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1970-12-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa
' • ' • • .. 1 , • " . .. · ,. . . ' • (;hotiner ·Labels . . . ~ . . ' . . :·, .. Jl~tipoIJution _ ··Fox" , • . -. ·- • Wife·· •Holley · Mad" Bits -~IJ.S. Steel ;: ' , .. fol -... ,. ··-,. . .. ' .. . YOll. U: lltO.. a1, I l •CTtoM. D "'II ' ' .. UPl -T........_ Faith Corey, contestant fur Miss Flotjda of · 1970. brings faithful Yuletide greetings to the rest of the nBtio;n from the sunny shores of Miami Beach. So who cares if it isn't a Whit' Christmas? -~ ·-• • 1 --' Glop , In. Trial 'CJiJDax -. '· .. · .. ' Firm Ouiloxed . . . . Polluti.on Dumped on VP's Rug CHICAGO (UPI ) -The Fox, a . my'stery antipollution crusader, says if the U.S. Steel Q:rp. isn't polluting area lakes and at.reams, it shoWdn't mind hi.s dumping some fluid from its drains onto the corporation's Loop office carpet. To make bis poln~ !be Fo1 dumped .a1 Chotiner Labels Wife 'Avaricious' As Hearing Ends By TOM BARLEY Of ..,. o.llY ..... l ltff foul-smelliilg fiuld masa on the white carpet of· the vice president ill the office building Tuesday. He said the substance came directly from U.S. Steel's drains in Gary, Ind. "After all, that's the stuff they put in our lakes and streams," the Foi: told hil only kno'11 confidante, Chicago Daily News rolumnlst Mike Royko, who Jdentifies ,him aa being a mild-~ middl!-ag'ed man from arowld suburban Aurora. ''They keep saying that they aren't really polluting our water. U that's true, then Jt s.bpuldn't hurt his rug, right?" As .he walked into the office ·of U.S. Steel Vice President Edward Logelin, the Fox carrled a large glass botUe under one arm and a sign and a tiny, coffin- shaped box under the other: . . • ' .. " VALOR · IN VIETNAM Sgt. lloli McDormott • -• . • • '' ·---' ·.··~ .. -. --. I Labeled as 'Propaganda WASIIlNGTON (AP) -Norl b Viebyun'• rele8se of a purported cfficlal prisoner of war list • Tuesday wu criUciud by Secretary of State Wllllm P. Rogers today u "a contemptible maneuver .. .for propaganda~-" He· said·tbe North Vietnamee Invited two senators· to eend repreaentatives .!!> Pari.s to gain informaUon on the prisoners of war, but added they failed to provide any fresh information on the fate of the captured Americans. Representatives: of Sen. EdWard M: ~ennedy (D-Mw.), and J. W. Fulbrltrlil (0.Ark.),. received In Paris a listing of . 339 Dames• cf Americans now held. AD had been ·listed tlnoUiclally earlier. AI• named were 20 men ll5ted as dead and nine others who had .already been released. Angela Makes lt'to Court White House aide Murray Chotiner provided a fiery finish to his· ai::r-day dJvorce trial Tuesday with a bard-hitting closing argument in which he described MimJ Cbotiner aa "money mad", "chintzy" and "avaricious" and accused the former model cf lying from the witness stand. "Good afternoon," he told the receptionist. "I am from the Fox FoundaUon for Conservation Education and we have an award for U.S. Steel for their oustandlng contributions to our environment." The Fox tried to open the boWe. The Ud stuck., By the time the Fox had the bottle open, the receptionist had come Coast GI Saves Buddy's Life, Wins 'V' Medal Rogers slid the North Vietnamtl8 acknoWledged capturing and bOlding 399 men, but the United States already knew . that. The United States has Information , that 39 other men were captured whole exact fate is uncertain and the North Vietnamese provided Do belp on tbo9e. · ~'Th~ fact Is tha,t they're maneuverJnc wilb these p(isoner,-<if-war In a way th4t 's' inhuman. 'lbey're 'd Ive rt I n,g attention lrOm tbelr barbarism ti)' Ibis method." eruie I Weather ~ weatherman's Ouistmas preaent lo the °'""" Coast Is not ,keeping bis promise o1 rain !or to- day. Mootly 811!1ny akles .. 111. pre- vail Thursday with temperatures In !be. low !Os •. INSWE TODAiY Intere~t in quality movt,s ii greater than ever lnfore, says ' the presiiient of Edwardi Chie· ma Thect.trs, who'1 openfng ~· thrte new movie housq on the ' Orange Cbast th.Si wttk. See Entertainment, Page lB. Olly 1 ~ CHRISTMAS SAN 'RAFAEL, Csll! •. (UPI) -Black militant bero!ne Angeli Davi!. wltb a clenclied. fist salute lo !riehds, appeared briefly in Court,..today to face charges of conspiracy, kidnap and murder. Her arraignment on the charges was postpooedlunW •Jan. 5 at-the requ..t of attorneys repi-ttac ber. After• a 1>mlnute appearance be!ore SoJier;or Judge E. Wll!T"1 McGuire, Miu Davis was. returned to WJ. Sbe' bad bOi!n,. . brOught back lo ~ornla·Tumday Cl/'~ges ot.belpliig · organize 1lle pri-t eecape plol which · result<i\l·ln i aboololil.lhat toot"rour Uvea. ,t 1 Mill.Dav.ii, .21,,Was flown on a secrtt o';ernigbt· ·Journey .from New York Tileod•Y.· shortly alter sbe lost her• two. month ~al strugg!e against extradition baek tO California. ~ aecurlcy. precautions were taRn. on the 11-hour'Jll'OP driven Air NatlOOal• Guard1 Djglat to llamlllm. Air Foi;ce Bue.. /lbe former' ·U <:oL A pbilolopby' lnllraclar • -accomponled (lee ANGl:LA, Pip 11 SA NTA, TURN -· .. TO PAGE lt Santa Clim Is compOtn' bla !Isl or delivttlea -he'll be ,.1ng Tliur.day night IDcl he'• poylng 1ttenllcin to ali !be requests lrom ~ along the Orauge c-t. Today's DAILY PILOT carries on Page 11 some ol ·thoee requetts, which have been forwarded .to Santa at the North Pole Jn p)fatf ol llme. / ' • "She should be told that the parade is ew:r, the marchers and bands are going baek IDcl !be spedators are going back to their endeavors," Presldent Nixon's apeclal counsel told Orange Couoty Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreizen. He accuaed bolh Mn. Chotiner, 44, and ber attorney, Bernard Leekle of Newport Beach, cf l!eking "blood money" and questlcned the validity of Lecltie'a charles, based on tbe I a w y e r ' a compilation cf M hours of pretrial work for his client. '-. _ Cbotiner, 6111 also \old Judge DrelUn in a spirited summation of · his trial arguments that N~rt Beach attorney Donald SmallwoOd, Mrs. Chotlner's lawyer in the early stages of the dJvorce 1ipgatton, should <be denied approval by ttte court cf·bis .ft,aoo fee -condemned IJYChotiner dw;iitg the trial aa excessive. .Chotlner reminded Judge Dreizen that Smaliwood bad med a munlcl~t court a;ction aga'.imt ·him for the fee. fie asked the Jude• to confine Smallwood to !bat metbod ol..recomint"lbat fee. "I Oland before you today deprived of nerytblng t ~bad but they want mort, ey<orythlng tlley·can· get,'~ OloUner 11ld. '1Sbe (Mn. Cbotinef) wants-every last penny of ui; communitJ !unds ·llld die II saying 'mntblnl! you• .. gol ls mine and evtrythlngi). bave la mine IDcl lo beli witb )'OU'." Oiotlner reminded Judie Dreizen !bat at one point during the trial Leckie asked him how inucll casb be had on his penon. The lflMing tiiotJner commented, "I thought .he was going to make me produce .my Jut $4 aod band It to !be cltrk.11 • Mrs. Chotlner Is demandln• ball or !be (See CJro'!'INEII. Pap I) , · around her desk. When he spilled the goo ove.r the carpet, some of it splashed on her leg ahd dress. "I gueis It was pretty me5$Y," Royko quoted tbe Fox. "You see, I had put some clam1 in the water. 11ley symbolize the destruction of wildlife." Then the Fox placed his "award'' sign on '-coach, left 'the coffin-shaped box, slapped a "Go Fox -Fight PolluUon" bumper •ticker on the glass door and beat a hasty retreat. Police later approached the litUe box carefully, Logelln s81d they were afraid It "mlgh\.be a bomb." Inside ·~ miniature coffin they found a dead ~tch, a dead crayfish and a dead frog. Alongside wa1-a small Vial of dark fluid, a1IO taken. a"ccording to the Fox, from U.S. Steel's drains. . "A PJllnk ls one thing," Logelln aaJd. "But th.la ls DO prank." EARLY DEADLINE FOR 'DIME' ADS All 1Dtme-A·Llne ads intended for publication -Saturday in the DAILY PILOT must be placed by 0000 Thursday this week, due to the Olristmas Day holiday:" Ads can be placed at any DAILY PILOT o ff I c e . The same early deadline situation wllt exist next week, al.so, because of the New Year's Day holiday. For further information. phone the direct line lo !be DAILY PILOT Classllled Advertising Dept. 842-5671. 1 Moving·swlfily but gingerly through an area beavlly booby.trapped by !be Yiet ·Cong, an Ora.Die Coast serviceman recently aaved the Ute of a wouDded buddy and won hlmlelf the BrOilze Star. Army Sgt. RObert R. McDermot~ a 1967 graduate of Costa Mesa's Estancia High ~ool, baa been clted for the brave actjon last ~-11 durinc a rtcmnalssance mission. . The Bronze star award carries the V device signifying valor, accordlng to the announcement ,by Cot. T. J.' Hanifen, Ninth Infantry chle( of staff. , Former Orange Coast College student Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W. McDermott, of 18101 Mann St., Irvine. He was on a mission with Con)pany A, Fourth Battalion, Nltitb Infantry, when the team moved Jnto an area heavily rigged wltb hooby-traPo, ooe of whidi was'detbnated by a ·radio operator.· Shrapnel wrecked the radio, ao Sgt. McDermott picked bis way tbroucb !be treacherous lleld to anotl>er team !tom company A to arTange m e d 1 c a· I evacuaUon, "laving the caaua1ty's llfe, He waa recommended for the award hr" Capt. Glynn E. Pope, who noted Sgt. McOennott'• action ls in line with highest mUitary Ideals, rellectlng credit upon himaelf and his unit. Sgt, McDermott has also received' the Anny Commendation Medal during his Vietnam tour, which now involves an Infantry assJgnment with \he First Cavalry (Airmoblie) Division. 4'I think it was a contemplible maneuver an~ lbodld ·be recognlzed u such.'' . The r~ Is, tie .... rtec1. !bat there will continue to be uncertainty. u to the completeness of POW lists 11unill North Vietnam compllQS ·with · the roles or international w~ and 1nows lnspe<:UOn of prlsoner-<if·war camps." . At another pdlnt he declared:' 11So· we conclude tbey'r1e usp(r ~ POW 1sne in a ·very Inhuman way to advance their poJiUcal objectives." · In reie1Slng the llSts ln•Parls 'IIN>aday, the Noz:th Vietnamese charact.rlzecl them for the firsl time u o«Iclal, although the same names bad been 1lven unofficially earlier. It marked the !irsl Ume official repreaentailvet of the U.S .. iovemment rec.iv.ti IUCb a POW.Jiii dlreclly;Tllus it made !be list the cloaesl tblng yet to an official Hanoi ccounttng ol POWs. But the administration wasn't giving much importance to tlle • N o r t· b Vietnamese moft: . "Pre-Christmas pmesmamhip,"' aid one ad-oflicfal .,.,,. lnaistM be nol be quoted by name. Blggm point ol contention wu wbether the list was comple!O IDcl lloal. U.S. pacilisls, through Wbcln Hanoi sent earlier llatl, said It wu. But U.S. ofllclala Aid a quiet checlt showed there was no rueon to believe !be list wu complete IDcl .......i eoriler (See PRlllONEll8, Pap I) J ' -- DAILY PILOT s WtdnHPy, Dfctmber 2.l, 1970 " ' • ·-ousted·in Po·land ---PRISONERS ... ' . report& lndlcate Americans not on the list are betd capUve by HllJO!. ''All we hive is the word of North Vietnamel!e officials," one official u.Jd. WARSAW (UPI) -Josef <lnOoldewlcz, the longtime Pr I m o .. ~ of Poland, was ousted in a ~ llhakeup toda¥· (CIW'·year term. Cyrankfewicz, although popular here, had angered workers by calling the Baltic demonstrators "hooligans and anarch- ists." One new element in tbe list, however, was Inclusion of th"e dates of death and/Ot captUN:., Pacifist leaderi of the Corrurdltee of Liaison with Families of Servicemen Detained in North Vietnam declared the • list has atl the names of prisoners the Hanoi government holds. Piotr Jaraaewla, an Army geoeral lill ~ nporl. WU DOmJnatfd to .uc...d Cyraoklewlcl. EJeclloo WU -automaUc. 'Ille eovtmmt11t changes -like tlioao In the b>p Communist Party leadership Sunday -were a dlroct outcrowtb ol the Ba!UC looilrloll Lui week. Glerek' called for a tw-1ear freeze on Polllh food prices. Bui this did not mean a revocitlon of the 20 percent lncreise 1n food prices announced Dec. 13 -the increase wblch touched off the riots, that brought down Gomulta and Cyrank!ewlcz. CyiUldewica'1 "Lett.r ol Retllnalloo" -~ltd lo a m..U., of~ Pollah N S par~t, ewport uspect A ld!e' ol rtSlgnatloo allo caJlll from President -Spydlllal, -'bad H ld G. l been removed lrom 'tbe Party's rullng e US ir Polltbun> Sllnday alq ·with bl.o· clooe =•~'.'"""'.party !~ wia~w Br~t:ally .Beaten ~1111 Finl Sacrela'J f,dward Gi.r.t. , . lb& man whci oucceedod Gomulka, A Newport lloich ritan sought after the lmmodlately took lbe Door a n d I lrill!. be~ of hil girlfriend WU non>lnltoil CyranklaWl<I for I he lmlfed at fll acquaintance's apartment preoldllley -a lo!'llilJ ''*remonlal ·jab. Tueediy. NtmlnaUon 1n W. ~wu conddered;; .. ~A. "Tuna" Atnip, 241 of 11314 lanlllDOUl)t lo eleetlOn. ' •• Jll., WU booked on SUIJllclon of Cyranklewlr:z. It, bad been pi'lmllr UsauJI wltll a deadly weapon, pending 1lnce JN7, acept for two yt8fS u issuance of a formal complainL Deputy Premier in 1952-M. A la.rge, bald, DelecUve Sgt. Ken Thompson said jovial man, he la known as both a lover of Atnip was taken into custody at 114 E. good living and aa a relaUvely llberal Ba1boa Blvd., about 8:30 p.m. by officers. moderating influence on the Polish He is suspected of severely beating regime. Car'.ole J. Fanche:r, 1.0, also of JJ3~ 29th II WU hellevod to be tbe fin! tlma .Sl,' leading to htr admittance to Hoag Poland has chaqed g o v er nm en t I Memorial Hospltal.-s intensive care unit. between elecUons. The Par 11 am e ·n i "Her face looks pretty bad," said a (SEJM) tnd lber<fore the ,...,,,.,.,,t nune, adding Ula! the vlcUm seema to be · had been reelec:tod only Lui year I« a -lo fair condition ¥1d is Improving. <'THIS IS THE ROBBER' CAME THE VOICE OF SURROUNOED BANK BANDIT 1r Offkeri'Joteph Ragoneae (left), Don Hamilton Hear Don Harrla' Tape \ F..-Pqel CHO'l'l~ER. • • community property including the $'10,000 home at 1637 Lincoln Lane, Newport Be~ .. Chotiner has asked Judge Dreizen to e1.clude specific i~ms of personal property from the carving up of the Chottner, assets Including the $12,000 deposit he made on tl'le home and the payment of community debtJ from tbe total proceeds. Snspe~t on Air Radio Station Records Robbery ClflCAGO (UPl) -Radio listeners "WGN." Harris replied . heard a play-by-play report Tuesday of "This is the robber -this Is tbe ~ the surrounding and capture of a would-called robber, I guess,'' the man ln the be bank robber. Part-or it came right bank repolied. from the horse's mouth -the cornered "What are you doing ln here?" Harris and already remorseful gunman. asked. n was before banking hours. Many listeners thought it was a hoax -"Well, I just want to tell you honestly, that radio staUon WGN was playing the WGN," the voice said. "I tried to make it tape of an old comedy. the shortest way possible and it's the wrong way." But It wall for real. "What'! going on now, llir?" the Newllman Don Harris received a tip a reporter asked. robbery was in progress at the American "Well," the man replied, • 'I 'm Christmas Services Listed Savings Bank in subutban South Chicago surrounded and at this moment I'd llke to Heights. He called the hank. request that I have a milllter because "What's going on out there?" he asked. I'm going to take my JUe." ''I understand you've got a robbery." Harris pleaded, "Don't do that," and 1 A male voice replled, "Yes, who's this kept asking quesUons. Many Orange Coast Churches Slate Evening Rites Cora We~, ~mmlttee chairman, said Jn New York, "1be heavy news 11 that it's final." In Paris, committee spokesman Rennie Davis said, "There are no new names and lbe North Vi etnamese are holding no tnore prisoners." The North Vietnamese told him they don't know where missing U.S . servicemen might be, Davis said, adding that J!ley may have been Jost when their planes were shot down. / Kennedy told a Washington neW1 conference in announcing release of the lis t that be didn't know if it was accurate and complete, but added the letter handed bis representative, Washington lawyer John E. Nolan Jr., conlalned a line that said this was the ofliclal lilt of the North Vietnamese. Nolan returned to the United Slates Tuesday ni&bt, but refused to talk with newsmen. Nolan took the list to David K. E . Bruce U.S. OegoUator at the Paris peace talks, Kenriedy said; The senator paued it o.n to the White House and Hogen. David Dell.inger, co-chalrman of the pacifist committee. said the North Vietnamese picked Kennedy a n d Fulbrlght to get the list because they were "men ol good will." Ronald L. Ziegler, White House press secretary, said that in the past the North Vietnamese have used "rather unusual chaMels" to convey mes.sages and POW list!. His statement replied to a question why a Kennedy ei;nissary was used to reCfive the list. Kennedy and Fulbright wrote Hanoi leaders last June seeking the identity ef POWs. Kennedy said he asked June 23 that President Ton Due Thang of North Vietnam let prisoners send and receive mall and release ill capUvea lhrouib s neutral nation. The M11A ... aeuon 11 a tlml for giving ser:.vjces. one will be held for the families bee ··'·' 1 apeaklng, please?" -"They've surrounded the bank here," ..,_, n ~=• ed by Balboa hlud United the man said. ..A.. ..A.. ..A.. and receiving, for lovinC and being loved at 7 p.m. in the sanctuary with carolll, Methodkt Church, 115 Agate Ave., at 7 Suddenly shouta were heard: "All right. "W" U ).( and for family and friend!. But is also a scripture reading and a Chrlstmas story. p.m. 1bursday. From P••• J Get •em up Hold It right there ~---·• 770 M M time of wonhlp and splrltual renewal. There will be lnotber service at 11 p.m. -n~ Freeze." . rI~. ore en Many familiel will spepd at leut a with choir singing and scripture by Rev. CORONA del MAR ANGELA There was a clattering IOUnd, as U the -"'or their bolldty1 ID prayer, tonl and Paul C B1'esmever r-• . ~ · Tl'lere will be a special Christmas Eve · • • • man dropped the phone. H }d b E fesUvlty at one of the many Orange Coaal cburchel and temples which b ave family service Thursday at 7 p.m. at the "Put the gun down," the lhouts e y nemy Christmas at SL John tht Dlvtne by nine californla law enforc;:ement continued. "Get .,.....,,. hands up! Get 'em ec.heduled --..1 .. 1 Christmas and Ep'·-pal ~ eh -.. Orange Av Corooa del Mar Community Church, ,._ ,,,.,......._. DQI ""ar • ~ e., agehtll and two matrons. up; get vn1• .. hands up! Get over here -srn .. ~mo, Te··. (on)_•-•-• l!anukab servi"' Cos'· M ·u '· ob d 'th the Congregational , 611 Heliotrope Ave., 1 -ni, ni,,v ... IU" n11 n11111 • ws esa, w1 ...,. serve w1 From Hamil ton, an un-.. ked patrol up ag·•·d "· wall Get a•·'-·t "· wall· '"--·Uons which notJfled t be which is open to the public. · ,._. CllliOl uft: • "'iww lllC officer who was imprisoned by the Viet i--m...,.....mn'rn .. dr"'Ol!-u,...r •wm<XrilldddJ•r' il-.o·n -.;annual;;;:=.,. Youth Pageant Thursday at 7-~~--------------"'ar took her to the heavily.guarded civic You in here alone?" Then more sbouUng. Cong_l_or fiveJears sa 1 Americans are · · tiM0 :""30--p:rrr.;-:there-wlll-~-carol Lutheran Church of the Muter, 2900 center. :tiiSuf tw i:lo"Zerrspectat:ors""Wtood Freeze . Drop he-tun:-Okar,-oktt,,-'-'o"vl!!er1100Urig liilrolllie men I blclude: sing1ng followed by , a Caridlellght p 'f' v· 0 a-ss lrom the -urthouse as Mila Dav1-move along "•me alona " COSTA MESA ac1 1c 1ew rive, C.Orona del Mar, will ........ ....... "' ' r e· -in Soutbeallt Asia. "nle children of a..tst LRtberu a.-e11 ~•Eucharist C::t 11 P·;-J!:W hold two hours of worllhip Thursday wu brought in.. "Hold it," came a voice, apparently of Green Beret Maj. James Rowe, 3%, of Sunday School wW presen~ a QJrbhnas w· , a ram11y l5b:nu u evening. The-speei&I· family Christmas Mlas Davis, dressed in a br~wn pant ~Heermane's mwyhciglf:a.~wered the telephone. McAllen, Tex., says 770 men -about ball Chrlatmu Day at"JO a.m. Eve worship of 7:30 p.m. w1·11 reature the suit, was booked on charges of kidnaplng, th Uma ed 500 held b th Eve service Thursday at 7 p.m. The Police Jdent eG the man they arrested of e es t 1, Y e enemy Church fl located at '180 Victoria St., Prince.of Peace Lathern Charcb, 2987 youth choir. The traditional candlelight m~~~e~ad1~:n:~~ci u a fugitive in a as Anthony Joaeph Yokley, rt, who gsve -are imprisoned in South Vietnam, Laol O:llta Mesa. On Christmas Day at 10 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa, has service will be at 11 p.m., accompanied . New York City motel Oct..lS on warr. ants his address as a Matteaon, ru., motel but and Cambodia. a.m., tie Rev. Lothar Tornow will scheduled Christmas Eve t w i I I g ht by the Senior Choir and a message by Dr. , charging she bought guns used m an who is reported to be from New York But in their zeal to pressh urlde HI ano!Ntntoth conduct the worship and will speak on the caqdJellght services at 6 p.m. Thursday William Eller entitled, "Jesus o f attempt to free three convicts from th_ e City. 111.e FBI charged Yoklly with releasing Americans re tUnn boor t theme ''C.ome .....:. God 1' Here." 1be fol"' the familiu. Pastor P. G. Malhew Bethlehem." There will be a Christmas Marin C.Ounty courtroom of Supenor attempted armed bank robbery. Vietnam, Americ1µ15 are orge g a u 5tn1or Oioir will slng. Ill brln th 'th ust by th Day service at 10 a.m. with communion Police from several suburbs, two those 770 men, Rowe told newsmen w g e message WI m c e and a message "See What the Lord Has Judge Harold J. Haley. sda youth J>raaa: and choir. A candlelight Made Known ." Haley, convicts James McClain and county sheriff's off!~ and Illinoi.s state Tue Y· Fint Cbrktlu Cbareb of COllta Mesa. service will be held' at 10:45 p.m. with William Christmas and Jon at ha n police converged on the bank after an He was held in Viet Cong prison campe '91 Victoria St., Coeta Mesa, will hold a carols, choir and violins and a message Jackson, 17, who brought gun! into court, alert from Louis Dandurand, 6 5 • In South Vietnam from his capture In CandleUgbt Communion Ser v Ice _by Pastor A. c. Anderson. There wlll be a ~~~~Nv~c:-were killed. president otthe bank. October 1963 unUl his escape on Dec. 31, 'l'tnlrldai at 7:30 p.m. Rev. Jamea Piercy fesUval worship Christmaa Day at 10:30 Mlss ·Davi.s was spirited from her New Dandurand said two men had robbed 1968. will preeent the meditation ''The Homage a.m. with message by Pastor A. Tanner. Holy Communion will be celebrated at York cell only 11 hour.i after U.S. him at his home of h1s bank keys, car He called on Americans to prtSSUre thl We Pa7 Him." NEWPORT BEACH Cbrht Presbyttrlan Cbarch, 20112 Supreme Court Justi ce John Ha_r~an keys and wallet, and tied him to a chair. Viet Cong in South Vietnam and lhe ,.... ~ Chr<h "' lhe Cofttwd, -Fafrvlew Road , Costa Mea, will present J. W. Peterson's cant.at& "A Sona: UnendJn&" Cbrlatmu Eve It Up.m. ' Temple -.., Gl7'W. llamilton st., COiii. Mea, wUr obaerve Hlllllbh -Fllday _,. tlarttng at a p.m.. Members of the youth group .. llgtous. llCbooil will conduct the entire oervlce ander the dir.c:tloo of ll>bbt Garaon C.c>ndnwl -Verde Uallad ·Methodl•I Chard!, 1701 BU:er: SL, Costa Mesa, has ICheduled lwo Cbrlatmu Eve candlellgbl DAILY PILOT ....,_ ..... II t'lf•._. --_,_ C..M... S..C....... OMHG• c:o.ur f'\JILlSHING CON.IM't •oMrt N. WW ,,.ldllllf..,.. hbt..... •. J1c.k R. Carf11 · ~. \lk9 ,.,.ldtnt ...... 0...1 ,........ T11,,.1t Kwtll ' ....... 'nt••• A. Mu1?1'1 ... ~··.,... l rch1r4 P. H1I '"111 0ru..-c.t1Nr ldltlr -C.t. M•: a w.t 1.,-lfNlt • ..,.,,., ... r.11.l 121' W.t e ..... ...,...,.,. laDUNI IHdll '1t '-1 A-Hllfltlfltton &letll: 17*JS leedll llllltVlirC &lltC ___ NWlft·E ·camN a.a ldenUcal Christmas Eve services will J\.1agnolia St., Huntington Be a ch refused to lnter-vene in the extradition He Creed t¥mself and telephoned police. Pathet Lao in Laos, along with the North Christmas Eve. Thursday, at II p.m'. p li td th ould '· "·-Vietnamese be held at St. Andrew'• Preabyterlan proceedings against her. . o ce aa e w -ro~ · Charch, 600 St. Andrew's Road, Newport Services will include the singing or Authorities said the heavy security and apparenUy used Dan'durand'1, keys to The Viet Cong and Palbet Lao, he aald, Beach. A Vesper Service will be held at familiar Christmas carols and a secrecy was needed because of the enter the bank and hoped to get early· "Have enjoyed an anonymowi atatua 4:30 p.m .. Thursday in the church meditation by Rev. Donald E. Roberts. . "repeated anonymous threats of arriving officers to open the vault. The because no attention has been focused oa San~·--· At II Th sda t · " FBI joined a search for the aecond man. them ." .... -..,.. · ' p.m. ur y, a A candlelight Communion serv1ce will ·~er~ro~r~ISlTl~·,-----------.--.O:ioiOiioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~;i;;i;;;i;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-.; candlelight lerVlce wU1 be held, during "-Included '" the Thursd Ch ·s1m -'dverti.1ment which the Rev. Olarles Dierenfield will ui::: "'' ay r1 u deliver a Christma.1 'meditation entitled Eve service of Fountain Va 11 e Y "In HOllpiitallty." The sanctuary choir Presbyterian Church, 9420 Talbert Ave., from 8 to 9 p.m. An organ prelude wW will present a speci~ Ch r I 1 t ma• start at ?:45 p.m . program. Newport Barbor Lutherad Cburch, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, has Resurrection Lut.ber8n Cflarcb, 9812 scheduled services both Christmas Eve Hamilton Ave., Hunti1'gton, Beach, will and Christmas Day. Services Thursday hold Christmas Eve candlelight services et 7:30 p.m. irhursday and a Festival will be at 7:30 p.m. and Friday aL 10 a.m. Worship at 10:30 a.m. Christmas Day. The congregation of the Newport Unity Chun:b will hold a special candleliabting service tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Senior ,Citizen's Building, tMh and Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. ' Faith Lutheran Church, 8200 Ellis Ave., Huntington Beach, has s c h e du J e d Christmas Eve worship at 6 and 7:30 p.m. Thursday and on Chr istmas Day at 9:40 a.m. Grace Lutheran Church, 6931 Edinger Ave.. Huntington Beach, will hold services Thursday, Christmas Eve, at 8 ao,d 11 p.m. and on Christmas Day at 10:15 a.m. GEM TALK TODAY by ~. C. HUMPHllD MODERN? Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crud~ly pierced stones echQed sparklmg water with a beauty even our pre-- historic forebears appreciated. SL 1Jamt1 Episcopal Cbarcb, 3209 Via Lido,. Newport Beach, . will hold three special f!rvk:es Christmas Eve. At 7 p.m. Thursday, a family candlellght service, highlighted by carols of the past and present, will be held. At 10:30 p.m., the &Mual Christmas choir presentation, with numerous carols and anthems, is scheduled and the "Midnight" Festival Choral Service and a sermon wlll be heard at 11 p.m. On Christmas Day, a Choral Holy Eucharist and sennon will be held at IO am. Christmas Eve services will be held Thursday at King of Glory Lutheran Chnrcb, 17'11.ll Newland St., Huntington Beach, al 7 and 11 p.m. There will be no servlctll Christmas Day. These forerunners of modem Redeemer Lutheran Cburcb, 16351 jewelry/erfection were valued for Christmas Eve candlelight Communion Springdale St., Huntington ·Beach, will lov~ an prestige. They ~ere also Fram- Omega, a wonderful ... donth••""· Christmas But If there WU IV9r ti Omega'• PfOUd •time !or the glftol an me position of eminence Omega, this Ctiristmu ls It. In the world of Sure, a diamond bracelet line watches means simply watch la 111 opulent thatshe'11knowyouwantad i Chrlatmat gin. But whtn lne best tor her. And she'll the watch Is Omega, 1uch probably never n4ed opulence a1ln1 elegant'• another watch for all the 1nd permanency. Christma ses to come. Is scheduled Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at have one service each Christmas Eve and believed to have protec~1ve value Plf m""6Udl qreptlonal -alii'U r-Ghr-letme~Day.-The-Thuf'sday-service--and-supernaturalpr.opei:.µe_s~,.~U'!p"'c"ul,__11--- Newport Harbor 3282 Broad street will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the service gems were therefore log1cal tok~ns Newport Beach. There will be a speclai Friday wlll be at 10 a.m. with which early man adorned him· solo presentaUon by Mrs. Mi chael self and his wife for p~otection of ea,tpbell, formerly a member of the CAPISTRANO BEACH both while he was hunung, a~d for noted 1lnglng group, the Doodletown A candlelight and carol Christmas Eve a ssurance of favorable cons1dera-__ Pipe.rs. service will be held Thursday at 7!30 tion by his gods. p.m. at Christ The Sbepberd Ludteran Real •skill in the intricate work Church, Camino capistrano and Del Gado of cutting gems and fashioning df* Ro.Ad, Capistrano Stach. The service signs first appeared about 5,000 A special Christmas Candle Light Ser.vb wlll be held tonight at I p.m. by the memMra of the Qru.rcll of Rellj:tous Sdtlce of Newport Beach at the Ebell Club, 115 W. Balboa Blvd. The Friday· sabbath observ8nce of Rarboi Reform Tempte wlll be In the form of a study session with the topic, Hanukah and the Macc1b~e1". It will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ptrkal, 1918 Leewafd Lane Newport Beach. Special Chrlstmae Eve services have features music, poetry, scripture! and n · d B b I · mcditaUon by Pastor Ackerman enUtled, years ago in rers1a an a y on1a. "Sweet UtUe Jesus Boy." and the c raftsmanship of these LOS ALAMITOS A special Chanukah service will be held Friday s:t Temple Beth David of Orange County. The congrcgaUon will meet at 8:15 p.m. at the Commun it y Congregational Church, 4111 Kate\la Ave., Los Alamitos. The West Orange County Temple Youth will conduct services. ' early workers Is evident in the in- tricate work performed in the cut-. ting o[ design s for amulets and seals fashioned from hematite, jas- per, marble and rock crystal. Today, lhe mythical values have been abandoned, bul love, prestige,• and ornamental beauty remain as solid modern values placed upon precious atones and gems. 0 OMEGA "--H 411MO!ldt.141( tolld eoi111 br1c1111 w1tct1 •• sru 1-n dlt111onft.. t4Kwt.n1 er yellow tolld told aw- 111 Wt lCll ••••••••••·"'° J. C. ..JlumphrieJ J ewefer.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONYENIENl TERMS IANKAMEIUCAltO-MASTEltCHAltWf • 24 YIEAR.S IN SAME LOCATION ,HON! 1~1-J401 ' l I l I ' 'I . 7 • -• ' 7 ' ' I 1! I • ·-. ,-"-• ._ .. _,,,, ·.---.-· • ' )'OL 63, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE cout(fY; ~tlFOR~ ,• ~~ES~At, DECEM •• 23. '1970, ' ' -' Appeal Filed on Meadowlark Runway Denial By ALAN ·DIRKIN · Of ... o.lb' l'llet SMIH Tl¥ decision to pull the permit for part ot tbe ccntroversial runway extension at MeadOwlark Airport was appealed today. . C.OUOCilman George ·McCracken, who wu apPofuted by tl)e council several weeks ago to look into the dispute, filed the appeal against the planning tornfniaskm's decision last week to revo~e the conditional exception. they gr1111ed the e~oo . lwo months The appeal will be considered by the earlier were not made., . cilycouncilatlL!meetingJan.4. Cleveland reported that alrpo_rt ·Toda B ll"•• ~--tmo J • operator John Turner had now complied· y u ~'6 uu~_,. a c.. with "98 ~t·• of .the conditions. 1 Cleveland salt:l that be would J!oommeud . ''I'm ~ that by the nei:t council that the permit be reinstated by the meeting there will be no hangups," council. The commiss1on withdrew the Cleveland aaid. ''Everything will baVe permit Dee. 15 ·becaust, 1be planners been compleled'by tJien." Wd, a number of airpor:t improvements The building dlrector ,said th a t that they atijlUlaled be carrled·out when electrical vlolatiool in the airport EARLY CHRISTfilAS -Santa·Claus alde<t.by 500 McOOnnell-Douglas .Corporation's Electrohlcs . DI· . vision employes dumped out bis whole bag this week al Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Inven- torying $1,250 worth of toys as others watch (from -'~ • • f f'• . lift) are tbenip!St K. JolUlscll. ~ Drln c:bafr •. man .Jack &lel&er, = 1£1111neer Dick Ward; Mal . Tower:Y RN, In charge of Ward. 338 and McDonnell- Douglas secretary Bonia .Peterson. " ~~~~~~---~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- -had bemt 'c:omcted IJ1d thet obo!rucflon lllbllD&. WU Jn order. 'llli maJn Minf of OOn ... lfoll between the alrporl oPOrator and the'lionleoWnerl Is Ille blul fence al the Hall A venue end of·tbe runw11. · CleVeland aald thal the lociltlao of the fence wu bo longer in dispute. Homeowners have chareed that'the fence was not installed.. in proper fO!JPd.11tions and\ did not conform to a plan Turner agreed on with the Boonl of' ZOObll, Adjustments. Cleveland aald that be and Councilman. McCracken fOUPd in a recent inspect.Ion thil the atructUre _was BOWld and subs!a.JtUal. bi· ht. apP.a1, MCcracken points iiut that although the planning Cf.Im.mission gave -Turner 60 day! to make the. improvements these conditions were later . 'modified because of conflicting measuremenLs and the Board of Zoning Adjustments did ·not act oh the fence until Nov. 18. ;, .. "I feel It Is l"J1erally agreed thai c:ondlUons have be<n Imposed wblch will effec\ively reduee ".the noise and dusj prob1ems for the homeowners on Heil Avenu~. but will also greaUy increase the safety ·factor at th.e airport," he commented. POW List Lashed Rogers Charges Propaganda Move · WASHINGTON (AP) -North Vietnain'1 release of a purported official prisoner of war list Tuesday was crttlched by s<cretary ol State Wlllim P. Rogtrt today as 0 a _contemptible 111aneuver, • .for propaganda purposes." He 1ald the North Vietnamese Invited two senators to send representatives to Paris to gain information on the prisoners of war .. but added they failed to provide any fresh information on the fate of the captured Americans. Representatives of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Maas.), and J. W. Fulbright (0-Ark.), received in Paris a tisting of 139 names of Americans now beld. All ,, .. ,,.,,.. --. .r ...... _, "' . . . •' ~- Foontaln Valley may hove.-,;..,,·clVlc audltorium, bot It !Jn't likely to faa1""' fixed seaUng as desfrtd bi ieteral clvic organizations. Here's what tbe parks and recreation had·been listed unofficially eartier. Abo named were 20 men listed as dead abd nine other• who had already been released. , · Rogers 1aid the · North Vietnamese COMPLETE POW LIST ON PAGE 3 acknowledged capturing and hot~ 399 men, but the United States alr~ady ~w that. 1be United StJtes has information that 39 other men were captured whose e1act fate is uncertain and the North Vietnamese provided no help on those. "The fact is that lhey'.re maneuvering with these prisooen-of-war in a way that's Inhuman. They're divert Ing attention from their barbarism by this method." "I think it was a contempt!bM maneuver and should be recognized 8!I such." 'The fact ls, he asserted, that there wfil· continue to be uncertainty al to tNl completenes!I of POW lists "until Nortn Vietnam complies w:itb the ruJes of international war and allows inspection of prlsoner-of·war camps." At another point he declared: "So we conclude they're using the POW issue in a very inhuman way to advance thell: (See PRISONERS, Page I) Vale Decor Judged Ave. a1!IO features "Mtrry Christmas" Jn bright lights ard a fully lighted house. Douglas Workers Donate Money For Yule-Toys 'Visions of Sagarplmns' • commiasion recommended TUesday nfeht for eip1118ion of the community center: Robert Bruce wrote "Ho,. Ho, Ho" acroaa hil garage door Jn. brlcht C2uistmas lights. Hi! creative effort won the DlOlt effective me· of ·ligbtl :catecory In Fountain Valley'• annual · Christmu decoration contest. ;. Other contest winners in Fountalll Valley are: Sweepstakes, Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Employes in two departments at the McDonnell Doug!M plart in Huntington Beach don't send Christmas cards to one another. lllstead of ' spending mOney on cardl\ and stamps they put it into a special toy fund. nus year the 650 employes in the Saturn electronics and ·the data reduction and instrumentation departments raised over $2,500. Monday, the leaders or the fund drive handed over $1,250 in toys and clothing to Ft1irview State Hospital. The gifts will brighten the lives of 55 boys aged 3 to 21 in. ward 338 of the hospital. , 'lbe rest of the money is being given to two other institutions -$638 to the Childrens Hospital of Orange C.Ounty and the special educational unit of Hollydale School in Paramount. ~"We've been driing this for five or six years now," explained Jack Smelser, one of the fund organizers.' "It seemed like a good idea back then and it has caught on steadily. This is by far the largest amount we have ever raised." Book Warehouse Set in Valley Fountain Valley Scbool Dtslrfct plans to bulld a $27,000 warebowle to 1tore 27,000 school books. Work starts in one month ' and should be finished m April Balley Construction Company o I Lakewood·won the contract Tuesday with @.l:!w bld· of m_,02;2,. Tbe Balley bid was $1.1111 less than the money provided by !he ltate for constrUction of the ware.house. ']be new 2,000 squ•e foot facility Will be attached to the emting warehouse at Number One Llghthooae Lalle. SANTA , TURN ' TO PA.GE 11 Santa CJaus Is compiling his list of deHveries which he'll be using 'l1lursday -night and he 's paying attention to &µ the requests from youngsters along the Orange Coast. Today's DAILY PILOT carries on Page 11 1ome of those requests, which heve been forwarded to' Santa at the North Po)t in plenty of Ume. . \ GingerbreadEntry Wins Huntington Yu"le Prize Tbe cardboard gingemread arllslry of Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson bas been rewarded with the sWeepstakes award Of the Huntirigton Beach "Cltristmas City" yule decorations contest. Making their home at 6362 Shayne Drive, the Andersons, along with their children labored for more than two months in a-eating their entry, called .. Visions of SUgarplums." "The. only trouble is that It's been raining so much lately that we've had to haul everything In and out of the house between downpours,'' explained Mrs. Gladys Anderson. M winners of the local contest, the Andersons' .gingerbread 'house has been ent_ered in the ''Forty Miles of Ouistmaa Smiles'' contest wliJCh js: ~sponaored by the DAILY PILOT ll1d the Orange. County Coast Association. Winners of that competition will be announced Tburoday. Joining the Anderaons in the Forty Miles. contest as the best commefcial prize .JWlnner in Huntingtpn Beach will be American Beauly· Florists, 17851 Beach Blvd. More· !han llOO bomes were checked by • judg" from the Chamber of Commerce and the Women's DivisiO. of the Chamber of Commerce in aelectlng the winners; They wUl receive their trophies during an 8 p.m. banquet, Dec. 29, at the WhisUing Oyster Re s-t,a u rant in Huntington Harbour. Winners in other categories are: Desi Cllrl11mM Theme -Gerald Graham, 16092 ?lrelocy Lane llld Dwight S. Wadsworth. 16101 Melody Lane. Cldldru's Fanlaay -Chuck Rot!;ert, llt2 Pine Sl llld Geo•ge Freeman, 20641 Goshawk Lane. Rellgtoas ·-Robert J. Latina, e832 Via C.orona and Allen Qulnn, 6601 Limerick Drive. Mobile Rome .-Gorden and Ester Babeoc~. 60 Hanl!ng19n St., No. '1lO ,and Robert Miller, l&m Monterey Lane, No. 241,". An orienlal gate will open the eyes of motorists entering Fountain Valley in 1971. The ·parks and recreation commission Tuesday night asked former city planner Ned Panons to design a street entrance (See WINNllllfl, Pap I) On a first priority they suggested building an auditorium ( 'tfith dreaing aod 1torage rooms), kitchen, space for large civic funcUons (up to 1,000 people), meet.ing rooms (at least three), and ,other, needed oiperational facilities (restrooms,. etc.). As a lesser priority, commlsstoners also asked for a game room. Jounce, rebeanal hall, and add!Uooal ·meettns rooms. 'Jbe commission balked at putUng in fixed aeata and sloping because it want! the auditorium to serve as the large apace for civic functions of 1,000 people. Leaders of the same organizations_ which urged a fixed seat auditorium also urged the city not to build one at all. "U we m\18t build a type of auditorium the same as we have, don't build one at all," Don Sauter, a spokesman for the Fountain Vallty Arts Association, told cornmilsioners. ~'Walt unUI we can afford a.. good auditorium. Unles.. tbe acoustics are better .than we have it's a waste of inoney," Sauter added. In earller public bearings, Sauter ptesented the commission with a peUUon 1igned by 24 civic groups favoring a fixed aeat autditorlum. Six individuals from the audience spoke up favoring fixed seats, none opposed it. Jame!I Dick, chairman ot the city's planning commission, spoke to the parks commission for the Friendl of the Library and in his wife's place for tbe Homemakers Club. , Dick was neutraJ on the fixed seatl, but (See SEATS, Page I) The Bruce borne al -·La Eaperanza Drill Platforms Off Hunthi~ton Tourist Sites? Brown and family, 18963 Acacia St. A moving ice skating pond and shrubs dressed to look like choir boys are the focal points of thi.! winner, The tromen'1 division of the chamber of commerce allo entered this home in the "Forty1 Miles of Oiristmas Smile11" contest co- sponsored by the DAILY PILOT and the Coast Association. M~ religious wipner, W arr e n Pinkerton, 17525 Santa Monica Circle, with a nativity and related scenes. The two oil ~g platforms off Best Christmas scene, Mr. and · Mrs. H ""~" B<ach beco 1our· t John Richards. 10286 Cardinal Ave., with un ... 15wn may me l5 a little bit of everfthing fasbiOned from attractions. , home-made figurines. Two bro~rs. gjven a ~lty Ieise to ,Santa. special, J. w. KJngston, .18526 operate a 1porUiahing businesl from the Santa Andrea St, featured a sleigh with a erid of the municipal pier are plannlng • m'oving Santa,plu.s elves and a cholr boy. two or three narrated bo~t f.rlps In the Most hum:orowi, Ross M~n, ~ El Camino Ave., displayed comical f1gurea aftert)OOns to the rip and along the in foreign costumes on his garage door. shoreline. Most unusual, Donald Blakely, 98167 Carl McCullah, who llvea in Buntlpgton 8'dbud Orcle, put up an elaborate Beach. and Robert McCullab, wboee. gingerbrea~ drummer boy group with home la in Newport Beicb, also are large musical notes and candy canet planning dally lisblng lrlpo, one fiom 7:30 spread througbout. a.m. to 2 p.m. i.nd anolher from 8 p.in. to r-----------,-•. 9:30 p.m. for night flshin;. The lease for the concession, granted by the City Council thia week, will last three years and be effecUve Jan. 1. There bas been rio sporUiBhing from the pier in 1970 but there was in previoua yeara .. ·Orange We11ilaer Christmas Services Listed -· and Beaches Director Vince Moorhouse r"tported, however, that in past years the sportfishlng created' more probleini llian• II WU wOrth, with damage being caU3ed ·to the pier, ramp and facllitleo. Moor-blamed -P"'blema on poor'lwe agreements IJ1d Ald"that a new Jeaaa ~Ing pr<pared by the city atlorney'a oWoe will -eel Ill e The . weatherman'• Christmas present to the Orange Coast i.s not keeping b.l.s prombe of rain for to- day. Mostly sunny skies will pre- vail Thursday with temperatures in the low eos. INSmE TODAY Interest ha quality movies b greater than ever before, aat1.t the pre$idtnl of Edwards Cine· ma:1 Thlater.t, who'1 opening three new movie houses ~ the Orange Coa1t this week!l See Many Orange ·coast Churches ·Slate Evening Hit.es 1ituaUon. · • The holiday aeason Is a'llme fur-giving and receiving, for Jovl!!g and being loved and for -family IJ1d friends. But ii alao a Ume of worahJp and 1pirltual renewal . Many families will spend at least a part of their holidays in prayer, song and festivity at oqe of the many Orange Coat churches and' temples which b av e schOduled opecial Cbriltmu I n d .Hanukah 9et'Vices. c:Ongr.gatlona wblch notilied I h • DAILY PILOT of theae wmhlp boon include: COSTA MESA The chUdren of Cbr11t Latllsral a.di Sunday School' will pres<nt a Cbriltmu Eve service Thursday at 7 p.m. T6t cburch ii located at 7!0 Victoria St., • Coot0 Meu.' ,On Chrlslmu Day al 10 a.m., the Rev. ~ Tornow will conduct the worablp and will apeak on tbe theme 0 COme -God 11 Here." The Senior Choir will sing. . Dal Cllrfttlu ~ ol Costa Meaa., '192 Vlctorta S~. c..ta Mesa, will bold~ ~t Cl>mmunlon S,er f I c ~ 'l'hurlday at 7:.30 p.m.,Rev. James Plierty will preoent the medltaUoo "The lloplas• We Pay Him." Tiie Pnlbylertal Chrcll of tbe eo ...... 1, 2'50 Fairview Road, , Colta Mesa, will present J. W. Petenoin'• cantata 0 A Song ·Uneridlna:'' Chrietmu Eve at 11 p.m. ., ' .. Temple Sbm, 6t7 W. Hamilton .St., Costa Meu, will obaerve · Hanukalt EARLY D~A.DLINE 1ervtcea Friday evenll)g , starling al 9 , • . , p.m. Members of , the youth fllOUP FOR· 'DIME' ADS ' rellglowl achoOb vim conduct the ent~e . . aervkit mlder llie dlrect!Oil ·of •l,labbl AD ·Dlml!'A.tine 1 aill fnlended "·for Garaon Cloodm!ll. · publlcauon ~lurday .In the .DAILY, • · . PILCll' imlst · oe placed by no6ii Tbtindly M ... Venle' v'aHed' Melbodlal 'cnreb, : thl•· ~ c!uO to Ille aiilllmu D~ 1701 Baker SL; ~ta . Mela, has: . bo~:r~ ~ placed al any •DAJL'Y acheduled two Cllrillmas·Ete cil)tdlelllhl PILOT o·ff Ice., Tbe aamec ·early aervlcel. One will be beld for lbe"lamlll" deadune 1IW.Uon will ml nm ...et, at 7 p.m: in the aanctuarr .,wtth 1C1tOll, also, becaUM of 1tbe 'New Y"ear:'i Day oc:rlpture reading and a Chriltmia llorf. bollda~. For fUrtber Information, pl!OnO, There win be another aervlc<I aMl. " .. m. the direct tine to !he D~ Y .PILOT · ' ' ClasalQed ~ ilePI-9\M8?1. • (flee ClllllSTMAS, P.,. I) • ) · Entertainme:it, Page 18. O.ly 1 ~ CHRISTft'AS ""'"""'""-' . ...... ' .... ·--~ ....._.. ..... +I °''"" C:-ty ' --" .,.,,. 2'1•tt lllcl ...... 1 .. 11 Tt"°""" lf ,,........ ,..,. ·-. .. ,,. ..... " ..,,....,. ..... 1>11 • ,._ -.. I I I r • r I I , "' ~y l'!LOl H .. . ·• From P.,,e I CHRISTMAS SERVICES • • • wltb: <:hob' 1Inglng and ocrlpture by Rev. Paul 0, llieslDO)'er. . . Christmas at Sl Jolm . lbO Dtvl"' Epllcopal Cbarcb, 2k' Orange Ave., Colla Mep, will be oblerVed wllb the annual Youth Page1nt Tburoday at 7 p.m. At 10:30 p.rn., there will 'be carol singing followed by a ~ellght Cllrlstmas Eucharist at 11 p.m. There will be a Family Christmas Eucharilt Christmas Day at 10 a.m. Prlace of Peace Ladleraa Cllurcb, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa, has scheduled Cbrl.stmu Eve t w i I i g h t cancilellght services at 5 p.m. Thursday for the families. Pastor P. G. Mathew. will bring the rD.esaage with music by the' youth brass and choir. A candlelight service will be held al 10:.tS p.m. with c.Yois, choir and violins and a message bf Past« A. C. Anderson. There will be a festival worship Cbristmu Day at 10:30 a.m. with message by Pastor A. Tanner. NEWPORT BEACH Identical Christmas Eve services will be .held at· st. Andrew's Presbytertu ctiarcb, 600 SL Andrew'• Road, Newport ll@ch. A Vesper Service will be held al 4:30 p.m. Tburoday In the church Sanctuary. At 11 p.m. Thursday, a candlelight servlce will be held, during which the Rev. Charles Dierenfield will deliver 3 Christmas medU.ation enUUed "'In HOspitality." ~sanctuary choir will present a special C b r 11 t ma s program. ' NawportHu~r~tberanCburch,798 D6ver Drive, Newport Beach, bas scheduled services both Christmas Eve arid Chrisbnas Day. Services Thursday will be at 7;30 p.m. and Friday at 10 a.m. 'lbe-congregation of the Newport Unity Clmrch will hold a special caodlelighting se,r.vice tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Senior Cit:lten's Building, 15th and Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. 61. James Epb<opal Clmrcb, 3209 Via Lillo. Newport Beach, will hold three services Christmas Eve. At 7 p.m. Thurs ay, a y can ellifi service, highlighted by carols of the past arid pment, will be held.··At 10:30 p.m'., tJ'li annual O:ristmas choir presentaUoD;·' with numerous carols and anthems.· ts oclleduled . and tha "Midnight" F..,tlvaj Choral Service and a sermon will be heard at 11 p.m.' On Christmu Day, a Choral Holy "Eucharist and sermon wm be held at 10 ilm. Christmas Eve candlelight Communion Js scheduled Thursday at .7:30 p.m. at Plymod Conpq'atioml Cbarcll of Newport Harbor, 3262 Broad Street, Newport Beach. Tbere will be a special solo presentation by Mrs. )fichael Campbell, formerly a member of tile noted singtn,g group. the Doodletown Pipers. A speoial Chriotmos C.ndla tlaht Servke will be held tonight at a p.m. Dy the members of the CJ1:a:rclt of ReJJgioU Science of Newport Beach af the ~ Club, 515 W. Balboa Blvd. The Friday .sabbath observance of Harbor Reform Temple wlU be Ill the fonn of a study session with the topic, Hanukah and the Maccabbees". It will 'be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Perkal, 1918 1£eward Lane N e w p o r t Beach. SpeclaJ Christmas Eve services have DAILY PILOT ORANG! COAST PU8ll't'llNO CCW.PAMY l)eeJI lll'beduled by Balboo lllud Ulllted Melbodlll Cbarcll, 110 Agate Ave .. at .1 p.m. Tbursday. CORONA de! MAR There will be a special Christmas Eve family service Thursday at 7 p.m. at the Corona del Mar Community Church. Congregational, 811 Heliotrope Ave., which is OP!D to the public. Lutheraa Cluareb ol die Muter, 2900 Pacific Viiw Drive, Corona del Mar, will hOld two hours of worshlp Thursday evening. The Special family Christmas Eve worship of 7:30 p.m. will feature the youth choir. The tradlUonaJ candlelight service will be at 11 p.m., accompanied by the Senior Choir and a message by Dr. W,illiam Eller entitled, "Jesus o t Bethlehem." There will be a Christmas Day service at 10 a.m. with communion and a meuage "See What the U>rd Has Made Koown."-. llVNTINGTON BEACH· FOUNTAIN VALLEY Holy Communion will be celebrated at C!Diat P:ret~n Clmrcli, 2 O I 1 2 Magnolia St., Huntington Be a c h , Christmas Eve, Thursday, at 11 p.m. Services will jnclude the llngjng of familiar Christmu carols and a meditation by Rev. Donald E. Robem. A candlelight communion service will be included in the Thursday Christmas Eve service of Fountain Va 11 e y Prelbyterlan Church, 9420 Talbert Ave., from 8 to 9 p.m. An organ prelude will start at 7:45 p.m. Resurrection Lutheran Church, 9812 Hamilton Ave., Huntington Beach, will hold Christmas Eve candlelight services at 7:30 p.m. Thursday and a Festival Worship at 10:30 a.ni. Christmas Day. Fattll LutlJeraa Cba:rclt, 8200 Ellis Ave., Htmtlngton Beaeh, hu 1 c h e d u 1 e d Cbristniu Eve; worshiP at 6 and 7:30 p.m.-ThuFl!day-and-oo-Cl\Rolrriiil!tiay-llt- 9,40 a.111. ~·,~ c\urcii, nit ~r Ave., Huntlilgton Beach, will hold services Thursday, Christmas Eve, at a arid lt p.m.: and on Chriatmu 'Day at JO:ll a.m, '-. ~1 Chrlstmas Eve services will be held Thur!ilaf at Klllf of Glory Lother•• Cbulcb, 'l'ml Newland 'St., Huntington Beach, at 7 !lftd 11 p.m. There will be no servicee. Christmas Day. Jled:eemer. Latberaa Cburcb, 16351 Spr!_ngdale St., Huntington Beach, will have one service each Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. The Thursday service will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the service Friday will be at 10 a.m. ' CAPISTRAllO·BEACR A candlell~t arulc.arql Christmas Eve service will tie,. held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. a~ Qrlll Tiie Sllepberd LalberaD Cburcb, Camino CaP!strano and .Del Gado Road, Caplstran!l ,Beach. The service fe8.ttl1'es mus1e, ·poetry, scriptures and meditation by Patter Ackennan entitled, "Sweet lJtUe Jesus Boy." LOS ALAMITOS A special Chanllkah service will be held Friday at Temple lletlt David of Orange County. The coOgregation will meet at 8:15 p.m. at ·the Community CongregatiOJll} Church, tlll Katella Aye., Los . Alamitos. The West Orange County Temple Youth will conduct wvtcea. ' • • ' ... •. -. Win• Eagle Huntington Beach High School senior Robert J, Benter, I!, 17, has won · His Eagle Award, highest in Boy Boy Scouts of America. He is currently junior assistant scoutmaster of Com- munity Methodist C b u r c h Troop 34. -------------c-------- --- • • ansons '-81ood .. . . uAt tht 1..aBlancu he wore the 11me mask he has wom here In cOurt -JUI! a peace-loving lndlvldual. And then he snaked out to get hll blQOdOtlrsty robots and send them in to kill." The defendants were 'barred from further sessions of the triaJ after wild scenes before the jury in which one even struggled with the prosecutor. Gives Suggestions From P .. e J Jury Praises Center PRISONERS. .. / political objectives." lo releasing the lists in Paris Tuesday, the North Vietn amese characteriUd them for the firat time as oUicial, although the same names bad been &1vu unofficially earlier. I But Foresees Worries By JACK BROBACK Of !IHI Dlll'I' Pllol Stitt' Orange County Medical C en t e r ' s operation has been praised in general by the Grand Jur y but some recommendations made for improvement and fear expressed over Medi-Cal financing cuts. The jury in an interim report today says, "the Grand Jury feel! that the medical center has an important role to pJay in the future health services of tbe county." Some of the problems of the center are due to the substandard condition of the older buildings and poor planning when the newer·buildlngs were constructed, the jury found. It was told that these problems: would be solved with the completion of the remodeling and construction plans for the center. The jury report praised the center for its collecUon policy but recommended that a stu<!y of the fee structure and methods of setting fees should be undertaken. "Although the fees at the medical It marked the first time efficlal representatives of the U.S. government center are higher than at other hospitals received such a POW list dir~. TbUJ it in the county it should be noted that this made the list the closest thing yet-to an is partially true because the center fees official Hanoi ccounting of POWs. include professional services by house But the adm inistration wasn't giving staff which is generally not true in other much importance to the N 0 r 1 h hospitals,'' the report stated. Vietnamese move, The jury expressed concern over recent "Pre-Christmas gamesmanship,'' saJd Medi-Cal financing Cuts by the state. one administration official who insisted "These reductions will not only severely he not be quoted by name. Cut revenue to the center but may also Biggest point of contention was increase lhe .,_patient load due to the whether the list was complete and final necessity of treating patients who were U.S. pacifists, through whom Hanoi previously cared for in private facilities." sent earlier Hsi..., said it was. Affiliation with UCI was praised as But U.S. officials said a quick check "attracting a large and competent staff showed there was no reasOn to believe to the, center." Exam p 1e11 of the list was complete and added earlier "sophisticated and advanced medical report.; indicaterAmericans not on the liat care" provided through the university· are held captive by Hanoi. hospital tie up were listed as the inten-"All we havf! is the word of North sive care, cardiac care and bum units. Vietnamese officials," one official saJd. "Rehabilitation of patients ia becoming One new element in the list, however, Increasingly important a.s more critically was i.aclus.ion of the dates of death and/or ill patients survive the acute 11tages of capture. illness," the jury reported. "But it is Pacifist leaders of the Committee of surprising that the county has so few Liaison with Families of Servicemen beds available for this purpose." Detained in North Vietnam decla~the Use of paramedical persoMel to list has all the names of prisoa"el'I the d e v e t o p improved health c a r e is Hanoi government holds. re oommended. "The training and use of Cora Weiss, committee chairman, said From Page J lay personnel to do tasks which in New York, "The heavy news is that professionals do and which do not require it's final." their special skills w o u J d be In Paris, committee spokesman Rennie advantageous." Davis said, "There are no new name11 DECORATION WINNERS • • • A list of recommendations Includes : and the North Vie'tnamese are holding no sign for the city on a Japanese theme. up at the Huntington Beach Chamber of That clinics located at the center be more priSQners." · Commissioners were urged to travel Commerce office in the Town and open. some evening each week : that The North Vietnamese told hfm they the oriental path by Councilman John Country Shopping Cente r: patients whose doctors have sent them to don 't know where miuing U.S. M Ro the medical center for special care or 'servicemen might be, Davis said, adcllng • Harper who appeared Tuesday with his ary gers, &ln Softwind Drive; te sts be referred directly to the required that they may have been lost when their own designs tucked under hls arm. Beverly Coker, 201 Huntington St.; clinic: that every doctor be conversant planes were shot down. Parsons also had three oriental theme ~~~or~~~~: ~:6;hy~82~~ J:er:~ wltli the cost to the patient and to the ' Kennedy . told a Washington news designs to sbo~ the commission. Ave.; HUntington Beach Travel Agency, county of the care he recommends, and conference 1n announcing release of the June Boykin, chalrm.an of t b e 222 Main St.. GoJden West Homeowners that bilingual personnel (Spanish and list that he didn't know if it was accurate cornmiasion, urged the hiring of Parsons, within Gol~n West St. Edwards st.' English ) be available on every 11hift. and complete, but added the letter while-asltiog-bim.-to-use-'IOn:ie..::Af..:Jhe-Bolsa Avt., and-McFadd~~Ave:;-Georg,.''~---------------;'$bdei:l -preaentative :Washlntt te ard d · bown b Ha lawyer John E. Nolan Jr., contained a wa .r g en esign • Y rper. Parks. 6241 Wprner Ave.; Tom Neeld, L W'lli line that said this was the offJclal list of The sign which pleased m 0 I t 1010 ~sin. St.; Doyle Miller, 1012' Park ura 1 81DS the North Vietnamese. commiisioners was alt-foot-long timbef, St.; Nolan returned to ·the United States one foot thick and two feet high. ·Panons James_ Slehl, 4222 Calhoun Drive; S H }d Tuesday night, but refused to talk wttb said UfC Cify---.i lf4me would ~ engrr.;ed William Brasch, 5601 Heil Ave.; Bill erviceS e newsmen. on the timber. Al one end of the timber Borland, 15241 Vi ctoria Lane·; Dale stood a five-foot wide oriental "gate" Hugbfs, 16301 Serenade Lane: Kevin with a sloped roof design. Chard, 16191 Norgrove Circle; Jeff Parsons estimated the cost of such a Irvine, 818 Joliet Lane; Steven Reed and sign at about $1,500. City officiaJs·plan tO George Calkin, 8421 Snowbfrd Lane. place some type 'of marker along major Marion Long, 1005 Park St; John and ~treets.entel'ing Fountain Valley.. Beverly Seibert, 1706 Park St.; Robert Parsons cari•t officially stirt work u'ntil Bonillas, 11111 eollie Larie; Richard the city cowK:U: 'approves · his. hiring. Martin, 17116 Edgewater Lane : Fred perhtiPs Jan. 5. Snipp, 15771 Willett Lane; Marnctte· Outdoor Trte -Richard and Martha Peek, 16301 Pomona Lane. Wilson, 1024 13th St. Fred Bruchwitz, 6841 Via Coronado Indoor Tree -Shorty.Rider, 1026 13th Drive; Melvin Muslin, 21151 Binghamton St. Circle; Fred L. Hodgkins , 1O0 I l Nelgbborbood ..... Sea Aire Mobile Home Stonybrook Drive ; Albert Murse, 9932 Park, 6301 and 6241 Warner Ave. Gare tt Circle; Robert Jacinto. 8291 Polk Special trophies have been awarded to Circle; James Solum, 16842 Baruna Lane. the following people and may be picked Front Page J SEATS •.. urged the commission to "think big," on whatever it recommends. "Think of the future and not just what money Is in the budget," Dick said. "In 1968 the current building was proposed and we said it would do for 10 years. 11 didn't till our needs for two yeats." "The first time this building Was used -for the Miss Fountain Valley Pageant -it was too small," Dick added. GEM TALK TODAY by 1'-""*"""'"'C:";,,.·,.li~~~~~ ... :~.'-" .. ----1< MODERN? Funeral service!! were con du cte d '1'4esday for Mrs. Dura L. Williams, a teacher at Sun View Elementary School, Hunt ington Beach, for seven years, who died last Satu rday at the age of 62. She was buried at Good Shepherd Cemetery after services at Smith's Mortuary Chapel. Mrs. Williams, who lived at 7682 Rhine, Huntington Beach, was a member of the First. Methodist Church. She·is survived by her husband, William ; mother, Georgia West; brother, Everett West; nephew. Ted West: and niece, Mrs. Sheryl Brandt. Youth in Huntington Set for 'Happening' Young people in Huntington Beach are invited to a Christmas week happening, Friendship 4, at the Recreation Center, 17th Street and Orange Avenue. The event is sponsored by the city's Youth Coalition Committee, according to YCC Chairman Barbara Nelson, who says dances are planned for Dec. 'J:1 and 28 from 7:30 to 11:30 p.m., with live music. From Omega, a wonderful Pardon'"' pun. C:hrisb:nas But lftherewa1 ever tim·e Omega't proud I •time for lhe gift ol an position of eminence Omega, this C{Trlstmas Is It. ~ In the world of \ Sure. a diamond bracelet fine watches means simply watch la an opulent that1h1'Uknowyouwented Christmas gin. But when the best for her. And 1he'll 1 the watch la Omega, such probably never need{ opul ence gains elegance another watch for all the end permanency, Christmases lo come. Roit1rt N. w, .. Pt9'klllnl 8nll l"lllillltlllf' J1cfc R. Curt.y Vita ,.,..,ld .. t....,. Oenonl MllllfW Fir1n Outfoxed Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her ca've, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely -clad in a rough1y sewn fur of ~i length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crudely pierced stones echoe_d sparkling water with a beauty even our pre-- historic forebears appreciated. ' Thomu JC...,u E•uor lhom11 A. M'"Jl!hh1t Mflltllna Edl;or Al111 Dirki11o Pollutwn Dumped on VP's Rug Wat Orlret COU!lty ~ Alb1rt W. lifta ClilCAGO (UPI) -'l'hfl Fox, a As50C:l•tt Hltw mystery antipollut.ion crusader. says if tf11t1 .. , •• h«ai OM,. the u,s. Steel Corp. isn't polJUting area 17175 a.1ch lo11t ... 1nl lakes and streams, It shouldn't mind his M1llirtt Ad4r•••: P.O. 101 7to, !2MI dumping some Ould from ita: drains onto Ot.., Otnc.. the corporaUon's Loop offJce carpel -"~"" '""'..._ .. ~'!"'~-1--·'llunW..~!n~ tha Fox d11111ped a eos+. ,ITtie: n> w-.1,..,.11reet I 1 llln uld 'th hlte "..._. e11c11: 2211 w .. hlbll• hi'-" ou -sme g mass on e w .kin C11ment1: ~J Norll'I EJ C11'11111t "'9e1 carpet ol i;be vice preslder:it in the of lice building Tuesday. He said the substance came direcUy from U.S. Steel's dratnl tn Gary. Ind. "After all, thal'1 the slu!f they P"t In out' lakes and strtams," the. Foz told hf.I only known confidante, Chicago Dally News cbbmlnlot Mike lloyto, who identlflef lilni ii being 1 mlld·m&Mered • Vtlddl .. aged man from arow>d suburban Aurora. . ''.Tb•Y keep 11ylng that jhey aron't . ruUy polluting our water. If that's true. then IL shouldn't hurt his rug, right?" As tie walked into the oUice of U.S. , Steel Vice Prutclent Edward Logelln, the Fox carrled a large glass botUe under nnt arm and 1 11gn and a Uny, coffio- ahaped box under the other. ''Good a!lemoon," be told t be receptlonist. "1 am from the Foz Foundation for Conservation Education and we have an award for U.S. Steel for their oustanding contributi on11 to our environment." The Fox tried to open the bottle. The lid stuck. By the time the Fox had the bottle open, the receptionist bad come around her desk. When he spllled the goo over the carpet. some of it splashed on her leg and dresa. ·"I guess it was pretty messy," Royko quoted the Fox. "You see, I had put.some clams in the water. ,They symbolize the destruction of wildlife.'' Tben' the Fox placed his "award" sign' on a couch, left the coffin-shaped box. slapped a "Go Fox -Fight Pollution" bumper sticker on the glau door and. beat a hasty retreat. Police later approached the little box caref1.llly. Logelln said I.bey were afraid it "mliht be • oomb." Inside the mlnlaturt coffin they found 11 dead perch, a dead cray(Jsh and a dead frog. Alongside was a small vial o( dark nuld, #llso taken, acoordlng to the Fox, lrom U.S. Steel's jlralns, ''A prank Is one thing," U>gelln said. "But this ls no prank." These forerunners of modern jewelry perfection were valued for Jove and prestige. They were also believed to have protective .\'.illue and su pernatural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tokens with which early man adorne1 him- self and his wUe for prote•.-tion of both wh ile he was hunting, and for assurance of favorable considera- tion by his gods. Real skill in the intxlcate work of cutting gems and fashioning de- signs first appeared about 5,000 years ago in Persia and Babylonia. and the c;:raftsmanship of these early workers 11 evident in the in· trlcate work performed in the cut- ting of designs for amulets and seals fa shioned from hematite, jas- per, marble and rock crystal. Today, the mythical values have been abandoned, but love, prestige, and ornamental beauty remain as solid modern values placed upon precious stones and gems. .. 0 OMEGA A-21.il1111ofld1. t•K 1llld eohS 1111cotot w11~ .. 1t'' !a -tt dl•mOftdl, 1-'K'<llt!l!t Of Y•llow tolld Giid &f•eo-ltt watcll , ., ........ 1450 J. c. 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANICAMtRICARO-MASTERCHARG£ I, 14 YEARS IN SAME LOCATiON PHONE 541·1401 I l ' ' I 'l '1, I I I I '" ' ' I I I I I l' I I Widnl1d11; Dtcombtt 2', J9~Jl DAliY l'JlDT t PAIUS (UPI) -The following Is a list Allfn ltYNtll cf:'=1t{\ Lt., s.111er11 Nar""°' Leur ... U'JMfA'ro~'°"'vui. 11t U.S. pllotJ captured ln North Vietnam • ~-kll1J:.~1,..:.~~J:~,,t..HflvJ1i. ttlchen1 M. ,,.,,,.,......,., Lr, u.r. Moll .. c11~ between Aug. 5, JllM and Nov. IS, 1970, J1..,.. Fr•l'lkH11 a.T."L1. c....ir., L•v11e ~~\ ~U:':; f':tb .. T=:-"' I ···• sda Atl!IW Wlllllm lhwtrl Ct.~·~ Jt~-v!o1 w"i.w eu-~ C.iM., ~ re e~ Tue y by North Vietnamese Hwh Atltn ""~· 11. cmar •• c1m11t~o. J•mei 1tk11e111 $111.,.tv. 111 "'· ,._ oflicials. ·~ LM 1~u.~ .. J~"'s .. II~· lt•VITIOfld Wtlltr VIMj~l· M1i., Vtrtd•I• P.u1 GonlOfl 1rowri, b1 L1 .• Ntw1on "-·~ o. wri;c~f'Vllfo~t\t The list did not contain the hometowns ~=-i::ec:rJ l,"'"''";~"h.1~=:,:nm Jol!n wimt"" Mllv'frt.1-.ti.:.lt~ M1ndles11r of the ~Jdiers. The states of .339 of the Ltvren •=: ""t-r. f1p1..:.n1 'roooy o.n1e1 JT.1'-o-11rr,"C.01.~A~mm1th men were obtained rrom Mrs. Cora ~=~-w-.J-;~11.,,~:r'l:;gton~1 ~ "''' N0t111 ~~-:u1t .. ·G.=111t11'li:.~'Wr.:" 'Velss, New York head of the com-ittee 01nmou111 .. 0one1c1 L1111r He ieer, c1p1,, MHlton ~ .... Timothy ll9'Mfd 511IUv1n, LI. (l.g.), $prln{llltkl w111i. .... JOhn Me!ioer Jr., l l. (l•), WIKonsln of liaison with ramilies of detained Run•i• eo ..... rd T'MTt~1y~"~•ot:. Nor111 F•lmou111 lll•Plh 5ervicemen, who said the list released Rober! Artfllt "~''· 11• 11 .. S•WY•• AFB Rllbert.R. er..,..-, J.i,.~,1;,,=,ltld. L111,1.i.1r1 T d WIU1rt1 $t!l-e.ll G!deo!I. Ma '/ Mount Cl...,.n& [ L' ues ay was essentlaUy the same as one M.nl11 Jun.s NtueM, ht .• iron Moun111n lhomli Htn"" ir:i.-, '· coi .. T•l•t• h bl I d I I r 11 · h d Oo!wokl Elllil..,._ OIMIJ, M1t .. Moun! Cltmtnl ·, .s e._o a ne as a except U a now· Jose~ Fr1nc1, snan.ri.n, c101y G[tr>ll R•Plds No home towns were available for the been "made official.'' J•m ... Hawlt w":it.ll~fJt,, .-1 ntl The list released in Paris was given to ~::foie~= t'~f'.:"c~o~.iip~:n1•POll1 :~:~=~men, all listed either as dead or newsmen by Rennie Davis, Mrs. Weiss' O.yid 111.~1 Wllffl, Lt. ti~ 1>11111111 CorcloYi represent ative. It was the same list as o.~id wui nu wi:i;.fr~s1,Jre•POlli DIYld iec1 .. •rr: krt1, c.oi 1Fv11m141. sacr-n1o lh · Se J1,.,., Wiiii~ l•llly. LI. Ilg), C•r1""9t H.n1r P-O""ler. 111 LI IF "41.SHJ, P1lo All~ ose given to n. Edward M. Kennedy T-• Eo-n1 co111n. 111, c101 .. J1c1r...., S.""' • R. G 11no11, J•~ Cll"ldt". C.W};ff~··M~•mt• and Sen. J . William Fulbright. . Cirlylt $mllll Hirr~·fs'8~·i.i...,_ )~~: HM!:.,1:-"'~~~· l'f.l'1tlncsr~ rM~I Jolin W•rAIO llrOC11~. C•pl,, SI. loull l~ N,., ( l>UI I CALIFOllNIA Jolln Wllltr Clark. CIPI .. <.flumble to!n'J""'h RIYmond HUQNy, I. J ... "°'"" WIUrfd ll:MH Abbo11, C.P1. lXlll11t), m Oiepl Oolwokl Riy SjlOOOI, Ill LI .• Pl .. wnl Hill H1rry Tlrltlllrl Jenlllnl Jr., Cmclr, OUCH ), Ev•rtll AIY••tl Jr., LI. II.!.) ("4124) S.1111 (I••• R-1 Oe•111 WO.Co~~;.~,,'*" City l ttn00tt Anthon¥ C ... tln Andrtwa. ~1. /FRlf~l), Ct>lco Tlleoclore Fr1M. ltoplm.,,, Lt, ("IOI". (ffl.S..0, ••o'•'<~f<lr. (. l1ld0dt. Jr ., LI. ( .Q.I 1""20!. S.n Rodney l\tltn i(n11110n. LI. Cl.f.), l lll lllf$ LtmODre ,.. -NEV.I.DI\ f""'I '" ~ Roblrt W. 81rne1t, MIJ. !FlllU!21!, HIWll'Mlrlll RlcMr<I Allf'n Dullorl, -.\lj •• ,,.orlll Lii VtglS. Cirl WIUIMTI lHll.,, C10I. • (UlQl2-Colt l!ICll, LI. Cm<lr., lit~11. Sin Otego RlcNro E"""" Smltll Jr., M.11 •• l.'11 V•• a:V~l•m Portl'f L•wrenct, Cmdr. 1. Sol.Ina T.,ry L" lloyl'f, IU LI, /Flllli»-Ql. VIWll1 Owiot>I fll'f<"llt Sulllvlll, ""'k· Ltl V~I EMI (;'1rdner Le .. ls Jr., LI. (I.I .) (...,I Siii •• M,,'""'r. I L" ltlJttllln, 11 LI. CF"VJl'590J, SHI ftotlvl F. W~irCJ'l'itSE.r'° 0'-" Alln Pllrct Lllt'le, C1ol. \"ff"''f A.oo!f Vtller Pt> Up Ntll 1ulttr LI. IUJJNJ, L• JoH• JllffPl'I Abbitt Jt., C•pl .. (no"°"" '""" ,1.....,, Jolln Mlc'11tf McGr•!ll. L. I "" 'S.11 IJl.-WlllJ•m W111c1 1i1>lltr, \"''· llll:W:Xll,_~n R.lfltl ~ Thom.1 COll9', Lt. I I·~ Llndtn JOlln B. McKl!l'll\'( "• l'U1'1 i 'm'°!I!.. Cify··· Oenn{1 Cll•mOtra. II LI. (F'Vll~O. YllM j~~~.·iem!: ~:~:: ~d'I::' town glvtn) ~::d P.H~~:lnM.~~ ILl~l~;,..a;:-·tr,w.,.11. H1rl1n P~ CNOfl'lln, C1111 .. (0114311, Frtrnonl Robtrl C•sr.:lt J-1, ht\~· C ... t ... m CorONclo Arvin ill.Dy Ch111ncy, Lt, Crnclr. ('ldlf), LI JOI/I Edwin Fr1 MIUtr Jr., LI. )\ Frlnklln L1kts R.1yrnon(I Jtrnts Merr/11· ""'/· f«m). Collon Ol~ud• Dolllll•s cio..... LI. Cmclr. UOW!, 5'n tt"".:.:, e:un~~ M~r~"t.~.. ,;,,:~.,:1• AnE,dllOft W1ln-111111 Ml ler L ' Col. {GW02), S111t1 A~L KINOS OF LUMBER HAS Bl!EN ASSEMBLED• FOR CONSTRUCTION OF HAPPENING A11out JO Worbri Wtre on Htnd Todty In ~•If Minute Building Effort SI TE J•mei Quincy co111n,, Ctpt, Ultoll, ,,,...,.1on Ger11d Slnto Ven~'I'~ ~.:..'i'Jc'ici"nton eioO:.:r*I Sc!!I Mollley, Lt. l.9. (101 .. 1), Mlnhlt11n J11M1 J. COl'll"ltl!. LI. ('4143111. LI Jollt James L!n11i..r1~ l'h11t>e1. LI. Col., S1nt1 F1 Fr""! M. Moore. Jr., Cmdr;;,JS5lllt). Lemoort Mlclltel P1ul ~ronln, \" imdl.a I, l"""I' letktleY ThDmls W•tnne Sumo•er Jr M•I H0Uom1n "-Fii ,,,.,,, "''"Mo("•, '<. • '· \'Ml1~'· '• ~'''' ...... "·•· '''!: It ' ...... ··-· .•• ,,... .. " ""' ... .. .. j, .,. ' " ' ""'"" " '" ··-" Joton H. 'f11myt11 Jr., hi LI. (FV I'll 11, Soul S1n "'1n Ftr. ,(,;tf,'· <~ 1 ) •n Ptaro Edw•rd A. lorudnci, lit Lt., /'11'flton Gabrltl ~ Hl'btf l • Y 1\'.liAM'J11'· C:l21n), fl•nc"9 Arthur Corml.,, s. S<il., B•r .Shot'• Diie 1 OibOrnt, Lt. Cmor. 1614229), S111 M'' •• ,, • M .. •• " ' M ' .. Myron L. Oon1kl, lit LI., Olilnlng O!tQO " · c .. 1,u; 11 ' ... II ·• an~··· Wayne GOOCltrmoft, Lt l/·j·'• le•lln Jim!!$ Vlenn P!rlt. LI. Cl'!l<lr. (614\NJ, L•moor~ H"btrt lltnitmln Rlngi.dorl. hi LI., fll>I K,..!n Josepll MCManltl, 1 LI., BrlQMW<rs John JMls:lll PltChlor<I Jr. Clot. !FllJUUJ), .,H~pp~_ning',· Happening I IJONil J•me1 P•Trlck Mthl. Cmdr .. H111POllllll S•cremento kilt Dia Biro . c~~! GltN11l1 Wtll•CI Grin! NtwtomDl(IOI., P1lntte1 Pell LIO T. Prollltt, Cmdr, tso..il/l• P1lo illlO Jeclr. WIU11m..,n llom1r, Ml!., M'" M 1 1 p 11 k 1 11.e h 0.rrell Ed"'I" Pylt, h i LI. I VlUJtMl\ T111tln L h 0 d' w k s v F • l L ' L•rrr Eaw1rt1 C1rriQ111, C1111 .. Scot11<11lt c.:".rr:', &.r,~cld'Rt',~l:.'"'1~ 511:t.._11 O•Yld GtorQe Riit>m•1111 EM!1>11 ("ISO'l L1nc11t1r t t t Geor1t Evert!lt O.r. Mii., Glendale NO•T• •. ,00,,,, 0.Yl1 John Rollin•, LI. (6)~1 .s~., Oll!llO ......, &! J~ (rtcc1. Jr .. Ill LI., Photnl~ ChttlH P, Zuha,k~. LI. C].g.), J'1mt$OOrl Wendell llurkt Rivet$, (1 . Cmdr. ISSJlU!. O•Mrd 011g• < " .. 're. • or ers e p es •va oca io1i Wllll1 Elllt F0<Dv. C111!. .. .. k1v Ruu~tl, LI. Cmclr. (~»41\, !>111 OltOO L1lrd GulterlOft. Mii .. l110on AflllUt T. 1'1111rd Jr .. Off" Lilt Lurt How1rd Elmtr llll!lldoe. Cmclr. (50MJS). S.n 01-"' ( Ti._,., Mick M•<1IMM1, M•J .. Pflolnl• ~:~.~utZ'r~ 8=:·~.!i .. L~IM~~t;:~ P•ul Ht11rw .SclllllL Li. cm11r. t116ITT). S111 01..,0 By FREDERICK SCHOEMEBL a Thalia Street hea lth food restaurant, business are going to be here,'' Ounrf O.nnl1 Anlho"" MOort, Lt., Mtsl {).)vkl Burnell Htlclltr, Cipt., Ml. Airy Robert J1""" Sctlwtllltr. Cmclr. f.'171H4l, Lt-• . "~ }:::,1·H~T~~:'.""~i;i~0l:1..~.:U:r Jamtt eo .. 1ro Hn11new, M•! .. 001obm" li"~7' ~.,~ .... si.'~k!l-:'·l1~'r~J: t::,"m, L• ot,.. ~"' "'"' ,_.. which ls doubling as the coordination asserted but he refused to say wh1cb. c11.1r1n •-re Tyl1r, M•l1 PhotnlK ~~Z ~~~"ft·M~J1~."1i'~i f1.~Fr1i..~i'~s11pto Ja"• The much-heraJded Lam1riD Beach center for the "coming together." l ones, because "we don't want to tum thll-; J•tk Lln-V1ni:~ic:t:"AlrK.on J Wtndell M 1 M I N pDJt Ci~!:, Evtre!t Soulllwldc Lt. Cmdr, IUfltl• 111o--1be La Beach H Kri.shn sect Jomes L1111y L•.-•· Lt. jot. LIUlt 1todf' w~:r.m Afid,..:,rv• kooTMon.ew Airman 1. c. • Ct>.orlts DIYls SIK"kflouse, Lt. f~i. L-. Ouisbnas Day "coming t .Q g e t be r ' • guna are a into~a commercial thing." 1' • w;1111m O.Yld •11•~~~ ~. Auror• •:';'";~~" T:.~:;r:..~:r~."crosbr f~-e"o!=~.~~8.~'. ~i1~7s';.-.Jt.1'ci'!~~f""°9 CMtinued to move. forward this morning hasr thealsoCbsta'~-~~~ey willtprov>de food "At this point," Dunn said, ••everything f Ben Mlrb1tur1 Po!11nl, M•t., Color.00 Springs OHIO Oi~' Gerhlr(I $11tr". LI. Cl.A.) (6"jl)(I), Stn as about 31) Jong-haired Qrkers made Or ruiu11a3 u.y even • RttCI l ll lM MfC.~::::E~t~',c;:)~ Old Gretn .. lth r.::.l!:r.mw'!::"c:~"='u~~:··Lr~~~"9nl ~-.. l-is Stlrm, Mtl. fFVJGliltn!, F .... i.. Cltv preparaUons at the. Laguna Canyon site. Aec.onllng to Dunn, local physicians, is working out. Three wee.ks ago, I 01LAwA1t1 JPM p,,,, F1y,,.., ca1.1 <no 11omt '°"'" 1lvtnl A,.~icl'llrd "'"'" Strinon. Lt. Cmdr. 1'°211111 ,..,., Maio· r developments, thus r a r , some of them a:ssoclated with the Free. thought it wo.uld take a miracle to make . Robert a1rtsch Oo•"""'• 1:1. c....v.1 wnmineton e11 ... rd John M1erltf'ID 1r hWLt .. 0.y!On ~ 1 I •· d b t •·-•• th t o 01sT1t1cT o COLUM• il T""""• N•llOn Mot, 111 {1., ,,,..,,.v1ue H11tht1 fi~i':n b.:u"r.,"~~'?1~~. ~~.1i•~~'!r1.Yl11'!__... according to organizer I.any Dunn, Clinic, wll ~on stan y o UGJll.Ue any this thing happen, but, we are having a , Ar!hur Tl>Om:lt HOH'°". Ill Lt. llrldltY E. $ml!ll, LI. .fl.I, L•k1 Mtlhlll Joi! A bot! C. ,...,.. .--... ~·~-· medi aJ diff' JU ' ' J•~ 11onc1 .Stockd•~tolt";'gjj_ R-rt E. WlclenwO'K~~\:i1iA Roctv 111.1 ... r ,,.,.11n,,. ~M6.' cmor. i1>rur.o A1>t1t 10• "''· <11tc1 Jnclude: c ICU es. miracle, right now.' 1 ~:;~dJi..11c:li~':'°Li~.''J-~·for~11nc10 Fred A. w. Fr1n1t1 J• cmor ., Mldwat cri., 1,:-1~jji.dL~,~~.'~~~· c ... 1. C•1>tur.o A..,.. n. -Construction of a 50 foot by 30 foot "Some really big name.s in the musical Dunn speculated that ~ "co. ming'; ktnnelh WllU•m• l.or<ll1r, C•11t .. TlmpS Gllina o. k••mtr. h i LI .. Tuls• JOll D•wkl llllClr., C•PI C111lurtd Ocl 21 1"7 to th " Ill I t thro h the Ou' stma c1r1 11ov1111 crun>011r, L•. cmc1r .. °"""'' P•rk ti= Cfi::-• N1~~ t'' ~1"( T"J:~ , ...... _. F•b. 1'. •'61. • • ' ' raised platform to be used by musical ge er w as ug I s ~ J"'1n .H-••<I °"""'· M.i~. J•tkt«!Yltle Robl~ Rl:'Mr~ r,. Ca1~."0k1aC1 Cll1 E<lw••d !lurk• lur<leU. Co!. CIPlllrtd Nov. II. IN1, od . It I k weekend and that he expects ·~ ,, ••• ,, , , '''"' ,,, , --, .,,,,,1,, ''''' • , ,, • .... c1o.i NOY. u. 1N1. aroups a sp1r ua spea ers. D k T ke Off .-Kf,:;~-;" -;,;...,. Ctpt .. ;, ;1~'"'., ~ Hubert ,.U!lord W• kif" Jr., ... pt., •U•,. llC'!llnllll Qobrlln• Camtron. Cmclr. (1pturtd MIY J,, lllo' • tte dance Of "thousands 'I ""' flolttrt IYrot1 F°ulltr, Cmor., J1ck~vl1lt OREGON lN7, di"" Oct.~' lf~. -The Clearing Of some 30 square yards U e a S a n . 'fl R•lpll Erno G1lth•r, En11111. Mllm Jarnt1 fl6on 5etpoE;_, ~~~vl:t".t'' Gro•• re1::~cj~Ycrii'."i"'to1t~· C•111· Capto,;rtd Fttr. 15• 1"'• of ground. behind the Sycamore Hill' site, "It's being advertised all over th~t:. °'911<1r E. Glen11. LI C•QI, Jacktonvlllt Wlln<Nll Reed Alcorn, LI. 1 1.~.I, Kl1t1nnlrlg E~rl GI...., Cnbelt, Cepl. (1plurld Nov. J, 19'1, U •t d Stat · 8 d 0 David Fl1tc11tr Gr1Y Jr., 111 LL Temoa Ar111ur Nell Blick, "1!tmln J.C .. 8tlhlthtm <II"<! Nov. 5, 11'67. near the j"UOCtiOn of Laguna ~&nyon and nt e eS, In newspapers ft 11. '' (;uy Oennl1 Grulers. C101 .. i•ra•ol• Jo11n Oo1111l•t Burm, LI C'l"\dr .. P•oll Ttrrv Ar<ltn OtnnJ.on, LI. c111tured July"· '""· 0 N M d' d. Th . t ·-a lot ol Lawre11ce N. Guarino, M•I. llt!!lte lle•ch Qayl(I Jty C•r•r.· Lt. 11.,.J. Jtlnntl!e. """' Julv ~I. 1%6. ~ El Toro Roads, for use as a helicopte• Jt ews e •a ra JO. ere are going 0 Ut: ... ktl1h Norman Hiii. ~•pr., FO<'I Watton &tac~ J"'1n O~ Day n. 111 L. Re8dln1 Wiiiiam C1tvln Oi..,,I, Mil. C1plurtd Nov. T, IH1, &! J h " Tflom1s Rtnwlck Hal Jr .. lt. !IQI, Pantacol• Edw•rd Antflonv o.~11. LI. (l.Q.l, Lrol1 (11...t Nov. I . ltt1. landing pad. peop e ere. • · .. Wllll•m Margan M•r man, LI. Cmdr., Ctnter Hiil DlvlO Henn· Oirarl, Ca111 .. C•nlan W1rd ken! Dodge, Mil. CIPIU•td Jul, s, lNI, died B h p 1· ch· r K th • ~00~·~1:~(.L~.ln~t·,~~."t':~'..~·:~hW•Uon Batch r~~n;:_L~y'!v.:~~·~~~l~t~.':~"~~~'.!:d Jv~~.,1~1/,nchet Frlsllm811. Lt, J.G. C•PIUftd One youth, named J ared, said the BUENA PARK (AP) -Actor John Laguna eac o ice ie e.nne . ~:i:i:', ?,",' ,',1-;r,•:."'•'."}.:..!:.•. 11• ktland M••k Jo11n R11hlf1111, C.p1., Pl!hbur;ti Oct. 2•, 1'''· re1u1t<1 Au,. s. lfff. landin g pad would allow ''the big musical W v· p Id t S 1 T A Huck has had several meetings with th!j ~ .. ._ ....... l'1 Robert Ralskrn s ... h111 Jr"' M11., C•rntqit J1m11 L. Gr1111n, L•. cmo.r. C•Pturtd M1y n, 1M1, ayne says ice res en Pro . g. orgaru'••rs. The local po,lice force i!., Chlrlel Nttus Jlmts Jr .. C:rnclr .. Winter P••~ M1rwy s. Stockmtn, L/. col., Pnlltdt1P111• (llPd M•v 21. ltt1. . groups" to ny In to the Christmas Day r . h I the -'-:1~~1.~n1~r ::i:~. ~·:~i:, 5.;;,~~•.,Durll konr•o w. Traurm1n, •Dt., .StHltoro c11:,11~e"b. 7~~. G•lbb, C•Pt. C•Pturte1 Jin. ,,, '""· Festival. new is justi ied in Is criticism o working 12-hour shifts during the bollda,x,,. WllMMI Denver ll:tv, LI .. J•t-,,onv\11e Welter E. WUl>e~Uc;,~rCil~~tr:~ Cross Roadi ,.!J,<,',•rd !>,·,"·"·'·,.!",.' lt. Crnclr. C1Plurtd Julr 21, -Q , h neWS media. week. '" \ltrnon PtVIOll Lloun Jr., LI. Col .. MtlPDutne 8t1Ch Wl11!1m R'"wlCk l\u1tlll 11• Calli .. Slmoionvlllt "v l>ed ~ " "' rgaruzers 8Ve set Up 8 ---1·/tee · Jolln Sld'Wo; m<:C•lh, Lt. Crnclr., Or•"!ll Pt,_ Bobi:tv Rw 86Gley. M1t., ~um!w Ooutlii Brent H_,.lll. 51''"'"· C•tlure<I "-11 J, ._..,,.... ."I doQ't think he's said one thing that Jt has been reported that police. In it~~.; w~rp;;;ir:s', ~'aiit~~ig:r,dndo R-rt s~ C/•l• F1nr JJ·• L~ .. "'.'?.''°" 'i~·,;:.t.;~~13· lq!~,,;..1• C••turld DK. ''-1,.,, structure to.,. handle sanlta.Uoµ, crowd . . ghbo . . . od ty - I•• Brlln Pll•[-C•ot M1rlanl'ol w,1111·~_, c'..'.,"1M••111 cao,•Pc1.'!-~m!tr reltiMd J~ly 11, 1961. """"lroi, water, food and medical pro"' should upset yciu," Wayne told newsmen nel rmg communities a coun Ptll'f V1n Sct>otllt. Lt'. CMdf., NIPIH 'A' .. ~,;-,,,;,,, ,-:;a,~~· Ml';k"'c_,om"<'•"• Otvld P1ul """lntnn<J._E11,l9n. 'c:•Pillrtd Oct. J, i'"" ~ IUthorlli'es haVO "··· asked (0 ~-od "-'· k"""tll Adrl1h $1mD1!11. Mii:: W~I Ptlm IH(h ~ 1'61 rel-.MO Ftb lf. 1-efTIS. , Tu•·•ay ll ~OUndbrtaklng ctrOffiOllJ'es Ul%.ll Ma .,.;-Wayne Ooden ~m11~. ht Lt. Llllnflllln 5R,u " 0 OTil 1in 1m1n errd 0 NtwHm; M•I. C•pti,orld July u. c;iu 111o· to aas•·t with' trarnc and crowd contro'· T J• 1.. ~r~~~R~~R~~1.fi'L"l1. ~.~(':"'..,be,,~ 1"' died July u 1"' 0unn ·d he 1u he •• Ung the El t Knot , w "" 11.r""'' C::S s11rUnq, M•t F~J::~ton leach ROMkl M1r1t e rt, "j t. wl\l..-1,,.., •• ,, NOrr1s M. owi-1\". M.t. C•PiUrtd ~1: ti, nu, sa1 w conuac for an amusemen center at t s should a large number of persom attend.i.'"") 0e~;dW1<111Qtw!~l"Qt'"·~~·\· 1Fort w111on llHcll h l'.c.UX ttlnlld Fetr 16 19'8 T M r\•• Co Air Sta•~· f the fa Lto ktll TllDr•"""••M• .,,•,, F•lli wn1er L.Wrs R~. lt. C1plo,;red ~H :n, lHI, oro a "'" rps uvu or Berry Farm. The event ,., scheduled •-start. •'"' Lewlt lrvl1111 W1IU1mt, Lt. '111! T1mP11 T H' r •IN• Alltl $ lfft f bo · Jn portable toil ts W J•rnts F•ukl• Y°"'ilto~G11.01.,..,_. ~=.'s 0N,r.tt/i~r~1i'.1.P~~ ... cov1no1on •,. ... ,.,.11Jjhnildt. Mat. C..pturtd 5"ot.1, '"'· dltd purpose 0 rrow g e · "You're allowed to say whatever you sunrise on Christmas Day. • . R.tncltr Cr1r.on, Lt. Cmclr. ~•l'IQt RI~-.ilrthllr V~xlti Cmdr ~ MtmPllls A~~· ~ettr Sllin. bl l l, Ctplutlll Jin, lJ, 1MI, Organizers Will have several ~n,, OD th lr° lft ~.f~·~:1Y~iJ:"Ll"1~;i' r~,, e1"'° CIMlrd llHtr. M.il .. 1111 Alllonlo dl~ Jin. 21. 1H1. horseback to monitor the crow!is and to want.about other public figures, but when Organizers emphasized e '!..~.-: l u. Gr~y HY•ll. t'.1. cm:.-,.: 1t.1t1.1ny J""" 0r ... 1es Bll'-l1n1. C1Pt .. .s'" Antonio c1i:::':v ~,,,5i'1111• cmc1r.,c•1ur.o MtY 10• 1"'· keep people"'! •-·Joe ~--•--~"", you get 9fl. the ll}', ina: p~ you .iet aU nafl!J1! of the event and that Its yw~ Mld\HI Chrf1~r Line, hi Lt., All.,,lf Ron1ld Gltnn I HH, h1 LI. T1mpl1 ~ C C H 'f" ""Y ~ .,.v.,...,,.... U""'l" W•-, , ". '. ' '":..' ' bl~" of J·-,• Thamls v~P1rroi1 c~ b.11'°'1 Oolwold R•v 11u(,,,~j,f:::l·;..1 1~e11'·----~ :~~m. l!ldr. •11'1111'... iv. 2!11, he-nkl:-lI'he-r'lnch-hls ts.ed-an _..,....... ..._.,.._, :i m 1 -· -or-Go-IPr C;;,;t...,:i ....... ~------•,-. C.-·,--._<,., '"(.,' A•~:-<io Cttr Id St.,p ''" Cool•-.. •·•(I H , h ~--t" Irby D. T ... reU. N'.IC; (!oil F'Olnt .,. """ v• INS, Of~ :rn 23, 1'70.' • -..,. ' Order lhat &II persons must stay of{ ranch The 62-year-Old Oscar Winner said e's "'"'~ • -'' Georu• G. McKnlQM,~il}t~1Hom1u1u ~.s:=-;~~~f~~;~,1 Rlt 1,U",":,1,~ ~~'fl°'lHa."""1• C•Plur.o M.llrch 10• JaDd. · · .~. .: "been out drunk" wi th ne~s~n wl)p The spiritual aspect will be rtDected lpj ~ Oonlld Gl.nn W•1tm1111, ~•ot .. K•lklOt R-rt ~nc~VJ:ll"tv, ~··· ,ri:ll•• 20J~1'.""'11'"· Lt. Ci pturfd Mir''· "'1• d!N M•r Food will be provided th r:o u gb ''only remember·~~ I wudfunt'f..whei\ bot.Iii .speakers~ Ind ptusica1 IJ"'OUA'\1 T11oma1 Jos•i>h e,,:~rt1 131~1 .. LomD•rtl ~O:: A:'i ur:O:"l1. io1.. 1:= Antonio ,,:r;r!i \'.'ii;' 4w. ,e:t,~mP, cipr. Ct•turfd Allrll '· donations of mone.y to MiUabee's 'n'ea tS, · they write .their stcirles. · ·' organ~ets said. i,, :-; JOl!n L. &or llno, 111 LI .. Chlc•llO W•rren Robtrl Liii,, (11>1 .. D1ll1s ._ Jtrn' Dt-n1l(I Orl1coll, hf LI .. Hlnsd•lt Louis Frink Mllr.owaOI, Mil. Mldl1nd --.............. ,.. ........... ,, J....,n Wllll1rn Frede~clr., WO. Trtmcnt ill!on llt"no Mtyer, Clll! .. l:olltllf St1lion lfJ1i.1WiliJl»i*1"'1JIQMM~MJlfitJt:IMMMMMJllilM•MM~•MMMJllilliJ$IJlll.aMMM1¥1•MMM.JliUIAJlll ,,·~ b~i'li!t.i~0Si't:r.~.'E\·:.~~·1~'i,;..,, t;;;:~"E!:i:;'R~~~·;·,,c~~1·"c~~'"'1 en, W . OPEN TONIGHT UNTIL 9 p M i ~kh:i:1 ''.:'~~~B~~~~·:;:i~ ti~~\~':~:.~ ?~~:~ii~=~ri:r'!:! ~:·:~1Tit.'t11~ I ' ' . • • ~:::~·t!f~fd:~r~~~~1~,~l~:fi1~ r€f:i~~~:~J~1'.~ti.::,~.fr.~~~~~;, 1 LAsr Gi·f·t Idea· 5 cHa1s1MAS EVE. ,,,L .4:ao r.~rtlll UYtrne iln<ll'flOn. LI. f(.g.1, Ctdl• R1oid1 ti< }I r:~;'d~;r~~~,~i~tr:~?lfar!h•m . ~~~~i=~~=!i,~l~:~i:.~~~· 1· MINUTE AFTER ·-CHRISTMAS •. ~. ~z:,:: ~a1y11:,mO:~r,dii.~~·r~~c~!'cnv JD!M! o1wld L11111, C•~oi::r~,,, SATURDAY 9 AM L p M i1 E<IW.rd L" Hul>Hnl. 111 LI .. Ovtrllnd P1rk J1mts Robert rvotr, C1111 .. Ltlllmtloro • 1 e • R.•mon AnlOll H0tnlclr., C•pl., Atwood J1m11 f. Bein! Col., Arllnqlon "V ~ Gobel OlllH JlmH, M•I .. OvtrllNI Park illttn ljOIDY Bir w, Cmclr. Vlralnl• l ttch I . -. 'M -4 p M H1rold E1111e..e JOhQSQn, C1pl., OverlaNI P•rlr. u~ .. 1·~.).':~,..,~h~:.'1in~11l~~JQ); Vlr11Jnl1 lttch ] . SUNDAY 10 A. • • • ~ Ron11d Llmbtrl MIUln. Ill LI. Mtrrlarn ktnritlf\ Leon C<tsktf. CT."lVlrQln '1 l"ct> i":r~':' ~ii~;~ f~;':~l1r i'.1~'c~~i~•1r;• v;111;t ~~:i~ :~~,£,'Tr .. ~n..:r::. \~nr. H.r.~~on • KENTUCKY • Dl!e w111., Dess, LI. ernor. ,_ llo<M tow" lit IMJSJllBJlllJllil"1MM--••·----------------~--------------,.,_ .......... 1:11 Robert ltldwln Purcell, CIP! .. LouilYlllt ei°""') JI: 'If °'"'''I" Ltt Smltll, M•I .• V•lley St1llorl Jol'tn H. Fell<tWIS, LI. Cmclr., Vlr11lft!1 lltlcll tt! 0 utdoor I '1g ht"1 ng you ~ -~OU lllilHil KPe:.trir:.,~~"11~~1:: r~~= w~ _ . _ 1 L•wrenct 11.,b.IY, '1D! .. Balon Rllll!ll Hn1rd Hiii. hi. LI, Ale~1ndrt1 h h lflom1s J. Cur!IJ, t~ .. Alt~1r>llrl'1 E""""' II. McD1n!tf, Lt. Cm<lr .. Vlf"aln!1 l•Kh never t oug t you ,-G!e"n H. 0.IQlt. LI. Lo.I, NIPQleo-lllt J•mts Allrlll M~llla1n, (melt .. Vlr11Jnl1 Brtcll ti< ' M11rplly H11I Jo.,.., •al .. 1111on R-• Edwin Arthur Sh~""'" Ill. LI. Cmdr .• Vlr9lnl1 f,( H•Yden J111'\fl Lockha•t Jr., h• L1., Alei•P"lll •I• eeacft ti'! Id ffo-rdl Bruct Gib...., ~tbtr.MC•'•'·'·,· Wtsl Monroe Wi!lillrn Micha el T1ct>uay, LI. 11.0.I. Virglnll 8t1cll Jt co u a , • 0 Rlcfl•rd O.le V!)Qtl. M1l., H1ma1on ti! RO!ltrl lrwln &IH. C101., l1ngor RonttO JOl'I" WetiD. C111t., H•moton « A11gela Makes It to Coi1rt S AN RA FAE L !UPI) -Bla c k militant heroine Angela Davis, with a clenched fist salute to friends, appeared briefly in court today to face charges of conspiracy, kidnap and murder. 'Her arraignment on the charges was U.S. Considers P eacekeeping Joh in Mideast WASHINGTON (AP) -Secretary of State William P. Rogers said today the United SI.ates "is prepared to play a role" guaranteeing a Ptliddle East peace settlement and would co n s ider participating in a U.N. peacekeeping force. At a news conference, Rogers also blasted North Vietnam's release of prisoner-of-war lists as a contempUble maneuver ••. for propaganda purposes." The press conference lasted almost an hour. It was Rogers' longest question· and-ans)"er session in the two yean he has been secretary of slate. His assertion of U.S. readiness to take part in the Middle East peacekeeping made. clear the Nixon AdminJstration is prepared lo go to extraordinary lengths to encourage negotiations and promote a settlement between Israel and the Arab states. "'We have reason for hope that the nc~otialions may slart." Rogers said. "\\te have no assurance. \Ve think 1971 may he the year or decision in tht' ~liddlc East." A! to what the United States Is Jlrepnred to do, he na'uy ruled out as Impractical any kind of joint American· Soviet peacekeeping force. postponed until Jan. 5 at the request or attorneys representing her. After a 15-minui.e appearance before Superior Judgu E. Warren McGuire, Miss j>avis was returned to jail. She had been brought back t.o California Tuesday on charges of helping organize the prisoner escape plot which resulted in a shootout that took four lives. Miss Davis, 26, was flown on a secret overnight journey from New York Tuesday shortly after she lost her two- month legal struggle against c;ir;tradition back to Caiifornla . Extraordinary security precautions 'vere taken on the II-hour prop driven Air National Guard flight to Hamil ton Air Force Base. The former U C L A philosophy instructor was accompanied by nine California law enforcement agents and two matrons. From Hamilton, an unmarked patrol car took her to the heavily-guarded civic center. About two dozen spectators stood across from thf: courthouse as Miss Davis was brought in. Miss Davis, dressed In a brown pa nt suit, was booked on charges of kidna ping, m'urder and conspiracy. She bad been arrested as a fugitive In a New York City motel Oct. 13 on wanants Charging she bOught guns used in an attempt to free three. conv icts from the Marin Coqnty courtroom of Superior Judge Harold J. Haley. Haley, convicts James McClain and \ViUiam Christmas and J on 11th a n Jackson, 17, who brought guns into court, were killed. r..1iss Davis was spirited from her New York cell only 11 hours after U.S. Supreme Court Justlct John Harlan refuserf to intervene in the extradition proceedings against her. Authorities said the henvy necurlly and secrecy was needed because of the "repeated anonymous threats of terrorlsm." w ~ f; w w Scrape, wash, rin se af/ your dishesi glasses, silver, I I pots and pP.ns in one I I A quality system you install .. yourself • tl"» quick, easy motion. Th•. I I ... in fllinutes, with complete safety. I !':""' perfect gift.. E'•i!o1n11.i1. w Nopermlts,c:oodu;tor d;gg;n•-IY···IUl!pluglnl . UL ! 1r111 KETILE 19 95 it only $33.88 • W •Pl'ro<ed l.l volt system 1bsolutefy shoe-. child safe I • • WEBER I.All • , i .. _ ~ --~ ~ ~ low voltage sets are complete with 1lfll sealed beam I Coverrefleelsheat,cooks theflavorlnnotout1 Adjustabledlmf)9rs I -~ hghts, color lense.s {amber, green, clear, pink and blue), weather· I reaulate heat; save charcoal. Ottttt' moclth front $JZ.95 i W proof, shockproof cable, transformer w!th oo-<itf switch or • i J:fiiJ:aMMM"'1MiiO=BMJlllMMMMMMi'iJWIM.-I W automatic timer, ground !takes and wall brackets • Ute this ~ . W ~ exciting new light from Little Giant In dozens of ways through-1~ CJJ /!). J / f \l ~ out the year for security and outdoor be1uty. Four uparat• · .:Jhop !<.ion .....H-ardware I ~ sets to choose from. • ~ Prices _@_ 1L , I 'J.or :Jko6e -efa6f rJ!Jinule ; WI start at W !~!1f.J9J!.Jl~! I ~ ~6 _ i · $44. 95 m 'J'ti -Utthi Olont Product I 1 · ... ·----------r---, .......... i • ! .. &IFT.. I • I WRAPPING ~ Sf'ttlal •fltt 111tll 1241·11 COtlNING.WA~f • " 2488 • • ) ... -A'~ - ' .. ..<I'~-' o• ' ~r Compl•t• line of Dlthma1tor n 1Nlr parh (Olft ,, .... "" .... .., memb« ol ttii.t..lly. -. . ..... . ',.,~ ·~ WEST CLIFF • . PLAZA I • . a FREE OF CHARGE I i I IQ.CUP PERCOLATOR Electromatk: heaUnc: 11ement removes for easier cleanlna. White witlt 110<ado mtdall~~ • " AR[)WARE : , M2 1133' , 1024 IRVINE AVl N11iPORI BfACH • • I I L~ ............................................... , ............ .a ~ _;.• I I ' • • .· I DAILY l'ILOT , Co11ditions For Peace , . Siar!l-R e lorns 'y eav_enly Ph~nomenon Explained ' BosroN f AP) Early Christmas morning three-"wanderinr stars'' will appear 1oltther to reproduce .a rare celestial evtot th.at may have led the Wise Men lo the Bethlehem manger where Cbrlst wa, born. The "stanr," actually the planet.I Veous, Jupiter and Mars, will mass .th1t morning near the cr~nt moon in a phenomenon very like one that oc- PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam scaled cWTed ln 7 B.C., the year the Christ child ls believed lo have been born. down Ill Peace demands today. It 11"1 that year, the planets Jupiter, Saturn and Mars came toa:ether In the • • I '1 apptirently dropped Jts demand for the ,heavens, an event that happens once every 800 years, said Walter N. Webb, ouster resent Sa ~0&111 mLAI>IL-J--aasiatant-dlrector-Ol-tbt-Char.leS--Haydan-lllanetariwn-ef-lhe-Boelon--Mueeum-·1----lll-it offered a cease-fire if the United States CJf Science. .-0.K. w. 'lI try •• u. inunolation. lVho1lb.. lint?'· Revolution By DJCX WEST WASHINGTON -.Perh1ps you have noUced that vio lence by campus radieall md other militants . appears to have tlminished this fill. And perhaps you Jilve been wonderln& why. t.,;· I invite your atteption lo the proWera.Uon of television "tali" ' t Televiaion news coveraie h a I atcasionally been accused of cauaing Violence, the theory being I h a I dt!monstrators tend to become more frenetic when the cameras are turned t~lr way. <"Thi. may be true, but any violence a'ltributable to network n e w 1 m en certainly is more than offaet by the talk shows, which have becOme America'• tint line of defense a1ainst revolution. JU,.YLE-ATTIRED CARDINAL BLESSES PATRQL LEADER Prelate Terence Ceok Bl11s11 S.rgeent Before Patrol IN ILLVllTRATION of this potnt, let us uy that • terrorist croup called the ••meteorologistJ'' plans to bomb a plant that makes frozen onion rin1s wved in military mess bails. 26 Etaeftlll Killed Vietnamese Paratroope~~s Attack Reds in Cambodia . ' SAIGON "(AP) South Vietnamese paratroopers pushing deeper t n to 'Ibe bluting party assembles at the Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese appointed hour and awaltl the arrival of force at daylight today and called in jet Alter .i.... bombers and artillery. their leader, Sam Boombang. wi.:Y sooth Vietnamese headquarters said 1.6 have been ltalldlng around for .311~m;;,in;utea;::.J.~~lo· ~~-~_aplLJlill 1----.. ~-. a.,.,.;-arri¥11.wi~•mrr·19. weapons and 20 mortar rounds captured "The operation hu been ICZ'Ubbed for ·10 the" battle 18 miles northwest CJf ·-··""he-·. _.,..,, ••...--Kompoog Cham. "What'a the matter?H •1111CNW: UU. One South Vietnamese paratrooper was •10id 110me-.iu tip off ~ ""-?" ed .,.,...~ ..... reported killed and 13 wound . "No," the runner replies. "Boomban& A spokesman 11.id the 1iu of the North fs appearing on the David Suaakind Vietnamese force was not known. but it 1how." was the btuest fight repomd 1ince 2,500 This doe& not mean, of coune, that • South Vietn1mese paratroopers were certain amount of terrorism doesn't take place. Buf think how much greater It· would be if televi!\on didn't keep mort~of the radical lt.aders tied up on talk ahowtl. IF YOU CHF.CK the dates on recent bombings, l think you wUI find that all of them ~ed on nights when David Frost failed to interview the leader of &Orne extremist group. The number of radical act.ivisb who are inadlvated by Dick C&vett and Johnny Canon ii far areater than the slim of their radical guesb. If a revolutionist is booked for the 1'1erv Griffith 1how, bi.a: loyal followers naturally watch the program. Al do the leaders and members of othu militant faclions. Consequently, a single guest shot on a network talk ahow can effecUvely neutralize the entire terrorist apparatus in this country. Putting this situation in historical perspective, we can eee thlt If David Susskind had been Cuban, Fidel Castro would never have 10Uen out of the Miestra Mountains. -UPI * * * VC Cease-fire Now In Effect; Cambodia Flares SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong's Christmas cease-fire went into effect in South Vietnam early Thursday while South Vietnameee paratroopers were engaged in an operaUon again.st enemy troops in Cambodia. The cue-fire took effect at 1 a.m. South Vietnamese batUefielcls were reported quiet An allied cease-fire goes Into effect at I p.m.-S a.m., EST, Thursday. Hours before the enemy stand-down, South Vietnamese paratroops pushing deeper into Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese force and called in jet bombers and artillery. lifted into Cambodia more than a week ago in an attempt to break the North Vietnameu stranglehold. South of Phnom Penh, N o r th Vietnamese troops attacked a Cambodian task fCJrce trying to reopen Route 4, ~m PeAl\!1..highway...io...U....1e attack occurred abou t 80 miles southwest 1 of the capital, but no other information was' available. Cambodian government forces claimed Tuesda y that they had reopened more than 50 miles of the highway sout h of Phnom Penh and that they had killed 400 to 500 enemy troops since they began their sweep down Route 4 last week. Government casualties were estimated at 10 killed and 60 wounded. 4 With Route 4 closed, tankers from South Vietnam using the Mekong River are now the only source of petroleum for Phnom Penh. One such arrived in the Cambodian capital early today with 290,000 gallons of aviation fuel , gasoline and diesel fuel. Earlier reports said the aviation fuel was consigned to the Cambodian air force, but of!icials in Saigon said all the cargo was for commercial use. South Vietnamese gunboats escorted the tanker, and a spokesman for the Vietnamese navy denied reports that it had refused to provide an escort. Other sources sliid the ship was dela yed in Saigon for 24 hours last weekend because South Vietnamese officials were not available to supply the escort. The U.S. Command in Saigon said in a delayed report that six Americans were killed last Saturday in the crash of a Navy helicopter gunship in the Mekong Delta east of the U Minh forest, about 131 miles southwest of Saigon. The cause ot the crash was not known. Most of Nation Shivering Mishmash Front Hits Midwest; Lows Reac1i 24 Below California a-, UllltM .,_ 1-Nt ... t l Mcntly l•lr 1kl.,. "'"" •~-,_. '• •flu"' to Sol/!i>ern Ctllfwnl• fHty '"'-1... • ...-111 fll '"'""' ,,.,, "'tt>clltd "'°'' •r .. ~ Wflllt llumtl"' 11t lo '"'" ffff of ltlOW ln att.fft. S..Ull'lt ni C.tltornlt bl.ti ,..., c1Mirw;t1 of lh movl"t !"ltnd '"'' ll•led 11 •lltM McA.llPn, T~•., w11 , ... w••mt$1 i.oot •~ '"' n111on Tve1d1v wlll'I t •tt.Sl"9 ot 17 d~rtt•. T ... O~t<nltlll -WI! ,, ~I-tt•o II WIUllton, N.D. Te111perature• 11 UNITEO ,..ISS INTIJINATIONAl Tt~-1111re1 •nd Prtelof!t!IM for Int i'""°"'' Pt!rlod -I"' 11 I •.l'fl. .l.lbuaut N:iut A!ltM• 11•~•,,,ltld Ml9'1 ltW .... IC. " ., " " " " .13 ., n J6 u .Ill would halt reconnaissance flight.! over The massing CJf three planeb will not be. a visually spectacular event this the North and withdraw its troops by year, said Webb, nor would-ii have been in the year Jesus was born.; But to mid-1971. an astrologer -and the Three Wise Men are thought to have been expert In All previous Hanoi s ta t e m e n t s .the occult science of interpreting heavenly signs -the planets' mming t.o- demanded a provisionJI c o a 1 i t i 0 n gelher may have seemed rraught with meaning. government that excluded the three top ' Sa.Jgon leaders as a necessary .step Some historians believt! the Wise ?i.fen came rrom the area of Me» toward the restoration of total peace· in potamia. U so. said Webb, the apparent westward movement of the three South Vietnam. There was no mention of planets, caused by the rotatiOn ol the earth, could have suggested to them that tbat demand today. the new-born king they sought was to be found in the west, in the direction ol 'Itle statement delivered by Chier North Judea. Vietnamese Del~ate Xuan Thuy said the "In tho.st days everything in the sky was described as a star," Webti question of South Vietnam's political said. "The planets were wandering stars, meteors were shooting stars. and an future was open to discussion if the Nixon event like the massing ol three planets would have been called a star." AdmlnistraUon agreed to Hanoi's latest The massing of the three planets on that morning, be suggested, may have condltlons. been what the J ancients called the Star of Bethlehem. U.S. Ambas,,ador David K. E. Bruce He said the planets d0 not come close enough to appea r as a single star~ also toned down the American statemer\ts even to the naked ex_e, they remain three. distinct points of light in a triangle. tocla'y. Instead of using words like "Jnhumane" to describe Hanoi's treat-Since. the three massed stars are close to each other fck' only one or two rnent of war prisoners he said it was night s, Webb said. the Wise Men must have set off on their long jour:ney many "ufl.!atis!actory" in the North and days before the planeta appeared together. ••disa:raceful" in Viet Cong controlled The suggestion that three massed stars may have been the Star of Beth. areas of the South. lehem is not new, Webb noted. It was first proposed by the German astronomer The New Hanoi conditions for peace and mathematician Johannes Kepler in 1604. ware inserted into the North Vietnainese statement after it bad been mimeographed for distribution t o newsmen. There was no immediate U.S. reaction to the modified Hanoi proposala , but Washington has lteadfasUy rejected all previous Communist propoeals that involved a withdrawal deadline and gave nothing more ln return than a promise to talk. Bolivia Releases Six Thuy's modified proposals were presented to the conference after the U.S. delegate indirectly acknowledg~ receipt of a prisoner list from Hanoi by dropping its persistent demand for such a list in the U.S. statement. Thuy alluded to the current Christmas season in his statement, and then said: "The delegation or the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam, on this occasion, calls upon the N i x on Administration to agree to t h e withdrawal from South Vietnam of all American troops and lhoSe of the other fCJreign countries before June 30, 1971, as the (Viet Coog's) provisional revolutionary government has proposed, in order to obtain an immediate cease· fire between the Popular LiberatiCJn armed. forces of South Vietnam and the troops aocl military personnel of the United States and of the other foreign countries of the Americait~.amp, W in o er pernu p ~o immediate discussions on the question of guarantees for safety for \tJe withdrawal of troops and military personnel in question and on the question of liberating captured milltary men. "Moreover, the Nixon Administration must immediately cease all a c t s threatening the sovereignty and the security of the Democratic Republic of .. (North) Vietnam. <Hanoi's term for reconnaissance flights.) "If the government of the United Slates ... act s in this direction, the parties could equally enter into immediate discussion on the tota l cessation of the cruel war which is going on in Vietnam . and 011 the question of respect for the fundamenta l national rights and the right to self· determination of the Vietnamese people.