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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-12-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• -•. .,. Teen --. -.~ .. • -• --• • "" ----·-6-trl --. ---. -. . .. ' • -' • -: -. -• Bound~ iti.peJ · -11~ Ct,a8t . -. '· Slaeett .• €•r .' -. • • • • . ' - -~-'.Center Guard • ·Thwarts Holdup Huntington Beach securitY guard Den- nia Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a dep;ar:tmeot store theft by shooting out the rear tire on an escape car filled with four fleeing bandits. Dahlke, regularly empl~yOO as a detec- tive with the Orange Police Department, Is a guard at HuntingtOn Cen~er. He fired five shots at the careenmg car and one bounced off the rear bumper, but another ripped through the left rear tire. The incident began at 7:10 p.m. ~en a J. C. Penney's Company store em~loye saw three men and a woman 1n a leopard skin coat trying ~ steal 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at- tempted to leave the store parking lot bl the escape· car. He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted lo run him down, Dahlke lold police. That's when the shooting 1tarted. Two Hitchhiking Girls Tied Up, Raped on Coast A pair of hitch-hiking teenaged girls told police Tuesday of being plcktd up by a middle aged man In Laguna Beach, bound wilh rope and raped In separate IOI.Ith county locations. Orange County Shenifrs deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the alleged abductions and sexual assaults. One victim ts 18, 'from Costa Mesa and the other ls 15, from Corona ~ Mar. They told police they were picked up about 9 p.m. Monday in the 100 block of North Coast Highway by a man 35 lo 40 years old. Driving north, they claimed he drew a pistol and pulled off In the Cr:ystal Cove area where he tied their hands and threatened tbem again, this time with a knife. lte allegedly forced the younger victim Into the back seat and raped her there, then drove back lo San Juan Capistrano where he ravished the older girl. The pair said they were dropped off at Coast Jllghway and MacArthur Boulevard. Wllere they obtained a detail- ed description of the assailant's car as he drove away. A complete description of the man was 1lao eJven to police. ' ' I Dahlke pumped five ahot.s 1t the car which wu found abandoned one hour later ·with the lhot.out rear Ure. It WU located by Fountain Valley police at the inteneclioD of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue.. All o! the suspecta apparontly escaped on foot but all of the stolen uniforms were recOvered from the auto. Police 1ater indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. pahlke Is a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He ls employed part-tlme as a PeMey's security guard. 747 Wi1ig Flap Hit,s Duplex, No One Injured BELL GARDENS, Calif. (UPI) - A 300-poond -of wing Dap !ell off a ·United Air Lines Boeing 747 on a tralnlng llllht Tu...tay night and plunged through~ rool of ·• duplu. ·'lbere wu no one In the building and no pe:rlODI po the ground were lnjurod. The Jumbo Jet, carrying a crew o! four and a Federal Aviation Admlnistratkm Supervbor, landed aafely at Los Angeles lblernational Airport. The NaUMal Transportation Safety Board and the FAA were Investigating the accident. The metal and fiberglass wing flap sectioR,t six feet by two feet and shaped Uke a . pod, tore a two foot square hole in' the riof of the duplex. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a 10-foot sec- tion of tlte kitchen celUnJ: The tMants, Mr. ind :Mrs. William HardY• ""' oot at home-· Watch Dog May Have Watched Burglary A burglar wbo m,ay have been disarm- ingly frlendly to a guard dog looted a Costa Mesa company of a $500 stereo amplifier outfit, the owner lold police Tuesday. Barry A. Bollman said a window was pried at Fibreglass Specia!Ues, 21M Can- yon Drive, and the unJt unplugged for removal. ' He ·also told Office Phl1 Donohue l11s big dog was roaming the yard at \he lime ind tha\ it Js no11n1Uy unfriendly to strancen. I • - .. . .. Rose• for BUI" -..... Billy Graban( a man :credifed - with preaching the · gosjiel lo more prople than anxone else in history, will lead ui~. 1971 Tournament of Roses Para·ae in Pasaden, as its grand~mar­ shal. He is 1he first clergyman ever to lead· the parad.e. Franco Commutes Death Sentences Of N ati~na&.ts BURGos·. Spain (UPI) Generalissimo Francisco Franco tonight 'commuted lhe death sentences of 11lx Basque nationalists conviot...'<I 'of m\D'der and· banditry, the·Miniltry of. InformaUon announced. The announcement said the sentences had been conuquied lo "the next higbeal !e11lence passed." The next hl&hesl aealence passect. by the But(oa military COW't WU 72 ~1 Franco planned tO explafu h~ action In 1 yearend addres,, to the n1tion tonllbl. He haa· been ~. mourttlJ>g prasure Wm' European governmei\11 ' and the VaUcan lo ccmmute the duth sent.encea ,and faced possible widespread unrest in northern Spain if be did not. There wu immediate reaction from the Vatican which said It heard o! the commutation with "enormoll3 relief." Franco took the action alter a special meeting with bis cabinet and the coundl of the reahn, an advisory group made up of parliament members. The ofticial news agency CJFRA an- nounced the verdict by flashing the Spanish word for pardon "lndultadol. lndulladoa. lndullados.'' '> --" . ' -··---,_ -- • . I ·--·-· -. uim~ggQn -· • . ;-1r ....,._ ~· .,... Banait Gets · $90 in Cash ·' Striking qaln with her trusty frontier- style revotver, the b es p ectacled Barbartlla·in-'black ran• a string of Orqe County holdups towari:I the dozen mark ~y night in Hununiton Beach. I ' . ' 'She ·Dasbod the .. 38 ca!Jher gun at cler:Jc i.am. Raran in Bm.Y Dow's Liquor Store, 19351 Buch Blvd., tucked l90 lnlo her black pune and made a smooth getaway. ·Orange Coast lawmen char&e the lady bandit -often &Wlitclrlng .. Wigs and eyeglass frames -has h\t a number· of liquor stores, markeU and a Costa Mesa drive-in theater since early Decem- ber. · One Job was pulltd during the Christmas holiday weekend. Described as· being in her early 30s, the female bandit robbed the Huntington Beach store about 9:35 p.m. Tuesday. . Her ~Ii shed approach is intended to keep victims calm. "Don't get nervous , all I want Is the money,'~ she said es she scooped up the cash and then ordered Raran to lie behind the counter as she made her gelaway. Although police officers, summoned by a silent alarm, swarmed over the area within minutes after the . holdup, they were. unable to find a trace of her. One of her most lucrative stickups occurred two weeks agO in south Orange County, where she obtained about '500 from a llquir store. Medical Teams Rush to Israel Slide Victims . . . BEERSHEBA,, Israel (UPI) -Medical tep;w were rushed teday to the border villa1e of Neot Haklkar:followlng reports ' a n>c:bllde had buried 40 perions, police sources said.· , First reporb: of . the Incident were •1'elchy, Some •akl t'1e allde buried 40 Israeli soldiers eating in 1· mess ba1l1 · kllllal IDd lllOWUllng many. · ' Other ..,.,-ti aald ·the c!Od lnd'lnjlll>d were clv.illan 11etUen of Neot Hakikar, which Is ·-15 mn.. IOllUt of the Dead Sea and aboct one mUe wea;t of the Jordan ceue-fire line. · Army 90urce.s In Tel Aviv uld they were lnvestlg1tlnt the reports but had no further Information. Neot H1klkar Is a 11ettlement in the desert below the ,.u paM of the' Dead Seaa about 10 .mllet south of the Biblical sin city of Sodom. Unlike aome other frontier setUement In . the Ar.tYI lleaert it ii I civilian 'and not paramllilary nlUemeal . ' . -- - ----• --·--.. • y.rEDNESOAY ~FTERN<'.?_9N. DECEMBER 30, 197.0 . • ,_.•,appf-:~ :Eoup-~-~-__ . .--........ ~' . . ·w,ii!;AIS t II Mldicqat-clad Prlhcess. i\la'rgaret takes her husband, Lord'-~~ •• home from London .c1µ.1c. ,T!ie ~ouple today dropped out of tbe..publlc glare that followed reportB they ~ve agreed to a divorce: S®wdon had been hospital!Zed for l\\!o weeti for minor &uriery. Thi ilaWre of the Surgery wfis rlo't disclosed~ · ' · · ~"'.;. . . ' . ' • , ' Soci~.~ecu;rity Measur.e D~adlocks in Congress ,. . , . ·WA,SHIN'ilTON (UPI) -The Sepa\e gave final ·Con&ressional am>roval today,. to a bill appropriating . $18.9 billion for federal health· and weUare prograll)S, but with only four days remaining before adjournment there WIS still no break in the logjam on other major bills. Transj,ortaUon, foretgn aid · and Social ~lty leglslatlon were the principal measures tied up ln the Congre&1. 'l11e hitch In the Social 8ecurity ln- creasea developed because of differing Senate and House versions. lti!p. Wiibur r1. Mlm (0-Arl'-), the lnfluenllal chain'nan of the House Ways and Means Committee, said it ·was "ut~ terly, humanly impossible" to reach a comproinlse before adjournment because there were' too many differences In the H°'1se and senate bills. Mills promised , however, that the boost In Social Security. would pass by early February ahd wou1d be. r~~active to .. Jan. 1, 1971. · • .., The House passed a 5 ')>efcent benefit Increase, .. the ~i;ia~ 10 ~cent, and while Ute llouae put a 167.20 minlmuln , on monthly payments, the Senite' boosted it to ,s190. It prev,loWJly was '64·. There wft'e .. numeroW:r other \ dirierenceS,' ~ cludfne: lnclullon In !ht senate bill of . ~~for lll<ftaied jlubllc• "'!illance pi ts ... 1 l• • ' .•.• IW'lippropNfldnf'blD,"~ tit:• ' 69-0 roll can 1vote, carries fwxls for lh< Labor Depart~ ·anc1· the Health, . Educallon and Wellare rle_parUnent. It Is '-1210 'mllllon higher' Ulan President NII<>n 10Ught but COflirtlSional leaden prOdk:ted he would ar111 theolll.· ' '!'he action left onI1 two appropriations bills to be acted opon before Ute Ital Qmgres1 goes oUt of buainela ~Rt· noon • Sllnday -'a 12.1' bllllon bill !Di' krilin aid ·and -$2.5 bUll6n1or the lrinspOrtaUbn department. · · ' • ' . ' M ''' / The 1transportall6n m.wun: 'bas ~n blocked by senate oppo!lelils ol ·th<! pio:-• posed Supersonic Transport (SST), which ; . "would -n:celve a $210 mllllon federal sUbsldy. The Foreign Aid a!Jlll'Ol"'lltlon was held up .because of a Houle.senate wrangle over $200 million for credit sales of mllllary equipment 1o-1orelp government,,. .. I The Social Security bill' was 1t a stand?till -~ House rnanaam ~ refusmg to -go to conference wttb th' Seoa~ . lo work out a com~ measure. Evc:n before the o1d Coacrtllt dreW to a close, · ?,...-t Nixon bO(aJi strategy sessions aimed at: promptb!c (See CONGRl!8S, P ... I) Wea~··.' The • morninc fot·"l!'7 ·~ ·~ ail', bUt we ckli•t cart; Ute Ries will clear up 'by noon and the temperature aJont the coast wW be up to 85, wiU.. 1 '12 reading m. land. . , - · JNsmJi TODAY , . I . I : W"'1i1 -Oi'Onfl" C01altJ'' ,l!iod U10 11tptnrilor1 takt O'f/i«; the11 mo11 appoint ttcno m~ btt• to fo'!( c01tntv adllllo'lf commlssion.t. Page !. ...,... • -. • """' n C .. 1""911 1 Mt"* *"" (lf'ttl' ~ fl •.,..., ....... 14 Cllkklllt U~ U • ,...,..... ....... 4" Cl-lflM fl·• Dtwt11 C....W l CMllu • U lrl'f'I• r~ 14 C,...-.il U • ,_,. tt-M OM!fl Mllkft I Dr. 1"'91'1"9111 1& OIWf'QI • • I 'ltMt•MM!ifs 1•1S "141flf'lll, ...... ! • ~ " I',............._, "°" ~ H-m , , ... \ 14-11 • 1WMflllr • 4 H..-.... , \I •: ..._.,. MtWI '"'' j ~T.t!"""' ,. ..,. """ ... " . '1 I !lAlt V PILOT s Wedntsday, DtUmbtr 30, l 970 Q_efense Lashe·s Linda .. Jiulgelnterrupts .Manson Lawyer Summation .. :. ? ... ~· ~ M'!) -'l'tlo Ill'-• Ollri. llaMoa. lald 11111 ~ ~ "Lind• Kuabtan oatd she did not know = -.,., at the T•LaBJanca blan gave the .a111wet1 the proteCUUon of any Intent to kill &QYone," Kanarek trtaJ' <hit M !"U "hwnanly Im-wanted In return for being IJ"&ntod Im· !lld. "She wu , ~ator who . ". for the ·bf atate wltnt.u to munlfy In the seven killings. did riot know anythtnc about 1 con-tall ,til truth about ,Ille slaylnp becaUH K.,,.,.k olso told tbe jury that !he W ,,u tbreatlnlcl: with proteCUUOD. proaec:uUon had produced no evldeoce llerlllf, ~. 1111ai.oever ol a conopiracy buded by ~ ~ Ille alioraaY f..-Manaen. ' ·-' lb:E~rcl•e ·Physicians Say Preside11t ' In 'Excellent' Health From Win Stn lces Goll IDd awlmmlng on the Oranr• Coast may be an tnunedlate New Year's resolution for PrelldeDt Nixon, who heard an addreil on the state of hJ1 health today. Orange County'• number one citizen emq ed from hir .annual checkup 1t tbe U.S. Naval Hoopltal, B<tbesda, Md., with both 1ood news and a pteletipUon tor more exercise. He dlfferod slllhtJY w!tb one of Illa perllOOal phy1tclana, Air Force Br!(. Gen. Wallar R. Tkach, on· tbe urpney of talWi, a break •WIY from executive clulles In Washlniloo. Geo. Tltach Aid he should vacaUoo In Son Clemlolle or Kay B!acayne, Fla., in lbe next week or two. • "I have DO excuie,l.' Presldent Nixon Missile Fight,er told reporten after completing the checkup. He was quoted as telli11g Ge n. Tka'ch he would try to get some fun in the sun as soon as he can get out from under the press of duties in the capitol. "l am concerned because I don't want him to get into trouble," the military physician explained, althout:h he was genarally enthuaiastic about NlJ:on'.9: health. Newsmen uked if the Pre1ident could conUnue at hil present executive pace -.ruln111 the prescribed exerciae and relautioc -without physical harm. "I'm not betUna on it," said nach. "The President ii really 1n excellent health," be added following the two-hour aeries of medical testa, to avo1d being ·m!Jundontood. 'll<ach almolt wued poetic ovu tbe pruldentlal blood preuure. ' "Thia ii a youna man'• blood pretaure ....... idtil," be remarked, aaylng the readJnc wu 111 over •82, ~pared to ' .... 120 over IO 9bout "a year ago whe;n Scores I nt,ercept . . Nixon wei~ two pounds m«e. • He ie allci :;i...., to 170 l!!)llllcls, wltb • • • cJear .... Junp:iJOod blood analyala ttad.inp In Pacific Test ::: ani1"'1lcoUent_muoc1e·and UJn tone for ~ ... a man of his q e and 'duties. • • -D ach wu .dilpleued, bOwever, tbot WASlllNGTQN (AP) -The Sprln • Iba' 'l'tlldinf. go1r..1· only f"'!r tlme1 m.luUt, a key weepoo In the Safeauard thll~111f, aw'°1 rarely and CUt down aaum1u11e ayatem, bu acored ill 'fltlt h1I boWUng. ,..,..11u1 t.,t Intercept of an bj- terccmtinental ballliUc mJaalle warhead over lbe Plclllc, Ibo Pentaaon announced today. Thi Sprint, a abort-range, auper-fast ~ shot up lrom tbe Kwaja!ein Mlla80 Rani• in tba Pacmc oa Dec. 23 * C&llle -"'kill ranie" of tbe 1CBM tarret -cone which bad J s £') been taunched f,... Ca111orn1a, •,:1()(1 n . an wemente mlla awa7. ' Manne Arrested OJ! Hold,qp · l\ap , Tlit ,wa ~ Nl •~.io any factua\, A iJq ~ hid ton ~ up~, 1 llle Pl!UID!I ll!d. '!'be ii!',_,+ rtee11Uy irlnsfernd 1rom inllltary pOllct lol<ept wu Verfllld 1IJ lnlliumentl. , • duty to a unit lillppln& out for V!elnun The Sprint, like Ill.partner Ioni-ranp ts being held In connection wltb a siring Spartan antlmlasOe, would carry 1 of holdupt of tervlce 1taUons in San nucleir warhead ln an actual inten:;ept Clemente._ of i n lncom1n& entmJ lCBM. Ferris Michael McDowell, was arrested 'nle Spartan and the Sprint comprise earlier this week 1n Chula Vl1ta after a one:two punch, with the Spartan dtlfan-an allfged robbery of a aervlce 1taUon ed to meet and destroy enemy warhell!_a there. more than tOO mUea away and the Sprint,_ Police in San Clemente entered the deslped to take out enemy warb¥dl lnvesUgaUon they swpect Ferris of being which~ penetrate the Spartan umbrella the man who allegedly robbed two 1t1-d~:.1· rlnt 1. blindln d ' tl.ons at gunpoint here in recent weeks. to re.1es on •-d I epee25 Tho Marine ts being beld on 125,000 . an enemy warnea some ball. ! .. miles. up and deJtroy IL A Police stakeout in Chula Vista netted Four months ago, the Sp~rta~ scored the suspect wJthin minutes of a robbery what the Pentagon called its first sue-there Monday fttaht. cessful ~e~ intercept. . . Similar stakeouts were In effect early ln cla1mu;ig a successful first ~ntercept last week iD San Clemente gas stations !or the Spnn!, the Pentagon said range in an attempt to -capture the robbery instruments uidlcated Its second 1tage suspect "~ close enoup to the tar~t to Warr~ntl have been Issued In South have destroyed ~~ with an operational Orange C'.ounty Municipal Court charging nuclear warhead. . two counts of armed robbery in San '.The vital radar equipment. which con· Clemente. atitutes the eyes of the Safeguard an· The first San Clemente robbery oo- tlmissUe sy1tem, allo has been test~ curred Dec. 7 shorUy before midnight from KwaJaleln a1 the United States at the Mobile station at 600 AV enida moves toward an operaUonal system. p· The Safeguard is sUll a matter of ~o.young man approached asking for conal~rable controversy in Congress, a can of gu, then pulled 1 pistol ind which this year llmlled expansion below demanded money. After stealing about the level requested by Prt1ident Nixon. $50, the bandit fled .in an older model gray car. DAILY PILOT Nftllert .... tl•llitt .. .._. .......... ,. ... .... ,.., C.NMn. S-C,._... OftAHGI COAIT PU1Lm41HO COM'AMY Jl•li•rt N. w,,4 l'nlllflnl .,..,. hlMi.Mr Th•rr.•t K'••Yil "'"' nterr.tt A. Mvrpl.111• M1""""9 ~fltlr Jl.ld11t4 '· tftlil s.rt11 or.,. c.virtr Edttw -COllt M .. ~ m '#tlf I., S ..... t H..,..-t h1dU 2211 w.t 11 ... 1 •w ln>•rd L~ l •tcfl: '71 JI'.,_! A....,\l't MIMI!,... ••d'li 11111 hKfl l wlewol'd In Clll'Ml'ltt; al NltUI II C.rr.lnO It.Ml About a week later a man matching the same description used the same ruse to rob the Enco 1taUon at Via de Frente and Avenlda Calafla. Polict Lt. Robert Muon said McDowell would be held by authorities in Sin Diego County until the cases there art closed. After th1t. San Clemente authorltlu will seek prosecution on the pair of robberies here. McDowell had been assigned to a military police unit at Pendleton until his rectnt transfer to a staging battallol\ which is due to ship out to lhe combat zone aoon. Postal Burglar Gets Six Months Ont of three men who att.tmpted to bum their way Into tbe Hunttn1lbn Beach P0tt Office safe and what would have been a haul of more than $100,000 ln stamps hu been aent.tnctd. to ab: months in federal prison. U.S. District Court Judge Manuel R•al Imposed tbot !cm on Sol Kaye, 16, llld IX"dered tbe CinclnnaU, Ohio, - to aervt fiv e yean on probation aftfr hit rtleue. Kaye wu found CUflly after a trial in 1A1 An1tle1 federal court. Kaye w1s one of thrff mtn discovered by U.S. po1tal lnapectora lut AprU 11 they UJed acetylene torchu to cut thtlr way Into the post ofllca ufe at 5771 Warner Ave. Federal officer• art 1Ull aearchln& for Kaye'a aocompllcu. • ' splracy." , The cOnlp;lracy charge was brought in , Kanarek said , because there was no way of convlctin& Manson of I.he actua l slayings. "There was just no showing of an1 conspiracy," Kanartk aid. "The motIVe of the people who brought that charge was to get Charlie Manson for some ungodly reason wiµch is pro- bably related to Mr. M&MOn'a life 1tyle1" Kanarek said. All (our defendants were 1bsent from the courtroom when the trial resumed today. Manson's attorney had begun his por- tion of tM final arguments Tuesday by hsndln£ the jury bloody color photograpN of the bodies of the victim& It was tbt rlrlt time the aeven men and five womtn had seen the pidlll'f:I close up. They passed th'1D around quickly and one woman J\U'Or refUHd even to gJance at them. "What the proeeeulion wanta to discuss with you in thia case are thete prejudicial photographs," Kanarek said. "They are trying to lynch Mt. Manson. They are appealing to the rankest kind or prejudice that divides thlli country today." Kanarek had to be stopped tiy Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older when he began addreuin& one of. the older male jurors by name and referring to his experience With "vigilante'' groups in the United States. With tbe ~endants l!attninr in ad- joining rooma7by loudJpelker, Kanarek attacked tht publicity surrounding the case and accused the prosecution of terrorist tacUes against witnesses. He iald the district attorney's office had attacked him personally. OJdtr had to ehut him off again and 1,t · tippeared the trial will be in for teveral days of 1tormy sessions when Kanarek gm around to the evidence in the case. Chief defense counstl Paul Fitzger1ld preceded Kanarek, ttlllng lbe jury It was quite feaalble that someone other than the "Mamon Family" committed the seven slayings. Fitzgerald said the fact that a fin gerprint of Patricia Krenwini.el was found at the.residence..couJd be explained by tbe pou~ tbot she Wll a house guest who bad 1!ffn invll<d IO 'tbe home by Sharon Tate' for a awiro. Fitzgerald cast doubt on t h e !ruthluJiitss Of II!• ptOltCu~oa wiinwes. He !>&'I~ lipped lnlo ~ leltlmony of Mrs. KUiblan Iha! she -t to th< Tate home "1th Olarles "Tex" Watson, Miss Krenwinkel and Susan Atkins. Mrs. Kasablan te!tified thaf 1he never actually entered the house but Fltigerald pointed out that her knife was the only weapon found by police at the scene. Mrs. Kasabian had said she gave tbe knife to Misa Atkins. "It Is just at re&!onable to assume that she did enter the houae and took part in the killings,'• Fitzgerald 1ald. "It Is also reaaonable to be1ieve that she was not even with Charles Wataon, Patrlci1 Krenwlnkel and Susan Atkins but with some other person or persons.'' 'Ille defense lawyer said lhoae persons could have been her husblni!, Robert Kasabian, and a friend, Charles Melton. Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of l!lkl•maskecl bandits who ap- pro1ched the attendant from behind with a 10.lnch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa aervice 1tatlon of $50 Tuelday night. Ray Rossi, on duty 1t Chet T1chetler's Chevron ServJce, 2275 Newport Blvd., told Officer Boti Arnold the young men fied on foot up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim sa id he was t;ken by surprise about 7:25 p.m. and ordered to turn over the money from tbe gasoline pump island box or be stabbed, Police searching the surrounding art• recovered a bat, striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi ldenUfied as be ing worn and used by the 18 to 20-year-old robbers. From P .. e 1 CONGRESS ... action on his welfare reform proaram in the 92nd Con81'esa, which meets Jan. 21. He scheduled a meeting today with Senate OemoaaUc and Republican Jeaders lo seek assurance hla family a.ulatance plan would be a "top priority" Hem next year. The plan wu junked Monday, alon( with protective trade legislaUon u congrea cleaned houae In Its rush for adjournment. A compromlle '86.5 billion defeme pro- CU111ment bUI cleared both the Senate af)d the Houte Tuesday nlcht after necotJators a,read to rtmove language lhat would have weakened a previously passed ban on the u_,e of U.S. troops and adv!Jere In Cambodia. Pusage came 70 to 2 after· the Senate earlier rejected a compromlst bill th111t would have allowed the iue of Americ1n troops to rucue prltonera ol war or to Insure tht safe withdrawal of U.S. trooris from Southeast Aa:la. A new lfouse-Sen111te conference bowed to the Senait'1 wishes and deleted tbe llJliU.I&•· Fl4 Fighter Destroyed In Crash RIVERHEAD. N.Y. IUPI) -The Fii Swing-Wing fighter, successor . to the Navy's version of the controversial F111, crashed on its second Ulght today as tl was attempting a landing and W'81 "wiped out," a Grumman Co r P . spokesman said. Test pilots William :P..1iller and Robert Smythe, ejected and parachuted to safety just before tht plane crashed on a runway at the Grumman Air Field at Calverton, next to the Long Island el· pressway. Jn Washington, a Defense Department spokesman. Jerry Freidheim, said initial reports indicated the crash was cau!ed by "some sort of hydraulic malfunction." The Fl4's first flight, which luted Just 10 minutes, was conducted sue· cessfully Dec. 21 and the next day Navy Secretary John H. Chafee chri!ltntd the plane "the Tomcat." Grumman got the contract to build the Fl4 two years ago after the Navy halted its participation ln the trouble- plagued Flll program because that plane was unsuitable for aircran carrier ope ra- tions. and the first 26 Fl4s already are on the assembly line at the Grumman plant. Booby Trap • Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by .Sgt. Bruce .Hom at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. T?1s 50- gallon drum is shredded in such a wa}'. that jagged edge~ paint out in all directions .Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When triggered, they fall on unsuspecting 150Jdiers. Chafee said earlier the Navy planned to order 722 of the F14s, for a total cost of $83 billion or $11.5 mUUon per plane. Chafee said the Fl4 would be an air superiority righter with greater capability than the esteemed F4 Phantom that now forms the backbone of the U.S. fleet's airpower. $38,000 Support Nixed; Divorcee Gets $2,800 Initial versions of the plane are dnlfn· ed to fly at about 1,400 miles per hour and have a c om b a t radius of up to 300 miles. Air California Gets One Year ~ For Jet Revamp Claudie Hutson Hirsch's plea for $38,000 a month in aupport payments pending trial of her divorce action against her multimillionaire husband was rejected today by Orange County Superior Court Judg e Robert L. Corfman. Judge Corfman cut her demand down by more than 90 percent in granting the Harbor Island socialite $2,800 a month for personal living expenses. He ordered Clement Ling "Jerry" Hirsch to also pay $150 a month each for the support of the estranged couple's two children. Mn. Hirsch, 0 , of 31'.1 Harbor Island, Newport Be1ch, had a1ked for $2,500 a month ~ the aupport of Casey, g TA.KE 'EXTRA. CAR' ' TO ROSE PA.RA.DE LOS ANGELES {AP) -Bus service to the Pasadena Rose Parade from loca· tlons in Loa Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counUe1 wUI be m1de available by the S o u t h e r n California Rapid TTanaU District early Friday. ServJce to the Rose Bowl game between Stanford ind Ohio State will also be provided from RTD's terminal in downtown Los Angeles. Bus riders must have their ea:act fare or use monthly passes. GEM TALK TODAY by J, C. HUMPHllU THE LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fascinate me most, reply is difficult because each has its own fascinating his· tory and tradition. I am not'" alone in finding jade particularly interesting ; for cen· turies the cool look of thJs legend- ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be- lieve It devtne , that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of Jade beads, carved statuary and low relief figures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered 1 r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found In Mexico. Some people believe Jade Is found only in museums; but today, exquisite jade jewelry ls available to all, and may be found in our store. ... ( and Christopher, S. No trial date had been set today for the dissolution of marriage acUon filed last September by Mrs. Hirsch. Judge Corfman's ruling v Ir tu a 11 y freezes the Hirsch assets of more than $40 million pending trial Of the issue. 1t includes denial or Mrs. Hirsch's re- quest that she be allowed ~3,000 a year for traveling connected with the substantial Hirsch interests in racing. Judge Corfman's order approves pay- ment of bil ls totalling more than $50,000, all incurred prklr to separation of the couple. But it ls made clear in a long and rigid ruling' that all future bill! must be incurred within the provisions of the court order. . Judge Corfman has also asked that the couple remain in the United States until some permanent division of their community property ls achieved. Hirsch, who mainta ins offices at 2515 E. Coast Highway. Corona del Mar, is the owner of more than 40 thoroughbred racehorses and a well known figure in California racing. His fortune is estimated at more than $40 mlllion and Mrs. Hirsch lists his 1970 Income as $7 million. It will be no less in 1971, she states. Hirsch ls also the owner of substantial ranch acreage in Orange, San Bernardi· no and San Diego Counties and Lhe im- porter of highly success ful bloodstock from a number of South Amer ican na· tions. . Air California will have an additional year to install anti·smog equipment to bring their jets up to standards set by a new state law, acco rding to a ruling made Tuesday by the county Air Pollution Control District apj:>eals board. An APCD spokesman said the variance was granted on the condition that the airline schedule5i the installaUon of modi· fying equipment as .~oon as it is available. It was granted because on Jan. 1 aircraft emlssion of snloke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new section of the state health and safety code. Bob Clifford, genera l manager of the airline, said jet engines that have not been modified will be in v~olaUon of the new law. "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spare engines, for a total of 17. Two have been modUied and we ea:pect to get another completed by next week," he said. Clifford said the airline ordered the modifying devices from the Pratt- \Vhitney Company in May and has con- tracted with United Airlines for their installation. "Delivery has been a little slow and United has their own Deel to take care of. so the variance will give us an additional year to comply. For a dynamic gift ... a P~mic watch An Omega Dynamic can make any gift- \ giving occa•lon an unuaual one. The unique horizontal oval~shaped caH was apeclally d11lgned for greater watch we•rlng comfort •.• It fita the wrist like a gtovt. 1 Wit h cool comfortable easlly lnterchangld air-vented tlrap. .. 11.wln111119, d•t•-lellJftg Oit110• Orn•lllk. l111n1, .. 1\ffl "'"" tt•l•t•nt CIM, Al,..,.Mtd lftl11c~1n,.1llle 1tr1, ................ t lll.00 M•n'Al·1'111d lllOdlil •1WIOWI uiltlldu •• '.111.so J. C. fiumphried J eweferti 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVENIENT TE.MS IANK'AMEIUCAlD-MASTElCHAl6E \ 24 YEARS IN $AMI LOCATION rHONE 14t.J401 I -. Duniingion Beaeh Today's. F••~ · \, . . ~.t.s...a· EDITION • • • VOL. 63, NO. 313 , 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES. • .. -=-• ORANGE .COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . ,,.-. WEDNESDAY, oee.~MBER 30, 19?0 .... •· TEN <;:ENTS • Huntington Chamber Sets Freeway Meetings By ALAN DIRIUN Of ... ~ .......... ,.., The New Year may weU start with • new fi&ht over the Huntington Beach Freeway. Developments ln Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley lndlcate that a drive may be launched to reopen hearings on the ronlf9versial route adopted by the state Highway Commission in 1968. With renewed interest in the freeway -Route n -growing in government, businesa, and l!Chool cln:les In West Orange County commurUUes, the Hun- tington Beach Clamber of C.Ommerce· has scheduled a full-blown p a n e I discus.sion, on the latest highway in- formation. More than, 500 invitatiom have been sent to leaders in HunUngton Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and GS.:den Grove to attend a noon ¥zncheon at the Sheraton,Beacb Im Jan. 9. Cbamb,,-Preaidenl Pete Horton said that latest state, county, and city think· ing on the Huntington Beach Freeway, the-Pacific Coast Freeway and the Orange Freeway will be reviewed at the luncbeoo. QuestlooS lo be discussed will be lbe effect of rerouting the Huntington Beach Freeway, when the Coast Freeway might be built, and the current status of the Orange Freeway. · 1be calling .of the meeting follows a call by a Hunttngtnn Beacb resldeot, • -- Larry Curran, for West Ck'ange County communities to push for a~ reallsning of the Hunllngloo Beach ·F(eeway. . The adopted route -t!Je· Qt~e ro\l)e -calls for the freeway to nm down Newland. Sired f!lrough Fountain Valley and HuntiJliloa Beach llDlll. ll -ln- ~m::han1e5 wlQt , the ~i'~ac ~t Froeway .at A<l!qls Av-.· Thb li°" wu oppoaed by.·Fountai!!=V.!lley .. and HUJi!lni!on ~~h .durin&ll!u1\lblic bel!l" lnp; .•.. Curran suggested that lbe route be But Milj'Ol' ' Dertk M<\Vlllmlef cl reallgDed roughly from a point just above Westml,nster ~ cold water ~ ~ ille San Diego Freeway In WestJnh:tSter. propo6al. Inslead of going down Newland Street ''We bav• 00 ~·-~ In .. 1. .. ....i· ..... cur .the freeway ... would be directed on • a _ mu::1~~n ~ ...... .ts.dearet ll)lle !fom .E~r Aveoue positior:i," tie ... aald. "We ~e .. ~tilfied acrosa BeaCh Boulevard to GQtbard with the adopted route and lD fact we Street and then Unk wltb tbe Col.st want it speeded up." I Freeway at.._.&fa~ Street. 1 · • He··P,Ointed out t.bat Qte Westminlter · T!Je:f!!llll)l!llton ~ch-9lJ.,~·has -C<ll\llcil' r_,Uy·pw.ed a reooluUO. call• f11Strucfe.d II;! pl~Jrl -~ 1-· -lng-for tbeostate o.lj>oed up <OOllruc:1loo Ibis change 1JOUld affect.U,,dty, · (See FREEwAV,.P"I" I) Theft Thwarted •, Beach Guard Shoot,s Tires of Car Huntington Beatjl security guard Den- nis Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a departJnent store theft by shooting out the rear tire on an escape car filled with four fleeing bandits. Dahlke, regularly employed as a detec. tive with the Orange Police Department, is a guard at Huntington Center. He fired five shots at the careening car and one bowx:ed off the rear bumper, but' another ripped through the left rear tire. The incident began at 7:10 p.m. when a J. C. Peµney's Company store employe saw three. men and a woman in a leoparo skin coal trying lo ste.al 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at· tempted to leave the store parking lot in the e.tapecar. . He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempled to run him down, Dahlke told police. That's when the shooting started. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car which was found abandoned ooe hour later with the &bot-out rear tire. It was located by Fountain Valley police at the intersection of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects l!-pparently escaped on foot but all of the stolen uniforms were rec.ove.re.d from the auto. Police laler indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach Clty Dodge. Dahlke is a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He is employed part-time as a Penney's security guard. Ocean View ' Blast Traps 36 Drive-la lineup DAILY PILOT Stiff n.tt Override EJeetjon .Set HVDEN, Ky. (AP) -An exploolon In a coal mine · in rugged southeastern K~ky mountain country possibly trapped l6 .... WldergrouDd lbls af. ._.. (lie lt~'·-lfli>es and Mllwala Deportinent replrted.. 87 RUDI NIEITal!UiKI The de~ <mnmllsloner, "l!. N. or 1111 °'" ""'~ Kir~~ llld ~ ln J.es:b!Cton ~ ex· Tupayers hi (lie Ocean View Scbool. .,.... ...... 11d 'at the Jllliley Coil Co., Dl.trlct will be asked to ante up for -ISl41 ,.m. EST. the ed11C1tlon of elementary school ·A 1department 1potesman at Huard, children again during an override election 1cheduled for Feb. 9. 'Indultados' Ky said there "is a possibility of 36 Girls on horseback wait theJ.r turn'.behiqd au'to at else.,_ The nianagement ~a:esn't say bow cusiom~rs me~ in the mines" drive-in dairy on Beach Boulevard in Huntington 11;t.owd· arrlve and the hoi&es ,.don't seem to niln<l No one bad eiOO,iec1 from lbe. mine Beach. Girls and !hell: anil!ial• drCJ!!· !Ji f,or a lil~ck. , ata,n~tnil: ·lheul~er to °fender with the mechlinlcar an bour alter -lWo-explQllon Illa pow~ W. ID =,;i~~·Y~·~'> . tpOtelmaa llld.:W'illd f.bi i1ili1• ~' \*..-Ut;' fU}\tiP ~· :o•~ :~:: ~2 ; • ·.' I j probabtr was a duit _aploslon. " • •-; , · , •· · "' : · ; Mlne inspeClorl ms llate police headed D L :, ~-· . ' '°'· t11e ""ne, about,E:m11et -e1;e~1e. NIS · ' Hyihin "1 lluirlcane ,,,,__ A!lqllt SO , • , · •, •• -:~ • , men are employed there, Xlrkpatrlck · said. . Kasabian 'Threatened' ·Rohs Bea~h .Liquor Store But while other 9Chool districts are asking for an increase In expenditures, trustees of the 22-school Ocean View district are requesting merely a con-- Unuation of the current f2 .75 rate per tlOO of assessed valuation for the next five years. FrancoCommutesDeath LOS ANGELES (UPI) -'J'he del""e charged today at the Tate-LaBianca murder 1.r1a1 that Jt wu "humanly im- "°'81ble" for lbe key stale wlliias lo Strlklog again wllb. hir .lr\l;iy flonUer- 1tyle revolver, the be 1pecJac1 e d Berbaretla-in-black · ran a string• of Orange County boldbps taWard lbe dozen mark Tuesday nlghl In Runtingtoo Beacb. She flashed the .38 , caliber gun at clerk Larry Raran in Billy Dow's Liquor Store, 19351 Beach Blvd, tuclted $IO into her black purse and made a 1mooth •etaway. "We would have liked an increase, but the board felt, with cw-rent economic conditions, the rale should be kept the same," e1plalned District Superintendent Clarence Hall. "It would be a poor time to levy additional taxes, so we wanted to hold the line." "If the economy were booming, we would have uked for more things the district needs. But as things are, they just had to be priced out." These items, Dr. Hall said, include foreign language instruction, the im· provement of older schools, sprinkler systems, instructional materials centers and a fine arts program. Maintenance of the '2.75 rate, which Includes a $1.25 override, would simply continue the district's current educational programs, according to school officials. Voters approved that rate for a two-- year period in May of 1969 It allo~ the district to establish a summer school program, double Its expenditures for ln-- structional materials, establish small libraries at each of the schools and finance one field trip per year for each student. During the weeks before the election, Dr. Hall and other district administrators will have to buck the oppo91tlon of a ta1payer's organiiatlon called the Coun- cil on Sensible Taxation (OOST). Claire Kelley, chairman of the group, contends that a "no" vote on the measure would be mort attuned to present economic conditions and c u r t a i I unrealistic spending. "In May 1969, when the Ocean View District's request for a tl .15 override was passed, it was admitted by the administration that tkents would cover the actual need," wrote Miss Kel!Jy In a ballot argument whiclt will be mailed to all voters. "Tb.is means that for the past two (See OVERRIDE, Page Z) Beach Parking To Cost More It will cost $1 a day to park by the &aJW in Huntington Beach neJ1:t year. 1'he state has increased Its rates for the Huntington Stale Part and Boba Chica beaches from 75 cents to $2 and this week the city council aulhorited a 1lmllar increase for the municipal beach parl:lng lot. The SlO aeasonal pass will still be available to regular visitors at both the city and ltate beaches. ' Sentences of 6 Basques BURGOS , Spain (UPI) - Generalis!imo FranciSco Franco tonight commuted the death sentence.!! of six Basque nationalists convicted of murder and banditry, the Mlnilltry of Information announced. The announcement said the sentences had been commuted to "the next highes t sentence passed." The next highest sentence .Passed by the Burgos military court was 72 years. Franco planned to explain his action in a yearend address to the nation tonight. l{e has been undet........mounting pressure .from Europe.an governments and the Vatican to commute the death sentences and faced possible widespread unrest in northern Spain U he did nol. There wu Immediate reaction from the VaUcan which said It beard of the commutation with" "enormous relief." Franco took the action after a special meeting with his cabinet and the council of the realm, an advllory group made up of parliament members. The official newS agency CIFRA an· nounced the verdict by flashing the Spanish word for pardon "lndullados. Jndultados. Indultados." The men them.selves were awaiting newa of their fate in the central priJon of Burgos, in cells with paneless windowa and temperatures at the freez.ing point. Had Franco not acted the siJ: men would have been ahot by a firing aquad or garroted with a steel band around their necks at dawn Thursday. They had been convicted by a military court of murder and banditry. The news agency reported the verdict shortly before Franco was to deliver his annual New Year's speech to the nation. A few hours earlier Capt. Gen. Tomu Garcia Rebull, commanding officer of the Burgos military rekion, confirmed the death sentences and the jail terms of nine other Buques, putung clemency direcUy up to Franco. I • • ' tell lbe lrulb aboul ,lbe s)ayinp because abe was tbreatehed With proeecutkm beraell. Irvtng Kanarek. lbe • attorney far Charlea Manson, said that Linda K&sa· bian gave the aMwers the prpteculion wanted In return for being granted im- munity in the seven killings. Kanarek also told the jury that the prosecution had produced l1P evidence wb"atsoever of a conspjracy . beaded by Manson. "Llnda K8sablan said she did nol know of any intent to kill anyope;". J<anarek said. "She was a co-conspirator who did not kijow anylhltlg~·about. a con· spiracy." The conspiracy charge was brought In, Kanarek said, because · there was no way of convicting ~n· ·Of the actual slaylngs. "There ~u just ·no. ahi).wina: of any conspiracy,'' Kanarek .said.•. "The motlve of the people who. brought that charge wi.s to iet Olarlie Manson for some ungodly reason which . is pro-. (See MANSON, Pqe Z) ' Fl 4· Fig.hter J~t Crashes on .2nd Testing Flight : . RIVERHEAJ1, N.Y. (UPI) -?)le Fil S.wing-Wlng .fitJ:hter, 111tcessor to the Navy's veriion of ·the controvenlal'F111, dashed on J.ts' secorld ·niglit today u it' was attempting a 18.nding and was ''.wiped ·out," a • Gruipman ' ·co r p • spokesman aaJd. Test pilots William .Miller and RObert Smythe, ejected and parach~.to saftlty just before '\he pl"ne er.ashed on a rimway at tht Grummaii Air-Fieid at Calvei-tii, next ·to tbf: Long ISlan~ ex· pressway. , . ID W,ubingtoo, 1 . Def"'¥ pepartment• spokesman, Jerry Freldbelm, aaKI. in.ltlal. reports indicated the' crilb was cauaed by "some sort or bydraullC maHunctlon." Civic Center Study · Set The Flf's fU'SI filgbl, · which lasted just 10 . minutes, wu. a>nducted sue. cessfully Dec. 21 and the next day Navy Secretary John H. Chaf"l' pir1stened the plan~ "the Tomcat." . Grumman got the conttaCt to build the Flt t'!Yo . ye.an. a10 after the Navy. halted ile ,pll'Uclpallo1t. in .lbe •trouble- plagued Fill proe:ram becau9 that!plane: w~ ~~hie f~r alr'll'aft CJlrtler oper ... !Ions, . and lbe first . a . Fib. alrtach'. are on the use\nbly line •t tbe Gruritman' Archirects to Estirnat,e Cost of Community Projeyt By TERRY COVILLE Of ltM Daltr ''"'' ll•lf Take your pick. Founlaln Valley will h8ve, (1) a full civic auditorium, (2) another multiple use hall, (3) nolblng. The city councU di.sawed civic center expansion Tuesday night. The only certain things coming out of the discussion were : -Police headquarters will be doubled In size with a 3,000.square--foot addJUon at an approximate cost of ll00,000. -Another 4,000 square feet will be added lo city hall for roughly 1150,000 lo $200,000. -At least $200,000 in Improvements musl be added lo the cit)" -atlon yards. City Manager Jamu Neal Wormed lbe council lbal l800,000 would be available at the eod of fiscal year 197t·n for civlc center expansion. By the lime councilmen totalled the ) needs of police, city ball and corporation yard facilities, there was on1y '300,000 left for the most controversial Item - community center e1panalon. "That Jsn't enough. J'd rather not sptnd a peMy,'' declat!d Cotmeilman Ron Sbenkman. "J'm scared to death of putting up ·a facility that won't meet our ulttmate needs," he added. · some civtc groups have asUd for a flied seat auditorium with space for 1,500 seata. "Wllb $300,000 we could build a 40-,.al auditorium," chlpped ln gouncnman John Harper. .,... · The a>uncil finally · agrood ·w f\ltther 11~ , of !ho commlOllty ctnler el<· ~ and ~ olher> ffnlllclll( melhOd!. . .. ~, ~ •1 Harper suggested bUlldl!ig 0m..iing rooms at each· park ·a'.n\1 .1hal pe:rh•ps no community center addj~n Is needed. He also said il a fi1td~li:it audtlorlum '· .. -· " ' ' . , • '· ' Is bulll, u mlghl also be Uled for cily cquncll. cbamben,· thus .eliminltlng a · new c::Ouncll room•ptanned fer Ctty ball.' "If lbe people of thll city roally want • • a fl.I m.lllJon audltorlum tte 'lhould kDciw It and find a way to do it. We have lo rind oil~ u··they· want u enoUgh to pay ror It," Sllenkmim said. A amaller fixed seat auditorium.· wu alto auuested .. being adeqaate for community .needs. Th> p>rl<I and recre>UC111"'comm1Utoo recommend<d a mu1u-. bulldt!JI plan!. · .. _ · Qiafee said earJI~ tht. Ni./y 1Plinned to order '112 •f lbe . F-lls, IOr • lolal· cost of 183 billion 0( 111.5 mlllloo per plat1e. 4 • • • ' ' Oldest ·u.s. Corilla Celebra.tes Bir~~l'\Y wllb 1 llage. Copunllslonen oald lbelr PHILADELPHIA (AP) --the· r600mmtndalloii was baled "' _lbe oldest ,llvlni 10rilla Jn c 1pij vit1, avatl1bllliy of ooJy '3001000. . · , c:tlebrated ·another b~ at the• The COW1C!I ~greed lq a l f;IOO conli'id Phila~phla Zoo loday. lle'ta lll;ll"!btps wtth die ' aith!JOO.tural nm. ..i IllUrock. oV.r · · '-• , and~•lo"«ll> <Olt"."'"1!1i~ .Oil· The ~ntba ·-llVtn lo the zoo •aH the:bulldlnp, 'plut est~*~UM· bf .fB\iipi!Yn, ·N.Y., ,_.,, iWllo >i.t conummlty•· center _...., \raitclng rilllld him and till bn>tlier untll 'il!ey' ,from I 1i,.pte Ull-liP ~ajl .fo·:~ ·lull 'go( too big ~ode~. 'lliil - 1,500 seat Civic •\idl~lum .• , ·, ' weat on ut a cli'¢ls. . · , . • I • • ., ' •• ' • ~'"' ... r1 ' I ' '' '· • ' Orapge Qiu! lawmen <barge lbe lady bandit -often switching wigs and eyeglals Crmes -bu hit a number Of liquor .storeS, markets and a Costa Mesa drive-in thuter since early ~m· ber. One. job was pulled during tbl Christmas. holiday .weekend. , ,,,. "~ Described as being Ir\ ~ ear y 30r; lbe female bandil roljbed'theHuntlngtog .• -1 Beacb •!Ore aboul t:a5 p.m. Tuesday. , Her poli§_bed':ipproacb is inf.ended to keep -victims calm. ;_ · .• t "'I5o1''t get nervous', all J . want la- the mo.,ey," she sajd as sh~ ~ up the cash and then ordered Raran lo lie . behind lbe counter as •be made her getaway. 1 Although police offlcent IWnrnoned '1 · a silent alarm, swarmed ovtt tbe ire• within minutes after· theJ 1lo1ctbp; ~ were·unabl~ 1o ftn4 a trafe 9f her. ---i .. One of her mos.ti lucrative atJcku6s occurred.two weeks ago In ·•OUtb' Oran11l. County, where she obtained about I.WI from a liquir _stare. · ~ ·-f -,__.........,_.........; ___ ........ -. Oruge C.ad I .. 1 DAILY l'ILOT " 'Town Meeting' Vall~y Plans -~ . l'ocmlaln Valliy Cllllda11 .,. llytn1 pllnl !or 1 serlil ol town hall meettnas to bring city jiYemmeat to the ll'aJS root.. ~·-e1on1io111o 'c111•• ..... -·~ iwr,er '• .......... )lttlnl 10 city aplalnod. , ...... lllo• ,..,, ..... &idLol the Cardi '!he ~""SJ!"lll ftim CouncBman lohn and as'kln& inct!_vlduals t~ rank those H~rper s desiu for closer commµnlcaUon goals 50 tbe .city can set up priorities. Tiit !lrll such seMion will be held Jan. 21 1t tbe P'ulLon School PTO mee11na. with the people and tile lack of av . . , , tendance at city council meetings. "Fulton ls the pdot meet 1 ~ g, "As a group we might answer questions Holly~ said. "If it works. we 11 set rrom the general audience. Then we'll up m~,tlnis with other Groups at each Most del)lrtment heads and at least two city councilmen will attend the PTO mee.Uflg to anawu cjuestion.s and discuss the local aovemment. break into smaller groups so the people school. can talk to the department head about Each to-:n hall .sessi?n will ~ open specific problems," Hollywood said. to the pubhc, but 1s delllnged prunarUy He added that cards might be handed for the area served by the school. •1we think by uaing the schoota and their PTO groups we will get better r-• ..., -I• attending," Jim out with room for questions and com· So far no meetings are scheduled to plaints about city activlUes. follow the Fulton session. b: E~erclse Physicians Say President In 'Excellent' Condition From wire 8ervlct1 Goll llld IWlmminl on the Oranp caut may be an immediate New Year's l"llOlullon for Prelident"Nixoo, who heard u iddraa on the llllto or hla bellth today. Orange County'• number one dtizen emeried from his 111111u.al checkup at tho U.S. Nevel Hooptttl, Betbesdl, Md., rib both good DeWI ud I prescription Sword-wielding Burglar Draws Prison Sentence for more exercile. He dlffered slightly with one of his personal physicians, Air Force Brig. Gen. Walter R. Tkach, on the urgency of taking a break away from executive duties In Wublngton. Gen. Tkach aald he should vacation in San Clemente or Key Biscayne:, F'la., in tbe next week or two. 'ti hive no UCUlt," President Nixon 'tokl rtpartus llter completing the checkup. He was quoted 11 telllq Gen, nacb he would Uy to get some fun in the sun u l50IXI u he can get out from under the pre1& ol duties In the copltol. '1 am concerned because l don't want blm to get Into trouble," the mWtary phyllciln upllined, tlthou&b be WU generally eotbu&iutic about Nixon's -. • Ne-'uked U .11ie Pnoident could A burrJ1r w!lo pHt.d 1111 rword •calnet CXlllllnue .at 1111 prelont ..,.,..uve paoe • HunUncton Belsil homeowner'• .45--mtnul .. tbe prelliibed elerclse and callber pistol In a prM&wn du!l:<.w... nliiiatton -without jihf1lc0l')ill'llJ. ...i.nced Mol1dlJ :to one to t.n Y...:.S -·•rm nji[betUnc .;,,, tt," •id Tiacli. In lllate prison. · -"The p;i;ldent ·i.7reany· ,In. exctllent L«oy Anthon>'. 'Johnson, 2$, l;oni boalth," )Je_1dded fo\IOWlng ,the two-bour Beach, drew !hit aentence from Orai!jja Rrloa .Ill mediCll •• tat1, to avoid b<Jna County Superior COUrt Judp J....S r :. mtamtdmtood. -- Judie after pllldlnl guilty to charges Tkach almost waxed poetic over tilt that he burglarl.Jed the home of Mr. presidential bloOd preagure. and Mra. Edward Olivares, 3292 Easter "Thii is -a young man's blood pressure Circle, Jut Sept. 24. -ideal.'' he remarked, saying the Of Deers said Johnson grabbed the r~ wu _Jll over 82, compared to eword wbtn be awoke Mn. Olivaru: l20:ovef-#0 ·Jt>out a year. ago When In \he bedroom ud Uled the wuliOn Nixon w>lat>ed two poqndl more. to thrutel) her~ when he tried -Ji!Ljs lllo..llawn to 110 f>ound!, with to COlllt to &rJ"'°ll"Jthe Intruder. ~ lliilili.:~ ana)y~readlngs 0Uvart1 said he warned Johnson, wav-and"eZ&llf;if-mtiiCTf\.n~ iilD tone for tng the IWl for emphasis: "beat it a man of hls age and duties. orl'UputaboleU:ln!u&byou." • Tka~u · l ·1 , however, that Of°'*" ifld MiJ>n ~t It 11 M tho . ooly !our:i-. a a neai'bJ ~~ M waa arrtNf tm y . .. . and cut Ciniii: by Hun~ llt!ch police sbbrllY 1111 bowUng. thereafter. Jud&• Judie dismissed additli>nll char&es of 1111ull )rith I deadly "'."!pon. Lloyd Johnson . . . Funeral Slated Funeral HrYices for Lloyd E. Johnson. 47, owner of Jolmnt Gius C.O. in Hun- tln&lon Btlcb, will be held at 2 p.m., Tburlday in Smith'• Funeral Oiapel. Burial will follow in Westmlnster Memorial Park. Mr. Johnaon died Monday of a heart attack. Ht Uvtd at 1205 Lake St. and was a resident in HwitlngWn Beach the past 2S years. The Rev. Thomas W. Overton of the First Christian Olurcb will handle flmeral ceremonies. Mr. Johnson is survived by his wife, Betty; a daughter, Mrs . Larry Taylor cf Kansas ; a son. Randy Johnson of the homej hl1 motlier, Mr.!1. Thelma Ferrla; a sister, Lorraine Ferris of Anabelm; and two arandchildren. DAILY PILOT OWOI C.O.Uf •UIL~INCO COilill"AXV le"rt N. W1e4 •rt1ldelt ........ .,. Jtclr R. Curl1y \'let Pmkltnt «A 0tnon1 MMtaw Thom•• Keevil •tllM' Thell'I•• A. Mutphl•t Mt11ttlllt !!:ti.or Alt11 Dirki11 Wtst Or•nte ~ly ldlW ;.lbert W, l1te1 ~ltlEcllttt HntlllttM ..... ~ I 7115 S.ttlt ltul1Yer4 Mtitint Acldre11t P.O. lox 790, 92641 OtW Of'flC9I L• .... alftll: m •-t ... ....,... Colt1 MIHI DI W•I lfy l!r ... .......,. ktel'lt 2211 W•t k!b111 leutmfC """'llfNrlftl • Htrtll 11 Ctnllllt lltll Jury Completion Near in Mesan's Trial on Rape Jury selection in the kidnap-rapt trial of Gary . Harold Phoenix moved into its final stages today in the Orange County Superior C.Oarl ot Judge William Murray. Phoenix, 29, Colla. Mesa. Is aCCW1ed of 33 separate charges of kidnap, rape, sex ~rverslon, as&auldt with inlent to comm'it rape and robbery. Investigators claim that al least seven women, ranging in ages from 18 to 48, have been the victims of Phoenix's sexual assaults. Those alleged attacks took place in six Orange County com· muniUes, amo111 them Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Charges filed against the former assis- tant manger or a Huntina:ton Beech health spa have led lawmen to compare the case with U!.at of Caryl Chessman, the convicttd rapUlt who dled in the ga& chamber after years of fighting the guilty verdict al appellate court level. The conviction or Phoenix on the 33 felony charges could, technically, lead Judge Mlll'Tay to impose the death sentence under the terms of California's so-called "LHUe Lindbergh law.'' The progecution already has indicated it•will seek the deaU!. penalty 1n the case. Rites Scheduled For Jack Kelly Graveside funeral services wW...be held Thursday for longtime Sunset Beach property owner and yachtsman Jack T. Kelly, who died Wednesday In Altadena. Rites will be at 11 a.m. in Mountain View Cemetery. San Bernardino. Mr. Kelly, 59. of 111665 S. Paclllc Ave., bought land in Sunset Beach 30 ;1ears ago and moved to the coast 10 years ago after managing a hotel in Needles. He was in the yacht financing business locally and belonged to the H1.111Ung&.on Be1cb Rotary Club, the Elks and the Mosonic Lodi•· Survivors include his wlfe, Katherine, son, John . and a daughter, Mrs. Llnda Coyle of Santa tl10nica. The family suggest~ memnrl•I con· trlbutions to LaVlna Hosplt.I for Resplrttory DlseaH, 3900 N. Uncoln Ave .. Alladena. where Mr. Ke.Uy was a paUent. From Page 1 OVERRIDE. • • years, they have been ~iving 76-ctnts per $100 more than DeCCSsary." Dr. Hall, however , argued that the excess was applied to educational enrich· ment whlcb may mean the difference between a good or a mediocre school system. "That dough went into t h e class rooms" sa!d Dr. Hall. "All one has to do Is 1ook at the reading scores during the pre-override and during the post-0verrlde-perlod to be convinced." Norman Ginsburg, director of the district's pupil personnel services office, said that last year Ocean ,View student& for the first lime scored at or above atate and national norms. These in- creases were attributed directly to an Improved reading proiram instituted through override funds . "Before the override our figures were static," be said. "Now, for the first tlme we have moved· torr center in comParlson to children arOund the na· Uon," be said. Across the board increases in the readinl{ capabilltiea ol youngsters were recorded for· grades 14 on the Stanford Reldlng Test and the ~Cooperative Primary Reading Test, said Ginsburg. "'What this means is that the teachers had' .. more ' materials to Work with as • • ~ ... ilJlt of tbe o:verrlde," he added. . , Prom Pag~l MANSON ... bably related to Mr. Manson's life style,'' Kanarek said. All four defendants were absent from the courtroom When the trlal resumed today. Manson's-attorney had be.1UJt his por· lion or Ill!\ 1 "'*1 ~~ Tuesday by handini 'ilie jury 1bk:iody color photographs of the bodles of the victims. It was il>t.fl!lt til1!", tlie ,1even men and five 1 .... i had 1Wt6 'ae pictures close up. 1fiey. paned tlitm around quickly and. Ol'lt woman juror rehaed even to glanc.e at them. "What the piosecutlon wants to discuss with you in this case are these prejudicial photographs,'~ Kanarek said .. ''They are trying to lynch Mr. Manson. They are appeillng to the rankest kind of prejudice that divides this country today." Kanarek had to be stopped 'by Superior Court Juda:e ·Charles H. Older when he began addressing one of the older male jurorg by name and referring to his experience with "vigilante" groups in the United Stales. With the defendants Hitenlng in ad- joining rooms by loudspeaker, Kanarek .allacked the publicity sWTouoding the case and accused the prosecution of terrorist tactics against witnesses. He said the district attorney's office had attacked him personally. Older had to shut him off again and it appeared the trial will be in for several days of stormy sessions when Kanarek gets around to the evidence in the case. Chief defense counsel Paul Fitzgerald preceded Ksnarek, telling the jury it was quite feasible that someone other than the "Manson Family" committed th! seven slaylngs. Fitza:erald said the fact that a fingerprint of Patricia Krenwinkel was found at the residence c0uld be explained by the possibility that she w~s a house guest who had betn invited to the home by Sharon Tate for a swim. Flttgerald cast doubt on the truthfulness of the prosetution witnesses. He particularly ripped into the testimony of h-1.rs. Kasabian that she went lo the Tate home with Charles "Tex" Watson, tl1iss Krcnwirikel and Susan Atkins. Mrs. Kasabian testified !hat '.she never actually entered the house but Fitzgerald pointed out that her knife was the only weapon found by police a.t the scene. Mrs. Kasabian had said she gave the knife to Miss Atkins. "It is just .., reasonable to assume that she did enter the house and took part in the ki!Unge," Fitzgerald said. •·r t is a1so reasonable to believe that she was not even with Charles Watson, Patricia Ktenwinkel and Susan Atkins but with Some other person or persons." Refinery Explosion Believed Accidental , LINDEN, .N.J. (AP) -An industrial 1ccldtnl, DOt labotage. Ls btlieved by ltwtllle Oil ·le Refinery Co. officials to have caused an explosion al thelr Plant here Dee. 8, sources cl05e to the refinery 1ay. The sourctl -said Tuesday th at the evidence points strongly to an explosion from within ·a process:lng unit of the plant rather than one caused by a bomb planted by an outsider. Frelfl Page 1 FREEWAY ••• of the route. "New htarlnas would delay the freeway four or five years," lbe mayor ldied. t'Wtl~ oeuld IOI aflonl that." II Westmin,ter does not agree to another look at t.be route it may 1ink hopes for a revision for state highway engineers have Jndlcated that the highway commission ha s been reluctant to reopen he.rings unleSJ all the a!fected cities joinUy requested 11. Mayor Edward Just of Fountain Valley 1aid his city was concerned with two factors : Whether the freeway wou1d cut through the Fountain Valley School District's education center at Talbert Avenue and Newland Street and the timing of construction. "The· main factor is that the freeway be built," be oonunented. •·we are not interested ln delayd.ng it." The mayor aaid that he understood that plans wert being revised so that the freeway w~d circle the school district headquarters, _ Mike Brick:, superintendent of the district, said that an alternt.llve freeway design in which the route would bypass the education center had been discussed with state highway engineers. But this bypass had not yet been adopted and official plans still called for the freeway to go over the school district site. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by S~t. Bruce Horn at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This 50- g~lon drum is shredded io such a way that jagged edges-point out in all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When triggered, they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of ski-masked bandits who ap- proached the attendant from be.hind witb a tt>-inch butcher knife robbed a C.Osta Mtsa service station of $50 Tutsday night. Teenage Girl Hitchhike1·s Raped Al~ng South Coast Ray Rossi, on duty at Chet Tschetter'• Chevron Service, 2275 Newport Blvd., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foot up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim said he was t:ken by surprist about 7:25 p.m. and ordered to tum over the money from the gasoline pump island box or be stabbed. A pair of hitchhiking teen aged girls told poHce Tuesday of being picked up by e middle aged man in Laguna Beach, bound with rope end raped in separate sout h county loceUons. Orange County Sherii.ff'a deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the alleged abductions and sexual assaults. · Hearing Slated Over Senf fie Meadowlark Airport operator John R. Turner will be arrlanged next Tuesday morning on four criminal counts stem- ming from an alleged scuffle between him and two police officers Monday night. The 46-year-0\d businessman will face charges ol assa ult on a police officer, interfering with the duties of a police officer, disturbing the peace, and operat· ing airport night landing light.! without a permit. He was jailed Monday night after he allegedly used profanily and shoved an olficer investigating a citizen com- plaint that the airport runway lights were being used after dark. 'l'urner was released on his own recognizance shorUy alter being booked on the charges. ' '· ! GEM TALK ,. J i . , ... ... '; " • ... ·' . ' ... F TODAY by J. C. HUMPHllD THE LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fa scinate me most, reply is difficul t because each has ils own fa sc inating his· tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting: for cen· turies the cool look of this legend- ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but fhls gem was the subjeCt of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be- lieve lt devine, that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and tow relief figures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyr•mids, thi s continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in li-texico. Some people believe jade Is found only In museums; but today, exquisite jade jewelry is available to all, and may be found in our store. One vlcUm Is 18, rrom Costa Mesa and the other is 15, from Corona dtl Mar. They told police they were picked up about 9 p.m. Monday in the 100 block of North Coast Hlghway by a man 35 to 40 years old. Driving north. they claimed he drew a pistol and pulled off in the Crystal C.Ove area where he tied their hands and threatened them again, thi.s time With a knife. He allegedly forced the younger victim into the back seat and raped her there, then drove back to San Juan Capistrano where be ravished the older girl. Tbe pair said \hey were dropped off at Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard, where they obLained a detail· ed description of the 1ssailant's car as be drove away. Huntington Firemen Check Fire at Motel Hwitiogton Beach firemen are in- vestigating a "suspicious" fire which caused 18,000 damage to a model home this morning at 20732 Bushard Sl The fire W!U discovered 1t 6:30 1.m. It caused $4 ,000 damage to the struclure and $4 ,000 to the contents. No other details were aveU1ble at pres.!! time except the cause i..! "suspicious." Police searching the surrounding area rocovered a hat, striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi identified as being wOrn and used by the 11 to 26-year-0ld robbers. Postal Burglar Gets Six Months One of three men who attempted to burn their way into the Huntington Beach Post Office safe and what would bav• been a haul of more than $100,00ll in "stamps has betn sentenced to sit months in federal prison. U.S. District C.Ourt Judge Manuel Real imposed that tenn on Sol Kaye , 58. and ordered the Cincinnati, Ohio, man to serve five years on probation after his release. Kaye was found guilty after a trial in Loa Angeles federal court. Kaye was one of three men discovered by U.S. postal inspectors last April as they used acetylene torches to cut thelr way into the post office safe at 8771 Warner Ave. Federal officers are still searching for Kaye 's accomj)lices. For a dynamic gift ... 1a D~mic watch · An Omega Dynemlc can make any gift· \Giving occa1lon an unusual one. Tilt unlqu1 horizontal oval.:shaped case waa specially de1 lgn1d tor greater ;witch weiring comtort ••• 11 flla the wrlat llkt a glO'll'. ! 1Wllh cool comfortable taalty Interchanged llro\ltnted •tr•P..1 1 .. ll·wlf\Cllno, cl•lt·lltllllO OrM;1 Oyn,,.,1c, •t1lftltH 11••1 Wlltr r.1ltt•11t ~lie, AJ"""Mitd lllllfcl'IUIDtl~/1 l trt• , ••• , ••••••••• , .t 1 llM M111ui1-wlNI lllfftl wfflOVI t•l•ndtr •••• 171.60 J. C. fiumrJhrieJ Jeu1eler:1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANICAMERICARD-MASTEACHAA'f 24 YlA-S IN SAM' LOCAT ION f'HONf 14S·)401 r Drug --, Council U·rged Justice Council Asks Improved Tre~tment By TOM BARLEY Of 1111 ~II~ l"llet Sti ff Immediate Creation of a drug abuse council and the strengthening o f "woefully inadequate" treatment and rehabilitation facilities for drug and alcohol users in Orange County is urged in a 26-page report compiled by the Orange County Criminal Justice Council. The 21-member investigative agency ended a six-month probe into growing drug use in Orange CoWJty by calling on the Orange County Medical Associa· tion to •·initiate and maintain a con- Co11ii1ig Oait tinuing program t&. ~ tbe en Ure com- munity make beUoir. Informed decisions obout the use of i!ruls oi all kinds." It also calls oa' Or'aDae eollnty school boards to reVi~" their policies for disciplining ~ Offenders' and suggest! that school admi:~tors "re'view health curricula for em ·' on ,boUi lhe risks of using drugs .. or ill ~ aoid on pMitlve approactiu to personal ad- justment." ExecuUve Officer Keith i Concannon s~ J)ubUcaUon '~ the _report will be ., ttilr s. Mamie Eisenhower, wido\v of the late President. enjoys eve- ning at International Debutante Ball with her granddaughter, Susan EJaine -Eisenhower, one ,of this year's debs. Event was Tuesday night in New York. Susan is sister of David Eisenhower, husband ol Julie Nixon. who is daughter of President. ~ Commission Jobs Ope11 As County Board Changes Positions on four county advisory com- missions will be open to new ap.. pointments next week when two new cgunty supervisors take office. Appointees to the harbor, planning, airport and fish and game commissions serve terms concurrent with t h e supervisor who names them to the groups. New supervisors are free. of course. to reappoint current commissioners but neither Ronald Caspers in the firth district nor Ralph Clark in the fou rth have indicated their intentions. Office holders whose terms expire Jan. 4. are in Supervisor Alton Allen's fifth district, Donald Killian J r., airport; Allen Grubb, harbori Harold Ekman, plaMing, and Thomas Forster, fish and game. In Supervisor William lfirstein's fourth district the present commissioners art Howard Lathrop, airport; Gene Thom8.'l, fish and game: Frank Mead, harbor, and John Mcinnis, planning. The board meets next l\tonday to reorganize and the new supervisors may or may not make known their intentions at that time. Present appointees lo the commissioners serve until a successor is named. Board Applies Brakes To County's Spending Orange County Supervison alarmed by increasing demands on available cash. decided Tu esday to delay for at least two "·eeks the purchase of $535,000 worth Medical Teams R11sl1 to Israel Slide Vi ctin1s BEERSHEBA . Israel (UPI) -l\1edical teams were rushed today to the border village of Neot Hakikar following reports a rockslide had burled 40 persons, police iOtJrCCS said. First reports of the incident were sketchy. Some said the slide buried 40 Israeli soldiers eating in a mess hall, killing and wounding many. Other reports said the dead and injured were civilian settlers of Neot Hakikar, which is about IS miles ~th of the Dead Sea and aboct one mile west of the Jordan cease·fire line. Army sources in Tel Aviv said they \\'ere investigatint the reports but had no further information. Neol Hakikar i~ a settlement In the desert below the salt pan_, of the Dead Sea about 10 miles south of the Biblical sin city of Sodom . Unlike IJ(l me other fronti er settlement In the Ar:)va Desert it is a civilian and not paramilitary settlement. of refuse dispasal equipment. Wilh only half of the current fiscal year gone by, the county has been jolted by a succession of fed eral cuts in health and welfare funds. To add to the financial gloom. County .Administrative OfflcCr Robert E. Thomas has predicted that a 14-cent tax increase may be necessary next year lo cover a $5.2 million drop in revenues. Thomas blamed federal and slate cuts in Medi-Cal and mental health programs for most of the problems. This year's $212 million budget re- quired d three-cent tax Increase when the state made a last minute reduction in its Medl·Cal contribution. Recently. the state has ordered even greater cuts in the program. Thomas said the county already Is committed to drawing $500.000 from its $1 million reserve fund to replenish \\'elfare aid to families with dependent children. The deficit was caused by an upsurge in the number of families re- quiring financial assistance. The delay in buying the refuse disposal equipment was opposed by road com· missioner Al Koch who said a study would reveal nothing new. "The equip- ment wears out and our figures prove that it is more economical at a certain point to replace it then to continue repairs." To guard agalruit further surprises the :;upervisors asked Thoma,, to establish a priority list for other anticipated purchases. followed by tts submission to the Orange County Board of S•pervlsort wltb tbe request that the drug abuse cooncll be created and directed by a full time executlve officer who would b e , technically, a meinbf!r of the oounty administrator's staff. . .Funds. to meet the cost. created by forn;iation of the council "may become avaftabte from other SOtu'ces through an awareness of this report," COncannon said. Criminal Justice Council· grants are normaUy received through combined state and federal SQW"CeS. Among recommendations submitted by a ii.member Special Strike Foree named by the cot.UlCil to investigate drug abuse ln Orange County was the suggestion that civic and service organizl.Uons in Orange County could plan and provide public forums for discussion of drug and other social problems. The Criminal Justice Council itstlf should include representatives cf more human service agencies, dJsciplines and (lO(nmunity interests, the strike force DO.(ed. The Criminal JusUce Council, in its p~nt . form, draws heavily on la\9 enforcement agencies with nine of lls members having that background. Three of the remaining 12 members are at- torneys, three are city councilmen and one is a county supervisor. Another innovation, the strike force suggested, c o u I d be the creation of a "cabinet" formed by heads of human service agencies and the appointment of a youth coordinator. "Agencies providing direct services to the public could use advisory boards to represent community interests," the strike force suggests. It is vital, the report adds, that there be in Orange County "continuing ex- changes between elected officials and the community about current and pro- posed laws regulating drugs." Projects should• include "a cost ef· fectiveness study cf slrategies of drug law enforcement and a review of discre- tionary practices in the criminal justice system," the report adds. "The Strike Force finds the distinction between the use and abuse of drugs a vexing issue in spite of the fact that society condones the use. In modera· tion, of some drugs and deplores the use of others," the report comments. "Whether approaching the control of particular drugs in diffe rent ways best serves society's needs is also a perplex- ing issue." the report adds. No furtHer action on recommendations contained in the report will! be taken until after the Jan. 25 meeting o( the Cr imina l Justice Council, Concannon said. Daugl1ter Wins First Round In Support Case LOUISVILLE, KV. (UPI) - A Uni- versity of Louisville coed who won the first round of her court battle to for.ce her father to support her said she was so "destitute" she could not go back to New York is a retrail were ordered. The coed, whose identity was been with- held because, of the private nature of the case, said her father stopped sending her funds last April because she had adopt- ed a "hippie" style of life and had moved off· campus. New York Family Court Judge Millard L. Midnock ordered the fa ther, who, he said was a prominent law· yer. to either pay his daughte r $5 , 7 S 0 by JUDO~ MIOHOCK noon Monday or serve :'ID days in jaiJ for contempt or court. But the sentence was stayed pending a re- \'iew or the case by the five-judge ap.. pellate division or the New York Su- preme Court . Midnock said at the time of the breach, the girl was on probation at the Univer- sity and suffered emotional problems from being "terrified ... ol her father 's rigid standards ." In the ensuinc 1nonths. ?o.1idonick said, the girl had improved her grades, li ved wholesomrly and had been restored to good standing at lhe Uni ,·ersity. She had also received psychiatric help and made efforts to visit her tat.her and steP'mOth· er. his fourth wife. The daughter said she was forced lo sell her car for $1,000 to see her through the semester. "I'm destitute right now," she said. "I'm looking for a job. In fact, If they order a retrial, I can't afford to go back to New York." Lio1i Brenda Delive rs Again Christmas morning Brenda, a five-year-old lioness at Lion Coun, try Safari, delivered her fifth set of quintuplets. Bill York, zoological director and ch ief game warden of the 500-acre wildlife preserve, said the average. lion litter is three. Brenda, however, consistently delivers live cubs. • • •• • I { ' , I ' • ) Wtdntsdq, DKembtr 30, 1970 H ' • • • • • • --• • • • • . . •. • • • . } · 1 •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • • • • ' . • • • • • ' .... • • • ... • I • • • • • • • • • .. • • • • • ' • • ' • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • . • • •• • • •• •• 4' ~ . \I . . t I f ••• ANNIVERSARY _ t ·: t ·,. . . . . · J· I . . I 4. '/ I I • .J . • · \ STARTS } . · .. : '.-/ THURSDAY. DECEMBER 31st • . . AT ALL BIGGAR STORES I -~.'/:I I F. ~: ~ ~ I TI ~ /R. E CARPETS, LAMPS . ' A C ·c E S S 0 R I E S • • .. .I· ,. I • "\ l L I SANTA ANA: Mein et El•venth PASADENA : Coloredo et El Molino POMONA: Holt, ••st of Gerey Santa Ana Store Open Monday Ev@nings • • • • • • DAJLY PILOT 3 • • • • • • • • • • • • •• ., ' l ' ' I .. I ,.!' ... ww.a : 'GliOrpf I've ju1t rementbered. Yo11'r• unemployed/' I . -I Ode Prai.ses t t'Al,so R uns' j I By DICX WEST t WASHINGTON -There are 1,040 )players in the NaUcaal Football Leaaue. tBy my calculaUon, compiled durin& a tweetend in front ·of the ttlevision' aet. 1934 of them are "unswig heroes." t arrived at thJs fjgure by taki.l'lg <the number of players identified as ~ heroes In four games and then ~niUJtiplying that by the: number of teama bn the league, divided by the n~ber ft;f pl~bY:-play ~· and analyst.I . l The presence of ao many unsung heroes Jon ihe screen gave my heart a wrench. tnd as tbe caniea. wore on I besan to try to think of oome way to lini them. · At hilltil!le. duriJIC the first 111ne ~Y ~ttmOOn, I even went so tu as to compose a 10f18 about them : "Sia& l 10ft1 of wwung heroe1; "Publicity.wise, a string of zeroes. "How iad it ii io b6 heroic. "And ·noi have anybody but' a television aJl!JfJWl!iir llllow IL "So lift ~ Wice to the hightat ..... "4nd let no hero remain unaunc." ITbelL ~.Jhould be •una to Ibo tu .. of"Badl'1t'l'llird ,Coi!t•ll for iillllr .. d chocus, Op.a 23, fn•D oblrp minor.)_,• 9erfte&.lmea an OUUlder can see Uafnl:1 ntore · clearly than a i:ierson wl» is per.110tt-1lf involved. Therefore, I ,'1ldl• tioned tl!e soni for my Wife, wbo. is very unemotional about football, other than bating it a lol "It &>esn't SClll, Cnzythighs." •he 1 a l d, 1ddrtssin1 me by one of my nicknames. "And huide.s that, if you sin& about an · un1ung hero, he won't be umung any tonaer. and all of those 11ports arinou'qcers will be Unable to iden· tify 934 players." "Well,. they could at.art ~aUing them 'suna' beroei," I said, but I knew deep down that it ·wtlUldn't work. At th4I next time 01'1, and a g a i n while the rtferee was giving the two- minute notice. I blitzed my brains for olh'1' ways to honor wuung heroes. The idea I finally came up with is an N'f'L unsun& hero all·star team. Plus an unsung hero "Hall of Fame" in which the busts of footba ll's most eminent nonenUties would be preserved. Beyond that, 1 would have the UP-I piC:lt an "unsung hero of the week" to provide more frequent recognition for obscure exploit!. And finally. at the end of the season. J would tchedUJe yet another bowl game -the ''Incognito Bowl," featuring the moat anonymous experts in the league. -UPI Convo ys Blasted ·U.S. J ets . ~ak e .-Heaviest RP.i~s SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. J•t light.rs on a strike aaa.inJt ' a North Vietnamese aupply-corwoy on the Ho Chi Minh Trail 1n Laos tria:ered the biggest secondary explosions in five years o( allied born· binas there, reliable military solD'ctl u.id today. The sources said the raid earlier th is wetk prod~ "well over" 2,000 secon· daty exploaions, indicating that large fuel or ammunition supplies were hit. They said ll coUJd have been the most successful bombing mission of the Indochina war. The informants said the secondary ex· pJOlion were "popping off" for more than three hours. The White House diaclosed last week that the Communists were moving sup- plies down the Ho Chi Minh Trail at a rate 30 percent higher in preparation for a new offensive, poMibly in cam· bOclla. The m2 and fighter-bomber strikes against the trail have been the greatest aust.alned effort of the war -or any other war -but reporU from Laos Indicated va5t quantities still were get· ting through. U.S. Defense Secretary Melvln It. Laird has taken note of the big Communist puM down the trail -really a maze of dirt roads hidden from aerial view by dense jungles -and has threatened &o bomb 1upply dumps in North Vietnam KenneA)y Denial O~ '62 Campai gn Af de Retracted WASHINGTON (AP) -'Sen: Edward M. Kennedy (D-Mw.), hd' retraded a dGial that • former auistant postmaster genera1, accused by a senate Btp0blicu oj moJdng lll•pl aJr mall c:onlrlcll, took part in Kennedy's 1961 election campaign. Sen. Gordon Allott (&.Colo.), made the aecuiaUon OI the Senate floor Tuesday qainlt Wlllltm J. Hartipn, a lon&·titne K.nnidy fmilly friend and lidt. Allott. in •t•ilin& Harti&an's role as a White HOUie' adviler uoder former PresJdent John F. Kennedy and as a poolal.~ for lix yun, uld Ha<tli•• lift' -!lit l'!>il llffice DePariment to manap Edward Kennedy'• lint election ' . Cllll . ''l eCt in any way the SUlgUUori that Bill Hartllan lei! th• oervlce of the. government to participate in my campaign," Kenn.edy interjected as AlloU &poke. "That's completely untrue," said Ken· nedy. "He bad ablolutely nothing to do with the catnpaign." Later, however, Kennedy inserted into the Congressional &cord this additional paragraph: "This -morning, in a colloquy with my distinguished colleatue from Colorado, Mr. Allott, l stated that Mr. Hartigan wa1 not invoJVed in my 1962 Senate campaign. ~ bid not encountered him or remembered ms presence in that effort but I am now informed by my ataff that he did come to Massachusetts to do some campaf&n work." Nixon Passes Tests With Flying Colors WASlllNGTON (AP) -President Nixon a id he received a "good b!U of health" in a medical checkup tod1y at the Bethesda Naval Hospital . Nixon arrived at 8:35 a.m. at the hospital and left for the White House at 11:15. Emerging from the hospital he spoke to newsmen and spectators and s1id ht was feeling el.De. ., JI neowuy. to protect American U...., In South Wtnlm. Mllitlry IOW'Ctl 1aid an American forward..--f:i'tontoller (FA.Cl sPotter plane pilot sipted , headllahta moving down a section of the trail leading into Cam· bodia and SouUt Vietnam and called in U.S. A1r Force jetl whose bombs got al moat ·•11n1tant tecondaries." The figb_ter-bombet attack as part of a three-month nonatop elfort to block supplies. BUI have almost 1topped bom- bing targets Jn South Vietnam so they could halt the flow of anoi: and perm.it continuaUon of tht U.S. withdrawal plans. The ltrlk.es were rtparted shortly before tbe. Viet Cona'a three.day cease- fire waa going into effect at 1 a.m. Thur11day (noon EST Wednesday ), 17 hours before the allle:s · betin their own 24-hour ntw year's ceue-flre. Vietnamese Defol iation Havoc Told CmCAGO (tiPI) -American use of defoliant IJ>l'IY1 h11 wiped out one-filth of Vietnam's foratl 1ince 1962 and "virtually nothing reniainl alive'' in some areu, a meeting of 1cienti.sta has been Ibid. Tuesday's M1Slon Of the 137lh meeting of the American Allociltion for the Advancement of Science was the third day in a row with protata from young radicals at the convention. A panel on "Crime, Vic;lleuce and Social Control" had a living demonstration of ita topic when the wife of a University of C!lifornia biologist, "Piqued by in· ltrruptlona from a &r•du•te student, jabbed him ln the arm. with her knittinJ needle. The student, Frank Rosenthal, who studies nuclear phy1ie1 at Columbia Universilf, 1howed }lood on his arm while some ln the audience applauded for Garret Hardin SO. Rosent.ha.l said he wu not seriously injured ; Mra. Hardin .said tbat if Rosenthal were a child, "I would hove told him to stop crying so I could kiss it and make Jt wall." 1 ~ • Arthur R. WestJna, a botanist at Windham . C.alle&e. Putnty, Vl, ··told delegates ~ t'vtrtually nothine re:mainl alive'' 1n the defoliated areas of the mangrove fon1ta alona the coast of Viellwn'a MU.., Delli. , Murder Charges Dropped on 15, My Lai Suspect ·ATLANTA, Ga. IAP ) -Two men reportedly kJdnaped by a motorcycle gang durin1 1 war with AUanta hippies were found today in a rural area south of here -one dead and the (lther seriously Injured. Three men were being questioned in connection with the incident, police said. MeanwhJte, in an apparently related incident, murder charges were dropped against all but. one of 17 persons - including a My Lai defendant -in the shotgun 1layin1 of a motorcycle gang member, Barney Leigh McSberry, 22. of Arizona. Sepe. 4 Robert T'Souvas, who with his wife lived in a boardini house where the shooting occurred, was among thO!e agai nst whom charges were dropped. A murder charge waS left to stand against a man Identified 1s John Wesley Roberts. Storm Perils Teton Climb Avalanches Loom as Threat to Arinual Ascent Temper ature• tY UNITID ,llll IMTllMATIONAL $GUiii ..... C:1lllornl1 hid mo&ll¥ •UO'lft'I' llll;iM fO<tt'I' wltll -"ltlll ..... H rlY ....,"1"' c1111t11 low tlol.ld• •flt 1~1. ...... little lM'lfleft f\IN Chf Mf. LC* A1111 IM lltd Mll'll tl!cllt "It h! 11\d Pl'IOl'"l11t fOll tPld tlouN. WI!" 111111~ ttlCM'I' '"" ThundlY lrtdl<!td t i ... .,..,,. ...... Wtr"'ltl' 111111 Tuet4fY. °""'!1111 1-. r•l!ffd from •r 11 tti1 Civic C:tMtr to t liOUI 40 I" tt'HI t~burtot, Tiit fl""9t'I' OUllMlt wtt f&r ftl, _....,, "'""'*' "" Wlltlcefld, wl!ll TNN Wit 11t ...... Ill "'' l.o. ...... .... att+n toN'I', l(:(el'flM f9 "" A.Jr hll¥tloO'I C....t,.. Olttrl(t. ... Clltt h .. Mldrf """'"1111 1111 f tl(I Cl°"*-with fllthl _, 40 I M ltlt Mou4'1 .. J... tfld ...,.. Wini Ml!'IO'lt .,., wl,,.,.,, wltll ll'lllUfllt lfl hlllllf ,,.. 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S11111m•rt1 t r UHIT•O , •••• IHT•l:NATIONAL F1lr -"*' """'*' "*I ti ,,,_ "''loft .. ,1., teat)' ,,,.,, tutttrM '1'1· Olllllf '"""' "'"'-' "" '-"" ... tltl 'Hiiie Cot1!, A 11omt <fl'fff M-ft I l rtlt ef rt ln t!ld IUI,., Willef IO'I tM ,.tt!l!t Ne- ""'' tftt' w111111 ef I) m1t11 111 !lour t>lt 1 11111111. Men!., Tl.lti4l'I'. l"'trmftttl'll r1l11 dOtttc! NIW Mt:rltlt .... llfl'ltlt•fl , ....... wtllll ·-11~ ... lt• ...,..,,.,. NOtl " hMIYlv1nl1, ,,. .... Ytrlt Ind !ht erMI ~1111, A 11$111111 -nt1l!'I tHmlll111 te~m 11 Grt nd Ttltft j1111k 1111, M-•· Wvo , IHlttled 1 tlllnf i1'!1 11\0WllO"" Tu1i.a1v 11111 trud-ftd 1~11111111 t~t1• IHI ti lfttW, Tiit '2•'1'11,....,111 IM!fe• el t~t IN!Ull !rek .. Jd flltrt Wll I """ltltlty'&I 1v1!1nchu. Al&tl'l'I' AlbutiUf ... Ut Atltnt1 ltttrtllt hf 11....,,.rdc '°'"" OM ... •~1 ... 1111 l uff11o Ci..r1ott• C:lllCt'9 Cli.tfl'l"'ffl c 11.-.111t1111 Dtnvtr Ott Mol11t1 Otffell ltM"Wllffll ·~~ Mo- ll'ICllllllMl!t J1~m1 ltllllfl C:rtt L1-1V .. K l.etA.lttf!t t L!'.10Jl1..i111 M ... 1M1 MltPl'll fti!lwtukff M!l'l,,..IOlll Ntw01'1 .. 11t N1wV&flt O.k11nf Olrlt "°"'t Cllv °"''"' !"tlm ••"'"9• ••to •MIN ltfl!l1111111111 ,.l'l&tlnl• ,.!lttlllll'tll ..... lll O'ld, Me, ,.o-ri11nll, 0'•· ,..,r11 c:11Y •• tl~lf ·- Hltll LllW .. ,.., " ' •I " " • •• • .. n I ., " .., " " " ~ " ' " " ... " n ,. " .. " •• y " ,. .. .. ' ., .. ,, " ,. ,. .. ,. " ., .. ·" " n " " .. " ., • n " " " " ' ·" " • '' " ·" ~ " " •• u ~ u " M ~ u ,. " " " " " •• ·" " • • " "' .. " " " • .. " .&! - -· '• a monumental • occasion I 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Anaheim Savings 11 proud to cel ebrate Its 50th Golden Anni· veraary. Founded In 1921, Anaheim Savings ls the oldest locally own ed Savin gs and Loa n Ass ociation In northern Orange County. We are celebrating 50 years of security, bu t more Im· portant, 50 years of service to our savers that has taught us many things. We have learned that people want more than a place to keep their money. Th ey want a smile and a personal greeting when they come In. In this computerized wo rl d of today, they want to be more than just an account nu mbe r and a dollar amount on a fil e card. At Anah eim Savings you are treat· ad u a parson. We are Interested In you, ever at rivi ng to give you complete aatlafactlon, because ••• your am Ila la Important to us ••• and we hope to remain Important.to you. ALWAYS MORI 1'1111 llRVICll AT ANAHllM IAVINOI SAFE DEPOSIT BOXES l'REE with account balance of $2500 or more PLUS: FREE MON EY ORDER S • FR EE TRAVELERS CHECKS FRl!E NOTARY SERVICE • FREE PHOTOCOPY SERVICE Eam the highest lnteraat In the nati on on Insured savin gs, 5% to 8%, uk for detall1. ANAHEIM SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOC IATI ON MAIN OFPICI: 11TW. Unool"AYI. Anlhllm, C1Hfornll ~llt-11112 411 MllnStltlt Hurttllioton IHch, Ctllfomla LEe.6581 - 710 8. Brta l lvd. l!lrea, Callfornla JAM971 -·- 1921 10180 M1Qmill&Avt11U1 fillYll'lldt, Ctllfornll &87·2210 1971 " l • . I I I .. . - -• • . ' -tain .Valley ·*··-· ' .J I •, ·-' . '. . . - .VOl:.J>l, NO. l 13, l SECTIONS, 38 fAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA --. • .. . • • -.. .. ~· } J. • ~ -• -• ~ • """.l!r • . ' . --. ' Huntington Chamber S£ts ~reewa y M e e tin~ ' • By ALAN DIIUUN Of 1111 o.111 ........ " .T\ie' .,N,ew Ye{U' m@y well start w,ith a new light over the Huntington Beach FreewaJ. ~v~opmenls in Huntington Beach and Fountain Valley indicate that a drive may be launched to reopen hearlngs on the controversial route adopted by U\t state Highway Commission in 1968. ,With renewed tntcrest in the freeway -.. Route 39 -growing in government. busineoa, llld tcbool circles In w .. t Orange County communlUU, the H~ tington Beach Chamber or Commerce has scheduled · a full-blown p a n e l discussion ~on the latest highway in- formation. . More than 50I lnvlt&Uons have been sent to leaden in Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley, Westminster and Garden Gtoft to attend a noon luncheon at the Sberalon'.lleach Inn Jan. 9. C!lamber Pr..ident Pete Horton said that latest stati, county, llld cKy tblnlt· Ing on the HunUnitcn Beach Freew1y, the Pacific C.OUt Freeway and U>e Orange Freeway will be reviewed -it the hmcheon. Qu..ucins to ho ~ will ho the ef(ect of re.routing tbe_Huntington Beach Freeway, when the c.ost Froewoy mlghl be built, and 1he current ataiul of tbe Orange Freeway. The colling '. of .U.. me.ting follows 1 call by a HuntinlloO Beach :r..idenl, ... ..... . . .. -.- Theft Thwarted Beach Guard Shoots Tires of Car Huntington Beach security guard Den- ni& Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a department store theft by shooting out tbe rear· tire on an escape car filled with four fleeing bandits. Dahlke, regularly employed as a detec- tive with the Orange Police Department, ls a guard at Huntington Center. He fired five shots at the careening car and one ' bounced off the rear bumper, but 1nother ripped through the left rear tire. . _ 1be incident began at 7:10 p.m. when a J. c. Penney's Company stDre employe saw three men and a woman in a Jeopard.. akin coat trying to steal 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and be coftfronted the thieves as they at. tempted to leave qie store parking lot in the 'e9Zape car. He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run .him down, Dahlke told police. That's.when the •hooting started. ·: Dahlke pumped five 8hots at the car which was found abandoned one ho.ur later with the shot-out rear tire. It was located by Fountaht Valley police at the intersection of · Bus.':ard Slreet and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparently esciped on foot but all of the. sjolen qnifonrui wen! recovered from the auto. Police later indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke Ls a fonner -Huntington Beach patrolman.. He is eJl!P~ed .eartrtime. as a PeMey's security pard. Ocean View Override Election Set Blast Tra 36 . ' BJ RUDI NIEDWL'lKI Df a. o.lfr ,.,.., stilt! T.upayers in the -Oceao View School Diltrict will be asked to ante up for the fducatlon of elemetitary school children again during an override el~ tcbeduled for Feb. 9. 'lndal(ados' But while other school districts are tsldDg for an increase ln1 expenditures, trusteeS of the 22-school Ocean View dlitrict are requesting merely a con· UnuaUon of the current $2.75 rate per SlOO of assessed valuation for the nut [ive years. Franco Commutes Death "We would have lilted an inoea.se, but the board fell, with current economic ~dltion!, the r'hte should be kept the 1ame," a-plained District Superintendent Clarence Hall. "It would ~ a poor Ume to levy additional taxes, so we Sentences of 6 Basques wantedtoholdtheline." BURGOS , Spain (UPI) - "If the economy were booming, we Generalissimo Francisco Franco tonight would have asked for more things the commuted the death itentences of six district needs. But as things are, they Basque nationalists convicted of murder jmt had to be priced out." . d band.if ... , th u ; .. ;.,~, of Inf t• The!e items, Dr. Hall said, Include !::Oounced~ 3 ' e .............. 3 onna ton foreign language instruction, the. im· The announcement said the sentences provement of older schools, sprinkler systems, instructional .materials centers had been·commuted to "the next highest and a fine art.! program. , sentence passed." The next highest ·M1lntenance of the U.75 rate, which sentence passed by the Burgos military Includes a $1 .25 override, would simply court -waa 72 years. cootinue the district's current educaUonal Franco planned lo explain his act!on ~grams, according to school officials. in . a yearend address to the nation "Voters approved that rate for a two--tomibt He has been under mounting ftar period in May of 1969 it allowed _.pressure from European governments ttfe district to establish a summer school and the VaUcan to c~ute ~ death am. double Its expenditures for in. Bentenc_ea and faced J>:O~lble ~despread Uonal materials. establish small WU'ellt ~ northern SpaU1 if he di~ not. tittaries at each of the schools and There wu immediate reaction from f'n13nce one field trip per year for each tbe __ VaU~n which said It hear~ of the :-·r.··: commutation wtth "enormous relief." ~~Pik~;g the weeks before the election ' Franco took the action after a special gf°~all and other district "dmlnlstrato~ meeting with his cabinet and the council wjD. have to buck the opposition of a of the realm, an adviJory group made up or parliament memben. The official news agency CIFRA an- nounced the verdict by flashing lhe Spanish word for pardon "Indultados. lndullados. Indultados." The men themse.fves Rel awaiting news of their fate in ~ certtr•I prJson of Burgos, in cells with pi,ne.leU windows and temperatures at the freedng point. Had Franco not acted· the six men would have beeil shot by a tirlng squad or sarroted wilh a steel battd atound their necks at dawn Thursday. "nl•Y had been convicted by a military court of murd er and banditry. The news agency reported the verdict shortly before Franco was to dell ver his annual New Year's speech to the nation. A few hours earlier Capt. Gen. Toma! Garcia Rebull, commanding officer of the Burgos mllltary region, confirmed the death sentences and the jail terms of ~ other Basques, putting clemency d~edly up to Franco. Curran suggested tha:t the · route be But Mayor Derek ~cWl)iniie1 of rtallgned roughly ftom a point Just above Westminster poured-ocold··wattr 'oo Ule the San Diego Freeway In Wl!StmlnlJter. proposai ' lriSteadr or, soing dowli ·N;wland st·reet ''W h. Int ~ In ...... .,.