Hurok, ttr• Ruuien paid SI million for "The Music bty who became 1 1ucceu in ll:DOll 6{))1E)Jlws IC) Man·• and spread il over two Al!Mtia •s 11'111111• of oper1 and D tDCil mlJffts IC) nights. ABC-TV was reported -. rt 1(1r1-,,... Otelft1T.,Tlri1?(CJ !-.:.:'..------------'-----------~-, ltd.,~-, .. , (30J a CB 11m: (C) 8 It llll• ' 111111 rt) (60) fD ... ii: "Fi,.._ Attad" (d11m1) mn.tr. 11111 (C) (30) ·~terlillf Haydtn, JoJ P11e. G Caotc•lltld r1111 (C) (30) ID Mlril: "JM Wld•ili ef Lilli fl) ~· C... "' lM He11~• (JO) ,..,.._ .. (df1m1) '55--lis• Din· 1:ss m CNlltiH • krtMt• <SS ) iely, Hu1h MtOt1mon. @ <II ,.,,, ..... CD Tlre MflUI• (C) IRJ l :OIG Ql(f)Jia lllllltn IC) (60)1' ail Herfttlpe ct11 &1 Pref. Htr1n111 Tt!i• Fia1ch 1uuts. . - ~.YifPl!t l1ltlt11 IC) (60) ~ir-1ll;l0 fJ t]D (jJ Mm Crillill (Cl Alu 11n11 'lllllCOmn ~enrt. Mo11an, Arltlll K1rr1s, Jimmy 0t1n, K.yt B1lltrd, Gillette 111d Sylv11 Mitu . Alex Dreier ind P11rl H1nreld 1uist . • Tt ltM tllt lntll (Cl (30) CJ @ (j) U11 Jellnn1 Cir Mn (C) f£I WIMl1p. il1 lllwltw (C) (30)' L1n1 C1nlrell 1ue3ts. CD Crt1H1 lt111rd11 (C) (JO) O Tiit Mtvil 11 .. (Cl tll Yt .. a• (C) (60) 1J Q) Diet. Clvatt (CJ 1:30 a ID ctJ m 1re1Mt IC) (60) "This Could Blow Your Mind." A lZ;OO IJ Mt\111: "11111 •f N"n'' (Id· vtnt11re) '47-Wiltii m Holde n. (fi) (])Dick Cmtt (C) 1.a111l1111' ."enfor~r" tries lo irse •11z:>0 ti AU.ftifllt »tw: (C) "M.111.M. P5rtholo.1it1l l1slm1 arnhr lo fo~ce1 13," "lest Dip ti hlW1•" ind Clllef l1onsllll to 1evt1I !hi hldin1 "My Dur Sautltr'J .. t !lce ef 1n infoimer. l r1dfofd Dill· · 111.11 tnd GIOlll lfriu1rd llll$1, I . . . G lUi (I) m ltrictit4 IC) (30J l:OD II Mttit: "H•nifl Clt•r" (drar111) "S1m1nth1'1 M11lc Polion." Slm•n· 'SO-Join C11wford, Wendell CoftJ'. 1h1'1 h111b111d flVIS If' hll ellort 101 CJD Ntw1 (Cl • ~' • [' :. f DAYTIME MOVIES l:tl 9 ..... .i tllll It•" (d1ama) '48 --SlllM Pettn, Alu:ander l no1. .,...., tH" (musicll) '42-Bint tr.Uy, fitd Alttlr1. a (C) "he ........ rr1111 "•t· .... (IMntin) '54-Dal1 llobell· IM, ri.11 Ptpt. t:30 O ''Tt111r C.111 11 "i11t!" (dram•) 'i 2-lnzrld Andree. Gt ''Df•IOllltJ $quadrtnn (drlll'll) 'S4-John HOC1i1~. Chue~ Con110n. 1:00 at '1.JKkJ P1rt11n" (tff!NJ) '40 -Ronald Colrn1n, G!n11r Ro1er1. 2:00 0 (C) ''ftrt)'·lilit·MMt 111~1" (dr1m1) '10--Darren Nc:C1vin. 4:30 8 (C) "1 SllWH tt Tttriti Wll~ 11 All.C.lfl Cltw" (c:omedr) '6&- G11dntf Mdl.11. Oiant Mcl1J11. e JOB PRINTING • e PUBLICATIONS • NEWSPAPERS Qu1ilty Printin g end Otptnd1bl1 Set•ic.t for mote th•n 'fl qu•rter of • c1ntury f ,, C·T PR INTING "IT'S A MAD, MAO, MAO, MAO WOnLO" CCJI '"" e S•-Nttldty , .. ._,, "AllOUND TNIE WOllLO IN M DAYI" I•) All Ctltt l'"Hlllly Eftf"11lii•netoll Allllrt l'lftMJ • Alie 011fnM1 "SCllOOGE" IGI , ..... St(Ot'MI Ht!ldl' '•ll11r1 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• 'Ct' --MJ<Mll i Ifft ............ ,.,., ,,..... ,,.,,.I'll Vlllc9111 Price "Oii.ONO IOX" (Ol'r ,.., e '"tONOUIEllOJl WOllM" lllflil e "ClllMION CULT" 101'1 ••••••••••••••••••• ••• •••••••••• -• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •••I I•" e" •"I I•• I I I•••• • o.wMt "'''...,. tMwl Ullftf 11 MWll It Wrtll ,.are!ll "'VMl!,.lltS LOVIElll" 1111 .... • s.ctfMI c.-r ,. .. , ... "CULT 0, TH• 0.1.MftlO" (Ill ···································~···· • on , tt wished holiday happi· slip hlm the. Santa Clllus swr s ~·al.k through a burn ward in neSll to Hope and his .troupe . $.1.50 rental tag to pay. Japan without being grateful Hope. also got an $8,000 chec k .Althougb there have been for that kind of American - from tbLWomen's Cbri$JtA. o_"y:fr.,.~t r<Pl!rls Hope's l<ft .n!'JIY to give al~~ck "R _ Temperance Union "to buy I.he . eye bothers him, doctor1 say this way ot Ufe ·o( ours. boys soft drinks ." the 67-year-old star is 'fit. He Also along with Hope on the Comedian Jack Benny -was hospitalized in May 1969 . trip, portions ol which will be dressed Jn a· complete Santa after suffering a hemorrhage J televised next Jan'la'.ry, are Claua ootfit-made a surprise of the e)'e, Hope slowed his singers Gloria Loring and appearance as Hope bantered pace and the eye aliment Bobbi Marlin, the singing aod with an airport crowd of about cleared. dancing Golddiggers, and Les 200 well wishers. "I'm so emotionally involved Brown and hi! band. JeMifer Hope and Benny embraced with the Cl1," he told an in-Hosten, Miss World 19'11 , will -then Hope backed away terviewer, "because I've seen join the group in London for laughing when Benny tried to so much sacrifice. You can't • the remainder of the tour. SCR Pla11s Musical Qn Ecology An original, po~rock mu si- cal revue that •·takes a stand" on the ecology issue is sched· uled to launch Lhe new year at South Coa st Repertory. -Brod· Den Father To TV's Interns ' By SOB THOMAS schedule for "'l'he Interns" Is HOU. YWOOD (AP) _ One rigorous, but no more so than of the better things of the j "Highway Patrol," "'t'Jch he oth~rYlise lacklu ster n e w ' turned oot in two days per tclevisio'ii'"Se'ason ii the sight episode. of the old pro Broderick The young performers on "The lnterns" keep him on his Crawford aellng as dery father toes, and vice versa. They are to a flock of young doctors on Stephen Brooks, Christopher ';The Interns." Stone, Hal Frederick, Sandra The face resembles that of a Smith, r-.tike Farrell and boxer who stayed in the ring ,_E_la_;,_e_G_if_to_•_· --------~-,-,------­ for one bout too many. But there's nothing wrong with Crawford's rapid-fire delivery -or his footwork. • ''I get a kick out of these young act.ors trying some tricks." he smiles. What kind of tricks? Upstag - ing ? =~:::::::~ TBE JBUSIC ·,ff JILL "Mother Earth''-\Yith book and lyrics by SCR associa te artiStic director Ron Thronson and music by SCR music di- rector Toni Shearer-is schcd· uled· for a six·week run begin- ning Jan. 8. "Oh. nothing as obvious as that. I mean like turning ever so slightly so f would have to n1ove out of my light to follow them . Haw! They should know!-----------------------,. '·I think "t.1othe r Earth"- \\'hile it will treat the subject satirically-is important," ~id ThronsOn, who also is direcl- ing the production. "ft de als with an issue vital to our safe- ty and well-being. At the risk of seeming indulgent . I would say everyone who is concemeq about ecelogy should see it. We need to spread the word around," he continued. The production -the first o1'1glna1.~...U k..ind presented by SCR-fea- tures a cast of 10 SCR regu- lars, Jive musicians on stage with the performers, songs and dancing. The entire pres- entation will be enveloped in multi-media ba ckgrounds by photographer K e n n c t h R. Shearer. Matti Lascoe will handle choreographer's duties. "\Vith M o t 'her Earth,'' TI1ronson re ports. "v.·e're not playing down the enterlain· ment value at all. It promises to be thorou'ghly enjoyable. But in the SCR tradition, we try to go beyond entertain- ment." m\'11\ti~'f that J 've learned all the tricks they'll ever learn, and a few extras as well. "Once I tried that lighting bit with ·Charlie Ruggles . ·voung man, just where are you leading me?' he said. Believe me. r never tried that again." · Crawford is the solid Joun · dation on which the CBS Fri· day night series is constructed -"l"m the lather confesso r." he comments. The l'ho1v iS being filmed in familiar sur- roundings for him -Columbia !Udios. w iefrbe ma<!C"""A11 the King's ~1en " {Oscar. 1949), "Born Yesterday" and several less memorable films. "Great place, Columbia." he muttered. "The rain comes right through the roofs of the sound sta ges. The termites are wha r s holding the . place togeUler. If they ever leave, it'll an fall apart." Cra\\•ford 11·ill be 60 next year. After a stage cBl'eer - ··or Mice and Men '', 6$ fe11ture films and a long-run· niilg television s e r i e s , "Highway Patrol," he remains as electric as ever. The IG) For Everyone SHOW TIMES WH'tl llHt CtHI Hwy. ~ CORONA OIL MAI. 7:00 and 9:30' "I~ Alo.~. J.MAD, ' ·MAD, MAD WORLD" NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES ' - th·e 4 BEdl'dl9 films for the price of one I :================' HELLO • • • • • ORANGE COUNTY! The MUSIC AAi.L is Pleased to ANNOUNCE THE OPENING Of. OUR NEW STORE · FASHION ·-ISl:AND Newport Genter We are the Harbor area's FIRST FULL CATALOG RECORD and TAPE STORE COME IN ANO BROUSE AROUND TO CELEBRATE THE GRAND OPENING of the . THE MUSIC HALl · CAPITOL recocds is pleased to present ••. SONGS OF I ' ,. - ' • • "THE HUMP8ACK· WHALE" J GIOlGI SEGAL aUTH CiOlDON '"WHERE'S POPPA?" "' TES, THE RECORD THAT HAS EXCITED SEA GOING MAMMEL IUFFS . ALL OY~R THE WORLD. ACTUAL WHALE SONGS AS THEY .-WIRE RECORDED IN THE OCEANS OF THI WORLD. A TRULY UN19UE RECORD FROM THE MUSIC HALL "Where 1U11slc Comes Flrtt" •61 FASHION ISLAND 01'1'. IROADWAY NEWPORT CENTIR NEWPORT IEACH, CALIF. J l0CAT10Nl-NIWPOIT, CIHTU!lY CltY. S.,NHT stilt ~ :;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~. \ ,. ' I I 1 ': ~ I ! ' ' l l - ,, EVIC1·ED· ~Mrs. 'ti: V: Skilling, president of the , Child ren's 'Theater Guild, dtBlJlaJ.izes the group'·s· plight wilh.the aid of (from left) Chris H.,.edson . Mr~. Richard Jordan. Blair Gµst, Carol Esposito, Everett Bieger, M r s . Franklin, GOQd,qo~gpc8Jid, Casey €Q<>gan. Curtain for Ki1ls? Harbor Children's Guild Loses Lease By TOM B~RLEY Of tM o.i1Y .f'li.t S11tf A Harbor Area organizaliop famed for its children's pan- tot1\lmes and nursery-tale-bas. comedies' may be playin g its first and last tragedy t h i s Clirlstmas season. : O!\JC€ : o..iMsON ,• ' ' • • ' , • • ' • • • I ' k!M D'-RB'/ TH E ...:o . STRAWBERRY . STATEMENT ,,PASSIONS OF ANN.AU '. NIWPOtT •t.\CM ,-.. tM ool>•- 1• i•~~I•~• IUo 1ok ··.O•. J -1110 EXCLUSIVE HELD OVER ND ROOM TD RUN ND PLACE TD HIDE I · Fiimed Ill Panav1sioo"aod Me11ocola l'iil ALSO .12 "MEDI UM COOL" that "·ere allowed to happen," the anxi ous president co m - menled. "We take our shows to schoo ls and centers r o r handicapped children a n d , very often, \\'e are the only outside agency interested en· ough to provide these dcpriv· ed children \vith some badly needed entertainment." "We'v:) given tlie p e op I e some wo nderful entertainment, including Ali Baba, Puss In Boots and Simple Simon," commented Mrs. Skilling. "But we 're all fervently hoping that \1·e can quickly name the cen· Ira! characlcr in our nex t guild act. "What v•e need," she com- mented wit h a wry s m i I e , "is a good Samaritan." Hard Sell? FINAL WEEK! Al~OLUTELY THI LAST 7 DAYS IN CALIF. IEfOR! ITS NATIONAL RILIASE EXCLUSIVE'ENGAGEMENT SHOWING NOW!! . . -=----~ . --- Andy Tries· Alja!n ' ' .... ·' Flunki~g ··Grade ' ' F-or-!H-e admaster' . ' ., . ;-r . By VERNON SC01T overs from "Headmastc:r. '' HOLLYWOOD (UPl)-Oops' Botli Grllfith and Ruben ex· Andy Grilflth, one of the pressed regret that Jerry Van most popular figures in lele-r Dyke w~d ~t continue. They vision, returned to a weekly f~I he 1S an extraordinary tal- series this season in "Head· en.t., • master" and bombed. "In the new shqw I play the No copout.s for An<ly. He ma~or pro tern ot;,a ·town.ne.ar and bis associates, Dick Linke ~r;enwood, N.C.! Andy ~1d. and Aaron Ruben. composed 1 m m~.~· have two kids the following exp!Hn.ation: ahd a s1ster-m-law. And some uw 1 'ed thlng 'and . of the folks fr om Mayberry ·~e r1 some Jt stop• by to see me " didn't work -it's as simple . . · . as that. The concept.. we all • Griffith admits he and . his felt was a good ooe. Wbtlb-partners were in verY sen ous er ~it was ~ properi~tucle !;OOble. Not ,,only were tht for Andy is certainlf ,open Headmaster r~tings low, to question. It doesn't matter. ~ show Itself di~ no~ p~ The idea didn't ·work, Md Ject tbe Andy Griffith viewers we now .are at work Qn an know and love. entirely new format in which "t'rp ~ good act.or," ~ndy we will 'present Andy as 'a fig-sajd. "} could play the pfo. ure we are sure will have a fessor all right. But since I fa r wider audience acceptance am the way I ant -a trans- -a man \Vith roots in his ~:yen~ 1;'~~~n1 .Caln;e':!fp't~~ native South • • . " Jn the title role or ''Head· And I can't overcome it. master," Andy played a man "My new format, like 'May· faced \\'ilh the problems of berry,' is • timeless period of high school youths _ drugs, lire, a bygone, quiet erea. It's gene ration gap and all • the pure nostalgia. Nos talgia is my bag and 1 know it." rest. Aaron Ruben put it succinct· He v.·as a sq uare peg. Jy: "We bring back the prcr "\Ve did I.he best \\"<! could per slamm1ng of an old screen to lell modern stories to enter-door. People have forgotten lain. ol d and young ali:.~.·· that 'sound. It's a comforting Griffith said. · th!"g. ·• "I thouszht it \\ias my fault because I'm slow to change. But the real problem was 1 1vas uncomfortable in the part. '·One day I sat dov;n in that living room set and had a phys ical reaction. I felt so ill at ease I "'anted to run out or there. "Even though I was a teach· er once myself, I'm not al Oscar Da te HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The 43rd Annual Academy A'wards program wlli be televised April 15, 1971 -the first Thursday night Oscar presen- tetinns in the academy's an· nah!I. home in an academic atmos-~~~~~~~~~~I phere. I rea lized that after F \Ve 'd filmed the second epi· sode in the series. "I called Aaron Ruben the followin g day and said l didn't know \\'hat changes we shoultl make. Aaron said ir I felt un· Who Cares? No olh11 n1w1p1p1r in lh• world c:lrtt 1bevl your commu. nit., Ii•• your community 41ily 111w1p•p•r •0•1. 11'1 th1 DAILY PILOT. comfortable he'd be · a fool!~~~~~~~~~~~\ to force me to continue in the role. "Then "·e did a remarkable thing. Aaron started writing ., A>.: • ... ' '> a show that \\'SS going .to take me-bac.Uo.Jhe-Southoo''-' -~1- · L t,l/1/,-,,z -• -ej .. . Ruben. sitting wlth 'Andy\ said they decided against a transitional segment. Instead lhe series will begin afresh J an. 15 with an entirely new cast. There \Vill be no hold· )la lltT Plfllfll0 "SIOOSl" .... "AN ntrHANT CALLI D SLOWLY" , .c1111, Slf,-A"I•. l tJI '''"· "YOU MUST SEE THIS Fll;;MI" ' -lflc~•rM k McJrol, Lll• COl.U~!&lit. J'!CfllllS ~·-• o !J!IS ,.,~ JACK NICHOLSON nw · ES8J/ '1.ovtfs ond Other Strangers" (R) ........................... "They Shoot Horses Don't Thr(?" ~l "ll'tAMAl ,MAl,.,,llYWOllr(&I •Ji• ..... , ......... . ""..,.~,.., .... WC/IL l;llllllff" •• , ' Tllllr>lay, Dmmber 17, 1970 DAILY PILOT 211 POSITIVELY ST WHIC ENDS T RS. DEC. 24 ·"**** IT'S ALLSO f UNNY l 'i.uu • • • 1.-atU.Twol . -NftfM~fWl"I" ~ ·-'-·-"·: ·.IOWBIS•on&~l@MG•. ' PlUS ·J ony M,.., .... Su.,,;K•ndoU'ln '1HI llli D WITH THI CIYS!AL PlUMMAl l" (IP) POSITl'la Y LAST WEEK ENDS rTHURS;DIC • • ~ PAULNEWMANAWD//WUSA' · • ...!',:!~-"'""~OANNE~~ODWARD . , . (GP --·-------· . . ' . C~ll 546-3l02 . ANTHONY PERKIHS · JAMES cMN, C RRIE SNOPGRESS IN "RABBIT, RUN" (I) BARBRA STREISAND-YVES MONTANO-JACK NICKOLSO -----..... -.. --· ·~·· -··-. _ • .., .. Nft. CALL 892-4493 1 WEEK ONLY CONTINUOUS DAILY MATINEES Sot. -sun. -Mon. -Tues. "ON A CLEAR Dlldr DA~UCAN . ~- ~~,,.... el.<;,t,151)( ~ r"'"5•&n Pi~ ArM\WIMNJUEe• AIRPORT . . . ........ DEAN MARTIN e BURT lANCASTER •HELEN HAYES "RATED 1'G" • 2ND TOP HIT .· . *-*-·-plus "QARLING LILI"· * * 3 NEW EDWARDS LUXURY CINEMAS TO OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY AT NOON! OPENING.PROGRAM IN CINEMA VIEJO AND HARBOR CINEMA I fun ... M.usic ... Adventure ... Purr-fect in avery way for evaryo~I .; . ' . ' WAIJ DISNEY pradacUoar A WO NDERFUL -"°'---NEW ...,;:- CARTOON \f~ FE ATU RE · ~ ... --~ -"1-· _..,. ' ., -• ' . · WALT. DISN EY'' N'L.lr ' . T!CltlllCflDII" ~ productloits• JUD, tbsOrp/uutEJep/lant '""'~~- EAC~ T!lfATRE IS ·BRAND NEW · EACH HAS LUXURY SEATS AND WIDE SPACE tOUNGER LOGES,SURRQUND DRAPES AND HIGHLY SOPHl ~TICAT.E·D ~ROJEC T ION EQUIPMENT. EACH THEATRE OFFERS THE 'ULTIMATE IN PATRON COMFORT· AND COllVElll· ' 'ENCE. EACH THEi\TRE HAS A GIANT SCOPE SCREEN AND.STEREO · .SOUND, DEEP PILE CARPETS .AND EXCITING COllTEMPORARY DECOR .. EACH THEATRE WAS DESIGNED BY A WORLD FAMOUS ARCHITECT AND EACH THEATRE WAS DECORATED BY THE NA· TION'S MOST OUTSTANDING l HEATRE INTERIOR DECORATOR • CINEMA VIEJO ·IN· 'MISSION VI EJO SAN Dl!GQ'FR£EWAY A ILA PAZ TURNOff DIAL 830-6990 g~:r:'~G . CHRIST!IAS "AR.ISTOCATS~' HARBOR I CINEMA TWIN THEATRES COSTA MESA HARBOR A I· WILSorl 2 Ml. SOUTH Of S.D. FWY . DIAL 646-0573 g;t~,~G .UllRISTMAS "ARISTOCATS" HARBO R 2 CINEMA TWIN THEATRES COSTA MESA HARBOR AT WILSON 2 Ml. SOUltt Of 5.0. FWY. DIAL 646-0573 g~;~,~G CHRl~MAS "CATCH~22" s·omething Special Almon Ll>C:kabtj' on boatln9, Tom Tilus on tJ;tater, Sylvia Porttr on fi~Mc.c....Jfie DAJ~Y r1~0T op the Orange Coast. ll's the agt of specializat ion. And Our sPttlalty Is beirttJ 'rtaUy SOITl('thlng 1pecl~I. stereol03FM • • • •• • • music m.usic music ,music • •· music good ... • 1 ' I : ;- ' ' - I I l I .. •• l'_ , l ' .. -. . , I I ,. •' " .. • • • ·'· !• . •• .. .. .. . .. .. ·-' . . ,. " :• .. . . .. " ·. .. ': •' ... '. ,. U DAILY PILOT -.. • Men in Servi~e Campa·ign Reports ·Not Coming In Novy Fireman Apprentice Jolln L. Hocbey, son o! Mra. Roberl E. Tyndill of 5911 Edmonds Cir<le, Huntington Beacll, jlas returned t • Maypor( Fla., from a Med iterranean deployment aboard the aircraft carrier USS Saratoga. Airman First Class Jeffery M. Rivera, son of Mrs. Marion J. Rivera, 238 Guajome St., Vista. Is on duty at Bien Hoa AB. Vietnam. Airman Rivera is a carpen· try specialist assigned to a unit of the Pacific Air Forces. Gary A. Gadeke, son of Mrs. through S 1 s t Strlte.FUabt Awards d the Air MedaJ at ~,,arine C.orps Air Station, New; River, J1ck$0flvlUt, N.C. He received tbe awards for participating In aerial comb.II Jn Vietnam. ' WASHINGTON (AP) Fl1., and Sam Grossman, D-because contribuUoDJ and Mu•kle. O.Maine, John O . Winne.rs and losers alike, Artz.. had not filed post-ezpendlturea not puaonallf PMtorie, l).ft.I .. and Lowtll P. legally and with a straight elecUon comp i 1 at ion ll of illvolvlng the· candktate are Welcker Jr., R-CoM.. -all face, have filed with the p e r son a I c a m p a i g n ez:empt. Private campaign wtnnen -l.Dd the loser•. -senate secretary &taterntnts--e:JpenCfltures. ---rommJttees o 1-eontroUed-Thmtu J. L>odCI and th!--ittv . they spent nolhlna: In the Nov. The Federal co rrupt pttSOnally by the candidate Joseph Duffey of Connecticut 3 election campaign. Practlces Act requires all are not required to file. and Joalah A. SpaukUng of And three major-party general election candidates to An example of the law's Massachusetts. Senate candidates, all losers, file spe nding reports with the loophole is In New Encland The other New England hive failed to submit the Senate secretary 10 to 15 days where seven of the 12 Senate wlnner, veteran Sen. Winston Second Ueutenant Bruce M. required campaign &pending before the balloting and again candidates this year L. Prouty, J\.Vt., listed no BrU:tierry, son of Mr. and reports at all. Anothe:r dozen not more than 30 days aftl'.!r including four of the five contrfbullons to himseU -and Climtr, present members or Conll'f:sr, were aent person1I lettera earlier this week Jn whJcb they were U(led to file. ·Grouman, aoother loser, and the unsucctSSful minor~ party candldatd were sent blunt two-sentence telegnms . "We don't expect to gtt report.II from some of thesr people," a staffer in Valeo's o[flce aaid. "But we've got to Mrs. W. T. Bradberry, 411 minol'-party and w r It e ·in the election. winners -report personally only J21SOO In open.Jes, for ---------- La Esperanza, San Clemente, candidates are tardy in filing Failure to comply ts receiving and 1 pending advertising. ask for them." has been 1wa.rded zllvtr wines the reports. punishable by a fine of up to nothing. The candidates who have not upon graduation from the U.S. ~ of late Thursday, Sen. $10,000 and two yea.rs in Reports of uro spendin3 yet flied reports are bting Air Force navigator school at George M. Murphy, R-Ca1if., prison. But the law has were filed by Edward M. nudged by Senate Secretary FOR WEEKENDER ADVERTISING PHONE 642-4321 lt1ather AFB, Calll. Rep. William C. Cramer, R-beetlme a political j o k e Kennedy, D-Masa., Edmund S. Francis R. Valeo. Murphy and Lleu~nant Bradberry 11...::.-----------'-----------~---'----'---------------------'--'-----------­ beina assiptd to Castle AFB, Calif., for speclalized aircrew training before reporting to his fll'St pennanent unit for flying duty. Navy Petty Officer Third Class lAny C. Davidson, son ef Mr. and Mrs. Cecil R. Doctor Says He Has Cure --;. .ant farm 2''' Bascom Jones Jr,. 1065 La Mirada St., Laguna Beach, has been commission~ a sec- ond lieutenant in the U.S. Air Force upon graduation from Officer Training School (OTS) at Lackland AFB, Tex. The lieutenant selected for Davidson of 235 Lillian Place, OTS through co~petitive ex-Costa Mesa, was advan«d to aminaUon, is being. assigned to• his present rate ~bile serving Williams AFB, Ariz., for pilot a~rd the glllded missile training frigate USS Horne at the San For Cancer LONDON (AP) German doctor claimed today that hia methods of cancer treatment save more Jives than conventional treatment. Get a slant on ants! Dig their ~oging, '#Ukh the old tee"' spirit as they ~ild roads., etc. Olor pla,tic wa~ let you view the entire wor\s. lcoltn.,- lqoney links or ahapen t · Francisco Naval Shipyard. Navy Seaman Apprentice Roaald W. Morton, son of Mr. and Mrs. Franklyn W. Ketchum oI 6571 Melbourne Drive, Huntington Beach, was graduated from basic training at the NavaJ Training Center, San Diego. Morton is a 1970 graduate of Marina High School and ha s been ordered to report to the USS Hooper bomeported at Long Beach. Marine Sgt. Ronald L Clark, son of Mr. and Mrs. James R. Clark of 2435 Andover Place, Costa Mesa , has reported for duty at Marine Corps Base, Twen- tynine Palms. Clark is a 1965 graduate of Costa M~ High School. Marine F i rs t Lieutenant David W. Nutter, husband of Mrs. Thea H. Nutter of 3M La Perle Lane, Costa Mesa, waa presented the Fir 1 t Private Henry K. Bamett, son of Mrs. Paul C. Crooks, 1778 0 a k w o o d Drive, Memphl5, Tenn., r e c e n t 1 y received eight weeks of basic training at the U.S. Army Tralnlng Center·lnfantry, Ft. ()rd,.Calif. ms wife, Rebecca, Jivea at 2454 Vista Hagar, Newport Beach. Navy Fireman Cbarlea A. ParU, IOD of Mr. and Mrs. Claude Parler of 15252 Van Buren St., MJdway City, ·is serving aboard the destroyer USS O'Brien with the U.S. Seventh Fleet off the coast of Vietnam. Navy Airman Apprentice Eqar P. Taddeo, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred S. Taddeo of 1696 Minorca Place, C.Osta Mesa, was graduated from the 28-day recruit training course at the Naval Air Reserve Training Unit, M e m p b i s , Tenn. Dr. Joseph Issel3 of the Ringsberg Clinic in West Germany &aid in the latest issue of the Clinical Trials Journal that his system - including !ipecial vitamin-rich dieta and the removal of nerv.ous or emotional strain - had kept alive 11 to 26 percent of • study group of patients, compared with other doctors' 1t1li!tlcs of 9 percent. Issels' methods are used in at least one British hospital, and Britain's Department of Health is debating whether to make a fuller study of the system. Of 88 patients in his clinic with cancer directly comparable to cases reported by other doctors, Jssels said, 16 were alive five years after treatment. This was double those in the other doctors' reports. ...,Hr• rldempony Star of the romper rodeo; plastic pony on wheels, seat is 10" high •• .fine for tiny riders.. gold digger suede pants eo-... ..i. pant ""h fly front; fit lilce Q seconcl skin to fht knee, then f'lore wide end hcndoomel locdo of f1tttKVf cobs to choose from, aius 6to 16. Build a bund. of lt\ing1. without glue or me-is.. C reatr.. fun for kiddies frOftl .4 yn. "P- fonlr• 214 beach buggy ~;;;'draw ................................ J 99 ~dJng logs. .......................... ..2 69 _,,_ •16 dlaney game•-------"-' .. ,.., doodle buggy ...:.. I ·" horsntfln loonle lites 69~ ... -----------Bl' Of the 88, he said, 42 had received only the 1 s s e I s treatment and their 1urvival rate was 2S.2 percent. crepe blouse topl.y bendorable doll Complotoiy- 221 ,. " . .. :·· . .. For the Record. Many. other survivors were allve_and...well..lS~year_!__lfter therapy, said Issels. Dissolutions Of Marriage DISSOLUTION OP MARRIAO• """ Dece!Tt..., It MltclMll. Mor\I ,t,.. and Jame1 c-n.1 s~n Fr•rcea •nd D•rr1ll .... Smith, Garv Lt RGY and Sh•""' Ola"" W•sllburn, llt"ttY LM1111 1nd L1wr1nca ll'aoi;U«l, C1rm1r1 and Mtir .. rat llalllv. WllllllTI ECIWlrcl •1111 Thsln'lt ·M~ T"°""PIOll' Bell• anel W1rret1 EdwarCI ThomPICln. L-Mtirll and DIMl1 0. Rlch1.._. 5hlrlev R. and Jtrrv Rav Clmlluc.I. H1ncv A. and Jlotoert s. Chlar'41G. FrMla E. and AlltUll~ G. ''· Himt.,, Ola~ F1Flll·allCI Hubfff Pa,,,_n. JI-W. al'Ki Liidil 0.. Hill. i.-allll Wiiiiam E ..... 1'11 PG1111". l..lvr• E. 1nCI Lllln J, lltae. Mlrslll and Simon Bu111Y. Hll\il.i M. •llCI J1mn c. ranlllftl, vlou arid RlclllrCI •· !r..,.r, 111.111 8'r111ra and Elton J~~::•'""' E. 1nCI Jtrrv E, HtfflDY. WIYftl E. and Yvonflt L. S1>1rk1, Linda M. and Pr11ton I, ~:n'!:viat:::: 1nc:1.~1v=.., e. H1r1>. ~nl1 Mlci'0.111 Ind 51r1dr! '~' 2:¥11. 111111 Id• Ind NMmlll w lll•m 1ry, wn J, and T"°""'I H. llYlft. Atlll Marie and Mar11PI Rlclltrd lltot•. Marv l.GlllH a!ICI Emest Franll:lln il'lell'll!l. M\Wlll G. arid RONld C. rGWtl, L.otralN \llvl1n arid Oavld Alli' MccCllllkrr. lld.:~v L" 1...:I \llr1l11l1 A. D1k~Jeci::l.ll!IM Mtiry a...:I 01111•1 SWlftk. Ron•kl Allerl •nd •-rntrv Mk Mlll l'llMI Oictll'I ...... 11 Cllurch, Dtnls1 E. Incl Dlnnf1 M. Ou l"re. lltobolrt TtrrY •fld Linda El1lne E1vn, P1trka Cl11r•ll• Ind Mt1¥ln Edw1rd M111ltr, Glor1la •nd Samutl Rlcl'll•d 11t1mlret, Mirtha Lydl1 and Jo1el>ll ,_, C•D'""'· Ktrl'll Lei IP'ld Jl lcll1rlf Aftn-Y Mey.,., A/1!11 and Jllclll•CI P•OlllX. Allu A. '11CI 11.omto E. ThGmPMlll. Olnnl1 O. aftCI L1n1 N.1rie !torrer, Patrkl1 A. I""! Wl11!1m E. i., C..rGlt Ann and W111l1m L. Wtltll. Joyu L. and Ill:_, IC. Luttm.11n~Pllrlcf1 J, 011'111 Lor"I W. Petr11/1, • A.. and Roll«! , M"°""''' m G aftCI J1ck Frlodrlksan, dllll aNI Erll119 illlldl, •-II J. Ind Rc1>u1 It, 1, M ~In E. and Elllllr Mlt :'i'DOtt, r.1r1c11 5, and Wlllltm Farnk Cl•rk, Cti.ri-H. Ind D1vld A. N•llt"!', Rtloll 0. Incl Miry A. Grlfflm, Gr_., W. am! Dll'llor1 L. W1tt1.ln~1a..il1 M. •fi111cllltl J, P. 1.1nt1. v """and 111 P, Stont. iEYf'"" Mlrle •l'ICI E mer Jol'lnlOll, lltoblrl lC.. al'ICI Jaeftn MIY Andrews, Jan anCI Robert E. dGn hrbtra H. Incl ROl\llCI W, .G~11 L:. ::= ]:ff~: Le•OY Dtan Ind Mlr1!11 Ad1lr PavM, = Lynn Ind Clrl Howard FOllll', JI"'" R. and G•ll A. llKk. P.11,111111 Mar ie anel Wllll•m Fr.nc:l1 LltQWS-!. Gtt11d Jolll'I 1l'ICI Wi1m1 0••'-Sl'llter. M1rclt Ann 1"4 J i m.!. L" w11111. CarGll E. i ncl JGlln v. O.lp. Rl WaVlll anCI Jotlrwi l1 Ltt IClllltfl, rol Jlfll and 111:..0.rl W1yn1 Ab .. IOfl, 1nlu E. and Wfllllm I.. lltn t, II lllCI lltlcl'll•d Trellrv E11::C:, :fe11~ A. and Frink J-11 Arll.ln. Ari-II. Incl Hiiiei J•"""· J""'*' W. 1"4 I•-E. Wall«.a, Bonnlt E. and L-f'alrMr 1~~~1,. ... Tv~ ~1, I~ H. 11111 11:1~,i. t._ RaFI ~:,le~~ rla Colllfo5, Jollll I,.. Ind Bttw II:. J'U~~· (illftl(9 1.wlM Ind 0Wltfit F1t11t<, llll<Mflf J, 1"4 RoDvta IE. C_, Emf'llfl K..-111 Ind N- ''Artistry in Moving" other group lludies listed by J.!Stls giVe similar or better figures, including a preliminary °'provement rate of 87 percent in one group. The Jssels system I s reported to be based en the theory that cancer is a general disease of the whole body. After surgery, radiation or drugs ror the primary turner. Jssels removes other infection centers such as bad teeth and tonsils and then works on the whole body system, using injections to boost the body's own antitumor defenses. Viejo Youths Named to Board Paul Brecht 0£ C.OSta Mesa and Warren Stevens of Mission Viejo have &een nam- ed to the board of directors of the California As.soclaUon of Nurserymen's Orange County chapter. Install~ as officers at the re~nt lllffting or lhe group were James Story, Upland, president; Jack Gruber, Santa Ana, vice president; James Tringham, HunUngtnn Beach , corresponding secretary; Gary Hata, Gardena, recording; secretary, and Nobe Miyamoto, Tustin, treasurer. FOR ADVERTISING in tho WEEKENDER OUT 'N' ABOUT SECTION Phone NORM STANLEY 642-4321 for the BEST MOVE of YOUR LIFE Call: 494-1025 580 Broadway Chondu·cnp1: blowsie with •hm<ltunleneck,luD 511 sl""95 with 3-bvtton cuffs. White md ml basic mlon, liza32to38. cul~e loungers or hostess gowns from 578 8eoutt. fot lovnging or to wear wheR entertaining informolty. Fobul°"' -m..lul .,r.i., ..,i.. to delight..,..,. personol < taste. Sizts srnoll, medium, 1c, ... 15-7/2..frt. mouse 257 A l'MIT'fdtriltmas mouse. to brightm up a window, tobM, mantel or wherwer ,_ ..... UL-cp~ ,.,.;,. co11trol1op panty hose 111 Cc:w• uk>p panty-hose ---~oltl1rli~ 5ntial. 0¥9l'ag9, toil, -«Spice. ••••• 77 -'Y-........ ' vitamin c 250-..·2'0's 138 vltamlnc ~~:~~'" 159 cfllohn'• 100'1 che-ble93~ vitamins AY.U• AT llOST RICIT ltSCOllt CllRlf a1sorted jumborolb Christmas paper 148 Wrap a raft of gifts ••• e-ren those super-big ones. Mony colorful designs to choos. &om. Buy now and get CMt eariy start on wrapping. lteovy hot font tumblers :,,:. 6 8 4.:;::. 8 14 TipP&rs' d>oOI ~ ~-don,.,, e01ity1 Two ~sins kw • .,,._ .. _,- type be~ ::.: .. ~-··· .. ···-' .. •tire pump 167 ""' Sp<c;oI Nbl>or boto and ched<""""' 15" he• .. fokkloww..,,.,,. f« ~tors. mftotabl9 bans. oble flat plmti<: dol wilft50Modootfm, 227 12 w;gs. Mogic • ~Doll-- fuft.ti:re .. fireplace" , of fibo<boa.d .. 1 87 •ocfmowolN<lb<kk effe<t. lft.-appro...d -«<d. Folds ftct. Leh a dlikl aeote his awn buggies out of things a round fhe house; set con. sisb of ~ights,, Gri¥i't'7" steering wheel.. bumf*lt _othw oa:w 'f "'""'-- gift boxes 99~ °'°""wail .mi1 the ktst rinute to get the bm:es yo11 Ned; check stt.. and $ee that yov bo... pMnty on hand ••• ..ow! •2"MJ... •4• cotton INll .. aw-..& Christmas ornaments 69~ to 114 Gliriil!lning bvbbles of beauty to inake your Ir• the envy of eYeryone who 5ee5 it. Shimmering postel colon and Yibront shades.,, ill~ and_.. sty4es. All sizes_ shopM and cokn to dlo09I We-. .,,,., colon litter basket 135 w.;g1.1e11 ,;..,i p1ost;c sad"'-'"' -hump of CGr) .._ b;o "'"'"' ._.of -and-...... • ,..,.._...,..., punch bowl set 241 Spo•klioo ~ _.. ... hos bow(. 8 cvps,, 8 hooks ond lod'le ••• o great .,,ay to pert 9'> party "spirits ! .. ....... 671 nvtcnedter ••t ...... rocharg•a•I• .,.9nofic flash light 311 Powerful flcnhli ght .,,jth re- cnsod MOgnet; rtc:horges on stmidord boutehold CV'1"9nf. :::;!::~ ........... 6" Pren ft<HI tummy, watch the eyes., nose ond mouth light up! Alsorted colors and chorocters, eoch compJe+. 1 -Npia<oablo bo!Wy. I plush Christmas stocking 57~ Cope<m 16 lJT.;..d. ...i plush stocking with wftite fur-like cuff ••• "'to hong with tfte g1wNst of core" 'til Sonto orriws to fiH ir. %odlac stationery Signs of the tintti; tablets al quolity 1en.r paper ond packs of enwlopes; decor~ ted with signs of ~ :r:od'ioc. 26~ien slick'• ,..,..,, punch bowl set k's o Mod. Mod '9d Wild new colon;. a punch bowl with 5 7 6 l '2 cups., 12 hoo&i. Ol"!d~lodle. '" •;rwoy out_o CJ>mpass 1 as Ful1"1ision ~. Mmpfe,..... on mountil'lg, shodt"f'e'Sistont constn.ldion.. For car, boot °'plane. A !'0'¥91 gi~ idea. 7610 E CHAPMl,N •\VI llR.\N\,I t.i Mlh'i'IO>i \HC1PPI Nf, C£Nl!R I 10i9 ,\IUNORA BIVD NllRW/,1' 13710 NEWP ORT AV[ nt h t \1 IUITIN WHITT IER "' \O ~!NIEN WHllllER \ANIA ff 0 1 IA MIRA DA WHl l Tl!h' 8)) NO Will OX MONl!BlllO 11071 fUCllD . GARDEN GROVE IJOll IPRINGDALI. WEITMINITIR 9011 ATLANTA . HUNTINGTON BIACH ·- I 1 • I I • . 1 ... ' ;' .. .... ::1 .,. •• :: j ., ii . .. , , ' • • . :t, I '" ::: :~ :· ....... :~i. .;.,. :" ;..• ' ..• ~ :-oi! • l:l ~~ .~ <:: " . •'· • .. · .. ~· ·'. ·~' '•' :~ :.: -~ # •• '• ... ~J. {: ... . , . ~ ·~-• , ... , , ,. ·~ '~'. :• •• • • :1l ·1! . ' :~; . . .. . . . -. . ._,,...,.,....,.,..~._ .... ._...,,...,_"°':..;;;:-;:-:-:;,.....,,,,,....se:...,,..,.sos ... ""'~xn'"'"w""'"~'""""",... ....... .,. ........ .,. ...................... .., .... .., ........ .., .... .., ..... ,. .... ""' • ' , J Thursdiy, Dtct~ 17, 1970 HA DAILY l'IUll'' ; 'I ! Survey Sho.ws More Women Hired CHICAGO (AP) -A surv~y or 191 businesaes across the country Ind icates that most wlll hire fe wer men and more women from the col1ege class of 1971, a No r t hwe s t e r n University official sa id Thursday. The University's direclor•or placement, Frank S. Endicolt, said the study shows starting salaries tor men will lncrease abou t 2 percent above 1970 levels while salarie~ r 0 r womt:,n may jump by 4 percent. .The survey .Ind i ca t e s , however, the starting salaries offered to women are almost invariably lower than those offered to men with the same training. Endicott said the survey shows that 168 firms that e mplo y ed W.125 ma le bachelor-degree graduates in 1970 plan to hire 17,334 In 1971. They hired 2,601 men with master's degrees in 1970 but plan lo employ 2,151 next year. ETidicott said the survey showed that 120 .companies that hired l,435 women college graduates in 1970 plan lo hire -Engineering: $IW men, prejudice, 24 uld women want 1,612 In 1971 , an increase of 11 $884. women. only short-term employment, pe~nt. · ....... Accounting: $845 men, 20 said women choose to lie said that 53 or the'· -im ;women. accept jobs '!hJc.b.,p_ay less. lS businesses polled lhought the" . -biberal Arts : $690 men, said the supply of women businss outlook for 1911 was $688 women. be~ter than in 1970, 99 said it _ Mathematics-Statistics: graduates exceeds demand, 14 was about the same and 39 $806 men, $n& women. said women cannot perform ~s thought it was not as good. -Economics-Finance : $768 well as men and 12 said women prefer jobs with Jesa A total of 108 companies men, $700 woiTien. plan to contact fewer ·colleges Endicott said that of 126 ;:='e=s=po=n=sl=b=iU=IY=·=====; in their 1971 recruiting efforts, firms which a n s we re d he said. que stions about why women Ancly'i F'-'n The study gave the following graduates are genera 11 y Ask any lcld. "Ask Andy" Is f11n. sample average m o n t h I y offered lower salaries than Stt it Saturda)'S In lht DAll 'V salaries offered lo 171 college men, 25 attributed the practice PILOT. graduates : to d Is e r l m In at lo n and Men in Service • Army C.ptain All<lmf G. wings upon ...,....u.a 11 Jolutton, whose parent!, Mr. Vince AFB, Okta. and Mn. Gw" A. J~ _Ll<ut.nlnt • Buumont I I and wife, Carole, live at 517-ottng aatgned to tr.vb AFB, Larkspur, Corona del Mar, Calif.. for duty •tth I utdt recently was assigned as of the Military Airlift Com· senior maintenance actvtaor mlJ'ld, with the Advisory Team 22 In Vietnam. Second Lieutenant· Doatla• H. Beaumont, ~sOn,.of Mr. and Mrs. Ashton H. Beadmont, 4041 Morning Stat Drive, Hunting- ton Beach, has been awarded U.S. Air Force silver pilot Navy Petty Offlcer Third Clas Lint C. -· hU1band ol the former Mia· Mary A. 'Wlcklwn of !ell Mancrum Drive, Huntm,ton Beach, Wll 1dvanced to..hls present l'lte while terVing aboard the guided mlisile ftPte USS Home ot the Su Ffanclsco Naval Shipyard. Tliey"re Shouting ""TOTAL DISCOUNT"" Navy Petty , Officer Second Class Jordan D. · Itcela. IOR of Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Inpls ol 153'1J Clmbay Line, HWl- tlngton Beach, wu advanced to his p~t rite while eerv· ing abOard the guided missile frigate USS Home at the Sin Francisco Naval Shipyard.• \ " ~ ~__,-.. BUTTERBALL ·~~ I'\ -• 'lfl~ f·t I --... --' ~ • ~;t·-_-. "' ~ ' 1, J • ' • BUT ... SHO.P.PE,~S .WHO .¢QMPARE PROVE . "· . -, I . . . I i JJ,/!J .~UCKY OFF~As·~:-DISCOU~TING IN ~DEPT'. -J~-..... _ _ .. _ •. ..-.. ··-.;_ ... . ... , .... ~ --.--...... ......... - Mrs. Detta Van Nattan Shopped ~ Compared Her Own List ;"? . • • oi, • TURKEYS USDA GRADE A TOMS HENS LANCASTER LANCASTER 11·22 LBS. 10.12 LIS. AVG. WT. AVG. WT. Mrs. Van Nattan wea in t he check-out line at one of the LUCKY DISCOUNT SUPERMARKETS in Long Beach when we asked her if she would buy the exact same items o r compar able brands at any ot her market of he r choice. MRS. VAN NATTAN PROVED IT! • • $, An outstanding act o r heroism resulted ln the award of the Soldier's Medal In Viet- nam recently, to Army Pla· toon Sergeant J. Edward El· lloU, son of Mr. and Mrs. Rob- ert P. Elliott, 5015 B r u c e Crescent, Newport Beach. He received the medal ror voluntarily risking his life to save others. The med1l is the nation's higi)est award ror heroism in a non<ambat situation. f.1arine Sgt. Carl E. Witty._ husband of Mrs. Carol A. Wit· ty of 2009 Cotillflental, O>sta P.1esa, has reenlisted in the Marine Corps for six years while serving at the' Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro. Marine Cpl. Roy M .. Melton, husband of the fonner Miss Gail D. Gilby of 8306 Magic Circle, Huntington Beach, was I • TURKEYS She spent $48.75 at Lucky ... The same items cost her $55.84 at -t he other market ... MrS. Datta Van Nattan 3~. 38lb. promoted to his present rank ~ TOMS SWl"'S Pl fMILIM. l'OUlll TOMS USDA 0'1141 A HENS SWln'S PllMIUM YOUllll MllU USDA ,,..4. A. 1 &. '22 lbs. 491t 10·12LI\. 551t. FRESH TURKEYS RIVllSIDI AllMOUI STAR !;.~.! 43~.. ~:~~.. 48 .i. FRESH FRYING CHICKENS ~~~:::::· ....... 25 ,i is convinced ..• SHE REDUCED HER FOOD COSTS 14.54% You Can Prove it, Too ••• Comparel SHOP LUCKY AND SAVE! ,.,,r1,•t o lt71 •r l•c•r ll•r••• C R'b R t ............ 81, .. ' s IK .. Allll1• ... -... 38 ross 1 oas _,.... ..... ausage ..... ,., , F S. J k s.11n 49 r; r1111.LL•n ••• ryer 1ze ur eys ..... : ..... ... R'b R t ""'"' 98 , Roasters ................. 49 , 1 oas ........ .. ... . CHUCK Ro-AST ''-'""'·'""'" 45 · t UAUnlOlllDfD!'IF ••·••••••••••••"'.''''. llt. ST ANDING RIB ROAST \'.:·:.:~-: ..... ..-. 79 ,i . ......... .,,.. ... Ra!h_Bacon .. """"'"''" -58' Ro11nd-steak-~~:::.::::.:-. 79 f..-l · k SI ' d B ... u .... ;;;:, .. -.. 48::...' -7"il.i! T-Bone Steak :::-.:.":j·:~:"..'.'. $n~ uc Y .ce a~.n .. ~ ....... _ · G-ROUND -BEEF ""'"'"""ciucn . 53 ·.-t o' QUAlln IOMDID l ffF ''................ tit. • Po·rterhouse "'''"""'"""· 1131 Oscar M Bacon "·'L "'·"" 69' ll(n IOlllllllUP , /.. , 111.1.tL,U. ,.., llAW•lllJI · ,,..-RED PUNCH "'""' ....... .. PIES :~~if.'~~.1~~~:".~~1~:~~~ ..... . REAL WHIP rrv:~~~CTll. .......... .. NIBLETS CORN ~!'o't.'::r' ........ . JENO'S PIZZA ~~~~':::. ........ . PUDDING :::" .................... .. lllOHYI COOl .. ClU#ll 34' 69' 51 ' 33' 89' 75' VEGETABLES :::." .................. 20' 11nt11111••• 1c..nn,Wllalo 1-rc ... 1 BIRDSEYE PEAS :::." ............. 22' SPINACH ::;.s:;:.".~~~ ............ 31c . G L s l ltOSlll 47' ORAN E P U ""'" .......... . AVOCADO DIP :~~'"· ........ 63' GETABL•s ....... " """ 42' VE ;1: 110L r11 ............ , SLICED BEEF co101n •1'f11/llO UMCI '1 " 1201r11 ............ . Cllfl-,IUJI l lU.010 s2n SHRIMP H'"" .................. .. BEEF STEAKS :::.''. ................ 73' IDLI llil 1un1110 (4 Ct.) ,,. SAVE 10°/o ·~· . ivy l 2 Of more quorH. f1fThs or 6 lioll gti!-. , 1 sarid w~e onodditionol 10"4tromthese r.... ~ , ..... -~, """'bt miitd or motthed. prtcei. "'"" ,,_, · )'(\. f~~.~f ~.B. ... $695 J&B Scotch Whisky ......... LADY LEE BUTIER :;•:z~~~'ir' .... 82' SOUR CREAM ~:~'i~~ ............. 49' TOPPING ~:~:~~::·~~~.·.~·········· 48' MATE rOWlltlt 85 ' tJ""' COFFEE llOLJAl ..... . SNO BALLS :w:r ................ 89' ~ MARGARINE ;~':t:t~~~.~~ 43' TA PAKT OUllflJUKl•Ul9 59' ~VI 4'0LIT\. ......... . GRATED CHEESE lt.' ............. 89' ' - .,.-FIDDLE PADDLE :w:., .... 33' AFERS IMllllHlll lHAMl l lUI 45' W t MoOl lOJ .............. ,,, ~MJB RICE:~~~::~~~ .......... 59' ~ STUFFIN MIX. ~.·~1<:0':1~~.1 .... 48' STUFFIN BREAD ~::;~~~·' ....... 27' ...-LIPTON DINNERS :~ ...... 69' Okh• & tlu 6'1eofltr9t ...... ~GELATINE'~:·,~it.1~ ............ 22' .,.-BREAD MIX l~l ............. 23' ·~·:·· .,.... VIENNA SAUSAGE :~n .. ()*"SCHILi ~~~~ ............. . D"""TUNA U:-...................... . C.UUnoll WlllTl MUf 011111111) <>""'SARDINES r~~~C.~~~.~-···· 33 ' SHRIM' p Oltl.UllSU.lllllVllllfO 85' O"'"'ll' 41'10LU.I , ........... , r P~ANUTS n"o~•"-~~~.-:'.~ .. 75' .,.-NUTS it.'· ........................ 75' • ....... ..., .... ,..<Ml•" .......... (MM .. ) .,.. MARY ELLEN JAM :::~,.. 39' .,.. PLUM JELLY :'.':1.~ ........ 39' rDRESSING ::t.~ri..~.~·.~~·-·· 33' .,.... C.H.B. PICKLES l."l~:'l".' ... 53' Our LOW Evcr)<lay Price! LADY lEE EGGNOG . · COFFEE 't't:r~ .. ~.M.1.' ....... 891 COFFEE MAIWIU llOllll '2" .. OL<All ••·••••·•• YUBAN ~r.':~ ............ 93 ' YUBAN ,..... '1" J20ICAll "'""'" YUBAN !:':l'u• ......... 12'' MJB COFFEE ~i:s;:~! •... '1'' ,,.,.-~:,.. ,llrf'i'lllHto '""''!" 'lifi'.lil :: . a 1".r.wRt .. ~· .. ;: BITS 0 TUNA ~\'t.~ ............. 15' DOG FOOD ................... , 13' CJ'""' llOI U.I ......... .. KAL KAN :·~n~~~.~~~.~~ ........ 171 ALPO DOG FOOD ~11~':,11:..-: .... 30' .,.. JOHNSON FAVOR ::':':".::• 99• FOIMULA 409 r:~~~~~~ ... 79' crCLEANSER \!~~~~~" ........... 10' CALGON ~ .. ;[1:C,o;'~1.~ ••••••••• s1 1• ...-KOTEX :l''. ..................... 11" Jool!o.,. .. ,~1 .. Ch·t•I••., 1o,.t1 PERFORM f.l.elKFlllUll 43' O'""' !IOICAI .... ,, •••• ,, r KLEENEX ::.~~To:"~'.~~~'.'.1.~1! ... 37' .,...GLADE DEODORIZER U:·. 45' ,.,..,,,., .. K4tlktt V-LiBBfs CORN 5c WM~I UllfR 00l0·12Vl-OZ.(Alf 1 ruu. SHANK H,W, \ fAAMEll J>HH. ~. HOC.!< REMQvtO. ·59,i. Ho E HAMS ............ 68' W L fUIL,CMll9 ........ Ir. CURE 81 ............ , . '1" l llllY COOIU 11,lM ,. ,,., ••• ··• i.. B I H ••Hr< .. •N.r__. '1·,. one ess am ,. .......... .,.. .. i... CHRISTMAS TREES Finest Quolity, fr•shly-Cut. lush and · Gt1en. , .. At Lucky's low Discount · Prices. DOUGLAS FIR TREES $) 18 PllCED FIOM OTMll SlllCTID YAl lTllS OF TllES FIOM WlllCM TO CMOOSI. BANANAS 100%c\111ult1 9 l n111tl C C Tltt Fln11t Q1111fty I b • Y1uC111hy ' POTATOES U.S. NO. !RUSSET H1c1srt1c110NIO rouND 39c or SllU cnlO IAG --$J61l SANKA :::~:~~~'.'.' ....... 1111 C&H SUGAR ~·::~~~"OZ.IOI ..... 191 F~·I. LOW DISCOUNT PRICES ON HOUSEWARES & BEAUTY A!O~ · STQU HOU"5 PIE Mix , ... '"""''"' O""" JtOLCAll .............. . ONIONS TfflCfflln l60ZC•ll •••.••••••• ,,,,,,.,. 0---MIX ~1J1~~~~~.1~.·.~1 ....... .. MEXICORN ~::•: ................... : r'SAUCE ::~:::-'~~~~.~~~~~~ .... . PEACHES &IMWTt•fllllTA ~ •II.CAii ••.••••••• ,,, APPUT.,1111 • M141 33' 31 ' 65' 27' 25' 39' er APPLESAUCE ~;:'~~1~10,,,, .. 49' rSTART DRINK :;-:tU:.".'~ .. 22' oA' DRESSING ~'o'~~~~'"':.' ......... 43' MINCE MEAT ;::~~~:: ............ 55' ~ CATSUP ~lo"ffi~ .............. 29c ,,-.. OLIVES ~".O:t!.~'l"J. ........... 33' DATES DlOMIDA•'f 29' PITTll ·Mt.•11. ,,,.,,.,,.,, ... Our LOW Everyday Price! HIRYESl Oil ROLLS DISCOUNT PRICED DELI.ITEMS! LUCKY FRANKS , MLMll.T "'"'""'"""""ILL•~ .. 58 PARTY DIPS , U.lf ut AIMITP •• "• •" "• .. • • I •t. C., 3 7 'LUNCH MEATS , NlffU..fUVI ,, •• ,,,LM\"fllkMk .. l'!if, 36 ... k4f &/-..r KING SIZE FRANKS , IAflMlMIAT •••··•••·•••·•••"'1./~t ... 65 ~~~~~.~D .. ".~~ ........ '3" L~:;.~~;!o HA~6 99 LEO'S SLICED MEATS 35, hfl l'Mlot, a.to T..-,, .... ., .... I"°,.._ LADY LEE FRANKS , tll~' ..................... 11 ... n .. 45 AVOCADO DIPS , tff'l,UU.yt,.wtml ......... fff.(1111 49 CREAM CHEESE , l'lllU .. l'ltlA ....... ,.,,,,.,,.,,In•~ .. 39 '•tf•ctlf fOt.,,td el .a~liM>h oh"'~ tibi-.., Pkg. of 3' SASHEEN RIBBON M101<hlfo;flo•ribboft·fo• rylfto pot ke;t 1 o• me kl~t b•w•. " .... ~. 69c 69' 1,000 COUNT LEAD ICICLES U••d with o lovi1h hand. !hey add 36C br1olh·1Gk;n9 b.auty lo 1h1 11••, SPRAY SNOW ... lOW PIKI 37c 6 ROLLS CHRISTMAS PAPER AND FOii Auo"94 Chrhlmcn d1119n1 o~ •l111ontfoU to beo llfify your otfr p.ockoo•"' CHRISTMAS TAGS, SEALS & CARDS Aitorted gih •11clo11u e 'ord1 a~d decorotiv1 gummed H0!1 In wonred ... LOW 69( PllCI C-7 BULB INDOOR SET S.i·of.,,_...,_ lftdoor ligh!t wit~ UL.op. prov.cl cord1 oH colora, clf>1 in<lud•d. OURLOW 99c PRICI C-7 REPLACEMENT BULBS Pa ckage of .S ligllt b~l b1 for Indoor • urlno~ brMliant, long.bumlng, Ill'/ .... 39c tro1 now. CHRISTMAS SCENE WATER BALL 37c SANTA MUG Glo1~ c-m~ ll'luf 2:f • fbf horidfif drll'IU. OUILOW PltCI while serving at the Marine Corps Air Station, El Toro. Marine Cpl. Joseph A. Kocl1ak, husband of th e former Miss ·Linda A . Napierkowski of 223 Beverly, Laguna Beach, has repOrted - for duty with Third Marine Aircraft Wing, Marine C.Orps Air Station, El Toro. Navy Petty Officer Third Class Tboma1 N. C11rk, aon ~:-¥.Clifi of 641 st. James Road. Newport Beach, has arrived at Pearl• Harbor after deploy· ment to the Western Pacific aboard the destroyer escort USS Da'vidson . Coast Guard S ea m a n Recruit Tbcim as J . l1Jey of 231 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa. was graduated from basic training at the Coast Guard Training and Supply Center, Alameda. Navy seaman Apprentice Randell 8. Uoy. son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas M. Lloy of 21622 · Kaneohe Lane, Hun· tington Beach, was graduated from basic training at the Recru it Training Command, San Diego. He is a 1970 graduate of Huntington Beach High School and has been ordered to report to Service School Command • Naval Training Center, Great ' Lakes, Ill. Marine Cpl. Jame. C .. fl.1acint4sh, son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Macintosh of 2179 Raleigh Ave., Costa Mesa, was promoted to his pres~nl rank while serving with Ma intenance Battalion, Force Logistic C o mm a n d , Da Nang, Vietnam. Hre reported to his present unit in Feb. 1970 and serves as a Tracked Vehicle Repainnan. Marine Pfc. Roderic A. Ca¥Y1p, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ortho 0. Camp of 706 Poinset- tia. Corona de! Mar, c<m· pleted the Combat Engineer Bas ic Specialist (:ourse at the Marine Corps Base, Camp Le- jeune, N.C. Airman Michael Deutacb, son of Mr. and Mr1. Joseph Deutsch of 1753 Centella Place, Newport Beach, has completed basl9 tralnlnf at Lackland . AFB, Tex, He baa been assigned to Lowry AFB, Colo.. for training In the armament systems f I e 1 d • Airman Deutsch • is a 1970 graduate of Corona del Mir High Scbool. Coast Guard Seaman Rec ruit HoW1rd L. llf<Mk:llH I, of 4~A l2lh SL, Huotlngton Beach, haa <om· ·pfeted reci'uit tr1lnl111 at> the cout Guonf• .Trlfning· Ind SUpply Cenltr, Alamedl. ··-Steven A. Scott, 10n of Mr. and Mn. HugA A. Scott of fi061 Shields Drive, HunUngl.al\ Beach, enlitted In the. Coart Guard at Lona Belcb.t I ~---.. ..: 1AtlV1'1LOT Tlwrsd11, Oecomlltr 17, 1!1.0 Ride, or Fall \Vhile most students walk, Ci r ride bikes or buses to school, students at St. Helen Parish School in New bury, Ohio. ride unicycles. All 128 pupils at the parochial school are required to ride a unicycle or face a failing mark in physical education. All of the boys and girls -fourth through eighth graders -seem to be enjoying the exercise. . sailna's Hazards of T ~chrwlogical ~:" •o•• ,,,. ltlore Caution Vrged .. p c· db w . ~~HRISTMA~ rogress ite y riter ~ "'""o ..... WASHINGTON (UPI) -"In· ao we tum to nuclear power are willing to make the dras- nocent until proven guilty'' is "thereby creating thermal pol· tic changes· he says are nec- a precious principle when ap-lution and 8 staggering radio-essary to save us. plied to human beings. His answer to the second When applied to things, active waster problem." question, "Will we do it? is however, it can be disastrous, "Until we develop 8 true "No.'' For. said,.ROsen, "We accordlng to Walter G. Rosen sense of the unity of nature," cannot bear the thought'' of a of the state University of Rose~ said, "we are des~ined moratorium on "business as New York at Buffalo. to fall to respond effective ly usual." Rosen made this point ln • to th~ possi~ly mortal ~r·'[p;,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,__,I an article on the envtronment l~rbations which ,,we have 1n· In Bioscience Magazine. pub-nicted. upon her. . . lished by the Jnslitute of Bio-Environmental pollution, 1n- logtca1· Sciences. eluding pollution of the pla~- CHRISTMAS SPECIAL 201/o OFF dr1pery mt!frlel $1 P41r y•rd 49S.024S Until recenUy, Rosen said, et by more people than 1t we have applied ''innocent un-can e-0mfortably accom~ til proven guilty" 10 such date, has. brought ,~umarutyllf.::::::::=====~11 thlngs u synthetic molecules. ~ the. ~mt where., our sur- combustion products food v1val 1s m danger, said Ro- additives. pesticides,' medi-sen : clnes and packaging materials "We must act rapidly and- . radically ... we must change "By now,'' he said, "we ought to have learned other· not only . our education sys-tem but our very life styles wise. The fission products of and our morality. we need a nuclear bomb testing ought new code of ethics ... ... ates -lo have taught us 1£ radium 1y did not. "We must get off the back mvr. DAN " IY•ON FINLf! "Thalidomide and DDT of nature, which we are break-Livol!•ir. ,, ...... 1,11y, ll•s 11.,1.,.. ought to have taught us. But ing, and back Into nature of Dffn 1cc1ptM ltY th• 11y pu1tuc 11 all of these experiences not· which we are a part.'' • 1pon11 .... u. oun..nt w1111 wllkll • 19 ''"' 1 ~IH'Y 11iu.tkln tr 1 withstanding we continill!. to Rosen posed two questions, p1rtkulirty wit•rf•lnlflt "Tr1~111111 assume that damage must be "Can' we do it?" and -"Will e 1t1!i.n M1111C1! Jewtlry e l'l'lllllrttll tHr si.1n1 &olitl e Cot!\/,.,. J1w11rt • Fr.,gr•~' C•Nlle\ • C1rd•, G!rt wr1p Plt!y Suppt~I e 1nc1nM I. l!um1r1 • c111n1. Ctn!•I e S!1!'°"""V, 0!1rl•, AllM,lllU e N""91tl .. '"" probolbly 1111 1•11'1 o"IV M1,11iul P~~Plf Mllttl '~ff 411tnll Avt, -t'8 .. 111 H1t11H11tl9ll l~ Ntxt 10 Nl!W l..,;ky ~-lit 0;>ef1 Mon .. Thur1, Fri. N lg~ I nd S\Hld1y 111.i B111kAm1rk<lr.i -l'rN Wr1.,.l11t OUTH CORS'f ] M j O' ~ < 1•u ••~IA"•''''" OPEN NIGHTLY ''U P.M. MATINEE SAT. & SUN. 1:4S P.M.I fAMILYWIDE ii CHl lSTMAS TllAT -~ SUPEll MU51CALI ALBERT FINNEY " "SCROOGE" ! ;: ,. • " . : ' U.N. Dress Dilemma demonstrated before restraints we do lt?" The answer to Couple Get are placed on dangerous chem-question 1 is "yes" -if we lcals." Rosen also deplored appli· Dog Back cation -of "innocent until Seoul Cabinet Shakeup Seen .. lllm.an" 1p.t...S.. Al llWCll. l•lllh- ttr w1s 1 tonk, 1 Mt t.room """'k~ IW9'1 IWI\' 1'111 (tewtill .t t11Dm. H-1¥ef", lllfll coma I IMdlcll IX· ,.r1 u• MOnl•lll WI¥ Wltfl "" Kkln1ifk lptll'NC~ lo llutMef" wllic~ t11'd1 19 mllc1 It 1ppur lllal I ' --c·o·'-"."--""-n_•_G __ ~ Staff Botliered by Double Standard proven guilty" to such things as thermal pollution, defolia· For Holiday lion, irrigation systems. high rise buildings and supersonic /\Mtfy 1111911. b, 11\dlllll, I rll'llU hllftMcMll •u If .,.,It, UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.' (AP) -In native dress. an African diplomat can stroll into the U.N. delegates' lounge without challenge. A Nigerian who happens to work on the secretariat staff is stopped if h~ht~Je_:i _to ~nter the room welirrng U'fe sam~ garb. The double standard is acknowledged as an example of the predicament facing. U.N. guards. · Lacking specific guidelines on what should be worn by U.N. staff members. guards and secretariat department chiefs are trying to use their jµdgmenl point for dramatic emphasis, giving the impression that he had stopped tG ogle the shape- ly courier. A photographer caught the tableau and the resulting picture annoyed the Russians. As a result U.N. of- ficials became painfiilly aware of staffers' clothing. One girl who showed up in a conference hall clad in a pants suit was hastily banished. "What staffers should-wear is largely a matter of common sense,'' said Serg Michel, direct.or of the division of personnel administration. United Nations for eight aircraft. SEOUL (UPI) -The Soulh years. taking many outstan-RENO (UPI) -For Larry He said use of .. 2. 4, ~ 1 , Korean cabinet of Premier ding photographs and receiv-and Faith Leech, it would as a defoliant has caused hu· Chung n-won will resign en ing letters of commendation have been a sad Christmas man birth defects in Vietnam. masse soon to enable Presi- from celebrities. without Lucky. But their poo-It was "innocent until· pro-dent Park Chung-Hee lo carry But since he let his hair die Jived up to his name and· ven guilty." And. said Ro-out a large-scale shakeup of made it home. the admini!ltration, it has been grow and began wearing blue sen, "this is the case for any reported. jeans there have been no more Lucky was stolen from a car and every other -compound . , photo assignments. He works in Redwood City, Calif., three not intended for direct inter-Orient Press, a local news in the photo Jab these days. weeks ago when the Leeches nal consumption." agency. said the cabinet "It seems incredible to me," were visiting friends there. Rosen questioned whether shakeup is expected to come L k · hi · I as soon as the national said Travis, "that this should uc Y lS somet ng spec1a technology, as presently prac-to th Leech th t · d 1· ed d I use! II ·th assembly passes a govern· happen in an organization e es, so ey r1e 1c . can ea u y w1 ha d to I. d h' 1 bl ment budget plan for 1971. The dedicated to peace and un· very r in un. environmenta pro ems I assembly aclion on the budget derstanding which represents "We don't have a child.'' caused by techno ogy . bill is expected by the middle ltlllw lh1 ctr .. rl l c1rt1,-, known 11 1~1 ~ypol'll1l1mu1. A l1u9h ltrin11 lnlo p11r 1111 cht1t 11111 11t01m.,., 1M '"ulrll l'flylhmk mov1m1nlt lty 1111 muKlu 11 lh1 11,1, nKk, 11w. t11r11! •I'd dlfplo•lgm. (Al'ld all 110nt WI hid lhluthl U l"S<IUlrfd 111111 more t111n 1 tvnnv tfclry, ltut llltn, 1ur. II nit lht tcltnllll< 1ppfOl(h to l11>ghlng.) It ln1ur1nct. Wt'rt l!XACTIHG Ind pay partlcul•r 11!1nllon lo DETAILS: Thtr1"1 I Kltn(t lo 1verytlllnt H don't uprrl-t with th• Int,",.. lt"(:ecl'. C•mt It llYll:OH FENLEY INSUltAHCI, toJ M1 ln In Huntln9ton 11,1 It give r111 tllt covtr111 YO\I Mid II lhl laWllll pes1lltl1 eoll. And, 127 nations whose diplomats Mrs. Leech said. •·He kind of ''Every epparent solution,'' j:lart of this month. wear every conceivable type takes the place of one. We had he said, "generates one or ;============;II ::;~111;·~:'1.;1~1: ;:iv:;:, :-:;:. of dress. To have to toe the to get him back." mote problems as serious as STARS ~:fl... W9f .it~: ELVIS PRESLEY ~ :!J'o -... , line as to appearan.ce in this They placed advertisements the problem it was designed 1 u"ir.ctor 1r r111lf1r. place doesn't make sense. in newspapejs, distributed to cure.'' Srdnev Omirr ;, on• of ,.,, 11~;;;;;;;~;~iiii~ii~=~~~~=~~;; .. There is no rhyme or more than 150 posters to Example: We run short of ·.;..er1i~, 9•••+ 11+rolog1r1. H i1 The ground rules specify what the public can't wear when entering U.N. head· 1'1\-----,quarters. no-men---m uno "\Ve give orientation talks for new staff members telline them that, as employes of the United Nations, they should dress so as not lo offend peo- p e.••- ·1 ( ) to k I · ·ty .;olumn i1 on1 of f~1 DA ILY reason to l·t. I recently took a stores and offices, and sent 01 , gas ma e e ect.r1c1 . II """J silf I 1 al ·1 Pl LOT'S 9r11t f11lur11. girrmena-int.o thede1epies---notices--to-pet-trospitals-andi~po;::";:-:;~;°'~=;"~e:;•;::;'!l~~;·~· ~~~~~::=:§~~~! ' I • ~ • dershirts and no women wear- ing short shorts, beach garb or pedal pustlers . When it comes to staff workers. the Jines become blurred. Staffers and their guests must wear "clean and acceptable dress.'' That·s all the rules say. And diplomats? ~A delegate could show up nude if he cared to, as long as he wore an identification tag ao that our guan:ls would recognize him," said a harried official. Clotbes took on a new im· portance a couple of years ago after an incident in the General Assembly. Andrei A. Gromyko was making a major speech when a girl messenger strolled past the podium wear- ing a very brief miniskirt. The Soviet foreign minister happened to pause at that EYES RIGHT DL LOUIS J. HASILFILD Op1em1lrl11 "Oo you ~1v1 "mil1·l ·l!'>inul1" •r••l It ii very "1c111•'V in th111 d•v• of high 1p11d dri•ing lo k"ow th1 dilf1r1nt1 b1iw11n joocl v i1\on 111d dri•i"9 •i1ion. CTrdin1rv good •i1ion i1 fin1 for 111i"9 fine P'inl 111d r11din9 , but t+i1r1 i1 I v11t di ll1 r•n~1 b1lw1111 r11ding ind being .bl1 to 111, c.omo11h1nd ind •••ti correctly •nd in1l1ntlr to high. w1y 1itu1lion1. To •void h•gic 1ccid1nh, h1v• your "i1io" ch1ck1d for 1uch thin91 11 l 1 l Vi1u1I Acuity,:. M.w fer c;1n rou 111 1~1rp1 ¥7 {21 Sidi Vi1ion •. , how wide i1 your field of •i1iofll j J) D1plh P•rc1plio11 , • rc1" yo~ j~d91 d ililflCll) (~) Binocul1r v;,ion J., .do your •y11 wo1k fo91t~1 ,1 Il l G11r1 Blind· Night Vi1io11 •• , do you ••• '"'•11 111 th1 d1,li 1 1rMI 171 Dirk Ad1pl1tio", •• d• 'Your 1y11 1dju1t q11ickty to !he d 11kl 01'ficl911cy in on1 or more of thew 1r111 111011 110! m1111 yo11 1ho~ld11't drl "•· It do•• 1111•n v•u 1houlcl either h••• corr1c• 1Jw1 1y19l11111 or Do in1h11cl1.:t how to m1k1 co111p11111tio11 for t .. • 1hortcomln91 to 1w11itil trou• ltl1. Com• i11 fer your •r• •111111• ln1tlo11 10011. w,·,, 111 th1 Fl~• Points Shoppl119 C111nl1r. Pho11• 147-1'271. • The attire of those who work in secluded offices in the 38- floor secretariat building is not necessarily the same as that expected of s t a f f members who come into direct cont.act with delegates and the public. In fact the of~ £ice workers have much more leeway. "If I felt that it was in- discreet for a secretary to wear a pant!! outfit in my of- fice, I would tell her so," said Michel. "If she persisted, I probably would not forbid it." 10unge ana we were both veterinarians. I wearing blue jeans. Whal hap-About 10 days Jaler , Mr. and MAST•• cH.t.11131: · l 0 pens? The guard Jet me by. but M~... Dorothy Trahan or U.NkAMl1tiC.t.•-D ~ E L stopped my comp a n 1 on Pacifk:a, Calif., telephoncQ because she wa s Wearing' and said they had found a dog jeans. I pointed out th.at I was answering Lucky's descrip-· wearing them too. but he said tion. Leech flew there im-Rf it was dmerent in the case of mediately...'~.· ... :· .. ·. ·-_' , f Nf· . a girl.'' "The dog didn't respond and ~- About half a dozen Larry didn"t ree-0gnize the American blacks in the U.N. dog. It was in a state of shock. ~ secretariat are wearing Afro His hip was broken. lt hadn't hairdos. This puzzles native eaten in a week," Mrs. Leech ':. • _ ~~~ Africans on the staff, who said. never wear their hair that "But I wouldn 't give up. The way. Edward Omotosc> of Nigeria. a member of the OfUce of Public Information in the secretariat. was stopped by a guard when he tried to enter the delegates' lounge wearing a dashiki. next week we both flew there. The dog walked to me im- mediately. I knew it was him." "To get a little dog out of that enormous area was unbelievable,·• ~1rs. Leech said. SOLCUltt HUT CltACICliltS PltlSN 'ltUIT GIFT PACKS dll!Ylrtd by (hrl1!m11 trim f.IS Let Us Wrap & Mail Your Presents ALMONO Gl'T PACICl A Tl •ll Tr111 CO!l'll'l!I OltlNCllltl MANUAL -ELEC1'.ll:IC HUT Gt'T PACICS Others try a more subtle ap- proach, as in the case of \Villiam Bowen, a former child psychologist who got a job in the statistical division about a year ago. He says: "t.1y hair was normal length when I was hired, but I have Jet iL grow;lii,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_;;;;;;_,_,_,_,__, Mr1. C•rv1r1 Dtllclou1 FRUIT CAKES PISTACHIO HUTS since then. There were hints about barbers, and I got a pretty clear idea of the message they were trying to get across. But I haven't <::ut my hair.'' The message was more specific in the case of Arthur Travis, an Englishman who works in the U.N. photo laboratory and wears hippie dress with hair down to his shoulders. Travis has worked for the OUR 16rt. YEAR Gin PACKS CHOICE FRUITS -JELLIES -CHEESE CAKES -OLIVES WE SHIP WELSH'S NATURAL FOODS 263 FOREST AVE., LAGUNA HACH 04-3Sl2 Order aow la time for llSl1U'ed c:hrlltmu delivery. •'V: t:;:~:.-."'--.~ Roasted Coffee Bean• ' Fnim Maw11t, C""!r1t & Sovll! Am.rkl, Frrnch Ex11rn11t. A!rk1. lnd0flal1, Ind Vlt nnl CASHIWS CEltAMIC NUT IOWLS HAN O CAll:VIO WOOCIEN HUT IOWLS !lrll1 Chrl\Tma1 91111 NUTVll..IE 1'.1.S.~ ""' 373 5. COAST ~WY. Hovr.: 11 It '· l Dirt CIClwnklWll Lltunl CHRISTMAS SPECIAL CARPET SALE 1011 8/e NYLON S'HAG A• Low At. $4.50 r~'. REMNANTS GALORE All Disco unted POLYESTER Al Low As SHAGS $6.50 r':· L~rge Selec tion & Gu~·~ntl!t'd !n1t1111t1cn\ WALLPAPEll:. ORIPEll:IES, 5'11!ET VINYL I TILi HOOVER VACUUM ~~~u-~ .~~.~T .. 1 ~. ~.~~. ~~~~~.. s59's FREE ESi"1MATES a,,o-%b4 FURNITURE The $59 something from the something else stores Wrovgh! I""' llftd ga.. 30" J< W cocktaB !Ible In 'flrdl-n, 911Uque gold or block. LOSANGILIS: 6121 Wiishire Blvd. Miracl e M1le1 1 tO•O W. Pko Blvd.1 81•0 S. We1t1rn Ave. ANAHEIM: 1672 W. Lincoln IAKEll:SAELD: 3010 Mltig Ave. CLAIEMONT/l'OMONA: 232 E. Foothill COVINA: 9-45 N. Azvsa DOWNEYi 9 .. 35 E. Firettone GLlNDAl.E: 333 M. Central Ave. CltANADA HIW1 10100 Balboa Blvd. HUNTINGTON IEACH: 19431 l each Blvd. LA HABRA: 1720 W Whittier lON.G BEACH: 2189 lokewood Blvd . MONTIUY PAIK: .415 S. Atlantic Blvd. PASADENA: 85 S. Ro11m1ad RIVERSIDE: 10,000 Magnolia SANTA ANA/TUSTI N: 1703 E. 17th St, . SAN IEINAIDINOi 999 S. "E" $t. SOUTH IAY115.533 $.Crenshaw llvd. THOUSAND OAKS: 2.C.( Thou1and Oaks Blvd. VINTUIA: 3409 Telegraph Rd. WOODLAND HILLS: 22223 Ytnluro Blvd. SHO, 7 DAYS A WEIK • WllKDAYI ,, UHTll, • SATUltDAY JO UHJfl ' • SUNDAY ' UHTlt ' • '"'' ,AltKfNG • '"'' DIC01tA.ro1t Sl lV/CI • CONVlNIENT I ANK 'rl.-MS I 1 .. TUMBLEWEEDS L015A LU'.:1(1 HOW 'M:XJLD 'lt>U LIKE.10 LfAD TuE ATrACK Oij 1}1E FORl"? MUTI AND JEFF JUDGE PARKER PLAIN JANE • _f_ .'!."':,. -- ollV10U5l.Y '100 A'f\f ~ Ut'IAWA1<1'-Of' M'( M!l.lfARY SfAfUS ... ':( 2C.l!l... l'VJ': l31':1'N 11f:UN!l: 1\l:CLA'iSlflED 2C.1!L. llV MY MASSACRE ilOARP. l;:t.·IT By Chester Gould "IT'S MIOMTY SUIR'/ I LOTS ,.aq 9CAl1'I TMAN""' POUCe WORK. FETCM 'IM OUT.• By Tom K. Ryan 2. CO\WN l'ICKING" ll"ffl.E. ~:::. ""!!rP -. ...,.!!' .... THA.T COFFEE pqT" IS STILL HOT! I &ETTER COOL Iii" OFF! 611 .. __ _ I WONPE~ WHAT KIWP OF A. PE5CRI PTI ON THE .IMJTRE P' Gi\VE ELMO OF #.E! By Frank Baginski e.. o=C::.-Oc:o 8' 8 6' 8 J:?c?o~c:.e>c:;.~ ' Ll'L AINIR S:ALL Y BANANAS GORDO t;H!_ MOON MULLINS ANIMAL CRACKERS I I ~r.~ 1*'XJ•l'LL WORK M'/SE.F TO A PAC5i. AllONG!'ND A HANK OFtVJ~'! ei::xl, TU. Ser rr1s ¥1 lT c:AIJ GE,. Dfll~"' l3El!JG. Ml~ 1HI!. OIJI-" DODO 00 ~ U/1.1!.-~ i'k%CF'f1Ef#lllf~""""~;:;;;;;;;;;;;-;1 -.. § ~ f f ~~~IUI ~ D•Ac,lolssy CROSSWORD••• by L "-POw.11 I r P_E_RK_l_Ns __ --""'.=::::;; ~-,_----------J .-::"'-:--... -~=·~"'::-;:;:::::-i. M""''~,-::n~s 42: Singe!' R91s Yntrrday's Piaz~ S~ftd: 43 RoYlnq l Doff advPmll'11.1Sly clothes 45 lnrbrlalM: 6 Do a SIJng clt anlng 4L lmprrqnattd Job 48 Prt!C'Il 11 Card gotmt 49 Gra in 14 Thomas--: 9oddrss US patr iot SO Daner 15 l ltrrary 52 D•flling for111 un it 16 S!rm1rr 56 lntrr nrilonal finial labor 91"oup; 17 Otpri•~ of Abbr. cltlztnship 57 forma l 19 Family drrss· 111tmbrr: 3 words Informal 60 -- 20 l t ight Brunswic k losrr's 61 Disfast conc trn of ctrtal 21 :~.r. Friend gra in ~ b2 Num!!'fica l 2Z Entffiain-llftlix 111r11t for111 bl Military '24 'llttre \ht title: Col issr1111 ls Abbr. 26 Hottl ~ Ofl iet custolfffs worker: 27 Folly k'lfC11"111al 30 Tracie: b5 John f"''"' J1cob -32 S111a ll quantity DOWN 33 Not drcoratrd 1 H1.11 d rd 134 Rodtnt 2 Vrhielr 37 Sicknrss J Co111plrtrly 38 Src1rtion. 19111h1rrd produc ing ~ Vrry soon : crlls 3 words 39 Type of 5 Tamtr1 afrcraft: ~nim al Abbr. 6.Cathrdrar 40 US pol It lea I fraturr vroup: 7 Study Abbr. hard for 41 Trtr an r•a• I• IN SP l r.liV ( ~Xl( ;<l.l l ~ lO ( t 55 ~l ll l Ol ll 8 Rl>imd of dutirs 'J Put Into ser'lice 10 WandrrH 11 Motor ist's concrrn 12 To plrcrs 13 Man of wraith 18Fras.l 23 lr il r 25 Sia tr: Abbr. 2& Gr;ilinq 27 K il'd of party 28 COMtrllatiOI 29 Dark brown ish '"'' 2 words 30 S 1opr 31 Sho11 rrsuU of e•rrlion 33 Think out befo1rhand 35 British composrr Jh Taill,ss ~mphibian MISS PEACH STEVE ROPER W>!AT IS TlllS NC>ISEM5E PON'! \\Oil£)' ABOUT rr, Mil:. ()l<JMMIS. Il<A ANO I ... VI< WHAT TMIV CALL. A • LOV• -MAT!• ~Et..ArlONSHI~ By Mill By Saunders and Overgard By Charin M •. Schulz 1- Thursd&y, Dtermbrf 17, 1970 OAIL Y "LOT J7 ""~ ICO#IUJ WIJJ. '{(){) ro .J.WA>/ WIT// 'T/W!J: FLIE5 SD ;r. CAI./ TAKE .J.NAPT • • MR.MUM I 1 By Al C•pp By Gus Arriola By Ferd Joh11S011 )bU'g LAT•!! ly liMJer Bolin I TlllNK HARD I l ' 'I I I ' l I ' '. • ' DENNIS THE MENACI I f I ~ 0 0 • I .,, ' • • • l ' Q"!LY PILOT ' .. DOG . ' \ Thursday, Dtcembtt 17, 1970 • Full siz• 4• x r ttie9ts • V-9'()ovtd for invisibtl joinin. • Luxurious look - 1conomiC.S priet IEG. TO 1.99 ·' ., ' . lHOW n-21c ITAPU.GUN •Cornes with Kl'Mnwfre aitblchment •Takts 1/4" 1nd 6/16"staples •All chrome tBCk• ' :~ ~ No. 2153 Slt Of 15 ·:at&.:S.95 POIOIA ' .. 12260 655 ''WT'.GAIYR · NORTH MlllS .. l j ·1io('1s EAST ' I • ' JUST EAST OF llTWHll 50."I" ST. • Of S POlllTS lllDIAll.llllL ILYD. AllD AllO'WHIAD . . .... I • Far"'°" papQr.. Am,ric:r.