·• Captured With Gilevara LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -'11he Bolivian government today released F r e n c !t revolutionist Regis Debray and five other guerrillas who fought with Che Gueva ra in his abortive attempt to foment a peasants' uprising. in 1967. Interior Minister Jorge Gallardo said the 30-year-old French writer, Argentine painter Roberto Bustos and f o u r Bolivians were taken to Chile by a Bolivian military plane. They had been in a military prison In Camiri, in southeastern Bolivia. Debray and Bustos were serving JG.year terms. Tht four Bolivians had never been tried. All were captured in 1967 by the army· forces that killed Guevara. The prisoners arrived by plane in the port of lquiqu"e in northern Chile. Debra y·s release had been expected ever since Gen. Juan 1.Jose Torres, a natK>nttli!t, toltk over-the presidency-on Oct. 8, after ousting right-wing military leaders who had toppled President Alfredo Ovando. , Freedom for Debray and the others ca1ne under an amn esty decree issued by Torres. The decree said: ''The armed forces, according to Christian tradition, spontaneously have stated their desire to Charles Ruggles Dies of Cancer HOLLYWOOD <UPI ) -Actor Charles Ruggles, v.·ho port rayed bum bl in g con1edy roles for more than 40 years, died today at age 84. Famed~ for his \Yheezing. Casper ?t.1ilqueloast portrayals. Rugg I es appeared in scores of mot ion picturts in !he 30s, 4-0s and 50s. He also starred in lhe theater and appeared on rad io and television. forgive and forget the harm that the guerrilla action did to the country." Torres was one of the military leaders who directed the army's campaign lo qefeat Guevara's guerrilla band. "The presence of elements convicted of crimes against the national integrity and the system of coexistence among Bolivians constitutes-a source o ! perturbanee. It is the duty or the auth<f'ities to take measures to guarantee soCia1 peace and tranquility," the decree said. It added that both Debray and Bustos and the others are banned from Bolivia. The others are Bolivians Antonio Dominquez Flores, Orlando J im enez Bazan, ,Jo.st Castillo Chavez and Eusebiet Tapia Arumio. They were flown to Chile in a Bolivian, military plane. M oonrover Rests Througli Another Lunar Night 1'10SCOW (UPI) -'Tbe Soviet Union ·s Lunokhod moonrover today tucked Itself in for a long winter·s night, its batteries fi lled with enough stored sunshine to keep ii v.·arm until earth controllers wake it Jan . 7. Tass. the offici al Soviet irews agency. said ground control closed the lid 'Tuesday an the pot-shaped moon car as the sun dropped toward the horizon at the end of a two-week lunar day. The car began activating an internal a i r conditioning system, powered by solar energy stored up before sunset. It was designed to keep !he car at • cozy 59 degrees while outside !he temperature plummets to 202 degrees below zero. Pope Hit T'vice In Manila Death Attempt ROME (AP) -Pope Paul VI v.•as struck twice during the attempt on his life at Manila airport Nov. 27, his per90llal doctor said today. But it was his hesitant in terpretations of confused little men in films for which he was best known. Ruggles was admiUcd to St. John"s llo spital in San ta Monica, Calif., in September. A f~y member &aid he was a victim of Clttlcer. TI1e vehicle already has survived one i such ordeal. It landed Nov. 17 aboard a Luna 17 mother ship and a f t e r preliminary tests it ·spent tv.·o weeks in . nighttime hibernation before aw&lcing for the latest two-week period of activity, .. Dr. Mario Fontana said, however. he was not able to say how he was struck. Fontana declined further comment in a statement to the prts.S. He was asked his views of a report in an Italian nev.'spaper Tuesday that the kn ife wielded against the Pope by Bolivian painter Benjamin , Mendoza Amor actually hit the Pope on the neck, on each side of the jugular vein. The newspaper, Resto del Carlino. said the blade did not touch the Pope because of the heavy, starched breast cape he wore. In Manila. the official who charged Y..1endoza with attempted murder of the Pope said he had no evidence that the knift canie wiUtin three feet of the Pope. Fontana said he did not personally see the attack on the Pope. He did not explain whether the "blows" he was speaking ol were from the knife. It has been reported that persons around the Pope forcefully pushed him away from the assallanL Bunkers Reunited SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker flew to Katmaodu today to join his wife for the Olristmas and New Year's holidays and their wedding anniversary Jan. 3. Mrs. Bunker is U.S. ambassador to Nepal. Soviet scientists said the deep freeze ' test was a crucial point in the Lunokhod t; program, and that it survived tbe test ~; with flying colors. ~; Tass said the site chosen for the ~ tfiachine's night resting place Wa! the ~ slope of a 100.foot crater in the Sea of Rains. a vast plain located on the northwe stern section of the visible lunar surface. ~ • .t. ,.,,,It 11or.,, frOfll ~11n, .it fllt C: ... •I •rid fol"«.11'9r1 11111 ,,.,._ Wfl I llltM HHlbfUl'I OI' tl ln l"'°"'trl 1•19 ,oroltlll GI TJturMft'I'. H 0 w.". , . 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T11trt Wttt tUllt•ed !IWllC!t •tllowt<"I l•OO'l'I l!lr (;11JI CNsl to !tit flOl"lll4i•" •1'111 n nttt l All.,..1-t<~ftnt, Gfflt"tUV rein '"'°"'n'• 111111 btttl lltlll l t!llOvtl'I Mrtfllllll,, Ttll!I., rr•ctlvH 1.10 '"'"''· A tllt nk" "' cloud\ ciw.rl-il '"" Jltclllc: Nortll.,.nl hut 'O!ll!IWtrd •wnnv •~!el lf1urned lo liov111tr11 C•l!IOl"fllt • .I. ,,,,,u llO•,,, <tnl•r WH IOUl!tf off ftl)tl Worth F"r11110 llllllt 111rxill1 Kt~MI City Lt• v"'' LOI A"9•1et M!"~tfleht Nor111 Pt1n1 01~11114 Ol!l•~on"lt Cllv o ..... ~t fltlm $t•r~•• Ptto llotllfl PflMllil ,.ltllburtll ""'"'nd lltoMd Cllv ll:ed l lw" ·~ St C••,,,•"'11 r..n L••• (ltv ~·" O'-S-•11~ 1"111""•' Wtshlnt!on ~ * " Th e Real Tliin g u .. 2t oc .01 .. ~ M " " " M " .. " " " " " ~ " u ,, " <I ". " » " " » M » .. ~! " " " " ". • From Wirt Services SPRINGFIELD, Ore. -A television trew is waiting at Georgia-Pacific Corpc>rat!On"s Wendling tree farm here to . shoot a special tequence. The requlrtd lhot will show wisps of mist from a heavy artifi cial fog machlne crated and nown nearly 1.000 miles from Hollywood for the assignment. Only one problem has prevented getting the etrle !Jctne on film . Genuine rog ha$ kept the limbcrlRnd 11olidly 5Dtked Jn: Gift of Li,fe Little ~latthcw Winkler, 6. has reeeived the best Christmas present he could have -his life. The young Ohio lad made medical history by being the first documented case of human survival follo'Ylnjt In· fection \Vllh the deadly rabies virus. Keeping coml!any Js a J?tft from the medical staff at Sl. Rita's Hospital in Lima, Ohio. j I I I • I ,f 'I r, II ---------~-~....,. .. -Jtlfl Lal Beerittg DAILY PILOT f l 228 VlolatloQ -- · Government Cites CIA __ Blamed in Massacre · 4 O~l Compp,nies Defector 'Not Beaten On Vessel' BOSTON CUP!) -The skipper of the Coast Guard cutter Vigilant said Tuesday Lithuanian defector Simas Kudirka was not beaten by Russian seamen while he was aboar4 the American vessel. "I went up to the defector just before he left the Vigilant, Cmdr. Ralph W. Eustis said in a copyrighted story in the Boston Globe. "At that time he was completely bound and restrained but he certainly was not bloodied or beaten. ''There was no blood that night." Eustis was given an ldminlstr;tive reprimand for hill: action and was re- assigned. The board of inquiry investigating K u d i r k a ' s aUempted defection said he interpreted bis o r d e r s "authorizing the use o f necessary force so as to pennit foreign natiooal.s to exercise authority on board a Coast Guard fessel." "The reprimand d o e s n ' t surprise me," Eustis said. "I knew what was coming." Eustis told the board he personally did not see any 'violence aboard the Vigilant. Rep. Rivers Beginning To Recover 2 Picasso Pictures Stolen From ·Museum NEW YORK (UPI) -Tuo Picasso masterpieces valued at $110,000 have been stolen from the Guggenheim Museum. One was done in ink and the other was a watercolor. Both were about the size or a large Christmas card. Mu.sewn officials reported the thefts Tuesday. The museum was closed to the general public Monday. Police saJd they were stymied by the theft. Thomas Messer, museum director, said the works, tiUed "Woman with Open Fan" and "Table Before the Window" were "lesser Picassos." "Table Before the Window ," a watercolor and pencil work, done in 1922, measured 5~ by 41,1, inches. "Womait with Open Fan," which Picasso inked in 1906, measured 6% by 41/, inches and was valued at $40,000. The other work was valued by police at $70,000. Another Picasso work. a st.ill life oil paint.i.ng of flowers valued at $60,000, was stolen Monday night from th e Phoenix Art Museum. New York P~lice Slayer Handed Death Sentence RARE DEATH PENALTY Martin F inp.tric~ UTICA, N.Y. CUP!) - Martin Fitzpatrick, convicted of killing tv.·o policemen, was a;entenced to die in the electric chair early today, the first man in New York St.ate to face the death penalty in seven years. An all·maJe jury handed down the sentence in Oneida County court after almost 14 hours of deliberations. Judge John J . Walsh set Sept. 7, 1971 {or imposition of the sentence. ''You as the jury have convicted me of four count.. of murder and if you believe J am guilty you must vote the death penalty," said the 34-- year~ld Ftlzpatr ick, delivering his own summation. ~~\i,~t~t ~ o..~ \\l(11'.~~ \wi. . ~ ~to.tn. \) WUTCLIH-PU.IA OP!N Im. 'tll t n,. CltristlHI IUNDAY-12 TO I \'ltlt Our leutique et tht New,erter 111• OPEN SUNDAYS. AND EVENINGS! HOLIDAY ·SALE OUR WAREllOUSE IS OVERLOADED .. , MULTl-MIWON DOUAR INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD BUY llilOW AllD SAVI • lST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPE-T IN· VENTORY IN THE WEST • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE ' • ALL LABOR UNCONDiTIONAU Y GUARANTEED All STORES ClOSED 6 P.M. CHRISTMAS EVE. DuP AT LAST ••• LADIES SUEDE BOOTS HAVE. ARRIVED WUTCLIJF PLAZA. 141·1614 . iAm.lDI;~~. 3~"-~ 100" -111>11•1& ... - lltautiM -doop allog IOffll e M 3y,• pit. Nor/ ---fri. colors to dtoost from. . ·991 NOW SALE PRICED Af SQ. YD. . SAVE $7.00 COMPARAILI RITAIL._ ............... $13.99 1000'1 OF ~UUIAITS r.;~11 60 % ~ll 80 %/ SAVll9$ SAVINGS .. TO••••• UP TO... • IMNG ROOM. DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEDROOMS CARS, ETC. I-TOii IOM MIAIUllMlllnl ALL CARPETERIA STORES CLOSED CHR•STft\AS DAY SHAG Tll .. COLOR 399 I 00" l'al!tltw Pile. lltout;ful Heavy 99 POLYllTIR SHA3 100% Nylon Fiber. D"O. rich, duroblt shog. Beoutiful new colors. r::· c._ New eden ro Mlect from. "· ''· .,,...,.. , SAVI ..... COMPA s .• COMPAUIU RnAIL ................. ss.tt K I 00% Kodel~ Po1Vf$11f P;lt. lhret pi< height pofltrn in 9raccful dnign. R(lgged durobility. houliful colors. 511 ~~~·~.!'~~ . .,. 7" brondl. L-llV 1*rYr 4" deep s.ivr · pll. .... w..tileltlafen. $UO COMPAIAILI 111A•L •••••••••••••••·•··~· COMPAUIL RnAIL ................ It.ff COMPAUILI RnAIL ............... $13.99 11'14 KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE 11(11 Cl.EIANESE •• lm!EL TRI-COLOR SHAG 100% KODEL POLYESm PILE, llCH, 1DfE'. LUXUJt10USLY THICK P'llL MA.NY NEW Hl·STYlf DEC: OM.TOR THREE COLOR IHAG TO $.flEC::T FROM. IESISf DlftT AND $01l STAINS. LOW FIRST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SAU PRICE COMPARAILI RETAIL ...... '8.99 ....... -~ .... 99 lo0" fOtTlfL POP'UTIL WIN, NIP LONCl-WIAllMO 99 AND MMD TO SO.L ITAYI awmM Wft1C AMtNtMUM Ofl CAif. YllY IUJUAHT. nMmPUL DICOIAJOI 1"111 LOW CO~OISHAO. • RIST TIME ottlRID AT THIS SAU · · PRla COMPARAILE RITAIL ..... '9.99 •••••ii' i' 1·1-··-· ... --•••=:mc:;:::::i:::;:=~ .. '11 ••!MO•·OUTDOOR cowRCIAL· caRPnULll· •RAIDID RUGI CARPn CARPnl 21LDIHI JIO.IT·TOUlllll IAVlt •. .• ' =~'.:~~;·299 ~:"~\'w~:::: 99 ~!!....., 3t' txl2 ........... 24" ' C• k I ....... ..._. -CW'AIA•lllTlfL ............. ... ldrol for fomify ••t ... • • ,...,, .,.idlf al f 12 39" rooms. play ':i:::· • NJI.. ....,.. .......... ,_ ALL SllU Jl •••• • • • • • •• rooms, dens. $1M ri: : :::'*c.t1111111• ~ 100"-COii!. filoriwnt Nylon · [~tra KtclV'f COMPAIAlll llUIL •• $4.'9 .,.,.,..,., l2"•l2" AYAU•I -•"•I llTAIL .. , ........ $11 '"!,,~.·H-•11n11111111ns1•U1M1t1111C11111PU111•-1111S•.-i·w,.ne-.--··ian•111Wlilrm11P1. GRAND NOtTMMOUYWOOD WHTLOSANGILH ANAMllM M011n11Uo ~NACI PASADENA OPENING 7"71.nnlCHTH 11M1Wll .. l"ll... Mtl.locllOt. nsw.-i...111 ... --.... -L<ol• .. •••I•• COSTA MESA ..... -tlt·2IOI 477·512S 6lS.7674 7tM167 411.ent Sn·ltlO 1714N1wport11¥1. - ' ,_, ,. ""'-s-°"" .. _,If • ..,.. 1bl11d11tto'tholS-.Afritf1• ( S-hlt,..,..,........ 6453020 1,..~1H.6~l•Wnl011 W• Wll~OOlfllCl!fAc:fMllr""(eiof ---~ Mf_9'1 ... lll..... f( ... I...... • w., '"',. '"'" (tllyOll 11-.d ""'' ltd MfWMl•ll"' ff illl'lr•..i.11.. frl""'IO"l l lwl nt l hlt~I CANOGA PAil 21111 u... .... , :Ml·ll:M YtM .... ,~, ,, ,.....,.. ..... IWT~ to $hrr"""' Wt, lliofll lot'll M4WTllOINI 12'2' .... ...,.. 11'4. •Jt-1121 S4il 0.,.0 •• ........., ,. fl ~ do ''"''°°" l tll , ....... fie, .. ... WHTCOVINA 2S26LWerii-Aft. f6M471 ~ ........... ,..., .. (11<\rt ~I )blotk•lle•(Mvtlt'# .. \ - llOUTW- 111s•.v-t1-. -1'H '"""''....,.,If~ ....,.. •VffMtM , SAii JIANCISCO MIUllAE 3'1llCoool"1111 H2·21H TOR RAN Cl 4136 Art11i• 11'1'4. 142·66t6 J I llo. \ (n1t ~I H.N>thornf ·~ """''"" l l I I ' ., " .. • •• , '· I I ' -~· I . 'I • Di\ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE • ,_ • ~ f. I " •, . ' Not Met· . . -Condition·s I , Thin)'!'.$ are 2ettinit: betttr'ronly slowly at Me8dow .. lark Ainx>rt. • , j\s a esult. pijots once a1atn. are,1without us~ ~f the controversial runwa~ extension ·and the respons1biJ .. ity seems to lie squarely with the airport operator, John Turner. 1 • ~He was ... iiven-a-pel'miHor~~rt: of-the-runwav-ex .... --- , tettsiOn, on tlie condition th-at siveial iinprovements be made to brinJI:'. the airport UP. tO code. ~O months were ,e:ranted for the work. But in a ,review last \veek the plannin.I( commission w.as told that there has been only minimal compliance with the conditions. Electrical violations had not. been corrected, run- way lighting had no.t been approved and the blast fence -the key issue -bad not })ten instaUed in the a,l?reed .manner. lt was not piit ill solid1 fouddatiOns: Jn its pr.es- e11t, form, ... i{tis portable .. · , ···J ''. ,· • • The pJanning cotnmisslbn'rulM ·it had no alt~rna·· · live but to withdraw the permit in spite of a last-minute request for more time. No consideration wiU be given to renewing it until t,he 4ftprovemezijs ~re made. If Turner is 'to contiiiUe the ·Meaaowlark oi)eralion·, he certainly coUld do.a better job of. mettin2 hlS a2ree- ments. Fountain Valley's Victory Fountain Valley ftas Quite a success story to boast in its recent industrial developments. This year alone 41 acres of industrial land \Vere developed or are bein2 developed. . There Is no. sln~le reason l/ehind Fountal~ V.aUey's_ ablUty to attract nice, clean light industry, but its lota- tion. at the San Diego Freeway-next to the Sani. Ana 'River must be a major ta·ctor. Stable government - considerably calme·r than the stormy recall days-may also be helpin.1?. ..-Whate.v.er_the_reasonloL.Eountain. Valle~&-vlctory. the -taxpayers-ere-the ·biJt:Jl:'.est"Winners. This, year the 192 acres of developed industrial land will~put Sl34,838 into the city and school district coffers. Another 350 acres remain to be develo)fed. · \Vhatever the clt.Y is doint ri.1?ht , we hope it keeps workina-. Fountain Valley is small. but its 700 indus- trial acres ,1?ive it just· the ritbt balance to survive minus the bedroom inflation of some cities. . . ' . . ' \ , .;., -' . 'Fhpu ghtful '.P.rogra m,s ' . The community owes at least a small '''thank you'' to ·the three elementa'ry' ·school districts servini ·Hunt. ington _Beacli and Fountain Valle{ for their•tlii>ughUul pro,l?rams keyed to the educational1y h'an'dicapped (-EH). ', , .. EH p:ro2rams are now prominent parts of tb~. Ocean View. Fountain Valley and Huntin2ton : Be8Ch , C.ity school districts. More than. 30 teachers work full time with these children in the three districts. "SOrlle 437 chil- dren in the three districts are receiving ER h~h>. · An EH child is not mentally retardeit. but merely suffers a particular drawback in hi s learnin)t ability in one or more subject matters. Such pr~blems can be - and are beinir cured by the concentration of EH pr1>- grams. 'Id · · · d' ·d I h I I h t · ·An individual chi 1s 21ven in 1v1 ua e n n w a - .. ' The closest competition lri west Oran,1?e County was Los Alamitos which had 15 acres of industrial land de- veloped this year. Westminster only had three indus- trial acres and Huntiniton Beach counted 14 new ones for the year. ever area his weakness is found . As one 'teacher put it, the program is worth its time if it just stops fourth grade students from becomint ei,2htb .1?rade dropouts. H ~llRN Hctl.~ Bl!fS:l!f llE.WIP& I Mla!f 6H ro SU ~16NlYLl.Nb AT ~r.; Protectionism ' , . ls a Form of Socialism International trade is one of the dullest gubjecl! it is possible to write about -unless the reader happens to mike his living in an indust,ry that a .threaten- ed· by foreign competition. 'rhe questiO~ of ••ftee tiade.'..'._·•ersus " · · Onis111" is an old an a Y· !carred.. debate in lhe U.S. Theoretical- ly, the "free tra· ders" have the best of il; but practically, the "J)rotectlonistS" have usually won. If we are genuinely a capitalistic coun· lry, and· ~lieve in ·free:·. competition,. then we mu st admit that other countri~ have the rlght to lm)>Ort goods here and sell it at I.he lowest possible price. We ca~t be in favor of competition just for \:lur o'wn country. WHERE TIIE RUB cpmes is that the cost of laOOr in many other nations is far lower than in ours. A textile worker in Japan, for instance, gets less than $100 a monlh, and an American producer can't compete with these low labor costs when his own employes make many times more. This is the argument of "protec· tionism.'' We have to keep the countries that pay "coolie wages" from ·un- dercutting our own high standard or living. ·It makes sense. as far as it goes, but this argument doesn't go far enough, as almost a!l ec-0nomists agree . THE FACT OF THE matter is that a nation likt! the U.S. should not be wa sting its energy and manpower in the production· of low-efficiency goods Banning of Certain , Toys: as Vnslite Dear1 .Gl oomy· •G.us: • ' " 'A Dange·r Is a Danger Is a Danger!" The Jllauonll AILi~nCe or Business-· i m.en recruits, counsels, empV,ys ·and trains hard-core jobless. And when difficulty appears, NA'B as· signs •· coordinator• of the · same ethnic group lo work things out. Thi.s~is ~high qrd~r ot To the Editor: ··~.>'!1~-_,...,_ ...... ~-'·:.M~;t Rec•ll'• High Cost the Sidney Harris column of Dec. 14 on · • ' .· ..:i "The True 'Dirty Words.'" I would like to comment on the letter , · t: · (MailOOx, Dec. 16! from the lady who &,, .~'JL ;..,<?! .. ·"' • To the Editor: Just the idea that there is no harm In ... object, to the banning of certain toys ' :fl~ 1'181 DVX~; ·"" Now that the recall election in Long dirty v.•ords of a sexual nature but the from the market \ .:w. 't'li Beach is over: According IA:l f>ress . real dangerous words are ''Americanism, ·one item on the list was a toy oven that $ reports. the election. which went down to socialism, anarchy. liberty, justice, etc.'' ·iOl:Ya;ff oi Dl w~ be ir -actually worked. Now, according to thia Letters frO'n! reader! are welcom~. defea t by a thiee-to--0ne margin, cost the would indicate that be is afraid of these ladj,. i>arehWjmtgment ·~ouJ~ be ,the , Normq.lly ~ters should convey their local taxpayers in excess of $80,000, latter words and how they may apply to iidt-pel'Hnr .;et. equal trtat· meat. only thing to prevent the sale of tl'lis . ~essages in 300 words or te.ss . Tiie The Orange County Regi strar or him. So he wa nts to outlaw them! item. But would she plug that stove in right .io , cond~e letters to fit space Voters has estimated the cost of a recall Don't you think your readers have had -A ·suent Majority . UnemP!oyed . Pfi'son before. purchasing it to see how hot it or . ehm1rni:u libel .reserved. Alt l~t-election in this county to be in the enough of his socialistic ideas? got? Would she not assume it wtis safe ~ers ·must include Stgnature ·and ~il· neighbor~ood of $125,000 of the taxpayers' Atid may I take this opportunity tD ""'' ..... ;.i*" ,...,...., ........ Mt IM( .. Mf!IY fM-M f l Tl'lf -"'· htlll '"'' 1111 -v• i. GIMmr O~ Pfltr Plitt. because a reputable store was'selling it? ... ing oddrtt.f, P~t f!Gmes ~ti be with· money. second "Name Withheld" in his support Probably _ aod there could be a ~eld on request 1/ sufficient reason There is a serious qut5tion in my mind and commendation of Ray Stripe ' and R rlously burned child on cbristmas Day! J..,".,· -.. a'!d"°. u.nt. P.oetru unU not bt putJ. a~ to whether w~ .~hould gamble an Joplin Boys' Ranch, as opposed to th• i. 1 . ~ '"" ~ighth of a null!On dollars on a Grand Jury criticism'.' , . ,., , • '" • • • · ::!'~::.· -~-------~---ir<"'°'ilion '·ec·" ·• ... --'·-).»1licb "k texlil.,-or-•h-"'4ir---h--IT·IS·PERFEGrbY-true·thal4h<re-i•-·~ ~·-• · -----DOW HUDDtESTON' " . , """" ""'" seems to be kept alr.oe ort!x,. through the modJties. We. are. a ~ high-t!flciency danger in swings, slides, tree climbing., -the shelvu. or use her own judgment as efforts of ooe centril"colirilY.Tiewsf)aper society, and .should devo>e our industrial •tc., but the!e are n~ manufactured ; to whether to serve. it to· her family at and a vocal minortty,of supporters. efforts. to producing the: goods we can dang~; these are acc1den~. The toys not? . THOMAS STIPE best piodUce' af the fastest rate for , me~tioned by Consumers UntD~, plus _the And sptaking of dangefOUS toys, does the lowest cost. ~·' ene:!I already taken out of circulation, the lady remember when there. were · were da n gerous because-of Low efficiency societies should be manufacturing defects or poor design. firecrackers and cherry bombs? As a allowed to take over the production And it should be poinJed out that some of child, they were "fight" for me, but of goods that best suits their economy the toy manufactdrei:s. !'PQ.n ~ !>cine "wrong" for many of my friends. arid tits their; wage«ale. If· we want d . d f h d f th Ir od ·~ to see capitalism and free competition a vise o t e anger o e pr UCWlo, ANO WHAT ABOUT drugs that have ).._ 1" either modified tfle design. or removed it been labeled dangerous? Many o( these spread over we world, we cannot insist from fhe market without argument. drugs can be had by prescription, for that other countries be penalized for which only substantiates the claim tbat they a.re "right" for some people, but sending their goods over here and selling they really WERE harmful to a child. "wrong'' for others. Would the lady it at the cheapest price they can, advocate the purchase of -these drugs be ' , A· FEW YEARS back the FDA left to the consumer's l n di v id u a I TO f•rROTECT" certain industries announced that botulism had been discretion? against foreign competition Is a form discover¢ in canned cranberry sauce, These examples may seem to be at of slate socialism. no matter wtiat t\lse and that it was dangerous to eat, and opposite ends of the spectrum , but ID it may be blled. ft is a sul>Sidy to could prove fatal. As it was at the holiday paraphrase Gertrude Stein. "A danger is inefficiency, because we should not be time, would the aforementioned lady a danger is a danger!" wasting our resources in turning out prefer to have this product removed 'from ~ LEE MJLLA'h. · goods that we can buy cheaper else- Holiday Ge•ture To the. Editor: I noticed today while parking my car in Newport Beach that the parldng meters had been covered and tied With red ribbon. ' It was a very joyful sight to see, and T think the city of Newport Beach is to be cOmmended for such a nice holiday gesture. GREGORY TOPPER llll•u•ed Word• To the Editor: I am astounded that you would pr int Tmo GIBier Schoolr To the Editor : I was surpr ised to read that Ernest H. Gisler Intermediate School · had been moved to Huntington Beach in your front article in the Fountain Valley edition of Dec . \5. Does the Fountain Valley Chamber or Commerce know about this~ CHUCK ALSTON Fountain Valley The story was correc t. There art two Gisler scllools-011e in Fountain Valley one in Huntington Beach. F.rn est H. Gisler Intermediate SChOOl (6·8 grades) is in Htt1iti'ngtan Beach: the Robert Gisler School r Kindergar· ten·8 grades) is i11 Fountain Va lley. -Editor where. Both politl.call y . and economically, "protectionism" is a slap in the face to world unity and to our pro!esied ci'eltt of 'free competition. It does not even make good sense to our stJort-term self-interest. for if other countries are limited in selling their goods here. they "''ill not have the funds to . buy our commodities, and \\'Orld trade will shrink perilously~ Our rt'jection of Frauds Again-st ·Trusting Investors · an open market would only confirm' the Communists• accusation that we manipulate capitalism for our own ends. , The message is finally beginning to get through : fields, with no hope of adequate. water or sanitary or utility services. ts land a chattel or a resource~ Can society a!fcird to permit huge. acreages of land. even privately-owned land , to be turned to uses that are destructive of so- ci1;1:l values'.' ' Mark Twain's Foresight . Gian t "recreational" or "second home" subdivisions are a clear and present dan- ger to a society increasingly concerned about a quality environment, and aOOut livability. Far from being great tax windfalls for local governments, they are instead "tax p8yers' time OOmbs." that will cost counties, school districts and others far more in the long run than they will pay In. plot buyers holding the sack, lucky if they get back 10 cents on the dollar. They take land out of its most pfoduc- tive and 'valuable uses -whether they be agricultural, or range, or wildlife .for· age areas, or e'ven desert -and chop it up into bleak,, tiny plots that destroy it for any productive use in the foreseeable future. ANO IT MAY BE the message is begin- ning to get through in southern Oregon -in the Rogue and Klamath Basins - which have come. under the eye of ·the land speculators as the ftlreat of tougher new laws looms in California. Such speculatiom have' been ·gobbling up California land at a rate · of up to · 300,000 acres per year. and · for every "new home" or "reCreational" or "'sec· ond home" development that has been suCcessful, a dozen others stand as bar- ren moouments to,JQBo 's cupidity. greed, 11aivete and lack of conscieil~ and hon· esty. MORE AND MORE these questions art being asked. and more and more the . answer is coming up that the public in-. terest, the social utility of the land, tends to outweigh mere chattel rights. There Ls ·much scholarly bickering in Maxwell Geismar·s new critical work "~lark Twa in: An A"rrierican Prophet." Geismar L~ a witty and articulate bickerer as he lays into the standard ~'lark Twain critical orthodoxy. The old gentleman. dead these 60 years.~must be.,. laughing somewhere in Satanic pastures at the hulabaloo about his life. work and later strong opinions on both sexual and gocio-polltical matters. For it is these last named that Geismar d'A·ells. upon at so me length in this new contribution to the Ma rk T w a i n legend-idf.as and attitudes "'hiCh-:-he chow11 us, have. been largel y swept under the critical carpet heretofore. IT l~ GEISMAR 'S central point that Twain's literary power was enhanced in hi! later years, rather th~n diminished as Twain specialists ha"e argued since Van \llyck Bfooks' c o ntro v er s ial in· lerpretation. "The' ordeal of Mark Twain, 0 set a whole style of Twain criticism. ('re.ismar suggests that Twain's bitter social criticism of the United States has been repressed or .ivoided by scholars "precisely because lt is so bold, so brilUant, 11tlrleal ·ind ptO'j)hetic." Twa in tndetd became more pagan, satanic and 11r.r1ge in hit soc ial comment. ln what appears here ID. be almost a New Left analysts or lhe, wril<r. <¢Wnor, 'triillt# lhll Twaln trulT -... _..,. future of desJ)ondeney and the central flaw s in American civilization. THERE IS ALWAYS room for argu· ment in a reboiling of old bones in the in· · terests of critical broth. and Geismar~ work is at once controverslaJ and run to _ read because il is a sprighUy, logiCar in· ~ terpretalion written with ver ve, almOlj,t reckllssly at times. yet eloquently ;' ·and , bri sUing with an· erudite wrangling_witb~ other scholars. For instance, Geismar takes on not on· ly Van \Vyck Brooks, ·.·but ,.t~.. If.I~ . Bem¥rd DeVolC!\,Le&lie F~ler{l!l.*nund Wil.lon . and J\iStin_ Kaplan , •. ), 1.f» I biographer of Twain ("Mc.' Cltl'flens )nd fl.fark Tw8in"J: This Geisn\ar rej'l?Cls' ·as an overly FreUc!ian interpfetatlcin 'Of the ' man and artist that suggested .Twain's radical social commentary was some sort or deviant 1behavitr, or expression of personal neur0&I-. ''ll,UCKLEBERJiv FINN" T w al n . s 3ingle 1teat classic'.' Nonsenst\. Celsmar snorts, his whfile ca reer Was a claMlc, includirc his lat er. generally ignored ~riod or !ilYJ.le rocial commentary. (~ llllllln; 110). • Wllltllll &go They are. With perhaps a few excep.. tlons. frauds against those who trustingly invest in Uitm. naively (and greedily) ex· peeling the...U land boom" to keep in~N!aS· ing th e price of land when, in fall, it 11ever will, never can, be developed. THEY HAVE EARN E 0 con· siderable sums for the original owners {\vho sold out at perhaJ>' twice the as- sessed true ·cash valuation of the proper- ty ), and huge sums for the promoters \\'ho have made profits ranging · up. ward from 300 percent on their invest. ment, only to leave \he second, &mall· THE MESSAGE Is getting through ln California, where the Legislature is now holding hearings on tough new laws governing such kinds of speculative de· velopments. The message is g e I t i n g through to counties. that, once bedazzled by the thought of higher laI assessments, have since been faced with tax fo reclos· sures ruMing at 33 percenLor more. ._ The message is getting through in land· poor Hawaii, where •·subdivisions" have been carved out of the middle of Java By George , Dear Georae : ~ t go wlll.J a very cultur~d gJrl ~'ho has · only one little fta'! In .her deportment. She. wears a very low· cut dress when we're shooting pool and J understand the fashion ru.le for a lady In poolrooms is a hfrlleneck sweater. Could you give me the proper ruling on this? CULTURE LOVER Dear Culture Lover: I callt>d Amy Va.ndcrbUt. but we must have gotttn dlscoMected. Oe.ar George: h 'Uwt·any •ay •·woman. can .. tell if a man terested'.' · Dear Hopeful : is romantically in- HOPEFUL Well, actually, Hopeful, there Is. ~o~~vecr ~f~~~d r:dy m~~,:~~f Every time 1 try to Mswer a letter Uke this it causes. people to .read a lot of mildly rlsquc nieaning" into it ~hat I 'don't intend. Write to a lady columnist .-. some of them get l\\'&Y wilh murder. <Send your problems to George and fttl better within live days Of doob!e your trouble bacll.). WHEN SUCH speculative development.s have been carved out! of old ranches, they are worthless for future agrlcultural use. Their value as wildlife range is ended, with deer herds decimated or scattered, fishing streams mined, and gan'ie bird habitat bulldozed or burned. Fire danger is increased. Natutal watercours- es are damaged. Erosion is multiplied. And to what end! Do the trusting souls who have put their · life savings into a plot of land ever build their "d re a m homes"? A feW try. Some IDnely little buildings have been built. a few trailers and mobile homes sit on their bleak little Plot&. But it is rare when the happy, communal. Carefree] Ille promised ln glowing ads ever materializes. _ TJIE ANGL().SAXON common law, and the statutes in the Unilfd States derived from it, are bapt In large part on the theory that a man's home is hi.s castle, and that no one has a right to forbid any. one to do anything he wants with his land. But the realizationk beginn ing to dsni.'fl on J)eople that wha{ i)eopw_ do with their o'~'n land. if not 5ubje<:t to som e s o r t of reasonable regulation. can have a dis- astrous eUect on tht. rtghU of the public at larce. ... . ,, • When big development corporations use the "chattel rights" theory to scoop up huge profits -and then leave the results to be paid by hapless investors and tax. poor counties -the time has come tD call a halt. 'I'his means, In practlcal terms, strong public kupport for those planning com- missions, county commissioners and leg- islators who, at long last, are daring to speak up in lhe public interest and say "no" to corporate developers who "·orshlp the dollar and don't· care a link· er's dam about the lanCI they have raped. Medford (Ore.) "fail Tribune ---·-- •I-• Wednesday, Dec. 23, 1970 Tht tdltorlal page of tM Da il y Pilot seeks to iitforrn and stim.· ulote readers by presen ti11g thi.t nt:W$paptr's opi11i~1U and com· mentar11 on topics of interest a11d siQnificance, by provtding a forum for the expre1siO'n of 011r readers' opillio11s, and • by presenli110 tlte divers t view- poi11t.s of i11forn1cd ob&ervtrs 011d spoktsn1e11 on topics of the day, Robert N. Weed, Publisher • ' ' , r ! I • . . I • iF01111tai11. ·Valley ·'l'~•·n.al -. EDltlON • ·:VOL '61, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES __. ,,._ ~ . -./' . . ORANGE COUNTY, CAUFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 2f, ·1970 ·• . TEN CENTS j : . . ·Appea·l Filed on Meadowlark Run~ay Deniat By ALAN DIRKIN ot .. ~ l'MltStlH . The decllJon to pull the permit foe part of tbe cootrovenial runWay extension at M'eedowlar'i Airport was appea1ed today. • COUDd1J;nan George ' M<fracke.n, who . . . wu appplnttl!:I by the council several weeks •JO to look Into the dispute, filed the 1 apPeaJ. against the p 1 a n n I n g coinmwton '• decision last week M> revoke the conditicmal uceptlon. The appeal will be coosldered by the city couocil at its meeting Jan. 4. Today BuDdtng Director J a c t Cleveland said that he would .-mmeod that the permit be relnslated by the council. The commisskm withdrew the pennit Dec. 15 beciuse, the planners said_! a munber of atrpdrt Improvements that they ltlpulaled be carried out when they granted the erception two months earlier were not made, Cleveland reported that a I r p or t operator John TUruer had now complied with ''91 percent•• ofitbe condiUona. "I'm sure ~t· by the next council meeting there will be no hangups," Cleveland said. "Everything wW have bEon completed by' then." Th"e building director said t h a t electrtcal violaUoM in the airport ..... IW'PILOTllllll ..... -hid beeo -and thOt obetructkia lllhllllg -lo anler. The main point ol ~between the airport operator and the -"""' is the blut fence at tbe Heil Avenue end of the runway. Cleveland l8ld that the locaUon of the fence wu no longer in dispute. Homeowners have charted ~_! ~ fence wu not installed in proper foundaUons and did not conform to a plail Turner agreed on with the Boord of Zooinc AdJumnenta. Cleveland said that bl! and Councilman McCracken found lo a """'" lnlpecllon that the ltructurt WU IOUDd and substanUal. In hi.s appeal, McCracken peinta out· that although the pJIUllllng commlaloo gave Turner 60 days to make the improvements these conditions were later • modified becaUle ol conlllctlni mea.suremenll and the Board of Zoninc Adjustment& did not act on the !..,.,._ Until Nov. 18. -I ' "I feel U II pnerally qreed thll cmdlllons have been lmpooed which will effecUvely reduce the -and -problems for the homeowners on Hell AWDUe, but will oho areatly lncn!ase the safety· factor at the airport," be c:ommeoted. POW List Lashed Roge~s Charges Propaganda Move WASHINGTON (AP\ -North Vietnam's release of a purported official prisoner of war list Tuesday was crlUclud by Secretary of State Willlm P. Rogers today as "a contemptible maneuver .. .for propaganda purposes." He said the North Vietnamese invited two senators to send representatives to Paris to gain information on the prisoners of war, but added they failed to provide any fresh information on the fate of ~ captured Americans. RepresentaUves of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (0-Mass.), and J. W. Fulbright CO.Ark.), received in Paris a listing of 339 namea of Americans now held. All • New Civic ,, A.u.l~tnri . · · · , , ~~-"QW~ had been listed unofficially earHer. Allo n8.med we.re· 20 men U.ted 11 dead and nine othen who bad alr!ady been released. Rogers said the North Vietnamese· COMPLETE POW LIST ON PAGE J acknowledged capturing. and holding 399 men, but lhe United Slates already knew that. The United States ~as Information that 39 other men were captured whose exact fate is uncertaln and the North Vietnamese provided no.help on those. "The fad is that they're maneuvering ~th these prisqnen-of-war to a way that'• inhuman. They're d 1 v e r t In I attention from their barbariam bY tbil metbod." "l think it was a cont.empUble maneuver and should be recoinized a aucb." Tbe fact is, he asserted, that there w1II continue to be uncertainty aa to the completenesa of POW Hats "unUl North Vietnam ~mplies wjth the ru!ea: of international war and allows in!lpection or prisoner-of-war camps." · At another point be declared: "So we conclude they're using the POW issue in a very inhuman way to advance tbeir (See PRISONERS, Page %) Yule Deeor .Judged .,.u ul1' u ' w· · , .i'--R o iJ~.;-.••fJ a inner -. ·.EARL y CHRISTMAS -s&nlli Claus ala~soo McDonnell-Douglas Corporation's Electronics Di- vUiori employe's dwnped out his whole bag tbiS ·week at _Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Iiiven- torying $1,250 worth of toys as others watch (from ·1ttt)·aro therapf..t Karen J~;·.r..y,Dii•• Ci.air. man Jack Smelser. Chief Engineer Dick Ward, Mal Towery RN, in charge of Watd 338 and McDonnell· Douglas secretary Sonia: Peterson. .... Founlaln Valley may have a new cJvic aUdJtorium, but it isn't likely to feature fixed seating u desired by several civic organizatlorui. ~In YaJ~y Competition Robert Bruce wrote "HO,· Ho, 'Ho" across his garage door In· bright Christmas lights. ~ crealiv~ elf~~ .won the moot effecllve -of 'llshll category Jn Fodnlatn Valley'• annual Chi'istmas decoration contest. Ave. also reatures "Merry Olrlstmas" 1n bright lights and a fully llgbted b ..... -Douglas W o.rkers . . Donate Money For Yule Toys Employes tn two departments at the McDonnell Douglas plant in Huntington Beach don't' send Christmas cards to one aootller. Instead of spending money · on cards and atamps they put it into a special toy rim \Tfus year the 650 employes In the Slturn electronics and the data reduction and instrumentation departments raised over $2,500. .Monday' the leaders or the fund drive handed over $1 ,250 in toys and clothing to Falnrlew Slate Hospital. The gifts will brighten the lives of 55 boys aged 3 to 21 iD ward 338 of the hospital. The re.!_t of the money is being given to two other lnatltutlons -·$6.18 to the <lilldrens Hospital of Orange County and the special educational unit of Hollydale SChool in Param~nt. "We've been doing this for five or si:r ~ars now," explained Jack Smelser, one ol lhe fund organizers. "Jt seemed like a good idea back then and it has caught on lteadlly. This is by far the largest amount we have ever raised." Book Warehouse Set in Valley Fountain Valley School District plans to build a $27,000 w8rehouse to 1t<re 27,000 ~1 books. Work starts-in one.,,.montb lllid should be finished In April. Balley Constroctlcn Company 0 r Lekewood won the contract Tuesday with a Jow bid of $27,022. The Balley bid wu •uo less than the money provided by the atite for construction of the warehouse. The new z,cm square foot facility will ~ atlached to the ezilting warehouse at Number One Llghthoule Lane. SANTA , TURN TO PAGE 11 Santa Claus ts compiling hlJ list of deliveries which he'll be using Thursday qbt and he'1 paying attention to all tbe requests from youngsters al&ng -the Orange CeasL Today'• DAILY PILOT carries on Page tl 1ome Of those requests; which have betn rorwarded to Santa at the North Pole In ple.nty of time. • ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 'Vlslo*1s of Sugarplums' Here's what the parks and recreation commission ~ommeilded Tuesday nfa;bi for expanSlon of the community center:· On a first priority the}' suggested building an auditorium (with dressing and storage rooms), kitchen, 1pace for large civic functions (up to 1,000 people). meeting rooms (at least three), and other needed operational facilitie1 Crestroom1, etc.). ' The Bruce home at l9IO La Eiperania GingerbreadEntry Wins ' Drill Platforms Off Huntington Tourist Sites? Huntingwn Yul,e Prize M a lesser priority, cornmillloners also asked for a game room, lounge, rehearsal ball, and additional meetJ.nc rooms. The cardboard gingerbnad llrllslry of Mr. and Mrs. James Anderson has been rewarded with the sweepstakes award of the Huntington Beach "Olristmas City'' yule decorations contest. Making their home at 6362 Shayne Drive, the Andersons, along with their children labored ..,Jor more' than two months In creaUtig their entry, called "ViliOns of Sugarplums.'' "The.only trouble is that It's been raining so much lately that we've had to haul everything in and out or the house between downpours," explillned Mrs. Glady1 Anderson. M winners of the local contest, the Andersons' gingerbread house has been entered in the "Forty Miles of Christmas Smila" contest which is <»-sponsored by the DAIL 'V PILOT and the Orange County CoaSt Aa.9ociation. Winners of that competition will be announced Thursday. Joining the Andepons in the Forty Miles coot.est as the best commercial prize winner in HUntington Beach will be American Beauty Florists, 17851 Beach Blvd. More than 300· homel were cbecked by judges from the Cham~ of Commerce and the Women's Division of the Chamber or Commerce In selecting ·the winners. 1bey w'Jl recelve their trophies during an 8 p.m. banquet, Dec. 29, at the Whistling Oyster R e s t· a u r a n t In Hunlingfun Harbour. Winners in other categories are: But Cbrlstma1 Tbeme -Gerald Graham, 16092 Melocy-Lane and DWight S. Wadsworth. 16101 Melody Lane. Chhdren'1 Fant.al)' -Chuck Rothert, 1112 Pine St. and George Freeman, 20641 Goshawk Lane. Rellgloa1 -Robert J. Latina, 6832 Via Corona and Allen Quinn, 6601 Limerick Drive. · Mobile Home -Gorden and Ester Babcock, SI Huntington St., No. 'l1Jl and Robert Miller, 16222 Monterey Lane, No. 241. An oriental gate ·will open the eyes of motoruts entering Fountain Valley in lg;'i. The parks and recreation o:mmtision Tuesday night asked former city planner Ned Parsons to design a street entrance (See WINNERS, Pap Z) The commission balked at putUng In fixed seals and sloping because it wants the auditorium to serve u the large space for civic functions of 1,000 people. . Leaders of the same organizations which urged a fixed seat auditorium also urged the city not to build one at all. "II we must build a type of auditorium the same as we have, don't build one at all," Don Sauter, a spokesman for the Fountain Valley Arts Alsociation, told commissioners. "Walt until we can afford a good auditorium. Unleu the acoustics are better than we have it's a waste of money," Sauter added. ln earlier public bearings, Sauter· presented the commWion with a peUtlon signed by 24 civic groups favoring a fixed seat autdltorium. Slx individuals from the audience spoke up favoring fixed aeats, none opposed ll James Dick, chairman of the clty'1 planning commission, spoke to the parks commission for the Friends of the Library and ln hLs wife's place for lbe Homemakers Club. Dick was neutral on the fixed seals, but (See SEATS, Pare Zl The two oil drilling platforms off Huntlngton Beach may become tourist attracUons. Two brothers, given a city tease io op,erate a 1portfishing bwilnep from the end of the municipal pier, are planning two or three narrated boat trips Jn the afternoo.. to the rlga and along the shoreline. Carl McCullah, who llveo In HUDllngton Beach, and Robert McCullah, whoH hom·e is in Newport Beach, also ·are plaonlng ,dally flahlng trips, one from 1:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. and another from s p.m. to 9:30 p.m. for night flshlnl- The le1se for the concesalon, granted by the City Council this -k, will lasl three yean and be effective Jan. I. Tiler< hai been no oportflililnr. from the pier ln 1'70 but there was tn previous years. Christmas Services Listed Barbers and BeacbH -Vince MoorhouJe reported, !1<>w~er .. llµit In put yean the aporUl!lilng .cruled more prObl~ than.It"~ ~rtb;:w1th ~ •• being •caused· to tlle pier, ramp and facUJtfe& , I ~°"'rhoasa :~1a-\.1-·~ on . poor. leue ~ll ~and.1Rld.:thlt a· • . ne)''te.., ,befn8 'propa;.d ,~,the"citY ·~·1·-offlce wUl ·--tlo.I·• " ' • Many Orange Coast Churches Sliite Evening'Rites -. ' •ltU.Uon. ' . . ' • ··~ • •• ~ -I The holiday aeaaon ls a time for giving anctle&iving, for loving and being loved and for family and friends. But is al.so a time of worship and spiritual renewal. Many ramllies. will spend at least a part of their-bolidayS in prayer, song and festivity at one of the many Orange Coast churches and temples which h a v e scheduled ipeclal Cl1rlstma.s a n d Hanubh aervlces. Congregatlolis whlcb notlfied I h e DAILY PILOT of theoe wonblp houra lncludo: " ' COSTA MESA The cblldrea of Qrlll La!Mra• Cbarc\ Sunday· School wlll present a Chrlstmas Eve aervic.e Thursday at 7 p.m. The church 11 localtd a\ 760 Victoria St., ·I Coita Mesa. On Christmas Day at '10 Temple. -,117 W; ".lllJllf\loll•lt., a.m., the Rev, Lothar Tornow ., wUI • Coit.a 'llJ-.. wtD:. ~ 'Bimbt.'· conduct the wonbip and will speak oo u.i• .rjceul'rliliO-''l•~ ~•ft I theme "Come -God 11 Here." ·The p.m. Membtn of • the :voulh group Senior Choir will sing. rellgioul tdloola will ·conduct the entire . F.OR 'DIME' A.DS .' Flnt Cbrtatlall Cbll'Cb of Coita Mesa, 792 Victoria St., Colla Mesa, will hold a Candlelight Communion S er v I c e Thursday a\ 7:30 p.m. Rev. James Piercy wlll piuOnt the medltltlon "'The Homa&• We Pay Him." The Pmbylerlaa Clrarch of die Coveout, ll$O Fairview Road, Coalii Mesa, will preoenl J. W. Petmon'• cantata "A Song Unending" Chrtatmu Eve at 11 p.m. ' • . . . service under the direction of Rabbi Garson Goodman. All llfnfe.A·Une ad& fllfetldel lot publio;aUOll ,Saturday .In . qi. :D,MLY. P!l,OT, qllllt be placed' by noon Thunda7 M ... Verde Ualled~!! Chrdl, . thls 'Wffk. due lo' tho ~ Day • ,, ' ·-· holiday 1701 ~ .,114 . Mau, .,.. Ads C., be placod at any DAILY lcheduled two MlmM Eve-~ Pfl,(YI' o'f !1 c 0 • The ,.... ull7 -°" wiutwl6i"ew deadline-~ will mt MJ1 -. ..:!J 'P'.rri. 'In ~-~· wlOI ~ abio, btc .... ' of the NIW yur•a Day scrlniur.e readlnl and a Chrillmu story, hol\d&¥• rot\ futtber .Information, pbOne. ' the dfrect Hne to the D~ILY PILOT TllerNi111 be another aerv!ce ,at II p.m. . Clasolfleil Adtert!Jlng Depl MJ.11171. . (See CHRISTMAB, Pap I) ' Other contest winnen in Fountain Valley are: Swetpstakes, Mr. and Mrst Richard G. Brown and family, 1896.1 Acacia St. A moving ice' skating pond and shrubs dressed to look like ~boit boys are titer focal points of this winner. The women's division of the chamber of commerm also ·entered \hill b~e Jn the "Fort,, Miles of Christmas Sril.Ues" contest co- aponsored by the DAILY PILOT and the Coast Association. Most-rellgloua wipner, W a·r r e n P~n, 1752.5 Santa Monica Circle, with a nativity and related scenes. Best Chrlstmu scene, Mr. and Mn. John Richards, 10286 Cardinal Ave., with a little bit of everything fashioned from borne-made figur~. Santa special, J. W. Kinllton. 18521 Santa ~a St., reatured a sleigh with a moving Sant:a, phu elves and a choir boy.1 Most humorow:, Ross Mason, 9400 El Camino· Ave., displayed comical figure• Jn foreign costumes on bis garage door. - Most unusual, Donald Blakely, 98187' Redbud Circle, put up an elaborate gingerbread drummer boy group with' large mualcal notes and candy canet spread throughout. The weatherman'• Chrlstmaa present to the Orange COast·is .not keeping his promise of rain for to. clay. Mostly IUlUlY ollla will pre- vaU Thursday with temperatures In the low tos. ' m,smE TODA-Y ·1nu1~1t, in qualit11 movies U 1 greattr thtm-ever bf fore, aa~ th<·pr•oid<111 of Ed11Xl!'d! Cine· ..ma· Theaters. who's opening 'three niw movit hou.se1-0n the Orange Coast • thil week. Ste ·Entertainment, Page lB .. ·Ooly1~ CHRISTMAS ' ---· --Mwtwll ,... " --.. --· . --" -~ .. ............ 1 .. 11 Te...... It = '"'I ...,. ..... 11 ............ ,.11 .. ,.. ,..... .. J • r .. -·~ -• • J Ull. Y ,!LOT H Wed>-, Dtctmbu 23, 1970 ' . • .A-ssails ' D ~puty · '.:JJA , -. Manson's 'Blood: -·-~ --.,, .I.Oii 4itG£l.Ell {lJ,PI)--Cbari.a. ......ta lllJ ibiiiil liili a.i .~ torliNk tilfl IYlllloc,!lol*kll-tiOmo,IYU>il "P !lit lDID llld wile jnd Qlarlet M~ lhooldU.. I melbarlal """1• W a 11111 fDr lliiill; -• .... ~ 1111 •14 ID Illa ,... ,rl!w· · for •..t.¥·11iiaAY at'"""'"," ·· tolllq lllam DOI to be afraid -ha bull! In llla U ted· Nallonl 10 N"' York -......, bl bid -a maat 'al. a ·,_~tr Ill:...~ .... ,_,..,..._.. • "~IM._._ llOlllllaljjp al 1111 c11y·;,, 7 wu not rotnc lo burl lhotn. for hi• con1ldera....... H• didn 't ·even "At the b.Biancu he wort the aame muk be hu worn here In "!1111 -flllt • peace-loving individual . And then h11 111aked out to get hb bloodlhlraty robots and send them In to kill.'' .......-, lndMdual just u ha 1111 "' -. ., •--.-.. •• .l:!'.:<.' . 11'11119" wool beck to the automobll• want his rombiea to lot them· koow they _. .... 1111 true character bt court. \be ~ ~!IP&~nyiow mllU9a ...,.., DO cm oolJn t¥r autllde , Bq\lool 1,1ld, and ln•tnicted were going to be kUJed bec1uoe he didn't sneeCutior eblraed · tode.y 1t the Tete--of tb1 sis moatti trtal, tumec: Wtdnuday htlm•, "tbltr autornobllel,~ "IJIJY pl.oe -. Charles "Tex" Watson, Pa tr i cJ a want thetn to panic." t..BilDca murder trllt. · to the slayinli Of wealthy grocer Leno wu nle from Ills Jnaada ble luat (or Kreiiwinkel and Leslie Van Houten lo go-Bugliosl said the LaBiancu believed The defendants were barred from "further sessions or the trial alter wild scenes before-the jury In wttlch one even &truggled wilh the prosecutor. DeiitJ ~Dlstrlct Attorney Vincent LaBl~nCa f.nd..'.lila ,rie'Rosirbaij'. · 1° ~deatlliblood·andmu.rde.r'."'BuglloslaaJd. inside but 0 don 'l let them know you're '<;barlle for they maybe could hive rwi ~J'llUJD'd bll ......._lion ol ~ • .l'lle pi:-delcrlbed l\4llllOD 1114 -Jli'O*lltor-plclllttd-l<ir...U.. Jury aolng to kUI lliiim. out of tha hau,. lo got halp or ocrtamed om wlth Maneon and· the three Women bll hippie rollowera driving around Los Manson golng alone into thil t.Blanca "How ·thoughtful and considerate. or called the pol.Ice or done something. ' ~ . ' From .--..l Giv e s Suggestions From P8fJe l CHRISTMAS SERVlcES • • • with t:bolr. aln&btl and !'Criplure by Rev. Paul c, Blosmeyer. . beeOlcheduled by Balbo1 bllld Unlkol Mttbodllt Cllards. 115 Agate Ave., at 1 p.m. Thursday. Jury Praises Cen te r PRI SONE RS . • • political objectives." Jn releasing the lists in Paris Tuesday, the North Vietnamese cbaracleriud them for the first tlJne as oUicial, although the same names bad been &lveu unofficially earlier. Clll!almu 'at SL Jal!O ... DMoe E~ Cbarc!I. 2M3 Orange Ave., cOo1a M-Will be observed with the UllUll Youth 'i'a&Ollll 'lbunday 1t 7 p.m. At IO:IO p.m., there wlll be carol alngbtg followed by • CIDdl•ll&ht QlrlJtmu EucbarlJt at 11 p.m. There will be a Flll!llly Chrlltmu Eucllarllt Olristmu Day at 10 a.m. •CORONA del MAR There will bt a special Christmas Eve family service Thursday al 7 p.m. at the Corona de! Mar CommunJty ' Church, CongregaUonaJ, 611 Heliotrope Ave., which Is open to the public. But Foresees Worries Prlntt of Peact Lutberaa Charcb, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa, has ICbeduled Christmas Eve t w l l i g h t cendlellght aervice• at 5 p.m. Thursday for the famlliu. Put« P. G. Mathew will brlnl the message \l!"ith music by th~. youth bran and choir. A candlellght service will be held at 10:45 p.m. with carols, choir and violins and a message by· Pastor A. C. Anderson. There will be a festival worship Qiriltmas Day at 10:30 a.m. with meaage by Pastel' A. Tanner. NEWPORT BEACH Identical Qiristmas Eve services will be beld al SI. Aodrew's Presbyterian Clisdl, 111111 SL Andrew's Road, Newport Beach. A Vapor s.rvtce will be held at 4:*t p.m. Thursday 1n the church Sa'nctuary. At 11 p.m. Thursday, a cand1ellght eervice will be held, during which the Rev. Charles Dierenfleld will deliver a Christmas medltaUon enUtled "'In Hospitality." The sanctuary choir wlU pre&ent a 1pectaJ C h r l 9 t m a a program. Newport Barbor Latlteraa Chard, 798 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, bu lldteduled RrVlces both Chriltmu Eve llld · Chrlalmu Day. Servicea Thunday will be at 7:30 p.m. and Friday at 10 a.m. Lutberu. Church of the Muter. 2900 Pacific View Drive, Corona del Mar, will hold two hour:i of worship Thursday evening. The special family Christmas Eve worship of 7:30 p.m. will feature the youth choir. The trad.it10111I candleUght service will be at 11 p.m., accompanied by the Senior Choir and a message by Dr. William Eller entitled, "Jesus o I Bethlehem." There wiU be 1 Christmas Day service at 10 a.m. with communion and a message "See What the Lord Has Made Known.'' HUNTINGTON BEACH· FOUNTAIN VALLEY Holy Communion will be celebra~ at Cbrbt Pmbyltriaa Cburcb, 2 O 1 1 2 Magnolia. St., Huntington Be a c h , Chriftmu Eve, Thursday, at 11 P.m. Services will include the alnging of familiar Christmas carol• and a meditation by Rev. Donald E. Roberts. A candlell&ht Communion service Will be included ln the Thursday Christmas Eve service of Fountain Va 11 e y Presbytertan Church, 9420 Talbert Ave., from 8 to 9 j>.m. An organ pre1ude will start at 7:41 p.m. Wln.t Eagle Huntington Beach High &boo! senior Robert J . Benter, II, 17, has won His Eagle Award, highest in Boy Boy &outs of America. He is currently junior assistant scoutmaster of Com· munity Methodist C h u r c h Troop 34. By JACK BROBACK. 01 ""' IHlll'I ,. .... '"" Ora,nge County Medical C e n t e r ' s ope~ation has been praised in general by the Grand Jury but some recommendations made for improvement and fear expressed over Medi-Cal financing cuts. The jury In an Interim report today says, "the Grand Jury feels that the medical cente r has an important role to play ln the future health services of the county." Some of the problems of the center are due to the substandard condition of the older buildings and poor planning when the newer buildings were constructed, the jury found. It was told that these problems wtiuld be solved with the compleUon of the remodeling and construction plans for the center. The Jury report J>raised the Center for its collection policy but recommended that a study of the fee structure and methods of aettlng fees should be undertaken. "Although the fees at the medical From Page 1 DECORATION-WINNERS . . • • • sign for the city on a Japanese theme. up at the Huntington Beach Chamber or 1\eaarreettoa LatherlD Charch, 9812 Commissioner! were urged to travel Commerce office in the Town and 'l'he congregation of the Newport Unity Hamilton Ave., ·Huntington Beach, will the oriental path by Councilman John Counlry Shopping Center: Qarch will bold a special candleliahUng bold ~~~-E · --"ce toniaht at 7:30 p.m. in the Senior ..,,u-ai.uias ve candlelight aervicea Harper who appeared Tuesday with his Mary Rogers, (1172 Softwlnd Drive; -.. •• ·""O at 7:30 p.m. Thursday 1r1d a Festival Be I Cok 20t H t· mo St C·,.: .... •a g .. a,:ii .... , 15th and· Irvine Ave., own desians tucked und6 bis arm. ver Y er, un m5 .... n .; _...., ......... '6 Worshlp at 10:30 a.m. Chrlmnu Day. "'.. Willi E"be t•-Ba La Newport Beach. Parsons also bad three orierital theme am a rg, ._ runa ne; d · to sbo the · · · Mrs. Norbert R. Murphy, 21002 Ocean ti J Epllcopal. Cluud 11>9· vta __ Faltl Latlw:ru "8rcb, 8200 Ellis Ave ., esigns ": comrrussion. Ave.; Huntington Beach Travel Agency, u; N:;ort Beach will hold three H~ Beat.hr hM scheduled June Boykin, cbatrman of th• 222 Main St.; Golden Weat Homeowners It marked the first time tllklal representatives of the U.S. government center are higher than at other hos11ltals received such a POW list directly. Tbua It in the county It should be noted that thi.! made the list the closest thing yet to a11 is partially true because the center fees official Hanoi ccounting of POWs. include professional services by house B~t the administration wasn't giving staff which is generally not true in other much impOrtance to the North hospitals," the report stated. Vietnamese move. The jury expressed concern over recent '•Pre·Christmas gamesmanship," al.Id Medi·Cal financing cuts by the state. one administration official who insisted ·~These reductions will not only severely he not be quoted by name. cut revenue to the center but may also Biggest point or contention was increase the patient load due to the whether the list was complete and !inaL neeessity of treating patlenb who were U.S. pacif ists, through whom Hanoi previously cared for In private facilities." sent earlier lists, said it was. Affiliation with UCI was praised as But U.S. officials said a quick check '1attractlng a large and competent staff showed there was no reason to believe to the center." E 1 a m p 1 e s of the list was complete and added earlier "sophisticated and advanced medical reports indicate Americans not on the list care" provided through the univen:lty· are held captive by Hanoi. hospital tie up were listed u the inttn-• "All we have is the word of North sive care, card.lac care and bum anita. Vietnamese officials," one official said. ''ReJ:labilitaUon of patients la becoming One new element in the list,-bowever, increasingly important u more critically was inclusion of the dates of death and/or ill patients survive the acute stages of capture. illness," the jury reported. "But it is Pacifist leaders of the Committee of surprising that the county has so few Liaison with Families of ·Se"lcemea beds available for this purpose." Detained in North Vietnam declared the Use of paramedical persoMel to list has all the names of prisoners the d e v e 1 o p tmRroved health c a re is Hanoi government holds. recommended. 'The training and UJe of Cora Weiss, committee chairman, 11ld lay personnel to do tasks which in New York, "The heavy news is that professionals do and which do not require it's final ." their special sk.llls w o u I d be In Paris, committee spokesman Rennie advantageous." Davis said, "There are no new names A list of recommendations tncludea: and the North Vietnamese are holding no That clinics located at tbe center be more prisoners." open some evening each week;· thi_t _ The North Vietnamese told him they patients whose doctors have 11ent them to don't know where missing u. s·. the medical cente r for special care or servicemen might be, Davis said, adding tests be referred directly to the required that they may have been lost when their clinic ; that every doctor be conversant planes were shot down. with the cost to the patient and to the Kennedy told a Washington news county of the care he recommends, and conference in announ.cing release of the that bilingual personnel {Spanish and list that Jie didn't know if it was accurate .English) be available on e.very shift. and complete, but -.added the Jetter ~hanctro-hrs-nvresMtta ' wwu·~ng=.~-- lawyer John E. Nolan Jr., contained a ! '.ke.L.Chtl5tma.s.__Em._AL ? · Christmas Eve WOf'lhfp ~t '8 and 7:30 comml6sion, urged the hiring of Parsons. wi~e :W.e.suiL-Edwards~ ~.l..-~pll'.m".'"';;:Th~ay, a family· candleli&ht--Y""Thursdarand-on-€hristmarDay··•att-~wohhile<ISktnr~to1Ursomrt1f\tfe--sQ1sa Ave., and McFadden Ave.; George aervice, highlighted by carols of the past •. tQ ~~ .~1 41 water ~arde.g ~ sboJfD.bY H~r. Paiks, 6241 Warner Ave.; Tom Neeld, and prNeftt,-.....U·bl held: At J0:30,,.m., G ~· &i...: • -._-...1. -·i Edin 'Ibe sign which pleased mo s t 1010 Main St.; Doyle Miller, 1012 Park the annual Chrtltmu clloir presentaUon, race ..,_l'lll ~1:11, -.. . ger commissioners: was a 14-fool·long timber,, St.; with numerous carols and anthems:, is Ave . .' Huntington ~ch, will hold one foot thick and two fttt high. Parsons, James Siehl. 4222 Calhoun Drive : scheduled and the "Midnight" Festival services Thursday, Chr1sl~as Eve, at 8 said the city's name would be engraved William Brasch, 5601 Heil Ave.; Bill Choral Service and a lennon will '"be -and. 11 Jt.m. Ind on Chriltmu Day at on the ifmber. At one end or the timber Borland, 15241 Vicloria Lane; Dale heard at 11 p.m."On Christmas DIY) a ·JO;:~ a.m. stood a live-foot wide oriental "gate" Hughes, 16301 Serenade Lane : Kevin ChoraJ Holy Eucharist and 1ermon will duistm~ Eve servlc:t!I will be held with a sloped roof design. Chard, 16191 Norgrove Circle; Jeff be held at 10 am. Th"-"IY at Jt•·• ol 01 ...... Lutheran Parsons estimated the cost of such a Irvine, 818 Joliet Lane; Steven Reed and o.u..,.. ..... ,,.., sign at.about $1,500. City officials plan to . George Calkin, 84.21 Snowbird Lane. Chrlltmas Eve cand1elight CommuniOn ~ Cbun:b~ 1'1'191 Newland St., Huntington place some type .<lf marker along major Marion Long1 1005 Park St : John and ts 9Cheduled Thursday at 7:3'.I p.m. at Beach, at 7 and 11 p.m. There will be no stre;ets entering Fountain VaJley, Beve rly Selbert, 1700 Pirk St.; Robert Plymnda Coqrecatloul Cbareb of services Christmas Day. Parsons can't officially start work untll Bonillas, 17711 CoWe Lane-; Richard N ............. Harbor, 3262 Broad Street, , the cily council approves bis hlr1.; .. , Martin, 17116 Edgewater Lane ; Fred ....... <-I Redeemer Ludlena Church, 16351 · "16 I I Newport Beach. The.re will 1J1L1: a specla perhaps Jan. s. Sn pp, 15771 Wi Jett Lane; Marnette· solo presentation by Mrs. Michael ~pringdale SL, Huntington Beach, will Outdoor Tree _ Rtchard and Martha Peek, 16301 Pomona Lane. Campbell, formerly • member of the have one service each Christmas Eve and Wilson, 1024 13th St. Fred Bruchwitz, 6841 Via Coronado noted a1nging group, the Doodletown Chrislmas Day. Tbe Thursday service IDdoor Tree -r Shorty Rider, 1026 13th Drive; Melvin Muslin, 211 51 Binghamton pjpers. will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the servtee St: Circle ; Fred L. Hodgkins, 1oo11 F..rklay will be •t.li.a.m...__ NeJchbortlood _Sea Aire Mobile Home Stonybrook Drive; Albert Murse, 9932 A .p.ctaJ Cbrlstmu Cindie Light Servb will be held tonight at 8 p.m. by the men;ibm Of the Oarch of Rtll&M-1 ScieDct of Newport Beach at the: Ebell Club, 515 W. Balbol Blvd. The Friday sabbath observance of Harbor Ref'orm Temple Will be in the form of a study aeulon with the topic, Hanukah and the Mat'Cabbees". It will be held at the home of Mr. and Mni. Donald Perb.1, 1911 Leeward Lane New po r t Beach. Special Cbrl!tmas Eve IU'Vices have DAILY PILOT OIUHGI: COAJ,T l'Ull.liHING OOMPAJfY Roli•rt 'N. WoM Pr•lcltl'll .... hMllMr" J11tlt ._ C1tl.y Vitt ,,.,llllftt a O.W.1 M11MfW Tl..111" k.:.ViJ !lilt!' Tis.1111• A. M1rttfil11e ,,,.,......,.. l!:fl:W Aloi Dlrll11 w.1~,.. aur.ty wnw Alltert W. 11!1• ADocllhl ,,,.., , H1111tl .. 101 .._. OMM 17•75 l11di h11)1y1f4 M11ll111 .Yirnn P.O. lox 7to, t 2'41 Ot ... Offlao l .. UMI llltflT 2tt l'"-..1 A-CoJtt MIW I ~ 'Wftl ky llrttt filnpwt ••K.111 :nn w .. 1 .. Ibo• ...,~ S.n Cir"""": SS Mor111 El c.rni.... lt•I CAPIS'l'llANO : BEACH Park, 6301 and 6241 Warner Ave. Garett Circle: Robert Jacinto, 8291 Pol k Special trophies have been awarded to Circle; James Solum, 1684:2 Baruna Lane. A candlelight and carol Christmas Eve service will be held Thuraday at 7:30 p.m. al tbrllt Tile Sltepltenl Lutheran Chuttb, Camino Capistrano and Del Gado Road, Capistrano Beach. The service features muaic, ·poetry, scriptures and meditatiori. W Putor Aclterman entitled, "Sweet LitUe Jf;iul Boy." LOS ALAMITOS A special Chanukah service will be held Friday at Tem ple Beth David of Orange County. The coocrtgation will meet at 8:15 p.m. at the Commuriity Congregational Church, 4:111 Katella. Ave., Los Alamitos. The West Orange County Temple Youth will conduct aervioes. the following people and may be picked F rom Page 1 SEATS ... urged the commission to "think big,'' on whatever it recommends; ''Think of the future and not just what money. is ii! the budget," Dick said. "In 1968 the current ·building was proposed and we said It would 110 for 10 years. It didn't fill our needs for two years ." "The first time this building was used - for the Miss Fountain Valley Pageant -.Jt was too small," Dick added. Fir1n o ·u1foxed Pollution Dumped on VP's Rug C!UCAGO (UPI) -The Fox, a mystery anUpolluUon crusader, aays 'if the U.S. Steel COrp. isn't polluting area Jakes and streams, It shouldn't mind his dumping some fluid from its drainl onto the corporaUOo's Loop office carpet. To make his point, the Fox dumped a foul·smelliJ]g fluid mass on the white carpet of the vice president ln the office building Tuesday. He said the substance came directly Crom U.S. Steel's drains ht Gary, Ind. - "Alter aJ1, thaf1 the stuff they pot In oor Jakes and streams;-" the Fox told hll only known conlldllnte, Chicago Dilly N ... 1 c:ohunnlot 'Mll:e floyko. who I idlnttfle'S 'hlnf 11 being a mild-mannered mJddlHged man from around suburban AurorL ''Th<)I ktop saying that -they aren't rtally pollutlng our water. U that's true, ti~I sbouldn't hurt his rug, right!" • be walked Into the o{flce or U.S. . Vloe President Edward l.og•lln, the Fox CIJT.Led a lar•e glass bottle under one· arm and a sign and a tiny, coffin· lhaped Im' under the olber. "Good lftemoon," he told th• rectpUonial "I am from the Fox Foundation for Conservation Education and we have an award for U.S. ·steel for their oustanding contributiorui-to our <!nvironment." The Fox tried to open the bottle. The lid stuc k. By the time the Fox had the bottle open, the receptionist had come around her desk. When he spilled the goo over. Ole carpet. some of it splashed on her: leg and dress. "l guess It was pretty messy," Royko quoted the Fox. "You see, I had put some clams 1n the water. They symbotm the destruct1on of wildlife." '111en the Fox 11lactd hls "award" sign on 1 couch. left the coffin-shaped box, slapped a "Go Fox -Fight Poll ution'' bumper sticker on the glass door and beat " hasty retreat. Police later approached the little box carefully. Logelin said they were afraid It "might be a bomb." ln!ide the miniature coffin they found a dead prrch, • dea d crayfish and a dead f~g. Alongside was a small vial or dark fluid, also laken, accordlng to the Fox. from U.S. Steel's dralns. "A prank Is one thln&," Logelin said. "But thJB is no prank.'' .. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHlllS MODE RN? Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crudely pierced stones echoed sparkling water with a beauty even our pre-- hi storic forebears apprec'iated. These forerunners of modern lewelry!erfection were v~.lued for ove an prestige. They were also believed to have protective value and supernatural properties. Uncut gems were th~refore logical tokens with which early man adome1 bim- seU and his wile for prote-:tion of both while he was huntµtg, and for assurance of favorable considera- tion by his gods . Real skill in the intricate "'ork of cutting gems and fashioning de-- slgn.s first appeared about 5,000 years ago in Persia and Babylonia. and the cra!t:smaruihip of these early workers Is evident in the in- tricate work performed in the cut· ting of designs !or amulets and !eals fashioned from hematite, jas- per, marble and rock crystal. Today, the mythical v·atues have been abandoned, but love, preslige, .Bnd ornamental beauty remain as solid modern vatu·es placed upon precious stones and gems. Lura Willia1ns Servi ces Held Funeral services were c o n d u c t e d Tuesday for Mrs. Dura L. Williams, a teacher at Sun View Elemerltary School, Huntington Beach, for seven years, who died last Saturday at the age of 62. She was buried 'at Good Shepherd Cemetery afte r .services at Smith's Mortuary Chapel. ti.trs. William s, who llved at 7682 Rhine, }luntington Beach, was a member of the Finl Methodist Church. She is survived by her husband, William : mother, Georgia West; brolher, Everett West; nephew. Ted West; and niece, Mrs. Sheryl Brandt . line that said this' was the offlCial list 'of the North Vietnamese. Nolan returned to the United States Tuesday night, but refused to talk with newsmen. Yo uth in Huntington Set for 'Happening' Young people in Huntington Beach are invited to a Christmas week happening Friendship 4, at the Recreation Center: 17th St'reet and Orange Avenue. The event is sponsored by the city's Youth Coalition CommiUee, according to YCC Chairman Barbara Nelson, who says dances are planned for Dec. 27 and 28 from 7:30 .to 11:30 p.m., with live music. ·From Omega, a wonderful ... ,,.,th,,u;. Christmas BU1lfth1r.w11eYt1r ti"me omeoa'sproud\ •time for the gift ol •n position of eml~nce Omeg•, thl1 C~rlslm•• I• It. -. In the world of! s ure, a diamond bracelet flnewalches mein11lmply\ watch 11 an opulent thatsha'l1knowyouwanted Chrlstm•\. gl"· BU1 when the best for her, And she'll i the watch Is Omeoe, auctt prob ab ly never need\ opulence 11aln1 eleg1r.c• another watch tor 1U the and permanency. Chri1tmase1 to come. 0 OMEGA ,A .. H dltlllOl\dl. UIC IGIJd eolll llflCtltt wlldl .. S7tt 11 -H ~ltll!Oflft.1•1C1111t11e Clf yll!OW to114.,00lll llflC .. let WllCfl , .......... MIO J. c. 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA ,..t!oNVENIENT TERMS l•NKAM Ell:ICAll:O-MASTElCH.Al.Gl I • ·- , 24 YEAltS IN SAME LOCAT ION PHO NE 541•]401 I I . I *'. . YOL. 63, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 32'~ . - , -~WEDNESDAY,. DECEMBER' 2f,· l970 • ; Toda)''• Fl•al .. TEN CENTS Board OKs CoUrt ·Site Purchase in Newport By JACK BROBACK Of .. DllllY P>Uet Si.tr . orange.Countf aupervisors tacky voted C to 1 to purchase a $650,000, seven-acre lite in the proposed Newport Beach Civic center for Harlxl" Judicial 'District Courts deapite doubts that the city has a firm financing program for the center. Harvey Pease, and attorney Max Stur· gis, both· of Newport Beach, objected ltrenuously to the plan. Sturgis threa.t· Couricil Ol{s Bay Ecology Use ·Studies A.resoluUon copmliting the city to pat· Uclpate in an app!ication for federal funds for a detailed ecological and land use atudy of the Upper Bay was -adopted 61 the NewpOrt -Beach City Council this week. ' The application wilt seek $200,000 in federal monies for the study, which will be conducted uqder the auspices of the Upper Newport Bay Cooperative Pl~ !Ung Project. Participating ip the project with the city are the county_of_.Qr.ange and the Irvine Company. The study will be d~ signed independent of the final outcome of the cOnJtov!,rsial Irvine Company• county land swap. ,. The swap, approved by a Superio?' Court~~judge last week, will likely be further contested in higher courts. .. . them 1llWllmoul Chai . the proJ«t lhollld .. ahead. . '\ lllrth DOt<d Iba! 11 per<eDI of ' e!Je city's empl9)'el are now bouaed in rented ipace. . A llrst motion bf BuperviJO< "11oo E. -' ' JD!!tbod of finaDdnC, with a IJMay llmll attached; dk1 not come IO a ~· Mayor Hlrlh aid tt would be JO to 11 months before-a bond· -· could be 1Ubmitted to 'the. voten . SuP<rvlior 'David L. 'Bater-warned of the adrte need for court apace in the ju. diclal diJtrlct which 'Ii -Inadequately bOUl8d iii di>wnt.own COila Mela. , Allen repeated hil mouoa; Gd it wu . . . aPJ>roved with only S•pervbor llobert Battin opposing. . , The agreement calla Jor c~ty por. chase.no!' ,of 5.26 acres· for $439,741 and. an additional 1.74 acres to be purchutd before Dec. 31, 1971 at a Iola! -of 1652.028. . The city must provide joint use of park· Ing areas for 120 cars and detention facil· 1Ue.s by Jan. 1, 1973 and site prtpal'l4 Uon 'in'cludinj: roads and uUlity aervicta byJan.1.1m. _ The cou.oty is ·Obligated to-award • construcUoD' contract for the eight-court facility by J.an. 1, 1972, 'Ibe New{Klrt Beach atte was selected tn September over a similar one at the Orange County Fairgrounds opposite Iha Costa Mesa Civic Center. That agreement Wits subject to Newpart and the count1, agreeiq oo 1erma· within 90 daj>s. · POW List Lashed Rogers Charges Propaganda Mov~ WASHINGTON (AP) -N or I h Vietnam's relea,e of a purported of~clal prisoner of war list Tuesday wa.a criticized by Secretary of State Wllllm P. Rogers today as "a contemptible maneuver ••. for propaganda purposes," He said the North Vietnamese inv ited two seaators to 111nd representatives to Paris to gain information on the prisoners of war, but added they failed lo provide any. fresh infOrmation on the f&te _of lbe captured· Americans. Representatives of Sen. Edward M, Kennedy (D-Mass.), and J. W. Fulbright ' (D-Arlt.), recelVed in Paris a listing of • names of Americans now beld, All Prosecutor Doubre View of Visiting St. Nick Tw0>year-old twins CbtlalO!Jher and Llsa KosVlc seem lo taie diHer-Tells· M'11nQl\n ent .views of. their dualivilft 'to iSa"nta Claus the othet day at FJlbiOn ~ . ._ ~~~. bad been listed unofficlally earUer. AllO named were 20 men llste4 Ut deld. and nine others who hid already ·~ released. Rogers said lbe North Vietnamese COMPLETE r>dw LIST ON 'l"AGE 3 - acknowledged.capturing and bolctinl S9I men, but the United 'Sta.tu already•knew thal The untted States bu information thaf'39' otliei'. men Were captuted"'Wbose e:18.ct fate ls uncertain and t1te North Vietnamese provided no help on ,thole. : "T~ fae\ ill that ihey'ni:...rhl~riM_ w:ltb. tbeee prl8oner11f~w.JJ: 'in..:.• ·wJ1 that's Inhuman. They're d l •er tJ.n B altenUon from their barbarlslil by this met.hod." , . "I think it was a colitem~ble · maneuver and should be recogniz'i' as auch." L . · 1be fact is, he asserted, that Uieie will continue to be uncertaint1 'as to the complet.eness of POW lists "until North Vietnam complies wJ..fh the rules of intemaUonal war and,.illows inspection of prisoner-of-war camPS." At another JK!in'l be declared: ''So we ~o~:de .=~ :~: ~ .:!c~ ~ (Sti{ PRISONERS, Pqe I) Mrs. Chotiiier 'Avaricious', / George M. Dawes, Newport Beach harbor .and tidelands administrator, Qked for the C011ncil resolution and said a similar requat will be made to the ~. Tlit -d pa pa • ..m~~i::,J:'~~~~ . ' J&laj>d'.~,. , .. . ·am·~ ·gscw~· .. " old . la~. -. eother -wafii . inceres::lii:etbil -•' y-cane i!uriqg, ~ ~ • , , parenta,.~ J4r •. 811'1 ... Tlll*nM ~'!'vtc·.o1 .1mne. . . , . 1~ . , . , •, ,-\ I I , : ~ys-Husband-- lotal I'! -1hlrd the <Oil of the ~\ ,OOll otudy, Di-<Xflaml. Dothli Iha mool · ol the city's colilribullon will be lh lhe form o/ lo-kind ....ices. In addition 41 sutmlntlat!ng the clty•s tn~ In the project, the resolution adopt,ed by the council also commits the city to sign a joint powers agreement with the two other participa:hts, 1 legal technicality required to submit the ap- plication. This would necessitate 1 change in the organization structure of the project. Dawes explained. noting that Mayor Ed Hirth to date has! been the titular head. Under the joint, pow era structure, the mayor, a member oi the County Board of. Supervisors and a representative of the Irvine Compaliy '!'ill serve as the three directOrs 0£ the project. In 1ddJtion to Hirth, actual representa· lives to project sessions have been Su· pervisor Alton Allen, representin~ the county, and William R. Ma.son, Irvine Company president. Hirth, Allen and Muon sit u the proJ- ect's policy group, overseeing reports and studies compiled by st.aft members el all three participating members. On the .Wf level, Dawes represent! the city; the county is r~ted by James Ballanger, a special projects en· gineer with the County Ha-District and the Irvine Company is represented by Richard A. ~se, the firm 's vice president for planning. The Sea Grant program. ltseU, i~ pr~ posed to investigate the impact of d~ (See EXJOLOGY Pqe !) Business ~ees Notices Out Newport Beach businessmen are now receiving not.ices that the city's new business license fee is due as of Jan. .1, Slan Hlrschberg, li<:ense oupervllon, aaid today. Hincbberg said Jicfmes, most of wbtch carry 1 $50 fee, double that of last year, may be obtained throuihollt the month'of January ..ithout penally. · He Slid that l!lY firm. !bat does not receive 1 nOtice by Jan. 4 should call hil office to make arrangements for renewal. EARLY DEADLINE FOR 'DIME' ADS AU Dime-A·Llne ads intended for publication Saturday in the DAILY PILOT must bi placed by noon Thursday this week, due to the Ouistmu Day lloliday. Ads can be placed at any DAILY PILOT o f f I c e • The same earlJ deadline situation wlll exist next week, also, because of the New Year's Day hollday. For further lnfonnation, phone the direct line to the DAILY PILOT Classtlied Advertising Depl.-!4U!11. • • i !1 ~ i LOS· ANOl:llfl· <UPi>~ ~1 • M....., had a lul for de&ib,~ ind m~r whlCb b8 bid qncler, 1 mut ol'.a peace-1ovillg JDi!lvidual' )ult u i. baa concealed bis true char'acler 1n <OUrl.· the p_.,. charged' todly al lhe Tate. :Valuable Furs, Jewelry Stolen In Newport LaBlarlca murder trial. · Deputy DiJtricl Attorney VIDceat BUgllOsl resumed bis swnmaUoo o/ the case with Manaon and the three womm ccidefeiidanli. all abeent ,·from ,'the Furs including a $6,000 full length iable courtroom. llatening to lhe proceedlnp coat and jewetr:y with a combfne<l vaiUe 1iY lOUdspeaker· in nearby holding cells. or nearly $13,000 were taken from the Bugliosl, winding up a three-day review home of 1 Newport Beach interior deco-of the tlr month trial, turned Wedneldly to !he. 1laying1 of wellthy ....,.. Leno rator sometime TuesdaJ afternoon. LaBJanea and bis wife Aoiemiry. Jerri Lofland, IOf Kin&'• Placo, called The proeecutor delctibed' l\!anlOll and 1 police about II p.m. to rtPort that thieves his hippie followers drivlnt arou'nd Los Robbed Fifth Time A Newport Beach family's home WU burg1arir.ed 'for the fifth time in 1970 Tuelc!aY, lolig gaily·wrapped Chrillmas &if ts ·piled beneath 'theit tree. . Mrs. Ruth Gan;der. of 1420 W. 8ay 'Ave., said the klls Wis-$63 and •incloded kltchenwu., jeweley, clothing and toys. had entered her home sometime during Angeles for hours that evaJ.fng "lootlng the late afternoon or evening. In addltim for 1 victim totally at random." to the coat. she reported that a broad-• "In the enUre population of the city of 1 tail fur coat valued at $1,500, • beaver million people, no one -not in ijielr . jackel worih , 11,2!0, a dlomond bracelet bomel. !heir automobiles, ony plat. - valued •t $1,500 and • gold watch valued wu safe from hia inlatlable Just for al 11.000 were also mllslnfl dealh, blood and munter,'' Buglloal Slid. other JeW<lry taken -a Ill> The proeecutor ,p!c!lured for the jury pearl ring. a .PIO -1 ·and .8'PJllllre MIDIOD goiq llone into the LaBlanci ring and a l800 .palt!iium dlilno!>d pen-h ~•--the min and wlf and dant 1n addi~on. a~ liquor .. 1uec1 OJI!O, .,.,. ~p e a1$l00 and'oeverll otber wn--' a.nsi. lelllng them not to be afraid because he n-WU riot going to hurt them. mas gifts of unknown ;value wen taken. Manson ,,..eut back to the~automobHe SANTA, TURN TO PAGE 11 Santa Clau~ is compiling bl1 list of deliveries which he'll be using Thursday night and be'S·P.aying attention to .all the requests from Jl)W1plen llOlll the Orange ColsL ' 'Today's DAll.Y PILOT carriesoa P1'9 11 some o! those requests, Which have. been for.warded' to Santa 1t the Nortb ~Pole ill plenty of time, oullide, Bugllosl aaid, and lnstrucled Charles "Tex" Wat.loll, P It r I c I.a Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten to go inside but "don't let them know you're going to kill them. "How thoughtful and considerate. Charles Manson should have a memorial built in the United Nations in New York for his considerateness. He didn't even want his 1.0mbiea to let tbem know they were going to be killed because he didn't want them to panic." B111li01l aald the LaBlancu believed Charlie for they maybe could have run ool ol the house to gel belp or tcreamed ar callocl lhe poll« or done aomelhlni. Christmas · Se·rvices Listed ·Many Orange Coast Churches S1"te Evening Rites. The holiday seuon Is a time for giving and receiVing, lor IOVing and being loved and for family and frien:t.. But is also a time of worship and spii'i.tual renew!ll. Many families will spencl at least a part of their holidays in prayer, song and fesUvity at one of the many Orange Coast churches Ind temples which h • v e scheduled apecill Chriltmu an d Hanukah ll!1'Vicel. Congregations • wblcll notified I h e DAIL y Pnnr o/ these worship houri Include: ; COSTA MESA The chilclren o/ Cbrfll Lathern Clnrell Sunday School wW present 1 Chrlltmu Eve lel'Vlcl 'l'hurlday at 7 p,m. The church ia located at 760 Victoria St., • ' ' Costa Mesa. On Chrlsbnu Day at 10 Temple ~ •• 817 W. Hamilton Sl, 1.m., the Rev. lAthar Tornow will C:O.ta Men, wW obaerve Hanukah conduct lhe worship and wW 1pell< on the '°"''""' ·Friday •venina 1Jartin1 at a Iheme "Come -God Is Beno.'' The p.m. Memllert of · the :routh groop Sellior Choir will slag. rellgloul -wU1 -the entire F1nt Cbrbffu cliardl o/ Colla M"8, ~= =.n.lhe dlrec;llon ol Rll*I '192 Victoria St, -Colla Mesa, will hold a ') Candlelight Communion S er v I c e Tbunday 117'30 p.m. Rev. James Pl<rcy ' Men Verde llnlled -Cllardl, will present lhe meditatton "The H01111i• 1701 Baker SI.,, Coota M-. baa We Pay Him." llCheduled two Clbrlltmll Eve candllllght ,,,. Pmbylerla• Cbardt ol the Cotlnan~ 2850 Fairview " Ri>a<f, a Meil, wW \preoeDt J. W. -can~ta "A Sona Unendlttl" ·Chriltm , Eve •t 11 p.m. -- oeriices. One will be h(ld for the lamlliel al 7 p.m. 1n the. eancluary with caroll, scripture r,eadiDg and a ChrJllmu llilry. There will be anoijler JOl'Vice 1111 .p.m. ' (See CllRIB'lMAS, hp I) .. ' , . CO«$t. GI Sq_ves Blidt!y's'Life,. · Wins 'V' Medal ·. Moving awl!Uy but ilnger!y,lbrough an area beavUy booby-t:opped by tbe Vlei Cong, an Orange' Coast serviceman recently saved ·the Jlfe Of a WOUnded ~ alld ;won.himself the Bronze Star~ Army ,Sgl. Rl>bert R. McDermol~ a 1915'1 graduate. of COlta Mesa's Estancia Hlllh School, bas been cited for the braw action l4t1t Oct. 11 · durin& 1 reconnatsaance miiajou, · The Bronze star· award carries the V device sllnll!'llla·nlor, according· to the -c<ineiit by Col. T. J. HaDifen, Ninth' Infantry cblel o/ staff. _.or m eirr.O r·a·n g e Co 1 s t:O:illege ~tli the oon of Mr. and Mn. Gimm W. McDermoll; oHllOI Mann Sl, Irvine. ije WU.Oil 8' million with Companyi/i, F"l'rib 'Batlalll!o. Nlnlh Infaotry, ·-the team movedl•lato ....... buvlly rlQOil with booby-,tJ:, °"' of which 1'il dttonated b71• operator~'' Shrlpail' -the .-. ... Set: Mcllehnott plclled bli. way lbroulb' tba lreachOnus field to arJOl!ier •team flolll Companr A to •rr-· ntedtca•I evacutUoa, saving tbe Cl!Ul1~1's'llfe. He1w• fecommeoded for tbe award by Capt. Glynn E, Rope,' who DOied !lit McDermott'• _pctlon Is ID lllle . with hijllool: mllltary Ideals, _.,. cndll upon lilmtelf and bis anft. Sgt, McI>ermOtt hai alao rocelvtd lbe Army Commeodation Medll during hfs Vietoam , tour 1 •t¥1 now llmJl9e1 an Infantry ,_...,,,,,_ wlth tbe i. lint Cavalry (Ainnoblle) Dlvilion. ! ' ' r Bus Hurtles Cliff ' . . SAN LUIS POl'Qll.' -(vP!) -An •overcrcwded ~:j>lanpd .,..; a n. loot clJll Tuesday, k1WJ1C tb ~~ 1$.flq· 41 ~. -' • feilerll lqln'8y pollce aa1d. .,.,. mt.st ., .. ca.-,.... .... mne' Houle aide ·Murray ll>ollmr prw1*Jf a fiery r~ to bis ~-day dlvon\" .trlai ,Tuesday ·with. a hard-lliWllr c!osiq argument in which be described Mimi Cbqtiner as "money mad", "c:bintzy" and "avarlcioul" and accused the former model of lyln& from the witness stand. "She should 'be told Chat the pUade la over,·the marcben and --ping hack and the spectatora are IOloi beet to tbelr ,endeavors/' President Nllon'a tpeeial counsel ·told Orange Comity Superior Court Judge 8amael llrelzen. · He accused both Mn. Cllotinel". 44, """ her attomey, 1!enmd lledde cif,N"ewport Bea~. of •kin& "bloOd moDty" and que1Uoned the validity • o/ Leckie'• charges, baaed on the l aw ye r ' 1 compilatJon of IK hours ol ~·work for bis clienL Olotiner, 61 ,, al9ct told Judgei Dre1zen bi ·a . aplrited summ&tion of his trial arguments that Newport Beach 1;ttorney Donald Smallwood, Mrs. Chollner•1 la~r in the early stages of the divorce liUgatlon, sbould·be .dellied ·approval by the court of bis $1,800 fee -condemned by Olotiner during the trlal as excessive, Chotlner reinlnded Judge· Dteizen that Smallwood' had filed a municipal court action 1gainst him ·for the fee. He asked the judge to confine Smallwood to that (See~Pap!) Oruge The weatherman'• Chrlstma• present to the. Oraiip eo..t Ji not keeping bis promlte of· rain for to- day. MosUy sunny sldes will pre. vall Thur,aday with temperatures Jn the .1... 608. INSmE TODAY lntertst in quality movfl•. fl greater than ever before, tav• the 'prtsUlenl '<>f Edwardo Cine·' ma Theaters,_ who'1 opening three new movie houses on the Orange Coast this week. Sei -Enttrtainment Page 18. ..... ' ... ,.... 1i ClllflrllM • I Clltdllltf "' 1 '""'"" .... _.. .. ·-.. -·""'"-, -' ·~, .. . ..... , ..... , .. . .. ,_ , .. 11· ·~ :: -. ).. -- - ' • -· • ! t DAil Y PILOT N Wtd-. Dt<..,btr IJ, 1970 C'•••t Men Named C~~plai~ts Told • -, . . ..... -l~·Ure'.ise ~ Frau-~ · ' 11iie'"1>ianp Coast men who aUea:edf1 told ~s for rou'nd-1.he..world cruiaes on wllat IJ\vesUgatot1 -aay was a nonel.ist· ent cruise ahip have been named ii1: ~~~ls -by the Or· U,e c Yllii!iiet:'"Atfuriley. ~ · .Oi.,...s aftet .. lnvestlaiUO. by Now· pan S-h police; the district attornefs lraud ICIUld and t.o.·A-ngeJes fraud off!· cerr; were Jerry Lundy, also known as Jerry ereston and J!nj Vardalis, pres!· dent of Roaring 70's Cruises Limited, :tOO W. PacUlc Coast Jfi&hway, Newport Be"acl: Gary Colvin also known as Gary West and Randolph Sclladfer. 324 Brooks St .. J:.aguna Beach. Investigators said they grabbed Schaef. rer, who ls ldenUfied ... the firm 's ollict -= .-...;.;c:;;. , (' . . . . .-. ' m._,. •• be olllhled from a Jet '"' tw'll1lli fl:om .tahltL T&y ar• sllli loot· inp; lor Lundy and .Colvin. Investlg1tor1 aald the trio collected ·mm tlwi S30rf:afrom Ora!lh County l'Uldenti Inf< ·.ma &Job.it Ci\ilio lt&rting Jan. IO·on the .. Vagabond Sun.• • Invest.igaUons cllJm there la no eucb vessel an<t Los Angeles Harbor official a have denJed that clearance was ever glv· en such a vessel Cor a departure from lhat !aclli)JJ .. Jan. .10. Also bilked, aCcordlng to the com- plai.cts. , were a number of re.aldents in· lerested Jn what Disti'ict Attorney Cecil Hicks descfl~ a.a a '1gay" cruise lo Acapulco Jan. 16, allo on the unregilo tered and unknowi1 Vagabo'hd Sun. From Pagel CHRISTMAS SERVICES • • • with choir slnging and &eripture by Rev. J>aul C. Biesmeyer. Christmu at St. John tire Divine Epllcopal Cil<rch, 200 Orqe Av~ .. Costa. Mesa, will be observed with the aMual Youth Pageant Thursday at 7 p.m. At 10:30 p.m., there will be carol singina: followed by a candlelight Christmas Eucharist at 11 p.m. ·1bere will be 1 Family Chri!tmu Eucharist Senice will be held tonight at 8 p.m. by Uie members of the Cburcb of Reuttous Science of Newport Beach at the Ebell Club, 515 W. Balboa Blvd. The Friday sabbath observance of Harbor Reform Temple will be in the form of a study session with the topic, Hai:iukah and the Maccabbees''. It will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Perkal, 1918 Leeward Lane N·ow port Beach. . EARLY CHRIST/AAS -Santa Claus flided by 500 McDonnell-Douglas Corporation's Eiearonics Di- vision employes dumped out his whole bag this week at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Inven- torying $1,250 worth of toys as others watch (from Fram Pagel DAILY l"ILOT lltff ....... left) are th~rapist Karen Johnson, Toy Drive Chair- man Jack Smelser, Chief Engineer DJck Ward·, Mal Towery RN, in charge of Ward 338 and McDonnell- Douglas secretary Bonia Peterson. Douglas W ~rkers £lanners Nix Motel On Balboa A request for a niile-unlt motel nn Balboa. Island, sought by Island resident Harvey D. Pease. has been rejected by the Newport Beach PlaMing Commil- sion. --- Residents of the arta opposed the request !or a use perinit on two Iota at the intersection of Park Avenue and Agate Street. The commission alao turned down a request by Far West Services, Inc. Thurs- day to Increase the occupancy'"Jlmit at Isadore's Restaurant, 341 Bayside Drive. Far West had sought the increase 'Without providing additional off-street parking. The commission did approve an appllcation by Leonard M. Murchison to allow live entertainment at a ttstaurant at 445 North Newport Blvd., a site that ls: within 200 !eel of a residential zone. A r~u~st by Harry V. Aoderson to add two units to his Sail Inn Motel, 2627 Newport Blvd., was also approved. There are 12 existing units al the motel. -Christmas-Day at 10 a.m. CHOTINER. • ....... lh .. --.. maneuve-In ·a11·onol Donate Money A request by the Balboa Bay Club Racquet Club to enlarge its facility on Pacific Coast Highway was approved as was a request for subdivision o! 52 acres inlO 117 singlr>-family tesidential lots in the Irvine Company's Blg Canyon project north of San Joaquin Hills Roarc:I. • · Prince of Peace Ll.tberan Church, 2987 Mesa Verde Drive, Costa Mesa, bas scheduled Christmas Eve l w i I i g h t candlelight services at 5 p.m. Thursday fOr the families. Pastor P. o. Mathew will bring the message wllh music by the youth brass and choir. A candlelight service will be held at 10:45 p.m. with carols, choir and violins and a message by Pastor A. C. Anderson. 'Ibere wUI be a festival worship Cbristmu Day at 10:30 a,m. with message by Pastor A. Tanner. NEWPORT BEACH ~Identical Ou'istmu Eve services will tie held at St Aadrew-'1 Presbytertan Church, 600 St. Andrew't Road, Newport Beach. A Vesper Service Will be held ~ 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the chW'Ch Sanctuary. At 11 p.m. Tbursdiiy;-a candlelight serviCe will be hel~ during which the Rev. Charles Dieren:field will deliver a Christmas meditation entitled "'In Hospitality." The sa6ctuary choir •ill present a speci~,,-C h r 1 s t m a s program .. tt Newpfrt Barbcny Latbena'l(;blU'di, 791 Dover Drive, Newport Beach, hu Special Christmas Eve services have been scheduled by Balbd Island United Methodl1t Church, 115 Agatt Ave., at 7 p.m. Thursday. CORONA del MAR There will •be a ~lal Christmas Eve family service Th~ay at 7 p.m. at the Corona del MAJ'.: Community Church, CongregaUonal,.. 611 Heliotrope Ave., which is ope~ to the public. . / Latllera.a Clriurcb of die Multr, 2900 Pa~/Vlew Drive, Corona del Mar, will hotd two hours of worship Thursday evening. The special family Christmas Eve worship of 7:SO p.m. will feature the youth choir. The tradiUonal candlelight service will be at 11 p.m., accompanied by-the Senior Choir and a measa'e by Or. Wf.lliam EUer-;--.-entttled; "Jesus o f ~m." There will be a Chl'istmas Day 1m'ice at 10 a.m. with ·communion and a messa1e 11See What the Lord Has Made Known." . , >'I U\1N'llN<!n!(l!, BEACH· 'FOOO.W. vALLEY method of recovering that fee. u~umu-..... ~. , ,. .. "I stand before you today deprived of and Califortlla j)ollUcs. F Yul T everythini I had but lhey want more, "She should. leave this courtroom in Ol e oys everything they can get," Choliner said. disgrace," Cbotiner told the judge. "She (Mrs. Chotiner) wants every last He read extracts from JeLters written Employes in two departments at the penny of any community funds and she is him saying 'everything you've got Is mine and to . . by Mrs. Cbotlner In which ahe McDonnell Douglas plant In HunUngton everytbjna I have is mine and to hell witb de.scribed her husband as a· ''ptiony ·old Beach don't send Chrislmas cards to one you'." ""O windbag" and "a heel and.a hypocrite.'' He refused to read aloud from another another. Chotiner reminded Judge Dreizen that letter passed to Judge Orelzen with the Instead of sj;endlng money on cards The commission postponed action on a request to utilize one acre of Eastblulf Park !or a branch of the Boys' Club ol. the Harbor Area and a joint requ'est to allow actual cona:truction of the facility. Fram Page 1 :Et:ULUGY •.• at one point durini the trial Leckie asked him how mucb cash he had on bil person. comment: "l won't read those words in and rt.amps they put it into a special toy mands for multiple uses and conserva- The grinning Chotiner commented "I public. fund. tlon in the Upper Bay," Dawes explaiMd thought be was going to make 'me "Sbe can work, it won't hurt her,'' This year lhe 650 employes in the to the council. produce my last •~ and band it to lhe ChoUner said. "She managed (before S turn 1~-• and the da ed H "d "Th __ ,,. · ·11 clerk." ., marriage), she did it, Jet her do it again. a e ="'"'"cs tar uction e sa1 , e pro~ pro1ect WI. All she wants Is a good meal 1..icket' here and instrumentalWl;I departments raised determine the feasibility and erteot of Mrs. Chotiner is demandin.ir haU of the in Newport Beach. over $2 500 coexistence possible between conserva- community property lncluding the f10,000 "There's nothing left on lhe meal d, · tion, recreation and_pth.e_r multiple water home at 1637 Lincoln Lane, Newport Mon ay. the leaders of the fund drive uses. Beach. ticket," Chotiner said. "This meat ticket handed over $1,250 in toys and clothing to ''The proi'eet results will pro\.rde' the is compleftlv punched out. I'm broke. Fa1·rv1·ew Sta'· Hos ·1a1 Th "Its ·11 Chotiner has asked Judge Drtlzen to J ~ P1 • e g1 w1 basis for the marine-oriented portion of e.zclude specific items of personal How lonj can she expect to use me as a brighten the lives of 5S boys aged 3 to 21 general plans being prepared by local meal ticket?" In ward 338 ! th ho ·1a1 property from the carving up of the o e sp1 . agenc.ies and accompanying program for Oiotiner assetl!I including the $12,000 Chotiner was assured by Leckie that The rest of the: money is being given to management of the marine enviroBo deposit he made on the home and the there will be no problem In the collection two other . institutions -$638 to the ment." paYitl~Dt of compuuU~ debta Croen ~ of his personal effect.s frorri the Lincoln Childrens Ho$pltal of oranae County and Explaining the objectives In specific total proeeeds. , La~ home. the special educational unit of Hollydale detail, o'awes said, '1The special problem Mrs. O.OUner's dema t Cbo•I•""' er Cbotiner noted in making the request h®l ;,. ParalQQ!m• --------J.>I-~y tie dclic_a1e...nature_oUbe • .llM"--~ that__!!_.,..,rw m___. .. ..__-=-==-~r -'""10'~ · --· · t di tates '" r-·•r .. 1 sup rt or next four years J~··o ·cu-u• .. • .... v .. .,.--w uvc vi "We've been doing this for five or six r1ne env1ronmen c ure ~ ... Produced on ilmost vi·oient outb .. -t fr&..t..' stay a't the house · and timow, Ol•·steal ,. J' . d J k ment for qualified and eJ:perienced ~· .cheduled ser,vtces both Christtnas Eve Holy CommlDlion wW be celebrated at t---. .. ,d~arDay. rv1.,..-'I'llm'SC!ay-ClirW-~laa C11arc11-, 2·orr2 wiU be at/f:·ao p.m.·aad lridly at 1011m. =•1 ~~• ilfuntitwtoru Be 1.eh1, , · · , . . . u Eve, 'l"hursday, at 11 p.m. The congregation of the Newport 1Jlffy Services wfll . include the singing of <hrd::will bold a special candlelilhtlna familiar Chriltmu ~aro)I and. 1 aerviai lonfghl al 7:.10 p.m. In lhe Se!llor-medftallon by Rev. Donald E. Roberts: Citizen's Building, 15th and Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. SL Jlllllea Epileoj>lll Clnirc:li, 3209 Via Lido, Newporl ·Beach, will hold three special servkes Christmas Eve. At 7 p.m. Thursday. a family caodlelight service, highlighted by carols of the past and present, will be· held. At 10:30 p.m., the annual Christmas choir presentation, with nwnerous carols and a.nthenUi:, ls schedWed and the "Midnight" Festival Choral Service and a sermon will be heard at 11 p.m. On Christmas Day, a Choral 'Holy EuChartst and sermon will be held al 10 am~ · amstmu Eve' candlelight-Communion Is scheduled Thutidey at 7;30 p.m. at Plymoalb · Coqreg•lloolll Church ol Newport Harbor, 3282 Broad Street, Newport Beach. There will be a special solo pttaentatlon by Mrs. Micbaoel Campbell. formerly a member of the noted singing group, the Doodletown Pipers. A .,..1a1 Christmas Candle Lieht DAILY PILOT OltAHGE CO.UT PUeLISHINO COMPANY Roil•ri H. w,,, J1cl1 R. Curl•y Vlc:1 p,_JC1911t 111d G1111n11 .V.W..s1tr Tho11'111' K.1.,il l!fllO~ T\0111•• A. MUl'pklM MtMOinO Editor L ,, .. , Krltf NtwPOtt 9MUI CllV adllol' __ ...... 2211 W11t l1llto1 foul1 .. 1r4 M11u119 "'"'"" r.o. lhx rt11, t266J ..__ CO.ti M ... : ,_ .. w.1 l•Y lrr.tf LAt111n1 9Mdli._m. l"ol'ftt A.-.n11e Hla'll1r'910f1 llMcft:" 0•1J hKfl loviev.l'\t San Clefntntei a ~ 11:1 C1111lllo ll .. I A ·CO!ldle!lgtit• eominunloo aervice will be. ipcluded in the Thursday Christmas Eve • service of Foantaln Va I I e y PrestJ,Jtertu t'hrclt, 9420 Talbert Ave., from a lo 9 P·"\i Mi organ prelllde will start at 7:41 p.m. Renrrectloa Lutheran Church, 9811 Hamilton Ave., Huntington Beach, will hold Cll!istmu Eve candlelight services a~ 7:30 p.m. Thursday and a Festival Worship at IO:JO a.m. Christmas Day. Faith Lutheran Cburcb, 8200 EUis Ave., Huntington Beach, has s c h e d u I e d Christmas Eve worlhfl> at 6' and 7:30 p.m. Thursday and on Christmas Day at 9:40 a.m. Crace Lutheran CbarCh, 6931 Edinger Ave., Huntington Beach, will hold services Thursdly, Clrlstmas Eve, at a and 11 p.m. and on Qristmas Day at 10: lS a.m. Christmas Eve services will be held Thursday at King of Glory Lullieran Cburdl, 17791 Newland St., Huntlniton Beach, at 7 and 11 p.m. There will be no services Christmas Day. . .. Redeemer Lutheran Church, 16351 Sprinidale St., Huntington Beach, will have one service each Christmas Eve and Christmas Day. The Thursday service will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the service Friday will be at 10 a.m. CAPISTRANO BEACH A candlelight and carol Christmas Eve service will be held Thursday at 7:30 p.m. ll Cluist Tbe Shepherd Latlleran Churcll, Camino Capistrano and Del Gado Road, Capistrano Beach. The service features mu.sic, poetry, scriptures and meditation by Pastor Ackerman entitled, "Sweet lJtUe Jesu.s Boy." . LOS ALAMITOS A special Chanukah service will be held Friday at Temple Be&b David of Orange County. 'lbl congregition will meet 1t 8:15 p.m. at the Communlly Congreiationll Church, 4111 Katella Ave., Los Alamito.s. ·The West Orange County Temp)I. "'Youth will conduct services. · Great Britain ·Owes .Bill in Cle_veland CLEVELAND (UPI) -Great Bril>in • ()MS the Cuyahoga County audltor"s of!lce $21.74. 1 ·. Tbe a"4flot'1 office Uid England Is ~ listed u the owner d the aeveland • ~ta ruldtnce ol Bruce Marshall, C.llidloa coUal here. The charae iJ for llrttt IJ&btlni repairs made la 11161. • • ... '" "'111 should be told that thoSe thlng,,oi rilmt be years now' e.zp ame ac Smelser· one ticlpation by oceanographic, ecological, the Whfte House eXecutive. · replaced." of the fw111 or1ankys,~ll_seemP.d Uke...a water quaJitv and marine ·recreational "She is not entitled to any support from good ,· •·· ba·• tbeo and It bas c ugbt ' Leckie assure·d J~dge o-•·•n lhat ue.i \;A a on e•perts · this da.y htnce," Cbo•:-Ar •~•ed. "~-• "u... t dil -·· l b f •• Jar · lolU'C -0 --Mrs. Chotiner "has no Ill will" toward sea y. '1u. s Y ar i.ue gest "Titree areas In which Sea Grant has has already collected more, much more, her husband and that she was misquoted amount we bave ever raised.,'' a recognized interest are involved in the than any court would bave aw-anted ' Id · her." , · at her press conference. proposed project," Dawes sa , naming Cit "That waa nothing to do with the 1 them as "coastal z on e management, otiner recalled that be paid his wile W .._ Amh d J bo •··· d 1· I •l:N\ divorce case," Leckie added. O.a.u8D 8888 or coasta1 zone a rawa1es an recrea 10na .-v a month from what he regard! as h th da'-Leckie told Judge Dreizen that the oceanograp Y-e u: of separation in January.of 1969 Cito N d h y "This pro1·ect ," he said, "will result ln and '750 a month from last Jttne when liners had a happy marriage until ame y ugoslavia he Iii Chotiner decided lo resume his polit!C>I • technology. management concepts, and s . ed a petition for' separate 1 · th t ·11 J d t nh nce-malntenance." , . -career after working for Richard Nil.on P annmg a w1 ea o an e a · in the Republican campaign. COLOMBO, Ceylon (AP) -Yugoslavia ment of the environment, promote bene-Added to that, he 'has st:afed, has been -has named a woman as ambassador to 1· ·a1 ul"li 1· of Up Newpor1 Bay h. "The fly In the ointmenl was h1·s ici 1 7.8 ion per is payment of nearly •'IM a month on Ceylon which has a woman premier. nd pr vi·d ga111· s lo lhe Sea Grant Pro--presidential appointment," Leckie said. a o e the Lincoln Lane mortiage and lhe Olga Strujic is the second female gram in that the data handling and settlement of "substantial" ch a r g e Judge Dreizen took the Chotiner ambassador to the island state in the management concepts Utilized at Upper account .bills created by Mrs. Chotiner. divorce case under submission and left on Jndlan Ocean. The United St ates Newport will be applicable to both tech- "Sl_ie's been driving fancy autos, vacation immediately after the trial. He's appointed Frances Willis to a similar post nical and jurisdictional P.toblems of num .. ruMmg up bills in Newport Beach and expected to rule on the issue when he shorUy after Sirimavo Bandaranalke erous other estuarine Zones alon1 the buying clothes u it they were going out returns Jan. 6. becam1t premier in 1960. coasts of the United States." of style," ChoUner said. "She didn't give .