~ tM Ire.way would ... be '-&rected . 00.,. *"' • e ave no er~~ ...... ~our 11 cie -'1nle !rOnl...,,.•'--·r Ii .P.,uOI!." he ulcl. 'We are l8lisfled =~~ •. . """'""~ .__. 11h· the d· 1·•··-'"-and ·1n· 1·--e across . .pc_aCh BouJ.c.v¢ to -·°*mt w . a op ICU rou.i.c -... Street a.nd then llDk wttb tbe · Coist want d speeded up." Freeway at ,Main, Street. •• , He,.,pointed out that the Westmlnster Tb&.JI~ liaocLdty lowiCll 'bU •• -..U'TICelJ!lll pMaed 1•resotullcn call· ms~ ·i!i pl..-:C::to::'!'"it hot -•liii for"!tbe slOle to ,pe.!f up consti:uclion this change.'fOUld affeg~j!l{. -~ ~-... ,See FREEWAY, Pap I) DAK. Y PILOT Stitt ,...... ' . -· , . . ' Driv e-in line«)I . . · Giris:OO ~or1~1l3ck. waitiii'eir 'tum '.behind auto aC 'else:"TlieQiiiil8gemenl ~oesn't' say hi>\\' custOfiiirs 'dilve'hi dairy on Beach .Boulevard in Hunt!Jl,gton s4•uld·arrlve and, the bo.rses don't 1eem )o ,m~ · . Beach. :Glrls 'l'd tbellj anunals dr"ll. in1for a snack , , s~g . s~ou!Uer to .fender with ' the me<;h"nlc¥ ,now arut-then, wal!h).~in lip' jpst ~i.ke1 ,"'.'1°ii!OdY L,.,"con.v;e,Y,~!.8·.~i ' . c . , 1 • .; •• , , • ~ •', , \ , ,. • , t • , • j I l 1 1 • • • 9 ) ·11e ~ · ~,~·~·: ·· .. ~. ·-· ~11~··\Strikes A-g· 'ai;., ..,. ~-:J... I I 1 ! , ' Kasabian .. · Rohs Bea~Ji:.itiquor Sto re 'Thre atened' 0 LOS ANGELES (UPI)· _\ii,. defense chatged today at the Tate-LpBlanca murder '\r ial that it was "humanly. lm- p(mible'' for ' the 'key state wllfl:m: to teii the tr;uth abolit .the slaytn'gs because she wi! thre~tened with· proeecution hei'self.1 . :trvtng Klnattk, the • attorney for Cb.atlel Manson, slid that Linda" Kasa· blah. Kave ..the answers the._ pr~Uon wanted in return for being granted bn· mlinlty in the seven killings. . . ' Kanarek a!JO li>ld the jory that the · pr.ost!cutiOP had .produced no evidtnce what.soeVer of a· coru:piracy . h~ded by Manson. 1'Linda Kasablan said she did not know of any intent to kill anyone," Kanarek said. "She waa a C<K:ilnspirator who · did noJ know anything about a con. spiracy." The conspiracy charge was brought in, Kanarek said, because there was no way of convicUng Manson of the actual alayin&s. ''There w-. just no 1howing of any cOll.!lpiracy," Kanarek said. . "The motive Of the people who brought that charg~ was to get Charlie Manson for some ungodly reason which is pro- (See .MANSON, Pose Z) ,. 'Striking again with hir tf!US'ty. frontier.- style revolver, the bes p e ct a c 1 e d Barbarella·ln·black · ran a · ·stnn&:' ol. Orange Couaty.boldupo toWard 'tbe 'c!Ozip mark Tue"1ay nighl In HunUnrtoo Be1cb. . ' . . . F14 Fight~r Jet ·' Crashes on 2nd Testing Flight . ,RlVERHEAD, N.Y. (UPI) -The FH. S.wing·Wlng ·~fi&hter, successor to the Navy's version of tbe controven;ial Flll, cr&shed on its secorid · Olgl:it today· as it was attempting a J'andlng aild wu "wiped out," a Grul\lman Co r11. spokesman said. Test pilots Willia?" Miller ind Robert Smythe, ejected and j>arachuted tO aafety JU.st before the pla,ne crashed on a: rUnway at the Grumman. Air. Field at C'alverton, next to· the Long Island ex· pressway. In W113hiogton, a Defense Department spokes.min, Jerry Freidhelm, said frUtial . reports indJca1ed the crash wu camed. by "some sort of hydraulic ·maJfuhctlon." She :naohed the .38 ,caliber aun 1t clerk Larry Raran in BIDy Dow's Liquor Stott.' 11135t Beach e'lvil., tucked ' l80 Jnt0 her black purse and made a smooth 1etaway. . . OJ:Juige c.ost lawmen charae the 1-dy l>an4ll · -oflen aW!lcbtog wigs ind eyegi,.ss 'frames -has · hit a nuinber Of 'Uquor ·stores, markets and."'-a· ·eosta Mesa-drive· In theater, sinCe early ~m­ bor. · Ont Job was pulled during the Christmas holiday weekend. Described u being in her e8]1Y ·*• the femafe bandit rob.bed. the Huntingtoa. Beach·store about 9:35 p.m. Tuesday. Her pollsbed .approach is intended to keep vlctims ·calm. · , . "Don~t ·get" .nervous, \an I want b: the· moqey," she aald~s she acooQed up the cash and then ordered Raran to lie behind the counter as she made her getaW!Y· Allhou&h police olllcm,.summoned by a 1ilenl alarm·, .Wamied over the area wltlihr mtm,tea afle~·the liOldup,' they were unabl~ to find a trace of her. One of her mos.t luCI;.&Uve stickups occurredJ"o·weeks ago In soutb• Oranae County, where she obtained about ''500 from a llquir store. tfipayer'1 organization called the Coun· cit~ Sensible Taxation (CX>ST). Claire Kelley, chairman of the group, co.tends that a "no" vote on the measure woOld be more attuned to present eeMOmic conditions and c u r t a i I (:ivic Center Study Set The FH'a firsl lilgbt, which listed just 10 . minutes, wa1 conducted sue-· cessfully Dec. 11 and the next day Navy Secretary John H. Cha!ee christened tbe plane "the Tomcat." Grumman · got the contract to build the Ft• two years ago alter . the Navy. hai~ la participation , In the ·Uouble- plagued Fllt program ••use that plane was unsufiable for aircraft carrier opera· tlonil, ind tlie first '26 · Fib alttady are· on the assembly line at the Grumman' j C.ut ' unrealistic spending. ''In May 1969. when the Ocean View Dtstrlct's request for a $1.25 override wll' passed, it was admitted by the 1~inlstration that •9-cent.!I would cover ttiJ:' actual need,'' wrote Miss Kelll.y In ?,it ballot argument which will be mlUed to alt voters. "l'bis means that for the past two • (Se< OVERRIDE, P11e 1) ~ • j s~ach P.arking • To Cost More ·It wlO cost $1 a day to park by the aatlls in Huntington Beach next year, "'l\e state has increased Its rates for the Huntington St.ate Park and Bolsa Olfca beacbea ffom 75 cents to $2 and um week the city council authorized a aimilM Increase for the municipal beach ~lot. 1!\0 110 seHOIW pa!!! will allll ho 1vollable to regular visitoro al both the cliy and state beaches. • • Architects to Esti1nate Cost of Community Project Bjo TERRY COVILLE ot tflt Dtltr rlltl lhlff Take your pick. Fountain Valley will have, (1) a full civic auditorium, (2) another multiple use hall, (3) nothing. 'lbe city COWlci1 diSCUMed civic center eipanslon Tueoday nlgbl The only certain things coming out of the discussion were: -Police headquartera will be doubled in size wilh a 3,000..square.foot addition at an approximate cost of $100,000. -Another 4,000 square feet will be added lD cily hall for roughly 1150,000 to $200,000. -At least $2l0,000 in improvements mu.st be added to the city corporation ya rds. City Manager James Neal informed the council that $800.000 would be .available at the end of flacaJ yei.r 1971·72 for civic center upanaioo. By the Ume councilmen tolailed the I needs of police, city hall and corwratlon yard facilities, there was only $300,000 left for the most controversial lfem - community center exeansion. ' "That isn't enough. I'd rather not spend a peMy," declared CCUor.ilmo,n Ren Shenkman. "I'm scared to death of pOttlng 'lrp a facility that won 't mett our ultlmlte needs," he added • Some civic groups have asked for a fixed seat auditorium . with apace for 1,500 seats. "With $300,000 we could build a 40«at auditorium," chipped in Counclhnan John Harper. The council finally agreed tO further studies of' the eommunity .-.w· pall!!lon and perhaps other · ~ · methods. " • ~ '"' Hatpe< ouaeit'Od l!aildl111 ..,.;e11n& rooms at each park and that perhaps , no community center addition 11 ~ed. He also said U a fixed seat ~um I I! i>Uilt, I( mlghl also ho used for cily council chamben, thus eliminating a · new council room planned for city hall. "ll the people of this city really want a $11 million auditorium we should know it and find a way to do it. We have to fiDd ol1l ~:they want It enough, to pay for it," Shenkman 'said. A smaller fixed seat auditorhnn was also 1Uggested as being adequate !Or community needs. The patis' ind 'rteniatk>n commission re<:cmmended a rilulll'JIWl)OSe building with a stage .. Commtssionen said ,the.lr nicommendotlon ,.,, baaed oil tbe avlllablllty <Jf only llOll:OOO •. The COl!ricil'•gned to a 11,SOO'Clllllnct • wllh ~ 'irchlttctml . flnn <Jf Blunick ancl 'AlacClltes• to ' do cool .. u11111 .. on •lftbe,bulldiilp, plus eotlm,tea for 1he colnmunlty. center1 expansion ranging ,from a 1Jmple tilt-up hall to a ftlI1 J,500'aeat clvtc-'audltorlum: • plant. · , · Cbafee 1ald earlier. Uie'Nayy plinned to order '122 of the Fl4s, rOr: a 1 total· ~ ol 183 bnuOn ol l!U mllllon . per p~~ . ' Oldest ·U.S. Gorilla I Celebrates .Birth~y ' PljlLAl!ELPHIA CA1') -M1111, tbe okltel ,,Uvlng llOl'illl In .e1ptlvlty~ celebrated another blrth~y 1t tl>e Phl11ddphia f.co tcdoy. Ho ii 40, perboi>s over.' 1 The. big gorllla w11 given to the zoo by 1 Bn>o~, N.Y., woman who hod railed · him'· and ,lits brother unUI they got too big and dingercus. The brctller went op to a clrcm. ' . Wei.tier . . I The morning fog may chill the ; air, but we don't care: tbe ' skies • will clear up by noon and tfte temperature along the coast will be up to 65, with a n reading in. land. INSIDE TODAY . When Oral'Jae co·unt1111 t1'ro mw supervi.sori take of/ict, ~ti/ ma11 appoint new mf11'l,. beri io four coU'ntv adviloTJ,I' commissiom. Pa.a~ 3, . . , -H """ "' ~ n C.llfllnl• 7 _.,... 11-U MlltlNll ,...... 14 c__. ~ " ~-ti ~ "":· Qc&Mh ' II --.. l =~fY1J: --' -' -= , ... ' • _...... tf,:rf ltlllidi U·ll -" ....... ..,. ,. .. ..-.,. ' . .... t \: 1) Of, .... ,.. ,4 ltMl .......... 1 .. 11 ·-.. -.... -. .._ ....... '"'' --.. j \ \ ·. - • 'Town Meeting ' Vt!lley Plans Sessio·ns Fount.In Valley officials aro laytJlg plans for a series of town hill meetlnp to bring city aovemment to the crau roots. '!be first tllCh session will be h<ld Jan. 21 1t the Fulton School PTO meeting. Most departm~l heads and at least two city councilmen will attend the PTO meetlng to answtr·que.tiom and discuss the locll aovemment. ''We th1nt by Using the 9Chools and their PTO l1"0UJll we will gl!:t better rtlpOme:, more people attending," Jim lb: Exercise ' --Jloliywao¢-... lo Ille cll7 ......... ,· oplaJood. -t Thi Idea _..1rom Councllmon John Harper's desire fOr closer communication with the people and the lack of at· tendance at city council meeUngs. "As a group we might answer questions from the genera l audience. Then we'll break into smaller groups so the people can talk to the department head about apecific problema,'' Hollywood said. He added that card! might be handed out with room for question,, and com· plaints about city activit.:ies. Physicians Say President In 'Excellent' Condition From Win Strvlcu for piore exercise. Golf and swlmmlnl on the orange He differed slightly with one of his Coll! -be •"·lmmedi•te New Year's penonal physicians, Air Force Brie. Gen. ,... rd Walter R. Tkach, on the urgency of ru:tluUon for President Nixon, who bea takin& a break away from executive ~ -. an Ille llllto of '~ health duUfl in Wuhlnllon. . ~ Gen'. Tkach uJd he should vacaUon Oranp County's number one cftiz.en 8•••• F'· • --' L...-1.1. annual checkup at In Sin .Clemente or Key -yne, wi., em. ...... nuw 1-In. the next week or two. the U.S. Naval HCJIPhal, Bethesda, M;d.. l'I hive-no ueuae," President Nixon w1111 l>oth lood -· and a pr-1ptlGo :told -~poriers. attor ccmp1elln1 the Sword-wielding Burg~ Draws Prison Sentence A burlfar wbo. pitied 1t11 Pord a1811ist a Huotfnstoll Jleacb hcmeowner'1 .41- callber plltol In a pre.dawn duel, !u oentenced MOlldl¥ lo one lo ten "'°" In slate priloo. • •. ta-., Anthony JohnlOll, 2$, L6ng Beach. drew that &lltlence from 0r..,. County Superior Court Judie James F. Judp after pleadlq 111llty to cltargea that he bur1larized the home of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Olivares, 3292 Easter Circle, Jut Sept. 24. Officers said Johnaon grabbed the sword wben be awoke Mrs. Olivares In the bedroom and used the w .. pcn to tbrtaten bet bmba.nd when he tried to come to grips 'lltllrtbe intruder. Olivares aa.td be wimtd Johnson , wav· Ing the gun for emphasis: "beat it or 1'11 put a hole through you." O{ncetl sald Jobnton beat It II IU' u a nearby canal where he wu arr~ by Hunlll!Cton Jieach police llM:lly thereafter. , Judie Judie d1smlssed addJUonal chargu of wault with a deadly weipon. Lloyd Johnson Funeral Slated Funeral aervicu for Lloyd E. Johnson, '1, owner of Johnton Glau Co. in Hun· tlngton Beach, will be h<ld at 2 p.m., Tbundly in Smith's Funeral Chapel. Burial will follow in Westminster Memorial Park. Mr. Johnson died Monday of a heart attack. He lived at 1205 Lake St. and was a resident 1n Huntington Beach the put 1.3 years. 'lbe Rev. Thomas W. Overton of the Fint Chrlltlln Qrurcb will handle funeral ceremonies. Mr. Johnson 11 survived by bis wife, Betty; a daughter, Mrs. Larry Taylor of Xansu; a son, Randy Johnson of the borne; his mother, Mrs. Thelma Ferrll: a sifter.i Lorraine Ferris of Anabtlm ; and two srandchildren. DAILY PILOT DAANtl COAIT PUI Ll»!INO COMPANY l•liiri N, W••4 ,,... .......... f'l*lllW Jtck l. Cvrlt't Vk.t Pmlftllt-.4 ~·· ~ Th•m• k•eYil (fl!M' Tlielllff A. Mur,hh11 M•Mtllll lfl,w Al•11 Drr•i11 W•t °''* c;ou,,1y ~-Albt.t W, lit" "-"'" Ellltor H1ath4tw .... Offkl9 17175 a.111! lo1l1v1r4 .Mtllr~t Ad411n1 P.O. kx 7tO, t2MI o...,_ Lt.-ltldli nt 1<1N11 _._ Collt MM : ut W..1 l 1y Str..r ,._.., lttCll: 2211 W•t l1tbo1 loulMrC IN CJtM.i"' al ""'1fl I.I Ctnllrlt lt .. l checkup. He was quoted as lellilg Gen. Tkach he would try to 1et aome fun in tbe sun u aoon u be can get out [rom . UDder the presa of duUes in the capi\01. '1 am concerned because ·1 doD't ~want him to get iato trouble," the military pbyalc1an expllined, altbou&f> he ..... generally enthualutic '-bout Nixon '1 . w bealth. . t ... ~ New-.uked U .the Pl>aident could • continue ·:at his prelent executive pate -~ mlnue 'the presCrlbed exercise and telanUiii\-, wltbouf physlcOl lwm. • , (i1•m not bettin& OD It," llJd Tkach. •'The P[.flldent ii reailY. in , exctlient health," he added IOUowinC-U.. tw.:hour llel1ia of n1edical .teata, to avold .. belna mism'Jderstood. Tkach almost waxed poetic over the presidential blood pressure. "This is a young man's blood pressure -ideal," he remarked, saying the readlog_ wu 111 over 82, compared to 128 av.er 80 about a year ago when Nixon ~ilbed two pounds more. He is al.lo down lo ·170 pounds, with clear lufip, gooid blood analyaia readings and excell•nt muscle and lklD tone for a man';iif hii lie and duties. Tk&Ch wu displeased, however , that the P.reddentJolfed only four times this year .. l.WD rarely and cut down his bowling. Jury Compl.etion Near in Mesan's '!rial on Rape ·Jury selection in the kidnap-rape trial of Gary Harold Phoenix moved into its final stages today in the Orange County SU(>erior Court. of Judge William Murray. Phoenix, 29, Costa 1.-iesa, Is acCU!ed of 33 separate charges of kidnap, rape, sex perversion, aasauldt with intent to commit rape and· robbery. Investigators claim that at least uven v.·omen, ranging iii ages from 18 to 48, have been the victims of Phoenix's aexual aaaaults. Those alleged attacks took place in six Orange County com· munities, amoftg them HunUngton~Mach, Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Charges filed against the former assis· tant manger of a Huntington Beach health spa have led lawmen to cpmpare the case with that of Caryl Ctiessman, the CO;'Jvicted rapist who died in the gas chamber after years of fighting the guilty vetdlct at appellate court level. The conviction of Phoenix on the 33 felony charges could. tecluUcally, lead J udge Murray io impose the death sentence under the terms of Callfornla's ao-called "Little Lindbergh law." The prosecution already has indicated it will .seek the death penalty in the case. Rites Scheduled For Jack Kell y Graveside funeral suvlces will be held Thursday for longUme Sunset Beach property owner and yachtsn\l.n Jack T. Kelly, who died Wednesday in Altadtna. Rites will be at 11 a.m. in Mountain View Cemetery. San Bemardlno. ~Ir. Kelly, S9. of 15665 S. Pacific Ave., bought land In Sunset Beach 30 years ago and moved to the coast 10 years ago alter managing a hotel in Needles. He was in lhe yacht rin11ncing buslnes.s locally and belonged to I.he Huntington Beach Rotary Club, the Elk.! and the Masonic Lodge. Survivors ineludt IUJ wlfe, Katherine, son, John. and a daughttr, Mrs. Linda Coyle of Santa Monica. The family suggests memorial con· tributions to LaVin1 HO!pital for Rt&piratory Disease. 3900 N. Uncoln Avt .• AltadeM, v.·here Mr. Kelly was a paUent. • ~ a11o< 11111-llltlntl 10 city Pia oa tjle reverse side of the card&· and asking lhdlvlduals to ratW: thOH goals so U1e city can set up priorities. "Fu.lton ls the pilot m e e t i n i , ' • Hollywood said. "'If it works. we'll set. up meetings with other Groups at each school." Each town hall session will be open to the public, but is delsnged primarily for the area served by the school. So far no · n\eetings are scheduled to follow the Fulton ses,,ion. l'rom Page 1 OVERRIDE. •• years, they have bttn receiving 76-cents per $100 more than necessary." Dr. Hall, however, argued that the excess was applied to educational enrich· ment which may mean the difference between a good or a mediocre school system. "That dough went into t h e classrooms,'' said Dr. Hall. "All one haa to do U look at the reading scores during the pre-override and during the past-override period to be convinced." Norman GjMburg, dire;ctor of the district's pupU persoMel services office, said lbat last year Ocean View studenta for the ttnt time scored at or above state and .niltional norms. These in- creases wire attributed direcUy to an improved reading program instituted through override funds. "Before the override our figures were staUc," be said. "Now, for the first Ume, we ·have moved off center in co.mpariSOI to children around the na· UOn," he" said. · Acrosa: tbt board lnciases in the read!~ c11p1'billties of y°"1nJ!:sters were r~ 1°' grades 1-1 on the Stanford Reldint Test. and the Cooperative Primary Re8dlng Test, said.Ginsburg. 4jWbat th1I means is that the teachers had more mt:terlala to work with as a re11Jlt of the oVerrlde," be added. 'l . . Prom Page J MANSON ... bably related to Mr. Ma1180n's lile style," Kanarek said. All four defendants were absent from the courtroom when the trial rerumed today. Manson's attorney had begun his por· tion of the final arguments Tuesday by handing the jury bloody color photograph! of the bodies of the victinu. It was the first time the' seven men and five women bad ~n the pictures close up. They passed them around quickly and one woman juror refused even to glance at them . "What tbe prosecution wants to discuss with you in this case are these prejudicial photoa:raphll," Kanarek said. "They a.re trying to lynch Mr. Manson. They are appealing to the rankest kind of prejudice that divides this country today." Kanarek had to be stopped by Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older when he began addressing one of the older male jurors by name and referring to his experience with "vigilante" grouJ>' in the United States. With the defendants listening in ad· joining rooms by loud.!peaker. Kanarek attacked the publicity surrounding the case and accused the prosecution of terrorist ladles against witnesses. He said the dlStrJct attorney's office had attacked him personally. Older had to shut him off again and lt appeared the trial will be in for several days of stormy ses!ions when Kanarek gets around to the evidence in the case. Chief defense counsel Paul· Fitzgerald preceded Kanarek, telling the jury lt was quite feasible that someone other than the "Manson Family" committed the seven slayings. Fltzgerald 11aid the fact that a fingerprint of Patricia Kttnwinkel was found at the residence could be expla ined by the possibility that she \fas a house guest who had been invited to the home by Sharon Tate for a swim. Fitzgerald cast doubt on t h e truthfulness of the prosecution witnesses. He particularly ripped into the testimony of Mrs. Kasabian that she went to the Tate home with Oiarle.s "Tex" Watson, 1.-1iss Krenwinkel and Su.san Alkins. rilrs . Kasabian testified that she never actually entered Ule house but Fitzge rald · pointed out that her knife was the only weapon found by poli« at the scene. Mrs. Kasablan had said she gave the knife to Misa Atkins. "It is just a~ reasonable .to assume that she did enter the house and took part in I.he Jtillinp," Fitzgerald said. ''It ls also reasonable to believe that she was not even with Charles Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel and Susan Atkins but with some other person or persons." Refinary Explosion Believed Accidental LINDEN, N.J. CAP} -An industrial 1ccldent. not sabotage, i.s believed by Humble Oil & Rtfinery Co. officials to have caused an explosion at thtir plant here Dee. 8, eourCCJ close to the refinery say. The sources said Tuesd1iy that thl!i evidence points st.rorislY to •n explosion from Within a procusing unit or the plant rather than one caused by a bomb planled. by an outaider. I, ' Booby Trap II Front P .. e 1 FREEWAY ••• -.. or the route. "New bearings would delay the freewsy four or five ' year•." the m1yor added. "W11tmlnlter ""t)d DOI afford that.'" If Weslmin.ster does nol agree lo another look at the route it may slnk hopes for a revision for stale highway engine.era have indicated that the highway commission has been reluctant to reopen hearings unless all the 1ffected cities jointly requested ii. Mayor Edward Just of Fountain Valley said his city was concerned with two factors: Whether the freew1y would cut through the Fountain Valley School District 's education center at Talbert Avenue and Newland Street and the timing of construction. "Tbe main' factor Is that the freeway be bUilt," he coinmented. "We are nol interl!isted In delaying it." 'The mayor said. that he understood that plan! were being revised so that the fretway would circle the school district headquarters. Mike' Brick, superintendent Gf the •1r1ct, said that an alternative fmway 'd8!tgn in lfhich the route would bypass the echJcation center had been· dlscusud with state highway engineers. ~ But this bypass had not yet oeen adopted and official plans still called for the freeway to .,go over the school district site. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by Sgt. Bruce Horn at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This ~ ggtllon drum is shredded in such a wpy t,bat jagged edges point out Jn all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums ln trees. When triggered, they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of ski-masked bandits who ap- proached the attendant from behind wilb a 10-inch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa service station of $50 Tuesday night. Teenage Girl Hit~hhike1·s Raped Along South Coast Ray Rossi , on duty at Chet Tschetter'• Chevron Service, 227S Newport Blvd., told otncer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foOt up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim said he was t;ken by surprise about 7:~ p.m. and ordeTl!id to turn over the money from the gasoline pump island box or be stabbed. A pair of hitchhiking teenaged girls told police Tuesday or being picked up by a middle aged man in Laguna Beach, bound with rope and raped in separate south county locations. Orange County Sheriff's deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the alleged abductions and sexual assaults. Hearing Slated Over Scuf fie Meadowlark Airport operator John R. Turner will be arrianged next Tuesday morning on four criminal counts stem· ming from an alleged scuffle between him and two police ortlcers Monday night. · The 46-year-old businessman will face charges of assault on a police orfiet.r, interfering with t.he duties of a police officer, disturbing the peace, and operat· ing alrport night landing lighta without a permit. He was jailed Monday night after he allegedly used profanity and shoved an officer investigating a citizen com- plaint that the airport runway light! were being used after dark. Turner was released on his own recogniz.ance shortly after being booked on the charges. --GEM TALK TODAY by J. C. HUMPHllB THE LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fascinate me most, reply is difficult because each has its own fascinating bis· tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting; for cen. turie!lhe cool look of this legend· ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but this i em was the subject of Mei:ican Indian legends before Cortez., and its cold brilliance made them be-- lieve it devine, that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low relief fi(Ures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in Afexlco. Some people believe jade is found only in museums; but today, exqulslte jade jewelry Is available to all, and may be found in our store. One victim Is 18, from Co!t1 Mesa and the other ill 15, from Corona del Mar. They told police they were picked up about II p.m. Monday in the 100 block of North Coast ·Highway by a man 35 to 40 years old. Driving north, they claimed he drew a pistol and pulled off in the Crystal Cove area wtiere he tied their band! and threatened them again, this time with a knife. He allegedly forced the younger victi m into the back seat and raped her there, then drove back to San Juan Capistrano where he ravished the older girl. The pa ir said they were dropped off at Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard, where they obtained a detail· ed description of the assailant's car as he drove away. Huntington Firemen Check Fire at Motel Huntington Beach firemen are in· vestigating a "suspicious'' fire which caused 18,000 damage to a model home this morning at 20732 Bushard St. The fire was discovered at 6:30 a.m. It caused $4,000 dtimage to the structure and $4,000 to the contents. No other details were available at press time except the cause is "suspicious." Police searching the surrounding area recovered a hat, striped scarf, shl rt and Dutcher knife which Rossi identified as being worn and used by the 11 to ».year-old robbers. Postal Burglar Gets Six Months One of three men who attempted to burn their way into the Huntington Beach · Post Offlce safe and what would have been a haul of more than $100,000 In stamps has been sentenced to sii: montha in federal prison. U.S. District Court Judge Manuel Real Imposed that term on Sol Kaye, 59, and ordered the Cincinnati, Ohio, man to serve five years on probation after his release. Kaye was found guilty after a trial in Uls Angeles federal court. Kaye was one of three men discovered by U.S. postal inspectors last April as they used acetylene torches to cut their way into the post office safe at em Warner Ave. Federal officers are still searching for Kaye 's scco~lices. For a dynamic gift ... ,a Dynarnic watch An Omega Dynamic ca" mak1 any gift· ;giving ocoialon an unusual one. The unique horizontal oval-shaped case was 1peclally d11ig"1d tor greater ;wale~ wearing comfort ••• it fits the wrist llke a glove. With cool c:omfonablo eaallv interchanged air-vented 9traP:J i!l•lf·•lndlr!f, d•l••t.lllnf 0111101 Oynt111I~. r::111n1111 1i.1r ,.,ter 1M!111~t 1:111. Al,.,,..Mtd ln111~tn0ttOlt 1\11~ , • , •• , , •••• , , , •• S1 U.00 M"""ll-WIM Ndtl trllllout t:1!111d1t , ., ,JttMI J. C. .J/.umphriej Jeweler:1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COSTA MESA CON\llN llNT TEAMS a...NkAMlllCARD-MASTERCHAA&E 24 l'EAllS IN SAM( LOCATION rHONf 14S·l401 ' I ~· • rt Beaeh Today's F lnal ' ' .. . voi:. 63, NO. 313, 3 SECTIONS, 38 ~AGES • I ORANGE Ce>UNT'(, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER)O, 1970 TEN CENTS ., ~ -' -. -( ' --. $329,000 ,N~wport . Bay Study Grant Outlined ' ' By JACK BROBACK . Of ltle OlllV P14-I Iliff A $.129,000 Sea Grant Project to aid the Upper Newport Bay C.ooperation Planning Project was outlined Tuesday to members of the Orange County Board of supervisors. Ge;orge Dawes, Newport Beach harbor and tidelands administrator, outlined the 8COpe of the project and ·progress to date. Supervisors took no action pending ALLEN GETS BOOT LOS ANGELES (AP) -Owner Dan Reeves of the Los Angeles Rams announced Wednesday that . the contract of the football club's head coach, George Allen would not be renewed. County Air Carrier Gets Re vamp Delay Air California will have an additional year to install anti-smog equipment to bring their jets up to standards set by a new state law, according to a ruling made Tuesday by the roWlty Air Pollution Control District api)eals ~anf. An APCD spokesman said the variance was granted on the condition that the airline schedu1es the installation of modi .. fying equipment as soon as it is available. It was granted because on Jan. l aircraft emission of smoke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new section of the 1ta\e' ~alth and safety code. · Bob Clifford, general ~n~ ajrline, said jet engtn,. that lilve nor been modified will be in violation of the new law. "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spare engines, for a tot'al of 17. Two have been modilied and we expect to get another completed by next week." he said. Clifford said the airline ordered the modifying devices from the Pratt .. Whitney Company in May and has con- tracted with United · Airlines for their installation . "Delivery has been a little slow and United has their own fleet to take care of, so the variance will give us an additional year to comply. T wo Hitchhiking Girls Tied Up, Raped on Coast A pair of hitchhiking ~eena~ed f 'rls told police Tuesday or being p1cke up by a middle aged man in Laguna Beach, bound with rope and raped in separate south county locations; Orange County Sheriff's deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the alleged abductions and sexual assaults. One victim ls 18. fr<lm Costa Mesa and the other is 15, from Corona del Mar. They told police they were picked up about 9 p.m. Monday in the 100 block of North Coast Highway by a man 35 to 40 years old. Driving north. they claimed be drew a pistol and pulled off in the Crystal Cove area where he tied their hands and threatened them again, this time with a knife. He allegedly forced the younger victim tnto the back seat and raped her there, then drove }:lack to San Juan Capistrano where he ravished the older girl. The pair said they were dropped off at Coast Highway and MacArthur Boulevard, where they obtained a detail· ed description of the assailant's car as he drove away. TAKE 'EXTRA CAR' TO ROSE PARADE LOS ANGELES (AP ) -Bus service to the Pasadena Rose Parade from loca· tlons in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino counties will be made available by the So u t h e r n California Rapid Tr ansit District early Friday. Service to the Rose Bowl game between Stanford and Ohio Stale will also be provided from RTD's termlnal ln downtown Los Angeles. Bus riders must have their exact fare or use rriontl\1" passe.s. I further study. 1 • Dawes said :the 1329,111111 l'l"l~ wwld be f-by a $1118,111111 fed~al grant, an<i $Ul,IOO to tie. apllt tijotween the city, llle1'0Uilty and the ll'vine Company. 'Ille Irvine Compot>y · has 1 agreed to advance f!OO,llllO. Jn ·cash plus staff servlc:es. 'lbol city and coonty will offer stall serv!coa and fadllliea. i 'Ille' 'IJpjlir• Ndport-Bay CooperaUve PiojOc!'bod ita belirinlng Jut February Mt -• ...... jhe-lle!rporl city Council endorsed ··~\jon .If~ ''.NeWJ>O<J To ..... f(>w" to commence-a com~ive study df· tbe lipper Bay" regardless or wbe&ber,. there wW or will not be a lana.escbange." p ,- . '!be Irvine Company' agreed lo tbe join\, ~anning effort. lit February and 1he Bailtd of ·Su~rvlaors endoraemt11t followedlnM~ Boll> the Slate Resources Agency and u,,., ....... Borne .from Hospit al Midicoat-c1ad '.P.fincess Marga~et takes her husband, l.Drd Sn~wdon, home from Uit)<l:on Clinic. '!'he couple·t<iday·droJiped out of thej>ubllc glare thi.t iollOwecJ,· rei}Qrts they bav~ agreed 'to '8 dlyarce. Sriowdon had beert hospitali;ed fOr ·two weeks to·r · minor iiUrgery. Tht·.na.ture of the suige~ w,as not ~closed. · ' . ' Residents of Irvine Form Incorporation Fund Unit ' A group of Irvine resfdents who. want ai;Uon on the dty'1 incorporation have formed ' I" tun6 raillrlg group to do just thal. Aodrew May, .17118.'0ak Tree Lane, ls chalnnan of the new' group which calls llsell CiuUos lot COIN (City Of Irvine Now}. ·' dent of CCI, Irvine Company prealdent William Mason and UC 'Irvine campus architect CliftOn Miller. "We hope to present our goals to any interested citizens Who . wish to attend, as well as bring them up to date on the iRCOrporation, '• May said. Reservations may be made through Bob Forman, 540- 4350, he added. the U.S. Corps of Engineers have agreed to cooperate and provide assistance. Dawes said studies to date have in- dicated that the participating agencies must have technical as.sistahce in order to adequately determine water quality conditions, maiine ecology, wild fowl ecology, channel widths and depths and optimum marine recreational uses con- sistent with other environmental factors. H~ said it is proposed to utilize the aervices of the Oceanlcs l)IV!lioO:, of Interstate ElectronJca Corpora.Uon :in applying foe the aea grant from 1he federal government. - If 'the federal grant Is oblaloed a tw~year, study is planned. In the application for the federal sea grant It Is pointed. out that the city of Newport Beach has , had M_years experience In man1glng a n d •d- ministering a marine recreational eD-" 'No lrvirie vironment, including stx~milet of ·oecan shoreline and the lower Newport Bay. Orange County, with 35 miles of shoreline and with three major· recrea- t.lonal harboi'S, will alsO contribute it.. eKJ!trlence in rµarine and recreaUQD related" disciplines. The Irvine Company haa bad more than 30 years of planning experience costly studies, the results which are avai!aMe to this projec~ Deal' Official Denies Stock Sale Rumor . ' Irvine Foundation Board Chairman N. Loyall McLaren declared today that no Irvine com pany stock owned by the non- profit corporation will be sold in the fore- seeable future . No matter what any allegedly, Inside sources say, it won't be sold to Howard Hughes or anyone else, he emphasized. ,One source has told the DAILY PILOT and at l~t. one other newspaper cover- ing Orange County that the billionaire financier Is Interested in getting a piece of the development firm. · Ttie foundation itself llolds the control- ling block of shares, while the remainder is held by a number of indivfduals. Founder James lryine organized It l;>e.. fore his death as a contlnqing source of charitable funds to youth, service and cultural programs. "We're not in a po:sit'.lon to sell· any stock in .tlie foreseeable fUture," MCL&ren sna~ped, · also criticizing the publlcation of such matters. A figure of 40 percent has been men.. tioned in connection with the rulnored aale. "There is absolutely no chance we are going to sell any in the near future," ~cLaren ri!peated. Recent federal legislation require& that ' euch nonprofit foundations sen some of their stock. - Jumbo Jet's Wing Flap Rips. Rooftop Blast Traps· .36, HYDEN, Ky. (AP} -An exploeion in a aial mine in rugged , southeastern Kentucky mountain country PQ&Sibly trapped 36 . men underground thl3 af- ternoon, the Kentucky· Mines and . BELL GARDENS, Calif.' (UPI) -A Minerals Department replrted. -,_, · -~'-f . f1a fell -" The deportment commmioner, 11; N. -po-"' . ...,...,n' o ~ ::.::,~aa_!d~~' ~y~tJ-'"=t'U7,f.:. £8.r. ·-.~ througb'the roo1·o1 a duplea. "' ' -A ~i>artment lpc>ke-at lfqard; . 'f1lere WU bo •one in f.he. building . f,. H 'i,. ~ and no periol\i on tb'e lfOWid were ~..u;;,..........,.... 1ni;~i um b 0 jet, carrying a crew of 'lndaltados ' four and a Federal Aviation Ky., .said there "is a possibility of 36 men in the mines,"· No one had emerged from the mine an hour after the exploSion, the ~kesman laid. He said the accident probably wia a dlist explosion. Mine·lll!J)edors and'state police headed for the 9Cene1 -'bout aix IDilet from Hyl!en' on Rilrrlcane ere.~. 'Aliout so men iare empt0yed there, Klikpatrlck said.: • Adminlstratiorl S_upervisor, landed safely at Los Angeles International Airport. The National Transportation Safety &a.rd and the FAA were invHtigating FrancoCo.mmutesDeath the accident. · The metal and fiberglass wing flap section, six. feet by two feet and shaped like a pod, tore a two . foot square hole in the riof of the duplex. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a 10-foot sec- tion of the kitchen ceiling. The tenants, Mr. and Mrs. William Hardy , were not at home. A neighbor, Al Hall, said "It. sounded like an earthquake" when the wing sec- tion hit the duplex. A UAL spokesman said the 747 was doing "touch and go" landings at Ontario (Calif.) International Airport and was en route to Los Angeles International when the accident occurred. Spiro Agnew Arrives For Desert Vacation PALM SPRINGS (UPI) -Vice Presi- dent Spiro T. Agnew has arrived here for a week's vacation. He plans to return to Washington next Monday. Agnew did not speak with newsmen when he ·arrived at Palm Springs Mu.nicipal Airport aboard Air Force Two Sentences of 6 Basques BURGOS , Spain (UPI) - Gen,ralissimo Francisco Franco tonJght commuted the death sentences of· six Basque nationalist.a convicted q~ muider and banditry, the Ministry of Information announced. The annoWlcement said the sentences had been commuted to "the next highest sentence passed." The next highest sentence passed by the Burgoa mWtary court was 72 years. Franco pjanned to explain his acilon In a yearend address to the nation tonight. He has been under mounting pressure from European governmenta and th e Vatican to commute the death sentences and faced possible widespread unrest in northern Spain if he dJd not. There was Immediate reaction from the Vatican which said it heard of the commutation with "enonnous relief." his annual New Year 's speech to the nation. A feW hours earlier Capt. Gen. Tomas Garcia' Rebull, cOmmanding officer o[ the Burgos military region, confirmed the death sentences and the jail terms ()f nine other Buques1 putting clemency directly up to Franco. Bands Wo n't Make Music STANFORD (UPI) -Stanford Uni- versity News Service said Wednesday a controversy over what version of The Star Spangled Banner will· be played at the Rose Bowl game has been resolved. Stanford band manager Ken Peterson reported from Pasadena that Ohio State's band will play the Ohio State version of the anthem. "We're a .gr~ of_ citi~ who want the·~tioi! of the.c[ty, The money we ritse· "in· i*'used to retain an attor- ney to represent us .and give~ support to the CouDcii of c.ommuntUes of Irvine (OCl),. at the hearings, '1 May explained. May· empba,s.ized that COIN is not oper .. ati.ng, in op~ to ccr .. 0 0tlr goals are idenUcal;" be. aald, "bUt CCI is a study organization and we'velformed an action group. We felt thert was too much discussion and ~not enough action." Physicians Say Preside11t In 'Excellent' Condition Franco took the action after a special meeting with his cabinet and the council of the realm, an advisory group made up of parliament members. · The official news agency CIFRA an- nounced the verdict by flashing the Spanish word for pardon "Imultados .. lndulladot. lnduilados." · The men themselves were &waiting news or their fate in the ce'ntral prli!On of Burgos, in cells with paneless:Windows and temperatures at the fr~ point. Pet.erson said the Ohio State band did Ml want to play the Stanford group's controversial version because the Ohio musicians would not get into it unUI the last eight bars. The COIN group has set a goal of $5,000 which they plan tO solicit from Irvine res- jdents, businessmen and industries. "Right now there are about 15 people on the basic corrimlttee. We're in the process of organizin1 into block chairmen and we expect to liave about 100 block lea~ers for house to house' canvassing," he ·said. ·May said the houae to house workers will Wo be used in the event the county Local Ageacy FormatiOn Commission a~ proves tbe incorporation of the city. "We wilt get every registered voter signed up, and then we'll use the workers t.o try and 'persuade Uiem of our posi- tion," he said.· In addition to soliciting funds. COIN members have planned a fund rai sing luncheon Jan. 11 at the Alrporter lnn. Their attorney, Robert A. Smith of the Newport Beach Jaw firm of Eilert, Bar- anger, Myer• and SmJtb II scheduled to attend as ii: John Burton, who ia presip ., 'From Wire Service• Golf and swimming on the Orange Coast may be an immediate Ne.w Year's resolution for President Nixon, who heard an address on the state of his health today. Oraf!g~ County's number one citizen emerged from his annual checkup at the U.S. Naval Hospital, Bethesda, Md., with both good news and a prescription Ior more exercise. · 1 He differed sllghUy with one of his personal physicians, Air Force Brig. Gen. Walter R. Tkach. on the urgency of taking a break away from executive duties Jn Washil\gtoo. • Gen. Tkach said he should vacation In San Clemente. 9r· Key Biscayne,· FllJ., ln-the ·nett week or two. • "l 1bave no ex~.us~,'' President Nixon tofd reporters after c mpleling the checkup. -- He was quoted as,.teJllng Gen. Tltach he wou1d try to 1et some tun in , the sun as soon as he can get out from under the press of dutles in the capitJl, "I am concerned because I .dnn'F ,~I I' ' '~,,,.. ... him to get lnt.o trouble," the military physician explained, although he was generally enthusiastic about Nixon's health. Newsmen asked If the President could continue at his present executive pace -minus the prescribed eiercise and relaxation -without physical harm . "I'm notDetUng on It," said Tka ch. .. The President is rearty in excellent health," he added following thei two-hour series of medical tests, to avoid being misunderstood. Tkach almost waxed poetic over the presidential ~lood pressure. "This iB a y0W1g man's blood pressure -ideal,'' he remarked, saying the readiftg• was 118 ovet' 82. corp.pared to 120 over 80 about a year ago when Nixon Weighed two pounds m!)re . He 1is·.ilso down to 170 pounds, with clear lungs, gOOd blood analysis ,readings and excellent muscle and skin tone for a n;ian ol'hls age and duties. :aach. was ·displeased, hOwever, that tM • President 'gOlted only four times tJUI_ year, awam rarely and cut down hi bowling. ' . • Had Franco not acted the six ,, men would have been shot by a firing squad or garroted with a steel. band ,around the~ necks al dawn !l'liunday •. They had been ainvicted. by a. military court of murder and banditry. • . The news agency reported ·the verdict shortly before Franco was to deliver 8 Public Hospitals Face Shutdown Soon WASmNGTON (UPI) -.H E W Secretary Elliot L. Ricbardson a,ld today eight tiubllc health sirvtce iloopltal• may be cloeed l>ecauie of 61gh coat and under-usage. The hospitals. with 2,184 bed~ are In Baltimore, New Orleans, San Fran- cisco, Seattle, Boston, Galveston, Tex., Norfolk, Va., and Staltn Island, N.Y·. They. and 30 Pils . cllnl~ w h I c h' Richardson Mid also may be. closed cost fll million a year to operatt. The locauona of the cllnics were not lmmedJalely dlsclosed. . Weather 'Ille morning fog may chill the air, but we don't;care ; the skies will clear up by noon and the teinperature along the coast will be up to 6S, with a 72 reading in- land. 'INSW E 'l'ODAl' When Orange Count11'1 two MW 1upervisors take office, tht11 TMJI appoint new mtm- beT1 to four coune11 odtn&orv commU1ions. Page 3. 9"1111• ,. Ctllttml• J c..._ c'""' 11 Clltcklllt u, 11 C"9tltltll 1141 Ctft'lln JI ,_ .. DMtfl Httk" I Dlvwt" I ... ,,.,. .. ,... . lllttrftlfl!Mfli , .. ,, 'IM!c• 1 .. ,. "-11 a.n~ Lt""n 11 Mtl..... I I I / t IWl.Y 1'1LOT N $90 Coast Heist strlkb1g 11a1n with htt !rutty fronller- atyle revolwr, the be s pectacled Barbarell•ln·blaci ran a strin& or Orange County holdups toward the dozen mark Tuesday night in Huntington Beach. Sbe Qubt!d the .38 caliber gun at clert Larry Raran 1n Billy Dow's Liquor SIOre, 111.UI lltacb Blvd., tucked $90 Into her black purse and made a smooth getaway. Or•nc• Coast ja'!}nen charge the lady hlDdll -oltea llWilcbln& wlp 111d Snag Stalls New Social Security Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -'lb< Senate gave final Congresakmal approval today to a bill appropriaUng $18.9 billion for federal health and welfare programs, but with only four days remainina before adjournment there was still no break In th. logjam on oilier major bills. Transporlitlon, forelan aid and Social Security lqislatkm were the principal measures Ued up in the Congres.s. ~ 'lbe hitch in the Social Security in- creuea developtd beca111e of differing Senl~ and House versions. Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (f>.Ark. ). Ill• lnDuential chairman of the House Ways and M~ Committee, said lt wa11 "ut· terly, humanly bnpcmible" to reach a compromile before adjournment became then were too many differences 1n the HOUlt and Senate bills. MD1s promiRd. however, that the boost In Social Security would pus by early Febnw'y and would be retroactive to Jan. 1, 1m '!be House paaaed a 5 perceol bene!i\ lncreue, the Senate 10 percent, and while the Houae put a $67.20 minimum on monthly pa}'IDeDta, the Senate boos~ It to llllO. It prevJooaly Wll $64. Tbm. were numerous other diffe:rencel, ·tn--; duding tnclualon 1n tbe Senate bill. ol money for iocnued public assist&nce payments. Tbe appropriations· bW. passed by a &O roll call vote, carries funds for tbe Labor Department and Ille Healtll, F.dueation and Welfare Department. It U $210 million hligber than President Nilon sought b~ ctwWresaional leaders predicted be woold.aJP th.• bW. Tbe .. ctJon left eNJ• two appropriations bU1a to be acted upon before the tl&t Congress goes out of business at noon , Swlday -a 12.1 bllliOn bill for fortll!h aid and II.I billlda'lif tbe tranaportatfoll department The transportatten measure has been blocked by Senate opponents of the Pfo- pottd Supersonic Transport (SST), which would, te«IVo a 1210 milllon fedval IUbaidy. The Foreign Aid appropriation was held up because of a House-Senate wrangle over $200 million for credit salet of military equipment to forelp govenunenta. Grace Campbell Services Slated Funeral services were held Saturday in Pomona for former Newport Beach resident Grace Campbell who died Dec. 22. Mrs. Campbell and her late husband Oliver moved to Newport Beach in 1936 and were propriettr& of the~Ocean Front Market. During their 3G-year ttay In the beach city they were active in church and community affairs. Following the death of her husband in 1956, Mrs. Campbell lived in Newport WJUl 1967 when she moved to Pomona. DAILY PILOT 01.ANGI!: CO.UT PUILISHIJrlQ COMl'AHY Rob1rt N. w •• ~ ?11111111 K11.,.lf EOllOr Th111111 A. Mvrplli111 Mtn1a1no e:111ior L P1t.r Kri19 Ntwpot'l &tKll City E•ftar """" ..... Office 221 t W11t l1lk1 l owl1v1rd M1ili11t Addr111: P.O. lo• 1175, 92661 -Offl-COlll MtUI : u:i W"I a • ., Slretl u1...,,. IMdlr 1:22 F1re11 ..,....,.,..,. HllPllll\llOl'I IMtll: 1nu IMdl 1ou11v1rll 1111 Clt.,...,,M: 111.S North l!:l C1'"!no 1.ttl OA.f\.Y I'll.OT, •lltl 11t\ldl II t'Ol'l>lllMll the H--"r.U, II 111,1MltNtlll .. Uy Ille.pl a.u,... Hy Ill 11tl)trlM ttClll-fe.r I.lot-IMCll. NN'OOl1 l .. dl, COlll ~. Hlllllhit!Ol'I IMCJI llld "°""''*" \11llly, •lorlt wl!ll ,_ ""'10flfl ttClll ..... 1. Or•• Colll l'vblllll!"' c.n.11y Jll"llllt"' Plllll!l lfll 11 n11 Wtl ealDDI 11w .. H4'Wllft'f IMdl. ·~ 1'° W•t a.y jlrttl, Co1t1 MM. t1l1,.1a1 (714• &41-4JJI Cl...,.. Adwrtlllt111 &42·1•71 a..o•i.tlt, 1m, Ori,.. C011I l'Vb!Wlltlt Clft!Ml'll'. Mt "'..., 1torlts, lllvt!rftlDll"' .,"""' rMMW " ecl\lf'flll4t1ll•f'I"' ltto'1l11 tN'f .. ~.. WllllOvl N*lel ..,.. """'"" ... ~, -· a.cw.. ~ ,..,... Miii II fllf'WIJl9P1 aelCfl 1N (Atlj1 Ml!WI, CIHforllle, Subl(r1ptlllll ly ot"riW A.• l'lllf'lfll'(J ., _11 u _11 rMtnfllly1 '"1111a,., •1111r1111N,. '1.» lllOl'llft!y. ,,.... "'--baa lilt ...... Of Uquor ......... markets ud I ()oala ' Mt .. JlrlftolD theater 1in<e early lleceJn. ber. One job was pulled during tbe Oiristmu holiday weekend. Described as being In her early 30s. the female bandit robbed the Huntington Beach store about 9:35 p.m. Tuesday. Her polished approach is intended to keep victims calm. "Don't get nervous, all 1 want is FUNERAL SERVICES SET Bruce Bucher Security Guard Stymies Theft, Shoois Car Tire . . . .. , Huntiniton Beach security guard Den- nis Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a department !lore theft by shooting out the rear tire on an escape car filled with. four fleeln& bandita. Dahlke, regularly employed as a detec- tive with Ule ·Orance Police Department, is .... J!lard at :!.funlington Center. He ~Aoll! I :Ille car!"l,m, car aiia··ane rbouncea otf'lhe ~-f bumper, but another riPMCf through the left rear ' " ' tire. ' ,,.__ " The inMderifiqan at 7:10 p.m. wheu a J. C. Penneyts COmpany store employ! saw three men and a woman in a leopard skin coat trying to steal 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at- tempted to leave the store parking lot in the escape car. He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run him down, Dahlke told pOlice. That's when the shooting slarted .. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car which was found abandoned one hour later with the shot-out rear tire. It was located by Fountain Valley police at the intersection of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparenlly escaped on foot but all of the stolen uniforms were recovertd from the auto. Police later indicated the eseape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke is a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He is employed part-time as a PeMey's security guard. Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of ski-masked bandils who ap- proached the attendant from behind with a JO-inch butche r knife robbed a Costa Mesa service station of $50 Tuesday night. Ray Rossi. on duty at Chet Tschetter's Chevron Service, 2275 NeWport Blvd., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foot up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim said he was t:ken by surprise about 7:15 p.m. and ordered to turn over the money from the gasoline pump island box or be stabbed. Police searching the su rrounding area recovered a hat. striped 1carf, shirt and butcher knife which Ros1l idenlili~d as being worn and used by the 18 to 20-year-old robbers. Burglar Busy On Lido Isle ~lore than $2,SOO worth or stereo equip- ment, radlOi.';, skis and money was reported stolen over the holidays lrom a Lido Isle home. Police said Daniel S. Thompson, 207 Vla Jucar. disrovered the Items had been taken by burglars "·ho apparently discovered an unlocked bathroom win- dow. Thompson Jisted a complete stereo system and sets of water and snow His tmong the ttoltn items. • . tbe -y.• Ibo said u Ibo .._.i lq> .!Ill CUb IOd tlllll ordared Jlaian. to Ile behind tbe counter as abe made her getaway. Although pollce officers. su1nmoned by a silent alarm, swarmed over the area within minutes after the holdup, they were unable to find a trace ¢her. One of her most lucrative stickups occurred two weeks ago in south Orange County, where she obtained about $500 from a llquir atore. Burial Set For Mesa Cyclist, 18 ""' A cleancut Costa Mesa student and salesman, killed ~1onday when his motorcycle plunged off a La'~na Cany~n cliff in darkness and unfamiliar terrain, will be buried Saturday. Rites for Bruce D. Beecher, 18, of 200 E. Magnolia St., will be_ at 1 p.m. in Waverly ·Chapel at Fa 1 r h av en Memorial Park, Santa Ana. He was returning from a visit to the big Christmas happening in Laguna Canyon -literally to see how the other half Jived, says his mother -when the fatal accident occurred. The helmeted cyclist was 3'pparently killed instantly when his vehicle slammed into the ground, 50 feet below the dropoff near Laguna Canyon Road. Mr. Beecher, an Orange Coast College business major, leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Beecher, a brothe r Donald, living In Canada, and a sister, Airs. Barbara Marcus. of Wisconsin. The family suggests memorial con· tributioos to the Orange County Youth for Christ organization, 1055 N. Harbor Boulevard, Anaheim, or the OCC Scholarship Fund. Mr. Beecher graduated from Newport Harbor High School in 1970 and entered OCC, from wblch his older brother graduated eight years ago. He was also employed by Sears, Roebuck &: Company at South Coast Plaia, most recently in the shoe depart- ment. after trying out other duties for the experience. "Jfe was next lo top salesman last week. just $~ short of it," his mother said Tuesday. Beecher played B team football at Newport Harbor High S<:hOol, was a member• of• ,_, Scout. Ship 306 an4 attended Harbor 'Trinity Baptist Church. He was also a DAILY PILOT carrier boy far five )'W'., while atteQding school. "He supPort.id himielf " to gel what he wanted while getting his education. He always did,'' taid Mrs. Beecher. Her son was leaving the Sycamore Hills festival site over unknOwn terrain near midnight Sunday when the fatal accident occurred. He was found after daybreak Monday by other festival-goers leaving the area, draped over the demolished cycle and dead for about eight hours, coroner'• deputies said. V nwrapped Doll Gets Covered Vp By Mesa Police A redhead who wore only a rosy glow, .a lavender necklace and a tattoo on her right shoulder. was arrested at Costa Mesa's Firebouse bar Tuesday, on suspicion of indecent exposure . Alexsha L. Christy, 21, of Paramount, was booked into Orange County Jail and later released on $625 ball, presumably to return to duty as a nude dancer. f.-fiss Christy. assigned by a Buena Park agency already facing felon y pro- secution stemming from nude shows at the Firehouse. 177 E. 17th St.. was arrested at 1:30 p.m. by Officer Phil Donohue. He said she admitted two prior arrests and convictions in her brief career in show business. The hazel~yed suspect is the latest in a senles of some two dozen nude dancing arrests at the tavern. A trio booked earlier on similar charges failed to appear in court for arraignment, leading to issuance of ad- ditional arrest warrants Tuesclay, Sgt. Jack Calnon said today. Mourners Pay Final Respects to Rivers CHARLESTON, S.C. (UPI) -Friends. constituents and national leaders paid ri nal tribu!e today to Rep. L. 1'-tendel Rivert, chainnan of the House Armed Services Commlltce who died or heart failure Monday. Mourners came throughout the night lo file past lhe flag-draped casket In historic Charleston's l22.--year-<1ld Grace Episcopal Church , and scores more poured In at dawn to pay the.Ir respectJ bt(ore headlnit off to work in the seaport'& shipyards and nearby military bases. • Booby Trap Lawyer Says 'l{asahian Threatened LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Tho defense char1ed today al the Tate-LaBianea murder trial that It was "humanly im· possible" for the key 11tate witness ta tell the truth about the slaylngs beCllUMI ahe was threatened with prosecution hersell. Irving Kanarek, the attorney for Charltfl ManJOO, said that Linda K1&1- bian gave the answers the pro!ecution wanted in return for being granted im· munity in the seven killings. · Kanarek also told the jury that the prosecution had produced no ,evidence what.soever Of a C1:1nspi.racy headed by Manson. "Linda Kaublan aafi:I she did not know of any intent to kill 'anyone," Kanarell: said. "She wu a co-conspirator who did ool knoW anything about a con- spiracy." The conspiracy charge was brougbt ln, Kanarek said, because there was no way of convicting Manson of the actual .!laylngs. ''There was just no showing of any conspiracy,'' Kanarek said. "The motive of the people who brought that charge was to get Charlie Manson for some ungodJy reason which is pro- bably related to Mr. Mangon's life ttyle," Kanarek: said. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are dlscussed by Sgt. Bruce Horn at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This 50- g'1J.on drum is shredded in such a way that jagged edges point out in all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When triggered, they fall on unsUspecting soldiers. All four defendants were absent from the courtroom when the trial resumed today. Manson's attorney had begun his por· tion of the final arguments Tuesday by handing the jury bloody color photographs of the bodies of the victims. $38,000 Support Nixed; Divorcee Gets $2,800 It was the. first time the seven men and five women had seen the pictures close up. They passed them around quickly and one woman juror refused even to glance at them. "What the prosecution wanl! to discuss with you in this case are these prejudicial photographs," Kanarek said. · ~ "They are trying lo lynch Mr. 11-tanson. Cla\ldle Hutson Hirsch's plea for $38,000 a month in support payment5 pending trial or her divorce action against her multimillionaire husband was rejected Injured Officer Sues Motorist, 9tY. of Newport A Newport Beach pollceman has sued a womu motorist and the city for $100,- 000 in an Orange County Superior Court complaint charging both defendants with negligence. Motorcycle officer Mitchell G. Thomp- son charges Ruth G. Griffin with "reck- less and negligent" driving which led last March 25 to a collision between his machhie and her auto at the intersection of West Balboa Boulevard and 6th Street. Thompson wa s seriously injured in that accident. His injuries led to a long delay of the murder trial of Newport Beach socialite Willia Dean Hunt in which he was a key prosecution witness. The officer also charges the city with responsibility for the "dangerous and de- fective" condition of West Balboa Boule- vant at the scene of the accident. Those conditions, he stales, contributed to the collision. GEM TALK '• ( ') :· ) •. lo. .. , TODAY by J. C. HUMPHalU THE LURE OF JADE " Gems have al\vays held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked \vhich gems fascinate me most, reply is difficult because each has its own fascinating his- tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly inteM!sting; for cen- turies the cool look of this legend- ary gem bas enchanted men of many nations. You may think on1 y of ancient China ~'hen you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican India!\ legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be- lieve it devine, that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low relief figures are just some of the exquisite artiJacls recovered fr om long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in A-fexico. Some people believe jade is found on1y ln museums ; but today, exquisite jade jewelry is available lo all, and may be found in our store. • today by Orange County Superior COUrt Judge Robert L. Cerfman. Judge Corfman cut her demand down by more than 90 percent in grantln& lhe Harbor Island aociallte $2,800 a month for personal living eipenses. He ordered Clement Lang ''Jerry" Hirsch to also pay $150 a month each for the support or tbe estranged couple 's two children. Mrs. Hirsch, 42. of 30. Harbor Island, Newport Beach, had asked for $2,500 a month for tbe .suppart of Casey, S and Christopher, 5. No trial date had betn set today for the dissolution of marriage action filed last Seplef!!ber by Mrs. Hirsch. Judge Carfman's ruling vi rt u a 11 y freezes the Hirsch assets of more than $40 million pending trial of ttM! issue. Jt includes denial of Mrs. Hirsch's re· quest that she be allowed $~.000 a year for traveling connected with the substantial Hirsch iottrests in racing. Judge Corfman ·s order approves pay- ment of bill s totalling more than $50,000, all incurred prior to separation of the couple. But it is made clear in a long and rigid ruling that all future bills must be incurred w.ithin the provisions of the court order. Judge Corfman has also asked that the couple remain in the United States until some permanent dlvision of their community property is achieved. They are appea1ing to the rankest kind of prejudice that divides this country tlx111y." Kanarek had lo be slopped by Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older when he began addresBing one of the older male ·jw-ors by name and referring to his uperlence with "vigilante'' groups in the United States. With the defendants listening in ad- joining rooms by loudspeaker, Kanarek attacked the publicity surrounding the case and accused the prosecution of terrorist tactics against witnesses. He said the district attorney's office had attacked him personally. Older had. to shut him off again and it appeared the trial will be in for several days of stormy sessions when Kanarek get! around to the evidence in the case. Otlef defense counsel Paul Fittgerald preceded Kanarek, telling the jury it was quite feasible that someone other than the "Manson Family" committed the seven slayings. Fitzgerald said the fact that 1 fingerprint of Patricia Krenwinkel was found at the residence could be explained by the possibility that she was a house guest who had been invited lo the home by Sharon Tate for a swim. Fitzgerald cast doubt on t h e truthfulness of the prosecution witnesses. He particularly ripped into the testimony of Mrs . Kasabian that she went to the Tate home with Charles "Tex" Watson, Miss Krenwinkel and Susan Atkint. For a dynamic gift ... ·a Dynamic watch An Om eo• Dynamic can make any gift- giving occasion 1n unuauer one, The uniqua horizontsl oval·1h1ped case was 1p1cially designed for greater watc h wearing comfor l ... 11 fits the wrist like a glove.I With cool comfor11bla easlly in\erchanged air-vented atrap., ~a.lf.wllldlll;. dt1t •ltlllft lll Omttt1 Oyn1111le, '$il!lllt1I 1lttl •111f lftfl1'ftl C:IN, Atf·vtMldl l111tl'cilt ft111tlllt 11fa, ................ 1111,0t M111W&1-w111.t IROdel wfllllut uilndll' •••• 111.IO J. C. .J./.u1nphrieJ J eu1efer.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVENIENT TflMS IA Nl<AM ER IC.I. R;D-MAST EaCHA JIG I • ( l-4 YEARS IN SAME LOCATION 'l"IONE 141·]401 I ~osta···Mesa Tod•y's Fl•al. N.\'. ·sioeu . YOt:. 63, NO. 313, 3 SECTIONS, 3~PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA WEDNESDAY, De¢EM BER 30, 1970 TEN CENTS A.LIEN GETS BOOT LOS,ANGELES (AP) -Owner "9A~eves af the Los Angeles ····Rams announced Wednesday that tbe contract of the football club 's bead coal'f:I, George Allen would not-be renewed. 'ounty Air Carrier Gets Revamp Delay Air California will have an additional year to Install anti-smog equipment to bring their jets up to standards set by a new state law, according to a ruling made Tuesday by the county Air Pollution Control District ap.,eals board. An APCD spokesman said the variance was granted on the condition that the airline scheduJes the installation of modi· fying eqUipment as soon as it b available. Jt was granted because on Jan. 1 aircraft emission of smoke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new section of the state health and safety code. Bob Clifford, general manager of the airline, said jet engines jhat have not been modified will be in violation of the new law. "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spare engines, for a total of 17. Two have been modified and we expect to get another completed by next week," be said. Clifford said the airline ordered the modifying devices frilm the Pratt- Whitney Company in May and has con· tracted wtth United Airlines for their lnstallaUon. "Delivery has been a little slow and United has their own fleet to take care of, so the variance will give us an additio~al year to comply. , Un wrapped D'!.ll Gets Co vered. Up By Mesa Police . A redhead who wore only a rosy glow, a lavender necklace and a tattoo on ht!r right shoulder, was arrested at Costa Mesa's Firehouse bar Tuesday, on suspicion of indecen t exposure. Aleuha L. Christy, 21, of Paramount, was booked into Orange County Jail and later released on $625 bail, presumably to return to duty as a nude dancer. Miss Christy, assigned by a Buena Park agency already facing felony pro- secution stemming from nude shows at the Firehouse, 177 E. 17th SL, was arrtsted at 1:30 p.m. by Officer Phil Donohue. He said she admitted two prior arrests and convictions in her brief career in show business. The hazel-eyed suspect is the latest in a seiiies of some two dozen nude dancing arrests at the tavern. A trio booked earlier on similar charges failed to appear in court for arraignment, leading to issuance of ad· • ditional arrest warrants Tuesday, Sgt. Jack Calnon said today. Jury Comple tio n Ne ar in Mes an's Trial on Rape Jury selection in the kidnap-rape trial of Gary Harold Phoenix moved into Its final stages today in the Orange County Superior Court of Judge William MW'ray. Phoenix, 29, Costa Mesa, is accused of 33 separate charges of kidnap, rape, sex perversion, assauldl with intent to commit rape and robbery. Investigators claim that at least seven women. ranging in ages from 18 to 48, have been the victims of Phoenix's sezual assaults. Those alleged attacks took place in six Orange County com· munJtles, among them Huntington Beach. Fountain Valley and Costa Mesa. Otarps-flled against the former assls· tant tnanger of a Huntington Beach hfallh spa have led lawmen to compare the case with that of Caryl Chessman, the convicted rapist who died in the. gas chamber after years of fighting the guilty verdict at appellate court ltvel. . The conviction of Ptioenix on the 3.1 fclony charges could. technically, lead Judge Murray to impose the death sC!nlence under the terms of California's ao-called "Uttle Lindbergh law." The prosecution already ha' indicated It will ... k the death ~nalty In the case. 'No Irvine Deal' Official Denies Stock -Sale R'uinor Irvine Foundation Board Chairman N. Loyall McLaren declared tod ay that no Irvine Company stock owned by the non. profit corporation will be sold in the fore· seeable future. No matter what any allegedly Inside sources say, it won't be sold to Howard ) Hughes or anyone else, he emphasized. One source has told the DAILY PILOT and at least one other newspaper cover· Ing Orange County that the billionaire financier la interested in getUn1 a piece of the development flnn. The foundation itself holds the controJ.. ling block of shares, while lhe remaioder is held by a number of individual!. Founder -James Irvine organized it:be· fore his death as a contJnuJng 10Urce of charitable funds to youth, service and cultural programs. "We're not in i poaition.'to sell ' any stock in the foreseeible tuture," McLaren snapped, also criticizing the pub1JC1t1o·n of such mattert. · A figure of .o percent bas been men- tioned in coMection with Uie rumored aa,le. , "There is absolutely no chance we are going to · sell any in the neir futurt/' McLaren repeated. . Recent federal legislatlpn requires that sucb nonprofit foundation,, adl some of their stock. • 2 tlitchhiking Girls Attacked On South Coast Blast Traps ·3 .6 A pair of hitchhiking teenaged girls told police Tuesday of being picked up by a middle aged man in Laguna Beach, bound with rope and raped in separate south county locations. Orange County Sheriff's deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the alleged abductions and sexual assaults. HYDEN, Ky. (AP) .-An expl<iilon In a coal mine In rugged soutbeaatern Kentucky moUntaln country possibly trapped 36 men underground tb.ia af. t~rqoon, the Kentucky Mines and Minerals Department repirted. . The department commissioner, H. N. Kirkpatrick, s~id In Lexington the ex· ploslon occurred at the Finley Coal Co •• about 12:45 p.m. EST. A department spokesman at Hazard, 'lndultitdos' Ky.. said ther< "Is a posillbillly cf lG men in the mines." No one bad emerged from the mine an hour after the explosion, tb.t spokumap said. He said the accident probably was a dust ezplosion. Mine Inspectors and stale police beaded for the scene, abou_t six miles from Hyden on Hurricane Creek. About 50 men are employed there, Kirkpatrick said. One victlm is 18, from Costa Mesa and the other is 15, from Corona del Mar. They told police they were picked Franco .C·ommut,esDeath utt1 T•""'M"' up about 9 p.m. Monday in the 100 Dmne .t .. om Hospit al block of North Coast Highway by a . • man 35 tc 40 years old. Midicoat-clad Princess Margaret takes her husband, Lord Snowdon, Driving north, they claimed be drew ' lb li a pistol and pulled off in the Crystal home from. London Clinic. The couple today dropped ~ut of e pubd · c Cove area where be tied their hands Sentences of 6 Basques F~iier~-:-f-0r glare that foll~w~ reports they bave agre~d to a divorce. Snow on and threatened them aiain.-this time had been hosp1taliz~d for two.week~ forJlllilor surgery. Tbe nature with 8 knife. BURGOS , Spain (UPL) - of 'the1 surgely was not disclosed. · He allegedly forced the younger victim Generalissim_o R'ran~co Fra~ ~·t , . . . Into the back. seat and raped, her there. commuted! ·the IM!!" ' · -"* ' . : . JiiA.Jlliili.~San~·+iiai• """"a111 ,,.. . '. M' c . Ii ~ . ". -WBeUfte'N. e o13er~W' .. , "~ . ' ~ bin ~\'the . , , IDfi • • iroca. e.i.a . ·ye st ~e Jli'ir .. : Jhey ........ ~.off .~ ... ~lrf!. !'.'!' oC -.:· iOl ~t Coast '.llfhway snd , 1\lacAr!h"' .,..,.,....... 1 • •• · • Boulevard. Whtlt they ob!auied ·, detail· ~ announce~n! said dli. . , IGHed in ; Laguna Slated ed description of the assailant's car bad Men commuted to 11the next hlpett as be drove away. • seiitence passeCI." The next highest 747 Wing Flnp Hits Duplex, senten ce passed by the Burgos military court was 72 years. " A cleancut Costa Mesa student and salesman, killed Monday when his motorcycle plunged off a'Laguna•canyon Cliff in darkness ~d unfamiliar terrain, will be buried Saturday. Rites for Bru1tf! , D. ~her, 18, of ~ E. Magnolia SL, will be at 1 p.m. in Waverly Chapel at F a i r h a v e n Memorial Park, Santa Ana. He was returnirlg . frcim a visit to the big Christmas happening In Laguna Canyon -literally' to see how th~ other half lived, says his mother -when the fatal accident occurred. The helmeted cyclist was apparenUy killed instantly when bis vehicle slammed into the ground. SO feet below the dropoff near Laguna Canyon Road. Mr. ,Beecher, ·an Orange Coast College business inajor, lea ves· his parents, Mr. anti Mrs. Charles Beecher, a brother I>ona\d, living in Canada~ and a sister, Mrs. Barbara M31'.cus, of, Wisconsin. The family suggests, 'memorial con· tributin to the Orange County Youth for Christ organiz@tiOn, 1055 N. Harbor Boulevard, Atmbeim., or the occ Scbolanhlp. Fund. Mr. Beecher 1ira4qaled from Newport H~ High School' In ltml and entered OCC, from which hii .older brother graduated •18hl years ago. He was a1lo employed by Sears. Roebuck ·&: Compaliy at Sooth Coast Plaza, most.recently'in the shoe depart- ment, -after trying out' other duties for the ezperJence. "lie was flelt 'to top· salesman last week, just ,$5 short of•. it," his mother uid Tueaday. . Beecher played' B loam football ai FUNERAL SERVICES SET Bruce BH cher Newport Harbor High School, was a member . of Sea Scout Ship 306 and aitended Harbor Trinity BapUst Church. He Was also a DAILY PILOT carrier boy for five years While attending school. "He suppofted himself to get what h~ w8.nted while getting his educaUon. He always did," said Mrs. Beecher. No One Injure d BELL GARDENS, Calif. (UPI) - A. JOO.pound section of wing flap fell off a United Air Lines Boeing 747 on a training flight Tuesday night and plunged through the roof of a duplex. There was no one in the building and no persons on the ground were injured. The jumbo jet, carrying a crew of four and a Federal A v l a~lon Administration Supervisor, landed safely at Los Angeles International Airport. The National Transportation Safety Board and the FAA were investigating the accident. The metal and fiberglass wing flap section, six feet by two feet and shaped like a pod, tore 11 two foot square hole in the i-iof of the duplex. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a IG-foot sec· tion or the kitchen ceiling. The tenants, Mr. and Mrs. William Hardy, were not at home. A neighbor, AI Hall, said "It sounded like an earthquake" when the wing sec· lion hit the duplex. A UAL , spokesman said the 747 was doing "touch and go" landings at Ontario (Calif.) International Airport and was en route to Los Angeles International when the accident occurred. Franco planned to explain his ac;lion lit a yearend address · to ~e nation .tonight. He bas beetl .under mounting pressure from Euro~an gov~nta: and the Vatican to commute the de.atb sentences and faced possible widefpread unrest in northern Spain if he did not1 1'~ere was immediate reaction from the VaUcan which eaid it beard of the commutation with ''enormoua rellef.'r Franco lOQk the action ,after· a specl~t meeting with his cabinet and the council of the realm, an advisory group made up of parliament mem~. The oUiclal news agency CIFRA .an- nounced the verdict by flashing the Spanish word for pardon "lndultados. Indultados. Indultados." Marine Jailed In Assault Ca se A Camp Pendleton Marine sergeant who attacked and robbed a fellow Marine of nearly $500 has been sentenced to one year in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge imposed that term on Sgt. John Paul Gaydos, 20, an administrative cler~ at Camp Pendleton, after Gaydos pleaded guilty to charges of assault with a deadly weapon. He dismissed furpi!!r charges of robbery and conspiracy and placed Gaydos on three years probation. ' Sea Grant Plan Outlined Gaydos was arrested after a ·fellow Marine told officer1 that the sergeant struck him on the head with a tire iron as the two were driving a rented car in the San Clemente area last May. The victim told officers that he YIU.· going on leave at the time and the $500 taken b7 Gaydos had been saved for that purpose. . $329,000: Fund W 0.ul.d Aid Upper New por t Bay . . . By JACK 81\0BACK Of at OeflY '°"" Sftff A 13211,000 Sea• Grant Project to aid the ? Upper Newport Bay Cooperation Planning Project was outlined Tuesda y to members of the Orange County Board of Supervisors. - George Dawes, Newport Beach harbor and tidelands administrator, ouUined lhe ·~ pi · 111e mi«I 1nc1 ~,.... 1o ·dale: SQj>erV-'took'ni"actU\n pending further study. Dawes aald the: $329,000 project would be llnanced by a lt98,llOO federal grant, and lll t,300 to be 1plil between the city. the c:ounly and the Irvine Company. The Irvine Company has agreed lo •• advance $100,000 in cash plus stall services. The city and county· will offer staff seryices and facilities. to cooperate and provide assistance. Dawes said studies to date have In· dicat.P.d that the participating agencies The Upper Newport Bay Cooperative 1 h t h · al · d Project had its beginning last February mus ave ec n1c a~istance in or .er when the Newport City Council en40ned to adequately determine water quality a,recommendation of "NeWROtt Tomor--·~· marine ecolol)', ·WUd 1 Cowl row" to commence • com~ensivt ~. chanpel widths' arld depths and s1i1~Y pf the tJJppec ,Bay" .r~':'°dJess, '. oMIUium mNl~, rrpsatl0na1 "1St& Con. of . whethtr there wilt or w1U Ill>! ~ 1iiiloit wilh·ff env~onmental.fac~. • a land exchange." tie said 'l1: is proposed to ,utllb.e the The Irvine company agreed to t)le servic;ts ot the ~anics Division of joint planning effort in' Februw.f a~ Jnterilate Elect.rOnlQ Corporatioti in the Board of Supervi~rs endorlemept ~ppblflll {Of. the sea grant frori\ the followed In March. • fedeiil -gMnmlnL Both lhe Slate Resources ~gency •llll Jl the f~erat 8'ant Is obtained a the U.S. Corps of Engineers have agreed · · (Ste GtiNT, Page J) y 't Bands Won?t Make Music STANFORD (UPI} -Stanford Uni· versitv News Service said WednesdJy a contr~ersy Over. -w)at ·Venion of Ttie Star 'Spangled Bann<r will be·'played at. lbe.RO>e>Bowl game~· b9en reJOlved.' Sta_nfotd b&tld manager ,.Ken PetetfOJ!· • reported · from iPasadena th•t ObiO Slate•s band wlU. play the Ohio Stale version .of the antbtm. PCleraon said lhe Ohlo Stile band did not want to play lht Stanfora group's controversial version becauie the 10hio mu'slclans would noC get Into It untn tile b1st eight bart.' The · men themael\tes were awaiting news of ,their iate. in the central pri8on of Bofr,.., In ,cells will) ~ lllndowl aJid iefnperllilra it the freezing polnL lll4 ~·~ -"~qie-11s -woU!d have been shot by a flrinJ squad or P,rroied · wi!li .a aleel band around their" becl<.9 'al dawn Th~y. They had ~n Convicted by a military court of murder and banditry. Tile news igency rePorted the verdict shortly before Frahco was to deliver his annual New Year's apeech to the nation. A few hours earlier Capt. Gen. Tomas Garcia Rebull, commanding officer of the Burgos' military 'region, confil1lled the death' sentences and the jail terms of nine other B:asques, putting.clemency direaUy, up to Franco. Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of ski·masked bandits who ap- proached tbe attendant from behind with a 10-lnch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa service station of $50 Tuesday night. Ray Rossi, on duty at Chet Tscbetter's Cheyron Service, 2275 Newport Blvd., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fl~ on foot up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim said be was bken by surprise about 7:25 p.m. and ordered to tum over the money from the gasoline pump island box or be stabbed. Police searching the surrounding area recovered a hat, striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi identified as being worn and used by the 18 to 20-year~ld robbers. Oruge Cout w e.tiler The morning ,fog may chill the air, but we don't ·care: the· skies will clear up by noon and the temperature along the coast will be up to 65, wlt!i a 72 reading in· land. INSmE TODAY . Whtn Orange Count1111 tt.Oo new aupervitor.t takt offtct, th1y ma11 appoint new mtm- btrt to four county advisory commUriom. Pags 3. I D.\J1. y ,fl OT c -= ' • $90 Coast Heist B_~rbarella Hits Agaii;t Slrlklll& 1111D wllb her trusty froollor· atyt. revolver, the be1pect1cled Barbartlla·ln-black ran a string of Oranae County holdup& toward the doun morit Tuelday nlcbt In Huntington Beach. She flaabed tbe .33 caliber gun at clerk Larry Rarsc tn Billy Dow's Liquor Store, IUSI B>ldi Blvd., tucked $90 into her black purse and made a smooth aetawiY. Orange O>ast lawmen charge the lady bandit -ofleo IWitchl!li wlis and Support Plea By Divorcee Turned Down CJAUdle Hutson Hirlch's plea for $38,000 a montb to supJ!Ofi payments pending trial of her divorce action against her muJUm.UUonalre husband was rejected todliy by Orange County Superior COurt Judge R'obert L. COrfman. Judge Corfman cut her demand down by more than tO percent in granting the Harbor· Jaland socialite $2,800 a month for personal living expenses. He ordered Clement Lan& "Jerry" Hirsch to a1ao pay •t50 • month each for the rupport of the estranged couple's twa childrtn. Mrs. Hinch, 42, of SO Harbor Ialand, Newport Beach, bad asked for $2,500 a month for the support of Cuey, 6 and Christopher, 5. No trial date bad been •l today for the dl.asolution of marriage action filed last September by Mrs. Hirsch. · Judge Corfman'a ruling vi rt u a J l y freeies the Hirsch assets of more than $40 million pending: trial of the 115Ue. Jt includes deniaJ or Mrs. Hirsch's re- quest tbat abe be allowed f,50,000 •· ' .. year for tnvelin1 connected WllUI tbe subatantial Hirsch interests In raclrig. • Judge Corfman's orde!' approves pay. ment of bills totalllnc more than $50,000, all incurred prior to separation of the couple. But it is made clear in a long Md rigid rullng that all future bills must be incumd wtthin tbe provl.sions of the' court onler. Jud(e Oirf-')N 1llo ulced Iba! the ~ •:..~the United States until tome dJvlsion of their communtty properl)I 11 acbleved. Fl4 Figliter Jet'& Crashes .. on 2nd · . Testing Flight RIVERHEAD, N.Y. (UPI) -The FH SWin&·Wini fight.el!, auccesaor to the Navy'a version of the controversial F111, crashed on lls second flight today as it was attempting a landing and was "'wiped out," a Grumman C o r p .• opokeaman ..rd. Test pilots Wllliam Miller and Robert Smythe, ejected aDd parachuted to safety just belore the plane crashed on a runway at the Grumman Air Field at Calverton, next to the Long Island ex-pressway. In Wu:hJngton, a Defense Deplrtment spokesman, Jerry Frtldheim, said initial reports indicated the crash was caused by "some sort of hydraulic malfunction." 1be Fl4's firsl flight, wh.ich lasted jusl 10 minutes, waa conducted suc- cessfully Dec. 21 and the next day Navy Secretary John H. Cbalee christened the plane "the Tomcat." DAILY PILOT OWCll COAIT PU ... ISHJNO COMl'AMV Aobert H, W,ff ,,..Id~! ·~ l"tlCMllW J 1,li: A. Cu1l1y \ID '"'*v ~ Gllllr11 M-nr l\01r111 K11ril .... Tlt-11 A. M•rpflit11 MfnlJiJll l!•Hor C... M-Ofl'fc9 ..JJO W .. t lty Str11t M1ilh19 ....Ur11n1 P.O .... 1160, ,2626 -°""" ...... a.ct.1 1211 W.t ••11111 hv!l'fft Lf..-•1oW11 ID ..,_, A-.,. """'"""'-... di: '11f'J h lCll 1~1.-..rd ... CIMIMM1 &J ..,.. I.I C..1111M RMI f!Wctu. fr--bu. lilt I ~~ o1 llquof """"· mm.11 and ·1 Mua d:rttHn tbe1ter.· •Ince w1y Decem- ber. One job was pulled during lhe Christmu hOliday weekend. Described as being in her early 30s, the female bandit robbed the Hunlington Beach store about 9:35 p.m. Tuesday. Her polished approach is intended to keep vicUms calm. "Don't get nervous, all I want is Roses. for Billy Billy Graham, a man credited with preaching the gospel to mote people than aqyone else in history, will Jead the 1971 'J'ournament of Roses Parade in Pasadena as its grand mar- shal. He is the first clergyman -..ev~r ~~jJ_ead t~e-: para~e. Security Guard Sty{!l k,s Theft, Shoots Car Tire ..... ~ .... -·.. .. ' Hunttntton beach security guard Den· ni1 Dthle Tul¥'tY night thwarted a ~P~ t!G1J 1bf.11 by ohootinl .. °"" the rear -ttre on an escape car filled with four fleeing band.its. • Dahlke, regularly employed as a deleo. tlve with the Orange Police Department, is a guard at Huntington Center. He fired five shots at the careening car and one bounced off tne rear bumper, but another ripped through the left rear tire. The incident began at 7: 10 p.m.· whtn a J. C. Penney's Company store emplo)e uw three men and a woman in a I~ skin coat trying to steal 20 nursi ng uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at- tempted to leave the store parking lot in the escape car. He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run him down, Dahlke told police. That's when the shooting started. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car . which was .found abandoned one hour later with the shot-out rear tire . It was located by Fountain Valley police at the intersection of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparently escaped on foot but all of the stolen uniforms were recovered from the auto. Police later indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke is a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He J.s employed part-time as a Penney's security guard. From Page I GRANT ••• two-year study Is planned. In the application for the federal sea grant it is pointed out that the city of Newport Beach has had 55 years experience in managing a n d 11d· ministering a marine recreational en· vironment, includ ing six mUes of oecan shoreline and the lower Newport Bay. Orange County. with 3S miles of shoreline and with three major recrea· tional harbors, will also co ntribute Its experience in marine and recreation related disciplines. The Irvine Company has had more than 30 years of planning experience C06tly studies. the results which are available to this projecl. l\'lesa Credit Union Robber Nets F unds A year.end de ficit of about $50 will be sho"·n on the books of the Costa lifesa City Employes Credit Union. One of its mem~rs, who wears a blue uniform in his employment •ptclalty, reported someone broke Into the office at 1871 Park Ave., Tuesday. Prying apart the safe netted the In· truder only petty c1sh. 1: :."':{~ =:. ~ ~oc= to lla behind Ille counter u Iha moclO· her getaway. Allhough police officers, summoned by a silent alarm, swarmed over the arta within minutes after the holdup, they were unable to find a trace of her. One of her most lucrative stickups occu'rred two weeks ago in south Orange County, where she obtained about $500 from a liquir store. Snag Stalls New Social Security Bill WASHINGTON (UPJJ -The Senate gave final Congressional approval today to a bill appropriating $18.9 billion for federal health and welfare programs, but with only four da ys remaining before adjournment there was still no break in the logjam on other major bills. Transportation, foreign aid and Social Securi ty legislation were the principal measures tied up in the Congress. 'Mle hitch in the Social Security in- creases developed because of differing Senate and House versions. Rep. Wilbur 0 . Mills CO.Ark.), the Influential chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. said it was "ut· terly, humanly impossible" to reach a compromise before adjoW'nment becalL!ie there were too many differences !n the House and Senate bills. Mills promised, however, that the boost in Social Security would pass by early February and would be retroacUve to Jan. 1, 1971. The House passed a 5 percent benefit Increase, the Senate 10 percent, and While the House put a $67 .20 minimum on monthly payments, the Senate boosted it to $100. It previously was $64. There were numerous other differences, in· eluding inclusion in the Senate bill of money for Increased public assistance payments. The appropriations bill, passed by a 69-0 roll call vote. carries funds for the Labor Department and the Health, Education and Welfare Department. It is $210 million 'bigher than Presideht Nixon sou~t but congressional leaders predi~d hi;. would sign the bW. The actioft ~ only two appropristlons bills to be .acted upon before the 9lst Congress gOes out of business at noon Sund8>'. ~ • $2.J billicin blll:i for foreign aid and $2.& billion for the transportaUon departmenL · The transporlation meaSUre bas been blocked by Senate opponents of the pre>o posed Supersonic Transport (S.ST J, which would receive a $210 million feder&I subsidy. The Foreign Aid appropriation was held up because of a· House-Senate wrangle over $200 milllon for credit sales or military equipment to foreign governments. Missile Fighter Sc ores I niercept In Pacifi c Tes t WASHINGTON (AP) - The Sprint missile, a key weapon in the Safeguard antimissile system, has scored its firs t successful test intercept of an in· tercontlnental ballistic missile warhead over the Pacific, the Pentagon announced today. 111e Sprint. a sh-Ort-range, super-fast missile, shot up from the Kwajalein Missile Range in the Pacific on Dec. 23 and came within ''kill range " o! the ICB1'1 target nose cone which had been launched from California, <1,200 miles a"'·ay. The test did not involve any actual explosion, the Pentagon said. The in- tercept was verified by instruments. The Sprint, like its partner long.range Spartan antimissile, would carry a nuclear warhead in an actual intercept of an incoming enemy ICBM. The Spart&n and the Sprint comprise a one-two punch, with the Spartan design· cd to meet and destroy enemy warheads more than 400 miles away and the Sprint designed to take out enemy warheads ·which penetrate the Spartan umbrella defense . The Spri nt relies on blinding speed lo meet an· enemy warhead 1ome 25 miles up and destroy it. Four months ago, the Spartan scored what the Pentagon called Its first suc- ces.sful test intercept. Jn cla iming a successful first intercept ~or the Sprint, the Pentagon said range instruments indicated lb second stage "passed cl01e enough to the targl!t 10 hive deatroyed It with an operationaJ nuclear warhead." The vital radar equipment. which con· !illlutel the Cyl!S of tbe Sa(eguard an- liml!silc system, also bas been tested from Kwajaleln as the United States moves toward an operational 1y1tem. The Safeguard it still a matter of considerable controversy ln Congress, "''hich this )'ear limited t:rpansion btlow the level requesttd by President Nixon. Booby Trap Lawyer Says l{asabian Tlireate11ed LOS ANGELES (UPI) -The deftll!I charged today at the Tate.La.Blanca murder trlal that it was "humanly im- possible" for the key state witness to tell the truth about the slayings because she was threatened wllh prosecution herself. Irving Kanarek, the attor11ey for Charles Manson, said that l.Jnda 1:asa- bian gave the answers the prosecution wanted in return for being eranted im· munity in the seven killings. Kanarek also told the jury th8t the prosecution had produced no evidence whatsoever of a conspiracy headed by Manson. "Linda Kasablan said she dJti not k.oow of any interit to kill anyone." Kanarek said. "She was a co-conspirator who did not know anything about a con- spiracy." The conspiracy charge was brought in, Kanarek said, because there was no way of convicting Manson of the actual 1layings. "Tfiere was just no showing or any conspiracy ," Kanarek said. "The motive or the people who brought th~t charge was to get Charlle Manson for some ungodly reason Which ls pr~ bably related to Mr. Manson's life style," · Kana rek said. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by Sgt. Bruce Horn at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This 5().. B~llon ~ru~ is sh~edded in such a way that ja gged edges point out 1n all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such druma in trees. When triggered, they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. All four defendan ts were absent from the courtroom when the trial resumed tndly. Manson's attorney had begun his por· . tion of the final arguments Tuesday by handing the jury bloody color photographs or the bodies of the victims. h: Exercise Physicians Say Preside11t In 'Excellent' Condition Jt was the first tlme the seven men and five women had seen the pictures close up. They passed them around quickly and one woman juror re.fused even to glance at them. "What the prosecution wants to discuss with you in this case are these prejudicial photogr4phs," Kanarek said. "They are trying to lynch Mr. Manson. They are appealing to the rankest kind of prejudice that divides this country today." From Wire Services Golf and swimming on the Orange Coast may be an immediate New Year's resoluUon for President Nixon, who heard an address on the state of his health today. Orange County's number one citizen emerged from his annual cht<:kup at the U.S. Naval Hospital, Bethesda, Md., with, both good. news and a prescription for more exercise. He differed slightly with one of his personal physicians, Air Force Brig. Gen. Walter R. Tkach, on the urgency of taking a break away from executive duties in Washington. Gen. Tkach said he ahould vacation In San Clemente or Key Biscayne, Fla., in the next week or two. "J have no excuse," President Nixon told reporters after completing the checkup. He was quoted as telli11g Gen. Tkach he would try to get some fun in the sun as soon •11 he can get out from under the pre~ of dutles in the capitol. "I am concemed because I don't want hirn to get into trouble," the military physician explained, aJi.hough he was gener•lly enthusiastic about Nixon's health. Newsmen asked if the President could continue at his present executive pace GEM TALK TODAY by .I. C. HUMPHIJD THE LURE OF JAOE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fascinate me most, reply is difiicult because each has its own fascinating his- tory and tradition . I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting; for cen- turies the cool look of thts legend- ary gem bas enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancJent China when you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be- lieve it devine', that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. -- Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low relief figures art just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in ~exlco. Some people believe jade is found only In museums: but today, exqulslle jade jewelry is available to all, and may be found in our a tore. ' minus the prescribed exercise and relaxation -without physical harm. "I'm not betUng on II," said Tkach. "The President Is realty In excellent health," he added following the twe>ohour series of medicaJ tests, to avoid being misuaderstood. Tkach almost waxed poetic over the presidential blood pressure. "This is a young man's blood pressure -ideal," he remarked, saying the reading was 118 over 82, comp•red to 120 over llO about a year ago when Nixon weighed two pound1 more. He is also down to 170 pounds, with clea r lungs, Jood blood analy~is readings and excellent muscle and akin tone for a man of his age and duties. Thief Takes ·Ring, Necklace From Purse A sneak thief who may have thought he wa~ getting cash tooit $<125 In jewelry from a Costa Mesa woman '1 purse whife she was shopping, police said Tuesday. Mrs. Ann K. Sydes. of 300S Fillmore Way, said the pearl necklace and engage. ment ring was in a white envelope, discovered missing while she was in a Baker Street market. Kanarek had to be stopped by Superior Court Judge Charles H. Older when he began addressing one of the older male jurors by name and referring to his experience wlth "vigilante" groups in the United States. With the defendants listening in ad· joining rooms by loudspeaker, Kanarek attacked the publicity surrounding the case and accused the prosecution of terrorist tactics against witnesses. He said the district attorney's office had attacked him personally. Older had to shut him off again and it appeared the trial will be in for several days or stormy sessions when Kanarek gets around to the evidence in the case. Chief defense counse l Paul Fitzgerald preceded Kanarek, telling the jury it was quite feasible that someone other than the "Manson Family" committed the seven slayings. Fitzgerald said the fact that a fingerprint of Patricia Krenwinkel was found at the residence C(luld be explained by the possibility that she was a house guest who had been Invited to the home by Sharon Tate for a swim. Fitzgerald cast doubt on t h e truthfulness of the prosecution witnesses. He particularly ripped into the testimony of Mrs. Kasabian that she went to the Tate home ~ith Charles "Tex" Watson, ~11ss Krenw111kel and Susan Atkins. For a dynamic gift ... a Dynamic watch An Om!!ga Dynamic C911 make any gift· g,vlng occasion an unusual one. The unique hor izonta l ov11;1haptd c111 waa 1pecially designed fo r greater J wateh wei ring comfort ••. it fits the wrist like a glove., With cool comfonable easlly interchanged eir-vented Olrlll:J ,l•tl·w111t1ln1. cht1·t•U111a O"'•;• 0,.11.,, •• tlt1lnl•tt ""t """ r••lll11>1 c:111, Alr.n Mlcl llll«Gl'lllllOl•llll llrt' • , ............. ,Jt U.00 MWll-WlllCll llldtl wllJtout "!