·aatomobifn Limit a- •Full 1·HP motor I s.fety IPPfOved • Gtnenll purpose REG. 24.88 \. GAIDEI liOYI 12662 CHAPMAN ' JUST EAST OF 605 FWY • 100 YDS. EA·ST OF HAllOI f . · ·1 lil"t'Ttl...,.' 10ne-l:egged Soccer P.~yer · ... . ' . . . . ' ' to Joe Dilillio,.:...goali.e-.coacb ,for the Southern Illinois University Socc.er · Club, makes a save during recent· practic~. Dilillio, 37t learned to play soccer on one leg,in bis·native Jtaly. He Jost bis right 'leg ~t the age of nine after·Nazi soldiers.shot him and a dozen otHer children ' during-World War II. He is a>doCtoral student in government at-SIU;- -Ex-Rose Bowl, Pro Ace ·-:-• ~T .._ • ·Recalls Gridiron Glories ' ' •• t;. ~t was the start of ·a new decade .. in a few months North Korea would \ftreak America!s nearly rive years of ·Jei:ce by invading ita neighbor lo the -th. The "British pound had just been 'CievaJued from $4.03 to $2.80. 'In 17 days masked men would pull off .~Brinks holdup in Boston,.getting away With $1 Y.z million. ; Preaident Harry S Truman wouJd "luthorize the production of a hydrogen bomb within a month. Later in the year .~Puerto Rican nationals wouJd fail iD ~ assassination attempt on Truman's Ille. . • And to st.art the decade was a sporting f:vent of major interest -the R06e Bowl . . ' . " ·' . . ·----~--=~--=~w----•. WHITE : ··WASH . . ,, __ __ • • : CU.INN WMIT8 ioolball game between Big Nine (as it )fas known then ) represenlative Obi<! tate and Pacific O>ast Conference tillist _cal . one or those fellows who sparked oruo tale's 17-14 triumph Was to later father ~ member of Orange Coast College's 1'70 ootball tel'm ... ·Mitch Morrison. The dad Fred "Curly" Morrison, was ·~ of ma~y fine ruJlbacks lo come out or 1iie Buckeye lnstituUon the past 20 years. -Morrison recalls his days of stardom as • collegian and later as a -professioOal with the Chicago Bears and Cleveland !Jlrowns. 'l And he ha,s no qualms· about the -. ifferenei! in football now and as he knew L Jn fact. when asked how his Ohio Stale ~team would slack up against the Buckeye outfit' which will duel Slanford t h i s ~ming New Year 's Day, Morrison says 1t.;mply: "We'd gel killed. •! "We dJdn't have any Jack :ratui'n$, Jan ::whites or John Brocklnglons. Our kind of ~.;foetball just woudn4t go today -:""•now ..,.y have more speed and -0verall depth !IJhan we did. • . Morrl.son, Chicag~'s first draft~ choice, came through h~mely as a rookie. He was the-NFL's leading punter and the BearS' leading gro"und gainer. He ·-repeated the latter honor two more lim" before being traded to .uie' Cleveland. Browns in 19~. Morrison played •on .clevtland:a great wOrld championship clubs" of les+55 and he rates Browns coach PauJ Brown u the best coach he ever·played'for. .. Brown gets the most o\lt of his players. He's proved that now _by makinc ·cincinnati a wiMer;".MOrri!On ·sats. MOrrison says his greatest thrill 'as 'a player was the l~ . campaign when Cleveland lost all four practlte girrits, then came back. to win 20 in a row: ' . ' Included in that string wp'.s a 31-14 bombardment of the LA 'Razps in th.e world title collision as otto Graham had a great" finale to hls .car..eer, p~ing fdr two touchdowns and rubnlrtg for two others. * * .. •Incidentally, ~1orrison · calls ·~ Bears' teammate George Blanda ( • ., beiO of the 1970 Oakland Raiders ) arthe NFL's moot underrated QB or the 1950s. "Georgi""CHilas) duln 't hive·coiifiitence in Blanda's signal calling but I lhoaght be was the best we had. And he bad a ,reat ' arm," says Morrison. The genial e1-Buckeye whiz has always encouraged his 90na to be intereated in other things as well as football . And aaya he's tried never to pressure them IO they '}re in his shadow er obliged to try and follow in his rootateps. "If they came top __ today and said they were tired off~ J'd say 'Swell, let's go fishing.' "You've got to love·contact to ao.well. You can teach a kJd finesse. how to block .and tackle. But you can't teach him to be a bitter." , Morrison will be on hand Jan. 1-in Pasadena when his alma m11t1>· h<>ttle; Stanford. And he a d m I t s it'll be·1 a nostalgic experience w I t h meu1 u1 -~• ui Uie day when•he made jersey No. 33,.a IOOgh target to 1top In the lll50 Rose Bowl classic. ' Gets ,_ Punched ' • .... ...... .. .... ••• . · . .. ·•· Thursday, Otctmbtr 17, iq1_o ______ DAl_L_V~· _'1_LO_T_,,,,_• Mouth .=· • ·tn · I' • ,. ... .. • • . 1 .... • • • ... , . . , . . . . ' J . ~· ... ~ .. -=·· A~lter M~lee Er--up'iS~~·-· · ~- ";. ·111~nm PU8ll the lime ,the 111tloll1Uy oecond-unlced bench 1mon1 Pl•i«rtrrom lioth tet.M. ~fficihls Ca1l&me '!lie' Mlrl'llnd ~.i·1111y JOI. Gameeoclal w... flt abelcl It M-70 end "It was like a bomb exploslonJ' aa jd ~ ~y the South C 1ro1111 ~. • U,.t . wW into the boob u the fblll tr1nk McGuU-., ~ C&rolina /_,h.' G•ftllCl/Clal, their eoecb 1ot IOClled, too. ""'"· ''S9me spark set It •o(f IJld th<n ~ ~·Dri...U, the Terpo' coach, wit • "lciln 'lllbock hit me," ,.Id DrleteD l'tllt\daioW.' Jhat ha~.lft«.lllal'' JIUDCllod· ii)' Jolin Rlbock, 1 South who IUflwelf· I bnJlMd cheek ond Up. "1-k hands wlth.DrleteU ·~iilre Car<lln>'piay<r; u be lrlod'to break·up • "All I -lr)'lnC lo do wu to 1e1 hlnr elf-conlinuod. "But be wu vtiy',;;lld." .. fr,bt -pla>'en of both tH,..·lhlt·' peopl •. " "I would like for llOlllebody'lo--ch enqMcl _, Ille lllryland benc:b Rid< AydltU of South CaroliNl,ond J1y how 1111llY times this South ~Ina ,,....., nllbL . Flowen of Mltyland rni came lo blowt team bu been involved in rights crier the '11*'--,.,.,...Geo< c..Jey under the G.......,k buket. Jut hl~s......,,"'l>ritoeU seld..-to caJloolf the'eollep"batteiball lame 1t . 'MMI olficiall broke that up, but &be "There is no excuae ror 1 .team that Collnibie, S:C. wllb l:U loft lo play. A1 Hal>linl erupled •lain...,. the Maryland bu lhla much buUtbaU. lalent flCbiing SpOr~ CllpP<:d Short • ·• i T t . Clay ·Will Retire • Af.fer Next Fight Al;BVQUERQUE, N.M. -Former beavyweiJl>t boxlnc champ Muhammad All uya he's cettini out· of the bolin& busioe:il u IOOl!I u be poUabea off Joe Frazier. ' "Yea, I believe .I'm ,ettjp.' on out," he aaid \YedbeMay. "'l!m·aure I am., 11Ua will be·the climu of my wbole.caner.'' '..Q;. ollo.l<Mwn u ·Casaiul Clay,' aaid be thinkithe bil fillil.of llia :m.11ill be !lie Fiuier liglil, Feb •• Zs, 1171, in the -Aatrodome. • STANFORD -,'ftle Stuford•University Indiana worked ... nor li;ai-!y !Wo hours .,.. llUldamelltals W-y ••t a 11cippy fleld In prepara~ for their New Year'• Day llole Bowl pme. with Ohio.State. Cbach "1obn• Rallton . Aid. work· Oil~:. game plan aplmt· the Buckeyea would come later . Tbtf rainy . workout WU the first after two day• off r• {iDal euminatiOftt. "We are in pretty good lhape, but we'll be under • lot of -to ... in top condition," Ralstoo.f&id. • PHJLADELPIUA -An ll·year<>ld &irl bu identified Jimmie l.o!lil llalTllon .. t of a police lineup u the mu wbo·. lhot Pbllldelphia Eqlel foo!boll play« N1te - " bullet from Ramsey's chest aa aooD 11 the wound heals. • HOU. YWQOD, Fla. -Army football coach TQm Cahill aaid Wednesday be w~ the Cacletl would quit playing Notre Dame. "Yw newspaper 1uy1 kept callin& tht Anny-Notre Dame aeries a if'eat seriea,,. .. told the' Hollywood Sun-Tattler. '•'Great'fOr who.!" , Notre ·Dame' bolils, 1 SW edge ·ln, tho Army Rrjes 1hit. dates blclt lo ltl!, Ar[ny pas not won aint"e COi. Earl Bl~'• Cacletl upoet the Irish 14-2 In 1951. CabOJ ' doesn't have an immediate worry, however, since Army and Notre Deme are not ICheduled to meet 11ain unUI lt7S. .. In recent yean we considered .it a mon1 victory to acore qlinlt liWe Dow," aald CahOL 0 We have a areat aeriu wltb·Navy. But,.tbere ii no way we can compete with NW<> Dmne ond that type of major colkge football ... • NEW YORK -A 10-Nlllld heavyweight. fight ii tel for Jan. 22 in Madison Square Garden between Oscar Bonavena and Fklyd P1tter1011;-bur-Bonavena-.ays he cu't mike~ -doctor'• orders. • when •ihey !la•e,a .,.poi')l leicl. cloil't think it ShoUtd be ·io1eraiea" ... Howard \Vhite score~. '38 pq_lnls fol Maryland while l'om .QWens led South • qt~f:llilla ~~ *8, i •l't., ~ : .'Ille1Gamecock.s we~ t~e:pnly ~team·ta •the'Anc;d>Ucl.J'r'st'T<IP" tw.n1r 1n • action: ' ' · ' • •· Navy beat Georgelown 7&-&9 lp !Ito overtimes. Fordham Whipped .~mbj~ a-tl, Bro w n upended Yale -19~ Louisiana State dereated !fulane IM-7' ii.cl Brigham Young trampled Denver' I~~ ' , 'nM! girl, Tanya Wllllllnl, received ,a flelb wmmd !ram • atray ahol dur)Jll the ahootlng . Incident M~ in Weai Phllaile!Pllia . !!mY~lalon. -of bozing'cl'for~­ llle -. -.the 111.J>t Wednesday. But Wednelday nlfbl Bona .... wd 1n 11uenoo Alfa: KNICKS' WALT FRAZIER DRIVESTPAST CAYS' DAVE SOREN5* Fr•zier Hit 22 Points· to LHd lOl-M NBA Win Ov•r Cl.evelend. ,· -:~ ''I want to ~ve this flgbt since 1 gave my word ·to Mr. Teddy Brenner (Gsrden matchmaker). bUt my personal doctor hu 1dvi1e4 me to rest and fcrget boz:ing for 1whUe, and I have no other choice but tci do Jiiii that:". · Harrilon, 35, wm wa IOUlht on .a warrant chargin1 him with aap1vated usoult -,an,l l!JlteQ' _and ..... n ,with intent to kill, gave himlelf up to police Wecfnesilay, ' · The Eagles' defenaive captain was Jilted ·in satU:factory condition at a Ph!ladelpllia hoopilal Wodnelclay. DoCinn ..kl .they will operate to remove the West Needs 17 To Hit 20,000 . CINCINNATI (AP) -Bob Psltil, Wilt Chatnbeflaint ·Elgin Baylor, 0 1 car Robertson and in t:wo days and 17 more poiri.tl; Jerry West. 1 •• Tbe. W ,Los· Anl'IH · bker l\J•nl will join that elite ·IJ'OUP if be scorts 17 points satunlay in · AUinla. The flrat · lour SUpenlarl ,have tcOrtd st,000 · or more, points In tlieir p1-o,..,,;;,na11 basketball careers · and 'WeJI will bep>me the ahOrtest man ever ·to do it. '. , He.edged z points·c•to.that magic rout •Wednesday · ntght ·here as the Liken ll<IUDCed the ClnclnnaU Royals 111-10:. • ( DAYTO~. Ohio -Veteran Detroit Tlgera outfielder Al Kallne has been voted the 1970 Hutch Award by major league bueball writ.er1 and broadcasters. · The award, l)XJDIOred by the Fred Hulcblnaon Cancer Scbolanhip Fund Inc.~ ls voted to a ·major league player who best e1empllfles the competitive 1natincta: and character or the late Clndnnati Red:l ·manager. • STANFORD -Richard "E. "Dick'' Hanley, 71, who coached Northwestern to tWo Big Ten footblll UUes, died WednUday at StanfOrd Un i v e r s i t y Hoapllal of. emphysema. · . , He had enlerod the hospllaJ·Dec. t: Hanley · wu Northwestem'a head football coach from 1927 to 1934 and guided the Wildcats to Big Ten championships in 1930 and 1931. He played hls collegiate f®tba11 at Wublllglcln Slate wher• In 1916 be e1ptalned the 1cbool'1 firat Rose Bowl team, a lU winner over Brown. COPS HIT LISTON ·However,. it was the scorinc. rdlouDdlng ·and all-round defe111ive pl•Y or Chamberlain that helped the Lakers break out of a two-game loling strtna to 'record tbeil' !Ith victory aaaJnst II WITH DD CHARGE iosaes,' 'flrat ·in-thr NBA•a-PacHlc----_ Division. . LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sonny Liston , Wilt acortd 35 points, grabbed . II fonner world heavyweight b o a l n g rebOunds and handed off Ii.I w.iN1 champion, wu 1rrt.1ted Wednesday nliht besides biockin& ~eroua R o Y • for tnvqtipUon or drunken driving, the attempts. highway patrol said. i.os' ue•i.•• c1~1"""'' ~ 31, of Lu Vegu, was re1eased, • ,., •,' ont-1>111 HllfllDn 7 2·2 16 V1Mrld1I• 11 1-1 M _... ' . l!rldlMI' , M ' Gr-.n 1 N lf The .pa\fOI said it observed the 214- Clll""*1ilrl" 1' 1-11 • ss 1lnMl'I' ' 1•1 ' pound fl .. "te:r dliving his late model car WMI · ,~ 7-f , " V•ftl.ler 7 J..l 17 a>• Goodrld'I t ~ • Ar~ll>lkf J +s 1' erriUcally . on the . San Bernardino MeMlll11n J 2·2 I HYll't!" • M 11 ' __ I M~::, · > 1.1 1 1.1c11 2 o.o 1 ~way·in ·Eaat U11J Aligt ti.• 11: , t a.• 1 ll:fblnM!I. 1 o.o . ·t. 'l1tre bo1er-hu been invoJvtd in minor ::~ .••• ~.::. ; ,Ar~ 1 ... 2 traiOC vitll1tlons 'in thl put. He . wu t•i. 'MoU 11• Ttt•••, ""1,.., 112 cOnvlcted 'of ... ..t ...... t .... a conctaled weapon Lot A•lta 8 •21 11 :M--111 o.;&111aa .. .ctrrletnM" .,, 11 t• »-1ot' In 1~ after"pollCe'llopped hla auto for a 1'111 ... tlif -Clnc:lnMtl. \.lay. __,..,__ -'---1. Tthl ...... 1, -Lot ...,..... .1s..c111cr_., 21. IVWuP:I ~· A~ -f,141. _. __________ _ Game Fl.-urlshllig "' • World-wide Golf Tour ·" Not :Far Off --Casper NEW YORK (AP) - Globe-trotting Billy Cespu sees the possibility of a wor.ld-wlde profes.sional go!~. tour . "Golf has experienced .a great growth In the i last few · ye&rs-.'' casper said receritty.wben in New •York to'reci!ive an award from Golf Maaazine as the player oflthe:year,1 ,,·~1'.do, feel that ·eventually thel:e wiit be a world tour or some fashion," the Masters champion s lid befqre ,1~ttifig out for Morocco and a game with 'the king. · "He's a good player, and an avid one," Casper said. "He's in the 80s. He's very interested in the game ." Casper'paused then, and added with a smile: "He gives me lots of little tips, helps me on club selection and so on." The 39--year-old Casper had hiB own world tour of sorts in 1970. Ht played in only 19 tournaments in the Ameri can circuiL-wl.nnlngJour o{ them -but played · in 10 other countries. They included such stops as Argentina, Japan and •aicouple of•trips to Europe. '!The game is-really OQuris~ing at this time/' said Casjler, who . erijoyed ',one of his better .st!asops .this Y.ear. In addition to his 1 foqr 'viCtories, hie ·won a b o u t $147,000 -an average of about $7~500 a start -was ·1 e co n·d on the money wlniing list .arid WJ!Ol over ,$1 mill ion for a career. • , Besides the rich· American circuit, which has reached about $7 million in prize money, the.re is ·a· British .tour, a Euro~an tour, a -Far Eastern lour, and tours ln South Africa and Australia. '"l'hefe , Woul~ ·be a nlimber of things that would have lo be worked · ou~ .. before achieving a world tour, Caspi r noted, however. Many would be on an administraU\:( level involving natlonaJ org anization!: ~ And , too, there's r u I e of III Tournament Players Division ()( tlr Ame~ican PGA which requ ires that a.q touring American pro must gel U• permission or Commissioner Joe Dey.t"rr~ th e Ami!r!Can sponsor-before competllt , in a conflicting foreign event. :~ The rules have been relaxed a lllt~J. recent months, how ever. It now calJs.f~, the player to get lhe permission 'flf .U:,1 tommissioner only on any event I~; than two Weeks after Labor Day. 14\' "That's relaxed?" C-: .per laugbetJ "It's harder to get the CommlssioniG appr?val than the sponsor." ~:::: Gatti Leads ....... ~:.a " ""'· ~~ '*~ "" Cards_' Hopes ·! ' I ~I~ PAS.ADENA (~~) .,-Bill Gattl relatively small and not very fast, ~ he's what Louisville coach Le6 r...Jiill. calls "my gutsy fullback." ~ --~ "He's our answer to Hans1''"says ~ of Gatti and Haris Albrecht, Cal ~ (Long Beach ) 5-foot-9 fullback, ;:~ The >IO, 211J..pound GatU and the.4~ r 220-pound Albrecht 9ppose each M Saturday in the 25th edition of :~ Pasadena Bowl. ~:~ I I J •. ··eut r do think we had guya w~ would .. \till be able to play." ~; Morrl!on. now a real estate .co~ullant ·.-ioo developer, was a versatlle pla~er. He -t;age -f;o•~ll ~ .. Doubles as Prea~he149 Gato doesn't expect the pro scouil...~ come knocking after he comptetes.~ti\ college eligibility with thiJ game. :;::: "~ty speed has Improved ," he. ij "but I guiss lhey won't be lmi>l"W with a 5.0 ·seconds in the' 40-yard ~ I'm only >JO. which doesn't lmpreU'~ scouts, either. I don't even think ~ was an end the first two yean: With the :~ct1yes. • He also pla~ linebacker and punted, ; Once averaging 57 yards on four kicks :•gatnst Wisconsin. • ~ Morr1'on had to threaten to qutt· the ·:team before coach Wes Fesler would give ' im a chance to play fullback. But once •,the transition was made, the 6-2, 2()$. ~i'polmd 1petdster was in. , ! He wound up his college career with a ;rreat day against Cal, scoring once after ,~wn or his touchdowns had been called back. And he rushed for 120 yards. HJ.s transition to the proi wu fluid. CINCINNATI (Al') -The b1akelbaU COJch at nearby Milford High School never preaches . to his playm durtnc games or pracUce1. He saves preadltnc mostly ror Sunday mornings. ••r Jry to be objective in the matter," said Dave Cordrey, or the Rev. Dav . Cordrey, whi chever the caJe might be. ''I don't want to.force my reltcton on anyone else. 1 do ·try to emphaalze U111t each boy have a reltaloo." During school days. Col'droy II a sharp- dressing leacher who double• u the ooach ancl -lirlda·hi-u acting ·u c..-ior fer mey lludalta wbo lake their penonal problema lo blm. At other !Ima and ·Oii SUnday morninl, he -'the .a... Cordroy, pastor of the 8all Air Cburcb of Cllrtlt In ktbel, a.lo. " ••rt'r-antque. ~·· no quation about that,'1 he . nkl "It'a like leedlng three lives. lf you conalder ttachlna: ont, coacbin1 ..,. and tho mlnl.ltry one. I bad no uplraUons to,!Hch and coach when 'I Cllnt lo the -,,, but by my - ~ I-saw that I had oomelhing lo offer to Youth in UM!le ways." 'lbe Hartford, Ky., native attended ClndnnaU Bible Semlnuy. 'Ille Rev. Cordrey said that be belie•~• In the oepar1tlon of cb\l?chiancl slit. 1nd thal eatendt to the basketball court. Outalcle of bealMlni end ending each a•me with j prayer' and dltCburaglng the ... of rranlty, he conctnlrates on basketbal . He uld that ''it bas bttn a shock'' for members of the church 'to gO ·to game¥ nd oee Mm yall l to the ployen and aetting·Cl~ht up in1the .action. . "Tbe ·qUe.Uon l'm·asked most often is 'how can youi look, ao excited without goinl over to the oth,et realm (profa~ lty).' rflllt tell !hem to sll n ... enough 'to hear me." . , . Players say they don't reel awkwaht playing for him and they know they can Hlsetw t.helt problem with him like other studentJ do. · "I'm young and they know me,'' Cordrty said as a coach and teacher. "Thal'• why they come to me." professio'nal football." ... J>rO .' scouts haven't tllled t h ~ notebooks wllh remarks on GatU bur~ hasij't gone unnoticed around ;:ibi Mlsso!ll'i Valley COnference. !:!:~ He ii one of four Carcllnals who •alilol unanimous ALLMVC honors this sea joining tight end Cookie Brin~ quarterback J ohn Madeya and defe'fl tackle, Horace Jones. ::~ Gatti has been l.oolsville's No. 1 'lt»a ca rrlcr"'With""" l91 carries for 941 yardJ:;e average of 4.9. ;! ~; I ... !4 •• ', . • ..-.r"""I',-----.....-.--------:------:----------~~~------ • / . lJ>- -~ DAil Y l'llOT Thlll'SCllJ, Otttmbtr 17, 1970 . ~.J.'V Rallies .. :;:··To Def eat -:::" ;:'\.. .. ;qfoe, 74-65 , .... . 4'~·· • . ' By JOHN CASS s~!$'1o. OI "'9 0.llY l"n.t IMff .~ hiving trailed by Q many as nine ~ polnts ln the first half. the Fountain "'-Viley Barons came back in the second :~ h4if lo record a 74-45 decision over the ~:~ peaky, Oran1e Panthers Wedntsctay night ":"~ flrat round action in the fifth a.nnual .. ~ Garden Grove lnvlllitlonal basketball : :: ~am"enl at Garden Grove High. : ~ :;'!'ht win was the si1th In seven times ~ ~ OUt for coach Dave Brown's Barons, who · ::_ riett lhe host Garden Grove Argonauts in :·~8:30 affair at the ume locatioa ",,-torri1ht. r Garden Grove qualified to meet Founlain Valley by takinc 1 M41 first round verdlct from S.vanna Wednesday nipt -. ' : ~The Barona alormed back from a aix· ' : ES:' ~ t halftime deficit and grabbed the ; ; · . for good .ear the end Of the third :· . e:r. ' ; C.tching the Panthers at 63·5.J on Pete · Gerber's lay-in alter a steal at midcourt with only 41 seconds left in the third stanza, the Barons then rolled' up • tG.2 blitz which carried into the final quarter. Dave Lynch, playing in a reserve's ro~. took a paas from mate Ed Pitts and new in for an easy bucket to provide Fountain Valley with a 56-S.1 edge, ill ftrat lead since the early stages of the ,~ •. "'Following an Orange tw~pointer which :,~ thlnp again, the nezt .eight points . :...m recorded by cagera wearing l h e .~llhte and Gold ol the Barom. ;.~ Rick Power sandwiched a pair i )WUhen from lhe top of the key ;. another Lynch lay-in. The Barons' ·: Krlstinat tallied the 1eventh and " points in the Quick 1tring on 1teal : ; , euy lay-in re'rulting from the . : thll (for Orange) Fountain Valley . • : Panthers closed the gap to four t (IMI) three minutes later. But ~ ,,inners countered with a 7-0 string ~ Orange's M center Br ad t -had left the contest with five t I fou!J. .. • bl hands were in vogue for the Baroo.s ~ ~Po'trer on fire with 12 firat half ~ rs, au from hia chosen spot 18 feet '~ the ba1ket at the top of the key . t e finished with 18 lo lead the winners ;~ In the scorinc column. ·~ Lyitch held the hot hand for Brown's FISHER F.ISHES CAROM -&-6 center John Fish· er of Edison pulls down rebound in 89-53 setback against Warren's Bears Wednesday night in Hunt· • • DAILY .. II.OT Pllttt "° ltkllt nl Ktotllt.r ~ngton Beach tourney game at Edison. Bears in pic- ture are Dave McCullough (left) and Ron Jenny (34). Huntingto·n Zips To ·-70-52 .Victo,ry By BOWARD L. RANDY 01 tM ~ f'llet Stitt Thi junior brigade moved to the firing line for coach Elmer Combs' Huntington Beach OUer1 Wednesday night and when the final aalvo had been launched, the t>Mts had annexed a convincing 70-52 victory over Pacific High of San Bernardino. Action was part. of the 42nd annual Huntington Beach Invitational baskttball tournament and the win moved the Oilers to tonight's semifinals against Monrovia with game time at 7 in the Oller gym. Pacific was to have faced Corona del Mar this afternoon after the Sea Kings dropped • 4&-35 decisiOn to Monrovia Wednesday. Jn the other half of the championship bracket tonight it's an all-Coast League affair with Compton and Warren meeting (8 :30) for the first time Ulla: season. Compton de£eated Villa Park, 92-71 and Warren stopped Edison, 89-53. "This was a tough game for us," Combs said after his team's fifth victory. "We stayed with them on the boards much better the second half and 1 think that was the difference. "It will be dif£erent agaiMt Monrovia . They use a pressing defense and we will have to penetrate more aga inst them.'' In the scoring department, Steve Brooks 12.1), Jim Worthy (18) and Tom Crunk (14), paved the w~y and all are juniors on the Oiler quintet this season. Brooks and Worthy teamed to hold Pacific's vaunted center Earl Hogue (6-5) in check mCll!lt of the night. H~iue controled the boards tor the Piralel ·and scored 25 points, seven.at the free throw line, but could never get hla, team bl front once the Oilers began their move. Huntington 1ave up the _!!rst hlta~tl, tied the rount at 2.-J, gave up anolhtr and tied it again at 4-4. Crunk, Worthy and Brook! then hit aucces:i:ive baskets and the Oilers never trailed again, altholJlh Pacific clo&ed the gap to four pointi at 49-45 with 6:30 left to play. ' This time It was Brooks, Crunk and Lee Ordway who .:ortd successive basket. to• widen ~ margin to nine point!. Brclj)~ scored 12 in the closing minute! to put Huntington well In front. · The tenacious Oiler defense., forced repeated turnoven by the taller Pirates, geltinJ the baU without a shot on 19 occasions while giving it up 14 Um!!: •• Huntington Beach hit on 38 percent of it& shots from the floor to 29 percent for the Pirates. At the line, it was 71 perctnt for Huntington and 55 for Pacific. The victory brings the Oiler season record to five viclorle1 against one defeat while Pacific is 2·2 for the year. H..,,lllllterl I Mcll IN) PtcHlc IHI WI~• Crunk Tr.a"''' Wort~y ...... Wtll<t• Ordw•v 111t,i •~ t11lllll• 21~1(1.trlilOtl llfJ J JJ lJHul'lf'I JIJI I 0 I I ShtHlr l J ' 11 JIJlll-IOOut t 1 41J 112fl1Clt•t• 114J Q010$.tul•• 1012 OJ2JRoberlt 1120 "'"'"" 0 • 2 0 "-Id 1011 MOrt n 911~ To•111 Ji n u 111 Tpt1t1 20 11 21 .u IHrt -~ Chlti't'" 1-<u"tlnvtori llNcll 11 u n n -70 "•(Ille; t" to 11 lt 12 -S2 Monrovia Hru1ds Corona"' 46-35 Tournament Loss · By RON EVANS Of lllt Ot llY' "lie! Slt ff What do you do for an encor~e after two previous victors had scorched the neta for 202 points and you take the floor with three starters missing? Coach Tandy Gillis at Corona de! Mar would like to know if any of the Se.a King fans have the solution. the second quarter when John Sumner and Mark Grigsby scored a pair of quick b.askeUi to give Corona a momentary 1~7 lead. With 2:41 lefl in the hall it was 13·13 and then the root caved in as Monrovia moved quickly in front by eight in the final tWo minutes to lead 23-15 and never looked back. Trailing by 15 points going into the finaJ quarler. the Sea Kings spurted brlenY, to close the gap to nine before Monrovia ran off a string of six points to put it awaf; .~ cr.w ln thefinathatf by pickln3up l30! Ed• e 09 59R L ,___...,.~ :~~ 1!~·-m.m°:,\':r :rneak~=--1s_on_lll_o~-~ -.,__ ever-Sa Corona met Monrovia's Wildcats in quarterfinal action of the 4.2nd annual Huntington Beach basketball tournament \Vednesday night in this predicament and after a valiant start, fell behind In the middle portion of the game and dropped a 46-35 verdict. The Sea Kings-were·to"Tetum to action this afternoon again.st Pacific High of San High point man for the Sea Kings was Grigsby with 14 with Monrovia's Willie Jack¥tn __ ~Jso hittingJ4. A portion of Corona·s trouble· came at the free throw line where they congected ' •• Forward Ken fihibata, who fouled out in ~ ffii" middle of the fourth q'uarter, 8dded _10, :: for the B~s. 0111 .... (Ml ,._!t ill Vttley 11'1 ::. ""'• ,, fl "' ,, J 1 I II 511\bate I I 1 IJ \.yncll 6 1 I )l Reider 1 1 l $ G. Gtrbar 1114P.Gtr.,.r OOlOJloower 4 1 J If ICrlltlMt ·~· P IHi K U 12 6! Tartt. klrt Dy Gvtrt'" " . w " .... "-''I" Vtlley ~'. J , 11 ti ,. ,, J 0 J 10 I 4 I II I I 1 1 , 0 , ' J 0 1 ' ' 0 l 11 4 0 I t , 0 0 • 1 4 2 ' :Ut1'14 1J11 -tJ lllt-1• ' i: Cold Shooting ~. ~: Monarch Five \·: ·~Falls 72-60 -~ ' · • Maler Dei High'• basketball team, . : hitting only 31 .7 percent from the field, ·; fell to El Dorado, 72-60, in the consolation :: bracket of the annual Va I en cl a , : tournament Wednesday afternoon. Rebounds can carry a maximum amount of weight on a basketball court. Ask Dave Mohs, varsity cage mentor at Edison Higb. Wednesday night Mohs watched as his Chargers played for the first time ever in their belated debut at the spanking new Edi.son gym. From what he witnessed "'1 o h s probably wished he would've had his eyes closed. The rugged Warren Bears clobbered the shQrter Chargers on the boards en route to an 89-5.1 rout In the second round of the 42nd annual Huntington Beach basketball tourney. Warre'n meeta Coast League foe Compton in the tourney seinlfina!s at 8:30 tonight at Huntingto n Beach while Edison was Jocking horns with Villa Park in an afternoon clash. Compton took the measure of Villa Park by 92-71 s c o r e in a matchup Wednesday at Huntington. In consolation round games not involving Orange Coast area schools at Chaffey ToU..ney Edison, Rancho Alamitos t b u m p I! d Sierra, 96-57 and Arcadia 1topped Glendora, 66-:;&. Warren's domination on the boards (the Bears had a 52-2.1 edge over Edison in th al category I was a telling factor. Edison could only make a real contest out or it throughoyt the entire first period and in the early stages of the setQnd quarter. John Fisher, the &-6. 195-pound Edison center who just returned lo the baskel.ball team after performing for the Chargers' Clf' AAA ch am pio na hip football squad up until last Friday, was iio match for Warren's 6-8, 24~pound Dave Baker. - The latter polled 32 points And grabbed 13 rebounds while holding Fisher to 15 markers and eight rebounds. Baker pushed through the majority of his buckets on tip-irui and powerful dri\'es underneath . · He demorutraLed on several occasions : The Monarchs. of coach Jerry Tardie : were thus ousted from the tourney. : Mater Dei enjoyed a slim lead in the : early part of lhe first quarter. but then .:: the Monarchs went cold, finishing the .; half with only eight field goals in 3l ~attempts (2!1.8 percent ). Rustlers Win , 110-82; : In the: process El Dorado jumped to a : 28-IS lead at the end of the fir~ quarter ... and held a 41-27 advantage al the half. : Maler Dei warmed up a little better in Bucs Upended, 95-81. ~the second half, hitting 12 Gf 32 alternp~ ALTA LOMA -Golden West College ~ from the field (37.5 percent), but so did ran its season record to g.1 Wednesda y -El Dorado. The Golden Hawks vaulled to : a M-37 advantage after three quarters night with a !1().82 victory over Chaffey : and at one point early in the final period College in the opening round of the : had a 28-point lead. aMual Chaffey basketball tourney. ! The Monarchs' Rick Kniffin hit 17 Coach DiCk Stricklin's Golden West : points and ~-off It rebounds to lead . . M . : his team in· both categories. :reammate-lttll;:tlers will now face San Diego esa 1n ~Steve Fritz was the only other Mater Dei the second round tonight at 9:10. : player in double figures. He had 11 . Jn another opening round tourney ti\\, ~ EJ. Dorado's Mike Moors finilihed as the Orange Coast fell to Citrus 95-81. OCC's ! ga rzje's Jeadj.ng scorer with 20 points With . . ' 1 1 !. mdft of his seven field goaJ9 coming on Pirates met Riverside this a ternoon n ~~a line jumpers. Teammate 8 o b the consolation bracket. : · eese hit 19. "Citrus grabbed the lead from Orange ! ater Del finished the game with 20 Coast just four minutes into the game i fie goals in 63 aUempUI. Tardie 's crew and never trailed after that. Tht o-.-,ls ~·ca. eel 20 of 35 a.ttei_npts ($7.1 percent) enjoyed a 47.37 halftime margin, t fton'I the free throw line. •, The Monarchs return lo a<' t 1 0 n Coach Herb Livsey 's Pirates were hL.1rl tSaturday night, traveling lo Santa Ana considerably in the first half by turnovers. ~Valley ror a 7 o'clock meeting . All five OCC starters hit in double Jn other tourney games Wednesday, j FoothJU tripped Troy. 52.50, and Santiago figures wilh Tim Conroy leading lhe way knocked off Brea. 54--37. In championAhip with 19. Steve Mct.fndon had 15, Paul bracket actJon and Valencia ripped Santa Home! hit 14, Larry Goi!lwiller had 12 ahd !:Ana, I0-63, ln CONOlatlon play. Bobby Austin canned JI, all in the first '.; I I..,_ 1721 M•I.,. Otl !•I hJ\f. • . •, -. .. " Ill ., 11 " " i. Citrus waa led by Roy Hickman 's 23 .. ...._.. 1J 41t1Cflltllr! 49J17 ''"W J 1 J t t'rtlr J I J 11 point~ . .; o... ' • ' 1 ic.....,. J • ' ' Golden West guard Chris Thomn.,,,n hit ,..._.., 1 6J•M~ JIJJ t""" ~ ,...., , 1 2 • J . Kllrt' 1 • ' t 26 points in the first half to spark the ;; ~ ~ : ! : :._:::r : l : ; Ru8ll~rs to 11 ~42 halftime lead. ~1 lt...-ft 1 • J 1 ""~ 1 • ' ' Thompson finished witO 33 poinfs, 2 ~ Jto• -;1. ICt,.tfl • 1 o t cann ing J5 of 24 field goal s (62.S percent). ~ T•i.i. ,, 11 u n °W:.i. ~ ,: 1~ .: Brian Ambroilch , playing center for ., .._. ., ---::-;, the Hrst 1lme this ~ason . hit 21 points Anderson had 13 and JO. Starting center Mark Dekker sat out the game with an Injury. The \'ictory was Golden West's sixth In a row, a school record. It was also the sirth time the Rustlers had hit the 1(1(). point mark this season. In other games in !he tourney \Veclnesday. San Diego Mesa routed Phoeniz, 112-95: Fullerton ripped LA Harbor, 74·52. Pasadena trimmed Cypres!I In overtime, 6.1-62, Mt. San Antonio clipped Palomar. 7().59, and East LA dumped Riverside, 71-66. In other winner's bracket games today, Pasadena faces Mt. San A n l o n i o , Fullerton duels Glendale and Citrus and East LA clash. o.N111 Wetl 11\tl ,, " . ,, P-'11 J J I !.) Cr1111..,.ft Ct1.tt1t1 !Ill tt t1 ,i1, I 4 0 11 1 1 1 lS II I J U --.~ J o ' 10 flte-••r A.mbratlc~ I J l 2! loll'I T"""'"'°" lJ I O JI 1-<1~ l•rnH .) 0 2 ' 81llty G••~•"' 1 0 J • low•• I 0 0 I J I S H C1r110" J I 0 J lolO•n J 0 ' 4 I 0 0 2 1 o o r Wiu ' 1 J s s ... 1111 c.-100 4 'M1~n ,00• Pll !I JIO! a-I I 0 1 let•~ " u 1J 110 Tot111 u n 10 ., Ht!lllll't teort ; Geld_. W•1 to, (l'Mtt!ty 4 . (~IHI ,, . W1~•• ,,..,,,11 1-<lc'"lf" '" 5,,.1t~ 0..1l~f0t ,_, Jolln.&IM ' ' . ' " . ' ' . ' ' . . ' o I ~ CN1l ltll "" ,,,.,.,, l 1i(-•Y )JOit ' 11 i.e!rMt , 4 u 4 2J Autlln J l 11 J li Go.wlll.. l 4 J 1J I )0 Mc l """°" 5 I I lJ ''lt(h•r 010 1 t J $nttfl¥ I J 4 ' 1 01011111 e11 1 ,,,, ' ' ' j fO!f l, «t I) " •S f1t1I' " H 11 It Bernardino. . Long Beach Wilson and Costa Mesa battled in a high scoring opener \Vednesday w}.th 197 points poured through the netting. Compton and Villa Park followed with 16.1 between them for a grand t0£al of.JOO £or the two games, a~ average of 90 per team. on only 11 of 28 for the night. • his ability to utilize the glass ba~ds to utmost advantage. (t .. "I dtl M•r (JI! M°"Nrlt 00 Edison shot a respectable 52 percent ( 13 of 25 ) from the field in the first half but ended up with only 33.9 percent In that department for the game, connecting on only siz of 31 in the second half. However, Corona and Monrovia ta llied at between them to cool off the nets considerably. G•19•by sev;er Kllltltr Longllft C1mertin Su,..ner fOTtll 11 ft pl 1, 6 1 J I• J t ck,a-. ' J 4 i s .... .,,. 