-~;:;;;::;;;~==:==--======-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'t a tinker's damn what happened to me." I ~ Ghotiner aald his wife forfeited any right to support when she refused lo go to W~shlngton with him in January of 1969, shortly after the inauguration of Presi· dept Nixon the Cbotiner'1 ~ppolntment to the White: House staff. He invoked a biblical reference to the duty to the wlfe to acCompany her husband at all times and to all places. Mrs. Cl::otiner forfeited any right to support, Chotiner said, When she held a press conference in the Santa An<t cowrty courthouse shortly before the start of the trial. In that conference Mrs. Chotlner told newsmen that she was working on a book which would expose Chotiner's influence on Preside:nt Nixon and chronicle the Fram Pagel PRISONERS. •• political objectives." Jn releasing the lists in Paris Tuesday, the North Vietnamese characterized them for tbe first time as official, although the same names had been given unofficially earlier. It marked the first time official representatives of the U.S. government received such a POW Usl directly. ThusJt made the lis~ the closest thing _yet to an official Hanoi ccountini of POWs. But the administration wasn't giving much importanct--ro the N·o rt b Vietnamese move. ''Pre-Oiristmas gamesmanship," said one adminlstraUon officlal who lnsisttd be hot be quoted by name. Biggest point of contentlon was whether the u,t was complete and final U.S. pacifists, through whom Hanoi sent earller lists, said ft was. · But U.S. officials said a quick check showed there wu no reason to believe the list was complete and added earlier reports lndlcale Americans not on the list are held captive by Hanoi. ''AU we have is the word of North Vietnamese otHclab," one official said. One: new element in the Usl, however, was Jocluslon of the dates of death and/or caipturL •• .... GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMrHllU • WW-. MODERN? Thousands or years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crudely pierced stones echoed sparkling water with a beauty even our pre- historic forebears appreciated. These forerunners of modem lewelry perfection were valued for ove and prestige. 'Ibey were aJso believed to have prolective value and supernatural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tokens with.which early man adorne1 him- self and .. bis wife-for prottY .. tion of both while he was hunting, and for alturance (If favorable considera· Uon by his gods. Real skill in the intricate work of cutting gems and fashioning de- !!igns first appeared about 5,000 years ago in Persia and Babylonia. and the craftsmanship of these early worken is evident in the ln· tricate work performed in the cut-tini of designs for amulets and 'seaJS fa!!hloned from hematite, jas- per, marble and rock crystal. 11 Today, the mythical values have been aNndoned , but JOVf; prestige, and ornamental Mauty remain as solid modem values placed upon precious sto'll's and aems. 1 • From o~~ga, . wonderful •ardcnlli<ou•.' Christmas autnlhl ... wnMr time omea-'•pniud • tlmt tOJ tha girt of an posrtlon of eminence Omega, thlt Cbrl•tmu 11 It.,... In the world or Sure, • diamond bracel•t f!na walches means slmpf1 welch 11 an opulent thetshe'llknowyouwanted, Christmas gln. But when lhe best for her. And 1he'll 1 the witch II Omega, 11Jch probably never need I opulence g1ins elegance another witch fer all th9 ' ind pe'm1nency. Christmases to come. 0 OMEGA A-21dlem1~d1,111( 10!1d eolf lr!Ktl.t ••tell •• 1121 •-tt dl .... CNl •. 1,l(whLt• or pllow 1011111 DOI' llflO.· /.t wolf;fl ,,,.,, ,,, •• 15~ J. c. 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA COHVEHllNT TERMS IAHkAM ERICARO-MASTERCHA.llGI! 24 YlARS IN $AME LOCATION rMONE 141-3401 .. I I I , I , I , I > . i . · . • ' I 228 Vloladou y.ifdntsdaf, Otcembtr 23. 1970 DAILY Pl~~~ • 1'11 Lal Deariltg • I _f;pveriiment Cit.es . . ' CIA Blamed in Ma ss acre -4 Qil Companies t. --~ Defector 'Not Beaten On Vessel' ·j30STON (UPll -The skipper of the Coast Guard cutter . Vigilant aaid Tuesday Lithuanian defector Sima• ... Kud.irka was not beaten by RUS!ian seamen while he was aboard the American vessel. "I went up to the defector just before he le~t the Vigilant, Cmdr. Ralph W. Eustia said in a copyrighted story in the Boston Globe. "At that time be was completely bound and restrained but he certainly was not bloodied or beaten. "There was no bloOO that Dight." EU&til was given a n administrative reprimand for h1s action and was re- assigned. The board of inquiry investigating K u d i r k a ' s attempted defection said he interpreted his o r d e r s ''authorizing the use or Tieci!SSary force so as to pennit fore ign natiooa1!1 to exercise authority on board a Coast Guard fessel. ·~ "The reprimand d o e s n ' t surprise me," Eustis said. "I knew what was coming." Eustis told the board he personally dld not see any violenct aboanl the Vigilant. Rep. Rivers Beginning To Recover 2 Picasso Pictures Stolen From Museum NEW YORK (UPI) -Tuo Picasso masterpieces valued at $110,000 have been stolen from the Guggenheim Museum . One was done in ink and 'the other was a watercolor. Both were about the size or a large Cbrislmaa card. MU&eum officials reported the thefts Tuesday. The museum was closed to the general public Monday. Police . said they were stymied by the theft. Thomas Messer. muxum director, aald the works, titled "Wpman with Open Fan" and ''Tlble Before the Window" were "lesser Picassos." "Table Before the Window," a watercolor and pencil work, done in 1922, measured 5~ by 4y, inches. "Woman with Open Fan," which Picano inked in 1906, mea~ 6o/• by .cy, inches and waa valued at $40,000. The other work was valued by police at $70,000. Another Picasso work, a 1Wl life oil painting of flowers valued at $60,000, was stolen Monday night from t be Phoenix Art Muaewn. New York Police Slayer Handed Death Sentence UTICA, N.Y. (UPI) - Martin Fitzpatrick, convicted of killing two policemen, was sentenced to die ln the electric chair early today, the first man in New York State to face the death penalty in .even years. An all-male jury handed down the Sentence in Oneida County court after almost 14 hours of deliberatiom, Judge John J. Walsh oet Sept. 7, 1971 for imJl:O$ition of the sentence. RARE DEATH PENALTY Martm Fitrpatrick "You a!'i the jury have convicted me of four counts of murder and It you believe l am guilty you must vote the death penalty," said the 34- year~ld Fitzpatrick, delivering hia own summation. ~ O'L -tkt. "ft:t..u.a : ';\:. -~k~~- \lJ~~ \wt. \i)\)j ~to./y\. \) WllTCLIPIJ PL.U.A OPIN nn. 'ttl t ttMi1 C..,.._ IU NDIT-12 TO I Vl1it Owr lo11tl~u1 tf th1 N1wp1rt.1 l1a HOLIDAY SALE OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED ... MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY "'1UST BE SOLD BUY NOW AND SAVI • lST QUALITY NAME iRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT FROM THE LARGE$T CARPET IN- VENTOltY IN THE WE~T • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE •ALL LABOR UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED CAIOGAPAll 211)1 1..,,.. •• ., JU .21>4 Vfll¥9 ,........, .. < ....... ""' Mwttl. • Sl'otrlllllfl "'' IN!! rf911t MAWTMOIMI 12'2' .......... 11'4. 67'-1221 Sell °""'° "-,. 11 !.fW'I • '""'°" ''" .. "°""''*"' 1 ... .WISTCOYIMA 25261.WM ... Aft. -11 s.. ..,..,.,. ,,.,,, .. <• ~' )fllaUJto•(.,.,. ..... - llOUTWOOD 111S•.Y-A-. 6"-7415 , Yin• ........ """"-' ..-... ~ . • bow tliii ctA bu opuated In SoutbealtAlla. ~ Clarence J. ~Dawldns. • A i.ntaUve b'lal date of Feb. wei-, clw1ln& the CIA carried out terrorist activities indudlnl "uaassinationa: and ::.:np" prior r. th • al My Lai, submitle<l testimony from 62 soldiers _.,,.the "shooting, ~g. •"'MhMUOO .w:t torJYre of Vfft!wmMe dvllians pursuant to the dlrecto< of the Unile<l Stites Anny." IS wu let for Torres an4 anothir oo Jan. 25 tor Smith; who are among ab: Amerlcan soldlm _!nclu<llng lat Lt. William L. Calley Jr., now OD trial;-facingirlal or have bfeU brought to trial ln COlllledlo!r with lily Lal. Only S. Sgt. David Mitchell, 30, SI. Francinille. La. has compleled ht. trial. HJ WU acquitted. LL Calley'a trial at rt. The three alleged C I A agenll 111bpoenaed w e r e ldentlfled by . Weltqer as Jamet B. May, Senior~lser in Quang Ngal Province where My Lai 111 located, Robert Ram"'a)e, D l rector of ''Operation Pboenil:," the code name fer the CIA 's alleged mtmm In Vietnam, and Capt. Benning, Ga. and • preliminary bearing here to determine if bia immediate superior, Cat. ~t (;. superior, Capt. Ernest L. trial, are both In recess. AT LAST • • • . LAD IES SUEI:JE BOOTS HAVE ARRI VED WB TCLIFF PLUA 141-1684 1000'1 OF IEMIANTS LAlll I % SMAU 80 /1 m ~ %1 SAV.S SAVINGS ~;;' •TO •• ,,, UPTO •••• :" IMNG IOOM. DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM. BEDROOMS CARS, ETC. UtH TOii i-MIASUllMllITTI ALL CARPETERIA STORES , CLOSED CHR.STMAS DAY •·. ~:~·~~~ .. ~.~2~! -MAMl llTAIL ........... .... AUllDS -fXl2 ........... 39H AVAi.AiU 100% (Otlf. fibn\ftll Nylon-l.tra H«ivy-CWIUKI nTAIL .......... ..... SAN FIAllCISCO MIW IAI TORRANCE 4236 Artttl• 11¥4. J42"6t6 J • ••• ' ·' • • • --~ --""'""·-I \ --r .. , < 1 ,,. ••II DAILY P ILOT EDITORL\L P AGE i . -• • r As the OIU Xear .En·d·s , __ ' • • • -- • ' , 'J ........ :1 1 ·~ ..... "-~-·--'-';'11: ---. -~ --' •Already in the midst of .m0re !Wious Issues th~n 'i"'c!ty-fathers accepted• their ruling and adjourned to any other city around, New,por\ Beach was blessed' With_ , the New YeJ.r J . knowing_ thit' as~confused as tbin's atill another quandary Moriday ·night. ·· are today, 19'!1 will probably be "Will's•:---· City At\orney Tully seymou.r. asked to rule whether: a petitioned election would be legal or nbt: told the city • council it iSt probably illegal but must be scl}eduled any· way. Th·e•Clttzens Coordlna11n~-commlttee-llled the pe- titions: They would force initiative electtons on a re. quest to rescind the existing' a~reement with the state , on a portion of the Pacific Coast Highway and on a charter amendment to require future votes before any new a~reements can be signed. Seymour said U the city orders 'lhe ~le~t~_!, .it !s wide open for suits by either taxpaye.rs (on alleged iUe· gal expenditures .ol funds tor the election) ~r the state . (for unilate~all;:)reillcin'g tli!_.\:[>tjl"!~l):';.;. __ f, -'. _ . In. adctillon. 11 woulll ·~ .. Pr;vP<irtY . owners ·act1hg' Under;.µie . as~ul\tptjon , 11 '. , ~e,)\'.'11'.y I 1l'"1iJ~f\li>. bµill ,as agreed. cOuHI als'o be coos1deretfto ~e a(gneved'. The opinio.n that the elections IJ¥lY be i.1 l1~ g al ,1 , prompted 1nowhere near the. 'sufprise frOh'I council mere . as did the. recommendilti,011-·they~·neve.tf.btless m~st ac't '.: ~ to conduct them. · 1., 'i' f, None of the councifmen; saw· Cit ,lo challeMe the ', ·· rulin,e:. But it did prompt some mutterings, including a ;,.• vulgar reference from the council's leading anti-free· \vay spokesman, as he praised the Ji!:roup that sponsored the petitions. ' , The opinion perhaps did not olfer a clear·cut solu· lion for the, councilmen, but few we.re naive enouJilh to expect that it would. It did manage to add Curlher complications to the frazzled freeway question itseU, as well as t.he bag· fut of critical issues already bountifully hanging onto this perplexing and perplexed community. 1 Was Action ,Too Ha~ty? The Newport Beach-City1 Council'Moildav-niibtae-- llarted from a lonJl!:·Standin"'~, plan to zone the 200-acfe Lockheed industrial property for a combined otfice- commercial:industrial complex. ,. . • · Jn doina-so, the ·council eliminated a sia-nificant piece of what bas lon.e: ·been intended as 8 future all· · induSlrial area,· an area desiined to provide a 15roaden· ed tax base. · . , cr'he city was .e:iven to understand that t~e ~ ~ust lje.compleled .thia month. . -.-• . ... The 'pJ:Of!\i•e:or· revepue«from the-ins~ ... ~•lop. • me~t.-estilji~led aJ. i\P tq . .,oQ,OOQ;a .year before l,98Q - made the proposal very attractive. • ,~ ,tfhere1wer.e;, ho~eve.r,, questions which sflould ·have • ¢.v-en the councU ppase. ·· . · . ";City,.P:_lann~r ~urence~Wilson admitt~ ~ere, was nol,suffidient stuay ..on th8~)9n.1?·rana-e economlc impact of tbe development. A de~ped· analysis of 'traffic• pat- te rns hild~'not beeii.'made. TOO. there was th"e 1.arge, un- answered question of .how much the development will increase pressure for continued and expanded ii;irJine service and business jet flights at Orange·County air· part. This in the face of-Newport's official 'position- restated' Monaay night -that jet operatio~s should be baMed at thl! airport. -· Newport Beach can only wait to see if. as predicted. other property owners now descend on the city with simjlar development requests. l .. -• • ;§. • ·' ·~,..-~ However, in this season of peace and good will, with all ·attention focused on what is good in lhe world, . The council must now answer this Question: How can it turn down similar requests after approvin2 this one? N ~~ ~-~-~~ JMJ611f 6Erro S,EE_ ~I~ AT 'l.ISrt . . ' - Protectionism Is a Fo_rm of SocialiSm t .-..., '" I International lraae i! one of'the dul est 1ubjects it is possible to write aboul -unless the reader happens to make his li ving in an industry that is threaten· ed by fore.ign competition. Dear Gloomy Gus: ' oO the Well-intenUoned citizens of ltvine who are encouraging low· income housing for their .future city realize .. the frustrations for children 1.n the midst or afnut!nCe'? Sucfl a poverty island would be .more like an animal cage to 1how • ·Gil <19 iqa!lolo. .-while 1arvu;, 'l ~. -·OOuclenctS. ' • ! -N. N. G. 'hlll h iture ...n.cn .......... viewi. , tiff .,, l't tltr ......... """"' ...... s....i • .,_ "' -................. Dellt' .. 1 .... ' 01ae of Last Chances to. Build .a Different Future Irvine People Want Right to Vote To the Editor: • On October 21. you · ran an editorial titled ''In the Giant's Shadow.'' The editorial was about the creation of the new 'City of Irvine; and how the leaders of the Council of the Communities of I . de ea· uftderll&andillg. You ' LetteT.t frc»n Teader.t ore welcome. s~:ted :~'the·bigge.f.Jlrobtem they Normall11 writer.t .should convey their had facing them wu lhe Irvine me.ssages in 300 words ar less. The .. i.~.1 right to co-ndense letters to fit !pact & county lhat·seems to pride itself on the rights of the people. At-·least· 101000 of-,these . people are finding out that the llag,waving, individual rights image of this county is a myth and. applicable only when the governmental officials, of the county feel it is in their best interest, not in the people's best interest. JANET P. BURTON Company's ,iNNt\'ow.. 011 eliminate libel rese"'ed. All! let. It has now become apparent the urs mu.st include signature .and mail· S la C · · H II possibility that taxes might be reduced was not considered. So if you don't "buy·• the tinseled city · hall colossus w i t h' a price tag ol conservatively $10 million you tht taxpayers only "drop" $800,000. The stench is so strong that even th• ordinary. non-complaining silent majority oannot be expected to accept it. ' HARVEY .D. PEASE Good Clti.:ens h l p bjggest problem .f~~g thei:n is merely ing addresi, but names may be with-tenc nt it II a getting the chance for therr people to held on request if sufficient reason To the Editor: To Ule Editor : • I I I. I I The 'qllestion of •·free trade" v.ersia H..---~~sm IS an old and badly· scarred,, ~debate , in the U.S. Theoretical. Jy, the ''free · tra. ders'' have the best of it; but practicaJly., the "pi'otecti.onistS" have usually won'. ' have the right to vote. i.$ 0 ren Poetr will not be pub· "there's • aomethl.ng rotten in The League or Women Voters of r----;;;::-;:::;;;::-;:;-::;::---:;-;::;:-;:::::--;;:;;,;-:;;;:;:;;;~;:;;;:;;:;:;:;-;;;;:;::;;--ji;ii~,f."'-'-""-'-'~'.t!..~:r...!!!'.!.~c.t:::;:;_,.~fliit.:--:=:::.::::::::::!!:.....:.:'..:.:.~~:::...~tange-coas cent1y-mml11~elf-tt;~-~~-• like textiles. or shoes, or such coril-.THE ORANGE COl/NTY Planning Bul there's a big }tench around the · finance drive in the communities of If \\'e are genuinely a capitalistic coun- 1.ry, and ~eve ip freJ cpmpetition, then we must admit that other countries - have the r ight to impart goods here· and sell lt at the lowest possible price. We can't be in favor or competition just for our own courltry. . WHERE THE RUB comes is I.ha! lhe C1>St of labor in many other nations is far Jower than in ours. A textile worker in Japan, for instance, gets less than $100 a month, and an American producer can't compete with these low labor costs when his O\\'n emp!oyes make many times more. This is the argument of "protec· Uonism," We have to keep the countriell that pay "coolie wages·• from un-. clercutting our own high standard of Jiving. It makes se nse, as· far as it goes. but Ht.is argument doesn't go far enough, as almost all economists agree. - THE FACT OF THE matter is that 1 nation like the lJ .S. should not be wasting its energy and manpower in the ·production· ol low-eff icienc)' goods modities. We are a high-efficien cy Depai'tment has recOmmended that Newport Beach citi~ .Costa Mesa, Laguna Beach. Laguna Hills society, and sbtluld devote our industrial • LAF,CO deny the people-the right to vote. flrsl ran up agains{ the people c(Jrvine It emanates trom· a contract which and Newport Beach. The efforts of our efforts to producing the goods we can beeause they want to do the planning for when trying to rezone McDonnel1-00uglas obligates the .taxpal"1'1. pf Newport Beoch members who worked on the drive beS:t Produce a;t the faS)est rate for the area and have grand ideas of properties· .has said publicly that UJe to cough up about J$800,000 to build a resulted in outstanding Support from the lowest cost. becoming "Big Brother ' ' and leaders or the CCI ''should b6 "detention center,''-1Ubterranean cor-these areas. •Low efficiency societies should ' be ,-&Upergove.rnment to the people or Irvine. investigated,'' and so it•goes. ridor, and parking JOt for the Orange The league a! a non,partisan organiza. allowed to take over the production '.l'he planning that they have done thus ~ar County court facilities at Fashion Island. tion relies on theie communities for of goods that best suits their economy in Orange County prompted the following THE LEA DERS of ilie proposed. City of This was the action t~en by the Newport funds to help finance its work to build and ~ ~ wqe-..sc,ale .. JI .we want qu~te in Bu.sinef'.S \Vee~ .<9-70) "Orailie, Irvine are a group of.dedicated men who Beach CiW, Countil. Cou•Cilman Howard a better informed electorate by providing to see capitaHsm and free competitl'on €.ounty, Cah forn1a. a l.1vmg example,-:of realize that here is ' one ·of the last ROgers strenuOusly objected and voted jactual information on issues and can-spre~ over the world, we canool insist , the horror of. non-plann1~. • • chances anywhere to build a different "No.'' 1 didates. that' other t:;ountries be penaJIZe<f~ ror The city of Santa Ana llas opposed th.e future and to compe11sate for the errors · The agreement thu"s "locked in" the We,.1lake this means to publicly th link sending their goods over here and selling .. cityhood of lrVine and even fel.t 1~ of the p11st. These men are under the city to the county, win, lose, or draw. those organizations and citizens who havi it at the cheapest price they can. necessary to spend tax mooey to htre a control o{ ·no political p ~ r t y , · t invested in our efforts :to build good 1 • New York firm to tell them how to stop governmental agency, or the Jrvine ·THEN, OBVIOUSLY with tongue .In citizenship. . h I I I . S d D 6 t C Th h t nl lO cheek, vafious couricilmen urged the HELENE K. HOLLINGSWOR~• TO ''PROTECT'' certain industrie!I l e peop e 0 rvine. un ay, ec. · a ompany. ey ave 0 answer 0 Y other increments of the city hall complex MRS GA'~) against foreign competition is a form an open meeting. Carl Thornto n, city their own conscience i:tnd1 realize' the be put to vote of the ·'*'-ple! What kind ol I . · . of stft te socialism, no matter what else .manager of Santa Ana. said publicly that possibilities of a new city, which· has stinking option is this.. _ President it may be. called. It is a subsidy to the people of Irvine had no right to vote potential beyond anything now in Instead of an O?eJL and forthright inefficiency, because we should not be on the question. He said his city was here America, as you pointed out in October. presentation to the citizens of 1 he wasling our·. resources in turning out first and they would make the decisions. But, most of all they realize that the community, a form of blackmail is goods that we can buy cheaper else-people of Irvine have a right to decide resorted to. Either vote the bonds or wtiere. Both p o 11 t i c a I I y and ' A POLITICAL advisor in Irvine itself, their own destiny· stand to lose $tK)0,000 of your tax dollars. economJcally, "protectionism" is a slap wh6 has run the campaigns of several The fact rthat1lhe city '.does not have the in the face to world unity and to our elected officials I.itely, has said that the NONE OF THEM is a politician and cash is or no consequence. Don 't worry, prolesse~creeq oJ free competition. CCI and the l)tople's movement must be how Sad it is that all the surrounding The plaq,,js to sell some city-owned assets It '®es nOl i ven make good sense to crushed, that they are dangerous. He' Has-political agencies seemed frightened of -land-and get enough dough. our short-term self-interest, for if other the officials he has elected convinced that them and determined to stop everything countries are limited in selling their goods they should be the ones that will control they have ·tried to do. 1 find it AND THE REASONING is: it won't here, they will not have the funds to the cityhood of Irvine. particularly frightening that this type of cost the taxpayers nothln ', no hQw, buy our commodities, and world trade The president of Azimuth Equities who thing is happening in Orange County . • • Because taxes will not be incteased. The will shrink perllQusly. Our rejection of an open market wOuld only conUrJTl the Communists'. aceusation that we manipulate capitalism for our own e~s. Holiday Gesture To the Editor: I noticed today while parking my car In Newport Beach that the park\ng meters had been covered and tied with red ribbon. It was a very joyrul sight to see, and I think the city of Newport Beach is to be commended for such a nice holiday gesture. GREGORY TOPPER .... ~ Mark Twain's Foresight Frauds Against Trusting InvestQrs The message ls finally beginning to get through: .,,,..... ·~ . ·• ".:.. 'Their value as wildlife range Is ended, with deer herds decimated or scattered, fishing -streams ruined , and game bird habitat bulldozed or burned. Fire danger is increased. Natural watercours· es are damaged. Erosion is multiplied. When big development corporations use the "cha ttel rights" theory to scoop up huge profits -and then leave the results to be paid by hapless investors and tax. poor counties -the time has come to call a halt . There Ls much scholarly bickering in f\.1axwell Geismar·s new criflca\ work "Mark Twain: An Amer ican Prophet." Ge ismar is a V.'ilty and arl iculate bickerer as he lays into the standard f\.fark Twain critical oithodoxy. The old genlleman, dead these 60 years, must be laughing somewhere in Satanic pastures at the hulabaloo about his life, work and later strOflg opinions on both sexual and ~io-pollUcal matters, For it is these last named that Geismar dwells upon at some length in this pew contribution to the Mark Twain legend-ideas and attitudes which. he • iows UlJ. ·have been largely swept under the criti~ carpet heretofore. lT IS GEISMAR'S etnl ral roint that Twain's literary power wai; enhanced in his lalcr yearir, r•ther than diminished as Twain specialists ha vt argued since Van \\')•ck Brooks' c ontro ve r si aJ ·in· terpretation. "The or~ea_I of Mark Twain." aet a whole style of Twain crilicitim. Geismar suggests thal Twain's bitter 10Ci11I cr1Uci$1Tl or the l/nlttd States has been repres~ or avolcied by scholars ••precilel,y because lt ls so bold, to brilliant, 11tlric1l and prophetic." Twain lndl'td bec•me inore pagan, .a.tanlc and wvqe ~ Ms social comment. Jn what •ppem lllr• to be alll103t a N.,. Left 1U11lylio II .Ille ..,II«, Gtismar 'inlilll that ...,. hlf i.~· ~ • • l.. .. --.. future of despondency and the cenlral Oaws in American civilization. THERE IS ALWAYS rootn for argu· menl in a reboiling o( old bones-in the in• tcrests of critical broth, and Geismar'1 work is al once controverslali and fun to read beca,use il is a sprightly, logical in- terpretation written with verve, almost recklessly at times, yet eloquently; ahd bristling with an erudite wrangling-with other schola rs. For instance. Geismar takes OT1 not On· ly Van \Vyck Brooks, bµl the !ale Bernard DeVoto. Leslie J<~iedler, &dmUnd Wilson and· Justin l<oplan, I a t e s t biograph~r of Twain t"Mr. CleJJinlk'and Mark Twain"). ,This Geismar rcjecJs l\S an overly Fr€Iudian interpretation of the n1an and artist that suggested Twain's radical social commentary was some sort of <J~viant behavto(, or expression ' of penon..S neurosiS. ' ~ll\JCKLE8£RllV FINN" "T w a I n's sin&te great cladk? Nonsense, Ceismar snfilU.-hl s Whole;dreer was a classic, including his later, generally ignored period or 5aVage SOCiaJ tommentairy, /1H•11Pt01·~flO). -,,- " · .... ' ....... Giant "recreational" or "second home'' subdivisions are a clear ·Shd present dan- ger to a society increasingly concerned ;ibout a quality environment, and about livability . Far from being great tax windfalls for lqca l govern1nents. they are instead '"tax payers' time bombs," • that will cost counties, school district. and o\her1 far more in the Icing run ~ ·ih'eY will pay in. , : They are, with perhaps a few -e~cet> tiona, frauds againsl those who tru$.Ungly Invest in them. naively (and greedily) ex· peeling Lhe "land boom" to keep inc'feas- ifig1 the price of land when, in fact, it tiever will, never Can, be deVeloptd , -. THEY HAvE EA R'N ED con· siderable sums for the original owneri; ·I who sOld out at perhap~ twk.'e the a~ sessed true cash' valuation of the proper· tyi. and huge sums rOr the promoters Y:ho have 1nade proHts ranging up. · "'"ar<I from 300 percent on their invest- ment, only to leave the second, small· plot buyer• 1l9lding the sac.k. lucky i! they get back JO cents OT1 the dollar. They take land out or Its most produc- tive and voluabie uses -whether they be agricultural, or range: or wildlife for· age areas. or even desert -and chop It up Into bleak, tiny plots tha t destroy it .lor ~.Y productive use in the foreseeable futufe. · Tiii MIM.AGI • 11. plllq tlvWb r . . -' t;, In California, where the Legislature Is And to what end? Do the trusting souls now holding hearings on tough new Jaws who have put their life savings into a governing such kinds of speculative de-plot or land ever build their "d r e a m homes"? A few try. Some lonely lit lie vel opmelits. The message is g e t t i n g buildings have been built, a few trailers through to counties, th.iit, once bedazzled and mobile homes sit on their bleak little by tpe thought of higher tax assessments, plots. But it is rare when the happy. have since ·been laced w.ith tax foreclos. ' communal, c~efree life promised . m sures running at 33 percent or more. · glowing ads ever materializes, The message is getting through in land· poor Hawaii, where 'jsubdivi sions" have been carved' out of the middle of lava fields , with ·no ho~ of adequate water or sanitary or utility services. Al, rT l\f~ Y BE tbe message ill begin- ning to gt t through in southern Oregon -ih the Rogue and Klamath Basins - which have come under the eye of the lond speculators as the threat of tougher new laws Jooms in Cttlitomia, Such speculations have bee n gobbling up Ca lifornia Land at a rate or up to 300,000 ac·rei> pet' year. and ror every "IJW honie" or j,reqeatloral" or "sec· O'\' home" development that has been sur.ess:lul. a dozen olhers stand as bar. re . moriumcnts to mnn's cupidity, greed, na vete and lack of conscience and hon- THE ANGLO-SAXON common lay.' .·and the statUte'.s in the united States' derived from it. are .. ~sed in llarge part on ,the theory that a man1s home is his castle, and that no one has a rig~t to fofbid any- one to do · anything he wants with hi~ lan'd. , But the ~alizalion is beginning to dawn' on people that what people do with their own land, If not subject to some s o TI or reasonable regulation, can have ~ dis- ~strous e.fte<:t on the right! or the public at larae:. ls land a chattel o;:··a resource? Can society afford to pennit huge acreages of lar\d, even privately-owned land. to be turned to usea that are desl.l'Uctive o( so- cial values? esty. r.IORE AND l\tORE these questions ;:irt ~ be!ftg asked, and more aind more the qt speculative dev~IOP.mtnls answer is coming up thal the public in· ha. rv~ old ranCh~, ~ _ terest~ tbe 80Cial utility or the land, tends are-for acricullurll 11$.. to OUlwei&b -· chaUel ri&b!J. ' ' This means, in practical terms. strong public support for those planning com- missions, co''\UltY commissioners and leg. islators WhQ, at Jong last. are daring to speak up in the public interest and say "no" to corporate developers who worship, the dollar and dop't care a tink· er's.flam about the land they. have raped. Medford (Ore.) Moll Tribue --~- Wednesday, Dt>C. 23, 1970 Tht editorial pa gt o! thr. Daily Pilot seekt to inforn1 and st.Ina. ulate reade rs by prescnthig this ne1ospa per'1 ophlfoni and com· mt nta'l on topics of ititl'rest and signi/iconce, by providi11g a forum fo r the e.tJ)ressio-n of o'ur---tt0dvs'-opi1'io111. ond bfl prese?1ting-the divern vitw- po lnu of' i11/orm.td observer• 011d spokesmen on topics of th• d<lv. • Robeit N. Weed , Publi sher ' •, .... . ... . . -• • Ir: • . . Today'• .Fm.I r 1f;osta ·Mesa • EDIIIOlt · ' I I VOL 63, NO. ~01. 3 SECTIONS, 32 PA6ES . ' . . ORANGE COUNT'(, CADFoRNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBE~ 23, ,1970 TEN CENTS ' Council Neg;itiye 'On~New · Ret1refile11t Towers · A MW retirement skyscraper rising 11 I ltorie9 hlto the heavens next door to CO.ta Mesa's Bethel Towers is n"ow in the I planning at.age, but the church behind it will need bel@ from the federal Fvemment. 1 Negotiations ·involving an Anaheim Baptist congregation and Costa' Mesa · ... . _______ P.laiming Director William Dunn have I 1 begun" but the outlook today is anything bu't prom'ising. ( Bethel TQwers, at· 666 W. 19th St., is a I . . , $3,5 miUloa -oriml Ille nodt.i •· ...... Ji--el·-. Costa ll4lf lupo,.n.. -·: . 1lwm todly that ---eo..truci.d. wilJI ledml 'lld to ~ J. Fears, of Anaheim, believes bocbii funds wider a nqnprofit, c:Upor.tioft have found a· way to· circumvent u:s. createil by Ille Soutiiem Calllomla l)eportm<nt ol HOUl!ng al\d . Urllln Assembly of <loci ·Olurdle&. 't b'< ~ laws against payin( 1"°'! mammoth retirement· nwWion • Pl)'I .no toes. . . ~ _ cily taKes. •-' · ''They aay they bive a way pt '!be adjactnt .no.unit 11-r..~C.lu.r e around 'tbll tu thing," Dunn remarktld, envt.iooed by ... Anljle)m Bfpljll but otber clly olliclola are d«Jbtllil. - church """1d be ldrntl<al In clellp-Ille fean WU amuchable•tbls "*1>lliJ. same arcbllect la lnvolvtd -!'flld. utilbe Wliile no one ,..med certaln j111t ~!I · tbe · iJ Baptist churclies Jn Anaheim II motlvatln& the low-Income, b o u 1 l n I do~ '"lbey'W got ieveral hurdles to ,croas. none ol thennm-">te, but the blQesl ls the council,". Diwm etplained1oday. He emi>!!.oihw! • that noOUnl !annal, such aa variaos aiipllcatlcm or bhleprtnls and feeJ ban been Died at tl1!s ata1e. "'!'.bey 1te wlllill& to pay local laxes and 'understand the problem wllh Bethel Towen," he 8dded. . Dunn's flrst'move .iu tO·be 'a poll ol Costa· Mesa City· Council members for their reactJoria, aD of whicti are nepUve to varying de~s. : . . · "I' still have the ·same feellnga I always did," declared C.OWX:Uman Alvin L. Pinkley. "Tbey should pay taus. the ,.., everytio(fy else does. • The1 cit.liens shouldn't pay for them. Unlesis we can be assured they're goin( lo'pay·I'm ap1Dlt it." -. Clty Manager Fred Sorubal clarir)ft the contention at coot to the local laJ]>ayer by pointing out 15,000 lot polico and fire services incurred by Bethel• Towers in its two years of existence. Sewage system improvements, para and recreation facilitte., atreet lighting fees and a variety of other 1e:rvices paid out of the general fund are. a direct result. ol U,e HU!Hinanced unit houalng 338 (See TOWER, P11e 2) POW· List .. Lashed I I \ 17 ' Rogers Charges Propaganda Move -~~ , EARLY<HRISTMAJ -Santa Cl@UI aided by ilOll le!!) mu.r.ntitJ[iN.fJOi!i!i('!'OY-'brjvetl\ilr-. McDonnell-Douglas Corporation's Electronics Di· · · rrian J"'*-SU.O!Ser, Cldef-alliOr Dick Wart!. MAI vision employes dumped out his whole bag lhis~eek Tow_ory RN, in charge of Ward 3311 and McDonnell- -at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. Inven-Douglas secretary BOnia Peterson. torying $1,250 worth of toys as others watch (from -- Douglas Workers Donate Money Fpr Yule Toy~\ Employes in two departments at the McDonnell Douglas plant in Huntington Beach don 't send Christmas cards to one another. Jnstead of spending money on cards and atamps they put it into a special toy fund. This r.ear the 650 employes in the Saturn electronics and the data reduction and Instrumentation departments raised over $2,500. Monday, the leaders of the fund drive handed over $1,250 in toys and clothlng to Falrvie~ State Hospital. The gifts will brighten the lives of 55 boys aged 3 to 21 ln. ward 338 of the hospital. The ~st of the money ls being given to two other institutions -$638 to the Childrens Hospital of Orange County and the special educational unit of Hollydale ~I In Paramount. · "We've been doing f.his for five or shi: years now," explained Jack Smelser, one of the fund organizers. ''It seemed like a good idea back then and it has caught on steadily. nu. Is by far the largest ui>ount we have ever raised." ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Tate Trial-- Prosecutor Says Manson 'Had a Lust for Death' LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charte. Mamon had a lust for death, blood and murder which he hJd under a mask of a peace-loving individual just as he has concealed his true character in court, the prosecutor charged today at the Tate- LaBianea murder trial Deputy Dmrid Attorney Vlnc:ellt Bugllosl resumed his summation of the cue with Manaon and the three women codefendants all abeent from the courtrooin, li.'1eoing lo tbe proceedlnp by loudspeaker In nOarby holding ce\JL BugUosi, winding up a three-day review of the sit month trlal, tumec! Wed:neld1y to the slayings of wealthy grocer Leno La.Bianca add · his wile ..Rosemary. Th~ proaecufur desaibed Manson and his hippie followers driving around Los Angeles for hours that evening "looking for a victim totally at random." "In the entire population of the city of 7 million piop'"li, no ooe -not 1n tbeir homes, their automablles, any p1lce: - was safe· from,hll !nlOtiable hat for death, blood llld munls, • Buct1ost aald. The prosecutor '"'10'1 !Or· tbe jury Manson goinl lioae 111\o tbe LalJlaca home, ty\JUI: up the man and wife and telling theni nOt to be afraid becauae he was not going to hurt them. Manson went back to the automobile rulside, Bugliool sa1a, and instructed Qlarles "Tex!' Watson, Patricia Krenwlnket and Leslie Van Houten to go inside but "don't let them tnoryou'r• &oing to kill them. . "How thoughtful and conaklente. Charles Manson ,should have a memorial built 1n tbe United NaUons in New York for his considerateness. He didn't even want bis ZOJRbies to let them know they were ~J:': to be killed beowe he didn't want-to panic." '"Bugiiosl said the LaBlancas believed Charlie for they maybe could have nm out Of the house to get help or screamed or called the police or done something. "At .the LaBiancu he wore the same mast-he ·tw worn here. in court -just a pea9"'1ovlng individual. And then he mated out to get his bloodthlnty robolo aod aend them ia to kHI." The defendants .... barred from fUrther ......., of the trial after wild ICerlCll before.the jury in which one even llniQied with the prooecutor. WASHINGTON (AP) -North Vietnam's release of a purported official prisoner of war list Tut:lday wu crlUclzed•by Secretary of Slate ·Willlm P. Rogers today u "a contemptible manedver .. .for propaganda purposes." He said tile North Vietnamese invited two senators to send representatives to Paris to gain information on the prisoners of war, but added they tailed to provide any fresh information on the fate of tb"e captured Americans. Reprtsentatives of Sen. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mua.), and J. W. Fulbrlgbt (0-Ark.), received in Paris a llstina: of 139 names of Americans oow beld. All ' . By JACK BROBACI. °'""' .. "' ........... Onnge County superviaots.today voted 4 to 1 to purchase a f650,0DO, 1evewcre site in the proposed Newport Belch Civic Center for Harbor Judicial Dllltrlct CourtJ despite doubts thlt the city bu· 1 firm financing program for the center. Harvey Pease and attorney M.u Stur· gla, both of Newport Beach, object<d strenuously to the plan. ~tari[, threat. ened a recall against the 111 councilmen who voted for the aereement with the county. Pease said financing the center, a •12 million project Jn the Jrvine. Company's Newport Center, should be .voted on by the dtllens in a referendum before the· COUJ'lty took action. Newport Mayor :Ed Hirth said 30 coun- cil votes had been taken· on the Jaue over the past two years w:Uh moat of them unanimous that the project should go ahead. Hirth noted that 3& percent cit the city'• employes are now housed in rented space. A first motion by Supervisor Alton E. Alle11 that the county approve the con- tract died !or lack of a second. A motion by Supervisor William Hir· !teln that approval of the agreement bt PoS.tponed until lhe city established a method of financing, with a 120-day limit attached, did not come to a vote. Mayor Hirth said It would be 10 to 11 months before a. bond issue could be submitted to the voters. Supervisor David L.' Baker warned of the acute need for court space in the Ju· dicial district which is now inadequately housed in downtown Costa Mesa. Allen repeated his motion, and il was apprnved with . only Supervlsor Robert BatUa opposing. -·The-agreement calls for county pur. chase now of 5.26 acres for $4.19,749 and an addltklnal 1.74 acres to be purclwed before Dtc. 31; 1'71 at a total cost of '662.1128. Robbed Fifth Time A Newport Beach family's home was burglarized for the fifth time in 1970 Tuesday, losing gaily wrapped Christmas gifts piled beneath their tree. Christmas Services Listed Mn. Rulh Garnier, of 1420 W. Bay Ave., uid the loss was $63. and Included kitchenware, jewelry, clothing and toys, EARLY DEADLINE FOR 'DIME' ADS All Dime-A-Line ads intended for publication Saturday in the DAILY PILOT mu.st be placed by noon Thursday this week_, due to the Christmas Day holiday. - Ads can be plactd at any DAILY PILOT o f r I c e . The same early deadline situation will exist next week. also, because ol the New Year 's Day holiday. For Jurther tnlonnaHon, phone Ille dir<ct line lo tbe DAILY PILOT Clauifoed Adver\laiQg Dtpt. MS-Im. ' _· ... L Many Orange c~t Churches Sime Evening Rites The holiday,......, II a time lor'Clvtog and re«ivlng, for loving end betn& loved and for family and fHendl, But'la ~ a time of worship and spiritual renewa1. Many familleS will sperid 1t least a part of their holidays in prayer, aoog Ind festivity at one of the many Orance c.out churchea and . temples ~hich ha v e scheduled spiclal Christmu a n d Hanukah services. 1•r Congr<gatlcm whlda . llOUllod ~h e DAILY PILOT of th.,. wOrlbtp boufs Include: COSTA MESA The cblldren 01 C1ri11 Loku c..dt Sunday School will pmeot a Cllrlaimu Eve >ervlce Thundoy al 7 p.m. The cliurcb ls located 1t '180 Victoria St., . ' Colla Mesa. On Chrlaimas Day at ,10 1.m.1 the Rev. Lothar · Tornow w~ cooduct the worship and wlD speak en tLe theme "Come -Qod .Ls Here." The Senior Choir will •in(. ' . .. • Temple Sbarol, 617 W. Hamilton St., Costa Mesa, wlD observo Hanllkah aervlc:tJ Friday tVening starting 1t I p.m. Members of tbe youth srouP tellglous achooll will conduct tbe entire mice under the direction of Rablil , GlrlOD Goo&rfani ) • bad been listed unofficially earlier. ~ namea-were. 20 men lilted as dead and nine 'others who had· · already t been r<leosed. Rocers · aald the-Nortb-Vie- . COMPLETE l!OW ·. LIST ON l'AGE.3 acknowledged capturing and holding-nil men,;but tbe United·Sta~.aJreadY knew that. Tbe Ulllted Stales bas Jnlonnation that 39· Other: men were Captured· who¥ exact fate ,.is uncertain and tbe North Vietn1meae.provided no help on thole. ''.The:lact ~ that·~·'!;:~~ wWl tbe:l!!e .Prisoner&-ot-_war Jn 1~ way ..... " . . .. . .. . VALOR IN VIET!UM ' '. Sft .. Bob Mc09rm0tt ' 1 Coast GI Saves Buddy's Life, Wins 'V' Medal Moving swiftly but gingerly ~ 1n area heavily booby-trapped by tbe Viet Cong, an Orange Coast serviceman recently saved the life of a wounded · buddy and won hlmseli the Bronze.Star. Army Sgt. Robert R. McDermott. a 1967 gr&duate of Costa Mesa'1 E.staocl.a High Scbool, bas been cited for the brave action last Oct. 11 during a recoMaiuance' mission. The Brome Star award carries the V device signifying valor, according lo 'tbe announcement by Col. T. J. Hanifen, Ninth Infantry chief ,of llafl. ' . ' The f9nner Orange Coast College student is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenll W. Mclleniiott, of 18101 MlllJll St., Irvine. He 1".U on 1 misllon with Company A. ·Fourth Battalion, Ninth Infantry, when the team moved into an area be1vtly rigged with booby-traps, one of whJcb was detonated by a radio operator. , Shrapnel wrecked the rll4jlo, ao 5t1. Mcllerinott picked his way thnJ\111). lbe treac11erom· field to another team from Company A to anange. med l c i l evaaJIUon, saving the cuualty11-Ufe. S.4.NTA , TURN . ,TO.PAPE ·~f: ~.; . SaM a. Is .compllllig his ' Hat Of • deUftrift Whlcb be11 be mink 'lbunday night end be'• payiRI lttentldO.tO all Ibo requelll frtm youngsters oloq Ille Orange Coaat, · • Today's DAILY PILOT cartles on hit 11-ol-reqoesll, --been forwvded to· -at 1lio llortb Pole In pleu!J; of time" . ~ ' 1 ,_ • that's inhuman. They're di v e r t I n g attention from their barbarism by this method." "I think it was a contemptible maneuver and should be recognized u Mich." . The fact is, be Userted, that there will continue to be unttrtainty as to the completenw o! POW lists "UDtil North Vietnam complies with the rules of international war and allows inspection ol prisoner-Of-war camps." At another point be declared: "So we conclude they're using the POW issue in a very inhuman way to advance tbeit (See PlllllONERS, Posge ZI Mrs. Chotiner By TOM BARLEY Of ftle hi,., Plllt lltff White HoUJe aide Murray Cbotlner proviiled a fiery flnisb to his si.J:-day divorce trial'Tuesday with a hard-hitting ctoalna argument in which he described Mimi ·Cbotiner as "money mad". "chintiy" and "avaricious" and accused the former modei of lying from the witness stand. "She ahould be told that the parade is over, the marchers and bantts are going back and the sJ)ectators are going back to their endeavors," President Nb:on's spec1.µ counsel told Orange County Superior Court Judge Samuel Dreizen. He accused both Mrs. Chotincr, 44, and her attorney, Bernard Leckie of Newport Belch, of aeeking "blood money" and quesUoned the validity of Leckie's charges, b!lsed on the I a w y e r ' 1 ·compilation o1 64 hours of pretrial work for his client. Cbotiner, 61,, also told Judge Dreizen in a spirited summation of his trial arguments that Newport Beach attorney Donald Smallwood, Mrs. Cbotiner's l Jawyer in the early stages of the divorce litigation, should be denied approval by the court of his $1,800 fee -condemned by (l)oUner during the trial as excessive. Chotiner reminded Judge Dreizen that Smallwood bad filed a municipal court (See CllOTINER, Page Z) Oruge Coas t Weather 'Ibe weatherman's Christmas · present to the Or~ge Coast is not keeping his promise of rain for ~ day. Mostly sunny sides will pre- vall Thursday with temperatures Jn the low 60s. INSIDE TODAY Interest fn qualtt11 movies b greater than ever before, says the preaidlnt of Edward# Cine· ma Theaters, who's opening three new movie houses on. the Orange Coo.st thb week. See Entertainment, Page 18. Ooly -1 ~ CHRISTMAS • -,----- W~IUAW, (UPI) -J.o-i.el ~ the longt!Jne Prime Mln<er-or POiand, was ousted ·in a coverninent ahakeup today. !'121ol-l<i ... Anny .- and OCXllQllllCS exper~ WU nomloaled lo ~ Cyranklewlci. E!ecUOD WU From ,Poge J • T9W~R .... po"""' ~u ... of Iba .W.mbly ol Gad Olurch enclave that broUlht Bethel ~ lo COiia Mau prom!Jed faithfully untU final llagea that they would cootrlbo ute 1aJ: .. ppori. "But we hive not received one cent from them," remarka Councilman Pinkley. Government law forbids It, Mayor Robert M. Wilson notes, and CoWlCilman Wllllam L. St. Clair von a veto vote OP the newest towen: propouJ WlW that l«w .. chanced. BURDEN RAPPED St Clair aalil:lba gov-t ii willing to finance such projects -conceding they . are needed -but criticizes the •ttendant taX burden on local citizens. "When they do Ul1I it makes it very dlffiCult for a community to open Ill arms and w!lllngly accept the added 19ad," he explained. "UnW the federal government realize! ti cannot load Iii problerm off ooto local qµun., I lhall be against allowing any more to be constructed." -<'.'.~~ only way I'd buy It ii il they 'P"lll" the federal law. Wbat the 119nproflt corporaUoo .or the architect promtaei means notbJna:," St. Clair concluded. . Mayor WlllOI! uld llUclt church motivation cannot be questioned from the viewpoint of the Cbr1ltlan de•lre for 1ood, but must be tempered with th• rea!JU.. of llCU!ar rules. •••we've been dealiqg wJtb Cbriltlan p>ople who mean ... u and their word ii riot to be doubted," Aid the tm;yor,~but the fine print in federal law eliminates tbeir promises ... .. lhe 300-plus elderly who live there are "'!'nderflll cll!Mnl and we are Siad lo hove them, but they make a tttmenilous demand on city facWties. It's ju.at a matter of money to &ive the proper services." WGUE JNvOLVED 1---JayM.Jl'jiloa,aald lhl<.NaUonal.LeallJO of CU.let bu been involved for several years In promotion methods of supj>Ort s¥Ch federal problem-projecf.s. 1'Revenue sharing ii an example," he explained. I •1Wben the federal government allocates money for UllJ type of project they attach a lot of otrlnp. to ll .And we're getting more and more problem. of co11Ce1tr1Unc this many people in one ,;pot," St. Clair, who attended a recent · UC Irvine seminar on federal low<ost houain&, ai..o ,... another unfair aspect "They talk of thl! u a nonprofit project for the church, but they are building 1t a low rate of lntel'fft using federaJ money. When it ii paid-for, it becomes the property of the church." "Really mw, what la the difference between th1a tnd · privately owned ap·artment bou&inc?," tie questioned. Planning Director Dwm said the property involved ii owned by Howard B. Lawson, of Newport Beach, and zoned for commercial use. Steps in beglnnlnC a new Towers development would include zone height· limit and parking. requirement excepUoo permit.o. Depending on council reeepUon, fonn1J tonaideraUon bef«e tbe Costa Mesa Planning Commtulon could begin In February. • DAILY PILOT OltAH~I! COAST PUILtlltlMO CDMPANY Robtrt N. WtN Prald111I W ...... llW J11lt l. Ctitl'lty Vite PRJldMt tM Otntrtl M111ew lUMu K'"'1 ·-Th•'"" A. M.,,\ru ,,_ ........... c..11 .. 0..... tio w .. t ••Y s1r .. 1 M•ifi111 Ad4rn1: P.O. In 1160, fZ'Z' ...... _ N~ "9cll1 2211 w..t ..... ~ a...i-ltldl1 m ,.... ""-Hwltlr!f* INdt: 1117J lttdl .......... llMI C*-'ti *'S Ntrt~ ·11 C-... lt•I 0011J1i41Nd automat!C. · '!'ht 1ovatllftlOllt:Clii11J111 -· like ~ . In the !Op Communist Party leoderohlp Sllndoy -were.a dit<ct outtrowth of the "Baltlc,foochioia last weet. ~ · ~·1 !'Letter of llffllnaUoo" was pr91ated lo a mtellni of the Polteb parllamut.. • . A '1ett.er 'of resignaUon al~ came from President Marian Spychalsld, who had - been temovocl ·f""" the Party'• ·ruling ".ol!tboUo ~-aloog with bil ~ fi!t!>d. former piity leader Wladyllaw . Gomulka. . · · ·Parl.Y Finl Secre!arl' Edward Giere!:, the !Ml!. who lllC<eeded Gomulka, , immedlattly took the floor an d · nominated Cyrankiewiei for t h e presidency .;.. a l1rgely oerem<>111al job. Nomination in this cue wa1 considered tantamount to election. Cyrankiewlcz, 59, had been premier since 1947, except for two years as Deputy Premier in 1952-54. A large, bald, jovial man, he is known as boil\ a lov~·Qf good' living and as a relatively liberal moderating influence on the Pollsh reatme. It was believed to be the first time .Poland haa chani:ed 1 o v er n m e n t s between elections. The P a r I i a m e n t (SEJM) and therefore the government had been reelected only last year for a four·year term. cyrutiewlcz, althou1h popular here, had angered workers ·by calling the Baltic demonstrators "hooligans and anarch- ists." ' Glt':f~ caUed for a tw-year freeze on Poliah food prices. But thll did not mean a revocation of the 20 percent lncreaae in food prices announced Dec. 13 -the increue which touched off the riotl that brought down Gomulka alld Cyraiiklewlez. · · .FJ'Om P.age J CHOTINER. • • act!OI} against him for the fee. He uked 1-hii ju(lge to cocrine Smallwood to that method of recovering that fee. DAILY !'IL.OT lllft l'llt• Yuletide S1'opping, Costa Jtlesa-St11le Despite gloomy skies overhead which have pre- vailed in recent days, a little rain obviously bas failed to c)_im shopping enthusiasm for visitors and homefolk alike In Costa Mesa. Bumper-to-bumper parking conditiona prevailed at South Coast Plaza shopping center. 1 I From Page I CHRISTMAS SERVJCES •.• with choir singing and scripture by Rev. Paul C. Blesmeyer. Christmas at SL Job tbt Divine Epllcopal Church, 2043 Orange Ave., Costa Mesa, will be observed with the annual Youth Pageant Thursday at 7 p.m. At 10:30 P.m., there will be carol singing followed by a Candlelight Ctu-istmas Eucharist at 11 p.m: There will ·be ·a FamllY Christmas Eucharll!lt Christmas Day at 10 a.m. Prlnce "of Peace Lutheran Church, 2987 Meaa Verde Drtve, Costa Mesi, has scheduled Christmas Eve t w i I i g h t candlelight se rvices at S p.m. Thursday for the ·families. P!stor P. G. Mathew ronn of .. study 1esslon with the ·topic, Hanukah and the Maetabbeet". It will t>e held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Perkal, lt18 Leeward Lant N e w po r t Beach. Special Christmas Eve services have been scheduled by Balboa lllud United Metbodl1t Cllardl, 116 Agate Ave., at 7 p.m. Thursday. 1 CORONA del MAR There will be a special Chrirtmas Eve family aervice Thursd~ at 7 p.m. at the Corona del Mar Community Church, Congregational, 611 Heliotrope Ave., which ls open to the public. Hamllton Ave., Huntlnrton Beach, will hold Christmas Ev• candlelight tervlces at 7:30 p.m. Thurtd1y and a Festival Worship 1t 10:)0 a.m. Chrlatmu Day. Fata Laku Churcll, 82:00 Ellil Ave., Huntington Beach, hu 1 c h e du I e d Christmas Eye worahlp 1t a and 7:30 p.m. 1bursd1y and on Chriltrnu Day at 9:40 a.m . Grace Lailaeru Cburcb, 1931 Edinger Ave., Huntin(tcn -Beach, will bold 1ervlcts Thursday, Chrlltmas Eve, at 8 1nd 1~ p.m. 1nd on Christmas Day at 10:15 a.m. Christmu Eve 1ervice1 will be held Thursday at · Kbl.1 of ~Glory Lutheran Chureb, 17791 Newland St., Huntln,ton Beach, at 7 and 11 p.m. There will be ao 1trvlce1 Chrilbnas Day. p,..m Page J PRISONERS . • • ',pdwc.t objectives." In releasing the llsts in Par:is Tuesday, the North VJetoamese characteriied them foe tbe !!rot lime u ettlc:lol, allhoucb the uma p.m.i bad beia 11"1' unolftcl11Jy earlier. It marked the~ ftrst time official repruentallves of the U.S. government received IUCh a POW list directly. 1bus It made the list the closest thing yet to an officlll Hanoi ccounting or POW!. But the admlnistratloo wasn't 1ivin4 much. im~rtance to the N o t t b VIetnamese move. ''Pre-Christmas 1amesmanship,'' 11id ene administration official who in.slste4 be not be quoted by name. Biggest point of contention was whether the list was complete and final U.S. pacifists, through whom H1noJ aenl earlier lists, said It wu. But U.S. officials 1ald a quiet c}leclt 1howed there was no reason to bellevt the list was complete and added earlier{' reports indicate Americans not on the list are held captive ~y Hanoi. "All we have Is the word of North Vietnamese officials," one official said. One new element in tbe list, however, w1s inclusion of the dates of death and/ot capture. Pacifist leaders of the Comm11tff of Liaison with Families of Servicemen Detained In North Vietnam declared the Jlat has all the names of prlaoners tbe Hanoi government bolds. Cora Weiss, committee chairman, 11ld In New York, "'Ibe heavy new1 J1 that it'• final." In Paris, committee 1poketm1n Rtnnlt Davi.I _said, "There ire no new namet and the North Vietnamese are boldlfll n1 more prisoners." 'l'he North Vietnamese told him they don't know where miaaln& U. S ~ aervicemeo might be, Davis said, addlni that they may have been lost when lbelr planea wtre shot down. Kennedy told a Washington lleWI conference in announcing releaae of the list that he didn't know lf It WU ICCUl'ltl and complete, but added the letter handed hi1 representative, Washiqton lawyer John E. Nolan Jr., contained a line that 1ald this wu the official lilt of the North VletDamese. Vandals Wreck Yule Decoration Contest Entry will bring the message with music by the youth brass and choir. A candlelight service will be held at 10:45 p.m. with Latberu Ch11rcb of dte Muter, 2900 Pacific View Drive, Corona'del Mar, will hold two houn of wo'rshlp Thursday evenin1. The special funily Christmas Eve worship of 7:30 p.m. will feature the youth choir. The traditional candlelight service will be at 11 p.m., accompanied carols, cholr .and vlollitJ od i messaif: by the Senior Cbolr and a message by Dr. Candidate for.Jhe 1ickest-ot'·the-seuea c1tegory Is the vandal or gang of them who deatroyed the flrlt-prize Costa Mesa Redeemer Latheraa Cburch, 18351 Christmas Decor1tloa Contest entry late Sprln&dale St, Huntington Beach, will Monday. • ·~1 llta:ad -before ~ today deprJved of everythlna I hid but they want more, everythln('thercan ~" Cbotlner utit_ "She (Mn. Cbotlner) wanil every !all P,elll1Y of any community fundl ud obe ii A)1q ~·mi' .. tot JI mine and ev~·l bava ll lllln> and to bell with ~Pastor.A. C. 4nderson.,'l'bere will be a William Eller entitled, "Jesus o f iesUval ~orshlp, Christ~ Day al .li:lO~ ~thlehetit •• e~-.• Chr.ist~a a.m. with menage by Pastor A. Tanner. . Day serv ce at ~.o a.m. with communion have one service each Christmas Eve and Nlght-llghted and animated Peanuts Chr.iitmu-Day :rtiui&day-aetvlC*-comic-strip-eharacters--meticulousty·butlt --- you :" - - Cbotlner .remlnded J"411 Drelzen ,lhli at Bn8 piltat during the Ufa! i.ckle siked hJm bow much ca•b he bad on bis person. ·ne grlnn!ng ChoUner commented, "I thouibt he wu 1olng to make me NEWPoftT BEACH and a mt1111e See What &he Lord Hu M_ade Known." pr~ce )DY 1Ut· fC-and band It to the clE1k.11 Mn. Chqtiner 11 damfndlna: half of the ·community property Including the '70,000 home at 1637 Lincoln Lane, Newport Beach. .. Chotlner baa uked Judge Dreizen to exclude specific It.ems of pel'IOllal property from the carving up of the . Cbotloer .,..ii 1ncludlng the ftl,000 depo1lt be made on the home 1nd the paymeot of community debt.o from the total proceeds. Mn. OM>Uner11 demand that Cbotiner pay her iUpport for the next four years produced 1n almoet violent outburst Imm the White House executive. "She is nqt eotlUed to ,soy support from this day he.nee," Cbotiner argued. "She has already collected more, much more, ~~~· aa.Y, court wocald have awarded Chotiner recalled that he paid his wife $500 ·a month from what he regards u the date of separaUon in January of 1969 and $750 a month from last June when she filed a peUUon for seper1t1 maintenance. Added to that, he has slated, has been his payment of nearly $300 a month on the LlncC>ln Lane mortgafie Ind the settlement of "substantial ' c h a r g e aceount bills created by Mrs. ChoUner. "She's been driving fancy autos, running up bUl1 in Newport Beach and buying clothes as it they were going out of style," ChoUner said. "She didn't &ive a tinker's damn what.bappeoed to me ." Chotlner Aid his wife forfeited any right tG support when she refuaed to go to Washington wiUI him in January of 1969, shorUy after the JnauguraUon-of Pres!· dent Nixon the Chotl{lel''I appointment to the White House staff. He irivoked a blbllcaJ reference to the duty to the wife • w accompany her husband at all tlmes and to all places. Mrs. Cbotlner forfeited any right to support, ChoUner said, when she held a press conference in the Santa Ana county courtho!ll! shortly before tbe 1tart of the trial. JdenUcal Christmas Eve services wlll be . held at St. A.ndrew '1 Prea:byterlan Charch, 600 St. Andrew'• Road, Newport Beach. A-Vetper Service will be held at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the church Sanctuary. At ll p.m. Thur1day, a candlelight aervice will be held, during which the Rev. Cbarlea Dierenfleld· will deliver ... a Chrisbt\as meditation . enUUed "Iri Hoapitaijty.11 The sanctuary choir will present . a apecial Ch~ ls t ma 1 program. Newport Barbor Lul.beru Ourcb, 798 Dover Drive , Newport Beach, hu scheduled services both Christmas Eve and Chriltmls Day. Services Thursday will be at 7:30 p.m. and Friday at 10 a.m. The congregation of the Newport Unity Church will hold a specJ1I candlelidlUng serV!ee tonight at 7:30 p.m. in the Senior Citize n's Bµilding, lSlh and Irvine Ave., Newport Beach. St. Jame1 Episcopal Church, 3209 Via Lido, Newport Be~ch~ will hold three special services . Chrirtmas , Eve. At 7 p.m. Thursday, a family candlelight service, hlghllghted by carols of the pa.st and present, will be held. At 10:30 p.m., · the aMual Cbrlstmas choir presentaUon, wllh numerous carols and anthen\s, Is scheduled and the "Midnight" FeaUval Choral Service and a sermon wW be heard at 11 p.m. On Christmas Day, a Choral Holy Eucharist and aennon will be held at 10 am. Chriabnu Eve candlell&ht Communion I! 1cheduled Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at Plymouth Congre1at1enal Cbllrcb or Newport . Harbor, 3182 Broad· Strett,· Newport Beach. There will be a special solo presentation by Mn. Michie! Campbell, formerly a member of the noted singing group, the Doodletown Pipers. · A special Christmas Candle Li1Zht Service will be held toniglit at I p.m. by the member• of the Chureb ol Relltlov, &fence of Newoort Beach al the Ebell Club, 51S W. Balboa Blvd. In that conference itrs. Chotiner told The Frid1y 11ab:bath obSfi08nce of newsmen tbat 1he was working o.n a book Barbor Reform Temple will be I the which would expose ChoUner'a inOuenct -n on President .NiJ:oo and chronicle the behlnd·lhHcenu maneuvers in n1Uonal and C&llfomla pollUcs. "She should leave this courtroom in disgrace," Cbotiner told the Judge. He read eJ:tracts from letters written tG him by fl.frs. Chotiner in which she de&crlbed her husband a1 L "phony old windbag" and "a hetl and a hypocrite." !fe refused to re1d 1loud from another Jetter passed to Judge Drtl1en with Ule comment: "J won't re1d those wordl ln publk:. . -..She can work, It won't hurt her,"· ~hotiner 11Jd. "She manaaed (before marrl•it), the dJd It, let her do It 1galn. At! .iie Wlllll fl a aOod meal tJclt:et here In Newpor\ lleach. ·Biirglpr Strips -. Costa Mesa Site A burglar broke Into a COsla Mesa construction shack Tuesday but the value of Lhe only loot taken is debatable. Gerald P. Heffern, owner of Heffern Construction dhnpany, Garden Grove, said all that was missing from the facility at 8SI Baker St., was a calendar fealurtna nude females. "No value," wrote reportlnl Off.leer P11 t Alexander, which ousht to make hill wife b1ppy, ' HUNTINGTON BEAcfi. FOUNTAIN VAIJ.EY Holy Commun ion will be celebrated al Christ Presbyterian Church, 2 O I I 2 Magnolia St., Huntington Be a c h , Christmas Eve, Thursday, at ti p.m. Services will include the singing or familiar Christmas carols and a meditation by Rev. Donald E. Roberts. A candlelight Communion service will ·be included In the Thursday Christmas Eve service of Fountain · V • 11 e y Presbyterian Church, 9420 Talbert Ave., from 8 to 9 p.m. An organ prelude will start at 7:45 p.m. RelW'l'teUon Lutheran Cburclt, 9812 1 , 1 l GEM TALK .:•-t " t· ·' , •• -'if-I.~ TODAY by J. C. HUMPHRID MODERN? Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman &lood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mint length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crudely pierced stones echoed sparkling \vater with a beauty even our pr~ historic forebears appreciated. These forerunners of modern l·ewelry perfection were valued for ove and prestige. They were also believed to have protective value and supernatural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tokens with which early man adorne1 him· ielf and his wife for prote-..tion of boih while he was hunting, and for assurance of favorable considera- llo~ by bis gods. Real skill in the intricate work of cutting g~s and fashioning d~ signs first appeared about 5,000 years ago in Persi~ and Babylonia.. and the craftsmanship of thes~ early workers Is evident in the in· tricate work performed in the cut- t ing of designs · for amulets and s eals fashioned from hematite, ias· per, marble and rock crystal. Today, the .mythical values h~ve been abandoned, but love, presuge, and ornamental beauty remaltl as solid mbdem. values placed upon precious stone1 1!1d gems. will be held at 7:30 p.m. and the service by James R. Jordan, 18, were wrecked Friday will be at 10 1.m. only hours after the judging. CAPISTRANO BEACH ' A candlelight and carol Chrlltmu Eve service will be held ThurSday at 7:30 p.m. at Christ The Shepherd Lutheran Church, Camino Capistrano and Del Gado Road, Capistrano Beach. The service features music, poetry, 1criptureS and meditation by Pastor Ackerman entitled, "Sweet Little Jesus Boy ." LOS ALAMITOS A special Chanukah service will be held Friday at Temple Betb David of Orange County. The coogregation ¥{ill meet 1t 8:15 p.m. at the Community Congregational Church, 4111 Kat.ella Ave., Los Alamitos. The We!t Orange County Temple . Youth will conduct services. Jordan, of 2269 Santa Ana Ave., w11 annoyed but not discouraged by the vandalism, which can still be repaired for others to enjoy. The display created over the past several years by the Orange Coast College student, son of City Councilm111 and Mrs. Willard T. Jordan, was also nominated In the Forty Miles of Christmas Smiles competition. His novel tableau barely 11urvlved driving wind and slashing rain up until the judging by Mr. and Mn;. John Leonhardt, Mr. and Mrl!I. Jafnea Garvey and Mr. and Mrs. Bill Smithey. Judges used a one to five-point raUnr system based on originality, completion, rellg!OU! or secular holiday theme, lighting, animation and overall balance ID 11lcking winners. Prom Omega, a wonilerful ,.,.,. ... ,,.. Christmas aut If th•r1 wa• ..,.r time omtg•'• pmud a tlm1 for lh1 gift or an po1 IUon ol 1mlnenc1 Omeve, thl1 Cbri1tm11 l1 It. In lht wortd ol Sort, a diamond brec•ltt fln1 w1lchtl mtlnt 11mply witch la -an opulenl th1t1h•'llkn0Wyouwtnt1d Chrlatm .. Gift. But wt1e11 th• be1t lor h•r. And 1h1'll tt.t witch Is Omtg•, 1uct'I probably n1v1r n11 <' opul1nc• g1ln1 eleg1nta t noth1r watch for all thl ind P1rm1nency. Chrl1trn1111s 10 ooine. 0 OMEGA A-1' dll!l\Ollft. 141( 111114 till ltfKl lM wt!dl, .1121 •-2t f \1l!IO!ldt.14KRK• er "llow t ollf .. Jd br1ce- lt1 'll'lltll •••••••••• • '''° J. C. ..J/.umphrieJ Jeweler:! 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVlNtENT TElMS IAN~MlllCAlO--MASTElCHAl&E 14 TEARS IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 141.J401 f I I ) • L .· DAILY PILOT I 2M Vlelatlou . Government Cites CIA Blamed Massacre • Ill '4 Oil Companrei -· ' Defector 'Not Beaten On Vessel' ' BOSTON (UPI) -The 1kipper of the Coast Guard cutter Vigilant said ~sday Lithuanian defector Sima1 kudlrka was not beaten by Rusaian seamen while he was aboard the American vessel. "I went up to the defector Just before he left the Vigilant, Cmdr. Ralph W. Eu.rtis said In a copyrighted story in the Boston Globe. "At that time be was completely bound and restrained but he certainly wu not bloodied or beaten. ''There W&!I no blood that nighl" Eustil was given a n administrative reprimand for his actjon and was re- assigned. The board of inquiry investigating Ku dirk a' s attempted defection said he interpreted his or d e r 1 "authorizing the use of necessary force so as to pennlt foreign natiMals to exercise authority on board a Coast Guard fessel." ''111e reprimand d o e s n ' t surprise me,'' Eustis said. "l knew what was coming." Eustis told the board he personally did not see any violence aboard the Vigilant. NEW olll&Ns CAP> - Four major all compani• wtre dlarled Tuad•t with -Wlur•~to.follow propor piety precautlou In -drtll!nl operaliorw in the Gulf of Melico. It was the fourth such move by the federal iovernment and brought to nine the number of companies charged-with not following regulations. In the bill of tnformaUon !Ued in U.S. District Court, U.S. attorney Gerald Galllngbou1e aald Z2t vlolatkm were dted against Gulf Oil Corp.. Mobil Oil OmiJ., Tenneco Oil Co. and the KeTT-McGee Corp. Gull Wll charpd with 115 Rep. Rivers Beginning To Recover 2 Pic(lSso Pictures Stol.en From Museum NEW YORK (UPI) -Tuo Picasso masterpieces valued at $110,000 have been stolen from the Guggenheim Museum. One was dooe 1n ink and the other was a watercolor. Both were about the size of a large Chrill;tmas card. Museum officials reported the thefts Tliesday. The mU9eWU was closed to the general public Monday. Police said they were stymied by the lheft. Thomas Mes.ser, mu.w:um diredor, said lhe works, UUed "Woman ¥i'ith Open Fann and ''Table Before the Window" were "lesser Picassos." .. Table Before the Windciw," a watercolor and pf!neU work, done In 1922. measured 5% by 4V• inches. "Woman with Open Fan," which Plea no inked in 1906, measured 6'T• by f'A inches and wa!I valued at $40,000. The other work wu valued by police at $70,000. Anolher Picasao work, • still life oil painting of nowen valued at $60,000, wa!I stolen Monday night from th e Phoenix Art Museum. New York Police Slayer Handed Death Sentence RARE DEATH PENALTY M.rtln F ltzpotrlctc UTICA, N. Y. (Ul'l) - Martin Fitzpatrick, convicted of killing two policemen, W8!1 sentenced to die in the electric chair early today, the first man 1n New York State to face lhe death penalty In seven years. An all·male jury handed down the sentence tn Oneida County court alter almost II houn or dellberationl. Judge John J. Walsh set Sept. '1, 1971 for imposition of the sen~nce. "You as the jury have convicted me of four counts of murder and ii you believe I am guilty you mu.st vote the dealh penalty," Ilic! lhe 31- ye&N>ld Frtzpatr lck, delivering hla own summation. ~~~"fl.it-ID :\;t r~.C\~ ·~ '"\. °'!~t ~ o..~ \lJ ~ ~"t"- ~ . \ll\11 hwtJt . ~WY\. t) . WUTCLI,, ru.ZA OPIN nn. 'tft t """ Cllrltt.- IUNDAY-11 TO I Vi•it Our leutl411ue •f th• New~ert•r 11111 HOLIDAY SALE OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERLOADED, •• MULTI-MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD /BUY NOW AND SAVI . ' • 1ST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET IN· VENTOIY IN THE WEST • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE •All LABOR UNCONDITIONALLY GUARANTEED ~!~~!~.~<h. deep. 5" luicuriously tflick pile. Nr.v dtc.orotor · SAVI colors. UM · 100% Kodof<t Polyntot Pi1t. Th"' pit ht;iiht pollom lo g<O<tfo.I daig• Ruggtd durobility. ltouliM cob's. COMPAIAILI AITA.IL ••••••·•••••••••$1.H C-P l I CANOGA PAii 211311""-oW•r l41-2U4 \l.,.iw. ,,_,.,, t.,,... ... Mw!h .. »-Mil' w., ... '""" MAWTNOll( 12'2'11o ....... lt ... •n .. 211 $M .,,... fl..-.¥ .. fl ~ .. !•NII 1111 1' ........... ... WHTCOVllA 2S2'LW-A ... ..... .,1 s... ......... """' .. (""" $t 2Wltkt-•(llrVlteWll• - • how the CIA has operated in Soulhelst~a. • Weltner, charging the CIA carried -out terrorist activities Including "assa!l!\natlons and Jddftaptngs" prior to t h e a.uault at My Lai, submitted teaUmony from 62. soldiers lhowfng·the "shooting, kill ing, uauslnatlon and torture of Vletnain~so civilians purs~nt lo the dirtctor oI the Uniled States Army." The three alleged C 1 A agents subpoenaed w e r e 1de:nWied by Wellner a 1 James B. May, Senior Adviser in Quang Ngai Province where My Lal la located, Robert Ramsdale, Qlrector o{ "Operation Phoenix," the code name for the ClA's alleged mllalon in Vietnam. and Capt. Clarence J. Dawtlnl. A tentative trial date of Feb..: 1$ wu set for Toms and another oo .Jan. 25 fot Smltbi who are amonc Iii Amer1cll( aoldiers lncludJnc ht ti William L. Calley Jr., now cli tr~. facJnc trial a< have befi\-- brought to trlaf In conaectloll. with My Lal. Only S. Sgt. David Mllchell! SO, St. FrancllviJle, La. hU C011Jpleted bis trial. He wai acqbitted. ! Lt. Calley'• trial at rt; Benning, Ga. and C preliminary hearing here t4 detennlne if Ilia immed.latt4 superior, Cat. Ernest L. &Uperior, Capt. Erneat t , tfW_. are both in recess. .,L;:. AT LAST ' ••• LADIES SUEDE BOOTS HAVE ARRIVED ' ·: ACIOI SHAG :;r[ 3~ '' IOOll -Pol)olt1f Pilt - lltoutifuf --a11og with a 1un 3~'" pi&t. Narrt ntW dtcorotor tri· ...... to dloolt from. NOW SALE PRICED AT 99 ~ fl!. YD. SAVE $1.00 COMPAIAILI RITAIL •••••••••••••••• $13.99 ..... OF REMNANTS I LAlll 60 · SMALL 80 Q ' 1111 % SIZE % SAMS SAVINGS ~,' •to ;,... UPTO .,, ,• LMNG llOOM. DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, llOOM, IEDROOMS CARS, ETC. ALL CARPETERIA STORES CLOSED CHR,STMAS DAY 517 '·" ~!~!~~1~~~1u~~~A~99 Shog. ~colors to select from. ~;.:~ .... COMPAIAILI an AIL .•••• , ••••••• , ••• tS.9t ~~~~~!~~-=ome 7" brandt. luxunously heavy 4'' deep .sAv1' pie. lew •'-strl• trkeltrt. N.00 COMPAllAIU llTAtl ............... $13.99 TORRANCE ' SAN FRANCISCO MIUllAE 320 II C1n1it10 Rrol 692-2555 4236 Artt•I• llY4. $42-6696 • 81or~ l11•r M li!Mothclf,.. ...... Ol!Arll"llO • •. • ,· . .. -... ;. •• - "· " ... 1,. '· ,. ·•· • • ! • I - DMLY PU:OT EDITORIAL P~GE Me·sa's· Postal Service •· .. , __ • • Just how good or bad the service Is •t the Costa' 1'1eaa Post Office rem3lns a question of how you pet· sonally view the results of a survey b)r the Costa M~sa Chamber of Commerce. If yo'u take the dim vie , you could-interPrel t~e statistics. as. saying nearly. half of CQ!ta MeSa feels the' Joca~ post office is not doing the ·job. · · Takin g the brii;:hter viewpoint, yOu could say that a clear majority (63 percent) believes mail sort· ing and delivery is good or acceptable, slightly more t.hBn haJf (58 percent) believe over-all service loCally is as good a.s it is at 111ost other post offices, and th~t h~lI •believe the wfndow· s~rviCe ·AP,d limeli~ess' locaUy ar:e a,t"leastacceptable: . BUt as ih'e chamber's ?Qsi oUil. .. -e t.Unmittee'poirited out. even if you are happy or unhappy with the local service you have no Way of realJy evaluating the Costa ?\1esa Post Office. N'o set o( stahiia~t exfsts f<ir'''grad· .! ing" post'office service' and· the.Te is 00 !Jleans ~f ~f!aS ... - llring the locaf chamber's responses ·with othei"' c1t1es. Jn short no one knows if it is "acceptable"~jo have only half of a r>Ost office's patrons a~ree· that "the ser- vice is acceptable or whether this pattern is common lhroo~hout the United States. Few would ar)'!:ue, however, that a private business would indeed be in deep trouble if half of its CU!<!lomers \rere dissatisfied with the service they receive. Jn defense of the post office operation. it should be Pointed out that only limited amounts of mechanization and automation can help the organization. Up to now,' no machine exists that can sort mail, meet patrons. reason through a badly addr~ssed envelope, sort and select the •prOper enveloReS for the proper boxes. The ..... cha~s for human enor are built Into the rst 'office't operation. -'W'hue we ·zympathlze with the lnevitabUlty ol, bU-' man ~rrOr, we seriously question whether the Cos~ 1.<Jesa Post Ofij_ce service 1s, over all, as good as tl -should be. Certainly a -friendlier spirit would be appre- ciated-and we do see more smiles and helpful com- ments in neighborint pott offices. - rn the next breath, we would commend al least 95 percent of the local post office employes for tbe day-in and day-out yeoman's task they perform in atcommo- dating and serving the 75,000 'J)eople wh.o use Costa Mesa, Californja-92626 and 92627-as theU" hometown • address. . G~~hd Jur.y .Service A.i:tain this year, Costa Mesa seems to.be sufferint 'fr.om lack of repfesentation amonj! tbe lll'.rollp n~minated for servf~e on the Orange County Grand Jury. . Of 30 nominated for the 19-member jury, only one ris .a Costa A1esan . Jn Ut~ast five years. only three A1esans have even been '11tf?1_inated for Grand Jury ser· vice-and none of them 'ha's been drawn. for duty. . It would seem that some steps sho uld be taken to call to the attention of the Superior Court judges - who make the nominations -some of our outstandin_t citizens who would make excellent 2rand jurors. As its contribution. the DAILY PILOT would be happy to call to the attention of the Superior C~urt iud~es any names of Costa Mesans w_ho h~ve_ the time 3nd backjZround necessary for duty 1n this 1mpartanl iob. 'C • , . -' • 1iljl£N H~~~,BLIY5 ~y /IU10!,,, I Mlan' 6Ff ro $ff ~15NlYLANb AT !.AST.', -I Protectionisn11 ls a Form of Dear Gloom y - Gus: I Banning of Certain· To1111 as llns.af~ ' 'A Danger Is a Danger Is a Dange·r!' Socialism To the F.ditor: I would like to comment nn thP. letter I was under the lmpreplon that (b-failbox, Dec. 16) from the lady wh o Local, ,Card• l'lrs l? To the Editor: efforts of one central-county newspaper and a vocal minori ty of -supporters, • THOMAS STIPE garages were.~at!,;:lt-~'~!ua~::-objecta lo the baMing of certain toys I thought I was being wise this year mobiles.' k~ ~tlid : .. ..:.i:...'t .1 from lbe ·market. _ '. when I mailed my out.-of-loWn Christmas f!olidnfl Gesttire ears par e 0~:-1, "'"6." mus"t· • One item on the list was a toy. ovel'I tha. t ~ cards before my local g r e e t i n g s . our community, most .,,, NI LetteT! /Tom Teaders are welcome. However. on 'Dec. 14 I decided that I To the Editor: thinlc o•ra-• are .... M .... 1 .. foe actually worked. Now, accordms to th11 No-·lly .~,e-hould-o-e.,·their . , 1-• I I d fi ....... ut.:t ...... ..., ,, ;. ..... ·~. parfntal ~· ebOutd be the '""' ..,, ' '" " .. "" • should have mai C\I the oca car s 1rst. 1 noticed today while parking my ca r In 11~1 • .. • • :t' , ...... , !;" 1 t_.r ., Clflfy thing to J>revent the Ule o( ·this messagts in 300 woTds OT less. The Please note the date of cancellation and Newport Beach that the park1ng metera lntemational trade ts one Of the· dullest ~ -A. D. W.• Item. But would she plug . that stove in right to condenu letters to fit sixu:e the point of origin for eaCh of the had been covered and tied with red 1ubjects il is possible lo wrile about •" ~ /'. before purchu.ing it to let' ~ pot it. OT elimiJiate libel resetwd. All le t-envelopes on the attached photocopy. The ribbon. -unless the reader happem to make T,.i, ...,_ nft«t• ,....;... ~ Mt _, w-·•• ·•-not ·i 1 ters mu.st include signature and.mail· card posted on Dec. 9·in a small So\Athem ft was , very i·oyful sight to see.· and I his Jiving in an industry tbat ls threaten-••na·,-. ""' • ... ,-..... .... •""· UUIU --= assume 1 wllina.s sa e ing GddTe.u, but namu may be With.-........ office re1ched me the same day as ·r ,_ .., .._ ,. ...,_,., .... ..., ""-• became a ttpUt.able store was: se g it! . . . ..-• think the city of Newport Beach ls to be l I I I I .t ! I I . ' ' I 1 ed by foreign compet1 ion. • ~ably _ and there could be a held on request tf sufficient reason the card mailed Dec. 2 only a.,k!v blocks -commended for such a ~ice holiday TI1e ~-q04:stion of '--------..,----~ t;eriou!ly burned child on Christmas Day! i.t apparent. Poetry will 'ltot be pub-Crom my home in Costa Mesa. gesture. ''frtt ~dt:•' :vtrs.us ~ _....:.'i&:h::•::d::.· __ · __________ ai·)Ob~vi~onui~lf'(fii'o~u1r~loca~l~·;'iit'-iofiffif,cefk'w~•w>!l ~-----~GREGeR: TGPPER,---,;prOteCUon.ism" ls ike-t.exUle!, sheet~~·· 1 • JS P8RFECTJ;Y-""true-th8t'Ulm-t• • ns mas -RUSH., 1--.--.,,;nra KCi11il!1 • modiUe11., w~ are. 1 hl'lh7fflclen_cy danger in .swings. slides. tree climbing, !;the ·shelves •. 9r use.her OWJl Judgment 35 (MRS.) 'oPAL' PRICE · scarred .debate •• in soc1·ety, and should devote our 1ndustr11' ~tc., but thele are not mano:faclured •L. "-r ·1 ' the U.S; Theoret.kal-t dan he . d Th , wheu1er to serve it to 11cr am1 y or ly, thie "lree tra-efforts to producing Lhe, goods we can gen; t se .are acci enls. e toys not? den" hav~best beat produ~ at the fastest ralt for mentioned by Consumt>rs Union, plus the And speaking of dangerous toys, .does of •t but u, Ji the lowt!t cost. • · • -ones already taken out or circulation, the lady remember when there wer• 1 :, ':uca ~; . . . . . ---.t."'" ;.ere dangtrous because of ~ the 'protectionists. Low eff1c1ency societies should _be >,;· ....... uraeturing defects or poor design. fl recracker11 and cheiry bombs? As a ba ve usually won. 111lowed to take over the . product.ion A;d' it should be po· 1 d I that of child, they were "right" for me, but lf we are genuinely a capitalistic coun· of goods tha.t best suits their oeconomy Ule: toy manufac'ru:er:u upon 50':in& •·wrong" for many of my friends. try, and believe rin ,free competition, atct fill, ~Jr_ W~-!c&le. 1!. we w~ot.. ""'::ildvt.ed Of the -din er of 'tbeir-"'roduef.s. AND WJl·'T ABOUT dru•• that have then we must admit ttrat~flther ·coofttr1!!.; -• 1ir sec -bp1tahsm and· free eompetH1on _1 • .._ 00.1 .•• lh gd · • ed ·i ~ - h lhe . h . ood he ad th ld we cannot inliat .~oup m I IC\I e es1gn, or remov I been labeled dangerous? Many of these ave . rig t to import 1. s , re spre ~ver e w.~r ' r~· f .~from the market without argument, drugs can be had by prescription, for and sell 1t at the lowesl possible pnce. that . 01 er . countnes .be pena 1 . or Which only substantiates the claim that they are "right'' for some people, but We can 't be in f;l\·or of competition ~nding their goods ~ver here and selling · U~y really WERE harmful to a child. ''wrong" for others. Wo\lld the lady just for ?ur own country· it al !be cheapest price they can. ' advocate ihe purchase of these drugs be ~ f"EW YEARS bock the FDA left to the consumer'ir ind iv Id u a I WHERE THE RUB come5 i" lh<>t the CO$t of labor in n1any other nA1ions i5 far Jo"·er th An in ours. A texli!e v.·orker in Japan, for instance, gels less lhan $100 a month, and an American prodOcer can't ('Ortlpete "'ilh these low IAbor oosls when his own employes make many tlmes more. TO "rRQTECT'' certain lndustrier against foreign competiticin Is a forin of state socialism, no .matter what elle announced U1at botulism had been discretion? LEE MILLAR discovered In canned cranberry sauce, These examples may seem to be al afld that it wu dangerous lo eat. and . opposite ends of the spectrum. but to .coo.Id 1"ve fatal. As it was al lhe holiday paraphrase Gert.rude Stein, "A danger is time . would the aforementioned lady a danger is a danger!'' pr~er to have this product remolled from • Recall'o Bl11h Cost To the Editor: Now that the recall election in . Long Beach is Over: According to press ttporU, the election, which went down to defeat by a three-to-one margin. cost the local taxpayers in excess of $80,000. The Orange County Registrar f.lf Volen has estimated the cost of a recall election in this county to be in the neighborhood of $125,000 of the taxpayers' money. There is a serious question in my mind a5 to whether we should gamble an eighth Of a million dollars on a proposition (recall of supervisors} which seems 1;tl be · kept alive only through the 1lfl•l11ed W<>rd1 To the Ed itor : l am astounded that you would print the Sidney Harris column ol Dec. 14 on ''The True 'Dirty Words.'" Just the idea that there ls .no harm In dirty words of a sexual nature but the real dangerous words are "Americanism, socialism, anarchy, liberty, justice, etc." Y.'Otdd indicate that he is afraid of lhese latter v.·ords and how they may appl y to him. So he wants lo outlaw them~ Don't you think your readers ha ve had enough of his socialistic ideas? And .may I take this opportunily tn second ''Name \Vithheld" in his support and commendation or Ray Stripe and Joplin eoyS· Ranch. as opposed to tht Grand Jury criticism:" DON HUDDLESTON This is the argurn!'nt of "proll'C"' lion ism." We have to kl'f'p the coun\rie:ir; that pay "coolie wages" from . un- dercutting our ov.·n high i;tandant of lh·ing. 1t makes sense. as far as It goes. but this argument doesn't go far enough, as almost all f!CQno1nists agree. it may be c11led. It is . a subsidy · to · inefficiency, because we :should not be wasting our resources in turning out goods that we can buy cheaper else-- where. ·Both _politically an~· economically, "protectionism" is a slap · ... in the face to world unity end to our profelittd-creed of free competition. It does not even make good sense to our short-tenn self·inler.tsl, for. if ~r countries are limited in selling their 1oods here . they will not have the-funds to buy our commodities, and world trad~ will shrink perilously. Our rejection df an open market would only confirm !he Communists' accisation that we manipulate capitalism for our own e~s. . Frauds Against Trusting Investors THE FACT Qfo' Tfft maltf'r i.~ th11t a nation like the U.S. should not ~ wasting it11 energy and manpoy.·er in the production or low~flicieney goodJ The message is finally beginning to get ·through : Giant ''recreational" or "second home'' subdi visions are a clear and present dan- ger to a society increasingly concerned about a quality environment, and about .liv11ibility. fields, with no hope or adequate waler ~ or sanitary or utility service~. Mar~ Twain's Fore~ight · !"ar from being great tax windfalls for local governments, they are instead "tax p;iyers• lime bombs," that will cost counlie.s. school districts and others far more in the long run than they will pay ifl. plot buyers holding the sack, lucky if they get back JO cenu on the dollar . They take land out of ils most produc. live and valuable uses -'!'·hether they be agricultural, or range, or wildlife for· age areas, or even ~sert -and chop il up into bleak, tiny plots that destroy it for any productive wie in the foreseeable future . A:ND IT MAY BE the message Is begin- ning' to get through in S4'.luthem Oregon -in the Rogue ,and Klamath Basins - which have come under the eye of the land speculators as the threat of tougher ne1v laws looms Jn C11ifomia. Such speculations ha,ve been ·gobbling up Calilofnia land at a rate' ol up to 300.000 acres per year. and for every ''new home'' or "recreational'' or "sec- ond home" develop ment that has been sucussful. a do1.en others stind as bar- ren monuments to m11n's cupidity, greed, naivete and Jack of cOnscienc~ and hon· There is much M'holar ly bickl;!ring In ~faxwell Geismar's new ('ritica\ ·work ··~lark T\.\'ain: An America n Prophel.'' 1;eism11r is a willy and .arlir.ulate bicke rer as he lays inlo the sl;1ndard \lark Twain crit ica l orthodoxy. The-old izrnlleman. dl"11d 1hc5<' 60 years. rnusl be laughing 50mewhere in Satanic pastures al the hulab11loo about his life. work and later stron g opinion.~·on bolh sexual and 11oc10-pulitica\ matte rs. For it i:i; these last namM !hat Geismar dwellit upo n al some length in thi11 ntw i:o11trlbution lo the J\1ark T w 11 i n Jegend-id,.as 11nd altitudes \.\"hich. he i,vv.-s WI, have been IArgely swept under the critical caq1et ~eretofore lT IS Gt:IS~IAR'S ccnlr,111 flO\nt ,that TY.'ain's IHe:rary power y,·as enhanct!d in his later years. rnthc_r than din1inished as fy,·a.in ~peciallsU have argued since V•n Wyck Brooks' c onlrovers l al in- tupretaUon. "The ordeal of ?.1ark Twain.'' Sl!t a whole style of ,._·a in crilicisro. Geismar suggests ltml Twain'~ bitter 50Cill criUci!m of thr United Slatr.s has been repressed or avoided hy iteholars "precls'cly btt:ause It is !ill bold, so brilliant, aatlrlcal and pruphc!ic: " T"'nin indei:d ~ame more pagan, ~a1anic 111nd Ul'llt in his 80Clal oomment. In v. hat ·appears herJ' to be 1lmMt 1 New Left analysis ol .,_ writer, Gei11mar insisi.1 that TWUI inllr ~" , .iJnon;o•1 ' •. " . future or desponden<'y and the central flaws in American civilizatlon. 'Ibey are, with perhaps a few excep- tions. frauds against those who trustingly jn\'esl in them, naively (and greedily) e:<· pecUng the '!land boom " to keep increas· Ing the price of land when, in fa ct, it never will, never. can, be developed. THEY HAVE EARNED C"On· siderable sums for lhe original ov.mrs THERE .JS Al .. WA\'S room for argu· (who sold out al perhaps twice the as- menl in a reboiling of old bonc11 in the .fn· t ~cd true cash valuation o( the proper- terests of critical broth, and Ceismar's ly), and huge sulTlr for the promoters work is at once control'ersial and run to 'who have made profits ranging up- read because It is a sprightly. logical.in· ward from 300 percent on thei r in\lf'St· terpretation "'rittcn with verve. almost men!, only to leave the second, small- r~kles5ly at times, yet eloquently;-~ • THE MESSAGE t11 getting ...... lh1"9ugh lo Caliromia. where the Legislature is now holding hearingfli on tough new laws ~oveming such kind! of speculative de- \lelopments. The message is g e t t i n g lhrough to counties. that, once bedazzled by lhe thought of higher tax assessments, have since been laced with tax foreclos- sures ruMing .et 33 percent. or more. The message is getting through in land- poor Hawaii, "''here "subdivisions" have been carved out o{ tbe middle of Java lsty'. , "WHEN SUCH speculative developments have been carved oul of·old ranches. they are worthlesa for future agricultural use, Their value as wildlife range is ended, with deer herds decimated or scattered, fishing '!~ams ruined. and game bird habitat bulldozed or burned. Fire danger is increased. Natural .,.,·atercoura- ts are damaged . Erosion is multiplied . And to what end ? Do th e trusting souls who have pul their Hie savings into a brlslling wilh an en1dite wrangllng _wt'h other scholars. For inslance. Gei~mar ta~e11 on .not on• Jy Van \llyc k Brooks, but lhe late Bernard DeVoto, Leslie fo'iedler, Edrilujid Wilson and Justin Kaplan, 1 ate! t btographer of Twain ("Mr~ C1emerm: ana .Mark .1\1.·ain''), This Geism1r reje<=ll ,S an overly }'reudia11 inierptttalion of the man and artist thal 8Uggt.1ted Twain'fl radic11l 60Cial commentary wu somt sort of de11ian1 behavior, nr expressl!>n or. personal neurosi3. . By George --------, . plot of land ever build their "d re• m h<¥"OK't ft /tw try. Some lonely little _buildings have been built. a few !railers and mobile homes sit 'on their bleak little plots. Bcit it1 is rare when lhe--tiappy, communal, carefree ' life promised ln Dear George: 1 go with a very cultured git/ \\'ho ha1J only one little flaw In her df'portment. She Yt'ears a very lnw· cut dre$11 when we"re shooting pool ·and t understand the fashloo ru le for a lady in poolrooms ii a turtleneck sweatrr, Could yoU gille me thej)roper ruling on this? CULTURE LOVER • lel\ If a man terested? is romantically in· HOPEFUL Dear Hopeful : glowing ads ever mattrialiu.s. Well, actually. Hopeful, there is. ,fowever, V.'OUld you mind writing THE ANGLO-SAXON common Jaw. and to one oC the lady rolwnnists:" the statutes in the United States derilled Every time I try to -answer a letter from lt. are based in large part on the like 1h/$ it cBu~s peoele 10 rtad a theory that a man's home is hi~ castle, Jot of mildly risque meaning Into it 1nd that no ant has a 1right to forbid any· lh1U I don 't intend. Write to a J1dy one to do anything he wa11_ts with his .... HUCKLEBtRRY nNN'' T w 8 r I\• s Dear Cull ure. J,o,·f'f'~ columnist -. Mlln'e of !hem get lltnd. ...,.. ~ln1i:le great r.las.~ic? NMM"Me: .Geiamar I o lled· Amy VAnderblll . but v.·e awity with mifrder. aut the rcalizaHon Is beginning to da1,·n 8nor1.11. hls: v.·hole t'!llrttr WA!: I classic. n1u•I lu1\'c golt l'n di!!ronnected. nn _peop!e that what pt0ple do ~·Ith their including hiii: lat.er. g~erally Ignored (Send you r problemJJ lo George own land, if not subjecl to some $or I perlod or ttava ge social tommtnfary. Oe111r Ci-eorge: ind feel better within five days or nf reasonable r~guh1Uon. ct1n have 11 rtls- (Hou&btoo Milllin; flOJ. Ji.there any y.•ay • "'"om11n can dooqlt your ~It blek,) 1 ~St.rots etrtttion the-right.a of the public ~ Wlltlla..., .i.;----------------~..__, .ilarllL- .. Ts land a chattel or a resource? Can 50C'iely afford to permit huge acreages of land. even privately-o.,.,Tied land, to bt turned tc uses that are destructl\le of so- cial values? !'otORE AND MORE these questions are being atkcd, and more and more the answer is coming up that the publlJ: in- terest, lhe soci~l utility of the land, tenda to outweigh mere chattel rights. When big development corporatiOll! use the "chattel rights" theQry lo scoop up huge profits -and then leave the results to be paid by hapless investors and tax. poor counties -the time has come to call a hall . ' This means, In pr11clica\ terms, stron~ public support for those planning com· missionS. county commissioners and leg. islators who, at long last. are daring to speak up in the public interest and say "no'' ~o corporate deyelopers who worship the doll ar and don"t care a link· er's dam aboul the land they have raped. Medford (Ore.) J'lfall Tribune ..... ~ ' . Wednesday, Dec. 23, 1970 Tlte editorial page of the Daily Pilot •eeq to in/om. and stirn- ulo.tt Ttodl!TJ bu presenting this .newspaper.'.s opiniuns and com· n1t11Mry nn topics of iutereJJt ond 1ig11ificance, by providlno n forum for tht e:rpres.siun. of our rr.odtrs' opinions. and by prest11t111g Ilic divtrlt v1ew- poi111., nf 111/nrmcd obser11eft nud spokc.snittn on topics of tile da~. Robert.N. Weed, Publisher 1 I , 1 - .- • S-addleh.•ek ,. ED ITI ON ... VOL:. l.3, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE C~, CALIFORNI~ WEDNESDA '(, DE¢EMIER 2!, 1970' -,- Deputy Assails Manson's 'Blood ·=-Lu---,--9s ..,.__·· ~ - LOS ANGELES . (UPI) -Charles code!endlnll aD aboent from the l\llllllOll bad a lust !or death, blood and _ courtroom, llllenlng .to the proceedinp murder which he hid under a mask or a by loudspeaker in nearb,y boJdlnc cells. peace-loving individual just as he has 8 .. ,...i-· 1ndiD 8 tbree-d•v review concealed his true character in court, the .,. ...... i, w g up "" prosecutor charged today at the Tate-or the a1x month trial, turne<! Wedneaday LaBlanCa tnurder trial. . to the 'alaylnga of wealthy ..grocer Leno Deputy District Attorney Vincent LaBJanca,and bis wile Rosemary. Buglioli resumed his summation or the !fhe ~tor described Manson and cue with Manson and the three women hia bJppie followers drivin& around Los COVERED PICNIC AREAS PLANNED FOR NIGUEL PARK AREA Fou r-family Facility Included in First Ph•M Building I Angeles for boun that evening "lookln; for a victim tolally at random." "In the.entire populaUoo of the city of 1 million people, no one -not in their homes, their automobile&~ any place - was safe from hia insatiable lust for death, blood and murder," Bugliosl said. 1be prosecutor "pictured for tbe jury Manson goln& ,alone into the LIBianca home, tyln& up ~ mon and wife and telling them oouo.be afraid -ha was not going toDurt them. Manson went back ,to the automobile outside, BUgUOsl . said, and instructed Charles •'Tex" Watson, P a tr i c I a Krenwinkel .Od Leslie Van Houten tO go Inside but "don't let them tnow you'Ot going to kill them. "How t!iouglitful and considerate. Charle3 Manson should have a men1orlal built in the United Nations tn New York ror his considerateness. He didn't even want his zombies to let them khoW they were going to be killed bec1uae he didnrt want tbem to panic." Bugliosi said the LaBiancu belleved . Charlie for they maybe, could bave,nm out of the house to get he1p or screamed· or called the police or d()fle something. ' "At the LaBiancu he wore the ame mask be ha> worn hen In court -jldl a peke..iovlng individual. And then be snaked oul to get hll bloodthirsty robots and send tbeJD ln•to·kill ... '!be defendaoll were barred from further ....iios of the lrial after wild acenu before the jury in which one even atruuled with the prosecutor. Rogers Blasts Red POW List ·'as Three Face Court Trial In Stickups A pair of bandit suspects accuse4 of a series. of Southern California stickups including one $10,000 jewelry. store job in Weltminstu ,must face trial in Orange Counly Supoj!or Court. Contemptible' Propaganda Bid· Charged By Official • WASIIlNGTON (AP) -N ort·b Vietnam's release of a purported official prisoner of war list Tuesday· wat criticized by Secretary of State Willim P. Rogers today as "a contemptible m&neuVef ... for propaganda purposes." JIOufW Oralie .,..,,,.~udlelil'lliilijOf .1 ~~---~I'!:-. . Cl~ & ~c~alid GOrdoii IL llfi:o, lt, to'appear o.E IO for lrla1 dates lo be RI. ile 1il.d the Nortb Vtelnameae Invited two senaton to send ~preaenlaUves 1o .... ·--·•-1111•-...... ~11'1 ol war, bul added tliey failed to UUGTllCll IM DSVHIPM,1.T• PAI.GI I •• o , ' LAGUNA NIGU ~L R ll l l MA.L PA.t it COUNTY ALLOCATED $550,000 FOR NIGUEL ·PARK CONSTRUCTION First Ph••• Prog ram (With in Dotted Lln11) Due Next Year County Approves Work On Laguna Niguel Park consultants said this water is not suitable for stock.Ing with fish and other marine Jife and should be replaced with fresh water. First phase construction or Laguna Niguel Regional Park for a budgeted $550,000 was approved Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors. The l62-acre park property is located Planned for 1econd phase between La Paz Road and Alicia development are athJeUc fields, a nature Parkway, south of Aliso Creek Road. It study area, childrens play areas, day includes 8 47-acre man-made lake. camping groups for youth groups, two . The first phase program. as outlined by ~=~tion points and an equestrlan engineers VTN Orange County includes The phase one area of 45 acres will development of picnicking are~, roads, include 23 acres of 'turfed and relatively parking areas, water supply. a fiat picnic area, nine acres of planted maintenance building, an e n tr a n c e slopes and hillsides, 13 acre! of structure off La Paz Road, athletic fields ._.roadways, par~g ~ non-irrigated and and picnic structures. undisturbed hillsi~es. Total cost of development of the park is Phase ~ will mclude 20 acres of turf 1111 'th th first phase to be and . 23 ICl'ef of planted slopes and $1.4 m on, w1 e . hillsides completed in 1971 and the balance m 1972. · The VTN plan calls for a recreation of an earlier era in California history-the ranchos. Open fields with a backdrop of rolling hills i! the setting. Foot and horse trails, ponds, the lake and a ranch-like atm06Pbere carried but by all structur~ components. The take currenUy is filled with water reclalmed at the Moulton N'iguel Watef'. District Sewage treatm!Dt plant. The Marina Streets To Be Li ghted Residents in the Marina View Heights eommunity have been in the· dark about who should tum on their street lights. Responding to complaints about the problem, the City Council voted Monday to tum on street-light& In the tract at the city's expense pending payment by the developer of the energization fees. The annual fee is $4,291. The city voted to acce,pt·the expenae "In the lnlereel of safety. I Firemen Save Marines' Mail A fire this morning In the vehicle compartment of a ldartoe C.rpo truck on pootal duty nearly dasbed the'lfopes<>f Cbristma! mall 1eoden, but firemen in San Clemente quelled the blaze leaving the letters and parcels intact. The blaze erupted in the Marine truck shortly after 8 l'.m. at La PlacentiAand Estrella. The truck was being used by the poot office as. a temporary mall vfhicJe during th• Cbrlslmaa rush. Fire Departmeii1 spokOameo aald the blue wN ...,lned to the encl!le compartment. Tba small flrt 1pparently WU C•U>ed by a baltery-Whlcb lhll1Ad Inn ill mount, callllng . 1borkfrcult 1P8~°t \ Pollce -"t the men, each held In lleu of $40,000 1*11, were driven by heavy heroin habit& · · Hall also faces burglary charges as well as robbery counts and ls identified by !late prilon authorities as an escapee from the Soledad Correctional Institute. Hall and ~Ice are suspects in a string of finance company .robberies, market stickups ana apartment b u r g I a r i e s spanning the swnmer and fall months, ,. One case involved $10,000 worth of finished je\velry items and Wlcut gems taken from', Jones Jewelers, • Bol.sa Ave,, Welijninster. A , total of fj,000 lo loot ha> oo i.r· been recovered. Ironically, they were arrested ~r an anooymous Up lo San Clem e ~le detectives following a . '135 finance company robbery -smallest among those charged to them -last fall. Police say Rice and Hall fit the description of the two long-balred gunmen who hit Household Fiiiance Corporalion, 107 s. El Camino Real. Rice will be tried on four counts each of armed robbery and burglary, while Hall -his next few yeara jeopardized by the prison escape charge alone I will he tried on three counta of each. •• Christmas Homes Still Needed For Marines Hundreds of Marines on Christmas leave troril Camp Pendleton will spend the holiday Friday in vohmteers' homes under an annual service sponsored by San Clemente'a Interfaith Serviceman'• Center. . There still 1re Gls waiting for - placement into voltmteers' bomes for Christmal dinner, center JP(lkesmen said today. She'• a Christmas Bunn11 ' TW0-ye41r-old Sheila Lambert fs picture of concentration 85'. she tolls off a f~w wishes for St. Nick during recent visit ·to•Santa !ll South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. Sheila is the daughter of ,Mr. and Mrs·. Billy Lambert of San Clemente. County Retains $121,000 For Mental Health F-unds Orange C.ounty Mental Health Program supporters won the day Tuesday and salvaged $121,000 which had been tentatively cut from the program. Supervisors approved county spending of f/95,425 as budgeted despite a .11 percent cut in state. support. In previous years the slate flad paid for 90 percent of the mental healtb programs mandated by &tate law. But the current squeeze ln the state budget has resulted ill drastic cuts. County Administrative Offiper Robert E. Thomas last week recommended redUclng the county spending lol'al ,to '674,320 or 14 percent of the program. !dental Health leaders, led by Or. E.W. Klatte, county program chief, f0ught for re!toratton of tbe '121,000 Thomas bad cut. Dr. Klatte agreed to cull or $'738,673 In the program bf ·not fillfflg budgeted positions, reducing the training program, cutting out the major part of the Alcohol Inpatient program., ellmjn,atlng the post of Chief of Research and Evaluation and two screening teams. He ut(i1:ed retention of support for five community-ba!ed drug abuse programs, activation of the human outreach program In southeast Santa Ana, e"Jl&ll!lon' of the l\lethadone drug addict program from 50 . to 250 patients, expanding ·the.Alcohol InpaUeot progam, and continuing the Fullerton Cblld Guidance Preschool program. The supervisors' action laved the above pri>grams .. Supervisor David L. Baker,, who had expressed serious doubt,., a b o u t continuing the program at full county cost last week,· agreed Tuesday that oiwe should attack the problem at the front end instead of after it .• happens. Supervisor William L. Phillips called it "trading dollars now for jail costs later." & the figures ·now stand the total mental health program will co s t $4,490,759 of which the county wlll pay the budgeted 1795.125. The original budget before, the state cute · was $5,912,756. I Orange C.unty's. cut of 111 percent of the state fund! compares with a statewide average cut of 18 percent, Thom as stated. This was because ·the county did not spend all money appropriated In the previous year while ' those county's which overspent were not cut as much. That state 11 now paying but IU million into the county pro g r am compared with an original commitment of $4.5 million. Tbe Soutb Coast Child Guidance Center In Costa Mesa would have been draatically cut In personnel and aervtcu If the $121,000 was not restored, Or. Klatte said. ~· any fiOib 1nlorm'attoo on the fa~ of tbe capfureG·Americans. Representatives of Seo. Edward M. KeMedy (O.Mass.J, and J. W. Fulbrljht (0-Ark.), received in Paris a listing of s.19 names of Americans now held. AU had been listed unofficially earlier. Al9o named were 20 men listed as dead and nine others who had · already been released. Rogers said the' North Vietnamese acknowledged capturing and holding 399 men, but the United States already knew that. The United States has inrormation: tha,t 39 other men were captured whose exact fate · 11 uncertain and the NortJa Vietnamese provided no help on those. "The fact is that they're maneuv'erfnl: w.itb these ·prisoners-of.war lo a wat. that's inhuman.. 