•lldat •••• ITIJO J. C J.Jum11kri ej J eu1eler.1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVEN llNT TEltMS IANICAMlltlCAlO-.MASTllCHAlGf 24 Yf.ARS IN SAME LOCATION ~liONf l41.J4~ I 7 I l • I 7 i -··-{ Saddlehaek •• . ' . .. • -t -• t'oday'• ~I .. 4 -· EDlTION ·• YO~. 63, NO. 313, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • ORANGE COUNTY,' CALIFORNIA -.. . .~·.WEDNESDAY,. DEC.EMBER-30; 1970 ' .. . . ~ . ~ ·-- TEN CENTS -· . • ranco ares Drain Grants •· ·-a.s • , . . . -------· ··-~- ::--:.-:-""'.::.:... "!" ~-~---.. • _1ves Nationalist Sentences San Clemente to Seek Federal Funds Commuted . The city of San Clemente will apply *<>on.·for Orange County flood control grants to install new drains at three chaMels within the city which have been:a· vexing problem for years. In two of -these projects, experimental lines calculated to thwart the sandbar effect of the surf will be built tn drain 1tagnint.1agoons ·created when the sea blocks drainage of accumdlited runoff water. T!le most costly of the three projects, however, would be the third, a $150,000 concrete and pipe Channel spanning the length of ti;.e canyon along Calle de los Lobos Marinos from Ola Vista to the sea. City Engineer Phil Peter said ap- Hold That Colt Jlancho Seeks 'Delayed Action' A ··child's yearning for a Chris_tmas colt may be universal, but not at RanchG San Clemente, on the doorstep of Presi· dent Nixon's Spanish estate. A Christmas colt on the thoroughbred farm-born between· Dec. 25 and New Year's day-is a catastrophe. Sci1 far, things are l~k.ing up for the J. J. ·Ebnores and their staff, who are hoping lbat Miss Poona, dUe lo foal on Jan. 3, doesn't jump the gun. If she does, and her offspring is born ln· 1970, .. the rulr:s say it officially is a year old on Jan. 1. It will have to race against horses of the same official age, but still it would remain a year younger. The Elmores who own and operate the largest thoroughbred farm in the state under a single owner, have to other ·mothers-to..be ·in their stables, but the two niares'' due dates are well into January. Miss Poona, whose offspring have run in the c h i p s at Santa Anita , is the only cliffhanger. l\l~ine Held as Suspect In San · Clemente Holdups A ·young Camp ·Pendleton Marine recently transferred from military police duty to a unit shipping out for Vietnam is being hel4 in connection with a string of holdups of service stations in San Clemente. Ferris Michael McDowell, was arrested earHer this' week in Chula Vlsta after an alleged robbery of a service station there. Police in San Clemente entered the investigation they suspect Ferris of being the man Who allegedly robbed two sta· tions at gunpoint here in recent weeks. Street Revamp Contract Set Contracts totaling $24,115 have been awarded by Orange Coo:nty Supervisors to the Griffith Company of Santa Ana to resurface seven .streets in the Capistrano Beach area. To be improved are Via Sacramento, Via Vercle Via San Juan; Calle Monterey from can~ Portola to lhe San Clemente City limits; Calle Naranja from Call~ Portola to Camino Estrella, Calle Verano from Camino Estrella to Catie OGlores, and Collegio Drive ~tween Coast Highway and La Cresta Drive . and tietween La Paz Avenue and Selva Road . There were four bidders on each job with high bids totalling $32,192. Oraage <!out l\'eather Tbe morning fog may chill the •ir, but we don't care; the skies will clear up by. noon and the temperature along the coast will be up to 65, with a 72 reading in-.J. lanq. INSmE TODAY When Orongt County's two new supervisors take office, they may appoint new mem· hers to four county adviS01'1/ commissiom. Page 3. • ... lll!t 2f M"' Ill Strvlct II C:•l"9flll• 1 """'" , .. 1, Ctl'W c-11 Mwtffl '"""' 14 Cfl.e:llliol U' 11 HtttNIM NtWI .... '"'''"" If.JI °' ... c.uitrJ • c:-lc• u ., .... " ...,,... 14 C:,.HWIN tJ S"4"tt 32·24 DMfll '"*" I Dr. S .. lllC""'ll 11 DI""'"" I S"'* Mtrtllll 1 .. IJ ••lftrial ,... I T•¥'ltltll 1• •-.m ....... t U•t1 Tfteti.n 1•27 ,llMf 1 .. ll WM111¥ ' ~-11 ._., fftWI ,,.,, """ Lnite" lt Wtrllll NN't ,_, •1•• • The Marine ts being held on $25,000 bail. . A police stakeout in Chula Vista netted the suspect within minutes of a robbery there Monday night. Similar stakeouts were in elfect early last week in San Clemente gas stations in an attempt to capture the robbery SU!peci. Warrants have been Issued in South Orange County Municipal Court charging two counts of armed robbery in San Clemente. The first San Clemente robbery oc- curred Dec. 7 shortly before midni'ght at the Mobile station at &00 Avenida Pl co. A young man approached asking for a can of gas, then pulled a pistol and demanded money. After stealing about $50, the bandit fled in an older model gray car. About a week la ter a man matching the same description used the same ruse to rob the Enco station at Via de F.rente an~ Avenida Calafia. Marine Jailed In. ~ssault Case A Cimp Pendleton Marine sergeant who attaeked and robbed a fellow Marine of near1y · $500 has been sentenced to one year: in Orange County Jail. Superior COuri Judge James F. Judge Imposed~ that tmn on Sgt. John Paul Gaydos, 20, an administrative clerk at Camp Pendleton, after Gaydos pleaded guilty to charges of assault with a deadly weapon. Re dismissed further charges of robbery and conspiracy and pl8ced Gaydos ,on three years probation. Gaydos was arrested after a. fellow Marine told officers that the sergeant struck , him ori the he°ad with a tire iron as the two were driving a rented car lii the San Clemente area last May. The victim told Officers that he was g\'.ljng on leave at the time and the $500 taken by Gaydos bad been saved for· that purpose. Supervisors Laud Capistrano Fireman A resolution of commendation has been 1ulhorized by the Orange County Board of Supervisors for E. A. "TOny" Nydeg· ger who has completed 32 Ytars of service to the Capistrano Volunteer F.irt Department. The resolutJon was offered b y Supervisor Alton E. Allen who pointed out that Nydegger was the departmC11t's first chief and for many year1 provided a garage for the equipment plications for all three projects would be acted upon by a ,pan~! o( engineers for the Flood COntrol District, perhaps in February. If that body approves the projects, then county supervisors would be called upon to include . them in the county budget next summer. "We're not certain we'll get the money, yet," Peter explained, "but we hava some interesting planS." The two lagoons whic;h would be drain· ed in the project are the one at Poche Beach and another at North Beach. The former is a natural dr8inage area paralleled by access paths to the popular surfing beach. During most months of the year il becomes a muddy slough clogg'ed 'with debris. A similar situation exists at North Beach where a Oood control channel made of concrete becomes a bog when the wave action deposits a natural sand dam at its mouth. Peter said the city proposes to install pipes -resembling giant bathtub drains -whlch would allow seepage of the ' . BU.RGOS', Spain. (,U,J'f) .- CeneralWimo Francisco Franco tonight e»mmuted the death :sentences of s1J: Basque nationalists convicted of murdet and bandltry, the Mlnl!try ol Wolmatioo annouoced. . . • '. '"l'he ~ent said tbe •tencu -had,beon CO!)lmuled to "the next bigbeJI ~tence passed." ·The_, next highest aentence paaaed. by. the .Burgos military_ court was 72 years. J!'ranco planned Co e:rplain .bis action in •· yearend address to the nation ton!flil. He has. beeJ1 :Jlllder mounllnC F.~· fl'!>l'1 Europeflll governmentl, aDd Qle Va~an •. Jo <;oOlll)Ule .the· death l!,entences~ faced possib~~ wi~read untW'ln norjhem Spain U he did DOI. ,There · wu immediate reaction from the Vatican which said it beard of the commUtatJon with 0 enornious relief." Franco took the action ·after a apeclat meeting with bl.a cabinet and the council of the .. ~jl)m,: 8IJ advisory grocip ·made up ,~~;parll~!Dent' i;Dembers. 'The af!lcial ~ws, •ge11cy CIFRA an. nounced the ver.dlct . by flashing the Sp_anisb word . .for ·pardon "Indult.ados. Indultados .. Indultados." . water: to the sea beheath any bar whieh , ' J ~ ' ' I.. • \ l • \ l JI ' 'Ille· men then;tselves .were awa:IUng .news of their fate in the central prison of.Bur&Of, in Cells WJth panels Win<lowa antj, ti!mi)eratiires at the· freezfug point. wouJd be created. .. · 1 • • , _ • • ; • • 1 \ ,. ·• OA.M.~ •!It-OT:·~~ . "We have on~ ~~\mg ~1¥ -,"9.·.S...e :;1 ·~ ••· .:· .. : • ~·~ls"r' ~ i:<!~~,-~:Jt;+. Hoa iFranc:o not acted the ·111. men ....Ud. have been· shot by a flrinJ squad or earroted with · a steel band around 11\tlr •neclcs ' at dawn Thuraday1 They hid been convicted-b)r a· mllitarY court lifeguard headqu~.Jnd . ~ ~ . , ... ,1 • • ., , • 1 •. • ., ... " .. near the city beach," he explatned, ~ .•• , • -· · l : ," J · · ~ · · · · ... · • they. 1fork very well. Before we 'Md Children clam.ber o,ver rocks :near, sltetr clif( ':;'h.ere; .. ~tot'tf! 1dfND~i · them there were always problems." .emply ·apd"spill over-.bhllf at Caplstamo _B04ch s BlUll Pili~t. ,Pl!':' Th~ coSI of the Poche drain -Id ents in vicinity have complained 't0 county ofiidals '.Ill 1\ 1fu,f!lf,• be about $6,41.6. ·open drain pipes constitute a hazard that attracts child~; ~un~y · ol murder llld'banditry. · At North Beach, the drainage b: not iii spending about $144;~ to .improVe drainage in .the pres, but re- as severe a problem. A project there placement of ·these old pipes is not part of the project. · TIJe news agency reported the verdict shortly before Franco was to deliver bis annual New Year's speech to the naijon. might cost $2,490, Peter said. -A few hours earlier Capt. Gen. Tomas: Occupational Program Set For Seniors ' A regional occupational p r o gr a m sponsored by two Orange Coast school districts will follow the success of its first effort in nursing instruction with a new course in food preparation starting in early February. The Capistrano.Laguna Beach Regional Occupational Program will offer the food course to interested high school seniors. The curriculum will offer training for employment upon graduation, spokesmen said. A minimum of classroom experience will be followed by adual, on-the-job training. ·- The program's first offering, health aide training, was launched last Sep- tember and has been hailed as a success with 24 students taking part. The heallh aide trained receive two hours each day of job training at a local convalescent hospital · and will transfer to wofk at South Coast Com· munity Hospital next spring. March of Dimes Chief Appeals For Volunteers The chairman of the San CJ~mente March of Dimes Jantlary campaign agaihst birth defects appealed today for volunteers to help Jn the annual drive. Robert E. Ridge\vay of Capistrano Beach said dozens of residents are being sought lo help in the annual cam~gn, which will wind up with 'German measles Vaccination clinics · Jan. 31 at several local schools. -.. 1be March of Diines fias shifted ·its emphasis to fighting .birth ddects after lhe conquering of polio. Ridgeway, a member of the executive cimmlttee of the Orange County March of Dimes. pointed out that. :thiJ, p a st year 1,500 youngsters in the county, 1,800 Orange County babies were ~ wllh birth defects. .Many of lhem; be add~. Were dllled by the mother's ·exposure tO German measles. · The vaccination effort agajnst tha disease ls geared to children fr.om, 1 lo 12 years old. Volunteers may call 492-74'0. Two State Groups Support Garcia Rebull, commanding· officer of the Burgos military region, confirmed the death sentences -and the jail terms of nine other Baeques, putting clemency diredly up to Franco. ' , Coastal Billboard Ban Two Hitchhiking Girls Tied Up, Raped on Coast By L VN HARRIS mcKS Of 1M D•llY .. 1i.t S!&ff Two California professional oi'ganiza· tions hve registered support of the pro. posed scenic area billboard ban sought by the Capistrano Bay area chambers of commerce·. The Southern California Chapter of the American Societ¥-of Landscape Architecta and th:e Orange County Chapter of tbe Ametlcan Institute of Architects have voiced their support in letters to the Orange County Board of Supervisors. · · The board Is due to act on the ban and sign control ofdinance in January. Lee Sharfman, president of t.he landscape architec~ orgapization, wroie to express' "support of t h e im· plementation 0£ tighter controls on out· door advertising in the Dana Point area. ''This is one of the most scenic areas in southern Orange County. The many ;,iisitors' and tOutists who pass· through this aiea will better bt able to appreciate' these exceptional scenic qualities· if thf!ir abillty , to do so Is not so freQuen~y· frustrated by visual obstructions," tie said. The arehltecl noted that Route 1 and' El Camino ,Real ti1r.9ugh th~ afea ha've been clusified potentia~ scen!C routes Of the california highway systenl. In Jts Jetter of support, · the· lnstitute of Architects said about outdoor ad· vertising , "~s with most ·other aspects of our visual environment this particular problem is completely out or , control in many areas of the county, and time is fast running out to reta~ the re- maining oasis of reason8tile, unsj>oiled countryside." 11le archiiects' presidt?iit, ·waiter J. Richardson , said "Billboards have ef- fectively been c~tfolled ·in m~ny ·parts of O!lf country through cooperative ef- forts o( citizens and . goverrunent, and it ~ust be done here." He told supervisors, "Y9ii .may co'unt on the support and advice of our en'tire membership in any matters Of this nature." The Oranre County Planning Com~ mission approved the proPOSed ~nlc area aign·control <rdinance in.Oecemb;tr. Opposition by outdoor advertising; !J>- tereets I• expected b~ billboard opponents wheri . the matter comes before the superviaon In Janiµry. Physicians Say President . ' . A pair of hitch·hiking teenaged 1irls told police TueSday of being picked up by a middle aged man in Laguna Beach.' bound' wlth 1'0pe and raped in separate south county JocaUons. Orange County Sherdff's deputies and Laguna Beach police are investigating the ·alleged abductions and sexual assaults. One victim ts 18, from Costa Mesa and the other is lS, from Corona del Mar. They told police they were picked up about 9 p.m. Monday in the 100 block: of North Coast Highway by a man 35 to 40 years old. Drivliig north, . they . claimed he drew a pi1tol and pulled off in the Crystal Cove-area. where he tied their bands and· thrtatened them again, this· Ume with a knife'. · He allegf!dly forced the yOunger victim 1nto the back seat .ind raped her there, then drove back to ·S,n Juari Capistrano where be ravished the older slrl. Education-Plan In 'Excellent' ·HeaJ,th ·. Dis~U$sion S_et · . . . : _For Cap· o PTA From Wire· Services Golf and ,swimmir!g on t,h.e Ot:ange coast may be an iounediate New Year's resolution for President Nixon, who heard an addr_ess On ' the State of his he81Ui tOday. · · ' · Orange ~~·s .nymber one .citizen ernerged from his annual cbecltup at. the U.S. Naval Hospital, Bethesda,. Md., wlJit both' good newa and a prescripllon for more exercise. . , .He .d~fered slightly with one o/ his , persohal physid.ans, Air Foree Brig. Gen. Walter ~. Tkach, on the urgency pf taking a break away from executive duties in Washington. Gen. Tkach Mid be should vJCation In San Clemente or ~ey Biscayne, Fla., 1n the next week' or two. ' "I havt no eicuse,'" President 'Nixon I . !'I •. toti:I reporters · after ' Complettni the ... checkup,... .. .. . , 1 A discUS!lion of the entire special .·He was q~oted •as telling Gen.: nach education program In the· Capistram be would try to get . ..,ine, fuil In .ibe Unified School .District -'feaJUrlng !\UR •u · soon · as he can get . <MJt· fl:om ,teachers lrom each class -.. will be under the press ·ol dUUes• µ, ~.Ca~. codducted'for members of the Capb:tram '"I am 'coil<e'i'n<d' be<:a ... l iloo't'!\'tni Council ol the PTA Tueoday nilht. him to get Into trouble,'"the:mQitaty 1'1>e•program will begin at 7::!0 p.m. phyiidan explalile<I, 'allhough • he -a> Marco Forster JWlior High School ieitrl\IY. enlhuSl..UC' •abodt Nlxon'i ·cafetorlum. health.' · Chari., Johanaen, director ol pupµ ' N....mtn .,fc«f if tJie l'rtiii!e!if diuld pel'sonnel, wlll .be~atoi;~ '.: C011tin,ue at hl,a present ~Uve. pie< S]l<lk~s wm, kid~ .M a.r j,o tt• -mmus· the prescribed ex<n:i,t and llahlbeig, men!ally g~ minor pro- relax:atton -'without physical harm. gr~; Irene Floyd, visually ha~ "J'in not betting. on it." said Tkach. dlcapped; Barry Tanner, speech therapy; ~~111,~:i;:.-:i~ ~U:: t~e ~~I::· =~~ ~;:~)~1= =~":. series of medical tells, to. avoid· beln& pedant mottiers: Jdf Olien, Ensli. misuriderstood. · ~ u a second lanpage. ' 1 1 J DAILY PILOT SC Lawyer Says Kasahian Threatened L(l5 ANGELES <UPI) -The defense cbaraed ·today al the Tate-LaBianca murder trial that it was "humanly im- possl_ble" for the key slate witness to tell the truth about the slayings because she ~was threatened with prosecution herself. Irving Kanarek, tho attorney for Ch&rlu Mal\IODJ said that Linda Kasa· biQ gave the anawers the prosecution wanted in rttum for being granted im- muntty in the seven killings. Kanarek also told the jury that the proaecution had produced no evidence whatsoever of a conspiracy headed by Mant0n. "Linda Kaaablan said she did not know of lily intent to kUi anyone," Kanarek said. ''She was a ~nspirator who did not know anything about a con- a;piracy." The c:qooplra~ charge wu bcouglit in, Kanarek utd, because there was no way of convJcting Manson of the actual slayings. - '"lbere was just no showing of any consplrac7," Kanafek said. "~ moUve of the j»eople who brought that charge was to get Charlie Manson for some ungodly reason which is pr~ bably rew.d to Mr. Manaon's We style," Kanartk said. All four·,defendaJitl' ""re absent from the courtroom when the trial resumed today. Manson's attorney had begun hls por· lion of the final arswnents Tuesday by 'handlni the jury bloody color phot.craphl of tha bodies of the vtctlma. It waa the f.lnt . tirrie the seven men and five women had sttn the pictures cloee up. 1bey • passed them around qukkly and ooe woman juror refused even to a:lance at then\, -1 "What the pro.:uUon wants.to dlscUa with )'Oil in this Will ire thete prejudiC!al photOcraplll," Klnirek sald. . '"Ibey are tJoytns ~ lynch Mr. Manson. 'llley are appealln( to the ranknt kind of prejudice thal difldea thls country_· todlJ." . Kanartk bad to be stopped by SuperlOr Court Judie Cbarl!I H. Older wheij· he btgan addrtatgg one of the older male j~ by n,,1ine and referring: to his apetjence with "vigilante" groups In the United Sta!a. With the defeDdlr'.s listening in ad· joining room! by loudspeaker, Kanarek attacked tbe putillclty surrounding the caae and actuaed: lhe prosecution of temrilt tactics Ag41nat witneues. He aid .the ;diltrtct'l .uctrney's office had attai:bd blm persoDally. Older bad to shut hJm off again and it appeared the trial will be in for -~ 4'11 , of ~y ~SSiOlll when. Kan•ek eel.I ~I to the eV.ideoce ID the cue. _ · Qilel delenae "°"""I Paul Fitzprald preceded I<anaret,. lelling the jury-It wg,s ..quite feasible' tha t someone --other than the "MlnlOll .Family" committed the llVen alayingl. Fitqeral4 nid the fact that a fingerprint of Patricia Krenwlnkel was found at the residence· could be explained by the possibility tbat she wu a house guest who had been Invited to the home by Sharon Tate for a swim. Fitagerald cut doubt on th e truthfutne;a qf the prosecuUon witnesses. He particularly ripped into the testimony of Mrs. Kasablan that she went to the Tate home with Charles "Tex" Watson, Mils Krenwinkel and Susan Atkins. Mrs. Kasablan testified that she never actually entered the house but Fitzgerald pointed out that her knife was the only weapon found by police at the scene. Mrs. Kasabian had aald she gave the knife to Miss Atkins. "It is just as .rwonable to assume that she did enter tbe house and took part io the killings,'• Fitzgerald said. "It 11 also reuonable to believe that &he was not even with Charles Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel and Susan Atkins but with some other person or persons." DAILY PILOT N..,.,t .. _. Mdf•M .._. "9f1M htidl h ll'911 Y6y c... ..... s.. a..-. OMHliE C.OAST PIJIL.1SM1Nli COMl".4MY llo\i•rf N. w,,4 P1u1•Unl tr.t PW!11'*" J1tli: It. C111l1., vice Pnt!lltll arAI Gltltrtl MIMttr lhom11 IC11•ll ldilet ?ho"''' A. M~rl"l.int MtNgln9 IOllOt fli~har4 P, H1U Mllll 0r...-(;Mt)' ldl!W --eo.111 Mtt1: UD Wiii It'( Sttlff flf'WPOl'l kat~I !r\J 'W•I Bllllol •1111t1Ytl'C • L.ffV'll BM.g,: ftl ,._, "'""Ill Muntlnttm INtll: 17111 IMd! l 111tl1v1td a..11 Clll'!llllltl aas Norm l!l Clmlrlo RNI • FUNERAL SERVICES SET Bruce Beecher Burial Set For Mesa Cyclist, 18 Senate OKs Domestic ··Money Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -'11le Senate gave final ,Congressional approval today to a bill appropriating $18.9 billion for federal health and wellare programs, but with only four days remalnlng before adjournment ·there was sUU no break in the logjam on other major bills . Transportation, foreign aid and Social Security leglSlation were the principal measures Uf<1 ~ in the CongreS!. The hitch in\ pie Social Security in. crease.! developed because of differing Senate and House versions. Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (D-Ark.), the influential chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee, said it was "ut· terly, humanly impossible" to reach a compromise before adjournment because there were too many dUferences in the House and Senate bills. Mills promlled, however, that the boost In Social Security would pus by early February and would be retroactive to Jan. l, 1971. The Houae pasatd a 5 percent benefit increase, the Senate 10 percent, and while the ljouse put a $67.20 minimum on monthly payments, the Senate boosted it to $100. It previously was $64. There A t wert numerous other differences, in· c eancut Costa Mesa student and eluding inclusion in the Senate bill of salesman, killed Monday when hi! motorcycle plunged off a Laguna Canyon money for increased pubUC-assistance cliff in darkness and unfamiliar terrain, pa~e~tapp. ro . .....t•tions ·'bill, .. ! .. ~ bv a wW be j>urlid S~turd". -· •·-,,..... , Ritea for Bruce D. Beecher, 18, of 69-0 roll · call vote, carrie ,hmds for -E M ti st w be t 1 the Labor Department and t;t>e Health, 4AIY • agno a ., w a p.m. , in W.verly Chapel at F a t r h a v e n Education and Welfare Department. lt Memorial Park, Santa Ana. _ is $210 million higher than President , He was ·returning from 1 visit to Nixon sought but congreulonaJ leaders lhe big Christmas happening In Laguna predicted he would sign the bW. CanyOn -literally to see how the other The action·left only two appropriations half lived, aays his mother -when bills to be acted upon before the 91st the fatal accident occurred. Congress goes out of business at noon The helmeted cyclist was apparently Sunday -a $2.2 billion bill .for fortlgn killed tnstag{Jy when his vehlcle sla11UJled -ald"and 12.6 bllli<>n for tho transpomUon into the g~. 50 feet below the ,clrepOff -deparlment. ' . near Laguna.Canyon Road. • .~ • The transportation meuure has been Mr •. Beecher, an Orange Coast Colle&e bloc)ed by Senate opponents of the pro- bUIS.Dlas mljdr, leaves his parenta. Mr. )>med Supenonic Transport (SST), which andr Mrs. -Cfarles Beecher,~& brother would receive 1 $210 mllllon federal D6nald, U~ In Canada, .and a sister, aubsidy. 'lbe Foreign Aid appropriation Mft:. Barberi Maroii, of Wiaconlln. .. was held up because of a HOuse-5enate 1'fie i'anit~ sugests metnOilal eOfi.. wrangle over $200 million for credit trlbtitiona .... to the -Oringe Count}'-Youth sales of milltary equipment to foreign for Christ org~ization, 1055 N. Harbor governments. ' Boulevard, Anaheim, or the OCC The Social Security bill was at a Scholanblp Fund!--standstill because House managers were Mr. Beed>er graduated from Newport refusing to go to eonlerence with the HarbOr .High .School in 1970 and entered Senate to work out a compromlae OCC,k &om Wblch his older brother measure. gradu'afea eight years ago. Even before the old Congrw drew lje ~~as ~180. employed by Sears, to a close, President Nizon began ~~-& Cg_mpa~y at Sou~ ~st strategy seasions aimed at prompting Pl.aa:, most: rectntly In th9 shoe ®part· action on bli'1i>elfate' refonh program ment, aft~r trying out other duties for jn the 92nd Congress, which meets Jan. the experlence, 111 , 21. "He .~ai. neit( to .. top ~~le~man 1,. He scheduled 1 meeting .today with w~k, Just JI .~ of It, his moU!ir Senate Dtl:boc!raUc and Republican said Tuesday. leaders to seek assurance his family Betcher played B team football it assistance plan wouJd be a "top priorlt " Newport Harbor High Sch?01• was a item ne1t year. The plan was junJ!d member of Sea ~i:out Ship 30S and Monday. along with protective trade attended Harbor Tr1n1ty Baptist Churc~. legislation as congress cleaned house He was also a DA~LY PIL<?'f carrier in its rush for adjournment. boy for five years while attending school. A comprom'-166 6 bill' def "He. supported himself to get what -· ion ense pro. he wa~ted while getting his education. curement bill cleared both ~he Senate He always did," said Mrs. Beecher. and .the House Tuesday night after Her son was leaving the Sycamore negotiators agreed tn remove lan~uage. Hills festival site over unknown terriin that would have weakened a previously .. near midnight Sunday whe.n the fat.I passed ban on the we ot U.S. troops accident occurred. • and advisers in Cambodia. He was found after daybreak Monday P~ssage. came 70 tn 2 afte~ the .senate by other fesUval·goel'! Jeavlng the area, earlier re1ected a compromtse bill that draped over the demolished cycle and would have allowed the we of American dead for about eight hours, coroner'1 lr~ps to reacue prl~ners of war or deputies said. to insure the safe w1thdra~al of U.S. troops from Soulheast Asta. A new House-Senate conference bowed to the Daughter Wins First Round In Support Case LOU!SV!Ll.E, KY. (UPI) -A Unl- \'erslty of Louisville coed who won the first round of her court battle to force her father to suppcrt her said . she was so j'destilute" she could not go back to New York is a retrail were ordered. The coed, whose identity was been wlfh. held because of the private nature of the case. said her father stopped sending her funds last April because she had adopt. ed a "hippie" style of life and had moved off. campus. New York Family Court Judge Millard L. Midnock ordered the father , who, be said was a prominent law. yer. to either pay his daughter $5 • 7 5 O by noon Monday or serve .1uoo1 M1t1NOC1t 30 days in jai\ for contempt of c~urt. But the sentence was stayed pending a re· view of the case by the five-judge ap- pellate division of the New York Su· preme Court. Midnock said at the time of the breach, the girl was on probation at the Unlve r· stty and suffered emotional !ll"Oblems from being "terrified ••• of her father 's ri~id standards." . In the ensuing months, Midon1ck said. the girl had improved her grades, lived wholeADmely 11'\d had been restored to good standlng at the University. She had also received psychiatric help and made efforts to visit ht.r father and sttp.moth· er. his fourth wife. The daughter ~•Id she wsll forced lo sou her car for $1,000 to see her through the se mestl'r. "I'm delllitute right now.'' she said. ·"I'm looking for a job. ln fact, if they order 1 ret rla1, I can't afford to go back to New York." ' Senate's wishes and deleted the language. Medical Teams Rush to Israel Slide Victims BEERSHEBA, Israel (UPI) -Medical teams were rwhed today to the border village of Neot Hakikar following reports a rockslide bad buried 40 persons, police sources said. First reports of the incident were sketchy. Some said the slide buried 40 Israeli soldiers eating in a mess haU, killing and wounding many. Other reporu said the dead and injured were civilian settlers of Neot Hakikar, which is about 15 miles south of the Dead Sea and aboct one mile west of the Jordan cease.fire line. Army sources in Tel Aviv said they were invesUgatint the reports but had no further information. Neot Haklkar is a settlement in the desert below the salt pans of the Dead Sea about 10 miles south of the Biblical sin city of Sodom. Unlike some other frooUer setUemcnt in the Arava Desert it is a civilian and not paramilitary settlement. TAKE 'EXTRA CAR' TO ROSE PA RADE LOS ANGELEs (AP) -Bu! service to the Pasadena Rose Parade from loca· Uon1 In Lot Angeles, Orange, Rlvertide and San Bernardino counties will be made available by the S o u t h e r n California Rapid Transit District early Friday. Service to the Rose ac>wt game between Stanford and Ohio State will also be provlded ftom RTD'1 terminal in downtown Los Angeles. Bua riders mu'!t have theit e1act fare or use monthly passes • f Booby Trap Wing Flap ' From.-747 Hits House BEl.l. GARDENS. Calif. (UPI) -A ~-pound section of wing flap fell off • United Air Lines Boeing 747 on a training flight Tuesday night and plunged through the roof of a duplex. There was no one in the building and no persons on the ground were injured. The j u m b o jet, cmying a crew of four and a Federal Av i a tlen Adm inistration Supervisor, landed safely at Los Angeles International Airport. The National Transportatio n Safety Board and the FAA were investigating the accident The metal and fiberglass wing fiap section, six feet by two feet and shaped like a pod, tore 1 two foot square hole in the rlof of the duplet. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a IO-foot sec· lion of the kitchen ceiling. The tenants, Mr. and Mrs. William Hardy, were not at home . A neighbor, Al Hall, said "It sounded like an earthquake" when the wing .sec- tion hit the duplex. _ Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by Sgt. Bruce Horn at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This 5().. g"°llon drum is shFedded in such a way that jagged edges point out in all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When trigge red, they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. A UAL spokesman said the 747 was doing "touch and go'' landings at Ontario (Calif.) International Airport and was en route to Los Angeles lnternaUonal when the accident occurred. Security Guard Stymies Tlieft, Shoots Car Tire Air Califo1·nia Gets Year Delay in Revamp of Jets Huntington Beach security guard Den· nis Dahlke Tuesda y night thwarted a department store theft by shooting out the rear tire on an escape car filled with four fleeing bandits. Air California will have an additional year to install anti·smog equipment to bring their jets up to standards set by a new state law, according to a ruling made Tuesday by the county Air PolluUon C.Ontrol District apj>eals board. An APCD spokesman aa id the variance was granted on the condition that the 1irline schedules the installation of modi· Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of skl·masked bandits who ap- proached the attendant from behind with a JO.inch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa service station of $50 Tueiday night. Ray Rossi, on duty at Chet Tschetter's ChevrOn Service, 2275 Newport Blvd., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foot up adjacent Fairview Road with the cash. The victim said he was t:ken by surprise about 7:25 p.m. and ordered to turn over the money from the gasoline pump isl and box or be stabbed. Police searching the surrounding area recovered a hat. striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi identified as being worn and used by the 18 to 20-year~ld robbers. GEM TALK TODAY by J.C. HUMPHllD THE LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fascinate me most, reply is difficult because each has its own fascinating his· tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting; for cen· turies the cool look of this legend· ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be-- lieve it devine , that only their gods could lead them to jade bearlog boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low rellel figures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, thla continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in Mexico. Some peopla believe jade ls found only in museums: but today, exqulslle jade jewelry 1' availa ble to all, and may be found In our store. I - - fylng equipment as soon as il is available. It was granted because on Jan. I aircraft emission of smoke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new .. ecUon of the state health and safety code. Bob Clifford, general manager of the airline, said jet engines that have not been modified will be in violation of the new law. "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spare engines, for a -1otal of 17. Two have been modified and we expect to get another completed by next week, '1 he said. Clifford said the airline ordered the modifying devices from the Pratt· Whitn ey Company in May and has con- tr!lcted with United Airlines for their installation. "Delivery has been a little slow and United has their own fleet tn take care of. so the variance will give us an additional year to comply. Oil Platform Fire Out After 30 Days NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The lar1est oil well fire feeding a wild drilling plat· form blaze in the Gulf of Mexico for the past 30 days has been put out, a Shell Oil Co. spokesman said today. Dahlke, regularly employed as a deltc· tlve with the Orange Police Department, ls-a guard at Huntington Ctnter. He fired five shots at the careening car and one bounced off the rear bumper, but another ripped through the left rear tire. The incident began at 7:10 P.m. when a J. C. Penney's Company store employe saw three men and a woman in a leopard sltin coat ~rying tn atU! 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at. tempted to leave the store parking Jot in the escape car. He identified hlmself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run him down, Dahlke told police. That's when the shooting started. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car which was found abandon,ed one hour later with the shot-out tear tire. It was located by Fountain 'Valley police at the intersecllon of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparently escaped on foot but all of the stolen unlfonns were recovered from the auto. Police later indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke is a former Huntington Beach' patrolman. He is employed part-time as a Penney's security guard. For a dynamic gift ... a Dynamic watch : An Omega Dynamic can make any gift· giving occaalon In unuaual one. The unique horizontal ova1~1haped c11e waa 1pecially dea!gned for greater ·watch wearing comfort ••• It Illa the wrist llke a glove. With cool comfortable easily Interchang ed air·\'ented atrap.1 ' \ .. u.w!n(!ln9, ll1t1•!t Uin9 011110• 01n1,,,1e, ~tll~l•n l lttf Wflt• ,..lstlftl C•••· .... f•Wn\ld n\lr;/llW\Qltblt 1111p ................ Sl15.00 Mt flllll.wlnd lllOCltl 'fl'llllout e&lttMlll •••• &71.60 J. C. .J.Jumphrie3 Jeu 1e fer.1 1823 NEWPORT BL VD., COSTA MESA CONVENIENT TERMS IANKAMERICAlltD-MASTllCHAlltWI I• YEAlltS IN SAME LOCATION P'HONf S•l·J~OI '- i "·"'1... • " I I . • • ... ,... -. -.. ------. - ---. • • . ' ' • . • · -·l:Jag-oaa-:B.eaehf .~- • f ~ • • 'Toda)''• 'Flaal • _ ...... , . • . • • • ., . . . ' YOC. 63, NO. ll 3, 3 SECTIONS, 31 'P 6£S . ':: . .. .. OU NSE CcuNTY .. c,(LfFORNIA • • • WEONESO~ '!'., .PIC EMIWJO, 'f"70f: •• .... -, ..... ~ ... .,._ ' . . ~· -...::. .. .. -.... . Other tities tO Share .. . ; . .._ . .... .. ,.::· Police Gen. Franco Spares Six In Spain BURGOS , Spain (UPI) - Generalissimo Francisco Fi'anco tonight commuted the death sentences ol. six Basque nationalists convicted of murder and banditry, the Ministry of lnlorniation annoilnced. The announcement said the sentences had been commuted to "the next highest aen~ passed," The next hijbest aente.oce passed by the Burgos military court was 72 years. Franco planiied to eq>lain his action in a yearend address to lhti nation tQnlght. He has been under mounting preisure 'rrom 'European governments and the Vatic;m to cooimute the death aentenc:es and faced possible widespread unrest in northern Sj>ain if he did not. Tbere wu immediate reaction from the Vatican which said il heard of the Cof!lD"IUlailon with "enormous relief." Franco took tilt action ~l.er a 1pecla1 rn..uiw with bis cablDet 'and Jhe council • o/ tbe ruJm, an advlloey group 1118d~ up,· of parliament memben. .. 'l)e ofllda1 ..... qeoey"CIFllA ... llOllDCtd the verdict lof f1ahlrlg .the s,,anlsb word for pardon "lndultadol. lilduiladoe: lndulladol.'' 'Ibe men Ulenu1elves were awaiting news of lheir fate in the central priaon of Burgoa, in cells with panelesa window• and temperatures at the freeiing point1 Had Franoo not acted the sb: men would ha:ve been shot by a firing squad or garroted with a steel band around their necks al dawn Thursday. Tbey had betn convicted by a military court of murder and blnditry. The news agency reported the verdict shortly be.fore Franco was to deliver bis annual New Year's speech to the nation. A few hours earlier Capl Gen. Tomas Garcia Rebull, commanding officer of the Burgos military region, confirmed the death sentences and the jail terms of nine other Basques, putting clemency directly up to Franco. Marine Arrested On Holdup Rap In San Clemente A young Camp Pendleton Marine recently transferred from military police duty to a unit shipping out for Vietnam ls being held in connection with a string of holdups of service stations in San Clemente. Ferris Michael McDowell, was a?Tested earlier thls week in Chula Vista after an alleged robbery of a service station ther<. Police in San Oemente entered the Investigation they suspect Ferris of being the man who allegedly robbed two .u.~ tlons at gunpoint here in recent weeks. The Marine is being held on $25,000 bail. . A police stakeout in Chula Vista netted the suspect within minutes of a robbety there Monday ni~ . . Similar stakeouts wtre In effect early last week in San Clemente gas stations Jn an attempt to capture the robbery auspect. Warrant& have been issued in South Orange County Mwiicipal C.ourt charging two counts of armed robbery in San Clemente. Capistrano Artist Show Slated J an 7 • San Juan Capistrano arUst Jon Serie wUI be featured at an art exhibit Jan. 1 through 31 at California Lutheran College In Thousand Oaks. Serie has painted more than 600 can- •asse1 and ls a self-styled individualist who has Uved alone much ol. hls 15 )'eirs in an ancient adobe hut. . . ~ -. . -. llapp~llillg Bjll . . ----. ·n ·otd -· Tbat-·t.ott Rancho. Seeks 'Delayed Action' A child's ·yearning for a Christmu colt may be uniVVS:811 but not at Rancho San ClerDente, on· the doorstep of Presi· deri\ Ni>On:a· Span!ab estate. A .~as. col on the thoroughbred farm-born between Dec. 2.5 and New Year's day-is a catastrophe. So far, things ar:e looking up for the J. J. Elmores and:their staff, who are hoping that Miss iPoona, due to foal on"Jao. 3, doeso'I ll\ITIP the gun. If she does,, and ler offspring is born in 1970, the rulea say it officially is a year old on Jan. 1. It will have to race agalnst borse.s of lhe same offtciai i.ge, but· still it wOuld. mnain a year younger. The Elmores who own aJl(I operate the largest thoroughbred farr\i in the state under .a single owner, have to other mothers.to.be in their stables, bu~ the two mares' due dates are well into January. . Miu Poona, whole offspring have l'UJl In the C b Ip I al; Sanla Anila,. is the only cllflhanger. Teenage ·Girl Hitchhike1·s . . Raped Along South Coast A pair of hitchhiking teenaged girls told police TUes4aY or being picked up by a niicldle aged man In Laguna Beach, Mi.ssile Figkrer. · ... SeQr:es I~reept ·1n .Pacific Test WASIIlNGTON MP) -~ Sprint missile, a key ~poq in the Safegu~rd antirnbS\)e system, has scored Its first sUcceuful test Jnteritpt of an in- tercontlhental h&tl&tic missile warhead over the Pacific, the Pentagon announced today . The Sprint, a short-range, super:·fast missile, shot up • from the Kwajaleln Missile Range in the Pacific on Dec. 23 and came within "kill range~· of the lCBM target llOM! cone which had ~ ~uncbed from California, 4,200 mites away. 1':>e test did not involve any actual ezpfosim1, the Pentagon said. The in- tercept was verified by Instruments. bound witb roPe and nped in separate south county locations. , Orange County ·Sbedff's deputies and Laguna Beach polki" are invesU&atlng the alleged abductions and 11e111al ass,.ull!.' · · · Orie victim ts ·1' from Costa .. ~ ... and the other is lS, from Cigrooa del "Ill' • ., \ ' < 1" ' "" 't' '"I ~ . ~ '!'bey told Poli'"'~. ~· p1CUd · a1al&. I P·"" iii tllt IOI ::foci:" of llorlb cOuc · by. a man 3S to fO JtSri1 .old. • • Drlvin& aar11f, ")bey . cl11med be· drew a piatol and J>!llled.. off Jn the CryNI COve area ·where· be fitd tbeii' bands and thre~tened them again, thlt· Ume with a knife. He allepd)y forced the younger vittim. Into the back seat and ,raj>ed 'her ~. then drove back .to .San Juan Capistruo where he ravlsbecl°tbe older girl. Tbe pair said they were dropped off at Coast Highway aM MacArthur Boulevard, where they obtained a detai}. ed description of the ami1ant'1 car as be dr:ove away., A complete delcriP.lion of the man was alsO 1iven "to °pOUCe. T~p_ayers . . Get Break . . In 1;· · a .~ . . BJ BARBARA KREIBICB Of .... Daltr "*"1lllff Laguna ~acli ,taxpayera will not have to '-;ot the whole ~ill for police wor.k during the Qristmas "happening," Public Worts Director Joseph· SwC1JJ1 aald today . ' . , • . Under . mu~I ala. agreeinenti with neighboring cltje,,, 61ch cl\r normally pays for the~ men and equipment it sends out in response tO police an~ hre. department. emergencies in. other communities, Sweany said. • · , Miitual aid. is commonly used .by fire departn:ier\t.s, Ae not~ . but calls . for pol!Oe n'.i\llual aid .,e retatively rare. )qith. regard k> payment of state. and county . officefs, he added, \here Ls a ... gray area:• which bu not ~ totally clal11ie4 ar thls poln!. • c.Iif,ornla Higbway Patrol offlcen manned"road blocks during the Laguna ~eoey and CQtlliltY ola.rshals and abiatffs dtputJes ~ ~· oq duty. County AdnUruitratOr RObert Thomas ;r~~~o;.e~rcoo!~ ooo; 4. • ~ • ..... • • JfE~! lo po; .... , lllO· ~ la .Laguna. Tilt ~ llUdl PoUce Departm..i eAima!Oi .Ila coil at lt,lllO 1'hlJe Foun- tain' VIDey contrllluled ~ worth of usislallct. . . During the four;--day· emergency 499 officers from 70 law enforceine"nt agen- cies were on 4ut): at.one time or another in Laguna S,.ch', . Jncl1i1dlng the entire '4~member"I,.ag!fna fo~. . OffiCen frbm other. a1encles included: aherilf's ll<i>artmen~ 67; county marsha~ fS; Costa Me'sa, 40 ; Santa Ana 35; Anabein\, 35 ; Oranie, 311.; Garden Grove, 30; FllJltrton, 25; Wes~nsler, 2.5 ; Baena Park, 20; Hun~ Beach, 17,; Foun-t.In Valley, 15; st.Into~. 9; Seal Beach, 10; BrE!;i:, 10; San Clemente, · 15; La tf_abra, 10; Cypress .. IO; La Palma, 6. . ii * * . • "Dome. tr•· Hospital . ' . . -~ ~. Mi4ico~l-clad ·Prince!'' Margaret takes. her husband, .Lo~ Snowdon, holJle from Lo nil on c mlc •. n, qouple today 'dropped out.of tb• pQbljc . glare that followed -repqrta Ibey have ligteed to a lllvou:o • .Snowdon • hll<f ·been bospita!i.ZO\I (or,IWj)I week& ·for pllnOr' aurg8')'; 'l'!lel·~· . oftbe~urgerywa~·nol<liacl!J:lled: . ·. · · · ·, '. • • , p;li~ . '\'.: ViY• tm :JGL,,1YR~-.i , "' • ~. •q!"u "l' ;.'.'t j .• • '"r'f; r , Physi~~dii~$~y P.~.eside~t~ I • ' -· • • • • In 'Excellent' Co»dition ~ .-, I • I • . , ' ' . . . . ' , F:'rom wtre. Se"lce:1 • Ool~ 111d, swimming. •OD the Oran1e CMst'Tnly be an Immediate Ne'f' Year'i rtlO!utlon for Preskient Nixon, who heard Bf1 addi'esa on tbe atate of hla health today. · <>range COunty's number one citiien emerged from his IJ}nual checkup at the U.S. Naval Hospital, Bethesda, Md .• with both good news and a preacril>tloo for more exercise. "I have no u:cusf," President, NizOn lold reparlen .after COll!pietin& the ~"!'.~~quoted aa 0te~ ~ ... Ttacb he~ would try Jo get ,.... fun In the tun as soon u he ean get out · from -under the preM of dlillea in the capitol The .Sprint, like Ila partner loog-range Spartan antlmlaile, woald carry a nuclear warhead in iin actual intercept of an incoming enemy ICBM . 'Happening' Organizers He differed slightly with one of his personal physicians, Air Force Brig. Gen. Walter R. Tkach, on the urgency of taking a break away from executive duties in Washington. "I am concemed betaute I dOn't want him to gel Into trouble," the mIUtaiy physician e1J>i8lned, although • be Wll generally en.Uriuiiastic about Niioo'1 health. Newsmen asked If the President could continue at his present· i xecuti-.:e pace -minus the prescribed exhciae ml reluaUon -Without physical battn. The Spartan and the Sprint comprise a one-two punch, with the Spartan design- ed to meet and destroy enemy warheads more than 40Q miles away and the Sprint d~ to . take out enemy "warheads whiCh pepetrate t.be Spartan umbrella defenae .• · The. ,Sprint 'relies on blinding speed to meet . an enemy warhead some 25 miles up and deilroy It. Four ·montha q01 the Spartan scored what the Pe~n called its first suc- ~ul lei! in~. In claiming.a sUcceastul first Intercept for the Sprint, the Pentagon said range inltrumlntl-~iDdScated its second stage "piiad dooe .,.....,. to the target to have destrOYed lt with an operational nucl.eer warhe.ad:" · The vital radar eQulpment, which con· stitutes the eyes ot the Safeguard al\" timilslle ~tern, allo bas been tested from Kwajalein u Jhe United Stales moves toward an openUonal system. !I'be Safepard ii still a matter of coosklerable ... ~~ in Congress, which \hla1~r Umtted apanslon. below the level requested by President Nll<on. ' . P olicewo1nan Hit-run Victi1n After four days of r'OUDd-the~lock duty and fouled Quisfmu plans, Laguna BeaCb police dlspatcber Juanita Per· rym&IJ was given the da y off Tuesday. She took the occasion to visit downtown Laguna Beach, only to be struck by a hit·and·run driver while crossing Forest Avenue in a crosswalk. The policewoman, who lives at 162 High Drive, wu not seriously Injured in the I p.m. accldent and was given first aid for brWes at the nearby Lacuna 'l Bf.oeil pallet, stallon. ' • The accident occurred in th< 300 block of Forest Avenue when a vehicle turning from Beach Street onto Forest Avenue clipped Mrs. Perryman. She was knocked to the pavement and the driver of the car did not slop. • MaySueLagu1utCouncil ~ Gen. Tkach said ht 'Should vacation tn San Clemente or Key Biscayne, Fla., iD the next week or two. Organizer~ of the Christmas rock festival in Laguna Beach ..td today they will petition the City Coundl at lt.s Jan. 6 meeuni:, seeking a full in· ve1tigation of the event. Tbe threat of a suit against the city also was made in a statement · attributed to Fred Lewis, owner of a d!ain of mod clothing stores, who appeared on the scene aver the weekend as one of the backers or tbe gathering that drew 20,000 people to Laguna Canyon. Tbe stat.eptent said the suit would not be for money but would charg'e "something like oonspiracy to start a riot." ,Tbe city, it ma Int• I ne d , "je<ipardiud the -livea o( :.1.000 people tJy forc ing an evacuation" a ft e r organi?en al,.adr bed qr<ed lo dllbond the gathering peoc.tuUy. Laguna designer Bill Greenwood. :!'ho participated ~n negotiatiOns with. the""" city regarding ,doaure of .the festival on Jt! third ~Y, said he. woold present a peti· . lion to the council Alkinll that . an. im- partial lDVesilgatloo bt.JJW1de to "'feveal the entire truth" about the. city's handling of t.be affair. Greenw09'1 said he "spen~ two hours Lion Brend.a Delivers Again. ' ' . Christmss maming ~a,, a five-year~ld lion~s at L1oti Coun, . try Safari, <\eli••r<d, lter !Uth ael • o(•qoiptupleti. ' trying to convince: the people that the festival would bave to end Sunday and understood the city woukl let trucks with food and water throuih the roadblocks to t.be city if participants a.greed to leii: .. e peaceably. The supplies were·oot allowed throuah, he charged., and a helicopter Oew over the site ,broadcasting a ~raaJ ·order. IJ'! said a number · of participants, in response to his request, remained oVernfght to clean up the site, bi.it were ~,by ~lice 1!ionday mor:ning~ wiUJ the ~ity takina: over the.cleanup job. Marine Jailed In Assault Case F14 Fighter Jet -. . . Crashes on 2nd Testing Flight' RIVERHEAD. N.Y: (UPI) -The Ftt Swl~·Wlng fii;hter,. successor to the Navy S·versian of the cbntrovetsial Flt\, crashed on ·its· second .flight today '81 it wia attempting a l{l~ding apd was "wlpe4 out," a Gi'umman C o r p • apok1amin said. · Test pilots William Miller and Rober~ Smf,the, ejected and pa.rachuted ·~o sa/ety jast before the plane c:rastm:I iln a runway at the Grumman' Air ·Field at Calverton, neli to the L<1nt Island e1- preaway. · , ·•· · · . In Wuhlngton. ·o;Delense Department sP.Okesin"an, Jerry· Freldbelm, said initial !'-_Camy .Pendleton Marine sergeant-...r'reporta lndiCated tbe crish W11 '><!~au!1C4 who attacked and robbed a fellow Marine by ''iome iort of hydraolic rnalfµnCUon ." or nearly $$00 ha1 been eentenctd to The Fl4J: first flight, wh!Ch 'lasted one year in Orange COuDty Jail. just '10 -minutes, waS ·conductec1 500- S°"'-erjor Qiurt Judge Jamea F. Jud&< cessruny,Dec. 2t and lbe ntlll dly Navy Im--' thal term on · Sgt 'Joh p 1 Secre!.ij. John H. Cbafee chrlst<Jltd the ......-.. n au p~ 0 tbe Tomcat." • ' 1 Geytloa, 2D,.1q •dnlinLstraUve clerk •t Grumman ·(ot !hO cont(acl to. J>,lld camp Pendleton, after Gafdoa pleaded the F:tt 'two' years · a110c• after the. Na"Y guilty to charges o/ aaaault with a deadly halted' Iii l>arl!•iplli<>n ;in the ,lrtll)bl"' weapon: He dillmWed further Charges plasutd Flit.program bec~H ijlat pla~ ol robbery and conspiracy and placed wu 1111111lt11>le f1lr .ptn:rall. carrier opera· G""" 'on iltree .,..... obatkm UOl'll;:i and Uie fltst .21~ F14s alreacty ~ . ,_ • pr • are 1111 '1>e ....,.bl)>Une al the Grumman Gaydoo was lltested . 'alter a fellow p11p1. • • : • , · Miu:tne· told ofllctn• that the ·sergeant QWee aaid eart1er .tlle N1vy planned atruck him. oo, the lieod ,with a th tO older' ~-of tbi! 1'111. for •a tot.al Iron as \be• i.;,, ,... driving-1 rented coot •of 113" blD.lon ar Ill.I ·m11110n ptr •· ,. .. 's..:::b •-~ u .. pllne. · · · car mwo; • Karea.-... ..,. ·Clio~' i.ld"tbO .FH would be 'an The vktjm . ,offic;er1 that he was lir aupe.rlorlty Ogtttef , wlth ~ter "I'm not bettlnl on" It," taid Tka~ • "The. President is really in ncellent .health," be a~ followirig .the two-hour sertes· of rne4ical tests, to avbld · being ml8undentood. Tkach aJmost ·waxed poeUC: over the president!~ blood Pfeaure. · • · · "This la a yowig man'• blood£11r< -ideal," he remarked, say· the reading wu· ill ov~ 12, com · ed to 120 over 80 lbout 1 year ago when Nhi:on· welg~ t,ro pounds mort. He is allo ·cfown lo ,J'Jll 1>binids", with cle:1ir lung,, good PIOO<\ llJla!Ya!s rOitdlnga , and .excellent tr;1uscle arid akin iooe· for a Pn,.of hia age and dtities.-, ~ach wai dilpleued, hpwever, thilt the Presld<01t golfed · only tour I"°'' thia year, nram ·rarely and cut down bis bowling. Wea.daer .. Tbo morning Iii( mo)' chlll .. the . atr,' but we don't care: the~ atiel will clear up by noon and the tem~rature along the coasfi will be up to a, with a n reading. in-- land. .. JNSmE TODAY ' . . Wlw1' orGngc Countv'• · hao '.new .rvpervilor• take 10//ioe, .thfv _ l)iqv aj)polnt ••w ,....,.. bert ·to /our covnty • odPilorv commflrionl. Poo1 3. · ..,.., • MtillM~n c..... , ~ ' »11 ("...., c-1l ==~...... '' Ollcl• u, n ,.._ +1 Clllllfllll .... or ... ~ I C'9lll • .,..... ...... 111 a-. • ..... ... • .,..,. Jlltfktl • Dr. ....... '' "'-'-............... ,. .,,..,... "'" ' T...,.... • ••1• '*'' ,..n.,. ~ IW1 ,.... 14-lj ...... • • ...,...... ,. """""""' ..... 1~,. ' B1U: Y~, "'°logi~I ~I rector and chief game warden of the 506-acre wildlife prestrYe, -..id.the avva1e lion litter Is lhree. B,.nd.t, however, consistently delivers five cubs. gomg dft "leave ·at the time and the capa!Oty than "the'esteemed F4 Phitttl>m '500 taten by Gaydos bed 1been· saved · th•t now forms the baCkbone or 1be · for _th1t purpciol, · U.S. fieeC'1 alrpower. "*" Lt•n 11 .. Wlf'lil ,.... .., -. • -' • .. J ' . . .... , I l 'r ,I I _D.ULY PllOl SC Lawyer Says Kasah~an Threatened L06 ANGELES (UPI) -The defense charled today at the Tate-1..aB!anca murder tiial that it was "humanly im~ possible" for the Irey state witness to tell the truth about the slayings because abe wu threatlDtd with prosecution heroell. lrvl111 Kana!U. tbe attorney for Oiarloa MalllOD, uld that Linda Kua· blan &ave tbt answers the prosecution -...s bi return for beinC granted lm- mnnlty In !be ,.,., ldlllnga. KIDmk. .... told tbe Jury tllat the -Uoo bad produced no evidence whatloevw of a ~cy beaded by M-. "Linda KaoabilD lllld lhe did not !maw of ~ ID .... to kill anyone," Kanarek aid.. "She wu a a:>-eonsplrator who did not know IJl1lhlDg about a con- spiracy." Tb9 conspiracy charge wu brought Jn, ~k said, because there was no way of convictlnc Manson of the actual ·alaylnp. "There ••• jult no showing of any couptraey,'" Kanarek .. ld. '"Ilia motive of the people who brooght that cbarJe w11 to pt Charlie Manaoo for iOOle un1odly reason wtuch la pr1> bahly rdatod to Mr. 'MalllOD's Ule style," Kananl: said. · All four defendants were ablent from the -m wbell tbe trial resumed today.·, M-'• atlarnoy bad begun hit por- tloo "' tbe fln>l argwnenl.s Tuesday by banding the ·Jury bloody color pbolograpba of tho bodlp of the vlctima. It wu the flrat time the seven men and five women bad mn the plcturea: ~ np. They paaaed them arOW)d quickly and ..,. -.an juror refused even to sJance at them. "Wlllt the prooecutJon wanl.s to c!ilcqas with""' ID tlllt cue m tbele prejlldlclal PhotGcraplio." Kanarek Aid. ''They are trying to lynch Mr. Manaon. They ore appealing to tho rankeet illnd Of preJudlce that divldel tlllt C(IU!l1ij today." _ Kuaret bad to be atoppod by Superlm' Cour1 Judce Cbarlea H. Older--:wllen ~ he bepo •dclreulnc one of thi 'oldi!I' : male;juron by name and referring to his e1perience with "vigilante" groupa: in the United States. Wi~ the defenUnU: listening in ad-JolnlriJ l'OOl1ll by ·~aker, Kanarek attacbd the pubUo;il:t aµrrounding the cue ·and aCCG11!f the proserutton of Urrortst tactlcl ap1lllt witnesses. He said .the diltrict attomey's offloe had attai:bd hlni pmOH!fy. · • Older bad to shut him off again and tt appeared the trial will be in for severtJ days of atormy aessiona . when Kanal<k .... .-_,to 1he eyjde~· in thf case. • . -· Chief defense coUnael Paul Fitzgerald preceded Kanare~ ... telling the jw:y . .ult was quite feasible ttlet someone bttier than the •'Manson. Family" committed the seven alaylngs. · Fitsgerald said the fact that:··:a fingerprint of Patrtcla Krenwinkel was foun4_ at the residence could be explained by the possibility that she was a house cuec who had been invited to the borne by Sharon Tale for a BWim. Fitzgerald cast doubt on t h e truthflilneu of the prosecution witnesses. He particularly rlpped into the testimony of Mrr. K.asabian that she went to the Tate ,home with Cltarlea "Tex" Watson, Miss Krenwlnkel and Susan Atkins. Mrs. Kasablan testified that she never actually e.otered the house but Fitzgerald pointed out that her knife was the only weapon found by police at the scene. Mrs. Kuablan had u.ld she gave the knife to MW Atkins. "It ts just as reamabll!: to assuml!: that she did enter the house and took part in the klllinp," Fitzgerald said. "It ls also reasooable to believe that she was not even with Charles Watson, Patricia Krenwinkel ·and SU!an Atkins but with some other peraon or persons." DAILY PILOT H•fwlt,.. .._. ....... ,...., ... ~ ... OAANGE COAST PUILtSMING COM•AlfY llob1rt N. W114 •rt15't11I erA l'ull!llMI' Jtt~ R. Cu•l1y \liU l"rti'fllll •l'A Glfttrtl M•!Wftt The111•• K11'l'il .. , .. 7"11"''' A. Murphi•• MMlllM ldltor «id.1r4 P. Hilt ~h Ort!We CNll)' l.lllOr -Cott• Mnt: J» Wnt ltv s"'"' N......,.,,., ''''"' nn Wnl ••Ille• IWllVt ... ' U.11!11 IMch: m ,.., ... AY- H\lfttt1111""' lt1cn1 17111 BtKll Boulltvt" _,ft (.111111111" »41 Hlrlll e.1 C&tnlno 11111 ,UNE RAL SERVICES SET Bruce Bffcher Burial Set For Mesa Cycli,M,, 18 A cleancut Coa:ta Meaa student and aalesman, killed Monday when his motorcycle plwiged off a Laguna Canyon cliff In darknm and unfamiliar terrain, will be buried Saturday. Rites · for Bruce D. Beecher, 18, of 2(lO E. · Magnolia St., will be at 1 p.m. In Waverly Olapel at F a I r b ave n Membrial Park, Santa Ana. He was returning from a visit to tile big Cllrls1maJ happening In Laguna Canyon -literally to see hoW the: other hill lived, u.ys hil mother -when tbe~tatal accident occurred. The helme~ cyclist was apparenUy killed inatalll!1 when hla vehicle ~ammed lnlo the ~. 50 feet below the dropoff Dl!:lr Laguna Canyon Road. M(. Beedw, an Orange Coast College b~ Dll!Jor, leaves his parenta:, Mr.. and Mrs. Jlmlea Beecher, a brothtr Dooald, Uvtn:g In Can'ada, and a sister, Mil. Barbara Marcut, of WiSCOMln. Tbe family ~suggeat.s memOrlal a)n.. trlbuUoni·-io the Orange County Youth for Christ organization, 1055 N. Harbor Boulevard, Anaheim, or the OCC Scholarstilp Funi!:- ' Sena MOKs Domestic ·Money B,ill . . . WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Sena!> 1 gave final Qmgresslonal approval today to a bill appropriating $18.9 biWon for federal health and welfare programs, but with only four days remaining before adjournment there was stlll no break iD the logjam on oiher major bills. TransportaUOll, fortign aJd and Social Security legisl1Uon were the principal measures tied up ln the Congreaa. The hiteh in the Social Security In- creases developed because of differing Senate and House versions. Rep. Wilbur D: Mills ()).Ark.), the influential cbainnan of the HOuJe Ways and Means Committee, said it wu "ut· terly, humanly impouible" to reach a compromise before adjournment because thl!:re were too many differences in the House and Senate bills. Mills promiled, hQwever, that the boost in Social Sec\!rity would pas1 by early February and would be retroactive to Jan. 1, 1971. The House passed a 5 percent benefit increase, the Senate 10 petcent, and while the House put a $67.20; minimum on monthly payments, the.Senate boosted it to $100. lt previously was $64. There were numerous other differences, in· eluding inclusion in the Senate bill of money for increased public ' usi5tance payments. The appropriaUons bill, passed by a 69-0 roll call vote, carries funds for the Labor Department and the Health, Education and Wellare Depll'tment. It is $210 million higher than President Nlzon sought but congressional ·leaders predicted he would sign the bill. The action left only two appropriations bills to be acted upon before the 9lst Congress goes out of business at noon Sunday -t $2.2 billion bill for foreia:n aJd and $2.6 bil~on for the tramportatlon department. The transportation measure has been blocked by Senate opponents of the pro- posed Supersonic Tramport (SST), which would receive a $210 million federal aubsidy. 'Mle Foreign Aid appropriation was held up because of a House.Sl!:nate wrangle over $200 million for credit sales of military equipment to foreign governments. 11\e Social Security bill was at a standstill because House man1gera were refusing to ao to c:onference wtth the Senate to work out a compromlae measurt. Mr. ~ graduated from Newport Harbor High School iD 19'11'.r and entered occ,-.ftom which bll older brother graduated·elght yeara ago. He wu also employed by Sears, RoebUct " company at ·South Coast- Plld;' -rect1111Y In the, llloe depart· ment., Arter trying out othtr dutlts for the e%ptrienct. "He wh :next to top saltsman Jut Evec before the old Con&ress drew to a cfa,,e, President Nixon began strategy sessions aimed at ,prompUng action on bis )JeU1re refOl'Dl procram ln the 92nd Coogreas, which meel.s Jan. 21. He scheduled a meeting looay with Senate ~atic and Rt°Publlcan lesders' to ·~Jr: aSIU1'ance his family assistance plan would be a "top priority" Item next year. The plan Was junked 1Monday, along with protective trade :1eglslation u congress cleaned house In its rush for adjournment. WOfk, )1111 ~~ '" it," his !!'°'F aaMI Tuesday. ... Beecher played B team football at Newport Harbor High School, was a member of Sea Scout Ship 306 and attended Harbor Trinity Baptist Church. He was also a DAILY PILOT carrier boy for five years while attending school. "He supported himself to get what he wanted while getting hls education. He always did," said Mrs. Beecher. Her son was leaving the Sycamore Bills festival afte over unknown terrain near midnight Sunday when the faLal accident occurred. ·· · He wu fOW'ld after daybreak Monday by other fesUval-soers leaving the: area, draped over the demolished cycle and dead for sbout eight hours, corooer '1 deputies said. Daughter Wins First Round In Support Case LOUISVILLE, KY. (UPI) -A Uni· versity of Louisville coed who won the first round of her rourt battle to force her father to support her said she was so "destitute" she could not go back to New York is a retrail were ordered. 1'he coed, whose identity w1s been with- held because of the private nature of the: case. said her father stopped sending her funds last April because she had ·1dopt- ed a "hippie" style of life and had moved off. campus. New York Family Court Judge Y..11llard L . }.iidnock ordered lhe father , who, he said was a prominent law- yer, to either pay his daughter $5, 7 5 0 by • noon Monday or serve JUN• MloNOCK 30 days in jail for contempt of court. But the sentence was stayed pending a rt· \llew of the case by the five-judge ap- pellate division of the New York Su- preme Court. MidnO<:k said at the timt of the breach, the girl was on probation at the Unlve.r· sit~ and su tfere.d emotional problems from btlng ''terrified ... ol her fither's rigid standards." In the. ensuing months. Midonick said, the girl had improved her grade•. lived 'wholesomely and had been re.stored to good standing al lbe Unlventty. She had also received psychiatric help and made e.fforts to vi~lt her father and step-moth· er. his fourth wife. The daughter said she was rorctd to stll htr car tor $1,000 to aee her throuah the semtsttt. "I'm destitute right f)(nlf," lhl said. "I'm Joolclng for a job. In Catt, If the)' order a retrial, 1 can't alfci-d to &O blck to New York." A compromiae $66.6 billion defense pro- cureml!:nt bill cleared both the Senate and the Hollie Tuesday night after negotiators agreed to remove language that would have weakened a previously paqed ban on the uae of U.S. troops and advise.rs in Cambodia. · Passage came 70 to 2 after the Senate earlier rejected a compromise bill that would have allowed the uae of American troo~ to rescue prisoners of war or to insure the safe withdrawal of U.S. troops from Southeast Asia. A new House-Senate coole.renee bowe.d to the Senate's wishes and deleted the language. Medical Teams Rush to I srael Slide Victims BEERSHEBA. Israel (UPI) -Medical teams were rushed today to the border village· of Neot Hakikar following reports a rock!lide had burled 40 pe.rsons, police sources said. First reporU of the incident were sketchy. Some said the slide buried 40 Israeli soldiers eating in a mess hall, killing and '!"OWlding many. Other reports said the dead and Injured were civilian settlers of Neot Hakikar, which is about ts miles south oI the Dead Sea and aboct one: mile west of the Jordan cease-fire line.. Army sources in Tel Aviv ~•aid they were investigaUnt the reporta but hid no further information. Neot Hakitar is a Settleml!:nt in the desert below the salt pans of the Dead Sea about 10 miles south of the Biblical sin city of Sodom. Unlike some other frontier aettlement In the Arava Desert it is a civilian and not paramilitary sl!:ttlement TAKE 'EXTRA CA R' T O ROSE PARA DE LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bus service to the Pasadena Rose Parade from loca· tton.s fn Loe Angeles. Orange, Riverside and San Bemardlno coor:ttles will be made 1v1\11ble by the S o u t h e r n C.llfomJ1 Rapid Transit District early Frldtiy. Service to the Rose Bowl game between Stanford and Ohio SUlte wlll also be provided from Rto'1 terminal fn downtown Loa Angeles. Bu., riders must have their exact fare or use monthly passes. Booby Trap I Wing Flap1 ' . From 74 7 • Hits· Hou se BELL GARDENS. Calil. (UPI) -A 300-pound lt?ction ·ot wing flap fell flft a United Air Lines Boeing 747 on a training flight Tuesday night and plunged through the roof of ;:i duplex. There was no one in the building and no persona on the ground were in jured.' The j U m b O jet, carrying a Cl'tW or rour and a Federal Av i ation Administration Supervisor, landed ufely at Los Angeles International Airport. 'rtle National. Transportation S.fety Board and the FAA were lnvestig1Ung the accident. The metal and fiberglass wing nap section, six feet by two feet and shaped like a pod , tore a two foot square hole in the riof of the duplex. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a 10-foot sec- tion of the kitchen ceiling. The tenant&, Mr. an~ Mrs. William Hard)', were not at home. A neighb-Or, Al Hall, said "It sounded like an earthquake" when the wing sec- tion hit the duplex. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by Sgt. Bruce Hom at a U.S. training,center near Oa Nang, South Vietnam. This ~ gj.}lon drum is shredded in such a way that jagged edges point out in all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When triggered. they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. A UAL spokesman said the 747 was d<>ing "touch and go" landings at Ontario (Calif.) International Airport and was en route to Los Angeles InternatiolUll when the accident occurred. Security Guard Sty mies .Theft , S hoots Car T ire Air California Gets ,Year I Delay in Revamp of Jets Huntington Beach security guard Den· nis Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a department store theft by shooting out the rear Ure on an escape car filled wlth four fleeing bandits. Air California will have an additional year to install anti-smog equipment to brlna: their jets up to standard! set by 1 new state law, according to a ruling made Tuesday by the county Air Pollution Control District api)eals board. An APCD spokesman said the variance was granted on the condition that the airline schedules the installation of modi- Masked Bandits Hit Ga s Station A pair of-ski-masked bandits who a~ proached the attendant from behind with a 10-lnch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa service station of $50 Tuesday night. Ray Roslli , on duly at Chet Tschetter's Chevron Service, '2275 Newport Blvd ., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foot up adjacent Fairvitw Road with the cash . The victim said he was tmten by surprise about 7:15 p.m. and ordered to tum over the money from the gasoline pump Island box or be stabbed. Pollet searching the surrounding area recovered a hat, striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi identified as being worn and used by the 18 to 20-year~ld robbers. - r • ... { r GEM TALK ·~~·· ~. 1 .... ,;ifi11 TODAY by J. C. HUWPHllD TH E LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fa scinate me most, reply is difficult because each has its own fascinating his· tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting; for cen· turles the cool look of this legend- ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be- lieve it devine, that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low relief figures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten f.1ayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette !ound ln Mexico. Some people believe jade Is found only in museums; but today, exquisite jade jewelry is available to all, and may be found in our store. I fying equipm.ent as soon as It Is available. It wss granted because on Jan. 1 aircraft emission of smoke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new sedlon of the state health and safety code. Bob Clllford, general manager of the airline. said jet engines that have not been modified will be in violation of the new law, "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spare engines, for a total of 17. Two have been modllied and we expe.ct to get another completed by next week,'' he said. Clifford said the airline ordered the modifying devices from the Pratt· Wh itney Company in May and has con- tracted with United Airlines for their Wtallation. "Delivl!:ry has been a little slow and United has thei r own fleet to take care of, so the variance will glvl!: us an additional year to comply. Oil P la tform F ire Out After 30 Days NEW ORLEANS (UPI) -The largl!:st oil well fire feeding a wild drilling plat- form. blaze In the Gulf of Mex.lc:o for the past 30 days has been put out, •Shell Oil Co. spokesman ssid today. Dahlke, regularly employed as a detec. live with the Orang!!: Pollet Department, is a guard at Huntington Center. He fired five shots at the ca~ning car and one bounced off the rear bumper, but another ripped through the left rear tire. The incident began at 7:10 p.m. when a J . C. Penney's Company store employe saw three men and a woman in a leopard skin coat trying to steal 20 nursing uniforms from a clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he conlronted the thieves as they at. tempted to leave the store parkinJ Jot in the escape car. lie identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run him down, Dahlke told pOlict. That's when the shooting started. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car which was found abandoned one hour later with the shot.out rear tire. It was located by Fountain Valley police at the intersection of Bu.shard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparently escaped on foot but all of the stolen uniforms were ~vered from the auto. Police later indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke is a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He is employed part.time as a Penney's security gusrd. For a dynamic gift ... a Dynami.G watch ; An Omega Dynamic can make any gllt- glvlng occaalon an unusual one. The unique horizontal oval-shaped case was speciall y designed for greater Walch wearing comfort .•• lt fits the wrist like a glove. Wllh cool comfortable easily Interchanged air-vented atrap., l a.tf·•llKllnf, d111-t1/l,nq Om101 Oyn11'11lc. a.taint••• lfttl ••tu ftl!tllllt ""· Alr>wnled ln1t1cfle11 .. 1blt atrtp ................ 1111.00 ~ JllOOll wllllo!JI taltn4'1 ••• ,J71.SO J. C. .JJ.umphri'e:I Jeu1efer:1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONYINllNT TERMS IANKAMERICARD--MASTERCHARGI I l• YEARS IN SAMI LOCATION ,HONE l •S·J401 11 I . I '\ I I· • I r I , I I I . San tlement~ · Capistrano YOL: n. Np: 3q, 3 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES t ...... EDITION • •• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA. . . ., .. --........ .... ,. -..... ~ .._ __ ' •. "~DNESDAV::;DECEMBcR -io~ 1970•--; :- --~ .. -·•· ., . ... • --~-F ---·-·--.. -. -· "'= • --- • -#"-~ .... ~... __.. ... N.V;fi~ ' ... ~ TEN CB\ltS . " •• ;_ :. .1 -· .. " • .. ran co-ares ....... ·1v·es Drain Grants Asked San Clemente to Seek Federal Funds The city of San Clemente will apply aooa · fOr Orange County flood ·control grantl to. install new drail)S at three channels within the city which have been 'a vuing problem for years. In two of these projects, experimental lines calcu!lted to thwart the sandbar effect of the surf will be· built to drain &lagnant-lijooDS created when the sea blocks drainage of accumulated runoff water. · The most costly of the three projects, however, would be the third, a $150,000 concrete and pipe channel spanning the length of the canyon along Calle de los Lobos Marinos from Ola Vista to the sea. City Engineer Phil Peter said ap- Hol1d That f;olt Rancho Seeks 'Delayed Action' ~ A child'• yearning for a Christmas colt may be universal, but not at Rancho San Clemente, on the doorstep of Presi- dent Nixon's Spanish estate. A Christmas colt on the thoroughbred farm-bom between Dec. 25 and New Year's day-is a catastrophe. So · fat, things are looking~ up for the J. 'J. Elmores and their staff, who are hop1ng . that Miss Poona, due to foal on Jan. 3, does11't jump the gun. If she does, and her offspring is ~m in 1970, the rules say it officially is . a year old on Jan. i. It will have to race against horses of the same official age, but still it would remain a year younger. The Elmores who own and oper""te 'the largest thoroughbred farm in the state under a !Ingle owner, have to other mothers-to-be in' their stables, but the two mares' due dates are well into January. MISs Poona, who!e offspring have run In the ch i p s 'at Santa Anita, is the only cllffhanger. Mar~e Held as S·u~t«tr In ·san ·Clemente Holdµps A yoµng Camp Pendleton Marine recenUy tramferred from military police duty to a unit shipping· out for Vietnam ls being held in connection with a string of ho;ld~p! of seryice atltions in San Clemente. Ferris Michael McDowell, was arrested earlier this week in ·Chula Vista after an allectd robbery of a service sttltion theft:. Police in San Clemente entered the lnvestlgation they su§pect Ferris of ~ing the man who allegedly robbed two sta· tions .at guripoint here in recent weeks. Street Revamp Contract Set Contracts totaling $24,115 have been awarded by Orange County Supervisors ~ the Griffith Company of Santa Ana to resurface seven streets in the C,pistrano Beach area. ,,o be improved are Via Sacramento, Via Verde, Via San Juan ; Calle Monterey from Galle Portola to the San Clemente city limits; Calle Naranja from Calle Portola to Camino Estrella, Calle Verano from Camino Estrella to Ca lle Dolores, am C.Ollegto Drive between Coast IDghway and La Cresta Drive and between La Paz Avenue and Selva Road. ~re were four bidders on each job with high bids totalling $32,192. '.Oruge Weather The morning fog may chill the 1 air, but we don't care; the skies will clear up by noon and the ~ temperature along . the coast will be up to 65, wilh a 11 reading in- land. INSmE TODAY When Orange County's two MW supervisors toke office, they may ·appoint new mem· bers to }our cottnty advisory commissiom. Pag e 3. _., . Cftllfwnil I <•l'MI' c-21 Clltellfll UJ 11 Cl• .. lllf II·• C-k• U c,..._. 11 a.111 Mlfk• • Olwrcft I hn.rllf ""' • ••rt--1 ,..,, '""'" 14'11 ~· II Mio ~ ll ,..._ . -., .. hnlc• 11 Mf¥... U.27 M~tw1F ,11111111 11 N1tlt11tl N ... 44 Oflllff; C-ty I S~IYI• 11'11111' 11 Slltl'h n .24 Or, SttlMl"tMI 16 Sttd: Mfl,..tt• 14•11 Ttlm• 1f ........ "'" w-. W.lfttll'I ..... lf·lt Wtt .. N... ... The Marine 1J being held on 125,iJOO ball. A pOlice. stak~4t in Chula Vista neUed the suspect within minutes of a robbery there Monday night. Similar stakeouts l"ere in effect early last week in San Clemente gas · stations in an attempt to capture the robbery suspect. Warrants have been issued in South Orange C.ounty Municipal Court charging two counts of armed robbery in San Clemente. The first San Cl.emente robbery oc- curred Dec. 7 shortly before midnight at the Mobile station at 600 Avenida Pico. A young man approached asking for a can of gas, then pulled a pistol and demaOOed money. After stealing about $50, the bandit fled in an older model gray car. About a week later a man matching the same description used the same ruse to rob the Enco station at Via de Frente and Avenida Calafta. Marine Jailed In Assault Case A Camp Pendleton Marine sergeant who attacked and robbed a fellow Marine of nearly $500 has been sentenced to one year in Orange County Jail. Superior Court Judge James F. Judge Imposed that term on Sgt: John Paul ' Gaydos, 20, an admJnistrative clerk at Camp Pendleton, atter Gaydos pleaded guilty to charges of assault with a deadly weapan. He dismissed further charges of robbery and· conspiracy and placed Gaydos on three years probation. Gaydos was arrested after a fellow Marine told officers lhat the sergeant struck him on the head with a tire Iron all the two were driving a rented car in the San Clemente area last May. The victim told officers that he was go.ing on leave at the time and the $500 taken by Gaydos had been saved for thllt purpose. Supervisors Laud Capistrano Fireman A resolution of commendation has been authorized by the Orange County Board of Supervisors for E. A. "Tony" Nydeg• ger who has completed 32 years or service to the Capistrano Volunteer Fire Department. The resolution was offered b y Supervisor Alton E. Allen who pointed out that Nydegger was the department'• fint chief and for many years prOVided a garage for the equipmenL _..,. J pllcations for all three projects would be acted upon by a 'J)anel of engineers for the Flood Control District, perhaps in February. 1£ that body approves . the proje;c:ts, then county supervisors would be called upon to include them in the county budget next summer. "We're not certain we'll get the money, yet,'' Peter explained, "but we have &Orne interesting plans. '1 The two lagoons which would be drain- ed in the project are the one at Poche Beach and another at North Beach. The former is a natural drainage area paralleled by access paths to the popular surfing beach. · During most months of the year it becomes a muddy slough clogged· with debris. A similar situation exists at North Beach where a Dood control channel made of concrete becomes a bog when the wave action deposits a natw;al sand dam at its mouth. Peter said the city propoees·to install pipes -resembling giant bathtub drains -which would allow seepage of the =~~~~ .·~ ':eaS:.~th any bar w~ "We have one working near the lifeguard 11ead'l~·~ ~'.,» n.ear,tbee~ . .;~~ they work very ·Betore • ft bad them. ~ were l!Ways problem!." The~ cOSt of the Poche atain would be about $6,426. At North Beach, the drainage Js not as severe a problem. A project there might cost $2,490, Peter said. Occupational Program· Set For Seniors A regional occupatiOnal p r o gr a m sponsored by two Orpige Coot scltool districts will rollow the success of ils first effort in nursing instruction with a new course in food preparation starting in early February. The Capistrano-Laguna Beach Regional Occupational Program will offer the food course to interested high school seniors. The curriculum will offer training for employment upon graduation, spokesmen said. A minimum of classroom eiperience will be followed by actual, on-the-job training. The program's first offering, health aide training, was launched last Sep- tember and has been balled all a success with 24 students taking part. The health aide trainees receive two hours each day of job training at a local convalescent hospital and will transfer to work at South Coast Com· munity Hospital next spring. March of Dimes Chief Appeals For Volunteers The chairman of the San Ch;mente March of Dimes January campaign against birth defects appealed today for volunteers to help in the annual drive. Robert E. Ridgeway of C8pistrano Beach said dozens of residents are being sought to help in the annual campaign, which will wind up with Ge,nnan m~asles vaccination clinics Jan. 31 at several local schools. · The March of Dimes has shifted its emphasis to fighting birth defeots alter the conquering of polio: Ridgeway, a member of the executive cinunlttee of the Orange County· March of Dimes, pointed out that thiJ. past year 1,500 youngsters in lbe county· 1,800 Orange County babies were born, with birth defects. Many of them, he added, were caused by the mother's exposure to German measles. ' l'he vacdnaUon effort i&linlt tlie disease is geared to cblldttn from 1 to 12 years old. Volunteers may call 492-7440. . Two.·State ·Groqps)Silpp~ft-:. . . (. . Coastal Billboard Bani , By L VN RARJllS HICltS · . . Of .._ Oii..-"'"" Aff , 1 T,'}'O callfornla, p;ofessional oi'ganiza-. tion~ h~·registered support of\the .p,rcr posed scenic {U'ea biltboaf'd. ban, Sought by the Capistrano _Bay area $ambers of commerce. · The Southern California Chapter of the American Society. of l.andseape Architects and the Orange ·eoUnty Chapter of the American lnsUtute of Architects have voiced their suppart in letters to the Orange .Coiinty Board of Supervisors. · The board Is ®e to. act on the . ban and sign control ordinance In January. · Lee Sharfman, president of the' Jandsca,pe archit<;qB orgapization, wi:ote to -express "support 'Of t h.e lffi• plementation of tighter controls, on out- door advertising in the Dana Point area. ' HThls Js one or the mbst scenic areas in southern. Orange County. The many ' visito'rs and tOuiists "°'ho' .pass · t~l'Ot1gh. this area will better be able to appreciate these exceptional 11cenic'qiiaUues·if their ability . to ·do so is not so trequentlJ ' frustrated by visual obstrucUons, '' be said. , The archi~ct noted' that Route I and .. . . f:I Cairunp Real ,througjl .th~ ·A.:ea ;~Ye been cla,.~IO<I potential acenjc ,iOU\ts of the Ca\liomla h,lgJn\lay sysietii. In its letter of aupport, ·the· tristl(ute of Architects said about outdoOr ad· vertlsing, ·~~s JVil\l .~t. 'other..~ of our vilual eovironment1thls P.¢ii~ problem is completely out -of contrel in many areas of .the ceantyr.a~· tiin.e is fast running out ~ .~tam ·~ '· r:e.: maining oasis of reasonable, unapolled countryside." · , · '!lie . architects' prealdeit. · w~lt;r .J. Richardson, said "Biiiboards have ef. fe<:Uvely· betn controlled, ·hr many parts of our country,,througb ~Uve ef. forts of ciiizens .and . gov~t, ,ind it must be doD<! here'." · , He t9Jd sui>efvispr~, ••YQu,{nay c<iunl. on the suppOrt and a4"1ce of our entife memberShlj> in · any miitters of »this natute." " · ·, . ' · The· Orallllt Coupty , PlaMing , Gorn• nUasJon · approv,ed the ptopoRd scenic area siP OOnfrol ordinahCe in .December: ' Oppaeltlon by, outOOOI"· advertlilng: li>- teresll is'eipol:ted b~ billboard,oppG!lellta When-~the matter comes. before .. the: 111petvtaora.Jn January, . .' Physicians Say President . . . . ' '. In 'Excellent' Health · . From Wire Service• Golf and swlmnpng oo the Qronge. Coast may be an immediate New. Year'• resolution for President Nixon, who heard an addfesS On tlie italt of his health' tooay. · .orange -Couoty'a"nipnber one · citizen emerged from his annual checkup at· the ·U.S. Naval fjplpilal, Belhesd~·Md., • with both ''9od pewi ud a, preicrlpilon' for more exercls&. . • ·He ,di.Ile~ ltlicbt!Y wl!Ji ... ~ Qf ·his . personal physlci8!1', Air Fofce Brlg, c.n. Walt.et R.· ft"acb,, ·on the rurgency of ' ~king a brealt 1 away (rom •xpcut.ive dptios ln~ . ,Qto. Tkach aaid !no ahoutd vacalioa In "'11-. c;leinent• p< Key Biscayne, FJt.,.. iD the next week or two. • , · "t ·11ave no excuse/~ Prealitent 'Nfzori • • . . . tOld repartera · after · eomplelil)g ~ c~kup. · . . .. . . ·He was quot~. u ·talllng Gen; Tkach he would Q')' to get some fun . ip .the sun aa soon · &$ . Ile: C'1> get· out· from under the press of duUes•jn: the.Clp,ltol. · · .. ·1 atn coMerned becauae I dan't wani tiim ·to let into .~~1e,11 ·\he ;mnttarY physician ~"Ptai!ted, althoUgh 'he wu generally · en~c · al:lout Nlion'a liealth., . • . . New-ad~ (f itie J'rli1d4nf could cpntinue .al h.il. 111;eterit .aecmq~· .tpaOI' '7 mbt)ll the pr-Ibid ~''ud reluat!M -wlthdul p~ hW>i. , ·~t'm,,not •beu.LQf·OD• lt,~'··~n.ch. .· : "Tho. P<ooldeot 1s realll' 1n ,utilli!il lJeafth,"I be~ fO!l.O,;ln&,tlle -- series of modlca1 leltl, to a"""' """" m!JunderRoocL · .. .,,, ' ......,. ' t Nationalist .. : .. . Sentences-~ ·Commuted :· ...... _ . • BURGOS,, Spain (iiP.h - Generalissimo Francisco Franco tonight .-uted tbe d .. th · seoten-. of •If Basqi"',t\Btlqna!Uta convi~ DI murdti' "D<i banditry, the Ministry o1 illlormalklll ·-.n..:~-Aid the .... tenceS had;beell CQllU11UlelJ to "the 'a<xt b;gbeat ...tence paqed." ,'The' ·next ~t 1t11tence prwed.b~ the Burgos milltary .court was 72•yeara. 1 / ..... , "Frllll<O plaNlld to esplaln .. hls ac:tl,.i ln-.. • ·yearend address ·to U>&-~nation tonight. He 'baa. been.c uoder ftl9Ulllilll preasare, from, ·~•n ~ ,and"the Vatican to -ulf.V.. death sentences al)!! f•coecl PQCl)b~ ~ wirest.io nortbem Spain II be did.not.· There 'was imrDediate Naction from the 'Vatican which said it heard of tbe c6mmutation with !'enOrmous relW." , . Franco took the action ·after a-.i.PIC!tal meeting with his cabinet, and the cowicU .of f.be. reatqi,; ar;t adviao111 grou'p ·made up of .parnament members. · ._ . the ·atticl,I news4 agency 'CJF'lli\ ;an. noam:ed · the .verdict by ~inl the s~ .. word !or wdon · ::It>dl!ltadoi. lndultados. IndultadQ41. '.' . ., Th:e men ~Ives • w~ .awatung news of their fate ,ln ,tllte celi&rat·PrillHI ol'.J!urgos;Jn' cellonth ~·~ ~d le!npentfim·llt, tlwi'~J,OllL • .,1114 Fro-not am ' Ilia Jleiii"._ . ~:t.:i.: ~ ii' 1w.:'.:""-"' . ''!'!". lliejr.'lleC!allY,jiit.l\:-· , • bad ... convii:ted bl' a• lilllHir7 ""'" if:!"'I"'*' aiMf(~.· "" . ·'Ille news qe!ICy reportec!!•loa·~ lhoit1Y be/ore : hancCY ---,&' 'dd!ver bis' amuaJ NeW Year"• speech ,to. the natlon. • .• ~.'A.few ·hoUn: earlier. Capt. Gen. T9mls <;arcla Rebull, commandlng IJflleor ol the ! Biirgoil · lnilltary 'repon, ~lrmed the· dealti sentence9 · ...r. the ·Joli. tmiis of. ntrie. other .Basques, putting .demency dlroclly up to FraDco. · · • ... . . Two. Hi~bhi~ng._ . ' .. . . G&IS .'.fi~d ·l!p; ... Jt:lped on ·enlist . A · pair of hitch-hiking teenaged llir!J told polke rTueiday of beinl picked ·up by ·a.-mlddle aged man in Laguna Beach. bound\ with rope and raped In ,.;pirii. iiiUth ciiunty locations. OraJ\ge County Sherifra depuUes ;and Lag\uia Beach police are iliveitlgatlng tlio alleged abductions and 1e111al a~aults'. One VJctlm ls 18, from Costa Mesa and the other· is 15, rrom Corona del Mar •. They told police they were ~eked up about 9 · p.m. Monday in the 10o block of North Coast Highway by a man· 35 to 40 years old. JJtlvllig north, they ·claimed he drew 1 plstol ·and p•lled off· In the Crystal Cove arta ·where he tied their banCls and'· threatened them again, this • time wl\Jl a knl~e. . r He allegedly forced the ,younger vlctlm Into the back seat and raped her there, then drove back to San Juan Capistraao where be ravished the older glrL Education Plan Discussion Set For Capo PTA ~ .. d)>cuaslon .QI the enttr. special education program in the Capistrano ,UnllfeCI School District -1 fdt~lng tead>ers from each class -will be .coricWcted for members of the Capiatram Coond1 of the PT A Tuesday nllbt. The program will begin at 7:!0 ~·'"· , at Maroo Forster Junior HJgti Sclml ,eafei,..lum. . Cbarlea JohaMSen, d~ecitor ol P"Pll pei..,iliet, wDJ be =•tof, 1 ~·••• )rill' · Marjorie ,. ·~ ,,\eiila)lyd llfle;I inblor,'.prt. " . grim;"';'~ , 11'11¢. "vlsl&illy :ha.-dlcapjioid;. Barry r..-, '!1'ech therapy ; Blifl)it'o; Mltdiell, ~ ~-=·:~°d':~~~~~qlri u. ~ lancuii'~ • .. I I • . ' ' Lawyer Says. Kasahian Threatened 14,ANGELES (UPI) -The defense c:mrct1:t tod1y at the Tate-LaBie.nca murder trill that it WU "humanly W. possible" for the key state witness to tell the truth about the slaylngs because ahe w11 threatened with ~tion htraeU. Irvin& Kanarek. the attorney for Qw)M Mantan, 111d that Unda Kasa· blan 11vt the answtrt the prosecution wanted In return for being granted lm· muntty ln the aevtn killings. Kanarek also told the jury that the proaecu.Uon had produced no evidence whatsoevtr of a conspiracy headed by M8111011. "Unda Kaublan II.Id &be did not know of any intent to t1ll anyone," Kanarek said. "She wu a co-conspirator who did not know anything about a ron- spir.c:y." The conopiraey charge wu brought in, Ktnartk Aid, because there was no WJY ot coav1cting Manson of the actual 1laying1 . ••nere wu Juat no showing of any cooaplraey," Kan&ntl< 11ld. "The moUve of die people who brought that chlr1e was lo get Charlie Manson for tome un1odty reason which ia pro- b1bly nlated to Mr. Manson's life style," Kanarek Aid. All fow defend.Intl were absent from tbe .....worn wben Ille trial rHllllled today. MIOIOtl'I attorqey bid begun his por· lion .of Ille !Ina! lfl1Ulltnll Tuesday by lwidlns the jury bloody color pbot"Craphl of the bodJeo of the vlcU1111. It WU Ille flrtt tJrrie the atven met and live women bad .en the pictures clc»e up. 1bey puled them around qulcilly and one ""9'1• juror refllled even to a:lance at them. "llbat the -tlon wanll to dlac:llu wtth·)'OU In lhll .,.. "' theae prejudlcial photocr1pha," Kan:arak said. "'llley .,. lrylJW to lynch Mr. l\flllSOll. They_ .,.. appealio( to. the rankeat kind of prtJudlce that divides lhll country today." • Kanaulc had to be &topped by Superior Court Judge Charlu H. Older when he bel•n addraalng one of the older maJe. jurcn by 11;1mt and referring to h1I uperltnce with "vl1ll1nte" eroupa In the United Slltta. · With Iha defendanll lbi.ntng In ad· Jolnin( rooma by loudape•ker, Kanarek att.clied tha pubu.Jty surroundln1 the .,.. and acOu.aci the prooecuuon of terrorl&t tactlal qaln&t wllntsm. He aald the dl&trlct f~ey's office had attactedblm~. ol<fj, had to abui him off again and . lt appeand the trlll will be in for MVeral days of stormy 1t11lon1 when Kanarek 1e11 -to !he e•~ In Ibo ..... Oilel def-"°"""I Paul Fitqerald preceded Kana..k, !<lling the jury It WI• quite feulble that IOmeone o(ber than · the "l\fanson Family" commltled the 11ven 1l1ytnc1. Flll(erald aald the !act that a fincerprlnt of Palrlcla Krenwlnkd wu found at the residence could be explained by tbe poaiblllty that !he wu a house guest who had been Invited to the home by Sharon T1te for a swim. Filzterald cut doubt on t h e truthfulnea of the priwecutJon wltnesses. He p&rticul1tly ripped lnto the testimony of Mrs. KU1blan tblt she went to the Tate home with O\arles "Tex" Wataon, Mill Krenwinkel and Susan Atklll!. Mrl. Kuabl1n tatified that she never actually entered the house but Fitqerald pointed out that her knife was th~ onJy weapon found by police at the acene. Mra. Kuablan had aald &he gave the lalile to Miu Atklna. "It ii just as reasonable to assume that abe did enter the house and took part in the killing.I.'' Fitzgerald said. "It 11 a1ao reaaonable to believe that she was not even with Charles Watson, Patricia Krenwlnkel and Susan Atltin.s but with aome other·puson or persons.'' DAILY PILOT ......... 