1 I O J Shepl\1rd 1 1 0 l °'"ltll I 0 l ? ll.MSdll I 4 ! 6 lllyan 1' II ti l.S Tct111, Sc•rt ~., Outrter1 Co•o~• del M•• 6 ~ M011•0¥11 1 16 lg II pl ~ I o J U 1 0 .) u l ' J • 0 0 ] • 2 1 e 1 l 1 4 , 19 I 19 o16 I !2-lS. 1.S I -"6 Fisher was the Jorie Charger in double figures with mate Bill Thomson capturing runnerup honors with nine points. Don Killian, the 6-31.'.11 guard-forwad for Corona, has been sidelined all season . Casey Jones. a sophomore starter, is still recuperating from an ankle injury. And Btad Comman missed the game with the nu. Kin gs Lose Again Guards Ralph Jenny { 17 ) and Bob Sutterfield 114 ) joined Baker in twin figures for Warren. BUFF ALO (AP ) Defense ha& w ...... Cit) '• n Sutll"ll11d ' 2 Jt<inv I 1 81~•· Jj 4 "(l!ln11 l l ldllOn (Sll Pl '' 111 II J 11 Har-" 2 2 2 11 W•IVhl 2 1 1 ll Fl1ller 6 l j ' "'""' 1 2 . " ' . ' . ' " ' ' ' . At one juncture, the Sea Kingi; wert started on a fast break on one of the few occa1;ions of the night and a whistle sounded le hall the action . betrayed the Los Angeles Kings in th~ir last nine games but never has it been·so obvious as in their game with the West Division leading Boston Bruins. The King."i allowed the highscoring Bruins to leap into a 4.0 lead Wednesday before the attack J:Ot goir.1:. When it did, the Kings scored four times to Boston's one and then. when Los Angeles· replaced goalie Jack Norris -.-·ith a sixth skater t.he Bruins scored en inl'iurance goal into an empty net, to win 6-4 . M((Ullougll l 0 "'l"!lt l I s-1 0 2 I T~Otl'liOll J l • I S"'llh I 0 o 2 Sc.l\ollle• o 2 Pt•li;, O Z I 1 S-2 I M<N•¥ 1 0 Tot11t •• 1J 11 •• Totels lt U ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " u ktl'tl '' OVtrlll"I 11 27 11 :tl -19 lt lt t U -5Ji The net was overhanging the rim of the basket in the backcourt at this lime. It just wasn't the Sea Kings ' night despite a deliberate first quarter in which they held Monrovia to a 7-" edge. Hope was re vived even further lo start ., . 1nas1er charge Sleeping Bags 14.95 to 79.95 Back Packs & Frames 12.95 to 45.00 Camping Stove 8.95 • K28 Golf ~alls 12.00 Doz. Sammy Golf Shoe Brushes 1.95 Duck Feet Fins 8.95 Wonder Kick Boards 4,50 Frisbees 95c to 2.95 Doorbar Gyms 5.95 & S.95 Handgrips • Jump Ropes Voit Junior & Intermediate Footballs 6.95 Other FootbaUs 5.95 to 21.95 Basketballs 3.95 to 19.95 Backboards & Goals Volleyballs . Soccer Balls Rams & lets Fooball Uniforms Chal)lpion Hall\fbaR ·Gloves Speedo Swim f(unks For the Beginning Tennis Player A Metal Racket for 17.95 Wilson T2000 Steel Racket Strung Nylon 32.95 Wilson Kramer Racket Frame On~ 16.95 Dunlop 'fort Racket Frame 15.95 Davis Classic Frame On~ 32.00 Pennsylvania Tennis Balls White Pr. Doz. 7.50 Yellow Pr. Doz. 7 .95 Wilson Tennis Balls Pr. Doz. 8.35 T P.nnis Dresses 13.95 to 26.95 Tennis SWP.3tP.rs I ~dies 10.95 Tennis Jackets Mens 14.95 Converse Tennis Shoes ladie~ 7.5n Me~s 7.95 Jack Purr.~11 Tennis S~nA~. Ladies 7.95 Mens 8.95 • ,. . ; :',,:"'::; 11 tJ :~ ~: ~ while for-.-·ards Jeff Powtra and Jim Bike Parts . Tires & Tubes Bicvcles • Unicycles CLOSED SUNDAY 531 CENTER ST,. COSTA MESA H•llllrnt _.,l Cltrut 0, Orl"Ot ColJt V, II. ____________________ _;~--------------------.. .,, • I I --·--------.....,~-:-7"~7C:'r";" .. -..... - • ' ' , Yoiir Engines! by Deke Hou/gate ... Something new is in store for auto racing in 1971 -its . • first All-America team. -_, The American Auto Racing Writers and Broadcasters Assn. ia now ba1loting to detennine who will win 10 spots on the team. ~ · Three each will come from oval and road racing, two from drag ~ racing and two will be elected at large. Associated Press will · report result. in January. -To organize its first undertaking, the :JOO..member AARWBA ·,. has appointed a committee headed by JPP Cadou of the lndian- apolis Star, and the committee has nominated (suggested might . be a better term) 20 American drivers : From the ranks of oval and road racing -1.fario Andretti, Mark Donohue, Dan Gumex, Pete Revson and Al Unser. From oval racing -Buddy Baker, Larry Dickson, Bobby Isaac, Tiny Lund, Roger 1.fcCluskey and Ricbard PeUy. · From road racing -George Follmer and Parnelli Jones. From drag racing -Don Garlits, Danny Ongais, Don Prud· homme, Gene Snow and Ronnie Sox. At large recommendations -Gary Gabelich (world's fastest human) and Drino Miller (off • . road racing champ of the Mint 400 and Mexican 1000). . How does a ~ailed expert tackle the job of picking an All·America team anyway? .ln football, it's perhaps easier, be- cause the big games and important teams are on television. Whether coaches or writers ballot they usually have statistics, scouting reports, TV highlight snows, game films traded from one team to another, a myra.id of sources from which to dredge information. Then the expert makes his picks about the same way any annchair fan might do the )'lb sitting in front of the tube with a good supply of beer on hand. Very subjectively. Today's lesson is about how one AARWBA member mark· ed bis ballot. Two 01'al Racers Automatic Two candkbte1 are au.tomaUc. Al Unser, who Irias to be driver of tbe year, won not only tbe Indianapolis 511 but also a total of 10 U.S. driving: cbampionabip races. 1bi1 feat tied the record 10-race total of A. J. Foyt in llM. Anybody who doesn't mark Unser oa bis ballot hasn't been paying attention. Ricbanl Petty Is the other drlvu who gets the nod hands down. lnjored at mldseason, be bid to miss enough races so be ~ldn't win ~e NASCAR driving cbampionshlp, but be won. 17 of tbe races he was In and dominated stock car racing. Alier Unser and Petty, the dtoice gets tougher. Should the third man be Bobby Issac, 1171 NA.SCAR Grand National cbamp and winer of 11 race1? Larry Dickson, USAC 1print car champion? Roget .McCluskey, USAC atock car champion? Tiny Lwtd, who won 11 race• and the NASCAR Grand Americaa title? Oar ~ot.e 1oe1 to Petty's teammate, unnamed by lbe nom· ,. lnaUni· committee .;... Pete Hamilton. He won three super spetd· · •ay races, including the Daytona 500. He earned $131,408 In one of tbe workl's roughest racing leagues. Almost sincle-bandedly the New England college dropout ckanged NASCAR's lma1e from ~t of a Dixiecrat convention · to an lmporiant national racing association. Gurney Heads Candidate's . List Nobody dominated North American road racing in 1970 except Denis Hulme, and he isn't eligible. So here we get really subjective. ', . Dan GU!'}!g of Costa Mesa beads the list not so much ·'"for th-elWi>Can-Am races 1J one SAi race won as • for the extreme competitiveness he maintained right up to the day be announced his retirement. . In 10 years of watching Gurney race, we can't remem.ber · a single time he wasn't a threat to win while he .was in action, and offhand we can't think of any other driver that statement could be applied to. · · Parnelli Jones who led Ford Motor Company to its Trans- AmeJ'iCB.n championship with five victories and won the Baja 500 off-road race, is No. 1 in terms of results this year. Jones is simply a great driver, and he could go on making ~e Auto • Racing All-America as long as he wants to. However, this might be his final full year of competition, because he has no Trans- Am ride in 1971. Off his machine-like precision, a ronsistency unmatched by any other driver, Mark Donohue wins the Utird spot on the team. Donohue in a Javelin won three Trans·Am races and fm. · lshed seoond three times to keep American Motors in contention all year. It might be pointed out that in two seasons AMC had not won a single race until Donohue came along. Mark capped his season with two formula A wins in his first du-ee starts. Snow, Sox Nominated It's too bad Otis is the first year for All·Americins, as far as the hot rod set is concerned, because we can't find a reason to select the two super stars, Don Garlits or am Proudhomme, due t the deemphasis on top fuel dragster racing in 1970. Instead, we opl for Gene Snow, the funny car king, and · Ronnie Sox, OOmlnator of pro slock racing. Snow, the Ft. Worth. Tex., used car salesman, simply won everything there was to win all season long. Like Sox, he is lhe NHRA and AHRA champ as well as the Supernat~nals elimina-· : tor. .. Sox, the quiet Burlington, N.C .• driver who usually lets his mechanic, Buddy Martin, do his talking, was in a class all by ·; himself all season. Saeage Surprise Drleer of Year We can'l overlook Ute tremendous performance of Gary Gabelicb, wbo 1pent a. montll oo Ute Bonnieville., Utah, salt work- ing die natural ga1· powered rocket car up to 1peed. • To do what be did, finally 1ettlng a land 1peed re.cord of : m.m m.p.h. only minutes before. nin began to fall to dlut · down tlte 1alt for another year, Is so incredible. that Hollywood wouldn't dare to make a movie about It. •: Tltrougb all the frustraUons, &brougb 1 near tragic brake failatt, GabcUcb clowned around, 1tayed cool and re.malne.d dedicated to Ute job: At times when odter drive.rs mJgbt ·have walked away In dl1p1t, Gabellcll remained ao ulbulia1tlc be lasplred bis crtw. ' ' Our llnal selecUon may come as 1 1urprl1e, because. the mu only woa a tingle race all seuo11, Ult Plloeol1 USAC 158. But David (Swede) Savage won pole positions ud led r1ce1 all ttirouP the year. He wa1 the single most threatenlnc driver Oii lbe Trani-Am circuit, acconliD1 to botll Joae1 aad Donobue.. JV Results I I Tar Five In 73-70 TWlllll 1701 111-tt-~ ' Zy ... _lokl ' ' • u Sw1!m ' • • " CrvmltY " , , • M.nclley -, ' • ' Rocco , ' , • Helm , , , • C11T1Pbell ' , ' • ·--• ' • ' ""~ , • • • TOllll n " " ~ N"'"rt Hlrlolr f7U .. n •• " K11m•r • • ' " McKh1111Y , ' , ' '"" • • I • YWM • , , ~ ...... , • • • " Swick ' • • " SchMIMr ' • , ' 0.nthlUMI> • • ' • Tot1l1 n " " " Edison Aces Get Awards Sopbcmore Football MVP: Michael Morado ; Captain: Craig Way: Most Inspirational : Lloyd Jennings; Most Improved: Ted Bauer; Most Outstanding Defensive. Player: Bill Ford; Most Outstanding Offensive Player: Fred Hernandes. Fl'esbman Football MVP: Brian Edwards; Captain : Dave Whjte. BB Dlstrid Frosh FotU>all ~tVP : Mark Eichert; Captain: Ron Budd. Water Polo Varsity MV: Bob Wunter; Captain : Ltt Graham ; MOflt Points Scored: Matt Kroona ; Most Improved : Al •McCown. Cees -Captain:. Sigfried Muhlhauser: MVP: Howard Gowdy; High Scorer Award: Randy Scolleld. Cross Country Varsity -Captain: John McClure: MV : John Weston; MMt Improved : D e n n i s Wll!on. Junior varsity -Captain: Steve Reed ; ~1V: Jon Karroll; Most Improved: Mark Stotesberry. LI Olllllfl (nl f6J) .....,M ... di St\IW Cit ). F Ctl NtllOll Wllltloc.t 11) F !ti HlllOll •11111111 .... U) c llll Sweeny •lld• (201 G llU McC11t1 e_.• c" G -nn e...:1111 korlM 1ull1: L1 Quint• -e.-.nnan 4 G1lllWIY 10. llfllM -Cl'lrl1ll11l1111 '· H11ttltft9: LI Ouln!1. U-JJ. 1111 CMMl!lt 1411 UO U V1lllY Sttffell.on (0 ,. 101 Ot11no Niii (t) F ") Hiii .. 1(-UI C ('I Oltvtr CtmtDrfh 17) G 1111 80¥0tOWtltl ' C)ooJfllllt CJI G 111 Nnl1u .... INSTALLED __ CHAIN-LINK FENCING . .. SCorlM tut11: Sin Cl-I• -Rl!ll lO. DllnMtn. J, WHtffrlll 4. SA VlllfY -h1twlc-J. H11fllm1: S111 ci-ntt is-1 . ••t•ndl uu MIU!tll Vt.ff en) I-!II F llfM•ll IH) ._ Gl'l'ntl' (') F Motmtn.Oln 114) :• McGrt'ffr Ul C Ct1me1 U) • Corottr !II G Mofl!!t 0 1 1: Ferd UU G Mu...tl., !21 • korlnt ~bl: E1l111Ci. -lfOWn s. •llfltlllll• •• -Aftti.n \lltle· -Lldtlt )4, Wiiii._,. "" lt, C1111lleft •. tt.HllfN: Mlt11oft VIiie ~ TIM!rsdly, Dtctn'lbtr 17, 1 WO DAll.Y ~LOT :JJ_ Wilson ·.s~ts:~~<;Qr,d., Mesa Falls, 11~~87 ' .... . D l D ' • Low k•rt l•I ... •:' r. ..... ...., ._ I ,f• __ _:._.__ ... "' r~9t ••• ' • ... ·: .. ' ,., . '.t! Real givin' whiskey~~ .. < . " . . I • I • ' I .. .~ ... • '.I .-. ::~~; . :· " . .. ,. • . SILVERTOWN CUSTOM • 80% MORE MILEAGE --- AS LOW AS slM 7.00.lS bl.e"-' phn 1edenil --ux of $1.96 11ndtra69-ift. BUDGET TERMS AVAILABLE SALE ENDS ·DEC:EMllR 29th, 1970 USE OUft ftAIN"CHECK PROGRAM. B.F.Gocdrich Wlll g9l 'fOU ~·in you Want. Shoukf we run out of \'OUf Iii• during this off.,, wt will b9 h•PPV to iuueyoo a rain check IM'kf • DEEPER, WIDER TREAD • WIDE "78'-SERIES STYUNG • RUGGED 4-PLY NYLON CORD (CtlltparisoM .._. .. ._. OWft loftt Mls.t) lhtul•r .. ,. .,.. Prle. ..... F.E..T. 7.0!>13 25.75 17.U 1.96 5.60-15 25.15 17.U 1.75 C.7S..14 (6.95-14) 25.80 , .... 2.17 [78-14 (7.35-14) 26.85 21.U 2.25 f7S..14 & 15 (7.75-14 & 15) 28.45 ..... 2.44 G78-14 & 15 (8.25-14 & 15) 3 1.15 26.11 2.60 H78-14 & 15 (8.55-14 & 15) 34.15 .,_ .. 2.80 J7S..15 (8.85-15) 38.65 31.U 2.87 Ptkes •boYe bl~. Whltew.ns $3.50 men P"' ti,., . -· ,·, .•' '" .. '• ',•,- ·.-· ... , ·r -.. ~.·. -" ... ' •<· .· '. .-. . . ~ ... :-:-~:-~"""'~:-""";;~·~i~~·~·~""':.:'~"""':::·:·"":::.:pnc:·:·~"":.;"":::::"":.:•:·':....,,:::i:·;...~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...... ' ..... 40 000 MIL'E GUARANTEE BRAKE RELINE $ 95 ~ • EXPERT WORKMANSHIP •QUALITY REPlACEMENT PARTS • •SPECIAL LOW PRICES ' :"' II TM ... Uty 111111!11 IMtlllff 1111 1'W' car •• JNl8llttMI tw .._ • "• i;::r~rt1,: ~ ~ ~=-=:~ i:9 ..::!'r'1ft~ ~-:"t:'.:.~~-::.::J .. i.r or dDN •rtrtMI ltfYlct. JONES TIRE SERVICE ' 2049 Harbor Blvd. ~ 'OPEN 1100 No. Tustin Ave. --• • 1.111 .... "''"' • f • YtcTO'll"' • ~~ fll ltyl MOH DAV' {Acmt 1..-111 ..... hit Oflktl • •• ~ . • -v J -· , "ll:IOAY ~ ... ALL CAIS ~~· COSTA MESA '-;T .. ~LJ. r.-< ORANGE t9TH ftf' O~lJrt SATUlOA'I' ,-CO&.LIH• ~-~ Phone 646-4421 • I .Ill. lit I .. Ill. Phon• 532·3383 I • MA~l~S D, UFllAVlll' RADIAL TIRll ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS HONORED .. YOIJ/t U'f SHOULD 1£ lflO#lll 0# ,,.,,.. . •• .,, ... "-- ·:·, ;• ·' :"ii ·: .• .. 1 •, , ,. ~ .... . .,, ·THE GOOD THAT MIN : ~DO LIYIS HYOND THIM .... •. .. ' .. . . ' . " ' '1ly fllllY GU.NT, l ... -The donatl~n of 8.11 organ, .s~ as a kldnty or ll11 ~YI! ts >. prime exampl" of rnan OOi.ilg rnntlnuing good. Ar.· llA!ly 11· I' thl' l11st ch11n~ or.snme.:ine to do something jl)!': his !tillOiA' man. Organ d<int.tion knOWI no ,.oonom· ic ba.rriel"9, It t11 th,. IV'l'&t t: .. l'I mm o.n denomin111or l_V,heother s man be print" or !'jiOper he can m!llkt' the same wonderful gift. and In R,qing liO a 1)3.rt of him en- l'I"'"· • At th\J time ol year "'hl!n ~ tht ~plri1 i:>f ;:ivlns: t~ 'o nwcb in our m1nru. consider ~rnafdnt out • donor c11rd or _ f'a.ddini It to your lll;n. The are donort {he gTl!A!l!r tht ~ JJportunltY r 0 r m11tchlng d(tul don.ors and thu& mol'f: !/l~nce for auctt1~. YOU OR YOIJ'R DOCTOR ~ PHONE US .... ·hen you ~ 1 delivery. \Vt wlll d~ Jl\•er profnpUv without ex· -W.: charge. A lt'f'Ml many -1j~qi<i\>r!e--rely on us for tMtr et th needl. We welcome 'lt'Qun:U tor dtlivtt)' Kr'Vlce '-D/J d'tarit aecounta. I See by Todays Want Ads ft11 cluf'l e The "CHIEF" p1d, tn 1qut•'. "The ('()m J& ready, ~to "SQUAW HOE"! 12ndJ SQUAW l'Ot m•d ••• burn· IT\( fl1.mf'. l4!tt lM Pn:>e:· P"'toUI mot.I , fTEE-PEEl t.t0 (cod "MOTEL LAND.'' f3rdl Walk~ "4 Bl.KS'' ''H.ARVEY'S CASINO.'' 14th) NO\V! Shf' Is lonkin1 for a. "9.EAL ESTATE EX· CHANGE" e GJVING A PARn'1 Wllh JI)!.,,. alf' "-111.u.ahttr th1!'1 '"HA.ROY'' YOU HOPE! •• ,To bf. JIUN!, , ,Here i,t: !hf'. aMolutto CURE!, Ocwl't Pl.n•e. , Here's Jn. Itani Htl,p! Ck 65'13. • Shares Sold ·---·~·•M•~·- 1,, -'4 Sll!IC,.m 40 ' l•i.. .._ .,. s...;,o I '" " Slb+!.io St1nO Pf22J " 711,,_ -h sunbo1m An ' 31111 .. "' Sulld1! nO • ' N Svnch 1>13 5C • l•'lo +t funs.: M Stb • ti~+ \II UP 1!u I 0 • .... , .. ., . .... ~. "" 'l" " ,. 41>0 "" " ,,. " • Dtctmbtr 1970 DAILY !'LDT . -. Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ,. .. NEW YORK (Al') .... Women have llbtr1ted ~ bastion of maleneu -. tfit New York st.ck Exch~ Ele""n 1Prl -clad i!!'Mio ""10Ckl madt thetr debiil: c the trading floor Wed....i.,, Girls were~ pages dunng and lmmed.lif!ily Ill.er World War 111 ~ ' otherwl'le tn ibl 17lt"'r hi•lory Ille ticbJnge 11>'11911 only boys Lo NI mesaafl bet.ween brokera. ., ~ ' ( \ I ' .. ' • ' ':·;.}lfrds of a Feather • : Gulls gather near Newport Pier lo feed off of large ~: school of bait fish that wandered into shallow water. -Scene of teeming wildlife so close to the shoreline DAILY "ILO'T l'Wt .-, l., l'tftt lt:r ... captured the eye and the imagination of beachcomb· in& photographer. Vietnamization Slipping? Cli~ging · Diet Aid To Heart LEGAL NOTICS LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE l'.nnt NfMt ClUJl'ICATI! o, •USUllll, Cl•Tll'ICAT• 011' IUtlNlll fl4'SU l'ICTITIOUI MAMI "',''''°"'' M.f.l!lll ... .. I Cllfil'tCATI Oil au11Nlll ™ un6e"lt"" ·-urllfY ..... CW\< Tiii untlt•l l ntf deet '''111~ I l'ICTITIOIJS Mt.Ml $1(.tl-1 -.i11 ... u 11 )1 tt ll'lt<« A,,.. «WMklelt.... I but!N•t II di W. ltlll,. "• I -~-It\ 1..: Ctift M111 C1lllornl1 vlldtt 1111 TM 11"""1""" 4091 <•rlll\I lie II ~ COlll M1M, Ctl!lorll I, u._r I litllllou• 11r:.-I'll"'' Oi MAC AllT lluctl"' • lt\1Jl11tt1 II 16'11 1'.clllc '''" tltlout Urm Mml Df 1!~0 ''"' '~·· wit l'll!NTtNG COMPANY 1fllll """' w l4 11,.,,., Mwr .. ~Ml 9,tdl, C1Uforil l1 tCl1d, fl....i !1 _ _..ff l"t t.tlewllll Nr...,, JI cwn~ ff ~ follOWll'lt Nr...,, 11Msr tM tlctltU llMI Ill-el COAST wflllM Ill"'' .111 11111 '"'° itl•(I ff -lden<I WlltM....,.. ill NII 11\d IJllCt Gf -~ CQHfACT4,IH&-C:O.-.-llltl.Mld.Jltm Jl_j• t.tlew!.!, . . .. •TII ,,,_ Avi., 11 11 to11ew1 · 11 cwn-..i ol "" tOllitwl"'f .......,, 81hr1,.. ""'"'•" ••• Jtl>n , .. N.c!Clflley, ... Httdl"'f Wey .......... Ngll 111 tull INI ltlact -rulidtllq C•I• MIN· c.111. t26H. Ctttt ........ 11 11 lollowti 0. ... N-btr ts. ltN Dtltcl Ole 1, lilt Sh'"'" '· Down-. lWS S. ,.clflc ''"''"' Mafllyl Jotlll." 'Mcllni.v Aw-, ... 0. &tx 'ff. '21. SUllNI lltlt of Ct llferlllt , 0•1-C-"'t NEW YORK (UPI) -A ''"'" c1111..:nlt. O•t-COllllty: ·-"· Ct lllor11l1 te11n. °" Nov--"· 1110.'°" ~ ~ ... Ch••ge 1·n the na11·onal d1"et o.. o.c. 1•, 1no. btklr• ""· , Net•.., 011t0 lrMV""bt' 11. 1t7t. Nott.., """tk 111 •NI •• ~..: ... , . . -"11bllc 111 1nd for ield Stilt. WMlllllY ''""""' "· Oown1, 0.0. ~I.... ..,Hrld ••h••"' Mtlll•• now one of the highest m the 111111&u...i Jol\11 P. McK111111¥ tnowt1 to..,.. Stti. et c1111ori111, Or•"'' C011111Y: tl'IOW11 to ..,. 1°.,."' "' ,."r"i'1t1i .. ~ Id ed in f t d 111 bt !ht '''"" WhOSt 111""' 11 On Nov...,ller t1, Mol'O. btfort ll't, I "'"'' 11 11/bterl lo I W 11 ~ Wor meuur a S an tllbter\blld lo fM within Int!""""'! 1.,. Nolt.., "llbllc If! Ind tor Uld Sl1lt, 1lrv,.,..,1 l fl.d Kkl!OW\ldt.0 M tKKllllf cholesterol ..... could lower the 1<:Mt ... lld9'4I 11e ••Kut• th• 111M. "rton1llv ,_,,.,, ''"""" '· DllWl'lt ~ s•""· Ll . (Of'l'ICIAL Sl!ALI lllllWft 11 '°" la ii. In. --~M (0,,J(IAL SEA rate of heart disease m ~ MAfCY I( HENfCY ....... 11 _,lllc•llltd ,, ltw wltlllll Ill• Ml.., •• ,~ ......,,.,. United Sta.tea by 10 much ... Hott.., P~r.11c • c1llforN• II•-' 11\f t«l'IO'llO'lldMd '-111tc11i.t Not•rv Publ1<<11tl'l!l'ftll """ "rill(INI Offlct 111 1111 """' ltrlllChNI Office lft 30 per<;ent a panel ol medical O·-· c-IY ISEALI Oft .... c-b ' " , ....... ,u .. E •I n Ntf'IOI E. Wnl My C-ml..iooi f-.lrtl experts haa reported. ~ ,,., ,.,, ~ ' Wo11rv "1.lbllc ,.,,11 1. 1m I• "ublf-"*'. Ori .... Coe1I tl•11Y P iii!! My c ....... 1u1or1 fllllfn ,...,.,,'" .... O•IM• co11I Otll'I' !'net They recommended safe o.cemi.... 11,.,,, ,1, 100 •1'111 Jin111,., 1, ~Y io, 1tu N11V1"'11H 26 11'111 Dlc•..,blr J. 1t. 11. and reasonable" changes in nr1 1J.1t.10 v1aTu1 • 1cM1c1t: 1•10 nn-11 J--------------I A~n II LIW Ame r icans' eating habits to ·LEGAL NOTICE "" w11kllff or1.,., Suitt Ht d the " Id . " f i "''"'"" &IH~, Cllll. '26'1 re,~ eb em1c 0 a· c1aT1,.1CAT• 0" IUllNlll. Tll: OHi Ml•21MT..W11 "·*""M ta .at.tac . "ICTITIOUS NA~• "ubll1111d OrtMt C111tl 01!1y "llOI. ClaTl,.ICATI o" IUllNIS .. Of a m llhori people who suf· llte -........... °'°" Cff11t¥ "' 11 0.C.tmblr 3, , .. 11, T4, lt70 ttJC.19 IJICTITIOUS NAMI f bear! I i._ • •kl. (....,IKllM • bvllllt~I ti lllCI l'tllMdtl Tiie lllllk~lflltd ff ct rllh< 011'/ .... er a t.aca.:i In u..., coun-•d.. S.ntt A111, (111""'1111, ulldtr tlle LEGAL NOTICE cOM'l.ldlll• , bllli.... ,, 1'4 PIK1nl11, try each year halt a million tlctllllllll !Jr"' "'"" al Ortntt CIMlnlY Coil1 Miii, C1llfornl1, 11f'ldtf tti1 fle- d le t kl --·· th" d f th Lll'lllSCIPI .. ltl111! SUPPIY •114 '"'' ••Ill SU,.l!ltlOJI COU'llT o" 'TM• llllo\ll ll•m "''"" al •A•E l!Ai,Tl4 qu c y, 411U a Jr 0 at 11,,., Is com--.1" "" follewlllt --· STA'TI o" CALllJO•NIA "Oil 5Ull.l'fl0ARO$ Ind lllll ltld firm 11 ~ group i1 younger than 65 years .~,:iT.,':.~:1" "'11 '"' ••.c. °' r..idtnc• TMI couNTV o" o•AM••, ~ cir 1hr ie1now1.,. "''""'' whott' old. L11e1• c . Wt!I Jr .. ll:Jll Pt!!1tdH ltd., CHI N-• 0 mn ::~.t.::s~ll •nd •l•c" ., rt1l4l1ne1 ~·· S1nl1 lon1, Ct lllomlt. SUMMo.NS IMAJlalAOIJ Otvlll stew11 l(tr1h1w, 31$ 1Jlth $!,, "Premature death fr om 0.1..i ,,,,.,,. 111 '' 1111 ..,,,,1.,, of "''"'°"'': Hullll"''°" finch, c1. """ wn111m L c W 11 Jr MILOltEO &EATlt lC!: SMITH, tnd heart Seizuret OCCUfS three Stitt nl (!fi:0,.,.·1,, Q,, ..... ~ COlllllV: llftlllOlldlnl! WILLIAM 'NLER SMITH. I Ylrl, l1f 1Jtti 51., HU11ll1111M 911eh. limes as orten among m en as °" CHc. 11, nit. btior. "''' • Not1rY Ta "" tce~t: WILLIAM TVLElt t:;.., o..::~ 1, ,,10 "ullllc In 1...:I ff>r 111d St1te, Hrl«ll llY SMITM OIYIO 51-n KenlllW among women. 1pourN Luc11 c w111 Jr. k-11 "" T"t "1111oner 1111 111111 • H!ltloll 1;1111· ,....,1 w1111.,.. In•• Th d . I la bt '"' ··-""'°'' ....... Is .Ubtcr!btd ctmJn1 Yllllr .... r,11 ... You ""y flit • '" ~ c II'·· II Or ~ c-~ty · e me ICa m en, 8 10 thl wllhl11 ln1tru1Mnl I 11 d wrll!e<"O rHPOllll within lhlr!y dlYI ol tlll I I "" I ""n ' ,,,... ""'' ' I d tt f ded t ( I dllt !ht! lhll "'"'"'°"I 11 H"'ed Oii YDU. Cl\ 0Kt"'blr I, 1'10, ... ,.,.. mt, I e era y-un pane o 15 •ck-ltoe11..:1 ht ••1c111tc1"" 11"'•· 11 , 1111 1 1111 1 wrllttn ,,1..,.,11 No••,., "111111c ln 1r>e1 tor 11\d srete, f d . { d (OFFICIAL Sl!!:AL) 1111 D "''°"ally I P_, ... Otvld Sll VI " experta rom me 1ca Jln M1rv I(. Htnrv within 1uc11 11m1. Y011 r d111u1t "''Y bl K•t1lllw •l'lf ,.1111 w1111,.., flv.,1 11_,. In ti r S in g & 0 C j e t j e S Noll.., "Ubllc-Ct llfor11l1 tnltrtd Ind fM caurl "''' tnltr I Judi · to "'' le ... fht Dl<IOll.' wtloll llllllft t rl I'' ' p r I" (ID . I 0 I! I c . I 11. men! 'OllltllllM l"lunc:llvt or etl>tt' onStrl SUbKr1bld ,, tlll wllhl11 \11sl"""""'I 111d recommended action to curb °''"'e c ...... 1v e1w•um1,,. •••111t111 ot ••-rtv ............ , m -ttdttd thtY 1xK11"4 lM """' the "three mai·or rtsk factors" MY c.,.miu ion h•1'" ,...,_,, tl>Ud ""todV, clllld w....i. •1· co~,ICtAL SEAL> Nov. 1•. ltn _,,. '"'· '°'''· ll'ld _.. tthtr "'11"' JEAN L JOBST in artery and heart disease: O:C~:~17 °;:n;~ 1~:s:nd 0t~::i~~"~' 1111"'::. ':1:•.;1'!!Y ,/:' :l:i., •• ,1• Nal1rY P11111rc: • c.111on111 h igh.fat diet! high. blood 1tn ' ' ' 215t-'9 ,_,, I• 11111 m111tr. , .. ....,.Id di .. "•l11CIP1l Ofllct 111 • • r · '"""''"' " thtt , .. r wrtlfN ,..,._, If Ori"" CounlV pressure and smoking. ,,..,., .,,1.,. 111 flied'" 11-. Mv com ... 1111o11 Ex•lr .. LEGAL NOTICE M1•ch 1, nn The group said the tobace-0 oited S..ttmbe• A, 1970· l'ubll tllld or1n111 coe11 011iv "11ot. industry should be taxed, to NOT1C• O" IMTINTION TO IHOAO• l$EAl lw. E. IT JOHN, Clt'1o 0Kt ... btr la. 17, 24. 31, 1'10 ~70 provide funds for s moking ~"'1v1"•NA1:011S•LI o" ALCONOLJC ~~le• M. co11"''"' LEGAL NOTICE control programs and o.ce ... tier n, 1t10 ""••t11 • st•LV · . TO WHOM IT ~y CONCERN: ATTORNEYS AT LAW treatment, and finally put sublKt 10 IHuenct al "'' Uc111s• Ill '"'111 M•I~ st .. luff•• l'.JHJ1 through an "orderly phase '"'n"' ,.,.., ""'le• 1, 1>t•etw 11Y111 11111 s.1111 •"'· c1Hf9t•I• ""' C••Tr,.ICA'TI o" •usn•a•s. 1111 ufldrrt,ltllld ..,_, lo sell l leol'lollc T11fflleM: (nt) S0 .. 1 'ICTITIOUS NAMI out" to eradicate smoking as a bt••••••• 11 '"' ••1..,1us, 1111crl1>1<1 ,, Ati.f'fll'IC•I .., ,..111i-r Thi 11t1c1t<1!1111'd dot• u rtlfJ.,. It '°"" " . , " laMawo: 1'11bflth..:I O•l r>tt CO.Oii tl1lly "Itel, dlKfllll 1 llul1rwss 11 1607 N. lr11!1I St.,. national habit. 1i..n1 W••t 1911! st"''· cos11 M111. OK...,btr J, 10, 11, t4, 1,70 U"·" $11111 ""'· C1t1torn11, uncl•• lht ncttfl- R<garding fats cholesterol "11rtu1n1 10 •IK~ 1n1en1I011, th' 11rm ~,,.,. o1 TAXCO •rid 11111 .. 11111..,, ' · unc11r1Joned Is u111~1no to lllt Ota•r'"'•nt !J eornPOU<I 11 fll• lol!owl1>1 P1no<1, and blood pressure, l h e al Alcoholic B••tr1111e Cantro1 for l11111nc:e LEGAL NOTICE 'ffhot• "'"'' 111 lull Ind pltct ol f91idt'Pl(.I h · · ·d h bod f by lr1~1fer of 1n 1\coholk bl•1r111r 11 IJ tenow1~ p YSlCUlrul Sal t e Y 0 llCMH (or llcf!flHt) tor these 1rt..,lt11 fl Btrl'llrd &l•Oll, 1601 N. 8rl1tol St., &eientiflc evidence .does not fai~: SALE GEN EA AL 1P 11 b 11 c ,.,,,,, ::".~~ ~~:t,. ,, itJt LEGAL NOTICE Include enough scrutiny of the p ...,, .. ,1 <••Tt,.IU.'T• o" •usotiss, Btrn1•d ••ron NATO All. R . . Q . N. ' p l ' . IJICTtTIOUS MAMI St I of c lllor J Or CountY · ~ u.wJll Ii Ii attacka and hardening Of the 11•ottll 1t 1nv ofllc:e of 1111 Oe1>1 rt1N~I ff d$1Kll::' 1 1 'j111111 0 1 1~ 17,"',,f!!!.""1 .~!" "ulltlc In 11'111 lt>r u ld Sll!t, IN""'1111Y Ins lllQlng ltestwns on •xon s 0 •cy SUSpe<:ted connection to heart of~~ 1':;!~'~71,to,:;:1e:1111111: 1~,';,~1':: T ... UN:l1ral1111td dot1 c"lih" M IJ ~ ~ orc..'t, 1~~: .,;,,~: "'" 1 •Nnll"Y . Akol\ollc 11ev1r111t Cor1tra!, ar by ..,,u 111 t.. uni"' "" ttc · 1 "'"' 1• v. ... tr 111-r..i ll1r111rd ll1r6" k-to ""JO ···•ll!!'lr::==::=·· -a;,. arteries. They asked for a ,,.. Dell••'"""'' o1 Akahollc II••••••• ',"',o'",',",1au1 11rm,."',.~ • 0MORRl~N bt !ht "''IO'I wh1111 11'"'' 11 1ublcrlbld By nn ART BENSLEY mounting • n y significant American ground forcea. back bombing the North followed by 1-g te m k g ( 1· al Control 1)15 0 Slrut S1c.tl mlf\IO M .. MA " 'INO c . llld "''t le tht wllhl~ lntlrument t rid ICkl'IOWltd!!i· V" r r P• v ram o na ion ciiuor~I• tSIU itill"' 11,~uncii ler d111>lii s•ld fir"' 11 comPllled el the 1ooow11>1 e11 ht nKUted '"" wme. '' U•llM ""'• 1111wu~ offensive. into C..mbodil. Any assistance only a few weeks an reaearch into the Americ an 11 ••avldld by \1w. '"' arem1w1 ,,, ,,_ ~;:~:';:1!, n:,;:..!~ tuu •nd 111W1c• DI tOFF1C1AL SE ALJ • d" t d . th t' Llc:MIH for l~t ••!t ot 1lcol>ollc . M.l.ltY I(, HENllY' WASHINGTON -President Now, however, intelligence for !hat country is supposed to .administration statement that 1e an , in e mean 1me, brY.,,111• T"' 1or ... a1 ver1t1cat1011 m•~ aryin MDrrl""'. 11111 Geldeft wm Na11.., PubUe . c1111ornl1 -.~·on said ••s threat to 21_22 these ''Suggestive'' changes bl oblllllld fr""' 1ny nlfl<• of me ~i·,!11~~=re;~~1o Pr!Pl(.1111 Ofl!ct 111 ~"'"" 1u report.I tell of relatively heavy be furnished by South Nov. attacks on t ••• ,, t 1 ,, ( DH1rtrnto"1t. 11,..,,n Morrtio.. or1111• C1111n1v -·-· bombin· g o• North ins••Jlations the re untl uie cone us ve resu ts Rlch••d It:. sur.1u s,,1, of ci u1orn!i 0,,.,.. CllllnlV· Mv c°"""1111on Exal'" ,.,.....,,,.. r Jnflltratloo south along the Ho Vietnamese trOops. But the .. were in -...i cts P11t>th1•td or.,,. cae•I 011tY Piiot. • · Hew. 2" itn p ....... u • Olc""IM!r 11. 1t10 tlol1·111 o~ DK .... bff l, 1t70 btfert ..... I P\lbll-""' 0.11191 Cotti l!lt11Y JO!lof, Vietnam if Hanoi increase3 Chi Minh Trail in Laos since with d raw 1 l o I an y retaliation for Communist _ 1 A~• consumpt"ion of fatty• _____________ 1Na••tY Public 111 •11t1 '"' 11ld s1111, o.cem.., 1&, 11 ,,, ll 1t111 2JOl.7111 ~ ,. H nonttlv 11•H••td Irv•~ Mo•fl-' ' • : the level of fighting in the the dry season began in considerable number of these I i r I n g o n u n a rm e d meats, egg yolks, butter, LEGAL NOTICE ~= 1~ ;~:1e~T~ ,~n· 1:~thl~ LEGAL NOTICE :south was necessary to insure October. And the N or l h from their present holding reconnaiuance planes. bacon, lard and baked goods NoTiC• TO c·11101,0111 11•u ... 1n1 11>d •t~nowl..i,.., h• tlKultdl------------- ( and dairy products which have SUl'1E1t1011 cou•T 011 T111 the '"'"· "..Jt'" continued w ithdrawal o Vi~tn.amese hav~!..8,.!L!'! __ po!lilions In South Vietnam -Defense Secretary Melvin ST•Te: 0 ,. c1L1 .. 011N1 • "a" (OFl'1C•AL sEALI c••T1,.1cAT1 o, 1u111111s1 : American rorces. butldmg up a m. J 0 r R . Laird on Friday told high levels of satmaled fats TH• COUMTY 01' Oii.io.NG• JE•M L. JOI ST ,ICTITJOUS NAMI would provide a major 1etbtck and cholesterol N•. A""" Nat•tY Public · c1111or1111 'Tllt vlldtnt1...., 111111, certln< ,111 11 UW>o This went beyond previous headquarters and supply base congressmen that all U.S. De t · 1 1 ( Ett1tr af EDNA MAY' Ll!!:E. Otcl!"llH. ~;~~=·~~:~· 1" 11uc1111, • bo.111riess ., 711115' s.n11 A111 • auidelioes and, naturally , has in southern Laos i'ust a cross program. troo,.. would nol be withdrawn -ve opmen o eaner NOTICE ts HEREBY GIVIEN "'tht C'l'f"' Mv comrniuion !:»I•~• Av• .. s.1111 •111, c1111ar1111. _,,, ""t10. •-: d the 1· beth Preaident N' ' l .,... meat animals by the meat dltor• e1 "" •1111¥1 "'""" 11~1 1~1 M1rch t. t•n 111111111 11"" n•""' 11 '" J.'• cotl'FUIES ra1ae ques ion w er the border from the narrow llOn I o P from South Vietnam until . . . . 111 1>1•110n• ~•vlnti clllm • 11111111 '"'••Id ,.11blllhed or1~111 to.oiro111, ,.1,o1, '"" '"'' 11rc1 "'"' 11 c-1tt1 " '.::l th e ' ' V j et n am ization" neck o{ northern Sou t b adYisers have complained American prisoners held by dtn~ustr~nd' and"1n1t~~Uvles by the ~~~!,:;;.r~=ri•.a 1~1 ~htlh';;ic:1:; Dtctmbtr J, 10, 11, 24, in• 22J4..ni ~~:;:';' ,::r:.:c:.-;~ ~o~::,,•," 1\111 • ,------...,, .. .,.11m ;--under--w ·h-i·e-h---y1eura . tvate1y -ro e wsmen-ttuit ano an -NOrtll tet~ a1fy 1 us ·Y .., ower or..,,,. c1tt11ett,...,i....1n11lltd GDWt. or ta ,.:.:,~~ir:.v:iie~~'°.:.... 1'3!: F1rnh•m. Saigon's forces are supposed Gen. Creighton W. Abrams, lt)ey cannot under11tand why were freed. This was the flrsl eliminate saturated fats in its =~~t,1, ;:·~ 11!~~~,,.!,•,, ~~·,:~:: LEGAL NOTICE 0111c1 OKtmblf t, n10 •to be taking over m06t o.f commander of U.S. forces in there is so muc h au1picio11 of time that r elease o{ the products. 01 he• At1a•11tv. T"""'•• M. J-•· 1501 , ______________ 1,,.,,-',','1 111:'..'_A0,·.00'f·.c:,•,,_ .. / d 11 d I f l w111cllfl Dr\vP, 5ullf 1 umbtr lJCl.1. ,,. ,_,, ~· ·ground combat, is really Vietnam, is said by Pentagon the administration's projected prisone rs had been injected as e era aws an regu a ions 0 N"'"''"' 11e1~. c1n1ar1111 tM60, w111ch 11 •A• m• 0n OK. '· 1•10, blfar• "''· • N .. •" _working. officia l! to have asked military aid program for a condition for w ithdrawal. -Revision of federa! laws ~~ ~~11~:,:•:.:!~.!.0~ ";"' ... ":::.~•;':.t; ~~:~:•:: c~t~:;R:r,, :~: ::!~~.:in :~w~ ~ldG~!:~ :e,:•1:: Th~ question has been President Naon to delay any Cambodia and concern over Observers were led to wonder and re g u I at Io a I to ~ctt1en• .. wnhl11 1111ir -•ht 1ner ,.,. 'THI COUNTY o .. o1t•M•E me 111 be ,,.. "'llOll wt.ost 111"" 11 ' fat l t f foods · for•! 1t11bl0('.1lkwl el t~li nol!e1. Mt A-41tlt wl:tlulbed lo,._ Within lnS11111n1nt IM .... raised· not by the usual critlca more troop withdrawals below Nl1on's threat to resume what other amendments might precise .. con en ° . · 01ttc1 Hcivt ... i..r u. n7111 1110T1ce: o, tAi.1 o" 111AL ""~ •c--1""111 s11t ••.cut• lh• 111M. of admi11lstratlon Indochina the 343,700.man level reached bombing or /iorth Vietnam. have been made in the also. r~vision of cert a 1 n ~;~r~~ir~~,cr•Y r.,1~,!iY ::":,11 •:;·~~ •t;.~dl•nlhl• " tOF1<ic::~,.,5~~~1..,tY' =policy, who have concentrated this week . three weeks ahead What they apparently fall to administration's pre y I ou a regulationa that pr 0 h 1 b.11 a• t~• E1••1• cl Rav H. N1~1 ... ur1 11111 c1ra1 M. N1~1· No•••v Pu1>11c-e11110'"'1 •on char ging that Nixon is of schedule. Abrams wants to underaland is that against the announcements. · producers' attempts to modify :!'1~h~,~~!1r~·:::~.:.,1e..:1eni "'~0;.1~~nor;·HE REllY GtvE N "''' lh• ~;~::'t~~1 in ?turning back the clock and hold up on a promised traumatic bac kground of the -Laird's ~latement to a the fat C-On lent. ~:~!!"