1bey're d I v e r t 1 n I attention .from their barbarism by th.ii method." "I think It was a contemptfbl~ maneuver and sbou!d be recognized a1 such." ' The !act Is, he asserted, that there will continue to be. uncertainty as to the coinpleteness of POW lists ''until North Vietnam complies w:ilh the rules of international war and allows inspection of prisoner-of-war' camp!." At ano1her point he declared: "So we conclude they're using the POW issue in a very Inhuman way to advance I.belt political objectives." The weatherman'• Christmas present to the Orange Coast Is not keeping his prorillae .of rain_ for ~ day. Mostly sunny skies will pre- vail Thuraday with temperaturea tn the low 60I. INSWE TODAY lntere1t in quality fl'IOVit1 it greate1 than · ewr btfONJ, IGlll the presid<111 of Edtoani. cm .. ma Th eaters, who'! opening three nt10 movie houst1 on the An estimated !00 young men far f!om home . will be placed aald ldra. Betty Shadwick, director of the nonprofit Council Grants ----------------COl'il!lgr CO<U» thil tJJ<ek. ·See Enteriainfl'leont, Page 18. center. The young men who do not choo!e to , !pend the day With a family .still will receive OU'iltmas cheer nonetheless, she 16-acre Rezone EARLY DEADLINE FOR 'DIME' ADS aaid. The r~e of 16 acn!s of land from All D' A Line ds , __ ,_, I al b In •·---• 1me· · .. a tn~-or A Chrtstmu Eve celebration is restrl~ed gener us ess to p14µ1...u , publlcation Saturday in the DAIL V sch"eduled at the amter with a live ·S.nta developmenl ...... j!ranted by , the S.n PltoT must be place4 by noon Tliutad.,. Claus dispensing gilts iloilated !Qr th•· "Juao Capllllrano Cl\y CO\lndl l\loqday. thi~ week, dull. to the"On'flllllll'' Day occasion by Ille Women's"Club af Leisiiri . 'l1le '1>r9j>erty, loca!td ¥1!1Jd . !Ii<\ holiday'. , · ' . ~1~ CHRDSTMAS WorY. • ' ' \ . Capilb; ... Vallty .llM>lltl ~ ,\ifllich: Adi'• bo ' lactd t DAILY 'IW;ctntit''• ,.Uiua)'OlrlJlmaa-INl!et: f~ .,;.· Del •Otii.!P&' ftha4 ·Is )>eln& ·• PlliOI' c".:' rr 1 c ~ ni: O:. wi, will betJn at 1 p.m.-OlrllbnN Day, and dm~ by.the ~Coa\pl'IJl',-'lbe -ileidlln<i l!lliiti<il.lrill e~llt _.--,- donati.., of prepared lood,Ol'mooey to ~ w!1l contain !f • ba!I~ also,. be<a.,. of,the New Yilr'1 l)i,y: • bey II are welcome. ;, coota~ ~ ~''on d•l ff.".~! 11 t . holiday. Jl'or !urtber tnformat!Go, pi.. Jl'ood dQDorl or volUll\llili!: wlll!ftc to elevatiODS. the di-line lo lhe . DAILY: PllXIT · hoot a senicemao Clll coit~;lhe·l!Olllor;· No ·~ .)lOb ln-ojlposiUon ~ !lie · CJ-··"led Advt~•·•-· Dept. 64i.a'll. · - at 492-1111. • · publ~jlearJni. · · • ~ ·-.. · i' . . -_______ __. \ ~ • ' ' ' ~· ' ..,_I ' ' ... ' ;· ) ·r ' "· ,L • • j DAJl.Y "'1.0T SC • • • l • . l • ·a· ·ion: 'irorgets :'~any Prisoners' .. ' • '41'1 ANTONIO, Ttz. CAP) -An Army He called~ Americana lo preaourt tho oUlcief who was tmpr~ned by the Viet Viet Cona: in SOuth Vletnam and the ~ fir five years says Americans are Pathet Lao In Laos, along with the North ovwlooklng hall of the men held captive Vietnamese. ' 111..-.11,bfalt Aaia. __ The Viet Cong Ind Pathet Lao, he said, ..,..t Maj. James Rowe, 32, of "Have enjoyed an 1nonymous status ~-~' ~)'S 770 men -about half because Dt attention bu been focused on -~ 1,500 beld b)' the enemr them ... - ;;:;c..~ In SO.th Vlllnam, LaOI "{:r "{:r "(:r But ht:their zeal to pressure Hanoi Jnto Mi D • -·1111 ..;~· beld 1n l!ar\h ss· avis vi.mam, ......_. ara forplllnc about thole '17'0 "lmll., Rowe told uewmnen Tuaadiy . Whi k d Jlo ..U 11e11~ Viet Coal prlaon carnpa S e In South Vlolnim from b!i capture ·la ~ ~ 1111111 illl ......... Dee. 41, 1-.,' I Two Utilities Seek lnc~emes • • Two ..,Jar.pabllc 0 111tlitlH oervlng tbe Orange CoUt area hive filed for nte Increases with the Public UW!Ues Commission. ' The Southern California Edison Company is 5eekina a major· nte hike, QJdng for a IU ptn:tnl boost for residenUal aervlce. A lesser increase, 1.1 percent ·for domesUc service, is being sought by the Southern CalUornia Gas Company. F.d1son Company official.! said the new rates are estimated to bring in an llddlUonal 1121· mJl1loo annually. A portion of tbe hike, H sranl<d, would be ~Uectlve next year with the remainder to be reflected in 1972. A 1as company spokeimJn &aid the company II uklng for Its bib to go Into effect Marc.h a1, 1971 . ~ increue would produce juat· over $13 million in new revenues, to cover a price increa.se enacted by its supplier, the El Puo Natt.tral Gu Company. Duke Takes Off On News Media llPENA PARK (AP) -Actor John WaJ.ile nys Vice Prosldent Spiro T. Ag- ...,, 11 juatlfied In illl criUcllm o1 ,!be "I don't thlnlt be'1 aid ..,. thing that lhopld upeet ~·" Wa)'l\e told 1'"""'1'"1 l'uijday It" lto<mdbleolifnl ~oiii .. for" an amusement center at KnoU'1 Berry farm . "\"ou're allowed to say whatever yoa want about other public figuresf but when you 1et on !!JO lrY!n1 pan you get Ill upset," Wayne 1ald. The O:year-old Oscar winner said he'1 "been out drunk'' with newsmen who "only remember that I wu drunk" when they write their stories. Missing German Boy Returned for Ransom MUNICH (AP) -A S.year-<ld Wert German bOy kldnaped from his ho,ru, Monday -!feed Tu~ay night nnharmed ln.r his porents paid 16,800 ransom, police reported. . They aald Stefan Arnotd was handed over to representatives of a Munlcb nempaper, w~ deliver~ the ransom money. He was abducted by "' man Monday mornlne while walking wflh bis , 3-year-old ai.ater near bis home Jn a Munlch ouburb, offlclala Aid. DAILY PILOT .,..,_, leadi H.Mtlllf• ... hito Court SAN.!\_AFAEL (UPI) -Black militant heroine Angela Davis, with a clenched fist salute to friends, appeared hfiefly in court today to face charges of conspiracy, kidnap and murder. Her i.rralpment.on ·the charges wu postponed' w\til Jan. I 1t the request.:of attorneys rep~Ung her. After a IS-minute appearance before Superior Judg1,; E. Warren McGuire, Miss Davis was returned to jail. She had been brought back to Californja Tuesda,y OD charges of helping ,organize the prisoner escape ptot which resulted 1n a shootout thlt took rour lives. Miu DaVis. 26, wU nown on a aecret overnight journey from New York Tuesday shorUy after she lost her two- month legal struggle against extradition back lo California. . Extraordinary security precautions were taken on the II-hour prop driven Air NaUonal Guard filght lo Hamilton Air Force 1,Baae. The former UCLA philoloph,y lnltructor wu accompanled by ntne California law enforcement agent.I and two JDltronl. From Hal'l)ilton, an unmarked patrol car took her to the heavUy·gUll'ded clvJc center. About two dozen spectators stood across from the courthouse 11 Miu Dlvll w .. bl'OIJ8hl In. Miu Davia, dreued Jn a brown pant, suit, was booked on charges of kldnaplng, murder and C0111p!racy. She hid been arrested as 1 fugjUve 1n a ··New York City motel OcL 13 on warranta charglna abe bought guns used In an attempt to free three convicts from the Marin County courtroom of Superior Jlidge Harold J. llaley. Haley, convicls James McClain and WiWam Cbriltmu and ' J 0 n a t b a D llClllOii..-11 ;.11o~1..,....1n1o.COW'I, were' tilled. Miia Davis waa oplrited from her New , . Yor~ cell only II houn after U.S. Supreme Court Justice John Harlan re!uaed to intervene in the extradiUon procffding!I against her. Authorities said the heavy security and seci-,cy was needed because of the "repeated Jnonymous threats o f terrorism." In 1 relatfld devetopment, Ruchell Magee, 31, charged along with Miss Davis In the courthouse shootout, was chained to a chair and muzzled during a court bearing in San Quentin prison after he threatened Judge Winslow Christian and a~ authorities of COMpirlng against him and Mias Davis. "I tried to leave Marin County once before -and if I h"'ad a gun I'd try to leave again," Magee s'aid. He waa the only convict participant to survive the abootou~ Explosion Recorded In Soviet Test Site ' ~ UPPSALA, Sweden (AP) -A atrong underground explosion, called ''an unprecedented blast" by S we d'I ah selsmoJoglst!, wu registered today from a SOviet nuclear test area close to the Caspltn Sea. The Seismological Institute or Uppsal1 University reported lt was located Jn I.he Plaln of Ult.Jw1 itnmedlately east of the Caspian Sea. ---·- ' Tells Medi~ Cut Fears By JACK BROBACK Of tM Delly Plllil tllff Oran1e County Medical C e n t e r ' 1 operation has been praised in ge!\eral by -~ttr-e Grand Jury but some recommendations made for improvement ind fea"r eipre!sed-~ over Midi.cal - fin...tncil!.g cul!,. The jury In an Interim report ~ says, "the Grand Jury feels that the medical center has an Important role to VALOR IN VIE'tlilAM S.t. Bob McDarmott . - Comt GI Saves • i play in lbe future health services of the county." Some of the problem! of the center are due to the substandard condition of the older buildings and poor planning when the newer building• were constructed, the jury found. It was told that these_ problems would be solved with the compleUon of the remodeling Jnd construction plans for the center. 'Mle jury report praised the center for 115 collection policy but recommended that a study of the fee structure and methods of setting fees should be undertaken. . • "AU.bough the fees 1t the medical center are higher than at other boapitalJ ~~tovlna: swiftly but gingerly through an In the county It should ht noted that this Is partially true because the center fees Buddy's Life, Wins 'V' Medal ·' area heavily booby-trapped by the Viet include professional services by house Cong, an Orange Coast serviceman staff which Is generally not true in other recenUy saved the life of a wounded hospitals," the report stated. buddy and won himself the Br002e Star. The jury expressed concern over recent Army Sgt. · Robert R. McDermott. a Medi-Cal financing cufs by the state. 1967 graduate of Costf. Mesa's Estancia ''These reductions will not only ~verely cut revenue to the center but may also High School, bas been cited for the brave increase the patient load· due to the action tasl Oct. 11 during a necessity of treating patients who were reconnaissance mission. · 1 red f · · te f cil't· " previous y ca or m pr1va a 1 1e,r The Bronze star award carries the V Affiliation with UCI was praised as device signifying valor, according to the 1'attraeting a large and competent staff announcement by Col. T. J. Hanifen, to the center." E:ramples of "sophisticated and advance(! medical Ninth Infantry chief of staff. care" provided. through the university· F or m e r () r 1. n I e C o a s t College hospital tie up were listed as the inten- student Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn sive care, cardiac care and burn units. W. McDermott, of 18101 MaM St., Irvine. "Rehabilitation of patients is beC(lming He was on a mission with Company A, Increasingly important as more critically Fourth Battalion, Ninth Infantry, when ill patients survive the acute-stages of illness," the jury reported. "But it is the team moved into In area heavily surprising that the county has so few rlgged with booby·trapa, one of which beds available for this purpose." was detonated by a radio operator. Use of paramedical personnel to Shrapnel wrecked the radlo, so Sgt. d e v e l o p improved health e a r e Is McDermott picked bjs way through the recommended. "The training. and use of lay personnel to do tasks which treacherous field to another team from professionals do and which do not require Company A to arrange m e d 1 c a 1 their special skills w o u J d be evacuation, saving the ca.."Ualty'a life. advantageous." He was recommended for the award by A list of recommendations Includes: Capt. Glynn E. Pope, who noted Sjt. 'Mlat clinics located at the center be open aome evening each veek: that McDermott's 1ction ii in line with patients whose doctors have sent them to highest military id~, reflecUne credit the medical center for special ca.re or upoa.J>lJw!Lan4JilliJlllJIL.._ _____ 1ests.hueflIJ'ed-direcil]!.lo.lllL.tequired Sgt. McDermott ha.a also received the clinJc ; that every doctor be conversant Army.· Commendation Medal &uill& bis with the cost to the patient and to the Vietnam tour, which now involves an county of the care he recommends, and infantry assignment with tbe Firlt that bllillgual personnel (Spanish and Cavalry (Airmoblle) Division. Engliah) be available on every _ahjlt. Contest Winners Told A Santa's sack full of trophll'S will be given soon to capistrano B e a c h tradespeOple by the c o m m u n I t y ' s Chamber of Commerce in a record· aetting decoratk>n contest.. Grand prize for the most spectacular Christmas decorations will go to Salma Fashions in the Capistrano Beach Plaza. The best me.rcl11nt's window prize was won by Kent's Cleaners, also in the Plaza. The beautifully decorated white tree tn Vohann of California's showroom in the village took lhe trophy for most beautiful tree, tnd neighboring Smetana Photo won the most outstanding religious display. The most unique decor wu Fashion Conspiracy's in lhe Plaza. Two area awards also Wert made - best on the oceanfront was the Capilltrano Beach Motel, and best on.the Estrella mall was Davis,,on Realty. Honorable mentions were given to the Plaza Merchants Association for its aolden bells and lo Del Thomas, Vlllqe Hair Fashions, Karts Shoes, and Life Center Health Foods. I Chairman of the judging, Louise Leyden, said trophies will be presented to the first five winners -certificates to the others -in the chamber'• Jan. 13 meeting. Ablsting Mrs . Leyden in the judging were Jim Elliott, May Betterton and Pat Chaney. • lf ' t r GEM TALK ·I." ·~ ' ,, ., .. ; .. ..... ,, TODAY by J, C. HUMPHllR MODERN? DAILY ,ILOT Iliff'"-.. CHARLIE PEDDICORD, WITH WOUNDED FOOT, BACK HOME 'The Most Hectic Ntght I've Spent in 79 Years' •wife Had Gall~ ~ ~'!t:':! Rela~~.~~i~e~.~~o~'!w.~ed or ttie 0.11, P1w s11tr right up to the guy." Charlie Peddicord came home lrom the His wife approached the bandit. dazzled hospital · Tuesday afternoon a f t e r " him with a few questions of God and spending "the worst night I ever went motherhood, and swatted at his gun. The through In '19 yeara." gun went off and Charlie went down. He was not blaming the medical staff The bandit became shaken at this at South Coast Community Hospital for point, Charlie said, ··and he probably st.ill his slee pless, painful night, but he did thinks he killed me ." The police came have a few unkind words for the man •and Charlie was taken to the hospital, who sho t him. where he amazed the doctor with a bullet The PeddlCords had an evening visitor wound that broke no bones. at their Laguna Canyon home Monday. "The doctor said lt was really a puzzle. The man "in a black hat" flashed a gun He looked at me and said 'You 've cut an and demanded money. Charlie refused artery,' and I was so mad I said 'Well, I and his wife Laura tried to take the pistpl didn't cut it'." from lhe bandit. In the scuffle, the gun The would-be robber escaped after "with a barrel that long" discharged and Charlie was shot, forcing Lau r a Charlie was shot in the foot. Peddicord to Jet him out the back gate of "The guy got real scared when the gun their poperty and taking Charlie's $17$ went of f," Charlie said, his bandaged foot pistol in lieu of money, Police searching wrapped in newspaper and prppped upon the area later found a silk stocking the an empty crate. "He was a Coward. If I man may ha ve used as a mask, but could could have stood up, I would have not find the man . knocked the hell out of him." Charlie said he will be ready for the next person who makes an altempt at robbing him . Charlie runs a trading post and lives ln a small triller amid a hall-century of -sa·rvag . has orten ~b'f!en-acrused-of being a wealthy man "with money burled everywhere," but he claiQ'l.S to be broke. The bandit appearing on hill doorstep Monday night had been taken In by the tale.s of wealth, Charlie said. "He came in with a gun in his hand," Charlie recounted. "He had awful black eyebrows with long black lashes and his face was all white. The guy was wearing a black coat that went clean to hCi shoe tops." · "You ought to have seen the gall of my wife," he said of the small woman sitting at the table with a pith helmet shadowing her head. "She went Into the other room saying she was going to get her coat." Charlie related. "When she came back she was carrying my $175 Colt revolver. The man looked at her and said "Drop that gun or l 'll kill you.• Well, the gun wasn't loaded "I'm going to ~1 a brace on both sides of thii t -door. • e sa1ii, rranCl.-l'rn going to keep my shotgun loaded." Hitle1·'s Death Ca1np General Sentenced DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) Franz Stangl, the SS commander of Hitler's Treblinka death camp In Poland, wa s convicted Tuesday of the murder of at least 400,000 Jews and sentenced to life imprisonment. Stangl, 62, who had told the court he had "only done my duty as a police official." listened without an y apparent emotion as the judge described Treblinka as a "death factory." Polish authorities say 781 ,000 persons died in .. Treblinka between July 1942 and October 1943. From 1 Omega,, wo8derful • .. ,,. ... ,, •. Ch:t:istmas ·- eut1t1her1w•s•ver time omega's proud I a ti mt lorth•olrt of.,, position o! emln1nce 0"'9gl, thll Cl:lclstm1s 11 It. ln I~! world of i Sure, • dl•mor;id br•celet fine watches means simply \ watch le an opu lent ll1atshe'llknowyouw1nted Chrl1tm•1 gift. But when the bes! tor her. And ehe'll .! th• watch 11 Omega, auch probably neve r need[ opulenc• 111ln• elegar.ce another watch tor all th& end 1>9rmenency, Chrlslmas1>s :., r·-~ Lei• .. '"" ........ ,..., C•N Mne S.Clsm .. OllAHGll COAST PUlLtlMIMO C/JIUIJAY Robtr+ N. W1M "'""""'.,,. Ml ...... Firm Outfoxed Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crudely pierced stones echoed sparkling water with a beauty even our pre- historic forebears appreciated; J•ck R. Curley Vtu ,.,.lftnl .. .-OMw•l "'-- n.1111111 IC., ... 11 .. "" Jko111•t A. Mu~fH M-silrll E411ttw tuch•'' P. H•ll loUttl Of•"llt Gull., ... om,. c.te MtM:,. Wtlf ... ,,,.. Ntwptrt lttU!: 1211 Wnt l1laoo1 lowll\llrC • l..ffloM IUQIJ ttl l'Wttl A-HUlll"'9Ttll IHChl 111n l•ctl IOll!t'nl'llll W CMl'IWllt: '°" Kot1ll El CM11M RMI Pollution Dumped on VP's Rug CHICAGO (UPI) -The Fox, a mystery anUpollution crusader, says If the U.S. Steel Corp. isn't polluting area lakes and streams, it shouldn't mind his dumping some fluid from lb drains onto the corporatioii'1 Loop office carpet. To make his point, the Fox dumped a foul-smelling fiuid mass on lhe whlt.e carpet of the vlce president in the office b~ilding Tu. .. du.ll• said the substance came directly from U.S. Steel's drains ln Gary, Ind. "A(ter all, that'• the atuff they put In our lakes and streams," the Fox told his only known confidante, Olicago Dally News columnilt Mlke Royko, who identi!ies him u being a mild-mannered middle-aged man from around suburban Aurora. "'Ibey keep 11ying that they aren't really polluting our water. If that's true, then It shouldn't hurt his rug. right?" As he walked Into the olflc'e of U.S. StetJ~VLce Prtlktent Edward Logelin, the Fo~ carried a laree glass bottle under oae arm and 1 stgn and a tiny, coffln- 1baped hoz under the other. "Qood at\1:i noor1, 11 he told t h e rtGbQl.iooilt. "1 arn from tbt Foz Foundation for Conservation Education and we have an award for U.S. Steel for their oustandlng contrlbutlona to our environment." The Fox tried to open the bottle. The lid stuck. By the time the Fox had the bottle open, the receptionist had come around her desk. When he spilled lhe goo over the carpel, tome of it 1plashed on her leg and dresi.. "I guess it was pretty m~." Royko quoted the Fox. "You see. I had put some clams in tbe water. They symbollle the destruction of wildlife." Then the Fox placed his *'award" sign on a couch. left the coffin-shaped box, slapped a "Go Fox -Fight Pollution'' bumper allcklr on the glass door and beat. a hasty retreat. illllce: later approached the little box care!ully. Logelln said they were l!rald It "might be a bomb." Inside the miniature cofrm they found a dt!:ad perch, a dead crayfish ind 1 dead frog . Alon&side was a amall vlal of dark fluid, 1tso taken, accordina: to the Fox, from U.S. Steel's drains. "A pra·nk -ll one thin&," Loa:elln uld. "But thls ls no prank." These forerunners of modem lewelry perfection were valued for ove and prestige. -They ':Vere also believed to haVe protective value end supe:matural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tokens with which early man adome1 him· self and his wife for prote':t.ion of both while he was bunting, and for assurance of favorable considera- tion by his gods. Real skill in the intricate work of cutting gems and fa~hioning de- signs first appeared about 5,000 years ago in Per.sia and Babylonia. and lhe craftsmanship of these early workers is evident in. the· in· trlcale work performed in the cut- ting of designs for amulets and seals fashioned from hematite, jas· per, 1r1arble and rock crystal. Today, the mythical values have been a_bandoned, but-lov&,_ presUge, and ornamental bpauty remain as solid modem valuel ·placed upon precious stones and gems. I I O· OMEGA A-H dl•~.141( IOIJd to141 .,l«ltl WllUl.,111$ '1-t!d\11110flft.14KW!l1!1 t •f Y'll ... l(llfd l old IM'K ... II\ ,.•tell ", •," .. "$&50 J. ·C. ':'! ' 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMIR.ICAID-alASTlRCHAR&l • 24 YEARS IN SA.Ml LOCATION rHONE 141·1401 ... 17 '· . ' • - Lag~111a BeaJeh T~y'9 Ff•wl • N. Y. Steeb"'· ~·E·DI I ION .. .. VPL 63, NO: 30f, 3 sec:rroNs, 37 PASES ,-.............. ,_ .. ~ .... ...... . ! . ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS , WEDNESDAY, DE¢EMl,ER 23,~1970 ... -,, _,......._;... __ • • ·as. ·e • . . " ... Propaganda Ploy Seen By Rogers COVERED PICNIC , AREAS PLANNED FOR NIGUEL PARK· AREA Four.f•mlly Facility lncluclod In First Ph•,. Bulldlnii' ALL KINDS OF LUMBER HAS BEEN ASSEMBLED FOR CONSTRUCTION' OF HAPPENING SITE About 30 Workers Were-on Hancl ~Tod •y in L•st Minute Building Effort 'I• ' f 1r• 'I' \'1 ';,J .-"~~I 0 0 LAGUNA NIGUEL RllllllAL PAik' COUNTY ALLOCATED $55'o,OOO·FOR NIGUEL PARK CONSTRUCTIOtf First Ph•M PrG1r•m· (Within Dottod Linff) Duo Noxt YHr County Approves Work ,On Laguna Niguel Park DAILY ~ILOT ............. RESIDENTIAL DEVELOPMEN>T FOR LAGUNA'S 'HAPPENING' Out Jn the Canyon, There Is No Pl1ce Like Home Laguna Fortune Police Find .$22,690 In Cash Charles Manson's 'Lust for Blood' Cited at Trial · LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Charleo Manson had a lust for death, blood and murder which he hid under a muk of a peace-loving individual just u he has concealed his true character in court, the prosecutor charged today at the Tate- LaBianca murder trial. Flrst phase conatructlon of Laguna Niguel Roglonal Park for a budgeled $550,000 was approved TUesday by the Board of Supervlaon. The 1112-acre park property la localed be'tween La Paz Road and Alicia Pirkwiy, south of Aliso Creek Road. It includes a f7·acre man-made lake. The lint pbaae program, as outlined by engineers VTN Orange County· lDcludes developmtrit of picnicking areu, roads, parking areas, waler supP!y. a maintenance building, an en t r an i e structure off La Paz Road, athletic fields and picnic atrudures. Total a:iist of development of the park is $1.4 million, with the first phase to be completed'ln 1971 and the balance Jn 1972. nie VTN plan calla for a recreation of an earlier era in Caij(omla bl.stcry-the ranchos. Open fields with a backch:oP of rollln( hlDa ii the 1etting. Foot and bone traila, ponds, the lake and a ranch-like atmosphere carried but by all structural compooents. The lab aimntly la llDed wl1ll water Depuly D~lrict Atlomey Vincent Bugllosl resumed his summaUon of the caae with Manion and the three women codefenclanla all abeent from the courtroom, llatenin( lo the proceedlnp After ..... u.a. fi•• days. Laguna arresled .. cb8rges ·o1 bavlng .. open byJ~~l,=g"'upari:.~ .. ~-Uniforms Stolen Beach police have-'been unable to kx:ate~liqUor contallir. ln their 1tatioo WNOO.. ~ -~11-.::ivn:w the owner of 12%,lllO, collflacaled In a Po Hee ldentlflicf'the,two .•· R;ooald Paul . of the Iii< monlb lrial, tur:ned Wedneaday brown paper .bag from "'° Hain, 25 and Johll G<orse Wallll;•:n.,. r_::;..~;t-:i-:1~ Leno A. t T, -·o .. nna. ..lfi.gh Massachusetts ~(traveli.agthroJ&h·the Foll~ttte.-arreet.s, Ult# ·men we,e ·. ~~1. .pa~,,...._.. reclaimed at the Moulton Niguel Water District Sewage treatment pla'fit. The coflsuttants said'UiliJ water is not suitable for 11ocldng· with flah and olher marlrie life and should be "'P!Bced wilh fresh water. Planned f or secon d ph a1e deYelopment are athletic fields,, a nature study area, ~ildrJmS play, ·areas, day camping groups far youth grou~. two • observaUon points and an eques trian staUon.· Oruge Coast Weadler nie weathennan's Christmas . present to the Orange Coast is not ~eeplng his promise of rain for to- day. Mosily sunny skies W!ll pre. vaJl Thursday with temperatures In the low !!Os. ·--INSIDE TODAY. Art Colony. " ·laken• In a ,,polrol <ar fo.~11\e ~; ,~~~dtl":.d.i'!::; e'l~ ,_....;, . ,...,; ' ._..._ Tlle' two )'!lq men, stopped by police Beach pclllce •l!'lion. When• .-.pi.. . _,.., """"'!"'~ . !•'." -~, . .., Boaeh ,...ce are -·-mtl!'&. , for a routine tramc vJolaUon, were out of the car, police claim c6Uad a ; ~ tor .bom's Uiat evenfr1g •1oot1nt the . theft ~)' ,of. ,,14,, bllketb&ll l fiUreit 1 ln clucUt11 movies i8 greater thml ever before, rays the' president of ~dtoarcb Cine· ma Theaters, t0h.o's opening three new .movie houses on the Orange Coast-t'"s week. Ste Ent<rtainN~(.· faQI , j8 SANTA, T UR~ TO PAGE 11 ·°' .... . . small plastic'bag.of maiijuana. fw;a vl<;tlm totally at~·'" • un11..-: from ,,.;.ma -"Hi&ll ' The amsti1Ji officers returned to the ' In the eolire ~of the~ of 7 5<bo01°)1el°"""" lo, a v1sltlnf tum. suspecta' au!'lmliliile for a furiblr searob mllllon people, no ..,. ~ not In their T1W '~· VaileJ High ' I ch o o I and aaid ijiij.: found Ute poper bag , bom,., •tfle!r automobiles,: any pla<e '-bautbali 1'"m Is bore for It liiurnament containing the· money oh the OOOr.of uw~ nl sate from hll ·in1i,t1AbSe :lu1t for ,1and &be teaJD·manlcer gne·1a: orange front ,.al' ~ -· wu ~ cl,Mlh.lllilodanclm~•JluilfOsl~. ••andblackuniloinm,lothe1y1111talllobe denomlnatiom ~·fl\inl·1• fl'l ' oSlio ~.!'j zrJl !qr !ht. ·ll!rY I wuh!ld, sdlOol qflli:lala aald. , The two .. dlbiitd\iit 'l :u· ~;s;s· ~ ' , ~-~ laJtlisi'11 ' WJmt the·. ;qulpment cap: WI I ellher lhe liag'cor ~·ot i ~*1W'wtl9' mlcl ..-..p!lcf 'l'l1eaClaf aner-. police marijuaoa. They jiOSll!d )Joni! 'of , J II DO cifiaill bee:-loO-alcl "l' anbo!'m .,..i--... lbCI flYl1\ each and were released p e n d I n g waa not coing to hurt them.. alld t:Oot d:Nt·unltorrDI. valued' at $5IXI. Municipal Court arralgnment Dec. a on Manaoo went bid< lo the aulomoblle One of the oaUlll """ ,_ed when ~ ~f ~Ion o~ marijauf!"'~ C>Uiltde, Buglloll aald, IDd rn.trucled ibe tfllef apparentlJ>• dropped JI '"' the havlnganopeneontainerlna\rehHk CharJes ''Tel" Watlm, Patricia wayoutthe"doar, ---· Laguna Btoch police have w.;;i;;the Kren"1nl<el and Lesll~ Van Houten to to The Apple Valley !Mm blld .-set FBI lo enter the 1nvestigaUon oi:"lht Inside bol "ilon't let them >mow )'OU'ro ol unllormll along !or Ille toc*1Wnenl 1ncf money ownenh!p. -, tolnl lo kill them. wlll contlnut to play. , '/, , I , ' .. 011ly:1'.'~' CHRDSTMAS ..... ' ... ," n C1ll'lmlle I CMcllU.. .,.. ' Cllilllfllll ..__ »a -... ·-.. D9111t' ,...... ' =: ... : ...... ,.. .. , ... ,_ • 1M' -" ... ~ ,. -. --· -,. .. ~,.... '' lttl!llHI ....... --. r-"'!"' ,,,:; sr::'.-.....,, '"'' , .......... ,, -... -. --" .._..-.,.,, --.. .. . ---.-------~ -~ • ' "' . • _LNati~n ·-~EMge _ ... ~s ~ ' -.:.~any · Pri~ners'· [ ' - hM lNToN!o, Tn. (AP) -Aa Army He cailod on Americana to preaun the - . . -Jllry_!feHs Medi-Cal. Cut Fears By JACK BROBACK 01 ltM DlllY rnet Sllff -who WU 1-ilorled by Ille Viet Viet Cong In Sooth Vietnam and tbe r--c.cq-for-flve years aays Amertcans·are Patbet IM-in-LaOI, along with the North o-.,rioOtlng half of the men held captive Vietnamese. Orange County Medical Ce n t-e·r' 1 operatk>n-has been praised ln general by the Grand .Jur y but s_om~ recommendations made for improvement and fear e:s:pressed over · Medi.Ca! finaoclng euta. . I tn 'Sciilbeut-Aala. The Viet Cong and Pathet Lao, he 1&id, GreeD Beret MaJ. Jame. &we, 32, of "Have enjoyed an anonymous status M~ Tu., ,.ya 770 mat -lhout hall. btcauae no a«enUOn bu been focused oo ol lbt lll1matod 1,IDG. held by the enemy tbem." ;;tr'~ In South Vietnam,~ Bui 111 llleli ...i to .....U. llaool.1oto nJeu1iW Amw!caoi 'lle!d . In North Vleloam. -are forgetting abwt u,q. TIO men, Rowe told newsmen ~· -lie -held In Viet Cool pr!IOll iampo In South Vietnam lrom hil eaplln Ill October INS uoW hb escape "' Dec. II, 1ltB. Two Utilities Seek"lncreases Two mafor public utlllllel le!'V!ng tbt Orange Coast are1 have flied for rate tncru.sea with Ille Public UW!Uea CommlllloJi. The Southern Callfornla Edison Company ii seeking a major rate hike, aaking for a 18.1 percent boost for restdenUal service. A leuer lncru!e, U peioent for domestic aemce, ii being IOught by Ille &outhun California Gai'Company. Ed1lon Company officials said the new rates art estimated to bring in an additional $1~ million annually. A portion of the hike, if granted, would be effective next year with the remainder to be reflected in 1972. A gas company spokesman II.Id the company is asking for Ila hike to IO into effect March 31, 1971. Tbe lncreue would produce just over 'I! million in new revenues, to cover a price lncreue enacted by it.. supplier, the El Puo Natural Gas company. Duke Takes Off ' On News Media * * * . Miss Davis Whisked Into Court SAN RAFAEL (UPI) -Black militant heroine Angola Davll, wltb a ~ flal· alule to frlenda, appeared brtelly Ill court today to face charaea o[ ~aey, kl~ and murder. Hei...malgnment on. ihe cbargu was postponed unw· Jan: 5 at the request of attorney• ......,u.,· ber. After a JS.minute appearance before Superior Judge E. Warren McGuire, Mils Davis .... returoed to jail. Siie hid been brought hack to califoroil Tuesday oo cbarles of belplng organile the prisoner escape plot which resulted iD a shootout that took four lives. Mia Davis, 28, wu Down on a secret fJVtrnigbt journey from New York Tueaday shortJ,y after ahe lost her two- month legal struggle against extradition back to California. Extraordln¥)' security precauUon1 were taken on the 11-hour prop driven Air NatlOOal Guard fllgbt to Hamilton Air Force Base. The' former U'C LA philolopby instructor wa1 acet1mpanled by Qlne California !aw enforcement agent. and two matro~. From Hamilton, an unmarked patrol car toot ·11er to the heavily-guarded civic center. About two doz.en spectators stood across from the courthouse as Miss Davls was brought in. Miu Davis, dressed Jn a brown pant suit. was booked on charges or kJdnaping, murder and conspiracy. Sb@ bad been arrested as a fugiUve in a New York City motel Oct. 13 on warrants charging she bought guns used In an attempt to frte three convkta from the '-·· Marin County courtroom of Superior BUUIA PARX (AP) -Actor John Judi~ Harold J. Haley. -w-... ya-V1ce.11nuc1mt Sfln-T.~-aai.r---Jam..-McCJaln-and oe,. la juJUfled In 1111 crtUcilm o1 the wlllla)o' <Juillmas· and J o n a t h a n oewr media. Jacbon. 17 wbo brouibt guns Into court. •t don't think be'a aaJd CN)e thing that were tilled~ abdbld upset y~," Wayne tOld newsmen Ml'8 Davis was spirited from her New Tulld&y at grOundbreaklng ceremonies York cell only 11 hours after U.S. for an ammement center at Knott's Supreme Court Justice John Harlan Betry farm refused to intervene in the extradition . ".You're aQowed to say whatever you proq!:edini• against her. VALOR IN VIETNAM Set. Bob McDermott Coast GI Saves Buddy's L.ife, Wins 'V' Medal Moving swiftly but gingerly through an area heavily booby-trapped by the Viet Cong, an Orange Coast serviceman recently saved the life of a wounded buddy and won himself the Bronze Star. Army Sgt. Robert R. Mcllermot~ a 1967 graduate of Costa Mesa's Estancia High School, bu been cited for the brave action last Oct. 11 during a reconnals!ance mission. The Bronze Star award carries the V device signifying valor, according to the announcement by Col. T. J. Hanilen, Ninth Infantry chief of staff. Former Orange Coast College student Is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn w: McDermott, of 18101 Mann St., Irvine. He was on a mission with Company A, Fourth Battalion, Ninth Infantry, when the team i;noved into an area heavily rigged with booby·traps, one of which was detonawt by a radio operator. Shrapnel wrecked the radio, so Sgt. McDtnnott picked bis way through the treacherous field to another team from Company A to arrange m e d l c a l evaeuaUon, saving the carualty'a llfe. He wu re<:olnmended for the awa,rd by Capt. Glynn E. Pope, wbo noted Sgt. McDermott'.!-!....c!i~_JJ in line with bighell military Ideal!, l'tflect!J\g credit upon bimlell and bi! unit. Sit. McDermott bu allo ~lved the Arm'/ Ccj)p:nendation Medal during h1J Vietnam tour, which now involves an infantry assignment with the First Cavalry (AlrmOblle) Division. 'I1le jury in an inlerim report today sa)'!. "the Grand Jury feels that the medic&! center bas an important role to play in the future health services of the ' county." Some ol the problem of the center are due to the substandard condition of the older buildings and poor planning when the newer buildings were constructed, the jury found. It was told that these problems woold be solved with the completion of the remodellng and conatruc:Uon plarui for the center., _ 'Ibe jury report prailed the center for lta collection pollcy but recommeQded that a study of the fee structure and methods of setting fees should be undertaken. "Although the fees at the medtcal center are higher than at other hospitals in the county It should be noted that this is Partially true becat11e the center fees include profu\iona! services by house staff which is generally not true in other hospitals," the report stated. The jury expressed concern over recent Medi.cal llnanclng cull by the aisle. "These reductions will oot only severely cut revenue to the center but may alsO increase the patient load due to the neceulty of treating patient.a who were previously cared for in private facilities ." AffillaUon with UCI was praised as "attracting a large and competent staff to the center.'' Exam p I es of "sophisticated and advanced medical care" provided through the university. hospital Ue up were listed as the inten• s!Ye care, cardiac care and burn units. "Rehabilitation of patients is becoming Increasingly Important as more critically ill patlenta survive the acute stages of illness," the jury reported. "But it is surprising that the county has so few beds available for this purpose." Use of paramedical personnel to develop improved health care is ret'Ommended. "The training and use of Jay personnel to do' tasks which professionals do and which do not require their special skills w o u I d be advantageous." ,1 A list of recomll)endations includes: That cliniCi located at the center be: open 10me evening each week; that patienta whose tioctors have sent them to the; mePJcal center for special <:are or te!ta be ref~ired directly to the required clinic ; that' every doctor be conversant with lhe ,Colt to the patient and t(l the county of the care he recommends, and that bilingual personnel (Spanish and Engllah) be available on every shUt. want about other public figures, but wben Atthorltlts .said the heavy security and you aet on the frying pan you get all secrecy was needed because of the upset," Wayne said. "repeated anonymous threats of Tbe q.year-old Olcar winner said be' a · terrorism . ., Contest Winners Told "been out drunk" with newsmen who In a related development, Ruchen "only remember that I was drunk" when Magee, 31, cbarl:ed along with Miss they write their stories. Davis in the courthouse shootout, was Missing German Boy Returned for Ransom MUNICH (AP) - A 5-year-old West German boy kldnaped lrom hb home Monday was freed Tuesday night llllharmed afttr hll parull paid 16;lll0 rall!OTll, police rtportod. 'niey said Stefan Arnold wu handed over to rep~tatlves of a Munich newspaper, who delivered the ranaom money. He was abducted by a man Monday tnorning while walking wltb hll 3-yu.r-old alster near his home in a Munich lllburb, olfidala aald. DAILY PILOT cb8.lned to a chair and muuled during a court bearing in San Quentin prison after be threatened Judie WUW.ow Christian and aCC'Uled authorities of conspiring agaiMt blm and Mis.! Davls. ''I tried to leave Marin County once before -and if I had a gun I'd try to leave again," Maiee said. He was the only convict pu1tclpint to 8UrVtve the gbootouL Expio·sio11·Recorded . . In Soviet Test Site UPPSALA, S>'eden (AP) -A 1tron1 undtrpmd aploslon, called • 'a n unprecede.nted blut" by S w e d 11 h seismologists, was registered today from a Soviet nuclear test area close to the caspll!t Sea. The Seimlologlcaf ln!lltule ol Uppoala Univ~ty rtported it was located in the Plain ol Ull.Jurt immediately east of the Ca!plln Sea. A Santa's sack full o[ trophies will be given soon to Capistrano B e a c h tradespeople by the co mm u a i t y ' s Chamber of commerce ln a record- aetting deeoraUon contest. Grand prir.e for the most spectacular Christmas decorations will go to Salm& FashioD.!l in tbe Capistcaho Beach Plai.a. The best merchant's window prize was won by Kent'• CJeaners, also in the Plaza. The beautifully decorated white tree In VohaM of California's showroom in the viUaae took the trophy for moat beautiful tree, and neighboring Smetona Photo won the most outstanding rellglous display. The most unique decor was Fashion Consplracy's in the Plaza. Two area awards also were made - be.st ·on the oceanfront was the Capistrano Beach Motel, and beat on the Estrella mall wu Davisson Realty. ., Honorable mentions were given to the Plar.a Merchants Association for Its j:Olden bells and to Del Thomu, Village .............. ......... _ .. ·ca.. ... Ol!;AHG• COAST MUIMINO COM'AJl't Re1t1rt N. W1M Fir1n Outfoxed "'"1111111 •rAI M111htf , J1clt •· Cvrley Vitt ""111.nf ..... ,....,.1 M....- 1 11111111 tc .... 11 ...... 7htM11 A. M•r,lih11 MMll~ IMlllll" tUc~trd P. H1I 5111111 Onntt CMlty .... -Ctttt M .. 1 m ht ll'Y l'INlt """"'' INCll.I :p'll W... ...... IW~ • u,.. ... e111 m ,_, ,.,_ """""'*' IMC111 usn ~ ...,...,.,. ... ~---.,~bll . . Pollution Dumped on VP's Rug CHICAGO (UPI) -The Fo1, a mystery ant1polluµon crusader, says Jf the U.S. Steel Corp. isn't polluting area lakes and stream&, It shouldn't mind his dumping some fluid rrOm Its drains onto the .corporation's Loop offlce carpel To make his point, the Fo:1 dumped a foul.gmellina fiuld ma11 on the white carpet of the vice preal~nt in the ofnc6 building 'nteaday. He sail'! the subrtance came directlJ lrom U.S. Steel'a dratna In Gary, Ind. "Afltt all, thtt'o the stuf! llley put In our lake1 lod atrW111," the Fox told his oo1y lrnown confidal\le, Chicago Dally News columnlst l41kt Royko, wbo ldeattn&: b1m &1 bcln1 a mild.mannered m~Hled au.n from around auburbao Aurora. ''T\ley keep sayln& \bal they aren't really polluUna our w1ter. If that' a trUe, then It shouldn't hurt his rua, rlaht? .. As he walked Into the office of U.S. SU!el Viet Prllldent Edward Logelln, the -Fox ttrrJed a large glau boUle under one arm and a sign end a Uny, Coffin-- shaped bo1 Wldet ·tbe other. "Oood afternoon," he told the re<epUonisL "I am -from the Fox • Foundation for Conservation Education and we have an award for U.S. Steel for their oustanding contributlona to our · e.nvlronment." The Fox tried to open the bottle. The lid stuck. By the time the Fo1 had the botUe open, the r~pUonilt bad , come around htr desk. When he spilled Uie 100 over the carpel, 10me of 1t splashed on her leg and dress. "l guesa It was pretty messy," Royko quoted the Fox. "You set, I had put some clams in the water. They symbolize the destruction of wlldlife." Then the Fo:1 placed his Haward" 1ign on a couch, left the coffin-shaped bo:1, slapped a "Go Fox -Fight Pollution" bumper sticker on the glass door and beat a hasty retrtat. Police later approached the little bo:1 carefully. Logelln llld they were afraid it "mt1ht be a bomb." Inside the miniature coffin they found a dead perch, a dead crayfish and a dead frog. Alongside wu a &mall vial of 4•rk fl\lid, also taken, according to the t~ from U.S. Steel's drall)I. "A prank ls one thine," Logelln aaJd. "But this b no prank.'' Ha\r FuhlonJ, Karls Shoes, and Life Center Health Foods. Chairman of the judging, Louise Leyden, said trophies will be presented to the first five winners -certlficatea to the othen -tn the chamber's Jan. 13 meeting. Assisting Mrs. Leyden In the judging were Jim Elliott, May Betterton and Pat Chaney. -·---AtwnlMIUOlil GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHllD MOOERN? Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age woman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crud~ly pierced stones echoed sparklmg water with a beauty even our.pre-- historic forebears appreciated. These (orerunners of modern lewelry/erfection were valued for ove an prestige. They were also believed to have protective Value and supernatural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tokens with which early man adome1 him· sell and his wife for prote-_tion of both while he was hunting, and for assurance of favorable considera- tlon by bis gods. Real skill In the Intricate work of cutlin& gems and fa shioning de- signs first appeared about 5,000 years ago In Persia and Babylonia. and t.he craftsmanship of these early workers Is evident in t!'ie In- tricate work performed in the cut- tlng of designs for amulets and seals fashioned from hematite, jas· per, marble and rock crystal • Today the mythical values have been ab~ndoned, but love, prestige, and ornamental beauty remain as solid modem values placed upon precious stones and gems. ' ... DAll.iY ,II.OT Sttiff ,.._ CHARLIE PEODICORO, WITH WOUNOED FOOT, BACK HOME 'Tht Moat HKtic Night I've Spent in 79 Years' •wife Bad · Gall~ Peddicord Relates Stickup Try By PATRICK BOYLE Of ,_ Delly Pllte lllH Charlie Peddicord came home from the hospital Tuesday afternoon a f t e r spending "the worst night I ever went through in 79 years." He was not blaming the medical staff at South Coast Community Hospital for his sleepless, painful night, but he did have a few unkind words for the man who shot him. The Peddicords had an evening visllor at their Laguna Canyon home Monday. The man "in a black hat" flashed a gun and demanded money. Charlie refused and his wife Laura tried to take the pistol from the bandit. In the scuffle, the gun "with a barrel that long" discharged .and Charlie was shot in the foot. "The guy got real scared when the gun \\'ent off," Charlie said, his bandaged foot wrapped 1n newspaper and propped upon an empty crat&. "He was a coward. lf I could have stood op, I would have knocked the hell out of him." Charlie runs a trading po3t and lives iii a small trailer amid a hall-centliry of salvage. He bas often been accused of being a wealthy man "w\th money burled everywhere," but he claims to be broke. The bandit appearing on his doorstep anyway, so she set U down and walked right up to,the guy." His wife approached the bandit, dazzled bim with a few question:s of God and motherhood, and swatted at his .sun. The gun went off and Charlie went down. The bandit became shaken at thls point, Charlie said, "and he probably still thinks he killed me." The police came and Charlie was taken to the hospital, where he amazed the doctor with a bullet wou nd that broke no bones. "The doctor said it was really a puzzle. He looked at me and said 'You've cut an artery,' and Twas so mad 1 said 'Well, I didn't cut it '." The would-be robber escaped after Charlie was shot, forcing L aur a Peddicord to let him out the back gate ot their poperty and taking Charlie's $175 pistol in lieu of money. Police searching t he area later found a silk stocking the man may have used as a mask, but could not find the man. Charlie said he will be ready for· the ni;~t _ J>e!son who makes an attempt at robbing him. --· . "I'm going to put a brace on botli sides of that door.'' he said. "and I'm going to keep my shotgun loaded." Monday night had been liken Jn by tile · Hi'tle ' Death Ca tales of wealth, Charlie said. r 8 mp "He came in wit.ti a gun In his hand," Charlie recounted. "He had awlul black . General Sentenced eyebrows with long black lashes and his • face was all white. The guy was wearing DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) a black coat that went clean to hi• shoe Franz Stangl, the SS commander of tops." Hitler's Treblinka death camp In Poland, "Yoo ought to have seen the gall of my was COIJVicted Tuesday of the murder of wife," he said of the small woman sltUng at least 400,000 Jews and 1entenced to lift at the table with a pith helmet shadowing imprisonment. ~-~-~·~-~-~ "She went Into the other room saying had "only done my duty as a police 1he was going to get her coat," Charlie official," listened without any apparent related. "When she came back she was emotion as the judge described Treblinka carrying my $17S Colt revolver. The man as a "death factory." Polish authorities looked at her and said 1'Drop that gun or say 781,000 persons died in Treblinka I'll kill you.' Well, the gun wasn't loa·ded ·between July IM2 and October 1943. ' From , Omega,, wo:derful • .,..,th•P;,: Christmas , Butllth1r11wuever , time omega'I praud\ a time for the girt Of an position of 1mlnence Omega, thllct'lrltlmu 11 It.. In the world or\ Sure, a diamond brae.lit line walcb• m11n!I 1lmply- watch 11 an cpulent 111atahe'llknoWYoUWlnted Chrl1tm11 Girt. But whlR the best lorher, And 1he'111 the witch la Omega, 1uch prob ably never need! opulence g1ln1 elegance another walch for all the 11r1d permar.ency. Chrlslmasl!s !'l .. --~ 0 OMEGA ,,_. dlelJIOllldt. ,41( 1oll4 Gold er1et1l1t wlt'1! .. l 115 a-ti lll11Hftd1, HICwllltto or ytllo• toll" ool• bnc .. ltl •l lCll •••••"•,.,I~ J. C. .JJ.umph,.1'ej Jewefer:1 1'823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVl:NllNT fEltMS l4NICAMEIUCARD-MASTERCHAR;t 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION PHONl S41-J401 1. I ,, • ' . . ~ -,.-.----.-, • .,_ ... ~-... -.. -, .--..,.~.,...,""''~ v • -' • • • ' San Oeme°"' -rL-~-. C-apiS.rano EDITION N.Y. Steeb -' --. VOL ~3, NO. 307, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS WEDNESDAY, DECEMB,Elt' 23, 1910 ~....;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;...;..~-=~~::;;-:...~~~...,..~~~--~....;;;.....;;.~~--';....-..~...;..~'"-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~...;;~·~~_;.;;;...___;~=..~~~..:l:.-~ ...... ~-·~...;..::...~~~.:_..;;......:~~--=~· Deputy LOii ANGELES (UPI) -Charles MaMOD had a lust for death, tblood and murder· wblcb be hld under a mask of a pellct-lovlng ladivldual jdlt 11 be baa cooeealed.J>ls true character in court, the pr-..tor charpd today al the ·Tale- LaB-.i murder trial. Qepity Dlltrict Allorney Vincent Bullloll nsumed bll summaJloa of the CUIJ.wlth MIDR and the three women f -" DA codefendants all ~·t frl*n Iha courtroom. listm!n& to tbe proceerlinp by loudspeaker in .. .,l!f boldlna ceJla. BugtJool, windin& up a three-<lay mdew of the six monlh trial, turned W""-'ay to the lllayiDp of wNltlly .,..... I.mo I•Bi.,,... azadi bis wife RcwemAry, '!be pr-..tor delcrlbed 11 .. ..., and bis blpplO ro-. ~ .,,,,,.,r 1.oo COVERED PICNIC AREAS PLANNED FOR NIGUEL PARK ARIA Four.family Facility lncludod In Flrat PhaH Buildfnv }' CllGftDCTll·I tl VSLIPllll T• PUAC:l 2 • 0 0 LAGUNA NIGU~L 11111.AL PAllC COUNTY ALLOCATED $550,000 FOR NIGUEL PARK CONSTRUCTION First Phan Program (Within Dotted Line,s) Due Next Yur County Approves Work .. On Laguna Niguel Park First · phase construction of Lagima Nlpel Regional Park for a budgeted J550,000 was approved Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors. Tbe 16%-acre park property Ls located between La Paz Road and Alicia Partway, south of Aliso Creek Road. It Pcludes a 47-acre man.made lake. The ftrst phase program. as ouWned by mgtneers VTN Orange Counfy Includes levelopmenl of picnicking areas, roadll, parking areas, water supply. a inabltenance building, an e n tr an c e llructure off La Pm: Road, athleUc fields tnd picnic structures. TOtal cost of development of the part is Jt.4 million, with the first phase to be :ompleted in 1971 and ttie balance in 1972. The VTN plan calls fOr a recreation of &n earlier era in Callromla hi.story-the ~anchos. Open fields. With a backdrop of rolling hills Is the setting. Foot and hone tralla, ponds, the lake and a ranch·like atmosphere carried but by all atructural .............. The lske cumntly Ill filled with waltt rtclalmed al the Moullon Niguel Wale!' fllltrlcl SO,,... --planL '!be Marina Streets To Be Lightea consultants said this water Is ·not suitable for stocking with fish and otbcr marine life and sllould be replaced with fresh water. Pl{lnned fo·r second pha se developmeot are athletic flefds, a nature study area, chlldrens play areas, day camping groups . for youth groups, two observation points and an equestrian station. 'Ille phase one area of 45 acres will Include 23 ao-es of turfed and ..iauvely Oat picnic Itta, nine acres'"'Of-planted slopes and h!Dsldes, 1S acres of roadwa11, parking and non-lrrJiated and undisturbed hlllafdoi. Phase two will inchlde 20 acres of turf and 2.1 acres of planted 1lopea and bllflicles. Firemen. Save Marines' Mail A !ltt thi.t mornlng In Iha .. bkle oompartmenl of a Marine Corpa truck on pootaf duty nearly, dalbed ·the ·bopes of <l>ristmu mall ....... bpi -In San Clemente quelled•the blaa leavlnC the •letters and parcels Intact. The bl-erupted In the Marine truck shortly after I a.m. at La Placentia and Estrella. Residents ln the Mar.ina View Heights The tru~was being med by the post community have been m the dark about . who should tum on their Streefllglils. -office " a· mporafJ' mall veblcle c1urJnc Responding to complaints about the the Cbristmal rush. problem, the City Council voted Monday Fltt Department opotamen said Ille to turn on street Ugl)ts In the tract at the 1>1aza .,.. eaallnod to Iha qlno city'• eipenae pending payment by the compartment. de9eloper of tho _,gtsalion fees. _ The annual!"' ts $4,lt'I. The city 90led '!be muill lire apparently Wll <>med to ~ Illa -"In the lllterest ol by a battery "1tlch lhltted from Ila safely.' mount, callllnl lhorl-cln:ull oparb. • - M-anson-'s 'Blood A.ogtles for hours that evening 11IOC)klnc for a victim totally at random." "In the entire population or the city or 7 million_ people, no one -not in their homes, their automobiles, any place - WU sa/e from IJls in.satiable Just for deJ!h, blood and murder," BuclloU aald. '!be prooecutor pictured !or the jury Maaaoo loin& alooe . into the LaBlanca borne, lying up the man and wile and leifln& them bO! to be afraid be<awie be was not going to burl them. Manson went back to the automobile outside, Buglioai. uid, and instructed Charles "Tex" Wat.son, p· a·t r I ct a Krenwinkel and Leslie Van Houten to go inside .~ut "don't let them inow Y<l}l're going to kill ~m. "How thouibt(ul and coo.siderate. Charles Mamon ahOuJd haw a memorial "'Al the LaBlanru be wor, the wne built 'in the United Nat!Clll ln New York mast be .bu~ Jiere in court -juet a for his considerateness. He didn't eveo peace-loving lndlvidual. And then be want• h~ wmbles r,; let them mow· tJiey snaked oul to lel bls bl-"" ....... robola we"' going to be killed becaule he dldn'I ---..., want them to panic." and stnd them in to kilt." Bugllost aald the LaBiancas bellevecl The delendanta were barred lrom Owlie for they may\tf. COUid have run further aessioos of the trial after wild out of the hoU5e to .get help Or' ICl"!amed · acenQ before the jlD')' in wblcb ooe even or callcd the poUce or clooe 101Dethlng. •lrufiled with the . ..,-. Rogers Blasts Red POW Li-s-t ' a-s Three Face Court Trial ' ' In Stickups Contemptible' Propaganda ' Bid _Charged . By Official WASHINGTON (AP) -Nori~ Vietnam's release Of a purported oWclal prisoner ·of war list Tuesdaj wu criUcized by Secretary o! State WWlm P, Rom . tqdfy .. ., ~a ~bit · maneuVel' •• Jar~-Jlurt>ooa." !. pa;,--of bandit 111spects aCCllled of a erriel. of Southern California .Uckups lncludfnl ... $10,llllO ~lry ~ J9! ·ID 1 JV-must 'tiii·b-W Ill onm,. ¥ County Superior-Cl!rt...:: - SoiitJi °'""" C\ianl)' ..Judldal -Com! Judpn_.,t Domeolcfilnl ordered Clyde E. Hall, 13, and G<riln H. Rice, It, to appeor Dec."° for trial dates bJ be .... --He~.Jbl..Nor;tb V!etrtsm1s1 -lnl'W- . tfO ltftalon lo send llJllOWWWlallftl IO Paril to fain Jntomalloo 00 Iha prisonen of war, but addOd they lalled to prOvJde· any fresh lnformaUon on the fate ol tbe' cspturecf Americans.. Police assert tbe men, each held in lieu ol $40,ollO bail, were driven by heavy heroin habit.. Hall also facet burglary charges u well as robbery counts and ls identified by state prison authorities as an escapee from the Soledad CorrecUonaJ InsUtute. She's a Christmas Bunny Hall and · Rice are ampects In a string of finance company ·robberies, m8riet stlckups and apartment b u r g I a r l e 1 spanning tbe summer and fall months. Twi}:year,old · Sheila Lambert Is picture of concentration as she tolls off a few wishes for St. Nick during •recent visit to • Santa at South Coast Plaza in Costa Mesa. Sheila is · the daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Billy Lambert of San· Clemente. One .,... involved $10,000 worth of furlshed jewelry items and uncut gems taken from Jones Jewelers, 8815 Bolsa Ave., Westminster. A total of $4,000 in loot baa '° far been recovered. County R~tains $l21,000 For Mental Health Funds Ironically, they were am:sted after an anonymous tlp to San C I e m e n t • detectives following a $135 finance company robbery -amallest among those charged to them -last ran. Police say Rice and Hall fit the description of the two· long-haired gunmen who hit Household Finance Corporation, 10'1 S. El Camino &al. Rice will be tried on four counts each of armed rObbery and burglary, while Hall -his nelt few years jeopardized by the prison t!C>pe charge alone -wtll be tried Cll three count. ol each. Christmas Homes Still Needed \ For Marines Hundreds of Marines Oil Chrilbnaa leave from Camp Pendlet.on 'will spmd the holiday Friday in volunteers' homes under an annual service sponaored by San Clemente's Interfaith Serviceman'• Center. There still are GI• waiting for pla~ tnto volunteel'.'' hornet for Chrlltmao dlllner, center~ aald · today. Orange County Mental Hl!altb Program supporters won the day Tue.day and aalvaged $121,000 which bad been tentatively cut from the program: SuperviMJ's ·approved county spending of $'195,425 as budgeted despite a '11 percent cut In stale support. In previous years the state had paid for 90 percent of the mental health.programs mandated by state law. But the current squeeze in the date budget bas resulted In drastic cuts. County Administrative Officer Robert E. 'Jbomas last week recommended reducing the couoty spi!nding total to '674,320 or 14 percent of the program. Mental Health leaden, led by Dr. ·E.W. Klatte', county prosram chief, fought for restoration of the $12t,OOO Thomas had cut · Dr. Klatte agreed to cuts of fl38,673 In the prosram by-not filling budgeted posltiona, reducing the training program, cutting out tbe major part of the Alcohol Inpatient program, eliminating the post of Chief of Research and Evaluation and two screenlng teams. He urged ~retenUon of SUPPort for five community-based drug abuse· programs, acUvaUon of the human · outreach program 1n southeast Santa . Ana, -Ion ol the.Methadone drug acldlcl Prolram from 50 to 250 patlenll, expandlllg Iha Akobol•inpatlen!;ptqp'~ Jin estlmated•tol youna men far frDm 1 , • •• • 1 • • .. ~ =..it %~:irlaid~ Mn..;,.:;:.: --COUncil: Gl'ants center.· • . . T1ie-,....,.:a-·w11o .o1o·11o1ci-1o • 1·6·ac· re 'Re;,."'ne . opend the day with a family lllUI will· _, ftOeive Cbriatmu cheer oonetheleu, she . 1 ~ • and continuing tho Fullerton Child Guidance Preschool program. The 11.1pervtsora' action 'saved the above programs.· Supel'Vililr David L. Bakel", ·who had expressed serious doubts a b o u t continuing the program at 'full coUnty COit last week, agreed Tuesday that 0 we should attack the ·problem at the front end instead of after it . happens. Supemsor William L. Htllllpa called It "trading dollars now for jail oosts later." As the llgurea now tland the total mental health program wJU co 1 t $4,400,759 or which the cowrty will flSf the budgeted $795,425. '!be ortglnal budget before the llate cub .,.. $5,IU,'IM. Orange Comity'• cul of ,fl percont of the state funds compares with a statewide average cut ol 11 percent. Thomas . stated. This.'" wu becat11e the county did not spend all money appropriated In the prtvJous rear while those county's which overspen were not cu( as much. · That state 11 now paying but ~.8 million Jnto the cotUJty pro et a II). compared with an original commitment or $4.5 million. . The South Coasl'Cblld Guidance C<lller In • ~ M.eaa. would bav,o Ileen drilUcally ,<qt ln_penOMel and smiceli• 1 if the ,f12l10f0 , WU 1D0& l'fllti:rid. Dr. • Kiitte l&Jd. . • r •' ,., I ":". --. . . . E:Allf.;Y I>tA:DtiNE . \ ' . . . · FOR :'DIME' AD-S-. " salt!. The l'tt.OOe of II acrea ol land from All I D-A·Llno ads lnteoded. lor -• A Ottlstmu Eve celebration is reftrlcted general business to P~ bll urd ocheduled at the center with a live Santa ' dev~t ~II' granted by the San pu callon Sat ay In the .D~Y. Cl.!"' ells~ gifts donated for the Juan Capiltr'!"' City Comlcil M~y. PILOT m111I be pll!cea by noon TIJuiaday occaaloo by the Women'a Club at Celaure ~ Tfio pu!Ptity, loca~tlii; this "!"-due lo' the ~ D.a1 World. Ca~ VaDe~,llapti!I Cburcb 1llblcb holiday. L ThO centtr'• annual Chrlatmaa bullet . -oo Doi ~-lload. • fl btlnC Adi can be placed at IDl' DAIIlY • will begin at 1 p.m. Oirlllln>as Day, and ~ br Ult JrckeonlCon!pany. The t1W1ne ~~ .wfll 'lbeullll,..:i =~ dooation ol prepond food or money to property will cwtaln II 'bWldlllp a!Jo, bocaule of the 11ew-y-·1 Day bay It.,.-· containing 24i unlta .., d !!'le re n I · bollday For· IUrtbot' lafonnatloo, phone P'vod dooon or vohmle«I wil1ln& to elevations. -the ht One to Iha DAILY PILOT llOll a lltnicemaD can CGlllacl the C011lor No one ..,.a In oppooltloa durlnl the Clusillod Advel'lilln( Dept. -. al tn-1111. public bearfnl. t _.,,,. R<pmentaUvea of .s.n. Edward M. Kennedy (D-Maas.), and .J. W. Fulbrlgbl (D-Ark.), received In Paris a lllll!ig of 339 names of· Americant DOW held. AU bad been listed unnl!iclally earlier: Also named were 20 men listed u dead\. and nnle othera who bad alread.Y DeeD released. · Rogers said the North Vietnamese acknow1edged capturing and holding 391 men, but the United States al.rucly knew that. '!be United Stalel bas Information that 39 other men were captured whose exact late Ill UD<trtaln and the North Vietnamese provided no help 011 thole. "The fact Is that they 're m1oeuvering with these priaoners-of-war in ·a war that's lnhuman. They're d Iv e r tin I attenUon . from tbetr barbarlllm by tbts• method." "I think It was 1 contemptible maneuver aud should be f'eCOIJl1Jed 11 such." The fact is, be auerted, tbat there will. continue to be uncertainty as to the . completene55 of POW lists "until North Vietnam complies w:lth the rules of jnternaUonal war' and alloW11 lnspecilon of prlsoner"'°f-war camps.'' At another point he declared: "So we concl~ they're using the POW ls.sue in a very tnbtunan way to advance their poliUcal objectives." 1fudter 'lbe weatherman'• OU'fstmas present to the Orange Coast 1s not keeping hiJJ: promise of rain .for t~ day. Mostly SUMy· Ules wffi 'pre- vail Thursday with temperatures In the lbw IOs. INSmE TGDAY lnt<relt In Q1Ulllly movW1 ls gre•ttr thaft ntr before, JGV1 \ thl prtsidext of Edtoardl Cint· ma Thtattrs, who'• opening thrtt neur movie houst• on tM Orcmge Cocut thil tottk. Se• E~tertoi~ Pa11< JB. -' o.Jy 1 ~ CHRISTMAS • • t I ' ' r • ' J • ' I I I I --. ·-. -" ..._ . CMdlilllll "' , ·-.... --. ·-.. --. -. ....... , .. ' . .....,........ , ... .,...... 1•11 _.......,. ,. ---" -. ~&. ....... ..... .... ,.,.....,_ ... __ .. --. ,.,....,.... M -n"' .......... , .. ,, =..-:-.: -. --. ._.. ...... ,.,. --.. . ' I l I • ,. ! DAILY l'ILOT SC . . V1Cc•1111 In Sotdla -. ~ ~ati~~: · 'F~rg~~~ . ,.. p-• .:.::....._::::· -1 -" -\ 1r:1.any . nsoner.~ I • ~-,lll'fOlllO, Tex. (AP) -An Army He called on Americana to J!fOllllt'! U.. odf&r 1ihO Wu Imprisoned by the Viet Viet Cong in South Vietnam and .the. ~ tw five years says Ametlc.ans are -Pitlfet'tao-lifLaos, along with the North owirlookina baU of the men held capUve Vietnamese. In ~ Asia. . The Viet Cong and Pathel Lao, he said, b.offl "Beret Maj. James Rowe, 32, of "Have enjoyed an anonymous status McAUea. Tp:,, 1111 '170 men-about b&lf. bet*UsO DD attutio.n bu been focused on d tbe, eltimated 1,500 held by the enemy them." ~~In -Vlelnam, l.aol But in·Uier ieat to preuure Hanoi into rt!AulllC .......... _ held In North VJolmjji,~~ forl<tllng about -·"". ,_·!Iowa told newmnen ~~~ •-bold In Viet Cool prison_ In Soulli 'Vietnam from bli caplun In Oc:tob"! !!A unW bis tscopt oo Dec. •i. 19611. " Two Utilities Seelt1(~emes ~ l'wo-milat·JlUbllc 111111tles oervlng tlle Orange ""'CQ!llt ~ heft filed for rate lncrtues with the Public UUlitles ConimJsslon. The Southern California Edison Qmpany is aeeJdng a major rate hike. asking for a 16.1 percent boo1t for rea:ldential ¥rvice. A -~ incr<aae, U pen:<al !or · domestic aervice, is being aought by the Southern Calllornia Gas C:Ompany. EdilOft C.Ompany offlcJ&Jt said the new rates are esUmated to brine . in an additional •121 million annually. A portion of the blke, II granted, would be effective next year With the remainder to be reflected in 1972. A gas company 11p0kesman aald the eompany Is uJdng for Ill hike to p Into effect March 31, 1971. 'Ibe increase would produce just over '13 miWon In new rtvenues, to cover a price increase enacted by Its supplier, the El Puo Nalural Gil Company; ' . ' Duke Takes Off h ()n News Media lltlENA PARK (AP) -=-Aclor Joh!r -Wayne-..,.-V~Pm!dent-Splro T. Ag- new Is Justllled In bis crttlclsm of tlle lle'f'media. "l don't think he'• Aid cm thing t.bR lhouJd upeet you," Wayne told newmien. Tueaday It iroundbreatln& ceremonies for r an amusement center at Kribtt'1 Berry Farm. 'lYou're allowed to uy whatever you want about other pubJlc figurea:, but when you get .m the fiyln(' J>lll you gel all upset," Wayne 1a1a. · The G-year-old Oscar winner said he's "been cut drunk" with newsmen who ''only remember that l wu dnmk" when they write their 1torlea. Missing German Boy ·Rehirned for Ransom MUNICH (AP) -A 5-year-old WOii German bQll kldnap<d from bis home Monday Wu ' freed Tuesday night unbanned itter bis parents paid '6.800 ranaom, police reported. '!'bey uld Stefan Arnold waa handed over to represenlatlvea: of a Munich newspaper, who delivered the ransom money. He was abducted by a man Monday morning whlle walking with his 3-year-old aiater near hJ1 home in a MWllcb suburb, offtcloh Aid. DAILY PILOT -t:r -t:r -t:r Miss Davis Whisked Intj) Court SAN RAFAE i, (UPI) -Black militant heroine Angela Davia, with a c~~ filt s,lute to friends, appeared briefly iq court today to face charges of conspiracy, kidnap and murder. Her' arralgmDent on the charges waa postpcned unUI Jan. 5 at the request of attorneys repre1enting her. · After a 15-mlnute appearance before Superior Judge E. Warren McGuire, Mis.s Davis was returned to jail. She iiad been brought back to California Tuesday on charges or helping organiz.e the prisoner escape plot which resulted la a shootout tbat took four lives. Mia Davis, 216, was flown on a secret overnight journey from New Yor)t Tuesday shorUy after she lost her two-- month legal struggle ·against e1.tradltlon back to caiilornia. ~ruaordinary security precautions were taken on the 11-hour prop driven Air NaUmal Guard flight to Hamilton Air Force Bue. The former U CL A philosophy instructor was accompanied by nine Calllomia law enforcement agenta and two malrons. From Hamllton, an unmarked patrol car t.oot her to the heavily-guarded civic center. About two doun spectators stood acrou from the courthouse u MW Davis was brought in. Mlsa Davis, dressed tn a brown pant suit;wu.booked on charges of kJdnaping, murder and"conspiracy. She: bad been arrested a1 a fugitive 1n a New Yort Qty motel Oct. 13 on warrants charging , she bought l\lllS used In an attempt to free three convicta from the Marin Cowity '°'l*.CKIDI of S.pedor Judge llan>ld,J,lloley~ __ Haley, oonvlcll James McClain and William Christmas . and. J o n at h a n Jacbon, 171 wbo brought euns: into court. were' tilled. Mia Davh' was spirited from her New Yort cell only 11 hours after U.S. Supreme Court JuJtlce Jobn Harlan refused to intervene in the extradlllon • proceedings against her. ~uthoriUes said the heavy security and aeCrecy was needed because of the "repeated anonymous threats o f terrorism.'' In a ·related develapment, Ruchell Magee, 31, charged along with Miss Dirvis in the courthouse ahootout, was chained ta a chair and muzzled during a court bearing in San Quentin prison after he threatened Judge Winslow Christian and accu!ed authoriUes of conspiring ·against him and Mils Davis. "I tried to leave Marin County once before -and i! I had a gun I'd try to leave again," Magee said. He was the only convict participant to survive tbe ohootouL Explosion Recorded lnJSoviet Test Site UPPSALA, Sweden (AP) -A stron& undersround explosion, called ' • a n unpretedented blast" by S1w e dish. seismologists, wu registered today from a Soviet nuclear test area close to the Caspian Sea. The Seismological lnst,ilute of Uppsala University reported It Was located In the Plain of U.st.Jurt immed.iately eut of the CaspllD Sea. -.- VALOR IN VIETNAM Sgt. Bob McDermott Coast GI Saves Buddy's Life, Wins 'V' Medal Moving swl!tly but gingerly through an .area heavily booby-trapped by the Viel Cong, an Orange Coast serviceman recently saved the lile of a wounded buddy and won himself the Bronze Star. Army Sgt. Robert R. A1cDermott, a 1967 graduate of Costa Mesa's Estancia High School, bis been cited for the brave action last Oct. 11 during a reconnaissance mission. The Bronze star award carries the V device signifying valor, according to the announcement by Col. T. J. Hani!en, Ninth Infantry chieI of st.aff. Form,er Orange Coast College student ls the son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn W. McDermott, of 18101 Mann St., Irvine. He was on a mission with Company A, Fourth Battalion, Ninth Infantry, when the team moved into an area heavily rigged with booby-lrapa, one of which was detonated by a radio operator. Shrapnel wrecked the radio, so Sgt. McDermott picked his way through the treacherous field to anO.ther team from Company A to arrange m e d I c a I evacuaUon, saving the ca..-ualty's life. He was recommended for the award by Capt. Glynn E. Pope, who noted Sgt. McDermott'• action u-.in lin! with highest mllltary ideals, reOecllng credit upon himself and hla - Sgt. McDermott has also received the Army Commendation Medal during bis Vietnam tour, which now involves an infantry assignment with the First Cavalry (Airmoblle) I Division. ' Cut Fears By JACK &ROBACK Of tlMI o:e.., ...... ,,.., Orange County Medical C e.n t.e..r....' 1 cperatlon has been praised In general by the Grand Jury bUt" soIDe recommendations made for improvement and fear expressed ever Medi-Cal financing cuts. The jury In an interim report today says. "the Grand Jury feels that the medical center has an Important role to play in the future health services of the county." Some of the problems of the center are due to the substandard condition of the older buildings and poor planning when the newer buildings were constructed, the jury found. It was told that these problems would be solved with the completion of the remodeling and construction plans for the center. The juey report praised the center for Its collection policy but recommended that a study of the fee structure and methods or setting fees should be undertaken. "Although the fees at the medical center are higher than at other hospitals in the county It should be noted that this is partially true because the center fees include professional services by house sWf which is generally not ti:ue in other hospitals,'' the report stated. The jury expressed concern over recent Medi.Cal financing cuts by the state. "These reductions will not only severely cut revenue to the center but may also increase the patient load due to the necessity of treating patients who were previously cared for in private facilities.'' Affiliation with UCI was praised as "attracting a large and competent staff to the center." Eramples of "sophisticated and advanced medical care" provided through the university- hospital lie .. UP. were listed as the inten. JSive care, cardiac care and burn units. "Rehabilitation of patients is becoming Increasingly important as more critically ill patients survive Ute acute stages of illness," the jury reported. "But it is surprising that the county has so few beds available for this purpose." Use of paramedical personnel tG develop imp roved health care is recommended. "The training and use of lay personnel to do tasks which professionab do and which do not require the~ special skills w o u I d be advantageous." A list of recommendations includes: That clinics located at the cent.er be open some evening each week:-that patients whose doctors have sent them to the medical center for special care 01 tests be referred directly to the' required -clinic; that every doctor be conversant with the cost to the patient and to the county of the care he recommends, and that bilingual persoMel (Spanish and English) be available on every shift. Contest Winners Told A Santa's sack fun of trophies will be given soon to Capistrano Be a c h tradespeople by the co m m u n i t y ' s Chamber of Commerce in a r~cord aetting decoration contest. Grand prize for the most spectacular Christmas decorations will go to Salma Fashions in the Capistrano Beach Plau. Hair FashioJJS, Karls Shoes, and Life Center Heall.I\ Foods. Chairman of tlle judging. ~uise Leyden, said trophies will be presented to the first five winners -certificates to the others -in the chamber's Jan. 13 meeting. Assisting Mrs. Leyden in the judging were Jim Elliott, May Betterton and Pat Chaney. • ~· CHARLIE PEDDICORD, WITH WOUNDED FOOT, BACK HOME 'The Most Hectic Night I've Spent in 79 Y1ar11 •wile Had Gall' Peddicord Relates Stickup Try By PATRICK BOYLE Of tlll O.IW l'I ... IMIH Charlie Peddicord came home from the hospital Tuesday afternoon a l t e r spending "the worst night J ever went through in 79 years." · He was not blaming the medical staff at South Coast Community Hos pital !Gr his sleepless1 painful night, but he did have a few unkind words for the man who shot him. The Peddicords had an evening visitor at their Laguna Canyon home Monday. The man "in a blac k hat" flas hed a gun and demanded money. Charlie refused and his wife Laura tried to take the pistol from the bandit. Jn the scuffle, the gun "with a barrel that long" discharged and Charlie was shot in the foot. "The guy got real scared when the gun went off l" Charlie u.id , his bandaged foot wrapped in newspaper and propped upon an empty crate. "He was a coward. If I could have stood up, I Would· have knocked the hell out of him." Charlie runs a trading post and lives in a small trailer amid a half-century of salvage. He has often been accused of being a wealthy man "with money buried everywhere," but he claims to be broke. The bandit appearing on his doorstep Monday nigtit had been taken in by ihe tales of wealth, Cha rlie said. "He came in with a gun in his hand," Charlie recounted. "He had awful black eyebrows with long black lashes and his face was all white. The guy was wearing a black coat that went clean to his shoe tops." ' ''You ought to have seen the gall of my wife," he said of the small woman sitting at the table with a pith helmet shadowing her head. "She went into the other room saying she was going to get her coat," Charlie . related. "When she came back she was carrying my $175 Colt revolver. The man looked at her and said "Drop that gun or l 'IJ kill you.' Well, the gun wasn't loaded af!yway, so she set it down and walked right up to the guy." His wife approached the bandit, dazzled him with a few questions of God and motherhood, and swatted at his gun. The gun went off and Charlie went down. The bandit became sha ken at this point, Charlie said, "and he probably still th inks he killed me." The police cam e and Charlie was taken to the hospital, where he amaze d the doctor with a bullet wound that broke no bones. "The doctor said it was really a puzzle. He looked at me and said 'You've cut an artery,' and I wa&. so mad I said 'Well, I didn't cut it'." The would-be robber escaped after Charlie was shot, forcing L a u r a Peddicord to let him out the back gate of their poperty and taking Charlie 's S!7$ pistol in lieu of money. Police searching the area late r found a silk $locking the man may have used as a mask, but cou1d not find the man. Charlie said he will be ready for the nelCt person who makes an attempt at robbing him. .. I'm goinJ!: tG put a brace on bol.h sides of that door," he said, "and I'm going to ke~p my shotgun loaded." Hitler's Death Camp Gene1·al Sentenced DUESSELDORF, Germany (AP) Franz Stangl, the SS commander o( Hitler's Treblinka death camp in Poland, was convicted Tuesday of the murder of at least 400,000 Jews and sentenced to life imprisonment. Stangl , 62, who had told the court he had "only done my duty as a police official," listened without any apparent emotion as the judge described Treblinka as a "death factory." Polish authoritie5 say 781 ,000 persons -<lied in Treblinka between July 1942 and October 19'3. The best merchant's window pri1e was won by Kent's Cleaners, also in the 1--;:.,;;_,;;;;;,_;;;;;;,-=:c.':'.. ;-:::.,.---=====~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;mjj' Plaza. The be.auUfully decorated white tree In Vohann or California's showroom in the village took the trophy for most beautiful tree, and neighboring Smetana Photo won the most outstanding religious display. The most unique decor WI! Fuhlon Conspiracy's in the Plaza. Two area awaTds also were made - best on the oceanfront was the Capistrano Beach Motel; and best on the Estrella mall wu OaviSSOD Realty. Honorable mentions were given to the Plaza Merchants Association for ltl golden bells and to Del Thomas, Village GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHlllS MODERN? From1 Omega,, wo8°derful ""'°"'"''""· Christmas , But If there was aver time Omega's proud I a time tor lht gift ol an position ol eminence Omeg1, th l1Ctirlstma1ls It. in the world of l Sure, a diamond bracelet tine wetcl\es means 1lmp1v\ watch la •n opulent 1hatahe·11knowyouwented Chri1lmt1 gift. EM whan 1he best tor her. And she'll.~ the witch is Omeg1, au th probably never need! opulence' g1ln1 eleger.ce another watch for ell lhe 11nd permanency. Chrlstm111se5 :~ ~--~ ..-... ..... ....... ,.., .. .,_ Firn1 Outfoxed Thousands of years ago a young Bronze Age wcman stood before her cave, gazing at the sun across a beautiful expanse of crystal clear water. Loosely clad in a roughly sewn fur of mini length and one shoulder strap, she glanced at her rough garnet pebble bracelet and smiled with pleasure as the crud~ly pierced stones echoed sparkling water with a beauty even our pre- historic forebears appreciated. I Pollution Dumped 011 VP's Rug ' CHICAGO (UPI\ -The Fox, a mystery anf.U>ollutlon crusader, says if the U.S. Steel Corp. isn't pollut,lng area lakes and streams, It shou1dn't mind his dumping some fiuld from Its drains onto the corporaUon's Loop office carpet. To make hi! point, the Fox dumped a foul-smelling .Du1d mass on the while carpel of the v1ce president in the office building Tuesday. He said the substance came direcUy from U.S. Steel's drains in Gary, Ind. "Aller al~ that'• the atulf they put In our lakes and 1treams," the For 191d his only known confidante, Chicago Daily News colwnnlst Mlke Royko, who identifies him u being a mild·maMered . middle-aged man lrom around auburbm AU.rora. "They keep sa,yln.g lhat they aren't really pollutin~ our w:itc.r. It that's true, then It sbouldn t hurt his rug, right?" As be walked into the o!llce of U.S. Sleet Vice President Edward Logelln, the For carried a lar1c glasa bottle under one arm and a sign and a tiny, coffin- ahaped box under the other. L''pooc! allernoon," he told t h e ......_ncepUoru.t. -"l am lrom thl FO% Foundation for C.Onservation Education and we have an award for U.S. Steel for their oustanding contributions to our environment." The Fox tried to open the bottle. The lid stuck. By the time the Fox had the botUe open, the receptionist had come around her desk. When he spilled the goo over tbe carpet. some of it splashed on her leg and dress. "I guess it v;as pretty messy!' Royko quoted the Fox. "You see, I had put some clams in the water. They symbolize the destrUction of wildlife," Then4he Fox placed his ''.award" sign on a couch. left the coffin-shaped box, slapped a "Go Fox -Fight Pollution" bumpe.r 5ticker on the glass door and beat a hasty retreat. Police later approached the Uttle box careh1lly. Logcltn slld they were afraid It "'might be a bomb." Inside the miniature co!!in they round 1 dead perch, a dead crayfish and a d@1d frog. Alongside was 1 small via l of dart fluid , alJO taken, accordlng to the Fol, frQm U.S. Steel's drains. · ~A prank ...b_o.oLt.blng.!.J.ogelin "But this ls no prank." These forerunners of modem lewelry/erfection were valued for ove an prestige. They were also believed to have protective value and supernatural properties. Uncut gems were therefore logical tok~ns with which early man adorne1 him- self and his wife for proter.tion of both while he was bunting, and for assurance of favorable considera- tion by his gods. · Real skill in the Intricate work of cutting gems and fashioning de-~igns first appearell about 5,000 ·tears ago in Persia and Babylonia. and the craftsmanship of these early workers is evident in the in- tricate work performed in the cut- ting of designs for amulets and seals fashioned from hematite, jas· per, marble and rock crystal. 0 OMEGA A-:t d!a1110Nl1.14K 1olld Cold ~ll~lltt WOll~ .• $1:S •-ti di.-dl. ,,,(..,,!\• Of ye Hew tollll 111i. ~'-111 WllC/I ••, ••••, • •• 1450 J. C. ..J/.umphrie.1 Jeu 1e fer<1 1823 NEWPbllT BLVD., COSTA MESA Today, tbe mythical values have been abandoned, but love .. prestige, and ornamental beauty remain as CONVlNIENT 1'ERMS 24 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION solid modem values . laced upon l.4.NICAM_lRICARD-MASTl:RCHARGE PHONI t••·l401 --pi'RIOus s s an gems. ~ ........ ;,;;;, ..... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.,. J ) • • I I I ) I I I I l J } l • .. \ • .-Peering Af,o'und'.~ ) • ., _..,, Dtctmbt< 23, 1'70 . , '. I cnTn•iu;T':': .5'1u••11o ' ce•n:*rtOl.lif .:=~1r •kif .. ...,.. :.. .., I ,ICTlTIOUI NAMC T~ unlW•ltnf<I • OOtt < ..... f'I lN II Tnilf"' "' Wit ,_..11! V """VllOtrt.lolltd .,..,wt"""" ti·~ dllllll(tl1111 • ..,.,,.... ,, 7llO ·~•I'll+ Ot.lrlct -..111 ~ -... ~111111 • bW-,, ... En11111• Qr., Ortw, ..... _ lffcll, C•lltwl'll•, IH'ldtt Utfl to.._ "'9f*t ,ltlllllw, tfilntlllf*•e..ctio C.lltoni~y vf'llllf .. ,.,. fld"'°"' 11"",J:; "' • fl'I • {Ill f\#llftW'I •Ill , ........ --. • . , ' ~ ,llma ~ 1•11'! • / Of ~lltlOWAl.tTY ,.LASTK<I ........ t Mid !!ti ..... .,..,.,..,,,.., r. •.......... "!' ...... -... · .. ,,...,Cll •• D .. 'llll'a ... .W:t•••i•,j'~lf'~JCES'l:TOWI tllif 1114"1k'M·ll """' .. """'°"" • tM.~ "'""-...... ttr tciliool' _,-; of tM '°'~· "''°"' wlwHI ...... ,...,""' In f\111 Md -.. « rtllo.nct tnttf'•ttll lll6dtn ll'IW: ~ __ ,1 "' .... 1 .... 11.:k , .. 0 •1 .. _,;,;_J ~ !ri No ,111,.Jl!C.t~~ it• t•" ''o""'' ---lftlN lltflf...,.. ,, "" v .... ., MISSlQN · VIEJO Wome.n~s flUUl y, -..lil'l.W ... L,,,.. re ... N towi: • "°""" '"""""-t.Ollff "'. 1• ktllol 01.ir1ct w'"'""""' 1 Club mf!ll'lbers may . dine out Ringo will pile Into the H::z:.; ~~:c:i:.,~~ Dr.. • :=:'~ ,,~· ~Iii .<•111· :~:=':'om":";~ c~ twice this mooth -they feted family's camper and head D•tld 0tc-lltf" 1, 1•10 / JotMi s_.. t.'"" Jr. D111mt onict • ..., 1 ~ u-.. I · boad The I . """ o M\lfT•V Stttt of c1utor11l1, Or""' c_,...1 'oulltelfl V•tlt'f. , • .,..,., jlusbands during a dinner a south ottbt er. Y P an ,,,;. of e1ntonii,,.o.-.-·couM"t1-.... 0n-~-n ..... 1m.-.. btfcn....-. ...... _.lftlHctllfl.,...t, ,,. "~..,.- the Ai__.er· Inn and some to' camp on· the bead\ in> tbe 011 O.Cll)'lflilr· 1. 1m, lltfOl'll ""' • Nottrv P..011c "' ~ to< Mlcl s1.i., w,,..,,._ •:• •·"'-. $:)t,.,,,. '°''" ·~· rl u-~ Noterv l"llllllc 111 •l'ld fot 11kl ll•I•· --'"'' .,....rtll ,J.-f! 1'"'*' IY "~' &1111rOtw£_,..,....,. a-id won free dinners from va ous sunny port of Mazauo.a. Wtont'h" .u"'"" ,.,_r G. M11rr•v L-o. Jt, known to 1n1 to "' 111t "'"" , Ho11nn1 . • ·~ ~ -·taur--••. ·~------,--,.,---1k-te 11\t· to lit the 11t11111 whoM ~~mt t, 11111tctlbtd 11f,.... w1tt1111 110 111 -,,, ~ · 'tt"' ~-"'""' ,--... ~ .. Wbfc;rlblod-to tl\t WI"™' lit-in.1rll!l*lt-.... KkflOWltOM'lll I'll 'axtcultd •lolfl! lo! 1 -ltd · ' - Winner or ltie grand prif.e. a ' LEGAL NOTl~ 1'"1nltftl 1M ~·tfft4 "' llllC.\lltd Ill• -· '9 lllt '°'"' ot """""· Wlltl d . ed b M ""' ~l!W-($EA.LI ' the P\ltdl••ll'lll Clett,' ..... centerpiece es1gn y rs. -tO•fl'ICtA.t. SEA.LI ELSIE (. JOHNSON I llftllflouM Lant. ..leY. -Ri~;;';...I ...,. .. iim. went to-Mr. ___ ,. -~11:Y-IC;-!tEN•V-Nolll"I' P\lllllc-• C•llfor11l1 c111tom1.1·0n -~~"fll,ji; =w~ ·~' S SU,llUO• .COUll:T O• TN• Notor., Public • Colltor1111 Prlrw:lpll OfflC. Ill 7, lt71 .t 1~.JO o.lft. """"'~ 11111(~; .. and Mrs. Harvey team. STA.Tl OP CAllllOINIA POI Prlncloll Ofl!A 111 or11111e COWlt't rl'lldt •I fllt htrd Mllllliil • 't, Entertaironent in the fonn of TM• eouttTY ..:.~ ---Or11111 Counl't -Mv Comrftlsaloll 1!11PltJI lt11 II 7:)0 p.m. Tiit eo.,.; ' rwi.n Mt. A ' Mw Comtrll .. ton E11Plrn A,...u1t t. 1'11 , ,....,.,,. tilt tlllht to''""" a medley of Christ.mas carols MOTIC• Ofl HIARINO 0' PITIT10N Now. 24 .1.rn ,,~tllltllff °"-Coo$! Ctltv Pl)OI °' ... bldt _..;~ ...,. 'ded by the Just Us PO• l'ROIAttST. ,:r.~~~Y.vtc '°1 Pvblttl>td Or111tt Co.it O•llY P!lol December"·». 1t10 tl\d Janua"" '· lJ. , ITEMS To II! 110 ul"ON{"'·~ , was provt "'"'•s Ta • "° Dtc.embe, 2. t. 16, 1'-1tJO tt~1·1D 1t11 i.)O 42 tt<11 Old "'" .. ..._. •t Singers of Mission Viejo. k El!•lw• of ~:~=~ ....... ~~"~~~"~.. LEGAL NQTJr.E LEGAL NOTICE (Ulltvt"'U ... ..ell U" oW '1"'idlllrs ' I I. t """ ' . .. ~•lcii.; Jr.u;!iJil;.' •• '' olillll ......, I TOUCH OF ELEGANCE -Newport Beach designer Mrs. Mildred Dyer points to the Biblical influence utilized for the award-winning home remodeled by -Mrs. Lester Giauque_llef~. The book rests on an antique table below a lead- ed glass window in the dome-ceiling solarium. o:;:,.,•1 · ' llfl't(i$), 2t .ocn Oki f'llOt ftlclliw 'Cflel,. I • John NOTICi: ts MEREl'f GIVEN lftlt ,....,., (tOTICI 0, IUUC T•AN1,1• (_. ~llloll), 1 MC!t~SrMQ 11tcfrle LAGUNA'S • novelist BETTY MARIE HESSLER , hae flltO Cl•TIPICATI 0, IUSFNISS, (lta. itll .. 117 U.C.C.> ft°11•1or ''* COMltlorlJ, i.liZ· - She I k thor of "lnSf.allt MNllll 1 pell!IOll fOr l'robltw of will alld ,ICTITtOUI NAMI Notte. 11 11t...tw .,_ t. t11t Cftd'llon + •l'ld. DiiPllUlfW, MOOtlm(T'. J, MCh' r 0C ' au " J f tor 11111111'' of Ll'ITtn T.,.f..,.....111"1' 'to lite under1l9fltd d°" ctrtl,., ~ It~ of Wllll1m S....._, Ttllllle<Of• w110H 'A. I. Dk:k Dwllcllor. ' ftt. t Saint" al)d The Ord.ea O "'" ...,11110!!C.r ,...,.rencc to wt11ct111 rnldt dllttlnt 1 bll11~11 ot 15752 Gr11v Otts. tiu11,...., llkl••1 11 :I06 ~'I"' A-. ffC/\ Rtml""°" .,._. tr I~ Mal.or Grigsby" will offer a tor"'"""' p1ttleu1tr1. tne1 11111""' t11n1 w.-1ml1>'1tr. c1111 .. 11ndtr ""• '"'eo"u~,.!. •••bom 11111111, COUii,., of°"'""' s"'''°' '::/:-...1 ,•-" ~.!.~-" r •!Id PIK• of lle••ll'lt lilt WIM Nos bMll """ "'mt ot INTEltSTAT ~· C•lltor"l•· 111411 I blrlti: trllllflr Is obOUl-to -...... course on the anatomy o a 1e1 tor J•nll•l"f' 1, 1tn, ef t :30 1.m1 111 MENT SALES co. •!Id 111411 wld f1•111 '' bt mad• to M:Clork ScrMrs. tr..,...,", :' ~~ "'-hlfC,,_ i I t UCl be g i n n i n g ""' couri,,_.,, .., o.Hrtrtioenl No. l of coml'Olifd of ttwi tollowl118 , .. -. whOS• Wl'lotl but!-•dclres. 11 m ~l'lM Feu 1 1 v nw W..•~t Id nove a 111d court, ,, 100 c1v1c Cet1ler 0,1..,. 11•mt i" tull '"" pl1c1 ol tesldtrlc• Ill 11 A-. B•lbM h._l'ld. COU!lf'I of or..,.,, ~ 11~1~1 • E c ~':"" ' Wednesday Jan. 6. west, 1" 1~ c1w ot s111t1 A111. c.111om11. 101111W1: Stai. of c11t1or"11. , cJffk of~ ~ .... , f NOT TO• leave out the o.1tG o.c.em•r 11. 1t10. R•~l't'IOllll c. Je!lltlns. 15H3 G1rr 011ts, TM l'rOPertv to · i,. 1r1111ttrrtd 1s l'llblllMcl 0 •. ..... .,.·. _ ~ W. E, ST JOHN, W111ml1111tr, C1llf. loe1ttd 1t. JM ~rtftl A~. ltlbot D« r•--( !I" "ll()t graphic arts Benne l t cO!lntr c11rt D11tc1Dec:tmbtr1, 1m tat•lld. c°""'" of Or1rttt.-s11i. -o1 emw n. ~.mo •• ~"il_..m.s;,. ' I d OONAlO N •l!'-VIAl ••~mind c. J1nltl111 C1fltoml.t. , • Bradbury recently C ose a 6JSf T••• c'""" 111111 .. 1u111 Jill St••• ot c1n1or"11, o,,,,_ coun1Y: S.ld l'r-rn< lt cl•terlbtd 111 _,,, LEGAL NO"tttlf h Wl·ng Of his rif'a'tl· n e WOtdloM Hlti., Clll .... 11 tlW On ~tmbtr 7, ltlO. before mt. I 11: All •tock I" l!'telt,~tUI'"' _.,.Ul"""""I 4 S 0 I Ttl· l!lll ,..... Nottl"f' PubUc 11> afld tor :seld SI•-· ollcl ll'Olld wnl of t~•I !'ffl """ 1Mnl11et1 T.-n •._# .. !lfA• paintings in lhe Grande Centra Alie.,..., 1tt: '"''""'' person11rv •i>Pt•rtd R1~mOlld c. J«*ln1 k~ 11 Sf'efllan1111 RMI Et11te 111c1 tUl'lltO• eou•T ow .~ •rt G ller'oes Jn New York. Publl"'*' Or1nt• c .. ,. 01Uw Pllo! i!..f!O!Wll to mt la be lllt ""'°" wrw.t loe•hld ,, 306 Mttl11• A.Vln!Jt, hlboll STAT• OP CALl~.:flf• ~ a 1 d ~mber 22. 23. 2t. lf70 nn.10 "'1P' 1$ 1Ublulbtd lo 1111 wlll'llll Ill-ltfot'ld. (_,., Oii o,..,..., Shit. ef TNI COUNT'V 'OP ., The tonner New Eng an. er, srrvment 1nc1 1c1111C1Wlld9tel "' •~twNcl c1tt(ot11!1. ,.., A...., , ·~ whose ~orks hang in m~jedor ~ NOTICE ~F~jt'1~L sEALl ~1:.~ti:;~,do~a..'6e.:C:~:£ -::'A:' O::::-: .. :;.~~== Uection~ in the Unit T""'9 JEA N L, JOBST ., HtDbl• a. Hlflfllt, m M«1"' Avtiiut. vnANca °" "•ol"t•TY _,.. COMo-co l for the NOTICI TO CRIDfTO•t . NO!•rv Putlllc . Ctllfomll ll•lbol L•F1t'ld, '-"' of o,.,.., Sl•I• ot Pl.IT• ,... ... •Y CON11Ul¥&ft• Slates, ew eas -SUPIRIO• cou•T OP TKI PrlnclP•1 Oftlu 111 c1"1or111.1. · 111 lilt ""ttw ot"" c.oi--ttr*' or · g STAtl! 01' CA'-UIOltMIA l'tM Oronp Coullt't So Mt It kneWll hi thl TNll'lf,Jffft,'•fl KATHLEEN CAtfY, 1'10 ...... operun • Tltl COUNTY 01' OIUiNOI MW (Ol'ftlTl!UIOll Explrtl buallltU "''"" •1111 odclmlltl uMd "' KATHLl!!EN B CASIEY c~· No. A .. PUI ~rth ,, 197) Tro•ror for the "''"}'Hrs l•U out, ,, NOTICE ti Hllllv .~o ..,., COMING EVENTS were the E11111 ol MARGA.II.ET A. Wit.SON. 1111 Pubtl5htci or'"" Coed Dilly Pttot, dllf•~' '"""the 1bDV1. •'11: ,._ ICATHll!l!N · tiU.•ION • . . I known ., MARGARET ALICE WILSON. Otcemt.t '· ''· ». '?· 1t10 ntl-1' D•lllcl c.c;f!Tlbet 11. lt70 COt\atnl•tor or """''" .... topic of discussion O r O.Culed. W1llJ1m. step11e"'°" 111mtd C()r!Hrv•lel. 111, fl"il'~, "'' be f th South Coast NOTICE IS H(REllV OIVEN to "'' LEGAL NO'l1CE Tr11>1,.t0r lion for 111 Ordlr dlttcfl.. )iM'ltlOM • mem rs 0 f-• l..-dlforl of the '"'°"" ""mtcl ~ent M. Cl1rk Somers to ~ltlf lllo lf!'m• of ''Cfl'tllll .:. CIUb board as they en1oyed a ""'•II.,.,_ 111"1"' dilm• •v•1115' lilt NOTICE TO CRll)ITO•S Tri"'''"" ltlcf mtdt bv ""' <Ol'l .. t'lr~ •lw· .... . I h •0 the new wld dKtdtnl ''' rMulred la Ille !hem, SUl'EltlOR COIJ'RT Ol" THI! Pubtlst>N Ol'•"Ot C°''' 0111'1' l"llol, ecutlftt '"" dellvttlllf 1 ~""" fe Christmas unc eon t wllh n.. nlKHWlt'V =he!'-In""' otllt• STATt 01' CALll'O.N1A l'OR December 23, 1911) 2l1S.JO H1rrt Ct'lll~ Ind Adtlille·<rl~ Laguna Niguel home or Mrs. ~! ~r:.':~~ ~.:.':.' Wllll m:td "~~~.',!., . TKI COUNTY OP ORANCJI LEG•1 NOTICE of -sl'l•r. ol c .. 11.1, ttodf of 11111fa1 In ae . . t of JAMES l POTTS. AllOl'lle1 •I L1w E1t1!1 ol CARL TON o. VALENTINE, ,,.,..,, of O«Ul>lllCY of I 111-0. M Brotman voucl'le" to flllt ul'ldat1ltned 1t the office He. A •uu n&> SUI hod! Mufutl No. 3• . ",_ On the docket are a trip 0 171 Nor!h 1..i Brei Avtnue, lnglewoocl: lllO know" 11 C. 0. VALENTINE, ,~ 1'111 Goldtn llaln ll:Old. L• .-World, 1 t "Song of C1Hl11r11t1 9C30f wMcfl ls the pl1ee of PK11Hd. CIRTll'ICATI 0 •UllNISS, rtff!'~ to which II mlda. -fvrllltr 1 Los Ange e$ 0 see, OO•lneu of tkt UMerslvned 111 111 mt l!lrt. NOTICE IS HEREBV GIVEN lo !ht PICTITIOUS Ml 1111rlkut1rs, Ind Iha! tllt tlii14•Villcl llllCtl Norway" a bus trip to San pert11111n11 10 !ht e11a1e of 11ld df«cltfll, crMltlor1 of lh• •bo..,. 111mte1 dect<ltnt Tho Ullekrsl1llfll doH urtll\o "' ,, cot!-ot lldr'"• the """ II•.~. Hf tor Victorian H·ome Wins Architectural Award , Coastal residents toured the ·LagUna Beach Architectural Society's Hous'e-Of·the-year during an afternoon open house hosted by owners Mr. and Mrs. Lester Giauque. With the assistance o f circular w r o ugh t Iron architecµu"al designer · Fred staircase r ising through 1 lh.e ... Harpman and Newport Beach J solarium. The 1 o £ t IS" interior designer Mrs. Mildred dominated by a 25-foot ceiling Dyer, the loft has been and stained·glass w.indow. transfor~ into a charming On the ocean side, steps le.ad ..crow's n;:st study w i t h to . tbe elevated living area sweeping' views of the carpfted in blue wit b cOastline. • embroidered blue I n di an Chinese infiuences we re crewel contrasting with walnut . nd. • around San wlttiln four monl'M llllT Ille tint pUbllui· ,~., Ill per1C1111 ll•~lnt cl•lms 1011"!1 !ht ·~dl119 I blr•ll'll$1 ., ""' Birch SlrMI, Decembtr 3(1, lt70, •I f :» .~.,,..Jr Ill "" Diego a a cruise !!Oii ot 1~11 notlc.. u ld d1etd1"1 1r1 rMu!m to 1111 them, s11111 702, NIWPOrt 111c11. c1111orn1.1, couttroom ot Dtotrflftt!lt ~,~et 111f DJ g Bay 01fecl Novtmber 30 ltXI wllP> ll'le netesserv YOU<:h1r1, In Tiit ottlclt lllldfr 11'11 11ct111ou1 tlrm "•m• of COUii, •I 100 Ctvlc Ctllltt Dl'IW w.t. 111 e 0 TM. AS di lor Hen-CAROL RAE 0YEAMAN ()f"" Citric of lh• lt!Ovt ll'llllted tout!. or BUSINESS INSURANCe AtSENCV 11111 ll'lt Cltv of~"'' An1, C11lfllnlle. CHRIS nner E~ecutr111 of the Wiii Of to Wtlllll llltm, wllh tilt ri«nurv 11111 .... llrn'I i. c-.ed of "" follow-o.Hd Ottambitt 11, lt70 ry and Mary Wagner of Balboa tr. 1bove n1,.,.i "'*""' voucMr1, to 1111 und1r111nec1 " 101 E•ll Int person, W110tt1 n1me 111 fl.on 1flcl plaui w. E. ST JOHN. .-_ ,. f JAMl!I t. POTTI ltlh Stretl, Coste Mut. C11tlor111.t, n•11, o1 residence 11 11 followt · C-'Y Clerlt . ~ tsland will be in the. hom.11-0 Ul .. .,,.·LI.,.. .• _ which II lilt Pl•ce ot blrllr>ltlll of "'' P. Joma ·Plop, a•i p~ .. ._,, ARNOLO, IMITM a KNWAtmll his sister and brother·in·l&'!fu· ~':~ .~.~,... ~:i:::::a .,:11_:1~ ::~1,".;::~f!1v!~ ~t.Fo.:=;',,'~:to11• "· m.o t: :': ==,.. Mr and Mrs Wallace R. SO ""°""" tw l!•ta1rl11 ...-lhs 1lt•r 111, 11r.i PUbllc1t1111 of !tit• P. JllMI l'tou Tll: utSJ uwrt• • . ' Publllhtcl . Or"ntt C°'ll Dtlly 11'11al llOlke. . . Stti. 9' c.n1on111, Or'"'' C_,.,: A1'wM'rw fw c.Mlfntw • • ..- Of San Marmo. Dtc*ll'IDtr 2, '· '" n 1t111 12~10 D•ltd N1r11mblr 20. 1t10. °" 0tcerY1btr "' 1t10. btfWe me. 1 Pubfw..ci .. or.,.... CtHt ~ '"""' Saturday the Wagner J .. " .v11en11... Not1rv Publlc 111 •1111 fer 111f s111e.,.--~·-'-:-:"="c,·~"'"7"':':":='·,:,· '!,_"-=-"" LEGAL NOTICE C111re V•lenllne k.-11 to '"' to bt the Ptrton WMw 1 Co-£xeculotl of tl\t wm "''"" 1, t11~tlbed 10 1111 W1tllln 11111.,,. LEGAL N011CE ot Ille obcwe n.med c!Ktdtflt me111 oncl ld<nowlld1tcl M alCKllllcl tM • ••r 2111 c°'°"" H.,t'I.,. s. trr1lllltl• Mme. HOTICtE TO CRl!DITORS An-w •I l1w !OFFICIAL SEAL) •A•"" SIJl"l!RIO• COUllT 01' THI! 107 1!1tl lltfll St., GEORGE H. DANIELS NOTJCI TO Cl•DCTOll STATI! 01' CALll'ORMIA FOllt C ... 1 MIM, Cttlf. Nalol"I' Publte. Cllllotllll tUP-":RIOft COU.T 0;,''n8 THI COUNTY 01' OttANCiE Tth (7UI S4J.n11 Prl11elPal OHlct In STAT• OP CAt.ll'OR,UA•Nll MO. A .. 7l'tl Alltl'M't fw tlll C•l!11Kvl1r1-Or•no• COIJ"tr TH'I COUNTY 01' Ol>\Nt• EUtle of ROY C. MATZ!CK, Di&e1ttecl. P11bll1hed or1n111 Caa•t Otlt., P1ktl. Mr Cornmlllloll Elllll!rn Ht. A"117I ''~' NOTIC! IS HEREBY GIVEN fl the Dettmbtr 2, t , U, 23. 1910 22'4·111 Seti! 17 1t7• T~01Rt' I e ti I LU L U EU$. N,E credl!Ol'J of !hi Oberle 111med decedelll Publlsfltd . o;..... Co1it DltlV ll'llot NllURGH . DK"Md. • .::WO • ' !hot 111 ""°"' htv!ng cl1lm1 11111111 LEG'' NOTICE Dectmlltrf 16 u 30 Im 229270 NOTIC&-IS H!REllY GIY .. ._ ~ the sold dK.0.1>1 •r• r1111u1red to Ille ~ ' ' ' ' • c....,llan of Ille obovt " ttiem. w1111 t111 -=,,.,,..,. ¥0Ud'lt•s. In lilt ... ,.,.. LEGAL NOTICE ttiot '" .. rson1 h1v11111 dtl · -JM offlle of TN! clerlt ol 11\t tb!Mt t"lltltci Cl•Ttl'ICATll Otr •Ul!Mllt . llld dtudll'll ore l'lllUlrtd ~. "*"• court, or lo PNlltllt 11\tm, wltti !he 111e11-T with the fllKflWl"f r,. ~ "'"' ¥0UCl'le,.., lo !hi under1loned •I "'• f lCI IOUS NAM.I l!IC(9W .... 1'11"'4 of !Ito clerll ot the •!low • 0#' otflct OI her •ttal'"l'f; M1LAN M. DO" The UllMNlltlltd don artllY thew .,. MOTICI" 01' •uuc TRANStrl• . IO Pl'-1 "*"-Wlltl !!It Fashion Duo 7032 •When the Giauques bought the old Victorian house n~xt door to their Victoria Dr.ive home. ~y intended to tear it down. But the more Uiey saw or the Chilrming fi.ve-story house atop. a cliff oveflooking the rocky · <:oastline., ·the ·more removed· and •Vict-or.i ·an paneling. ----· p.spects stressed. A garden Mrs. Giauque's collection o( TAL, U"1°" 81nk Scluore, Sullo UOO, Or· cond!IC.ltnit ' blrilneu 11 Cotll Miii, (Sta U~1t1 U.C,C.) Wllchtrl. to !ht 111111er11tlltd .. ·g~== '""' Cltllfot"l1, wlllcfl 11 t11t Pllct o1 Colltomlo, ullcler the fltll!lou' firm n1lft! Notk111l\tr....,1lvtn 10 !llt Credi"'-of It• '".,.,.,...... COO. lt:V Mlne11 0! 1119 Um.tll•ntd 11> oil mo!-of PAii.AMOUNT MAINTENANCE Ind of Let RllHIU,. Tr1111teror, W110St SCHUMACHER, COLE~N, ~llN'AID f. • i.r1 Pfrtlln1nt to the HfitM, ot w1d d .. 11111 wld llrm 11 comPO'fd of tile follow· bustnn1 l<ldrns 11 '300 Hol'bor llwf., HOWAltO, 11!1 Tow11 & COl#mv llOld «de11t, within tout mcit1tlle otlf!' !hi first Int ""'°"" W11oY nemn I" full Ind Cott• Meso, c-IV of Ort~. Sl•1't ot Orwnte, C1llton1to '2'61 ~ h .t intrigued they became. · Three years of · remodeling became a hob)>y and produced an wiusual and charming residence accessible on upper levels by a· narrow Wi1aing staircase. The house was built in 1928 by three religious sisters who kept a Bible in every room. They painted religious ctuotations on pagodas and bridgeS on tbe premises. and topped the structure ·with a gingerbread loft where they played hymns on an old organ. entrance gained through a antique cut glass and silver wrought iron gate leads. down len<h _e_hlg~ to ! he to the second-level arched dining. room with an eclectic doorway dramatized by an feeling; of th& era maintained anUque EnglishJaJl1ern. by Bacearat and ormolu The main entrance Opens chande.liers and Queen Anne into a solarium created when accessories. theoldpatiowasenclosedby A s ma11 bedroom a :JO.foot high glass ceiling. overlooking the solarium was The solarium is a scaled turned into a warm walnut- replica of the solarium in paneled, library.guest room Golden Gate Park in San and two small upstairs Francisco and houses the old bedrooms facing the ocean organ, lush gi:eenery' and a were made into a master suite pair ol French coach lanterns. and bath. To one side of the solarium Interiors of these rooms are is a · billiard room below a loft enchanced-by pa n e I i n I apartment reached by a finished in antique celadon. A Penny for His Thqughfs Greeting Goes by Mail The first Christmas card, created more than a century ago, bore a salutation that remains the classic greeting on Yuletide cards today. The simple greeting was: "A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You." It appeared on a card conceived in 1843 by Henry Cole, an imaginative and. distinguished Londoner. His' idea of Christmas in an tnvelope followed by only thrfe years the English pasta] reform, which made it possible to send season's greetings to friends near and far for only a penny. ' Cole asked an arUst· friend, John Calcott Horsley •ot the Royal Academy, to-design the~ card: The. charmiQ-g missive was diViided into three panels with the main illustration, in the center, showing a friendly rarniJy party in progress, the elders with wine glasses raised in a toast to the recipient. The panels on either side depicted two of the oldest traditions of Christmas, feeding the hungry an d clothing the needy. The card bore the greeting, "A Merry Christmas. and a Happy New Year to You," still the classic in the field. Original specimens of the fif.!it Christmas card are now extremely rare a nd valuable. Only a dozen are known to exist_. Two of these, including the most perfect one in existence -:-It bas never been used -are part of the 70,000 card H a 11 m a r k Historical Collection. The trove o f gr~ting card Tori gathered by Hallmark Cards is lhe largest such collection in lhe world. I See by Today's Want Ads • IN rited of a b!l.bysittcr? H<'re's a n1othcr who \\'ill babysit in .her home, .serve hot meals and has a fenc- ed yard, Her rates are _ reasonable. Se~ Clan 65.iO. e A POODLE FOR CHRJST. MAS? 'niere's one in class •8825. Sme.JJ miniature Poodle for· ja\e, AKC, 11hots, trained. 9 months old •• 13ctll!l' horry! ! e NE'ED STORA CE SPACE! Thete'a a garage !Or rent fn Cbsta Mesa on , , th.!' E·sftle for in. per month . Tllia Muld be your ans111·er. , • e EXPERIENCED medical J"CC't'ptionlst ne~e\'.I for busy G.P:11 office. Must _____ be~ tl:'J1if!.l!.~ qual. fry for this positJon, 9('e help v .. anted todn,y. Starting in the 1860s, several greeting card firms sprang up in England, and brought to the forefront Kate .Greenaway, England's most famous, woma ·n artist . Miss Greenaway contributed outstanding g reeting c a r d designs for Marcus Ward and Co. 0£ London, and also provided illustrations f o r c hildren's books, many of which are prized today by collectors. Tbe designs on most popular cards of the 1980s and 70s had little Christm_as significance. It·was not until Louis Prang or Boston entered the greeting card field that religious scenes became ·popular. Prang, known as the "father of the American Chris tmas card," perfected the lithographic p r o c e s s of multicolor printing in the · 1870s, often using as many as 20 colors on bis cards. The reproductions of oil . paintings were so perfect that many times experts were required to tell the print from the painting. • A1'any of the outstanding designs were of the Nativity and o t h e r religious scenes, startling a Popularity that today i s increasing year by year. Times were good in America and the American greeting card industry began t o tstablisb itself. Most of the major greeting card publishers began to emerge about 1910 and by t9'l0 were able to meet the Increased public demand for Carrls of better quality and design. In 1929, the wor)d seemed to come to a _halt. but Christmas. cards continued. Growth of the industry since World War '11 has been -t>-h-e-n•o"m-e-n-ai-:-tn-1"4, Americans sent some tWo billion Qirfstma.o areelln&s. ---------- 1111bllt1llon ol tl!ls nollu. Pl-ot rt1lclfllc.1.1•• •1 follows: C1111otn11, tlllt •bulk tr111tftr It 1bolil fe olilell of bllsl""' or"" ui°ldtrs!IMlll ht·d I Oeled Ottem~ 11, 1t711 -• P•_11_l H•_!OPllll~ ~ ,,..,., EJ bt tned• ta Virani ~nd• • t!Mttltd m•tft~_...,..1,.,liw..hi-~ __ .,R .... • IRIS EMMA.LIN! MXTrtCK Tof'tl --rn.-11;--.rld-FrT~P1rtit1t.J.' t ITllfTltd dec.tdtftt. wllllln twr "*"""--,...,_ tJ1t EJ1eculr!11 of tM Wiii ot Jim Hendrl~, 2441 Corf• Cr111ti, r1 mon, •1 l'llf'f~en. Tt1111ftr .... WhoM first l'Ubl!uilf111 of lhlt llotlcl., 'W• tM 1boV1 1111Md dlUd'tlll Toro Mt-lddl'llS 11 ':IOa H•rbat Boulltvotd o.ttd .o.:tmlltr 11, 1'10• _ MIUJll M. OOSTAL Doled D~ber I, lfJO Cost1 Mna, Cou111V of Or11111t, Sltltt oi THE l'IRST NATffWAi IAllnt U11 .......... s.u .... lglll 1111 P111r H•-l•n 4···~··· ......... ~ .. ••R•~· C1ltfot11!.t. OF ORANGE coUillt'Y.- or ...... CIU'-11 Jim Htlldrl)( Tflto orOPtrtf to bt trtmfered If foe:""' • 11111on11 bll1*1nt ·~ Toi: fTIO US.nt4 Sl1l1 ol C1!