1e.q' H.r..,1 .. lwlt &.ii• '-" .... ,.... ,..., C......... S..Cla .... OAAHOI (.O.f.11' PVtLISHlNI) CIJMINf'I ~obtri N. w,,4 PrnW111t t r.ii l''*'llt'- Jtclt R. Cvrl1v Vici Pl'llMl'"I tll4I Gtntrll Ml119ftr 1li"''' K11.,il l•lMt 7hem•t A. Mur p"'iftt MMll9illt lfUtr lichtr4 r, H•tl Swlll Or.,._ Clulll)' U lt# ....,_ "'" M ... : DI W•I ••Y Sl1Mt ,....,.,! IMd'll nu "'"' ...... loltlMrt • Ltf\IM INclll tn Pet"! ......... .,. Ml.lfltltlf*'I tetd'l1 l7J1S 111~1! l1Ulev11"11 llli C.,,....lti JOI Nwlll fl C•mlnll AMI FUNERAL SERVICES SET Bruce Beed\er Burial Set For Mesa Cyclist, 18 A cleancut Colta Mesa student and aalesman, killed Monday when his motorcycle plunged off a Laguna Canyon clU( in darkness and unfamiliar tenain, will. be burl«( Salunlay. Rites~ fol' Bruce D. Beecher, 11, of mo E. Magnolia St., will be at 1 p.m. in Waverly Chapel at Fa I r b a v e n Memorial Park, Sant. Ana. He .was returning from a vi.sit to tile bit O>rl1lm11 happening In Laguna Clnyon -literali7 to see how the other half lived, says his mother -when the fatal accident occurred. The helmeted cyclist was apparently killed inrtanily, when his vetUcie 1lammed lnlo the groond, 50 feel below. the dropofl near Laguna Canyon Road. Mr. Beecller, an Orlnge Coast College bUi1DeP n\l}cir, leaves his parent.1 Mr. ana .'Mrs. .diaries ~Cher I • brother" Dinald, 11~1'!1· In. C;aplda, .•nd a sloter, Jl!iw. Barbo[J Marc:qo; of WllCorllln. 2fM :_iamflj augestl . memoi:ial con· ll1butloos· lo !lie Omli• Coun\1 Youth for Christ organization, 10S5 N. Harbor Boulevard, Anaheim, or the OCC Scbolar1blp EWid. - Mr. Bt&clir graduated from Newport Harbor. High· &choOl in 1910 and entered 00;,':.-from whkli his older brother gradOaiea. elgnt yeon ago. • He waa alto employect· by Sears, Boeboct . & Company at South Coast P~ua. most recenUy .bl the shoe depart· ment.. -att:er trying out other duties for the experience. "He wu ntl\ to top salesman lut week, jUst $$ .lbort of it," his moo.tr saki Tueaday.- Beecher played B team football at NeWport Harbor High School, was a member of Sea Scout Ship 308 and attended Harbor Trinity Baptist Church. He was aJso a DAILY PILOT carrier boy ror five years while attending school. "He aupported himself to get whit he wanted while getting his educaUon. He always did." said Mrs. Beecher. Her son was leaving the Sycamore Hills festival site over unknown terrain near midnight Sunday when the fatal accident occurred.. He was found after daybreak Monday by other fesUval-goers leaving the 1rea, dr1ped over the demolished cycle and dead for about eight hours, coroner'• deputies sa.id. Daughter Wins First Round In Support Case LOUISVILLE, KY. (UPI) -A Uni- versity of Louisville coed who won the first round of her court battle to force her father to support her said she was so "destilute" she could not go back to New York is a retrall were ordered. The coed, whose identity was been with· held because of the private nature of the case. said her father stopped sending her funds last April because ahe had adOl)t· ed a "hippie" style of life and had moved ofr. campus. New York Family Court Judge Millard L, f\lidnock ordered the father, who. he 1aid was a prominent law· yer. to either pay his daughter $5 , 7 S O by noon Monday or serve .iuoo• M10HOCK 30 days in jai\ for conttmpt of court. But the sentence was stayed pending 8 re· view of the case by the five-judge ap. pellate division of the New York Su- pr:eme Court. ~1idn0Ck said al the time of the bre8ch, the girl was on probation al the \Jnlver· sity and suflered emotional problems from being "terrified ... of her father's ri%1.d standards:." 'tn the ensuing months, Midonlck uld. the girl hid improvtd her arades, lived wholtsomely and had been restored to &ood atandlng at the University. She had 1190 received psychiatric help and made efforts to visit her tathtr and step.moth· er, his fourth wife. The daughter said she was forced to Rell her cnr for $1 ,000 to see her through. the stmesttr. ••J•m destitute rl11ht now ," shfi said. "I'm looking for 1 Job. In fa ct, If they order a retrial, I can't afford to go back to New Yori." Senate OKs Domestic Money Bill WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Senate gave final Congressional approval today to a bill appropriating $18.9 billion for federal health and welfare programs, but with only four days remaining before adjournment the.re was sUU no break in the logjam on other major bill.s. Transportation, foreign aid and Social Security legislation were the principal measures tied up in the Congress. The hitch in the Social Security in- creases developed because or differing Senate and House versions. Rep. Wilbur D. ~tills (l).Ark.), the influential chairman of the House Ways and Mearui Committee, said it was "ut· terly, humanly impossible" to reach a compromise_ before adjournment because there were too many dllierences in the HoUR and Senate bills. Mills promiled, however, Ui1t the boost In Social Security would pQ.11 ~y early February aJt4 would be re~actlve to Jan. 1, 1971 The House passed a 5 percent benefit increase, the Senate 10 percent, and while the House put a $67.20 minimum an monthly payments, the Senate boolted It to 'UlO. Jt previously was .J64. There were numerous other djfferences, in· eluding lncluslon In the Senate bill of money for lnaeased public assistance payments. The appropriatiorui bill, passed by a 89-0 roll call vote, carries funds for the Labor Department and the Health, Education and Wellare Department. lt is $210 million higher than President Nilon sought but congressional leaders predicted he would sign the bill. The acUon left only two approprlatiorui bills to be acted upon before the 91st Congress goes out of. business at noon Sunday -1 $2.2 billion bill for foreign &Id and sz.e billion for the transportation department. · The transportation meuure has been blocked by Senate opponents of the pro- posed Supersonic Transport (SSTJ:-which would receive a $210 million federal ,_ubsidy. Tlie Foreign Aid appropriation was held up because of a House.senate wrangle over $200 million for credit aales of military equipment to foreign governmentJ .. The Soctal 'Security bill was at a stand.!ltill because House marµlgers were rtf\J.slng to so to conference with the Senate to work out a comprombe meu:ure. · Even ·before the old Concres.s drew to a close, President Ni1on began strategy sessions aimed at prompting actk>n on hill welfare Jlfonn program ih !he 92nd Coogress, which meets Jan. 21. He scheduled a meeting today with Senate Democratic and Republican leaders to aeei: assurance bis family assistance plan would bt a "top priority" item next year, The plan was junked Monda y. along with protective trade Jegislalion as congress cleaned house Jn Jta rush for adjournment. A compromise $66.6 billion defense pro- , curement bill cleared . both the Senate and the House Tuesday night after negotiators agreed to remove language that would ha\le weakened a previously passed ban on the use of U.S. troops and advisers in C8mbodl1. Passage came 70 to 2 after the Senate earlier rejected a compromise bill that would have allowed the W'e of American troops to rescue prisoners of war or to insure the safe withdrawal of U.S. troops from Southeast Asia. A new House-Senate conference bowed to the Senate's wishes and deleted the language. Medical Teams Rush to Israel Slide Victims BEERSHEBA, Israel (UPI) -~fedica1 teams were rushed today to the border village of Neot Hakikar following report3 a rockslide bad buried 40 persons, police sources said. First reports of the incident were sketchy. Some said the slide buried 40 Israeli soldiers eating in a mess hall, killing and wounding many. Other reports said the dead and injured were civilian settlers of Neot Hakik1t , which is about 15 mile.s south of the Dead Sea and aboct one mile ~'est of the Jordan cease-fire line. Army sourets in Tel Aviv said they were investigatint the reports but had no further lnformation. Neot Hakikar is a settlement in the desert below the salt pans or the Dead Sea about 10 miles south of the Biblical sln city of Sodom. Unlike some other fronUer settlement in the Arava Dtsert it is a civilian and not paramilitary settlement. TAKE 'EXTRA CAR' TO ROSE PARADE LOS ANGELES (AP) -Bus service to the Pasadena Role Parade from loca· lions in Los Angeles, Orange, Riverside and San Bernardino· countiea will be made available by the S o u t h e r n California Rapid Transit District early Friday. Service to the Rose Bowl game between Stanford and Ohin State wlll aJao be provided from RT0'1 terminal tn downtown Los Angeles. Bus rldert mwit have their exact fare or use monthly pa.S!c.s. • Booby Trap Wing Flap From 747 Hits House BELL GARDENS, Calif. (UPI) -A 300-pound sect.ion of wing nap ftll off • United Air Unes Boeing 747 on a training flight Tuesday night and plunged through the roor of a duplex. There was no one in the bulldlng 1nd no persona on tbe ground were Injured. The jumbo jet. caJTYing a crew of four and a Federal Aviation Administration Supervisor, l1nded safely at Los Angeles lnternational Airpor.t.. The National TraruiportaUon Safety Board and the FAA were investigating the accident. The metal and fiberglass wing flap section, six feel by two feet and shaped like a pOd, tore a two foot square hole in the 'riof of the duple1. It then hit a rafter and ripped out a 10-foot tee· tion or the kitchen ceiling. The teriants, Mr. and Mrs. William Hardy, were not at home. A ndghbor, Al Hall, said "It sounded like an earthquake" when the wing .sec- tion hit the duplex. Dangers of Viet Cong booby trap are discussed by Sgt. Bruce Hom at a U.S. training center near Da Nang, South Vietnam. This 5(). gallon drum is shredded in such a way that jagged edges point out in all directions. Viet Cong commonly rig such drums in trees. When triggered, they fall on unsuspecting soldiers. A UAL spokesman aald the 747 was doing "touch and go" landings at Ontario (Cllif.) International Airport and was en route to Los Angeles lnternaUonal when the accident oceurred. Security Guard Stymies Theft, Shoots Car Tire Air California Gets Year Delay in Revamp of Jets Huntington Beach security guard Den· nis Dahlke Tuesday night thwarted a dep1rtment store theft by shooting out the rear tire on an escape car fUied with four fleeing bandits. Air California will have an additional year to Install anti-smog equipment to bring their jets up to standards set by It-new state law, according to a ruling made Tuesday by the county Air Pollution Control District appeals board. An APCD spokesman said the variance was granted on the condition that the airline schedules the installation of modi· Masked Bandits Hit Gas Station A pair of ski-masked bandits who ap- proached the attendant from behind with a 16-inch butcher knife robbed a Costa Mesa 1trvlce slatlon of $50 Tuesday night ltay Rossi, on duty at Chet Tschetter's Chevron Service, 2275 Newport Blvd ., told Officer Bob Arnold the young men fled on foot up adjacent Fairview Road wlth the cash. The victim said he was t;ken by surprise about 7:25 p.m. and ordered to turn over the money from the gasoline pump island box or be stabbed. Police searching the surrounding area recovered a hal, striped scarf, shirt and butcher knife which Rossi identified as being worn and used by the 18 to 20-year-old robbers. t ' ' ~ ,• ' .t ' GEM TALK ~ ~J TODAY by THE LURE OF JADE Gems have always held for me a strong historical interest, and when asked which gems fascinate me most, reply is difficul t because· each has its own fascinating bis· tory and tradition. I am not alone in finding jade particularly interesting; for cen· turies the cool look of this legend· ary gem has enchanted men of many nations. You may think only of ancient China when you see jade, but this gem was the subject of Mexican Indian legends before Cortez, and its cold brilliance made them be-· lleve it devine, that only their gods could lead them to jade bearing boulders. Strings of jade beads, carved statuary and low relief figures are just some of the exquisite artifacts recovered f r o m long forgotten Mayan tombs and Toltec pyramids, this continent's earliest known piece being a carved statuette found in Mexico. Some people believe jade ls found only in museums; but today. exquisite jade jewelry is available to all, and may be found in our store. tying equipment as soon as it la available. It was granted because on Jan. t aircraft emission of smoke with a given degree of opacity will be in violation of a new section or the state health and safety code. Bob CIUford, general manager or the airline, said jet engines that have not been modified will be in violation of the new law. "We have seven Boeing 737s and three spa re engines, for a total of 17. Two have been modUied and we e1pect to get another completed by next week." he said. Clifford· said the airline ordered the modifying devices from the Pratt· Whitney Company in May and has con- Lracted with United Airlines for their insl,Pllation. "Delivery has been a little slow and United has their own fleet to lake care of, so the varianet will give us an additional ye1r to comply. Oil Platform Fire Out After 30 Days NEW ORLEANS (UP I) -The largest oil well fire feeding I wild d~i\Llng plat· fonn blaze in the Gu1f of Mexico for the past 30 days has been put out, a Shell Oil Co. spokesman said today. Dahlke, regularly employed aa a detec- tive wlth the Orange Police Department, is a guard at Huntington Ctnttr, He fired five shots at the careening car and one bounced off the rtar bumper, but another ripped through the left rear Ure. The incident began at 7: IO p.m. when a J . C. Penney's Company store employe saw three men and a woman in • leopard skin coat trying to steal 20 nursing uniforms from 1 clothing rack. Dahlke was called to the scene and he confronted the thieves as they at- tempted to leave the store parking lot in the escape car. He identified himself as a police officer but the driver accelerated and attempted to run him down, Dahlke told police. That's when the shooting started. Dahlke pumped five shots at the car which was found abandoned one hour later with the shot-out rear tire. It was located by Fountain Valley police at the intersection of Bushard Street and Warner Avenue. All of the suspects apparently escaped on root but all of the stolen uniforms were recovered from the auto. Police later indicated the escape car had been stolen from Beach City Dodge. Dahlke ls a former Huntington Beach patrolman. He is employed part-time as a Penney's security guard. For a dynamic gift ... ·a-~mlc watch ; An Omega Dynamic can mike any girt~ giving occ11ton an unuauat one. The unique horlzontal ov11~1haped c111 was 1pecially da1Jgned for greater ,witch wurlng comlort.~.lt Ills the wrist like 1 glove. Wilh cool comforlable easily interchanged alr·ventad atrap:, , ~ .. Tf.wl11d1"f· d•lt·lt lli~f Om•t• 0)'111..,lc. g11lnlt tt 1tttl Wt1tr tlt ltltnt Cltt, Afr • .,..nltd ln!t ral'l1"0tttlt 11r., ................ t nt.OCll Mtnu.J .. 111\! Mdel •llhfiut ttlt!Wll' •• ,,,1tJO J. C. fiumph .riej Jeu1eler.-1 1823 NEWPORT BLVD., COST A MESA CONVlNllNT TE•Ms IANICAMlllCA•D-MASTEllCHAllGE 24 YlA•S IN SAME LOCATION PHONE 14t.t401 • I I I I ' I ) . • I I I 11 l l'ILOl-ADVERTISER Wedlltsd•y, DKtm'otr :JC, 1.,,. . ' CLOllD NEW YEA S DAY #I PATENT ROSES NO WAX 3 or more extra large cones, roota wrapped in special pock with mos1' to protect root&. Each will produce huge bouquets of brilliant colored roaes. All of the moat popular colors and varieties. #1 NON PATINT ROSES All of tne most popular varieties. Top quality, ready to plant. 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Protect those Christmas gift clothes from stains- nowl Prevents greasy and water stains. Protects all apparel and home furnish ings. Makes outerwore roin repellent. SAYE 78' 1s• fULLllTOll • DAILY •IL01 Jlt Y.'' ROCKAWAY TABLE TENNIS TABLE Filled %" top with regulation white striping. Heavy duty nylon cas-ter wheel assemblies. Heavy gauge 1" tubul ar steel legs. 4 Player Table Tennis Set ••• 3.99\ ~ 2299 ' • ..... ~ wrVIA~~ HOODED . . RAIN JACKET long wearing vinyl, comple!ely waterproof, hooded rain jacket. Fully cut to fit over outer' clothes. Complete with carrying cose. Buy several, keep one in your cor, tockle .box, boot, golf bog, knopsock, \ unting t:oat. Your choice of cleor, ol ive drab, red or yellow in sizes S,M,L,XL . DECORATOR STORAGE CHEST This is an ell purpose chest, for storing clothing, toys and other uses. Decorated in o daisy pattern. Your choic e of siz e~ .. PLASTIC TRASH BAGS Heavy duty trash con li ner to keep your cons clean and neot. Don 't miss this greet value. 20 gal. 8UlllA PAIK lliO VALLI Y Vtf~'J ~T , .. (, l1th ST. I ,I I .. J 4 DAILY PILOT SC Wtdnrsday Orcrmbtt 30 197~ Your 1'1one11's Worih 10 Basic Safety RulesNruned By SVLVIA l'()RTEll This 1• tbe week when dried oul ~mas trees defective OU'bitmas lightl and ovu~x hiJarated children can be ma jor fire hazards -leading to tht appall1~g news that the aMual cosl of home ac- cidents 1n cur country IS still rlsing and Is oow af a towering $1 7 b1lhon The an- nual cost of home fires alone IS up to a startllng $700 mtlllon and""'lt too 1s sllll chmb1ng relentlessly The drain on vou 1f you re a victim of an accident can be flnaociall,Y devastating Jn tbe form of lost wages rocketing medical bills soar 1ng heallh in s urance premiums And even 1f you have never been 1nvolved 1n a serious home acc1denl you owe 1t to yourself to consider not only the intense personal tragedy but also the financial disaster this might be For the key fact 1s that you could prevent the ma Jor1ty of costly home accidents by relatively simple steps Here are 10 basic rules sug gested to me by the Council on Family Health a Ne\v Y o r k b a s e d organ1zat1on sponso r e d b y the phatm.aceulical industry and other ma1or sources con cemed with home accident problems (1) DO NOT keep dangerous toxic products such as household cleansers polishers pamts pesticides and waxes 1n easily opened easily accessible places -for instance. underneath t b e kitchen sink or on the lower $helves of closets Thts 1s especially important Jf you ha \ie children 1n the elC ploratory age bracket of two to five (2) DO thro\V a1vay haU Ill! cd contamers of the most highly c a u s t 1 c substances \\hlch you use only oc cas1onally such as dratn cleaners carbon tetrachloride muriatic acid your f1nanc1al loss m so doing will be minuscule compared WJth the hazards of leaving s uch substances aro11nd 1nclud1ng not only the poss1b1hty of a fatality but also of a gr u eso m el y prolonged med1cal-surg1cal ordea l (3) 00 NOT risk po1son1ng by carbon monoxide (more tha n two-thirds of deaths due to carbon monoxide po1SOn1ng oceur 1n the home) Help pre- vent this by having non-elec. tric stoves.. furnaces space heaters and other appliances serviced regularly and pro- ress1onally be sure all areas of your house 1n which these are used are properlv ven hlated avoid running your car engine 1n a closed garage avoid using charcoal grills and CHARLES E EDWARDS • ___.tHlllliaU Charles E Edwards d1stnct manager o[ the Costa r-.1csa Automobile Club of Souther 1 California office has bE'cn named manager of the Carden Grove d1str1ct offu:c Edwards v;ho lives Jn Hun Lington Beach is a menibrr of the board of directors of lhe Costa Mesa Chamber of Coin mcrce 1s first vice pre!t1dent of lhe HarbOr Aren lin1tcd F uod and "as president 1 f the CO$la Mesa United Fund last )ear A grad u a I c of UC LA E<:l\l&rds l'("ctntly erirned a degree 1n Industrial relations •t UC Irvine Edwards expects Lo r~mriln living JO Hun tington l\tirbor He aod his wUc Jnycc have l\fO children Laurie 18 and Jd!tty, JI hibachis Indoors unfess you have an adequate esc.pe hatch for the fumes they pro- duce be extremely careful about lht gas, oil coal charcoal and wood stoves and appharu ts you use aboard a ~malJ bont In a mobile home or In a tent or campuig \ eh1cle These all produce carbon monoxide f ~) 00 keep all potentially dangerous gardening producta such as pesticides herbicides and rerllhzers 1n properly c:Josed conl.a1ners properly labeled and stored out of the reach or children DON T store such hazardous substances 1n food or beverage containers 151 DO keep all med1c1ne5 on the tughest sheU of your medicine cabinet and try to childproor this cabinet by for instance locating the cab1ne1 above the reach of small children t5) DO NOT stock medicines which look or taste like candy and never make any com par1son between med1c1ne. and candy to your children i 7 J DO follow the rule or U S nurses and read the label Sl1op1>it1g Cente1·s 011tline Expenses NEW YORK - OVER THE 'couNTER I Complete-Ne\v York Stock: List ?3 ' ... l\ 11'°' -\o ,,. l<I~-.... J}U -• l' -... 3l'o + '• l6 + '• Ti i -\o 1. -' IOU -, ' -. lH~ ..._ 0 ,..,, ... ,. J8. + \o ,, .. -., s-1\'t + • U\-~ ». lfl• + 4 ..,~. + "" 10~ -• 17 • • '" -~. 11 + • " + • ~~ +11~ 111. + 1 1•. • ~. '9~ -" 2:11• + "' 51 + • .. "• la •+~ • .:w. + • 11~. + "• 11 • -Ir 11 . -• ~ '" 0 + ,, 30>t -• SP -~ ~ .... + I . -. .. _, lH~ + ~ 1:1 . + • il ' +1 • .J + v. 36 ... + • " ' ~~ +1,z 30 -t ' 1' -~. 1.P• I-t~ 'I ' -• J • -~. lJ. -• " + :1111. .. • ' + • 2& -~. '" 2J~ +1 . ~~il = ? 2,. -,. 21~~ -t ~. ' ' 4,j + ,, l'lh -~­s ....... " t' 26~' ~. 19. + 11 ' -' " . l \o-.. 1;. ~ ~ 71 + • :10 •-I·· ' -' 6' ' + • 81. + " J2h + ~ • + • 2 -~. "' t ' ~ ~ 19'1. -.. :J :;-;r 60 +2 . ·~· + • \ \ ' I , I ' WldntsdJy, Dfcembcr 30, l 970 SC D.\ILY PILDT J S l Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List ~I I I I Jf DAA. Y PILOT Relatives In Home 'Best Way' By Peler J. Ste-. MD Although the column ap- peat:ed months •go about Mrs. G., who was upset about sen- ding .ber mother to a nursing home, letters coiit1nue to come that may be helpful to readers in resolving similar problems. One follows: DEAR DR. STE!NCROHN: This letter is intended for Mrs. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE G., the lady who was sO guilt- rid<k.1 because she was forced to plaqe her mother in a nurs.- ing . home. If printed, I do hope that she will find a me.sure of consolation in these words. Twenty one years ago I was forced to commit my mother to a mental institution, for a longer priod of time than I Uke to recall. I suffered from an extreme guilt com- plex. I cried and I prayed for peace of mind. Then came the realization that this was God's will , it was His plan for both my mother and me. Try as I might to change things, this could not be done. J ·realized that I . had not deserted my mother. I would have to ac- cept f.be will of God and resolve to be as good to my mothei as r possibly could. I visited her often, always taking i;na.terial things that she needed as well as extra treats to make life as plea!lnt as poaible for her. I brought her home for a week or two many times over the years. I TOOK HER on trips back to childhood places, back to her mOther's grave, always trying to do little things that made her happy. I shall always treasure a remark that she made to,me _not too long ago. She said, "My darling, don't ever feel bad about . ~tUng me away here. You only did , Whitt you ):tad to do. You are the best daughter that any tnOtber ever had, and I love you' &lcaiDi ~ an i)'Oy.." I laid my t.mOtber to rest two alllf·a, bait months agO, after tiv~ aitd a Mii months of · Unt.ol~ suffer.ing: Dul'ing this time I went to see her each: weekend iind although I w8s nDt wjth . her at µte very . end I ·know that she toot. ~l'. -Jove for me with her ,to the grave. Not once did she ever feel neglected or dl!!serted. MrS. G., we must always aceept · God's will and only in doing-this ca n we find peace of mind. -Mrs. B. M~!>ICALETTES (Replies lo Rea6ers) For Mrs. L.: The Important thing in considering your young son's leg cramps is to dete'rmine the real reason. Sometimes what p a r e n t s believe are muscle cramps are really joint pains. When in· definite, they are called grow. ing pains. Although massage seems to help temporarily, I suggest that you take him to your doctor. What's important to know is whether or not these growing pains are due to unrecognized rheumatic fever. FOR MRS. Y.: There is no definite rule, but it is often accepted by obstetricians that a woman should wait about six weeks 'after having a baby before resuming sexual rela - tions. It ta kes that long for the uterus and other organs to return to the pre-pregnancy state. FOR MRS. 0.: A safe rule Is not to take any kind of medicine (even aspirin for a headache) especially during the fi rst three months of pregnancy -unless you receive your doctor's OK. Some ask. "When I am nervous, what harm is there in taking a tranquilizer, or a sleeping pill for insomnia?" Let your doctor be the judge. FOR MR. O.: The tuberculin test is Important as a screen- ing test for tuberculosis. II shows only that you have come In contact with the TB germs. The pos itive skin·wheel does not mean you ha ve active tubercUlosis. C:Hll.DREN f,JKE UNCLE LEN 1 ---·-...,..._._- Wtdnrsday, December .30, 1970 I PILOT·4DVERTISER JJ •• , <HAVI 'Ypt.I .VISITl!D OUR Nl!W $TORI AT1 •ou"TAll• VA\.L•Y-11* M ...... It. •I , .... POUNTAIN VALLrt-1Atl """' IM.~ ........ IL T0•°""41 T-. .. IMddi.lf ..... • ( NUNTIN•TON llA(M-:llH 1..0 '""'· 11 A ...... tANTA .VU.-IW W. ''"-' ... ,,.....St. I WUTMINST•.._.,,W........., • ...... W ... COSTA Ml~ at•rW ,._,, .. WlllM It. COST A MISA-1'1 •• 11'11 st. "UNTIN•TON,aMC ........ ..._ II lneldlu'91 HUNTINITOW llACM-llfldt...a l•lllttt "UNTINOTON IPCH-War.w a .,,_. .. 58i1 "W11aer .. ~t .. Springdale in Huntington •each • ' ' . • -I I ). ~ . ' ·. ··· · ·· Hard .Side ~ Vinyl. Lugg~ge .,..c.:,....,,r ..,...... . ,. 2· 66 t;onds0"1e arid ~,with v:l'IYI cov.erlnos. ·In Bltte ·Of\ 'Grten. Full slie.i Sovt $$$ row. I , . . • ,4 99 av· w .. _.. u·" . •:s'.~ (21: ,.,.." ·.·.··· ·",. : ... , .J ......... ..... • • •.~ ~-.·r~ • -""·"'"'" ' ..... .&:: ' ,....~ I. ( ,~: ·Men's Ac1Jlic -~ . Knit · Sllirts •· 1" ! • ...:, ~·· ' . • ' Mockl"< wolh<>blt1 l•ll s22• foihioned kriJh. wltk mock· t urtleneck coUor,.ackfle s~lder. P_opulor cplon., ~:i:n. . Embroidered Women's -llou.ses $3'' NOVEL:fY LOOK MULT I •COLOll!tO .fMSRO IOEitED PANELS . · S1iE:s 32.·38 · ,. er ' • Clearanee Brl• Plpts , •• • a. ••.ti•l'I W \'i'!lll T ..... 1111 'omoue Mos .. t'irctolt fn •tY'-.oolortl ' Womell's Vinyl ·. ~·· Folding ·. Slippers ~33 ..... t•~ ,.,,fty --. ''""'" •.. tt~P_. Ste ' . J'ANUARY ·)n111 Good Thru Tuu\far · • • $2'' v.1" Plast~~ . House:wares ' I $15" Tweed 8~x11¥2 Room Size .Rllgs Cookie ·Sule I Lb.and 140..lap · 3 F s1 Ftesh new shipment just un.. · O ' packed. 8 delicious ~ri,iin In I Gorclen, laundry, 2--4 qt, NCtOn• gulor bolbtl! 56 qt. WC1stebcsk.· •h! flip top hompml AU In hi· density plastic with tilgh polish • , , jumbo 1iae. 97c Quolity"Vi!'.'ltoge'' rugs 8\.7xl1V,t' s·ga· 9 irt si1e. New•sr tweed tones for every decor. Tufted on jute f0t , • IOl'IQer weor ••• fooin .rubber bocked. Serged all .croUnd ••• reody to Jciy. , so1e priced Grot.IP. Ger-younl , •49c ..... CMcoS.tc hth, 15'9 .•••••••.• Jfc •Ste fM,. en. .. S.9'wfcli•, 1.~ Lk. ; ,4tc •Vilt. P•k Ceold•, 11 tt 14 • .._TM( chek. JJe Cannon Monticello Reg :$1 2' 1st Quality Printed Pillowcases Reg. $1" Sheared Jacquard Bath T'wels "Serenity" SUpe!·flM printed cotton muslins In pink, blue, y.Uow, rnulti-colars. -42-x36" Only ot Thrifty, .... ~3" .......... ........ PACK OF 2 Extra heovy quolity, super-absorbent cotton terries in woven sculpturtd rose ·design , • , Green, Orange, Blue, Rospberry. 24x4-4". • !tc lhllff M•tclil., WnMl""• '"• • $1.19 Jfial" Metdlitlt "...ii T1nlt "' 2",,.... C-.Teny DllllClollis ·~·4:88° '""-Illy 11¥.l•'•l'o". .. .... ,.,, .... , .. ... ~~~69° .... __. • •• Jor ..... y..,~ Colondt:n,, ronge perks, roo1t pans, whistling t•oke.tt les, soucepots! s411. " Plastic :· SI .II. Y1la1I Self ldheslwe Shelf Unhl9 Chair Chol~ofot .. 'tractive·,pot. '1 Of tems & solid col••· 12-fH~ long, f8 Inches wide. Ex.t rc mlld beauty bcrs cf Mtionolly o-d .. rirtised IOCIP. 59' ecr. lox141 Station!'f 3 ';;" $)' . 18.to.24 sheets, 1_2' envelopes. Designs, colo!'I, Mod Glass Globe Lqmp 541 '11.10 '~'" 88 .i ... r....,..i. I ..,i "'..,.....of colGtl•I ,... - •• ~11o...i4 ,....,. hllltl r .. rythl~t,..:, 'S" _.., __ -"""-· ......... """"' ............. ~ ....... 1~ ..---•444 _....,..._. ~--•15~ ..._~ •. 77 h••"' , .... ,. ' 10"-·-· t •!4, •h•l •• ....... Recent cut..outs of top selling <4S'a. Country Roc:k. &, Bluti, Popular -music fw everyone. $1 •• llhta. List itM Ult Pritt Top Selling SflrH · Albums Albums $349 $2'·' Latest & ar•ot••r ltT'Klsh hits by top enter· to Irie"' World .. fo .. mOUI per· forme rs & hit>. · Mol•r Lo I .. , Monaurol Album• IJJDO All brond 47' , -new • fltlt ::a::!' quoflty. =~··· Markoff Quollty Vodka $J49 8111-llhr Soolth Whbky IOOPreef '""' "'"'" $ " ... , luyl Rleoro Rum ,$339 $333 s .... .. , ...... " .... ~2:971 lili; & 69' School Paper • J.-'H.a. F\lfM P.,... WW• or Celleti• •• • hl 1 Y.l" TYJ11p1 p.,... 43' $12.85 Ylfael Record Cabinets Glont ., ....... .., 32 •• °""" Siz:e. Modem cob!· net In wolnut color wilh ch~ plated legs, tllding ....... •1 00 Tussy U, Riot of Color u,. .... 2i'1 Poles ond brights! 6- c olor GOid accent ed case. Yardley Soap ~.e $275 4oa:m,m1~ Ultra Femlnlnci'O::r s5oo """ ntW..-1 L: c-.... °" •1 So Dry =:... SOt· sl,00 Value! Dorothr Graf Hol'lllone Crt1m 50 ~ CWRAICEf IE STOCKS UST 97c Socl1i Secretary II~ 88c 91c Old WD~d Ml' 88c 59c Y1l1t T1bl1t r. Entlllf. 29c $2.50 Sheer Mist Siil $1 .11 $9.91 8.E. Aln Clock $5.• $2.44 Bi1dorelll1 Doll $1.91 $7:98 8.L Satlli Al1rm $4 .• $4.91 Niklhn ltz11ps $2.91 $2.98 ralltleu Tfl syr, $1.33 $2.51 Roi Tn Fmb Tips $t.• $3 Cerlu I.hit Clprillas $1.51 $1UI I' Al ... Lalld1r $1DM I ~ J I. ' I ~· I I J ' ])rug • Council Urged • Grand Jury A sks Improved Treatment By TOM BARLEY Of IM Delly l"llllf s1an ' Immediate creation o( a drug abuse Unuing program to help the entire com. mun,ity make better informed decisions about the use of drugs oi alr'kinds." followed by its submission to the Orange County Board of Supervisors with the request that the drug abUSe cov.ncll be created and di.reeled by a full time executive officer who would b e , technically, a member of the county admini.stra¥>r's sta(f. cmmcil and the strengthening o f "woefully inadequate" treatm~nt and rehabilitation facilities for drug and alcohol users in Orange County Is urged 1n a 26-page report compiled by the Orange County Criminal JuaUce CoWlcll. The 21-member investigative agency ended a six-month probe into growing drug use in Orange County by calling on the Orange County Medical Associa- tioo to "initiate and maintain a con- It also calls on Orange County school boards to review their policies for disciplining drug offenders and suggests that schol>l administrators 41review health -la fO< empbasb oo bOlb. UJe .;,ks oj ming dnlg• of alf klllds: aod·oo paoith'e approa.pe. 'to poraonal ad· just:mellt." • ' • Execulive Officer Keith Concannon said pub)icatlon of the reJ>O<! will be •' ' "'. P'Uods to .. meet the costs crea~ by formatioq.. of the council "may bicome A Yalllble from otller sources through an awarenesS of this report." Concannon said. Criminal Justk:e Council grants are normally received through combined state and federal sources. Coining Otat Mrs . Mamie Eisenhower, widow of the late President, enjQys eve: ning at International Debutante Ball with her granddaughter, Susan Ff.aine Eisenhower, one of this year's debs. Event was Tue sday night in New York. Susan is .sister of David Eisenhower, husband of Julie Nixon, who is daughter of President. ~ Commission Jobs Open As County Board Changes Positions on four county advisory com· missions will be open to new ap- pointments next week when two new county supervisors take office. Appointees to the harbor, planning, a irport and fish and game commissions serve terms concurrent with t h e supervisor who names them to the groups. New supervisors are free. or course, to reappoint current commissioners but neither Ronald Caspers in the fifth district nor Ralph Clark in the fourth have indicated their intentions. Office holders whose terms expire Jan. 4, are in Supervisor Alton Allen's fiflh district, Donald Killian Jr., airport; Allen Grubb, harbor; Harold Ekman, planning, and Thomas Forster, fish and game. In Supervisor William Hirstein's fourth district the present comrriissioners are Howard Lathrop, airport; Gene Thomas, fish and game; Frank Mead, harbor, and John Mcinnis, planning. The lxlard meets next J\.1onday lo reorganize and the. new supervisors may or may not make known their intentions at that time. Present appointees to the commissioners serve until a successor is named. Board Applies Brakes To County's Spending Orange County Supervisors alarmed by Increasing demands on available cash. decided Tuesday to delay for at leaSt two weeks the purchase of $535,000 worth Artist-Teach er Shows Display ' Laguna Beach artist-teacher Ruby Huf· ford will demonstrate the art of collage for members or San Clemente's Arts and Crafls Club Jan. 14 at the Elks Lodge. Mrs. Hufford. y,•ho exhibits at the Laguna Festival of Arls al.Jo teaches at Laguna Beach High School, Mlssion Viejo High and Leisure World. The exhibition of her work will be included in a 7:30 p.m. meeting which also will include the giving of a life membership to Thelma Ruckman of San Clemente. one of the original six founders of the group. The public is welcome. County Cyclis t Dies Fron• Crash Inj uries A Garden Grove ~1otorcyclist died Tuesday of injuric~ received in a Dec. J l cru~h in Santa Ana. KrnnC'th Smith· 22. dica or n1u\tiple f ,,., . ._, . .,~11 ~t"~rl injuries at the Orange County r .. :cd1cal Center. l!ls cycle had c.,,11;..tad with M auto. of refuse disposal equipment. Wil.h only half of I.he current fiscal year gone by, the county has been jollcd by a succession of federal cuts in health aod welfare funds. To add to the financial gloom, County Administrative 0£Cicer Robert E. Thomes has predicled that a 1-cent tax increase may be necessary next year to cover a $5.2 million .drop in revenues. '11lornas blamed federal a nd state cuts in Medi.Cal a nd mental health programs f9r most or the problems. This year·s $212 million budget re· quired a three-cent tax increase when the slate made a last minute reduction in its Medi-Cal contribution. Recently, t.he state has ordered even greater cuts in the program. Thomas said the county already is committed to drawing $500,000 from Its $1 million reserve fund to replenish welfare aid to families with dependent children. The deficit was caused by an upsurge in the number of families re-- quiring financial assistance. The delay in buylog the refuse disposal equipment was oppo5Cd by road corn· missioner Al Koch who said a study would reveal nothing new . "The equip- ment wears out and our figures prove that it is more economical at a certain point to replace It then to continue repairs.I' To guard against further surprises the supervisors asked Thomas to cstabli:lh tt prk>rlty ll!l for other anUcipated purchases. Among recommendations submitted by a 12-lnember Special Strike Force named by the council to investig::.te drug abuse in Orange County was the suggestion thal civic and service organizations in Orange County could plan and provide pubUc forums for discussion or drug and other social problems. The Criminal Justice Council itself shouJd include represenlatives of more human service age."lcies. disciplines and community ·interests, the strike force liotOO. The Criminal Justice Council, in its pli?.ent form. draws heavily on law enforcement agencies with nine of ils membe_rs having that background. Three of the remaiiting 12 members are at- torneys, three are city councilmen and one is a COWlty supervisor. : Another innovation, the strike force suggested, co u I d be the creation of a "cabinet" formed by heads of human service agencies and the appointment of a youth coordinator. "Agencies providing direct services to the public could use advisory boards to represent community interests," the strike force suggests. It is vital,. the report adds, that there be in Or8nge County "continuing ex- changes between elected officials and .. the community about current and p~ posed laws regulating drugs." Projects should include "a cost ef· fectiveness study of strategies of drug Jaw enforcement and a review of dlscre-- Uonary practices in the criminal justice system," the report adds. "The Strike l<'orce finds the distinction between the use and abuse of drugs a vexing issue in spite of the fact that society condones the use. in modera- tion, of some drugs and deplores the use of others," the report comments. "Whether approaching the control of particular drugs in different waya best serves society's needs is also a perplex- iog issue,., the report adds. No further action on recommendations contained in the report will! be taken until after the Jan. 25 meeting of the Oiminal Justice Council, Concannon Bald. Dog Association To Disband After New La'v Passage The L a g u n a Beach Dow Owners Association will be disbanded following final adoption of the revised dog control ordinance, spokesman Richard Challis announced Tuesday. The controversial ordinance, accepted and passed to se1..'0nd reading by the city council Dec. 16, after revisions pro- posed by the dog owners, is scheduled for adoption by the council at its next meeting Jan. 6. The Dog Owners Association was form- ed to battle the original ordinance that would have banned dogs from three city parks and all beaches. Members circulated referendum petitions and suc· cessfully forced the council •to repeal the law. A watered-down version of the ordinance, limiting the beach ban to the summer months, was presented to the council Dec. 16 and approved aner further revisions. These included removal of the ban on dogs in Top of the World Park and limiting the ban in Boat Canyon Park to the summer months. Commending writer Arnold llano for his leadership in the campaign to revise the ordinance, Challis said Tuesday, "The new ordinance is obviously a compromise and indeed a fair one considering both those for and against Ordinance No. 650 (the original ordinance).'' No further meetings of the Dog Owners Association will be held after final passage of the law. he added, unless specifically requesl!:J. However, he urged interested persons to attend the Jan. 6 council meetings to state their views on updating and revision of certain provisions in old animal control Jaws as proposed by Hano at the request of the council. Ne·w Classifieds f-ri Debut Today New "inlernational sign language" classified advertising headings make thclr first appearance today in the DAI· LY PILOT. Streamlined and simplified classifica· lion of ads goes into effect today, along with new headings which feature artwork similar to the symbolic drawings ap- pearing on road signs and In airport terminals where travelers of many na· Uonalitics and languages are learning to understand them. The overhaul of the DAILY PILOT classified ad pages ts the first major change in .that section or the newspaper In nearly five years. Check the ''new look" todaJ. • •• l: l ' • • ' • • • Wtdntsdly, DKrmbtr lO, 1~70 s • • • • · l · 1 • • • • • • • I .. :· ~ .~ • • • • • • .. • • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • ' • • • • • . ' . .,. . • • •• • . . ·1 • ... • • • • • . .. .. • • .. • ' • • • • • • • • • • • • • . • .. ·; . .... ,. I'··· • !. \ • • • . ' • \':. I . BIGGA~S J :· ·~ .\/ ·. 'I I •.. ANNIVERSARY t . : t . -. . .. :· · J· I I ~· l • • I --- I • .I . · \ STARTS } ...... : ,:-! THURSDAY. DECEMBER 31st AT ALL BIGGAR STORES I -.\l··. 1 / II • F. ~: ~ \N I TI ~ l.R E CARPETS; LAMPS . ' A c·c E s s 0 R I E s • • • .. .~· ,. /. '\ l l L I SANTA A.NA : Mein et Eleventh PA.SA.DINA : Coloredo et El Molin o POMONA: Holt, ees+ of Garey S1tnta An& Store Open Monday Eveni.ng1 • • • • • • OAJLY PILOT .s • • • • • • • • • • • • ' . . ~· •• ' 4 ),t!LY l'ILOT Wtdrttsday, Dtctmber 30, 11170 •• Co•ivoys Blasted R'lelc• U.S. Jets · Make Heaviest Raids 'Georr11l I'1111 just remembered. )'011'1• 1111.itployedl' Ode Praises 'Also Runs' By DICK WEST WASJDN~T01" -There are I,"* ayerl in the NaUonal Football League. y my calcultUoQ. (:OD'lplled durin1. a eekod In front of ti. televisloo M~ t them are ··~ becoes." • arrived at um ;ffgure by taklng lµTlber of pllyers identified 11 heroes in four games and then '1iu1Uplylng lhat by the number of team.a t the league, divided by the number pl9-l!>'·Pll1 ~.' llld analysts. The presence of IO many unsung heroes n the screen gave my heart a wrench. and U' _the tames wort on I beJatt to try tO think of IOl'D.e way to ail1I them. At ~. ~,Ill& !~st game SUjlq,y ~; I mn wertt 10 f!f ,. . -.. aB to cdtlipole a aona about them: SAIGON (0Pf) -U.S. jet f;1hi.ra on a strike aaainst a North Vietnamese supply convoy on the Ho Chi Minh Trail in Laos triggered the biggest secondary explosions in five years or allied bom- bings there, relisble mil itary sources said today. The sources said lhe raid earlier th is week produced "well over" 2,000 secon· dary explosions, indicating that Jara;e fuel or ammunition supplies were hit. They said itJ~u1d have been the most 11uccessful l:Silmbing mioion of the Indochina war. The infonnanil said the 11econdary ex- plosion were "popping off ' for more than three hours. The White Heuse disc losed last week that the Communists were moving 11up- plies down• the Ho Chi Mlnh Trail at a rate 30 percent higher in preparation for a new offensive, possibly In Cam- bodia. The. 852 and fighter-bomber strike• a1ainst the trail havl!: been the greatest 15ustained effOrt o! the war -or any other war -but reports from Laos indicated vast quantities still were ge t· ting through. U.S. Defense Secretary Melvln R. Laird has taken note of the big Communist push down the trail -really a maze of dirt roads ~dden from aerial view by dense jungles -and has threatened to bomb supply dumps in North Vietnam Kennedy Denial On '62. CamJ!aign Aide Retracted -, WIASHINGTON !AP) -lien. Edward M. l(ennedy CD-MUI.), b11 r1!1lacted a denlaJ lbit a formfr 1111l1tant ~ter a:er!erat, accuaed by a Sen1te Repulllltao of' maldq tlltial air mall cot11lacla. took part In Kennedy's 1962' election campaij;n. "Smi * IOQ( of UD11111C herOes; "PultUeJty,wlle, a atrtn1 of woes. "Hal!tUd It la to be bOtpu:. • i. •• An4 tBOl hive anybody but a tel iiion-annowider bow JL sen. GOrdon Allott <ft.Colo.), made the aCOJSaUon 01 the Senate f10or Tuesday . agawt WJlllam J. Hart1can1 a lona·titne Ke!'l*IJ family friend lllld aide. AUO!t. In delallln1 Hartlpo'a role u • Wlllte ii._ ·octvber UDder for- Presiden:t John F. Kennedy and as a poatal of!lclal for u years, aold Hatti&•• ltft 1he PosL Office Department to ~~ward ~fdy''-llrft electloo "So !lit your vol<le to the maoot rung, -' "And .Iii no'l!tr9 ro.Uln llllSWl&." (~ l)'rl<!l,JhOuld be iWlg to lllO tune of Bacb't:tnilrd Cantata for illlle.t.. and cllllM. op;; :za, In D •llorp minor.)'~ SorDiuntea an ,outlidili-can see thlno: more cie1rlY than a Person wbo~.11 personal1Y involved. Therefore, I au&- ti6ne<I t.tte IOftl for my wif.e. who 'is very Uditn~ about football, ~ than haWI& t!'flot. "IL dOMn'I IClld. Craiyth;ahs," Ille 1 a i d, t:ddr~in'i: me by one of my nicknlt'l)el. ''And" besldts t)lat, if }'OU sillg a~t IA W11una hero, he won't be WllUM ll\V fqer, and. all of thole r;portl aaaounctr1 will be unable to iden- tify 114 .jlllyen." "Well: tlley could mrt oallin& them 'sun&' Mroes," I said, b!Jt I koew deoep do"n th1t It WOUldn't wor\C. At tt'6 next tlme out, and a & a I n while the referei was a;iving the t~ minute ootlce, I bUtied my brain& for other wif'a to ~ unaung heroes. The ldM I finally came up with ts •n NFL unsun'1 hero all-star team. llJus an unsultl i.ero "Hall ol Fame'' In which Jhe buat! of football's most eminent 11onenUtlea: would be preaerved. Beyond. that, .I would ha ve the: UPI pick ~~ "WU1un& hero of the week" to prm.'.kie more ~ent recognition for obacui't '1plolla. And fW.Uy1 at the end of the &eason. J would ~hHµlt yet anothf:r bOwl game -the ~lto Bew!," featurlng the most anteyn:toua ·upwta ln tht. league. , ~.~.-: -UPI · •«t teject ln 1ny way the suggestion that Bill Hartlaan left the service of the government to participate in my campaign,'' Kennedy interjected as Allott Jpoke. "That's completely untrue," said Ken· nedy. "He b.ad absOlutely nothing to do with the campaign.'' Later, however, Kennedy inserted into the Congressional Record this additional paragrapb: "'This morning in • colloquy with my dblUJlguished colleaiue· from Colorado. Mr. Alloti. I stated that Mr. Hart!Jan '+'u not. involved in my 1982 Sen1te campaJgn. r hid not encountered him or remem~ hll preaence ln that effort but I am now Wormed by my staff that he did come to ft1assachusetts to do some campatan work." Nixon Passes Tests With Flying Colors • WASHINGTON !AP) -Pre1ldeot Nizon said he received a "&ood blll of health" in a med ical checkup today at the Bethesda Naval Hospital. Nixon arrived at 8:35 a.m. at the hOfipital and left for the White Jfouse at 11:15. Emerging from Lhe hospita l he spoke to newsmen and spectators and said bt was feeline tint. if nece&sary 1o prot.eCt American Uvu in South Vittum. ,.1ilitary tources said an Al'l'lerlcan forward air cont,oller (PAC) 1pOtter plane pllol s;ghlod bead!Jghla movln& down a section Qf the trail ludJni into cam. bodla and South Vietnam and caUed in U.S. Air Force jeta whose bombs 1ot almost .,inatant aecondario.'' The fighter-bomber 1ttack u part of a three-month nonstop eUort to block 11upplies. 852a have almos:t &topped bom· bing targela In South v;etnam .. they cou ld halt the flow of arms and permit continuation of the U.S. withdrawal plans. The strikes were reported 1SborUy before the Viet Con&'&, three-day cease- fire was going into effect at 1 a.m. Thursday (noon EST Wednesday), 17 hours before the allies begin their own 24-hour new year's ceue-Urt. Vietnamese ' Defoliation Havoc Told CHICAGO (UPI ) -American use of defolianl sprays bu wi~d out one-fifth of Vietnam's forests since 1962 and "virtually nothing remains alive" In some areas, a meeting of 11clentist.s has been told. Tuesday 's 1e11ion of the 137th meeting of the American As!loclaUon for the Advancement of Sclence w11 the third day in a row with protests from young radical! at the convention. A panel on "Crime, Violence and Social Cont.rol" had ·• llvln1 demona:tratlon of ·JI.I topic when the wHe of a Unlveralty of California bioloel&t, piqued by ln· terruptlons from a araduate student. jabbed him in the arm with her knittina need1t. The student, Frank Rouothal, who studies nuclear physics at COiumbia University, ahowed blood on hi.I arm while some in the audience applauded for Garret Hardin Mt. Rottnthal a&Id- he was not serioWlly injured; Mn. Hardin said. thlt it Roaeotbal were a child, "I would have told him to .atop crying so J could 'k1u It and mai.e it well." At'lhur R. Westing. a botanist at Windham COllige, Putney, Vl, told delegates that "virtually nothing remain! alive·• in tM ddoliated areas or the mangrove foreat.s 1lon1 the coast of Vietnam'• MekOna Delta. Murder Charges Dropped on 15, My Lai Suspect •• ATLANTA. Ga. !AP) -Two men rtporttdly kidnaped by a motorcycle png durinl a war with Atlanta hippies were found today in • rural area soutb of here -one dead and the other seriou sly injured. Tbree men were being questioned In connection wil.b the incident. police stid. Meanwhile, ln an apparently related incident, murdtr charaes were dropped again11t all but one of 17 persons - including a My Lal defendant -in the 1hot1un al1ylng of 1 motorcycle aang member. Barney Lelah McSherry, 22, of Arizona. Sepe. 4 Robert T'SOuvas, who wi th his wife lived In a boardllig house where lM shooti ng occurred. was among those against whom charges were dropped. A murder charge was left to stand against a man ldenutied 11 John Wesley Roberts. Storm Perils Teton Climb Avalanches Loom as Threat to Annual Ascent (:allfertilt;a ' ar UfltTIO ,..ISi UtfllNATllMAl seu.,._ c1!lf0ri,1' llU .,,..,1,, "1nnY .-... ,..., wlttl ~ llltllt I nf p1rl'f ""'"'',,. t'Nt~ ~ cltl.IH •!Id 101, 111d nni. ttrnMr1tvft clltlltf, lot A .... IK lll d """9 H llll'f nlt hl •ftt m...,.... ltt tl'll c!Mt. wltll oll!t/11 ,_.,. •Ml TIWl'Mlf t~id .. 11 ... tn,... ...,.,.._ 'ltt l'fMI' tlltn """'''· ov.Nlltfll ,1tWt ,,,..... fl'lll'll '1 II fllt ClvlC Ctrlttr ft lloWt «I 111 1111 IUM!rllt. TM fl"t4•1 ......._ W.t tor t1lr -"*' fl,..11 lfll Wlfl!tl>cl, Wl!ll ...... at• """"'''"" .. 1"'" .... M MMI Ii\ tllt .... .._,... Nllt •• tlillr, ~ It !flt Air N llllf!M l:MltTel Dltfflcl. .... ;Mf N lcr!Y ,..,..11'11 f6t I nd clll* d 11.,,_ ,.,., • .,.. 111t ..... M.. ,_,,,,.. •Ml ..,.. ...,.. Ji'f'<fl'f •lid '"""'#1wlfrl "*""fWI 11 .... WI tM -1tN1 H11 llltllt ,....illt tr.. IM .......... ...... 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IJ.S, Summar" I Y UIUTIO ,ltlll IMTlltMAT llNAI.. ltlr -tfltt ....,._. ,,., l'f ll'lt N lltrl "'"' ... ., •It., iun¥tt vi-ol.ii ,,.,_ ... ,,.,.. ""' Stull! .... 111t l'•cltlc <tttt. A tlorm Ctn!er i.tt I lrf ll ef ttlll f l'f IUllY Wlfllb Ill IM '•<Ille lffrttl. _, '"'" """'' ef JD ... 1111 .......... 1111 l l!Ullft, ""'"'" , ... ..,. .... lflfff'l'lltttnt r1l11 111nw H.,. Mtw.l<e ttlf "'""'"" 1'u11, \ll'llllt .-1111,,iu .....,.,.. 1Mt. ef ,_1,1v11111. Htw YNll Ind Ill• 1rHI M1r11. A 11"1'11•• ll'llll~1t1r ,11n1111n1 t.1m 11 Grtl'ld Ttion ~rtll n11r MOO\t , Wni , l!llllM I bllnl lllf ~-tlOrfl< TlltcMtl Y Ill!! !rUll9fd l~rGUt~ t~•ll •tt• of '"°""· '"'-tl·vt 1r•111 t116t• et IM tn!\\11! lrM Wiii llltrl Wl l I POHlt>lllty t ! 1v1!1nciltt. -------------------------- r-peratures A!N ll'f .41~111ff1UI Atl1111t •tktrtlltl• •1.,ri1relt lol•• .... .., .... ,.,. ... 1111 l 11rt11f (lltrltlll Cll!rtee (l11Cl1111t1I (ltvl lt nf ... .. D'f,Mtl ..... .... " ""w""' ~ ... ._ .... lndltlll•! .. J1dllll\vllle IClllMI (11'1' lttVftM l.A&Mttltl Ltul1vl!lt M~ll Mlt/1\1 Mll'flt tlll" Ml1111¥Hll1 Ntw°'1 .. flf ~e"' .,.,. 0 1111111\d Oli1111M11 (lty -" '"'" ···'"'' ~.,. lt"1" ,-llllttfltlHt '"&tlllk il>l!ht.urt~ "orf!1roo, Mt ,..,..l!t "ll, Ort. ll11i11 C11V l:H l l11!1 ·~ Mltll 1.tw ''"· ll I I ! JI 15 l1 .n • u JJ l ., » .8' 11 1 ~ " .. " ' ll u ·'' " " » " 11 '' .Ol . " tt " ,, ' 1111 d .JI " ~ ~ " ~ .. '°' 15 .H u " " " il " •• '" " IJ 11 1t J .u " . IJ ~ .U " " .. u ~ . : ~ . " p " " " ~ i: .et '4 ., ,ti ,, 11 SJ '' .,. 2S .II - -· a monumental • occasion 50 YEARS OF SECURITY Anaheim Savings le proud to celebrate Ila 50th Golden Anni- versary. Founded In 1921, Anaheim $avlngs la the oldnt locally owned Savings and Loan Association In northern Orange County. We are celebrating 50 years of security, but more Im· portent, 50 years of service to our savers that has taught us many things. We have learned ·that people want more than a • place to keep their money. They want a smile and a personal greeting when they come In. In this computerized world of today, they want to be more than Just an account number and a dollar amount on a file card. At Anaheim Savings you are treat· ed aa a person. We are lnternted In you, ever striving to give you complete aatllfactlon, because ••• your smile la Important to UI,,, and WI hope to remain Important.to you. ALWAYI MOlll i'Rll SlllVICll AT .. .ANAHllM IAVINGI SAFE Dl!POllT BOXES FREI! with account balance of $2$00 or more PLUS: FREI! MONl!Y ORDERS • FREE TRAVELERS CHECKS l'llli! .NOTARY SERVICE • FREI! PHOTOCOPY Sl!RVICI! Eam"thelllghest Interest In the nation on Insured savings. 5% to 8%, aak tor detallL ANAHEIM SAVINGS ANO LOAN ASSOCIATION MAIN O,,ICI: 117W. U11COln Aw. ArWitfM, C&lillrNI Pll>1N2 411 Malrtllr'llt """"""°"-II. CtlJIOl!I!& LEM5t1 ·- 11121 - 101eo Maonen1 A\ltf'IUI l'llverildt, c.11101111& &6M210 1971 • ' " • • • • • I ·' DAILY PILOT /; . --·--.1:-.:~1.~~~"d1-Tdedicare ·1 Elder -zanuck Dislodges· Son 30c Cost In B. ·. F C F. h Lena Home For Yuletime ' WENATCHEE, W•sh. (AP) Christmas !hey ~-1 .. That woman who claimed she was & witch-get her back here! And whatever you do, don't acoff!" Officers in Defector Hassle Blame 'System' -Students at Deaconess "Se nd Lena Home for the Hike Set 1ttei· ·ox orp. 1g t • School of Nursing here found a liolldays," campaign. , r They raised enough money present or a fellow student for 1 ticket to Belle Fourche, that made dhstmas bri""ltr s D d · t ~-----a-• . ., an a g1an ~auuu £or all of them. card . WASHINGTON (UPI ) The Medicare premiums pAid monthly by 19.5 million aged ,persons to cover doctor bills wlll increase SO cents to $5.60 a month July I, federal of- ficials said today. 1'1ost of the 6 petCtDt iri- crease is necessary to meet the rising costs bf physicians' fees, the Health, Education and Weltare Department said. The° inc:i7.ease also will cover a flrealer use of doctors' services among the elderly. Premiums paid by the elder- ly go into a trust fund used to reimburse doctors for the.ir services under Medicare, a health insurance program for persons 6.S and older. By law. lIEW must adjust t h e premium annually lo keep the fund in balance. The monthly premium is matched by the federal government from g e n e r a I revenues. Physicians' fees increased NEW YORK (UPI)'."' - Richard D. Zanuck, 36, has been ousted as president of Twentieth Century-Fox ,Film Corp. in a bitter tight with his fatht!r, Darryl F. Zanuck, 68, over the direction of, the major motion plcture pro- ducer and distributor which has lost $21.3 million so ·far this year. There were also reports Tuesday there might .b e further shakeups in the finn which has lost heavily this y~ar on such films as "Myra Breckinridge" and ' ' T o r a ! Tora! Tora!" Richard Zanuck, one of the youngest heads or a major motion picture producer; and under pressure Tuesday at a Lena Shephard ts spending "None of the 1k'ls can really special meeting of the board the holidays with her family in a£1ord extra e i pen a e s , ~ of directors. The restgnatlons South Dakota because or the esPectally at lhis Aime of the are effective 'rhursday. students. When they found out year/' school director Franctt Darryl Zanuck, chairman of she was the onJy one, or 73 · Klrtpatrlck aald, "bat this gift th~ board and chief .executive trainees who. hadn 't made to Lessa has made Otrlstmu offic!r whose con ti: act expires! plans . to go home f o r . rnueh bright.er for all of m." in Mily, 1973, instigated thel i"';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;o;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'"l ousters, according to studio1 spokesmen, because hiS son closed the firm's Paris ·officri and made other . decisions without consulting bim. There were other reports lhe elder Zanuck forced this Issue to[ retain power. Sources said the father-son rift was widened when Chase: Manhattan Bank and Morgan Guaranty Trust Co .. tw() ma·[ jor lend'i!rs , pressed f 0 r l assurances that profits from e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS 9 NEWSPAPERS David Brown, vice president OUSTED BV FATHER some successful filffis would for c;cative operations and Richa rd D. Zanuck not be dissipated in 1971. a director of. the finn •. sub. mittt'd t h e i r resignations World Beauty WiH Be Wed Army Spy Activity In Illinois Bared ' . Quailty Printing end Oep•ndeble S•rvlc• for ~or• th•n • qu•rt•r of • cehtury WASHINGTON (UPI) - Two Coast Guard of[icers forced into early retirement for not allowing a LithUanian s;tilor to defect from a Soviet ship to a Coast Guard cutter blame "the system" for the mixup. 7.1 pereent from December, SYDNEY (UPI) -Penny co 'tt T d d k l969 to November, l9'10, 8 Plummer. Miss World of 1969, CHICAGO (UPI) -Army District Court Judge Richard mm1 ee ues ay an spo e Social Security Administration with newsmen. will marry her high school intelligence activity in Illinois B. Austin on a suit to force PILOT PRINTING Elli spokesman said. During that boyfritnJ on New Year's'Day, h ' 1~~~ 1~ wars lhsic!, at period the consumer price in-Miss Plummer's mother an-has ranged from watching the Army to halt alleged ome a we une 0 e ,~ov. dex or ••lected g-~-and h' h 1·1· I r· t d 23 · 'd 1 and 1 kin d · .... VVU:> nounced today. ig po 1 1ca 1gures o or er-surveillance or civilians. 1nc1 en , ac g a vice services rose only 4.9S per· from Washington, told Brown t . Miss Plummer. a librarian ing pizzas sent to the home Later, O'Brien said, the to allow the Soviets to recap-ctn • before winning the title, will of a schoo l boa rd president, agents ordered p i z z a! ture Simas Kudirka, who had Spokesmen for the elderly marry Michael Roy Clarke, a former agent said Tuesday. 2211 WEST IALIOA ILYD., NIWPOIT IUCH-'42-4JJ1 Adm. \Villiam B. Ellis, com· mander of the 1st Coast Guard District in Boston, and Capl. Fletcher Brown. his second-in· command, testified before a House Foreign Affairs su~ jumped aboard the cutter already have criticil.ed lhe an employe in the Sydney Former Army Sgt. John M. delivered to Gale's home tc Vigilant to seek asylum while' _:P::."=m::i::um:::.:i::nc::.re=•::"::.· ____ _:c::I•::.r::.k_:o:_r ~pe::.ll::Y_:'::'":::i'::"':_'::ff~ic::.•::.· ~O'.'_"_:B:,:ri:::•n:__::les:'.'.tif".'ied:._:be::.lo::r:•_:U'.':.~S.:_h".'a'.'.r."'as"'s.'.h".'irn'.'..:_ ____ __:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ the tv.-o ships were tied I • Stetso1i Co. Halts Hat Production PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Stetson, the firm that covered ~ heads of prairie ranchers and presidents, anrtounced Tµesday it would end the pro- duction of hats "early in 1!#71." The firm was famous for its cowboy star clientele who ...Ore white hats when they were good guys and black bats when they were bad guys. Stetson once employed 5,000 er:Dployes in its factory here. Some 300 employes remain. They were on holiday leave when the closing was an· nounced. John Batterson Stetson foun- ded the fir m on his return from a trip to the \Vest 105 years ago. Hi s first hat was a· JO-gallon v.•estern. an an- ceStor of the Stetsons worn by President Lyndon B • Johnson. r:--:-. I " . (~ together for official talks off 1'1assachusetts. Brown ordered the Vigllant's caplain, Cmdr. Ralph Eustis, to allow Soviet sailors to drag Kudirka back aboard the Soviet vessel. Brown told newsmen, "I was the 'man in the middle. I was the son-of- a-bitch who had to carry out the orders." Coke Sets 5c Return 'NEW YORK (UP!) -The ·Coca-O>la G>. 1s·offerlng New Yorkers a five~nt deposit on all retu'rnable bottles of Coke in an effort to curb litter an<t to save on production costs. The company, in ad- vertisements in New York Ci· ty newspapers today, said ·ils two.cent program had worked ·well. but "lately a lot of our returnable bottles have "been wi nding up in the garbage in stead of being returned. (The last thing our com- munities need is m o re garbage.)" The firm said there would be no increase in the cost or its drinks. WESTCLIF F PLAZA ARDWARE l_1 0Z 4 IRVINE AVE. NlWP ORI BEACH MZ 1133 . Open Mon.•Fri. t 'a.m-9 pm Clo1ed Ntw Years Day Sat .. 9 a.m. • 6 p.m. -Sun, 10 a.m. • 4 p.m. FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS REPUBLIC "GEMINI'' · ·WATER HEATERS • 20 Gal ••••• 547. 99 30 Gal. • • • • 549. 99 40 Gal ••••• 559.99 so Gar: •••• '74.99 Tllll .,allty ..... r111tted 11111 I'"" Wiier IHl11tr It e1191!1PH wltll Uftly '""'· 11 r...,.irM rt llW. Wt lllV• ..ame •1y lft. 1111t1llMI tftli.llle, II yov w1.ii. All normtl llltltli.11911 .-rli lllCI ...... (th •y --lfttltll tllal H r. AIM ,_.,.,.(1' kltltll111.ti ·~•H••le. All --dOM b~ m11l1r fllUm .. lrl. INSTALLATION AVAILABLE GARBAGE DISPQSALS IN·SINK·UATOR ~~.; .. :" $3388 out PRICE •• Modtl lll- 1 Yr. Gu1r1nt11 M-F 551 $ 688 1199. S6f.t5 4 OUl PlllCE •• Modtl SS5- J Yr: Gu1r111lt• 11 ... S7f.tS M .. ol <'1 s 95 OUll PltlCI • • 57 Modtl 77 - 5 Yr, Gu1r111tM INSTALLATION AVAlf:ABLE OPEN SUNDAYS AND EVENIN$SI HOLIDAY SALE OUR WAREHOUSE IS OVERlOADED ••• MUL n:MILLION DOLLAR INVENTORY MUST BE SOLD BUY llOW AllD SAYE • lST QUALITY NAME BRAND CARPETS AT LOW DISCOUNT PRICES •SELECT· FROM THE LARGEST CA~t , . VENTORY IN THE WEST . • lVERY ROLL OF CARPET IS MARKED AND PRICED FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE -. ' All LABOR UNCONDITIONALLY GU.ARANTEED All STORES CLOSED 6 P .M., NEW .YEARS EVE. DuP NT ~vr NY 2 100% (onlil'lllOUS Filoment Nylon Pile 99 Ctrtifitd with DuPont 501. Blue "N" lobef. · 1:i~:· ..... COMPAIAILI HTAIL .............. ,.$4.99 DACRONSHAI 100% Docron Po1yesttr Pile ~ Beputiful ntw detp $hog with o fl•' 3Y2" pilt. Many new decorator r colors lo choose from. . . NOW SALE PRICED AT -Pill 3~'' 99 SQ. YD. SAVI $7.00 COMPARABLE ." RITAIL., .............. $13.99 1000'1 OF .IEMIAldS ~ts 60 % . ~::,s 80 % UPTO ..... . UPTO .. : , LIVING ROOM, DINING HALLWAYS, BATHS, ROOM, BEDROOMS CARS, ETC, HING TOUI IOOM MUSVllMINnl ALL CARPETERIA STORES CLOSED NEW YEAR'S DAY ~~~~~~1~~~r,~:A~99 Shog. New_ colors to select from. : ~-::· ' . . NM COMPAIAILI HTAIL ...... ; ......... IS.ff KODEL SHAG 5ae 100% Kodel Polyester Pile. Rich, deep. f Z . fl111uft0usly rtlick p~e: Mew ·decoro1or s.i.v1· colOfs. sut · ~~!.·~lv~~~-=om• 7" brands. Luxuriously htovy 4 '' deep S:.::· pile. llltw k~1tyle tr~celer1. 16.ot 100% Kodil Polyf~ltr Pilt. Thrtt pilt SQQ hti9h1ponem1n 9roctful design. Ruq 9!d f. .,{ durobai1y. Be:outilut colors. 1.i.v1' ' .... COMPAIAILI HTAIL ................ $1.99 . C MPAIAILI llTAIL ................ St.ff COMPAllAILI RnAIL ............... $U.99 . 11\'ll KODEL TRI-COLOR SHAG DEEP PILE 11\'ll CILeLANEse·~RTREL TRI-COLOR SHAG 100~ ICOOEl POLYESTER Pllf. llCH, DEEP, lUX\JltlOUSlY THICK Pilf. ,\O,ANY p.j(W Hl·STYll OECOlATOI THIEi COlOt 5HAG TO SELECT FROM. Rf SIST OllT ANO SOil STAINS. --., LOW fl~ST TIME OFFERED AT THIS SAU PRICE COMPARABLE RETAIL ...... •8.99 . IMDOO•·OUTDOO• C~-l•CU~L· c.&•Pn CA•Pn• FINIST QilAltTT299 CONTIACTOISr 2IUILD99IUI •AMI UAffl MOMIOWNllSI Ideal le( torn11y ~. Y•wr Ckicel rooms. pl oy • · Miu;:· • fllylo• , "'''· roonn..·dens. · SIM · ~: C-Atllll llTAIL .. $4.99 TAIL .. H ~ , .. , .. ,.,_lo_ 99 100% fOITlfl POLYESTER. LUSH, DEEP lOMG·Wf.UIMG 99 AND HAllO TO S01L STAYS BEAUTIFUL WITH AM.IM IMUMO, CAif. VERY RESIUANT. IEAUTtfUl DICORATOI THUE LOW SO. TD, SAVE 13.00 COlOI SHAG. _ · RRST TIME OFFWD AT THIS SAU · · PRICI COMPARABLE RETAIL ...... •9.99 . . BRAIDED RUGS 9xl2 ........... 24'1 C .... AIA.l lltAIL ............. ... 9x12 ....•.••••. 39'1 100% (oru folall'ltftl Nylo!i~l..iro Hfo"Y C..,UAal IPA& ........... ... iiii ·"°"Y~ .. 3Hi:• ills .. Mtlbisf. ClllYIMKlll Cl!lh l'Ulll lltt 111t11 n11t11 afAltMll. ClLl '" fl!l-·11·-SIM!'. flSR ... m1• liar!1111n. NOITK MOUTWOOO WIST.LOS ANGILIS ANANllM -TlllUO l-11.ACM PASADINA 1'01 L.....e CuyH 11"1 Wiltlrlirt 11". Mt•. lecltl St. 71 S w. WMttltr Ifft. ,... ... ,....., Ifft. 2660 (, Celere4t 11,4 ""· -tl2·2200 477·SS2S •>J.7674 721-1167 421_,.M S17·1ff0 S.,. o.i. 1"""""1!;• te Wl11wf i ~11 IWl~ol \MllAN lllt (ornr<olMolllftlrlo 5-1 °"" lr-f le~ , ... ft oll .• oi..•1 Wnl .. WI ...., °" IY!.W Acron ,,... Col>I ~ ... Wlwtt"' 11-d ,, .. '"'ft llff Nor* M ....... I I olorlldli ft!•d "' '" . -----1~·;;... ______ ... ....;"";;;;;r"";;:;;;•;,;•;;;•;;... ... _..; ... ;;;;;~;;.·;.;;•;;;•;,;•;.;'o;";;.';;.' -.I CANOGA PAii 210>1sti.. ..... w., M1°23)4 .......... ll'W*O/ "' t"'"' ,. ... ,....,. ... ~""ti\ ~t '""' ... ~! KAWTKOINI , lltltllo-11'4. 619·1221 ~ °"'° ,,,....I.. u -..... "°" i111 Jlow'illo.llf .... WHT<OVINA 2S26 I .• .,. ... Ar•· -71 -!.Oft .......... ,....., '9 (•''•I )1 1 Plrlol;lo11tet11{""11110W .. I - KOUTWOOD 111S I . V.,_..t AH. "6-74SS ' ... ,, ....... ot Hoifll'OOd ti.-OflYtf- VINTVtA 25011 ... t.St, _,.., )Mlrt._1...,n•~ ''"''-'••Moll SAN FRANCISCO Milli RAE TDRRANU 42l6Art11ie11'1111. J42·66t6 .. ' , . ' • \ • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE Commi·ssion Changes Swearing In of new county supervisors reP.resentlng lhe Fourlh and Fifth districts next week will bring a new loot to county government in more places than just tbe county supervisors•. meeting room. In boa!hll or recreation for lb• barbor commiuion. The cmx ol. Ille matter II wbelll•r lhe supervisor appoints commissioners to serve lhe broadest interests of his district and Ille county. ~. S.utor ~a l»n lo -:1'llU aboat tbe Ann.r ptlleriJJ1 inWU,,.llClll data OJI COlllr0"'9W Absurd! Prepoaf.eroU6! Hotrenr, I nppo# I. tlbould -Jtim. JIO]llit»J llpra The new -or at least dilferent -look. likely will extend into three key county commissions: the Plan- ning Commission. the Harbor Di.strict Commission and the Airport Commission. Members of these commissions (and a fourth, Jess active, body. the Fish and Game Commission) are ap· pointed one from each supervisorial district. The com· missioner's term expires at the same time as the tenn of the supervisor appointing him . The three major commjssions are deeply involved in the county's current big problems -and controver· sies: land development, Upper Newport Bay and the jet aircraft noise hassle. Comrnission appointments can be made on any of several bases: -One is straight. unadulterated political reward. The commissioner is c.hosen as a reward for helping. in the campaign. The question of the appointee's qualifi· cations is strictly secondary. -A second basis is another form of politics. If the supervisor ha.a made .a strong campaign pitch for -or against -some project or institution or program. he may shortsightedly name an appointee who is a strongly committed protagonist on the same single cause -for· getting that commissioners with closed minds usually become a liability when the ideological honeymoon is over. -A third category of appointee -and usually the most satisfactory -is the "recognized expert" or lay· man with t>revious experience in the fiel d. A person 'vitb planning expertise from private life or from a city commission. for example. A person with some know!· edge of aviation or other forms of transportation for the airport commission; a person with some experience The appointments lo !be;thr., commissions made by Supervisor Ronald Caspero, nplaclnc Alton Allen, and by Supervisor Ralph Clark; 1ucceecllng Wllllain Hirstein. will give Oranre County 10tne hnportant clues as lo Ille tone and direction ol. th• county board in th• year ahead. Hughes, the Newsmaker Since Howard Hughes resurfaced to Page 1 of the nation's newspapers, the story bas not been without its local aspects. Would you believe, for instance: -That Hughes hlmseU landed In a personal jet at Orange County Airport and was whisked ·away to the Newporter Inn? . -That a topllevel group of Hugbes aides .ta Dying in and out in preparation for a 1igantic Oran11 County o • industrial land purchase? · -That Huches is negotiatin& for a takeover of the Irvine Co., or at least for a massive investment in the company? -That Hughes• son lives in Newport Beach and is being "tested" in the latest series of events for tak., over of the empire's helm? If you an!wered "yes" to any of these questions. you 've been on the same rumor cycle aa the DAILY PILOT. All have been checked out, not once but sever- . al times, and calls have come in frpm as far away as Texas seeking our tiometown angle to the mysterious Hughes manipulations. You can say this for Mr. Hughes : He makes news even when it doesn't exist. Jolt l•t -140k over our file OJI lti.m before J'OU .,., JWn iJI. Fast Travel Strains Body And Mind Dear Gloomy Gus: Eeonom11, Skill, Efficienq/ at E~po '70 ... ~ 4(. .~, .-... -•• ~r"I' '• • , . . ~ "\. . '. ,. . ·r,~• . "<'t ~ .. #'. -~ ,. f'.1~ ~ ~ ·l ' • ' ' • - My opposition to the 111personlc tran&o port planes ls not just based on the eco-- nomics or politics (or even the .. tonic boom") cl. these vehicles: It is based even m<n on the human factor of adjust· ing to -speeds. Even today, on tht ordinary jets. a daytime Olgbt between tbe U.S. and Eu. rope · or any other part o( the clobe is latigue.makinl In a clinical .. Y we .WI don't !uDy grpp. Traveling fast through several lime·lJOnel imposes a severe strain Oii the bod)' and tl>o mind. • IN HIS RECENT lnter'"li"ll book, "The PatholoQ of Leadership," Dr. Hugh L'Etang a British physician who for years h~ studied the medical histories of world leaders, warns that "even the statesman in full possession of his facul- ties may be exposed to unprecedented llaiards as a rts11lt ol the capacity of modem aircraft to cross oceans and con- tinents in hoUrs instead of days." Our vital processes, he points out - sleep, brain activity, temperature Control honnone. formaUon , gut activity. mineral metabolllm, and many others-are gear- ed to a carefUlly adjl.l,l'ited schedule ;_ and if the body is rapidly tr¥Sferred to a different time system, "its own_ c~y synchronized actJvlties will be out of step with tht new local lime." THE BOOK ALSO quotea Dr. Hubertus Strugbold, chief scientist of the American aerospace medical dlvllion, as suggest· A good way to tnd the Vietnam War would be to put the, pollUcal leaders in uniform and on the batUefield -tnd send tbe young aoldler1 to the conference table. I'm sure they wouldn't care wheth- er it's round or square. --<:. '· "''' ... ,.. NftNl9 ~ .,..... .. --"" ..... ., ... ........., ....... ,_ ,., ,,.. ..... •'-'""' ow, °""' ""' in& that these tudden cbana:es ~., ' have some significance Jn inttrnatlonal conferences during the first few days ••• which are not the propel' Umes for im- portant negotiations or vital declslons." And U.S. Aerospact 1tudies indicate that not only middle-aged bu.sinesmlen and government officials are affected this way, but also that "actors, cbeu players, athleies and last but not least." race horses 'were not at their intellectual or physical best tht first few days a1Jar arriv!Jig from a rqi<m four or more time zonea away." RECENT WORK has confirmed thele findings. The results of varyln1 teats after a daylight flight of 18 hours from Oklahoma Clty to Tokyo were described as showing '"a marked and quite •ii· nificant deterioration In psychologlcal performan~ on the nm full day in Tokyo as judged by both reaction time and de- cision time. And, while younger students had a rapid return to normal, "in con-- trast, the older men showed impainnent of reaction time and decision making for as Jong u five dqs."'. It used to be thought that, in travelinc at high speeds, the mind could nol keep up with the body; now it is known that even the body cannot keep up with the body. Flying beyond the spttd oI IOUDd, without the "packaged environment" ol astronauts, is an insult to the or1anism. Curbswne Seismologists There •as a three-line item out of Tokyo the other day saying thtre was an earthquake in the western Pacific. no damage. Such items always catch the eye of Californians along the San Andreas Fault. since their pappies bad some trouble with th e fault almost 65 years ago. ;--. ' .~ .. ScientiflC Ameri- can runs a feature called Science and the C\tlien, and In the OJrTtnt ls~ is a brief ••Y on San Andreas headed "Where the Fault Lies." It says there have been 2$ quakes or the Richter magnitude 5 or belt.er a1nce the 19305. That would start with the Long Beach affair. At the time some good folk put out tt wu caused by the withdrawal or petroleum' from the So u th e r n cautornl• fiel ds. This Interested a friend. Notin& that quakes involve land to a depth of the order of 30 miles. he calculated I.he Long Beach area cubic conttnt w1s about 3 million times the cubic content of all oil pumped llnce Jt10. No way. The yarn comp&f'tl with one going the rounds in 1908, that tbe ocean had excavated a coVfrn under San Francbco. . DI' TllBIE CURMTONE seismologists are as ~ u the planet In their conclusiODtt tbty haven't much on lh• rtal lebmOlolla!s who have been-trying for a century to derive a formula for earthquake O<:tWTence with s c a n t success. Not that the experts haven't learned a lot about quakes. They know whert quakes are likely to occur most often, and one target b the rim of the Paclllc Ocean. Yet the moet violent earthquake ever recorded in America hit the Mlsslasfppl Valley In the early llKlOa. It changed the course of the big rivtr. and j<lg&ed for weeks. But loss of IUe was trlvJal beca\llt everybody livtd in log cabini or tepees. The scienUfic American piece rests on a pa per of Robert E. Wallace. U.S. Geologica.I Survey. In the Geological Society of America Bulletin. WALLACE SAYS THE ceoloaic•l history of san Andreas goes b1<:k 25 million years and indicates a rite of fault·slip 'rclaUvely comtant.' ile has constrUcted a "rtturrence t: u r v e" suggestlna the interval b e t w e e n magnitude.e quakes l;hould bt: Jive years, between masnitude·7 quakts, 15 yws. and betwetn magnitude.a quakes (as or 1006) between 50 and 200 years. As a recurrence of 1906 is alrea.dy 15 years overdue under the SO.year esUmate, none of us will be around in 2106 under the 200- year·estlmale. Chern.off Miracle: .He Underspent WASHINGTON -It's aimoot unheard ol, but It actually happened -a governmeut official spent considerably let8 than Ule amount allocated for bia project. This unknown miracle.worker I 1 Howard Olernoll, eommlJsl<otr general of tht A-'<an pavtlm at Expo '70 in Japan. 'lbrOIJl)I liChl economy and hill> powered akDI and eflldency,'the -· newtpaper and ~TV executive tmMd baci. to the Treuury· Dlpartmenl 11,201,000 -men than 10 ..,.._t of the -authorllod for Ille U.S. ahibillm·· at the OoUa Fair. Congms voted 110;207,000. Chtrnall beld down expendllurea to $8,900,000. HIS ACBIEVEMENT was so remarkable that it prompted a n. exceptiona I letter of acclaim from Dtredot Frank Shakespeare of. the U.S. InfcwmaUoa Acency. Writing Rep. John Rooney, D-N.Y., chairman of the HOWie Appropriations Subconunlllae In cb1r1• ol lllts budget, Shal<ttpetre 11ld: "The American pav1Uon, under the outstanding management of Howard Chernoff, wu a financial u well as a vilual aucceu. 'I1le entire project - design, construction. operation a n d cloain; -will have been accomplished at a cost of $8.1 mill ion. or $1.2 million lesa than Congreu allowed for the project. Furthermore, we-will use more than the minimum amount of blocked yen specified in our appropri1Uon -(whicb mew a sav1n& of sWI more dollars).'" IN WARMLY llAJLING Olemoff's utraordlnary performance, Shtkupelra -aulhorlllet ara still undtddecl how to ~alJ; icommend him: "Bonni O>oiDolf did • -job ai "CpmnWdoner G1neral ,1 ' Sba~ wrote. "His oervlce to the . COWllr)' ....... proper recoplllon. and we .,...aplortn( pooaibllllles to enaure Illa! he a.is .'d." Oaemoff i,; not a career burtaucr,~He. -lllioiir. wistent to the then\ or ~-.,-ii;-Johnson Admlnlstr•tlon' When' ctwa tbt1 usignment of •ttlnl up and runainl tbe American pavilion. Because of his, brtDlant work, ht wu lcepl On by tbe Nlxoil' Adminlltration. niree Incidents pphically illustrate why a..off WU such a ve-t IUecta!, u followa: TBE FlllST IS the pemnplory manner in whicb bt put an tmphttlc end to uslnc U.S. boltesaes at the Fair Jn 1. way he delpiad wholly unacceptable. Chem()(! !orctMIJ llUllU!led up his position In a ttlft.~. •1we have been receiving requqts from various JapantH organizatlon1 for three or kA.ll' • hostesses to attend tunches, dinDeri and other function.s~ Most: of the time we have been told they wlnted ODly hoot..,.. and not male auldes. Alto lllat they did not want Nisei under In)' cirtumstances. "FJnt, we do not want our Nisei IUidel discriminated aaatnst. All of our ptdli · were selected on the bails of abillty, ind ,.. will DOI permit -to~ tllo · rules of the came. Second, tr they an representaUves of the Japanese mu!lic truly interuted in us, then they should industry notified him they wanted want to tatk with 10me of our young men. royalties on the Japanese music being If Mt, so not, but we are not running a piped through the U.S. pavilion. road show edition of a Geisha house and Chcrnoff's answer was a prompt and we dO not plan to supply our cute and , emphatic no. intelllaent lirl twde• to amu11e Japanese He e'"'l&ined he had decided to use men." -r Japanese mualc as a 1estur1 of THE SEOOND INCIDENT occurred when Dr. Gt.lstav HeiMmann, president or West Germany, visited Expo '70 and made a tour of the U.S. pavilion. Chernoff wtlcomtd him with full protocol and then started to ucort him throu1h the ell>ibit. ,Without waitinc or llstenlng to Chernoff, HelntmlM bel•n rushin& thl'Olllh the pi•ce. FinnJy grabbing him by the ann, Chernoff said, "Mr. President, do yotl want to see tht U.S. pavilion or are you in a hlllT)' to get to the neuut exit? If you are, you won't need me and I can 10. Jr you would Hilo to leorlt som<lhlnC about my country, tlien relu and let me show it to you ....,1y. But you make the dectlionl" The head or tM West German 1ovormnent blinked, his mouth dropped open and for a few ltunMd moment.I he stood looklnl In atartled attonllhment at CbernoU. Accompanying: Gtrman and Japaneae officials were equally qhut. Finally, Heinemann . collected hlmltlt, smiled ,..akly and apoloped, In !act, 'he aoolollZtd Mvtral times, taYlDc he would like very mud!. Indeed, to go throuP lht Amerlc~n exhibit. The third incident tells a' lot not only about Qlernofl but the Slate Depertment -and its penchant for meofymoulhed Pllll!'fooUnf. Shortly aftu the Fait o p e n e d , friendship and 1ood-will lo the host coun~ry. But if' the mu.le ownm wanted payment for Iha~ he would immediately shift to Americtn music -wblch ha personally preferred. 111£ HEAD5 OF the other !o<eiln exhibitions, hearing of Cherilofrs firm atand, held a meetlnc and unanimowllY elected him to ·represent them in dealfnl with the Japanese music owners. Cher· noff wa.s stronaty urged to hold fast and make no concessions. He did ....; with resounding success. Faced with the unJted front and Chemoff'1 unyieldln& rtjectkm, the Japanese m1J.1Jc· owners, after a week of thinking it over, ha.eked down and completely withdrew their demand for royalties. It waa a 11«n1J·tr1umph for the 'U.S. - and Chernoff pmonany. But there was an ironic touch . In the midst of the congratulatioM from his delighted staff and the other uhiblton, he got a menace from the Stall Dtpartment, which ht had notilled ol his' action, dlrectlng him to pay ~I demanded roylltlea. Chernoff didn 't! With a derisive sncrt,' he irnored the communicaUOn, telltnc bil'l sterttary-to rue it with "UMle11 and unneceuary papers.·· ~ ll)'llellerlS.ADn' .... ,,... .. __ 'One of Few Voices in Wilderness' To the Editor: I must take u:ceplion to thl letter Of Don Huddlulon (Dec. ll) attacldni the "!IOCialistic ideas" of 1 y n d t c a t • d columnist Sydney Harris.. Mr. Barria bas been one of tht few voices in tM wilderness of our contemporary cultun'a values of materialism, ~ intelledu81iam, and auacta on n1tern society's hJghest ldt:als. To accuae Mr. Harris of e1pressin1 un- Amertcan ideas is merely a renection ol the accustr't lack of undentandinc or Mr. Harris'• hu,man and pracUcal approach to the soclal problem& of our times. HAl\RJS PUTS his llnror dlrtclly on "the source of our tr' o u b I es: our acqulslUvenus resulting in individual insecurity, and all lt.s ramifications, toeiety, Mr. Harris has consittenUy proved his patrioUsm by conUnutna to support thole people and ldtala tblt ire the b1sll of tht: Amtriean cltmocr•tic oocltty. I ~ !or ~--811 .Geor•e -- Dear Georce: Could you tell me what late, J1te show it WIS th&.t John Wayne WIS a captain In tht horse IO!dler1 and he came In right at tht l15t moment and savtd the wqon train? C. A. CThe opinion• e.xprelttd I n Oeorae.·a column are not nectuarl· ly those of George. Hm ..• lhat doean't IOllnd rifhl, doel It!) Lettfr• from Ttader1 ort wrlcomr. NormaUv writer1 should conv~ thcjr me1aage1 1~ .too sDord1 or lf11. Th• right Co condttUt lftttrt to /it ipace or eJminGtt libtl ii retervtd. All Jtt· Ura mutt inctudt aign.oture and moil· ing oddr111, but nomts mav be with. hfld on rtqtte.st if sufficit nt ftQ..fon is apparent. Poetr11 ·wilt not be pub· liahtd. juat one ol the many wf'lo apprtcilte Sydney Hmls't colWMS and 1oolc for· ward to 1 e 1 I n s thtm In the DAILY PILOT. IRVING E. FRIEDMAN St....,1119 an Otte I.es To the Editor: Most """ and boys put their pants on slandiJll up -hoppina -on one lea )lice llllM cranes -trytna DOI lo break thtir neclts and/or tht luntiturt. This might be re11rded. aa a dally tribute to maocullne dttermlnallon, but it doesn't uy much for malt pervtrltntP borderln1 on dwnbnesa or ahettr lack of common sense. Ask around. You'll find aome of th1 otherwile amarteat il'lYS you know are stand inc on one lei when they ·lhould be 1ittlna or letnln&. IT'S LJKS TAUING when you Bhould be beplna your mouth ohut. Th<n ort btller, qulclttr and nfer w1ys to accompllth thla and other such t1sks -wilhoul JeopardlJlni lift, limb or property. New Wl)'I are not always better and the rapidly chanatnr order of Ufe is not nectanrily nlated to improvement. But we owe it to oureelves to lllten, le1m and try -evtn about pants. A New Year'• rt?Olutlon ! AJ\T!M\ WEISSMAN Cenee"' fer POWa To the Editor : I We 1'111t to thank the many people who worked to l\ard at the Prisoner of War table I at Sou!ll Coast Plaza durinc the fil'lt two weeks Jn Deeembtr. We also v.·ant to lhank the thousands who donated money amd who ti&ned letters, cards, and peUtlons requesUnc Hanoi to follow the Geneva ConvenUons and hopefu11y to releue our prlsonera. We pray that Hanoi will respond to our pita .•. and toon. MRS. STEPHEN HANSON AND TODD P.S. MW P<OPle olltred h<lp. Wt need to at.an an offlct for Concern for POW•, Inc. If anyme ii interested. please let us know. (P.O. Box !MOO, 'l'llstln, cal.) A••lHat Abortf- To the E<Utor : Re: "Lolin& out Ri1hts," Wednesday, Dec. ii, wrltttn by Steven C. Ll.ubly. Mr. Laubly is •aatnst Jaws that iupp:lltdly regulate morality. These l1ws \\'trt made by covemments to protect the indlvidusl They are baled primarily on Utt natural Jaw and illO on tbt Golden Rult. Motl of th< Ten Commandmenu are alto bued on the natural law. SINCE THE RIJMAN span ol lift is from coacepUon to datll, abortlon would deny us our r1'bt to life before birth. Infanticide does the ume to our yowic· children. Euthanasia does the same to people Mr. Ll.ubly's age and older. If Mr. Laubly wants hi!1 right to life protected. he has the obli&aUon to protect the rii;bt! to Ufe of all humanity. MAYBE MR. LA.UBLY would like the' laws. concernin& theft and extortion and usury al.so relaxed so that such thievery could be more widespread. Our world i1 becoming more sophisticated 1nd more pag1n every day. We hear so much about the brutality or war, but I hl.ve never heard 1 news commentator talk about the brutality of abortion. I don't lhlnk any Cl(, us would like our Uves tenntna:ted in tbe sarne mahner unborn children are gettln& it. MRS. DOLORES H. KAISER. ---- Wednesday, Dec. 30, 1970 The. <dltoriat pog1 of the Delly Pilot sttks to inform ond stim- uiatt rtodet'I b11 prtstnUng this n1w1paprr11 optnionl and com- mtntary on topfct of inttrtst ond tignificanct, bu provkU11g a forum for Ute txprtuion of our rtadtrs• opinion1, and b~ prc1enting tht divme vieur poinU of fn/oTf'IUd obatrvtr.t and spokr.tmtn on topb of thr day. Robert N, Weed, Publisher L \ Wtdntlday, Dtcembtr let. lCfTO -. State Reapportionment I GOP Promised Share of Districts WASHINGToN (UPI) '1 CllUOl'll.ii.'i two senators are 1 divided sharply Oller Gov. j Ronald Reaa:ail's veto of a $1.8 million ·grant to the 1 California Rural L•e g a I ,1 Assistance Program (CRLA). j Sen. Alan Cranston, a 11 Democrat. urged P'rank C. :; Carlucci III, acting dlrtcl« ~ of the Office of Economic Op- J portunlty, to override the roveroor's veto. Sacram~nto Tightening Its Security · 'eJt s.n. G.;.r'ke' ilrw'PhY. a Republlcan,'l slid be"hoped Carlucci would· s 1t1't'a in Reagan's veto because. Qf what he said had been "absolu 1 telj dishonest" use of GR.LA funds. A public clash ~ver'the· pro- gram , between the two senators, one of them due to step out of office in a feW days. appeared to be in store. Both Cranston an4 Murphy are members pf: 1-Senate labor subcommittee that will hold bearings today 1 on Presi~ dent Nixon's nomination of Carlucci to head the 'oEO. CrailStoo said in a letter .~ 'r•t. $2 Miizidf~ Mµrijuana Haul Seiz'ed to Carlucci tllat be intended SAN CARLOS (UPI) -A to ask the nominee bis.views ·ton of1Dlrijuana, ftlued at on Reagan's veto. Murphy, the . tanking GOP memtier of the up to $2 million, was Rized Employment, Manpower and , '.J'ue~.ay as police arrested 15 ·SACRAf\tENTO (UPI) -A Poverty Subcommittee, s:lid persons in a small house in move is under way to tighlen he also expects to.'-iuell.d the the west San Carlos Hills. security at the state Ca pitol confirmation hearing. \ The raid by 5 be r·t ff• s 1after a rormer Los Angeles Murphy charged in an in-d U the d 1 1 1 1 t r police detecllve sal~ ·any terview Tuesday that "young epu es, 1 r . c • • ·capitol office "is v.ulnt[able· !lawyers" in the CRLA pro-. "lo~ney's office and poll~ ttoin to attack." .'. gram had diverted funds in-~ San Carlos and n e a r ~y The Senate !JegislaUVe tended to finance leRal aid Redwood Oily on the SAn Building Space Needs Com-for individuals to ''l eg a I Francis~o peninsula ca~ e ~~~~~ h:o~th r~7m~:~~-~e~o!~·~ ip~~~~:rn~~~~pr~~ ~ft~:.,8 ~month WMiereover measures ranging from '-a grams . lpV'llll1.1p~ nearly completed c Io s e d "I think Jt was abJolutet:t Seized · were 114 kiJQlrlDl circuit t~evlalon .system ,for dishonest to' ua&·thft funds for brl~ of marijuana, each monitoring 1he capitol's base-other p~,'~ Murpb1 said. we~ng 2.2 pounds. ,. ment and corridors to "plllic v,~. button&'!.. inltelled in each1----------==-------_;:-:.:•"I legislator's office. The recommendations made to the Senate Rules Com- i SACRAMEJ4ro Oll'i) -~bUclllS art parutooci ~tbelr fair tbart" ol. new -In the 1'71 ...... il'fNlcloJI ah d ltalalallve iu~nment . d. I pH. Democratic ccatrol ol lhe S...te tnd 'AMITlbly, a S.nate O.mocratlc 1 .. c1er ll1d ~ay. S.n. Mervyn M. Dymally of Los An1ele1 , the Democrltlc caucus chairman, mittee were developed by the . • , . • , . .., b~ildlng space Needs eom-Docto-' lies· ~ 1•~.oa1.i.·l iv ,. mittee last month but only ~ I~·' Ml II 11-.cllJlll' made public Tuesday. • Norman H. Moore, a retired ervous 1ien11on Headach"'s ~~i~~~~!~l~:fr':"'~~ '. Now. Ma.de-ih..·bl1"c: · · ~ H. L. Rk:fiardson (R-Arcadia), , ru said the need for lmpnfved capitol securlly ls "abundanUy clear." · · Non-Narcotic Tablet That Needs No Prescription Pro~es Ju~t As E,ffective As·'rhe Expensive, leading l?a1n-Relief.Prescr·iptlon Of Doctors. Golden Gate , .. if ;ou·n: on;.o1 th• m..;y .,i.;, · &Ct leose, nuvous headaches. Claims 408th ih"' ''""' "'" by . doctots • ' . 'Should be of the area.test im· • -partaooe. I'!' ~N .FRANCISCO (UPI).-1n recent medical tests dot· Police l&ienUfied a man who =rovod a famous tablet thit plunged to1,hil d~ ~.,from UM; no prcaeription· gives thC Golden Gate 1'tl:T; ~-,~~t compltt~ headache rtllt/ day as Siab Llng'S,.~'i'...;t, .fr! ~expensive. leadl!lg pre.. whose friend died the same sCrlption of doctors. ·., , • Chr. •-r n... doctor1' tesU -~' way 1Suuas1 ,..ve.'l, ! ,,, ~ 1 <i..-.!-..1 d Pfu;"":" Sae-oW-s· Wfl ~ , Pth -~~a ~bt, tUt ~D .. known suicide tz:o?ai 1be · I*' lti effttt1v•.'lo-·rt~e. ·ten-' \he Californi~ Hi&lnt~)! ~ afoa~adaches, yet Anacin --'d. ncods no pr~rlption aDd is far more eoonom1cal., · , . With Aftacin,cheadachc pain and ill nervow lcQ&ion vani16 in minutes. Despite its strenath. .,Anacin is not narcotic. You ca.n ,ale it without g~ttin& dizzy or an upse t stomach. ,. · , Neit limC take Powerful. tut~ actinr Anaci,..,iA.nacin'T_.... gi-.. the mne compktc bad- acho =D rdief u the Jcadin& pcesc tioo product for which doctors wrO(e 21 millioa ~ saiptions laM year. ( ' " H id thi on&lfttn; one-vote rul· Ing ol lhe U.S. Supr<me Court, combined .wtth I' move by whltn to Utt 1uburbr, have ·ensured that neither party will be able to substanUally "ger- rymand,r" the redlstrlcUng. "The governor doesn't have to scare people by telling them he's going to veto the (re1pportlmment) bill," said Dymally. Gov. Ronald Reagan has threatened to veto any reap. . pGrlionmtnl bill pasted by lhe Legislature which doe1 not give RepubUcans their "fllt share" of new dlatrlcti. "There will not be a whole lot of gerrym anderl n1 i:egardJe<s ol who doa ll because the courts are 101n1 to watch thi.I reapportionment very closely," sald Dym1lly. Dymally, the Senate's only Negro, is considered the front runner to chair the Senate reapportionment committee lf • Democrat& use their.21-19 ma- jority to OOll GOP Sen. Jack Schl'fde aa pmldenl pro tern, pore. Ammblym111 Henry Wax- man (0.Los Angeles), who ls erpeeted to become chatnnan of the A11em,bly Reap. portlonment Co mm It ~ee , agrets with Anembly Speaker Robert T. Mooagan (R-Tracy) that it would be difficult for Democr•tt to aerrymander the 1tat1. O.IJl.V 1'11."1 7 Avco's'bfil~paglng · savings account:· ~es Pays your blUs fi>J 1JOU. NowfMn•'• a 1lgnlne1:nt dlff erence between savings and loan associations. The bill paying savings account called MasterPay. , Onty Avco ~avirigs has IL Here'f how It wOrks. Every payday, deposit all or part of your paycheck in your MasterPay account All of your funds start ea ming lnterestJmmedl1tely. The highest ~Ible lntereat Then send us your bllla. All of them. Phone blll•. Department store bllls. <fasollne bills. You can even make arrangements to have your flxed-ambUnt monthly expenses (mortgage, auto •pilymenta, etc.) paid automatlcally by UI. After we've pa,ld your bllls -we ewn pay all posJage -the funds remalnl!JS~YCllJI' ICcol.mt conti nue to grow at-CUJrtnt hlQh annual rales. An A""'eo.ii!o•~by•ccount can be oom6iriBd wl other accounts . ratJs.liaiUlmumloterest .Oll lJOUf saYlngs. that pay interest from 5% in the way up to 7¥.1: % ,per annum. Nobody pays more. ....... lfl1. V1'91it Mi1.Tn 5% MadtrPJJ,. $ ... ... 5%% Certifical1 $ 1,000 12·23 •..U.S 6% Ctrtiliull $ ..... 2·10yem 7Y.t% Ctrtlflcill $1DG,OOO 5-11 Jtll1. KHp r.our balanOflJ high enough and you don t pay a penny ln S81"'1lce · charge1. DOeeh'f It make sense to have al/ your funds working for you 11/I the time? MaaterPay dou just that It paya yourbl1l1. It pays maximum Interest. It 11yea a loJ.OUlme and trouble; ·Dro'1by any Avco Savi not office and operra M1aterftayecoount today, We'll get your lnternt up ln paying blfls. · · · . . Onlg at Avco SavlDgs.. e· • ' A_, 1 .... tfMI Leen Aetoel.tlon: Btll-Maywood -925o Atl1nffe Aftnvt • Cotta Me1a -3310 Bristol Street • Los Angeles -4925 WU1hlre Blvd. • South Galt - 4240 Tweedy. Blvd. • Studio City -12-457 Venlu~ Blvd. • Ventura He1dqu1ner1 - 250 South Miiia Road • Main Olliee -2059 Zoe A,_vt., HunUngton Park ' t i •' 1 Men's suits made to Penneys tailoring specifications in premium quality fabrics. Every suit in the new shaped silhouette with wide la . Value. It stiD means something at Penneys. •• Avall•blo •I th• followin9 P•nney stores: F11hion lsl•nd, Newport Center, Huntington Conttr, Huntington 8Hch Ch119e It. " " For The .. • Dbsoltdlon• Of Marriage ~.Notlees IDCM•I ""-'<• D. hecfltf', ... 11, ol 20Q E. "-"Ila, CMt• M-. DIM o1 dMlh, Dl<-llolf' :Jt. klrvl'ted by' NAnllo Mr, .,,_ Mrt. C ... rlft --.111r1 ~ttwr. Oon- •ld. 9f Cl ..... / llfl.,., M,._ 81rber1 Me-ran,.,, Wlka'llllft.•S.rvlcH, Stlu,..,., 1 l"M. Wt....,,., Olurdl, F1lrt11Y9fl --1-91 P'lrtl:, ,.111'111'1' IV'lfflh 11\oM WI.,,_ ,_ .. "*"' ..-Wltl contr!bullof\1. p( .. M °"'l'rlfMM fo ,.... ONllff Cou"1't' Vllllll far Cf\NI, JOSS N. Hutlor, Alll- hl°"'.W tile QA-(Mt! Coll-Schol· •l"llhl11 .. ,,.... '"' -lrw4Wl't' Morfv1ry, Directors, ......... L"'"' 1!11'1111 Joll1110t1. An 1.1, flf Ull! Lelli St., Hullflnti.... "'9ctl. Survived trio ...ite. kttY1 rno111..-, .~. ~.IOhntln1 •111"'-"• Mrt. Lim-T9Ylorl' illll. i111:1nd'f ~' ''''"' L1rr1J.,. '""''" twit er..-!dcfllld...,.. s.,.,lc•. Tl!urMlel'. t P'M, •tlh1 Cll.,..i, l"llJrme!ll, Wnlrnln11tt" #-'-1 P'1rti. Srnltfl1•Mott\11ry, Dlrec· tw. NoxoN \ IYll C. Noxfl\. 411 Fio-. !f·• (Oft1 Mn.t. lllr¥1v.cl bV llu.ei.l!d, 1i1M1 H. Nnor.: .,.,. JoMpli K. Abbott,~Le• C-a1 '- if9Vttlf9n. M•1. JM-IC. CeUIM, COlll Mftl/ Mrt. l!Huo~ C. att.t. ,.._J~lu1 """"""· Gtltw I!. Wllltl', l"IW!f11, 11 •rtt'llldlllllntv 1 lrMf ·~I~. ~ "'" .. held """"''· ' '"" l"Klfk v• c-... · ,.., ,,.........,. Miw'lillwY· Olrwc:'9n. ARBUCKLE 6 l!ON W-M-.,Y G7 E. 1'1111 SI., CO.la Mna -• IW.TZ MORTUARIES C.... tie! -•... OR S.Hll co.ta M114 • ....... ml f.ZG4 • BELL BROADWAY MOR'ftJAD Ill Broldwoy, Colla M ... u W43J • McCORMICK LAGUNA BEACH MORnJARY 1711 I.qua Caay,. Rod. 4"'1111 • -.. -aACD'I(: VIEW MEMORIAL PARK 0.-.,. M-.Y CMpd -hdllc vi.. D11 .. N ...... ll<adi, Ca11r.n1a 114-!7• • P!D: FMULY mtONIAL FUNERAL ROME ! '1111-A ... w $ ,.., .... -..ma • • •1118' MORTUARY 11'1 Ma SI. ----- • Traffic Decreasing -Series Set ·For Jobless ' ~ ( . Engineers A second four-week series in "Prolessiohal 'Career Plan- ning" to aid unemployed pro- fessional people begins Jan. 6 at Golden Weit College. The meetings, beld at 7 p.m. Wednesdays, are designed to , ~elp ~ left jobless through r.erent aerospace i n d u s t r y cuts. There is no tuition or materials charge. Mort than 70 perebns, some from'-as far away ' as Santa Monica, aUended the first series last nionth which was developed by the Golden West Evenint: College and the McDonneJ J Dou'glas Astronautics •. ,Corporation in response to urgent local needs. ·:Guy B. Righter, course in- structor, :!aid the turnout, in- terest and participation in the first series was encouraging. Righter is internal plaoe- m~t '°dministrator f o' r McDonnell-Douglas and is ac- tively involved as a vofunteer counselor assisttng aerospace professionals. •;Aerospace industry cut· backs have the ir impact on each member of the family," he said. "Ska.use of 'this J strongly urge both husband and wife to participate in the counc to fully f.ppreciate and understand job-finding tech- ..niquel and-second~ Cll"eer planniog !""'ihiliUes." Sierra Club > Shows Slides SANTAANA-Havasu Can-ion JO spring is the Subject · of a 'sude presentation set for the Jan. 5 meeting or the Orange County Sierra Club. The ·meetl.ng ·ts set for 7:30 p.m. in the Smedley Junior High School ~uditoriwn. Tile slides were taken by Mr. and Mrs. Ed Walter of Laguna Beach, 1 S • y e a r members of the club. · Beginning with the January meeting, a truck will be on hand between 7 p.m. and 8 p.m. to p ick -up old newspapers, alurtinum waste and glass for recycling. Indian Rite Set Tonight SANT A ANA '-Indian dan~ra: will perform tonight .i,t 7 p:m. in the ,First United ¥•lbodilt Church of Santa Ana. Sioux Indian lorist, Red Dawn, will narrate the ·pro- gram featuring the Tahqultz dancers of the Long Beach Boy Scout. Council and actor Joe. Seaboy, a Si5aeton Sioux, who will drum and sing sOngs. The Winter night IQdlan ceremonials are sponsore<I by the American lndian Lore Associition of Orange Coucty . Admission is by donation. ·3 Appellate Judges Told SANTA ANA-Judges 'Herb- ert S. Herlands, WiJUam L . · -Mwrly and Raymond Tho!np. son have been appointed by thde C.Jifomia Judicial C.OU.n- cll to serve as the three-Jud!€ appella.te divi3ion of the Or- ange County Superior Court. All three Will htar appeals filed against municiPll court decisions in Orange County. Judge Thompson will serve as presiding judge. California Otief J u g t I c e Donald R. Wright, announcing the •'PPointmenls, said Ibey will be for the calendar year 1971. The Orange County ap- pointments wert one of 2S 1uch CalUomla fl o t t Ing I authorized Monday by the Judicial Council. .. ' , ' .i .. . . . ~ . , ... ' .. ,. v Sale ~2?s~~ sav• m• Reg. •••,..P911ncrit1t "' portabl9oolor1Vwith 15"~creen ··-· ·• -... -- meu·~red diagonally is feature-pack~d ,-·--· , for· great•color TV ¥iewing. Automatic fine tuning. built·in . ·• automatic color purifier to rrii~fmize cofor " disturbance, high impact plastic cabinet. --·-~------···--·-· ··--. Sale s299 ' ' -.... .. .. J J· l ,.,. ··" I ' 1:1 ' i' . -I . I ,.., pl_. tube gu1101H -Ptnneya provides hori'lt "rvlct on Ill)' '9nncrtst• TV (ln·slort 1ervlc:e on port1ble TV) fot, dtftcle In mattrltl• or wortmanahlp epPMrliig within to days Of purchase, We replace your picture tulle (ualng a Nbullt picture lube) If defKll'l'I wllhln 3 )'11n. on color TV. Wt pl'O\llde rtpl1cement let any pert II dtfec· tl'l'I within 1 )'ter. Labor la extr• efter 90 d1ys. Con*! Ptnneys fOr authorized ••Mc. under guerantff. 1 Save.sso11 -'Reg. $32815 Penncreal"' "ContempO t,ar.y'' 1Jy1• iable .model • color ·TV Wlth'1B inch screen measured diagonally .. Walnlll finish over hardwopd cabinet. Also available 'Ea'rly American m&flle,, ~ •i • • •"-'i. = ~· .... )·. ' .... ' I ' . .. .. . . . ... ~'.:. and Mediterrlnean (not shown). ;. ,. • ·.', \. , • ~~~·399 .. Penncrest• 3·piece radio-bhono component system . Features indiVldual ljaas and treble controls, FM background button for keeping the body of music Intact at low volume. Penncrast• 57• Mediterranean AM/FM credenza atereo with doors and.eight track cartridge. Features s controls. diamond LP and·Upphlre 78 RPM needle, 4 speed automatic changer with 11 •turntable. 3 pc. deluxe component stereo Orig.~~~$ 248 Dark oBk finished wood cabinet. Features solid state chassis, 75 watts peak p0wer, 'lliM/FMtFPil..n!tel> llYWftffffUmer :--- FM stereo indicator light. Available at these Penney stores: BUENA PARK BURBANK CANOGA PARK CARLSBAD CHULA VISTA COLLEGE GROVE COMl'TON CULVER CHY DOWNEY FASHION VALLEY· SAN DIEGO FULLERTON GRANADA HILLS HUNTINGTON BEACH HUNTINGTON PARK INGLEWOOD LAKEWOOD LONG BEACH LOS ALTOS MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH NORTH HOLLYWOOD OR ... 'lGE "THE CITY" RIVERSIDE SAN FERNANDO TORRANCE VAN NUYS VENTURA WESTCHESTER WEST COVINA Buy it on Penneys Time Payment Plln. • . IQ. " .. • .. el ii •• ICt .:: •• tal ... •• - I I r .... ! r ;' _, .... !-'--·~· • - • t! .:· ' -:• • :l :· ~·· .. ~-. '. ill~ ,, ... ''.!•) I • . I ; ; . (? ·i ·' ,. . ....... ' t •• ~ • . , . • '• • t ' . .. . b « I ''criOO.'fropi.3 P,ice gr<>11iis·Qf ~·· ~ • _ !!! ~·~ra~.£i~for _l!Vlrio •. ~~ t1brics and colors, so hurry In for . . --- \ .... . ' ,. ! ' . ' ; selection ••• while theyi 1'.st. Group I Orig. $8 to $9 .,.. NOW 618 Group II Orig. $10 to $12 NOW 818' . • ' •, • Toddle<*' polo shirt and stack sets of stretch nylon in usortod colors. SlzM %T-4T. 2 tor •s . .:.'. .... i'. • • . .. • : ... 1 • . , ' ' . / · / ,.' ,. .. · . ,. _,. .. -~ • c.:~ .. • ~, 'I ·)·<.'" --· _ _... ., "-• --1,: L 1-H·-::.~\:·11 \--""'' ' I ' Girls' dresses in v assorted styles.and. v colors in 2 price groups. ·Brok8n sizes. Hurry for.best choice. Group I Orig. ... to SS . • 2• ·l NOW . · ,. Group II ( Ortg. .. to $7 NOW ~II ·'I • .,,., I ,,,,j I . • . Women's "1ouses in 2 price groups • Assorted styles, fabrics, Colors. Curtains at big savings now; Choose from assorted styles. fabrics, COIO<I, lites. Group I Broken sizes • Group I Orig. $1 to S7 NOW 3aa Group 11 Orig. 14 to $5 NOW 288 Orig. 1.11 to 2.21 NOW 188 Group 11 Orig. 2.98 to 3A9 NOW 244 ' • '· l'{omon•s cotton nannelette sl-ar. Go:¥111• and paJamu In usorted styles and prints at a tremendous saving now. Sizes S·M·L·XL Hurry • Orig. $4 NOW 2ss \ Assorted boys' pants priced to clear. Group includes: jeans and drets slacks in plaids and solid ·colors in sizes 6-18. Save now. Orig. 3.11 to 4.H NOW 2" ~"· ~r J0.'191!L. . ·-·:~AILY Pti.OJ ' • . ... j , ~~. I ~· . ' a /;, ; . .. . .. .,(. • -<J • • • • • :. .. ...... ,· ... .. .... "'o I • " • •••. , ,._ " .. ' . . .. •, ... ' ' .. ',·, . ' ; ~ -~-. --~~' -. . JI·-• • -•.. -.. ,•, .... ,..-........... ,. ff :·• .,. '·. r.-··~. •• . . . . ," : .. .' · ... : :~ .. . I ! • I _, ,:'f" ' . . ... " • I ' •' , • '> . . . '· , ... '·· ?";. . ;·~-... ~~~{ . ::.· ,,._ . ., , r' ,, ' · .Boys' sPorl1hir:t"i In ·2-Price : ' groups at tremendo~·s saving., k(1ils •. wovens, short 8nd long sleeV89, aSSOrtttd styles and colors. Sizes 6-18. Group I iOrl!IJ 2.9~~ ~~iv . 1 ia · ', Group.II Orig. 3.98•5.tl NOW 288 .' . .. ·" . : . l .. -· Men's sports shirts at terrific cleaJ.ance · •. prices ••. 2 groups of them in v._1fiOu1 1tyl_e9, . fabricp.·colors.· . Group I ' 311 Orig. 5.H to 7.H ·NOW . Group II · 218. Orig, 3.11 to Si NOW Value. It still means something at Penneys. " 1 CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY STORE! • • I I I I' I JI DAILY PILOT Wtdntsda)', Ofcembtr JO, 1970 •• • Limited Time On1,1 · ' , I t \ It happens every January. Penneys fCJmous-Sheets go on sale. Fantastic sheets. Fantastic values. Don't be caught napping. N~•w1t1te . Cotton 111u1ln. 1 S3 count• S3x108". 12x1oe·· ;~~i;~"-~-~~-tt~~.:_---····· .. -·.--HOW 143 Full 81x108" flat or Penn-Pre1t® percale fa1hlon color 50% cotton/50% polye1ter 72x104" ~:~~~~:!.~~.~:~~~~-t:~~.~~~~~~~: .. -..---MOW 357 8tx104" ll1t sheet or twin fitted bottom. ~ lull titted bottom. Rtt. 2.21--.... NOW 1.11 Reg. 4.99 ............................................................... -...... NOW 4.17 ; ~~1,::e~=:::~=~h!'o'.°' 2 for 1.09 ..... : ........ ;~· NOW a for tic OuHn flit or Outen fitted bottom. Reg. 7.99 ............ NOW 1.71 King flat or Western King fitted ' Penca11• white percele Combed cotton. 111 count* Twin 72"x108'' flat or ~:. f~~~e9~ .. ~.~~~~-~: .... -.. ---··-·-... -.. .-...... -NOW 183 Full 81 x108" tl1t or full fitted bottom. Reg. 2.69·--··--·-· NOW 2.1S Pillow cases '42x38" rtg. 2 for 1.39 ..................... NOW 2 tor 1.09 •e1eached 1nd Finished Penn·Preat* white mu1Hn 50% cotton/50% polye1ter Twin 72x104" flat or ~~;. f~tt;:·b·o·t'.~.~: .................. _ ................ -NOW 1 n Full 81x104" Ital or full fitted bottom. Reg. 2.9U .......... ___ ......... "-·--···NOW 2.S7 Plllow CINI '42x36": Reg. 2 for 1.89 ................... NOW 2fOr1.17 Penn·Pre1t"' white percele 50% cotton/50% polyeller Twi n 72x1 0-4" flat or ~~~-f~~~:. .. ~.~.~~~-~ ................ --···· .. ····-···········--~NOW 237 Full 81x104" flat or full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99 .. ·--······--····-···--....... NOW 3.37 Twin titted top. Reg. 3.59.--·-·-· .. -· .. ·-·····-·-·· ... NOW 2.17 Full filled top Reg. 4.59.--... .' ........... __ ..................... NOW 3.'7 Pillow caH&, 42x36". Reg. 2 for 2.09 ....•...... --NOW 2 fOf 1.17 Queen pillow c ..... 42x40'". Reg. 2 for 3.09.-NOW 2 for 2.14 f(ing pillow Cuti. 42x46''· Reg. 2 for 3.39--llOW 2 for 2.71 Ouffn flat or quHn _ -· fitted bottom. Reg. 6.90..----NOW l.M t<lng flat or W11tem king fitted bottom. Reg. 8.99 ................ --.... -· ... -.NOW 7.IC Penn-Pre1t"' mu1Hn In Flor1I prints 50% cotton/50% polyeater Twin 72x10.t" flit or twin fitted bottom. 2 Rog. 2.99 ................ -................................ .. Full 11x104" flit or full fitted bottom. Reg. 3.99.·---·-·-....... -....... _,.NOW 2 for 17 Pillow CIHI. '42x38". Reg. 2 for 2.49 ..... -... -.. -.NOW 2 '°'. Penn·Preat* mu1lln f1ahlon colora or 1trlpe1 50% cotton/50% polye1ter Twin 72x104'' flat or ~:i~. f~~~·9~ .. ~.~~~~-~ ......... _ .. ,,, ... _ ................. 2 for s5 Full 81x104:' flat or full litted bottom. Re g. 3.99 ................................... NOW 2 for S1 Pillow CIHS. 42x36". Reg. 2 for 2.-49 .......... -........ NOW 2 for '2 bottom. Reg. 9.99 ........................... -.... ---.. -.NOW I.Al Pillow cnn. 42x36". Reg. 2 tor 3.Qlt .. ___ ... NOW 2 for 2.11 · Oueen pillow cue!': 42x40". Reg. a.tor 3.59.-"0W 2 for 2.11 King pillow cases. 42»46 ... Rig. 2 for 3.89--HOW 2 fat S.DI Penn-Prest® percale multl·floral or 11rfpe1 50% cotton/SO% polye1ter Twin 72x104" flat or ~:;. f~t~9d .. b.°.~~-~:... __ , ............... _ .... ___ .NOW 418 Full 81 x1 04" fl at or full fitted bottom. Reg. 5.99 ...... _._ .... _ ................. __ ,NOW 5.11 Pillow cases. -42)(36". Reg. 2 for 3.59 ................ .NOW 2 for J.11 Penn-Prelt® Percale Companlonette 50% cotton/SO% polye1ter "' Twin 72x104" flot or ~:;. f!tt;9d .. ~.°.'.'.~.~.:......-.-................ ____ NOW 418 Fu ll 81 x104" flit· or full fitted bo~om. Reg. 5.99 .... --.... -....... _..._ ... NOW 5.11 Outen !l it or Ou11en fitted bottom. Rig. 8.49--..... NOW 7.22 Kipg flat or West,m King fitted bottom. Reg . 10.99 •.. -·---·--·---"7'""NOW l .M Pillow ca"8.-42x36". Rig. 2 for 3.59.. NOW 2 for 3.11 King pillow cues. 42x46". Reg. 2 for 3.19-..NOW 2 for 3.31 ., . ·,~ Value. It still. means.something at Penneys. CHARGE THESE VALUES AT YOUR LOCAL PENNEY ST ORE! ... --------------------------- . . . ----" l ' I I • . ' • I I I I /_ CHECKING . • UP• Girls Don't Need J'he1n in 2 States AM ASKED TO name the country's five alltime best- selling novels. Can only nunte four. "Peyton Place." "Gone With the Wind ,"' '"Forever Amber" and ''Uncle Toni's Cabin.'' Will ch~ck further . bachelor. ~11gkty available. So when he came back to his hometown alter a Ion g absence, hi£ si:;ter telephoned f~ur of he.r girlfriends lo set hitn up. The first, a book· keeper, promptly asked. '"HO\\' much money does he' m.ike?" The second, a secretary . ask· ed. "Is he an executive?" The FAllllLY CIRCVS .......... ·--·-··-·· 11 / have to throw these bulbs away 'caus e the bat teri es in 1em wore out • .a .. AS FOR THAT feminine device known as the falsie. those two slates wherein the ladies buy the fewe st of san1e are Alabama and Georgia. Or so says one m o r e un- dergannent maker ... THE WEATHER STATION al the University of Connecticut in · eludes in its daily for-:rast a moonlfcht pred iction for the benefit of young lovers. third . a schoolteacher , asked,---------------------- "What did he major in ?" And THE GARDEN OF NEPAL. Is a fairly well-known spot in the town now called Ista n- bul. It was, according to one historical rePort at hand , the sultans' seraglio. Had to look that up. Seraglio m e a n s harem. Anyko.w. r re q u en t parties wer'e tossed in the seraglio, so tbe record shows. And abo a matter of record is these parties for centuries were illuminated by nothijlg more than candles attached to the ... backs of ambl ing t.ortoiies. Quite a pictur~. that. 'ro THE UST of citizens born m odd places, add a Mwnl Vernon, Wa sh . , subscriber who says he ar· rived In an open woodshed during a blizzard . Top that ... NOW, fLEASE, consider Cold-Nose Charley , a registered dachshupd owned by Kathi Rickner or Yale, Okla. He weigks 60 pounds. 1£ Cold-Nose Charley doesn't hold the beavyyre'lght reCQrd among dachshunds; who does?- HE w~ an availabl-e,,. ~ fourth , a waitress, asked. "Where is he?" Our Love and \\rar man says this gives you some idea of ho•.v bookkeepers. secretaries, schoolteachers and waitresses react to news about available bachelors. CUSTOP.tER SERVICE -Q, "Say, old boy. did you ever find out wh y the groom alway!! sat and the bride always stood up in those old wedding photos ·r· A. Look, I don't 'A'anl to talk about that anymore . I want to t.alk about how n1uch fat there is in an ordinary hotd<>g, About 34 per- cent . . . Q, "ls it true no Mason was ever hanged ?" A. Can't be. \\'hat about old John Brown? He wa s a Mason. Lodge No. 68 in Hudson, Ohio. RAPID REPLY -No. si r. a longtime warden told n1e once the most trouble some. convicts in any fair-sized prison are I.he men sentenced ror moral s offenses. Least troubleson1e, he said, are U1e murderers. Your questtuns and com· ments a1'"e: welcomed and wilt be used in CHECKING UP wherever possible. Please address your letters to L. M. Bo¢. P.O. Bo:c 1875, Newpo';' Beach, Calif. Cadence Drow11ed Out ) . ' Military. Acadeniies -Los~ Old Popularity SANFORD, F'la. (UPI) - Like the cadets of Gascoyne, thole "defenders of old homes. old name.s,1ok:I splendors." the sons of Southern gentry once were schooled early in the use of bugles and gunpotA·der. Ml Ii ta r y a rad emies flourished across Dix ie. Tkeir histories -or legends -arc filled with stori es of how boy soldiers [ought and died in the Yankee onslaught. Time mutilate s tradition . Values are so rn et i me s reversed. TodaY. shout.s or "hell no. '"e won't go" are drowning out the cadence or young cadets. Faced with a v.·ave of anti- military sentiment,_ ~rowing permiMiveness in the home. and a general shortage of money, the na~ion's military prep schools are struggling to keep their doors open . Some have succun1bcd <Hld closed. Others are staying alive on the strength of endowments and cutbacks. A few have obliterated tradition by admitting gi rls. "In today's world. children . don't want to go to a place and be under rules and regulations where they can't have cars and do what they wanLall the time.'' said Capt. Earl M. Clark, headmaster at Admiral Farragut Academy in St. Petersburg. And some paren t s . according to Jack Natcher of Miami mili tary a c a d e m y , ''feel military training iS 1 pa5spo rt to Vietnam ... The National Association of Indepe ndent Schools said 14 n1ilitary prep sc h o o I s responding to a recent survey reported their cnrOllmentii: down this year. Kentucky Military Institute r e c e n t J y closed its winter facilities in Venice. Fla .. and prestig ious old CUiver Military Academy in Indiana is now accepting coeds as day students. Georgia ~iilitary Academy at Milledge.ville, Ga., McCallie School at Chattanooga. Tenn .. and Bolles in Jacksonvill e. t,la.. have dropped their military program s . Patrolman Gets Huge 'Card' from the G~1ig SACRA~1ENTO (UPl) - used to be a lot or big. open Motorcycle patrolman Roberl fields. I used lo c h 1 s e Van Der Volgen got au jackrabbits and do a lot of unusual Christm as ca rd things kids can't do anymore. from the "gang " The card is a 12L,I,-by 25--loot billboard. And the "gang" rs a group of 16 youngsters who v.·ante<I to show the officer how much they appreciated whal be does for them. The billboard reads: "~terry Christmas, Bob, fro m all the gang," It ilsts the names of the boys and girls . Foster and Kleiser donated the billboard after one of the youngsters. Ricky C o o k e , wrote the nrm a letter which said Van Der Volgen gives "us candy at Christmas, Jets us drive his jeep. takes us places, and plays 'A'itk us and lets us jump on his tra mpoline ." Ricky asked Foster and Kleiser whether it could make a poster for the patrolman. He said he and his triends could pa y $1 .for it. Van Der Volge.n learned · ·about tM s'@:n wht:n shortly after dinner Tuesday night a youngster rang the doorbell at his home and told him there was a sign with his name on it down the street He said be at first thought. it was a sign with defamatory remarks on ii. "Boy. was I surprised,'' he said. "There v.'as this bi& billboard all lit up with my mane on it." The office said, ''They are real good kids'' and added "some of them had il pretty rough. "I was raised In this ne ighborkood and have: lived here nearly all my life . "When I was a kid . there Cal Poly Youth In 'Who's Who' John Lance Selt.7.er, a senior at Cal Poly, San l..!Jis Obispo, and son of former Huntington Beach Police Chief J•hn Seltzer, will appear in the 1910-71 edition of "Who's Who Among Sludents in American Univers.ities and Colleges." Seltser. who li ves witk his mother Mrs. Mamie Seltzer. at 80 Huntington Ave .. -v.•a.s selected for "Who's Who'' for his service to Cal Poly as editor ol the college ye arbook, aad other student activities. ~PSA to San Francisco and Sacra1nento (or San t h • Or ... c.ountYI) San Francisco S18;Sacramenlo; $2 1 11lls saws Y'O'i nJD San Diego $8(all Include 1ax). More flights round crtp to S.F. tha n any othar airline.PSA 11Y85 ya&& a llft. ""''"'-~! ... Wtdnttd;iy, O.Ctm~r JO, lCJ70 DAILY PILOT J J Cli111ate Bas Been Changed Climatologists Study EHec ts of Pollution on Nature WASHNGTON (UPI) CUmttoloelsts wllh they knew more about tbe cltmate. which bfocks sunllabt 4 and A British climatologist has be disas trous to h u m a n tends lo, reduce teinpei',.tures .• rtporled thil !he grow.ing cuJtures. Wayne M. Wendland. lt ls 1 toasup whJCh wJ.11 season for crops has been a University of Wiaconsili win out -the warmln{tf'end shortened by about two weeks Cllmat.ologi.st, has Jinked an· What makU them a little an.xlou.s 11 that they jusl don 't have the information , or a really comprehensive way of colitCtin1 It, to ·explain the climatic ftuctuatlons l h e y or the cooling effect. Some since 1950. cient climate chanaes, going scientists hold that nature, · CI i m a t i c rluctuatio ns. back 12,000 years, w Ith with its vot.;anoes. ts ,Mainly however broughl Hbout. can changes in the lot ol man. to blame for the atmoii;~ere'sf;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~;;;;;_;;;;_;;_;~ io creased dustinw. others set man ,, the prime villain. They all agree Ulat ii is nect!ssary to get observe. ls man·made or nature-the facts somehow. They know made pOllution prim a r i\y atmos ph eric tu bldity responsible? If man is the '(dustiness) has I n c reased ch\er cu.lprit, then it ma y be sharply in thi<J cen tury ovrr pos.::ible for him to change large areas of the northern his ways in time to prevent hemisphere. I another ice agr: and lhe fall II 'A'as established recently of civlli.tatlons. thal the air over the norlhl The world 's climate in !he Atlantic ocean is twice as dir· 1 p11st 100 years has changed ty as 11 tA·as in the early -If not drastically. at least t900s. Ir. that period man- enougb to pose worrisotne made and volcani c pollution quesUons. have increased. From the ISllOs until !he I ,... If the dust-Induced cooUng ear Y lnOs the w 0 r I d ' s trend should .,ontinue in- averqe temperature r 0 s e definitely. "another ice age a:radually. Since then it has is possible," according to been falling, ~1eteorolog1st William E. Cobb Why? Some meteorologists or the National Oceanic and blame man. His pouring of h carbon dio1lde into the air _A_t_m_o_sp_•_•i_c_Ac:g_e,_.c_:_y_. ---II from the burning of fuels has tended to ralse the tern-.. perature. Countering this effect h1s been an Increase In airborne dust, notably over cities. FOR WEEKEND ER ADVERTISING PHONE b42-432 I Up and down the stale, the 27 offices of the 5.25 3 subsidiaries of Imperial Corporation of America, the nation's 1hird largest publicly·o.,.,•ned savings and loan hold ing company, have taken the name ··-of lmperlal Savings. Here you'll find the same 5.75 % frJendly staff backed by experienced manage· ment dedicated to community growth . Here you'll find the highest interest rates permitted by la w, r., • ..,.,. insured g fety wit h your funds protected by an agency of the federal government, and a great 6.00 % ranee of finan cial services. Whether you open a passbook, or guaranteed growth account, your funds will start earning ~If ....... instantly. Come in an d start your savings growinc 7.50 % at Imperial Savings, a subsidiary of Imperial Cor· poration of America. "' ....... • en 90-~1¥ terhhute~ At11111,..,1d S 39·~ ...~~n 1n1~lil..t 1nl"t1t JCQ.niullll llM """ o• $1000 deimll\,,, .,,q,~ held one 10 h" !'.,~· Act!MI ~ 90% wtil:n 1>1<1nf'. ;ird on1er~t 1K~u<llllloit1 ont year. en Jj()O() d•JIOS•1' or n•o'' Mid l"'l ~··r~ or mn•t Atlual y11ld 6 18~0 wh•n ~1n~ and •nttrt~! Keumul~I• OM JUI". on SJOO,IXlO dtpos;ltJ or !llOft IMikl~r er mou ~lull 14 ' 1!:~ w!ttft I and ifl1ttHI tc~Ulllllltll OftC piW. I See by Today's Want Ads HAVE A 1iAPPY NEW YEAR!! e f>ACK YOUR BAGS & .GET 1'10V'IN ! Start th,. New Yf'ar out rl&ht! .. You rHn SWING a)I yf'ar 11round ... Cau1e you'll bf' adjaecni to a nice ~olr rourst'. CK this Execuilve llon1r ou1 Now! • 1~ your garbage dispo:1al tn your home or mobile homr, not workina? If you have any plumbin& prob- lrn1s ... Give !his HANDY· :'ltAN a ra1t buz •.. & he'll ht' ovrr in a Duh. , .Ck i\lainte ruu"ICt'. • LQl'.sa apts !or rent, avail 1/1/71-All 1ize1, a~a.s, prlce range-very ttason· able ... !b hurry & Ck out rental ~ecllons NOW! lmPERIAL SAVlnGS ' and Loan Association of Newport-Pasadena Newport Balboa Savings' new name (xeculive otfioe: 3366 VII Lrdo, Newport Bc.;iCh, 673·3 l 30 Main Office: 61 South Lake Avenue, Pasatlen1, 795 B44J Coro rt• del Mar Olllce: 550 Newport Ce11ter Drive, Nl'Wl)("li1 Be1ch. 6411 · l t. ., 3870 tl~:t Foothill Bou levard, P1S<1dert1. 795 0447 134 North Glendora Avenue, Glen11o1.i, JJS AOll3 Wee4le11lll Hill• Offic.•; 19900 V•~l11r 1 l•11l1•11cl , Woocl l111cl Hilh, l~O·J,20 I I • ' . J . - JZ IAlLY PILOT Wtdtltsday, Dtcembtr 30, 197t MAHOGANY BAR STOOLS 10·FT. Ready to fini~h, vse-in kitchen, den or patio . .( Fully assembled. GALVANIZED GUTTER r>.,,~ ~~ if."' Slip fitting design for quick assemble, easy instollOtion with free instruction sheets available. We ca rry a comPlete stoc k of fittings. 77.:. ~ -.- FIRST AID KIT OR SAFETY FLARE Kl'I Your choice of a greqt duo for your car, boot, or com per.' These kits could ' save ypur life. Y'OUR CHOICE 67.!. BOOSTER CABl:E l·FOOT SET Get ready for the wet weather and dead batteries. ~eep a set in your car or all times. '~ ,,,(', 11·1 ~, e .Y~ ''"""'~ 99c Wtdp~ay, D!ttmbtr. 30, lqJO PILOT·AOVERTISER I.I ,;)Ji . %'' 'j[ 4' x 8' "PARTICLE BOARD CLOSED NEW YEARS DAY LUTRON DIMMER SWITCH 600 WATT 2 99 EA. 2'' x 4'' x 6' DRY PINE AND FIR Surfaced stock. J ust th e thing for making projects, or fixing up wi th your new Christmas tools. 4'' REDWOOD -BENDING STOCK 5/16'' thick for flexi ble uses. You con weave a fe nce, shape a border around your plants, make walks, put it up for privacy and shade. l~~~~~~~~~·~--~ .. i·~~-' . c= 31. '' x 12•FT. METAL TAPE RULE \'" ,,, -'. f 3J l2l Rugged die cost chrome case with positive push-button lock feature. 1•• 16x 25 .. !Controls liQhting from low 01 candlelight to bright as day light. Create that atmosphere of luxury. ·o·S'''n 2•• HOME TTERY CHARGER Recharges o ll"D" ~ize, "C" size, 9-volt transistor, ca rbon·zinc, me rc ury, nickel cadmium. A real must for all Christmas batteries, 2!~ LICIUID PLUM'R • KEEPS DRAINS OPEN! Safe, no harmful chemicals used. ,,p·• "'' 1'' \ FURNACE FILTERS For maximum ·efficiency of. your furnace, change filters regularly. Measure old filters for correct size. OWtN~ CORNING FIBERClLAS A.merica·s Greatest ::E-1ardvv-are Stores TUSTIN 17 12 lRVIN [ BLVD EL TORO ORANGI 2-4392 ROCK FIELD ll-43 Ee, KA ELLA AVE . FULLERTON I WIST MINISTER 2465 f . CHAPJ\1AN AV[ t.o1!» I \VCSTJ\llNISTl HAVE aUINA PARK ,.. COSTA MISA E.17thST. ' 8860 VALLE.V VIEW ST • • ., f 'ILOT-AOVERTISER Wednesday, Oecem~ 301 1970 CL ID NIW YURS DAY #I PATENT ROSES NO WAX I ' ·-~ 3 or more extra large cones, roots wrapped in special pock with moss to protect roots. Each will produce huge bouquets of brilliant colored roaea. All of the most popular colors and varieties • • #1 NON PATINT ROSES All of tMe moat popular vorietlea. Top quality, ready to plant. ROota ore pocke d In special moss with 2 or more large canes. ·-'I·~ PLANTIR M•X 2 CU. FT. HUMUS '.PLANTING MIX Perfect for planting bare root roses and shade tre11. All organic and weed free. 99.:. KORDITI LIAF BAGS 3 BUSHEL AND 7 BUSHEL ;;.·, ~ Perfect for the ho liday cleanup. No more dragging a heavy trash car\ around. Just f ill up and tie the top. Cleon and easy. Comes in 2 i lzes, ,3 bu1liel, 10 per package and 7 bushel, "4 per package. I L TOIO 241312 ROCKP:tllD ,~jt .. ~ MANAZaNITA GAS LOG SET 4 .;p1Ec1 FIRIPLACE TOOL SIT • Smartly atylod. All block fireside tools set with case Mand ie and'boae. Approximaloly 28" high. CASTING RISIN IXCILLINT FOR ALL MOLD Ulll -~··· ·-.. KATfllA AVE . Top quolity, clear resin for 1he hobbieat. Excellent for all mold use. Also see our complete line of resin crafts, dyes, crushed glass, grope molds, gift making sets. 299 SCOTCHGARD BY3M Quick! Protect those Christma1 gift clothes from stain1 - nowt Prevents greasy end wo•er stains. Protect• all apparel and home furn ishings. Makes oUterware rein repellent. SAYE 78' 1s9 Wl lTMllUITl l DAILY PILOT _: lJ Y.'' ROCKAWAY TABLE TENNIS TABLE Filled %" top with regulation white striping. Heavy duty nylon caster wheel assemblies. Heavy gauge 111 tubular steel legs. 4 Player Table Tennis Set ••• 3,99\ ~2299 •• ,. ..?~ ~ HOODED RAIN JACKET long wearing vinyl, completely waterproof, hooded rain jacket. Fully cut to fit over outer clothes. Complete with carryin g case. Buy several, keep one in your car, tackle .box, boat, golf bag, knapsack, \ unting coot. Your choice of c!eor, olive drab, red o·r yellow in 1izes S,M,l,X.L DECORA ... OR STORAGE .CHEST Thia is on all purpose chest, for storing clothing, toy1 and other uses. De corated in a daisy pattern. Your choice of size~. PLASTIC TRA SH BAGS Heavy duty trash con liner to ·keep yo ur cans·clean and neat. Don't miss this great value. 2 0 gal. 1!1860 VALLf Y Vt f \V !\T, 246S ., COI T A Mll A "' E.111hST. PULLllTON . I • I 1' J !f DAILY PlbQ.l s Your Money's Worth Complete-New York Stock Li st 10 Basic Safety RulesNmned OVER THE COUNTER ... =, .... dsd • _..,. fl WWW , ...., t ...., ...... MAIO, • •....., W w---. .... ,, • •-m111'1r NASO Llallrita for T....i•y, o.c.lni..r 2', 1970 111hl f:W YOlll;UAP-1 • l'llltd•'r't to!n•!ett f•IM Ne! "'" 11.t I~:~ tCi&""in.~ Prl<• •Uh I -.J HI• Lw c .... c.... fl*,) Miiii L• ClllM O~ '.1:.,. ......... "t'. i:fii:~ ·qi ~ ~-ir.~ i ~ i:r.~:, ,,: 1 ·ttlli 1m 111i~"·~ By SYLVIA PQRTER This ls the wetk when drled- out Christ.mu trees. dtJedive: Christmas Jlghti and overot:1· hilarated chUdrtn can be ma· jor nre llaurds -l!adlng to the appnlllng news that thl" annual cosl of hon1e ac-- cldtalS 1n our country u stUI rilinf and i~ now 3l a towering I 7 bUllon. 'the an- nual co.st of home fires alone is up to a st.a rthng $700 million and It too is still climbing relenllessly. 1'he drain on you, If you're 1 v1ctuit of an accident. can be financially devastahng. 1n the form <1f lost wages, rockelmg medical bills. soar- ing health ins ur ance premiums And even if you have never been involved Jn a serious ho1ne accident. you ov.e it to yourself to consider not only the intense persona l tragedy but also the f1nanc1al disaster Ibis might be For tht key fact is !hat )lQU could prevent the ma- 1or1ty <1( CQstl y home accidents bY relahvely simple steps. H·ere are JO basic rules sug· gested to me by the C<lunc1I en Family Jfealth, a New Y o r k -b a s e d orgaruzat1on s ponso red by t he phannaceutical industry and other ma1or sources con· cerned with home acc1denl problems (I) 00 NOT k eep dangerous. toxic products such as household c l eansers, polishers. paints pest1c1des and waxes in easily opened, easily accessible places -fo r 1nslance, underneath th e k1lcben sink or <1ii\the 1011.er shelves or closets Tb1s 1s espec1ally important 1£ you have children 1n lhe ex- plcratory age bracket of two 10 five. (2) 00 throw awav half-fill· ed eonlainen: of the most highly c a u s t 1 c substances which you use only OC· cas10nally, such • as drain cleaners, carbon tetrachloride. muriatic acid. your financial loss m so doing 11.111 be minuscule compared with the hazards or leaving s u c h substances around. 1nclud1ng not only the· possibili ty or a fatality but alllO of a gr u es<1 me I y prolonged medical-surgical <1rdeal. (3 ) DO NOT risk po1sonlllg by carJ:ron mono:r.1de (more than two-thirds of deaths due to carbon monoxide po1son1ng occur in the home). Help pre-- vent thl5 by having noo-elee- tr1c stoves, furnaces, space beaters and other apphanees serviced regularly and pro- fessionally: be sure all areas of your house 1n which these are used are properly ven· tilated; avoid runnmg your car engine in a closed garage; avoid using charcoal gnlls and CHARLES E. EDWARDS Countiau In Ne 'v Post Charles E Ed11ards distrk:l manager of the Costa ~1csa Automobile Club of Southern Cahforn1a office. hull. been named manager of the Garden Grove district offLct Edv.•ards. v.•ho 11ves in l!u11· tlnglon Beach, ls a member of the board of dlrectors of the C.OSt.a Mesa Ch::imber of Coin· rnerre, ill f11:11t vice president or the Harbor Are:1 United Fund and 11·as president of tilt Costa ~1csa Un1lrd Fund IHsl year. A gradu,.te or LCL1\. Edwftl'ds recf!ntly earned a degrft in industrial relations at UC Irvine. Edward.$ expects to remain living in Hunllngton llarbor. He aod hi!! wife. Joyce:. runt two children, Laurie. 18 ~nd Jetrtty, 14. ~! '( \t~• . "' For 2 40 cf I• Jf .f-~~.;,;y' I.:;, "' •• Vo ""~11iu ·1 r. \ii.~ "+\• ~~~c~n tn~~~Wl~~es:sc!~ :ma~~~t~~ .~~~·~ .. ..,.. :~u· 141 ~ ·~ Jm l,Va ~be~~.:. tf !: !~ !: :e~:J=:j~, ~,· s~ .1: ii~ t•~ hatch for lhe fumet lhey pro-When )IOU like lbe COlliaJnet ~EW YQal( CAl"l "Jtwt'll~-=-~u: l"ro Golf f ~ti 4 ·~,llll ~1 ll ~ !i !!= i ~l~~~.t ra 11: 111; ~~ ~=~·•1 1d lai f!: iitt +\! duce: ~ extremely careful out of tbe c~blnel ; just before -~TM·1':':W":J:! FM ao.t M • ~ .. All• i= ~ ~.t. ~.l.J• u t~~" l• Im .. f:l,. ...... f °"" ji fl ~ :mt "',,.v=~.10 iif fl JI'-n + '• about the gas, oU, coal, •• i.1 ..... or•1vmgthemedlclne1 --''" • 1<11G'l" •v. "'°'"~~ff< t!i1 l15:' ""' "~'•"' 1 ... 1~ !'\\ -\\~'•"•~"• 1"' 't 11,"'• ~"''-1"Ai r.. 1 Jl'l lfi..,.'-•·-·' d o00 '" __ ... .._..'6 V _,_ •1.-tilt •llolwol M.OC: "'~•p MIO 1t It~ •111:1 $ 1N( '< ·m ~ W ,.L ,f -1.M 71 '->loi A., 2! +ft W Ill\ I -- appliances you use aboard a medicine has betn taken . not ,ii11•11"f;,11~ ~tlek':'111 ,t..., il1ro ~1,1 ... ,:,,.1 2r~ 22 ,t11~::' 7J,.. ,f" :r.:11,..1~ ",,. ""t\'o tw. 1~ +.,. ~=11 '"'°• •: 1ra,~ \l111 1,.1\i. l'I A~ ~11 111 ' 1'f n 11o _ 1• CIWT\.V4U an w swves i:UIU to someontt -: after uic !:...,.,._" '9cw111 .. ~fPMt 1111 H "u ~11~iw iii : ., nl 1~ ::."11l~t. 1.a Jt .~ ~re •l""; "" :::f."~,I ~ 1J. '..\'t I(: AS::$• 1,, IJ• t lb' • " 11 bo t In a mobll bo1n ''°"' l:ioJ• •r• ••1>-FGllCI FP b ,.,., Pur 1r s1 11111 1i• r~a,,... A ~ Af ,. a • "'°'"' -~ '"'" .i 5 1 ~,.. ·· -. :, prf'IO"' 15,",.~ !m v. l' sma a ' e e 18) DO NOT, it you must -nt111-.11 ln1 ... "°'"'' 0 u 1314 POuo Cp ' " T ny Co ~~ '"' ... ~ ·= :: 16( ~l7l'o #~ L~ 11:! cr~t11~ .co r:i m: L4 .. n~ +'~ •mr:o 1.JI) ~~ u .. ~ "" ~· carry meu c ne Ul your purse, •-lmtrt/lii .,_ J F1111 cornt 2• 2 RT 'p;' '" 111111 Go 31"' Jl'I 111<1~ 11 J6\.li 3 ,. ,.~ '-!l>O ltff '° 1u1 1u 11, 11s + v. ·~ ... tt' J,.O '' jj~·-,,.~ is + l • or 1n a tent or camprng .... 1 I • dNltr orkti1 a IOI FDtmly 1 Ou•J CM ru 1~ T nr 111 • ,~ A.J lndullfltt 121 ?: 3... , \,'!Inn GE 1.-" m4i 71 1'1!1 •• •m ~! I 1s Ji :M \'chicle. These alJ produce I the id p m,,1~!.WllM I M f:olom Mil. ~ RM " •l'f l!~ •K 18 ' ,. ~· a.a I.II ,rl,2 1~ 11\.'i lffi-\\ l!IG pU,7S 11 a-. '5'!1. ~ + l'i -,, .. l),. lJl~ + '• rbo d eave purse open 3 ac-M<:w '""L..,. could f™L 'I J s At11•I ~ u Tr111:nt l•t~ ltYii •Ml• 111i.r, tMa ,w, 2 +ii.. i.,.c;E pf, 1111 ""' ls ss04 + "' rfocOe!! 1 » " 1J: f:"" JS\, -'• Cll n monoxi e. cess1ble to children arowid lhe ~":. 11N;111I ~ ~=nw 1~ 'I'"' ~= ! If'" ft,~ ,Trr:.,nt ,..,1 iv. ' A-~ .n •.o ,,,_. ""' ti 1nM11ac 1.• 12 •v. 11;, """ +1"' at::~k,, T°nc1 g ~ '"' 1f:;: -1 ;• 14)00keepallpotentlally 1.-··---old 1111oi. nTu·f<-t!M, ..,R...,m , l.W.l••",,,.,.~.12hll~111w.n1l6 s1 12411111.'I \II 1tf1n1to 114-l\114'1Vo '-')li+'~ CA 11to 7111i.r.1o11tll'' 1: dangerous gar en g p1vuucts cna1111e t ,._ tMt Ith I' a red l!t; ~11'1 l~~1rP11 311'1 ".w. ~::S,.:~ .>G " u~ ''"' 11 ·-.. E'T P1S.SOC J no \'li 110 nov, + ~ ~ .. i..,. ~ 1~ a nu._,,. d in _.. ~. d .. ltr mm•M•ll flt l(mp 3'9 ' Ra;J q loo I '"" -'lc•flAlu l.20 12• ""' 22r. ~I~ IT ""SOB ..., 110\\ ll!M 1101,, -+ h ~I" MClp ts, I"' It"" IJIJo ,,. such as pestlcldes, herbicides (9) DO NOT leave small :::' l~llt,, 1=:11>11-: •• Ai'~ lttt tit =Ill)' r.: 1•~ llMli TYllOll Fd 7\o 1t: A.lite Cp it l~ m.j~ n .. fft: :i ~·~"~: j;'O l~n ~ru f."' ~~ 1 ~ l~. 1.g,· J ];:: ill? Jp-t"• and fertilizers in properly children unattended at home ~~~dCIWfl ;"'~~: l( ... •:r.: •• 1 l~ m ,,. ... , ~ ~ E~ 8~1tfium ~ J" ::i::t:= ~~ It "' 1111 Jh. '"' cl~1r1~i 0'~ 1 '1~ az~ '1~' ' :t~:n oll0,. '•' ~~"-~\If .n. ,4 even for Short period' 1 I 'I <" '" o R-~...... 22 2• 1J11 McGU •'4 l '" Allet Pw l.H 41 23 -~ j> I( C11r11; E 1 • n ,.;,• j' '"• + I "is" •'M s.11.:, 1'" closed containers, properly .. -. -:' ~· r 4 •Ji 1191'1 .. .~ •l'i RO..-Call 3•\ ~"' 01 9Mnot I ,,,., A.llltd (II l,lO .. , 2•1"' ;;~. t 1 c ••k o~ .. 1J ,t.',. ·~ ?Cl~ + .... ~~.bf:( to" J: I Vt u:u. -1• labeJed and stored CIUt of the and do not rau to take every ~rc~o 2J~ '~« ~··II 23\11 L a~· Sloy J~ )J\lo ~s f11~v.~1 .'11~ ]fill ~1~:,1117~ t~ Hh if" f .!·~ ~l:e~lff ~:: 4 Ulo S61'1 .M-. + .,, ~i;.):1 '.J~ u .J0'4 .., ~ :f:1t! reach of children . DON'T precaution agani.st hre d there ~TS .:: ~~ 1·11 lllb 1 "R,; j~ ll s:3ifer Ho J~~ s~ ~: ~~~ ~\fl :i\O tll1':s1~d1"!o ,;: }:i! ~r.· 14141 + \~ !y Pit l 7'P '~ nll n r,,~ + ~ ~ olr;, .~ J'~~1l!:i')IT. ·~ ~ s'"re SUCh ha z a rd OU S are Smokers 10 Y 0 Ur A.~!( pl I •Id U~ lO'h f"' ~kai::,11 1E 2~ 2l't Ull~ Sld Alo Mi A.lldSut .Up 1• 6\l t \') 211\ + ~ ~1:;1:,,:: to tY ~r.!' ~ ~:: ,!: ~ "" ·~1 rll'-\ ;~+I~ w ""'Sehold These (WO m'•takes A.~ (p )\Of I C l \lo 1... J C t 11 3<1t 4 Ulll Ind 2~ 2•Vi A.IUICl\ll Oje 1•1 15\0 15\-1 ~ + 111 Ctu."P pf I II 11,,. 11'\li 11'' + Oil n "')!',: 2-':l' 16 l lU \Of '"' + " substances 10 food or beverage """ · "' Abtf'le tn 2:i.. ,\lo ''""en S>M '"' ti 1.:,• 1'-Jt Vil LO ,._ •1>li A.llrh1tA.11t '° ll lllo :io\.t 21to + ~ CNA F1"1,., '411 11~ 11 11v. + ·~ Ho11 11 1a41i H t O!.. i , rank al the top Of the cause' Acme El SI t\!o flpll $c. 1~ I~ 1m ·---.·.~. ,.! ·.·,:a;~'!.. s. 1':1 lS. A.IPl\IPC "°'" 1 1'1~ Ulil 15"' -\~ CNA IDf A.1 10 71 211.li 2S\ll m: + Ill "'l11H .JOI m 111~ II 1' I ~ containers All S•• n. ""I'" Mt• •2 .u ,1 ~ ~.. -· 1.. 1 A.lcoo 1 t11 15.! !lit !I !&It _ ~ '°'" st G•' 1•1 "'• " ~ • . M1111 11 ,, JJl\ 331, Of today's m-l tragic home 'I' 1nc1111 1 1:;1, '"" Mt I"' '"' Pf: 1•'' lf\.\o w an 2• ~·111 .1Jn11su, 1.-J 21 M•• 2,._ _ '"'c11sG1 1111 '' s s1 .,"" 51 +I'. <lflMor l .O. ttl 1~,. 7'\11 W! +1" (5 J DO keep all medicines "" " •b<'n f 1tlt. 15~ r11lt RE 1\lo lt r!o 0 " l\.i l \11 WICliW p 11 11\0 AMBAC JD 4) 1) 12>t ,, ... -"' Coe• Col I ... 12' ., ··~ ··-· + h enMoT -'Pl s ' 7'16 7N 7•'A _! ·~ fires AtDH w 2'1i l ,_ Fr 3 ll'I •r,rte Df lt'Ac 19Yo w1111 Bd l•~ u Am..-E1 1 20 .., n lli 12\Q 121'1 i 14 roc1 a1111 w ' ts\~ 2~ u...., , Mai "' 11s l l s.tllt 14 5 On the highest Shelf or your "l"r.• I 1\11 rwlh Ill 6lli ~ f: I Cm• t Y, t'Wi W R-1 ''' lV. Am E1 pf'l 60 I 40 t6 '6 l'I COii! Pll 1 40 It "!o '4-\11 46 +"' '11PCem 10 d Jf'\ 1!''1< J~ -'• 110) DO fl h ill d A co •t J\1 '~ IJOrdn ' l\\ ~ llfllltn •"i lil W111hw JI\ • Am H111 »" 261 ""' "6Vi "'"" + ~ Cola P oil SO tJ1111 n '-'t Ji"4 sJ\'t ~ 2\~ PubUt 1 .o 1q nu 71 21\i ±' •• 1nedlc1ne cab1nel and try to us P s an Aiko L...i u,,, 'l~ ',," .. ~,.,, j.,. :~.nG~'• 4\41 s w1i.r. Nii ,,...,, iti; AmeH pl250 ,, ,02..,, 101 102V;i ±1 co111n, Al~ 1 Jt ~• Jiii~ • .tal.\ +1~ ~ .. A~fr~ct 4' 9,, '" ·~ ·~ f > 1hJs an"U!es prescribed for a 'l'f. e~v .. " "" fi:JN" S""-SI Wii.h RE lD\lii IO':o AA.lrflllr IQ 41 62 60U 12 1 .... !0!1111 A: '100 'S 14'• h1' 14'1.11 +"' GMll'"f 1 '° 12 J6 \'o !' I "ch1ldproo ' cabinet by , c r-1 1 11R_ ~1~~G~ ~l; ;~~:;llX'i~ 1:~2i "",!",1M1 iv. ~~:fit.T•• 7'111 r;.,,,... ... 1,1111 .a ... nv. 21v, ,,.,.. to 01c1 ni.1140 ~l ~ i!.~ tt~~-.~•g:\Trn'W 9441",,__,. ~"+'• for instance, localing the spee1 1c emPorary lwft:SS' :mat' ,I"' 1~n ~:Yi"ct '; >m ii wii '"' 11.., w~l'.:'" ~U' :f ~ma~~.~~ 1~t ~·111 ~~ ... ~~~ t ~ g/I l~J4ll s <U" .. ~ •s·~-+ Ito gn Teie1 1.,u llS :i" 1:p; lJ''-+ !• Cab!Oel above the reach Of down the toiJet after theAmEI~~~ J\.11M~ldoc 1111 Jfi f'[ET1I ~ ~W=ll~~ 17'11i11V.~~~~:1'-l ~ll ~1 ... ~~ ~f~f~c~l,'i':.".:::,' ..l lil•~ Jr~ ;:::;t~ l~~1 .,'W2r rl~ ffl'I r,:: rr:·',; small children symptoms have gone and the:;:: ~~~~ '°"" 11 H:!= )Ii • w ~tCo isit. lJ"' wit1;1t P t'lli I\:. A C•n pf 1s 3 u w .. W'I ,, 1~ '°"' 21"' f1 "Tire 10 u 22.., 211\ n,. + ,, iod ., h told ... G Ml Jtt .ri HHCI -,.1jt ~ :,:.:i'IC l~ 1,"' -:;:~ ~~i i1'" ·:.: ""'Ctm u. ,. n~ ''-~ .. = tt 01~iPi~ ~ " I.\ ~' JS t I.\ -a I 70 1$1 211. 7114 21>.i ' (5) 00 NOT slock medicines per m W•uC you were , ··~ir-1,.«•• ~!!",,·,, , tl:i s1.,111.,,,. 2,~ I' .. ' • c11a1n 1 '° 11 :u 2~ 25 _ 1o1i ·~ • m 12•" 11"" 121.1 ~ ent111 fDe 1s '4 ,.., ,~:; ,• lo k !he ·• · h -, ... .. -_,_ Std flt 1 10 ww'-~ Pu1 17\fo 121'> 11c1anld 1' u :11' :M"' lt\~ 34~ i \\ 01......,11 1 IO It ,..,. 1n. tt•o -.. '14 en1\r In~ 1 ~ '"" ,,. • \YhJCh look Or taste hke candy la e mcu!Clne as ~els na J~ H~ ~I i:~ JO._ 51111 ~~ 21 ~ w:~,· ;['° ,,s,, .,?~,' Am 0111111 1 J 11\~ 11\lo 171'1 t m!I En 1 XI 'JO 5.',, •"',• >.l~l o',~,.,,',' ,..11 ff :MV. Jl\lo 36~ -+I and never make any COm· ended A.nil,,_,'",!!1 II~ I .... HiK'k" Mi" • 4\li jjtrl• Str lOV. 11 W•dlw E l"' '2•.r. AOi11T.i 40I 1: r~ if~ ~ :) ~;-.::~rvl .~ '~ l!~ 16,Z 1n: -+ 1-'ll gG•Pd° ~t I ~ 'r~ io~ t1•i ?_!,~ t',, ~ ,., 7~~ I Hud PP !fit.'°"" raw Cl JSl.t W•l9hl W 2'111 30\'o :~~~~.:/ f'.,f, sa1 29\ .. 1Pl jll'I _ \_; C1-,_ •,<.,t '°'• ll Iii 31~ ll\'J + 'lli •Pcf 111 l 40 1 $11 ,. " ;r" ' Parison between medicine and ln short, never forget how A,~"i•", M0, '"" 1 M~• G11 1,111 lS\11 su111c Tv 1v. ~ vran~ E ' •l'l Am E•P '"° 299 111~ int lit + 11 ~:.;.:, "' ·~ 1 1 1 m 1161') 116-ll •rlMr 11(1 16 ,1i;, 41 :ti\Q .1~ • n o j' Hurd P Slol Ill A.mExo pl A• l1'G ~ ~ 5"'~ _,, ,. " 24 . 2)ltli 24 + ~ GettvO 1 06t IS 70.. JO ... • candy to your children. ext r aord1nanly dangerous ",',, -.P 1m '"' Hv11t C• '"" ll'A A 11 ... 1111 so " 15~ 1~~ 1sl't + i, .~!.,',",, 160 11 16'> l•'t :): ,._ Gtuvo 1111 10 , 11u 17,L l':.~ -. :• flW 291,'J 30\li Hv1tl Int l\'J f A. Gnln/"1.IO t 111 11''1 11\li '-"'~ 2Jt tl'I "-911 ·~ 1#1•11 PC IOI lO u~ " "' ' 17) 00 follow the rule Of pharmacolog1ca( ''miracles" ,"~ktc''•r I~ II H1lll ... lh 2\li l Am Holl 40 41 ~ p,i, fl\::+: Comwt 50 111 ii S0'.1 ~ .. + l1 Glt1r111 Fin 11 ,,,• ,","• ,",», + ,'• U.S nurses and read the label can be if unproperly used. A0•,!~,, Sc;., ~ :ttr 111CJ Nud vv. " HorM pf, 1 1061 1116111 1°""" _'Ill ~~nGn r °* '6 ''~ ,, 24 . . 11111. 1 '° 1i 111'1 in. -+ '• ,.., ..OW. '1\lo lm1ee S¥ SU. f.: A Home 1 60 114 n 71111 11~~ _ ~ c-Miiis 1 16 tt 11 21 + lo\ §fOdLew .1<1p \12 11 • ' • -• Bake<> "" l~ 1i~ 111,,"','!..1 ltt 10~? MUTUAL •,o •,•,•,•,, "•' t1 ,,. .nv. i.. +1 c::;••c 1111 41 1• 1m 1• Jmbtl er 1 # ~ ;f"' ~ t ~ eat P1l111 ,J.,-•l'l ln1rrn'"in 1'A n. A"M.aici l lt 1~ g., ~!~ ~llt.:;·(( on~3l:o~': "'; ~ l~ ~l•:t~o1~,.,1~ •f 11 O>o JI +:: i!i1~r1'11 :l;: ~ !~! ~~t, llS D·"' ! ... =!.t~., •r ~111 li~ ul'I + ~ E 7.J·~,~20~ ,11 1:¥! lH'~ ,g: ""f 1 \. 8l~1~~~i ~!. ~;, .. ~5 ~: i 1:J !•tins 16'• 17"' lnl Sr pt 1S 16111 FUNDS A.N1•G•$ 210 3~ ,~1' A~ '~ t'~ Eon frtoti.1 I '' JOl4 ~ ~ \ii Glob•t Ma•ln ?Jl •• Jt ~ \, ee<;~m 27'14 23\ll Int!•' I llh A.m Pho10 '' ~1' l~ 1~ 11Wo Con Lea1/no 110 11to 6\li 1 \l. Globt u11 40 ?I l','i' 11t, U\'I .+-l•o 81!11 hit 11110 1t Ion cs 11 18 A.ll ttOv 1le 16' 4 'h •1°" •1'.• _ CanN•!G 111 •4 2~• '9110 29'4 "i Goodrich I ,.., • li't t ,_ Bf"I Mlt 161,0 UV.11 SoU1•1 29~~ AmSeil!ng 1 1 J6h '''"' l~+"'E~Powert f1 JS 34\\ ltlil "'Goodr 15 '"" H\ft 26!, 11\ft I~ ;tlt.F·~ ~v.a 1:~.:£ :~ :~ ~ms,;:/r,': ~~ ~~~ ir~ ~~i:~ :.-x1r~~ 'L~ ti>": t'~ tt~+,tt8:ta~:::A1~ i~1f.~·1~1.t· n;~-i:·· Shoppi11g Centers I s J61i1 -~ jtm Wit •'lo ,.,. AmSoAfr 70 (7 t2~• •l •2v, -1"I :: ~:: ~ :Y ,,,\ JO't> 3'lt. + \~ G••ct 1.50 114 ~1; 2''• lC -t' ._ lf~rc .... "" ''• J ,•,O", F '.~ ~ NEW YORI( IA.Pl 1~-A"'5A.lr ln,1'11 ,,•, '° !2 !! ... l".;: ICOO pll :tl ' 1~ ,.. 1'• ... Gr•nbv 11111 II 2!1<t ~m 211• + • Black HI l1'•l1 Ju1·~'1d1 ,\; 3·~-TMlollowl119Quo-1;:;'~ ~~!~!'"sr~f:fJ7J 1 :~~" wz I ... ,,",'•"•Pl H: k"" ~ 1:~!~S'i::i1.~~ ~ Jl l7l. 2•·· n~!:t: 8otlle El 1;t 1~~Jhnsn Pd ~,m ~~",,~!'J'l~.-1>¥1 NTGN 1tl 1'1 krl s1,rll ,4' tl 13\< "'' 1,,, 1 ~[•<•••'-• U 4111> 41 (IV, ~Gt•nlt'lll~ 1 11 1~ £~· 111, llt.+10 Boothe C l(o\~t Sf 3lV> 3'Yii ...,,.1 .... ....cl-ln-. Coll 11 50 llM AT&T wt a 10>• 10l 10h t. I 0 \il •l"o '1\.'Jr lit Gr1"1 w 1 50 IJ • tt\1 721, -l~ •a~(~= I( 141,'J 1(•1151 Pl l~ 11111 ••klft OI S.C:1111!1t!1 lllY Guld JI) • JO ...,,, T .. T 2 611 tl1 sou. soV: 50\ll + "" on!MI~ 1-04 fl lt\t '' 19 Gr1nt Pl l n 10 tll• 41~. ., .. , +. \., •• 1 1U. l(•lvar 20 21 OHie", Inc• ar. lllY lndlc 11/llYIH Am WWI< .J.i 1 J?!o 13'-' 11.._ I~ "'° "! jl'4 ll ll:W + 1• GtavOrg 1 l~ 1 J Sl .SJ -\0 "1.i::.n 111 Jv. Jt l<•I• Gr11 lU. ' §:Prlca :!:.uwr,~" l"Yt$ Bot 11.IO 12 to AW pr1! I 25 J.00 IV.1 ll\~ 11\11 ...: ~ :::: It 11:c, ~ l\.t 43'~ •l\~ -~ Grr "'&P ' JO ~ 2t\-I 21 U\~ + h Outline Expenses (AP) Recognizing that 1t will need as much as $6 b1U1on a year 1n expansion cap1ta1 for at least the next JS years, lhe shopping center industry has come to \Vall Slreet with its story th.is week NEW YORK Such tr1ps always ha ve. as their purpose the use or other people's money, of course, but 1n relatmg their hopes fo r the ruture, the shopping center people revealed a good deal £boul their <1wn money tkl Sea 11" 11~' K111m 1..., 2ilo c ' 1 lnw.to,. Group Alll l ine JO ~ 1\oi 7'1\ on! ti '3 ~ 1ft! ~JV. i'l~...:. \i G!Norlton le 11 ~~~ ~~~~ 21~r + \• -j B At 10 lO'h l(ear T lOl!< ll'i' to'f. (bld1'1iv; bo=~ IOS ndl (,OJ t35 A.mttron 1111 I II 171" 1• + v, ontrol Oil• u1 lg 50 511, + \ GrUoNe~ 160 76 •ll~ tl ,;,• •• sometimes lOe highways and B~~ll Be 1:t:: 11,\ ~:n::~ 2J¥: 21¥: l•1k.O) ilttd•1, ::~:.a ~rs 1~ :: ~~r.lt~rn; 6~ !rt ~:_J ~141 ~~ _! ~ ~.:wf' S:, 1~ I SI Sl +. 1: 8tN~;:.a il':nr lll 21111. 21~ ?fi! 4-1't mark lhe ()UtSkirls Of towns. ~~~vCP l .m Kl\llt E t t:W. •1t1 A1k Stock l1 76 19 JO Am ac 10 14 1,!~, ;i. 3tU. -+ •• "'* U"ll 10 1~ ~" w.~ ~\.Ii _: ~ 00,'.~,"C,•,11 "'!!, 29 ~: ~ n,,'> ','," :): n' B el f h lurn111> S JH'I. l(e-.e ll'lb 14'~ lH• Allll'clfl I·~ 1-U St!tcl I" 9 5' A.MP Inc SI 76 ..,..,.. SS SW. + V, -fin 1 «I ll /1 .-. " ..., St '" Y d !OltiOn, In act , I e ~IC ltls 11"' I>,:, KtVI (111 1,\11 U 'rli Admlr•llY f\H'ld$ I Vi• p, t ,'2 , 10 AMPCOPI w! I l'it l'i I\• , R 1Jo l r1\~ rw. 'f1~? G,~f!n0•1 l.U 4 ttt ~'~ 1;\\ ++ ,• ho 1[ W 5¥ 2tU ll!Ji l(tytl PC l'AI f Grwl/I t «I •SI 111¥ I R11h lln9Y•U A-Jr Cotp 215 It 1"-lll'o -T .n 25 5 Jl'4 Ulli 1t\:+ -\lo GG ""' n JO 29 ,.,,. II' >C + • ! ppLng centers il speaks of m11at1 N no w.1e1ne 111' 2u '"° 1111:am J.1-t -21 111e lt.5010 10 A""I•~ 110 37 ~ """ ""' _; lll c-1a1111 1 :10 :1c1 1" 55 Ji _ ""0rn GI•"' ,6 71 2, 2,1; ,,.' /~ b 1not1M 70 7J Kl1101EI 7''1.~ I-7tl'IU ""' IOl 106Amlled lt0 7'Jt~2"-Jtt'o:):1'-"C-llot..j0!1 '4 71''>71 Ul.'t +t!. r"Jh.ael10 tt JJ\">I" "1 " must e successful. because caMM e " 11 K1r11 CP s\11 '"' .1.a-.1..-1 J.Oll 5.iS J w~11 11s • 21 Amtti 1 1:1 ,... n11 11.'t ·~ ~wiostt '° ,, u~ 11"' 12i,.. ({ 0Gr1v1 hound 1 .,, 1,~ 1 .. ~ 'i',I' + ,, h f h C•nt•d 1i~ 2'h Kn•r, Vol 21v. :Ill'• Aetna Fcl t 2110,09 ol!Mln lt.tt lt..tt ,.,,,.ton I ro 31J 21 )(1•'4 71 + ~ lnthe .:JOt ff 71 ti~ l1'1'1 -t\ ra ltr ro 11 '" 1•,• • " t e 1rst c aracter1stic is thal i•P Mtge 11 11.., l(r11lr 1~ 7\li AttUi.t a •ti 1 41 Ke¥1t-Fu111ts A.l"<fl Hoell 1 1°' nv. 3111, li~ + ~, oro1w 1.JIMI IO• '!""" 17' 1 1 -11 GrummnCp 1 lio -.! ,,. •,•, -" .' Sow 1•\ 7'li' •Me ... ~ ''"" A/rt•• 1.511 1.511 Aoolla • n '51 AMorp s-.c I 1$ •• , .• '''" ' t or-11" .n 1(1(1 l' ') !'-" G!fLIH• "' ~·-. .. + '• ''ii must be located on a site •o r11tA 7'. t~ t 1...i a" J~ 1141 111 Am F 6l •9 Cu• Bl 116l1t..Q A.nc1 Cloy 110 , 31..., 37" l1v. ~ owie, com ~' '• P o •''-+ ~ GllMOh 1 to. '° ll \lt lll lll.'t :):'" Which Pre.analysis shows can •,•,,TcJ!..u 1•• 1~L1n~ w11 ..,. 1u. ... 111111. 10111~'' C111!'11n:1t110Al)l(ti.tCp u so Ill'. Ill.\ Ju.+v,Cl!>I B«r1 XI 1:1t 111. 11"' l1>'t:):\'<Cu 11 011150 1# ri~ ~J~ ~J .. '• .,.,. ll• fl'o LattOll 2 1l'o A. Piii Fd lU •1 11 Cu1 • 1 n 166 ADl':oO 2.661 4] 37>~ )fl.\ :11'\ _ ~. CPC l"I I 10 lf1 :W.:. 3"\io lt-a Gulf lltirce 1'1 t"'" j Jl\'7 + ': support 11 profitably " c:~~ ~~ 1~i~ ,m t~: to \~t! J;., :~:~ ~ ~ 1 ~ ~~! ~~ ! U f ~ ~~!: ~"'l," '~ ?~!l f,U ?t.~ -~ l;~Fin11='f: 1 R f5~' ?:1i ?tl\ = ' 8¥/~~:1 JI iZ .t ll~ n 1~ +-!! Ca-w: NG IGV.l~L~ c""t fV. 2"t Am Ov11110.2411 19 C111 !' "f~lfllAllJiSvc iOll: 3111fl4111Vr1Hl -'LCroc:kNll L,60 41 J.I"" l:R• l~!~I GlfS1u1111c. •• 16ltli u -10 Moreover, tl must be easily!•"' c111 111 '"'L•l1ur G i2 n:io Am Emw _,, $lt cut 2 lo 011M "''"• ,.., 111 lllll " .,.,cromoK... '1 "'• i'• 1~111 ~Guu w11 50 ,',', l•\\ ,.1, 1•1t +•, tnltll 40\'o «™! L.Wll BF 10 11 Amtr ExPrn1 Cui SJ 117 1&l Atctt1N pit ti :U 31~" "''"'!•OUstHj~ \ 11 1112 fl 11\l!i "'1Gul!Wpf :l.50 '"• lfl-o 1"1i +' accessible by car, be designed "' vPs 111\ 11v. Linc M111 Pi m C1pl1 1 11 I .ff Cu1 54 • 10 ,_... A•dl 0111 1 11 i..:1ti :ri& ~~ -+1 r-co1 AO 3U u 12::i. IN ~ CutfW p1 3 87 ~ 11a. 111•·, 11 .. _ .. : f I l ll be l __ ... tnl lib ll~ 1"4 lobllW ''• '"" lnc:me I ti '1 Pol•r l 1' l.tl "-'Ir PS-. IOI 3tS '71/r 211.\ 72'• -Ii row o•,• ~ ,,,' ""1 '. ~,ev. ~r-. •, ••••• , ... ,_ •,!_.75 2 ,·,:~ '•:;:'" ,•,•,,• ++I•'·. or re a1 se mg, a p anncu !111'"'• t 2Lo" c.otY l\li '"' •n~• I~ t "6 1Cnlck11 ,,. '" A•laiust l1ID ,,, Iii l\11 ,141 + v, ,......., 11<k 11•; 6'" ·~ _, ,,.. .. and 'nlegral~ architectural , ... ~,, o,, sv. s<i L09 Ertn 10 10'4 So1c1 1 21 /(nkk G1 ,,., t °' A•1ntoS 1.., n 1 71,1 70.,., ,,., + ""c~5 ~"' •021. ~' ""'•" ~,.~! fio\', -. .. n 111 11 11, + '• eu ,., .. 1'1-11 tlA l•nc:ll c 11 1!\'t S1oc:1< I~ '4J .. ea l#rltl 121 1 ti A.rmc pf J !O JO ,,.,,, 11 11 C • WV llllo ,. ... _ u I flit Ind Y.. '\-Ii M•O GEi l~ I Am Gr1h ' 10 6 •1 lt• RKh 14 •l 15 " A.rmr pit 75 3J ~ s.t'' .I.ti.Ir + 'ii C...H -. lolit It '!Ill 11"" lf'lli ; -n• - II bl Ill er... •2 61111 Malllt•I ,. .. lll''U Am Mui I 7• f li Ljl• St• • N '31 Atm Ru, 60 ,, )I ~ 3:1" + lii ~11ma111 ,211 ~ :lt" 1t''1 ·~· '• H~lt Pr I 60~ ' J) 1"'111 31•: + '• unit rat h e r than a 1"" u1u lJ'H u~ M•I AITY µ;, ~' Am 111-. ',. s ?1 L11ter1¥ 5 u 6 04 A.rrnl! Ck 10 ,~ ,, 3'1,,.. 3, .._ 11 Cvor.v on 'S • 7 71 2 i \ tt.-c:kWa• , ,0 1 34" m 1 s ce aneous assem age, hrl•t s 110 11J Mini11 M ,... 11~ A.mN Grh 2 '° 1 1J L •e. In¥ '" 1 » ••• Coro n ,1 i•"o 1u-1A•~ .. 1•• ~::ii~o" :/0 H 't' "g·~ ~ ... t'~ ~:~~r ,',~, ~ .a :J~ Jl .. -~. situation conta in parking 1 a c 1 11 11 e s c .. r1,i 01 91 102 M•not c •~ 11,;; Anc:~-, Group ~inc N11 tu 10 55 "''v111 lfl<I 1 11 ,~, ,$~'1 ,~·-+ ,,. c,,,•,,w, ., 1 , , ,, ,.,, ., ... ... •', ,,, "• • '• I l (ll•~tl t'• 1 M&t M!O It'll 1•"4 •11 I 1 U I )f .. Inti l '' (.JI °"lhlcl 011 1 10 11 ,. t'U\ 1:1~0 _ \'Ii ~orlt...r A. l • , nlmm Pap I lJ 1l'li 4 Ii + '111 Upon comp e t 1on, or ·'J 1 f I c1111Mt11 l'~ll'l'IM•rmVr a>ttl(I, rw1 h 1o :is1 •.Jt l'r:;l1S1r11s· A.udB••w i. ,,,, i•1 1 c~ierH l10 2\U.~·~~~.l ~~~•Hamm11e1...io ,,111.3ll•2J1~+l\ I th I f -.A,, accoru ng oa ormua ... cn11 u• '''-<27\.+M 8,ow• 2,111 77v. 1nc:m. 11J •J1 •nr,a :nu11.ttAudOG17fl 21 •1 ~ ,1 -1-tcvci .. il'l'.I 2 2~· 2~ 2,t:+• H•""""" ea .,. 3~ 10~ 1 11 •+·~ examp e, e va ue 0 a guuu . Cl!l1 u B 26l..i 21\li MIU! LP 1'4 l\li I'd lnY I 40 t 1 IP I 10 J7 10 37 """ So l 7f)b I 29''1 'tth 7''~ • CYlltll~ 1 '° 2' SJ • "~ Sl\ + H•n<! 'f•r 11 • lh ,. .... l' shopping Center wiU be 25 Centers meeting I h e s e 1J1y1n 11.11 H~. 11 Mi-.•• 0 't.l'ft 2:n~ V1n1 ll .an t.1111 11 " 13.19 AldTr.,n oso 2.io 100.. 10 101~ -+ ,4 • ,.. • Ht,..1 CP :so 11 11~1 11.:. + • • ' I••~ Ml 21~ nv. MCOI/¥ 21 11"'-Al.MCI• I 22 1.)1 lulll Bro 11 3112 ... Allll--Ind Int 11>1 lJU. ltl-~ -l--0--H•-M I )0 ll ~' 11!'1 "'• -II< percent to 33 percent higher dehn1t1ons appear lo be 11111 Mt• 121.1 Ill• ec11c H ""° .a~ ""'rotl • 11 ,.., MM"" In 1 n , 17 1.ncvEI 1..M n 21to ~' 7:1\lo H1rt1111rr 1 32 1 .. IC>\i Jlh + \• al l ll"ton 0 J.. l"t =td Mii 11Yli t2V. All• ,.._hi.., ...... ,,,,,, A 11 J 21 A.llCtvEI ~ ( lJO 5.! JI JS :·'' ~llt¥r .15a U ''• t\\ ,,,., -1 Hl"fS lnl l ~ ¥h>. lJ"' 3'i.. th lb t tal cost 0 f most a ways successful, and c~, Cp 1µ.. 161'.r MN1tn """ l6 Fl,INI A J 20 s 65 .wir i.;rttt s.s1 f JI a11 1111c11f1d, 11;2 ,, "'" u1~ _ ~ ,.. co 1.ts l u 29:-. ,..., 7911 J H••Ko c11 1 105 ~ St'-s.tlli + ·~ Pr~uclJO:. sai~ Albert Keidel the experience of some <lf the ~ONr 1°p s.i~' .J,,. ~;113 t,11 ~ 201:: !t':t 8 ~:U !·tt =::: f~ 11~ l, ~ ::l111i7c~~~' Y17' ,r,;z 1{~. 1~;1~ ='-. n \::: ~ S:l !t"' ~(! ~~? :t: ~::t~'~)(lao jl fiE fit? ~:= '.t ~ nal~ ·s f a 1 g e s t insurance ~'.,''",1•,, •r IUJ ll• Mldlf~ a 1•\ 'Jo 0 Sd CP 4.'10 "I M111 In¥ 11 n 12 OJ 1111111c11 1112 IO ss sti~ jl*.I< n34 _ ·~ §l" Proce11 1s1 11•~ 10•. 1-1~ 1 ~ H1wu Et 1,4, 71 31~ l''' It -~ Jr, an <1ff1cer <lf The Rouse "'" F 11 lH•MidW GT 11i,-.11v.. a11m 1~ • SMii• Tr lt.<1lU 1J"fla1c111-m 1 JO ''1~ • 1•U+~ -caco 1' u '10lol ui. 71 1 H•v11111bll 1 77 1 • ll"'-1~ Com pa e' S b I I I th olon Str Jll!o 11 '11i M•I• G~s '.llV. l<I BaYrc I !'~ M11~ 3 u JU A i.1 Coro 191 JI~ 11AI ...._ IY<O o!I 25 1100 11 71 H1~lflne '' It' I '" + !II Co, a Columbia, Md. OJ usan1aes e omce1 .!~.!!~Miu VIG 16..,11 1aeacon~ 12,1s1 5M1111tr1 l?kU°'""'"co of lkJUOll'-'tlWi ll~:.·v.01v1nHuo50 "21 1rv.11 -,.,"ICA1nd \OI! ... !" •,~ ..... bell f om Clr ~,.., """'Mo RSC/I 1 2~~ "'g fll 1 1' I "lldA. Mi.t (JS j 4! ATO Inc QI 2o.r ~ 11Jli IV. + " 01ytnPL 60 JI 2•1'• 24~ 1•'11 .,._ ""Htcl1M" 11r ~ ,1 \-developer~ c. ComG•• 11\IJ !2\litMOdkl •'•5"" ... k th s•1alJMOOd¥(;•ll'os1s1•11•11t•Prod 1S e•• •• ,. 1¥1 OPLpfA]IJllOOY 51 Sl +1 Ht~IHJl '"'1''1,'•1~?2·~+ ..... Com Tel 2,>~, , .. ,,MOl>wk R 20-Y,1111o Blalr 1•,11 f.60 a.l'.vi-y•1 0271141 A.ulom O•I.> H • .f..5'"-46 +"..i OPLFIC lttl •10 JJ Sf +ll't Ht nt Cu'1 :n tv. , .. JS~-,.. "Not a bad margin," he Howard Nielson, serond vice~om ~o~ cot 7 "'-'-1 s111 1.)4"1'" 'i-'"Automlft .,,., 1ac ,,., •"• ""_141 oee1e co 2 "° "" 'll'h 40\fi Htler 1n1 '° 90 Jjl'o ~ t(~ + 't add~. As a member of the presi"'ent of c 0 n n e ct l cu 1 ~. 0 1v 1~3•1 nv; =~ Pit 1~·~ 1n• t:l°'\:-.," 1..,.7• 1f·" Mii" Giii _.._ S.Jl AvcoCP .toe ,.1 11,. 1~ 1'" + ~ oe.,....•P 111 :..4 1•~ ,,.,., 1J.\O + 1~ H'I""' Pd• 1 11 u°" Ulll 211--it cu u -·· ,. • • .. MOot p Ill! I!\ Muus G-. lO. 0.67 Avco Cp wt 0 m JU. JI.I, Otf Mllft' 1 10 1'll 17111 'l6Ui 21\li t ""' H• mtllP 10 !J n~ 22h 15'> + •• l nlemal'·ooal c 0 u n c, I of General Life Insurance ~-, !~.· ,,•,, ,\,• ~::O """'~ s 10'-11 IPll I~':' st 1~l: 1t lf Mu OmG J f.JO Aw:o DfJ ?C JJ lll~ Ji~~ """ + "' 0.111111r ~ 1•1' » loll\ » J\\ Httnls"" cao 2s j~ j• ',",l + '• '-"' ... ...., l A 1f\lt lft'o M Mu OmJ" f" 10 IS Ave•y Pd '10 S 3JU J,._.. ~ -l\ Dtlttc Inf fl S 4'\ «o i ,._ Httn Im; 6Je 16 .., 1 • + \• Shopping Cenlers' Ke'del •·hich has m 0• milli'on ,,,_rec fr>, tt;::_::~,,~ ,.._ l~ l'1'.:i.:if°c.111si J Mui Stvs l•02 1'-"""11e1 1n :tf"ll 79• ti'. ~\. ~'-"+~ o.n11M11 '° 1» ""' n•• 11•• ~•Hercule 110. 1101 ,,,. ,,._. .. ...... _,, -~ Motdl M •\lo $\\ II .. n Mui Tri! I fl I ts Avntl on 50 J '3:W. ,,.,, 4:1l' -+ lAi CHt'lllMf9 •• l • ''\~ ,, lfVt v. Ht<V.11' ' JO lS'• 7S ••• , -... addressed h's remarks lo the Jnvesled 10 centers, told the 1:i.~dixk 30!" ", .. Mo! ct11b l l'h 1•1~ ~u~I< J~·~ M ~ NEA Mut t ss , 7t •-.011 Pd 1 1~ 11s •~ 11 16 +1~ o ..... vRst IM '" t •"' l'i \lo Heub1~1" 1s ,, ·~ ,5~ 2s>, -w '• ,, Mulltir 1 1VI ~~ fdn J Sf l -NII Ind ID 02 10 07 A.lite 011 111 )0 U 14'i ltllo • Oe11hplv•nt 1 11 JOi 2•\ii 24.1,(, + ~. Htw Peck 10 l'S 11'11I 29 •,.•~, _ '• k So I f Se 1Y I I f d b or>lr&n RI E 1t'ot ~ " S ·~N11 '""'' 117 71< -... Offec011fA 5 '6 '3>i!i 46 -i-J Hkl" VOlllN' 1J ''' New Yor c1eyo cun anaysso asurveymae y -•L 16>H 11',:M111 ~ ''"'',.,.. 11w 1GOo11102 N11 Jecur Ser -oe,ec-olll e 1, ts•.11 ,, .,,~1,,.H11tonHo11 1 11, ' ''• Ana lysts Bui the Imp.cl Can the l"'UOCll 0,',~ 5vr l J Ml~' ,:;., JV. l~ Bua~ "F':J Ii~ i: ll B1r1" 10 4' 11.<I• 8&bckW lO 01' -11 _" ,.,~ ,,. OeSolol"c 40 1 15 1C''I. 24'\ '\ !:lob.o,t 11G ' ~ fl~ 41'~ +"ii .v ( '" m n, N C t:M\ lN Elor.d •to J l6 9 k ,llT " ~,.,. ,." -.,... 0e1Ed1& IAt 116 '10''1 104li 1°"" '-' .. oet11Wa1 to 10 2• ;j-1. 40>, + "• be lost On none bul the most Dala from 21 of the nation's l~:o co ~11'1 ~Jiii ~:~.::~ 11: '"" 10 !~Pl~r 7.Jl. : n Olvld t 01 4 4j e:11riE 1 ~ :: ~r~ J~.... ?.!1' + .. Ott Ed off l2 :nll 1121'1 111'1,io 111''> 1'11 ~0JI, 'jl~lrn ,•,, 7•4 r l l'--lt C 11 R 1\<o 7V.NC CP 1"' 1¥1 111 J ll 141 OtWth 170 '51 Bi! G ICf ? •• n Ol!EdeUSO J IO l't'~ 1'V.-•~ o ~"" n :it.~ 1"\li ~ naive SO largest 1nsurancec~;~'esc ,.~, N•t"'~o111 211\:n :: s~~f.11 •o1J Pf Slk ''t111 e1noPn1P iso '5¥~:~~~~""t '"'°"x1er 2• ~·11•0 11•111~+1,,~~ld·~-1100. is·••.,::~ O Lb ~ Sloa Nal G .. O 11 It 1111Sllr1 1212 16 lnc:Oll'I •92 lll8-P,J,'l n 19 lO" ,,,. "'Ol1IFtnon .4G 5 U'~ lll, 11'-l.-''H v....,.., 110 I U 17 11 K id I a' really I US l companies shO\ved that 1n 29 0',M"'' •' " ,,. 10 2s.., »Vo 1 , sroc:k 11' 1.51 8 •• • + "ot..,..1n11 1• 1s "'"' Jtt, ,.,, , ome·u' ., t:it n·~ 7114 · ,. e e W ~,.. 5i; ~:li ~fd 26"' 211~ "t~~ 1~111 u N11 G•"' 1' • • ?11 e:":tc.11 '.sJ4 \~ ~;" ~i>,\ ,1~ ++1"' 01 ... Shem 1 291 n'i n•, 12•• -'' ~::"'Eli 11 10 31# ..,.,, 1:1u, ~~t t ;: beg1nn1ng, though. "Jf ii is years only seven foreclosures &:l: g: 1•>• 2Bo Hal Pt! l"° >"' Cam SI 1 60 I 75 N,llW )." 5 e; .S.Sl B1nlr. of NV 1 11& 4J>Z J Jllo DI• Sii pf( 1 U 31 ll\1 Jl''°' -\.i 1-tOi [ 70 ij ~~ 79\') lO t \, 1-ated and operated properly, \Vere necessary, a rate Jess g:~,~~ ii': 1'• 1 ~11 ~It f'4 lO G••lh 4 M J 1t ~::°WI: 1' fl f 43 8'1111 Tr l 1' 15 •N :s~ :f~ + '' 81~~ DlJ! 1: w..• v~-1/;.' -+ " Hoor ~.~ ~Z' 16 1-'• ts..., :+° ~- "'-M ,•t, I~~ 81 Sh-~~; 1·~ ~Oll'll 1~.1·, Ntw1on ,1;~nt1 R:;bO,J Jll 10 " •l·~ 43•~ -'II Olebold '3b 11 10\') 10:. ~ -" Hou.S.11!1 60 1•6 ¥;!;, nv. rr· +1"' its value will conunue to grow than one-quarter or one R:°' I~ ~~) s ~~·" s~1ve' ll'i 1•u. cna11 8r eos Nldl s1., 11 06 ,, 0: aa,l:: '"''lo' 17 45'~ '"':· •Sllli t"' 01G10•1 60 1'' ,,.... 11 v, 111111 tn' ~pl 215 1 211, ,. • ., 211"" l f th l I Oeklb Ao )7V. ll.\ti NJ N1IG 191/< lt~ Caotl 'to • 11 ~··" I• 63 )( 61 Biie. M~ .: I~~ a~ l~:: f 1Y< OIGlor1 pl 81 1 "~· lfl'o 1fl• lt'o H::e~t" 1 ~g 11,0 I~ 141;i ,,~ + 1• and 1l will produce an percen o e1r ota 0eth1 int •'•'u1"''"F 27111 211~ l'u...i 1.t1•2•"""'~ '"'1sB•te1M1 p11 51111,16...,11 /'01ftlf•tE<1v10 nt "" 6l"o'3'li t"Mou~ll',,,,50 ,,,,...,~.••2:wi+i. 'ncre•••g cash flow and an mortgage investments ln °'o•'"',,',", '3Vl 6"\lo l1t1 A AO"""'"' Fr111 1ln{6J1lg\' d ll041t;se~thfrw1 OJ• l'l n..,, 11w. ?l•I> ,,~0,1,11,,g~m 'II 109 "'" ll'A n >.< Hou~LP 1;0 1~ "'u" ,,_,,. .. ,.,. ....... l•'A 15\li lell e 1(1\'t "'" Shrti.d 10 .. 1 )I 0 FO I to • ll Bll~lfl pf2 50 10 S6'"' $1 S6Vi ; tll"9 pf A ' ' 7'\1 11 ,,\I) +''~ Hou1tNG. IO 2! tr· •JV, 45'~ + 114 I n Cr ea S' n g rclurn On shopping centers o" ,,'", it,,., xi N"' R11c '"' 2Voi S...cl • u. t 22 ~"' Wms 13 It u.12 81M1schlb .., " 50 " 50 •lo 01111'"' Pl a 2 1 Jt :it 2' +1\!i HouG 011 50 19 .,,, 4'14 i ,, ""' JV. W-NCa• NG 11i-.12 '"'""' 170S111l 'Ntl ' 11,41 t6 4lllX!L1b \1 J20 2J\~ ;s ;1·~-1·~011ionco " 11 20·~ '10\(; ~ ·HowJOl'ln ,, 179 ~ ~ 50,~ .~. I I "•· said This he concluded was 011m Ct 1 •1 1•'~ NEur 011 l l lil Cok>nlal: PPfnh 7M 1.JS g•vk Cit 50 1 ti:. •v. 9, 1, Ot.flet' XIII 101 lt~ un l4J ""'' HOWnlll 70 Sol 191, • "-· 1nves men , '"" • ' Disc: Inc: lh J(~ NPA G•S l J•: ,,~ Eq\tfy l 74 "°' 0 AIM IOOJ lC" e1•lnt1 l I fl ... •l~ •1..: ... Ol•IS..ag I'° '' .... •a·~ ... +~HI/bar I 111! 11\'t 11•. John o.sm,lh,presidentof even better than the JossD1v1r CM "" ""MwN11G t'i""' Fund 10.191j.»"'C$ec t i.11oos ae11Fd11 lJI JI.'' 3'\li :ttt 1 01vt111nc1 36 "'ti,\~. 11•+••w11e1a.,120 .1112•~ ,•, .. ._fl'• .• :: Oocurel !."' '1,,t NW p11s-. :n1,1, 21 Owfl l'I SM 16 Ptce Fnd 7 02 16 Bui il'dt pf f 1 tuo 'I'~ 91~' +l=: Ol,.M91 1 ~ 7' 21' • '' ''"' 'iui1' H" ..0 4i f'}• .,. ,'"-, .... t he COuncii, which represents experience of the typical hfe g:""•'l!tt",J:-.!'" •• '!. !t.vc:,01 •,K,, •VI 'l• t111:om t.u lo JI ,.•ul Re-. 7.JO 1 t e .. r ii' 1117 10 1 11 1 ·~ 11,~ ·~ OrP~r •• ,, 'Jt• 2lv. 1l''o -'Ii Hvnt Chm 11 2 '''' " ~... ... ,. ..,., 1 W. V..,t 4 )I (, "'" Sii 1 &l I A.c-m111 SO tJ 2'lti 1~~ ii" -DorneM"' IO 3l !1\1. 51\~ J6'--\Ii ldl/loP 1• J1 20 201.'i + \~ an IDduslry Of 13,000 centers d e p a r l m e n t -w h 1 c h ,,•~ f,& 211A n g;i wa1 n 111 1• 01 Grth 11 11 11.11 •'•'• Mut 3 111 J 111 &1e1 Oltk ::ro its 36,. 31,! >l't •, •~ oomFfld f7t H •'l ,,_ ,,,. tdt•i 11:1 ,", 11 ,..., lJ4ti JJ'lii _ 1• ~ "" ,•,,, ,.·~. ,0 sc•n ll'" ,...,, oms 8d '''SDI •• 1llJ l(52 81'1!ChA.lr )J "° 12~ 11 u i" t l>or<"fl'tY " 14 1•• 1•~ ,,~. _... 1t lllC lot )J•i l•l't. U'•-Ii a nd an investment or nearly incidentally, invest 1n almost D11nkl11 o ... mon1 '"" 1•1o wu11 AB 111 111P111r1m IJ 7t l7 ee1coP+11 50b ,,. ui.i 11., "' u, nor1e c .. l? '~ 1••· lf'• , ... +1 111 c:~' ~d~ 11 21 21•. ~• +1 Dut>IOll u•. 1SV. of1er TP ,, 1'1~ wltll c I ll 1 .. Pl"' St 11 11 11 11 8e!Oe" 1 H 11 '''" 13\ 11\~ i ,, °"' 011 .. ~ ,, .... ··~ ~· ... -'. Ill Pow 2 ?O 16 •ll<i 44\i ., •• + l 'I S.2 billion, added a f f'W nothing but the best EZ P1ln1 •,',•, •,:•, o~e• N" 3lM '~' omp ..,. 111 'M "•'•°" Et~• •.11 '" B•ldnaH 11011 15 ,,,,. !!~ 17,,. •'-DQ\ltr C11 1~ 11 " "' •l +11 , 111 Paw' 017 JS ,,~ •IH• •D\<o ~o,,,., _ \o E•glC wt 0 C•I 11 llt,I omHI a.JI'" on il'lld II n12 !ell How «I tl Jl\~ ll 1' Dow(l1m 111/l ~1 u ""• ?t ·11 111 p •v '•'• 3' • llrO'Vocahve ihoughts of his Whi le shopping ccnte r E~s• Sh t>.i.10'4p~vc 1srt 17 13.., omo Bd 114 ''1Pl•n Inv t t010 12 •fllnt•ca11 .u ''! ,,,, ,,~ ~1 11ravoe1111n 14 ,.,. ,, i •l, ... •\im11t~C"1lo• 1:1C1 2• 1' -+'• • j Econ lAlt '!"' ?~ PAiis! Br 50',\ SO"ii omp Fd ':U 10 U Prlct ll'Ut'lllJ •ml1 Ca ·~ lf !~ 111, 1 r.i., l f'ltM~l...r 1 "II 11 "'• YI 31·~ +. •; IN P m til ll"li 12\'< 11•-+ "4 ownlhatmusthn~e 1mpressed investment w1l quite l1kelyEd11t svt ,,'•,1!!~1c 1.1110 • ..., 5'11 om1lk •OI t ll Grwrh 21osn~5 Btflftl• 160 "'16'• 1s•o 25,~+..;nr"•TP11!1 ,. '' ""· ... ,..._, 1 ACP,140 9• 36\o 35•1 JP.-~. 'I P•sEI ,... F E ,~ ,, oncord 11)011.JO N Er• • :u f4 ' B-1• pl] 1 "'" ~~·i. "'' .+-''"'"'"ale ' 10 ll Jl'-'i j] + ·~ 111:011>1 IDJI 11 10>• 10 IOU + .__ analysts Y:ho have seen their renla1n the 1 n v e s I m e n t E b• s1,1 ,, • ., •,, .. P:~to •co 11 l on-01 in 11 oo 1115 N Hor ,. 211 f• 711 e-11ca ' 01 ,,. J1 5114 51,. _ •\ ri,.,.,,. c .. 1 •J , •• ,, ,,,, , •• ., +p. /:fcu 1 li.e 1 101. 1o 10 _ -;:: th eh I of hcb ·I .i Ekttrll• 'Pnc:o! ''• ~. ontlMI 70l10lP•oF1111CJ t.sttu B-llDf4.JO llJ ll Bl -11,0llltePw l t0 111s 7WatS +14 1 n:Hoao \IG1J\.)Jt~1S\.)+"' best slocks hit bottom WI Vices t 1g1nst tuuons,E1H1t~ ,',,"1•,•,,,.:rkr Or 111o '" ontGTh IJ.1f-'2Pr0 Por1f •1s 111 a,~"'1"'11~ 1160 :n ll'l'I ;n +• t'lvltto111t1 1,1aut 1111 ln"l "-"'"'...i 0111~50 1 '' '* 91 +11, I f nd d El Nuc • H t t >l Ol't ld 1• 331$ 1' PrOYd"' 4 JI ...0 tncruel S•7 l'i • •'II.+ ~ °"*' P161J j tl~ " 9&'14 +p\ ""G• I 11 lt lt 11'1i 10o .. neither a skid nor a bounce sue l as pension u ll an E11rm s·~ '"" Pir~w p )I\ sv. ntw C1P 111112 n Prud sw1 f 1610 n R•110u.i m 1 s1~ s•\ s>.1 oune,d 1 'IOt ,. ~"• Jl''-11~ + VJ •"<IPl•PL 1 i.o 20 11,., ""' - f l I El C $YI 1'-' 1 Ptu 111 111' 111.'J r" WOIY 5 14 •,11 Putna"' Funcr1. en.;..., Pl'O l•t I'• 1'o I -11 OuO!tfl 6Ct 12t 71 171fi 2n\ Ind Pl Dl611 1 N' t ff~} u:,• +!" -Construction of a shopping insurance 1rms. s m a er El oar• •5,',', u,1•, ~:;-~1 ttMf 10 lOl'I ''C wo.1 •" •I) Eoua 7 is 711 1r.111T0s11 1 ao tos fl'" 1w. 11~-. + "° duPo"' ;; 1n 1:n 13~,,. 137 .. ~ 11...is1r Nu •o 11 ,,..., 11•• + I I d l hl he E1 Moen • ' , 16\'J 1l ~th M llt9•2n Gtott ll•• '' a ree 60 1• .... •11.'t •7111-~clul'orll D1'50 l ·~ 6~ ~t\,I +1 n-R•IKI 1 3' ••I· •l it lli" I\ center doesn't eYen begin Unli lnVt?S OrS some ay mg EmPS 011 1Jlo 16 Fflt•E~• \ ,_.. \'fo 0e11w1r1 G•aut GrTh tJ• l~ll ll1f~~k If n SB~~ 51111 SI -cluPO~I pfl.YI 1 JJ'll SJU, Sl'li Inf.Rd Pl13J 5 31"'° ll\4 JH: • !: !'rm leases llavc been S'gned able lo Participate through the Erie,,','i'•'• 111, '!" =: G~ 21 n il o.c:ai 111 1' 20 •ncam 111 1 .o 111r,; L•" .. , ' 16"1. '! "!" + 01111 LI 1 6' 1n 1~·~ 13'• 2t•~ + \•,in and s11 1 211 11~ 21 1111 + II) E t "" p l ~lllo Otlwr 171 1217 l"vtll •9lllSBlack lRllO 1111'-'2 2 -"i0Gtl!t>f?01 tl0 1f'>i-'~7!'} nmonl ?fp 19\1 !Ol'>lO'i -ot for "•II or most of the space lo arow1ng aYailab1lity of real E~rwc'•'•• '•~• '1~ ~:~r. v:; ... ~, 11.r. Della 6 s1 ,, I v111• , ., 162 Biiie ti u l',. " 62'o 60\ti ''~ 11"'' Oii 'lOPn os i110 "'• '''" ''''• +i•, ln111co la •6 " ii•. is .. + l\ ., l> Ev,. " to Ill 1,5 ~V, Dod1I COii: 13 93 lj tl VoYa• ' Q I 07 lllUlll 1 41 51'4 JO J1\/i "'° Dual! •Pf 1 r?oO 18•l ilV> 2~'\ -, , ln•Uc Pf Al ~S • !f,_ 19'• 1t•o _ "- I ... e3tate mvestmenl trusts. E,•,,•,•' ,o.!J 1~ • ~R: , '° •• O••••t '! u 1 13 R!-.''' , •11o" 8obbl1 '1' '1 1 1•1'oll """ 1•1•. 1 o.. J 75pf1 11 rJ20 1~, ?s·~ 2-\"• -1 ln$plr CoP •• ll •6w1 ,,1, ••!• _ .._ be deve Opl"u ·-------------·! -I •' 'I\ Pl'l ll t c 111'1 lt'' §r•wf Fd I u 11 ., llt "'''' l• St IJ 00 Boel • c ,_, ,. Uh ll\\ l.l'h + \~ gvrioo Ind u 10 , .• 10 .. ·~ l"ICfCO • 20 10 '°"' f() ~ + •• -F"l"re income lo co,er FBCtco Vt 1;?,. 1 11 ,1, ,.,, r•vt L-.12 4' '"11101,..,h 5., •i.lBoiC' 0,S: '°' u~• 11\/o 1('•+~ miA.m '10!I ,,. 6\~ !~~ •'-+-'lti'""""fnc 18(1 33 1"'~ 73v. 2,,,.._., -u u F•b Ttlt i\~ r .... ,r:i..~" .. 6&\i .-,ton .. H~ard kllullr I'" IS M &...!. ~I )71 ,, ... , ... "''~ + \~ E .. 18M 'IO 3SI "°'" lU 320•. +llti d F•rtln• ... HlC 1I It B1!1n 10 OS 10" kWofr " lld n llo St I 71• I -•r-1111 Chm N<lr II •II tJ•~ I OJ)Craling expenses an ttlN:ll•~ I oPDtlr Grwth 116jl2IO "'' ln¥~J~ll n::;:.,M1ti. 121 2 lN n:i,a 1t1o1+v.Eev1tP 1,. t0 1s ''u 7y~ ,,,.,.,,,t"1il'1•ll'r llOh JI •s•' Ul.li' _.,. • -• lhrough lnc:om .! I 6 a Joe:! 30 44 30 n I 20 'I 16'1o 71\.\ 21 + ..., Elfftl CP ,eo :11 1't• 1••, 1''' + ~. tnl Hor-. 1 to ,1, 71.,t 21 6•''' -"' mortgages is assur._.. ~ 1~ ~ 1• 8,1 1," 14 5~ :::~w., 1.gs a. 19111 n.. ,.. _ \~ e.,, Air un ,,. u,,, 11i.. l"'' • '· rn Hok! 1 01 3 14 ,. 11"' + 1i I t r n lease' With nal',,nal E ' ' c-SI t •• '' • ,•n• ... 1~ 10\11 1~ + "' la!IOI 1 °"' 1.!P JS... l •.,, {IJV, + llt lnl lndi.tsl jl( 10•• IO•\ 10'' +•" ong e r " i;i..'f' J~.~ ',', S.Currir Funai S: E~11 ... ','•' • ll~' 31 3111t +"' 111 u111 1 '° 6 19" 19•.., 19VJ 1n11"" 1>t110 61 ,,,~ 11..., 19,·;-+,.. I rela'ler' before I he V.ll P k 1ri • E-·I• •-t " ~· 111Codllt lt 'JS 15'l tllo 111.> -tl lnl Mlnet~I lit 10• lo• l, < C 1310 • 1m•111 SC S 24 j ll ln~o j )' 7 .oi 11111 106 lOJ\.'r 1~\'t -\~ 11onY• 1 tO 13 lS''I JS 3J\'t lnr M"t ·~ ' ' ' -~ PrOJeCl begins f, a ar ::r,•w 11 Jl' l '~ IJl!rl J JJ 6, ~~r~t 111i"e 50 J~ 101" 10 l V. t • 1elllln Ml st irl11 U~i 1.... 3''1 -+ l\ '" Nie~ I tOI 39~j 4~~ !~~ ~;~z + t. -Financing is h 1 g h I y e:~~f~,11 : H f''°JI '1!ltcl,!c~ 1!ll l~f. l~\fr~ ; fl! '~ s~~ ,~:~ s.~ -.1 >.1 ~~~~ro!' 1 ~i ~f.; 3jr.1 f.!i t ~! I~: P':.:1lr~r 'fi ~~ 3i~: ~·· ~ (: .. ' ••• ,.fill Giii '!''"O ',.. '664\.fo""'a.i.:.+'\ C .. G 10 104! !~\\ '"'"l'V.+\1tl"IT&Tl/1S 4.51 Sl',.SO' ''"•'-)'!\ eraged b e c a u s e the M N d Fa~r1d ro ~OJ t' 511.m Fd t 4 , ;; 8•j:1~~ 1"''1 7J •S\l ••"' '~' -11\ 1M1111c 37, 1u -t l'' l',. , lnrT.f T o H • t ,. 9n~ .. " "cceloper '''P'"allv arran"e~ Ull a111e Ferm eu t,50 ,.tts::••r A.o 16"''" e: Pt1'1n'1t 19: l~~ ~~ ~l\\ + \\ ~~ ~':. ~': ~~ ::i. ~'! ::-~ l!~ ¥1~11·~ l2 ~.~ ;1~ <n•·' ' " "' ~r: Grlti. 11~1;i{j ~Ide Dffn IS r,!Ji: 8dwy H11t t JI 361' Jit\ ~ _ 1\ EIM'1:: Pl f 11 11.. 11'\ 1 !~o + '' l~tttT oU(• ~ Ii 16 , 19 -t~ htS mor\gagc Joan Oil lhe vaJ11e F:.l~VGr' Sllf"!f Fvnch :":""Hll plJ 4i U.,., •l\11 ••l't .. ~ Et1f~ NII JI 5'• J'o l'o ->t 19r~ OIL! SO r)61 1'll t1') 70 n• of the completed center-flot Lawrence 11 \V1\son has ~::~ {rn l!il f::;~1 1g ~ ,t ~~ a,~1~oc?11 ~ ~! ~·~ ~~ l1"\ ! ~ ~~.!~~,;, 1~; ~::.! }!~ ~:,J t :: 1 1 "', H~,11"',1 .,;s 1~ t~ N'-J~ 11~ 1:~ ~ 15 Trull 113 S4 row~ Co JJ S\~ lh ''' Emet El 1 16 3' 6!~ •II.Ii •P4 .,._ Ill fl vi' 37 )ti.ti '• 3''4 1•o JUS\Onthecostofthelandand '-~-0 appolned vice president F~:1• ll'°'l1"'!m!1t111 ,,, '0 ,,11wns~ro '° •o n i, ,.,.,, 1011t_...,EmEl•olBtn 1a 4J \\ "" o \!i-l'li ~1eroace 1 JJ 21 11 ,,,, n = I" WS! ' ' ew"Si'lo+I I 5(1 11 ll'1 U'lli 331" \1t , .... ,,..,,.,Ir!' I 6 JI~ S1~ 111, l 'Al "«Dtl pl ' J ll M•• ,. bu1ld1ng• of the telephone center for Pu•111 '12 1·1'!"' ", .. , a. ,,..e•11n1w11" 1•s 11•4 1n~ 11 -mll••• !Ml 1 ""' ll 1114 •tjnh&••nct o0 •l 'Ill 1si;; 6\t f'' l111m '97 j 'I nw I 10 • 59 Bu<v er 1 10 lt w~ 2s m~oln 1 u J '"• '1t'i ,,.., 1" "'er!Pw l ii I II I''• I' ', -Sincereturnsarebnsed ~ Lear Siegler Inc , Electronic ''"" 1119 ' • ov•f,'""'12itll 7!euadCo •si» 1t6 nt, 111'1 lf!f :j:1'~ 1111fhMln 4!I 101 ,,,, 261-. u•11-1111n111tra 60P 11. u•r, 1(. ,,~ \• f t • "1~~·1 P~'-1, jfr""'Gr 1.J :'!7 BUOd Co11fJ 110 s11.1i 51'' s11' + 1~ nn•ll111 lt " 11~ 1'0.I~ 11•, t '" 0:;:~B1e•,'50 61 '''• n~ fS't +2•• a p<"rcentage o lie tenants Instrumentat1on Div:ls1on, it lndu•t 1'•2 l"t1 "'• s1 •lllti11 ~::=i,:':'p 11 : :~ ~ ::.Zf €::/~{:.· ': J: l#! l:~ 1~+,~1&:11 s i 'J1o :: i;:: 11J J~+lt' 0ross sales, th~ dcveloper'l\ was announced today by ,,_,... Sto •ji lttcim•n fllfld•· au1111'0<11 11o '1 37 16 16 1esb tnc: l'IO 31 72 'IOl• !""+''~aw• ow 110 Jj "'~ • ~J\ • ..-: • 'Vlnl l 911 •. 1 s,t111 51 •J • u U 8u1<n>iw 111 1 ,,.. nu, 17 v; 11.\ ...,tc1111, .. JO 11 1i 11._ 1 + 1~ jOW•FSv l.l6 n1 211, 21 ""' _ ,__,._ rel urn 11·il1 continue rising as frank t;, Cole, d 1 v 1 s 1 on 11 va lo n n ,., leadfn.ot1 flJndi au11t• R•mo 3s, 1.,.. t>t ~ t es ... 1r1ri1 1.'10 fl Jl 12,, 33 +1 r.a Hirui i.. ,. 19'11 11•~ lt"-! '' h den! ~::11..R:~ ,.~ i ~~nd l·"' J0 ,7l 11llfl~i p11 50 sl :t1111 3to, ll'.: ;: 11reft1n ne '' 1otoo •t• 10-.. + •• lit~ ~~ H llJ ~, x , !'•• ,,11, tl~pro)L'Cl grov.·s1n prest F,,,.,,,,,.511 111 11'0J e~r1....i1«111 .. w v,111v1co 1•n 72"'-7t'12 . Il0 1 ,. 1 II ·~ 'II ... ds 611•1 No 11S. 11'0 33,, :n ' Iii_..,, lllYI 11'17 «I 10 ).t<l 34\, l•lt + '• -J. -f!Alron"gc Wilson was tbe director of ~: ~~111 ~-= •·U 1:~ °" 1,t!i 11, "i• Bu•1"'"' Pl sJ so 6'• '"" 61i. _ J Uf'Ofd 110t '' 11' 1m 11t. + ,, Joe~'""" ~· !' ,. Th d I I I d , S'· _ ... 1, 1 1 , Bu•"ay 7~ ~· 11\o '! U•s -+ 'II E"•"•P 60b t •!-. •~1• •110 -•t Ja k Al 1 '" I ' !1' + ',', -c rvl' oper 1< pro cc e the telephone c en t e r and "'r~ ;:;: ~j ~ ~ s Su~~ .. iw 11/,y'° n •o au"o~• 60 ,., 101.., 1~ " il't•• -+iv. E1rce110 1 's 11 l~..., 21v. 11~ + •. J.~:, ,D~ -1• ,, •l~ !'' + fro1n 1.1nprM1ctable increases previously was assistant to the Fl•t FM Jn , , r111 $" 105 Bush un t" ''c10t1o to1' 1~ ~::':.;.r .:'ii '# «f'': ~~ ~ •• + ;~ 1•n111n l!o'.lb 1 i . 1 " 1 ,_ + -· h f ff1 Giii 5 ~ • 14 umll II 10 ii - -Fi!nll (em lff 2,,~ 21, 2,.. -t ~. J:Oi'ii"f ::: 44 '• t'-~1 -'• 111 expenses. sue. as or vice president Pr1orl0Jo1n1ni;: ~:;e~:~G•~ ''s ~he•;:; '~C1be1 ca111 1n '''• ,,,,. ''''!2 Ftl•Hm :JOt (4 I'' ~: l>,\-'•JerinP11o~ 80 ut ''• '"' Parkin" lnl or bullcllng the firm he held ma nagerial G•wt., u?t u•2t~"fi •• 10'1111"',1~•111CJ l! ~• 1:) ,~, """"Irmo"'' 11 ''~11<~ ,,,_ ... J,'"'1(.o!SO s ff,, l".1 ;.!'lt' "' intom n1j 'j"IHC"'• t•1 M a 1"""t • .,. t\F1t'lt11! 1~ ltt m J'} S'li + '• JlmW•lt oo 1•1 ,, Ii JS\+\ tnaintcnance prol'V>rty taxes, nnd technical position$ with M11111 1'1 " ac11nc1 ~cs 2 n cait1hn MN! " H,,_• 1111~ ' '' '' f1tT111¥ Fl 60 JS 1J'. 1•l• I'" :t " ll"'w at I 'Cl 1~· 1, 11 .. ~ .. ~ r~ ' 1111(1 I'° :All -01 2:J ot 1J n (1mo11:1-•t 20 .,.,,, 1' 1f'~ -It l'1ntl"'I l~t 11• lS't 1'' • '"' I'• Im Wiii o( I r n ~ 2U IJl insurance and promo!lon:il HENRY F. REED such finns as Philco-Ford Four.. t'tt1 .M 1~• ~R •ti J3f C•"'!P o 1 1& 11 J1•~ I~' ~" t ~ F1rw,.1 Fin 'I ~'' 17>-""'•\.'I j~•n t 'IO 1 ~ f;i, .,.; ·i"' ~ Fr•!!*.Un Gl'Ollll• ran •• 7 u 7 It Cat'ISallt' "It 1100 .ll1/ '\ l't l\ ~trthM~ Ml 1' ta" U'\ Ollft Jol\n U JI\~ ''• l4 , activ111es bv pror::it1ng lhem Corp Lenkurt Electric Com-ONTc 1.s.i • >t \r•.. t 11 10 1• Cdn Br1w "° JO t< • tt. + l'A.$ rnt 111 •Y '• • "' " '• Jot>m s-.c IO 1 11•~ I" li" ' ' f Grwlh !.t5 '30 111tor a 11 Jt n 1' ~'" r,•c '» 1 ,,,, '"' 61\.'I -\\ Ftd0tr1 ,fO Jlit H\• JI'• ,)l\o -'• Jonloa11 ~ • sr-. •, 1~ 1 .. ,',•' ;1111ong the tcn:1nts pany. and Anten nAv1s1on 1'.t g. u111 • n i tJ Tw< Gt 113 3 10 1n1 R 1 10 J uv. ,..., "~ + lt f:e0tr-•1 1 ?C Jj !' 71') j' I •· JOf\LAu l•o so 10 th , lnc:am J"'HTwn(lnc:•~••I IPC80tl• 4l71l'7N79\\-Y.l"td"-\Oll1,IO l l't.11\lt 1 ""JanelauOfS 21§" ~ Protec11on such !IS this can and Ei.g1neer1ng Co. "'""'d " 1 ~"I' ·~ I'° 10·05 1•rt111111 1 so " 4 rt a 11 "1' ._. ,, FedNMt~ " us '' '"' 43'o 1•. Jot1,nl " 'I '' ,1 11 • I k l'O Ir Mui t SI f n Id r. t a3 ltll\I' 60 00 11 16\ti lt>oi. -.. n fKP1cEl JS I'" 12"1 Ul~ I• Joy M ~ 1 -0 I ' 1-. 481' .,"' \, make buc chip slocks sound CJl l\,f B ~It has a B S degree In .,~ inc: C•• n CtPltt t , ,11 araca.o~ s 1uo 60 n se -1 J:P1c 0111' 1 ' u 1• 1o !S•l""'lum 1 ~·1 f' ll',,' 1, like Vl1\d speculntlons It tt:t'tl.) an er tlectrlcal .:nsl~~ring from r;v f,~ 1.:l ur.~~m Flllld!'h ,:! ~:~: ~;; l·:t ;t i~ Jf"' ~fil ::+: :t ~=~fo~0 :0 ll •i~ \~:! \~:t + 1: R:1: ilgl ! ~f J Sf'" 1~~ S~ _, c<tu!dn I be all Iha! good , C1:1uld lhe Universi ty of California ~i"ior ~ 1t.U 1J s:" 17 fJ 1~'ff g~~f~ t0 \1 ff:-U,, I, + "'~=~s::-C-1 10 ~: ~~ ~~ :.·i, ~:l,~t:',.. 'J~ 11 tii\ ti'-ft.+;~ lt' p d at BC!rkelty. has "Tttten !F:~MI r.tt ~llur:~f~-'::i ;,u !~::i~ 1r 1g H"' tr.: ~r.: i ~ :e·~.°% 1; ih ,:,, Jo~ -•• ~:l~~ :a ~i l ~\I ~m, ;i·~-+ ·-~!uybt ti()! The International romote numerous ltchnfcal articles ~.~ :~ I::! v'vti:i L'lil'" '~''t:" i•1erl;,~ 11, •'Ii 'l\t ~ 1 ,~ Fl=\~ 21• ~1~ ~·· 1'"' + :.l~S-1v~Pll1~'1 1J ?!~ l·~ *~ ... '--co 'I I• -•II I lkl ·-·t f f I 11 h I f r"'9 S« ll'l(all'I '" 1? ? (• pfl )J I lll<o t.}I• 17\\ !Vi ""'"' l.'O ,, l\ 111' fjl'f +1 K~ DI I zrao n l l" unci · ,,_ ya ni;tau .. u or proeuona ec n ca AM•·~-·1.117,D s.1 SI• •tt ~1RC0C0t• i , 1'1i 11" j"•+O\FjnFt0tr11n l'll ,1, fl.i 1.1,t"ic:, .. 11 1•• Jl '•1.1 ., ,...,, ..... 11rofes~1onal!y i>IHnncd and r --n,• d•I •tar r•s1denl aga"lnes and 3 registered &11 F11 ! " l l Vl'(;ts , .. 1 x rl•neH'C~ M Ni. ,, i~ +,,.., '"'""' \·!'! •\11 "'; " •ni ,,. K•nN~o· 1.s1 flt' •• fl'• J. '• '-V•v " ~· ~· m"' • C°"'itl •tl ' V•ndtl)I 6 f t)il tlt"PIA(,i: l~I ~' 57 fll(hrl'fl~I il'1,.•ilo 41il,,+'o1¢•11l'Lll,i6 I I'' i'• •, .. ,, 11 cll n1anagcd enterprises llenry r Reed has bttn proresslonal engineer In theg~:~il'1,.: 11~11H~~'11111r :n 1;\ tr<"F~~'· 10f 't1• '°Ii~ ·~~~~=:~g'C't1 t,f~ 'il Jp: J~~: ~'-'t~~:~~il~ '° Ji'.,:;.,;: 4~~t ,~: r:ithrr than tht. seedy, h:ilf· elected v1r.e pre.$idenl and state of C11hfornia, ~=1'rCN1 2 ,,., ~11111' 111 :.lfloH :: 1ri111·~ l1 l;:~ J 1• ~ ! i;~~(~:11':io" l J1;: fl~: • ;! ;i 'i: ~:~io-"Jro 1, ~ \&ii-: ~j' .._1,~ :===========:i--'-'fl~nl~>~he<f:'.'._.!~r~o j t ct s that assl!'itnnt 5ecretary of Western \Vllson resides 1n Villa Park Hl'I 1,ff 'n w.,~ Mu n .111 u.10 l!l'\llP t M u ll" ~ h fa. l'lsrir F.i ·'°' • , i... 1 1 '' -'• t{"D~r '" • um )''' I '' -.-, · G111 1 1 .. w,111.-.111 Gr]' ~"IL•EI r k '• 2•-'..I '• ,, "/•"•• S<I '' t{ 1' 1 ·-t1l. + .. 1(1111r •~d eo •• J>o 'l'• s•1 .._1,0 Bancorporatinn, a r('gfstercd \\llh h!s wife Rita Louise, ond n:~=-1 1f.g ,, E~~il :: ll~ ~~ ,·~ !~ •• ~:"'n"' '• ""e~r.: ~· '1 :z;t n~ 1';: : :: 1:\~H 1i IO tt • .. ~ .. rr· = ~: bank holding e 0 mp any their five children The Eltt· 11 .. C l.... • f ~· t ltd "" $or11 ,, JJ\t •• ~' l ~ "1n111011 I " m. ,,,. ,.\, ... I, '1\0111 ,, • P,'• 711, 1,..-S OP OIL PAINTJNa' WttOt.llALI WAltMOUSI OP111 TO TH I PUl lfC $5 and up 111t •• l"DlfMlllll. l.l•T• ANA ,HOWi OMMt ·-· DUUllll .. WAlilllO .... lj' . 5"'b Gor 7, 71t t(h¥ I" rn ... r.iu "Ob )I) '° ·~ ,_ "' n! ~a 1.u I J1 JI'• llA• ... I ""'"' I IOD I ... "'• ~, ... -' headquartertdinU>sAng!les. trCnlC Jn stNmtnl&l!On "'" ! 10 r11tt l.<171 ,, t<re _l,tOll :144 1m ~ 'I l"PltEC#I" .i ,_ I) :il:i.++11~1~)60 21J 11, g• Jn.,,,: I •·· I l . od I ho "1'" . ' w1111t 12.ttlj .,.,.,..., '° u !"" u. -li !"a...~ 111 ,.1, a' ~ ... •1 YP 10 5'1 '"" ,,, .._. \Vestern Bancorpor:ilon ·~ Dvs1on pr uces te ep ne ~ M•llfl 10011 w1111n ":ll trt·lrd ¢ ... , t' l -1 i.POw 1" fl Jli:• 1i.. '•+ •U1111?1: ~ff,.., ,.,,+.: •• afflltated ban"·, among u1pment el-ironic data Vbtm~ "'' wrncrr ' 1fll ''.,.."1' ·" 'ff I ' • "'+ " 1,ttPwL.1 2•12 1 \' "-+ .. t:tMco 111 1 11 •0 1e1'-• _ 11.11 eq , "'"'" M ttlnl 11!!4¥• v..•nt l!'d I'' Fl srt ,IO.I o 1 I • -.. ~"' SIMI I II 11 •··· §!""" ~ 'i "• J'-" l , 1 + , them Unit«! CaliComl11 Bank acqu1311ion I y st e ms. com·1 I ti fr: '-:n.~.?i1 :"~1':'1~d 1 i~11ti i:-Jti"../IK;, I ! r t.u ~·~ :t ~ l~~.l.Xl I ~ ~~~i U'\ r,I '"l' ~ £?.. ~ 1.S ~tt• .r· ~::: +1•: R ·~• h •~ I h 1•• I U ' I and Trull J,10 . ,. w nfllld J-91 ·t! mos I 10 •• + 111 f;;-i.r t I , j»" !!!> j• 'l 1C Od ;i(ll·"' l' " J' •!'4 nu as ~t.n wt '"' mun cs on equ1~men , ... 1,11 S•• 1 n ~;l w r:d J:•J :U a•ter N 1,1 " ' +'II M~ C• y ••i i,111 •l• ·~ ~~~1~ ·"° l'f I'' jj'~ 01, _ , c.-ompany 11nce 11161. nrdnance ruze dtv1ces. ::-,101~ ::J: J:H tor~r., tY.10 11 '~".Ji. 1D Jm ~ +·" ~ f.l, .. ~~ '• ~~ ... 11i;;x:.~• .:l !. ~,; :: ~··:: ;: ,, • .. :; " '· " ,, " " .. " " '• ~ .. .. .. .. '• • " .. '• '• " ,, '• .. + • ,., " " •I .. ,, ... •• " .. .. " ·• ,, " " .. " " " •; '• '• .. ,., '. '. '• '• '• " l.io .. ,, ' '• • ~ .. .. • • " '• , " " .. • < .. • • • '• '• • • • .. ' • • " " n ;; ,; .. I • " .. • • • .. • ' l • • , • • ; • • ; • • • ' • • • • • ' .. • : ' • • .. • • • • • • • • ~ ; .. • I • • • Otttmbtr 1910 \ I I 'I JI DAILY PILOT Relatives Iri Home 'Best Way' By Peter J. SU:lncrobn, MD Although the column ap· peared months ago about Mrs. G., who was upset about sen- ding her mother to a nursing home, letters continue to come that may be helpful to readers in rtsolving similar problems. One follows : DEAR DR. STEINCROHN: This Jetter is intcnded~or Mrs. DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE G., the lady who was so guilt· ridden beca1t.se she was forced to place he~ m!>ther in a nurs· ing home. lf printed, I do hope that she will find a measure of consolaliori in these words. Twenty one years ago I was forced to commit my mother to a mental lnstitution, for a longer priOO of time than I Jike to recall. I suffered from an extreme guilt com- plei:. I cried and I prayed for peace of mind. Then came the realization that this was God's will, it "·as His plan rOr both my mother and me. Try as I might to change things, this could not be done. J realized that J had not deserted my mother. I would have to ac- cept the will of God and resolve to be as good to my mother as I possibly could. I visited her often. always taking material things that she needed as well as e.r.:tra treats to make life as pleasant as possible for her . I brought her home for a week or two many times over the years. I TOOK HER on trips back to childhood places, back to her mother's grave, always trying to do little things that made her happy. I shall always treasun a remark that she made to me not too loog ago. She said, "My darling, don't ever feel bad about putting me away here. You only did Whit )'OU Md lo do .• You are the best daughter U*", any mother ever had; and I love . ' . you·because,you are you." I J1id ~Y rnolher to rest two and a ha lf months agO, a~r Jive: and a half months of untold suffering. .During ~~h °:e~.er~ndto :i~~ I wu not with her at the very end I know that she too\ her love for me with her to the grave. Not once did she ever feel neglected or deserted. MD. G., we must always aceept God's will and only in doing this can we find peace of mind. -P..1rs. 8. MEDICALETTES (Replies to Readers) For Mrs. L.: The important thlng in considering your young son's leg cramps is to determine the real reason. Sometimes what p a r e n ts believe are muscle cramps are really joint pains. When in- definite. they are called grow- ing pains. Although massage seems to help temporarily, I suggest that you take him to your doctor. What's important to know is whether or not these growing pains are due to unrecognized rheumatic fever. FOR 1\-1RS. Y.: Th ere is no definite rule, but it is often accepted by obstetricians that a woman should wait abou t six weeks after having a baby before re~Jling sexual rela- tions. It taltes that long for the uterus and other organs to return to the pre-pregnancy state. FOR rims. O.: A safe rule ls not to take any kind of medicine (even flSpirin for a headache) especially during the first three months of pregnancy -unless you receive your doctor's OK. Some ask. "When I am nervous. what harm Is there ln taking a tranquilizt'!r. or a sleeping pill for insomnia?" Let your doctor be the judge. FOR MR. O.: The tuberculin test ls Important as a screen· Ing test for tuberculosis. It !hows only that you have come In 0011lact with the TB germs. The positive skin-wheel does not mean you have active tuberculosis. ClllLDREN LIKE UNCLE LEN -------:--------....,.....-.....-.....---------------- PILOT-ADVERTISER JJ HAVE ,YOO VISITED rAJR NEW STOltE AT1 fJOUNTAIM V.t.LLIY-11'N .......... It ... Tl ... POU!fTAIN 'WM.LIT-llMI ...... •"" I • ...., COSTA Mii~ fM'11w IM. at Wla.-It. CO$TA Ml~ I . ,,_ st. 581l Warner a.I . Spri11~aJe in Hultington leach IL TOll:0-11 ,..,. .. 11:9CXIMlll ..... Mt.INTINOTOft llACN-illfl '-" I • .. ,....... U.MTA ......._,. W ............ I ,.._. It. WIJTMIJtSTI......, ....... It .... ~ MUMTlft9TOfil lu.ai-tMI ,,.._ •t 1.-11....i HilHT1N•TOfil llAC.._.Ndl a 11 ...... NU":'lffnllf llA~._, & 1,,....il • ,, leg.- $3" ·Hard Side Vinyl : luggage . H~ ond ~:i':~ v1r1v1 '2'' covering$ In BIU9 ~ GrHn. Full l ire. Sov• $$$ now. • 54 99 21" .......... ,. It'" • $.5",99 2 .... ,....... ·.•••· ·" •S'6.99 W~··•:,· ff - Your Choke of Olo11 or Pla.tf• 'Go rlon 1iz• with outomotlc 1~f1ty shut-off, medlcant holde"r mol<Md Into plostlc t~ •. '2'' ft! Stlmudt•t '""'pad• ,.o .. 38e EXCEltANT MINTV FLAVOR . .1 Sego Liquid. . .. Die~ Drink ' . .5~99c · $2SOY1l11l Mfridl Hand Cream ...... 66c at .. ~ .... I Mach ine woshoblt, full s2n fashioned knits wltl\ mock- t urt ltneck collar laddf1 sl'Cll.llder, f:opulor • colors, $fZ1S. Women's Vinyl '2" Folding Slippers ~33 Clearance Briar Pipes Y1li11 HIOI Typhoon Ughttr $1•• • Ut A•fll•tr1 T1a;111t 211 ~ornous Men. t•rc:rott In 1tyl1s galore!' $159 --. . . ·• s2" v~ Plast~~ '. ·. Housewares r I' Gotdon, laund<v, U qt, -9~ :. gulor ~I $6-qt. W01ttbolk-·• •• •!Alp top hanipm,! AJl .ln hi-. t , dtnsffy plastic with hlah pallth ' f 1 , ••• JU'Ylbo ... l •j • ., •. , j • ... $12'. I st · Quallty Printed. Pillowcases "Serenity" super-fine printed cotton rnusllns In pink, blue, yellow, multi-colon. .42x.J6" Only ot Thrifty. PICK OF Z 84c _ ..... _. !::t.:="-:; *4" ----•6" Recent cut-outs of top tilling AS'L Country Rock &,Bluer, Popular _ -music for rt!fYO!?!· .... llhn.. U.t ..... Liit '"" Top Selllnc stereo llHMI Alballl $34' '2'' Lot••t Cr gr•ote1t uncuh Nti by top •nt•r-. tolners. World0 fo- mout pe r- former• (;/ hits. _.,. -. ,· . "" . , '15"Tweedl~Xl IV2 Room Sliti ~~gi. Quou..,...._·-•v..11w 1999. In 1lz•. Ncwat twnd ._ for eVerv dlcor. TYft.d on ,-. fW - klnaer wear • • • f'Oml't nlibitr ' 1 • backed. Sef'Qlld OU a'round • • ..... to loy, . • • • • I I ." ·pr1coo Good Thru Tutlday Cookie Sale ;:~~~,:.~ .... 3:•1 pocked. 8 dellclOUJ ~/es In I IG'9 priced gniup. Get yol.lrlf • ••t•' ..... Q:1c1lll• hfh. IS'• •••••••• Pc . ~ ' •Ste .... et-. S..nt1r..., I·*': \No •• •tc •V.... ·-c..ki., 11•1• ... y.., ..... JJ• . Reg. '1", Shea.f•d Jac_quard -lath Towels [JctM heovt quolity, IUJ*·absorbtnt cotton ti'rriu In woven sculptured rose -design •• , Green, Orang•, Blue, Raspberry, !Ax«". • Jk 1i:.:12"' ~ w-.htlll .... ·•1.zt l,at .. ~ ..... , .... "' Q...lily ..... wffli ;:::::<. :::. •511 -.. -_,_., .... _.,. ci ••• .!:~ '6" r"---.-.·,. ... - y"' Clli;elce Colanders, ronoe perk•, roost poN( whistling teakettles, IOucepotlJ $12.91 Y1luel Record Cabinets Mol»rn ~bl· net In wolnut color wlt'1 chrome ,plotM legs, $lidlng ....... ~ 541 & & 69' Schottl Paper Wiii .. ,,... , ... , .~ v1111 A arm (--. "'"' °"' Tops Jn ~II· ty. $4" • $1.fl a...a .... Dlef $1.n Harkoff Quality Vodka $J49 'l" Tussy Llf Riot 11 C1lw CWRAJIOEl WHU STOCKS UST ' -2i'1 t.Ltl y .. , • ....,. lllflniile letJH ···~ ...... Yanllty S..p is,:, s211 u~-,;,;w;;r..:: •s• rn ...... lkm•LIOll ~ QJ Major Label Monavntl Album• All bro"d 47• new• t l11 t l•ln Mhor Scohh Whhky 100 ....... .... luyl Rlcort lluM $33' ,, .So .lh'J ~... 504 IUO V11Uel Dorifhr llr11 Honn11tCr11rn 97c Stell! Stc11t1ry BHks lie 97c Old World Ma' lie 59c Y1ltt T1•111 & Emit,. 29c $2.50 Shtr lllst Siil $1·! , $Ul.ll Aln Clect $5.11 $2.44 B11dlf'Hl1. Doi ' $1.• $1 M tt Stem Aln $4.• $4.• lllllU LIZllJ!! $2.91 $2.98 f11ltlm Tri. Syr. $1.33 $2.50 Rel T111 f11sh Tips $1.98 $3 C1rl11 U.. Clprltlls $1.51 quo[I~, ' I f ifth ...... $ " Plltto G•HM so . $14.91 &' Al1111. Lidder $!lit .. , • .. •• . l •.. .. Scene . MiGl i· Ma kes t be ·Harvard • I-- •. '· . ..... ~ • , . • ' • •• '"' I· . • . •· • ' • • ' ' I c . \. ' • , ' 'I ' . • The midi mu ddle goes ma rching on e nd o·n. Latest ·t or pick apa rt the ph en omena of its rejectance wa s a group of men at the Ha rvard Busine ss Scho61. . ' • • • Slant on Slopeweor ' ....... .. " .... ,. ..... •• ·-• • Snow What's New for Skiers? le1tfter 1kl c1p with snuggly larnf>..lintd aide fl1p1 that ti• Ul)Cfer chin or fi11t1n on top 11 one of th1 new, exclti"I 1•r·w•rm1r1 for tk11r1. -~--' Something bas happened on the aki slopes -a ~n happening. Skiers will be playing dress-up Ulla year. which doesn't mean wearing a Jot or silly garb, but collecting a fashionable and fun costume look. Eclecticism, (selecting the best of what is available) is a way of life for today and makes skiing more fun. Clothing that's representative of a culture offers a wide choice for mixing moods. For the ski slopes, this meam that cowboy hats will replace the stocking cap and warm-up pants will resemble national banners and calico bandannas. For both active ski and aprn wear, Interesting fabrics and textures are taking over including stretchy quilt., feather and fur. Apres-ski boots have a new look too, like a Dutch clog in felt with wooden heel and sole. ' Pirlw are a whole separate fuhlon subjecL There, the long and short of fashion is important as the number of lengths in parlw grows. Some parku it.op al the wailt and so~ are Jong and belted, tunic fashion, A popular style is a nylon mid-thigh length self-belted jacket that could be called the midi in parkas. If·a skier feels like being jacketless, a zip-front, one-piece jumpsuit of a stretch gabardine material is a true comfort suit. affording a sleek silhouette and minimum bulk. Color is a key factOt on the white of the snow this year . The spirited colon indicate that a spirited Ume is erpected. Some of the newest colors are It'• the Grapest , Fawn-do IOd Kitzblue. Prints are lmp<rionl too -abWw and geometrics, printed 1e1·l be rt . Muican-inauenced prints ud diamoOd shapes. 1, Fabrics are the key to comfort.able sltiing, and this year'a are eome of the most efforUess ever. The new knJts , some Crom Italy, make senaaUonal suits and sweaters, both textured and plain. Ski panta are alive and trim, a• well 11 being warn\' and lightwdght. Warm·up suits are streamlined and tailored, making the bulky loOk of y,.terday deflnllely puae. . E)f per'ts Study -Skirt ~t Leng·th . , lit llAlllAN CllJ\ISTY ~ll -~ sun-raging midi mud-dle --whlcb ii reaching a fiery emotional pUeb IPd ~ly burning the '8 billion laiblun industry -recently was e:x· amlned at the H1rvlf!1 Bualness School. ~ men, usually e·mbroiled in more lritellectual headaches, collaborated • an ·!l><levtll '.....,. of the generally -midi and heatedly ham· mered home Pro and con midi con. ........... -Dellgners hive "misjudged" the temper tl,tbe contemporary woman '!ho la independent enough to wear clothes that reflect her penol}&lity. ntber than thooe labeled "status." -1"e proposed change from mini to mid1 was too abrupt, and women no longer subject to social pressures, will pull • "Mrs. Nixon" by fall-winter 1971 -namely aCcept.ing a hemline that ii "at the knee." -So'.called "Beautiful People," like J acquelloe Kennedy Onauls and the Ford Women, + are no , longer the country's fashion Jnnovatora. Tbe influentials are a •ttOIS section ol tllppie1, youth In general and older women of means with ooj>IW.Hcaled tastes. -Deslgnert have mistakenly tried to "force" women into midis ratlier than to "seduce" them. But the con- trov<ray. la healthy because fashion ~ a subject on everybody's Ups. PANTSIJIT SYNDROME -1be pantsuit syndrome, the public's answer to the midi, has been given a powerful thrust by women's liberation groups who Inadvertently encouraged the wearing 'of trousers because the fashion concept idenuties them with men. -The word "midi" is undergoing a fantastic change In cOhcept. Originally it literally meant mid-leg. ,The fashion industry is now trying to change its definition to any length below the knee. (The Harvard report makes the following definitions: Miniskirt is 21 inches. Knee length i! 21 to 2214 inches. Mid Is 23 to 25 Inches. The longuette l.s 2514 to 33 inches. 'Ibe maxi is anything over 33 inche.s.) John Fairchild, chairman of Fairchild Public1Uo.n.!, Inc., which counts amol)g lt.s trade newspapers Women 's Wear Dai· ly, sat in on the class, fielded questions and made a few wry observations. Fairchild, the prime midi skirt champion, actuaUy devised the word "longuette." "Looc skirta .weren't the dicule of . . designers\" said Fairchild. "The trend started with the young who Inhabit Greenwich Village, the Left Bank in Paris and London. "Designers have nothing to draw on but life itaelf. Designers saw, were In- spired and crtated accordlngly, It re~lly bugs me to hear women accuse designers of secretly banding together to decide trends." Fairchild said that the latest trend in Paris amonj the young who pursue the discotheque scene are "hot pants." These are v a r l e d renditions of shorts that look like men 's drawers. BASIC UNES "The length Is Incidental," says Fairchild. "Actually there are only two basic silhouettes in fashion, H and A. H is the straight up-an<k11>wn chemise w:lth a belt. A is the A-lloe silhouette. That's all fashion is, HA !" The audience laughed heartily. A Harvard man ask.dd Fairchild If WWD "created" trends rather than "reported" them. Fairchild's answer: "We don 't write about yesterday's news. But the very fact we put a long skirt on our front page means we are in- fluencing a trend." One male ; student queried Fairchild about the lack of se:x appeal in midis. "Showing flesh isn't sexy," Fairchild shot back. "Kn~ aren't sexy . Clothes are a woman's accesso ry. Today women / want to look' individual and express thtlr oWn character. However, fashion Ui not an . art. It's satisfying -like having ' good meal." / 'Nlere was no response from the predominantly male audience u n ti I Fairchild predicted that lhe young pro- bably will wear midls and go toplea in the futur e. "They'll wear lovely jewels banging down ," said Faltthlld, More laughter. JACKIE LEADS Fairchild, whose pubUcaUon labels Jackie Onassis "Jaclde-0" aDd 11Queen . ~ of' Elegance" -and reports her every fashion move, sun considers her the ,world's leading fashion heroine . He said she was wearing a. mini skirt the day they talked about the William Manchester book on JFK's death and a·WWD photographer took her picture. Fairchild says she dignified the mini because the masses concluded that If a woman of her stature wore a mini, they would not be corrupted If they did likewise. "People look to other· people who have charisma." Fairchild said. · The study also Quoted top American designers on bow the midi got started. Jerry Silverman said: "In the case of the midi, fuhlon was in a rut. This ls indicated by a tag in sales all over. Women were shortening their old dres,,es instead of buying new ones. Thus, a drastic change was needed." .. ~men BEA ANDERSON, Editor w .. .....,.. ~ .. lnil , ... 17 Fun on the slopes! When the weather gets cold, e cuddle coat of sheepskin lined with thick lamb is just the ticket !above, left). A nylon jacket with stendup collar features epaulet stitching end snep-flep pocket, es do the penis !below leftj. Suede takes to the 1lopes iebovo), becoming purple on the way and 1 ski ve5t lined in furry lamb. The Western look predominates in • tornado hat in nylon end two·piece mini-quilted suit in stretch nylon, -.. I , I) I' I -..... ~· . ·-. .. .... .. _ .......... ... :-.------~-.. :-.----::-:---...... ~--::--::--:.-:.~:------:--:::-:===========~~~===:=:::r DAILY PJLOi You r ,Horoscope Tomorrow . . . A <:1 'uarius: Resist · Temptatio n~ ' LOOKING HOMEWARD -First Ni~hters Mr. and Mrs. C. Sidney Johnston Jr. arrange an angelic setting for the premiere of "Look Homeward Angel" as Victor Hugo maitre d' Alfred Rosenberg (left) gives approval. The group will gather in the inn Tuesday, Jan. 5, for a preperformance dinner before the Laguna Moulton Playhouse opening. ' ' THERESA WEBSTER Br id ... I.ct Fr bruary Date!, Set : First United Methodist : Church of Costa Mesa has • been selected for the Feb. ' ~ 14 wedding linking Theresa • Lynn Webster of Costa Mesa ~ and J. Frederle Hanover of j San Diego. ~ Parents of the engaged cou- ~ pie are Mr. and Mrs. Edward ~ F. Webster of Costa f\.1esa • ~ and Mr. and Mrs. Jules B. : Hanover of Garden Grove. The bride.elect . a fifth ' · generation Californian. is a ~ graduate of Estancia High School. Her fiance is a graduate of Botsa Grande High School. Garden Grove and attended Orange Coast College. Final Sessi on La Leche League of Hun· tingtOn Beach . will conclude 11.i current series tonight at a in the HWltinglon Beach bome of r.1rs. Dale Keicher. The topic will be Nutrition aod '\\' ea.ning. Reed Greffiti By Bill Leery Firs t Nigh ter Toa st Dinner Precedes Play Members of the First Nighters or Laguna !\.1oulton Playhouse will launch the new year on Tue~ay, Jan. 5, with a night to remember. ~fembers wi~I gather in Why not ring in the New Year with a resolution to give a few hours a week or a month to help Some- one less fortunate ? Perhaps helping at a Boys or Girls club would interest you: coaching, woodworking, arts and crafts, and campouts all need workers. Dedicated staff people need volunteers to assist them after school and weekends. OPPORTUN ITY VARIE S Volunteers are needed to work in community centers, visit the elderly and the infirm, provide transportation and give ward parties for the handi- capped. Fam ily Gatherin g Be trothal Revealed A June wedding in St. John the Baptist Catholic Church, Costa l.1esa is being plaMed by Penny Ann Charter of Costa !\.1esa and Terry J. Braund of Corona. Ne11.·s of the forthcoming event was announced by the bride-elttt's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Aivin Charter during a party in their Costa Mesa home. Miss Charter is a graduate of Costa Mesa High School and will receive her BA in social welfare in June fr om California State College at Long Beach . Her fiance . son of i\1 rs. Wilma Braund of Costa Mesa and C. J. Braund of J\finot, N.O., is a graduate of CMHS and UCI where he now is doing graduate work. PENNY CHARTE R June Plens Victor Hugo Inn for a gala dinner preceding opening of the current play, ' ' Lo o k Homeward Anget" Hailed by enthusiastic reviewers, ,the pn:iduction des c r l'b es an episode in the life of Thoma.. Wolfe. Director will be M Is s Rowena Harwood. Hosts for the 7 p.m. dinner will be Mr. and Mrs. Franklin Metzleur of Capistrano Beach. Guests joining them at the head table and in the receiving line include the Messrs. and Mmes. K. E. Burford of Laguna Hills, M. H. Cochran of Newport Beach. C. Sidney Johnston of Laguna Ni~I and Anthony Lease of Laguna Beach. Among those hosting tab!~ are Mr. and Mrs. Dmald Vanderbilt with guests Mr. and Mrs. Roy Smith, Mrs. George Thompson, F I r s t Nighter president, and Mrs. Clare de Bus. Table guests of Col. and Mrs. William Hilby Bruggere will be Mr. and Mrs. Percy Brown, Dixon H. Kirkpatrick , Mrs. Craig Ketchum, Mrs. Margaret Swope and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Sanford. The Colin Timmonses will ~ the Messrs. and Mmes. Spencer Honig of Mission Viejo, Torrance Dodds of Newport Beach and Joseph Simmons. Others arranging tables are Dr. and Mrs. Zachary Malaby and Mr. and Mrs. James L<>mas. Members are asked to make reservations and s u b m I t guest lists by Sunday, Jan. 3. Refreshments will be served ln the theater Founders' Room following l h e peliormance when members will meet th e cast Mrs. Adele Ipsen and Miss AM Banks are in charge of the reception . PRE-INVENTORY CLEARANCE NEARLY EVERYTHING DRASTICALLY REDUCED THURSDAY DECEMBE R 31 By SYDNEY OMARR Beede New Year'• Eve IMkaled ~y planetary .. top: Wier of 1ectdent11 fl.rel It empUsb:ed. Friendt tend to millttetprtt motivt1 ud, la .ome extreme c11es, coald ruor1 to violence. TbOM wM are moderate will M anud. to lell the story. AlllES (Mardi 21-APrll II): Money argument ls tomethlng to assiduously aVOl<I. ,,_ who start out being cona:eniaJ may lose control. A v o i d driving with one who is lntemperate. M o d e r a t io n should be your keynote. TAURUS (April 20-May 20 ): Don't attempt to outdistance associates, friends or family members. Be conservative. Shrewd observation w i 11 enable you to note trends, obtain valuable infonnation. Act acco~lngly. GEMINI (May 21.June 20l: Ayoid ~ecessary travel. Not wise to ·argue now about politics, relJ&ion. Steer clear of one who lmbJbes and acts like a know-it-all. Control impulse to make cutting remarks. CANCER (June 21.JuJy 22): Emotional conflicts dominat~. Key is to break through to new ways, kleu, concepts. Be independent without b e i n g arrogant. Jn meeting new people, be direct but gracious. LEO (July 23-Aug, 22): Blocks to progress are on agenda . But you can remove obstacles, if determined. Stay out of way of one who leeks PRESIDENT Mrs. David Klag11 Officers Elected Mrs. David Klages of Laguna Beach was elected president of the Women 's Arehitectural League o f Orange County. Serving with her will be the Mmes. Thomas B. Moon, Costa Mesa, vice president; Arthur Danielian, I r v I n e , secretary, and Gordon Ensign, Huntington Beach, treasurer . The officers were installed during the joint dinner dance with the county chapter of the American Institute of Architects. The event took place in Irvine c.oast Country Club. Coiffure Curl ing Tendril curls dropping from the hairline or a coiffure is one of lhe new~ hair pro- ducts. The tendril is a corkscrew drop or permanently curled synthetic hair sewn onto 1 bobby pin. The bobby slips into and becomes a part of the hairline, while tht tendril remains outside for all to see. FOUNTAIN $8000 3 TIER REG. $100 NOW DECORATED STRAWBERRY , $698 PLANTER REG. $10.98 NOW AVAILABILITY SUBJECT TO PRI OR SALE WE ENCOURAGE UESUREL Y SHOPPING-OVER AN ACRE OF EVERYTHIN~ AND ANYTHING FOR DECORATING INDOORS OR OUTDOORS • AMERICAN BRAVO -WROUGHT IRON -CANDELABRAS -CHANDELIERS -OAXACO POTTERY - POTTEaY -BASKETS -PAINTINGS -WALL OECO~ CANDLES -DECORATOR ACCESSORIES - GIFTS -FRAMES -PLANT STANDS -STATUARY -CRYSTAL -GARDEN ARTS EL PEON OF SAN JUAN CA"STRANO -ACROSS FROM THf MISSION -OlftGA HIGHWAY AT fl CAMINO RIAL-SAME LOCATION FOR 20 YIARS to prove roolish point•. Don't compou~ error by ins~tinf. c1Jollna. :mtGO (Aug, 23-Sept 22): Go with tht Ude ; relax and ~aliae. Some who appear tertous m.1y merely b e whispering sweet nothings. Know thi.t and resrond accordingly. Be p I ea s ant without commlttlnc yOuneU. IJBRA (Sept. 23'0cl. 22): If careless, you lme valu1bla. You &!lo 1mash budget. MeJR1 put brakes on extravagance. There la a tomorrow. You do have to face yourself in momlng. Act like you know It. SCOR~IO !Oct. 23-Nov, 21): Stick close to home base, if possible. Exchange thoughts, Ideas with cOmpaUble persons. One interested in the law some· embarrassing memories . Word to wise should be sufficient. PISCES (Feb, 11-MIJ'Ch 20): A relatlooablp may be on hr.ink. Evaluate oeedl and potenUal. Don't drq. out • step that could be completed with dispetch. Mwage will become increasingly clear. IF TODAY~ YOUR BIRTHDAY you aim blp - 11t times upiratlon1 a r e be)'(IOd reach. Strive to be more pracUca.I. You have Jewelry Mobilized could make v a I u ab J e ' Jewelry with meaning ls suggestion. Be r e c e p t J v e definitely in this fall. rather than aggressive. Ale1is Kirk, whose Sensuous ·: mad! deci!ion and a move affecting home Ille. Now .,Ou can proceed and make giin. But you must keep feet on ground, If you do, yoo will accomplish much. Otherwise, you will brood rather ~ achieve. •: flNI ........... ·~; IOXID ...; Christmas ~ Cards :: •• RI•. S1.JI te S4.t l .: l/2-PRICE " s .. Ou r Gift • BARGAIN TABLE .• ., • . ce .. le MIMn, c•M~ -"""" ..,..lfl', "'""'"'" ....... Save ~ & More! ? '. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22-jewelry won a 1970 Coty Dec. 21): Take tpeeial care in Award, says : "Jewelry muat traffic, while on short journey. have meaning and relate to Confusion seems to be the body ..• the ltttJe. ear· ~ ·; keynote. Good to celebrate, to inc ... or the basic bracelet sa ~, ... have fun . But do not throw means oothlna anymore to 5W W caution to winds. Otherwise, anyone. c A11 & •1n SHOP ~;. there ii regret. "Jewelry glorifies the body, ,.., .t.ri.t• .t.Ye • ., MtllM .. • : CAPRICORN (Dee. 22.Jan. its 1hape and Jt.s movement. _.,':::~.:;~!:!.art 19}: You may 1et too fut a Jewelry ii oot heavy, it has 0,.... Mtll.4 ,,_,. .. , pace. Going from one party to ~ne~w;;;mo~b~il~lty~·~";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~=== another could prove mort!i tiring than lnvtgorating. Check tendency to wute ti m e , emotions and money. Avoid self-deception. AQUARIUS (Jan, »Feb. 18): Don't give . in to temptationa. If you feel you l muat expreu grievances, do IO in diplomatic manner. Otherwise, you will be in for Artists Costumed Admission by costume only Is the keynote for a Beaux Arts Ball sponsored f o r members of the Laguna Beachl Art Association Gallery at a p.m. on Saturday, Jan. 2, in th~ gallery. Robert Thorn, 'a board member, not.es costumes may be available at the Laguna Moulton Playhouse for those who need them. Reservations for tables should be m1de in advance. Muslc will be provided by the Jazz Rock Group with cocktails and light refreshments aerved. ROBES AT HOME WEAR DRESSES SUPER PANTS, TOPS, DRESSES COATS, ETC., ETC. V2 PRICE WESTCLIFf PlAZA ON LY 17th & IRVINl-NEWl"Ol.T II.A.CH UP TO ~ COCKTAIL FORMALS CAPRI sm SPORTSWEAR COATS OFF 3424 VIA UDO e NEWPORT BEACH ONE OF THI LI DO SHOPS MON,•FRI DAY t:30 A.M.--5:30 P.M. SATU RDAY 10 A.M.-4 P.M. . ' ' • • ' ' ' . ( ( l ' ' • •I : ~ : ~ ! ,• ,, •' ' DA!LV l'ILDT 19 Solution Not the Cat's Meow -· DEAR ANN LANDERS ' I'll bet every farmer in the United St.ates and Canada ls mad at you. Your advice to "Williston. N.D.," whose dad drowned the five kittens was really bad. You told the sad young girl that her daddy should have taken the kittens out in the country and filven them to a far'1er. ANN LANDERS ril • Do you have any Idea how many cats • and dogs are dumped on farmers every day because of city Idiots like you? Al one time voe had 13 cats. Where did they corne from? Urban apartment dwellen Y!'ho drove out in their cars. opened the doors and turned the poor things loose. Cats are not self supporting, you know. They mu.st be fed. Farmers have to buy their groceries in the supennarket jusL like city people. So please, Ann Landers. don't perpetuate the myth that every farmer is glad to have "one more mouser." It isn't so. -A CAT-ASTROPHY NO MATTER HOW YOU SPELL IT DEAR CAT: I received hu.ndrtds of letters from farmers wbo e:rpr«sed precisely tbe same point of view. Please accept tbe apologies 1,f thil City Idiot. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Several weeks a11:0 yo11 printed a letter from Dr. William Center of San Antonio, Tex. He described the value or breast self-examination and urged women to write fo r lhe American cancer Society's free booklet on the 1ubject. Would you like to know what happened? Our lives have not been the same. The headquarters of the American .Cancer Society in New York received nearly a quarter of a million requests. This meant added help, added shifts, a tremendous postage bill and~joy unlimited. We are nol complaining, Ann -voe love It. Becawe of that column dozens lm3Ybe hundreds) of lives will be saved. We hope. you will publish this letter of gratitude. And please, Ann, tell your readers who have not yet sent for the free booklet tha t they may obtain one by getting in touch with their local unit or the American cancer Society. It is listed in the pho,ne book. -JOSEPH CLARK, DIRECTOR OF PRESS. DEA.R J\1R CLARK: Your letttr made my day. Thanks for writing. DEAR ANN LANDERS : J am a l&. year-old girl with a problem I can't tallr. to anyone aboul My older sister i!l 20 and not married. She lives about 100 miles from here. Rosemary moved out of the house about a year ago to take a cashier's job in a restaurant. (My folks were against it.) 1 have reason to believe that Rosemary Children Keen on Book 'Scents' has had a baby within the last month. She has always been overweight and could have been pregnant without showing anything. \Vhen I saw her eight week& ago she was wear:ng a smock which she always wore to work, so I didn 't think anything of it. My question is, should I say aomething to my parents? I am almost positive my hunch is correct. Don't you think Mom and Dad have the right to know whether or hot they are grandparents! Alao I would like to know U I am an aunt. I will take your advice. It ls usually ri&bt. - UNDECtDED DEAR UN: Ketp quiet U your tilter did give birth 1he obviously did rt:lt keep the child, so there is nothlD& to celebnte. Exposing her secret woWd Mn• DO useful purpose. I repeat : Keep qllkt. A1cobo1 is no shortcut to social success. if you think you have to drink to be accepted by your friends, get the facb. Read "'Booze and You -For Teenagers Only," by Ann Landers. Send 35 cents in coin and a long, self·addressed, stamped envelope with your request in care of tbe DAILY PIWI'. Holidays Captured Year-round By JOAN HANAUER NEW YORK (UP I) -Every , mother knows books are wonderful for litUe children. The older ones read them. The younger ones learn just from looking at their pictures. Some children also eat them, which is all right with the mother who is delighted to see her little feeding pre>blem eat something, anytb.ing. children can do with books -may say something about our smell them. · t """' y. That's the Klea behind the The finn that devised the ''Golden Fragrance" line oI give oH an aroma for a tong, long time -no one knows exactly how long -.and the qseoces used ar~c.-books now in the works, with micro -encapsulation procen that makes all this _6niffing 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;r, the first book, "The Sweet bl Smel l of Christmas'' (G<ilden possi els the 3M Company. A company spokesman said that Press, Western Publishing tiny microsa>pic capsules of Co.), is already on lhe marke t. concentrated scent we re The publisher says this is coated onto paper. They are so the first such book -a small that 200 would fit around "smelling" book, the natural a human hair and a half suoce~ to all the ''talking'' million of them covers every books on the bookshelves. Rackets Bow · to Balloon s 'n Streamers There also, oC course, are the chikiren who use books to hit their small siblings over the head but that is a different category. --m·~ 11._ 1.5 aboul a square inch of paper. ..., __ _.-. Jrit: ....... , '"" When a ctiild scratches one •••M.n bear family getting ready for of the strips he brtaks some of • ••M.t.m.nur1 • ~ C::: . • . ' • ! Eastbluff residenls !\1r. and 1'.1rs. Bill Herrman (far left, right} take time out<from the tennis courts to ready a "young couple" for the Newport Beach Following Yule Ebe/ Is t-e tt;ng · Down Relaxation is the name of the game as memt>ers of : . Laguna, Bea~h Ebe.JI Club meet at 7;60 p.m. in the Emerald Bay home of Mrs. Jody Upham on Monday, Jan 4. mind members or an up· con1ing rummage sale on Fri· day and Saturday, J an, 29 ~nd 30, in the Lagi.ma .Beach \Voman's Club. Proceeds \Viii go t o philanthropic endeavors and scholarships. ~ Dressed in comfortable at- tire. Ebells v.•ill ''lel do.,,.-n ·• after the Christmas rush to sip punch, visil apd play bingo. tn addition l1> fun and games. 1'.irs. William Hinwood and Mrs. r.iacauJy Ropp re· Hosts for the event will "be the J.ltnes. Herbert Burridge, Harold Odmark, Howard Shat. loch. \Vinfield Shiras Il l, Raya mond Schim, James 'Townsend, Edmund V a n Deusen and Arn Youngman. Friends Heor New s Engagement Revealed f\1ore than 100 friends and relatives .attended an open house hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Paul C. Nurches in their Pasadena home v.•hen they announced the engagement or thei r daughter, Ch ri s tin a Mar ie Nurches to Robert Merle Black of Newport Beach. Her fiance is the son or lvlr. and 1'.1rs. William Black or Newport Beach . The bride-elect is a graduate of Pasadena High School and is an art major at Pasadena City College where she serverl as ll 1970 Rose Princess in the Tournament of Roses Court. A graduate or Newport llarbor High School, her Hance attended Orange Coast College and is serving in lhl' Anny. He will begin a Vietnam tour in January. A wedding is being planned for summer, 1972 . CHRISTINA NURCHES To Marry ''IRGINIJ\'S Jll4 SNIP 'N STITCH SHOPPE E1 st Coast Hw y. e Coro na del Phone 673-8050 YEAR END STORE-WIDE• FABRIC SALE ENTIRE STOCK-WITHOUT EXCE,TION 20% OFF OUR REGULAR PRICES Mon .. Jan. 5 Thr11 Jan. 10 e IANKAMEltlCARD e MASTER CHARGI Tennis Club "s annual New Year's Eve ball. The J-Jerimans \Viii serve as hosts during the gala whiclt. also commemorates the club's 1fifth anniversary. Now there's somethimg new RITA TOWLE March Bride News Told By Towles Rita LouiM" Towle \\'ill be come the bride of Dennis Dean Blackman dltr ing March 6 rites in St. And rew's Presbyterian Church. Newport Beach. The betrothal announce me nt has been made by her parents. 1'.tr. and Mrs. Richard !\.1. Toll'le of Costa lvles a. 1\liss Towle. :.1 graduate of Corona de! ~1 ar High School, attended Dr<1nge C o as t Collegr. Her fiancc. sn n of 1\-tr. and 1\irs. Brute B!ai.:kman or Santa Ana , is an <ilumnus of Costa !\.1esa High Schoo!. , I 0 ·TO avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white J!:lossy ~holo­ graph s to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received after that time v.iill not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be su~ mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill r equirements on both wed· djng and engagement stories, fonns are available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions \\'ill be answ ered by \Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466, New Slate Installed 1\lrs. James Utt, v.·idow of the former Congressman, was honored guest at the meeting and installat ion of officers of the 1'1esa Verde Republican Women. Co h d u c I i n g installation ceremonies at the Christmas luncheon meeting in t he Newport Riviera Clu bhouse, Costa Mesa, was M r s . Barbara Bunk e r, pasl Republican Women's state president and la!l.t year's recipient or Re pub I ic an · woman-of-the-year award . New officers for the yea r v.·ill include the M me s . '.\'illiam J . Collum Jr .. presi• dent ; Fletcher Stewa rt, Rurton A. Wilder and Calvin Sumrall , v ice presidenlS; Mark B. Webster and Will iam F. Halt. secretaries, and Wilham Rorick, treasurer. All women who are registered Republicans are in- vited to attend the meetings. Christmas in typica l little kid lhe tiny bubbles and the scent n v .... "' s.JM Lk.._ style. The difference is in the k. 1111 l-. Coott Hwy. six paper strips attached to is released. According, to ln,; Coro"• 11.1 Mir-Ph. 61J·19SO ,:m~a~nu~fa~ct~""'~'~th~e~str;;.;:ips~~w~ill;.:!:::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=::::=~ six drawings. Iii FACIALS Scratch a strip -or rub it hard with your finger, for that matter -and you can smell the appropriate a r o m a . Enjoyed by glamorous ~. TV 8tars at leading beauty apu. There's apple pie, pine tree, JOSEPHINE BLACK RE candy cane, gingerbread boy, • • hot chocolate and Christmas (714) 538-9551 -!!!:"-'"::" ~ orange. ,..,TI_ •• ·----- Actually, the strips haveJ~==~::::!=================i been used befo re in .advertlsemenl5 fo r martinis, among otMr things, which Song Writer Stages Return Song writer and singer Richard Froeber will m a k t a return engagement for members of the South Coast Club at noon on Wednesday, Jan. 6, in the T o wer s restauranl. ..., Froeber has entertained in the Savoy night club in London as well as hotels in Southern California. He has written musical productions for Las Vegas revues and is writing several &COrtS for motion pie· lures. · Yoga is 7~ ~a~ ,.._ A 0111 EAT I AlllT ON '711 Fiii INTRO CLASSIS Tllll.•111 .. J I". Jiii U:N ,.m,) Th11rs. 111tllt, J111 7111 U :N p.m.I AIM Sil. & Wt11. Mo'lllfll rEACE l YOGA CENTER 40 I , 11111 SI. ,malAe; YEAR-END WIG SALE! THISI All LIMITED T1Ml 5PICIALS -SO WI SUt;GIST YOU SHOP IA.a LY fOl THI llST SILICTIONll 100% KANEKALON WIGS ----, REDUCED 50°/o ••• Moa11 The TRAVELER The VOYAGER Slr..icll .Cfjl, Cotrfy Ir Htnl• c11rly ,., wltll l•-..1 11tct. Wltfl .. WI"'°"" ,.rf.-.4fr ._ lf"lfl' ...... The DUTCH BOY The LIONESS Th• 11fw IMt wllh Ill• 11111, sll•t9Y M<k, llfttl llKtll11f ll"TM tl'lll Wit, Ylll'U lov1 Ill E•fll< Hum1ft Hllr WIGS AH Slllll" 19" "''""'' ..... u.u Cul & SlylM 2'.H e Stml HIM·llM e MIM·TIM WIGS WIGS .... 39" 19.tS .... 49" ff.ts ,. ... SlylM ..... H "r•StylM .. 54.JJ Cut & 5tylH •f.tJ Clll a ltylM Jf .fS WIG SALON 250 E. 17th St., COSTA MEIA-541·J446 n11n. & Fri. till 1:00. hlly tHI S:JI Choose One of the Many Coast & Southern Federal Offices to Serve You: Art Linkletter Shows You a New Way to Beat Inflation ...Just Join Coast & Southern Federal Offers You These Highest Prevailing Rates: 'kMAIN OFFICE: 9th & Hiii, Lo1Ang1111es • 823-1351 WILSHIRE et GRAMERCY PLACE: 393.3 Wllshlr9 Blvd., LA.• 38&-1265 LA. CMC CENTER: 2nd & Broadway • 628-1 t02 1:: HUNTINGTON BEACH: 91 Huntington Center • (714) 897·1047 SANTA ANA LOAN StRYICE AGENCY: i905 N. M1ln St.• (714) 547·9257 -et SANTA MONICA: 718 Wll11li111Blvd.•39$-0746 'kSAN PEDRO: 10th & Pacltlc . 831•234t *WEST COVINA: Eastland Shopping Ctr.• 331-220f "1-PAHORAMA CITY: 8618Van Nuys Btvd. • 802--1171 '1t TAAli.NA: 18751 Ventura Boulevard• 345-t814 1'LONG BEACH: 3rd & loeutt • 437·7481 -tl()ptn S.lvrdryl -9 am to 1 p11t Dally Kovrs-91111to4 p111 ASSETS OVER $800 MILLION 67ke lnsltlem Oob With a $2,500 bll1nce In your uving1 account, you are ellglbfe to become •member. Subltantl1l UYlnga are mtllabl• wh111 purchalng many Items Including automobiles, tumlture, appllancea, Jewelry. Plus many fr ff 11rvlce1-money orders, safe deposit boxet, etc. COMPOUNDED OAl.Y AND PAID QUAftTEFILY.1 5.00"1°-5.13 O/o Pusbook; No Minimum. 5.25 o/•-5.39°/• Th!WO Month Certificate; No Minimum. 5. 7 5 O/o-5.92 O/o One--Ynr Certlncate; $1.000 Mfnlmum. 6.00"•·6.180/o Two-Year Certlflcat•i SS,CX'G Minimum. • Ett.ctin Anmlll E1'"1nr11 • INSURANCE TO $20,000 I 1 I .... .!-.: •• • • o lV~ILOT ' 4 W~sd'a), Dtttmbtr 30,.1970. ROU D TE,•·;·K . M'.. . . . . . . \ I I I 1HIN SJ.LClit MEATS ' LANO O'Fto>T ~ST. 3 3.oi_S 1· '· PKOS. •· • • 'KlBBlED BISCUITS W~LTIRKINDALL 26 OZ. 10 LI. 39' Sl8 9 '"'"'"'~~· ·-· .. G ..... G~·· PRICES EFFEC. THURS -WED !DEC 3151-J~N 6th 1522 Weum11ttter ll•d., Wen111ht1t1r ' . ' ' • • 101 Weu NlN tttnlh Street, Cesta ¥es• 2601 We1t \eYeM1111ih Strttt, So11t1 Alo j.175 l1h~r' Sttfft, C:o1oto b4 t•o •i~2 Edl11t e1" Ave1111e, H1111ti11~11 1 .. h 14111..lted Hill Afe11111, T1111iJ1 14112 MiMI' "'"IUll , Wlrtlttlei J4JO West L/11coht'Aff11111, ~Im 1100 •• ,,Celli"' A•efl11, Or...,. llJO ldinqer.A .. 1111, S~to .Alla t2JO.E. McFcuid.11 A~ .. So11hl Arnt 2110 Newport llf#., Co111 M .. a . 2564 W .. l.to•d-y, AMWi tlm \ -"'' .,..~••••··--·--•• .... _._.,.._,,.,.., ... , .• , ~, ,y '"~' ,,.-•~•"""' ,.., ,,.,,.,,,...,,,. I PllOT-AMRTISU W~. D«:tmber lCI, ·1970 DAILY .l'ILOT R ~.Government Book Store Sometimes Slow in Deliv:e:ry , · I I t 1 1-Dw Joi<t• t wntt tt tM and ·tl&td boca.,. bwnana opened s book tlort• outside -and •ubstltute the ap-Ctnler, Bostoo, Mua. OllJll!; Sin F'rmcb<o, ·c.Ji!. MIOI: ..._ • tt<llld<Ol,-ol .ScleOce,T.,•Ja;,ra111 .. , ,. rs..ea•••e.c ., Detumt& and machlne9 couldn't hve rip-the Wuhlngton area, and propriate address whenever r Room lM.1, 21t So. Dearborn 'Ibt 3 new boot Moft:1 will qid IClelUfte earetrt.W• •J lltl .. • 1lli st.· N1W, ' -..-..... 0 C. -) ud ped the envelope in such a plam to open 3 more within mention a booklet it available St., Chicago, Ill. I o.e O 4 : be locatlit in the FederaJ·Of-~ .... fer ... tdliMI. w......-, 0-C. -.,, ~ "-~ · ferocious . manner. Evidently the nett year. Unless It's an from the Superintendent of Federal Olllce Building, Room caner ..,W-ada.-JLT., •ttcJe eopy -fl• dHi< -11 -hr -ol IM· be didn't »have a ,..,. of· obscure publlcatlon yQll want, Documents il1 Wubil>ltoo-135, 601 E. 12th Sl, K...., flee BuiJdlnp in D·a I I a'• Ila _..., c.111. -,,_ NfrA. · .! a111111e. ,.. •elti,11• la • humor becaUle I never beard chances are good that )'(ltl 'll Stan your address to the Qty, Mo. MUii; Federal Of-Denver and Adlnta. "Keyt te c.rw. .. Seleece ...,,_ t.a •lati.t• .,_. --I -"'1 ,.. r..m him · again. e didn't gel fasler terVice by ordering Goverrunent Boot Store and lice Building, Rool)l-1015, :IOO '..tr '.A. "*' ud TMMo110 lm" It •, .. ltplc _..... *· ._ "' ..,.C ....... -IP bot eveo,retum·the pootage.) from the branch nearest you. continue with one of tliee: No. Los Angel., St., Los w blMloln,ity ol re11Mably la• .. la -. loot ...,...,,..I lilft MC~• Jtt. Dees tq~an effort to provide better Here ire the .addreues -J.f,K. Federal Bui Id 1 n g. Angeles, Callf. 90012; Room Dear Jeyce: Wlttrt cu· t .,..... career titer..,. U.. \lohune ti -11 Jqlbl :..--::= ~ ~ ~service. the SOD bas PLEASE CLIP AND SAVE Room G25, Gover•nment 1023, 450 Golden Gate Ave., 1et a Ilic.of,,_" •<o1t.·~nmp1W '1 .. Natltul. per11Mll Pl"';"~Mi•lll!l1, S.&.L, ltww,.. IOll .... Ka. ~ " Career Corner Becauae a number o f noden ha .. uked this que>- ·timl, and btnuse t b e ~ ol Documents ~SOD) II the IOllrce ol a wide •arlely ol helpful publloatiolll ;4111 eareers -and other topk:a ;:.. I'll elplain • mue about tJlll agmcy'1 operation. :~ 1be SOD lr the •les agent .. (put ol the Government Pr!n- , ting Ot'fke) for Federal :sovemment publlcaUons. As 'uch, the SOD receives 'flctween ....0,008 retUesta: dal- ly for literature. ·'rbe SOD 8tocis IOIDe 25,000 different •'tttles, wilb an inventory ez • • ~ 'Ii mllllon plecea " •literature. A. you can reallze, .the -., -ii.rues ol l1ICh :an operation are a Imo at .overwbebnJng. Richard Reppert, a c t i n g assistant to the Superin- teodf.nt, tells me the "turn- around" time (time between orders received and mailed . back) bat been reduced lo 'abaul3-U-itutedlo \ate u Joni u M months. However, H you don't get yoor ,Cirder in s .... u. undenland ':tbal a number of mllhapo .eouJd have occumd: the booklet you want may be 'lemponrily ouk>f..toek; your ·....i.r coold have been mlsilJ. tect.ed by you, « lncoJTecily bandied by a clerk at the SOD; er It could have gone utray in the malls, (On ihli' latter point -the ·malls -J am partlcularly sensitive. C.omplatnts from .ruden who .dldn~ gel their booklets mentioned in this col- umn teem to come in cydes, and -Uy there have been '.more than usual. 1, too, have bad llwble wilb tho mall& .lately -items coming back :di.ma.pd -w ev~ just a :torn envelope minul lbe ...,. . tenb. la fact, I ,,_ the P-ol one Jarp city, -. olfl<:e had tent me back a tom empty envelope, aaldnl blm wbeA be kepi the Dons Men in -Service Cout G a a r d Lieutenant Tenuct ft. Plc&eapel, lmband of the former Miss Diana V. Hogland ol Costa Mesa, is HrVing abolnl the .Coast Guard Cutter Winona bOmepoCled al Port An1eles, Wish. Morine Cpl. Darill L • TeMUI, aon of Mrs. Virginia · R. Tesdabl of 1JIO College St., -COSta Mesa, is serving in the ·Avionics stetion of Marine Flg!U<r Attack Squadron 235 at Kaneobe Bay, HawaH. He as s ists In the Maintenance ef dectrical and electronic equipment used in ·the guidance and operation of .alreralt. Marine Second Lieutenant IUcli•I W. Mtrrlt, 100 of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Morris ri 2111 Pomona, Costa Meu, was &raduated from Environmen~ al lndoctrinatlon School. Naval Aviatioin School Command, Pensacola, Fla. ·Airman First aau BlutJ" C. Aernn, son of Mr. and Mn. Blunty W. Sherron Jr., ~ Jndianapolla St., • Huntington Beach, Is on duty al Tan Son Nbut AB, Vietnam. AUman Sltemn, an aircraft maintenance spec::iallst In a an.it of the Pacific Alr Forces, itrevlously 11erved at McClellao AFB. ' . NayY Ueuttnanl ( J u n I o .r 'fl'lde) DlrrtD F. s.tok, son :'of Mr. and Mn. Victor W. Snook of 21382 Augusta Circle, Jfuntlngton B e a c h , has 'rtporltd lo the Naval School al lle&Jtb care AdmlnJstraUon al Bethesda, Md., u p o n rectlrinc I tommlsskln in the Medical Strvict Corps, Naval Raern. N•'l' Seaman Apprentice lllckle E. lAve, aon or Mr. and ~rs. J1mea R. Sells of .ao,o Neptune, Newport Beach. 4«11 graduated from basic tr1inln1 at the N1val nalnlng cGiter, San D1<10. MOTOIOI PWml'S "Ory Roasted" PUlllS llooilS Dl!llpr tsal ii process-. it~ llu. 63C llYllWT Batteries "C" Cell er ·r c.11 PachU 29c --~ rueplace IJgs , 4 > ' ' .. ' ''• I c ' " •• ~ ; • .. Mi s I ktill IN ..,_ .. 11&11 blot. -\::t,,i..- :-.1.39 r.r I -.... 11111! --~old ~--Slzt -1.77 lint u u. Sia - IOC.Llw s ....... 3gc Prtcl b Sic ,. ..... ... ·--2 ........ •11.11n1 .... ,. loc.1• 111-1.w OOC· 50C 75c Dana SPIAY Colognes "Ultra Feminine" .. HlllllA IUllmllll --Cr!onl with,........ -. flit crm lllat stnd ii all! MtJll witi lli01-..... ltlill .U ii -·-"" •ez.Cranl l1r.111MllliH ••• _ 1.•Y111t un"" '§! 5.111 2.00 •Tlh •21Clla . .... • fillr ~ 01BARRY Skin Care Items 2.1111 "Happy 11111'" SET :i::-i:=3 39 Slol 611os, -- __ ..., ---· . Stil foil( lltiel 5oz.h(.2M ClemiDt: Clalt lw.loc.UI 1.25 2 DO PIHkllil( 2 00 • . fl:,. • lllULYOll "Desert Flower" 3.00 UlaSet ...... ...,-.-.,. d •.cii.e I ll. .... UI mn Lip Riot Of Color _..., __ ... ,. .. -... __ _ s._O ; c fMllr. --Qllllll . ::=::::==========· Stil Polnid Clllorpzk 11 ~:_•:•111 2.00 ~1:~1.11 3.001 1.00 • -----.. a.II••• Cab' pidn ii I DtY1riil11 _ ... ,_._boy y . =f: 24•88 ! aponzer • Yitlnin "A" 2~000 unit!. fM M> gsc -.:....-, letq condil!OftS, • 111, 1.11 la'I rrtan1in B-12 rtbmil 11-12. 10 "'~ c A ~th po""'1 '°"" ot 69 1~1111Ws B-C811'1ex $lflr hill 2 39 Yllllll1 C, .... l.111Ws , HBl6s more tm 1 plloll of wal!r. Al~nigld: opmtio:1 witll automatic shut-off. les.l.N 3 99 #145 • For the Winter Days Ahead Yillllin E -···379 lllO- .... 4.7t 200'1 • Yeast ·& Iron TllLEI$ • • • l'w! 1 69 Brtwn Y611St .... 1.12 :zst'& • HHHlll!l!ll!I!. . "DOME" "Poe-it-File'' ms fir mu • rw t111s•N Bmlll Filt 121qe-. T11 De:Wclill File for my illCOIP!e ID: fHiila. Afflillmt File T1 ~rd persoaal 1ppoint~f$ an~ S'OCiil tngagements. S...ities Filt To reuird in.come for dfvide:Tds & ir.te1e~l lltdll cq.wr Fill for reei~. discount ~ ... stamps. etc. Newport lffch 1121 1m-. w ... 1.,, "-- Huntington leech Aff1111 a lrfftlll11nt Huntlnoton a.1ch · S,tl"f4••• ...... 1.19 ... ClllT1JH, Heating Pad I Tllree favorite htats. .,.. n :e.cover. TmY''Wind & Weather "WAWl"' "Cnsr' 1001ll PASIE s..n1ai.· flllallllo ,.., ......... 2:1.00 lceC.. ·- EleCtric ·alaaket . """llitictlly ldj.sts la cbHtes i~ -,,,,...... .. llloplic. --..--Tolllllo ' {llljlt "'!'Ill· 12.95 -· !Slilll- 13.29 I I • • '1J DAILY PILOT ~ Wtdntsday, Dtttmbtt .30, 1970 Rose Bowl R.esemble Lion, Lamb PASAOENA ~ The lion and the lamb, ilfifS 'W~y Hayes and John Ralston. Hayes, the unpredictable. sometimes Irritable Ohio Stale disciplinarian. and Ralston. the suave, personable coach · af Stanford, are as contrasting as the styles of their Rose Bowl-bound football teams. Their relations v.:lth wr iters. their Ideas on the game and their bowl record s C()Uld hardly Oc more different. Ha~·cs. a fanatic of the rushing attack. ha s never lost in three previous ll.ose Bov:l appearances. He is the winningest visiting coach in the bowl"s 57-year history. Ralston, a me n who lives by Ule pass and a pro..stylr offense, is working toward a seventh bow! game as a player and coach. He has yet to be a winner in post-season play. Hayes frequently fences v.•ith writers. Ralston. although \\'il.ry of ne1\'smen, tnakes it a point to be cooperative. Says Raider Boss Hayes. although he talk s of passing frequently in practice, k isn't fooling anybody. He's an advocate of the ground game. Age Called Beneficial -"Rushing yardage is er f i c i en t yardage," he announced upon his Big Ten champions· arrival here . llalston countered. ··we think we can conlrot the ball with passing." lie has Heisman Trophy winner Jim Plunkett to quarterback his cla im. Their practices have been opposite. too. Whe11 It's Just On e Gam e OAKLAND (AP) -"When mosl teams lose their top quarterback, they have to put some kid In the game." notes Oakland Ra iders coach John Madden. There won't be kids throwing passe! Sunday in Ba!Umore when ·the Raiders and Baltimore Colts play for the l\mericsn Football Conference ti tle. "The Coils are lucky, like us. Their ISCCOnd quarterback, Earl Morrall1 has 'ot.s of experience," Madden said Tuesday after his team's first practice t:if the v.·eek. , The JS-year-old Morrall plays behind 3'7·year-old JohMy Unitas. The Raiders have 4J..year-old George Blanda ready If Daryle Lamonica, 29 and an eight-year yeteran, needs help. The Colts' quarterbacks have been in the National Football League 15 years each. giving them a one-year total e•- perience edge over Lamonica and Blan- da. who is in his 21st season. "Thll; will be the 22nd gam e or the 11:eason for bolb teams. That's a long tiaul," Madden said. "But age doesn't hurl you when it comes down to just one game. It becomes e benefit becauae it means experience." All four qu.arterbac ks had good seasons ll nd the team passing statisti cs were r:;imilar. Unitas and Morrall combined for 3.005 ~ards and 23 t ouc hd o wn s, while l..amonica and Blanda had 2,977 yards and 21 touchdowns. "We're healthier now tha n we 've been 1111 year," Madden said after all squad members took part in TGesday's one-hour •'orkout. The Oakland coach. afte r watching Colts' game fllms. disagreed with some members of the Miami Dolphins who said Baltimore's runn ing attack was lreak. Sun Devils, Tar Heels Lock Horns ATLANTA fAPJ -Undefeated Ar izona State, lhe nation's No. 8 power. and ball control·minded North Carol ina col· lide tonight in the third annual Peach Bov.·I football game, a post.season event that has been plagued by rain the last two years. A day-long rain Tuesday soaked Ceorgia Tech's Grant Field, sit e or the B p.m. kickoff. but the weather oureau forecast fair and cool weather ror the ga me. Each or the tv.·o previous Peach Bowls has been played in rain. Bill Dooley, the Tar Heel coach \vho On TV Toni,,/11 Channe l 13 al 8 ----~ounts o-;; a punishing ground assault !ed by Ail·American running back Don \icCauley . would welcome more rain ~ slow down the speedy Sun Devils, ,,.00 have six <lffensive performers who iprint 100 yards in 9.8 seconds or better. "After thinki ng about their speed. I'm 1 more firm believer in tradition nO\V than ever before:• said Dooley. v.·llose rar Heels are a six.point underdog. While Dooley fre~ about speed . ASU ~oach Frank Kush, possessor of the second wlnningest record by percentage tn college football. says that speed won't mea n 1nuch if the Sun Devils can't zet the ball . Dooley's game plan it simple. "\\'e ha\'C to 1X>nlrol the ball. grind it out !lnd ketP the ball out of th eir bands." Doolry says. "When you Lalk about a ru nning game, you have to consider the linemen as well as the backs. Their offentive line will be the best we 've faced all year," Madden said. He called Norm Bulaich. the Colts' rookie running back. "a combination of Miami 's Larry Csonka and Jim Kiick, only faster than either of them ." Madden said he compares Baltimore·s defensive line with those of the Kansas City Chieft and Denver Broncos. "They're very physical," he said. SC, Br11in Five s Seek Hoop Titles The Trojans of Southern California ha ve developed a killer instinct while marching to eight victories without defeat and a No. 4 national ranking by The Associated Press. '·Last year we couldn't put a team away. but this year it looks as if we can ," said Trojan guard Pau l Westphal Tuesday night after host USC walloped ~1ichigan Stale 88-63 in the opening round or lhe Trojan Invitational at Los Angeles. The Trojan s meet Houston (7·2) to-- night in the championship ga me. The Cougars knocked Tennessee fron1 the un- beaten ranks \\'ilh a 68-65 first -round triumph . Tennessee, 6-1, and 1\1 \chigan State, S-2, will play for consolnt ion h<ln- ors. Ron Riley, USC's 6-8 center, scored a varsity high or 22 points and grabbed 17 rebounds to lead the Trojans. He'll face Houston's Dwight Da vis in the pi v()t tonight . • PITI'SBURGH -UC LA . continui ng its string of collegiate basketball dominance, won its seventh straight game Tuesday night. defeating persista nt Williani & Mary. 90-71, in the nightcap of the first round of lhe annual Steel &wl. Pitt surprised Duquesne, 70--M. in the first game be hind sophomore Ed Har- rison's 25 points. The Bruins started out strong and it looked like a ru n away as they zoomed to a 23·1 4 lead before William & rifary made its comeback. At halftime it was only 42·36. UCLA used a sort press on the Indians but W&ri1. led by the outstanding ball - han<ller George Spack , broke il \vith ease. Hitting consiste ntly from Jndians \\'ere led hy Steve 19 points. outside the Dodge v.·ith The Rruins. \\'iclding a tremendous ad va ntage in height. finally pulled away midway in the second half. Sydney Wicks led UCLA with 23 points. Steve Patterson scored 20 and Curtis Rowe added 18. While Hayes rants and raves behind Ohio State"s closed gates. Ralston has permitted spectators until this y.·eek at his team's workouts. It's like an armed camp at the Ohio State training site at East Los Angeles College. The atmosphere is relaxed at Stanford's practices at Long Beach State Co!lege. ~A clll!ter of Stanford players goes through the Harlem Globe trotter drill, tossing a foot ball around their hea ds and behind their backs. riteanwhile, there's no laugh ter or cut- ting up as Ohio State players plod through their patterns under the watchful eye of their crJSty general. Whicheve.r method you prefer, both are successful. liayes. 57, who some insist will retire after this, his 20th Ohio Slate season, has coached three national champions, three Rose ·Bowl winners and six: un- disputed Big Ten champions and anot h-er league co-chan1pion. Hi s two decades at Ohio State have produced 134 victories. 42 losses and seven ties. Ralston, 43, 011·ns seven successive no~ losing seasons at Stanford after an open- ing J..7 record in 1963. His Indians have won 45 games . Jost 33 an d tied three. Need Break s To Beat SF, Says Renfro DALLAS (AP \ -Dallas corner back Mel Renfro credits San Francisco coach Dick Nolan with helping hi m develop into a pre mier defensive back. but the Cowboy pass thief says. "All rriendship aside Sunday . , . We 're going after th is game lo win it." A nu mber or Dallas defensive backs playi ng against San Francisco in the National Football Conference title game in Kez.ar Stadium were coac~d by Nolan v.·hen he was on the Cowboy defensi ve st aff. "\Ve all thought Dick was a great coach," Renf ro says. "He"s the type or guy who instills confidence in you. If yo u get beat ~n a play: hl,.11 pat you on the back and say 'You'll get hin1 next time.'" Renfro says, "Nolan helps a defensive back keep his confidence. If you Jose your confidence ou t there -you've harl it. You lose the ability to concentrate." Renfro interce pted a Detroit pa ss with :15 seconds remaining to ice Dallas' 5-0 NFC playoff victory over the Lions last Saturday. "It's go ing lo take some brraks like !hot for us to beat the 49crs." Tlcnfro says. "I think this gan1r is even all !he v.·ay around. The teem !hat makes the fe\\•est major errors will win " Renfro says 49ers quarterback John Brodie has all the respect in the \\'Orld from the Dallas defense. "Brodie is exce llent at looking off lhc linebackers and free safet y, niaking ii appear he's going to throw to the • other side of the field and then co1nini:: OXNARD _ Funeral services were back and hitting you when you relax," Renfro says. scheduled Thursday for fo rmer world •·\\1e·1t have lo be on our toes·· pole vault record holder and 1924 Olym-Renfro draws the assignment of stop- pic Gold Medal winner Lee S. Barnes. ping swif t Gene \'iashington . Brodie·s Barnes. 64. died Monday night in a favorite target. 1 surgery. "\Vashington am azes me ho1v he gl'IS Vaulting for Southern <.:a I i for n i a , open so much.·· Rrnfro sa~·s ··Jn all Barnes won the Oly mpic v1ult after the fil ms I've st>cn , he 's alwa\"S in 11\r breaking a tie 12 reel. 1111J·inch end 7.0ne by him~elF. So1nc of ihc rred1t (See Briefs, Paae 13) "" 1nusl go to Brodie and his faking." . . ' ... l ' S o Thi s Is Basketball PE NN STATE PLAY ER (11 ) PILES ON IN 73·S7 LOSS TO NORTH CA RO L INA STATE. .. UPI T1l1~hol9 ,• DU KE 'S DICK DEVENZIO DOES BELLY FLOP IN 93-87 WIN OVER NORTHWESTERN. Cowbo y Passing·. W oes Don't l nip1·es s Nolnn SAN FHAKC!SCO (AP l -Toni Londr~• of the Dallos Co11boys Ls trying to 1ni1 ki· il so und like his tea m·s passing ~dt:i('k is in trouhlc . Dic.:k Nola n. the other he.ail l'O<il'h in Sundav·s !'\ation:il Foolba!! C11nf1·rrnet' ''ham1iionsh ip gan1e here , t<1kl's the t;1lk lightly. '"\\"hen you\'f' got all that runnini;!. you clon'I nrcd to pass too n1uch." Nolan said 'l\1esdav as the San Fran· cisco 49ers hl'ld t11Cir first practlcr or the v.·ee k. Landry said in a telephone intrrvirw that his No. I quarterback. Craib !'\lorton. has <1 sore right elbo\v and a cul on his r1pht hand. He said ~1 orto11 didn't thro\v Tuesday but planned to :.lart \()- da~·· But there's no1h111g \1·ront; 1·:i!h Ou.1111'.' Thom as and \\'alt (;arrison. tht' lcarl1r11: backs \n a Cn\1boy running a\lack tha t gained 2.300 yards this yrar. i\olan nr,lrd. The Dalla ~ roach sairl he h;1.!' hrcn call ing all offensive plays for the ter1m sincr its 38·0 loss to SL 11ccks i!!;O "lo lake the 1.lor!on .'' Louis sevC'n pressure off • The Cowboys ha ven't lost since. "I don't 11•ant In change things now,'' L:1ndry s~1icl. L.inrlry s;iic! \'oln11. his for n1 e r dclcn."1 \·e <issls lnn!, will have a cnach1ng advantage Sunda y, even thou gh their teanis are similar on defense . "Therf' are some ;1d\antagcs of know- in~ 1·:1ch othrr·s defenses . But kno1vini;.: the players is more ·important. That's 11:1crc Dick has the advantage:' he said. r\o\an. ...,,ho left the Co11·boys three years a~o. coached eight of the 11 current Dallas defensive starters. Lasl year. \\'hen the 49ers were 4·8·2. thr1 c:urpriscd the Co11·1>oys by tying lhPnl ~1-24 in the Cotton Bowl. :'\ol;ui said Tuesday that Doui:: Cun- 1dn~h<1111. a starting running ba ck most i r the season, probably \von"l be ready lfl reclaim his job Sunday. Lal\.ers Dt1el Phoe 11ix, Rip Bi1lls, 126-117 Pl lOE:N IX fAPI -The Los Angeles T~akl'J'S. according In their c0ach, will , try !fl go over a p~vchological hump- loni;.!hl when !hey play thr Suns in l'hn~·nix in ;i .\;:t\lonal Basketball Associa· 110:1 g:i n1c. "\\ l! h:ive the pC'r.!'onnel." coach Joe J\lull::incy soid Tu"sday night after a 126-lli 1ietor.v over Chicago al the J.'orurn. '"Oul' probltm i~ tha! \IC have played ---------- On TV Tonight Cl1a 1a11el 5 at 8 -------- l\\·o or three good games in a row and then a cou ple or bad games. "Once \\'I' ,C:l'I o\·er !hat hump, J think.. 11·e"l1 be all right... r The Lakcrs 11011· ha,·c \\"On threi ~tr:iight gilmC's. none of them close. Included 1ras a 128 110 victory over Phn{'n1x Sunday nigh1 at the Forun1. Ariwna Slate trimmed 10 st raight foe5 , Averaging 37.5 point.! per game. Led by Joe Spagnola, the Sun Devils led lhe nation in total offense, averaging il4 yards pe r gamr . UCI Guns for Tourney Title T onight ri1u!l.'.l11ey suid cvrrybody contributt~ l'l Tursd:iy nigh\"s vic tory, pnrlicula}19 \Vilt \h;imbC'rlain whn led the \\·ay with 34 points. "initlmida1cd tr'lci r shooters and blo<'ked qu 1tr a few shots.'' Jl•rry \\"c.!'t added 27 and Gail Goodrich 21 to round out a balanced Los Angeles · uffrnsc. The Tar Heel!I. m~nwh1le. averaged 411. with US ()f that comi ng on the ground. Spqnola passed for h991 yards and added 173 on tht ground. McCauley. a 20ft..pounder . broke the NCAA season rai;hing ma rk by running for t 720 yards for the Atlantic Coast Coflfe:.ence ltam. v.•hlch V.'On eight and losl three. J . O. Hill. 1 9.3 sprinter, heads the ASU receiver corps while fullb~ck Bob fhom11 and halfback ri1onroe Eley ~c­ counted for more than l .600 yards on t he ground for the Western Athletic Conference chlmpions. Although Carolln;i seldom passt.!'. quarlerback Paul ritlller compiled ~ 60 pertent completion mark, hilling Oil 48 of 80 passes ror 728 yards 3nd eight tou chdowns . Dy HOWARD L. ltAND\' Of lfl• 0.11, l"li.I 11•11 It's ge tting lO be a bit of an instant replay as UC Irvine and Cal State tFu1le rton) collide tonight for the cham- pionship or a basketball lourname.nt. Earlier this month they met for the Kris Kring le l.TOwn and UCl's Anteaters 1valked away v.·ith I 68·50 triumph . Tonight they sq\l are off at UCI for 1hc cro1,1,•n of the Kiwanis tourney. Tif)ll(f lS at 9, Irvine reached Uir. ch:impionship gainc for the. fo urth strniJ:hl season by defeating Cal Poly ll'nmona ). 92·7.'i, Tuesday night v.•ith :inolher outstandini; first half performance 1-'ullerton gained Its place opposite T1m T1f\'s UCJ squad v.•ilh a 72·66 \vln over Cal Poly !San Lui5 Obispo ) Tucsda,1·. Alex Omalev's Fullerton squad has run up a string of six :i;uccessive victories to bring the seaso n rl'cord to 7·5. UC I IS 7·1 ror the year. "I thought we played an av.·esome first half. It appeared lhat v.·c faltered a lillle in the second half but I probably mixed the kids up myself,"' Tift said or the effort against Cal Poly. "In a close game we ll'Ould attack the full court press they used but tonight 1,1,•e 1\cre indecisive and they gained a lillle ground.'' The first haU Tifl 11,as rcfe:rrin,i: to found ucr bombing 10 a co mmandin.11: 5~·2S advantage "'ith Phil Rhyne paving lhe way with 16 points. Troy Rolph scored the first basket And Hhyne addC'd a second . The Anteaters never trailed and the score I differen tial t·ontinued to v.·ldcn until ~n· tcrmis.sion. \Vilh 12 minutes left to pl;iy in !Jic second hnlf. l:CI held a 29·poiot f'rlge at 69·40 The aclion lurnerl into a Y.'1ld mclN' for the balanc(' of the ni ght "'ilh Pomon.1 rl'Ckle ssly pursu1ni;: lhc Antea ter~. forf'· Ing turnover~ and hilling t'Ons1s1ent ly from outside lo narrow 1ht fin11t marl!ln, The Bronros were n('ver in lhr gnmr but the rndini;: ~pluri::c nlade \hr hn,11 !'icorr more respt•ctAblr The AnleAters h11 a f~ntas11c fi3 S pf'r· cent from lhc floor to 34.3 for Pcn1l'nA in thr first hal f :inn for lhr A:in1r it wns 52.2 for UCf and 42 J f(Jr lhl' Brnncs . Irvine nutrcl>oundcd l'ornon.'.l, •1i.J~ v.·ith 61!1 ri·loore top man with 13 rollov.·ed by Gary Fox \\'tth 12. Pomona and San Lui5 Obispo meet for third place al i , Afternoon games found Chap1nnn and Northern Arizona playinA for seventh pince and Qcc1dc11tal and San Fernando meeting for the con· solatton ti\l('\ Occidental tr1 p1led /\rlzonn. 101-83. and San Fcrnaildo halted Chapman, 91-e..1. Tuesd:i1• UC 1,...1nt rn 1 ,..m•~• !Ill ll~~~r N.oi;;ue (l•rlo ·~ Ra.Ir• fl "'T "'' ~,,~ .... M•'~'"" C:('tl•t• 111•1~ Tot•·• 1-l••nl"'' 1.n.110 1.11,11, 1•1,llow J D!' ~'lltP•r>• J1 J IJ •l•RY•(I I J l !.t !)lllOv~n 111• 10•10•v• JO)lll •>,tDOt"O"' 01)~ i)1!?J&f!~• 011 ).l!'K"'" •0~1 I I J ltln1a. 0 II 1 II. "lllllCO"'..,. •11•1 ~\U htJ Tot1 1 ll t;I ') UC 11-.•nt ~. (•I l>Olv (l>Omo<lt l ?l In u_ther NB A ,c:ames. Boston edged · San Diego. 110·108. Philadelphia tripped Ruff:ilo. 12~·113, Detroit knocked o'f( 1\llanta. 99-97. and ~1il11aukec routed C\C \l'l;ind. 119·9'i. In the 1\rncr1l'Jll Raskc1bal1 Associa· tic.n . Cnrolina trimmed l,;tah, 113-110, ~fe111phis dn1med Plltsburgh , 109-10\, Den\er ripped lndian11. llS.106. Virginia nutscorl'd Tc,as. 1·13·120. and the Flori· dian:> nipped New \'ork , 91·90 (HICAO:O LOS A.NOit.iS lrv~ Vl•I' •• 1'1"11.1 ..... t ~ O• \',to·> "' r~~·, I I~~ ('.,~ , (ell "' c~ r .. ;~ ~ I I 9 I I 11 t~ ~! "llr"~" I ,. '' 1 •i 11 F.•i<~JO~ • OD I' 1 , I ll c~· .... tar•11~ ,, •·ll ;i., 1' ) 1 11 i..oo<l•lcft 10 •J l • · J M f l'lf1! U J.1 11 I ~I "-'tC••'t' I 00 ) J J 1 lllot.o•'°" ' 1).0 1 r r. "'""'' 1 1>-1 ~, o I · tl.'ltllf" 0 O·O O. 1 04 , lt ll•y ' ).) •• 4 :t ll I 1t 101~11 SJ '°'" 11' )I 1' 11 JI 111 t&• ··~·,·· .lf J4 ,. JO !16 a11•.i•· ~ , 1•· l o111 "'"" -Ct <~O~ )t, l.01 ·~~tlH 16 • J I • .· .. " _,. , ?!' . u. ,,,. '" ,. .. a " w " ,, f ·r. ·s h " d ' d I( d I· ), 1. a I· I " " ". ,, . " ' ' " •· '. " ' • ' • ' ' Wtdnt~ay, Dtttmbtr 30. 1970 DAILY PILOT .J3 BRI EFS ... (ContlDuecl ,from Pate ZZ) pe:fonnance with GleM Graham or Ca1teoh . S~orpions 56~53 Huntington ' Rolls Past .Jlames placed filth in the 1928 Olym· ~i.t Amsterdam and lben sel a world pple vauJt 'mark of 14-l'n that stood four years until another Trojan, Bill Gr~ber, vaulted 14-4~. • PORTLAND -Oregon State brushed . Pll!l Stanford, 82-75, Tuesday night and e;hied a shot at Oregon in the finals of tbe 15th atU1ual Far West Classic. "~gon limited Washington State to fli~}>Oints in the final 11 minutes and <1'iPe out with a 64-48 victory in the ~ semi-final contest. :c>fegon State tield only a 42--41 lead efll~ in the second half. Theo the I¥avers, with Sam Whitehead scoring 7 · of his 2.1 points, outscored Stanford ~9 .for a 64-50 edge. :Claude Terry, who also colletted 11 pPinls, then directed Stanford on a IO- J>!lln1 string which narrowed the OSU lead to 64-60. However, Oregon State went ahead 71-62 from there and was never again in danger. • ..,PASADENA -Backup linebacker Ken qixop or Ohio State suffered a broken Jl9se Tuesday in football practice for the Buckeyes' game against Stanford 1ft· the Rose Bowl. f,oach Woody Hayes said the 6-foot-3, •pound sophomore from Wintersville. Ohio, probably would miss Friday's game. Regular Ohio State windback Larry 1.ellna, who has been hobbled by a pulled hamstring muscle, ran a little and Hayes indicated Zelina would play against the Indians. • SAN FRANCISCO -Leon Burns, 11\l.1SCU!ar running back from Cal State tl;.ong Beach) joined the \Vest squad ~oSfay for the Shrine East-\Vesf football gitme Saturday. Bums, 6-1, 230 pounds is a replacement fof Willie Armstrong of Grambling, who 5ulfered a knee injury in practice Mon- day and will not play. Despite the unforeseen rival attraction of the National Football Conference cliampionship between the D a 11 as . Cowboys and San Francisco 49ers Sun- dciy, Shrine officials said their 46th an- nual charity game was already a virtual sellout. • Here comes Auston Carr . . . oops, there goes Austin Carr. Notre Dame's point-dealing wizard is the same model as last year, running aod gunning as good as new. The runaway Carr hit eight-ranked Kentucky with a SO-point performance a~d led,the 15th·ranked Irish to a 99-92 vtmry .in college basketball Tuesday oillbL Estancia Tops Rebels, 54-50 Estancia 11igh basketball coach Gary Carr used one substitute briefly for a three minute interval _prior to the ha1ftime intermission as the Eagles top- pled Savanna High, 54-50, Tuesday af- ternoon to gain the consolation finals or the Orange tournament. The Eagles used starters all the way with exception of Doug Confer's brief spelling of Lee Freidersdorf and the consistency paid off with four of the Cive hitting in dou ble figures. Estancia and Garden Grove met in lhe consolation finals this afternoon at 5. Garden Grove defeated Loara, 93·53. The tourney champ ionship will be decided between Orange and La Habra. Orange tripped Lowell, 77-7!, and La Ha bra defeated Foothill, 69-55. Tuesd8y 's Estancia victory was a nip· and-tuck affair from start to finish with Hank Moore putting the frosting on the cake after the final whislle. Moore scored on a pair of free throws after the buzze r to widen the (inaJ margin to four points . Etl111cl1 UO S1v111n1 !Ml Ore Ill ·-· T110m1t H1r1 Fri-•ldorl to1111 E111ncl1 S1v1n.,. It Ir pl ID l lO Jll I ' J II 1 0 J 1 • 1 J 10 • J I 10 C1mpt>e11 Roshon lllt9le O~l>eNI Gallup• Gl"lllteYlth Suk tr u 70 11 s• To111• ,,.,, by Q111r11r1 6 n 11 11 16 IO It II P! Ip ~ 1 s s 1 0 0 1 J 0 • ' I 0 • 1 s l l ll S I 3 11 I J D II 11 1 1•so . " 10 -'° By PHIL ROSS OI f'-Gally f"lltl Sltff Camarlllo'a Scorpions sneaked past the holl:t Newport Harbor Tars, SG-53, Tues- day night in a Newport tournament semifinal basketball contest shrouded by a cloud of doubt and controversy. The visitors from Ventura County meet defending tourney champion Monte Vista (San Diego) in the title game tonight at 8:80 while the host Tars are ticketed to go against Clark of Las Vegas for third place at 7 o·clock. Although the Sco rpions garnered thei r final margin of victory on a pair of tip-ins by burly (&.-3, 190) forward Fred Huston in the lasl 32 secon~. it was GWC, Gauchos Notch Win s; Bucs Beaten Golden West College, after a record- breaking 113·82 victory over San Diego Tuesday night, will battle Pasadena for the Riverside tourney or champions basketball title tonigh t (8·401 a t Ri verside City College. In other tourneys Tuesday involving area junior colleges, Saddleback blitzed Palo Verde, loo.82, in the College of the Desert tourney to reach the con· solation finals tonight against Citrus (7,30 ). And. Orange Coast dropped its 12th game in 14 tries, losing to De Anza, 76-53, in the consolation bracket of the Santa Monica tourney. The 113 points scored by Golden West was a tourney re<:Qrd, eclipsing the old mark of 109 set by Long Beach City earlier in the day in defeating Riverside, J09-ll6. Guard Chris Thompson led the Golden • West assault with 31 points while Brian Ambrozich hit 26 and Jim Anderson had 24. Golden West had a 55-43 haJftlme lead . In other Riverside tourney games, Pasadena tripped Fullerton, 87-75, and Palomar downed Imperial Valley, 93-54. Orange Coast could only hit on 30.5 percent of its shots in the loss to De Ania, canning 18 of 55. The Pirates failed to get a player in double figures. Saddleback rolled to an early lead against Palo Verde and steadily in- creased it as the game got older. Eric Christeasen led the way for the Gauchos with 2.6 points while Steve Minton had 25. College of the Desert (11·3) gained the finals of its own tourney with a 105-93 victory over Mt. San Jacinto. Desert meets LA Trade Tech tonight at 9 for the tourney title. Trade Tech nipped Barstow, 80-78, in the final two seconds. Citrus gained the consolation fina ls wilh a 100-56 victory over Victor Valley. Golll ... Wtll 111)) l •R 01 ... nu '• It .,, " ft II . " Ambroilcll " • ' u Alltn • ' ,. Arict.r1on • • • " l,Mcltl'nOfl I , ' " Graham ' • , • WlnGel ' • , " Tl'IOml>IOn " • ' " OMcltmore s ' ' " 81rn95 ' • ' ' Muri1v ' ' ' " ·-· ' ' ' ' 01(1 , ' ' ' Otllktr • ' ' ' PDWtll • • , ' Minn • ' ' ' Oul1umbl119 I • , ' Whirt!tld ' • • ' H1rllln11 • ' • ' ,_ , • ' • Pletl I • • ' ··-' I ' ' To111a .,,,lJ l\J T011l1 n " Ht lfllme: Gollltn w .. 1 .u. "" Ofego .i. " • s.tldl ... d1 110t) ,.11 "'"'' lt2, It It pl " ,, fl • " Cl'l•llllnlfn 10 • ' u Rob!nton " ' ' " M!n!On " • ' " .. .. " • ' " Ellw1rll1 ' ' , ' C1"'9btll • ' ' ,, G1nln1r • ' ' " H1rr!1 •• , ' " M...:!tf"IOl'I ' • ' " Ector • • ' • Lltlrt ' ' , ' DOmln!chlnl 2 • I , TDlll1 «1 1011100 To1111 " .. ,, l l Ht!t!lrne: S..ddltblck «I. P.io Utrdt Jl. Clr11111 C••rl CJJl Dt An11 11,, ,, ft .,, " " " " " (onrov ' ' ' • lllllQUfl , • ' " Lach tr ' ' ' ' NfilQHlk ' • ' " Oll!lt ' ' ' • Ttr~ba'IOYlt 1 , ' " Go1wllltr ' ' , , Mullltln ' • ' • Mclenoon ' ' ' ' <~• ' ' , " Holme, ' • • • Gcuvele ' ' , " Au~!ln ' ' ' ' Cnepm•n • • l • (•!• ' , ' • Wollect • • ' • w.1~ •• ' ' • ' ·~· • • ' • Shelby ' • ' ' Totol• 'c,!' 17 5J Tot•I• Jl 16 Ho lllimt. ... .... ol(I, O••nt• (O•UI 1J 27 ]~ Ca11ucks at LA LOS ANGELES -The Los Angeles Kings. who reached the zenith thus far in their National Hockey League season last Saturday nigh!. will try for two straight victories tonight v.·hen they host Vancouver at the Foru1n. Vilces Reach Semifinals With Last Seco11d Win COVINA -Marina High's rampaging Vikin&s are in the sem ifinals of the prestigeous Covlna High Christmas basketball tournament tonight following o come-from-behind 50-49 victory over i\1onrovia Tuesday night in l h e quarterfinals. Coach Jim Stephens· Vikings, now 8-3 for the year and possessors of three ~traight wins at Covina. fa ce San . Diego llP.lix in an 8 o'clock game at Covina. Helix blasted Covina Tuesday night, 73-47. for the right to n1cct 1.larina. lt was an uphill battle all the way for Stephens' crew and ii took a superb full court man-lo·man pressure defense In the final eight minutes of play to pt.tll It oUI. With t I seconds remaining, Kipp Baird got loose underneath. took 11 pass an put it in for ·1hc Orst and only Mar ina l~ad of the night . ?.1on rovia's bid lo come back \\'JS :rushed when a \\1lldcet pass sailed out of bounds and the Vikes ate the re~ maining time up. Baird was high point man for Marina ""ith 20 counters, on nine field goals and a pair of gratis shots. Monrovia led by as much as 10 in the third period before the pressure tactics of ~farina turned it around. Baird was the lead ing rebounder for Marina with eight, followed by Dean Bogdan 's five. The only other Vike In double figures "·as Slit McGuire, a senior returning starter from last year, who tallied 12. M1r1,._ Ufl ,, fl ,, ,, 1!11lrd f I J '° eun 1GS • llOfClen 1 S J t McG11!rt • 0 I 11 Tllwtm I 0 ) l Wl9IO"tr 0 0 l 0 ll•woldt o o 1 o $tllder1 t o 1 1 Mfn .. ~!1 I.,) It It ,i Ip St1vtn1i111 04nl•I I l J ~ !lltD~rd I 0 5 11 lll!ICl•tOl~~ Jtt~.o~ ~ J I ll ll Vlll 1 2 1 ' To1111 ,, I ,, .IO !ot~I~ II 5c•rt -1 QuU"l•rt \l t~ ., U -50 ·-· ID ID It u I• u a miXup in the official scoring which Ignited all sorts of verbal fireworks with 6:21 left in the affair. With the contest knolled at #-44 at · the outscl of the fourth quarter, the Sailors got a pair of quick scores on a 15-foot jumper: by Larry Gentosi and a breakway lay-in by Taras Young 111 up the count to 48-44 in Newport's favor. However, a young Newport student working the electric scortboard got con- fused in the shuffie and a check of the official scorebook was ordered by the game officials. The scrutinizing of the scorebook was completed with the official scorekeeper 1another Newport stude1111 having the Tars ahead by just a pair at ·10.<l·I Coach J)a\e Hagey of the Blueinc~t'!S was especially nustered upon conclusion of the strange happenings. lie cornmented to the D'l\ILY PILOT. "f'n1 lodging an official protest aboul the game but there's really nothin.ll that ca n be done s;bout it." I lagey confronted Nev.'porl ;1thl~lic director and tuurney <·hainnan Jules Gage after the contcs! and stat(<d ern- pha tically, "I won't pL1l n1y te:itn on 1hc noor to1nornnv ( \Vcdncsdav) unlrss the official scorer is replaced by an adult (Hagey n1entioned an adult chou.:c of his o\.\'n by name)." Gage replied , "we already have an offlcla l scorer and we·rc going to keep thl' same une." Young and Gentosi pn ced the Tars seo rlng column 1vith 25 and 11 markers, wt11le l!uston led Camarillo's winning e££urt with 17. Cfn11rlllo UO MIWP&rl H1rMr !U) ,, " " " " " • " H11111111 ' , ' " K11mtr ' • ' , Pltlfl ' , ' • (ll~C ' ' , • • s .. i.1n ' • I " Swlf~ • ' l ' &t~ftt! ' • • • YoU11q .. ' ' " M~f.ltmc•y ' • ' " Gtn''"' ' ' ' " M~•u~u • ' • , Mtll.•~nt1 ' I I l I "'ltY • • ' • T~!~I\ ~ " " • T0111t " " " " ~cert oy Qu1rlt11 (4mU•llO " " " 14 -St. M1-..1111n HlrbOr " " " . -" DAtl1' ,ILOT ,hoto bJ l'lltl<k O'Donntll BATTLE FOR REBOUND -San Clen1ente 's Chris Ellinor (4 1) and Mater Dci's Rick Kniffin 1321 battle for rebound durin_g acti on in Rancho Alami· tos tourney Tuesday night. San Clemente's 1'itons .gained the tourney Jinals \I ilh ;.i 59·5l victory. Other players in1.:ludc San Clcrnentc's Jlo\vard Val orc 1 ~5 ) and Steve Peter (13) along with Mater !Jei"s Greg Green ~20J . Football Odds Fa vor 49ers LAS VEGAS -Texas f!> a i -p<tint fa vorite in the Cotton 8011·1 an1I Ohio State a 9-point choice in the !lose 11011·1 in latest odds announced Tuesday by Las Vegas bookies. Here arc the point spreads C'stablishe d by the bookznakers for this week's Fool· ball games: A1nerican Football Conference cham- pionship .Ian. 3 Bllltimore -Oakland I lfz uver Baltimore. National Football Conference chan1. pionship Jan. 3 San Francisco -San l'"rancisco 31'.! over Dallas. Peach Bowl Dec. 30 Atlanta-Arizona State 6 over North Carolina. Astra-Bluebonnet Bowl Dec. 3 J Jfouston-Oklahoma 2 over Alabama. Sugar BO\.\'I Jan. I New Orleans.Teri· nessec 10 o\'er Alr Force. Cotton Bowl Jan. l Dallas-Texas 7 over Notre Dan1e. Rose Ilowl Jan. t Pasadena -Ohio State 9 ove r Stanford. Orange Bowl Jan. I Miami-Nebraska 6 over Louisiana State. c:ator Bowl Jan. 2 Jacksonville, Fla.· Au burn 9 over 1.1ississippi. A nderson, Valore Spark Tritons to 59-.51 W in Bv CllAIG SH1':F'F or lht D•ll¥ '!JOI ,,.ti Sparked by so1ne fflnty C1U1sid~ shooting by t:raig Anderson and llow:irrl Valore, Snn Clemenl e High's ba~kethnll team gained the finaL'I nf the Han<·hn Alamitos tourney Tuesday night \\1ith a 59-51 decision over tough Ma ter Jk1. Coach John BRker's San Clt11nente Tritons face hosting Hancho Alan11tos tonight at 9 for the tourney champion:;l1ip while ~1 atcr Dci duel s Western for th!r"il place al 7. Ranchu tripped \\"<'Stl'rn, 89·79. Anderson and Va1orc combined fnr 40 of the Trllons' 59 points. Anderson confined his shooting to !lie outside. connecting eig ht times 1n f(j tries. Valorc canned nine of 1:1 attempt~ (60 percent) with an assortment of shots from in close and along the baseline. While the Triton offense was hlltin~ at a 42.9 percent clip from th r field 124 of 56). San Clemente's m:tn·to-m:111 defense was playing one of Jts bc!i t games. San .Clementi' guard Pete Sellers hel d the Monarchs' J)ave Kiley we1t J11 ehL•c:k. Kiley1 who hit 20 points th e night before :1..,:1inst IA·~ l\la1111tos. \1·as held to just 10 bv ~tilers, six comini: in the last quarlcr . And the 'l'ri ton lriu of 6-7lf: center Slcvc Kalnla :ind forwards Val ore and Brad ~1cCuslin cnnlro1cd the boa rds :1g:1in~t the sn1allcr Monarchs. \',11th ~1ater Dei starting slow !the ~lon· nr<·hs hit only llvo of 15 shots in the OJlf'ning fJU;1ricr), the 1'rilnns zipped to an (':irly lend vnd maintained it through the rC'st of the going. C'onch .Jrrry Tnrdie's ~tonarchs made !11n ;1t!l'n1 pls lo take the lead. ;\l1d\1·nv lhruu~h the second quarter r.'1a1f'r Dci neArly caughl !he 'frilons 11~1-181, but buckets by Valore and Kalota put the steady S::in Clemente club out of d:ingcr. Dtl Ull sin Cltrntnl1 Utl Y~lnl~ f rn1 l'emllf'r 0 ll:ll~v +;•ltOft•I 'lobt•l• N~n•v Gf~VI! To!~•t I• II •I ID ' L l I "°'cC&sll" t 5 1 n v~lort I 1 1 J Kftlcl• l A l !O An<!Praon O 1 1 1 Stilt" 7 I ;1 S 9Autr 1001Ptt•r 1001C<l!>, It 11 17 )I To!911 ~co,.. by Q111r1t•1 1.\11•• C<·• San Cttm~· t• I IS 11 i; l• 1• It Ir DI I• J ? ~ I • 7 1 '° ' 0 1 ~ I ~ I :IO l 0 1 1 0 l I l 1 0 0 1 0 n I 0 )I I! 1J St Foe, 72-61 By RON EVA.NS Of lflo1 O.llY ,111! 11111 Forward Steve Brooks popped in 20 points in the second half to paef! Hun· tington Beach to a 72 • 61 verdict over Los Alamitos ln the consolation bracket of the Rancho Alamitos basketball tourney Tuesday afternoon. Coac h Elmer Combs' Huntington crew faces Magnolia tonight at 5 for the ' coosolation title. , Huntington won the game at the free throw line, converting 26 of 38 charity tosses, including 17 of 20 in the crucia l second half. Brooks went to the gratis line 1 l times (a11 in the second II minutes) and came awa y empty-handed only once. Hun tington did not take the lead for good until the closing minute of the first half . After the lead see-sawed back and forth through much of the firsl and second qua rters, the Oilers zi pped to a four . point edge at the half (33 ·19) on a five-point spurt in the closina: minute. An eight-foot jumper by Brook.a, a charity toss by Scott Whitfield and Garth Wise's 16-fool jumper gave the Oil City crew all the impetus it needed for a second half blitz. In contrast to its 63--62 ]()IS.! to San Clemente Monday, Huntington took only the percentage shot against Los Alamitos \ and as a result controled the tempo l or the game. The Oilers built the margin to 15 (71}-55) before the Griffins whllUed i~ lo 11 at the buu.er. ' Hunt!ntlon 1n1 LM ALlm!1'H 161) l rook• '10 1 71 Quin" ' O J 11 Tnorn.H 6 S 1 11 ll1 .. 1r 7 ' C 16 Wor11lY J 2 l I 111 ... l1rd I I S 1 1 WIN Jl l7R"1rulo; 13 1 11 Crunk 1 71 11Mllltr JJ C IJ wnn111111 o 1 1 l F111nt1r O f 2 O Ordw11 0 0 2 f J1dt1"" 0 0 I I Tron19tltr 0 l l I Totel5 l J 11 u 72 To1aJ1 Sc•,. .., 0111rttr1 Hur1!lr1oron B11cn rt u 1~ lOl A1tmlto1 ll 16 JI Edison Falls ,,,,,It 15-77 , .... , To Magnolia Five, 68-63 By JOHN CASS 01 ltt9 0111)1' l'lltl Iliff Edison lligb basketball coach Da•t Mohs is a patient man . With the majority of his players I~ volved in the ClF AAA football playo[fs. Mohs and his basketball team got off ; to a slow start in "the early going or· the 1971}.71 campaign. And now that Lhose (ootball players have joined the cage squad. the Edison · coach Is walling patiently for his team I to jell . "I just hope we can win this game : tonight, so \.\'e can get one more in befOre the start of league pla y,'' said Mohs prior to Tuesday night's battle with f\1agnolia in lhe coMOlatlon bracket of the Rancho Alamitos tourney. But Mohs didn 't get his wish as the Chargers fell lo Magnolia by a 68-63 count and were thus ousted from tbe tourney. Except £or about seven minutes. the Chargers played fairly consistent basket· ball. But in those seven minutes, Edison wa s limited to just one free throw. Leading 10-8 midway through the first quarter. the Chargers went cold, falling lo score a point for nearly three minutes. As a result, ~1agnolia sprinted to an 18-10 lead. But Edison came back and tied the score at 31·31 with five .&lralghl points in the closing 35 seconds of the second quarter. Then at the outset of the third quarter the Chargers again went ice cold, failing to score a point in the first 2~ minutes and only one point in the first lour. Alter Magnolia had vaulted into a 59-48 lead, the Chargers made a gallant attempt to catch up . They narrowed the margin. to two (63-61 ) on a jumper by Bill Thomson with a minute to play. But the Chargers were forced to go out and get the ball and the result was fi ve Magnolia free throws in the closing 43 seconds. Mltfltl\I uu Stewar! Ricl\lP Miii"•~• llllCllvnol< Holo11t! .o.demiOn lllllPrl• W••I•• It ft pl I• ' ' l 12 7 ) l 17 5 • $ u ' ' l • 2 l I 1 0 , 0 2 l 0 l ' 0 , 0 2 lalol1 21 11 )I .. t!•l ... 1131 Wfl9ht / H1l'IM!I I Fl111tr ,,,.,,_ Mfll1 ·~ Smll'll Pt11ltl-R1Ymoncl Tol1l1 I• fl •I I• 3 7 1 13 ' 2 0 1 • ' t 11 J ' • 10 0 J 2 1 7 0 0 • 0 C T 4 J 0 1 • 1 I 0 I lfU 14'3 Me sans Rout Victor Valley, 83-59 By Bl.LL. ~1c8RIOE 01 1t11 CllllJ 'il•I Stell Costa ~lesa's ~1ustangs zipped to lhei r second l4'in of the current campa!e:n Tuesday v.·ith an 83-59 runaway deci'.'lion over Victor Valley in the consola tion semifinals of the ninth annual Ncwporl Harbor invitational basketball tourna· ment. The Mes11ns were slated to take on Oceanside for the consolation title todRy Ol 5:15 p.m. Oceanside earned the right to n1ccl J\1csa in !he con!'lo\:iUon finale by stO!ll>ing San Diego County foe I.a Jolla, 80 • 71 In another Tuesday battle. Coach Emil Necme's ~1ust<lngs pla~·cd 78·55 with 2:06 left in the game. aggressive defense l>u! or Mesa's 2-3 Quick little ~1ustang playmakcr Chuck zone setup and It paid orr dearly 111 Rridgcs !S-1 1) accounted for H pair of the lopsided final 1nargln over the buckels in the string and was also Jackrabbits from Vlctorville . cr<'d1Led with assists on three other field Costa Mesa led all the way from l{oals Jn 1he abbreviated, but fruitful, the opening mlnules of the COlltCS I to s!rl'ICh. the end ftut the ~lustangs •lULn<ldiil'd The "·Inners. 11hn shol A respcrtoble the Jackrabbll.s \.\'ilh a quick spurt of .. ~6 7 percent frorn the floor, had a sri-38 II st raight tallles in the mkldle of the ·t·c'r<e nn 1hc bonrrl~ \.\'ilh Doug MocLcan fina l period. ~2[1/ Alan ~1ourr 1101 :ind To1n Sam pson Seemin(l:IY not con t<'tll 111 ~1! on a 1101 actln~ llkt• huni;in vacuum ctenner!I fairly sale 65·53 advant uge with fi\·1• Jn th::i! c:i tcgory. minutes remaini ng in the affair. Kcu mr's Thr 11hnve lrln also ca1u1ed 16, 13 boys quickly pocketed the II consct·utl\c 1-1nd l!l points tn J.:(1 along with 11 and markers to raise their prtmium up tu 10 point perform11ncts by Bridges and Jon ~1archiorlalli. Rick Young came off the bench lo chip in wilh nine important points for f.1esa while Victor Valley Wll pact$f by Armando Quinones and Rich Navarro with 15 each. Victor V1llly Ufl Cnt1 Mtu flJ) ... -. Nl•lffll ••• Z1mudtt \llllt11~ M~'~r La"'y~r Sllt•">YOOd (>rlt• Tr>om•1 loiti, .. ti .. " .. ti .. ., 11 IUMltlMll I I 11' • i 2 U M1rt1111fill!l C C • lt tJlf1Mor1 SJllJ 1 1 I J 51""*' & J tit 12o ••r1c1tM S t tll 1101Allln llJf lfJJR ... flll 10f?Ytullt tllt ,,,, •... , ,,., • 1 1 ' )1 11 11 ff 'TO!lfl M 11 U U klll• ., tv.rtlA Voc~r Vlllty It ,. 1J II -tt (Otlf Mt11 U U It JI -I) • -'- I ' •' - • -- .. I 1 · i r I I I. r ' ! I - -" I i l I t~ . l • ~ J 1'. OAJLV PILOT \Yt4nttdQ, Otct1nbff JO, 1970 Co~otes Blitzed -~ g Fountain V al"ley Bids for Title By ROGE R CARL.SON ot '"' ~rw ~iw s11ff Fountain Valley If i g h's Barons. with a press that has forced 61 turnovers in the last lwo outings, go after the championship ol the fi!Lh an- nual Sanliago High basketball tournament tonight at 3:30. The Barons of coach Dave Brown earned the right to meet host Santiago in th<! finals arter demolishing Buena Park _ Tuesday, 87~, while Santiago was beating Tustin. SIHO. MV Posts 66-53 Win It was a makeshift lineup of reserves, paced by Craig Citro with 23 points, that gave ~1ission Viejo an easy 66-fll consolation round victory over the Sunny Hills junior \'arsity Tuesday afternoon in the Brea-Oiinda basketball tourna· ment. The Diablos of CQach Pat Roberts meet Lutheran High at 6:30 tonight for the con· solation championslli.p and vie· tory wou.ld glvt ~1ission Viejo its ~ straight consolation title at Brea. It was an Impressive display of power by Fountain Valley in routing the Coyotes as first a man-to.man full court preS! put the Barons into a IS..polnt lead (27-12 ~·ith se'Jen seconds left of the first period) and then a zone press in the se- cond half took over after Buena Park appeared to have the former tacllc solved. Tonight's confrontation with Santiago. \\·hlch ha s ~·on this tourney for the past three years. is the first ever oc- casion that a Fountain Valley team has made the finals in any tourney during the five year history .Qf the school. Brown·s -crew bas rolled to an 8-3 record in setting itself up for the championship showdown and as in most cases. it was the combination of Ken Shibata and Dave Lynch that did the most damage. Shibata's play caused Brown lo remark afterwards. •·He·s the best 6-? player in the county -at both ends of the court" Shibata repeatedly tallied through the Buena Park zorie defense and led all players in scoring with 24. Lynch added 1D 1-S -the Barons rambled to a 21-poinl lead while still In the third period. Bro~·n filtered in h i s reser:ve&· during the final five minutes of play . Buena Park's ace shooter. ' Lions Zip To 70-59 .. Victor}' Westminster High meets Kennedy this afternoon (S o'clock) for the consolation title of the Ufth armual San- tiago High basketball tourna- ment following its come-from· behind 7()..59 victory over Bolsa Grande Tuesday afternoon. The Llons, 19&9 Sunset League champions. appeared unable to shake off the pesky Matadors in the early goings, but a second half surge spark- ed by the three·point plays of Terry Meisenheimer and Eric Southwick turned it around midway through the final 'period. Coach Don Leavey's Lions had managed a slight lead after three quarters and then, with a man-t~man pressure defense forcing Bolsa Grande to cough up the ball repeated- ly, the Lions struck with a fast break offense that put them up by 11 with 4:02 re- maining. In all. Bolsa Grande com- mitted 25 ball control errors and along with board strength, Westminster was able to get off 69 tries from the noor -IS more than the Matadors. Jol'"I"" Bloktlt¥ Mf>ndo11 B••H --5rnltll ..... ~111mln11er lltl 8r1m•n MelHlllll-I ...... $outrlwlct. L•nllH lort11 e11;. ""•rnt ·~· f' 11"9 lltfl•t~ Foni.r f'lnle1 10"11 ••It• or1nM un ,, .ff ,, " 1 0 J ' ' 1 l ' 0 0 J ' 0 0 ' 0 ' ' l J ' l ] 1 ' 1 ] • 10 J 1 75 , J ] • ' 0 2 11 111111110 ""'''' ' 6 ' 11 l 1 J 7 l s • 11 1 3 l s l 0 ' J ' ' J '' D 0 1 0 ~1t72l9 ~A~'"e_~ ~ ' . AVOID STIFFENING LEfT LEG ON DOWNSWING \. Bel ieve tlie old ge>if phrase, 11Hit against •firm left side," has misled many players. By following this advice, many golfers tend to stiffen the left leg during their downswing (illustration f 1 ). This causes topped shots as well as ones that are pulled left. The knees should remain flexed as they pull your arms and clubhead back to the ball (illustra· tion #2). Only after the ball has been stfuck should the left leg begin to straighten; . I think it would be better to call for a 11firm left arm,'" or a "firm left wrist," ••• not a "firm left side.'' "HITTING THE IRONS"-offers SOiid trip, staric• 1nd ••ln1point· ers to boost Iron play and lower 1olf .wrul Sand 20c and • stamped, return 1rN1lo1>1 to Arnold P1lm1r, c/o thi1 paper. Prep~ JC Basketball Or1n11 lftvll1lll1111I CWln-'' eretk1IJ Lt Hailr• "· Foomlll J2 Ortllfe n. Low111 71 ~--.... -, ,.{.r AA Selections County Trio on . All-CIF Sonora's Brad Hillman and Jack Fielding were accorded second t.eani All.CIF AA honors on the United Savings. Helms Athletic Foundation football team of {970. JOining the pair or Sonora stars from the Orange League is Saddleback High 's Pat Pryne, Player of I h e year laurels were earned by L a r r y Mwhinskie of CJF champion Temple City. AA l"oa. l"llftr, Sd1IOI E 0'8rl1n, Ctnlwt ll E Per~. V!(:lor V•lltV T H1111n, Hamal T Wt~tnl, Gttnn T P1ck1rcl, Wl11on, L I" G L10ll, Cenlr•I G Glotr, e 1 s.tundcr C Gamm, ltmPle Coty LB WoOd, Worlur<on LB P1Peclokll. Mlr1 l15i. JV Basketball klft!Ntly CHI lfll 5aft C...,_I• Hvff !Jl F fl9J Hcrffnwn Dll'•n (ll · F (OJ For.min N.clorn (6l C (61 KennY RIY 111 G 10) WlllOl't Ll1t1r (2) G (fl Yodlr kor!ng tub" Kennedv-T~ 1, Jorclln 1. $1n c11manl&--01roan 3, lllrH• 1. Helll!m•' 51!1 Clemen!~ 1t·16 M1rl ... (UI C6JI KtltHI Ada.mt U) F l•l Hen<Ntwn BIU (U F 1111 Sn-t Sw1 n11or1 C1l C C14l Gllbtrt ll0t11ft (11) G (lJI HelfMr SPll«I no G Ill BtnlliOdlel korlna tubl' Mtrlnt-Forcl !. W•• -6. K•tell•-ShfPnercl '· H•lrtlme: M¥ln1 ll·ll R1line 4 WhMll Machine 4 Drun\I Overhaul 4 Whffl CyllM1r1 »,000 Miii UMOl\Clllleftll C1111r1 .. 1N lNOT ,.RO.RATIDI , $39.95 VW SHOCKS ................ $7.95 Installed 100,GOO mile guaranteed {not pr~rated), \VE DO AU. FOREIGN CARS. e DISC llAll SPECIALIST e COSTA l!.ESA STO RE ONLY Jiil Horbor 11 .. 1. 549-4022 ., 549-2259 651).13 plus 1.711 Fed. Tax and old Ure Foremost GP Lutheran defeated Neff. 74· 47, to gain the consolation finals. Jn the championship bracket, Servile defeated El Dorado, 81~1. and Sonora lop. peel host Brea-Olinda, 74-611. Servile and Sonora play at 8 for the championship Y:ith Brea-Olinda and El Dorado vying at 4: 30. Steve Hite. was held to 10 points -with his first bucket coming in the third period. Fountain Valley never trail- ed and ended up ripping the nets on 31 of 72 tries for 4.'1 j)f'rcent in its r a s t break attack. sc.,,, llY Q~1r11n Wutmlntter U 17 11 11-JO Bollf Grt'llle IJ 21 11 14--Jt EtltMlt S4, 51v1n1111 511 Gtrclen Gt0ve .-:>, Loi•• SJ St •flt .. TIUr!lt,,...,1 (Wl11J19"' er1,k11l s~n!l•to !o!I, lu1lln .e F""n"ift V1H•• 17, lluen• Park 6! (Ccrnl0!1tll"' •••cktO We1rmlnsltr to, 801'1 Gr•nde 5t ir:ennft!V !O, Unlvtfllh .., with 4 ply polyester cord Mission Viej(l held the lead from the opening basket. Roberts said he used the reserves for a dual purpose. First, he felt his regular starters had not played to their potential in openin g tourney action with Servile and second, he felt the reserves could stay with the sunny Hills junior varsity. In addition to Citro's o u t s t finding performance, Richie Price (13) ·and Jeff Masterson ( l l) aJso scored in double figures. Ml1llH 11'-l• CUI Mhcr1ll Noronlndl" ,_, '"" lludlM!l1 M..ilet.IOll l"rQ .,,,_ E:V111$ Hebtlt lotllt Mi111ofl Viele SUM~ 1-<llb JV " . ' 0 ' . ' . " ' ' ' . ' . ' • • ' . . ' 21 10 1• 1i 1! 1J ' " •' ,. ' . . ' ' . ' " • • . " ' " ' . • • " ~ ·~~ ·~~ Tom Kovacich wa.! the lone threat for the freeway League representatives. canning 18 before fouling out 'vith six minutes left. F..,fll•llo Valli~ 1111 P Gerber G. Ger~r Ctrrl•r~ FOOi• Sonlbit!• ·~· ·-· W•lke<' Rtkl•r K rlo.!lnt! LYl'ltl'I Pltt1 To .. !1 Gtll .. cr Mtrtvlc/1 Hiie F1rrier C•ntl•ld ICCIVICldl CH Ptrkln• R001bavtn l crltl' F.V. ,, ft •• t• • 1 c 10 l 0 l ' 0 I 0 1 1 II I ' ' 6 • ,. D 7 I ' ' 0 0 j I 0 0 ,. 1 0 1 j 1 l • • 7 ' J '° ' 4 1 ' 32231'017 ~ftl Part IUI ,, ft ,, ,. 0 0 l 0 1 I ' S ! 0 I 10 I l 1 J 4 I 0 f ' ' J 11 ' l l J s a ' 10 I I 0 l 161111 65 " Sc~• ho Ow111u·t Bu•nt Ptrk ,, 16 7, ~1 u ll 11 1~ Irish Press Too Much For University, 50-43 University High's youlhful Trojans dropped out of the fifth annual Santiago High basketball tournament Tues· day night after an early show of power against Kennedy High 's Freeway Le a g u e representatives. Coach John L>riscoll 's seniorless Trojans stunned the Fighting Trish by secu ring a seven·point lead at the half, 3fter trailing 7-0 early in the issUI' and not hilling the nets \\'as 2fl mere attempts than Driscoll's chaps could gel off -primarily because or 28 turnovers. The third quarter press by Kennedy accounted For a dozen Uni miscues and !he ~·Inners parlayed it into a 21· 10 effort to offset University's early edge. University returns to action Tuesd~y against Ambassador at Foothill High in a 7:30 p.m. game. from the field until 34 seconds remained in the fi rst period. w.1~,, llftiVW'lifl !IJ1 lg II pt t' o O I o 3 ] 4 ' • j 1 11 l ? l I ' 1 ' 1' Ul!l5•J A throttling full court press Miter Mullln•( by Kennedy. howe'Jer. took its ~!mon toll in the second half and ~tvftrt To!tl~ the Trish rinally captured the Kenntt• 1501 consolation Liff. 50-43. Krnworth• ~' '; P: ;j University had shot to its :~~! ~ ~ ~ : halftime lead ~'ith a balanced Fr~ l l • • attack along \\•ith the abilily ~w~' ~ ~ ~ ; to contain Kennedy's sQQOting 10111' S(w• llw 0.11rtenn 1 11 511 arsenal. unl••rtllv s 11 10 11-•J In all. the 1-2-1·1 and 1·3-1 ~'""'v 1 • 11 IA--511 zone defen~es of the Trojans allowed Kennedy only 20 good ones In 71 tries -but lhat Artist Five Triumphs "°"'ti T""~'"' IWI""'"' anocketl Servitf II, El Dortdo ti Sonor• ''· ll•f'! if cc""""•".., •r•tktll Lu!l>u•n 1•, Nell _, Minion Vldo 6'. Sunnv Hlllt JV J.t c~11111 tnvlt1t111111 CWlnntrt' ••Kkll) Onterlo t1, LI Qulnte l7 PARAMOU~.,. -Laguna c1 • ..-1 .,, 'T...,1111c1ty !a Uo!ar.cl n. P1cl!lc1 62 Beach High's Artists survived c 1>ut1 'Jl111 .,, Chklo '° an overtime scare f r o m 1c1-itti... Bl'ffl!ttl Bellarmine-Jefferson H i g h ~:_ H~;1,' :~!ci":"'W." Tuesday night and went on G1nnh• "· Du•r1• " h Lt Ct111cll .H, Mor1lcl111" IS to post a 57-52 victory in t e c1v11111 T111,_oit consolation bracket or the . 1w1nner1• ... MUii . h I .1 1. I Edo-ooct 61. "1N<llnl '61 Brethren Hig nv1 a 1ona w. Ccr¥1n• SI. M11n111" • basketbaQ• tournament. M.1rln1 so. Mcnr,,..11 4' Victory gives coach Jerry Hell~ ?c~':..•11,1e111tl Fair's Artists a st\ol at the Muir n. South Peitden• '° C 0 n' 0 lati.00 championship !looco lech .,, a111 Gardefts '3 Ctll>f<lrtl 61, LI S.111 61 Thursday night against Len-0om1 .... 1111 Y, ROttTMH " · h d Sift hrMrel111 Ttu...., nox, w 1 c turn e away 1w1nMn' ar1tktt1 Ambassador Tuesday night, San l!t'llll"'1no ss. L. B, Pcriv !ti 58 P1clllc 7J, R1mcn• JI 76-· 1c ..... 1111c111 •••ck1tl Laguna's 5:30 p.m. engage-lll•1r11<1e Potv 11. "l\llttlm Jl l ·th Le d C1fon 61, El Monie 53 men WI nnox was move eurbinl< n. Font1n1 61 back one day along with the Eitenr.crwtr &J, Chall"' '' r h ch · h' r· I •••"'"'" t111r1Ym1nt rest o I e amp1ons IP 1na s L<"' ... ..,1...,, as. L•wnd•~ 11 because Of the re\igiOUS COO· L1wn1 lle1ct1 S1, Bell·Jell 57 !oil . ••-B th l'I"""' T111rn1ml"I vent1on al 1.1ic re ren gym v11.,.,c1a "· sinta Fe s1 today. CllY COLI.EOE In the championship brackel S1n11 Menlc• 1nvn111on11 IChlm~ll"tlll• ll'lldttll Tuesday it was Los Amigos Pierce 15, Como111n " beating Lawndale, 85-82, and .San!• Manic• 11. EL" IJ (Con .. 111i.n art,ktll host Brethren over Gahr. 54-L•r>e• J.1, "'••t:>ot si 46 0e"n11 16. Or•nt• c ... st Sl . S•m llr.., 11 G-1• Nick Gille,spie, John Harbold cc111m11111"'1'1 and Chuck Corwin combined Le• "r>Vtl•• 11, cur11°' '' IConYllllenl for two-pointers in l h e El Camino ~7. l.". vallev $6 overtime to settle the issue Mfl• t1>11rn1m1n1 •• s1" DI•" ICl!tmP!Mlthl• Br1U:tl) with Bell-Jeff after the Arlisls 1uo "'-"· MOCl•Par• i. Jet the Josel'S off the hook S•n 01190 M"" 1a1. &•keri11e1d lDl (OT) \. in regulation play. 1c.nto1111 ... 1r1clfwl1 The win snapped a four-Merceo •s. soi.no 1fl -,,.,.,,llt IS, Soull\w~!•rn 11 game losing st reak for the l:::;;•;;::;,:r,;=~:;;;;;;-;::-j Artists. 4 ¥ ~&.£'> Leading Laguna in the re--· ......, bounding department was IA .. 2•• Vince Whilnah , who pulled in --, IO. .utAIDI a.Eml carrEA '"'"" ... Ccrrwln Gil!t tPI• Whl! ...... Nel1w1n0e• Hert>o!d 111>0• F ltt!tt ••• ,~ 1· ' ' ' • 101111 Trrwllllet • C11!lllo O.nl!IHf r C Bullum Mtll>tWI ' • ' ' • • " un • , • ' • • ' ' • • ' . ' ' ' . IS 10 ' ' • ' • • • ' ... 1bl111! P-rnl~ lcrl1l1 1• • ,, Sc.,. 11¥ OV1rllr5 L1eu1111 B11dl I 16 n I• 7 -SJ ll1n-Jrft ts 1 1s 11 1 -n MO KI'S JOIN MOKI FOR A SAFE 9910SHO . CoMe1r1•D1 . t1lll f<lll THE _. 1"""1' If.ft llTn1AtlRl1 •Tllf •Ar1•••r.11rAIE ~, .............. <& ~ .,. .. ':i~ ... - NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY CHO DllYIHGI AT THI IODIWAT INH DINNER, CHOICE OF MENU COCKTAILS e PARTY FAVORS DANCING e ENTERTAINMENT OVERNIGHT ACCOMMODATIONS OtM Hetf hntl el CH.,.. .. ,., c•11pl.- MOlNIH• PIC•·Ml·UP lier.ff t. T••r 10•1111 WATCH IOWL GAMIS ON COLOI TY ALL DAT WITH 6 P.M. CHIC•OUT $35 Per Couple c.11 for r•••rvations or furtlier inform•tion. l•OO PALISADES RO . COSTA MIS.A 551-1700 557-1466 Lec....i .. , ..... "Y .... ' -- CLOSEOUT! 1744 2044 2344 plus fed. tax plus fed. tu plus fed. tax and old Hre and old tire and old lire Size Fed. tax Size Fed. tax Size Fed. tax 650-13 .• --1-78 E78·14--2.25 G7 8-f4.-··--·--.2.60 C78-14.-2.17 560-15-1.75 1888 * Foremost" 'El Tlgre' 12 volt battery F78·14. F78-15 Features solid rubber case. Engineered for heavy electrical demands. larger plates than High Vo lt line. ·-- 2.44 G78-15- 2.40 .. MO. GV.ll!AICTff 5"0\/ltl .,.,. FO<WIO!OSI ''Iii 119'1~ h•1 • l~'Y 1 .. 1 fnol !ftutly aatlwrl'll•I w''"'" I~ mo"'n• !•OM lht> ""'" ot J)l.lr;:nno. ·~'"'~II"' Pen ..... ,1 '""II w.11 b'! ·~· t-l>r~d Ir•~ o: cn•·g~. ~··~· 1~ "'<>nil'> b"t P' <t! lo !O~ ~•·p Ul·O'> ,.,,t. !)! 1h9 fl•o•••nl••· JC. P•~"~Y C<I .... 11·•p• ... 1•,, IJ.ll'e<f ,~ •• ,, . .,, nnfy to• 1~ .. "91 100 ot P,..,,••sh•p. bl:.ld Pl'I IN C11•r1M t>ftt~ fl tn• .,..,. OI r1i.,,., ruo·•~ted oortr lno ~"911~'"'- .2.60 Whitewalls $3 more. 2644 plus fed. 1ax and old tire Size Fed. lax H78·14 ~···---···-·•2.80 H 78· f 5 .•. -... -........ 2.80 12 to 5 Sundays, too, at any of the Drive in! .Charge itl ... ••• ... ''· "· ''· ... ''· ••• ''· ••• ••• ••• ''· "· ••• ••• ••• ''· "· ••• ... ... ''· "· ••• -"'·" ·-· .,,. ..,._ .... -.. 40• 4 --....... • • .... ···-···. ·····~ .............. '•''. • • ' ••• ' DICK TRACY .. ._ ~ AGO'TODAV. ius ANO I ~PRISONERS lN TME FR\Jl'T" CELJ..AR OF= OUR elJRNING HOME."' TUMBLEWEEDS -- By Chester Gould •T ,,....T 'TIMI! A. WAG ASKl!0, .. 15 TMI!> "TW!' !ND Qt: AN ePOCM ?'" iy Toni K. Ryan . U'L, ABNER SALLY BANANAS GREETINGS, CLASS! 1\115 SEMINAR FEAIURES A COORSE IN lllRl7 I.Oii~! FIRST OFF, Wt'O CAN GIVE ME A DEFINITION OF A lllRP? A e1RD IS A Ll'L 91RDISH·LIKE AIR CREE~URE WHAi'S GOT WINGS JN LOO OF ARMS, DRUMSTl(!(S IN LOO O' LEGS, A eEEK IN LOO OF A NOSE1 61111.EiS IN LOO r1 IITTERNUL Ol'j;IN651 IN LIEU OFA emER ANSWeR, NOTeADi MUTI AND JEFF WOWE·E·E! / ~ESE OFFICE . PARTIE~ ARE '/ MURDER! -;:-:- JUDGE PARKER OFFICER, WILL '>tlU DRIVE ME HOME? I ovs:<:- DtD IT! AN' FEATHERS IN LOO O' FUR! DID VOU VES,ME.T! RESEINATIONS A.a: lN ' TALK TO OIZDER' ~THE ONE-FOKTY R.JGHT! E-LMO, ME WAS A LITTLE UPSET THAT 'tOU LIZ? 'OULDtrl'T SEE HIM BE~OCZE HE LEFT S.u\ PRIVEIZ JUST PHONED &000: fll:Ofi\ KA.NSAS CITV! HE'LL BE. WI LL HE GfrTllrlG IN m s Ar:TERNOON! STOP &Y ME SA.ID HE A.TIENOED THE HERE ? _.eur r EXPLA.I NED THAT YOU WERE VERY BUSY ~:..::--,;rn PLAIN JANE SERVICES . FOR LA.RllV ROCKET~-TMAT EVEIZY· ,;~:' TMING WENT flNE~ PERKINS I DAILY CROSSWORD ••• by • A POWE• I ACROSS l Dismo unted S P1tcts of .advice q •...• po in t 14 Coln of Europt IS Co11cerr.in9. 2 words 16 Dismiss from o!!ict 17 Ntglect to mention 44 Foolbil fl D1ay!'rS 4$ Drink slowly 46 Stal}01t in Fi1I 48 lro11 ····-· 52 Coalition to OPDOSt rvll: 2 words 56 Strptnl S7 Fabric SB Cooking 18 Schtdnl e of racts 1 q Brtalhi11g sounds ingrtd1ent 59 Kind or grass 60 Disclos ed· Slang ... 12130/70 MISS PEACH 20 Possessivt word 21 Choreo9r~pl1v 23 From ~·dt tn sid!' 25 .••. bter 2fi Legal m~He r 27 l~ys wageri 29 Bthinrl 32 Ont lak in9 instr11ct1011 JS Oppo~1 1~ of 29 Across 1 )6 No! running 37 Quod ••···• demon- s1randum 38 Toolh 3q Part of 1ht hand 40 Monsl1>r 41 Spoken 42 ltall~n peel 43 Teachrrs' group Abbr. 2 l bl Big blow q Broad 3b Nol fitt ing !>lang comedies 38 M1n111 t 62 Slash 10 Yles1e1n simplt bJ Aq11aducl US c.1ty organ1s 111 Jud Woodbin e 11 Bouldtr na tive 42 Sc<tnda l c.011ttsl~ 12 Allege as a Slang 64 "l'lalch 1tl " fact : L ~w 44 Happenings 65 Fo•m~r 13 ..•. m.1jesty 45 Various h!'avywe1gllt 21 Cl11nest' 47 Usth1I champ Y1t ight unit 48 Ctntral par ls 22 Oeposil 49 •· • •·•· for 111 a tomb Adano" 24 Produce 2 words 001'.'N J Word of a column 50 Anc1rn t greet1nq 27 Gauc.hos' re91on of 2 Poker players' weapons Asia Minor agreement 28 Of a time 51 Sharpl y J ...•. period dresses 5weepslak t 30 Flutter 52 Wofld power, •Make lace 31 Distant: Prtri'll' Abbr 5 Trac k met\ 32 l ow Iv worktr 53 Callforn1 1 oflic1als JJ f'Ofte communitv fi Ldttess with vigo r 54 ke mass- 1 ···-··· 34 Sponging 55 Frog genus school 35 'ien1 y or S9 Colltge 8 TV recelvttS Ern1t degree Abbr ' 10 11 11 13 " ~ .. rl-t-+- 17 I 20 >,. 11 ll " • " l2 1 " ,. " " STEVE ROPER • "'' ..,r, --- By Al Smith 1'HREE' MALTEDS I ONE STRAWBEl<RY AN D FIVE .--- LEMON SODAS! By Harold Le Doux MO! ME SA.U> HE HAS TO·fiNISH UP $0ME 'i'IQIRK AT LE6Al AtP -THAT ME'Ll SEE VOii IN ntE MO!i:NIMG! I THOUGHT" HE HA.P RESIGNED FROM LE6M. A.ID! By Frank Baginski • GORDO MOON MUWNS ANIMAL CRACKERS 1)0ll.\l(l.E, ,.,~ Uf1'\.f. S~Al<­ Wl<J :t WO!)O!;~ llJtlM <IOcl Al!E. - LAST NIGHT r l;A~ A ~w Y£<1r<'S E\S PA«TV. Kr MIONGl<T we aieer•c>, JOSSED,. Ctl&'P ANO euw Ht%N5~ ·e<n' ltXI ~ \M<EN n" WIS AL.L. OVE1<, ICTHJNG WAS DIFF~? • -~-~ ---... ~ ,.. . .-. ,• ... -'·-. .... -.. ---.......- 'R~ N~Oru. .. .' By John Miles J.~i!u 1l'e. ,..,.. llq•"ot "'!• # •"~ Trlbo.., ~1.,,~•00\o By Mell O~ COU~G NOT, OU,\1-0UM~ TQ>.\O"ROW IS , NE\VY~5 EVE! \'/tdntSday, Dtcembtr 30, ]q70 DAILY PILOT 2$ c-""""'""'""'"" . -·-.. -· .. ly Al Cmpp By Charles lclllOttl By Gus Arriola • ~ . By ROCJM' Bollen MR.MUM oFflCERS ·i--1 CL.LIB ~ M·ILE SIR! DENNIS THE MENACE ·1 I, u !j i.! PEANUTS I I ,, .. .. By Charles M. Schulz I .. ' .. I " " .. " ,, " .. 61 " ' .. • lO .. " " 6S 5aiROEDER. 00 51 'OJ 1HINK IOUtl E\fR WRR!i ,,. '50MEQ/\V? NOT FOR AU. 1HE 6EA6LE5 IN 8EAGLELAND ! I I 1 I I • ~":°"' ~ ;.,~·--~w:;;;:.~.~~;.~.~ .. ~:.::.:.~.:.-:;::;;::~:::;:.:;:;:;::::::::;::::~:::,~.:.:,:~:.::::;:;:;::;::;::;::::::~:~:::.-::::::;::::::::::::::::::::;::::::::::-~~==1!!11 ... 1111!~~ DAILY PILOT .. • WEDNES D AY ·• Wtdntsday, Dtc:tmb'' 30, l q10 1:05 m TI•111 d• Dtpori.. css) 1:30 II 9 ([) CIOvtfftOf .. JJ, (t) (31)) The Governor's newl)'W!d molher comes home to son 1ner • lcweii .I!! DECEMBER 30 qu11itl. Linda W1tkil'IS and )(enl \!: Smith l\l&sl. .,_ 0 illJ (I.) Q) loo• 2!2 (C) (JO) i'~ "The t1ughln1 M&jorlty." A rotund i;oo II lit -(C) (!O) ~'• DonP>J. ]okt$\e1 changes the student apathy concerning sch()()l eleclion,. ' 0 KHBC NtWM~lct (C) (60) ID David Frost Show (CJ (90) Ye· )~ 8 Tiit Alltn !how {t) (90) hudi Menuhin, Don Watson. R9Y G Sir O'Clot); Movlt: "Ctlllna Prite, Charles E. Silverman, John !'.!. l uUdo1 lhum111011d" (myslery) '51 tto lt. Seelie Lester. -W1ttor Pld11on, M1r11rit Leich· tt\I Civlllutlo1t (C) (60) "Heroic ton, David Tomlinson. Malui1li5m:' -11 0 Diel Ytn DJt• (30) £I.i.) Plttein lor Li¥1RI (30) f'. m l)t n11t1tone1 (C) (30) 9:00 0 ®J@ Mtdical Center (CJ (00) '·" t1J Stai Trft CC) (60) D •·· G -t -n)t'·t ~ (]) footNU (C) (cont'd. fro m r. IVG annon ..... mes n "" ,,. 5 PM) Ptadl Bowl came. with Indian tribal customs. Geoffiey fD Hodlfpodp Lodp (C) (30) Deuel, Rudy Sol1ri ind Eduatd tit ([l CBS""" (C) (30) Fr•M cues!. Ell) Fi1Mt rimllJ C30J 0 A rollicking hour IE Notldtro 34 (C) 160) * of Comedy On Ice ~' !!) W"d"tust (C) (30) KRAFT MUSIC HALL ~ f Ef'il l8 Horii f1111H11t con htrldt 0 ~ @ m Kr1tt Music Hill (C) al News In tlit Round (C) (30) <60) "Comedy on Ice." Huch ~ D CarH!ld Clllltft (30) O'Brian is host of an ice ska!int Gl TH flyin1 Nun (C) (30) 1evue. 0)@ NBC N1in (C) (30) 0 @ (1) aJ Johnny Cttfl (C) EJ!)P11)'in1 flit Cult.If (30) (60) Tenneuee Erni e Ford, Louis -tn) CIJ MJ flVOl'llt M1rtlln (30) Ar'mst1on1. Kenny Ro1ers & The &')Social Security (C) fllll: Edition cuut. ( t?) Tllo Dneit Report (t) (30) IID JO Mlnutas (C) (30) ~ Qi) Los OIV!dadol (30) ai) Nltlthl (60) ,-aJABC twnlnt Nm (C) (30) 9:30 0 B1l1tr Wtrd NIWI (C) (80) 6;f5 Ci> Mlllkalt EI) The N1d1r Rtport (C) (30) 7f' II CU Ewnln1 Nns (C) (SO) til) Muskile • 0 @D MIC Nla:htlJ Nm (C) (30) EE Conderto de Alm• (JO) : Q Wblf'o My line? (C) (30) !:45 Em P1stot'1 Desk (C) t m I I.OWi Luq (30) 10:00 EJ 9 ({) Hntil r"""° (C) (60) ... ID INI tho Clo4 (C) (30) F11nk Silveri auests as '1 sm1ll &;) HomNOOd Stereo Sptdtf (C) ranche1 who is a victim ol progrtss. (6Q) "Hotrr.rood. Bowl Speclacular." 0 ~(I) £0 fou1-ln·One: "Rod ~ Conductor Zubln Mehta, th• LA. S.rlinl'• Nl&flt Callir(' (C) (60) r Philflttmonlc Orchestra, ind pianist "The Houst" and "Certain Shid- Gary G1aflman In • "Tchaikovsky ows on Iha Wall" star .loanna Gtlt," In P,totr1m sl~ukast on Pettet, Sieve Franken, Paul Rich· ~ XF.\C, 92.3 ft,!, t rds: ond Louis Hayward, Agnes 8 ([)Trotti °' Contequencu (Cl • E) etutst 1f1e liYlnt Word "" (30) Moorehud, Ra~el Roberts and ftTi ,v, Gr17JOn Hilt. , u;i Rourio (30) 0 @ (}) fll Datt Autint (C) (60) i' CS Si"!plt1Mllle Maril (55) "P1ssln1 fti1." Tht m111de1 of • jj>, m-... fl-(C) (30) psychiatrist leads Aucust Into t 7fD 8 8 Cl) i IPICIAL I Tiit frottn m.uo of po1itie1I pressute. ~ W«WI ef Slits tnd W1lrus (C) (60) l!J HolldaJ Movie: (C) "'Rfl•PIMY" : A fattl111tln1 tri p to the North (d rama) '54-~Jizabeth Tf)'lor, Vit-t and So11tfl Polea to see how 1ni· torlo, Ga,man, Louis C1lhern. t mils tltere fl1ve 1dapted to some m Qtorp Putnam Nein (C) (60) of tile hol"!l'lest erMronments fI) er.an Ptn0n (JO) A prolil• J1 known to mtn. Cherin: Kur1lt is of Slf TyroM &ulflrie. t1 ntrro.to~. m :rv Mustca! Osart (C) (30) f< Q @ @mMtn frot SMtll 'G?i)T~iltlll Eaptntl (Z ht) J( (C) (90) "Hannah.'' Lisa Gerrits1n & 1uests as }'Oun1 glrf se1rcMnc for 10:30 II 111 5 N9WI (Cl. (&O) Kewin her "lort .. mother. Sandets, Bainey Morris. g""' Wnt Silo (C) EEi Flick Out (C) (30) I 0 &J Courtship 1~ Eddie's fltllt1 @r) la famlfll (30) (C) (30) "I Thoucht You ThOu&hl" 11:00 IJ aJ CIJ et Nm (C) Tom thinks Mrs. Livinptone his O @@mNfWl(C} falle n tor him. D GB Nm (C} G Miiiion $ Movie: "The l rid1•" m Trojll laMttblR (C) r_nvll•· (diam•) '61-Yolker Bohnet, fritz tlo!MI tou1111ment. ltped e1rl1er •t t Wepper • the Sporb Aten•. 8 m1rd "c...-..-(Q '(30) m1111 Johns"'" (q (30) QI l IHC!IL I VktOrJ ii MIY (t) t'iJl Cil l'lnJ MtlOll' -(30) HIJhllt'hlo of !flt lndi1nopolis G) Eatll1I Wildo• and Modtra 500 aports Cit nee lift: "Omn!potenct." CID CMnllMllt FH~ (C) (JO) 11:30 II Iii(() Mtr1 lriffl11 CC) Burt CE No er.. •• 1o1 Kolllbm: (JO) Reynolds, J1ek Scott ind Al Rudd)'. 7•S5 Gl!> Culstion "' Setulldo• a 9 (I) m ..,., C..011 (C) Beth -Bran~hing Out Gentle ·Ben's B; RICK OU BROW HOLLYWOOD (UPI) Miss Beth Brickell lives alone high in the hills of Los Angeles, in a lush area known as Benedict Canyon, wbicb is almost as famous for its celebrity residents as for llS fire insurance rates . She has a huge dog who is very friendly and lovable, and \\'ho \V iii let a I in o s t :inyone into the house. doing very little good as a burglar alarm. It is a nice house, with sl'.'veral fine adornn1ents -a spectacular view and a fram· ed diploma showing that the former Millie E l iza b et h Brickell, of the University of Arkansas, has done al\ right for herself in what they used to call tinseltown, before the tinsel disappeared. 'She did a two-year stretch as a sexy young mania in lhe children's show. "Gentle Ben," on CBS-TV wi th Dennis \Veavcr, former l y of '·Gunsmoke" and more recently of N BC-TV's "~1cCloud," playing her hus· band. But that's well behind her now, and a good thing too, becau se a young lady with her looks and ability, otr viously is cut out for more adult and with-'it roles. On her series, she \Vore her hair short -on CBS-TV's orders because the net\\'Ork wanted her to look more average, which is impossible in her case. In the second season, when she tried lo wear her hair longer. the network hollered because she looked so luscious. Well, goodbye lo all that lype-casling. She now \Vcars Under II MWtl •• Wiii\ P•rtnl Git Yount "LOffrt and Othlf Stro111Jen" IRJ "plUi "Tfle'I' Shoot Hors11 Do11'f They" Cont. Fri. & Sun. 1 p.m. 'Mania' Updating luiage NATURAL NOW Beth Br ickell Iler television career has begun to shape up nicelK. She recently appeared on tfit! top. rated series "Marcus Welby, ~1.0.," as Gary Merrill's young fourth wife, a sort of female trophy. The same night, she turned up in the two-hour preview of NBC.TV's new series "San Francisco lntcrnationaJ Airport.'' as Pernell Roberts' secretary. Also thi s season. she will appear on ABC· TV's police show "Dan August" as a sensitive, fru strated \Vife ; tln NBC-TV 's western ''The 11cn 'Gypsy' Cast Tryouts Set F'roin Shiloh:" on a tv.•o-hour The seCQnd round of audi- NBC-TV "World Premiere," tion s for the South Coast Chor· called "The Great Man's al and Light Opera Association Whiskers.'-' about Abe Lincoln; production of "Gypsy" will be and on "Bonanza.'' in a role held Jan. 8 and 9 in the music she says is her best ever room of San Clemente Hign -that of a pathetic, homely School. her hair Jong and blonde and C11untry girl. A wide range of ages and natural, \V hich seems to fit ''They didn't want me for talents are required for the in with her penchant for the ·Bonanza' part,' she said. production, according t o playing folk Songs 011 the "They didn't think I was the SCCLOA officials. Technical guitar. On this particular oc-type." personnel also are needed for casion, she v.·orc a n1Jdi -length In the best llollywood tradi-the show. gaucho outfit, 1vith boots, <1nd tion she went to the Salvation Tryouts will be held at 7:.3" served exotic tea. Army, bought a dreadful, p.m. on Jan. 8, while the She tends her own gardens dumpy dress for $1.50, put Jan. 9 auditions wil l begin -literally -and generally it on. wore no makeup, got at 9__a.m. Performers are re· avoids Hollywood social life. herself into a pathetic homely 11uested to bring their own She was a political science mood and went to the music. major in college, and did "Bo anza" office where, in,-:...:.----------11 editorial work on nc\vspapers. the t Hollywood tradition, At night. she studies her craft the se'cre idn't recognize ·~=$',,_---'----,~=" at school. her. She got the part. fY . Y OU ARE INVITED _~ "It's so ni ce to he (lb!cl i"';:;;:;==~~=====;;;;; TO THE 2ND ANNUAL lo look the way I want to • BALBOA WORLD FAMO US ~~~:~:~~ sea~~Crl~1n~:.caH;~~ 673-4048 BIRD CLUB nice having long hair. Irs so OPEN New Year's Eve much 1norc fen1ininc and ap· 6:41 pealing 10 men." 7" ~. ••"-Dinner Dance .. lltoli P•nln1ul• ALL YOU CAN EAT "llllRllllr .. lm!D" HllUGll'l llntl( l'AWttll!I 0 Q"lo!,.l l!llllXl!i !'7....::&nPCllnsP!.....-SA.f-lowa>1IW l(o:I IWMl Jay Ll!"'ll• PIOdl.CIOI ~•Mg Barbra Yves Sirelsand I Montand On A Ctear/J3fN!'°"s..""" --.. -.... 0o~o..o., ... G..5oo-p~ T~ AP;ir.Jl'l'IW'llPC116e~ "M·A·S-H" Is the best Amer'lcan war com•dY since soond' came in!" , •NOW-Ends Tuesday• WE ARE PROUD TO USHER IN THE NEW YEAR WITH THIS GREAT FILM- "A SALUTE TO A REBEL!" h e--,., .. _ t•A't"l'ON FULL 9-PIECE.BAND At The J1istoric .,_\)\111\ PAV!"/ft ~\' 400 MAIN <T.t .BALBOA PENINS ULA WHILE, OOWNSTAJRS ~ An -·-SHOWN 1:40 ONLY TAtE~tkWHAL~ SEAFOOD llESTAURANT PRESENTS THE logo Preminger Prod uction ~ U L.Hn lnl•tblll (C} (2'A: hr) !D UClA Ba~etb•ll (CJ The Br11- LA. Lakfrs va Phoenix Suns ins plaJ !heir second tnd fin1I '--·!RI . ' &•mo of tho "StMI Bowl Cl•»it... - fJ@())&JM•kl Room for 00>~ C.V.tt (C) ALSO PLAYING- Color by DE LUXE' Panavisionel ALSO-BONUS FEATURE Show11 7 .00 On1., Jan Deneau Trio EVERYTHING Clrnddlddf (C) (30) '1he Tatn 19 Motlt: '1flt F'auy ""k Nilfi1-- Idol." Danny offe rs ad~ic• to o ....... (ccmed1) '57-J•n• Rus-The slory of a bcauliful girl's lifetime S1Ct1fly m1rtled teen1p Idol. sell. mto Tiii tht Trutll (C) (30) l2:IXI @(}) Okk Ctvttt (C) bet\veen th e ages of 19 and 22. ID I Sl>tl1A~ I Pe1cfl 8nrl football 1:00 tJ Movie: "Koll! RtSl'tve" (dra· NAllONAl GINLRAI. l'ICTURlS rr~it ON THE ~!ENUONLY S4.95 FREE NO ISEJ.\AKERS! FOR RESERVATIONS .d1_ ~ CALL 673·4633 di}~ Cl1uic (C) (J fir) Arizona Stile ma-'4&-James Mason. ,..__ Afl __ ----.~r University vs. North Caro11na. OONews (C) ...V ~ ..,,-totbR !fl"MOV!l~.· tI) Tho F1endt Chlf (C) (30) m All·Nlpt Sllow: "'A Wom1n's ,,,_,,,,... ~ ~O f'i!lo . €I!)Tbe Anawe1 (C) (30) Sec11I," '1ht M•rt Between," ind I~==:=~~ ~===~====:======~~il~"";~~~~~~~~~~==~=~======I g;) l11dlt Ubf1 (C) (90) (C) "This Angry Ap." 1 · _ THUR S D AY OAmME MOVIES t:Oll O '1.tdy f1om Louisi•n•" (ro· mance) '41-John W1yno. t:l5 O "Deir Rlltfl" (comedy) '47 - Join Caullleld, Wiiliam Holden. ..,,._ 11.ii1 Thlt F1iled" fdr1m1) '40-Ronald Colem1n, Id• Lupino. 9:30 C:J "You Wire Nev11 Lovelier" (mu- sical) '42-Fred Astaire. m (C) "Enchnted lsl1nd~ (dra. ml) 'SS-Dant Andrews. l:oo m "Dinner at Elitrt" (comtd>') '33 -John t nd Lionel B1rrymo1e. 2:00 O "'l'ou'r• 11 t•• NOVJ Now" (comedy) '51--0ery Cooper, 4:30 B (C) '1en W1nttd Mtn" (W!SI· 1rn1 'S5-R1ndoloh Scott. e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS Ou•ilty Printing and 01p1n·dabl1 S11'\1ice for mor• than a ~ue rter of • century PILOT PRINTING JJt1 WIST IALIOA I LYD., NIWl'Oll:T ltACK -142-4121 1 I{[Il]]Di9Jif ' •£WP01f BEACH • Olt.J.IJSO Eve. Show Starts 7 P.M. Continuous Show Sunday from 2 P.M. NATALIE WOOD- ROBERT CULP IR WT SUPP. ACTDl I ACTRW l Olll SCIWIPUY & CIHOOJDWJINY ··~-(!] Bob & Carol & Ted & Alice -w.o.·-. - ALSO THIS SECOND GREAT COMEDY A Ho\.vard Hawks Production r "RIO LOBO", CONTINUOUS SHOW DAILY FROM 2 P.M. THRU JANUARY J -ALSO-:r..... , ..... _.,,' &IAlf ,,,__lfW.wl, !Ill --··av1N "MOH E WA:LSB" HC MMICD I '1W ~ JEANNE MOROO ·JACK PALANCE PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT! All ColClr Program "LOVE STORY" !OP) plul . ROCK HUOSON "HORNET'S NEST" (GP) • Unffr 11 M11tl Bt W!l)I Ptrtnl • 'llTrLE FAUSS & llli HALSY' • 111111 -. L" Muvln e Cllnl E•~hwood • "PAINT YOU R WAGON" 4GP I • ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ""' l>iovo , ..., '-•-oft·•-~ .. ~s E~(lu•iv• orlv~in s"'°wln11 Burl L1nc•t!er e Dtan Martin "AIR PORT" 1Gl PIUS ... (OnO color Prat'"" 'COLOSSUS·Tht FOR61N PROJECT' ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• uo p,.pr..,. • -..... {W.) "1·26U All-color Promitr E1tg•9tmt11l l J ohn W~yne "1!10 LOSO" (Gl pl~• Lee M~,..,;n In "MONTE WALS H" IGPl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ... ~ ... ·-~­·--111·1861 AIH:oJor Premier E1>11•t tme<1U · John W1yn• "fl 10 LOBO" (Gl pl11• Lt1 Mt,..,!n "MONTE WALS H" IGPl Undet 11 MUii I t Will\ Pt ttnl '"I 1.0VE MY WIFIE" (fl) pl115 l!O"-rt 11..cllord "TELL TMEM Wll..1..1£ IOV IS MERE" (GPI •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• E•ct111lvt Drlvt-ln Showlnt! a 11rt L111C111tr • Oetn M1rlln "AIRPORT" (0! p1111 1tcolld color 11rotr1m -""""'"' 'COLOSSUS·Tht FORllM PROJECT' •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All Ctlfr ,.nmler1 Ent•t tmtnll John W1'(f!1 "1110 LOIO" !GI Pllli e l.tt Mtrv!n "li\ONTE WALSH" fGPl •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• All·color E1c1111i~t OtlVt·ll'I SlltWl"11 _..._..._, Un<1tr ll Mu11 It wn~ Jltrtnl ."C, (. ANO COMPANYH un 't"' Dttn Ml rtin e lllQUtl Wtlch "I ANDOl.EflO" ill k:Oror ''""!' linterttift"91fil D<l~DI• Mlrrat P'1•l11rtl "Wtr O• TH( OAll:GANTAUI" (01 ~1111 Nick A.O•m• '"MOllSlliR l l!flON col .•..•............••••••...•........ , .... Laguna's 'Angel'· Cast Announced A large cast has been selected for the Pulitzer Prize· Winning.comedy-drama, "Look Homeward, Ange l," the first production or 1971 for the Laguna Moul ton Playhouse. The play. which is based on Thomas \Volfe 's novel and dramatized by Kelli F'rings, \vill open Jan. 5 for th r e r. weeks under the direction or Rowena Harwood. Starring in the role of Eliza Gant is Iris Korn, \\'inner of the 1967 DAILY P IL OT Distinguished Performance Award for "The Subject Was Roses," also at Laguna. Her hard-drinking .hus band \Viii be played by Doyle McKinney, with Mike Hubbard cast as GIVE , 'EM HELL, JOHN! JOHN WAYNE , A Howard Hawks Prodr.,IC1ion "RIO LOBO" Tect1n~ ~- their son, Eugene. Other members of the Gant family will be played by Patrick Birkett, Pam Jones, James Gilio and T o m Southard. The featured roles of Doc and Elizabeth will be played by David and Betsy Paul. Tenants of the C an I boarding house \Vill be played by Suzie Scott, Tom Arnold . Sam H. Clauder, Hilda Allen, Miriam Kaiser, Linda Krause. Linda Gilio and Annabelle Quigley. Completing the cast are Nan Prince, J a c k Marshall and V i n c e n t Capozzello. Assisting Miss Harwood is Susan Killion. MATINEES DAILY FROM 12 NOON '"M *A*S*H' is the best America n war comedy since sound came in!' ... IUM, TllUl1.1:00 , .M • Ill. I 1AT. ltJO P .M. MAU. wro. SAT.• JUll', .... -,--,-,ccc.~?:OO~•M~.~-----J Special Midnight Show, N!w Ytor1 Ewt! ·ALSO. ''M ONSTER ZERO" "A COCKE\'ED . MASTERPIECE l" Pl,US ·POPULAR fllMJ "STRAWBERRY STATEMENT" (R) MCTR(). GOtOWVN MAYUI' Wodnt1d11Y, llfctmbor 30, 1970 DAILY PILOT 27 'Hope Returns Home , Praises GI Morale World Trip. Roekl ' " ., ' .Bad Luck Follow s Nabors ~ HOLLYWOOD (API -Bob Hope returned home Tuesday from his seventh straight ~ristmas of entertaining U.S. troops in Vietnam and said ''Their morale is exceptionally high: higher than last year." The 67-year old comedian ... as in a sober mood after arriving at Van Nuys Airport from Alaska aboard a giant Air Force Cl41 transport. He said of American servicemen in Vi etnam , "They're all screaming for peace. They all g.ive you the pe1ce sign. "Tbey'rt very nervous about some of the guya yelllng for peace over here. They feel they're really hurting their chances for gettJng out 0( Vietnam in an orderly fashion.'' NATIONAL GENERAL THEATRES .. •ROSS IUltTtl-' · 'AIRPORT, l BilRT •·-DW I UllCASTER • IARTlll JEANSEIERG ~ JACOUWNE BISSEf J GEORGE IEllNEDY HELEN HAYES Ii UftlYDl$AI. P'ICTUAC f[OIMCOU)ll• """"""° .. f(X)O.#r(I. [§!•i--~ -·- SHOW TIMls--.IRIDAY-SATUll.DAY-SUNDAT 1 -2:5~:4o-6:JD-1:20-10:1 0 M111doy thr11 Th11ndq 6:Jo-t:J0-10:10 ALSO "Anne of the Thousand Days" ... ,,, .. , lllCHAll D IUllTON GINl!lffl IUJOLD Ill.IHI PAPAS Ceftfl111n Delly ., .. ,. ... , ... .. A ... ".t l :00.6100°10:41 GEORGE SEGAL RUTH GO ROON HOL SAT. & SUN. OPIN 12:41 M111. thni Tll1n. OPEN 6:11 Hope aaJd Pruldtnt Nfxon•a Vletnamlzolloq pllln -tumln( over lhe burden o1 lhe war By CYNTRIA LOWllY treatment. Feellnl a 111111 be~ lo SOutlr Vletnamue l1'0)ll JlOLLYWOOD (Al') -A ter, be Dew lo A"'tralla, -"Is worklns Incl I lalked tall, lklnDY lllY In Ille wblte visiting friends 'Tom m Y to a Jot Of peopje who 1hould• j01ns and aports shirt lopes 1.<oneltl and his wUe, where know. ' around tbt CBS rehearsal hall his aUment was dlqnosed as .. 1 think we'tt ,01 .... to· aet, these days with a happy grin afenct1o0t>.outn. e type of vlrus in· ..... on his face. He Is Jim Nabors. our IUY• out of there by lhe 15 pounds lighter, 1100.000 "I felt a little better and end of not year." ~ poorer, but &lad be ,survived I kept on soinii:.'' Jlrn con. It w'u . Hope's 2 o t b hls holiday from television. tinued, "but J sure didn't think Chrlstmu tour r "Come here, 11t down and much about all those places, mlli ...... bUea 0 ~ .lhes • let me tell you about It," like Hong Kong." jl~ aroun he ordered eagerly. "You ju.at Eventually, he got back wor · wouldn't believe." home, still fetllng rocky, but He wu accompanied on the He launched into a tale that managed to pull toeether his 1$-day trip by an 11·member would keep a IOIP opera tn part of the act that he and troupe ineludina Lei Blown'• plot,, for six months. Carol Burnett were to present band; •ln&•r Gloria Lorine When the final "Jim Nabon in the Nevada resort com- and CinclMtU Reds' catcher Hour" of his first CBS season munitles. Johnny Bench. was a yarlety star was taped, "Well, then f picked uP Before tu.vine Dec. JS Hope the pride of Sylacauaa, Ala., some strep infection in my said he hoped It would be hopped off on lbe first leg thro1t. and It was all swollen manaaed to llniah their book· .inl•· "So l finally came home -and found !bat my bol"1! had burned doWn," he ~ eluded. "Fortunalely my mother. who had been staying there, had cone to visit mt sister. and nobody wu hurt. But 1, lost a lot of ~gs that can't be replaced, Ji~ palnt1n11 and photographs. And I also diacovered that l should have )lad 1bout •too,ooo more in lmurance coverage." 1 · In tbe courae of all this Jim dropped 1$ pouncll the hard way and decided to keep a closer eye on his business affairs. lhe last time be would b&ve f..asun• St•r of a long anUclpatff trp up," Jim said. "And to make lo go to, .Vleblam. Alked u' around the world. thing• WO"'· I followed the Denver Back he would IO ap.ln next yeai Iris Korn plays l ·h e While over the Paclllc. he doctor'• instructions and took if American troopa were tt1ll leadlnr role of Eliza in was stricken wltb severe pains a pill that put me to 1leep HOLL YWOOO (UPI) -Bob there, Hope grinned and "Look Homeward, An · in the back. Docton on the -and when I woke up my Denver, veteran star of replied , "Well, the way l feel gel," opening Tuesday p 1 an e gave first aJd but throat had closed up and [ "Gllligan's lsland," Is plottine, now I will." for three weeks at the swpected somethlna v e r y thouaht I was strancllng." a return to television in a new He added, "I hope it's my Laguna Moulton Play-11erlous, and Nabors stayed in That also required first aid. ha 1 f·J:lour mystery-comedy, la st trip to Vietnam . But it's house. the Phillppi.Des fOf further But aomehow Jim and Carol "Scared Stiff." not my last USO sbowl -------------'.;._----------------------- overseas." Hope wu greeted at the airport by about 250 persons and a band of teenagers who played Hope's theme song, "Thanks for the Memory." Among those on liand to greet him was Gov. James Rhodes of Ohio, in Southern California for tbe Ro1e Bowl Game'. at Pasadena. Hope grew up in Cleveland, Ohio. Hope was asked if he had cut back on the number of shows his troupe gave to aervicemen this year. An eye ailment bu plagued him off and on 1lnce 1969. "No, I don't think so," he said. "We did 14 sbom in 15 days. And that doesn't cowit the unscheduled shows we put on." Hope's tour covered ap- proximately 30,000 miles and took him to West Point, N.Y.; England; Wut Gennany; the 6th Fleet in the Medlter· ranean; Thailand; Vietnam; Korea and Alaaka. " NOW PLAYING EDWARDS HUNTINGTON CINEMA PACIFIC'S HAllOR DRIVE-IN Behind ewry"successful" man· is an understanding woman ••• ELLIOTT GOULD * "' ioviLMv:.:w1iFE" ~ "-BRENDA VACCARO ·ANG EL TOMPKINS ... '9 IW;ll8tT llAUFMAH • °"9<• ., MR :STUAftT • ,._... It IT.UI MAllGUUES • .__ ,_ DAVIO I.. WOU'UI A UNIVERSAL PICTURE ·TECHNICOLOR• IEJ-..:..::=-o:;:::-o AND rot SHOW0 VALUI ,.1.U$ / .... ::: • .._---_·;;::-.-:---:: ==::_-;_ •. •· "Tell Them Willie Boy Is H1r11" "'I left My Wlft"' s•o•• At 1:30 P .M. "Wlllle .. ,. Siio .. At 6:00 & 10:15 P.M. In Offke o, .. J&Jt P JI.I SMw 1""11 At6i00 PA GET WITH THE CATS WHO KNOW WHERE IT'S AT! WALT DISNEY ............... ,, •. ·-·-~ / I . A PURR-FECTL Y WONDERFUL NEW CARTOON FEATURE .. .rJ . Ci!!!> .. _. Nlftlr WALT DISNEY productions ..... ,.. ) JUD, the Ol'}lllanEJepkant TECHNICOLOR .............. IUllU "I" '""''"lfl(JICD., Ille .• flUC W1~ ~ PloMI-oa (Exttpl At Stodium D.I.) DAILY FROM 12:00 NOON AT EACH THEATRE ( bc.-.:>I StadiYm ) Drr..1~ lldl 2Nll "ION6Of1Hf Gtuml!S" EDWARDS CINEMA EDWARDS ~-HARBOR 1 VIEJO CINEMA 1 CINEMA .JN-WEST MISSION VIEJO NATIONAL GENERAL TWIN THEATRES '" CINEMAL\ND * * BEACH LV • AT ELLIS * * HUNTINGTON BEACH* 847·9808 IXCLUllYI INOAOIMINT Edward's Cinema Costa Mesa & Pacific's Lincoln Drive In CO·HIT tiii11AiV1r itt11cot~111Y11i 011.j l'TAINI YOUI W~GPN" _ "LITTLI PAUSI & l lG HALSY" SHOWN AT t.00 r .M. . ; COSTA MESA SAN DIEGO FREEWAY WESTMINSTER 1414S.Harllat 1'14. Ana""": HARBOR AT WILSON ATlA PAZTURNOFF WISTMINSTU: el GOl.DlN WB T 635·7801 2 Mi. South of S.D. Fwy. DIAL 830-6990 ltt.~G-4S.Dil'fl'""I· DIAL 892-4493 DIAL 646-0573 3rd Hit "'King of The Griiztits" I ~~~~~~~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~~ "PAINT YOU• WAGON" SHOWN AT 6:31 P.M. I rn:ICD:ICD:l:n:ll:n:llllJ:IDlCD:ICD:liDJ:n:llDXU:S:DJ;a:JCCDl'~ u ~sm~soos9!!1CD:ICD:ICD:l:llllllli ExcLuswEt Ali' MacGraw • Ryan O'Neal NOW PLAYING Pacific's Bue111 Part<01i11 la l Edwants N11111ort Cln11111 The Y111's #1 1 , Best Seller A HOV/ARD 6.MINSKY·ARTHUR HILLER Production jO'hn Marley & Ray Milland EmtH sEGAL ARiHuR HJUER 1 ~Ill 1a"'"*-._~.,.., ICCIJlt[aJ HOV/ARD 6. MINSKY DAVID GOLDEN FRANCIS LAI l ;llllOlll PCl\111 1 I SCIJJe hACI lillllll AWJlAI,.( NI 'MAllMlf ·~I •1=-:..~ . . CO-HIT_. 2nd 'fAlUllfAl llJ(HA 'AllKOlt.Y "HORNET'S lllST" (GP) "LOVE STORY" Shown Al s,30 l.M. "HORNET'S NEST" Shown ol 6.30 & 10130 r M. aox Otfit•O!I-.5:45, M. $how Slisrtl et •110, M, 'Ai~·c·s BUENA PARK DRIV ·IN L.INCOLH AVI. • ., tlOCKI WllT °' llACH aw. <Adf°"*'I h LINCOLN DNYl.w) CHltORIN UMOll 12 IUll TUP"°"l 714/t11.C070 IS THE MOST MOVING, MOST INTELLIGENT, THE MOST HU- MANE~OH, TO HELL WITH !IT! -IT'S THE BEST AMERICAN FILM 'l'VE SEEN THIS YEAR!'' -ARlll llAllOl TWiii _, HAll80R Cl .. IMA t WMIAf-·cotTAlllU 2-IO.Of lH -PIUWAT 572 ..................... ,, -Vlnconl C1nb1, N. Y. Tlmtt CO.H!TAT ANAHEIM OHl,Y "THI ADVllTUHI S" 'CA 10121' AT 9,30 r.M. • '-'OVDITURER$' AT 6'00 P.M. IOXOPPICI OPINS 1130 P.M.• SNOWJTAITS 6100 P.M. . \ I UP AND OVER -AND DOWN -Bystanders bold their colleetive breatlie as the 40-foot trimaran Erin is hoisted over a delicatessen and' alley to its fi'fst salt water dunking in Newport Harbor. The trimaran was . a three-year , labor of love of the Bowie Houghton family of 2804 Newport Blvd. Credit Squeeze Not Affecting BQat Buys 'Jbe tigbt money,or "credlt oqueeo/' of um , had litUe effect 011\ple~ boJ!Una, ac· cordit!g' to a joint statistical report by the Boating Industry Aµociation and the Natiooal Association of Engine -and Boat Manufacturers, the na· ,tioo'I two leading industry {l.ssocialions. More Americans spent more money on pleasure boating in 1970 than ever before, ·ac- cording to the report. The only exception was in the trend toward larger and more powerful boats. The average horsepower ol. out- board motors sold during the dropped to 31 percent !rom 33.1 the previous year, and the average length of out- boards sold dropped to 15.4 feet from 15.9 in 1969. 'nle. slowdown in the sale of large sailboats was also reflected in the records of major builders in the Costa ~tesa and Newport areas where sales were off from 17 to 30 percent during the year. In their annual year-end statisUcal report, BIA and NABM estimated that 44,070,000 persons w e n t boating more than once during the year' a gain or more than 800,000 over 1969. • 'Ille report said $3.44 billion ' was spent at retail on new and UM!tl boetin& equipment, fUe1 ina!rance, mainteneoce . "' . and hicldentals -up 11411 million from the previous year. The ·nation's 8,814,000 boat recreational neel breaks down as f<6rn: tl7 ,000 inboard motorboats -including aux~ iliary-pawered s a i I b o a t s ; S,201,000 outboard boats ; 620,0@ sallboat.s without aux- iliary, power, and 2,357,000 rowboats, canoes, dinghies and miscellaneoos craft -some of which are used with out- board power. The rll"'rt also note. that there are 3.7 million boat trailers; '125,000 in b o a rd gasoline and diesel engines and 7,215,000 outboard rooters in use in the country. Skilled workers remained the outboard motor's most avid fans, accounting for near- ly a quarter of motor sales to employed persons -though they make up only an eighth or the en1pioyed population. Professionals, managers and proprietm-s and clerical and sales personnel also accounted for increa9ed shares ·of the out.board market Outboard sales to :iemi-tiklll- ed l'Orl<en fell from IU per· cent in 1969 ta 13.9 in 1970. Trimai:an Launched In Newport Horizons unlimited. That was the feeling of the Bowie Houghton family · of Newport Beacb Tuesday when their ~: triroann Erin was :'10l1ted 1over a delicatesiefi. and an 411illey and e....r" fu!O the wliters of Newpol't"Harbor. The launching marked '-the climax of three years• of tedious and ardUOWI work by Houghton and his wife, Erin, -for whom the trimaran was named. 1be craft was from a dealgn by the late Arthur Piver wbo disappeared on a trimaran a few years ago while making a trial run from San FrancUCo to San Diego. Houghton began work on his dream boat three years agG when he was a student at Georgia Tech. He recelved a lot of manual and mcnl help when be married bis wife1 Erin. Work on the yacht was tem- porarily halted when the Houghtons moved to Newport Where he was employed by an aerospace finn. Houghton and his wife finished the trimaran during a brief Jayoft from his aeroopace job. ... _ RAIL DOWN -The New Zealand yacht Buccanee r, skippered by her owner Tom Clark, slices through heavy seas oU the Tasmania coast durJng the Sydney to Hobart Race. Bue<:aneer won it in 3 day•. 14 hours. 6 minutes and 12 seconds -much of II in heavy weather c<>nditlons with high seas and stroni wind<. · -• LEGAL NonCE LEGAL NOTICI: ....... N9TICI tNYtTt• ·-NOTIC8 111¥""'9 ... c•11n,.1UT• • • •ut•IM. 'Tfle c_,.. s....111• 0111r1cts ., Tiie c-tv ..,..._ DWr1dl ti •KTiT... ....... OtMM C_.., Wfl ,....... -ltd bki1 Or ... C-'r Wll t..a1W --..... TM""""""'" .... ctrtlfot !tit Iii -"""-1 lltDI A.M. Mandi,, J-.t't' 11, unfit ll:OD A.M. ~. JtlllllfY 11, duetl111 t ~ •I 4'1 l lrdl 5!r1Mt, 1t71, 11 wflldl llfN tllt't wOI k Mlllllcl'I 1f71, at whldl fl-lfltr Vitti De ...-M:ll' Suitt llCll, ,._.. 9Mdl. C11iftrnl1, -..led ll'ICI .. amlnH 11 1'119 otflu ...,.. llld .CM!IMcl 11 .. """" lllllltr" Ille flttllltut firm lllllM Of ol lllt DlJtr~ 1-.U EHlt A-, of the D11trktt, NM' IUi.. , ......... IUSIHESS IHSUltANCI AOIHCY .... ,_laill Y1lleY, C1lllomt., fOI' the Y1llrt. C1Nfwflla, fw t111 """"'-i .... , .. 111 ""91 ii ~ el ftlf Mllfw. ,_.loWl,.: TWO It) ).WHt:t:L EL1!'1l1C CAllS "-..,_ ..,_. MIM 1111 f\11 W llltct THllfl 1)1 4-00011 PA$SEHGEll SPECIFICl.TK>lf ,_ ~I flf ~ II M ....... ; IEDAHS SPECIFICATION NO, AO TWO ltl ..WHEEL llLICTWIC CAU '· J-....... 0# 1"-'I ~ lift mutl be IWllmlt*" 1t1 ttM> '°"" s•ECll'ICATION NO • .t.4D Ntt. & ....._, IMdl. C.. ,_ Miit!'! ... IW fttt Olttrlctt Ill ~nu llft lllUH bt eWnllttwritl • "" ""'9 DllM °"*"""A.. 1'1f wltfl 111 lll'O'I'"'-flf the 19tdfle.ttloll.. .._il9i(I fW t11e Dlttl'lttl lft ...... ICll ... ,,_ ....... 5-llk.elloM, tllcl bll~t ll'lll furthtl' Wiii! '" -ltlMI GI' the llNCiflca*""· .. C1IHDmMI. or-c .. nty: '""'-tlOll ,.,., be tlllllnMI .t ... $HdflcttloN. bM _.... .... NrtMt Oii ~ .. lt 1t. lltfor9 -· • .....,. ........ ...,_ Nl-UU w w.,m.ljOll _, M .... ._. 11t H ......... l"Wlllc "' a1111 IW .... St• j.ll.2ftl. ....,. ....,_, ....,... fitNal w k'lllWtl .. -.. ._ 1M --""'-J, W-SY~ S.:mt. -.. ~ " 1M wttlllll IMtrv-Dif'9diW GI F"*°O _,,. 91111 ~ ht .ecuw 1111t l"IAllWIM orAIWI CMlt 0.1~ l"llol -· . Dtctmbtr a. lt1t tn1•10 (Ofll'ICIAL SEAL) GEOltOE H, DANIELi ,...,... l"llltllc • C.ilfllrni. ...-lnc"'91 Office In ...... LEGAL N011CE or ... c"""' • CHTmCATI' -"'' ..... M1 c.ownrie• ~ 'ICTITM*t _.. MOTIC:• ~ eitel s.t. TJ, mt • TJMi lllllltl'l'911M ... Ql'tlfY bl t. ~ Netlc. 11 Mrw, oJWll tMt 1111t ._,.. _, ~t ~-.. ,.f#,!.t Del~--'°"!! ~ • 1M11I-•I ..,,-Wi. 11'ft. Cotto Trv11"1 of ffle Fwntal11 V•llrt ICfMioll ' • -·.--~ c.i""'111a. ~ flW fktltll:ll.ll """ Dllfrld er or-C-'Y. c...,.,.,..., w111 • ~~ ,., NOTI,._ _... ti 'IATHfltlTON l"AINTING Md ~ _ .... llllil .. i. t;• .,rn. """"• ~ \lD lhtt ..... flnft .. c-....i ..... ~ l:Jltl ..., • .i-,y, tftl .... efllcil .. ---------------!• --. .._ MlllO Ill "* -"""' .. i. tdlell .ittrld _ctw.lrll...,.,,...,. ....,.. tf ,......_ .... ,.,....! . .t wllldl ftiM Mid llldt Wiii M ...... cam,ta.TW o . '"· ~ttwt111n. ,.,. 'ltt'el'n or .. .,,. ..., tw a Hell...,........,.. ,.M. CO.l'OllATIOM Coar. Mt--. C•llf. with NAO tl"' Mii.t!M. Motw .. • MO> TUMUCTI ... •UllNatl 0.tM OK. 1, lt70 CN .. llOM' •lld 1 mobil '"'°""""9 """" llttOI• 'tCTITIOUI MAMa O. I", FMltlt''""' No.NLN '511. The"t' ,,. " .. ~ 14 tT II HlfllEIY CElll:Tll'IEO Al ,OL. Staff .. C.lffwnll, 0,."" COIHIW: .cc~ \With -lftut'--.,. flle LOWS :. On Dec. J, 1m Wfl:Wt ,.,., • Mol•ry In ,,,. ~rdlasl111 .,,..,....,.. .r "" Tiie SP ti .... , •• CllifWftlll '*"'°" .. l"utllle In .,.., fol' Mlf st.ft, Nl'U'lllllY F-loln Vtl"7 $C11ot1 Dletr'lef, N""""' "'"· '9 ...... Minni In "" Stthl fll ..,._,_. 0. I". FN~ lultwn to -OM l.ltlllth9uM ~. C.,,... GI T.-rl Ctllfarnlo uncltr "'-f'ldlflous -"T. to bt h ""'°" wlloM -15 ~I· olld NllWl111d S!rHt, F•nllln Vtflt~. H. LIKEN I. SONS". T .... 1rlncJpel sla« M ht "°' 'l\'lf!lln lntlrvl'lltflt 11111 CIUfomll "*· fll !Mnlnest Md tht SI.ct ot ,......_. ~'""" he fQQli.d tti. Mme.. By QrW 9f thl IMl'f fll .. Mid corPW11»on .. loc•lld If nio !Of'FICIAL SEAL) TfWttft. ,-1dl Line, W•lml111fer, Ctllfwnla. MAllY K. Hl!NllY ~ ...... In V•lllY tt11tOf D1tMct Dtltd: NO¥embtr ». ,,,. Noterv ~lie. C•lllwfll• Win• c. c;,_, Clwt "' ... LIKEN, IJKOltl"OllATl!'D Mnci.11 Dfl'ICI In • ..,. I•: 'Th!mft K. t.lkan, .. ,....,. Or...., CounlY l"ul>llthtci ~ c.... Dtll'I 'l'lllf )CllS c-i LMw NII' CM1ml .. 1on 1:.,1,.. Dtctmi.r JD. lt70 lftf J_.,... '° Co.II Maa. C1llfornl1 Nn. f.C. ltn lt11 231f.11 Mautlq S. Llk"" Secrehi,.,. l"ubllll!tll Gr•-Co.11 DlllY ,lloto __________ _,.-- TP'Hlllfff' Deo:MIW t, 11. 2), lO, 1'1'1 ttft.101 2ff Nlelll Av._ 1---'-' ----------1 "-... di. c.uMrnl• LEGAL NOTICE STATI! OF CALIFOlll:NIA ) •U•OOOOO -•oT OP TMO COUNTY OF Oll.t.MOE ) 11 "'"' On o.c.tnbtr 7, 1t10, bt!Ol't -· ,... ...,,711 STAT• 0, CALl ... MIA l'Oll UndtflhJMd, o NOll,Y 'Ybll(' In 11N fOI' c ••Tll"tCAT• .THa COUf!!!_.!!' 01Alt98 LllGALll01'ICE .. 111 c-Tv ..,, s111t, .. .._1tv .,..r. -LOOK MOMMI E, IT FLIES -Two year old Worth-• THOMAS H. LIKEN, ti.wn """ '° co•l'Olt.0 ATta• T••NsACT11ite •UM."o"' 1ull•LW•1 bt tht l"nsldenl and MAUlllCI! I. LI-\lllN•U \INDl!ll In ,_ "-IMl'r'-t .. .....in.-~ lngton Bowie Houghton III marvels as.the family KEN,~" -., .,. ,,... 59Cl't!t1,y. tT., H::Y~~~\.,~m~ As FOL· =...=n.=.,:n.,.• •..-..n11 trimaran is hoisted over an alley before being de-~111'1n i::.=~':-"'-[.:Cl: LOWS; To 11w 1tHllOI009n1: • posl'ted m' Newport Harbor The craft was named .,. ..,.. "ri-wt1o tllec""" TM w11111n ""-undtf'llfNld, • couiorn1o «llffl'•· Tll9 11tt11i-ti• ftlll • ""'1tn • 1n1l•u1Mnt on bth•lf Of !he cor-•llefl "°"' 11 dolne 1M11ln111 In "" Sl~lt ot concemlne l'OClr l'l'llrrll•. y_, "'-" fll9 Erin for Mrs. Houghton who helped her husband lher91n ,..m_, ,.., 1e•u-lld9id to me c1111orn11 llndt!' ,... f1ctll1ow -DEL • wrlltitft ,_ w1tt11n flllrt-t •v• Bowl. build l'l. '"'' 1udl ecw..:irilkln ltlllCVttd the within MAit COM,ANY". The sr/ftdpel ralece of of"" tlttt 11'11! 11111 ._ '* _.,... '"''"""'"' ,..,_nt 11 1,.. bl'laWI .,. • butkit1' W ll'le .,..cit flit rutdlnct " en rou. tt ""' 1111 to nr. • wrt1t11t --------------:--------------lrH011111ar1 °' "'lllllrd" dlrtctora. 111d corsw111on II IKl!ld '' n• Fen-,_. wllhln well tlMI, ,_, -.u11 Sailoffs Scheduled In March (OFFICIAL Sf:AL) Wld: L-. We1ttnln1llr, C1llfomla. ' rmov 111P enlotlwl tnd h c_, ""' w1111 a..11 H'"'''" DllM; NowmlllPr •· 1'70. tnter 1 1udilment conlllnlne lnluncl!Y9 Noll'I' Publlc-Ci lltOl'nle LIKEN, INCOlll:PORATED er other ordln CClllCtf'lllnt division .t ~ 'rlncfpll Ofllc1 I" •~: T110m1• K. Llk•n. pl'Ol«fV, _.1 ·,~, dllld Cllll9CIY• CallTlll'ICAT• OLI' •UllNSll. Or""' Counw Prtlidt>nt dllld ..--.. ttfWMy.. """ '*''• FICTITIOUS NAMI! Ml' CCll'!mlulotl EulrM ~ .. "-'"~--' Mid such otW ttlltl"H mey lie llll'llM Tiit lll'ldtnltned doll«H'lltr ht '9 ~ DK. 11, 1'71 ""'" i .... ,...,,.., Ill' tfll courl. duc;!IM t 1M11Jneu ot ism or"' Olkl. l"ublbhld or-cent o.RY l"lltf, Mwl1C1t s. Ll'.M. II l'OU wit!'! to llMt ""' .nic. .. WntrnlmMr, c1111.. unii.r h 11et111ous D«embw 14 n. ». lt11 &noil Jll'llltl'Y '' ,.."'"'.,'...l'Y·T,,.isurer 111 •""""-"' Ill 11111 -!!tr, ,,... "'*"" firm rwme of 1HT2'RSTAT2 EQUI ... 1n1 JU2.10 ,.,o l'fnUI 1111 so -llJ' " fhlt vtur """"" MENT SAL.Ef: CO. incl 1 ... 1 llld """' II Lont lltldl, C1tllornl1 ,_, 11 1111'• 1'1'1111' .. ftlll en ComPOi.ed of t1!t1 toUowlnt "'llOll. w1M1M • STATI! OF CALIFORNIA I lllTll. nome 111 NII Ind "'a« °' ralclt1ico h N LEGAL NOTICE COUNTY OF OltANGE ) 11 D111d Die:. 24. ''" lollowl: On ~r 1, lt1B lltf11r1 '"" l'lle WILLIAM E. IT JOHN. "'""'°"" c. Jenll;I ..... 15152 GrtY Oeb NOTIC• INVITt• 91DI ........ ,..,.., ....... ,., '1lblk In .... fol' c~ We11ml111ftt', C1lll. ' Notleo 11 h9rllW t'-!hi! tht...,. tf .... C-IY Ind Sti le, .-11W" II>' W. It, HlnrY. LEGAL NOTICE Dlled Otutnbtr 7, 1910 Trvlllfts fll h Cotet Commr.N'lllY Cll .... -'" Tllon'lll H, Liii.in 11111 MMrlct °"""" • R1~ C. Jlftklnt Dfrtrlcl ot Dl'anM CtunW, Cellfttn .. , w\11 S. Ltnll, ._ .. ,.,. ts h tllt P'TMI· ISl!"Al) · Fir1t major yachting action sr1t. of c1nfornl1, 0111"" cou"ty: rec11vt -ltd blcll us 10 n:• o.m., IMl'll '"",~ "°...,"'-""',.,..Tniuunt'" _!...,.~ tllt0 ._..,. KlllN'Ytl ........ • On D«emblr '· 1'111. btfDrw ,,.., • ""°""'"· Jlllut'I' 11. 1m. ,, "" ""'°"' -... m... II-,...,, --er. JR Southern Call!omla after Ho••l'Y Pllllllc 111 • ..., for 111d stote, '11rdll1Fnt om. 9f Mid ~ 4lltrlcl ::""~~,.: :r...l: i:.::..:,.-,........ v.....,, Cdf. the New Year will be the ....-1tv -·• 1t1vmon11 c J.,.,.. loClholll .t 1»0 AU!r'll A-. c.t1 on T .. ""' ..,.M , • k-to ,.,. to bl "" pen0,. _,,.... ~ C.llfaml1, It wtlldl Mmt .. Id bMI i..ti.11 ot 1111 ~•llarl IMrtln .......... l"ubllsllfd °'"'" C-' 0...... ....... sa1loffs for the Congressional n1m1 is wbxrlbld 11 1111 wllllln 111-wlll llil ~lctr -*' -' ,.... tor: ::',1e-'~ :. ":.th~ 1 ~ Decwllbtr JO. Im llld ~ " n. CUp --~•uJe<f m' March slr-t llnd .m-lldted he .. KU!td ti) Grocery Oilll ll .. l1t.r1 _....,,...,, l9 Ill lll'·llWI Ir "'-_. 20, lffl H»11 M;.llC\I • Ille llmt. , 11) W.... W1!wr VIPOI' .AMlnla t..111 .. ~. -' ~ "" Sailoffs will be held Jan. (OFFICIAL SEAL) All """ .... 19 bt ht KC'Ol'llllKI with ~';E~~)d"' dlredorll. 9-10 . H Jul d Lo JEAN L. JOBST Ille lllltnldlont ...... Condlllonl Ind Wiii 0-Ht m ono u an ng Hot1ry Public . C111!orni1 5Ndllcoi-.. whldl .,, now Oii file Ind Not:,., l"vtllc, t:~~;. ClfltTll'ICATI! ., •UllN9U. LEGAL NOTICE Beach. The Honolulu Yacht Prlnc:lpet Otrkt In !Ml' bt .,.,.. 1n TM otflot .. h Prtnclpet OtrlQ 111 •ICTITtOVs •AMa Cl b Ill d t the tr, I 0r.,,.. C-11' 1"11rdt•lnt AHnt ot Mid .Khool dl1trlcl. O••ntt CclunW The undlrslenN .,. cenltr IMI' 1,.. u W con UC 1a s Mv Commi.11on EQlrn E•dl bld4lo' mllll 1utmlt with his bid • M• comm1u 1on E~I Olldllcl! 1 there to determine which skip-llbl Mll'Cll 2• un c••hler"s er.. c•rllt!M el\lcll, or Dtc. 11, 19n ,... i ...... c~1~ ~.:;,• r:!w;!:, ':::~ per and crew will particlruate ~~t ~;•;;,• ld C~~ D•llY ~~ bidder'• bond tN1d1 .. v1blt to Ille er1111r "'ullll1htd Or•nt• counfY Doll• Piiot. C•lllcrnli, under !I'll tlcllll•• 11""' rt1me r-' ' • !JI 1111 Co.sf COlllmunllY Cel19M Dlslrld Dlctmblr' t•, 23. 30, 1'711 tnd JM111r' ol HU·V Ind llllt wt• firm 11 "'""°""' in the Congressional Cup. LEGAL N011CE lo.rd °' Tnn!te I~ 9fl •meunl Ml llu t. 1tn 2Joll·10 ,,, 1111 followl11t1 ........... WllMt """" The , -• Be h YC sailofl 1t11n five ~ INI of the ""'" bid 11 111 lull •rid ~ fll ,..llMD -._.. ac ,.,_ • _.,.. thtt'"" ~ ..i11 °""' l!rte LEGAL NOTICE •• !Oli-t· will be conducted over two c11tT1l'1CAT• °' •u11Nl!IS. ::.,:::::1,., cm",;:..!:,,, 9:: ,:Tr" : i.-11 G. Kiii!, c Ht11o1"'"· c- weeke-•-Jan 9-10 and l'ICTIJIOUS NAMI ... "'"' 9Udl. C91trocf tht Pl'«.:.ri of , -· del Mir. ~lldrkk A. Sdlelll11Pl1Mut, I~ -• T,,. llndll'lien.d dells (lrllfY .... .. • ...... a Hlllol:,,_, c-. lltl Mir, C• Jan 1~17 The winner will Conduellnt • llllllflml .. 7.SO lllll'lbrtrd TM dltcJc wlll -forttltM ... In tllt (tit CllltTl,IGlT• °" COlll"CNIATION LlmltM ''"""' Jdln H DYii' 1mi • " Drl\tt, L-IMdl. C.llfenlla. Ul'Jder " I bend. Ille fllll Mn thtrwof w\11 lie l'Olt ftAMucnotl OP •Vllllat N, lfdD•r Pl., Fuillrhn, ca. ' represent the host club. ""* flctltloul fu'm n • rn. of forlelttd " Mid W-1 llll1lrlct. lltlDll ... ICTlTfOUI !CAMI Detld DIC. 2t. lm Sailoffs in the San Francisco PElll:SONALITY PLASTICS ...... lllU Mid .:::.. ~ ~~ltlld,.;,-.. "I• :..,. fern: THE UNOElllllOlll!D COlll"ORKT~ON LllWll c. Kiii! fl"" 11 ~of 1111 fol""-""°"• ... ,,...,...... n ... llirWby ttrtlW tllmt ff la conlluctll'll """*Ill A. klttll~ area Will be held Jan. 23-24 wl'loae Mme In lull Ind pl.ct of r11klencl clllt lff for tht -'119 "°""'· I blnlnlll In 1111 Sllle of Cllllllrftll, John N. D•er at Long n-cb but under the I• •• follows : Pl'~ffw -:."'re1~.!."".:"' ~~"" CounlY .. Of'•"I• In Ill• CIW ot ~ Slit. ef C1llfornl1, 0r•"9••COU""': aa. J-h SffPIMln Lqo Jr., no • or Bt11:h, 11 217? Dul"onl Orlw, Ulld1r On Dlcwmblr 2t. 1tJO btlore ,.,._ auspices of St. Francis Yacht R1mtw1rK11 Ueune 811d!. C•llf. ~111;-:_ "'~~ w1';9.!i;:tr:....;, r tht ncn11-llrrn n1,.,. of FLOIUOA • Noli,., 'ubllc In ,,... fol' •Id St..._ Club ·· Doll"' Dec. 11, lr'/'11 ()son· JI_,., It. 1'71 • ll·• ""' MOOOL.Alt COMPVTl!ll S'f'.STEMS, lt\IC. ""°"'"" '"911'111 L1w1a e. Kt1fi1 & • JOllPll S'-fton L-Jr. ·,ltMd NCMl:MAN E ·w1.TsON ... the! Nhl' """ 11 ~ ., TM H ... 1' A. Sdltl~-'-to ._ .. On Jan. 30-31 sailoffs will St•I• of C11!10rflll, °'""' C-W! I ' COtSor.tlon. .,_ ~ -,. .. "" .. ,,_. ---• On 0tctmtw 21, ,,..,, btfror'o 1'1'11, • SICl'ttt..,., acw.I ., . .,..,.,_ pllQ flf Minni II" fellewt: tt'W lubKrlbtd to t111 within~ be held in San Diego, Newport Not1ry Publlc In ...... ,... ..... St.le, ~ .... ·-,,,. ....... 0,111v '"'"!· Nt!M °' ~tlo: MOOULAll COM. tnd HkMwllOIM they ll:tcUtliif tfll H ~-L An I Lo perlOl'llltr •-1'111 J-'t '"""*' •n~ ... l"UTl!ll SYSTEMS. INC. • llmf a1uu.r, 0 S gees· ng L""'°' Jr. known to mt Ill bt tht ...,,_ lf71 141 .. 11 l"rlfldHI ~ flit Ml-:: t1011 Ntrlh (CIVFIClAL SEAL! Beach, Marina del Rey and whott n1me 11 wbKr~ to ftlf wllM!t D .. lt Hll,....,, Ft. Lt..,,..11, "-""· MAll:Y ll!TM MOit.TON Sa ta n • ..a... IM!r!Hnlnl 1rld~nowllCIMd tit....,.. LEGAL NOTICE 0.IM: N••••ibt+ JI, lfJIL Nofl,y 'ubll('. C111fen11t n ..-.uo..1a. ""11me. M111ui.r c_..,. tnttmt. tnc. l"rlftclNI 0tric. In Southern Califomla sailoffs (SEALl K-.... c . ...,.... Or-Co!mtv ELSIE E. JOHNSOt\I '90TtC• OP MAIHNAl.'S IALI! .. ,......,. ,,,,., c..-rui.n 1:-. wiD be held at Long Beach Nof•rv Public • C1111orn11 T ... "tit · Wlllllm c. l.Mldll. Aprn t. ,,,. Y cbt Club The f, st d Principe! Olflct In r1111C11111t11W1111 c...m S.MQ, Inc., S.U.t.,.,.T,.1111rtr 1"11blllihM Or'•-ce111t o.nv p·ret 8 • tr an se-Or1111'1 CounlY l"l•lnllfr n. Howll'd H. C••nll'MI. Slllrlet' STATI! Of 1'1,.0ltlDA. Deumber JO. 1'10 ol'ld JtflUI '-'1:a. cond places in this salloff will Ml' Comnilt•lon l!JUllN:I Cornl"!: ~nl.. COUNTY Of'. 81lOWAltd' 2Q, 1m IY :Mla.11 h . . AUSIDI t, ffn I V "'""' fll .ri ll:ICUflDl'I iu..-1' Oii OW Nw1111•r 29, Int. btfert -••----:=:::c:-:===---represtnt t e J r respective "'11111'"'" °''""' eo.rt D•ITY P1111t ~ 1, ,,,. 11¥ 1111 MunldHI COU11, ,...,,.,., l"vMc tcr .... CMllY ,,.. 1i.ir..' LEGAL NOTICE areas in the r....-ssional o.c ..... ...-n. ». 1•• w J•11111tY '· ,,, °"-c .. ,..., H911Jor JlldkM1 D111r1et, _.....1"' ...-... """""" o. "'" .. •---;:;;;;;;;;-:::c:=::::::::::::=---'"""-'6'.. 1'71 Z:.11 C-fl' 9' Or1111f, Si.te et C1llflll"llll, llnd Wlllltm C. t.ndla. .>r. '-.. rrw1 CUp. ._ • h1d9fl'llllt tnttred "' ft-of tr. bf f!M·I"........., Ind ,_,...,.,.T_,r. NOTIC• TO Cl•ltrTOlll The Co ~a1 Cup t LEGAL NOO'ICE. Tt~lll C'8Cllt Strvk9. Inc., •• "" ...-c!IWl'I' ef .... c:otfl«llllllll "'-! , .......... CCHllT .. TNR ngresa~ s ludt .... nl c""'ltors ..... lhlnst ........ "~ .... wllttln fnltrvrnlnl Oii Wiii" STAT•°" CALll'OltNIA,... the na:tion'S foremost match OAO .... H. Carnine, Slllflll' C1m1,.. .. ludtMtrlt of h cOI tllon ll'ltnlll nlft'lld. tnd TMI COUJITY QtJ OlllA•• • • • dtbt'Or .. -'-1119 • 1111 llil"'-of f:t.ff.t<I ~ I d 7' .. llllt 1UC1t • Ht. WPJlf racmg series wtth 10 skippers IUPlt:lll:IOI COURT OP TN• ectullly dUI en 111d lud9rrllnt .,,. Ille ;;;;~ ""':,,.. ,._.. 1:"11"' ... ELMEll If. BAltNETT and f ll the ITAT• OP CALl,OltNIA .S.lt fll Ille 1-PICll of Mid _,,,_ I IOFLl'ICIAL SEAL! Oeatlld. • crews rom a over '°"' THI! COU•TY CH" CMIAM•• h1vt lto/1111 "'"" .n TM rlthl, lt11t ..... IUI L MdW NOT)CI[ II Hl!ltE•Y GIVl!N .. ""' country · "'· ... ...._ lnllf'nl 111 Mid llllftmtnl llllbfort, 1n "'-"'°''"' i-llblfc 11 .,.. for a.dlhlrt « "" •bow fllmtd dtcfttnt • NOTICI! o• H•Allll .. Ofll 'ITITION _.., In lllt COll!tW of °"""' ... ,. Mid c-ty •rid Sf9te """ •II --Itel'!,. el•lnu '"""' Yacht Firm Shortening Work Week ,Oil l"llOBAT• 0, WILL ANO l"Olt flit C•lllornll, cll1ocr1btd 11 followl: Ml' C-llllon lf .. I,... ll'lt Niel dtc.o.r.t IP'I .._lnof '9 fll• Ll!TTl!llS T•STAMl!NTAl'r lof 1J of Troe! NI. 1tS4 M tM Jin. f ltJ• • llMm. with 1111 -..,y 'IOl1dl9rt. I E•le"' fll Herbert E. ANOl!llSON, COunfY af °"""' Slate (ff C1llloml1, 11 ' T...,. the dflca of the clffk f11 tl!tl ~ O.C..wd. .., ""' rtconled In toot 11w. '""" !S. ll'lll:llh'*ll or.,,.. cont c.iw l"llol onttl'IMI murt, .,. 1'D ""'"' "*"-w1111 NOTICE II HEREIY CIVEN tlltt H llld 27 .. Mlsctlle...,. M#I Ill flM o.c.mbtr 14 U. JI., lt11 Ind ~ Ille -MIT Wlldll~ to flM BANK 01" AMl!RlCA NT I. IA !In fl ... Ol'Pkt of Wte Cwntv It__, ti Mid .. lt71 n.';; dtl'lltnld 11 1119 oMct of hit ... nen::; hlrtln • Plllllon er ...... i. of Will c .... ,.,. ,,...,,. " COllWhG(~ ._.. •• Slllm s. Frlfllt!ln, .,, E11! 17111 '""' •ncl tor 1uu1nu of LtlttP'I TM!lrnlfttWy m Level•, C•I• Mn1, c.111om11 r •GAL NOTICE C•I• MIN C.lll'or'ltl1 f'N27 Whldt 1' lo lltt111-r, ...,.,_ .. Wllld'I II NOTICE 1$ Hl!RE8Y GIVEN tlllf on &..r. 1111 Pllct of MlntU .. 1111 ~r.n.: midi tor lurtlllr' Plrtkvlln. onof tlltt F1111tv, JtftUery t. 1t11, .i I :• e'dodt In 1n "'-"'" 111rt1ln1nt to l'tlt nllte tllt """ Incl SllCI "' llllri!W ll'lt l".M. .. tront .. co.ttlloutl. .N1 Wut lltlh llfCITIC• TO BIOO•lls ol ..... deadlnl, ...... lllvr """"" ~ ~t:~.m~ flt tor 1111 J=.:; r~~ "Jr.~,"' ste":'~ g::::t: T= 1!t "':' F:11:"'v::91eY ~ ~ ~~~ tlll• ""lcw. of D-rtment 111.. I °' Mid COIH1, I wllt eel! .i lllbllc lllC!lon to .... hlthtsl Ol1trlct Will P'IQfyt ltldl. le slll'CNH !or Elton .. rntn •• 100 Cl¥1c c..iw 011119 Wllft, In bkkltr', for Clll! In 1..it!! ""°""' of tllt U'lh to .... hlthlll blddll', otllOlttt 1dlool E~ICll!or °' ""Wiii"' !hf City of Slnlt Aftll. C..lllontt.. Unlltd St1ta, 111 TM rt.Ill. ttllt tM In-fvrllltllP'I and ICllll-1, "ll ii. .. IOtllch 1111 1bow llMl>td dKliflrlt 0.tfd Dlotmbtt' 7J. 1'11 lffnt of Mid IUdittntn! MD!w. In t11t Pits M!fl MttnnlnM "' bt I'll lilNtr hlltll S. ,,.,.._ ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. -~st::'N '°"" dncHb9CI '"'"""· °" .. mum_.... fol' K11eo1 """*•· •1t .... 1m Slt'MI, In a precedent making move ltOLAND ._ •teOMH• ~~'..': ::="l'n:.:'= 1:~:::: ~ ,.:'~~~ .. :: ~m~.nl...._....., for the boating lndustry, ..,,. M9111""" COl1t, Sd!liel Dlrtrlet Wl rtllouM, 17M Ntwlln(I A"'""""" ........ Morga Yacht Corp has ~~ ~ CllW. .... o..,1tt1 .. Cot11 Mftl. c .. 11om1 .. Dt-Sir•'· FOllll!lln v.11 .... II ... '°""' l'NIV l"ubll1ti.d Or•-COllt Diiiy l"llllt n • · cem r 14 1'1'1. bt el:ltt>lnltl ,,.,, 1111 'urcllal119 Ct1rt, Oecamblf' JO, 1'70 Ind J"'"'"' 4 ll recenUy shifted to a four-day,·~~ ~c•tt .O.ll• ,11ot ~~'rn=i..• c.,rt, ~=1n ~:;,. N .. 1 t.11111,,_. Line. 211.. 1t11 M'-..i 11>-bour a day work week. o.a,,,.... 2', • 1910 11111 J•-,., or1"" C-IY HOrtor ~ ,_,. ,,.. .. fllflew5: LEGAL NOTICIC ~--Jes Morgan president .c. 1m Mll·ni JUdlc1e1 Dl11r1ct w • ......,.. ,,., •·"'· • s:• '·"'· ftl•l-.i-----7.o-;;;;;------>.AJoai • '' e. J . ,.. .. i. ,,. ••c.t lltvnhv1, 1un11.,.. tn1t1 off' the lllytedaohlthamlanthufacturing LICGAL NOTICE MAX NAltA~ =~~·=•«II or mo,.. ''-mutt bl NOTICI! 9:~ ~~•D1T01t1 um. ! e move c••TI,tu.T• o• 9\ISINISS. tllYt ... ~ tnclollcl In • -"" lft....._, ldcfraMd SUl"llfOll COUIT °" TM• Is tn the modern trend and l'ICTIT!OVS MAM• :::-~ hi tllt l•nl"' T""'"'-Ind fllld "''"' STAT• OP CALll"OllNIA l'Oft ~'--' Jm condl"'-· Tiii undtt'll"'*' do CllrilfY !111' '" A"'""" "'1 l"llrd'Ml•lnt Cllrt, Dldrlcl Otlkt, No. TNI! COUNTY M 0 ....... ~u to prove """'"' condlldl11t1 1 ~ ot Sll»Jt Hfmlhort PvDlllflM Or.... C•ll 0.11" l"lklt 1 Ll9MIMMit "-• F-.tlllft V•ll..,, E ... M1M for peraonnel as well as the s1., c... .... c.i1fdml •• "'*" .... ~ '"' n. JD. im ""°11 ?~ -;.: ....,.. ~-· J_,... ~r ~01t~.~Ymo~~ lletlllout flnl'I -ti HAMIL TOH LANE ' · '·'"· _., M ctedl!Ors ot tM obeve 11MMC1 ~ company. APARTMENTS ,..., .,..., Mid """ 11 LEGAL NOTICE "'left 11 ,,.. to.I'd M"'1"' J'"""'"' 1, 111,1 1n parscm ti.vr 1 1 "Experience has shown that mmPOMCt of "" tv11ow11111 l>ll'IDl'll • .,_ Im '1 7::111 •·'"· T,... •a.rd °' T,,,. .... ,,,. Mid *<wOlnt ,,."' ,:.~1::, :'';:! where the system w a 5 ... ma In 11111 and Pl.en ef mW.nu .,..,,.,, ~':~"" rlthl ts -i or P'lllCt 1nv ,....,,, wltll 1111 lllCUMl'Y ~ In ..., ,,._ 11 followl: NOTIC• OI" U.L9 M ITEMS fo IE •ID Ul"O otlk• ol TM dil'lt °' flll Ho¥t lfltltl .. employed in other industries. Dr. ~ w. DNn. w North OIAL ·-··-AT ••JY•T• SALO --"" N: COIH1. "" to llf'-.it """" wttll 1111 ..._... h Siii' Line. Mrt. Dul'olll~ 0..11. 21S ' • ~• ""° ttllderlt lllHll Ml'Y -..c:fllrs, 10 "" Vfldlrll9nN ti Ill.I morale and prodUcUon ave Norlll 511r Lint. In !I'll ..,_':. "'t::: of "" Slit. tun~I), N IKll It"' lid ,.,.. cti.lr1 offlw et lier llltlrnt't"· MILAN M. D0s. been 1----' and emp!oye Oiled Olclmbtr 2', 1t10 of CIUtornle, IOI" ltll COllflh' of 0,.,.._, :=)~I~::)~-~.!',-"',, -~rs TAL. Union l"'k ~re, lutt. t!m, Or· &lllfNUY~ O•. T"°""• w. °°"' . .._... ""' .......... , ....... C1llfornl1. whk:h 11 Ille •Ila .. tumnver has been reduced,'' Mrs. Dorottw °°"' In .1111 °""""" ot tht Ell•te Of Vicki con1iw IH<ld C*'ldll1onl. 1 .. c11 Pllolo buslneu °' !ht vnden.ltnetl In 111 '"-' -,..-· Id "~-le Sl•lt o1 C1Hfvml1, °"'"" cevntv: J. STv.r1, •lie ._ 1• Vtnf J. ll~ld O...,llc1h11', Model CT II, 1 tKll !f!'s 111rt1lnlnt 1o 1111 "'''" ...... .;_. Mcrgan sa • V\<1-peop 0n o.c. ,.,, ltJD, ~ ,..., • Nollry sru.rt, Vlctlt Sc11un1 ..., ,. Vtr• A. B. Did: o..i.tlctfol', Model N .. 212, 1 ce<Mnt, wltlll" four mMlll• .,... "",. , have welcomed tbe move as Pllb1k In Ind tor Mid Stttt. ,.,_.,11tv J. WKflllwttw, O.C..Md. Qdl 1t1m1nt10n """' E I e c 1r1 c PVbt1eo11on of 1111s notk•. "' 1-.ci 1'"°""I W Do.ft I. Mra. Notlce II lwnliY 91'1'111 11\tt IM lln-Ty.-wrttef', I Mdl Horllllllltl F-.r, D1ltd Oeclmbtr 1l lt11 one which will give them more Ooralhy OOln k_. le "" lo be denl"'*' -..n Mii •I ,rl\t11W 1111, lo Molltl Ne. ts. I Mdl • .,,.,..,..,on. lltlS EMMALiNE MATtlClt .i-_.. and "--"•Uy 8 boost TM ""°"'' ~ Mmft 1r1 lublctlbtd Ille hl9hltl 91111 bltt blffirr, Wbllcl to By Order Cl! tlll ._,.. E•ecutrl• of tht WIH ti ..ui.n:: .• '"'I""'" to !ht wllhln 1n1tnnn1nt trld Hllnewll'dll· conllrl'l'llllotl fll MMI S-lor Courl, on Of Trw1tt1 • the 1i.o.,,. _.. ~ to OUl' lndWJlry." Id tl!tlv IRIWllll 1"9 1111'11· "" lfttr TIMI ltlfl IMY .. J.-w•r,, 1'71, F111111l•ln Vll•l'I' Scllclol Olttrkl MILAN M. DOITAL M-y--•t Co~ a (OFFICIAL SEAL) 11 Ills Clfflct GI ni.ri-111111 Mlllll', Mr. Wllllem I:. Cr1n1, """"' ... ._..,, , ..... 19 .... an ILIJ • r·· JO ANNI! MANN A"'"""9 .. ~. HM l"•lnt.r ......... Cllrt Cl! ..... OO'l'lf'lllM .. ,.., °""'9e. ~ wtiolly owned subsidiary or Not•rY Pvt>11e . c.1111m1• WllllllM'. ~ of Lo& AnMltl. st1tt 0:.,.':.,lllled or-C1111 o.11y ·,1111t T11: t7141 ... ,,,. Be tr, Foods Co of Chicago Prlftcl1111 ottia. In of C1llflrnll. 111' IN rleflt, nttt 1nd 111-~ n. ». lt7t ms-111 A......,. fW lfnc""'111: a ice . . 0r.,,., CounlY 1ere11 of """ -..11111 1t t11t ti,.,. ot l"utoNll!fd °"'"" CHll o.ii, l"ltlt manufactures a full line of M• comml111cn 1:u1... ltNth _, 111 1111 rw.1. 11111 •l'ld 1ntert11 LEGAL N01TCE o-i.r 11. n •· 1m ,,... J~-,., , , 'ij Ml¥ II, 1'1~ tllfl tlll llftllt ol ... Id dlCNWd llf• K-l-----...... -----11~•c._:l~fn.:.._7':-0--,,-,.,.,-,~-~-~~" fiberglass sailing auxt arles at l"utolllhlll or1nr.1 cout D•nv ttltot '"'1"" toor 0Ptr111on .. i.w "" °"""""'~' • ., • .,. '5t Petersburg Dec~ 30. ""' 1ne1 J•1111•1Y '· lJ. """' 1111n or In Ndltlon ,. Ill.It • Mid NOT1c1 TO c••DfTelll LEGAL NOTICE • • 2D. lf11 ~111 -..1111. ti l'lle ltml .. dlllll. lfl •1111 IUl'••tott COUll:T O~ TNa ....... cerl1ln ,., ,,_,,,. •llll•lld STA.Tl C)tl: CAUl'OllMlA ..Oil ClllTl•JCATI M 1w111•1s. Buccaneer Takes Race LEGAL N011CE In ..,. c-w of °''""' Sltt9 of 0i11-TH• C'OUNTT o• ottANO• •1CT"HMll lllAMS J------==,,------1tom11. pertku .. rly llrkrlblll 11 fol-Nw. A"1Sn TIM llNll'1ii.ntd elf nrtllY ...., .,. T-611.N lowl, 1-11: E" I I It f o I L U LU EU G I N E COl'llfvctlnt I 1111111\fH.t It 711 L ... l"trlt NOTICI TO CllDtTO•s Lot 110, trtct 11U IS "' "''' TH0111NBURGH, Oll:qtl(ll. Drlw. NtWllOl1 llldl. Cllffllnll .. .,....... SUl"llllOll COUllT op: THI! recwlllcl In beolt l 7, '"" II ~ HOTICI! IS HElll:l!•Y GIVEN t. ltll l'lle flclllllul """ -GI H C 11 STATI Of' CAl.l,OblA l'Oll 1! " ""K~ -In "°' ~ Crldllo111 fl 1111 ltoe'l'I fllrMid dtctdlnt Dlt:VELOl"Ml!:NTI 11'111 tlllt Nlilf fll'ftt Tiii CO\lt!TY OI' ...,,,... 91 1111 l'l<Wdfr fl Mid ~IY. l!IOn 11111 Ill ~ 111¥1111 clll1111 -11111 11\t I• tDl'l'llllOMCI ti 1111 ._......,._ ......, .... Nn• ~ ~ M: 4t IE. 11th MMI Wcedtnl .,.. ,_,il'lll "' ntt !Mm • ...._. nernu In lllN Md ... '11 f1tlft;. of SIDNEY £, CAll:Tlll. O.. St •• C111t -.,., C1l11«nll. ~ tlht '*'""N' YOllCtlln. In lht onkt ,..ldtflc:it or:. 01 lotlewl; I Cffled, Tl""" of S.19 cell! "' ln'flll .,_., of TM Cllrll: fl 1111 lbovt tnlt"-1 court, Olf Jolln L. Ctircl, 2027 L__., L ... HOBART Australia (AP) -NOT ICE 1s 1oi:1t1ey 01vl!N ,. t11t ., ,,.. u"'1d Sttttt "' cetrflrlMllDl'I io ·-' ""'"' w1111 1111 lllCftUP'I' N-.rt atlC'll, c.. ,,.... ,,,,..,, .. • cr.dlto,.. of tti. ......... 111mlll ~ of NII. or pert ulih .,.._ ... llMt ~ te t11t """""°"" 11 11'1111 ll'llctl Hl'INrln, 217 Vie G11101. ,..._. New Zealand yacht!man Tom tflll •• .-11ew.. e111nu M•lntt evlOenad i.. .. tt MtVf'W ~ MettNt• of 11i •llor'llrlS. coo ic s E v , •ttC11. c1 . .,... Oarke'a. Sleek 73-foot attter ::.., 11:,. ~~,. ==. i;. ":.-: :... T'r~ =...i °"., .. _,~ ;: ~A~H~: ~~":Nc.=i~·:::, °"* .:.:T.'r~ ,,,. Boccaneer raced to an easy ..,...,_ '' t11t1 111t1eo ., "" 11tornM 11t ..... 1..., w1t11 ""' ~. c111torn11 ..,..... w111ct1 11 t11t J._ Mtlllrln HURLEY, SHAW .. TOMICH, tuo Hunt-11111 of oHt... .. .,. In """'""' 111111 ,, .. of binlNll ,, .... undtrtlt ..... In I M Stitt ot C.llfOl'nle, Dr-• Ceuntr. \llctory· in the Sydney-Hobart lnf!Ol'I Orf¥", tin M111no. Clllfwllll """ wll ._ l'IC'll'tld •t IN 11.,,..1• effltll f'lllll9rt ,.rt111'11nt 19 TM nt•~ o1 .,.rd on Oectmbef 21. U10, ""'-"' ..,._. Yacht ra""" TUesday wflkh I• '* •l•C• llf .,.,..,...., flf t11t 11 1ny time lftll" tllt frrli 1111t1lkltton dtc:ldtnl, within four FllOl'lths •1111' fl'lt • Not1rr l"ubllc In IN for MW 1111e, -• .....,...,.""" In •II """"" Nff•lnlnt " "'""''"" befrOl't Ate" ui.. ""' ~lctllon " 1111• Mike. __ .,., ......,.Id JOHN L. CUlltCI Buccaneer crossed the line IM """' "' "'"' ....,,, """'" ,.,, Ottecl Thi• Dnd ..... Dec.,,....,, Dllf'M ~ 11. 1,11 .... JEltOMI! HIEL•E•tN ~ • lo •-·-~ , t 1~·..1. "*""' ..,., ..... fl'1il llUMICll"" tf ltlll ltJI. TMI! Fl•ST NATtQNAL L\NIC mt 19 '-Ille ~ ...._ ....-uuw• ..., mmu es ou~lu,; nflflct. MktlMI 11111 ktlWlti Of' OllANG& cOONTY. .,.. tvto.c:,,..., .. ""' wt1t11n 1"*"'"-' the __ _...., for the 680-mile OOllOTHY lll:EEVES CAATl!ll Adr!llnblr•ter I ll9llonll Mnl!N _......., ""' ~ """ Uk...... tlM ~u. A*tllnlltrtlrll with ~ Wiii I/II ll'lt 111119" Mkr t•IClllW f/f IM W1tl ol 1119 Mmt, joarnty 5'1't Jn 1962 by Ondine """'•" .. "" ...... ot Dec.eent. ,.....,.. '*"" -...nf IOFFICIAI. IEALI of the Uni·-· Sta··· ,,,. '°""' f'llmM OICllltrll. CAYLOll ANO ...... ..... WATN• coon•T, 1CNUMAC••1. COLI.MAN, l l!llNICI! MAITlll -"" • NUllLIY, INAW • 1'0MKN •· Tl!Oilllll"IOM Mlll'rAllD & llOWAID ftoftl'Y Putllk • c.Hftl'nll The cloull COD'teDdtr behind .,.. N ... 11111• .,... 104 .. ..., .... '" ,_ a c;....,., ...., 1"!1ndpel OH1c1 111 S-M ..... ~ f'l1tl WMlll!', C11Wtr1111.... Or .... ~... Ol'tflt9 c-fl' Buccaneer, the 5 5-'0 0 t , .. I (fll) •rm • T .. , ""' ...... T ...... I ICJ-1111 My CllftmlUltn ··~lf'fl: •-~-" I p h ""'""' fir '*"I l:llittrbt CTA A'*°'""' .......... lth•I• A"°""'" '9r I""* June 2>. 197t n"""'" a.an s oop ac •· was l"ilbll"*' °"'"" c ... 1 Dtllt' Piiot ll'v0111111c1 or.,.. CM1t o.n" 1"11ot. Publltlltd OrtMt coelf o.11y ~11111 l"l$U1Md Or•"" coo1 D•tf'f '"'lf expected to cross the Une 1ater Dec~ u , n. -. 1t11 """' ''""',y " O-mtllfr tt, -. 1m •nd J1nwry s. o-w D. a. mt 111111 Jtt1111r'I .. 13, o-w -. nto ""' J1~u.,., " Wednesday mornJ.nc. "" ~" 1m ¥1WI 1m n1•11 '°· 1t11 tol·lllt .. • • • " ' • • • • • • • • • • • , • • • • • • • • • • • ' ' .. • • • i ' • • • • • ' : • • • • • • • ' • ' ' . _,. .... ·~. . ...... . . '. ~. . .... ---' • , Wrdnt.sdiY, Otcember 30, Jq10 DAILY PILOT %9 -' ., ' ---. . . . . . ·-. c. ·Year ·s Eve ;_ .. lnterest, , .. •( " .. ·.· .. ~:.·::. .... • •'"'°''~ ~ It Down ~l~ghtly • Over .Last ·' YI • • "' •' ~1 II.. , • '· ' ' ,,.. ~ LOUl!!t> COOK 1 In New · York City,. \here, ~~ Ynr'rEYe'. A spOke!lman J. 'The'• prJcts, 1 ranging from the economy." 'sj'j1e -cm the West Cout. A For those who prefer a ~ r'fOt the Century slmpler celebration, the city 1~ ~~t¥St ROom ,in Loi wlll hold its third annual New• ·~J~les offerlna: dim>ef, dar> Yefr's Eve party tn Central C:iftl, \~ F.dle Adam1 abow, Park, w.i\Jl bell4inglng, music I (ax and tips for e;JS t person and flrewtrls. Rot wlne ·puncb·· §Id .,lt's a se~ Sltuauon. ·.and furn cider wUlpe sold. · Wt cton't> 1 haYe to ai> And In SI/I ' Franctaco, I spokeaman for lbe Fairmont A Philadelphia ~ht club ~~ :,"~~w.u. . , 1 .w~-aµ the old _1tand~ -1, saidasuita~leat~act,loncoul~ $55.~ ~ Hq.50 ,per person .,., Auld acquatntaoce-certainly including .Guy Lombardo aad• noi. be.iound.thls ·year. , depen~~~ina;,' are lHe "'"oa't be . fariot .' this Ne'w lhe lighted balJ• in· ~' i.offibardoi.' who began hi.s1 same af 1-f &Dd\blclude : Y.e.~.'~,Ev~~but for:~YJM!0-1 Squa~. . · .. · · Auld Lane S)'J'le ~ts in imG· filet' mi~ ~ Ups, ,.J1te,, 1,, WOli t .be 50 liv1Shly liut at -least one nig)i.f club , will be at the Waldorf;Astcria but ot liqllO!'. J' e did not ·•rtmtn1be.red ·as in the past. .. , -The Royal Bo~ at the Hotel graNI ball r00m ror the flfth .htae ' lhe1·'f{f01 t.hii ·~ear," ' . Ho!A!l ..., •liere cwtomm pt owner offered one explanation for ceiebratioos in spite of =el 11ressure11, Said Samuel Hotels, ·. J'!!l!llauranl! and ~meric~a :-. announ~ n . year~ilf ' &'?ow ·l:lro~<h;ast ey ' a ·~rPo"ke~P.-141 .. 'le ~idn't • nigbt,.Clu"'tii.: In . several major . Wouldn't even be <>Pen this at least 145 televisi'?"-stalions. '. teet we.~ sl111Jutd Urt .tJ,gtit or t elHes checked by ' t'be · ' , , · • J. t . Lavish .Uving ;11u stlll In • commoda\e everyone.rt• dinner, daoclni ·an( a Jock Jones show for 131 ~ --Aid reservations were 1'very, very good," 4'1Pit• a SS prlc:e tncreue .over last year • blri4er Jr.: "Wllb New Year's Eve, lhl wife ls Lhe power behind tho throne. She will demand \o be liken out eve.n If the IUY bi broke." .. "' Aulida~ P.r.e~ riported ad-. • · ~.. • . , , 'i'. ~ 1 • ... vance re.servat10ll! were doWP. ' ... -becime . -ot the• econODliC ~~·Some plates JoW~rid pri~~ ~ re.., ev~ ~ed ~ tr&diUODal celebraUons . ;., ~. :;rtie ( r bcepllon . to . th • . buslneu, slam.P was .on· the · Weit COut where both Los ~ Aa1eles and Sa'n Franc.iseQ ;. nlibt 'Pot owners 5. a I d , reserya~o~ were ,going 'wt:D. .Several places reported · sell- i.. oiits., ln contr,ast, Boston night • apota reported busine~ was slow compared.to 1969 .. ; . One' night club owner Said he generally ·s sold out two weeks bef stmas, but bu!inesa i$. f a thlrd this yeir. lfe~ 1-is NeW Year's Eve' Dllll'.l the first time in 14, an·the·cltab• will not be .1\10, .. . Another Boston ·tJuti itarted . advertising its New Year's • ; ~vti.'. ctlebiltion ai $16 · per -·perS()O: It &ot a poor respons.e . ana reduoea the ·price to ·fl-.50 .. a· per.son: , · ·. , • A large Bost.on hotel rtduc- • e:d Its'. New 1 ear'S Eve price "·from ·'40' last' year" to $30. this ..year •. ~ Jp ·KanSJIS City, Mo., Frank ··Wheal, owner-manag'er of The End Zone, a night. club, .1aid. "We have· ·only abOut .a third · as many reservations as we had at this time last year and we 're tbinking'abput go_.iJlg to • first-come, ·first-serve basis" " · . . '·· ' . Don, -Schoonover; gl!l)eral ' ~~ger of the Playboy Club in Kanau Crty, &aid. "We 're packine._ \heltl in .. and . we're full','up, .. but-I ·think a lot • ef that's due to P..1arilyn P.f'aye ; wbO we have for t b f! ~ hoJidays. '.' Miss Maye started •. btr career in Kansas 'City · and· atill'lives there. ' · ~gg t!'!Ci!.e pjaces ·that Canceled celebrations was the 1 "· Olympi~. 1fotel' in Seattle, Wash. A spokesman sai.d there would .be. no party. in the grand ballroom "because It wouldn't . be , llooiiclalfy. feasible this :.w-~.. . . -' .. , ,, :: ·Se~stle ·hHs "·one ·of _ t~ ·;~ uftemptOymei\t rates • -. estimate<! a[' u · pei'ceiit ' . -among the nation's cities as a, "reiiiit Df laige.-sc.ale layoffs by the Boe;jng Corp. · Nationally, unemployment is · • a~ ' 7'.2-yep.r h.lgb of 5.8 per- cent. , • · · . .. 'A;nother Seattle hotel Said. i · reservations ·were ndefinitely . ' behin.~_ l;1sl yl!ar" and a thira hok( ·said ·i.t was· re)ying on •,,, lad"piiJfJJ+e' .advertising "to • : draw 'e m ·in.1'· • · , · · 'SUme s~atile residents did ... plan 10 tell!b.riU!, ·however. : A. ~·a~s8'an far ·1 h·~ · •WasblngtOb Plaza said .Mol.-' ~da}r bis facilltie~ were. a.1 a "b~-eve'i1 .Point and -1.hat· · • 1i>uf'e profit'' rt.serv8tloDa ;·Were. expected ·by Thursday .' • lrnight -· ' . • • . r ~ ~ "New Y-ear's Eve-. is one nlghf pi!op)e Can forge\ au their pro,blemS .··· the spokesman· said. "It's . one night it doesn't matler what the economic condiUons ·are ." In Dallas, Tex., · hard· hit ~·by laYPf!$ in tHe electronics :and aviation industries, some 'l!lght clubs cut per person ,_pricts for New Year's Eve galas ..by abcilit . $1.50. Prices around the city rangl!d from a high , or $35 a person to 1 low of $3.00 cover' charge. ·."''The Pump Room In Chicago ;cut its New Yeat'! Ev'e price .from $39 to $33 per person :'to encourage oelebranta in a ·eonservatiVe . spen d ing ·economy· and to start the year ,$)1! wlth a bow to the budget minded." It .said reservations. -Wer.t ooming 1n as well as last year. A !lmilar, report came from Atlanta, Ga·.. where t h e Oiateaq, fleur · de L Ls Restaurant offer~d a special dinner, favors and ·en· 1tetta:intft~nt · !alt yeat for. •11.ts per person and cut the price this year by $4. .Many places, however, said they couldri'i cut prices~ John Jirandi. a ·nlghl club owner JJt' Pl\lladelphia, said he was forced by inflation. to raise lM Prfoe Or his party package by•P t!> Mo·a.copple of di.ruler, •dn& and a bottle of cham-'l>line. . A spakesman for a New York firm that·caters private and business partiM aaid, "\Ve •'!J ·trying to hold the price 11" as' much ~s possible. We c3.n't drop the price because. food prLce.a are .,.P.." He said flTs business wu off 20 percent lhls year. I BONELESS RIB .STEAK • .. CHOICE BEEF OR ALBERTSON'S SUPREME .STANDING RIB ROAST . . . ~ SLICED BACON HOFFMAN'S NO. 1 GRADE LARGE TENDER 22 oz. SIZE BEEF POT ·ROAST CHOICE OR ALBERTSON'S SUPREME 45~.· SPENCER STEAK.='.:'..-........... !J11 TURl<EY ~OA'sr.=:,:::;~::: ...... .2 •n .. '3" SIRLOIN STEAK ~:;:::;;,o;:..-......... 'I" SALMON STEAK ....... .,. .................. ~!" POT ROASJ'""''"':o'~~. . . 731 'TU,RKEY D,OAST ..... '""'""''..... '2" Albeffl.oo. i S..,..O...··-••• • •••• ,,,,,.Jb. . . ~ Da<k-1 •/<i<P"1•••••••2·1n.... . CORNED BEEf ...c.f•"""••;·•• ...... _ ••...•. 981 FINNAN HADDIE ;.....,,,,..,, ............. 191 . , . . ... CR.os·s RIB ROASJ~':7'..,";.:: ........ • 9.1 BON(USS:KAMS ::,-;:·~'::.".:~ .......... • 1" BEEF LINKIES ""'.,. ....................... ,.,291 KIPPERED TIPS ..,...,._. ............... ~981 FAMILY ST£AK ~';;:!;:';:,.,,: ... : .......... 9a1 · LEG O~·PORK ,_ •• .,.,~ .................... 591 BREADED SHRIMP. \:l'.;!r'.'.'.~.~ ......... "~I" CRAB MEAT'°""""'•·-· ............ ~ .•... "~2" . . . -. . . ' STEW'.MEA T....,.,..,,,.,;., .................... 191 LINK SAUSAGE ............................ 2/591 . . . . . . . SALMON ROAST ,., ... .,. .................... ' I" CHUCK STEAK ~.:..".".:;.",':.:'~: .......... "551 28 oz. NO R~TURN .. Happy Time .. ·-MIXERS . ·' ,,-:.c:.:;:;..:,· A.ss:r,:f 't-AV.ORS /..:.::;:...,... ASST •. COLORS · - ' . 10¢ OFF LABEL-GIANl' TIDE DETERGENT ,, . FA\CIAL ·TISSUE .. : .......... ; ...... ~ .. 5/.1 •.. F'.'Ob.Tl;~GERS_C_,_o'· FF. EE .. l : s177 ' ' ' . . . . . , ·····-·•·t-··-······ . Gentr,o!M.14 . . '' . ; . · .'' 1 ~' ·.3lb.Jin . · l S SI PARTY SNACKS ............. : ......... 39 f.OlGER~ COFFEE ......... -............. 2 GiA0NJ' ·D·A$H ';:: ............... -........ J9~· .. BEEf-A.;MA JQ ... 1 .. dTo_o,;o> ..... qt 35~ . IVORY LIQU'm ................ ~ .. n .. ~sa~ : 'MiXED ·NUTS ........ _ ................ "" 59f . ' . . . . . ' P .. nied · ' . · . · ' · · · Vor~ Chick~ ~ . ZEE TOWELS; .................... : .......... 3.1~ VE1 S.DOG FiOOD ...... ~ .............. ,,,,9 60 Co;,t Spiu T o.i · ' , . · , ' • . lovro SNdders , , ~ .ZEE NAPKINS: ............... ~ .... : ... 12~ POT: A TO CHIPS ..................... "'49 "~.~~·~:,' In-Store Bakery ASSORTED Sandwich . loaves WH ITE 3 $1 WHEAT ~A·6Z. SESAME LOAVfS ASSORTED RYE · BREADS PARTY RYE-CARAWAY· GERMAN BLACK·PLAIN· PUMP!RNICICLE-ETC. 3 HB.100 LOAVES ASSORTED BOXED · Cookies o.,., 3/89 4: . DANISJI COFFEE CAKES ,.,. .. -......... ,.691 BANANA DA n · NUT lOAVES Z:::.::'.':'::" 3/1. FRUlr CAKE ......:..,_ .................. : ...... ' J" , LIQUOR DEPARTMENT Alpen Glen Choteau Rene BEER COLD DUCK 2~~z. FWTH $1 69 KINGSBURY WISCONSIN BEER .,12.Lc-.............. 89~ PllCIS GOOD DIC. 30th THIOUGH JAN. Sth ,...,flBE 1 N' SAVE20(WlllJI IOU.,., A I LB. CAN of RIUiEll'S CllftE """' -..,,.._ .......... ---1••1< .............. "' ............. 1001 THI! Ill, I SWEET JUICY PINK or WHITE ,GRAPEFRUIT 12 for 1°0 POTATOES ._._ ...... 20 :;,791 RADISHES/ONIONS , ... c;,,.,71 TROPIC ANA 100% PURE ORANGE ' JUICE 1i 2 GAL. FRE$H LIM~::::..:; ;;.:,···6/25 69~ DRESSl,.G ..... 'c-•.. : ... : ... "'491 DRESSING ..,,_... ........ ,,.6 ·i-....;::.....;;__, FRESH RED LEAF-BUTTER-SALAD BOWL LETIUCE ......... .,.EA.10~ FRESH-RED 19~ TOMATOESLB. . FR OZEN FO ODS DELI CATES SEN ' o RANGE HOFFMAN or BAR'S 5 LBS. JUIC·E . CANNEDA29 l~~-~~: 6/1. 6;.33~ H~MS 't · ' W.llHllS ~ lo•t1 T......, •••o,•••••••••1bS9• DINNERS '-"'"'·'-·,_,..., 491 GALLO SALAlll ""'""""·'······ .. •·,.•-911 lllO"("-t! .. dWlo6a .......... ,·1,,1·0· I . '1 " N PIZZA """""o... ••••••••• 11.... 1• MEAT PIES v_.,,_,.., ..... •~ 351 C~EISHIZZA-o.•0 ••••••••••••• >1.911 PIN & QUlll DIPS .svo,1etinl•1.c~,. •• _ • .39{ EGG ROLLs;.:;~~:!:'.:':': .. 691 '""''o 111us .... ,, ...... .-....... 3;1. SLICED DANISH HAM Alffrt-'1 •••• OL ..... 594 SARA LEE CAKEs =::'.7::;.191 LoNGMOu cM1Ist::::.;::·.~":: •• st1 WE GLADLY ACCEPT U.S.D.A. FOOD STAMPS CHICIC YOUI LOCAL STOH ro1 NIW YIAIS DAY HOUIS The DAILY PILOT- ,Teps .Jn Lecal SpOris ,,. . ' . H.untlngton· •each--15511 So. ·Ed .. 'ards Hlliltingtcin ·aeadj..:... 8911 Adams CDrona d91 Mar -3049 Coast Hw,. LaCJuna Beach -700 So. Coat Hwy. . Fountain· Valley-16042 Magnolia 1 • I ... • • 1 l ) • ~ l a· • • ~ ~ ' ' ' • • ' , ., ' ., • •• .. ' .l ., " " .. .. . • .. ' .. . , :i ,, .. • " • ' .. ' l " • • l • l .. '.; • • • • ' • , • .• • ~ :i • • I ·1 • i I ; l I ' ' ' ' l • ' I ! • I ' ' l I t t ' • -• , I ' ' I ' I • • I t • f • • ' ' ,. ' i . '.'} ... ' I ' .. • • • ~ • ' f f I ) ' .: " • " f. " F -----...--------....- , •• , ·:W ...... D<et-30, 1970 ™··---.... ::::u.;;: • UN-8/iOOK HARDWARE . s ·~-J: -CARlllT TIU .. ,., ... ..,..., w.,.,. u,..,,_,,. •Ydm .. •••*r-.. .,,.._ ........... Mckittl wfth ,_ ,..._, .... "'_15~ ..... ,. ...... DRAIN CUANIR . ..... ""-,_..,...,.... c,;' •• .:., ' . w ~~ . · ... ~, ..... ••• .... S9c Tew a.et• -II.A• ,Mou ·~ ..... ..,... ---....... ·--· •CW.·•-·• ., t.16" .1 .. ·····$a.4f •2•9 1.W-Uok DOOR MAT •1:1-dl"..,.. .......... ...,. .......... . . """" .... ,.... ....... ... SPECIAL STORE HOU RS DECU!'llll 3 1 9 A.M."TO 6'P,M. '-' 12 Qt. ·wam IAllOTI "hiMS...W. f,.U C.u.ctonl,. •,.,.~~I(' ci..r.ctffa . Mt! .,.... -ti. __, \ " I ' • .....,. _ _......, I .......__.m .. ,.-.. '· ..... tt:1•· ' I 77c """·Tip ' IROOM .. .• ,. ··-.a-. _...,_ ..... ,.... .. .-.rt"'•· .......... • ..... Y" ..... .... $1.)9 ,.....,,_ TAIUTOP 1''•12'' Utility PINI SHILYINO ........ 29' ........ 37• ........ 45• I ft ..... 5fl ., y _ .... DICOUTOR fLAMl•ftP IULll "(,..,. •• ,, ...... Al_,,..,.,.. •a..rer~"-'· ..... NIM ht ... ... .,.4_., ...... . .... Sh 17~: ' ' . ....... " 2x4 UDWOOD • lx•U .. t lw ,..._....:..,fond..,. ........... I • s-t.cM 4 "'"' e!HU trllt!IMcl . ..,. ..... -..... 19~. \ THA.TEA HOt.IPA.Y PA·Y t='OR. 0 6/Too! ' . ' ' . ·-~~\i/ll:IYE.eS H. VE .SEARCHED ·· H~ 'JI A.NDt.OW . · ·TD Of'Fpe THESE YE'A~-ENP PRICES/ • Perfect fof Mow TMr'1l'llrty1IYOn. • Cry1tol cl.., pte1tlc In "on the rock1" •ncl cocktoll 1lq1, •••· 4tc 39c ""•· ef 2J .... .... , IARI ROOT ROSU MONronlHtl To Growl .. •Cell ...... klttew.,. .. ............ ,.. ... ,,. 2 ,,. ...... •.T-chelce •I .. _.. ~1:.etl4 di ...... ,tir.et . .... ,,,,. 79~ " ... LIN·8ROOK HARDWARE - m.:isrer charge '·• ........ ' .. •229 '~ . ·.~ .~.; v r <' • . . , . Top Quollty "SPRAY PAINT H ... lftf ,.. r-~jH • r .. 1 ~. 1-t lntln1 t1.,iah • •at.I• ef ,.,.._ cel•n I• ... dt pilW..... • • 11 •a. c.-*or big lobe w toudt•I •••· 59c 33' x-1o0· r · . SHELL: MOTOR 011: • I "Tllo Marl!: el Q-lltyl" • On'1 tM Hit lw ew cwt•--th&. ~ ~ ......... --... """"-'-"' • T-chel• ef IAI 20 tw ~:at) ......... : .... 4Sc 29!. ............ SHREDDED FOAM "CIM• 0 ... 1•• H•~·An.,....id" • .. ., ..... •hlfftllt hr..,., ,-n.-. ,.. ... _. etc. • ,...._,._.,ht -4 '-'4 ........ ._ 1 llJ ..... . • ... 4h 29c .. PRICES HONORE:D AT BOTH LOCATIONS! LIN -BROOK HARDWARE -ANAHEIM o LIN-BROOK HARDWARE -FOUNT~IN VALLEY ' ' l - I __ J 1 • ' I • ./ I I 1 13 PILOT-AOYERTISER ' , Wednesdily, DKemlttr lO, 1970 'Wtdilt!diy, °""""' 30, 1170 ' ~ .,. = . 'oA!LY PILOT !J .. • • • • ~: ,. I~ '. ' 1i: \ • l -4 • ~ r I ' ' ' .. -.. ~ ' I ,. I ....... \, f ., . •I J• •; l: ,., ~ r "- '. •• ' 1 • ~ • ii . ; l •;.. 1 1,. .:~ I.I '·-: ~ ~ •• ... I i . • • . ~ ' I. J ' .,, .. ... iY .,,~ ., ' ! ' I • ' ' ., .. VJrt•• c ...... , 1700 Ntwport II.vii, . . . .....-s,..c. 1700 Newport llvd, J.,ce ldl1H '2790 H1rbor Blvd. .. / . • • . " • ' ( "'~. l . , . .. . " ... ' • • •• \. • • " ' • • J " . . " ~ I ' ' . ' . ! l , I "Th• ~t hos a right to /~ eoerytli.lng concerning the tramaction before he act& •• " ' ....... -.~,_,,,,_ ---''M111tt1•r ;z:1to H1rbor 11¥d. D.,W ...... 1700 N•w,.rt 11¥4, . . --1700 Newport llvd. " --27tO H1rbor 11..-d. • I J - . .._._ 17001Newport 11"'- .....,_ '1700 .Ne.,,.n 11"4. --· 27f0 HerMf llW. '. ' . ' • ~I • ~ • ). I fie~ U .. We .neJ . -. , ' ' -• I > > - .. •• ' r , .. ,..._ ' -' " •• • :t -~·· ' . ·~ • t Jill 1! • • ' . J.Je1·e Are 36 f<ea:JoM '/JU/i'u We Are _j(hown -JJ.:J ,. "' . ":Jfre Probfe,~ Sofver6 '! / -! -' . -' . ' . TO-.EXTEND OUR SER.VICE WE :ARe 10P,ENING A NEW OFFICE IN HUNTINGTON BEACH ·AT 1793l'BEAc;H BOULEVARD . ·.Hltllf>.,.....,...i..: :.'I • Mio,.,,.,~ Coro"' d1l Mtr .. ..... ;· ' cWr Wl•enM i S'ecr;t•ry 27f0 H•rhr llvd, ·- • . " .... \ • ... 1 • ' ·/.;1 ' ' ' . '. 1 I• ..... l.ur&e 1700 -Newport llwcl, ' ....... -1700 N•wport llvJ. .."MMtldlll'f I 1700 N1Wit0~· liVJ. ' ........ ww... 1700 Newport 11,,.,, . , N9n11 . ..,..., 27f0 Hetbor llvd, --2790 Herb.r llvd. NM Mcer..y 2790 Herbor llwcl. " L.cy'C-.y Coron• ci'1I Mir ·' 1111 '"". . 27'0 H1rbor ·llwcl. --Coron• ci'el Mer . ' • "ti l .. . '' . . . ' , .. 1.'c...11 27f0 H1rbor 'llwcl. .. • ' ... '" .. . ' . ,, . J, 1 ' . , • H• -Cea· ' 27,90 Herbor llvd. ' ~ ' .. 1 " • ,, . ' ' ' ... Serving Newport Beach • Costa Mesa • Corona del Mar • Huntington Beech 4 Convenient Locations Near You • ... ' NEWPORT BEACH 1700 Newport Blvd. 646-7171 COSTA MESA CORONA DEL MAR 2790 Harbor Blvd. 546-2313 332 Marguerite 673-8550 INVESTMENTS 2784 Harbor Blvd., Suite 20 I Costa Mesa • 54'6-2316 -. • ,. • • IT' . • • I J J • ( • • • .. • • I !. I l • • • 1 • • ' ' • . • l t • " ,. ,, • -.. -.. " ~ " ., ' ' ., ' . ; ~ l ! ' ' ! f } • • • ' . ' : . . ' :ti pmv flLOT Ev e~yon• Hai Somethin g Tnet - PILOT ·ADVERTISE• 4 • Wfditt:s!q, IDect'mbff JO, 197' ' ........,, Dt<tmhtr 'l0._ 1970 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED · ADS . ' So m•one Elie Wanh ··The "Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642-5678 for Fast Results You Can Sell It, Find It, Trade It With a Want Ad . • ' • . • • I: t: I~ •• . ,. " .: . .. .. " ,• " -.. -~ . ! 1~1=' =-=""= .... ~'~= l~I l~I l ~I l~I l~I ------------ General General General Cotta~ Huntington Btadl Ntwport Bli•ch EXCLUSIVE EASTSIOE COSTA MESA 2 TRIPLEXES PLUS POOL START THE NEW YEAR RIGHT! • I f< * OOUGLAS * * BY OWNER -Baycn!&I, TRAILER RANQ LEWIS 128 E. 21st St. •22 Co-'• Me11 Ef\fPLOYEES ATIN! 3 br + 400 sq ft PLAY Walk to Yrork!! Sharp 4 br, R<><»t w/wall atorace1 2 ba, all bltns crpta thru· a rt'11.. Pool & lge yard. Prin· PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES PARK out, near schOOis. Use your i='=;p;::l'='=0="'='=· 646-<3&5.===== Jn ""U? 01,vn home, The fol-You ar:t the winner of ,. 2~k •• t 1'--Gr loan or ta"-over 4 yr lo•_~ .. ~·are select, VACANT e ..... o 1111:: "C' ·~ S t C Ill • old GI loan w/total monthly Newport Heights 52 Linda 'lsle Dr. One.story 2 bedroom, 1 bath units. Built-ins. refrigerators, carpeting, drapes. Filtered pool.·· Fenced. Cul De Sac street. Complete ·privacy. Shopping, public Lransportation just steps away. Shows excellent spendable. Call !or appointment to s~e. prope.rlles. available for OU n a orn11 QUICK OCCUPANCY, choice Sport1, V1cation payments of $191. l----------1 1erms! & Recreational Larwin Rea lty, Inc. CHARMING Cust 6 BR., .iudy, 5 bath home w/4 frplcs., circular stairway, decorator selected carp. & drapes. Shown by appt. .......... $210,000 2o Spaces recenUy completed in a new 10 acre park. Build 0111 the 1·cst & make many $.$$.$ Located near Rancho Calilomira. * Immaculate 3 bedrooms. Ve h icle ShoW 962-6911.Anytime Presllge home like new, • new shag carpeting, new ar the WALK TO BEACH. BR, 2 Ba. Ekaut decor. For complete !"formation on paint in and out. S23,9.:i0. ANAHEIM 9282 Moklhana Dr. Large kit, all bltns. ltalian :o~~t~md~ing2 ~~. CONVENTION Price Slashed By 0....'Tlet marble frplc. Chandeliers, 111 homes & lots, plea1e ca ll : Lachenmyer 1860 Newport Blvd • Costa M es• Full Price $155,000 CENTER Assume 1 .. -, 5a1 ~ VA loan, large llv & din rm facing Jo'l.REPLACE, NEW shag ~. ~ BILL GRUNDY;· REALTOR 133 Dovar Dr., Suite 31 N.8 . J.nu•-2nd th 10th or zero down GI, Jor thi~ 3 lara;e pool. Partial oetan carpeting. Price AND V. A. ~~ ru .. 642-4620 Realtor C•ll 646.3921 or 642-G18S appraisal a $26,500! Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 br 2 ba home, Located an view from large ht.loony. • Sharp EASTSIDE, 4 betwee!I 9 and l pm to clalm nicely lndacped comer Jot. $55,000, Ntwport •• Fairview family room 2 baths built· your tickets. (North County 968·027l CALL (!) 646·1•1.f ins, FIREPLACE. $31,950, ~U-lree num':' 11 540-1220~ LOVELY 3 Br., 2~ ba. Mel'"-At;.'41arc, v. A: or F.H.A. is OK. edlth. Form din rm, 14d>' '71Jtllity * HUGE 5 bedrooms. 3 BEST BUYI paneled .tam nn w/frplc. Ni•r Niwport P••I orrltt General G1neral Gene ral • REDUCED $1300 NOW $21,700 $26,500 3 BEDRM BEACH $19,950 646-1811 (1nytime) bath. beamed CAntEDRAL 3 Bdnns., 1% haths. CU1tom Maint free li&hted bck yd. C'HILDREN ceilings in Planned Com· built. Priced to ltll at co;w:=":':96=2<1=1=76=·====, OCEAN Vit!W· 4 br, 4 ba, niunity. s~ctacular value! $24,000 -Ja:e rumpus rm w/bar, lge WANTED! v.A. appraisal S39,000! CORBIN• L•iun• Be.ch 1iv nn, Irplc. 3,000 sq ft \Vhat a great bargain. Add very JitUe down for a double batiain. Spotless 3 Bed. rooms, sparkling koppe.r_ kettle kitchen. Large Jiving room with y,•hitt' brick fire. place. Quiet neighborhood. Large tree lined grounds. All types financing available. Excellent slaMer hohit>. Ber. 1er huny, 2 On The 1..A:it. 2 Bedroom . FANTASTIC House & 1 Bedroom Garage \Ve t1Jn1ost didn't believe i1 Apt. on Jarge E-s.id{' lot. Try ollrsclvcs: Only 6 years 10'.~ down . young and loaded with 2700 Sq. ft. family home wilh ESTATE SALE w I k & L + 800 gq ft unflnlilhed . 4 bedrooms & 3 baU1s: on a er ee PANORAMIC OCEAN VIEW $49,500. 548-5766 or 548-53n 1A acr<', professionally land. 236 Via Mentone 201 , 3 \Roa1V''''110;"ii o .. · ... , MA RT IN Multilevel r e d wood • 4 BlrpY l~,WNEbllnsR.' 'MaBnyr, !ti!:·. charm. 3 large bedrooms, 2 Newport baths. AJI latest deluxe built. in$. Beautllul patio. Pro- fessionally landscaped_ S166 F•irv i'w mo. µay~ all. i''ant astic year scapt>d. Several entertain. 0 H .. ~ balconies, 3 B R., '" ment decks pool table gize pen OUSe J"b -de 2 BA Walk to 3 schls. Would con. ' · fi ,_ & a 1·1 1 L'd I 1 II A 6-16-7711 Open 'Iii 9:00 PM REALTORS ~7662 1 rary n, , arv. old•• lo·•·. ••g.••-. family room wt th 1rtp.,,ce eau 1 u 1 o s e · omr> . ., iii ... ;i;;;;i;iii;i;;;,;;iii;;iiiii;;; ... i I ;~:;:.:.;;,:h'n:;:;;;;:~;;'-1 shop, frpl, am/fm, beams, !=::==:-==~=-====I 1vc1 bar. Built-ill kitch<'n. bedroon1 + formal dining. lmm~iate Occupancy cptd, btr.ut drps, 1 yr old. Stoll(' fireplace in Jiving Completely modern buill-in EASTBLUFF O"'!K'r wiU sell at 1'~HA •P· Priced Jor quick sale, University Park •t to11d bi1rgain. Don't delay! 646-88 11 C111J r10\Y 962-5585 room: laundry roo m. Double kitchen and breakfast bar. Family home on praisal, $24,000. Large 3 bed· S0,000, Owner 491'·1650. -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I garage. Only $19.950. Cal l . large su11deck, covered pa. ~pacious corner lot rm, 2 ha, dbie garage. New 1 ·'--"E~M-7=E~D,.,., •L"D~BA~~y~-• lio, 2 car garag<' + larg<' .t Bedrooms, 2~ baths catt>Cts & dr,>s. Big fenced JU'\ 645·0303 FOREST E. ·OLSON REALTORS 2299 HARBOR COSTA MESA srora,c:<' room or office. Cor-family room v.-ith corner lot. Estancia High Just listed! "Attr. traditional Ola." llf'r lot • street to lov~·ly Fireplace School Dis!. See this new 3 BR. 3 Ba., sep. liv. rm., II/ estradil. A l.Juy at $66,000. Formal dining area listing loday. Call 54()..l.151, din. nn. & fam. rm. REAL ESTATE ror irlS"""lio n rail: Nice Yard Heritage Rea]ton;, 716 Emerald Bay $75,000 Ine. Reallots ..--~ ===========::I Sho b ' 19131 Brookhunt A1,·e U!IO Glenne)Tt S1, JEAN SM I TH, R LT R . Reduced to $46,950 wn >' app t. Hun linJtton Beach ' 494-9473 :';<1~16 &l&JTa5 400 E. J71h St.. Cl\1 Fountain Valley Biii Grundy, R•altor (10ylimel FOREST E. OLSON TAYLOR CO V W HOME I;:;;:::=:;;:: 833 Dover Dr., NB 6424620 IE COURT DEMANDS BLUFFS LOW OOWN/LOW INT THE RIGHT TIME 5 Bdrm ""tom-bit home on CONDOMINIUM 3 BEDRM + LG PANEL-Lido Isla To buy this y,•ell built 2 bed-~~~ sl~~ely.r! & IMMEDIATE Charming four bedroom. two LED DEN + LG FAMILY l ----------1 room home 1,vhich can be 4~i baihs. ' s99.soo Really Company SALE!! story honic on charming Realtors Rltf. BLOCK WALL, EX· Spacious Lido Home cxpand~ ls no~1·. Tl'!e right DOVER SHORES A MUST TO SEE! Probate court sale. A chance grecnbcl!. Near pool. r.lany ''Our 25th Ye ar TRA LG LOT. Prime 3 Br. 2 ba. sitigle place! 1nexclus1,,.cBa~hor. . A MUST TO SELLI for your bid. Large~ bed· upgraded fratures. Priced In The Harbor Area'' HAFFDAL REALTY story. 3 Sunny patios. On es. Private beachc1 &: _play. Brand NE\V & bea~li!ul 4 4 Bedroom • view • dining room. Corner Jot. Near lo sell at S·IG.000. with term&. 400 142-4405 street to street comer lot ground~. Ideal Year round BR. den, formal din rm. room • den • 2~ baths • bcach. Sunken formal Jiving ~ 673-4 BY awner, end ol cul-de-sac I:%. Reduced tn $81,500. livinit. Thc r.i&ht priCil! Only Really unusual. $l05,000 beamed Ct'iling and comer rm. Step-up dining for for-~ ~I ==========-on pvt park, poo1 &: clubhse Prime L.ido Nord "c"o1'e. -s·w-.. or-·t11.;y· w.;i~t~~Cp,,, ;7?,~~:~~~~i~ :~1 ;~;,:;:;F"~.:£: Coldwel~.o~ 3 Bedioom, 2 Bath ~~~:~car Pf· sac s:!~t~l~. ~:1¢: IJ 11"1 21ll San Joaquin Hills Road aJso for sale. Vacant and ~ts. drapes, patio, dble ~H:;un:;;;;llngt=;.;°":....::lltc:.::•.::d>:.___ Prime Tir. • --~ • Newport Cenlt'r 644--4910 re&ity to go, hurry and be prage, large Jeoced yard -of Lido Is e & Co.· . 675-3000 642"235 675-3210 """ Call <n4) -· 13).0700 644-2430 w/"""" ro, boot .. """""· Beaut • BR., 41< ... -· LOWER INTEREST Rates are a,,.ailable! We can now offer low interest & low do1,1'n paymts. on all oJ our houses & townhollMs. Buy NO\V before pricee go up! We have from :I to 4 bdrms. priced f r om $25,000 to $45.000. , ,CAIL TODAY! (ired hill Realty Univ. Par+: Center. Irvlnt Call Anylime 833..0820 TRANSFERRED owner Open .U lo 5, 17811 Acacia. Trtt Ln. 3 br, 2H1 ba, Stan- t>rd townhse. 2 frplct, crptl, drps. Xlnt ICbools. 145,000 Re&JJbo;_ . . 22 Yo.:.S of .. ' FOREST £. OLSON "'· i><,T"°, Ea.ts!de, C.At TRADE BEAUT. HOME with 56 It, wolu Iron._. Newport &~h Qf~~ Real Estat2 Service AU E xpenses P•.kl 11S ttl ts 1 tax Room for large boat IUpt.. !il · 1028 675,..,..4~ Dr." · Jn The H~ Atta . lfS GOT JO GO!! ~,.,~ lnc. Rkhealton:A 8~~~. ro~ v;,:Si~b :!:7: ~!,.~ 0•1 2· i~e~ F\)r patdPf!'~sert~r mn:: 7ij1 ~:1ciy, Rltr. , __ .. _.,_:O_!_!~_l_'~ _ _,I • ;)-....,.,, RARE OPPORT.UNltv ':"'l.ll Broo urst· ve. rnA b•yo-~ o·'y ""uai Ca·Ariz. All conv. l blk .. . Pl nd 'ft-..1 llunlington Beach ·~ "''"" •u ... Heights. $29·150· deadend st. \Valk to 1chool ll33 -~"°"':,;,,,,,;..;'°'"'"''-'NB-='=~....-==' I·---------Ten.Acre ay9rou Prestige locatioH . Irvine Teti-' 4 °""room!, 2 slory &: il'1 iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii..i;ii.iii;;;I FHA down and Im pounds. Well1-Mc C1rdl1, Rltr1. -= A .. k doo lu •· 2 bl ·-" 1 ·~ooo N Fenced, 2 br, 2--car encl ON STRATA CENTRO .t~r --c ....;.MsTr· . ..P-M•ElSA•!"' race •2. 3 &Inns., 's. pn ... =-at on y .-.. . ()o Vacant and r· or Rent Bu ilders repos!!essions now 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. -·r-A h' do GI Tak · gar, bltn!, drps, crpts. etc. 4 Bedrooms, 3% Bath3 BO"'<,, o CLthe Lge. din. l!~a... ~efil!Q..n@!y t 1,n._k "'," toka . "c vacant, l & 4 bcdnn, crpl.~. 548-n29 Got pets, 4 or 5 children, 3S Ft. + Lot Acreage for 1ale ISO J.. 'S UB a. n·4 .(:(Oll'Ten. priced at $46,500. Will con-a oo anc ma e )'Our oucr d-, all c.'<trna. For details I==!:::!:::===== • ""'... ..,,,, money not too plentiful? Street 10 Strata lence of downtown Costa .si~r )easel'.~"· ,. ""' hUl't')'! New listing. Beautiful & spacious 3 bedrm eall 540-tl :il, Heritage Real· ..... ,_ I th 1 2 I r.telt"". lticludcd is-aclfsfOm. ~· •. CO•TS 3 BR CONDOMINIUM .iu,a s e pact. m $72,500 • "" with large fcnccd yard, big ion. from btach. Rctirin& In Ju· LIDO REAL TY INC. built Three bedroom, Dining & brick BAR-B·Q and lots $27 950 In choice section ol Mantled. Jy don't need. Wiil answer 3 I 67 • 7 _ Rm.' lath & pluter home . WALLACE more! Located on a lovely ' lo, to be completely ttdec· , ail. Reply to P.O. Bax 1254, 3n V • Lido "" .- only' 1 yrs old. Detached , . REALTORS street of homes it's only 4 Bd. \Family Rm. orated Including new car. H.B. 9264.T REDUCED $4 500, 215 Dbl~·'.garagc, l~e . eer~nt e 962-4454 e $250 month 10 ni0nlh. Fam· Large home,~ hvin sized bed-pets. Prlccd below market. -"'--------·I Ravenna, well furn. small block wall enclosed'" Ya(d, Ules only. roms, hugc fam!ly rm., en· Act fll!t on this one. OLD HORSE h>use, lge sunny lot. $51,950, with ,bciat gate from '1Jey~ ~ E. Coast 1j./.wy., Cd_bA . · •.•• Open E¥tning1 C0.1. try hall. Owner desperate. $20,500 6 Months vacant, S3J.OOO full 10% down. Owner 675-2643. OR .. F1-IA TERMS • ACT WOWI 4~% VA Assumption & 9:~ Pr.1. 51Q.li20 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~I k>an. 4 Bedroom 2 bath, • * MRS. F. HICKEY 3134_ Kerry Lane Costa Mesa You are lhe winner ot 2 tlckel<i: to the Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show at the An . .Excellentbtlyu~/~A • "'TS No down terms. Open till PERRON 642·1n1 price, $24,000 5~1. FHA FAST! ~rice only $Zl.9SO. S~'fo Financlnr---PRIME EAS'I'SIDE LOCA. · WALLA:CE 2955 Harbor TARBELL $28,950 needa work, out or state CO· M.-M. La Borde; Ritr. High gove~t 11oan bal; '.I10N. 1800 SQ. It., Four Bed· REAL TORS Sell or Lease/option opentlv1 owner, fireplace, 646-05.\S Eve: &C-'1438-&nee w/totaL pymtJar btlow rm., Bucco/a Built, copper _546--4141-4 BR., 2,, bo., r-lo. 2 rnr w ith 5V4o/o Loan carpell, drapes, service OWNER SERIOUS ANAHEIM · ftnt. Also, -V.A. ne-do.wA ..or .plumbing, new paint. 1''am. ,.. . ,, ..... ASIUme the 5\4 1. apr. JOan porch, ahake roof. Owner 'FiiA terms. Neat & clean Rm wilh Door to ceiling fire. (Op~n Evtnin9s ) gar. 3 \'rs. old. 2200 Sq. f't. & pay just $139 a month. now says "get otter like we Reduced price lo $34,500 cm CONVENTION la.ra:e ·3 bedroom & family CENTER Pacesetter home. Popular January 2nd thru loth NEWPORT HEIGHTS * • ~ & family in c.hoicc l\1esa placc. Covered patio with A·l Cond. V:icnnt qu ick pos-3 bedrooms, den, entry hall, turned down." Verde neighbOrhood. On Palos Verde Rock water sess. Call today ! all the built·ins. Open till model with front living room. Please call 642-5678, ext. !14 Naw vacanl submit low bety,·een 9 and l pm to claim down paymen't and take over your tickets. !Non.h County h1ah: balance loan. Thlt ii loll·free number is 540-1220> the buy ot the year. For de-* * * % Homes On A earner Lot A Good Investment Al $29,7$0 Well1-McCardl1, Rltrs, 1810 Ne1~•oort Blvd., C.1\1. -• sa=11n - $20,750 3 Bedroom + 2 baths, full dinliig room. used brick f!replact', built-In appllanc. es. Patio. sprinkler system. 540-tµJ 2955 Harbor Ta rbell $28.950. fall and decorator lighting. Open Daily 1 ·5 • Bill Haven, Rltr. 9:00 P?.f. 540-1720 • ~10RE, ~10RE, MORE. 200l Aliso Ave & 20th 2ll1 E. Coast, Cdi\f 6'13-3211 2955 Harbor ~RBELL S41·Sllt SHARP. SHARP, SHARP. 1---roR 1N•'ORMAT10N CALL Formal Dining Room BEACH sPEc1AL sPEc1AL-FEATUREs _ ,l,lE-GEol REA.Li;! M. M. La Borde~ Rltr. 4 Bdrms. 2 baths. Xlnt cond. Pool, paUo & splendid Dover ..-. Kirt.,-64Ei-055a Eves: 64~1438 Custom built, 3 bedrm, 2 ba,, Ste1>11 to ocean. Only $33,0CiO SOOres V~iv, !var. Wells- sep living m i., fireplace, . Tcrms. Built 4 bedrm, 3 bath, pwdr It' OHi ial Lease Option Sale lomHy 1·m., '"' bltn" FA CAYWOOD REAL TY room hOmo. Lg d;o ""· tun S · C .. _ heat. patio 11·/~as (ired BBQ 6306 \V. Coctsl Hwy., NB rm w/lrplc. Avail now. Roy ~·t apprai$81 ii;i. an this 4 Sparkling 3 br 2 story, trt. pit dble gor., ~pace for boa! 548-1290 J. Ward. Rltr.1033 Mariners ~rm. 2 bath home. ra:mlly level w/furmai dining huge & trailer. Good ccrms. Dr., 64&-155() Open Daily. ~m. 1"·1rr~1c, top 'E&&tllde tamlly & all blln.s. SJ0o mo. Lachenmyer Rlty CUSTOM FOURPLEX locallon. $25.50l;I FHA or VA or As1u1nc low interest loan Call 646-3!128 E,,.es: s.18-6769 Gholce Ne1vpoi-1 area, 3 BR · • !JT make offer! Owner anx· w/mlni1num <!own. Ca 11 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"!!!!!!!!!!!!!: & 2 BR uni1s, Ideal owner lous, as must leave! Near 545.842-1. occuplecl & lax shcller pro~ Catholic Church. Hurry!! DREAM HOME . crly. $9.120 lnconie, $l2.CXXJ HAPPY HOLIDAYS! I' rll,10,e Reol htJte Hz.4471 I :::: ) 54M11J $1000 •-r tails call 540-USl Heritage u.low Market Realton. Cemetery At1ume GI Lo•n ;:;;::;:=====:;I Lots/Crypts Anyone qualifies, ya u r NewpGrt Beach tmna!! 3 Bedrm, 1% ha, FOR SALE: 2 cemetery Jol, frplc, Newly painted aut. BALBOA COVES Harbor Re1t. plot 341, phone aide. tmm e d poues11 WATERFRONT c~:========I 847-8507 Prime 1oc. 3 BR. 2 ba, aln&le - 1tory. Newly decor. Fenced Condomlnluma 156 yd Slip for 30 ft , boat. Only • .;f,:o:.r .:•;::,•l::•c_ ___ l.:;60::: I 119.soo ' . REPOSSESSIONS Spadding cleen·homes;-~me newly painted & carpeted. 2, 3 4 It. 5 bdrrns Some wilh ~ls.YHA·VA 00nv. terms, 1rom SI 7,00Q to $40,000. Lachen~yer lUlja In a drean1 of a location! Do1,1,·n S75000 PETE BARRITT Rlty ~~~~~~~~~I ~B~ll~l~G~run;.d~y~, ~R~oJa~lt~o~r TIBURON TOWNHOUSE Re· 833 Oovcr Dr., N.B. 6124620 sale, 2 Bedrm, 2 bath, one story, c.arpets, drapes, love.. MODEL HOME SOMETHING EXTRA Jy private paHo, dbl• g.,.., I" ~: ' .. . '. 646-3928 • E\:es: 646-2291'.l t.losl attractively decorated PERRON · 642.Jnl l bdrm., 2 bath. Hurry, thiJl---------642-5200 Sharp duplex: 2-2 BR. each, air conditioned. Take over plus an owner's sleeping Gr loan with only S245Q cub qtra, Partially tum.; F .A. + low closing cosll. .. ·' ~: $26 500 1,1-on't last! $54,950 INCOME I !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I Builders CoeeouL Fully car- ' -OUR HOUSES * Dela ncy Rai l Estate ? Fuml hed b he! n"ts peted 4 immaculately land· 4 Bd. + Family Rm. * F 2S28 E Co&st Hwy CdM -s ac or u 1 acaped. Sparkllne decol"ltor -~ '· Ir. '• •• .. Collins k Watts Ine. fl843 Adams Aw:· ~-5523 PARK LIDO '-PLEX $75,000 Ne1vport·Beach Cood income, 213198:\·'1039 18olated rear UVing rm, 4 4-:I Bdrm., aeparate homes . 644-7270 ., close to beach & shopping, B•lboa Is land colors. 3 Bedrooms, 2 bl., Bl!droms. huge family rm. on Jge. lot. Room for more. $2il,OOO frplc A a.U bltnl, 5% FHA/ •ftreplace. built-Ins. No down FURTL'lf (X), 642-:iOOO . DIAL dirttt 642-56'18. Charge George W1illlamson YEARLY 2 br, W. Bay Ave. VA No Down Ava ilable, min.s. 5-t0-1720 TilE SUN .NEVER SETS on .)'our ad, then &it back and Rea tor Just painted. Bay view, $30,990. CaJJ 563'24, South hett.t. Good Joe. & flna.ncinf. Larwfn Realty, Inc. MORGAN REAL TY '62-6911 Anytime 673-6642 675-6459 THE "Yellow Pages" of IT'S A breeie .. sell your clauitl.td .•• Daily P 11 at t1em1 with eue. use Daily Service Dirtttory, Oeck K ' ~ ... I':: •• ~- 2955 Harbor Ta rbell Pilot Oanut«id listen to the phone rin&I 673-4350 64S.1564 Ev•s. fireplace. $22). 675-215.1. Coast Realtora. Pilot Cluslfled. 642-56'18 for the R~ )'OU need. , I ~: <- ' . ' Genar:al o ... ral G•nera l General General General General General General r.~----.WC----~~-MMMM•M•llll'M_._ ____ ~~--~-~~~-~-~---~~----~-----------.uiM~-----JC3itMM•MaM,.._M•~---. 1-l'l'B•-,tJ#4 .iD]#4#4 HAPPY NEW YEAR! ! ·: I-!!~?.!.e,RD!. .,~!!Cff OFFICE o~;?.?i!! COSTA MESA OFFICE-545-9491-545-0465 HUNTINGTON BEACH OFFICE-842-4455 1.· :: ~ . START THE ' 2790 HARIOR ILVD. Op•• 1v .. 1.,. 'Ill ' P.M. ~. ~:~,. 4 ·.·E·D,,::+;::.2·~:NTTO.:Y 540:5140 Q i Ffom all of us at the Costo Mesa Office: ~ :: I NEW YEAR = STEAL : HAPPY NEW YEAR Room to run In this 1600 sq. ft. Cape Cod Cotto" with low, low $144 pa)menu '., :.:. Ill RIGHT! o• IBA and VA T•nn• av&llabl" $26,000! May th• coml19 yHr glve you joy o nd happlnes" .· I . HAl'l'INESS IS . 1 -.. ~Ow. Home.111; followi"4) ore select, VACANT properties, ayaflable Phil Glblllsco, r.lanllgrr Bob 1ifcCaffrey Jiving only 3 blocks frnm the Blu~ Pacific for only $19,500 FUU. PRICE. House . a-ftUJCK OCCUPANCY. dtolce,Jerms_ ! and 1ot~:z 117 fL and zoned for mulUple units. .•. .r-T Lois Cornwell, Asst r.1o no 1 Art P&Jmer :· -e ~ta-re 3 beclroofta, mw sbai e&rpt'l ini:. new f)tl.l nl In and out $23,950. Nick A"'<'l"M John Plnche~ $600 TOTAL ":·-I • •3 bt'droomt. 2 baths. J'ORt-.!AL dlJ:ilng room, FlltEPLAO:, Nf;\V &hi~ clrJ)el· Kay Babion fllcrle Rottman DOWN Ina. Pm:. ANO V.A. a ppralsal ls •• ~! l'-•k Sa-bi'a Tha.t'a all you need to buy tht• 11harp home which Include! WR~hr>t', dryer, Md r.ay Brnmlell ..... , '" rtfriirerator, plus Calltornta FIREPLACE to complete the mood. $18,500 FUU. :· e •Sharp EASTSIDE. 4 + farnlly f'09m. 2 bath.-s. liuill·1N, FIREPLACE. $31 ,950, Vlrtee t~ham Hhc11. Tatf! PRICE. ...: V.A. or F.Jl.A. 11 OK. :.· ~ Cary Jcnki1u1 S h11.ndra Tr<'nl HEL" u•rE DESE"TED •. R e •1~UGE 5 bt-d room11. :1 bft lh, hr1'mM:I C.ATHF:Of':.AL rrl!ln~ 111 P13nn<'d Coin· , ,..__,,.~ • " ·~ !.\' munlty. Spc.'c(aculnr value ! V.A. apJ>nlsaJ $39,0001 Dn11 Lcr John \Vhclan ~~nbtl~k""to"n"o~Ym'",','"1 ',' •anndd~nO<'dk• s""h"mk·"t ,1',,~'1othl•d3o•~-~m .. be,u•muly JlbnJd otntly ti. Dave. LC'vlnr R!'UY 'VIII~ ,. "" ,. n r , u 1 a , w -.. .,"' t su ec o l! :."-~ LO\V INTEREST ~ov·t. loon. otal J){lfmtnts of $198. $26,rol! ;II ~ Clem Ui1nb1u·t11 Bill \'ouna:e1: "!) I ~-~-~--~~-~!~.!~~~!'!.~!~~~--~--~~ I ' l ...... ----·--~·~·-~· ~--·--........... ~-~~---~-~ .. -----... ·----·-·------~---··--.-··----~-~-----~----·--.- ' J5 PILOT ·ADVERTISER Wedntsday, Dttcmbet :30; 1970 Apt1. Furn. 360Apt1. F um. 360 Apt. Unlurn. L.• .;.;:-".;..;='----...;.~=-'-'"----·I Fountain Vallo~ Hous•s to IM moved 164 Lagun.-..8uch 365Apt. Unfum. 365 NEAT 4 -plcx, lo~zy big room•. Xlnt return. Income $530 per mo. Can amnge financini:' w/S5000 down. $47,500 full price. Owner, 61l-7178, Ag!. lncom• Property 166 • Eastside 5-Plex • $92,000 356 E. 20th Street Costa Mesa '42-4905 INVESTMENT Property for sale. Some avail for move- ln. Lo int, F1IA loans. Pvt Ply: Call: 548--4343, 962-2893 Lots for Sale 170 OCEAN front to Coast Hwy R.3 property, approx. 12,000 sq. ft. Xlnt business or home possibility. So. Laguna, $110.000. (213) 244-1197. Hou11.1·fuml1nou 300 Ne!'f'Ort.BHch Neweort ·llMch • . "" Fountain-Valley ----------· . * RENTALS * LAGUNA BEACH (A). 2 bdtm. tur11. unit, lge. tree shaded patio, 150 yds. to beach. Lease @ $165 Mo. 18 ). 2 bdrm .. 2 bath, view, close to beach & everything. Fittplace, charm. Okler. plA.ce w I ,vood_ panelling. Leru;e @ $250 Mo. (C.) 3 bdrm. older home, close in location. Fireplace. Kitchen w/range & refrig. Dishwshr. Lease@ $300 Mo. MISSION REALTY .985 S. Coast Hwy. Phone 4~-0731 Newport S.1ch TOWNHOUSE • beaut mod· e.rn 3 br 2~S·ba, frpic pa· uo.' pool:· 2-car garage·, all bltns, crpts, drps. LeP.SC $l2S I mo. Mr. Ruppert, 523-4710 or 846·5991 eves or wknds. n- 'Oakwood ... a new way to live in ~ounlairu M,dilOrNJn..,. Style Lusury 11 2 Bedrooms-1 lllllll Adult Living Furnllhocl I Unlamkbocl I I •) BALBOA Coves watertront. Financi;lll Decorated, 3 BR. 2 Baths. l'::::::;:====~;:;:::::q Month to month. $350. I· Bill Grundy Rltr. 642-4620 Newport ~each It's fun. fine neighbors and prestige livini;, all in one luxurious package. That's Oak· wood Garden Apartments in Newport Beach. just minutes from Balboa's Bay and beaches. There's a % million dollar Clubhouse with party room, billiards room, indoor golf driv· ing rangl', men's and women's ·health clubs. saunas, tennis courts, resident tennis pro and pro shop, and Olympic size pool. AU this. and much more, just steps from your professionally decorated apartment, each \vilh private baloony/patios. Air condition· in;/fircplaces optional. ' Apts. Furn. Apt1. Furn. Business. Opportunity 200 Houses Unfurn. !-'==="----'-'-' 30S Corona del Mar Huntlnglon Boach AAA Candy & Snack Supply 1---------1 We Establish All Routes * tj)UIET * (NO SELLING INVOLVED) $135 • Clean 2 BR, Cottage. CASH REQUIRED Stove, crpt.s, drps, Jrg patio. 2 BR l·Blk to Oceen Call Alt 4: 544-4558 Costa Mue $125-$135. LGE, modern 1 br nr bch; crpts, drps, etc. 409 Calif. 53&-4261, 847-5169 DELUXE Bachelor Units • Walk to Ocean. Ulil pd. LINDBORG CO. 536-2579 Plan one ............ $97S.OO BLUE BEACON Plan'"" .......... 11625.00 *. 64S.•Ol l l * CASA de ORO FURNISHED Ba<hefo• '°' CASUAL Calif, Llvtng in a rent, $100/mo. Plan three •..... -.•• $3250.00 Excellent income for a few hour.s ,~·eek1y 'York. (Da)'!'I & Evenings). Refilling and collecting money from coin operated dispensers Y.ithin a qualified area. (Handle11 name brand candy and ~cksJ. For personal in· rview send name, a.ddren phone number to Multi- te Distributing, Inc., 1681 West Broadway,. Anaheim, Ca: 92802. (714) 778-5060 •. -1'1ATL Order business. ft1ake$ you S money! · $395 secured. ~2740 Investment Opportunity Shopping Center S ACRES 220 Site * Jog To Beach $165 • Lovely 2 BR. Ne\v crpts, r /o, nice yard. Tot & pet ok. BLUE BEACON * 645-0111 * Oakwood Garden Apirtments On 16th Street bet\veen Irvine and Dover Dr. (714) 642-8170 warm Mediterranean atnios· Call 646-~7 phere Spaciou.s color CO• I========== ordin8.ted apts • designed & Laguna Beach furnished for style &-com- fort • Heated paol • Kitch. I---------- en w/ ind"•" l~htlng • $30 WK LUXURY Spoc.lo-.s 1t11dlo, 1 & 2 lffroo111 pilf ... F11r11i1hecl Deluxe RIO. Adults only. No & up. Bachelors, singles, 1 •r ... ,., ....... '""" $145. IM!Ndf ... O"•IHHIC'I· pets. Pdrm, steps to heh, all uw, 3 BR House· Midway City Models.,.. d•lly 10 -te I ptn l BR.-$175 furn. htd pool, linens, rec nn, area. Fncd rear yard. Avail UTILITIF.S INCLUDED restaurant, cocktails, danc· J~n 1, '71. $185 mo. 897-8754 365 W. Wilson 642-19'n · tng, Balboa Island 3 BURM. + family rm., full Beautiful 1 & 2 BR furn Village Jnn Hotel Apts dining rm., built-ins., brk. II~ I Apt F '60 er unfurn apta. OFFERING: <!94-9436 $390 a month. NO FEE, HousesfcrRent .• ~-s_. _u_r_•_·-----I sell clean. cve.ns, D/\V (in °oc=E_A_N_v_;,-w-.-red-wood-~-.-,. Newport, 540--1720. ========·::;:::: General 2 Br), displs, shag crpts, 1 c'y., in s. Laguna, lUrn'd, 3 BDRM .. Family rm., park Houses Unfurn. 305 drps. Jacuzzi & Sauna bath. util'" &: deck. Single $115. like yard. Costa Mesa. Kids ----------Huge Pool, FOR ADULTS 499-211-1 eve & wk end. $200 th No Just For only. -========== ~~E~r~G-1120.a mon . Laguna Bea~ MERRIMAC WOODS Newport Beech 3 BR. 2 Balh, small. Near S1"ngle Adults 42) ~!~~i~~s~Vay WTR. 2 BR. Util paid. Nr. ~beach & shop'g, crp\'d, 11'5 ~ •• . • • • • • • • • • I heh & stores. .. . ......., ,,..\h ----------!rplc, patio. Ref's. $22j/mo. Soulh Bay Club is a \vhole $6 nile up $Z7.5() wk up St. N.B. See Bert Merriman Prime location w/servicc sta· 3 BR 2 BA bit .. • Call &l'-1615. f ·1 · • , n swve « .. new \vay o he designed STUDIO & l BR Apts or tel, (673-7727) (539-3346) tion on corner. Partners •-o· h sh FA h t J"'=='=========o J reuig, is wa er, ea , just for single people, It's e Color TV,.phone sen-', pool aft 6. except on Wed &. 'Pliling. Subordination to gd. ,. ..... & d-s ga•ago e•· La•·-a No'guol f i· · ·1h dy .... ..,, ... , • • "'· ...... un :vUlg wt wann, • e Linens, maid serv avail, sun buyer. SACRIFICE! TI4/ Yearly. $295. 673-2-431 l--''-----"------1 namic neighbors. It's a Social clubroom-bill iards etcl~oc=E~AN=F~R~O~NT=-.~.~-~nd"'°·=-w~. 546-1266 Days or Eves. "":=:==::::=::::=::O:=:=:o J 3 BR, 2 BA. view, cptd, al . • ... ,.., d~ E ,_ d k" . he th club, saunas, s\v1m-Live "''here the tun is! 3 br lower, all extras. $375 INVESTOR w/$15.000 t o Corona dol Mer • .,.... xu ... pave parnng · I •• bi! 23 - f ~·1 & bo I 3 ming J>OO. par..., room , · 76 Newport Blvd. 54g.;I',.,.. mo til J une 15. Will consider ·-··. over so~.o interest in or ual er a. yrs 1· ~-l d .. dri . . • • • • • -B •-· id Xlnt nd 1 2 8 O ia.u:., n oor gou. Vlllg • • • • I ""arly lease. Reference& P.,·mo s•,·, a•re R2. 8J0....6040. LRG 3 Br, 2 a, '-"'l'lt area, <1 . co • . . . .... _ J~ • ... 4!Q..42.44. range, tennis co,....,,, pro Lee 1 & 2 Br apts. req'd. 548-9743 trplc, bltns, cpts/drps. shop and resident tennis pro. tarnished or untumished Money to Loan 240 l --~~673-=_•904~~--·I SINGLE, TV, pool, pets ·Ok. Single, 1 & 2 Bedroom lux· From $l30/mo. 3 BR. Apt. Near beach! I'-'"'"'-"''--'"--..,_.___ 4 BR, 2 Ba. encl patio, new $Z) & up wkly. DANA partm nt w·th all the Completely car p e t e d , 1 TD L Marina Inn 34ll1 Cout ury a e s 1 Pay now for Jan. Winter or yearly. Call St Oa n crpts/drps, 1 hilt to beeh modern conveniences avail-&-get !he rest of 675-Z28l. Adlts, no pets. 673--0205 "'"Y· <tble. Furnished and unfurn-Dec's rent Free 7,. 'Ai INTEREST ished. CaU 642-8690 * * $150 l\lONTH • apt, utillties paid. 1 ., 2 TD L Costa Mesa Lido Isle nd oan , 4 & Family, Mesa Verde. 3 Br. crpt.s, drps, bltns, ':r'erm1; ba.sed on equ ity. Available Feb Isl. $265. frplc. Adults. $300. 673-1768, -4 BR/family + pool, East· 142 Via Undine. 