~tit Jg:iv~s ul'lller111111e<1 wr11 u11 •' Drl•••• 1111to1111 :;,.c;rr.;:1on Ex"1'" 'widening the war. It has been withdrawal of an additional past five yea rs in Vietnam, a Senate commitlM.. that he did 1.11. Nu"'"'' m ~~!a:ndby bl:!ld111C:,';;,1:b1~!.~ c::; .. ~~1,_lhtd 0••1>1• Coe•• Ol ll'I l'llot , LEGAL NOTICE N-1 •11c11. c1l.,..,.l1 nut 111,, 1111 nnd di¥ 91 OKtmbtr, lt11!, 11 ...... ..,,, r 10, 11, JA, St, lt10 tJm.111 ra i sed b Y sever a I 60,000 by May l until he can credibility gap-can begin lo not tcll.1heD\,a bout. the aerial Tll: 11u1 "'·"" noo North r0,..,,, UlllOll ll•nlc s.u1,,,1------C...c..._:. _ __:=.c; t ti. h ( u s d . th t te t ( f be ( II k d ' ,.,,,,, w!lll·l_.ll·lllMltf .. c I LEGAL NOTIC· represen a vts ere o . . etermtne e rea e1 n o emerge rom a num r o a ac s on au r r o u n 1 n g <••Ti,icAT• 0 , IUllNltt, Atttr11tv le!" A..,1 ... 11,11111 ,,..,, 1111ar11 •· ,,,..,,IOll •Y•Oll /r:t ·allies in NATO, who are the danger. r elatively small developments militaryeatablishmentsduring 111cT1T1ous N•M1 P11bli•htoe1 or1n•• co••' 0111v "11o1. :•1:;1~h~,1~i1";:y.'!:'~~::,~~·;:~~"l:i~1-------------- M. d L.: h d In\ · d ·d · ( The wlldtrsl111N 1111 ctrtlh< llllY Ir• Ot<tmlMlr !, 10, 11, 14, 1'10 H.U.JQ Gu•<dl•llsl!IP eslllt hti i c•ulrod ~¥ "..Jt'11 ·an1ious to see ""1xon succee Some 1ug 8 m stralton an does no?t require any a ra1 on a prisoner o war co...iucr1.,. , bu•l~1 11 n» v11 Llda, ·~111r111011 of 11w or 0111,,...111 111 .,.,, 10 c1•T1111CATt o, 1u11111111 ·in extricating the United officials believe that North mai'or duplicit • camp in North VI e t n a m NtWPO" •••ch, C11110·~1•, 11"'°.,. lhi LEGAL N(Y'J'ICE 1h1r c••lll11 •eel 11•0Ptrh 1nu111 1n 1h~ "tCT1T1otn NAMt (-lltllllCl'lll firm n1mt ol PURPLI!!: HAZE Clly cl 0ri11oe, COll'rily n1 Orl"llf, $!ala Th1 lll'lllVllt!Md 41ts ct rllfV ht II .,,._ States from the war. Vielnam is preparing a major Objective ooservers cite the because they had not asked .,..., th11 ''~"' 1~ cM11•<>1~ of1 1~• NOTI CI! TO c•ioiTo1ts 01 c1111orn11. aar11c.,1i•1v de1erl1>H "' durt1n11 11111;,.... 11 211 a1v11'1ldt, Ntw· U nt.11 very r e Cen t I y assault against Cambodia l otlow1"ng 1·te-· wh1·ch worry hun· ~-t spec"tc qu•·u·on to11ow1 .. , " , Wha10 111..,ts 111 1u11 su,.1!1110• COURT o, THI tallows: •n ulld lvid..i one htll l~ttrr11 In PDrl Buen. C1llfornl1, lllldt r "" lk:tf• ' • """ UIO U ~ ' ll>d Pl•c•• al '"111"'Ct ''" 11 lollow1: !TATI 0" CALl,OfCNIA l<Olt 11'111 to: llOVl fir"' "'"'I of USEltS l!RVICES administration officials were Nixon said at hia recent people besides Sen. J. William This caused congressmen to •11•1n0er •I'd s111v Tort11r1 111• 2101 Tiii'. couMTY or: oRANG• Lo• n. Tr1ct N11mbtr 4'1t, 11 ,.,_,, COMl'ANY' 1nd ""' .. id 11"" 11 _ "virtu {I · · f •·• h {d F lb · h ({ ho h I · th M••INf'I Or .. N""1Hlrl hKh. N• A 6114S Oii M1p lhtttal. reca•dtd 111 Book lll, ,,., .. d ff lht tollowlr>g "'"°"' wtio.I' a y u n a n 1 mo us 1n news con ere nce tuu e cou u rig t: ques on w muc e se ey All11 •1'111 Otl!uY Aawt1nd, 211 vlt E , e1 M.INNIE MAY 10vo "'"' l• l2..1J, MIK1ll11110U1 111111, "'"" 1n tuH •1'111 PIK• a1 ldt<tc ll pjcturing Hanoi's forces a s foresee no circumstances th•t -The fact that Nixon had falled to learn by not ~=·;~.~wen oec~t:1!t ' Arcorm1 of Ortnti• cou..1v, s1111 a1 11 1o11ow1. , r• 1 badly mauled and Incapable of would lead him to send changed the gtound rulet for asking the r ight question. A11xind~r Tort>!tt 111 u:i~~~~E a1'5~E1~,"' ..!'.:!H ~°..i~~ i~1~!;; 10 ... SALE : c11h 1 .. 1iW1u1 N=::: 8~1!.~~1 "' VI• Lido ""d• S1Uy Tarbltl "''' Ill "'""'I lltvlllO cl•l"" 111!1111 t"" lnCllltY of '"' Unlled S••l•1 (Ill COii· 011..i Octobll' JO, lt70 ____________ ,___ .... ___________________ MMMMMMJlllM'"'i' ~l•n 111:'11;w' d "'d dKHllnl pre rtaul•HI 10 1111 them, 11r..,111on of 111t Tin ltf!rt:'"I of lrnllllnl Donild It. WOClll . Oll'll ow·~ with "" n1CtHl rY •ouch•"• In tilt olflCI (If bid le bt d-lltd wllh bid. STATE 01" CALJFOJ:IHIA S!1lt el C1lllor<1l1, Or1no1 C111111ty : 01 lhl clpl'lr. 01 !ht i bovt Mll!llld eourl, ar 91dt ar allert 1r1 !Cl bl In -111119 11'11 ORANGE COUNTY• ' , This Gih Keeps Giving To Order a Gift Suliscription , Phone 642-432 1 Here's a package familiar to discerning shoppers along the Orange Coast. It has everything ... a gift for anyone of any age. And it keeps on giving all year round, not just at Christmastime. In fact, we hope you don't wait till Christmas to open This package is filled with ads, photos, features and the freshest news we could find to help you enjoy the holiday season. u)Ai L v Pl LOT I On Oct, 1', lt111, btlort ""' • Molll'Y te artHnl Thtm with tlll llK•HltY will bt 'Ktl•td II tllt afflct ol llYron 011 Oc!obtr lfl · ltlO llt!lert l'L1llllc 111 ll'ld fer 11111 Slut. PlrlClllllfY wll(l'oer• 10 !ht u'ncitrtlllnHI 11 4u !:••I H1l~r1011, l)Oll Nari!\ T-t•. UnlOll &1n-Ntll,., l'vl llc I; l l>d' for llld "tt•tel I ,_,.., Allxllldoer lo S1ltf T9rblt1 Ill, l11~ Sltfft, Calll Mill. Ci Ufornl1 tn71. Sau1re. 0•11111, Ctlllarnl1, 1! 1ny 11"'1 P1r101111ty ll>Nlrtd 00..ild II, wood .i111 & °"""' fe-l•nd k110W11 lo "'' le be whlcll It '"" plict OI bullntll of •~• t iter Ille llr" 11ublk1tlln lllreitf Ind t ,_n 111 me ta .,. t~t ..,..., ......,.. "" Pl•llllll wllalt lll"'fl 1rt 111t11Crlbtd I II I! t J •-I bllort Cl1!t OI 1111 I ' II tt.. within lniltu.....,t 1 11 d uO'l(lttSl•ntd n I ml lrl Mr I "~"" e OA Tl!!:O ~ bf 7 1 70 "'"'' I lllbtc•lbld ta 1111 Wftlll11 In. id<nowltdr..i t ... ¥ t•ec.,!ld tht ''"" th1 t s!•lt al 11ld dKl!'ll•nl. w11hln tCl'llr HloA1tY"'N..(IC.AM~RA ••rvm .. 1 I nd Klt,._ledofed 111 ex.cu!td IOl'P'IC IAL llEAL) , "'onth1 t lltr lht f!r1! publlc1llC111 ff l~\1 Gu1rdl1n ' 1111 II"" I MA•Y I(, Hl!:NltY Mlle•. HALVl•SOM & MAlVIRSOM COtflcli~ll Notirv Plll>llc. Ci lll0<nli 01t9d Novtmbe• 7], 1910. 11111 NOf'lh Tiwtr P1lrlc:lt A Wll1rio I Prlr>e:IPll Olllct I~ Dri ntit County A!lct F•Y• 1C ldm8~. u"'°" ltnk '·~·· HOlltY' "ubllc • Ctlllortlll Mv Comtr>iHloll Ei1>lr•t IE•Kvlrl• ol IE!!&tt (II Ortntit. Cll!lornle t1UI Pr!Pl(.IPll Olllct 1n I Nov 1, lU! !ht Ibo~• "'"'td dtctdtnl T 1 (nll J•l-4:1N Or1119e Cou11tv Publlt~td· ~ ..... COit! 01Uv Pllol ~~~~ t-.~".Aw7~i';!N ~~bl!llltd o ...... C.11111 O•llv Jltef, ~~ ~~~HIM Er1tlr11 I ~~tmlltf 11, ,., ll, '"' •nd J•'"'.::i.:o "' ,,,, nth '""' o.c .... bt, 10. 11. "· 1•7111 ,:J"t.JCI "ubnihtd o •• .:.v. c1111, D.11., ,11°' I COlll Mt11, C1IHerftll tUt1 OtClm~r lf, 11, J•, l l. 1tJe· :rJM.70 L·•GAL NOTICE Tit. 1n•> 60·tH• /Ct Allll'lllY "' l•K•lrl• LEGAL NOTICE l~==-=O"""====-=====I 1"111111,,,.d or1n1e cae•I 0111V "ltot. L EGAL NOTICE NOTICI 011 INTENTION 'TO •NG•Ge: N ..... tmlMlr '' Ind Dtc""'btr l. 1n, 11.r--.;;;"o;""'"''""'""-·1---;;;;.,.:;;.:;;;.;:~---rN TME SAL• 0, ALCOHOLIC 1911 '11~111 1110J~~~11°"0::~·~:·;11J:~· NOTICE TO c••OITO•S I ••v••A•IS .. "' J2111 SUl'••IOJI COU•T o" THI T Wh 11 M c Dtctmbtr II, lnc LEGAL NOTICE LMft '" VA nHlt STAT• o" C:ALll'OltMIA llOll I D om I Y MCtrn: LHG. hi J'1 TN• COUNTY 01' OllANGI Sub!KI lo lllUI MI "' 1111 llctns~ 1'·2tJS1 N~t1ce T• htr.tl~ t lYlll l~ll WliSTS!OE Nt .. lo-411f1 •Pllltd for, llCl!lct 11 htttbY elvtn lhll C:IEaTl,ICATI 01' •UStNfSS TITLE COMPANY, A LJ..,l!ed ottlroerlN• !1!1!1 of JUANITA SUTTON YotJllG, lht UN:ltrtltlled Pt-its lo NII elctol>otlc: ,ICTITIOUI NAM• ,1 truitM, or SIK<•Hor trv1"", or DtcM•HI. I =:!" II '"' a•-IHI. CH!Ktlbld f l Tiit und1•1l11""' -s ctrlif'< \ht ,, con· 111Dtlilutld fr111tff P11"111n! "' tl>t dffd NOTICE IS HEREBY Gllll!!:H to fl'<• :tolii Hlrtlor llCl'llltYll'd, Celli Mtll d11Clln1 t bo.111.,,st II 1611 Ntwt>Gtl ff 1'1JSI 1•tcultd "' 5~t•I G. OtYtf crNltors ti lhl 1bo¥t lllrntd dicldtt>t Pu<lllllll to w.;" 1111.,.1i...., lilt 11\"d,, N•'"l>Grl llt1dt, C11ito<11l1, uf>dfr tlld Pt,."11 J. Dlvtr, "utbll>d llld wflt 11111 Ill r-rt0111 l\eYlftO Clll"'I IM1111! U.. ulldt-.ltllld h toPIYIM la 1111 Otpirl"'•nl !ht tlc!lllCl'll• firm n1"'e ot Nt:WPOlt T ~nd rocordtd ..... n, ltolt. In book tt:U u ld docldetOI lrt •tc111lr1H1 le Ill, tl'lt"'• of Alcohotlc lllV.,llll Control IW 1Huinc:e lll!!:•CH Rl!:•L TY t nd lhtl 1t1G f ir"' ~~ •llt IH 111 Ofll(ll l Jt-cordl-In !flt alllct with tht lllClll•tY VCl'llc"tr t. In lht llfllct ti Oii ori.11111 11t11Ucelloro al 111 rlcoloollc co..,_td al th• !allawlnt 111rte111, WhO~ ol l'llt Coun!w Rtc0"''' ar O"•nw CllllnlY ot tlli' cll'til If !ht l boYt tnl!tled c111rt. Of' ... blvtr1u llctmt for lhHI prtmlHI II n•""' In lwll •I'd •lt(I "' rt•hHllCI II C1llloml1, '"" Pu•wtnt "' 1111 Nt11C1! oi ... _ ... """! :"'"'' wllll ,~. nK•lll .... i lallOWI: 1$ to llow1: Otlt ult 11>d E!Kllon la S.11 thirtllllcltr Y '" 0 ht 11fldtrtl11ned It !ht llflfC'I ON SAL! Gl:NER•L. llON• FIOE 9tltY 51tP~..i1, 411 Linwood Or., rtcora..i A.,.. 7~, lt111 In book tlll •IO~ ~d:~.A~em9", °""'c 1'"•' MCCtCrllo10• '"' PUBLIC EATING PLACI! C.M. 111 or lllkl Ofllcltl Rtcords, win tell, Oii ""' Vl llut!, OI I .... I torn!• Any-dtt!rl1>1 to P•attst tht lswt11Ct 01ted Orc•.,,bt• 2, 1t70 J1n111tY 1, 1t11 11 11:00 '·"'" 11 !ht nart" f'n21, w11Jc:11 h '"-•l1c1 of lllnl11ttt ol of lllCh l/ct~l• "''Y lilt 1 vt tllllHI •"'l•1t 11111¥ Sltol'""' trQ191 entr1nct lo !ht O••"'• Counly thr UN:ltl'lllnld '" t!t "''"•" N rttJ"ln• ti 1nw otllct of !hr o.,,,.,.,,..,, al Stt!I or C1lllll'"l1, 0•1no1 (ounf'< CevrtllouH, loc1ttd 11 1UI Cholc CMfi>r to 1111 t1l1tt OI Hkl llec9dtn1. within ""' AlctohoNc •tv ... •r• c ... trol, ci• 11¥ mi ll to On Otcttnt>.r 7, 1t10, btfort "''" I Orlvr W"'' flrmt•tr Wul Ith sireet, "-111S tntr !ht 11•11 •ulllk1l1'11 of flll• th.-o""""""' ol Ale-lie: lfYl•l•t Noll 'Y "llblft '" '"" It>• 11ld '''"· S111lt A11•, Ctlllt>ml1, ti 111Jblk: I UClltw•>, flOllk•. • I COll!rol, UIS O ~ltffl, Slcrl...,nla. 11trton1HY •-1rtd ltllY lttDllll'll 11 lllt h!ohltl blddll' !Or ctth IPfwllllt ii 01led 0.C.t..,btr 1, 1110 C1lll!>N1lt fSf", 1111"" ,,111'1111 !or dtr>l1I k,_n ~ "'• lo IHI ""' etrMll ""'°•' !ht !!,,,.. al Wit In l1whll rnontY o1 the LM~ l.\ltlon H1,,I .. Ill .......... ldt<d'"' ltw. Tiit rrem!HS •• , 1101 n .... , lt tutllC•lbl!d 10 lh• wU~I" 1 ... U11!ttd Sll tft) I ll ,1,n1, llllt , Ind lntll!'IJI, .~:ec.,ul•I•,,, I R ...,.... Llctnitd tor !ht ••I• of lll;OllOU( 1tru..,•nl 11'111 •~ltftl(I I._ IJIKUltd tonwltYf'd lo 1!111 llOW l'teld IW n unffr tl ld "' W ~ I IMl•H•Ofl. Tiii '°"''el wrUlcttloll m•v l~t 11111•. nftd 111 Ille 11rootrtY 11tu1t1 In 11ld Caun· 00 AL~l'le the"' n1med dKtdtnl lift obltlMll lrom '"y alllct of lhl (OFFICl •L SEAL) 1¥ '"" Sllhl dttcrlbird II tollDWt; ... • •• A. Mc CA.TIN I On>t•lmt nl. MIN lltth MorlOll Le! 7l ol lrpet No. lU!, In Ille clly al llM AYlftlN SAMIO'S RESTAURANTS, INC. Hot•r¥ JOwbllc·Ct lllornll CCJll M .... Cou111Y n1 0.•MI Stile ol C11t1 M"I' C1llftr11l1 "'21 I 0wtn G. Johlltlon Ptlll(.1•11 Olllct 111 Ctlltoml11, 11 Nr FIMI• rKorOtd t11 11D1* 'Tth (11') Mf.1$ .. P\lbll1hld O••nti• Ce11t Ol llY "llol o ...... C111111t¥ Ill a~tt• 1, •• t, Ill •1'111 11 al ""-y "" llK•lrl• 0Kl'!lbtr 11, !tl'D 7211·1'11 My C°"""IHIOll E~11lr.. lftlKtll1neou1 m•PJ, 111 t1!1 Olflci of tht .. !'.."bllshfd Orl llH CO.ON Otll'I' "lief A•ril f . lt11 tovnlY rtc:O ....... et llld CWllty, ,,_.,.,bl,), 10, 17, 11, ltlt U.,M I LEGAL NOTICE l'vt>ll1Md °''""' C1>1st 0111'1 l'lltf AO: 113 Clrtrl 11 .. C•ll Mtt.1. 0tc"""""'" J, 10. 11. u. 1970 tt5"1t c111r. tu" LEGAL NO'J1CE I ltOTtcl 01' INTINTION TO INOA•t Stld '11• wJll be ..,ldt, 111(1 wllhoul1---::::;c;;:c;="':O::;::="'°---IN THI tALI o, ALCOHOLIC LEGAL NOTICE co~n!.,.. w•"111IY• tJ••ns Ill' llfl•llM. NOTICI TO c11101TOa1 I 1•V••Ao1s '"''d1"' 11111• "'""'ion or .,.. su,.1a10J1 couaT o, TM• O«""be' ll, lt1ll l'·JHl• cu..,flrl...;ts, lo sAll1ty the lfldeb!Hllln . STAT• 0,. CALl,OJINIA ,.0• I TO WHOM IT MAY CONCE•N: c1•T1l'tCA t• 01' 1UStH•11 ~.,,.,, bv ''':t :"; 17111c11-::, lht fee THI COUllTY oit oa.1o111•1 I SublKI tc IUUll>C• "' th• 11(•~·· IJICTITIOUI NAMI :. I·~~""? b ~ tu'" • al lht Ml .... , ... '""!ltd tor, notice 11 ht rfblo tlY.n th•I T~r Undtrol•ntll •1 (Utlty h• Is Cflr>· ~:.:,~~· ':,11" y I~~:,.~":~ !~:~II Elltlt •I CAR L O. llAVENS, Ooctt Md tltr u"°'rt!efll'd arOPOHS 11 till t lc:olloUc dll(ll111 • bu•lntn II llJIS D111t S!r111f lhtrtlll, 1f.d In. -•Id prlfltfo.ol of~ MOTICI IS Hl!!:RE&Y CUllEN It ~ bt:"••••H II "" pr""I'"' dtK•lbfd II llld ' NO. '· 0.111 l'al"1• C1llf,..."J1, Ynd" "!!If' ll'CUrM .,.. Wld dttd· t&-wl! C•tdrtw1 -!ht Ibo.rt n•""" dlc:Mltnl I 11111,,...s· !ht flc!lll0111 l!rm "'"'' nl Hf O•NA SU 1'! tJ 'with lf!ltrwtl --I llllt '" ,,.._, l\evlfll cl11tr.1 ... l11tl !ht ttll·A l rhlol, (ClllU Mtll . COM.P•NV I ncl lh1I 1tlt l!rM II Com· M•'rcll. I 1'7t 11 Pl'e\OldHI I~ llld nnl:orn llld dKHlnf lrt rM\jltfd It 1119 tMm, ~ Pu<l<jl•ol lo 1....:h 1111r11ti.t, '"' llllOHCI ot !ht ronowi,,. "'...,· ~· Ot!td 'oK 10 11.,. ' wl"' lllt lltClll•,.., \'Olfd'>t ri 111 !}it otllc• II: vrldt••ltlltd h 1ao1~1,,. to ,,_. Oft>••'"""' n ..... Ill 11111 Ind PIKt OI •otidfPl(.I II ti WEsTs1 01! TllLI COMltANY " "" cllrt; of thl •tlow ,nti11141 Cllt,ltf."" I flf Ale-le ll11Vt•111 C011tr11 for ltov•nc• folfow1: is •tKh Ttv1tu te ,,.Hiii lhern, '""" '"" lllChllrY' Oii orlell11I tDOlkt tl ... al ... 1lcatla1I( HtntY Hve~ Holl"'•"· J'31S Ot!ll 1¥ WISTlllN OEIO COit"°""'" Yflll<Clltn. to tht \ll'ld1rtt1ntd .,."" tfflc• blow,••• llctnH for !lrtnt"l tor l"tH 5tr1r>d tct .. 01111 ltoi..t, C•lll, T!O"I al !ht!• Alto!'111,. 5111.., 5, Frill-!ln. ,lt pr1 ... 1111 I I tollow1: 0 1ttd NftYf"'llt' ?4. 1"0. ·~ W•-H MU~... E11 • 11th '"""'· Casi• MIN, C1l/10•"'1 I ON SALE IEER .. WINI!, I OMA H""' H, Hollma11 Avlllorl ... ofilul' .,.n. which h , ... PllCI of 111/tll'ltll " FIOE ltU&LIC EATING PLACI , '''"of C•Hlor11lt, Or•MI COUllty: ' tnll "" lllldll'llt~td ... Ill .... 11w1 "'"1"1"9 •11,_ dHJrl"' to '"''"' '"" h1u111C!! Oii Ntr"itrl'IMr t4, 111'0, bttol't ""' • to 1111 tllt lt ~ 11ld dklcltf>I wttl!ln four et w.;h 11c1 .... r11 ..,., 1111 • 111rlt1M No11,., Putiuc In tllf fet 11ld 111tt •.. !'~~1 o,'.'~,, .~.&elf O.J1'f,.,""'•' """1111 1n1r 1111 fin! PUOttci t..., o1 tftli I ll"t1ftl 11 t fl'I' fll'Cf of IJw. Orwtrtnltnl 11 "'"'"ltl'I' ll>Pffrtd "'"'"' N, Mel'ff!ltft _.,,, ' "' • • Nllcl . Ako!llllC. ..... ,,,.. C ... lrol, or ff IMll lo k-II fM IO bt lht ,..,_ wl\oM 0.1"1 N-bfr 21 11119 "" °"''""'"' it •le~ ~"'''" "'"" 1, "*trlllMI to "" wi111111 r... LEGAL NOTICE Htltft Nottitri •114 ••rt iimiw Conlttl, nu 0 Sit ... , SKr1 ...... 1e1. 11,,,...,111 ..... l(llll0Wltd91f ... fl!tcvltd C&-E11tc11tet1 I C1l1Noml1 •JIU, 11111,.. •• ~fir 6ff>111 "" ....... -' NOTIC.I o" NON·•ltl'OMSl91l1TV of""' Ellllt OI I I •r1YldM.,.. lt w. Tiii ...... 1 ..... -tOF,ICIAL Sl!ALl Netk• It Mretw· tlYHI ll\lt lllt "'"' ·~· •bo¥t 111m-.t dlll:Mlltll Llc •nttd lot lilt 11tt of 1l(ef\fll( turf M, Olvle d.,111""' wUt ntt bl •..-1lblt for 1"1' wl~ll'llowln .. n~MH IMlv•••tt\. Thf IC"" al 't'frll1c1!IOl'I 11'\tV NOlttY l'11tJJ(, Ctllt.rftll dt~t. ,, 111bll!lltl COll!Fl(fH .... l llY-llllM •• 'IANICLIN II .,,. Obl•l-,....., •11• alt Cl "' lh• f'rlncla1l Otttu I~ """ flll ft •fW.Wll, Cll M llttl' 11111 dlfl. (1t ''" 11'11 lltlf'f u Op1r1 ...... 1. o ...... C-ly Ot!td lhll "~ dtV of OK""bt', nn. C11l1 MMI, C•llfll'~ll "'t' I!! T-I. ""'I ,,.., COl""'IHlofl l.•lll'fl Otnn lt 0. ThOl"rlCl'I Ttll 1n11 '47•HM -I P111t J. Jl(l~I MIY l , 1911 ,,,,., I . '1tt AlllMIY ltr C•l•t<:lll'" ! J»l-JI P\lbl•lll«(I Qt11111 CIWll 0 .. tv •llftl, C!lf<ll Mt11, Cthl wll"•llltowlll•l-~N lllll•:91 .. .,••t110llCJ•:ll"'10••--WllQIW•W__,•--------------o"utit•,iofl!I Or•~°" Cou1 04•!' l'llfl•, Novtlftblr 1' tM Olct111Dlr ). 1e, 17, l'~bllllltd O•tntt Co.ttl Olltv •11e1 Pu111111>H °''"" c~11' Oi!lv .,,,.,, :so-,,_.._, -tctlntllr U, lf1t l U0.10 1J111 U1t·1'11 Ott""bl' 10. 11. 17, .. ,. UCl:l'·70 OK:tnlblr L 10, U, ''-1•111 1111.JI .,.. .,-. •.. " T T r ... , ... _~~-.... ~~·-.... ..., .............. _~ .~~ ......... ~ ..... ..,._..... ____ ;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;""-:;-'="'::-,:~~""""!!'111'!1111!"'""""!!"''!"! ..................................................... .. . , HOUSESJIOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR' SALE HOUSl!S FOR SALi! HOUSE S FOR SALi . HOUSl!S POR SAL I HOl,ISES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE Condominium 1'50 '11BORON .. TOWNHOUSE Ro- ule, 2 Bedrm, 2 ·bath, one story, carp!ts, draPfS. love. Jy private patio, dbte pr., air conditioned. Take over GI loan with only ~ oub + low clo&i.ng COf;fJ. Larwln Realty, Inc. General 1000 G.n~ral 1000 6-ntral 1000 Gerter1I 10oo Cotta M••• 1100 Huntington llHch 1.acl -------- ofinJa .!Jj/e Dlstlilctlve Executive Home * 3700 s!f. ft. of CHARM!! * Magnificent view ot the Harboc EASTBLUFF BIG 5 Room for lots of kids. We ',.COLLEGE PRK -$24.000 •• 3 Bft...mA '11il%-LO ON * BY OWNER: 66-0921 * have S bedrooms and thrtt Mt•• V•nM 1110 ~ths. Want to swim? We 1----------1 have a beautiful pool. Want COUNTRY CLUB IJVING. to buy a boat? We have Sparkling 4 bedroom home, room to park off th~ itreet. one block from the Country W11.nt a a\fi!!g ~t? We tiave Club. SUnktn livina' room, room for that too. \Vant a formal dlnlnr, huce master fine school distr!Ct? New-bedroom · &: 2200 sq. ft. of port-Costa Mesa. Wanta fair living area. Seeina i II price? $52,000. Phone ~n11 believing at $48,S{i(). Call QCEAN YIEW-3 Brm $15,500 UNBELIEVABLE! PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES * Loaded with specia.J fea- tures : ewly listed-Lot #60; perfect for the fam- ily who wants a spacious wate;rfrOnl home . 4 Extra lge BR.. 4 Ba .. pwdr. rm. Lge. !IV'. Im. A: den: 3 car garage. Beaut. patio/garden W/rm for pool; deck & dock. By App't. • Built-In vacuwn system .. EI P.ctronl!: O\'en .. Intercom • Price includes washer + dry~r. refrigerator-freez. " 54!>-8424, South Co a• t That's Right! Hard to be· 962-6918 Anytime lieve? But true!! A 3 Bed-===~o--"--­room home and two giant RENTALS lots for the price of ona. Houffl Furnlahed Price lneludes full size al- ley. R-3 zoning, you can have many more units. All ~th ocean view, ~ mi. from beach. You name the tenn1. Fantutic v a I u e! Don't Dtlay Dial 962.5585 G•n•ral For compl•t• Information on all hOm•• & l~ts, pl1•1• c•ll: • electric garage door * 3 Spacious bedrooms * Unique, Tri-level • Con- 1-Q THC REAL \"'-I::STATERS Real ton:. * $80. w /Utll * Oceanfront 1 BR •Pt, Ideal for 1ingles or couples. Move in today, BILL GRUNDY, REAL TOR temporary design ' ' 1200 Dov•r Or., Suite 3, N.B. 642-4620 * Price • Unbelievable CONTRACTORS PARK &"'°OL FOREST E. OLSON • BLUE BEACON ·----- $67,000 546-2313 * 645-0111 FOR SALE-OR' LEASE OPTION SPECIAL-2 Plex P:.::_ Lt!';. 3 !~drp· .l ,Ba.._~~· G I 1000 T k & E I OK ' ., • .. , · tnc. Realtors : .. ~r• Gener•1 lOOO ASSUME G.I. LOAN on this 4 Bdrm. 2200 sq. rue 5 qu p. -~:o 1~.!e ~:t f:c~b-e~ 19131 Brookhurst Avt. Rent•ls to Sh•re 2005 j;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ft., 3 years young, 2¥.l bath home. 2 Patios, Looking far a place .to live Uvtni. Aaking $33,500. --"~unt~-~in~""'~"~"'~a~ch--· tFEldALE roommate wanted MEREDITH GARDENS 3 BR CONOOMINIUM dbl. garage, brick Jrplc., w /w cpts. & drps. ~.~1 ::: i;"i~r o':~x"':i~ CALL '=" · "'''"' · ELEGANT to •bare turn,"°"" on Bal· , In choice section of Monticel. VACANT. $35,500. Owner will lease/Mopt1on comm . zoning, Huge lot with . 9*~*Jltlltl 5 B-"'rooms boa Island. Please ca 11 BEAllTV lo, to be complet~ly redec. for one year. $500 Option money. $275 onth, MESA VERDE alley access. Close to every. ___.........__ wu 675.6446. or 673-3497. 1M I orated Jncluding new cir. 1st & last months rent. $25 Per month will thl""' Great area tor Invest ·' &!ALTY 2 Baths GIRL to share ocean view '""· · Ne•r N•wpert Pett Office -' M~cent home with 5 huge bedrooms, 3 baths, country style kitchen, formal dining ·rm., lg ~ily rm with par· · quet wood Door and fire· piice. 2900 Sq. lt. of family living plus covered patio, ouiside gas BBQ. Beautiful H/F pool fenced for safety. ·Room for boat & trlr Truly a fantastic home. can for de Jails. Jt;a,.. COATS ~ WA~LACE •. REALTORS Open Ev•nings "'.'; • 962-4454 • • • pets. Priced below market. be credited upon exercise of option . Call: Pat . CAMBRIDGE ment 1 cul 'KN\ f M beamed ceiling "house, Vie- th. W d 54•2300 · DUPLEX· 4 br up, 2 br dn, mma ate, -...... sQ. 1· er. to••'• Boa•h. •0 • -· Act fast on is one, 00 ., • DIAL 645-0303 edlth Gardens Home. llxl!i '-=='===·=·=~="=~=='! $20 500 FOREST E OLSON :k:ar, neat 6: clean, .nicely l. ___:__ e BILL HAVEN, REALTOR If your family needs more • turn. 200' to bch. Sacrifice. ffoulrmb•lal dcl<lning.~m, beaultld. CUSTOM 2 BEDROOM 2111 E . Coast Hwy., CdM 673-3211 room. then be sure to see REALTORS Owner. n4/ 542.194~. lam · wcu.uut pafee & GUEST COTTAGE this gorgeous 1850 sq, ft, 4 2m HARBOR, C.M. ~D~UP=LEX=-,-,-""'-,.-.~.~b-r,-2• 1 Uy room. Comp etely AVAIL Jan. 15. Halecrest. S G I 1000 ~--==~'----·carpeted, CW1tom draperies bedroom borne. Nr Baker & Excellent Eastskle location, enera Gener•I 1000 bednn home with large $3800 ~ ba. up, 3 br, 2 ba dn. V:l~w. throughout, decorator wall Fairview. Adult family, no , C 0 m P 1 et. I Y •.• ,.,.,,_1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 family room and a massive Prep int IL furn 675-0922 •. I 1 d ·= • 11 Moves you into this beautilul · • · · paper. magn 1cen an • pets $310 mo. Box p.»lJ, ed. Heavy sha\l:e roof & DOVER SHORES dble used brick fireplace. home. 3 bedroom + den, · acaping, complete .sprinkler Dally Pilot many bltn features. Refrlg . It's located in the prime huge family rm with BBQ Newport Heights 1210 system, block wall and many\ ,;=:::=;=:::=====I & Wa''·r •'nclud•'. Perf•ot BAYFRONT section of Mesa Verde just fin f 1 •-. "" " fireplace. Central noor plan. more e ea ures. ""'e 11 to for the aduJt family and in· steps from park and sc;hool. ~1'?20. BY OWNER: 4 Br, 2 bl., believe It • for only $46,500. laws. lmmed occupancy. BY-OWNER It's OUR EXCLUSIVE LIST· H bo frpl c, bltns. ~lany xtraa. TOWNHOUSE -belut. mod· ING at only $3.1,950. with TARBELL 2955 e r r .Walk to 3 achls. Would con- 3 Bedroom -2 Bath. New I y decorated. FHA or VA terms. May 1,1·e SPECIAL FEATURES 1lder lease. 5(8..5306. ern, 3 br, 2:-i ba, frplc. pa- st · · d & b R·" d -'--... _ h., d' Do -========= tlo, pool, Vear garage, all eam room, 11cu111, en ar. lftlWOO auuw you uuuug · Pool, patio & splen 1d ver -b11ns, crpti, drps, Lease deck' overlooking pier & sli p for 40 ft. boat. Shores .View. Ivar. Wells-!;;U;;n;;lv;;•;;';;';;lty;;;;P;;o;;r;;k;;;;;;;;12;;37;; $325 / Mr R $110.SOO. ~ co: Ts B"i114 bodrm, 3 bath, pwdr NEED 5 BIG BR'S 52347Jo ~; 846.s'm ,"::':; 642-1771 Anytime room hOme. Lg din rm, fam LOWER lN1'EREST wlrncb1. Costa M•s• Newport Beach "' PER!=!ON -; .. ;,r.·,,..--.... .,~. 2100 2200 REDUCED $7000 for quick sale! . WALLACE rm w/trpk. Aval) now. Roy Rat""" available! We oan Nn nuALIFYING REALTORS J. Ward Rltr. 1033 Mariners now oHer low interest a: low U-11 3 BR. 2 BA with viev," & Noweo· rt flo)ghts An• Co_rona. del Mar 548-1936 or 644-4684 -546-4141-°'·· &l&1550 Opon D.Uly. down paymt., on all of our htd/liltnl pool, oval! now ot I , c 0 s T A ( $475 mo. Call Mr. Hoeeee · Enjoy one o ' Th"is 01' Hous8 Open Ev1nin91) houses & towJ\houses. Buy That's right. Just take over MESA'S FINEST" locat•d 1~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~1~~;;;;;;~;;;~ C t M 1100. FHA 1 d •· S45--M~. Agt. · R 1 01 • I l a NOW, before prices go up! oan an payment.'!". 1 -=~"'..-~~=-~~ t ,IU!tr WE.ST CLIFF SHOP· has two very desirable • We have from .2 to 4 bdnns. Fantastic trl • JeveJ series 4 BR & den, 1i> blk to heh. PtNG CENTER. Ample Jots {with 3 large trees & General 1000 Gener•I 1000 $1,460Total ASSUMABLE'.! priced from $25,000 to with separate master suite. Yard. Vu of ocean. Wntr ,.;..,,m for your large furni. alley accessl just steps to D p t "'5 000 CALL TODAY New shag ,. ........ ts in a 11 TIO! ~shore Dr. 64.2-7671 itift . Three GIGANTIC ma in ~ch & bay. Magnifi· -OWn a,ymen Cash to this $23,500 • 6'Ai'1o "' . ~ . . . ! BR'1. Fresb~t in & out, !!~DROOMS. new golden cenl bay VIEW obtainable TRAILER POOL HOME -for thjs· grei:lf 3 bedroom, 2 FHA loan will put you into i red h·111 Sep. laundry rm. Corner w/ ba,rvesl shag carpet , Double from second stories when $27 500 bath hOme nestled on a huge this lovely home for a total boat access. Near beach, LOG SIZE fireplace Jn the new homes are built. $65,000 • country style Jot Glistening monthly payment of only sffiool-& SJiOpplTii. VerfJow Bay1hor11 2225 2-BR_turn. 26ll Bayshore Dr. Open Weekel}ds. C 213 ) 821-1545 for appt or 645-3584, lamily room. F?'!sh spark· c I tb Assume Sl Loan HARDWOOD FLOORS. A1so, $219. 3 ~rooms, 2 baths, dn. and unbelievable r.P. iing white decor inside and 0 eswor y PARK It sparkles from the new roof carpets and drapes. Subject large 21x21 beautitully fin· Realty of $32.llO(I Won•t last! Call ~t. Bright, cheerful kitchen and pa lnt job to the pool. to VA Loan of $23.450 with ished bonus room. Many at. Univ, Parle Center, Irvine ITifl 962-5585. Lido Isle 2351 with garden view! $2900. in-Can't If rd 1., T total payments of $219 per tractive features for great 1 !!~C!!at!!I !!A!!n!!ytt!!'m!!e~'33~·08!!"1~~ I FOREST E. OLSON [---------- . ~t1sri~~~~!tm;~t Q ~~~ & R=I~· 2() Spaces recently completed !::m~~a~:r~:ep::3 ~ ~~:·bal~~:~ ca~11· carry ~~!fonli:.~i?1l for in-I ·Irvine 1238 I --~=R~•~al~'°~"=~--IS ho!~"w~~b:;, zr~:=~ j I i I t ' .1 • • -$3f500. Nt>wport-Beach-0ffice-in.a.new 10~ k. Build Mated poo1 AU · · · w-a•ker-0 -.lee '='~~=~~-:-==,,,_! 4 BEDROOM $1500 Month 1"~"¥. LABORDE, Rltr. 1028 Bayside Drive out the rest & make many dition!lnd~~tof1~!':,;~~-·1 · --U-J; --·rPano;;;~-d-ay-/niftl vu, '4 -~EA~OW FfO-Me --3~a~-sa-:-off=water--i;om•ef---' i:li4Wl5::::o:;-:;'';.,...,-f;E;ii"~'ii':i:":i':C-4::;57:.:9_1 _.,,,"· ""'..;.67~"4~930~==c--I UU Localed near Rancho 5%. Joan and owner will Raellors Ac, unlqUe, 2 1ty, 4 BR, Sharpest home in tract, this furnished $450 Month MESA VERDE HUGE CORNER California. help ffnance . Total monthly 2790 Harbor Blvd. al Adams pool, boat st. AdJ. PCI, 8J3. home ha1 been kept Jn tip Bill Grundy. Rltr. 642-4620 Full Price payment """" $200. ,.,.,..., 0pe0 'til g PM POOL HALL 0056 top condition, fully carpottd LIOO !JI• 3 BR. 2 Ba. " POOL Surrounds thi s gorgeous 3 $l 55,000 I F B thruout, nice drapes, cover. CQmpl. fum'd hie. Avail Hfte's a beauty. 3 bedrooms, bedroom Early American . HOME 4 r. + r. + onus E•stbluff 1242 ed patio and excellent land· Utll's pd. 673-6281. i~ baths and family room charmer. Sparkling baths, N I ZONED FOR That's right bonus room ia l -scapltJ&' in front k rear enormous wood burning, •wpor so Jar&e you could have a B UFFS 4 BEDROOM yards, See this beauty today. Ba lbo• lsl•nd hon\f) with a sparkling heat-u·~ brick FIREPLACE. BUSINESS I 4 b' A f' d 4 •·• 3 23.15 .d and fute-d pool for fun ...,.. •t J'>OOl hall o your own. ia rare rn a ucuroom, 1, '" Lo l •-'th t h 673 3000 Bd + al bath "C" plan In "· ." ving. Quiet ne ighborhood ts o carpe.,, '"'! mac • F . 1 • ,. Sharp 2 Bedroom w/separate nns J elrct. step urc '"Within walking distance to ing drapes, Country • style ••I V •w The Number To Call \\'hether garage + attached room in over kitchen. FH.( APprais. "Bluff.a;" with open beams 1010 SO. Bayfront: 4 Br. 3% ba. waterfront home & 2 br. 1 ba. garage apt. Dock. Mopping. l\fuch more to see kitchen with all modern 646-8811 Buying. Selling or Leasing thri..,;ng busines9 district. ed $34,000, Bring the kid& and a baJcony for your Ju· 962-4471 ( :=) 546-1103 for only 531.95(). Call now built·ins. No down payment CORONA DEL MAR Vicinityof17th&newBuild. and come see this rreat 2 UetandpatloforRqmeoand REPOSSESSION Bill Grundy Rltr. &42-4620 · for Gl's and low down for (a,,ytim•) CHOICE DUPLEX ers Emporium. Full Price 5tory buy, Bettl!r hurry, nearby pool for everybody. Assume VA loan, anyone 546•2313. F.HA NE\V LOW TNTER-1 -,,~ ....... ~~"'l"~~~ $25,000, CaH now for· appt, DIAL 645-0303 ?tfake yollfRll Part of the qualifies. Yaur terms. J _L_•~v_u_n_._11_ .. _._h ___ 2_1os_, -o·THEREAL 1"'-ESTATERS ) I • ir • L > ,. W ESTa ral lk"einre"'&'1 noLw.eCaeu l;OV•leErlwool<lngVINE•Wwpo, rtVCIE,.w,,,, 2 :~~~c:e~~:iiu~j:[~d~~~~ to see, FOREST E. OLSON ~~ life ln the Bluth. Bednn, l* ba, frplc, bltns, * RENTALS * • 2 Single garages. Property 646·1-1·'11 REALTORS Call 6'f3.8550 CTPta, drps. VACANT. LAGUNA BEACH ' Cost11. Mesa, and beautiful like ne1>r. E"~ walk to Post """" HARBOR CM 847-8507 (A) 2 bd 1urn· ., •-~ Realtors Newport Harbor. The even· Office, shOP;-& beach, Price ""'"' ' , . , •lllllll~rl~~ ~ sha:i· patic), ~· ;d;: H EL p 2790 Harbor Blvd. ,., Adams ing lights are like a sevt'nth only $44.500. AXER-UPPER m· id: '''Ip to beach. Leue @ $165 Mo. al 545-9491 O~n 'Iii 9:00 PM heavt'n. Well kept, three ~ __ 1 3 •-• . C 11 ~ :ltt-1 ''"," fB.) 2 bdrm., 2 bath, view, Modet home with I t~ ex· l ;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;-1 bedroom. tY.'O bath home .1.41ges ucuroom tn o ege -•• ....,.. close to beach & everything._ tru. 5,,..rkling 4 beclrm, 2 with F·a m/Rm, Din. Rm . MUST SELL BEFORE 19n ' Park area. Need11· Jots of I========== ~ 3 De 2 b th VA FHA v ·~ LOW INTEREST Firepla~. cl:larm .. Older _._, hOme with fonnal din· and B/I eltct Kil. Large & n, il s. or tend'er loving care. 5x7" Coron• del M•r 1250 ~~ o 2' 950 1087 place w I wood panelJinr. ''•,family and 2600 sq. ft . Living room is located above K, S .. , • see page FHA loan can be a.ssumed, VA LOANI -~ 1 JI 1----------Lease @ $250 Mo. ·Mu·t( be sold !mmedia1ely-Realty Company garagt' which of.fers privacy te ephone ye ow pages • payments $157 a month pays Only $24,9501 ·ssooo under the market at anrl unsurpasserl view. Cool, 1 ~~=-""'="""'""°""='"I Costa Mesa's Finest Real everything. Now vacant. FIXER UPPER C•n't Beet Th ii f (C.) 3 bdrm. older home; •$39,950. Call 545-8424. CAMEO SHORES quiet, p111io and rear .yard VACANT GIANT! EstateOflice. ~eyourhome brini your Ajax and paint. Special! 3 Bdrm., 2 bath; 1 3 BR, .2 BA. crptd, fncd, close in location. Fireplace. \outh ,(-oast Open Daily 1-5 2o01 Aliso Avo & 2Dth F.0J01al Dining Room ·:·: CdftQm built. 3 bedrm, 2 ba, ~·living rm., fireplace, lam\Jy rm .. elec bltns. FA heat, patio w/gas fired BBQ -pit, dble g:ar., space for boat -& trailer. 'Lachenmyer. Rlty ciJf 646-3928 Eves: 548·6769 ~ =c=-~- CUSTOM &~st, 3 bedroom, panell- td den. dining room, geJt ;cleaning pool , -PETE BARRETT RL TY " - -~-:-642-5200 $29,500 5¥4% Loan $154 a month. when Yoll as- ~ th.la 5% ;,. apr loan. 4 bedrm, dinine rm. entry htll. btrllt·lns, large rooms. •1120. T ARllELL 2955 Horbor ANJ;;t>a..v Is the BEST day to ·rUn'• a'n ad! Don 't Jfi), .call today, 64Z..'678 I• ThrPe bedrooms. ShPl1tred arta, Excellent schools • Eniny a real family Christ-on TV. 1000 Free Christmas For details call 540-1151. blk. to the beach. Need1 Joli FHA !enns, also! Kitchen w/range &: ~. pool. Lacge. "'ell planted . d 1 ,, ,.,,,.al of"oo Owner/Mgr "Th• Only Way 10 Buy·· ot work! J1,1.1t reduced Disbwshr. Lease@ $300 Mo. near shoppini: an on Y ma, in th•·, mod•rn s bed· u ~ • HAFFDAL REALTY MISSION REAL~ ttrr11.ce Good ocean view. Chari Q [ lard Reali r $5,000. Owner sallln1 around A 4 -· minltt~s 10 1n,. Dunes and room . .1 bath luxury homt. es u n ° · •.12 •••5 "°" s Coa H lmmacula1~ home with grea! ,, I ·~· -.,." .. ':'! ~~!.950wo.rld k wants action! -"'"'""' i10il • it wy. · i;cll at $5.1.000 y,•it h very HUGE family --m. mas. D L R I E Fountoln Valley 1410 charni Priced realistically sandy beachP.s, Priceu to Beamed cathedral ceilings, ~Ul.f1fOrd .... _ .. ""'''" ...., Phone 494-0731 at $82.500. '"" e •ncy •• st•t• RENTALS ~asonable te rm s. slve rock FIREPLACE dra· REAL TY Macnab-Irvine M. M . LA BORDE, Rlt r. malic raised marble ·entry Sine• 1'46 2828 E. Coast Hwy., CdM BY owner. end of cul-de-sac , __ H_o_u_ .. _•_U_nf_u_m_l_sh_ed_.1 646-05.l.'"1 Eves: 644-7003 hall. Priced at VA apprais· Downtown Coita M"a FIXER-UPPER ===----",.'-'-.--7""~·1 on pvt park, pool & clubh5e 1 Gener•I 675-3210 Vacation Year ~wn~c ~;;,'::'Ag;'.\o~' '''" H~~~oo642-2991 SCRUB & SAVE ~~:.e ,~~:~:°i.iv\::;; ~'.~'~~ .. ~gar,'" _*_W_O_N-'T_LA __ S_T:11_0-*o_-o_.1 A d w lk & L Bring soap 1,1•ater and scrub rm trplc h .. 9•. mirror&!-"==='======= roun 8 er ee CORONA HIGHLANDS brush •nd a Httl• elbow mantlo. Billard oi"' octivi· S•nt• An• Hg/1. 