\lcr"11, Or1no1 Cou"tv: •I 1300 H1'11or Blvd .• Cosio~. COlllllV Eli:l<!Jlor of"'::.~ iflllt" .. Atttnlit'f fw E••ulrllC Ofl Oec. I, 1t1!1, btfort 1111, • Noltl"I' of Or•"" s111t el c11110t1111 •bove nalNd '!!>-~-__ Publlsfled Or1111e Caotf 0.!I., Piia! Public '" Ind tor W!d Sla1t. Hrta"1Uw Slld 11~r1., ts dt1Crl11tci In -•I eootfSln', SCNUM.ICHlit..~N. tleamber 1,, 2J, lO, 1t10 Ind J1tnu1rio IPPl!•"ld Ptul Ht-11" Ind Jl<tt Het!drbc 11: All tlock t" fl'~. fl•lurts, equtp~I MINYA•O • HOWAIO .. ,,,_ 6, 1911 )Ul-70 knOW"I 'lo mt kl bot lht per'"°"t Wl'lffl end taod will of t~el 11\of rfPl1r builnns lll TIWll & C-11try RW • l-------~-----l rw1mff •rt: 1ubstrlbed 11> lht wll~I" I,,_ know" 1• THE COBllLElt'S BENCH 1ricl °"""' Collftml• ""' LEGAL NOTICE • strum•"' •'Id •t~nowledttd Ille';' ••KulH loellttd 11 tlOO HorOor Blvd .• Cool• Mesi, T,,..,......, MJ'·Jln •-----~~~-----ltt>t 11me. COU!l/v ol Or11119e, Siik of Ctlffarnl1. A~• ftr ••lllW ! ,-T"'JJU fOFF ICl,1,1. SEAL) Tiit bull!: tr1111ter will bot C(lfllummttwcl ~lsfltd Or1119e COt't D_elly l'll!rt NOTICI TO CREOITORS MJ.rv K. H•"rv Oii or'"'' !ht'"" •• ., of J11iu1rv 1m DKWnblr n. XI, U70 ... J._,. .. lJ. SUJrl!RIOlt COU•T 01' THI' NO'larv Publ!c-C1Utor11t1 et 8111k of A"""lt• NT&SA. 5"11 w.;, ,m: 1'71 • ,, ,m.11 STATI o" CALll'ORMIA l'O• Prlnclotl OHi« tn SI'"!, C111!11 Mna, CounlV ot Or11111e, . THE COUNTY 01' cut.ANO• Or1n'1 CO\Onlw Sl•I• of C1!11ornt1. LEGAL NOI'ICE • , NI. A411• M., CammtHhlll E•p!rtt So lar •• ·-to "'• Tr1~, .n 1--:::=:::c::=-c:cc=""C::.~--E1t"e of SIDNEY E. CAR7Elt, De· Mtr. 2'· ltn bustllt1s l'ltntll Ind oddr•-Ultd by HOTICI O" MARIMA'-'I IALO n.oled. Pub111hed Or1rt11 (Nit 0111¥ Pltot Tr1"1ten1r, fot 11'11 fh"'9 Vt•tl '-•! ONf, Mt. I•,. NOTICE IS liEREBV GIVEN te ltlf Dec1mbtr 1, t. U, 23, lt7D 72411·70 ff dlfl-1 fnm lhe obove, •1'1: Trtllk()lllllltftf•I Cll!dlt S."'ke. lllC., <rtdflorS of IM lbll'tt Nmed diKtckllll N-. l'l1!11tlft Yll. HcJiftrd H. t:MtiM. Sfllr$ni 11111 111 ""°"" 111v1111 c1arm1 1111"11 LEGAL NOTICE L" •Ullst11 comr,..·, ~"' --rtN'i- r IM wk! 6K~t ire r1<1ulred to Ill• lhetn Trt"1l11'or ay Ylrlll't el .. llN<UfkWI ""*" Oii wlll'I !hi lleCtSYl"I' 'IOUUl•r•, to I"-111t-, 1!1crow Ne. m -:tt74 Vincent Mtlldt O.C.,ber 1. 1•11> b'r !Pit Mlmk:IMI C"el.N1, dei'JttM!d ot fnl'' office of her 1tlom"11 N071CE TO C•IOITORS Tr1111le,.. Orlllff C .... My Hol'bor Judlcl•I Oktrfct, ,..Vilt.EV, SMAW & TOMICH. "'9 Hu11f· A b\lllt tr1ntkr ls tboul lo be ll'>lde, 'l'ronk P1rlOlt11t Cou11ty of Or._, Stl'lt of Clflf9mlt, lllffon Drl\11, St" 'M1rlroo, C1ll!ornl1 tnoe, The f>ll'MS 1t'ld bUllntu 1oar111 of thl . Tr1nsff"" -• IUdvment 111'-"'cl '" '""" tf "'flllch II lho l'IKt OI butl11111 of !Flt tr11111i'rvr trt: l'ubll1hed 0ral'!lll CO.If Dal1Y Pllot. t.._~l'*"-1 Cl"fdlf ~·~ M U\idl"'9Mll 111 111 rnolltr1 P1lt1lnlng lo EARL KICK, 2nl Eott Co.11 Otarnber 2l. 2'70 2311•10 ludOfllmt crtdltori ot'ld ti ~l'Cf 1M nlote of_ Mid dtc..-i.t. wrt~ln IOI.ft Hlthwov, Coron• dolt Mir, C1tlfor"t' • H. C1rnl11t, $1tlrlw Ctr'!llwA mtrtt ma11tn1 11ter. 1111 first l'Ubllcatlon ol lhl1 Tll• n1mn •!Id t>111IMU lddrtuu et LEGAL NOTICE debtrot'I. lhowf1111 • 11111 bl~ ~.fl llOlltt.. "'' 1r..,.1~'" trt: octuetlV dut on wld ludlll'lill'I on lllt DOROTH'f REEVE!S C,t,ltTER C. V•l11m1kls •rid M 1 t In I ,.,,nl d.tlo of 1111 fQu.tnce of Mid tlll<\tllon, I Actmlnl1tr1Tr!11 wllh !ht WHI Vt!s1makl1, t2011 S1Jtl11 L 1 n I , Cl!RTll'ICATI! Otr COll:~•ATION h•¥t IWltcl 11P011 "I fhe 'rl1llt, 1111• Ind Anne.lied of 1111 ttl1l11 of Hu11t111tl011 f111th, C1!lforn!1 ,0. TRANSACTION OP IUllNltl lnft,.1! Oii Hid t~ Mloo 111 n,. the lballt! 1>8mtd•dttedt"t. All other bulltlelt "emu t"cl 1ddrn1n UNO•R ,tCTITIOU• NAMI l'r'llPf:t!Y tn /lie Cou111Y of nn lt11t MURLl:Y, SMAW & TOMICH U•td by Ille tr1"1terot wJlhlll Ill"'""" THE UND!RSIGNEO COltl'ORATION of CIUIOl'lllo, cla>Kr111td .. ' Crochet two swingy, scallop-~~! .:~~::'tt.u::~ ,,,.. ~~!~,:~:! .::; ~. •• 11:now11 to 1111 :or~~~-1~·~:;; 7:~911 .!: t°.~,:~;i: c!.~w ~ rJ:.,,.'::."fi.,':°'."1• • 11 ,1 hem skirts in no time! 'l'.•~;u •• ~?..7_!1 ... 1 Thi 1ac:1llC111 •rid etntr.•' •rrptton ot cou11tv o1 Ot•ntt1 111 Ill• crw of N"""°"' Hr "''P r.e~ 111 IODll' 104, ''u. I .... ....11111tro ... (TA 11141 P-1'1 lo bt tr11>1t.r~ed INI: 5IOC:k le1dl •I 2111 DuPont Otlve undtr ,, 11111 27 ot Mttetri.-. ,..,.. In 9119. QUJCit • CROCHET props P10bllilled Of"•Nt Co.ti Oel!1 111101 1" !ride, 1t11t11rH, "ulP!M"1 t!!d ooccl tlllt 1ittlf10111 firm lllmt of Fi.ORIOA Oll1". fll lilt Cou"tv •-• • 11w' r to om a nd daughter O~etnber •l6. 23, :io. 1970 •!Id J1nu•l"I' 6. w!ll of • (erl•1n r1t1!111r111t 11vtt11111 MOOULAlt COMPUTE• SYSTEMS INC ~ Prootm< Is c-i.,· k!llWll ·• Or pS -ffi It 23'0.l'll knoW" 11 ''llr!lnlh 90lt'', 2nT Elll COllll ""' !hit Wld tlrm It <Ol'liPC!llcl 0, ~ 2n LO\lol1, Coste M-, Cllltw/ltl or sisters love these skirts. LEGAL NOTICE Hlohw1w, COl'Olll det Mir. C1t1llor11Ja. followlfl9 (On>or•t!Ol'I, wlloH -pfklcl••• NOTICE IS HER!"llY GIVlfl",flllf -. b' TM piece, •!'Id ttwi dete °" or •ll•r Pltee "' bvtl-It•• totiow.• ftfdly, J111114ry I, lt'fl, " 21 .... deek Use knitting worsted, lg tr-DUI whfdl, t11t blllk tro"'ltr I• to bt N1mt of CaroorollO: M0t1Ul.A1t COM· P.M. of frollt of COln'llloUll; "1 Will! 1M -hct hook Pattern 7032: CIRTlll'tC&'l'E 01' IUtlNl!lt, consumm•led llrt: °"or lllftr J111U• .... J, PUTEllt SYSTEMS. INC. St., City of Co." ~ ~. c,..,,_ ' . l'ICTITIOUI NAMI 1•71, 1t Senk of America NT .. SA, 3'«' Vto l'rlllCll'lll Plott of b~llltt•:: 2JOI' Norlll CIM.lllfy of Or•11t1, SI• ff. Cl'""""'" sizes 10-16 and 2-12 included. ,.~ undersloned daei cetl!IY ht' 11 COii· Llda. N~ &Heh, c1111orn11. Dlxr. Hlltlw..,., fl, t.ouderdalt, Plorlclt. ,•-wtU ttll it !"llbllc •l.IClllll ft ll'li ~ · h dvetlno , bull111111 11 '41 w t7111 c0511 011td c.c;1mbtt 15, lt7D. Otltd: Naftll'lbtr 20. ltl'll r, tor CIJll '" lftofll~,.,. FIFTY CENTS for eac Mno, C1lffon111. \ffldtt lllf tic1111~1 """ Ea rt Klcil, TrB"11f1ror Moclultr ComllU!w . S'(Sftmt. ll'L Untttd lt•lft. '" ... """ ,,.. t'•m _ add 25 Cents for 111me of FEATHERSTON PAINTING end Chrh!OPl!tr V1l .. 1111to1s Klllntlh G. H1rpl" ";:! of Mid ~ ltt Ille pa i.c: • • 111•1 ••Id fir'" r1 lamoo'fd of Ille tonow-Mori"• V1lum1kl1 Pr11ldfnl • descrlbtcl """"""· ;., . -"'°"" each pattern for Alt Mad and 1119 lllf'son, wh0tt 11.1me '" 1u11 •nd ol1e1 Tr•"'''''" wuu1m e. L1M11. '":'°' •• n:!Y .l; ~.:''~"' . I H di' · lhcrwise ot ru1d1nu I••• 1o11owa· Publllhtd o ....... Collt DlllY-·Pllo'I, Soc:r .. •rv·Tr111u,..r wosl UICI/ K"* '"" Spec1a an 1ng: 0 0. P. Ft1lhet1lon, 1m l'llulrn Dr .. 0Ktmbltr n, 1t10 n11.70 STATE Of' FLOll.IDA. ( o!tec1 ' c ' -l-"" • third-class delivery will take Cosla Mesa, C1!1I. COUNTY 01' BROWARD "'"bit I~ ,,~'· ~ .,.. ks Send to 011ed 0ec 1, 1t10 LEGAL NOTICE o" N<M!ll'lber 20. 1no,. btfo.,. ,.,. • • 0 0· ~,__,• three wee or more. o ... ·. FH111er11011 Not•,., Pubuc '°'••kl C01tntw •nd ''''-' M. · wi1 ... ,~ Al. B ks the Dally Pilot s111e ot c1111or1111, ore"" counlY· ""°"'trv •-rid IC-.ttt G. tt.rpl• '"'"'' MU11-1ce rOO ' ·On Oec:. 7, 1t70, btfaNI mt, 11 • Nttlel"I' T"'56a tt'ld Wtttltm C. t.111dl1, Jr. It-"· II mo -°''""(-IV H, f05 Needlecraft Dept., Box f'ublte 111 and far ••kl 111i.. per~111nw NOTICI TO c••DITORS 10 be IM Pr"ldellt •rid Soc:..i1 .... ·fl'ff1Uf': • ~1Jdri11~ ~11"'.._ld·!~ S t. N 1111>e1rt1:1 0. P. Feolhettlon known ta me SUl"l!RIO• cou•T OP THI' er. rtlHC!lvtl., of ltlf corpcr1tloll tllilt V • • • ... ~ 163, Old Chelsea ta ion, ew lo bt the !leTIOl'I WllOll n•-II 111b1<r11). STATI! OP CALlll'O.N!A trO• f!Jl(ultcl Ille wllll!ll ln1ttV!'Mfll Oii btlttff MAX MAIA'-'"'"' ·"" York Ny 10011 Print Name td to tho within r111t"'lft!"' 1nd TH• COUNTY otr ORANOI! o1 !ht co,,...111111 111trt111 no!Md, 1nd nsv. Ntfftil -.. ~. • · • ' ' •ck"&wltd!led he 111.cultd 1111 ""'"· No, A""" 1cknowledltd to me lhlt •uch corJOt• · • Address, Zip, pat' er D !OFFICIAL SEAL) E1t1ffl Oii ANNA o. HUNTLEY, Oett•• !1011 lllKUltd ""' '""'· ;ii.~.~~ MARV K, HENRY ed. {OFFICIAL SEAL) "' ., .. ,,.., • Number. Nat1rv Pub!!,. C1lllOtt11l• NOTICE IS HERE9Y G•VEN to lflt S\l't L. Addto o:•hed Or•nt• c ....... NEW 1971 Needlecraft Prlric1111I otnu 111 , creditors ot the 1bcw1 n•l'Md dtclcltllt Noltl"I' Pllbllc 111 •ncl tot bltr 14 23, », Int ~~ Or11111t Counf'f • lfl1t 111 perl(lfls h•vll'lt cl1tm1 111ln11 11\t ulcl COUllf'f Ind Sl•lt. C1talog -more in s t an t Mw COlllmlHlort E•Plnll llld ~nl .,. requir ed lo 1111 tlltm, MW Cornmtll!Oll f)(pftff LEGAL fashions, knits, c r o c h e ts , Publi::· ~~.~ c°''' o.iw ,1161 ;1~~~11ttT:"~ ~~~1/:.i ':,~1~ " 111 · 1 ' 1'~4.,.,,. NOTici 0,. PWt.fc -" q uilts embroidery gifts. 3 Dtt...,be, t. 16, n. ». 1t10 ""'"'° 1e l'NIHl'lt 111em, wi11t 1r. -= ... ,..,. l'ubll•lltcl Dr-•"'" c .. 11 01t1Y tr tiet ai1101ta TN• ctTY ' 'ts YOUdlfr11, to lht Ulldet1tolltd •I lilt olllce Dtct'lftbtr 16, 23,. a 1910 lflcl ,,._..., , • °" Tll• ~ free patterns. 50 cen • of R09E'ltT J. HERRON llt. AttotNY •'I .. ltn 1,,,..10 ... CITY °" fllOUMTAIN 't NEW Complete I~stant Gift LEGAL NOTICE ~iiiornf.3 tG;~~ ,.!\~·,, =' p1:!oe~ LEGAL NOTICE ,_:,EJ•'r:,_':!~~';..o:,: .. Book -over 100 gtfts for all l'·n 1st bullnn• of tti• und•ir111rtec1 111 111 m1111rs 111e COUl!tll Chlinbwl. Cll't " 1 .. I C het tie CeRTll''ICAT• pert1lnl"9 to !l!tl ""I• of Wld dtctdftll, P4'7U SlllW A-· ,oimt.111 ... • 11 t't. occas ons, ages. roe • COlf'O•ATIOM T•-"NIACTINll w1t111n tour morrths ofter t1141 ftrst publlc. c•RTl,ICATe coir1om11, lilt c1,.,. COUl'ICll ._.1,..,... • d ye, paint, decoupage) knit, •VJINRIS UHtll'lt tlort .. ' .. ' 'h~~~c .. •; 21. 19711 CORl'OIU,TION 111.ibllc llllrl1111 Oii tht folk!Wlllll! 'I IL'ICTlflOUS NAMI ~'" TRANSACTING •UllQSS I, I-Clll°"" NI. bl -A..ilt.lttoft sew, quilt -more. • tT IS HEREBY CIERTIFIED·.AS f'Ol'.• MUltlEL M. MAlttNKE UMOIR Jr/CTITIOUS HAMI ftltd try Clatllc tlwti.rn.M ....._,.... Co lete Afghan Book -LOWS: . . I Admlnl9tr1trlx ol lfle fff•I• ot IT ti HEREllY CERTIFIED AS l'Ot.-di•"" 01 ion."' ··-"" ··"" °" mp Tiit undert.lwned • C•Hfomlll ~•· the '"°"' "'rnelf dec:edtnt LO'NS: "'-llOl"llt tldt ef Sl1rfl111',..-1 ell fashions pillows gills more! tl«1 t1 OOlnt ~111UI Ill ..... Sta,. ol •o•l!•T J, K•••ON Ill • Th• Uflcltfl ...... (111•~111. _,. •rooktl!H'lf from Al .. •• IHlltt °'-' I I ' • ""' .... la Ulll S'lr.ef I .• --~ .. ,, •• -·· •. II "16 Jiffy Rugf'' Book. 50 Ctl1for11!1 Under !,.ht flcllllout "'"'' tlEt. Snl •••d'I. Cil ftn'llt HU• 11111. 11 dolnt bu1!ne1s ''" lilt 8l1!1t ot ..,.. .,_, 111 ..,1trtct.1 :. · I t MAR COMPANY , Tiit prlnclPll P)tl t ol Tfl• HU) IHo1'JS Callfor"Ta Vlldlt 1111 flcllllotll "''"' "T, t. Rlt'+'ltw ~ Cl,., C...~ ~ f;-cents. "50 Instant Giftl' Book. b\lllMll •nd Ille l'llll of l'f!lldtMlt ()I ... n;,,...,,... Aclmllllllrtlrlll H, LIKEN .. SONS". TP!I orlnclPll •I•<• ........... ""-lm""Jilr., t.lflo 50 Cents. Book Of 12 Prlte: •N1',', ',','~.'w'~om"•·""••••."'c•'•' .. ",.~. Ftll• Publll1*1 Or•nff Co.st Dilly l'ltol of b\11lnt11 •nd lfl• Ploce of r1t1tdtnc1 ., .. N.,...att fklnr.; I •t• ·-r~ " ,,, '"'" .... .. ' ' ,. '' ··-···-10 of wk! toro«•llO!I is hxll# " ,,. llrookl'lurlt ,,,.,, l~ltcl 11'1 !flt ~~ .. Al b 50 t • "-lit Book 1 Oiied: N-mblf' 30, lt70. ""'""" r ' ' "' ' '" . ..,. f'•""'1d: lone, W•slmln.ler, c1nttr111.. C.t C~l•I t-. '' • ~ flf g ans. cen s. ...... LI KEN, INCORPORATEO LE CE Dlffld : NOYemlltr :io. "XI dtYttol.,.ll'lt. COl'ldlllttll ''W""',......... -16 patterns. 5U cents. sw: T11ornu K. L1k111, GAL NOTI L!KeN. 1HCOllPO•ATEO e0tnm1u1o11 •111111t1011 '°"'~ Museam Quilt lioolr % -~~,, Lone T..sm ~~ ~=1••~n. llkt11. PrttkNftt ~""":" ~'r\1 :'"oi:..,.. ~ Patterns. for 12 unique quilts. c .. ,. Me ... Coltlomlt SUP•RtOlt COURT 01' THI COlll Mttt. Collfornll ""' -•llflff•I ftlllC9 lrlll.lllll I , ·~ •n..tt I Mourlce s. ll-111, tTA TI' 01' CA'-lflOINIA 'oa ~11ric. I. l lkfft. Stertt•t'I'· I. RltYttW IY Cltr C-11 tfff.r\: 50 Cents. Book 3. ' .... .,1$ Or Secrat1r.,·Tl'M111r•t THI COUNTY' OP OllANOI T"'1111'W ...-1tltf W .....,_ ' flN' T·•· , u·.1 .. .;o II ••tlems '" 1t1e1e Awnu.a ' N" •""" ,., Ni.to AWll!,lf ~ ot "' ... rlmlllf to -J I •-. • r-• lent llfldl, C1l1lornl1 H0'1CI °' HIAIUMO 0, PITITION t..or.e had!, C1llfttrnl• lit •llulttcl Oii 11 9C"" ......... 50'cents IT.ATE OF CALlf,OltNIA I flOft PROBAT• 0, WILL AHO NA STA.Tl OF CAlll'Oft!'llA ) ........ 1.., llY W•r-~·-• COUNTY 01' OltANGE: ) U LITTl!ll TISTAMINTA•'f COUNTY OF O•ANOE J 11 ll'UM, LI Htdtflcll, 1111 LA Oii Detembtr 7, 1'1D btfert: '"'' '"" Elf~!• of o.win cl 1 NT 0 !'I Oii Dtambtr 7, 1•10. ~ ""' ... Alolfttdt • .,.,. • tfllt -u!ldtnl•lltd· • Not•rv Public ,,., •fie! lot ,.1!$COTT, lllO k..-tl .. 0. CLINTON Ul'Mltl'llfnfd, I Hot1rv Mlle 11'1 tlld for '"' ff1ftrl'f of B~ "Id 'County 11t!CI llelt, Hrtontll'I' •e. PRESCOTT, 0.C.aMd. wld (OUlllY ft &tti.. MtMllll,., .,....,, Tlllt P"IHth' II fWrtl!er ~ .. New Looks '"'" Thomll M. t.1-tfl Ind ~vrlc• NOTICE IS HERlltY GIV£N thll td THOMAS H. LIK.N. ~ to"" IO Loll ... s Incl .. Ttltl Ml. , .... 1 ... ) s. Ll~en, kl'IOWll to "" to be '"" l'l'ffl· lll:ENE PRESCOTT 1111 flltcl lltrtlll I .. "" P!'ftldtllt lllcl MAVll:i'CI s. lt-Thllt """ ..... ,.. .. "" ........ dMI and 111!1r Sf(l'll'l•l"l'•TrlllMrftt ~ !ht ptt!lkln tor probtll o1 win Ind tdr ICl!N, ltl!OWll to mt to .. 11141 Stcritlll"I'• """""'' ,fl.I lilt P1..W119 L ..... i .. tor1>1,.•tlori lh"t •~tcu!e'cl th• within 1,.. 1t~•"<~ ot ltti.fl Tt~l8m1t111•rv lo-'~" Tr..,11rtt ol Ille corw•ll"' 11111 ltllK\0-St1111 of C1111-11 (Go\l't. CA " P t•oned l•V"'tfM, k-t'\ !O m~ lo bf !ht llf'ttonl P41lll-t rtfttlflC• to whlCll 11 rl'ledl for llld lllt within IMlnlll'ltllt, lc:!IO'fm to "'fll to ltfl.) 111c1 t~ fO\fntlt" Vallit\f. 1111 ropor I who utc:Uf«I "" wlll!lfl l11t1rlll'l'ltllt °" tllrt!!IT porl!cul•rt. •nd "''' Illa tlmt •1111 bt 11'11 PtrlOM ""'° ft:tc:Uttd' "" wtllfht Onllllftlct. Tiit lottlllll °"'llltllaf PE -IHll•ll of n.. toroor1tlon .._.111 11erntc1. l'ltet of llt•rlflf '"' ll!Tlt ~· ...... Ml ll'ltl""""nt Oii MMff .. ~hie ¢0fflOl'tllOn ~"' ll'lf £)(1!1bltt lf'I Oii flhlj "" •M ICk-ltcllttd lo' 1111 lhtl llO(h to!' f(ll' JlllUll"I' t. lf71 , If .,,:to 1.111., r" IM lflto!'tlll ltlrl'ltd, Mid •~ltdMd te 1111 l'l.l"nlr.. D""'rlmf!lf tl'lcl ltl ~ • Whether you dtclde to wcnr w1t1C111 t11ttu•"9 1111t w1th111 111t1tvn•11111 '°""'"'" ot OeP.r"""'t No. ~ o1 uld 111t1 •udl corper111111 eJ11<Uttc1 the w1th111 tot 1111buc 1~11°" •111t 1J1~111t1 m ·ocro m 'onl midi or maxi 11ur1o11•"1 to lh b't·••ws °' e t-hlllon of cevrt. 1t 100 c1 ... 1c. c"'''' °" ..... w .. 1. 1n 11111rvtn1111 ..urt...,.111 to lit br11wt et , T11o11 Mtrlnl to ttttlfv 111 ,, W,' I ' ' ' '" betf'il of 41rt"tlot•. the (II'/' of a.111• Anl, Clll!Gn'lll. molullort of II• "°'"' el dlrKtolJ. OOP01lll011 fl.I "'-.,.,_1. Wiii """ the Import.ant thing to tSlALI O•ltcl OttttnO.r 11. 1t11 1011,IC•Al stAt.J 111 IH'Or'lllflltv to c1t '°' 11 · "'" Wlllt 0.1n Htr1r1tt W. E.,IT JOMN, Wllll 0..11. M•••rlw lllfotlftlllOll ,1t dtlll'fcl, wou mtV' IKI remember Is that each Jen,. .. , ,.oi,rw l'>vbllc, C•titor1111 cou11tY c1tr1t Not•rr Pubr1c.c1111ot1111 tht l'li!11111"' °"'"_, 11 NMeti""* ;. a com"pletely dllfe~nt look PrlMIHI Oltlu Ill MlKENJllA a l'ITTINO l'>rlMIHf Otlkl-In r,,.,. hi ""'"'""' 11-. I ... ,.. '" · Ortn11 C01111tv lw; Qr\11111 W. MCC'"'" Otlllff Cl'U!'llY CITY COIJNCtl, Ofl 1'fl • ach mus be 0 r n MW Cllltllm!Uloll l•fllr•• ,., .. II Twt It.-&!. SUllt A My eotnmlllfM l"ulrts (:LTY OF "OUNTAl.ll. b---o.o=t , ttrl 1......--Ntttr7Ctllfmtlr . rnm ~:•.;;;.::.;;;:;,;"',:;;.;..._ properly, wl e r a: t Pubtltlld Ot•.,.• c°"n"' o.h., "*'of· A"'"""1 '°'' -""11~ PuDtllhtcl er..... cont o.11y "''IOI· cth' Cit<\ • V-~rtl••• to "e style o.r;emt11r '" n. • )t10 "'"' .1-r¥ it~bllll!IO 0••111• co.11 Dll+Y 1111o1 o;;:;:; '" 11, ao. ",. t11c1 J•11111,., ,, Puttnll'IH or,11111 ct.et+ ~· ..-;..-, r•v,.... """' i.u • I: lt71 ,,.1.10 Otcembtr tt. 2'. n . lt10 '"''"' 1m »n·10 Dt«mo.r 1J. 1'79 ,. •' 'l'»f.1' I ii I' L .. wAibte\.i o. SAYLOR Nhr•S..•rd Momber .. , .. .. . • Jtfi~ch Man Ue~t~d 'fu~«Firm · •. wltrei 1D. SaylOr to( Mira Loroi ._O:~r c l'e , '.HUntington. BtaCh •·was ele(.lted . to the Board .. ot Direct.ors of Air lndusttiOI. C9J'poration (OTC). Ttie "G.r:nten Grove based firm. mal!IJfaciures and dist- ribufu·:hl&h 'emperature high lltttnatlt '.!Melded products lor the ~erqspaCe Industry. SVJor ls president of the G~ Grove West Rotary clu~L'' 1)1Cmbe~ of tlle board of ~ra. Carden Grove ~bet: :<1!, commeret; and ~111t of Ille CllJIY•• LAIE' Jioptrty, o·w o v s -•tlOo .... Pilar :~ Jolninc A I r Jn 1961 as . d~ector .,, et be .,., on th!) I~#~·, CorponUoo public .;llafL ,Saylor lo a ' or UCLA and !•~iiiti·~ .... uy, Toptl<a, .. -.;.;:.....-- -' ' I ' r • t > 2 ===~c-~---.-,-• ------.---------------------.. -' • SC D,ULY ',JLOT J ".. (. J -~ ... . ··::i" • . . :.. ·- ( ' • I •• D41L v PILOT -- I a 1tf•re Edwards Ci~·. Opening • • I I t QuRiiiy Filme; i,n Gre'ater ·~eman~ ...... Today ., TOii TITUS .... ....,, ........ ., maintalns tbat qua 11 t y entertainment •a always 1n de(Jland. His 40 years of operaUbn appear lo bear him out. the form ol the Edwarda Cinema Wet! theaten which are aceessible from 1 that tllorougbfare. ' . ·~ ifme WU J tlJ; ~·i Deprualoo WU at 1ta ...,.., and fewer dollars~ -beinl opent on the .. flilll'' of life -such .. aomC te lbe lnfflu, fot exarqple. • ~ . .; "~e ls a greater Interest In good movies todsy than ever before," the dimlnutiVj:·~~~~'.'f,;'i( that could have n· to movies. It f-4· 90Cf to quit er~ t qql~le nicks put together in a week or so and start tnakJ.Da: good films." Edwards' acumen for the movie theater business was not an inherited lra.1t. Show business wasn't in his blood. With bts roots deep In Soutbe_J'tl Ca}\f9_rnht'• ,put, Edward$ also ~ a sllarp eye Yet that WU the year J~ Edwardl got into the niDtlOD. picture t h e a t e r 1 Utnew, a YOUDI bank ...... In 1111 twentla who ....... a --mofte -In M-...y Part beqilme be wanted somethinc "'" -bis Nchts. 'l'ec!a1 Edwardl bu plenty to dO 'with 1111 nights, not to l1lellllon 1111 cloys, aa preslctmt of .Edwarda Cinema Theaters, a chain ~ high quality motion picture houses: which o n OmiitmU Day will·grow·to 30 wltb·tbe:opening or three new. theal<n. lllong the Orange Cout., ~se latest theaters -two In 1 Colt& Mesa and one in MlllJon Ylejo -are numbers •Ix. llYejl and eJ&ht In Orange ~t7. wblcb has b e e n ~ re<epUve to the ~· opentioa since jt ~ bera oo Qirlslmu ·-·-· '. •. ., ••• J MORE THEATERS J ame1 Edw•rds Day, 1963. This la a special source of pleasure 1o Edwards himself, since be has made bis home in· Newport Beach for the past two decades. And del!plte the fact that, not unlike the thirUes wben be started his career, t b e economy is not in the best condiUon today, E d w a r d s 2. MORE SHOP~G DAYS! --COOKING- FOR THE llGHT ''WT MINUTE'' • ... GJFT FOR ...... . MOM OR DAD? MUSIC BALL and : ·COLUMBIA RECOR~S PRESENTS THE ARCHIVE .. HALL Of fM\E SERIES Of GREAT JAZZ Rl(ORD\NGS ' Such Grwat PackC14Jes As ifr THE ELLINGTON ERA * THE SOUND OF: NEW ORLEANS CHICAGO HARLEM * WOODY HER/MN "THE THUNDERI NG HERDS" * MILDRED BAI LEY * BILLY HOLIDAY * GENE KRUPA. ''DRUMMING MAN" • • • *·'BENNY GOODMAN ' .''1934 CARNEIGE HALL CONCERT" AND MANY MANY MOREi I:. ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS I ... ...... ,.,. Gifts Mom & Dad Wll TNCI .. • Forever! _ ................... _ .... ... THE MUSIC HALL ,. "Wllere Jlfule Comes f'lr u" "" PAIHION Ill.AND OPP. llOADWAT • NIWPOIT CINTH f'W'OIT llACH, CAUi'. 644-561 O i --· caTUIY CITY, SUNsn n11P • M-year-old Edward,, declares. "In the eight weeks we ran 'Airport' at the Newport Cinema, the picture played to more than 80,000 people - 10,000 in the last week alone." "lt takes two facton to bring succw in t bis business," he a~, "a good picture and a g o o d • comfortable theater. We try to provide both." of up .to four theaters, in recent. years. "Out Harbor Cinema.I will have a single projection room. with one operator handling all "My father was a cOwboy," he relates. "And bts father came west during the gold rush. Dad's family aettled in what is now Westminster." In fact, the theater owner points out, Edwards Avenue in Westminster was named for his father -and many years later James Edwards erected a mC1mument of sorts there in on its future with nwe Cioemas planned to dot the niap of the Orange Cout. The . , next is earmarked N a twin for ' the Newport Cinema, opening In all probabWty on ChJiBl!nas Day, 1971, for lhll is the way Edwards celebrates almost every Christmas. Only this year, there'll be three big packages under bts tree -and he's hoping a good many people will come to open them. Edwards has turned this philosophy into profit on the Orange Coast ever since he built Ule first E d w a rd s Cinema Theater on Adams Avenue at Harbor Boulevard four machines," he points out. -·------------------ ''It's all automated and can be in Costa Mesa seven years ago. This was followed by rapid auccesslon by Cinemas in Hu ntington Beach, Westminster, Newport Beach, WestrrUnster (again) and - opening Friday -the twin Harbor Cinemas in Costa Mesa's Harbor Sb opp in g Center and the Viejo Cinema on La Paz Road in Mlssion Viejo. The double theater operation In Westminster is a n IMovation which Edwards Introduced in Alhambra 18 years ago and which has been cdpied by other chains, in lots set into motion at the touch of a button." It's a far cry from the early thirties when E d w a r d s combined his budding movie theater cperation wilh stage shows and vaudeville. Yet the obstacles, both economic and technological, have been similar. Radio was the first. "When radio came :in, everybody said the movies were d !! a d , ' ' Edwards recalls. "But we survived that scare, and then -along came television in the late forties. "I thought T was through then. I closed down 12 theaters in one year. But, as it turned out, TV was the best thing Old Ed Changing Sullivan, Stages Spec:u' us....-1 EDITOR'S NOTE - Vaudtvfllt ntvtr rtally died. It just turned into -"Tht Ed Sullivan Show." But tht old staple varietu program, now in iU 231'd se111on, is showing some liQn.t af cMngt. By CYNTUIA WWRY NEW YORK (AP I -Ed SuJllvan and hla productr, BOb Precht, sat eating luncheon - Ed's breakfast, to be precise- and coUnting the number or variety programs on network television. When the total reached 16, Sullivan took a final bite of lamb chap, and alghed. ''That's a lot ol variety." "Getting the talent Is the hard part -llnJng up exciting and Interesting performers,'' he went. on. "Once all you needed wu to put a Tony Ben- nett on the show. • .But now they've Sttn everything and they know everybody. And the same people keep coming up all over." Jt ii a common ·complaint. There l5 a lot of variety on television, and there are signs that the public, wlth its in- stinct to tum away when It has had enough, is sated. While "The Flip Wilaoo Show" - more comedy than variety - is undoobtedly the one real hit of the new season, ''T h e Tim Can.way Show" and "The Don Knotts Show" re?ver got oil the ground; "The To m Jones Show" has been convert· ed into a sometime t h i n : "The Johnny Cash Show" is barely holding Us own. And 1'The Ed Sullivan Shaw," the granddaddy of them all, stems stuck in a danger zone of the Nlelaen raUngs. Sullivan Is now In his 23rd television seasoo as host or a show that lterted, quite simp- ly, u cld-.fasbianed vaudeville pllyed mo.t.ly In front iof a curtain. Aa the se&SOM moved on, the productian values be- came more sophisticated, the sets and surroundings more elaborate, but It was still a program that presented a se· riel of acts, from jugglers and an i m a I s to snippets !ram Baardway hits and opera stars belting out arias. This season, however, is dif· ferent. Faced with tough com- peUtion for star turns and.per-- IOOlliUes and slotted in 1 Su~ day night position on CBS ., the first of three Pict houra of variety, and against a poptl· lar police-action show, the good old .. Ed _Sulllvan Show" bai btier!. unders:olng radlcal cmmeUc surgery. For the !int hall of' the seooon, eacll pro- gram has been Ued to a theme -an ice &how, a vilit to a state fair, a salute to the UnJted Nations, a tribute to Richard Rodgers, a book mu· sical. "Aciually Ed criginated the idea cf putting on special pro- grams within the weekly se- ries," Precht said. "He has dooe it oceasionally over the years -the Moiseyev Ballet, the Irving Berlin tribute, the end-of·the-'60s show. Now we think about the special as a practir.al pattern, partkularly when there is: an over abun- dance of straight variety around." Sullivan, at 68, is still as competitive as a cub reporter -he still thinks of himself as a newspaperman ahd still has a daily newspaper columo. He has stepped up the hunt for ·new talent and fresh faces. "We've got people all over looking for us," he said. "We ~nt to Japan on a hunt; we go to Vegas. We try to find them on Broadway -we ~t Melba Moore on TV for the first lime." Although Sullivan, Precht and their assistant.a comb the entertainment world for talent -it encompas,,es every thing from emerging roclt groups to star athletes - Sullivan feels strongly that he has larger responsibiliUes. "You have to be conscien- tious -you can't just look for something that is not," he said. "The United Na t i on s show, for example, se emed important to us. And getting Natalia Makarova, the Rus· sian ballerina who defected, to dan~ on our show -wlth an American partner." However, in terms of rat- ings, the. show llas been slip- ping steadily since the begin- ning of the season. In the old days, it was a rare week when "The Ed Sullivan Show" was out of the top 10. 'I'he team of Sullivan and Precht -Bob is his son-in-law u well as producer -will CQO· t.inue to seek a solution. Obviously, the idea of retire- ment -eVen forcible retlre-- ment -has never crossed Su.1- livan :s mind. Yule Festi va l Set for KCET For the sixth conSecutive year, KCET again will telecast the annual Quislmas Music Festival from the Music Center Thursday from 9 a,m. to 9 p.m. on Channel 28. 1be entire lJ..bour program will be seen in color for the first time, when more than 21000 performers In charuses, orchestras and as soloists will take part in the longest continuous program of Christmas music in I.he world. Penn y Pinche0ds Turn Sense Into Dollars twllllll P'o:fti'i! MIOIS Ali Mac&nw • Ryu O'l1al I lla.\lllll &llllSl\Y ·Mlllllll Hlll!R -..... -... --Jolla Miiiey & lay Milland m SE61l ARTHUR 111.lER -· I ----It ' •CD.!J:l ftJ IOHIRll & MillS1\l 111110 lllOOI FRANC~ LJI •......, """ :· . ,..,IMCllCM.llMM.(•,......,lllCOllD5) 1Rl!..=.=--;... I . • PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY.• I FASlllO • ••• "COMPLETELY FASCINATING TO WATCH AND MUST BE PRONOUNCED A TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT! Redford is nothing short of stunning! Not since Brando has an actor had more presence on the screen! Lucille Benson's perfonnance (as Pollard's Motlier)-'Best Supporting Actress stutr!" -US ..... WWOUTAfll 1 "FAST! ROUGH! EXcmNG! . . Robert Redford, as always, is totally devoted to the character. He's inside it. What looks out is a charming liar, thief, lover, deserter, brave, not lucky, and a man who'll never stop trying. Brilliant!" -'"*'9r"""""" NEW TORK POil' " 'Lillie Fauss And Big Halsy' is a REAL THR IUERI Robert Redford takes another giant step forward as the most exciting leading man since talkies!" _,,_ Scott, u,, ... ... _,,.,, ... ,., ......... aottn m1CHMl J. -· MDfOllD llOWlllD ~ unu MUSS AllD 116 HM.SY MAl.mtlL .... .-ucnoM • ... _ULmMMtr1CM ~..,. LUCI.LI llMSOM .. -=-=-~r:z..:.";;.;.1-·-t-.-".. ·--PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY • EDWARDS' f "I LOVE MY-WIFF' RLIOTIGOULD IHA Di.VIOL WCIU'ER Produttion "I LOVE MY ... WIFE" BRENDA VACCARO· ANGEL TOMPKINS .. ,_,. -.. -.. ---,-· ... tl\J.Ollt•fTU-·1;1-~--A-JIOC'll.ll(·1~• 111- PREMIRE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY • HICATCH·22' IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST INTELLI· &ENT, THE MOST HUMANE ..... OH, TO HELL WITH ITI..;. IT'S THE' BEST AMER ICAN FILM l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR I It comes as close to being.an epic hum an comedy as Hollywood has ever made! Alan Arkin as Yossarian provides lhe film with its continuity and dominant style. Arkin is a deadly serious actor, he projects intelligence with such mono-maniacal intensity, he is both funny and heroic at the same time. Nichols remains, as he Wis before one of our finest directors." -""""' cANav, 1 N.Y. T/Mf.S ·rrs ONE HELL OF A FILM! A COLD, SAVAGE AND CHILLING COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nichols' place in the front rank of American directors." 1Rucc w1wAMsON, nAYIO't "YiewiRI Arkin ls like watching Lew Alcindor sink baskets or Bob~ Asthlf play chess. A virtuoso pla1er enterint his ricllost pe~od! A trium phant perfonnancer· -n•< "'""""' GRAND OPENING CHRISTMAS DAY All All NEW LUXURIOUS MOTION PIC- TURE FACILITY TO SERVE All OF OR· ANGE COUNTY. A BRAND ltEW THEA· TRE GOI NG CONCEPT 'FOR YOU; 2 DE· LUXE THEATRES IN ON E BUILDING, EACH THEATRE SHOWING A SEPARATE AND DIFFERENT PROGRAM. ' -EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN CINEMAS HARBOR CINEMA 2 · HAUOl ILYD. ATWllsOll ST. COSTA MHA 2 M1US SOUTH Of THI SAN DtK0 FWT. 646-0173 ' EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN CINEMAS HARBOR CINEMA 1 HAHOll ILYD. AT WILSOll ST. COSTA MHA 2 MllfS SOUTH Of THI SAN DIEGO FWY. -M6-0S73 STAIQ -WALT DISNIYS CNllSTMAS DAY "THE ARISTOCATS" - ' f - • ' I I I ( J I ! t r ( [ • t f l t • ' \ • ! • • I , List of Prisoners PARlS (~Pl) ~The Following is a 1ist of U.S. pltots captured in North Vietnam between Aug. S, 1964 and Nov. 15, J970, released Tuesday by North Vietnamese ~<lfncials. · The list did not contain the hometo'A'l\S vt lhe~ldiers. The. atates of 339 of the n1cn were obtained lrom Mrs. Cora \Ve.iss, 1'ew York, head Or \he co1nmittee ..... Ginwlial80n~·-wi.U1 families ·or , detained servicemen, who said the list released Tuesday was essentially the same as one she obtained~Jast fall except it bad now been "made official." The list reJeased illj.Paris was given to newsmen by Rennie Davis, Mrs. Weiss' representative. ft was the same list as those given to Sen. Edward M. Kennedy and Sen. J . William Fulbright. · CAlll'OltNIA Wllf<.il KHH Abbo!I. C.pr. !:IOll 7l0, $•n 01- E\l<=:rtU AIY•tf1 Jr .. LI. 0.1.1 (t.U11~), S•nll (.I••• ~ntnonr, Ch•rln Ancl•irw1, 1111. IFR3 ~ll. CMc.o •• .-r di. C. B•IOod, Jr., LI, I .11.) (""20), San ... trCM 6' RObert w . a.rn,n, ~I. !FR310211, H•WIMrne C.olt Bl•ck, LI. CMClr., 1Sf'3171. Stn 01900 TJrr11 LH Bayer, hi LI. jFR3\SJM1). Vl.,.U• MlcllHI LM Br•ltllon, II LI. IFV31.wt'Ol. Sul ·-· l'hlllD Ne•I 1utltr. LI. (M7Jff}, LI~'" ~1111.tm Wll Kt uti.r, ~:1'1. r:ll J~_S:-n rt•l~t CU trl Oeftnll (1Mmb9rl. I LI. I l»4Ul), Yu~ ~•rl•n P-'ge O..prn.in, C.ol., f011'311, F ... mont A(lllft ltay CIMuncy, Lt. (rndr, 161Clll, ~ JOI!& Cltu6e Oou91&1 Clo-. LI. Crndr. UOl-471, S.n "':r.:: •mts Quincy Collins, C.pt. (27'091, Alhtr1on J&mn J. Conntll, LI. {6<17"311) L•1!!!ll'" MkllHI P•yl Cronlil, Ll.f[,o), I 'I· ner11e1ev EOwtrd Dale E1tn LI. ....,r. , Ltm00r1 John Ftr, Cao!, Cj'ii23l •n P9dr1 titrlM!rl IC1U11 lj1Mr. C•PI. 021'1'1), 1t1nche LAI AMA Mlchtel I(, McCyhllon. C•DI., MonlgOIMrY H•rtltf"I Benl•mln Rlnosclorf, 111 LI., EllHI I ~llOHA Kiie Dao Ber11. C1~1 Gl..-.:1111 J1c.11 w;u;.~ eom1r, Mil .. MIH ltrr'll Edwtrd C•rri<lll'I. CtDI .. S<:oln.Gllf JCIMJlll Crecu, Jr., 111 1..1,. pi-ni.. ~ Ewrtlte O.y, M11., Gltndtlt "'fll• EIU1 FOl'bv. C•DI. LI rd Gu!ll!'rlOll· ~I., T~on Tr-nt1 Mack Madison, Mtj., l'hOt!lla Oenn!1 MtMnv MoDre, Lt., M~ lewl1 W. Slliottuck, C•pl.1 MeY J•ck H. Tomes, (IOI .. (l\lndler Clllrln Robl-rt Tvltr, Mlll,f ."'-"I' J1c11 1.1n-v1n1~;w.r.;u;uuon J1mes Lesley Ltm.r. Lt. C~l.:t Lltll• Rock COLORAOIOI' Wllllem C•vid l311rrDUQM, ~I .. A11ror• Ben Mertsbury Po1!1rd, M•I .. Colol'tdCI $prl1191 CONNECTICUT 1t11d Bl1!n.e Me<:ttarv. Lt. tlal. Old Gretnwlc~ OELAWAIE lloblrt Btrtlcl'I Oortm111_, LI. Cl'ldr.1 Wllmlrigtan DISTRICT 01' COLUM• A Arl!lur T110tna1 Hofflon. hi Lr. J•ma aonci Stoctd•~'i:o'r.~ RtlDll J, l rownlng, lsl LI~ Orltndo Gerek! L. Cott", I.I., Slmord Kennel!I Wllll•ms Cordier. C•DI., T•mpS C•rl &Dvette Crumo1er, LI. cmor .. Or•fllll! l'trll Jotln HOWlrd cu~. M11 .• JICklOfflUlt JOlln Slewtrt FlnltY Ht, LI. Cmdr .. Stltllllt ~d'I Kennelh F!1he!_i CaDI .. !1-ellrlna Roller! lvron l'Ulltr, Cmdr., J1c.llsonvlll1 '"~ Ellli G1illltr, En1l9n, Mltml Den e . Glenn. Lt \•al. J1ckionvl!IO!' Otv Fletcher Gr•V r .• 11! ll., TtmDI Gll\I Donn!$ Gruters, Ctpl., S•rtJO!t Ltwrenct N. Gu&rlno1 Mii. S1l11Ult B11ch k-1!h Hormtn Htll, <.,.tpt .. Fart Wt1111n lletCtl TMm11 RtnWICll: Ht!I Jr .. Lt. llol, P1n1tcDll '' Wl!lltm Morlllfl Htrdmen, Lf· Cmdr .. Cenll' HI John Htlllo Lt., North Ml•m '"'" Robert Bruce Hlncklev. Ctpl., Forl W1Uon Beech J1mt1 Oil• Hlvner, CtDI., l•f'ft.IN J.,ne1 Leo HUltDfl. Lt. Cmdr., L1te,.nd Cll1rln NR11us J1mt1 Jr., Cmdr., Wln!tr Ptrll. P1ul Anll'lony Kerl, Ctpt., St. P"en111.or11 Rlc.lltnf P•ul Keirn, ("1pt .• TtmPll -Wiison ~r Ktv. LI .• Jtdttonvllle \/"ernon PrffOtl L~ Jr .. LI. Col., MelbO\J'I'~ Betel\ John Sld':r,: McC.tln, LI. Crnd• .. Ottnot Plrll Glln II. orr!,...ton, LI., 51nlord C'>!mllDl'I w. Perllln1, C•ol., Orltncla Couai•• Brian Pele.son. Ctp!,, Mtrltnnl Peter Vtn khDll!el, LI. Cmdr., MIPll!' , ktnn.tth Adrl1n Simonet, Mtl .• Wt·il P1tm BNCh wavne OQden ~mllll. hi Lt .. Dunedin Tl>Omts Jtmell Sterllnci, Mtl.. Fort W111Dn l ttcll IUcMrd Gtof#e Ttflll""'"· l.I_., St!'llord Dewev W1vne W1Clclel1, M•j·i "°'' wanon 11..-cn Lewi• l•vino Wl!lltms. LI, !Ill. TtmDI Junu F111ld$ Youfl!I, Mtl .. Hollywvod GEORGIA ltender Cr1yton. Lt. Crndr.lL111r•nire ltoll FrtMll'-EHI• Jr;,"' '" Hiii! Porltr A. Ht lyburton, LI. 0 11), ll,OCJl;ef LIO G_., Hv1n, LI. Crndr., Alblllll Mlchtel Cllrl,loolltr ltnt. 111 f.o·· At!1flll 1"°""'' Vince P1rro11, c .. 111.1 ,.., OrlOf' G. Swlndlt, c.·1171. Cam It Irby O. T1rr111. N'.11 .• E•st Point Ht.WAii (ieorDtl G. Mc1Cn19111, 1!fi':~b ~luht Oontld Glenn w111 ..... n. (JOI., IC•lloll!I' IL<.INOIS TllOlnl• J"'eDh B•rrttl, "111 tl., Lomblrd Jollt\ l. Borllno. hi L!., ClllU1111> Jtrr'll ON\ald Ori.coll. 111 L!., HIMdtle Jotln Wlltlam F~trlcl<, WO, Tremont Thom11 F. Norri1, Ctot .• Godlrt~ G1ry Richard Slglt•t'H'o'i.i.~A"lt ro•• Richard Brenn!'man. tit Lt., Ml1111w1ka Ml<hael Thomas Bumi, hi Lt., Wlt'SAW Hu"-•' Elliott 81.>Chtntn, 1$1 LI., A111!1n Ronald Edward ltyrne Jr., Ma l .. Kokomo J1rnes Helms ka1l1r, Mal., lndllMDOll• """ r.1rell'I L..,.ernt An6eflOll, L!. 1¥.i•ll·l• Ctdtr lltpld! II~ John Nal!lllMDn, LI., Slit L1rrv HDw1rd SP1"1Ctr1 Lt. Cl.fl· , Etrtlliom ICr.NSAS C1!1rln Grtharn &oyd, Ctpt., Wlctllll Vertyne Wlynt Oanleli, Cmdr., Nn1 CllY 11 • ...-Anion t-lornlck, C1pl., A~ Edw1rd Lee Hubbfn:I. 111 LI .. Q¥trltnd Ptr1t Gobel 0.1" J1mn. Ma! .• Ovtrltnd Ptrk / Ht•okl Euoene Jonnson. C101 .• O..tr1tnd l'trk Ronlld L1mlM!rt M11lln. ht LI.I Merrl•m ta1ellll Ch<"•ln Plumb Jr .. Lt. C .oJ( l'r1lrl1 v m1ge 1rov WIH!•m StUT~·e:1:~b~·K~mm na• Robert Bt ldwln Purcell, (1pl., LDUl1vllle 0.Wtf lee Smllll, MAI., V~!Tey Sl•tlon LOUISIANA L•wrenct Bt•beY, C.101 .. l!tton lloUfll 1110..,1• J. C..0•!11. C•ol., Al1•1ndr11 Glenn iti· 01~le, LI. (l.o.), N111<1lt0ftlllll1 MurDh' NNI JOfleS, (eot., BtlDn ROliQt . H•Vd"' .Jemn Lod<lliorl Jr., 111 Lt., Alelltnd• .. llruce Glb'SOn S.f'IM!•M'.:t';iE Wnt MDnt111 Robert Irwin Blu, Caot., 81noor Alltn Rus.s•ll Caroenter, Lt .. S1nf0nf M1rk1!1m l. G1rttey. LI. ~l.a.l. G•etnVlllt R°'"r 0e1n 1rqv1~it.~AN~1"'°'11 J1m11 FrAnklin 8t"I, Lt. Crndr .. L1vt\e Arth"" Wllll•m Burer, C1cit., Ro<kwllle HllQh Allen St•lfard. Lt. Crndr .• CtmllfidOf Berlllrd Lto T1ll1~ J r .. 111 LI., Btltlmorl' Drive Lannched For Needy Pets Donations of pet food and cash to help tiomeless animals housed at the SPCA 's Canyon shelter once mort: art: being collected at Laguna 's Shop of the Open Windows on Pepper Tree Paseo in the fOO block of South Coast Highway. Owners Marion and Jane Crier annually set aside, the week before Christmas , as a special "be kind to animals week'' at the little shOp . Donations are picked uo on Oiristmas Eve by a representative of the shelter. NOllTM DAKOTA Loren Htrvev Tor11e111111. 111 Lt., CrCllbY OHIO WUU1m Jalfll!> Bt UQh, C•DI., Pl<IV-B\ll'!On Wly~ C1m-ll, lit Lt., Amh,r1t ~~.;1:;,115~~ t;c,,;o..l;l.}~i!'rri':, 't:"~vtnl Tl>Oma1 Hiiton Mot, hi Lt., W•rrtnsvlllt Htlg~ll Br9dl1y E. Smith, LI. 1 ·i·I, like Mtlton Raber! E. Wldtmtn, l . 1.11.J, Rocky Rl11.,-, OKLA OM• Frid A. W. Frln~t Jr . Cmdr., MldWtll City Gtltnd 0 . ICrlmtf ht Lt .. T11ls•. Ht rold Oll!lou Moo'llu~ hi Lt.<.. Tul~ Tllom11 SMw Pvle 11, C.pt., <..Ofd.ell Aol>IN<>rl ll!1ntr1 •. L!. Col.. Ol<l11\at'n1 CJly Hubt<'t Cllfford '°•Iker Jr., C1D1., Tulw OltEOOH Jtmn Eldon Stnor~, C1ot .. FDl'HI Grov1 P EN .. SYLYAHIA W-ell Re-td Akorn Lt. 0.f .), KJtt1nnlnt1 Artl'lu• Neil Bltdl. it.lrfl'lln 2.c ., lethltllrm Jotin Coulllts Bwrm, LI Cmdr., P"°U Oe111d Jty Ctr,Y, Lt. •[c.1. JNnnetlt JDl'ln 0....., 0.111ts..t Ill I., RNCllflll Edw1rd Anthonv vev11, LI. (l.g.l. l•ll Olvlcl Htnrv Outrt, Ctr.., C•nton -Glenn Leo Mvtrs, 111 l ·~ Plt11burgl! Jon ... Re~na:d1, CIDI .• NII Cynwvd M1rk John Rullllflll, CtDI., Plll1burgh llobtrl R1l1lon S1whlU J r M•I. Ctrneg\e HtrvtY 5. Stockm•n, LI. (ol., PftllodelDhlt konr•d w. Tr•ulm•n, CIP!., STttllDn WtJlff E. Wllber1 Cmdr,,, Cah1mlll1 Cron Rotlls S<.>UTH \.AllOLINA Wll!l1rn lltnWfck Au,tln Ill CaDI .. Sll'rl05onVltle 8-y Rn Btol111. Mtl., umter --Robert Sr. Cltlr Finl J• .. LI., .,,.,son Wllll•m Htrlev Metni Jr., Cap!., Sumltr Htrsc:h.-1 koll Moro1n, C•DI., SUmttr Albtrl Edwtrd RuftY•n M1J., SUmter SOUTH DAKOTA L.urence Victor Fri... Cao1 .. Huron ll kh•rd ll eymond R1til.1f. Lt. lloJ, Ablrdnn llOMlcl Mer .. Lebtr1, 111 LI.( W11cr1own Leo k.-1111 Thor'"'\Jih'.:~\lE~ll F•lll lloOerl 0 . Pet1. ht LI., Ptrl1 Cl!trlll Nt11 1tnn.tr, LI. Cmdr .. CowlnQ!on _8tY.fll91l4..Arl~ur Vol!d.f~·xl's Cmdr., M•molll1 E lmb Clnntrd R1llk1r, Mtl., San Antonio Jol'lft Ch1rles Blt'Yln1, C•PI .. Sin Anlonlo llOMld Gtt11n 81111, lil LI, temole Donlld A•v B~t"•· Mtl.~./·11 ...... 1 Wtll, """-"'~~ ~•nd~"',r.,\~; A~!ilnQUMn C ty Robtrl Jllaltn ,,~~lrtv, C.101 .. Oej Rko G-Robtrt all, Ct I., Waco " JullUI $11.111...,. l\ll'jll, \!'101., 0.1111 ·-t:"''" J.,.....,, C•PI., Dlllt1 S•mu..i abl•I Jol'lft10n Ma .• Pl•no Gordon btr1 ~non. l1. ~01 .• St n A111Dnlo Wt ,,.111 ltotiert Liiiy, (tPI .. Ot1i.1 I.pull Frtnll. Mlkcrwa.111. M1I., Mldl•nd Al!Otl B111nt M111tr, C..Pf., Colltlll Sl1tlon AnnMNI AIM Mvers, C~t.. Uni-Ml C.Jty Jtmn Edwin R.11, lit U., Conrot ltabwl Jtmtl S.ndvlc•. Ctol .. F1rwttl J1rrv All"' SlnPf•lan. hi LI., 0.1111 Tllom&s Gordon Slorey, c-.. Au11rn Ross R•ndl• Tetrf, Lt., Ltke Jtckson "Ttrrv Jun uvtv•m•r c.1111 .. Au111n Jlllln HMlrY Wtndel Jr., (tp!., HOliS1on Glenn Hullcrt W!llOf'I, C•t:t.'J.rl•lfl-ll Cl!y L•rr! j· Cl'lellev, 11' LI., Oodtn J•' ' Clelia Hn1. •o! .• Bounlllul JtY Rottr J.,,llfl, C1pt .. Leyton JoM Dlvld ll!nt, (•~jll=f~IA J•mll E. Be•n, Col.. it.rlln<1ton J•me• RoOtrt •troer. CIPI., Lt•fnaton 1111..., Colbv~"crv. Crndr. V!rolnl• IHth Frtd Vt"" "-r"" Mtl.. $u lk Mlc:htel Dur 1m ~llrl1!l•n, fJ'! 11111, Vlrqlnlt lffth KIMl'lh I.ton Cotl<tv. '~tVlroln11 l lKll Fr..ttrlc:k AUS!lll Cll>W Jr., I, Cmdr,.r "-"' Jeremlth A. Otn111n Jr., Cmdr .. Vlr11ln I Bttdl Oe!e W1t11r -0os,, Lt. Ctnclr. (-homt town 1lv111l John H. Ftllown. Lt. Cmdr,, VIN:1lnl1 Be•cll ICtl'IMll'I II. Fi._., Ma/" tllmDlon Ptul Edwl[d G11tt\ll, l .. Richmond Howtrd Hll • 11!. LI . A/e••ndrlt Euotnt B. Mcotnle!. L . Cmdr., VlralnT1 !leech Ji m" Al!rtd Mu1lla1n, Cmdr .. Vlrqlnlt Btttll Edwin Ar1hur Slluft'Wln HI, Lt. Ctrl(lr,, Vlrglnl1 8"~l0iem Mlct1111 T1clluctY, LI. u.a.1. v1•111n11 B11c11 . Rlth•rd Ctlt voo1I, Mt!.. H•moton Ron1ld John Webb, C1ot., H1mol!)n Presents Sought For Children In Sitton Home They haven't been bad, but they are locked up, and for these teenagers, Christma s may be just another day as wards of the court Officials at A1bert Sitton Home in Orange predict 1he holidays will be bleak for a group or boys and girls 15 to 18 if some citizens don't volunteer to play Santa Claus. ·, "They will get absolutely nothing.'' says Mrs. Betty Beckwith, of the Sitton Guild. Merchants, service clubs or Just families with enough extra t.o give, such as small transistor radios. cologne or shaving lotion, belts, wallets or sport shirts can help. Meditation Lecture Set For Laguna Beach W om Trarisceodental meditation. the natural I L-thnlqu e for lbe development of the n\lnd. will be the subject or an introductory lecture at a p.m .• :>ec\2t, at the Laguna Beach Women's Club, 286 SL . Ann's Drive. Cathy Cooper, 1 1967 graduate of Laguna Beach High School, who bas stucfied under the Maharishi Mahesb Vogt, will jnstruct at the introductory lecture. Followiog lhe Introductory lecture. students of the mind-expanding art will reOt"lve one day of personal Instruction at th'e Students lntemaHonal Meditation Society (Sll.fS) he3dquorters in Los fingt!les, on Jan. 2. F.oUowing on Jan. 3. 4 .111nd 5, st1.1denti1 wil1 receive further pc~onal Instruction In Laguna Btach1 ''lt !a a very simple technique to lncrease the strength of thought and tht effectiveness of all actions, thus making Jife more enjoyable, 11 Miss Cooper c:rplalood. · "And lt .. only takes 15 to 20 minutes twice dally," she added. Miss Cooper, who has been studying transcendental meditation1 said the practl<e lw lmproveil'lier relaUON with family ind friends and bas bettered her work at school. SIMS 11ks 11 $35 minimum student donation or a $75 non-studCnt donation for the series of courses. The funds ·go toward renting halls for lectures. printing costs. and sahtrles for f u 11 • t i m e. lnslructors. AU donalions are tax depuctlble. • • ' LAGUNA'S TOP POSTER MAKERS DISPLAY THEIR WINNING CONTEST EFFO~TS Mrs. Mark Detrick With Winner1 Richard Flore\ Deborah ·CHlerdner and G1elen Berryhill 9 San Clemente PolicC; Office~ To Get Diplomas • • I ., Winners in Laguna Qental ,~ \ :·i Poster Contest Annoiinced ''' " represent Laguna Be.ich in the C'OWlty., wide poster contest during t>ental Health Week in February. Santa Ana Firm Gets Road Bid ... 11~ ' ., ··i• ' • .. -· ·~· ~. ' I I ' ! ! I • I t ·-~= I DAILY PILOT Wtdlltfday, Dewnbef 2J, 1~70 ' Wleles 'O.K. w. 'll try ••lf- immolation. Who'll he . lil'lt!' :TV Curbing Revolution • Reds Soften Conditions Fo r Peace . PARIS (UP!) -North Vietnam llCtled down iU: pea~ dem.IJ'.1.U today. It apparently dropped Jts demand for the ouster of the present Sala:on regime and Jt offered a cease-fire it tht United StateS would halt reconnaissance Olibt.s over the North and withdraw its troops by mid·197t. All previous Hanoi ' t a t em e n t s demanded a provisional c o a Ii t I o n govttnment that excluded the three top Saigon leaders as a nect!lsary step toward' the restoration of total peace in South Vietnam. There wQ no mention of that demand today. 'Ule statement delivered by Chlef North Vietnamese Deleaate Xuan Thuy aa ld the question of South Vietnam's pollUcal future was open to dlscuulon if the Nixon Admlni1ttation agreed to Hanoi's latest conditions. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce also toned down the American statements II)' DICK WEST WASHINGTON -Perhaps you have noticed that violence by campus r&dlcall and other' mllltantl appears to hive dlmlnllhed tll!J fall. And perhaps you have been wonderinr. why. . . today. Instead of using words like ''Inhumane'' to describe Hanoi's treat- ment of war prisoners he said it was "unsatisfactory" in the North and ''disgraceful" ln Viet Cong controlled areas of the South. If so, I invite your attention to the ateady proliferation or television "talk'' shows. Televilion news . coverage ha s ooculonally been accused of causing violence, the theory belng t h a t demonstrators tend to become more frmetic when the cameras are turned their way. Thll may be true, but any violence attributable ·to network newsm e n certainly is i;nore than offset by the talk shows, which . have become America'• first line Of defen•e azaiost revolution. IN ll.LUSTRATION of this poin~ l<!t us gay ttiat a terrorist group called the •·ml!:teorologtsts•• plans to llomb a plant t.hat makes frozen onion rinp served in military meas balls. The blutfnl party wembles al the appomi.d bounll!d awaJta the arrival of their leader, Sim Boom bang. After Ibey have been atandlng around1or 30 mlnutes or so, a runner arrives with a meaage. "TM operatton hu been scrubbed for tonigh~" be reports, "What's the matter?'' aomeone asks. •·Did somebody tip orr the pigs?" "No," the runner replieii. "Boombana: Is appearin& on the David Susskind Mow." This dOl!:ll not mean, or course, -that a · certain amount of terrorism ~sn'.t take place. But think how much g~eater It· would be if television didn 't keep most of the radical leaders tied up on talk shows. IF YOU CHECK the dates on recent bombUq:s, I think you will find that all of them occurred on nights when David Frost faill!:d to interview the leader of srune extremist group. The number of radiCal activists who are inactivated by Dick Cavett and Johnny Carton II far greater than the sum of their radJcal gueats. lf a revolutlonlst ii booked for the 1¥-terv Griffith ahow, his loyil followers naturally watch the program. M: do the .Jeaders and members of othl!:r militant iaction1. Consequently, a 1inrle guest shGt on a network talk ahow can effectively neutralize the entire terrorist 1pparatus tn this country. Putting this situation in historical ptrspectiw, we can see that if David Susskind had been Cuban, Fidel Castro would never have gottm out of the ?.taestra Mountain•. -UPI JUNGLE-ATTIRED CARDINAL BLESSES PATROL L,&ADER , Prel•te Terence CDOk Blesses Serge•nt Before Patrol 28 Enemy Killed ' ' Vietnamese Paratroopers Attack Reds in Can1hodia SAIGON (AP) -South Vietnamese ' paratroopers puahing deeper i n t o Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese force at dayligh.t today and called in ,4et .. bombers and artillery. South Vietnamese headquarters SJid 26 North Vietnamese were killed and nine weapons and 20 mortar round• captured in the battle 10 miles northwest of Kompong Cham. One South Vietnamese paratrooper was reported killed and 13 wounded. A spokesman said the size or the North Vietnamese force was not known, but it was the biggest fight reportl!:d since 2.500 South Vietnamese paratroopers were -tr * * VC Cease-fire Now l1i Effect; Cambodia Flares SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong's Christmas cease-lire went Into effect 111 Soutb Vletn'm early Thursday while South 'Vletnameae paratroopus were engaged In an operaUon against enemy troops in Cambodia. The case-fire took effect at 1 a.m. South Vietnamese battlefields were reportl!:d quiet. An allied cea!le-firl!: goes into effect al g p.m.-5 a.m., EST. ThuNJday. Hours before the enem y stand-down , south Vietnamese paratroops pushing deeper into Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese force and called in jet bombers and arUllery. lifted into Cambodia more than a week ago in an attempt to break the North Vietnamese stranglehold. South of Phnom-Penh, .N o r t h Vietnamese troops attacked a Cambodian task force trying to reopen Route. 4, Phnom Penh's highway to the sea. The attack occurred about 80 miles southwest of tbe capital, but no other informatlOp was available. Cambodian government force!! claimed " Tuesday that they had reopened more than 50 miles of the highway south of Phnom Penh and that they had killed 400 , to 500 enemy troops since they began their sweep down Route 4 last week. Government casualties were estimated at 10 killed · and 60 wounded. With Route 4 closed, tankers from South Vietnam using the Mekong River are now the only source of petroleum for Phnom Penh. One such arrived in the Cambodian capital early today "'ilh 290.000 gallons of aviation fuel. gasoline and diesel fuel. Earlier raports said the aviation fuel was 1:0nslgned to the Cambodian air force , but officials in Saigon said all the cargo was for commercial use. ' South Vietnamese gunboats escorted the tanker, and a spokesman for 1he Vletnaml!:se navy denied reports that it had refused to prov ide an escort. Other sources said the ship was delayed in Saigon for 24 hours last weekend because Soulh Vietnamese officials were not available to supply the escort. The U.S. Command In Saiaon said in a delayed report that six Americans were killed last Saturday in the crash of a Navy helicopter gunship in the Mekong Delta east of the U Minh forest, about 137 miles southwest of Saigon. The cause of the crash was nol known. Most of Nation Shivering .~ishmasli Front Hits Mid wes t; Lows Reach 24 Belo w CaHtomlo •r UllttM ,,.. lllftl'lllltwt.I Mbttlr f1lr .itlft .,.,,,.. ••-td 11 rtfvm to $oultllr11 Cellforl'll• lod•t toUowlN • ..,In flf t1orrn1 tt.11 or111Cllltd rno.t 1r111 whl!• d11~1rit u11 to four flMt ol •-In •tllt,., ' -, '110AA llA11111UlWUTllll.Sl!MCflV J:DU .M. llT ll •1'•70 . '· Southtrn C.illornl1 bYt tht tftt1>t•5 of ll~ mcvll'l<l int1nd "'ere llUIKI '' 5ll~M. M{Allfn, lex., "'ll the w1rmt JI SPOt 1~ fht n1!1on lltl'ldev "'I""• rNd!119 ct 87 a .. rff5. lhe 11v1rnltnt lo"' .,.,, 21 below te•o <ti Wllll110r1, N.D, Te1npera tures ·-U'-llTt:O i-1t1ss INTlll:PfATIO'-!At.. ll"m-•Tu••I end 11rttt11U1!lon tor lht 2•·h011r period tfldfn1 •I ' 1.m. Hiii! low ,,tt, '1 ,, .. " " " .,, " " M JJ ·" The New Hanoi conditions for peace ware inaerted into the North Vietnamese statement after it had been mimeographed for distribution to newsmen. • Thl!:re was no immediate U.S. reaction to the modified Hanoi proposals, but Washington bas steadfasUy rejected all "pnvious Commwtist proposals that involved a withdrawal deadline and gave nothing more in return than a promlse to talk. . Th11y's modified proposals w e r e presented to the conference after the U.S. delegate 'indirectly acknowledged receipt of a prisoner Ust from Hanoi by dropping ita persistent demand for such a list in the U.S. statement. Thuy alluded to the current Christmas 1eason in bis stateml!:tlt, and then said: 'The delegation of the ~mocratic Republic oI (North) Vietnam, on this occasion, calls upon ' the NI x on Administration to agree to t h e withdrawal from South Vietnam of all American troops and those!: of the other foreign countries before JWle 30, 1971, as the (Viet Cong's) provisional revolutionary government has propoaed, in order to obtain an immediate cease- fire between the Popular Liberation arm~ forces of South Vietnam and the trOops and military personnel of the Unlted States and of thl!: oUter foreian countries of the!: Anil!:riCan camp. and' ln order to pl!:rnUt the!: parties tG enter ihto immediate discussions on the que1tion of guarantees for safl!:ty for the!: withdrawal -0r troops and military personnel Jn question and on the question of liberating captured mllitary men. "Moreover, the Nixon Administration must immediately cease all a c l s threa1ening the sovereignty and the security of the Democratic Rep1,1blic of (North) Vietnam. (Hanoi's term for reconnaissance flights.) "lf the government of the United States acts in this direction, the parties could equally enter into immediate discussion on the tota l cessation of the cruel war which is going on in Vietnam , and on the question of respect for the fWldamental national rights and the right ~to self- detetmination ot the Vietne.mt!l-p:eoplc~ Pope Hit Twice ·Jn Manila Death Attempt ROME (AP) -Pope Paul VI v.·as struck twice during the attempt on his lift!: at Manila airport Nov. 21. his pl!:rsonal doctor said today. Dr. Mario Fontana said. however. he was not able to say how he was struck. Fontana declined further comment in a statement to the press. He was asked his views of a report in an Italian newspaper Tuesday that the knife wielded against the Pope by Bolivian painter Benjamin Mendoza Amor actually hit the Pope on the neck, on each side of the jugular vein. The ne\\·spaper, Resto del Carlino. said the blade did not touch the Pope because of the heavy, starched breast cape he wore. ln Manila_. the official who charged Mendoza wilh attempted murder of the Pope sa id he had no evidence that the knife came within three feet or the Pope. Fontana said he did nDt personally see the attack on the Pope. He did not explain whelher the "blows'' he was speaking of were from the!: knife. ft has been reportl!:d that persons around the Pope forcerully push_ed him away from the assailant. ,. -11 t!Ol'tl'I lrlllll ,,_ ett the eo91l ....,. forec1tttr..,,11(1 lM•t .,.,, • s!lrht -•lbllllV of rt l"' •f'IOwt" '''' lonltht or Thur Ml••. 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S111 I; .. 1.m, MOOll Ill• l:lJ1.lft, lll1 ll:lt11.m • V.S. Sutntn•r y lOS ANGlllES (llft l) -Thi rMllOt!wklt w .. !Mr I UtnfllttY: A low .,..1111~ l'l'lttf'rt c1n1trfd c~•• "" mid-• b•CIUOM II v1rltl¥ cl wtt!llH ''"''!"' lrom thyfldentorm1 to 1r .. 11,.. 11recf1>11111on toc11¥, TM Ctnl1• w-.. rnovlnt llll"'trd 1r>f • "'1n1tr 1torm. witch w11 onlt•ta tor met! ti Ntw Enftt'IO. Ut to 11~ lt1CIW1 cl •now "'fl 1>r1•lllct1d. T11v1i.ro• "'''"Int \ 1or l•lfllnt rt!n -•• '" tlltel lo• WIKon5tn Ind Wttlt•11 Ntw Yerll. T~trt w1•e l(lll~rf(I lhU""''li'Wrfttfl l•cm lh, Gull (O.•I to !he r>0rl~1tn l'lf (tn!r1! .-.1~t ll{l'll1n1, Gtntrt lly •~1" 1mov11t1 h1no bP!o" tlt~I 11111-11 Mtm1M1. Ttlln., ••tllvtd 110 !nr1111 I blt"•tl flt -Cf!NCl5 COWflld I~• P•tin~ ~rt11w11t but SOUl~ ..... d 'Uf'll\Y 1•11, ttl~•fl:llO let Soull'ltm C1lltor11t1. ,,,. am111 tlfl•m «tllt• ""'' 1oc:11td off .-. I For1 Wor!~ F••1no lfldll n.tHllt 1(1"111 C!!V l•' Vti1) l tt Allttltt Ml"llffDOll1 N"'n. Pl1!tt Oak11no Oltf11101111 Clrv Cm1~1 Ptlrn S~rhttf ,.,56 1110~1., """"!• Plthb\lr~~ llo•!11n<1 Jt11ld Ci•v "" •1~11 Jt1n1 Sat.1...;,,.,, Sill ~•"• C:ll• s.~ O•tt0 '"'*'"' lf!t (fl'!l l W•1fll11t!O'I " " .. .. " .. " .. ~ .. " .. " ~ " " " • ,. •I " ~ " .. •• " ~ ., " " .. .. " .. " " » " " " » ·• .. " " " " " " " ,, The Real Tliing .o• FnlJn Wirt Services SPRINGFIELD. Ore. -A television cre\f l.t waiting at Georcla-Pacific ~rporation's Wendling tree farm here to Shoot a special sequence. The required shot will show wi sps of 01 mist from 11 heavy artiriclal fog mach.ine crated and flo\Yn nea rly 1.000,cpllles fr onl Jlolly wood for lhe assignment. Only one problem h8s prevented gelling the eerie scent!: on film . Genuine ,fo& has kept the Umbtrland •olldly sockod In. -' ' .. • 'Siar' Heavenly Phenomenon Explained BOSTON (AP) -Early Christmas morning thret "wanderi ng 1tar1'1 will appear together to rtpl'Oi:tuce a rare celeaUal event •tbat may hav·e Jed the Wiae Men to the Bethlehem mqer wher• Chrllt waa born • The "stirs," actually ttie planets Venus, Jupiter and Mars, wl!I mas.• that morning near the crucent nioon in a phenomenon very like one that oc- curred in 7 B.C.,.tbe year lbe Christ child Is believed tO have been born. In that year, the planeta Jupiter, S.tum and Mars came together In the heavens, an event that happens once every 800 years, said Walter N. Webb, assatan~ director of the Charles Hayden Planetarium or the Boston Museum of Science. ~ The masa1ng of three planets will not be a visually spectacular event this year, said Webb, nor would it have been in the year Jesus was born. But to an astrologer -and the Three Wise Men are thought to have been expert in the occult science of Jnterprttlng l'\eavenly signs -the planets' coming to- gether may have seem~ frauabt with-meaning. Some ·historians believe the Wise Men came rrom the area of Me5'- potamia. If so, said Webb, the apparent westward movement of the three planets. caused by th!! rotation of the earth, could have suggested to them that the new-born king they aouaht wu to be fowtd in the west, in the direction of Judea. "In those days everythlng In the sky was described as <s,_star," Webb said. "'The planets were wandering stars, meteors were shooting stars, and an event like the musing of three planets would have been called a star." The massing of the three planets on that morning, he suggested, may have been what the , ancients called the Star of Bethlehem. He said the planets do not come close enough to appear as a !!Ingle star~ even to the naked eye, they remaln three dl1tlnct points of light in a trianale • Since tbe three maased stars are close to each' other for only one or two ni ghls, Webb said, the Wise Men must have set off on their long journey many days before the planets appeared together. · The suggest.ion that three massed. stars may have been the!: Star of Belh· lehem Is not new, Webb noted. It was first proposed by the German astronomer and mathematlclan..Johannes Kepler in 1604. Bolivia Releases Six Captured With Guevara LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -'Ibe Bolivian government today released F re n c h revolutionist Regis Debrat and five other guerrillas who fouaht with Che Guevara in his abortive attempt to foment a peasants' uprising. tn 1967. Interior Minister Jorge Gallardo said the 30-year-old French -writer, Argentine painter Roberto Bustos and four Bolivians were taken to Chile by a Bolivian military plane. They had bl!:m in a military prison In Camiri. in southeastern Bolivia. Debray and Billltos were serving 30-year terms. The four Bolivians had never been tried. All were captured in 1967 by the army forces that killed Guevara. The ptisoners arrived by plane Jn the port of Iquique jn northem Chile. Debray's release had been expected' ever since Oen. Juan Jose Torres, a nationalist, took over the!: presldl!:ncy on Oct. 8, after ousting rlght·wing military leaders who had toppled President Alfredo Ovando, Freedom for Debray and the others came Wlder an amnesty decree issued by Torres. The decree said: "Thi!: armed forces, according to Christian t r a d 1 t i o n , spontaneously have stated their desire to Charles Ruggles Dies of Cancer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Actor Charles Ruggles, who portrayed bu m b I i n g comedy roles for more than 40 years, died today at age 84. Famed for his wheezing,. Casper Milquetoast portrayals, R u g g I 1!: s appeared in scores of motion pictures in the 30s, 10s and 50s. He also starred in the theater and appeared on ridio and television. ,But it was his hesitant interpretations of confused JitUe men in films for which he was be:st known . forgive and forget the harm that the guerrilla action did to the country." · Torres was one of the military leaders who directl!:d the army's campaign to defeat Gvevara's guerrilla band. "The presence of elements convicted of crimes against the national integrity and the system or cOl!:xistence · among !J91ivians constitutes a source o f perturbance. ll is the duty of the authorities to take measures to guarantee social peace and tranquility," the decree said. It added that both Debray and Bustos and the others are banned from Bolivia. The othen are Bolivians Antonio Dominquez Flores, Orlando Jimenez Bazan, Jose Castillo Chavez and EusebiG Tapia Arumio. - They were flown ta Chile in a Bolivian military plane. Moonrover Rests ' Tlirougli Another Lunar Night MOSCOW (UPI) -The Sov;iet Union's Lunokhod moonrover today tucked ltselt in for a long winter's night, its batteries filled with enough Stored sunshine to keep it warm until earth controllers Wake it Jan. 7. ' Tass, the official Soviet news agency. said ground control closed the!: lid 'Tuesday on the pot-shaped moon car as the sun dropped toward the horizon at the end of a two-week lunar day. The car began activating an Internal air conditioning system, powered by solar energy stored up before sunset. Jt was designed to keep the car at • coiy · {19 ·degrees while outside!: the temperature plummets· to 202 degrees below zero. The vehicle already has survived one such ordeal. It landed Nov. 17 aboard a Luna 17 mother ship and afte r prelin1inary tests it spent two weeks in nighttime hibern'at ion before awaking for ' r Ruggles was admitted to St. John's Hospital in Santa Monica, C11if., In September. A family member said he was a victim of cancer. the latest two-week period of activ ity. 1• Bun kers Reunited SAIGON (AP) -. U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth: Bunker rlew to Katmandu today to join his wifl!: for the Christmas and Nl!:w Year's holidays and their wedding anniversary Jan. 3. Mrs. Bunker is U.S. ambassador to Nepal. Gift of Llfe Soviet scientists said the del!:p frel!:ze ~ test was a crucial point in the Lunokhod ". program. and that it survived the!: teat with flying colors. .:_ Tass said the site chosen for the machine's-night resting place was the slope of a 100.foot crater in the Sea of Rain s. a vast plain located on the northwestern secti-0n or the visible lunar surface. Little l\·Jatlhe'v \Vlnkler, 6. has received the best Christmas presCnt he co uld ha ve -his life. The young Ohio lad made medical history by beinR the first documen ted case~oLhuman. sundvaLiollo\vJng in· !ection with the deadly rabies virus. Keeping company is a ~ift !rom the medical stall at St. Rita's Hospita l in Lima, Ohio. ~ \ ' 'l • • • • Wldfttld.o, Dtctmbfr 23, 1970 D~LY PILOT § . 2M Vlolatlon11 1flV Lal Hearl..,, Government Cites CIA "Bia d in Massacre 4_ Oil Co~<:inies Defector 'Not Beaten On Vessel' BQ.STON (UPI) -The skipper of the Coast Guard cutter Vigilant said Tuesday Lithuanian defector Simu Kudirka was mt beaten by Russian seamen wblle he was aboard the American vessel. "I went up to the defector just before he left the Vigilant, Cmdr. Ralph W. Eustis said in a copyrighted story in the Boston Globe. "At that 'Ume he was completely OOund and restrained but he certainly was not bloodied or beaten. "There ·was no blood that night.,, Eustis was given a n administrative reprimand for his action and was re- assigned. The board of inquiry investigating K u d i r k a ' s attempted defection said he interpreted · his o r d e r s ''authorizing the use of necessary force so as to pennit foreign nationals to e1.erei!e authority on board a Coast Guard fessel." ''The reprimand doe 1 n • t surpri!e me,"-Eustls said. "I knew what wu coming." Eustis told the board he personally did not see any Violence aboard the Vigilant. NEW ORLEANS (AP) - Four mljor oil oompanleo went chlrged Tuelday with -failure to~follow" proper.Uftty preeaulloos In olfahon drilling operations in tbe Gulf of Mexico. It was the fourth IUCh move by the federal government and brought to nine the number ol oomponies chlrged with not following ttgul1Uon1. . Jn the bill of information filed lo U.S. District Court, U.S. attorney Gerald Gallinghouse sald JM violations were cited against Gulf Oil Corp., Mobil Oit Corp., Tenneco 011 C.O. and the Kerr-McGee Corp. Gull WU dwilecl with 115 Rep. Rivers Beginning To Recover 2 Picasso Pictures Stolen From Museum NEW YORK (UPI) -'llwo Picasso masterpieces valued at $110,000 have been stolen from the Guggenheim Museum. One was done in ink and the other wu a watercolor. Both , were about the size of a large Christmas card. Museum officials reported the thefts Tuesday. The museum was closed to the general public Monday. Police sald they were stymied by the theft. Thomas Messer, mu..eum director, said the wocks, tiUed "Woman with Open Fan" and ''Table Before the Window" were "lesser PicaU01." "Table Before the Window," a watercolor and pencil work, done in 1922, measured 5~ by 41/. lnclles. "Woman with Open Fan," which Picasso inked in 1906, measured 1% by 41/• inches and was valued al $40,000. The other work wu valued by police at $'10,«KJ. Another Picasso work, a still life oil painting or flowers valued at $60,000, was stolen Monday night from t b e Phoenil: Art Museum. New York Police Slayer Handed Death Sentence RARE DEATH PENALTY Martin Fl .... trlck UTICA, N.Y. (UPI) - Martin Fitzpatrick, convicted or killing two policemen, was sentenced to die in the electric chair early today, the rint man in New York State to face the death penalty in seven years. An all-male jury handed down the sentence in Oneida C.ounty court after almost 14 hours or detlberatlons. Judge John J. Wabh set Sept. 7, 1'71 ror Imposition of the 1entence. "You 11 the jury have convicted me of four counts of murder and if you believe 1 am guilty you must vote the death penalty," nld the 34- year-old F11zp1trlck, delivering his own summation. . ~ O'l, -tJM. -ni l-t:r.a : ' ;\:. -~w..~~ \\)~~ ' HOLIDAY SALE OUR WAI! SE IS OVERLOA NDOUAR :~~~:1 MUST BE SOLD BUY NOW AND VI • lST QUALITY NAME IRAN ARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT FROM THE LARG ·CARPET IN· VENTORY IN J HE WEST • EVERY ROLL OF CARPE MARKED D PRICEO FOR YOUR SHOP G CONVENIE CE • All LABOR UNCOND iTI LL Y GUARAN EED ....... CA•.1tn t •UTNAUn ""'UAIDS tdeol for family rooms, ploy rooms,dtns. <-•••m • AT LAST ••• LADI ES SUEDE BOOTS HAVE ARRIVED DACIOI SHAG · ~~~ 3Y2" 1~ Dactan rot, ... ,., - lloutiM ,_ dioP 111oo with a luR 31;• pi!& /Mttf ---lri-colort to thoolt from. 99 SQ. YD. 1 NOW SALE PRICED AT ::~~ COMPAIAILI llTAIL, ............... $13.99 1000'1 OF REMNANTS LAIGI 60 % SMAU 80 SIZE · 0 SIZE . % SAVlllS SAVINGS O UP TO••••• UP TO •• , • UYING ROOM, DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEDROOMS {:ARS, ETC. -TOii -lllJSUllMl•TSI ALL CARPOERIA STO RES CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY • • . AUSIZU AVAllAIU IQ, YD. SAVE 14.00 ~9x12 •••••.••••. 24'5 CIMPAIAILlllTAIL ........... ;461 9x12 •••••.•••.. 39'5 100% Cont, f1lom1nt N1lon-E:d ro HtOvy CIMPAUKI llY~ll ........... $11 'vwi. . . \U\11 hwvts · ~ TlllS• ... •ClllftlflU-.af-111111"•11111•-lillllllln. GRA ND OPENING ~t<Vil. D . WllTCLI" rWA O,IN IYIS.. 'tit t ..,., Cltw.. • • IUfllDAT-11 TO I Vt.if Our huti~u• 1t th• N1wp.,fff In• CAll04IAPARI 21NISM1W111W J47·1U4 "'1oltw• ,,__,. .. ( ...... llltl'th " ~-w., .... I • NAWTNOINI 12'2t•• ........... •n.a211 s. 0...0 ,,_..., to II S,., • twldl lftl It ~"' ... • NOUYWOOD 11111.Y_A,., -741S 2~11k<1'1f....,... al'llll111V-1 UlllllACll ............ •11-.. ......., ....... Ml_.,...,._....._ • • YITITlllA ue11.•1o11, ........ 1 ......... .. , ... ,... .. .... PASADlll A IMOLCelerwlllellv• 177-1900 ,,.,. ....... , s..rmol!ft1od SAii FRANCISCO . MILLll AI COSTA MESA. 1714 Nt wpert 11¥4. 645-:J020 "'"'•t,()rl 11"'1 "' t ,,,, ~· TORRANCE 4236 Arttti• 11•4 • 141·•••• ~- "' I I l • I I -• w.i,..d1y, Dtctmbtr '23, 1910 'O.K. w. 'll try ••lf- inttnolation. '1¥ho1lb• fint1' 1TVCurbing Revolution BJ DIClt WEST WAlllJNGTON -Porhapo you ha" nollcod 11111 violence by CllllJ>UI radlcala and other. rnwtantl appear• to have dtmblllhed lhll f11L And perhaps you have been wonderinc. why. If so, I invite your attention to the &teady proliferation of television •;talk·• ~ws. Television news coveraie ha s acculonally been accused of causing violence, the theory being t h 1 I den'lonsllators lend _Jo become more frenetic when the cameras are turned their way. . ~ --"""'"-"" ... • Reds Soften Co11ditions For. Peace PARIS (UPI) -North Vietnam se1ted down its peace demands today. It apparenUy dropped ft.o dtmand for tile ouster o( the present Sata:on re1ime and It offered a cease.fire if the United States would halt reconnaissance flights over the North and withdraw its troope by mld-1971. • All previous Hanoi statement s demanded a provlslOt\11 c o a I l t I o n government that excluded the three top Saigon leaders a.a: a nteessary step toward ' the restoration cf total peace in South Vietnam. There was no mention of that demand today. 'Ille statemeni delivered by Chler North Vletname.e Dele1ate Xuan Thuy uld the question of South Vietnam's pollUcal fUtW't was open to dllCU!Sion U the Nixon AdmJniatraUon agreed to Hanoi's latest conditions. U.S. Ambassador David K. E. Bruce 1!90 t.oned down the American statements . today. Instead or using words like "Inhumane'' to describe Hanoi 's treat· ment ot war prisoners he said It was "unsatisfactory'' in' the North and ••wqrat'eful" In Viet eon, controlled areas of the South. The New Hanoi conditions for peace ware inserted into the North Vietnamese statement after it had been mimeographed for distribution l o newsmen. There wu no lmmedilte U.S. reaction lo the modified Hanoi proposals, but Washington bas 1teadfuUy rejected all previous Communist J>roPoSals that involved a withdrawal deadline. and 1ave nothing more in return than a promise to talk. Thia m1y be true, but any Violence attributable ·to network newsmen certainly is more than offset by the talk shows, which "have become America's firat line of defen1e •&&inst revolution. JUNGLE-ATTIRED CARDINAL BLESSES PATROL L,liADER , Prelete Terence Cook Ble1M1 Sergeant Before P•trol Thuy't modlfted proposals w e r t presented to the conftrence after the U.S. delegate indirectly acknowledged receipt of a prisoner list from Hanoi by dropping 26 Enemy Killed I I its perslateht demand for such a list In the U.S. statement. IN ILLUSTllATION of W. point, let us say · that a terrorist group called the ••meteorol<>1ist&" plans to bomb a plant that makea fro&en oman rinp .ved in militvy meos llallJ. Vietnamese Paratroopers Thuy alluded to the current Chriltmas 1e.ason in his statement, and then said : 'The delegation cf the Democratic Republic of (North) Vietnam, on this occasion, calls upon the NJ 1 o n Administration to agree to · the withdrawal from South Vtetnam of all American troops and those of the other foreign countries before June 30, 1971, as the (Viet Cong's) provlslonal Attack Reds in Cambodia SAIGON (AP) South Vietnamese paratroopers pushlna deeper i n to The -l>luUnt party auemblet at-the Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese appointed hour and await.I the arrival of force at daylij::lit tooi)' and-ca.Ilea in Jet their leader. Sam BoombanJ. After they bombers and artillery. ' have betn atandlng around for 30 minutes South Vietnamese headquarters said 2.6 or so, a runner arrives with a meaap. North Vietnamese wue killed and nine ~-bbed 1 weapons and 20 mortar roundl captured "The cperaUon hu uca1 scru or in the battle 10 miles northwest of tonight," he reports. "What's the matter?" tomeone asks. Kompoo1 Cham. •·Did someh>dy tip off the pip?'' One South Vietnamese paratrooper was "No," the runner replies. "Boom bane reported killed and 13 wounded. A spokesman said the size of the North Is appearin& on the David Susskind Vietnameae farce was not known, but it a;how." . WIS the biggeat fight rtporled 1ince 2.500 Thi;; does not mean, a:r course, .that a · South Vietnamese paratroopers were certain amount of terrorism doesn't take • place. But think how much g~ter It- would be if television didn't keep most of the radlC{ll leaders tied up on talk shows. IF YOU CHECK the dates · on recent bombin&s, I think you will find that all of them cccurred on nights when David Frost failed to interview the leader of 6Wlle extremist group. The number of radical activists who are inactivated by Dick Cavett and Johnny Caraon ls far ll'e&ler than the sum of their radical guests. If a revo1uUonlst. ia booked for the Merv Griffith ahow, his Ioy•t followers naturally watch the program. Al do the leaders and members of other militant !actions. Consequently, a •Incle guest shot on a network talk 1how can effectively neutralize the enUre terrorist apparatus 1n this country. Putting this situation In historical pttspective, we can see that If David Susskind had betn Cuban, Fidel Caslro would never have gotten out of the J.taestra Mountains. -UPI -<:r '* * VC Cease-fire Now In. Effect; Cambodia Flares SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong's Christmas cease-fire went Into effect in South Vietnam early Th\lrsday while South Vietnamese paratroopers were engaged In an operaUon against enemy troops in. Cambodia. The case-fire took effect al i a.m. South Vietnamese battlefields were reported quiet. An allied cease-fire goes into effeCt at g p.m.-5 a.m., EST. Thursday. Hours before the enemy ·11len0-dowt't, South Vietnamese paratroops pushing deeper Into Cambodia ran into a North Vietnamese force and called in jet bombers llld 1rUUery. lifted Into Cambodia more than 8•1 week revolutionary government has proposed', ago· In an attempt to break the North in order to obtain an immediate cease- Vietnamese stranglehold. fire . between the Popular IJberaUon SQuth of PMom Penh, N 0 r t h armed forces of South Vietnam and the Vietnamese troops attacked a Cambodian troops and mllltary personnel of the task force trying to reopen Route f, United States· and of the other forel&n Phnom Penh's highway to the sea. The countries of the Amerk!ln camp, and 1n attack occurred about 80 miles southwe.st order to permit the parties to enter Into of the c8pltal, but' no other lnformatiOn immediate dlscu!slons on the question of was available. guarantees for safety for the withdrawal cambod· 1 f 1 . ed _of troop! and military personnel In 1an governmen orces c aim ..-question and on the-question ot liberating Tuesday that they had reopened more1 t d JU•R than 50 miles of the highway south of ca.~ ure m UifY m~. . . . Phnom Penh and that they had killed 400 1 Mor~pver, .the Nixon Admm1strat1on to 500 enemy troops since they began must I!fUilediately ce~se all a c t s their sweep down Route 4 last week. threa~1ng the sovere1~nty and . the Government casualties were estimated at security of. the Democrat1~ Republic of 10 killed. and 60 wounded (North) Vietnam. (Hanoi s term for w·th R t 4 1 ed. reconnaissance flights .) 1 • ou e .c os . tankers f~om "If the government of the United States South Vietnam using the Mekong River . . d' · · are now the only source of petroleum for acts 1n this 1.rect1?"· the. part1;s co~ld Phnom Penh. One such arrived in the equally enter into ~mmechate d1scuss1on Cambodian capital early today "'ith on the_ tolll:l ce~t1on_ of the cruel war 290.000 gallons Of aviation fuel, gasoline which. is going on in Vietnam, and on the and diesel fuel. question o~ respect for the fundamental Earlier repor•-sa'd th · 1. f 1 national rights and the right to self· ~ 1 e av1a ion ue d t · 1--"" v· tn I " was ronslgned to the Ca mbodian air e errruna ion w w•e 1e amese peop c. force, but officials in Sa igon said all the cargo was for commercial use. South Vietnamese gunbOats escorted the tanker, and a spokesman for the Vlelname!e navy denied reports that It had refwed to provide an escort. Other :sources said the ship was delayed Jn Saigon for 24 hours last weekend because South Vietnamese officials were not available to supply the escort. · The U.S. Command in Sal1on taid In a dela yed report that six Americans were killed last Saturday In the crash of a Navy helicopter gunship In the Mekong Delta east of the U Minh forest, about 1'7 miles southwest or Saigon. The cause of the crash was not known. Pope Hit Twice In Manila Death Attempt ROME ( APl -Pope PauJ VI was struck twice during the attempt on his life at Manila airport Nov. '!1. his personal doctor said today. Dr. Mario Fontana said. however. he was not able to say how be was struck. Most of Nation Shivering Fontana declined further comment in a statement to the press. He was asked his views of a report in an Italian ne\\:spaper Tuesday that the knife wielded against the Pope by Bolivian painter Benjamin Mendoza Amor actually hit the Pope on the neck, on each side of the jugular .Yishmash Fro1it Hits Midwest; Lows Reach 24 Below C.tltortde ., IJll!Mf ,,... ,.......,.,...., Molt!Y ttlr Mitt wt,. tllHCIBI l• rtt~rn to ,$tUll'ltrl'I C•tl191'1'11t lO•UW- folltWll'll • -lei "' 1twm~ tf11t llrellCtltf mott trt•t Wflll1 CIU~ll'lt 111> to fOllt Moet Of •-11'1 t"'9t1. A llMll 1twm lnNll 1111111 t4't tilt COii! tfllll fwK•lfwtl 11 ... """' wtl I •ll1M .... lbUfty et rtll'I ,_,. ltlt '""191'11 or Thurlell,, MI w 1 "I• , Chrl1'1MI 01r Wll UH<!lil II bt c.lolo1r tlMI <rlw •1 low 11m111<1111•t• Wiii 01' lnfo tl'4 Jlt I• •1 ... ," ••lllt •tont cot1llt Mci'~ Ind Mir :lO 111 ,,.,.,,., W-l lltYI. l'r~rc.1111 111t115 "'''' Ill "" .... Tl•• •XH<ltd h!tll 11'1 los At11tles '-'"' WI • 12 cOtnH•M te .SI' T~\\CltW-, T ... l'l'llXlmlll'l'I Tlwrllll-....wW'bt to. 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WllNll :bC •1..-.nlOI .IOoS'- 1'1111! ~ "' ltl.trttllld """ "" °"" ..... SMll• •• ,..! •..... ""~ ........... #& ' lftl.,,. '"""''""'' ,.,,.. """ '° .... Wt tw '*"-'t11H1 111. Swn, M-. Tides WIONltDA"f s..... hl9'1 ........... •:••"""'' ll ltcll!Mll low ,, ... , . 11.0if.lt\. J.I TNUlllOl."f ,1n1 1111'1'1 , .. _, ... s,n1.m. 31 tlllr~• • .11tW ............. 1·u •. m. 01 IK,...-~}tlt .,,,,,,, t1q1m. JJ lt<Ol'll low • •• 11 :4 t.M ,, llHI ltfwa ''Sot'""'' l•h • .. ,_,.._ ...., atMI 211•1""' sm "'"•A v.s. Sum••rt1 LOS ANGlllS (U,,, -t111 fltllOl'IWkl• -ttltf" 111r1"1m1ry: A low o""'""" tnttm c1n11t1d ev., tllt m1owtat brDl,lfhl • v1r!1tv llf "'"'~•• ••n•lntl !rom lhv0\Cleu!orm1 lo lrMllllt ortcliol!tllotr to111'1', f1'19 Cfflffio Wll !'l'IOVll!I Mlfwtrf tll!f • Wlft'-• ''"'""' Wtlth '"''' •l'll•rM few l'l"IOll tf New E11tltfllll. IJ• te; ''" '"'"" ol tl'IOW WI• •rlOll(lfO. Trt .... !1•1' ""nll11t1 ,.._ trfftlN rt ll'I ,,...,. I~ t ile<! fof Wla<Ofllfl'I tfld wt:tlt•n Nt,. York, Tlltrt Wi!tl ICtlltntd lftlll'lll .. llllllfl" lrtm lftr G~lf (Ollll 10 ll'lf, not"ll'Ol•l'I t l\'ll c111t111 A1111ltr~lll•n1, Gtnt rt !IJ tt l" l ""°vfth ht .. ~II ll•fll t !ll'lllUlll ... fl1\rftb, T~M , flCtfvld I 10 lll(fttl A 011~-fl tf (IOl/lh (OVlt'Pd Ill~ '•clflc MOl'l!l-1! but '°""'w••ll "llMV .u., ,,, .... '*' " hll!lllftl (111'-ll ... "'1111 llOrm Cttltv Wl) lo<tltO ofl Te1nperet•res •r UNITllO ;.ltlll INTlllNATIONAl TMU~ll<'flllrlt IPlll l>l'K\1>1!1tlon Per 11\e 2•.flour ~ertod 1111111'11 11 ' 1.m. Alb\ICIW'Q"" Atl111t1 t1k•rsll1!d lli•m1rc' 9row11,v1111 (hi<fllQ (l11(l/111fll Df111¥1t De~ Moin1• Oetroll Fart Wortl! FrittM l11dlt"4POlll IC111M1 City L•• '"'"'' L1tAMtl" M IMffoofft Norlll PllUI 0 1kl1<1C1 O.l1llom1 Cltr o~,. P1tm 1,.,1,.., il'IM ftOllltl _,, fllll"'1•"Jh ll'otllt l'IO "'••Id (ll't' JIM etvrt OMO St trl 1t1f11IO $~u l•~• en, S.11 Olno s-.1n" Tfttf"Mt 1 W1t11lf'lllltll Hl11'1 l -l're<, ., 11 ~ -" . '1 .13 u " ~ JJ .01 .I• •i .71 •• 1t l) It ,. '' .rn II Sl » " •1 •t .01 •• It " » .... " tll .01 41 CJ " .. .. " ll D7 " . '" » . " ,, v ot ., . II •I • • ,, 01 •1 " l' u ~ " 11 111 II J' ~ . ' , vein. , The newspaper, Reslo de! Carlino, said the blade did not touch the Pope because of the heavy, starched breast cape he wore. In Manila. the offlclal who charged 1'1endoia with attempted murder of the Pope said he had no evidence that the knife came within three feet of the Pope. Fontana said he did not personally see the attack on the Pope. He did not explain whether the "blows" he was speaking of were from the knife. It has been reported th11t persons around the Pope: forcefully p~ him away from the assailant. ' Nothing Like Tlie Real Tliing From Wire Ser"lces SPRINGFIELD, Ore. :.. A television crew Js waiting al Georita·Paciflc Corporation's Wendling lrff farm here to shoot 1 speci al sequence. • · ' The required shot will show wisps of mist from a heavy artificial fog machine crated and .(!own nearly 1.000 miles fron1 llollywood for the 11ssicnmtnt. Only one problem hes ·prevented getting lhe t.erie scene on fllm. Cenui"."_,Ioa has kept tile timberland solldly OOCJ<ed In, L • Returns . ' . Heavenly Pheno1nenon Explained BoSTON (AP) -Early Christmas morning lhrM "wandering 111ars'' ·will appear toaelhtr to rtproduce a rare ctlet1tla1 evt'nt·that may hive Jed the Wise Men to the Bethlehem muser where Chrlat wq born. The "stirs,'" actutlly the planets Venus, Jupiter and M•r•. will maM that morning near the cr~ent moon in a phenomenon very 1111.e one lh1t oc- curred in 7 B.C .• tbe year the Cbrllt child 11 believed tO have been born. Tn that year, the ptaneta JupJter, Saturn and Mars came together In lhe heavens, an event that happens once every *XI yeari, 1ald Walltr N. Webb, assistant director of the Charles Hayden Planetarium of the Bo!ton Pt1useum of Science. • The mauln& of three planet& will not be a visually spectacular event this year, said Webb, nor would it have been in the year Jesus was born. But to an astrologer -and the Three Wise Men are thought to have been expert In tile occult science of tnterpretlng }\eavenly signs -the planeta' coming t~ getber may have seemed frausht with meaning. Some ·historians believe lhe Wist Men came from the area of ?-1e» potamia. If m, said Webb, the apparent westward movement of the three planet&, caused by the rotation ol. the earth, could have sugiested to them that the new·bom king thty IOU&ht was to be found Jn the west, in the dittction of Judea. "In those days everythln1 In the sky was described as a star," Webb said. "The planeta were wanderin& stars, meteors were shooting stars. and an event like the massing of three planets would havt been called a star." The mwlna: cf the three planets on that morning, he sugge!ted, may have · been what the 'ancients called the Star ol Bethlehem. ·, He said the planets do not come close enough to appear as a single stir: even to the naked eye, they remain three dlsUnct points of light in a trlana:le, Since the three malled sta rs are close to each· other for only one or two nights, Webb said, the Wise Men must have set off on their long journey many days before the. plane ta 1ppeared together. The sug1estion that three massed stars may have been the Star ol Beth· lehem ls not neW, Webb noted. It was first proposed by the German astronomer and mathematician JohaMes Kepler in 1604. Bolivia Releases Six Captured With Guevara LA PAZ, Bolivia (AP) -The Bolivian government today released F r e n c h revolutionist Regis Debray and five other guerrillas who fou1ht with Che Guevara in his aborUve attempt to foment a peasants' uprising. in 1967. . Interior Minister Jorge Gallardo aaid the 30-year-<ild French writer, ArgenUne - painter Roberto Bustos and four Bolivians were taken to Chile by a Bolivian military plane. They had been in a military prison In Camiri. in southeastern Bolivia. Debray and Bustos were serving 30-year terms. The four Bollvians had never been tried. All were c1ptured In 1967 by the army forces that killed Guevara. The prisoners arrived by pl~ne In the port of JqUJque in northern '"'ChRe. Debray's release hid been expected ever since Oen. Juan JMe Toma, a nationalist, took over the presidency on OcL 8, after ousting _rig ht.wing military leaders who had toppled President Alfredo Ovando. Freedom for Debray and the others came Wlder an amnesty decree issued by ·Torres. The decree said:· ''The armed forces, according to Christian t r a d It I o n , spontaneously have stated their desire to Cl1arles Ruggles Dies of Cancer HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -Actor Charles Ruggles, who portrayed bu m b I i n g comedy roles for more than 40 years, died today at age 84. Famed for his wheezing, Casper Milquet01st portrayals, Ru 11le s ap~ared in scores of motion pictures in the 30s, 40s and 50s. He also starred in the theater and appeared on raaio and television. But it was his hesitant interpretations of confused little men in films for which he was best known. forgive and fora:el the harm that Ute guerrilla ·action did to the country." Torres was one of the military leaders wh6· directed the army's campaign to defeat Guevara's guerrilla-band. "The presence of elements convicted of crimes against the national integrity and the system. of coexistence · amoog Bolivians constitutes a SOW'Ce o f perturbance. Jt is the duty of the authorities to take measures to guarantee social peace and tranquillty," the decree said. - It added that both Debray and Bustos and the others are banned from Bolivia. The others are Bolivians Antonio Dominquei Flores, Orlando Jimenez Bazan, _Jose Castillo Chavez and Eusebio ·Tapia Arumlo. They were flown to Chlle in a 'Bolivian military plane. M oonrover Rests Through Anothe~ Lu11ar Night MOSCOW (UPI) -The Sov:iet Unlon's Lunokhod moonrover today tucked Itself in for a long winter's night, its batteries filled·with enoua:h !tored sunshine to keep it warm until earlh controllers wake it Jan . 7, ' Tass. the official Soviet news agency. said ground control closed the lid Tuesday on the pot-shaped moon car as the sun dropped toward the horizon at the end of a two-week lunar day. The car began activating an internal a Ir conditioning syslem, powered by solar energy stored up before sunsel. lt was designed to keep the car at• cozy 59 degrees while outside the temperature plummets to 202 de1rees below zero. The vehicle already has survived ()ht such ordeal. It landed Nov. 17 aboa rd a Luna 17 Jll(Jther ship and aft er prelinli nary tests it spent two weeks in nighttin1e hibernation before awaking for Ruggles was admitted to SL John·s llosp!tal in Santa Monica, Calif., In September. A family member 1aid he \\'IS a victim of cancer. • the latest two-week period of activity. I-- Soviet scientists :said the deep freeze t lest was a crucial point in the Lunokhod ~ program, and that it survived lhe te11t '• with flying colors. ~ Bunkers Reunited SAIGON (AP) -U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth Bunker flew to Katmandu today to join his wife for the Oiri1tmas and New Year's holidays and their wedding anniversary Jan. 3. ?-lrs. Bunker is U.S. ambassador to Nepal. Gift of Life Tass said the site chosen for the machine's ni1ht resting place wts thf! slope of a 1QO..fool crater in th1 Sea or Rains, a vast plain located ()n the northwestern section of the visible lunar surface . Little f\.Iatthe,.,. \Vl nkter. 6. has received e best Christmas present he could have -his life. The youn~ Ohio lad made medical hi story by being the first documented case of human survlval followln~ In- fection with the deadly cables virus. Keeping company Is a ~ift front the medical staff at St. Rita's llospital in Lima, Ohio. ( • , Wod.m..r, lltctmbtr :U, l 910 --OAILV PILOT f 228 Vloladou MJI lei-Hearlttg Government Cites CIA Blame in Ma ssacr e· J . 4 Oil Crunp_anies how the ClA has o~ated in Soutbwt Aba. W.U-, chargiJli the CIA carried out terrorist activlUes lncluc:Ung 0 usasslnations and kldnlpl.np" prior to t h e auault at My Lal, submitted teaUmony from 62 soldiers ~cu.. "ahooUng, killiJli, uaasaioation tnd torture of Vletnamete ciViliam pursuant to the dtrector of tile United States Army." Clarence J. Dawkins. A tentative trial date of Feb. 15 was set for TotTes and anolher on Jan. 25 for Smith, who are amqng six Amerlclll !!Oldlers iDcluding 1st LL William L. caUey Jr;.i. now on Defector 'Not Beaten On Vessel' 2 Picasso Pictures -~ Stolen From Museum NEW YORK (UPI) -Two Picasso masterpieces valued at SllO,IXKt have been stolen from the G ugg e nhe i m Museum. One was done in ink and the other was a watercolor. Both were about the size of a large Christmas card. Museum offic ials reported the theft.s Tuesday. Tb e museum was closed to ~ general public Monday. Police said they were stymied by the theft. Thomas Messer, museum director, said the works, titled "Woman with Open Fan" and "Table . Before the Window" were "lesser PicaUOI." "Table Be!Dre the Window," a watercolor and pencil work, done in 1922, measured 5~ by 4y, inches. "Woman with Open Fan," which Picasso Jnked ln 1906, measured 6¥' by 4'4 inches and was valued at $40,000. The other work was valued by police at f70,000, Another Picasso work, a rtll1 life oil painting of nowen vaJued at $60,000, was stolen Monday night from t b e Phoenix Art MlL!eWll. New York Police Slayer Handed Death Sentence RARE DEATH PENALTY Mortin Fl"POlrlck UTICX:-N.Y. (UPI ) - Martin Fitzpatrick, convicted of killing two policemen, was aentenced to die ln the electric chair early today, the fint •·- man ln New York State to face the death penalty in seven yean. An all-male jury banded down the sentence in Oneida C.OUnty court after almost 14 how-s of deliberalions. ·Judge . John J . Wal!h set Sept. 7, 1171 for imposition of the aentence. 0 You as the jury have convicted me of four count. of murder and if you believe I am guilty you must vote the death penalty," uid the 34- yem--old FJ~zpatrJck, delivering his own 1WDmation. ~~~~t~t ~ o..~ \\Jcik~ ._ 'nvt. \U\ll ~' -1 ~to.In.\) ' ' ' WDTCLIPP PLAZA OPIN RIS. ''" t tin~ IUNDAY-11 TO I Visit 0 11r k11ti11• •t th• Ntwpffttt 11111 • I tria l, fa cing ttiaJ or have-~.---~--w brought to trial in C9fllle<:Uon HOLIDAY SALE OUR WARElfOUSE IS OVERLOADID ... MULTl-MIWON DOLlAR INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD BUY NOW AND SAVI • lST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT FROM THE LARGEST CARPET IN- VENTOlY IN JHE WEST • EVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE •All LABOR-UNCONDiTlpNALLY GUARANTEED The three alleged C I A acents subpoenaed w e r e idenUfied by Wellner as James B. May, Senior Adviser in Quang Nga! Province where My 4). Is located, Robert Ram9dale , Di r ec t or of "Operation Phoenix," the code name far the CIA's alleged misa!M In Vietnam, and capt. with My Lai. Only S. Sgt. David Mitchell, 30, St. Francisville, La. bas compleled his trial. He was acquitted. Lt. Calley's trial at Ft. Benning, Ga. and a preliminary hearing here to determine If hi.s immediate superior, Cat. Ernest L . superior, Capt. Ernest L. trial, are bolh in recess. • • • LADIES SUEDE BO OTS HAVE ARRIVED - WESTCLlff PLAZA 548·1614 DACION SHAG · :~~ 3Y2" -99- NOW.SALE PRICED AT SQ. YD. SAVE $7.00 COMPAIAILI llTAIL ................ $13.99 1000'1 OF IEMNAITS LAIGI 60' % SMALL 80 % SfZI o SIZE . SAVlllS SAYINGS O UP TO••••• UP TO... • LMNG ROOM, DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEDROOMS CARS, ETC. ..... TOii -111.uuiiiMIMnl ALL CARPETERIA STORES CLOSED CHRISTMAS DAY ' . ' -SNAG 100% Polynt« Pilt. Btotstiful Htovy 99 POLYllTIR IHA~ 100% Continuous Faomtnt Nvlol\ Pile Cor1ifod with Duf'onl 501, Blue "N" lobol MAWTMOlll 1Jtlt .............. 61'-tlll SOii 0..0 ,,_, lo 11 s..- .. Tiirfli:IH lnl ,. "°'""""flt ... I 00% Nitlon Fiber. Dftp, rich. duroblr lhog. Btovtiful MW ~L 3V COM •• K 100% kodel1* Polvtsler Pae. ThrH pile htight pcfltm In groceful design. Ruggtd durobiliff, Beollliful colors. 511 COMfAIAIL nAIL ••........•••••. St." II.YD. SAVE '3.00 llOUTWOOD 111Sl.V-A,., -7'SS 2Yoc\.1Motltiol.....,.... ..... ,,_ c: ....... New colors to sel'ec1 frollL ,.. '1• ..,..,. , SAVI ..... C-PAIAILI RITAIL ................. $5.ff ~~~·~!~~~ome J!? bnindL ltl)luriously heavv 4'' deep sAvl •• pie. -•~llYl•ll'kolon. suo C-PAIAILI RITAIL ............... $13.99 I SAii FRANCISCO MlllllAE 320 II C:1mh•• ltol '692·21SS GRAND OPENING COSTA MES A 1714 H1wpo11 BIWd. 64S-l020 N.,..f\0!1 B'•~ '' 1111>~1 TORRA NCE 42l6Ar1ttil11•1111. · S42·66'6 I 81iw'' fol\.! 11t +loh•lhllr"" 8lvc1 on Af~~' ,• , .. '" r - ' • ·-· .. ·' '-BA.D.Y PILOT" EDRORIAL .,!GE • • . , c . ' . . ("' ! ·· A Ch r i·si ma s .Presen·1· . ' . ... ' --·--• . ,. · · ·News that Ille Fluor Corporation. will take over North American Rockwell's Laruna Nlrue! '.lodustrial QOfnPltx'Was a fine Chrisbn~s present.fo r South Oranae nt.v · ...!._ ~ --·-- ' t FJOOJ'.' s·-a ma1or International firm provlt1lb-g-en~ gineeriog and construction service Ior .the minjna an4 • · petroleum industries: has some ·Impressive plan,s for ' . -· ollliied to relocate to Oranre County. rather than com-J1l!ltifit. as many present employes of North American mll)it have done. ')'he South Cou~ty is forJ.:unate to have a firm of this caliber select it as home base.-And with due modesty •• "'e 1'J.8Y say tliit-thTFtuon-eol>le-b-ave-chosen-a""Ve>rY--'---1- nice. apot for their new home. ft th• future. The arri\·at or its ·1irst eoriling•nt qr 2,500 "' Fresh. New Concen.t em._.e:loyes will be. a welcome everit>. A r When North American fti::st aMoun'ced plans for " the NiJ?Uel facility-by filt the most ambitioU.s project A new San Clemente Fire Department came inlO" the South County h3d ever 'witnessed...:..it 'WIS hailed as sharper focus this month with the airine of a, fresh n'ew ~-n:iai?r boos~ for d-ryelop~e~~O! the are~. . . conce~1 a( an uparaded, deparqn~nt usirig a 1c.ombi!1a- • . COoilnx:hon· of the ~·n-•oua.re-focit tiered. build, : . 'til>D ol 'lime . ruemtll\. imiu>ttltoed police. ,vplun--"IL w .. h~pe~" by raJN,~ •!nkea~ 11 still Wll . I . " . • · ,. • ·'* far• froul• cempletton; wbel';l •CU~s' iQ e 'so~ pra; te~rs. ~ •. 1 , : . • ••• , -liram foreed Noith A'inertcan"•to'p'~t'lt ub 'r sale. · Ana "S.-n Clem~nle Pl'!I" <c:ujled from th• best Obviously the market lor .SZ4 millloa l>ulldi{lts. i.s _ or qther 4fJ$)8rtments s~ms on the i;oa·d to reality, limit4'<f. There we.re .•-few',. 11loqker;1." byt~·it waa too .. r. · Cit.v~na.rer ·Ken· c8rr has adapted' th'.e iptofessive mucli of a ~ood thlnK,for most .wllo Jl"'ked. No one;codld ..-J" , aspects "'· ii tours o! "-partments lll -Galilornia and ft(ut_e out how to Utiltze any.thm.r QUfte that1ar.e:e. .. "' . ::1w.-• • • It looked as ii South Oranre Coun)y mi(bt have pro-· · Ar!ZC!~• l<'f·p new d,!~~~e.nt ~his city: : duced a 'j!:_i&nt ;white elephant. "· , \ . ~ •:-· F·1rst *llm;'f the pr1ont1es 1s the build1n~·of a new, Fortunately, Fluor decided it would do very nicely $170.000 headQuarters. and, equally fortunately, North American agreed to Second on. the ~ist is u~inJ?: about ~.qoo in .ci.raret accept Fluor's rather complicated trade of far-Dung tax revenues lo hire several more full-time firemen. real estate-for the buildini and adjacent land. These employes, bolstered with cross-trained l>Olice. In the eyes of many, especially the new -0wners of COl,lld cut response times to files by more than half. La.runa Nl~uel. Avco Community DeveloPers Inc., All the iMovations re<1uire no extra tax revenue for Fluor will make the ideal nei.e:bbor. implementation. The money exists in the present budg· Its staff, mostly eniineers .. has an a verate annual et. &alary oL $14,000. That 'm·eans~substantial home buyers . lt seems to be a tood example of everyone makin-'? or renlerst · best use of what is: available to resolve a pressinJ?: need -- <9,._ ~~ • ....,. Now situated in tbe Los Angeles are~. they will b'I in a srrowinlt' community. s al!Ml R~Bin'$ Mt f(iJlllltr.) I MISlf 6E'f 10 $U DISllm>.Hb AT L.ASt'. ----------- Protectionism Dear Bantai ng of Cert~in . Toys as llnst,tfe . -. Is a Form.of S ocialism . ... GIQoiny. Gus: ... . ,~ '· 'A Dange r Is a · Danger _Is a Danger!'· ' ~ __,. ,,. 1"' To the FAitor: Do. the well-Jnttntlotitcf Cillzens ti. I would like to comment. on the Jetter Irvine who are encoutaitng 1°"-income housing for their futlll'f! (Mailbox, Dec. 16) from the lady who ~tty rea1ize tl'le . frustrations for object& to the tiaMing of ctrtain toy!! .chltdn!'n Jn the midst of .aUJutncef · from the rnai:ket. ; SiJcb a poverty. island would· be-" • One item on the list was a loy oven that .. ' Letters from readers are welcome. 10<0""-"' mor~ like an arum.al c~ to abow . 1 ...... actual~f_..)"jlrked .. ~ow, a:iing io this Normally ~tera should conve11 their · 1 .. 1 J.·r." 1 , ~J:·a..(~ .. .;~.!!tt:'~1 •-..~.~·~·~ ""' ... ~~ j~t s d be J.~". message1 tn 300 words or le.ss. The l~temat.tonal tf.id~ls..one oM1k! ~. 6>DiClence1. • · -on1y tbbig.:to prevent the e of this 1, right to condeme letters to fit BptJCe 1ub1ect1 it Is poss1!Jle to write a~t.t<. _ , -N. N. G. · item. But would she plug that stove ill' .. or eliminate libel reserved. AU Jet- -:'. u_nl~ . the ~adU hlppen.s to matt '111, ... ,..,.. r.t11c.-1 '"""'1\ VjlM.·'tlllf bef«n puttl'lasing ,it to see lh~Jf hot 1t ' , tert.?"U.St include signature and moit. • • they are "right" for some people, but "'M"Ong" for others. Would the lady advocate the purchase of these drugs be left to the consumer's ind i v i du a I discretion ? These examples may seem to be at opposite ·ends of the spectrum, but to paraphrase Gertrude Stein, "A danger is a danger is 1 dang~!'' LEE MILLAR socialism, anarchy, liberty .. Justice, etc." would indicate that he is afraid of these latter words and, hoW they · may apply to him. So he Wants to ouUaw•them ! . Don't you think yO\tr rtaders have had enough of his socialistic ideas? And may I' take this opportunity to secood "Name -Withheld" in his support and commendation of Ray S~ipe and Joplin Boys' Ranch, as opposed to tl'le Grand Jury criticism'! DON HQDDLESTON hi.I hv1ng 1~ an 1ndwt.ry that 1S threaien-~~ ..... .,.,.. ••••"'· ..., got? Would she not assume It was safe ing address, but nanus may be with- --ed by foreign CQJn~t1tlan.__ _ ,_._"' ..-~~ ~ a.11r """· ~use.a ~tabl:e store was_se~g it? • httd on request if IUfficitnt reason The question. of ; Proba ly -aiia U>eie could ·be a ~ fs-oppaJ'ent:-.:P.:oetfl("WfU not-be pubo Hollda 11, ·Gesture .To_the_EdiJoc~-r-__ --- - .. free lride" versus 1 "' aerlously-burned child on Christmat.,Dayl I, tithed._ · ••protectiotUsm" is . ; an old •nd' ·badly-like textiles. or ,ooet. Ol'l ,.auch. cam, rr IS ?ERFECn.Y true that there is ~ 1 scarred · debate· in mddl~. We ani • hJ~ici~-danger in swings, slides, tree climbing. I ,discovered in CJnned cranbeny s.,uce, the U.S. TheQretical; society, ~ shou~ ~evote our industrial etc., but these are not manufactured and lhat It was dangerous to eat, and Jy, the "free 'tra-'. , efforts ti produeuig the goods we can dangers; these are accidents. The toys could prove fatal . As it was at the holiday ders'' have the best "tc.'¥best p~uce at tbe fastest rate for mentioned by C.On!Wners Unlon, plus the time. would lhe aforementioned lady of lt; but practical!)'., " . the lowesf;cost. " !J)nes already taken out of circu!ati' n, prefer to have this product removed from tlie "protectionists'" Low efficiency societies 'ahOuld. M: . were ding er o us because of the shelves, or use her own judgment as l'lave usually won. allowed to take OYer the productiqn manufacturing defec\s or poor desi . to whether to serve it to her family or lf we are genuinely a capitalistic coun-of goods that best !ulls their economy And it should be pointed out that some,i f not? try, and believe in free competitim:1ti and fits their w.aige;scale .• If we want the toy manufacturer~, 1 upon be And' speaking of dangcrvu.s tors, does then we must adfuit th'at other" COOtifrltii ···to taee capitallnn ' antt ·free, compeUUon .adviaed Of the danger bi W!ir ~ro&uc the 1a·dy iemembet ' when there 'were have the right to lmport good& here spread .over the wocld, we cannot in1ist ellher modified. tl'le design, qr removed' firecrackers and cherry bombs? As a and sell it at the lowest possible prict~ that ~ther countries be penalized fot from· the market without 'argumeht, child, they were "right" for me, but Wt can't be in favor of competition sending tbe.ir goodJ over here and selling which only substantiates .the claim tlllt •·wrong" for many of my friends. · just for our own country. it at the ch.ea pest price they can. they really WERE harmful to a child. WHERE THE RUB comes is that TQ ''PROTECT" certai,n industries. the cost of labor in many other nations against foreign competition ls a fonn A FEW YEARS back the FDA announced tl'lat botulism had been ANO WHAT ABOUT drugs that have been labe1ed dangerous? Many of .theie drugs can be l'lad by presa"iption, for I ~d today1w~ile parking my car in Newport' Beach ll<at'the parldng;metero had been coveted 'and lied with red ribbon. , , · It was a very Joyfµl sight to :See. and I ·think the city of Ne)VPOrt Beach is to be commended £or such • .nice l'loliday gesture. GREGORY TOPPER i'Jl$u1ed Wor d• To the Editor: I am ·astounded that you would print the Sidney Harris q,1umn of Dec. 14 on '·'The TriJe 'Dirty Words.' " Just the idea that there Is no harm in dirty words of a sexual nature but the real dangerous words are "Americanism, To the 'Editor : Now that the recall f:ltt!Wn In Long Beach is ·over: According to press report!, the eleCtiOn: which _went down to defeat· by a three=.to-one margin. cost the local taxpayers in excess of $80,000. Ttie Orange County Registrar of Voters has estimated the cost of a recall elecllon in this county to be in the neighborhood of $1?$,000 of the taxpa.,er1' money. There Is a serious question in my mind as lo whether we should gamble an eighth of a million dollars on a proj>osition (recall of supervisors) which seems to be kept alive only through the efforts of one central-county newspaper and a vocal minority of supporters. · THOMAS STIPE is far ' Jj)~·er tJ!an in ours. A textj~e ~ ~ sUlae socialism, ~ l!'at.ter wh~t else worker in Japan, Jor instance, gets Jeu . ~t .may be called. ,It is a .subs\dy to than $100 a month, and an American inefficiency. because_ we should not be producer can't ~pete with these JGW • w~sting our resoorces in turning out labor costs when his own employes make ._,oods. ,that we can , ~uy cheaper else-- many times more. where. Both p o I 1 t i c a 11 y and This ts the argument of · "protec-eronomlcally, "protectionism" is a slap . ·Frauds Against Trustin.g Investors tionism." We have to keep the countries in the face to wortd unity and lo our tb3t~ pay "coolie w~ges" fro~, ,wr 1pf01~ ~tt<f ,o! free ~~tilion. , dercutting our own high standari! of •ft does bot'even 'make good sense ·to Jiving. Jt makes sense, as fa r as it our short-term self-interest, for ir other goes, but this argument dr.esri't go far COl!lllries are limited1ln selling ~ir goods enough, as almost all economists agree. here, they wlll not · have ll'le funds to THE F ACJI OF THE matter _is that a nation like the U.S. should not be wasting its' inefgy .and manpower in t.be production of low-efficiency• 1ood1 ' buy our commodities, and wo,r~ trade will shrink perilously. Our rejection ·Of an open market would only confirm the Communists' ae<:Usation that' we lnanipulate capitalism for our own ends .