642·3970 642·2171 545-0611 Serving Harbor area 21 yrs. side. Best offer. Option Sattler Mortgag• Co. 'also. College Rlty 546-S88B 336 z. 17th Street 2 BR. 1 ba, hrdwd firs, I.==::=::=::;::;:::;:=::;:=, I E-side location. Yard & Money Wanted 250 COMMERCIAL ST!\BLES Construction & permanent financirlg needed. $35,000. Owner 613-~. HoulK for R"1t I~ Houses Furnished 300 General fruit trees. cul-de-sac, $190 mo. 835-2300, 646-27:il LG 4 BR/2 ba. Newly dect1r, Jg yrd w/playhse. Pet OK. Walk to schl 's & prk. $290/mo_ 557-6898. 3 BR, den, 2 ba, fenced yard. l blk to schls. $230/mo. J6n Gisler: By . Appt Only. ~3. MESA VERDE Executive Home. p k.lly furn., adj to golf urse. Avail Jan. 15th. $ /mo. 54~3569. Newport Beech OCEANFRONT l br. $160 mo. Please write o\\•ncr, Box 256, La Canada, Ca. 91011 LGE., comfortable 2 BR. elect.kHch, firepl, patio. Nr ccean & bay. $195 yrly. 673-7452. LG 3 Br. furn/unfurn tirepl. parking. Rel. $200. 280~ Newport Blvd. NB. 931-9760 Newport Heights MODELS OPEN DAILY 10 A.M .• 8 P.J\t. RENTS FROM $ISO NEWPORT BEACH 880 IRVINE AVE. IRVINE & 16th 1714) MS.OSSO SOUTH BAY CLUB APARTMENTS • • • * 2 BR. Furn. $155. * 304 3.1rd St. * POOL, Bltns, crptii, drp~. nooc '=E'°A"N"F"R"D"'NT""'02-B"•"'·""""'1. children, no pets. 32N" E. gar, $17S winter. AlliO 2 Br .. 17th Pl, C1t1. 54S.2'138 gar. $165 ,vlnter-. 673-8088. FREE rental-share I r g FURN. apt. Utll pd. $27.SO beaut. home, exceptional week. 22-4 Newport Blvd., oppty for 2 girl friends info. NB. &tG-9944. Call Dave. 838-0038. $30 wk-1 per, w/kit $35. Maid ser, linens, 'IV &: tele. Seal.ark Motel 2301 Npt Blvd. 646-1445. $2S Per Week & Up BACHELOR & 1 BR. 'IV & maid serv avail, 450 Victoria, C.M, Apt. Unfurn. General 3U . FURN Bachelor & 1 Br • Liva where the fun Isl Exceptionally nice I RENTAL FINDERS Frn To l1ndlords 6-4S.()111 4JJW.19~.CMte M ... RENTIN& FURNITURE 2110 Newport Blvd., CM RENTING FURN. t Br. apt. $100, incl. S17J NE\V 2 BR apt. Best localion. 356 E. 20th St. Costa MeSa. 642-4905 • • ALICE HADDOCK 5131 McFadden Huntington Beach You are the winner ol 2 ticke ts to the * CLEAN. 1 BR; 2 BR, l !h BA. Crpts. drps, lrg closel.s. Pool. Adlts, no pets. Util pd. 548--0336, OCEAN View -241 La Jolla. 4 BR, 4 ba. rumpus rm, frple. 3000 sq ft, $400 mo. 548-j 766, 548-5.171 University Park FURNITURE ulil. kitch, ba., carport. ~7870 Sgl. man cnly. COSTS LESS Balboa Island 1 ROOM, bath & kitchen, for nice aclulr person. $105. MODERN 2 BR. Bltn atv Complete 1 BR. Furn. util pd. 2191 Harbor Blvd, & refrig, forced air htg. Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show at lhc ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January 2nd lhru 10th Please call 642-5678, ext. 314 between 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickets. (North County toll-!ree number is 540-1220) • * * * NEAR BAY * ftl)).Completely furn. Bache· Jor apt. A1so 1 BR. $125. Avail noW, Bll~e Be~CON * 645-0111 * 5 BR, 3 BA, fam nn, liv rm din rn1 , w/w cpts, f'lec kil~h. Country Club. $J:)() mo. Lease or opL S1G-1713 Balboa 1sland WINTER Rental: 2 Br. encl yard & gar, d shwshr, wshrfdryr. Reas. 642-7912 2 BR. Duplex. Gar. No pets. Adult.s , $144/mo. 773 W. \Vilson. 548-2802. I BR. near 20th & Orange $145 /Patio. Carport. 675-5080. 646-9155 LEASE • 3 BR + family, 1 yr old. Xlnt area. Option to buy if pref. $21;1. 5.'l7-1653 3 BR. Covered patio. Fncd yard. 2 gar +. Clean! $185/mo. Call 548-0336 2 BR. Unfurn Duplex, Crpts, drps. Elderly cpl. Days 548-5.190, eves 548-0422. 4 BR., Fam. Rm. & din. rm. 21$ ba. Turtle Rock •• $365 3 BR, D.R .. 2 ba ••••••• $325 3 BR, Fam Rm, 2~2 ba .•• $300 -4 BR, family rm., 21,,J ba. 2500 Sq, Ft ............ $375 . \VE HA VE OTHERS! "I 111\i ·1 \·!Iii. ---,'] \l'ul ior "SINCE 1946" 1st Western Bank Bldg. University Park Day1 13:Ml101 Night• Immediate Occupancy DON'T DELAY! Eastalde. UlD. 3 B<. 2 Ba. CALL US TODAY·I \Vill"~ll low down to exist-2 BR, 2 baths -....... $275 ing 5\4 % FHA. Eves. Bkr. 4 BR. 2 ba. El Toro •••• $275 838-6341. Elegant 3 Br 2~!1 ba •• $425 as low as $22 per mo. CM. crpts, drps, priv. sundeck. 100 % PURCHASE 1'1-=s=R-. -.-.-n,-1~;,-.,--w-/~w _1_18=5=. _Y~oa~r=IY_._6_13-_24~~31_,- 0PTION carpeting, garage. No pets. 2 BR. Fully crptd, 1tovc, Ind. item sclecli()n * 6T.,..i952 * refrig., drps. No swingers. 24 hr. delv. Month to Mo. NICE apartments. Utilities Call 673-3336. CUSTOM paid. 1,; bl ock to Ocean. ========= Furniture Rental 2300 Scavir1v, Cd~1 Corona del Mar 51 7 \V._ 19th, C.l!I. 548-3481 e BEAUT. Bach. & 1 Br. ~--------Anaheim 774 .2800 apts. $35.00 \Ykly & up. LaHabra 694-3708 Furn., incl u!il. 546--0451. "" - PALM MESA APTS. 1 BR FURN. $149.50 Bachclo~ Furnished from $140. 2 BR apts $1 r.; mo. mo.I mo. OK e POOL e SAUNA e JACUZZI 1561 Mesa Dr. Costa Meu Phone 546-9860 ACAPULCO Ap ls at!:ractive, ~~!, Pool, Util paid, Garden living. Adults, no pets. 2 BR ON TEN AC\ES $175 • 1 BR $145. 1800 1 I: 2 BR. Furn I: Unfunl 1 ~W~·=11·~0~·-A_ve~··_c,,.M_, . ...,..,~~I Fireplaca I priv. p&UOI I 1 BR. furn. apt. Heated Pool. Poo1a. Tenn1a. Contnt'l Bldlf,. No pets. Children ck. See 900 Sea Lant, CdM 6f4.2b1.J at 126 Monte Vista, CM. (MacArthur nr. O.lt HW)'J $85 & Up. NICE 1 & 2 BR Trailers. Adults. no pet". CORONA DEL MAR 133 E, 16th St., CM. 642.1265 ~luxe 2 BR. 2 ba. upstairs Huntington Beacft Tlvo b.,... 1 ·sh~"' 1 BR. 2~~ baths •.•••.•• S.~ -t:un.11.>m un urn1 '''-' BEAUTIF1.JL FURN. APTS. d I Carpe'· d 3 BR., mo. to mo. • ·• ·• · $35C Balboa Island Q · 2 apt. "'/prlv. aundeck, all bit· ins, cptd .. draped, l mmed. cccupancy. $225 Per Alo .. .:..year lease. up ex. ...., rapes, $1404165, ulet, priv, patio. nd b .11 . A .1 bl J 3 BR. 2~ baths •.. , $300-$32J a u1 -ins, vai a e an. BR 2 PJO 5 RM apr, 2 BA, W/\V crplg. wardrobes, frplc, dressing 8th. \\'a!t'r paid, S 11 D. 3 · Ba. tnhouse • ·•• View. S323 mo. yrly. Dock rm, locked sep. gar. Pool. , , 675-HSO 0 -····-" 11 .... Costa r-.lesa. 64&-6972 , . r I Jll"lvgs. . j 11301 Keelson Ln. (1 b!k \V. month. 778 \\1 • 181h St., (i' eel h•11 . 61,_.228 Sauna. Rec rm. LITI Bal Is attr fum hse ) DARLING 2 BR. $18~ incl cf Beach mvd. on Slater). NEW DUPLEX nr water, patio cov'd fncd Fountain Valley utilities, Winter re.ntal. Call * 842-78-48. Priv. patio. Enclosed garage. 3 br, 2 ha trpl. 673-6267 REALTY mornings or eves, 673-1928. l'N=E=wC-~1 '-b~,-.-1"1"3"5~_..,1-,1-,,..,...0 , Carpeted &-drape.I. Comp. SO. Bayfront, winter lse. $350 4 BR, 2 ha, frplc, maintained Univ. Park Center, Irvine fum/unfum. 1 Blk to heh. built-ins. lmmac. Jandscap. · 3 B I ~ pool, pets ok, ltaae $275 mo, Call ytJ 833-0820 B Ibo p n' , I I••• 3 BR 3 ha Pr!,. ... --mo. view; r. ge. pauu, An me a a • in u a Pvt pallo 202 A 11th, II B .,., • · ""' ..... gar.'. wshr/dryer. Dock fOT avail Jan 10. 842-2937, i::3&-l3l9 · ' · duced to $300 ;>er mo.11th, 18 ft. boal. Al!o otMr yrly _S>;-321 __ 6_·______ PENINSULA .. l BR. furn.1,.,.·°"'"...,..·..,,--,:--=-.,,.. ,· • 175 .. ,050 0 & ""ntr rentals. Island Rlty $185. 2 BR remodeled. Ma. 1\9] Adults <1nly. no pe ts. Winter LUX. 1 Br. 220 12th St.. • • 673--1200, 67:Hi653 eve lure adulhl. 190 Canyon ~=....,.:::=.....,=="':::-=:::'.:=~I rental. $130/mo. 64+-0753 H.B. 1 BR.-2 BR, 2 BA. W llli._11' CL,& 213 -~1 aft. 6 PM See Mgr, 219 l Slh St, H.B. Acres Dr. : ~ • Corona ·del Mar Apts. Furn. 360 e $25 WK .OCEANFRONT. LGE ht BR .. 1 2J blk1;11trom* * COROLIDO APT$* Huntington B••ch Lo\'ely Bachelors, 1-Bdrm. beac . Ava1 an s . 2 BR Sludlo. Unfurn. All VIEW .. VIEW · VIEW Generil ?>.1ald service. Pool Util. ~1116 or 642-0040. cit-<:, dshwhr, dbl carport & Of lhr ocean hon1 lhis beauL I~tMAC. Ex lrg 3 Br. 2 • 675-8710 • 1 BR M d iron Condo All I 1 11~ • 6~3318 I C d 1 J~OLlDA Y PLAZA o-=-~=--.=,-=I e a 1 : f'lt poo • ""«up. ,,)" 3 BR. 2 Ba. furn . hom~. Ba. dup tx. rpt, rp1. b t· DELUXE Spa·•·ou, l BR 3 BR, 2 BA, fu1•n. apt. hltln.s. .rclrlg, enell~lio., EXECUTIVE. 4 Br. 2~~ Ba, Avail, Jan. 1st. thru June ins, lrg lovely priv. yard. .... n -canlront Balboa. pool Quiet $l30 67:i 5034. llth. Gar + huit prk'g. $103. furn apt $135. Jlcaled pool. l ~~~~~Ca~l~l ~·.....,;~""~=='/~~;· ~~·L:· ::·::12300 sq. ft. Frpl, bltns, till". ~ll; 673-3663 675-88&& E...-e~. R('i;pon. married adlts . Ample parking, No chlld-Dane Point $345/mo . Jae. 7 14 8'12-3276 ren • no pets. l!IW Pomona, Golc.cnrod. 968--8658 associated BROKERS-REAL TORS 102~ W lolboo ~7l·J6fll C Cotona del Mar 2 BR. 2 BA mobile hon1e, ~·;'c-· ..,,..-,.-..,...,.--.,-...,,.-J ·-~-:-:::-: ... ;-:::--JSINGLE, TV, pool, pe~ ok. DELUXE 3 Br, 2 Ba, bltns. Driftwood Park at the THE r·astest draw In the Pvt. bach". rm & ba. $25 le. up "t.•kly, DANA dhwhr, new &hag crptc. b eac h . Ad ults only. West. .• 11. Dttlly Pilot Nicely turn'd. No Marina Inn :Wlll Cout frplc, laundry rm, fncd Tradewinda Rlty MT45.ll Oa.stl~d A4. 642-(i678 cooking. 673-600t Hwy. -patio & gar. $211. 644-8.102. .D,llLY '!LOT . Classlf!efi '. INDEX Advert1s1ng · I._ _HcK.-_1 ... _s...~llel I Serv~es1ndRopmr1 I~ 111 ....... cl•• .. fklltM ........ 1 .. CS-lfJ ,,.. ,,_ IMltwl ._., lldl hl' •• , ..... c.v. ....... ttlltM ..... ••1•1111 .. .,, ..... l..,.:Nlf .. ., ...... . .._ .. , ClllNnllt hid! C11MM I'd Cw.. ilfl ~ ·--o-"'"' .......... lllt •flllt l lT- Pt1111l•I• 'v111t1 ........ ~ H.,. Hlltli1Mt HltHltlltlttlt 1-.cll HUlltlll ..... Hl""'r ·~ .. lrvlfll TM'FIC• L..1911111 """ LllUlll Hlllt L9111A Nl9"6 Lllll l•lt Ll ... ttll -. ...... M ... v-.. MlfflY CllY Mh ..... Viti• Hew,.,, IMlll ""'-"' ".i"''' """"" s ..... oc .. 1111,.. Sen Cll'"""' S•11 JM11 CWllfflM Stnl't AM H1lll!l1 SMI 9""' Sl1"t9!! ·--UJll¥WM!Y Plrt Wltftllff Real E1tate, General ~-----~ ~ Av"'" fW "'' ............... 1,. 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MM''" ·•••••••·•••·•·•··•••·"••··"' LIY•ltCll ··••••-•• .. •·•··••·••··· Boat• Ind I · Je I Marine Equipment tf.. ~___, Rto!llS ............ , .............. .... ll•'" .... , •............. : .... .. ""···· Mlltll ................... flt ._,.1 .......................... ... INh. Mlllllt./Sll"lk l ........... fff ••ltlMltkll .... , ............. ... &-t """' ...... ' .••.••..•••.•. 41. Swnlllll" ............ , ........ Gt ~(11)911 .... ,.1 •................ cs Renllll It Si.tf't ,,, ............. 4:11 ... , ....... , ............... , .... ... "'"' llflll!Clllrtfl' ............ M "''-•SIU ..••.. , ............... "' G1r11" ter lltr!I ,,., •• , ........ 4*5 Offk• 111111111 ................... ... ·"'-· lltr!lll ................. 441 lnll111trlll Rflllll ••.• , •• .,, ••••. $ • .. , .. 1i.1/Dtdtt .............. flt ............. Jld •••••••••••• t'll .... Slll'l'I• ................ ~.t1J llw-.......................... "IS Rllltelw W111tM ................. tM MllCtll-................. 4'f I Announcenwnts I~ I Transportation . Jlr11l An_ll(_lf .................. IN Ct,_ ol Thllllct/111 IMlllfflu!ll •• ,.I Alrcr•tt ......................... tll L .. 11 HlllClf ......... , .••.••• , .. llt C•m-•, S.IWRlflt ............. m eye"'• lllllt. SClfl•• ••.. , • , •. tU • 11etrlc Cli'I , ................... tM Mfflll H•lllH" .......... , ........ flJ ,,_,., """-..................... .. Tr1lltn. TN"" ................. Ml Tr1lltn. UTlll;., .................. t41 ___ P_•_rs_o_n•_I_•_~,.~ Autl trln"""11lllll •• ., ••••••••. , nJ ,..,..,..,. • ...................... 'tJll Stcltl CIU.. ..,,.,.,,,, ••••••••. W I~ _Las_t _111_d_faund_ ......... I [SJ ... I __ -"-~-.. -.. 1ar-... -.~-.. ~-... -........ !I ~-I A.......,C .. Mk1 ··•·••·••••••••··'" o ............................ tu ,~ (ft'M ,,., ................ .. Lnt •••••·•···••• .. •••••••••··••·US ,...,,.. •1e•. lllh .............. m Tr-.<l!t ...................... ,., •. th Altl LNlllll . • • • . , ••••••• , •• , .. .. All• Hrtk. 6 ,..m ........... H6 Allltt W.,.,.. ................... HI ........ ,,,., ....................... ,. [ lnllruction I [I• / ~------A ..... "" ......... , ........... .. A•• "* .................... ,,,. Stlll>ti. I lflttrwlltM ...... ., •. 111 Tl!Hl;kll ••• , • ••• •. ,,.,. ••••,, •••• ' . .. DAILY PILOT Wed"""'1, Dl<tmbtt :!O, 1970 PILOT-ADVERTISER :*****************************~ Find -·Your .. Name See-Yhe-Big·-show l_f your neme Is listed in a special ad-it could 1ppear under any cl1tslfic;a.. t1on, so look at them 111-Phon• 642·5671. Extension 314, betw"n 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. to mike 1rrant*m•nt1 to pick up your 2 frff ihow tickets at any con· venlenl DAILY PILOT offlco. FREE ****************************** :.not1t11St11M5 · ~ _..ltll • : • CATCH 'DI & IOATS • ·w-u • ~ Ii-TACKUDMAY ~ v.la':tf:W E le The Guest of the DAILY PIL-OT A,tt. Unfurn. Huntington Be1ch 365Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt, Unfurn. :165 Huntington Bead-I .J!a Quinla fiermoja CasuaJ estate Jiving. Enter La Quinta Her- mosa's lush' green atmosphere & stroll tree- lined walk ways to your apt. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED I BR. Uni. $ISO -Furn. $180 2 BR. Uni. $175 -Fum. $210 3 Spac. !lr. plans, decor. furnishings: live within romantic setting w/fun or privacy. Terraced pool, pri. sunken gas BBQ's w/ seculded seating compl. w/Ramada & Foun· lain. * Color co-ord. kit w/ indirect lighting. * Deluxe rang• & ovens * Plush sh1g crplg. * Bonus st or1g• space * Cov. carport * Sculptured marble pullln1n & tile baths * Ele_gant recreation room. FURNISHED MODELS OPEN DAILY Blk from Huntington C.nler, San Diego Frwy .. Goldenwest Colle~e. San Diego Frwy. to 'Beach Blvd .• So. on Beach 3 blks. to Holt; w. on Holt lo ..• LaQuinta Hermosa 714: 847-5441 Costa Mllu \VIL.SON GARDENS APTS 2 BR Unlurn. Newly dee. New cpts &-drps. Spac grounds. Adults. no pets. $140 mo. 2283 Fountain \Vay E . (Harbor, tum W. on \VilsonJ. Quiet Adult Living I & 2 DR. Shag cptl, b1tns. beau! lndscpd. $150 &: $170 incl aU utU. Adulla only no pel'I, 241 Avocado St. 64&-0979 THE GABLES •. THE SEVILLE 2 Br, 1~' Ba, w/ gar. Adlls, crpts, drps, range, tncd yd, patio. 2•139·G Orante Ave $155 2619·E Santa Ana Ave $155 LUXURY APT. HOi\tE l\1ESA VERDE AREA $260 3 BR., 2 Bath!!, fireplace; large, private patiO, 2 car g11ra~. Near freeway . Adults. 546-4016 . ' . •eeee•••e•••••e••••••••••ee••···········' PRICES ADULTS $1.90 KIDS $1.00 Atntal1-I~ I ~·--*--*;.;._---:.*::__......;.:*_...;*;:, I Office Rental 440 CORONA DEL MAR Trader's Paradise 2 Rm 1-Wte, pvt ba, pvt entr . f>rk8:, crpVdrp, util pd, $145/mo. Owner. 67U757 lJ0..61JB.1200 !IQ. Jt. OFFICES, S61J.-m$180. Coata Meaa. 646-.2130 * XLNT OFFICE Space Now Avail. LIDO BLDG, 3355 Via Lido, NB. 673-4501 lines times dollars 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB "----------------..J ON 'Ilifj BAY 675-2464 or SU-5032 \i Acre, zoned pro(ess., n1edical or oonvalt!Sttnt. 1670 SANTA ANA AVE, C~I G2.a· X 292 .. heart o( C.M. 35c sq. foot 67;).24&l or 541.5032 Exchana:e for 4 BR tise. ~..:.:::co.::~~::.::::.,,,~1 '""""' * NE\1lPORT BEAOI •ic I--------- Center 300 ft to ltlXI ft. CAPISTRANO C·ZONED Answ & secretarial 675-1601. 4 + Acres, (ree & clear, $130,000. TRADE FOR in- 8u1ine1s Rental 445 001ne or ??? REALTOR 548-7711 OFFICE, STORE, nr. N'pt. l'.:"------- Bch. Post Ofc. & Greyhound Owner v.·ill trade 25M equity depot. l3X22. S75 mo, lse. ln 65i\t' Executive J BR 2 Graham Realty 646--2414 BA hO~ in Arcadia for STORE • 826 w. 19th St., CM. beach or Orange Co, unlts. $115/mo. * 541-1768 213·3»7372 collect. l-II Gl l DESERT for HWlh WANT caJlf·Nev. 2·3 .M elev. HAVE Cl cor. 90x 117 2 bldgs. $68,000 eq _ $42,000 inc. $445 mo. Own- er. C~I 646-8558. '65 V\V Bug, '64 Ford PkUp & Camper. '63 Pontiac Le 1.fans: WANT Van or auns or 4 'ft'hl drive vehlcle 536-959.1 aft S pm. ' 5 BR, J BA, fam rm !iv "."·din rm, w/w crp!Js,'elec kuche n, Country CI u b. Trad!" for inco~ proper. ty. 546-1713 GOLD MEDALLION l==::=:::==::=::=::=::=::=o;=:=:::==:::==::=::=::=.,=5 ~~~:.• J.,,8:.· b~ ~;,· ~~~~: Industrial Rental 450 * * * * * * Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apt. Unfurn. -... ---------!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~! I-''---------gar. Many )UXtll"Y extras! I r-----~ If ._c_ .. _••_M_•_s_• _____ c,.. .. -:'-:-•-M_ .. _. __ _,..--1.,'.~~;,,"'._b_us_._'_'"~·Ad~ul-~-""~E-·.I ...,._,,,. .... H•l I ·""OM""'"''"' I~ ''"'~"''"''"' ~ s~o~~~ ~~~s '°"""'""' I~ [ -..., ...... ]~ VILLA MESA APTS. Sublease On Beach AVAIL Jan L 2 br duplex, =====~=::! l ~=====:'.:='.11". $115 mo. lmmed ..... 1 ~=====~~ 0 2 BR, Priv patio. Htd pool, Extra~~~~ & G~je· Apt. Unfum. 365 Apt. Unfurn. 365 Apts , pancy. 660-775 sq Dft.NG * Lost SSS Bebysittin9 2 car cncl'd gar, Children '-1 Bit Onl $200 stove ... '6. pe1. ts, ..:.._.;..;.._;_______ Fu.rn. or Unfurn. 370 *NEW B_UIL _I 1----------:---------1 ~J::?me-. no pets pleaae! ....... · Y l!!enager ok. No dogs. Quiel Newport Beach Santa Ana I--"--'-~----'---1280 sq ft units: ollice, rest-SIOO REWARD for rctum or $165 mo. 719 W. \Vilson. 2 Br, 2 Ba. Only $225 st, E-side; $140. MS-6355 Newport •-ach room, llJ).220 pow<r, plenty · I le * • * 2 Br w/ocean view & u. in o ading to return of JESS LONGA 646-1251 LRG mod. 2 BT. Bltns, crpls, PARK NEWPORT _ ,,..._, of parking. 18th & Whittler s d .... ,. •ult 008•-. 1 Hounds CRE J .,-~==.,,..,~-=.,.-,:---JGI sq' priv deck. Only $300 '"u'" V' Q BE UTIFUL "' ~ 1752 L C * * NEW 2 & 3 BR. Shag Furniture available drps, displ. Nr. K-~!art & tree Uvg overlkg the water. VILLA MARSEILLES A ,...JL N \V. A Ave. Costa ?.1esa. Tooth Gray, 1brown,1 blue, • olina crpls, dwhhr, gar. Only 3 • 11arbor Shop'g. Closed gar 7 poola, 7 tennis cts S750,000 BRAND NEW PARK NE\VPORT. Luxury C. Riibert Nattress, Rr.altor 1 Glen plaid & 1 gray plaid. Sa nta Ana neighbors in your Bldg. HUfttiDgtOO Pacific + prkg. Adulla only, Call Spa, From $175 to SPACIOUS living in BacheJor apt Coata P.1esa fi42 .I-4SS 4 Sport jackets, 1 blue You a.re the winner of Child ok. Nr. S. c.oast 64&-6919 ;.150-Bach. 1 or 2 Br. Also 2 1 & 2 Bdrm . Apts. overlooking pool & ocean. ~ Bldg. 1728 to 2300 sq. check, 1 gold, 1 b I k 2 llckets to the Plaza. 54~1973 or 545-2321 APARTMENTS 3 Lg bdmis/2 ba, new crpls/ sty Townhousea. Dec. kt. Adult Li'iing Phone 644-5703 ft. Nr. Baker and Fairview, cashme~. 1 gray &. blk Southern California * DELUXE l &: 2 BR 711 Ottan Ave., H.&. drps, No pets. Chldrn OK. prl. pat or llaJ Subtrn parkg, Furn. & Unfurn. t 1 yr lease. Su 11 i van. chcC'.k. Please reply to 1213) Sports, Vacation Garden Apt.a. Bit-ins, priv. 536-1487. Avail Jan. 1st. $165/mo. opt maid ser cpts, drps Jusl Di~hillasher . color coordinal-L---'~_,._i' _ __;j[,s) MG-4429. 7624479 or 938-2051 A Recreational patio, heated pool, irplc. l\lanaged by 545-7245 N. ol Fashion Jsl al cd appliancc.>s • plush i;htij; _ RENT t\1-1, 1125 sq fl. $125 LOSf Irish Seller male. Vehicl• Show Adults. $1~ mo. S46-5163 ·-~W~'~"~'•~m=W="""~"o..:°';;.;.· -I NR new 2 Br, l» Ba, Jamboree &. San Jouquin carpet • choice 01 2 color mo.1355 Logan, no. 4, Costa 'Vhi!e flea collar. while at !he ' ORLEANS APJS Hilla Del. 6-14·1900 f or 6 morkln ' oo .... h '' & ANAH NEW TOWNHOUSE • "Pt/drp11, stv/dshwhr.'gar. schemes • l baths • stall tttcsa. 67i-511 g. "" • c c EIM 2 BR, l '..1 Ba.12BR. Crptg, Avl now. 7ti6 w. Wilson.i ~"::c"::,,'";,,<c_W::;.;•:.,· -----I sh.>"·ers _ riirro!'l!d v.'RJ'd.. ~R::oo:::;m~•:_ ____ _:.400:..:.ll~~~;:::=;:====I feet. Children grieving. CONVENTION •-. self cleaning gas ov. MZ.7958 SEACLl1'~l~ Manor AP ts. robe doors _ indirect light-1 l ;,;M:;l;;•<::-~R::.:o'h::l::•::l:.•---46-"-5 • _,,64&-<.,.,.='~"~=~--.,.~~-I CENTER .._..,., ADULTS ONLY 7-"="=-~~=~~~·I Spe•. holiday dt'<-unl + UPSTAIRS priv iv room. 1-._IALEC t blk& h ~" J en, encl gar. Patios, 548-3605 2 At'T'RAC. 2 Br, l'" Ba Studio ... "" Ing in kitchen _ breakfast .. _ h " a • v.· I ........ 1co. anuary 2nd thru JM• Ir 3 BR. Avail, Privale pa. · mon"'" ••-·. $1"1160, I & Bdrm &. ,,..1 , sep cntr. GARAGE for rent SI ~ oo A 1 Pl "~ 311 W. Wilson. apt. • Crpt1, drps, blrns, .. "Y u.;:.... ...,.... bar • huge private fenced I nee ..,..,c u. ns o ease call 642-5678 , .. 1 -4 Uo, pool • indiv. laundry fac. lri Pool 2 BR, tin BA, crpts, drps, No cooking. 8 5 / m 0 · 1905 Oay St., N.B . • ·pa co.·' Vic Santa between 9 and 1 pm' to.cl. a1m" BRANDNEW ~--i.,·dol"2 (Nr ~ang Co ,._1 Tu re g. • No p ets. patio. plush landscaping. 83 .. 21= 8 673-Sl" BR. 1 • 2 :-:"th,, II""~,, · vr e · ~""r ; II· S46-66IO patio, pool, ·Children wel-brick Bar-a.Q's -large beat. I~='.:;~::_~=~~~°"' 548-051 or "" Ana/Mesa Dr. 301 Mesa Or, yuur tickets. (North County .,.. "" lin at 17th St; nr. \\lestclill)~ come. 152a PI a cc D ti a, PVT home. NICE. \Valk dist CM ....... , loU ~-$195. Crpts, drps, dshwhr, * NEW LUXURY 1 &: 2 _Br. 5<18-2682. erl pools & lanai. oc College & Fairview 11•1 · "' .,.... * -.. = number is 541).lla)) M!lJ clean gas oven. all v.·tr 1741 Tustin, Costa Mesa dwhr, shag crpt, garages. =~"'===~~--3101 So. Bristol St. H0&p. Sli wk, $5."; mo. Per10Mls LOST.· Wlnchestu. our Spr· * * It au pd. Hid pool, 324 E. t-.tgr. ?.1rs. Thompson 642-4641 Pool &: Rec .. Quiet adult ~~r•--~CHg EuLOp R bA Pt ' l1Ai l\-11. N. or So. Coaa· Plaza) 540-3810. t..,••dd" hSpabniel. White ,w/ Car~nt ~th SL &16;-9148. living 64Z-4470. ...." 1UUA.L.11 per ay , . Santi Ana IS rown spo 1 . ... ... er 1.;:;::;c~~"=.,.;;._c--.,c-_J ~~~,,,...=~--~·l <n;;;;M-"-;;2-;;8:;;R:-c2o;o:---::;;=-I $179.50. Incl : elcc/appl, PHONE: 557_,200 ROOiit for\110rking man. Kit· Personals S30 Reward for return or anyl--::-::------I 2~ BR. l~ BA, encl pa ... , e MARTINIQUE e • .._. • ha studio, shag crpt/drps, sauna bath, chen Priv. E. 01 Info. Please. 646-8646 pool, \vah/dry, stv/ref. cp11, redee, cpt/drps, adj 11hop'g, gym, pool & billanis. Utl * 642-0326 * FUU.Y LICENSED * CARPENTRY drps, Pets ok. $00. 830-8886-Park-Like Surroundings S48-8301. 2131592-5227 pd. II ,.,1,..,,ted, • , I I lk:oo"·ned Hinda Spiritualist LOST Turquoise "i Ive r MINOR REPAIRS. No Job CLASSIFIED HOURS 8:00 a.m. to 5 p.m. ~londay thru Friday 9 to noon Saturday Advcrti~I"$ may place their ads by telephone COST A r.1 ESA omCE 330 w. Bay 642-5678 NE\VPORT BEACH 221 1 \V. Balboa Blvd. 642-5678 HUNTINGTON BEACll 17875 Beach Blvd. 540-1220 LAGUNA BEACH 222 Forest Ave. 494-9466 SAN CLEMENTE 305 N. El Camino Real 492-4420 NORTH COUNTY dial free 540-1220 ... Sl·I -ROOi\1 for employed Indian bracelet 1.londay T s DELUXE 1-2 & 3 BR. APT8.. II•>--2 Bl( New d-, -t•, 89' ~°'. Advice on all matlt!r.i. • oo mall Cabl~t in gar. •ru .... ., .,..,.,..... n1an, Near 17th & Irvine, Dec ~ Sea Horse&: &>a Alto FURN. BACHELOR 11tov!'. Adult.a, no pet5• Call 1-*~~.~A~Y~F=R=O~N~T~*~ Coli la P.1esa. _6.._.,. 16 IAve, Marriage, Business Sh · · R d ages &: other cabinets Prv patios * Htd Pools· 642-5848 SINGLE STORY I _:;:._;:,.;.~"""~~--Readings given 7 days a anty 8 re a· e war · 54>8175 U no ans...,·er le.a~ Nr 11hop'g e Adu1tJ onJ;y I========== IHlgh·r~e z BR's .lrom $293. Sout h Sea Atmosphere * St:l PER \\'eek • Ufl week, 10 an1 -10 pm. 5<!4-28t7. msr at 646-2372. H. 0, 17'Tl Santa Ana Ave, CM · E•s~.Bluff 3 side lie slips a\'ailablc. z BR .• 2 BATll \1'/k\lchen1. $27.50 per "'eek 3l2'N. El Camino Real, LOST "-Pepi", miniature AnJerson ?.tgr. Apt 113 e 646-5542. 642.2202 Olf'JX'ls & drp~ • 11p 1\pls. i\tOTEL. 5-18-9755 San Clel'T'entc 1011ghalrcd Ch I h u ah u a. ;Q;;-U;-;A'L"ITY"'°-,-::...,=,-,-,"11.-~--,-.1 Air Condiliolll'tl LARGE:, p!rasant. Working , ~=':c'c.2-~9~13;:6,~4~92-00="""== White & tan ma1c. Fountain """ ffUntillgtOD Granada Owner's home apt, 3 Br. 3 NdWPT }fcightJE. '1 Br, crpt, Pri\'a1c Patios n1an only, O>sta i\1esa area. i·YOGA FOR MODERNS Valley. Reward. 968-1703. =~ s;:·dge~· co~_t;· Free Ba, dr.n, frpl, encl dbl gar rps, stove. nc gar. $160. POO C 1 .. 7=-_ cs1gn ........ 1 Ken, ·~ n u =; 67" E.1'1.... 54S-9693 111':ATED L a I &1 ,,..,. Free Intro classes: Tues all LOST. \\'hltr/apricol toy 645--00~4: 646-21}12 1 BR. From $135 2 BR. ! bA. From Sl55 Sep FAMILY SECTION for children ur.der 5. Just Soufu of 'Vatnc?I' on Golden West, H.B. (7141 847-1055 CASA del SOL ~sq. ·_...mo . .........., Pl 11 ........lJ 1 I . 16 1 BR. Apt. Unfum·, Al Park cn1y o :t\Vn at :\ pm, Thurs nitr (Jan 7) .,......... e, ema c, \'IC th & REi\IO. D.EUNG & »-pa;• Twnhowle. 2 BR. 2~11 BA. Carport & Storage Rentals to Share 430 at 8 poi Al~" Sat & \Ved Orang•, Cl\1. Reward. <;'~ial ·~ • B 1 I Nowporl . Spo •i"h · -~.' 1st. Comm'J. "•ldon-llns. rp c. encl dbl gar. ... " I llDDEN VILLAGB momt'og• ~1 l<a·h<n 6-12-!095 days, evrs 646--9516 "-' p 752 Amlp Way. 675-503.l. privileges included. Short · .--au ... • ....... aneling, cabinets te rm l ease avail. GARDEN APTS. FE'.\IALE roomma!e \\'anted Yoga Center. ~45 E. 17th ALTERED n1a!Q Sea1point piarlil~ formlca. 644-7";&. • •189 =i °'4-"""" 2j()[) South Sa.lta 1 i share rvvi] apt w/2 St, C M 646-8281 Siamese cat. Fat, vo-LET h Fountain V•lley • ,.,,, mo, Vt ........,, Santa Ana Col 546-152:i o~hers. $53 ~ &16-3Hi6 ~;:_;"w' .:;·~l'-L.;.L.;_;P~·A~Y~-dark. Cdl\I. Rc"·ard. Ph~ odt e Swede do it. Repair 2 BR carpeted, draped, near 6~ rem el & patios. ' ALL NEW beaCh Sundeck, "'''''·' ~~~~~~~~~! SHARE n1y waterfront home 673-5417, 494.-. .. .,. Need ride dn.lly to & from LO~ =:======;·0:;,~==:I VALLEY PARK washing laC'.il , Yearly. "''dock. Man, 30-60 years. work.Livt!inLaguna .work .,,,; While f c 1u dog _ SIZ-3978 eves & wknda. Wtst•liff Sl50/n10. 6T:r4331 w/blk l'ipots (Dalmatian) Carpet Service For FAMILIES with pr~· I :;i-'7.""0.:.""';:.._:::;:::::c__ .. In Costa Mesa. Hours S 10 Vic: Edinger & Main SA, --------- Channing, casual, new apts school chlldttn only, • VJE."W APT. • Lg. rm., ---------Office Rental .... 0 5. Call 642-4321, eXl 270: 548-8832. Cl Cl at the beach. l & 3 BR and 2 BR Studio flrepl., Kitch, ha, 1 Adil. $165. 2 BR. NCI\' shag, bltns. ! ..:_-..;;;:_;c;;c.c.;.;.... __ ..;_..;;c .hO=m:::•-'::"c.·:.".::"::· ____ o'=-:=c=,~--~--1 can eaner Cleanest' 1 BR. From $14S $160 to $215 only $17S. Ulil's, & gar. htd I b ld SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY '"" LOST; Pocket book, con· Kurt \Vagner Carpet • 4 2 BR. 1'1'om $Z15 172.16 South Euclid, FV lncl'd. 642-6889 Quiet ~di is, n no ~i~~~s: l·2·3 room, up to 3,000 sq. ~~;E~e C:;g~SGC ;: HlaiBnlng ID.:.. "1·~; Apel Ln, Upholstery Cleaners. ..$9 21661 Brookharst St HB CJu11t South of Warner) &12-2514 ft. office 1uites. Immed. OC· O. DA:ic 2111, Anaheim, · · Rewa.~, ..,. 893-8603 a633-vc~~. rm. 534-SJO!i (7141 962 ,,... N h ~ ~ ~ (714) 541).4715 eweert Helg ts c•Jpancy. Orange Cnty. 92804. 539-9081. Jfl•) o· HARB R GREENS ========= Apts Airpo11 Irvine Commerc. lnslruction ian1ond Carpet Cleanifl.i 0 LOVELY 2 BR. F'rp~. Cpti::, ., ~· I d. ALCOHOLICS Anonymous. Nc1v Year S""ciai'. Huntington Beach drp!, patio, laurmry. l'!r., Furn. or Unfurn. 370 ... oiup ex, a J. Airportcr Phone 5-12-7217 or v.Tile to -l'r i\ll R~ GARD!:N Ii STUDIO API'$ Jlo!el & Rcstauranl, banks, P.O. Box 1223 Costa Mesa. ee 1 nor epairinir Bach. l , 2, 3 BR's. from SllO. . 2 .BdrrnS. • 2 Bath 6Adulli::, no peL'I, $I 7 O · Cost M S:1n Diego & N'pt F\vys. Schools & \Vi th Cleaning 400' $20 CLASSIFIED 2700 Petl!l'SOn Way, C.M: ~~1972 a osa UNCROWDED PARh,NG __:i:;;•.::•l:.:'.:"::<::li::on::s:_ __ S:;7.:S :"'.':"}""'="'==:':=":· ="=~=":=';'=· = DEADLINES 546-U370 2 Weeks FREE RENT NOW'$ THE SHARP-CLEAN 2 nn. 01\,1r:fm~.~Tl~nt or., !=:::Lo:::':::"="":::'=""'==J~l=q~) Discover a Great New Ceilings Deadline for copy&. kills Nl':\V 2 Br Gold Medallion 1150 MONTH • POOL C• Pl< I bit t / •· C W'th Th A G II TIME FOR · . <rps, ns. urn Rm. 8, Ne\"""'rt Beach areer 1 e ls 5:30 c.m. the day be· pl. ar, yrd, bltini, J-1 ..;,V•-. ~d, OK I P I l i°'l i·-·~ F d (I d I 550 P I 11 l' t d '-•n _, '"" ..... "'l'> "' un urn. no · """ JJ, 83.1-32?..3 Courtesy to Brokers --°"-"--'•-•_•_•___ A NT Accoustical Ceilin"" · ,r.,0·~ l>~lo~-'yon, Ed"t..,tlo'n rps, Suq crpl. t-;o pets•=-2620 Delaware, H.B. Artults, no prts (tecna ok) AIRLINES •10 e• trad "~ "'"' • • ~ -. Avoll llt5. 536-0062. 2 QUICK CASH llONu•.·· ,,f!R,\NGE". EN~ DESK SPACE o'r 6'~JIJ0o' " ~•...:?1. .. tif'n deadline ii Salur-· ... 64 ·2221: alter 3 p.m, 53&1816 .-.. ... , L\RGE i;·emale Burmese .w- day, 12 noon. 2 Br. dbl bath. pvt paUo, W'LK TO OCEAN ~11"<' SSS &l2·9.l20 222 ~ t A cat, wHh bad right !'ye, d6hwhr. pool. Adults. Quiel 1 en"' if'V-"'-I THROUGH A . ores venu~ vie Glenncyre &. forest, A natural for young people Cement, Conc•olt CLASSIFIED & beautiful. $1 Sj inc·s ulil. · '-'l'ts .... .,s, some \V Huntington Beach L B h Laguna. 494-9781 or who want excitement plus! ' REGULATIONS 17676 Cameron. H.B. frplc A: patios. $130-$l50 l)('r aguna eac 497-1961. Ticket Agent? Air Freight? l\lORE Conctett! ""Lio 1-8<" •1 ~ mo. Mulls. DAILY PILOT 494-!1'66 =="=~,,..,..~~ SI l 1 .~ ~ •• ERRORS : Advertisers "'"'° ''· LINDBORG CO. 536•2j79 j l & 2 BR' 1''RO GREYJ.IOUND -Male, fou nd at on age n t7 Reserve. e.g~~ey. Artistic setlin&. 1hould check their ads 2 , BR. Crpts, d rps •. * TOWNHOUSE WANT AD Overlooking s.bcaut :.~a~::1~ DESK SPACE 12/26 vie. Golden West and tiona? Ramp or travel l..ic., call Max at 644-0687 dally &: rcpoM <'rro~ Immaculate. Laundry fac. * pa!io ·& h!d pool, ,\dull-'. 305 No. El Cimino Roal Ellis. Call 847-96}4 8 a.m. a.gent? \\'e'll train you for FREE Est. Sawing, break-lmmediatcly. THE N t 1 hi'ld k 1 • .,.1: 2 BR, f~ BA, C'1'1•. drns, till 7 p.m. 1 day< a ... ,. tit<"" a-• more day o• ,,.,, · h DAILY PILOT 11!\.<1.umea 0 pe s, c 0 ' ,_, 1 "Adul II"" 3, "E 642·5678 103.l 121 h SI, across from Sun Clemente .. ""' '"" · ' · ing, aullng & skiploading, l\ablllty fQr the first In· 96l-3886 :l~y Ln. tsScs.t;M .1 " · Lake Park. 500-2092 4924420 l\tALE Dachshund, d a r k \Ve include i:h1.~mcnt AS-Service & quallt)'. 54&-8668. correct insertion only. ATTRAC. 2 Br. from SJ39. brown, found vie lk:public slstance. CEii1ENT \VORK. no job too CANCELl..ATIONS: All cxlraa. Pool. Kids & BEACHBLUFF Apts 1 ;A.;;...""°";;;;;;";;<;:•;;m.::•::•:.:l:.s _ _:S::OO::_:A::n:.:n::•:::u::n:;<::•m::;::•::n:;ts~-=SOO~A~n~no~u~n~c~o~m~•~n!!l!_s _ __:5~00~ I Homes, P.1esa V erde. small, reasonable. Free \Vhcn killing an ad bl> JX'tl ok, 1i441 Kee.l10n-D. New 2 BR, 2 Ba, dishwash· 1 54;,...1089. E~t. 1l YT'!. Approved for Estlm. 11. StuOlck, 540 ""'!" ••7 •m, ~.0 1·,10 pool ti 0~1 EU' ='==c-~~~c-~ Veterans. Eligible lnsUtlH.lon o-oo "' 1ure lo make a rt'Ci"ird .,.. ..........., =<>-Ct'I, • pa o, ~ 11. FOUND in EastbluU l11st ••. CONCRETE. Floors, of the KILL NUMBER 5l'ONEHENGE 842.M11 or 847.~7. C.tr\1-0 X\'-{ /)-C ~c._e ·wttk -young female kllty, under the federally lnsured palios. Any iize·job. Reu. ~~~ ~0~fpt.Y~~1~0~~ Exclusive 2 Br, 2 Ba. furn WALK TO BEACH! I \:J\!;) J..'-Qtl ~~ -~ IJ(,J• ;::> dark grey. Owner calJ student loan program. Call Don 642-8514. l'Sncrllation. This kilt $185. Unfum Sl ~. can no"· LOVELY.NEW l Ir 2 BR '11, The Puzzle with the Bui/f .. /n Chuc'fe =c"'=c'~-'~"-'~· ~-~~~-1 Airline Schools Pacific 1=====''=====1 number mu11t bl'.' pre· 1 1,~536-:;;:3::1:;:01:.:·;.W:.:•:."c:''..::."';;':;""::'""=I Crpt11, drps, dishwashcl'fi, It BEIGE Sh11ggy dog, Wed .. 610 E . l]th, Santa Ana Child Care llf'.ntt'd by tht: advertiser NICE & Spacious 2 Br, 11 ~ 709 Pliln'i". 8'17-3957 e ~f:Clrtong• lstters of the Dec. 23, vie. Laguna Canyon l::=::--------1 In C8lit o( a dispute. Bit. New crpts. drps, bllns. I z========= I four scrombled words b~ Rd ., Te1onic parking lot. I ~-~...::.54CJ.6.:...::5:.:9..:6 ___ I EXPER, Child Care my CANCF.Ll.AT10N on nr 1ehls & shop'g. No pets. Laguna Belch low 10 form lour ~mple wo•d1 R.1:\-938.:) afl 5. PIANO l.A!sson.'I your home hon1e, 'Vamr.r I: Springdale CORRF.CTION OF NE\V $150. :,.a~l.12~ or 5"Q-6338 I T U A PAIR 1 boo · La ~1·1H!ed f('arher.1 . i\1usic :irell. IM6-ji62 ADBErORERUNNlNG : OCEAN VIEW· Lrg 1 & N BE n-0 ti::, '"1~ guna Syfi\l'ms. :\Ir, ltathcock.1-:'--========I &''"r')' l'fforl I~ made to 1 & 2 BR. unfurn. Poot Elee 2 DR unfum apls. Crpls, l I' I I I I IXach Rock Fes11va.J. Call &16-1368 Contractor kill or cort'«'t 8 nrW 11.d & \\'Ir pd. Adult5, no pet~. dfilli, blt·lns, patios. \\"lllk· _ . . . . to Identify, 675-3899 l "~,:,CC,,.---------------1 that hllS bttn ordered. i\1ESA i\:IANOR, 211 ,V, In&: dl:slance to !own. 100 FE ~I ALE reddish/ bro\\n L1':AR.'l Piano a1 hOmc lrom LIC'D Contr, Remodeling, but \\'C cannot i:;uaran· \\'llM>n Ave, C.\I. 54S-i405 Cl iff Dr, Laguna Beach I I doxic. Anxious far o1vncr. profeSJlonAI songwriter. $10 add-<>n1, iooflng, painting It ter to do go until the t1d 3 BR. hJy.·cr, • .blln~. 2 Ba. 49~1ll8 G A l l E Iv·~':',' ;;CJ~"C.· _;SO~l::'-3~l9J":'!.; ~>1~2-~1~0!16~, I ;=L<="='°="=· ::m:::. =719=5·:::=:== I rep!llrs. ~7858. 5w.7664• ha$ arpeattd ln the pa.. Swlmmlnit pool. $175. 1043-A I-========== I I I I I I ! :: per. P.llsslon Or. 5'5--lFn 1. FOUND Jn l...agUn.a, sn1t1ll I I ~ Remodeling * AddlUons Irvine 1 female German Shepherd. Servicn •ndRep.n-1 KARLE. KENDALL DI!>.fE·A·I JNE ADS: l CR. crpt/drp!, retrtr & I-;;;;;:;;::;;;::;;:;;:;;:;;; I 'r 494-4891. . . Llcensed-Bondt'd 548-1531 These R-dJi are. 1>trlctty itove f/yrd, gar. Adib -No 11 I V 0 L C E I e11h In advance by mall NOW LEASING! 1.· He: Yesterday I bought 0 FOUND pair of men · & Bibyalttln." i\IY \VAy, quality home or al any Ont ot our of· pets. $140/mo. &lz...5531. N..W, fft.mlly and Adulta unlls i. I I I I cor an the installment pion. prescrfp!lon gla.'lscs In l--'----'""'------1 repair, \Valls. ailllnc floon. fices. NO phonl!' Ord('T!I. 2 DR.. Frc1hly pa inled, blln!. with total l'OO"f'atlon club Him: Is that so? 1''uhkln f&le. 646-7354 MOTIIER will blbysit, my etc. No job too 'small THE Dfill..Y Ptl.Dl' re-no cpts, gar. Pa!io, Child He: Yep. Today lhey sent F"OUND Slamcl!E', Ma 1 t . hOrne, fenced yard, Hot !M3-1<&!M, 24 hr •n.~. serv, ~ tht right to elas· ok. $14~. No pt-ls. S4M.l.\7 ~~~:S~So.1·N:.· s~~ I H y p £ C S I ma tho -. ll-)O w/\\hlt~ rollar. Vic: Irvine mC'als, Any hour, reasonable Addllions • Remodelin; • 1 1fy, t'dlt, _f;!nso 1 r_Aor ~1 CLEAN, N1Cfly crptd 3 BR, pl-~i -~-,, J 1 S 1 1 1 1 1 ft Complo•o ,, , 11 d I: Do1·er. ~. rates. 548--0166. Gl'rwick & Son Uc usc &rt)' ""'vt!T' o:wml'n , ra™"""-fr, '"' , ""t pd. . ... , avo . KJtU<.> • us , • V .. 'le t"uc e quote Si.1'601! • ·• " and to ctJ&ngr Ill rates . ..,._,,.., • w• lilOUlh of San Diego Fwy, on . . . riy f,fl,ng In '~" m•51'"'J WOid LOVELY lge clean home lor J ' <HS.2].iO • reR\lh1tlons without 11,c;•:;du;:l:;I•:.· .;l;,:''°:::·~"18-;:::::'c:'°::'·_:._ CUiver Dr .• Jr\'lne, 833-3733. }'T:lu develOJ'l fro"' i1rp No. 3 ~low. Lost SSS I your ha.by. Good c11 rt. prior notl.ce. LRG 2 BR C'rpt!.. Cfrp1, 1 PARK WEST .:\.PRINT NUM6El1(0 l flTEl!S. IN ________ ;.;.;. Re11son11ble. C.\I. 6.ui-:l.l.17 1 G•rdenlng I rhllrl nk Slti + rtp. 2211 ~ THESE SOUAl!fS i\llS.~I NG 2 v.'t'ek.,..Royal ;;7;;i,.i;;;:;;,;=;::...::.::.c::;::_:. ----'=-----1 CLASSIFIED j Col_I••_<' Avr _S'l,_:Z, 6-¥....-0627 APAR TMENTS S:t11.nda.rd bli1ck p0(1rl11", RAB'\ SITTING n1y hom<'f AL'S CAIIDENINC MAILING ADDRESS I $1 1:i • Ll!Ci 2 Br, C'rpts. 0';;:'1~~~!\~n~~by £.Ji i) u~~·~~e~EN~~~-~E LETTERS J I I I I I I ~~~'t~ rC~1~11:cur ~~.yrs fl~~ ~~~~~~·6 :~;2" Sl 50 per ! ':a~1:i:1~f~~ :~i"~-:S p, O. Bo~ 1500, drp•. bit~ ~tlo, no pelt.~~~~~'!!!"~ ... ~ · · · · · . . Harbour-Sun.sci Bch flJ'('ll. NE \V 'ica r s 's Ev~ ServlngNewport,Cd1.f c- ._ __ eo._ia_M_ ... __ _. Wl<dll'I &Ii ik:il, !111-1167 °DAILY I'll.OT WANT ADS! SCRAM· LETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 118 "'"'"' 213/592-0280 or hob)'•itilog. My ho m', to ""•· Dtn-or s>.;;; 71418f6...38.43. ewn!ng or all nlfr. &I~. \li'Mtcllft, ' " ,, " J7 PJLOT·ADVERTISER Wtdnttda;y, Decembtr JO, 1970 JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU .. ., ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service end don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the h a rd way· The Service Directory (classifications 6500 -7000 in the classified ad section daily l gives you en advantage you get through no other adver- tising medium. It reaches customers who ere ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the services you have to sell. If your service isn't lis ted, we'll start a category just for you. Pick up the phone r i g ht now end reserve your space in the "Sellers Circle" • Your Direct Line to Directory Results 642-5678 DAILY PILOT . CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT -_L":l.... ______ _ -·--------------------- Wldnhdq, Dt<tmbtr '°· 1970 DAILY PILOT (JS J[Il] I l[Il] I-~......... l[Il] I -I~ G•rdenfng' Job Wanted, Femele 702 Help Wented, M & F 718 Help Went,.d, M & F 710 H•lp Want-4, M & F 710 Furniture 11-~~---~~~~ STORM REPAIR U AVE 0u11tandIn1 * DOORMAN, part time. OVERSEAS SECREI'Al\Y, exptr. Typ-* · * · · nee work, Sllfltf1, bn.clng Hoosekeepers1 mmpanior\$, Apply PORT THEATER, llll, SH, fiil.nr, proof· MIKE OGDEN prunt. La.ndM:p ma Wit prac. nunea avail for ·llvo-Aftl'. 6 eves, Cd~t. ret.dlrc, 1ct ahead publica-2066 Or•nt1e Ave. cleanup jobs. Time open. in. Employer. pa.ya tee. I ~E~x-pe_r_Med~~lc-.~I ~.Re,.-c_e_pt_ lion A film&. 496--5133· C04ta Mete Profess Gardentr. Geora:o Health & Family Catt !o -GP' -~ • WORK • SERVICE.st& Salesman: Im-You.arr the winner of 646-S89l. Agency, 5f.l-4i681 r · · • oi.uct, ......... .. 11 ,,.,..,.,.-,.-.,--~~,.--===""'==,,--=--I typist. 646-3003 mtd. optninp fUU· ttrpe. 2 ttclcebl to the AL'S Landscaping, Troe HOUSECLEANING, lt1 on.· Ex~riencCd OiiJy. Apply In Southem Cellfornle f'ri CdM Np B D A• FRY COOK • Experlenctd removal. Yard remodeling. ~-. , .. " ,_., only. 562 w. l!lth St. Costa person, 2560 Nt!wpQl't BJvd. Sports, Vacation Trash hauling, Jot cleai1up. area, $2.75 per hr., be!Wffn M All 11tUl1 A proteasionu C.M. , & Recreational Rt!palr sprinklers 613·ll66. S.T p.m., 847-3637 eaa. $125 SERVICE STATION AT· Vehicle Show Exper. Japaoese Gardener, AIDES -For eonvalescencf!, F\JLLER Brush sales & serv. TOTAL FEE TENDANT all 1httts open. at the Comptete yd 5ttvice. Neat elderly care or family care. N. 8 · atta $2.6S hr to •t. CALL Apply In person, 46'11 Cam· ANAHEIM & Rella. ,.... est. 642~389 Homemaken, 54741681. 832""'8· 714/956-2251 pu• lli., NeWpt Beh. CONVENTION EUROPEAN LANDSCAPER * FULL CHGE BKKPR e SERVICE Sia. Salesman CENTER ---------1 * cosr ACCOUNTANT Cean Up. Tree Surgery Help Wanted.Ma F 710 Call for appointment 962-7776 -o=P=E=a=s=.s=m=a=LE=·SP=E~Cl=A~L~I ~·paopl!-i• i~~.~50.90" E0 •,1,thy. January 2nd thru 10th Reasonable. Eves, 496-3383 •t••/Fn·. "JU I no..v, . , Pie•,. c·" 64" =71 •<t •14 -· Exp'd onl" •-wear Id C >! (,._• d I · ) ... -' · • -> CEN CJ.a "' • rnk1 ARTJF1ClAL UMB '' t"''"" ' ' · • ..,._.. roa_ rvine between 9 ···• l pm to calm nup, e e.: sp r GARDENER T" 'INEE,--~y N 8 Vac n•v .,.,, '"72 -.,,.. R t tit H .:i.--MANllFACTUJUNG -"""" '"' ,.... · · · · r~· ~ SERV. estab. Fuller Brush ""''r tickets. (North Countu serv. oo .. an....., ... an, "•ATURE, c·~· .. ~-. ex""r. nee, Xlnt Oppty, Ph: P ,.. v odd job. Re .. ••«••s 1-.. ~ ...... u • ,,.. ART lime \\!Ork 7.-J days rte, $l2S-$1'15 wk, to at., alao toll-tree number is 540-1220J . .· -~ H.S. G"'D, SERVICE betwn 8-lOam only (TI<) I I n.n a wk. Wall c ean n1 pt tlme. 546-57'5 * * * EXPER. Hawaiian Gardener COMPLETED. 4!M-54'7 bu••·-•• Actl e bondable C 1 G own"'' · v 'n 'SERVICE Sta Attendant ANTIQUE white triple omr ete ardening We will train for mold· GffiL W/tttail credll stor transportatlo. 962-MM gra~yard ahltt. Apply at dresaer, matching Service. Kamalani, 646-4676, if1C oJ plaatic, artillcie.I expe-r. ~1ust ~. neat a PART TlME btl mat Complete Yard Carel feet. Phone for appointment pearance. Penn. posit! . P, e, 3195 Harbor Blvd C.M:. he&dboard bid. box 1prnga. Tiflf!ded .tor food pttparation * SNACK iAR * & mattre.,, iso for all. JThf , Ma-4837 * KINGSLEY l\fFG. CO. f7141 846-3355/(:l 3) & 8erv•na. Experience Walnut chest ot drawet11 • 592-2900 pref'd. 645--055.l match. nla:htstancJ $30 '. General Services IO am to 3 pm HOUSEKEEPER, Ii v • in, I ~-~-------1 Experienced In limited 642--0340 ::;;:;::.:;...:::::..:::!:'.:..--.liiseiABBYYS'sti1T'°liOo<rotee.a;<chitterW:-, BBoOllMsa CdM, English apeaklng, PERSONNEL DIRECTOR fut menu operation, Z.3 I"°==,..· -,--,..-,--,.-,-I RAIN Guttl.-n Inst a 11 ed, Chlca & Edinger H.B., my clean thoroughly, Good (Part Time) days per week, prefer~ 1\-fOVING, elegant furniture Quality \\"Ork. Reasonable. hme. own tranll. 846-3434 w/children, $180 mo 1tart. Adm In Is ter C 1 assUied ably wetlrends. Apply in fi0% oU. Color TV atereo. Free est. 968-2?.08. BAKERY. Man to make 67$-2790. Service Pet'!onnel program pet'90ll to: paid uz, >lbl• se:~1~~plusllli ---------1 under direction of th" DICK STAGG game a e, -~. IMl H I• donuts. Work 6 nites wk, HSKPRS Emplyr pays fee. 1 8 A" TO '" •~• $250; comp! bdnn A living au ing Penn. Clean cut. Trotter's George Allen Byland Agerr Personnel Comm ssion of ,,. ..., '" rm sets. 673-1409 Bakery, 231 Forest Ave, cy 106-8 E. 16th SA lhe School District. Re· AMBITIOUS Young man to 547-0395. • ' ' quires knowleda:e of do li!e hauling &: yard 01.agu~~"'~"~•~•~•h~·=~=~' t----------1 Administration: two yn of WHITE FRONT STORii: DREXEL double dresser $150, Kinpz hdbrd noo. Both beautiful con d . 642.-9929 cleanup. Reas. Anytime, BE AU T 1 FICATlON Public Per1on nel 54, 0093 d I ho HUNTINGTON BEACH .........., . movement nee s peop e ''' Administration: tivo yrs of TRASH & GQ"""oe clean-up, 7 v.•ili Y.'Ork for xlnt pay. UNION college (or ""Uivalent): five 3088 BRIS'fOL st. ~-536-4084 HIGH SCHOOL DIST. ~ .. days. $10 a load. Free est · yn. Professional Personnel COSTA MESA Anytime, 548-5031. Ji EA VY DUTY and re I ate d experience, E<!u•t opportunih• employer Garar Sale 112 1----------I Betty Bruce -l\IEOIANIC-ly I School v I $686 to $8-18 ~10NTII preferab Inc udlng TEMPORARY GAL MOVING· Must Sac bdrm Hou1ec eanlng m f1 Required : H.S. graduation or District exp. Salary range set cou~ chn et~ l6450 t.1esa Cleaning Service id& C xec e q u Iv . and 3 yrs. $;1'1o.50 " S6S8 (20 Hrs per Good lelephone voice. Busy Ro'ss Cr, \Ve s t m I n·, I er . C •• . d n t JO. """yman ex""r. i " \l.'k.J desk for per90nnel place-847-395.) arpe,s, win ows, oors e c. ,,~ APPLY CIUiilied Personnel ment -·-•ce Irvin• lndus.t----+------t "'' & Conlm,·1 •••'ill /I automotive mechanics. Ap· ""'v• ' ....,,... _/r/j plications must bf' in the prior to 4 PM, January 5th, tria1 Comple~. CoHou1s1EHOF CL0EA~ 'Jencu' Personnel otc. before 4:30 1971· WESTMINSTER American Girl Mi1cell1neou1 111 mp e e ouse ean1ng ti 7 •~2 11 h 2172 Du ~ NB 642·6824 pni, Jan, lh, '"""" -1 SCHOOL DISfRICT ~nt ...,,-, ROSE Bo I ti k t . 410 \V. Coa.ott l{wy., N.B. St, Hunt. Bch. 14121 Cedarwood Ave. 9.nte 12 MKOtiable~ . c e 1• pncea SCOTI'ISH Lady housework By appoint. 646-39'..9 Janitor.N.B. area. 12 \Vestrninster, Calli. WAITR,ESS exper. wanted by 646-7395 by the day. Highest local ~r. ....idnlle 'til SA.\t shift. he Ith ,., .... --! " t be Call atter 6 P.~f. 54(}.5468. BOB'S ,.. * PROMO WRITER * a ....... • '"~s 2 ROSE Bowl game I: 2 Courtesy Personnel . . __ .. GI 1 neat, attract. I: eH1clent. parade .......,nd stand licketli "HOME OF TiiE BIG BOY" 835-84.64 Pubhshln& fll'm n .. ~. r Betwn n-35. call 646-9780 ... w • Maintenance Fr.klay ~with •. nare for betwn 5 6 6pm °' alt 11 .. 30 1 pkg, $35. 644-4835 WAITRESSES JANITORIAL. Exp·d male HANDYMAN will do plum· ovr 25, pt time eves, 5 promotional writing. mar-pm. OVERHEAD garage door Ir. bing & mobile home repairs. Ne-at appearing, good char, nltes wk, H.B. arta 5$-8600 ket n!M!atth. Can double In WAITRESS xp'd Apply hudwatt, $25. 962~613 1. 646-6945 NO EXPERIENCE NEC. br1.51 as &ettetary to boss. ~ N • e CM. B h 206n Kelvin I:.n, H.B. Many frlna:e benefits HOUSEKEEPER, Live in. Must be well organized, H ewport, · · rune TWO single beda cood Painting & Interviews 2-4 Daily Spanish speaking 0 · N · 111elf·•farter and 1>09e11s aood ouse. condition $10 each Paparh1inging 154 E. 11lh, c.M. 495-5438 after 5 p.m. 11ecretarial skills. Advertis-YACHT STEWARD 540-3233 . Equal oppty employer ing or n!!lated bkgrnd. de. Exp. man for corporation FISH T kll 40 11 + DO It younelt. You do trim. * CASHJERS * 9~rcd. ~ opportunity. for yacht. For'f!ign v:atel'! 6 all acce~~ri,s $40.~0 ~:non Avg. 3 Br. house. Exter right girl. For an Interview, n\Onlhs anually, Perman· SlO 54~24• stucco $150. Incl mat'I & ca 11 Mary McFcrran ent poAition, 5.f.5.7446 · ;> labor. Ail ~rk a:u ar, THE 5464370. * HAVE plush beige wool 547-1441. carpeting, 100 yards. U!!ed . ~ QUIET, middle.aged couple l II"-I Xlnt cond. 536-6924 No Wasting GRANT des\N' woman tor general ~ -V 1----------I + WnALyoLuPcAalJP~MRac* cleaning 2 mornings a week:W<=======:· '=:::!.ji----------1 .\vbe Own tranaportalloo. 0 A tlqui IGO FREE TO YOU 54Jl.I444 646-lm BOYS !RVINE PERSONNEL >-'61! " • INT/Exler painting. Free SERYJCES.,_.ro•v-y REAL ESTATE SALES* * *"GINGER," a very Jov1zle est. LocaJ ref's, Lic'd & ins. e P1rmenent Position -r\\JLI~ Join a going oraanlzation & AL LEARNED dog, Heim 57 varieties. Accoustical Ceilings, Cali e Heilth Plan 488 E.171.h (at Jrvlne) C.M. start ~ MW year rl1ht! 2515 E. Coast Hwy. Needa .new home. Hat. Chuck, 645-0809. e Profit Sherinf 642·1470 Bonua commiallon plan , Corona del Mar broken. owner hu aban- rAPERHANGING-F r'e e Full Time Only Only 2 ol)f!nings, C&ll Jor in· You &ff: the winner 01 doned. 836-4493 12/31 est.. satisfaction guaran. IS MONEY terview, Bud Corbln • Paul 2 ttckebt to the DOXIE mix 1 teed, Dan Schwartz, APPLY IN PERSON YOUR PROBLE~f! Martin. Southern C1llfornle housebroken. k>vea 0~~; 547-5846. FROM 2 TO 6 MON-ml Here's the ansWfr! CORBIN-MARTIN Sports, V.icetlon animals. kids, le. women, JNT/Exter Painting. Free 1750 NEWPORT BLVD. Become an AVON REAL TORS 644-76'2 & Recreatktnal but pre.fers men. Owner est. Ref's. lmmed. Servict, COSI'A MESA Representative -earn good REsrAURANT: Male, nltes, Vehicle Show abandoned. 836-4493 1/1 646--0210, 642-2.014. ===~~=--o--· I money in your spe.M time FemaJe, part time days. at the 0 ...... Cot ===,,__,,._,..,..,-,.,,--·ICLEANING GffiL, depen· near home. CALL NOW ANA''EIM En.!~uu .. Shepherd/ I le, PAINTING • Ext·lnt. 18 yn. dab!e, O\Vn transp. For S46-S34l or ~7041 Exp/Req'd. Apply aftr 3PM n lpctyed female, 4 yra: old. expcr. Ins. Lie. Free est Fridays. N.B. area. 646--6414 1 iiiiiiii'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii JEDRO'S, 3000 Br I at 0 I , CONVEfr!ITION Very loveable. ~lust find Accoust. Ceilings. !J68..91Z6 COASTAL AGENCY Leg1il Sec'y =c~·=M=. ==-'C7.,,_----.·I CENTER new home, as new apt won't PAINTING: Quallty int & A member ot Salary Open. Exper. rcq·d. RETIRED LVN, pract . January 2nd thru 10th take peta:. 548-0483 U/31 exter work. Insured, free SncJllng & Snelling lnl". Under 30. Gd typist, lite SH. nurR, lo care for heart Please call 642-&611, ext, 314 YOUNG adult kltle1111, ROtne est. 613-mG aft 4pm. The World's Largest IStenorelte also usedJ. Love· J>t.llent 9am-2mP, 5 day wk. between 9 ~I pm to claim apayed, some unspayed, P I • 1 IY N.B. olc. H•• 9.5. Pit aft 2 pm; 842-1276 HB your tickets. (North County some shot! & some no shott. PAINTING: Honest guaran. ro ess1on1 • t 11 ,_ bo t ••• ·~ teed work. Lic'd. l..OcaJ ref's. Employmint Service Newport area. o .... "'e num r II ~uwl 548--0813 or 836-t493 1/1 CaU 675-5740 aft 5. 2790 Harbor BJ CM 5'10.60:>5 Personnel Agency SALES CLERK part time.* * * KITI'ENS. Long hair, "==========I 1 · 133 D D NB Married, 25 or older, 16 teenagers. All colors, bo> 11 Harbor B vd. at Adams over r., • • hni per wk. Earn $128 per Appllanc11 ~ tralned. 836--4493 w 1 LL COMPANION needed in ex· 642""3870 mo. lntervlews at No. 63 REC"NDITIONED DELIVER 12/31 Plaster, P11lch, Repair * PATCH PLASTERING All lypes. Free estimales change for room and board Fashion Island, N.B. (The "" and some salary. In modest LIVE In Babysitter, 11alaey Passionate Eye) Sat 2nd. 1V'S le: APPLIANCES MIXED terrier 2 mo. old puppies l2), 3230 Call540<825 Costa ~Iesa home. Call + board, 5 days. Call SALES PEOPLE wanted to FINAL CLOSE-OUT 64&-1353 646-2066 aft 6pm. earn SlOOO or more per mo. on all 1970 Doer samples NO THWEST Oil Jnforma· Call Earl at 548-097110 am We deliver, service It Wa11hlngton, CM. 540-5259 i21n 11-Pl_um_b_i"-"9----1* COMPTOMETER PLUMBlNG REPAIR OPRS * No job too small • 642--3128 e Apply !mmed. for inventory I========== I jobs for Feb. 4th, 5th & 6th. Roofing BEFORE You buy, call T. Guy Rooting Co. Recover s pecialist . 645-2780, 548-9590. Sewing/ Aller at Ions • Dressmaking A Alterations Special On Hems C&IJo *~46 Alterations -642-5145 Neat, accurate, 20 years exp, Tiie * Verne, The Tile l\1an * Cust. work. Jn.stall & repairs. No job too sml. Plaster patching. Leaking shower repair. 8f7.1957/84&-0206. CERAMIC Tile work. Free est. No job too small. 53$-24'6 Top Soll Top Soil, Sandy Loam LYMAN LANDSCAPING 633-7636 Employment J[Il] Job Wanted, Male 700 * • JUDIE PIEPER 25262 EriclOft Wey Lagun• Hiii s You are the winner or 2 tickets: to the Southern C11llforni1 Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show t1I 1hc ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER • January 2nd thr11 IQ1h Please call 6<12-S67S, ext 31~ between 9 Md l pm to claim )'our tlckels. (North Olunt,y toll·!rte numbtr is S.10-ll'lOJ • * * \Ve also need product demos & all olfict classifications, Regist('r for a temporary job today Tntervws. 9.12 Western Girl Inc. 4667 Macf.rthur Blvd. Newport Beach 540-0325 *COOKS ALL POSITIONS AVAILABLE APPLY IN PERSON lZ.3 PM A.IRPORTER INN HOTEL 18700 M•cArthur Newport Beach, Cellf. CARRIER BOYS WANTED !or '"' DAILY PILOT Dana Point, :',an J1.11n Cl'lplstrano and Capistrano Bench. Conta~ Mr. &8.Y nf DAILY PILOT Stn Clemente office ~ N'. El camino Real f92M20 * COOK'S HELPER -5 days ea, \\'k, No nlles or wk end1. Train for CHEF. Burrough'' Cafeteria. Paul rt.Ta.,well. Mgr. 83()..3232 Ext 433 DE't"TAL RECEPJ'IONlST • DeAk only, E.xp'd, Proficient '''Ith lnsut'8nCC, Afternoon to eve hrs. (1-8 or 9 pm), Mime Sat's. Salllf'Y open. l.tinac bendlls. Ph: anytime (}L:J, •rta) 8 3m·9 pin. 846-3540. --· t . Alaaka j ob op. guarantef!. BEAUTIFUL Male portunities, * LABORERS SECREtARY $5JO. DUNLAP pure-bred Blk/~n lg brttd $ 4:JO ,vk. * TR u c K Fee Paid by Co. 1-fllllt have APPLIANCE G. Shep needs lg fncd area, DRIVERS $715 wk. For in-shortha.rul. ~ll Ann, 645·2'770 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. 847-9936 aft 5 PM 12/31 .form. send self addressed \\lestcllff Personnel Aa:ency, e 541-77U e AF1''ECI'IONATE, decla1o1.'ed, envelope to P.O. Box 1521, 204.1 Westclllf Dr., N.B. (Al-aJtered malt~ cot to good Ontario, Calil. 91762 110 fee jobs). SE•~ Kenmon Ranges-home. Allergy proble m , PIT F/T oppor \V Div of SECRETARY, One girl of· ::~o~~s:e~a:n~ 83~ 12/31 Gen Foods $25-$100 wk up. ttce, shorthand helpful but SEARS Adams at hfagnolla FREE To qualified home ~~ 1-felp w exciting cosmetic not nee. ~us t know pay Huntiniton Beaeh. 962-7781. Russian Blue male cat 8 bus. learn prof beauty roll, Computer Mate Inc. • · · mo. very loving, good secrets. No exp nee. No 150 Loii Molinos, San F RIGJD~IRE auto. washer. natured. M!~1846 12/31 door to door. 842-2664 Clemente &-Westinghouse elec. dryer,l==~~~-~~-cl .,;:;==:;,;::;;=::;,.;:=:==,,:,:;;;::=·======I &ood cond. Both for $65. NEED Gd home fncd yd Help Wenled, M & F 710He. Ip Wanted, M & F 710 Guar. & delivered. 546-86'12, for Ginger. Lovable sm Restaurant ANNOUNCING ANOTHER Exciting Cocod AND We will accept applic11tions for - • WAITRESSES • BUS BOYS • DISHWASHERS • HOSTESSE$ • cooks . • BARTENDERS • COCKTAIL WAITRESSES St1rtlng December 29 9:0!M:DO Deily Apply In Per10t1 24001 Aven1d 1 d1 11 Carlot• i.agune.Hlll1 Santa Ana or San Diego Frwy. to El Toro Rd. -Corner of El Toro Rd . and Avenida de la Carlota . 0\Yned by Far \Vest Services, Inc. Operators of Snack Shops, Coco's Reuben's, Reuben E. Lee, Tho Whaler. Isadore's 847-8ll5 breed. doxie terrier mix KENMORE auto. washer, 548--8013: 836-4493 12/31 xlnt cond, $65. Guaranteed VERY Lovable & aUe cl. yg. & del iverad. 5 4 6-8 6 7 2, spade female blk kitten 6 847-3115 mo . amber ey~s short thick REFRIGERATOR- FREEZER Large \Vestlnghouse $47 Best Offer. 64&-3131. tur shots. 539-nst 12/31 GERMAN Shepherd, 10 mo. or Needs perm, h ome . 675-3&10 1/1 GI!: apt elze ttove, prac· MIXED puppies, 1 wks old. llcally new. s/steel top $75. 2054 National Ave, C.M. Call 646-478.f 548:-3576 1/1 * LARGE CLEAN FEMALE Poodle very gOOd REFRlCERATOR with children 4 yrs old. $35 * ~7820 646--2946. 1/1 REFRJG. GE 19c ft, brown. WEIMARANER -11 n10. old Botlom frzr. Xln! cond. fem all', to good home . .$225. 833-0487 847-7354 alter a. 12/31 IRONRrI'E mo~ER 4 Mo. old girl kitten, 2 eolo~. good condition $3S. looking for family. 96:2-6075 Call 545-8081 eve!!, 12/31 PUREBRED Red Doberman. Furnitur• 110 female, GV. ma's, Gd , .;..;;...;.c"'-.;_-----'I watchdog. 646-0366. 12/31 PR uphol chtlirs. nr newl=~='=~"""'C--'= $<13. ea. Twin bed $25. OWN~ Ill \VIII give away Dining set w/ltalian chair&. her nice &payed cats. Call $173. 642--9178 646--1353 12/31 LOVELY Sota, .never uHd, FREE Hone manure. You quilted flora acotchguardtd haul. 546-0925 20311 Cypress $125. Matcllii., love:atat t75. Santa Ana lleights 12/31 53G-8331': FREE Sofa, needs slipcover. HOUSE furnlt\lrl for !!ale. 548-0807 l:l/31 MUsi" SEU.. 456 Cotltt FREE Dutch rabbit 64U223 Me:M St, .M. alt -4. ~ -l2131 e 4 PJECE SECTIONAL FREE Female pood]ro mix • & MISC lTEMS 5 months 644-1920 12/U * '* 646-2329 * •_ 2 \Vhltt clucks and gulncA * CUSJ'OM FURNITURE pigs 64Ul650 12/31 RENTAL. Set ad class :l BLACK puppie~. 8 wits 4000. Call 548-3481 old. 002-1031 12/31 NO matter what It Is, ~ !'REE FluUy puppies 1 can aell It with a DAIL'/ ":etkl old 540-0~ 12/ll DAILY PILOT WANT AD. GERM 1horthair polnetr, Call m5m A Cha'10 II. 1 yr old, 646-41'7 l/( I, • .. 'f• I ,.. --,1 '" : t :: : i ' ·"4.•\ : _,t 4 ! ·~ ., --. ' 1 I ·. • ' ' -l ,, I I ' l . ' ' , I ' ' ' : • 1 ! I; • • • . I ., . ' I "! . -I f I I I! •' r I: 11 i: • 1 .. I ' I ' ' . . r ... '' ' ' f l'. I! I I' ' I I • . -. ' ' ' . - ; . ' . . • • .. I ! l l .. ' I · ,. I ' I .. .• .. ': '• :: ·' .. . : ' ' ' I ' • . • : ------------~------~--~------------~----- 38 DAIL V PILOT Wtdnesday, Dcctmbtr 30, 1970 Wtdntsday, Dtttmbtr 30, 1970 PILOT·AOVERTISER J8 I ·-ll§J I -l!§l I Jl§J I ..., ..... --· QO General )~1 1::: = ... "=""..,.==.s)~:::!l.:l==·=="'"'°'=""=J~::::'.M Cycie1, Bikes, Trucks 962 Trucks 96a Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 ][i) l llil I llill Tr.nsporl.ition frw1spor1atlon 900 * * * GEORGE NICHOLS mn otlntla Dr. . D-Point You an the winnrr or , 2 licktts to, tbe Southem Celfforni• .i ·Sports, V•ution & RKreetional Vohlclo Show at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION • CENTER January 2nd •thru 10th Pleue. call 642-5618, ext. 314 bel'Yr't'4'ln 9 and 1 pm to claim yotJr tiCkets. (North County toU·free number is 54~1220) , _________ , Scooters 915 1-----~-----------~ S' YATE8. _11urfb0ard, good Krrt No. 816, used one1--..;..;;...; ____ ...;.1 oond s;o. B<and new Soa seaoon. lmmaculale. !800 ..... - - - -G.·.M.' C. TRUCK CENTER SUit, lull ltn&th $20 New $25 6.fz..96116 a.fl.er 6 P!'.1. L ...... - _ _. racks for $15. 541).328.1 18' GLOUCESTER •Dory &. THIHI POOL Tables. Brungwick trlr. Custom bit In '69, Xlnt HQ""'..._ llll. $269.9:> & up. Chodc'1 Bowl-~· S350. 646-3483. ~,. ~ tng 6 Billiards. 2750 Harbor Blvd., C.!'.t. 540-73CH. Boat1/M1 rin1 l======"==I Equip: TV, R1dlo, HiFi, _ __.__. _____ _ Stereo 836 McCULLOCK 4 hp outboard. 2 yrs old, Like new oon(s. f'OR SALE: Brand new 1971 Call alt 6 pn1 '\\'etkda.ys • A(lmiral con a o It, con-Anytin1e weekends 962-2737, siting of 25" color TV 2 lfP SEAGULL outboard. rceeive.r, a stereo radio & XInt shape. $75. stereo phono. List price 675-2400 w/ta:< $UM5. Sale price $745 1---------- cash. 962-6328 SONY color TV set. Like 1.B_ .. _,_•c..• _s_._;1 ____ 909..;_ .... "THEY'RE HERE" 71 ·GMC'CAMPER SPECIAL PoW.r· brako.s, H.D. sprlng1, 8 $3295 ply tire•~ reedy for big c1mper. 11 10557) (Stk. # 1005) CALL 546 -6750 24 hr. Phone SALES • SERVICE UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 Harbor Blvd •• Costa Mesa 935 Trucks 962 AUSTIN AMERICA AUSTIN AMERICA Saler, Service, Part.a lmmedia.to Dtlivery All Mod.a J1rtnp ntt jl 111po t t ~. 3100 W •• C.0...1 Hwy., N.B. .,,_ 540.1764 FIAT "'"1l'UV'I "THINK" I 11aa NEW 12A CPE. DEMO • $2795 ... "FRIEDLANDER'' 1l750 llACH ILVD •• I <Hwr. JfJ 893-7fl66 • 537-6824 '59 Austin Healey "Bugeye" NEW-USED-SE~V. Spd te, $295. • • - - -_, AUSTIN HEALEY • • • nev", $200. See al 176 E. 17th, C.M, 612-7374 FLIPPER, Complete, perfect, blue. Ne\v sail, mast & boon1. S350 or best 545.5759 - ------!iil!?lli1!?1~•l•llJl"i '66 Ford 11.i-Ton P.u.1==0A=TS='=U=N=:::;1-,,,..68.--.;F1,.A•T•arr:so..- vs. 3 speod, radio, heat", 1--------1 SPYDER Finest Adult, Park I J i"-' l ofr. 6'16-3108. c==""=='="::::"'"""'::::="=':::::~:::T'\:; ~,,=.~T~,,-,~pe~,-,-.-,~,.,-,,-,1-,a~l·I. _ ~o· Ost Aux. Try-$24,500 In So. CalU, surrounded by Irvine Or-ange Groves easy-lift tail gate, C48008C) 1969 DATSUN 510 RDSTR, Red wUh black tn- Cats 852 Butant -Agilt -aovei - Pss'che--HUBCAP lie: \'·esterday I bought a ---------S PURE Siamese kittens - car on the installment plan. 828 just weaned, box trained. Sewing M•chines $'" ~·~ =28 fl 6 Him: Is that so'!' ..., ea. ,,....r.N a pm. He: Yep, Today tht'y sen! me the HUBCAP. SALE • Magnus organ, desk light, Varnier caliper, elec. healer. table radio A~1"-FM. ~t" y,•ire mesh, hand truck. old TV, Romex, cle c. material &: hand tools. 642-5556 . SINGER "Golden Touch &·Sew" Repossessed. Save the $242 that was paid on this very best Singer Automatic Sew- ing Machine. \Viii discount remaining balance for cash: or payments can. no\v be reduced to $8/mo. Also avail- Dog1 854 * * * * Le a r n to enjoy your dog Special classes for puppies Jan. classes forming now. Orange Co. foremost trainers Martincrest Kennels 546--0989 42' B<lY slip, good location Pac Yachl Sales 67:l-1570 13' Banshee Sailboat com· plete. Sacrifice $ t 9 5, 67>-8990 eves. Boats, Slips/Docks 910 15'-30' slips avail for power boats. Bayside Village, 300 E. Coast lhvy, N.B. =-* SLIP, fl.IAIN BAY, up to 50' sa.iL * 6/;,.-8990 * TEAR END DOUBLE-WIDE SPECIAL 2 bedroom, l bath, complete 3 HONDA 90's, I-Super, \Vith car~t, drapes, ~ 8:11 1-Trail, 1-Scrambler. All elec. appliances + 35 patio like new-call aJter 6 pm <\WTI, + full carport own, + weekdays, anytime skirls, and 2 steps. tSer. "'"eek~nds 962-2737. 7169) WANTED Complete Package Delivered & Set Up $1399 ONE OWNER 17.000 J\.il. terlor, Like nr.w, YQY834 AIR CONO. $999 BARWICK BeauUfut Sage green finish CHICK IVERSON IMPORTS INC. with Blond lx!ige bucket VW DATSUN seats, Equipped with auto. matic transmission, radio, 5'1~ Ext. 66 or 67 9'38 S. Cst Hw;y, LB 494-97TI heater, Factory Air Condi· 1970 HARBOR BLVD, '61 CHEV 112 T P .U. tion. This attractive car COSTA 11-!FSA W/CAMPER SHELL must be seen & driven tolc-=""°'=-===o---:1 Rebuilt motor, new brakes, appreciate how carefully * '69 FIAT SPYDER, good bunk$, bike rack, excp. maintained &: like new. cond. $300 4. Take <1ver clean, $750. Pri. party_ Eve ZSE 226 $1700. Johnson & pymnts. Call 847·1358 i.11~. Days 535-2247. Son, 2626 Harbor, C.M, '66 Chevy Can-y-All. 6 <yl '68 DATSUN PICKUP stick. Lo mi. New paint, Good eng:. $850/ofl er. 673-4191. Radio, heater, <ilr., 4 speed. JAGUAR JAGUAR FREE formica counter tops \\ith cabinets · ror kit. or bath. Very r easonable prices. 10 days o n I y. 642-2741 able, a lITTO "Dressmaker," CHOCOLATE bro\\'n mini j il1'odel Zig-Zag ),1achine, toy poodles, mall'!. Al\C. ,------~[ell ] Any year 250 or 30j Honda with a balance payable of * 002·0:>54 * Transportation Scrambler, not running. only $47. Both fully Cuar·i ~=~~~~oo-cc-~-~======:::C=::= -"'-~-"~"'~~------! anteed.1'"'tlrHomeTria!Ph: S~1ALLblacktoyPoodlePup-I C SI /R 920 * * '70 KA\VASAKI CEN- DEC. 23-31 NINE DAYS ONLY -$9588 '50 CH:EfVY J,J Ton w/shell, recent reblt eng & trans. Best ofr. Must sell. 542--06.lI O '52 DODGE PICK·UP \1'/side panels. Runs good, 536-6924 (WPP 762) Will tako "'' ;, HEADQUARTERS trade or linance private par.. . t,y 546-8736 oi: 494.61111 The only autborb:ed JAGUAR '6J DATSUN WAGON ~:'In the onlire Hubor 5'18-4-12.5 or 499-3828, Any· pies. 1 male, 1 tcmnlc., ampers, a e ent TURION llOOccJ. Like new. + Tax & Lie. IDlr. TR 193) Used double tier lockers. Fair time. P & J Agency 64&--0142 or 5-18-1022 . 333 E. FALL CAMPER Sl10. 642-1691 14851 JEFFREY RD. FOR SALE condilion. !-.Ir. Laney, Daily 1970 Singer Zig-Zag Auto, 17th .St. Cl\t l/6 '67 YAMAHA 100 Trail in Beautiful Irvine Pilot. beautiful walnut console. AKC Regis. German CLEARANCE JI/Jaster. Xlr1r cor.d. $200 Or 5 Mi, South of Tustin, and FOR sale: Used 4' duores· !\1a ke11 button ho I es, ~hepfierd puppies for sale. · best offer. 67>-1821 ~ Mi. s. of Santa Ana Frwy. cent fixtures, $5 each, as ls. overcast~ S<'ams. b Ii n d Blk & Ian, 4 wks old. Over a dozen brand new s I======::::::::::::=! (2 mi. North of San Diego Autosfor~e I~ Contact 1>1r. Laney or Mrs. hems. designs <itc. Guar. 557-48~7 i t to 11 ft , campers now Mobile Homes 935 Frwy.J Greenman. Dally Pilot, 330 $4•1.44 cash, or i>n1all pymts. :r.1UST SAC. Au,1 Shop pups. slashed to 832-8585 Auto Leasing 'Vest Bay, Costa Mesa 5-15-8238. Reg. Blue Merles, shots. $49 OYEI BED. Couch. Frig. $10 ea. * REPAIRS * Come see & make ofr. ACTUAL Tape rec. $1 & misc. Wed Clean. oil & adjust your ma. &12-6400, 1-6 pm . 644-81~ FACTORY 2-6 only. 2029-B Pomona. chine in your home. Spec. 2 t.tale poodle puppies, silver INVOICE C~f. 548-5194 ial $3.93, all \\'Ork guaran· miniature, 8 wk~ old, Used Positively no added dealer CARPET La.yen; have shag teed. 547>-8238. to children, m paper!;., $10 charges? Every unit ready & comm'! N.·eed crpts, Deal ---------ea. 545-4270 before 4:30. for immediate instaUalionon direct. Exper installer. Can ---------IRISH SETTER puppief!. your truck or a r:ew 19n! finance . 539-8327, 827-8740 Sporting Goods 83r, AKC reg. Champion blood THEODORE 11 SQ YARDS nylon * * * lines. Call 846-39!}.1 ROBINS FORD carpeling, blue/green, good MR. A. B. PHILLIPS 9 ST. BERNARD pups, j 2060 HARBOR BLVD. cond. PO. 549-0074 1918 Sanfiago Dr. AKC, reg. Show qua.I. COSTA MESA 642-0010 • LADY SCIUCK hair nlist Newport Beach * 002-7531 * '64 F rd C y "sl~~Glsct. Llke Ile\\', $10. You a1'f' the \11inne1· of * SHERRY'S POODLES * 0 amper an ...-.<1 2 lickets to the Yr end puppy sale, groom- Southern California ing. Free pk-up. 546-2&48. Completely equipped y,•hh pop top, Ice box, stove, dlr. Radial tires. I owner, CUE0- 104) Will take car in trade or finance. 546-8736 -0r 494-68ll. 21" COLOR TV $125. Tank vacuum cleaner $10, B&'V TV ~. 64~152:> HOTPOINT elec oven, range top, hood. White, good l'Ond. $60. StZ..2741 MUST Sell all: Furn, app's, Grandma clock. col TV, piii.no, toys. 962-2719. Mf1cellaneous Wanted 820 Sports, Vac1tlon * PEKINGESE male -$25. & Recreational Completely housebroken. A· Vehicle Show real cutie. 6-15-2761 at !he ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January 2nd lhru .10th Please call 6•12-5678, ext. 314 bct1veen 9 and l pm to claim your tickets. (North County POODLES AKC: B wks old. Silver, Chocolate & While. 642--0326 .. 673-9357. New '71 Datsun 1---------tol\.Jrce nun1bl:r is 540-12201 AKC Minia. Poodle pups, blk & silver .. $75 each. 545-85.58 sr BERNARD Pups AKC. Gd. lines. Weaned end of Jan. 968-9641. 16!); OHC, Pickup with camp. er. Sale price $2099 dlr. { # 459454l \Viii 1ake car in trade. 'Viii finanee private parly Call 546-8736 or '94-6811 2 YOUNG GIRLS Need fREE Fui:niture. in good conditiqn, PLEASE CALL: 6'&-6972. Musical Instruments 122 * ROTH Coronet $75, Noblet Clarinet .$120. Artley Flulc $12.l. 545-1841. Office Furniture/ Equip. 824 Refil)'d 34xOO wood desks, $69.50 e Refin'd \\'OOd arm rotary chiyrs, $29.50 • \Ve have the lar:est selection of used office furn in this area. Mc l\faha.n Desk 1800 Newpon BJvd. ......,. • • • GUNS: New Rem. Mod. fiOO carbine 350 n1agnum SlOO. Lrfc\'<'I' 1rap gun \\'/rib Cycles, Bikes, Scooters $135. NC'W mod. 42 'Vin. 1970 llonda SL 100 General 900 92S .410 GA. $19."l. 494-7Jl6 YACHT ·STEWARD Like ne\v, 1JO miles. J\Iake POO b I ., •• & offer. 673-6809. L 1a Jes.sate, ;)NJ up. Exp. man for corporation 10',6 discount on all flcccs-yacht. Foreign watcNI 6 '10 Honda Trail 90 ~ories til Dec. 31st, Beach months annually. Perman· Xln~~~ .. · 1300 Billiard, r1'17-0!l.13. ent pogition. 54:>-7416 ,,... SURFBOA.~R~D~S~-~.n~BO';-.;ST=o~N'°""w=n~A~LER""',~u~ •. l -~100~9~.~Ya~m~a~hc-a~l~.,-A~T~-1~.- 6010" ··creek"' Jo\v railer. ~ Johnson 40 hp elec Xl11t cond. Bumper racks. clean shape, $60. 7'0" ~tart, trlr, full y cqpt.' $1000, I ~~$3.'ill=-~· ~Ccc•:.:11~><:.:fr35..:c"l::5~- "Greek" pintail Sl>. 644·1742 645-1462 Eves, Day s: '67 SUZUKI 2.iOcc road & 55l-6191 tlirt: Xlnt cond. Trade <.'On- 'ITRED of that old furniture! FOR Sale 10' c I a s p a r I c-'_id.,. ~$29~, '=· ·=·=-='~"=~-­ It's really nol that hard dinghy. Gd cond. Sl2i * * DESPERATE, must to replace. Just \Vatch the 548-0420 eves. sell 196:i BSA . Rebuilt fw-niture & misrellaneo"Js 1 7"=~==~=~= engine. SilO. 641).....Sjj.~ columns in the •Ousilied !\1ICRO SPEED BOAT: 7 1 ~'. =~c..-...-...,.-.-..,=- Scclion. · $65 or Best Offer. Must Sell '70 YAMAHA-LO Ml 673-4537 $40(,. • 548-9&!14 5 SHORT WORDS MAKE ONE UNE=NO-AD LESS THAN 3 LINES 2 TIMI$ - . $4.50 $5.10 $6.00 PAYMENT ENCLOSED 0 SEND BILL 0 • Publllh f1t ••• •••• ••• d1yf, ll19lnni111 ••• •• •• •• •• •• •••••••• •• • •• •··•• • Cl111iflt1tl•11 ••• •••••• •••••• •• ••• ••••••• •••••••••••••• •••••••• ••• N•lft• ••••••••••••••••••••• •••• • • •••• •• •••• •••••·••••• •• • ••••• ... Addr.u • •• ..... •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• • • • •• • • •• • • •• • • • • • • •• • • • • '• • . City , , , , , ••• , • , • , • ••• ,,,.,,,,.,.. Ph•111 ••••• ••, •••••••• ,, • .. • • • • ---------CUT HIRI -P.UTI ON TOUlt IHYELOPI BUSINESS REPLY MAIL Plrtt GI• ,.,.. Ko IS. c.t.i M•, C.11'-io Oronge Coost DAILY PILOT P. 0. lox 1560 • TIMES - $6.10 $1.21 $9.76 Costa MtM, Callf. 9262' 7 12 TIMES TIMES -- $10.65 $15.90 $13.10 $20.10 $15.55 $24.30 TO FIGURE COST 'ut onlr on• word in ••th t pico 1bo~o. lnch1d1 your 1ddrou or phon• nutr1b1r. Thi cod of your .id b .it th• onil of tho lino on whlth tho lid word of rour 1d 11 writ. ton. Add 12.00 o'.rlf.i lf you d1tir1 u11 of DAILY PILOT loll 11r~ic1 with 11'111l1d r•• ,1;.,. Claulfiod Dofl. - OUR New Year's Gitt to You Triple Wide Comell LEASE Chapman had a good year. l YEAR'S FREE Continental e Paramount A NEW l9n R 'NT Barrington e Universal PINTO c 1'1amingo e General $50 00 AIJ homes new & sharp! hroadmoor e Star ~ • mo, FLAMINGO 24x60 Hillcrest e Cambridge <36 mo.) S-05.52 ................ Sl3,000 CHAPMAN open "'Id FLAn1INGO 20x57 MOBILE HOMES RENT S-0074 ................ $10,993 ,.,...... N liar~ S A .\ NE\V 1971 ST AR 24x43 ...,,.,,, . ....,,., . ' PINTO * TI4/531-8105 * '·"'~i.ivF:iisAi.''4;.,1"5!!' -~c~o~s°'T~A-M=E"'S~A--$4 DAY S-24629 .... ; ......... S14,400 Casual Mobile Estate Llv'g AND CONTINENTAL 24x5.'"1 Ne 12, 20 & 24 \Vide Models 4¢ MILE s.23SJ ................ $13,600 Nov; -on display in 5 Star PUT A Urn..E CONTINENTAL 24xij GREENLEAF PARK KICK IN YOUR S·2386 ..... , .•.•••.•.. $14,Sj() 1750 \Vhittier Avenue 642-135{1 LIFE! CONTINENTAL 2·1xfi0 NICE 8x42 Norse trailer. in THEODORE S-2422 ···· ........ · ... S16,500 aduH park. No pets. $2300. ROBINS FORD SHERTON MANOR 24x60 2191 Harbor Blvd., Sp 19, 2060 HARBOR BLVD., S-0602 ••• .. · ·••••••••• $13,300 C~1. COSTA MESA Rent up to $90 per mo !================I 642-0010 CHAPMAN Trailers, Utility 947 -------- MOBILE HOMES 12331 Beach Blvd, G(.-; 14' Tandem Trailer, a!I sleel, tTI4) 530-2930 welded L-Onstruction. '-''" J206 N. Harbor, S.A. Deck plating. 54:; .. 1361 or 17lill 531-810~1 6-12-5845. \Vi!J 1rade on Pick (ZlJJ 86Q.5210 Up. Auto Service, Parts 966 ·ss V\V Engine, 1600cc, '4 1·ace cam, $270: Plus trans, front end . floor pan & parts. Call: 673-9352, CHAPMAN'S YEAR END SPECIALS •G_e_n_e_ra_l _____ 9S_O VOLKS\VAGEN , Sapphire 9 1-radio, \V/. lront & rear Originals & Sharp! * * * speakers. $33. Call '36-4972 e FLAMINGO 24Xli0 WALTER - IS0613) •··•·•••·••••· $11,700 QUISENBERRY e FLAJ..UNGO 24X60 206 la Palma #3 IS0552) ··· ·••• ••••••• $12.700 San Clemente e FLAMINGO 20X57 (S0074) ................ $9995 e STAR 24X43 {S6967) ................ $849.5 e UNIVERSAL 24X63 (246291 -............. $13,300 e COS!\10POLIT AN 24X5.'J You are the winner or 2 tickets to the Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show {S2383) .............. S12,500 at the !'i31-8lO:; * 213/860-5210 ANAHEIM Autos Wanted 968 WE PAY TOP CASH for used cars &: trucks just caU us for ~ estimate. GROTH CHEVROLET J206 No. Harbor, S.A. CONVENTION Ask for Sale t1anai:;er or 5.30.2930 CENTER 18211 Beach Blvd. 12331 Beach Blvd ., G.C. January 2nd lhru 10th Huntington Beach Adults Only Please call 642-J678, ext. ~1~ 847-6087 KI 9-3111 MOVE IN TODAY betwee.n 9 aod 1 pm to dam' WE PAY CASH 1 . • • your tickets. (Nonh Countv \\alk1ng distance to Knotts to'.l-1'.rt-e nuniher ls 540-1220·1 Berry Farn1 & sho11s. * * * FOR YOUR CA CUSTO~f 24X53 CRUSADER1--~~-~----R (#S·205U Oishwa.hoe com· '65 Comet Caliente bo \Vashc1· & dryer, AWnings, SPORTY ECONOl\olICAL CONNELL Skirts Porch & 3 dclux Convertiblr v.s. very clean. · steps' t.andsca(1ed. aul01nn1ic transmission, ra-CHEVROLET $12,995 Terms dio, heater, power steering, 2828 Harbor Blvd. For appointn1ent call po10.·er hrakes. f\VAB 8851. Costa Mesa 54f .. 1200 '* 714/530-2930 * $775. This car ha s been \veil ~~~-~~~~-1 n1aintaincd & i!ii excellent WE PAY TOP OOLLAR Complete Package value. Johnso n ,t· Son, 2626 FOR TOP USED CARS CRUSADER 2:1x53 sci up In Harbor. c.~1. 5.J0-3630. If your car is exb-a clean, park ncl\r Koott's Be1·ryl:==::::::======== see us first. F D bo i~ BAUER BUICI< arin. ishwnsher, coin Dune Buggies 956 234 E. 17th St. V.'Hsher I dryer. a1vnings,1----'°'~----- carport. Juli skirl.".I. dehL'\C HEAVY silver nie!a llic blue Costa Mesa StS-776:> porch & sleps, \1til shed, l\tanx, \\lhite vinyl hardtop. U.1PORTS WANTED ton1ple!ely landscaped. S· A bcnuty $1850. Orang"" Counties 20:>1. $12,995. 548-5766 or ~8·5371 TOP $ BUYER CHAPMAN FBRGLS buggy, licensed, BILL MAXEY TOYOTA MOBILE HOMES full synchro trans. super 18881 Beach Blvd. ·-{7141 530-2930 float tires. $495. 540-2597 ii. Beach. Ph, 847-8555 fTI4l 531·810:; Triple Wide Cornell Jllllcrcst e Flamingo Paramounl • Universal Barrington e Broadrnoor Contjuental • Star General • Hillcrest CHAPMAN MOBILE HOMES 12331 Beach Blvd. G.G. * 71~'530·29..'\0'• Automatic, dlr. Radio, hea~­ er, special v.·hecls. (VOE- 951) Will !rad~ or fi.mtncc private party. Full price $1099. BARWICK IMPORTS INC. DATSUN 998 So. Cst. Hwy, LB 494-9m Completi: SALES SERVICE PARTS BAUER BUICK lN COSTA MES~ 2J.I E. 11th Sll'eet 548-7765 '68 1600 Roadster . "'"""'"' """'"'"· Low MERCEDES BE~Z mileage. (WEZ710) $300 un· der Blue Book. $1395 BARWICK 11\IPORTS rNC. DATSUN 998 S. Cst. H\\'Y, LB 494.9771 Orange County's Largest Selectior. New & Used Mercedes Be111 Jim Slemons Imps. Warner & Main St. Santa Ana 546.4114 '681600 ROADSTER 1--M-G~- Ready to go! dlr, CWEZ no>1 ----------1 Will take trade or finance private party .. 546-8736 or ""'6811. DOT DATSUN OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAYS 18835 Beach Blvd. Huntington Beach 842·7781 or ~o.<M42 1967 Datsun 1600 Roadster. Very gd cond. Good mile- age, \\'kdys. 714/633·9393 ext J6J; wknds & eve9 714/ 673-1811. No cash down. TAKE OVER PYMNTS. FERRARI MG Sales, Service, Parit Immediate Delivery, All ?l-1odcls J1rt.uµo rt 311nport~• 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. .. ~-540.~764 1J710 IEACH CHWY, :it(, FERRARI 893·7566 e 5.'7...,.. Newport Imports Ltd. Qr.. NEW-USED-SERV. angc County's only author· ~; ized dealer. ~ SALES-SERVICE-PARTS 3100 \V. Coast J.lwy. Newport Beach PORSCHE :: G4Z.94.05 540· 1764 Authorized Ferra!'i. Dealer '66 PORSCHE ---------ICoupe 912. 5 speed, \frown ---------1 with black interior . ~nd FIAT new Pen-elli tires. XY1474 --------1 $3299 Ike ' 710 NOW ON DISPLAY auto sport ltd Aulhorized SALES e SERVICE e PARTS 962j Garden Grove Blvd. 537-7771 Call Collecl 1969 F iat 850 Spider Xlnt Condition • 548-0919 • CHICK IVERSON vw ~'49-3031 Ext. 66 or r, 19j0 HARBOR BLV~. COST A r.1ESA •, '67 911, 5 _ sPd. \Vcbcr(· nu tires, •lS.000 n1i\, t3!1jl), 54~105 days, ask for cirei;. ·~19 PORSCHE Cpc.: Extra Clean 616-6319 TOYOTA JUST ARRIVE~! ALL . 1971 TOYOTAS Corollas -Coronas Mark II -P ickup< Land Crui1ers : Ready For Deliver'.y ' ~erut Lewi.i .IMPORTS ' •70 10 , .. I: ... w N :ood "" llS JAR '"" IZ I ,B, 1164 • ,, >wn •nd IH N nu l;j(J . ... If s • I y on .ike N y 9 . SS .. •• " 7'0 , rr.::: J• PILUT·ADVERTISER Wtdne$daJ, Dtctmbtt 'Cl. 1970 ·.w 1.:====:::;-;::=;-;:====::;;::~r===----. WM-. -JO. 1970 DAILY '1LOT ., I ,_,,,'"" 1§1 I ..... ,,,.. I~ I ~ .. ,,,.. I~ I· ---l~ I ..... ,,,... I~ I ..... ,,,... 1§1 =' =-=-... ===.::::1~:::1 ~1=-="'= .. =l'.:::;~:1 ~1 =-=-=-=:!~= .. Autos, lmporttd 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Imported 970 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd m Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMCI 990 Autos, UHd 990 Autoa., UMd MEICURY PONTIAC ._. TOYOTA VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CHEVROLET CORVAIR ·~1--~~~~~~~-1 -~~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~~-1-~~~~~~~--~~~~~~-~~~~~~~~ -~~~~~~~1 -~~;;;:;:;:;~:-;:;;-·1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;, JEEPS •1.9 CORONA '66 vw '65 vw Bug BUICK '61 RIVIERA CHEV. '70 MONTE CARLO '65 CORVAIR Mo ..... o'11'ul-JEEP l!M& CJ2A · V4 283.1 '" MONTtGo MX 70 OTO ~ Olx. Hardtop Ci>e. w/fllclOry S.S. 454 ed ert1, new dutch, xlnt 0/drlve, b.uba Chev •t~r-2 Door Hard ToP., Lo.nduu ijard1op. Vinyl roof, 4 ~ Crffn wit h contrasting Inter. AMIF air, tuU power, vinyl tool, ONLY ll,600 MILES cond. $6SO, 13)..1959 ins, 11 In. RJm &: tires. roof, ·f!ni&h Jlke new. Au to-455 CU, ir'4 Ram Air, ·-.. • ~~macuwl•Wte, :~-Bl~;,_Sae. ior, tuned ~~uat. runs like r-.. n ~!\.~ gpced, (NNK090) 1ttreo multl ... t...x, tUt wbed, Jtydrarnatlc. power 1tee...1.... Much mott X-tra nice maUc tranamJ.uJon, radio, clote nRldt'° 4-speed, • ·,.,.wee, r.aMJ Utu..IC' ot STL-.!af ., -pncc t"'" ""• KA ,,. hood tlch ~ Hm_.... • ~ new. · 5799 ""''°"' 1n1e,;," ITFBIOOl -•i.c """" -wtn••... COUGAR 11-. ~2-3309. heater,.,.,., 11eer1ag, pow. • • -• ,. a.nee pvt,~-Call Sld, $999 $2'll2 AM/lo~M multiplex, strato 1946 Wl llys J eep. er brakes. 0CLH479) $205(!. pkg, PIS, P/D/B, RMlo ... ' ' d.lr. 540-31.00 or 191-7;,os aft. CHll"K. MRSON & hut kew Firestone · , ,.. , , BARWICK • NABERS e bucl<et "'''• lull "'"'"· '69 COUGAR Med>anlcally •h•r1>. N...i• JO!won I< Son, 2626 Harbo,, "· lO a.m. XTS 3f3, tilt wheel, factory air cone.I., LUXURY SPORT some body work etc. $700. C.M, $40.5630 Wide ovalt ... ALL BLACK" '71 COROLLA Y)N lDATSSu INC. racr. Aut~r~~C:dillac Dlr chrome sport wheels, wide BeautifUl Arelic white finish 642-9500 days; 645-0962 "'6T""'M"•_n:_u_r;_eo""'10-ny""'P"'u"'k,..,I ~ake: ~trade: Radio, healer, disc brakes, factory 11.lr, lo1v. low miles! Take older car or final! down. Under luct. \l'arranly. ~~.~~:aR66B~~~ 2800 HARBOR BL... track bc.olted tires, auto load with black landau roof with eves. &ta wag, many extras, A/C. te ~ tru 90C S. Cst. 1-lwy, LB 494.9771 COSTA llfESA , leveler, etc.'. etc. Balance of matching interior, automatic 4 \VHEEL Drive jeep utility COSTA MESA 1006 V\V. Rebuilt motor wit!\ 5.f0.9100 Open Sund.,. factory wananty. This ls an transmission, power flteer-WllJ.>on, V-8 o/drivc, new MUSTANG L k ' I ' abeoiutel.>: llJl"IOOUI autnmo. lnJ, ah' conditioning, radio, uphol. New painl Must sell 00 Ing or • c•r 3·000 miles. Good cond. '62 BUICK Skylark. V-8 aUto bile, You U have to see to heater, completely serviced lmmed. Xtra nice Sl495. ---------I 'EASY .. .Call !'.laur:y dlr. aft IO am ... ·! 54Q.311)J er 4!M-7506. 037327. TRIUMPH TR l '59. Very good con- di tion. Hardtop & con- '.~rtlble. $575 or best oUer . }': ,· 54S-6654. -C! '68 TR 250 Tri um ph, overdriVt!. r.1ust sell. T.0 .P. 54~aft 3pm. '66 VW Sunroof Immaculate condition. \'eUow \vilh pin stripping, new tires & engine guaranteed for 90 days. Lie. YPT9l5. $1099 CHICK IVERSON vw SG-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 l9i0 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA WANTED 1---------I'll pay top dolla-for :your VOLKSWAGEN VOLKSWAGEN today, Call 1--------1 and 8'k '" Ron Plnchot. Large Selection f VW Campers, Vans, Kombis, Buses, New & Used , :.. ·Immediate Delivery :, ', CHICK IVERSON vw " . 549-JQlJ Ext. fil or fi1 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 549-3031 Ext. J;6.6',', 673·09'XI. '61 VW BUG ::..1n1. concl. Good transpcrta. tion. $499 CHICK IVERSON vw S.'19-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1910 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA '69 VW BUG $1005, 64 2-1573. Lrans., good cond., $300 or ap~te. (fM48.EM) I:: ready for delivery, BaJ. 1976 Oran&e, C.M. 543-2333. '69 fit\lstan& Sport Cpe Auto, Call Auto Relcrnl lr0t ol 'Q V\V aut. Sacrifice su:;o best offer, Phone 61S-l382 $3717 ance or waJTanty available, ~;M.p1':~~\~;. ~~'. charge. \\'e have aellers in a llu1·ry a!!C'r 5 p.m ..... ·eekdayr or e. Nl\IERS e $2550. Lie. A'WS 707 Johnson wai ting, All 1ypeg l. priots, * 53&-3107 * anytime \veek-Ends. It So 2626 H bor Bl d LINCOLN '65 MUiian& oonvt. Auto., VS. Sellen &lso .,.,.eloome. 1966 VW Squareback -Very QUICK • '62 Sulek 1Spe.c. CADILLAC C.M ~ ar v ·• 1------.,---1 Good cond. fi1ovlog. $'100 or 642-4431 clean good me-chanlcal Alm '62 PonUac Temp. Fact.,A.uthorited~lllacDlr · · 1969 LINCOLN oHer. 64z..t993. Auto Referral Service c::ond . 673-~10 aft 6. Wag. $199 ea. TI4: 6f6-S!ll ' 2l50() HARBOR BL., MUST SELL $1800. 61:>-2947 548-4.319. COSTA~ DODGE Tht. nice Llncoln O>upe,1--------'70 GTO CADILLAC ..,.9100 0pen SUnday -------1.oad«1 ·wtlh .-... lnclud· OLDSMOBILE -__ V:.0=:,:L:;V~O::_ __ ll;;;-:-;;;;;:;::;:--:;::-:::;;-::\ 1961 CAMARO COUPE '66 DODGE Spo,bm•n Bu" lag '"°"' lntem, Land•u -------- CAD •~ SE DE VILLE GOOD HANDLING Mark IV Air, auto, VS, root. AM/FM, ait condition-1967 OLDS • -~ ..... • F ,...;_~I D, __ ,.,.,_._ &: SPORTY trlr/hltch, camper lng, Asking $3650, Terms Cutlass Supreme ~ cu. in, Ram Air, close ratio 4-s:peed, hood tach, Ride 1i Handl'e pkg, PIS, P/D/B, Radio &. heater, New Fittstone ........ - -~ .... !,. '1 ' 1 "";:,"_~ln:._~ U ....,, thlnk ,O"-and "" °'w!"""ndo"°wo=,'°'3'"'6-"°'5""''1"°S • ..,,-,= OK. YPT830. Joh'150n k SPORTY & PRACTICAL THIN. Y IOP, Ull eau11:" w;.o-J ¥--.. '69 WE-RN SS ai .. __ ,. Son -u--bor CM 2 doo 11 rd t P '-·• l !or. Every db:. option, (NEX. look1ne for a well cattd for ~~"" • • <.vuu, • -nu-• · · r a op. n ... ..,.. or Wkle ovals. "ALL BLACK'' Make oUer or trade for late model Ford truck, 'VOi.Vo' 053). low mileage, 800d bandllng ndio, PS, 4 nu Michelin 540-5630. quick sale, Condi t ion sa $1666 sporty car, «JWpped With tires. Xlnt cond. $1600. --.l"'t6"'9'°'L"l"N"C"O"'L"N,,---throughout reflects good -e NABERS e dependable 327 V8, regular Cprlee correction). 8.13-IK87 IF YOU ARE roSSY care. Attractive :yellow {in. "FRIEDLANDER" CADILLAC tu•l •ngt"', automaUc ,,.,,._ 4 Door Sod•>>. Luodou., like bh. Blaok Buckot "''" & .!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!I!!.,.\ misskln, Radio, heater, Pow· FALCON 11ew, leather Interior, tilt landau r.o 0 I· Automatic '58 Pontiac wagon run1 SoDl1 1mo ...... , .. 1 .. wv. :1111 1-"act. Aulhorlzed Cadillac Dlr tr Stttring, flctory air, --------wheel, 24,ro:> actual mUes, tr&Mmlssion, radlo, heater, $100 Jinn ~ alt. 1:00 893-7566 • 537-682.J 2600 llARBOR BL., etc. Check this one before * '61 FaJcon station wagon. cne owrw:r, see this gorgeous Power Steering, P o we r pm. NEW-USED-SE RV. COsrA MESA :you buy, ZUM 740 CJeuanc-Runa good, $125 er best car. Ycr..8'8. Johmlon &: Son, Brakes, factory air, e tc. ".66::=~PO~N~T~l-AC~.-1-,,-0-wne-r.I 540.9100 Open SUnday ed Priced $1950. Johnaon I otter. 5f6..-0714. 2626 Harbor, Costa Mesa, New ear trade in, Drive A Must aell, going cverseu. -'68 CADILLAC CONV. Son,2626Harbor Blvd.,C.M. ---------540-5630 Bll,Y today. UOF 516 Sl450. Very good cond. 642-4851 SPORT LUXURY 5'0-5630. ::::::::::::::::::;::==== Johnson & Son, 2618 Harbor, e VOLVO All 71 's Are Here Savings Up To $466 FORD C.M 540 5630 '68 LE MANS, full p>WU, Beautiful canary yello\Y fin-'64 MAIJBU Super Sport --------MERCURY ;i;---';'""'O;-"";';;' =;-;="'°'I air, am/fm, tilt whl0 xlnt. ish with black leather inter-convert. Being transferred. LA --------'65 OLDS SUPER SPORT cond. $17;:(). 837-3422 ior &: black rool Fully equirr Sac for S200. New tires, TOP IJOL R 1970 MERCURY 442, pwr steering, &Ir, spoke -==-==-=-==---1 pee. including AP.1 / F?.1 brakes, reblt e~. Nttds Colony Park St.1, Wan, wheela. Good tires, black in-1---------1 stereo radio, 1ele tilt wheel. body work. M5-8770 for THE FINAL STEP UP• terlor with gray extericr. RAMBLER on remaining 70's (#8782) $3350. Liv. VZA123, John.'IOn l.:;c53~a"'1EV='"'2"0'°',c-. '"'A-cUlc-o'"'tn-rui, CLEAN USED CARS rt )'OU are readf fer the llnal Good condition, $800. Call 1---------1 Over Seas Del. Spec. & Son, 2626 HarbJr, C.1\1. "'/h, --•·t~ • ,·n _,1 , o --Anny Brown 1 . Lu S . 495.5696 after 5 pm or '65 RAMBLER 2-DR. 1960 VW BUG • ... ,..........'""' ~·· ~ s ep up In xury t.11.hon kend& Red, with mag \vheels, wide !\lust sac! \VUJ lake cider n"',. 111n:, 1970 C.oupe deVille 2-<:lr HT. ~~Bethel Cir, H.B. ROBINS FORD Fully PowC"red ('quipped, air 1965 OLDS 9S auto lran."l, ---------I Radio, heater, CTUR124) dlr. fl L 54().5630, shape See thlJ o~ at $375. THEODORE Wagons. This one Is for )'OU. I "w"""='·=--=-.,.--,--BEST OFFER. 54(Mi837 oval tires, new engine guar. car or tinance. 546-8736 or U.11&. WID JO,IXX1 ml. Landau top, """"'''' conditioning, AAf/Jo~1 Stereo a ir, <'lee wnd\vs, ps/b, all STUD,..~KER antetd Imo 90 day1, llTI7f. 494..Qll. JM PORTS • Ahf/Fif £tef'<'O & tape XIEiO Harbor ID\'d. Radio, center facing Jrd ,·er:y gd cone!. Gd I ires. m;;•A .• $799 '65 vw Bug, new eng, good deck, all extras. Beautiful CHRYSLER Costa ?i.tesa aeata &: Del u.'( roof rack. $1050. 19292 Bel.he! Cir, H.B. --------CHICK IVERSON tires, $850. Xlnt cond, 1966 Harbor, C.P.1. 64&9303 car Asking $5795. Days ---------:-:o:;-==omo=,,1:-:0=-:-;-,,;= 1 Owned and cattfully main. I :o96-c2-"'7m"'-=;-;=:::-==: 1~ Stude. Sta. \Vai:. $1Zi. VW * 644-4013 *~ l---------l~67=3-=-7G-:7D~: ~o.!7!_6,,_67>--=-73309_._ 1 OWNER. gtill under .,.,'&fT'. '67 GORGEOUS GALAXIE Wned by Johnson & Son e '62 OLDS Station Wagon call 9 am..;3~ '68 V\V: 29,000 mi, new paint Autos, Used 990 1970 Cadillac Sedan de '69 Chrysler Ney;port, $2600. Power/air, nu Dunlop radials since new. 5 year -5000 Gd. Tram, Pvt. Pty, $295. =========I 549-3031 Ext. fi6 or 67 & radio Xlnt cond. J\fay I ---'-------1 Ville. l\fy personal car. New 646-7300 eves. deluxe Int. LOADED, beaut mile extended warrant)' Jn. 54~ Aft 3:30 ~-·!;1970COSTHA~OMESAR BLVD. take cider V\V in trade. SPECIAL rond .. lo1v mileage, $5795. =========I car. Fantastic bu:y at $1050. eluded. See & drive thls out· 1958 OlDSMOBll.E. Good T-BIRO ' 64&-1249, 642--0350 496-6239, 493.-3212. CONTINENTAL 492-0520, 9 am-3 pm. HURRY standing Value to appreciate. transportation car. ---------1 ~ '&1 VW, leaving. $;)50 or bst DISCOUNT I------------------, '70 COUNTRY Squire-429. 443 AGE Johnson & &ln, $100 * 5.Si~ '55 T·BffiD O a.sslc, lllDels VW Bug, Rad.lo, rear o!r. Rear cpening windows. SALE CAMARO 1970 Classic Merk Ill Loaded, air, all xtras. $5865 ~26 Harbor, Costa Mesa1 '64 Old convt. New tires. forces sacrifice sale, wtl. , t speak.en. $1375. prl. pl)'. Gd cond. 673-3634 PRESTIGE CAR New-$4300 Now. SJ2...2548, 540.5630 Good cond, $400, ~9 w/blk Int. $995. 205~~ CcnJ. ' after 6 pm ,CC'-:c.CC:~'-'.-~~-544-1393 1 9 R Bal Isl. 673-28&5 ' 1969 V\V \\'estfalia Cam""r. H OF DEC OF nt.E ERA • 6 ME CURV Colony er 673-5TI9 aft 6. I '".-;'""°"""''""'-.,,...,..,_,,.-1 "-MONT • '61 CAM ARO 3SO RS, '"" p ,,. '-====;::::===I '64 T BIRD °"""'-Aux/gas heater, oil cooler. Equipped with aU the finer '63 Ford Stn.wgn V-8 stick, ar" 1 · • • Radial, AM/FM. Xlnt. Cond. (Grandkids need new &hoes) wire whl rims, 1 ownr, vinyl luxury features, Like new O'Drive 8 track sterec $375 TilE FINAL srEP' UP P. LYMOUTH cond, Premium tires. \Vl!ta. * * 213/592-1651 * * 50 CARS top, Sl.300/bet ofr. fil>.1787 thru out, chance to own for cash 673--0209. This beautlfut 9 pa.sscngC'r I--;;;;-;:;::;:;;;:;;;;:;;;:--I :::167:::5:::· :::°'::1:;":::':::w::n"::::· 673-<::::::':::41=.-I i;:;:o;;,,::_:.:=:.,~--~---.~.68=V\=v~C°'O°"N"V°'RT""ec-1 To choose from . No down on l---------1 low price. Must see to ap. XLNT 2nd ear. '6! Wagon. staUon wagon Is perfect for '69 RQADRUllllER Po -'66 V\V, 65,IXX1 mi's, orig. RJH, REBLT ENG. approved credit. CHEVROLET preciate. John50n & Son, New trans tires auto Ii the growing !amily, Equip. 1111 .. ·cWYK'r, top cond, clean. $975. Sl095. &16-4606 ~ ~ 2626 Harbor, C.M. 540·5630. air. Only $65o. ~. ped \vith all the luxury VALIANT Phone t.lr. \Vard, (Il4l items auto •-R-radkl 383 V8, automatic, powao ...,c v·"--2 d p ~1455. VW LEASING 2100 Harbor Blvd 645-0400 1961 4 DR . Bel Air Chev., 1965 Ford C.OUntry Squire be t ' la . uAt.:':'..' R .. • iteering, dlr. Excellent~ ..., .uiu1t oor. epP7 &: · p/gl!de P S good shape CORYmE ~""""" station wagon, $575. a er, ctor:y air co...... economical little c•. Good • ,65 VW CAMPER * e Tax & Lie. DoY.TI • · ·, · ---------I ~ _, •l•erlng po··-b-'-dition, Low miles, IUED1'3) ndition lb h 514 Geneva Ave, 5J6..0280, 642-9500 days; 645-0962 ..... ~~ • .. c. ''""' co rou1 o•t. New engine. Full:y equipped .• $50.87 per rnopth BUICK H.B. '67 vmE e\'e$. es, (JOVo'Crwindow!, unbeliev-\\'ill take car In trade or 6'B-llGl. .557~9359 • 36 month open end lea.st? ably priced at $3,400, (YCN. finance private party, Full --'-.;.;..------1 •.-.-V\-V_C_A_>-lP_E_R-,-1965-_-_ 1 1971 VW ABTug 'W BUICK Deluxe wagon '&I CH_EVY Bel Air Ur Fastback • "427", 4-speed, '64 COUNTRY Sedan Wagon: 2721 , Johnson & Son, 2626 price $1899. BUSIEST martretplace ta lmmac. in &: out. Must aell V-8 sllc*k, $400. * AM/FM radlo. New poty. Air, pa/pb, r/h, & w/w. Harbbr C.M 540-SlQ • BARWICK tcNn. 'I'h9 DAILY PllDI' . O•on. N•w tU.•. Pvt party. CHICK IVERSON 646-6728 glau °''L. Excellonl coo-!SS. ** 6"'3958 --~·--·--~·--1 \ ::• ;'Jl32S. S48-26!12. I,,'.'''."'~' ;~•~e~k,!l795:;:":_;<::"1-~?5~l6'.<' =\i·ooi0"'22iniiiR.Ci~'he;~-·klor<;Hl~e dltlon, Driven e&$Y. DAILY Pnm DIME -A nIE Fastest draw In 'the IMPOR'PS INC. =.w. ••-~~ __!.&'!_~ ... VW ~•a-back. Xlnt VW '66 ELECTRA, Loaded, Xlnl ........ ,. ' DATSUN ·-J ....... ,.., ""' -• IO;(I' """""'" BLVD contf · 11260 $150. $2&50 -LINES cost )'OIJ just pe~ West. •. a Dall,y Pilot ahoppfnr tnq. '1CS '"J~, $~'. 548-5168 lll7o~~:c;ESA • 100;· S4s.6236 * Call 64&9705 Ask for Mr. Grahnit 54&.86«1 nits a day, Oaaified Ad. 642.-5678 998 S. Cst. Hw:y., LB 494-97Tl armchair. ~~'·~.~~~~~:::====-'..:==~~~~~====--==,,;;~~~:::=:==:ol=;G~.:.:.:,.~1=========;;,5~0~0~.:.:.:,.~.========;;;;;-:;=:=::;=======~,;.50~;Ge;::n•:,:.~1=======;;;;:;::=:;==========;;;.:=-:;==="':'=======::: ; .. ; .. General 950General 950General 950 .. ' _., " ... WE'RE SELLING THESE OUTSTANDING DOMESTIC AUTOMOBILES AT SUBSTANTIAL SAVINGS BETWEEN NOW ANO THE FIRST OF THE YEAR. THE CARS LISTED REFLECT OUR MAXI· MUM DISCOUNT AND WE BELIEVE THEY ARE AMONG THE BEST VALUES TO BE FOUND. 1965 TEMPEST CUSTOM Con.,•rlibl•. Nici c•r, told "'"' her1. lt121QEI $895 1966 CATALINA 4 DR. H.T. VI . 111tom1lic, P.S., 40.0DD mil11. 1407- 571 $1095 1967 BONNEVILLE 2 DR. H .T. Vinyl top, ftclory 1ir. ! 112167 ) $1095 1967 BONNEVILLE 4 DR. H .T. Full pow1r, !TXS945) $1395 1967 LE MANS 2 DR. H.T. 1965 BUICK LE SABRE C1alom 2 Or. H.T. Pow•r il•1rin9-br•~•1• •••*· I RVLJDl l $995 1967 CADILLAC Std1n D•Vill t . Full pow•r. IWTE453l $2495 • 1968 CAMARO SS396 4 1p•1d, cuJ!om inf•rior. ILWU!95 l $1595 1969 MALIBU SS396 f tclery 1ir, ~i11yl top, P.5., P.I., turbe hydr•m•tit, 16,DDD eriq. mil11. CZKF5471 $2895 1967 MUSTANG 2 DR. H.T. f-f1clory 1ir, \Pl, 111!0., P,S, !VCK6121. VI , P.S .. P.B .. 1ir co11ditio11in9. IWWP. 128) .. '. v • ,., ~: ·-.c· ,, $1895 1968 FIREBIRD 400 ~ •P•td. pow•r tl•11in9, Yirty! lop, (YQF 121 ) $1895 1967 OLOS 98 LUXURY SEO. $1995 1969 PLYMOUTH GTX $1195 1969 MARK Ill LINCOLN Fvll po"!'lt, b•tuliful ti•. !WXR6141 $5295 1965 CHEVELLE MALIBU 1 Doe• h1!'d+op. Aulom•lic, powtr 1!11r· inq. (TEY214 1 $795 1966 CHEVROLET CAPRICE VJ11yl top, pow1r t111rl119 & br1k1J, 1uto., St1tio11 w19011. f•cterv 1lr, pow1r 1!11r- ll,OOO mil• .. IXVHllll l'~g. l17 VI. !RPL4•71 $2595 $1095 .ROY CARVER ROLLS -ROYCE 2925 HARBOR UOUL~V,ARO , COSTA MESA 5464444 --~-~-----------·-~-- AT DEALERS COST!! ·CO A • • MONTEGOS and MERCURY • NEW 1970 COUGAR POWER STEERING POWER DISC BRAKES WHITE SIDE WALL TIRES DELUXE WHEEL COVERS IADIO ' HEATllt EXAMPLE Johnson " •SOD LIN OLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR • .. -~- " .• , . I J THIODOU I OllNS. IL THIODOU IOIUIS. JL 1 . ..J f• 1· 1 ~ I J . _, ' \ , ·' . ' \ L.....JS L~~~~·" J I ., r ' . INVENTORY REDUCTION! BRAND NEW 1971 TRUCKS! We Must Reduce Our Tremendous Inventory of New 1971 Trucks IN THE StfORTEST POSSIBLE TIME 0 ·-' ' . ... -- • FIRST IN I • .. .- ' EVERY NEW ., LEFT IN STOCK _, ' 11 -• ii(}_ I O •<• _, \1-. '-~ '" ( ·-. .. . .. --c. ,, " 1 .~< .., t.,y· ·\ I -BuHt In America By Americans 1 For Americans! 1 •TOTAL ;v.,l , I I i DOWN 4., -1 :'>' \ PAYMENT _, MONTH 36 I MONTHS $250 i• th• totel down peymenf end $6J i1 the fotel monthly peyme~t incluj;ng fex,'.•10 /i- c9f\1e encl ell fin1nce ch1r11e1 on epproved credit for 36 month1 . Deferred p1ymenl price i1 $2511.00 'including ell fin•nce clierges, t1xr1, '70 licen1e or if yo u pr1fer to p1y c•sh, tlie full c11h price i1 only $2171.17 including 11111 fix, '70 license. Order Your F1vorite Color Tod1y. ' ORA.NGE COUNT·¥! NOW SLASHED TO ACTUAL .... •• lftlplrt-C· · READY FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY f' ~--.·#~ r·-r . 1 L· ..... v . _L .. -... ~ .... SEE THE . " 20 to choose from. '65 thru 7D models. Coupes, har·dtopt:, co,.. vertlble and 2 + 2 Fastbacks. Some with 4 speed's, also air con- ditioftlng and 1utom1tlc models. DAMPLE: ·70 '66 '68 1969 MUSTANG SPORT ROOF MUSTANG HARDTOP Low, low mil•i. W•rr•ntv •v•ileble. Auto., R&H, P.S., tilr. 14S2ASll . MUSTANG HARDTOP Auto., P.S., RIH, •ir cond., good mil11. IRRNl801 MAVERICK Fully fe ctory equipp.d, R&H , 6 cyl. tZDUl40l SHELBY COBRA GT 350. 4 1p1ecl, R&H, power •leering. !ZLH9741 GALAXIE 500 2 dr. H.T., v.1, euto., P.S., RIH, Air cond., vinyl roof. IXEUS69) CORTINA GT 4 1p1ed, r1dio, heeler. low mil1e91. 1ms111 .... '1.t'' ,..,.. ---'"·"' 1'1 .... 161 .... 1M.7" .-.. '0 Vtrlli Wltllh ff.4" " .... n .I'' ,,, .... Htlghl 10.1" lt.1" U .lt" JS.I" .P'nHll TtHd ..... SI.Ii" 19.4" n .I" RH r Tr11d 55.0'' '"'" ~ ... ~5.2'' Hurry for the Last of the 5 Y ear-50,000 Mile Warran s! USED CARS A THEODORE . ROBINS EXC~USIVI . 1 ...... _,_ .... ···-.... -·· 100% PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS c...,. ... Meellainl p•rtl l1el11di ..... 1 ... .,.. .. 1a1 •• llrhe 11-. '"' eH. PLUS IM'olles. battery cllMI ...... .,...._ All ...,.., .... ..._ .. •Ill' ..,. Mnice cl.par.--. 'tRADES ACCEPTED PAID FOR OR NOT • TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS '6-5~~ VS, auto., R&H, P.S., air cond. <:-, . '\ \FMZ235) (· '67 CORTINA GT 2 DOOR 4 speed, radio and heater. (TRN287) VS, 4 speed, radio, heater. '65 MUSTANG <ZKU941) Good body & paint, VS, auto .. '55 CHEVROLET good miles. (JRB136) '63 FORD STATION WAGON Fairlane 500. VS, auto., R&H, P.S. (KSK158) '66 Y.W. 2 DOOR DELUXE · 'Radio, heate(, good mil C'S, (TQV748) '"" Weith! (Ill.) tt• flll nu "" SIHtl!ti c Rid( & llltltr RKln::111tlin1 RKln::111tlilll · Pillleli SIHrlnt ••n 1111 L .· . " ··-9""0 ..... ·--~·"- Many to choose fram.' i65 thru '70 Models. Spart~;oofs, formals, 2 d~r & 4. door hardtops. Full power, 11ir conditioning. Wi r- r1nt111 available. EXAMPLE: '66 '66 '69 '67 '69 . -· -· . 1969 FORD. LTD 2 DO.OR HARDTOP >1~ conditioning, AM·FM r1clio, l1rtd111, pow1r, good mil11, I XTJ26l) • ' • J FORD 4 DOOR VI, eutomatic, power 1fe1 ring. 1372311. Good miles, w1rr1nly 1¥1il1bl1, CADILLAC · CVT. Full power, ftcfory air,. l o1d1d. Good milei! (RSK952) FORD STATION WAGON VI, euto .• RIH, P.S., ~ir <ond. {SLV6421 V.W. STATION BUS 7 p1 11. 1t11ion w19on. R1dio, he1f1r, good mile,. fZNM9r2l MERCURY , COMET 2 dr. H.T. V8, auto., P.s'., r11d io , h11ter. !TXT655 1 ~ONTINENT AL . LANDAU '4 cir. Full powtr, 1ir, ¥inyl roof, good mil11. IXXS l971 PARTS-SERVICE HOURS 7 AM To 9 PM MON I P·ARTS DEPT. ONLY 8 AM to 1 PM SATURDAYS 7 AM To 6 PM TUE-FRI ,. ~-'-'O.\':~ ..... . ~ . ---~ '"""""""-'""'-""'-==-=---.... ------------------------...:.' __ .:,f_..;.._..r. \ 1 I