1630 1165. cozy 3 BR cottage' 642-1235 4 bedrooms, open beam ceil· View & pool k you own the grease and you have a ireat ties room w/wet bar. 2 tro-with pool, built·lns, crpt&, 4 BR. 2 Ba. bOme locattd·on lnp, balcony, lovely patio Realton land in Corona del Mar. 4 bargaio. ~ Bdnns • family p!cal brick patios NQ yard 24TORY Southern Colonial .. drp,, Kids OK. VACANT, • EASTBLUFF a large, tree lined. aecludtd on the green belt, nearby 21W3 Westcliff Drive Bdrms., .2 baths. On I y room and den. Great tenns. work. Uae a11 large f.amlly 5 br/~ ba, din ' a: I rm• BLUE BEACON fenced lot. Ideal fo~ young pool and putting green. A 646 1n1 n..... •ttt 9 00 Pfl.1 · J l' d ff fam/rm Located In Beaut. * 5 · children & large dogs, Own. spacious home in 11. beau· · ... ...,n : $69,SOO. ust iste · urry! home (privacy for in·laWll) .. ctton 'or s.A. Hghts. Ex· 64 •0111 * Co RB IN DIAL 645-0303 or 2 income uni ta. OWNER er wanls offer. $42,750. tifully maintained carefree. B • b \ . • FOREST E. OLSON $52.soo. · 675-03U istin& GI Mortgage, can be VERY CLEAN and spacious ~ SP.11inq: in the Bluffs mny· e-1n y • ~ I • assumed W/L/J Dn pymL 3 bednn home with It fenc. ............--............... $46.MO. Your number to call MARTIN REALTORS HAPPINESS $37,500. 545-2992. ed yard, bltns and lots ot . Cot..L.-'f,B--•·-to ~ Htwr11ted to the easy Christmas! ' 2299 HARBOR. c.M. You will find it tn this nice room. Mo/mo OK at $250. Nnat Dalll\IR' Ille 673-85.10. REALTORS 644-7662 EASTSIDE • 51,4 % loan 2 BR.. home, just No. ot L•gun• 81_•_c_h __ 1_1_05 Call Agent 54&-4141. 133-0700 644-2430 \.0 THE REAI, ·~ESTATERS -' ' ·. ' BEACH DUPLEX Behind In Poyments 2 Furnished Units !\lust sacrifi ce. As,. um~ Xlnt location! Sl!.600 VA Loan subjt>Ct to $28,000 6~ annual percen1age rate Geors • Wiii iamson with total payments o[ $156 Re•ltor per month. Submit your 67.,350 6'.S.1564 Eves. down payment on thi11 clean ,,.~&;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;; I 3 bedroom with 2 luxurious • baths. Carpets and drapes, e Easlside· 5-Plex • Huge ""m" Double garage Wi th fenced yafd. GOOD SHAPE. CaJJ • $88,000 Walker & Lee 356 E. 20th StrHt Cost• ~·•• 642-4905 Reailol'l ... """"'""""'""!!!!!11!!!!!!!!!\2970 Harbor Blvd, at Adams $23,000 54~9491 o,,., 'til 9 PM A 51, ., Oceanfront Duplex 11um1 ~• 1• . 3 BR. lower; 2 BR, upper. Loan. apr • .f bedrooms. dirt· Comp. tum. Lawer unit on h18 rm, dream kitchen, hlt· winter / summer rental. Up. ins, payments lea th:tn ttnt. per unit v&OllJ\t Xlnt rental .r:~WiJ.L 2955 H•rbor =~!$74,500'.. You awn * BALBOA * Call• 613-3663 54~5042 Ews, 4 BR.. hOme. View,_ tJ_u1 pt· •ilfl apt. • and • on 2 R-2 Jots! $69,500 Newport BHch RH lty * 675-1642 • •• associated BROKERS-REALTORS 101~ W llo!bo., 1>1) )61>) 3 "·d + d h available. Choice 3 bedrm, 2 Hwy, Frplc., patio, carp. &: 3 BDRM. + •--p .. nn., .... =.room. en om. e. LARGE. lmmac, 3 BR + dra-s N··•a om "lov•" 3 UNITS· """' v iu.u F I I hath home In sbsolutely .,,. · eeu 5 e · dinin• rm., builf-ina., brk. 1amily ~tn ng ~m, fire. fam rm., near Back Bay Immaculate tondition. All Quick possess., vacant Jan. Three blocks to beach. 2-1 $390·-ea month .. NO FEE, t Pace, ltns, .dishwasher, area, 2 brick trplcs, hrdwd bltns. hardwood floors, 1st. ' CTPts, drps. covered patio, floors, bltns, w a 11 ed crptg, fireplace & qui et MORGAN REAL TY :C~~~. S~~:iie~a:sn~ 1,.-N;;•;;wpo°"'rt","'5411-=,,172,,_,,0·----.·I dble ~arage. AU ~ perfect park-like ya rd, c overed residentlaJ location. A must 673-6642 675-4459 dition, $4..950 Gross income. 3li~~RMyard". ~~m,laUyMnneaa." parKl"~ cond.l~ion~ Immed~le po!!:· patio, trees. Quality houiie to !ee at $3.1,000. Call HIGHLANDS ~ ~ ~css1on ~ $28. 750. oil a beautiful street. 10% 545-8424, South Co a A t $39,950. Call . OK, brk., $200 a month, NO W1ll1-McC•rdle, Rltrs. Down, $3.1.000. Kingaard Realtors. 2 B-"'nns' + Pool ...,,/0 FEE. SfG..1120. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. R.E !o.fl z.2222. I ~=~=~==--.~ .., I · 548-7729 , __ . ~~~~--2 BR/2 BA CONDO• Adll Ura• ?llllr bedrm, 1'4 b•. 0 ,,an Cost• Mos• $28,000 s.... i.pooi. & cibhse. 0wn.. 1rr>1o. dbte rar. 137.eso. REAL ESTATE TAYLOR CO 4 BR + Fomlly rm. Wan" D'81! Anxious! Seil Ownr/A&t. 673-013.'I "·auti'lul home. ~me ·-•. $21.500 w I terms I or Lie I ·2~8-'-nd~-"=--..,.-1 -'-,;,,.,1-1190 CJenneyre St. LARGE 3 BedroQm., 2 b&Ui, ""' '"', ..... $21S. Call 6.58--7976 or write ra new uni s • un que 549-03 6 QUIET CUL-D E·SAC Enclosed & OOVeN!d, patio, JG Anderson 41674 Marine lrt delllXf! duplex. Best area. 494·9'73 1 :~tli. g~ts~m;BQonanad .~ 4 Bedrm, huge famil y .rm, By owner. 673·6904. EMERALD BAY KC ""'~ Mammoth lh•. rm .. \50\atOO ~A .. 17..... Dr., Hemet. Ca . . ' place, newly painled A new , 1 -~ ;.,.,.;.,.,.~~=-'o----.o-·I * PANORAMIC VIEW J~st 11.sttd! Attr. traditional mslr sul e, ~BR. Room l~r TARBELL 2955 Harbor GOOD s BR hst on Lon· CIU'flett/drapes, $25o month. t pool. Sfi9.9JO donhen-y In No. C. ~I . Luxury Ocean Blvd. Duplex. 3 BR, 3 Ba., aep. liv. rm., PERRON " 64t.lnl ! BAYCREST $78 SOO • Steps To Oce•n • Assume existing FHA loan Overlooktni Jetty & Harbor. din. rm. 6 f.t.m. mi. I A most unusual ··111 nd Or rn· Empty & like n e WJ Only ol spprox S2S.750 w/intere:st 1 =B=y=O=-=="=',,,_===*== 716 Emei:ald B'1 $'75,CKXI MESA VERDE 3 BR, 2 Bath. - terlainment." ln.'lide pool, 3 $.12.500. 3 BR. fam. rm., 2 at only 6" %. tnoo down 1 • Shown by •CIP'l. family room, bltn ran,e A BR. den atudy. 2'111 bath's.-· ha. 2 car gar., bltns, paymnt. Chu, c. Martin' Lido Isle 1151 Bltl Grundy, Re•ltot' oven, trple, crpt.a, drpa. "Our 25th Vear" CAYWOOD REA1.. TV RllT. 548-1195 I---------833 Dover Dr., NB M2-462J $265/mo. 1644 IA.brador. W11l•y N. Ta ylor Co, 6:ll6 \V. Coa!'>t lfwy., NB LOVELY, quiet. secluded, ON STRATA CENTRO e $73,500 e Cott W. Baker). Open Sat ,a,, REALTORS • 548-1290 • ocean view home. 2 br, den, 4 8«1room1, 31!4. Bath• 2-STORY, 3,000 Sq. Ft. Sun. 2111 San Joaquin Hills Rolld 4 Bdrm . + Family rm. .2 b&. $39,500. Consider 35 Ft. + Lot ~ Br/2 Ba. llvlnJ/rm & 2 Br, drps, stove, retnc, Nr.vport Center 6+f..4910 Assume existing 111"'.-·loa"·of· le•eeloption, Owntt 548-8007 Sl:ltt to Strata family/rm 2/fp'1. crptl, garq:e & fenced REPOSSESSIONS 6%%. El•gant ,ntry haU , 4 FHA Re.are, 3 BR, 2 ba, E-m.500 " * GOOD Ti RMSll * ~. No pet.. 114 Monte Sparkling clean homes 110me Bedrooms, h u c r ltmlly side w/lre yard. Newly LIDO REAL TV INC. 404 Emerald 8&Y newly pajnted & ca.tJ>fted. 2. room, n~tural brick fire-pa.in!ed, new lbag cpt, 3377 VI• Lido 673-7300 '94·2609 * 2 BR DUPLEX, un- 3 4 & 5 bdrms Some with place, swim pool , park llke:,,e12S,..,,2SO;;;..· -'-646-~2504"-".,,.646-552<,..,...". "-·..-I OllUSTMASIIS c::orni"&! ~U Dono Point 1730 tunrtshtd. Opts-• drps.f • 1 FHA VA . I yA rd 540.1120 1 'coNOO 3 b 2\' ,_ I ... It ·~ I k Nice & clean. MS-0422 • ~m'·11,,ooo· to""S4"ov.;., '.rms. 2955 'H•rbor TARBE LL • • r. ~ oa, x ra your unwtn em.1 °"p c ---------"" .,,,,, lge p&tio or 1m yAl"d. FHA up fut cash thru a Daily S30,9!i0 New 3 BR Tt!ld~nce. NEW crpts &: drps. ta:e f~ Collin~ & Watt.I Inc. TlP.ED of th1t old tumirurt? 51,i,.,, $24,00'l. Nr Harbor £: Pilot Oa1!llfJed ad , •• it'• 34041 Csllil& Drlvis ed yard, 2Sl5 Eldeo Ave. 88~3 Adams Ave. 962-5.523 lt'• really not that hard Gisler. 213; ,M7-0900 'eaTy •. call 642-5678 BUILDER + &42--190& $1!5. 545-1657 ;.;;;;:_..;;;;;;;_;.;;;_;,;,;;.\---1 . .;.....---~--. 3100 • ! ' ,. •' I - . . . ~. . . . . . \ .. " • . .. I • • .. .. '. .. ,.~ ,. .... .~ * ••• j ·~ • • . '.. . . .. . ~ • , . 3& DAILY PILOl lhur~1y, Dtttmbfr 17, 1970 . R ll'i"ALS .• REN'i'AL• ReNTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTAL~ 't Hou-Fumlahed Apb. Fumlshod Apts. Fumlahed Apb. Pumlshod Aph. Unfuml1heol Apb. Unfvmhheol Apta. Unlvmlohod Apta. Unfuml1hod RENTALS /~ Apt1. UOfumlmof: t • ea.to Ao1no 3llO G-r•I -Huntington lloodt -H...,llngton llood! -~rol 5000 Coste MMe 5100 Nowport -5200 Bolbo• hltnd 5355 Fountain V1ll1y $410 • • 2 Br, O,.~. dq>I, $LIO Rd J • req'd. l or 2 childftn." S.9-122:5 Just For Single Adults ~ Quinta J./ermoJa YENDOME 1~· 1:wBA.J,.~::;, ~i,~ c~:;.~ 2 ~~;,~ ~.~~~~ VALLEvPAR~\ lMMACtll.ATE APl'S! IRAND ·NEW 2 IR. Jnq, •WO Patrloc Rd. Adu!~ ooly. No pe ts. far l'AMILIES With ii~ ' 3 Br, Cf'Pta. d?\IL. Rent $250/ 1.. $225 mo. Util pajd. -83lJ...fQ; •ft 6. ~. Attracdve 3 br, utU rm, yard A pelib_ No pttl, 319 Del Mar. 644-4212. 3 BR. Houff, l n BA. Fl!'nced yard. $225 I mo. I S210 yr lease. 646--1246 or ~961. 2 BR. lK>u.w. No pets.. Ref'i; Required. $150/mo. 213: 371-3965 2 BR. New crptl, ctn>s. C.OU- pl.e only. no pell. $~/mo. 548-1~ or 646-6762 MMeO.I Mar 3105 LAGUNA Bch--m&le 32 will lhl!T w/malc oc vu 2_1tory hi. $100 mo. 494-7942 &ft po. NOwporl Buch 3200 3 Bdrms., 2\.9 baths; new carpeting, Faces pool. sm month. Realtor 548-6966. 2 BR fireplace $250 ~ block kl beach ll8 39th NB ~ or 642-0310 r I' I ·11 ' "I I I' 11 ti . -~ -I L·11ll11r REALTY Univ, Parle C!.nte.r, Irvine Call Anytime 8,13.0QJ BEAUl' 4 bedrm, 2 ba home. Crpts. drps, ;ill bltns. htd &. filtered pool \Ooith auto sweep, 3 car gar. AvaLl l'I()\\'. CaU Mr. Hoegee hl:>-8424 South Coast Realtors. IDEAL l'or the &mailer Ja.mily, .3 Bdnn -den Condo. Bltn~. Walk to shop'& & schls. $210/mo. Reis.. 962-383L 2 BR. 2 BA mobile home, Driftwood Park at the beach. Adul t& only, Tra.dewind.1 Rlty 847~ll Soutl> e.y Club is • whole Casual estate living. Enter La Quinta H.,... new way o1 ille dni(ned mosa's lush green atmosphere & stroll tree- juat for Alni"le people. Jt'i; lined walk ways to your apt. tun living with warm, ey. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED nllfilic neighbors. It's a 1 BR. Urif. $150 -Furn. $180 hte.lth club, saunas, swim. 2 BR. Unf. $175 -Furn. $210 ming poot, party room, bu. 3 Spac. fir. plans, decor. furnishings: live !lards, Indoor aoH drlvina: within romantic setting w/fUlt or privacy. range, tennis courts. pro Terraced pool, pr!. sunken gas BBQ's w/ shop and resideiit tennis pro, seculded seating com pl. w/Ramada & Foun· Single, 1 & 2 Bedroom Jux,.. t.ain. _ uryod11.partments with all the * Color co-ord. kit w/ indlt•ct li9htin9. m em oonvenle:nces 11.vall-I ' & * Pl h h t able, Furnished &nd unfum. * De ux• reng• ovens us 1 •9 crp CJ: i!hed * Bonu1 1tor•g• sp•c• * Cov. cerport · * Sculptured merble pullfn•n & til• beths ?olODELS OPEN DAILY * Ele9•nt recr•etion room. l1l A.M •• a P.M. .FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY RENTS FROM $150 NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th (714) 64~50 Blk from Huntington Center, San Diego Frwy .. Goldenwest College. San Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. on Beach 3 blks. to Holt; W. on Holt to ..• LaQuinla Hermosa 714: 847-5441 S30 "''k-1 per, "''/kit $35. 3740 ~latd ser, hnens, TV & h•le. 1---------~•Lark r.101~1 2301 !'pt 2 BR, 2 ba, frple I t'.rpts I Blvrl. ~7445. &,.lbltm. Smlll s.elf cat! 1 ~F~U7.R"N'°"'B"t-ch-;:..a~lo_r_&_l_B~r.1 yd. $3XI. Adults. 49rr2002 Dene Point RENTALS Exceptionally nicel AptL Fumlahed 2110 Nawport Blvd, CM $~1 BR. ufll pd. no General 4000 f d\lldren, no peti. 1662 Newport Blvd , 642-6l!M •Pt 6 lfOUDA Y PLAZA DELUXE Spaeloo1 l BR 1 1 BR.. rum, Upper, Cuport. ADULT and REALLY' DIFFERENT! &12-(lg7 642--lTTI. 67~. 1chool chUdttn only. !; . P'AMILY Section All de.luxe feabJrtt. Priv, pa. JMMAC., Newly decorated; tr BALBOA ISI...AND • 2 br, 2 & 3 BR aod 2 BR ~-ttl:d'o Close to shoppl"I, Pirk tias, btam cellinp, pa.net. 3 Sdrna, .bi.y~ view bW. .frplc. C • l 1 aJlt'.r_ f, 213/ S1fiO lfl S2lS , •. * s_pa..;jous 3 BR't, 2 be. tng, frplc:A •va.il. Bis rec beaches. SZ1S Yearly cl;n;-;";"'======= l~ Sout:· Euclid, fy .. ~m pool, lHli /ll'ffn bldf, l)Uttlllg green. sand Davidson RtAllY 673-9060 -;;;; (Just South or Warntrl , • F'rpl, Indlv/lndry fac'IJ voUeyball, !You Name It!). 2 BR, OCEANFRONT, Jowtr :H:":;";':lng;;;;,ton;;;;B;•;•;Ch;;;S400;;; (714) S4M715 +. 1145 Anaheim Ave. Adult•, no peta. Cl<>ae to S2:ll yrly. Crpts/drps/gar • =='=='='===='==! COSTA ME&\ 642-2824 everythlnr. $16.5. f:i()()91,S. Srashort>. 213: 248-1921 ON BEACH.' santa An• ".5620 !!!!!!!!!1!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!![387 \V. Bay St. fbtwn Harbor 2nd Flr-4 BR. 2 Ba, 2 patios, &: Newport Blvd, "-ml N. lrplc, gar, near bl!'ach! Call RENTAL FINDERt FrH To Landlords 645.0111 4J5W.1ttti,c ..... w .. • ~Ulli) iM;lhl=::l=48=·========== 646-0013 e Also uk •bout our • BRAND NEW SUPER apt. • alJ features above + 2 Br .. 2 Ba., 2 trplcs. 2 BR"s. $170 &: up. Near Hoag hospital. Crpt.s, drps. bltns. \\'A.Sher/dryer apace, gar. patifl. 4217 Dana Road. 64&-8325 2 BR, carpeted, draped. Oaoan v ie"''· sundeck. gara.~, "'·ashing f 1 c i I . $225/mo yrly. 642-3978 eve1 !, wknds. 3 BR, 3 &, rlelu.-.:e apt "'' frplc, li;e ba.loonif'!l, v{Aw of bay & t>eean. Av11.U of!~ 17. Apr l. 745 Domingo Dr, N.S. Call 64S-l260 Newport Helthts 5210 SANTA'S Specill.l-aizier than the North pole. 2 Br. unt. ~2~".° pet.. $145. 642-8001, Sublease On Beach illediurran""" Sryl• Lu•urr I 1 I ! Bedrooms -! Ballul Adult LlvlnJ Faralahed • IJalnmbbed . -. , ... • ow.-"- • -'Hs c--· • rn.. ,,,.. 5410 VILLA MARSEILL)S BRAND NEW ;' SPACIOUS 1 & 2 Bdrm. Apia. Adult Living , Furn. & Unfum_ Ol!!hwashl!'r • color coon:tinat- ~ appliances: • plush '•har e&.ft>et • choke of 2 cOlor achemea • 2 baths .;.:.",atall shi>~'t'rs • Mirro!'ed ·Ward- robe doors • indim:t ~t· ing lo kitchen • btftkfut bar • huge prlvale ~ pa_tio • plush , l~p~ns · brick Bar-8-Q 1 • larie:.Rat. er pool1 t.. lanai. •••. 3101 So. Bri1tol SI. (~All. N. of So, Coaai Pl.l;:la) Santa Ana • · PHONE: 557-1200 SINGLE STORY South Sea Atmosphua 2 BR .• 2 BATH • • Carpf!ts &: drp1 ~ Air Cnndltioned Private Palios. .·, HEATED POOL ' · Plenty of lawn ' Carport & Stora&:e. • HIDDEN VILLAG~ . CARDEN A.PJ'S:• ~ South Sa.Ila' •. Santa Ana • 546.i.52.5 Condominium BEAUTIFUL Country , 'duh Villa, C.M. 2 br, 11.S, ba, pvt pa!io. crpts, drp1, blll)I, ete. S2.60 mo. Cati J ea Jl'n e Edwarais. 968-fil2.1 ~ · NEWLY Dec. Furn rm\':¢:ij. frm1de only, ~rudent etil. Comm. h11 . S1."l/mo. £42.!520 N.B. pvt lower !eve! w/vi@W, p11lio. rt'lri~. m11y rook! )la. IUN' gent. $100. *'45-09.)t "• Business Rentel '60f0 IMMEDIATE · • ' OCCUPANCY , 1.060 Sq, f!. in convenl~nf:2Y IO<'ated 1Mppini;: ctnler. '350 Prr mo. ;, yPa r lease ·tot inforn1Rrlon c-1111 •• , • ' • 546-5440 .. OFFICE. STORE, near Wp&.. Posl OfficP. S..12 aq. ft.~ P11rkin11:. S120 Mo. ·' ~ ' Grah11m Riiy . 646-2-(14 STORE · R2fi W. 19th St .• CM . Avflit. 1219. Sll.)/mo. Office ·Rental 6079 SUPER-DELUXE QUALhiY 1-7·3 room , up 10 J,Ol)J 1q, It. oHice 1ultes. lm.mtd. ec... c~panc)', O:ange C n ty . Airport lrv1~ Commerc. Complex, 8dj, Alrpbrter: furn apt-$135. Heated pool . I Pnol, S135/mo, 560 Ha.m11ton Ample parldna;, No child-or ca.II 545-0760. ren • no JMfa. 196$ Pomona, • BEAUT, Bach. & 1 Br. CM, apt!!. Sli.00 "'·kly ~ up I' I' I' I' I' r I CHANNEL frent 2 BR. upgtllin apt, New cpl. dtpg. Boat dock, Cpl only. $700 mo. £7:)...9556 1tt1 fi DUPLEX • 2 Br. a-arq:t , drp1, stovt , ~lut1t cpts, h1.rae J>AliO. ™ck Bay SI 5 5. Adults. no J)('ts. MZ-2267 e a...N C.rq• • 1!"-' (alfi..,. 9565 Slat.et A•enae l~l!. \ ,,~·iJ ~,,. ft Ti:.. 1:h'7ii Hotel & R.1!1111unnt bankl' San Dfrsro & N"pr F~ir,. ·' .' UNCRO"'TlF:n PARKIN¢ ; ''WHJTE: Eu:Jl'HANTS" 1,-",,'="'-·:-· -'":::."-';..'':oil~· ::54:::.&41.=>::;l.~I ovtrrunn!nc )'OllJ' boUM'.' J BR. furn. s.pL J.lea1ed Pool. "C.ab" •• tell them lhnl No pets.. ChLldren ok. See •I Dt.1ly Pilot Oauifled 12fi ~1ontt VtslA, CM. " 0 UNSC:fA.Mllf J.IOVE LETTER~ 10 Gfl ANSWE, I I I I I I I SCRAM·LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 • I 3 Br. 2 Ba. unfum. Blt11!1. crpl!I, drps. Sn.i/mn. Call ~ 7573 or 11/t 5 968-86S8. Jl1tlf" "°~,_,.,_ • ' L0\\1El\T RA TES ' I Chl•l!f'rl mn. 2172 DuPon' of., Rin. ~-Np1vprir1 81>11ch 113.~23 Cour.re~y to Brok TIRED of that old fUmltgre? • f !-Ii!: ·- .. ,. ,,, . ' -. , ___ _...... ..... ~ ....... . .. ,.., . .,._,,. __ _ • - • .r.i-----------------------..IRIA(ISTATI Gtnirol Thun<llJ, Dectmblt 17, 1970· D41LY ~ILOT 37 lllAL: ISTATI ·i:i-llll!:i::--~~-!!"'--:!""-~~·!!•~ll~V1!5C!IJD~lll~l!5CT~O~l~Y SillVICI b11llCTORY Joas I IMPLovMDn 0-rol l'A -k * * · ....:==._____ Coltrl '575 Molntononco AIU Jobo Mon, w-7100 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED INDIX Of(lco Rontal .. ,. Lott ''°' GIVING A PARTY? HOME Repaln ; Palntini. ** BROJLER A PREP. •; ·' ' DIAL DIRECT 84%-587• ' l'•r '•tt "•rvlc• •Ml ric,ort Aul1t.nce .... ~. USES FOR SA'LE Ml~. JlliNT•l.S' ol!Ne1tAL .................... 1 .. R!AL-t!STATI;-o~!CE I h ctn• MI5& ................ 11• General .. "" . 1pace w p one, DESK~SPACE 222 Forest /wenu• Logu.no Beach 491-..... IAYFRONT · COMMERCIAL Stra~c Co11'1merc!al Lol with 7S' Don't Pink•! Instant Help! carptntry, cemen.t work. Sm. MAN J..5 yn exp. (!nly need Bartend, Walter, Oeattup job8 OK, 646-6446 app. 49f..2700 Lag. Bcl1· 0 ""''" eou ••• '""'"" CARRIER. Re•sonetlle 67J..14t3 Palntlnt1. P1perh1111lt\g 6150 BOYS • ColNnolm•klnt-6511 1Xl 11_ ·-If y do 1r· youne . ou tm. WANTED C\ISTOM WOODWORK A•l· 3 Br. houu. !:x1'r Mms.t. otB. MAil .............. 11u •NCOM• ••o•••n erv1oe 4 1ma.lt amounl or i-. Ml~ Vl!IDI ... _ ........ •·1111 I U)l/<fli$S •JtOl'lJtri'"'''•.,·:" tttretarial v.-ork W-""1TED -l•O• ,ARI( '"'''''""''llll llllAILEA PA.it.CS • ,..,, ,on !tie1iay AdJartont to Public Parking with Nf!WJ)Ol't 1Blvd, f'rontaa:e Reduced to J195,000 1''urnlturt Is C.tblnet1 11uceo $150. Jncl m.tl'I It 548-4235 or ~ labor. All w~ I u a r . lor the 1 _ _.. ewPOJtT •••cH ............ 11• ausiNass llNTAL •t in Newport area. Pleue UJ W~ltt H!fGNTS .......... ttll OP,.ICI l:rlllTAt ........... ., call 962-2561 •~-LIO.f. CO\'.~ ............ llU INDUITllAL •11.oP1'iiTY"• ··=-·-~==~=-~~-·I POlT SNOlll ........... Int COMMllCIAL ••... 1 · DESK SP CE lll'l'CREST ··· ................ itts iNoutTllAL llNT.t.L'''""''6111 A ""SNORES ,,,,,,,.,,.,..,,.lDS l.OTI ···•"··'"' oo•lfR INOl£S ............... 1221 ........................ ,I• lOS No. El C•mino Real WESTCLl l'I' 1ut 111.NCNIS .... ··-···-···-· •IM .c.t.••o.J t1 10NUN0i":;:;:::.1us ~~'1\u,,S0G•ovas ............. •11s San Cl•m•nt• IVER5tT't ".f.Rlt ......... ,.1UJ UICI l~t1N0ai"'"''"'" .... ttel , ~ -~NI ...................... 1n1 REIOllT l"RO .. ERiY """""'''1ft Wltoddyo Wont? Whotlclyo Gott SPECIAL C1.ASSl~ICATION 'OR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spoclol Roto -547-1441. ---~N'"o-w~ .. -.~,,.----I Carpentering '590 * WALLPAPlll * When >'OU call ''Mac" 548-1444 M8-1TI1 CAR,INTRY MINOR REPAIRS, No Job Too Sm..U. Cab1Mt In f&r- .. p• 4 other cabinets, PAPERHANGING-Free DAILY PILOT Dani Point, San Juan CapltJtra.no a.nd Capi1truo Beach. Contact Mr. Seay at DAILY PILOT ~ACK &AY ........ _ ........... 1tU ORANGI co ...... 111TT"""'= CORONA DEL MAR "•'11s;•LUFI' ............ ~/ ..... ,•,w OUT o• n.t.Ta ...... • .... ,. 5 Rm •w'••. ··-.• ~~. ''' I ~ ~OUNTAIN A DIJlllli _, ..... ,1tt "'' "''"I' INI: TERRA.Cl ............ IU$ su•ot'llSION' •1110 ......... ,,, I Ba 1100 •Q ,, _.. ·- J L lntt -5 llmtt -5 bucks IULI• -AD MUST IHClUN 545-8175 u no 1nawer leave e1t., 1ati1f.actlnn ru1ran-San Clemente ctflee ll'l.'I at 646-2371. . H. 0 . ,."",_; ... Du sch w l l' t I • 305 N. El.-c:.m,.!no Roal ONA o~.L MAR ........... lUf tEAL ISTAT••••Vii:9''" 06t1J • • • 5 """ LU. Realtor11 ••our 25th Veer • 1-w1111 .,.. "" -. '""-~'' ,... ll'lllf • ,,..., Anderson "·==~-==-·~-~-~--1·~~--='~"-'-=----1 REMODELING & Repiir CHRISTMAS Special 'i4i COMPANION to live ln It ;.£ ~l~~~ ::·7 1.~~~~.::::::·:::: l.I, l)ICN.f.Hal ,. ....... ::::'.t2M ~==·="~"~"~'-·=--t-YOUtl _... ••I• ..,_ .... 11-11 ..._,....._ ....,,.TlttJf• Na UiLe -T•AOll OHi.Yi .,, l.v ISLA"4DS ................. 1u. ~. 1· WANTll D ... · .......... "Mt * NEWPORT BEACH ,Civic . 1.100 UL.~ ................. 1u1 BUSINESS and ~nter 300 ft to 1000 ft. _, lAL'.IOA ISU.NO .............. 1Ut FINANCIAL ~n The Her•r ·~ree'' . 673-4400 To 'l•ce Your Trader'• P•redlte M PHONE '42-5471 _ Speciallit, Comm'l, reiiden· Price! Fast & Righi! Ext. & help with hou&e'NOrk, ffe(. ' lial. Pane:ll.nr. c abin e 11 , Int. Free Est. Bob or eren~1. 673-2006 ,,; ftVNTINGTON IEACH ....... 1... Answ &: secrttari'1 515-1601. I UNTINOTON NARIOUR ..... 1.os •U•tNESS OPPORTUlrUTlll .... ;.::::::::_::..=:::::.:::.:c:::::~ ~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l3 Un.itfl Nwpt .tor! unit• ' ''\.INDA ISLE '* IUltNESS W.f.NTID ........... 3700 NEWPORT BLVD NB M •12 , ~ PclruNTAIN v.t.LLIY .......... 1•11 INYEITMENT o.,.,,_..._ .,,,,1, ON THE BAY · · · C. Ha ft>r a-units rtt1., ll!A(N ................ .l•Je INVESTMENT WAllTID ...... 4.IU ck:::.•=·=·~'"=-------~'=200~1 o.\' C.MH.1, Garden Gr or SET •EACH ............... 145' ~ONEY TO LOAN ............... 67~2464. 541-.5032 -Anahe' A k f A Kt "'· .OEN oaova .............. 1us J~:~NSAL LOANS .......... ,..,.. 16~ ~--~A •WA A~ CM 10 , ACRES IOVth of Palm. tm. s or I nr I.ONO lt:ACH .................. 11• c LRY LOANS .............. IV ....u... , .. n ·~ Ow Jones Rlty Jn~, NB, 673-6210 • ·.,t1,ftWOOD· . .. ............. ISM .OLU.Tt:•Al LOANt ......... .au 35c sq tt SpriJ'\11. ner need• cull. )RANGI CO'JNTV ............. 1 ... ~~\ ISTATI LOANS ........... 675-2'64 ' • . Valut S75()..SJO!IO/acrt, Will Builder will trlde new OIJJ OI' COUNTY ............. 1"' MON1~":1~r~':0 o..-.... 4.Mt or 541•5032 -..:11 for ••~ta•-. Ow-r house ..tn•ily In Dana Point Olll' 01" STA.Tl ...... ,, .... _ .. IHI '"'' .... ,'151 ""'' .....,., '""" ''"' """w t:.~~STER .. :::::;:;::::::::~:/: ANNOUNCEMENTS *No~~a.ll~Fi~ B~~ will eany on euy term.1: for 1 lmproffil lot, hf.act\ r=t ~ .. t~T" ·::::::::::::::::~~: ,.0~~: c~2I~~ES .... 1 .::3355:==v~;a';:'.Ll~do::;;, ~N~S~ .. ~673-l50;::_=·~1:. lc~~~T~2~'~'w~n-·~~'-'_5_'_m_•_·. I ;~~·~~~;'iv:·~·~•e-,_*:'....~"~~~19'6~ S•IKA ANA MOTL ............ 1'31 LOST ........... ::::::::.:·: ..... 1 I 'I:"'" GE . ,. .................. 1w l'IRSONALI .,. 300-500-1200 sq. ft. ANTELOPE Valley Invest-1.2 Units, primt Joe, ianta IN ·· ·· .................. l'4t ANNOUH~EMtNTS''""""'."'411 OFFICES -~llOJ A - G H TUSTIN ............... 1'41 l lRTNS ............ :::::;::::::u11 • .,_.,,., . mtnt property, must 11.c:ri. na, IN rou. $50.000 Eq, t.NAHl!IM , ................. 1u• 'UNlRALs 6411 Costa MHa. &t~2130 tice, moving out ot 11ate. Tl'lide for ~.000 to $60,000 s1Lt ERADO CAH'r'Olill ......... 1u1 l'AtD 011Tu.tliY ................... u:l :::==:=::::;::;:::;::=:;::::=:I ~AGUNA HILLS ................ 17'1 l'UNERAL OlltEcfO'Ri" .......... ,~ I Box 2325, Newport Sch, borne, dupl~ or triplex. LAGUNA 11AcH .............. 11u t<LOR11Ts ....... .,.1, lndustrlol Roni I z-"""""' OwDer!Broker 67" ... ,. I Caveman 641)..11707. HIGH DESERT fnr Health. mar lie, form ica. 64'-75.'18. """==o=-~===~I Custodial Helnar WANT CalU·Nev. 2.J M elev LET the Swede do it. Repair. INTERIOR Ir EXTERIOR r- mod I • I Jerry'• Painting Se:rvloe HAVE Cl cor. 90xll7 2 bldgs tt e "'pat o~. • •fl&..UlfW • Octan View School District '68.000 eq~l.000 inc. $445 673-5417, 494-78.i3 JNT/Exter Painting. Fl'ft S2.31 per hr., PA!1 time • 2 mo, OWner, CM 646-8558. eat. Refa, ·Imm.Ed. Service. hra: eai;h ,t.M, L1te,cleanlng 20. To 40 acre. producing Cement, Conc~t~~ 640-0210 64,_3014 duties at etementry ~hool . Citru1 grovt, Rivenide. CEMENT WORK, 00 job too · · \\'ork e.xper, In deaning de· $1500 Per acre f'(Zulty, for •mall, f'ta!!On1ble . Free FIRST Cl1s1 Painting k ilred. Applications mu111. be local units or commercial. E!ltim. H. Stuflick, S48-86t5 Paper·hanglnf . Frte Est. filed Personnel c.omm. Ofc., Will trade up. 548-3263 Call 54~34~9. 7972 "'arner, H.B. by 12/28. ==-~~-----1MORE Concrele p&tia tor HIGH DESERT for He1Hh. lea~ monty. Artiltic.1tttinc. PAINTING· Eltt•lnt. 18 yrs. DENTAL RECEPTIONIST . WAN.T Calif-Nev. 2.3 M eJev Uc., call Max: at &«-0687 exper, Ins .. Llt". Free est. Desk only, Exp'd. Proficlent1 HAVE Cl cor. 90xl17 2 bldg8 F'REE Est. Sawina:, break· Accou8t. Ceillop. 968-9126 with in1urance. Afternoon to $68,000 eq · $42,000 Inc. $445 ing, hlulin& , aklploadlng. PAINTING: Honest (l.laran. eve hn. (1·8 or 9 pm), s0me mo. Owner, CM 646-8.158. Service I: quality. 54S-8668. tf!i~ >NOrk. LJc'd, i..Ocal ref'•, Sat'1. Salary open, -Jrinre LAGUNA MIGUEL ...... ,._ .. 11'1 CARD 01' THAN.Ki"'"'"" "611,.1 :::;;~;;7~~·~;;~~:1:•=-=·==:::::===== -MISSION VIEJO ,. ...... _,. 17W tN MEMORIAM •'"""""'4411 ~"""CLEMENTE ....... 11u CEMITIRY 1.ori '""""""'•t1• -SMALL UNITS Lo~y Ora:an • Top con. View ft..l Jot, $16,IXW) equity, 5AN JUAN CA .. ISTRANO ITU CEMl.TElt'I' CllYl"Ti'"'"'""•nr Out of Stat. Prop. 6201 dltion, Chlntose Oriental rug for income, TD or ! Child c.r., Pl I p I h g~:~';;t~~ •IACN ~~: ;::~z~:;,,~•Yrrs :::::::::::: COSTA MESA •nd 1evenJ IJ'na\I diamond Tarbell Rellitor Licensed 6'1( aster "I· e c ' DENTAL Front ofc girl for Call 675-57:40 aft 5. benetit1. Ph: anytime (H.3. ana) 8 am-9 pm, 84&3540. ocEANSIOE ................... 11s. ~eM0•1•L rA•ki ............ 'ftl $95 &: $11S mo. lmm!d: OCCU• $lf5 FULL PRICE rings. Trade 1'0r auto or T 540-1720 1----------·-R~•~P~•~lr ____ _;4~l~IO: specialist, Exp'd, Beach SAN 01Eoo .. -........ ,_,,1rn tucr10Ns .............. T b' ••• -~ AFTER School ca-•12 •••• Rox M -· D a JI y 11;1vE1s10E couNTY ......... 11• •v1•T•oN sl:1t'Vici:"" ........ ..,, pancy, 660-775 sq fl PINE ree rovtttd ct in ""~' A11k for Naomi ·~· v-· * PATCH PLASTERING · j • ......,.. I 1r1ousEs TO If. MOYlD ...... ltot TR.f.Yt:L .......... '4» * NEW BUILDING * sllht, w/roa.d. OOJ1e to 2· '~=H~la-bl~.~-~A-·----.. -~-.. -, ____ .:c.._c.;.;.:;:_ __ I Pick up •t •chools. Craft&, Al Pilot 330 W. Bay, Cotta col'IDOMINIUM . • .......... 1ts1 A.tit TRA1r1SPC>'~Ti.TiON """"uct ••v -_.... ··-• 3 commercial units C·2 Jot, tield tripe, Prof. teaehtn. 1 types. Ftte estimate• Mesa, cahr. I OU .. LEXIS FOR S.f.Ll ........ ltJS AUTO TRANS,.O•TAT!Oflf"'"uu 1280 sq ft un ita; otti.ee,.rest. lakes, surrounded by Nat't xlnt tax shel., F&C, tor 98l':m I l ==~Cal~·="""'~~"~==:l>:Xi'Eim:Nc:Ei)''D;;;T.~ APA.flTMENTs FOR s..t.LI .... 1111 LEGAL NOT1c1s ..... .,.. room, Jl0.22o power, plenty Forest, Southern Ortaon. ch 1 · · ncome $900 mo. 646-3706. EXPERIENCE~ · Dent a 1' R~TALS Ot:RMAN a TUYORINO"''.:':·"" ol parkino.· i~· • Whltti'•r 213/240-1186 or n 4/&u-4185 ya: t. nc. prop., bu1, A $45.CM)() eq, Trade for Mme Pl b.I 6190 chalrslde 'a1aislant South ' Houin furnished SERVICE DIRECTORY oui • steal •t $3500/acre. McCrea. here or Oregon. Leon Vibert Contrectors 6'20 um ng · OENEll:AL .. .. .. ......... 2tOI :~~~u1':t~~NGOsE1VIC ........... ~ CAv:-~:o-taN Mesa. R al 1:e:':":·::======= l200 Riveniide Dr., Burbank Rltr. M8.f1.188, ~Ve 673·~ PLUMB,~lN_G_R_EP_A_l~R..;;.OI :.-:~,u.n:A?.!tii:co•."~~r>-.!'r!;,..~1·1 . RENTALS TO SHARI ......... ioos Al"l"LIANCf. REPAIRS ·;vt.• :m . .......,.,rt attreu, e tor 1963 DATSUN P.U. New ----~----C' MY Way, quality home ~""-3 """",µ '"'"" ... ~ •. (0$2'• Mt:SA ................ 21• •s,.NALT Oii• ' Co8ta Men. 642-1485 CAPISTRANO C ZONED repair. W'11s, coili"•, floors ND job loo small Coa1t Hw>"; "Laguna. MEs• oEL MAit .............. 1ios •uTo Riir.t.i•s""'"''""'" mt Mount•ln & Desert 6210 tir"'. Good Cond. TRADE ... • 642 3128 • , MESA VERDE ........ _ ...... 21u AL.ITO Seu ,..,. .. ,-· ·· ... •!• NE\Ji Bldg. 1728 to 2300 sq. FOR·. A GOOD"'-.. _........ 4 + acre1, free It clear, _etc. No job too email. -FREE Space for a Quil.llfied r , OE PARK .............. 11u 1..,,,,·,,,,.. • '"' ltc, "" ., ... '-¥",,... $130 IVll\ TRADE FOR . 54'1494 "h RETnu:O M I Pl •-STENOG""" ·-POll:T &EACH ............ not IOAT MAl,.TENANC ......... t.15' tt. Nr, Baker and Fairview, DIVORCED! Mu1t sell, 1 Bir tion Car. .......... 111-.... • .._ r an1. let'\', ' aa er um'-"'r. PUBLIC """HER. ' .. N&lill"ORT M.GTS ............... nu IRICIC MASONRY ......... .w l yr lease~ s u 111 van ' Bear lots, 25xlOO ea. Valu~ 494·9950, 494.531)1! come or ?! ? LIC'D Co tr R od II Like1 •mllil job. Very Pre~tige Npt. Bch ofc "loc.' : . ,Vll"ORT sNORl!S .......... :nH 1us1NEis s1•v1c'i:'" ....... ""..., ... ••29. · $3000 1 ·-•• 500 REALTOR 548-1711 n · em e ng, ttuona.ble cn•-e 54&-3479 Reply Rox M-" Dally ., .t..'i'sN011:Es ................ ms auiLo••• .. _...... ............. , se I ~ cull or.... . --------"-"---1 add-ons, rooflnr, pa.intlnr Ir -• '""'""' ,J l:WER SNORl!S ............... nv ,,,,,, ..................... 6$1. '========== 'd Bob A ,. 1.2 acr" R2, !rte Ir clear. . SIO ''' D··~s ., .. __.., n-; I Pilot . wt:STCLIFF .............. m1 CAllNl:TMAkiiiO'--··-.. -'"J Lots v.·n A terms. us .1n, Oll('e home. 1 _home, pool, Trade $3800 eq. in 2 BR. 2 repa1n. -I or .... un -~· u•a1n na'I===·==~===~-. UNtVE RSIT'I' ,ARK ........... nll CARP.INTI NO ............. ,.,. :c:.:.o._ _____ _;4~1~00 329 Harbor Blvd, •P # 22. ~"" ha. mobile home \n lovely 540-76&4. 1Jow'!' Expertly cleaned $9. GARDENER TRAINEE. no : IRVINI ......................... ml CEMENT 'CRI I .............. iUH all 5. guell !We. S40.000 equity. 1-~"'"'--~~~~-2fi h ~ .-AC'IC ••V .................... n•• cHiLo c~.:"clr :.:.; ............. NEED Chtlstmai money . WANTS , u N 1 Ts. Bier. Bayside Village, _for late AddltioM * RtmodeJJnt · r aerv. exper. ntc. Xlnl oppty. Ph: • T ILUF, .................. u41 C0"4TR.t..cro.ts c .......... u mode l camper/van or car. Gerwlck &; Son, Lie ~twn 8·10 am only, n4: • .,.,,, Jl44 CARPET CLEAN1Ho"""::::·.!: Must u criliet my beautiful, R.E. Exchan11e 6230 ~558 anytimt. CR~oo..;;.f~ln~1'-----~"~50:: 4M-4.;)21 1 v)NE TEll:R.t..C~ ........... 12•: CAJll'ET uv111110 & 11t1r.t.11l '41' level, view lots, located in ·:;.::.:..::::.:::;.:;:;!!•C::..-~::: OWNER 67S.l&t2 673-6041 * 54§.2170 ORONA DEL MAR ........... 2" ORAPERIES -Townhouse 3 br 2~ ba GENERAL Off' 101. ....................... UM DEMOLITION .................. ..-: prest:Iae Arizona subdivilion MOTEL lot, 4 bib trom · • Relflodeling * Additions WENEDA Roofinr Co. ice· renta.J & ·f 0 ISLf. ""''".;"""_'_'._'.',_'m 1 .DRAl"TINQ s1:i:YiC:ii "'"""""" lot $495 each. M. Mo-an, HARVEY'S CASINO • t N.B. For pool, patio, frl>lc, What do )'OU have to trade? KARL E. KENDALL ' Repain, Jte.eover or New Bkkpg nee. Call btwnj!~ ... .,. ISLANDS ................. mt ELECTRICAL .......... ..ir ... Val p 500 TaJct. TD trlt L' t it he I Or "••LIO.t.. ISL.AND ........... tw eourrMlNT •ENTALi"'"""u. 1215 So. 7th St., Phoenix, 1tale line, aouttl Like u • • · ., 11 re -n anre Licensed-Bonded scg..]S,11 -Roofs. 1700 superior Ave, k 11:30. Dwtwn H:B. , H N"(1l'lGTON •EACH ......... 1411 F'"' ....... UJt A · • ~··rtle ho Xl 1 . H or T C.OunQo'• llll'lt•t read trad. CM 64'1691 21 HRS 5,.'\6.2579. ' ttWTAIN VALLEY .......... 1411 .. lOOING ..................... ,.... fllOua -..;n-p ne Tahoe, nt oeation. ave . ~ . H!AL &EACH ................. 2•St FIJRN~ci"it·;;·.t."···""·-.... "'9 602-fM0..7534. $20.000 equity. Will trade for Owner, '46-6654 ina pott.642-567& Cers-t Cleenlnt 6'2.S BEFORE You buy, cllil T. HELP WA.,_"' ~l!G eE.t..CN , ............... u .. PURNITURE~.~~~.~'c. ...... ..,.. '---t, lot, ca~ .. trade,,,,, * G fl nn;.v o jlNGE COUNT ............ ,,... ,. REl'INISHIN' ....,.. •n"" * * * * * uy Roo ng Co. Recuver E I ·-• SlNTA ANA ..........•....... 261f o "" $78,000 value for $60,000. Clean Cleaner Cleane$1! spec.t allat , 6(5•2780 -xper en~-\lil.aiiTMINSTER ................ 101 GARDENING .. . ........ UM SAYH S 1. NB Kurt Wagner C•"'"'l & • e I 1 ii 1· ·-·te bl l()WAY CITY '., ............ 261' Gl!NERAL JllRVIClS ............ 1627 Port ter 1n1, ' -.. ~ 548-9590. ns a a 1.on C-":'" " SAHTA ANA HEIGHTS ........ u10 GRADING, OJSCtNG ........... '611 644-7895 ANNOUNCIMINTS ANfllOUNCEMINTS UpMl1tery Cleanen1. $9 •·Installation, engines • ~AJ·TAL .. -................ tnt Guss ....................... ,. ===========I • NOTICIS .ond. NOTICES average rm 534 5305 •I l II f h rd i.#oG~,. ... IE.t..CH .............. 2115 GREEN THUMI ........ -...... ,.. ., --en. - ----. -• 'SiW'lng· ·-6960 n1 a a ion, a ware ~~~~~Jl~~i~·:::"·;':':':':':':·:·.:'fi~ ~1Et~::~Lii•~::·:·:·:·::·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·:·::iai ·~ j I H ! :R~·..;:E~·-W::;:•~n~ttd::::; ___ ,=2~40~ l :F~ou-nt1771F:;-rff~~Acl:-;-1~)-:'4IO:::: l 7L~.~,7,------~640:::l:l ~6~:~.~:-~:,.~· -c-a,.,.--,-a-,-,-,-;,-.-l •Dres1making -Alteration• • :~;:~P . •prayers &lid SlloN JUAN CAl'ISTRANO ..... 1n1 HOUSl!CLll!ANINO ............. •71' Private buyer want. apt unit• Ne w Ye1r S._,.ial! De1ign!d: to IUit you. • L&mlnatol'B A"l'BT RANO &EACH ......... UJI INTl!RIOR OECOR.f.YtN• ,.,.,t tlt ,...~ 'l"A POll'IT ''" INCOME T.t..X ................ ,.. good Jocation. any condition. 'MALE AduH cat. Orange Jo'ree Minor Repairing Call Jo • 646--6446 • Rigging '1t YERSIO£ COUNiY"".",',',',',''11oe IR ON, o,.,, ..... llhll, •1~ ......... ,. 675-1511 With Ci . ·~ 120 Ap I 8 to 3 PM 'IACA"TION RENTALS ·: ........ , ... IRONINQ ...................... ,. with white feet an d eaning ...,.,· . Alter•tlons-'42-5145 P Y.. SUMf,IER RENTALS 2'11 INSUU.TtNO .................. ''" 4 BR home wantM from ma.rkinp wearing f l e. F~ eitl. 64»1317 Neat, accurate, 20 yeara exp. EN-TERPRISE J tONAOMlNJUM-w--····~·.:.~·:_.'.'.'..,ttst -:=i~~~::,c,,ET1tiii ''Dii "ft';· .. "'-:",,,1-owner In N.B. area.... Un_to C9:.U .• r. Attection•te Vic. 1:;;:::;;;;;;;::::::::::;;:; YAOfT OORP. i ~!tlTA'LSuR" ............. tut ~~':,!~~:!ti1i;~·1a;·::C:~~:::::::: $30,000: &45--()746 ~ V811•,'!~.CNBa~~~~l3":9, cf-the ,.;:~;:::.:.:::::,::..:c'.'.::~:..,ll;'::::;;.::c:;;;::.:... ___ ~·6~IO:;: "me, Ceramic 6974 --s.z:~i:~~s.u~~-r.-----+?'il ·• 'Hou111 Unfurnished u.Nose.t.r11r1• .................. 11 BUSINESS and .... V'rO"V MALE ""Y atlo tb I d ... "" l.OCICSMITM .................. 6111 . ~ . r • re AL'S GARDENING-* Verne The Tile Man * Eqtllll opportunity emptoye! • "'R.t.l .................... JIOI MAID s11v1c1 ms FIN'NCl'L tJaer..am....i: cat lost vie • • COSY~ MESA ................ 11• MASONRY ••1cii.'_"_ .. _,.... "' "' FOUND: Yng. S harg y .. ...,.. tor Gilrdenlnr Ir •m•U land-Cust. Work. lnahlll I: repairs. HELP Wanted, Re1t. prt.l. 1E 'MUl DEL MAil .............. Jltl MOYtHO' JTORA9'i:" .. "" ..... llu1IM•• "'°'"' wht w/-y ''"''· curr Dr a: Irvine, N.B. acaptnr services cal) 565198 No job too 1ml. Pl••ter ., O"''· •1'tes • -·-y-~. ; ~A vE•DE ................ 111• PAINT1N•, "'"""-n.i.ii""'"..u ... ~ Reward for return 548-4260 • " "" ... ~ • ., ,....., 'ti L EGE PA.RIC ............. SIU PAINTOfG Sltftl ...... 6115 Opportunltie1 '300 Red eol:lar • f'lea collar. ' Servln& Newport, CdM, Cos. patching. Leaking 1hower MURI be cou~.. neat.' · .. :~g::;: ::~~~ ::::::::::::nr. ,".'01,00•., .• ·, .. ,, .... ::.:.·.: .. :.:.:.:::.~.·.·.·.:-..,. _ . . SM"'L·exp'd·tJ--·ic co-Vic: 15th & Marruerite. BLACK w/whit~ male ~ ta Mesa, Dover Shore1, repair 8471957/8f&.0206 ho 1 & r bl A pl < ' ,.., • .,..: ~ """·uvu •r die, black collar, k11t vie W"tcllff · . · nes_ re .la e. p ) I N w.,.oR T SHOltES .......... mt l"lASTE•1NG, l"•tdl. ll••lr utt c·;... ... ;::::).::.";. tractor w/ ,_ poto•ti•l •-CdM. 673-15'.ll, 536-&340, • CERAMIC To'ie wo,k. Frc• Jack-1n-the-Box, 385 E. · oRe:s ................ 3%1.t rLUMa11r1o \ ··..,. "5 " • .,.., Brookhurit It Ada He DOVER SNOltl!S ............... m1 PIT GlltOOMINO"""""T"".... rood name in indu!tey. ""'8.12-8~-"-:--.--,,,,.-~---ms, . ' Sl'ORM REPAIR eat. No job too •mall. 17th St, C.M. see manager. WESTCLIF.. .. .............. HJf POOL SERVICE ' '"' • Reward. -968-9471 b . !JXJVERSITY PARI( ........... m1 l"OWl!R SWEl!riNe-::::::: .. ::,,11 needs backer for 1hort term LRG. Shephenl mix, JICM!S. '~~~-,.,,------Tree work, auraery, rlCIJ\J, ~2426 HOUSEWIVES NEED _RV\NI! ................. ,_,,lUI !"UM .. $IRY1ca ................ ,,. bank financln( a: bondinf. German, Belgt1n, ynrmale. LRG Grey~ white illn-ed 'prune. Le.ndll'p malnt, XTRA MONEY IN YOUF Ii.Ji =~~fp··:::::::::.:·::::: .. ~:; :~~~6"'ii,,;liii "i:rC"'"·"·"·:g: Secuf.ed by 1ood contraCts. Vic 15th It Monrovia, NB. mi le cal, vie Harhtlr Vif'W cleanup job11. Time open. Topsoil 6977 SPARE TIM'E? Th Ir l!t or• l2•• REMODELING & aEr'Aiil '""''~ Good ,.;. of IJ'OS8 profit to Day11 ~. eve1 &: Hills, CdM. 'Re ward . Proteas Gardener. Ge-ora:e pnxlucl 1ells f l se lf . IR.Y1WI TERRACI! .... -....... ,., JIEMODl!LINO IOTCM••• ... b ,_, 548-1'91 644-2909 "'£<! ... ,, -To Soo'i s.~ .. Loa OllOl'IA DEL MAR ........... 22so scissoRs •Hi'•riN ..... ,,, backer en contract Y con. w 111.111. · · V'l'r"" · P • •iu.r m Everyone hu need tor Jt ,..-LfOA .................... SEWING .......... "" tract ba1il. No gimmicks or HUGE mal• "'· rr•y WST, loy French poodle, AL'S Land11Capl"g· Tree. LYMAN LANDSCAPING Work on commi11sion OJ . 'ISLANDS ................. sue SEWING MACHiif'ii'iiilii.t:lii '"' ti ~--' h' . 633--7636 Dli tSLE ................ nn SEPTIC TANICS. s....,.. Ire. ,,.1 dishone1t prac ~·· UVllU topeide. white bottoma ide. w lie w/ttd flea collar. removal. 'Yard remodellng. ....·hole11ale b 11 i 1. Nr •~OA ISLAND .............. SHJ TAILORINO , .... , ·-,,,, c oppty for P:f!l'IOn w/ in· Very friendly, but m!ues Reward. 962-7017 Tru:h haulinl{, lot cleanup. JOBS & EMPLOYMENT gimmickA, no "blue-sky' :11Nr:!.~TTo~e~~AC•f'"""""::: TERMITE coHTROl :::.::::::.,n tegrity. Can be protected by his owner. Pie••• call --R•pair •Prinkler11. 61"1186. promises. You will dea' !olONTJNGTON NARIOU1t"""•'MIJ TILE, C"11mle ,, __ ... , ......... •t14 nf) -~ J-• W ·• M ~ctN'TAIN VALLEY ..... ,.11 TILE. L111ei.um a Mml• ...... •nt key man in1ura.oee. ( t).46.:.5244 Personals 6405 vv ant-, en 7000 with a reputable: firm , ~ .. ' ''''" ............ TRIE, SERVICE ............. .... 67>2=" 8arn-5pm Exper. Japane1e Gard~ner, 67~7877 alt•r 5. I ' • · ................. ,, Tl!LEVlllON .,,.r,._· l ie. ••I "°" Ln-TLE F aJ I C i t d i N f -"8EN GROVI! .............. MJS UPNOLITl!RY .............. :::,... em e puppy, par fi.JLLY LICENSED* omp e e y 1erv ce. ea L'ON •IEACN .............. Js• WELO!NO mJ German Shepherd, pal' t Rf!nowned Hindu Spln'•·ai'o•t k Relia. Free est. 642-4389 MATURE Man de1ire1 work HOUSEKEEPER, 11 ve ·In . 0111,,ltGE COUNTY ............. UM WINDOW CLfANIN ............ '"' PURE RITE Coli' _... . ,.. I '"-d H . n-r· t f eld-·" WIESTMINSTElil ................ un SYSTEMS Canyon Rd, Lquna Beach. Love, Marriage, Builneii JIM ••• •••r in janitorial and building woman. 847-4441 s•tfr• ANA .................... u10 JOBS & EMPL()'y··M···E"N. T L • . ie, fou ..... vic Bluebird Advice on all matter•. Complete Verd Carel G any,.,.., . a1 experience """ •. o care or .,..., MIOW4Y CITY ................ Ult JOI W~NTl!O, Mfn ........... ,,... 57•1•11 "~~ -~~ .....,........ maintenance Al!IO ho ANT1" ANA HEIGHTS ......... J&H JOI ~.f.NTfO, w-·· ........ 1m "'" or~. Readings given 7 day~ a . Ule HOUSEKEEPER & compan. tDASTAL , ................ s1111 JO I! Wo\NTEO. SHEPHERD I Spa,iel m I :x Week, l(lam • lO pm EUROPEAN LANDSCAPER and •P!· window i wall io n for elderly Jody, Owr: LJ.GUNA ll!ACM .............. 1Jtt NIEN a WOMl!N ...... rat Ott . -· . ., Cl••n up T-Su-•"' c I I! an Ing Ai-fl u.ouNA NIGUll!!L ............. 1111 scNooLs & 1N1T•ucr101r1 ,,,.,,.. ers unique op.,,,. .... ni . 15"-:ll" high, Gold w/black. 31.:J N. El Ca mino Rea.I, ~-• ·~e "' •J · • "" oor trans Call 494·6070 I MlssToN VIEJO ...... _ ...... ilOI Joa l"•El"ARAT10N ........... 11ot current neWJpaper expo•· 'Id F San Clemen!~ Rf!a.onAble, Ev~!. 496-3383 maintenance. 6 4 l-11 S 8 1 · · iAN CLEME NTE ....... 111• THEATRICAL ....... 1'11 Good w/cht ren. ound vie anytime. HOUSEKEEPER. Jiv~·ln, klr ' •• ••• NO ''''H .. un inc on .xac u ac o ARCHITECTURAL D 11 . family w/4 children. H.B. I •H"".t1.1AN CA,.1STRANO S115 MERCHANDISE FOR A ure item. Small inve1tment, H 1· 1 •-1111 -1 tt 492-9136, 492--0076 EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener ..,. • ., .... -... ..,,. l•-eprofil!.CaJIMr.Oavi1 G ld w 1 •~""'' Co l•loGardo I ra ' tli\MA: l"OI NT ................ 1141 SALE AND TRADE -.. o en f!ll · -~ Orlenlal Swedish f., French m P n n g area Own room. 5.36-1341 t oNOOM1N1uM .......... "" FUR NITURE .............. for appl. 5.17-5792. =FO==-~.,~,,.--=~~ MA. SSAGE Service. Kamalanl. 646-4676. man, experienced, want!I--~·--------' OUl"LIEXl!S UNl'U•N .......... StfS OFl'ICE FUll:NITURE ........ It'll MAIL Order. marine equip & UND ac and white Saturd1y work 833.2045 aft HSKPRS Emplyr Jll.YI let '6vE~"T"ALR~NTAU .......... mt o,FICI Eo••PMl!NT ......... 1111 hwiky type Jong haired dog. Gonorol Servlc•• ....... 2 7 pr,1 • George Allen Byland Agen-":N ~ STORa. EOUl,.NIENT .......... tilt 1Upplie1. Net $1500 per mo Vic Sanla Ana between -' -·•pts Furnith-.1 CAt<E, RESTAUl\ANT .......... ,, now p/time Req '• S2000 1(1 A ~f to 12 p M cy 106-8 E. 16th, S.A. ~·,-f.' • l9U ..... EOU!l"ME~T .. -....... MU 5 . MEN. and Del Mllr, CM. . . . . CARPENTRY, Caba., Pain-s.1 7·0.195. I ' ·sMi RAL. ....................... HOUSl.HOLO GOODS ............. ca11h secured by twe.t $6000 ~246.1 Ull Newport Blvd, cr.i Job Wented, eot--rA MESA ................. •lot GA RAGE SALE ........... ..,, Inventory. 961-8813 642-0450 ting, Formica, P_lbf l'l!pair, Women 7020 HOUSEWIVES ·&: TEENAG 'i'IE.S• YEROE ................ 4Hf FURNITURE AUCTION ........ 1111 TERRIER puppy, bro·-w/ concrete, appliance• &: I .. ~,.·oar tEACM ............ •HO 41'PLIANCES ................. 11• eve11/wlmd11 -.. 1 -----------1 ERS fl nr Pl time. Sell phtc. Nl'NrORT Nll!!•GNTS .......... 4111 'NT1ou11 ................ 1111 black markings, found vie -~~~Li~ce~""-""'~"~---I water healer repa~ementJt. phate fl'ff _ nonpollutant uwro11T SNORES ........... •n• SEWING MACHINt ........... 1111 PART or full time whole1ale Cotta Meaa Libra"", "' * MASSAGE * 646-l5U Mon thru Sat. 1 to LADY: club experience 111-.werrcL 1FF ........... ,4UI MUSICAL INIYRUMl:NT ...... t1U Bui. Oppty, for thoae who .. , 7 1i1t & M!rve, cocklaii or·,,· ... I au n r! t y compaund, Pl\: , JERSITY 'ARIC ........... Ul1 l"IANOl & ORGANS ............ 11N Cenler St. 646-384~ · SAUNA * WHIRLPOOL , .:~· ~~---~-~~ " 642-1.'m a.ftr 5 pm. •£AlT' tLUFI'··:::·::::::::::::::.,~, rELEY1StoN .... : ...... :: .. :::nu obligation lntv ; Call FOUND Sunday \n Lo\•elyG!rl1.Pl111hfacllltieii, RAIN G ut.er11 ln11talled. 576 7 1, a•c'lt IA v n•t 11:•010 ............... H• 5 want Financial Sec. For no " ner party, babysit week·o li,..iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii- ' Ol!IGHA DEL llUN ........... •211 Hi-Fi & STIRllP .............. uu ...,. _,A Hunt\noton Ctr, fem . Open 6 days, noon.mldnJcht. Quality work. Reaaonable. ends. 5,16.4. after p.m. -~AL llOA ................... •iM TAPE RECORDl!RS , .. , ...... ntt '1llO""UU.. .... F I ,....-. I ES F _, , g,1,v isl.ANOS ................. •n• CAMERAS & 1:ou1,M•NT .... 1seo . Siamtae eal, wearlnc flea 2930 W. Coa1t Hwy , Newport ree es . "-· A D -or ...,eonv .. escence, 'L100 tSLE .................. 4lJ1 NOe1v SUPl"L.lt:s ................. Mon•y t9 Lo•n '320 ,,.,11,r ••• •736. Beach. 54~3608 Af .L TyP'•· or C•r·-lc til•, elderly care or family care. 'aAUIOA ISlANO , ............. •US SPORTING OOODJ ......... ,..UM >.v ......,... -...,., 1u.r>tYINGTON IEACH ......... ~oo 11NOCULAR1, scor•t .... -.. uH 1 JD L 1 I ·n & maM>nry k Homemakers, 547-e681. TAtl'I VAL.LEY ............. 11 NllSCl!LL•N•OUS ................. st oan NDnCE Surler! • Seuhore • MIKE STOMP • p AJ en g wor · 1===========01 ' .. ~~~~~~ ·::::;::::::::::::::: =~'tto:::~~~ie:·::::::::::·:::'~ I Or area. Your 2 dogs:, Sm I LOVE YOU! I Al$0 dry wall. 6-46-l 598. Jobs-Me.n, Wom. 7100 tJl&NGE COUl'ITY ............. •He L.UMIER ....................... 1111 1%.% INTEREST blk/ wilt "-Sht.pherd, Call * SHARON * .. r.£EN G11tov& ............... ,11 STORAGR ...... .. ............ 1n1 Npf. Pourid, Jmmecl ! Haullr'I 6730 w1 1o1i NiTE11: ................ «n au1LotNG M.t.T1R1Alr ....... 11u 2 d Jg· L 1 ~;,;=~-'--,--i-~~ ALCOHOLIC{) Anonymou~. BABYSmER: For 2 yr old MDnY CITY ................ 461' SWAl"I ................... .,,. n oan FOUND ff.m, yilg Sf'aJpoint Phone 542--7,tt7 or write tol----------\litfTA ANA ..... . ......... , .... ,. PETS end LIVESTOCK Siamese vie: Galaxy Dr. I P.O. Box 122:! Co1la Melia. YARD I Gar, Cl ea.nup. boy, Live.in, Ille hsewrk. l!!m:~~.~.~~~.~~.::::::::::rJ ~::: ·~~.~.~~.~~.:::::::~:::::: F ... ~errn217,1 hued on S4~i~ll Ri1el Or, Dover SDore1. =========='I Remove tret•, ~~7tra1h. 8~;,;~4-5~~~ ( 31 . E!:m!• 1 ~Ae:~·::::::::::::::.,., ~i~~ ... ·;::::::::::::::::::::: ... : -~ -646·8135 Announcements 6410 Grade, backhoe, 45. ,:.,.hi~ NJ1E~O .:::::::::-:; .. :::: LIYISTOCK .. .... ~rvinc Harbor attl '21 )Tl. BOYS Or men& pl"l!A(l'\ptlon -JUNK Wanted. Free metal Llvt--ln. Housekeeping " 1•111 CLEMENTE ....... •n• CALIFORNIA LIVING Sattler Mort919e Co. glalll!i, dk anen fra.meA , CHRISTMAS CARD pick up&. garage cleanup•. P•y. 64fr2449· ~~~.t~::N~·:~:c•HAHO !~ NURSERtEI ................... ttll 3.18 Z , l?tb Street found vie Oranae 'rut St. RETURN ADDRESS Hauling. Ed Slone, 543-8913. BabyAiller, my home 488 E. 17th hlt Irvine) C.M. '42-1470 •o ' SWINIMtNO POOU ................ STICKERS N So C•••t Pi m--IN .,, ................ , •• l".f.T,IOS ........... -........... tfU S4S-1402. TRASH,. G&r8.ge clean-up, 7 r . az11. b t·u~L..'.',·,•,'u'•· .................... tWNINGJ ...................... .,,. I M-Wanted 4350 $1 FOR lDOO d •10 , io•d ~e e•l Call 5-$6-0904 alter 6 LANDSCAPER, e x pe r 'd . d'IC.,., ................. H v•C•T•ONS -··~-:.:;;-:.c.•..::.:.;:.;:;:;;:..._..::;.::: I.FOUND· oft wht--k-•-poo •Y•· •· • r u:: n... • I KOJEU _ .. ff1J .. · ' .. · ...... · · .. · -~"" .. _A.. u d 11 _, A o' •• ,_~.1 8 A R M AlnP•r•on•bie • u.:"llgn or construct on or ;'r ........ .. ......... TRANSPORTATION COMMERCIAL STABLES on Lido Isle. Day: 673.3310, -· .... yo r 0 ar ••IQ ny 1me,..,.. ~ · ,.. .,.. '~ENTA, LS s , '"'' -your copy to· Irie·'!•. Full or,.,, 1lm•. both, Xlnt oppty. Ph: be_lwo IOAT a " ............. Construction It permanent Eves: 673-8346. · JUNK Wanttd. Free metal '""" 8 10 I 714 4~ 27 I Apr. Unfurnlsh-.1 UtLIOATS ............... M1• .... ,,, ~-tl•g • -~1 Di" Tit• Lo•u• "··m, '97-9.57!. , llm on >'• ; » ' ~ >OWll '''''"' sm • I __ ,_, ""000 GRAY _, I r• ri·,., " ' ...,..., •• P''ck up • ...... ctea nup1. ~ ............ unanc ng •~ni. -· · Anu wh te J>!l rabbit. Bo 1875 "" ...... MACHINE OPERS. Single au• !._LEsA";::::;:::::::::::.:O: ~~1~°t::1'L.'1t0s"T :::::::::::: Owner 673·2259. Vic. of Del Mar/University NeWJ)Ort ee"ach, Ca. 92663 J.laulinr. Ed Stone, 50-89l3 Bi-Linnuel Sec'y · ntedle tor 8 port 1we11. r .' , ,,,1!S'A vE 11:01E .............. Jiit •OAT M.t..1NTENANca ........... E ANNO NCEMENTS 11nd SanUi Ana St CM ··• Ex 'd I Gd I N6WPORT IEACH ............ sHt IOAT U.UNCNINO ........... ,,.,. u ··==---~·~-· __ ,Your labtli. will ht 1ent by Housocl••nt-4735 ToS550 Prefer So American p on y. ·P3Y. 'MEWl"ORT MEi•14n .......... IHI MARINI l!OU•"· · ........... ftlf and NOTICES FOUND -youn1 Calleo, "" l ~"~ru~r~";m~•~'~l.~==~--1 '~=::::;:-:::::"";:";-:::;::-born & educated,· Mult hive * 64Z-3472 *' 'NEWPORT SHORES ........... snt IOAT 5LIP, MOORINI ........ ,.,. ;:;;.::..:~.'-".::.:;:... ___ _ •1~L'"" .............. •1• •O•T 111tv1ca1 .............. ..,, l'OUar. Viclnhy Santa Ana SIRVICE DIRECTORY HOUSE OF CLEAN &d SH &. tfllln.-+ medic11l MAN with CitiZf'n Band vi11:51rv l"AIK ........... 11u •o•T J!ENTAL.s ............... tu11 Founcl (~rH Ada) '400 He.lghtl 54(Ml617 H Ci · ph " 1 bck-A h 1 I k 1-.. • d I ""~'"" ................... u .. •OAT CNARTElli ............... ttif -=""'=~· .,.,,,...,,,.,·,-.,-,-,-I Complete OUM! tarun.ir or armactu c11. 5 ... ,.. tee n ca now •NR't> (I'. e•, u' 'ILUFF ............. siu t<tlM•MO •o•TI ................... FOUND IOid Derby bicyci• ,l~o~bv:.:;•~l~"~ln~p._ __ _;'5=5;0l-=--,-,;i64'==,l-682::;;:~'=,,-,,.,.--Nowr:rt 1lgn for manufarturit11t, Call , CORONA DEL MAit ........... siH IDAT MOYIN• ................ ,... SEALPOINT Siameae cat _ _ M S k R!M ?5;"~ I , ~· ................... s• 10tT STOR.t..01 .... _ ..... .,,... round vie 16th & Newporl w/eomblnatton \(lck, UC'D d•v c••t, toddi•r. 7 Meas CJ.~•nlng Sf.rvice Ptrsonne A9ency j r. ac ~ • >: • J Y.ULANDS ................. sut 10.f.TI WltNTIO .................. D 8."'''' .. 2 ...,, .... _... .. ... 0 0 NB '"ECHANIC N d d • J:ll,O'IJ\.E .............. Ill! AIRCRAFT · ............... ti.. Blvd, CM. 645-05.11. -=====·-=~===== am-5;3(1 pm wkly lfot Carpel!, WluuOWI, uOOl'J f'fC, •• over r.. • • ~" ee e im· · ~oA tsU.NO ............. "" t<L'flNO t.ISIONS ............. flM ~ · Res&:. Commc'I 543--4111 '42·la70 mediately. F/tlme. 1101 ~ INGTON &l'ACH ....... .,f(ot MOltLI ttOMl!.5 ............... ,,.. ALL Black mal111 c11 t round L ~·· rne.al1, Harbor/Baker. • ' UlilTAll'I VALLl'f ............ 11 MOTOlt MOMll .... _ ......... n lJ vie Bushard &: Hamil ton, ost -1 ~1 '39 Bayside Or, N.8. 1fli1,, •E•CN .................. su1 11cvctE1 ................ nn l. • Lencftceplng 6110 IOl'S ~~~~o'EE~g~Nrv ·:::::::::::::: ~~=f~~~c.,cA~~ .. -.-.·:.-:-:::::::·: H.B. Call aittt 3. 962--0178. LOST: IRISH SETl"ER PUP· BABYSITIING, My Mme, Medical Sec. o.t•OIN GI OVI ............ ,, .. ,. MOTORCYCL.l!S , ............. ,,. '!I••••• .. ' ••II! BRACELET PY, female, 12/11/70, '4 mos, by Wf!i!k nr month. 601 19th I.AWN and 1arden wnrk, IN"e "HOME or THE 81G BOY" F'ront nfflce • t"f\. l'etl\llrrd. =~,~~N~r:: ::::::::.::·:: .. ::t:: ~3:g~~.0:1C~;·. PA'Hi '::::::: lil H E s ,,-1-"'ound o,.n .. r:·,"1•'tlc Ave. IO Jbl, Surtalde •rte•." .r~ St., H.B. 5J6..977J. rstlmates. Re A 1(1 n ... b l e Waitresses-Cashier Call Ann, 64$-2170, 200 SM4TA """ ..................... AUTO TOOU & IOUll'. ....... Nit '""' ' Wltrd .. 592-1407. =======~===-r11lf'I, ~'6-4315 after 4 PM We8tclltt Dr .. N.B. "IT" ANA N!1GHTI ......... UN fRAILl!R. TRAVll .............. I I k M ,.v TIN ....................... ,... •••11.••s. untttr ............. MJt YNG cat. 1mokey~ Jona:· Lott: rttY •White cit. Oufty. r c • ••onry, -·-Neil 11ppearlnr, Jtt'IOd rhar, MEN <1r Wome:n. Full Pl.I'- ''"STAL .................. !J .. CAMl'l!RI ...................... fnt haittd found D p clfk ftmale. Vic HuntJ ........ ., ... Har. •te 6560 MAID Sl!RVICE 6125 I s• ·-L.AGUNA al l.CM .............. 110& tJUJCJtS ............ _............. n II y s' . , n a . ........ NO F.:XPERlgNCE NEC. l me. .. .... + ~ne:rou1 't·9llfl• 1t1ourl ............ Jtt7 ,,.,, ""'' · ............. tt111 • Ave. 642-0176 bour Rew, &46-5054 Many frin"e bf.neflta bonu11e1, C.Ome in 1869 Ne"" 'N•tLINlll!!NTI ' .. ''"'"'",. CAMPll! lllflfTAl.t mt BUILD, Remadf!I, rt()'llr. ANXTOUS-to-pltue, ha rd ... . l •N JUAH c1.r11T1A1110 ...... •m DUNE tUeG111 _, SEALPOINT BLACK Affhan. Femalt. Brick, block, concre le worktni locAI fir! needi Jnlervlrw1 2-4 0111iy port Blvd, F, Costa J'.1t>sll . c""'''.""o ••"c" .,,, •M,o•rto .t.uros ............ ,... St ,, vi v· 1 ~ and P 1 ~ E ITth c"' '*-"'""'"011r1T ................. 1141 sro11:T CA.,5 ............... 11 ~-tt,.n. c. •c 0.-111. lacenlia c1rpt:ntry, rio j()b too •MAii holld•Y Joht:• Good re.ta. · . . , · MODELS f o t' pmnfolklnal ~:iN.-:1·.,.r~~M :::::::::::::f.: ~:tl:0~:&·,.'~~\~~.::-:::::::=: ~} f~lit 67~1877, Corona de! Mar. ori 1219. PLEASF; llJ3.4i009 Lie. Contr. 96z.6.!tl5l.::"~~~3~!~11~·-------Equ11J oppf>' emriln)'f'r '\\'Ork for boutique franc:hbe, •fll1•Ls WtNTID ........... im 'uro &VINT~ ............... "21 ~ SILl\"Y TEMIER LOST • M'1e labrador mix. BRICK. BIC'ICk, siont. P.tti'M. Turn tho~e While EttpMntA SELLING Your bOa!T "List" No exp nee. IAG Inr 8.~1 aOOM5 110• ll:I NT ........ ,..ms •!JTOS llllANTID .............. '711 11_: .. ~·~~r~~~~·~~~lL_:~!.p~~~·~E!::._ ... k I h •& aoA11:0 . ,,,,. NIW C.t.l,J , ................. ,... ,1, _ c. ar "' el'lter .. c w w lte mllrkin&I, 6 entrtnce wsy1. Nn jM too into ca&h thtu a Dlll)o Pilot "'ith UJ. •. .ell U f31t . Dally THE SUN NEVER SETS Ofl s. u1.•11.E• cou•T• ,,,, tuTo 1. ,,, .................. 1111 • ~a.m • mos. D~ M2·1"t0l. 1ma.U. 646-7825, Rel furn . Dime-a-line lld! t P Uol Clwltled. M2-557l Pilot Ousl.tltd \I ' " • t.:AILY PILOT Thundl)', Oe<tmbu 17, 1911> i iMPLOYMENT J01S a IMl'LOYMENT MIRCHANDISE l'OR MIRCHANDtll POR ' MIRCHAHcMA 'l!Oll ~~~ MIRCHANDlll l'OR PETS •nd LIVESTOCK I .",;;; ..... ;;..;;.M.;;1111'"".'""w--"""'""1"'100-· ,.~. Mor. w-. 7iOO SALE AND TR.ADI SAtl AND TRAiii --~ ... ...,.. SAL'llAltD J.llAQI . . _.fR_EE TO .YOU ....... ms ' ,., Furniture IOOO A=llence1 ·11•. '~left.: .. "' -~--~ =.:.c ' -N.nt'!@' SEllVICE S Pwn i.i ' = ' . , , '!!l 41!! -· hilp '"" JUST' IN TIME rQJt : .. .._ SUPEftVJSOR-LVN, S.11:30 · ta. p · a ESTATE SALEll DE!:_~~ _.f'rl_!l~~'~rei .• 1 !'{11~'°!!! · ,~::r"M:.!-e:":l Chrf1ftn11 .': : ~--p:m. te:8J1LOvfLube Croom. exp. From motion picture execu. ma .... ..,. elec. ~ AW.: ~<..,.t'~ a -..-.~"" , ~'" '1 1 ~.l swiiue ldtte.ns, *Male MaltHe, w~~' l\t ! . LVN sUPtRlllSOR REIJEF • •• ~iu <IM. ""'"I""""""' Tutti•,,..,., di>'er. l>IO,Cdctlb' ~11' ~-~ 1~ T' •t;rr.''CHlls1'f!itAS' 5P1Cllllt' *' 'i< ........ _ .. ~Will hold ""· lltz. * Silver ~cup :S.ll!·JO pm, • · SM:rifice 7 m11 of Italian It old: COit ,$«10.t-:W.-$17S. diiaia ¥1 1 I 111Unt! ,, -.1 , ... 1 • ., "'.APJJ il1..a. _:.19~r:r-1 11, ~1~·., . "Until' citfstmU, call femal« Poodle'* Bla~ lOY _, LYN SUPERVISOR RELIEF SMA. LL --avail ,,,. 1V Spanish f\arnilhlnp, inch.ad· ~tor , .. JDTS ,....,,. stj_ t '"'A: t .-,,\-• ~· •• fW~ 4111 Uly r ~ I •-.1 n.....ll1. N Mr ~ .--MNScines 3-ll:30 pm -··3 • tnr oil r-inttnp exquWtt. ~.-....!a.. at• ·In _,.~from MW 'illr.ChridrM1 &O-al9 121l7 ..... m~e ~. 0 pa..,.•- :?-• LYN suP£RVJSOR lJ.i,30 ""'k IOI" ijg~~.J!..,l!O d~·aet;"piina;,...,. ,;,,. 'hflauH 1111 _ _.._,..,..at Wflll """"" .-. 'l'D qua! hom« chop! *....OW. !33 z: . .. •\. am: exp ntc. JAG Inc. 835-3501. L.R. pcs, klzlg bdnn Wlte 4' ;..;;,:;.;x;.;. • CCIII rluJ.: JW.a lllWY Av. • C ...... f -.c ... 1_, , • i ~ayt1~bred, *-m&Je, o: ~11th St. C.M~ =4- LVN RELIEF SUPERVISOR SPECIALISTS IN ANY mueh ,,,.,.., !Oto S Sat A ROU..TOp ~ Xllll llS' doll -11, 4aallty Uowm made ,~~,._Ullllg your-d.-.illD --119,..:.. + beaut SHERRY'S POOQL~S . u:r:30 am. FIELD, if you a~ out or Sun 130n Red HIU Tustin. ~ft..~ w 1~, iabop or call or.OlJl'I • Gotd.;ailvu, .1old ,filleC!,"Pl•ted .~ O. ~·puPf. • 9 Yrt upnienct ;.,__ __ • ' . ' Park•Lldo ConY&1escent \\'Ork, chanMI )'Out eUorta MO~G! Like New: 8' %131.__.&ft 10un. t U1o~TJM:lr.?A.Jl(._.V..1i; ,.fin~,"/HtthlQ e:JeweJrY·~J.IUP,-• ,mol.·,·nd .homet W/fencH. All breed ~min&'.--·~ c.n1... .. ""'"' VECl'RA ""' $100. Game . . . . s.. II!. , pllea &· 1oo11 • Preclom met a I culhlg ·"l-2'111 12111 pick up • deli•"Y. ~·· ~:;1:; ~w~~~~:': tab~ $l!IO, desk $145, new hWlnt ~I~ 1120 l'AN>'S~WIN m.IDIO equip•.• ~m t!llDbliDC , ,"lWopd ,carviti& ''Lo\Ule tlitt striped kilt· mu pugs in all~. PASTE-UP le production, "'Ork on conuniJSion basis. aott-toucb nauab llOfa, com--SACRl,tCE ' l~lNtwport,.C.M. '4U4M . &·sculpt~& kit.I for tberamate"'1' . en1, ' mo'1.· Netd penn. ~ .. , part tin~. for O.C. Adv. Your tncomelifuitedo(l!Yto mode• $35 ea., matching 1970Sina'tl'aptozla-aq,autD· ' • • I •. • M):neMhoti. Sf& .. 08l3 , Dane Puppies-.• ~c.~ Call lm·l6TO betw'n yOur tnldatiVe. 675'-7877 chrS, beaut cstm tota. dark buttonhcilts,'lllind beQli, av .. Te1*'.-, . -CNfti ~ •vetY, customer ,136-f.Gl 12117 AKC. Fawn. Female. Afpli. ·:.· 1,...s,_1.>:..1_0_,IS_AM __ ••...;ly"'·---1 • .:.•:::"''.'.':;·5::,. ______ I -M-~t ·~~t&ll ... ~~~bdrmodes, ercut, zie·taP1 etc, w/o.at CUR ......... _.... n,.;..i... t 1i-:* FIYe -M ;~..!--.. * '* BEAUT, St Bem&rd .t caUona now being accepted ,._ CUl .. _,. ,...~ attachnlentl. W/walnutcon.. •w .. .ain•noo'~ · · , _.... •• ~ mbc, fem, 1 ya:.. forparenthOOd.$200.5'6-3708 PBJI, THE DAILY PILOT ,.t,lampo.963-9061. sole, !<2.22 full prlct, « ~/W_TV·&-..~w/ ,2JO;l,,17thSt.1H:£on· onllt',CGitA·MoN' habrlm. '.U · shou, Iowa alt6PM. . ., RECEPTlt>~IST hag an openlng for an experl. * curn>M FURNITURE amall Pl)'mebt&. M5-8238, ~ -~· PIX!. Gd , , . 1tof ·. . , • clilldrtn: !Q.-23,79 12/17 MOVED To apt-To. _'.good " Operate Jl!lall switchboard enced, joumalliit in its wo. RENTAL. See' ad dan 10-7'daily., _ ~. -• , P»n:~<..~·til'8 PM·Tue11T}lur & Sat LOYA.BL&, ll"Y 'tipr 1tripe home only, black mlniJtutt and act as ~tioni3t for men's de""-..ent. Applicant 4000. Call 548-3481', , SPECIAL e , RORY:AatE TV • ' ' ,.. IAM1til O PM ¥on,, Wed I:: Fr; , kitten.·•~ IOft tut. 4 mo, poodle, 1 -yr, •. c Ood !<>Cal <Uv of 1 ernationaJ _..... . UHJ'/VllF $35 * 5"«a29 ...;;i;,._ -....... ~ ......._ -'1' _..___ ---........_ ------ndl .00 home. ~lS aft w/childttn. Housebroken. coi;pon.tion. . ·, cler~cal must be able to ttJICl!'l, Office Fumlture I010 Repair any make,~ mocSe'I "' LWWW.Q?-LWWWWSW!!At 1 pm'. 12/17 $60. ~7982. e."!;Ptf., lncl mg typing. write clearly, understand in your own home. Clean, ,~ Good benefits &. working usentials of photography A Rdin'd 34x60 wood des1ra, oil &: adjuat,.. o DI y n.95. H~1 & .~ . life Mhcel ..... : ' ' ... MllOfPaft1-• ... f'REE: Dllle ,or female cat, CHRISTMAS Poodle ,_zAKC cond' layout. Top company bene-$69.SO e R#in'd wood ann 568238 . 1 , • • • 1 ' • V'11Vlaft'ectiontte: both M.ve reg, Champ sired..· :roy Equat5~pportunity employer tits, good salary, attractive rotary chain, $29.50 •We RICCAR'S Co?llOle Sewin& CAPEHart:am/fmmtildlk'x *-AUCnON * ........ been.'•tixied. Call 968-SW. apri~t. 7 w~. Shota.':Very 1.T.T. JABSCO 146S Dale \Vs)' Costa Mesa, Calif. 92626 (714) 545-8251 ntwquartft's.Applyinwrit. bave the ~ .election Mach. Never uaed. $75. I track~ tor.tnle. 140 Plll:IDAY 7:1io'p ;M. 4IK . .. 12118 pttCIOUs. Will bold · til Ing only, dtin&' eaperlence, .. -oltice -.. thll furn.~ ''""':""''cbaMel. IJlcludes . D•CEMil!R 18"' . . GREAT IDEA 1'011' WW a mo male,"lookl Christmu. 540--0354 • ' ; bacllgroond" "'ucatto•.. ..... ....-. on. . .,,., $250. u , .• .::..~, s' s · 1 THAT L:AST MINUTI ·lllle ShoOp.doir, bm, blk" EXPERT grooming ·l~T.50. Margaret Greenman, J>er. Mc Mahan Desk AllO, I trade tQes,.'Inquire ~.•J1"1W9 tw9 I• SHOltPINOI wh( }0Ve1 children hbrkn Poodl&puppies, most(Olors, sonnel Manager, Box 1560, :mo Newport Blvd. Mutk:al t iAM-2:30 PM. 900 {33) Sea P•rtlal Liltl""-. aU(8C0481or•237912/17 ~up. Monkeys $35. ~ial eo,t, M• ... Calif. 92626. 64U450 lntlrumonls 1125 Ln. CdM. . """" ....... ·boxes. -Psyc·.h:.:,,.1_1~ "c PAll<r' s· .... wliit on all birds. 547-3ail . or PBX prer'd. will OUNG W pable f 00i Model J.50.D A dhh packs, 7-pc dinklr .d· ...... ' wnese, _.. . e, 547-9591. • ' train ·.• eng~"ht" .Ph Y · ornan ca o e SOLIDWALNUT e 4.Pc.DRUMSET,redpearl, , ~.to -t~•-·cabine•?·pc-...:i odd ·eye .. ~.Bellm,ton 0.,.,.TJANSCh 'bd person. : neat detailed work on * OFFICE DESK * + hi-bat, 22" eymbal, ftel cu.tom' tape 'deck, 3 .. '"""'.. -.. """'"' T~hi~ 2 )'1'I blebrlm nu<•uo. · amp, i=,. '-'536-888"'-=':..· ------tempoiaty catalog projttt, $25.' 893-3482 thronie, all aCCffl, Xlnt beads, mk:lapbwts, wood = tet..,w.o~;hf:in:~ ' '1-;,.t:·IS, ' 897..sm,· 83&-M93. un9 T~e home Christmai-<ir;wk r Some typing. Principala cond. $400 invest._ sacriflce cabinet. .many kit.turn. ma~. s:;;;;·-;,,:. .._in PUPPY-part _l>OO'.dlt/part before. Top cond. ~!:)': * PHARMACY CLERK • Only. 548-eSOO. Office Equipment 8011 ;200. 548-5148·atter 4 pm_or Uled 3'mo, Make"offer.' 212 "'aae.u,,Deaka Dinettelt Scotch Terrler, 10 Wu. Will AIREMl-1937. . AKC Oftiee proced,ures. &Offie typ-Wanted: TV technician weekend No:-eout 11wy; AJll:•S, L.B; Qlttee.tablel .. Bai w/refril. MRGA'INI bold till C!uiatmu. Aft 5. DALE Pupp1e1: . i.n& & bkkpg. Full time-days. Salary open, Exp only L. c. Smith desk model. CONN CORONEi', very Jd. TAPE .Dtek. ~Akal Colored TV'i, Portables, Sound . 2l3i'591-5274 12111 ~rn 9/ll/70. ;us ea, ~i South Coast Community * Call 543.3493 * 16 inch carriage type-cond. A---i-.. rn:~ Bat otr xm>S, a ·track ~ ~ stereos ""'-~~ .. Reelln ! -controll_etl, -3 dtl.n-BLK l ht _,.,,., I litter/champ pe d ta-r~e ; Hl)@ital, So. Laguna. Per. writer $25. MS-7983 vv~CLUKU •'" • ---·· • n I ' ·~jht s'hoWs M•nv . w .. ..........,. em. yng 5J6..Q2() Otti 4991311. takes&IS-~75. ridp,eu.tte,reel .. New. erw.. ,.Dis,-~crs.. W"her typls.tor .carA-h<ilne.S.::. dog. Mostly sprlngerI====,.,,-,-..,..,,-l--1 aonnel CP. • SchOO:s-ln1trudlon 7600 Garage Sale 8022 SNARE drum. LUDWIG, Kenwood ~140 AM/FM ltdryerttta, AVoeadosid&-.cllre<:t fr!)lll: manutactur'U ~pani~I. very l ovable . CHARMING Beagl~ ~e~. PurchaJing Agent -s YOUR MOVE chrome. $60. Cail 546-0573 """' ........ ,, 150 ...... ··-,.q ~ malHUnr • SAVE! 54IJ..0254 12119 Punb"d AKC, Will )i;i!!l tU Good t y p Ing. Purehasmg 11 MOVING·SAf.E! ! Llke New· after 5 PM like MW. 673-0SBO Pl: atove. Pool .tabfe, Fwr ' '·~·ht •. A1•$un. CHILD'S ADerl)' fottel to Chriltmas Eve. $50 c~ ~ ~~. 0 ·, ~~~IWle}clill""'"0r."'.·, INDUSTRY CARE£RS fuJspring&mattresa-Lane *CONN ditYctor trombone RCA Sf'EREO ~r A:·'Jawn mower. -·, 1.,,, .. ~··Sfevent rjve, up. 2~i yr old Blk terms. 837-6518 '"' '. . ...,.4'•• -... cedarchest·stereo.reclin-case. Approx 2 yn old, WalnuJ Co-ntemporary ~Pt. Lota of~ toys. Sa.nta.Alle. . .. ~1 ~Terijer,Catlc7kit·MINIATURE Schnauier1 N.B. er .. commode. Spanish en-$7S. 646-2165.. cabinet, Excellent. condltkm ~. ·Exe'l'CllOr~· Pier ·Q-··-, tent. 83(1..4113 -12/17 AKC reg, 6 wks. ~1; to RECEPT. TYPIST Exciting position with a lot of challenge &: advancement. Start S350. Call Linda !..tt, 540-605.s. COASTAL AGENCY A;nember of Snelling &. -Snelling tile. 2190 Harbor Bl, CM S40-6055 Harbor Blvd. at Adams try wall coMOle. pictures. FENDER Guitar le CUe, il.75. tures,-Etc.;.,197025o Yamaha , . . , FREE To qua! home ftd go h:lrne -for Cbriitlqas. AIRLINE & TRAVEL statues • tennis rackets. single pick up, xlnt. cond. • l9'J-IS!9 • End~; Ai¥f .m~~! ~ESE Hoobd 'nae.· all Doxie mix, sweet _&: ioVable, S4Z..Ui9 -~' Bric. a· Brae ETC! ETC? $90. ~ LONGINES •SW.O . ~ •Y~S ~AUCTIOlf ,Mo!, 10 x :lf\with rubber · fncd yd. 548-0SU 12111 2 M~e poodle puppie~•illlt't f: OPERATIONS AGENT e TICKET SALES e RESERVATIONS e AIR FREIGHT-CARGO ' e _CQ~CA'110NS e TRAVEL AGENT 995 Sandcastle Dr. <Harbor p1ayer,. 4 ~tlj.9 · o}d, ~inc. &,Ip with' floral NU1'TY Coclr 1 Id miruaturt, 8 wks old, U~ View Hills) 644-59~. TRUMPET A: CASE originally $80 ukipc $30. co~_;n.OwsE,AROuNn ·"~~ $25, ~tc~·3 •x 5 Semi-tn.;ned~~ ~ to children, no pa~ :$4~ '~ SIZE slate pool table, Good~:~ $25. Eve/847~. :«H$% Newport" Blvd. . 1'111, ·~tb . pad $5 •. F'ftncb CommodOre NB 12/17 ea. &15-4270 before 4 ~ • . . surfboards, 4·slice toaster, CI\J\IG Pioneer, ,4 track .. _pla. Y· & ...... _.. .,._,, m•· M ·,._ Provincial cott,e table "".itb ' , • AKC REG TOY POODt.E; Fryer. 6 musical CONC,EJlTViolin;xlntcond. er,·~·ne'w."Tapeaavail. Coirt&IUDGM;;"r'• ... ~ IOMr .shellanddraWft'~.2Yn,gfe~.cats,l.wht/blk MALE CALL AFT 4PM:- instruments. Grill for patio Appraised $500 'Yill aell * 8'6:93l& * 'OPENn'A!LY 9 ,10,4 :Kenmore vacuum •w\th a abort hair, l calico long 545--0556 ' · or cafe, <:omm'I French $295. 548-60>. 642-3862. taclunentlf·$12 .. 6f6-4032. hair. 546-7308 12/17 · tryer, Kofla.eb tie ski boots. El.EC Ore 2 . ls Al'Al·X360D, Ji tapes STOP & SWAP A Home for 'Christmas? Kit· MINI Dachshund puppies; Airline School1 Pecific sz 71..i. Loads or misc. no .....ial~. ~ , ... :8", ~'. .. ~. U!..-Antlque1Splnet Dt•k . ·i::·• ~m ty spayed.fem. -·nffcb_kind ~~ .. 11t::!· 2 males. AKC. ~.:· ... ~•MEN OUT OF 610 E. 17th, Sont• An• ~· '' --~-· , ~• -~·• ·-·-" ~ ~ ~ • junk. 1701 Park St, H.B. 540-5452. · S~. bt:d ·W/attacbed:dffk, ,;rn·Newport Blvd., C.M ...... t .,_...._, ut17 . WORK'.' Sell ·a ·product that 543-6596 53&'-2683 af112pm. f nde B G i 6' Ko&. wood cotte~ table '(next to Tony'a Bide Mft:) CUTE Mixed • puppies. 292 e . AFGHAN PUPS, AJ:CC. sell.s itself. Work on REGISTER. your -6t'f2 yr old BOUGHT Mobile Ho' me. I: -r 111 u tar T•pe R1ienler1 aDo Sm , te~ tihles,, .very ;~ UM 'fUm; .sioves; '1te.frla'1; Vi·ll a Nov a, C. M . Pick. of litter! B~ack ~: commissionon or wholesale in Special ch r i st ma 5 Everything goes. Elec. appl, NEW. * · &f6:3738 · tare' Chinete Black ,wood • A Mf.c. ~ 12/17 eel silver. 962-6956 aft 5. • ~hl!-~~ .~'::i':~~'.You~ Vacation program. Skatin&-clocks, lamps, silverware, HONER Accordion w/ cue, , ~ .M '9 ~. 1883 colored ~th-"ll We dOn'~· have what you AKC SJJrincer Spaniel 10 mo · tncom::'limlted.only to your bow·Jing.field trips• dinette, dishes. bdnn set. 120 bass, used 1 ino. TAPE REC:c>RDER ~ °' _of Am•ri~ ytclJ,~ ~.we'll pt it for )'OU" old liver le white '73-1684 Horlff lilo initiative. You will deal Tranaportation avail,· Open You name it! 64&-6919. 2214 Sacrifice $100. 847-3871 -• ~2009 •• ~.c·ol.lec.'tio'n (odt•of 2-Pc teetionaJ 1 curved I ' . . l2118 ' with a reputable firm. 7 days. 114G-3706 B. Rutgers Dr, C.M. . "Lt's Paul" sta?ldard print) · books Cn aailinl. table -.,, '·Sfi .... -blw . ' FOR SALE! 1970 Bai Fii,y. YOUNG Set Sclxiol n.... 7 Guitar C & Eio !: . -'-1 ' model . ,_.ea., ~r ta e i,i . .ffusky. Black W/ ·wblte. 'I'hree B and Clahh-'. II 61:>-7877 after 5. · "'1""" GARAGE sale, Dec. 15th, .1merll~ ' ne ivory .,~pa _ · • • ~-Vanity bench w/pad ~-Shoti,:LOves children. . an ~ SALESMEN, ..full or p/tlme, days, 6:30 AM • $7:30 PM. 16th, 17th, 18th & 19tb, 1021S e 646-5630 e ·&4utpment· . ... ~ ~rcelain, Japan. $3.SO. Arm.chair $3.50. Bar· can. 5J6.7'181•aft·S m 12/18 Breechng. ~70 Bay Filly. Professional teacheni·. Ages Swallow, Fountain Valley. s·. e1e can'ed iwry, SQapstone, 1tuo1 S2 50 , Lp -oval wool p . Madder ~usic, Joe Reed'. -n pick your own hrs. Sell to i.12. Transp. avail. 646-3706 pothes, office supplies & Pi•no• & OrtaM 1130 HASSELBI.Ap " ·lens, 4'~ Oriental BCteen; 40''X ~d ·~, $60. Honda·5.5 ~~ER 2 ye~ old and Buzzie.Bell H brffdiOg. pvt homes & industry. Sal· TAlilTlAN & Hula Classes equip, E1c. Planar,*~--011. * 2S Coromandel plaque, for Parts Pl &U-0558 ~(ltl~_ and loves children. 7141737-5649/Norro. . .. ,. ary unlimited. For more in· By Maihlokalana. Phone NO\\' IN ONE LOCATION ,,,_,, Meencha~ pipe, Auttrian " , " 646-8150 12/19 BACK Bay Saddle ' Cfub ro. contact Mr. Ricardi, 9 &fG.-2012 after 3 PM • MOVING SA.LEI e Conn *' Y•maha (Anthon,) vase, 'Toby mlip, 39 H~INT'e I e ctr 1 c CHAIR C!O!Tler aora and boarding $45 mo St«t cm .. ~----~·~m~'"~'~"'~pm:;·,.·,.t,.000-... ,.(l3ii)iiiiSeiiat~L~A~G~U=N~Aiil·Pro~.SC~hoo~·l,_ag~ (F~~:~F.:.=.__.! .. !ho"!~'-.5>!•~•.n• l500 ~an ,1t,ins,,A.a·t !J ·Ue ~~m. hR.ocet! rocka:.trte. 216 E. ~ rala for •ale isO. Entlilfi, ~I 2%-6. $20.·$50, mo. tuition, sui' Be twood. chairs ETC, 1W1U C?m.,.ete aelettiOn UR ft.& , -~. ~ M<&le,.....-... US.--Mttim. &lit~~~ 12117 _w~m le~. S4G-18!!~ Secretary 494-~ or 495-4498 Edna 54ifil03n • or P'W10S 4 orp.ng S'lO"L z . ~~ x · ~~. ~~~!::~~ «>~ appii;x: l~~.$50. '~ PUP~rhsbrk 8 weeks 0¥1. MUsrAN.G mare. baY'&!': • • Acctnr Dept. No-SH, gd-tyy. Ol&lring, Dir.. • Qllen_~ 10 til t Ex Oona:• ldf." $1).!Xl~.;-¢lll l7tb·be1Wn•J:Joft.r A-'Bufk· stenotype mt.chine, nrier • TOy Sbtpherd."and beai;l.e · 8 yr old in foal. $150. 548·7tii ist. S~tiatical typing. Lead-LEARN Piano at home from ~~!f:~.i~::sm~ ·sco::T*M~SI~ S.S:~ .. Goad: ~ ~jf l -, ' ·.' ; , a.ti $115,lM7-99J7. , , mix.:S.m,.-, . -nil! or Sf9.005 eves & wklC.s; in1 company. Fantllltic ben· professional sonpriter. $10 MD kit Art work, wall NE;WPORT a: JIARBOR Prffent .· · · · ~ . ~ . ~~El~. train. •t.: .~ ~8!"':ll~ breed .pl&ytul pu~ TRA.MSPORTATION' efits. Lesson. 673-7795. plaques. 2792 Mendoza, CM. Col!ta Meaa * 642-2S5l· ctJSI'M 'Gordi'e , aurfboUd •', .!'~Y~~ 3 e~ w/can, 2 1~11. 'pies, r6 ~~ks ·aid, fe~! --------,-·I MISS EXEC AGENCY *POPULAR PIAN°* . $125 , • i;,ny ·-· $25 OU1STANDll\IG VALUES. col\ 1tud,~.---.1 '~:;6,l9 12118 ao.t & y ch fiGa 410 W. Cout Hwy. NB 1.e ... -;, home. "" mo. FREEZER, chiirs, sm &. lie BEAu:rtFUL Wurlitier 4500 H bl i1: __ ..-:._.u M:: i .. _..... J.U...LJKEIN'EW··BJG DIS.. Yriold!" 11tll:u -:11 $250.all in-TO -.....i ho only She -.1. a . hi . . 6463939 • .,, ~ itemE, Wed thru Fri aft 6; Console10rgan .•• Pre-Ouisl· 0 e .U,S.CU,•.JUU ~~ ~t COVNi's. CH'lt'tsTM .f.:S d;uditd.~~·tofs ··avail 'at f.fi,~eonrrea· . p. c . tt . • 546-2759 • Sat & Sun 10-5. 29381 Valer. mas speci al, SAVE $700. ~ •• .,1,.'1Yl:..,. n" w ..mild, LAY.iAWAY, 3 cbannel ~!jht lOC{ci ;of cost.. 67"'>3003 .or herd 6: e.JIUJ>8. ~1': s RAM•L s * SF.cRETARY / OFFICE MERCHANDISE F9R io, Laguna Niguel 4~ Open Daily 10 til 9 ""'" .t,,_i.w. · + ~ 'eoior '·' ;Aut.o 6~5023. ·· · · - MANAGER Ior small busi-SALE AND TRADE GARAGE aale -Clothes, Sat 10-6 * Sun U.5 ~ 'G;ift' .• :~·. col.Or ~·.lJ&r:s, ~~~ 2 -co·u~'llES match/ 3 :.~hibalrid .. Gu~ Pip. ANSWERS ' neq ·in Habor area, Cen'l, furniture & mi.&c items. 2353 COAS:T MUSIC cue.·~i;ca.~~··. iln, Q)J'ltfols, Stueos,·FM atetto IOvffeat dinette .;1 cmplt Will ho\d for Chr11tma.s. : aecy1 I: bkkpr exper, req'd, ~urniture IOOO Irvine Ave, N.B. 548-6292, NEWPORT &. HARBOR Marlw'·Rotomate blD::bnp, radtO.. tape 'Pla:vft'S Ir: Ktna:.a·l.bed. coffee• tbl ·A: 545-4361 12119 By ne Vigil _Whoop ~ salary open. Send resume TWINS-Matt-.&: box apgs, 2 Fri, Sat & sun. Olsta Mesa * 00.~1 poles. Used once n40. tapet. XREXSA1l. CORP., refria. .IJdo Isle. &n0ca7 SWEET Wht le blk fem. cat. un:ck: PHOBIA , tctB.S. Henry, Gen. Del.Bal· matcil prs. Englander 21" RCA color TV, 5-pc din-Special Holiday Sal• Mf.rn.I. . 815 "B" W.15th St, N.S.. Aft 3. N~s home w I children. Sign spotted at the wain1 boa; Calif. 92661. orthosupport, Real cheap, ett.e,-2 wing-baclc chairs, FREE GIFTS P00Ltables,UW,$395Aap,-' JAKE'S Ultd E rythiha st&-Tn l2/l9 Airport: ''People W!»·-Are SENIOR Citizens .. l or more $311 ea pr. SOFA, brn clothing & misc. 838-1767 Wmt Pt.JRCHASE lO~ dlacoant on all~acc:n-* HO TRAIN LAYOUT. g Buy-seD-Tnde E7ec. aoH LQVELY ·Ync. Jon a-hair Afraid to Fly Have c.asti-o ' older men tG alternate metallic fabric, hardwd CI..arHES, 1.!iOts, Br ic-HAMMOND :rotll~lhlt, B:eaeb =tab~~ir!e~h·eJu'ai = cart $25. n-c'.mt throw calico cat. 546-7308 l2/19 fHOBIA." ,: : working evening shift. Ser-frame, $45. 646-2021. abrac, fruit jars, Christmas ORGAN STUDIOS • · troll · tain tu I mower.$65. <;olor TV $125. Box sprinp & 3 Fisberman's Delight-.J.8'' vice station, 5 pm to 10 pm. HOUSEHOLD Jurnishings-trtt stand & decor, 2264 tn COff:ON~ DEL MAR SURFBOADS • 9'10'' Ru9tt :1dee. 'wr::r tor'·2 ~ l11 E. l8th, CM. mattftues. 642-3929 12/19 Thunderbird run-aboUt:'Jfll 'Lite work, $2 hr. CaU in per· mrbl top table, occ. chrs, Meyer Pl, CM. 104 2854 E. CoUt Hwy, 613-8930 $;(1,'9'.8"-~." ~· opertt:ions. Mounted on 4x8 1~150,000 B.T.U. Day&: N~ FREE pt·Poodie pups . Ready hp OMC stem drive epj.. 60 son morning& at King'I; Lido sngl bed, sofa, bureau, A.G.O. ALLEN T·U.A Full 9'1<""_.. boUd fQl' fold up It cabinet fllmace, ezteJior monnting for on.tmas. 968-185? 12/18 gal gas cap., other eXttu. Richfield. 3EiOO Newport garden turn., potted plants, Appliances 1100 Console Organ, 32-Ped, Wal. • Scuba tank,. brand· new, w/bullittln board on reverse $100. c:c.itact 'Mr. Laney or 12 Cilte Ouimnai ~mice! Boat & trlr. $2'lXl. 545-:81~. Blvd .. N.B. ~~~intings. Re t t Ing, 22., 'IV Home Entertainment nut ••• ONI..Y $1995, NEVER been Uled, J.v.:Jw, side. $1(10. 646-2165. Mn. Gnenpwi at the S49.Q958 aft 4:30 pm 12118 25' FAIRLINER c;~bi n SERVICE STATION Center, like new $200. RCA Open Daily 10 .til 9 boot, S60. ~ $300 TUmON to L.A. DAD..Y Prtm, 330 W. Bay, KITrENS g k& • box Cruiser, Best otter ~Over . S ALE SMAN-MF.CHANIC.· LJKE.NEW--'fumiture, color Console color TV $l<IS. Sat 10-6 * Sun J.2.J * 12 aat.iae 1hots:un, Collete ot Mied a: Dental Costa Mesa. · w • 3 mo, $1000. Anchor MmM.:tin . TV C01180le, SO to 60% oU. We deliver, service & guar. COAST MUSIC Brw'ftine O 1: U, .Like Ant-Anaheim. For We at RA'ITAN .. w/2 •tools $50. ~. 836-4493 12/l8 Back Bay Dr, N.B. ; Full or part lime. CaJJ 673-1409 btwn 3-7 pm. antt'e. N~RT & HARBOR new; $450, 6*4638. $273, Pvt pty: Clutes IOO?l. Br'id,re Id: $2». Bone china, FREE baby Guinta P igs. Experience pret'd. 31D-A 'Dahlia. Place, CdM DUNLAP Costa ~sa * 642.2851 HOUSE of Paipo 51,. foam 673-4353 ' denert or' aalad plates, $3 ~ 12118 S•llboat1 . tpici • Advancement oppty. e Training Program IVI0VJNG. ·Mirrors, lamps, APPLIANCE Spinet Piano $195 apoon ti.ex-tail knee tioud. UPRIGHT Piano, S2·25 . fla. TV" I .nice stand $20. 4 I.Jvtoly kittens ;1 RU55ian RENEGADE ~~ e Paid vacation chests, beds, paintings, 1815 Newport Bldv., C.M. Thomas Organ $195 Will lfl-C, $60. 536-7692. G-uitar 'llN~ca1e $20. ~29C7 Blue._&li-3354 12/17 of • Profit sharing chairs, dilhe1, artifacts. e 541-naa e 100 New .I: U.ed . St@~no AM/FM con-FOR Ale: Ultd ,. fluores--::~- •Well eqp'd. station 646-296Z. FRIGIDAIRE Auto washer, Pianos on Sale Milcalleneoua l60I tole $25. Port. TV· le Stand cent tlitarts, $5 .each, as is. PETS and. LIVESTOCK F NE~POR! · · e Xlnt. location CRIB & Mattrtss, xlnt ~ncl Be1ch Music Center $15. 536-3839 after 5 pm. Contact ·Mr. Laney or Mrs. p · "'----~mou.s 2S Tops 1 cu~ •. e Hi gallonage unit $35, Port-a-Crib $7.50. Car $60, Kenmore autet washer Huntington Bch. 847-8536 CHINA .. S1 pc ·Roeenthtl BICYCLES 20", 24" le ~" Greenman. Dally Pilot, 330 eh, VW19r•I U00 diesel, A.P_., 1 b~ of saiJJ, For interview contact Bob beds $5 ea. 6 4 6-S 2 5 0 , :~n:~ ~nt de eol ~ e: CHRISTMAS ~·-eitiona .. Fantuia pattern, ll!rY 8; &1N· I:: boy1. l · I:: S Spds. West S.:,, a.ta Mesa C'APi.J(:HIN Monkey (organ every possible eqw,pment fO Sctidder. 6-9 PM, 2800 W. 646-5.>91. 546-86!_2~• 847-8115. ....._ pe~· O.t $280, Sell St.TO. ·Nicely· painted. Good cond., t OLD CHOPPING BLOCK. srtmef. variety), Almost l go !"1Y'W~e l!l the wor¥- Coa.st Hwy. N.B. LIVING room chair, llght ·· ~=-ndNew·! ~ ~ 714· ~· ftuonable. Mini Bilc:e·4 HP, 2i6 Slerb,1Gf, 54M242 aft yr:Old. Will sell at less than Aaking $9500. 646-l9l4 f:ve.• SERVICE STATION AT· aqua I gold. sheJ> casters. KENMORE Or Whirlpool o!mostmakei.Beatbuysin .SO,FT, , ~ v en·d t•ns xlnt.:$95. &e.llT2 lorwkndl; %,our cost Will give full WOULD YOU ; . $50 Lik .,..___,... elee dryer, Old but in good mac_. hlrie,iche, •. st"tne, .• Walnut • • ..,,!ES L06 carat ~--·nd · \ ..... -.; .. ul. an. $50 Ind ---. BELIEVE --'. TENDANT alJ shifts open. • e new. 847-cwu•, eve cond $3'J ea, Al!O Kenmore So. Calif. ·at Schmidt Music fi h Paid~ .._.__ .,_ ~ ....... au ...-·~ -~ Apply in penon, 4678 Cam· 968~·.;:ll,.;78"-.~-----I Co., 1907 N. M•in Santa rull • -~· ~·......,. solitair.fl', VVS, blue white,, MechlftiUV,.ltc. 1700 Call.~7614 Aft 4 pm COROijADO :rt ~ wringer type washer $25. Ana. --. like new, 535-9m.. --i-.a .,.,~ Sell .. :n :=.:.!.; · TRnPICAL Fish ,._ . OFFER ..• • pus Dr .. NeWpt Bcb. LOVELY Sofa. never used, 546-8672, 847..SUS. CARPET I '--· -!"~~ .-.v. ~· LATHE H dut.• 27'' --6' :'f • eqwp-29 2 w ' SERV. estab. Fuller Brush quilted nora, scotchguarded GE Dryer, can be used on STE J.N WA y p AR LOR Qel'I, ·-.w lhas Pl'i. plrty, 212 No, COut · ~ -~~.... ment-aale. Cosine our store l · Coast Hwy, N.B.; rte, $125-$175 wk. to at., also $125. Matchinl' loveseat $'15. 110 watt. GOOD COND. Too GRAND . crpts deal dlreet. exp in-llwf, :.,{pt S, LB. ~~!~nCfi~p~tr w/8= , e~.rrthine must IO· 20% to Priced for quick sefe, pt dme. 546-5745 5304337. I~ for our mobile home. Refinished, OVerhauled lc ttall, Cllt' tin. 539-8327, CUSTM Gordiit IUf'fboard rest $1250 673-5274• 50f'o · oft. ~B E. Coast CORONADO 25 •••..• $59rl5 Mahogany Credenza Bargain $20. 557-8005 guaranteed. Sff & bear to 81{...fltn $125 .t ~Uy board $2S. • • • Hwy, CdM. 673-54SS. New motor, galley, -...J.50~ SERVICE Station Attendant. exp·d, for grave ya.rd ahilt. Emfe'~ Union Service, 2983 Harbor. C.M. Too large for trailer. $7S or •REFRIGERATORS • appre'cl ate. WARD'S LADIES Full lift out double Hoble ·llUl'fbiOvd S25. Adult FREE TO YOU ~noa. etc. See at 2912 W. tradeforsmaHdinetteset. FROM MODEL HOMES BALDWJNSTUDI0,1819 eoil&rmlnk .1tole.A~ owned toya new cond, C•ts 8820 CoastHwy,N.B. : S3&-t222 * 5,31-8105 * Newport Bl~., 642-8484. valoe $1fOD, ·will 1el1 . fM ~: Sf&.Orlo. . . BEAUT P\ft wht YJlf adlt, FREE 161Ai' 505, Extremely fail. NEW CLARINETS I:: $400. 833--~9. . . NAT, sun metal mink Jacket, IPIY'd cat Wue ~~ _ Black & white ax:tO photo of ~ cond. Full race. J ib &: VIOLINS NEW 10 •Pd boY'• bllce' $50. !ate style, .rine collar, ntY· alto 2 belut 'tirtr altered your kitten, 3 mo or Jessa. spinnaker & trlr. $WO. Call Rent towa.rdat purchue CUsto'!ft bdUt 'pn Cablnlt ·er M., ~t ONtmu: gift, main ... lhots. ·~13. Must haw lhots. Pleue call eves, 213/966-803.1. · 11~ TAR G A'ZEK".. ;n time lor.Chri8tmas SISO. mn:iinlnut, bacbi!lor $&00, s:tr;<> ....... 511-836-4193. 12111 fol' 1ppt, 51&-9818 CORONADO 2:1 No. 596. By )t,1'~ [A\ >=!! • .._ ~l app!'O"ed cht1t & ~r $75. 5'8-0012., MISC. Ite!N, Eiec. lftiJI, ND' ad home fncd yd .for very * ·CHRJSTMA:S KI'M'ENS * owner. Like new, many fl,~. •••u By Cl.A Y l. POLU.N uatA Coast Music Service, 646·0271 N.B. ~ CI u b family ~inc tbl, &Ilk, hang:l"I' lovablt! 11 tftaie breed bl){ Beaut, exotic Rex K1ta, w/ tras. $6500. n4/4$-5261 "'~·1 ~ Y-~.'1T ·..;.yew:le Ji... stfr.1trt"J. GULBRANSEN Organ, memhi!rihlp. S3'7S plvs lithtl .. coffft tbl It sploe ,Jabmix6mo.low1·cbildml 1botsA--n.Showor-t ,"'••,,'..,',.,·=,,...=-,---t ,..,,_ n Act din '° tli• Ston. · @Ii@ l transfer Call ~ -""-•---n. ..-"" ...-'1; • 2. 9.1j.1 ' To deYelop 5o0ge for frkloy. ~i.~2' model E, ike new. 25 note • "' ...... vtV-lo> nda perm. ar temp home. Call: 962-6995. COLUMBIA 22 tmmac· UJ3.80.a2 rtodwordsc0t1espo~ingto.....nbef' ~ i>e?als, pe.rcus1ion It SCHWIN,N Rambo?'D C(Rp!JT lQfl' bu hi.Jo's 50-<llU: 064493 12119 · Motor, Miny 'otber x~ ofyolll'Zodioc:biinhSign. chimes, 2 m~. Alto futba.ck. 5 spd, Stincrajr, lha,p at fantastic' 1avtnp: PARTSiame1e, beautiful, tn-Dots 1125 Slip, Sacrifice $27SQ'. ,,. . l it.pan .,..,,._, separate Leslie speaker. xlnt eond. 166. 5fS..SI$ P'rM est will ' ple a,1e,,. tell well tnJried Utile bJ.k . 494-1285 i ~"'°' ~t..._, !}~ Sacrilice $US5. 5'S-l402. I' DINGHY, new British m-9951 ktl-te-n _need• home e ST. BERN:mo pupe. e CORONADO 35 ' Atf'1t J.tT• 6.t». EBONY F1$ber Baby Grand. delian. It folda. $250. S&il POOL Tables, Btunswick badly, Had ahots. SQ.3839 A.ICC, 7·~;;df~ NOW IN NEWPORT : ~~ ~.~~ ~~ :'r::!nt~ ~ ~ extra. m-4923 S2tli9'.95 & up, Cbber1 8oWf. .rt 1• 12111 IRISH SETI'ER PUPS For appt call 845-0810 : 10t1....,-31~ 61c-it 673-2'259 644-5972: • BRUNSWIQ(•V.J.P. poot ta· ing 4 Billiards, 2750 Harbor VERY lOVable . tt~e Auat. ltEGIST'ERED-4 wb UNBELIEVABLE I • '.',~. ..,,,~ ~~-• b1e $500. Jn ·xlnf cond. Blvd., C.M. ~~. Shf'p, a~ temtr mix male. e •--e COLUMBIA 22 1.,.,;. ... ,,...,..,... ORGAN By Ch\'Der: O>nn 2 --~... e SKI •• _.,,..._ M--' .. ,. ~~ 'lo·~ child· ~ • ······• .. ~ l lYllw AIC-,,,..... _, -..-11 ,.. • .....,,.., -.~~now! ..,...-.-uni., • .,,. 2912 \V COll!tH~NB · 12~ .C:lf09t'f , nu,. manual • .., note ~··WE Loan-Bey-Sell~ Cabin at Mammoth Mnt. ren, shob, 1% year:;.SCHNAUZERPuiw.Maleat · ··~· · • :!:=.., !!~"' ~!~ percus1rlon.likenew.$1XIO. CoutPawnlrAucHon.D Slps T. Finpl, etc S18-P> s;w.mt;·83M493. l2fll stud, Grooming, Hold 'tU Lido .14'!/trlr$195 ; 150f •5Valw 75t:,: 642-2393. Newport BJ.vd. 60-MDD per d&¥. 531-3374 ~·· SIAMESE • )'!'la 'ma.le cat« Ouiatmas. M6-08S9. -* 645-0222 * :~~ ~~·-1111k: ~... * ELF.CTR.IC PLAYER T4LJ:(ING Panot tcw Ou'.lst· MUST Sell, New box tpfinp 2 ferri~ ldtlfl'11 to aood SEALPT Siamese malt, not UDO-Clean & completely ~.:n:: ::~i..e :=..... ~~:::' PIANO, Xlnt cond. $550. mur "Euy'1.'Ttach ~·Ftin It msttm• $3l, 2--dr refril home a,. HolmbloRn. reata. to ,bretd w/~ fem fltt~. ~rth sails, trlr. No. 1 :xiv-'°T.._ '°"' ~. to'Own!".S10or t,·Sfl.,M1f $150, Calh A carry. 536-?t:iO l2/1I _,,.pick~lltter.6t6-4l69 l865.$9•a.673--0676aft6. /tt: ~WI 11 'i ~~ ~:.. ~~ LOWRY Spinet orpn, xlnt BABY'S plq n4/S36-6Ml. BEAtrl'Il'UL Tabbf femalt C,E~. Shtphttd AKC CHRISTMAS Flipper No. 79'1 ~ ... u5.aaJ ig~ ~~ ~&'_. tond. Orig COtt $850, will ~He 1 .::z.c:ar~at, BAl,J>WIN OrPn. UM ntw )rltten,31imo's,blt'AlfQ, 1uppvpa.2Utttrt.Tmm. X,_mldolly&:cover $l50. zc.-.55;:.;:;, a50tf .ell for $430. 346-63n. bm. WiU'~ ·MP.'54~ lr4. ~E record ,..,er, 400 ~·. Nf'tds ·'Id hm .t Cl}1 n41637..%156. "1 Can 646-216.i •c.t1 56.. ·~ * Fartlu. combo orsan. Xlnt G& DISHWXSiiER ,ood: 1 Trimlw, 1~ new SU. J)liople1of bu-own. !Wl)..5t8'T RARE breed mbted Ll'IAPA· LIDO 14 <•2337\ rul)y roulp-1:;;:• ~~, ... , ... ~"-'-sound. Cost MW $?00, AC dlti "2 ;,id ;:· Hobby hone $7.147-MtA. . aft l PM. 12/11 Apeo ~It pupS, oni, 2 ltft p@l'f, Rigged for'n~ing, Xlnl ·~g:.r :r.-:=.... $210, 213/592-5876. -a~oo PM ' TWO Ntw M•vy duty whttl 3 Part Pcodle, tiemaw pup. botry. uo. ,499-2l.28 cond., f1 350. 64&-8411 :· 1':Jo, ® 121111 BALD\VIN Oraan A: lptak('r • • barrowl with "2 'lpU'f' •'hffls ~~ I wtts. llttel for Olrltt.. **J.OVE FOR_SALE. AKC FLIPPER·Perltt1 Chrlstmaa lf\$/Gocd "'tV'ilC {)Ncurnl Like New. SAC! "pr{~. * SA.OT* SEID each, M6-3962 after 6 rrias 20661 TUler ·Cirde! fJwn. ·Gttat DaDf!t, 7 wks. GUt. l~~ yrs old Xlnt eorwt; ~:1':,,:!:!!:;::;,,=:::::;;:,,==,:;"===:!:==::!!!.._ ___ l,!!11~600~. -~*:_*~-~61<-<m~~ , can aft 6 PM, 6*.150IS pm. llCmt. Bitaeh .._ 96S-5348. $300. sn.ssss · ·-I • '. I I ,_ I . • , ' ' _!.lo ' •• T ........ -17, 01910 DAILY -•. TRANSJ'O!ITATIOtol TltANSl'ORTATION TltANSl'ORTATIOfii..--"ir"'liANm:-i-50<po,.R'"'r°'A'"··"'·16N=----,-;r"'RA"°N"'S""PO""'ll"'f"'A"'f "1Cli'IEO'= i..,;o,\od Auto1 9600 bnporied A-9600 lmoortod Autot 9600 lmporied A-9600 - .G. M. c:. · TRUCK CENTlR AUSnNAMERICA KAR~l\N N GHIA PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN • AUSTIN AM6RI CA '68 KARMANN GHIA PORSOIE 911. Motalllc ..ed. s.i... s.iMoe. Putl .app, ~· AMChnn/ r~ h I ~ • Immlftla~ OellVtrJ $harpJ For the •'POl"tl mind. aemper1 .. , , a -All--·--~!.!.. ....... _....=-·--· c~--_rack_8,tllO_mi. Warr • ..$3600. 1 056),........., • 1"'11ter, "~ Eves 541-3953. l ~t'lllpLlll Jl 1 11 pnr 1 ~. $1666 SAAB Ha rbou r V.W. FREE!! With Tht Purchase Of ''5 vw Radio, hMter, Wpeed. "95 Harbour V .W. 18TIJ BEACH BL. 84iM35 HUNTINGTON BEACH VW LEASING • Tax & Lie, Down e $50.87 per month • 36 month open end 1eue 1971 VW Bur AT CHICK IVERSON ======I vw '70 ~bra mini bike, Xlnt cond, SlOO or offer. FALL CAMPER · ClEARANCE '68 1600 ROADSTER '64 Sunbeam Alpine , d ~_. _, -"''tio 4-•~. radio, iteall!T', px:I ., r .x:uan, ~nt couul n robber fine cond Stt thll ~ 4~1018 one! (bXH.875) ' 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 67~175.3 BENELLI 50cc S200, Powell 5 hp Sl50, Bonanza 9 hp Mac UlO. Xlnt mnd. 644-2577 . tia.i!y to 10! dlr. CWEZ 710) Will take trade er finance Over a rfc!l:en bran;d new 8 private parcy, 54&8736 or ---------1 ~~ llto ft campen: now .,.•,,,94-68ll:-,~' ==~==-MG $495 We have the finest selection of used VW's and llflOl't cars In Orange County! :. ·:'~· ~. ADULT PARK SURROUNDED BY NEW mini bikes • 1 Nova P.ouahrider S150. l Nova Mustang $100. Cal]. 968. 7429. ~.,.T~ ~;. ~e;: s49 ~~..,\~ ~! .. ~~~~~','~~ --~-.-._-... -~-.G-~-.li-.~-.-1 $140 Two Bell helmet. $15 n-t..1 fNYOICI {WPP 762)' Will take Car 1n • All ~~ .... T&M MOTORS 8081 Ga1.J,.,, G,a,,~· Bl11d SJ4 2284 &92 S551 T&M MOTORS 8081 Ga•dt>n Gro11~ 61.,d S34.2284 892 SS51 Ol'EN \UNOAT'> ..., ";,01!.Ar)GE GROVES AN D .": · r,; AG RI CUL TIJRE , .r ' $300.000 -RECREATION CENTER each. AU $650 ealJ 548-6UJ ~uvely nc,-added deal11r trade or finance private par • MINI bike 3"2 HP, Gobd chalye1l Every.. unit ready cy, 546-8736 .or 494-6811 . cond, $79. for immediate installation on 1.,:e.:,,.:;;:,;.::;:=-,::.:c,::::;c,,~ * 61>0825 * ·Auto ~..Vico your truck or • "" 1971! '70 2000 ROADSTER MICKEY bike &: go-cart.. & Parts -9400 ·THEODORE Both J hp Briggs.Str&ttoo ROBINS FOR'" . Like "'"'· Mll>t "" (WP[. $70 each. 494-9306 . . VW engine nbuild Sl99 part! . . ,_. 104) dlr: Will ·t&ke. ea"r tn $1.00/Mo, Per Couple "'°"~"""~,,.:.:::.,,==" & JA.J>or. New pistons k 3)6{> ffAR&OR BLVD. · .., . rl \ '. . KAWASAKI MINr BIKE" , liners, tearinp, valve job, COSTA MESA 642-GOlO trade or unance p vate par. ~ • -ENTREE FEE-PETO.K. Xlnt Cond. Sl.35: · carb· rebuild ./,. tune. M.D. _ _ t)'. ~Or 494-68ll. ·:.' • ~ Att _• •!"· .,1om00 .. ..,_,.,,. '64 Ford Camper Van ·n p•TSUN mi """·"'· ""' • ·i~-14 MODELS N~" , ,.....__. ,.~.-. •. p & G . :-: mi 1, am radio. vin. top. l ::.•: ON DISPLAY _M.;.ot;...;.orc.;c;:.y.:.c;.;f•.:.• ___ ,.:.:JllO;..: shifie~ . .:,""n!';~e loCkout Q:impletely equip~ with. ~s:m ~=~7= ~~ -'A.NT TO MOVE IN NOW! '*'* 1967 YAMAHA 80 dirt {f:>r Muncie tram:, 1ps. pop top, ice box. stove, dlr. ;M.,an · ' .: -' bike. $80. 546-7-488 • Radial tires towner. CUED--~·-------,! ;~~ble Wldet Set Up fi46.9m4 '69 Dodge 383 engines. 14 bbl 1G4) V.'ill t8ke car ill trade FOR Oui&tmas '68, lfJXl J1r l upo r 1 Jl111 po rt ~; OPEN ~UNOAY'.. *'&3 SUNBEAM Al))lne New top, wire whoo!" Xtra 1960 '6'LJ.U_G Clean. $650. 545-7911. · ~1--=--lh · ,_,_ wid tt.ea. W1 mag Wu=.111, e 3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. oval tires, new engine guar. 642-9405 540-1164 TOYOTA "''"" ,.,. so '""'· IF'l'l14 . $799 ~ '69 Toyota Wa""n CHICK IVERSON • THINK .. -VW "MG'' Excellent cond. 4-&peed, ra-dio, heater. <ZAE-178) 549-30Jl Ext. 66 or 67 SR $1195 1910 HARBOR BLVD. c05r, MESA . ''fRIEDUNDER"· C I t W'th po-... ck, 12 bbl 1-. ,,-•. or finance. M&.8736 ar Rdstr mnv. & Mrd lop, .-• .• ;. _ omn_1 I _, '69 Y h 175 EDd lo .. ._ " w• 1•--~ _ ama a Ur"Qo, .c~. xtra.s. 1500 ml, 1 _. new. , 1P• ••ACM IMWY, :»Jl 'r' ~~ing1, Skirting, T•x ml"1 & Clean,~ Yellow Cab, l8& E. l8th, CM. . . 4~-._ 893-7566 e 537-6824 '68 VW SQUAREBACK Mil.It sell. $1300 firm. 557·3032 _ '·1• & Lie. * 614-1530 * __ 411 ~ENG, tran• & ""' New '71 DalSMn .:e;J>£su,._.m.wG~.-Xlnt ~..E.D-J.E.Rll. , .. _..,,..~.\l .. '65 vw a... red r.d!on wbltewall1, runr aod. fl50 . 646--0692. '63 VW V&n Wtlllphalia sunroof. Rblt .ena $105(! ** 548-3187 '70 vw Sedan, ndlo. Grk blue. $18SO. can Mt-7695 a.ft . .... I mpwted C.ro - t UI Ill • I z -• I -!: ~ -a Ill a • -:; - " Nm $9999 (Sir. 7119) -um----Jlond'~'7D. !Iii =.."M~~e~-~ll alt 6 160G ORC, Piclrup'Wft.h cam~ . ~-·"N~w brake.. Must ~.. stereo. Muat Sell! $1500. :~ANClNG AVAILABLE ~w. lo. m1le34', $280. · er. Sale price 13m 'int. Sell! ss:IO. 9&R-3M2 1 -----------::;=.,:~~i;;i.i~-=l.!~~~~~~~'!!!,l~6'>-ifj~l6lilfja~!t;;;-J'~30~PM~;-"· ra.iki.J ·" DLR TR 193 5'18--05.5l. T-...-o Po.rsche 5Pe~Jte.r f#··45S4.54) Will~ car. tti . •'4 DATSUN '69 MGC Roadster '64 VW. New tires & radio. ~ ;.: -' HONDA· 90 ~ol~ ... $311). Ha.rd~o~2-= ~Her ! trade .. WIIJ_ .~1'Ct! _ J:lriV~~-· Sst'otter 'pvt. pty, 673"'¥2 AM/FM radio. $2400 Showroom clean. Per1ect. ~ :fJD5J JEFFREY RD. Vory •P'""I. Dirt roady. party Call ~36 ot • · -642-4955 AJtor 6 pm M"'t ""· 646-1249 1-'W 1968. Perfect 494-7280 <94-6111. · . FiRRARI Radio, heater, dl5c brakes. '66 VW F astback: Gd. mech i Mz. SOUTH O,i'.. TUSTIN, HONDA 50, P'd -cooditlon, TrAiler1, Utnlty 94.SO ____ M_G_B___ factory air. low. low milea! cond. rd: tires, brakes .l ,. , * MI."SOl!ITH· OF Jow mllP.11. SlOO. C I .9 ... · ".'F!llRAll Take older car or small battery. $851). 536-&135 ~SANTA ANA· FRWY. CaU 548·9618 _ 14' Tandem Trailer, all s~l. imper Rent• I . 5.._,. Newport lmporta .ttd. Qr. down. Under fact. warranty. ,66 VW "'*'· (1% MI. NO. OF * 1970 HONDA '* ~~~-@d.pl.~~tru. ~!5lo4n~r-1 ~0',' FOR Rent: 22' Pa~e Aroow a.np 9'W1ty'1' only author-1967 MGB-CT, Yellow, Call Maury dl r. aft lO am Grttn with mntraating inter. 'i'"''SAN DIEGO FWY.) CB 350 · · .u.::u.. ..... "" "".. 11 911 6 lo 8. $150 wk + 5e be(f d!oaler. 11675 21'200 '!1+Fine ~9 540-3100 or 494•7506. OJ7J27. klr, tuned exhauat, run,, like 545-7717 after 5 PM , 54Z.S84S. Wiil trade ott Pick ~ 548-3554. · -1 SALES-SERVICE-PARTS , '69 TOYOTA new, STL-184 :. :.:I' (714) 832..asas •7o YAMAHA-Lci.Ml·;,_u_p._._. ------. -.-••.atM w. Cout Hwy. ~ WHtTE '.'d°GB: ~rli own· Caroll• St•tfon W•gon $999 .i;;.....,;:· c:.:.~;:..::=;:--"-. • 548.98&1 --------Dune a· ·-I•• ,... . Nowport Bw:h "· F.•~ta•bc C.nd. Fanw· Whli. w/black in"rlor. Lilt• CHICK IVERSON -· at:• Want To Live In .....vu T k 9 .. _ ..... ~ ~ 540-1'76C tic Gift. 646.8420 alts. new Lie XWZ928 . . COSTA MESA '6• SUZUKI ·IO ''-'ru;.;c;;.:;..•_..,...._____ A tho~-'¥.-~ ~-• . . VW > -* {001~$ $75 *· ' ~ ·-'"''N' ~" $1299 ,. 11 ,.:;';."'~~';:',"::!,~. l<lnt oond. Sl25. 642-6820 ' . ..-Ford ii Ion P.U. . "'84 So. """"'im Blvd, ' ·FIAT OPEL CHICK IVERSON ' ;,,'-.•mo. hUo home. , .Now'• FOR SALE: 19n Honda SJ.,. •6 'Z!; ~. ·• _ ~Im ---'~---------------I VW ..i.~ 350 Lo mi. Fa11lartic Cond .,.,":""II, """11>1 -1ile. 'time lo see ...,.., H68 OPEL 22 QXI Miles 549-3031 Ext. 66 Ol' 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COST A 1.fESA , .4 ~OBILE HOMES-• Honda 50, 1968 • ' reai end,-1&.ce paint. magg.' mi wur. on new valves; :A lilted . Diac erake1, .C spd/ 549--3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA I .~~;"BAY HARBOR 831 - 2489 '62 F~rd Emno. New engine: '70 1tIEYERS Manx-w/4000 ma· Bfl 102 H p eiwine ~wer 8.5- 4t5 Baker St. (at Harbor) Xlnt oond * Lo mi's wide ovals Alt 6 549.2434, Tow · bar1 Good cond. ~ · trans. Radio w/2 rear speak. r!bsta Mesa. 540-9470 Sl50 '*''*' n~&38-l662 · ' , ~·aft 6 pm , •. / ~. POii· Traction wide rtar1'r'"U;;T'"A.-------I '67 VW BUG 4-1peed, radio. heater. {UWL-135) . f".8X31 PARAMOUNT , '69 Ronda175 ·~Chev. perf ~. nU ))aint, '69 Dune Buggy pro-/he ' tire1. Dual pi))e9, New ra-TOY _ _;in C.M. Adult Pllrk Shield & helmet. S360. tires, eng, seats, bait, ¥U~t fes&ioR&lly OOilt. Cle&n. . 71 dlal 1pa.re + 2 other spares . .., kii: Spa!:!: .rent ss2 mo, 644-~ sell this wk. 548-9202. $975. 646-5983 . .1 $1475. Pvt Pty 642-00iJ CM OTA -l"'.C'otal ))rice $2495 fBZ 2225) 1969 HONDA 90 Scrambler. 'Q 1'ord f:conollne P.U. +RAIL buggy+ OPEL GT, yellow. 1970. Hiu $1095 •American Mobilhome Sales ' Major tune.up, mechanical. :Xln't Condition, ·$600. Call incomplete,. TISO NOW ON DISPLAY air COnd, Xlnt cond, $2950. Ip Your Stocktni for Xmu l.. T 54$-82.fl * Jy perf. $225. 847-3871 __ ·=645-""'3691~·====.=.=:.'.:===*=962-56==13=*=== 646-6129 From Dean Lewit: r 11Uto •port ltd r;: 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE -UNE-NO AD LESS THAN 3 LINES . ~":·~~~vra; PORSCHE fJeiut LP.Wit i..:;:;:::;:=:::::::;::'='--..- I •PARTS '70 Porschti 914 IMPORTS ~ t·"' · I 4 7 12 ~ Gan:len Grove Blvd, '~~" -TIMD TIMU ntffl TIMD 537 • ....-.i ,._,. ''"Allect 5-~pe@d. radio. heater, only 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 Immaculate mndition, Yellow : ·•':' ,,,,. '-<Ul....... .. ll ···-i..;__ m es on uua never own. with pin strlppinr, new tlrer ~.:.---l---1---·l----1----1·---1-· ----,+-,---· -1---:-"' .. .,.,,, (#P>JSl) BllL MAXEY & •ngino .,..,..., .... for so • $3895 day1. Lk. Y?m;, t ---1----1---1---1---·1-.,._·50_1_$6_.~.,.... -1--''1 - 0·'-'-1--,-'1 -s,_90 lf!OIYIOJT!Al CHIC~1 WER50N } ' $5.10 $8.2.1 $13.10 $2.0.10 11111 llEACH BLVD. VW . ;• . $6.00 $9.76 $1$.55 $24,30 .1!."':::!".:::!:~~:. :f~~,-.P-A-YM-1..EN_T_E-NC..L_LO_S_E_D...LO~S-E-N~D-8-1-LL-'-0...;__._~_._~-'-,,-•• -.. ~co~n~ '69 CORONA 549-:nll Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA ~ Hardtop. Vifl)'J root 4 1peed, '64 Volklwaaenr '61 engine. '"' e11ly en• worlf 111 ••eh Immaculate, Sky Biue. Sac. New paint, &ood ~~ _J_ ~· ~·~ •• ' . , 'f..-[. r, ,, *"·' :c ' : •P•'• .~ •. l11c:lud• y•ur 1J7A RACH ILYD. CouPe 912 $ speed brown rifice. Will take trade or owner. Call Days &U-3423, t cldrt'n .., ph•n• 11u111D•.'· • tHwJ. J!I . wil.b b1acic interior' Brand finance pvt, pty, can Sid, eve& ~2. l\1 ••If of yo111-4tl h •t t•• 893-7566' • 537-6824 new Pen-ell! tires. X\'J-474 dlr. 5t().3J.(IJ or 494-~ alt. '65 V\V Squan!back. AMISW •nil tf th• li11• •11 whic:h ~. NEWaUS&l) . .'SE RV: $3299 10 a.m. XTS 343. radio, lunqe rack, , ........ ,"""···.. ll...lia-----CHICK IVERSON '69TOYOTACOROLLA '"'""''· Lo ntl. 1998. te11. Adtl, 12.00 •rlr• ff "", -~ -~ New pa.int, complete enrtne 644-1370 . tledN ••• ef DAILY PIL.OT VW overhaU!, Clean. Will consid-'L.°'69'""l/Vl~s.d~-. ~B-,ro-t -or&lll'-. -. l o• ,.,.,.It• with · .,,.lrM ,._ '68 FIAT 850 549-3031 Ext, 66 or r. er motorcycle !or eqult;y, Very clean. Xtrai. nms, ,11,.. ' SPYDER , 1970 HARBOR. BLVD, 642-4321 Ext. ~-tires. exhaust etc. !\lake of- Publl1~ ftr •••• , ••••• d.y11 ltt9!1111l11t ••••••••••••••• •••••••••••;••••• c1 ... 1nc•tl•11 ••••••••••1••••••••••••••••••······ •••••••••••••• ••• . . . . . . . .. .. .... .. .. .. . . . . . . .. . . .. .. .. . . ·~·· ............... . Aclclr1u , •• •••••• •••• •• ••••••••• • •••••••••••••••••• •••••••• •• ••• ' C1ty • , •• , • , • , • , , • •, ••,,., ,, ,. • • • Phe~• ~·. ••. • ••, ••••• , ••••• ·• ••• RDSTR. Red witlt bllck tn. CX>STA MESA ORIG. Owner "67 T~ta fer. 6-42-0368 .. te:rlor: If'e new. YQ~ e·69 911 ·T European 1tyle. Custom erowi> 4 dr wagon '64 VW Van 1500 ccm ex- CHIC ' K$"'1VE· . RSON Tur, run comfort aroop, !W!, '"'°· lit 11100 talc" ch.onp ongioe. New paint. ' -----CUT Hlll-IA111 ON YOUl INYll.Orl ----.-------t-,,--- ~p ~': l.: ,: ' fc . :~ . :~~· . -- ' . ',. ·' ,., ,. - t .• . -; ,W r • .... . ~. . ;. • 1•"'• j; ri .. ~ . ' IUSINEs's REPLY MAIL Pint C1-,_1t Me llt c.tt M-, C..ttf...ie ' Oron11 Co.at ~AILY PILOT . . . I'. O. lox 15'0 -. . COila 1.1. .. , c.Jlf, ~2' mao. AM/FM. 23.000 ml. It. 67S-0116. SS'ni/otter. K. B lock, lnunac. 6'f3.6265. ''6 Toyota Corona, R/H, auto1.=SJ&.:::.c.m:::1.:.:·-,..-----VW ·51 911, 5 , •otl. We""1, '" tram, -lntor.. body La..,e Selection 5f9.:lm Ext 66 or S7 ti.rel, "8,000 mi'.. $3950. mech IOwld, Must &ell, $650. Of '" C 1910 HARBOR BLVD. 51>-8105 ........ for°"•· 642-0558 . ;; ampers, -,6-8..::=:;:Fl:.:;,AA:...:lllEST=IA:_A,__-1 ·sa PORSCHE 1600 coo. '°"' TRIUMPH Vans, Kombls, loll coDd. SOtdent .. crllfco. Buses ew & Used ~.·radio, -htater. PX!. 5.f8-473S Evts. TR 3 '59 Very eood mn-I med· t O.lf Clll!C,283) '67 9ll, $.sptl, •Ir cont!, tlltion. """"'' • COO· CmHICK •• '1vEuy'o'YN $895 FM/AM. New Um. It new 'Vertible. $575 or best otter. KARMANN GHIA 'TO .C:OITV@rt. Xlnt ccnd, 'N/ taP&-(feck, Re•IONlble. C.U •,tter S, 491-m brakes. Xlnt cond. 64S-0203. 5'8--6654. YW '66 9U S..pd, all extras, lo '68 TR 250 Tr tum p b • ~n Ext. 88 or S7 ml'1, Must aee to appreci. overdrive. Mu1t sell. T.0 .P . 1970 HARBOR BLVD. •te. M&J040 aft 6, JlVt pt)', 5G--5358 alt 3 ))m. COSTA MESA 1966 Porsche. Perfl!Cl oond, TR 69 GT 6 + xlnt cond. nu SANT A has nu &leia:h·l\fust $-fpd, $3.100. clutch .l tim, )tuat tell 1ell ·~ Bur, io mi's Like 496-3102 after S pm f21l) 693-MBl. · nu·S1350/mk oHer. 545..2864 '67 912. .C·spd, New clutch, TRlUMPH SplUire '67 ~IK. '&I VW , Wai tn a.ccldent Good cond. $3695. 6"-S321, ll Canvt. Xlnt cond, orta 1200 or Best offer 'OU Port Briatol, NB. owntr, SU!iO. 6TM284. T 64Z-.c337 * • '57 PORSCHE • 1969 TR-6. White. '66 VW Deluxe Bui, xlnt cond. SPEEDSTER Imm1culate. !>.lust Vecy clean. RIH, new •* 644.5967 *. aell, 83J.Z130, brakel. $1075. 645-J;163 I .i----~-'-'-.:....:.c:...:..:::__ ---~-~-'• l I • ,, .I • I ' . . . . . • • . • . . . . ' . .· . . . -• . . . . . . . M 0 It AVTBORIZED • s~s • e SE&VICE e PARTS .I WE HAVE THE BEST SELECTION OF . BMW's IN ORANGE COUNTY • 1600'1 • 2002 • 2500 • 2800 • 2800 cs • All Colors • An Mcidels • Immediate · Delivery REPEAT PERFORMANCE IMW1 ere built for Gtrm•ny's no-speed-limit eutobehns. The four will cruise •II Uy 1t 100 mph. Tho six will do tho .. .,. at 120 mph. If thlt kind of dur1billty ft your spMCI, Me us for tho 1... boolclot, "33 RNsons Why IMW Is Better.'' Or 1sk for the key. You11 ptt the moNage. :~~!~r..~!~ ,........ 51695 wh .. I dri"'•· Thi1 mod•I i1 1uper . i!wlt end r•~Y fo~enyrliing lt IRLZ-21]} '64 ALPINE '65 MustanCJ Air cond., V/I , r•i:l io, ht•t•r. V1r-1 low 1t1il••i1•· Runt 9r11t! $100 11ndtr whole1•le blut boolrl .Joe Be rlottl OWNIR-GIN, Mil, We have a financing plan to flt your budget including 1Gq°/o financing (0 .A.C.) Will t11ke your car In trade paid for or notl Come in •nd talk with one of our experienced coun- cilors. AVTBORIZED e SALES e SERVICE e PARTS Jo e IJeJottij y·g M MOTORS OPEN SUNDAYS IOtt Gar•n Grove Boulevard 'Ii Ilk. E. of Beach Blvd. ' U4-2284 892-5551 Harb our V.W. 18Tll BEACH BL., 842-443,; HUNTlNGroN, BEAffi '69 VW BUG Radio, heater._ 4-speed • ,(l<Y,E-250) $1595 196(1 VW• Bur. Radio, reu Rat speakers, $1375. prl. pt;y. 644-4687 • afttt 6 PID. Harbour V.W. IJnf SL\OI'(==·· 8U-'1561S • 537 NEW.USE.D-SER\I ~ e VOLVO All 71 '1 Are '·Here Savings Up To $466 on remaining 70's (#8782) Over Seas ~. S~c. 1964 CHEVELLE STATION WAGON. Btl,e $650 * 962-2113 CHEVROLET CHEV, '10 MONTE CAru.o S.S. 4M ONLY U ,800 MD..ES Hydramatic, po'Ntt' stettfni -di.9C brak~ -windows, AM/FM mwtiplex. 1tralo bucket !J8.ll, fUlJ pqtt,. tilt wheel, factory air cond.; chrome 1pon wheels, wide track belt@(! tlf'et, auto load Jevder, etc., etc. Ba.lance or factory waITanty. This ii an abtolu~ly gorgeous autoll)G. bile. You'll have to IM' to appttdate. <944BEM) $.1999 • NABEltS • CAO!lli\.C Fact. Authdrized Cadillac.Dir ~HARBOR BL., OOSTA MESA 540-9100 Open SUnday * 1968 Chev Capriee 396. Hydromatic. air. FM, tUt wheel, deluxe Interior. 11,,,.,, M6-2783. '63 Impala sm. Wsn, 4-dr. Extra•. isso. * 968.6075 * * ·ss Chevy 2 dr. oon. J225 or otter. • 54&-.m * 1966 CHEVY Van, dean, run1 grr:111l, new paiftt, 2 .~.!'"" .............................................. ,,_~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1·~~1.Call96&--~ll ~-h -. " TEMPm . . UNDER INVOICE Mer-· cury House Cars at con•, slderable less than invoice.· . '-· • t Come in . today & look ' "·• over these tremendout buys. You'll . :want one! , Johnson & son · LINCQLN CONTINENTAL ·• MAl11 Ill -· . MERCURY e COU•AI ONE DOLLAR OVER! BRAND NEW 1970'5 /"'WE HAVE SEVERAL BRAND NEW 1970 \ COUGARS & MONTEGOS LEFI' AT $1 OVER INVOICE! COME IN AND LOOK OVER THES OUTSTA!19DING BARGAINS TODAY AN TAKE ONE HOME Johnson & son . -. ·11 Miio Soolll of S.. DI• FrHW8Jl , LIN~LN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COllGA ·: 540•5630 H~~:rt:u~ 642-098 (:' ., . '