• Mark Twain's For esigk,t future of dcspondei;icy and the cenlra1 flaw1 in American civillution. The message ls finall y bef'nning to get , through: ' • ' Giant "recreational" or "second home .. subdivisions are,ll clear 1~ presenl dan· ger to a society increasingly concerned about a quality environment, and about Jiva!JU.lty. ~ Far from being great tax \vindfalls for local governments, they ar instead "tax pa)'ers' time bombs." th will cost counties, school districts a ' others far more in the long run than ey will pay jn. They are, with perhaps few excep. lions, frauds against those trustingly- invest in them , naively (and ·areed11y) ex· peeling the "land boom'' to keep increas- _ing , tbe p{ice ·of· JaOO w~ in fact, it never will, never c~n. be J!~~loped. , TIIEY HAVE EARl'\ED coir There Is much scholarly bickering Jn A1axweJI Geilmar"'si1'*' ci:ltical ctrork • "P.1ark Twain: An American Prophet.'' Geismar is a willy and articulate bickerer as he lays into the standard ~_fark Twain crllical orthodoxy. The old gentleman, dead t~eSe 60 years, must be laughing ~mewhere Jn Satanic pastures :tt the hulabaloo about his life, work and later strong opinions on both aex\lai and aocio-political matters. sidetable sums for the ori~al owneri ( \vho sold out at perhaps twice the as-. sessed true cash valuation of the proper. ty I. and huge sums. for the promoters \\'ho have made profits*nging up. THERE IS ALWAYS room (or argu· ward frol'!'l 300 percent on heir invest1 menl in a reboiling of old bones.in the in-ment, only to Jeaye the nd, small· ttresls of critical brOth, and .Geismar'• plot buyers holding the sa . lucky if work Is It once controversial and fun to they get back JO cents on tt doUar. rtad bec~use it.ls 4 sprtghtly, logical irf.v TheY._ lJke land out of its r.ost produc- terprelat1on written with verve. almost live and valuable uses -1411\elher they reckle.saly at times, fet eloquently: afld 4 • .. ' / r-r 1, Gqeat . Editorial~ ' ', . "· , ,. I . ' .... _ ( be agricultural. or range, or wildlife for- age areas. or eyen desert -and chop it up into bleak. Uny ploU that destroy it for any productive use in the foreseeable 'future. THE Al l-:SSAGE is gelling through In California. where the Legislature is now holding tiearings on tough new Jaws governing suCh kinda of speculative de- vel opments. The message is g e l t i n g through to coupUes, tNit. once bedar.z led by lhe thooght.:tif higher taK assessments, · have since been faced wilh tax foreclos- sures running at 33 percent or more. The message is getting through in land· poor Hawaii, where ''subdivisions·· have been carved out of the middle of lava nerds, with no hope of adequate water or sanitary or utility services. AND IT t.1A Y Be the message Is begin- ning to get through in southern Oregon -in the Rogue and Klamath Basins - which have come under the eye of the land speculators as the threat of tougher new laws looms in Calilomia, .For it Is these last named that Geismar dwells upon at some lengtl\ in um oew_ cootrlbuUon to the Mark T " a .111 Jq:end-ldeas and attitudes v,:bich, he .:.\ows us, have been largely swept Older the criUcal carpet heretolore. bristling with an eMllte wranglinc with .. olhe< l!Cllolars. .--------....-By Geor•e -..----+-----. rr IS GEr8MAR.'S central polnf fhat For lnstance, GeisrOar lakes on not on---' Twain ·s Utetary power was enhanced In ly Van Wyck Brobks. but the lisle bis later years, rather lhan diminished as Bemard OeVoto, Leslie Fiedlfr, Edmund TWain specJali•ts have argued since Van WjJ.son and Justin Kaplan:-I 1 te st Wyck BrookJ' cont rovers I a I In· biogr•pher or Twaln:f'1'-k. Clemens.aftd terpN!taUon. "The ordeal of Mark 1'-iark Twain "). Th1s Ceismar rejects as Tw1Jn." 1tt i whole atyle ol Twi.in ,Ill oYerJ.y -"teudian int.e~lk>n of lhc: criticism. • man and artiJt that suggested ?wain's Geismar suggest& that Twain's bltttr ra(Ucal social commentary was some sort llOCiaJ ctiUclsm or the United SLalH hu of de\'llnt behavior, or erpressioo or been represaed or avoided by itehollni ~IOJ'lal l'leurosis. "precisel)r .~use it ii so bold, IO ··•ruCj:ICIZBERRV FINN'' Ty/ a In 'I brillianl, aaUri~l and prophetic." Tw1k; single great classic? .Nonsense, ~is1nar indftd became mare pagan, liatanic and snoru. hii whole career ,Was .a) classlr, atvq:e 1n blJ eoeial comn1enL In _whet • 11,cludlng his later, generailly, i1nored •we1r1 Mre to be almost a New Left period or savage 90Clll commtnfary. ~ of tbe wriler, .Gtilmar ln$iill ~ MiUlln ; Ill), 11111 1.'IMI l"1lr -~.. • • ~ ~ .... Dear 'George : I go wilh a very cultur,td girl who ha•· only one litttt! fiiN In her deportmeol. She weirs ai very low· cut dress when we're shooting pool and t understand the fa&hion rule for a lady In poolrooms i!I a turtleneck sweater. Could you give I?t: the proper ruling on this? · CULTURE LOVER Dear Culture Lover: I called Amy Vanderb ilt. bul v.'9 must have golten disconnected . 0e11' George : la there any way 1 w .... tell if a man teresled ? Dear Hopeful : is romanllc&lly in- llOPEFUL "' Well, actually. Hopeful, the.re Is. ·11ov.·ever, would you mind writing to one _of the lady columnists ? Every lime I try lo answer a letter like thi!I it caui;es people to nad 1 lot or mildly rlsque meaning into· It that I don't intend. Write 1011 lad y columnist -Mtne of lheln grl ~way with murder. \ (Se:nd your problems 10 <leorgc and feel belier within five da 'I or doublt ,)'<>Ill" lrollble J;>ack.) ' . Such speculations have been gobbling up California laod at a rate of up to J00,000 acres per year. and for every "new home" or "recreational " or "sec· ond home" development · that has been successlul. 1 doun others at.and as bar4 ren monuments to rt.an'• cupidity, greed, naivete and lack of conscience and bon- cSty. WHEN SUCH speculative developments have been carved out of cld. ra_nch£s,. they are worthless for future agricul tural use. Their value as wildlife range is ended, with deer herds decimated or. scattered, fishing stream& ruined, and gamtt bird habitat bulldoied or burned. Fire danger ls Increased. Natural watercours- es. are damaged. Etosion is multiplied. And"to what end? Do ll'le trusting .souls who have put lheir· life savings into a plot of land ever billld their "d r e a m homes"? A few trY. Some lonely litl}e buildings have been built, a few trailers and mobile homes sjf on their bleak little plol!I. But it ls rflre ·when the happy, communal, carefree life promised in g\o\\'ing ads ever materialiies. THE ANGio.s.UON common law, and the statutes in the United States derived from it,' are based in large part oil the theory that a man'i home is his casUe; and that no one has :a right to forbJd an,y. one to do anything he wants wllb hi.s land. , But the realization is beginnin1 lo dawn I Quotes ' Dr. S~ I. llly1kaw•, 'pl"e1., S.F. State.- "We must not forget that our first mission ts educatiori. We are not 1 social &e-rvice agenc)'t ~ 80Cl•I aervices th1t can. and perhaps atJould be offered come secondary to education.'' Jo11nn1 Barnn,! N.Y. author In · UoUywood as 1ctren -"The only way ti) ha ve fun growjn&_ •old Is to become 11tisolutely outra&eous. Think or t h e wonderf'UI guUy oPlnion• you c1n gtt 1w1y with lf 'you1re old and considered a c:barldiirf" I on people that what people do with their own land. if not subject to some s o r \ of reasonable regulation, can have a dh~ astrous effect on the rights of the public at large. Is land a chattel or 1 resource? Can society afford lo permit huge acreages of land, even prlvately-0wned land, to be turned to uses that are dest.-uct ive of so- cial values? MORE AND MORE these questions are being asked, and mot'fl and more U. answer is coming up that the public in- terest. the _social utility or the land, tendl· to outweigh mere chattel rights. When big development corporations U!e . the "chattel right!" theory .to· scOop uP huge profits -and then leave the resulta to Pe paid by hapless investors and lu· pdor counties -the time has come to call a halt. This means. In practical terms, 1Slronl public-support for those pla nning com· missions, ·county commlssiooers and Ie1· islatots who, at long lasl. are daring to speak up in the public Interest and say "no" to oorporate developers who Vr'Orship the' dollar and don't care ' tinkv er's dam atM>ut the land ihey have raped. Med!Ord (Ore.) Mau Tri-. -----illlliiiiAal-. Wednesday, llec;-25, 1970 l'ht ~ditorial page of the Dail11 ,Pilot seeks to inform and •tiwi- iilate readtra by prucnting t.hil ne w.tpapt:r'J. opinio'nl ond C()'m.o mtnta.rt1 .on ' topfc1 o/ intereat and significance, b11 providing o forum. for tll-c czpreuion oJ our rcadert' opinion., end b11 prc3enti11g tlie diwrsc vfet&- poinl..t of informed ob!lerwr1 n~l spokesmen on topic1 of the dn~. Robert N. Weed, Publisher 2 ' I I .:: ' /" !. . ' . . QIJEENIE ~· ' . \llednt"'ll"Dtctmbt\"?l,. ltlO;. eAll.Y I'll.Of f : . Czech·~-. Wh~ Keep _·Honor Lose ··tlieir-Joh -.. •• ' PJlAGqE (JJPU .. :.:~·fie Who . or 'co,ndemned· the Soviet·ted he ls only 62 '•nd in fine Some • • , . ..,,ad e d • • ~pthil job lw IOo! hil -r:-lnYlsion \hat ended tho3e 'h<Olth. . • _.,_ _., llllfl'lbilr jobo. be who ~ his hooor lw loot r<Jonns. Dubcek hiimelf -I b t ~ ...-bavt been ' . rte111t ·rm· If 10r,. why? And -Do you hive contact wftla1 Yibeh'? < -• .... -fortlpen? Who? .. .hll ~.:-, . . . . Among tht victimsare some fonnir leader of tht party -lucky to llndrmimaol llbar. ' TH£ f'lllN na.W y111 rv DIBnl'T NllllCff ; ~ Qlls &l'ipl . 11u.Je .. famous n8~. has no job at all~ He Uve1 in A Meond ttace of tbe purse MUULIDfUtift ~I Mr I h1 I Ml ~.111ei!.-lhe~~ ~ --1.llt r. f u Idleness Jn bis '""'"''" -,la ...,., •• -· It II aimed : • ' • ' • .. MISllOll ""° ' . ' · ~ .for hundri!ds of : . "!" : ' oor-me Diar BraU.lova:--' ' 11 '""*'ty .......... wllo ~-•-' y.., • . tbo&isaM. ol ~ah <Olympic dwnpJOn, tours the To have been vlcllmhels uie --. ' l "..._ ~ ca1111hl in 11/t puriid wh~ COW1lryS1de with • surveymg this is a mark of hooor wl~~ -i:.=:t:1r :ouJ..~' J 0 Y 0 U•S · C H 11 S• T M A S N:ve allcff'througb ibis naUOn team. many Czechoslovaks.· lot It And An tn'tbe past ;e.jr.' , .. ,. Jiri Hochman, a leading makes Ille no easier.for~tlie 'J'yp)eal. .:m · in thll A I UN DA NT NEW y f A"R l~-1ili'1< wlio ·once ....a,at"the~ioornallst, -does manual laboi'~Vlctimi1;, ::..::...::::::::.::.,,.:;_Jll\!~~!f!!!I. · : · · top of ~ir professJo,n hlve in a provincial !adory. The purge of the' C.OburninlSt ...:..'ffoW do you a.._ Uli -H•n ye1-,•c•l~-6M"IC•-;i,""'' tlft-ti...,..f °'· ----1''--- "I savi 8. m<>Vie last night where &·man went to·Iunch and took off down the road ot life. I hope he K'w It." .. . .. CHECKING .. •UP • Greyhounds Have Pretty Bad N 9ses By L. M. BOYD IN BOSTON just ·28 years ago an inventor of large imagination and J i t t I e foresight patented a peculiar device. It was designed to help ladjes ·get rid of that natural adornment called m i d r i f r bulge. They were to wear it around their waists like a money belt. And when they relaxed their a bd om in a I muscles, compressing t h e clever little harness, it delivered forth a blatant warning___whisUe most startling to aJlYbodY nor:ramniarW1Ui the thing. The girls who wore It once in public rarely wort it twice. and it failed financial success, unfortunately. CLIENTS COMMENT "Mister, if you think~the right front seat of a car is three times as dangerous as the rear ,seat." writes a coed, "then you've never been to a <!rive-in movie." . . • "IT SAYS in the animal book that if you pick up a skunk by the tail. he's helpless," writes a gentleman subsc riber, "but the one I picked up hadn 't read the book ." school graduation just about when my lifetime pen ran ou of ink • • • OUR TOAST· l\fASTER wants to know w wrote this : "Oh, ·too much work and no vacatkm • ..• Is sufficient cause for a Utt1e libation .. So rally aroorid , boys, and fill up your glasses . . . \Vork is the curse of the drinking classes!" Any notion? MY MOTHER was a genUe literary lady. She didn't work at it. She worked at a stove ht a cafe. But there had been a time. After Milli College. She had written fiction, poetry, critical treafiSa once, m=the . Depression, when g'ifted girlJ walked streets in· aearcb of . sailors, 1 asked my , mother what one lxlok In all of literature meant the .tno!t to her. and she said, "My cookbook ." Later, at the University of Pittsburgh, I asked the same question of Prof. .Edwin L. Peterson, another literary scholar of even greater depth, and he said, "My checkbook .'' Remember that, young fellow. Learn a trade. CUSTOMER SERVICE -Q. "Do lions get TB?" A. They . . do. So do elephants, blrds and "NOTE IT STATED 1n print snakes. Jn fact , tuberculosis is the U.S. Government al· • the most universal of all the templs t? function in the spir\~ contagions, it's said •. , Q, of. Christopher . Columbus. "What kind of scent do the dog ?v1Jght be something lCJ that. track boys smear on the Sr. Columbus was none too artificial rabbit to make the sure ~he~e he was heading. greyhounds chase it ?" A. No couldn t hgure out where he scent. Greyhounds have bad w.as when he got there, and noses. They don 't fo!low muc~ did the whole schmeer on bor-of anything they can't see. I rowed· funds .. , "A FUR· · RIER cleans his pelts by EVERY FOUR111 TRUCK revolvi ng them in a steel on the road UI at least eij:ht drum partly loaded With years, old ..• rr•s CLAIMEQ sawdust." reports one of all West Point graduates are same. "What kind or sawdust e.s:ceUent dancers • , . 'l'HA'J: depends on the sort of animal STATE · CAPrrAL with the pelt. Oak for beaver, maple shortest name is Salem, Ore. and muskrat. birch for mink." Your qutstfon.t ond eom- A~I ACCUSED BY a femi-m<'nh are welcomed ond nine customer of being sar-urill be wed in CHECKING don ic if not downright cynical, UP tohere;er poufblt • .A.d- and she inquires when this drus rettert to L. M. Boyd, skepticism first set it. As 1 re-P.O. Bo:t 1875, Nttop0f1 call, it was shortly after high Beach, Cali/., 92660. ~~~~ • DINNER DAZZLERS . . .. \ Look vol.Jr loveliest 1t that next special dinner occasion. Dinner ringsln 14 karat white gofd, blue sapphires encircled in diamonds. Your choice. S226. Slightly enlarged to show ct.tail. Divided Paymenta AYl!labl•. CllffWI A~ ·lnltM -~ .. ..,.... IMl•.t.nttrklrf ..,, Mntlr CIM,.t, 111. SLAVICK'S JC\\·elen SI~ 1917 18 FASHION ISi.ANO NEWPORT BEACH-644-1 llO Opeo M......, tin Sat. 'Ill t :JO been dropped into manual . Frantiaek Kr I e g I , a Party haa; ended now. More 1181 military intervenUOn ol "lut .,, "'~'" •• ·f't'c•11'-' Hl111 (Cllriitl .. -Hi;M .:t••• Hi ··-Warsaw P--_.,,.,-i...., .Jll•••r t. ••C-• ........ ,1f s~... -J1h11 1:12 I a bo r . of . en f ,0 r c·e d prominent sutgeiln and former than 300,000 of the 1.4 million ~ ....., """""'"..... ......_ QNlo flt .,_ ....... ...._ _, ... , UllelPPIOyment -all .beca~ member of the Communist P',rty memben( lost their -Wbatbaveyoudooelinoe ,...,..._Qi: .. www ·.,., !~ ap}>roved the 111-1 Party'• ruling politburo, ls an cards. Membership of mariy 19171 Give detaits. llRnH Ill 01111LL ICHQOL reforms of AlexaDder ll>ubee):_ old-ace penslo~, even though others wu suspende"1. -Did y~ 10 abroad tn ......,... 1• _...., ....., 11•1141 2666 HARBOR BlVD. • 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 io 9 SATURDAY SUNDAY 9 6 , ·'.DENATURED 4..:-COKOi; a Ju1t in 111111 f•r holidty p1rti11 • "No1 no, •Htrbert y111 clo11't drink tlt1 •h•ff, you put it In tlt1 Fonclu food w1rm1r to k11p th1 ituff1t hot, 49cPINT -.-.... 0 You k11ow you'r• 9oin9 lo ru11 out of 91111•1 over the holid1y1. Th111 ••• th1 pr1Hv 11h, your cho;,, of 9 01. rock. 12· 01. b1v1r191 or t+., thinly 16 01. cool•r. J • 3 99 I SET GE 8 CUP PERCOLATOR 0 H1ndy brew 11l1clor from 111 >to rn11d, •••¥ to r.1d cu" rn1rkin91. 0 S"1ci1I rn i11i-D11w fot yo11 'h cupp1H. CM10 12•• TULIP SWAG LAMP Thi1 h th1 only Tuli' yow'lt 111 b1for1 1pr1n9. Unici111 p11k·t·boo d11i9n 9 i•11 Iott of li9ltf. Com11 ;,. purn"kin, oli•1, whit1 or combi,.1lio", wh1t1v1r t~et it. R·ll 11•• • Frotl14 7lob1 co11111 1n cele,. o whit1, 1rnk• or 9r11n. At thi1 low low ,.ice yo11 ctn 91t '"' 1f 1tcli t• w1 won't h1v1 lo 4111t '"'"' 191i"· 7.•• CLOSED CHRIStMAS DAY 0 Th••• F1nlt1tic buy• will b• •11 t1l1 u~til D1c1ll'llMr JO, •n• cl1y b1fpr1 tlit i:.Ut• littl1 ltiJ, 1,711111k11.tli.1c1n1, 0 E~•" De ... • 901t, •!&ti th••'• ..... .tt.1"9. N.O. JJJ 2888 TOIUASE BOWL ~UANIR 0 Tciil.E1t1 rtm•••• 1t1i"'• l11v11 the ittw). D1l9ltt ind 1hinin9. SHEPHERD TYPI CASTERS Thi wlf1 h14 lfl• ,uti tli111 •"!fly clt1ir, 111w •••ry tiMe I t11r" I roll tlew11 th1 •l1i'1. Now 1k1 t1l11 1111 I 1h1uld 111111 "'¥ ch1ir i11 fill IOI" lio• d1rby, 77! ' Black & Dttck•r 1/2" DRILL 0 Cofl'lp1ct, li9llt w1i9ltt tlrJll. 0 C1p1city: VI,. 1te1I; 14" ll1rdwoecl ; I,. ll'll lOnry. 0 Sidi ll1ndl1 fir b1tt1r l'tnlrel, hiplt r1tl11ctie" 9•1,in9. NO. nH 99 BLACK & DICKER HEDGE TRIMMIR ..... ~--. 0 Yeu 1111y 11et M tti1i.k1"' .r tht1 lt.111 liut ~ yo11't1 1114 to •llf the ' hMJ• wlthe11t it .... 11 ... time. U·212 2488 ALL CHRISTMAS ' DECORATIONS ' TREES V20FF 0 A f1w b1uti11 l•ft, itut com• in 11 rl¥ ,, th1y'll .,, 9on1. OARAGi DOO* -WUTHiR STRIPPING 0 Winier i1 fi111lly 11...., 1nd.liow.ltiii wtll• ... ·fuioll.ll~.., .. ...,..__ 11141 liop 11lllly 4r1ft. th•t tickle .your ''ii•• 0 Y e11r 1t11rh19 wft..tl Mifltf l ¥1n ~ WIMll Ill , the ll'lor"in9. ~ 2'9 MULn~COLOR MAT .,.,..,,,_,, 0 J111t In ti1110 fer the mu4.ty f11t tlltt l"1ht 011 1petti119 the u19, 0 Multi·color1d, efre"t thin ly flbeu cft111 '··· fle1t. 1'9 Dor 9V BAnERIES • 0 Y O.U ~llOW Vl r¥ Wiii thtt 101'11on1 i1 111r1 to 9iv1 tll1 llttl• ''"' ,.,.,. •1n4 of bett1ry ep1r1t..t toy 10 why•p1y hl9h .. rio11 wh1n tli111 tlo • 9re1t i•b for I/) th1 ''i"., RAIN GUmRINO __., 0 .A.ll 1f ye11 h1•1 1i11" for91ttin9 tel ti"'t "l1!" •1t11 .. Aw1y" •.o h1r1 •• 1r1 ~r1nclt.4 191i"' 0 L1ok1 Ii•• lt't 901119 to ls. • wtt holicf1y, liut 1111y lt Ii• • Merry 111e fr.ffl 111 •f 111 to 111 el-yett. ' 10 n~ UNO TH 1 I • • 'r• - 't;t ~y PILOT EconolllySurgeS ~e n · Bank Predicts Southland w Rebound .. Smut · Indictments Issued . LOS ANGELES (AP) -pomocrapby throolb l h I ' . Four firms and 10 perlOlll malll, were returned Tuaday.l have been lndlcf<d by a U.S. Atty. Robert Meyer uld; federal grand Jury o n 14 penons were lndlcted Oft pornography charges In the I d en t t c a I chargea la second such action la u pu.y November. LOS ANGELES (AP) .:... 't1le years from now, personal In aaother economic report, months in the South et a Meyer said the J 1le1 t aix~ty Southern Calllornia spending should climb by over Security .Pacific _N a t lo n a l Callfomla area. __ lnd.ictmenta came alter an area is slowly rebowlding 38 percent to $4& billion, Bank said Southern eanrornia The Jndlctments, cbargiag intenalve inveatJaaUoo b 'I from a recession lhat ended construction should total $C.3 distribullon o f unaollcited postal inspecto~. Its economic boom or the business spendiag by 3111 billion In 1970, an 11 percent---~----====--'-~---- 1960s, the Banlt of California percent to $10 billion and decrease from 1969. 1....,._11 saldlna-ipecialreporttoday. aovernment _speoding up_ 4S_.t 'Although we expect this ~ -------------ii said tile worst is over for percent to 123 billion. lili!illil?y'smajor C<1mponenl3 1he b £ding llnillche News ln-mJ the area's ailing aerospace It said most of the increase -reside11Ua1, nonresidenUal • Ul'IT ........ Chattapion Santa Cla-.s ·Former light beavywelt!bt boxing-champion Arclrle Moore scores a knockout as a Santa Claus judging from the delighted looks on these two Compton chil· dren's faces. Moore donned the red suit for nearly 1,000 underprivileged kids Tuesday for what is said to be the only Christmas pr.e,ent for many of them. • ID Fog H e lp CH P io Guide Drivers elist.l.ng cendilion," Ii a Id Harold W. Sullivan, CHP commissioner. Bad Dream On Credit Cards Over SAN FRANCISCO (AP) industry and t.bert now ls ln govemmeat spending will and engineering construction • lasts .., "sufficient strength in other "result rrom an expansion of -to show •some losses, fta.....___ lft 11-.tr-. industries to offset tht fUrtber, the work force and higher severaJ subcategories display .,.,ULUl-a ~ ~ J '... -~'&l but narrowing declinel the salaries." counter trends," said Arch D. N 41 --A 'r.i • Hea_.. ,,j:" he aerospace industry w 111 On an over all basis, the Ha~yment, .a bank vice ervous ' llllSIOll ~c S suffer." bank said, the emerging president. .. 1 · The ba{lk's year-end report pattern ror the next five years The increases, tie added, Now, Made Pu' blilC oot.ed a "aubatanilal increase" "is one of_ gradual'-relatively came in multiple family ~ last year In aavlnp by 11Able growth aa oppoaed to dwelling u •I l r , res!denUal • · Individuals which, u· )X'edtcled, the boom or btlsl cycle" of the a11e ... uons and addttloN and , Non·N;;.,tic Tablet That N~s N~ ~ption "iJ building up p!OSIUle for a,';;iPlll;;;;;;ii,..,._ii. _______ ne_ .. _co_mm_e_rd_al_co_ .. _tru;;;ctiiliion,.I r .PrOYeS Just As Effective As The Expensive, meable lncnoase tn penoaal11 , t.,Leadlng Pain-Relief Prescription Of Doctors., spending in 1971." W• invite you to ~ -= • .,.>. _..,. · 11 said i" 11 ve -y ear CHRISTMAS at ST J AMES lfyou"ro~ne-oltbemaoywho ·-;,.J;.cnPIMlnandil~ projections or the area'• 3209 Vi• Lido, Newport Beach get tense, ncrvoua btadacbc:s, more cc:onomical. ·-~ · ...,_ economy "iildicate a return to these latest tests by doc:ton • With Anacin, !adacho paial aubstaaUal growth, though a\ CH RISTMAS EVE ahould be of tbc greatest ifD.. and its nervoua tension van~· tower rates than obtained 7:30 PM Family Choral candlelight Eucharlat portaoce • ._...~ '"' •-t..~~ in minutes. Despite ita strcogt d · the s· •: " Caroling & Sermon · ~ Jo recent medical teetJ doc-Anacin is not narcotic. You unng ix ... es. 10:30 PM Annual Senior Choir Gift Of tora proved a famous tabict that take it without acttina dizzy~ Personal income, w h I c h Christmas carols-. • • needs no prescription gives the an upset stomach. • reached $50.9 million In 1970, Ancient and Modern mme compltte headache relit/ ,. Nextlimetakepowcrful,fut.: Is expected to expand at a 8.9 11:00 PM Traditional "MJdnlght Mas.s"-as the expensive. leadiq pre. actin1 Anacin•. Anacin Tableta I I tMfl A Fl!Stival Choral Eucharist' · h · ,_._ 1.--· percent annua rate rom ""' &. Sermon 1CTiption of docton. ..,,.. ·:\ 11ve t c same compiac r-d• to 1975, down from an anAua1 -.. 1'ht.ae docton' tests prcwed, ache paln relief u ihe k:adin& 8.4 percent rate In 196$-70, the CHR ISTMAS DAY beyond a doubt, that Anacin is prescription prodliCt fat whiclll SACRAMENTO )AP) - Holiday motorists using U.S. 99 in the Sacramento VaJley can e:zpect help from the California lllgbway Patrol if fot blots out the roadway. SulliVan said the program will run till March. bank said. 10:00 il'l Choral Holy Eucharist and s~on j11st a.r efittti11e lo re.ltew: ten.-doctors wrote 21 million pc-. Eve r had a bad dream about . The repoft Aid that fivt ••~1·•ltflfll 11 7•• ,,m. ctir111w..1 lw• s.rv1c. • 101oe 1.rn. e11r111rna1 •1 ~on_beadacbes1-;:-Y!l_.AD.acin scriptiom 1ut ye.at. someone going on a fantastic _ _:::.._:~'..:_=~~~:'.!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~!!!!;~_:..,.. __ ..:;::.:;.::.._ __ .:__:. __ _:.:_ ___ _ The patrol . Tue1 da y announced ''Ope rat i o n Fogbound" will provide CHP pace cars equipped with amber lights to help guide traffic through fog patches at sale, speeds. • "Traffic w:ill be slowed to • speed that is aafe for the He said-be wished to warn Olristmu and New Years holiday drivers of the program so they know what to upect during foggy conditions. Operation Fogbound ii In eUect, be said, from Wheeler Ridge in the south to the Sacramento County line in the north. spending spree with your credll cards? Supervis or in Ventura :convicted of Bribery Well, even if it happens for real, you won't be lbt goat. Cauromla law -and a new federal law effective next month -virtually assures freedom from liability for unauthorl7.ed use of c r e d i t .cards if issuers are notified wlthin a reasonable time. Deputy-.-Atty. Gen. John Porter says the fine prJnt on the back of some credit cards saying you are liable for use withou t :toot pennission is Illes al. VENTURA I UP I) Ventura County Supervisor H. F. Robinson, 48, was convicted Tuesday night of a""pttng '3,000 in bribes to influence his ' wtes on zoning matters. Robinson originally w a s charged with 'Zl counts of accepllll( brlbea from the Cooaolldal<d Rock l'rnduci. Co. and Larwin Land Co. However, he wa1 acquitted on Rail Fares Hiked 10% the 21 counts J n v o I v i n g SAN FRANotSOO (AP) -A ~in. 'Ibe other. ~ix, coonts 10 percent hike ~ railroad all mvolved Consolidated. passenger fares· has been Tlie Clil;;;eeJiiihilililed that -approved'"by"the itate-l'l!blic the molity, trem Conaolidated Utilities Commissiori, effective was in &be form et campaign Jan. 21. contributions while that from The ruling Tuesday granted ~, Larwin was t& supplement the increases for Santa Fe , salaries of 1 Robin son'• Southern Pa c ific , Flier Makes - -Loiig Crawl To Sa fety SAN DIEGO (UPJ) - A assistantl. North western Pacific and pilot with a broken ankle The Su~rior Court trial Union Paciflc Jines. crawled through 1now for 30 began Oct. Jl and went to the But the PUC said the hike hours befo re he reached a jury last Friday. Further will not apply to SP • s highway where he flagged proceedings were continued to commuter trains between San down a pusing motorist Jan. S, 1971, for bearine of Francisco and San Jose. Tuesday· defense moUoos. A similar 10 percent boost AulhOrities .a.aid James-W. Robinson facet one to 14 became etfecUve Sept. 1 for Brown, 42., La JollJ, a bank years In prison on each count. interstate passengers. ex>urier. crashed in thei--------------------1 mountains early Monday while on a flight from Burbank to lmpe rial whert ice began bJilding up on his plane. He made a crash-landing on a snow-covered m o u n t a I n plateau. suffering a broken ankle, and then crawled three miles to the highway. . Brown. a former Navy commander, was reported in fair condition at Balboa Naval Hospital here under going treatment for a compound ankle fracture, facial cut s and frostbite. Brown's plane had been sighted by a rancher two hours before be was found and a ground K&rCb 'otU under way. WISTCLIPP PLAZA OPIN IVIS. 'tH t tttr11 Chrlstlllu Vitit 011r le11tiqu• •f +h• N•wport•r I"" • altcH Christmas? ' lnilo The action starts on December 26th. ~ tmfy ll1d Mw 1 ploric, Then slick-..! and have a bol Coovtrient -11·•-andbel>. Ev<rl playll<IU lotchlldren. --dlti• a DllVDat.1>11 ll1d ... ex-Galls q>1111l:OO &II\ flr1I )Xlll 1230 PJn. • ' • • ' . ,--·--~--- Up and clown the state, the 27 offices of the 5.25 % :..~s:=-subsidiaries of Imperial Corporation of Am erica, ---the nation's third largest publicly-owned savings --and loan holding company, have taken the name ..... .. -of Imperial Savings. Here yoU'll find the same 5:75 % 911$1CIXl~w friendly staff backed by experienced man~ge--·""'-"''-ment dedicated to community growth. Here you'll ~-... -s--find the highest interest rates permitted by law, ....... insured safety with you r funds protected by an .. -......... ,... agency of the federal government, and a great 6.00 % C111$SOOO~« range of financial services. '"°" 11114 1'111 yun • _ .. AcNll Jlel• Whelher you open a passbook, or guaranleed I .II" lllllfl """" Mid lllltrest . growt h account, your funds will start earning .. -~--· instantly. Come in and start your savings growing 7.50 % •$100.lllCl""'911:1 at Imperial Savings, a subsldiaiy of Imperial Cor-........ """:t:•· ---,.... poration of America. 1.19" ..... ... _ ,._ ~--· lmPERIAL SAVlnGS • o ·• ., ot ll'ltplNI' C111111111t1on "'Am9fb and Loan Association of Newport.f'aadlnl Newport Balboa Savi ngs' new name Ex.cutlwl Office: 3366 Via Udo, Newl)Ort Beach, 673-3130 Main Office: 61 South Lake Avenue. Pasadena, 795-8441 Corona dtl M•rotfict: 550 Newpot\.Cea\w..Driw,-NllWJ)Ort Buch, 644-1461 ~ 3870 E•st Foot hill Boulmrd, Pasadena. 795.0447 134 North Glfndoni Avtnut, Glendor•, 335-4043 f W••tll•l'ld H!ll1 Offic•: 19900 Vt11twr• lowl•'+'•rcl, Wtocll•"cl Hill,, l46·ltJO 1 • ' - --·------------------------------ ---------------------------------------·-----~.--- • DAILY PILOr • FAJUILY-CIRCVS f>V BU Kea11e Philco Jlead For the Record Stuaent Su.ing Orange Dist1:ict John Lawson Re-elected Births • .tVA.NS·,IHt. -Otc. ll, ll•lllh NtwlOil ~ ~v1.na. SJ, •IW J•l'lft lllalMlll ,lfll, "' M, .. , .. Of COlll MfM CHl!Stlll·Mcl(INNIY Ott. lf, JllMI I!. Cflttltr, lfl. ''"' Or•t • Mtrrf°" Mcl(lllllt'f, Ht .. tfl or H1mlln110n ltltfl. .IAOl!AllS·HAWLl!Y -OK , 1,, Oltnn A, Jtttt ,,, 11, tllll l trlll• Annt1 Htwlev, 41, llolll of Hunt!llCIOl'I IMth. ITAlll(•OtMITT -Ole. 12. 1t•r1 OtM!I Sl•rk. :M, l !WI J•nftf (lllnt Olmltt. U. ~qt L•1une IHcfl. SIMMON•TUMOLO -Ott, tt, JOM•fl H. Slm!Ml\I, Sl, ol Moronto v1111~. i nd M•r11f"1' M. Tll!Mta. 5'. of C"ll Mt••· HOUCK-HARTMAN -DK. 11, llrrv .. RIV HOl,"k, ;id, of L1n~Sler, •rid • Carole Ann H1rtm1n. 21, If Huntlnotan Be1ch. ,b.LORICH-DUGOl!ll -Dk. 1 2. 1 Wllll1m H•ri.nd Alllrlcll, n, of LOii• !ea<h, 11111 Jt n-Du111r. n. qt 'COlll M9•t. TAUATl·LAI AN -Ott . lt. Fltm•I•! M1!1l• T1u1!1. JS, of Wutmlns"'· •and l!llt1btlll N, L1b1n, u. <1' Slllla ,An•. HODGES·VADl!lll -Dec. 12, Wtlllt"' J. Hodtl l, 41, •1111 M1rgrll JOhlM I -V1d1r, Q , llolll of Co1!1 Mn.I. HIELOl lllANOT-SWANSON -Dec. 11, Lel'O"I' l!fW1rll H!eldbrlpdl. i•, of .Stenton, •IWI Jeen A. Sw111~. U. 11f Hunll11tlon Be1ct1. tHOHT-CLARK -OK. 11, Rlc"-rCI L, Hl•llt, 27, ol Wt1tmln1ltr, 1nd Vicki• Lt• Cl1rt. n. al Buen• Park. ADl(IN .. WILLI$ -OK. 11, Rlcl'l1rd ldw!n 11.dklns, olC, of Lont Btach, and Nine Arltne Wllll1, :If, of Hunllntloit •••ell. I C H WARTZENIERGER·BOOTH Oee. n. Rontlll Mlchttl Schw1rlzenbe r1er, 14, ol Wutmln•ter, and E11een M•e tooth, ,,, 11f Huntington Beach. McGIVNE Y-BENTLEY -DK. 12. JeHllfl W•rrtn McGlvney, 11. Ind N•ncr llent~r, 11, batn of Huntlntlon '""'· RAGIJINC>-THOMPSON -M!ch1el 8 .. lt, ol 1716'h An•h"!'ll S!rte•, cos11 t:",~ J"d Ol1n1 LM lf, of J1l.3 Ntw SM111fA-HltVf~1~w~finn R., 23, of 102! Vt)I!.~ 'i!i1, Irv!"'-•1111 Grela A., 1&, of 7 Ml 0!111n.. Cot.It Mn•. OAVISSO ·DltA. e-Flovll A,, 55. of 16611 A.v91'1\11 dtS-0. M1•1lon Vie jo and Giru•9/• G,, JO of 2•11 II Del E;f~rlsH~8~1Sir-"'fir.; J,, n, ol 1Jl4 Belf•tl Av1., Cr!' Me11 1nCI l(rf1tln J ., ?!I, of 101 COl'Dfll Line, ME°'~A~l~Y-CAN N0YA-T"°"1•l A .. 31. of 5151 H•lt, r.u~ll!llll~ l l1Cl'I end Ch1rloflt D .. 1 , li. 10411 Su!W11v l(Cr1:1l.~~atlr.!t' A~··,~,. ol 224 V• •no "0 lrvlnt i nd Loi""; 22, of lt\tfnt. CAR. ·BOOIA-G1br ti, l. of 11' Wni E•CtlOM$, Stn c •mr:•• •1111 Mir'!' H .. 11, cl Stn Cltmen e. OlT-BUOLONG-l(MUlelh W .. ll, of 18U Monrovl•. Co1!1 MtW •nd Chervl L .. ?(I, of Cost1 M1s1. !IENEF1EL-Pil:AR$0N-Ro111td L .. 34 ol 901 Soulh Vlrlee. Stn•• All• I nd BtVtflV J., 10, off 1)41".! Wtbile•. s 1e~tV3'1Stt'MtLLWATER-Lawrtnc!OR,, 2l, of 1356 CotneU Or .. Co1!1 MHI •nd Linda A .. 11, of 121 E••' e.I&\1.r~A·u2'i'Gi~w1r11tr , • ~1. of (15 M1rr!m•C WIY, Co.I• ~Ill Ind P•ult J, 2J, o JCoot• Mt1t. R05S-CROWOEN-l..oellt '" 2'2, ol 1113 Octtn Avt .. S111 eg1t!'I 1M '•mtl• ,.,~. 0_!_ 116'~ v~n ur1n. H~ntlncilo_n DEC .2 HIGH-OSBORN-Mtrk E .. lt, &I 1Jl11 wr11ow La~, WtJtm1n111r •na Detlllftl! S .. "J'O, cf ~1 C11..,.1>trl1nll Avt~ W .. •!mln1ttr. SMITH-OIVINO-Rlch•rd C,, 71, of IUl 1Ci1111!11htr Hunllnq1an 811eh •nd Sh1ryn E .. 11, of 1tl12 H1mden Li nt , Hun!lnc!on B 1d1. JONES·WEEl(S-Roberl L .. 11. of 19131 DeleWlre. HU'l!lnll10~ & .. ch ind carm111 v .. 11, 01 101n 1(1mue11, Huntington Beech. WALTHALL-JENNINGS -J lmmv E , 11, ol 20 Gren111~. Sen Cltmtnte 1~11 P1!r!cl1 A .. 20, of St n Cl91'11tnlt. NOONAN·l!ARTHLOW-Thornt• C 11, ot 1M1)2 Sorlnocl11f, Hunllnci!an ih t th Deulh Notice• lllATOlt !:lmtr W. Fttol'. 0111 of cHltth, Dectm· tier n. 111 N-Rlcl!mona. Ohio-Sunrivrd bv wilt, Beulah. OI OM01 Kin, ·Tom F1tor, A~111111 !wo d•ueh!trs, M ... Benv Lou Tr0e9ner ar>d Mrt. Jove• flt<1ur"1rll, both cl Newoort l ttth! t nd .. T9hl grtndcMIClrtn. Fun.,.11 1ervlc"' ? PM, MO<W:ltv. DtcH11ber 29, B1ltl Cotti Me111 CIWl1>tl. ln!ermeMI, Ptclllt Vltw M1rnor11r P•""-Bt!ll Co1tt Me•• Mot· !utrv, Otr.cror1. GALLIVAN F D fMl-tl Gallivan. Aet ,S. of 1711 Newm1n, Hun!ine1on Bt•<h. O.it ot <1e1th, Olc:91'111Mr 12. Sunrlv..:11 by wilt , M~rth11 tllrH d1utMtf'I, Dl1nne, Ot~n1, And Otbi'l l t>roll!er, Mr. M. J . G11lllv1n1 four 1l1ttr1, Ml1s Gtort!1 Gallivtl!, Mrt, GllCIYI lttwllnf, Mrs. Mtr•tr•I Mlll.,- and Mrl. P1trkit Rld-.ir. Vltllallon, IQ.dlY, Wt<lntMltY. 11 Noon lo f PM, l",mllllt Ch1pel. Strvlct1, Thurtc11v, 10 AM, Smltlls Chapel. ln!trmtn!, '•clli< View Mtmorlal Pt•~. Smlfhs Morl'Ull'Y· Oirtt!PrS. LEGA C1tmen ro. LP1111. At• n, el 206'1 Stncl· '"Per L1n1, t-lun1in;!on Be•cll. Celt ~f 11e11!h. Otocem~r 71. Survlvell b• ll•tt r, Virglnl~ lll:1m1ero; niece, Ol llvt De! R!ol neph~w. David Romero; 1rt lld·nl1c1, Mar!llll Ot! Rio; trend-neotitw,, Htnrv Del Rio. Ro11ry, loi'lltlll, Wt'dntlcllY, 7:i0 P fl.•, smiths cn1oel. lt"ul91'11 M11s, lnurnlev. t AM, Si Simon & Jltde C1lh· e1ic Church. lnltrmt nt, Goocl ShtPl'lt rd Cemettrv. Smith• MOrtvtl'J, Dlrtctor1. RAI ALITI G-11 lllbtltlt. 15' NtlltU, CtJll Mtll . Ott• flf d .. lh. DKtmber 11. StrY• Ices pendlnt 11 W11!cll!I ChtPI! Mortu• ArV, 6'6-.llt8. ARBUCKLE & SON Westcliff Mortu1ry 427 E. 17'11 St., C-011'1 Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona dl!l Mar .... OR S-MIO Costa Men ........ mi I-Zill • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 110 Br11dway, Costa Mesi u 8-3433 • McCORMICK LAOUNA BEACH MORTUARY 179$ Laguna Canyon Rod. '91·9115 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Cemetery Mortuary . Cb1pel 3500 P1cHlc View Drive Newport Beacll, California -· • PEEK FAMILY _ COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7Ml Bolq Ax_e. \\'estmlastcr , , . 893-35%5 • SMITHS' MORTIJARY 117 Mala SL Hu.atlngtoa Bea@ - OlssolQtions Of Marriage ORANGE -Conlendlng that Orange Unilied School District officials "singled him out" o( 100 studenll violating the once sticky dress code, an Orange High School student vows to file suit against the district. Roger Merrick, 11, or· Orange, , ieeks reinstatement at Orance H.igh ending lhe disciplinary transfer that put -him Into Richland High School, a half-day, non academic contlnuatldn school operated by,Jb(~dl&ldcl. - Meir~k flunked the school'• ''hair test" on openh~g day ot school, but aaya he was the nnly "one to be transferred to John B. LIWIOn, uec:atlve vice pnoldeDI of Pbll...,Wd'• NtwPon BolCh ""-and Derwe Sylteml Oponlkllll, haa been JWlocied .lo the -lloltd.-<>l-OO'llll'llotl-ol-the Aerolpoce Jndultriu "-i•· Uon of Amorlca, Inc. Lawson'• feC'Ond ooe-year term bealM Jan. t. A,griculture Instructor To Be Cited Richland. ,-------------------- 'How can we toll If visions of sugarpl ums are dan~ing in our heads~ I've never sten a sugarplum.• County Slates Safety Projects on Highways A moratorium on the dreu code Ls In effect until Jan. 4 when a more Jax code, allow ing long hair for boys, Willi P M goes into effect. am ... org a n, agricuJt\U't ln$\rUCtor 1 t Merrick. who admlts to Fullenon:Junlor College, wUI being 1cUve In oreanlllnt: be honored al the sprins local anti-war demonatraUonJ, California Farm 8 u r e a u at.so edlta the school P1per Federatio n convention f o f which frequently has taken thirty years of service in stands against administration agr\cultui-el education, pol icy . according to an an nouncement He feela his transfer ls made.by the State Department "PWliahmenl for his pollUcal of Edueation. views and activities. Morgan earned his B.A. "For too long . achoo I degree in horticulture from ad ministrators have tried to Penn~ylvanla State University use the.Ir authority unjuatly and his Master of Arts degree and hive suppl'fiuect b1sic Two tr al f i c sa le t y The estimated cost Is $20,000 from California Polytechnic constitutional rights/' Merrick Improvement projects { o r and will be equally shared by College at San Luis Obispo. He alleged. SCotaunt'ty blb&ahvweaY!..._nin apOrp'r'o"vegde . the CalUomia Division of started his teaching career 1n Merrick's lawyer has served .,.,... Highways and the City of Pennsylvania . notice on distrlct nfficials that for fundtng: by the California Laguna Beach. After leaving Pennsylvania, suit will be filed in Orange Highway Comml11ion. Existing traffic signals will Morgan went to Hawaii where County Superior Co u r t T:affic signals ind highway be modified and t r a t I i c he taught for thr.ee and one· charging that the transfer lighting wl11 be installed on channels constructed o n half years at Lahalnaluna "violated both his right to free Route 1 1t Its intersection with Routes 1 i nd 39 1s a single Technical High School en speech and his right to due ••rrc•r• •<tiv1°w11r ct'. for th et l•st mi nut• 9ift ld1a only 1t f1 1hion isla nd li •n~1m•1J4•rcl e ll'l•••ar t;h1r•• ' •1 f11hl111 l1l1nd, 11ewp orf "'"'•r 444-5070 lnttNf ~Hf'u li~C~le~o~S~tree~~t~1~·n~La~gu~n~a~B~ea~c~b~.~p~r~~~·ec~t~.~~~iiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiM~a~u~i.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii:~~p~roct~~,.~of~l~aw~."ii;iii:~ii:i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Rtybtlrn, Albert J1mts 1nd Joennt E. LH, v1r11n11 111d L1wre11et H. Moorf, C.rolt A. 11111 £1rl J. illlilMJlll••~Mi\~MJ!fJ:ir:li~lllfl-Jll•M•--...--•"'5.M~MMMJlllM .. M•MMM'Jlt'i1JlllMMMil!IB~MJWIJRJIJIM"I,...,...,..,... _________ , ~;2::.::~ti.!'":~'.~~~:~:;~:· ! ,t J nf•e ,,.,a·· 1fgr n'P'Jj h 1/llf i A ny'f' , OUR CONVENIENT '1:'.~; """ ''"""' ·~ '""''" i/JIJU/(. Jlj f'i tf J14,;liUU1 CHRISTMAS SHOPPING HOURS: ~~l~~~:G~!t::.•;:=.nc:v:·L. ~ • MON.-SAT. 10 'tll 9. SUN. 12 'tll s I ~;":;~:.~:"..~:·~.:.;:,;·~·~·""" ~ 'i 11~ fli'I-··1(;'.' '1'1".v.ll;f;f Tach1uer, Edwin 0, .M Wlnn\frtd J. I ""' n "~ I • ,,, ••• HOOPff, Oebortll S. 11111 ROltr E, Oonaldian. Htit."I •nd Wiiiiam F. Ht'n<lrl•, Mt rY Jatn and 11.lc.lllrll G. Tolnlon, LucUI+ o. tnd Wllll•m Henry Cort~1., lltvertv Incl Enrklut 0ow111, Bewirlv A. 11111 Mllcelm I . II< Sml!I!, Clorlhl F. 11\d O.Ortt w. JC Or~r •• Otto 11111 MllY Jttnne ~ l'rltcl'\ltt, 1..,...1,. (llllit tnd Lewl1 J. Smith, M1bl1 O. •nd Wllllam J, O'NtlU, t-lt!tn •1111 Duane P. F usco, Clllllr s. ~ All>trt J. McClell•nd• Mtr;1rtt K. 11111 Fttdtrlck J. Llhou, V!t!Grlt K11lh t rld Gt ,.1d H-t rd flloblrbOn, M1rlotlt £. and Trey N. Brok•w, Mtl'Y Ctro!t Ind • MlcPIMI $COii OtrKllow, Jolln t fld K1t11trln1 M. Aub!o, L1n<!1 •nll Jo1eph HtncltrlM!, Llf'lnt1 S. i nd Anllt C:, I Mllltr, l(aren R. •nll Ch1rte1 £. N1n111m, P1tr1cl1 D. 1nd P1lrltk J, w. Btrw!ck, Gene A. 1r>d Miry C. :OUb.:~~ :i~;!~ ~it:1:nac::~;,.:: _ - Sellft, l'1tr!cl11 N. •nd Hlram \., L1n"r1'4'. Htrry A. •1111 Llllllll I!'. Ollt, Ctctll1 ll:Ob!f'I 1nd l(fnntlfl JOlffl! Cuflh, Lor'111 E. 11111 Lt wrence D. 111111'111 Dlct11U11r IS Nol1, J\1111111 1"41 l'•ul Lt0,,.rll Gultltrrtl, 111:111 t ncl •awtrd GoodCI H . GlitdV• A. •ml Ono Ill:. Feneck, JOhn Jos1Pll t nd Pa!rlGll An11 For1n, Kttl'lleen lll:ulh i nd Tllom11 R091r Snook. Fredi!• S. and Jot>n F. s umm1r1, ,hll111 llotn1 •NI l lencltt Lorrtlne ltlll, Ruth ancl LI Mtr Sumi, Miry IE. end Mlcll1et Ill, Cllt ntY. \llGkft Lee •nd Tammf J09 Autud, l"•lrltl• 1n<1 Robert .r.11111 I D1vlC11on, Alber! 8111ke t nd Slltllt M, Tuektr, Mt l"I' Gr•t e 1nc1 Delbert LM Hllkf, Mltdl ltn G. and Mil!Oll Ill, Rum•rt• JNn I . 1 nd J1m11 I!. J t coblln, ltulh A. ine1 Wtller M. I Elwell, JostPhlne Winifred 1nd John · '" . Od11\'1, l "tv J, •r>d Robtrl E. L_..,OlllUL Jvdllfl H. 1nd Corl G. ~ POM1r. Dlt nnt I(. 11111 J•mes Llndtr, v 1,,rn11 L" and Thomt s ~ Miiton Lorah, Lindi Jtnt and l 1wrenc1 II Lulhtr II; L•wltr, l"l'lwlU1 !'.. 11111 Den~il Arllt ~ T1Ylor. Mark S. •ntt Heltn L. Pell!!, M!chtlle M1rt end Wt 1ter Ellis Hiii, l 1r1Mrt A.nnt •nd Irvin Ch111m1n ;:i: Lt ld1!1n, Jacob'· •nd Aidt z. ~! EPltv, 8e!tv A. •ncl Cov E. Jr. R Cur!11, Jamts E. i ncl Jeanne M. I Htlmlt, JOl'ln Ill. Jr, and Dorothy L. Wlllolll, lonnle s ue a/Id Oontld Alltll Slepheruon, C1rol Lorrtlnt tllll Otrin!1 w!:.·~~I• ~11 1nd Howard Wlllltm I ThamP1on, Ltor1 N, ancl G•ll M. Andrews, Miry Lwnne trill John Ch1rle1 . l(oukv. Mtrltwn A, •nd M••vln I!'. I Mtrshall, Dcorr!nt Jun and WUll1m OtV!d Jr. ll!Mvt,_ Al!tl K11hlt tn 1nd lllCttr ~ Leiter ~ G1'91, Kt1hrt1n A. Incl T1r t\t W, Curr&n. s11v111 W•wnt •fl4 Nltkotet Vtltr!t Cole, Clartnc• I!. 1nd Almt J. S...tr. Chatltt IC. and SuJan (. GrHr, Ronnlt Mlc/lltl Ind Con1!1nc1 Jltft kullntr, ''"''" J1nt 1rid lllch1rd w. Ellll, M•ry LOUlll tricl .Gltn WlllClll kundw11k, C1rol Ann •nd Chtr1t• Jr, />Mell.It, l!tlt!la E. 11111 JtmH Jr. R0911, Lcrr1Tne M. arid JOl'ln A. . Btrnett, Oouoltl HultY Ind PtnH ~ M1r91rt! f( Ow..,, 01nl11 L. ind Shlrllnt ~ illOllltlbUtk. JuCIW lwt>ll t nd J1ck f( ltr1-f<ill Prll'l~I, Mtrle A, 11111 Wlllltm G. GlllHn, illl'blcC. K1w 111!1 Mlthltl J, l rltvlth, l•l'Volr1 AM 11'111 01rwln Peur krtthochwlll, J•dl H. Incl MH dt l- Schwen~. Ptltr G. arid Mll"I' Wood. ICtrrw Alwnt •nd Tf\ofml RtfPh Nltltllller, Arthur Henrv Jr. 11111 Ellutlt!h Fr.nett l r0t•-•. Anft1 1nd Jolin w. I tel-. Slltll!Y 0 . and M1r1orle I!'. :.t CO!lnoltw, D1nltl P, •nd Mtrv An11I• 11; LH, E11"tr It. •nd M1rv Rvlfl lllowland !If Gr•nl, Sln:t lYlt M. 1MI J61!n M. II: l!l'llM, l'r1nt" 1nd J•mts Rlch••d I J111u11. Ev1 Suu•ne 11111 J••l'ltl lllobtrt w11111m1, '•IMll Ind Oivld G. Tol!'llOll, LllCllll 0 . t nd Wltrlt"' Htnf"I' Thomp1on. M•111•rll A. Ind Mlcllnl o , l"ltn>llrldC, Donni• A. 11111 Cht rln 11;. Cr•to. S.lldr1 1111 tncl Lours Lt l'OY If Ho!!/1, Tt!treu11 A. •no M.ltk A. Ill: 2e!ltr. Thom11 t-tcw•rll 11111 Ctrolvn II Loulte K ftlummer, HMtCt Ec!Wlirds •ncl Allee ti! Henrfell• A P091l. Mlrv G. 1nd Don •. !!r G1rt11, Memorv Svt incl M11tin ~ Ylnctnl Roo~r. M1rl111 Ind llloul G~\ { ~r°"""n M1r!1 '"' O/llln "'' tt klnt, !TU!lln Al1n Mid Jtrl!H I{ ,tNAL OIClll:l!l l t: 1111.,.. OlcMlllfr 14 R i1te1. Elhtt t . Ind OIOrtt l . (ti Lt!'IFl<fr!\, Ntnn L. tlld II-kl n. ~ l <lwn. M•rv Chtrml•n 1n11 lteytlt I(, I HtrrlllOl'I. TlllYI I . tMI EdW•rCI J. .. Buellrne11, S.nclrt M11111r11 • n d WllU1m Lff C•l'fl"'911. J•nol lll'ld Huth Curll• I W•ln!o, J1 A!'lnltll •ncl Ottinll .-.111n Ev1n1. lt1rmond Mtrlln e nd JM!'I Wllten llftWCt. D•nltl c . 1M Slltrrll M. Btllrtndf, Mllllred TtYlor •nd ltoblrT Allen • Ii M<:Gtl, Cort S. •RI! Onlllt W. BONU~ OFF.Ell FREE--- 18.8 Stainleu St ... Sat.cf Se1. 11¥1til purchaee ol s499s Wll(IOMI ~ 1111 -"*.:a. '"-rlncs 0111111 m1rqui1e dil"'ond brid91 MC. &low wilfl t t"euMnd liJhtL $900 THE SET ' both riltgs 588.00 l 4·karot ...... DJ ,.ao.. ;<Md. llluWot'°"1 enlorc;ted. lob o .,.or to poy! 0 OMEGA '"' ,,,w ... .,.tfi"9 Seo· ,,...,,.,, Alllo"'o~to!· ly 11111 .... cloy fN:I !ht dolt. 14JC Mlid geld IO¢>, ... bol:k. B·l 4K yellow or whi~ M)lid gold brocelet ... k. · · sizaooo CHARGE IT! • . . ", . .. . . •.#~ .... 4 •• ·: : w ........ ....... t~lr y11low or w~lle 901.f • Hill-' Hin. IW .... -... SW..., .... ""-· l4.( ,.-lc>w or whi• ~ Y•2 ·S19.9S BULO\.A. l. C1101l11•hnc "'••ktfl c• • t•l~P•l•e 0' 01Y11'hlf ~tl' lt ,ewrl1. '''· l .r.•tt<" .. ~ l••IH "'O!htl• cf-ot•'t •!JI. 111, .. 11 •• : ,, ......... ,11. Accutron· by BuloYa Dla.-..it a"' G 111ulite ltu~I• HUNTINGTON CENTER lloich I. Edlngor Huntin9ton IMch '92-5501 Oulll'lll'lf,TIYM.lndJlr!\tlE. ~ T•"E••UtlYE·•rOP ·v ' Orr, lldft I, 1nd VI J'llJt H. p; " ,.. "' "' HARBOR ~;:,i::~~ ~:!f1~11L!u1'.,nd.~v~1~;,1 s. • L~VAWAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS. SHOPPING CENTER ll•rmtr, J•l•nt l11t •1111 Oon•ld Gtnt ,... NO PAYMENTS 'Tll JAN. '71. :~:~·IC;,:111:1:~ ,:nl!r::t A~otMrt • CHARGE ESTAILISMEO 43 YEARS 2300 Herbor llvd, J ~~~~~.:: t ;:;: ~=:: :: l IAllKAllllllCUO , "Tho S "h . C f d B I Coste Meta "'"'1110t1, 0t1or" J. '"" 1o11b11 w, 1 1 KIRK tores r at on i ence ui t" 54•9,.5 Erleutn. Luer M• •nd 1111-~ - OKJt.vt. Ml111lt 0 , Ind ,eltr J, 1·=·=·= .. =-=· = .. ~-=~ ... =-=-=""'=""=·=-=-=~=-=;:-=·=-=·=-=·=-==-=-=-=·=·=-=-=-=-==·~-=-=-~-~-=-~-==;-:::-=·=-=-=-=-=-=-=·=-==-=-=·=·=·=·=-=-=·=-==== Corti••· Wll11tl'l'I l'r1nk!111 11111 $tllllll11 Kolt koWl-1. Lll'ld• G. •1111 lt-k:I A. ., • , . ' " . . . ' .JO OAILY PIL OT Wedntsday, De<tmbtr 23, 1970 ' ' :L/N;,IRIJIJK . ·HARDWA•i , I I ., ... ~ ..... FREE-STANDING SCREEN • s''"" h•• flMt,.. a..~. •n-d ,.ll•h•d 1-rou l•t•· • 11.,k -•h 'ul't•ln-31" wh .. •ill" hit!'!· '1199 7 Piece POLISHED BRASS ENSEMBLE • r111,,.. ........ "" Hte -hl·0°Matlc cartelflt. I With GMllNlll and 4 pc., ....... . '2J99 •••• 20'' ..... ROTARY MOWER ,,,,. ,,.,.. .. ,,_ Yw• la • Narryl" ... .----• .,.,.7 •. ","· , ........ --111e __ , .......... , .. .................... a" ,wrtl111 IM'9hr. """" p,.;_ TOYCHUT "A11 ,_,.,,.. .... fw ......... 1·• • lw r.y., ...,...., ....... c.._t, etc, ......... ltrybetty ,. •• ntW, t•·ftnWt. • 16"'hftihx 1t" .... , ..... , •. "'9· 14.95 '9'' kltl'tl'i•'• TABLE & CHAIR • J.,., thl thl._ ,., ••"'"·...__enc, ate. • s-tll!Jt _. .. aotd t99lly t• ,.JN, , .... $3''- C ... lr $J99 All ft•r~' SHOPVAC® • Pewert.1 m•t1r -.kN C ..... •lilp ... ,.. ... • l11cllll4es"I .. L 1fMl ._,hNt, . fl•aal., '""'"'· ............. .....,.. •U.L .,,,_..._, __ .... ...... " '19'' ............ 0.-... 1/4" CHUCK DRILL • H1.,.y0i611ty 1.t •""P 1'111t1r, 4•••l•pt ,.,,UO r.p.m. • Trt11.,. 1wttdt with l•dll111 ltvtten, • 0.-4 chvcll •"' kfy- U.L _,,,.v14. •••• •••••• •799 ----s.t., a.c. 2• -, " ......... PET TO"(S . • lteckht9 1tuffen f•r y•u• , ...... .,. '"' •r de9. . ...... ,, ..... 11Mh14as.,.ur ......... ~ .. yt .,..,. .. teyt. 39c 9 C•p lledrk PERCOLATOR "'•rf1ff C•rf•• ,_.,ry Tlm•I" • Caffff k&atch 1l~11i1r chelce ef ,.111, pom ., ... " ..... • U.L .,,....,... -tltll Yffr ,_ ... , ... .... $S~4t '3'' SANTA .••. I W91JLD LIKE.... TO SAY -11.Etlef-Cl/glSTMA~ TO At.L ..... F,ROM. AL:L OF US, ~T J.,/N-BROOK.' ------- • ~ • -,-:Z......, ... ·9'cw1n1111---•M•A.1L .. .,P ... . ~ -: "" CLOAD~DAY' 241'H-tl'etl' BAR·B-Q ENSEMBLE "Quciflty ffffur•1 Ocilor•" • l11ch1••• lar .. INllustaltla <"'"-""'•Pktt•d 9rill artll 1plr. • 6" wMel1, ._. 1Mlf afld U.L .,,...,. ... .ot1r wfth ••"'• evt .,... • ... $12." '8'' 20'' Fl,.-ploce - GAS LOG SET • • J1i11t Ilka a ,.., w1ed fi r• with 11• • Incl•• b•rn•r .. --;,11h olr all(Vl"liiiilir' . •"" thrff ,.•llttlc ,., .. • ... $11 ... ··~· .. ·~· .. niaster charge "' . ······ ' ... H_,.. SWAG·A·IRADE "J,oHlt•r -SjMcla/ VoJ-.tl" • 21 " le119, llMll·llka ahact.- ltni .. hi-.11 lllfftp with dwiln a"d aN ~ ha.nhll'•ra. Ra9. $f.9S Your Choice '699 He-II FLORENTINE SWAG "'Wf a Utrla Utlit In Y-r lffaf" • ... 1.11011 tin• In amMr, 9ree11, My .,. whit. ""Ith bro•-•m• , .... with all .,., .. ""Y -~ . •... ''·" ......1c-....... . LAVATORY FAUCET • ftrecnnllnecl fouc.-11 } hHvlly ch,..._ plcrtH. •&.?~_. ........ h.91 • Acryllc O)'ltal•llke hendl••· • ••• $9." ·6~.' .. ,..,. .. , DISHMASTER • Y•w chelc. et •c~ •r-11-nt.· •••• ~9.95 '33'' $ ,,,.,. CUTLERY SET ,. ''follly Mcrtcll•d--Ctratom ~aft1d/" • lw9lc•I 1~111.._1 ltlaMt wtth poll.it.II re.ewoall ... .. 111 .... • S ••tnt 1hclfP k11lv•.- 1..-r ... d •lit••· •••. $2.19 ·1~~-.... ~ ~o c.,, BUFFET PERK • C.ffee fer• -w.n lhe tN1 hilly _.._..k H cwp ,.rtt. ~ • U.L .,.,..~1 Y"• .. ,...,.., .... ... " '7'' ..,,... ! 3 SPEED BL.NDER •l1lld1tate .., ..... ~file•• ltffl '-''"-• c•(ll it~'lt1 a.... . ' • U.L "W"....d -.,..... w-11ty. .... $17.ff : ,, '13'' PRICES HONORED AT BOTH LOCATIONS! LIN-BROOK HARDWARE -ANAHEIM e LIN-BROOK HARDWARE -FOUNTAIN VALLEY • • . ' - -, ! I ; ! ,, t .. · •' " ! ·< I' ., ' ' r Wot~, -2l, 1970 DAILY PILOT , J J America's Cap 9J Letters to Santa Dear Mr. S. Claus, Ix too little to write whit he wants, so I am writing for him. Some baby toy 1, pajamas, some oew clOthti pleaae. I want to thank you for whafe.ver you brlg,g. .·Br t~h, A~~-ie~ Ja'kB~tl Widow's J)ld Boat " I hope you have a merry ;Christmas. Please at our )lliwse leave a bonda 70, some !boots, football, minny TV act, l'!lllnny sailboat. • . '-y name ls Gary G. Wajtney • ar Santa World Join Chal~nge,_s says, · • NEW YORlt CAP) -Britlah yldlll. stri~~ ' I am going to tell you what I ' ant for Chtjs~. I V.'ant l ¥>me red go go boots and a Love, Micllael and Robby Deaf Santa, J I have been i good boy all year and l want a surfboard, Hot Wheels Siulers, Hot Wheels Track, Do u b) e SQeedoineter, Thanks a I o t LOS ANGELES (AP) -Tbe and-Australian challenges for TJie EJtclish challen1e'casne • -. ~i~ -~ weather-beat~, aging sallboa~ the' 1973 America's CUp race from the Roy a I Thames are or Ls ready tor Davy Jones were received•Tuesday by the Yacht Club, London, and was locker. Bu1 to a S!-year.old NewYoltYicht Club. signed by Comm.odor,~ by go bye ~)'~ and a white t-llble with a zipper. wldo u Ellsworlh J°"" but 'I h • e -~tbe~ tbeworld. Tbe • "NYYC said t ·be_ . clpala .,.ere not knOwn to ~'!..ti , "ts Anna JohnJon. •.)VDU of the A@&auan challenge w • • rt;.~N\'Vc , _ ~ ge -Santa. : signed Kendra "ll>eqr Santa 'Ibis year~ want to have a ;baby go_ bye bye an~ i Mickey Dear Santa I want a dog. I want a playcar, I want q. doll ~foot ktlcb li•es on it tendered by the secretary of -..~ .......::.:. b I I Ix ' . the Royal Sydney Ya c b t •n. i.;1-..e!Cts r ng o s weekends, telhn1 interested Squadron on behall of Sir the number tendered thus far • · bidders lbat her boat isn't for Frank Packer. p 1 ck er' s for the 1973 race. • tnouse phone and pogo stick ! Jnd a P. J. and a shaggy dog fJ,nd ror ·my mom I want to get ji Hoslest gown a size 12 and I . want to get some boots, o.k. :for the bo(>ts. M e r r y ·Christmas and a Happy New Year. by by good old Santa Claus. Dee Dee sale. syndicate backed Gretel 1£ in The deadline for filing is Dear Santa Sometimes she just sits on thJ)970 ClJp race for 12-meter Sunday. from Julie Blum Dear Santa. t want a teddy bear and stuffed dog. and SllOOllY· Why do you come at Night? Lisa Whealy Dear Santa I want bicycle and bicycle lock and bicycle light and a blanket. Jeff Halley Dear Santa Claus I would like a chalkboard a~ mini deck of cards for · NEW HOM-E _Robert and Maxine Barber of Los Christmas. I would al9o Uke a A 1 and H nolul ta d bes.de their new cata· whole bunch of dresses and nge es o u s n I . t and dolls and maran Ono Kai which will become their home at ~o~~s for ao~ dolls and Marina del Rey. Ono 'Kai is a Polynesian Concept especiall 1 want some kn!Ung . class catamaran produced by W. D. Schoc~. for tools so~ can knit and some television actor Buddy E bsen who owns the or1_g1nal balls of yam to make mexlcan Polynesian C9ncept. The 37-foot cat was desl,i:!ned goods eyes and to make tblngs by Choy Seaman and Kumlale of Newport Beach, out of yam when I knit. Yours truly, Beth Strauas Dear Santa Claus, Down the Ways lhe deck watching the sea gulls and other boata as they 1 come;1a ud out of the tiarbor, For: 11 years -sin« the day be.lore Mrs. Johnson's huiband ciled.ol a heart attack -the boat's motor hasn't run. She explains that she keeps thf! craft -with its broken planking, sagging riggin1 and unpaint'ld sides -f t r sentimental reasons. "I feel close to my husband here," she says. On a $600 a month bookeepei.'s salary, M r s . Johnson pays $131:1 a month for the bOars mooring, "I go without a great deal I WISTCLl•F PLAZA OPIN I VIS, 'TIL f TMlll.I CKllllTMAI I would like a bike for Christmas my brother Tim would like a ten speed bike. 'tirn ind J have been very good this year. I am sure your elves are very busy but if you can please get us our bikes. , Love Wendy and Tim Jolley Dear Santa Claus. I want a bunch of Dawn's clothes and a bunch of and her fashion sho"· I also want Dawn's sofa phone &et and her fashionahow. l also want a tlddle Kiddle house like I got LaurJe or betttr, with the dolls in it. all my regarlill, Ebsen Produces New never eat out, never go to the At Th• Ntwporter lft11 movies. I scrimp oa1food and"==================:;::= •• Merry Christmas to you. · Cathy. 646-181& :~Dear Santa .. ' I want Football suit. Johnny ,Lightning 5 O O, basketball, Mighty C a s e y , Dunebuggy wheelies, walkie t a I k i e s , Sizzler, Sk.itUe pool, Road runner, G.I. Joe, Kenny Hall Dear Santa Clause, I am being a g_ood boy. And J a m trying not to cry too much. I help my mom with chores and with my little brother. I also helj)ed put up our Christmas tree. Even after Christmas J promise to be the best boy that I know how to be. For Christmas I would like you to bring me some of these things. Hot Wheels, Track, a tank, a big wheel, Leg.o, a new belt, Especially I want n e w pajamas. My brother Robbie Smuta Dear Santa I would like a ???: Train set, a desk and hot wheels, cotin candy. rock n' sock n' robots, radio, football set, dunebuggy, popcorn mak.ing set. camra, football game set, show n' tell, ant farm with ants and food. Santa I am s:Y, l well see you at Bulfunu. The cat.s want collar, toy, rest spot, mat, bells, toys. Scott Dear Santa Here is my Christmas list. We are bery busy and cant come Jo see you . Gas Engine, dune buggy, hot wheels, mongoose snake, sizzler and juice machine, silly string, SSP-yellow Lany Chapman A Chri1tm•s Wot1hi p lnv it•tion .. CHRIST CHURCH BY THE SEA United Methodist I'® W. Balbo• Blvd., Newport Beach CANDLELIGHT CHRISTMAS EYE SERVICE December 24-7:30 PM Theme: "CHRISTMAS IS" An Expre11lon in Celebration by Instrument and Voice •IMMr the d/rectfe11 of Mn. MM Dn'I« "A Christmas Meditation" by Or. Ray C. Gery clothes all because or Anna." 1. Polynesian Concept The boat's radie a nd refrigerator need repairs. The oriental rug ia the cabin needs cleaning. Ono Kai, the second Polynesian Concept Production catamaran produced by teleVlslon actor Buddy Ebsen, will become the home of owners Robert and Maxine Barber of Los Angeles and Honolulu. The 3'l-f09t Ono Kai was launched Saturda y at Boatswain's Locker, Newport Beach, following a g a I a breakfast at the Stuf t Shirt Restaurant. 18 Events Scheduled Ebsen was master of Barnacles need to b e ceremonies and introduced scraped oU the boat bottom. Rudy Choy and W a r r e n "I can't afford to keep her Seaman, de.signers of the Polynesian Concept class of up like I shoo Id," she says. catamarans, and w. D. •·vet, I can't see mystU Schock, the builder. selling the boat. I just freeze whenever someone asks me if The boat was launched with she'• for sale." the traditional Polynesian The Johnson! Initially picked blessing by Hawaiian priest Anna out as just the right boat David Kapahulehua who flew to sail around the world. to the mainland for the occasion with Hawaiian Jets. Johnson died as the couple prepared to depart. Barber, an e I e ct r o • "A few days before Ray mechanical engineer, said he died we bought new sails for and his \Vife Maxine plaMed Our big cruise. They've been to Jive on the Ono Kai at Villa stored in a locker all these del Mar in the Marina del Rey years. never used. area. He hopes eventually to "It doesn't make sense," the sail the craft to Honolulu. widow adds. "I know that The first Polynesian Concept better than anyone. still J was designed for Ebsen by hang on lo Anna. ·F E .lurO-Choy, Seaman and Kuma1ae. OJ!.--: -Du m television actor raced the "Anni owns me. 1 don't own ' for that last minute 9ift id•• -; • , only et fashion t1lend l.111•1m1ri~•r• e Jl'lltftr chtr91 1 ft1hiH ltl•Rtl, ll•Wpofl c.nltf 644°5010 boat to• Hoooluh1 in the Anna.'' • -lnttrnational---&peedboating's MOltlhull ... 'ft'lnspic-n -ce-and --..... -=~~=~=~~--=-~-=-====-~-=~ most demanding enduro -the was the handicap wiMer. He third annual Long Beach. ed · · B ·1··• •·-Invitational Marathon of later rac it U1 n 1511 wa\G~ Champioru -and the National around the Isle or Wight. Ebsen beca m e 10 Drag Boat Assn . National tha Championships are features or enamoured of the yacht t , the 1971 Long Beach Marine he formed a company to Stadium special e vent 5 produce others like it and schedule approved thl.s week commissioned Schock to do by the city's recreation the building. The rirst commission. producUon number went to Eighteen events were Jim Kimberley, widely known sanctioned for the 10,000..seat sportsman, who sailed it from facility -nine for powerboat.!, Newport. to his home in eight in club and Florida. Intercollegiate r ow i n g and Ono Kai was launched on the another for an annual Girl 194th anniversary of the fi rst Scouts of America water catamaran designed and built sports carnival. in the United States. the Bookstall Everyone deserves ' at least one book for Christmas P••••------·~•______..--.. ... .,. ••• ,... ••• ..,. •••••• d I . I FOR DREAMING GIVE: I w I This Gih Keeps Giving I I I I I ll I ll' I i Here's a package familiar to disce rning 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 it. This package is filled with ads, photos, feature1r and the freshest news we could find to help you enjoy the holiday season. I I ROD McKUEN'S ... IN SOMIONFI SHADOW (A CM.el .... I. 14.11 ITANYAN STltln AND OTHll SOllOWS. $4.IO PMltlt 14. JJ,fJ FOR INSPIRING GIVE: The Prophet TWILYI YIAl! Of CHltlS'fMAS (A CJrtnel hM;I. SJ.JO LONISOMI CITllS. S4.IO LllTIN TO THI WAIM, 14.10 PKltlt 14. tJ.fl by KAHLIL GIBRAN This past year alone, 400,000 people in search of lile's meaning turned to Gibran's masterpiece -today it ts even more read and loved than when it first appeared 47 years (and 3112 million copies) ago. 85th printing. $4.50. Pocket ed. '$4.50 Deluxe $10. FOR CREATING GIVE: Mastering the A rt of French Coo~ing VOL.. 1 ANO VOL II •12.SO IAC~ at the Bookstall I JU I . 17th IT .. (OITA MllA 14M'11 ~-::~::.:::::~::::~~----------1--==-----'f'-_,_'"_=_~-~~-::1 _______ •_•_~_•_~~-H-~------==--DAILY PILOT CLvc your male animat'sotne wild stripes {or Chrislmas , .• Jack Bidwell has a. hug~.stock of striped 1sllir(S,~·ue,, ,sP.ort co ats and · sla~ks .~,some d amesti cat~; sollf, wi \~.Just think what a ijpl(to~)V,.tofor~ ful shirt will do for.hfs tame grey Suit Jack alsO has great sport coats-camelhair, hop• sack and corduroy along \Vith a full line of acceSlioties. Stop in and lerJac~ sfiowyou · how easy Chrjstmas hun ting can be. Bidwell's o( Ne"]lort, 3467 Vi.t Lido, Newp~rt Beich, 673-4510 • ' f • . . - -, ,. • . ,. • • . 7·' • • ~ , . . ' Ideas, . . • " , . • .. . to-the Gflristm·a:s Place~ ... Nylon tr1cot half slip and panty set for sizes 6·18 in 85SOrled colors. $1 Girls' panty ho9e In assorted colors. 1 &iZe fits sizes 10-16. 2 for $1 ·-- Boys' never-Iron Penn Prest 11 short sJeeve sport shirt in assorted stripes, sizes S.18. Boys' never-iron Penn Prest> polyester/cotton jeans. Flare leg in assorted colors. Sizes &-18. regular and slim 3so ••ell • Woman'• pmrty ho9e In faslllon shades. · Sizes petite/medium and medium tali/tall 129 Women's nyk>n tricot robe quillad to Kadel• poly8ster,Uned with · acetate tncot. d!llSS length ExciUng fashion colors. Size 10-18 $11 1 38-44 $12 'Ro98 Misr floral pattern towel ensemble In fresh ·yeliows. pinks or blues. • Bath towel.1.75 Hand towel 95c Wash cloth 55c I M8,f1•s 'Frevlra ties . 1CKt'Jb polyester In stripes, p&tterns, solids. Wasliable. 2so • • Triacetate/nylon n..... I • robe, 16 warm anct·,..._, Dress ·length In. Iha 1 pretii~t solid. colo.,,. MiSSts, 10-18 $11 Woman. ~8-44 $12 Men's stretch hose of Orlon® acrylic/~lon. Nylon reinforced heel and toe, cushioned sole. Assorted colors. 1 size 1its ell. $1 • Pretfy print blankets in lots of colors and prints. In a great blend of polyester/rayon. .~6 _x 90 twin,_ 5"'-"9_9_ 80 x 90 full, 699 Men's long point conar dress shirts; long sleeve, 2 button cuff; assorted solid. fashion shades in Dacron ® polyester/cotton. • 14 1/2·17 neck, 32-34 sleeve. 598 Short sleeves, $5 Krinkl!> patent handbags end bronco grain expanded' vinyl bags in all the prettiest shapes. Krinkles in blade. brown. ginger. cil)ll8l'llOIL Bronco grail)S in black. birchwood, bone, sable. $6 . ' Penn Presti•peJarne: notch collar and pullover styling. Poryester/combed cotton in prints and solids. $-M.L·XL $5 Now all Penney stores open 8 nights a week, Monday through Saturday for your shopping convenience • • CHARGE THESE VAL.UES AT YOUR L.OCAL. PENNEY STORE I • ' r----~-:----":""-------------------":"';""' ___ ..,... _________________________________ ~------~~----..-- .. , ~en __ _ ' BEA ANDERSON, Edit0r , .......... ~U.11'9 , ..... ' toottnc 1or a p.n!ct Christmal·llli for lhat lut ~ on pur 1111, the one· "bo .. has tveey;thq?"' ' ' ' ' 'l'ry I budbai Ga f~Jiu . . · ' . '. 'tbiirs· one 'of the bea•Ueo of buyipg a handbag -any· siJe il'ftne. The qiiestlon of 'aij.tlblllty_; is_ ·avoided al!o, fOr every ~ -"i_a new l!andbq. :::::!i"Z~-....... "'...- ' /t. ~· ~ gilt ,Is the lllnd of-ht.*he·~'women hattMe to buy .d........_!..,;f,' •J I for. 14bUit!IVes:--the ·very d1' e 1 s y ~~; bjte. the ~i or eveou:i& bq, tbe""8 jn an olfbeat color. ~ ,that are not utilitarian abo are favorites, ,the ,fraiiJ• and JIOt.a<>lrqlle bqa of peou de 1Qie 0< vel,.~ liJv<r· and gOld'kid.cr-meUI. sat.in, cobN, suede, 1n black ..-white puteb. Some new.fubiom in bap are quilted, emboaed. embroidered (butt.erflles a r e important this season), beaded, bejeweled, hwig from the shoUlder on a klag, slender tuseled chain or clutched in the hand. Tbeae baga m llttle bilh fashioo wwu of ~ delllgoed lo be uaed and cherished loog after'the bollday ....... baa paued. Another type of handbag that is lmportAnt is the bag designed for rtlbrt wear. These -an specifically made t o aeceuoriie the' c1otbes that will be worn by· t)ie ~ who' ski, bask ip the sUnsblne or fly to tbe more exotic islands to escape the chill of winter. Most fU.n.type bap are medium size or rather large this seuon. They are offered in • 'wide range •of colors as well u 1pecial look! auCb· as tie.dye. Fabric1 choices are .'varied . including CJUl.VU, su~e. cobra, patent, smooth lea'then, lizard' or combinations of two lealben. Any women wi:ll bo glad to "resort" to carryin9 • canvas tote ba9 (left). Other now ideas are evenin9 bags including 1 silver tone,cl motel box, --'--·-'-cobre-bo~l-4""' · i1tin"1nd golden mylar. Making • • H·:oliday Magic ...... ~ /11 ~; -..;..· Holiday glamour can go lo a girl's head and add sparkle.to the season. Here are four i:tr.etty things that can happen to a Christmas hairdo (from left to right): a Jong synthetic braid worn as the third strand in a long braid of your own bair i-• I I ' 3 4 gold bulterlly pin worn In your own hair or plMed Into wig ; a long beaded braid coiled into your bun, and a spiral· Ing golcL cbilllOD cap for your own bun or 1 take. -· I .. . .. ' . . --· .. • • . Midi Issue Skirted For Survival Quest By MARIAN CHRISTY NEW YORK -P.1illions of Amer.ican e\egantes are by-passing midi fashions because they're preoccupied with a new. er dilemma -the simple matter of sur· viva!. The relevant pressing question is: Will people or the near and distant future have fresh air to brealhe? It is NOT: Should we (()wer our skJrtS'! Party chitchal, especially in upper- CfU5l circles, tends to pooh-pooh frivolous fashion controversy and zero in on future gear like asbestos coats as protection fr()m the bomb and lhe wearing of gas masks, not hats. against polluted air. Rudi Gernreich, one of !ashlon's most- brilliant designer-poets, recently had a graphic say on the subject. His Spring-Summer 1971 collection fea- tures short military clothes and -get this -guns instead of handbags, GI dog taps lnstead of jewelry, ·protective gog- gles instead of the usual gobby eye make- up. Rudi is thinking today, tomorrow and down with all this 30s nostalgia other de- signers are dishing out as "fantasy" fash- ion. And then his shattering, terribly hone st comment: FUNKING OUT "Designers are totally funking out. Don't they know what's going on?'!.. - If the world's top designers, Rudi ex· cepted, aren't ''aware," at least one gi- ant cosmetic-perfume company -Dana -is plotting a serious but clever cam- paign to convince fashionables not to throw aWay their empty perfume bottles but1 instead, to find fabulous alternate uses-for them. • ~company has commissioned a New York artist, Robbie Capp, to design a serie1 of unique glass sculptures using empty perfume bottles of varying sizes and shapes,-lt-beall burning lhe botUes and fouling up the air. Already the Creer Gallery, In the shadow of New York 's Museum of Mod- ern Art, is thinking about a 1971 eXhlbit of the bottle i!ICUlpture because it's far more contemporary than Andy Warhol's Campbell soup cans and Kenneth r{olan 's famous stripe paintings -both of which are among the most-cherished trappings of the rich. Greer counts among il'i regul.ar clients Andy Wl\llams, Betty Fu.mess and Rob- ert Merrill. Besides, Mrs. Capp last year turned ~ut a aerle1 of paintings made en- tire\y from lipsUck. They've become '°1-· lector's items and the artist's name ii "established " -However, the perfume company hopes that lhe idea will sell to the mMses ratti- er than the chosen teW. The hope is that imaginative women everywhere will dash out tQ their nearest hardware store, buy a tube of doe-step epoxy glue and do their own thing with bo\tles . LmERBfT Ladies who think less lmaginativeJY~an use the bottles as vases, candlestick hOJd· e~s and place-card markers. D~n11. -'~ n1ng an extensive media promotiO{l. -'JiI1 use the slogan: "It can help a litter'bit..>• Perfume industry figures indicate-~it ln;1971 Americans will buy I' st.irUfug 275 million bottles of s w e e t smelling stuff. It doesn't take a mathematical genius to figure out that when the boUleS· are burned -which is their u.iual burial -another black cloud or ~lluted fir will hang over us all. A little ca0; end up helping a ·lot. • , Another good reason for reuslng ·bot- tles: • Everyone knows there's a Ught;meiiey squeeze going on and even the ;wpi:la's most famous best-dressed, like th( fords aod Kennedys, aren't throwing aw'1.thett last year's couturier fashions but art, in- deed, wearing them in public. So why throw away bottles?,. • lt1s not nearly as absurd as It sounds OD the surface. A Dana executive last week wandered into a snobby Madison Avenue leather boutique and the sales- man, a frien d, told him that one of the shop's most important Park Avenue cli- ents had bought and returned a $5 key case because her husband, a s~ock mar· ket enlrepeneur, was furious she hadn't gone to the local five-and-dime to buy a "more reasonable" key case. The Dana executive surmised that tf the rich were harried about a $5 expeocH- ture, perh~ps the entire country was on a less-obvious economy kick and some- thing like bottle sculpture concelv1b'1 could be-a 1971 atatus symbol. That old trick of perfuming lingerie drav.·ers with empty bottles just isn;t enough anymore. That was yesterday's gesture and without impact. Informed people like Gernreich and'Dana have lM message : The clothes-cologne syndroV" must relate to what's coin& on. ' • J -· -Pet Problem's Not Cancer • DEAR ANN LANDERS, I am a 14- year-Old girl who needs an answer-t.!&ht away. Plu!e hurry because I haw a dote with this BUY Saturday nliht. · 1s ii true that heavy pe~ lelds lo breast cancer? Llkt I said , <pteue hurry, -. TERRI U. HURLEY, N.M. ~ DEAR TERRI: He1vy peUJaa doll eo1 ANN LANDERS ~ Yi!e al once. -TEXAS TENTERHOOKS lead lo breast cucer but It CAN lead et "i · o!Hr dllng1. Cool II, Kiddo. ' tt1uons of .epa.ratloa, ~ or the no- tion. that ou mlcht be Inj\lriool! lo their heallll. So cllllk one up Jor the old motlo, "Use U or tote tt." -........ DEAll T.T.: Do llOt -llct'Ule p1'1 part11tl. 1& woald 11rve DO ue1a1 porpo .. .aa4 II mltU create...-trouble "=~ ... , ... d•IA't.r- -;~~Golfers 'Putt' Some C,heer in the Bag .:~~·ta .;,ade a detour on his way to the Albert ·Si tton --lfeme to stop at the Mesa Verde Country Club and ",<!Qltect some additional gifts. Providing th~ toys ~44:f;re members .of the Mesa Verde Women s Golf ~CJ,µD, who fortleited their member exchange for .·-1.· ' . . ' • Pamela Fetterling -_Wed to Lee Boone -Ce.rmany will be home after -.-:S~-honeymoofl for Lee Allen ling, who exchanged-pledges in Our Lady Quee• of the Angels Cathol.ic Church, New. port Beach. ~ne and his bride, the idliner Pamela Ann Fetter-. :; .... 1 The Rev . Raymond Sa pa Us officiated for the double ring rites linkhi1g the daughter and son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur E. FeUerling Jr. and Mr. and ~1rs. Donald E. Boone. all or Costa Mesa . • ;J ,,.. Attending her sister as maid of honor was Miss Lori Lynn Fetterli._g. and iterving as bridesmaids were Miss Diana : Kee[e, ti1iss Melinda_ Boyce .. and Mrs. Bradley D. Harrold, sister of the bridegroom. F1ower girl and ring bearer were Lesley Ann Spraker and Christopher Harrold, nephew or lhe bridegroom. Michael Todd Boone was hi.! brother's best man. a n d ushers were Roderick Jurney, 11arrold a11d Kirf Fetlerling, broth er of thl' bride. Both of the newlyweds are J.tt"" ,...111 graQu ates of Estancia High School and he is an alu1nn11s or Orarrge Coast College , "'here she is a student. 'Ji RS. LEE BOONE · .• '.,:' S•Y' Vows ;:8:etrotha I Told .. ,-.• . ' '. ·. ·At Annual Tea ...... ,. . thrlsty Farrell of Newport , ~h. and Steven William .Foster of Laguna Beach are Jli•nnlng a June 26 wedding in , .... · ' ,., I '. ' " . " •• ~t· •• ... • . " .I .;~. -. , . . . • ' . ' . • • ' . :.i;!l'ime --•. AT LAST ••. LADIE S SUEDE BOOTS HAVE ARRIVED WISTCLI,_, Pu.I.A , .... , .. the second year to bring gifts for the children. Pul- lin!? some Christmas hdppiness in the ba,g are (left to right) Mrs. Delmar Hamre. tournament chair· man, and Mrs. Dean Olson, vice chairman. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are remind ed to have their wedding stories with black and .1'1hite Riossy P.hoto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens o .. partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time will not be used. For engagement announcements it . is imperative that the story, also accomparued by a black and white glossy ,picture, be s~~ mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. II deadline is not mel, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories. forms are available in all of !he DAILY PILOT offices. Further que.Stion~ wiU be answered by \Vomen's Section staff m embers at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Honeymoo n Cruis e Rites Read • North . ' DEAR ANN LANDERS: You're I>"'" I hope you'll prinl Ibis, Ano. 11 mi&hl bably slck and tl"'1 of tettm lhnut tlW • encourap ...,. of-the old catlen who ' psycholo1Y professor who claims sex in write to you. ~ENJOYING IT AT marriage ls not Important. I'm enctoolni 76 IN KITCHENER. ONTARIO. • YOll AODl,J•lt'lt'ever, let Hr bow 10• ... ann ol ....__~, ud lllol a clipping from a news story out·of Lo~ DEAi\ JDTCB: fte .W 1 1afhn ftt don that shou ld settlt the conltovusy. wrtle 11 me dla't NEED ....,..em.&. , ..... wllllq le ..... tdo lier wltll -1e ........ if tllle ....... I(,. Slllow ... Two· British scientists wrote. in tlJe:lr Jt'1 ta.Ir wkit1 wM.,. wrt&bll •ml - book "Slxty PIU3" that it ls a grave ud ~ ls wbt ..,..,. _, -. mistake to allow their se:ruaJ krve maiinc Ttibb for YMll' teuei. I'• wtdt U.... to die away u couples get older. "If they 1cteadlb froa Old npc,. continue to enjoy .sex as long u they live," wrote the scientists, "they will be happier, more relaxed. and healthier." .. , .... dis ....... dn'I lry 'te-l!l'uk ., lier frlo ..... lp -... pt. It -·1 ...rt. M.....,, h mfPI bolld a Will "'1dl lalermfPI-·--·· One of the authors, Dr. John Maddison is the founder of the Clinic for Preveptive Medicine at Teddington . He wrote, "The ·wise men of India and China believed that regular sex activity wu the key to eternal youth." CONFIDENTIAL TO ANNOYED, IB· RITATED AND BURNED TO A CRISP' . A pod way to measure a persoh is by the size of the thlngs that bother ~· How will you rue& when 101Dethlng of REAL magnitude occurs. DEAR ANN I.ANDERS ' I wrote lo'°" last month uyln,l l tboucbt my 1$-year- old daughter wu pllinfr loo .friendly wtlh a girl I was IW'e wu a lublan. You ukl unless' I bad more than a hwlch to forget it because it is· not .ynnatW"ll for sirll to be chummy at thls oge. J have now in my pouession letters Jf yoa m e &roable 1eUlq: "911 wltb Dr. Maddison went on to prove hi! thesis by citing laboratory .studies which showed that regularly mated rats re- mained in far better health than. rats who were isolated from tile opposite sex. Ex· tensive interviews with patients rtvealed that married couples lost the ability to function sex~Uy when they •bataioed for from UW <>!her glrl lo my dalllhte< !fhld> your ponoll , •• U ,... .. 'I I'!& tllem lo leave no room for doubt.. Jet yoa. Uve ytDr on llff, ..... fir Au Should I confront my dalJlhtet with the laden' booklet, 11~ b'J' Parata- e:vldera? Shottld I have a talk with. the Bow to Get More Fre61:U.,. s.d II girl's parenta? Would tberaPJ help my · c:eetl Ill c.la wldll yoar nqaett ·ad • daughter? She.seems happy and perfectly loq, 1tamped, Hlf.addrnaed a vl1ope ill nonnll ln every way. To look at bet care ol die DAILY PILOT. you'd oever 1111pecl a lhlz>&. P~ ad- Horoscope Leo: Bide Your Time THURSDAY, DECEMBE~ 24 By SYDNEY OMARR ARIES (1ttarcb 21-April 19): 1'I o n e y misunder1tandlngs soar to forefront. St! t t I e differences wfth m a t e • partner. Look to future. Keep potential in focus. Help one who also is willing to aid himself. TAURUS (April 20-~fay 20): Bright prosptcts appear if willing to accept a d d e d res pnsibil lty. Key is willingness to give spotlight to others. By taking temporary back seat, you eventually accelerate move forward. GEMINI (~1ay 21.June 20): Take itoc.k. Slow pace. -no so voluntarily or it will be done fbr you. ~tessaee will becqme . ~CIY clear. Tbtre is ·l ao1y · ..., much you c a n ,3ccomplisli at one sltUng. ·CANCER (June 21..July %2): ~void extravagance. Don't let Writing ' Contest Closes ti1ore than 400 children were expected to participate i'n the annual Children's \V r it i n g Contest sponsored by the Friends of the Fountain Valley Library which closed this ·week. Children, from kinde rgarten to eight h grade. could enter their work in the three categories of poems, short story and essay. According to ~1rs. Ronald Murphy, youth chainnan the entires will be judged on I ori,mallty, creativity a n d aUenUon to theme. The announcement or winners will be made-in January with a ~feet the Authors Tea from 4 to 6 p.m. on Jan. 21 in the Fountain Valley Commun ity Center. Parents will a~mpany their children to the tea and the winners will read lh~ir entries. impulse dominate toelc -It can be costly. Reallie this and recapture basic values. Hold back: on property decision. LEO (July , 13-~ug. 22): Obtain hint from Cancer message. Those who are in pos!Uon to direct also are likely to be quite stubborn. WINT[R PROGRAM Don't compound error. Bide our time. Check details. Be cautious. 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~I t 0WEEK COUR.SES ll J111. 4 to Mir. 6 VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): ~11-;;~11111 P•l•tl•t-Fl11re & Lai d· - Hold off on short journeys. tupe. O...wlit·Life & Steer clear or disputes with AHt••Y· Ceramics .. brothers, sister!, other close Sculpt.re Art History· relatives. Strive to recapture Jewelry I PHat Makl19 sense or humor. Don 't write C•tWn1'1 Art letters in anger. OtMr Hy aid eve1i19 UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' ........ Approved t.r Cbe<:k Ariel ~essage. Playing ..,._ __ _.'i•l•OL.•s veh1W11 games with financial serorltyl •U.S Writ. or pit.-fof Wodiuro: results in loss. Hold tight to • •·•~•,. • Ma.hr ca..,. (714) 4'4-1520 i ains. G u a rd possessions. 21 ,..,. 111 SOiM uutlN ' 6JO ._.._ Ca1 yea .... __ , k 2717 f. Co11t Hwy. i.. ha a. t26S1 There is no n~ to ta eii! ~c:,.:·~,.~·~·~' ~M~·~~~·~·~· ~'7~J~.1~91~0~~~~·~·~-~=·===~ unnecessary risks. Respond accordingly. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Some apparent legall complications ultimately "'ork1 in your behalf. Realize this and don't give up principles, ultimate g o a I . Temporary setback 11hould not deter you. Cycle is blgb. You'll win. SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22· .. ~-21): You get plenty of action in area previously quiet. Means su rpr isi n g statements, actions e o m e from unusual sources, commitments. Stick close to basic course. Refuse to panic. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19): Friends may be resentful over imagined slla:bt. Key is to let those who want to leave go . You will learn who cares and v•ho is fair-weather variety . Listen, observe and learn. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb. 18): Study Leo message. Problems with those i n authority may be order of day. Fresh viewpolnt couJd aid cause. Cancer-born individual may need your reassurance. Give It. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20)' Tf you rush off without partner or associate. you may have to retrace steps. Steady, sure p&ce is better than sensational advance. Si:e up one: who talks or get·rich-quick scheme. lF TODAY IS YOUR BmTRDAY you are mu.!ical : I FACIALS ~ Enjoyed by glamorous movi~. TV star11-at leading beauty spas. lll4 JOSEPHINE BLA~K R.E. (714) 538·9551 ....... _ '"' .... m.l!Mfl)' ,.,,,..,.. VIRGINIA'S SNI P 'N STITCH SHOPPE Ee,t Coest Hwy. e Coron• d~I Mir Phon e 673-1050 To All Ou r Many Friends • I ANKAMIR ICAID s., Y•u Soon! JACKIE FOR THE FAMILY SELECT FROM FAMOUS MAKES • DANIEL GREEN • EVANS • WELLCO •GROSVENOR • O"OMPHIES ALL SIZES -·COLORS -STYLES ' ' Peer ing Around . --------.. --- ..,,,. ''"'· Dectmber 23, 1970 DAILY PJLOt.~ J@ LEGAL Nmu;E ,....... Ulftfli&Te °' SUllMIU. llO'NCI 10 n•n,tc.t.fl "" MISINlllo ,ICTITIOVS ltNi!I Hotkit l* ,__ .. 1. flll ,IUITIOUI ltAMI Tll9 ""*<•ltflM lltU QttfltJ ht 1' Trv.t.n .. IM l'...,..,..n V TM ~ doM; cwtlf'I' M h -C91W11Ctllll t WtlftfM 11 7JO ltttMirfMI Oblfkt wUI rwc;Mw ..... .,,,. • i..i-,, -l#Ml\fltl Ory o;lft; .......... -..ell; C.llf•ole· ~ utll .. ,,,, •ltNll """"· MllM~ IMdl, C.llllwllla. """1 IN tilt .nctlriw. tlrrl\ n t ft'I t Of h#rllllllf't ~ .,.._., "• ~ 1'(M 1111'11 If l'M l"liltlo.IAllTV l'UJTIC$ 1111111\et M~ M• Mf!I ...,,,,..,,.. .. •m••c..._ .............. :. .. •zam. ..... .,,"'•a•l:.~.'f:~".!T:t~..=. ";;:.!: ~ i!:'fl::.r ..:-..:.~-.=.:.ea:..,. -;. 111t '*"' tft f\IU """·~ tif11 ,...IOtfK1 ._ •• It .. tot~ "-" ll1ttd .,._ 11 !'It M.ISSJON VIEJO Women's family; Incl~ ·Laurel and 1t11owt• · .,.. '"""" l-Jr.. .,. Slfleol Dlrtrld w.,.,.,.. Club mM.bers may dine out Ringo will pile into the ..!:.'i"*~·:,.J,\:-"'• il:I:';:'. 11~ ._. '""· ::'"::;..:=':':,;•::"· ; ~S'. twice this month ..... they feted famlly'1 camper and head b11e11 ,. .. ., G~!'rr'::' 111"' "'~...!.~.i!M-~1 ~=~"' :::;, ,.. 1 '-~ husbands during a dJnner h• south of the bolder. They plan ._.,,. ., 011,.,.1111, °'"'" c_,.,1 · 0n O.Ctmlltl' 21, 1m, bdor• -· • 1"""''1o11 "°""' ,,. •• .... the Al-"•" IM and 10me to camp 00 the beach·ln the Of!' De<4'1'1tiw 1, U1'11, MIOte ""' • '"''"' Pvtlllc '"Mid '..,. wN ''-"· w1,..,,....1:001.i.i.·f '"IDti-, r--Met1N Public h1 1M w· .... l1tt1, ,...,_ .. ., _..,..., ~ $'""*' IY newt .. iuro.w,. tflilf won free dinners from various sUMy port ol Mmtlan. IMl'MNlll" ... -....i P1ter o. ,;.,,,"'" Lor.t0. Jr, lrflOWll to -to tit IM..,_ HG11c11vo .. •· IS kMWfl Iv Mt to 119 t"9 ..,._ wl!OM .,._ -It t11DKrllltd to tM ,..""'" •111t <11'1 .,.. .,. ..,.,..~, -res .. uran . _ '* "''*'''*' to '"' "'""" 111-1n11n1mtt11 111111 ~k-ltdlld "' "*t.I'" 9flC:tOMd 1<1 1 '"'" 111 • Winner of the grand prite. a LEGAL NOTICE •'!"'~ •!'If •<know...,. 11e 1119'.uttd "'' .. -. to ''"' hll'd " Trv1ttt1. I d · ed b Mrs iflt .. ,.... t1ut.1 1111 '"''"'••lot clfrtl. Dll'tkf <ie11terp ece esign y • jOfFICIA.L S~AlJ -ELSll! I!, ~NSOM ' 1 Lltl'llllo;/M LIM. , Richard Johnson, went ~o Mr. SUl"llUOI; "c'#~T ,o, TM• MAt.Y l(, HENll.Y ...,..,., l"Ufllk . C'llllOl'llll C11IPo1'11l1 Oii ... """" ,., and "Mrs. Harvey -Steam. JTATiro, cACl,OllMIA"Jlo ~:~~~"~Lrllfnl• ~=-~~'" ·-;.:·.~~.,.:.~~-::'..;. _, Ent rt·•·-t Jn the fonn ot THI COUNTY Oii OUH• Orw-COl.ifiry M-, C-".io.. ExW. ltn If 7;3' .,,,.,_ nit ....... ' e llllllllen * A.... Mf Ctmml!Won lllllll'tt Alltllllt ,, tm ,...,.,.. flit rlll'tt 19 _,. --~ medley of ChrlsLmas carols NOTICI Of NIAt.IM9 OP ,.,..,.OM New. , .. 1972 ll'llbll,,,.,. Or•-('"" D1tlof llllot or •ti bids. I(( ?',. 811'( • "ded b the Just Us ll'Ot. ••OUT• Ofl WILL AHO "°" ll'llblllllfd Orlftlt CW.It O.IW ll'Uel DK.,,.,. 21. •• ltN end .i-.... 6. l:t, ITV.U TO •• •ID u~lir .... ''-was pro,.. y LITTl•S TllTAMla!TAllY ~ L '· It, 2:1. "'° tul-1' 1t11 t)f0.)11 ., 11ch Old ,.,,,. ,-·_,., ... !' .... S. ol MJ··· v1e1·0 £•"" tt HENllY "· HE$SLltt:. lllo tu"' ,...... • ingers ~on • .__11 ,, HEN•Y ll'AUL HESSLE1t. L.EGAL NO'rlr.E LEGAL NOTICE ""'11• .. ffdl ir ow ~,,. . OICff.... fWMdJ, :r1 MCfl Old '°'" dMln. I Joh NOTICE IS HE•E•Y GIVEM lt\tl • l'.-ut MOT.Cl OP •UUC TIAMSfllt. , ''°"'" ctndlnDI!), 1 HCll LAGUNA'S nove lst n •l!nY MA•ll! HEULl!t. ..... 11..., ClllTIPttATI oP •u11M1ss. (S-. "",."' u.c.c.1 co111fer ltoOd C1MW1H1111, 1 Sherlock author of "lnstaat tiffllll I Mlllltn .. prlibll• °' wlll 11'111 PICTITIOUS "...,... • N«kl 11 MrWr ,......, " "" c...mon :.-.Id :r1c1.,."::'~.::--cr ' , Q~•a\ o( for 11~ of L.tt«s T•l•ll'ltftf.,., to The ""*"'•"'"' don n,tlt'I' ,._ non-d Wllli.nt I~ Trt,.,.rw, wfloll • ....., • Saint" and 'The '""' ""' ,.u"°""' ,,,...rwit• Jo which 11 ~ *"11,,. 1 Ml11111 •I u1.n Grn> Otll" ~· lddrn• It * M.frll'ICI A_, M<ll ltln'llrttfwn ltlfMI Major Grigsbv" will of(er a tw f'mflt( """kultra. 11111 NI ,,.. n.n. W•ITlll111ler, c1nt .. r.indsr ttie1 ••,~!~, .. ••lllM ''"""'· c-tv of Orw"", ,,.Ir o1 l::::'~·,11 1udi-"",,.' ' o( 1rllll ~IC• 01 lltll1111 1111 -II.-...., fl"" MfM It INTEltSTAT ,... ..-(1lltlll'!ll1, !hit 1builllntltflr 11 1bout t. • • . course on the anatomy a ..i tor J•"'*V s. 1tn. 1t '''° '·"'·· In MENT SALES co. 11111 r111t uld n::o!! 11t ""°' to M. ci.rk SOoMo. T'"""'"' :" ~..: "" ., I t Uc! b e g i n n 1 n £ lhl ""'.,.._, .. 0-,_I No. l of con'IPOMd of "" tollGWl"' ,..,._ .._ Ml-ldd...... .. m M~ f'Ol.ltll I .......... .......;..~. -nove a .. 1c1 court, 11 "° c1¥1c c.,...,, oriw ,..,,.,. In tutl ...o ~ " r•ldl11t1 11 .. A-. a11bol hi.tnd. c~ °' OtllflH, w .,:n'l\, -• '""""":' PP"'C' Wednesday Jan. 6. wstt, 1n "" Clt'I' of knt• """' c.11torn11. 1o11ows; ""' « c1111w"'-. ci.fll of ~ ~~ ~ TO• I out the 0.11111 ~ti. 1t10. Rlfl'nOllCI c. Jrllklm. um G,..., o.u. "'-,.._,..., ,. ._ "'~ & l'vDl . , ~:. NOT eave w. ~.ST JOHN, wratml"'Mr· <:1Ut. kKlfld 1t * ~.....,. A,,_, ••lbiM ~ Orante C,.lt Dllal "'"'' graphic arts B e n. n e t l <:Mtv c11t1t · D11itd OKernlM• 1, "" 1111,.,,, c..,.,,., ., °"""' 111tt: of n. 3' "" • 11&111 ' 1 --.1 1 DONALD "· a1LvuL 1t1ymond c. Jt111r1111 c11ffllf1111o. ~ Bradbury recently c O:;eu ou T...,.., c..v.. ...... s111te •1 s1111 111 c111fol'""'· °'"'" countvi . 1111 Pf'<IHrtv 11 6neflbtd "' """'' LEGAL MTJl\.~ showing of his m a r l n "i ~~;;i:1 ~ CallfWwll '1* N:,., ~=' ,:· .~ID. fo~~;t. Tii11~ !'nd ~~.in.,"::;·!~:"'~":.! T"""' -~~ii,' • paintings in the Grand Centra An.,.., ,.,-1 , .. 11._, "'-tr., .-rtot ••Yfl'IOl!d c. JlllklM •-•• '"""'",.. • 1t .. 1 E111t• ,,.,, suP••to• coucT w~ Art Galleries in New1~~k. o!c':~n.~t';~1,~o.ii C.llY"~~~ :" 1~ :;:K~~ ~tt11:'':'t111~ \::~ ~~ ~"~r.~":"'$11~": 'i:J~:SN~L:.0::\-..: 11le former New Eng aituer, 1tnim1n1 11111 .anowltdlltd ht ••1e1111td c111!9r"''· ..., A4'M .-r. k h ... major ~GAL NO'nCE th• lllM. Tl'll lllltlt 'tr1nt"" ""'"tis-'" NOTICI °" MIAll:I ... °';"TIO,. whose wor s ang I ed (OFFICIAL SEALJ on M ,,.... 11'113lll ffv or DK""""'· 1'7Q, Pott AN 01t D•1t DlltllC?t CON· llecUons in the Un t T4*t . JEAN L. JOIST ., Hlllb/1 • HI••· 22t Mll'fl\f Annus, V.VANC• Ofl PltOPlltT'(-COM.-co t { the NOTtCa TO Clltl'OITOltl Nolt,., Public -~1Hfor11l1 lllbol l1t11111, <:ountv of Or11111, $lilt of l'llTt $ALI I Y CONSllWA .... States. flew eas or SUll'l1t 1ort coullT o, THI" p,111(1,11 0111~1 1n <:1111wnr1. . 1n,,,. ''"".., o1,.,. c ,...., of · g STATI 011' CALIPO•NtA flOll: Orlntt CO!Jfltv So f1r H IUICIWll to the Tr1n.!1""', 1TI l(ATHLEl!N CASl!Y, 11• II openm -THI COUNTY OP OlllANGI M' c-mfHlon fllPI'" bullnlU "'""I •nd Nd-uted tw KATHLEEN B. CASl!Y. c .... ""'''" Mln:h 2, ltll Tr1n1lmll'fOl'flll.fflfft ..... ,.. •• ,,_1,11 NOTICE IS Hl!ltl!aY..-,..., COMING EVEN'TS were the E1t1te el MAltGAlllET A. WILSON. •IM ll'vblllhitd OrlnH (Giit OlllY" ll'!lot. dllf9""1 '"°"' lhl 1bov9, 1re; N-KATHLl!EN MAltfON "' . f kl\OWll 11 MAltGAREf ALICE WIL.sON. Dlct<nbtr f, 1', 23, :», 1t10 2293-JI D•ted 0.ClfJltler 11, lml COl'lfft'l1tor of 11M nlltt '¥' --~ topic of d1~sslon or o.c .. -i. w1u11m S'-he-"•IMll '°"'..,....,.. .._. """' _ l "'"" TOUC H OF EtEGANC E -Newport Beach designer Mrs. Mildred Dyer points to the Biblical influence utilized for the award·winning home remodeled by Mrs. Lester Giauque (left).. The book rests on an antique table below a lead· be f the South Coast NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo lhl LEGAL NOTICE Tr1nmrw 11on for 111 Otdef '<11,.tll'll ~=,-·.., m em rs o crtdlfol'1 of "" 1tiov. """"" de«<len1 M. c11r11 Somrrs 1o 11,. ,.,. ~ of ..,.. ' I b board the" en)' oyed a ""'' 111 ""°11$ h1vlnl clllml 11111ru1 ltM Tr111111r11 -rt 11 _... cu as ;r -.. 1c1 dtc«llnl •r• '""''" lo IHI """'· NOTICI! TO Clt•OtTO•S Pubffslllfd O••nol COIJf D•ll., ~llot. tn<t ~ by IM c-t-t ..., .... Christmas luncheon ID the new with , ... lllCHMl"Y vwc!Mrs. In,,,. lffl(• SUP•ltlOlt COUtlT Ofl TH• o.c .... 11e,"' ltlO D1S-l0 ilWtlllt ..... dtllnrl111 I '*"'!;"'"' .. f Mr fll llrti; fll f111 bOYI tllled STATI Ofl CALIPOltNIA POlt Kl,,.., CrltleOrll '"" ,,,.... C-lf1et.d4 1 Laguna Niguel home o s. 10 tr::...,, !Mm,• wim ..,t11t ,:';.~ r H• C®NTY o' o•ANct• LEG ., N-CE " -1111,. 111 e1111111 dodo: ""~ 111 M B lman WllKIM,. "lhl \ll'IClef""Mnitd ,, ""ofllc• .... A 'HM ~ V .t.t Sell hKll M.mi.I Na. fl!w ... ,_ ae ro . • lo"' JAMES L ll'OTTS. Allornlf ,, l•w E1t1 .. If CARlfON 0. VALENTINl!i. ""'"'"' OCCllOlllC"f of ""''"'"*" 11NS, ed glass window in the dome-ceiling solarium. ' On the docket att: a tnp 171 Norttt Li. ., .. AW!'lue. ,,,.ltwood: •loo ~ 81 (, o. VALENTINE, 1'·1M'I 1.01 Goldin lt1J11 ltOllll. Ltflvt.l Wwld,. A I t .. "Song of C1ll'ler1lll '°* which ls ll!r llllCI of OKl•wd. Cl!ltTIP\CATI! OP' I USIMlll rtfctllftal .. whkfl It ,,.,.. f9r,NnMr Los nge es 0 s • s bualnrM of !tie .:......11Md Ill 111 INl!ftrs NOTICI! IS HlflEBY GIVEN .. IN .. ICTITIOUS JllAM1! • N•llail1•a. Ind •11111 ,,,. , ........... lllin Norway " a bus trip to an ""11n11111 kl tM n111e of 1o11d ~t ctltlllOn of 1111 above nrrMCI ~t n. llndlr.ltflitd don unlf¥ 1'e 11 ~ of hurr111 Ills -hn ....,. .... 10# . 00' · around San wtmln four ,,_tt. •"'' "" tlrat P\ltltru'. 11111 111 """"' 111ov1nr c111m1 "•lMI 1111 ducn111 1 butrnru •I w1 81/'dl s1r..,t, Dkfmbr, :11. 1t70. 11 ''" 1ln~ Ill ,..,. Diego a a crwse """ 111 11111 11e1i1«. • -1114 c11e•nt •r• reciulrltd '• 1111 """" .su1i. m. N..-t Bff.ch. c1111on111, c_.._ Ill ~ Na. ·" « Mid Di Bay--_ D1!ad Nev..nbfr :», ltlO wllh the nec:esw,..,. ¥WCl\e'1, 111 1!1t oHk r undtr l!lt tlctltloul firm "'"" flf cawt. •• l'OO ClYk Ctnlll' Dr1Y1 W..,, 111 ego ISTMA. s d. er for Hen-CAlll.OL ltAE YEAMAN of""' cirri! ol 1111 •bov• rnll!lltd court,,., BUSINESS tNSUltANCe AGENCY I nd Ille Cltv of lint• A,.., C1llfomla, CHR inn ExllC\ITTtlf 11"" wrn 111 "' 11r•11t11I 111tm, wn11 "" 111<.nw"' mer wld 11""' 11 ODrnPOSed "'the follow-O.t..r 0.Cl'n'llM!' 11, 1•11 v ·ictorian Home Wins ~ and Mar" waaner of Balboa l!>t ....... nllMd llllc9knl vwchlra.. lo_llM llnder•lfned ,, 117 E151 11111 HrlOl'I, wnose ... _ In NU Ind ptll:f W, E. ST JOHN, \ ,, ' ~· ( JAMii L l"OTT1 lttll ~rert, Coat1 IMw, C1U1ot11l1, '2617, of rtlldfflCt la 1• follows• Coull,., Cltrk ,. • I sland will be in the home 0 1n "'""LI ., .. A-which •• !tie Pita cf binlMl• Ill the P. J1mrs ""'"· •1• P1rt NtwPOrt AltNOLD, SMITH .. $CNWAlttt. · · d b ther-ln-law 1111....-. c•11Mn11 tnN .....,,.rsl?Md 111 •I' ,,..tte,.. prr111n11111 10 Alt!. m, N-rt Bttth. c1. nwo ' ,..... w111t11.-""''"'"'· """ • .... hts sister an ro • Ttt• 12111 ,n.1211 111t "''" of 11kl dlcedli11t, within tour Dlled O.Crmber ,, 1t10 Lit A"""'-c111fw;* ... Mr and Mrs Wallace R. Soll A""111"1' fW ..._.,,.. m11111111. 1111r tr.. flr11 l'Ubllt1t1o11 of 1t111 P. J1m1• Ploss '"' uo1 '"""1• t . . . hMlll'lld Otll'lff Cont C.llY" ll'llol llOfl(I. s11i. of C11t1on111. °''"''Count-,: AHwMt-11 "' Clllll t'f'"' or Su Manno. Dlc.ln'ltllt" '· •• 1 .. n. 1'10 '2•10 Dlttd No~-blr 20, UJO. Oii Oec91!1G1r .. lt10, blfwe -. I "ubll"*' Or111M ~ -pfti-, -~llrt Saturday th'e W a g n e r J11n v11rn11"' Nof•l"Y "ubllc In •nd 1or Nl.S s111e, o.c.no., is. 11. 21. 1t10 ', n»10 Architectural Award Coastal resident.s toured the Laguna Beach Architectural Sac iety's Houre-0f-the·year during an afternoon open house hosted by owners Mr. and Mrs .. Lester Giauque. When the Glauques bought the o ld. Victorlan house next door to their Victoria Drive home, they intended to tear it down. But the more tt~y saw ot' the charming five-story house atop a. cliff overlooking the rocky coasU~. the more ifttriFed they became. · 'l1lree yun of remodeJlng became a. Mbby ind prodaleed an wwsual and charming residence acceyible on upper levels by a narrow winding 1taircase. The house was built in 19?.8 by three relig1ous s isters who kept a Bible i~ every room. 'Ilhey painled re I i g i o us quotations on pagodas and bridges on the premises, and loppejl the structuie with a gingerbread loft where they played hymns oo an old organ. With the assistance o f architectural designer Fred Harpman and Newport Beac h inlerior designer ~1rs. Mlldred Dyer, the loft has been transformed inl.o a charming crow's nest study w i t h sweeping views of t h e coastline. 'Otinese influences w e r e removed ancf Victorian aspects stressed. A garden entrance gained through a wrought iron gate leads down to -the secood--level arched doorway dramatized by an antique. English lantern. ·nie main entrance opens into a soiarium created when the old patio was. enclosed by a 30-foot. high glass ceiling. The solarium is .a scaled repLica of the solarium Jn Golden Gate Park in · San Francisco and houses the o ld organ, lush greenery and a pair of French coach lanterns. To one side or the solarium is a billiard room below a loft apartment reached by a A Penny for His Though ts circular wrought iron staircase rising through the solarium. The I o f t is dominated by a 25-foot ceiling and s tained-glass window. On the ocean side. steps lead to the elevated living area carpeted in blue w i t b embroidered blue I n di a n crewel contrasting with walnut paneling. Mrs. Giauque's collection o( antique cul glass and silver lends elegance to t b e dining room with an eclectic fee.ling of the era maintained b y Baccarat and .ormolu- chandeliers and Queen Anne accessories. A small bedroom overlooking the solarium· was turned into a warm walnut. paneled, library-guest room and two small upstairs bedrooms racing the ocean were made into a master suite and bath. · Interiors of these rooms are enchanced by pane Ii n a: finished in antique cel~on. Fashion Duo 7032 LEGAL NOTICE c111,. V11Qnlln. 11-n '-mt to tis 1111 _,,,.. Wiiow Co-Eio:eculOra ol IM 'fllll ,..,... 1• 111btc:rl1*1 Ill Ill• with!" ln$lrit-LEGAL N011CE of tile 1bOYI n11Md dlC9dtnt mint 1nd 1du10Wlt0ilcl hi ••Kllltd lhl j-----::-:-=-,,,0---0---..,. •7S ClltMI Ktrtllltl I, Pr1•ll1 Nrni!. NOTtC• TO c1tao1TO•S """"'.,"I•• fOFF IClAL SEA.LI "°''':,•.·,-••• a:·. ' S1Wlll:10t. COUll:T OP TH• 117 ... 111111 St., GEOll:GE H t DANIELS STATI Ofl ~ALlll'OlltNIA POlt C•1!1 M••· c1111. Nol•..., ll'ubtk -C1lffornl1 SUPll•!Otl COUllT 0". THI cou"t Y Ofl OltANGE T ... 1710 Mf-'111 PrJnclP11 on1l;1 In •TATI 0,. CALll'O""'"' ..... A-4ntl Al'tonllW .... , ... c~••IClll..... o, ...... (Olln'Y Tif• COUNTY Otl OltA • l $l•lt of •OY C. MATZ:ICK, OecNMd. Pullll$Md 0.1nes Co-11 DlllW Piiot, M., Commlsslolr li•ll+•" · NI. A_.7111 '• • NOTICE IS HEltEBY GIVEN to , .... 0.C:lfJllNr 2, •• "· n. ltlll :rJU.lO s,., 17 ltf' ~ E"• f1 I e "f L U'L--U-1! U•• NE crei:lllor'I ot Ille above 111......i d«tdtnl ll'ublllll9d " 0;1,.,.1 Col,! Dilly 1'1IOI THOltNtUlltGH, Dtct1 .... 11111 11t "'llOfll l'ltvl11t1 c!11mt aNlftlll LEGAL NOTICE Oettmblr f, 1i ZI XI ltl'O nt2-HI NOTICE IS HEltEaY GIV IM wld deeltd•"I are rMulred Ill Ill• ' ' ' C!'ldltors ot 1111 lbo\'e m.m, wlllo 1r.. l'IKftloll"Y -..die.,, In Ille P-1Ktt LEG•' N-. CE lhll •ti NtlOl'!l l'ltvl1111 clllm1 otlkt Ill Ille c1rrll of 11'11 •""""" 111!1tlitd SS ~ v •-• wld dlc:ldllll ,,. rewlrtd "' cou,t, or 10 llltl9flf tNm, wit!! !Ill MC• ClrtTll'ICATI Ofl BUSIN• w!ffl !hi lllCH .. ,..,. nucl'ler&, Iii ....... _,,.,.,, lo ... unde,1l1ned 11 Ill• flCITIOUI NAMI IKl'WW N .. Jl7-9M Ill"" clffk of Ille •boYt 111n lfflt41 of her 1ttorNY: MILAN M. DOS-TM Ullcllrsltlltld .ioe. ''"Hf lhl., i rr NOTICE OP l....,._IC TltAlttl'llt lo 11~ them, w11t! 1111 rl TAl. lll!lon B•nk MUlre, Suite UOO. Or· eondll<.ll"' 1_tMlblu -.11t-COii• .Mtw, f5ta '111-4111 u.c.C.) """""""°fro Ille Ulldlf1.ll!IH •t 11111 efflCIS 1nr1, C1IHoml1, wllldi It lhl pllu 01 Clllfllfnl1, ll!ldr!'" lhl flctlllO<n llrm -Holl(r II ..... .0-, 111-,.,. to tM Cl"ldlflot't ot 111 11!Dfl!l'l1, COO If I E y • !>Utlnna af 11!1 Uftlle,..,lellitd In 111 ITlll-Ill PARAMOUNT MAINTENA.NCI! 11111 of LO't! •uneU, Tr1n1terw. w11oi01 SCHUMACWElll, COLl!MAN, Ml~AltO & 111'1 P1111l11lr'111 lo 1ti1: nl•te af wl4 de-n11! wkl firm 11 com"91d DI' llM lollO•· buslnrn MklrnJ lt 2'00 H1rblt lltWI., MOWARO, lJJ ,_ & (..,,..,, l;Olll, ndrnt, wlmt" '-' ""'""'' aff1• ~ Hrtl 1111 ,..,_ """'-111m" Ill 11111 ~!Id Qlll• ~. Coumv el 0ra119f, State al Otwntt. c1ntornl1 nMt. W!!ldl " ff1e ,wtkatlon "' 11'111 no11C41. pi.ot1 If rstloHftu ••• 11 lollowl: <:1Utornr., m111 bult; lr1nsfll" 11 •boll! to pl1er "busl11C111otfMundlr..._111 •1'1 Dtttd ~ 11, ltl'O P.ul H1~1n,. lUU Corti Crnt1, El 1M ll'llOI tro Vll'ICllll Mlfl(ll, 1 .,...,rlld m1"9ra prtl1!nt"' 19 W. wtill ti .. Id llttS EMMALINE JMTZICI( Toro ,....,. end Fr1n1t ,.1rS011no. 1 ITllrrlltd dlndln!, wtlltln ftlVf --.,.. rt.. E•ICll!f"lx of lhl Wlll·of Jim Hw.drla. um Co111 c.,u11, 11!1 m..,. •• """"""· ,...___ .._ 1'lnt ~·~ .,..... -- lhl lbOYI llCllTIOld dlcedtllf Toro bu•I-lddrftl It'"° H1rt:oot 811U!t¥1rd.. Dlltd o.c..ibtr fl, m'I ~ILAM M. DOSTAL Dltld DKlmbe, 1, 1f70 Co111 M9w. County flf °"'""' Slit. 11f THE fllltST HATIOfCAI. INfl{ Ullf9R "'* MIN. •""-I* Pilll H1-l1n C1IJ!ornl1. Of' OltANOI COVfrO'V, Ol"Mfl, Clltlwlll JI"' HtllOl'IX TM ,,,,,_.,., to be lr1Mferetl fl lota!td 1 "'"-' blllllllll I~ Tll: (ntJ D-nH .Sl1f1 flf C1Utornl1, Or1...-Countv1 1t noo H1rbor Bllod .. Cosri M11o1, COlln,., E•Kulor af lfll Wiii,,, -~ A"'"'9r ,.. •-•111• Oii DK. !, 1f10, IM!w• ,..., • Nol1rf ot °''""'' s1111 of C•Hftll"nr1 •hwll nlfllld decH9nt, , "ubU"*' o •• ,,., COl51 Dally ll'llof :::. In Ind ,,,... wld 51111, """"'n"' S.ld ,,_11., •• dtM:r1bni "' -•I COO«S•Y. ICHUMACH••· ,..,....,., o.a..,,i.-16, "' •• 1t10 •nd ......... .., ..... P•ul H•-l•n '"" Jim Ht!ld•l• It: AH llodt In ,, .... fllftu,n. ... uf-1 MllllY .. ltD • NOWA.•D '· 1m '33f.10 kllOWll 11:! me to bl "'' prrtonr w1101t ind tODd wm m the!•,,_ rtPal• buil""t IU ,_ l C..,,.,,., •..t •,,.... n1"""' 1re wl>tcr1be<f lo Ille wlffll" I""' 11nDW!1 11 THE (OIBLEll:'S llENCH Ind ene.., C1lw.ntl1 ftMI LEGAL NOTICE 1t,vment 11\d Hilnowr.ctpd lht~ 111tc1111cf 1ot1led 11 noo H•rbor Blvd., Cott• Mid, '"""""'* M'.Jlll /-----~-------l"'e wme. C11Vnt-, ol Or111ff, Slife m C•lllornl• A"'""",., l"•ncvlw T_.,.756 (OFFICIAL SEAL! T~• bulk lt1fU:llfl' will 1M COllaumiNfrtd-' ~llst-1 OrlflH C1111I DtJW l"Uol NOTICI" TO Ctt:l!OITOll:I Mi rr K. Htnrv on or 1tter !ht 4fh d•r of J1nu1rv, lt7\, D<ic""blr :tl, JO, 1t10 1!'111 J.....,,.,~ 13; !UPe•10 .. COU ll:T Ofl THI! Nolll"Y P11bHc. C1lllllrn!1 •• ll•llk "'Anlll'lc• Nf&SA. U8 Wnl "'" lt71 "7f.l0 STA.Tl Ofl CALIPOltNIA 'Ott: ~r!nt!NI Offk;e In MrHt, Coal1 Mew, (O!Jflty of Ori .... ,:1----;-=::-;:,.-:::::=:::',..;;;;:C:: THI! COUffTY OP OlllANGI 0,1111• C011n'Y St1t1 el C1llfornl1. LEGAL NOTICE ' Ni. A-471411 Mf Comm ln fon EwPl,_1 So fir ts ~nown to Ille Tr11111ef'ff1,·1n:1--:::::::c-o~-c-~=--·-· c'-' _ 1!1!1tt If SIDNEY E. (AltTElt, D~ Mir. '4• itn bullnlll ntmn Incl Hdr•-ulld bl' NOTICI OP MAltSHAL'l .IAL• (lloed. ll'ubl11hed o''"'' c ... 11 DtlfV Pllol Tr•Mfll'Or. fOf' ""' ffl .... '"" 1••1 Htl, Ne. It .. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN tt IN DtcrmlMr 2, '· l&, U, lt70 2Uf-7'0 H Cll,,.,.rnt from me lboYI. Ill!; ~-ll!lrlllil Ctldlt kl"Yln, Ille., crtdltor1 fl Ille 1bov1 ""''""" ~t -C NOllCI. Pt1l11tlff -_,,. H C • -• ""'' I ll ·""""· flavlllt tlllmt 191lnst LEGAL NOTI E LM llwwll c,,,,,1,.,., o;tllldlftl.. . !ff-!r' ....,...,. lllt wld .ec:tde"' ••• ,._,Ired lo 1111 tlltrn Tr1Mf1f'!;!• 8-, vf'111s .t 111 ~ lttlllf .,. wlffl fhr n.tstwr-, voucllera, to !I'll 11"" EKr-H1. IOll·HI• Vlnc:tnl M11'1dt OtclfJlblr 1, 1'111 by Ifie MllnlclHI CIMlr?, llcol""" If tM lfflt• of lier lltor""' NOTIC e TO Cltl"DlfOllll Tr111sfe'H Ori"" CounW H1!'0or Judklll ~let, ='EY, $HAW & TOMICH.· 21'11 Hlllll· A llu1111'11Hllfl' 11 1bo\11 11:! ~ m.il<I. Fr1t1k P•rt0l1110 C111111Y llt' O'llltll, Slit. af C.-<o. """ortw, ~ M-itlllel, C1Hfornl• tlHlt. TM lllrMI '"" 11u11 ..... ldd, .. , el Ills Tr1"1ftrw -I ludlrMnl '"t.Ad Ill Jf ..... "' . It lfll ,11e.-of blltll>rn of tr.. lr•n1ffrw 1rt: Putil!tlltd Or..,le Co.If Olll\I Piiot, T'•-'1"'11111 C'ldft llllC N '""'19"'"' In I N rn11t11"1 H•l1h1l11C1 to EAltL KICK, 2711 £111 C1111l December 23. 'l't70 2111-10 lllcl9rnoint Ct«lllora 11111' .. ..,;;.,,,, lhl, ril111 of 1o1kl dlladfllt, wllht!l "fll\ll'" H1tllw11. C°""'• dlt Mir, C1IUornl1 H. C1ml111, $hlrllV C.rn111 t IMnllll '""'" 1111 tint Pl*lltelhwl ef 11111 TM NrMI •Ml butlMH ICld•-· "' LECAL NOTICE ·~ aflowl!lf I "" SMll.tl l!Ollc,. · !hi 1r1nsltrM 1rt: •tflMllY" dul "" .. kf I 111 me "'A6.& B DO"DTMY-fllEEV.1!5 CAltTElt C. V1l111Nkl1 Ind MI r In I P•Jt11t d.t1 flf tt. liWIMe of .. Id 11110tfftfl, I .. 0 ":d""lnlllr1lr1• Wlfll lhl Wiii V•l1am1kl1, nail Sllwn LI n I • ClltTIPICATI O~ COltl'O•ATION lleYI lr¥1H -111 f+ll rltllt, ltllt 11111' IM Anntllfd el IN n1•i. of HuntlMIOll lllKh, (1lllorl!l1 P'Olt TltAHIACflOM OP I U!IMISJ l11t1t'ISI of .. Id ludlrMnl dtbton. In lfll "" •bovt n•mitd dtc:itdtnl. AH otlle• bvllMSI .... mn ..... lddre•stS U"Dllt PICTITIOl/I H•M• ~ Ill 1111 Coulll'f of Ka;""' HUltLa'J, IHAW & TOMICH uoed bl' Ille l,1n1ffrw within th'" .,Hr1 THE UNOElllSIGNEO COll:PQjlATION of C1tllorril1. dltcrlblcl 11 ; Crochet two swingy, scallop-r,: .::,~.= ""' 1111 1>111 .,,. 11r 11 kllCIWl'I to ""Na hereri-, crrtltv "'''" 1a cOfldudlnr Lot n of '''ct N•. '" .,.. frllHltrH 1r1. "°"'· 1 llullnrll 111 1111 5ti!e of Cillfornli <:ountv of Orl11t1t, Sllll ~ 1111 '' Greeting Goes by Mail The first Christmas card, created more than a century ago, bore a salutation that remains the classic greeting ()D Yuletide cards today. The simple greeting was: "A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You." It appeared on a card conceived in 1843 by Henry Cole, an imaginative and distinguished Londoner. His idea of Christmas in an envelope followed by only three ·years the English postal reform. which made t t possible to send season's greetings to friends near and far for only a penny. Cole asked an artist friend. John Calcott Horsley of the Royal Academy; lo design the card. The charming mis.sive was div:ided into three panels with the main illustration, in the cenler, showing a friend1y · ; family party in progress, the elders with wine glasses raised in a toast to \he recipient. The panels on e ither side depicted two or the oldest traditions of Christmas , feeding the hungry a n d clothing the needy. The card bore -the greeting, "A Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year to You," still the classic in the field. Original specimens of the first Christmas card are now extremely rare and valuable. Only a dozen are known tG exist. Two of these, including the most perfect one in existence -it has never been used -are pa.11 of the 70,000 card It a 11 m a r k Historical Collection. The trove o f greeting card lore gathered by Hallmark Cards is the largest such rollection In the world. I See by Today's Want Ads • JN nted of 1 b!llby!litter! J{ere's a moUier "'ho wJII bab)'lllt tn her home, serve hot meals and has a fenc. ed. )"al'd. Her r11.1es are ~880nabl@. See class 6550. e A POODLE POR OIRJST. MAS! Thfore 's Olli! In clau •8825. Small miniature Poodle fQf' sa.1@:, AKC, mou. trained. 9 months Oki. Bttttt hurry!? e rJEE D STORAGE SPACE! There'• 11. garage for ~m. fn C.OSta M"-. on th& &side for $23. per month. 1'\ls ('(»lid be your ansv.·e.r. e EXPERIENCED medical receptlonh1t nced!!d for bu8)' G.P.'1 otfiet.. Mu1t , , be gOOd typist. lf )IOU qual · Uy for ihl1 pc)l11ion, !!Ce help wanted lodAy, bem skirts in no time! ~;!!..!.!!'~ m;,=11111 1 1 c Tht 1ou11on •nd otMl'•I i111e,11111on of coun'Y oi or1nt1 1" 1111 en-, of N.-ori Pll' IN• .-clll'ded '" Booft 1iw. '21. I ,.,...... '1 r • TA Ille .,oprm to IM fr1111ff,,ecl 1re· 5toc• llr1<h •I 2172 OuPont Drln ulldt, 'H illld 27 of Mltc:.111-~ Ill tllf Starting ln the 1860s, severa QUICK • CROCHET props 0 '~" ci;:n;:, 1~;:11,_cJ111Y" Plln1 111 tr~. fl•tur11. ""''-' Ind oooc1 the 1ict111""' 11,,,. .,,."" 11 Fi.01tlOA Offkl of me <:ount1 ltKordlt .t 1111 ·gree"ng card ro·rms sprang up { lo d •aughter IC • I llllHl"Y 1• wlll of I u-11111 r11t1ur1nl llll'llMH MODULA• COMPUTER: SY"'TEMS IN C COl/fltv. "-"' 11 t"'"""'llllf· ........ '" Or pS -mom an 1'" lt71 2.)40-111 known It "fJru11ch BDll", 2111 E11t Cotll 1nd 11111 tlld firm 11 c~ltd 0, n.l, m LO'l'Ol1, Cotll Mftf, Ct~lt in England, and brought to the or sisters love these skirts. LEGAL NOTICE Hl•hw1.,, coron.1 IHI M•'· <:t11for1111. toHawl"' corpor111on. ""1IOlr pfflKINI NOTICl!I is Hl!lllEBY GIVI~""' ,. r { I K ( G . . d b" TM 111c1, Ind tl\1 dtt. Ofl or 1flt• PllCI If t11.11fne11 It •• tollowt • f'rld1.,, Jl!M.11 ....... ltfl, •t 1: tltClt ore ron a e reenaway, Use kn1tt1ng worste , 1g P·JHH w111c"· 111t bu11i: 1r11ttt1r 11 to IM N1,... of <:orP0,1tro · MODULA II: cOM. PM, 11 front ot eour111ou ... ,_. 11111 England's fflOSl fa m 0 US oche( hook Pattern 7032: Ca•TIPICATI! OP BUSIN•Ss, c""1umm1tl!d ire: Oro or •lier Jlntill"Y J, PUTE,_ SY.STEMS, INC. -It,, Cl,., ol (Diii ~' .Cltlfoml1, e r . fllCTITIOUS NAMI! lt11, 11 l•"k of Amerlt• NT•SA, ~VII p,IMIPll PllCI of blls!l!lh"' '"°' NDrlh Coun,., of Or•""· S1Jlt' ..,.~~ji;;i; Woman a rt i s t , M i SS sizes J0-16 and 2-12 included. TM llllderal9ned dot• cart1rv "" 11 cen-Lido. Newport Bffl:h, C1Hfllflll1. Dl~!e Hlehw1y, Ft. L111de~·.1e, fkll'ld1. I wit!"" •I !lllbnc •uctlell 1111 Mt Greenaway c 0 n tr j but e d ~ h duClln1 I llll'lln•H II "' w. 17!h, Co1!1 Oiled Dec1mber "· lt10. Oiied: NO'Vt11'1btr 20. ltl'D,• blddll', for r.ull '" ~ lhl FIFTY t:ENTS for eac Miw. cilltor"li, Ul'ldtr 1r.. tlctlllow llrrn Etrl IC!tk, Tr1n1t1ror Modul1r CD!TIP+Jltt $f$l.,...1, Inc. Unlllcf 111'-t, •II 1M rltflfj Ir;. outstanding greeting card pattern _ add 25 cents for n1me of FEATHElll.STON PAINTING ind Ch•lttoall..-V1r .. m1klt K1111111h G. ~,,.,,, ":!'..! .. _ .. Id '~~. flll d lgn { M W d d . , 11111 t11d llrm !1 COf!IPOltd of ti. lollow· M•rln1 V1lwm1~ll Presldtfll '""'• rlblcl JN' __ ,..., .. es s or arcus ar an each pattern for Atr Mail and 1nr "rson, whow 111mr 1n lull •ncl Pt•c• Tr111111,u1 wm11m c. L1M11, lllll'lol''' ",m•r t1s0 Co. of London, and a lso . I Handll . th lse of rr1ldlnc1 ls .. follaw11 ll'ubllttlld °''"" (otll Dilly' Pllo'I, S«•fl•rv·Tre•sur1r .. IXKU on, w 111 • "'"""Vided illustrations f 0 r Spec1a ng • O erw o, '· F11thrr1ton. 1m ~llcilrn Dr .. o.c.m111r n . 1t10 nn-10 s T•Te OF FLORJOA, cotti!i.t t c ~· third-class deliver" will take cost• Mt11, <:1111. COUNTY oF BltOWAflo cerM1r ,: ,.,,ott. AWwo,. Chl.ldren's books man• o{ ' nd DllM o.c. 1. 1t10 LEGAL N~CE Oii N0¥1mbe~ 10, 1'70. brforw m' 1 ' · •• • :r three weeks or more, Se to o. ,., '""''"'"'""' v•~ Not•,., Pubric '"' wld COllr!lf •nd "''-· o. D. wn~r,_,.,.. which are prized today by Aii-Brocks the Oallv Pilot g1.1e or <:111tor1111, O••nr• c""""'' • .,.-11, '"""'"" IC.,.,..ni G. H1,.11 ~·r.1111 .. ~ 11 to '"" ' I On Otc. ,, 1t711, IMfore me, I Nolll"Y T.sul Ind wm1 .... c. l•ndlt, Jr, ·-fro "" llllt .........,,., co ec rs. 105 Needlecraft Dept., Box ~utillc In 11'!11 for llld "'"· Hl"1Dnl11~ HOTICI! TO ClllOITO•t to DI "" ,,..,!dint '""' Slael•l"Y·T"fftut-J,w•,t••• DLllrld. The det;igns on most popular s . N ·-·"" o. ~-F111htr1IO>'I --to""' SIJPlillllO• COU•T OP THI! .... ~lvelf If lhl cor.ortllall 11111 ., . J. P.-111, ... 163. Old Chelsea tation, ew lo bl flle "'"°" wl'lm1 n1me II lllbtctlll-$TATI Ofl CALIPOltMIA POlt rxtculed tf\r wltlll" I""""""" Dll 1111\ell St,...,,. . cards af the 1980s and 70s had York Ny JOOll Print Name td 1o ,,.. w11~1n Fnstrvrn.nt •nd THI cou"TY OP OltANO• °' 1111 t~•tklll lflll'•l11 111mte1. 11111 :'.J =A- 11,u. Cbrl.strnas .,·gru·r1·ca""" • · • · ' •c•-lldffd 1'I eucvfld ""-,.._ A-4nw idl;MW!edeitd to ,... 11111 tutll COl'llOI'• • ., '"""· Address, Zip, pat t tr D !OFFICIAL SEAL) ' Esl1!1 of ANNA D. HUNTLEY, Drctll-tlofl IJICUled' "" """'· ~=; c,·--· It was not unt1·1 Louis· Prang of MAltY K. HE•OY .. (OFFICIAL SEAL) • Numbtr. Noll .... Plll!lk. (1llfornllo NOTICE 1$ HEllE•Y GIVl!N 11:! "" s ... L. Addto ~ublltlltd °''"" c~ Boston entered<· the greeting NEW lt'11 Needlecrart P•l"'C1t111 Olfle. 1n crltdllora 111 t11e .tboYI NIMll 1SK..ien1 N111 .... hllffc 111 11'111 ,,,,. Dlft!nbr, It. n. io. 1m ,,. card {1.eJd that -J1°g1°0US sctn"" · Or1111r COU!llv 11111 1n N'l"IDM t11vl111 tl1!m1 .. llMI tl\1 Wld C"""'°' ltld Stllto. '" ""' Catalog -mort J n S t an t MY Camrn!Mloll lklll'" wld dlcitdrnl 1a ...Wlrltd Ill 1111 ,,_.,, My (ommluloll Eicp!rtJ became popular. 1 "·-· kn·•· c r 0 ch et 1 Nov, ,4, "" w1t11 111111tce1w,.., ~,..,, 111 1111 ettkt Jin. 1, tt74 Pr k th "f tb aSiuvn"' 1...,, ' Publlllled Or1"9t CGlsl DlllV ll'Uet of 11M clHll of fhl 1boYe trlllllld uovrt, 11' T-4S7M HOTICI Of'" PUILIC ang, nown as e a er quills embroidery gifts. 3 o.c1mbrr 1.-1,, n. :io, im '211-1ll 1o ~ '"""'"· w1t11 lfll ,_,1 .. ,..,. ll'ublllhl(I °"'"" con1 0111'1 Piiot 11,0ll1 rtts cm or lhe American Qiristmas ' ' voudlf>rt. ID lhl ll!ldlrwltlnH ,, "'' "11« Drctinbll' , .. 13. ... lt7'0 ll'!d J11111S•Y Otl ,,. .. free patterns. $0 cents. of lllOBl!ltT J, Hl!llllllON Ill, Allor'MY II .. "" mt-JO CITY °' ~tnmllf( cerd," p e r f e c t e d tbe NEW Com pie le Instant GUt LEGAL NOTICE LrN. :,n 1"h sir"'· 1M1 hKh. NOTICI!" 11 He:1teeY 01 lithographic p r o c e s 1 of <:111111n111 touo. which Fs "" ,11e1 ot LEGAL NOTlCE Tlltld1-,, J111111,.,, .L ''"· 81 Book -over 100 gifts for all ,.,,711 11111111111 of the UMo1t"t1111111 1n 1u "''1111'• "" COlmCH c~ CllV .. ...,.. multicolor p rinting in the • '""' Crochet tie c1111,1,1c.i.r1 P1rt11n1111 tro tfll ftl1te"' .. 1c1111e..,...,1, N'l1SJ s11rw AV'llllll, fl!OU11111n V:!flliv . . 1870s. often using as many as occasions, 8e~w• • co1tll'01tAT10N Ttt:ANSACTU4• wu~rn fov• m0111h1 '"''!ht lt,•t ~1c.1-c••Ta..J<:ATI c111t,,,.,,11. 1111 Clf'f cou11tll WIW ltolcf a d ye no.int decoupage knit •us1Nl!IS UMOI• tlOl'I of tllll llOll(I. COlltll'OltATION llUllll( hMrlnt ... me ftllo'lll'IM: , 20 colors on bis cards. • ,,_. , • ' ll'ICTITlotlS NAMI! ·a.tltd Novrmber 21. 1'7'0 T•ANIACTINO IVS/MISS I. hM (' ....... " .. tat -Atflk.lllM The reproductions or 00·1 sew, quilt-:-more. $11 IT '' HEllll!BY CEltflF!EO AS l',()l, • MUllllEL M. MAllNKE UNOllt PICTITIOUS NAM• ffl«I b-, Cln1lc D1¥11llfllllllt l'Ml*ll"9 Complete M1ban Book -LOWS; ' Admlnl•l,•lrlK of"" ttllll "' IY IS HE1tEaY CERTl!'ll!D ... , !'Ol· chi"" of lllllCI ... .,.,..., ... lllUM Oii paintings were so perfect that Tile 1111111ra11ntd, 1 c1111,,.."i1 ~-""' •bo~• "•mtd dtcltdtnt LOWS: !I'll ,.,,,.,~ •ldt of St•l'fltlt 'Jwftt 11 fashions, pillows, gilts, more! tton. '' dOIM 11111111n1 1" tM st811:ol' ltOll!lltT J. "•1t1toN 111 Tl'lt undll"llQned, 1 c1111orn11 corf'Or• B""*"11rt1'""" Al la 11.4 (HltliOIMl!'f many times experts were II "II JUI e~ ,, 'Book 50 C•tltornl1 "*' 111e lktllloln n1me "Ol!L .., 1"" 11'"' llDll, 11 11o1,. -.,1,.,..r in ll'M! s111, ot .M11111,11 ow.111111 D""ia,1 • required to tell the print from • y n11p . • MAii: COMPANY". Tiit prl11tlP1t Pll(I of .... llKJI, C•Hllrftl• ",.. C1llfOl'nl1 llNNr the ll(lllfo\11 ,..,..,. "'· .. ltlh'ltw .,. Cit-, C-etl "' ttem•'"'•••I•• centa. "50 ln1taat Olfls" Book. b\ltfl'IHI •rid !ht 111tl Of ,.ld•nc• of Tii i Ct!U ""711$ H. LIKEN • SONS". The •rlnclHI 111(1 M ..... ---............. UJio the painting Man• o{ the Prtu .. 111 cer11orot1011 h "''"' " n-,,.. At!wMY ""A•1111ttr•frl• 0 ~,. -•·••-· '"" "" ,,_ ---·-· Sf'Mlf ".,.._ t1ell"' • .,, • ' = Cen'•. Boo~ O{ •• w-•o·•. Wn"'"''''· C•o••--o-Oo. P""'llhltd °"''"' CNlt l llV r• "' "" ,,._ -....-"' rnt · '!! I la di ••• · , of ..,., "" a w. ""~ .. ,.. ""' ,,_ tut-7ll 111 w1d tol'ftOl'•tlon 11 1ocettc1 11 1110 ltrooltrwrat 11r11t, ..,_ 111 t111 'II OU S n ng ut::ilgll" Wert A{ •· = IS n..nt Book I 01fld: NOY1mber JD. ltHI. Oectllfblr t. '· "· it. lt7D ''"""'°' L1"" Wfttrnlnit1r. cilltwrlll. (·1 c"'""'"'" z:-. 1t • nlllll "" the Nativity and 0th er g ... ns. <#II cen • ..... LIKEN. INCOllll"OlllATED Olll(f: NoYemblt •• 1'70 d•"'·~'-Condition "W"., "' Ilg• tart'~ -t6 pattflms. 54) cents. 11r: Tl!Or!lls K. U11111. LEGAL NOO'ICE Llll:l!N, •N<:Oltll'OltATEO ~ cO!'llllll•klll 1tt111u11D11 JN re IOUS scenes, s 1ng a M ... ~ut D-k l Prnldslll . •w: Thofll•• I(, LJMn. Prttfdtnt .... , "ll.ll'lltllf' •lorW WI•'" tlllU popularity that today I s llSt "l"l uww -:J02J <:1p11 L-T.un1 JOU C•r1 ~M 1t1C1c~ -t111n " "ltl'Oltct ""'" -patt.erlli for--11...Wllque quilts. ~::r-l~--:!:_fllnlfl IUll'l•toi. COUltT 011 Ttl• COlll ,,.., C•llfomll Ill• ..,,,...,.1 flnc9 ll'lll!ld "·" inffl"f~ifigyear tiy yeat. SO cents. Book 3. "Q111lt1 ftr !of'C...i1rv-Tr1•wrt r s:-::·c:~NCfi1:r'o'tt:0°.1t ~"':i:wL Lllltn. S«~,.,. i..:::::.,. "1 ~llY' .. ~!, an~imt~~ we,..~:=~n ~~~gl Today's Uvtnc" • .J4 patterns. r~N'i"'~~ll1tnl1 HOTKI OP .::A:=I o" P•TITIOM l:."'::J.""'c::"11orr111 :"'~t. 11 .,."' 1~ .. '=' Card Industry began t 0 50 cents. ''"tE OF CALl,.OflN1A ~ POlt l'tl:OIAT'I OP WILL A.MD '" $TAT! OF CALIFO•NIA I -·•IV tw Wln'ltf' A_, · COVNTY OF OtlANGE l IS LSTTl .. 1 TllTAM•NTAllY COONT:'Y Oft Ol;ANOt I H B,_ l1 HIClll!dl, 1111 Ml '"bi! h j•••j{ M ( ( the Oii Dt¢ ...... r 1, ltlO blfor1 mt. ll'HI Et11!1 .. DfWITT CL I NT 0 N 0.. Olc4fllbet 7, ltJD, befort nw, IN All1!Mldt, "'"" I llM 1-"M e s... s """ . 06 0 ...-n1tflld, • Nolll'J' ll'utilk Ill '""' fer PllEKOn, t lM ·-II o. CLINTON ""'°"'" .... I H<Q,..,. hbllc Ill lfMI ""' fMt ••"''"' "' ·~-major greet Ing card wld Cll/flf\I •1'1111 "'''· ""'°"'1"' .. PllescoTT, ci-Md. --· .. ., '°"""'.,... 11111. ,._11r -r-Th11 ,,_.., 11 IWlflll' dllCr bl be be N W looks _,.... ,,.,,,.,., H. Llill.M IJld ""'-'IU NOTICE " HElleev GIVl!N ""'1 H Tl«>MA~. LllCl!:M, .,_ to ,.,. Ill LOh "i 11'111" Tr.ct Ho. fl ... pu i.S r5 180 tO emerge e S. Ll!l41'1, l-II ft'lt IO Ill me Pt.,._ !IE.NE PllE$COTT i... "ltd htl'elll I bl 11'11 Pl'tlNOlnf lfMI MAUlt!Ct S. LI-T-.... ""'"'" ·-btW about 1910 and by J-e .,...., '"" lfll Stc'111,,..Trn1~ Ill lllt Prtl!IDll tor proflllt Ill 'fWllt Ind fer ICEN. "'-"! to fllt 10 bt fl'lt 5ecn111'-flVtlV*ll II 1'111 PlllllllM L ... ;sw w re ar-•llDll 11111 rHCU11td "" wfthlll .... IHU.lllCI ol Ltttl'I Tr11 ......... ,., "' "" ,, .. w,.., Ill ,,.. ~•tltn 111111 IX-$lilt "' C•llforl'll• f0e¥"t. (Ml able lo meet the increased Proport'1 oned ln1m1111. ,_n to .... te bt "" --NllllOl!tr rtlelflltl I• ""'"" ., """' tor ""!ht wtl!llll lfltl"""'fllf, --" .... kl -·l Ind "" Fou111.i11 V•llw bl! d nd { rds wllo lllt(Ultlt "" .. 11111n l"'trurMnl Dll flltllllr -tlclll•ra. 11'1111 tlill ,,.. ltnw 1!'1111 Ill n... --....,. tkfCVfltd ""' wttfllll Or41-Tiit Z°""'I Onllt'llntl, pu c ema or ca of llfflllf o1 me """"'"'"" """°111 1111111d, ''"' ., ""'"" 1111 Mme l'lt• bMft Ml 1nt""""'1t en btlwll! flf IM cerw111Dr1 .....-.. ll'!d l!xhlMh .,. .,. fHe better quality and •·si"otn i ll'!d ltllMWl4'dlltd la ,,,. 11111 tuCll nr-for Jtl!lllN L 1'11, 11 t:• 1.m., In ""' tlllrelll """""'' ef'lcl 1(11,_..,,..,. te l'M ll'llnnt• 0-t"l'!!lrnt 1nd '" ~ rt'k Whether you decide lo wear tlll'lllDll ••ecutw "" wttllln lmtl"Vmlf!I -1f'OOl!I el °'"""""' NI, 3 of 11111 ""'' well COfllll'ltt.I ftMltH 1111' ... 111111 .... flVbllt llllHC!loft '""' llrm tn Jim. Ole world seemed to micro, mini, m.ld1, or maxi. r.':~ ':, 1:.r~-::' • • '*!"'llOll of f:'t'~' ettoo~l~ J.':"t':u~=:_w .... In ~:ei"::' ,,r~~f'd ",.· 1~1!:!!:!' • • •=Dll"::'::.."° .=~ftw\fi't come to a halt. but Olrlstmas thl t 1sEALI t> o~F t ......... r cards continued. the Important ng 0 WUl1 Dtt11 H1,.,-"" itllllw~':"f:'JgM~~11 I 1c::1~1 ·o:.~1 H•rt''""' f:,.,,:1,or1111-, .._'f,._~ ,,:-,,.,!~ Kt remember Js that tach lenitth No1•,.., 'ub!lc. c111r,,..n1• countv cttrtt Nol••r l'llblic.c.111°""1• lfll "'•""1111 o..,,,,_, 11 tt>I G rowth of the industry since 11 a completely dlffer••t ioo,Ji:. ll'rtnclHt Ottle• In MclCIMNA a P1n1NG ,.rtMi.11 omui 111 ,,,,, re"" eboYI ,...,,,. -, W Id W Ir h be ..... . Qtl!IM County IYI °""'" w, McC"'f'f'ofn on"" eou11,., CITY <:Ol)Nru. Ofl THI.-or ar ' RS· en Each must bft w 0 r n M-, c-1111on l!llPlm "'" •1 ,_ ltelif, Sllfll A M, c°"""''"'"' ,..,.,.. (ITY OP FOUNTAIN vM.(...- p h (! n ° men 9 J • tn I954, properly. with the r I ah t 1'111111•=· b~.,:' c-..-o.r"' "''°'· ~=~'::;, C:~~r.:,. tim Nlllt~· g;.u_i c.e..t 0.1"' ~101. ~~;.,cr.J-0" ~..: -.....:i Amctrtcans M!nt some two proportions to the style. ~;riw 1 '" A •· "10 11111 J;t;,~,i ~:::On.°t't";.~ 1t'ro~" t>.inr nf~.~ fmtmW 1 .. t:i. a. "" 1nc1 MIMI~~ O::~,,.~,',."" c"'' b Uµo n Chmlmas. crcclilJ&s. • • .. . . • I ' ~.: --"' _,,,_ !.ss: and ., .LIDt ... t.Mlit•AM .... ~=- ---------------I • • OectmDtr , 1970 DAILY PILOT_, I ' l. ,. American St0ck Exchange List .• ~·~~ .P t t~ .. . . -xv ---"ZS&lWSt%EXStYa-ZSia7i?BXZ I i - • I '' .. _ •c-............... __ ·~ __ ... JI OASL'I' P'IL.OT Wtdntsdaf, Dtctmbtt' 23, iq10 '"' S Mfjre Edwards C'nemas Opening Quality Films in Greater ~emand -Today BJ TOll_TITUS OI JM oallr ,... llltft ne Ume was lilt; 'America'• Depresaion wu at Its btl&hl. and r-r dollan --1><1111 spent ... lbe "frllla:'' of life -such u &Oioc to lbe 111..ta, for enmple. Yet thlt was the year J ames Edwards gpt into the qKloa picture l b e a t e r builntss, a young b an t emp&O,e ln bis twenties wbo ~ qyer a darkened ...,.,.. _ house In Monte~ P a rt became be wanted somethln& ~ with bis nlgbts. 'l)>day Edwards has plenty to cl'! ... itb bis nights, not to mentkin bis days, as president of Edwafds Qnema Theaters, a chain ol hl8h quality motiori picture houses which o n a.utmu 0.y will grow to • With lbe openln( of ~ new tbetien along lbe Oran«• Cout. ' ' 1beae latest theaters -two fn a.ta. Mesa and one Jn MllSiDa V'iejo·-are numbm ..., ..... and eight In Orange County, which has be e n pai\ladarly l<CepilVe to lbe Eiwmls operation since it llUrlOd here on Christmas Jam• Edward• Day, 1963. Tbls is a special source or pleasure to Edwards himself, since he has made his home Jn Newport Beach for the past two decades. And despite the fact that, not unlike the thirties wben be started bis career, t h e economy is not in the best condition today, E d w a r d s 2 MORE SHOPPING DAYS! ----LOOKJNG- FOR THi RIGHT ''LAST MINUTE" GIFT FOR ...... .. MOM OR DAD? " MUSlC HALL and ~ '.tOLUMlll RECORDS ~ • PRESENTS T~E ARCHIVE • HALL OF FAME '· SERIES OF GREAT ~i JAZZ RECORD\NGS ~~l~~~~~~-:-~~~~~· •' ~~· ~:Such Great Pack119n As • • . * THE ELLINGTON ERA * THE SOUND OF, NEW ORLEANS CHICAGO HARLEM * WOOOY HERMAN ''THE THUNDERING HERDS" 'ft': MILDRED BAILEY *' llLL Y HOLIDAY *GENE KRUPA "DRUMMING MAN" * 'BENNY GOODMAN . '"1934 CARNEIGE HALL CONCERT" AND MANY MANY MOREi r ALL AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS These Are Gifts Mom & Dad WHI Treaure Forever! THE MUSIC HALL "Wllere M .. lc Come• l'lr•t" #61 PASHION lstAND OP!', llOADWAT NIWPOllT CENTll NIWPOIT llACH, CAUF. 6'M·5'10 I tOCAnO ........ IWPOIT, Cl'NTUaY CITT, SUNSET STAIP maintains that q u at I t y entutainment iJ always Jn demand. His 40 yean . of OperaUon appear to bear b1m out. "'ll1m Is a greol<!r lnlmlt In l(OOd movies · today than ever before," tbe dlmimrtJve, M·ye1N1Jd Edwards declarel. '1n tbe elght weeks • we ran 'Airport' at the Newport Cinema, the picture played to more than I0,000 people - 10,000 in the last week alone.'' "Jt takes two factors to bring success in t b i s business," he adds, "a good picture and a g o o d , comfortable theater. We try to plOV!de both." Edwards has turned Ibis pbilotophy into profit on the Orange Coast ever since be built the first E d w a r d s Cinema 1beater on Adams Avenue at Harbor Boulevard in Coeta Mesa seven years ago. 11lis was followed by rapid succession by Cinemas in Huntlngtoh Beach, Westminster, Newport Beach, Westminster (again) and - opening Friday -the twin Harbor Cinemas in Costa Mesa's Harbor S h opp ing Center and the Viejo Cinema on La Pu Road in Mission Viejo. The double theater operation fn Westminster is a n IMovation which Edwards introduced in Alhambra 18 yean ago and which has been copied by other chains, in lots . , • that could have happened ·to movies. Jt forced Hogywood to quit er~ out quid.le filcks put toce&btt in a week or so and start making good films." . Edwards' acumen for the movie Qleater business was not an inherited trait. Show business wasn't in his blood. "My father was a cowboy," he relates. "And bis father came west during \he gold rush. Dad's family settled In what ls now Westminster." In fact, the theater owner or up to four theaters, Jn points out, Edwards Avenue in recent years. Westminster was named for .'.Our -Harbor Cinemas will his father -and many years have a single projection room later James Edwards erected with one operator handling all a momument of sorts lhere in the form of the Edwards Cinema West theaters whlch are_ acceuible from that thoroughfare. With h1s roots deep lo Southern canforrUa'a put, Edwards also bas a sharp eye on Its future with mote Cinemas planned to dot the map of the Orange O>ut. The next iJ earmarked as a twin tor the N~wport Cinema, opening In all probabllity on Christmas pay, 1971, for this is lbe way Edwards celebrates almost every Christmas. Only this year, there'll be three big packages under hLs tree -and he's hoping a good many people will come to open them. folir inacbines," be points out. -·------------------ "It's all automated and can be set into motion al the touch of a button." It's a·rar cry from the early thirties when E d w a r d s combined his: budding movie theater operation with stage shows and vaudeville. Yet the obstacles, both economic and technqlogical, have b e e n similar. Radio was the first. "When radio Came in, everybody said the. movies were d e a d , ' ' Edwards recalls. hBut we survived that scare, and then aloni came -·television in t}te late forties. "I thought I was through then. I closed down 12 theaters in one year. But, as it turned out, TV was the best thing Old Ed Changing Sullivan Stages Specials EDITOR'S N 0 TE - Vaudtvillt nevtr really died. It ;mt turmd into "The Ed Sullivan Show." But the olct staple varie-ty program, now in it$ 23rd 1eo.ion, ii showing some signs of change. By CYNTIDA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -Ed Sullivan and hl6 prodocer, Bob -Precht, sareatlng luncheon-- Ed's breakfast, to be precise-- and counting lhe number of variety programs on network television. When the total reached 18, Sullivan took a final bite of lamb chop, and sighed. ''That's a Jot ol. variety." "Gett.ing the talent is the hard part -lining up exciting and interesting perfonners," he went on. "Once all you needed was to put a TOny Ben~ nett on the show .•. But now they've seen everything· mid they know everybody. And the same people keep coming up all over." It Is a commoo complaint. There is a lot of variety on television, and tbere are signs that the public, with its in- stinct. to tum away when it has had enough, is sated. While ''The Flip Wilson Show" - more comedy than variety - is undoubtedly the one real hit o{ the new sea90rl, "T h e Tim Conway Show" and "The Don Knotts Show" never got off the ground; "The Tom Jones Show" has been convert· ed into a sometime t h i n ; "The JohMy Cash Show" is barely holding Its own. And "The F.<I Sullivan Show," the granddaddy of them all, seems stuck in a danger i.one· of the Nielsen ratings. 4 Sullivan is now In his 23rd television season as host of a show that started, qu,ite siinp- ly, as old-fashioned vaudeville played mostly in front or a curtain. As the seasons moved on, the production values be- . came more sophisticated, the seb and surroundings more elaborate, but it was still a program that presented a se- ries o( acts, from jugglers and a n l m a l s to 111ippets from Boardway hlts and opertl stars belting out arias. This season, however, Is dif· ferent. Faced with tough com- peUlion. for star turns and per- sonalities and slotted in a Sun- day night posit!Qn on CBS as the first qf three solid hours of variety, and against a Popu- lar police-action show. the good old ''Ed SuWvan Show" has been undergoing radical cosmetic surgery. For the first half of the season, each pro- gram has been Ued to a theme -an ice show, a visit to a state falr, a salute to the United Nations, a tribute to Richard Rodgers, a book mu· sical. · "Actually F.d originated the idea of putting on special pro- grams within the weekly se· ries." Precht said. "He h a s done it occasionally over the years -the Moiseyev Ballet. the Irving Berlin tribute, the end4·lhe-.'60s show. Now we think ..about the special as a practir.al paltem, partk:Ularly -whenthete Ls an ovet abun- dance of .·straight ·variety around." Sullivan, at 68, Is 'still as competitive as a cub reporter -he still thinks of himsell as a newspapennan alld still has a daily newspaper oolumn. He bas stepped up the hunt for new talent and fresh faces . "We've got people all over looking for us," he said. "We went to Japan on a hunt; we go to Vegas. We try to find them on Broadway1-we t Melba Moore on TV for th ftnt lime." Although Sull an., Precht and their assis comb the entertainment worl for talent -It encompasses e v e r y thing from emerging rock groups to star athletes - Sullivan £eels strongly that he has larger responsibilities. "You have to be conscien- tious -you can't just look for something t h a t is not," he said. "The United Na t i on s show, for example, seemed important to us. And getting Natalia Makarova, the Rus- sian ballerina who defected, to dan~ on our show -wilh an American partner." However, in terms of rat- lngS, the show has been slip- ping steadily since the begin- ning or the season. In the old days, it was a rare week when "The Ed Sullivan Show" was out of the top IO. The team of Sullivan end Precht--Bob is his son-in-law as well as producer -will con· linue to seek a solution. obviously. the klea of retire- ment -even forcible reti re- ment -has never crossed Sul· llvan's mind. Yule Festival Set for KCET For the sixth consecutive year, KCET again will telecast the annual Christmas ~1uslc Festival from the Music Center Thursday from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. on Channel 23. Tile entire 12-hour program 'viii be seen in color for the fjrst lime, .when more than 2,000 performers In choruses, orchesll'.as~ as soloists will take part in the longest continuous p r o g r a m of 01.rtstmas music in the world. Penny Pincher Ads Turn Sense Into Dollars A Hll'lllllll 6.~llSKY -IRllll/R llltLER P10<!<11on John llarley & Ray llilland EiH S!GAL iRi'HiiR Hlll!R ..,.. ----11r •au• ja ] t111JV1RDalllllSltl IWllGruO FP.lHCIB lll ,......,_ :· ' 1-JMCllU.AYAUUM~llltml1 (Qti.,.:C..,~ ....!...._ PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY.• - "COMPLETELY FASCINATING TO WATCH AND' MUST BE PRONOUNCED A TOTAL ENTERTAINMENT! Redford is nothing short of stunning! Not since Brando has an actor had more presence on the screen! Lucille Benson's perfonnance (as Pollard's Motlier)-'Best Supporting Actress Stuff'!" -UI ........ COlllOPOU'fAlf "FASTI ROUGH! EXC1T1NG! ... Robert Redford, as always, · is totally devoted to the character. He's inside it. Whatlooksoutisa charming liar, thief, lover, deserter, brave, not lucky, and a man who'll never stop trying. BriUiant!" -.vctw WlrMlft. NlW YOM mT "'LiltlePauss And B ig H~' isa REAL TH RILLEFlfRobert Redford takes another giant step forward as the most exc~ing leading man since talkies!" -V-5n1tt, U.P.I. _._ .... ,_ IOltllT llllCllH. .I.. IMDfOAD llOWltlD ~ umA MUSS MD 116 HAUY NI Mmlf ~-""°"""'* ··-L.MmM~ .~llm LUCUllDISON .. ._.. ........ .. !~"·! . , ·-----~-----,,_..~ .. '"'~'"°'·' 7~ PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • STARTS CHRISTMAS.DAY • EDWARDS' • . -- I "I LOVE MY-WIFE" "I LOVE MY-WIFE" ELLIOn GOULD IN A OAVID L WOlP£R Production I "I LOVE MY ••• WIFE" BRENOA VACCAAO ·ANGEL TOMPKINS ::;;'.wnwi .~lV"'....T•=.:i.w...n .~•L":M, ~Ulll-~·ftC*IClll.OR• II• PREMIERE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEMENT • ST ARD CHRISTMAS DAY • 111CITCH·22' IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST INTELLI· GENT,THE MOST HUMANE -.tJH, TO HELL WITH IT! -IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM l'YE SEEN THIS YEAR! It comes as close to being an epic human comedy as Hollywood has ever made! Alan Arkin as Yossarian provides the film with its continuity and dominant style. Arlin is a deadly serious actor, he projects intelligence with such mono-maniacal inten·sity, he is both funny and heroic at the same time. Nichols remains, as he was before, one of our finest directors." -•1"'~.'#'."1; "ll'S ONE HEll OF A FllM! A COlD, SAVAGE ANO CHllllNG COMEDY! Firmly establishes Nic hols' place in the front rank of American directors." 8RUC£ PllLUAMSON, PLAY!OY "Viewin1 Alf<in is like w1tchinc lew Alcindar sink baskets or Bobby Fischer pl1y chess. A •irtuaso pl1yer enterlnt his ricltest period! A lriumphlftt performance!" -11•< "'"""" GRAND OPENING CHRISTMAS DAY All AU NEW LUXURIOUS MOTION PIC· TURE FACILITY TO SERVE AU OF OR· ANGE COUNTY. A BRAND NEW THEA· TRE GOING CONCEPT FOR YOU; 2 Df. LUXE THEATRES IN DI.IE BUILDING, EACH THEATRE SHOWING A SEPARATE AND DIFFERENT PROGRAM. EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN CINEMAS HARBOR CINEMA 2 HAUOI ILYD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA MESA 2 MILES SOUTH O~ THI SAN DllGO FWY. 646·0573 EDWARDS HARBOR TWIN CINEMAS HARBOR CINEMA 1 HUIOl ILYD. AT WILSON ST. COSTA MISA 2 MILES SOUTH Of THE SAN DIEGO FWY. 646°0573 STAI TS WALT DISNITS CHRISTMAS DAY "THE ARISTOCATS" • •• ,. . '. ' • • .... " .. ' TUf S OAY '"' .... -(C) (601 Joni ., ..... 8 IMC llMt..mc. (C) <&0• ........ _(C) l"'l Q- Jlllll Bl1lr, Cllftoll F1di1M11, Ti· ther Jl.ltt1t, Alizt Kllhl. H• Rus.stll Is pell t.O·host 0 LA. TV PREMIERE! * "HEY THERE, IT'S YOGI BEAR"~OLORI D iii....,.. -(C)..., ,_ "''"' ..... (-) .. -Yolcls " 0.... lutltr, Dolli ..... sick, Julie Bennett. "" l l1er. Hal Smlti and James Dimn. ........... (301 m no-!Cl 130l m Ill! ID ,.. '"' <Cl <!Ol · llll-..... (C) (30) Q!l Cll ... -(C) (30) • m r11111r ft•llJ' (JO) Ill ... don .. (C) (30) m '"'""' " "' "' <C> <>!'> El!) LI ""' f t.Ullt CINI htrkll Ill -..... -(C) (30) ~ ............... 130) m no """ •• tc> <301 9 Cll IUC -(C) (301 !Iii ,_. -(30) Q!!CllllJ ....... ·-(JJ) llil--(C) mno--IC) (30 mi..-(30) ' Ill UC """' -(C) 130) 1:451lDM11k.M 7,00 11 ca....,.. -tcJ ~Dl a m""' """"' -<ci (101 a"""'' "' ""'' tcJ (90) m IHJ ID I ..., ..., (30) tbt wor\(11 Mf' • ~ h •nd ,,.ltldpttq .. • ...., ol 11111, lldudlnc Nllri '"""'· Jullt .,.,..., "'"' ....... Shl"'1 Mtd.llM. 1100 $ttelsllld, Audrtf Hl!Pbm, 811 COUJ md rlortra Kendtna om Jiit tc1 (30) <"> -"" 81tck Mtec... Coft7 .. ., -• blrthdtr Pll't7 •nd fllldl th1t hla frillld'a fathlt won't let hi• 0011L · U IDHD II MC -" "' ... (Cl ..... -.. -•. ;...,. (-"1) ... - Tiit ., ti Robtlt f. ~,,~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' ..... lift ...... "' tll ... ala's bulW °" Jmit 6, 1961. m -'"" -<ti (90) <Ill Rlcquel Wtlth 11111 am Boot1M , ...... ·-<Cl (30) ......... ,_ (C) (301 l!l-.,....., (90) I 111 i. ............... (C) (301 '"' o iu Cll m ""'-_, .._. Cllrlltul'" (mOttoll} '54--""' ....... ..... ..... .... 111111 ClooMJ, Vtr1·Ehn. Dun Jl1· ..,. T1lls mvtlctl ooml4r conc:em1 tWo war buddl• wtio btoomt 1 top-notdl show blllfntu tum '"" thl .. ,, .... ftlturtl 15 ,,.,_ Inc Brill MP- l!llno -(C) <IDl Ill Qm1 .. -(C) (30) !Iii"' -(C) (60) ., .... _ (30) G)-IJO) ~30 II Q!l Cll Tt -Wl1> ..., (C) (30) A lona·Mitd phllosoj)hy prol t1Ds Alia on 1 Mlllortrcl• d1t1 1n the COIUltl'J. Mlcfl1el Blodaett """ • -(C) (30) """ w .... lmilHCIAL I ....... _ ..... -" -.. (C) (10) "" Sl*ie! fllncll ttlt lllltoty ti tbl RoM bit lfOlll Ill IMeptilM IO the ,,...mt llil•- Ul-• M-(30) ............. (C) (30) 9 (j)T-_, (<) ... .. lldl.• "l'I t•l l!il ,_, "* (C) 1111 ..... <Cl (90) (R) Q)(J)Trdl tr Ce••••••• (C) Ill""" ............ (C) (JO) Ill """' (30) IE Sl•plalltltl MW (55) Ill "" ... (C) (30) .. '°"' • Q!l Cll ... -Nos (C) (10) 8 Ila: 5 R• (C) (60) ltn\1 sancl•rs, BlmtJ Morrls, Tom Hit· "'" D Ill! ID 111 --· 11.D. ('C) (60) "lf'l'll .. I MoUlltai~ to;." A JOUlll MMjo ltlll .:i.W who "°"* Ills hi&fllf plW job 'lill ,,.. hltll .... 1111 \'"" fl'Oll the povwt:J at the ,..,.,.tion ' DAILY PILOT }I LagutUI Civic B •l let 1 'Nutcracke~' Splendid Ch iSJbnas Show ' ly TOM BARLEY Of W. ~ Pltlit 1 .. ft Tocbalkovllcy'a eacbanllna "N~' ballet ii' fut bemm"ll a Chrl1tma1 trodltlon wllh lhe Lquna -Civic Bal1el CGmpoay and II Lila Zall'• dedicated dancen Wllllled any proof of lbelr pn>ductlon'• UllWanlnC ~arll)', lh"f IOI It SUnday trom· an eotlnlllutlcJanta . Ana llllh Scbool 1udleoce. lien tlw: l ,llOll -.... the lllllMI billet the prevlout -1< In Newport Beoc:li and !here 1111111 have been nearly that nwnber in Santi Ana to see a dellghll\11 and hi&hlY eolertllnlnc porformonce of Ibis ·-wort. Miss Zall bu not -cooteot lo rest "' the lourola she recelftd when .. llnt put "' her 11ttterln1 ••Nutcracter••i on the contrary, there were many lnnov1Uoos and lmprovemenb to be notloed In the Sanll Ana performance and IO me oddltlons lo the costume deplrtment tbal have belped to give an 1lway1 colorful ballet a new luster. IonovaUons are h I g h I y welcome, of coune, but It wu Ibo ..,;d lo aee DW1Y ill the clancen usodlled with earlier praent.IUons of the "Nutcracker" revive 1 n d expend on their roles tn thll ide&l children's entertainment. No one wW begrudae lndelaUC•ble Charles Colgan 1eltlnl pride of place In that departmfSlt ,., hla brllllant depiction of two key ,.,., In Ibis hippy ballet: thole of the tottering but 1ame 1 n d 10Te1ble Councillo r 0.-lmey<r, the apry old buck Who knows the qulclt WIY Uat he can nol publish 1he name of every y o u n g oonlrlbutor lo tiu. braulllul "Nutcncnr ... It would be DO rnon than you richly · 4eserve but space does not permit such a lribule. A merry Oirlalmu lo ,.U an. May Ill you 1ttempl In 1971 receive the acclamaUon -arded lo your alitteri!ll ''Nutcracker.'' PosmvnY W'{ wm ENDS THVIS. DIC. 24 ; "***"" ll'S AU. IO FUNNYl'u !!!ll .,.,.. ~""· 'I , ......... _..,,..,.,.,, ....... ' aa.s•-cmm ..... NE\,\' PORT T <·-·-· . 1.... . ~ .,. . IARIM STREISAND-YVES MONT.A.ND-JACK NIKOLSON-haithotly hJ1 "'-n.. Dec. ti ·~ .... ,, ;tD1i t/::luitfi!.~. ~ . ' ' .. ? OSITIVELY ENDS TADISDIY DEC: 24 M ""9 wt:a.,...ftflll C...,_.. A JOSSHUNTUI ,_._ , I ~ ~~g~~~:!: RATED "G" • 2ND TOP HIT• Jul11 AndritW-Roclr: H111ho11 ''DARLING uu·· DIRTY DINGUS MAGEE ·~,; --~.:::-:::--.:r.;:: 'CALLl92-449S 1 Pl• ... ,......, -''THAn THI WAY n Jr ~to 1 child's heart, and Mother·1_;== Glncer, the loftrinl, fairy talelsh old girt Who hides I veritable brood of little slnler snapo beoealh her volumlnous 11drU. By the way, Charles, drop your hem an tnch or two. We spotted ywr llllb Sundoy ond · any child who nottced tl1e aame thin( Is deprived of just a wee bit of tht mlllc CTUted by your role. And the annual w 1 rm trlbulel ""' due Hal O'Neil u lhe Nutcracker Prince, Krtst1 Moorhead 11 the S.-Q<ieen THE PERFEa CHRISTMAS PROGRAM STARTS CHRISTMAS DA !s.. CONTINUOUS DAILY FROM 12:00 NwN AT EACH OF THESE 3 EDWARDS CINEMAS! CINEMA VIEJO . , . . • • ' I ,,,. II Q!l Cll -"'..... (C) {30) (R) Ch1bl111U flUnlon In HootlfYillt flnlb cut rqultra flom P1tticolt Junctlorl lftd GrH'I k .. s. a-wld*I of •IGMIC •ltlno flllSb. • · --r-Gene-wlllres u the Soowt-1f--Kinl for faulUea delivery ol lhelr mljor roles. M l 1 I Moorhead, parUculatly, caught th1I crlUc'a eye with oome superb Interpretation of Mlsl Z I I I ' I dbtlqUlshed choreography. WI DlllO fHIWAT.U PAZTUlll-Off -MISSIOlfVJEJR3Q:'6990 a m ... -tcJ (IO) • Chrbm11 thlmt 11 purwtd bJ 111ests GIM Lollobl11ld1, Vin John· son, Thi DJll11d1 and Jlllatta' d1ulfll1r, X1t111 (17). D llTPll «> (30). D Ill! ID Ill Mtd ,._. IC) 1301 "JLISI Rini the Biii Onct.'" line fJ __ ,.._,_. ~-~ ·---· Lindi O.ntl. Dllft ...... m ..... ..._ -tc> <60> ms. ,_ "" tc> <IOI 111--(90) m--<IOl blfrtendS I child whOlf molblf b lt.30 mg Jllll:t ..... (C) (30) involYld with Uquor tiljlcMrs. • 0 llillJll $ Moti.: "'"'" II .. IE t. Falllll (30} NIVJ ...-..(corntdy) '51-lii•IJ Cooper, Eddil Albert, J1111 GrMr. 11:00 D a wm ... (C) GI Trdl er c:.a...-(C) (30) 11 I.ICU ........ (C) T•Pt cl'tltY Q) n r.-1 DW (C) (60) at Bruins n. UM. at Mo. l•mL 1!1 •••• .... Fiii (C) (30) ., ... er. ........... (30) ''" IJ Q!l Cll •-..... (C) (30) Ollvtr ii ltd Into 1n lm•&in•rJ ..... am-tcJ m-....., ""'.,. ...... (ll9mf) '44-Jotu1 Cemllne. .. _...., .. _(_· .ty) 'S3 -Maril Wll111n, Robert Cumfftinp. Ill! ID""' - flil -(C) (R) 0 Yir&fllil .,. ... (C) (60) liutm: Jull1n Ritter, Stln117 Mrra Hin· ll:JO 8 iB Cl) Mn l rlnl (C) dltman, Bartl111 Mlnkus ind D ID Cl) m""" (C) PIO!'. Jullu1 Sumner MIUer. O IB IMct CMI (C) Dustin m T• Tiii Ille Tmtl (C) (30) Hoffm1n t1111tL Im Fill liolPll 1111_..1 (C) ID,_, .. <Cl (30) U.'0009(j)1!11-°'"" (C) Monti Rott. Dr, Leopold Ball1k 1:05 al) Ulla Lan (55) 1:30 IJ INTERNATIONAL PAPER * BRINGS YOU A "WORLD l'nl m All.fltOt -= """" " o.r Anraft II Mllllq.'" -..r. aH MF$ s.Jlll• •nd "'Sllllrl. .. l!lllD"'* ... (C) OF LOVE"-A UNICEF HOLI DAY SPECIAL ll'30 Ill -._ II Zml"'" (.....,, .......... _ II la (I) I ttl<l&L I i\ hW If lM (C) (60) Pruenlad 111 con· ju11Cflo11 wllll UNICEF and pirtly l:tO 8 llMt: (C) -0. .... , .. ' . .....r' (4t11111) '57-&tlMr WU· orll!Mtin& flvrn 1111 UnHtd fl1hon1 11 »NI SWn. "°'P Nadir CtMr1I AsMmblJ In New York City, •ml, • th1 prolflrn II 1 u luta to chMdllll D llln (C) WEONE \OAY e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIO~S e NEWSPAPERS Q~•ilty · Println9 and D•pendtblt Service for m 0 or• ih•n • quarftr of • century Pll O T P?INTIN<:> 2211 WIST IALIOA I LYD .. NIWPOIT IU.CH-14MJJ1 • -·--~..., STARTS CllRISTMAS DAYI AU. lllW CMTOOM ftAMlt IGJ• TE6 HNICOLOR9 ' Carrie KneubuhJ. Wll ' I delightful Clara, the lltUe girl ,.,m Nutcracker sparkl the adveQlure, ond lh1l alfled young dancer, Gre1ory Otborne, WU hls u I u 1 l brllllant oell 11 I .danc:lng doll ond an Impish slnler 1n1p. And 1 very speclll tribute today for Hope So11wa and an absolutely enchlntinc perfonnuce by Ibis young lady who wu so Ideally cut as the Sugar Plum Fairy. She and the versatlle O'Neal gave us a magnifldent pas de dem:, an Inspired pie<• of dancing that shoold have received much niore than the modest ovatkm lt productd. Thll crlUc deeply ,..,.,. 'La Mancha' Now In Sixth Year By JACK GA VER NEW YORK (UPI) -Five- golng-orHlx ii now the atatus of 11Man of La Mancha," the musical al the Martin Beck Theater. Thll most unuiull 1!1111k11, bued on Spanllh novellat Cervantes' checkered llfe u blended wllh liis clualcal masterpiece, unon Qullote," Is lhe flflh musical lo pua 1he live-year mart on Broedw•Y· It Is -In lhe 1ood company pf "Hello, Dolly I," the champion; .. My Falt Lady," "Fldd1er on tbe ,Rool" and "Oklahoma!", in &bat order. . The show bu .,......i more (han l30 million In lhe Unltod State! In that lime, retumtnc lo dale a profit of l,IOO pertent -4,llO,llOll .. lhe l200,llOll lnveltm<nt. '111ere w1D be Important prollta 10< 7un to comt, long after the Broaclwa)r run ends. There have been prodlactloal in 17 foreign countrlel. Two naUonaJ touring comp.me. have rung up 1,455 and S17 perfonnances. M of Nov. JO, lhe Broadway production bad achieved 1,091 aoowlllp. 11 need! 122 more performances to pass "Oklahom1I" The DAILY PILOT-: lops.in Locel Sports '' -eU•DOPl•1•e1 HARBOR TWIN CINEMAS "AllOI AT WIUON·SOUTN Of S.D. fWT, COSTA MESA·646-0573 ellA•D ..... I.GI Cl•UIA I IN THE WESTMINSTER CENTER CINEMA WEST I WESTMINSTEll AND GOLDEN WEST 192-4493 RATED "G" "ITS FOR EVERYBODY" • •• • : .1,7. • • ... . ·. J ·.~. • . ' . . . .. .. • • . . ·. )' • ... .... I .. , • 'I . . • ... I "J ' .., ,, • ·' • I l ,,1 . ' • ' I ' I ·:II. • • I • I • • :,; I • • • • • 1! " j ! ; • I ' l • ~ t ,, a Ii :~ ... l· :I •I ii ii ! It I ., " I I r' I • ,, I .. I' .1 11 • I 'I i I l· r • • . ·--· ·--···-----• .. -··--... < ff) DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, DKtmbtr 2:3, 1970 Off Broadway Pini Boy Meets Gir) .• ~-i11 Ma11y Ways . I 'Carpenters' Poetit Fan 1t's the old etcr1tol tlleme, whether it be comedy or dtama, and these 16 Orange Coun· ty theater groups of· fered many variations on it during 1970. How many can you recog· 'nize? --- . • By WllJLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -' A perversely poetic f a n t a s y about us all, maybe. "The Carpenters" opened Monday night at the American Place Theater, the first but hopelully not the last play by an intriguing fulent, S t e v e n Tesich. The 28-year~Jd author was born in Yugoslavia, earned his BA at Indiana University and has penned short slories and a novel . ln!ltead or the usual aulobiographicaJ indulgence of tyro dramatists, he surges effectiveness into s o m e The dialogue is elliptical, si mplicity which the world oddly humorous , inverted, a . sometimes mistakes fot slu-' trip through a crazyhouse of pldily; and Laura Estff'lllal verbal mirrors, s t t a d i I y afrects fugitive alienatlm tot engrossing. The players are cameo cl_arity. 1 sensitively iesponsive under A scenic dlsplay by Kert Eugene Lesser's direction to Lundell that manage1 to the · script challenge. Vincent crowd five or s.l.x multilevel Gafdenia creates a powerfl.11 rooms into a copper-wire ima&e of awful, doomed fram e augments the emOtive f r u s t r a t i o n , and Alice intensity with deft ligbUhg Drummond as his wife makes assists by William Mintzer. much of sparse dialogue. Poetic drama discovery l5 Among their three grown the prime aim of t he children. Glenn W a Ik e n American Place Theater. lhd depicts youthful, unanswerable this piece is right on target. cruelty with chilling fire: Joni-::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::; Korkes rep res~nts their original absurdist symbolism. 1 -,..-,-,.-,.-,,-"'-"-...,-~,,-,,.-.,-,-,,.-n-. "The Carpenters·• concerns ~ a family of five settled into such individual C<lmplacency ~ J and CQUective isolation that · for .a time Vague intimations OPENS of hate and menace seem like lhe harmless -jests of TV X·MAS NIGHT CLOSED TONIGHT family serials. But Tesich has 1rar more A1ilTON MERRY CHRISTMAS intense pwcpose. Employing "i devices that remind or Kafka , TO ALL .f I onesco and other inC<lmpatlble extremes. he -----------·II ,---------.',., creates an allegory that can Bftlll If j II wm! l ___ s_,._,_,_._F_ri_d_•_Y __ '_,I' be understood at several rwu11111 ~ -.; . interpretive levels. "THE "SLEEPER OF This may be everyman and · his care-calloused wife up THE YEARll"'' against the generation gap; or Dlre(.t Fro'" lf1 S .. 11Sotlo1tol "Dtlithtful l11tltftoi11....,t" "IK0'"1M11decl"'-CBS ".. WllOOtll -bl'hlfy ,_., ... ~ ....... 1 •• reflection upon metaphysical abstractions ; or is it anotherj "Bleak House" parable of national affliction? "'"11tif11I ltocll C""'"'y" • --Juditk C ., ·°j' S!>uped Up Shakespeare Hits London LONDON (~ ~ A pop musical version of "Othello" called ''Catch My Sou I'' opened Monday night with a twang of guitars in a converted locomotive shed. On the v.ohole, said the ANGELA LANSBURY~ r Oir1<t From Hit Triu'"pll "'..:i "'[, IS "M1m,"' ill " .~ "SOMETHING FOR EVERYONE" critics, jt's a pretty goodllri~~~~~~~~~~~:~=~::~:; show. The popped-up rendition of !he Shakespearean tragedy itflh-IL I DIOI~· · At The Entrance reatures costumes that look l!.J 11 To Fabulous like so m e thin g from Woodstock-or-eamaby Street; •fWl"OflT IEACH-~-Olt.J.13$0c --. Lido-Isle- music th at wails !rom Loodon discotheques to the swamps ·of L<luisiana and Lhe w h i t e former president of the Oxford University Dramatic Society, Jack Good, in blackface as the Moor. Good also produced the musical. Shakespeare set 'Othello" in Venice and Cyprus. ''Catch My Soul" is set in the Deep South of the United States. METAO-OOlDWYH·MAYER PHsenll A BURT KENNED'!' PROOUCTION SIHATn!1s mnTYDIHGUS r EE llrn-0 ; P~VlSIOH" ; METROCOL.OR ' The show is being staged at lhe Roundhouse. an ·engine shed in North London and the headquarlers for some of Britain's wilder stage events. Every pillar and beam is hung with microphone s and loudspeakers, and the music from a brass and rock un it called ''The Gass" sha kes the 1==~=========~~~~~~~~~~~ building to its 19lh century foundations. The show marks the return of P. J. Proby, an American singer \\'ho once fell out of favor in Britain for repeatedly splitting his skintight pants onslage. Proby plays Cassio. and a top soul singer, curvey P .P. Arnold, writhes her way through the role ot Bianca. • 121·4010 Albert f"lnll•Y • AlK Gv!M$1 ' "SCROOGE" !GI plul e S1conll Ho lld•y Ft•lurt "A •DY NAMEO CHARLIE •ROWH" (GI Pn1mi..., Ent~ • Under 17 Mun •• Wilt! "•'-' * 01411:Y OF A MAO HOUS•Wlfll• • PIU$ • Kim D•rbr : "STllAWB&RRY STATEMENT" Boy' meets _gi rl, boy loses si:irl , boy .e:ets j!Jrt. And how many sta.e:e productions have evolved around this particular premise'? In Orange County, the batlle or the sexes in livin.e: theater was foujtht on many different battie.e:rounds. Abo.ve are reminiscences of 16 or them. on 'vhich the theaterJ?oer mav sharpen his recollec· tive \vits. Identify as 1nany as you can. then check thi s section Thul'sday to see ho\v you scored. The Daily Telegraph complained that "shakespea re's text has been chopped into messes," but ii saluted the musical score by Ray Pholman and Emil Dean Zoghby. The Guardian protested that "the chorus or tribe as we call them since •·1-1air"' mostly have that dreary , scrawny look of someone·s kid sister trying to loo k lecherous.'' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• E•chnlwt Dri¥ .. ln Sllew'"111 Ptl•r f'Otodi • Den11l1 HI,.... "EASY RIDEii" 1111 PlU5 e Clll>I Ei llWOoNI "ICl!LLY'S HEROES" !GP') Continuous Daily From 2 One Wffk Only ' ALSO TH IS POPULAR FEATURE 'lhe"Peaaata'O.ac: 'M~Jtlarnd Charlfi 'Brown" •·---D• TECHNICCLCR STARTS . NEXT WED., DEC. 30 JOHN WAYNE A Howatd flawtcs Ptoduc!"'1 1110 LOBO" " ~-· NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES _ ... ,. ': CONTINUOUS DAILY the 4 BEdfdJ9 films for the price of one I GIORGE SEGAL RUTH GORDON "WHERE'S POPPA?~' '" --AlllERT 1'1,.NIEY "SROOG('' plV$ "AN ELE,HANT CALLED SLOWLY" c ... 1. Sil. & s-. 1:• '·"'· _,. ar.\'I• '" .. "'f '~~. ~!!~ . .,. ~ COROlt4 DIL /11\Alt . ''IT AW. #i MAD, · llD, Who Cares? No olh•r n•w1p1p .. r in file world c•t•1 •bout your commu• nity Ii•• your community dtily n1w1p1p1r does. 11'1 lh1 DAILY. PILOT. IGl For Everyone SHOW TIMES 7:00 and 9:30 MAD WORLD" NOTICE: Me-chofth FltEI CHltlSTMAS $HOW, WffMJd11y 0111d Thwrldq', Dec. 2l 011d 24, 1 :00 p.111. "CAPTAIN NIMO •11d UNDEltWATElt CITY:• Cell '01tT THIE.AYRE fot •d"i· tiOftOI lftformO'tloft, ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• FOUNTAIN VAL LEV OIUVE IN "••n-s1,..1r1 "DIRTY OINGUS MAGEE" !GP') plu1 • Second CllOr f'lllvrt "ELVIS • THAT'S THI: WAY IT IS" Ult") •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ............... --·--171·11'2 Frtnll. S~••• "OlllTY DINGUS M4GEE" [Q .. j plul e Second CllOr Ptalvtt "ELVIS e THAT'S THE W4Y IT IS" fGP'I •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• Al-I FiftM1 • AIK GulMIS "SCROOGE" (GI ,1u, e 5.nnd HtlllllY F11iw.. "A •OY NAMED CHARLll •llOWN" 10) ·································~·· ........... ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• SJ.GO rr• CARLOAD ---· --.. ,.., ... , ~. .. -M t 41J1 l 4<11N f"ec:tN W1t"'""ll C111!1 Eu-PHl'll P .. llwil "THI 0000, THE •AO AtlD TH• UGLY" 10"1 'Ills e "HANG 'liM HIDH" {Oft} plw "l'llT,.UL OP OOllAltS" fOIJI Alt CelwS""' G".-.e C. Sci" "P'ATTOH" tOf") _.i111 e 1!1111rt llVfl'I • H1111'Y l"llltf ---' f'•ATTLI 01'" THI •ULGI" ····································~··· • r - ¥orld atu-,... .,., ' l\ert I lo Uevel •win ltitive ~llllg ... ry Is t • e .~ et. ...... •• I I T ' ]· Rll"". . • OR :e . • ;.) • .... !Wlfl'I liHT" cm ., T '"] • " :m • :m. ..... "' .. :01 ~ ... ' 1111 lMa " . ., I Wldnesd11, Otttmbtt 23, 1970 1 DAll.Y PILOT l!J ' One Mistake an·d I!>~· Rolled Out••V allel By PHIL ROSS Of "" .,.,.., , ....... ., INGLEWOOD -Balbo1'1 John Vallely had just showeml and was rapidly slipping into his streeJ: duds in anUclpaUon · of a brief and much· . ' _hastened return trip to the Orange : :COU:t area. , For the better part, th~ ex-UCLA 1.411-Amerlca guard on last season's NCAA championship squad h a d . watched (he only saw action for a · llve-minute stretch, in the .econd ,' ~riod} hi.9 AUanta Hawk teammates like a 119-115 thriller from the Lakers Tuesday night at the Forum. .- Blackman's ' , ·~ Gefs . . Stiff Test · . ' ~b 'Blackman gets his most severe t~t as a coaching wonder worker now tl\at he has taken over as head football coacli af1he UMlVersitY Of lllinoii. -- Slac,man performed s u b s t a n t I a 1 miracles for. ·it· Couple of Southern 1 C&li(ornia schools before moving up in the world of coaching back in the early Jl50o. ' The ex-USC~gridder Initially waved his magic wand at Monrovia High School, ~ving tba! icbciol its first varsity league tir,tball:CI1>WJ1 in 13 aeasons. Atter·keeping Monrovia on or near th• • WHITE ' WA SH ·--- •L•~N WHITI ,. t of tti heap be moved on to Pasadena C ty Colege "'·here he aga in worked the ackmitn miracle, guiding PCC to a Jr. e Bdwl berth and subsequent 28-26 {. queit'.Of Tyler, Texas. · , ·~nver University Lured · Out' Of Southern California and i' a school that finished last and nfxt r+f.o· last in the Mountain States Con~eTice to the circuit title in 1954. l'f Uft achievement prompt ed IlflrQ:Routh University to try ·and right a sink~" ship. The Jndian!I hadn't had a "'in g season since 1H9 so Robert Bia an was brought to the helm. In ·s' first year there (1955) he wa!I only~. But then he go~ roll~g and never h•s !Md a losing campaign since. ll ii'J962 Indian! owned the school's first ~beaten, untied season in 37 years. A~thli: past campaign his undefeated r1e\'m,, was acclaimed as the best colle~te outfit In the east, by virtue of Its rGCe.ipt or the Lambert Trophy. l'iofil. tbe 52-year-old super coach faces his ~t challenge-that of throwing IOGeqler a footba11 program than can nval~those of Michigan, Ohio State and , Ille ~~. ot Illinois' neighboring lUg Ten schooll. · It W.On•t be easy. Bui"'Blackman, a ·man whose name used:th crop up occasionally for the USC JOO. ~do it if anyone can. PSO,Mayhe he'll he John McKay'• 11.1c~r at USC when the latter retires. ~· * * * Railis coadi Getr1e Allen 1ets a bre1k Ir h takr1 Use Grttn 81y job-Pbll Btn~n served as a !Julftt after tbe \rtnCf'Lor.bardl era. P\o: fur1n bis rlC'°' mlod would bave .-•n to be the tint man 011 Ute Job tr Lombardi. ne pressure On n~a must ltavt bHD aabearable at· ti el.., * * * niwering a column note or a faw da)'I . Oreen Bay hU only be&1 shut out ce:1n the same stason by the-wne cnt three times In Ill ~year pro tboll hl,slory. ..,~go Bears did It In 1932, 9-0 a '8 .. TM ChJcago Clrdlnals or 1934 h '¢ the Lrick. t--0 and &41. Then 1hls y r &he Detroit Lions pulled It off, t<Ml, • It wu another former Bruin all- ~ri~a JUlfd -veteran Walt Hazzard -who sparked a second half Hawks' comeback and finished wilh 32 Points. J have to get more playJng time 1n ot elSe l'll'nevtt progress," he says, "If I get Into a game ralr!Y eQ.rly, I come right bade 'out afler I make one mistake and sometin'leJ don't get back in after that." mlnu1<8 laler. of cblDce to watcb llim wbell I'm oo •11rs very tough all the Ume when l the blndl." get into a S•me," allerted Valltly, "In lac!, l· pl plenly ol limo to watcii all lhe good guordl . In the "because I Just can't get prepared leagoe whtn I'm on· the bench.'' menially. ValleJy b leading the Haw.,. In fr .. "I suppose 1 am pretty uptight in throw accuracy {oVer 83 percent) and l\WU In addlUon to John (Maravlcb and GtoraJ1'1 Hub Whlla)," A,l'I Guerin. . "I've been playing John In' opota during lhe flnt half In our lalt few·: games and he's getttna better, - -clally defeOJlvely. Corraled by lhe DAIL-</' PILCYI' in the victorious Atlanta lockerroo.rn follow~ the win, _Vallely was obviously pleased his team had emerged triumphant. The tow-headed, 6-3; ISO.pounder got the dubious asai.gruntnt of having to shadow Jerry West when he relieved another Hawk yearling -Pistol Pete Marav ich -with about 10 minutes left in the first hair Tuesday night. there. I mean. t try to do what I can is ICOl'lni at a 4.f clip despite Ills do ~iltn I gel ln and ii ll doeln't.go-•Pl>&lf•l lac:k_oLaufllclt11I playJn& right l'm out of the game." time. "Ht has every relponsiblUty a elerllL.llke..Jluza1 ..... ...,....,'---9-~~~~ dlUerence Lt: jn the experleoce Walter However, in a dialogue of sheer frankness, the ex-Corona de! Mar High and Orange Coast College star was understandably disappointed he hasn't played more In his rookie campaign. "I haven't been playing much at all. Vallely actually held West to a mere field goal and then swllched over to shutout guard Willie McCarter when Maravlch replaced Hau.a.rd three , Perhaps it's a charisma which exists AUanta's mod-attired coach, Richie • between former players of UCLA Guerin, is a former N at i o n 1 l coach John Wooden but Vallely readily Basketba.11 Association guard and bt admitted 111 just enjoy playing with plans on bringing Vallely aloq slowly. Walt (Hazzard). ''It takes a IOOd guard about two or "I'm picking up the proper attitude three years to establish himaelf in the just being around him and I get plenty NBA and we have two other rookie has over a kid like John." Altboucb bo Ilk .. playing '" pay In ~ Vallely confided, 11Geor&ia ii liothlng Uiie Cal~ornla. "My wife and I will he riahl bock here the mll'lute the season ends," bt OOllclll</t& ' Rose Bo·wl Rivals Fight Mud, Rain. '51 Indians .. • PASADENA (AP) -Ohio State and Stanford football teams were able to practice outside 'I'u_esday wlth a letup in the inclement weat~er but the West Coast representatives for the Rose Bowl had better f o r t u n e than did the Midwesterners. ."It was awruIJy slippery and there were mud holes," said coach Woody Hayes of the Big Ten champions. "We had trouble with pass receiving and some J hem..}ooked like they never saw the ball before." Stanford, meanwhile, held its two workouts at Long Beach State College and coach John Ra1ston commented, ' "this was the only day we could time out anything. "Before this practice it was difficult for our receivers to cut and our quarterbacks to Lhrow. That kind of timing was almost nonexistent.'' It appeared the weather conditions were much better at Long Beach. about 30 miles south of Ohio State practice field at East Los Angeles College. Hayes said the two-week layoff since the end or the regular season has been particularly beneficial to running back Tom Cam pana, a 5-11 junior .. "Campana is playing better ball now than he has all year," Hayes said. "He has been pestered with a pulled muscle and the two-week rest really helped." Hayes and Ralston said they did not plan a full scrimmage prior to the Jan. J classic in Pasadena's famed Rose Bowl. "We hit every day but we don't scrimmage," Hayes told a n e w s . cooference. "I think that's the way to avoid injuries." Ralston also said his squad would work with full pads but no scrimmage situation. The wet weather which has existed since both clubs arrived altered the practice plan of each j!Oach. "Practicing lnslde, we are limited on what we can do," said Hayes. "Actually there are certain techniques we can work on better lnsJdt, IUCb u footwork, ball· handling, deception and short cuts. "A.s soon as ·we get outside, we'll 10 Into more group action with long and sbort passes and dummy ICrimmqts." Ralston admitted the S o u t h e r n California rain b8!1 been "extremely dlsconcerting" to the Stanford aquad. "Running in an inch of water hurts total perfonnance,11 he said. Nevertheless, RWton said he hopes the game pian wlll be installed fairly aolidJy by the conclusion of Saturday'• workout. Brown Works Grid Wonder In 3 Seasons NEW YORI\ (UPI) -Phil Beqllon ii gone and Bill Austin most likely ls next. A couple of others are sure to follow but on~ man is staying for sure. P1ul Brown.' ' Rewrite For Malt PASADE NA (AP) -They...,.. • mallgned u lhe "belly pampettr1" .. New Year's Day 1951. the Stanford Jndians who loat the Roae BQwl game to Jlllniols f0.7. And one writer, 8 stanford AIWJUlUs who had ~ Stanfor,:t plarers sipping malted milka after PJ'lctices for the bit game, wrote: ' ' T h e self-indulgent, taste-tickling Stanford belly-pamperer• ATE their w1y out of the football game..'.: ___ ~ After 19 dry winters for the Indians. Stanford is in the Rose Bowl again •S champion of the PacWc a. 1bt f ri • 11 Ohio State on Jan. 1. As Gary Kerkorlan, a lawyer in nearby Ingkwood, or any other 1951 Indian 'will -attnt,-the 1ame was m'llCb closer than that. . Slanford led 7.t lale ffi-ilie lhird quarter when Dllnioa went ahead after a pass intereipUon. On· the n ex t' series, quarterback ~rkofian w a s sidellntd with a fractur«I vertebra in his back. The Indians, with a sophomore i;ubslitute quarterback throwing the football, gambled. The close contest · broke open after a couple more lnleroepti.ons, a blocked ~nt and' ~ , He's nol going anywhere unless it's to the Super Bowl next month. Such a prospect was dimmer than a 100-to-I shot before this season began, bul after losing six o[ their first seven. Paul Brown's {:incJ[!J!Bti Bengals came charging back like the cavalry. -------~ They've" ~on seven in a row noW and are looking to i:nakt it -eiaht Saturday long IWnt runs. • • .!low ihaLSlanlord linally"l\"orr~-_ race for the rosts. \be Indiana of 1151.are reubitinl- · when they go against the Baltimore Colts Jn on~ of th~ AFC's semifinal playoffs. TM<'Bengals aren 't nearly as impres. slve a club a1,·11y, the Mlrmeaota Vikings or the Baltimore Colts. They have no superstar and nobody ou~ide ·their immediate families can tell you the names of the players who make up tb1 front four. But somehow the Bengal! 1et the job done and when you talk with any of the Cincinnati players they tell you ooe man is primarily responsible. Paul Brown. · ·•we•re all going to get together, for a malted mllk." 11ld Kerkorian. "l hawo't had one in 19 years." The most prominent of the 1951 lnditnt Include five dictor!I, four engineers1 three attanleys, two bankers, two I i I• insurance executives, two coaches, a congressman, a minister and a collett dean . 'Their co a c h, Chuck Taylor, i! tbe Staford· athletic director. Running back Bob Malhlu is servlft& la the House from Tulare. ' · · All-Alnerlcan end Bill "'1cColl Is a doctor, as are defensive back ·Bobby Thompson, safety Dick Hom, running back Eric Southwood and defensive back Joe SJ. G<me. ltijured A119el S till Battles Talk to Virgil carter, for example. He's I.he Bengals' quaryerback and he g~ the regular job in the fourth game of the season. This is Carter's first season wltb Cincinnati, Brown having picked him ue from Buffalo after Greg. Cook, rookie or the year last season, suffered a separated shoulder. Linebacker Chuck Essegian, w b o gained further fame u an actor and basebal1 player, is a Hollywood casting director. Harry Hugaslan, who scored the Rose Bowl touchdown', is a paper company execuUve. Minnie Rojas, Jr. spends his time visiting hospitals instead of playing ball like other little boys, His father, Minnie, suffered a crushed spinal cord In an accident \vith a truck in which young Rojas' two sister were killed. The former Angel pitcher is cur- rently getting therapy at Rancho Los Amigos Hos- pital in Downey and his many friends and acquaint· ances can contribute to the fund according to Angel shortstop and captain Jim Fregosi (left). Address for contributions is &x 3820. Anaheim, 92803. Carter didn 't know quite what to expect of Brown In the beginning. "I heard a great many rumoni about him," says the 23-year-old quarterback, whom the Chicago Bears fined Sl,000 lut year because he was critical of the way they handled him. Defensive guard Leon King ls the minister and Al Kirkland, a defensive- tackle, is assistant dean of the Stanford School of Engineering. Brui ns Tac kl e StLLoui s Af ter 94-7 5 Victory By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Coach John Woode n of unbeaten, top. ranked UCLA is puzzled today after an intersectional basketball victory. .. ,I can't explain our terrible free thro\v shooliefg.'.' Wooden said after his 5.0 Bruins ripped 11tlssouri 94-75 Tuesday night before 12,347 f ,a n.s in Pauley Pavilion. "We worked more on free throw shooting than anything this ••eek because of final exams,'' said Wooden, whose team converted only 20 of 40 from the charity stripe against the Tigers. Perhaps it \Vas inactivity. The Bruin! hadn't played since Dec. 12. But they return to the home court ton ight against SL Louis Unive rsity. "The only way to beat a national champion is to play an exceptionall y fine game," said Missouri coach Norm Stewart. " "Anything Jess and It's a disaster. "l thought the Bruins were a little sluggish defensively and (rom the fre,e throw line but OW!y put on a characteristic blitz and that was the ball a a me. .. I nottctd six NCAA pennants hanging around the auditorium," Stewart said. ''They didn 't get them by accident" Oregon State suff~red its first defeat In flv~ starts at Lexington when !ievcnth· ral'lked Kentucky 'bad to ttght off a Deaver rally In lhe last six minutes to wtn, &f·7l .. - Blanda Says He'll R etire "l was awe-stricken at firit and a little hesitant. The rq_mors you hear about him are wrong. ne•s· really an outstanding coach, a very honest guy, a very knowledgeable guy: one who knows how to use his personnel and how to surround himself with some outstanding assistant coaches." And if the 1970 underdog Indians prev ail over the Big Ten champion Buckeyes, n1alted milk may not be enough to match the occulon for the men who carried the Stanford banner two decades before . If Raiders Win Cro w n MA RTINEZ AMONG SOCAL LEADERs OAKLAND (AP) -The National Football League playoff games will be settled in sudden death overtime periods if they are tied after four qu_arters. P..laybc that's why the Oakland Raiders are favored in Sund ay 's game here with the Miami Dolphins. '11ley have George · Blanda . The 43-year-old B I a n d a was undoubtedly the. NFL 's top clutch performer or the regular season, !l&ving four games \\'ith field goals or touchdov;n passes In the final momenls. "I didn't feel all)'. pressure, t knew what \\'e had to do . 't •ve been in every kind or situation you'd v.1ant to think or since I slarted playing this game," he'd explain week after week. The later it got In the game, the better Blanda \\'as. He kicked thrCe field goals -winning two games and tying one - with six seconds or less left to play. Blanda has become the most honored backup quarterback in pro football history. On Tucsdoy, the P..t i am I 'l'ouchdown Club named him the winner of its Playe r-of-the-Year award . La.st week, the Maxwell CI u b of Philadelphia voted him a similar awaid. And a club in Blanda's home town of Chicago named him that city's top athlete of the year. Blanda, Y.'ho broke into pro football with the Chicago Bears in 1949.'says he"s "90 percent sur~ ... -he'll ~retire ii-the Raiders win the Super Bowl. ''11le road to the Jan.· 1'1 iamc and an. NFL title looks rough . The Raiders wer?.M this season In games with other teams that have reached the playoff!!'.. One of the losses was a 20-13 setback in Mia'mi. -- Talk to hlm about the reason for lhe success of the Bengals and you'll never hear him mention Paul Brown, only his bal lplayers. "They're enthusiastic,·• he s ay s. "They're just bubbly and every body's having a great time. It Wlll that way even When we lost. Pete Perreaull, now with the Jet!, rcmember:s that meeting with Walt ~1ichaelll. He also remembers ano ther habit of Paul Brown's. "He's not a young man by any mea·m (Brown is 62) but he still doe! thole calisthenics' with everybOdy else·,'' Perreault says. "That's his way. He'll never ask you to do what he ·woni do himself and no matter what, he'll llway1 let you le.now where you stand." A man who al!lO can manage tllat Is IOtnething else. SANTEE, Calli. -Laguna 13.,ch'• Richard Martinez fired a 70 to rank high among qualifiers in the So u the r a. California golf open being played between rainstonns. Martinez, the defending champion, tr&lled Jim Gilbert of San Diego, Lu Vegu' Larry Mowry, Roil Reif of'Santee and Frank Merhar of San Diego: AD hid 69s. They lead. the field of 71 professional~ Into today's final IS.holes In the $10,000 tournament. The tourney, reduced to 35 holes from the originally scheduled 5f becall.9t rain washed out play Monday, bu a $1,500 .- check for the winner. Bengtso11 Quits, -l'11~kers Seek Coa~h , GREEN BAY, Wis, (AP ) -Coofldence and camaraderie. two vital Ingredients of I.ht Green Bay Packers during the Vince Lombardi era, were Je ss prominent this past season on the National rootball League team . Whether the Packtt1' decline from twe>- llme Super Bowl champions to also-rans In the National Conference's Central Division, and Tuesday 's resignation of Phll Bengtson a!! coach and gene ral manager,. can be traced to the a,pparcnt coollna: is a p0lnt of conjecture.· The 57.year~ld Bengt.son's resignation and an author, once wrote that Lombardi following the 111&1 season, color television ended a di!lmal lhree-year 1tretch that Is ··a cruel, kind, 1oulh, gentle, sets the nest year and silver l'ea set.I saw the Pack win 20 games ~bile losing miserable, wonderful man whom 1 often afttr the Packers defeated the Jtansu 21 and tying once. hate and often Jove and llway1 respect. C Bo 1 This year's mark of ft.I wa,, the worst " . "Lombardi deliberately made U1 think lty Chitfs in the fln:t Super "· ror the GreeD and Gold since 19S8 when it of oUrsel'O'es-u: a unlt, as a group of fO .Now, from outward appearaoces, thl posted a 1·10-1 record. men," Kramer said. Packm are just another pro football The 1959 ·season saw Lombardi take But Lambardl a\90 had a "IOft'' tide. 1 team. Tht Packers are close, they are over the reins or a chronic loser and It wu "St. Vlncmt" who lMtlted f l ~ but Jo lhe 1 mlJ h l b l f h I lh.l )he Picker Pl.Yer.' lhelr ~.,, and r euu~; no nger are 'I a y. elevate t e c u to the roe o c amp on. w1 ''Th ..... 1 · ...... · .1.. h Lo b d" bl' I children •et togelher on Tha·•sglvtng e "h•>a min m--. lS u19 AUhoµg m ar 1 s pu 1c mage was " ,..., that of an ogre, Packer players knew Day for a team party. \ feliowthip we had amonf ouraelvee," said bctte,~~-= ;:-,;;;;.-;::,....=:;;;--;;;;•""'-c;;i;ill,cw;·'•"'.,;l;<hem,"~og\',re::.,or Green Bay'' who 1 Ray NU1ehke, veteran Packer mlddll Jcfry Kram~r, ormer 1c er a:u1r aavc Il)HS' -wrvel' mlftk-1carvcs Untbacktr.---1 ti • ,. • I , ' ' • I I r. .. • -· WtdMsd~, DK'mbet 2), 1970 ' . ' . FeELING OF ·LONELINESS -Don Smith (22) ol .. Humboldt State Gollege is surrounded by .UC Irvine __,players Monday night. On the left is Bill Moore with Ed Burlingham and Phil Rhyne joining the crowd. UCI won its fifth game of the year, 94-74, over the Lumberjacks from Arcata. ' ..• Sports Jn Brief . Pro Grid Odds Listed ' For · W ~ek e 1ul Play offs LAS VEGAS -Baltimore, Oakland, Detfoil·and MinJ'lesota are ravored to \Vin this weekend's National Football Leap:ue plaYoff gam'es, Las Vegas oddsmaker Jimmy . "The Greek" Snyder said :Mooday. _,- In Saturday's game. Baltimore is 21 six- point choice over Cincinnati in their Aml?l'ican Conference semifinal while Detroit is picked by three · points over Dallas in a National Confere n ce semi!l1;,!. 0 "1:\and gets the -nod by seven points over ~liami in the other AFC semi while Minnesota is sev en points over San Frericisco in the othl'r NFC semi, in Sunday games. • LOUISVILLE, Ky. -Dr. J o hn Heldman Jr., associated with tl~c University of I..oujsviUe for 33 yc::irs as a bas:."!ball coach and athletic director. died of an apparent heart attack Monday night. · Heldman, 65, was strieken fatally at his home shorUy after returning from Lo\•isville 's basketball game w'i th Kar.sa s. 1-!c had been planning to retire in July as head of the health. physical education and -recreation department. During 30 years as baseball ci>ach, he compiled a record of 356 victories, 16.1 losses and 2 ties. • SAN DIEGO The Sain Diego Chargers have dealt tight end WlOie Frazier to Houston , the club that surrendered him five years ago for a first draft choice. The newest member of San Diego's football team is Doug Wilkerson. a rookie offensive guard who played only three games for the Oilers last season on def en~. recommended that both be fired as,-a result of, the third racial controvetsy to stir the athletic department in four years. • LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Kili.gs Skate · after their s e c o n d consecutive National Hock~y League victory at the Forum tonight against the Chicago ,Black Hawks and familiar faces. The Kings, idle since Sunday night's 7·2 triumph over Montreal snapped an Il~ game winless streak, lost at Chic.ago S-3 on Nov. 29 but it 's the first Forum appearance for the Hawks this season. • LAF A YE'ITE, Ind. P u r d u e University Athletic Director Guy "'Red" Mackey has been moved to an inten"sive care unit and was listed in serious condition Tuesday rqornipg at Met~odist Hospital in Rochester,, Minn., the university l!-nnounced. The university said a .Mayo Clinic spokesman described the transfer as necessary for problems related to the stroke Mackey suffered Sunday, the second stroke in Jess than 'twO months. Mackey, 65, was taken to Mayo Clinic Dec. 6 and his right leg was amputated at mid-calf after a circulatory . problem developed. · lie had been hospitalized at Lafayette after suffering the fir.st stroke NOv. 8. • COOPERSTO\VN, N. Y. -The 1971 Baseball Ha]l of Fame game will pit the Chicago C u b s against t h e Cleveland Indians on Aug. 9 at Doubleday Field, it was announced Tuesi:lay . The Cubs and the Indians hav~ met here twi.ce before -in 1952 and 1960 - each winning once. The game will be preceded by induction ceremonies for new.members of the Hall of Fame. _Saddlehack Ousts Trojans From Tourney By RON EVANS Of nit ·Delb l"llot Stoff A 29-point performance by Universjly'1 Tom Mullinix went for naught as the Trojans fell to Saddleback, 51-48, Tuesday afternoon in the consolation round of the Laguna Rotary basketball townament at Laguna Beach High. The loss ousted University from the tourney . Saddleback met Damien this afternoon in ' the second round of the consolation bracket. Mullinix, a 6·2 junior with outstandtng spring, kept the young Uni club or coach John Driscoll in the game all the way. The Trojan center not only hit on 11 of 22 shots from the field (most of them jumpers from the baseline) but also did an outstanding job on both boards. The game was tight all the way with Sadd\eback holding the upper hand throu gh most of the early going. The score was tied at 12-12 after the first quarter of play and 30-30 at the halftime break . It really got furious in the third quarter with no team holding more than a two- point advantage. With six minutes left in the game, Mullinix hit a shot from in close to t.ie it at 44--44. But Saddleback guard Richard Lipski .$anned a free tllrow and a cripple and teammate Tom Kuk followed with a charitf ioss' in a span of 1 ~ minutes to give the winners JJ 46-44 advantage. Trojan ,foi-ward Dan Stuart followed with 'a bucket to· cut the Roadrunner m·ar.giii -to ~wo points, but Lipski countered with a fl"ee throw and Saddleback had a 49-46 lead with 45 seconds to go. Un!v•r1lty (UI S1dd1tllldt Ull W1l1t•r Mlco MIJH!M• Stu1r1 ~~':Piin TG!th ,, ff ,, ,, l 0 I I T•vlor 1 1 2 l Llrmtl 11 1 22t Kuk 1l37 Putt 1012WHb111 OIOlwrltM . S1lr:j!:l\iy 11 11 t •t TOlfl' ktr• •r 0.lr!tn 12 II U n II II l l fl ,, "' 1 l l u S l I ll 1 l 2 5 1 0 0 ' 1 0 • 14 0 0 I 0 0 0 1 0 21 tU!I • -51 ,_. T • .. • '.Per.sever~nce Pays Off , • • ... Cut as Sop1i, !la~ r Val utible _ui lJCI By HOWARD L. HANDY CH fllo DlitY' l'fflt '"" . "He's one of the moat coachable players·] have ever bad. He makes very few..-rriiltakes and because of that he .is a valuable playing member of our squad this year." That's the capsule summation or coach Tim.Tift u be dilculaa UC ITTine junior reserve guard Brad Baker a n d emphasizes his importance to the ·Anteater team. "Brad was cut from the squad his sopbomor'e year but he didn't give up, Far from il And his perserverance has paid off," Tift adds. What did Baker do to change his cour se of development? First he wani:lered by the weight room and had a Jong talk with swimming and water polo coach Ed Newland. "He helped me a great deal and started me workiog on weights. He also changed my mental attitude," Baker recalls. ·uae·s my kind of athlete," Newland says. "He's a fine boy and shows me a lot ol class. He used to be iD the w~ght room every morning with us. "My t~Year-old son, George, thinks the world of him. He has spent a lot o~ time with George working on shooting baskets." To which Tift adds : "He is a very sound, fundamental player. Not spectacular in any one phase of the game but valuable to the team. ~ "His strength is in defense and his passing. He blends in well in a game where defense and tempo of the oftense- arJt in1portant." . With all of these acrolades it is hard to fathom the -reascin for his being cut from the squad as a sophomore. Baker takes a philosophical attitude. "Phil (Rhyne) and 1 would both be seniors if we hadn't sat out a season and that . giv~ this ' yea_r~s te!!D added exper~ence. "While we don't have any :5enM>rs playing at the present time (Steve Parker has yet to make an appearance u JRB Nostalgia , . ' . BRAD BAKER ' ~e 8~nrl:i~1~). I'm sure this team will What is the cne big difference in p18ying at UC Irvine ever some otbtr schools? . ••1 think it ia the system here. It ls intelligent-Oriented and we play a tempo control game.· "By doing this we can play to. the. oth~r team's weakoesses and use our own strengths." Baker tbeO cited· two· ea r 1 y season opoonents as examples. "We knew we couldn't run against .Cal State (Los Angeles). We had -to force them to play our game and we did .ii right in the first half but we had a cold shooting streak in the second half that cost us the ball game. "Whittier was another matter. We knew they '""' were· a Trnart ball clUb -wita- eiperience. 'Ibey were fundamentally SOUDd mi we played a tempo control game." The Anteaters lost. to Lo.. A!Jieles an4 defeated 'Whittier • Row di>e> Baker like tbe tempo cootrol game? "t enjoy It "tremendously becaust I don't'have a lot of physical oklllCl'ftn get out there and pJay with th<se P"'l'le in......tbis" type ol game. ba'lt ~ ingrained with the tempo game." Baker is an economics major with an eye on a law degree but be enjoys selllng and is currently associated with" a b iodegradable product Imown commercially as Nutrilite. "Dan Rogers was the ba!ketball ·coach at -Irvine when l was a freshman ariCl hi went into sening when he gave llp coaching," Baker says. . "I enjoy it very much and w~ I could spend mon time at it." . · Baker Uvea on Balboa Island and ,.is a law background would be good .for any future job or busineu opportunity ... "II la great tralnlng for the ~ world," be addJi. His dellghl in selling comes naiurally. Brad1t father and mother an 11~ graduates of USC and bis father .l(a salesman for Boise-Cascade a( the present time. Baker began his atbleUc career1~~e many young men in this day and age, as a Little Lea&ue baseball player. "I played second base in Little t.eape and continued through Babe Ruth~ buH felt-I was too •low ar»d l abct1didn"t like the stai>ding around that , ... wllh baBeball... • --'·- While aelling Nutrilite p r o du c t 1 demands &elf dlacipline •cconllnl ., • Brad, he o1so eojoys -king w!Ui ~ and spent the past summer with-. tbe YMCA sports program. J Brad Balcer is UCI's model of ~ ,&11- American boy and the good looking~ with the pleasing personality will p:-f!!" in his chosen profession, be it se1futf, Jaw or economacs according to the two men who know him· best out.side of bis own family-Newland and Till ,• Golden West .. : 1946 Team's Reunion Breezes east .. , .. : ' Misses Key Personality SANTA BARBARA -Golden West,,,Cl!I· Cues~ 81-63_· ~ tege's basketball team goes after Ila IUla When the Compton C.Ollege Junior Rose Anteater mentor 1w · • pnblem. victory of the current campaign ~ ~;ii:a~~~=r:!nt~~atwfh!--:~~::.!'~~.!.:t~~ when_ the ~&,,tleI'.l_tanglL.witb_;~- 25th Pasadena Bowl Saturday the most Tili o1so ... trouble gOUIDg bis -d Barbara City College alter poslintl .. raa.19 alumnus er that year ~t the Tar-up for game1 sueb as lite Bamboldt Stlte 11-63 decision over Cuesta in San ·td:i1 tar institution was absent. eacounter Monday ntgbt. Oaapman coald Obispo Tuesday night. , . Tay Brown was the coach and Ken be tbe tame dH1 ID opellfD& rouad play~of In the win ' over CUesta, Golden W~t ·Carpenter (Olympic Games d i s c u ! the aaaual UCI·KJwaals tournament shot . to a substantial lead and with 16 champion In 1936 at Berlin) was an betlmdnJ Monday. minutes left in the half, Rustler coach assistant. "They ld>t at acores of lllllel 1'1tb Dick Stricklin pulled his starting. fiW:. Bev Wallace went on to p I a y outfits &bey _have beatea and wonder wllf As a result, Cuesta narrowed the professional football as a quarterback for they are playjDg tbeae ~ams," Ttft'says. margin to 40-36 at the half. the San Francisco 49ers as understudy lo Humboldt "had &ott to Cal State But with the regulars back in action Frankie Albert. (Fuller&oa), tOU7, tlle Satarday nlPt during the second 20 minutes, Golden Gordon Wells is a coach at Los Angeles prior to the UCI came and tbe Amteaten West had little trouble with the central HOWARD HANDY Harbor College and Bruce Holladay is an instructor at Palos Verdes High where he also did some coaching. Others who were on hand Saturday Included Rene Monroy , Dewey Vroom. Lou Gill, Jim Good, Frank "Crazy Legs'' McDaniel, Paul Monahan, Don Hickman and Manny DeLe<ln. But the name that was missing wasn't a member of the football team as a play· er but as a student publicist. He later went to the University of San FrancisCo with the leading ground gainer of the '46 team, John Finney. After that he was with the Los Angeles Rams twice, -0nce as publicist and the second time as general manager. Ir you haven't already guessed, it is Pete Rozelle , the erstwhile commissioner of professional football. The Tartars had already been selected to represent the west in the annual classic by JRB -0fficials with one game left to play on the regular schedule. You guessed right if you tabbed the Tartars for a loss to Los Angeles City College by a IM score. However Tay's Tartars redeemed themselves in Pasadena b;y_ ,ban.ding Kilgore, Texas a 19-0 defeat * * * Tim Tl.ft'• UC Irvine batkeU>all team Is 1•dlln& along ID hl&h 1ear but &ff U d defeated ~er1ft, ...... earller. California college. One other lhbil Is bolllerblg Tift. Guard Chris Thompson led the Rustlm UCI has finished second u.e last tllree fn the scoring department with 21 points years ill tbe UCI tonraament, lotlq:-&o while Jim Anderson hit 14. Brian Cal State (Los Angeles), Cal State (Loag Ambrozich and Mark Dekker followed Beach) and 1'brtbera Arlloaa In ttiat with II each. order the past three yean. * * UCI is ranked seventh in team defense on the college basketball level, giving up 60.5 points a game to the opposition. Chicago is ranked first with a 48.7 mark. Louisiana State of New Orleans had an 11-game winning streak (six this season) going into Tuesday night's game with Cal Poly (San Luis Obispo) . '. '· Ooldtft w .. t CIH C-"i (~) . " ti " ,. .. 'ff ... ,. Ambrozlch S I 2 11 C1lltl\tll $ , I 1 11 AMtrlOfl 1 0 3 1' McN1nn1 .t O I ' Otltktr 5 1 2 11 91cltff ' ~ 2 10 T"°""PIOll ' 3 2 ,, Pullen • ' 1 21 B1rnn 2 2 1 ' Rich ! o l ' P-" 7 1 J 5 Sll1!flt" S o 2 10 Gr•~•m 2 1 o s M111" 1001 Pl•l1 0 I ! 1 C1rllllll 1 o o 2 erown 11101 Whllf1-ld 1 o 0 J Tot1I• 3$ 11 15 11 Tol1t• 2111 1 I "1 tfl!lllmt KO••: Goldllft Wttt «I, Clltlltl. Ji. Apple Valley's Speed Does In Arti sts , 7 4-60 By CRAIG SHEFF In tonight's championship bracket, Of tll• D•llY '"'' S1'ff unbeaten Brethren (9-0) faces Ru!Jidcnn:: Apple Valley High's basketball 'team at 7:30 and Corona and Apple Valley duel parlayed a talented fast break attack at 9. Brcthfen tripped Victor Valley, 67- with some fancy outside shooting into a 61. and Rubidoux edged Palm Springs by 74-60 victory over Laguna Beach in the an identical score. second round of the Laguna Rotary In Tuesday night's game Laguna tournament Tuesday night. showed good early board strength, but-in The loss dropped Coach Jerry Fair's the final analysis, the Artists-just club out or the ruMing for the team couldn't keep up with the Sun Devill' champion.ship, but . the Artists still can running game. salva~e fifth place in the 14-team event. Fair's club held a lf>.12 edge at the first ;ronight ,~una faces Be.}J{l..Q.wer -!h!--<tuarter and led 25-21 with three minutes with the victor slated to r:ieet the Victor left in the half when Apple.Valley went to Valley-Palm Springs winner at 4:30 work with its fast break Saturdar for fifth 1l1ce. If the Artists With guards Rick 01iar and Pasqual lose tonight they wlll play for the seventh Salazar gearing the Sun Devils' runnin spot at 3 Saturday· game, the winners outscored Lacuna, 1l I, and Jed at the half, 33-26. A 6-2. 24S-pounder from North Carolina Central C.Ollege, Wilkerson was the 14th player selected in the 1970 college d'faft and the first offensive lineman. "l could say Willie Frazier was a disappointment,'' said general manager Sid Gillman Tuesday of Frazier. whose consistency and approach to practice never ~tisfieci the management. S-4\V Clips Estan~ia Five, 66-65 Laguna made a run at Apple Valley midway through the third quarter when Bart Tabor's three-point play cut tht margin to 43-37. • S£ATI'LE -A black assistant football coach and 1 bl1ck ·administrator in the • 1tbleUc department will be hired is soon 1.s pi>.UJble, University of Washington 1thletlc director Joe Kearney said l'uesday. Jt wu Kearney's lirtt response to a •ecision by_regents ~Q. retain b9fh he and bead football coacll Jim Owens. The ~versitx•s Human Right,, Commissl~ .ca.rdlng to unconfirmed" repii;.fs, paa·- By ROGER CARLSON 01 lht OlllJ l"llot Siert Estancia High School's basketball team, compQSed of what appears to be five guards, has a few da y!I off Jor I.he hclidays following elimination from lhe Troy Invitational Tuesday tvenlng. Coach Gary ·carr's ultrn small Eagles will meet La Habra Monday in the cpening round of the Orangl' Invltittonal after dropping a 6&-65 decisiOn to Irvine League rival Santa .,Ana Valley In the consolation bracket at Troy. T~ ...!~ '!ai; th~~ !leCCnd In a_row or Carr s crew and in Uie lnal analysl.s lt was Santa Ana Valley's ability to cash in at the free throw line that turned the tide. The Eagles (without a starter over 6-tl) committed -0nly 16 fouls during the issue, but the Falcons tanked 22 of 11 attempts from the gr:atis stripe, good rtir·a third of their SC<lring output. The taller FalCC1ns appeared to have the contest wrapped up at the outJ11Ct of .th<! foW"lh period, boastlng a JO.point edge by' vi rtue of the dominance of 8-6 center Jim Keyes. &'eyes poured through 24 In all, mostly on short $IUfJ ag~inst the _s9Jlapsing zone •. defense employed by "Estancia. But Carr's speedy quintet went to work with a press that caused several Santa Ana Valley turnovers and the outsi~ shooting , of Bob Kaiser narrowed. the margin. Lee Friedersdorf's bucket with 39 seconds to go pared the Falcon margin to 64-63 and moments later the Eagles bad possession with JI seconds left. However, an Inbounds infra ct Ion coughed up the ball and the falcons put it away with 13 seconds remaining on Joe l4J>t1's successful o n e • 1 n d -o n e _performance at the free throw line. Cary Of&il(seort1"s 1illhC firs ll minutes of play, finishe4 with 22 for Estancia, a noll?h under his 23.1 average for seven games. .Mate Kaiser lilt in double figures for the first time, chipping in 19. Estancia (now 3-4) hit from the field fof a 48.1 perC<lllage (26 of Ill. SA V•llty !6'1 " " .... 1!1l•MIA CU ) "'"""' lol'ICIW t 0 0 • F'lod....iorl t1tll 1 J I 1 Ktlffr "''" I • I J• M-. LOPtt 2 1 ' 0'1111 OIMll' 4 • J 1• TPIOl'N1 Tl\Ol'l'loti ti OS YOUl'l'!I J • 4 ' Ttlll• ti :t 10 6' Tote!' j ,,_.. ., ... "°"' ~ A.llt-'ffllty-.v-.5 " U llltrw;lt ••••• ,.,.., •• ,, II II 1 4 • ' •• I J I IJ 4 • 4 u I·' • It ' . , . I .But Ollar hit a pair or outside jumper" and Sanchez added two free throws to pu1 the lead out of reach. Tabor took scoring honors for the Artists with 16 while Vince Whitnah had 12. • A"lt VtlllY f"J ,.,.,, .. lA_ ... Ch( .. ) ''""'-10' '" t 4 C It '''"" Ttl!or Whlt111~ t11rbokl Jtmllllt'I Gltt•solt HtllWtndtr ·~ ,_, Tot111 i2 110111r ' I 2 It S1t111~ ' • , " f l ... • 0 2 I J °""""" 0)11Rc-I l ) S Golellfl t,OtEllll'lll J OlCMey1r1 •totw11n1 ~n11on 20 IO U ~ Tot1b k"• ., Chltr;tff1 """" y,,..., ~...,, LtOUnt 8ett11 lJ 11 I e t t t ' ' • C 4 2 It ' ' c • 0 • J • I I 0 t , • 1 l t 0 I I 0 ' 0 , :91')411 It 1c-111 IS It _,. 60 I W crtrol II> .. elllng II> • ...... ,...h !id ... • up could ¥• rony -~y. rf:'! the 1ct1 "·lo -...... '·,All-i:; iliilig, i two >f hi! -.. ~Colsllik lllilha ... 1. ., Ill i ·tdi• ' West ilh 10 -.. I the ·-;iolnU Brian lowed ,; "' "' •I 1 11 t I t ·• :t '' • I n • l • 0 f IG 1 •• .. ICftt, ldoux "'°" y, 67. gs by -· lilt in just evil&:' ~ first ..... "11 lo 1aJJey When I tilt npers :0 pul th• I had ., •H • ' '~ -4 11 ••• . ' . ~ , u ' . . ' ' . . . ) . ) ) . ' . •• 1 ' 2• t• :: ------·-----..-.~ -'' - Start . -Your Gauclios Have Top Returnees · llEll' .WElGHT.C)Pf HEELS. TO IMPROVE LEO ACTION Many Solftrs, HP••l•llY r ' Brigbt.'71 Outlook For Oilers I· E . ' ngmes. Althoueb Saddleback COiiege womtn, f11f ·to 11t lht dlsllni:e will· lose • great number of they deurw. on:~ob ~" • One would gtt ' t h e by Deke Hou/gate I 1tarler1 fr oni tts l th .. r I• tct1on t1 lacton1. You "Cliimplolfahlp !OOCl>all 1,.m o! _must •.mploy lht bl& muscles lmprtulon that head COICh Ken MOits and his st1U would heaa ilnmediatety !or the hllb with all·round back Gorth Wise hiving concluded his football career at Hu.nlingt.on Beach High. ••-m•••••------... --.. 111111, Gaucho coaeh George I of your ctlVH and thlch• If Hartman i&n't aboUt to call you •xpect to set maximum -·'1De1r Santa : · The last time around you i,tt evefything we asked for, and · )l'e 'lt!ver did get a chance to NY thanks. So here goes. ~·.Thank you for the opportwUty to see the Daytona 5001 the Indy 500, three Can-Ams, two NHRA national championship ra~. all the exciting shows at Riverside and more In 1970 .. lt'll 1 rtbWldlng year. · length on your shots. "We'll hive-1 good nucleUs fo Improve yout 111 action. back " says Hartman 'And IYOkl puttin1 too much wel,ht there' are some outslandlng on, ~ur httls (llluatratlon I ). people in our area high Th.1S_tnhlblta food footwork Ind schools. lf we get everyone we sh1ft1n1 of we11ht. But that's not the case at Huntington where M o a t s actually ahowa aome optimism for 1'11 after expe_rtenclng a horrl!ytnl , .. rtcOrd In •ro. Thank you for .getting us ((.)get her with many of the . great drivers we hadn't met .before -Johnny Rutherford, Bobby Jsaic, Gene Snow, LeeRoy Yarbrough, Kevin Birtlett Md Dr. Don Tarr, to name a few. \Ve really can't expect you to t.?p that performance, but we would like to put in a good word on behalf of some of our friends . On your way to Redondo Beach, Cal., "'ould you please take Care Gt· these fel!0\1•s? Mario Andrelti. He'd like to win the world driving champion- , ship. Give him the best Ferrari o( the lot, and he 'll get the job dOOe. , A. J . Foyt. Before he Mws out , A. J. wants to win just one . n10ri tndy 500. That's a lot to ask, but it would give him a ri(:or'd four. ~. · Craig Breedlove. He could use a good spon90r so he can get . back to Bonneville and shoot once more for the world land speed .r~~d . You ga\'e the last break to his buddy, Gary Gabelich. . .David Pearwn. He'll have to drive without factory support . this season, and he'll be poinUng for the big money at the super ~~ways. Give birn a few good paydays. . want, we will be able to field a pretty good ball club." Allboogh the Gauchos will lose their entire starting backfield and most of the line, there are some top returnees waiting in th~ wings. All-America tailback Toby \Vhipple, ·quarterback Chris Hector, fuJlback R ock" Fletcher and slotback Jloward Hoyt will all be moving on. But Hartman has a pair or rUMing backs -Steve Divel and Don Wilson -that sho"·ed signs of promise while playing reserve rol~ this past season , And back-up quarterback ' Bob Bosanko bas the potential ' to be a very good passer. Saddleback is expected to Instead, put more wel1ht or : the balls of your feet (illustrl· tion #2). Don 't crouch forw1rd: rather, keep your back rel1tive· ly straight. Your legs should feel plia nt and. ready to ·move· as you address the ball . .Also keep your knees •li•hl· ly flexed throu1hout yoursw1n1. This is another iure way to In· crease the 'power-flow from your lower body. The Oilers lose the all· county pick, who gained well o~r 2,000 yards total offense in his tw~year varsity carter on the ·on City campus. Jiowever, as Moats puts It, "I think we'll really have some bright spots returning to us for next season. •·we'll have to find some seasoned linemen and we also will need a couple o f linebackers.'' . ~,ilm Hall. How about bringing him a waste disposal system, ·a ~ce to dump all the complaints that he sweeps up with h.is •<Vacuum cleaner" Chaparral? , George Follmer. He's -traveling, OOwn -to New 1.ealand and : Australia for the Tasman and could use a point championship, ~--if be has to take it away from his STP teammate, Chris alter ita offense considerably for the '71 season, but e.e1mMJ.n._.._.,..~ __ •.J Hartman 1 says that the '--"'.-~~.:"., -~-.:" -====-:-:=~~~~=~=:_:;:!. changes will depend a tot on Moats cites one or the key Oiler woes in '70 lying in the team'.i inability to throw the ball and lo catch It on key downs. "We were basically s junior "M!On. -. * * * the quality of new personnel. Another big obstacle the Gauchos will have t'o overcome i3 replacin g. • Don Prudhomme and Tom McEwen. Would you please le'ave linebacken Rocky Fletcher flfcm a scorecard? Tbe11 maybe we can all find out at the end and Don Martin. Both went ~Ol ·ile season bow die Mongoose vs. Snake match race 1eries both ways. Both were on the ~Cliiii oul. . all·Mlssioit Conference team, ·'· • Jl•n Gumey. Keep him fully involved In ncfq:, evt11 If be Mart.in at center. tSn·t.drlvlng any mort. He'd like that, and sO would ~s followers. Top linemen r eturning Cale YarbQrou.p. "Superman" says 11e · n~s lots of 11raC-include Rod Cummings, Mike lice time In open wbeel can 11 lie m•s dae tr1ndtlon from Colt, John Fletcher and Doug NACAR stocks to tlr eUSAC cb1mplonsblp clrcuft. Give bJm~all Rothrock. Coit and Fletcher the laps ll:c·needs. are linebackers, Cummings is a defensive end and Rothrock Paula "ftfurphy. Everybody talk• •boat wemen11 lib, but Paula is doing something about h. Give Paula 1 cood l)MllllOr is an offensive guard. . to pay the bills and the recopttlon tlie world's bravest lady In the defensive secondary, driver desuves. Rudy Holmes and Larry T'"Y Adamowlci. Give blm 1 good sltot 1t making Ille Oeld Hernandez will be back, but Holmes may be shifted to a at Indianapolis, and while y~'re 1t It, maybe you can deliver a wide receiver spot on offense. fe"'l'ther good rl~s. * Riek Geddes i! another ~ * * starting.receiver coming back. • Al Unser. ?-.laybe Al doesn't need any gifts to go along with He was the Gauchos' second ~ .!1\'ney and championship statui he has earned, but he might leading pass catcher behind ,. ~ 8; Hickok Belt handy to hold up his britches. You know the sophomore Rick Day. f fhciok -thal's what they give the best professional athlete of Hartman is also hopeful ,Atae.year. A racing driver has never won one before. guard TerTy ~1unhall will Vni to Adjust Attack For '71 Grid Seaso11 team last season anyhow and we have a wealth of good receivers back," states Moats. Among the 18 lettermen who come back to Huntington for another year on the gridiron are no fewer than Jerry Redman must've been to is 5-9, 1 4 5. p o u n d seven veteran receivers. on the verge of watering at quarterback Tom Walker, the They include Tony Ciarelli, the mouth as he followed team leader wbo returns to Bill ~ssler, Dave Clapp, Edison's u.nscathed mareh to the fold along with all of his Tom Crunk, Brett White, Scott the CIF AAA football title in 1970 teammates (the Trojans Whitfield Md Jim Nitzkowski. the jwt concluded campaign. didn't have.any aeniors on the Nitzkowski, a 10.1 sprinter, For, Redman's te a m '70 roster). I.I the fastest of the group (University High) you see, Walker developed into one of while Ciattlll's 29 receptions posted a $--3 record in the 1970 the best sprtntout signal left him one short or the one-- season -the iniUal gridiron callers in the area while season school standard. ven ture for the f I e d g i n g picking up valuable varsity ~ Crunk missed most of the Trojans. experience 00 his throwing '70 campaign with a broken Unbeaten (13--0) Edison, in skills. hand and While doubles as a only its second year or H d plaeek.icker. operation, made lt through the d"'iu" bestea Y s1hort ptedassber In spite of Wi se's departure , an w comp emen Y the Oilers boast of two Irvine League wars with a t · ' Ing •· •·· Ed . re u.nung runn lHICl\3 returni·ng 8·-~-r, In the shiny 4-3·2 mark in its first Cati Bob GUI ·-• G ~·~ season. • ~1\1 eorge offensive backlield in fullback Although the Chargen ~·ere Harney. Steve Duval and tailback ' Big back Dave Ong (195) I! SI Pi kford f th in a AAA league and faced t9e c , son o e being converted into a guard F ·-· v II he d · d perhaps some rougher oun~m a ey a gr1 ·oppofients than Unlverslty;ttie _oFr tac~, joining the likes of mentor and athletic director. loyd oailey, Ranay Rogers, Th i.:---.--111 b Wad 1•a, "'*t'bW 23~ lt70 DAILY PILOT %If FV Cardinals Barber Cuts Out To Cooch Tea1n 111 PHIL ROSS of Colla Meu, Infielder "Ilk• 9' "'-o.tlr ,.. .. '"" Leppa <Red Sox) of Costa Six~ years aa:o .Bob Mesa, Alet: Sch u m a ck er Chavarria gave 1 .hslrcut to ' (Athletics) and Denn y one-yeat-0!d Jeff . Allen in , Desmond (Alhletlcs) 1 re 0-.avarril I p I f"-I mo U n·t., affiOO( Ciavirril'S ctim:nt borher lbop. pr<>ducts wlio hove already . Today Chavarria f I n d s signed c:ontrscts or been himself mana11na ~. lU dratted by the pros. pound Jert Allen on • 5emlprofesslonal b a s e b a 11 Former· Dodier hopeful Roy team, cb'lng the aututnn and Gleason holda down the hot winter monl.hs. , corner for the, Trust TIUe nl~e. -TbOlr team _ 1he Trust. Jack Brohi.mer and Mike Title Insurance Company of Loglln. now in tbe Cleveland, Connecticut nine -was known and Oakland minor leque as the Fountain Valley syste~s, are. former Cardinnls up until t b re e Chavarria pla)'«S. months ago when t he The club, which neve~ had a insurance firm took u p regular . sponsor until ~ sponsorship or it. ConnecUcul tnsuranct fjrm C h a v a r r I a ' s current , took up its banner last mODth, livelihood Involves running the managed to stay in, busintss barber shop at Irvine Cout its first sii years -with - Counlry Club. Chavarria, 47 and his ·22--year- But although he spends at old son Chipper accruin1 mo.rt least five days a week cutting or the expenses. hair and shaving b r 1 at I y Olavarria bad his first big beards the Tempe, Arii., baseball whirl as a member-of naUve is perhaps t>USlest on a the Arizona team In the 1938 single day or the week -American Legion World Series Sunday. at Omaha. For the last three months He's been associated with his Trust Title team has baseball, in one rorm or enjoyed relative success in the another, ever since that time. Soulhern California Baseball llis biggest thrill w a s- Association's tr a v e I l n g leading the old Fountain division. Valley Cardinals· lo three In · addition to A 11 en, ainsecutive Nalional Baseball Chavarria can boast oC a Congress crowns from 1985 handful of performers who through 19&1. ha v e e I l her signed Chavarria's present outfit professional contracts or wl'lo possesses enough tools to have major Jea1Ue 5COUts hot duplicate any previous such on their heels. successes, which could be Chris Yoder cf Anaheim and anticlimactic after everything Beryl Hamrick, a former that's happened in the pasL Costa Mesa Mustangs baseball Until another title comes ace, are a pair regarded around though, Chavarria the highly by major scoul.f. barber will continue to trim Although Yoder is only 16 the tresses of numerous young years old, Savanna High coach customei:s .. hoping that ene Jim Reach rat,es him as the wlll tum out to be another Uke best ~atcher he's had. And Jeff Allen. that's saying a mouthful 1incel--------- Reaeh also had the talented Andy Bielanskl, "'ho I e d Savanna to the C I F championship in 1968. Yoder has been used at catcher_ and second base for the Trust Title squad. Hamrick, a member. cl a CIF playoff entrant at Costa Mesa a couple of yean ago, ' was converted from catcher to · Pitl;bet-1>9' Olavarria;-for - _ .:t~ally. Ear ks_ and Big Willie Robi~. Send the presidents return. Munhall a t l e n d e d ,.-of the Natiohal Hot Rod Assn. and the Los AngeJes Street Rlct"rs ·-()regon State two seasons ago, ,r Assn. an invitaUon to get together. They should discuss bow to but has another year of git illegal street racers back to the drag strips. ellglblllly at Saddleback. . ~fickey '11vJmpson. Keep him int6este4 in racing, but may· "Next season will be a much r..1· ans have the toots to e auuve pair w e Dom DeRado, John ,Schaeffer, b ked b o low ~ el ·-• duplicate Edison's successes ae Y ar , .11vl .. 1\1 J im Divis and Don Tague in K 1 v A fort ne•t ·-ason ;., u .. _ A A y e an mers . whom ·he·• been playing .winter ball . since bis· prep .,..be:_arop a few helpful hints hi.I way a! the Mlck delves into air bigger challenge for w," says poJJi+lion research. Hartman. "ll will be a great Les Richter, Help 11the coach" save what's left of American ~porltm!_ly for lots of ace.ways, the company that built Michigan and Texas Speed· incoming freshmen to make ways and darn near put Riverside and AUanta out of business the ball club. We have a good fore Richter took over. nucleus back and we have ~·Pete Hamilton. He needs 1 Southern accent -or something de~eloped a wiM!?& habit, so to get himself in good with a top NASCAR team after terrorizing we II be all right. e\•erybody on the super speedway circuit this year. Pete i.s too otd a driver to go begging for a ride. ... * * * , A ,,.,. ... ua: the it1terior line. Qu b k lo be ciassi!i·cau·on. arter ae appears a Lettermen duos . return at b t I bet J. M rt• And, after a year as " free a t e ween un a in both the tight and split end nd s ·11 H bi lance operative, University a 1 ar n. gets its baptism of fire m' the spots. The line will be buUt aroWld Willie Jannan and Dave t n1 1 rt ~1 B k Orange League In 1971. re ur ng s a en ,-., e a er Redman is known partly for DeLapp will be sharing the (tackle), Jim Peral (guard, tight receiving chores while Ji·m p ti (g""~' Mike helping lo have fashioned a o er ..... ....,, Bob Patterson and Bill Rldd.le c nlngham ( rd) d Mlk successful rullbouse offense at un 1118 an e F hill Hi h be be ed are espected lo divide lheir Hoplay (center). oot .g · w rt serv Ume as wide receivers. De ren s iv e ends Paul as backfield coach before M of th al ioned . . 1 01t e orement Courtney and Don Garland moving over to Uruvera ty in Trojans will perform both will also be back along with a 1970. ways although defensive back veteran &eCQndary composed · He .started out the '70 Trojan Joel Champlin I.I ticketed for a of Pickford, Clarelli, Whitfield days. . Pitcher Steve Hazan (White Sox) ol ?-.-11S&ion Viejo and S.ddleback eouw;.1 catcher Bill Eller (CUbi) 'ol Cotta Mesa and Loyola University, ln~lder Gene Slagle (Orioles) Roger Penske. Send the Pblladelpbia Pllox 1 few 17-bour lays ·so be can keep up with his multiple ci.rcuJt raeln1 pr-Ogram aitd fiekl cars on tbe USAC champ trail. SCCA Trans·Am and [!qJ¥1Dental circuits. . ~immy Caruthers. Find some way for him to Cop his USAC midget championship this year -a crack at ro.cl racing, a t:ba tnp ear, a stock car ride. He has already proved blmseU in the UUle ears. Laver Tries Golf-Skills slate with the r e au I a r one-way aulgrut?ent. and Jerry Ashford. fullhouse he deployed at ,,;;-;========:;;=========;;:;:::::::::::::::;:::-;::§§§§~~~= -FoothUI but has graduallyll been !D<Ced Into chlnglng his offensive philosophy to a.more wide open degree:-- Bobby Isaac. Give him a guest shot on the Johnny Carson Show. Bobby might make It b1g In show bii with bis uoortbodo:r ipe of cbalttr. . Ll,oyd-Ruby. Give blm a front row start !or the Indy 500 lhif' time. It may be his last appearantt there, and we'd mueb raiber see him have a good chance for the checkered nag tbu suffer the fru stradon be has"')'ear alter year at the Brickyard. Denis llulme .. He doesn't need 1nytblng on this 1kle of the Atla nHc, Sanla. He ba1 done ptttty well on his own. rtlaybe he r.ould u1e a lltOe Can.Am competition to keep from boring blm· sell to death. Rod Laver, the "·or Id's No. l ranked tennis professional, has to s1tUe for a six handicap on .the goU course but that will not deter him Monday when he leads a contingent of former Australian netters into acUon on the Rancho San Joaquin golf course. As the ex·Redland s University all-round star puts it. "we're going lo do a little changing in ow-b a 1 i c offensive phUo90pby because of Walker's .ability. "We just don't have the big hicks and people 1.1p {ront to run a fullhouae or ball control offense." The Walker Redman refen Davkl Lockton. Leave him lots of Ueket 1alt1 to keep that magnificent Ontlrlo rtfotor Speedway in business. * * * Laver, now a resident of Corona del Mar, will join with Roy Emerson of Newport Beach, Jimmy Sheppard and Terry Add.Ison in an 18-hole handicap g o l f tournament pitting the four net stars against 16 handicap players. Course owner G e o r g e Holsleln has planned the event Joe Leonard. Give_ the Pelican a full season of driving. He as a team effort w l t h claims.he needs the experience to stay shar~. and we guess he handicap! ranging r r om Basketball Scores is right -but look at what he did In only three races Otis year. Laver's si:r to a high of 18. ..,,,. w•f1' He led Indy, v.•on at P.!ilwaukee and set an uoofficial lap record Tee-<>ff lime is set tor l0:30 ui.h 10s. Nortti t11011111 •' Arlr-15, NOl'!lletll Arl10fl1 1' al Ontario. , arter being rained out this co1011d0 st•t• o .. o.nver SI ·'ames Hylton. Thc'NASCAR point championship. Every year week. uc ""'' ••rtMi,, ti. Humboldt st.• i' UCL.I. t•. Ml1.ou,J 7J he goes after it. and every year he almost wins It. This has to Competition will be by C••. w"'''n n. Saullllrn u1111 ,, 4be One. teams with Laver, Emerson. ~=.t~~"..,:.._s::;~11~'·;: '' Sam Posey. Lots of racing in 1971, but leave him plenty of Addison and Shepp a rd Pot111M s1111 "· uc o.v•• n · H d · U h 1· """'"""' la, NVU U, ov•rtl,.,, time L? comment on the racing scene. e rives as we aa e represen 1n1 Au Ii tr all 1. w1w,1111tort s1. '°' NWMll·lt• " talks, he enjoys thein" both, and he makes a lot of sense. Addison is a touring pro and ~.ir~'i. •;;, ~!';: ~ Enzo Ferrari. Thanks for that early deJlvery -remember, Sheppard is the club teaching •••T ~OU dropped AndretU in his stocking prematurely. Now all the professional at Newport Beach :':;:'" c!.t..~c~; :,'. J"""'• H.v. " i'talian racing master ..needs is a manufacturer's ehampionshlp to Tennis Club. Ol.oQllltM '°· s1111befw1111 .., finish a distlngutsbed carett on • high oote. OUters i n c l u d e Huah K~ .,, :~ stii. 11 Peter Revson. Drop oil a sackful of money taken from the Stewart, Balboa Bay teMls Mtryi.M '°• T•m" n ' H I '·In Larry J hn FOl"dl\ll,,, IJ, Mlim!. l'lt. a Revlon fortune so Pete can start enjoying some of the benefits pro, o SK: : o ton, N. cirotll'lf ''· "· o.v1c1.or1 44 e\lerybody believes he has been. Yes, Santa, he's a member of Jim Ewart and Al Rabalais, 1.su0NfW01"1 .. 111 ns. c11Potv11.ot>1 • r ··-,_ s Hiii R I Ct b V•l'ldtttlUI UllJ, Mla lUIHI 111 the family, but no, Santi. he doesn t get any o ""'" }\ev~n UMY s acque u Mrow•n JOOney. · owners; Stan Pyron, Bill tl~.'!i. 'liricc::1,~"'"" -While we're tearing down Images, Santa, help 1et the word Hanen, Ron Pruessln&, Roger 1111111111 111, 1111111" •• ai'ormd lhal Pele ROblnson Isn't "Sneaky.'' that David Savage Burkt, Jim Doan. Jack ~::0.,,";.°'~.':"'11 6J Isn't a "Swede," that Don Garlits is 1 fine family man and notiirG;;re;:;"";:rv;;;•;;;n:;:d~J~oiihn;;.;T,;;teiiri\ineiiyii. --•°':::":.;n;;,,· m"'~'li'M;;,:"• ..... -., ~ "Big Daddy" In the\lsual sense, that DeWayne Lund isn't "Ttny1• and that Chris Kararnesiries Is of Grecian t:xtraetlon but YW •llAKE Is not. a "Greek Chiller." ....... ·4w...... That'll do !or another year, Slllll. We'll watdt for your pit •.5 P 'E C I A L st~ Oft Christmas Eve, as always. · Prep, JC Basketball T,... Hltll T_,._.t l lt lr ... 1"111tfft ., Tl"1>r If, Ltt V ... 1 Wetttrn IS lu1n.t Ptrll t'. I I M.S-76 Vlllt ..... Cl-fc LtJ\11~ 5', C9"lt1111l1! SS Yblt Pl'l 11. MJt1l111t 11 .Mllll,ll;tn it. Suntw Hlll1 fO Otn\JntVtl ~s. SI, A~1PICllV ., A1ttlltllw H .. IU~Jtsll~tl l-Ut ti, WHll!'lt II UtllM IM!fll"""I lt""""'°'lt "'· "•Im ,., ....... , '"'""'"" t1, Vkftor V1 Un U I I Clortelr! 11, HOl'CO U O."'ltn N, II S~ 'SJ (11'1' COLLltl Lm •.,.• 't~ CC ~. L.A. Vtllf'I' rt Ji n L .J~ M.,I ••• 1!1" L.A .... DrHrJ _t,, il'1l0ot11r '4 tn'~' 11. Pitre• n I ·, M1dll111 4 DrwM -ol4-Cyt ...... .... Mitt._._.. ......... I .. '" fl•CMIAT80) $39.95 . 'fW SHOClCS ----·-$7.tl '""""" 1()(\000 mil• auanntetd (not pro.ra.ttd). I ~I WE DO AU. FOREIGN CARS. e DISC RAU IPIClAUIT e COSTA MISA STOH OMl.Y Jlt1 N ...... N . .149-4021 ... 14f·221t AND MAKE lT JilE DAILY PllDT JUST CALLH2·'521 FOR HOME DEU'BY • , - \ ' T - I, IT'S EASY TO BUY THE ALL NEW ' THIS WEEKEND EXTRA PLUS EXTRA.PW$ • EXTRA PLUS ·EX TRA PLUS \ EXTRA PLUS EXTRA PLUS ' " ' FORD BRONCO ' (Vl5F~K41194J ,, ... . .. . " .. ,..,. • ,. ,' ,., . .. ' . -... TORINO GT . 2 DOOR"HARDTOP • ' GalaxleXL 2 DOOi SPOID IOOF 390 rn. 2 vv.a. c.-11 •tic;.,..., ..-..1 tronrtht ...... olr ceftd., Nllie, YWWHty ,,_,, V~ r..f, 1IKt clock. (W60Yl131SI) ' . ,_,..,....,..,,..... ,_*...,.'"11111" ovr1:n cng CARS & ..._ __ -....... "·"-"--_. .. _____ " .... _· ------~ · -tihlU · -1iUc1s-:---- • .. . . GAL. 500 I Dr .. v.&. IMIL 1r'llfll,, fatllfy oi' md. tiolliilt. l'ower ltttring. nMlio. fttotv. ,...,. L " Dr .. v.a. ... ...._ tadorf•ff ~ I • • ~Fury .2 OJI. 6 cyl st/shit, fact air, ~ WOD1 7S PICK UP • ~ ' ' ,.,... ,_ 1'ilrilig. .............. """ f--~·-<-'~~~~~"°'i'fjin~T~411W=-~~~~~~--_;,. V-8. stitk shift • radio, w/comptr !ihlll. 1'5891 Coupe I • • , ...... > I -• . ' ' • 2Dr.·HT V-1. l/1r .. fact. air, p/5'1',. r&h.U4AFX Fairlane 2 Dr HT Y-1, ML "1ns., poww .... rodiD, Iii:-YCU 240 _ll•Cpe .. firebird · _ j Y-1, Wirt, hM.. ptWll' f•tfffrint. ,..._ htatw. '"""' ., NOVA 4 Dr. "·· 6 tyl .. ·0110. Irons .. • rodio.hllltw.fDE233 ,I, ' 'WAGON V-1. Alllo. lr'Dlll.. foctoryAi~ pow.-5*'· ... poww windows. nidit.. ....... SJJl16 6cyl ... ~rah,"""*' •.UON9J1 LTD 4 Dt HT 4 Dr HT, V-8,o{tr., factoir,p/st.. ro... vn1 <00f l1Vl!680 GAL-500 Coupe V-1,o/tr,. p/str .. r&h. 'lll295 2 Oii HT, v.a, I/tr .. foci air, p/w .. ra. """' 2-DR. 6 cyl .. stitk shill, ,.,_, ZITSS2 INTERN'L. 4Whetltill XDC•'4 Fl OD Pick Up V-1, stick stiff °""*"" wlc ...... linnst IOll73f .. -I l . ' • . -' '; "The client ha,! • righi to ' know eveTJlihing concerning ' the transaction ~fore he acts .•. " ·RANDALL R. MC CARDLE Pre•id•nt of The Retl· E•t•len: • college retl ••t•le insit11dor end lttturer: euthor of the book "Reel E•t1te Tr1inin9 in C1lifornie C'el. le9e1"; • Rt1I E1t1.fe colu1t1ni1t•for ·the Deily Pilot; 1tet1 director of CARET. wu1-. M. lchlRldt T.,,,. Mee.die S1l11·'Men191r · '1"'911'11• c.nr. ... 1700 N•wport Blvd. -.... , .. ~ 1700 Newp \ t Blvd. .. • Men191r 2790 Herb6r II~. ------ '6.W.,tt.i.. 1700· Newport 11..-d. ..... ._ 1700 Newport Blvd. °"' lcftntl 2790 H1rbor Blvd. ' ... ~· ... -.. 1 ;. .. - I ' • , '"'"-""'''"' r ~~~~~~~~~~~J . w. Chrijtmaj. record continued ' appreciate People/ Werry. .another I ' TO-EXTEHD OUR-SERVICE WE: ARE OPENING A NEW OFFIC! IN , •H...,. H. WlaNn Ill M1nt9tr 1700 Newport Blvd. ---- -·-1700 N1wport llYcl. Jlldy SllMll 1700 Newport Blvd. -·-2790 H1rbor 81 ... d. HUNTINGTON 8EACH AT 17931 .BEACH BOULEVARD ............ M1n·191r Coron.• del Mir ---__ .,_, • • l1tti l.Rrl• 1700 N1wport llvd, &ort...S WWte 1700 N1wport Blvd •. ~It---M111n191r Hu11ti119ton Beech ------, ·~-2 79o-t11r1Sor Blvd. I .... -2790 H1rbo~ 11"4. Netl McCritetry 1790 H1rbor Blwd, • Clltdy Wiil.,... Sec:r1t1ry 1190 l:ltrbor 11...d, . --- .. .. w .. ,.... 1700 Ntwporf 11¥41. llH .. ,. 2790 H1rbor llvd, -'"-Corona cl1I Mar , -·-lnve1tf1'1111t Div. J7f0 Herbor llvd, -~ . . " Le"9 ......... 1700 N1wPort· llvcl. .... c..I'·· 2790 Herber 11 .. d. • ......, $left Cor~•· ~·r Mer ' .. "...Y'" I~ ... . .; ,; . ,, - ·~ .t ' . ' ;. . ' H .. c.115- lnve1'hn111t Div. 2790 H1rb1r ll.d, . --- Milft """"' 1700 ·Ntwpori thocl, ....... 2790 Htrbor 11 ... cl. ....... Coroi:i• cltl Mer ' ' Serving Newport Beacih • Co.!!_~flesa e Corona del Mar e Huntington Beach · · · 4 onvenient Locations Near You . NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7 171 COSTA MESA CORONA DEL MAR 2790 Harbor Blvd . ~32 Marguerite 546-2313 • , 673-8550 • INVESTMENTS 2784. Harbor Blvd ,, .Suite 20 I Coste Mesa 546-2-316 ~XPERIENC£ ,-ELIM[NATES . EXPERIMEN.T i~'S FUN TO , BE NICE Tp PEO'PL~ ., . . •• • +1 l 1~ I . i ' " l ' l j I • • I Wtdntsda)', Dtetmbtr 23, 1970 DICK TIACY TUMBLEWEEDS WILL 'ttXJ PU1 nlAT MV,l..E POIY>J? HOW YA 'SPECT T HAVE A 6000 MULE: 'TEAM IF YA ~ MIJYIN' nua MULES!! .¥ MUTT AND JEFF MU"M", MAY I BORROW A PAIR Ol= 'YbUR WlF'E'5 STRETCH PANTY tl~E? PANTY tlOSE? WHAT FOR? JUDGE PARKER 1'W MEARO ABOUT TI-IE HiAPPV TMINOS n.tAT l-IAl/E COME "iOUR V..V, TINICV,- C.ONGRA'TlJLATIONS ! By Chester Gould VES.AS l'AR AS l'M CONCEANl!D, 1970 WAS !!l""--7"1 l'UT, !JEANS ! cYNIHIA WAS UP ALL. NIGH'f WITH A ~AP. ~AP 1lJMMY ACHE! ... SHE FEELS AWFUL! ... I 601TA WALK HERT' SLEEP SO'S TO HELP HER GIT WELL! By Tom K:-Ryon ·A·~Yf: CYNTH IA IN l)!E lREE 'THOO~PS O'SWAMPERS n AROU AN' I GOlTA PRAW l)!E FLOR NC< NIGHTINGALIO O' THE JACKASS SE:T! By Al Smith By Harold Le Doux • TME ~LY llll tJG I YOU MEAN WONDER IS ~ow SMART I-IE S1'1D IT'LL P,E TO LET ELMO ~METMHJG T\4AT'S RIGHT .. SOMETlllNG AP>OUT HIS PEA.TH'. ~~:r ':;6~~ ~R~~~H~IJ~. ~·~N~F1Ft~~~~N'r LOOIC,.MR.T,.I'D R1'TME~ NOT 5,,.V ANYTM1NG OVER THE PHONE~ I '.IA SURE THAT ELMO SAlD WHAT ME PIP &ECAUSE HE WAS PlllNl(ING ~ AND, PLEASE .• DON'T .LET MIM. • !(NOW I MENTIOWED ANYTHING! PLAIN JANE --- ··~ -~--~ ACROSS l Dlsnty ch aracttrs 5 School sub ject: lnrormal 9 Circuit 14 FavOl'llt 15 Dull pa in l b Bass , for onr 17 S. Amt r. "'I 18 Rt at lvt 20 Cuts 21 Shack 22 N1 ut lc 1I dirrctlon 23 Ending used w Ith photo and th~mo 25 Cht mlc al prrflx 27 Stupor 29 Advanced In yrars 30 Blood : Comb. form 34 Big 5UCCt SS 3b Comt aftt1w11d 38 Numb!f 39 Frig id: 4 words 42 Slope 43 "fttr th1 usua l time 44 Crnso1's concrrn 45 "Prrst nl" 46 Russian rlvt r ' l • " •• 47 Ciro's 1ovrr 49 Fixts 51 Parts of shots S4 Alarm : archaic 58 F111urt " •r prnd19t o crrt1ln s1rds bl In ptrson: 3 words b] Co lotltss b4 Part of w1sh ln9 machlnr cyc1t bS lnstrumtnt bb Olmlnutlv r suff ix 67 "Thr B lg Knilr" author- &8 Riv rr of Europr b9 Ed itor's post DOWN l Planls 2 Stnsr lrs1 person } Small awto: 2 words C R1sll!t nl: Comb . IOl'nl S Solt pulpy mi ss Ii M isbtha~t: 2 wotds 7 "Annr ol -·· ··-·· -·": G tntv lt~t Bujold ro lt: 3 word~ 8 W!sr to: Slang 9 Dispatch boat 10 Grra\rsl Quantity 11 Q11ic k mtal: Informal lZ Bakery t mployrr 13 Bird 19 Kind o! storm 24 Fish 2& Choosr 28 Plus 30 Posstss lvt wad 31 Wr~krn decis ivt 1y 32 Limit 33 01 lilt color jtl bl~c k 34 Mtal concocti o11 35 Small body of land GO TO lllE SERVICES 1'60UT HAVE .MEARD WMA.T I DID! A.S A MATIER OF FA(T, I 'D STRONGLY SU(;,GEST YOO GET !="OR _LA.Ii:~ RO<l(ET'. ROCKET~ ELMO our OF TOWN FOR A. COUPLE OF WEEKS'. 12/23/70 37 Room 38 Wifr of Abraham 4Cl Pronou n 41 Haw 'r. companion 4b Populace: Comb. lam 4 8 Harvt st rd 49 Trombonists' drvlcrs SO Bolivlan c ap !ta1 S2 Rhythmic sw1n9s 53 Wtll 11roomrd S4 Cont!nrnt: Comb . rorm SS DtPoS llrd 5& Skin d!srasr 57 That .. which is lrf\ ovrr 59 "nimal 62 Bot he1· some lnsrct --,, -· PERKINS MISS PEACH I j l I • KELLY SCNOOl WOMENS"' LIS STEVE ROPER By Frank Baginski EQVA~ Rl&Hll' LJH .. ·LOOK , TIGER.'· ·ABOUT US :M:e .. r ALSO \IHSl<EO HIM A \/ERV HAI'?\' HANUKKAH- ·• • I . \ Ll'L ABNER SALLY BANAN"S HoLo,aRTMUR! I AM 111e · • ....&i-4.,t..... ~ \ SPIRIToF OFF1ce P4RT1es :tPu.... ~ ~ ... ,......--,. l'aST ! GORDO WHA11S 1He II ARD EST W851A/JCJI IA/ 7#E WOt:iLOT f t OU>JlilO~ ll2CloJf sreei.r OIAMO;/Of MOON MULLINS. ANIMAL CRACKERS RA.NCI NE, ooes ALL Tio/IS i\1EAN )tXJ WON'T LET ME 5LN YOU SODAS ANYMOll:E? By John Miles By Mell OF COUJt'.SE I WILL.I 'i'OU11lE. STIL..t. MV FAVO!<ITG WU C><AUVINIST ,__~ ..... f: ii II I \00.I., '.t tU,~J'l" SE~ -Allll'!Mll)4;..+<,IP1'61J!. .,,.. SllANGI WOILD MR.MUM • By Charl•s Barsotti By Gus Arriola - WELL1 !IE'S FAMOUS s~~- rJA1NG! By Ferd Johnson WHY, You SILLY OLD GIRL .. I AIN1TTH'C.A1 !!, By Roger Bollen ... ~i?£XJIJD CllllSl'MAS, <l(JV-.U.V!:. Ti;>.NJ.olll- 111)() wee(s !'Cl'. pW\/Ei!</ ... DENNIS THE MENACE By Charles M. Schull -.. 'lllY/ MUCll TCRt ~ O' R!M¥'a< IWD1' ·; " ( --·-·--------~---- • r llA!LY l'ILOJ 2 : Everyone Has Something That So meone Else W ants DAl·LY PILOT ~LASSIFIED ADS You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It Wi th e Want Ad ·The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial ·642·5678 for Fast Results HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES n Lind• Isle Drive New 5 Br., 5 bath home on lagoon. "Marble entry, wet bar, AM/FM Intercom, Huge mstr Br. has beam cell. & own frplc. Large liv. & lam. rms. w/frplcs. w/de<k ....... $185,000 For complete information on all homes & lots, pl•••• c1U : BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR 133 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.8. 642-4620 HOUSES FOR SALE Macnab-Irvine General 1000 General 1000 642-1235 675-3210 COURT DEM~NDS Let's Have a Party IMMEDIATE 675-3000 SALE!! Probate court sale, A chance for your bid, Large 4 bed- .room. Comer Jot. ti/ear beach. Sunk<'n formal living rm. Step-up dining for for- mal occasion11. Separate, musive 1amily rm. wilh cozy fii;eplaee. Furnishings also for sale. Vacant and ready to go, hllfTy and be first! Call (TI4) 962-55&5, FOREST E. OLSON Inc. Realtors 19131 Brookhun t Ave. Huntington Beach Open Daily 1 ·5 2001 Aliso Ave & 20th Custom built, formal dining room, 3 bed.rm, 2 ba, ~p living rm., fireplace, family rm., eJec bltns, FA heat, pa- tio w/gas tired BBQ pit, dblf! gar., rm for boflt/ttlr. Lachenmyer Rlty Call 646-3928 Eves: 548-6769 Tom Cont'! Herb JohnJ Elliott K~n,von Gary ?tfaluian Gtne Mayo Eloise AforTI~ Be.mice Ricketts Jean Rolfe Realtor NeY.'J>OM Beach Office 1028 Bayside Dr. 6r>4930 GREETll\'GS • of Vs, to All of YOVI Bob Shape.rd Vee Stinson Ruth Vauthrin Spc-nce Werner Jack Wi M Ron Workman Wayne Yet~r Jol'Zt.rwekh Beverly Crffdon. Aasistant Manager Gtorte W eferbach, M&nqer ---- HOUSl!S 'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUS&S l'Oll SALi • HOUSl!S l'OR SALE lll!KrALS Newport· •I Fairview 64Ulll PARK LIDO 4-PLEX $75,000 Newport Beach GOOd income. 213/981-7039 "' ------:~E HPCN ,J ' • ..·. • . ••. 642-lnl Anytime * For Sale By Owner * Carefree Condo. Exclusive Mesa Verde. Chr l1tma1 house, red carpet treatment, gold & red drapes. Frplc .• all bit-i n kifch. 3 BR. 2~ ba. Pool. Spanl1h design. Lovely grounds. Perfect adult Jiving. Call • 549--0971 From aft of us at the Caste MIM Office: we wlM to extend a Very Meny Clwh-to eH1 reo• lo ... -C- Area. Tab a '"""'"' to ...,,. •.. d , .. wll 111111 -.... h ..... to !le tflankful ''" Phil Gibilisco. ?.tanager Lois Cornwell, Abt. M&n&Q:cr Nick Aversa Eob McC&tfte)' Art Palmer John Pincbes Kay Babson Ray Bramlett Vince hham Gary Jenkln1 Dant.te Dave Levine Clem Lombardi 1tfttle Rottman Frank ~bla John Whelan Betty Witte BUI Younte.r NOW IS THI TIME TO IUYll . ---------------- Hau-Unlumltlled Miu Verde 3110 NEW Spanish dupl~-dehm 3 br, 2 ba A 2 br, 1%. ba. All bltns, Comer, 3095 Cusia. Res: 213 / 344-9406, Bus: TI4/87l-9300 ext 32, Roy 3200 3 Bdrms., 2~ bath.I; new cupeting. Facea PGal. $275 month. Realtor 54U988_ S@\\411A-~£~s· The /lunle with the Built-In Chudle DY KEE 1 • I ! I I I I ,. I I' I I NY&AT 1000 Gener•I 1000 HAPPINISS IS •• , l.Jvina only 3 blocks from the BLUE PACD'IC tor only $19,iOO lull price. Houn and lot 50 x 117 IL and zoned for m~ltlple unltt. ChrtstmU Spe~Ltl! MOYI IN IY NIW YIAI 4 nD 2 STORY Room lO run In thil 1600 IQ. ft. Clpe Cod Coltap with low, IO\V $144 pe.)lftlenls or THA Cl VA Terms available. 126.000! $17.900 fULL PRICI U you can afford to rent, you can afford :your own homt clOfie to u.ndY Blue Padfic. BuUUn Jdtchen, fenc:.d )'a.rd. ldeal starter hom~10·~ down handlH. SM06 ND S121/MONJH · Oubtandln1 home with hure 14 x t1 SEPARA'ti=; F1unlly Room complete wtth POOL TABLE. SmoS frff &i'ld clo.se.to Blue Paclrlc. Purchase aubjttt to 51'. an~ nual peretfttqe rate: ICU. VA or FHA Terms ahllablt. Call Collect .• : i I ' ' • • • • I • • t ' ' • -------... -.·---------......... -----~----· . -~~~. -~ --·---~-·-----.,,----------------,,------------- • 1 I I l ) . I t l I ' ~LY PU.ar .Wfldttndr,q, Dtumbtr al. 1970 . Al;i . RENTALS RENTALS RINTALS • l!E.NTA~5' • .-,... ,..........., Aph. FWfthhed Aph. fum--Aph.' f""'lthod ·Apt1_: Unfumhhod ,,...,.... IMch 421111Newport Bo.di 42111 Hunll""°" llMdl , _ _...,... llMdl, -c-ta Mou 5100 RENTALS 1---!Jlll-11111!1--llll!ll--l!"ll-lllll!l'l IUSINISS anti · ~· llnfumllhld • * * * * * FINANCIAL Corona dol Mar 5250 _Monfy Wanlld ' .Oakwo_od ... a new way to .liye i1:1 . . . Newport Beach It's fun. fi ne ~lghbor1 and presLig~ living. ·a.II 1n one lux:urlou,a package. That's Oak-, \\,'OOd Garden Apartments in Newport Beach, ,fust mlnute1 f rom Balboa's Ba,y"' and ·beaches. TlJei'e's a % .fn'illlon dollar Clul1hoUSe · wjth party room, billi.a"rds room. indoor. golf driv, tn,g _ra,nge, men's· and women's health clubs,. saunas. tl'iinls courts, reS.idetit tt'nnls' pro IU\d pro shop. and Olympic si:r:e pool. All -this. and much more, Juli 1ii!Ps frorii your nrofession&lly dtt0f'8.ted apart.men( each u i th private balcony/patlos. AJ:r condltiOn- irli;;i nreplaces optional. .. 01k~ G•rd1n Aii.rtments Or: 16th Street bt'tween Irvine and Dover Dr. 1714-) 642-8170 . ~ i SHARP-0..EAN 2 BR. fl Q. · · rl Cli>tl, """' e""'· """'· 1140. oLa u.inf~ -.J:l'ermo~a ~1t~· ~ <tttns U>. C.ORONA DEL MAR -.0.J BR. S bt.. -· apt w/prtv, aundlck, all bit. Trader's Para~ise , COMMEilCJAL STABLES O:instrUCtioll .I: perm&nlnt --$3>,000.1 Own..-~-· , • _ · • BONUS .DEAL SA VE U ""· <Pld., dnP<d. lmm<d. occt.UH&ncy, $225 Ptt Mo., _;.year I~""· lin~s CJsu,l• esi.tte ijving. Enter ta Qq1nti Her· . ·t,..._,. ~~~-~~~ m9sa's lush -green atmosphere·&: stroll tree,. l .. •.2 BR-u.ntwn~ Pool. <c · ·lin d lk 1 , • · & wtr pd. Adults, no pets. .e wa . ways o your ~p.... MESA MANOR, 241 w. . • All ·u;rrt:ITIES }NCLUD~D " Wihon"Ave, CM. 54&,7405 . · ''. f7WOSO 0, -·' ,..,. ••• times ll'RIV ATE *"Jiart)' n e I di $10,<D'.1 )()1)1 aa:aiNt $25.CDJ equity. 546-39!4 . ANNOUNCEMENTS and NOTICES I. BR._.Uril.·fl50 .,... •f••n. JllO 2.ll ..88, 11' &, ••cl ,.,~. 2 BR. ,Urif, $175 -Fur11. $210 ,.. po0l w•h/d'l' •'t v / u f 1--;;N"E°'W;;,.-;D"'U"'P"'L"E"'X"-· 3 SRaC. flt. P.lins, de~;-. ftlrnlshings: live cpta'tb. Peis ak. s1so: Prlv, patio. Enctoeed PrRP. within romanUC setting w/fun « .privacy~ 1;:-~~·,,.;;;:;:;;~~~ Carpeted &. !Jrai>ed:-~p. Terraced pool, pri. sunken .gas ~BBQ'a w/ NEW LUxwtY ~ ._ 2 Br. built:ina. Immae. ~P. 3 Units Nwpt I: or s unit.· seculded seating cOmpl. Wi'Ramad1 & Foun~ Dshwht, shag cpt, raragea. ing! 3 BR: 3 ba. Price re-c. Meu tOr a.i2 unila rttS tain. . __ Pool & Rec. QWel adult liv-duced to $300 ~ monlh Qi C.M Garde G CASA de ORO * Color co-orcf. •it w·1 inclirect li11htin9. ing! ~410 . " • ·,7• .,.;;.. ·o eaa. n r, or I 'ii > « -~ Anaheim. AU: for Al Kina: * O.luxe r•ntJ• & ovens '* Plush she9 crptg. 2 BR. Freshly painled. Crpts, • ;,., • Jot1ea R,lt)' Inc, NB, 173:6210 1( Bonus stor•g• spice * Cov. carport • dt'J)I, paneling. Quiet & -'IL& 1910 Motor Home 27• Load-* Sculptured m1rble pulfm1n & til• b•ths ~· $160 util pd, No ed! Like new! ~ for * Ele9ent r•creetion room. children, 11.1-A Avoca~o. CM * CORO~IDO APTS * Real Eatate, ·etc. ' Call FURNISHED MODELS OPEN QAILY .-LRG ·2-BR apt. patio, drps, 2e1!: d:=.· d~~rt~ 645-DIS or n4: 328-3401, Blk from ·Huntington .Center, San Diego. ..cptl, util ·nn tor waaht'r I: Palm Sprillp, . Frwy .• Goldeti:west Collea:e. _ · dryer, gar, 115G op. 54&-8688 1rg pool; $190 &: up_ 613-3378 °""'11t'r will tradt 25M equit)' San Diego Frwy. to . Beach -Blvd., So. on •.2 . B~ l ba, MES A 2 Br, clean, \lpper, Stv/ref, in 65.~ Executi-ve 3 BR 2 Beach 3 t>Jks. to ·Holt; W. on Holt to.. . ~E. Nu cpt •. drps; rar, ~Pe~:~cJ· ~0~1~~~: BA home' in Arcadia for LfQuinta H~rmo5a 71 ~: 847·5441. no pets, S150. 5.S7-MOO. 713:.Cli-1!95 aft 4 coll. beaCh or Orange Co, units. l°':=;:=;:::;:==~==!"'!=~=======I LRG l Br, Upta, drp1, new IEXE="cur=;;;iv=E,-;-<-;lh'c:--;;2,-,,,-.....,-l ""-155-=-;;·,.,.,7372,.,.,~co71-•~<t". ,_,...,...., 1~ . paiht. Kids olc ,1998 NO. l ' ~ '67 C ad i 11 a c Fleet11>•ood 4705 .. ,. · 2300 aq, ft. Frpl, bltns, gar. 1waple Ave.~. $ 345 /mo , I s e . . 114 Brougham. Perfect cond. 2 BR l 11j BA Vent Jge J145 • 2-ROOMS, new drpl. & Golcienrod. 968-8658 Loaded. AU extras. Trade pvt faro.& cQ~ P.&Uo, 2 c:Pf_ :Adl}l~; ~pets. . NEW Dupkx·2 Br, ·2 Ba, p;ooo eqi.i:U;y for boat or r snort blka to ".beecb $225. Call . 6f2-SM8 bltns, crpll, frpl 1: deck. 968-B873. ~ Vitjo. 494:96()1 ' ~ Bfl. un1urtt, crpts, dtps, $275/mo. 52.0 Dihlia. 642.8086 '* · * BRAND new. lge:, uniq(ie 3 dollars-F°""" IFrH Adil 64" .FOUND ~One week aio al HIGH f>ESERT for Health. Sunny Aina ~fotel small Terrier type male dog with WANr Calif-Nev. 2-3 M elev fi"H"' while hair, Pleue HAVE Cl mr. 90Jd112 bid.gs ...Y $68,000 eq • $'2,<n> inc. $445 call 543-1786. mo. OWner. CM 646-8558. FOUND 1DOnl!y in ·downtown Lquna Beach. Lo8tt write Townhouse 3 br. 2~ ba, Daily Pilot Box M-1006 stat- N.B. Pool, patio, frplc, lng amount lo.rt and locatjon, ValUe $32,500. Take T.D,, .n.,;n.,. phone numbt'r. trailer or ! ···-.. Owner, 64£~ FOUND Fem ITeY am. cal. Vic: Lquna Cahyon r.&: TRADE S6000 Eq. large P .C.H. LagUna Beac h . lake front lot, Clear Lake, 494-7646, 4SH1D2 . Ca.Ill. For small house Eq, l'B"LK=~•-"-wh7t~lti~"ll~•-0 -w-,-an~.-.. ·I Loca.i or-bA County, Oea collar, hllbrkn, vie: 19th ""'"" . Ir Santa Ana Ave., C.M. What do yoo have to trade! i-548-='~tlS!~. ~-----t List Jt heh! -in Orange YOUNG Cat , itrlped, abort County's larrest read trad. hair, wearinc collar. Vie: ir11 post.642-567, I Superior .I: 16th, N . B • ........ * * 1 BB, N. ·cod, ·cJ05e in, pa. bttns, $130/mo_ 568 W. Wil- tio. $175, utiJ. pd. Mature: 15on or.. can 5'5-07fi0. * FOUND In HB G. Shep blk and tan malt' anxious 1or owner 542-7096 before 4 BR, Z~ BA. Best area. $325 RENTALS -------- --- adlts. Perm. 494-5f40. 1-BR. conv. den. -condo. Fpl, ·· 'Patio, pool, rec.. facil. Gar. mo. 67,_.,.. · Apts. Unlvml,,,... REAL ES1'ATE . GOn.rol 847-9936 aft 4 . CASUAL Calif. Llvii:ir in. a warm Mediterranean atmos. phere. Spacio111 :color CG· ordinated apts • designed &: furnished for. ityle & com· fort e Heated pool e Kltch. en 'v.•/ indirect lij:hllni • Deluxe RIO. Adults only, ·No RENTALS .__ . Adults SlliO. 64Z...U50. Apt1, Unlurnlshed-~ $145. 2 BR. Bltns, new ttPl.!I. 2 BR. Frplc. Stv/Rt'g, nu -:--------- shg cpl, encl iar, $195/mo. S.nt• Ana 5629 Office Rental '°70 FOUND Pup approx 6 mo'• fem black & tan w/Oea collar. Vic. Bushard It J>:eb . Bachelor:~145. fum. --1 BR.:-$1'15 turn. UTILITfES INCLUDED 36j \V, Wilson· _ 642·J~TI No pet1. 673-ll09. G r,._ gar, patio. Child ok. No eneral """"' pets. Nr stores. '548--6357 Hlintlngton BNch 5400 Sublease On Beach YEN DOME ' * 2 BR. Furn. $r$5-l ~IAtACULATE APJ'S~ Lrg 1 BR. Only ~ VILLA MARSEILLES BRAND NEW SPACIOUS I & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Adult Ll•lng SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY Adarna H.B. 962-6486 . 1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 sq. =ro='u'°N"-o-'M.C.O'-. =.:.c:0o'-· -v~· I tt. ottloe auttea. Imm.eel. oc-1n1ature xie w: cupancy. Orana;e c n t y. Ford Rd, C.'d 641't-!:064; Airport Irvine Commt'tt. MZ...2640. PCJOL. Bltns, crpls0 drps, no ADULT and CLEAN, Nicely crptd 3 BR. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Only $225 . ctrildren, ro pet1. 325.J E. FAMILY •-t;"n .tangt'/tt.lr, gas &: wtr .pd. l Br w'..,.,,.'" ,,;,w • 'Jtt*i..i •fMle, 1 & J ...,_ .. tt •. Fttniw.H 17th ~1 CM IUll ....... 0 . ~.., Ad It 1140 •• ,_,.~ ·~- Furn~ & Unfum. Coinplex, adj. Airporter BR/Bla.ck/wht puppy found Hotd I: ReatAarant. banks, Vic Margurite & Coast Hwy. San Diego &; N'pt Fwys. 675-1283. lJNCROWf:>ED PARKING BOY'S G~n nylon quilted ., Uhn1bl!MI. ,,.... S1'41. t1111Mt11ete 0cc., ... .,. .--' · '"":"'.,)O Clo~ to shopping, '!ark u s. · "" ~·· 484 sq' priv deck. Only $300 LDWESI' RATES jacket Bal~a Penn. -,...,_ . .,.. Mlly 11-.. '-.I p111 $25 Per WHk & Up •·spa..:ious j BR's, 2 ba .NEW TRIPLEX Furniture availilblt' l -BACHEWR &: 1 ~R. ·-Swim ~~ pul~reen 2' SR, ~u. drpsJ bltns. Hu" ntingt" on P.acffi•• ----,. -:---. --"fV'"& maid' sewavail. * '1°rpf.liiliY/1nc1ry fac 'ls IOO'kea aar:-No-ttafflc~-• Mr- Dishwuhtt. color ~t ed appliances • plush aha&" carpet • choice of 2 color ~ .. 2 baths • atall -&Mwen .:-~ wam. Owner/mil'. 2172 DuPont Dr., 675-1515. Rm, 8, NeWpon Beach 1 ,-LG~E=l'll~p.~b~lk~w~/wh-l~ho-ll'~o-,1 833-3223 Courtesy to Broken REN.f ALS <t[(I Vic_toria, C.M,. 1845 An1h1im Ave. sirable E-side. S1 75. 645--3.544 APARTMENTS I Hou Unfu J-L-~ General 4QOO S30 wk-I per. w/klt $35. CO~A ~fESA 642,.2824 1 Br Duplex, furn or uni. 7U ~ A H • robe door& • Indirect light· Ing In kitchen • breakfast bar • huge pr:IVate fenced patio • plush la.ndlcapinc , brick Bar-8-Q' a -larie heat. ed pools &: lanai. DESK SPACE chest. Vic: Mesa Verde. 54&-2800. 1u m .,,_ ----------I "d 1. •!!!!!!!!!O!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I U . ""'ean ve,, ..u. j ~ • , Mai ser, mens, TV & felt'. t1J's pd, drps, crpt, relrig, 536-1487 •11---------Just For Seal.ark Mott'! 2301 Np! _!'an,ge. $145, 64Z...7806. Managed by 222 Forest Avenuo Laguna Beach 194-9166 PEKINGESE Dog vie: Davia School., C.M. , "UnlYeriity P•rk . 3237 Blvd. 646-7445. William Wil.1te-rs Co. I s· I Ad It FURN Bocholor & I Br. RENTAL FINDERS N-port Boach 5200, ...,~~--'=-'....:..;~-1 545-1022 DON'T• OE LAY I 1ng e u s Excoptionolly nicol Fr .. To L1ndloi ds l·P-A-RK~--. N_E_W_PO_RT-_-,.,.-Huntington Granada CALL-0$ TC>DAY! South Bay Club lS a v.•hote 2110 NewPort BJYd, CM 645.0111 ~ livg overt~ the! water. 1 BR. From1l35 3101 So. Bristol St. (%Mi. N. of So. eou, Plua) DESK SPACE MAN'S Schwinn bike Balboa Penn.' Ownt'r identity 67>-1515. J 2 BR. 2-bathl 1 •• '· • • • 1215 new way of life designed ~l BR. \1til pd. no 4JS W. 19rti, CW• .M-7 pools, 7 tt'nn!s .els Sl;i0,000 2 BR. 2 LA. From ll55 , • 4 B}J._ i ba. El Toro • ·•• S275 just -for single J>eople. l!'.s children, no ptts.. 16621 ~~~"'"''"'"'°~~~,_.. Spa. ··From S 1 7 5 to r======z= · S.nta An• PHONE: 55) .. 200 105 No. El Cimino Re•l I =ro-="UN~D-OtO,.-b-Scoo--t -w_alle_t · S.n Cl1m•nt1 '92-4421 vie. Pie & Sa \'e store, Wmstr. 673-7699 l Elegant 3 Br 2'Ai ba •• $425 fun J!ving with-warm, dy-Newport Blvd. 642-6194,apl 6 $17~ NE\V 2 BR apt. Best S450-Bach. 1 or -2 Br. Alm 2 Sep Fl\MILY SECTIO?i tor 4 BR .. 2-lili beth.s ....... ; ~ , ___ ,. '" E 2tlh SL •'" Tow·'"""' El-kt ctrildren ur.der 5. · namlc neichbors. It's a 1 BR. furn. UpPt'r. ~rt. .ucn )On. ....., • t '?' '""'" · ....... · 3 BR .. , Il)O. to mo .•. •· •.•• S350 h ·' b . Co 1 'f 64., •nn:: ....; P•l or b•I •··btm pr'-Just Souti:I of Warner t'tuth clu • saunas, swim-PooJ.:1l35/mo~ Hamilton _ s a 1• esa. ..-......., ,,. " ->U n•, i BR. 21-i baths •••. UJ0.1325 . bU opl J'!'laid ser cPts, drps Just on Golden West, H.B. CAN1 BE BEAT 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, CM l =SMALL=~-,7,h~ite-'-,,O-,-..,.--.. -.. -, 35c sq. foot fotUld on Wilson St. in C.M. :f BR. 2 ~. tnhouse .• ; .• ptO r1;:-~ ~fl'..~~ .. or cill 54:1·0760. ·-·N. of f ashion Isl at (714) 147-1055 I Ja S, ~r '? rlVlJ}g 1 BR. furn. apt. Jleated Pool. Cost• Mes• 5100 Jamboret' & Sa n Joaguin --=c"A"SA'"'-d .. 1-s=o-,....-SINGLE STORY South Sea Atrnolphere 2 BR. -2 BATII Carpeta: a: 'drp! 673-2464 or 54.1-5032 ~7 300-600-1200 SCI. ft. FOUND • young Calico, flea ,. • red h·111· ,.. ..... "'""." "'"'''·' "'° No .. ~. Ch;ld..,, ok. S.." u;u, Rd . 64._1900 for • e l 1~p and res1den1 tennis p~o. 126 ~tOnie Vista CM. ;;;;;;;;;:~~::;;;;;;;;;J~i..~,.~Utr~;~t>l~o.;==-: Singlf'. l I. 2 Bedroom Jux-' Ch · ury apartments With all the •-BEAUT. &ch. le. l Br. DELUXE ~CLIFF Manor Apta. a.rnunc. casual, new apts Air Conditioned Private Patios · J:IEA.tEil~L OmCES. $60-S00-Sl80. collar. Vicinity Santa Ana Costa Mesa. 64&-2130 Height.. 54().0017. 4 3100 NEWPORT BLVD, NB found Orange tabby, male, ON THE BAY REALTY --u.n1v_ Park Center, !rvine can Anytj~ 833-0820 - BR., F&m, Rm. & dlit. nn. · ·2~ :ba. Turtle Rock • • $365 l BR;-D.R., 1.,ba .• , •.•• $325 3 BR, Fam Rm, 2\li ba .•• $300 4 BR, "fiinily rm., ~ ha. 2500 ~. Ft ............ $375 we !f.AXE OTHE~r. <-11 I · 1 I I' ' 111 I !'.!!(, ---! I 1·1d!11r ·• "SINCE 1946" lat Wectern Bank Bldf. UniVt!rslty Park D•Y. 13UIOI Nights modem ~flVt'njt''rices avail-apt.$. SJ5..00 . wkly . " up. TOWNHOUSES Spec .. ·holiday discount + 81 the beach. ab~ FUrnishi'a"""atiaUiifuth--F\tm,-,,--inci ow. 54&-&t51. 1>N NEWP.ORl". qAeK---BAY monthly-disc. ·Jl4.>-$160.-t A-LBRJ)'om S14.5 . -675-2-464 or 54.1-5032 near cor. Slater .I: Magnolia, -Fountain.Val~y-.--W4727 ished, QUIET, nicely rurn, Irr 1 2 BR; 1% BA,. erpta, drps. 2. SR. Frol'Jl sn.; 'BR. Adult.: -$145, 2589 3 & { BR-3 Ba. Frplc,• farri patio, JIOOI. -children weJ. 2lli61-(J~2~~; HB Plenty of lawn Carport .I: Storare lilDDEN VILLAGE GARDEN API'S. 2500 South Salta lnclustrlat P•oporty Poodle, t;rey, •fl!:Jllale. _ VJc. Harbor Blvd & 19th St. Coata Meaa. 673-7349 ?.lOOELS OPEN DAILY lO A.M. _ B'P.i'\t' •. REl'fTS. FROM' . $15G NEWPOR:r BEACH 880 "IRYINE .AVE. l~VINE !, l~th 17141 645-4550 SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS • • • Live whir'• the fun isl Orangt'. 54M360 roorn, double garage. Beaut. come. 1525 PI a cell t I a, lounge: Poo1. Billiards. 548-2'68_2. 2 Bdnns 2 Bath .Mw1 & Childrena .,.,. * BAYFRONT * .. l'SO/mo. 642-0300, 540-5141 · Furnished & Unfur• FREE RENT to iAn. lit. 1 BR mpdern apt. $140 mo. niihed f;om $295• $150 MONTH . POOL 4200 Santa Ana e· 546-1525 ·-M·l Comer. 141bc140. 16th ~ Pomona, must be 90ld to settlt' estate. Leon Vibert, Rltr. 5t8--058I eves 673-4\14 Spe.u run, South Lido Chan. tle'!. Dec 11, 1970 67>4257 Lost Mal J.o 1' lo Joly !, Botw"" e MARTINIQUE e In<I cytld11>•, lcid• OK. Ocean & Bay. 673-1071 p· · k Ll.k S . 642;2202 2620 ~lawan:, H.B. Condominium 5950-~lnc(uatrliil R~•I -M90 ~~D for Chula, taken befort"· lo am or aftei: 8 pm •r • , • urrouhditfgs 2 BR; 2 BA, IUths, crpla, •'4~2~-2221~;~.r~t'~';!'~•:=·m~. 5J6.~~18I':c6'. I ;;;::;w;;;;:;;;:-;;;:;:;-;;;;:;: .uuin VlC. 29921 Camino Cap-DELUXE 1-Z &: 3 BR ~S. drps, $1.'lll. · Nr~ lfoag H06j). -BEAUTIFUL Country Oub NEW mde. 1728 to 2300 1q, istrano, s.JC. Shiny black BEACH apt.. ~an· v'iC'w, 2 Also FURN. BACHELOR Jnq. 4150 Patrice Rd. WALK TO OCEAN tL Nr. Baker and Fairview, mutt, w/white boots, ·wear-B~newly deci>r, AvaU. p . lBR.Crpts.drPs.SO;mew/ Villa,C.M.2br,1%ba,pvt l •)T leue. Sullivan,. 1n Vrly $300: -:ew:8: rv patios '!r Htd Pools G!IZ;-4387 64Z...177l . patio: crpta, drps, bltns, etc. ,..,. ••-1ng dog &: flea collars. 642-4. Nr sb:lp'g • Adults on1y/:·=3':::.:====== lrplc & patioa. $!20-$150 per $260 mo. Call Jeanne ~~. 493·3713, 493-4586. CUTE 2 BR, .... 1nrn1. lge. M~'mo;:,;~"""~'~·~""'~~A~•~·~· CM~~[;;lrv;;;i";;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;5;;2;;3;;1 L';1~o;g~g".co. 5.JG.2579 1 _Ed_w_"""_·_968-<323 ______ Lots 6100 LOST -Winchester, our patio. Npt Isl. \V \ n t t' r ~gr. APt 113 • G46-5542 --o--====-o=,-------~-~ Springer Spa nit'I. Rt'ddi&h $135/rila. A&t: 675-4562. BRAND NEW Eastside 1 & 2 NOW LEASING! * FRESH AIR Rent•I• W•nted 5990 OCEAN front to C.OUt Hwy brown w/white 1pots . \~=-------' BR. l & 2 bath1, $155' to Walk 3 blks lo Beach! ft.3 property, approx. 12,000 Reward for return or any 1 .BR., pool, ,b_lock_ to ·oc1ean, $195. Crpls, drps, dshwhr, N .. w. taJ:nily and adults units Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w WANT To Jtase uni 2 or 3 br SQ. ft. Xlnt businezs or home 1,;;111;:0c;.·,;P,cl=""='::·.c-=.::::_ __ I s~.~ adult. Sl35. Sll-3.535 self clean gu oven, all Wit' 'NI.th total recreation club la cl.rps bJlnl t apt or home on Bay or po&sfbility. So. l..aiuna, 1 Sn.VER rninialut! poodle, or 6#-0637 evt's, &: gas Pd. Hid pool. 324 E. anci pre-school. 1, 2, & 3 ~. '225. No pets,~ oceanlront in Balboa or E. SU0,000. 1213) 2«-1197. "Chez Bon," Vic: Harbor&: Coron• .del M•r .3150 1----------10CEANFRONT 2 Br, frpl, J>th St. 646-9148. bdnns from $150. Nr. shop. Newport area. Responsible I========== Wilson, Fri 12/l8. &12-982! 1---------RENTING FUINITUIE gar, Sl~ w~nter. Also 2 Br., Wrt.sON GARDENS APTS ping, golf, schools .. Just WALK TO OCEAN cooplt, no children, no petl. Mount_ain & DeHrt 6210 eves, 642--4960 ext 251 day. WJNTER rental · 2 br, So. of h\\Y. Encl yard, gar., dsh- v.•shr, atove, shutters crpls. Util paid. Ad'ul1s.' $ZIO Avail Jan. 1. 642.7912 · LRG 3 -Sr, 2 Ba, best ar~a. bi>J.c. bltns, cpts/drps: S325/ mo. 673-69CM · Lido Isle 3351 COSTS LESS gar. SIS5 \\'lnttr. S73-8088. 2 BR Unfum. Newly dee. sooth of San Diceo Fwy. on Lovely New 1 & 2 BR. Crpts, 673-8310; eves 67S-5766. Jeanie Adams New ,. ... ,s & drns .. ,..,.~c Culver Dr., Irvine. 833-3733. drps, dwhr. 709 Palm, DIVORCED! Must sell. 2 Bit as>LA:cCK;;;;-=;:=:..,.---~I Complelf' 1 BR. Fum. 11s' low as S22 per rrio. I 00 ~. PURCHASE OPTION .....,.. .,, "'I"" 847-3957 WANTED By C,o u ple Bear Iota, 25xlOO ea. Valued le tan min I Newport Hgh_. 4210 grounds. Adults, nO pets. P'ARK WEST ;;-;.,,--,,,.,.,=,.-,=-.,.,= w/child, 2 or 3 br apt or "'UW\. ,.u ,_ ,,.h or lf::N\ Dachshund, vie of Virginia 1--~-~~---$140 mo. 2'283 Fountain Way APARTMENTS 2 Br. dbl bath, pvt patio, hou tu NB ..,.,.,., ............, .......... Burner's P~·ty Shop F~ d h h pool Ad It Qu' t se rn. · · area. dwn & terms. Bob Austin, ... · · "'"' .J "BR Apt. Furnished, no E. (Harbor, turn "If. on Owned ·and )fanaged by 5 \\' r, · u s. ie Approx. $200. &33-5&17 or ,,_ ff•""'" Blvd, IP • ~. Rd & Par!Ons, CM. 642--0824 ki tch,n. $85 mon thly. \VilsonJ. The lrvi!"' ~ompa'ny & beautiful. $185 inc:'s util. 644-4149. ~ .,......,., -or 642-5996. e 6~~706 e 17676 Cameron, HB. i---------S.A. aft 5. c;;;;;c-;;;;;o-';==--~I Ind;, i1en1 .!Sdection GOLD MEDALLION 84Z-fil21 . _________ 1-.:B'"U"S"l°'N"E"S"S,-o-ncl"'"'---LOST lOlb Lt'perrnese male U hr. dcly. J\lonth to Mo. Corona del Mar 4250 ?i.1odern 2 Br. l~ Ba., patio, Back Bay 5240 ~*~B"E~A'"C=H"B"L~U~F=F-•.,....•t~s"' Rooms for Rent 5995 FINANCl.aL cat, dark spottP-d, ltrt eye CUSTOM ~ crpts, drps, GE liit. ~ncl. """' --...... .-------:-----~----·I defective. Vic: Sprlnfdale .1: .Fundhlr• lllttal. 2 BR 1-Blk to Oc:e•n i;:ar. ~fariy luxury extras! PLEASANT vi'w 2 BR, NEW 2 BR., 2 Ba, dishwash-FREE Rental-exceptional Busl-is Slater, Rtward. 847~1412 " b 1155 120 E. rrnt d..... bit J er11, IXK>l, palfo. 8231 EUis. • .. 517 \V, l!lth, Cl\L 543-3481 Cali Aft 4: 544-4558 -"r u11 · ·Adults ~,, s. , ,,s, ns , poo · S42..~7Y or 847_3957_ oppty for ¥n& attrac. lady Opportunities '300 DEC. 16th, vie Agate St., L.B .. 3 Br, crpts, drps, bllns, Anaheim ............ 774-28CKI Pv ba h b 20th. . . . $165/mo. ,£7&-3690 . 5'2 or Ieu; keep houit', Puppy, part Shepherd tan & "pl"· Adol.ti . $300· • 67'1768. LaHabra ........... £94-l708 NL t 'f·. ~d&N a. THE GABLES . NEW 2 Br Gold Medallion some cookinc. will not MECHANIC'S DRE••.1. bllt,whiteon chest.R~ .. --' .. • ... .,.. ice Y urn · o Corona dol M 525G A 1 G f/ ~ bib" t t f f th ~ ""™ 142 \ria Undine. &&2·3970 HOUDAY PLAZA cooking .. &73-6004 TiiE SEVILLE ar P · ar, Y•u, ns, n 'r 'r w 0 er Union OiJ Co. has availabJt', .,c.i..,.t:-Co,-;;;U·;-;-;"c.l/;-;4o:76:.,·ll=66~. ~-I I======'==="== I DELUXE Spacious 1 BRI=========: 12 Br. 11.) 'Ba, ""1/ gar. Adlts, dt'J)ll, sh84 crpt. ~ref. employment. Call Dave a 4-be.y aerviee sta tion Jo.. 1 LOST U/14: Male kitten, Huntington Be•ch 1400 furn apt $135. Heated· pool. B•lboa ·4300 crp1s, drPs. ra?ige, tncd yd, req, Avai 1115· · 838-0038. cated In prime anoa of Costa orange " fluHy. V ie: 2 BR, 2 BA mobllc homt'. ren -no pet1. 1965 Pomona,• $25 WK --OCEANFRONT. 2439-G Oranae Av~ SI55 'Q.. from $135. Cpts, dTps, bltns, w/kitchena. $27.50 per call Joe ChirCo 2131860-6531 Rtward 646-958-C. Ample parking. No child-patio. ~· •NEW 2 BR apts , * $15 PER week-up ~fesa.Forleaseinfonnation National & Victori a : Drif:tv•ood Park at the CM' ·. LoVt'ly Bachelors, 1-Bdrm. :ll19-E Santa Ana Ave Sl~ • 1'"am)Jy section. 846--7777. week-up Apts, MOTEL. 5'8-or 213/567-0410. beach . Ad ults only . . J.taid St'rvice. Pool. Util. VILLA MES 5 F t · y II S4IG 91-5 SILVER ~flniature poodle, ·•iaa e 675-S740 e A APT , ON TEN Ao.ES oun ••n • ey I ;:=-:=-o-,=-=-:: UNUSUAL BtJ SINES S male, AKC registe red.. Sun. Trade\\'inds R,l ty M7--85!.1 ~C;:os:t::•:..::M::•~•::•'..,.. __ _:•::.:::1~======;;:;=== 2 BR, Priv, patio. Htd . pool. ! • 2 BR. Furn .I: Unfunl .,.u_ NE\V PVT room &. bath w/pvt OPPOR'l'UNITY. U.S. &r: 12/20. Vic. Bolsa A. Fountain V•lfey • • • Ii •-. • II '" I B•lboa Island 4355 2 _car enci d car. Chil~; l'treplaoes I prlv, fl.tics I VALLEY PARK entrance. Sgi adult male, overseas. See ii you qualify_ Edv.·ards, H.B. 897-7305. l------'-'--34=10 S6 nite up $21.50 wk llPI---------welcome,· no J)t'ts pieaAe-. PoiU. Tefmli o;·mnBkbt.. m wk. 673-6799 Call fl.fr. Anderson, 830-2570 LOST 4 BR. 2 be., f'rplc. mein'tained snJ[)IO & 1 BR Apl.S * DARLING 2 Br, · $185 $l6S mo, n 9 \V. Wilso~. 900 SN Lane:~ &tf.-2bU For FAMTLIES with prt· 1----------1COFFEE Vt'ndifli' machine w/bl~ :~e cb:i~tt:~ I • ~·-TV ho 1 •-·) d" 1.1.,1 C·'I ft 646-'1251 _ 1._,_k.~ ... --.·-n._..., H-I school children only. ....,,, for ,.,,_ poo. (It'll ok, lt'ase $275.mo. """"r . P Ill' R rv, poo ""' u ing u 11 es. .., a er -~-=~~~~-1 ... M;IU"..,,..., '" ....-.. , -~ 2 & 3 BR 11nd 2 BR Studio Misc. Rent•I• 59" • ., Vic: Edinger &. J\fain SA. avail Jan 10. 842-2937, • Linem. maid terv 'avail. 3:30. 673-1928 -Qulet.A"dult Living S160 to S2lS ** 96Z...35M ** 548-8832. 536-3Zl6, Social clubrocim-billlards, etc \VINTER Lease. Bayfront.' 1 &'2 Bll Shag cpts. bltns, NE\V 2 br.-1 ba, frpl c, shag l7256 South EtR:lid, FV CLEAN Single garait, S20. MAlL Ordt'r busines:s. l 'i..~..,.-,-,b"to-c~k/~Wh-;t-,-f-,.-nal•,t Lagun• !$••ch 3705 2 BDR:\f, 11~ BA, 1"" yr old , vie~·. beam clng. shag crpt, b_l ti ns. a vai l ,after Chrislm aJl. S22:i mo. 1095 Oro, 494-50i'3 2 BR. lj~_BA, .1110,ve & refrl£. Ne pets. f18S . • 494-0!"'52 • ~•n• P:oint -Live where !he fu n Is! BR. 2 Ba. $350 + util. bee.ut ~cpd. $150 It $170 crpt, drp~, patio, laundry {Just South of Warner) W-&ide CM. E-Z acceu. ~fakt'$ you $ money! dog, Jlev.'l.rd. Answera lo 2376 N~wport 81\·d. 5'*9155· \Vinton Real Estate 675-lJJl incl .all util. Adults only no facll, SZOO/mo. ,675-5724 . (714) 540-4785 Cement flr. elec. 642-5583. 1195 54!cured. 645-2740 "Lady". 673-945.i ••••••.••• I .. , ""'.'=:=======I -==-~c...:::_ __ _ lee ~-& ·7 Br •Pl.I. -H t' gt Bed 4400 21i· Avocado St. 646-0979 FoUnt•lo V1li1y .5410 Fount•in V•lley 5410 E-~d~~Eta$2SM~ ~~ .Si i~Yesfment MALE Pekint11e, beige I: furnished' br u.nfurn\shed un in . on ' -l••t 1·n •d••-. 64 .. ~.. Opportu I • blondt' color, vie. Hamilton F....,. J130/r'!°' . BE~UTIFUL FullN: APTS. HA"Rl!OR GREENS '" ~-n ttH 631G & Brookhont. 640-®9 Pa'i...:.now for Jan. $140-$165. Quiet, prlv, patio. 2 GARDEN ·Ii:-STUDIO AP'l'S • GARAGE for ft!nt, itoragt' Shopping Center Site Ir gft t~ rtst ot wardrobe1,, 1rplc; dt:J?Silng Badl. l, 2, 3 BR'•. from $110. ' 'Ji~ only. Call tU 5pm: 645-3264. 5 ACRES P•rson•l1 MOS Oec'.s ren,t F~••. i:~n!.oc~'!! ~-a-ai;-. ,Pool. ,2700 ~ter19n Way, c.M~ · REAL ESTATE, Prime location w/Rf'Vic. ita· 1--------;:.;.:;:,1 Cilll 64z:8690 11301 K:eelson Ui.. (l· blk W. 5t6-Q3TO _ e C:Hlral lion on corner. Partners FULLY LICENSED * + ./ licautlfuf 1 & i BR fl.Im of Beach Blvd, on Slliterl. * • NEW '2 & 3 BR. Sh&g In--P-rty -splitina:. Subordination to gd. Renowned Hindu Spiritualilt 1 or. untum apll, OJTERING: * g.iz_.7848. dtts. dwhhr, gar. OR1y 3 ....,.,... ·-...-buyer. SACRIFICE! 714/ Advice on all matten. i;ell clean. ovens, l?AV (ln1 1,N~E\="-1_br-~l-l l_5 ___ 1_1~5-0 neighbors in your Bldg. ~ 54&1266 Days or Eve1 Love, Marriage, Busine11 z "tsa. 2 ba. f-1, I ~1, I 2 Br! dl•pla 11~n .. .....,ts , • Child ok. Nr, S. Cout t 0 e [a .. .:.L. C Dlex • INVESTOR w/$1, •. ,.; l 0 Readings a-ivtn '1 days a .,. -··· ) ·" ·-~·r ' furn/unfum. 1 Blk to heh. Pla:r:a.540-1973or54>mt..... -.1· ~~ '1T ta'· so~. t""" . Wttk,10am-10pm. dl]1.$])11ns_ SrnJ.11 5<'11 care d~. IC\WI 6: Sauna bath. PvJ pal io, 202 A l4th, H.B. oun ai,...., 11le ovtr If' 1n t'l't'Sf m 312 N El C&m\no Real., )'(I. $200. At:lulta. ~96.-2002 !luge Pool. FOR~ ADULTS 5..'t6-l319. NEW TOWNHOUSE $81,000 prime 61-i aett R2. 8l)..6().1(). _ • ' San Clemente Ri NfALS onl)'. 1,.,.,,,-~,....,=~~~~ 2 BR. l'Ai Ba. & 2 BR. Crp1g. Mediterranean Styl• L..:iu.ry ._92_9136, 4n.oorg •-F MERRIMAC WOODS L~. 1 BR. 115(1. 2 Br. 2 Ba. drps, telf clean1ng ~s ov. 356 E. 20th StrHt Money to Loan 6220 ~t. urnished 4.2S :O.fc:rr11T1t1c Way Sis;>: In lovely Spanl!!h'bldg. en, encl Jt&r, Patios. 548-3605 Cotti Meta --~--'""---";.;;;;I SERvtCEs ot a ptl'IOnable "----··I·· -~--•· .. .,. Q\li('I, 5Cl'Tnt' atmo.<iphen!. :m w Wlhion 1 & % Bed.rooms -! B&U.. 642 •905 penonal es c o r I to bt I·-~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; J ~;:;;;Ji;l_?l."_AP~~aiU?E;. I ;,w~,l~kdt~o;b<~h~.~2gl9~t~lth~S~t.:,__ I :•o,:;:' IDi'EJ. :a>2iiiil Adult Llvln1 ... 1 t TD L available for Holidays. Good .. 1\CAPULCO Ap~ attrac~ve.1i>ELUXE Ba.eheklr Units -• DELUXE J • 2 QR I ~!!!!!!'!!~!!!!!'J!!!!!! I s oa n dancer, Sinl('r etc. 6.13-2587 "ALM -~· APJS 1tool, UIU p&ld, Gafdt>n WALK TO OCSAN Utlt pd Garden Apts. Blt-iru, priv: Funllbed & tlataralsbed Buslnnl R•nt•f '°'° f, .J11 , tMnJ. Adult" "° ..... 2 BR WIDBORO Ctt · 5.16-2Sl!i .. ,.,, htot«I pool , !rplc. e ,... 7!11$ INTEREST SWJ)iGER Onn•• C o. 1175 • , SR 11G. '*'Ii=====·==== i .:·~""~':',::~~-1~1~u~ .... ~~"'6$1~~63~ 1 • ,.,.,,.,... STORE . 126 w. oo s• .. CM. 2nd TD loan g-..... ""',,;;"" ~1 P. 1 BR nJRN. $149.5fl -a.cli!lora f'uml1ht'd tram ftfO_ 2 81t •"Pt. si r. mo, mo./n10. OK e POOL e SAUN"A .... e JACUZZl-....., 1561 ~ Dr. ~t• MHA .r -..~• Watl111C4'.' Ave .• C.~f. . L•guna S.•ch •705 * TOWNHOUSE * :e -sr.., ~· ~ Ava il. U/9. 9i8o4 ~90h ' m, DUPLEX. 1 BR. Furn.-·-------2 BR. 11" BA, crp11 d~. e l"n.-;...., SUS/mo. • * Sll-1768 Tenn.'! be.aed on ~t;y. li;'i;;<;";;<;';;;;.:""-,,===·I Adµ!~. qul<J. No dOI•· Nr. $30 WK LUXURY ,.,,,,_ AdOI!>. 11~1."ll< E. • Cl-' c.N... 642·2171 545-0611 A~H0.1:~n ~"'~:':; ~t.)pplng .. ~27"» &-tip . BaL-htlors, glnatci 1 Melody Lt1, M8-t7i;, • S..-' Cllil;.,. Office Rental 6070 Sc-tvtn1 .triutor area 21 yn, P.O. Box 1223 Colta ftteU. I BR. Adults. Pool. ldC>til fo_r Edrm, ~lf"PJ to bch, -.JI u'u1, Sl80. 2 QR, 2 ba 5tudio, 9566' Slater Avenue • ~"PORT BEACH Civic S•ttler Mortgage Co. bachtlon. S1)lclou11. Sl2S. hid . pool, Jine111, l't'c rm, redC'c, cpt/dt'f>~. llrlj ~hop'lf· -El~'·• .,_1_1!!. Center XI() ft to 1000 fl. 336 .:. 17th Sll'eet 1993. Chu rch. 548-963.t res!atu11nt, coclt.talla, dAnc-r118-Alo1. 213/592-5227 ;;;i"'lli.1'! 19 •• ~'";i' '"' .Answ &: sed'f!tarial 67S-t60J. 'L"n.:°"'E'"°'T;-o-.,t_,...,~,o--.,0~.-r I ;."°""'"--'-"'-":.:m:.:;;.'"o:"c:;.' _.:;'4;;1;;;0 S8l It.. Up. NICE: 1 .l 2 BR in~. I ""2 -=s=R-. "tt"'"I ~.-•• °'•'"1t"n•'".".,"'".,~c.~~~.1 ""~~.. • XLNT OF'F'tCE Space Tr11.dtt'1 Paradise column ls BAND AV All.ABLE Tt11U1!ra. Adulr1. no Pt'l!I, VUlaae lqn HOIC!I A.pt1 oirp~. No pel!I, I cl\lld ok. Now Aytll. LIDO BLDG, for ).w! 5 Llnts, ~ Days for for pertjes. 1P E. 16th St., C.\1. &t2-12W ~ $1.;(I mo. M:>-2486 I 33SS Via Lido, NB. 673--1501 s.;, C•ll loday .•. ""'"56T8. __ 646-..;;..::9il.cl3;;.:..;131~.0;::15!:;!_..;I. ------- • ---~----------• ~ • -..... •r-• ' , ' Wtd"td.lr· -"· lrn> DAil y I'll.GT D ANNOUNCEMINTS· SlltVIC1i DIUCTORY -511\VICl •. DIRICTOllY .IOIS& IMl'LOYMINT JOaS .& IMl'LOYMl!lf MIRCHANDIH FOa MlltCHANDISI fiSR MIRCHANDl$1 FOR FREE TO yr.-u ~ •nd .N, OTIC,IS s "•·-l•ln---1an· J•~•-•-• .. ·i...:...-,_ 7_ SALi AND TltADI SALi AND TltADI-SALi.AND TRADE...,..., _____ ..,, __ 1 c.,.,.,,t, Concret. ,'600 Tlle, .. (or•mlc "741;~-;;=;·;··~;.·;~-;-~;~-; .. ~-;-;~-=1~~~~~~~~1:~~~~~~~=~:~:~~~!, -ltp•I -._, 6450 CEMENT WORK, no Job too , * Verne, Tbe Tile M"" * Furniture .. -Mi..li-1 -Mlocell1--, ~::,,~ .·~ ~ 1 WILL oot'be•respon,1bie small, reuo.able. Free C\llt.-. lnatall & ,.pairs. tUITION FREE MOVING, •l,.ant furniture ihorthair black & whlta, 1 tor any ~bta Othtt fhan m)I Estlm. H. Stuftick, M~. ~o job 'IOo .,nl. Plaatu • • 60% off. Color TV atered, mo to 15 mo. 546.-TDI 12114 own..JJvan&Gordoo · ••·CONCRETE Floon Qalehms .. .Luldnc chow<r · --' · pak!Jl2SO, 1ell 1SOO; pt114h * CttRISTMAS 'SPECl•L_ * w WK old bJaclc aboi'tbalr SERVICE DIRE(_TO_DY "'''°" Any ..... iob .. R<u: repair, 8'1"9'11/~. Nurse's Assistant T.ralnlng pme table, paid 16CO,, .. u ••% off -· II I ..,, I ' kltte ' Abo 1 ~--·· . ~ cau . Don Mi-&514. •. CEJUMIC• Tile work. ~ $250; compl bdnn A uvinc I ~ -k f at-pr ce ~"11 'c"hY 1' nt blac~ 6 brown. m~-;,. labvttttlng 6550 eat: No job 'too fll'l&ll. tm M!ts. 6'73--t409 ~ n our 1toc rom now. t r stmas ~ Controc:tors 6620 , _-536-="26=======< Select grour, <ii women will lie chMen to train MUSI' ..u all bou"bold with this lld HSlf;.IM.:Y 1 '.~ i~~~e~~.b~~~i.t. ;:i MY way, quality home 1Topsoll 6m ·~~~~lf.t~. ~~SZ,'fu~f~n s:v:~~ ::.:~(;~ ~~.;;ot~~· ~tn·~-;;. 0 Custom made Jewelry, \l8lDg1ftl!ur dtsl:J ma1e· UeeANio. ~ ~~ meals, aey h>i.ar, reuonable re .... 1 ... W·"·. ce:11-,-•---'-------,,-employm" ent: No age limit. Interviewing ~ Tod•", "" eo.ta Mell St.', or oura • Gold, silver, go11~.~!:in pla , 546-13(8 , , • unt l~'"~"~'·:..,"~'!:8-0W!l~~·=:;o;:=:j;t~No-Z;b ~-.~~ -T"'P Soll, Sand.31 r.oam· gins Tuesday, December 29, 6:00 to' 9:30 P.M C.M~ ~ findings & settings • Je·we ... r g sup-COCJ<ER tenW, Pll1PI-. 3 tJC'D day care, toddlu. 7 54>-1494, 21 hr ant. ;.,._ LYMAN LANDSCAPING at 24452 Via .Estrada (Beverly Manor) La-OCEANFRONT HOME pties & tools • Precious met al cuUng male, 2 "'"'· Bet•J 4M.18U, ....so:io pm--wld;.-Hot LIC'D eontr. Remod<IJnc,1 .,,.,'=--,,.~..,-=-'::"'=== guna Hills. QUALrJY. Bodo, din""" equip •Gem tumbling • W:o®_carvlilc Alt 5,496-2118, ,.,_._]2121 me a I a. Harbor/Baker. add~ns. roOtingr paintiA& le JOBS & EMPLO'Y'MENT dreuers, · chandfllen, ~ & sculpturing kits for the amate·ur SHELTIEi mil(, a m 0 •. 54&-JS.39. ~:.. s4q-.,1sss or 'JOI» W•ntM,.M.n 7000 ~·tr collect 1213) 24.5-3352 .~r:~r;.ei;:e.~~26Jf '!' Glftt for • .,...y cu.temer =rokan. ~ ~ ~ M;'i,! .. "''i"~~tti~ Addltlo., " "-"•linr _ CAREER DEVELOPMENT · LOVELY Sota, never .....i, 1f * Five M Gemr * '* KITl'El'IS, 9· w"' .,,., mo. °'''day, 8'2-112<. -Gorwkk •Son, Lie SCRAM~LEJS CORP'ORATION qulltod llora. --box traln<d all '°'°" 1,=~::::;:.:..::,,::=~-673-©U ,,. 549-2110 --$125. MatchuW -at 1.15, 270 E. 17th St., Hllklren Conter, Cotti Mew 836-4493 ' • w:ii MOTHER Will babysit NS RS. . .. . 6451909 weekda,ys. K-Mart area. Remodelinr * ·Additions A WE '!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l:~530-"33~~1:..· =-,;:c:--.,-,;;;il · TO ,tpedal home on l 7. 6'2-'329 KARi £, KENJ;lALL Sl'OVE Apt 1iz. Pl $4! Open 9 AMlll6 PM Tues .. Thur& Sat Sheperd-Collie -~. uttnsed·Bonded 548-~ ...... rvld _Ke·~_ Tanov.:.. Jola1 Men, Wom. 7100 Jobi MM; Wom. 7100 wttrade or bey ·dbl bC!d 9 AM til 9 PM Mon, \Yed & Fri 642-f5.58. Ufis BABYS~G my bJme, ....... ;.,,,. . ..., day ·or nlte, any .age. Hot Typist-KIDNEYS REAL ESTATE SALES compl: 6'1'5-3'm. Nd Gd home flXld yd tor meals & fncd yd. 646-3738 Carpet Cleaning 4!625 Reforme4 dnmkard: "He Gen'I Ofc/Recept Join ·• roi.ne orranization .l UNDERSC'RIBABLY . l600 lovable J& blk Jab mix Oean Cleaner Cleanest! had to give up drinking for Anaheim. 2 Girl ofi:. Xln"t start ~ new )'ell' rl&ht! UNIQUE TABLE Planot I Ortans 1130 MIK1ll1neou1 548--0813: 836-f493. 12/%3 Bolt Maintananu 6~55 Kurt' \Vagner Carpet &: his wife and KIDNEYS." potentW. Frnt ofe apJ>e&r· Bonus commiuion .p I a I). ** * 613-7999 BEAtrrIFUL ant1qlle K\'lhler 4 CHRJSI'MAS puppies, 2 GULL Marine Sel'Y •. ~, wW Upholstery Cleaners. $9 lJNlT MANAGER: ance, diversified. Only 'f openinp. Call for ln· * CUSTOM Jl'URNJTURE &. Chase 10 yr old Upright 3-PC sectional, 1 curved doxlea and 2% doxltl need .' "-'·ee ••tima",,· 0 , average rm. 534-530 5, Employed. 1alea exec MISS EXEC AGENCY terv~w, Bud Corbin • Paul RENTAL. See ad clan Piano A maitb1n& stool. w/table ~-'ve•: Stauffer good homes, 56-5978 11124 .. • w/well behaved 9 .,... old . 410 W. C:C.Ut Hwy, NB Mart.in, · 4000 Call •~0 .. ~ .. • Xln -• -•-tt table $20. aruty bench l~===,....,~-.,.-'-C"-'I P a i n t•i n~g-v.a r.n i sh ing 1.:63.1-564::..:=2::.· ---=-~-I son. Flexible hn:. EX'f~ive ~ 'CORBlN-Ml.RTIN • _._... tco.~, .,...,... or;~,,.~~ er. w/pad. $3.50. Arm cha l r K ITTE NS-H~broken, fiberglaa n!pain, hauJ.ouis, Diamond Carpet Cleaning REALTORS ~7:u.2 Off&ce 'umlture •10 492-0423, aak tor Wll.ITY. $3.50. Barstool $2.50. 1.ce· ·Great tor Christmas! bottOrn palntlt)g. cleali.ing New Year Special! ~t!t~~.· ~~od~ e;:;:~: , ,. BEA-UTIFUL antique \'lval wool bn.lded rug $00. ~ 12f2;i inside/out. Contact Mr. FteeMinorRepairing eGIRLSe RECEPI'f.GitlFrld•Y,Rtt1n'd S4x60 wood deskl,. rosewood pl&no. Small •. Honda 55 foll parts p). rnEE'•Twltold frieodly Scott · 5 5 7 -6 D 7 J'. Eves With Qeaning 400· $20. l-51f;.-2l_60_. ------Super s~. very attract, $69.50 e Rdln'd wood um Perfect cond. Show piece. 64J-Cf68. male puppy, Call 545-6m, 675--4567. Free est. 64S.l3lT for fast food handout service. full or pt-time, wUI traJn, $2 rotary cha1is. $29.50 • We $li00. 644-09ll'I ' HO Model TraJn Set. ttx4 ta· 12/>C Job W1nted, · .Apply in per90n per hr litart + future. have the larpst etlec&n EBONY Fisher Baby Grand. ble, 50' track, ovt'!rhead & 6 Wk old pupplee part Lab. Brick, Masonry. •le ~ BUI.Li>, Remodel, repair. Brick, bloCk, con c r<e te r carpentry, no job too small Lie. Contr. 96U9-15 ~ar~ning . "80 Woman 7020 547.5846 ol used oWce tum ID this What a beaut Christmu surface powt"r, electronic 548-6556 ~ 12125 AL'S GARDENING THE RIGGER RECEPTIONIST, gen'! cfc U'eL present! SI195 Owner . controls. Fully l&ndscaped, l='~=-~--..;:;;;;;1 DAY work. General Cleaning duties. Progreaslve co In Mc Mahan Delk 673-2259, 6M-5972 complete acceuorlea. Phone ~~!1' And cage. 12/'5 for Gardening Ii small tand. wkly or prtime. Reliable good surroundings. 644-5904. 1800 Newport Blvd. BALDWIN ~-,_ •P<•k" ~94~·;21008~,'-=,.,-.,,-==-I i-iCO~iIT,Y-Poo&n;;:-LQ;;q j scaping services call 54().5198 Tra 541 3524 54"1 9330 NO. 16 FASHION ISLAND 642-StSO ,,.,,. .... "' SOO'ITY·POO 6 mo. Loves Serving Newport, CdM, Cos. ~3-~26 -' ~ NEWPORT BEACH. SALES, demonstrator for Like New SAC! ~ price. FoR 18.le: Used 4' fluores-kids 891-5480 12/24 ta Mesa. Dover Shores, ~:;,;:~=-...,.-...,..--,.,...,. J ,,.,,,====-:-:----c-S~lko Oil Cleaner. Work In DESKS, Credenzas, chairs, $1600. ..t * 6444771 cent fixtures, S5 each, u b . \Vestclill, AIDES -Fer eonvalescence, HOUSEKEEPER. Live in high traffic local. automotive tpe cabs reception rm fw'n, PLAYER piano for gale Xlnt Contact Mr. Laney er Mrs. LAB ~e mix Blk/wht, 1 STORM REPAIR elderly care or tamlly care. for father A: C()mpanicn to store. 213/327-4495. ~ines1~ ma~ ~t!~ condition w/rolls. · Greenman. Daily Pilot, 330 yr. 548-0813; 542-7096 12124 Carpentering 6590 Tree work, surgery, bracing, 1'"'memakers, 547-6681. ll yr cld daughter. Refs Sacr1t1ry es. • * 496-4729 * west Bay, tosta Mesa FREE dutch rabblta black CARPENTRY prune, Landscp mai(lt, J0bt Men. Wom. 1100 ~~hatledir Se~I~~:: Fee ~id by Co .. Must be 8:3G-5 pm. FARFISA dbl k ey board RATI'AN bar w/2 &toola $50. and white. 545-7450 ll/:J4 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job cleanup jobs. Time open. Father hM occ'ttravel. $100 ma.med. (AJao fee jobs), Call Garage Sale I022 combc organ $5iS Xlnt BriA-set $20. Bone china,, MIX lab puppies ready tor P f Gard ... ' G-• Ann. 64.>mo, We1tcliH Per. od -.1523 ' "'6" Chrlitmaa 642-9136 ..... u Too Small. Cabioot in· gar. ro ess · ~v•• *AVON* mo. Write BOlr M1050 Dally JPOnnel Agency, 2043 Weit· BEDSPREADS Wall mhTot co • .....,.. dessert or salad plates, S3 =""='"'-';:.,,;c:..,:.::;:_-=u::.•::;ftl ages &: o t b • r cabinet!. 1..:64&-<;893=.,;=:;.· ----.,,..--REPRESENTATIVES 'ilot, 33(] W, Bay St, Costa cliff Dr., N.B. & acones, ShUttleboard aet, EI.EC ORGAN, 3 man\Ws, e... TV w/nice 1tand $20. BABY Gu n tea p 11 e, MS-8175 ii no · answer leave AL'S Landscaping. T r e e are advertlSed regularly -Mesa, Ca. * SECRETARY, I OFFICE Child's tur coat. Misc & new pedals, Danish walnut, apt ~2947 546-9965 12/23 m&g at 64&-2372 H. 0 . removal. Yard remodeling, TV and Magazines, Be one IH-O_U_S--'E~KEE--P-E-R-.-1-1 .-,-.,-.-, MANAGER for smau busl· klys. 546-3242 n . $250. 541)..5452 2 SCHWINN Stingray al" ·3 GUINEA pigs, Must go, Ande~!!... Trash .haul~. J ot ~ean!l_p. yourselJ. ... ~n4-enjoy high CdM, English.s11·eaking, ness in Habor area. Gen'!. bicycles. Comple tely 642.-2312 ~ REMODE;WNG & • Jlepair Repair sprinklers 67J.llS6. ~75· ~rnow -54()..7041 clean thoroUghly, Good secy'l 1: bklcpr exper. rtq'd, Appliances 1100 Tel1vlsion l205 re 64 b2-•UIOilt.#, $30 I: $3S. Ca1f PETS ind LIVESTOCIC Specialist. Corn.m'I, residen-·Trees & Shrubs removed. w/children, $180 mo atart. sala Se d tial. Paneli""', c ab i n:e t 1, Hauling-Lawn Main!. BABYS11TER . FOR ( 3) . ....., .....,,.. ry open. n resume WHIRLPOOL Elec dryer $20 COLOR TV 1967 25" ln .._ C t --~ .y-v -1,·mat" 645-34_33 Live-In. Housekeeping &:1-·-·~~··-~------,--toB.S.H.enry,Gen.DeJ.BaJ. Kenmore ras ~ SJS'. Contemp. ~ut' cablnet. LARGE New Cowhide blac .. •I ~ Fm='ar~li~·1-""c,lormc.;.c"-i"'co"'.-'&t-<-;.,'IS98-"-"''-l~"-.. ;;;...•;:o===~,-~-I HOUsEKEEPER, part time. boa, Cahf. 92661. Older machines but itt lood SUS Or will trade, 642--0584. k white, STS, Peterson * CHRISTMAS KITI'ENS * LET the Sw~e do iL Repair, Exper, Japanese Gardener, Pay, 646-2449• Nr. Brookhurst & Hamilton, SENIOR Citizens;~ 2 er more cone:!. 546-8672, 847-8115. itroller &: playpen $8 ea. Beau• exotic Rex Kit.I, w/ remodel &: patios. Complete y~ service. Neat B A BY SITTER/Hskpr. Z. Hunt Bch. ~ 644--0581.. " 673-5417, 494.7853 & Relia. Free est. 642-4389 children 5, 7, Live in. Ent1----------older men to alterna~ * LARGE CLEAN Hf.:Ft & Shi 1210 CAB.2E'Lla)ier:s, have shag shots&papen,Sbow O¥pet~ 1-:::.==='=====-l'Fr'r.iriPFiii"L<Ni)s(:AP'il•ii I. speak., ref's. 893-7892 HSKPRS Emplyr pay1 tee. working evening 11hift. Ser· REFRIGERATOR reo ,___ Cal l: 962-6995. -EUROPEAN LANDSCAPc.R •-vice station, 5 pm to Wpm, 135. *· •~1•-TmE ...... _.. .._..___ "'·-j crpts deal dltect, exp fn. 112J' Cem1nt, Concrete ·6600 0 Tte 5,,,....e..., 8ARMA1D-Personable &: George Allen Byland "'6en-l!1'nr _, .....-.........., ""'...,....,.ANl llall can fin. 539-8327 0 •. ·-e~n up • e . -,. •; ey l06-B E 16th s A. Lite work, $2 hr. Call tn pet'> _ Xm>S g track play, cart· , • ogs MORE Concrete patio for Rea.sqnable. Eves 496-3383 ~~~his~~. ~95~~t. 547--0395, • ' · son mornings at Killg'1 Udo Appliances 1100 ridge Cassette J'ffl • New. 827-8740 JU'.SriN TIME FOR. Jess money. Artistic setting. EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; R\Chfield, 3600 'Newport KenWood TKX'.140 AM/FM END Of Estate Sale: Stone, Chrllitmas Lic.,cal1Maxat644-0687 Comrlete Gard.ening *.* BR~ILER le nlPREPd Blvd., N.B. SIDEWALK SALE sterec> receiver, 150 watt, sm. re!rig, klng bed. Other **3 BlackToyPoodlepupa~ FREE Est. Sawing, break-Service. Kamalani, 6'!.6-4676. MAN 3-/!" ~· ky nee SERVICE SfATION AT-Saturday,-Dttember 26th like new. 673-0680 ~. mi.IC, Cheap I l male, 2 female * 1 adorJ ing, hauling & skiploading. Compl1ta Yard C1r1! npp. 494-DO · h. TEND~NT all 1hifts open. Recondi~ned 1V'a a: appll· FORCED to sell by Christ. able Silky male ** 6t&-0142 Service & quality. 54~. -JL"'d 540-4837 BOOKKEEPER"S Assistant· Applbr m ~Bc~S Cam· ;ii Ftnal·cl~-out on all mas. Fl.!iher stere<> compon-100% VICUNA coat, pun:hu-333 E. !Tth St, CM. , T'Le General Servic1s 6682 ~~t: ti1: = <~ 'X:ru~ s~_~viei: s.e:tSa.lesman,_n. Wan'tde!itt Y:r,5:!1~~ le ruar· ;'::f.2co~~::;'t:;: !~ :!~~~:-~:~.~ CffiUSTMAS Puppies! I n Bookkeeping & typing exp. t Exp d A 2590 !12 3009 tinn. 615-0146 Miniature poodles, AKC,, RAIN Gutters ·In stal l e d , preferred. Near Bay Club, ime. •neat. PP· ·DUNLAP 492-0lTI or 4 · · ===~=-~~~-= champagne & choc..'01ate;1 • Q al. k R bl N B Ask for Ken 642-9262 Newport Blvd. C.M. NEW Stereo 100 W. AM-FM REVELLE Americana Alot males & females, 6 _,ks,' I A~ Lil u ity wor · easona e. · ' ' SERV. ~stab. Fuller Brush APPLIANCE GtllT'8td tune· table Sac .ear home raceway set, $50. le f15-. 642-0326; · · . · , 1-Free est. 968-2208. .890~J;f~~.-f./~.-~~: -!~ PfRSOONEt Tte~75'wic--to 1r.,-alt10 -1815~.Ne~..;!l,!vd.. C.?L $150. Btwn-7 -.-a·oruy,. -complete, Cost$lfl0, sell S30=:-·-&7a:!l35T. - _ • •--- Hauling 6130 !4~~-S~rd. Xln't pay SER.VICES pt time. 54&-5745 _.,,_ e 646-0862. 9S2-3Y13. SHERRY'S POODLES "------· •AGENCY Tax Agents FRIGIDAffiE Auto washer, ** FORMALS, 2 fabulous PI LOT. JUNK Wa.tod. Freo ,m•tal CARRIER 488 E. 17th (at Irvine) C.M. Xlnt cood !50, Weatitigbo"" Sporting Good, l500 designer formals, 1itt1 W • All b~ ~ r,..; pick up & garage cleanups. 642·1470 NO EXP. NEC. elec dryer, xlnt cond, $40. -•· ---· ---12. Call 675-8681 pick Op Ii ·JeliveJy, &hrlst. Hauling. Ed Stone, 543-8~13. 'BOYS PT. OR· FUL'.L TIME g~li1s. A: dellv. Sf&-8612. %STMle ::e ~ MOVIE projector $25, like mu pups In all colon. · . . TRASH & Garage clean-up, 7 WANTED LANDSCAPER, ex per' d . Hobie aurfboe.rd $25. Adult new. Deluxe 26 gallon 546-2848 ' · days. $10 a load. Free est . Deaign \'lr construction or JAXCO lllO owned IOY•. new co'"" aquarium, $25. Call 642-6935 ORANGE Anytime, 548-5031. both. Xlnt oppty. Ph: betwn Antiques ,...._ . EXPERT grooming ST.50. · R 0 G c 1 tor the 8-lll am only n.f· 494•5427 Eves: 546--0730. · "DfAMON[);:70 carat n ng, Poodle puppies, mod colon, y A I ·a r . eA.nup. DAILY PILOT ' . . . Housewilei·Stude~ts-Retlred Beautiful French Curio ·Cab-SPORTERIZED Springfield fine1t quality &: color. SSO up, Monkeys~-Special RE:move trees, Ivy, ti:a5h· Dana Point, San Juan lwtANUFAl"ft!RING Engineer Anyone over 18 In~rvlewz' tnet. curved atu.. &U-J>ft 30.06 Ritle with Weaver K-4 Emerald cut. $499. 675-8681 on· all bJrda. 5f7-3851 or. COASTIS 9rade, bacll:~, 962.-874a. er Ttthnician t('.I develop f 8 8 Tu after 6 PM secpe $75 842-6509 SKIS, Head competition, G.S. 541-9591. Capi1trano and jigs fixtures assembly pro-rom am to pm. es. -~ . . . Men's 215 CM $30. Women's I ..:"-'::;::_,~=----I Hous1cl1anlha' 6735 " Capistrano Beach. cedlttts Ma~Gregor Yacht & Wed ., Dec. 22, 23, Bel Sewing Machines ll2o SURFBOARD -Gordie 9'6". 185 CM .. en. B42-3T12. • POCKETSIZE pups·. Contact Mt. Seay at Corp J63J Placentia Costa Congo Motel, 2665 Harbor, Perfect cond. $55. 673--0168. _, Poodles, Mal te 1e or; HOUSE OF CLEAN "AILY PILO. T Me~. ' Costa ltfesa. Phone for appl SACRIFICE CHRISTMAS Gift _ skis, BLUE Ctiip Books Yorkiea. 2 .lb. Stud serv. lead.Ing Complete House Cleaninr ~n Clemente office 545-9428. 1970 Singer autc zig.zag auto cue, Nord!ca boots i i. 9'4. 8 for $2.25 cS<.:;0.:,,2100"='-----~-I 642-6824 305 N. El Camino Real Loan Processor TEMPORARY GAL buttonholes, blind hem~. ov. Marker-Rotomate bindings, 646-5819 * GET your grooming done Meas Cleaning Service 492-4420 Salary Open. Female. exper. ercut, zig.zap, etc, w/out polei. Used once $140. TALKING Parrot for Christ· before Chrlstmaa. $1 ctt Carpets, windows, floors etc. =~~-~,-""~-,.,.·I FHA/VA. Spot, single fam. Good telephone vcice. Busy attachment!. W/walnut con. 6«-'f708. mas! "Easy to Tfach . Fun with thi! ad. Pupple1 1or Marketplace Res & Commc'l. .5484111 CHILD· Care, Ea s.t bluff ' lly reside-nee (1-4 wiltJ). desk for peraonneJ place. tole. $42.22 fu)I price, or POOL Tables, Brunswick to Own!" $70 or ·r. 548-9477 sale SS & up, 642-4818 AttEtr school..2 • 5, mom p k Lo ly riient service. Irvine lndWI· ~--•1 pa~·•ntJ. 545"38, $269.95 & up, Chuck's Bcwl-Zl" Color TV, AIREDALE ~-pp'·s·. ·~" P . • 7 :30·-8:3r7" Own car. ac age on tracts. ve trie.1 Complex. .,..,..., .1-u· _., 2750uK-bor ita·nd , T\l ""' An<.. a1nt1ng, &14--0665: new \'lfc of est.ab firm. American Girl 10-T dally. Ing & Bl 1a1-us, mu UHFNHF, good working, Born 9/U/TO. $125 ea. ftg . ·: i ~ ,f ' • i I • Paperhanging 6850 On Monday 12/28 2172 Dupoot Dr, NB SPECIAL Blvd., C.M. 540-7304. $2l5. 646-!525 Jitter/champ ped Irr••. OIRJSTIAN Houseboy with Call Between 9 AM & U AM POOL bl sI $395 & 536-6220 00 It yourself. You do trim. car. part time, C d M. Mr SI.lite 12 Repair any make, any model ~ es, ate, up. Misc, Wanted 1610 ~~-~---~-• Avg. 3 Br. house. Exter 835-o Newport 1 ---===~==~I in your own heme. Qean, 10% discount en all acce1. 2 Male poodle puppie11 sliver stucco $150. Incl mat'l & Kelly-673-l260 or nt. Personnel Agency * ~ TRU~ ?~IVER. oil & adjust c n I y ~.95. sorie'.1 til Dec, 31st, Be!lch PLEASE HELP! miniature, 8 wks old, Used labor. Ail work guar. COASTAL AGENCY &l3 Dover Dr., N.8 . Ex~1d· en diesel 40 semi 545-8238 ' Billiard, 547·0933. 2 Youn ~-. J'ust ....... 1 .... to children, no papen, $40 •-f tra.i er. Must be able to -~1 g 5'"'"'" s ........ '6 ocA.: A.,.,.0 •·t 4 '" 547-1441. A mem....,r o 642-3870 ICC physical &: driving t;t. -M -. I Ml1cell1-•1 •'-"" cut, moving Into untumlsh-ea . ....,..,......, I.II: ore :,,.,, No Wasting Snelling & Snelling Inc. I~~~~~~~""!!~~ I Cla&1 1 license req'd NO· UI ca ,,._ .._ ed apt. Need free furniture, 2 DARLING bll< puppies, * WALLPAPER * The .. World's Largest MACHINE OPERS. Single others need aPply, · <n4> Instruments 1125 CROSSMAN "lSll"' .2'l 002 in gOOd cond. Please call: Cock·a·poo CI at her k When you call "Mac" Professional needle for sport swear. 546-n72 CONN CORONET .,....., rd. rUle SlO. German ,177 646.6972 er after 6 pm: poodle) 1 male, 1 fml., T "'S.l"' ""llli Employment S1rvic1 Exp'd cnly. Gd. pay, , .... .1 on .... A..., wo-l••t•r wks. 644.7708 ~ ~ -* &12-3472 * * TYPISTS * coM. Apprat..ci-$15. Bit ok Pellgt1n $17.50 Flint ta,...t --· ouu · 1--------·I I'APERH~GING-Free 27~:::o~i~'. ~iIA:ss I ,,=-=-=--,=~ I takes 64~2475. ripe about .41 cal $95 Single WANTED Uud Jac uzzi, *POODLES AKC REG* est., sstlstactlon guaran· MAN with Citizen Band Regtster for 1bot .22 rifie SU.SO Old goodworklngccnditlo n. Small, miniatures. Puppy teed, Dan Schwattz, Counter girl for dry cleaning technical knowledge & de· a temporary· job Fender Ball GuJt1r· petcUl!lon pistol, 15'' 548--4l05 clipped. 962-2195 S4T·S846. agency, exp pret 496·1705 aign for manufacturing, Call today NEW. * 646-3738 ban'el, French ;95. 2 full _:_ ______ SMALL miniature Poodle, 1-lN~T/"OE"x:..t•-r-pa~l"~'-'"-g.'"°"Fru=·I atter6PM M1·.Sacks894·7555. Inttrvwe:.9-U *FENDER MUSTANG 1izemen'1blcycle1,each$8 FREE TO YOU ARC. g mcnths, trained. est Local ref's Lic'd & ins. ''D~ENT=-A~L~R~ECE=~Pr~l~O~N~Isr~. • MAID • KITCHEN Western Girl Inc. irultar w/reverb amp. Like 4 wheels and tires, ball Shots. 644-0910. Frtt window \~ashing in & Desk only. Exp'd. Proficient HELPER. Days, fl time. 4661 Mac.Arthur Blvd. new. $285. 64S-3214 bearing type SlS. Small trail PLEASE Will aomeone give SILVER Female Pcod le out. Call Chuck, 645-0809. with insurance. Afternoon to ~;'nnel Dept, Hoag Hosp, Ne~~ *ROTH Coronet $75, Noblet ~~te!.~;:;,. ~:,:~; ~ri.l~;ne 1'~ lo~e, :~ puppy, $25pure531-4b5n!d,75 no !NT/Exler Painting. ,Ff:ee i!ve hrs. (1-8 or 9 pm), 110me """=--.----.-,,,--=,I -====""==,,,..-I Clarinet $120, Artley Flute VW •· 1 -·-rt 5 papers, , . f l d Se . Sa t's. c .. 1.-. open, fringe NEED a sharp gal with own Wanted: TV technician $12.5. 545-1841. 1 w0~0 e '· ~·w-"' d.,., •s"P·M kitten, 3',S mos. blk &: gray AKC "'-· .._ t-t-. _, _ _,ft. est. Re ·s. mme . rv1ce. ..--..;, hoe $1 Tuea. e • ., tabby, Free to qua!. home ~u;, oi: .... .., n.un • ......-646--0210, G4W014. benefits. Ph: anytime (H.3. transp to deliver silt Salary 9.J>en, Exp only "Leli Paul" Standard 54>3169' 540_5487 aft l pm· -P!lPS $40. Alao breedfn& 1..::::...:=,,.,:::...::;.:::....~-~ I area) 8 am-9 ,pm. 846-3540. --certificates to new home l--•-'C"-eil-'-548-.;..;34.;93.;...*_~1 Guitar · itock special nJe 84&-5748. FlRST Class Painting & \'lwners & make appoint. e ~5630 e GRANDMA Knitted by hand please! 12/24 · Paper·hangini. Free Est. DISTRIBUTORS wanted in ments for s 0 ft water I S~c:!hoo~:!!l'"~ln:!1~tru~ct:!!!lon:!.,~7600~!===:::=:::====:::=::1 4 new, never worn, extra KI'M'ENS pretty, playful, IRISH Setter .A.KC 1 yr. old. Call 54· 3459 beach area' for nationally I 175 'l·""''="'r,.:.;_"=' .....,..,..=-·I . rod y senrice co. NO SELLING. D' 0 N Pianos a o-ant 1130 warm woo coat 1wea1era healthy 8 mo. girls. Gray ~ .... ~-~ L·fon!' -· 11 PAINTING . Ext-Int. 18 .-. kriown P uct. our cwn Gd. pay to right gal. Ph: ftpWlr • reilt IW '• $15 each. Ideal for ak er striped king hair, oranre -.,.-:~o'-'-'C'-~c,,;;_;,_.c...;"7"..,...1 J ·~ busineas Contact P.O. Box CarHr With TM Cord conll ltl 6 J ~ exper. Ins. Lie. Free est. 1563 La· Be h 64!">-1188 N.B., ask for Mr, NO\\. IN ONE U)CATION snow. or ess and black spec ed short Pupp es (part I"-"""'"). ~ccousl Ceil.lngs. •9126 • guna ac · Brown. AIRLINES Conn * Yamaha man's best Remingto n hair hsbrk. 126 Magnolia 1969 Pomona, CM, 54Mi991, DRAPERY-·Work nn, *Thom•• Orgons Lektronlc shaver, u aed CM.'548-6365 lit come; $5. eaCb. , PAINTING: Hones.I, guaran. 1 1 1 K... ...... .. I J tu teed work. Lic'd. Local ref's. ema e, _exper en1.'l'\l powf'r OVERSEAS Also comple~ telection cnce, _.t • P ece an n SILKY Terrier mix pups, 2 PUPPIES: Beagle purebred, ) Call 675-5740 aft s. machine operators. Beach A natur.il for )'OUng people of f)lanos " orpna ~:. ~~i2 ~!·1.$5, Size females. T wkl old. Will reasonable price. · l Drapery 900 W. lTth, C.i\f. who want exdten1ent plus! Open Dally 10 tit 9 ...,... make Dari i ng pets. 53frU93 J PJ1sterln9, Patch, ,Ri polr 6llO * PATCH PI.AS'I'EruNG All types. Free estimates Call~ EXPERIENCED Dent a I • Ticket Agent? Air Freight? Sat 10-6 * Sun 12-5 SILVER Tea server, ~pc Sub-miniature. 1408 9th St., ** LOVE {OR SALE. AKC , cha.itside assistant. South • WORK • Station are n t? Reserva. COAST MUSIC sc!t appraised S700, must S.A. 541-5570 12/25 fawn. Great Danes, T wb, .Laguna Office. Mon-Fri. x. . tlonl!' Ramp or travel . NEWPORT le HARBOR aeu $500 or best ofr. Aho LOVABLE friendly gray 9M-SM8;- ra,ys. Send resume to ~l agent'!' We'll train yoo for Costa Mesa * 642-2851 antique glauwa.te, Inquire tigt.r striped female kitten -"'""'""-------!:, -Coast H...,., So. Laguna. theM and more day or flite. 900 Sea Ln, No. 33, CdM shod toft fur 4 mo. needs Horses aa 1 ECRET All skills ~ profeuiob.as • WE Have 13 used Pianos It anytime lo·'•• ho .,. ~is ft 1 =,;,;,;;;;... ___ ---""-"'~ EA'P'D S ARY highly We Include placement a. 10 uaed or demo Organs · vu15 me..~ a · FOR SALE! 1970 Sq J"iUY.· skilled typing It shorthand. $125 alstance. be Ing 0 tte red at BICYCLES: 10 1p. SchwiM P.M U/24 Thret Bars and Clabber II i;P:..l:::u:;:m:;:b:;l:•··~9----'"'°""-o 1 Soulh Coast Ccmmunity TOTAL FEE unbelievably' kl pr 1ce 1 1 Vanity $60; S Sp. 24" LOVABLE dJc •pr. min. 8 edin 1970 Ba Filly PLUMBING REPAIR Hospital, So. Laguna, Per-CAU.. Eat. 21 Yt'I, Approved tor WARD'S BALDWIN Stingray $38. Mlni·Blke 4 malf'l cock-a-pco l yr old MictdergMustc, JaieyReed ri l No job too small sonnel Dept. 499-13U. 714/956-22 J Veteran1. EHg'lb\e inatitartkm STUDIO l8UI Newport. C.M. HP. All :_iclnt condition. hsbrk likes chlld.A!n needs and Buzzie Bell H btt:edlne. • S42-Jl28 e Exp. 11--oman, small aJtera· ' ' 5 under the federally insured 642-8484 0 th e r mlac. bicycles. new home by Christmas 7l.Cl'l37.s649/N ll·=========l 1io115. zlppen, cuff1 ect. student loan program, I MZ-1.272. • 8J8..0045; 1 AM on U/24 ~ <n"CO. Roofing &950 Con1act ha.Iii. 496-1705 alter I-:---:--.,.-..-.,---Special Hollday Sae FREEZER chest u cu ft, FRISKY furry cuddly TRANSPORTATION 6 P..M. Packa9lftt De1i9ner Airlln1 Schools Pacific · FREE Glf'"l'S xlnt running oond, $50. 4-puppies: amall 'breed. Will Boah & Yachtt fOOD j BEFORE You buy, ctll T. h F• paid by Co. LoCal Re· 610 E. 17th, Santi Ana Wmt PURCHASE man rubber raft $25. 60mm deliver. T wla o Id . I Guy Roofins: Co. Reaiver ~.:Xtlr 1 ipper Ir receiver. wmes held i n confidence U 54U596 JtAMMOND telescope Equatorial mount 546·5659 12124 UNIQUE 10• outboud le ~~~~ l ia t. , 6 4 &-1180, -=--m_;~· &t;o:.2-,;2006:::,_•~--1 =2T1~~~=-iff 'i:'~!.,~:j LEARN photographic dark In ~~A~l~AR !!LJ~ 1allon crock $5. FREE Tc good home-Lrg trailer. ~ co nd I ttotr.. i 110=="'7"-:--.,,.-,,.--,,.,-E Med. IR roomtechnlque1.Sesslonsby285'!E CoAatHwy 673-8930 German Shepllerd A Must.aee. 7 HP Clryaler WENEDA Roofing Co. xper ice ecept Atency, 2043 ·Weatclltf Dr., ap.:.t., "''ell equip. dark:zm, . • MUST Sell, Ne~ box sprtnp •mall Ccck..A·Poo, both gd motor optional. Call I ~ • Repairs, Recover or New ~ ~ay O.P.'1 office, ~ 1 =N~.B=·='~'~''°=-'-""j'-o-"'"I" • ....,· ~ Jab' material furn. SlS, per GU L B RANS EN Orran, a mattreu $3$, 2'-dr retria w/chlldren. 548-0168 12125 ~-""'=-';.""..;;.~-----! ~ ~ Rooh. 1700 SuPt>rior Ave,· <YP11t, 616-3903 PASTE-UP A . P:roduction, 3 hr e:ession 493-1977 model E, Ilk• new. 25 note $L50, Cash A 0 e1rry. PLAYFULChrl tm 6 S'allboats tell R .. d Ctautficatlons CM. &45-1691 24 llRS. ttFRY COOK part time, lot 6.C. Adv. · pedal&, porcuaal on a '1141536-6ID.. 1 u pups, "-"""-"--'-----'-"~I' Fo Expm MUST BE EXPERlENCED Age. Call 8.13-1670 betw'n LEAR.NP!anoatbome ftom chimes 2 manual Alto wks Chrl1tma1 dq, CHnlSTMAsSABOTI ..... ~'stance Sewing 6960 AND OVER 21. 8:15--10:15 AM only. f:!':,k>~,:_prl1er, $10 =! ~USta-~~aker. ~.L~ 'set ~nuDalua:I =~~. Lab-Terr ~,r;.c Finest Quality A Real.iltlc IUatl 9~umaking • .Alteratlona Apply in ptt11on only * PHARMACY CLERK * t'\.....L. • • euttom antlq desl,tn. $425 or LOsr 11 p . n" Prices. MJS.1567. ' 6500.6900 Dl'slgned to suit )IOU. Surt& Sirloin, 5930 W. Coul Ph&tmActutlcal Exp. *POP~LAR PIANvw CHRISl'M.AS Suggt1tlons -ofr. 673--8004. cat,• ~,o:r k~~ian ~ul RED Schock ~wblrd, 11• fn the Call Jo + 646-6446 Hwy., NC""Pt Bch. Office procedurt1, some Leuons tn home. U5 mo. Hammond, Steinway , 9~ }IP-6'vinnide: t'Mn s,i cu C hrtatmali preie"n t . fiberglass tnc. trlr, dotty, DAILY PILOT Altafl•tion•-'42.,JMS 'c"'•:;R°'DE"N"'e"'R,....,TRA="1N"'E°'E"'.-.. -1 typing & bkkp(. r u 11 • S4S.2?S9 • Yamaha.. New. ~ planot fn ACUba,. tanks 18' Hotpoltll 54~58 12/24 cover 2 u.Ua $300. &46-4310 Neat, accurate, 20yeiLncxp. exper, ~. Xlnt oppty, Ph: ~~~fty ~~lt~.0 ':0'. ·~:~·~·tr::!~~ ~.~~1~!~&::~~t~al~ rtlrig. 6~. . FR.EE GtrmaJI Shepherd-toy ~s·""°"sa1"'1:,.'boa:...;;ts= • ..:~;:;;cc:.;:,..,,.,..;:.;.J li'ot an ad to Rl1 a.round betwn 8-10 ~ fnly• Tl4: Ltgun11 , Pertonnel OUi turn Into ct.th thni • Otilt, Co., 1907 N. Mall\ Santa e UNCUT GEODES e Coll ie, 6 mo'a. femalt, blk.a lna:.r $225 com,lete. • U.... clocltt' di.al 642-5678. 1_49'-54 __ 21_;. ______ 1 .,:""1m:;::::;::'--~==~H°~-OU&Ulfld Id. 6fl..S678 Ana.. 1 * 549-16811 * white. 531...fi&J.2. JJtl _195_._m-_5_775 _____ • l I • ' ' . I I I -~--· -.. -~ OAJLY Pn.OT t flAN5"0RTATION S.llbooi1 9010 RENEGADE of NEWPORT PamoQI 2$' Topg'I cutter, cftetd. A..P., 1 hap of salls. f!W!t1 poalble equipment to &O ~bele i'1 the Y.'Orld. AaJdrC $9500, 646-191' Eve. ENGLISH Shark Catamaran, 10' x 31' \'ery complete. tra.Uer, trapeze, mo tor board. Seagull, lipinnaker, etc. "$2150, Small SB~h~h type, needs work ~. Tues.- Wed. only ~9P?o.t 545--3169 fLI PPE R , Co nip le I e , perfect, blue. New sail, mast. & boom. $350 or best Wtdnfsd..,-, Dteembfr 23, 1'170 TRANSPORTATION TllANSPORTATIOH ~ TRANSPORTATION ~ TRANSPORTATION • Moblle Home• t200 Mobile H0met t200 Tfucko 9500Trvcb ffOO jl!:t?ln!:lf!l•l•!IJl#I Mo~·~ ~~iv Southern &alifonia's w~,.~ ..:.~·· FINEST ADULT PARK SURROUNDED BY ORANGE GROVES AND AGRICULlURE $300,00) RECREATION CENTER CUSTOM UX53 CRUSADER (#,S.2051) Dl1hWUbei, Com- bo washer&: deyer, Awnlnp, Skirts, Porcb & • 3 delux_ •lell9. Land.leaped. $12,995 Term• For appointment ClU '* 714/SJ0.2930 * Motor Homn '215 BRAND NEW - G. M. C. TRUCK CENTER, CALL S46-67SO 24 hr. Phone SAL ES e SERVICE UNIVERSITY PLDSMOBILE 2850 Harbor Blvd., Cott• Meu TRANSPORTATION -TRANSPORTATION -• TRANSPORTATION rRANSPORTATION .;_;,;;,.c:=..:;.;;.;..:.:.;..:.;:.;..:~1 .;..;.:;,;;.;.,;.;_.;,. __ -:::::1 C•mpor Rent1lo 9522 Imported C1n -Imported .Autos 9600 lm,eorted Autos ff0!1 ' WINTER RATES DATSUN MG 'TOYOTA 26' HORIZON . 1------------1------MOTOR HOME DOT DATSUN MG JUST ARRIVED! Fully seU cont&infJd with OPE~AIL Y ~:;1~11~~~ ALL AS ; generatorwai.-rondlooo-All Mocl•t. 1971 TOYOT i ing, &lffps 6, c..J.1 for spec-SUNDAYS Corollas -Coron•• ..I · •-t 18835 Beach Blvd. winu:r ra es llJ\d reser-Huntinp:m Beacll M•rk 11 -Pickups vadons. Aak ror Ron Kranz 842-Tm or 5'!0-0M2 Land Crul1er1 CONNllL . '68 DATSUN PICKUP Rudy For Delivery CHEVROLET "' ••• L•..:· Rad' .. _, cilr "' __, -3100 W, c.oaat Hwy., N.B. tun U.UIO )(I, ..... !T, •• ,, ~ 60-sai M0-1164 1WPP 762J Will take car in JM PORTS 2828 Harbor Blvd. trade or financ& private par. ~ ~ ~ Costa MeSa 546-1200 t;v. 546-8736 or 49'-Qll, ...----.----,._ 1966 Jlarbor, c .r.1. 646-9303 HORIZON Trucko 9500 ==.;;..;;.;;---1 Dune Bu119ie1 952.5 '67 DATSUN WAGON Dues $l.OO/f.1o. Per Coup]e 1,•::";:-~&l6-31~::;°':::·:,-,,-;;=;:-;;;;-INO D.'TREE FEE-PET 0.K. BANK Clearance, Balbo3 20, $3200. THE BOAT SI'ORE. Zl.3/498-1535. • BANSHEE. Used once. mus! 5!11. comp! w/trlJ', $399 or otter. Zl.3/498-153.5. Sl.!t'~!~~.1~:1!.. '66 Ford %-Ton P.O. Metal Flake Bodies Automatic, dlr. Radio, hea:. er, special wheeb. {VO& 951) Will trade ()J' finance private party. Full price $1099. . • °!!'t!.IN6~' '49 TOYOTA Coroll• St•tion Wagon Whitt! w/black inlerior. Like new. Lie. XWZ928 rt.IPPER·Perfect Chrislmas Gift. 114 )TS old. Xlnt Cnnd. $300_ .,,....,. , Power Cruisers 9020 14 MODELS ON DISPLAY ~·ANT TO ?.10VE IN NOWT Double Wid•s Set Up Compl~t• With Awnings, Skirting, T•x & lie. with bath, 1rove & oven, n-VB, 3 speed, radio, heater, trigel'8tOI', """"' & .,..... <u;y-lilt '5'"1 '3'9"9-C<&908C). * $125 * etc., etc. Was $12,950. CLOSE.OUT PRICE BARWICK :M4 Anaholm Blvd . $8950 lMPORTS INC. Anaheim 639-1151 DATSUN *BODIES $75 * Aak for Ron Kranz 998 s. Cst. Hwy, LB 49.f..9m aJ84 So. Anaheim mvd. ''FRIEDLANDER'? s1m 1a• 11•c• '"WY-•• T CHICK IYERSON 893..7$6 • 537-6824 • vw ===::.... "'~""1 ""'-" o• 6'I I ....._...._.... 1970 HARBOR BLVD. ' COST A ?o.tE.SA BARWICK If.IPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. C.t. Hwy, l.B 494-9771 MGB TRIUMPH CONNllL '"' Chevy E, Camloo. Good ~';1~';' FERRARI cond. New 348 eng, trans & ==~="°, '-=---1 .62 26. Chris • must sell by CHEVROLET starter, tires & ehrm rims. MYERS TO\V 0 . Extras. Alli----------'65 \VHF ITE ~Gcli ; Or1,·g own. TR l •;;g. Vecy good con· Steve, 675-5934. o~ part. FERRARI l"J', anta.1t1c ond! anlCIJI· dition. Hardtop & con- Jan. l . Equ1Pd for· fishing-. --~~-----$1500 * 642.{1190 Newport lmporU Ltd. 0r.,"'"='=G=;'="=616=-"='"=='="='=· = ·.:\!r!ible. $575 or best offer. F.om $9999 <S•'· 7169) FINANCING AVAILABLE DLR. TR 193 IWbo. "'-Shp ;no. Pa;d 14851 JEFFREY RD ""Rubor Blvd. '64 El cam;,,._ 327_ •-548--<654 $4Dl la" Y"'-"'"' oil" , • 4 'P'•d. 4 An<en Mog•. I _, C -ango County' a only auth<rr-~~-· ---~~1 over $2950. 4~.6059 Costa Mesa 546-1200 X.LNT COND. 673·6986 mport,_ •rs ized dealer. MORRIS ·~ Triumph Spitfire MK·3. '~======== j 5 Ml SOUTI{ OF TUSTIN, SALES-SERVICE-PARTS \Vire wheels. $1300, Real 1~ '62 Ford Econoline P.U. Marin.i Equip. 9035 ,~ ?-.JI. sot.rm OF Blcycln 9225 YA.i\tAHA 1968 305 Big Bear. Xln't Condition. ?-.lust sell. AUSTIN AMERICA 3100 w. Coast Hwy, '60 ?o.tORRIS MINOR Sharp! Call 646-8749 SANTAANAFRWY. -~..;_.;_------Now •·p•nd.'-ks&run• Call64<~•-Newport Beach '6'En · . * 1967 TR I U MPH I · SCHWINN w -~ '---------l&1"9405 gine, new tires, int. TROUJNG, sailing eecmc 11% Ml. NO. OF BOY'S good. Best ()tfer over S275.l ---------1• • 50-1764 * S48-729'1 * SPITFIRE. Xlnt c ond. motor, equivalen.t to 3HP. S,\N DIEGO F\VY.); APPLE CRATE Call days 494-7744, after 6, AUSTIN AMERICA l~A~u~thori~-,..~~F~•.....,~rl;_;D<~al~";:ll ===='='=='==== StlXIO. Pvt pty. 61U281. 2'JJ Victoria. CM. 642-5800 XLNT CONDmON' 673-S238 ~. CamF"r• 9520 Sale•, Serv1ee, Parts FIAT OPEL '68 TR 250 r r i ump h, 9035 (714) ~32-tSSS ~ ... -H~o--nd"",-350~--c~e.~2.~soo~m-i.I FALL CAMPER .Immediate Ddlvny ov•nl•;v•. Mu" ,.u_ T.O.P. 1,M-'o'-r--'lno __ E_,q __ u~ip_. ___ --""'c"H"'"A'°'P""MA~°'N"'S.---:.M_ln_l_B_l_k_H ____ n_7_S 1 Real clean. ssso. Call Gene _All_Modeb: 548-5358 aft 3 pm. 'HP SEAGULL outboanl. YEAR ENO SPECIALS BONANZA,!% HP, Iron! & at642-TI81!rom8 to 4; all CLEARANCE nou 19680PELR•Uy,22.tX>l>fil" DRAFTED s.cr;ore, "" .,.,~t sha"". $15. 0•1'g"onals & Sharp I b k -•-k iroi:: <I, 548-5060. g ~ l02 H.P. engine, power as· Triumph Spillitt, x In ' t 1U1• .,.. .,,, .,,00 ac .,""' 1• _... ...__ do b d •;.-!61-sisted Disc Brakes, 4 spd/ nd $l~ '"° ·~• 6.r..... e FLAJ.1INGO 24X60 * 675-8343 * YAMAHA lOOcc Trail Master uvu a ze,n ran new 8 co . .>;>.>, ~· -f t trans. Radio w/2 rear speak. ===========I ---Boat Slip Mooring 9036 15'-30' slips avail tfor power boalll. Bayside Village, 300 E. Coast Hwy,.N.B. Boat Charter 9039 r - fS0613J ············•· Sll.700 e MINI BIKE e .....,.,,., ml'•, like new + mas. t. to 11 L campers now fh ' ers. Posi·Tractkln' wide rear e FLA?>iINGO 24X60 $225. 5'6-4737. slashed to LIKE NE\'/ * 5'U338 I ==-~=~~--I e ' tires. Dual pipes. New ra. fSO&.i2) , ............. Sli,700 HONDA 90, 1969, 200 miles. $49 OYll 3100 W. Coast Hwy., NA 7/ · dial 1pare + 2 other spares. e F1.AMINGO 20X57 ---------1 practlca1ly new! Sa.ttific-e ACTUAL &12.sa 5f0.17&4 ,( $1475. Pvt Pty 642..fi64.1 CM --------·I (S007·ll ................ $9995 Moto ___ rcy-'-c_le_• ___ 9300_ ~$26.1'-~· Call=~-,--'-c,-'2233~---1 fACToar .., vw LEASING • STAR 24X43 1961 Honda lG(lcc. . -INYOICI CORTINA NOW ON DISPLAY PORSCHE •Tax & Lk _ Down (S6967l ...............• $8495 ~ S27S or Beat Offer Positively no added dea1er -----e $50.87 per mon th G UNIVERSAL 24X63 545-0906 evening• charges! Every unit ready auto snnrt, Ud 1---------• 36 month open end leue VOLKSWAGEN Ch.l CU629 I $13 300 THINI for immediate installation on '67 F()rd Cortina. Good cond. r-~.s~~ Chrr!er • .............. ' FOR SALE AS IS, tru k 1911 30,000 orir mL Auto w/air, Authorized '66 PORSCHE 1971 vw :~g avaU. ** StS-2434 (:P~S~~~~~~~~ = HONDA '66 ~~ 220* $75. your T~EO'oORe ! ~~S9;.res. $500. Steve, SAt.Es • SERVICE CouPe 9U. 5 speed, brown I=='='====== I 531-8105 * '13/8'0-5210 • ROBINS FORD •PARTS with black ;nie,;o._ B"nd CHICK IYERSON Moblle Homes 9200 1206 No. Harbor, S.A. lt'fRlad , ... ~ • Honda 50, 1968 • ......,,. liAFRBOR BLVD. 9625 Garden Grove Blvd. new Perrelli tiJ'es. XYJ474 VW or 530.2930 UPLAnlf'Ul · Xlnt cond * Lo mi's -DATSUN 537-rm Call Collect _ $3299 1970 HARBOR BLVD. T.iplo Wide c .. noll 12531 Boa<h Blvd., G.G. : ..... --: <;;,: $l50 ** TI4/83S-1662 ,,,co=-STo--=A-MES~=-A--64UI0~-10 1 -~-------1 '68 FIAT 850 CHICK IYERSON COSTA MF.sA ~!'::m~ !1'.;';\~~. ~~S'rl"~~i~ NEw-usEo-sERv. ~~·~.:"~.~::as:,~ "l: '&4 Ford Camper Van '68 1600 Roadster sPYDER vw '69 vw BUG Barrington • Broad.moor Local i;paces available now! .. - -.. -::"=2-=35=18====== RDSTR. Red with black ~ 549-303lExt. 66 ;;: 6:' Rad ·-·•·. C.Ontl11ental ., Star • ... - -... I Completely equipped with Excellent condition. l.LJw terior. Like new. YQY834 1970 llARBOR BLVD, io. heater. ITul\.Ul:I) dlr. r---• e Hill.:..,1 If you are i;erlous about buy. '66 y---•· ~ B' n-pop top, Ice box, stove, dlr. ·1 WEZTI .,~ $999 COSTA uroA ?o.fust sac! Will take oldtt ucuo:•.... ...... in~ a mollile home .•. N'ow'1 auuu ... MN II: .co:ar Auto S.rvlc• mi eaa:e. C DJ -..u un. ".lLoV CHAPMAN the time to see Oean, fut, )ow miles $715. & P11rt1 9400 ~~~~~~kel o::rin (~~ der mue Book. CHICK IYERSON '66 PORSCHE 9II-5. Wt-bf-rs, car or finance, 546--8736 or MOBILE HOMES BAY HARBOR 642-1434 aft 6PM. or finance. 54s..s736 or $1395 VW AM/FM. All avail xtras. _<_94-68_l~l~. -~=---t 12331 Bea<h Blvd., G.G. MOBILE HOMES '70 YAMAHA-LO Ml HOLLY 4-barrel '"b '"up 494-68ll BARWICK Pon"t rond. Be.I ofr_ WANTED * 11.,<0029JO • ·-• •=<O l'IOOA • 54" ,,,31 Ext. 66 O)' 67 ~0 1585" . ... .,..,,.. 1425 Baker SL Cat Harbor). -ruu. OJ'tel•:x>O'I for 327 Chevy or 318 T·Bird. ---,,-,--==-~~=~ ~ lo=-c-=o---,,.-----,"°"',.,----fll pay top dolla-tor your Triple Wide Cornell Costa ~lesa ~70 * '68 HONDA 300: Needs* Recently reblt, perf ect New '71 Dahun IMPORTS INC, 1970 HARBOR BLVD. '67 9U, 5. spd, WcbeJ'S. nu VOlJCSWAGEN today. Call Continental e Paramount COSTA MESA Mino 00 ',"', pa16...,rs.;.,~ake c:ond. $25. 549-3883 lS<X;OHC,Pickupwith camp. DATSUN COSTA 1-fESA tires, 48,COO mi's, $3950. and uk for Ron Pinchot &rrlnrton e Universal . ,.........,_ er. Sale prlce $2099 dlr. _998 s. Cst. Hv.-y_ ,_!..B ,94_.j771 - -• - -543-810a do.ys. ask for Greg. ~~~!Ext. 6!1-6'i .. .ffi-OOOO . ..,... __ 1.;.....e General Ql!ua\ !\labile Estate Liv'g . -·-·-~ (# 459454) WW-take car In --· .....__......_ -.JI ~• Star . ~~.;z:~dtp~a.v~;5~~els W~aA~~er~! Traller1;-Util[ty -9450 trade. \Vill finance private '68 1600 ROADSTER ''THINK'' ·:,~~!;t=i~:.>ant '61 YW BUG Hillcrest e Cambrid&c GREENLEAF PARK running 54~1690. 14' Tandem Trailer, all steel, J>Rrty Call 546-8736 ()r . $900. 548-4738 Eves. Xlnt. cond. Good tran!iport.a.. CHAPMAN 1750 \Vhittier Avenue 642-1350 welded construcOon. %" ~'~94-68ll ___ ~--~--Ready to &o! dlr, CWEZ TID) ~am~ II 1966 PoNJche Pertect -cond-tion. \l:A99 MOBILE HOMES Tum those White Elepb&nta Deck pla,tina. 545·4361 ()r IT'S A breeze .. sell )'OuJ' Will take trade or finance ~spd Sl300' . .,.... 1206 N". Harbor, S.A. THE SUN NEVER SETS on into cub thru a Dail¥ Pilot 642-5845. WilJ trade. on PiCk Items v.ith ease, use Daily private party. 54&-8736 or ,,.· 3102-ft 5 CHICK IYERSON * n 41531-8:105 * Pilot Classified Dime-.a-llne ad.JI Up. Pilot Classified. 642-5678 494-6811. NEW 124 CPE. DEMO . a er pm !========"'--'========:....:======== ='=======::.!.====='==="-=========I $2795 . '67 9U, 4·&pd, New clutch. VW ,. 9800New Cars 9800New C1n 9800 New C1r1 ftOO New Cars 980Ci New Cari 9800 s.. Good cond. $3695. 64'·5321, 549-3031 Ext. 66 cir 67 ''fRIEDLAHDER'l >112 Port Brt<lol, N.B. 1910 HARBOR BLVD. A Most Unusual Christmas Gift Suggestion NE W 1971 COUGAR 2 Doo r Ha rdt op. Big 351 VS, powe r steering, power front disc brakes, AM radio, tinted glQss, com ple te, F70x14 white side wall tires, smog control, . etc. # IF91 H527620 +TX & LIC • J'ohnSOD+SOD LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK 111 e ·MERCURY • COUGAR 2626 HARIOl ILVD., COSTA MESA 13750 IUCH ILYD. lfiwy. Jtl 893-7566 • 537-6824 NEW-USED-SERV. ~ * '69 FIAT SPYDER, good cond. $300 & Take over '70 911-T, 1400 mi's, Xlnt =--=~CO~ST~A_M=ESA~~-I cond. As new. Special $6750. ·59 vw Sedan, 15,00J mi's. 54S-.2250. 548-9236. am/Im. Sav. blege. 1 '69 911-T , 17,000 mi 's , owner. t mmac. i 16S O. Extra.s. $5500? 673-4710. -===*='"="'=1"=*=== 1968 VW Bua. Ra~. rear -seat speakers. $1375. pri. pty. 6#4687 ·alter 6 pm, TOYOTA pymnts.·Call 847·1358 --------- 1969 Fiat 850 Sp;d., '71 COROLLA '66 VW Fastback: Gd. mech cond, gd: tires, brake1 A battery. S850. 536-&35 Xlnl Condition • 548--0919 • JAGUAR JAGUAR HEADQUARTERS The only authorized JAGUAR dealer ln the entn Harbor ..... C.Ompletb SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK lN . COSTA MESA 2M E. 11th Street 543-1165 • Radio, heater, disc brakes, factory air, low. low miles! Take older car or small down. Under fact. wa.JT1ll1ty. Call 1'1aury dlr. alt JO am 54(1..3100 ()r 494-7506. 037327. '68 Bug, RIH, Lo 'mi's, Xlnt cond. $1175. a48-2'l50 * 548-9:236 '65 V\V Bug. red, radio '" \\•hitewaUs, runs gd, $750. &16--0692. e '68 VW CONVRT e BIIL MkXEY RIH, REBLT ENG _ $1095. 646-4606 ITIOIVIOITIAI '6.'i V\V CamPl!'r. new engine, Fully <quip. ;nd tone 18811 BEACH BLVD. * "7-9359 * Hunt. Beach 147.a55J '70 V\V, under W&lTaJltY. I ml N. of o..t Hwy. aa Bell Radio, sprint/whls, ndia.l tires. lmmac Cond '69 CORONA ** ,.,__."' **' Hardtop. v'1nyl rool, 4 spee<l, '69 VW F'stbck, good cond. Immaculate, Sky Blue. Sac. l\.1ust seU immed . rifice. \\'ill take trade or ~137 finance pvt. pty_ Call Sid, '61 V\V Sunrool. Runs & dlr. a40·3100 or 494·7506 aft. looks great. New clutch. lD a .m. XTS 343. Must sell, $400. 54~167 '66 TOYOTA Corona, R/H, '68 BUG R'H b k .,,nurae!!, auto trans, good inter. body tires 29,000 mi. Xlnt C'Ond. mech sound, .~ust sell S65D. Sac. 497-1231, 675.7867 642--0558. '6j VW Bug, new eng, &OOd ANY Day ls the BEST day to tires, $850. Xlnt cond. run an ad! D on't * 644-4013 * delay .. call today, 64.2-5678 '6' VW, leaving. $560 or bit items \vllh eruie, use DaUy ofr. Rear ()perMlg windows. Pilot Oassi!ied. 642-5678 Gd cond. 673-3634. . ' • ....... •• , ,, , ; us a •••w •• •• ··~-· ••-•••=,.=-•,.=-••-• '"'"'"' "'""""'"'"'Vl'""'""'"'-'•=••"'•"•--""="'-'""'.,...'"'·""'·"""""'"""'""''" __ ..,..,.,,....,...,....,"'ll.;'ti!ml!l!'ll~l'll'K~lw.""'i'l'l""r'?'..,...,..'l?ill~~;r,~. "'II':, :O:.T.rr:c~ lf,, -· . :.:t~ "• ;-;. .,. -.... Wrdnesday, Ott:embtt 2.3, 1970 DAILY PILOT rRANSPORTATION • TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 'TRANSPORTATION-fNANSPORTATI ON TRANSPORTATINI --Imported Autoe 9600 lmpon.d Autoe ,_ ·Auto LH1lnt 1--..... -'-----'-'-MIO UMd Cora 9900 UMd Cort '900 UMd Cort 9'00 UMd Cora 9'00 UMd Cora -UMd Cort tlOI VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN A LN~~' CADILLAC FIREBIRD LINCOLN • MERCURY OLDSMOBILE .1-;;;;;;;;PO;:;;;NTl;:;;;A;;C:;;;;;i '66 VW '64 V0Ui1wagen, '67 engine. ~PINTO '61 CADILLAC CONV. '69 FIREBIRD: t.~fag:;:w:.:h;:l,·,1 --1-96-9-L~IN_C_O_L_N~-1-,6-l_M_E_R_C_U_R_Y_C_o-lon-y-l '&li OLDS SUPER SPORT !• Green With contrlUlllfti: Inter. New paint, good tires. $50.00 mo. Beautiful canary )'tllOW tin-many xtras. Steal llt $1850! . P •rk 442, pwr 1!eer1n(, air, 1poke ·'70 OTO ior, tunltd exhalilt, ru111 Hke o\lo'~. Call Daya 642-3423, (3G mo.) ish with black leather Inter· Pvt pty: 1/521-7822 Must sell this nii;e Lincoln T.hls beautitul 9 pruisenier wheels. Good ftrea. black I~ ei5 Cl.l. Jn. Ram Air, new, STL.184 eve:. 64S-.fl952. open e'1d ~ & black root Fully equ1p. FORD ~Pe'. Load~ with exn:as, station wagon la perfect for terior with 11'1.)' exterior. doee ratio Wpeed, $999 RENT pe<t ineludlne AM I F,M includmg ltather lnteno~. the srowlng famll)'. Equip. Good condition. lbl. Cl.JI bood tacb, Ride .It ~·1 CHICK IVERSON VOLVO A NEW 1971 ""'° ,.d~. tole tilt w""t.1--------·I Landau roo~ AM/FM, aor .,a with all the IUX"'l' .,._5686 llttr 5 pm or pq, PIS, P/D/B, Radio PINTO Lie. V7.A123. Johnson I Son, TOP DOLLAR =~~~Y~,o= Items. auto. tntn1 .• radio, 1 ""w"k•:;nda;;· =====;: W~be:~. ~ ~~. VW • VOLVO $4 DAY 2626 Harbor, C.M. 540-5630. &:: Son 2626 Hartior CM heater, factory air cond., I'" U'•"'-·o&r or ..... tor 5ri9-3031 Ext 66 or 67 FREE CAR WASHE.S for one ror 1 540-563(, ' ' ' power 1teerlng, power bnk. P-L YMOUTH ;;:' D¥>de1 J'ard tnldc. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. l AU 71 11 An Hwe AND year, with Cad '69 Convert, CLEAN USED CARS · e1, power windows, unbellev-..._ COSTA MESA Savings Up TO 4¢ MILE all black, all xtru & power, See Andy Brnwn 1969 LINCOLN ably priced at $3.400, <YCN-'69 ROADRUNNER · $466 PUT A LITI'LE incl. AWF!o.1 stereo. radials. THEODORE 4 Door Sedan. Luscious like 272 J, JOHNSON & SON, 2626 '66 VW Sunroof KICK llrYOUR Ori(ownor,14875. (YPSIM) ROii-NS FORD oow, 'loall>ec ln1ec1or: till Hacbor, C.M. 541>56!0. 383 VB ~--"-1'62 ~.~.? !.!::"-~ on remaining 70'1 {#8782) . ~·heel, u.~ 801 .... mileg, ''======='== , &U1wnai.n:, po"-er tran1 .. .-...... ·-•-· Immaculale condition. Yellow Ov•c s.., ~1. s....... •LIFE! Newport Centf"r Car Wash, uw .... 1-t · dlr Ex n .~.,.. Call 968--MlS . " ...,.., ..-~ F·-"'--r·-• NB .,AA AA= -~-.... --one O"'ncr, ii you are fl.IS.SY MUSTANG I eenni, . ce ent con-' ,;-::··====·==::;I with pm stripping, new tires THEODORE ..,..,..,., ::M., •• "'"""'"""· _, nacuur Blvd. dl"'on '-.. miles !UED!'') '' ~-.. M see this """"'eous car. YCL. u -•.l.Alw • w & engine guaranlecd for 90 fl""" [nrtt!• ROBINS FORD CAD. '70 Coupe DeVille ...... &«iml esa 848. Jo~~ & Son, 2626 WU1 take cu in trade or days. Llc. YPT005. Wll. UUIO 2000 HARBOR BLVD., 11,000 mi's. Sliver, blk. top 0 Harbor, Costa Mesa, 540-56Xl '69 M'u.stan& Sport Cpe Autu, an.nee private party, FUU RAM'ILER $1099 IMPORTS COSTA MESA & trim."'"""'· '66 COUNTRY SEDAN PIS. PIB. radio, lo ml'o, price $1899. l--------I CHICK IVERSON 642-0010 CAOILI.AC 00,excollentSiation Walo>n. Ru., &<JOd, Clean.RoaaoMble.64>-7899. BARWICK '61 Stn Wi•. Orli oar, YW 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 =========I cond. Radio. Air. $325, TV V8, .automat!C transmission, MERCURY '6.S Mustang convt. Auto., V8. u.,1PORTS INC. Overdrive, new pa Int, --Used C•n 9900 set for $30. 673-0148. radio, heater, po~r steer-Good cond. Movln&'. $700 or DATSUN overa: tlttl $lXI 673-873f 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 ~ ----'------1---------1 Ing, etc. <SAA866) 1875, ---------otter. 642-4993. ' ' 1970 HARBOR BLVD. THINI SP~CIAL CA MARO Johnaon • Son, 2626 Harbor, '67 Mo.cury Monterey I::;~~~~~~;== I ~998~S~. c.t~.~H~wy~·::..· LB~~,,..~!!m~ I '65 RAMBLER 2~ COSTA MESA ~ OLVO' DISCOUNT C.M. 540-5630 4 Dr, H.T. Thi• attracHV< I OLDSMOBILIE '64 Okt. convl. N•w tir•,. BEST OFFER. L S I • 'V · 1970 CAMARO sports mod., 3 '65 CTRY Squire st wen car offers the buyers safety, Good oond. $400. 646-5638 or ar9e e ect1on -S.ALE spd/fir, 6 mo,s old, 8000 mi. R/H P/B PIS 9° pas•' comfort and thousands of1------.,---1673-STI9 aft 6 T llRD Of VW Campers, $3000/beat otter. 64U366 new' trans~ rd iJre1 $825: unused miles, aut~>. trans., '68 Olds Toron•do• :-.,,,62'°"o"LD=s..-.•=ti,---,,,..= I " •'fRJEOLANDER'' 642-3827 radio, heater, power strr., ThevcrypopularGoldBrown '. .,,ta on Wagonl ---------1 Vans, Kombis, MONTH OF DEC. CHEVELLE l;.;;ro;-;"'°==_,,_..,-,= power brka, air 1..'0nd, driven n1etaUic finish with hannon-Gd54n. ~~7 A'1·1 Pvt,,30· Pty, $295. '56 T-BI~, GD COND. 11111 ••AC" onn. •• • (Grandkkls need new lboes) COUNTRY Squire-429. '7"'-.i 11.1 Buses, New & Used m.~ • 537.m4 50 CARS '66 •talibu PS/PB/AC Auto Load~. air, all xtras. $5865 only 38.ooo mi. by one own-!zing Landau roof Ir: Inter-1 "'===o:====== I $1700 or SST OFR. " N w-i4300 N tt. Own today foronJy,S'l215.-kn'. F.qu\pped wUh auto. *call: ~ * Immediate Delivery NEW·USED-SERV. To choose from. No down on trans, R/H. New fu.es &: S:.-1393. ow. 532-2548, rutJN 234). JOHNSON & trans., radio, heater, pwr. PONTIAC 1968 T·BmD FU1l powu, Air CHICK IVERSON ~ approved credit. brakes. $1050. 64:;.-0946 aft 6 l;XLN;;;;;.;TC"2nd;;;;;;-;;:::-=""=-SON, ~ Harbor Blvd., atrg., pwr_ brks., pwr, seats, cond, AM/FM ~~ Lo VW . ' ~ ~ CHEVROLET New .trans~·r;~ :~~ C.M. 540-5630. aircond.Mustseethi£beau-'69 PONTIAC GTO 1:m:="='..,=:=·'":UOO=:.:;'""''.....,.===I 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 Antiques, Cl11s1lc1 9615 2100 Harbor Blvd G45-04S6 air. Only $650. ~&-6306. '69 MONT EGO MX titul car .to appreciate cond. Locks A runs like new. Auto-1 ; · 2 Door Hard Top, Landau &: price $2350. (VTL 9111), malic transmission, radio, VALIANT l970 HARBOR BLVD. CHEV, '70 r.tONTE CARLO 5S Ford Station '\Va~n roof. finish like new, Auto. JOHNSON It SON, 2626 Har-heater, power ateerlng, pow· COSTA f\1F.SA '56 Imperial 4 dr $350. Good BUICK SS 454 Panel. Good condition matic transmission ndlo bor Blvd,, C.M, 540-5630. er brakes, air, this car ia a 1---------1 '68 V\V Combi Camper, tires, new brQ, HEM! ena.1--------.-1-ONLY ll 6oo AllLF.S • S46-5630 • heater, power ste<>ri~, pow: House Hunting? Checlc the front line immacuJate CA!'. '65 Val!ant i door. PepPY 6 Retrig & bed, Cupboard, 1 owner. 491·!li!M. BUICK 1968 RIVI.~ Hydramatic, 'po\\·er steering '57 FORD, good condltlon, I er brakes, (XUf479) $2050. DAILY PILOT Open t~Ollle Priee uncomparable at $2275 economical little car. Good Cunains, $1995. 968-D349. ========;:I Factory a l r condlUon1ng, _ disc brakes _ windows owner car. $135. Johnson &: Son, 2626 Harbor, column in every Friday & CYCU95()l, Johnton a, Son, condition throu1bo1 t · '62 V\V Van, new engil\(', xlnl Autos Yf•nted 9700 vinyl. top. Tilt &: telescopic AM/FM multiplex, sl':'8.t~.1 _,~·:;"'c~al~l:673--'=750=7==:.l_~C;;";;'·,;540~.5630;::;=====;;Sa~llm!~ay~.=====.,.-.='""~;;H;;:ar;;bo;;':,· ;,;C.;;M;;,·;;540-::;;5630:;;;.~=6'1=3..!~lfl3"'.=:===:;;=::'I con<!, rvtust sell! Call 11teer1ng, stereo, fu1J p<l\\'er. bucket sea1s, fuU gauges.1 644-1452 WE PAY TOP (X.01..584). tilt wheel, factory air concJ., • 9900 '65 YW Bug AA-1/FM, 4 speed. (NNK090) F'ull price CASH $2999 - --'Chrome sport wheels, wide • NABERS • track belled tire,, auto load CADh.t.Ac leveler, etc., etc. Bala.nee of tar Uled can A trucks just call Us tot free 'estimate. Fact. Authomcd Cadillac Dlr fa ctory warranty, 1bis Is an 2600 HARBOR BL., absolutely goraeous auIDmo-$799 BARWICK GROTH CHEVROLET COSTA MESA bUe. You'll have to see to 540-9100 Open Sunday appreciate. t~BEMJ $3999 ·:,~~RA, Loaded, X1n1 e NABERS e ll\1PORTS INC. l>ATSON Ask !or Sales Manacer 18211 Beach Blvd. Hun~n Beach *~* CADILLAC 991: S. Cst. Hwy, LB 49"-9771 --Fact. Authorized Cadillac Dir 29XI HARBOR BL., COSTA MESA M.7.f.087 KI 9-3331 1960 VW BUG CADILLAC Red, with mag wheels, wide oval tires, new engine guar. anteed fo .. 90 days. 1FT174 $799 CHICK IVERSON vw WE PAY CASH FOR YOUR CAR CAD, 1965 SEO, DE VILLE 540-9100 Open Sunday Factory a Ir conditioning, '55 OiEV 2 dr H.T. 302 cu in. vinyl toP, full leather inter-350 high prof cam, 5000 mi !or. Every dlx. opHon. CNEX. on eng. New battery, new CONNELL CHEVROLET 053), 3: 57 rear end. Hurst 3 spd. 2 $1799 chrome whls. Cheater 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. e NABERS e slicks. Stuart Warner gauges. Radio, 2 spkn. CADILLAC Body needs lots ot work. Fact. Authorized Cadillac Dlr Muit sell, Moving. Best COST\ ME.SA Coat& Mesa W~l.200 2828 Harbor Blvd. Authorized Olr. WE PAY TOP DOLLAR Sales e Service e Parts FOR TOP USED CARS 2600 HARBOR BL., o!f<'r over $300. See at Greg COSTA MESA Auto Shop, 1525 E. ht St., AU Models 10 Choose From U your .car ls extra clean, ~9100 Open Sunday Santa Ana. 557-4982 before Service l\ionday 'till 7:00 PM see usB~~~R BUICK '69 CAD CPE DE VlU.E lOAM or aft 8; 30 PM Sat 'WI Noon 234 E l 7tb St COAST IMPORTS Co<la Me,.· S.s.7765 XLNT COND, PVT PTY: Looking for • c•r? * * 644-0461 * * EASY Of Orange County Inc. IMPORTS WANTED l'HE "Yellow Paaes" of Call Auto Referral free oI 1200--w:-Paciflc Coast Hwy OraiigP. Counties 642-0406 e 546-4529 TOP S BUYER cl Wed Daily p 11 t chal>ge. We have si llers ass · • · 0 waiting, AU types & prices. Service Directory. Check u Sellen aJW~~me. e 1966 \'W Bug e BU..L MAXEY TOYOTA Ex. condition $850 18881 Beach Blvd. • • 493-4716 • H. Beach. Ph. 847~ for the service you need. Auto Refern.1 Service I================''====--=========-·55 CHEV. Transportation. 9900 $50. Used Cars 9900Used C111r1 9900 Used Cars WE'RE SELLING THESE OUTSTANDING DOMESTIC AUTOMOBILES AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS BETWEEN NOW AND THE FIRST .. -OF THE YEAR. THE CARS LISTED REFLECT O~R MAXI · MUM DISCOUNT AND WE BELIEVE THEY ARE· AMONG THE BEST VALUE·s TO BE FOUND. 1965 CHEVELLE MALIBU 2 Door h1rdtop. Automatic, power 1!11r· ing. !TEY2 !41 $795 1966 CHEVROLET CAPRICE St1tion w1qon. F1clo°;''\I 1ir, pow1r il11r· ing, l17 VS. !llPL4471 $1095 1965 BUICK LE SABRE Cusioft'! 1 Or. H.T. Pow1r 1t11rin9-br1k11· 1111. IR.VllOJI $995 1967 CADILLA.!= S1d1n D1Vill1. Full pow1r. !WTE~5 3l $2495 1968 CAMARO SS396 4 •P••d, cuiloft'! lnl1rior. llWU195) $1595 1969 MALIBU SS396 F1 clory •ir. ~invl top, P.S., P.fl., turbo hydr1ft'!1tlc, 16,000 oriq, mil11. IZICF597l $2895 1967 MUSTANG 2 DR . H.T. VI, P.S., P.8., 1lr •conditioning. (W'WP- 1281 $1195 1969 MARK Ill LINCOLN Full powtr, b11utiful '''' I WXR6741 $5295 1967 OLDS 98 LUXURY SED. $1995 1969 PLYMOUTH GTX V;nyl lop, pow1r t l11dnt & br1k11 , Iulo., 18.000 mil1i. IXVHlltl $2595 1965 TEMPEST CUSTOM Con.,.1rlibl1. Nit• &1r, 1old fll W ll1r1. 19128QEI $895 1966 CATALINA 4 DR. H.T. v•. 1uto111 11i,, P.S .. 40,000 mil11. (407· "' $1095 1967 BONNEVILLE 4 DR. H.T. Vi~yl lop, f1clory 1ir. f 11 236 7) • $1895 1967 BONNEVILLE 4 DR. H.T. Full powar. !TXS94S l $1395 ' 1967 LE MANS 2 DR. H.T. F1ctory eir, Vt, 1vto ., P.S. fVCK 6>121 $1895 1968 FIREBIRD 400 ' 1pe1d, pow1r lf11rinq, .,.:nyl lop. IYQF 12 t I $1895 ROY CARVER ROLLS -ROYCE . 2925 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA i6-.;l.4_i,.._ ____ _ 1 ' Call 548-2938 '64 Chevy Be!Aire 2 dr V-8. Stick. $400 • &16-6728 • '63 Impala Stn Wen. Extra.s, $550. * 968-fi075 * I964 Chevelle Malibu convt. $600 or best ofter. * Call 968-7064 * COMET '65 COMET CALIENTE Convertible. V-e r y _clean, Automalic transmission, ra- dio, heater, power steering, power brakes. (W AB 885) $775. John1on &: Son, 2626 Harbor, C.M. 5'10-5630. CONTINENTAL 1-970 Cl•11ic Mark Ill Prestige car of the era, equip- ped wi!h all the finer luxury features. Like new thru out, chance to own tor low price, Must see to appreciate. {No phone calla pleue). JohJUOn le Son, 2626 Harbor, C.M. CONTINENTAL '69 or '70 Wanted. Have cash &: mint '68 Buick LeSabre. 833-2087 '67. 2 dr Hard Top. All. power, Leather int. Af int cond. 1 owner $1800 cash 833--1348. 1969 2-dr Lincoln Continental. 18.000 p i. Xlht cond. $4300. 64>~. 9 to 5. Fastback • "427", '"9pttd, AM/Fr.1 radio. New pol)r. glas5 tires .• Excellent con- dition Driven easy. . $2850 Ask for Atr. Grannl1 ~6-8640 COUGAR '69 COUGAR Beautiful Arctic white f\ntsb with black landau roof wllh matching interior, automatic trammlu:lon, power steer- ing, alr condillonlng, radiO, heater, completeb' 1etviced le: ~ady for delivery, Bal. ance of warranty available. $2550 Lie. XWS 707 JohnlOn & sOn, 2628 Harbor 'Blvd., C.l\f. 540-5630. '67 COUGAR XR7 Must RI! th~ btautltul car equipped w 11 h automatic transmission, r1dlo It heal. er. po.,.,·@r 11etr!rw, powe!r brake&, factory air, Excel· l~nt condlllon throughout, Priced at only SUIOO tor Quiek.aaJW.YCl.4&!L-10llN.· SON A SON, 2626 Harbor, Costa f\Ie:u., 5f0.6630 . • • • • BE FIRSTt 1969 AND 1970 CHEVY SALE I Once In a lifetime I dead sharp, low-low mll .. , near new rubber, remaining factory warranty up to 50,000 miles. HURRY I I ALL THl$1 CAllS·-PllCID $100 e e OYER OUI AISOLUTI COSTI SALE ENDS POSITIVELY DECEMBER 31, 1970 1970 CAMARO 2·Dr. H.T. Au.to., r•dio, fac:t. air, P.S., gorgeous car. 12,221 miles,--17~9~ BBXl 1969 IMPALA Custom Cpe. It, H .. P.S., JSO Vt , fief. 1ir. -Nothing "''''· IXWE222l . $2619 1969 CAMARO Coupe R .. H .. P.S., 4 1p11d . H1 1 f,,,, w1rr1nty. IYNKIJ9) $2156 1969 MALIBU 1970 IMPALA Custom Cpe. Vinyl roof, P.S., Auto., ti• dlo, f1~t. 11ir. 9,000 111il11. 6tt 11riou1. 171 IAKll $3323 1970 IMPALA Sport Coupe · It, H., 1uto., P.S., f1ct. 1lr, -l ow low 1111111. 1170• ACG ! $3029 1970 IMPALA Sport Coupe R. I H., Viny l roof, f1cl, 1ir, P.S., •uto.,..,.._ Shop thi1 d ud• -I tt!ACOI $30A9 1969 MALIBU 2·Door H1rdtop sport ,,,, R., H, ¥inyl roof -On1 own1r - IYCM066l $2046 1970 MALIBU 1970 MALIBU 4-Dr. Sed1n Vinyl roof, 1ld1 mldg1., r1• dio, tulo .. ,.S .. f1c.t. 1lr. Wll1t 1 buy. !AC6Z61) $2714 1970 IMPALA Sport Coupe Auto., R .. H., P.S., fe,t. elr. Study your (1110111 hor1. 1053ASVI $3037 1969 MALIBU Sport Cpe. R .. H .. P.S., 1uto., fie.I. 1tr, ¥1nyl roef -Nlc.1 1914· AN ll _$_2498 1969 MALIBU Supor Sport 2 dr. H1 rdtop. R., H., P.S., 4·1p11d -OUCHI !ZXHl411 $2119 1970 IMPALA Sport Coupe Side 1t1ldg1., 111to. r1cUe, ,,$., f1c:t. 1ir -Hurry! IOIJ4ASV I .$3041 1970 Klngswood t 11•11. w19on -To P, ef tho Uno. Red io, P.S., euf•., AM/FM 1t1r10, olec. wi .... dow1 -tilt wheel -011c1 in , lif1lift'!1. IZWV261 I $3.504 Custom Cpe. Vl~yl roof, P.S., r1dlo, •u· to., f1ct .1ir, !YYNOSt) $2496 1969 MALIBU 2·Door Herdtop. R .. H .. •r.ito., P.S. ¥1nyl r.iof. Al11olr.it1ly 411111 1h1 rp. IXCMOSS I $2099 1969 MALIBU Super Sport Coupe 4-Dr. Hordlop R1d io 1ulo., P.S .. f,,,, •It, ¥invl roof, 14,200 mil11. IJJ9ASUl 1970 IMPALA Coupe P.S .. fa ct. air, auto., radio, 14,624 miles. 811 first . l34~SSU I Cp1, 21.000 1111111, R .... H .. 1uto .. P.S., f1ct. 1it -SU- P.ER SPORT, IP2265 l $2484 R., H .. 1uto., P.S., f1ct. elr -E•l•rior mldg1. -B11 u· tlful. IAIX0521 !ONLY l l $2837 1969 CAMARO 1969 CAMARO Coupe Stick 1hlft, -.. H .. 19,167 mil11 . -H1v Did -6 cyl. I IJJASPI $1738 Coupe Auto., R., H., l'.S., ,..Jnyl roof, f1,t, 1ir-Gorg1ou1, IZR.W576l $2592 '70 CORONET RT $2808 , 1970 IMPALA Sport Coup, Auh1., t1dJo, l'.S., f1ctory 1ir, My, my. fll9ACll $3002 4-Dr. Hardtop Sup•r Sport, i1uto., P.S., R., H., vinyl roof, fact. air -25,101 mil••· IYCT661 I '70 PLYM. SATELLITE MORE BARGAINS • 2 llr. H.T. 1,000 mil11, ¥inyl roof, 1ulo., P:S., rellio, m19 wh1el1 I .poly gl1t1 GT tir11. 81low wh1I. 8lu1 laok. 122'1'AKT I 9 p111. w19011. P.S. P.I., reclia, 11110., ft1.f. •Ir, 1ow 111il11. 121 IAI $2486 $3199 1965 BELAIR 4 DOOR $899 1968 PONT IAC GTO $1099 R .. H., 1uto., P.S., t lr. LJ,, !NRA207) R., H., 4·1p19'. IWEP507) 1965 IMPALA 2 DOOR $999 H,T. Auto., R., H., P.$. l ie. IP217ll 196& FIREBIRD $1999 R., H., 11110., l'l'r, vlnyl roof. lie. IVYMOJI I 1964 CHEVY II COUPE $499 1968 FIREBIRD $1999 Auto., R1dio, P.S., l ie. !OMRtt 11 2 ci r, H.T. ll., H., P.S .. elr. Ut. IVVMOl I) 1968 MUSTANG $1799 1969 FIREBIRD $2299 Auto., R., H., f1ct. 1ir. U,, IWQK204) ll., H .. ·r.s .. elr, 1t1rof er.it.. Lie. CXVlttll 1968 MUSTANG $1599 1967 OLDS CUTLASS $1499 Avlo., It, H., P.S., ll1d i1I ti111. Ue. 2 ch. H.T, J.., H., euto .. P.I., 1ir. Nie• fXZ2966 1 IT RK4 lJI ' CONNELL CHEVR·OLET 2828 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA 546-1203 • ~ • • t . ' ! I I • ' ! ' 0 • • • ' I -~-----------~-----------------·.--~· -------------- r. I f ,. ' •• ' ' ' ppy 0 • ·YEAR END . ' INVENTORY . REDUCTION! ' BRAND NEW 1971 TRUCKS! We Must Reduce Our Tremen~ous Inventory of New 1971 Trucks ly December 31 ! . - F-100 CUSTOM EVERY NEW ' CLOSlD .CHllSIMAS' DAY_ COMPAU THEM ALL AND YOU'LL WANT . .. ·UNDER YOUR TREE Bullt In America ly Americans For Americans! s2· .5:0 ·TOTAL s63 MONTH · D~N U O·Y ER. I 2 0 PICKUPS, VANS AND MEDIUM DUTYS NOW DISCOUNT· ED TO FLED PRICES FOR QUICK 1970 LEFT IN STOCK NOW SLASHED TO ACTUAL • PAYMINT • MONTHS $250 11 ~· tot1I dow11 p1yt11e11t en4 $61 11 th, tot1! 111ontMy p1'(M9nt l11clMi11t tn, '70 n. c111 .. 111M 111 fi11111c1· cfri1'9" 011 1ppro.-ecil cr.cfit f., 16 111011th.. D1f1""1 ,...,_.,.J pric1 i1 $21511.00 inc1'6dift9 111 f111111c1 ch1rg11, t1111, '70 lic:111M or if you pr1f1r to p.ay c••lt, th• f~ll •••Ii prjq it 011ly $2172.17 i11ehtdi119 t1l•• fll. '70 li c1M•. 6,d,, Yo11r f 1•orito Color Tod1y. ·---. . SALE! c . • e FIRST IN ORANGE COUNTY! FACTORY ·1N.VOICE! ..... ·-· ·-· ·-· READY FOR . IMMEDIATE DELI.VERY SEE THE SWINGING RANCHERO "SPECIAL" TODAY! ....... ..... ,, ..... ·-l"rlllf TrNC ltNrTnM """ ........ , .. , ·- ..... ...... .... .... SS .... .... -..... .... ..... .. ,.. ... .. --- 1,'1.6" 161.4"" .... ,. ..... ..... 11:4"' ff.I" h .r' ..... 11.6" ~ ... ..... JS.I., , ~ ... ...,.. "'' '"' --lt9dmU""9 lttcln:uliltftll ·-'"' .... SHARPEST PENCIL IN THE WEST • • • LET us PROYE IT! ~~~~~~~~~~~ MUSTANG SALE . 20 to choose from. '65 thru '70 models. Coupes, h1rdtopl, ~ vertlble and 2 + 2 F1stHcks. Some with 4 tpMd'a, 1l10 11lr 'con- 1 dltlonlng 1nd 1utom11tlc modelL . EXAMPLE: . 1965 MUSTANG Vi , 4 •p•M tr•11tmla:io•, rodio, h••hor, IIKU94 t ). OUR PRICE $796 MUSTANG HARDTOP VI, 1utom1tic, P.S., r1dio, h••f1r, 9ood mil••· fSAA917J, CONDOR 26' MOTOR HOME Ps~~1" A~· Compl•t•ly 1•lf co11t1i11•d. 1l••P• I, dl11•i1 I pow1r by Offer5 Ford, •vto., P.S., •ir co11d., 1t1r•o 1y1t1m, t•conditio11td Consldtred thru•out. Sold 11•• by ut. llYA25ll. ~ 69 ~~~~ ... ~,, ~r.J.~ Vl,~~f; AM-FM, Air Co11d. tZKA60 1) $2196 . '70 OPEL KADEnE LS $1696 Cpo. '!5. Fully •qu!pptd, ·oppx. J,200 milo1. 190llEPI. '68 GALAXIE 500 $1896 2 dr, H.T,. V-1, 111to., P.S., RIH, Air co11d., •i11yl ro of, IXEU569l . '69 CORTINA GT $1196 4 1pcM, rodio, fl••t•r. Low 111i1,,, .. 1ms111 USED CARS A rdbrfl m·1~nr· · CENTER SEAL ON THE WINDSHIELD! -l TD-Galaxie-Te»rino-Waqon Sale Mony to<'-from. '65 thrv 70 Models. Sport.ruofl, lormal1, 2 door lo 4 door hardtops. Full power, air condltlonlng. War- r1ntln •v1U11ble. · 100% PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS EXAMPLE: 1969 .FORD. LTD 2 DOOR HARDTOP C.... .U -••teal ,_.. JMW91....... • ..._ R--. ... -.rLus....--...._.,._....._.,.....,.......,.__. ................ , ....... A~ ..... ; •• ouR'M;'iJti·· no96'" •XT,,.,, ALL OF.FIRS ·CONSIDERED TRADES ACCEPTED _!A.,!!.~' '69 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS · '66 FORD CUSTOM 500 9b I 66 4 doo•, fully equipped. Radio, ·, beater, (SLU974) ,-6.::_7_C_O_RT-INA_G_T..,.2 ..,.Do""o=.----,s .. 7_....9...,,..6 4 apeed, radio and heater. (TRN287) '65 HONDA MOTORCYCLI 160 cc. Priced to sell. (547273). '67 MERCURY CYCLONI 2 dr. H.T. V8, auto., P.s .. radio, heater. (TXT655) Good bocf1" I: paint. VS. automatic. '55 CHIYIOLn (iood miles.. (JVB136) ' '68 '68 '66 FORD 4 DOOR VI, 111fom 1tic, power 1t11ri119. IJ72J I>. &ood milM, w1rr11ty ••1i11bl .. CADILLAC Full p•••r, f1~tory •ir,. l••d•tl. Good mil•tl IRSK9521 LINC. CONTINENTAL Full pOw1r, f1ctory 1Jr 11onditio11i119. .IWEH24l l CHEV. IMPALA 2 dr. H.T, VI, 1ufo., RlH, pow1r tf11ri119. 6ood mil••· {VHl776) CHEVY MAL-fBU 2' Dr. H.T. VI, 1ufo., 11.S., RIH, • Good mil11. ISUG5<421 '67 TOYOTA 4 DOOi Automatic, radJo, heat.r. Low miles.. <UVS.560} '70 BOAT-MOTOR· TRAILER : · 11• .sn.ttli111. so 11.,.. Mire. v.111011 tr1il1r, t1rp, 1l~c.. 1f1rt. ( GZ~ 1771 2060 Harbor ..... • 7 AM To 9 PM MON 1 A~ To 6 PM TUE·FRI . I 'PARTS DEPT. ONLY I.AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS •