HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-11-26 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7
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, Bu.~l:a-._t .. •ts: l;.'o:Wer Lt.Se:~~
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Signs · Bill for D ~lf i ,i t<;tt~ry Nl··-xon.
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Nliell · V.ow s .A.et lon ·
· ··vwi ·M~sacre siuks. ·
' §khni~~ :ib ~t,~i~~~
From Wire Semca
WASIDNGTON -Top Anrty offieials
,unfol~ today, before shocked . and
· 'Sickened members of Congress, details of
~ alleged U.S. massa.cre of South Viet· n~ villagers, including color slides
ahoWing piles of dead bodies.
~ display, to the Senate and tt;ouse
Armed Services coqunittees, followed
shortly a White House declaraUon that
the alleged March 1961 niaSSIJC?t at My
Lai·ia "atiborrent to the cOMCieoce of all
the American' people." .
has been brooden«I to Include whethel'
detaifs of the alleged ma.~ killings were
covered up.
SeO. Stephen M. Young (Mblo), oald
one colored slide showed "n0ncombatant
citizens who bad been kill~ at close
range with their insides hangln'g oul"
He 'called the situation "an . act of
, brutality that cannot have been e1ceeded
in llitler's time."
"No one ciari q\Jesuon that there was an
atrocious slaughter of 200 lo 700
civilians,".Yaung.aaMI. ''There.can be no
justification for an ad of•brutalJty of this
kind.''
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-·. Say1N"ew Setup.
W.iU r ~e]j~ve
't ·~·,.· ''.; z,·~~~~"':
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~'AF"afoN" .nJPn -. "-rt ~·~llotl !GllaY to ,. .. the
way for·thti llait ht January ef the lint
cfr&!f!Olt.ry·1ince WOrld Wlr n'11n1hald
ho.would nol be sallslled'untD lhe 'drOft -~be e!lmlnated·eOU..ly.. ... " • ' ' r ~ ' Speutng at , a cerei:nony in , the
" Ri>OeevO!rRo6m of tlieWhlle H-. Nix·
"" llaJd,,UJe.ncw. l)'slem-,wwld· eliminate
~~<'! the ~t!ltlell In the '~ SeJeCUve Service setup. \
i.:.:;~'.='.d=~:.:::.i
on Motiday. 'lllis• w!D allect January
draftees, The quota already has been. ect
at 1~,lM)O. '
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fres1 Secretary Ronald L. Ziegtei,
stl'essi.Jlg that he was . speaking {or ~b:on.
pledged ,that all "illegal and' lrnmorai
Conduct. as alleged," would be <teaJt with
by the Anrty and the Adminilllratlon.
Secretary of the Anrty Stanley II.
;Rasor. who appeared before the com·
mittees, described the events at My Lai as: "appallin&" and said ·the investigation
. ·sen. Daniel K. lnouye (0-Hawail), a
much decorated World War U hero who
lost his right army in Italy, said, "I
thoug!it I'd be a bit l>ardcned about thia,
but I must say that I'm sick about thls."
COMBAT· PHOTOGRAPHER
Moh\IOY'• drawing will take· ~ at
Selective Service-beadquarten · 10
Wubirijtoo. Plans are · ftr yo • t h
n:preautaUve1r from throughout. tM
country to drlW" fNm ·•' buje liiWJ~ one
by·-.3111-ciapsuleo. Each capoule,wlR
coota!n .adate'and lhtBequet1Ce·tn wllldl
Uiey""' dra*'1·wlll cletOnnioe lbe'"dnll >'*"·"·· ·' ··~ \
Bandit Suspects ·
Held in Shootout
. 'Ite slides exhibited by ResQr at tPe
.hearings, hurriedly arrmig~ as 1pro.
testations about the Incident swelled both
at home and abroad, were 1 dozen photos
!aid· to· have been taken on the day of<the
killings by an Anny c o m b a t
photographer, Ronald Haeberle.
HaeberJe is among witneases to the
alleged massacre who recenUy have
SIGNING UP -President Nixon b.,j~ s.;.venir
• ptn IA> Secrj\lall)"Of Defense Melvin Laird after sign-
111g-0raft re!orm bill. Also prese~t for t!>day'a sign-
Tree T1immer . . ' Here's How · New Drafi
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On Two F.reew_ a y_s_ givcn _grueso111edetallsofthe•hootlnss ·1n the,.vfllage. •
· Sen. Inouye, a8Jd one slide showed "a A pair of bandit ~ are In Jail ,....g woman standing up begglni. 'her A Santa Ana tt .. tilmmer was elec·
today aller they allqedly eJ>llged chJJdren standlna around ber, knowing lrocuted Tuesday when the swaying
Orange County Sheriff• drputies in • that she would be. killed an instant later." metal bticket in which 'be rode touched a
Electrocutea
Lottery Plan · Will Work
rurmia& gun baWe durinC 1 tOO-mlle-per~ ~ llid, he W¥ "sick about lt,11 pow~r line., hour pur9llt tbraugh iraffic on two fr..,_ and added: James B. Argall, 29, of 809 E. Oc-WASIIlNGTON (UPI) -Here Is the COiiege delmnenls wlll 11111 bO aJIOwrl
ways Toeldly night. "'nlere ianoqUtltbl that men, women cldental St., died al Orange County way the new draft lottery will work: 10r foUr years; but the gradqate mmt
The c:hale ended in Norwalk with a and~ appartnUy non-combatants, Medical Center less than one hour after Someone . will . draw· ,ooe by · one ..:. undergo . a year of . ellg{blltty1 .rter he three-cat~ but a Los Anetlel County had been tlJled.., he was'nlShed there by fellow employes presumably (rQQ'l...a hat, something· like . leaveJ cOn_ee, ,Just aa ~ ~ ~ }9.
Sheriff'I deputy said he rammed his Rep. Leslle Modi (R-Dl.). said tite of Lbe city's parks department. .. ·
patro1 ear Into the wreckage, to slam the pictUres showed muies of bodies but Co-warken said Argall was lopping that -388 numbers representing the , ' ~n~.:::W•Y car shut and trap said they1dkl'not ttiaw that Americans br~hes {rom..overhangtng growth when "days or the year rrom Jan, 1 to Dec. 31, :Mllrd ... er ... j~or mr. ·.e
Tho-Whlle HllUle ia1d In a statement
that ......... 1 proJectltnio lilillcite 2ll,lilO
pe1 Mii will be drafted tn '1'10. •. ~
Nlion llgned ·81'.1 executlve·order tO put
the lo\l"¥ system .Into effect, mmitng
th.at:~Y 1.971 the great buJk. of the naUon11
dnl(leea will be 111-yeitr'-otdl;_ . ' •
Fol"' the' first year, lll' 'Q'le!f th ·the.• called ~'di~ pool.;;..:: ~y :.J(oiii. 11
througb Ii -wlll '110 oquauy. vulnerlble, ·
They wtU be drafted by birth dates, wltll th<ioooom otfthe nm date drawn -
In go, and -born m lbe'llill date Jul&
11 certain Dot In be adlld. • ·
In 1171, the .,-S'd lti.fally Into ef-
fect and,wlll be~. toJh~.
"""1>t • .!or -wlJii. wve pvtn deleimeiill at 11 aatl,...,.. btlc't lntO the
tulnerable ar...--· ....... Uon frD1!!
college or othenrile havtni abalill<id defetred¥8tli~: ~ ... : • ·-.. .\ ) j
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Or...ge ..
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-15 did !he kllllnl. the crane eXtension of"the city truck dip-.including Feb~ 29 even if it Isn't-a leap
Donald L. Horrigan, 25, of Anaheim, ,._..., 1,,.--· grueaomc ·pi',._ pe:Q_intothe·power-line.He 1mmediately .year, The men Wtth bi.'rthda ..... t.a 'on, ,the ... "''
and Brace-I. Amico, :Ill, of Buena Park, ~;~; -· ~ ~ slumped to ·the floor of'the buckeL 1 fl(st .dat&.dtawn Will ·be called· first, the
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1"' :...~•-ts' · D'rop' ped:
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were boobd Into ooanty jail :~i:ges , t•y~~·rr!P,lled. t•Yeah, I've . Tl}e ciW ~rker is.su.rvived·by his wifei, second date second and SO· on. Tho8e io \..AJu..u. : ::!it~~ uaault tent p .a.qUeasy ~·" . and two children. the last'·half of the 'order, will oot likely lnlufficient evideoce:hu-led 'to-dro'j)' :.. · "~ ... · .... !
Auuhitlel Aid a .357 Magnum re. In .a ·statement ·1'° ~Nl:e .Jloote""·· ' ' ·be called. Those in the . top few date.II pin(c1of~J11~~-htft1char ... ~.lt .,.,......_.~] .. · ., . ,.
.\tolver wq conftacated from the·§at. ....,> "'•• ..._(S..~""P ~ Z) V II ' Ci H ll .definl tely wil land· there is a gr.ay area Wilmlnifiin man, whlfi-hta G~~;~_:ove ,Thf-W!Ba;t.1~~-l~.n.... , c~"i\::!i::l~Ollllc:.ev;i' ~I '; · . 8 ey S . ty • 8 betwcch. . , l!'rln,,",!:i:' a Ure shop Is lllJll ~l'' •t. ha ~...--•-. 1..rr In Anaholm. • • are ro PIWT OFFICES . h F ' A lollery drawing also 'win be bela vellli .. -., :, . ·.' . • '.·. ,J!: over !l!t1~"'=.I -t:i.
In •.... _~ --~ -· -. . s 'qt· : r1"d,·ay 'Too among the 26 letters of the·alphabet. All Soulli Gate Police aMOUnccd't= 1..m~-nO.<!..i....oi '"' <llle'..Jow j .. •• -.--· -· ~ ••• llhl the -v1nce f' ••all of Alfr.id·J; Slatiio, 41',·-''"""t" . ;;;;:,~---i\ :-,....., 1.'"'. · find -tho'..-'-...... --SHU"" TH ··'RSD ;.y . persolll ,1' n ,~-0 a ,.. .. -w ~ • o/' • ' •·-·~ .-"":.'.:! 1.· u .ti. boanl'(lildlvldual boanl1 wtll·lllill do-the ·Ave Garden Grove/ Udl ..,... !CeJT. '
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law-.~ they--lie~ , . Cl!Y-Hall ·wlll:bect08edtiollt1Thursday calllng)wljoarecalledaccordlng.toooe jng,::.;lil•Wllm~i~ : ''llti.w-, TOD&Y ·' ,,';:;
~milr~ cM al control at ~ 1bandly tn:obsa+aiice of ThankqiY lng. e~P~e:' ~enJOy 8 t~c>;d81 Thanksgiving letter drawing in ordef of the first letter murdtt wW oOt be' ' · ~·~~' • °'°"°" \,eountr• .raptnlilvr1' .. 1 with 2;.:. IUR blllt:s befM'e 1hi _.. All DAILY PIIOl'·alkes.wlfl,W.clbsed and Jf'rfday ~n ·rountain Valley as c;JlY birthdale will be liped up acc;oidtng to the Clµu1es ol . c.'Olli: . i ) ~l • • -• -'!~ ""\ . .., ~ .
Sherifrs Lt. Bud Mann said the har-Day. The holiday edlUon of the ce~ lo~~ in Fountain Valley take twoi .of ~Ir .last name. lf ·llOll'fe ,lut .names ring, ictordlniJ~ ~·, , ' -· ·~. ~ have tak~'wbo:i mow b. CM
rowing chase began when a white sedan newspaper wW be published on a days for Tbink.sgiving each year because begin, w1lh the same .letter, the same ·both. tnfQ JtDif.tlller ~ stem-Ji1'St rti'p'to reooM:ioJdu ~V
whizzed by deputies Dave Skaugllad and 0Saturday" xhedule for m 0 l"D i n g they focme Admi.ssionS Day as a holiday~ 'ordefl ~I.~ ~~~w ¥11!!1Ulik.:°'~~~ rild. 1
. : r banking. proctda1t1. Pao• 1. ..
Jmy Horton, l!laUOl1ed on the Sao DielO dcltvery to homes. said Clly Manager Jim Neal. nl ~lier •,-lliill'I !I g.-' ~ .. -..~ aa1d mdro than l!J0,!119 C-. · l - -' I
Freeway in Las ~· ' A'lpeelal lt91uN,of the ldJdly edlllon 'Huntinctoo Beacll,cj(y. ofllcu alao l'!illo> <l!ll'V!o<~ ~ al\>llabet ~ of liolen I004 pl'I' dangeroua !::::1" n-i: = C:: °t . Anaheim pollce bad ndloetl a ~ wnr be lbe llll:ludin of oe.vval sections ) be closed ~ TI,O,lntllr ai•H•fiifay. was f., ... p-1, etc., Fred Struth would be ·drup and 'marijuana 'wen .. 11ec1 . at -11 ,... ,.
l10t1 of the Jwo blndtt ..._ts !IOQllil !«" de9oled• to 'Cllrlltmu ""°Pl>lnl· -In 'lit!.. •• ·.~~will obl,eeye ngular hoil· ·c111ed.ahead of'Saln Sml!h. (or 1Amold Red'• Tire Int., In whlCll SllllOll and K•' :=.:,J~ ! !!!!!!.-,..:
the market holdup, pl111 the getaway dition to barga,i"' .~'be'· found -:tn irfa' da,Y schedules Thursday, 11lanksgiving SalKitiOll staniey~);. · ·~' ~ .... 'ring are eucuUve1. · · ' • r:-•P• ,.,,, llidi"-"'J'
car's •licenae numberf ' • ·.~·cif&ici'ln UR apicll.I section Day. Durlrc the nrst year of operaUon . Tbe atreltl wen midi In' connectiolt ~·· • -.i ~·-.;?:
_Skaugstad and Harton said they recog. ads -the lllClloqo '!Ill-contain gift 1ug. Mall will ' be pliked up from deposit (1970). aU draft ages (II lhrougb Ii) w!U wllh the aDellltl de!IVery of IQ lo art •-•-• n •-•
ruzed their quarry. pstjona and~holiday 1t19on stories from Polnta on holldl)' schedules and processed ·be sbbject.. k> the lottery. Bqinning tn iranp. the ftturdeir of a nn car dealer =:., " · 1
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"Our dcpuU" aaw the car go by .and literally throullhoul the world. for outgoing tltlpalch but there will be no dll71, 001¥ those with 19th blrtllUp dur· !fUe~JI;'~ !lt!ot --·.U,111l1 ~'-~~'""~I'. ' , , :
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• (See~· Pap I) _re£!!!!r_~~or ·deUvery~rvl>e. Ing the )'<Br will be vu!neiablt. , · n wl!h ··~~:---. •. " · .' L,-~ .... -o.;,....__:;__.._...:J
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Battin Plans Own A~.swer on Bay Swap Burglars
Get Haul
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Blood Aids Needy
GWC Student,s Make S~rifice
By RUDI NIEDZIBUU or * Dltlr P• ltflff
ll's ~ for a college llludelll to be
charllabla around Thanksgiving.
Usually he isn't working and the money
he carrlei in his pocket scarcely pays for
more than a hamburger and a malt.
Five students at Golden West. Colie:ge
were determined however, to provide
needy llllllliel In HWlllDltOO Bach with
ThllllklClving -And the way they did II wu to M11
their -blood, perbapo -of the molt meanJoclul coatrlbullom .... human
bein( Clll make to -· Mib Longo, an accountlni major lrOl1\
Ganim Grove, llld he and bll frlendl ar·
rived II the ldu while plaJ'lnl cards In
the cafeteria. ••we decided that we wanted to do
something more meaningful that> juS\
collect money and that's why we decided
to sell our blood," he explained.
Last Saturday the group marched down
to a commercial blood.bank in Sinta Ana,
stretched out their armJ, and pve one
pint each. Tbe reward wu .. per perlOD.
"Al lirll ... ..... afraid Iba! they
woaldn't take our blood.'' be contlnoed. "TlloJ told DI that they already bad u.tr.
quota lo Typo O and. all ol us Wied out
al Type 0. Finally they decided they
needed it afler all."
The group then contacted the Women's
Assistance League ol HunUngton , Beach
and We4 ll>em to provide a llot GI needy
families.
"I don't tb1nk om: blood money II loin&
to IO too far. We bad no Idea Ihm were
., many pmlinely needy -le tn lluJ>.
tington Beacll," ht edded.
The -ts have allo collocted
various camed aooda at tbe collep lO
roond out the dinner. "My mother even
lold me she would bake ,_ pineapple
upside-down cakes for the project/' aa1d
Lolli•· Those who participated In the project
are Longo, Cosy Werner 1 Sharon Parent,
Dave Strough, and Augie Longo.
"We're going to try for some more
be:fore Thanksgiving though," said Mlke.
.. I bope that we can a:et about 20 to
rartldpate."
Pentagon to Cut Overseas
Troop Strength by 15,000
WASHINGTON "(AP)-The Pentagon
announced today a decision to reduce
mUit.ary personnel abrood by 1$,0llO. Al
the sam< time the White HOUie Uld It
is closing down 19 consular posts, 17 in
the wtllern hemisphere.
The P<otsgon action, llll10llllCOd by
Semtary of Ddense Melvin R. Lalrd,
ii put of an overaU effort to reduce the
U.S. preaence abroad.
The White House said reducinl the conaular post! la a move to help solve
the 'potbenome balance of payments
problem. Lalrd said his department la 1lao doing
away wllh about 1,815 civilian jobs In
El Toro Hottest
Spot in Country
There was a hot. time in the old town of
El Toro Tuesday -the hottest in the n&·
llon al '1 degrtt1.
While Oran!!" County led lbe countey on
the tberemometer for TueMiay, weather
forecaaters promised cooler -but not
much cooler -lemperatures f o r
Thanksgiving Day.
Local fog is expected along the Orange
Coast tonight and early Thursday, with
.!Ullahlne prevaillng throug)lout the af·
t.ernoon. Mercury readlngs in the coa11tal area
are predicted in the middle to high 70.
whUe inland thermometers s h o u I d
register 13 degrees. Light smos is
forecast for the coastal atetiona.
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D/\ll' f'.LO I
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ORAHa COAl1 .,,... ..... COMNHl .............. ---J ... L Codoy .. .,.... ___ __ -·--ft,.n A. M .... 1 .. -·--c-. .... , ...... , .... """' ....., -.ct11 ttn,,.......,.. ..,..,.. ---·m.--tt:SZ•••ctu••--
........ ::.°It ......... _....,. -:.··:c;:;.....-=. -:r =i:: __.. ....._ ~ ._., lls r a'
--~.,..,;._ .....
........... on.i. ""' ......... ~~-.. 1111 ... =-...:--~~ -•
1 y· 1 en•• '4Mm .:::..•..:.. 6:!e' ~-=-°"""""· --..... .... .... ... .....,......., ............... ..... _ ..... 1 .............. _ ...... .,, ... __
~!:!!!!'!'~--:;....wz.~--....:: ...., ... I.-......
foreip lftU.
The avlnp hoped tn be naliled by
the --will ...... !male llO mlliloo annually, ofllclall uld.
.The military cuts are part of Jn'
viOlll!y -planl to llub the streqth of U.S. armed farces overall by
•bout 115,000 thlt year.
President Nlsoo IDllOllllCed earller Ibis
year .he wanted to make a 10 percent
reduction tn U .s. personnel located ill
foreign areas.
Exempted lrOl1\ the mllit.ary cut, Lllrd
said, are sucb areu u Wut Germany,
South Kono, -Vietnam and -areas ~ the Wllr ellort.
Biggest manpower reduction come1 ln
the Padllc command whlcb ts glvl111
10,165 military_ iplces. A total of 1bout
1.100 mllitsry jolll are boilll ellmlnated
in Europe.
SHOOTOU'I' •••
followed It," said Lt. Mann. "At Katalla
Avenue on the San Gllrlel Froeway, they .
turned on the red Ulhts and -·· Horrigan and ~both ~ In
a chain of Orange Cowlty holdups-shot
off northbound on the freeway and the
deputies reported by radio they were
under fire .
Holding their own fire to avoid endan.
geMng other motorists, the deputies
£lnally got a clear shot at the Rosecrans
Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad'.s five
shotgun blasts hit the fleeing car.
Deputy Horton was travelinr at high
speed and overran the offramp, but the
suspect's car hurtled down it and slam-
med Into a car driven by Sanh Rkh·
ard.son, 29, of NorwaJk.
No one wu injured ln the uchange of
gunfire, but Miss Richardson suffered
cuts and bruises in the collision at
Katella. Avenue and the freeway exl.L
LL Mann II.id the pair were 1bout to
fiee on foot when Norwalk Shtrtff's
StaUon Deputy Raymond Semi crashed
his car into the O.Jl'.'ning door of theirs,
trapping them i.n!lde.
Five other patrol cars from the LASO
staUon In NorwaDc and also Lakewood
had pulled onto the freeway it Alondra
Boulevard to halt the suspects when
posaible.
No Lightweight
For Heavyweight
Heavyweight boxing champlooshlp IH>po
Jerry Quarry took on a woman Tuesday
tn a SS0.000 acnip that won't need a
meree or a rinr -just the judge.
Theda B. Berube ls the name of the
Bellfloww boxer's newest opponent IOd
she weilhed ta&o Superior Court wtlh a
personaf Injury 1awsutt that names Quafl>
ry and "Ooet, one thftllJ&h ten," 11 de-
fendants,
Mn. Berube bltmes Qu•rry and his
unidentified usoclat11 for lnjuna she
sulrered last July 8 when she 1llegedly
11lpped and fell II the plllllilt'a Dlomond
Crat aoartmenl buildlne.
Mn. Bmlbe suffered whit she cl1lms
ll "tome permanmt. dlNblUty " 1n the fall '
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by 1t !tut tine of lbe ....... wllo hid
811 tbroup two houri ol ~ dollbera-Uona. •
Supervllor Allon Alie --'P.'d ..,.., .. ·-......... ~ lbe lepl upods iii. ilie -
lli.y dilpute, a matter t"&tt-w.,... Orange c.unfy SuJIOrior and ""1dl
wlD, Allon told tbl 10Ul1iltarl. "IO•all'.Jhe
way to tbl 8upreml eourt.." ·,
• Kenneth sampooo, coUnty director GI
harbon, beaches and parks, Aid today
bl wu lntrlped by the Battin Idea.
But Sampson reiterated hil opinion lbal
there la nol enouah conlUiuous, ample
Plilbllc acceu to the bay, ewa u.ou,ti
lllck Bay Drive, a auhotandanl fOlld,
1'11111 along lbe e..w.. llldt iii the
atu\U'Y. "Certainly there is some acceas. but it
Joaquin Voters
Okay lnter~t
Hike on Bonds
11J PAMELA BALLAN
Of 11111 °""' , .... ,...,
A measure boosUng the interest rate on
school bonds from 5 to 7 percent was
passed overwhelmingly by voten In the
San Jooqutn School District Tuesday.
V ottn approved the measure nearly 3
to l ' with 2,016 votes in favor and MO
V<JlelqalnsL
'lbe me&IUl'e passed in each of the four
prectncts tn Leisure World, the Laguna
Htll1 retl-community.
"The closett we came was in one rural
precinct. where out of 14 votes cast, nine
were for and five were against," said
District Business Manger Rex Nerison.
"We're smiles from ear to ear around
here this morning," said Nerison. He said
the first thing to be done will be filing ap-
plication with the state to construct more achools. ..
••we'll have to make a precise
determination as to where our nut
JICbool will be," he contlnued.
"We're finishing two e l e m en ta r y
school! now. One is in rr.t.salon Viejo and
the other i! in El Toro. We have t'wo
more """' lo be COll3lnlcted iD ldlaalon
:Viejo 11J!d Turtle !lock.
"We're I Plttnc I lot ol ... wth In the
central orea around lbe Jlanch develoi>
menL We'll be looldq ~there. We
allo need .. tnt.nnedlato IC!lool tn El
Toro and TUrtJe Rock. ..
He aald the dlltrlcl bas IU mllllon '
authoriaed for -Normally, --11....Stopayllacklllta
loam, but the -bas -permHtlns
dtslricts to ... their --for -atrucllon projects llnce It bas no mon
money loloari.
Nerfloa Biid lbe cumnl prl<e ol 1
school la tn ...... ol fl mlllloo .. that
the bood money can be uaed for two &ehoola with aome Wt over;
Comparing lut year'• -election •I
which Ume f5 mllllon wu authoriaed, he
·said that with 24 percent v«er turnoul
the meuure hid pasaod with I0.7 petcent
voting yes. Althaugh Giily IU peroent of
Ibo votera tumed out for thlt electkn, the
yu vote ratio wu neu1)' the ame, 7tt
percent. :
"We hope we've oet a pncedeal for .
olher dlatrlcts," Biid Nertsaa. refmldc
lo the flcl that hll WU the flrat diltrlcl
In 0r111111e County lo attempt to ralae tbe
interest rate
"I know MV~ were watchloa IL"
'Movie Contract'
Lures Secretary
Into Perversion
A pretty Newport Beacb secretary
lured by an alleged movie morul's ap-
pralsa1 of her charms wu forced, into sex
perversion at gunpoint Tuesday al a
Costa Mesa shoppbg center.
The 24-year-old woman was not
physically harmed In the incident, but
waa shaken by being forced to perform at
tunpolnt in tbe front seat of her own car.
Investigator George Wilson said the
vicUm told of leaving the mall about 5:50
p.m., when the rather disttnltdshed
genUeman approacbtd 111d introduced
himself.
She said he claimed to be affiliated
with a Hollywood studio, uked If she had
ever been a model -which ahe hadn't -
then obtained her nune and address alter
1sklng her to pose.
She continued on to her car, she told
pollct, but the man, described u In hla
forties or fUtits, followed her and then
pulled a eun. .
"Gtt into the car," he ordered.
The young wom&i said he 1eco1ted htr,
then forcll!:d her to commit ~ acte: before
he got out of the car and quickly dlsai>'
peared on fool
High Tides Flood
Streets of Venice
VENICE, Italy (UPI) -!>.le of the
hl1hest AdrlaUc Uda In memory 11-d
low·lyl111 ports of Venice and other
-dU.. today. nio lloocla blocbd tourtsta ill their botela and -dalmed two
Uva.
Hip winds and low atmospheric
pre:Murt combined to ralle 111 ltvtl
nearly flvll!: feet above normal In Venice.
11ooc11nr SI. M11rk't Squan and otheJ'
p•rll cil lbe city. Merebants movad lbelr
soaked wom from llreet Intl ..... lo
hlall<r ground.
'
ii tn pll<hes and separata rpots. 'Iller.
Isn't .......... provide rall-d, par1:.
ill1 f1cllltla oncl all that -with such a devdopmtat." bl Wd. .. ___ fllllllllll'aolar
land ...... ,,.. have puhllcl¥ !l!ai8ted that
publlc ...... ii 1mple.
Fruit --· • Qtlual In the Su-Court lull -tlio --reflorated today that there ii ample "°' cess lhroop Back Bay Drive and that
ample parking for crowds uatne the bay
for recreaUonal use could be eoslly pro-
vided around lbe boy.
At tsaue In lbe UUgatlon la the lepllty
GI tbe eounty•a ~ <If Bocl: 8-Y lanil
with· the Irvine Co: Tho ccaanlJ-lrvlne
nip <If compony up!-* for county
tidelands ts bel:!a quesllooed .. unlawful
and a vlolalloe <l tbe atate coaatltutioo.
lrvlnt Con!pany olllclall, Including
Pmldont WUUam R. Miion, bad no com-
ment Oil the Battin mystery plan.
llallA nfllMd lftlr 1111 ......, la ..
lfy the nature and utent of the proposala
he piul lo ~ ....... the bolnl.
"I CICiiy uld wlilt I llld today la the
heat of the -and In r-lo what.._ YOUOCilft bad to say," bl
commented. "I pllll to make Inf an-
nouncement "'*"e the board and I woo't
make any atat.e'ment before that Urne.
"But I gueaa you aotlred bow those
. kldit felt about that Upper Bay deal,11
BatUn added. "'"'9· live In thal area,
lbeJ' obviously doo't llb the Idea "' the
trlilo and what they had lo say about It
just compelled me to reveal a lltUe of my
plans."
•
·Of $10,000 :
Hilh««inl barglan tootell two J
M111 llortl of nearly flO,IOO In valuabg
Tuesday and early today, including
quantity of bedroom fUrnishlngs in whl
the company truck was stolen and u
in the 1etaway. l
..
My I.al Jaeldent
P1lroll!ng poUoemen mbsed the teJ
wllich broke inlo Sears. Roebuck
COmpany, South CoaJt Plaza, by on!
moments early today, acco~· g I investigators.
Someone using an unknown instrum
, smubed a llua ~· . tbe Im s. Brla{oJ SIT,· the pmn
of $2,500 in women 's lea er coats trim-
med in fur.
Army Denies KJWWing
Of Slayjng La3t Year
WASl!INGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
denied today any dtfenae official in
Washinpm wu aware last year of the
alleged U.S. mauacre in March 1911 of a
South VlelnaJnlM village.
"No hlih Arm1 ol!lciail or Jlepll'tmenl
of Defense olflclal1 were awan of WI
last year," Jerry Frledhelm, a Pentaa-
1pokesman, told reportm.
The lmpllcalloe ts that Initial mllltsry
r<ports •bout the My Lal Incident did not
10 beyond 8ataon. rrtcdbeim WU unable
to aay ~ hl&h up lbe milltsry chain of
command those first in v es tic at iv e
reporta reached.
House Republican Leader Gerald R.
Font said Tue>day high Army official!
were aware of the allese<i massacre
shortly alter it luoppened, although he
declined to name lndividuala.
Frletlbelm salci 5ecretary ol the Army
Stanley R. -dlacUSled the matter
with Ford this morning, presumably lo
clarify the lltu1Uon.
"He (Ford) said he did not mean to im-
ply that the secretary ol the Army, the
chief of staff, the vice chief of staff or
MACV (the U.S. commander ill Vietnam)
knew about it," Raor told newsmen at
Capitol IUD earlier today.
0 1 think be bad In mind that 10me
1oneral officer ill Vietnam miahl have
,,,. •• ~-.e 1
MASSACRE •••
reportert followlni day• ol pentslenl
~I -and virtually non-
commlUal replie1 -Ziegler sa!d the
Prealdent viewed the incident as 0 bt
dlroct violation" ol U.S. mllitsry pollcy.
Ziegler llmlod that the Incident
lhould not be interpreted aa a rellectlon
on a million and a quarter other
Americans who served In Vletnam and
were now bacli: home. Retor empbaalzed
Ibis polnl alao.
111 am convtnced that the overall record
of the hundreds of thoUsands of American
llOldJen who have participated In combat
openlloe ill Vllll1111t 11 -of decency,
con.tlderalloe and mtralnt toward the
clvtll&lll who find tbemaelves in a tone of
mllitaey opentlom," l\eJor said.
Haor llld that whatever happened al
5ool My WU "wholly unnpresentaUve of
the manner In which ow forcta conduct
military operations In Vietnam."'
The only American toldJer specjllcally
ctw1ed in the ca11e ao far la a lleuteDant
acouaed In the death of Iii. perlOlll.
known about it."
Ford meanwhile &aid In a stalomen~
"Responsible authorities In the .Depart-
ment <If the Al'my la Vietnam knew aboul
tbe Soni MJ m--=re.'' .
'1The 1ocldent oc:corred bl March t •
and It came le their aUenlloe shorUy
thenlllor," be said. "Tiiiy lllvutigated
but no alllrm1Uva lcllcia wia taken. I
bave not Im~ tllat lbe.oecretsry of the
Army, the Army chief ol atall or Gen.
Weatmorelaod knew about tbe incident.''
WlllllD1 C. W-.ianct, -Army chief of staff, wd U.S. commander in
Vietnam at the Ume of the alltged ln-
cidenl
Asked why Ulere was no public state.
ment about the .Ueged massacre
between last April, when Secretary of
Defense Melvin R. Laird first heard the
allegation, and Jut September when
fannal charges were made, Friedbeim
rqlled a new invuU11Uoo then was
under way and no charges had been
decided.
Goodell Reports
More Atrocities
In S. Vietnam
WASHINGTON (AP) -sen. Charles E.
Goodell (fl.N.Y.), oaid Wednesday he has
received reports ol several atrocitlu in
Vietnam alnce ukinl for an lnvutipUon
of the alleged My Lal muucre.
He declined to stve any delalll, but
said that ln at leut one instance he
understood that the case involved Soulh
Vletnamue troopo primarily.
Goodell laid the reporta involved more
than one case beyond the My Lai instance
and an unsubstantiated report by Rep.
LJonel Van Deerlln (D-Callf.), that a
village was used for tara:et practice.
"I have several other reports of
atrocltlea: In Vietnam," said Goodell.
He declined to 11peclfy how many
reports he had received or how serious
the reported imtances were.
Biafra Asks Talks
BERN, Switzerland (AP) -Blafra's
leader, Gen. Odumegwu Ojukwu, has ask-
ed the Swiss government to help arrange
for peace talks in the Nigerian cooflict. a
high official of the Swiss Foreign Office
said today.
PoUce Aid burtlan who may evea
have bad a kty looted the Ma-King,
2'11 E. 17th St., oo Tueaday, maldn& oil
with fl,611 tn mercbandJse In the Orm'•
fUOO van.
Officer James Farley dl.scovered the
burglary ill South Coast PllUl at 1:1!
a.m. today, estlmatiQg lhsl he boo
mtsoed catcblng them 1n the 1c1 by two
or three moments.
Patrolman Tom Laur had passed the
sctne only a short time e.arlier and all
was well.
The Mattress King burglary was dis-
covered during the day Tuesday by
owner 'Thomas H. Pap, who dllcovtreid
entry was made via the frcct door and
the entire showroom looted.
The loss included a kin& al&e W ,
.,.orted linens and other IUmtshlnp. u well as m.•ltreAU, bedl\nldl ind
the like, all believed loaded oolo the Ill
ton company truck.
Scientists See
New Moon Rocks
At Space Center
SPACE CENTER, Houston '(UPI) -
Earth ecienUsts set a look at 26 to 30
pOunds ot the moOn tonight when they
open a suitcase sized box sealed by
Apollo 12's explorers on a dusty desert
called the Ocean of Storms.
The aluminum case, believed to contain
1 large amount of dlrt, moon beads and a
few rocks, rests in the same vacuwn
chamber in which man's first lunar
samples were inspected from the Apollo
11 eipedition four months ago.
Tbt box is one of two flown to the
spoce caiter from Apollo 12'1 SoutlJ
Pacific recovery area. One arrived Tue:;.
day and one reached the moon laboratory
early •todaY..
Scientlata had planned to open the first
box thlt morning, but when the 1eCOl1d
container arrived, they discovered there
had been a mlxup and the second box
was the one to be opened first. This
delayed the opening process until tonight.
The other box will be unsealed Frkiay.
Dr. Daniel H. Anderson, curator of the
Lunar Receiving Laboratory, welgbei;I
both boxes and said they contalne1l
between t>5 and 59 pounds of lunar soil
and rocks.
In addition Apollo 12 atronaut.s Charle!
''Pete" Conrad, Richard F. Gordon and
Alan L. Bean stowed at least one sack of
rocks as big as grapefruits In the com-
mand ship Yankee CUpper. They will re-
main in the astronauts' quarantine van
on the recovery carrier Hornet and ar·
rive here with the pilots Saturday.
Altogether, project officials estimated
Conrad and Bean collected as much as Ill
to 90 pounds of moon dirt and rocks dW'>
Ing their 1¥.: miles of hiking on the Ocean
ol. Storms last Wedneaday and Thursd11.
REWARD for Early Bird
Cbdstmu Sh!JRP81'8_
Thia Limited Eclition
Royal American Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
1111--CLIP THIS COUPON ---
With Your Christm.1 Pun:h1,.
of $5.00 or Mor..
!LIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMlll
CONVINllNT
TERMS
IANKAMIRICARD
MASTER CHAR61
J. C. .JJ.ump~rie~ 'Jewefe~
1121 NEW'ORT AVENUE
COST A l.llSA
a z
21 YURS
SAME LOCATION
rHONE
14J.J401
'
'
I
. I I
I
I
.I
•
Bontingion Bea~h~
• EDlllON
. * .. *-----* voe. 61 .. NO. 283', 3 SECTIONS. -30 PA~-
r ' -i • ' . • assacre. --~lC -
-· '
-----------. ---------.. ._ -. -_____ ._...
. -·
-' '
Blood A_id~-:~~etJy B~nd Vote
GWC Student.s Make ·sacrifice
By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of "" O.lly Plllf Stiff
It's tough for 1 colle1e student to be
charitable arou¢ Thanksgiving.
Usually he Isn 't working and the money
he carries io his pocket scarcely pays for
more than a hamburger and a malt.
Five students at Golden West College
were determined however, to provide
needy families in Huntington Beach with
Thanksgiving diMers.
And the way they did tt was to sell
their own blood, perhaps one.of the most
meaningful contributions ooe human
being can. mate to anotller.
Mike Longo, an accounting major from .
Garden Grove, said he and his frlendll ar~
rived 11 the Idea while pia)'lng cards in
tbe <afeteria.
"We decided that we wanted to do
10mething n10re meaningful than just
collect money and that's why we decided
to sell Olll. blood," he explained.
Last Sa'llmiay the group marched down
to a commercial bloodbank in Santa Ana,
stretched out their anna, and gave one
pint each. The reward was '4 per person.
"At first we were afraid lhat they
wouldn't take our blood," he continued.
"They told us that they already had their
quota in Type 0 and a11 or UI tested out
at Type o. Finally they decided they
needed i~ after all."
The group then contac~ the Women's
Assistance League of Huntington Beach
and asked thenl to provide •·list of needy
families,·
"I don't tliink our blood money ls going
to go too far. We had no idea there were
so many genuinely needy people in Hun-
tington• Beach," be added.
The students have also collect.eel
various canned. ·goods at the college to
rouod out the dinner. "My mother even·
told me s&e would bake tome pineapple
upside.down cakea for the project,'' 6&id
Longo.
Those wbn participated In the project
are Longo, Cosy Werner, Sharon Parent.
Dave Strough, and Augie Longo.
"We're going to try for some more
before Thanksgiving ~gh," aald Mike.
"l hope that we can get about 20 to
participate."·
Ar ea Legislators Diffe1~
On Needs of Huntington
By JACK B-.ai:
Of .. 0.-Piii!' ...
Different views on subjects vtt.al to
Huntington Beach were expn!Sled by
state and county legislators during a din-
ner meeting Monday with the Huntington
l Beach City Council.
Controversial subjects covered included
the proposed Balsa Island nuclear
desalting plant, the expaniiion or the Hun-
tington Beach Edison plant, and the
Local Agency Formation Commisalon
(LAFC).
Meeting with lhe councilmen were
siate Senator John Schmitz (&-Tustin),
1 Assemblymen Robert H. Burke (R·Hl.Dl·
Ungton Beach) and Robert Badham (R-
New;iort Beach) plus Orange County
Supervisors David L. Baker and Alton E.
Alien.
Badham said he believed the ~.lsa
Jiland project was dead because of rwng
costs and other fact.ors. He cited op-
po&ition of conservaUooil!its, the current
Two Huntington
Men Given Award
By W estrni.nster
Two men from Huntington ~acb were
among four cited Tuesday rugbt by t~
Westminster City Council for their
bravery in pullini a trapped man from a
blimlng vehicle Oct. 12. •
'The award was presented by Cow>-
ci1woman Joy Neugebauer to 1bomal L.
Donahue and Robert L. Scbleicbef. Hun-
tington Beach; and Jeffrey C. Harris and
William R. MaM~ Anabe~m . . ..
~· coi,;j._ ..... wa!illaa ol COii
lriughl on by Atomic t....v Co!ll-
-ngulatlons. Burke disagreed, calling the Bolsa
Island project "Inevitable." He said a
lack of funds was holding it up, but only
temporarily. lie also said Colorado River
wate. now used· in the county was show·
iog heavier mineral cOntent and even-
tually would have IA> be blended with
desalted ocean water to be u.seable.
Councilman Henry Kaufman asked If
state funds could be appropriated !or the
project and was told by Senator Schmitz
that there is no real surplus of state
funds and with the bond marRt problem
the future is not brigbL
Badham said the local Edison plant had
to be expanded to meet growing ele<:-
trical 1>0Wer needs and discotJnted pollu-
tion figures cited by WiWam Fitchen,
county air pollution control officer.·
He · was backed in the attack on 'Fil·
chen's figures by Burke who' Said that to
attribute 30 tons a day of pollutants to the
local plant was unrealistic when com·
pared with Los Angeles County where lZ
limes as mucb·production produces only
90 tons.
Supervisor Baker defended the county
board's request for a moratorium on all
fossil fuel (gas and oil) burning electrical
generating plants.
''11te solution to controlling emissions
from web plants is here today," Baker
said. ••Funding is the problem." He said
the state Public Utllltles Commlsslnn
should allow the uUUUes to spend
research money as an operatlng cost.
Badbam auageated that 11preasure
should be put on the auto manufacturer to produce a amot-free automobile."
Mayu-Jack 'Gn.en wanted to know 1£
lbe Legislature Is planning laws to
strengthen the I.AFC and ran into strong
oppagiUoa from Senitor Schmitz, who is chairman~ of the senate's Local Go"ern·
(See MlimNG, Page 11
. .
Education
Drive 01\.'d
Approval of a pre-election intormation
campaign for the Huntington Beach
Union High School Oistrid 's proposed
$9c5 million bond lssue >was granted by
district trustees Tu~sday.
lt conafsts of recruitme:rt oC volunteen
lo colleot canipalp funds, prlnllng ol
pamphlets and news releues, !onnatlon
of various subcomrni.ttees and p,Jblic
talks by meniben of the board of
trustees, prior to the Feb. 10 election.
Several board members Indicated their
wlllipgness lo make appearances be!ore
community organizailon.s ·to point out the
necessity of the bond measure which will
be used to finance the ·construction of
another comprehensive hlgb school and to
bring a classroom wing at the Hlltltington
Beach High School camp.\s up to required
earthquake safety standards.
Trustee Ralph Bauer' told school .ac1.
miniatrators he would do everytbin( in
his power to make the election suc-
cessful. · .
"You.baye1my body" he said.
"You don't haft;~·" supped
'1)1lslee J~ --who llu -. gWeotJy appa1ed ~ issue • the
l!!Olllldl lbat "exi.illil . l>IP -' !acililles coula. be .... ..,. ~UY •. 'dppooillon ...... ...co.i 111 R*rt Go-. ,chaJmian ,ol ID organizing ......
mittee of a new group called Citizens
Organized lo Support Scbnols.
Jn a prepared statement, he told
trustees his group "proposes to validate
the hypothesis that the districl C&1 pro-
vide quality education for its studentl
without resorting to a sixth com·
prehensive high school.
"We plan to collect and to evaluate 'all
the relevant data, and we plan to make
public both our conclusions and the
means by which wt reached them In
order that everyone may judge for
himself the validity of our judgments." '
Truatee Bauer replied,·" AU of a sudden
you come oo tbe·scene &1d say I'm 1obie
to fight you. The sb<th high school' may
j\fst come out t,o·bt the alternative ·tbat'a
best:"
Trustee Matthew Wefllker said' he Is
reluctant to let Gordon "use meeUnp of
this board as a political forum."
Valley's City Hall
Shut Friday Too
City Hall will be closed both Thursday
af)d Ftiday in Fountain Valley as city
employes enjoy a two-day Thanksgiving
celebration.
Employes In Fountain Valley take two
.days for Thanksgiving each year because
they forsake Admissions Day as a holiday,
!aid City Manager Jim Neal
Huntlngtcn Beach citY offices alto will
be closed both Thursday and Friday.
Post Offices will observe reguJar holi-
day acbedules 'I11ursday, Thanksgiving Day.
Mail will be picked up from deposit
points on holiday schedu1es aod processed' for outgoing dispatch but there will be no
regular window or delivery service.
Indians and Pilgriuas
Whitney Brown and Cindy Hanson, both 6, of Fountain Valley's New· larid Sdloot,· were among thousands of Orange Coast youngsters who
learned• about the.m'eaning of Thanksgiving ·this· week by-re-enacting
the original Thanksgiving Day feast in homemade Indian aDd Pilgrim
coatumes.
'4 -;, f I "'~ • · · · ~ • t r1· · :1 J 1 • • '·~, •· ':·1 · '1 ~ •: ~·, 1' "• }
vriU~r··EYifig: Developers:: · ·
-.
For Funding of New Parks
·FounlA>ln Valley lloPes to squee,. more
money -as much as $300~000 -out of
developers in the future for the city's
parks and landscaping needs.
The nioney can ·bO gained · threufi a
chahge in ·city Ordinances, already ·
recommended by the planning and park!
comrilisslona, which would · esse.ntlaDy
double~the required fees per Jot.faripark
devel9pme~t. . . . ,
·eurrehlly the city charges~ devel,?per's
StoO Per lot for a straight R·l (sinil;le
family) development, $65 per unit' for
multiple family. and $200 per lot for. plan·
ned developments with an average lot
size under 7,200 square fee.
The proposed new ordinance comes
before the city council Dec. 9. lt would
change the fee structure as follows:
Straight R-t -$200 per lot.
All plaMed developments -$300 per
lot.
MUitipie family : $65 for a one bedroom,
$95·for two bedrooms,.and $125 for three
bedrooms and up. 'J\le prppoeed change Is expected to
pass the ' city counCil. Councilman Ron
Shenkman pro)l06ed the olucly which· led
to the new (Jgureii.
Pllinning ditec(or Stan Mansfield
developed the· fee slrQdure based on ~ · sa~pling of 11 other ciUes using a park .
fee ·1ystem. . "Under our current system we charge
the '6th highest rate," be explai~,
"under the new fees we would be'the 5th ·
highest."
Considering the cost of land for a park
' and devek>pment expenses, Mansfield
estimated .the city could justify .a f~ ~f
$400 per ·lot but recommend~d ,agalnst 1t
because or ~er heavy Jqt fee11 r~ulred bl' 1J1e city.
"If adopted the new f!e .scallt'·ahoukt
solve a predicted '3()0,000 deficit In the
futur,e for our park acquisition/' he AJkl.
Huntington Girl
Escapes Death
Pistol Accident·
Near tragedy was averted Tuesday
night when a young Huntington Beach
girl was accklentally shot by her 12-year·
old brother while he cleaned a pistol.
·Police said Melody Shuman, 19, of 502
Huntington Ave., was not seriously In-
jured when hit by a bullet from a .22
caliber automattc pistol. She is listed in
good condition today at Huntington
Intercommunll>; Hospital.,
Ttie accident occurred about, I p..m.,
while Melody was stretched on the floor
With her school books and her brother,
Erk, was cleaning and loading the pistol,
said lJOllce. '
.Erk told investigators t~at he bad 'been
cleaning Weapons for about three houra
Each of them defied Ule poss1b1hty . o[
explosion as they rescued Daniel Garcia, sa HunUngt.on Btach, from the cab of a
oo'rning pickup truck which had overt.urn-
ed at {he 1nte.rsecllon of Brookhur&l
Street and McFadden Avenue 1 n
Westminster. Garcia, wbn had received third degree
burns over 40-percent or bl1 body, died
three weeb alter the accident, despite
frealmenl In lbe burn ceoier of ""-..
Orange County Medical Ceni<r.
Pair Nabbed • Ill Shootout
when he · walked across the room and
t.Mpped over his 1lster'1 out.stretcheil
Jep, discharging the weapon.
·The .... chUdren's mother, Mrs. Ruby ·
Shuman, told police sbe was uleep afthe
time of the accldenf, but was awakened
by her son who. told her what happened.
The men tbem1elves rect.lved burns u
tt>eY extra<ted a-la !rom the pickup.
PILOT OFFICES
$HUT THURSDAY
All DAILY PILOT olllces will be cloled
Thursday In observan<e of 'l'hlnk!glvlnl'
Oay. The holiday ed.iUon of the
I newspaper will be pubUsbed on a
"Saturday" schedule for rn or n I n g
delivery to homes. I A special feature of· the bnliday edition
I will be the inclusion of 8'veral sect.Jons
devoted to Chriltmas '1lnppin(. In ad·
ditlon to b1rg1lna to be found In area
.tores -carried In lbe special ..ctlon
.:ds -the aections will contain g1ft Ill&"
I g"tions "1ld bnllday ...... storlet !rom
literally throulh«JI the -Id.
'
· Bandit Swpec~ Deputies in Car. l)uel
A pair ol blndJt suspects are In Jail
today liter tha1 allegedly engaged
Orange Camty Sheriff'• depuUes ln a
running .,.. botlle during a tOO-mile-per-
boor punall Jhrooll> tralllc on two rr,..
...,. Tlleaday ••
--ended In Norwalk with a thn:e-car pllup, bul a Loo Angeles Counly
Sberlff'1 deputy u6d be ram med his
patrol·ca:r Into the wrttkage, to slam the
door ol lbe getaway car shut and trap
the fleeing men.
Donald L. Honigan, 25, of Anaheim,
and Bruce L. Amico, 20, of Buena Park,
were booked into county Jan on charges
of armed robbery and assault with lnlent
to commit mltlder.
Alllbnrttla aald a Jill Mtpiwn re-
volver WU confiscated fnlrn the cetaw~
car, along with Sl,000 believed taken a
short time beloro In a Cole's Markel roiJ. bert in Anaheim.
tnvestlgat.on .asatrt six &hot.I were
!Ired from the getaway car al punulng
I
. . .
lawmen, while they returned. lhe fire HoldiJlg. thf,ll'}ownJflre·.to ·aVokt endan-.
with five Bhotcun ~blaatl before the su~ getlftg · other . motorlsU:, the deputies
pect a1,!lo careened out of c<l!ltroJ at the finally got a clear: shot at. 'the Rosecrans
li1.mlle point. Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad's five '
Sherill's Ll Bud' Mann said the bar· shotgun bla!ts hit the Deelng car: '
rowing chue began when a white sedan ~ty Horton~ wu 'tra~qng:at1hiih_
whizzed by deputies na .. Skaull!tad and speid-anCl.,..ei7an •il1e ~l_!IU(,,tlie')•
Jercy Horton. ataUooed on.lbe San lllqo IUIJIOCI'•' c!ar hortle4 -Jt.-.,,..__,-
Fteeway In Loo Alamia 1 med' Into a "' driven bY Sarah Rlch-U~ t~blod'*i:'= ::::; . T~11.i!~~~ h ....... ,.,
the market bnldup; pluo tbe getaway gulilre, but MY.':'-Jll.!>ardson-lllffired
car's license number. cull and bruises in f.he fC\'!Ultkin 1at·
Skaugstad and Horton aald they recog-Katen. ~vem1e aoll lilt !,._.,-ail.,
nlzed their quarry. " Ll Mann Aid the po~ were aboot to
"OUr deputies saw tJjl ,car 10 by and net "on foot ' ·when Norwalk .-, SIW!l't!'s
follawed I~" said Lt. M~. "At Katella ' Statl...-Deputy Rayinond Serna -
Avenue on the San Gabrifl Froaway, they I lila .cor ·info 'the opanlng <Joor ol tWn,
lumed Ofl the red lights atll llrtn." lltPPIDl,.them ~ ' I
Horrigan and Amlco-boCI! ""~ In I t)Ye'Olbet patrol can !tom jlle !JASO!
a chain of Orange Counl1 holdup/>-'abnL llMlciil <Jn m.tiNk• ml alao ~
oil northbound on the lr<eWIY and the 1 11.W. pallod _...., ~·&eeway'at -·
deputies reported 111 radio they were Boulevard •to .hak the IUlj>ects wlion unde< tire. -pooslble.
,,,
I
Police.labeled the ahootll)g an accident,
. . ___ ;.=-.:4
~ . .., .•.
N.Y .. ~ee••
..
Te-I· CENTS I
ress
"
Army ·~Bar~~
' • r • • '
Ci)lor. Slides ,
Ot ·Victinis -
. Fnm .'l\'lrt ....
W~GTON _-Toil ArmY. olllcials
unfolded today, before a!.*:ked and
sicltehed members of Congress. detalh of
the a1legeil U.S. masaacre of South VI«·
nam~ villa(en, iDcfudlng color 'slides
s)\owin( piles.of~ bodies.
iDle lllsplay, lo the ,s.nate and House
Anned Services commlltees, !ollowed
ahOrtly a -Whlie House declaration' that
thi! aj]epc! March Jill matsacre at· M
4i IS •·a~~ 10 !lie comc1eoce or aft the Amertcan people." ~
Pr.-Se<retary Ronald t. ZJec1er,
al-a.g that he wu sj1eaklng !0< NlxOn,
pledaed thal all "'illegal and Immoral
oonduct, as alleged," would be dealt with
by the Anny and the Adn!lnlstntiOQ.
Secretary ol the Ariny Stanley R. Resor, who appeared before the com-
mittees, descrtbed the em11s a1·My Lal
as "appal!ing" and said the fnvesUgaUon
has been broadened to Include whether
details ofrl!le .U.eit.,... ldlllnp were
cover'ed up.
,Sen. Stephen M. Young [D-Ohlo). aald
one calored slide ahowed "noncombatant
citizens ' who had been. killed · at close
range .,t:th their inaides hanging out."
He· -~ed lhe -... ad of
lwulalltj thal ---""""1ed tn· ~· tlnie." -. ·«fft m,i can g'Qemllon tllat there·wu an a ........ 1 .. .,. .... ol • to \700
c~· Y<imr ilild. 'flJ!hert cin M no
just~ica~on !or an act ol brutality of Ibis klnd."-
·s.n. l)anlel K. lhouye CD-Hawaii), I
much ~ecorated l\'orld War U hero wbn
ioSt 'llli right army In ltaly, aald, "'I
lhouihl.l'd-be ,a 'hll hardened ai...t lhls,
bOt I must say that'J'rn sick about thll."
:The· illdes exhibited by· lletlor ~I' the
h~arinp, hurri~ arranged , as· pro.
tesq.Uqus about tJie Incident swe.IJed both
at ~ome and abroad, were a dozen photos
sah;l to1bave bem taken on the day, of the
killings by an Army c o m b a I
pl!Otographer. Ronald Hatberle.
Haeberle ts amonr wltne.... lo the
alleged massacre who recently have
given gniesome details of the shootings in
the villag~.
Sen. Inouye, aaid one slide showed "a
young woman Standing up begging, her
child mi standing around her, knowing
that she would be killed an'1nstant latir."
Inouye said, he wU "1lck about It,"
and a<Sded :
"'Ibere is no question that men, women
and chUdren, •Pi>arently non-combatants,
had been. killed.''
Rep.' Leslie · Arends CR-llL), Hid the
pictures shewed ... masses of bodies but
said Oiey did not show that Americans
did lhe kllllnr.
11They were pretty gruesome pie· turq?" someone· a1Xed. ·
"Yeah," Arebds replied. ''Yeah, J\te
got a queasy stom&ch."
In a statement to White House
repottefs following_.days or pmtm.nt
questioning · -and v i r t u a,l t y nen--
coriunittal replla -Ziegler said the
President vlew<d Ibo lnckleol .. "'In
di~t violation" o~ U.S. military poijcy.
NEW YORK (AP) -The slock market
took on a firmer tone in quiet tiadliit late
t<lday. CS.e quotatlool, Pag" ~I),
'l:ou&
Weadler __ .. , ...
The weatherman'• wlahlnc )'1111 a
haJllll' 'l'hlnkq!Vlng with aunn1
alda """" the Oranp Coll! and
temperatures llb6ed in the !Ow
IO'~
INSm£. TODAY-" • ' • I . . . .. . -<lnlllo< Co..i,· IUpmifaort
h8ff taken what mau be the:
Jlm •l<P to m>atutlonite coimcv
1 bafllcina 'proctdurfi. Paoe 1. -' t ~:-:.~ "'ft
~ 14 =.:~.::. : I I 111 UR' 1 .. 1l ,.... ... -" =...~ 'J -, ..... • 1+11 .
j
\ '
--. --.. Or-..c..r ' ,,... 1.1 --. = .... ,.,.,:::-~ ,....... , .. ,. ·-' """ ...... ... ....... """' .....
J DAILY I'll.OT H
Burglars
Get Haul
Of $10,000
~ burglan looled two Colla
M .. ._ of ooarly ,10,llllO In valulllleo
TuOldly and early today, lncludin& a
qLWlllf3' of bedroom fumlahlnp In whlcb
the company truck was stolen and uaed
in~ ptaway. ,
Patrolllnl policemen mlslld !lie !elm
whlcll -e Into Suri, Roebuck &
Company, Sollh Coast PIW, by ooly
moments: tarly · today, according to
investigators.
Someone using an unknown lnslrum<lll
!mashed a g1us door in the building at
3333 s. Brbto1 St., looting Ille premilll
of '2,IOO in .....,,.,.leather eom trio)-..
m<d In fur.
Police said burglars who may ....,
have bad I key lboled the Ma~ Kl>(, :rm 11. 17111 St., '"' Tueaday, mUliir off I
with 11,•1 In merchandise in the llnil'•
$4,509 van.
Officer Jam ea Farley . dilcovertd the
burglar)' hi !!oath Cout Plara at l:fi
a.m. today, estimating that be had'
missed catching them in lhe act by two
or three moments ..
• WJl.T '"'°' 1111 ,._ RI ADY TO KICK OPP .'TOYS l'OR TOTS' DRIVI
Pvppt!Mr -•nl MltdMll, Sft. J ..... Hinde,_
•Toys for Tots~
•
·------~--
Schoc;>l Vandals Sought
Mesa Hard of Hearing Center. Hit
ID.,..uptloa OCllllm>es today IDto BD
Ink ' aad ,alai-llurl!IJI raid at Colta
Mela'• Wilton 8cbool, where classroom
peta ..... 'killed and 1Plrlll of·' llOllle
parUcularly sem!Uve studenll c:ruahed.
Repalra to the two dusrnoms used to
teach children with hea~ defects -
who 'coriie from as far iway as Hun-
tlnglea Beach and San Clemente -will
cost 12.111111 and Jul lltrOlllh9ul the Melt.
Colla -Polloe Deledlve Pot Alex-ander Is probllJI the 1e..:.ie.. weokend
ramP11e at the two specialized rooms
among 2Z in tbe fad.lily and was out of
the staUon today. .
Indications are that the two used for
the prwchool and klndergarteo bard.of·
hearintJ~ams were seJected at ran-dom, they are not visible to
passersby on the Met nearby,
"I don't think tlds .,..., aimed 1t thl
• llard-<lf-hearlpg ..-oeram,.. say1 Mra.
Elsie Deeter, who teacbea the' moi'o1ni
seS!loo, while lf.1aa Bobble La Buda ln-
!lruc:ll In the afternoons. Whoever bnlb In during the weekend
toaaed lndelibte ink and paint over
clllldren'• proJecll, _fatolly oonlamtnallng
water IA bo>pla f<r eoldfllh and turlles, and= ~plla' handiwork. s tDI uaed to teach
har<klf.-ing dr"1 l111J<IY escaped
dam1&1. but tbt IOUndproof moms are:
unavailable for use while repairs are in
pn>gms.
A $1,700 amplifier and earphone sets
were splattered with ink an<J paint and
Prlndpal Hubert LeathennaD says there
ls no immediate way to determ\ne
whether fumes ml&ht dam.lie the
sensitive gear. ·
One of the mosl Jrleplac,eable loiles. .,....
besides the heartbreak of children and·ln-
terrupllon in their l<arnilJI -Is tha1 . of
13 years' worth of pupil ret0rds dwnped
tnto a toilet.
''I don't have any Idea fiow to beglft to
replace them," said Mrs. better. '."they
. pve me medical knowledge ol Uie CIUleS
and 'effects of eldi di\ld's bea/lni loss
and llelpea me understand the problems associated with belpm, him learn ...
The two leadlers are-oooUnu.ing. work
witb the youngsters this week in corners
of other classrooms, but lack of the
special equipment and the familiar en·
vifonme~t of their spe<:ial place makes it
hard to ie.rn.
Bond Interest Hike OK'd
San Joaquin Voters Pass Increase to Seven Perce nt
By PAMELA HALLAN
Of !fie EMiiy ,1191 lt.tf
plication with the state to construct more
schoo~ .
structlon projects since It has no more
money to loar.. .
Pallo~ Tom Luar had passed the
acene ooly a abort !Im< earlier and all •
WU well.
Marines Start Annual Drive
A measure boosting the interest rate on
school bonds from 5 to 7 percent was
passed overwhelmingly by voters in the
San Joaquin School District TUesday.
~'.Wt'll have to make a precise
detennination as to where our ne:s:t
school will be," he continued.
"We're rmbhlng two e I em en tar y
schools now. One Is in rr.ldlon Viejo and
the other is in El Toro. We have two
more toon to be cooatructed in Mission
Viejo and Turtle &cit.
Neriton said the current .Price or a
school is in excess of $1 m1Uion so that
the bond money can be used for two
schools with some left over. ·
'll>e llatlml Kin& burglary WU di>-
--durlnJ the day Tuelday by owner Tbomu H. Page, who dll<over<d
entry -made via the "'1al door and
the enllnl obown""n looted.
Tiie loll Included a klnc Ille bed,
UIClrted lloelll and other flD'T'!Mlap.
u well u mattm-, bedspreadl and
the like, all believed lolded ooto the 11'
loll CCIDJ>UY lnlck.
Huntington M~n
Arrested on
Burglary Count
A aell-<mploied Huntington Beach ml-
dent WU armt.d Tuelday nilht on a
wammt from Los Attielel afttt police
alle&• they recovertd '20,111111 In office
equlpmllll --• Loo ADpJes ecbool earller lhls moath.
Robert w. Engllsb, ~. of um Feola
Clr<le, Is being beJd In dty Jill today on
Char.., of burcliry, reoeM111 stolen pn>
perty, pouelllon o1 naroolla, and crand
theft auto.
lnftatlgators from the Los Angeles
Police Department are expected to ques.
tion him today in cumectlon with a large
liurglary of of!loe equipment from an un·
dlsctooed l"1S Angeles scbool.
Huntington Beach Qfflcers said various
ltema, otber than !he olflce equlpmeo~
wert. recovered which might Implicate •
En1lilh in robberlea In Costa Mesa,
Garden Grove, Anahelm and Fulltrton.
lnveatigaUon is BUll under way to
determine the origin of a r t l c I e s
recoftred, one of which was a motorcy~
cl•. On the booking lheel Engllah had
lilted bls occupaUon u "sell-employed,"
polloe said.
Coed Surf Club
Started by Y
A coed 1Urfln& club, complete with
boanll, haa been •tarted by the Hun·
tington Beach YMCA.
Richard Collato, clireclor, said a pro.
gressive system ol awards is being
developed for the aurfJng club and that
,;everal surfboards have been donated to
the venture by Jack'• SUrf Shop.
Surfers will be awarded YMCA
emblems {or jackets, and cards denoting
skill levels. For more informaUon call -·
~AIL Y PllOI
(llANG9 CO.UT P\JallSHINO COM,AM'r
Roh.rt H. Wttl
rraldtnl lllMI l'Wtlllllt
Jt,~ R. C.rl:r
Vlc9 'rn10t11I Ml(I °""" Malllfl'
Th1111111 k11.,il Edllllr
Tho"''' A. Mw1r,hTno M1n111n1 f.ei or
Alborf W. lol•t
AHtclt!1 ldllOr
"'"'' ...... IHcll OfflA JQt Ith Streit
M1lli11t A1Ur1'" r.o. 101 no, t2•41
OtWOffkot
.. ......,..14f(ll! 1~11 \Wt1 !11n,i1 9GlllC'llrf
(•It Melot~ :L)CI W~ll OIY 51rul
UWN lrlCl\1 W ,_,, "'""'""
l
'Ille U.S. MarlDe Cocps will kick off. Iii
annual •'Toys f<r Tots" drive lh1s Friday
eveoina In the 1iuD11111toa Center Mill.
Maj. Paul S. Marc1n1 of the Ind Ba~
taliDD, 23rd Marlnel ol seal Beach, who II
-llq the toy procram In this
area, ·will ·belln· the Otten>Ollll by
switching on the IJihll on the hop
Chrll!mu tree In the HIJDllniloD Center,
Followlnl the lrte-liaJ>lllJI, • free
CbrUtmaa ... ppel lbow Wiii be pr .... ted
by the Mltchell 'Marklnetlel, Also In-
cluded tn the celebT&Uon are holiday
""'" and Chrll!mu carols by the
"Oilpter V" &iris alnging rroup from
Padlico 11111> School.
Dooated IOyl may be left at the drop
box, located near the Cbrlslmaa tree In
the mall Tiiey abould not be wrapped, to
faclllltte dlslribllUon accordlng lo qe
andteX.
Tiie IOyl abooJd be new or ID l(OOd -dltlon. Stufled ~-hand toys are not
acceptable, however, because of Allllary
...,.iatlonl.
Collectlon of the toy• will continue
through noon Dec. 23, when they will be
picked up by the Marines. and dlalrlbuted
to underprivileged chlldren.
Votert1 approved the measure nearly I
to 1 with 2,011 votes ln favor and 540
votes against.
'I11e measure passed in each of the four
prttlncls In Leisure World, the Laguna
Hiiis mlroment community.
•'°ft)e closest we came wu in one rural
prednct where out of 14 votes cast. nine
were for and five were •&ainst. "· said
District Businea Manger Rex Nerison.
"We're smiles from ear to ear around
here this morning," said Nert.son. He said
the first thing to be dooe will be !IUDg ap.
"We're a (ltWng a lot of growth in the
central area arotmd the Ranch develop.
men!. We'll be lookln( wlously there. We
abo Deed an Intermediate ICbool In El
Ttn and Turtle Rock."
He said the distrlcl haa 13.1 million
authorized for coostruction. Nonnally,
bond money Is used to pay back state
loans, bul the state has been permitting
districts to use their bond money for con-
Comparing last year's bond election al
which time $5 million was authorized, he
said that with 24 nercent voler turnout
the measure had pissed with 80.7 percent
voling yes. Although ooly 15.4 percent o[
the voters turned out for this election, the
yes vote ratio was nearly the same, 71.t
percent
"We hope we'\le set a precedent for
olber districts," said Neri.son. referring
to the fact that his was the first diatrict
in Orange Coun1y.to attempt to raise the:
interest rate
"I know several were watching iL"
Cities May Have to Fund
Lobbyist for Oil Ban Bill
MEETING .••
ment Committee. The aen.ator said be is
opposed to "givmg more powers to a non-
electlve body."
Supervisor Baker argued strona:Jy for
LAFC authority to eUminate overlapping
agencies and force ~rporation of
ialands in the county to clues.
My Lal Incident
Army Denies Knowing
Of Slaying Last Year
California coaslal cl1ies probably "111
have to clrlp in to pay a Washington lob-1
by;.,t to help jiusb the Cranston-Murphy·
Muskie-Nelson oil bW through tbe Senate.
Roy Marcom told fellow directors of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
thia week. ,
Reporting an acUvities of the Coastal
Area Protective League, Marcom noted
the successful passqe of two anti-drill·
tfig measures by the California Legist ... ·
lure, bufsaid the bill aimed .II restrict·
Ing drlllll'g operatl9ns In l)\e Federal
tldelandstfurther out to sea can ~ . ' tougher sleddlog.
'Mo vi.e Contract'
Lures Sec retary
Into Perversion
A preUy Newport Beacb secretary
lured by an alleged movie mogul's ap-
praisal o{ her charms was forced into sex
perversion al gunpoint Tuesday at a
Costa Me'sa shoppbg center.
The 24-year-old woman was not
physically banned In the incident, but
was shaken by bclng rorced lo perform at
gunpoint in the front sei:it of her own car.
Investigator George Wilson said the
vldim told or leaving the mall about &:50
p.m., when the rather d.lsUnguished
genUeman approached zid introduced
himself. She said he claimed to be af!illated
with a Hollywood studio. asked lf ·she had
ever beeri 1 model -which she hadn't -
then oblllned her name and addreas after
asklnc her.to pooe.
'She contlnued on to her car, she told
police, but the man , described as in hlS
forties or £1fties. followed her and then
pulled a gun.
"Get into the car," he ordered.
The young womr.1 said he BCCO!lled her,
then forced her to comznjt the acts before
ht got out ol the car and quickly disap-
peared on foot.
Extortion Case
Delay Granted
A Huntlngtoo Beach college student,
accused of 'trying to extort $5,000 from
Dr. Ralph Bauer. has been given unlll
Friday to find a lawyer for his ar-
n)gnment in West Oranje . Counl.y .
lllunlclpal Court. '
Victor Yee Tsao, 23, of 220 12th SI., apt.
21 , HimUna:ton Beacb, 11 currently in ,
-Oran1e county Jal! on susplc.Jon. ofJ at-
lfmpted ealorllon. 'Ball '"' oet at fl,111111 Tuesday In municipal court.
Police altege Tsao sent a thrtattnlng
letter laSt-Wedneadey Jo Dr. Bauer, '1,
lnlllee of bolh tl;e Octi111 View ond llun-
Ungton I Beach UnlOll High s c h 0 0 I
Disklctt, demandins •s.ooo be left at an ·
llldlic'-1 JocaUon. · -
No ~ive for \h"e C..l.stat1 Fulterton
~l's octton ba1 l>ttn detelmlotd, tc·
cordlDg to poUC<l.
It WI1l lib a lot of ellmt to get tllooe
people back there (Washington) to un-
dentand our problems," .. Mareodl,
0 and we know Uie oil comPanl• wtll.be speodlng a lot of mooey to get the bill
rejected, because they have a lot of mon-
ey Involved in this."
The CAPL. he said1 ls seeking bids
from three lobbying urms quaitned to
round up supporting votes for S 3093.
·~This gets expensive," said Marcom.
"It could cost as much as $50,000 to
1100,111111 -aod the coaital ciUes will be
~to halp." . '
M.nrder for Hite
Counts Dropped
Sdlmltz 511Qesled that perha)lO the
LAFC should be abolished and ils func·
lions taken over by tHe county Board of SuJiervloors. . • '
City Administrator Doyle Miller l!ked
the legislators: to give the cify tideland
surface rights for 11better control of
offshore drllllng Islands."
He also plugged for more oil revenue lo
the city above the one percent now
received.
High Tides Flood
Streets of Venice
• • I '
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pe~to&on Capitol Hill earlier today.
denied today ' any defense official ' ln "I think he had in mind thal some
Washington was aware last )'tar of the a1 alleged U.S. massacre ln March 1968 of 1 gener officer in Vietnam might bave-
Soulh Vietnamese vtlllige. Miown about it."
1'No high Army officials or OeJ>.!_rtment Ford meanwhile said In a statement,
of Defenae ofrlcials were aware o{ this: 11ResPonsible authorities In the Depart·'.
last year," Jerry Frtedhelm, a Penlq:on ment of the Army In Vietnam knew about·
spokesman, told reporters. ' the Song My massacre."
The JmpllcaUon 11 that Initial military "The incident occurred In March 1968
reports about the My Lal incident did not and It came to their attention shorUy
gn beyond Saigon. Frledhelm was unable thereafter," he said. "They investigated
to say how high up the mJUtary chain of but no affirmative action was taken. t'
command those flrat l n v e s t I I at I v e have~not implied that the secretary of the''
reporta reached. Army, the Army chief of staff or Gen.
House Republican Leader Gerald R. Westmoreland knew about the incident."
VENICE, Italy (UPI) -O:le of the Ford said Tuesday high Anny officials William C. Westmoreland, now Army
highest Adrlallc tides tn memory flooded were aware 0£ the alleged massacre chief or staff, was U.S. commander In
tow-lying parts of Venice and other shortly after It happened, although he Vietnam at the time of the allesed m.i
coastal cities today. 'The Ooods ·blocked declined to name lndlvtduals. ' cident. ·
Insufficient evidence has led to dro~ tourists tn their hotels and claimed two Friedheim said Secretary of the Army Asked why there was no public state-~
pina: of murder.for-hire charges against a lives. Stanley R. Rcsor discussed the matter ment about the alleged massacre
Wilmington man, while his Garden Grove High winds and low atmospheric with Ford this moml.ng, presumably to between last April, when Secretary of
partner Jn a tirt shop is stilI being in· pressure combined to raise sea level clarify the situation. Defense Melvin R. Laird first heard the
vestigated. nearly five feet above normal In Veni~. "He (Fo~) aa1d he did not mean to Im· 1 allegation, and last September when
floodin g St. Mark's Square and other ply that the secretary of the Army, the formaI charges were made, Friedhelm
South Gate Police announced the arrest parts of the city. Merchants moved their chief of staff, the vice chief of staff or replied a new investigation then was
of Alfred J. Slaton, 41, of 6501 Klllarney soaked wares from street level shops to MACY (the U.S. commander in Vietnam) under way and no charses had been
Ave .• Garden Grove, and Francis Kerr. higher ground. knew about It," Resor told newsmer. at decided.
ing, 29, of Wilmington on Monday. ,;:::"'==""=====================================.,
Charges of conspiracy to commit
murder will not be brought against Ker-
ring, according to Lt. Robtrt Taylo'r, but
both men still face other counts stem·
ming from the raid.
Investigators Said more than $50,000
worth of stolen goods. plus dangerous
drugs and marijuana were seized at
Red's Tire Inc., in which Slaton and Ker·
ring are executives.
The arrests were made In .copMCtlon
with the alleged delivery of $IOO to ar-
range the murder of a new car dealer
allesedly invqlved in art adulteroua sltua-
tiOll with someone's wife.
Mod ern, Ballet
Dance Offered
The doors are open for entrance to an
eighl·weck modern dance and ballet
course for girls ase t.12, sponsored by
the Huntington Beach YMCA.
Registration for the course, to start
Saturday, will be accepted at YMCA
headquarttts, 14776 Beach BI v d ••
Westminster. For furtheii information
caU i9MS48 and ask for Richard Collato, d~eCtOr ol the local YMCA.
Claues will be conducted at Mercury
Savtngs and Loan, 7812 F.4:1.inger Ave.,
Huntington !leach.
Weigh~. Lifting Set
In Huntington School
Adults• and high school students have
lieen "1nvlttd to work out w:ltb weiahta
1n tht Hu nUngton Be1ch Hial't .School
weight room Tu'1days and 1bundaya.
rtom ? to I p.th . · •
W<lght programs w 111 bt avalllllll,.
Uu'oilh tht tnslnlctor~ clty tacrlltJon
Offlclal1 said. There ii no charge.
'
for Early Bird REWARD . Cbl'i8tmas Sho.JJJJsrs
This Limited Ed ition
Royal American Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
.---CL IP THIS COUPON. __ _
With Your ChridmH Purch•,.
of $6.00 or Moro.
(LIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMl•l
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANICAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE 112l NEWl'ORT AVINut
COST,A MESA
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22 YEARS
SAME LOCATION
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•• SIGNING UP ~ ?!e,.ldent Ntzon ¥.z!ds souvenli 'J>8ll to S~ of Defense Melvin Lilrd after slgn-mt draft reli>rm bill. Also present for today's sign·
8eiefltists
... • I ,.... ....
' t • Studylto e
MOOl;ffRpcks
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SPACE' CENTEll,-Houaton (UPI) -
Ea!1h, ~1tn~111,,.~4~i ·~ ~ ~. imtica:"'allid :. -' l>)I ~.111s1111j1qi,.i1,,.;. • 'dUlt'' ~
e1llet Ille Ocean ot.-' • ni; ~ ~-belltyed to conlaln
a t1!'11• amount of dltt. -·lleadl ll14 a few rocks, rests· .I,· the 'liaiM-v1cuum
ch$6'.i Iii wtif~ .._,.!r , llfll '!lll!ar
88lllptes'wmd111piicled !rom' tho •Apollo
11 erpeditlon IOOZ'1nilottha qt; ' · n.e · bo1I 1a t-, ·or .two. Down ·io. 111o
•Pl~ <tnle< -,AOoDo ' 11'•· -. Pael& ffcoVe.ry ·.mi. 'One arrived Tu61-
da · and me_......, !be riiooli labor•'-"' ~'10.:i ' :-·~~ j t -J • ~'had. --to ...... tbt·!tnf ,, . .
box uur-. .. liul -1116,-:,
-·anlYOd, they cl1acovered then had been I mixup and the setond bot
wu the one to be opened finl '11111
delayad 1116 opening J!'OCell llllUI toni&ht-
'Ille other box will be UlllNled Friday •.
Draft Lottery Bill . ~igned
Dr. Daniel H. Aodenon, cur1tor of the
Lunar Recelvln1 Lab<ratory, welgbed
both boles and l4ld they contained
between 'llS lllcl • pounds of lunar ,.u
and rocks. " ., •
ln addtUon Apollo 11 atronaula Charles
t•Pete'' Conrad, Richard F. Gordon and
Alan L. Bean -at least'°" llCk of
rocks 11 bll u 'llfapelrult.1 ln'lhe CODI'
mand ship Y anlcee Cllpper. They will re-
main in the attronauts' _quaranUne van
on the recovery carrier Hornet and ll·
rive .here with the pllo\I ~tuiday.
N,ixon f.~dges End for Selettive Service Boie of New York .
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon lilJltd i.iclalatloo !oday to pave lhe
way !<r the llarl In Janmy o!'tloe !JrSI
draft lolUiry since World War Il and llld
he -ld not be satisfied until the draft
could.be ellmlnated enllrely.
Speeldnll at a ceremony In · the
Roooevelt !loom of the White House, Nix·
m l4ld the new ll)'ltem would ellmlnate
some of the inequities in the present
' Selective Service setup.
'Ill• P!'sident ~ that the lint
lottery-by-birth date rid be conducteo!
on Monda)'. This will affect January
draftees. The quota already has been set
at 12,500.
Monday's drawing wlD lake place at
Selective Service haadquarlera i o
I I Here's How New Draft
Lottery Plan Will Work
. ' I WASHINGTON (UPI) -Hm Is the
I IV•Y the °"'draft lottery will work: '
I Someone will dr•w , ~ b7 ope -
pretUDllbly !rolll I bat, ii>meiblnl l!~e
that -361 · i1umbers teprfteilfu!i the
( days of the year from Jan. 1 to Dec. SI, 1 including Feb. 29 even If tt isn't a leap
year. The men wllh birtbdates on the
ftnl date drawn will be called fint, the
oecond date secmd ancl so ob. Thooe tn
the 1111 baU of the order, wlll not likely
be called. n-in the top few dates
definl~y wil land there is a gray area
birtbdate will be lined up according to the
letter drawing in order of the first letter
of their ~ name. If some. last names
betiln )•ith tl)e same letter, ~ e.ame
order 'of :the ~I 1Vlll ~.to ~,
!lfst letter o! tbelr first nAmes. 'For ex:
ample, if the order of the lottery alphabet
was f-s-n-p-1, etc., Fred Smith would be
called llhead o! Sam Smith. (or Arnold
Sands or Stanley South).
'
-·· A IOttery drawiiig also will be held
amo .. tile 16 letters o! the alphabel AU
penona within the provmce of a draf\
board (tndtvldual boards will sWI. do Ille
calling l wbo are called according to one
During the first year of operation
(1970), all draft a8's (19 through 25) will
be subject to the lottery, Beginning in
1971, only tboae witb 19th birthdays dur-
ing the year will be vulnerable.
Collet!• defermente wlll sun be atlow'ed
for four years, but the graduate must ·
·undergo a year of eligibility after ·he
leaves college, just as thougb:be were 19.
I .
I Pentagon-to Cut Oyerseas
. Troop Strength by 15,000
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WASIUNGTON (AP)-'Ille Pentegori
announctd today a decision to reduce
military personnel abroad by 15,000. ·At
the same time the wrote House said it
ts closlng down 19 consular posts, 17 in
the western hemisphere. -~ The Pentagon action, aanouneed Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Lai ,
is part of an overall effort to reduce the
U.S . .,....... abroad.
1 The White House said reducing the
eon.suiar posts 11 a move to help solve
Bond ·Rate Hike ·OK'd.
I •O:•. -: ' ~
WASHINGTON (.u'l• -':.'l'tiO! Senate
oent to Praldent N1ui . todaY the blll
PennJttlog 'ID .lllcrnlO . In the Interest
rate tt\ aavllip bonCll from 4'1• per cent to five percent.. 'l1ie Jncre1se applies to
future Jnuea and also, rttroactive to
June 1 tbts·yHr, to the '52 bUllon of sav·
trigs bonds 1?0"' outstanding.
Fel41nt ...
20..20
extend1 fo
20•60
I.
the bothersome balat!ce of p~ymtnts problem.
Laird said ·his cieJ)artment Is also doing
away with about 3,825 civilian . jobs in
foreign areas.
The savings hoped to be r~lized by
the thret actions will appn;ixlmate $50
million annUally, officials said.
The riilni.ry cuts are part of pre-
viowily announced plans tl'I slash the
strengt!i' of U.S. armed fQtees overall by
about 2:15,0llO this year. •
President Nl,><QD '"'l9'!11ced earner this
-be w1111tid ti> mah a 10 percent
ltductlon In U.S. pmimnel located in
foreign areu. . ·
.El•ll!Pled from Ille riilntary cut, Laird iaidl are· .Ueh areu al West Germany,
SOUda :Xorta, ~Sduth Vietnam and other
areas -lllpportilg the war ettort: •·
BiggeSt manpower reduction come• in
the Pacific command which Is giving
10,965 rnilitaey. ,,ip1Ces. ,A total of about
t,400 military )Obs .are being eliminated
In Europe. ·
Li~ .. 11
· T·enn1
Av1ll1bl1
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Washington. Plans are for y o u t b
representativea ·rrom throughout the
country to draw ftom a huge bowl, one ' . by me, 3e6 capoules. Each capdule will
coota1n a date and the sequence in whlcb
Altogether, project offlclala estimated
Conrad and Bean·colJacted u lllllCh u IO
to IO poullda or moon dirt ind rockl dur·
tn1 tlt<lr tll inlles'of hlkln1onthe0c:e.n·
of Storms last Wedneadly and Thuradayi'
=·~·c1rawowilldetennioethe"c1ra1l Mesa Worker, 18
'!'he Whtt. HOU!e l4ld In a statement
that currini projections Indicate 2io,OllO In.J· ured in Fall
persons will be drafted in 1970.
Nixon signed an executive order to put An 18-year~Jd Costa Mesa construction
the lottery system h1to effec• meaning worker is reported in satisfactory con-.., dltion at South Coast Community
-
• • Pamela Dee Ted,.co, mo, Tournament of Role& Queen; findl fatty toy cat durinJ &hopping tour in New York City. She~ll,.,. blielt ti1
'Pasadena In time for annual New Year'• Day parad«i!lld a.,.e.sowl
football &!lID•·. -., .. ;, •• .~ ·~ -.·
Thanksgiving Rites Set
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11:1 Orange Coast Churches .
that by 1971 the gr~t bulk of the naUoo's Hospit.J·today after au1rertnc a back lJl.o
draftees will be 19-year-olds. jury in a fall at the FesUval of Arla ,
For the. first year, all men Jn the so-grounds Tuesday. Many churches alona the Orange Coast at tbe Senior Cltiztns Building, 15th J.
called draft pool _ moatly from 19 Charles Leslie Land r Ith , 2SOS will hold special Thanksgiving servicu Street and Irvine Avenue, Newport Beach
Westmlnater Place, an emploft of the u.; .. ev•·•·• or on Thur•A•.. at 7:30 p.m. through 25 -will be equally wlnerable. Beach eo-.~·~• on Company, wu m· • wu.o ........ ~· ~~=u J luded th " the u.-bo • Tn Laguna Beach there will be a 10 1 They will be drafted by birth dates, with jured in a JS.foot fall from a ramp oc amq oae 10 ' u..-r a.m. Thanksgivinll service at SL Paul'• f
thos"e born on the ftrst date drawn celtain leading to tbe Irvine Bowl hillside from Area •re Christ Lutheran Church, 7eo ' Lutheran Chrirch,iG Cypre51 Dr1ve, and ,_
t · and. fi..... ... 1v..... •"'-1 ~ da'-" . • new constructlon at the Bowl entrance. V1¢orla. Costa Mesa. a 10 a.m. Thurs-a .~v.ing ,eva aervk:e at _eorr.nu. \ 0 go, ·~,...."OJI ...,. ••• .,.,11/llr-TM l!owt• """"'°ae .area ii' beJita n· dfy aervi~•: SI. John llM! Divine . .\!:ola,ce;-nlty PresbY!erlan Chw'dt; ill forest '
11·....iatn not to .. 1'.."J'ned. t.oded 'over the .entrance to provlda ad-pal Cbur•• :IOl3 Or ... e .. Ave., 'CoOii, Me. at 7:30 ii.m. · · ,~~~w~:~~11;;:1;e ~ ~·· di=~~~~ ;,.., !be' 111 .. of ih ~~~:r.:.;iboi~ ~~; c=:.£.~~~· ~ :
except !or tbooe wbo were g1,.0 l'llllp 'WbUe corrytni>,a ple<t ol lalldln( later II " 10 p.m. M.,. · Vmle vw=' Flrll "'ptlat C1'lrch ;,/ llw!llqt<ll .1
materlal,'landtni 1111 ·h!S back on I truclt Metbodllit Church will bold 'l'haDbcl"'11 ~,.6th aQd ei: ... • •! 10 ~.m. and a deferments at lt and come back into the parked below. He wu liken to bollpltal Day servlcee at 10 1.z:n. _, Thanksgiving eve service al Lutbcu_
vulnerable area after llf&duatlon !rom by Wind Ambulance and Is under One Thantaglvtng eve service will be'. Chuich of the Resurrection, 9112 IWnll-
college or otherwise having exhaullecl • ,.oiibet;;;;rvi;a;;tlo;;o.;;;;;;;i. ;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;beld at Newport UnllJ' Cburt-;;;;h,i;;meetlli;;;;;;;;i. (i;;;;;ton;;. i;' ;;'t;;7;;'30;;;;;p;;.m;;;.;;;;.;;; ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,.
deferred status. II •
Nixon said the new system "does not
remove all inequiUes • • • but the agony
and suspense that ha& hung over our
youths for sev~. years .has now been
reduced to one year."
Wreck Injuries
Fatal to 'Child
Sev<Te Injuries sullerod four ~YI
earlier when he rode his bicycle in~ the.
side of a truck proved fatal Tuesday for a
nine-year-Old boy from Orange.
Todd Alexander Markle, died In Orange
County Medical Center following whit 1
hospital spOk:esman toda y said was "a
pretty hope Iese fight for life."
The boy was ridJng his bike near his
home and collided with the truck in a
busy Intersection. Police have cleared the
truck driver .of '1J'espon1iblllty for tbe
crash.
.
Two California Men
Jleld for Smuggling
EL PMro, Tex. (UP!) -Two Calllor-
.nla men '!'ere chilled !oday with COi>
· splrillg to:smu&lle as much 11 fl .I qUl-
lion wortli of marijuana into the United
Stetet by driving a camper tnick across
the murky RiO Grandt. . '
Jerry E. Hartman, II, 1 student al the
University' of California, and Roger B.
Brown, 21, a Berkeley pbotoarap'ber,
were held bt the El Paso County jail in
lieu of ·135,000 bond each. · ·
y,
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$5.98 CLASSICAL LP ALBUMS ................. : ..................... NOW $3;98
$4.98 POPULAR LP ALBUMS ..... , ................................... NOW $2.98 -.
ACOUSTIC
RESEARCH ....
Pflt.e
Sale
GARRARD 30
a,.. SJ9IO P<kl
FISHER 160•T -
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FISHER 220·T ·
DIMO-Ntw
eUAU.NTD
FM·AM
,a:.! s32910
sa1!·1f800 ..
SHURE M~91E
M91E DELUXE STEREO
ELLIPTICAL--CARTRIDGE
T1ttk1 from %•1 '/J 9rt1t11, Tr1clralti1 ify
•t I Jf•ntl 21 tllt/llC at I• kHt. , '.s;7-
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GARRARD SL-75
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30% t~ 50% .·DISCOUNTS on , STEREO,
TAPE RECORDERS, TAPES & RECORDS I . . .
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. N .-. Viets Sp~I, .. ,
Ii,•. • . ' ·gtvalry Outpost. . -,... ~ . ' ......... ·-. ·~----' . . .......... (,,..., -l!artll v--. . . . . ~ ..
lllellld a~ ~-outl""I . lbe ommuntuap:~:~ lhlJ>"ih '¥ ·'*" l!W.; • . ~ ~· blow-coo1rov~;11;1<\0 ~~nearby, ·~-.ii?..;,,/,,,-dump wblch ex-1111 1011n:ta...i.I. ,'Jlli"-dOck kllied 'ono
p,..Wont a"" Mrs. Nixon will lie ~ -violence II dtllroyed a American and ...,_ "11 olhlr.' u 1be
'"': ..... J • • a-. -valued al abnoal Comm··-•·'-~--'-' '"· •--.,. i.bosta to 235 senior clUzens,,-~tN! a.s .......... "'1nfQl'Dled U.S. ·mWtary wUDWl ·r~ ... ~ ':'4lllllll a Dll\es
·· 14"1).yeer-old Mimi• El..,...,.,,._ IGUl'CM·lt!jM1ed. northwest ol Bal.sap. .
, at nantsgiving dinner 1n' the , ' ·Hiib Cll!li!!!'te lheU. """""'"" oul ol The Sheridan ~ lj.. tome under au-·' Wlllto Bouae Mrs Eisenhower' and ·: · • · " • gresslo.,.t crtllclRD .11 lntervah durlo1 :..~--I ·Joel .Corl-, 89, of . : ;tf. *· * 1961. Crltie1 AJ' ll _ll·~vely noisy,
uw wn,; e, .. . 'f' .. .. has a leaky fuel ftaat..aad a smoke ex·
•. BoQne, Iowa, will arrnl ~e Tliw~~. L ,J;-Jg· e Agrees "haUSI which inab.. 11·...Uy visible al ., day and spend .the e~ . • .. (J(l, ifeal dislances.
"ons will leave Wasblngton after th~ , .. ' ' Gis 1n !he field 1..tta111 __ o1 ~ ~ 1o lpOlld the weekend at ~1 ··To~.;,oa· z;t; ""n . u.. lank ~CJ11111Jv•1~1 u iqlleo-per
• Bilcayne, Fla. •. ~ "' ...., · bour on land and five lhrou"1 ·-·
•. , , Ellcb Sheri4an has 1we meddne ll't'I and · N-• • also carries 30 1$3.mlllimeter rounds. It
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-!~ NttDspaper .reJlOl"f.eT Erica Wallace ·~; 1mile1 Uluni.c, .,;.J 10llo, swa!&mo.d th<
•" canaTtl ai slii re1U in bed at her
:~~·'London home Tuesday following the
hatching of a chicken in her bosom.
~--She tritd ilie 21-dav experiment fol·
, -lo~~ Lord S1WW&m11 controversial
.:~ film showing Mrs. Ella Petry ptrform·
.h\. ing a similior feat.,. Mi.ss Wallace 1r.am-
ed the cliick, shoWn sleeping ptace-
~:-tUlly, #'Anthony Ami.strong Jones."* • r Ad•m Nordw•I(, o n e . of more
C: tban·IOO Indians squatting on Ale•·
!· traz Island tD. San Francisco Bay,
;: olfered this commerit on the cOn-~: di lion of' the Jsland pruon: "When J: )'ou.Me most of· the.reservations in t thiJ:coWltry; Alcatraz looks pretty
~ good.'t
~ . ! •-w·,..,.-.•c1•t1rc•.•.,,_-ii•h111.•com.-.. ~f~ plaint to iii< c11Ji-cowl'• health ,. committee ·in Ladpood, Eno·
Zand, afUr 'purcfaas:tng a "moul· f dJI cream coke,• Der tic Stanton
~. ~ft the f'l'l.t'eting. Stanton. chair· man of the committee1 later ad-
(: mitUd he wa.1 · tht U&Opkeeper i: Who sold'ihe cake. l ._ ____ ...,.;mm=
I'. Wb~ Pat Lyn: and Mork" Drap-
• er decided. to f o r m a marketing t and communications counseling
l firm In AUanla, Ibey talked Ron-
t· aid Merrlll.and .S.muel Pierce into
1' j~lning them and named their com-
?· pany: Merrill, Lynch, FeMer and
~ Draper. ''Our rosf.er of partnt;!rs is t: complete with one exception," the
~ · attractive Miss Lynch said with a
t; straight face "when she announced
:: the new partnership. "The task
: ' now ls to recruit a talented and
;: well:financed individual in the ad-
1• vertlsing and public relation& field ~ whose surname is Fenner.''
t• •' ..
egatiations ::; •. :=rUjl~Ui.'i'i:. t:
r9'>£ing naill"W.ith·tipi.' ·
PARIS (UPI) -Ainbassad°' Henry
Cabol ,Lodie said loday lbe United Slltes
ii "1lllnC lo dl.scuas a COl.lition govern.
me_:nt for South~Vietnmn In' private talks
with North Vietnam.
Lode•· lalidoi.wtlh newamen"al lbe Ill.Id
o! lbe i41h session Of lbe Vietnam peace
talb, WU asked why the United States
could not negotiate on behalf of Saigon in
the PriVJlle qegoljatkrur wllh lhe Cqm·
mwllsts.
•'Well, I don't think there's any pre>-
blem about oUr talking about a coaliilon
government and other matters with the
North Vietnamese," Lodge· replied.
· But be made It clear the United states
thinU only lbe South VI......,_ ~em
ment can carry out · an agreement in
South Vietnam.
Lodge's response followed President
Nixon's statement on May 14 that the
United States bad ./'llo intentio1 of im·
posing any fonn oI government upon the
people of Sciulh Vietnam, nor will we be a
party to such coercion."
Nixon had held out for a "government
In South Vietnam tbit re1ults from the
free choice of the South Vietnamese ~
pie themselves" In free elections, rather
than a coalition government whose com·
position was negotJated with the Com·
munisls.
The Communists hit . with machine
guns, mortar shells and bar.ookas then
fo.llowed with a grgund asnu!t llf the.~
fuslro of the .expbll:ngrammil.nl.Uon dump'
at the camp 62 miles northeast of Saigon.
Tbe ground altack wu hurled back in
he~vy f.lghting.
One American was kl11ed and t4 wound-
ed Jn the surprise att8ct which came
before drin. lt WIS one of the lllOSt
devastating attacks in wee.kl, .along the
Cambodian .border where the lllh
Anno~ Cavaley has massed law,
annoi.d penooneJ -aod arlill aiainst an eZpected Red offensive.· ery
The millllry -.aid Ille d111111• was caused by shells of an w:rldeoUfied 9jie which preceded lbe grour.d ..,.ull
tiy'the CommW)ists who fired rocket.-pro-
~ grena~ as Ibey hil !he ou\pos.l's
defeues only to· be hurled back by fire
from un~ tanks.
The attack inflicted what the military
ofDclal deacribed as "moderate" damage
-meaning it was sei:ioui erioush to hani-
per the camp's defe.1se.
Rights Suit Set
Against Mitehell
The apparent shift in the American
position came alter two days of an In· WASHING TON (UPI) -A civil rights
direct public debate between [Adge and legal group annooncea today It had
chief Hanoi negoliator Xwm '!buy, bo\h prepared a federal stilt chargini that At.
of whom in statements to newsmen gave torney Genetal JC!M N. ,,~tchen. had
confltct1ng accoUnta cl, what has ha~ •'conspired" with JOCal ofOClals to 'delay
pened in the secret negotlations. '"' school desegregallon in the South.
Xuan Thuy toucbed oll ,U.. debate. by The organiatioc, lbe \l!ashlOgioc
charging In an interview wjlh •n research projed 1'1111 ~-pi!<Jnieys "°¥Id·
Am.ericail newspaper (the New York seek a declaratory.-,~nt <that J41t·
Time!) Uiat Lodge had refused to1discuss chell is acting illea;~y in ~_failing lo de-
"general questions" in the secret talks, mand faster desegrepUon acUon In 16
and had lnsisted~that the only subject or .school districts in seven Soulh!lm slates.
the private Wkl be the mutual · The suit chargei lhat ltlitehell and ~wal ~-of the United States. olhtr JusUCe ~t 'official{ have ·· l.odle ~\an angry rebuttal b · ,11oonspired wtth·~·~tofflciila and
Tbuy's charges, Cliiming that ~~ Hanoi • . otbC!r feder~ if¥!':,,.t&te officia1!:'' to
negOUator had deliberately tnade fJ]se •deprive ,Negro ~· c;hildren In the
statemenll about lhe American poiiUon. ··-ol l\'elr CODlll!uti..,ai 'rights.
" . ' . '
Divorce Bill·:1(Q~:1 tdly
Passes Parliament Test
ROME (UPI) -A bill lo lrtlroduce
divorce in Roman Catholic Italy passed
its first test in parliament today only
hours after Pope Paul VI intervened 011
the question lo urge the bill's defeat.
Jtaly now does not pennit divorce.
The Clamber ot Deputies rejected by a
vote of 322 to 290 a motion by the aovem-
lng Christian Democratic Party, Itself
predominantly CathoUc, lo throw out the
di vorce bill.
The vote cleared t.he way for lhe cham·
ber to begin voting on each article of the
bill with the final ballot on the entire bW
scheduled for Saturday. The bill mu st
then go to the Senile where it probably
will be tled up for months.
Earlier today Pope Paul Indirectly call·
eel for the bill's defeat by telling his
weekly general audience at the Vatican
he wants the family lo be "venerated,
honored. defended even by civil law and
al~ Italian faws."
As the chamber voted, a crowd of
divorce supporters gathere'i:I outside
parliament in a drizzle carrying signs
which said: "DepuUes, divorce advocates
are Wat:hlng you!" ·
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I• • l• •' .. • .. Some Snow Due for -~oJitlay
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Northern Minnesota Records 1 Below Zero Mark
Temper•tures ---Mlllt L-L'nc.
55· " ....
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" " .... " .. a ;: .oa ....
n " .. " " .. " " " .. .. ,. .. " ... II .. " n H ,, ,, .l't . ,. " . .... .. .. " .. n ~ .. . ..
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MEMBERS OF GUN CREW PRAY IN THANKSGIVING SERVICE AT TAY NINH
Ch•plain Mol.·Mo<a Jott •J,r. Stortad S.rvicH S.nrol Days Ato to Gel to Ali His Mon
~
Feel ca8e Clo5ed '
South Yiets Discount
· ·U .s. Blame in ·.s.~ying
SAJGON (AP~ -: The Soolh Viet-place came . b .!he wake d lhe Tel o!'
namese government has opened a yawn· f~ve1 largest enemy puth of the war. ,
Jng credibility gap by, i~ si.ielfieht dis· Over the years, the· South Vietnamese
counllng American culpability i n the have learned to live with war and suf·
mass IUIUng of civilians. Ironlc'1-ly, it is fering and the massacre reports are seen
the Americans here who sttm most by many in the conle1't of events which ·
disturbed. ·have become commonplace.
An American lieutenant, William L. OpposiUon poJlliclan!, usuaUy. eager to
Calley Jr., faces a court·m8J'.tial on a jump on President Nguyen Van '11tleu'1
charge of murder in the deaths' of 109 govet";lrnent, have so far taken the killing
South Vietnamese at My Lai in 1968.' rl!ports with relative caJm.
Despite this, Saigon'• Defense Ministry One parliamentary depupt, Tran Ngoc
has closed its own · invesU,atioo. after Ch~u, h• auggeMed a joint lnvestigatibn
S;BYin& such charges are "completely in-by the South .Vietnamese and ·Amerleans.
accurate." But he did not press the point and added:
"As far as the ,government. is con· "Things like this happen in every 'war
cemed the case is closed," a spokeanan and people . fihouJd know the truth aboat
aaldo'loday, brushing · aside coritiriiltig · theni." · ..
;
Czechs .rilrge
Key 'Figures ~
. . i •
Dtihcek Regime ' . . . . . ;· '
PRAGuE (UPI) -The Csechoalonk
parllalllent · today J>U<liid: ~-: tjl ti.
liberal mmiiber-i .]nclullln1i'11r. Ota Sit,
whose ea:iitomie rerOrms under ti.e A1e'i-
andcr Du~k regime angered Moscow
and brougbt KremliJi charges he was
leading the country toward capliallsm.
A report by Pi-a~e fadio said 62 new
memben we'rt chosen.·~ the. total
membership. back to 200, ·an indlCauOn
that 62 liberals or nearJy one-third of the
members bad been purged... ·
' Others in addiftoii ·to Sfk: who were·~
tnclu"ded Cestmir ~ISar, a prootlhent
member of the ousted Dubcek rtgime,
ousted Czech. cuJture ,minister Mirollva
Galuska; Marie Mikova, ousted.refonntl!
J...C SmrlioUky's dem•J,y in lhe ftderal ' . ""'er -. ood. Bobwitlt
• ~~iiead O! u.<. 11ra,u• eom-
mun111 party coriuiiittee. .
American inqYiries and a leries of detajl· 1 ,
ed statements by e1-GI1 in.~ . United . .l..., BJ~:te=~ ~.,.i;~-;.."~ubu: ·SteVe'nson Gets ·
commenr 6n the di9cl'epancy between the'
alUludes of lbe United States and "Sout!t .. Dem·_·, ocrats''. Nod' . Viebam. Privately some in lhe·American
community here wue wringing their
· Also lililo Huebl, lonner re<t« of the
Communist party high -aclJool: . Otto
WJcbterlle of the Academy of Scienm
and Ed\18r4•Goldsluecker,_,
hands over the Siiutli Vlelnamese state-'Fo' r ' Illi' ·o· ms· . Sea«t ment Issued last weekend. Co{l1mu~lst Propagandists have rushed
in to accuse the ·South Vietnamese of
being American puppets.
Sik: was the . father of the econon'llc
nfonns lnstituted in Czechoslovakia ddr·
Ing lbe relorin· perlrid"-under · DUOC.k.
They were sev~rely .critictzetl · by the
Soviet& as a return towardl' capitalism.
South Vietnamese officials assert there
Is no real problem and the Issue ts very
simple. They have examined reports of
the incident a-.'ld written it off as "a fact
of war." WhUe admitting that about 20
civilia'ns were killed, they attribute it to
an "operational accident" involving air
strikes and arUUtty and not to any
deliberate wiping out of civilians.
'The area <1{ My Lai was heavily in·
fest.ea by the Viet Cong, these offida)s
say, and :Uie military acUon which took
U .S.~Russian
Missile Talks
In Fourtl1 Day
HELSfNKI, Flnlsnd (AP) -U.S. and
Soviet negotiators mixed business with
entertainment today in their fourth secret
meeting since starting missile<Urb lalks
10 dayl"ago. ' '
The U.S. delegiUon, tmder ~tnbassador a.ran! c. Smlljl. talked busineas with
SQvtet e.iivoys at the SOviet Embassy for
1 v,.. houn, then stayed on for a two-bOur·
lunch.
The diplomats agreed to meet qain
Friday. But beyO!Wf that announoem91!t,
the news blackout on the progress of the
lalkl that has prevailed slnce (bey. bel;an
WIS still followed by·both sides.· ~
Jn addition to the social cordiality from
today's lunch and a swnptuoas dinner
hosted for lhe negotiators by the· citr or
Helsinki Tu'9day ~ !he 'J~
for the nuclear arm1,cOnlrol d.iacuai9ns
\Yas sweetened by diltrmameot dehlop.
ment.a elsiewhert. ... ~ •
The Sovie! cllid delepte ll•Vladlinir s.
Semenov,
Lindsay Ready ·
For First Soow .
· CHICAGO (AP} -4'd1al EJ SteveMOn
Ttl, A maverick Democrat who had
been 1in ·MaYor Rlch'ard J. Daley's frtffi?r
for IM!!arly two yean1, has been pfcked by
lbe porly ltliran:hy 1; tun for lbe u:s.
Senate in ltlo. ·
Stevenson. 38, the state treasurer and
his party's top ballot attraction in 1954.
and 1966, will probably face Sen. Ralph T.
Smilh · (R~ll.), who was aJ>i>o;Jned !rt
september lo lbe aeal held by tbe late
Sen. Everett M. DirUen .
The slatemakers -· tM> top Democralli-
-chose Stevenson over six other S~te·
hopefuls--alt'r '.Daley Introduced hipl
personally and.led .the Chorus welcoming
him back to the fold.
Daley tokl .the . slatemalc:en •that St~venson h'ad alt · the qua~tles of
statesma,nship exhibited by his father:
lhe: lite U.S. ambassador to the: United
Nations who unsuCcesSflllly carried the
Democratic banner ~galn!t Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower in the 19S2 ans!' 1~
presideriti8I races. .
It was onty ·21. month! ago.,F~bruary
1968, thil.t Daley and many·of the eame
slatemakers· turned 1 their backs on
Stevensmi's bid to run for governor. He
refused theR to pledge loyalty .to the
JohNon administration's· pollcy'ln Viet·
ham and' further. lrkOd lbe porly brain
trust by ~tUntly asserting be 'wu the
lln>ngesl .candidate for governor .
Daley's \haw began Sept. 7 when rlbe
maYOl't8tte;nded I pk:nk •at Stevenlon'I
farm !rt LJberly,illl<, · •· northnA<rn
ouburb or Chlcqo.
Daley said tbien the D!mocralic party
would have "room for everyone.''
Pr8p!e raCl:kJ said-Evien i Erban,
chaitm.Bn 'of the. Cze'choslovak ' national
front, ' Fonuliuii1s1 party-controlli!d U!Jl•
brella ·of polltJcal organitaUoM; was
elected to parliament to replace Cisar.
Cisar bad been ousted from the Coln-
munist parly·effretatjat-Sej>t.·l,·iJu, un-
der Soviet~but.remainedi.ainem~
her of paruiment until the purge aa.-
nouncecModoy. In his lelleNll mi&n>-
tion, he said he ·had alt'ays acted·1/wt&h
good inte~".;allhoulh>·~ bjid
un!av9'flbly alfe.cl<d ihe ~'.•
work while he was in offt.ce. ·
Informed sources said Cisar was likely
to·be named ambassador to 1BelgiatnJ ·'
SANTA WRONG 'GUY
FOR PAY TALKS
EUGENE, O"'. !UPI) -Teacht13 and
school ·board members at Fem Ridge
nffl' here. are having trouble flndlng 1.a
date for a meetjng. on salary negoUaUons..
This week Jt WIS decided both !l~S
c:mild Rel .qelher Dee: 15, but ibe boanl
diclded qalnsl lbe date. •
Bill · Barttts,. d!itrlcl spote!1llan on
saia>y mitten, Is Piannln& lo play mla
Claus at a school program urller that
evening. Board meaillero fell lie nqhl be
in tbe ""'"' -·
~ie.d for Life
' ' • Stepdad Hokh Kids a~· Gunpdint
TORRANCE (AP) -Tam\ny·Grundon ke!ll lhlrt(s fmn reacblng a peat,•
11811 Ille lsn'I...,.,. •he ~lo,ber step-'Ille dllldnn sold lhe terror ended
1-. Her IS.y~ar-old biolhlr 11811 ber -Sberlll's Sgt. ~-Sokallkl, 27, fabeboods ssved bcih younp14n' U-. ~ ~ 29, and dll8nned bbn. ''lbadlolletohlm,"lbe~ ~kn aald 'Prlee ·earuer bad ,........,... -'•I •• u.,~~ I ~•~ .~ lbol and crillcally ·WOll!ded Philip
• bl~-•• -··-11·--" -· Sim-. It, ........ a biUer'a~~1.,· ND' YORK (AP) -"Even H lr1 ~ 111'1 olfkers Iba! tbe steplolho<, lbrcuo -·• ·•-"-
o'cloclc In Ille nmilng, and I'm sleepln(: Price, held her and Rick a1.,.,,..,.uri for a~!:; said Pric. lben toot lbe
t want to be penonaJly tnfornrecr wbeo sil boun early Tuesday in their Twrance ~--.... -s and bis fonner wile, Nancy, the nm inowflake falls." borne .1 ............. .
That's a new standing order from She.1akl she told Prlct, "Pleue·don't ~.::=·of a dr!Ve. Offloen u.id.
V.ayor.John V. Lblod.say. ......... In shoot me. I love you and w1nt to Illy •\.-.\.a.M-,1 m~•er was ord~ in•· a Poltk:ally em 1rraaed ·ma•· w ter .. after Price hid fared fl sbo we uUJW cu uu1 e1ai .... when a heevy snowstorm got ahead of !"ith you, ve s l., llore to buy &ome beer. She 0 .. ,.
' '" .. the plows, the mayor checked Tuesday on Just above her head and was boldlri& 1 •ltrted the c1erk and etd.ped from Price
::· lbe ... ,,--procr..,...-i for Ilda ~·at her,temW.. · -~· -Ille fomlly orrlvtd bock al her ,lwo-J: ar.' -·-•~ ·r-' "She ~ aJd oave our Uva •-< """ ..,_-her._
' '. r,
.. " • • • ..
,. ye Aller helrtna,.n!lbe plw fimi Saulla-, throe lfa\te," Rli:lr told !be olll~ • J'r!cO, wu -ed ,., love•Ugallon ol
:: ... , lion 1'.>epartmfll\ officiali;•be' mwe •1t ",She '!oifkl loiot up •t bltn ~-116'1 •SflWt With .~~to,commtt murder, or
• clear Ulat ht wanted to be ...,.,..,...a11y in-somettilna . and ~ he 1fOUld be c O'm • tidM~ and ot pQllCSlion of a lilenctr
:; _. cludedlnlhe"oirly"winiliiji~~: ·· ••· '!n.iolrlled and•!IUI Ibo..,, ...... 6hl !Gr oflNum, •
I
,
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'
'
,
• QUEENIE ly Phil lnt1rl11ndl
·1
~
,, For«bst
1 ~~dth-R~e~..S i.::a·nN ~ ~'.
; , • · • • I , , llllrl'ltdlloe~*" •to ;,n.~J:;;; :.;.,,:• ·:~· r->t ,. r~~, ... tt .~1;;
.. :~e~k, N~i .~~ s: .. ( ~~~~
" .11y 1. ac; IOTD • TRB JdN.<or· o\4 11...e not teodlnlr the IUIU• al•)naoib• ,;J:,:.=.:::. ...__ •. _ • .,.iy ·~ tbelr.olbo-mi beyond: lta~led n,c.· 11 ""'1fW""" ••Y•-.. , ..... Ille > ~ lhf• .. pJrallon ..... 'l'llQ •• Mu( ...... my er.' ~...!i. ~.. ........... Allb¥ the. Senate q,...i '7r1'.!-~"'t' ~l'·-c'!ittr~ .to take b9 ""."" .-.JWllll It r..;. • teatW billuvbe •·" )lllve • 1'I ·to ,.. te npicl-.. ---Mtplar fnm .• A cloeao't1 ......... hif l(anbattoo .but tt·iil'.\sim to 'l'hlnUclv:llW hollijoy," I he fllii .W, be ..-iier; ~. taro aP ' ' · ,.·' • • debote coiitiu*'I today wUb I
fint ~ : .• .' ~ ".~ ~ _: l>.h cootrovenlal ~-..11 depl!uOo J1~•bfiqmior tad ~ • tber< rea!IY llldl •'U\llllr· ... a .•"•'"'""' ~r "!' Ille fllter.ciPntte lblck .1a. Old\.-;-'-.,, Cll\l;-?,1.·no • ..., ~bu-.&, , • ' ," . eal ••. ,WJDEric-Seterild• amala -btiidm·.·mea md ~-Allen,J .. ~ <I?-~ ·re1C1Jo11r-._,,..,w.wf'tl>t'_...
1>.+11 ~·· m Int I e T-..;-~11 bunt for'JijlOl'lf,S. lloW La.), la spooiorl)\&,tlle--·• • · . •
'NDO·ID'lomorrow ... lnher. '"'1.Poll eier, et lo he a -=Wou!cl~!be '\'I-l.ahOllldho..,~'yi>a-M'c:ollhequlte
bW., body stocking, I h 1 I , 1"'tnami 1Qr ,4! f, 1)0 . 2'111' , nt de p \ e I \'•D · ~ l .. MJ!diah ot -· .. .', •lllliei7 girl looks just 1 llt6e • 1ragg d~~5. At what ,ollowMce wblcll'~ M ln , .
like • , map o! wheN u!o . 11e genefii!y 'diiloi 0 girl tlBp effocl-lhm'40 reora.ITM· I · ~.::~1:: .. =~ l bl~~~.·&u -:!';'~Ji)==·=~ :sw·' e'' ~As St;l·l· T" ry' .:n' g I ever llnew ww:W,; ~<l 'What's ,,;t yet luiOwnJs ex-F\IWK'O ~ set ·the . ~ ·"' "' . . _
aenlal •• •; So go, It's ~· .~.. · icUy how many men _Ind fiPe'. at ~ pereent. , ' . . ,
LOVE AND WAR ....:. When It women are on pills. 'The Na· Ellender 1 amendmllit will T A •d w p-'• · ' -
cornea to sittlng on eggs,. the ., il.ooal !nstitu~ of . Mental \>e,lhe lint item V,~·on ~t 0 . ~ a· r r ·iso· ner· S
male ootrlcb dally puts' ln l Health ls.trying to find out. By w~ u_D)esa I\ 1l dlspll'fd In. "' · .
about 16 . houn .while t6L · survey. Would.You like ta .bet -.~Jilshi~_<, -~· -·· --
female ostrich takes over ror a quarter on the comer these EXtension of the ~x ap-STOCKHOLM (UPI) the second nme In 10 wee~s
on1y about 8. Our Love a.Dd upcoµUng statistics 'Will be in· J>ellred to :fJ:tbe . settleCI by Infonned SwedJsh sources said and told them thtre w8s 00 m,.
War man ls flling ~lhis f~y . -1-:'i_cant? You're covered. I T\if:sday's votin • Ult Qie toda .. r the . Swedish Qovern•-1 · ~
fact ri&flt along with ~~ ... il:k'the revelation about uir H~ also'"""--... ~)lthea . ..men .bas been .in touch with ~~T~nfr:e~~e~le::i~
report rthe male elepltanf and-down pills. will disclose a provision in .. '!IF vusaon, ' both Hanoi and Washington In The •-~ le
doesn't really get rQmanUc naUonal di s as t e r. · 'And bill it Aased Aug'. 7 • 1'hus the recent weeks concerning the Y were promlOCU. tters
Wltll tbe age .of 11. The file somewhere in t b" ~r bOOn--~ ·woul• ~-•~-~. be0_~ fate of U.S. prisoners of war when they met the Com·
• w.r .... 11. "!""""' 26, t%9 .. . ~ ~ ·----1 OAfl y l'llOT I ·•A ti e::woas
Bishop Tl! ·t;asnl:iky
CBS Chief's View.
Agnew Called 'Mi.sih'formed'
folder~ t.: !obeled: "Alrleall' dOcks lurks a latter-dayCan1e .~ to,be ......... ,. -In ·Norll>-'\'l<tnam. 01unistsJ\l September, but no • . • ...
Animals _ R 0 m a n c e . 1 • Nation who will step forth with coolermce between the two The disclosure came as two Jett.en came and they return-NEW YORK (UPJ) -The ~et work c o .m-m e n ta t or s news. "Whe!a , politk:ians are
Incidentally, the male ostrich . .-furkm u to back~ branches to wort out lbe final .Air Force wives from Dallu, ed to Paris. president of the Columbia diSCUllld lbe. Agnew crlUCism • critictzed orf cUaq:reed. with,
, , a1-.invprtably .~ his ·~slons.·All that'i really -l~we°'vt!" lelllfllthelllJ~:., diie~; 'l'elW, Mtt, Bonnie Slngletoft in"';;,~-~~ ~K~: Broadcasting System (CBSl . oo o.·w..iatan panel prograjli ,~J~'I<! ~)o111iaa. .. egg~ at about 4 o~toc'k. ·so far is .fwlce as 1D8l}1 "" '1.• .oK,IMn • and Mrs. Paula Hartness , flew Said Tuesday Vice. President.· (CSS.TV's•-Minutes). s(DJSUi!rlfuotiftt..incf :Wk et
every · afternoon, completes women as men are users. ·-no.t complete acUml ~.tl\e bill hett-from'Pari1 to -ask Sweden . states "blll ·a lilt of: 11•1 ~ Spiro T. Agnew's crlticlsm of . CBS' Mike. "Wallace, reler-objectlvlty," be aald: : ~ the n1ng shµl..lhen-!.PS ·rlgbi_ CUSTOMER -SERVICE: Q. in the It69 aession the for help in d~nnining the . pr:l~rs _and they ~._ no• television news "wu replete rtng.1 to Agnew's charge or ' Hoyard K. Smllh .. Of ABC .., tlil:uUP . U)e . graveyard sugl . "Where do the biggest ap-surcharge extemloo might be fate of their husband& w~. Mn. -~tan. 27• ·Bild in '!ith misinforamtion, inaccur-.. "lns~t-a .n a I y s i s and said. Agnew "ov~\ld" hll
wtlbool'a ~ What. ~e ol ··Jiles grow?_u .A. T.wo-poad•ap-:'. if-~~{-1 ·acted . · ~t : WeJ'.lf"' shot . down . over North ' ~~: · ~~:ee ~;'.~: .acles and contr!l~ictlons. g uerqlou, ctltl~ism" ~y com-o.se but 'hetwork spotesmQ
day the-21-year-old male· pies are !air))' common .. ·in · . 5 en : nu ··Vietnam. . Dr. Frank Stanton, in a· me.1lf&tors of President Nix· "oVerreacted." Thereb: a pro-
.: elephant tends to ·get romantic Sweden. Do they get that big yeaf' lt would be a_ question of Olof Palme, Sweden's new could use his Influence. speech to the International on 's Nov. 3. Vietnam speech, ·blemJn television news, Smith
" .1s not Ja:town, buJ it is un-in Wenatchee? ... Q. UBO'J'H reviving 8 tax which had ex-social DemOcraUc premier, in-Although there had been no Radio and Television Soc.iety,. went Into~~-on the ~Cul said, since "we· are attracted -~ he ls relatively in· MALE an.jf · female spiders pl_red and for w ~ l ch dieated last month he wl formal request from the said "the ominous character pr~par.ation by-the television mcistly to what-goes wiong .. ,
different on said day .for ab9ut spin webs, true?" A. True, but w!thhlnoldlngd ~~r b.aJ ~ prepared to use Sweden's good wives, Palme's office. was" of t.he vice president's attack commentators _lnvo~ved . -a in .a n.~tion ')'.h'lre Y,.e must be
23 houri 59 minutes and 30 the female is somewhat nUUer elim ate . '""" t ng an. · offices on behalf of the more making plans for a Friday derives ultimately from the preparation which included a doing a· lot that is right."
Rconds. · at it lban the male. Some leg~lators ~bt not than 500 missing Atrierlcans meetlna: with the.m. Palme is fact that i1 is mad upon the White House briefing before CBS newsm8'.l·· W a 1 t e r
CONSlDER the lady driver Your questions and com-want~ do ~s. .. . believed· prisoners of Hanoi. in ·Oslo for· Scandinavian journalism· of a medium the speech was made. Cronkite said, "It is: difficult
who gets into a car wreck. The men ts are: welcomed and The Senate vote W~_s a vie· Sweden is one of the few eeonomic talks but is expected licensed by the government of NBC newscaster D a ·v I d to tell the good news becauae
· thing palice re s e a r ch e r s will be used wherever pe~-tory (or Pn;eldent Nui:on Wl:!(t E~an nations maintaining to return to Stockholm tonight. which he is a high ran~g of-Brinkley said Agnew's com-. the good news is the,oorm ...
wanted to know _was. exactly sible in "Cll.ecking Up." stroogly supported . the .~x-diplOniatic" contacts -.with Palme ts a ,harsb critic Of ficer.'' plaints were routine up to the these things that. we report
what she was most apt to' be Address mail to L. M. Boyd, teru;:ion ~gbts part ol hil anti-JD-Hlinoi and the inquirieS ap-U.S. palicy In Vietnam but be Stanton's speech was sup-point where they intimate which are .•. abnonflal,'8re
r. doing at the r:noment of the ac-in care of DfilLY PIWT, flatioo fl • p8rently were c 0 n ii u c t e d is known to be sympathetic ported by Leonlll'd Goldenson, gover.iment regulation of the rare."~
cldent. !Aoking at herself in Bo:r: 1875, .N£wparl Stach, through normal' ·diplomatic toward Swedish attempts to president of the Amerlcan1pii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, u.e mirror, they found out .••. Calif .. 92663. Airlines· Ok· channels. obtain infonnatlon 00 miulng Broadcasting Co., and Julian
" · 1 Hahoi officials .In Paris met Anlericanr and if pcu1bie ti>· • ~an, ~res~t of the N~ · ·
' N' • B 'ke T kes lhe\IWo women Tuesdlly far obl&in )heir releue. U~~=~'°~ciom or A TIME . FOR :GRAT/TlJOf .; ..•
j L ""'" ixon. ' ac . r a T -u1er Fares .:. . . . . televtsioo," Stanton said,"... • ..
··· ,,;· ·, · .. ~ .... ,.! · ··. ~·,,.·· ~,.,,·r!cfr~'t· . · . · .. ~:rsraeli'·P1anes 'Pound ' ::t=';.;~,,:~o?: ... · '··' .. · -· ·· , Election in· Illinois .'fo E.urop·· e · · . -· · · · . ~d~ty~nh::s..i~:~; •CHRISTIAN .'SCIENCE 'CHURCHES
. • • · · • · · rnvt e you o err ' J d f F H media." • 't t th ·
'CIIlCAGO (tiPI) ~ A. con-in Vieln..;,, ~ . . .. CARACAS, VenezuelA CIJPi) or an . or our · ours str~:gt\: IJ::'~:i~;i:~dt~;:. . ,
:; --itfve .ReN•blican backer · Crane also campajgned on• -F~~ of 'the· world's ~ edl le 11 THANKSGIVING SERVICE -." .,. , ,... · . . .. plaUonn .af """""'Uon.to .ht"". major alrllJiel, meeting to try as a news m um te vs on . . • : eC'.'Pmtitent ?(iJ:Cli'~ Vletn8;!JJ. taxes and ~n;u-and can:d to bead off a tar.e· w:at. ·Mv~ . . ON _THE JOR~AN"-JSRAEL ~n act!Ve 1q sl!elllng .Iaraeli is plunging the nation into col-
--~1ie]' hi) won a 20;000-vQte ·for cutb~-hr~ welfare · agreed to redu~ ~~C\lrs.!oo.. CEASE:.f'IRE LINE, Israel armypasjtloosand.bohierset-lapSeand canbedeterredonly ~.tn."~s iace for.Jlli.l)oi~' programs." ,_ ·· . · iind · groU~ tares between (AP), .-.Jsraell f I g ht er . tlem~nts, a sJ)okesman:.iab:f. by suppressing .criticism • , ..
13th ., Dialri..t . co.n•reaslonal . Warman, an.tmde~ Jn the ~otih America and Europe. ' . bombel'1 today lsunche"d their ·in ~ ~ f.11.1:;.J~ m , .... isrllitl's the vice President's speech · .,., ,... ·~ The t N Yo k..Lo parliament today endorsed was replete w J th mlstr r. I.at:. 1 wealth~, ·tr~dl .tlonal\y. · curren. ew .r 0• .fieaviest·.-strike Into Jordan In Prime Minllt.er Golda Meir's formation , in.accuracies and
Phitl A. Crane called his ~pubhcan .~strlc_t, end0!'5ed don ror·trip excurs:on -fafu more tHan a yeai', bl.astlng message of cmgratuJaUons to contradictions."
r vtct:or/ vet Edwird A. .Vietnam mor~tor1wns and was c_u to '150 In ·Yi nteft. lrWJery :pas1tions . for four President ·NIXoo 00 h"ll Nov. 3 .. "Jn my judgment, the whole. · ~. rn n-·r .called for .qwck removal-of $265 iit spring and_£all 1Ut4 to heUN·Wittiout a break • toPe, the whole content and Warman an 8 irma....,., 0 American foices froni Viet. $29$ fu summer · Vietnam p0licy.1s?ffch. --
•1 the· pollctea of Praident .. · . the fl · · l 1 Wave upon wave ol planes The message sent Nov 7 the whole pattern o( thb Rich~rd Nixon, especially the nam. ·; · It ~~-;J1 ~~: 0~ streaked over the J_ordan brought critlcis:n from lsr~li government. intrusion Into the
poUdei extended in his Nov. 3 ~o 1 ~ ~~r n 8 t 1 -~~ a 1 Air River ~ona: a thr~-mll~ f~nt, leftists, wllo claimed It could substance and method$ of the
.: speecb .. of a gra~ual, o~rly CO · Transport ~aUon (IATA) pouring~ of high explosives reducer, tkM;i to the .'(~r· .broaQcast pi:ess, &"Xi~ of
... •-rable disen•:11•ement ·.. . up1e Wm' . d . in the 1·-1· I I . . on -the em.Jacerneots. by ·~ Je-~·y --. _, an journallsm, have th~ a1Nlll\.lllU ._... s ce .... 1an a r 1ne. 11ie ·r.'!' ·to anU I aft ftU.I · .. ~.vw .--.-v.. ·gr-avesi.iinpliCliUOns.'' from Vietnam. Al'tall · t 1 •• N. .. y k Y ucw in -a rcr the parliament's 120 members, ~ . _ . · .I a CU t..li ew .or • . fire blit·all returned ·h · · · Jn another development,
Warman h~d llrged I rapid ·up· . ·~ ... -J'a. u· ,· Rollie fare by nearly $100 to The planes conce~lrated on owever, supported a motion America~ .w1~aw1I ~urlng ........ $2;19 on .Sept. 19. artlllery in the Gilead Moun-..condemning Mrs. Meir· for
the campaign. SimUar cuts by other tain range ·facing settlements -~~~rv=f~~.~-Ame~'s in-
Final returns gave Crane . Get .Marn· ... ed transatl&ntic"lirllnes followed. just' South· of the Sea of 18,tl,9 . votes ~ Waonan . cutting round trip New York· Galilee. 48,~ .. The district has 296,000 • . · London f1res ·to $260 In winter. The raids sent plumes of ~ed,I~ ~-o~s. II . RENO Nev (AP) A nit new fares take effect smoke s"--ard and shook crane ~ JS a co ege pro. • • . . -I A ii J 1970 li Th l .. , " Wallace E~ds
2nd Spanish
Quint Dies
f ~~rand lecturer He young couple· wbo·came. ·here pr • or ear er. e n-buildings 10 miles away. ·~ . . ltion tO : !h for a Reno wO<idi g'bnt oUnc! dlvldual excursion rare time Israeli fanners said the Tour :of Asia BARCELONA, Spain (UPI)
; e~ ·· . '?JI~ _;., 1 • . 1 · ·i ha :!~ w led limit of 14 days minhnurn to Jor.datiian guna lil\ely had -Victor Castro, smallest. of Vfe~ "'.ar moralOr urns llP n .3ai . ve ..,..;in marr ·21 · days maximum 'was ex. ·been , ·join.lng In b o r d e r ( abd said.. he opposejf any . &el~.'. anyway -in a ceremony ii:e~· tended to 21 days. First class . ski-. hes between Israeli SEOUL AP) . ;_ Fprmet Tuelhe sdcaasy: trno1'•~tulnbt•~tpleotsff.ersdl~or Uemtnt. of .1he cobfllct that form_ e d . by . the -clty, Jail fares are nol af£ected. tr 1.•11lS ;;.j Al ·r· .. tah. • Alabama · Gov. George C. &>' ..
would "make a n\ockerY" of chaplain.· . 90P5 a.&N . a guer Wallace' Jeft, Wednesdil~ for security and education poured:
i:c ·me iaCrifice of Amertcait live! .. The fo~·er ·Sp~ry -~tit~ .~ ~~-'~·i.~ .Is a big s>~. and It ~';: ,:~~~~t:!ia~.~g . ~~rv~~ an~~e~~~ar~~~-e e
·1i . m~, 23• ·« Salt Lak~-City, 'Missile Fired aims to silence the Jordanians He met South Korean Pres!· Social Security Hospital said ~. A Bl_. t ;;1d r ~e ~e_t. ·~ue ~~· . . , for a long time," said one set-dent Chunt Hee Park ,and Victor died of a lung hemor· mm(). lllS 'o a t ma. pu VANDENBERG AFB (UPJ). tlement head Prerrtler'Chunc IJ.kwon during rhage. His brother, Lino, died
,: l ---lie mar.k41t about · a month 1 1 Tbe mlli'" • · '' d 'd •-·~.. •• South M day f h --~ f r· · nc1· 'it 1 ~ ,.... A Minuteman .. n-Miry comman sa1 · ·his ..._,.._,. •Vwtt ·to on o t e same GUI~ o ~ ago, ~. ' was . ove at first tercont1nental ballistic. mW:ife Its pilots reported. "accurate Korea. He . also toured ·the respiratory .disorder.· TT,,:Jls Tw·:n.· sight.. . was launched Tuesday ni&hl strikes" on artlllery ".&tteries Koreab-ti'lfce vitlige Of Pa. .Ff&nciseo, Jorge 8.nd Yolan-
·.ftiJ · "' ;,,. The~ dream. delayed' by car ~ the western test range in-~ vld:olty of Alad village munjom and visited American da, the survivors, we r e
·Thorsdciy, November 27, 11 a.m.* . . . . .
Costa Mno-First Ch urch of Chri~t, Sci•nJist, 2800
Mei• .V.erde Or., Costa M~s•
HulthtthNl "lfttdt-flrst Churcli .of Chri1t1 Sci entist
810 Oliv•, Huntington Bet.ch •
Latu111 ae.ch-First Church of Christ, Sci entist 635 .~ .. t1lgh . or:. Lagu_~ ~.!~ch I
Newport lhach-First Church of • Chri1t,.,
· . 3303 'Via Lido, Newp·ort BNch
S;eiitfisf
*Newport ~Second Churc:h of Ckrist, Sclen-
+J"it, 110$>.PacifiC View Dr., COrona del:Mar tSarv-
"ices :,w_iJI" be held: at 10 AM (
At th is se rv.icer you will he4r ·appropriate
selections read f r om the Bibfe and the
· ·c~r.istian Science ·textbook", sing h'vmn~ onCI
h·ear Chri stia n S.ci~ntists gi ye thanks·tQ God
for healing and· sPirituCI ,g_r ~wt n .·.9~rned
through t 'e; r study ond opplicot;on of
Chr istian Science.
:
ALL ARE -WELCOME '·
No collection will be token.
•
CH·A'RJ;ES'J'OWN. • lhd · ~le, on :~ 'f•Y te ;Reno.,. fnim' Va-rg Ali 'Force in Jordan. -. and Korean ~ guardtlJ nporied In good coodttlon lnl
· ... • .. · lbecoup~·"*U ·arrested Fri~ ;flue~:·~~-·~~~~.,-~-Theae~~ba~lte~ri~~::.'.hld~~ncen~~U~y__:the~~de~m~l~litarhed~~~zooe.~:__~-~in~cub~a~tor~s~. -·~-~--'·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (UPI) -At ltlsf two pe~~ diy outside a pawn shop. "' ·
were killed and 21 olben 1n• Cog;o ia held on ·a Seattle burg-.----------.... -,...---.------------------------------------------, JIJI<d Tuesday nlg)it '!'!On an Jary warrllll, Ille< bride far •
uploskm npped throU8h one inve.st.igatlon of being a dis-
bullcJjng at the Anny am-orderly person.
muniUan depot here. . 1be 'dead wtre idenffled as . Spary firrled fa inngle. car.
Miss EmrM 1';._ ..• 1/ .. 0 s s , patiow. u the ~pit, ln dr~b ~ ChartestOWn, and "Paul J\. Pit· jall .. uniforms, .. recited , their.
mart, Gieensburg, Ky. yo~a Monday while other
The p}ant commandei: LJ, prisoners watched, The n~W·
eo1 •. G.'R.Daughlery, said the · l~s •ent 1*k to thelr'ln-
exploalon ·occurred in an area d1v1duat cells a ft e r the
w:~e propellant for a 1 • ceremony.
mllllJileter morlan has Iolid· ;::;r.;;:::;;:::;;:::;;:::===~
)_~ ed.\ iUnor nre "'* out
follaD!i the aplollOn, but
"'• was quteld:J nttnguished.
'Who Li~on•
To 1Anden7
.... o=i~;;;;;i;;;;;;;~
THANKSGl.Ylf!IG
... . '
'" '" <'
•• 1 .. .•.
.
SPECIAL
rASK~'S
INTEllNA TIONAL" llESTAURANT ' ' USO ,$. Coost Hwy., L19Uftl -h 'or 'll-.11""'• ••• 497-1800
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·--·. Wl-llG-tjl'loce
3N3 Mllhl,. BML" • a.faes
.. ' IN YOUR 1111•1GHBORHOOD ••• · ....
W llshire-Gramercy Office of Coast ·& Southern Federal
Savings, where your a,ccount is ·
.SAFE • CONVENIENT • AVAILABLE
• -I • Market nuctuaUol'll don't worry Cont ind :.SOuthe(n ""',. •.. tttetr capita! II ....,.. ........ In wlut. A-nd _...,. aura
of the hlgh•l Nmlnp 'cotlliat.tnt 'Wtth eafet;y Wtten..y_ou
• ..... at Coat and SoUthlm. Foremolt aauranoe of trttll btneflta lt the outstanding ·
financLal ltre_noeh malntalnld tfuough the~" bJ th• ft'\Afl•
sgomtnl of 0..1 one! -m -rat SOvlnila.
IMSYWAMCE TO $15,MtitESODWCIS OYER-IOO MILLION
"
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DIVIDENDS TO DATE .OF WlntDAAWAL .
llAIM Mlel: UMTA MO•tCA: TAJUANA:
1S761Vent11N.111111. • J4S.al14
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lONG llACM:
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1IOI N•. Mllll IL• (7\l).8'1ol2&T . .
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DAD.Y PDm Mfl'OBIA.L PAGE
An :Ir.rational ' . Reaction
• ' PANIC-Pmnta Aaaloal Naco~ jual what \
lbe name lmpll15, an lrraUonal IMCl!Oll 'lo a very serl·
' OU! problem. ,
The lll>UP propoHa a l\lll llflht Al•¥ schools be·
cause it.a supportan flt! they are C'••iria or at least
allowing, lhe ilrug problem.
Some o( ·lb• Pro~ ad'!IJICO<I to stop teens lrom
using narcOtlcs . 1ncflllle pl4o~ ICllOols, kHplng
chUcfren out ol school. paytiic tuoa under pro-
test and pressurµi1 school ofllclals. ·
Such actions are bardly llkaly to ruolve an already
sticky situation.
Backers of PA.'lllC claim to support the action tak·
en by a couple wbo toot lbeir two leeJl.aie daughters
out of Founfaln' Valley Hip School because of narco\.
lcs. ,
It takes a naive mind to believe !bat educators are
openly allowlnc students to smolte pot and deal in nar-
cotics on carnpl!S. But at least some of the backers of
PANIC believe 'It. Their .. 1ut1on to drug abuae is to
make It hot for scllool officials -already barrasaed
on several slllu -and \et lbem take up the slact ap-
parently· left by parents and the rest of society.
Narcollc un among ~uni people IJ certainly a
growing problem. But it 1S nol· conlined -nor even
centered -on \h,e campus. The outrage shown by par·
en.ts who puJI their sons and daughters lrom the schools
to _avoid Contact with drugs and drul users is spent in
vaU1 •
· Where are· IJ\ey goiug to put lbei< offspring -in a
clean, white room with no doors ~ windows and nary
' a"Crac1f in the wall T
Work oo the problem certal•ly is called for, but only
a cl011r, sl ... dy, ralional attack on drug abuse cin pro-'
vlde a solution-,.. ~
It Is Ironic Iba! local clinics on drus abuae have
drawn only sparse attendance or att.enUon from par·
enta. And some of °the parents who failed lo show. up
are among those now trying to dump the respoolibillty
onto the schools.
They Deserve Recognition
In Huntington Beacb a group of ladies Is doing yeo-
man work for needy school children by providing them
with warm clothing for cold winter days. And they're
~~t.it quietly, wjlboul fanfare, without anuounce-
Last week the women, members of the local chapter
of the Needlework Guild of America, turned over 62
hand·knit sweaters and 122 other clothing Items to
school officials ~ $•tribute to need~ youngsters.
It I a k e s between 40 and 50 hours to knit such a
~weater and some of the women proudly turned in not
Just one, but four each.
The money for the yarn was acquired through bake
and rumn:iage sales, in effect doubling the achievement
or the project.
.. Certainly .these unassuming women deserve recog·
n1t1on for their quiet dedication to a worthy ta1~.
Dear
Gloomy
Gue:
Trustees Stereot11pe ¥ outh-&y W•t Hight:
Yt»r 'MNrldly editorial saying
ane people praised the mayor or
Santa Cruz fOr tearing down a VC
nae on private property verifies
what I havi Jong suspected about
the "silent 'inljority." It Is compos·
eel, no doubt, of anarchists with no
respect for .. Jaw and order."
-J.B.
pursuit er pleasure ts just as Iran·
..s our pursuit of gain -IO that when
-run acrou an acquaintance who looks
ant, it i1 ililJmSible to tell if be
eeds a vacatioh. •. or bas just had Ofle. • -•• . · · · • • • to 1,CIOO percent. l-·--·-· ... ignored by most peop&e ls that s001e. Tbe paradox Of the professional
who iJ ogerly to give YoU advice tr•vtlu ii that be is a1ways looking for a
ally gives you worlle ~~ than "homey" ~tmolphe.re in a hotel, and for
eone who is reluctant to give 1t. hotel service at home. . "' . ( . . .
I we don"t recruit a hi~ grade or ~Y is it that a woman with a decent
for Congrea ..-l!'!'ft ,.,.., are leas ficute CID wear Lf:vil and a man's $hlrl
itive to Ult needs of spectal 1nterest.s, with an attractive effect, whereas a man
~ more sensitive to public interest -in any kind of fema1e 1arb seems either ·~ it doesn't much · matter how we rkilculOUJ or e>Ncene?
F'tate or demonstrate, except as a futUe • • •
aM o.f letUng o!f S'le8m. Advice .to parents: tf you want your
• • • :1:1~ sacrun..~s to be appreciated, t a k e up f (Speaking of Congress, If judges dis. baseball.
rqualify them selves from ruling in a case
t'Where they have had a prior interest,
:why 6houldn't Congressmen be banned
Jfrom voting on bills that dlrtctly affect
• • •
~their financial holdings?) , . . .
' I Ask the average American lo estimate
the amount of foreign -non-milibry -
laid the U.S. is providing Ulis year, and he
twill overestimate by anywhere from Ult
Laws themselves art lhe grtatesl
~rs of conHnUonal immorality -
millions of dlvorcea art involved in Ir·
nplar relaUons with men simply
beca111e remarrying will force them to
relinqul&h tbdr alimony. • • •
JC you shout io an argument, it makes
you wnmg, even when you are right.
I
I Bob Hope's Enjoyment
~ \\lhen a man has earned so many
,millions that other people can only guess j•I their number, he sometimes turns to
1&imple pleasures for enjoyment.
$ Bob Hope, one cf the wealthiest en.
~ttrtainers in history, gets a kick oul of
lithe fact that he has a "pretty big''
bedroom.
"I like to putt in It while I'm thinkina:
and working," he explained.
I Born Leslie Townes Hope in En&land,
Bob came to this coontry at the age of 4
Fnd has emerged as one ol lta moat laud--
and successful lmmigranls.
" At 66, Hope. whose latest television
•special, ''Roberta," was aired over the
iNBC network 'l'tnusday evening, Nov. 6
tis currently enjoying lhie higbe.sl ratmP
;of hio; career and keeps as bU&y as ever.
• ~ BOS. THEN A young vaudeville com·
~'edian, made his first big hit on Broadway
"Roberta'' when the musical first ap-
are1 there in 1933.
, "I'd like to see ll start a revival of
l'Uthf't big .shows of I hat period," be
I
emarked.
Looking back at his fabulous record -
;ind al his present bank account -rnany
le wonder why Bob keeps up his
ranlk perfonning pace.
For in lbe last 42 )'ell'I be hu-
Traveled li:x mJIUon mnes.
Appeared tn five Broadway shows,
re th.an 50 films, 225 television shows
nd 1,145 radio shows.
I GrVEN HUNDREDS of benefit shows
hospit.als, oo cotlqt CIMJIUSft, and at
;ury service camps.
Raised mllliona of dollars for charil.tble
nd phllllllbrople .. -. Received more thin IOO awardl, clll·
ions and --· locllldlnc 10 rary unl"'111y c1e.,....
Bui 11'1 no m)'llery to llGll-why
mainlalnsbll ~ .-..
_ :·work\1111 ~your menlll -•1111
ahlpe and y(llf adrtnalln pwn,pina,"
llid, "Ni Ions II I'm hNllh1, notllll!f
It 11 tvtt IU!ep me fl'om warkln,.
~.
I ' I
"lf I ever quit. I'd fret myself out of
cor.dition. Besides, I get more fun out of
achievement than I do out of anything
else in life.''
BOB STILL WORKS as conscientiously
at every new production as if It wen his
finst one, but he says be has alowed up on
hi.I M>Cial life since suffering an attack of
high blood pressure a few years ago
.. J play goU as much as I can and· lry
to !Jt!l in an hour's nap every d•y '• he
said. '
Asked what defeats mwrt people In
American Ure today, Bob grinned Ind
replied '
"Television. lt ha!I replaced con-
versation, ambition and good times. Peo-
ple &-:!t stuck In front of the set fasten ~ir seat belts, and watch eve~ything.
Jt s IOmt habit, I want lo tell you."
llE1\lt AllB BOB'S likes: ••Mktntcbt, because I'm a night crawler
-wcdlae.alone in my olllce at night -
lamb In mint u.uce, lemon pie and
chlcten hllb -putel colors -1otr fool· bal~ -ud llsblni for ,.1..;,n -moo1 popullr music and popular novels
-coUectlnc money and old U'!e1ter
memotlhlllo -moot kinda of people -tumlllJ oe IM llJbt of memory by talking
with CUY• who remember old·llme acts."
Htre art hi& dlsllkes:
"IJla-ve audltDCeJ, they bug m• -
people wbo bowl "IJt -anls -radishes
...i ......,boro -Ille smtU of wire bum-
hlr ...i 1M -of 1~ condlUonen -,,.,_, -·se ilieY're Ila. drlllltlna out af I dplotte llclU' -laud, nervous
women who attr.ct attention by yt1 Un1. ·•
U he Wfl't -to choose his own eplt1 ph,
Bob 11.11 tt would bt th is:
"One mome.nt. please!"
Disloyalty Pr.otected, hut Not Hair
To the Editor:
I read with considerable dismay the ac·
count of an Orange County high school
student who openly refused to pledge his
allegiance to the flag or to this country
due In part to the fact that he had no con-
trol over his being born here.
This philosophy seems preva1ent In the
youthful society of today, which exists on
the basis that they have been provided
with all the material wants and are
thereby driven by motivaUoo in $e8l'Ch of
.. something else," and in so doing seek
·any and all means to achieve a mental
release from the world of re.allty. Henct
the rampant use o1 drugs, pills, and other
vehicles of ''escape".
THE REAL BURR under ' my aaddlt
concerning this tugh school youth is that r
am helping pay for the education to
which he is ·~entitled" in t.h.i$ colt1lry.
And I'm doing Jt while, at the same time,
m~ son, who has full respect for the flag,
this country, and the authority of those
who govern it, ls denied the opportunity
to voluntarily attend school because of a
heinous social atrocity -'his hair is too
long.
What rationalization permits a n
ovtrr.ealous group of theae school
trustees to deny an educatla.1 to any
young man merely because they choose
to stereotype him without regard to his
ability as a student or his conduct as a
responsible, respeclful citizen?
OPEN DEFIANCE of our coo.ntry·s
principles or government ts protected by
the right of free: speech. Isn't it un-
fortunate it couldn't be foresetn that the
Bill or Rights needed to include a clause
~rovidi'.1g for the right to grow long hair
1n order that a young man might be
allow~. the same educational op-
porturut1es as one who speaks out against
the form or government which enUUes
him to education at its expense.
It is also intere3ting to !\ote that aner
f xcluding lhe tong.haired "dissidents''
and pote.llial radicals, such a thing 1s an
underground newspaper could be fostered
in such a puritanical atmosphere.
. After. noti.ng the percentage of my tax
bill which ts applied to educational re~
quirements, I too am "Saddle Sore".
GORDON J. SANFORD
Commends Re9ents
To the Editor:
On Friday, November 21, the Un1vtrsl·
ty of California Board of Regents voted
lo purchase 200 acres of marshlands from
the Trvine Company for the creation of a
v.oildlife preserve on the UC Irvine cam·
pus.
A university spokesman said this
marsh is charagtrized as a major "way
stati.o!l'' for ml~atot)' birds along the
Pac1ftc Coast It is also considered to be
extremely valuable by natural scienlisls
for the study of fresh water life.
I THINK THE Regents should be com-
mended for such a fine act.. Here ta an
Lettns from readert are totk:ome.
Normcllt1 writers should conve11 thei'r
mtuaoes in 300 worda or lest. The
right to condcnle lttt¢1'1 to fit spate
or eliminate libel is rt1enied. All h~t·
ters must include .signature an4 mail-·
ing addren, but tum1t1 may be with.-
~ld on reqiu1t i/ aulficient rea.Jon
l3 apparent.
example of a IJ"OUP or people Cwllh f!10DtY and power) tatlna coUecUve ac-
tion to restore the balance io nature
which man is ultlmately destroying.
I do not feel kindly to the UC Regent.I,
especl1lly lfter the roc:eat dismissll of
Angela Davis, but you have to C'ODSider
this act to their reputation on the whole.
DAVID OLIVER
Smeke Screen
To the Editor:
Alter reading California Edison's
clever plea In the DAILY PILOT, there
are comments that should be made con.
ctm1ng fllcU they convenlonUy neglect<d
to menUon.
They say they account for only one per·
cent of the total air pollutant. ln Los
Ana:eles, which is poalbly true. but it's
like sayiq IDUer's ..,.,._ chamW1
contributed only one percent of the air
polhrtanta in Germany. The point is,
Hitler's poilulioo was CONCENTRATED!
Edtson's smoke isn't as deadly but
sometimes nearly as concentrated!
FOR THOSE OF us who live between
the plants ln Huntington Beach and Seal
Beach, we know where this concentration
sometimes exists. We've heard their ra·
Uoaallzatlons about high stacks, preval}..
ing winds, "two-staae cornbusUon pro-
cesses," etc ; but we've had to leave our
home several times to get a fresh breath.
We've observed amoke belching from
the stacks at Seal Buch and sett:llng
back to the ground to envelop Uie nearby
Leisure World, poulbly ahoneniq many
senior cltlum' lives.
ONCE WIDLE fiylllf, ,.. ~aced 1
brown cloud envelopina Anaheim bact to
the smokestacks at :Huntington Beach.
City attorneys should be Onding gmmds
for legal suits.
Thue are times that winds dispene the
smoke lo blanket the entire bastn wfth a
pinkish.brown cloud. Their meager one
percent. Take a look at their smoke whtn
they're burning oil and compare It to the
C?lor of the over·all smog. I\ might tie
difficult to do Olis lioce they are clever
enough to do most of their oU burninl at
night.
WHAT THEY SAY about 1utos is I.rut
and dlsgusUng caood luck, Bill Leor), bu1
BIJ 6-l'IJ• ______ __,
Dear George:
I have been la.kin& the exertile
course you sent and lnatead of c•t.
ting !lronger I feel wtaktr lhart I did. Could It be thal I'm doing the
exerclats wrong?
C.T.
Dear C.T.:
NOP'-. you 're oot wrong -J sent
you the wrong set of e1erclst s by
mlsltke. I can't lmtglne where I
aot ahold of lbose £cypUan Air
Force exercises.
Dear Georae :
Why do other advice colwnnifil!
run such lq problems in their col-
(
"
umns and the pnibltmS in your col-umn art ao brief?
Curious
D .. r Curtoos:
Man1 of my clients are rtpeat
customtra who have traded with
George's Advice Systtm for years.
You. too, can have short problems'.
Send for Georae's Speed Worrying
Course.
CONFIDENTIAL TO TOYafA :
As nearly 11 1 can determine, you
can't aue because aomebody bu
1nothlr llW. cor on Ille nwttt.
Bu~ really. Jsn'I INt Just Uke lhe
Germans!
(
I have nevtr known autol t.o emu a
pinkish-brown smoke.
Could the allernallves menlioDed by
Edison pit them In a "poor invatment
interest" position? I'm IUJ'e everyone ii
aware that when industry bu to dk>Ol9I
between invertment lnttr"tlt and public
heaJth, inveatment interest wiM out -as
the tobacco and automotive indUlb'y
have bo(h proven recently. Only public
pressure can change this.
THEY SAY "no one wants io try to live
without eltctrlclty." Personally, I wou,ld
prefer raUoning until nuclear pl111ts
become operational than to aee lllJ' more
stacks erected tn this area to btlp brown
oor sk.iea and rush us chaotically down
the same patb of the auto 1ndultrY -
toward asphy1latlon and fin al e:rttoCtlon.
What's worse, an electrical blackout or
an envlronmenlal blackout? ~ ~
We've allowed ourselves t.o be wb-
jected ~ a literal smoke acreen; kt'a not
be taken in by thelr fipraUve one.
BOB S\EWART
Three Buie T1Jpe•
To the Ed.il9r:
Tbe top managtrs or all the companies
that produce electrical power tell ua eJec..
trical power plants must have large
quantlUH of water ~ar at hand. Jn the
Los Angeles buin this means that any
ntW power planta mU1t be built near the
ccean. Now let us examiDe wb7 the water
is needed.
To genente electrical pawer water ii
heated in a boiler until it ii a very hot
steam at high pressure. 'Ibe fuel used lo
do the heaUna; can be anyt4ine: from coal
to atomic power. 1be It.earn ia t.be'l
heated to a supernealed condlUon and
according to my 1M9 edition of Marks:
Handbook, the . steam will reach a
prequre of about 1,800 pounds per square
inch (1,800 pal) and 1 temperature ot
about l ,<M» de,,.ees Fahrenheit. '
THE SUPERHEATED Jleam ls then
directed through a mulU.ta1e steam
turbine which converts the potenUal
ener&Y of the steam into rotltional
energy that ii used to gt"Jffate elec-
tricity. As the steam gon throuch each
atqe of the at.tam turbine the preuure
and temperature of the steam decreuel
unUI \he ateam reaches the condenser
Let us say that U we started wt with ~
preuure o11.-psi and we ended up the
a preuure of O psi then we would have
extracted all the potendal enero from
lhe steam.
THE CONDENSER is just a eontliner
w~ the spent ltea.m comet in contact
w1t!1.many tubes that have water running
~th em. Wheo the staam hit s
the tube .the water running !n the tube
absorba heat from the "'am whkh then
becomes water. Since steam takes up a
lot of ~pace as compared to water It la
easy ~ reallr.e that the preasure is
lowertd as a result of condenalng th e
steam to water. The pressure may be
reduced to less than 2 psi. However, this
procw nqulres L0rS OF WATER.
TllERB 18 NO lhennodyn1mlc I 1 ,,
that dtalll>ds 1)>1t lbe pressure -be
1"' thin 2 pal. H-ver1 there 11 an
e<lOl'IOmlc law thlL rtqwres tbat tbe
preaure must bf: lhtt low. Thus, large
quanUtlM of water an not nece-..ry to
generate electricity but are n:q11lrtd to
produce the cheapest electricity.
In conclusion; there are thrtt bplc
types. of generating plants lh•l can be
built m or near lhe L.A. ba1in: J. Fos.!ll·
ruelrd plr.ll which produres the chtape61
electricity and smoc: 2. hull-futled
pltol bulll outaide of the L.A. buln which
will product more elf>en•lve electr1city.
3. Atomic-fueled plant bullt on an 1lland
off the coast which wUl not product amoa
but the electricity will cost more. We the
peopte mu!l tell our local electric uUllt1
lhal 11 will be allowed lo build o•IY pl101J
two or three and that we will be happy to
pay tht necessary ?'ale Jncruae.
I have oversimplified the generatln1 of
electr1cal power. Someone will point out
that the conde':lSer pressure ahould be I
pal.a. The a stand.I for absolute pressure
while 2 psi means about 17 psla.
However, I hope you will see that one can
be too precise.
HARRY B. McDONALD, JR.
Bond 1'icter11
To tht Editor:
The 72 percent yes vote on Ocean View
School Dlltrlct'• bond electJon on Nov. 11
was the result of the concerted effort of a lal'J' ownber of people. Thb victory Is,
m a 1lplficamt measure, a DAILY
PILOT vktory. 'lbe decision to publl.ah a
supportive editorial had, we thlnk a
posjtive Jmpact in our community. '
Even more imPortantly, the o:cellent
Mria of arUcles you printed provided
ccmcfte, accurate, and well written aum·
maries for voter infonnatlon. The
plurality we receJved on elecUon day is
evidence of the success or our collective
efforta to get our message to the voUng
public.
Please accept our congratulallom 'for a llOOd Joh of reportiog and our lhankl lo
the DAU. Y PILOT for its supportive otance,
CLARENCE L. HALG
Superinlendenl of Schools
Beautiful and Free
To the Editor:
My triends and I greatly apprecl&ted
the patience with which a woman
member of your staff talked to me about
the seagull caught In Southtm Callfomia
Edison C:o.'$ high voltage wires. 1 called
aeveral tunes from Edison High School.
I would aJso Uke to thank· the merriber
of the DAILY PILOT staff who called the
necetsary people at the EdisOn Co to free the bird. .
My frie'lds, Stephanie Poulos and
Betsey Chace, and I uw the bird from
the ~afeter11 and rot our te1cher's
pemussion for one ol' us to go to the
ICbool office aod call the Edison Co.
OUll VICE PRINCIPAL, Mr. MDI.,.
called the company and was altnost
lotally ignored,
Belley, Slephanle and I c:hanpd 111 or our lunch mooey to dimes and gave the
dimes, along with Ediaon c;.·, pbone
num~. to people who laid they would
caO ll!d complain about the ~ird. We then noUfled you.
The last of aevera1 calls we made to
you was after the bird was freed. Betsey
and 1 watched the bird as be rested on
the library durina: snack. The bird
at.retched, flapped bis wl11g1 -and
s~ to Dy! We felt very close to God
and like crying because he was ao
beautUuJ and so free.
Thank you tor all of your help. ... '
GRE"l'CllEN BEISNER
-.... --
Wednesday, Nov. 211, 1969
T~c cdllorial poge of the l)ajl
Pilot seeks eo tnJorm. and ~
MloU rtodt1'1 by prc•tntfng this
M101pcrper'1 opbtiona ad l(Om.
mtnta'll on topics o/ m~rtst
and significance, by providing 0
forum /or the t:cpreaafml of
our rttkkra' optnfoni and b~
prestnting the df~•e view-
points o/ fn/o""'d observer•
and 1J>Ok<1m,. on toplci of "'' dow.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
j .
JODIAN HASTINGS, '42o4321 w-....,, ...__. .. '"'· " ..... 11 .
' '
Holiday Play
Makes Debut
. A holiday · atmosphere will take precedence when members of
the Fountain Valley Woman's Club meet et 8 p.m. Monday, Dec. 8, in
the civic center.
Holiday Harmony will provide the theme for the general meet-
ing a.pd "Christmas candles,' an ongm.al play wntten by Mrs. ,Charles
Rolirbacher, past drama chainn~,. will be presen~ by th~ drall!a
group directed by Mrs. Joseph Giesing, current chairman. Nine chi.I·
dren will perform in the play. .
Mrs. Laurence Leeds, music chairman. will lead in the sin1ting
of Christmas carols and Mrs. GiesinJt also will present' a dramatiza·
tion of Christmas in different countries usinK dolls dressed in native
costumes.
Mrs. Clarence Stewmon is program chairman. Any area resi·
dent is invited to attend the meeting and may contact her at 847-7083
for additional information. • ,
ln conjunction with the meeting a layette shower for the March
of Di m e s also will be conducted . in lieu of a gift exchange &mOng
.members.
Mrs. Lyle Greenway, philanthropic chairinan, is requestin«i that
members bfa~~ new diapers, new and used articles of baby clothing,
receiving b ets and other items suitable for infants .
. The collection is a pai:t of the club's annual sponsorshi_p of t h e
citywide March· of Dimes drive. Tlie ·clothlni will be turne4 over to Ute
Maren of Dimes headquarters in Santa .Ana, and: anyone wishing to
make a donation may call Mrs .. Greenway, 962-3640.
1 The club also plans to sponsor the Mother's March ·end the an·
nual March of Dimes Ball in February. ·
• == -• • ••
• DAILY l'ILOT l'lletl .-, •le....,. ..... Serving as hostesses for the meetinf will be ·the Mmes. Warren
Hartung, chairman; Allen Bookout, D•an Christiansen, Lewis Fer-
ree, Robert Kyle. Robert Moss, David Ricble, David Stegner and Rob-
ert Welch.
IMAGINATioN LIGHTED -"Christmas Candles," an f>riginal
plaY.rltf Mrs. Char1es Rohrbacher, past drama chairman, will be
presented when the Fountain Valley Woman 's Club meets r.1onday ,
Dec. 8. Nine children will perform in the production. AJ ready
li ghting their candles are (left to right) Cindy Erwin, 5; Tracy
Wessler, 7, and Michael Stewmon, 8.
ROYAL RAIMENT PREPARED -Members of the HunUng-
ton Beach Mrs. Jayc ees will greet entries in the Junior Miss con·
test, thei r mothers ,and city dignitaries during a tea takini place
Sunday1 Nov: 30, In the horn• of Mrs, MarneUe Peek. Sprucing up
the royal robe and crown which will be worn by the contes t
winner are (left to right) Mrs. William Schweickert. Mrs. Robert
Walker and Mrs . Jim Shepard.
Tea Opens Pageant
Mrs . Jaycees Host
Future Junior Miss
Some of the city's fairest young 'vo1nen will gather at 1:30 p.m. S1:1ft'"
day, Nov. 30, in the· home of Airs. Afarnette Peek ror the annual Junior
Miss tea sponsored by the Huntington Beach Mrs. Jaycees.
Attending the tea, sponsored. in conjunction with the city's Junior
Miss Pageall'I., \Viii be the contestants, their mothe rs, sponsors, city digni-
taries and judges.
Serving as chairman of. the tea is Mrs. Bob Walker, and assisting
her \vi th teaJ.reparations wilJ be th e Mmes . Peter If olden, Michael Brook s,
fl'tike Ortiz, erry Vaniman, Jack Tatham. Rodger Boe and Dave Atkinson.
1'he tea will open a weeklong pageant which wi ll be climaxed by the
crowning of a new Junior Miss during cerrn1onies which \viii be conducted
at 8 p.1n. 1'.,riday, Dec. 5. in ~luntington Beach High School.
Last year's llunting:ton Beach \vi nner. Jackie Benington. went on to
'vin the national title in Mo bile, Ala .. and was awa rd ed $10,000 in sc hola r·
ships in adOltion to $2,500 in the youth fi tness and scholarship divisions of
tile contest.
Contestants still are being accepted, according to Dan Fenley, chai r-
man of the pageant. In order to qualify the youn g woman must be a senior
at either Wes~ns ler, Edison, Marina or Huntington Beach high schools.
~ She must maintain a B average, and 'vill be judged on the basis of
appearance, personality, poise, talent and physical fi tness. Additional in ..
formation regarding the contest may be obtained by contacting Fenley at
'1168-4192 or 536-7525.
Du rifig their next regular m eelin~. the Mr s. Jaycees will discuss the
group's annual Christmas dance. Mrs. Tom J,,ivingood will serve as chair ..
man for the socia l event taki ng place Saturd ay, Dec . 20. in the Fountain
Valley ·community center. • Mrs .. Michael Brooks \viii host the 1nccting taking place at 8 p.m.
Monday, Dec. 8. and follo wi ng the business session the program will in·
elude an exchange or Christm as gifts between secret pals a nd serving of
members' favorite refreshments. Members also \Vill bring recipes for th ei r
favorite holiday dishes lo include in a cookbook which will be di stributed at
the meeti ng. Mrs. Sol Sallman is program chairman. and Mrs. Jack Brandt
is president of the 'voman's organization.
Santa's Sl:ei .. g~h Power : Genera,tes · Returning Hero's Spark
. . I
DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband
returned from .Vietrianl'.three weeka ago.
We had been married !our years when he
left and the "lioneymOoh" aspects of our
i:ex life ended long before he went
overseas. When he returned r didn't know
what to expect. l rea90lled that our long
i-eparation might make him especially
eager but 1 also heard that some wives
experienced the· opposite reaction which
they Attributed to exhaustion, change of
climate, trauma and so on.
Since my husband'• retuni, he has been
as randy as a billy goaL I am af.
fecUonate by nature and I love to bt lov·
ed, but lbl1 ls ridiculous. La8t night he
confi d e d the s ecret of his
"revita1i1a'lm" ln Vietnam be had ,
' ' , , I·
heard ground11p reindeer horns were us-
ed for centurlea as a male aphrodisiac.
He bought several pounds of the stuff
after 10tne of his buddies reported "grea~
results."
t don 'l know what to meke ol Jl I've
never believed in love poliom, but now
I'm beginning lo wonder U there Isn't
something to it. Please ask your medical
con!Ullants about reindeer horns and let
f"'!e know what you learn. J !ll!l.. -EX·
. ' ..
HAUSTED lN GARDEN CITY,
DEAR EX: My medical con1ulla11ts ln-
fonn me that once the born• •rt off the
rehtdttr they are asile11 -e.1:cep& for
decoraU11 walls. Love podon1 have beta
• noartdaln1 racket since &be Year One.
Tbty are •II phoney. Bial, H Ion&•• your
•usband bellevn hi Lise !'m•&k" It wlU
work, becaa1e all se11111l actlvlCy 11
aeaenW· 11 lite mlad. So, ftlu, dear
and •cttnt tlte fact tUt Duett and
Pruc:er :lllll: Doiloer and,· Bll~n are
phi& to be •.part of yow We for • wbUe.
And. a 1tft 1T)' Cbrfi&inas lo f ou l.
I'•\. ''
DEAR ltNN LANDERS: Our son is one
rif the lhousands of: young people who r11n
a\\·ay from home after becoming in volved
\\'Ith narcotics. J OOnl know what to do or
where to turn . All my efrorts have been
in va in. Every road has led lo a cleltd
end. You arc my last hope. Please print
Lhis Jetter I have written to him. Perhaps
he will see iL When ne was home he read
your column faithfully. Thank you and
· God bless you, Ann •. . -'. ,,.
DEAR SON: Every night I kneel by \he
bed In your empty room and pray that
$Olllehow, through &ome miracle. your
eyes will be opened to the dangers of the
life you have. chosen. You left a loving
home, . parents, brothers and sisters,
nchaot and clo.11e friends. \Ve felt you sti~
pin& away, but ""'e were unable to reach
you.·
. We Arc rlecply <'onccrncd not nnly ror
your health and safety, but ror your life.
Every day d07.COli or young pt>oplc like
you arc found dead . Whenever we read of
suth a lrn gcdy \YC wonder if the "unidcn·
t1f!0 cl" boy is you .
\Ve )o \·c you and want you to ~1ne
horne. We will try hard to help you in
every way. Please, before It is too late,
call us collect. Let us know where you
11rc. We will get on the next plane and
come for you. No quesUona asked. -
YOUR MOTHER ANO DAD
DEAR MOTHER AND DAD: Here h
your letter and you can be 111tt1 K will be
read by many runaways. I hope and pray
your son 5ee1 your plea and mpottd1.
Please let n1e kn ow if Ibis letter produces
resull11.
CON~"lnENTIAL TO REAPING THE
BITIER HARVEST : Everybody martial
for love -or son1ething. You married for
lhe love of material things and what you
thought would be a lite of cpsc. Pa rdon
the cllchc, but as you sow, '° shall you'
reap.
Ann Landen will be 1lad lo ltefp YOI
wllh your probltm1. Send tbtm te ltet' 11
care or the DAILY PILOT. enc...,, a
telf-addretlf:d, 1tamped envtlope.
... •!·-
}! DAILV PILOT Wtdntsd'7, Novtmbet 26, 1%9
I
I. _ _: Writer's Scrapb.ook Action 'Packed Need a Ca len da r?
'
By JEAN COX MJu Zlqler. al 1hat tlmt.
Of .. -- -WU bul)' bdJ1I l polltlcal MJA IAbelle Zlqler'• brave edllar of a _, 1n Allee, Ta. However, Ille -~mince llltle r,..me bu mardled lllell 1111-.Sbe fk*oi like Ille
Into -llllh4' unllktly mov1e 11 ·au. ,
placa wblle taktnc orders "It -a almple llllle 11<17,
-her dauntleu wrller'I but the lllO'rie WU jml awful brain. They made ii lolo,-. .... , big
Wbeo Hiller made hla pro-!j1ud1S::d :;°'tti:;1 .. addJi:
ciomatioo 11 Clrllbad ~ reported 'l!itb i>uslve dbdam, l1ll1nc hi wanled no more of Beaidea her book, MJu
c..choslovUla, 111" Zlecler Zlqler bu the f-p ol
wp there . • • when . the the many would-be writers lhe Germ.ans took over AUllria, adopted 1'hlle teacblng 11t
Mill Zli1gu Wll there · · · u~ • and ~-•~ at ' -when the notorious Mul'lich """"" -c:~..-.-..,. _,. Aoplea City College. agreement was made, Mias UCLA wu otay, she allow·
Ziegler wu there • • • when ed, but she far preferrtd the
the Germans took over Prague city coUese. and other newopaper people
had prudeaUy depar1ed for BORING Cl"8S
Scouts Close Sa le
It's sUll not too !ale to buy Girl Scout calendars, U you missed the
girts in green or brown during their yearly sales campaign.
The 1970 calendars are available at the Girl Scout Council o! Orange
County headquarters, 1320 E. Chestnut Si., Santa Ana, or the Newport
Beach Girl Scoat bou•e, 1700 W. Balboa ruvd., Newport Beach.
Girl Scouts from all over Orange County will be joining fellow Scouts
the nation over during the coming year in a new program, developed at the
38lh National Girl Seoul Convention in Seo!Ue last Oclober.
ACTION 70 will be a total effort lo "bridge lhe people gap by get-
t ing to know individuals of dillerent races, religions and nationalities and
be known by them tn turn," says Mrs. John M. Owen, president of the Girl
Scout Council of Or~ge County, of the procram.
Tbe council wilf'particip'8'te by developing plan s to be carried out by
the Girl Scouts and interested adults.
As a preface to the eUort, the council adopted a resolution stating .
that it intends "to foster development. of positive plans for action which can
be implemented in an eUictive and enduring manner.''
more atrene puturea. Mias "In my UCLA classes I had Zlealer wu there, ''bllmmlng a lot of dental anil medical ., ____ ""'"""""'""""'"""""'_,...., ... .,,, ... ,,,.,...,,.,,. __ _, _ _,,,..dj
rides" and ~ding troop ltudenll who all thouabt and
trains . . . wrote alike. How borinl:I lhe
And when the Gestapo, after remembered with diltute fler
the Nazi army msrcbed into voice wanned quietly as she,
Czecho&lovakia, bepn l'OUJl. recalled, "But at LACX: there
ding up everyone in Carllbad were ao many oddballs, '°
wbo looked the Jwt bit many · dillereot pel'IOD&llllea.
suspicious, the ever prtleDt It was a scbodl that seemed to
Miss Ziealer wu amq than. attract 1DSt souls.''
Obviously the lady reserves
PURSUES CAJLEER a special seat in her heart (or
Horoscope
Capricorn: Change Mind
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
"'ith impulsive statuncnt, BC·
lion.
c;ANCER (June 21.July 22):
of preconceived ~otions. Ob-
tain hint from Ubra message.
WAR CORRE SPONDENCE DAY~ RECALLED .
Purlllln1 bet career as a Iott souls. She also h111 a
syodJcated colwnnlst f o r special love !or teaching, a
Carlile Crutcher of LouisvlTle, career which oddly enough
Ky., Miss Zie&ler wu right in began her working days as
the frying PM.durin« the fiery well 11 ending them. -
early months ol. World War II. As a youna: woman she
She aJJo went to Berlin, taught languages in t b e
France, Hunpry, Yugoslavia University of Vleona and
and Italy, aod after beJni call· n:tumed home to teach in a
ed home from Europe. to South small college in N or t h
America. Later during the C a r o 1 i n a . During the
war she came back to the depreu1on the <;>liege went
United states and covered ac-out o( buslnea& and MW
tivltles surroundina th e Ziegler eventually , went into
Japanese relocation camps. the writer's business, begin·
BEST BUYS today lDclllde
historical boob, · boasebold
furniture, r a r e be\ltrages.
Favorable for tis~, plu-
ting.
Be stralghUonvard. Stress
originality, fresh approach.
Circumstances change. The
changes favor your efforts.
Mr.ly who wanf to help feel
you are self-sufficient. Avoid
arrogance.
SAGITl'ARIUS (Nov. 23-
Dec. 21): Concern with the OC·
cult occupies much of your
thoughts." You want answers
which border on t he
metaphysical. That':; fine. But
don't lose your equilibrium.
Message is clear by tonight.
L•1un•n la•ltell• Zl19ler
Mo fhe r's Medal Worn ARIES (March 21-April 19): LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
.. ' ~ ·"1.
Couple Visit Mexico The stormy years of World ning as 1 women's editor for a
War 1l seem upt years away paper in LouisvJlle.
from the tranquil S o u t h • She began wriUng a column
Laguna cottage which Mias "full of froth and fantasies,''
Ziegler hu chosen for her which b e c a m e syndicated
repose and rttirtment. almost immediately. It wu on
Take steps to insure greater
security. Streu natural in-
dependence, originality. Not
wise to take situations,
persons ror -granted. Double
checJ.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Good lunar aspect coincides
today with time when ideas
are pul to tesl. You seem able
to suc~ully overcome
obstacles. You do th Is
especially il inluillo.1 is given·
full rein.
Romantic aura p e • v a de s
personal almosphere. Means
air or mystery enhance~ your
image. Don't be too anxious to
reveal a!L Leave some doubt,
question. This will bring
personal benefits l09ay.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Be willlng to take another
look at proposal which you
originally rejected. Today,
creative thinking is keynote to
success, That meztS be will·
ing to change your mind.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
JS): Work, basic chores con-
tinue in spotlight. Your · judg.
ment improves. You are abfe
to zero in on targe t •
Specifically, you get coopera·
tlon rathe'r than opposition.
Wearing the same medal
her father designed for her
... mother for their wedding,
···'Ka ren Lee Gray exchanged
·~Wedding vows and rlngs with
J ohn Dee Tarvin during a
morning ceremony last Satur-
day in the Blessed Sacrament
Church, Westminster.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and 1t1rs. Robert Gray of Hun·
tington Beach, was given in
marriage by her father. For
her wedding she selected a
satin gown designed with bell
,.;. sleeves and trimmed with lace
··· and sequins. Her shoulder
. ·: length veil was held by a
' .,., petaled headpiece trimmed in
• ·• sequins and pea rls, and she ~ • 1'-carried a nosegay of white
roses and carnations centered
· •' ' wlth an orchid.
Her maid of honor, Pally
· ' Nemeth wore dark pin k crepe '"~I While bridesmaids P a u I a
·.· ;,_ FrateJ, Susan Tolen and San·
•. ·...:. ·dy Browning wore contrasting
•-\ · gowns of light pink crepe. The
··-'bridal attendents carried bou-
, · qu els of pink roses, carnations
.'.. and baby's breath.
'• ·' Serving as nower girls we re
: , -: Diana Frybarger and Kelly
' ' • •Pett. and carrying the ring
.. ~. was Aron O'BTl<!!l.
', l · Eddie Olson was best man,
· , and seating guests were Toby
• '•1"'Tarvin, Glenn Jones and Jere
· ·' Gray, brothers and brother-in·
~~ 1 law of the newlyweds.
, -Following the ceremony 200
.• ' guests attended a reception in
• .. the Meadowlark Country Club
~ . where Mrs. C. S. McDowell,
... 1 the bridegroom's grand · MRS. JOHN DEE TARVIN
Huntington Be•ch Home
She still works, editing the basis of this (.'(llumn she
manuscripta, and hi teaching a was sent to Europe.
creative writing class for a During her career she has
handful of Riviera C I u b written teleplays ror CBS and
memben. her abort, stories have a~
However when things get peared in n u m e r o u s
quiet, she has a lot more than magazines.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Suppress urge to go overboard
in spending. Utillze logic.
·Have fun wilhouL being ex·
travaganL Much is going for
you. Don't upset apple cart
the usual yellowed clippings in
a scrapbook: to recall bygone ·-----,.--... achievements.
First of all there is her
novel, "The Nine Days of
Father Serra," which began
after MiS! Ziegler visited San
Juan Capistrano and saw a
statue of the man who founded
missions all over Calilonrla.
"He was a little, pathetic,
sickly man with an enonnous
spirit," she sakl in her usual
subdued tone, explaining her
fascination with her hero.
The book WU published in
the llSOs and made into a
movie by Twentieth Century
Fox, "Seven Cities of Gold,"
starring Aolbooy Quinn.
Handwriting
Srutinized
Peering
.Around
Greeks
To Dance· j
Four chapters of American
WORM OF wisdom wert Hellen1c Progreasive Assocl•[
inscribed in a scrapbook by Uon will stage a grl'Jd ball in
guests honoring bl'ldH!lect Santa Ana Elka Club on Satur-
June Wn,ht at a recent day, Nov. 29.
shower in t.he home of Mrs. Host chapter is Anaheim,
Roderick Wheeler. ~hostess assis~ by Long Beach, San
of the affair· was Mrs. James Pedro and the Bay Area.
Foster. Tea 8nd coffee were G'rtek and American dan-
pourod by the benedld-<loct'• clng wlD beam alt p.m. to the
mother Mrs. Norman Hald. music of the Eddie Stell
• . Orchestra. During the even.
KIM FIGGA'IT of Costa . ing, an t:i:hl biilon of Hellenic
Mesa was guest of honor dur· da':lclng will be performed by
ing a birthday d1nntt in the the· II-member Athan Kanu
Stuft Shirt, and Dr. and Mrs. IntersecUon Dancers.
Buuty Is emphasized. Your
idea.ls come to Core. Prtnclples
are accented. You judce
othe~ -and yourself -by
sincere If)Qtiv~s. You learn
v.aluej of frleodship, And . you
ar_!~!~t.ed. . . . Liii"" (Sept. :D-Oct. 22):
.~.~you know direction of ~li Ou,. may have gocid ln-
le)t\ bu~ wrong methods.
KnoW!tbis, 8nd perltct techni-
ques. 'i:tainly, it is important
to get r id of deadwood.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Youngtler can speak trutll If
you are smart enOOgh-to Offer
encouragement. Means get rid
PrsCim (Fd. 11-March 20):
Good loaar · aspect today
emJilasizfs ~vity. ex-
pression .or feelings, cont.acts
. w:lth opposite sex. ·You are
able to mllke koow.t your
beltefs in clear, dynamic man-
ner. Do so. ·
To find oYI who's l11CllY tor YOU 111 ~ Ind love,-«dlr """"" O!Mrr's baekllt, "Se(t9f Hltrh far Mell 1nct
..... .._ ... Send ............ ~-C."'1~ tu 0m.,r Atlrololr s.ue1.. OAllY ~fl.OT, Boll 32.60. GrWICI C111 r1I $! .. tloll, NtrW Yw-. N.Y. 10017.
Tlae Pirates Inn
"We Serw Black A-ngus Prime Bee/ Ezclu.rioel11"'
THANKSGMNG DAY
i SPECIAL MENUE -5:30 to 11 :30
' MtUT..-1 "'5M1 New
Diii S ............... a-. ............... htl1t ...v_...., .... .,,., .
It~ l:flL_IOAST 1011 TVl•IY -.,,_,,. -....W ,...~ .,... ..... ,.,.... •• sMR ...
, CHtcllN lift
VIAL COIDOM ILUI
$4.50-AUmALIAM LOISTD TAIL
FIUT Ml•NON IUCCANll ll
S"t !:ft JUNIOI PIOAm TUlllT' ~ ,. ...... ,., .. _.-c ...
440 Heliotrope Ave., Coron• def Mir
........ ,.., ,..... 6Jl.2011
Mr. &nd Mn. Dan Duncan of
Orange will 1peak on WhaL
Handwriting Can Tell Us
About Our Personality when
the Remarrieds Inc. gather at
a p.m. Friday, Nov. 28, in
McFadden Junior High School,
Santa Alla.
John J. Albarlan of Balboa The semifonnal dance Is
Island also entertalned with 8 open to the public. Tickets at
dinner paty ln the Ame $4 may be purchased at the
restaurant to honor" the birth-door
day of their dau&bte:r-in-law . ~~~-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;!l~iii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:i~ Mrs. Timmie Albarlan. Ii
The newly fonnod organiza· Eas tern Star
tion sponsors family activttles,
educational programs, group 1.1uonic Tunple ln Laiuna
discussions and social events. Peach is t.he meeting setting
Further informaUon may be: when Laguna Be.ach Chapter
STOCK . CLEARANCE ... ···mother , was an honored .~ ' guest-·Assisting at the recep-
... · tion 1v1s ?<.1rs. Gladys Shotv•ell . ··~. Following a 1''edding tri p to
.,.,'., ~fazatlan, Mexico, the couple
' ~ \\'ill make their home in Hun-
f.1arina High School and her attended Golden West College. obtained by writing to Remar· 521, Eastern Star memben
husband, son of Mr. and Mrs. He has served two years in the rieds Inc., P.O. Bo% 742, Santa gather the first and third
U S Army Ana 92702 Fridays at I p.m. SALE
r ~lrFabric';in5to7k loo;", I . MUST GO ! I
Antiqu• Si1tiM, Loo•• We•v•s, C•1ements. John D. Tarvin of Huntington , __ ._. _ _:_·--------·--·---------'----'------11
,tington Beach.
--..: The bride is a graduate of
Beach, is a graduate of Hun·
linglon Beach J1igh School and
• ' I
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. njoy Thanksgiving Dinner
· · .~ ~~he Newporter
...... '.· rt., ·~; ... r • .,. f.·• · • -~, Conwrmnt Tri_,.. To.td CMftl S..W
t . . ' ~ W11dllff ~lid ••
l\Nsl Apple V.1lltyTurliey-Giblel Gr.avy,
~ge or CM~lnut Dressing 4.'li
' l•\td Sug•r·Curtd H•m-S•uce Cu'9thtrl.and 4.7$
lofttiai llodry Mounl•in l ruut-S.udcAlawodine 4.i'S
aoasl Prime RlbJ of Beef-Au Jus 6.SG
aroiltd NtwYOfk Slt•k-M.litrt D'Holel 6.,S
-Hot Mince Pit • 1!91Mfr k«e """""'ift Pit
fifth 5'ffWbt")'SIMdff:
5ptti.I Childrt'n'• Dlmff
Soup or S.l.td' • De»elt I: lcvrugc
Chok&oli 4ppkV•lky T11rt.:tr
Wtd KM! l2.9S
.,
AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC
LIVING CENTER
"Plan Ahead for the Holidays"
You are in vited to • pro9ram fill ed with cookie jar tr••ts •nd c•ndy d•li9 hts:
holid•y tips •nd pl•n-•h•ad tricks, usin9 your cl••n el•cfric r•n9• •nd fro1t.fre e
free1er.
Ed i1on Hom• Economist, Mr1. C1rol H•in1 will pr .. •nt "Pl•n Ah•ad for th• Holl·
d1y1" pro9rams •f th1 Edison Electric'Llvin9 C•nt•r, Ill M•in Str.et, Hu~tin9:
ton Beach. The daytlm• demonstrat ions are on •ith•r December 3 or 5 •+ 10:00
1.m. Thi •v•nin9 pro9r1ms &t• •t 7:00 p.m. Oecemb•r 2 er "4. Th• 9ue1ts •fiend.
in9 wil/ rec•iv• • r•cipe book.
Ano/hat community urvlc• ":s<:;§
$0!/f~om C.lifornl• Edloott Compony
Width
~ ft,
6 It.
• ft.
IO ft.
12 ft,
Lmatb , •..
96'1
96'1
•&"
96"
I CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES I
L _A!_ c~~~,:i:_ES _ J
ON ALL·
PAMICS
INOURITOCK
'
BRING
YOUR
· ·.mstlREMENTS
,.
' Phone
675-1510
·.,
l'llCI' INCLUDIS *Custom
Foftness . "Fabric · Make· UP
"" "" ,,,, "" ,,,, ,,,, ,,,, "" "" ""
T~
'.2'·"
~t.;t
It,~ n." "·"
*Complete
M.koup * HMvy Duty
TreYerse Rod
•5st St1te1 Saln Tax
Roel A Installation Srmll AddlUonaJ Cl\ar~
* Expert
lnstelation
ARCADE CARPET & DRAPERY
OF CORONA DEL MAR
2846 E. COAST HIWAY 1714) 675-1510
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• Wodnesday, N"'mber 26, 196' H·~V • DAILV "LOT-J3
Don't Slow,. DoVfn for Holi 9,aY,'
Bushard PTO
· Mrs. Ray Flteman
President
COMlNG UP : Ei:ecutlve
hoard will meet Monday,
'Dec. t , at 9 aim. , .. Special -
Christmas music program Wm be--presenled in place o(
December unit meeting . ~.
Plan1 are under way fOl'( a
Christmas party for ex-
ecutive board members and
their husbands.
REPORTS' Pl'O and stud<nt
council curren t ly are
spon10rtrig a canned (ood
drive to provide Thanksgiv·
ing dinner for a needy fami·
ly . . . New committe~
chairmen are the Mmes.
James Harris, laboratory
aids; Thomas Malloy,
libraey : Arthur B•r au l t,.
health and welfare; Charles
·Thomu, community
resources, and R. a_, Allen;
legislation. Mrs. Thomas
Boardman, ways and means
chairman. reported a profit
of more than $80 from the
fishing booth operated by
PTO at the Fountain Valley
b a rbecue. Announcement
was made that 16 members
assist in the learning centers
• • • Candy apple sale was
1ponsored tiy Pl'O to raise
funds . . • T. L. Towery.
principal, announced that
parent attendance at con-
ferences this month was the
largest In school's history
•.. The Mmes. Arnold Dias,
Robert Miller and Arthur
Boese, learning c e n t e r
coonlinalj)rf, Invited paronll
to visit the centera.'
Colle9e Vw. PTO
Mn. IUchanl Bogle
President .
REPORTS : First session of,an
eight.week physical educ•·
tion program oo-.sponiored
bl" l>TO, cecn !doe. pr111.
cipal and HUntingtoo Beac'b
YMCA t.ooi: place yesterday.
Se.sstoos ire scheduled alter
ICbool each Tuetday and
'11Wrs4afon the playgrouiid. ·f>l:tllriuh Is opop to-boy> and
gii'ts Ill \tie ICbool area and ·
is desigoid to stimulate ln-
1erest in physical education.
Program is . supervised by
pro(essionil ~adult leaders
and will iDflude JlllyaiCal .ri.tness. sports, gymna'stics
'and recreation. Progressive
awards will be presented
participants. All particl~ts
will receive jacket patci\es.
wall~ ~ds and tee Shirts.
Eader PTA
,airs. Jam.o 'Lewis
President
REPORTS' Mr.s. 8. D .
Pethtel, • w.aY.S and means
chainnan, reports · school
sweatshirts are on sale until
Monday, Dec. 1. $2 for
children's sizes and $2.50 for
adults . . . At ezecutive.
board meeting, Mrs. Horace
Reynolds reported t h 1 l
funds raised at tbe -Ex·
chw.1ge Club carnival will be
used for the purchase of
playground epuipme.{lt for
Eader Par~. Mrs.· Reynolds
added that the · ~change
Club presenls ita Carnival at
a different school each year
and that this year's event
was the m06t profitable.
Heart
P,reseriting a contribution of 1$359.45 towards the
purchase of a h~ar~ sc.anning n\a~bin~ for Wes~·
minster School D1str1ct 1s Mrs. Alvin L1petz, pres1·
dent of Clegg PTA. Recipient is Mrs. Gaines Smith.
Santo 's Elf Comes Running
• FV Ele. PTO
Mn.> Waller Tale , President
REPORTS' Pl'O Is i:oilecttng
Pfiper towel wr.ppers which
wtll be redeeme{I. for , world
atlue1. PTO'• goal is to ob-
tain an atlas for e~h
c I a 11 room ... Mrs. "R.ay
Delight. hea1th and safety
c!iatrman, reports t h a t
vis.Ion testing has bttn con-
ducted Oil all k!lldergarten,
first.. third, fifth 'and seventh
grade students; t.fore than
S5Q,chlidrtQ•were tested with
the assistance or members.
teachers and ~1rs. James
Zahlen, COO(dinator of health
services. ·
Fulton PTO
Mn. Robert Welctt
President
REPORTS: Sweet Blppies and
Ups and Downs currently
are tied for first place
honors in PTO bowling
league. Each team has won
21 .games and lost 11. n
s"econd place are t h e
lncop~istenls. Mrs. Dean
McNalr holds hiBh game.
honors and Mrs. D o n
Stewart, high series ... PTO
has pur chase d an up-
right freezer fbr the
school. •• PTO m e m b e r s
collected canned g o o d s ,
usable toys and clothing for
needy families. A a yon e
knowing of families re-
quiring aid should ca.1tact
Mrs. Jamey Jacob!en at 847·
3207 ... PTO meeting and
pop ooncert took place Ia.st
Thursday. Concert was
directed by Robert Olinger,
vocal m u 11 i c instructor.
Participating were. advanced
chorus and the Madrigals.
Miss Carol Olinger wrote the
piano arrangement. Mrs.
Greg Burke. parerit aide,
displayed materials and ex·
plained her work in Cur·
riculum Materials Ce.1ter.
Citizenship awards were
presented .. : PTO·
sponsored Cub Pack 415
participat~d in a field trip to
Cabrillo t.fuseum ... Through-
out. November, designated
as. Safety Month, PTO has
urged parents to study wiih
their children sa fety rules.
Hayden PTA
Cbrys Delisstr
Presi dent
REPORTS : "Roberti to," a
play was presented t n
Spanish by second and third
grade students at u n i t
meeting. Director was Miss
Walieta Stanzel.
Meadow Vw. PTA:
Mrs. Carl Harris
Presk.le.1t
CQMING up, RoUer sk•liDi
party wlll bo pulOnled by
Pl'A Tuesday; Dec~ 9, in
Harbor Roller Rink, Costa
Mesa. Students will ~te
frdn\ 6:30 to 9 p.m. ·and
pal'!ntll are urged to pick
them Up promp,tly .
Admisaion Is) 50 cenls per
person or a maximum
charge or $2.50 Per fam i'Y.·
Anyone wishing to tnake
rese~ations should contact
While Shelley Thre\1 tells Sanla (Kathy Munday) what she wanls lor Christ·
mas: Santa's t f (Judy Corr) comesl'unning with tho gills. These and more wllll
be sold by Robo.wOOd PFO belween II a.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 6, In
tho gchool cafetorium . Festivities will be launched with the helicopter arrival or Santa.
' Mrs. Jolm VG!bur1 al "47-
11&17. l'llbllc la ln•lk<!.
REPORTS:· Mn. Geor11 Mal·
~s. membership chairman,
reports that wlrr.itr ol the membership drive Wll Mrs.
i.eroy.Green's class wllh 165
perttnt. Eleven o th e r
classes achieved 100 percent
or more ..• PTA-sponsored
Webelo Pack 134
part1clpated in ap overnlaht
cam.pout. Daniel· Haggarty Is
le.ader. , .Officers serving
PTA this year are lhe
Mmes. Clrl Hanis, presi-
dent ; Charles Pharaoh and
Issac Sowers, vice presi-
dents; Crandall Gudmund·
son, secretary; Frank Zang.
ger, treasurer. Other oUlcers
are James Hillman, auditor;
Doug I as TeG1r.1tvoon,
historian, and G e o r g e
Williams. parliamentarian.
Serving> 11 chairmen are the
Mines. John Felts, Donald
Elster, Jay Smith, Carl
Thornie, M a t t a s , Jer.
ry Callies, Pharaoh,
Smith, Gordon Dussell , Har·
ris, Thoma Nellon, Norman
Gilbert, William Warner,
Thornie, Vosburg, Sowers,
R on a I d Freeman, and
Robert Cowan. Hagsarty is
citizenship chairman.
Robinwood PFO
Mrs. Let Mock
PresideJt
COMING UP : Christmas
bazaar sale from 11 a.m. to
4 p.m. in the cafetorium will
be handmade gift.a,
household items, Christmas
decorator p i e c e s and
children's arl..icles. Featured
will be Santa 's grab bag,
cake walk and baked goods
table. Sloppy joes a n d
dessert will be sold ...
Room mothers are planning
annual c 1 ass Christmas
parties, Anyone wishing to
assist may contact ?\-trs.
Daniel Meade at 893-4280.
Sprin9 Vw. PTO
ft.In. Ve.rnal Day
Pres!de.1t
C0!\1ING UP : Christmas
Capers is scheduled at noon
Saturday, Dec. 6, in Marina
High School. Price of ad-
mission is $2.50 per adult
and $1.25 per child . Tickets
may be obtained by calling
l\lrs. Gerald Dee at 8t7.Wl.
Grand prize of three days
and two nights at Hacienda
Hotel in Las Vegas will be
presented. PTO members
handling arrangements for
the event are the Mmes.
James Qui'.m, John Fort.
Charles Hammill, B r u c e
Hunter, Marui.a Fujita.
Charles Zamltta, .F r e d
M~lc, Julio Rivera . Larry
4Ddeaman, Claude Beasley
and Fred Smith. , Adults
modelill& will be the 1Mme1.
Leo Dunn, Alan Arborpst,
John Rose. Michael Stocki,
EUjah Howes and Miss
Dorothy Feeny. Children
· , niodelini wtU be ~· Scott
Rlvera, MichMI Moorhead,
Debbie. Thomhtll, Brian Dee.
Cindy Quin.1, V&ncf: Hunter,
Cindy Bea11Jey and Dale
M u rakami. Commentator
will be Mrs. Tom Pen-
derghast. ·
Sun View PFO
Jlm Barsard
PresiOent
REPORTS ,,DI', Ralph Eckert
spoke at unit meeune last
night on the 15Ubject Your
, Child 11 f GetUng J Sex
Education. What K I n d ?
From Whom?
Tamura PTO
Mn. Blrclll Mattbewt
President
COMING UP : Executive
board will m eet
'lllllrsday, Dec. 4, · at 9,30
a.m. in the multipurpose
room .. ,PTO board and Ti·
Ue I board members will
. meet at luncheo;i to dll!iCUSll
ar.rangements for Cinco de
M8yo FesUval next spring.
REPORTS : Mort than 300
parents and children at·
tended Father and Son
Sports Night. Program in·
eluded a film of the Laker
basketball team, presen-
tation by Stan Stafford of
the Parks and Recreation
Departme.1t and question
an~ answer period con·
ducted bY StafJord and
David 8-., F o II a ta th
Valley High School basket·
ball coach. David
Bienek. Ch r Is Schneider.
Ronald Panico and Robert
Kenyon, volunteer nag foot·
baU coaches, w e r e In·
• troduced and the school
Milady's Foney Turns to Holiday Fashions
Chirstmas Capers is the theme selected for Spring
View PTO's fashion show and luncheon, to be pre-
sented at noon Saturday, Dec. 6i in Marina High
School. Fashions will be shown by Huntington Beach
shops. Waving goodbye and wishing Mrs. Leo Dtinn
a good time are J. Scott Rivera (center) and Bdan
Dee.
chotal group presented a
medley of Broadway
h i t s . . . Telephone con1·
mittee for upcomi.1g bond
election met today.
Wardlow PTO
Mrs. Georre Meellan
President
REPORTS : Mrs. W i 111 a m
Hay?/00(1, library chairman,
has announcei:I that
members or her committee
are the Mmes. Jes.er; Car·
ranza, Robert Mallgren.
Luther DeVore, Rober~
Herson, William McAdoo,
John Rinde and Samuel
Shaw. Committee meets sec-
ond and fourth Fridays of
each month in Curriculum
Materials Center from 9
a.m. to noa.1.
Peace Theme Strong
In Christmas Cards
By GAY PAULEY
NEW YORK (UPll
"Peace on Earth •.. " the
angels sang two thoosand
years ago to herald the birth
of the Christ Child.
The peace theme speaks out.
just as strongly today in the
1969 Christmas cards, as a
world is torn over the war in
' Vietnam and the conflict in theme. As always, the auoct.
the Mideast. lion say15 the t.fadonna'. and
"Probably 00 sing I e Child are by far the favorite
Christmas card design and subject.
message idea has ever take.1 Also r.1 the r e l i g i o u 1
on more importance than the category are the. journey tB
plea for peace," says the Na-Bethlehem. the AdoraUon of
tional Association of Greeting the Shepherds, the NiUt1ily
Card Publlshers. "Many of and the Wise Men.
these cards simply ll!le the This year. l!lome cards: lhow
word 'pea,ce' rendered In an adult Christ. Shann<p ad-
countless different ways as the ded -a bearded younJ1man.
main design of the card." And scenes of the Last SUpper, Chapter Notes On other cards, the words traditional of Ea•ter, aro
"Love': and "peace11 are used showing in the Christmu ctil·
Westminster Hi PTA Holiday Dotes lnterc/langeabty. Other cards lections. •
Mrs. Emory ctlltoa introduCe the. plea for peace in For adults or children, there
President · 1 1 1 m8'.1y languages. are the usual Santas .and Plans for partic pat on n a "Thl.s peace motif really reindeer, toy packs, elklrlc
REPORTS : An evening of reception honoring museum blossomed," said Steven Shan· trar.15 and the like. .
sports was presented by supporters in the Long Beach oon, executive director of the And a good deal of whhmy
PTA last Monday with Museum Sunday, Dec. 7, were association, who goes through has crept Into designs. Or Is It
studenls participating under discussed when the Xi Xi Pi some 40 major manufacturers' more truth than fantasy when
the coaching of Edward Chapter of . Beta Sigma Phi collections each season. one card's message ls. "My,
Leary in basketball and met in the home of Mrs. ''Peace is the word this how time flies. It seems like Robert Cosarrek in wrcstl-Norman MeGirt1is of Fountain year," says the American only yesterday wher. I took ing. Speakers were Jerry Valley. Artist! Group, Inc., whose down the mistletoe." Look i""'
Tarkanian, Califor:Ua State The chdpter members also designs feature works or con· side and the me.ssage ftnlshes.
College al Long Beach disc11ssed the upcoming temporary painters. "Come to think of it, it WAS
basketball coach and Emory Christmas party Dec. 17, dur-Whatever their se.lections, only yesterday."
FWmort:, freshmen and ing the business session led by Americans will send cards by Or how about thi.; one for
junior. Counselor. Mrs . Eldon Dvorak, president. the billions this Yule, an laughs, suggested on ly· for
W t 1 t PT A estimated three billion o( someo·ne you know pretty well. e~ mon them, Sh8'.1non said, or half or The message reads, "I told
,Mn. Robert Otue Bruoett~ .Stars the total greeting cards S•.1ta you were a good girl
. ,President ~ purchased i.IJ year. this year and dG you know
OOMING , UP: Candy CHM .• Diil·yms ever notice that the Shannon says it is difficult what he said??! -'Ho! Ho!
Line Cbrtetmu bazaar wut ,most enduring stars of stage to pinpoint how much the Ho!' • b te' Chr1·s1mas cards will cost, but "Merry c•~-1·· .. •s." be presented by PT A and screen ~e runet . 1111.11 .....
SaturdaJ, ',Dec. 13, from, 10 • l\nd did you ltnow that a few certainly the public is spen· i'i ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
a.m. to 3 p.m. In school. of our great stars started as ding more for each card. or
Items ort sale w\11 .in<:lude blondes and 1didn't make it un· "upgrading" quality of selec·
homemad4= ilft!i and w>tife til they become brunette. like: tioM.
elephants. Baked g:o.o d s 1 Joan Crawford, Bette Davis. The message in many cards
cr.ldy, hot dogs, chill, pop-Joan Bennett, Ida IAJplno and this year conUnuts the
com and cotton candy al80 .-;Lo;r~el;l;;;•Y;ou;n;g;!~;;;;;;;;;:;~·r~el~lgl~ous;;m~ot~if;. e;v~er~a~;fa;vo;n;:;'te will be sold, Games wilJ ·be
1
j,
available Ior entertainment; 1 ~r~ria~o~fW~f.~::~i~: JOll PIOILEM: '
will be the Mmes. Robert i 1. Chase. Jack Staley and Yeu w..,t te aell tome item :
Arthur Adnams. A n y o n e thet yeu no .....,. MM but •
wishing additional in-1 a0111t..,. ehe cen .,. for •
formation may contact Mrs. N 0 T () y ER $ 5 0 Ii WuHI at 847-4691. ? 1 ? ? ? ? • HB:nutei·ngtSonl:~c~:::,ar JODI ANSWER: 1'
You ull THE DAILY PILOT, Hk t... Mothers, Chapter 2 stage Cl1aalfted Mvorflal,., •ft\I plow I
meetings every Monday atj
I :30 p.m. In Lake Park
Clubhouse. ~-·PILOT
is COMING to·
COSTA MESAi ·
FalDAY ·~ ,.
Nov. 28th ·
F .. turln9 Superb
PRIME RIB s3 OF BEEF
PINNER
M¥v!IM'""11
• ' I • PENNY
PINCHER How's lour HearinCJ
MODEL OF NEW HEARING AID GIVEN
A most unJque rree offer of It weighs les,, Chan one quarter
1peclal lntt:rest to those who ounce, and It's all at ear level,
h ea r but do not undentand In one unit. No wires lead from
words hll just been announCed. body to head. Here ls truly new
A true-lire, actual slu replica hope for the hard or hearing.
of the smallest aid ever made These models are free while
wUl be given absolutely free to the llmlled 1U"lJllY loals, so we
anyone answering t h is advcr-suggest yo u wrile for youn
Usement. Try it to see how it now. Again, we repeat, tht:rt Is
ls worn in the: privacy of your no cml and ctnalnty no obli·
ow11 home without cost ot obll· gatlon.
gallon of In)' kind. ll'a yours to Write for yours today to He1tr·
keep free. The size of this aid Ing Aid!, c o Box M-432. Dally
is only on~ or many reeh1rcs. Pilot, Co!ta Mesa. 1
CUSSIPIED NJ
AT OUR SPECIAL LOW RAll i; 3 UND 2 ~ 2 DOLLAU i
AND YOUlt CRIDIT IS GOOD 1 ii
DIAL NOW DIRECT!. i 1
CT•,,. Nd CMlfy .... 1Utl I
We will be OPEN
Weekday Luncheo
11 a.m. staring
Monday, Dec. 1st.
WINES • BEE
(C!1CKT AIL LOUNG
OPEN SOONl
428 E. 17tb ST.-~
COSTA MESA • 642-5671 J
***ft***••••••••********"**•••··········· 1._ ________ ..
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Wtdntsdlr, N"'mbtr 26, 1%9
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'W e!l·n~sday,: ~Harvey' Set.
· JlollywoQd's ·Gt~fS Pay
..I'\~, '
• ••t~ •
11J TOM TJTU8
! ., ...............
All"• quiet Oii the Orllli• Cout front UU. weel 11 far !I .....,., nlshls.,. """""1«1,
bat tartbOr north a potr of
eomed* ~ ooe old •nd one
~-Uvely new -join the
j>irade oi ' producUons on
Oranae 0oun1y lllUe thelter·
saiJit.
1"e newcomers are "Any Wtdnmda)'." which opens • ne.. tlleaW foo the 118-year-old
Santa .Mi~ C.o Di m'u n·I t y
~laytn, and "Harvey," the _prize.winning lMO's comedy
prelJ!llted by the Fullerton
~~ 'f !Oot fu'at a\ "Anf Wtidi'ielday" -an _ ~ cbok<' 'since·
-this irrltef Is allo mannln)I the · clireck!r'• chair for tbe com-,..
edy.' A l!!llCeaful Br!>adwlY -·in Jilli (tt lswiehed'the
....... of sand)i Demi!!),. " bu ~ ,_ 1)lli1nlly 1n
omip County, ~ Jut !!me Iii Isle J881., • ,,. • . .
• F~ the central role of ~le ! b.e·. ,IU-deducUbte·
m of a hilh-POW'e:red g ..
eartlve, ii BartMara Garllcb of
Colla M.... Another Colla
lilesan, Don J!)loedes, Is cul
u !Mr wheeling and dealing Javer, •
· Allft Hart, a busy actor tak· Ina Gii· hls"slsth role of ·t11e
par,.pla)'I tbe Ohio .fack>rY
owner who turns tbe triangle
Into a quadrangle. CompleUng
the pictufe is Edith Goodman
as the' Gecutlve'l. talkati_ve -· · The Muriel Resnik comedy
unfoldJ on the spUt-Jevel stage
of tht San&a Ana Players' ,new
theater. a converted a~ com·
fortable church bullding at
West 6th and · Ross streets
near·the Civic Center.
Friday's opening per!orman·
ce is resei-ved for the players'
first nighters group, while
subsequent stagings wlll be
given Fridays and Saturdays
through Dec. 13. Reservations
are being taken at 543-7647 or
835'1417.
* Whlle Santa Ana celebrates
its g~lden a nn i versa r y ,
"Harvey'' is observing its
:diver year and will be back on'
Broadway to commemmorate
the 1 occa~ion , ~"· ~irst, tiowe,ver, comes a visit to
Fullerton.
Tony Brandt or Corona del
Mar is directing Mary Chase's
PulltZer Prize winning comedy
\\1hich · will see W a 1 t
Assenhaimer taking t h e
tea.ding role of ElwoOd P.
Doud. to whom man's best
friend is a six.foot invisible
rabbit. Floria Mose plays his
exasperated ilster, Veta
Louise.
..
t
dramatic readlnp b e I n I
_.,ieil at ihe OpG End .
-Wider the title "All ._. .... Cone1J, Pepple." Warren
Deacon .ts citrecu., .
David Paul, Betay Paol and
Genf:vie:ve Murray are in·
du4ed Ill tbe cut · of tbe
ar1p.a1 producllon at tbe GWC Offers u-Ur, •ts Villa W a y , 11~ .• Beac!1-. T!~ta may 'AJi·" ,,..,. , m'
be ,...,,,eel by calllnJ 67~ ""'
U:IO.
Murray jp1'1 comedy . w ODderland'
"Luv'' retUIDt1 production
'lltunday night at tho 5an
Clemente Community fteater.
lllchar4 Anderaen dlrecls tbe
u.r...diaracter cut of Bob . . Moe, Karen Moe and Gordon
Golden Weat College 's
drama d~artment turns to
family ibeater .,for I t s
Christmas pri>ducUon :with an
adaptation of Lewis carroJl's
''Alice in, Wonderlind." .Harris. Four per(onnances a r e
P.erfarmancea: are b e l n g scheduled -In the A ct o·r ' s
J(ven at the Cab r 111 o PlayboJ<, Doc. JS.ti and 11·20,
PC:llybouae,· 202 Aveni d a at 7:30 p.rD., and two maUnees
abrlllo, San Clemente. ncket especially for tbe YOW>iolers,
:?tlervatlonl are being ac-pee. 1i and 20, at 1:30 p.m.
cepted at 4f2.0te5. All tickets are 25 centa from * the college book!tore.
They ' won't let t h e All of Carroll's familiar
'NO CAVITIES'-:Barbara G•r.licJt shows Alan Hart
what a healtbY btlde she'd mai:e in thi1 scene from
tbe new Saofa Ana Communlly Players comedy
"Any Wednesday," opening Friday.
Westminater C om mu nit Y characters are iii the pro..
·1Thelte? get away with only ducti0'.1 -the March Hare,
thfee JJ¢ormances of !.'1be DormoUse, Mad Hatter, King
Odd eotiple," 80 the populii:: and Queen of Heart! -and a
Ne~I S~· comeclJ is being few upbeat wrtnk1es are being
held over f~ a.fJnal sta&fng added by the 1players. 'lbe set
S a t u rd a Y n i Ch t a t will have ps)'Chedelle colors
Westml11t.er'1 Finley School. and design, and guitar mu11ic
Others In lbe cast are Jill
McMitfan, Ja~. ~vilOD, Loia
Larnard,'wllllam Fe<ney, Jay
Conklin; ArthtirPrunlf:r, Carol Hale; John MAione and direc-
tor Brandt, who, will appear as
the cab drivtr.
Perfonnances of ' "Harvey"
will be given Fridays and
Saturdll)'S through Dec. 13 at
the MuCkenthaler Center, i19
Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton.
Tickets may be reserved by
calling 827-1339.
* Back on the Orange Coast, a
var.lely of theatrlca1 en·
tertainment -c om e d y ,
drama, musical and anthology
-heads into a second
weekend at four separate
theater.s.
At the Costa Mesa Ci vic
Playhouse, "Stop the World r
I \Vant to Get Off" takes the
stage Friday anCI Saturd8y
with Thor Nielsen directing
and playing the leading role.
Jayne Hamil costars in the
Newley-Bricusae mus I ca I
satire.
The popular production is
being presented at the Com-
munity Center auditorium on
the Orange County
F a I rgrOunds. Reservations
may be obtained by phoning
the city's recreatioft depart·
ment at 83'-5303. , * . "Invitation to a Murder" is
the fare at the Huntlng_ton
Beach Playhouse, w h er e
Pllillp DeBanot Is directing
the mystery dr!lffla. An1'abelle
Quigley, Ron Lambert and
Cheri Surncow take the prin-
cipal roles.
Perfonnances are b e·i n g ,
given Fridays and Saturdays
at the playhouse, 2110 Main
St., Huntington Beach, Call
S36-8861 for reservations.
* Tennessee WWiams Is the
subject of the collection of
Oirected by Silly Crowley, will provide transition between
Uie play atars Sam B~ scenes.
and John Moran. The scbooJ•is cast In the tiUe role of Alice
located at Ttuk Street and · is Mindy Mlddoogh. Sup-
Edwards Avenue, w.ith 1>9rting her are Bonnie
reservaUons being ~en at Hackworth, Renata Florf:1,
897·1114. Laurel Burne, Wendy Fried-
Astor Aboard
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Louise Astor 1 daughter of
Lady Irene Astor, has been
added to the cu~ cf "Anne of
the Thousand Days" starring
Richard Burton.
man, Virginia Trela, Don
Hayes, Sa 11 y Mizell , Sylvia
Symank, Cheryl WOiodford,
Marlane Melton, Dan Brown,
Steve Mutschler, Robert
LaMonte, and Bob Pone.
Soldiers will be played by
Velia Fisher, Jorelta Worden,
Guy Cockmnn, and Roland
Barajas, and flowers by Diane
Baty.
Open End Auditions
For Feilfer Mitstcal
Stars Signed
! HOU, YW'OOD (UPI)
·&lzam>e Ph!shette and Ed
Nelson m co-stars of 20th
Century-Fox's 9 0 • m l n u t e
movie for television, 11 Along
Came a Spider." ·
Ope.1 auditions for a musical
revue based on the work or
satirical cartoonist Jules Felf-
fer will be held Sunday and
Monday at the Open End
Theater In Newport Beach.
years ago formed a sununer
music repertory group in
Anaheim. Among his musical!
credits are "Oliver," "Fi·
nian's Rainbow," "Bye Bye
Birdie," "Carnival" and ••110
in the Shade."
Crossword Puzzle
Thor Nielsen, currently star·
ring in his own production of
"Slop the World-I W<!-rit to
Get Off" at the Costa Me.sa
Civic Playhouse, will direct
the Newport producUon. ,
"Applicants should be well
versed In comedy ,singi'.1g and
dancing."· Nielsen Said. "The
show will be done in a fast
paced, sophisticated style re·
quiring some excellent talent.
Revue and standup comedy
experience also would be
valuable."
As a director, Neilsen Is
familiar with the fast.moving
satirical style of Feffer, hav.
ing loured with a; aimllar
revue for three months in
Europe last year with the
University of So u th er n
California theater a rt s
department.
ACROSS 52: Oash
54 Groove 1 Vessel 55 Du.II finish .5 Card 'ga111e 58 Astrtn 9 lilosalc law 61 Femlnfne
14 Russia• name
river &3 Restrain
15 Simon -65 Goddess of f & In a h!ghei' the 111oon plate &7 Retribuli'ff'
17 Kind of action lealhe1 70 Below In ran i 19 Metrit unit 71 One of five 2J1 Transportat ion ma jor lak es
mtd iu11 n Thailand's
21 Leg.al former name document 73 Rich i11
2:3 Part ol 111allf'r "lo b~" 7~ Cord , 24 Femal e 75 Red or
anlmal uc•e1 -··
125 Catch ~8 Restin!I DOWN place
l Punishes i1I 30 Fathrted ~2: Insect a certain 6 Veterans .. ,
0 Mat 2 Greelin;
•41 Loud sound 3 Acquired
·4Z Unit of ret1tivt
Ice erea111 4 Sufftrln9
44 Very 5 l1ttrlng
popular place
person 6 Etcf'nttlc:
4S Of tht ,Sl1n, speed of 7 In a i~e
sound 8 Oan9 er
~1 Ace: , Scores
J words 10 Japanest
•9 Period sash
of lime; 11 R~ttr 2 words ·1 Z State
S1 Analyt:e 13 In th is
critically locition
'
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Ytslerday!s Puzile Solved:
P l S • r l
O M OV E 1v•ll
11/201&•
18 Highl! ~J Ne ighbor
irittll gent of Ec uador people ~O A lber\a city
22 Pait ol 48 Fiber
Ntwloundlantl: 50 Steer •ildly Abbr. 53 Nol in any
2f, Weapons de9ree
27 Tree 55 Unreasonable 29 Fttl enthuslas• deiettion s&·uuslc JO T1ke a licensing
lon1 stei; group: Abbr. 31 Wll 57 Subject
33 Bustle 58 Scottish 34 Detroit « arth lttct Vancouv~ 59 lnsttumffll footballer 60 Informal JS Slit: f r. farewell
Jb .\ppro•i· &2 ····Wo lf~ 1111l~ly: S!out
2 worl1s character
J7 Bird 64 Oirection
38 Copf'nhil gtn 06 Captu1e t lt iztn t.8 Short drint
J'I Derived 49 Wotd flo m the lndlcalint sun surpr ise
I•
Nielsen is a longtime actor-
director in Orange and Los
Angeles · cou.1Ues who t\vo
The revue, e;iUtted "A Smile
is a Frown Turned Upside
Down," will open NeW Year's
Eve and will play Fridays and
Saturdays through January at
the Open End, 2815 Villa Way,
Newport Beach.
j
I
I •
wtiHe your ntishbon llt doirll
the ThanDalwlll ~ you couJd ile'oa a ·
submarine nrqt Ill the Nd hit.
The elegant Vlctor'lln decor of
The l'lau. Inn
Efltl'M• ol Rotlt Tul'Uy •lltbd VlrtW• Ktm
$2.SO ' S!>'~l•I Chlld'I ''at-. &1 .&0 •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Th• N•w Ori••"' Styl•
French Market
EnttH-RHal ~vrUy
$2.SO
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
. Th• Romtrrtic Moonlit Atmotphate of
The :Blue :Bayou Restaurant
' EntrH-ftffttTUfkty
. $2.115
············~·························· OlnMnl t«Ytd from 11:30 AM.
Disne~and 1l10 senu 1111 ks!
ni1httim• entertainmtllt, Nomnbor 27-29.
PAUL ANKA
FRIENOS OF DISTINCTION
JENNIFER .
BILL DEAL and THE RHONDEL~
PLUS mo1e thtn SO 1dventures 1nd 1ttractions.
Opon Thanks1mnr0.1 !rom to IM lo M~ni1hl
Disnc~1land
ll/1'11t 1 __ :...,._:._ __ ======~----!
'
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Tribute' to J ~k "W grner ·
' I \ I '>
By BOB THOM~ 1 dlsqree. l'm here to pay cotting you a fortune."
H~'"YW. OOD (AP) ,;;, You homage ' lo my prof.,.lonal Re>aan noted 1hat Warner -· • had been spending time In couldn't call It a lov.e ·1•'8~-father." . New York, ivheie be backed a
becaUH Jeck Warner .wasn't . Gov. Ronald Rea.pn, who new Broad\\'.aY. mlJ!lcal,
the kind"• bc!as who:·"~ ispent ti yem undet contract "Jimmy." The ,governor "add-
love. lDcleeCI. Done of ~1Jlen . to Warner, gazed over the ed: "You won't like it there.
who built h'lovie emp~ ~ :ae~ace and~ to his The governor .(Nelson A.
considered loteb~. . • old bola: '1Look if" all those Rockefeller} never even did a
But ·!MY. ·~e· ·out· of ·dress' eitras. Tbl'.s .must be walk.on."
respecl .-.and a M!nle ·of•I>;-~,~~·~;·;;;·~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ·hlstO!Y: Tbe reapect wu"ex·1; . -
preaied When .',the , teretn : 11 • 1 . .. • : '
lighted·uf. with put mmnents "' ,--.
or film: !Al Jolaoa In th<.fint I. "[1111-1 ·01W' SOUTH COAST llOUnd movte ' .. ·piuJ Munl u · • -!A, f'LAZA THUUIK
Zola .. . o' Humphrei' Boiart : : " -• San Dlip ,_at lriotol • 546-271<1
uklilg ·Dootey.Wlllonto"i!Jay ''..:'·.-~----~--------
it again. Sam" ••• Errol • MATINEES ON~Y Flynn dying u ,Gen. ,CUster ,
. . . Bette l0ev1s, 'James » . FRID~ Y, NOV. 28 12:30 • 2:30 ~~g~~':J::1~:~:· al !, . ·SATURDAY, NOV. 29 12:30 • 2:30
Ja4 W•J'l!Of was potent.I• su· NDAY NOV 30 12:30 ON. i:Y of Warner Bro\jiors studio • • •
when all those achievements .;:;::;:;;:;::;::;:;:;;::;::;:::;::::;;=.;::======:, wefe /Umed. And ao a
thousand t,ldustry 1.e ad e r-s
went to the studio last week to
pve him honor;
They also seemed to be bid·
ding farewell to an era of
Hollywood greatness now clos-
ed with absOlute finality.
Warner.was the last of the in-
dustry PiOneen to sell out. He
had handed the studio to Seven
Arts, which in tum sold It to
the present awners. Kinney
National Services. The new
studio boss for Kinney, former
agent Ted Ashley, gave the [l:::======i:;:::==:;;:==========' glittering farewell for Warner.
Frank Sinatra was emcee.
He said, the dinner was in
honor of "a man who has done
a great deal ror what is Iif~ of
the motion picture industry."
Jack Valenti, iis pre:aident of
the MoUon Picture Producers
Association. rec·alled his tussle
with Warner over the salty
language in "Who'S Afraid of
Virginia WooU?" Said ValentJ :
"How I have longed for sweet,
delicate 'Virginia' -longed
for her after 'Fanny-Hill.'"
Onetime Wamer gangster
Edward G. Robinson called
himself "the only . 5-foot.S
survivor of the W a·r n er
University Class of 1.930." He
recalled the days when he,
Bogart, Flynn and Muni "used
to sit around exchanging X-
rated anecdotes about our
commander.in-chief." ~
"There aren't many or us
left," Bette Davis s a Id
rtie!ul1y; S..he ha.4 known years
of battle with Warner, bu.t she
Commented: "Dorothy Parker
once remarked that the thing
most responsible for 'the good
old days' was a poor memory.
• I
• .. flOM THI STA.IS OP
"IOR H flll" COMU
"RING OF
"BRIGHT WATER"
2 SUPE~ II~
HOLIDAY SHOWS * Continuous Thurs • ~I • Sat O' -Sun * . . ~ .
Coming ·. • ., CHRISTMAS DAY . '
"FUNNY GIRL"
Omar Sharif I ~· ' ' I
......... ...., . .., ........
.......... t1' ............
· Prat 111:-.... . ·111rta..-1ter
D1 ........ Km
e JOB PRINTING · e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
',Qu1 1ity Printin9 and Oependeblt Service
.., for more theft a -.uerter of a c•ntury.
PIL O T rRlt<llNG
2211 WIST IALIOA II.YD., NIWPOIT llACH -Mto4.JJ1
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*'' ' -. ORANGE COUNTY ' <!:.ta:tFORNl4' . ' ' voe. 61, NO. 283', 3 SECTIONS, 30 "PAGES ' ., (_ : .
' • ! • . ' -· t ... _ -.. .:::;::" . r-,· : .. --' -"J:'1r'•-::::4 1.
l .:..,,, ! l ,.:· ' .
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.~a~ssacre r ·ec,.... -~-·.. .j Q .u
Blood Aids· -Needy
GWC Students Make Sacrifice
By· RUDI NIEDZIELSKI pr !119 o.!ty ~.., ,,..,
It's-tough for a college atudent to be
charitable around Tbankqiving.
U SJ.tally he isn't workinj and the money
he carries in his pocket scarcely pays for
more than ·a hamburger and a malt.
Five students at Golden West College
were determined however, to provide
needy families ln Huntington Beach with
Thanksgiving rlinners.
And the way they did tt was to sell
lheir own blood, perhaps one of the most
meaningful contributJons one human
being can make lo another.
Mike Longo, an accounUng major from
Garden Grove, said he and his friends ar·
rived at the idea while playing cards in
the eaftiteria.
"We decided that we wanted to do
&0melhiog more meaningful than just
collect money and that's why we decided
to sell our blood," he explained.
Last Saturday the group marched down
to a commercial bloodbank in Santa Ana,
stretched out their arms, and gave one
pint each. The reward was '4 per person.
14At first we were afraid that they
wouldn't take our blood," ,he continued.
"They told us that they already had their
quo.ta in Type O and all of us .tested out
at Type O, Finally they decided they
needed it after all."
The group then contacted the Women's
Assistance League of Huntington Beach
and' asked them to provide a llilt of needy
families.
"I don't think our blood money is going
to go too far. We had no idea there were
so many genuinely needy people in Hun·
Ungton Beach," he added.
The students have also collected
varioui canned goods at the college to
round out tbe dinner. "My mother even
told me she would bake some pineapple
upsidlHlown cakes for the project," said
Longo.
'nlose who participated in the project
are Longo, Cosy Werner, Sharon Parent,
Dave Strough, and Augie Longo.
"We're going to try for some more
before Thanksgiving though/' said Mike.
"I hope that we can get about 20 to
participate."
Area Legislators Differ
On Needs of H~tffi,gton
By JACK 'BllOBA~
OI "" OlftJ Piii! ltW
Dlff!rtnt views on subjecb vital to
lluntln&lon Beach were expresa<d by
state arid county legislators during a din--
ner meeting Monday with the Huntington
BeaCb City Council.
Controversial subjects covered included
the proposed Bolsa Island nuclear
desalting plant, the e~pansion of the Hun·
tlngloo Beach Edison plant, and ~he
Local Agency Formation Commission
(LAFC).
Meeting with the councilmen were
state Senator John Schmitz (R-Tu!tin),
Assemblymen Robert H. Burke (R-Hwr
tinglon Beach) and Robert Badbam CR·
Newport Beach) plus Orange (X>unty
supervisors David L. Baker and Alton E.
Allen.
Badham said he believed the ~lsa
Island project was dead because ?f r11ing
costs and other factors. He cited op-
R05iti111 of conservationists, the current
'J.'wo· Huntington
Men Given Award
By Westminster
Two men from Huntington Beach were
amon four cited Tuesday night by t~
wesU:inster City Council [or thetr
tii'avery ill" pulling a trapped man from a
burning vehicle Oct. 12. Coun--
The award was presented by
cnwoman Ja'/ Neugebauer to Thomas L.
Donahue .and Robert L. Schlelcber '. Hun-
tington J!eaCb; and Jeffrey C. Hams and
Wiiiiam R. M-Anaheim. . .
' . .. ' ' .
coo\·ol.-Y. and an ~laUon ol cost broualil on by· Atonuc Eaer11 Com· niisslim regulaU9ns. ~,
Burke dlsagreed, Calling the Bolsa
Island project. "inevitable." He said a
Jack of funds was holding it up, but only
temporatj.ly. He also said Colorado River
wate. now, used in the county was show·
irig heavier mineral content and even.
tua!Jy would have to be blended with
desalted ~an water to be useable.
Councibl'lan Henry Kaufman asked if
state funds could be appropriated for the
project and was told by Senator Schmitz
that -there is no real surplus or state
funds anCt with the boOO market problem
the fature 'is not bright.
Badham said·the local Eclison plant had
to be expanded to ·meet growing elec·
trlcal 'power needs and discounted pollu·
liOn figures cited by William Fitchen,
county air pollution control officer.
He was backed in the attack on Fit·
chen's figures by Burke who said · that to
attribute 30 tons a day of pollutants to the
local plant was unrealistic when com·
pared with Los Angeles County where 12
times as much production produces only
90 tons.
Supervisor Baker defended the county
board's request for a moratorluni on all
fossil fuel (gas and oil) burning electrical
generating plants.
. "'lbe solution to controlling emissions
from such plants Is here today," Baker
said. "Funding is the problem." He said
the state Public UU!iUes Commission
should allow the utiliti es to spend
research money as an operating cost.
Badbam suggested that ''pressure
should be put on the auto manufacturer
to prOduce a smog-free automobile."
Mayor Jack Green wanted to know if
the Legillature la planning laws to
atrengtben the.I.AFC and ran into strong
opposition from senatqr Schmitz, who is
chairman of· the ·senate's Local Govern·
(Seo MEE'l!NG, Page I)
Bond Vote
Education
Drive OK'd ·
Approval of a pre-elecUon lntonnaUon
campaign for the Huntington Beach
Union High School District's proposed
'9.5 mlllion bond issue was granted by
district trustees Tuesday.
lt consists o( recruitme-.1t of volunteer&
to collect campaign funds, prinUng of
pamphlets and news releases, fonnaUoo
of various subcommittees and ·public
talks by members of the board of
trustees, prior to the Feb. 10 election.
Several board members ind!cated their
willingness to make appearances before
community organizations to point out the
necisslty of the bcr.id measure which will
be used to finance the· construeUon of
another comprehensive blah school and to
bring a classroom wing at the Huntln«tan
Beach High School cam.pus up to requlred
earthquake safety standards.
Trustee Ralph Bauer told school ad·
mini!trators he would do evei'ything in
his power to make the election suc-
cessfuJ.
"You have my body," he said.
"You don't have mt.1e,'1 snapped
Trustee Joseph Ribal, who has cor..
sist.enuy~opposed tbe bond. issue on the
_..ia 11111 . ·~ hl&li-;~r fi:ciltft1'toald be eflHlrdlf· 1l
~ --,YOICed .lOJ'-.t' Gordon,' cbilrmin Of ·an organ111'&:
mlllee of · a -grOut> <a1le4,I
Organized to Support -In a prepmd statement, 'he told
trustees his group "propoaei. to 1validaie ,
the hypothesis that the1 diltrict. C8';l pJ'O..
vide quality education for Us students
without resorting to a sixth com·
prehenslve high school.
"We plan to Collect~anCl to evaluale' all
the relevant data, and we plan to make ·
public both .our conclusions .and the
means by which we reaChed them in
order that everyone may judge for
· himself the validity of aur· judginents."'
Trustee Bauer replied, "AH of a sudden
you aime on the ace'ne,ll'ild say l'tn gOing
to fight you. The ·si~th high schoot may
just.come out to be:lhe alrerRaUve -that!s
best"
Trustee Matthew Weyuker said he Is
reluctant to let Gordon "use meetings of
this.board .as a political forum."
Valley's City Hall
Shut Friday Too
City Hall will be closed both Thursday
and Friday in Fountain Valley as city
employcs enjoy a tw<><lay Thanksgiving
celebration.
Employes In Fountain Valley take two
days for Thanksgiving each year because
they forsake Admissions D8y as a hoUday,
said City Manager Jlm Neal.
HunUngton Beach city offices alw will
be closf\1 both Thursday and Friday.
Post o[fices will observe regular holi·
day schedules Thursday. Thanksgiving
Day.
Mail will be picked up from deposit
points on ho1lday schedules and processed
for outgoing dispatch but there will be no
regular window or delivery service.
---. -----·-_, --..
lnillans ·and Piigrims .
Whitney ~rown and Cindy Hanson, both 6, of Fountain Valley's New-
· land SchOOI were among thousands of Or&hie Go~t·young1ten who
learned about the meaning of Thanksgiving Ilu.<Week by r~etlng
th'e orlginal'Thanksglving Day feast 1n-bomemade Indian.and.Pilgrim
costumes.
' For Funding.ofNewParks.
F.oun!ain.Valley·hopes '9 squeeze more
money -as much as '30Q;OOO -1out Of
developers in the future for the city's
parks apd landscapipg needs..
The mdney Can ~be galned1 th(ough a
change in · ci(y ordinlnce&, already·
recommended by the.planning and patl<s
commisskms, ·which would renentf1lly
ctoo5le !he requfred fees per'Jot.for park
d.eve19J>.n;ie11t. , · , 1 • • • J •
. Currently the cil.y chafges devF.J:qpers
$100 per lot. ror. a straight R·l (single
fimily). · <Je.velopment. $85 per unit for
mulilple familf.'and $200 per lot'fot plan·
ned developments with an av.erage· lot
sJze·.under7;20ll•square fee. ,
·'f'\te proposed •new ·ordinance ·comes ·
before the city eoq~il Dec~ 9. lt-.W?Uid
change the·fee structure as follows:
Slraiihl )\-1 -l1!10 !><\' lot. ,
All planned developments -$3:00. per_
lot.. . -Multiple famlly :-$65 for · a one bedroom.
$95 fOr twot bedrooms; arid ·$125 for three
bedrooins and up. . • .
1'1e JJl'Ol!Ol'ed change. Is "'peeled to
pan the city council •. Councilman . Ran .
Shenkman proposed ·the ·study y·wh,ich Jed .
to the new {igQres. . , .
Planning director . Stan Man~he1d.
developed ·the ft!e' structure baaed on a
sampllngl()( 11 other' cltiea·ualng. •~ Pl&rk·
fee system. 1 • • • • • : ••
"'Under our current•syst.emrwe ·chai"ge:
the 6th highest .rate;" 1)e explain,.! ..
"under the new fees we would be the 5th
highest.••
CORliderlilg 111' coot of land for a p<rt
Md deveJoP.ment 'ex~s. M1nsfield.
estimated, the citY' couJa· j'ultify a fee of
$'400 per lot'bul ·recommended against il
t,ecallle of ~ ~vy, lot fees cequired
by the clly. ' . ) x
"If adopted the new fee scale ·snoUltl
solve a predicted $300,000 deficit in the
f1.1t.ure for·our 1>1rk 1Q1Uiallloo," he ukL
' • • ' r ' ' I . ' '
H~tington, ;G~I.
Esca~.:Death
Pistol . Accident .. · . ' .
'o I ,Nw ·.tragedy wu am:t<d, '.l\JeldaY
night. when a young· HuntingtoO Beach
girt wa11 aCcidenta11y ,shot by her 'U-~·
old'btother while he'Cleaned a plslol.
. Polk:e slid MeJodY ·Shuman,, io; . .of 502
Huntlhgton · Ave., was not ·aerloualy in.
j)Jred when hit by • 'bOllet fr'Om , •. !Z
caliber automailc plitot. She Is ll!led in'
Jjood cond!Uon · today at Huntington
fntercommuDlty' Hospital,
Tile acCident ~cilrred about 8 p.m.,
Whtie Meioc1y Wai lt~etthed.oit the rioor
with lier ~1 bbok11 and" her Jxi>ther •.
Eric, was .cleaning and loadlnftheipflWI,
a81d police. . .
Each of them defied the poss1bihty of
explosion as .they rescued Daniel Garcia,
51 Huntington Beach, from the cab or a
bU'ming pickup truck ~hich had overtum-
eO at the intersection of Broo~
Street aod McFadden Avenue 1 n
Westminster. , . Garcia, who had rece1v~ third degree
burns over 40 percent of his body, died three weeks after the accident, despite
treatment in the bum center of tham-
Orange County Medical Center.
Pair Nabbed • 1n Shootout
' Erkrtold'lnveOtlgaton that bO lwfbffn
cleaning weailons tor· abm.lt:thrff -hOurs·
when · be'. walked , acroa:' tbe roorit and
tfipped over his siste:r'• .ouiltretched
legs,·~ilocharg\ng t!ie w.eapon., . .
The c1lildren'1 ~. ~ •. R?by
Shuman, told police she was asleep·at the
Ume of the accident, but was awakened
by her son who told her wlolt happened. -
The men ~ly" received bumfi aa:
tbey eztractecfGlrcia from the pickup.
PILOT OFFICES
SHUT THURSDAY
: All OAILY""PILOT offices will be closed
"ntursday in ob:tervance of Tbanltsglvlng
J)ay. The holiday edition of the
newspaper will be published °'! a
"Saturday" schedule ror m o t n 1 n g-
dellnry to .hom<s.
; A special feature of the holiday edition
will be the Inclusion of several sections
ctovoled to Christmas •hopping. In ad-
.cltkm to bargains io be found in area
atora -carried In the special sect.ion
.US -the seclloos will contain gijt "'I·
,..itona and holiday ,.. ... stori,. from
Ut<ralt, tllnJulhoul the world.
• ·'
...
8a11dit Suspects., Deputies iii Car Duel
A pair ol bandit '""""'"' are in jail today after they allegedly engaged
Orange Coun!J Sheriff's depuUes In ·•
running lllli1 baltle during a JOO.mile-per·
hour-punutt through traffic on two free-
....,. 'I\J...ia, nil!ht.
Tbe"-ch.ue ended jn Norwalk with a
three-<:ar pllup, 1iut a Los Angeles .County
Sheriff's deputy said he rammed his
patrol car into the wreckage, to slam the
door of the getaway car shu~ and trap
the fleeing men.
Donald L. Horrigan. %5, of Anaheim,
and Btuce L. Amico, 20, ol Buena Park. were booked into county jail on charges
ot armed robbery and assa\llt with intenl
to commit murder.
AuthorltJes sakl a .357 l\1agnum re. volver was confiscated f.rom the getaway
car, along with $1.000 believed taken a
1hort t1me before In a Cole's Market rob-
bery in Anaheim.
lnvestlaaton assert six shots were
fired from lhe aetaway car at pursuing
'
lawmen, while they returned the fire
with five shotgun blasts before the SUS·
pect auto <:areened ooi of coritrol at the
alx-mUe poinl.
Sheriff'& Lt. Bud M&M said the har·
rowing chue began when a while sedan
whizzed by depuUes Dave Skaugstad and
Jerry Horton, stationed on the San Diego
Freeway in Los Alamitos.
Anaheitn police had radioed a descrip--.
tion of the two bandit suspects sought for
the market holdup; plus the getaway
car's license number. ,
Skaugstad and Hortoo .Sllid ,they recog. 1
niud their quarry.
"Our' deputies saw the 'car go by and
followed it," aaid Lt. Mann. "At Katella
Avenue on the San Gabriel Freeway, they
turned on the red 11.ihts and sirin." ·
Horrigan and Amfco-bolh suspect$ in
a chain of Oranae County holdupo-shol
off northboond an the fr..,.ay aod the
dcpuUea rtportod bt radio-Ule)'-wue-
under IJtt.
,.
. ~-----
Holdibg their own ftre 1to ,avoid endan-i
gering other motcrllltl, tbe deputies'
finally-got a clW'r at.>t. at,the•Rolecl'IDI·
Avenue offramp, 1 and~ Skluptad'1·-five
sholguo .blaalJ bit:the,fieeina ca<. ,
. DeP.UtY H<1r\9n w~ .. traveliog. at. hi.ah,
speed and overran the .offramp,, but the
suspect'• car hurtled do'wn It arid slam-'
med into a car dilven. by· Sarah Rich· ·
ardaon, 19, o( No1'9all!. · · • • • ·
No ~ was, i11Jtiredl fn·the•excbange .of
gunfire,_ bul Miu Rfc"l~1!fered CUtl titulees>t>~ the • • r at K.ite1i"t:.e1iue mid lhe free ·ult
Lt., ftftJJn said the ,pair :were; about 1to
n"! on fool when Norwalk SherlH's
Slallon I)epulf, Raymond Serna crUhed
hls car lnto th~ opening door of thelrs,
trapping' lhcm tnsfde.
FJve other.~trol cars from the LASO
staUoo In Nonralt' aod al., Lakewood
had''putled .onto the rneway· at Alondra
Boulenrd ''Iii 'hlll 'the· suspects wlm
possible.
•
Pollcellbeled •the 111o011nf an acclilent.
El Toro 'Hottest' . ' . ' . '
Spot · i11r Coutitry
-Ar.my~ Bares
' . . . . .
Color~:Slides
'' , '
Of Vi~tims
·' '
. • -Jl°l1m· Wl{e ·~
WASilJNGTON -Top.Anny olllclals
unfolded today, before slioebd and
sickened momben.o! Congress, dalalll 'If a.. aileged'u.s. maasa<ft o1-Vlei· nO!l1<\e vlltaieh,' bicludliii '-'liar· llldel
s11ow1ng p11es o1-bodies. • ·
Tiie'· display, to. the Senate· and ·trOUM
Anned Services Cmm1itteel, followed
•Jiorlly • • ·White Houle declaratloft that
the allepct ·March; 1111 mauacre at My
tal Is, "abhorrent to the conacleoce of.all
tbe;Amerlcan people." · ·Pr;., Secr~ry llonald t. Zie1ler,
streaslng that he was speaking for Nixon.
ple(tged that all "illegal and immoral
conduct; as alleged," would be dealt Wltb
by 'lbe'Anny. and the Admlnlatrallon.
Secretary of the Ahny Slanley R.
Resor, who appeared ~ore ~ com·
mittees, ~scribed the eventt at My Lai
as "appalling" and said the investigation
has been broQned to include whether
details of 1the alleged m&..."B klllings·"ere
covered up.
Sen. Stephen M. Young (D-Ohlol. siid
me· colored· lllde showed "noncombatant
citizens · who bad been ·killed al close '\
range•wtfh tbt1r Insides hanahtg out."
He. called Uie situation "an aet of brµ~Jty tliat.cannot liaft been e=eded
lb Hltlp"• tlmt." . ' .
1 ''ffo 'ine cn'qudtio0 tlllt there WU an iitroc~ ' alaujjllMr ' o! • tOii to -'IOI clVOl:anl," Young llld. ''There can be ne
justlflcallol\ !or.an act of brulallty Of t1lll ttnd." <
. Seit. DW,I K. lllOU)'e (l>-Hawajl), a
TI)~h d~11ed Workl War Il herO who
. lost hi• rlglrt army In Italy, llld, "I
thought I'd be a btt hardened aboat tbls,
but 1 mlllt say that I'm. sick about•thit."
The •lklea exhibited ·by Relor at th•
hearhfgs, hurriedly arranged u preo
lestatlono about the lneldent swened both
at home and abroid; were a doien pb;ltot
.said.1to have been taken on'tbe day Of the
ldlllngs by an Anny e om b a 1
Jihqlographer, Ronald Haeberle.
' Haetier1e ts a'mong wltnesseS to the
alleged massacre who recenUY have-
given gruesome details of lhe sbooUngs in
the village. . ,
Sen: IrJouY~. said one slide a~ 11~
younc woman standing up begging, her
cblklr<n stsodlng around her, lmowin.f
that she would be kllltd an instant later.
Inouye siJd, he was . "sick about it,"
~...Jt~~· oo quesUon ~t rnen, women
8nd chll<fren, ·apparently non-combatanta,
had . been ·killed."
llep: Leslie Arendo ca.JU.), said u..
pict"ures show:ed m1&m1 of bodiei but
said ~· dJd not show that Americans
did the kjlling. '
· "They were pretty gruesome pie-~
tures?"·90llle00e asked. ..
"Yeah,'' Ar~ replied. ''Yeah, ]'VI
got i queasy stomach." ·
Jn a statement to While House
reporters foUowing day11 of persiltent
quesUonlng -and Y tr i u 111 y Dono
committal replies -ZleiJ.er said il'lt"
President viewed "1he b)cldent as ''in
di~ vtolaijoo" of u.s, mllftsry pollcy. -------------" StOelc 'ltlsrlcet
NEW'YORK fAP) -The stbck marut
took on a flrnier tone-in quiet tradlRJ Jatl
today, <S.. quota"""'' Pageo M). -.-------------,··
·.Cease
' . .........
Ttie weaiberman;s wllhiWt you 1
happy ThanUflvlng wltll llWlll)'
•kla over tile Orange Coaal and
temperatures tabbed in , .. low 80'•· . --.
IN$_IDE TODAY .
OTonae Countv suptrvia:ors have ~..,. ,.,,., l!IGU b< ·lite
fir•t Jteo cOir'"eoolutio'nize cOamtv
bankfno pro&~•r••· Pnil•' 7. . . . "-,...: --• CllMlllrlll ---.. ._.. " or ... c...,. • 'c...-.. ... " --• lyMI ......... • ··'*""' , .. ' -, .. 1. ==--1 .. lt --•• •• ·-" -" -.....
=~ ... " -' • --~ ==· • __.._,.., , .. ,.
a OAJl.Y PILOT N
Burgla~s
•
I
Get Haul
Of $10,000 .
fflil>«orlnl bur&lars lootecl two costa
Me11 llora of nearly 110,000 lo val.Ulea
Tueaday and early today, Including a
qo111Uty of bedroom fomhhll!IJ lo which
the company truck was stolen and med
lo the geleW•Y·
Pllirolllng pollctm .. m1aed the.loam
which broke Into Sean, lloebod< &
Com,pany, South Cout Plw, b7 on1y
momenta early today. accordinl 1o
investigators.
Someone wing an unknown 1nstnunent
smashed a glass door in the bulldin& at
3333 s., Bmtol 111., looting the pmntjos
of a.-In womea11 leather tolls trt.
med In fur. ,
Police aaid. burglars who may even
hove had •a key looled the Mattma Kini;
270 E. 17111 SL, on '.l\!elday, making oft.
with ll,1181 lo mmhandl!e lo the firm'•
'4,5()0 von.
Officer James Farley. d.iacovertd ~
burglJuy lo Sooth Coast Pllza al I :47
a.m. today, enunatlng that be had
missed catching them tn the act by two
or three moments.
P•trolman Tom LUii' had posed the
scene onJy a abort time earlier and all
was well.
·The: Mattrt11 Kini burglary wu diJ..
covered during the day Tuesday by
owner 'nlomu H. P•, who discovered
entry wu made via the front door and
the entire ahowroom looted.
The ... Included • ldng si2e bed,
....n.d llilens Md other IW'1lhhll!iJ,
as well as mattresse1, bedspreads and
the like, all believed loaded onto the II>
ton company truck.
Huntington Man
Arrested on
Burglary Count
A 1eH .. mployed Huntlngtoo lleacb ml·
dent WU arrested Tue8day niJbt on a
warrant from loo Angeles after police
allep they recovend P,,000 In office
equipment taken from a loo Alll'les
ICbool earlier thLs month.
Robert W. Engli!h, 2S, of 15182 Feola
Circle, b being held In city jail today on
charget of burglary, recelvln& stolen pro-
perty, posaeatiou of lllltOllct, aod grand
theft aoto.
Investigatora from the Los Angeles
Police Department are ezpected to q~s
Uon him today in connection with a large
burglary of oflice equJpment from an un·
disckleed Loa Angeles school.
Huntington Beach olflcera aaid varioua
Items, other than the offict equipment,
were recovered which might implicate
English in robberlet In Costa Mesa,
Garden Grove, Anaheim and Fullerton.
Inveatlgation ia sUll under way to
determine the origin · of a r t i c I e a
recovered, one of which wu a motorcy·
cle. On the booking sheet Engliah had
listed hi11 occupaUoo as "sell-employed,"
police said.
Coed Surf Club
Started by Y
A coed aurfina: club, complete with
boards, has been started by the Hun·
tlngton Beach YMCA.
Richard Colla~. director, said a prt>
gressive system of awards is being
devtloped for the surfing club and that
several surfboards have been d(Klated to
the venture by Jack's Surf Shop.
Surfers will be awarded YMCA
emblems for jackets, and cards denoting
akill levels. For more fnlonnatlon call
194-4~.
DAILY PILOT
OUNGa CCI.UT l'Ull.IS'HINO C:OMltAtff
111.i,.,, H. 'W"' Prul~ end l>ubl!Wt
J1c1c Ill. Cwrl:T YD ,,_ldetll 111111 Ganrt ~
Th•"''' K•1vlt l:'.111101'
Tho111•L A. M11ophln•
Mllnttln• [dlfot'
Alb.ti W. '''" Auot1111 Ellll.,.
H•~ .._. OMcti Jn Ith Slr1•t
)-41111111 A..Wr••ii r..o. a.. 1to, t:t,41 °""' Offk" ....,,,,..... MKlll 2t11 w111 .. ..,, l w llv1r"1
(Ml• Mc\t~ 3lll Wttl l lV Slr~l
l.QuNI lu<lli :W F«UI A¥fl'UO
"'"'-·' DA!l.'f' ,ILOf, ,..1111 ,.~le.JI II combiMf ""' ., .. ..,.lft~ • "'1tlol•,,,... d1lr• ir•<t'PI ~ ILIY "9 tfjlolflfl H lllDN for HIMllftt!M
-...di. F-.lflfl V1!lt'f', (Mt.t Mty, ......
S*'f •..c:PI 6tld l~ It.tell. •!Ml Wlllll ,_ ,....,...., edit.-. Orll'lff C...I Pti1M1'11-
... ~ "'''""" Pif"'' e•• It :nn W.t ..... .,.,,. • "'"'"" llNdl,, ""' ,.. WUI ,,,.., lttffl. C06t.I Mt.-,
1 ... ,...,. C1141 MJ-4Jl1
,,_ W.1d1am C91t 14 .. 1llt-
Q IJMI M19111.a.. ~J.1411
c-.'i'llM. ..... °'"'" ,_. ,.,..u ... -. ~ ... '9 -11•1 \t1, ~IV•lr•~
Ml'-11111 "'-"" « .. vt•lltt._,,lt l!trt"' _., 119 ~ •llllCl<ll L911(1111 ,.111111~1111
If W l'titlll -.-.
Ila" ... C..,_ -·#llf H 'd 11 No"'""' lol~
... Ceil• ......... C•ll1 .. r11 ~l.l>K• """ tt urt'IC' GAO -ltl!Wt Irr Mall J' .16 lllMll!lrt tr1U~ •IMt ..... ltOI m11r.1hty,
1
DULY PiLoT hi .... READY TO KICK 01111· 'TOYS llOR TOJS' DRIVll
PuppotMr """'""' Mllcholl, St!· Joht! Handal'IOl1
f"
'Toys for T~18"
Marines Start Annual Drive
'Ille U.S. Marine Corpo will ldclt off !ti
annual 1'To71 for Tota" drive this Fridl:y
evening lo tbe lluntlogton Center MalL
Maj. Paul S. Jtfarcanl ol the 2nd Ba~
laliou, llrd Marlneo ol~ Beach, who b
coonliuating the toy -In thla area, will begin tne ceremony by
&Wilcblng oa the llibta on the bog•
air-.. tree In the Huntlngt"'1 Center.
Following the tree-llghtlng, a ·free
Cbristmu puppet llhow wlll be pr_,ted
by the Mitcllell Marloneltet. Alao In-
cluded bi the celebration are holiday
50!1(1 Md Cbriatmu carob by the
"Cha)ller V" girls alnglng S?OUP from
PadOca !Ugh ScbooL
Donated toyJ may be left at the drop
box, located near the Chrlsbnaa tree in
the mall. They llhoWd nol be wnpped, to
facllltate cllstrlbutioa acconling to •1•
ondl<L
'l1le toyJ abouJ4 be new or In good con-
dition. Stuffed tecond-lland toys ~ nol
a<ceplable, however, bec1U1e ol aanltary
replallons.
CoUection of the toys will continue
through noon Dec. 23, when they will be
picked up by the MU!nei Md distributed
to unclerprivUeged childttn.
Cities May Have to Fund
Lobbyist for Oil Ban Bill
California coast.al cities probably will
have to chip in to pay a Washington lob-
byist to help posh the Cramtoo-Morphy.
Moski .. Nelton oil bill through the Senate.
Roy A1arcom told fellow diredon of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
this week.
Reporting on acUviUes of the Coastal
Area Prot.ective League, Marcom noted
the successful passage or two anU-drlll·
Ing mea!lures by the CalUornla Legisla-
ture, but 1ald the bill aimed at restrict-
ing drilling operations in the Federal
tidelands further out to sea tan expect
tougher ~edding.
'Movie Contract'
Lures Secretary
Into Perversion
A pretty Newport Beacb secretary
lured by an a1leged movie mogul's ap-
praisal of her charms was forced into sex
perversion at gunpoint Tuesday at a
Costa Mesa shoppbg center.
The 24-year-old woman was not
physica11y harmed In the incident, but
was shaken by being forced to perform at
gunpoint in the rront seat of her own car.
Investigator George Wilson said the
Tictim told of leaving the mall about 5:50
p.m., when the raU\er dislln.gulshed
genileman approached Z'ld introduced
himself. She said he claimed to be affiliated.
with a Hollywood studio, asked if she had
ever been a model -which she hadn't -
then obtained her name and address after
asking hei-to pose.
She colltinued on to her car. she told
police, but the man, ck!sc ribed u in his
forUes or fifties, followed her and then
pulled a gun.
"Get into the car," he ordered.
The young woml'il said he accosted htr,
then forced her to commit the acts before
he got out of the car and quickly disap-
peared on foot.
Extortion Case
Delay Granted
A ltuntlngton Beach college student,
accooed ol trying to <x1A>rl IS.000 from
Or. Ralph Bauer, has betn given until
FrJday io find a lawytr for his ar-
ralgnment In West Or•nge County
Municipal Coor!.
Victor Yee Tsao, 13. GI DI 12\h St .. apt
21, HUntington Beach. Js currenUy In
Orange COuoty Jail on WSJ)lcion of •t·
tempted utortJon. Ball was set It 15,000
Tunday In munlclptil court.
Police allege Tsao &ent a threatfnlng
ldttt last Wednelday lo Or. Bauer, a
trultff of both lhe Ocean View Ind Hun·
UngtoO Beach Union HJgh S c h o o 1
Dlstricll. demanding $5,000 be left al an
uncl1'clo<td JocaUoo.
No motive for the Cal.Stale Fullerton
1tudenl'1 acUon has beeo determlntd, ac-
<Ol'ding to police.
Jl
It will take a Jot of effort to get those
people back there (Washington) to un-
derstand our problem..," said Marcom,
"and we know tbe oil companl" will be spending a Jot of money to get the bW
rejected, because they have a lot of mon-
ey involved in this."
The CAPL, he said, is seeking bids
from three lobbying firma qualified to
round up supporting votes for S 3093.
HTbis gets expensive," said Marcom.
"It could cost as much as $50,000 to
$100;000 -and the coulal cities will be
asked to help.''
Murder for Hire
C.Ounts Dropped
Insufficient evidence has led lo dro~
ping of rnurdtr·for-hire charges again!t a
Wilmington man, while his Garden Grove
partner in a tire shop Is still being in-
vesUgated.
South Gate Police announced the arrest
of Alfred J. Slaton, 41, of 6501 Killarney
Ave., Garden Grove, and Francis Kerr-
ing. 29, of Wilmington on Monday.
Charges of conspiracy to commit
murder wilt not be brought agaln!t Ker-
ring, according to Lt. Robert Taylor, but
both men still face other cotmta stem-
ming from lhe raid.
Investigators said more than $50,000
worth of stolen goods, plua dangerou!I
drugs and marijuana were seized at
Red 's Tire Inc., in which Slaton and Ker-
ring are executives.
'11le arrests were made In connection
with the alleged delivery Of $$00 to ar-
range the murder of a new car deaJer
allegedly involved ln an adu1terou.s dtua-liOn with someone's wile.
Modern, Ballet
Dance Offered _
The doors are open for entrance. lo an
eight-week modern dance and ballet
course for girls age 4-12, aponsored by
the lluntington Beach YMCA..
Registration for the course, to start
Saturday, will be accepted al YMCA
headquai1ar.s, 14n6 Beach BI v d • ,
Westminster. For further l.nfonnatlon
call 89MM8 and ask for Richll'd Collalo,
dln!Ctor ol the local YMCA.
Cl•"" MU be condocted at Mercury
Savings and LoAn, 7812 Edln&er Ave.,
Honllna1on !leach. •
Weight Lifting Set
In Huntington School
Adult& and high school students have
been in v\U!d to work out with weighta
In the Huntington Beach Hlah School
weight room Tuesdays and Thuudays
from 7 to 9 p.rn.
Wtlghl programs w 111 be avall•ble .
through the instructor, city recrt1Uon
olnclals sald. There Is no charge.
School Vandals Sought
Mesq H~rd of Hearing Center Hit
ln...U,.tton ... 11nues today Into an
1o1< ad plint.llut1lng rald •t Coata
~·· Wlllon. School, where cla.urocxn
pets were kill~ and 1plrlta ot aome
parUcularly senelUve 1tudent.s crushed.
Repairs to the two classrooms used to
leach children with bearing defects -
who oome from as far aw1y as H'un.
tlnglm Beadi Md San Clemente -will
coot 11,000 and last lhroughoot the week.
Coata Mesa Pollet Detective Pat Alex·
ander is probJq: the seue:Jess w~kend
rampqe at the two spedallzed rooms
amoq Z2 lo the adlity aod WU OOt of
the staUon today.
lndicationa are that the two used for
the pre-school and kindergarten hard-of-
h'aring programs wer' selected at ran-
dom, because they are not vlslble to
paSIOl'Sby on the tlnll nearby.
0 1 don't think tllll wu aimed at the
hard-of-bearing prosram," says Mrs.
Elsie Deeter, who teaches the morning
session, while Y.'l!ls Bobble La Buda in·
slruct.s in the afternoons.
Whoever broke in during the weekend
tossed lndellble Ink and paint over
children'• projf:('ls, fatally contamlnaUng
water in bowls for goldfish and tµrtle s,
and wrecldn& the puplb' handiwork.
Speotallzecf equipment used to teach
hank>!.-rlng c:lli~dren ely esc.aped ctama.a:e, bpi the rooms are
unavailable for use w repairs are in
progress.
A ,1 ,700 ampllfler and earphone sets
were splattered with tnk and paint and
Prloclpal Hubert Leatherman says Ihm
is no bnmtdiate way to determine
whether fume1 mJ&ht damage the
sensitive gear.
One of the IP~ lrre~l•ce•ble IQS,.. -
besides the heartbreak of chtldren and in·
terrupt.ion in their learnin& -ls that of
13 years' worth or pupil records dumped
into a toilet.
"I don't have any idea how to begbl to
replace them,'' said Mrs. Deeter, ''they
eave rg_e medical knowledge of the causes
and effects of each .child'• hearina lO!IS
aod hel(ltd me uodersiand the problems
usocia-.ed with belpint him learn!'
Tl)e two t4achers-art conllnuinl work
with the youngsters this week in comers
of other classrooms, but lack of the
specia1 equipment and the familiar t D·
vironment of their special place makes it
hard to learn.
Bond Interest Hike OK'd
San Joaquin Voters PtUs Increase to Seven Perce1it
By PAMl!LA BALLAN
Of fM DIU, r11• It_,,
A measure boosting the interest rate on
school bonds from 5 to 7 percent was
passed overwhelmingly by voters in the
San Joaquin School District Tueaday.
voter:. approved the measure nearly 3
to 1 with 2,016 votes in favor and 540
votes against.
The meaJure passed in each of the four
precincts lo Leisure World, the Laguna
Hills reUremeot community.
"The closest we came was in one rural
precLnct where out of 14 votes cast. nine
were foi-and five were against/' said
District Business Manger Re.z: Nerison.
"We're smUes from ear to ear around
here this mornlnt," said Nerison. He said
the first thing to be done will be fJling al>'
From Page 1
plication with the state to construct more
schools.
. "We'll have to make a precise
detenninatioo as to where our nut
school wW be," be continued.
"We're finishing two e I em en tar y
schools now. One ls in Mlssloo Viejo and
the other is in El Toro. We have two
more 5000 to be constructed in Mission
Viejo and '.l\!rlle ltoclt.
"We're a getting a lot of growth in lhe
central area around the Ranch develop-
menL We'll be looking aeriously there. We
also Deed an intermediate school in El
Toro and Turtle Rock. 11
He said the district bas $3.f mllllon
authorized for con.strucUon. Normally,
bond money is med to pay back slate
loans, but the state has been permitting .
districts to use the.lr bond money for con-
My Lal Ineldent
struction projects since It has no more.
money to lom ••
Nerison said the current price of a
school is in excess of $1 million so that
the bond money can be used for two
schools wilh some left over.
Comparing last year's bond election at
which lime $5 million was authorized, he
said that with 24 pei'cent voter turnout
the measure had passed with al.7 percent
voting yes. Although only 15.4 percent of
the voters turned out for this elecUoo, the ·
yes vote ratio was nearly the same, 71.9
percent .
"We hope we've set a precedent for
other districts," said Neri.son, referring
to the fact that his was the firrt district
in Orange County to attempt to raise the
interest rate
"I know several were watching it."
MEETING •••
menl CqmmiUee. The senator said he ta
opposed to "glvmg more powers to a non-
elecUve body."
Army Denies l(nowing
Supervisor Baker argued strongly for
LAFC authority to eliminate overlapping
agencies and force lncorporation of
islands in the county to cities.
Of Slaying Last Year
SchmilJ suggested that perhaps the
I.AFC aboald be 1bollsbed and its func.
tlons taken over by the county Board of
Supervisors.
City Administrator Doyle Miller uked
the leglslators to give the city tideland
surface rights for "better control ol
offshore drilling islands."
He also plugged for more oil revenue to
the ci~y above the one percent now
rf:('eiv,d.
High Tides Flood
Streets of Venice
VENICE, Italy (UPI) -O:!e of the
highest Adriatic tides in memory flooded
tow-lying parts of Vetllce and other
coastal cities today. The floods blcx:ked
tourists in their hotels and claimed two
lives.
High winds and low atmospheric
pressure combined to raise sea level
nearly five feet above nonnal in Venice,
flooding St. P.fark's Square and other
parts of lhe city. Merchants moved their
soaked wares from street revel shops to
higher ground.
WASJilNGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
denied today any defense official in
W uhington was aware last year of the
alleged U.S. mu!lacre in March 11111 of a
South Vietnamese "1age.
"No high Anny offlclals or Department
of Defense officials: were aware of this
last year," Jerry Frledhelm, a Penlagon
spokesman, told reporters.
The implication Is lhal initial military
reports about the My Lal incident did not
gn beyond SaJgon. Frledhelm waa: unable
to say how high up the rnHitary chain of
command those first Investigative
reports reached.
House Republican Leader Gerald R.
Fprd said Tuesday high Army oCficlals
Were aware (If the alleged massacre
shortly after it happened, allhoogh be
declined to name individuals.
Friedheim said Secrelary of the Army
Stanley R. Rcsor discussed the matter
with Ford this morning, presumably to
clarify the situation.
"He (Ford) said he did not mean to im-
ply that the secretary of the Army, the
chief of staff, the vice chief of staff or
MACV (the U.S. commander in Vietnam)
knew about it," Resor told newsmer. at
Capitol Hill earlier today.
"I think he had in mind that some
general officer in Vietnam mlaht have
known about it."
Ford meanwhile said in a statement,
"Responsible authorities In the Depart-.
ment of the Anny in Vietnam knew about
the Song My massacre."
"The incident OCt'Urred In March 1008~
and it came to their attention shortly·
thereafter," he said. "They investlgated1 but no affirmative action was taken. I.
have not implied that the secretary of the1 Army, the Army chief of staff or Gen.,
Westmoreland knew about the inc ident."
William C. Westmoreland, now Army
chief of staff, was U.S. Commander in
Vietnam at the time of the alleged in-
cident.
Asked why there was no public slate·
ment about the alleged massacre
between last April. \\'hen Secretary of.
Defense ~1elvin R Laird first heard the
allegation, and last September when
forma! charges were made, Friedheim
replied a new investigation then was
under way and no charges had bee n
decided.
REWARD for Early Birr/
. Christmas Sho_gpers
This Limited Edition
Royal American Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
.. --CLIP THIS COUPON--11
With Your Christmas Pur<:hasa
of $5.00 or Mo ...
!LIM IT ON E TO A CUSTOMlll
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANl<AMERICARD
MASTER CHAR,£
J. C. .JJ.umphrie& '}t1we£r&
I
!Ill NEWPORT AVENUE
COSTA MESA
, ,,
21 YEARS
SAME LOCATION
PHONE
50°1401
Saddlehaek
ED l·:t lO·N
* voe. ~1. NO. 283, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAGES ORANGE cOUNTY, ~Afl~RNIA· ~v.-~2'. ,,,.,
-~ -. .....
L·a·guna
By RICHARD P, NALL
Of Ille 0.lfY Plllf lleff
A February tax override election ls
likely for voters in Laguna Beach Uiilfied
School District.
Polled at an intonnal meeting · Tuesday
night, trustees agreed unanimously that
an override is needed to finance the
district.
'111e board diUered only In ballot ap-
proach. Dr. Anthony Orlandella favored
one propoMUon on the balloL Other
• . -----.... _ -. ... .
Schools Seek Fehruiry -OVekf{d~ . . .
trustees, however, leaned toward a multl·
proposition approach.
.\ vote r filling in the multi-proposition
ballot, for example, might vote yes or no
on:
-Increasing the district tax rate 65
cents with the money to be used for
classroom materials, texts, library books,
in-service training, health service, ad-
ditional staff for growth and salaries.
-Increasing the district tax rate 40
cents lor educational support programs
of transportation, opei:atlons, main-
tenance and fixed charges for replace-
ment or equipment. plant maintenance:
operation, vehicle replacement, ad.
dltjonal start aod salaries.
-Increasing the district tax rate '20
cents for equipment at the high school,
the three elementary schools and
Thurston lntennet:ilate School; a n d
purChase of new vehicles. ,
Each proposition on the ballot would
stand alone. They mighl all J183S, or all
fall ,oi° any number could "Piii arrfaJL 1n
the exampit11· aboWD, il all puaed, the
tax rate'tnc:reue would be their-total or
11'.15. Ji ;nljOiity vole woUld be required
lorpasaqe. ·
Truslees abo·dbcus•e•Fthe pasalbility
of I liond ~ 00 tlJO ballot. but .. acbed
no ~t Wll1lam Ullom bi lo
brfnt >pedllc reoommmdlll11111 lo the
boan!'at Its. Dec. 2 meet1111. lie laid he
favors .. o\llFride. So doel .&be Lquna ·-. -
j -• .::.~'
VQte
assacre ens
--· -·-. --.. ----,
. . -
2·eounty. Gunfight ~my.Bares
'
Freeway Chase
Nets 2 Bandits
Color Slides
Of Victims
From Wire Services
A pair of bandit suspects are in jail
today after they allegedly engaged
Orange County Sheriff's deputies in a
running gun battle during a lOO·mile-per-
hour pursuit through traffic on two free·
ways Tuesday night. i
The chase ended in Norwalk with a
three-car pilup, but a Los Angeles County
Sheriff's deputy said he rammed his
patrol-car into the wreckage, to slam the
* *' * Bike Officer
Hurt in Fiery
Freeway Spill
Laguna Beach motorcycle officer Earl
C. Carpenter, 33, escaped serious bjury
Tuesday when his machine rolled ~nd
caught £ire as he chased a speeding
motorist in heavy late .afternoon freeway
traffic. Police said the officer began following
the speeder within the city limits on L8guna Canyon Road, shortly before 5
p.m., followed him out to the Santa Ana
Freeway and north ro the freeway until
he lost control of his motorcycle near the
Jeffrey Road offramp. Taken to South Coast Community
Hospital in South Laguna by Wind
.Ambulance, Carpenter was released after
treatment for minor bruises and
abrasions. California Highway Patrol officers, who
'answered a pursuit call radioed by
Carpenter as he tried to keep the speeder
iri sight. said his motorcycle appare".1tly
developed a "speed wobble" as it al·
taiiled speeds up to 85 miles an hour 0 11
the freeway.
A witness told the CHP he was north-
bound at about 70 miles an hour when the
1;peeder passed him with ease, trail~ by
the motorcycle with flashing red lights.
The speeder was not apprehended.
Pavement marks. according to the
CHP indicated Carpenter's body slid mor~ than 200 feet after he was thrown
clear of his bike. The motorcycle,. a total
toss, travelled 550 feet along the highway
gid burst Into flames. ·It was the second serious accident for
the 6-foot 2-inch, 216-pound officer. Two
years ago, he was severely injured in .a
crash on Emerald Bay tum when his
bike kickstand scraped th~ pavement,
flipping it over on top of him.
Mesa Worker, 13-
inj'llred in F~.
An l.l'year~ a.ta Mesa con.muct1on
worket is reported in saUdactory con·
dition at South Coast Community
Hospital today alter suffering a baclt In-
jury in a fall at the Festival. of' Art!
grounds Tuesday.
Charles Leslie L a n d r I t h , 2505
Weslmi115ter Place, an employe of the
Beach Construction Company, was in·
jured In a If>..foot fall from a ramp
leading to the Irvine Bowl hillside from
new construction at the Bowl entrance.
The Bowl's backstage area is being ex·
tended ovt.r the entrance lo provide ad·
dilional storage. Landrith !tacked over the edge of the
ramp while~ a piece of building
material, Jlnding on his back on a truck
parlied below. He was laken lo bo<pltal
by Wind Ambulance and Is under
~aUon.
)
' '
door of the getaway car shu: and trap
the fleelng men.
W ASBINGt:ON -TQP Army officials
unfolded today, before shocked and
sickened meq'lbers of Congress •. details o£
the alleged U.S. massacre of South Viet·
namese villagers, including color S:lides
showing piles of dead bodies.
Donald L. Horrigan, 25, ot Anaheim,
and Bruce L. Amico, 20, of Buena Park,
were booked Into county jail on charges
or armed robbery and assault with intent
to commit murder.
Authorities said· a .357 Magnum re-
volver was confiscated from the getaway
car, aloµg with f.lJIOO ~lleved takeit a
shOrt Uriie "befft In· a Coleis Market rob-
bery in Anahelm. _
'I't!~ ~1.ay; to ~ Sefl:ate and Hoose
, Anned Services cOmmlttees, followed
shOrtty ·a Whlte 'House dec1aratloi:i that
' 111' ~•Ced M,..i. Jilli rnusacre al My ~: • Lal l!:. .. abhorrent to 'the cofuicleoc~ ·of all
r 1 the American people." ·
~ Secrttm 'llaoal4 i;. Zlo&lfl', Inviillptors assert sl• shots \W9 rm from 'lhe l"laway car al ~ lawmen, while they returned the h
with five shotgun blasts before· the sus-
pect auto. careened out of control at 1he
. ~ lhit ht .... speO~ for MioD.
jllodsed lhat 'all "Illegal and Immoral
CoodUcl, as alleged," would be dealt wllb
by lhe Anny and lhe AdminiJtratlon.
six-mile point.
Sheriff's LL Bud Mann said the bar·
rowing chase began when a white sedan
whizzed by deputies Dave Skaugstad and
Jerry Horton. stationed on the San Diego r · • 1 1 • · 1-< ~ Freeway in Los Alamitos. ' '1 ' . ' • '' • ft l 1 . ' •. ' : .. 1 ,' .. ', : 'I 1 '. . ... • r ·~Pt ·-~·.
Anaheim police had radioed 8 descrip-SIGNING; UP ·-+ ·President: Nixon h~nds ·'souveJilr ' : lng ,were '(from ltft):Rep. E<lward He~ert, (D-I;a.);
lion of lhe two bandit suspects sooghl for ·pen to Sec"!Cary.of>Defense Melvin La1rtfafte~1'lw ' '.Re~. L, Mendel llivers1(]).S:c,)' anll,· Rep . ·.Leslie
the market holdup, plus the getaway .i,ng dr¢t:r,e~?m1-bill •. Afso.~re~ent1 for:'t,~aY:s· si'~ 1 ~ds (R~Ul:) ~ · · · '. · '
car's license number. , · ' · . , · , , 1 ; 1 • • . . ' . ' ' . ' Skaug:stad and Horton said they recog~ ; , , , · . · , , . · 1 ' t 1 • • '
ni~.1t:.~i;p~~::'tw th• car go by and J\r.,·,x··. 4n" .S·i··. g..·ns· .··D ;r:· a' .f~: 'D·i'.ll .... • • ' f ' I ! ' i '~ •
, Hertl's" Ootlilie . ;
followed it," said LL MaM. "At Katella 1 l j Cl -I> D
Avenue on the San Gabriel Freeway, they
turned on the red lights and siren." . 1 1 •
a ~~~R~~ o~~:~~~ol:furi:~~ , r· 0 . S'"r.ri L·'·o" t'ery For: New Draft
, ·, r1 ·•
off northbound on the freeway and the ' (.(..f, It · It Setup Lottery System · deputies reported by radio they were . ,
under fire.
Holding thei r own rire to avoid endan·
J:ering other motorists, the deputie!I
finally got a clear shot at the Rosecrans
Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad's fi ve
!See SHOOTOUT, Pop I)
PILOT OFFICES
SHUT THURSDAY
All DAILY PILOT of!lces will be closed
'nlunday· In observance of TbanksgivJng
Day. The holiday edition of the
newspaper will be published on a
"Saturday" schedule for m o r n i n g
delivery to homes.
A special feature of the holiday edition
will be the Inclusion of severa l sections
devoted to Christmas qbopping. In ad-
dition to bargains M> be found in area
stores -carried ln the special section
ads -the sections will contain gift sug-
gestions and holiday sea&on stories lrom
literally throughout the world.
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon signed legislation todaylo pave the
way for the start in January of the first
draU lottery since world War II and said
he would· not be satisfied until tile draft
could be eliminated entirely.
Speaking at a .ceremony In the
Roosevelt Room of the WhJte House, Nix·
on said• the new system would ellmlnate
some of the · inequities in the present
Selective Service setup.•
'lt.e President announced that 1the fim
lottery-by-birth date would be coiid•cled
on Monday. '11lis will affect ""January
draf[Etes, The quOta already h&s:been set
at 12,500.
Monday's drawing wnJ'·take "place at
Selective Service ~eadquarters I n
Washington. Plans are ·for yo u th
representatives from throughout the
country to draw Crom a huge bowl, one
by one, 366 capsules. ~ach capsule will
contain a date and fhe sequence in which
they are drawn will determine the "draft
year."
The White liousc said in a statement
WASHIN'G~N .(UPI)' -Here ·,;: the that c1.,1rrent projections lndic•te-250,000· wa'y the new· drhft· lott"ery W:lll wotJC: .
persons will be drafted in 1970., · SOnieone • will draw ·One by one · -
Nixon signed an executive order to put presumably from a hat, something· like
the· lottery system, into effect. meaning lh~L -366 numbers representing the days of the year fi'om Jan. 1 to Dec. 31 , that by 1971 the great bulk of the natioo's including Feb. 29 even lf it Isn't. a leap
draftees will be IS.year-olds. yeti"', Tbe 'men with blrlhdates on the
Fort.he first year, all· men ·ln .the~ flnt date drawn wlU be calledJJrat, the
1c:alled draft pool -mosUy , Crom 19 ~nd date second and IO °"· .Thole, in
through 25 -will be .equ,ally vulnerable., ' the last, half of the order, will not ~ '11\<Y will be dralled, by bil'th da~ ... wllh be called, Tho!e In 'lhe lop ·few dales
lhose·bom ·on the first ·date drawn certain definitely wll ·land there Is a gray ma
to go,. and· tHose born' On the Jut date just · between. ·
as.certain·nol·lo be called. ' t lo!lel'Y. ~rpl\'1118 ·also wlll;l>e .. beld I~ 19Jl, the syS\em )'ijl go·l!¥1Y In~ of· : among lhe 21 lell<ra of ·ll\<' al~be~.All
feet and will be restricted to l~year-oldl. · . per:io~. ~i~n , ti):', P1"9vince _of a · ctWt
except , for · those Who . were giv~n · board (indl~litua' bOaias wJll:suu·~ the
detennents at II and .Come back inlo the calling )1 w~ are Called a~tding·to,ooe
w iner.able area after ·g?;"adua't!On from birtthdate·,w~ be Jllted up according ~ the
college or otherwise haVing exhausted lette~~raw1ng:il1 ,!J~3er.,of. ~,~le~·
dererfed, St3tus. • . . · -of_ their last name. If so~ last 1D&NU
Nixon said the new-system "dOes not begin with the same letter, the same
remove all inequities ... but the agony o.rdeI" of the alP.t!~bel will ~pply to the
and suspense that has hung .over rur first letter of lherr first names. For e•-
youths far seven years has· naw been ample, If &be_ order of the lottery alphabet
reduced to one year,. was f·S-n-p..I, etc .. Fred Smith would be · called ahead or• Sam Smllh. (or Anicld
Sands or stanley South),
• Bond Inte.re.st Hike· OK'd Red ~tOut ·
--. ' . . .
San Joaquin ·Voters , Pms litcrease· u, ·s~~ri-Pe~f£1tf : Fo;r.:.~~~. V~~-t:
... ·' ' • , , 1 , • ., Another 1on·g-h·a l red. bearded
By PAMELA BALLAN
or .. o.11y """ lletl'
A measure boosttng the Interest rate on
school bonds from 5 to 7 percent was
pa"ed overwhelmingly by voters ln the
San Joaquin School District Tuesday.
Voters approved the measure nearly ~
to I with 2,016 votes in favor and :>40
votes again.st. .
The mtasure passed in each of the four
precincts In Leisure World, the Laguna
Hills retirement community.
"The closest we came was In one rural
precinct where out of 14 votes cast, nine
were for and five were against," said
District Business Manger Ru Nerison.
"We're smiles from ear to ear around
' ,.
• • , 1 • ' • • • gentltinan 1will .·be ·maklllg 1tlie ·Lafuna · here1h1s'morrtlhg,""sald'Nerlsoti. He 'said He · said ·the clli:tr1ct>-he"s""'3.4 ,million scene rridiy night. 1;fJt. {h)1 orie ii sfated
the first' thing '°'be done·wtll be filing ap-1utJ:>orized for ' cd.'lJtruction., Normally. · for· the ·uffil Carpet'' ·trtatment. ~ , .
pllcattoa•wlth lhe stat• lo cooitruct more bond mOlley t. llled lo p1y ~P< ·stale ' SJnla .c~ has -~!ell a ipedal
:ichools. loans, but lhe ·st.ta" hu been pennittlng pr~bollday vllll lo tlle,Art CoJony lo help
"We'll have to make a precise disttk:ts to u&eltheir bond money for con-tum v.1.the Chrj,stm&s'·llght& aod will be.
determination· as lo where. our ,nel'f, struotion pro)ecti since It has 1no more an1v(ng by ·nre qlle at his newly
school will 'be,' be conllJiul", lno!l<)I 11> loel• . • . · . ' decoraled Santa hoUle al the .loot of
"We're l[obtthig two •I• m •n·t •·r y · l'lfriloi> ... i.r.:O>e· currenl price of • Broadway. a~,7. p.m. , ·
school• now. Oneis In MililOn."Ylejo and 1i:&ooJ ·Ia In uila of It hilllloil oo11hal lie 1!111fll"Ml yoqtll!ul LalllJOw ·ror a
the O\her ls in El Toro. We have two \hebonii tnone;. Ctn be ullld for tW cOuple ol houri FJ1day evenlng, then
more soon to be constructed in Mission schools with ~t¥ left over. depart for a weelt befdre lnaugurlllng h11
Viejo and Tllrtle Rock, Comporlng ltf'.Year's bond election at ,.gutar vfliUng ~ule on Salurclay,
"We'" • gelling a lot al gnroth In the wlllch -IO lhlllloo waa IUlhorized, he· Dtc. JJ.
cenlral area around lhe Rind! develop-aahl lhal wltb 24 portent~ -Bealnntnr on that date, aocl on Dtc. IS,
menL We'll be lookinlf Hrioully !here. We lhe meuun'hld p.aed wjlh •·l pen:ent 17, tii 1D, band :II, Sanla wjJI wdcoml
also need an lntermedlale a<hool ID El votlng .,... AllllG!IP only JU perceat of ' vllllol'l-lo bia Uttle boule from·..,.. IO
Toro and Tw1le Rock.• Seo 'OAQIJIN,•Pap I) · loor p.m.
~ d lhe Army Slanley · lft . ,
Resor, who appeared before the com-
mittees, described the events at My Lal
as "appalling" and said· the Investigation
has 'been broa<tened to include whether
details of the alleced ma...q killings were
covered up.
s.ft. Slephen M. Young (D-Ohloi, said
one co)qred slide , showed "~ncornbatant
cJUzens .who had been killed at close
range wtlh theif inJldes.ha~g oUt."
Ke ·called the , tltuation ''an act (If
bnltllity1 that cannot have been uceeded
in Hl~'s Ume."·
"l'to one can question that there wu an
atroclo\lt · •l•ughter, of 200 lo . 700
clvlUa:ns/' Young said. "There can,.be ~
justification for an act of l:rutality of this
kind." .. • s.n.· Daniel JC Inouye (J).Hlwaii), a
much"" decorated World War 11 hero who
lost his 'right army fn Italy, sajd, "[
thOUgbt"'l'd be a bit hardened about this,
but J must say that I'm' sick about \his,"
The slides exhibited by Resor at the
hearings , h\Jrrledly arranged aa pro-
testatloo! about the incident awelled bOth
at home and abroad, 'wete a dozen photol
said to have been taken on the day of the kil~ by an Anny com bat flholOlilPber; Ronald Haeberle.
Haeberle I! among wim-> lo the
(See ~PIE, Page I )
•
' . NEW YORK (AP).,. The stoclc market
took on a flrmet tone in quiet trading late
today, (See q~olaUOlll!, Pages 8-9).
The averages trimmed· eai'ly losses.
The mirgln of decltbes over advances
among lndlvlctul! l.!sues traded on the
New York Stoct'"Exehange was slender. . -------
· We!Clier
~ wlllhermu'a wtlblng yOoi •
happy Thlnbifvlnc" wltll lllM1 •ti" over lhe ~e Coaal and
.tempir:ratUl!e! t8tibed. in the low
•1(1'1. •
IN81'E , TODAY.
l Onmoe County ,•uptnrilors
havt ta.ken whet 111au be tht
Jirlt attp to fevoLit~ionfu C0'4'n'11
baxklng pra«dvrtr. · Page 1. ._ . c......... ti·• -" c..-....ni 1• "::J'"• ' . '"'· . .......... ,. .. 1 .. ,. ·-.. -.. ,_ ....... 11 -. ·-' .... , .. ll
--. --.. ---. PU 11 --. ,...... ..
\:'A:WI '1t T--. 1 .... -. --.. ........... , ...
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1
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I
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"ot ... -.::.\! •••• ,, .•. ,.~ .. • . ..
! DAILY I'll.OT l •
UPI T•....,_
FIGURES IN INVESTIGATION -Sgt. ,Charle& A,
West (left) and Ronald L. Rldenhotir are two of
Lhose Involved in current probe of alleged Artny
atrocities Iii Vietnam. West parUcipated ill'811 Army
attack on Lhe Vietnamese village known as Pink·
ville. llidenhour-ia ex-GI whose' lell¥rs apparenl-
ly triggered probe.
My Lal Ineldent
·Army Denies Knowing
Of Slaying Last Year
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Pentagon
denied today any derense official In
Washington was aware last year of the
a)Jeged U.S. massacre in March 1968 of a
Shuth Vietnamese village.
"No high Almy official! or Department
ol Defenae officials were aware of this
last year," Jerry Friedheim, a Pentagon
spokesman, t.ld reporters.
The lmpllcaUon II Lhlt .Jnltlal military
reports about the lly Lai Incident did not
gn beyorid SalgoD. Friedbeitn was unable
to say -bigb up the military chain of
cmnmand those first in ves ti g a ti ve
roports reoched.
Houae Republican lacier G<rald R.
Ford said Tuesday high Army officials
were aware of the alle&ed massacre
lhortly alter It happened, althou&h be
declined to name Individuals.
CArgfuia Designers
Take Top Prizes
In AllD C.Ontest
Lapna area designers took two oul of
three top awards in the third annual
!Jl't5entaUons of the American Insti tute
ti 1nterlor Designers, Orange County
Chapter, Tuesday Wgbt at an awards
banquet in the Towers Restaurant.
Frledhelm said Se<rttary of the Army
Stanley R. Rcsor dlsculsed the matter
with Ford this morning, pr~-.bly to
clarify the situation. •
"He (Ford) said be did not mean to im-.
ply Lhlt the secr<!tary ol the Army, the
chief of staff, the vice chief of staff or
MACV (the U.S. commander In Vietnam)
knew about it," Resor told newsmen at
Capitol Hill earlier Ulday. ,
"I think be had In mind that some
general officer In Vietnam JDICh! bave
known about tL"
Ford meanwhile said In a lltaltrnen~
''Responalble authorltlea In the Depart-
ment of the Army in Vietnam knew a~
the Song My mauacre." '
"The Incident occurred In Morch 1918
and It canlt to their attenUon lhortly
therufter ," be said. "They li\vestlpted
but no affirmaUve action waa taken. l
have not Implied that the ...,,,tafy of the
Army, the Army chief of· staff or Gen.
Westmoreland knew about the incident.'.'
William C. Westmoreland, now Army
chief of ataff, was U.S. commander in
"Vietnam at the Unie of the 'alleged in-
cident.
Asked why there was no public state.
'. ment about the alleged ma&QCre
between Wt April, when Seer~ oE
Defense Melvin R. Laird l~s\ heai'd the
• allegation, and last September when
,.. formal charges were made, Friedhelm
repli ed a new investigation then was
under way and no charges tiad been
decided.
Goodell Reports
More Atrocities
In S. Vietnam
WASIUNGTON (AP) -sen. Cbafles E.
Goodell (R-N.Y.), said Wednesday be hu
received reports of several atrocitJea in
Vlelnam since aaklng for an lnvtstl11t1on
or the alleged My Lal massacre.
He declined to give any details, bu}
said that in at least one Instance he
understood that the case involved South
Vlelnameae troops primarily.
Goodell said the reports Involved more
than ....... beyond the My Lal Instance
and ao unsublltanUated report by Rep.
Lionel Van Deerlln (l){;allf.), thal a
village wu Uled for target practice.
"I have several other reporta: of
alroclllea In Vlelnam," said Goodell•
Alex R. Larson
Services Held
Graveside services are scheduled at 2
p.m. today in El Toro Cem·etery for Alex
R. Larson, Laguna Beach building con-
tractor who died Nov. 25 In Beverly
Manor, Capistrano Beach, at the age of
16, Canon Douglas Stuart will ofllclate.
A. native of Sweden, Mr. Larson was a
20-year resident of Laguna Beach, where
be .made his home at 430 .El Bosque.
: He is survived by his widow, Ruth and
two sons, Dennis and Leru)y, of the home,
and· by a brcitber, Lennart Larson also of
Laguna Beach, as well as by brothers
and sisters still living in Sweden.
Sheffer Lagwia Beach Mortuary, direc·
tors.
Top land!C&plng awanl went i. South
Laguna's Ken Wood, ASLA, and his ~rtners, Fred Lang, AILA, for their
work on the Gaede reaidence at Irvine
Cove.
From Page J
OVERRIDE •••
School Vandals Soughtl
..
Mesa Hard of Hearing Center ,Hit
lnV..U,aUon continues tod•Y Into an
Ink and paln\.liulling raid at Costa
Me sa's Wilson School, where classroom
pets were killed. and spirits of some
particularly sensiUve student.I crushed.
Repairs to the two classrooms used to
teach children with hearing defects -
who come from as far away as Hun-
tington Beach and San Clemente -will
cost #1000 and lut thl'09lhout the week.
Costa Mesa Polite Detective Pat Alex·
ander ls . probing the senseless weekend
rampage at the two specialized rooms
among 2Z in the facility and was out of
the station today .
lndlcations are that the two used for
the pre-school and kindergarten hard-of·
hearing programs were selected at ran-
dom, because they are not visible to
passersby on the street nearby.
"I don't think Udl was aimed at the
hard-or-hearing program," says Mrs.
Elsie Deeter, who teaches the momlng
ses!ion, while fl'lss Bobble La Buda in·
structs in the afternoons.
Whoever broke in durla1-the weekend
tossed indelible ink and paint over
children's projects, flltally contaminating
water in bowl.a for go)dflah and turtles,
and wrecking the pupils' handiwork.
Specialized equJpment wed to teach
hard-of.hearing children largely escaped
damage, but the soundproof rooms are
unavailable for use while repairs are in
progress.
A $1 ,700 amplifier and earphone sels
were splattered with ink and paint and
Principal Hubert Leatherman P.)'S there
Greeter Gaining
But More Funds Still Needed
The Laguna Beach Greeter Fund
reports gratlfylng response from many
areas to ill annual oppeal for "Thank
you, Eller Larsen° contributions to help
support the Art Colony's famed Greeter,
now nearing 80.
However, says chairman Pete Fulmer,
donations to date will fill only a small
portion of the need and it is hoped more
friends of the sidewalk ambassador wlll
respond to the appeal during the holiday
season.
Lanen pays lo< hall ol the reduced
rate cbarp for big room at Hote1 Laguna
from hil veteran's pension, with the com-
munlty...,..;aored lund covering ad-
diUonal c:ooll. Many local ,.stauranll ln-
vtte hlm for meals, Fulmer said.
Contrlbutlons, many aoonymow:, come
In from throughout Orange County aod
from further afield, often with ap-
preciative notes from visitors who say
they alwayt watch for the Greeter's
cheery wave u they drive through
Laguna.
A Santa Anan wrote, "Thanksgiving
greetings to the brightest, most cheerful
spot in Laguna Beach!"
Another donor said his contribution was
In honor of his wife's 81sl birthday, "to
express our appreciation to dear old Eiler
for what be has done for our community
in past years."
Donr.tions to the Greeter Fund may be
sent in care of the Laguna Beach
Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave.
The committee admirusterlng the fund
Includes Mayor Glenn Vedder, Chamber
president Harry La~. Mlss Lorna
Mills, president of Laguna Federal Sav·
ings and Loan, writer Rt:mlow Harris and
Fuhner.
Cities May Have to Fund
'
Lobbyist for Oil Ban Bill
ca111om1a coaatal c1u .. probably will
have i. chip In to pay a Washington lob-
byt,t to help pual1 the Cranston-Murphy.
llluald~Nellon oll blll through the Senate,
Roy Marcom told fellow dlrtdon of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
UtLs week.
From Pflfle J
SHOOTOUT. • •
shottun blasts hit the fleeing car.
Deputy Horton was traveUng at high
speed and overran the offramp, but the
suspect's car hurtled down it and slam·
· med into a car driven by Sarah Rich-
ardson, 29, of Norwalk.
No one was Injured in the exchange of
gunfire, but Miss Richardson suffered
cuts and bruises In the collision at
Katella Avenue and the freeway exit.
Reporting on activities of the Coastal
Area ProtecUve League, Marcom noted
the successful passage of two anti-drill·
ing measures by tile California Legi,s1a·
ture, but said the bill aimed at restrict-
iog drilling operations in the Federal . . tidelands further out to sea can e:rpect ·
tougher sleddin1.
lt will take a lot of effort lo gel those
people back there (Washington) to un-
derstand our problems," said Marcom,
"and we know the oil companies will be
spending a lot of money to get the bill
rejected, because they have a lot of mon-
ey Involved In this."
The CAPL, he said, is seeking bids
from three lobbying firms quallfled to
round up supporting votes for S 3093.
"This gets expensive," said Marcom.
"It could cost as much as $50,000 to
$100,000 -and the coastal cities will be
asked to help."
Biafra Asks Talks
Lt. Mann said the pair were about to
flee on root when Norwalk Sheriff's
Station Deputy Raymond Serna crashed
his car into the opening door of theirs, trapping them inside. BERN. Switzerland (AP) -Bia£ra's
Five other patrol ears from 1he LASO leader, Gen. Odumegwu Ojukwu, has ask·
11tatlon In Norwalk and al9o LakewoOO eel the Swiss government to help arrange
.
Is no immediate way to delermlne ~
whether fumes mJi:ht damage the "
sensitive gear. •
One or the most Irreplaceable l08St1 -:
besides the heartbreak o( children and in· ·
terNpUon in their learning -ls that of ·
13 years' worth of pupil records dumped ·
into a tollet. •
"l don't have any idea how to begin to
replace them," said Mrs. Deeter, "they
gave·me medical knowledge of the Causes ..
and effects af each child's hearing loss ·
and helped me understand the problems .
associated with helping him learn."
The two teachers are continuing work
with the youngsters this week in comers
of other classrooms, but lack o( the
special equipment and the familiar en-.
vironment of their special place makes It 1
hard to learn.
Fro1n P,age J •
MASSACRE ..•
alleged massacre who recently Jiave .
given gruesome details of the shootings In
the village.
Sen. Inouye', said one slide showed 11a
young woman ianding up begging, her
children standing around her, knowing
that she would be killed an instant later.''
Inouye said, he was "sick about It,"
and added:
"There is no question that men. women
and children, apparently non-combatants,
bad been killed."
Rep. Leslie Arends (R·DI.), .. Id the
pictUttS showed masses of bodies but
said they did not show that Americans
did the killini-
'"Ihey were pretty gruesome pie·
tures?" someone asked. ·
'4Yeah," Arends replied. "Yeah, l've
gof a queasy stomach." ,
In a statement to White flouse
reporter.s following days of persistent
qtrestionlng -and v l r t u a 11 y· tion·
committal replies -Ziegler said the
President viewed the incident .as "in
direct violation" of U.S. military policy.
Ziegler stressed that the 1ncldent
should not be interpreted as a reflection
on a million and a quarler other
Americans who served In Vietnam and
were now back home. Resat emphasized
this point also.
"I am convinced that the overall record
of the h~s of thousands of American
soldiers who have participated in combat
aperalion in Vietnam ia one of decency.
cons ideration and restraint toward the
civilians who find themselves In a zone of
military operations," Rcsor said.
Resor said that whatever happened at
Song My was "wholly unrepresentative of
the manner in which our forces conduct
military operations in Vietnam."
The only American soldier specifically
charged in the case so far is a lieutenant
accused in the death of 109 persons.
Fro1n Page J
JOAQUIN VOTE
the voters turned out for this election the
yes vote ratio was nearly the same,' 78.9
percent.
Laguna Beach architect Fred Briggs
i\IA, and William Blurock, A1A of Corona
del Mar, won the first award for com·
merclal architectural design for the city's
new Top of the World flre station 'Bl 2900
llta Laguna Boulevard.
year we've been operating at a deficil
because of the defeat of lhe late override
which means we have to dip into
resenres.
had pulled onto the freeway at Alondra for peace talks In the Nigerian conflict, a
more solid backing this time. Boulevard to bait the suspects when hi~h afficial of tbe Swiss Foreign Office
"I feel we s"hould have one big shot. Let possible. said today.
"We hope we've se t a precedent for
other districts," said Ntrison, referring ~ the fact that hi s was the first district ~n Orange Cowity to attempt to raise the 1nterest rate
"I know several were watching it."
First award in the residential architec·
ture division went to Edward Giddings
"1A of Corona del Mar !or the Boy Klotz
residence on Linda Isle. ,
Orange County projecls completed in
l968-69 were comldered for lhe AID
presentations.
~ COW1 "* ........ CQfNWp
IHertN.W ... ..................
I
........ °"'" Ykt,,..... .. o...._, .....
n....1...a ....
Tli•N1 A. MllfJl\1111 ~lflliw
l l1ker4 P. Ntn ..__
Cltr • ._. '
••
Taylor said it would not be possible to
keep dipping into reserves.
Regarding posslbiUty of a bond issue on
the ballot to finance purchase or future
school sites, Taylor po\nted out that ToP
of the World School site had been pur·
chased at about half the CO&t or the like-
slze Thurston site because the board had
the funds available When the right op-
portunity to bay developed.
:a:e said. thtre eould be r.onslde.rable ,.d.
vantage to -the taxpayers because of rl"'
ing land costs in buying a site now which
might not be developed as a school for
five or 10 years.
Trustee William Wilcoxen commented
that pending development in Arch Beach
Heights of about 400 lots would create the
need for another school site.
During discussion on the type of ballot,
Dr. Orlandella favnred one proposition.
He said he felt the override would have
El Toro Hottest
Sp0t i1t Country
There waz 1 hot lime In the old town of
El Toro Tueaday -the hottest In lbe na-
tion at t:1 degrees.
WhUe Orange C.Ounty led the country on
the theremomete:r for Tuesday, weather
for«asters promi!ed cooler -but not
much cooler -temperatures r o r
Thanksgiving Day.
Local fog Is expected along the Orange
Coast tonlaht and carly:Thursday. with
sunshine prevailing throuaJlout tho al·
temoon.
Mercury readings In the coastal area
are predicted In the midd~ to high 700
whUe Inland thermometers a ho u Id
rt'Jdst<;r IS degrc<1. Ll1ht smog lo 1or1ca.st tor the coastal sections.
them vole on $1.25 and get all the support •========================================'°'
we can behind it," said Orlandella.
Trustee Norman Browne said, "I sug.
gcst we come to a majority opinion and
gel the hell on with It. I would rather lay
my money on the crap table $3 at a lime
than $10 in one shot."
Wilcoxen said, "I don't agree that we
stand a chance with a one·shot $1.2S. I
don't see it passing." Orlandella said, "I
think we 're going to have more support,
very solid support from the teachers
which we didn't have last time."
At .one point during discussion oE ba.slc
maintenance needs, Dr. Ulloni said, "We
have '6 ~~ million worth of buildings in
the district. U we don't take care of
them, they're going lo deteriorate."
Mtu·der for Hire
C.Ounts Dropped
Insufficient evidence has led to drop-
ping of murder·for-hire charges agal~ a
Wilmington man, while his Garden Grove
partner in a tire shop is still being in-
vestigated.
South Gate Police announced the me!t
of AUred J. Slaton, 41, of 6501 Klllarney
Ave., Garden Grove, and Francis Kerr·
Ing. 29, of Wilmington on Monday.
Charges of conspiracy to commit
murder will not be brouaht t11ainst Ker-
ring, aocordin;: to Lt. Robert Taylor, but
both men sun race otber 00W1ts item·
n1ing from thi raid.
lnvtttl1atorc Wd more \ban $$0,IXKI
worth of 1Jloltn goods. plus danatrour
drup and marijuana v."'11 st1icd al
Red's Tire: Inc .. In which Slaton and Ker·
ting are exec:utives.
REWARD for Early Bird
Christmas Shoppers
TI.is Limited Edition
Royal Ar •. ~rican Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
i..---CLIP THIS COUPON --11
With Your Christmes Purch111
Qf $5.00 or More.
, !LIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMER)
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHAA6E
J. C. fiumphrie6 'Jewefe!6
JUI NEWPORT AVENUE
COSTA MESA
22 YEARS
SAME LOCATION
PHONE •
541-l401
The wretU were made In ~
With the allepl deli VU)' Of I -tO ar•
range the murder of • new car dealer
1lle1edl)' lnvolved ln an adultuoul sl&ua·
UOn with someone'• wife. ''----------~------'---...:..--------------------'
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• Laguna Beaeh.
EDII IO·N
• :VOC. 62, NO. 213, 3 SECTIONS, 30 PAG ES ORA NGE ·COUNTY, CA(IFORNIA
•
WEDNESDAY, NOVEMIEll· 2', 1969 _ JEN CENl'S . -. -
Laguna Schools See,k F ehru~y-Overfide Vote
••
By RICHARD P. NALL
OI ,._ Dltl)' P'ltlt ''"'
A February . tu override election ls
likely for voters in Laguna Beach Unified
School ));strict,
Polled at an informal meeting Tuesday
night. trustees agreed unanimously that
an override is needed to rrnance the
district.
The board differed only In ballot ap-
proach. Dr. Ahlhony Orlaiidella favored
one propo..ition on the ballot. other
trum.., however, leaned toward a mulU·
pr6pos;Uoo approach.
A voter DlliDg in the muIU-proi>ooIUoo
ballot. for uample, might vote yes or Do
on: •
-Iocreasing the district tax rate 65
cents with the money to be used for
~1assro:om ma~lals, texts, library books.
J.0-Sel'VlCe training; health ltrVJCe, ad-
ditiooal llloff for gruWlb and aallries.
-Increuinc· the dlatrlct las rate 40
ceots for <dllcaliooal auppoil programs
assacre
2-countfl Gunfight
·~~eeway Chase
Nets 2 Bandits
A pair of bandJt su.specl! are Jn jail
loday after they allegedly engaged
Orange County Sheriff's deputies in a
running gun battle during a 100.mile-per-
hour pursuit through traffic on two free-
ways Tuesday night.
The chase ended in Norwalk wiUt a
three<!lll' pllup, but a Los Angeles County
Sheriff's deputy said he rammed his
pitrol car into the wreckage, to .slam tbe
' * * * Bfke~Officer
Hurt in Fiery
Freeway Spill
Laguna Beach motorcycle officer Earl
C. Carpenter, 33, escaped serious bjury
Tuesday when his machine rolled and
caught fire as he chased a speeding
motorist in heavy late afternoon freeway
traffic.
Police .said the o(ficer began following
the speeder within the city limits on
Laglina Canyon Road, shorUy before 5
p.m., followed him out to the Santa Ana
Freeway arxl north a.i the freeway until
he Jost control of his motorcycle near the
Jeffrey Road offramp.
Taken to South Coast Community
Hospital in SOUlh Laguna by Wind
Ambulance, Carpenter was released after
treatment for minor bruises a n d
abrasions. California Highway Patrol officers, who
answered a pursuit call radioed by
Carpenter as he tried to keef. the speeder
in sight, said his motoroyc e appare:itly
developed a "speed wobble" as it at-
tained speeds up to 85 miles an hour on
the freeway.
A witness told the CHP he was north-
bound at about 70 miles an hour when the
speeder passed him with ease, trailed by
Ihe molorcycle with Dashing red lights.
The speeder was not apprehended. '
Pavement marks, according to tbe
CHP. indicaled Carpenter's body slid
more than 200 feet after he was thrown
clear of bis bite. The motorcycle, a total
toss, travelled 550 feet along the highway
B:ld burst intO flames.
tt was the second serious accident for
the 6-foot J.incb, 210-pound ofUcer. Two
years ago, he was severely Injured in .a
crash on Emerald Bay turn when his
bike kicklt.and scraped the pavement,
lipping it over on top of him.
door of the getaway car shut and trap
the fleeing men.
Donald L. Horrigan, 25, of Anaheim,
and Bruce L. ArnJoo, 20, of Buena Park,
were booked into county jail on charges
of anned robbery and assault with intent
to commJt murder.
Authorities said a .357 Magnum re-
volver was confiscated from the getaway
car 1 along with $1,000 believed takeJ? ·a
sbort·time before in a COle's-Ma,rtet.robo
beryin~. , . .
InvesUgaton a.uert ab: shots Wfle
fired frooD the getaway car at pur~
lawmen, whlle they returned the ore
with five shotgun blasts before the sus-
pect auto careened out of control at the
six-mi.le poinl
Sherlfr1 Lt. Bud Mam said the har-
rowing chase began When a white sedan
whizzed by deputies Dave Skauptad aod
Jerry Horton, stationed on the 5an Diego
Freeway in Los ·Alamitos.
Anaheim p>lice had radioed a descri~
Uon of the two bandit suspects sought for
the market holdup, plus the getaway
car's lictnse number.
Sk8ugstad and Horton sald they recog-
nized their quarry.
"Our deputies saw the car go by end
followed ~." said Lt. Mann. "At Katella
Avenue cm tbe San Gabriel Freeway, lhe7
turned on the red lights and siren."
HOJTigao aod Amko-both IUSp<Cls Jn
a chain of Orange County holdups-shot
off northbound oo the freeway and the
deputies reported by radio they were
under fU'e.
Holding their own fire to avold endan-
gering other motorists, the dep.ities
finally got a clear shot at the Rosecrans
Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad's five
(See SHOOTOUT, Pap I)
PILOT OFFICES
SH UT THURSD AY
AU DAILY PILCYl' offices will be closed
'llluraday lo oboervance of 'lllank1glvlng
Day. 'Ille botiday edition • of the
newspaper will be published on a
"Saturday" schedul~ for rn or n i n g
delivery tO ,homes.
A specW feature of !lie holiday edition
will be 1be inchllion o( several sections
devoted to Christmas ~pplng. In ad-
dition to bargains to be found in area
stores -carried In the epecial section
ads -the secUona will contain gift sug-
gestions and holiday aea,900 stories from
literally throughout the W<>fld.
,
of transportatioo, opqations, maln-
teoaoee and f1zal ~·foe ~
merit of 1 eqWpment, ~t matnteoaoce.
operatica, veblcJe · rtplacemeot, ad-
ditional staff-aod aalariu.
-Iitc"reaSing I.he di&lrict laT ra'te · 10
cents for equipment at the high school,
the three elementaiy scl10jils and
'lllunlon Jolenoedlate School; a D d
puri:haae of now vehlclet:
Each · proposltlon on the · ballol would
alADd .alone. They . mlgbl•all· p;o_ss, !"'all
• IC:
"
'1 ' · , • ) ~ '·, I • . ·: 1 ' Ir . '· ' ·;' -· ' ' I ' : · I ' .,,~ ~. ·
SIGNi°NG up·,.,_, President ' Nixon hll!ld•', souvehlr" ·!rig ·were '(from Jeft)1Rep. Edward•He~ert ID-JA,)( pen th1Secr8tary 'of'Defense'Melvin Lalrilla!ler:s1gii: : R'ep.·L. Menilel Ri••l's'. -~o;s.e.) and Rey .. lleili~.
mg dralt;reforimbij!: Aisi»present.fortpdaY.'"'lign•' ' AJ;,ends '(~·lJJ.) ' , · · . '
' '
Ni~on S'ig~ Draf;t :'Bitl
' . . . ' .
To . Start Lottery Setup
WASHINGTON · (UPI) -Pr.,ident
Nbi:on·signed 1egistation today to pave the
way for the start ·in January of the first
draft lottery since Wo(lcj War II and said
he would not be satisfied until the draft
could be eliminated entirely.
Speaking .at a , ceremony In the
Roosevelt Room of the ·White House, Nix· on. said the new sYsterh 'Would eliminate
some of the inequities in the present
Selective Service setup.
The President announced that the first
lottery•by-birth ·date woakl. 1be conducted
on Monday. 'J'\lis will affect ~ January
draftees. The quota already bu been oet
at 12,500. •
· Monday's drawing will" t:ue· place at
SelecUv.e .Service headquarters i n
W11hington. Plans are for you t h
representatives from throughout the
country to draw from· a huge bowl, one
by one, 386 capsules . .Each capsule will
contain a date and the sequence. in which
they are drawn will determine the "draft
yeat."
The White House said in a statement
that •cnrtent profecUons indicate 250,000
peroons wlll ,be<lrafted In 1970; ·
Nixon .signed ~executive order· to put
the lottery system into effect,. meaning
that by 1971 lhe great bulk of·tQe·nation's
draftees will be· l~year-olds,
For Uie first year, all men 1ln the so-
called draft pool -mostly . from 19
t~ough 25 -will be equally vulnerable.
They will .be dtalted "by birth dates, with
thole born on the first date·drawri certain ·
to go, and 'those born ·oo the last date just
as certain 1IOl" tcr be called.
In Ii71, the J!Yalem wlll &o fully Into ef·
feet and ..in berestricted•to 19-year-oldo,
exCept for t?iOee who. )Vere £.1.ven defeqne~ta at 11 ari<f come ~ck blto the .
wlnerable ' arta 'after graduation .from
cOileg• or olliel-wlS< baVl!Ji eahausted
de!errtcl" status. . ·
Nixon said the new system ·•'does, not
remove all Inequities ••• but the agany
and suspense thaL has hung over our
y~ for 1even years bas now ~been
reduced to one year." ..
' . Here 's Outline .
.Fer New Draft
Lotter y System ·
WASHINGTON' (tiPI) ._ Here ls ihe
way. the new draft lottery will •work:'
Someone will · draw one by . one -
presumably from a. hi t, somethlnc. like f.!lat -366 numben representing: the
days··of the year from Jan. 1 to Dec. 31,.
includins: .Feb: 29 even if It l11n't a-1eap
year. 'The men with blrthdates ·on~the
first·dllte drawn will•be called ftrVt,'lhe
s~cond date second and so on. Thoze . .in
the Jail tialf. Of .the. order, wlll not "likely
be called. Those In the top few dates
definitely wil land there is a gray are:a
between.
.A lottery. drawing also wlD be held
among the 26 letters of the alphabet. All
persons. wlth1n' the .prov"lnce of .a draft
board (individual boards Will still do "the
cafling·')1Wb0i'are called accordint: ~to--one •
blrthdale will be lined up a<cordlni•to the ·
letl>r-drawing In~ of.the llnt-1'11er or their laSt' name .. U some lait .~es ~gin with the .same. letter, µie u!T4 q
order · of the illphabet will appl:f to the
first letter Of ·their flrat names. For· tx· '
ample, ll the order or 'the lottery ·alphabet
waa f+n·p-1, etc., Frtd·SnUth would fbe
c'!lll!d ahead of· Sam· Smith. (or > Arnold
Sands or·Stanley·Si>uth). ·'
au._.. no).alliloach It had -..,.
doned by .. ~ ........... rmmlnll fur-polla.
Boord 1'1-·LarTy Toylor aaJd
-.... Al"ll haft -llud)<Inc flnandal needl kr tbiautf!•e,..n
wltb all dlililcl ..,.,_, -~
teachento-· l!ild Taylor liiillJ, "Bdioob bm! -
facing lnflatliie"')' J'l'O!>!!ma "" -u
the -llld -· lh tbll (See OVBIUllDE.l'lp I)
-· -.
ress
-
.Army Bares
Color·~Slides ·
Of Victims
From Wire l!mlcff
WASHINGTON -Top Army afflclal1
unfolded today, before shocked and
sickened members of Congress, details of
the alleged U.S. massacre of South Viet•
namese villagers, including <:0lor 11llde1
showing pl1e11 of dead bod.Jes.
l1le display, to the Senate and House Anned Seryices cornmJtt.ee.s,. fi>Uowed
shortly a White House declaration that
the all~ed March 19811 .......,,.. at My
Lai i,";abhorteiit to-tl>e cimciencsof all
tha~~--. .. ' Preis ........ _ .......... L. ~
.• ~\'-..,.1 :l":c"'~ ' -~I ~ thal"he was.~"',,_ pt«Iged thal ' all "lilepl and 1Iinliloral
"""1ucti u allelled. • would be dealt wllll
b)' the Army aod the Admlnlslratlon.
Secretary of the Army Stanley R.
Res6r. who appeared before the com-
mittees, de~ibed the eventa at My I.pl
ar "appalling'• and. laid lhe lnveallgailon
hai lieen"broadeoed to Include whethor
detaRs of the alleged mass killings were
oovered up.
Sen. Stephen M. Young (Mhlo), said
one colored slide showed "noncombatant
citizens who had ~en. killed at. cloM
range with their Insides hanging out."
He called the situation "an act <11
brutaJlty that cannot have been ex~
in Hitler.'s time."
"Na one can question that there was an
alrociowJ slaughter of 200 to 700 -
cMHlns," Youn1 sald. ''There can ht! no
justificaUon for an act of brutality of thil
kind."'
Sen. Daoiel" K. Inouye (D'Haw~). I
much decorated Workl War n hero who
loot hio right army in Italy, said, "l-
thougbt I'd be a ·btt hardened about thla, 1
but I must say that I'm sick about this."
'Ille slide! exhibited by 8-II the
hearings, hurriedly manged u ·pro.
testations about the incident swelled botb
at honie and abroad, were a doien phot.oll
said t()have been taken on tbe1day of the
klllin'p by • an · Army c o m b at
pholographer, Ronald Haeberle, . ·
Haeberle is among witne88U' to the
(See MASSACRE, Pqe II.
NEW YORK (AP) .,. Tbo otock market
took on a firmer torie In qWe\ tridlng latf
today. (See quotaUOOs~Pig.. 8'9);
"The averages trimmed di'ly losses
1be margin .of .. decllnei oVer advancet ·. among biillvidull laal!<s trailed on tho
New York Stock ~cb.ang'e· wu slender.
..
Oraage
Mesa Worker, lS-
ln jured in Fall Bond Interest Hike · OK'.d Red C.arpet Out
F Qr Santa Visit An ta.year-old Costa Meaa construction
worker ls reported• In salilf1etory con-
dllion at South Cout ComniUnity
Hospital today after suffering a back In-
jury In a fall at the F<stlval of Arla
grounds Tuesday.
San Joaquin Voters Pass In crease ro Seven Percent -
Charles Leslie L a n d r Ith , 250I
Wtstrnlnster Place, an employe of the
Beach Construction Company, was in-
jured ln a l~foot fall from a ramp
leading to the Irvine Bowl hillside from
new construclion at the Bowl entrance.
The Bowl's backstage area is being ex-
tended over the entrance to provide ad·
diUonal storage.
Landrith backed over the edge of the
ramp while carrying a piece of building
material. landing on hts back on a truck
parked below. He was taken to hospital
by Wind Ambulance and Is under
ob&erv1Uon.
By PAMELA BALLAN
. or .. ~ """ ...., A me.....,_.... the Iotem~rate on
school bcr>dl from 5 t6 7 percent was
passed overwhelminllly by voten in the
San Joaquin School DIJtrlct Tueaday.
Voters approved the meaan: nearly 3
to 1 with 2,016 votes in faV« and 540
votes against.
The measure pasted ln each of the four
predncts In Leisure World, the Lqona
Hills rettr.ment community.
''The closest we came was ln one rural
precinct where out of 14 volts cut, nine
were for and five were against," aaid
District Business Manger RH Nerlson.
"We're amlles from ear to ear around
\ . ,
here U\ls momfng," said Neilson. He said
the flnt thing to be done will be filing IP'
plication with tlie state to conatruct more
ICboob.
"We'll have to tnake a prttise
determlnatim as to where OW' next
school will be,11 he continued.
"We're fmisbing two ~.l ~ m.e n tar y
schoob DOW. 0nt.iiJ1"-Vlejo-aocl
the other is in El 1Toro. •We have two
more.ooon to be <Ollllnlcted. ln,Mlaslon
Viejo and T\lrtle Rock. ' ' -
••we're a geWng a lot ol lf°"1h ln·the
centraJ area around the Ranch.. develop-
menl We'll be lootlna serlOU1ly there. We
1lao need ao Intermediate school In El
Toro aod Tudk ..Jlock.!.' -·--
)
•
·He aald the dbtHct hao 13,4· mllllon
aujhorlzed !or coiistructicio. N"om)ally,
bond money' b Uled to pPY 'bact !late
loonl, but !he state bu been permitting
cllltrlds to·• thelt bond .lllOll<Y ., .........
struc:tlori-p(ljecto olnce It bu no m""'
money to lam.. .
N'erllo1i" Did ' the cumnt pr1ce· d a
IChool 1'I In uceaa of II million IO· that
the bood mooey can be Uled roi: two
llChooll with BOme left over.
Comp1n111 last year's bond election st
/ wl'1dl U-'• million was authorlftd, he
,.Id that '!Ith 14 percent -..ter turnout '
tiie measure had p111ecl' with 18.7 perctnl '
vbtlna·yu. ·Althougll only 11.4 percent of
S. JOAQUIN, Pip I) ' '
Another long-haired , bearded
genii.,... ·will · be-maldng . the. bl&u"" sc;ene F~ night, but lhls one la arated
for the "red carpet" trtatment.
Saota . Claus ,bu !Cheduled a epeclal
~Ilday.vlllt to the-Ari Colooy.to h/'1P ·
tuni. 0.1 1M Chrllln}U Ugb1'1 aod will be
artlvllig tiy fire engine at hlJI newly dlfcOrat.l! Santa --... the oot.ot .
Bra.dway. It 7 p.m~ · . '
llei:win sr.et youthful Lagunans for •·,
couple • or houro Frld1y ••enln&. then
deport for~ week be!,.. lnaugur•U'11 hlJ
re_gular . vi1iting schedule. on SatUrday,
Dec. II.-
Beginning on that elite, ""d on•Dec. LI,
17, Ir, JO, II and 14, Santa will welcome
vlllton to bl1 little houS< llvln ,_ to
four p.m. •
..
--Tile w..__., wlllilnc you.a
happy 'l'hanu,lving with llU!U\Y
skies over the Orange Coast end
temperatures tabbed In the low
8(1's. ...
INSmE TOD,\,Y
O.range County npcn>ilon
hooe taken· t0luzt mov be ihc
f(r•t sttp ea m10Lutionite collfttr
banking proc<dur<r. Poat 7.
,,
.
--I ..... -.. ... --' PTA ta ",,,,...,.,.. . ._,. .... ·==·"· .. T " lMMln ......... -. , ---.. ..................
..
;;, -=--_---. ~-,--. -------------------~-;;;;;::;;:::;.:;:;:;:::~::;:::=:::;;;;;;;;~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;::::;::::::::;;;::;;;:;;;:;:;:;;::;::;;;::;::;::;:::;:;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;i;;;11111--,..~ . . ~ . ".• .,.,. .... -., .. " ... '. _,., __ .C'" ;"'"" ..... _ --. . .
L ~. --26, 1969
FIGURE S IN INVESTIGATION -Sgt. Charles A.
West (left) and Ronald L. Ridenhour are two of
tilose Involved In current probe of alleged Army
atrocities In Vietnam. West participated In an Army
Ul"I T.-.....
attack on the Vietnamese village known as Pink-
.. ville. Ridenhour is ex-GI whose letters apparerrt·
!y triggered probe. ·
•
My Lal Incident
Army Denies Knowing . ' . .
Of Slaying Last Yea r
WASBINGTON (AP) -The Pentqon
denied today any dele111e olficlat In
Washington was aware last year or the
alleged U.S. mauacre in March 1968 of a
South Vietnamese village.
"No high Army officials or Department
of Defense officials were aware of thi3
last year," Jerry Frledhelm, a Pentagon
,P.kesman, told reporters.
· 'lbe impllcaUon 11 that tnllial military
reports about the .My Lai incident did not
r beyond Saigon. Friedhebn was Wlable
to aay 1-hicb up lhe military chain of
cOmmaod thole first in v eat i g at iv e
reports reached.
Houae Republican Leader Gerald R.
Ford aald Tueaday blsh Ann'/ officials were .,,are ol the allqed massacre
lliortJy afl<r It happened, allhou&l> be
declined to ume individuals.
Laguna Designers
f ake Top Prizes
In AllD Contest
Laguna arta designer& took two oul of
three top awarda in the third annual
11resenlaUons of the American Institute
;, Interior Designers, Orange County
Olapttr, Tuf.Sday night al an awards
~uet in the Towers Restaurant.
Frtedbelm said Secretary "' lhe Army Stanley R. Rcsor discuued the mati.r
with Ford thl1 mornl.ng, presumably to
clarify the situaUon.
"HI' (Ford) said be did not mean to Im-
ply that lhe secretary al tile Army, lhe
chief of sta!f,-the,vJce chief of stall or
MACV (lhe U.S. commander In Vietnam)
knew aOOut it," Resor told newsmen at
Capitol Hill earlier today.
"I think he had in mind that some
general officer in Vietnam might have
.known about it."
Ford meanwhile said 1n • a statement,
"Respomlble authorities In lhe Depart-
ment Of the Army in Vietnam knew about
the Song My .massacre." ·
"Th~ Incident occurred In ,.arch 111111
and it came to their attention shortly
thereafter," he said. "They investigated
but no aUinnaUve action was taken. I
have not implied that the secretary of the
Army, the Army chief of 11taff or Gen.
Westmoreland knew about the incident,"
Wiillam C. Westmoreland, now Army
chief of staff~ was U.S. Commander in
Vlelnam at lhe lime of tile alieged ln-
cidenl. ,
Asked why there was no public state.
ment about the alleged massacre
between last April, when Secrelfry, of
Defeme Melvin R. Laird first heard the
allegation, and last September when
formal charges were made, Friedheim
replied a new investigation then was
under way and no charges had been
decided.
Goodell Reports
More Atrocities
In S. Vietiiam
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. Charles E.
Goodell (R-N.Y.), said Wedneaday be ha1
received reporta of seyeral atrocities in
Vietnam s1nce ulllng for an lnveotlgatlon
al lhe alieged My Lai musacre.
He declined to give ·any detalll, but
said that in 1t leut one tnatance be
understood that the cue Involved South
Vletnameae troops primarily.
Goodell said the reports involved mate
than one caae beyond lhe My Lal instance
and 1n unsubstantiated report by Rep.
Lionel Van Deerlln (0-C.llf.), that a
village was used for target practice.
"J have several other reports of
atrocitiea in Vietnam, 11 said Goodell.
Alex R. Larson
·Services Held
Graveside services are scheduled at t
p.m. today in El Toro Cemetery for Alex
R. Larson, Laguna Beach buUding con-
tractor who died Nov. 25 in Beverly
Manor, Capistrano Beach, at the age oC
61. ClllJO!I Dooglaa Sluart will oflicial<.
A naUYe of Sweden, Mr. Larson was a
20-year resident of Laguna Beach, where
he made his home at 430 El Bosque.
He is survived by his widow, Ruth-and
two sons, Dennis and LeI\fly, of the home,
and by a brother, Lennart Larson also of
Laguna Beach, as well as by brothers
and sisters still living in Sweden.
Sheller Laguna Beach Mortuary, direc-
tors.
Top landscaping award went to South
teguna's Ken Wood1 ASLA, and his
partners, Fred Lang, AILA, for their
work on the Gaede residence at Irvine
Cove.
From Page 1
Laguna Beach architect ~ Briggs
~IA. and Wllliam Blurock, AIA of Corona
d!I Mar, won the first award for com-
inercial architectural design for the clty!s
lle:W Top al the World fire staUon al 2900
Illa Laguna Boulevard.
First award ill the residential architec-
ture division went to Edward Giddings
MA of Corona del Mar for the Roy Klotz
residence on Llnda lsle.
Orange County projects aimpleted In
l968-69 were coosldered for lhe AID
~ntatiom:.
uAl/ 1 Pi! (JI
GIAJIOI! atMI NII. ....... GllUWfY
l•s..f N.'·W ... .,.....,. .............
Jae• I , c.1..,
Vlct ......... o-.. ----.. ..... -Tfle11111 A. M.,,w ...
Mt"'llfll If.WW
liJll1r4 P, N•ft .___ <.,_ '---111 ,., ... ,.,., ••
M•tlttlt Mtlr--. P.O. I • Ml. t2M2 --c... Mmll1U1 .. 11W l'Nt -.n -...1 mt..,.,.,... ........
.... tlSlt ..... ~----
,
OVERRID E ••.
year we've been operating at a deUcil
because of the defeat of the late override
which means we have to dip into
reserves.
Taylor said it would not be po~ible to
keep dipping Into reserves.
Regarding possibility ol a bond issue on
the ballot lo finance purchase of future
school sites, Taylor pointed out that Top
of the World School site had been pur·
cbilSed at about half the cost 0£ the like-
size Thurston site because the board had
the funds available when the right op-
portunity lo buy developed.
He said there could be C011$iderable ad-
vantage to the taxpayers because of ris·
lng land costs in buying a !lte now which
might not be developed as a school for
five or 10 years.
Trustee William Wik:oxen commented
that pending development In Arch Beach
Jleights or about 400 lots would create the
need for another school site.
During discussion on the type or ballot,
Dr. Orlandella favored one propo!ition.
He said he felt the override would have
El T oro Hottest
Spot in Country
There wa~ a hot time 111 the old town o(
El Toro Tuesday -the hottest In the na ·
lion at 87 degrees.
While Orange County led lhe country on
the theremometer for Tuesday, weather
forecast.tn promised coqler -but not
much cooler -tcmpcrature.s f or
1 Thanksgiving Dly.
Local fo11 ls expected along the Orange
Coast tonight and early Thursday, with
sunaNne J)Nlvailina throughout the af-
le"'°°n.
Mtreury readings In the eoastal srea
are predicted in the middle to high 705
whlle lnbaod thermometers l!i h o u I d
rqistu 83 degrees. Ll1ht smo1 ii
forecast for the coastal sections.
"
more solid ba cking this time.
"I feel we· should have one big shot. Let
them vote on $1.25 and get all the support
we can beh ind It," said Orlandella.
Trustee Norman Browne said, "I sug-
gest we ct1me lo a majority <>pinion and
get the hell on with it. 1 would rather lay
my money <>n the crap table $3 at a time
t.han $10 in one shol."
'Vilc<>xen said, "l don't agree lhat we
stand a chan~ with a <>ne·shot $1.15. I
don't see it passing." Orlandella said, "l
lhink we're going to have more support,
\'Cry solld su pport from the teachers
which we didn't have last time."
At one point during diseus5ion <>f basic
maintenance ileeds, Dr. Ullom &aid, "We
have $61l.1 million worth of buildings in
the districl. If we don't take care of
them, they 're going to deteriorate."
Murder f or Hire
Counts Dt·opped
Insufficient evidence has led tG drop-
ping Gf murder·f<>r-hlre charges against a
Wilmington man , while his Garden Grove
partner in a tire shop is still being in-
vestigated.
South Gate Police announetd the arrest
of A1£red J. Slaton. 41, of 6501 Killamey
Ave., Garden Grove, aod Francis Kerr·
ing, 29, o( Wilmington on Monday.
Charges or conspiracy to commit
murder will not be brought against K91'·
ring, according to U . Robert Taylor, but
both men 11UU face other counts stem·
ming from the raid.
lnvestig11tors aald more than $50,000
v.·orth of i.1olen goods, plus dangerous
drugs and marijuana were seized at
Red 's Tire Inc .. In which Slaton and Ker·
ring are executives. •
Tho arrem were made In connection
\Vith the alleged delivtry of ~ t~ ar-
range the murder of a new car dealer
allegedly Involved ln an adWterous situ&·
Hon with someone's wift. •
School Vandals Soughti
;.. Mesa Hard o f Hearing Ce nter Hit
.Jnvestlgatlon continues today lnto an
Ink and pato~hurllng raid at Costa
·• Mesa's Wilson School, where classroom
pets Wert killed and splritl ()f some
particularly se.naltive iludenll crushed.
Repairs to the two classrooms used to
teach children with hearing defect.s -
who come from as far away as Hun-
Ungton Beach and San Clemen!<· -will
cost IZ,000 and laat thniughoul the week.
Costa Me11 Police Detective Pat Alex-
ander is probing the senseless weekend
rampage at the two specialized rooms
among 22 in the facility and was out o{
the statiOn today.
Indications are that the two used for
the pre.school and kindergarten hard4·
hearing programs were selected at ran-
dom , because they are not visible to
passersby on the street nearby.
"l don't think Ulla was aimed at the
hard-of-hearing program," says P4r8.
Elsie Deeter, who teaches the momini
&e&&ioo, while tl.lsa Bobbie La Buda in-
structs in the afternoons.
Whoever broke in durin& the weekelld
tossed indelible ink and paint over
· children's projects, fatally contamiDaUng
water in bowla for gold!lah and turtles,
and wrecking the pupils' h1ndiwort.
Specialized equipment used to teach
hard~f·hearing children largely escaped
damage, but the soundproof rooms are
unavailable for use while repairs are In
progre~.
A $1,700 amplifier and earphone sets
were splattered with ink and paint and
Principal Hubert Leatherman says there
Greeter Gaining
But More Funds Still Needed
The Laguna Beach Greeter Fund
reports gratifying responae from many
areaJ lo Ill anrwal appeal fcir 0 Thank
you, Eiler Lanen" contributions to help
support the Art C<llony's famed Greeter,
now nearing l!IO.
However, says chairman Pete Fulmer,
donations to date will fill only a small
portion of the need and it Is hoped more
friends of the sidewalk ambassador will
respond to the appeal during the holiday
season.
Larsen ~s for half of the reduced
rate charge for his room at Hot.el Laguna
lrom bis veteran's pension, with the com·
munity-sponsored fund covering ad-
ditional costs. Many local restaurant8 in-
vlle him for meals, Fulmer said.
Contributiona, many anonymo:us, come
In from tl1roogbout Orange County and
from lurlher afield, ofl<n wllh •I>'
preciative notes from visitors who say
they alwaya watch for the Greeter's
cheery wave u they drive through
Laguna.
A Santa Anan wrote, ''Thantagiving
greeilngs to the brightest, most cheerful
spot in Laguna Beach!"
Another donor said his contribution was
in honor of his wile's 8lst birthday, "to
express our appreciation to dear old Eller
for what he has done for our community
in past years."
Don<:tions to the Greeter Fund may be
sent in care of the Laguna Beach
Chamber of Commerce, 280 Park Ave.
The ct1mmittee adminislerlng the fund
1ncludes Mayor Glenn Vedder. Chamber
president Harry Lawrence, Miss Lorna
Mills, president of Laguna Federal Sav-
ings and Loan, writer RemloW Harris and
Fulmer.
Cities May Have to Fund
Lobbyi st for Oil Ban Bill
caJllomla coeatal ciu .. probably wl11
have to chip In to pay a Washlngtoo lob-
byist to belp puab tile Cranston-Murphy.
MU!ld .. Nellon oil blll through lhe Senate,
Roy Marcom t.otd fellow directors of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of Commerce
this week.
F rom Page 1
SHOOTOUT. • •
shotgun blasts hit the fleeing car.
Deputy Horton was travellng at high
speed and overran the offr~mp, but the
suspect's car hurtled down It and ~lam
med into a car driven by Sarah ruc.b-
ardson, 29, <>f Norwalk.
No one was injured in the exchange of
gunfire, but Miss Richardson suffered
<'Uls and bruises In the collision at
Katella Avenue and the freeway exit.
Lt. Mann said the pair were aOOut to
flee on foot when Norwalk Sheriff's
Station Deputy Raymond Serna crashed
his car into the op:ening door of theirs,
trap ping them inside.
Five other patrol cars from the LASO
station in Norwalk and also Lakewood
had pulled onto the freeway al Alondra
Boulevard to halt the suspects when
possible.
Reporting on activities of the Coastal
Area Protective League, Marcom noted
the successful passage of two anti-drill-
ing measures by the California Legisla·
lure, but said the bill aimed at restrict·
Ing drilling operations in the Federal
tidelands further out to sea can expect
tougher sledding.
It will take a lot of effort to get those
people back there (Washington) to un-
derstand our problems,'' said Marcom,
"and we know the oil companies will be
spending a lot of money to get tht bill
rejected. because they have a lot of mon-
ey involved in this."
The CAPL. he said, Is seeking bids
from three lobbying flrms qualified to
round up supporting votes for S 31»3.
"This gets expensive," said Marcom.
"It could cost as much as $50,000 to
$100,000 -and lhe coastal cities will be
asked to help.''
Biafra Asks Talks
BERN, Switzerland (AP} -Biafra's
leader, Gen. Odumegwu Ojukwu, has ask-
ed the Swiss government to help arrange
for peace talb in the Nigerian conflict, a
high official of the Swi~ Foreign Office
said today.
Is no immediate way to detennlne '
whether fumes might damage the'
sensitive gear.
One of the most lrreplactable Josses -
betides the heartbreak or children and in-
temqrtion tn their learning -ls that of •
13 years' worth of pupil records dumped
Into a toilet.
"[ don't have any idea how to begin to
replace them." said Mrs. Deeter, "they
gave me medical knowJed1e of the causes
and effect.. of each child's hearing loss
and helped me understand the problems
associated with helping hlm learn."
The two teachers are continuing work
with the youngsters this week in comers
of Other classrooms, but lack of the
special equipment and the familiar en-
vlronment or their special place makes it
hard to learn.
l•'.-om P qe 1
MASSACRE •.•
alleged massacre who recently have
given gruesome details or the shootings in
the village.
Sen. Inouye, said one slide showed 11a
young woman standing up begging, her
chlldren standing around her, kz19wing
that she would be killed an instant later."
Inouye said, he was "sick about it,"
and added :
••There is no question that men, women
and children, apparently non-combatants,
had been killed."
Rep. Leslie Arends (R·lll.), eaid the
pictures showed mas.sea of bodies -but
said they did not show that Americans
did tile killing.
"They ..;ere pretty gruesome · pic-
tures?" someone asked.
"Yeah," Arends replied. "Yeah, l've
to:t a queasy stomach."
In a statement to White House
reporters following days or persiltent
questioning -and v I r tu a 11 y non·
committal replies -Ziegler said the
President viewed the incident as "in
direct violation" <>f U.S. military policy.
Ziegler slressed that the i~cid~nt
should not be interpreted aa a reflection
on a million and a quarter other
Americans who served In Vietnam and
were now back home. Resor emphasized
this point also.
"I am convinced that the overall record
of the hundreds of thousands of American
soldiers who have participated in combat
operation in Vietnam is one of decency,
consideration and restraint toward the
civilians who find themselves in a zone of
mititary operations," Resor said.
Resor said that whatever happened at
Song My was "wholly unrepresentaUve or
the manner In which our forces conduct
military operations in Vietnam."
The only American soldier specifically
charged in the case so far is a lieutenant
accused in the death of 109 persons.
JOAQ UIN VOTE
the voters turned out for this election the
yes vote ratio was nearly the same,' 78.9 percent.
"We hope we've set a precedent for
<>ther districts," said Nerlson, referring
~ the fact that his was the first district
in Orange County to attempt to raise the
interest rate
"I know several were watching Jt."'
REWARD for Early Bird
Christmas Shoppers
Th is Li mited Ed ition
Royal Ar .. ~rican Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
,..,...,_CL IP TH IS COUPON am-n,,
With Your Chri•lmH Purcn•••
of $5.00 or More.
l\.tMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMIR.)
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANKAM!RICARD
MASTER CH,1.R6E
J. C. _J/umphrie~ 'Jeweler~
llll NEWPORT AVENUE
COSTA MESA
I
2! YEARS
SAME LOCATION
PHONE
541 ·1401
..
'
I
I
\
• I
' I
· Boar.d Stult,ying
\ ; .. :
Fund·: Shifi Plan t. • • • .
SANTA ANA -, County
~llor• look Tuesda.Y·-1
1Dll' ·be the lint Ille\) ta a , ft~ry ·transfer o r
._llllll1Cage funds from banking
lundf paid· bf, m or 't 1a1 e
holderi In an mpound 8C«llU11
and ·tlieY in•k• their -ual
payn1ent1 of county laxes
from that source/~ Battin
said. "My suggestkm II tbat
thole tundlf be paid over t-0 us more frequently as a solution
to the prol>Jem we face in rais-
ing revenue from JuJy to
October."
For The
Record
Marriage
Licenses
DEATH NOTICES
FINCH
Ectw•rd Gto1'9f Finch, Age 82, of
Jln'h M•rlt<!ld, QorOM o.l Mff. °""
of dfflh, H""· 2J. Survived bY -.. Ch•rlts E. l'lncl1, of U.11111 8Ndll
two 1r1nddllldr1111 1nd four tn•I• trandchlt~. $1!,..le••· Frld1'f, n
AM, 811t1t CIMMI, »20 E'. C:0.1f
Mltl'lwe'f, Cor-doll ~r. lnltm'!ot11I,
P1cJr1c View M.morl•I ,,rt, 1111n
Morfl,lary, Dlrerlt>ro. mCI<S
ltoito. M. Hlck1. Atot '8, of 254
llroedwlY SI., (P!lf MHI. Sul'Vlwd by wll1, EIHnor; 11Jltr, Mrs. Ptul
l(Ol'llltr, Amtlov. 1mroo11.. S1Nlc11 win
be held 1"rld1y, 11 AM, !lell tlrOlld·
w1y Chepel. 111term8'1t, Pacific View
M-ltf Pert. Dlrtcted' b'r ltll
!lnMOdWl'f Morl...,ry,
LAJISON
Altlf R. Utnon. Ate U, of o:I El
BcrtCIVf, ltOUllt 8tadl. Dli. ef lllfflll,
Nov. 25. SurvlVild bv wllt, 1111"11 two
llOlll. 01111111 tnd l1n11y, boffl of Lt·
11Unt ll•chi brolt!tr. Le-rt Un-
1on1 sewrtl b<'otl\ers ind sllfwn In
SWl'dlon. Gr1v .. lde 11Nlcn. WtdMs-
dev ,loch'!', 2 PM, El Toro C.,.,..._rv.
$1\tfftr lttllllf Bttch Mortutrr. DI• nctors.
McNAILY
Jtmet I!'. McN1ttv. 100! E. 1!1lbot
l!l lvd., 81!boa. 01!1 ol d•11!1, Nov. 1~. survived bl' ion, C1rl O. McN1Uy,
of Ille home; d1u11ht,r, Mr1. JHn
t umwall ot Newsoorl Be1ch1 &rolll•r•
G1ort1 H. Mc"ltllY, ot LOl!ll •••Chi tr~ndSOll, J1m11 0,., of Coltl Me .. ,
PrlYlll tamllY "rvlc11 lod1y, W9d·
ne1d1y, 11 ,.M, P1clflc \II.., Ol1P9l.
ln!1rment, P1clllc View ~r!1I
P1rtc. Olrtcltd by Paelllc VLf#. Mof·
f1111Y.
PONTIUS
J1m11 E. Ponllut. A'• n, of 1'114 'Vorkhlwn, Huntlnvton BNdl, Ol!t of
dHlh, NoY1mt11r 24. Surylvff ilV wife,
M1rt11ret: clauohter, Mrt. Luelle "''"
Olx""' Ht,1ntl1111tan 11e1ch1 1ht1r, Mrt.
Nelll1 Lt1k11 •NI l<!vr t'lll4Chlldr1n,
serv!(11 will be held Frkflt'f, I PM,
'!im!lhs Ch1111f. ln11rm1nl, W11!mln11er
Memorltl Ptrlc. F1mlly su11111111
lrltl!ds wllo w!lh mtY c1111trl bull lo
tht Amtrlc1n C1nctr Socl11y, Smllhl
Mortu1ry, O!recto••. WALLACE
(hrltllnl R. w11i.c1. Beloved l'!!Qther
of Mo. AtnH W, H1W!horM, GordO<'I
M. W1lleCI INI Mrt. Cllrl1tln1 \/,
H1hn, Alto !1Ur'l1Ytcl bY ll!IMI llflnd•
chlldrllfl 1M 1'<¥9 1tt1t-11r1nckhlldnln.
Str'lkl .. Frlcl1y, t :311 AM. Wn l(lr1t
O' thl H11t111r, For11t L1w11-Gl1n-
dlle, Forti! LIWll MorlUIN.
ARBUCKLE I< SON w .... uir Morluuy
1%7 E. 17111 SL, Cotll M ... -• BALT'l MORTUARIES
Corona del Mar OR UtJI
Costa Mes• Ml I-UN • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadny, Cooll Meu
1J H433 • DILDAY BROTHERS
HudnglOll Vllley
Morloory
1m1 Beach 81'11.
HundnglOll Ilea
141.mt • PACIFIC VJn
MEMORIAL PARK C.••1•'~ Chapel
1181 Poclfle vr ... Drive
Newport Be..:b, Calllonla , -• PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME
l!Gl Bolu .... w--' . 81117FERMOll'l1.IARY Locn•-IM-IAI s .. aemente 41Ml• • SMITll!J' MORn!AllY
1r1 Miii SI.
Runttniton BtlCll -
vaults to county coffers.
They llhelved dilcuslloO ol
.... jWOpOled methods ol
ellintnating the coun&y'1 °dry
period" -tile July-October
apeU when revenues from tu aources are not 1vallable -to
u.t.. ta Supervilor Robert
Battin'• eyebrowof'alalng plan
!0< molltenlng the couuty's
· lean months.
UBankJ boJd • portion of the
CSF Team
In Co"Uege
Bowl Sunday
FULLERTON -A Cal State
Fullerton team beaded by Stan
R. Brin will square off agahW
Merrimack College t h I s
weekend in the ~tiOJally
televised "GE College Bowl."
Originating live in New York
City Saturday, the award-win-
ning quiz show can be seen by
Los Angeles area viewers via
videotape at 9:30 p.m. Stinday
on KNBC (Channel 4).
Bl'ln, 21, of Malibu, ls a
senior majoring b political
science. He was elected cap-
tain by his teammates, Carl F.
Macek, 18, of Anaheim;
Timothy A. Hodson, 19, of San-
ta Ana, and Theodore Perle,
21, of Whittier,
Macek is a freshman com-
munications major, w h 11 e
sophomore Hodson and senior
Perle are political science ma·
jors.
Coached by Dr. Russell H.
Miller, ass.lstant professor of
English, the four have been b
training for nearly a month.
Last week they defeated a
faculty group, 3()().180, in a
praclice match.
GWCHosts
OC Of fic.ers
Golden West College will
host the seventh Orange Coun-
ty Sergeant's 'Academy for
law enforcement supervisors
Dec. 1 and 2.
Lawmen from all over the
county will participate eight
hours daily in the two week
s es s 1 on which covers
responsibilities and duties of
the police supervisor, morale
and discipline, performance
appraisal, leadership principle
and the handling of com·
plaints.
The course is designed for
sergeants but is open for of·
ficers who will soon be pr~
rooted to that rank.
Applications will be received
by Derald D. Hunt, director of
the colleae'a law enforcement
program.
s._..,.. had called ror
Ideas on how the county might
belt aVokl going to area banks
for 1o·ans during , the 0 dry
period," loans which have
lately been subject to record
interest rates.
"We'll get no objections
from those who m a k e
mortgage payments," Battin
pobrted out. "The banks won't
pay them hrterest on the im·
pounded money so I don't see
why the money can't come to
the county at more frequent
intervals."
Battin Loses
In Welfare
Branch Duel
SANTA ANA -Orange
Cowity'.s Weliare Department
got its brcrJch office in
Westminster Tuesday but only
after a board battle in which
Supervisor Robert Battin call·
ed for a half to "this creeping,
Insidious decentralization of
county government."
Batun went <town 4 to 1 but
only after he had-condemned
"county, policies which are
backing us into a sateillte.civic
center complex and which are
shifting the center of govern·
ment." ·
His arguments will launch a
study by the county of all proj-
ects designued to establish
branch offices of c o u n t y
departments. In many in-
stances, Battin argued, the
public would be better served
eco':lomlcatly . if not
physically, by operation of the
required function from bead
offices in Santa Ana.
Supervisor William Hirstein
stressed that the Westminster
office had been approved by
the board "long ago" and that
the west county location had
been shown to be ideal ''for
the limited means of its main
users -welfare applicants."
The county is Jeasi'Jg the
14,000 square feet of an office
building at Vista Verde Drive
and Westminster Avenue for
$4,850 per month. It has an op-
tion to purchase the lease in
1979 for $561,000.
"It's not that I'm objecting
to this particular office," Bat·
tin said. '"But I do feel that we
should establish a clear,
workable policy one way or
the other and either approve
this drlfilng away from the
civic center or condemn tt."
No date has been set for
renewed board discussion of
the issue.
James Beam to Lead
Orange County CofC
ANAHEIM -James Beam,
vice president of the First Na·
tional Bank of Orange County
is the president-elect of the
Orange County Chamber of
Commerce.
Beam and his fellow officers
and directors will be installed
at the Orange County Ball
Jan. 2.1, at the Anahetm
Convention Center.
Ted Finster, vice president
of Boyle Engineering. Santi
Ana, will be first vice presl·
dent: John B. Merrell Ji of the
law finn of Wyatt and fi.1er·
rell, Westminster, will be sec·
ond vice president ; 8.nd Lloyd
H. Stocker, CPA partner In
charge of the Santa An• office
of Peat, Marwick, Mitchell
and Co., will be treasurer.
Rounding out the executi~
committee will be F. R.
"Dick" Marvin, vice president
and manager, Security Title
Insurance Company. Santa
Ana; Paul Johnston, assistant
administrator, St. Joseph
Hospital , Orange; Will H.
Lindsay Jr,, cons u It Ing
enitneer, FuJlerton ; 1 n d
Arthur W. Wagner , vice prtli·
dent, Ralph C. Sutro Com-
pany. Orange.
Beam, 35, is a native of Oranae.
His underaraduate colle1e
work was completed a t
0ran1e Coast Coller• and Cal
State Fullorton.
He entmd the banking pro-
fession with the Firat. National
Bank ol Or-Counly In 115J
rising to llliltlnt trUlt omcer
when he left to become a
partller in the firm of Eckhoff
and Beam, rtal e s t at e
brokers, Orange.
TO LEAD CHAMBER
Or•nt1•'• B••m
In 1965, Beam rejoined the
First NationaJ Bank of Orange
County as vice president
He is past president of the
Orange Chamber of Com·
merce and past chairman of
the Orange County Chamber's
Economic Development Coun-
cil. He pesently is treasurer
and a dlrector of the Oran1e
County Chamber of COm·
merce.
He was trtasurer of the re-
cent Soulhern Callfomla Billy
Grahlm Crusade and Is an
auodatc member of the
California Republican State
Central Commlllee.
1n 1981, Beam wat named
Orange Young Man o( the
Year by that community's
Jayctes, and in 1967 he was
named Orange Man or U1e
Year.
Is Oil Rig
Really Over
Drill Site?
SANTA BARBARA (UPI)~
Sun Oil Oo. today claimed its
260-foot high oil platform had
su~uDy been towed to lts
offshore well site but mem~
hers ol the GOO (Gel Oil Out)
organization disagreed.
A Sun OU s-pokesman told
the Coast Gu1rd the barge car·
rying the platform was an-
chored directly over the wen
site· in the Santa Barbara
Channel and installation of the
rig would begin today.
llow.ver, Bill Bolwright. a
GOO spokesman, said the
barge cOUld not.be in the right
spot because a private craft
in the GOO neet, which main-
tairled a small blockade, was
ancb~ over the spct.
The Coast Guard said the
small boat and the barge were
about 80 yarct.. apart. A Coast
Guard spokesman said there
was no trouble between the op.
posing facUons as the barge
moved Into the area because
of the apparent mixup or the
correct site.
"It would appear they could
not be on the coordinates
authorized for them by the
Corps of Engineers permit,''
Botwrlght sai~. "They wou)d
have to be on top of our\craft
to be on the authorized site.
"We know we 're right on
those cootdlnates," he added.
Botwright said the small
GOO Boat anchored dlrecUy
over what his organization be-
lieved to be the correct site
would remain there "until the
situation can be cleared up."
The U.S. Supreme Court
Tuesday refused to take ac·
lion on a request by the city
and c~unty of S~ta Barbara
to 'ban further drilling In the
channel,
Judge Bars
Evidence
From Vomit
VENTURA (UPI) -A Ven-
tura County superior court
judge has ruled that evidence
obtained by forcing a suspect
to vomit may not be used
against him.
Judge Marvin H. Lewis
made the ruling In acquitting
Ray P, Archibeque, 30, Ox-
nard, of a felony charge of
possession. of heroin.
Archibeque, a parolee, wa s
arrested Aug. 1 after an OX·
nard pollce detective saw hlm
swallow a balloon believed
containing heroin. H.e was tak·
en to Ventura County General
Hospital where three detec·
tives held the S¥Spect whll~ a
a doctor and nurse gave him
an injecUon which caused him
to vomit.
Authorities said the balloon
Archibeque swallowed was
filled with 14 heroin capsules.
Lewis said the officers and
the doctor and nurse would
have been guilty of wault
and battery If the injection
of the drng had not been part
or a Police search for evi·
dence.
. Ill Tax Propesals
'
Reagan ConsUlers
Dropping Issue
SACllAMEN'll) (AP) -The
Reagan admlnlstratlon, In a
mood ta compromise, la con-
alderlng dropping ooe ol the
most controverslel feab.lres of
Its lax relief plan - a pr°"
posed boo.st In the persooal In·
come tax.
The latest details of the
plan, to be presented in
January, were ouUined in an
interview today with Kirk
West, deputy director of fman-
ce who is in charge of tax
relief planning,
West aJso disclosed the ad·
minlstralloo is working closely
with Republican leaders in the
Senate and Assembly to draw
up a compromise \ plan and
avert the batUes that stymied
Reagan's tax relief program
In the 1169 sessioo.
West' said the. proposal, as It
st.ands now, still would boost
the present five cent sales tax
by one cent on the dollar to
finance a reduction in home
property taxes of about 40 per·
cent.
But he said th e ad·
ministration was willing to
abandon the proposed income
tax bike that stirred up heavy
opposlUon the past session.
''We are trying to find an
altemaUve or reduce the
•mount of the increase or
eliminate It!' he sald.
Last month, the Republican
governor announced he would
ask the 1970 legislature to
boost personal Income taxes
by an average of five percent.
That would be done, Reagan
said, by imposing 1 new one·
half of one percent tax on ad-
justed gro.ss personal income.
The proceeds would go to
financing the property tu cut.
In 1969, Reagan proposed an
even bigger increase, ah
average of ' 10 percent .
Democrats and Republicans
both objected to the increase.
West said that late st
revenue figures showed that
the increase in income taxes
might not be needed to replace
money lost through lowered
property taxes. He said talks
are now under way between
t h e a d m i nlstration and
Assembly Speaker Robert T,
Monagan, R·Tracy, and Senate
President pro tern Howard
Way, R-Exeter, to put
together a compromise plan
before January.
Trustees Back Down
On Control of Papers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Trustees of the Slate College
system, after debating the
issue at some length, have
decided against issuing a lll-
point set of ground rules for
student publicaUon on the 19
campuses.
The vote to table the matter
Tuesday · leaves control of
campus newspapers a n d
magazines in the hands of col·
lege presidents,
The guidelines, proposed by
the t r u a t e e s ' Educational
Policy Committee, sald slU·
de:it publications should serve
the welfare of the students
and the college, s h o u I d
"pursue exactlng c r e a t I v e
standards," and "avoid techni·
ques of harassment and in-
nuendo." w. o. Weisslch of San
Rafael opposed the guidelines,
saying : "J'm not willing to
give advan<:i! approvaJ to the
students."
William O. Norris of Los
Angeles expre.sSed opposltiaJ
for a different reason. "This,"
he said, "is treading on very
dangerous ground ... freedom
of expression."
Ahmanson
Firms Fined
WS ANGELES (UPI) -
Four rorporations which are
reportedly controlled by the
estate of the late financier
Howard Ahmanson, have been
fined a total of $40,000 for
making Illegal political cam·
palgn contributions.
The fines were imposed
Tuesday after attorneys for
the companies entered guilty
pleas to lhe federal grand jury
indictments last month.
Home Savings and Loan
Assn. was fined $1S,OOO; Ar·
rowhead Savings and Loan
Assn., $2,500; Continental Sav·
lngs and Loan, $2,500 ; and
Galaxy Inc., $20,000.
The . Indictments did 11ot
idenUfy the candidates who
received the donations which
were charged off as ad·
vertisblg e1penaes in some
cases.
Daniel H. Ridder of Long
Beach, a newspaper executive
and president of the trustees,
commented that be saw no
value in setting up campus
press guidelines If the college
presidents did :.-wt respect the
advice.
Gov. Reagan, an ex officio
trustee, said he didn't believe
standards for the "outside"
press could be satisfactorily
applied t.o college publications.
Chancellor Glenn S. Dumke
said after the meeting that the
vote may have killed the issue
for the present, but he
predicted a "crisis" could
revive it.
Man Sought
In Shooting
Of Seaman
VALLEJO (AP) -Delee·
lives sought a black man to-
day in the ambush shootlng of
a merchant marine cook
outside his home.
Raphael rf Cal or, 56, was In
serious condition at Queen of
the Valley Hospital with
wounds in hls head. stomach
and legs from shots fired from
a 9mm pistol at a range of
about 25 feet.
Because of the weapon used
and the seemingly senseless
nature of the attack; there had
been speculation that Calor's
assailant may have been the
killer who calls h i m s e I f
Zodiac. Amoog the five vlc·
tims Zodiac claims were ones
killed with a 9mm pistol.
Police say Zodiac it a white
man, while Detective Sgt. Ed
Rust said he had 11developed
informatJon that Calor was
shot by a black man -that a
young Negro male was seen
leaving the shooting."
Calor, a Negro, lived ln a
b I a c k neighborhood. He
returned Monday from two
weeks sea duty and had gone
to his car to get a bundle of
clothes when he was shot from
ambush.
LA Murders Linked
ViCtims Members of Mystical Cliurch
LOS ANGELES !UPI) -A
teen-a ge boy and a girl, the
latest of 13 victims of seeming
11thrlll murders" In the Los
Angeles area since Jan. 1,
were members of a mystical
church group, police revealed
Tuesday.
In addlllon, LI. Earl A.
Dtemer aaid he had "strong reason to believe" that a
young unidentified w o m a n
found stabbed Nov. 16, also
may heve belonged to/ the
Church of Scientology.
The church uses a variant of
poychoanaly1l1 ta suppooedly
help the lndividu al com·
munlcate better wllh hla en·
vlronment and with others.
'Ibe f'OUP. makes u!'-of an
.. £.meter," 1 type oflltdetec-
or In Its lessons.
Deemer said close parallels
exl!t between the ldlling& Fri•
day of James Sharp. 15,
Crestwood, Mo.: Doreen Gaul,
19, Albany, N.Y., and the
unidentilied woman, about 25.
Deemer said, however, that
the mystical group had refus-
ed to release membership lists
although it had cooperated In
the lnvestlgalJon i n t o the
deaths of Sharp and Miss Gaul.
The parallels lb\ed by
Deemer were:
-All three viclima had been
stabbed repeatedly and their
wounds appeared the work of
a "fanatic."
-The three were a1aln Jn
different loca\on1 .than where
their bodies wete found.
-?be three were recently
arrived to the Los Angeles
areA.
The unldentl rled womnn,
fully clOUled. h;id been stab-
bed repeated ly in Ute upper
half of her body and her thrbet
had been cut. An -auk>psy
revealed there was no smog In
her lungs leading authorities
to believe she was new to the
ar:,:1U Gaut, nude except fof a
string of Indian beads whtn
her body was found with Sharp
in an alley, had been raped.
Both she and the youth had
been &tabbed 50 to 60 times
and both lhek rlgbl eyes had
been cut out. or the lS murder1 aince the
b<&lnnin( ol lhe year deocrlb-
ed by autbortt4e s as
murders," four have been
young 1kl1.
'nle others were the mus
murden of actress Sharon
Tate and four others 1t,t,ltr
Benedict C•nyon estate Aug. 8
and the slaying5 of a m-arltct
owner and his wife the foUow·
Ing nlghL
11,ALY I'll.OT 1 ,
ALL D·AY -~
T,HURSDA Y, NOY. 27
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STARTING
FRI DAY, "ov. 28
OPEN
EVERY .DAY
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~merica Facing
Compl~te-New ·York Stock .List urn••, NO'l'ICI '
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u N N N N N N
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Market I '
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...-"" . .. ..... . .. . .. --·--DAILY PllOT f
York Stock ·Exchang~ List
In All Home
Editions
American Stock Exchange List
PUT WH IN
YOUR POCKO
S.11 un~1anted Item.
with a DAILY PILOT
Clau.Uled Ad.
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Safety, Measures Due 1Ml·mA>*"#OU·~ .. . ...
MR. MUM,1 11 ;( 11
II
11
U.N. Hails·
Action
Doeket Crewded
Senare w Oka'°' . '
, Destroying Germ War Stockpile· Tricky
rl2>-"J : ~1 .. 1 ~y Nixon AgedTre~tySoon WASHINGTON (AP)
,__ olllcials say Pr<~
.. Nilon11 order Juntlna:
U.S. lllllltary genn stocU will
require elahorak. 1 a f et y
precautlona which may sti:etch
the disposal operatkm over
several months.
'nle Defense Department ex-
pressed hope. Tuesday that
elimination of fP1I\ warfare
compooents can be completed
0 well within a. ·year." The
Department of Health, Educa-
tion &1d Weltare will asalSt in
the disposal.
The highly poisonous nature,
rather than a huge volume, of
the biological stocks is the
main problem, officials said.
The Pentagon has not yet
stripped the Secret label from
documents sho.wing how much
bacteria there is to destroy,
but sources speak in terms of
"bucketsfull" arid p o u n d s ,
rather than tons.
However, as 1\ttle as a
thimbleful of such lethal
bacteria as anlhrax or plague
is capable of killing thousands
of persons over a wide area.
The Pre s ide ~1 t 's an-
nouncement or the planned
disposal Tuesday climl:lxed a
six-month review of t h e
American chemical a n d
-biological warfare -CBW -
'·
program.
".Mankind already;carcies in
Us bands too many of the
seeds of its own destruction,"
Nixon said.
The commander·in-c h i e f
said the United States will
coofme Its biological research
to defensive measures such as
hnmunlzation. And, in the
chemical field, he pledged that
this naUon would never be the
i
'
first to use lelbal ot In· ' terla) to 1« how pn>duceable
capacitat.ing gases. it ls. The only amount.a in
Nixon's re re re n c e to stock are those which · have
eliminating "existing sUlcka«ll .been producod·ln the plloll'l'O"
bacteriological w e a po n s ' ' ducUoo plant, aod these have
made Pen\agon informatiro a Umited life."
olficers squirm since the The rate ot Pine Bturr is
department has repeatedly clearly in ques\lon n o w
told reporters that the United although .continued research
States does not ·stock germ; there may be possible, the of·
weapons. ficla1s suggested. G e r m '. If I . -
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y.
'(AP) - U.N. clelegales today WASlllNGTON (AJ>f _
bailed President Nixon'• President NlJOri's ·.ca!I for
reuociation of germ warfare rallftcaUon of en ·iged ·treaty as·a step toward agreement on . to-prohibU blltial1U&e or gas.or
a treaty banning biochemical "lenns as weapana·of war has warfare.~ ·But some . diplomats been ad.ded to a . clogged
felt bis new limitaUon on1lf.S, ' Sen~ · docket · ·Wit b a
chemical warfare did not go DembcraUe pledge qt action ''We have no biological research also is COl'lducted at
weapons as such.'' the Pen. Ft. Delrlck, Md. Programs
tagootiSel'ted af~r the ~L there also may be,curtalJed.
dent had spoken. ··we do have How the genn stockplletwill
certain biological agents in be disposed of ill not clear, but
storage contalners." It appeared the procedure
~ far enough. .wi;thin ·.a month.. .
. . Diplomatt' from both Com• Seoate Democratic Deader
munlst ·and •nonaligntd coon. Mike Manafleld said the1trea-\ I I n . ·4 -OJe CBW expert suggeited would tlvolve rem.~ vi i;i g
that semantics w~e involved. bacteria r r om rehiger~
"The.problem is, when does it and exposing them to light
become a weapon," be said. under closely m on l tor e d , , ~·
Most. biological agents would restricted condlUons.
be sprayied from special tanks The defeme establishment :--
in the air. But the agents are seems to have a broad r1U1ge -'---'-----------------
not stored tit the tanks "so, of llvlng organisms as well lu
the tanks are.not a 'biological tolins -the poisonoos pro-
weapon' until they are used," ducts that germs can form -
he said, asking Yfbetber a bot· to eradicate.
tie.of bacteria should be called Defense ofliclals say seven
a weapon. The Pentagoa lethal germB have beeJ. under
thought ~1ol ~ study for military use. These
Locations or the germs as include yellow fever virus,
well as ' the size of the ri.red ra.bblt fever virus, anthrax qu~tities, are sUU secret. But bacteria, psitlacosis agent,
the .Pentagon said that since rickettsla, Rocky Mountain
disposal has· been· ordered the spotted fever and plague.
information will be declassified for public release. Four lncapacltaUng diseases
Such quantities of bacteria also have been researched in-
as eiist are mos~y located at eluding rickettsia causing Q
Pine Bluff, Ark., and kept in fever,·Rilt Valley virus, Chikungunya disease virus and refrigerated igloo-type strµc· Ven e z·u e I an equine
tu~~lagon sources say Pine ensephalipis vii:us.
Bluff bas handled 90 percent ;:;;;;========:;::;
of the CBW work in recent Final Stocks
years and has been a stand·by In Al Homo production line.
As the expert explained It:
"We 've played with it (bac· Ed itions
ArmyS,pe11:ding High
Hunting for New Cup
WASHINGTON·(AP) -The 'In iot,.nl.
Army has spent $58,560 so fir · The .cup under deve1opnient
on developing a~ bigger, col· will hold .two quirts, ac-
lapsible canteen cup. cording to testimony at a
The present cup holds a closed-door hearing last July
quart, slips over the base ·or in a ~on .of a H~ ap._
the canteeo:i, is made out or p r opriatlons subcommittee.
aluminum with a fold-out ban· The testimony was released
die. . . , today.
tt is similar to generations The U.S. Army Natick
of combat veterans and has a Laboratories, Natick, Mass., is
hundred uses. It's often the supervisin' the deftlopment,
handiest thing around ror in-the committee was told, with
slant coffee water aOO raUoos, help from two contractors in
dipping into a field stew Pot. the ~te. Mitron R&D Corp.
drawing a share of ice cream, of Waltham and Roland Tei.1er
a.id soaking rifle .trigger parts Co .. ,Inc., fl Everett.
' , ty, first proposed «•yean ago,
trles1 wel.~ Nixon s l pro-sbould be approved this year.
·mise lo clestroy U.S. slDclqliles 'l1le Senate plans to adj~
of.11a<teriological weapcr;lS and Its current session by Dec. 23.
his pledge that in any combat "I can see DO rea&00 why
U.S. forres will never be the thertrove ~~dManslbe. 1""lld. con-d
first to chemi. al ersy, 1e 1 s a 1 use c weapcns after Nixon returned the long
that incapacitate permaoe~Uy, dormant treaty to the ·stnate.
an extension · of a previous Nixon's pledge to destroy
pledge against, first use ef ui~nt stockpiles· of bao-
cbemical weapons that kill. ~noJogica] weapons·prcvnpted
Mrs. Al'a IJ!yrdal, the ~··,~k~;t'.'1i:~ght ~O.~i Sw~~ _disarmamen~ .~xpert, . Union might take <iimihir ac· praised ·Nixon's declamn as · · , ~·-r "an ·enormous st~ forward :tian. . ·
toward tbe eventUal."~limina· Fulbright promised . the
tio.1 of 1hese ho'rror .weaPons." Sena.le Fo~eign Re I a t ~on s
She expressed hope that tear CQmmlttee will e1;ct without
gas and defoliating herbicides delay, but .set no t1Ine for ac·
are among the chemical Uon.
weapons U.S. forces won't use
first, but the President's ban
exempted these chemicals and
other riot control agents.
This llmitaUon is certain. to
stir up. criticism both at the
United Nations and at the
Geneva disannament talks.
where representatives of Com·
munist a.id nonaligned nations
have already scored th e
United States for using such
weapons in Vietnam.
Hbt Monl)y
KHARTOUM (AP) -Sudan
bas money, to burn, $96 tniUion
worth: 'Ibe b'anknotes
representing ~ m i 11 i o n
Sudanese pounds, printed in
Britab, were 'foUnd to contain
a fauUy signature and were
withheld from distribution for
burning ar:id replacement
Get five pictu res. With the Sketchbook
First National Bank .
Checkbook from Southern California
Sketchbo.ok checks picture five colorful scene s of Orange County. So your
checks can re flect the beauty of your own area. And you can wri te them free by main•
tai:niDg a minimum balance of $1 00.
An order of Sketchbook checks costs only 7c more th an ~tandard checks. And
you get ~ometbing extra for your money-a handsome-enlarged print of o~ oftU
scenes. ., · If you'd like prettier money,
just phone or drop in to one of our n e
Orange County offices. We'll give
you the picture.
Costa Mesa 23 0 E. I 7th St., 642· 1660
J,
•
•
!
"'ll1m are aome points o!
temllnoloil' and interpJ<talion
wtlldl must be clarified." Fulbright sald.
Sen., Van~ Hartke (0.lnd.l,
wflo bad ·proposed a resolution
urging that the' White House
~ the treaty to the Senate,
said ''lt is now incumbent
upori the Senate to act as
quickly as passlble .•• "
Tbe United Stites took 1
majoMol .. in shaping the 192S
agreement at a .conference in
.Geneva, but•tbe Senate never
acted 00 it.
The Geneva protocol pro-
hibits first use ol "asphyx·
iating," poisonous or other
·gasses and. of bacteriological
.m.etbods or warfare."
'lhe . administration early
this year barred first use oJ
germ or gas weapons, but ex·.
eluded deroliatlon agents and
tear gas.
In his aMouncement Tues-
day. Nixon reaffi.nned thi3
renunc:iatim, and extended ii
to coverilrst use of chemicals
which incapacitate without
killing.
Nilon said ·the United States
would never employ genn
warfare,. even if an enemy did
so first He said U.S. research
in that field would be limited
tp derense measures.
Fulbright said he was pleas-
ed Nixon had gone beyond th'
Geneva ·protocol and em
braced the principles of s
British proposal to ban pro-
duction and possession ol
bacteriological weapons.
I
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Barbor Today'•· l'l•ill
VOL:. 62, NO. 283, 3 SECTIONS, 30 .~AGES ·----l-• ORANGE COl:JNTY, CALIFORNIA
.. 'J • r ' "I ·~' t
-WEDNESDAY; NOVEMBER 26, ·1,69
• TEN CENTS
--••• Slid~s ~ickeft CongreSs
. . ---. ' \
Army._Gives Details --of, Viet -Massf,lcre
DAILY PILOT $!1fl Pl11!9
L'oading Vp
Danny Davey packs truck for another· of his annual Thanksgivi~g
treks to Navajo and Hoppi Indian Reservations in Arizona. This year,
Davey bas ·overseen the collection of more than 12 tons of food, cloth·
ing and household goods by various groups and individuals for dis·
tributipn to Indians.
Vandal s Uiiise ·IJeary Loss
At School in Costa Mesa
tnvestigation continues today into an
tnk and paint-hurling _raid at Costa
Mesa's Wilson School. where classroom
pets were "killed and spirits of some
particularly sensitive students crushed.
Rt!palrs to the two t::lassrooms used to
teach children with hearing defects -
who come from as far away as Hun·
tington Beach and San Clemente -will
cost $2 (XM) and last throughout tbe week. Co~ Mesa Police Detective Pat Alex·
a.nder is probing the senseless weekend
rampage at the two specialized rooms among 22 in the facility and ·was out of
the station today. JndicaUons are that the lwo used for
Parking Ticket
Gets CdM Man
More Trouble
A Corona del Mar man who told of.
ficers he was an administrator for a land
developing·firm was arres!'d tale TUes-
day after police allege he tore up a park·
ing ticket -then took a poke at the o(flcer
who wrote it. Matthew Adrian Encinas,_ 33, 8051A
Narcissus Ave., wound up in custody at
'4th and Narclssus Avenues after the
ticket incident At 11:10 p.m. .
Patrolman Clayton Lyons said he cited
Encinas for illegal parking, then when
Encinas came out of his home, the officer
claims he refused to provide iden-
tification to the officer during a dispul c
over the Ucket ...
Lyons said he tried to arrest Encinas
after the man tore the ticket up and
threw it to the ground.
That was when the ·alleged blow oc·
curred\ . . E . At last repoN· thls morrung, ncinas
was still·in-custod)', awaiting charges. of
assaul~oo.a,pottce.officer.
Telephone Plea
Not for Society
The director of the Ora.ige County
Children's Home Society today warned
Harbor area residents receiving phone
solicitations for donatioils to t h e
organization.
Edward J. Mooney, head of the society,
said today his group never uses the
telephone to ask for donations.
the pre-sch?01 and kindergarten bard-of·
he.aring programs w.ere selected at f&!l·
dom , because they are not visible to
passersby on the stfeet nearby.
''I don1t think this was aimed al the
har<klf-hearing program,'.' says Mrs.
Els~e Deeter, who teaches the morning
session, while N.iss Bobbie La Buda ~
structs in the afternoons.
Whoever broke in during tlic weekend
to~d indelible ink and paint over
children's projects, fatally contaminating
wa~r in bowls for goldfish and turiles,
and wreeking the pupils' handiwork.
Specialized equipment used to teach
hard-of-hearing children largeJy escaped
damage, but the soundproof rooms are
unava~lable for use while repairs are in
progress.
A $1 ,700 amplifier and. earphone sets
were · splattered with ink and Paint and
Principal .Hubert Leatherman says there
is no immediate way to determine
whether fumes might damage the
se nsitive gear.
One of the most irreplaceable losses -
besides the heartbreak of children and in-
terruption in their learning -is that of
13 years' worth of pup)! records dumped into 1a toilet, · ·
•
Bent in ·Traffic
Froin:·wtre-Servlces • ·
W ~HINGTQN. -T?P Aftny ,ol!icta~
unfolded today, berore shocked and
sickened mr,mbers of C,,ngress, details q[
tlae·alieged u,s, .. .....,.. ol0 Soutb Vlet-
naptese ~villafiers, inCiudingi color ·&lktel
showing piles of dead bodies.
· The display, to the Senate and House
Armed ' Services ~committees,• ~foUOWed
shortly •a White House declaration that
the alleged March 1968 massacre at My
Lai is .. 'abhorrent to 'the conscience of all
the ·American,people.11 •
Press Secretary .Ronald L .. Ziegler,
P_air Caught
Jn 2-county
Car Shoqtout
. I . • ' . ~ . . ,
A palr· of bandit suspects are in jail
today after they allegedly engaged
Orange County Sherifrs deputies in a
running gun'batUe during a·100-mile-per·
hour pursuit through traffic on two free-
ways Tuesday night.
The chase ended in Norwalk with a
three-car pilup, but a Los Angeles County
Sheriff's deputy said he rammed his
patrol car into the wreckage, to slam the
door of the getaway car shut and trap
the fleeing men. ·
·Donald L. · HOrrigan, 25, of Anaheim,
and Bruce L. Amico,. 20,· of Buena Park,
were booked into county jail on charges
of armed robbery and assault with intent
to cO{Jlmit tiiurcler.
AutborHies said a .3a7 Magnum re.
volver was .confiscated·from t~ getaway
car,• 8lonf with $1,00tnldiev"' &Um 1• short tiine befort-ln Ar'COJl•s MUUl~f®:.
bcry in Anaheim. .. 1 ,
Investigators aaieri_J...siz" shoCa ~ fired Crom tlie ' laww -c:ar al jMnull'i'
lawmen, while e ii!lui'ned the fire
with five shotgun biUtl before the SUS·
pect auto careened out of control al the
six-mile point.
Sheriff's Lt. Bud Mafln said the har·
rowing chase began when a white sedan
whizzed by deputies Dave. S~ugstad. and
Jerry Horton, stationed on tbe San Die.go
Freeway in Los Alamitos.
Anaheim police had ladioed·a descrip-
ti on of the h\·o bandit i!iuspects sought for
the market holdup, plus the getawJl,y
car 's license number. . ,
Skaugstad and Horton said they recog·
nized .their quarry.
"Our deputies saw the car go by anti
followed it," s.Ud Lt. Mann. "At Katella
Avenue on the San Gabriel Freeway; they
turned on the red \ights and siten:"
Horrigan and Amico-both suspects 'in
a chain of Orange County holdups-shot
off northbound on the freeway and the
deputies reported by radio they were
under fire.
Holding their own fire to avoid endan-
gering other motorists, the deputies .
(See CHASE, Page!)
Stock Jtlnrket
'NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
took on a firmer tone in.quiet trading late
today. ISee quotations, Pages 8-9).
The averages trimmed early losses.
The margin oC declli>es over advances
among individual issues traded on the
New York Stock Exchange was' slender.
..... ·~.. .,.. .. atresima that be w1urspealdng !or Nixon.
Ple<lied that all "illegal and Immoral
ccritUd, u alleged,0 'wouJd. be dealt.with
bJ·tlietAnny,lnd:the Adminiatratlon.
' Secretii'y o1· the Anny Stanley R.
Relor, who appeared before the com.
mltteer, described Ille everita at Mr Lal
as HapPalllng" and said the JnvestigaUon
has been ·broadened to include whether
details of the alleged mus klllliig~ were
coverec(, up.
Sen. ljlephen M. Young (o.ohio), said
one.colored slide showed "noncombatallt
B,.t~in Sa11• So
cilizeos. who· bad been killed at -close
range with their insides hanging out."
He called the situation "an act of
brutall\y·f.bat cannot have been eXceed~
in Hillel's tin\e."
"No·~ can que~on that there wu·an
atrocious slaughter of 200 . to 700
civilians 11 YQUDt aid. uTMre can .be no
jtistit'icaUon fOr Ail act of brufali\y ol this
kind." " ~ •
Sen. Daniel K. Inouye (0.Hawall)1 a
much decorated Workl War ll htro who
lost his rlpl army . tn Italy, said, "I
-..
Ne.w. .Upper Bay
' . ' ' .
Plaii i'n Works?
Supervisor Robert Battin.served ooUce
on surpriled fellow supervisors Tuesday
that he is in the last stages of "my own
set or. Upper Bay proposals" and.that he
will ouWne111a plans Dec. 1 ai the weekly
board meetlq. .
He made the announcement im.
mediately alter a group of Corona del
Mar High ·School·students -all·visltora
to tile hearr.ig room '-had ·closely ques-
Uoned the . board · on . aspects · of the
tidelands gade 'controversy, an issue ~hi~h;diiclosed: the·yoongsters tor be well
informed oo: t.be ·d;lofny problem. . . ·
. ;,,~lfllilll.:~ '"ii)W,-.&:11'! T~~ !1111!11<1'1· -jpli6,f_'lallJii commented .. lllo last ... a:""""' or
)'1l!ltlllul qum-. lall the ~. "rm iiollig l6 111neat that tHe OOWtl1
ca;idem• .lbe lalanda obatraellnr" i-.
t>IS'"lli!WIY of Up~r Ne1'PCJrt Bay and
acquire much of this area from the Irvine
Company." , ,
Battin explained that "costs estimated
by the Irvine Company at about IZI
million actually come to about •10 million
in my figuring and I think I know where
we can find the needed money."
Battin estimated that the :Jew Dana
Poiftt Harbor, currently .. in the final
stages of construction, woul' provide an--
nual profits of •t million for the county
"Jn· about two years' Ume, "· revenues
which could be used to · finance • any_
eminent domain · mQve by the coo.1ty
"agatmt the Irvine land. ' ·
· Battiil mide It cle8r ·to the studentS
&~~~~~!
by ,.t lel!at .ihtee ol·tbe st#nli who had !:,.; lhrousb two hllW'l jll bOanl·~
. lldpinbor Alton Allen .... among
board members who clarified to• ~
atudenla the legal aspects or . tbe· Bick
(See BA1TIN, Pap. I)
San Joaquµt Voters Okay
School Bo.nd Rate Hike .. ' BY PAMELA R.\UAN
Of Hit et.Hy f'Wlf ....,
A m~aSUre boosUng the iDtert!s~ rate·on
sc~ool· bonds from· 5 to 1 percent was
passed overwhelmingly by volera in -the
San Joaquin School District Tuesday,
VOters :approved the measure Dearly 3
to l with 2,016 votes in favor and 540
votes against.
The measure pa~ in each of the fou r
precincts in Leisure World, the Laguna
lillls retirement community.
"The closest we came was in oneirural
preCinct where out of 14 votes cast, nine
were for . and five were against," said
District Business Manger .ReJ: Nerilon.
"We're smiles lrom ear to ear around
here this morning," said Nerison. He said
the f~st thing to be done will be !ill111 ap.
.... _
• .. . _ ..
. ' -DAIL~ Pl~,.. ... f"iC:, /
... '
·-, --·~ ~ --~
plleation with the state to· construct more
school!. · ·
''We'll have to make ·a precise
detenninat1on as to where our next
school wlD J)e," he continued. •
"We're finishing two e I em e n t a r y
schools now. One· is in ~.uslon Viejo and
.the .other is ln ·El Toro. We .have lWo
more soon to be conStructef.I in Missitin
Viejo and Turtle Rock. ·
"We're a gettlhg i. lofof growth in fhe
central area ai'ound the Ranch · devcilop..
merit. We'll be looking seriously there. We
also need-an intermediate school in El
Toro aiid Turtle Rock." ·
He Uid the district has $3.4 million
au~rized for construction. NOrmally.
bond· money Ls: used to pay back state
I°'"", but Ille state bas been pennittlq
districts to use their bond money for con--
strucuon proj~cts since, It bas no more
money to tom •.
Neriloo said the current price ol a
school .is iri excess· of $1 million so that
the bond money can be used for two
schools with some left over.
Comparing last year's bond elecUon at
,vhiCh time '5 million was authbrized, he
said . that with 24 per<ent voter turnout
the measure had passed with -*>.7 percent
voting yes. Allhbugh only 15.4 percent or
the voters turned out for this el~ioo, the
yes vote ratio was nearly the same, 78.9
percent.
"Wt -hope: we've set a . prej:edent for
othti' districts," said Nerison, referring
to lJ!ejact that bis was the first district
in Or~e County to attempt to raise the mte..¢ rate
"I know several were watching it."
PiWT OFFICES
SHUT THU~DAY
~I DAIL y PIL01 ollic:es, "Im be closed
Tlfur,Ollay· i~ iiiblerVance ol T!JanP.glvlng o,.,.: 'iThe ·~ct.; ~iUon ,or the ~-~per wµt ;be published on i '~uttdly1• scttediile ·tor .. m'O.i' n to .a:
deUveiy li>.flom<s. ~: · 1
He cited several reports of phone
aolicltations ln the Harbor area in 'f'ecelt
days.
.je ~ _.. • • Passersby talk things over as motorist Carl E. forced olL road by.,ano!JieroC!aJ' shortly. before ram....
Treadway's car rests on traffic signal control box ming the com(Jutw.ized• .control .box-.at. Newport '
,Ii oped!l lealur,t or the holiday edition
will~ ~' Inc~ of JitVeral sections
d<l'Ol<d lo ~" ·•hopping. In ad-dl!lon to barplne to l>e 1""11d . In area
•tores ...; -led In lbe ~l J!Clion adf·~:lbe IOCllont wllh:~tain lift: SUI!· ,.....,. and 1holiday ......,,111Jl., lrom
.Uttrll)y1~1hl WOl:ld.~ 1·, / MOQntY asked recipient$ of such calls to notify the 10Ciel)7 at 142·1JA7.
l I
_fpllo,wing Tuesday niltht. crash. Treadw'!)', 37, 'Ol.. _BuoL9atil.aJ!d.lndwtrial Way. He· was. not boljllt· •
2837 Ellesmere Ave ., Costa Mesa , told police he was alizea.
-~·----~-------------
thought I'd be a bit hard~ about this.
but l must say that I'm stck about ·tbis.''
T~e: slides epiiblted by ReMr at the
hearin&s, ,hUJ;rledty· arranged ~ pro-
testation& about th~ incident swelJed both
at ho~ and·abr~d, were a dOz~n phot,os sai~ fo have Weit'taken on the day of·tbe
klll.lng! by :an Army 'C 0 m b at
photographer, Ronald Haeberle.
Haeberle is among witnews to the
alleged massacre who recently have
given gruesome details of the ahooilngs in
the cvi~agt.
County Balks
At Tide -Fees,
Wants ·Study
Orange Couniy'a Harbor Cominfaslon
today balked''at recommending 1pecific
tidelands use fees and instead recom·
mended a large, comprehell!ive plan oo
the enijre philosophy. ·'
Commissioners voted unanimously to
follow a staff recommendation urging
the study whi~ would involve all Ud.,
lanQs in Newport Bay.
Commissioners did not recommend
that · specific fees be charged to· bays Ide
homeowners with private piers on pubUo
land. .
They examined deeply the conflictlnt
phll~pht.es behind. the fee proposal.
whlch has caused a furore irr Newport
Beach City Council chambers recently.
. Former Councilman Dee Cook led the
oppoiiUon rto the fee plan.
Ltut Rites Heltl ' . .
For Pioneer
JameS' McNally
Private 'funeral' rites were hel.d today
for James B. McNally, an 'early 'Balboa
Jsland r!sident who died Monday after a
short illness. He was 83.
Mr. McNaUy. first came to Balboa tn
1908 with his family for smnmer vaca·
lion.
He returned to the area io 1922 with bis
own family to .go<lnto the charter fUhing
boat business, w~ich he owned and
operated for ap year,.
His ·son, Bernard. later went Into
partnership with him In Ule familiar and
well .known Mc.Nally sailboat rentals,
An enthusiastic fisherman, he founded
the Balboa Angiirlg Club and organized
µie ocean . Fish Protective Associati'on.
He was a ·member or the Orange County
Fish anil Game Commission.
Always active in. civic affairs, he serv··
ed aa a member of the freeholders' com·
misSloit which drafted the Newport Beach
City charter.
Mc.Nally School in Costa Y.esa was
named after his Wife, Clara, who dJed
three years ago. She was a teacHer"tn the
sChool district for rt years.
He is survived by his son, Bernard di
1002· BaJbOa Boulevard with whom he
ritade ·his home; a daughter·, Jeah
Zumwalt of Newport Beach; a brother,
George of Long Beach and a grandson,
James Orr of.:Costa Mesa, •
Interment followed the private services
both held at Pacific View Memorial Park.
Orange , Coast
Weatlaer •
The weatherm_an't....'ffisliina you a
happy Thank8g!Ytng with llUIU\Y
akles over the Orange COast and
temperatures tabbed in the low
!Ki's.
INsmf:. TODAY
OratlQe County '"pervilor1
hpva takt ti .• iQkat -:-n1a11: be l]te
Jir1,t stiJ> tOimi~utlonLte cOuntu
bc11lein(1. proCtdurts. POae 1.
(filttfllle -, ,_..... Ill... •
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DNtll "'1ktt J IYl\olt ,.,,.. I ........ ,... • IMrtt ..... II
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,.
•
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, :t DAil Y PILOT
Burg~la~s
Get Haul
Of $10,000
~Ing burglara looted two Costa
Mesa stores of nearly flO,OGO ln valuables
TUesday and early today, including a
quantity o! bedroom furnishings in which
, the company truck was st.oleo and used
in tht getaway.
Patrolling policemen missed the team
whlcll broke into sears, Roebuck &
Company, south Coast Plaza, by only
moments early today, according to
investigators.
Someone using an unknown instrument
smashed a glass door in the bulldliig at ....
3333 s. Bristol St., looting the pre.mises
of $2,500 in women's leather coats trim·
med in fur. .~
Police said burglars who may evea
have· bad a key looted the Matire,s King:
270 E. 17th SL, on Tuesday, m~king off
with $1,661 in merchandise in the firm"s
$4,500 van.
Officer James Farley discovered the
burglary in South Coast Plaza al !:If
a.m. today, estimating thal he had
missed cat.clling them in the act by twO
or three moments. ·
Patrolman Tom Lazar had passed the
scene only a ~rt time earlier and all
was well.
The Mattress King burglary was dis-
covered during the day Tuesday by
owner TbOma.s H. Page, who discovered
entry was made via the front door and
the entire showroom looted.
The loss included a -king size bed,
asserted lloens and other furniahiogs,
aJ well as mattresses, bedspreads and
the like, alt believed loaded onto the l lh
too e<mpany ln!ck.
'Movi.e Contract'
Lures Secretary
Into Perversion
A pretty Newport Beach secretary
lured by an alleged movie mo,W'a ap..
praisal of her channs was forced into sex:
perversion at gunpoint Tuesday al I
Costa Mesa shoppbg center.
The 24-year-old woman was Mt
physically harmed in the incident, but
was shaken by being forced to perform at
gunpoint in the front seat of her own car •.
Investigator George Wilson said the·
victim told 0£ leaving the mall about 5:50
p.m., when the . rather distinguished
gentleman approached z.1d iotrod~
himself.
She said be claimed to be affllilWd
with a Hollywood studio,.aaktd ifsbe hid
ever been a model -wblch she h'adn't-
then obtained her n8me and address after
aski ng her·to pose.
She cootinued on to her car, she told
poUte, but the man, described as in hi!
forties or fillies, followed her and then
pulled a gun.
"Get into the car,'' he ordered.
The young womB':I said he accosted her,
then forced her to commit the acts before
he 1ol out of the car and quickly dlsap.
peared on foot
Roscoe M. Hicks
Rites on Friday
Fuoeral Services will be held Friday
for Roscoe M. Hicks, 68, who died Mon·
day at Hoag Hospital.
Mr. Hicks, who lived at 254 Broadway
St., Costa Mesa, had been active in (.'Om·
munity affairs since 1955. A self·
employed contractor, he helped build the
Seafaring Masonic Lodge or Newport
Beach.
He is survived by his wife, Eleanor, of
the home, and a sister, Mrs. Paul
Koehler of Amboy. Ill.
Services will be held at II a.m. Friday
at Bell Broadway Chapel, with intennent
at Pacific View Memorial Park.
DAllY PllO T
CU.NM COAn l'UM. ISHU.O COMPANY
le"-'t N. We••
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Jeck .. c .. 1.,
Vim Pl'9lclltit ... GfMl'll ......
ne"llt KMYll
Elfilllr
The1111s A. M11rphl~• ,...ntll,,. f:dllor . J,,,,,., F, Colti111
H-1 klldl CJTY Ill!« ---2211 w ... I.IN. h11ln1r4
M1lltn1 M•rm1 P.O. lu 1111, t241), --Clll• ,,..; -.... "",,,...
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I
Sign of the Season
The 1969 National Christmas Tree was put in place loday on the
Elipse behind the While House. The 65-foot Norway Spruce will be
lighted Dec. 16 by President Nixon in traditional ceremonies. Tree
was cut at Glen Falls, N.Y, It ls a gill to the nation from the people
of New York.
Cities May Have to Fu,nd
Lobbyist for Oil .Ban Bill
California coastal cities probably will
have to chip in to pay a Waahington lob.
byist to help push the Cranston.Murphy~
Muskie-Nelson oil bill through the Senate,
Roy MarCom told fellow directors of the
Laguna Beach Chamber of · Commerce
this week.
Reporting on activities of the Coastal
Area Protective League, Marcom noted
the successful passage of two anti-drill-
ing measures by the California LegiSla~
lure, but;satd the blll aimed at mtricl·
ing drilling c~rations in the Federal
tidelands further out to sea can expect
tougher sledding.
It will'take a lot or effort to get.those
people back there (l\'ashlnltonl"lb un-
derstand our problems," said Marcom,
"and we know the oil companies will be
spencllng a lot of money to gel the b!ll
Mm·der for Hire
Counts Dropped
Insufficient evidence has led to drop-
ping of murder·for-hire charges against a
Wilmington ~. while his Garden Grove
partner In a tire shop is still being in·
vestlgated.
South Gate Police announced the arrest
ol Alfred J. Slaton, 41, of 6501 Killarney
Ave., Garden Grove, and Francis Kerr-
lng. 29, or Wilmington on Monday.
Charges of conspiracy to com1nil
murder will not be brought against Ker-
ring, according to Lt. Robert Taylor, but
both men still face other counts stem-
ming from the raid.
Investigators said more than $50,000
worth of stolen goods, plus dangerous
drugs and niarljuana were seized at Red'~ 1'ife Jni:., in which Slaton A.nd Ker-
ring are executives.
The arrests were made In connection
with the alleged delivery of $$00 to &r·
range the murder of a new car dealer ·
allegedly involved in P.n adulterous situa·
tion with someone's wUe.
Greeter
rejected, becawe they have a Jot of mon.
ey involved in this." ,...
'lbe CAPL, he said, ls seeking bids
from three lobbying firms qualified to
round up supporting votes for S 3093.
"This gets expensive,'' said Marcom.
''It could cost as much as $50,000 to
fl00,000 -and the coastal ciUes will be
asked to help."
El Toro Hottest
Spot in Cou"ntry
There Wat a hot time 1n the old town of
~l Toro Tuesday -the_ hotteat in tbe ii.
tion at 87 degrees.
While Orange County led the country on
the lheremometer for Tuesday, weather
forecasters promised cooler -but not
much cooler .:... temperatures f o r
Thanksgiving Day.
Local fog i11 expected along the Orange
Coast tonig~t and early Thursday, with
su nshine prevailing throughout the af·
ternoon.
Mercury readings in the coastal area
are predicted Jn the iniddle to high 70s
while inland thermometers s h o u 1 d
re11ister 83 degree1. . Light smoe is
forecast for the coastal sections.
Tree Trimmer
Electrocuted
A Santa Ana tree trimmer was eJec.
lrocuted Tuesday when the swaying
metal bucket in which he rode touChed a
power line.
James B. Argall, 29, oF 809 E. Oc·
cidental St., died at Orange County
MedicaJ Center Ieu ,lib.an one bol.:r,after h~ was rushed l:here by fell,ow~~ployes
cf the city's parks departtnent. ~
Co-workers said Arglu WIS lopplni:
branches from overhanging growth wbtn ·
the crane extension of the city truck dip-
ped Into the power line. He tmmedtallly
slumped to tbe floor of the bucket.
Gaining
But More Fun~ Still Needed
The Laguna Beach Greeter Fund
reports gr1Wying ru:ponse lrom many
areas to its annual appeal for "Thank
you, Eiler Larsen" contrlbulions to help
5Upporti the Art COiony's famed Greeter,
now nearlitg ao. ,
However, says chairman Pete Fulmer.
donations to dale will fill only a small
DOrUon of the need and it is bo~d more
friends of lhe sidewalk ambassador WUl
respond to the appeal during the holiday
season.
Larsen pay~ ror half nf the: r~uced
rite charge for bts roorn 1t l;lotel Laguna
frotn btl veteran's pension, with the com·
munltY·spoMOred fund covering ad·
dlttonal cotll. Many local restaurants in·
Tlte him tor mu:ls, Fulmer said.
.Qmtrlbutlool, many anonyrnoug, come
Ill lnln throllghoul Orange County and
from furtlier afltld, oflen wllb ap.
preclative notes rrom viliton who say
U>ey alwaya watch for the Oreeter1s
cheery wave as they drive through
Laguna.
A Santa Anan wrote, "Tba.nlcs&Jvlng
greellnga to the bri&hlest, most cheerful
$pol in Laguna Buch! "
Another donor said his contribution w11
In honor of bis wife'• list bklhdly. "lo
express our 1ppreci1tlon to de.ir old Eller
for what he haa done for our community ·
In JXISt years.''
Doru:.Uons to the Greeter Fund may be
sent in care of the ~Laguna Beach
Chatnber oC Commerce. 280 Park Ave.
The committee administering the fund
tnchJdes Mayor Glenn Vedder. Chamber
president Harry Lawrence, Miss Lorna
Mills. president or Laguna·Pederal Sav·
lnp and Loan, writer Rtmlow Harrla Ind
Fulmer.
. ... -· --· .. ::J ... -• • • • • • •
a ·.Surpri~~
Pentagon De~ies Any Previo~ Knowledge
WASHINGTON (AP) -The PenlaJon
denied today any defense officJal 1n
Wuhlnston waa aware last year of the
alleged U.S. massacre in March 1968 of a
Soutl'i VJetnarneee villaae.
"No high 'Army offlcials or Department
of Defense Officials were aware of.this
last year,'' Jerry friedhelm, a Pentagon
spokesman, told reporters.
The tmpllcaUon Is lhal initial military
repon, aboul lhe My Lal incident did nol
gn beyond Saigon. Friedbelm was ·unable to say hQw h!lb gp the n\iUtary chain of
command those first invest i g at Ive
reports reached.
1 House Republican Leader Gerald R.
Ford said Tuesday high Army officials
were aware or the alleged massacre
ahorUy after it happened, although he
de<llned to name lndlv!duals.
Friedheim iald Socr<tary of lhe Army
Stanley R. RcJor discussed the malter
with Ford this mi>rnlng, presumably to
clarify the situation. · ~
"He (Ford) said he did not mean to Im·
ply that lhe secretary of the Army, the
chief of staff, the vice chief of staff or
MACV (lhe U.S. commaador In Vietnam)
knew about it,'' Retor told DIW'tmel1 at
Capitol WU earlier today. . .
"I think he had In mind thal IOmO
general officer In vt.ui.m mllhl bavo .nown about it."
Ford meamthlle ~ 1P a ltatement,
"Re!ponllble autborllla ln'lhe Depart-
ment of the Army In Vletoam -about
the song My masaacre.''
"The incident occurrtd In March 1861
and It came to their· attention ~rtly
thereaftu." he aa.id. "They investigated
but no afflrmatlve aclion was taken. l
have not implitd that the secretary of the 'Amit, the ArrilY. ch~f. of staff' or 'Gen.
Westmoreland kriew about the incident.''
William C. Westmoreland, now Army
chief of staft, was U.S. commander in
Vlelnam al lhe time of lhe allepd in-
c:ldenl
"'Md why there waa. no public stale-
meot about the alleged massacre
between laal April, when Secretary of
Defenle Melvin R. Laird first beard the alleptton, and last Seplember when
formal charges were made, Fried.helm
replied a new tnvesUa:ation then was
under way and no charges had been
decided.
Bike Officer Outhouse Fracas Nearly
Hurt in Fiery Hal S dH lOp .
F S ·zz ts an . au erat1on reeway pi ·
Lagu~ Beach motorcycle officer Earl
C. Carpenter, 33, escaped serious bjury
Tuesday when his machine rolled and
cRught fire as he chased a speeding
motorist in heavy lat9 afterJlQOn freeway
traffic.
Police said the officer began following
the speeder within the city limits on
Laguna Canyon Road, shortly before 5
p.m., followed him out to the Santa Ana ·
Freeway and north ro. the freeway until
he loat control of bia motorcycle near the
Jeffrey Road offramp.
Taken to South Coast Corumwµty
Hospital in South Laguna by Wind
Ambulance, Carpenter was released after
treatment for minor bruises a n d
abrasions.
California Highway Patrol officers, who
answered a pursuit call radioed by
Carpenter as he tried to keep the speeder
in sight, said his motorcycle appare':ltly
developed a "speed wobble" as It at·
tained speeds up to 85 milea an hour on
the freeway.
A witness told the CHP he was north·
bound at about 70 miles an hour when the
speeder passed him with ease, trailed by
the motorcycle with. flashing red lights.
The speeder was not apprehended.
Pavement marks, according to the
CHP, indicated Carpenter's body slid
more than 200 feet after he was thrown
clear of his bike. The motorcycle, a total
loss, travelled 550 feet along the highway
a.id burst into flar?ies.
It was the second serious accident for
the &.foot 2-inch, 210-pound officer. Two
years ago, he was severely injured in a
crash on Emerald Bay turn when his
bike kickstand scraped the pavement,
fHpping it over on top of him.
High Tides Flood
Sb·eets of Venice
VENICE, Italy (UPI) -0.1e of the
highest Adriatic tides in memory flooded
low-lying parts of Venice and other
coastal cities today. 'The floods blocked
tourists in their hotels and claimed two
lives.
High winds and low atmospheric
pressure combined to raise sea level
nearly five ffet above normal in Venice,
flooding St, Mark's Square and other
parts of the city. Merchants moved their
soaked wares from street level shops to
higher ground.
Driven of lhe lumbering llnd·baul rip Is shining.
in West Newport have been drlvJnrby And a dilp!M '!'UeldoY over~ little
lhe light of lhe mooo lately uoder a nlibl hou,.. with the cmcent-shaped cul on
shirt arrangement. the door was the partial reason, sources
But the men have to drive by the light said, for a walk&ut w~ch lasted through
of the half moon, too, even when the aun the day.
From Pagti I
BATTIN •••
Bay dispute, a matter that It -btfare Oraoge County superior Court and wbldl
wlll, Allen told lhe youngstm, "go all lhe
way to the Silpreme Court."
Kenneth Sampson, county director of
harbors, beaches and parks, said today
he was intrlgiled by the Batiln idea.
But Sampson reiterated his opinion that
there is not enouab conUnuous, ample
public access to the bay, eveJ though
Back Bay Drive, a substandard road,
runs along the eastern sick of the
estuary. . ,
"Certainly there is som':! access, but it
is in patches and separate spots. There
isn't enough to provide restrooms, park·
ing faclllUea and all that goes with such a
development," he 1aid.
In recent daya, foes of the Upper Bay
land exchange have publicly Jnsllted that
public access is ample.
Frank Robinsu.1, a litigant tn the
Superior Court suit over the exchange,
reiterated today that there is ample _ac-
cess through Back Bay Drive and that
ample parking for crowda using the bay
for recreational use could be eaSily pr~.
vided around the bay.
At issue in the litigation is the legali.ty
or the county's trade of Bae': Bay land
with the Irvine Co. The county.µvine
swap of company uplands for county
tidelands is bebg questioned as unlawful
and a Violation of the state constitution.
Irvine Company officials, Including
President William R. Mason, had no com·
ment on the Battin mystery plan.
Balin refused after the hearing to clari-
ify the nature and extent of the proposals
he plans to place before the board.
"I only said what I saJd today in the
beat of the mom.ent and In response to
what these youngsters had to say," he
commented. "I plan to make iny an-
nouncement before the board and I won't
make any statement before that time.
"But I guess you notlred how those
kids felt about that Upper Bay deal,''
Battin added. "They live tn that area,
they obviously don't like tilt Idea of the
trade and what they had to !ay about it
just compelled me to reveal a litUe of my
plans."
The drivers, reportedly complaining
over where the employe outhousea·were
placed on the Santa Ana riverbed, walked
away from their rigs for a portion of the
day.
One man's paycheck was also an taaue,
aourcea: said.
Lale In lhe afternoon, lhe oulbouael
rouad some new, more convenient apotl.
lhe paycheck wao stralgblened out and
the driven mounted tbeJr trucU again
for the moonlight ahllL
CHASE •..
finally got a clear shot at the Rosecrans
Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad's five
shotgun blasts hit the fleeing car.
Deputy Horton was traveling at high
speed and overran the offramp, but the
!uapect's car hurtled down it and slam-
med into a car driven by Sarah Rich·
ardson, 29, of Norwalk.
No one was injured in the exchange of
gunfire, but Miss Richardson suffered
cuts and bruises in the collision at
Katella Avenue and the freeway exit.
Lt. Mann said the pair were about to
flee on foot when Norwalk Sheriff's
Statton Deputy Raymond Serna crliShed
his car into the opening door or theirs,
trapping them inside.
Five other patrol cars from the LASO
station in Norwalk and also Lakewood
had pulled onto the freeway at Alondra
Boulevard to halt the suspects when
possible.
Demo Solon Suggest_s
State Finance Loans
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -Assembly
Democratic caucus chairman Gi?orge N.
Zenovlch said today the state should fin·
ance more home loans, revamp the lend~
ing program for veterans and create an
agericy for financing second mortgages.
"Some of the private lenders aren't
going to particularly like this concept,"
Zenovich. (0-Fresno), told a news con·
ference. "ll's lime for the private lenders
to come up with something or if they
don't come up with someUting it's time
for government to step in."
REWARD for Early Bird
Cbdstmas Shop_pers
This Limited Edition
Royal American Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
.. --CLIP THIS COUPON--·
With Your Chri1lmH Purcholo
of $5.00 or More.
lLIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMflt1
CONVENIENT
TERMS
IANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHARGE
J. C. fiu1np~rieJ 'Jewefer6
1111 NlWPORT AVENUE
COSTA MESA
\
22 YEARS
SAME LOCATION
PHONE
i41-l4&t
Extension
Of Surtax
Forecast
I
QUm.E
W AlllllNG10N (AP) -I>· knll... GI. the "1<on!e .....
~alaDve~ •
rote ftf the llnU~all '!11> Im '
M)f--...IUS.blg ~
IP -11111 ·boc-law tbJs ,..,. I I
\l'ho Sinito ' voted 'l'ulldO)".
·t I• •f.21. to ntaiD a ,pi'OVillon ft-'' >,.;
, By L. M. IOYD " TBt 8N OF 01i1. Roo>e' not tendlna the lllliax ab: ....U..
S1'0PLIGllT • Nj)'ll9NS ·-' ~ ftllllh<d,_tbelll _1 ud beyond Us -Doc. II
wiit. ~:Mui coot, 1111 Ol'fl. tf:;Jl.~~2 = -= '\t· Seaato'tereed '
Thll j11111<-dleeliod aald ploys '" .~ ~~ I to tal\e DO mon valel ,till It ''""'l!l• lealhor....,..,_. :)" jjave "';. ·1o • ,..,,...i"'i:;i~ roturDa -.11-, ~·a
A 1~-·t1 ........ htr f/'~11¥,, bolt tt la ~to Thanbcivlna . halldl1, •the
fi1'lt ilQs. f)e. ~ l\f, t11i11 UAI ;.~ , \, 1 ~ ·; debate coatinuid'to;day wWt');
ly Phil lnterlandl
first J8yclied< • • • • ~ • OPEN QQES'l'IONS _ !..h controvenlal •, w I I° deplOtloo
Jackhammer lM sport.I, 1 there~ Such 1 thine as aa1 allow.nee ameildmtnt as 6e , · ·
ftlter d&amte atuct In each lnlil<n Qr'1 leaie? 1. Dd any peodlng Mibeu, ' -. \l·Z6 • ; ~
ear •.. WlllErlcSeve:Ot1~ ~aJ,s t--tiuklel men · 8rid ~Allen J. F;ll. <J,>-~ • • ... ,_...._._ .• ,~.~·,....---'-
herlt Ll-'•·m•ntl'e.!' ·wea.e1abuntforoport?l.H.W J.a.,,la-'tbe~ . .
Tune 1a,toiiiomiw •• , 1n her . did Pollr .kt set· to llt··• ment wb!cb would reston tloi "I -I lbould h~ve warned Y<M!;-h• can be qwte
blue body •~. tb.iJ nj~ ~~!· 4. 'J)y :ml l'"""'nl dep·1et.lon .cb11dlah attimel.
.Udie..,. prl loolr:s Just a litllo !JVP ~~ 5. At Wtiat allowance which..., -·In
like a ,..p · of wl)ete thli oge gstdoel a llil atop , effect mote than 40 yaan. The
A 1J • I b • n Y meets the blll!hlng! . . . .' , ' . HOUll !"led lo cut lhla benellt s etJes' .
Moqoaca11e1a ''.~Herb· UP WN PILLS .::... '".:•'JI"..-ml the Senate , W , Still Try;ng . I ever !mew wu big mid. What'a.'nOl 'yet lmowD"•ll! j!i finance Commlltoo .. 1 ·the • · , • 11 ·
. aenlaJ ••• "So go, 11'1 &rien· ; actly bo'o! m>by men 11\d., 'ii.,;;;.. JI ~ percent. . . , 1 · ·
. ·LOVE ANDWAR-Wbat.Jt women are on pills. 'lbe Na· ~leDders amendment will T A .d.W . ·p , •'
comes to silting on'"" 'llfo! Uonal lm!!tute of . Mentel ·~the first lie!!> voted ... _next_ .o .· i . ar ... ·.risn~ers male ostrich daily Puls Ill, ,_ilealthlsiryingto.flndout.B)' week unleu 1t·1s dlapla~ed In y1.11
about 18 hours While . the ·survey. 'Would you liie to bet ~I) ff.JliJqn. •
felnale ostrich takes over for a qliarter on the corner these Extension of the surtax ap-STOCKHOLM (UPI) the second lime Jn IO weeks
only about a. Our Love and upoomlng statistics will .be in· peared to be settled by Informed Swedish sources said
War man~ filing this: fancy significant? You're covered. I Tuesday's voling be:c!'-use ~ tod;lY the .Swedish ,Govern·
fact right along with U\at think the revelation abou~ up-HC>Ufe. also incl~. ~~4~ Jp.tnt bas .. heen in touch with
report the male elephant and-down pills will disclose a ~risioo in the virsfuri Of. uie both Hanoi and Washington in
doesn't really get romantic national di s as t e r . And bill it ~ Aug. 7 · Thus the receot weeks Concerning the
tm.Ul the age of 2t The file somewhere in t"be bocJo.-~would not even .be~. fate \f U.S. prisoners of war
Jolder is ial!<led ' "Afrlean .docks lurks a latteNlaJ'Canie ii~ to lie aejtled_..,the· In North ·Vielnam:
Animals -R o m a n c e . ' ' Nation who will step forth with eorifennce between the ~wo 'The disclosure came as two
Incidentally, the male ostrich bef furioul ax to back up drug braoches to work out the final • Air Force wives ftom Dallu,
and told them there was no i.n-
aicatloo when letters would
arrive from North Vietnam .
They were promised letters
when they. met the Com·
munilts Jn September, but no
letters came. and they return·
ed to Piris. .
.. ~·· ---... Jiii
;DAIL~·•Jt.OI II
CBS Chief's View '. -r • " ..
Agnew Called 'Mismfo1·med'
' NEW YORK (UPI) -The
abnost invariably starts his ~. All that's really known form of. the leglslatlon. Tens, Mrs. Bonrue• Singleton '.'I a1ao asked them if anyone ! -egg ... itilng ·at about 4. o'doct 9 far is twice · as many However, if ~ &:nate mes and Mrs. Paula Hartness, flew Jn Parb or in the United
every afternoon, completes women as men are users. ~ comelet:e action ~ the ~ here from Paril io ask Sweden S),ates had a Jist oI all the
president of the Columbia
Broadcastinr System (CBS)
said Tuesday Vice President
Spiro T, Agnew's criticism of .
television news "was replete
with mlsinforamtion, inaccu r-
acies and· ContritdlCtionr.
network c o m m e n t a t o r s news. "When PoHUci;. are
di.scusaed U..Ap!w criticiam -criticized Ofl.. dial~· with,
on m tel¢Bioa panel progr(m , ther1end tO ~ ..... Jn"' blu,
(CBS-Tl's 80 Minutes ). sini'ster m0t1ves anCl lick oC
;. the ~ shill., tben goes rl~bt _ . CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q. in the 19111 JeSSlOD u!C 1 for help in detitrmi.ning the . prisoners and they said 'no'," , th\iiu&h • u.:.grayeyard •Unt." .,'.'.~ ~?, the biggest ap-surdlar&•,.:f""1"' might ~' file of lbeir jwsbapds who Mn. Slngleton,'--2'1, said In ~tbfllt a ~k. Whi~ time ."-Rle! grow., A.. TwO'p(Ml8d ap-. ~U-'" blU ·1s .:. • ..1. -'....:.4-· were -!!hot .down . over North ~.~~=holmSo tothe!.....;. tum,·r ec!Palm'e•
CBS' Mike Wallace, refer. objecGvlty," be said. '
ring ·to ·Agnew's charge o( ... Howard K. Smith of UC
''.instant ·:,a n~a 1 'f s I s and said AgpeW "ov~~" his ,querylous_~iml" by com-case but network spc)kestrieia
me.1t1ton .of President ·Nix-"overreacted." There~ a p~
on's Nov. 3 Vietnam speech, blem in television news; Smith
went in lo detail on the, careful said, . since '1we are .attracted
preparation by the television mos'tly to what goes. wrong ..•
CQmmentators Involved -a in a hatlon where .we· must be
preparaUon which includ.ed a do!Og a lot that ls rlghl."
day ' the 2t-year~ld male j>les are fairly' common in . ·"IC ena\;~ Qq\ Vietnam. _. . . .......
elephant tends to get romantic ·SWeden. Do they~get thit big .Year, it would be a. quesUon of Olof P:alme, Sweden's new could UH his influence.
ii, not. .kn9)¥n,:. but it ~~ )Ul· in· Wenatchee? . .'. Q. "BO'IH , ~~ a tu WI hich had ez-social Democratic premier, in-Although there had been ·no
: Qentood he bi nlatively. in· MALE and female splders Pm.lU and · or " b i c b dicated last monlh . he ws · formal · request · from the
different on said diiy fOr 'aboµt Spin webs, true! ... A. True, but withholding rates haJd ~ ·prepared to use Sweden'* good wives, Palme•s office was ~ hourlf $9 minules and 30· ttie female ls somewhat niftier · ellmina~ starting an. 1. offices on behaU of the more mating plans for a Friday
Dr, Frank Staiiton, i·n a
spe«h to the International
Radio and Television Society,
sajd "the oinlnoUs character
of the vice pi:esident's attack
derlves ultimately from the
fact that It is mad upon the
journalism of a medjum
liceilsed by the government of
which he is a· high ranting of-
ficer."
t stc<>n<&. . at it than the male. Some legislators might not than 500 missing Americans meeting. with tbem . Palme is
! CONSIDER the lady driver · Your questions and C01n· want to do this. . believed prisoners of,HanOI. in Oslo for Scandinavian
Wttite House· .briefing before CBS newsmlr,1 . w ·a t t er
the s~h Wa!j made. Cronkite said, "Jt is dUflcult
who a:ell into a car wreck. The men ts are . we:lcomed ond The Senate . vote w~s a vtC· Sweden ts one of the few economic talks but is expected
thlna: police research e t s w_ill be , us~~ wher:ever pos;, lory for President NlXOn wh~ European nations maintaining to.return tc Stockholm tonight.
wanled to know was exadly sible in ~heckma Up. st~ supported the . ~~ diplomatic contacts . w i t h Palme · Is a harsh critic of w~ ~ w_as ~ apt lo be . ~ddreJs ~U to L . M. Boyd, tensaon r~!"'F of his anli-Ul--Hanoi and the inquiries ap-U.S. policy In Vietnam but he· ~at the moment of the ac-in core of D,AILY PILOT, DaUoo ,.., • patefltly were conducted is known to be sympathetic ~1: Looking at he1'31!1f in Bo:_ 181~. Niwporl Beach, through normal dipklmatic toward S'ftdish attempts to
the 1111m1r, the)' f<lllld out ·· . • Calif., 92663. Airlines Ok channels. obtain lnformaUoii on "missing
Hanoi officials in Paris met Americans and if posetble ·10
the two Women Tuesday for obtain .their release. Nixon . Backer Takes
·:i;·-·1 , -Lower Fares
: ·E.kciion'.i'fi1llin(Jis
. I _,, ~· ~
T9 Europe Israeli Planes Pound . . '.•;" .
' Jordan for Four Hotirs . .
. ..
CHICAGO (UPI) -A con.-In Vlelnam. CARACAS, Venezuela (UPI)
Stanton's speech was sUP:
ported by Leorrarif Goldenson,
NBC newscaster D a v i d to tell the good news because
Brlnkley .Sa.id Agnew 's com-the good news Is the norm ...
plaints were routine up to the these things that we report
point where they intimate which are ..•. ibriormal, ara
government regulation o( the rare.''
president of the American1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiit Broadcasting Co., and Julian
~oodman, president of the Na-
tional Broadcastina Co.
''Checking the freedom of
television," Stanton said, " ...
will inevitably destroy the
mo.st powerful safeguard ol a
. ftee society; free, lr.lham-
. pered and unharaued newa
media."
A TIME FOR GRATITUDE • •
' ).
CHRISJIAN. SCIENCE. CHURCHES
invite you to their •
lerVa~e Republican backer . ~e 8!£ ::wign: hfJ ;af:Z~= ~~ngW:~
,· d. ~dent Ni,.oo•s Vi~tnaqi. f.xe:':t tnflatim :cs called .. to head off i. 'tare war.-. have ON ,THE JORDAN-ISRAEL ~er his ~on a .20,000-v~te for cutbacks in-soclai weHare agreec:l to reduce ex~Q.U CEASE-FJRE IJNE, Israel
vJct.oey bt his race for Ull119i;>'· · · pr.ogramSJ and. group . fares between (AP) -Israeli fighter·
13th District congressioll&t. · Wannan, aq ·underdog in jJie North America and,Europe. bombers today launched their
· The CBS pi:esident said "to
strengthen . the delusion that,
as. a news medium television ~n active in shelling Israeli is.plunging the naUoo tnto c:ol-
army poliUons and border set-lipse and cl}l.be deterred only
Ueinents, a spokesman said. by suppressing criticism ••..
· THANl(-SGIVING SERVICE
Thur~day, Nc;~&mb~~ 27, 11 a:m.*
'
L weaJthy, tr.a dition,ally The cur.reat New York-Lon-lieavtest strike into Jordan Jn aea . . , Republican di.strict endorsed .don round-ttip excursion fare . th 51·~1
_Philip · A. Crane called his Vietnam ·moratorf~s and was cut to ~ in winter, to :ery an~ti::r, for a.:if:
victory ~~er Nidwa~ A £ called for quick removal o£ $265 In spring and fall and to hourS without a brellk.
Warman · -an 8 tnna . 0 American. forces from Viet-$295 in summer. · Wave upon wave of planes ~ ::~: o~~~ nam. · It was the first agreep1ent in streaked over the Jordan
policla _ _._~em· ••-Nov 3 ·negotiations of members of River along a three-mile front, es.~~ 1 ~ .. the lnternational Air , speech ot a gra~al, orderly . Transport Association (lATA) pouring tons of high explosives
In J e r us aJ em, Isr~t's the vice· president's speech
parliament today endorsed wai replete · w i t h mis1'.t-
Prtme Minister Golda Meir's formation, inaccuracies and
message of congratula.Uons to co,~tradlcU.ons.11
• President NIKM on·his Nov. s.-, Jn .my Judgment, the whole
Vietnam policy speech. .. _ t9ne, :the wboj e c9ptent a~d
I • . ' • . ·.·
Cotta Mno-Firit Church of Ghtl•t, s'c.i~ntist; .iaoo
M111 Vard1 Or., Coste Mts1 '
.. HJNttlaftoa lta"ch Fir~t Church' of· Chri~t. Sci1nti1t
110 Olive, Huntin 9ton 811ch "
Lot ... I.at. First Church of Christ, Sci1ntist, 635
. -l:i.!9h Or:·~1gun1 B~ch . : , . ~ ho~able disebgagement -_Couple Win_d . since the Italian air 1 in e on the emplacements.
fmn. Vietnam. .. Alilalia cut its New York· They flew into anti-aircraft 1· Id fire bllt all returned. . Warman bad. Urged • rap · . :U ·m' JaiJ• Rome fare ·by nearly tioo to The planes concentrated on
The message, sent Nov. 7, the whole pat~ of thl5
brooght criticism from braeU government Intrusion Into the
leftists who claimed It could substance and methods of the
reduce'. oppostUoii to the war -broa~cast press,.Zld Indeed of
'by American Jews. Only six.of ~II _l°'·11:nall~ •. ha~e t ~.e
the parliament's 120 members, gravest 1mplicaliom.
however,_ supported a motion In another development, ·. -·. . ~
N.wport leoclt-First .Church · .of Christ, Sc1 intist
•
American wlthdrawaf. durmg. p. . $2:99 ~ Sept. 19. • artillery in the GUead Moun-
tbe campalgn. 1 · ' Similar cuts by other tain -range f;lcing ·settfements
. Final returns 1ave Crane G M • d transa.Uanilc alrllnes followed, . just-· sooth or the Sea or
M,111 .votes and Warman.:· et arrle cutUng roum .trlp New York· Galilee
48,l'TO. The !:!ct has 296,000 . . London fares to $260 in .winter. The ·raids . sent plumes or
. ~Sf iS • · n --RENO, Nev. (AP) -A The new fares take eff':Ct .smoke Ekyward and shook -cnr;e, -:. , a co ege pro. · April 1, 1970 or earlier. The in. buildings 10 miles away.
~ning M'rs. Meir for
"intervening in America's in.
temal affairs. 0 • 2nd Spanish
Quint Dies
fess«, wnter and lecturer. He young couple who came here dlvidual excursion fare· time 1 1· f Id ih · -· 1u· · to th f Re edding bui od · srae 1 anners sa e BARCELONA, Spain (UPI) eip~sed oppos on e or.~ . no•. wo~ llrrut of 14 days minimam .to Jordanian guns latelY ·had -Victor Castro, smallest of
Wallace Ends
Tour ' of Asia
Vietnam war moratorlwns up in Jail ~ave. been mam~ 21 days m~xlmum was ex-been joining in b o r·d e r th C ul t 1 ti cited
and sai_d he opposed. any set.· anyway~ m a cerem~ny per · tended to 28 days. Fjrst class skirmishes betften Israeli SEOUL CAP) -·Former r:esd:ystr~ig~t "i::i ~ff~rs of
tlement of the conflict that fnrm.e d by the city jail ·fares are not af!ected. t . d .Al F tah -Alabama Gov. George C. secun·ty and educaUon poure~ would "make a mockery" of chaplain. ~oops an a guer Waflace Jef~ Wednesday for
the ctif of American li\tes Th f s D nllas the United States,, concludi'.ig in today for the t h r e e
aa lee e 23onn:rs ]i8Zk ac~r:· M1·ss1·1e FU". e" d' "This is a big o~ .. and it hi s iact-flnding Asian tour. survivors and their parents. -. i:nan, • 0 a e y, aims to silenct the Jordanians He met Sooth Korean Pres!· Social Security Hospital said . BJ . . ·.said sh"e met. Duncan Cogo, Jor a long time," said one set-dent Chung Hee Part and Victor died ot a lung hemor-AmmO· ast::.. ':!· of Seattle, In a Seattlt ·PU~ VANDENBERG AFB (UP.l) t~en1 head. Premier Chung JJ-twon during rhage. His brother, Lino, died
. -. he ma~ about a .month -A Mlituteman I iil· The military corpmand ·Said · his four-dly visit to ... South Monday of lhe same sort of
, ,ago, ~.nd it was love at-first tei'contlnental ballistic misslle its pilots .reported 0 ae<:Urate Korea. He also toq,recl the respiratory disorder. Kills Two sfghl was launched Tuesday night ~trikes'' ~.artillery betteries Korean ttUce village Of Pin-FririclsCo, Jorge and Yolm.
.Their-dream dela.yed 'by car down the Western test range 10 Ille vicuuty ol Asad village munjom and visited American da. the survivors, were
:.3301 Via' ~ido, N~po'rt 811~h ·¥
*Newport ~eedt-S1cond ChurC:~'.Of CIWist, Sci1n.
tl£t, 3 100 P1cif~. Vf1'w 1Dr:,.eorone del·Mtr ·ISfrv.
lcu win be h1ld~1+··I O -A~I · ... · · · · ·.
I . . ....
At this service •. ·you will. hea~ appr'?p~ia.~
seledio ns read f r Q m the ·Bible and . tho
Chri$ti_an Sci~nce text book, si ng hymns and
hear Christian Scie:nti sts give fho.nk~ to.GOcl ·
for _healing anif spiritu1 I g row t h ga(n~d
through l·h e i r study and application of
Christian Science.
No collection will be taken. · VOUble on the ·way to Rao, trom. Vandenhera: Atr Force in Jordan. and Korean troops guardbg reported lo good coodiUon in ·c.HA~L.E_·sro~, Ind .. \he cotiple was ·arrested Fri· ,na..~::._· ________ _.:n....'..".:~balte~:'ri~ex~bad~"'~""~':'.:n~tly~~the~de~ml~U~tarlzed~~'.:'."~"'~·---~ln~cu~b~aTlor~s~.--· ___ :..,,~~~!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~ (UPI) -At ltut two p<tso,,. day outside a pawn shop. -
were killed. and n: 'othin In. ' Cogo is held on a SW& tiarg-
jured Tuesday night when an -1ary warrant. his· bride f
-iiplollOn ripped ··mrougb-one investigation of belng a diJ..
buUding at the Anny am-orderly person.
munlllm depot here. • · med · · le The dead were .Identified as. .~pary-ca a sing. car-
Miu , Eftm:aa B. ~ :o s s , . 'JYl.tlOl\._~l ,..the cou~. tn d~b
Charlestown' and Paul R. Pit-1a1l-.uniforms, recited thelJ'
m , Green~burg, Ky. vows Monday while other ~ plaht commander, u . prisoners watched. The new· cOI. G:.R. ·Daughter)', said the. lywed~ we~t bit~ to. thel_~ Irr
esploaiowl occurred in an area dlvidual cells a f t e r the
where propellant for 8 I· ceremony.
mll!lmlter m-.. has foa~ ;=;========;I
ed. -' i. · lillnor· fi;. :bfolie oul
IOllinttll the ......... bot
Wlto. Listens·
To Uind...1
.... cilly extlll(julsbid. -
..
.
THANKSGIVl"G" .,
SPECIAL.
l'ASKO'S
INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT
1550 S. Coast Hwy., L19una Beach
l'or R-rv1tl11111 •• , 497° I IOO
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IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD... .
Wilshire-G ramercy .Office of Coast & Southern Federal
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Market·ftuctuatlont don'I worry Cout"an<S SOuVa.m N'lll'I
••• their capttel Iii ....,. ....... In velue. And JOU're,aure
of 1he hlghtlt •mlngl cqn.1i11ent wtttt •!It~ when you
H¥e at COlll end. SoUOtem. ·
F.omnott .-.arwa or lt*9 benefits: Iii lhl outmndtng
. financ'-f lt1'9nglh malntllned thnwgtl tM YN." by the lnl~
agement or COat end Southtm Ftdlral ~
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• r. •' • •
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~~~ f~~~~J ~~!"
DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WlniD.RAWAt:
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·'
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
Learning About Police
Newjort Beach police depertment bu a1'orted a new
project whlcb should produce some new 'relaUonshlps
between police and younc people. ,
lt began several w..U aao with tbe firs\ pair of
teenagers from Ni\Yport Harbor High SChool who took
a trlp Into the world as the polkeman '"' ii on a typl· cal Friday night. : W~ of the pro)ect traveled •fast on high school
campuses'. and now tffi pf'Ollam, runn1n1 every Friday
and Satw)ii;, mght, Is booked solid t111'111ib the begin-
ning of 11111). • ~
1~ · Each student group rid11 with a volunteer oUlcer
working overtime, and the only things tbe students don't
see in the "field" are the incidents wh!cb·could prove dangerous.
i ..
Otherwise, the ezperience ts as real and typical as
that of any patrolman on the job.
I
The kids love it. The pollcemen.Jhink It's a terrific
plan. too.
f
Questionn~lres filled out by both patrolmen and slu·
dents have borne out the overwhelin1ng poslUve reac-
tion to the prp1ram.
I
Invariably the youths. respond that the experience
proves one thing they never thought about before:
Policemen are, human beings Who posae11 keen skills.
Not one stud~nt respond!ag thua far has said the
program is anything bUt wortlrihll( .• ·:
The students also ,..ply that their basic attitudes
toward authority and 'l•w enfoicers are changed to a
more positive level after the trip. I
I
I • .
The patrolmen are as keen on .PJe plan as the slu•
dents. tt's a "learning experience" tor them, too.
• • • • •
Police spokesmen say many on the force b e s I d e s
the 10 officers now picked for the duty want to try it,
too .
: The onJy problem -and it is a pleasant one at that • • • • • • • j Our Frantic
• _Pursuit of
l.easure
Our pursuit of pleasure is just as fro.
' c as our pursult of gain -so um when
-e run across an acquaintance who looks
ggard. it is impossible .to tell if ~
s a vacation .•. or has Jutt bad on~.
• • •
A psychological truth that Is surpris·
ngl1 ignortd by most people ii tbat some-
one: who is eagerly lo aive .~ advice
enerally gives you Wone ~vi~ than
one \lo'ho is reluctant to.give it; .t, • • •
'• 1£ we don't recruit a h1Ptr srade'ot
en for Congress -lhel1 who are: ·leas
ensitive to the needs of special interests,
nd more sensitive to public Interest -
n it doesn't nlut:b. lh1ttar how we •
~uitale or de~trat~" e~cept u a fa,Ule .
fftieaos of letting off Steam. ' • • •
(Speaking of Congress, if judges dis-
qualify themselves from ruling in a cue
I whue they ha ve had a prior lnterut,
why shouldn 't Congressmen be banned
1 from wting on bills that directly affect l lheir financial. holdi~gs?) •
~ Ask the average American to estimate j the amount of foreign -non-military -
aid the U.S. is providing this yur, W he
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
H<Kf "sweet it would be" If th e
Newport Beach City Council were
more itn1IUve to their bosses
(the· people) and less responsive to
their employes (city management)
in mU:in1 policy and legislative
decilion1. How can we elect lead-ers, not foUowers?
-N. MacT.
Tlllt fWwn "*'*'-_... "'""" "" ~" ..... "" ""' ... _. a..
._, "" -tit ....... , 9-o.!ff Plllt,
wil• oVe"rtstimale by anywhere from 100
fo r,oc» pticen't. • • •
The paraddx of the professional
traveler is that he ii always looking for a
"homey" atmosphere in a hot.el, and for
hotel .servlee ll home. • • •
Why is it that a woman with a decent
filufe can wear Levis and a man's shirt
with an attractive effect, whereas a man
in any kind of.female garb seems either
~idk:uloua ot obacene~ • • •
-Ad\!iel •\o parents: If you want your
sacrlftcts to be appreciated, t a k e up
baseball. • • •
Laws themselves are the greatest
tfteders of conventional immorality -
millioos of divorcees are involved in ir·
resuJar relalions with men simply
becaUlt remarrying will rorce: them to
rellnquilh their alimony. • • •
1£ you shout in an argument, it 1nakcs
you wrOllg, even when you are right.
Bob Hope's Enjoyment ' ;
! { When a man has earned so many
~ millions that other people can only gutas
t •l their number, be sometimes turns to t i;imple pleasures for enjoyment
.. Bob Hope, one of the wealthie&t en-
~ lt:rtainers in history, sets a kick out or
~ the fact that he has a "pretly big" 1 bedroom. .
"I like to putt in il while I'm thinking
:· and y.·orking," he explained.
.i Bo:-n Leslie Townes Hope in England.
~ Bob came to this country at the age of 4
~ ind bas emerged as one of ltl most laud·
lj ro and successful immigrants.
A! 66, Hope, whose r1atelt television ! special, "Roberta," was aired over the i NBC network Thursday evening, Nov. I,
j is currenUy enjoying UM! Ngbest ntinp
t
of hi" career and keeps as busy as ever. <
BOIS, THEN A young vaudeville com·
cdian , made his first big hil on Broadway
ir ''Roberta" when the musical first ap-
p&arcd there in 1983.
"l'ct like to see it start a re vival or oth,.,. big shows of that period.'' he
refhark'ed. ~ Looklng back at his fabulous record -
a.t his present bank account -many
Ii!! wonder why Bob keeps up his
le performing paoe.
• In !ht last a )'tal'I he bu-
travel«I six million mlles.
Appeared in five ero.dwa1 showt, l more U..n !IO filml, ~ tolevlllon &bows r and J,145 radJo showt.
I GIVEN RllNDllEDS of bto"1t 1hows ""4rt-ttospit.all, on college c1mpu&e1, and aL
l~p!lbtary strvlce camps.
Aalaed mlllion1 of dollars for charitable
:md phllantlnplc couS<J.
-.ftece.ivcd more thin .,. awards. clll·
liolll and --... ln<IUdiJ!I If .... ,..,. .. ,, -·1 ci...-. But It'• no mymry lo Boll hfmlell w~y
~;;in11ltltalnl ""..., • 111»1)11 rwUM .
_.orklna ketpo your -'ti ·--... . and your -Un pwnpilll,"
lie ._.:r •As long as I'm heoltlly, nothlnf
ever keep me from workl:ftl. ,
"If I ever quit. I'd fret myself out of
cor dition. Besides, I get more fun out of
achievemtnt than r do out of anything
else in life."
808 mu. WORKS as e<1nscienliously
at ~very new production as if it were rus
first one, but he says he bas slowed up on
his 30Clal We lince suffering an attack of
high blood prurure a few years ago.
"I play golf aa much as l can and try
to get in an hour's nap every day," he
said.
Asked whal defeats most people in
American life tOOay, Bob griMed and
ttpllfld :
"TelevisiQn. It has replaced con-
\'trsatlon, ambition and 1ood times. P~
pie g~t stuck in front of the set, fa~ten
thei r seat bt'ilts. and watch everything.
Jl'1 119~ habit, I wsnt to tell you."
HEllE ARE BOB'S llkes i
··Mkfni~, because I'm a night crawler -wortbtl able in my office at night -
limb in mlnt .sauce, lemon pie and
chick .. --'putt! <Olors -goU. foot-
boll, buebell ad lbhing foe salmon -
molt popular mu.Uc and popular novels
-celJeCuna money and old theater
memorabilia -molt kinds of people -
tumlnt on the Uaht of me.1nory by talking
with guys who remember old·Ume acts,··
l{ere are hi.1 dlsllktJ:
"ll'lllteaUYe audlrncts, they bug mt -
people wbo blwt out aervanll -radishes
incl C1K\lmbf'rs -the smell ol wire bwn-
inc and the llOUftd of air condllloners -
l\lartllllt, bocauae they 're llilc drinking
out ot a cleantle U1hi.r -loud, nervous
wo-Tiefl whO attract •tltntk>n by yelllne."
If he were to choose his own epitaph,
Bob a11 It woukt be this :
"Ot1e moment, ple11sc !,.
• -Is that there are too few cars to &o around and too
many sfudents who want to participate.
Problems such as those only emerge from success.
No 'Rig~t' Place?
' .. Increasing clamor b•s been heard. in receut Umea
by cltlzens' groupjs and conserva'lionlsts who seek pret ..
ervatlon of large areas of shoreline, beaches and bays
for public use.
Yet a relatively small incident which developed re-
cenUy in Newport Beach illustrates that theorizing about
publlc beach areas is a lot easier Lhan accomplishing
the purpose.
' fn Newport , t b e r e exists a little s a n d y spOt
below the westerly bluffs of Upper Newport Bay at
North Star lane. The sandy shoreline was created during
dredging operations and is walled oil from adjacent de-
velopment.
A while back. members of Newport's Parks, Beach ..
es and Recreation Commission got the notion that t h o
nice new sandpit might make a fine litle public beach.
Abruptly, opposition b e g a n to develop in t h e
neighborhood. Petitions were P.Bssed. The advisory
City.County Joint Harbor Comnuttee was 'prevaileCl up-
on to come out against the beach plan. All kinds of reas-
ons were cited against having a public beach: Lack ot
parking, trash problems, need for restrooms, need for
lifeguards and so· on into the night.
And so, it would appear that the Newport Beach
City Council once again is faced , on little North Star ·
Beach, with the frustration of our times:
There apparently is no "right" place for a freeway,
a school. an airpoft, a stop signaJ , a parking lot -nor
even a publlc beach.
(N)
Trustees Stereotype l' onth-by What Right?
Disloyalty Protected, hut Not Hair
To the Editor:
I read with considerable dismay the ac-
count of an Orange County blgh school
student who openly refused to pledge his
alleaiance to the flag or to thls country
due In (lB:rt to the fact that he had no con·
trol over his being born here.
This philosophy seems pcevalent ln the
youthful society of today, which exists on
the basis that they ha ve been provided
with all the material wants and are
thereby driven by m-Otivation ln search of
"so1nething else," and in so doln1 seek
any and all means to achieve a mental
release from the world of reality. Hence
the rampant use of drugs. piUs, and other
vehicles of "escape".
THE REAL BURR under my saddle
concerning this high school youth ls that I
am helping pay for the education to
wblch he Is "entitled" in this coo.1try.
And I'm doing it while, at the same time, mr son. who has full respect for the flag,
this country , and the authority of those
who govern lt, is denied the opportunity
to volunta rily attend school because of a
heinous social atrocity -his hali: is too
Jong.
What rationalization permits a n
ove rzealous group of these school
tru stees to deny an educaU<r.1 to any
you ng man merely because they choose
to stereotype him witboul re1ard to his
ability as a student or his conduct as a
responsible, respectful citizen?
OPEN DEFIANCE of our country•s
principles of government Is protected by
the right of free speech. Isn't It un·
fortunate it cou ldn't be foreseen that the
Bill of Rights needed lo include a clause
providi'.1g for the right to grow long hair
in order that a young man might be
allowed the same educational op-
portunities as one who speaks out against
the form of government which entitles
him to education at ils expense.
It is also interesting to nob! that after
excluding the long-haired "dissidents"
and pote.1lial radicals, such a thing as an
underground newspaper could be (ostered
in such a puritanical atmosphere.
After noting the percentag .. of my tax
blll which is applied to educational re·
quirements, I too am "Saddle Sore".
GORDON J. SANFORD
Conunends Regents
To the Editor:
On Friday, November 21 , the Universi-
ty of California Board or Reaenls voted
to purchase 200 acres of marshlands from
the Irvine Company for Ule creaUon of a
wlltlltfe preserve on the UC Irvine ca m·
pus.
A university spokesman said this
marsh is characterized as a major "way
station" for migratory ~ along the
Pacific Coast. It is also considered to bre
extremel y valuable by natural scientists
for the study of tresh water Ille .
I THINK TllE Regents should be COm·
1nended for such a fine act. He re Is an
example or a group of people (with
monl!y and power) taking colleclive ac-
tion to restore the balance In nature
which man Is ulUmately dcstroylna.
I do not feel kindly to !ht UC Regeots ,
espoclally allet the recent diJmlssal of
A111ela Davis, but you hive lo consider
thls act lO their reputaUon on the whole.
DAVID OLIVER
Three 801le Type•
To the Editor:
The lop managers of all !he companles
lhal product electrical power tell us elec·
trical power plants mus: have large
quanllUt! of water :iear ti hand. Jn the
Los Angelea ba~in this means that any
new power plant.1 must be built near the
ocean. Now let us eiamlne why the water
15 needed.
To gcn@rale tleclrlC'al power water Is
heated In a boiler until It is a very hot
steam at high pressure. The fuel used to
do the heating can be anything from coal
lo atomic power. 1be steam is the'.1
heated to a superheated ~ndition and,
according to my 1949 edition of Marks'
Handbook, the steam wil l reach a
pressure of about 1,800 pounds per square
inch (1,800 pai) and a temperature o(
about t,000 degrees P'ahrenheit .
THE SUPERHEATED steam is then
directed through a mullistaae steam
turbine which converts the potentia l
energy of the steam into rotational
energy that is used to ge.1erate e1ec-
tricity. As the steam goes through each
stage 0£ the steam turbine the pressure
and temperature of the steam deereasea
until the steam reaches the condenser.
Let us say th at if we started out with a
pressure of 1,800 psi and we ended up the
a pressure of 0 Jhi then we would have
e.1tracted all the potential energy from
the steam.
THE CONDENSER is just a container
where the spent steam comes in contact
with many tubes that have water running
through t h e m. When the steam h i t s
the tube the waler running in the tube
absorbs heal from the steam which then
becomes water. Since steam takes up a
lot of space as compared to water it is
easy to realize that the pressure is
lowered as a result of condensing t h e
steam to water. The pressure may be
reduced lo leas than 2 psi. However, this
process requires LO'I'S OF WATER.
THERE IS NO thennodynamlc l a w
that demands that the pressure must be
less than 2 psi. However, there is an
economic law that requires that the
pressure must be that low. Thus. large
quantities of water are not necessary ·to
generate electricity but are required to
produce the cheapest electricity.
In conclusion: there are three basic
t)'l>'s of generaUng plants that can be
built in or near the L.A. basi n: J. Fossil-
fueled pll';'lt whJch produces the chtapeil
electricity and 1mo1; 2. Fc>ssll·tueled
plant built outside of the L.A. basin which
wUI produce more expensive electricity:
3. Atomic-fueled plant built on an Jliland
off the coast which will not produce smog
but the electricity wUI cost more. We the
people must tell our loca1 electric utility
that it will be allowed to build only plut&
lwo or three and that we wlU be happy lO
pay the necessary rate increase.
I have oversimplified the atneratin& of
electrical power. SOmeone will point out
that lhc conde-.1ser pressure should be 2
psia. The a stands for absolute pressure
while 2 psi means about 17 psla.
110'\\•ever, 1 hope you will see that one can
be too precise.
11/J\RY B. McDONALD, JR.
NeN f•r Slceptldnt
To the Edltor i
Recent news atones •ppearing in the
DAfL Y PlLOT that nlate to alrcraf
noise and air pollution at Orange County
AlrporL demonstrate the need for
joumallstic skepticism \\'hen reP.Qrtlng
the statements of public and indusiry or.
flclals en the often complex and highly
technical issues involved i n tn·
vironmenlal polluUon problems. A few
examples illustrate my point :
IT'EM : The recent!)' announced Jo'AA
noise .standards ror aircraft wlll cut
future noise levels tn half.
FACT: Aircraft cerWlcatcd under lhc
new standard would produce noise levtls
between I Ii) and 3 timts louder th.an
those now b e i n g experienced around
Orange County Airport.
ITEM : Air California recenUy an·
nounced Its inteation lo rnodlly Jt.s jet
engines (at 60me undefined ruiure date)
to drasllcally reduce air pollution.
F A,CT: The proposed modifications
would yield substanUal reductions ooly in
the amount or visible emlssion1, wbich
constitute less than 1 perceat of the total
smog.producing emissions from jet
engines.
ITEf.t: The recently installed Instru·
ment Landing System. (IU) at Orange
County Airport will reduce noise levels
and increase safety when aircraft are.
landing from the south.
FACT: \Vhen landing from the south.
the ILS is no safer than the old VOR
system, since there is no glide slope on
the back course approach. Yet, under the
old VOR approach, aircraft landing over
Newport Beach were requittd to main.
lain a minimum altitude of 500 feet. With
the new ILS system, aircraft are allowed
lo descend to 357 feet over the hom1111 of
Newport Beach, substantially lncn!&slng
aoise levels and the danger of a
dilaitrous crash.
ITE~1 : The county is drafting an
aircraft noise ordinance that will provide
relief for the people of Newport Beach.
FACT: The proposed ordinance would
not reduce existing noise le:vela. More Im-
portantly, the ordinance would not limit
the number of jet flights, which is equally
important in CQntrolling noise e1.po1Ure.
Assuming that the ordinance ii passed in
its present form, and further assuming
that the number of jet flighls continuet to
increase at the present rate, the residen-
tial area all the way to Dover Shorts on
both side1 of the Bay will be subjected to
an unacceptably high noise exposure Jeni
by the year 1973. fl,fany artas around the
upper bay will become uninhabitable long
before 1973.
DANIEL W. EMORY
Cook Clarifies
To the Editor:
I beJieve it Is my duty to clarify the
record. I am responding to Your editorial
regarding the city sign hassle. Your
reporter was . present on numerous OC·
caslons when l made this statement in
speaking for the Corona del Mar
Chamber of Commerce:
We are not interested In who is on the
top, or who ls on the bottom, or whole
name ls thi largest, or whose seal is
there. We believe the letters should be of
a size that would make an attractive
sign. Il is also our opinion that to have
two signs is somewhat childish.
AFTER SEEING many signs at lhe en·
trance lo cities, it does seem it would be
more understandable to our visitors If the
s i g n rud, Corona de! Mar, City of
Newport Beac h, with the city seal placed
in the proper location.
The picture of the CCln:lna del Mar sign,
as "1lown on the front Pac• of !ht DAILY
PILOT 1 few days ago, llluatratts that
there was ample room tor lhe city to be
represtnted. We have exltnded an in.
vltatlon to the city lo be ._atact OD
the 1lgn on many occasions.
In \he lntere1t of economy, we believe
this ls the proper coune. lO follow and the
sign Is so designed that it could not be
con!!idercd an attractive nulsanct 1s
some designed by tbt city have been Jn
the past.
D~E COOK
Prt~d<nt
Corona· del ~ft.r
Chambtr of Commerce
F'ormer Newporl Btach Citu Coun·
cihnon Cook f't.f lrt kl the CitJi Coun·
cil'& decfsfon to permit o Corona del
/\far sign ot the. southern tntraru:e to
that arta with a Ntwport Beach d ty
limits sign farther south, to be inatalt·
ect later.
-Editor
None Was Involved
To the Editor :
You wrote an editorial on Nov. 21 whlch
said that Orange Coast College faculty
sroops were preseaUng "more of the
same one.sided anti-Vietnam war pro-
grams f o r the November morator-
ium .•. "
Thjs is a statement of fact by you.
Would you please tell yow· readers what
OCC faculty group or whal OCC faculty
member participated in the 0 C C
November moratorium.
JOHN L. JENSEN
Tlte DAILY PILOT erred. While
some faculty members participated in
the Octobtr moratorium, none wcu
involved in tile November morotor·
ium.
-Editor
Glorln!J E11esore
To the Editor :
I am wriUng: to express my shock at
see.ing the ridiculous Iron cage installed
over one of the cave entrZlces at Corona
de! Mar. I am not speaking of the recns-
ed iron barricade In the main cave en-
trance on the bay beach but of the cage
lhat extends well out over the narrow
cave entrance and that look.! like it mu st
have been a ru sh construct.Ion to confine some weird amphibious creature that had
been crawlif1:1 out of the cave every night
and devouring people.
Not only is it a glaring eyesore but il is
completely ururecessary. The placement
of a few of the natural rocks from the
area Into the naITOW cave entrance would
do the job ":licely and no one would know
that it was even there.
THAT NIGHTMARE of an iron cage
can only represent the workings of an ad·
died or corrupt bureaucracy. The cost of
!he iron cage plus its installation with all
the holes drilled into the rock must be a
hundred limes the cost of filling the en·
trance with rock. Furthermore the cage
only goes down lo sand level &0 a little
diggt.1g underneath or a little erosion or
the sand by the Ude and waves would
open up the cave.
To make matters worse, it seems that
someone has decklfld that lhe cage should
be painted, with the result that unsighUy
paint is splattered all over the rocks in
and around the cage. The iron stock is
thick enouah so that It would take
decades to rust lhrough so why paint It?
The natural rust looks a lot better than
the paint In the flrtt place.
AO I can say is that if this lltlle project
is an example of the way our clty ii nr.1
then there surely needs to be some
changes made.
J . W, PARKS
--~--
Wednesday, Nov. 26, 1969
The fdiforial pog• Of the Doily
Pilot a•eks to inform cind atim· ~tt readtri bt1 preienting thia
neui1paper'1 opin!ona and com-
mentary on topics of intne1t
and 1ignificance, by protndtng a
forum /OT tlu: tzpres1io1& of
our rtadtr1' opiniom, and bu
presendno the diverse vitw-
pointl of informed obstrv1r1
and tpakemcn on topics of the.
day.
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
. I
... . . -. ! f •. ! ~ ' , ' ,. . . .. .. ,, ..... _ .......... .
• • • •
Stately: Laguna Homes Open for To.ur
. ' &!Ven impressive South Laguna and Laguna Beach residences wlU
be decked In Christmas finery !or the Holiday Home Tour being given by
the Opera League, a support group !or Lyric Opera Association ol Orange
Co•nti, from 2 to 5 p.m. Sunday, Dec.14.
Hosts and hostesses busy adorning their homes with holiday decor·
ations for the public tour include Lucian Horton and William Gilmer', two
artists ol Niguel West, Mrs. Franklin A. McCaM of Three Arch Bay and
Mr. and Jlrs. H. Jean Bedell of Emerald Bay.
OU:iers are the Messrs. and Mmes. Roger W. Russell of Irvine Cove,
Harry J. Early of Camel Point, and Parker Christopher and Thomas B.
Fleming, both ol Monarch Bay.
The Russells' Irvine Cove home, with a tiled atrium in its center,
features a reflecting lotus pool and unusual sliding-dome roof. It will be
the setting for two performances at 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. by the Chorallers
and Clarinet 'Choir, led by Jack Krefting, music director !or Laguna Beach
JU0b School. The 14-glrl group and the choir wUl presertt a program ol
Christmas songs and music.
The Ni~el w .. t home of Horton and Gilmer has many art objects
and a collection of paintings to reflect the talents of the two artists w h o
also are interior decorators. Handpainted murals enclosing a pool with a
floating Christmas tree are of. particular interest.
Art wort fills the home and ~ows out into the garden and pool area
or the Christopher's spacious Monan:b Bay home. Here the artistry and Im·
agination of the hostess. combined with bold use of colors, resulta in a hap-
py, warm abnosp~ere.
The McOanns' home, set on one ot the older tree-lined streets of
Three An:h Bay, is in keeping with early California tradition. The couple's
coUection of antiques and wood scuJpture fits well with the decor. Potted
plants, a landscaped patio and old brick walks complete the serene setting.
The ocean view Camel Point home of Mr. and Mrs. Early is reach·
ed by walking through a wrought iron gate past the gardens and pools. The
interior is a handsome blend of period, traditional and Oriental furni•ture. A
marble-topped credence in the dining room and a light-filled master bed·
room are especially interesting.
The Bedells' trilevel seacli!f home In Emerald Bay has a distinctive
yet warm and friendly atmosphere thanks to the use of wood through the
patio entry and cantilevered sundecks. ritrs. Bedell's weaving is a striking
accent to furnishings.
The Flemings' huge Monarch Bay home offers a magniiicent view,
of Dana Point and the coasUine and is an ideal setting for gracious or re-
laxed out-of-doors entertaining. A Fiemish religious triptych Over the fire-
plice is an eyecatcher.
DECKING HALLS -Mrs. Parker Christopher puts
final touches on holiday decorations which will adorn
her Monarch Bay home during the home tour spon-
so red by Opera League SUnday, Dec. 14. The spac-
ious residence, one of seven to be opened for· the
public, has a .warm and colorful atmosphere, ·with
art works flowing into the garden and pool area. ~men
BEA ANDERSON, Editor
Wtll-•1, l+tvtmlltrr U. !Hf 11 ,..,. n
H.alls Decked • Members' Honor
Some Fort y-Niners!
Husbands of members of the Women 's Gali Association of Irvine Coast Coun-
try Club will have lo keep the home fires burning by themselves on Tuesday,
Dec. 2, for that is the day their wives have planned their annual Stagette. All
men will be barred from the club from noon till midnight and the women will
enjoy gall, games, prizes and food . Ready lo compete in Ufe costume contest,
following the theme, Forty-niner Day, are (left to right) Mrs. George Grant and
t.1rs. William l\1irams.
Christmas will cotne early
for asociate and 8Ustalnfn&
memti:ers and sponsors or
Newport Harbor Chapter of
American Field Service when
they ar& honored at a coffee
Tuesday, Dec. 2, in the
Newport Beach home of Mrs.
Richard Steele.
Joining the AFS supporters
will be this year's exchange
!l.Udents at Newport Harbor
High School, Christine Vuille-.
quez of Freneuse, France and
Eduardo Pena of Gtlauaquil,
Ecuador, -will describe Christmas customs in their
naUve lands.
They will be guest. aloog
-with L;nn Rosener of Newport
Beach, who spent last sum-
mer in Turkey as a n
American Abroad and will
describe her experiences in
that country.
In reminiscing over the past
15 years, chapter members
will remember the 31 students
from foreign lands who have
lived with area families while
attending Newport Harbor
High School, becoming part of
the campus and community
scene.
The chapter aupports the
program through donations
from indiViduals and organiza-
tions and invites interested
persons to jotn tta ranks.
Leadihg the group is Mrs. S. ,
R. Noni Jr., presldenl,' and
serving with her are the
Mmes. Barton B. Beek and
Wooluy, vice presidents ;
Robert Taube, recording
secretary; Thomas R. Young.
corresponding secrelary, and
D. M. Hummel, treasurer.
• -..
SYMBOLIC TREE -When Mrs. s. R. Nord Jr ..
Eduardo Pena and Christine Vuillequez (Jell to
right) get through decorating their Christmas tree.
it wilJ be a symbolic one tor it will have one orna·
ment for each of the 31 American Field Service stu-
'
denti;; who have studied in the Harbor Area since
the inception of the AFS program in the autumn of
1955. Mrs. Nord and the two current exchange stu-
dent s will be guests along with other AFS commit-
te e members at a Chri sln1a s Coffee Tuesday1 Dec. 2.
Santa's Sleig ·h P9wer . Generates Returning Hero's Spark
DEAR ANN ~ANDERS' My husband
returned from Vietnam three weeks ago .
We had been mcirried four years when he
lelt and the "honeymoon•· aspects of our
sex lire ended long before he went
overseas. When he returned I didn't know
what to expect. I reasoned that our kmg
separation might make him especially
eager but I also heard th al some wives
experienced the opposite reaction which
they attribu ted to exhaustion, change of
climate, trauma and so on.
Since my husband'• return, he has been
as randy as a billy goa t. 1 am af·
rectionatc by nature and I love to be kiv~
eel, but this is ridiculous. Last night he
confid e d lhc secret or his
"revitalization." In Vietnam he had
•
ANN LANDERS ~
heard ground-up reindeer horns were us-
ed for centuries as a male aphrodisiac.
He bought several pound• of the ltuff
after some of his buddies reported "great
results."
T don'L know what to make of it. I've
never believed in love pottons, but now
I'm beglMlng to wonder If there Isn't
something to tt. Please ask your medical
consultants about reindeer horns and let
me know what you team. t am -EX-
HAUSTED IN GARDEN CITY.
DEAR EX: ~ty medlc1l C1mtaltants 11-
form me. Uaat once tbe ltornt ire off Ule
reindeer tky 1rt aselesa -except for
dec«ltl•i walla. Love potion• •ave been
1 nourl1hlng racket 1lnce the Ve1r One.
They are all phoney. But, 50 lone 11 your
husband believe• In lht "m1gic" IL will
work, bec1a•e aU ae1aal activity Is
1entnted 1a tbt mind. So, rells. de11r
and aectpC tbe fact that Daaetr aftd
'Prucer. and Donner end . BUtun ire
pl11 tit.he a part of your We for a wblle.
And 1 MUI')' Cllrl1tmu to you!
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Our son is one
of the thoulands of young people who ran
away from home alter becoming involved
with narcotics. 1 don't kliow what to do or
where to turn. All my efforts have been
In vain. Every road has led to a dead
end. You are my last hope. Please print
lhis letter I have written to him, Perhaps
he will see it. When he was home he read
your column falUUully. Thank you and
God bless you, Ann.
DEAR SON' Every night l kneel by Ule
bed In )'OW' empty rdbm and pray thot
somehow, through some miracle, your
eyes will be opened lo the dangers of the
life you have chosen. You left a loving
home, parent11, brothers and si:ster:o;,
school and close fr iends. We felt you slip-
ping' away, but we were unable to reach
you.
We are deeply cnncerncd not only for
your health and sa fety, but for your life.
Every day dozens or young people like
vou are fourxl dead. Whenever we read or
Such a tragedy we wonder lf the "uniden-
tified " boy is you .
We )ove you and wanl you to come
home. We will try hard to help you in
every way. Please. before il i~ too late.
ca ll us collect. Lei 1111 know wh ere you
are. We will get on the next plane and
come (or you. No quesUon1 asked. -
YOUR MOTHER AND DAD
DEAR ~fOTllER AND DAD: Here 15
yoor letter and you e1n be sure. it "·ill ~
read by many runaways . I hope and pray
your liOO sf!fl your pin. ind responds.
Please let me know If tbl1 letter produt.ea
results.
CONFIDENTIAL TO REAPI NG Tl!ll:
Bl'M'ER HARVEST : Everybody marrlea
for love -of something. You married for
the Jove of material things and what you
thought would be a lite of ~ase. Pardon
the cliche, but as you sow, '° shall you
rea p.
Ann Lenders will be glad to btlp yet
wttb your problems. Send ~m to lter 11
care of Ille OAJLY PILOT, eatlodal 1
!ICU-addressed, stamped envelope.
.. .... .. ....... ~ .. 111--~ it·• ... ·~-... _.. . • •.r -.:-..~.:.: .. :.=-~-~ .. ;::p::=:.::::::::.::~~=:~==::-::::::::=~:.~.-~.-~-~-=:::!-. -... -.. .-. ... ·-..... ··--... ·····1-.-~ ....... ,-•• ~ ..... -~--....... ,,... .... . ..
••
• -•• ' D.llLY i>tLOT Wtdnt$d.17, Novtmbff 26, 1969
Scrapbook ActioQ Pa.eked . '
Need a Calenda r?
·-
By JEAN COX
Of Ill• DtHt Pllet lltl't
hfiss Isabelle Ziegler'• brave
litUe frame has marcbed ltleH
into some highly Wllllrely
places while takirla: orderl
ff'On\, her dauntless writer's
brain.
. When Hiller made hls pro-
clamation at Car)abJd in-
~istlng he wanted no more of
Ciecposlovakla, Mba: Ziesler
was there . . , 1Vhen the
Germans took over Austria,
Miss Zielger was there , , , ,
when the notorious Munk:h
agreement was made, Mia
Ziegler \ll'as there . . . when
the Germans took over Pral\)f:
and other newspaper people
had prudently departed for
more serene pastures, Miss
ZJegJer was there. "bumming
rides" and riding tro o p
trains ...
And when the GeslapG, after
the Nati anny marched into
Czechoslovakia, began ra:ao-
ding up everyone in Carlibad
who looked the least bit
suspicious, the ever prtlellt
Miss Ziegler was among them.
PURSUES CAREER
Pu rsuing her career a11 a
syn4icated columnist f o r
Carlile Crutcher of Louisville,
Ky., Miss Ziegler was rtgllt ln
the frying pan durina the fiery
early months of World War II.
Miss Ziegler. at that time,
was busy being a political
editor of a paper lo Allee, Tex.
However, she doesn't mince
Py wordl. She doesn't like Ill•
movie at all.
"It wu a simple litUe story,
bot the movie was jwt awful.
They made It Into a great big
gaudy loud movie and added
all zorts of things,'' she
reported with passive disdain.
Besides her book, Miss
Zleglel' has the friendship of
the many would-be writers she
adopted while teaching at
UCLA and "peclally al Los
Angeles Clly College.
UCLA was okay, she allow-
ed, hllt she far preferred the
city coUege.
BORING CLASS
Scouts ' Close Sale
It's slill not too late to buy Girl Scout calendars, ii you ml&Sed the
girls In green or brown during their yea rly sales camplllgn.
The 1970 calendars are avallable al lbe Girl Scout Councij of Orange
County headquarters, 1320 · E. Chestnut St., Santa Arla, or lbe Newport
Beach Girl Scout house, 1700 W. Balboa· Blvd., Newport Beach. Girl Scouts from all over Orange .County will be joining fellow Scouts
the nation over during the coming year in a new program, developed at the
38lb National Girl Scout Convenlion in SeatUe last October.
ACTION 70 will be a total efiort to "bridge lbe people gap by get·
ting to know individuals of different races, reli gio ns. and nationalities and
be known by them in tum," says Mrs. John M. Owen, president of the Girl
Scout Council of Orange County, of lbe pro~ram.
Tbe council will p~clpate by developmg plans lo be carried out by
the Girl Scouts and Interested ad.ults.
As a preface to the effort, the council adopted a resolution stating
that it intends "to foster development of positive plans for action Which can
be implemented in an ef:fictive and enduring manner."
1'ln my UCLA classes t had al«~ dental and medical ..,,..,..,..,..,,..,.,., ... ..,,. ........ ,. .... .,.,....,,..,.. ........ ..,.,..,.o::,
lludenll who all thought and
Horoscope
wrote ollke. How boring! aha remembered with dlltute Her
voice ·warmed qulckJy u she
reclllled, uBut at LA.CC there
were so many oddballJ, so
many dllfennt per10118llties.
It WU • school that seemed to
attract lost IOUb."
Obv!OU!ly \he lady reserves Capricorn: Change Mind
a opeclalaeal In her heart for THURSDAY Jost soub. She also has a
opeclal love for teaching, a NOVEMBER 27
career which oddly enough B YON M'" bea:an her working days as Y S EY 0 tuloR
well as ending them. BEST BUYS today tnclade
with impulsive statement, ec·
tlon.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
of preconceiftd ~iohons. Ob·
tain hint from Ubra message.
WAR CORRE SPONDENCE DAYS RECA LLED
L•stYNn Isabelle Z-ieg ltr
She also went to Berlin,
F'rar\c:e. HWlgary, Yugoslavia
and Italy, and after btlns can-
ed hOme from Europe, to South
America. Later during the
war· she came back to the
United Stales and cavered ao.
tivities surround.inc t b e
Japanese relocation camps,
As a young woman she blslorical boob, boulebold
taught languages in t h e furniture, r a r e bevera1ea.
University or VleMa and Favorable for fishing, plu--
retumed home to teach ln a ting.
Be stra!Jbtforward. Stress
originality, fresh approach.
Circumstances chana:e. The
changes favor your efforts.
Ma:.iy who want lo help feel
you are sell-sufficient. Avoid
arroa:ance.
SAGITl'ARJUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Concern with the OC·
cult occupies much of your
thoughts. You want answers
which border on t h e
metaphysical. 11lat'::: fine. But
don't lose your equilibrium.
Message is clear by tonight. small college In N o r t h
othe r's Medal Wor n
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Couple Visit Mexico The stormy years of World
War JI seem light years •way
from the tranquil S o u th
Laguna cottage which MiSll
·Ziegler has chosen for her
repose and retirement.
Caro l ina . During the ARIES (March 21-April J9):
depression the college went Take steps to insure greater
out of busintu and Miss security. stress natural in-
Zlegler eventually went· into dependence, originality. Not
the writers business, begin-wise to take s I t u a t lo n s ,
nlng as a women's editor for a persons fOl granted. Double
paper tn Loulsville. check.·
She be1an writing a column TAURUS (April 2G-May lO):
"full of troth and fantasies," Good lunar aspect cotncldes
which be c a m e syndicated today with time when Ideas
almost immediately. It was on are put to test. You seem able
the basis of this column she to successfully o v e r c o m e
was sent to Europe. obstacles. You do t h Is
RomanUc aura p ervades
penooal atmosphere. Means
air of mystery enhances your
image. Don't be too anxious to
nveal .U. Leave aome doubt,
quesUoo. This wfll bring
personal benefits today.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
CAPRICORN (Dec. ~an.
19): Be willing to take another
look at proposal which you
originally rejected. Today,
creative thinking is keynote to
success. That meZlS be will·
ing to change your mind.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Work, basic chores con·
tinue in spoUight Your judg4
ment improves. You are able
to zero in on targ e t.
SpeclHcaJly, you get coopera·
lion rather .than opposition.
~ 1 'Wearing the san1e medal
~ falher designed for her
mOther for their wedding,
Karen Lee Gray exchanged
wedding vows and rings with
John Dee · Tarvin during a
morning C2remony 1ast Satur-
day in the Blessed Sacrament
Churlill. Westminster.
The bride, oaughter of Mr.
and lifrs. Robert Gray of Hun-
tington Beach, was given in
· rt1arriage by her father. For
her wedding she selected a
··~tin gown designed wlth bell
.'*eves and trimmed with lace
_.:~·!kt sequ ins. Her shoulder
-:1t!ftgth veil was held by a
···pietaled headpiece trimmed in
• ·,equins and pearls, and she
.•,'lilrried a nosegay of whit~
· rOse.s and carnations centertd
.•-fl'i'ith an orchid.
~ •ffer maid of honor, Pally
•. ~Nemeth wore dark pink crepe
!•~e brldeJmaids P a u I a
• ..f'·rates, Susan Tolen and San-
;,~ Browning wore contrasting .. J-Cd;wnl of Ught pink crepe~ 'Mle
.1"1ridaJ allendenls carried bou·
·¥ts of pink roseJ, camaUons
.. -anll baby's breath.
.!r.i' Serving as Dower girls were
, ,'))iana Frybara:er and Kelly
: :P,,il. and carrying the rin;
... J'as Aron O'Bri.!:1. .~ -:-lt$ddie Olson was best man,
. ~ seating gue!ls were Toby
~l?Mvin, Glenn Jones and Jeff
t. Qny, brothers and brolher-in-•r"li of the newlyweds.
She still works, editing
manuscripts. and is teaching a
creative \\'riting class for a
handful of Riviera Cl ub
menlbers.
However when things get
quiet, she has a lot more than
the usual yellowed clippings In
During her career she has · especially if intuitlo.1 Is given
written teleplays for CBS and full rein.
her :!lhort stories have ap-GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
peared in n u m e rl> u s Suppress urge to go overboard
magazines. in spending. Utilize logic.
Beauty ls emphasized. Your
Ideals come to fore. Principles
are accented. You judge
others -and yourself -by
sincere motives. You learn
value of frle:idship, And you
are appreciated.
IJBHA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
PISCES (Feb. 19--March 201:
a scrapbook to recall bygone t>l::llll..,""--""la""'"' achievements. R
Have fun without being ex·
travagant. Much is going for
you. Don't upset apple cart
Be sure you know direction of
goal. You may have good In-
tentions, bu~ wrong methods.
Know this, and perfect techni·
ques. Malnly, it is important
to get rid of deadwood.
GOod lunar aspect today
emphasizes creativity, ex-
pression of feelings, contacts
with opposite sex. You are
able to make know.1 your
beliers in clear, dynamic man·
ner. Do so. First of all there is her ~
novel, "The Nine Days of
Father Serra," which began
after Miss Ziea:ler "vb:lted San
Juan Capistrano and saw a
statue of the man who founded lJ
missions all over California. i
"He was a little, pathetic,
sickly man with an eoonnous ~
spirit," she said In her usual
subdued tone, explaining her
fascination with her hero.
The book was published in
. the 1950s and made into a
movie by Twentieth Century
Fox, "Seven Cities of Gold,"
starring Anthony Quinn.
~andwriting
Srutinized
Mr. and Mrs. Dan Duocan of
Orange will speak on what
Handwriting Can Toll Us
About Our Personality when
the Reman1eds Inc. gather at
8 ·p.m. Friday, Nov. 2.8, in
McFadden Junior High School,
Santa Ana.
Peering
Around • •
Greeks
:OU~ ch~e?. ~::rlca.I
WORDS OF wis<ioy91 were Hellenic Progressive Associa.I
inscribed in a scrapOOok by ti on will stage a ga:id ball in I
guests honoring bride.elect Santa Ana Elks Club on Satur-
Juoe Wright al a. recent day, Nov . 29 .
shower in the home of Mrs. Host chapter ls Anaheim,
Roderick Wheel er. Co-hostess assisted by Long Beach, San
of the affair was Mrs. J ames Pedro and the Bay Area.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Youngster can speak truth if
you are smart enough to oUer
encouragement. Means get rid
To !incl OU! who's luo:k"t' kit vou In mone~ •nd ion. order Sl'dMl' Om1rr•1 bool<ll't, "SKfl! Hlnb for Mtf'I 1nd
women.'' Send blrl'ldlr. ....i • 111• ~ em.rt Aslro'"°' S.C..1tt. II 0 l Y PILOT, &cur Jl!40. Gf"1NI c::Jr11 I• tk!n, Ntw York, N.V. 10017.
The Pirates lnta
"'We Serve Black A·ngus Prime Beef Exclusivelt1"
THANKSGIVING DAY
SPECIAL MENUE -5:30 toll :30
M•e Yew lllll'rNtloa N•w
DINNERS S.,.,,.. Wllfll Wiiie. C....._ NIH, ...... ldtlll , ....
1M V.,..t•NI tr Ille °''· Foster. Tea and coffee were Greek and American dan-poured by the benedict-elect's cing will begin at 9 p.m. to the $3.50--IOAST TOM TUlllY-Crt111befry M•&e. uHIMI
mother Mrs. Norman Haid. music of the Eddie Stell .,..... .pec'-1 ,.,.,.. •1111 •t•fflet. CHICllN lllY Orchestra. During the even-VIAL CODON ILUI KIM FIGGA'JT of Costa ing, an exhibition of Hellenic
Mesa was guest. of honor dur· da.iclng will be performed by $4 50--•USTULIAN LOISTll TAIL
ing a birthday dinner In the the IS..member Athan Karras • FILIT MICJNON IUCCANUI
Stuft Shirt, and Dr. and Mrs. Intersection Dancers. $2 50-.IUNIOI PIU.m TUIKIY
John J. A1barian of Balboa The semiformal dance Is ' M_.... , ....... -4 c.\•
Island also entertained with a 0 ,.....n lo !he pub"c. Tt"ckels al d. I · lh same ,.,... ll 440 Heliotro-Ave., Coron• del M.r inner pa Y in e $4 may be purchased at the r-restaurant to honor the birth-d ... , ... tlle hrt n...m 67J.IOll
h • li~oo~r~.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii= day of th eir daug ter-1n-law
Mrs. Timmie Albarian.
Eas te rn Star
, ... Following the ceremon_y ~
"i · sts attended a reception in
'':. Meadowlark Country Club
' ~ P.trs. C. S. McDowell,
. :thtl bridegroom's grand· J.n< o t h er , was an honored
: ·_guest. Assisting al the recep-
'·"'li"" w.is Mrs. Gladys Shotwell.
':'~: Following a wedding trip to
-~"MhlaUan, Mexico, the couple
''.\;ill make their home in Hun-
. ·fi'llton Beach.
MRS. JOHN DEE TARV IN
Huntington Be•ch Home
The newly formed organiza-
tion sponsors family activities,
educational programs, group Ma.sonic Temple in Laguna
discussions and social events. Beach is the meeting setting
Further infon?Jation may be when Laguna Beach Chapter
STOCK CLEARANCE
Marina High School and her attended Golden West College. obtained by wriUng to Remar· 521, Eastern Star members
husband, son of ri.tr. and Mrs. He has served two years In the rieds lnc., P .0. Box 742, Santa gather the first and third
U S Army Ana 92702 Fridays at 8 p.m. John D. Tarvin of Huntington ._.:.·.:.·.....::.::::.:.·--------'-'--· ________ .;_ _ _;_ _____ II
·· ·The bride is a graduate of . .
r
, Beach, is a graduate of Hun·
tington Beach High School and
EJtjoy Thanksgiving Dinner
at The Newporter
.::':-·:~ ft~ •.•. hT .. ,. \'~' , · '. COfttOllW'IM: Tri1nott TOtMd Cref:ft S.t.<I
t 1 • · W1ldorl Sil.d ... .
: Ro.ist Apple V•lley Turke y-Giblet Gr.ivy, 0 S••t or Ch~lnut Dre!iling
\I l.1\i:ed Sus•r·Curt'd H•m-S..uce Cumberbnd
lontlm Rocky Moum.1ilt Trwt-S.aute Almocidine
ao.l Primc Ribs of Beef-Au Jut 611roiled New York Slr•li.:-M;1ibe O'Holcl
.... ...
. , .
-Mot MirQ Mrt-lflndy SM.lc"c P'ltlllp\in Pie
fl'fth )ti .... -., s.&..
~;,1 Chikfm1'1 DIMI«
Soup or S..l.itf •QeMm A kYV.p
~o(: Applt v,Jlq' J11.t.:r7
IAedll•nt $l.9S
~-
4.9i
4'f.7S
4.7S
AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC
LIVING CENTER.
"Plan Ahead for the Holidays"
You •re ir1vited to • program filled with cooki• jar tre1ts end candy d1Hght1:
holid1y tips end pl•n-ehead tricks, using your cl••n el•cfric range i ncl fro1t-fre•
freeiar.
Edison Homt E.,onomi1t, Mrs. C.rol Heint will pr•sent "Plan Ahead for the Holi·
day•'' programs a't the Edison Electric l iving Ctnt•r, 538 Mein Strt•t, Hunting4
ton B11ch. The d1ytime demonstrations are on either December l or S at 10:00
t .m. The evening progt1ms •r• at 7:00 p.m. Oecemb•r 2 or '4. Tha guests •tt1nd-
ir1g will r•,eivt • recipe book.
Anolhff communl/y Htvice o~
Southt11t C•liforni• Edison Com,,.ny
SALE
ON ALL
FAIRICI
IN OUR·ITOCK.
•
PRICE 'INCWDIS ,
\Vidlh Lerigth FabriS Mak·@. Up Total Price
4 ft. 96" .,., "" $Zt.H
b ft. 96" .,., "" 4'.tt
I ft. 96" "" .,., "·" I 0 ft. 96"" "" "" 12.n
12 ft. 9b" "" "" '2.tt
'5~ State Sales Tu
r.~ A Installation Stnllit Addlt.lonal Charge
BRING
YOUR
. MEASUREMENTS
Phone
675-1510
* Custo111
Fullness
· *· Complete
Makeup
* Huvy Duty
T rovo"" Rod
*&pert
lnstolotion
ARCADE CARPET & DRAPERY
OF CORONA DEL MAR
2846 E. COAST HIWAY 1714) 675-1510
Ye
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Todayt1 l'liial
ORANGE COtJNTY, eAIJFORNIA WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER. 2',. ·19(,t, " . TEN CENTI
Slides Sicken C6ngtesS
'
Army Gives Details of Viet Massacre
From w1re ·s.mc..
WASHINGTON -'!;op Army offiCials
"llrifolded 'today, before shocked and
stCtenad1members of ec:.n,e.s, details oi
J the alk!led U.S. massacre1or· Soulh Viel~
namese villagers, including color slides
.sOOwing<piles of dead ~les.
Loading lfp '
Danny Davey packs truck ·for ·ano~her~of.'his .anniJ..~ Than~sgiving
treks to Navajo and'.Hoppi .lndi~n Resery.it1ons 1n·Ar1zona. Tlus year,
Davey has overseen the col1ection of more tl).an 12 tons 'of 'food , cloth·
ing and Jlousehold goods by .various'groups alid'individuals for dis·
trtbu\ion to °Indians. · ·
Bicyc~e ~a~~a~~~p_ Plan
. .
Launched by Mesa Police
Bicycle owners often pretend they are
at the controls of such adult vehicles as
car8 and mo.torcycles, but few un·
derst.and bow closely grownup laws apply
to them.
This is why the Costa Mesa Police
Department is undertaking a new pro-
gram or education for youngsters and
their families ..
"A· Jot .of people, for instance, don't
realize it is mandatory to have them
licensed," says Investigator Walt Silver,
whose new job includes other aspects
than biCycle then.
Another semi-annual bicycle auction Is
scheduled Saturday ·at 10 a.m .. bellind the
Police Facility at 99 Fair DriVe, with
scores of bikes on sale, most of them
stolen and later recovered.
Prospective buyers may look oyer the
selection during dayUme hours from mid·
week on, and theft victims may even get
bicycles back which•would ·otherwise g0i ·
on the block.
Silver 's new job is Intended to cut down
lhe number of bicycles which will be sold
at the next auction in the spring and·tl>e
task has several aspects.
"W~ have quite a problem,"· says the
young detective, whose desk log shows
nearly 200 bj_cycles stolen just since ~
start of 1969, but these are only.-Ucensed·
vehicles.
"We just have no accurate way of
knowing," he explained in lenns of tbe
number of unlicensed bicycles which are
stolen and therefore unlraceable.
Silver points out that youngsters riding
unlicensed· bicycles will be issued cit.a·
tions just like grownups• and must t~n
appear in bicycle court held at 10 a.m. on
Saturdays.
To avoJd getting a tick,et, Cost~ Mesa •
children can obtain bicycle Ucenses
between I a.m. and 1 p.m. Saturdays and
Sundays for a 50 cent fee and · parents
need not-acccwnpany them.
Licensing ii done at the Police·Facllity
PILOT OFFICES . '
SHUT TffVRSDA:Y
All D'AIL y ·p1LOT offk:..-wiil be cloeed
Thursday in observance of ThllJlksiiving
Day. The holiday edition of the
newspaper will be published on a
"Saturday" schedule for m or n i n g
delivery to homes.
and that half-dolalr cost could guaran,lce
recovery of a stolen bike which would
cost $50 to $75 to replace, he noted.
"I've even had a few cases of boys
riding stolen bikes they've r 0 u n d
somewhere," he added, pointing out lhal
fiitders .. :keepers 'does •not' apply in theft
cases.
If they•are licensed, they can be traced
and owners notified.
· sestdes the' iiceilsing and citation en-
fori:ement prograrils. Silver or represen·
t.alives of,the.COsta Mesa Police Depart·
ment traffic bureau ·visit many city
elementary sc hools.
This · facet ' only covers · third through
5jxth graCles, however. leaving some
you·ng:o;ters unaware of the
responsibilities and duties·that come· with
blCycle ownership,
StfH!k ltlarket
NEW YORK (AP).-The·stock market
took·on.a·firmer tone in-quiet trading.late
today. (See. quota lions, Pages 8:-9): '
-rbe"'ave:rages,-tnmzned early. J01SeB.
The-niarg}n of rdecl,ines over advances .
.among" individual issues traded o~ the
New York Stock Exchange was slender. . . .
-
Bent '" Trffftic ·
'Jbe~dlsplay, to the Senate and House
Armed , Suvices committees, followed
shortly · a White House declaration. thti
the .alleged March 1961 massacre at MY
Lai is "abhorrent to the conscience of all
the American people."
Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler,
Mesa School
·vandalism
. . . U~der Probe
Investigation continues today into an
ink and paint-hurling raid al Costa
lt1esa's Wilson School, where classroom
pets were killed and ~pirils of some
particularly sensitive students crushed. ·
Repairs to the two classrooms used to
leach children with hearing defects -
who come from as far away as Hun-
tington Beach and San Clemente -will
cost $2,000 and last throughout lhe week.
Costa Mesa Police Detective Pat Alex·
ander is pro~ing the sense1e8s iweeker1d
r.ampage at the •two specialized rOoms
among 221 in the facility and was out !of
the station tOday.
Indications are that Uie two ·med' tor·
Ille pre-school and kin4,'1Jarten hard-of·
bearing. Pl'Olr&ms wete-~td •~ru.
dorn, because tbey ,~Are not villb~to. ·
passersby on the street nearby,
"I don't ~ tbfsl Wu aimed at ·p,e
hard-of-hearing program," says Mrs:
Elsie Deeter, who teaches the morning
se~ion, while W.iss Bobbie La. Buda in-
structs in the afternoons.
Whoever broke in during th e weekend
tossed indelible ink .and paint ·over
children's projects, fatally contaminating
water in bowls for goldfish and turtles,
and wrecking the pupils' handiwork.
Specialized equipment used to teach
hard-of·hearing children largely escaped
damage, but the soundproof rooms ate
l;lnavailable for use while repairs are in
progress.
A $1,700 amplifier and earphone sets
wire splattered witb ink and paint and
Principal Hu bert Leatherman says there
is no immediate way to determine
whether fumes might damage the
sensitive gear.
One of the most irreplaceable losses -
besides the heartbreak of children and in-
terruption in their learning -Is that o!
13 years' worth of pupil records dumped
inlo a toilet.
"I don't have any idea how to begin lo
replace them," said Mrs. Deeter, "they
gave me medical knowledge of the causes
and effects of each child's hearing loss
and helped me understand the problems
associated with helping him learn."
The two teachers are continuing work
with the Y011118sters this week In comers
of other classrooms, but lack of the
specia1 equipm~nt and. the familiar e~
vironment of their special place makes tt
hard to learn.
stresstng•that•he·was speaking for•NJxon,
pl<d&<d that all·:"illegol and Immoral
contluct,.as aUeged," would be dealt witll
by1he•Amly and the AdmlnlstraUor&
·Secretory ol •Ifie Anny .Stanley R.
Resor, who appeared before the com'.·
mittets, described 'the events ~t My Lai
as."appalling" ~nd said the lnvestlgation Nfs Deen broadened to include whelher
~al!#·ot\he alleged ma!!! kllUncs were
co,_yered up. ,
Sen. Stephen ~f. Young (D-OhJo), said
otte::mlored' allde ahowedt''noncombatant. -. ----.
.
citizens wbo; bad 'been ·killed .at ·close
range with their insi~es hanglrig 011t." ·
He ciilled • the . sltuatlQn ... a.fl act, of
brutality that cannot have been.ixCeeaed
in Hiller's~time." '
"No one c•11 quest.I~ that there !".89 ... an
atrocious , slaugh~r: .of , ~·:Jo· .. 700
civjllans;~··vourig said. "There cm;Mm
justiflciUon !Or an act otbtutlbt}l',af'-tbis
kind.~' '·
Sen. 'Daniel K. Jnouye (0.Jfa\f.iil); a
much ~rated Work!. War 'n 'tiern "':'who
101t h~ rig!i\ anily ir! fla!)r, 511id,~1"l
. ..:.:....·
~;?;....:!.:~~~~~~ ·-~·' ' .. ~-! ,~.; •••
t• . • . •.• .. .. t•/ .,, .. , "'"'~,Ul.'1 ......... ,. aoW 1~0UT. -Eat-ae·~,f~~( ett)~-~tio~·e"~Nic; .t;:~s~~~ ?J~", water users spans 53 years, a~cepts ·1oklenrreplica .of rwia.ter PU.OW
· frOm' fefiow · €ost3 Mesa County Water . District Director, .M8i1,o
Durante. Bennett, a director of the .CMCWD since the agency wa s
fanned, n1arked·· his retirem·ent Tuesday· night at a colorful cUnner
Jn hls·honor: · ·
Mesa Pionee1· Ed Bennett
Retires From Water Board
He. plowed.the first fm:row In whal II
now Vict(J(la· Str~t. He 'came. to1C'pef.a .
Mesa in 1914,. when•Cha'rlesrTeWintle's '
general.store wu'Uie onlY shop·in•ti>Wn.
. '
. '~ ' '
.He'•'"""' the.city .,....,.n·rtght. And
now Ed L. ·Bennett, 76, .has r,tifed ·from
the water. ~d,, .ending an association
that h<1;s spai:med 53 .Year~. , ,
Bennett joined the Fairview 'Farms
Water · District, one or the first water
boards in the Harbor Area , in 1916.
·when it mer1ed · with two other
district& to become the Cosla Mesa Coun~
ty Water District in 196(1, he was elected
to the new five-man board.
He was born In 1893 in Lowndes. Mo.
and came to California wllh his parents
In 1914.
He saw duty In France with Santa
AJla's Company L, J!Oth Infantry Reg!.
ment, 40th Division during World War I.
When .he returned, he got maµi~d .. His
wlfe, Mary was one of~ Mesa's first
achooHeachers. He met her whJle he was
doing some carpentry at the old elemen·
tary, scbool .on 17\h street ·and, OrJRge
Avenue; • .-here she was teaching.
~ Bennetts bought !iv~ acres in the
FatrvJew:aubdiVlslon. where' they raised
oranges and a son, Ted, now employed
with the city of Costa Mesa. ,
Bennett will be replaCed at lhe Dec. 11
water board meeting by Nathan Reade.
Massive Eai:lh<1uake
' SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -The chatr·
man of a legislative commlttee study·
111( earthquakes nld Wednesday Call·
fornla la in for some massive ones, per·
A special feature of the holiday edition
will be the inClu!lon ol several sections
devoted tb Christmas '!hopping. In ad-
dlUon to bargains to be found in area
&tores -carried in lbe special sec:tion
ads -the sections will contain glit sug ..
geest.ions and holiday season stories from
lllA!rally throopout•lh<·world.
Passersby-,taJk things over as motorist Car~ E.
Treadway's earl rests on traffic signal control box:
following Tuesday night crash. Treadway, 37, of 28.37 EUesmere Ave., Costa Mesa,~told ,POiice he was_
•forced of1 road by another iear·shortly belor*· min the com uterized conlrol1 box al N ·
Buofevard and ~hdustrial•Way. He •was •nol •
hapo ..... ' ' . .
State Sen, AK!Od E. Al~uist said 'a
"gremt earthquake" wu poUlble which
could, cause .up to $30 billion damage ln
San Francbc:o llld' Loi Angeles alone. alized. . . . . · I .
•, •, \
thoulhtTd'be a btt hardened about th!S,
but I must say that I'ril.sick about this.",
'nie_ slid~ eihibited by Rett· at the
heirinp, hurriedly arranged as. pro-
~ about the lncklent swe11ed both
at home and.abroad, were a dozen pholos
said to have been·taken on the day of the.
killings by an Army c o m b a t
photogtapher, Ronald Haeberle.
Haeberle is among witnesses to the
alleged massacre who recently have
given gruesome delalls or the ahtlotings ln
the villagt. ·
Bu·rgltirs Get
$10;000 Loot
In Mesa Jobs
Hlgh-scorfng burgllll's looteil two Coote
Mesa stores of nearly $10,000 in valuables
Tuesday and early today, including a
quantity of bedroom furnishings in '!fhlch
the company lruck was stolen and used
In the getaway.
Patrolllng policemen missed the team
which broke Into Sears, Roebuck &
Company, South Coast Plaza, by only
moments early loday, according to
Investigators.
Someone using an unknown Instrument
smashed a· glau door In the builtllng at
3333 S. Bristol St., looting Ille premi...
of ·fZ,500· iii· women's leat!'e:r coats trim·
med· in fur, .
1Pitlee aaid ll1rglar1 who·· may 1e)'t9
hallo-ilod a Hy loat,.s Ille MattnSI King. 2101JI:. 17th SJ., on Tuesday, ll)aldn( oll
wtlli J1,i11 th merchindi.. 1n the firm'•
JI.silo .i... .
Officer James Farley discovered the
bu'1Jlary ln South Coaot Plazo at 1:41
a.m: today,. esUmaling that he had
ml~ catchlng them In the act by tw:o
or thi'ee moments.
Patrolman Tom Lazar had pasSed the
scene only a short time earlier and all
was :weU.
Tht Mattress: King burglary wu dis·
covered during the day Tuesday by
owner Thomu H. Page, who discovered
entry was made via the ' ftont door and
the entire showroom looted.
The loss included a king ,site bed,
assorted linens and olher furnishings.
as well as matt~sses, beasprea41 and
the like, all believed loaded onto the 1 ¥.!
ton company truck .
Mesa Employes
Get Big .Holiday .
· Coeta Mesa ~City Hall will be closed
'Mrutsday and Friday for the Thanksgiv·
Ing holiday, glvll1( city employes a lour·
day weekend.
The Friday-off arr&nJement Is the ~t or an agreement negolfated with
the employes, lradlng the traditional
Columbus Day boUday Oct. + 12 for the
Friday after Thanksgiving.
Assistant City Manager Fred Sorsaba1
said lhe holiday switch, new this year,
was arranged. because "little city
bu siness has been conducted on the Fri·
day after Thanksgiving."
Or ange
Weatller
The weatherman's wishing you a
happy Thanksgiving with sunny
skies over the Orange Coast and
temperatures tabbed in lhe low
80's.
JN~mE TODAY
·oranae Couniu supervisor•
have takn what mau be the
Jir1t steo '° reuolutioni.u cou;ntr
bcnklna procedures. Paae 1.
C•ett.""" 1 ClnMfll' ll•M Clfttln , • If ,,..._. 14 --' IMINI ,... i ............... , .. 11
ll"IMMt ... -" ........... 11 ==-t .. ,!
j
I DAil Y PILOT c
2wH••t1 ...... ,., ..
' .
Freeway Chase
Nets 2 Bandits
A poll' o! bandll IUlp<dl ~ In jaU
tndly .tier they •llegedly ...,ap1
Oranp County Sheriff's depuUes in a
rwmtng gun battle during a UlO·mHe-per·
hour pinull lhr"'4'> tral(lc on lwo 1r ...
' Army Unaware
Of Atrocities,
Pentagon. Says
wASl!iNGTON fAP) -'!be Penta&OP
denied · fudaY any def'"'4! omclat tn .
Washington was aware last year of the
aUeaed U.S. muaacre In March 1968 o! a
6outh -Vietnamese village.
.. No high Anny officlala or Deparbnent
or Drienae officials· were aw are of thla
Jut year,'" Jerry Friedheim, a Pentagon
spokesmari. told reporters.
The impllcaUon ls that inlUal military
reports •boul the My Lal Incident did not
gn beyond Saigon. Friedheim was unable
lo say how high up the military chain of
command those first Invest i g at Ive
rtports reached.
Home Republican Leader Gerakl R.
Ford said Tueaday high Army offlclal5
were aware of the alleged massacre
lhortly after ti happened, although be
declined lo name lodlvldoala.
Frledbelm sald 5ecre1ar1 of the Army
Stanley R. Rcsor discussed the matter
with Ford th1a morning. presumably to
clarify the lliluaUon.
"He (Ford) lald be did not mt1n lo Im-
ply that the secretary of the Army, the
chief of staff, the -vice chleC of staff or
MACY (the U.S. commander in Vjetnam)
knew about it," Resor told news mer: at
CapltDI Hiii earlier today.
"l think he had In mind that some
general officer ln Vietnam mighL have
a:nown about it."
Ford meanwhUe said in a st.atement,
"Responsible authorities in the Depart-
ment of the Anny in Vietnam knew about
the Song My massacre."
'"The Incident occurred In March 19M
and it came to their attenUoo shortly
thereafter... be aaJd. .. They invesUgated
bat no affirmative acUoa wu taken. I
have not Implied thal the secretary of the
Army, the Army chief of slaff or G<n.
WestmoreJand knew about the incident."
William C. Westmoreland, now Army
chief of ataff, w11 U.S. commmier tn
Viet.llam •I the Ume of the alleged in-
cident.
AsUd why. there was no public state-
ment about the alle1ed maaacre
between last April, when· SecretarY, of
Del .... Melvin R. Laird first beard the
aDeiallon, •nd Jut September -.1len
fomial dhargea were made, Fritdhtlm
~ a 11ew lnvestigaUon then was
under way and 110 chara:es had been
decldlld.
Goodell Reports
More Atrocities
In S. Vietnam
WASIUNGTON CAP> -Sen. Charles E.
Goodell (1\-N.Y.J, said Wedntsd&y he has
received reports of several atroclti.ea in
Vietnam since asking for an investigation
of the alleged My Lai massacre.
He declined to give any details, but
said that In at least one ln!tance he
understood that the case involved South
Vialnamese troops primarily.
Goodell uld the reporls Involved more
than one case beyond the My Lai instance
and an unsubstantiated report by Rep.
Lionel Van Oeerlin ([).Calif.), that a
village WBl!i used for target practice.
•11 have several other reports of
atrocities in Vietnam, 11 said Goodell
llhll 1 f•l\OT
ma,.. COMI' ,.... ...... CDMMtfl
l.wrtN.W ... _ ... _
Jet~ a. 0.rhy
Vk9~ ... -----_._n ....
..... A.. "'''""'"" ~IE .. IW ---! :110 w... .., $tr .. 1
I ...._..,,_P.O. I • IMO, '2111 --..._,,. """' m1 ........... ~ ""T"""'"""'~..-.m~,.-.-
•• Cle ...........
ways Tutsday rUght.
The cha,. ended Jn, Norwalk with a
thrte-ear pllup, but a Los Angeles County
Sheriff's depUty said he rammed his
patrol car into the wreckage, to slam the
door Of tbe s:etaway car shut and trap
the ~Ing men.
I>Onald L. Horrigan, 25. or Anaheim,
and ~ruce L. Amico, 20, of Buena Park,
were booked into county jail on charges
of annod robbery and a""ult with lnlenl
to ·commit murder.
·Authorities said a .357 Magnum re-
volvtr was confiscated from the getaway
car, along with $1,000 believed taken a
abort time before ln a Cole's Market rob-
bery In Anaheim.
Investjgators aasert sit shots were
find from the getaway car at pursuing
lawmen, while they returned the fire
with five shotgun blasts before the sus-
pect auto careened out of control at the
six-mile point.
Sheriff's Lt. Bud Mann said the har-
rowing chase began when a white sedan
whizzed by deputies Dave Skaugstad and
J~ry Horton, stationed on the San Diego
Freeway in Los Alamitos.
Anaheim wllce bad radioed a descrl~
tion of the tWo bandit suspects sought for
the market holdup, plus the getaway
car's license number.
Skauastad and Horton sald they recog-
ni1.ed lf>elr quury.
"Our deputies saw the car 10 by and
followed it," said LL Mann. "At Katella A-an the San Gabriel Freeway. the7
turned oa the red lights and alr<n. •
Harrigan and Amico-both 1111pecls In
a chain of Orange County holdupo-ahol
off nribeUnd on the freeway and the
deputies reported by radio they were
under fire.
Holding their own fire to avoid endan-
gering other motorists, the deputies
finally got a clear shot at the Rosecrans
Avenue offramp, and Skaugstad's five
shotgun blasts hit the fleeing car.
Deputy Horton was traveling at high
speed and overran the offramp, but the
~uspect's car hurUed down it and slam·
med Into a car driven by Sarah Rich·
ardson, 29, of Norwalk.
No. one wu Injured in the exchange of
gunfire, bul Mias Riclw'daon IUffued
cull and bruises In the collision at
Katella Avenue and the freeway all
Lt. Mann said the pair were about to
Oee on foot when Norwalt Sheriff's
StaUon Deputy Raymond SU.. cnlbed
his CIJ' into the openlna door of theirs,
trapping them Jns[de. -
Five other patrol C&l'I from the LASO
stalloo ill Norwalk and alto Lakewood
had pulled oolo the freeway al Alondra
Boulevard lo halt the SU1pects when
possible.
Last Rites Held
For Pioneer
I '
James McNa)ly
Private funeral rltea were held · today
for !amts B. McNally, an early.Balboa
Island resident who died Monday after a
short Ulness. He was 83.
?ttr. McNally first came to Balboa in
1908 with his family for summer vaca·
tion.
He returned to the area in 19"22: with his
own family to go into the charter fishing
boat business. which he owned and
operated for 35 years.
His son, Bernard. later "'·ent into
partnership with him in the familiar and
well known McNaUy sailboat rentals.
An enthu.siasUc fisherman. he founded
the Balboa Angling Club and organized
the Ocean Fish Protective Association.
He was a member of t~c Orange County
Fish and Game Commission.
Always active in civic affairs, he serv·
ed as a member of the freeholders• com·
mJsston which drafted the Newport Beach
City charter.
McNally School In Costa Y.esa was
named after bia wife, Clara, who died
three_years ego. She was a teacher in the
school district for 'll years.
He is survived by his son, Bernard of
1002 Balboa Boulevard with whom he
made his home; a daughter, Jean
Zwnv.•alt of Newport Beach; a brother,
George of Long Beach and a grandson,
James Orr of Costa Mesa .
Interment followed the private services
both held at Pacific View Memorial Park..
El Toro Hottest
Spot in Countr y
There WI! a hol tinle tn the old town of
El Toro Tueaday -the holte5l In the na·
(jon at f7 degrttS.
While Orange County led the country on
the theremometer for Tuesday, weather
forecasters promised cooler -but not
much cooler -temperatW'!s Io r
Th1nksgivin1 Day.
Local roa is expected along the Orana~
Coast lonlghl and early Thur<dly, wllh
sunshine prcvaUlng throu&houl the af-
ltmOOll.
Mercury readings In the coastal aua
.,. pndlcted in lhe middle lo high 71111
while Inland thermometers 1 ho u Id ,.,;stet a d•eree•. Light smog la
forccut for the coutal muons.
----~----·-.,,,-:~,. .... -----.. -~-,,..----"!""·~--_ ... _.__,,
Battin Sa11• $0
' . '
New Upper Bay
UPI Ttltffefil
S._n of the Season
The 1969 National Christmas Tree was put in place today on the
Ellpse behind the White Houae. The ~!not Norway &pruce will be
lilhted Dec. ·1& by President Nixon in traditional ceremonies. Tree
was cut at Glen Falls, N.Y. It is a gift to the nation from the people
of New York.
Outhouse Fracas Nearly
Halts Sand Haul Ope1·ation
Driven of the lumbering sand-Mu! rigs
In Wesl Newport hm! been drivinl by
the light of the 1110011 lalely under a nig!JI
shift arrangement.
But the me11 have to drive by the lighl
of the half moan, t.oo. ena when the sun
ls shining.
And a diapute Tuesday over tho&e UtUe
houses with the1 creecenkhaped cut on
the door was the partial reason, sources
said, for a walkout which lasted through
the Clay.
'The drivers, reportedly complailllng
over where the employe outhouses were
placed on the Santa Ana riverbed, walked
awax from their rigs for a portion of the .e1ay,.
,Orie man's paycheck was also an tssue,
aources said. '
Murder for Hire
Counts Dropped.
Insufficient evidence has led lo drop-
ping or murder-for-hire charges against a
Wilmington man, while his Garden Grove
partner in a tire shop is still bting in-
vestigated.
Late in the afternoon, the outhouses
found some new, more convenient spots.
the paycheck was straightened out and
the drivers mounted their trucks again
(or the moonlight shill.
Mesa Fund Drive
Havin g T1·ouhles
Costa Mesa 's United Fund campaign is
Jn !rouble.
Th e drive lo reach a $220,000 goal today
has only 30 percent, or $66,425 collected,
il was announced.
Chuck Edward, president and Frank
Zrebiec, campaign director, said that
returns on the 18,000 contribution appeals
mailed to Costa Mesa residents have
been "spotty."
Slnre the campaign began Oct. I. the
lndustlial Division has c o n t r i b u t e d
$5:4.Ml of I.he $65.098 raised so far, la rge-
ly through employe suppo.rt of the fund .
The campaign will end sometime in
December. But even it it succeeds in
reaching lts goal. many of the 22 local
agencies \vho \Yill use the money have
financial needs far in excess of the
United Fwld support they receive,
spokesmen said.
P·Ian • Ill
Supervisor Robert Battin served notice ·
on surprised fellow supervisors Tuesday
that he ls in U1e last stages of '1my own
set of Upper Bay propcJ¥ia" and lhal he·
will outline his plans Dec. ~ at the -l<(y
board meeting.
He made the announcement Im·
med.lately after a group ot Corona del
Mar High School studenla -all vllltors
to the hearb.g room -bad closely ques--
Uoned the board on upects of the
tidelands trade cootroveny, an luue
which dlsclooed the youfti*n lo be well
informed on the thorny problem.
"You'll be inleresled lo koow that I'm
railing this very Wue net.t week." BaWn
commented as the Jut of a Rries ot
youthful questlonen Jell the microphone.
"I'm going lo 5U(lfe>I thal the county
C<r.1demn the Islands obstructing the
passaaeway or Upper Newport Bay and
acquire much of this area from the Irvine
Cttmpany."
Battin explained that "costs estimated
by the Irvine Company at about $21
million actually come to about $10 million
in my flguitig and I think 1 know where
we can flnlhe needed money."
Battin e mated that the ~iew Dana
Point Hat r, currenuy · in the final
stages of construction. woulC: provide. an-
nual profits of $1 million for the county
"in about two )'em' Ume," revenu~
which could be used lo fJnuice any
eminent domain move by the cowty
against the Irvine llnd.
Batlln made It cJeu lo the studeoU
thal be WU "fully In sympathy with your
desire to keep thla Upper Bay ill Ill
nalural state'' -a aenthnent expreaed
by al leut three of the atudenla who bad
sat through two hour• of board dellbera·
lions.
Supervisor Alton Allen was among
board members who clarified to the
students the legal aspects of the Back
Bay dispute, a matter that is now be.fore
Orange County Superior Court and which
will, Allen told the youngsters, "go all the
way to the Supreme Court."
Kenneth Sampson, county director or
harbors, beaches and parks, said today
he was intrigued by the Battin idea.
But Sampson reiterated his opinion that
there is not enough continuous, ample
public access to the bay, e\l'!'a though
Back Bay Drive, a substandard road,
runs alone the eastern sick. of the
estuary.
"Certainly there is some access, but lt
ls in patches and separate spois. There
isn't enough to provide restrooms, park·
ing facilities and all that goes with such a
development." he said.
In recent days, foes or the Upper. Bay
land ~cl;lange have. publicly insisted Uuit
public aecess is ample.
Frank Robinsro, a litigant in tl1"
Superior Court suit over the exchang!,
reiterated today that there ls ample ac-
cess through Back Bay Drive and thal
Telephone Plea
Not for Societ y
The director or the Orao:lge County
Children's Home Society today warned
Harbor area residents receiving phone
solicitations for donatiorui: to th e
organiz.ation.
Edward J. Mooney, head of the society,
said today bis group never uses the
telephone to ask for donations.
He cited several reports of phone
solicitations in the Harbor area in rere.1t
days.
Mooney asked recipients of such ca11s
to notify the society at 542-1147.
Works?
. .. . .
'1mple parking for crowds 115111> !Ho. bay
l<>r recreational ute could he ... 11y pro-
vided around the bay.
At iaaue in the llUgaUon is the legality
of the county's trade of Bae~ Bay land
with the Irvine Co. The COUttly-trvlne
awap of company uplands for county
Udellods IJ beiog questioned u unlawful
and a violation of the alate coMtltutlon.
Irvine Company offlclab, Including
Presldenl William R. Muon, hid no com·
merit on the Battin mystery plan.
Balin refused after the hearing to clar-
ify the nature and ulenl of the proposalJ
he plant lo place before the board.
"I only aaJd what 1 aaJd loday ill the
heat of the moment and ia respoose to
what tbeae younpten bad to aay," he
commented. "I plan to make mt an-
nouncement. btlore the board and I won't
make arrt statement before that Ume."
County Balks
At Tide Fees ,
Wants Study
Orange County'• Harbor Commlsaion
loday balked al recommending opeclllc
Udelands use lees and lnsltld recom·
mended • large, comprehensive plan oo
the entire ph1Josophy.
Commlaslooers voled unanimously lo
follow a alalf recommendaJion urging
the study which would involve all tlde-
laads in Newport Bay.
Commiuioners did not rebommend
that specific fees be charged to bay1ide .
homeowners with private Piers on public
land.
They examined deeply the conflicting
philosophie:i behind the fee: proposal,
which has caused a furore in Newport
Beach City Council cllambers receotly.
Former Councilman Dee Cook led the
opposition to the fee plan.
'Mo vie Contract'
Lures Secretary
Into Perversion
. .\ pretty Newport Beach eecretary.
lured by an alleged movie mogul's ap-
praisal of her charms was forced into sex
perversion at gunpoint Tuesday at a
Costa Mesa shoppbg center.
The 24-year.old woman was not
physically harmed in the incident, but
was shaken by being forced to perform at
gunpoint in the front seat of her own car.
Investigator George Wilson said the
victim told of leaving the mall about 5:50
p.m., when the rather distinguished
genUeman approached &:"Id introduced
himself.
She said he claimed to be affiliated
with a Hollywood studio, asked if she had
ever been a model -which she hadn't -
then obtained her name and address after
asking her to pose.
She continued on to her car, she told
police, but the man, described as in his
forties or fifties, followed her and then
pulled a gun.
"Get into the car," he ordered.
The young v;oma-.1 said he accosted her,
then forced her to commit the acts before
he got out of the car and quick1y disa~
peared on foot.
Sou th Gate Police announced the arrest
of AUred J. Slaton, 41, of 6501.Klllarney
Ave .. Garden Grove, and Francis Kerr-
ing, 29, of Wilmington on Monday. REWARD for Early Bird
Charges of conspiracy to commit
murder will not be brought against Ker·
ring, according to LL Robert Taylor, but
both men still face other counts stem-
ming from the raid.
Investigators said more than $50,000
worth of stolen goods, plus dangerous
drugs and marijuana were seized at
Red 's Tire Inc.., tn which Slaton and Ker·
ring are executives.
The arrests were made in connection
with the alleged delivery of $500 to ar·
range the mun:I~ of a new car d!aler
allegedly Involved in an adulterous &itua·
lion with JOmeone's wife.
Roscoe M. Hicks
Rites on Friday
Funeral Services will be held Friday
for Rotcoe fl.I. Hicks, 68, who died Mon-
day al Hoag Hospital.
Mr. Hicks, who lived at 254 Broadway
St., Co.1ta Mesa, had betn active in COOl·
munlly affairs since tl5S. A .. 11.
omployed contractor, be helped build the
Seaf•rilli Masonic Lodgo of Newport
Btach.
He 11 survived by his wile, Eleanor, of
the home. and a sister, J\.lrs. Paul
Koehler of Amboy. !II.
Services will be held at 11 a.m. Friday
at Bell Broadway Chapel. \\'ith interment
al Pacific View ~femorial Park.
Pope i\larks Rites
VATICAN CITY <UPI) -Pope Paul Vt
wHI atllnd a ceremony Dec. ·a marking
the flrlt centenary of the council that
procli1med Roman Calhollc popes ll>-
(allible, VaUcan sources said today.
I
. Christmas Shoppsrs.
This Limited Edition
Royal American Ironstone
1970 Calendar Plate
~-i;aCLIP THIS COUPON --·
With Your Chri.tm11 Purch1,.
of $5.00 or""°"'·
!LIMIT ONE TO A CUSTOMEl.1'
CONVENIENT
TERMS
BANKAMERICARD
MASTER CHAR6E
J. C. .J.Jump~riej 'J eweferj
1123 NEWPORT ,AVENUE
COSTA MESA
l2 YEARS
SAME LOCATION
'HONE
541-)401
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NI .. •
CIUCAGO (UPI) -A i:oli-· In Vielnam.
leH'ative Republican backe·r · Crane also c;amF.gned. on a
· · · I · . plaUorm o! J>PPQsillon to high of_~ Nixon's V ~~~ taus and inflaUon and called
polict' Jlas w_On a 20,~vote for cutb~ in ~l!JJ welfare
vic;tQf1 jg his ra.ce for llljnols' : progr~. , ; .
13th Dlltrict congressional Warman, an underdog ln the
seat. . wealthy, tr a d·i ti on a 11 'y
Philip A. Crane called hls Jtepublican .&strict. endorsed Vietnam moratOrlums a n d victory over -Edward A • Warman "an affirmation of called . for .quj_c~ remoYal . of American forces . from V1et-the policies of Presideni
Richard Nllon, especially the nam.
polld .. mended in his Nov. 3
speechiaf a gradual, orderly·
111cl<bonorable. disengaganent
from . Vietnam. ' ~ ·
·winlianluid urged ··· n\)ld
1• • AmeriCall withdrawal dutin' the camJ)aliil. • .
Couple Wind
U in Jail . p .~ .. ''
" Final mums '""' Crane a ,mt -. IUd warmau · Get .Married 41,810. 'Ille 'dist>ict has 296,000
registettd voters . ---cnm<;·31, G'i c:Ollegepni-i\ENO, .Nev. (AP) -A
fessor writer am:! lecturer. He young couple ·who came here
· e~ OppositiOn to the for a Reno Wedding but wound
Vietnam War monitorlumS up-in jail hav.e been married
and aaid .he opposed any set--anyway -in a ceremony pc.r-
tlement. or the conflict Utat formed by the · city jail
would •jmake a mockery" of chaplain.
tlie s&Crifice of _AmericaD lives The former Spary Dautet-
. ! man, 23, of Salt t.ake City,
said she met Duncan Cogo,
Ammo Blas· t zz. or Seattle, In a SeaUle pub----,....,.. be market about a month 1
• 310, and ''it wu love at first
K ·11 T •igbt. .. l S ' WO Their dream delayed by c·ar
trouble on the way to Reno,
C.H AR LE STOWN, Ind. the couple was arrested Frl-
(UPI) ....: At'leasftWo persons d.ay outside a pawn shop.
were kill~ and 2:S others in: Cogo is hel(I on a Seilttle burg·
jured Tuesday night when an Jary warrant, his bride for
ei])Tosiori ripped through one investigation ot being a di.f.
building at the Army am-orderly person.
munitlon deppt here. ·ec1 · 1 The dead w:ere identified as Spary carr1 a sing e car-. 'B D Jiatlon as the cou~le. Ua drib
Miu Emma • 0 S S ' Jal\ ·-" \led •~•-CharlestilwD; ll1d Paul'R. Pit-~worms, _,.. •-
man. G~I , 1 Ky . .,_ LI , ;vs!n!°:1afu~~ =
. .'l'be P ant oomman\IU'. · lyweds went bic,k to thdr ln-Col.G-11. Daughtery, said the -di'"'" I ,,_ . II .,.,_. .xplosion:oceurred in an erea vtuua ctuo a er UH:
when propellant for • l a ceremony.
mUlliiliter--·lill ·lOod-;=.=======J ecL )
A' minor' ·11n ~ out ~·Ibo . ..,._, ·1"11 '
-·ljilekl)'·Ht~" -·
Who ust.n •.
To· L..nden1
'.1'...,.KSOIVING
SPECIAL
PASKO'S
INTERNATIONAL RESTAURANT
1550 S. c.Mt Hwy., U.-INch
·,.,. R....,,111ont • , • 497-1 IOO
(Just Acn'.111 Ph>m Surf 6 Sand Hot.el)
' .
QUmllE ly Phll lnterlancll Blshop.:_'£V. 'Casualty
Jqey Gets Gutt\· Walks Out .fJ.f Stu{lio . ~ .
'"'T-... SHOW CAliCE~EO
JOiy Bl...., ' ~ . . -
lo1" .......... !If 1lfnl1les Cir•
rylnal the ll"Olflm, 125 lo 1$1
for Griffin'• lhtw a.od J.09 for
Canon'•:
t1 ~·think· the American
' Broadcullnf Co. put me on (~pit! 17, 191'1) .,.hen ll was
not conoldered the rlght thing, ud µ.ey tepl .., OU," aa\d
Bjtbop. "Ip liome of the
cities." .he said, rere·rring to
~the a{flllateJ, ~·w.~ did not do
the bualoess for them."
II-lhe public wanted to'·know a.oy mQre, Bishop IPded, "_get
Johnny or Merv to IU me .on
.... tosaylt." p
ABC Prealdenl Elton Rule
saJd.in :a statement : "I'm fru·
JY. aony .this current associa-
, ~n is cqmin& to a close.
· ''Throu'b Joey's eltortJ·the
ABC tile.VtilOft "network for the
lint _llmt llP.DYld• subs!an-
~· l.~oadl into late.night pnt-
graamilllg. We Ill ~ Owe
Joey an e1.£reme debt · or
gratitude."
Bishop WU the second ABC
talk-abow casualty. DI ck
~vAU holt,ed a daily morning
abci.W · ~. last summer, a
tliree-niglit-a·wtek program,
1b6th •dropped, by the network.
CaVett is still under contract.
'
STOCKHOLM (UPI) thE second time in 10. weeks
lnfonned Swedish sourcu said an~told; ~ Utere was no in-·
CBS Chiet'i View . . .
today lhe . Swedlsb Govern-d' t1on 'h \ .ment has...~ rn touch with 1ca . w en etters would
both Hanoi and WashJ" ... "" ift .arrive· froril North .Vle&nam .
'16"' They •ere promised kUers recent weeks concerning the · When:. they ~ met the Coin-
fate ' of_ U.S. prisoners of war muNsts in. Se.._.ber,·bui nn
Agnew cidted 'Misnuornied'
. ~ --~ in-North· V'iefnam~. ·· · ~'.."' . The discl l letters came ano they r~lurn-osure came as wo -ed to .Paris -AU: Force .wives from Dlllas •• · ' Tnas Mn; Bontilti Slnglet6\!"" ·· .. I also uked them If •nyone
and Mrs. Paulit Hartness, new In . Paris : or 1n the.Un~ted
here from P.aris to ask Sweden Stales Jlld a list ·of all -.th!'
for help in detennlnlng the .jrisoners ·and:they aald. 'no',!'
fate of their l;usbanda whd M~.·1 S~e~.-. 27, sa1d in •were · shOf down ~ over Noith -Pa'i'l1.. SO ·tbef · t~tned to
Vietnam. Stockholm .to see 1f Palme
Olof Palme, Sweden's new could .. use his influence.
social DernOcratic premier in-Although' there bad been no
dleated last month he 'ws· formil request from the
prepared to use Sweden's good wives, Palme's · office was
offices on behalf of the more making plans for a Friday
than 500 missing Americans meetina: with them. P~lme. is
believed prisoners of HanOi. in Os1~ for Sc.andmav1an
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
p_resident of the Columbia
Broadcast!''· jy$~m, (CB$).
said Tuesday Viet.. Presidtn~
Spiro T .. Alllew!s ·critjclsll\ ol·
lele.Vision news "was ~riiplete
With misinforamtlon; i"accur-
acles apd · C@lltra4lctions. ·. -
Dr. Frank Stanton, in a
speech lo the International
Radio aod Television Sociefy;
said "the 'offilnOus character
of the vice ptesldent's attack
derives ultimate!}' from the
fact that It ls mad upon the
journalism of a medium
licensed by the government of
which he is a high ranking of.
fieer."
-S\anton's speech was sup-
ported by Leonvd Goldenaon, ·
network comme nt at o,r s news. "When ~ art
dis<u.se.t U..<!<gnew crillc~ criticized or r~. '!!lb.
Pn a ~eltvlllot> panel -am' '""' le!idltol bl"'°' 'riiW~lilaa,
(CBS-TY's·ID !iltnulesJ. slrilster ~1.., and LICt or
, CBS' /Mlb 1'.'alJact, rerer-qbjectlvity," hi'"said., ,
rmg. , to 'Apri's charge of ·Howard K. Smith ol ABC
"instant. --.n a I y s Is and said APJ.'llP' uo~.~" hla.
querulous, crttlcisrp" by com-case but network spokesmen
· me.1lalon ·of :Presfdent Ni1.· '1oVerre8.cted." There Is 1 pr.
on's Nov. 3 Vietnam speeeh, blem in tele•llioa. aews; Smith
went into detail' on the careful said. sinct "we are attracted
pr~paration by the television mostly to what goes wrong ...
commentators Involved . -:---a in a nation where we mwt be
preparation· ~blch included a doing a lot that is right."
·White, House briefing ·berOre CBS newsmcr.1 ~ w a It er
the speech was made. cronkite said. "ft.·is difficult
NBC newscaster D a v I d -to tell the good news because
Brinkley !aid Agnew's com-the good news is the nOrm ...
plaints were routine up t.o the these things that we report
point where they intimate which are ... abnormal, are
.government regulation of. tt1e rare."
Airli.Iies Ok
Sweden ts one of the few economic talks but JS expected
European nations maint&µiing to return to Stockholm tonight .
diplomatic conucts w l t h Palme is a harsh criUc of
Hanoi and the • inquiries ap-··U.S. policy in Vietnam but he
parently wert co o· d u ct e d is known to be sympalbeUc
through normal diplomatic toward Swe:dlsh alt.empts to
. ·chaMels. obiain infonnation on -mlsslng
president of the American1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;Oiii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii BroadcasWig Co., and Julian
Hanoi offlcials1ln Paris met Am,rie~ and If poUlbie to
the two women. Tuesda1 for obtain their release.
Goodman, presklent of the Na:.
tional BroadcasUng·Co.
"~king Ute 1reedom of
tele-vislon," Stanton ·said," .•.
will inevlllbly ·d.WOy llle
most powerful safeguard of a
free society; Uee, ltlhaqi-
pered IUd unhu.-Jfewi
Lower Fares · · .:J~i~e~;·~lanes 'Pound'·. · TQ Eµrop~ __ .,~ •I· • , ' ..
CARACAS, v.nezue1a (U!J). J.Ot'dan · for Four · llou..S ·
-Forty.three o! the world'.s
·niedia." · ... · ~ ..
·, ·The CBS· president said "to
strengthen the delusion that,
cis a news medium t.elevWon major air~ meeting to try ii> head off 8 fare ,.-~r; hay.~ ON. TJIE JORDAN~tSRAEL
agreed to reduce excqrs~n CEAs~Fn'tE· LINE, Israel
and . group fares between (AP) -Israeli f 1··1 ht er·
North America and Europe. bombers today launched their
'I1ie current New York-Lon-. heaviest strike inti>· Jordan in
don round-trip excuraion fare mort than a year, blasting
was cut to $250 in Winter, to artillery i>osltlon"s ror· four
$265 in spring and fall and to lH!urs Wfthtiut a break.
$295 in suminer. Wave upon· wave of' planes It was the first agreement in streaked ·over the JOrdan
negotiations of members oI River along a tbree-mlle front,
the Int e.r nation a I Air. pouring tons ot high UplOsives
Transport Association (lATA) on.the emplacements.
since Uie Italian a>irl·i .ne . The fl U \ n Alilalia cut· its New ·York-.. y ew into art .a rcra
Jfome fare by ne.arl0 ·1100 to nre b"ut all return~.
1 The plartes concentrated on m! o~ Sept. 19. artill~ry in the Gilead Moun--
-Similar cu.~ , by o t h e r tam range facing aettlements
transatlantic airlines foJIOWed..._ :.jtlst: ·S0uth Or fhe Se'a of
cutting round trip New York· Galilee
Landon fares to $260 in winter. The ·raids sent plumes of
The new . fares take eff~f smoite skyward and shook
A.prll 1, 1970-or ~arlier. The In-buildings 10 miles away.
d1 vldual e1.c41's1on fare time Israeli £armers said the
limit of 14 dars minhn~.~o Jordaiiian. guns laWy_ had
21 days maiunum was ex-been joining in b o r d e r
tended to 28 days. First class skirmishes between Israeli
fares are not affected. . trqopa Ind. Ai · Fala~ guer•
rill as.
Missile Fired ~'This is a big ~ .. and It
aims to silence ,the Jordanians
for a king time," said one set-
. VANDENBERG AFB (UPl) llemeut head.
· ~n ·a~ve. ln shelllng .Israeli is plunging the naUon into CQI·
arply j>olitipns.and border set-.la~ and can be deterred only
tlemerjjs, a· spo.kesdlan. a.Id. -6)' Suppreuing criticism .' , .
InJ 'erusJle~; Isi-~l'S· the vice president's speeCb
parllarrient today endorsed ·wu· replete· with mistJ.
Prime Mini!tf:r Golda Meir's formation , inaccuracies and
message of congratulations to contradict.ions/'
President NiJ:on od•hll Nov. ·3 -· "19-my judfll!ent, the.whole
Vietnam policy epeech. • tope .. the wQQlt.. ~.ntent .a~
'lbe meuage, sent Nov. 7, the whole pattern of thlS
brought crlUclsm ·froin Israeli government intrusion lnto the
leftists, wbo·claimed It could substan;ce and meth~ of the
reduce opposition to the •ar broa~ast 1¥'~.ltld:JDdee<I of
by•Amer.ii:an Jews .. OJ:1ly'sl1. or· .aJ!. J~rnallsm , ha~e t,l:t .e
the parliam,nt•s 120 members, gravest implicatlons.
.however, supported :a· motion-In another dev~lopment,
ieon~on,g . V.rs. M~r for .· •
"lm.etvf:'Qing .in,America'·s in· --
ternal attairs." ' · · 2nd Spani~~
Wallace Ends
Tour of Asia
·seoUL '(-'Pl -Former
Ala~ma Gov. George c.
Walla,ce "J~ft· Wedneiday for
ttte ·United States, concludt.1g ·
his fact.finding Asian tour .
Quint Dies ·
BARCELONA, Spain (UPI)
-Victor casiro .. smallest of
tlie, Castro qulntuplets, died
Tuesday night .. but offers of
security .and edu_caUon P<!Ured.
in ·today . for the t hr·e:e
survivors and·thelr parents.-'
Social Security Hospllal said
Victor died of a lung hemor-
rhage . His br01.ht!I", Lino, died
Moo.day ot the same sort of
respiratory disorder.
A TIME FOR GRATITUDE .• . -·
.. -··"
CHRl1TIAN ,:i(IENCE. CKUICHES
in.vite you to their
1HANKSGIVING ·"SERVICE ..
Thu-rsdciy, No'!'en:iber-27, 11 a ~tn·* .,
" C°'hl M~First Church of Christ, Scienti1t', 1100 . . Mesa Y•td• Or., Coste M•s~ · . . ·.' '
"Hull,.._ .llCICll First Church ~f Christ,· Scientist.
110 O liv•, Huntington Be,ch
~)·~· First Church of Chri1t, Scienti1t, 635
~I' Hj_gh 1Dr. 'J.:191,11'1 , Be'ach · ....
N9Wport 1 l~Jt.-Fi,r,t. Chur.1ch. ·.flf-·C,hrist,.:_SC•infi•J
: '. 1l30"l Vi• Lido, N9w'po;t 8w1ch · · · _
*Newport ••s• Stcond Church ol C~rlif, .S~ien.:
.tis); 3100 Pacific-Yi.w Or:, COron~-clel Mer IServ._
i_ces "will be h',ld -.t·· 10 ·AMI · · · -
At this .service, y~u will hea; tlppr~priate
selections re nd f r om. tho Bible ond the
Chri·~ti.On ·.Science .fextbook, sing hymns and
heor Chriition Sci en Ii sh :give th0 nks to. (:;od
. fo r h~oli~g and spi;it.ual g-~ 0 1..t.Jj . g'O:i.,.;d
through t he i r study ond opplicetion of
Christian Science .
·-
ALL ARE WELCOME
No collection will be token.
-A Minuteman I in-The miliUry command said
tercontMtal ballistic missile Us pilots reported "accurate
was launched Tuesday night strikes" on artlllerj.betteries
down the western test range in th.e vicinity of Asad vnlage
(rom Vandenberg Air Force iri JOrdan.
Base. · These batteries had recently
He met South Korean Presi-
dent Ciung Hee Park and
Premier Chung 11-k':won during
his four-day visit .to· South
Koru. fle ... •1'<> tO\U'fld the .
Koreab lhlte Village of Pan·
munjom and visited American
and Korean troops guardf.1g
the. deJnillt'arized zone ... · :
FrciriciSco~ JOfge Ind Yi>lin-
da, the survivors, w e re
reported In good cc;indition inj .incubators. · . . · ' ' ..
WUHIPll Of "Cl: .
Wftlhlre M ,Grmn.~y "'°' 3138 Wlllh1rt Blvd.• JM.1285
.
111. YOUR NllGH90RHOOD ••.•
Wilshire-Gramercy O/Me of Coast & Southern Federal
Savings, where your ac:Count is., . : . . ·
' -
SAFE • COllYllllEllT .. AYalaABLs:
+ I. ' . ' • .-'/ ·-•I . . ., '' '
DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL
Mliicot _ don,_,y C-' 111c1 &u"-"' .... ,. HIOHEsT PREVAllJNGi RATES ••• their capital ii ....,. ....... In \ll)UI, AM ,....,. IUte . . . ... . . ' • •
:i:..lh111h=l-=~r-""' -lllllJ __ ,.. -s.oo" .1 s.13"· 17 s_ ... 38" Eoremott ... urara ol theH benefits ii the outstanding
financl&l atrength malnlllntd throu.gh ti'!•,..,. bl"" man--ANNUAL tv.Tf .COl!t'OUNDEO DAILY •ONUI P\All lglmtnt of Coul end Soulhlm F-Siy\ngs;,. ·
INSURANCE TD $15,000/RtsDUIClS DYER 110· fllltllON . ·, ' t .
' .-~ ...
MAIM O"ICI: tANTA MONICA:
"" .. Hiit. Lo• A11t•I•• • ~~J·t~1 ,,, wu.n1 ... Ind •• »J~746 --L.t.. cmc ClllTIR: 2114 . ,...,..,. • 121-1102
""""""'°" MACH~ 91 Hulllti ..... C....••·tCMT
'"""°"°' 10ti. 1 Paottta • a t-D41
WQTCOWIMS
ElllCllltd ......... Ctt. • 111-pDI
llNIOMllA CrTT:
tltt Vlfl "furl 9M. • •·1171 . . .
lOflQ aUCK:
3rd & loc\ltt • 437·?4'\
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D,tn,y PILOT EDITGRL\L PAGE
It Could Be an
Meaa Verde nlldtnU are under~ concerned·
-some ol them worried -about plllll to construct a
large 1partmeot project near their secUon ol north&ide
Costa frlosa. ·
!
Vlrtually &Ii ol lbe Mesa Verde aN1a Is singl .. lam-
lly resid'!llces. And ....uen of ·11og1 .. bmlly residences
are aimoll 1f!ways wary of et proposal that mliht
lower the al~e .ol their prope¢' or cl)anle the charac-
ter ol their nel&llborllood. rn short, slnate-famlly reai·
dents usually want other sln&l•lami!Y reaidents as
nalglillOn.
I But this time we wonder if there Is real jusUficalion ' for their concern. I j:
' I '
It is true that Costa Mesa b .. Car more than its
•bare ol pink stucco and a111balt roofed duplexes -row
upon row of nondescript developments that were buUt
with an eye toward turning a dollar for the builder and
not for any luting aesthetic contribution to the com-
munity.
• ' J
Bui the Vista del La10 development proposed f o r
Mesa Verde Drive 'East leems to be a great deal more
than a routine apartment project.
'
Jn the first place, rentals will begin at $200 and
range upward to $500 a month . .Attr~ng_people w h o
will p a y this amount of r e n t undoubtedly will mean
standards and quality of the development will be high,
Too, engineering for the 1,180-unit complex includes
plans for a recieation lake and other ameniUes.
Interland Develo~ent Corp. already has compiet-
. ed a s,imilar project in Santa Clara and thole wbo have
Our Frantic
ursuit of
r pursuit of pleasure is just as fran·
m our pursuit of gain -so that when
run aCross an acquaintancl! who looks
ard, it is impossible .to tell if he;
• v.-cauon. •. or hu J"'* bfd toe: • • •
psycl>ological lrulh thll I! i;urprio-
Y t...,..i by most peo~le ii lhot 1ome-
who i. dprly lo II\'• :rau ldvlce
glYOI you .-.,,.,. die
who is reluctant to atve it. ,. • •• • •
I we don~ recrutt • .hlabV grade cl
: n f(J(' Congreas -men no are leN
siUve to the needs or specla1 lnttresta,
· man: sensitive to public lctertst -
' It doesn't much matter how we
Wlate or demonstrate, e1cept as a futile
tm.ans of letting off steam.
~ . . . i (Speaking of Congress, if judges dis-f~ qualify themselves from ruling in a case
where they have had a prior Interest,
why shouldn't Congressmtn bt banned
¥ rrom voting on bills that directly affect
itheir financial holdinas?>
: * • •
: Ask the average American to estimate
:the amount of foreign -non-military -
laid the U.S. is providing this year, and he : ' •
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Ho bum! Isn't this the same pap-
er which r11vored the "great" St.
Clair over Black prior to the last
Costa Mesa city election? Would
yoo say a llUle more invest13aUon
before the nexl election would be in
in order. boys?
-0 . w. Pl-1.
T'lllt ........ ~ .......,.. ......... "" .....,.,. ................... , . ....-
,..,. ,. ...... " • ......, .... 0.ltr .. 1 ...
wil1 ·oven:stin1ate by anywhere from 100
to 1,aoo percent • • •
The parHoz or the pro(e&&Kwlal
traveler ii that ht ii always lookin& for a "'-1" ~ ill a hole~ and lor
hotel servtoe at borne. • • •
Why is it that a woman wilh a decent firure can Wear Levla: and a man'a lhtrt
with an attracUve effect, whereas a man
in any kind_ of female 1arb seems either rkllcu.loua 'or· obacene?
• • •
Advice to parenta: If you want your
sacrifices to be appreciated, l a k e up
bueball. • • •
Laws themselves are th'e greatest
breeders of conventional immorality -
millions of dlvorcets are invvlved in Ir·
rqullr relations with men simply
btcau.se remuryil\g wUI force them to
rellnqullh lbelr alimony. • • •
1r you sboUL in an argument, it makes
you 'Nf'Olll, even when you are right.
' • • i Bob Hope's Enjoyment
~ \Vhen a man has earned so many
$millions thal other people can only C\JeaB
$1t their number, he sometimes turns to
{sin1(.lle pleasures for enjoyment. t Bob Hope, one of the wulthiest en-
"'tertainers in history, get.a a kick out of ~the fact that he has a "pretty big"
Jbedroom. t "I like to putt in it while I'm thinking
• and working," he explained. ~ Born Leslie Townes Hope in England.
~Bob came lo this countJ'y at the qt of 4
~and has emerged u one of it! moat JalJd..
•ea arid successful immigrants.
; A~ 6C, Hope, whose latest televi.slon
;1pec·ial, "Roberta," was aired ovtr lhe
; \IBC network Thursday evenlng, Nov. S,
: 15, currently enjoying the highest ratings :Jr ~I· career and keeps as busy as ever. • • ; BOU, THEN A young va udeville com·
(!disn, made his first big hit on Broadwa y .,}r "Roberta" when the musical first ap-
Y.:>eare1 there in 1933. ~-''l'cf like to see It start a revival or ~•Uw;· big shows of thlllt period," he
::edrked. ~ Ll9king back at his £abulOUI record -Z.•&!t his present ban.: account -many '! wonder why Bob keeps up his
Iran c performing pace. i FQI' In the last 42 years llO bu-
Tttveled Iii mliilon mliu. AWeared In five Broad•ay aliows,
nore th,. so rums, m ttlevtalon "'°"' J'nd 1,145 radio shows.
GIVEN HUNDREDS ol benelll lho•1 t"'n:'fiiiOitalJ!\on college eampuaes. and at ~ ltl'Vk:e camps.
~ Jnlllions of dollars for charitable
""i~ll•nlhroptc ....... J lved more than SKI awanls, dla· :<oiii • and delXlrationt', lncludill& 10 ~ry 1811Voraily de,,_.
• .W,11'1 .. -to Bob hlmstli ""1
:.itc1Nil1taln1bM411Wp-a11LWMS routine.
;-'\Workllli keeps your menial 1ppera1US
!• iJj'lljl< •od your adrenalin pumplq,"
~llill· "A• lonl n I'm h .. lthy, nothlO(
~ill .'!"fr kftJ •from worklna.
••tf I ever quit, I'd fret myself out of
cor:dlt.ion. Betides, I 1•t more fun out of
achievement than I do out ot anything
else in life."
808 STllJ. WORltS as conlC.ientiously
at Every new producUoo as if it were his
first one, but he saya he has slowed up on
his aocil&l lile since suffering an attack or
high blood pressure a few years ago.
"l play goU aa much as I can and try
to ge1 in a.n hour's nap every day." he
said.
Asked what defeats most people in
American llfe today, Bob grinned and
repll~:
"'Television. ll has replaced con·
versation, ambition and gOOd times. Peo-
ple ~t stuck In front of tht set, f1cten
their seat belts, and watch everythlnc.
!l's -habl~ I want lo teU you."
R8llE AllE BOB'S likes:
"Nklntaht, becauae I'm a nltht crawler -•«111111 allot tn my omce Ill nlgllt -
limb In dllnt Nuce, lemon pie and
chick<n --putel colors -IJl'lf, foot-
ball, -1lall ad fllhlni !or Nimon -
moet popular mkit and popular novels
-collectinC' montJ and old theater
mtmOflbilla -moat kinds of people -
turnin( on Ille llglll cl memory by talk ing
with guys who remember old-Ume acts."
P.tte art h1a dislikes ;
"lnau..tlve -· th<y bu& me -peopto.wbo baWt GUI -•nll -radishes
•nd cucumbers -Ille UMU cl wtra bum-
IO( ~ Ille sound cl air condlllonm -
Mariloll, becauae they're like drinking out"'. cifarttlt l!p\tr-~. "'""'" wol'fter. who attract. attention by yel1ln1."
If he were to choote his own epitaph,
Bob II.YI K would be this:
"One moment, plea11e ! "
sludl.ed II say 11 ls hardly llktly such a projtet In Cocla '
Mesa would lower property values in the area., IMeed. · ·~ ,,• }'
the $21 million development couJd be an asset. • i" ·
Ono ol the basic cballenges lo a municipal plan-
ning Commission and eitX council is protecting~ lavest~
menls of home. owners anct at .the sam·e time &lvlnS
buUders and developers \he opportunity to ullllte .new
and dl!ierenl techniques lo bring modem housing to
modern families. In some cases, aingle--famlly re1ldenc.e.~ ·~
unfts are not the only answer ; imaginative we or la:nd
and adaptation of new building techniques and·mater.
iaJs al.so can provide housing that ts a community asset.
It does appear, at this stage, that a project, such as
Vista del Lago, can fill a need without threatening the
investments of those who Uve nearby.
Ed Bennett Retires
The familiar face of a man whose public service ca·
reer goes back 53 years will soon be ab5'nt from the
Costa Mesa County Water District's Board o! Directors.
Ed Bennett Is the type who stole no spotlights; just
did the work , voted the way he believed wa'1 right and
was generally correct in his vi~w or what should be
done.
Many retirees get gold watches, but CMCWD direo-
tors presented Benne'lt with something much more re~
resentative of his work at a testimonial dinner Tuesday.
A gold water meter will be a fitting memento .
{()
Trustees Stereotype Youth-by Wlaat Blglat1
Disloyalty Protected, hut Not Hair
To the Editor:
J read with considerable dismay the ac-
count of an Orange County high school
student who openly refused to pledae hi s
allegiance to the flag or to this country
due in part to the fact that he had no con·
trol over his being born here.
This philosophy seems prevalent In the
youthful society of today. which exists on
the basis that they have been provided
with au the material wants and are
thereby driven by motivation in search or
"so1oething else." and in so doing seek
any and all means lo achieve a mental
l'f:lease from the world of reality. Hence
the rampant use of drugs, pills, and other
vehicles of "escape".
THE REAL BURR undtr my saddle
concerning this high school youth is that I
Up helping pay ,for the educaUon to
wlilch he is "entitled" in this cotr.:rtry.
And I'm doing it while, at the same time,
my son, who has full respect for the nag,
thla country, and the authority of thole
who govern it, is denied the opportunity
to voluntarily attend school becauae of a
heinous social atrocity -his hair is loo long. ·
What rationalization permits a n
o••erualous group of these school
trustees to deny an educatlrr.t lo any
young man merely because they choose
to stereotype him without regard to his
ability as a student or his conduct as a
responsible, respectful citizen?
OPEN DEFIANCE of our country's
principles of government t.s protected by
the right of free speech. Isn't it un-
fortunate it couldn't be foresem that the
Bill ol Rights needed to include ·a clause
providi'.1g for the right to grow long hair
In order that a young man might be
all owed the same educational op-
portunilies as one who speaks out against
the form of government which entitles
him to education at its expense.
It Is also interesting to note that after
excluding the Jong.haired "dlssldentr;"
and pote-.11ial radicals, such a thlng as an
underground newspaper could be fostered
in such a puritanical atmosphere.
, After noting the percen~ of my tax
bill which is applied lo educational re-
quirements, I too am "Saddle Sore".
GORDON J, SANFORD
Commends Regent•
To the Editor:
On Friday, November 21, the Universi·
ty of California Board or Regents voted
to purchase 200 acres of marshlands from
th e Irvine Company for the creation or a
\vildlife preserve on the UC Irvine cam·
pus .
A unlversily spokesman said this
marsh ls characte.rized as a major "way
station" (or migratory blrds along the
Pacific Coast. It is also considered to be
extremely valuable by natural scientists
for the study ot fresh water life.
I 1111NK 111E Regents should be com-
mended for such a fine act. Htre ls an
example or a group of people (with
money and power) taking collecUve ac-·
tloo to restore the balance 1n nature
B11George-~
Dear Georre'
I have been taking the exm:ise
course you sent and Instead of 1e1.
ting 11trongcr J fetl "''eaker than I
did. Cou ld it be that I'm doing the
exercises wrong?
C.T.
Otar C.T.:
Nope . you're not "'rong - I sent
you the wrona set of exerclsts by
11\istake. I can't imagine where I
got ahold of those Etypl1111n Air
Force exercises.
Letter1 from readers art welcome.
Normally writers should convey their
messages in 300 won:b or less. The
right to condenst lt'tttrs to /it space
or eliminak libtl is reserved. AU let·
ter1 mut include signature and mait·
ing addreu. but names ma11 be with-
held on reqiust if nfficient reason
U apparent.
\vhicb man Is ultimately deslroylng,
I do not feel kindly to the UC Regents.
espeojally alter ll1t! re<ent dismissal or
Angela Davis, but you have to consider
this act lo their reputation on the whole.
DAVID ·OLIVER
Three Buie 'i'11pe1
To the Editor :
The top managers of all the companies
that rroduce eleclrical power tell us elec-
trica power plants mus: have large
quantities of water ~ear at band. In the
Los Angeles basln thla means that any
new powtr plants must be buill near the
ocean. Now let us examine why the water
is needed.
To generate electrical power water is
heated in a boiler until it is a very hot
.st.earn at hip pressure. The fuel used lo
do the heating can be anything from coal
to atomic power. 'I1'IE steam is the-.i
heated to a .superheated condition and,
according lo my 1949 edition of Marks'
Handbook, the steam will reach a
pressure of about 1,IOO pounds per square
inch (1,800 psi) and a temperature of
about 1,000 degrees Fahrenheit.
THE SUPERHEATED steam is thtn
direct~ through a mu!Ustaa:e steam
turbine which converts the potential
ener11 of the steam into rotational
eneray that is used to gr.ierate e1'c-
trlclty. As the steam goes through each
staae of the steam turbine the pressure
and temperature of the steam decreases
unUI the stt1m reaches the condenser.
Let us say that if we started out with a
pressure ol l,IOO psi and we ended up tbe
a preuure of O psi then we would have
enracted all the potential '1!erp from
the steam.
THE CONDENSER Ui just a container
where the spent steam comes In contact
with many tubes that have water running
through t h e m. When the steam h I l s
the tube the water running Jn the tu be
absorbs heat from the steam which then
becomes water. Since steam takes up a
lot of space as compared lo water. it is•
easy to realize that the pressure is
lowered as a result of condensini l h e
steam to water. T h e pressure may be
reduced to less than 2 psi, However, this
process requires LOTS OF WATER.
THERE 18 NO thermodynamic I a w
that demands that the pressure must be
less than 2 psi. However, there Is an
economic law that requires that the
pressure rriu.st be that low. Thus. large
quantities of water at! not necessary to
generate electricity but art fff:luirtd lo
produce the cheapest electricity.
In cOnclusion: there are three basic
types or generating plants that can be
built in or near the L. A. basio: 1. Fouil-
fueled pl8'.1t which produces the cheapest
electricity and smog; 2. Fosall-fueled
plant built outaide of the L.A. basin which
will produce more expensive electricity;
3. Atomic·fueled plant built on an bland
off the coast which will not produce smog
but the electricity will cost more. We the
people must tell our local electric utility
that it will be allowed to build only plants
two or three and that we will be happy to
pay the necessary rate increase.
I have oversimp\i[ied the generating of
electrical power. Someone will point out
that the condt":tJer pressure should be 2
psia, The a stands for absolute pressure
while 2 psi mean s about 17 psla.
However, J hope you will gee that one can
be too precise.
HARRY 8. McDONALD, JR.
Need for Sheptlcilm
To the Editor:
Recent news stories appearing In the
DAILY PILOT. that relate lo alrcraf
noise and air pollution at Orange County
Airport demonstrate the need ror
journalistic skepticism when reporting
the statements or public and industry of.
ficials on the often complex and hl&hly
technical lssues involved i n en--
vironmental pollution problems. A few
exam.pies illll.!trate my point:
ITEM: The recently announced FAA
noise standards for aircraft will cut
tulure noise levels in hatc.
FACT: Aircraft cert.lflc.ated undu the
Stepping on the Gas
Stepping on the gas mity yet prove to
be one of the best ways of comblttinl
sn1og. Uteratly, •
While the anU...m.Og t1l.ea.m car ·ex;.
perlmenters atlll struale to aet the bUCs out of their new venlons of an old but
llmlledly uteful vehlde, a sys-for
sub&tJtutlnl natural 111 for guoltne as
fuel hu been p<oVtd pnctlcal, and •P-
pllcable to present tnternal --en~ned autos.
'Mle ay!lm was developed under the
ausplc.s ol Paclnc UJlhtlng •nd Supply
Compa111. A com111rat1vely simple filter
adapts standard auto motors to the use of
n:1tural gts, the same fuel that Is used In
homes for stoves and fumnceR. The C(lm·
plcle adaptor sY.stem costs about m at
tl 1ls time.
NATURAL GAS costs about half as
much as ga901ine and contributes about
90 percent less 1m og -pro ductn g
hydroearbon1 to the air. Si nce internal
combustion enitnes are blamed for a
grtat part of the nation's smog. lhe
natural gas fUel system offers a hopeful
opportunity.
There are drawbacb, or course. Thr
r I
~l
estre tank takes up useful apace In
pmenl can, .. d Ill capadty llrnlil the
range of the vehicle while operaUftl on
gas. Alto, gasolloe provtdil srU\er
power. h engineers point out. however. even in thl.!i present &tage of dtvtlopmnt
lhoee minuses do not veally -the syltlm 's value.
A SIMPLE SWITQf pennlte the driver
lo change over to 14.90llne on long
sl re tches or open highway where smog ls
not sueh a problem. and the power loss In
city u.~ \\Wld not be not.iced by the
average driver.
Pacific Llghtine's tesls on 33 vehicles
ha\.·e persuaded It to convert all 4,000
vehicles operated by ll.s subsidiary com-
panies. The federal go v ernment's
General Services Administration Is in-
terested. too. Smog 1Ufferen will happily
join the cheering sec:Uon.
Cal~onlla F<lllllr. Servlee
new standard would produce noise levtTs
between l lh and 3 times louder than
those now b e i n g experienced around
Oranae County Airport.
JTEM : Air California recenUy an·
nounced its intention to modily Us jet
engines (at some undefined future date)
lo drastically reduce air pollution.
F AC'L The proposed modifications
would yield substantial reductions only in
the amount of visible emissions, whkh
constitute ~ than 1 percent of the total
smoa:·produciog emiss ions from jet
elliines.
rrEM: The recently inalalled lnllrn-
ment Landing System (!LS) at Orana•
County Airport will reduce noise levels
. and increase SJ{ety when aircraft are
!lnding from Ille -'11.
FACT: When IMdlng Crom the south,
the Il.S is no safer than the old VOR
sy5tem. since there is no glide slope on
the back ·COUJ'St! approach. Yet, under pie
old VOR approach, aircraft landing over
Newport Beach were required to inaln·
ta.in a minimum altitude Cf 500 feet. With
the new lLS system, aircraft are allowed
to descend to 357 feet over the homes of
Newport Beach. substantially increasing
noise levels and the danger of a
disastrous crash.
ITEJ\I: The county is drafting an
aircraft noise ordinanct that will provide
relief for the people of Newport Beach.
FACT: The proposed ordinance would
not reduce existing noise levels. More Jnr
portantly, the ordinance would not limit
the number of jet flights, which is equally
important in cont.rolling noise expoaure.
Assuming that the ordinance is pused in
Its present form , and further assuming
that the number of jet flights conUnues to
increase at the present. rate, the reslden·
tial area all the way to Dover Shores on
both sides of the Bay will be subjected to
an unacceptably high noise exposure level
by the year 1973, Many are.as around lhe
upper b.!ly will become uninhabitable long
before 1973. ·
DANIEL W. EMORY
None Wea Involved
To the Editor ;
You wrote an editorial on Nov. 21 which
said that orange Coast Colltae faculty
groups were presenting "more of the .same one-sided anti-Vietnam war pro..
grams f o r the November morator4
ium •• .''
This is a statement of fact by you,
Would you please tell you• readtrs whet
OCC faculty group or what OCC faculty
member participated in the 0 C C
November moratorium.
JOHN L. JENSEN
The DAILY PILOT erred. While .some Ja.cuLty mtmbers participated in
the October moratorium, non.e wo1
involved in the Novembtr morn.tor-
ium.
t -Editor
-----W edn 1 sd ay, Nov. 26, 1169
TJoe· fdtfoNI pogt Of the DailU
Pilot seeks to hlform and 1tim-
®JU reader• bu presenting this
11etOJPOper's opintom and com.
me ntoru on topic• of interest
and 1ignif iconce. by providtng a
forum /Of' the ezpression of
our rt<1d111' opinton1. and by
pre1ndng the dfoerse view-
points of informed observers
and spokttmen on topics of the diiv.
RobeR N. Weed, Publisher
-·~--~----.----------
•·, -.--:;::
. -
.. . -
lly Phil lnterlond~
•
Six Study . . . . -' .. . . . .
:oe:v~Ioping.
O.f B.each . . -...... -. ..
' . ~ .. ·'· '.: . .. . ~":.\ .
Sir ~.~, Q!Plllallaol In U...,.
Beac!> .,. lllomplbir' lo ·-·"" a "falrly JhC)le" let'Ot Aconuitendllions
.., develapnenl. al lbe llaln a-Ji for
--•l • Qty camiCu lludy -Doc. 10, O\amber of Commerce illrectcr~ Jeamed ,...,..,, ·~ ' .&din& dillrman Bernard Sylaa . t
IM"recelved' lbe ~·1 •itvtWal~a
plu to empower the 01amber11 e:r·
ecutlve ""'1Ullitlee to lennulate a letter
tolbe-~lbe w... ..... . '~. ' , ....... J'eCOID-m_endfl!!!ett.,... -· e around.. con-
alructlon al a beacblronl hotel<llllfereoce centar .••
. . flllMi. cqa'itp•Jom parliclpatJ,/c in the
Main -· plann!na --.!Gni Syfan add, are the CJviC-League, b Hotel·
Motel .\looclallon, lbe Cltizem Advlaory
CclmJnltloe, lbe Cllbenf' Town Planning ~Ullnpcl lbe,Downtown'-• A..oclltion.~ ... + .. •
"We hoPe u llllley people u -Ible
wtll uae their initiative and creaUve •blli-
ty to come· up with ideas, 11 said syrim.
Barbara Duarte Takes On
A tentaUve draft of" recomm·endaUo:is, Syf~ !"Id; Included the lolfowihj:
-Ttii.t a hotel of not iess than 100 nor
more than 200 rooma be built on the Main Beach~ .
-.-Sl10pa abould be Included In Ibis Daily Pilot Social Chores atructurt. L
-The center sbou1d include conference
space equal ·to two seats for eaCh hotel
t1IOll>.
DAJLY
1rn..Ot '"" ,_,
JOINS PILOT STAFF
Laguna's l•rbara Du•rf•
i\v reek Injuries
Fatal to ChiJd
' Severe tnJurles suffeml four days
earlier when be rode his bicycle Into the
Jide «a truck proved fatal Tuesday for a
nine-year-old boy from Orange.
Todd Ale:rander Markle, died in Oranae
County Medical Center following What a ~ spokesman today aald was "a jretty hopeless fight !or me."
~ The boy , was riding h1s bite near his
\ome and 'collided with the truck in a
busy intersectlon. Police have cleared·lhe
truck driver of "''POll~blllty for the
crash.
Flood Damage
Repairs Slated
: R<paJr work oo the-"CtiooJ of Laguna
Canyon ROad damaged tn last wiJller's
•flood cldlnltely will get ID1ller way Doc. 1.
.Mayot Glenn Vedder -aWed,'Lagurja
.Beach Chamber Cl ~ .. directors
Tuesday. ' . :
The project W11 ,dtfayed fot 1 time
when Federal conitiucuon fuod1 were
held up, 1>111 Vedilu said he now bu
·assurance that the Santa Monka con-
lracUng film of Drumm«ld and Broonkk
wilf keep the Dec. I date. .
Larae . aecUans on both sides oC tbe
recently enlarged roadway were washed
out in the floods.
Foldh19 ...
20xl0
ewt•nd1 to
l0x60
Barbara Duarte's youthful good looks
don't hint that she has been in the
newspaper business in Laguna Beach for
20 yean..
But tt's a fact. Mrs. Duarte bepn
aniy;ering the phone on Saturdays at the
front.desk ol. the South Cout News When
lhe wu: 11 years old '.'bopbts no one
would ast a question J couldn't annrer.'~
Calls she's answering now are about
DAILY PILOT social coverage, features
and news stories.
Mrs. Duarte has joined the DAILY
PILOT staff in the Laguna Beach office
where she will handle aoclety and other
news of IJO\lhern OrOnge Cowity, ·
AJ a girl the answers may have come
faster than for most newspaper begin·
ners. She was the third generaUon. of
her family 'tn the busl.ntss. ·
Her father, William W. Ottaway, was
publisher of the old South Colo! Newa,
purclwbig tt In 1911. Hhl lather, the late
Elmer J . Ottaway, was publiJhfr of the
daily Port Huron (Michigan) Tim~·
Herald. Her uncle owns · a chain of
new'Pl'pers In the East.
lier new'!"'!_Jel' training has ranged
through dtric81 wort aa a ifrt and bocik·
'keeping to even oCeulonally re-iettliig a
beadDne error in emergencies.
The trans!Uon lo wrlttna· and reporting
several years ago was a natural one -by
osmosis from q>e fami\y heritag~, ooe edltorCODIJ1le!lle<t .
She bas been a general reporter,
photographer, society editor and manag·
Ing editor. In 1987, Mrs. Duarte won an
honorable menUon from the CaWomla
Newspaper Publisher Assoclaij,on for her
coverage of the disasterooa cruh of tw:o
plants over and into Leisure World which
killed five persons.
Deadline Set
For Decoration
F ete in Laguna
--That adequate parll!ng be Included.
-The structure should be located mly
south of' a line ZOO feet from the Hotel ~t:lty.betweep_'the boani'!'alt an4 the
-~ni vlsull accas to the ocean
should be maintatne(f and the hotel center
co-ordlneted wltbfn a part plan, tbe city
to develop the part area adjacent ·to the
hotel at the same Ume as the boteJ is
beln bulll -'1: private financing for the hot.ti
be arranged, to avoid fUrther inveatmeo3t by the crty, · ·
-A time· taible should be set for all
phlles: of the deYelopment. ' -nie city~ ...... peririttitr
for the propoeed center and seek pro--
posals by hotel lntemll, aliowlng 911 days
for study, prior lo acceplance.
-1bat ·eonatruction' start within one
year of aceeptance of a propc.al, with
the hotel to oepn In 11172.
-Aesthetic land Use and open space, as
well as econorillc factors abould be b-
cluded in the desiio. · ·
' '-A ~ well.dertped hotekonference
center of this type," Syfan coocludld,
"would be O[ tremendous impartance to the clty1"• • . f •
Victor Andrews
New Hospital
Board President
Vietor C. Andrews has been elected
prtsldent or the board of 5o\llb COait
Community Hoopllal In Soutb Laguna.
Andrewa replaces John Weld, who bu
been an offm and director of the
hospital fOf' 15· yean. '
Weld asked to be relieved of the
preaidency ·becailst of extentive travel
plans in · the coming ~ear. The ofnoe of
board cbainnan which Andrews held w1ll
remain vac&Dt, it wu.announcedo -f
With Dec. 17 set as the final. date for Weld is to serve as first vice president.
Laguna area Mmeowneri· to enter the other officers ~leccled for. the cqmtng
1969 Christmas decoraUng c:-10 n t e at , )!.t&r .arJ: Harold O:sborn, aecond vtce
apooaored· by the Junjor: Cb11imber of pres!:d~t,. ~,-treasurer; Edward L.
Commerce, Jaycees president Phil May Olsen, third vice president ; James Moniz,'
reports there wtll be bushels of trophies ~ourth '1ce preaident; and Bernard
for winning homes in lhree separate Ingram, secretary.
atf!as or the city. Two new dltectpn:, James Thorftas and
Judging .. of decorations In · l>usineas. Harloo.ir . ~. ~I~ were. elected 'to the'
f1M'D8, bOth for 'dllplay windOws and en-board to replace PIUJ Dodds and Carl W:.
Ure bUildlngs, will be'beld Dec. 1. , Bun, who "'~pied alter nine and U
:Wllljam Mcer.ady, chairman of the , years, rei;pec:lively, oo the· board. .
, se~ -~ber'1Jtecorattng committee, . told. ~ Tuaday Iba! preparations •
lor'J"rlclo1,nllhl'• "lights on" eve11t are Bond Rate Hike OK'd
prngreuing,wJI. with city mwa'belplng
to string deciar&UOns on down&own streets
and' the olllcil! ' fO.foot Christmas 'tree ready~ go up 1t'tlae foot of Broadway.
Illiimlnatioo ol lbe city decoraUona will
colncide witb1 ~ merchants' tradi·
Uonal bolpltallty nlCbt, with mo!l sto,.s
planning to stay open late and serve
refreshments le visitors Friday evening.
L~er•I
T•rm1
Av•il•bl•
WASHINGTON (AP) -The Sonate
sent lo Prui~n\ Nixon today Ifie bill
pennlltiftg an increase .In the lllter.st
.rate"" ~-bondl from 4V. per ceirt
to five pel'Cerlt. 'the increase appllea to
future islues and also, Mroadlvt to
June 1 this year, to the $52 blllloo « nv-t.., bondl now outstapdlng,
I'
: -.''-'!!!IQ!,t~ ·'-.... , .. " -·IJis~ion ;
. T ~ ·1 ... ·ra1 •• • • • ' • 'ry ; ;
~~e~: J:imit ~ut · ;
UPIT_....
Rose of New York
. ' Pamela Dee Tedesco, 1970 Tournament of Ro ses Queen, find s furry
toy cat during sboppin gtour In New York City. She'll be back .in
Pasadena in Ume foi' annual New Year's.Day parade and RoSe BoWI football game. ' ·
T4anksgivi.ng Rites Set
Iu Or:ange Coi1st -Chnrches ··
MallY churcbec 'along the Orange C..St
will liold 1peaa1' Th•ntsilvlng amilces
tbiJ evenln& or M Thuradi.y. ,
Included amone those in the Harbor
Area ar~ ChriJt Lutlferan Church, -Teo
Victoril, COsta Mesa, a 10 a.m. Thurs·
day oervtce : st. John the DI-Epilco-
pal Churdl, llJ43 Orange Ave., Costa
Mesa, holY communioa at 6:30 p.m.
Thur1day and a laln!l1 holy communion
later at IO p.m. Mesa Verde United
Melbodilt ,Church will bold Tbanltsgiv!ng
Day services at 10 a.m.
One Thantlgtvm, eve service wtn be
held at _Newport Unity Churcl). meeting
al 'the Senior Citizens Building, 15th
Street and Irvine Avenue , Newport Beach
at 7:30 p.m. ·
In Laguna Beach there will be a 10
a.m. Thanksgiving 1ervlce ar St. .Paul's
Lutheran Church, 429 Cypreaa Drive, and
a Thanksgi\'lng eve service at Commu·
nity Presbyterian Cbutch,· '15 ·Fcrut
Ave. at 7:30 p.m.
Amcog thole West Orli!P County
church<s boldlng service! w1R be the
First Baptist Church of Huntington
Beach, Ith and Orange at 10 1.m. and a
Thank,ggiving eve !eZ'Vlce at Lu'theran
Church of the Resurrection, ·sau Hamil-
ton, at 7:30 p.m.
Oh Camino Road ' . . .. .
SAN JUAN' CAPtliTRANO -Member!
of the City COClbcil have voted to reduce
lbe llpeed limit OD Camino Capistrano
betW<f> San Juan Creek Road and ~
.JOU!!< bounc1ari'4. " ' , . 1fie ·11peec1 llinll. ~1y-55,rn0e, per
hour, will now be 45 miles per hour. City
Engineer J act Kubota had recommended
3S miles per bout-but oouncllmen believ-
ed this to be too slow Jor a relaUvely
straight road.
e Bol>l>JJ S.f>l\' B-tetl ..
SADDLEBACK..Y ALLEY -Plans arn
under way l4J ~Ult the. number of ~'till!uln ~. ~-J~ IJobby Sor -~ . Ne'!' ollk<i> foi:.lbe l!oaaue:a,. Gordocl
Li!O!ileuJ, presldenl: MuJne .Holland;
vice. .predc1eot~· 1Judy Mo1baa1b ~
sttretary, and Steve GandoU1, treuum-.
Fourteen teams In both major ... d
minor divtskm made up the league this
past season. G)rli from I lo II are ellgl·
ble to play. .,
i .Tenab, er.,_. sr.teci .
MISSION VIEJO -Tennla 1111nict1on
will begin Dec: I at. lbe llecreallm
Center. '
.The cla-open lo any -of 11.laiCI), Viejo, will tab. olace, oa llloJh
dliy1 • .&nc1 Tbtinday• untlf Doc • .., The
one hour 1->nS will be !aught al I, 7 and
JlO"ibly . 8 p.m. wlih Bill Smllh,. 1n-·
"'"'!-Ing· I e Program C....._ell
CAPISTRANO -Several changes fn
the weekly adult recreation programs
i po.,,...ed by the Capt.slrlllll!· Unified
Sehool..Dlslrk;t will ~ ~ pi, nex! several weeks bec~use o('the hOUdays
and the start of lbe high acbool basket·
ball season.
No programs will be or fer• d
'Tl>l!nlciglvlng night llQd dQrln& the ,weelts
of Dec. 22 and 29. Beginn ing Wednesday,
Dec. 3 the regular men's Tliesday night
volleyball meeUnc will switch to,. Wedo
ne.48y so a! t!l aVbtd Ccnruct With home
high school wtetball gaines · .••
Tueedays. • t • l
Adult Pnlll'IJDS are oil ...... ~ C1!1
Monday (iwomen), Tuesday (Wedne8day
starUng Dec. 3) ·and Th&lr>day. All adulla
In the communlty 'are tnvtted lo tab' part
tn the opporWnltles for supeiv!Hd
physical activities, The women'.s ~am
runs f,rom 7 to 9 p.m. while the men'1
nights extend from 7 to 9:30 p.m. . ..
$5.98 CLASSICAL LP ALBUMS ................................ : ...... NOW $3.98
K98 POPULAR LP \ALBUMS ... :: ........ ::::: .... : ................ :NOW $2.98
. .
ACOUSTIC
RESEARCH
'
'AR-4X ......
Prlu
" $ 00
· Sale .. 37 ·
GARRARD 30 .,
.... s39so
''""
FISHER 160-T . . .
AM/FM STliR!lO ·
' .
::.r:1i'~c1 ,,. l ~r··
. .... ,,,,,.
l D•i!i••t~t0t -
NjW''uoro11!01
. •
'J;ISHIR 220-T
DIMO -HIW • GUA.IANTll
..
FM~Ar,t
~ s32910
Sale5198°°
· SHURE M·91 E
M91E DELUXE STEIU!O
ELLIPTICAL C~RTRIDGE
'
Tr•c•• fro111 ~·I Y, f r•l'llt. Tr•c••bllltv;
1t I tr•111: 21 ~/1•c •t I ·~
GARRARD Sl.~75 . . . ' ~
• s'nuo
AUTOMATIC
CHAN•••
~ s109so •••• $
Pl.ICI • • 64 .._,.,... ...
. .
f •••• optl•11•I •l'tr• l
30% to 50% ISCOUNTS on STEREO,
TAPE RECORDERS, TAPES & RECORDS !
•
•
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•
I~' '!J'•t!lff .Rwf1'!il
.. • J
. I .
~ --
N-~ Viets · Shell • ,.. ._ .. • I
1
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' I
··c~valry Q11;tp~pst ,.
SAIGON (uPo -North Vleln>meoe .. ' : • ' " I ... ~ a .p_.s.: Armond Cavalry outpoel Ille immunlllGa
1tlumP np'jied throuCli lhe "
.., Ibo Comlwllan border today, blow• coOwVenlil 17.a.i~~ nw;lly',
«C..... .., ... 0....,.. "'"• ;, il!C-:up a enununtUoa du.inp whlcb ex.. the IOW'Cel t.llW. 'J1W 'Jitlck killed °" Pr•~l ,and Mro. Nixon will be plOded•wltl! ouil! violence It destroyed a American ud ....-_14.olheii I. the
•osts to 235 senior citizens, fuclud· -~:.., tanbedvaluueds atml~ ·Conmmlats atruclt Ille ,bul ii lllllP
•
,, 13,5 .......,.. •• orm . . _, norll!wnt of' SOigoo.• ·-,
'tng.75-year-old Mamla•El•~•r, -~· , nk "' · · .,__ In ,Ibo . ui ... -· .... •• abella sere·-•·· ou1 o1 The Sberidan tank baa come under=-at. Tha ••• vmg ~·" ·....,. ~ -..... greslional criticism al. llittvall durlnc
-while House. Mrs. Eisenhower and • * * -k -Crllics say It ts .. ~veiy noisy
-he i uncle, Joel C•rlsOn, ;~, o( ,w ;; ·~ has 'a leaky fuel tank am~. amob a:
.Boone, low~. wiU a~ive Wednes-· ?t ..:::-..Jg;, Agr·nne , baust which makes II ·...Uy vlllble at
day and spend lhe rugbt. The Ntx· . L(JU, c; ~ greal distances.
ClDS will leave Washington after the • ··.. Gia In lhe ·fteld geaerally_QPl"Ove of
.-dinner to spend the weekend al Key To Coal;tw" n' the tank whicb cu I?~ "1 •J!Dlle!. per
'.'Biscayne, Fla. "' hour on land and n .. lhroull!. ~·
1!:acb Sheridan baa two _...,.....,:an<l-
Neg· . o. tiations . :::. °:!~~ ~~: hurl t,aoo ma~ daflf ~ loo\ 'l"f .
.. rooling nalla !!ltb illjo. ' i. . -.
PAR1$· (UP!) -Ambusador Heney Tbe Comni..usts bit wltb machine · Cabot .Lodge oaid today the .llo!lod Stata guns, mortar sbejJs and bazooba then
'•
la willing to dlscusl a coallUon govern-followed wllb ~ground uaaultin·the.con-ioent for South Vietnam in private tatu fualv.I of the QPlodiq: amirnmftkm. dwpp
with North Vleln>m. · at the camp C miles -of SalJOll.
Lodge, 1>1tlii1 with i>ew1m11ut ll!e-~1,·Tlop gl'QWld. •Uaclt '!'" hlliled. baclt in
ot ll!e. 14th ....ioo o1 the vletolm . .,..,.. • . l!eavy fill>tlng. • , .. , · . .
talks, was asked why the United. Stateo One American wu killed and 24 woilnd-
could not negotlote ca behalf ol Salgao In ed Jn !he 'ourpriae a1ladr whl.ch came
;MEMBIORS 19F GUN·ea·l!w PRAY .IN THANKSGIVING ·SERVICI! AT TAY NINH
Chaplain Mal. M-Jatt Jr. Started Services $e .. ra.l l?a;t• Alo to Got to All Hl1 Man ..
• Feel Ca8e . Closed
South Viets DiScount
• ·!be' private negollailons wltb tbe iCooJ!-before dawn. ·It wu one ·ol the most
+.i!<.;1 munlsts. · ' clevutalblg allaclra In wieta along the
· "Well, 1 don't think there's any pro-Cambodian border where the 1 tth
blem about our talking aboul a coalition Armored Cavalry has massed tanks,
government and other matten with the: .armored penormel carriers Cid artillery
North Vietnamese," Lodge replied. against an expected Red offensive.
Tbe military "°"""' said the damage But he made tt clear the United States Willi caused by shells of an unidentified
thinks only the South Vietnamese govern-type wbicb pr.eceded the ground uaault
ment can carry out an agreement in by tbe Communlsta who fired rocbt-pro-
Sooth Vietnam. pelled ~ as they hit the ootpoot'a
U.S .. Bkirrie in Slayi_ng .
"' Newspaper reporter Erica Walla ce
1smiles like the cat who swaUowed 'the " •1 canary 6$ she rests in bed at h e r
·London1 home Tue!dat1 following the
hatching of a chicken in ht't' bosom.
1r" Sh.e tried the (21-da'tl l!.tperimtnt fdl·
. .lowing Lord snowdon'.i controversial . r I •11film showing Mrs. Ella. Petry peT onn-
""'ing a similiar feat. Miss Wallace nam·
ed the chick, 3h.oWll s~e:pfng ~~e~full11. "Anthony Arm.strong Jone1." • r Ad··~. Noic1wa11: ~ n e of more
1 than 100 Indians squatting on Alea-
~ traz Island in sari Fr&ocisco Bay.
! offered this comment on the con-1 dition of the island prison: .. When
~ you see most of ,the reservations in
1 this country, Alcatraz•looks pretty ! good."
4 •
~ 4·
1 When a Citizen b1"ought a com-
plaint._to the dq,i council'• health
com.mitt.et in Ladtitoood, Eng·
land, afttr purchasing a "moul·
dtl cream eakt," Derek Stanton
Utt tht ~eting. Stanton, Chait·
man of tht committee, later ad·
mittf!d M tOOI the shoplu~r
tD"ho sold the cake. -
Lodge's response followed President defense" only to be hurled back by fire
Nilon's statement on May 14 that. the from undamaged tani.s.
United 'State& had "no intention of Im-The attack inflicted wi!at the! milijary
posing any forn\ of government upon the orrtdal described:u "moilerate" daiyage
people of South Vietnam, nor will we be • -meaning it was serious ·eooup to ham·
party to such coercion." per the camp's d~Er.Jse.
Nison had held out for a "government
in South , Vietnam that reeul.11 fl'CJnt the
free chol<e of the South Vietnamese -ple themselves" in free elecUons:, rather
than a coalition government whose com-
posil),on WBll negoUated with the Com·
muntsts.
The apparent shift In the American
nMition came-after two diys ol an ln-:ntect pijblic deliot< betweea Lodge ud
chief Hanoi negotlaior Xuan Thuy, both
of whom In ataltments to newsmen gave
confticthw ICICOl81 oC whit hu hap-
peoed In the secrel negotlat!Gna.
Xuan 'Ilnly touched oil the cleblte by
charging In an int>rvlew. with an
American "~apaper (the New York
'''nm<s) a.al Lodge bad nfll!ed l<>dlscu"
••general questions'' in the secret talks,
and bad insisted that the only subject of ·
the . private talks be the mutual
t • wllhdtliwal proposal of the United States.
· Lodge made an angry nbuttol · !o
Thuy'a cbarJet, claiming that the Haitol
negoliitor had deliberately ·.made falie ·
statements about the American poatUon.
Rights Suit Set'
Against Mitchell
WASHINGTON CUPn - A civil rlg)its
legal group llllllOUllCe4 todl!y H bad
pr<pored a federal sulf charging that At-
. tomey General Jolm N. Mllcbell had
"coospired" with local officials to delay
school desegrqatlon in the Sooth.
The organizalton, the Wphlngton
ruearcli project said ~;a1tomey1 W.0!4
,..k a declaralory· judgment that· !dt·
chell Is acting ijlegally in falling lo de-
mand faster desegregation actlQR tn 16
school diltrlets ln ~el. Southern stalls.
The siii1 charges tllat Mitchell ind
other Justl .. Department offtclals hive
''C>JNplred with local odtoOI olllclals and
~r federal ' and It.ate ofndals"' to '
deprive Negro scbdol' ·Children in the
Sooth of their ""'"'"'-' rlghta.
Divorce Bill .. ~f or l ·taly
SAIGON CAP) ~ The Sooth Viet·
namese government bu opened .a yawn-
ing credibllity gap by its statemenr dis~
coooUng American culpability, 1-D .the
mass killing ol clviliarµi . IroniCall:Y1, it is
the Americans here who seem most
diif.urbed. · ·
An American lieutenant. William · L •
Calley Jr.,, faee1 a court.martial on a
charge of murder , in the deaUis ·of ·J09
South Vietnamese at My Lai 'in · 1968.
Despite this, Saigon's t;l\!f""'! Ministry
has . closed Ila own inYestigation ·after
saying such chai-gea..are !'completely in-
accurate." . . '
"As far as the loMment is con-
cerned lhe case is cloeed," a spokestnan .
said today, brushing aside co'ntinubg
American loqulries and a series: of detail-
ed statements by ex-Gls in the United
State telling ol the kllli!'I'· ' ~ U.s: 0Ulciala1weft, !llaking no public
comment on the: discrepancy between the
atUtudes of the United States and South
Vlebam. P,r)vately ~ in the Americ~n
.community' here-."1t wringing llietr
-haiids over the Soi.Jul Vietnamese state.
ment Issued Wt weekepd.
Communbt. proPag_aric;Jtsts have rushed
in to ' accuse the South Vietnamese of
being American pupr>ets; .
ir:-.i------a
~ .
( \Vhen Pat 1..ynch and Mark Dr•~ Passes Parliament Test
South.Vietnamese officials 8Slert there
ls no real problem and the iaSue is very
elmple. ·They have examined reports' of
the incident EJd written it off as "a fact
of war." \Vhll• adml~g that about 20
civillam were killed, they attribute it to
_ an "0pef8uoDal accident" invol\ling ·air
strikes ~aild artilleey · al)d not to ·any
deliberate wiping o;ut of civilians.
Tbe .area ·of .My 4af 'was heavily· in-
fested , by the Viet pong,' these 9fficiaJs
say, ,and U\'e .mm~ ac~o.n whJ~ took ( er decided to f o r m a marketing r and communications .. counseting ' _,., · UP ) A bill to lnlroduct ~ !inn In Atlanta, they talked a.... .~ ( I -.
: aid Merrill and S•muel Pierce into ~1vm:ce in ~an Catholic Italy passed
\ i'oinina them and named their cou:r ill first,~ Jn parliament itodp.y only '' ~ : d boUrt: after Pope.Paul VI Intervened on ~ pany: M~.rrill , Lynch, Fenner an. the 'question to urge the bill's deieat.
, Draper. O~r roster of p~rtn!,rs 1s ·Italy now doll nOt permtt. .divorce.
; complete with one exception, the The Chamber of tJepuUes rejected by a ~ attractive MiS5 Lynch said with a vote of m to 290 a motion by the govern· ·f straight f8ce wh~n she announced ing Chriatian Democratic Party, Itself
' the new partnership. "The task predominanUy Catholic, to 1lhrow out the
~ now is to recruit a talented and divorce bill -
; well-financed individual in the ad-Tbe vote cleared~ way for the cham-
• vertising end public relations field ber to begin votin8; on each article of the i wbos-e surname is Fenner." . blll with the final ballot on the entire bill
' ' . . .. scheduled for Saturday. The blll must •
-"' 1o the -w11m u probably U S R . will be Ued up for mooth•. , """" USS18ll ... -Earner today Pope Paul indirectly call-
ed for u.e bill'' defeat by teutnc hi•. Mis' . n· T. lk.
, weekly general •1'di'"<e at. the · ViUca~ : S ·e .a S ·
be wants the family to be "veqerated~ ..
honored, defended even by.civi\Ji~ and J' F . th D · also ltolian law.." . ,• n our . ay
As the Chamber vated, a CJ'Owd of ' ' ·
divorce suiJPorters gathered ·outsldf HELSINKf, Finlarid (AP ) -U.S. and
parUament ln • driule cai1r:vfN &Jgna ' Soviet iiegottator1 miud business with
which said: '"Deputies;JilvorCe HVOOates entertalriment today in their fourth secret
are watchlna.you!'' " meetblk since startin& missile-cur~ ~!ks
lit dlys ago. '
1 Some Snow Due for H.oliday The ·tr.s. clelegitloh, · ui'lder Ambassador
Gerard C. Smlth, talked business with
Scrriet envoys at the Soviet Emba~ for
I'll hours, thm stayed ori for a·tWo-bour
lunch.
. The diplomats agreed to meet again
Friday. But beyond that announcement.
the news blackdut on the progress of the
falls that hal prevailed since' they began Nort;hern MinMsota Records 1 Bdo'w Zero 'Mark
' ... lllill followed by both !Ide!.
1 In addition to the social cordiality from l'eMJN!l'•ttcres todaf's ·lunch and a sumptuous dinner
.
place came b 'tht·wake of the Tet Of-
fensive, largest enemy push of the ~ar ..
· Over the years, the South Vietnamese
have Ieatned to live with war and-suf-
fering and the massacre reports are seen
by many In the context ol events which
have become commonplace.
Opposition Politician!, u!ually eager to
jump on President Nguyen Van Thieu's
gover:imettt, have so far taken· the killing
·reports w10t:·re1ative calm:
One parliamentary deputy, Tran Ngoc.
Chau, has sugcested • 'joint investigation
by the South'Vietnamesc and America~ .
But he d1d not press the point Bod added:
"Things like this happen in every war
and people should know the truth about
·them:"
t .... • ~ ••
Stevehson Gets
Democrats' Nod
For lllionis .Seat
. CHICAGO (AP) -·Adlai E. Stevenson 1111, A maverick Den:iocrat' who had
been in Mayor Richard J. Daley's freeier
for nearlf two years, has been picked by
the party hierarchy lo run for the l/.S.
Senate in 1970.
SteveM011, 38, the State treasurer and
his party's top ballot attraction In 1964
and 1986, wilJ probably face Sen. Ralph T.
Smith (R~lll.), who was appointed l,n
·September to the seat held by the late
Sen. Everett M. Dirksen.
The slatem'°kers -8CI top Democrat!
-chose Stevenson over six other Senate
hopeftlls after Daley introduced him
personally arid led the chorus welcoming
blm back to tflc fold .
... D~ley told the slatemakers that
Stevenson had all the ·qualities of
stat'esman'ship exhibited by his father,
the late U.S. ambassador to the ·u nited
Nations who unsuccessfully carried the
Democratic baMer against Gen. Dwight
D. Eisenhower In the 1V52 and 1956
presidential races.
It was only 21 months ago, February
1968, that Daley and many of the same
slatemakers turned their backs on
Stevenson's bid to run for governor. He
refused. thien to pledge loyalty to the
Johnson admlnlstraijon's poli~y in Vl et-
riam and further irked the party brain
trust b¥ blunUy asserting he was the
strongest candidate for governor.
Daley's thaw began Sept 7 when the
mayor atte.nc¥d a picnJC at Stevenson's
farm In Libertyville, a northwestern
Suburb of Chicago.
. Daley saJd then the Democratic party
would have. 0 room for everyone."
. ..
~hsP~ge ·
Key Fi~es~
QubcekR~~e
"': .I~
PRAGU1! (UPIJ -· Tiie :Clochollonk ~~! n.:.... -C!ldla llbeial'...,_. ~-Dr: oea.m. wbole"!eConomic reforms under. the· Ala•
inder Dubcek regime angeted ~
and broUght Kremlin cbarl.. be· .....
~~the @Ulltry toward ca~
" A report by Prague radio said •G •new
ll)Ombers """' clJoaen, bringlog u.I total
mombershlp. baclt lo ·200, ·an· :ladlcatlon
that 62 lilitrals ·or nearly ·ooe-lhlnl ·of the
members bad been ~.
Others.in llddllloti lo Sill,l\'bO ~re 11r<4
lllcluded CestmJr. Clsat, . a promlnmt
member ol the aoslAld Illltioet regime.
ousted Ciech culture minister Mirolln.
Galuska ; Marie Mlkov0: OUlled refonnr.
Jood .Siilrtovaky'a cle!lllI· Jn.j!Wfoderal
Mrllimenl lqwer '~ imd ·~!;'"ii SJmoo. former bead of il.e Prague·Cilm·
lllUllisl party committee.
Alla. Milan Hl\ei}I; fonner rector 'Gf° the
Communist party 'hi&b 'IChool > Olio Wichtetlie of the Academy of ·Sctencea
and Eduard Goldstuecker. · . -
Sik was the father of the econcmlc
reforms instituted in Czechoslovakia dur-
ing the reforni period under DiJbcek.
They were sevf:rely crillCized by the
Soviets·as·a return towards capitalism:.
Prague radio said Evzen Erban,
chairman of the Czechoslovak naUonal
front. Communist party~trolled 'um·
breJla. of political 13:rga'nizai.ions, was
elected to parliament to replace Cisar.
. Cisar bad ~ ousteci rrOm th< <;om-
muriist party sectttaria.t. Sept. 1, 1111 .. un-
der Soviet preswre but. remained a mem-
ber of parliament until the PUfle an-
nounced lodaY. In his letter of raic-
· uon, he said be bad aiw4ys.actec1 ·•'wfPI
good inlenlioos" although zntslakes had
unfavorably affected the p8rUament'•
work:while be was in ofHce. 1 •
Informed sources said Cisar-was.likely
to be named ambassador' to Belg\~
' SANT A WRONG GUY
FOR PAY TALKS
EUGENE, Ore.. (UPI) -Teachen and
sc.hool board meinbers ,at Fem Ridge
. near here are . having trkible finding · a
date for a meeting on salary negotj.atioos.
nus w.~k ... li _was . deci_ded · bqth sides
could pl loplher Dec. IS, but the board
d~ided aeainst the date.
'Bill , Bartels, district S;PO!lesmin on
salary matters, is planning lo play Santa
ci.us at a school Wol?'&m earlier that
evenlug. Board membeb f~lt he might be
.1n·ttie wrong mood.
..........
Andlor•M -.-
A"Mhl "' ·-
"': "'; ~~ hosted ror the negotiators by the oi&y of.
Hellinkl Tu..day nl&h~ the-~
:. · : for the ruclear ems contrQI' ~
., 0 .ti wu aweet.ened."7 disarmamem ~l.9P
men\s. e•hm. ~ ~ ~: ,; :' , , '!he Sovle~M dllepta •11 · •• ,.dllllrr s .
Lied for. Life . .
• .
'
llMl1rtt ..... ......
-8toWM't111!,t . ..... ..£~· '-· ... ,._ ......
~·lr!Mo~ '°" WWtll
1S 6' . .ot
=~
Semenov. ~Y"X-f"o, ... -: •• :.~"'r"· • ' .. lo"• ' .. • .~. -r • •
I . . . .~.J • • ._,• .. ~:
Stepdad H~lds ~.ids . at G'unpo~nt . . .
.n 2J .. " .... TI <l .. ~
, ~diay R¢aay ,' TORflANCE: (APl .c:.TIJ!)!!lll ~
Mi• ~ iso't "'"'I she lied lo.blr lllep-
fattW. Her 16-year-old ~ 1111 her ·
"falsehoods saved both yCllJnllWI' Uva.
kept things inim reaching a .paak."
The chlldr<n aald the ten'o< ended
wheo '8berlfl'1 Sgt. JIUlla Sobllkl, 27,
aurptloed Price, •• ·and dilarmtd lllm. .. .. .. ,, .. . .... .... ,, ,, ,lt
. a " 7a SJ ...... ....
.. 61 •
' " . ;! : 1' .~
6' 21 .II
" " ' -• 11 ,, ...
ll ~ · a n '1t •1 .. " . .. ........ -
J6 " .. ,
i t • "' ...... ...
FOr F-ir~T Snow .
NEW ·YORK (AP) -"Even ll It's: 3
o'clock In .!hi morning, a1jc( rm •leePf!ig,
I want to be peraona11j' biformed wfien
the first snowflake falls."
1'1.at's a new standing order from
llayi!r John ~-Lindsay. _ ..
"I bad to Ile to h.bJl," the .. ~ •
bl~ girl salil Jal.et In tdlinc -..
• ill' s Officers lha~ the stepf•ther, Marcua
)'rlc<, held her lild Rick •I "'""81t for m houn early TUesday in lhttr Torrance
home.
She said she told Price, "PlD don't
shoot me. I lov& you and want to Ny with you," aft'r Price had fired five $pt
just above her head and w11 holdin& a
gun at her temple. ' .. -
Polltlcal1y ell'Jba.rrassed last winter
when a heavy snowstorm got ahead ql
thtpl-. the mayor checked Tuesday on.
the *" __,_ncy program set tor thJs eai ,. .• "T".,•-•· •• 1 "She 1etuaJt, ·~d save our llvu about
y .Vier he!lli!I aO tbe ~tana !!\ll,ll 'Sahili· thN!e llmO!," RI~ told the officer~
lion Departalent olficlall, ~ milde ·11 "She would lobk up •t ti!m Ind .NY
clear that he w1rited to be ~rsonaUv in-sometblga. and he would b e c·p m e auded In lhi w lfwaMW\j lfsleiri~ ·~ f...W-i!OO and Pit Ille Ill" down. She . '
~ oaid ·Pri19 earlier hod ~ '.""'1 crlttcally '""'nded Pbilip
SIJi!poon, II, durinl I bilW ,..,....,. in
.. Cc8ca :..-. ' • ''"'° '<lincva said """° !Mn loolc lhe )'OUlllller! ~ his fo/mtr 'f!ll<, Nab, 'trn';her borrle. ..... · t -
· 1n ·the cour• of a drhe, Gfftcerl~ the chDdren's mother wu ordered a
liqlll!I' "11\0lio lo buy ..... beer.
•lerled ~ clerk and -pod llOm ce
when the family arrived bad at blr <>
i lo!J apottmem ~ _J
Pl'lct' was booll;ed. for lnvt1Ugauu; of . w~ with Intent to commit murder, of
lildnaj)lng•m .,.~.of a llllttPr
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To -Linden?
SPECIAL.
PASKO'.S
INTIRNA noNAL REST AVBNT
UH$, c-1 Hwy • ..._. llN<h
Por R"°"lllono '; , , 497·1800
(Jllll ACl'OR From Surf .. Santi Hotel)
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Extension 1QJ&1IE
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Forecast ,
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WI 11,..1 QAllCI: .
Willlllll II Cl-rcJ."'-
3133-n -·lfll.:12'15
--LA. CMC'GaTfti
lftd ......... , ·--1tot
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OAJl~ '!LOT I
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ly Phll lnterlancll £a~~alty
ks Ouf.·.of·:Siudio
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· .CHRtSJlAN SOENCE . CHURCHES
invite you lo their
THANKSGIVING 'SERVICE
: . 1 /,
·J;hl.1F$day, N~v:em~r 27, 'M a .. m.* ... , '
COIN M..,_Fi"t Church of Chris t; Sci•nti1t, 2100
Mes• V.erd• Dr., Coria M•••
.., ' .~.,.:... .. . ,,
ltl:YOO, ttlJO,H8clRHOO-~... .
Wilshire-Gra;~rcy,.Qffece ot. Coq,st ·& .Southern, Federal
Savings, w~re 'Yo.~/~'q.cco'flnt is · ··:, . :· . ... . . . .
SAFE • CONYENIE .. I • ~~~~~~·~· . _
Ma.l.a1 ,ftuc1ua11on1 .ion·1 worry eo..1 ~net Soulhom .... ,. "fllGttHT PREVAll,!NG RAJ•· ~::::~~~..::i ~~~~ ':o.':.. s oo· · " ·1 .. ·s" 13·~ I s· 3. a"
ForMftoat euu..,.,..of. v.e btnefitl It the outstanding • • ·• •
fi....,ifl a1Nngth -!bijtlacl ttlrough _Ille -by Ille DJ&... ""'"'" 0.Ti• • 001.,0UNDIO .. ,.. , ·,...,. .W. ~ ol Cciaal Md,-m.,,._... Savlngo... · -· · · ...
INMllAllCE TO $l'S.•11n11111cu ciYil Ul llLUDI DIVIDENDSi01DATE OF_ wmtDRAWAL
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• DAD;y PD.eT EDITO!f,U PAGE
Two-way Educati~n
A rldH!q Jll'llT8lll to pi8c. \'Olmlller Y"lllll·
1ten, tuebel'I and olbel'I In Lquna lleecll police cars
will be• two-woy -I~-.
Jolul Q .. Publlc e-roll)' doll DOI Ulldontantl pollce
work. Too ollml blJ' lmprullal!I of poUce· oro formed
wblle on lhe wrone ond of o tnfllc llctol or from •
TV thriller.
The ir111~ I a w enlorc8menl aptclrum I h a t
ranges froJll ~um to death muat be ..... lo be under·
stooil.
It will be educotloool for tile pu1en1en to 1ae ait-
uaUons that call for inllaDI llOlamon-llko declalons
which are not on\Y fair and &uod public rel&Uom but
that will stand the lest of a courtroom.
It will be eooe1 for= too. From tholr )llllsellllers they can learn 'the d • viewpoint lrom~ queatHms,
commentary and dlalop. .
Pollet have worked out the proaram cartfully with
school omclals to mlnlmlie the dail&er and mulm!Ze
the educaUon.
Although new lo ~. the proctam hu worked
successfully In other coinmunltt ... 11.Jhould work well
here.
Our Tortured' Families
Three-yeilr-oid Todd Haruon of El Toro has never
met his father, Marine pilot Capl Stei>ben H.....,. A
few months alter Todd wu bom, hla !athet'a halicop-
ter was al.lot down over North V1Mnamese terrltor)'.
Since then -no word.
' TOdd'• molbtr Is sure her husband waa Wep pm.
oner. She recoghlzecl blm In a North V111tnam11a'prapa-.
ganda picture. Bat olllclally he must be llate4 as." .....
Ing to acUon" beca11H the North Vlelnamese do DOI re-
leaae the namH~tllonars. Nor do they perDlil lllom •
to communicate their famlli11.
To date, ooly ahonl'400. Of an eallmalad lli300 Amer-icana believed to be !Wd In prison CllllJlll aw been
positively idenWled. The famDlu of the other men re-
main In a stranee lilajlo, not knowtn( u llley are alive or deed.
This is a peculiarly refined fonn of torture, appar-ently aimed at demoralizing both the men and lllolr
~es. '
The North Vietnamese signed the Geneva Conven-
tion which sets forth simple, human regulations for doal-
lng with captives taken 1n any armed conflict.
These Include identification of prisoners, openln1 of
the camps lo a llj!U!ral inspection aeency, such U the
Red Cross, and permlsslon lo communicate with fomi· lies. All have been totally dlaregarded .
Of!lcial attempts having failed, wives of some pris-
oners have gooe to Paris lo saek direct contact with
the Vietnamue peace delegation. 'J'lley were promised
that "an lnve~" Would be ~de. Nothlnf. b a s
been forthcoming. Mrs. Hanson plans to try llils ap-
proech herself next month. ,
With other families, she is spearheadlnll a ,drive'to
focus attention on' thla tragic situation. If olflclal a n d
unofficial protests are loud enough, perhaps Hanoi will
hear and heed, as it does anti-war protem.
• ' Regardless of one's position on the Vietnam conflict.
this is a humanitarian c a u s e that should touch all hearts.
s
·Our Frantic Dear
Gloomy
Gm:
Truteu Stereot9pe Youth-by What Right~ ..
~ursuit of
f fwasure
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a...-AtLarp: ~.;,;;-polrlllil .i ;,i.,lllft ii juJt u Iran· ~oa.r punuit of 1aln -IO tbat When
. run llO"OIS an acquaintance who looU . it . . possible to tell if h< , lS Im
. 1 vacation. • :or hu j\llt bad one.
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~ A ps)'cbolotx:al truth that b surpri!-
~ ignor<d by moot_. ii Iba!,..... ·:tOO'who ii _1, to llvo you advice ~ pveo,.. _... ·Mvlce lllln
~ who is reluctant to .ll•e it.
~ . . .
~, lf we don't recrull • hi&t* Fide o! ~~ for Congreu -men 1'ho are llll ~tive tothe noedl of~ lntereots, ~•.~ more senalilve to publk: interest -
' it doem't much matt.er bow we
jljtlilal< ar demOOoltate, ucepl II I fvllle f:FU111 ~ letUnj. off. !rte.•!"· • ( (Speaking of Congress, if illd&a di ..
~· quality themselves from ruling in a cut ~: whttt they have bad a prior ,intereat,
; 'Why shouldn't Congr<lllDln bt binned
; 11'11111 voting Oil bllb tbal directly auect r their financial boMiinp?> .. .. . . ' . ! Ask the average American to Hfimte
t the amount of foreien -non-milltuy -
• aid the U.S. is providln1 this year, and he
will overesllmate by anywblre from 100
•
11 was pad of tbe La«un• ochOol
boon! to poinl out tbe inadequal•
dly, libra'J. How la Ibo b oar d colDlne wlUl tbe bllh IChool u.
brary? lm't the school short 1ev·
tral tbousand boob!
-J.B.
"".....,. .................... ..
Ill I .., ... mf -••z-. s..11
........... ......, ... Dlltr ,. ...
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Tbt ...... of tbe prolwlonal
tziveler ii Ulll h< ii always looldllt for a
~ lbDNpMre in • hotel, and fc:r
hotel oervlce at home. • • •
Why ia it that a woman with a decent '
fliure CID wear Levis and a maa 's shlrt. with at1 attractive ef'f9ct. where.as a man
in any kind of !•male 1erb lllllll eilhor
ridiculous or Hlolnt? • • •
Advlce to parenll: If you want your
sacriflctl to be apprecilted, t a k e up
baseball. • • •
LaWI tbemlelm are tbe l"'llest br..a.rs of ..avenliollal Immorality -
mllllou of dlvorcee1 are in'IOlved ln ir·
resular relatms wltb men limply
~ l'llllmJinl wW lon:e !hem to
rellPqulah lllelr allmooy. • • • If yoo about in an 8flUIDtnt, it makes
y«i .....,, .Von -you ate right.
.. , Bob HQpe's Enjoyment
i When a man bu earned 110 many
; mlllloiis tbal other i>eoPle can only ""'" ; at their nwnber, ht someUmes turns to
! simple pleuures for enjoyment.
! Bob Hope, one of the wealthiest en.-
: tertainen in history, sets a tkk out ot
: the fact th1t he bu a "pntty bla:"'
~bedroom.
: "l like to putt in it while I'm lhlnkin&
~ and working," he explained.
; Born Leslie Townes Hope in England,
• llob ClllllO to tbil counlry at tbe .... of 4
: amt has emersecf 11 one of Ml molt laW.
-ea. and succeuful immigrants.
At 86, Hope, whole latdt television
special. "Roberta," WU aired OvtT the
NBC netwcrt Thm'lday eftnlna:, Nov. '• • ;, cunoaUy '11joyillt tbe blPUI rallqa
: of bi~ carter and teepa u bu.sy a1 evu.
•
<;: BOB, THEN A young vaudeville com-
; ed.lan, made his fil'1t bic hlt on Bro.dway
: ir. "Roberta" wben the musical Orst •I>' ! peared there in im.
'1J'd like to see tt llart a revlvtl of 1 otht.r big shows of that period,'' he
• remarked.
; Looking back at hi! fabulous naord -f and at his present bank ICCOUbt -llllllY
I peoplo wOIMler why Bob keeps up his
•; ftanllc performing -· ~ Ft>! in the last 0: )'tan he bM-
. Tr1vel"1 ala mllllim mllet. ~ A~ lo five -dway llllowa, ~ more thin • flbnl, m ttlevWon lbow1 ! aod 1,lt5 rldlo shows. ~
~ GIVEN llUNllU!D8 of -I sh6ws
,_ In bolpltala, oo collail cam-, 111111 at
} millt.try tenk:e CIJ'Dll'.
: Ralled mWioN: of doUars for charitable $ and phll+Jl+uplc w
~ Reat,t..i --......... -i'llolll 1U111 -'l , INI R J II ~ bonorll1 .... ...., ...... ~ 11u1tt···n .. llab~""' -:. ~ malntllal • 117 .. ,..., ; "Wlll'id!!I .... ,_,_,. __
$ In lhape ml ,_ adrenallo pmnplilt,"
~he Aki ... ._ ... u I'm Melthy, nodUr l wW ever Ulp mt fJvm ~
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"If I ever qu.J.t, fd fret m)iself out of
COl!dition. Btaides, I ret more tun out of
1cblenment tban I do out of anything
el.le m We.''
-STJU. WORD as colllCienllCIUOly
at every new production as if it wtre his
fint Clbe, but he 1111 be bu slowed up on
hi1 aoclal ru. linco sulftrln& ao atlack o[
bilh -..-.re a !ew yoan qo, "I play &Oli as much as I CID and try
to get ln an hour'• nap every day," he
said.
AJked whit deleala moot people In
America life todoy, Bob ,,_. aod
raplled:
'~villon. II hss replaced can·
ttn1Uon, amblllon llld IOOd Ume1. J>eo.
pie r.1 &luck in hon! of tbe oet, laiten
their seat belts, and watch e~.
lt11 101D1 i.btt. I want to ttU you. '
HEU AU BOB'S lilies: "Mldallbt. becallle I'm a ni&ht crawler
-""""' a1-In ~ of!lce at nllllt -
limb In -lluct, lemon pie ancl
---paslel eolon-""'· foOI· boll. bonball ud lllblni rw 111mon -
DtClll _. lllUllc alid -lor novels
-c:olloctlnl -llld old !beater
----kinda of people -lunlillC • Ibo llPt ol ... mory bf lalklnR
wllll l'VI who nmtmber oJd.tlmt ac11."
l!ere-Ml.dllllbt:
"INllMI'" --· jlloJ llot mo -....... -... ·foti--...... eww t rs -lbe amtU el wire bmzt.
lq 11111 1111 -of air --. -
---lboy'n like drlnl:lng 1111 fl. dpnlla lllblar -loud, ....... -""° -._...by ysllln1." u be wort to -· hia own epUapil, Bob .. ,. It would bo IN"
''OM-..plluel"
Disloyalty Protected, hut Not Hair
To the Editor:
I read with considerable dismay the ae~
counl of an Or1D1e County hilh lldlool
•ludenl who openly rofused to Plods• hia
allegiance to the flag or to this country
due ln pirt to the fact that be had no con·
lrol over hia being born here.
This philosophy seems prevalent in the
youthful society of today, which u1sts on
the ba~s lhal Ibey have been provlde<I
with all the material wants and are
lbtreby driven by motivaUon in search of
"something else," and in IO dotnc seat
any and aU meam to achieve a mental
release from the world of reality. Hence
the rampant use of drugs, pills, and other
vehicles of "escape" •
THE REAL BURR Wider my aaddle
concerning thia hijh achoo! )'OOtb Is tb1t I
am helping pay for the education to
which he is "entitled" in this cw.itry.
And I'm doing it while, at the same Ume,
my son, who has fun respect for the nag,
thls country, and the authority of those
who govern it, Is denied the ~
to. volunlarlly attend school because ol. 11
heinous social atrocity -his hair ii too
Jone.
What rationalization permits a n
ovtnealous group or lhtse IChool
trustees to deny an educatioa to 1ny
young man merely because they choose
to lle1'0type blm wltboot rqsrd to his
1blllty as a rtudent or h11 conduct u .a
resPonsible, respectful citizen?
OPEN DEFIANCE of our country's
principles of pvernment ls protected by
tbe righl ol free speech. IJn't it UJ\•
fortunate it couldn't be foreseen thlt the
Bill of Rights needed to include a clause
providi:ig (or the rigbl to grow lont! boir
in order that a young man mJght be
allowed the same educational OP"
portunilies as one who speaks out acalnst
the form of government-which entWes
hlm to education at Its expen&e.
lt ls also interesting to ~ that after
excluding the long-haired "dlaldenta"
and pote.1Ual radicals, such a thine as an
underground newspaper could be fOlte:rtd
in sucli. a puritanical atmosphere.
After noting the percen~ of my tax
bill which is applled to ecfucatiooal tt-
quJrements, I too 1m '~Siddle Sore".
GORDON J. SANFORD
Contlllelllb R..-it
To the Editor:
On Friday, November 21, the Untversf.
ly of Caillomia lloard of Reaenls voted
to purchase 200 a=s of manh1andl !nm
the trvtne Company for the cnatlca of 1
wlldll!e preaerve on the UC Irvine cam. pus.
A university spokesman .said this
marsh 13 cbaracteriud u a major ''Way
ltalJoa• !or mterat«y blnla alonr tho
Pactnc Coul n b alac conaldered to Ile
extremely valuable by natural lcllnt.lats
for the study ~ fresh water Ufti!
I '1111NK THE llqenls should Ile com-
mended lot IUCb a fint act. Mere Is ID
Dear Georcie :
1 bave been ~ tbe Utr<IM
course 10U -ud Jootad of ,.~
U,,. stroopr I feel -tboa I did. Could II bt tbot I'm doJnr tbe
et.erclles wrona?
C.T. Dear C.T.:
Nope, you're not wroni -J •tnt
you the wrong set of umt.es by
mllt.akt. I can't bnlline whert I
got abold of ~ tgypllan Air
Force exercises.
Dear George:
Why do other advice columnists
run such loni problema in their col-
Lcttcn from rtadfr1 are welcome.
NormaJJr torittrs 1houJd conve11 thti1'
mtu4011 in 300 w6rda or less. Tht
rlO"t to co-ndtme lctwr1 to fit space or eliminate Ube! it rtsm>td. All let·
trr1 muat include signature and mail··
ing addre11, but name• may be vftlt-
hel4 on requ.rt if nifflcmtt rtOIO'/l.
ii apparent
eiample of a group of people (with
money and power) tUiDC collective ae·
tion to reatore the balloce in nature which man ii ulUmately destroying.
1 do not feel kindly to the UC Ro1enls,
eapeclally after the recent dismlual ol
Angela Davis, but yw have to consider
lhls act to their rtpUtaUon on the whole.
DAVID OLIVER
Smoke SC!reen
To the Editor: ,
After n1dlng Callfornla Edlton's
clever pleo In the DAILY PILOT, there
are amments that should be m•de coo-
csnlng facta Ibey coavlSl!enliy neglected
to menUoa.
Thay NY Ibey ICCOWll foe only one per-
cent of tbe total air pollulallls in Los
Anj:ela, which ls posalbly true, .but it's
lll:e llY1na IDUer'1 monoxide chamber•
conlribiillil oaly -pen:enl of the air
pollutaols In Germany. The Point "· HtUer's polluUon wu OONCENTRATED!
Edbon's smote iln't as de1dly but
!IOlnttlmea nearly 11 cmcentrated!
FOR THOSE OP' U1 who Jive between
!be pluta In Hunllqton Besch and Seal
Belch we know where lhll concentratiOn
somttbne1 e1llta. We've heard their ra·
Um1UuUona about high stacks, ,prevail·
Ins winds, "tWMtlae eombustlrm pro-CtlMS," etc: but we've had to leave our
home eeveraJ times to 1et.a frtsh breath.
We've observed amoke belching from
the st.cb at Seal , BHch and settling
back to the lfOUnd to envelop the· nearby
IA!imn World , paulbly shortening many
Hniot cltlltns' Uv11.
ONCE 'lllllLS fl'11C, we traced a
brown cloud "''-Anahaim back to the smokestacks it illllillnct<>n Beach.
City altorneys should bt finding l""'llds
for legal suit..
Then .,. limes !bat winds dlspene !be
smoke to blanbt the-entire basin wtth a
pinkish-brown cloud. Their meager one
percent. Take a loot 1t their smote when
they're burning oil and compare ii to tbe •
cokr oC tbe over-all smoe. It ~ be
dWlcult to do this liDce thl1 ari Clerir
enough to do -of lbolr oil bumin( at nl&ht. •
WHAT TIRY llAY a11out -Is lnie
and dlslultlal <JGOd tuck, aw L<arl, bul
11111111 llld tbe Pl'Obitms In )'OUr COi·
umn art IO brltf?
Curious
Dear CUr1ou:
111.., of n11 clltnis m repeal
eustomer1 wtio l\ave tradtd with
Georje's Advice System for years.
You, too, can hive short problems:
Send lw Glorp'1 Speed Worrying
Coune.
CONP'IDENTIAL TO TOYOTA:
Aa neitty u I can dct.tnnlne, you
c1n't Ille beolUM somebody has
• .-llllle car on the marktt.
But, re1lly, lan't lhlt just like tbe
Genllanl!
I have never known autos to ·emit a
pi.nkish·brown smoke.
Could the alternatives mentioned by
Edison put them in a "poor investment
interest" polition? l 'm sure everyone is
awart that when industry has to choose
between investment Interest and public
health, investment interest wins out -as;
the tobacco and automoUve industry
ha ve both proven recenUy. Only publJc
pressure can change this.
THEY SAY "no one wants to try to live
without electricity." Personally, 1 would
prefer rationing until .Quc!Ur planta
become operational than to see any more
stack& erected in this area to beJp brown
our skies and rush us cbaoUcall)' down
the saine palll of the auto indualry -
towsrd asphyslaUon and final mloction.
What's worse, an electrical blackout or
an envJronmental blackout?
We've allowed ourselves to be sub-
jected lo a literal smoke screen; let's not
be taken in by their figurative one.
BOB STEWART
Three a .. 1e T11pe1
To the Editor:
The top managers of all the companies
that produce electrical power tell us elec·
trical power plants mus~ have large
quanttues of water ':lear at hand. ln the
Los An1eles basin this means that any
new power plants must be built near tbe
ocean. Now ltt us examine wby the water
is needed.
To ge:oer1te ~lectrical power water ls
heated in a bOiler until it is a very hot
stum at hicb pressure. The fuel used to
do the beaUng can be anything from. coal
to atomic power. The steam is the.1
heated lo a superheated condition and,
according to my 1949 eclltion of Marks'
Handbook, the steam . wUl reach a
pressure of about l ,bl pounds per square
inch (l,lllO psi) and a temperature of
about 1,000 d~grees Fahrenheit.
THE SUPERHEATED steam Is then
dlttcted through a muJUstage steam
turbine which converts the potential
energy of · the steam into rotaUonal
energy that is used to gei:ierate elec-
trictlf. AJ tbe sleam goa tbrough each
stage of the steam turbine the preuure
and tempet1tw'e of lhe steam decreases
WIUI the steam reaches the condeMer.
Let us say that U we started out with a pressure of 1,800 psi and we eDdtd up the
a pressure of O psi thtn we would have
extracted all tbe potenUal ...,gy from
the steam.
THE CONDENSER la jusl a coot.aintt
where the spent steam cornea In contact
W\th many tubes lbat bave water running
tbniqll I be m. Wbeil .the lleam h 111
the tube the water nmning in the tube
ablorbs heat from the 1team which then
becomes water. Since lteam takes up a
lot c:Jl space as compal'f!d to waler it is
'euy to realize that the pressure 11
Jowend as a result of condensing t h e
steem to waler. The pressure may be
reduced to less than 2 pal. However, WI
procea l'equirel LO'l'S OF WATER.
TlllRI IS NO thermodynamic I aw
tbal demands tbal tbe preuure musl bo
Quotes
Dia Pedre eeo.,, S.F. actor, OI at.et
Prt*i -"I can't change what tam and I
don't w&nt to chanp what I am. If I have
to mate a choice between belna: .a bl.a
man and a hu-man, 1'11 be a bu-man."
Ted Meore, Clarenu1at -0 The sooner
we all &et too one fact straight. tM.t d~g
abuse 1& only a rymptom of a very com·
plex social problem,, tl!e sooner the ~
aense 10luUoas &o the problem wUI end.''
less than % psi. However, there ts •n
economic law that requJres that th e
pressure must be that low. Thus:, large
,quantities of water are not necessary to
generate electricity but are· required to
produce the cheapest electricity,
Jn coitclusion; there are three basic
types of generating plants that can be
built in or near the L. A. baain : l . Fossil·
fueled plir;it which produces the cheapest
electricity and smog; 2. Fossil-fueled
plant built outside of the L.A. basln which
will produce more expensive electricity;
3. Atomic-fueJed plant built on an island
off tl'.le coast which will not produce smog
but the electricity will cost more. We the
people must tell our local electric uUllty
that it will be allowed to build only plants
two or thrie and that we will be happy to
pay the necessary rate increase.
I have oversimplified the generating of
electrical power. Someone will point out
that the conde-.iser pressure should be 2
psia. 'The a stands for absolute pressure
while 2 psi means about 17 psia.
However, J hope you will see that one can
be too precise.
HARRY B. McDONALD, JR.
Laguna Librar11
To the Editor :
Now we have the city pushing for a
library to be built oo a hillside on 1b!rd
St. that is: large enough to take up half a
city block, to serve a population of 13,000.
Jf Laguna runs true to fonn this building
will twist and crack and slide down the
hill, and we will have the firemen and the
city workers pumping water, and car·
rying out water.soaked books.
Laguna is faced with several million--
dollar projects aocl no one knows frorn
nothing how lo handle them,
We are constantly being urged by the
City Council to make QUICK decisions
and move full speed ahead. Yes, let us
open the throttle and head into disaster.
Then Laguna wilt be bankrupt along with
New York and other big cities that
eeonomists predict will be insolvent in 12
months.
Stop the city from its madness of
building a library on the hillside on
Third St. Stop it from removing the nine
lots on 111.ird St. from the tax rolls. Tax·
producing: structures should be built on
that site. The city does not need to go out
and buy land for a library.
SIGNE FISCHER
It Tell11 a Lot
To the FAlitor:
I ~Id like to tha:ilt all the chUdr.n or
Lquna who did such a splendid job of
coUec:ting money for UNICEF on
Halloween.
It was wonderful to see that they cared
about hungy children all over the world.
They coltected over $100.
This really tells 1 lot about the11t
children.
ADELE IPSEN
-----
Wednesday, Nov. 26, 11169
T1lc cdilorloI page o/ tit< Doll y
Pilot s1eks to inform ond ttim-1'14tc ,.,oo,,.s by pn'lntdng thil
tae10Jpaptr's opiniona and coni--
mtrJf4f'V on topica of mtere1t
and signtficance, bu pr-ovidt110 a fonmt /or the e.rprea1ion ,,,
, our rtodtri' opinioni, and b11
J)f"'e•ttttifto tht dion 1e t>iew-
poinU o/ informed obserVtra
and 1pokcm1111 011 topla of Ilic dau.
Ro~rl N. Weed, Publisher
•
For The
Record
Marriage
Licenses
DEA'.l'B lVO'.l'lCES
P'JNCH
~lflo.o•nt °""91 l'"lftcl!. "'' a . ot 502~ M•r1"hl, Co,_ d•I Mir. D1t1t
M de9th, Nov. 2J. SurvlvM '' 1<»1. Cll1!1n r. Finell. Df LllUM IHChl
twa tnon0dllldr1n 11\d four 1re1I·
1r1ndchlldr11n. S.rvlc:11, 'rldly, II
AM, 11111 ClltHI. )ll'O E. CGltl
Hl1ltw1y. CoroN del Mir. Tnltrr"""'·
Ptdflc: Vltw ,.,,._111 P1rt;. kltt
Mfftu1ry, 01,.......••.
IUCKS
ll-M. HkU. Alt Ill, ol ll4 flroffw.., St~ Co.11 M ...... Su""'°"'"
bv Wlfl, l!lHllOrl 1\tl1r, Mrt. Ptul
l(MllJ.,., """°"'' l lllno!s. llNlc11 will be Mid ,..,,.,, 11 AM, •1!1 lrHd-
WIY Ct..HI. lllltf'-f, P.cl!le Vlt•
M-111 P1r'k. OlrtCltd 1W lltll
lfOMlwlY Morfl•••v.
LAMON
Alt• 111:. UrMO!. AH 6', of l'Jll l!I
•-111. L1tvn1 lntl'I. 0111 Df c111111,
Nw. ''· SUr\llVtd bv wit.. ltutll/ two
"'"'• O.n11!1 1MI Ltnny, bo!ll of I.A·
"""' llH{h/ bn1t111r, L1nn1rt l1r .. 111111 14v.r1l bro!lle.,. tnd 1!1t.r1 Ill
SW9dtl'I. Gr1v11kl1 "rvl«s, Wtdntt-
dtv ,tod1r. 2 PM, El Toro Cemt1!1rv.
Sllefftr L11W"9 lltKh Mortu1ry, DI·
r1Ktor1.
McNALl.V
J.ints Pi. McN1llr. loot E. 81l"GI
Im!.. tlllboa. Diie of clt1lll. NO¥.
~~. Survl.,.., bJ '°"' Cllrl D. MtH1llt', of tti. ......,,., dl~l~r, Mr1. Jt1n
Zumw11t of HtwD«t ltad'l1 bf'o11'11f',
GHJl"M H. McHlllJ, of \,onl lffdll
l flMlon. Jtrntl °"· of Coll• ~. "rlWl te flmlll' .enlcn tot.w. W116-
ntldl¥. 11 AM, Ptelfk Vl1w CM .. 1.
lntltfl'Mftt, "•dfk View M-1•1
Ptlt. OlfKled bl' l"tclfk \llew Mflr-
tu1ry.
PONTIUS
J11M1 E. P°"llu1. AH n, of "' Yorktown, Hil~ll119ton IH<ll. Celt of
llHlll, ~ ''-SUtl'IYed lrf Wllll.
Mtr9enl1 dlWl!llltr, Mr1. Lut llt Mtl'
Dlftfl, Ml.lnlll\WtlM> llffchi 1htlf', Mr1.
Ntllle lffktl 11'111 four 1r1rwktllldrtn.
$1t'Vla1 w111 bl h91d Frid..,, I l'M,
Smtrlll Cl'llptl, lnl-tt1t, W11lmlMllt
M'"'°rltl Ptlt. F1mlll' tvn11!1 frlttlcll who wllh inal' tor1ttlbul• It
tllt Am1rlc111 Cl l!Ct t SOClt!Y. 119111111
MOl"lutrr. p1.-.etor1.
WALLACE
t11rt1trn1 II:. W1 ll1c1. 81l9'1tll 1T10th1r
of Mr1. Alntl W, H1w111otn1, Gordoll
M. W1ll1c1 1f'Mf Mtl. Cl'!rllt1n.1 V,
H1hn. Alto 111rvlm bY nlnt trtn<I· c~lldren 1n<1 two 1rtt1-1r1l'llkl'IUG,.n.
Strvlcn, l'rhltl'. f :• AM. W" Kirt: o· 11>1: He111'1tr, Ftr11t l.awn-Gltrt-
ui.. Ftrnl ~ ..... Morlv1ry.
ARBUCKLE A SON w""'un M-..,.
II'! E. 17111 SL, Colla --• BALTZ MORTVAIUJl:ll <:.r.. dd Mar OR s.Ma
Colla M.. HI M4ll • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
Jll Br .... .,, CoN Mal
uwm • DILDAY BROTHERS -.-v.oe, M__,
17tll -Blft. llnlhopo-
IU-11'11 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOIWL PAlllt
Csa1trJ1 • M.-, IMP~Drt"
Newp«t-.Colllonla -• PIZll.FAMltY
COLONIAL nnmw.
ROMS --· ... "---• "'8BD'""'rlfrl£11" MotmJAllY ._. ...........
8u Clommle GMlll • IMITllS' MORTVAllY
RT Mila Ill.
llunUnpo -~ -
-------·--·--~-
I ,,
Board Studying'
. . '
Fund Shift Pinn ' .
UNTA ANA -Cocmty
llqlll'Vllon ~ ,,,_, -t
lbq be tbt lfrit olep 10 a
revohdJonary tranaftr1' of
mor1p1e !undo lrcn ~
vault!( 10 COWllY. coffer..-
, They llhelvod, dilO\lllloo. of,
11• pr_.i -of e!imlalln& the ccui>!Y'• "dry
period" -U. Juf1-0etober
spell when nveaua !rOm tu
IOlll"Cel are not available -to
llJten to Supervioor llobert
Battin'• eyebrow-raiaJ:nc plain
fer mo1Jttnina the counQ>'s Jun months.
"Banb bold I portioll al the
CSF Team
In College
Bowl Sunday
FULLERTON -A Cal State
Fullerton team hea~ by Stln
R. Brin will square off a1alnst
Menlmack ~liege t b ls
weekend in the natkr.ially
televised "GE Collete Bowl."
Originating U~ In New York
City Saturday, the aword--
ning quiJ show can be seen by
Los Angelet ana vieilers via
vtdeotapt at 6:30 p.m'. Sunday
on KNBC (Channel <).
Brin, 21, of Malibu, ls a
senior majoring t.1 polltlcal
science. He was elected cap-
taln by his teammates, Carl F.
Macek, 18, of Anaheim;
Thnothy A. Hodson, 11, of San-
ta Ana. and Theodore Perle,
21, of Whittier.
Macek Is a freshman com-
munications major, w hi 1 e
sophomore Hodson and senior
Perle are political science ma·
jors.
Coached by Dr. Russell H.
Miller, assistant professor of
English, the four have been b
training for nearly a month.
Last week they defeated a
faculty group, 300-llO, in a
practice match.
GWC Hosts
OC Officers
Golden West Coll~te wlll ·
host the seventh Orqe Coun-
ty Se~ant's Academy for
law enforcement supervh1or1
Dec. I and 2.
Lawmen from all over the
county will participate eight
hoW's daily in the two week
s e a s i o n which covers
re1ponaibllitles and duUes of
the police supervi.lor, morale
and dJsclpline, performance
appraisal, leadenhlp principle
and the handling of com-
plalnt..!1.
The course is designed for
sergeants but ls open !or of-
ficers who will soon be pro-
mot.ed to that rank.
Applications will be received
by Derald D. Hunt, director of
the colleee'a law enforcement
program.
!Wllb "Jl414 bl' mortt11e
holden In u lmpouncl ......,t
and tbq make thl!lr annual
paymenll al county 1u,.
from that source," Battln
said. "My IUfteelloo ii that
-funds be paid over to u. more frequently as a solution
to the problem we face Jn rals-
inl ,......., from Jiiiy lo
October."
Supervbon bad called for
lcltu oo how the county might
best avoid s<>lng to area banks
'"' loans during the "dry period," Joans which have
lately betri subject to record
Interest rates.
"We'll get no objections
from UlOie who m a k e
morta:aae payment&," Battin
pointed out. ''The banks won't
pay them interest on the im-
pounded money so I don't see
why the money can't come to
the county at more frequent
intervab:."
Battin Loses
In Welfare
Branch Duel
SANTA ANA -Orange
CoLinty's WeUare Department
got Ila brr.ich office in
Westminster Tuesday but only
alter a board battle In which
Supervisor Robert Battin call-
ed for a halt to "this creepin&,
Insidious decentralhaUon of
county government."
BatUn went down 4 to I but
only after be had condemned
"county policies which are
backi ng us Into a satellite ci\llc
ce nter complex and which are
shifting the center of govern-.
ment."
His arguments will launch a
study by the county of all proJ·
ect.I deslgnued to establish
branch offices of c o u n t y
departments. In many in-
stances, Battin argued, the
public would be better served
eco .... omically, if not
physically, by ope.ration of the
required function from head
offices In Santa Ana.
Supervisor William Hirstein
stressed that the Westminster
office had been approved by.
the board "long ago" and that
the west county locaUon had
been shown to be ideal "for
the limited means of Its main
users -welfare applicants."
The county ls leasi'.1g the
14,000 square feet or an office
building at Vista Verde Drive
and Westminrter Avenue for
'4.850 per month. It has an op-
tion to purchase the ]ease in
1979 for $561,000.
"It's n-0t that J'm objecting
to this particular office," Bat-
tin sald. ''But I do feel that we
should est1bllsh a clear,
v.·orkable policy one way or
the other and either approve
this drifting away from the
civic center or condemn ll."
No date ha! been set for
renewed board dl!CUssion of
the issue.
James Beam to Lead
Orange County CofC
ANAHEIM -James Beam,
vict president of the Flrat Na·
tlooal Bank of Orange County
is the preSident-elect of the
Orange County Chamber of
Commerce.
Beam and hil fellow omcen
and dlncton will be Installed
at the Orange County Ball
Jan. 23, at the Anahelln
ConvenUon Center.
Ted Ftnsler, vice pmldent
of Boyle Engineering, Santa
Ana, will be llnl vice presi-
dent; John B. Merrell II of the
law firm of Wyatt and Mer-
rell, Westminster, wll1 be NC·
ond vice pmident; and Lloyd
ff. Sl<1cl:er, CPA partner In
charge of the Santa Ana offl<e
of Pea~ Marwick, MIU:ball
and Co., will be trwurar.
Rounding out the execuilve
committee wUI be F. R.
"Diet" Marvin, vlce pruJdent
and ,,,..,.., , Security TIUe
Insurance Company, Santa
Ana: Paul Johnston, uslttant
admlnlltrator, St. Joseph
Hoopltal, Or-; WIJI H.
Lllldsay Jr., cons u It ID g enctnetr, FuDert.on; and
Arlllur W. W-r. vice pml-
dtnt, Rolph C. Sutro· Com-pany I Oranp.
Beam, ., ii I naUve of
Oranp.
Illa llllder1radua1e oollqe
wort "" complieted at Oran,. COUt College and Cal
State Fuller!On.
lie entered the blnklftc pro-
f etalon with tbt Finl Natlonol
-al Or-Couaty In 11115 rbln1 to lllblanl trust officer
when he lell lo become a
partner In the firm al Eckhoff
1nd Beam, real e s t a l e
broke.rt, Orange.
TO LEAD CHAMBER
Orang.'• B••m
Jn 19&5, Beam rejoined the
Flrst National Bank of Orange
County as vice president.
He ii past president of the
Oranre Ch1mber of Com·
merce and put chairman of
the Orange Coonly Chamber'•
Economic Development Coun-
cil. He pesently ii trtllllln!r
and a ditec:tor of the Or1nae
County Chamber al Com-merce.
He wu tre11urer of the re-
cent Southern Calllornla Biiiy
Graham Crusade and ii an
auoclate member of the
Callfomla Republican Stale
Central Committee.
In 1181, Beam was named
Orana:e Young Man of the
Ye1r by tbot community'•
Jaycets, and In 1917 he was
named Orange Man of the
Year.
Is Oil Rig
Really Over
Drill Site?
SANTA BARBARA (UPl)-
Sun Oil Co. today claimed Its
280-foot high oil plaUotm had
successfully been towed to its
offshore well site but mem·
hers of Jhe GOO (Get Oil Qui)
organizaU,On di!Jagreed.
A sun Oll spokesman told
the Coast Guard the barge car-
rying the plaUorm was an-
chored directly over the well
site in the Santa Barbara
Channel and inltallalion of the
rig would begin today.
Howtver, BUI Botwright, a
GOO spokesman, saJd the
barge could not be ln the right
spot because a private crart
in the GOO fieet, which main-
tained a small blockade, was
anchored over the spot.
The Coast Guard said the
small boat and the barge v.•ere
about 80 yards apart A Coast
Guard spokesman said there
was no trouble between the op-
posing f1et1ons as the barge
moved Into the area because
of the apparent mJxup of the
correct site.
"It would appear they could
not be on the coordinates
authorized for them by the
Corps of Engineers pennlt,"
Botwrtght said. "They would
have to be on top of our craft
to be on the authorized site.
"We know we're right on
thos' coon:llnat.es." he added .
Botwright said the small
GOO Boat anchored di rectly
over what his organliaUon be-
lieved to be the correct site
would remain there "until the
situation can be cleared up."
The U.S. Supreme Court
Tuesday refuaed to take ac-
tion on a request by the city
and county of Santa Barbara
le ,halt further drilling In the
chaMel.
Judge Bars
Evidence
From Vomit
VENTURA (UPI) - A Ven-
lura County superior court
udge has ruled that evldenct
obtained by forcing a suspect
to vomit may not be used
against him.
Judge f.iarvin H. Lewis
made the ruling In acquilting
Ray P. Archibeque, 30. Ox·
nard, of a felony charge of
possession of heroin.
Archibeque, a parolee, wa1
arrested Aug. 1 after an OX-
nard pollct detecUve saw him
swallow a balloon believed
containi ng heroin. He waa tak-
en to Ventura County General
Hcspllal where three detec·
lives held the suspect while a
a doctor and nurse gave him
an injecUon whicb caused him
to vomit.
Authorities said the baUoon
Archibeque swallowed was
filled with 14 heroin capsules.
Lewis said the officers and
the doctor and nurse would
have been guilty of assault
and battery lf the lnjecUon
of the drug had not been part
of a police search for evi-
dence.
la Tax Prepouls
• ..
Reagan Considers
Dropping Issue
SACllAMJ!:NTO (AP) -The
Reaga n admlniJstratlon, in a
mood to compromise, ls con-
1lderlng dropplni one of the
most controversial features of
Its tax relief plan -a pr.
posed bo9st in the personal in-
come tax.
The latest details of the
plan, to be presented ln
January, were outllned In an
interview today with Kirk w .. t. deputy director ol llnan-
ct who ls In charge cl tu:
r<llef planning.
West alto dl!closed the ad·
mlnistraUon ii: working closely
with Republican leaders In the
Senate and .Msembly to draw
up a compromise plan and
avert the batUes that stymied
Reagan's tax relief proa:ram
in the 1919 session.
West said the proposal, as it
st.ands now, sUll would boost
the present live cent sales tax
by one cent on the dollar to
finance a reducUon In home
property taxes of about 40 per-
cent.
But be said t h e ad-
mlnlstratlon was willing to
abandoo the proposed lnrome
tax hike that stirred up heavy
oppoaiUon the past session.
"We are trying to find an
altemaUve or reduce the
amount of the Increase or
eliminate It," he said.
Last mooth. the Republican
go\lernor announced he would
ask the 1970 legislature to
boost personal Income taxes
by an .average of five pereent.
That would be done, Reagan
said, by imposing a new one-
half of one percent tax on ad-
justed gro.ss personal income.
The proceeds would go to
financing the property ta:x cut.
Jn 1969, Reagan proposed an
even bigger lncrease, an
average of 10 percen t .·
Democrats and Republicans
both objected to the Jncreue.
West said that I a t e s t
revenue figures showed that
the Increase in income taxes
might not be needed to replace
money lost through lowered
property taxes. He said talks
are oow under way between
t h e ad m i nistratlon and
Assembly Speaker Robert T.
Monagan, R·Tracy, and Senate
President pro tern Howard.
Way, R-Exeter, lo put
together a compromise plan
before January.
Trustees Back Down
On Control of Papers
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Trustees of the State College
sy1tem, after debating the
issue at some length, have
decided against issuing 1 JO.
point set of ground rules for
student publication on the 19
campuses.
The vote to table the matter
Tuesday leaves control of
campus newspapers a n d
magazines in the hands of col-
lege presidents.
The guidelines, proposed by
the t r u s t e e s ' Educational
Policy Committee, said stu-
de-Jt publications should serve
lhe welfare of the students
and the college. s h o u I d
"pursue exacting c r e a t t v e
standards," and "avoid techni-
ques ol haraument and in-
nuendo."
W. 0. WeiMlch or San
Rafael oppoaed the guidelines,
saying: "I'm not willing to
give advance approval to the
studenls."
Wllliam O. Norris of Los
Angelea expressed <lppos!Ucr.1
for a different reason. "Thl1,"
he said, "Is tre1dtng on very
dangerous ground ... freedom
of expression."
Ahmanson
Firms Fined
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
Four corporations which are
reportedly controlled by th!'.!
estate of the late financier
Howard Ahmanson, have been
fined 1 total of $40,000 for
making llle,11'.al polltlcal earn·
paign conlributlon1. '
The fines were imposed
Tueaday after attorneys for
the companies entered guilty
pleas to the federal grand jury
indictments last month.
Home Savings and Loan
Assn. was fined $15,000; Ar·
rowhead Savings and Loan
Assn., $2,500; Ccntlnental Sav·
ings and Loan, $2,500; and
Galaxy lnc., $20,000,
The Indictments did not
Identify the candidates who
received the donations which
were charged off as ad-
vertising expenses in some
eases.
Daniel H. Ridder of Long
Beach, a newspaper executive
and president of the trustees.
commented that he saw no
value in setting up campus
press guldellnes tr the college
presidents did 'JOl respect the
advice.
Gov. Reasan, an ex officio
trustee, said he didn't believe
standards !or the "outside''
press could be saUsfactorily
applied to coUegc publications.
Chanctllor Glenn S. Dumke
said after the meeting that the
vote may have killed the i5.'ue
for the present, but he
predicted a .. cr:lsls" could
revive it.
Man Sought
In Shooting
Of Seaman
VALLEJO (AP) -Delee·
lives aoUght a black man to-
day in the ambush shooting of
a merchant marine cook
outside hi.I home.
Raphael N. Calor, 56, was In
serious condlUon at Queen of
the Valley Hospital with
wounds in hJs head, stomach
and legs from shots fired from
a 9ritm pistol at a range or
about 2$ feet.
Because of the weapon used
and the seemlng_ly senseless
natltte or th1f altatk, there had
been speculation that Calor's
assallant may have been the
killer who calls h I m s e I r
Zodiac. Among Ule five vic-
tims Zodlac claims were ones
killed with a 9mm pistol.
Police say Zodiac Is a white
man, while Detective Sgt. Ed
Rust said he had "developed
information that Calor was
shot by a black man -that a
young Negro male was seen
leaving the shooting."
Calor, a Negro, lived In a
b I a c k neighborhood. He
returned Monday from two
weeks sea duty and had gone
to his car to get a bundle of
clothes when he was shot from
ambush.
LA Murders Li11ked
Victims Members of Mystical Churc1i
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A
teen-age boy and a girt, lhe
latest of 13 victims of secmina:
"thrill murders" in the Los
Angeles area alnce Jan. 1,
were member1 of a myltit•I
church group, police revealed
Tue>day.
In addlllon. U. Earl A.
Deemer said he had "1trong
reu:in to believe" that •
younc. unldenW:ied woman
found . stabbed Nov. 11, ;Jao
may hive belonged to the
Church of ~logy. .
The church uses a variant of
paychoanalys~ lo aupposedly
help1tbe ind Iv Id u al com-
municate better with his en-
vironment and with othtra.
Tbe ,roup make1 u1e of an
••.£-meter," a type of Ue detec.
or In 111 lessona.
Deemtr said close parnllt:!ls
0<~t b-Otwetn the killings Frt·
day of James Sharp, ts,
Crestwood, Mo.; Doreen Gaul,
19, Albany, N.Y., and the
Unklentlfled woman, about 25.
Deemer said, however, that
lhe mystical group hid refus-
ed to release rhemberthlP lists
although it hid cooperated in
:he lnve1tlg1Uon I n t o lhe
deaths of Shafi) and MiSI Gaul.
The parallela listed by peemer were :
-All three victims had been
otabbed ttpeate<lty and their
wound• appeared the wort or
• "f1naUc.11
-The three were !lain in
dllft:rent k>catons than whtre
the.tr bodies were found.
-nie three were recently
arrived to the Loi Angt:JeS
arc:i.
The unidentified woman,
(ully clothed, had been Kla~
bed repeatedly In the upper
half of her body and h<r Jhroat
had been cut. An autopsy
revealed there was no smog In
her lungs leading aut,horltJes
to believe she wa1 new to tbe
area.
Mill Gaul, oode except for a
st.ring of Indian be&da when
h<r body WU found wllh Sharp
in an alley, had been raped.
Both she and the youth had
been stsbbed IO 10 to limes
and both their rllbt eyes had
been cut out. or the 13 murder1 since the
belinnlng al the year deacrlb-
ed by authorltle1 11
murdm," four have been
yoong glrll.
11le othera were the mau
murdm of actress Sh1ron
Tate and foar other1 at her
Benedict C11nyon estate Aug. I
and the slaylngs of a market
owner and hls wife the foUo·w-
lng night,
..
DAii. Y PILOT '1
ILL .DAY ·~
TH,URSDAY, NOY. 27.
STARTING
FRIDAY, NOY. 28
OPEN
EVERYDAY
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I DAILY PILOT
U~AL NOTICE
MOTIC. 9F SALi!
HCltlm .. ~" kle
LEGAL NOTICE
SUl"IElilotl: ·cou•r 01< THE
ITATd CW CALtFOltlOA fOlt
THI COUNTY OF Olt~HOIE ... -
s
NOTltd 01' Hl'AltlNO C" l"ETtTION
11011 l"ltOtATd OP WILL AND ,Olt Ll!nlltl Tl!ST&MINTAltY Eitelt of JU ... MITA OENNI, Dtctased.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN TJ\al M.l,_1rirt T. 91.nfl ffld )OHPl!lM E. L~ 111..,, llleO 11Ht1n • pe1l11on tor ..,..,. fll 'ltlH anoii fol' lsw.n« el L,i.
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Deambtr It. tMt, t i t :lO 1.111 •• 11'1 TIM o;owt,,_ of °'"rf!Mllt ~ 1 of Y id aurt, t i M CIYk Cfnltf Orhll W~t, In
tl'le CUY of S.1111 AM, C1lllornle,
O•tecl Hovtmbcf 11. tNt W. II". ST JOHN
CwrlW Cllrk
ltfflltT L. HUMl"Mt.l!VI ,.~,_... .. ....,"' c .... ,,...~11 nw Tel'! C7HI,,...... .. """'" .. ,...._.. Pl,lbllMecl Or-e eo.n D•llr Piiot. ,.......... n. 2' •1111 oecemr..r 1, t... "".,
LEOAL NOTICE
IU .... tM ~Jt'T 0, TME
STATI' 01' CALll'OltNIA J'()lll
THe COUNTY 01' o•ANGIE .......... ,
INOTtC• Oil H•AlllNCI OF PETITION l'Oll ,.o.ATI Of '#ILL ANO l'Otlt Ltn••s TISTAMl!NTAltY t•OND
WAIVIOI £ti•~ of 11\AAGUERtTE" Mo\IUE \AlOVSICY1 ,,_ k"'""11., Mere!Jtl•lf• J. LllnnkY .,. ., M«Juefllt J, Robrnton. -· NOTICIE II HERESY GIVEN Tf'i1I
0.lllef L•lWMY 1111 fl., flVtlll • "'1· floll ,_ ~,. .. w:llf tM '"' ~ of t.etm. T .. 11...entlO' hi Pellllonw ~ hlW
'W•l..ecn, ftftt'HICI lw wllldl ii rMo. for
fltr1Mr .. 111cv11o. ll'ld !Mt ""' rime llld
•i.e. ef f\elrfll9 11\t WIM het lletfl Ht
for Dec.tmbl'I' u. ,,.., .. t :10 ......... "' rhe ~ ., °"'lrfmtftl No, J d" 1olld
court. et 700 Clvk c~11r Drtv• Wtsl, 111 ~ CllV ot ~1111 An•, c.mom11.
DlllCI N-i.r 20, l fff W, IE. $T JOHN
C-IV Clt!rk
JAM•t L llUllL. JR, >m VI•°""" ~ a.di. C1lfttr1l1 nut
Tiit 11141 f,._.1'1, ..,....., ,.. htltleMr
l"vblllihilcl Or•Me COllSI D•fl'I' Piie!, ""-nbW H. 71 •nit Oec..emtRr 7.
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~PYE~ THE, f.PV..NTER1 "NASD' ll1tings IOI' T..J.;,~ ......... 25, lMt
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---·--- ---------~~~---=---c;:---~~~~-.. ---------
.. Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete
•' New York " Stock Exchange list
, IM
American Stock Exchange List
..
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If DUl.'l l'ft.OT Wtdnflda)', Nowmbtr 26, 196'
Safety Measures Due U.N. Hails
Action
By Nixon
Beek.et £nned
JI
I
II
De.troying Germ War Stockpile Tricky . ' -..
S·enate to OkdJi
.Ag~dTreatySoon .i WASHINGTON !AP) -
Pemaaon officials say Presi~
dent "Nixon's order. junking
U.S. military germ stocks wlll
require elabotat... ~a f et y
preauUoos which may·stretch
the disposal operation over
aieveral months:
nte Defense Department ex-
prelled hope Tuesday that
tllmioaUon o( gemi warfare
compooenll can be completed
Awell within a· year." The
\ Department o( Heelth, Educa-
tion &id Welfare will assist in
lh• disposal.
The highly poisonous nature,
rather than a huge volume, of
the· bk>logical stocks is the
main problem, ofliclals sai<t.
1be Pentagon has not yet
at.ripped the secret label Crom
documents showing how much
bacteria there is to destroy,
but sources speak in terms of
''bucket.sfull" and pound s ,
rather than tons.
However, as little as a
thimbleful o( such lethal
bacteria as anthrax or plague
is capable of killlng thousands
of persons over a wide area.
The Preside.':l t 's an·
nouncemenl of the planned
disposal Tuesday climaxed a
s;x-monl.h review of l h e
American chemical a n d
biological warfare -CBW -
program.
"Mankind already carries in
lt.s hands tocr many of the
seeds of its own destruction,"
Nixon said.
The eotnlll3nder-in.c hie r
said llle United Slates will
confine its biological research
to de!ensive measures such as
Immunization. And, in the
chemical field;he pledged that
this nation would never be the
. '
first to use lethal · or in· terle) to aee how produceab1e
capacitaUhg ·gases . Jt is. The only imounts in
Nixon's reference to stock are those which have
ellmlnaling "exJStlng sJocks ol . been produced In lhe pllot·p<o-
bacteriological weapons•' du~U~n ~t,,.and tbese have
mllde Pentagon in!Ormaticr.'I a hnuted life.
olficers squirm since the The rate of Pine Bluff Is
department has repeatedly clearly in quesUon no w
told i-eporters that the United although conunued research
States does not stock germ there may be ~ibleo the of·
weapom. -ficlals suggested. G e r m
"We have no biological research also is conducted at
weapons as such " the Pen-Ft. Detrick, Md. Programs
tagon asserted aft~r the Pl'W· there ~so may be curtailed.
dent had spokep. "We do have !!ow the germ stockpile will
certain biological agents in be disposed of Is not clear, but
storage containers." lt appeared the procedure
I\
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1JNITED NATIONS, N.Y.
(AP) -U.N. dele1at.. today
hailed Preaident NI zon·1
reunciatloa at,. aerm warfare
as a step toward agreement on
(ill a tre.aly banoing biochemkal , warrare, But rsome dJ~
felt bis new ·lfmilaUon on U.S.
,.... chemical warfare dJd not go
'•i I far ._,,\i. . , t; 1 Dip~~ from both eom-P, tml!liSt ud, nonaligned dQno • fl tri~ welcomed Nilon's pro.
-i mise fu destJ:oy U.S. slockpi1ea
ol bactefJological we&po;ll and
0.1e CBW eipert suggested would . bvolve re m.o v Ing
that semantics were involved. bacteria fr o m . refr1gera~on
"The problem is wben does it and exposing them to light
bec1:ime .a weapOn, •• he said. under closely ~ 4? n i t o r e d ,
Most bio.logical agen~ would restricted conditions. J,.. .
be sprayed from special tanU The defense establishment ~
. •
' his pledge that in any eo1t1bat
U.S. forces will -never be. tH
first to use chemical weapona1
that incapacitate permanently, in tht air. But the agents are seems to have a broad range ....!!....:~~:_ _______ .:.__;;•.'-.!_-2~~~
not stored in the tar.ks "so, of living organisms as Well as
the tanks .are not a 'biological toxins -the poisonous pro--
weapon' until they are ·u.sed,'0 ducts that germs can form -
he said, asking whether.a bot-to eradicate.
tie of,bactll.ria should be called Defen.se officials say seven
a weapon. The Pentagon lethal germs have bee.1 under
thought '.10t. study for mil(tary use. These
Locations ot the germs, as include yellow fever virus,
well as the size of !,he stored rabbit fever virus, anthrax
quantitieS, are still secret. But bactf,!ria, psittacosis agent,
the Pentag9n said that since rickettsla, Rocky Mountain
disposal has been·ordered the spotted fever and plague.
i n f o r m a l i o n will be Four incapacitating diseases
declassified for public release. also have been researched il't·
• •, • an extenalon oC a previous
Army Spen~ing ,Hig~;~:a:ca1·t~i:t:. of
' • I =· Alva rMyrdal, the H • ·f : N I c Sw · h ·tli&armamenl expert, unting . or: ew up pr Nizon'•· decision _ ..
WASHINGTON (APl -The
Army has spent $58,550 so far
on developing a bigger, col-
lapsible canteen cup.
"'an enOrotous .step' forward
toward the eventual elirnlna,
In solvent. tio.1 or these horror weapana.''
W ASHJNGTON: . :(AP) -
Presidmt Nil<on'1 . call for
ntlt!catioo o1 .. •iec! treitr
to-problMt inlUal·-ilf gas or
genps u weapc:ps of war· has
been added .. to a . dOUed
Senate docket w i t b -a
DemocriUC pledge ol action
wltbta a month. ·
Senate DeniocraUc ·!Jeader
Mike Manslleld said the tr.a.
ty, first proposed 44 yrars ago,
should be approved this year,
The Senate plans to acijotrn
its current seuloo by Dec. 23.
"I can see no reason wby
~ should be an,y .,...
1roveny," ManifleJd said
alter N,lxon relumed lhe long
donnaot treaty toithe Senate.
Niloa's pledge• to destroy
exlaUng .stockpiles . of bao-
teriological weapms 'Prompted
Sen. J, w. Fulbright (0.Ark.),
·to suuest lhal' lhe Sovl<!t
Union might tab similar ac·
tion:
Fulbright .promised t h.
Senate Fortlgn 'R e I a t i o n s
COmm.ittee will 'act without
delay,. but sel no time for ac·
Uon.
Hot .Money Such quantities of bacteria eluding riciettsla cauaing Q
as exist are mostly located 1at fever, Rift Valley v 1 r u s ,
Pine Bluff, Ark., and kepl in Chikungunya disease virus and
refrlgeratesf igloo-type slruc-Ven e z u e I a n e q u i n e
The present cup holds a
quart, slips over the base Of
the cantee.1, is made out of
aluminum with a fold-out han-
dle.
Jt is similar to. generaUona
or combat veterans and has a
hundred uses. It's oft,.en the
handiest thing around for in.
stant coffee water and .raUons,
dipping into a field ~,pot,
drawing a share of. Ice ci:eam.
ztd soaking.rifle tfigger-,parts
The cup· under development She expressed: hope that tear
will hold two quarts, ac-gas and defoli~~g her~l9des
cording to tesUmony at a are among -tft~ chemical
closed-door hearing last July weapons U.S. force's.won'.t use
in a session of 1a House ap-first, but the Presl t'11 ban
'pr opriatiCJnll subcommittee. exempted these cbemi and
'lbe testimony was released (lther riot control agents.
today. This limitation Is certa to KHARTOUM (AP) -·sudan
The U.S. Army Natick stir up cr.iticism both at has money to burn, $96 million lures. e'nsephallpls viruS:.
Pentagon sources say Pine ;:::========= Laboratories, Natick, Mass., is United Nations and at ~worth. The banknotes
Bluff -has ·handled 90 percent
of the CBW work in recent
years and has been a stand-by
production line.
As the expert explained )ft:
"We've played with it (~
Fin•I Stocks
In AH Home
Editions
supervising the development, Geneva disarmament talks, representing 40 m 111 ion
the comm1ttee was tbldi with where representatives of Com~ danese pounds, printed in
help from two conlractors in munist •8':1d.nona:ligned naU001 tat:i, were.found to contain
lhe state. Mltroo R&o Corp. h>ve already S<Ot'ed · t b e a ulty signature and ,,.,.
ol Wallham and·Roland T~ ··UnJted .Stales· for usillg·auch 1ritlioeld from dlltrtbutioo for
Co., 'In<'.·• of Everett. weapons in Vietnam. burnilte.._and replacement.
Get five pictures. With the Sketch book Checkbook from Southern California
First National Bank.
Sketchbook checks picture five colorful scenes of Orange County. So your
checks can reflect the beauty of your own area. And you can write them free by main-
taining a minimum balance of $100. .
An order of Sketchbi>ok checks costs only 7cmore than standard checks. And
you get something extra for your money-a handsome enlarged print of one of the
scenes~you'd like preuier money, n't' e
just phone or drop in to one of our
Orange County offices. We'll give
you the picture. ·
Con Mna 230 E. 17th St., 642-.1660
"There are some points of terinnol"IY \llld lnl<rpftlallon ~ must be clarified."
Ful!lri&hl aald.
Sen. Yanco Hartke (0.Ind.)',
w~o bad proposed a resolution
urging that the White House
,,.nd lhe trealy to lhe Senate,
said ''It ii now incumbent
upon the_ Senate to act as
·quitkly as possible.,."
The United States took a
tiiajor role in shaping the 11115
agreement at·a conference in
Geneva, but the Senate never
acted on il
'Ole Geneva protocol proo
blliits !Int use of "asphyx·
iatlng, poismous or other
gasses .and of bacteriological
methods of warfare."
The administration early
this year barred first use of
germ or gas weapons, but ex·
eluded defoliation agents and
tear gas.
In bis announcement Tues-
day, Nb:oq reaffirmed this
renunciatiM, and extended it
Jo cover flrst1lse of chemicals
which Incapacitate withoul
kilUng.
Nixon l!,I<! lhe United Stales
would never employ germ
warfare, evtn H an dmy did
so firsl He said U.S. research
in lhat lleld would be llmlted
to defense meuures.
Fulbright said he was pleas-
ed Nixon had gone beyond the
Geneva protocol and em-
braced the principles of •
British proposal to bao pro-
duction and possession ol
bacteriological weapons.
•
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,
Stately ·Laguna Homes 0 .pen for Tour
>
Seven lmpresslv• South Laguna and Laguna Beach re1tde~1 will
be decked In Chri1trpa1 f10ery for the Holiday Home Tour being ven by
the Opera League, a support group for Lyric Opera AnoclaUon o Orange
Covnty, !tom 2to l"p.m. ~unday, Dec. 14,
Holla and booteaaes busy adorning their homes with holiday decor-
ations for the public tour Include Lucian Horton and William Gilmer, lwo
artist. of Niguel West, Mrs. Franklin A. McCann ol Tbree Arch Bay and
Mr. and.Aft•. H. Jean Bedell of Emerald Bay,
Othera· are the Messrs. and Mui••· Roger W. RuJaell of Irvine Cove,
Harry a. Early of' Camel Point,, and Parter Christopher and Thomas B.
F1emlng, both of Monarth Bay.
The Russells' Irvin& Cove home, with a Uled atrium In Ila center,
features a reflecting lotus pool and unusual sliding-dome roof. It will be
the setting for two performances at 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. by the Chorallers
and Clarinet Choir; led by Jack Kreltlng, music dlreetor for Laguna Beach
Hi&h School. The 14-glrl group and tho choir will present a program· of
Christmas songs and music. _
The Niguel Weal home of Horton and Gilmer has many 1rt objects
and a collection of paintings to reftect the talents of the two arUati w h o
also ere interior decorators, Handpalnted murals eoclosing a pool with a
floating Christmas tree are of particular interest.
Art work fills the home and !lows out Into the gaideo and pool area
of the Christopher's spacious Monaich Bay home. Here the artlatry and fm.
agination of the hostess, combined with bold use of color1, results 1n a hip-
py, wann atmosphere.
The McCenns' home, set on one of the older tr .. llned streets ol
Three Arch Bay, Is In keeping with early California tradition. Tbe couple's
collection of antiques and wood sculpture fits well with the decor. Potted
plants, a landscaped patio and old brick walks complete the serene setting.
The ocean view Camel Point home of Mr. and Mrs. Early h reach-
ed by walking through a wrought Iron gate past the gardens and pools. Tbe
interior is a handsome blend of period1 traditional and Oriental furniture. A
marbl&-topped credence In the dining room and a ligh\,.fllled master heel·
room are especially interesting.
The Bedells' trllevel seaclifi home In Emerald Bay has a dlstincUve
yet warm and friendly atmosphere thanks to the use of wood through the
patio entry and cantilevered sundecks. Mrs. Bed.ell's weaving ls a striking
accent to furnishings.
The Flemings' huge Monarch Bay home offers a magnilicent view
of Dana Point and the coasUine and is an ideal setting for gracious or re-
la~ed out-of-doors entertaining, A Flemish religious triptych over the .fire-
plice is an eyecatcher.
DECKING HALLS -Mrs. Parker Christopher puts
final touches on holiday decorations which Will adorn
her Monarch Bay home during the home tour spon·
' sored by Opera League Sunday, Dec. 14. The spac·
ious residence, one of seven to be opened for the
public, has a warm and colorful atmosphere with
art works flowing into the garden and pool ar~a. ~men
Ni guel Brownies
Real living Dolls
Living doll•, four troops strong, will be fet.
ed at a doll tea sponltOred by Assistance
League of Laguna Beech as they arrive with
armloads of dolls for Indian children.
The youngsters, all members of Brownie
troops in Laguna Niguel, have collected 100
dolls for the Danny Davey Doll Club which
are destined to make Christmas I)ay a Jil.
tie.brighter for Hopi and Navajo childrim.
"Never underestflnate the power of a wom-
an -small though she may-be· will be~the
prevailing theme for the Tuesday, Dec. 2, tea
which will honor youngsters and their lead-
ers. The affair is scheduled from 3 to 5 p.m.
in the Assistance League House.
On hand to receive dolls and welcome girts
will be Mrs. Harry E . Hansen, doll club
chairman, and committee members Mrs.
Thomas Maddock and Mrs. Donald Conklin.
Sharing the guest spotlight will be women
who have taken the once unwanted dolls and
transformed them into top condition. Com·
pleted efforts of doll club members in beau·
tifully refurbished dolls and stuffed animals
will be on display.
Tea chairman is Mrs. Aloysius Spaulding,
assisted by members of her committee.
. JEAN COX, --w......,.,.........,.., 1.., I , ... n
Unit Aims
For Active
Ballot·ers
coaee and,convenation will
be Ille "'"""" ol tho day !or Orsnie · Coot Leque o I
Women Voters, L a g u n a
Beach unit, 11 members melt
for a Wednuday, Dec.~' open
house bl Soulb Laguna.
The evftll, beginning II
10:30 a.m. in the Camel Point
Drive home of Mrs. J. R.
Campbell, will acquaint South
Cioast wc:men with functions of
the league, a nonpartaan
group aimed at encouraginC
infcnned and active particlpa·
tioo in govermnent a n d
pollUcs.
During the open house slides
will be shown hlghllghting
functions and actions of the
league and questions will bl
answered, according to Mr1,
Han')' Jeffrey, unit chairman.
Topics on the docket for
d18cmslon in coming months
will cover the California
judJclal system, y o u t b
services, water conservatk>i)
snd foreign aid snd trade.
The Danny Davey Doll Club is one of con·
tinuing philanthrople• of the Assistance
League of Laguna Beach which also spon-
sors a Friendship Club for persons over 50 ;
operates a Turnabout Thrift Shop; presents
scholarships lo graduating seniors, and COtl·
ducts weekly classes for women seeking seJ1.
confidence through group therapy. KEEPING INFOR ME D -South Coast women Interested In keep-
ing abreast of politics are invjted lo attend a n informational open
house sponsored by the League of Women Voters. Laguna Beach
unit members Mrs. Richard Stryker and Mrs. Harry Jeffrey
check on latest developments prior to the December talk session .
All women ol voting age are
encoursged lo attend the
open house. '"-lnteresled
may call Mrs. Richard Stry.
ker, 4'7-1122, or Mn. Jeffrey,
497-1843 !or fUr1ber details. •
Santa's Sleigh ' Power Generates Returning Hero's Spark~
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' My husband
returned from Vietnam three wet.ta ago.
We had been man1ed four years when he
left and the "honeymoon" aspeda ol. our
sex life ended long before he went
overseas. When he returned I didn't know
what to expect. I reasoned that our long
111eparation might make him especially
eager but I also heard that some wives
experienced the oPJ>05lle reaction which
they attributed to exhaust.Ion, change of
climate, trauma and so on.
Since my husband's return, he has betn
as randy as a billy goat. I am af·
tcciJonale by nature and I Jove lo be klV·
ed, .. but tbfs is ridiculous. Last night he
co nf ided t)le se cre t of his
"revllallzation.0 In Vietnam he had
ANN LANDERS ~
heard ground-up reindeer horns were us-
ed for centuries 111 a male aphrodisiac.
He bought several prunds of the stuff
after some of his buddies reported "great
results."
1 don"t ):now what to make of it. I've
never believed In love pot.Ions, but now
l'm beginning to wonder iI there isn't
something to it. Please a.s\: Y6ur medkal
consultant! about reindeer horns and let
me know what you Jearn. I am -EX·
HAUSTED IN GARDEN CITY.
DEAR EX : My medlcal con1ultant1 In·
ronn me lbat once Ule Hm.1 art off die
rr.lndeer &bey are u1e.les1 -except for
dttoratmg wall1. LClve podont have been
1 noarl1blng racket since tbe Year One.
They are 111 phoney. Bot, 110 Jon i 11 your
husband believes In the "magtc'' It will
work, 6ecau1e. ·all 1e1ual actlvtty ii
• enerated ln thi mind. So1 re.las, dtar
and accept Uie fact Ulat Dtncu aod
Pruttr alld Donner •nd Blllu:n are
plq &o be a part of you.r We for a wblle.
Aid a Merr, Cbrllbn11 to you!
DEAR ANN LANDERS ' OUr oon is one
of the lhousanda of )'oung people who ran
Rway from home after becoming involved
with narcotics. J don't know what to do or
where to turn. All my efforts have been
in vain. Every road has led to a dead
·en<!. '-tou are my last hope. Please print
thi· 'r I have wrltlt:n to him. Perhap!
he 1 ec it. When he was home he read
your L" .. lumn faithfully. Thank you and
God bless you, Ann.
DEAR SON: Ever.y night I kneel by lhe
bed In jout empty room and pray that
somehow, through aome miracle, your
e)'es will be opened to the dangers of the
life you have chosen. Yoo left a loving
home, parents, brotbers and sisters,
school and c::lose friends. We felt you sllp-
ping away . but we were unable to reach
you.
We arc deeply concerned not only for
your health and safety, but for your life.
Every day dozens of young people like
)'OU are found dead. Whenever we read o(
such a tragedy we wonder l! the "unldea·
tlfied" boy is you.
We Jove you and want you to come
home. We will try hard lo help you In
every way. Please, before it b too late,
call us collect. Let us know where you
are. We will gel on lhe next plane and
come for you. No queatlona 1sked •
YOUR MOTHER AND DAD
DEAR MOTHER AND DAD: Here Iii
yoar letltr ud yw cu be nre it wW t»e
reed by ma11 nana11. I ltepe aod ,,..,.
,..., -... ,... plea ud ""' ,,
P1eue let mt bow if W. ltUer prone~
renlll.
CONFIDENTIAL TO REAPING THiii
BmER HARVEST' Everybody marrt ..
'f.or love -of aomethlng. You married i.
the love ot material things and what yap.
thooght would be a ll!e of ease. Pardon
lhe cllche, but •• you sow, so sball )'<Ml
reap.
Ana Loden wlU be lfld to .. ,,,..
wllll yoor ,._,,,~ Stld U..m to .., II
ctre of Ult DAILY PILO'I'. at..., 1 ltll\· -pee .........
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I,
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}2 DAILY PILOT Wtdntsday, Novtmbtr 26, 1%~ -·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Writer'·s .. Scrapb.ook Action Packed
'
Dy JEAN COX Mias Ziegler, at that time,
01 11141 o.Mr "1* '"" \\'as busy being a political
Miss I!abelle Ziegler't brave editor ol a paper in Alice, Tex.
II I I b ·--•~ 1 U However, she doesn't mi.nc\. II e rame as m ... _ tie any words. She doesn't like the
In~ some highly unllkely movie· at all.
places while talqng orders "I\ wu a simple little story,
trai,n her dauntless wrtter'1 but the movie was just awful
braj.n. 1beY tn•de. it lnto a great big
. gaudy loud movie and added . When~· Hiller made his pro-all sorts of things," she
clam&lfn at Ca~lsbld ~ reporttd with passive disdain.
&Ring ~e wanted oo ,more of -Beside• her book, Miss
Czechoslovakia, Mlia, ~e&)er Ziegler has the friendship of
" was l:here . . • when the the maoy would-be writers she -Werma~ took over Aualrta, adopted while teaching at
Mifs Zielger w~s there • . • UCLA and especia)ly at Los w~ the notonoua Munich Angeles City College. ~eem.ent was madet Miss UCLA w81 okay, $e allow.
Ziegler was there • • • wben ed, but she far preferred tbe
the Germans took over Pr.1CU9 city college.
and other newspaper .people
had prudenUy departed for BORING CLASS
• '., I ' ........... ·.-..
Need a Calendar?
I
Scouts Close Sale
It's still not too late to buy Girl Scout calendars, U y<>u missed the
girls in green or brown "during their yearly sales campal1n.
The 1970 calendars are available at the Girl Scout Council of Orange
County headquarters, 1314 E. Chestnut St .. Santa Ana._ or tbe Newport
Beach Girl Scout house, 1700 W. Balboa Blvd .. Newport ""8cb.
Girl Scouts from all over Orange County wlll be jrilnlng fellow Scouts
Ute nation over during the coming ·year in a new program, developed at the
38tb National Girl Scout Convention In Seattle last October.
ACTION 70 wW be a total effort to "bridlle tbe people gap by get·
ting to know Individuals ot different races, rellglona and natloilalities and
be .known by them In turn," says Mrs. John M. Owen, president of tbe Girl
Scout Council of Orange County, of the pro.ram.
Tb' council will participate by developtng plans to be carried out by
the Girl Scouts and Interested adults.
AJ a preface to the effort, the council adopted a reaolution stating
that it intends 0 to roster development or positive plans for action which can be implemented In an efflctive and enduring manner.''
more serene pastures, Miss "In my UCLA classes I bad
Ziegler was there, "'bwnmJng a lot of dental and medical ••..,.•••••••••••••••••••••••••-••.Ji rides" and riding t r o o p s~ots who all thought and
ttairu . . . wrote alllr:e. How boring! she
;t•
. Mother's Medal Worn
And when the Gestapo, after remembered wit.b diltute Her
the Nazi army marched into voice wanned, quickly as she
Czechoslovakia, bqan mun-recalled, "But at LA.CC there
ding up everyone in Carlsbad were so many oddballs, so
who looked the leas't bit m'any dilferent personalities.
suspicious, the ever present It was a school •that seemed to
Miss Ziegler was amq them. attra.ct lost souls.'t
Obviously the lady reservts
PURSUES CAREEk a special seat in her heart for
Pu_rsuing her career as a lost souls. She also has a
syndicated columnist f o r special love for teaching a
Carlile _Crut~her of Louisville, career which oddly eno~gh
Ky,, Miss Ziegler wu right in began her working days as
the. frying pan durinc the fiery well as ending them.
earty months of World War n. As a young woman she
She also went ·to Berlin, taught languages in t h e
France, Hungary, Yugoslavia University of Vienna and
and Italy, and after being call-returned home to teach in a
ed home from Europe, to South small college in N o r t h
America. Later during the C a r o I i n a . During the
• Couple Visit Mexico
• war she came back to the depreuion the college went
United States and coveted ac-out of business and Miss
tivitles surrounding J t h e Ziegler eventually went into
Japanese relocation camps. the writer's business, begln-
The stormy years of World ning as a women's editor for a
\Var II seem light yean away paper in Louisville. '
from the tranquil South She bee:an writing a column
Laguna cottage which Miss "Cull o( froth and fantasies "
Ziegler has c~osen for her which b e c a m e syndica1'd
repose and retirement. almost immediately. It was on • Wear ing the sa1nc medal
her father des igned ror· ber
mother for their wedding,
Karen Lee Gray e:icchanged
wedding vows and rings with
John Dee Tarvin during a
morning ceremony last Satur·
day in the Blessed Sacrament
Church, Westminster.
The bride, aaughter of Mr.
and ritrs. B.obert Gray of Hun-
tington Beach, was given in
· · ;fnarriage by her father. For
her wedding she selected a
-~latin gown designed with bell
sleeves and trimmed with lace
., '.,"and sequ ins. Her shoulder
length veil was held by a
petaled headpiece trimmed in
sequins and pearls, and she
carried a nosegay of wttite
roses and carnations centered
' w1th an orchid.
Her maid or honor, Patty
,.Nemeth \\'ore dark pink crepe
\vhi\e bridesmaids Pa u I a
· 'rrates, Susan Tolen and San·
· ay Browning wore contrasting
'_·gowns of light pink crepe. The
bridal attcndents carried bou-
quets of pink roses, carnations
·''aJld baby's breath.
··~ Se rving as flower girls were
-:-·Diana Frybarger and Kelly
Pelt, and carrying the ring
--was Aron O'Bric:-i.
·' ·· Eddie Olson was best man,
and sealing guests were Toby
.'.'.'Tarvin, Glenn Jones and Jeff
, , Gray, brothers and brother-in·
· .. 1a\Y of the newlyweds.
She still works, editing the basis of this column she
manuscripts, and is teachlng a was sent to Europe.
Crt!ative writing class for a During her career she has
handful of Riviera C I u b writte'.\ teleplays for CBS and
members. her s~rt stories have a~
However when things get peared in n u m e r o u s
quiet, she has a Jot more th.an magazines.
the usual yellowed clippings in
a scrapbook to recall bygone """'°'-.-.."""""""" .. ""'!I achievemenls. .~
no~~~~t '~he011Ni~reD;~s h~~ i'
Jo'ather Serra," which began
afrer Miss Ziegler visited San
Juan Capistrano and saw a
statue of the man who founded
missions all over California.
"He was a litUe, pathetic,
sickly rnan filth an enonnous
spirit," she said in her usual
subdued tone, explaining her
fascination wllh her hero.
The book was published In
the 1950s and made into a
movie by Twentieth Century.
Fox, "Seveo CiUes of Gold,"
starring Aulhooy Quinn.
Handwriting
Srutinized
Mr. and Mrs . Da)i Duncan of
Orange will 11peak\on What
Handwriting Can 1ell Us
About Our Personality when
the Remarrieds Jnc. gather at
8 p.m. Friday, Nov. 28, in
McFadden Junior High School,
Santa Ana.
Peering
Around
WORDS OF wisdom were
inscribed In a scrapbook by
guests honoring bride-elect
June Wright at a· recent
shower in the borne of Mrs.
Roderick Wheeler. Co-hostess
of the: affalr was Mrs. James
Foster. Tea and coffee were
poured by the benedl~t-elect's
mother Mrs. Norman Hald.
·KIM F1GGA1T of Costa
ri.tesa was guest of honor dur-
ing a birthday dinner in the
Stull Shirt, and Dr. and Mrs.
John .J. Albartan of Balboa
Island Mso entertained with a
dinner paty in the same
restaurant to honor the birth-
day of their daughter-in.law
Mrs. Timmie Albarlan.
Eastern Star
Following the ceremony 200
:· ." guests attended a reception in
· the flfeadow\ark Country Club
, where Mrs. C. S. McDowell,
the bridegroom's grand .
· ... mother . Was an honored
' guest. Assisling at the recep·
. ·' lion \\' 1s fl1rs. Gladys Shot\\·ell.
MRS. JOHN DEE TARVIN
Huntington Beach Hom•
'Ibe newly formed organi.za·
lion sponlOrl family actlvtues,
educational programs, group ·.±. ~1asonic Temple in Laguna
discussions and social events. Beach is the meeting setting
Further lnformaUon may be when Laguna Beach Chapter
Following a wedding trip to
, fll azallan, fl1exico, the couple
~·ill make their home in Hun·
Jington Beach.
~1arina High School and her altended Golden West College. obt.aioed by writing to Remar· 521, E;astern Star members
husband, son of Mr. and Mrs. He has served two years in the rieds Inc., P.O. Box 742, Santa gather the first and thlrd
J h D T . 1 H t' gton U.S. Army. Ana, 92702. Fridays at 8 p.m. o n . arv1n o un in ----'-----------------------------11
• -The bride is a graduate of ........
Beach, is a graduate of Hun·
tington Beach High School and
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ll:o.t'I Applt. V.illeylurkl!y-Cib\et Gr•¥)'1
5111.e or Chestnut Dressing 4.9.>
Blo~ed Sug,u·Cured t4•m-S.uce Cumberl•nd 4.7S
Jonel~s Rocky Mounl•in lrout-S•ute Almolldint 4.75
Ro.tsf Prime Ribs of It.el-Au Jus 6.50
Jroiltd New Yorlc S1e,d1,-M•itre Dltot fi
81ltd .. nm! $qU1,h
C«n O'llitri
"""" Ho4 Minct 1'it-1r-'J SN01 t""""' Pie
r~~ St"~ SundH
Sptti~I Chlld"'n'J Dl"M'
Soup or .S.l.d • Oa~ • hv~~p
Cllok:I of: Appl. V.&lq-Twllry
.... """"' $1.!S
THE
AT EDISON'S ELECTRIC
LIVING CENTER
"Plan Ahead for the Holidays"
You art invited to t pro9rem fi lled with cookie jer frtets tnd cendy deli9hts;
holiday tips end plen -eheed tricks, u1in9 your cletn electric r•n9• and frost.free
freeier .
Edi1on Home E'°nomist, Mr1. C.rol Heint will prtsent "Plan Ahead for th e Holl ..
day•" pro9rem1 1t the Edison Elec:tric l iving Center, Sl8 Me in Street, Hunting·
ten Btec:h. The daytime demon1tret ion1 ere Cln either Oectmber J or 5 et 10:00
e,m. The evening progr1m1 era et 7 :00 p.m. Dec.ember 2 or ~. The 9u11t1 attend.
ing will receiv• t recipt book.
Another community service of .....l""I:
.::t~•rn C•lilorni• Edi,on Com,,.ny
Horoscope
Capricorn: Chqnge Mind
THURSDAY
NOVEMBER 27
By SYDNEY OMARR
BEST BUYS loday ladade
blslorical books, b-d
furniture, r • r e beYtl'llltl·
Favorable for flshlng, pD
ting.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Take steps to insure greater
security. Stress natural In-
dependence, originality. Not
wise to take situations,
persons for granted. Double
check.
TAURUS (April i&-May 20):
Good lunar aspect c,olncides
today willt time when ideas
are put to test. You aeein able
to successfully o v e r co m e
obstacles. You do t h l s
especially"i:f intuiUO'J is iJven
full rein. ·
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Suppress urge to go overboard
in spending. Utilize logjc.
Have fun without being ex-
travagant. Much is going for
you. Don 't upset apple cart
Greeks
~.:' ~~~::.rica.I
Hellenic Progressive Assocla-!
lion will stage a grl':ld ball in l
Santa Ana Elks Club on Satur-
day, Nov. 29.
Host chapter is Anaheim ,
assisted by· Long Beach, San
Pedro and the Bay Area.
Greek and American dan-
cing will begin at 9 p.m. lo the
music of the Eddie Stell
Orchestra. During the even-
ing, an exhibition of Hellenic
dll'.1cing will be performed by
the IS-member Athan Karras
Intersection Dancers.
The se milormal dance is
open to the public. Tickets at
$4 may be purchased at the
door.
with impulsive statement, ac·
tlon. _
CANCER (June 21.Jufy 22): Be straightforward. Streu
originality, frtsh approach.
ClrCWDltances change. The
changes favor your efforts.
Ma'.1y who want to help feel
you are aU-aufliclent. Avoid
arrogance.
1J10 (July 23-Aug. 22):
Romantic aura p e r v a d e s
personal atmosphere. Mearu
alr of mystery enhancts your
image. Don't be too anxious to
reveal all. Leave some doubl,
queaUon.. 'l1lis will bring
personal benefit1 today.
VIRGO. (Aug. 23-Sept. 22),
Beauty is emphasized. Your
ldeala come to fore. Principles
are accented. You judge
others -and yourself -by
sincere motives. You learn
value of. (rieldship. And you
are appreciated.
IJBRA (Sept. ~-22):
Be sure you know direction of
goal. You may have good in-
tentions, bu~ wrong methods.
Know Ws, and perfect tedmi-
ques. Mainly, It is Important
to get rid of deadwood.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Youngster can speak truth if
you are smart enough to offer
encouragement. Means get rid
of preconceiftd ~tions. Ob-
tain hint lrom Ubr• message.
SAGITrARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Concern with .the OC·
cult occupies much of your
thouRhts. You want answers
which border on t h "
metaphysical. That'o fine. But
don't lose your equilibrium.
Message is clear by tonighL
CAPRICORN (Dee. 22-Jan.
19): Be willing to take another
look at proposal which you
originally rejected, Today,
creaUve thinking is keynote to
succea. 'Ibat me&U be will·
Ing to change your mind.
AQUARIVS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Work, bask: chores con-
tinue in spoUighL Your judg-
ment improves. You are able
to zero in on target.
Specifically, you get coopera·
lion r1ther than opposition.
PISCES (Feb. 19'-March 20):
Good luaar aspect today
emphasizes creativjty, e:ic·
presaion of feelings, contacts
with opposite sex. You are
able to malte knovr.i your
beliefs in clear,• dynamic man-
ner. Do so.
To !Ind OUI who'I luell.y for ., .... 111 ,.._, •nd lo'ff, orlltr Sl'<IMY Ol'n•rr'1
booklet, "Stcr.t Hinh lor M9ft and Women." $W1C1 blrtl'ld1!9 •nd 5t CMl1 lo Drl'IMr Allro1otwtt,•l1, l1'le DA1L Y PILOT, 9oK ~40. ,...., Ctnlr•I s1 .. ti.:.., N-York. N .. 10017.
The Pirates Inn
.. We Serve Black Angua Prime Beef E%chuively"
THANKSGIVING DAY
SPECIAL MENUE -5:30 to 11,30
Mele T••r • ...,...~ New
DllllERS hrnlf w1•• Wl11t. o-. S.IH, '"""" lftlle "'",. n '"" v ......... " 111e o.y.
$3 50-lOAST TOM tUlllY -Crubeny ..-., c•Hi..f
• .,.... •,.clol ,. ..... , .. ••wffl ...
CHICllN lllY
VIAL COIDON ILUI
$4 50-AUSTUUAN LOllTD TAIL
• flLrT Ml•NON IUCCANlll
$2.50-JUNIOI PllATD TUlllY
M-.clPot9teeleMC•ll•
440 Heliotrope Ave.., Corona del Mer
leMll4 ... Pett TIIMMr 671-2111
STOCK CLEARANCE •
SALE
r A11f~'bric;-1n st;k R"OQ;;;-, I MUST GO! I
Antiqu• S1tins, Loos• Weeves, Cesement1. I CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES I
L _A!_C2._N~;! ~l~S-J
ON ALL
: .·: fAa~ICS
•'' IN oua STOCK
' PRICI INCLUDES •
\Vldth Length ra~c "'M.ake-Up Total Price
4 II. 9#>" "' .... $Zt.tt
6 It. 96" "' "' 4t.tt
I It. •6" ¥' "' st.H
I 0 It. 96" "' ,,,. 7Z.H
12 It. 96" "' ,,,. tZ.tt
'5% State SllH Ta:c
Rod & lnstallaUon Small Additional Olarte
BRING
YOUR
'MEASUREMENTS
Phone
675-1510
* Cutlom
Fullness
*Complete
M1koup * Ho1vy Duly
Trovene Rod
* Export
lnstlletion
ARCADE CARPET & DRAPERY
OF CORONA DEL MAR
2846 E. COAST HIWAY 17141 675-1510
;
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P-T , Group ·s Don't Slow Down for Holiday
(fdltw-'t. '"'"' ... "" d"""1fd • CO.It Met.I, l*w""1 I.ell. L•lllJN
INCll tnd Mtl&lon'Vltlo Hrllfll·ft.m.
tr or"nl11tlolll wlll •flPN• kl Ille
OAtLY PILOT MUI wMll. t"'°'1t'Y·
tkwl mlAI ti. noc.i .. c1 lw the totlth'
1111>11r1rntfl1, ., b1 ,,..1~no 0t c1e11 .......
Ing CC117 to Mn.. GM«I Smllh, *2 C~lelle P*:e, N~ l•dl b7
S "'"'· Ft!Nr flll' P11blk1tlan WN-..., .. ,,)
Harbor Council
l\1rs. John Clark
. President
COMING UP : Busine s s
meeting at 9:30 a.m. Mon-
day, Dec. t, on lhe second
floor of the Paviliop. Coffee
aild registration will be
hosted from 9 to 9:30 a.m.
by Mr!. David Chavis, presi·
dent and Michael Hill, prin-
cipal of Newport Heights
School. Program will feature
AFS students from Estan-
cia, Costa P.1esa a n d
Newport Harbor h i g h
schools. Students speaking
are Adriana Tagliari,
Bra ti I; Margarethe Kli est,
Greenland : Angela
Massmann, Chile . a n d
Eduardo Pena, Ecuador.
Buffet luncheon at $2.50 per
person will take place at
noon. Reservations may be
made by cuntactlng Mrs.
'James Schafer, 546-1429 or
Pi-1rs. Robert Sorensen,
MM904. S a n ta will
distribute $1 gUt exchange.
' Bay View PTA
f\lrs. William Frost
President
COMING UP : Board meeting
and coffee at 9 a.m. Tues·
day, Dec. 2, in multipurpose
room.
REPORTS: Mn. M i 11 e r
Buchanan, third g r a d c
teacher directed the
Thanksg.lving1program , . , .
Volunteers are phoning to
ascertain the number of
parents reglslered to vote.
Those wishing to regi ster
may do so from 12 :30 to 3
p.m. Monday through Fri-
day, at school. Evening or
weekend appointments may
be made by calling Mrs.
Ray Garrett at sc h o o I,
54S-7Z33. Deadline r 0 r
registration is Dec. 18, to he
eligible to vote in the Feb.
10 election.
College Pk. PT A
Mrs. James Schafer
Pre5ident
C0~1ING UP: Board meeting
followed by potluck luncheon
will take place at 9:30 a.m.
Tuesday, Dee. 2, in the
home of Mrs. Jame s
Schafer, president. ~
REPORTS : Apprecialion tea
was hosted in the home of
Mrs. Schafer for t h c
volunteers who worked on
the mini carnival.
Davis PTA
a.1rs. Grant Bertolet
President
COMING UP: Board meeting
at 3:1S p.m. Wednesday,
Dec. 3. in the home
economics room.
REPORTS : Mrs. Paul
Engdahl, member s hip
chalrman announced that
l\trs. Marlon Yale's Spanish
class won the drive a·.1d lt1rs.
James Griffin's music class
finished second.
Ensign PTA
Mrs. llarold Shaw
President
COMING UP : Family night
spaghetti dinner Crom 5:30
lo & p.m. Friday, De'c. 5.
Musical and dance en·
tertainment will be provided
by the students. Mrs. Victor
'Cianflone, chairman, will be
assisted by the Mmes. Ray
Rammi'.1g Jr., de.coraUons;
George Thomas. tickets;
Harold Shaw, Elgie Arm()L;r
and B. E. Buckley, door
prizes. Seabee sweatshirts
and jackets will be sold.
Harper PTA
ltfn. Bob Lindsay
President
COMING UP: Board meeting
at 7:30 p.m. Monday, Dec. J,
in the home of Mrs. Donald
Samit' . . . Christmas prG-"
gram will be presented at
7:30 p.m. Tuesday, ()ec. 9,
in mulllpurpose room .
REPORTS: Ratified at the
board meeting were t.1rs.
l\fichael Blair. inside publici·
ty and Mfs. George Stanton,
co-social . . . lt1rs. John
C ampbel I, membership
chairman reports 3 0 3
persons joined. Five classes
had 100 perre.1t.
Monte Vista PT A
l\frs. Mark l\1orri1
President
REPORTS: 50 s I u dent s
participated in the bicycle
safety program conducted
by officer C. T. Camarillo
<ind the Mmes. Michael
Seymour, Stuart L y n c h ,
Andrew Lakatosh and Bill
McAfee . . . Visual aids
committee chaired by Mrs.
Bert McElmurry worked at
the curriculum center last
week . Committee assisting
were Mrs. Roy Mickey, Mrs.
Charles Kircher and fi.trs.
Michael Phillips . .
Volunteers who built and
painted shelves for the
library were the h1essrs.
and Mmes. David Goodsell,
Tom Herndon, Bert
Servaretes and J e r r y
Horto.1, along with the
f.1mes. Jack Glenn, James
Moor, W. W. Leaverton ,
Byron Chamberlain a n d
Michael Blackwell. Students
assisting were Denice and
Connie LaVoie, 0 ebb i e
Glenn. Val Bjornestad, Hugh
Springer, Chester Carter,
Lynn Petty, Mark Martinez,
Phil Maurer 8'.1d Bill Colon.
Scott Paulsen, principal,
Gifts for Everyone Promised
supervilid.
Newport Hts. PT A
Mri. David Cbavls
President
COMING UP: Executive
board meeUng at 9:30 a.m .
Tuesday, OOC. 2, In the
home or Mrs. Joseph
SlowlkoW!kl.
REPORTS: Cub Scout Pack
10, Oen 5 led the flag
ceremony for lhe 400 at·
tending father.son night.
Relreshmenls we.re served
by Don Burns, Maurice
Parole, Ralph Stevens and
Slowikowskl ...
Volunteers assisting with the
immunizatiu.1s were t h e
Mmes. Elgie Armour ,
Pernell BarneU, J a m e s
Blain, David Ch a V· is,
Richard Kuykendall, Ken
Logan and Sam Palmer,
Our Lady Queen
Of Angels Aux .
ft1r1. James Davies
President
COJ.11NG UP: Board meeting
will take place Tuesday,
Dec. 2, in the home of Mrs.
William E. Magruder.
REPORTS: Mrs. Francisco
Alvarez, health chairman,
assisted by Mrs. Richard
\Vagncr and Mrs. George
Clark conducted an eye
cli'.1ic for students in fifth
through eighth grades ...
Civicc Club has been formed
for students in eighth grade.
f\1rs. Paul Ber gd ah I,
chairman, will serve as
moderator.
Paularino PTA
Mn. Nigel Balley
President
REPORTS : Mrs. Fred
Palmer, program chairman,
announces that 190 parents
attended the unit meeting.
Ice cream treats were
awarded to Mrs. Ferren L.
Christiansen's afternoon k?.1·
dergarten class and Miss
Nancy Little's third grade
class fpr the highest at-
tendance ... Participating
in the Thanksgiving phiy
\\'ere Lori Brumleu. Leslie
Larson, Allison Hansen and
Coleen Scherf. George
Roberlsd.1, fifth grade
teacher, directed.
TeWinkle PTA
Mrs. Robert Sorensen
President
REPORTS : 357 memberships
have been received to dale.
Those who wish to join may
contact 1'1rs. Lawrence
Englehart, chairman, at MS.
0495 for further informaUon.
Univ ersity Pk . PT A
l'ltrs. and Mn. Robert Kerr
Presidents .
COMING UP : Christmas book
sale will take place from 3
to e·p.m. Friday, Dec. 5, and
from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Unusual gill articles. such as lbe hobby horses which intrigue John Klauer
(lcfl) and Brian Skelton . will be offered for sale during St. Catherine's Auxili ·
a ry's Christmas Tee and Boutique from noon-4 pim. Saturday, Dec. 6, in the
Monarch Bay ho1nc of l\.1r. and fvlr s. Ray Kl a uer. \Vlth the young 0 cow·pokcs"
arc their mothers, 1'.1rs. Klauer (left} and Mrs. Thomas Skelton, chairman.
Saturday, De<. t In the
multlpurrose .room.
Procttda wU be uS<d for
lhe library.
Victoria PT A
Mn. Fred Woo4wwlll
President
COMING UP : Paper drive
from 9 to 11:30 a .m. Satur-
day, Dec. 13 .•• Book drive
for seh90l library will take
place rrom Monday, Dec. 1,
through Wednesday, Dec. 10.
REPORTS: T<e shirts in
$Chool colors or orange and
yellow are being sold to
benefit the alhleUc program
. . . Serving as room
mothers are the Mmes. John
Opferman, Al Kemmer,
Francis Dowd, J a m -e 1
t.fadsen, S. D. R o s s •
OeWayne Nelghbot'3, Ted
Argott, Kent Spencer, Ken
Adams and James Keller .•
J.iotbera assisting with the
library are the M m e s.
Charles Doyle, J a m e 1
\Vilson, Jen-y Ogle,
Lawrence Alvarez a n d
Cor.ieUus Perez •.. Estan-
cia High School marching
band led the Americanism
program honortng t h e
astronauts' return last Fri·
day. Colors were posted by
Brownie Troop 417.
Coordinating the p.-ogram
was Diet Kuykendall. music
teacher, and Pete Fornier,
band director. Mrs. Barton
Bean assisted.
Wilson PTA
?t1n. William Oudaw
President
COfi.flNG UP: Ere cut 1 v e
·board meeting at 7 p.m.
Tuesday, Dec. 2, r.1 the ' teachers lounge ... ~icycle
Event
safety test Tuesday, Dec. 2. A Las Posadas Festival, featuring a procession and a.m. and last until 1 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 6. Ar-
Mrs. Robert Murray is in {he sale o1 homemade foods and Mexican decora-ranging sale items for displays are (left lo right)
charge. lions will be staged at Aliso Elemeniary SchOQI , La-' the Mmes. Keith Kinner, John D. McKenney and
REPORTS : Membership guna Beach by the PTA. FestiVities will begin at 10 Clayton Ganison, chairman.
trophy for highest PTA -''-----'------------=------'------------------
enrollment was presented by
Mrs. Robert Sankey, co-
chairman to Mrs. Mildred
Kolue's kindergarten class
. . . Thanksgiving essay
awards were presented to
the following students :
Laura Phegley, third grade;
Dora Romero, fourth grade;
Susie Chavez, fifth grade;
Deborah Angiano, s I x t h
grade, and a special award
y,·as presented to Pamela
Gihl.
Hoag Needs
Volunteers
Volunteers who would like to
start the new year right by
donating time to hospital work
are bvited to attend •
membership meeting of the
Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial
Hospital, Presbyterian on Fri-
day, Dec. 5, at 10 a.m. in the
hospital conference room.
With the operi.ing of Hoag
North, many more jobs are
available. Those interested in
infonnation may call Mrs.
Robert Unger, membership
chairman, al ~65.
Monthly meetings the fourth
Thursday of each month will
resume after the frrst of the
year.
GOP Delegates
Convene in NB
A delegation from Costa
Mesa Federated Republican
women's Club will attend a
Dec. 4 Orange County con.
ventlo.1 in the Newporter Inn.
Planning to hear speaker
Dr. William Banowsky, presi-
dent of Pepperdlne campus,
Malibu, at the 10 a.m. con-
clave are the Mmes. Charles
Benton, Bruce Walters, Lillian
Riley and Earla Mae Nugent.
}.lternates are the Mmes.
William Avis, Sam Cordeiro,
Louis Fisher and H. J. Woods .
Club guest Mn. Ed Bennett
will join Mrs. Orvie Hlghum,
page, z.1d ?ttrs. F I s h e r ,
hostess.
Service Mothers
Every lblrd Thunday U.S.
Air Force Mothers, Flight 19
schedule meetings in
California Federal Saving!!
and Loan Wlldlng, Costa
Mesa. at a p.m.
Tot's Delight Peace Theme Strong
In Christmas Cards
By GAY PAULEY
NEW YORK (UPll
"Peace on Earth • , . " the
angels sang two thousand
years ago to herald the birth
of the Christ Child.
The peace theme speaks out
just as strongly today in the
1969 Christmas cards, as a
world is torn over lhe war in
Vletnam and the conflict in
the Mideast.
"Probably no s Ing 1 e
Christmas card design and
message idea has ever take'.1
on more importance than the
pica for peace," says the Na-
tional Association of GreeUng
Card Publlshers. ''Many of
these cards simply use the
word 'peace' rendered In
countless different wayr; as lhe
main design of the card."
On other cards, the words
"Love" and ''peace" are used
interchangeably. Other cards
introduce the plea for peace in
mz.1y languages.
"This peace moti£ really
blossomed." said Steven Shan·
non, executive director of the
association, who goes through
some 40 major manufacturers'
collections each season.
"Peace Is the word this
year," says the American
Artlsls Group, lnc., whose
designs feature works of con·
temporary painters.
Whatever their seleCtions,
Americans will send cards by
the billions this Yule, an
estimated three billlon of
them, Shir..mon said, or half of
the total greeting c a r d s
purchased o.11 year.
Shannon says it Is difficult
to pinpoint how . much the
Christmas cards will cost, but
certalnly the public is spen-
ding more for each card, or
"upgrading" quality of selec·
tions.
The message In many c!rds
this year continues t b e
religious motif, ever a favo'rite
theme. A:!. always. the assocla·
tion says the Madonna 8nd
Child are by far the favorite
subject.
Also b the rellsldus
category are the journey to
Bethlehem, the Adorallol\ of
the Shepherds, the Nativity
and the Wise Men.
This year, some card& ahow
an adult Christ, Shannon .ad·
ded - a bearded young man.
And scenes of the Last Supper.
traditional or Easter, arc
showing in the Christmas .col-
lections.
For adults or chlldttn, tllere
are the usual. Santas and
reindeer, toy paclui, electric
tra?.1s and the like.
And a good deal of whlmsy
has crept into designs. Or Is it
more truth than fantasy when
one card's message ts. "My,
how time flies. It seemt like
Y I · d B 11 t D only yesterday when I took U et I e 0 e U e down the mist1e1oe." Look 1n-
0e1ig1tt a girl or subteen side and the message finishes.
Ylith this {luffy, furry set. A cast of fiO will dance the youth groups, state hospital.s "Come to think of it, it WAS
Crochet ear-cuddling bat, colorful Christmas ballet "The and handicapped children. only yesterday·''
cozy muff in loop sUtch and Nutcracker" in Newport Tickets at $2.50, adults, and Or how about this one for
cul loops, brush for fur look. Harbor H lg h Schoo I $1.25, chlldren under 13, will laugh!, suggested only for
Use knitting worsted plus auditorium on Sunday. Dec. 7, be available at the box office someone you know pretty well.
mohair. Pattern 74S3 : direc· et 2:30 p.m. before the performance. For The message reads, "I told
2 b . S8'.1ta you were a good girt Uons year to su teen s12es. A presentation of Laguna Information on special group this year and do you know
Fl.FT)' CENTS (coins) ror Beach Civic Ballet, a national rates. Mrs. Rosenberg may what he said??! _ 'Ho! Ho!
each pattern -add 15 cenls honor company, the ballet is a be contacted at 962-7297. Ho!'
for each pattern for first-class fund-raising endeavor of "Merry Christmas."
otherwise third-\:lass delivery B'nai B'rlth. Chairman is Valley TOPS r malling and special handli'.1g; Orange County Chapter 1230 of ,.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~
will take three weeks or more. Mrs. Lynn Temp k I n s with
Send to Alice Brooks, the QAI· Mrs. Irwin Rosenberg and Leltuce·B-TOPS convene at
LY PILOT, 105 Needlecraft Mrs. Seymour Klugman 1 7:30,p.m. each Tuesday for
Dept.,· Box 163, Old Chelsea assistants. programs in Fountain Valley
Station, New York, N.Y. 10011. Proceeds will help support Elementary School. Print Name, Address, Zip,, _.:.....c..:..:.:..:..:_ __ _;_ _ _:_:. _____ _:_ _____ _
p~~rnl;;n;.~r; d I e c r. ft i~y''o··, ............. o''a''t''EM''''."''''··········
Catalo& -40 page!, over 200 J •
designs, 3 free patterns! Knit, crochet Instants, argy I e You want M 11n ..,.. Item
sweater, hats, dresses, swim thet you no longer MOCI Wt
r;uit. Quilt embroider, weave. ...,.._ •'-Clft UM for
Make toys, gll~, gay afghans. HOT OYER $50 Send :,0 cents.
51 INSTANT Gllu, Make lo-? ? 7 7 ? ?
day-give tomom>w. 50 cents.
"16 Jiffy Rug•" lo knit, JOUI ANSWEI: crochet, ~ave, sew, hook. 50
cents.
Book of 1% Prize Afghans. 50
You coll THI DAILY PILOT, oolc for
Cloulfte4 Adnrtlol .. , ..... ,,_ I
CC'.1ls.
Bargain! Quill Book 1 has 16
beautiful patterns. 50 cents.
ls COMING to
COSTA MESA
FllDAY
Nov. 28th
..
• F11turlnt Superb "'.
PRIME RIB s31• DF llEEF if
DINNER -~ • •.
SAME DINNER $ftla
4-6 P.M. .£-°!
WHkUy1 Only :.. --· PILOT
PENNY
PINCHER
--alao f•mout -• How's Your HearinCJ
MODEL OF NEW HEARING AID GIVEN
A most unique free offu of lt weighs less than one quarter
special lntereat to thoM who ounce. and it's all at ear ltvel,
h ea r but do not undentand ln one unit. No wim: lead from
words ha1 just been .lnQOU.nCed. body to head. Here Is truly new
A true-llfe, actu1l size replica hope for the hard of hearing.
of the smallest aid ever made These models are free while
will be given absolutely free to the lllnlted :W'1)1y losts, 60 we
anyone answering th I a adver· suggest 'j o u ·write for youn
Usement. Try it to see how it now. Again, we rc~I. there is
ls worn in the privacy of your no cost. and certainly no obll·
own home without cost or obll· gaUon.
gaUon of any kind. l&,'a yours to Write for your1 today to Hear·
keep free. The r;ize of this aid Ing Aids, c o Bo1. M«. DaUy
Is only one of many featurc1. Pilot, Coata Mesa.
CL.ASSll'llD AD
AT OUR VICIAL I.OW RA11 3 UNu 2 1IMU 2 DDUAU
.AND YDUlt CltlDIT IS GOOD I
642-5678 lftl ____ , .. ,
Choice Steab-~
-Lobster.
We wUI be OPEN fof.
Weekday Luncheon •·
11 a.m. staring !
Monday, Dec. Isl •
WINES • BEER •
(COCKTAIL LOUNGE.:;
OPEN SOONl :
428 E. 17th ST. ;:
" COSTA MESA ~
DIAL NOW DIRIC:JI
at°'A*t•••tAtA•AttAAtAHttt*** . :i .. ________ _
'
I
I
•
• p ~----~~-... .. .. .. ---·~. . " .. . ·-. . ... '• .... -·-......... •' :· .. 't
-!# DAll.Y l'ILOT WtdnHd.ly, November 26, 1CJ6q
'
. 'Wednesday,' 'Harvey' Set ,
' •• BJ "!OM TITll8
:. Of .. Deir"",.,.
:·All.. qtlltt ... the Orana•
Ccioll fnlnl tbll -k u far •• ......,, nllbls ore coocemed. l!!it fUrlber nortll • pair of
cilmedlel --old and .... f<Jl'l)linllvely new -join the
j>ande GI produ<l!ON on
Or.... OOunty Utile theater ;iq ...
:n>e newccmers m "Any W-y," which opens a in tlleater for the llO-yeaMid
Santa AM Community
P.lilyen. and j•Harvey," the
!":11.e-winnlng !MO's comedy
fl"·e uted by the ~
FOCJt\ll!lterS. . :·Leta tau a look lint at
'~AnY. Wednesday" -an
tiOOetatandable choice since
this ~ Is a!.oo mannlng the
~'s chair for the _com-
edy • .A ,...,....ru1 Broadway
show in 1985 (It launched the
• .,.... of sandy Dennis). it fias been seen sparingly in
OranCe County, the tut time
1c· late 111ee.
Filling the central role of
f;Den. t b e tu-deductible
miatrese: oC a high-powered ex-
ecutive, is Barbara Garlicb of
Costa M"8. Another Costa
M:esan Don Rhoades, is cast
as her' wheeling and ·dealing
IOver. Alan Hart. a tiusy actor tak-
ing on his sinh role of the
year, plays the Ohio factory
QWner who turns the triangle
into a quadrangle. Completing
the plcture ls Edith Goodman
as the executive's talkative
~-Muriel Resnik comedy
unfolds on the split-level stage
of the Santa Ana Playt.rs' new
theater a converted and com-
fortahl; church building at
West 6th and Ross streets
near the Civic Center.
Friday's opening performan·
ce is reserved for the players'
first nighters group, while
subsequent stagings will be
given Fridays and 5atw'days
through Dec. 13. Reservations
are being taken at 543-7647 or
835-1417.
* While Santa Ana celebrates
ils golden anniversary,
"Harvey'' is observing its
silver year and will be back on
Broadway to commemmorate
the occasion soon. First,
however 1 comes a visit to
Fullertoo.
Tony Brandt of Corona del
l\far :is directing Mary Chase's
Pulitzer Prize winning comedy
which' will see W a I t
Assenhaimer taking t h e
leading role of Elwood P.
Doud, to whom man's best
friend is a six-foot invisible
rabbit. Floria Mose plays his
eiasperated ii st er, Veta
Louise.
DAILY PILOT st.n,.....
'NO CAVITIES'-Barbara Garlich shows Alan Hart
what a healthy bride she'd make in this scene from
the new Santa Ana Community Players comedy
"Any Wednesday/' opening Friday.
Others in the cast are Jill
McMillan, Jane Davison, Lois
Lamard, William F...,.y, Jay
Conklin, Arthur Prunier, Carol
Hale, John Malone and direc-
tor Brandt, who will appear as
the cab driver~
Performances of "Harvey"
will be given Fridays and
Saturdays through Dee. 13 at
the Muckenthaler Center. 119
Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton.
Tickets may be reserved by
calling 8'l7-1339.
* Back on the Orange Coast, a
the city's r~eation depart~
ment at 834-S:m.
* "Invitation to a Murder'' is
the ~fare at the · Huntington
Beach Playhouse, w h e r e
Philip DeBarros is directing
the mystery drama . Annabelle
Quigley, Ron Lambert and
Cheri Sumrow take the prin-
cipal roles .
Performances are b e i n g
given Fridays and Saturdays
at the playhouse, 2110 Main
St.. Hw>tington Beach, Call
53&-8861 for reservations.
* Tennessee Williams is the
&Ubject of the collection of
dramatic rudlnp b e I n 1
pnHllled at the Open End
'11leator under the tllle "All
the Lonely People." Warren
Deacoo la dlractlng •
David Paul, B«ly Paul and
Genevieve Murray are In~
c11111.i In the cut of the
original prodUcllon at the
theoter, 2114 Villa Way,
Newport Beach. Tlckela may
be merved by calllq 115>
1120.
* MWTay Schlagal'a C<lllled1
"Luv11 reaumes producUon
Thursday night at the San
Clemente Community Theater.
Rkhard Andersen directs the
lhr<ediaracter catl of Bob
Moe, Karen Moe and Gonion
Harris.
Performances are b e I o g
given at the Cabrlllo
Playhowit, 202 A v e n id a
Cabrlllo, San Clem"!'le. Ticket
reservaUonJ are being ac-
cepted at-.
* They won't let the
Westminster Commun l ty
Theater get away with only
three perfonnances of ''Tbe
Odd Couple," so the popular
Neil Simon comedy la being
held over for a final atqtng
Saturday night at
Wcalmblter's Finley School-
Dlrccted by Sally Crowley,
the play 1tars Sam Brandon
'and John Moran. The school· is
tocat~d at Trask Street and
Edwards Avenue, with
reservaUoos being taken at
897·1184" .
Astor Aboard
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Louise Astor, daughter of
Lady Irene A11tor, has been
added to the cast of ·~Anne of
the 'lllousand Days" &tarring
Richard Burton.
vaTiety of the a tr i ca I en·
tertalnment -c o m e d y ,
drama, musical and anthology
-heads into a second
weekend at four separate
theaters.
At the Costa Mesa Civic
Playhouse, "Stop the World -
I Want to Get Off" takes the
stage Friday and SatUrday
with Thor Nielsen directing
and playing the leading role.
Jayne Hamil costars in the
Newley-Bricusse music a I
satire.
Open End Auditions
For Feiffer Musical
The popular production Is
being presented at the Com·
munity Center auditorium on
the Orange County
F a i rgrounds. Reservations
may be obtained by phoning
Ope-.1 auditions for a musical
rtvue based on the work of
satirical cartoonist Jules Feif-
fer wlll be held Sunday and
Monday at the Open End
Theater in Newport Beacb1
years ago formed a summer
music repertory group in
Anaheim. Among his musical I
credits are "Oliver," "Fl-
nian's Ralnbow,0 ''Bye Bye
Birdie," ''carnival" and "UO
in the Shade."
Crossword Puzzle
Thor Nielsen, currently star-
ring In his own production or
"Stop the World-1 Want to
Get Off" at the Costa Mesa
Civic Playhouse, will direct
the Newport production,
"Applicants should be well
versed in comedy,sin¥f.1g an~
dancing," Nielsen said. "The
show will be done in a fast
paced, sophisticated style re-
quiring some excellent talent.
Revue and standup comedy
experience also would be
valuable."
As a director, Neilsen ls
familiar wilh the fan-moving
satirical style of Feller, hav·
ing toured with a similar
revue for three months ln
Europe last year with the
University of Southern
California theater a rt s
department.
ACROSS SZ Cash
5• Groove l Vessi:I 55 Oull fini sh
5 Card game 58 Astern
9 MosaJc law 61 Feminine
14 Russia• name
river t.3 Restrai11
15 Simon -b5 Goddess of
16 kl a lligher Ole 111oon
place &7 RetTibutiye
I l7 Kind of action
leathet 70 Below in t'allk
1
19 Metric trn lt 71 One of five
20 lransportatioll 111a]or lakes
' 1111ediu• 72 Thailand's
2.1 Legal former name
document 73 Rich it1
2) Part of 111atlet
... kl be" 74 Cord
124 Female 75 Red Of
animal ti cker-·
125 Catch
28 Resting DOWN • plact ,3 0 Fathtred
]32 lnsttl
~ Vtteran s
~o Mv !~l Loud sound J.4Z Unit of
ice: crta11
·~· Very popu lar person
. ..tS Of tht
sl)ffd of
sound ·•7 At e: 3 words
',19 Period of tl111e:
2 words Sl Analyze
uiticaJly
•
' ....
' ..
• •
1 Punlshts ill
a tt'l'lain . .,
2 Grtelinc 3 Acquirt-,
relalivt
-4 Suffering
5 latetlng
pl act
b Ecce-nttic:
Sl01g
71na1ine
8 Danger
9 Scores 10 Japanes t
sash
U Roster
l? Statt
13 1n thl!
lotltiOft
Ytsletd1y's Pu zzle SolYed:
S ' F l
II 0 V {
1112bl••
18 Hign11 43 Neighbot inttll1~t of Ecuador people •& Albtrtl city 22. Poart of 48 Fibtr
Nm01;1ndl": 50 Steer wildly
.t.bbt. SJ Not Mt illlY
26 Weapons de9rtt
27 Tree 55 Unreasonab1t
2'1 f eel enthusias• dtjec\ior. Sb Music j 0 Take: 1 li t ensinq
lon11 sttp group: .t.bbr.
31 Wilt 57 Subj ect 33 Bust1e 58 Scottl sb
J.4 Detroit fll architect: Vant OUYt'f 511 lnstru111esit footballe.-bO lnfor111al
35 She: fr, farewtll i
36 Approxi · 62 -·Wolle-: · 111atety: Stout z wordi. ch;iracttf 37 Bird b4 OiltcllOll
38 Copenhagtn 60 Capture
citi zen bB Short drint 3' Derived •9 Word frolll the lndltltint su• surprise
10 11
Nielsep Is a longtime aclor-
director in Orange and Los
Angeles COU'.1ties who two
The revue, e.1tiUed "A Smile
Is a Frown Turned Upside
Down,'' will open New Year's
Eve and will play Fridays, and
Saturdays lb.rough January at
the Open End, 2815 Villa Way,
Newport. Beach.
I
I
I •
While .your nei&ftborl 111 tlolnc
th' Th111ksglvinc dillles,
you could be on 1
submarine YOY11f lo the North l'llle.
Th• elegmt Vlctoflan dtc0r of
The Plaza Inn
El'ltf't9• of ftMtt Turby er lftall Vlrslnla H•m
$2.SO
Sped.I Ct!Ud'•l't• &t,SO ••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• ih• New Orleane Style
French Market
Entree-AOlst Turk'1
$2.SO
·······················~··············· Th• Romantk: Moonlit Atmosph•r:t of
The :Slue :Bayou B.est&urant
' Ent...• -Aoa•t Tutk•r
$2.85
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••
Oin'*'8 Mrv,d from 11 :30 AM.
Disneyt1nd also serves the best
ni&httime entertainment, Novtmber 27-29.
PAULANKA
FRIENDS OF DISTINCTION
JENNIFER
BILL DEAL ond THE RHONDELS
PlUS mo~ lhin SO •dvtnluru •nd altnctions.
Open Thlnkl1ivin1 Day from IO AM lo M~nf&hl
'Disnc~1lond
_ Ht;Jllywood's Greats Pay
.GwC. Offers
'Alice • Ill
Wonderland'
Golden West College's
drama · departJJ)ent tlll'M to
family theater for It s
Cbrlstmaa pi'oducUoi;i with an
. adaptaUon of Lcwia Carroll's
0 Allce ln Wonderland."
Four performancu are
scheduled in the A ~ t o r ' s
Playbox, Dec' li-13 and 111-20,
at 7:30.p,.m., and two matinees
especlally for the youngsters,
De<. 13 and 20, at 1,30 p.m.
All Uckets are 25 centa from
the college bookstore.
All of CarroD's familiar
cha:rader1 are in the pro-
ductlcr.i -the March Hare, Do'rmouse, Mad Hatter, King
and Queen of: Hearta -and a
few upbeat wrinkles are ~ing
added by the players. Tbe set
will have peycbedeUC colors
and design, and guitar music
will provide transition between
·scenes.
Cast \n. th! title role of Alice _is Mindy Middough, Sup.
porting her are B o n n l e
Hackworth, Renata Florh.
Laurel Burne, Wendy Fried-
man, Virginia Trela, Don
Hayes, S a 11 y Mizel1, Sylvia
. Symank, Cheryl Woodford,
Marlane Melton, Dan Brown,
Steve Mutscbler, Robert
LaMonte, and Bob Pone.
Soldiers will be p)a~ by
Velia Fisher, Joretta Worden,
Guy COckerum, and Roland
Barajas, and flowers by Diane
Baty.
Stars Signed
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Suzanne Pleshette and Ed
Nelson are co-stars of 20th
Century-Fot:'s t O • m I nu t e
movie for television, "Along
Came a Spider."
' Tribuw to Jack Warner
Bf BOB THOMAS I dllagree. r m here lo pay ooating you a fortune."
'HOLt.YWOOO (AP)_ You homage to my protesslonal Reagan noted that Warner
couldn't call It a love feul father " l had been spending time In
' • t New York, where be backed a because Jack Warner wasn't, Gov. Ronald Reagan, who I 1 the klnd' tl' bOu who iinlpli'ed n e w Broadway mus ca , love. 1,ndied; none of the men spent 13 years WJder contract "Jimmy." The governor add·
who bUllt rriovle empires wire to Warner, gazed oyer the ed: "You won't like it there.
ldercd I bl assemblage aod cra~ed to hi s The g o v e r n or (Nelson A.
CO!ll ova e. old boss: "Look at all those Rockefeller) never even did a But they canle out of dress extraa. 11Us must be walk-ov."
. respect ,-aJl4 a scnie of:I. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ blJtory. 'l1le respect was ei:·1;
pressed when the ICrttn
lighlcd up wl\h greal moments
of film: Al Jolloo ln the t1Bt '
sound movie ,. .• , P,ut MWll as
Zola • • • Humplirty Bogart
asking Dooley Wlllno lo "Play
it again, ~am" ~ • • Errol
Flynn dyl!1I aa yen. Custer
, . . • Bette Davis, James
Cagney, Judy G~land, etc., at
the peaks of their caremi.
Jack Warner was potentate
of Warner Brothers studio
when all those achievements
were filmed. And so a
thousand industry I e a d e r s
went to the studio last week to
give him honor.
They also seemed to be bid-
·ding farewell to an era of
Hollywood greatness now clos·
ed with absolute finality.
Wamer was the last of the in-
dustry pioneers to sell out. He
had handed the studio to Seven
Arts, which in tum sold It to
the present owners, Kinney
Natlonal Services. The new
studio boss for Kinney, fonner
~a··--*sou.~H ~OAST . I' l"LAZA THEATllK ""Dit&o freewi1 at 91l1tol • 5*271'1
MATINEES ONLY
FRIDAY, NOY. 28 12:30 • 2:30
SATURDAY, NOY. 29 12:30 • 2:30
SUNDAY, NOY. 30 12:30 ONLY
ALL SEATS 75c
agent Ted Ashley, gave the:\~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ glittering farewell for Warner.!"-
Frank Sinatra was emcee.
He said, the dinner was in
honor of "a man who has done
a great deal for what is left of
the motion picture industry."
Jack Valenti, as president of
the Motton Picture Producers
Association, recalled h,is tussle
with Warner over the salty
language in ;"Who's Afraid of
Virginia Woolf?" Said Valenti:
"How I have longed for sw~t.
delicate 'Virginia' -longed
for her after 'Fanny Hill.' "
Onetime Warner gangster
Edward G. Robinson called l!lmsell "the · only 5-foot.S
survivor of the W a r n e r
University Class of 1930." He
recalled the days when he,
Bogart, Flynn and M_µni "used
to sit around exchanging X·
rated anecdotes about our
commander-in-chief."
"There area't many of us
left," Bette Davis s a I d
ruefully. She had known years
of battle With Warner, but she
commented: "Dorothy Parker
once remarked that the thing
most responsible for 'the good
old days' was a poor memory.
2 SUPER llG
HOLIDAY SHOWS
FROM THI STAI$ OF
"IORN FRIE" COMIS
"RING OF
"BRIGHT WATER"
* Continuous Thurs • Fri • Sat • Sun *
. ; ' .. ~
* * BEACH BLVD. AT ELLIS * *
HUNTINGTON BEACH * 847•9608 iiiolllIDi1W1imXllil1io ri1·iiiii1fffilll!i mim
G ~====-~CDUJlll..!:::k'TM'!:;.~ ..
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY RUN
Coming • • • CHRISTMAS DAY
"FUNNY GIRL"
Barbara Streisand Omar Shartr
2114 llll ACTION SHO~ 1
. ~ neu1rt.,ii'"
~·~COIT•llru,..0.)~ .. l•ot UUJIGM ... IJ H•ATll • ~--~ I ·-,:;·;;;:;uN-· ~ MflftOCOUlto-nnr
HOLIDAY MATINEES • THUR • SAT • SUNDAY
''The picture leaves some re.al film
things In the mind, as tha be1t
American movies about danger and
loners elways have done. There are
good,· good scenes!"
-l'tntlOP• Gilli•tt, Ntw York-Jr M•9t1i~•
e JOB PRINTING e PUBLICATIONS e NEWSPAPERS
Quality Printing and Oependabla S•rvice
lor more th•n e quarter, ol • c:•ntury.
PILO T PRINTING
1211 wm MLIOA ILYD .. NIWPOIT IU.CH -Ml·Ult
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'. Swenson ••
w-..,., N0vtmber 26, 1969
LA Plailhartttonic Visit
I DAit Y PILOT J .,------' .... "'ff
~-:.Soloist
AtOCC
Spanish· ·Concert Rich, Glltterin·g
' ! , !
Giiled YOllllC llOloUI DaYid
Sw-wlU perform the
Rachmanlnol! piano oonceno
at the optolng coocert ol the
year GI Orange Coast CoOese
Community Symphooy
Qrchellnl Dec. 7.
The COl)\lOrl Will be held at 4
p.m. in the OCC Audltoriwn.
Adm!Bslon $1.
Swenson will be making his
third appearance with the
OCC orchett.n.. A winner of
the Intematkmal P J: an o
Recording Contest ol the .Na-
tional Guild of P I a n o
Teachers, Swenson's ap-
pearances IQCally have always
drawn full bouBes. He has
1tudied under Evie V.oorhles
,of tbe mllllc staff GI Calllornla ( . DAILY PH.OT'lttff ......
~~t:a,~~ :,:,WI•rton 10' 'Couple' Returning
The orchestra will perform ' Uie Overture, '•n u 11 i an John Moran (left) and Sam Brandon will be squar·
Easter," Op. ·36 by JUmaky-ing off again in "The· Odd ·couple" once more Sa-
Konakoll. Followinf this, the turday as th• Westminster Community Theater orchestra, under d rector comedy has been held over. (See Theater Notes,
Joseph Pe1rlman, wUI Page 14).
perform 1he "New World Sym-~--~-------------
phony" by Dvor8. Swenson
-will perform alter 'the in-
te-.
'nie orchestra ls now In its
seventh aeason. It has grown
from an origtnal membership
of 30 to its pnsent 71.
The group wlU hold Ill first
performance off campus next
month when It travel& to Hun·
tington Beach Hlah School
Dec. I at 8:15 p.m.
Membersh ip of the
orcheStra cuts across all areas
o,f business, professional and
homemakers in the area, as
well as outstandtni high
school seniors. It also includes a: large number or area music
t.eachen. It Ls supported
joinUy by OCC and the
Department of Recreation of
the City of Costa Mesa. There
are also a number of business
and professional firms in the
area, as well as private
citiiem:, who act as patrons.
The orchestra, u n d e r
Pearlman's dlrectlon, I a s t
year won the "Euterpre Music
Award'" given by the DAILY
PILCYI' as ·the best concert
organization in Orange County
for 1968-69.
Injuries Big Threat
To Hit TV Program
By VEilNoN srorr !Ormer was hospitalized for
n!iie weeks. HOLLYWOOD (UPI) What does the television pro-"I kept Anls.sa because the
ductr of a hit show do when public fell in love witb her,"
one of his stars: F~detsoo said. "She broke , her leg tn May and was sup-
1. -drops dead po3ed to be able to perform
2. -quits in a rage without cast or crutches when
3. -breaks a leg. we began ahooling in June.
"You pray a lot," said ~ 0 The doctors miscalculated
ducer Don Fedderson of ' My so we delayed the statt of pro-
'"'-Sons," "Familv Affair" .i.11.""" ~ duction. Finally specialists
and "The , Lawrence Welk told us it might take longer. So
Show.'' ' we shot our first four shows
He also buys in'surance by with Anissa in a cast, hope it
the carload lot. would be aJI over."
"Jt's very expensive in· Sure enough, Anissa healed
suraoce because you need at and the CBS.TV series rolled
least three quarteis of a ·along for another seven shows
million dollars by m 1 d -depicting the little girl without
season," Fedderson explained. a cast.
"ll somethipg happens to your Unfortunately Anissa was
star and you have no show, not covered by insurance
you are out of buSiness." because the accident took Feddersm added a few gray hairs this season when Anloa place during hiatus when the
JonQ, the dimpled 11-year~ld poli<;ies are Wted. · F bloode of "Family Affair,'" Fedderson bore lhe loss. Film a'•orite broker her leg when the show All was well unUI Aug. 2
HOLLYWOOD {UPI) was on hiatus. · , when a mended Anissa spent a
When "The S.O.B. 's" films in Th'e · producer considered \ Saturday at the b e a ch ,
Almeria. Spain. lhat small city replacing her, as he did Bill dashing ln and out of the surf.
will become Europe 's favorite Frawley with Bill Demarest in Fedderson continued wiijl a
location site with 250 movies "My Three Sons,'' and Sebas-catch in hia throat: "A giant IJhot there in the past dozen tian Cabot temporarily wit.h wave cnstied' onto the be'.lcb
Jears. John Wllllams when th e and turned Anissa upside ...::==---------~~--------down. When she came to the
surface· her leg was broken in
exactly the same place as
before." '
Tlle ptoducer stifled what
might have been a sob. ,
He was then stuck with rour
shows fealuring Anissa with a
cast on her leg and seven
without it. Plans (or beaming
the first four episodes with the
cast were junked and will be
tacked on later in the year.
"We'll ha ve 15 segments
with Anissa ill a cast," Fed--
derson said. "That's a-n
GLORIOUS
He 3Jnply proved that point
for us ln jUst one of those four
glorious movements f r o m
"Suite Espanola"; the subtly
scored "Granada", a lush, ex·
otic movement that carries
much more than a hint of the
Arabic influence so correctly
noted by our program and 1
which is so typical · of that
particular comer of Spain with
its deliberate, almost lazy,
musical fonn and 1 u s h
overto11es.
De ~ B1Ugos was obviously
delighted wlth his orchestra
and he made no secret or it by
bounding• lo concennaste r
David Frisina with his con-1
graiuiattons right after the
last note of that rousing
"Aragon": so he shouldt for
his superb Albeniz owed a
great deal to a dedicated
orchestra, particularly a
s ·tring sec ti o n which
thoroughly distinguished itself.
It's Ume, however, for cer-
tain music critics whose col·
um m have come to our at-
tention to push De Burgos' ef-
forts for Spain to one side and
evaluate the man on his
overall m'usical abilities. Not
that one needs to go further
than what he displayed Satur-
day night to rea~ tha't this
awfully long time !or a bro.ken E.lephan't ~oy leg to mend, but we don't have
too many options."
:Beach Bingo
Linda Evans and Frankie Avalon are in the middle
of rock music motorcycles and bikinis in the mbtion
·p1cture "Beach Blanket Bingo" on the Channel 7
screen tonight at 9 a.m. Others in the movie are
Annette Funicello, Paul Lynde, Don Rickles a n d
Jody McCrea.
I SEE BY TODAY'S
WANT ADS
• Don't elW)" the ,eulnt rid·
er, own one! BeautUUI Ka.
wuaki. 350 Ave..,er, llke new, tap condition 1969.
• On )'OtU' Mod Chrl1tmu
lilt 1 New sroovY hand
made sheepskin embroid·
ered vests. croc~
drnsea. leather p>d:a, etc.
e OUtll..., ·the !\one. A ,,...
17 ••• 19'26 Modtl T Coupe,
completely rntored trom
frame up, ll.850.
Unfortunately, Redderson HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
can 't collect insurance for the Young English actor Mark second broken bone. Anissa Lester, who played the title
was at the beach and not on role In "Oliv~r!." signed with
the sound stage. Disney studios for a two-part
"Ah, well," Fedderson con· television show, "The Boy
eluded. "Nobody forced me to -=Wh=o=S=lo=l=e=lh=e=E=le:ph=a=n=t.="=:;
become a televi.sioa pro-.-
ducer." BOAT BUFFS
Al'"o" Loc••b•Y It the onlv
f11ll0tim• bo1tift9 e4ltor work!,.,
H t S Olt •"Y "-•P•,.r In Ot•119• es on ays Couitty. Hit ••clu,Jv• CO••t•9•
of bo1tin9 1M y1chtin1 "•W1
11 •dilly f••ture of the DAILY Actors\Vant~·=·~~r=. =::;=:;=::;=::;~[~
Pay Video
WASHINGTON (UPI)
Actor Charlton Heston, pres!·
dent of the Screen Actors
Guild, told a cangressional
committee actors are in favor
o1 p0y te1ev~1on.
Testlfylng to the H,oute
Communication s Su-b-
committee, Heston also ltlg·
getted that sex movies such as
"Euy Rider" and "Midnight
Cowboy" be bann~. from
televisim, eltlM!t commertcal
'or 11.1blcrfpUoa t e I e v i.1 I o n
CSTV), otbenriJe known u
pay TV. . . ;
Heston lllld'h&U o! the 22.000
members of' the guild earn
leas than '5,000 a year. STV,
he lllld, would open up new
jobs for starving a c t o r t
beea.,. of the expected ln-cre• tn the demand for
television movies.
Urider STV, te l evlslon
viewtrl ~d ' pay •
''subsertptlon"0fee to see nrtt
nm movies or othe:r popular
events. Oppontnll ol STV say
It would ruin commercial
televiaion snd put movie
lheaten out of bllsines!.
e NOW~DI TUUDAT
•• Bl lllllY: llBISllYilulll•
' •
'
DOW yo11 C111 SEE
anyeblng you want
>\iic:n
RlftU1RANT"
...... ARID tlUTHRIE
,COU>R by De Luxe Uadtd AP111t•
\[!lat TM •lATOI•
SPECIAL KIDS SHOW
Frl.·l•t .• Sun-1:30 p.m.
All S11t1-75c
"Wond•rful Lind of OI''
plus
"M19lc Voy ... of
Slnhcl''
2nd
BIG WEEK
Coll 673-62'4>
For Information
AllO Playing -''THE FIRST TIME"
~ll,ll! . ........ ""••h l!J
CONTINUOUS
SHOW
THURSDAY, FRIDAY,
SATURDAY, SUNDAY
FROM 2 P.M.
Eve Show Starts 7 p.m.
Continuous Show
Sunday From 2 p.m.
HELD
Xl"CINILftX:."""'11
JohnWlvne
Hoek Hudson
~the
Undefeated
OVER
-·-· .....
Sois..llll
... , .. o.tlltle
"ALtC•'l •l!STAU•AHT• (It. 111• .••llff "'TH• YELLOW SUIMAalN••
.Hllft Wl\'M lttldl ......
"THI UND•l't:ATIO"' lrdMV hlllH ~ Sftl..._ "Tttl LOST MAN"
F_.._
""""' SOUTH COAST
llllAll ox PLAZA TH-lria
f.lll:PORAllJll Ian Dle10 fr1tw1y at ltiltoJ • 546-2711
* ACRES OF FREE PARKING *
Box Ollie~ Open 6:45 -Showllrno ••• 7 l'.M.
His Newest Hit I • • •
JACKIE GLEASON
-In
"DON'T llRINK THE WATER"
plus
Dick Van Dyke
in
"COMIC"
Ticl<1Mt bJ>•oMN w ~ miff-N !fie• "•I nDDfl-ic~'" •I~'
CF.MPUT/CKET u~· JI Mu1u111 -nclH ·Ill' I. t..rty ~t ...,,.c
HO~IDAY MATINEES·
DAILY AT 1:30
ONLY FOUR MEN HAVE WALKED ON THE MOON.
FOR Tl:fE REST Of US, "2001" IS AS CLOSE AS
WE'RE LIKELY TO GET.
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II -.Y l'llOT WtdntSdaJ, Novembtf 26, 1969
Big Holiday Money Gam.e: The ·Bowl Battle s ~·
BJ THE AS80CIATED Piii!&
Mlclqan'a stunning upset of powerful
Ohio State earned the Wolverines a trip
te the ROlt Bowl and also gave the Big
Ten co-champions a shO\ at earning
-thing e1lt ..• like !400,000.
With itll-Out Crowell and television
~ the post..aeuon Bowl garnes
hive become bis: money games to the
porllclplllll.
And the randdaddy or them all -'~· ROie Bow -Is believed to be tne
ricbell, atthollgh officials or t h e
P·•·deN duak: refuse to comment on
KC's Piniella
Named Top
Rookie in AL
TA11IPA, Fla. (AP) -Lou Pinietla was
named the American Baseball League's
rookie of the year "because he deserved
ll," according to one "totally unbiased
fan " -his wlfe, Anita.
"Oh, I still can't get over it,'' she seld
Tuesday Bbor1Jy after learning of the
honor accorded her husband, who plays
left field for the Kansas City Royals.
' PinJella, :ZS, said he knew he was in
contention for the award, "but I never
upeded to win."
In fact, Piniella said, he was ready to
quit baaebaU if he hadn't been drafted by
a major league club in last spring's
league expan.!ion.
• Piniella said he had played for three
years with Portland, a Pacific Coast
league farm club or the Cleveland ln-
dlans.
"I had real good years, but every time
t reported for spring training with the In-
dians •. they'd send me back to the minors.
J was really getting disgruntled," he said¥
The Seattle Pilots drafted Piniella in
the expansion, but traded him on April t
to the Royals -another move that
PinleJJa wasn't too happy about, at first.
"I really didn't want to leave Seattle
because I'd been playing on the West
Coal!lt and was pretty well known there.
But as soon as J talked to Cedric Tallis
(the il.oyals' general manager), he told
me I'd get the opportunity to play and I'd
start in ~ft fiekl if I showed I could do
the job," he said.
Piniella showed he could do the job well
enough to end the season with a .282 bat-
ting average, and was happy with Kansas
City "becaU5e 1 got to play a lot of
baseball."
He and his wife and lhe.ir IO·month-old
llOD. Lou Jr., live in Tampa in the off·
Mason while Plniella work.s as a broker
trainee with the E. F. Hutton investment
firm.
Piniella said Anita was one of the ma·
jor reasons he stayed in baseball.
"Anita saw how discouraged I got, but
1he encouraged me to stick it out1" he
aaid.
For Anita, the triumph wa s a vin-
dication of the lean years in Portland.
'"I knew Lou would make it," she said.
''He just had to keep at it, that's all."
Piniella laughed when he was askC' l
1bout the rather unusual baseball lradi-
Uon of his Spanish-American family.
"Oh, you mean my mother," he said.
"'Yep, she played on the traveling softb all
team years ago that was headed by Babe
7.aharias, the famous lady goUer. Mom
was pretty good, too."
Mrs. Louis Pin.iella, who played under
her maiden name of Margaret Magadan.
wu too thrilled by her son's success to
think about the pasl.
"l still can't get over it," stw: said.
"I'm calling everybody t.o tell them,
'That's my boy.' "
A ZTECS, BOSTON V.
JN PASADENA BO WL 1
PASADE NA (AP) -Boston Universily
will oppose San Diego State in the Dec. 6
Pasadena Bowl, the Pasadena Junior
Chamber of eomme·rce, sponsors of the
football game, announced Tue.sda).
The Terriers compil ed a 9-1 record and
tied with Dartmouth College for second
place in the Lambert Trophy balloting
behind Penn St.ate. Boston, an independent, d e f e a l c d
Colgate, Vermont. Harvard, Lafayette,
Maine Connecticut, Rhode 1 s 1 a n d , Delaw~ aM Temple, losing only lo
Yanltet Conference champion
MU1BChusetts, 14-9.
San Diego Stale ls champion of the new
Pacific Coast Athletic Aaaociation with a
l-0 record and one game remaining.
the recelpt:i.
ltowever it Js bcUeved that No. 7 rank·
cd Michigan arid Paclflc-t champion
southern CalUornia, No. 5, will lake home
over $400,000 for 60 minute& of football on
New Yeu'a Day.
The $400,000 figure breaks down from a
crowd of -OVe_r 100,000, paiylng $8 apiece
and the National Broadcasting System
adding a big chunk for the television
rights to bring the ante over $1 million.
Each school receives 37.S percent of
ticket sa.lc.s and radi~TV receipts, ac·
cording to NCAA rules.
Just a slight ~tep down the money tree
comes the Orange Bowl, whlch is ex·
peeled to hand out about $360,000 apiece
to No. 3 Penn State and Mi&!JOuri, the
sixth ranked team in the nation.
Although offlclals for the Miami game
declined to disclose the exact figures for
the 1970 game, they did" confirm that the
NJttany Llona and Kansas did get at least
$3$0,000 apiece last year.
And ae<.'Ording to Charles Zatarain Sr.,
chairman of the Sugar Bowl executive
committee, eactl team in his classic will
get $343,000 this year, up over $100,CKKI
from last year.
UPI TtlN ... "'
HAPPINESS IS A HE ISMAN TROPHY -When Steve Owens of Okla·
ho1na 'vas named as the 'vi nncr of the ~leisman trophy, both he and
his wife could not hold back thei r feelings. 1\bovc, Barbara Owens
cries and laughs at the sa111e ti me at hearing of her husband's selec·
lion. BelO\V, Q\vens cn1braces Sooner coach Chuck Fairbanks. mom·
cnts after learning he had been st!lccted as U1e outstanding collegiate
football player of 1969.
The Sugar Bowl at New Orlt1111 will Arkanaas. Lest year f.148,150 was paid
mal<:.h Ml.,tsstpPI No. 14 againll dtller out by Collon Bowl olrtclall and the
top.rankeJ Texas or No. % Ark8DIU. l*)'oCf 11 eipec:ted to be about the l8p\C! And with the Increase In Pl¥11lODll Zatarain says "II obviously pllca the lhll 'lfm< around.
Su1ar Bowl in a poliUon lo compete wi\11 Ollklala"ol the Bluebonn<I Bowl, wbich
any bowl game in.the COW>lry/' wlll be p!iyed Dee. 11 at -
A mort lucraUve TV contract wltb the betWeen .No. 18 HOUiton and l2tb ranktd
American Broadcuting Campany wae Aul:lw'n, say each team will receive at
the main reason for the increase, which leut $2m,OOO. -
was up over $200,CKKI from last Year'• l~ cOWd be tdiher. depending upon the
game. television. P,1Ckate whlCh la ilil1 tmael.-
The other New Year's Day contest, the ·~ Ued.
Cotton Bowl at Dallas, will ptt ·Notre Ailbama and Colorado, opponents In
Dame, No. I against either Teua or tbe Uberty Bowl, Dec. 13 at Memphis,
,.
figure to receive an estlmal.ed s1eo,r,o;t;
accordin& to oUlclals.
Another '200.000 ls expected to 10 to ,.
Gator Bowl oppooe:nts Tenneuee, No. I~
and Florida, No. 17, wbe!l lhey meet~.
%7 in Jacbonvllle, Fla. • ••
Sun Bowl officials in El Paso, Tex.,
have guaranteed No. 13 Nebruka and
Georgia $80,000 apiece for \heir mee:l, .. ,
Dec. 20 while backers of the Peach Bo:w ~,,
set for Atlanta on Dec. 30 between SoU ·
Carolina and No. 19 Weat 'Virginia madt1:1• , '
no comment on the amounl each teim •
woukl receive. ·" ol• . ., ... 1 . -'. ·' .. ,, .. ~·
Ramos KO'd.on Drunk Rap;:·:
~ ·~·
State Pulls Boxing License:::.~:
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Mando
Ramos, workl lightweight boxing cham·
pion, is without his California boxing
license today following bis second arrest
within a month and the statuJ of his next
fight is uncertain.
On Nov. S the 22-year~ld champ from
Long Beach was arrested when mari·
juana was allegedly found in hls car. The
Sports i n Brief
preliminary bearing on Uie possession
charge was set fj)T loday.
But in Tuesday's predawn hours Ramos
was booked for lnvesUgation of drunk
driving.
Officers who made the arrest in t.he
suburban Wilmington-San Pedro area
said his car was going 50 miles an hour in
a 25--mpb 1.0ne and that he failed to pass a
Lakers, Lew Meet on TV;
Cops Stop Rioting Cops
MILWAUKE~The Los Angeles Lak-
ers, with more men on the Injured list
than either the floor or the benCh.
can stlll scare the winningest team in
pro basketball.
The Lakers, led by superstar Jerry
West's 41 point.s, battled fi-om a 42-2.8
deficit Tuesday night agalmt the New
York Knicks and pulled ahead 78-72 be-
fore finally falling to defeat 103-96.
The vict.ory was the 16th straight for
the New York Knic k&, kings of the
National Basketball Associa tion.
Tonight the Lakers meet Lew Alcindor
and the Milwaukee Bucks in a television
game, 6 o'clock, ChaMel S.
• -'
~10NTEVIDEO, Uruguay-Police were
called to restore order Tuesday when a
free-for-all brawl l\roke out on the play-
ing field between two soccer teams-all
policemen.
In fact, it was other members of the
local prison guard and a radio patrol
unit, whose teams were C1lttlpetlng for
the police championship, that restored
order.
Two players were hospitalized with
contusions and there was no word wheth-
er the game was completed.
•
STOCKHOLM -Romanian Davis Cup
st.ar Ille Nastase defeated Tony Roche
of Australia ·6-2, 6-4 in the first round of
the Stockholm Open tennis tournament
Tuesday.
Marty Riessen of Evanston. 111., de-
feated Torben Ulrich of Denmark, 6-3,
6-2 and Fred Stolle of Australia defeated
Jan Kuka! of Czechoslovakia 6-3, 6-3.
In the women's singles, Ingrid Lldahl·
Bentzer of Sweden defeated French
player Francoise Durr 6-3, 1-6, 6-1, and
Julie Heldman of New York defeated
1i1argaretha Sandberg of Sweden 6-4, 6-1.
Billie Jean Ki ng of Long Beach easily
eliminated Madeleine Pegel of Sweden
6-0, ~1. while her compatriot Rosemary
Casals of San Francisco, beat Sweden's
Ewa Lundquist S-1, 6-4.
•
NEW YORK -The 1().1,588 spectators
who crammed into ~11chigan Stadium
Saturday to watch Michigan upset first·
ranked, unbeaten Ohio State, 24-12, was
the biggest crowd to attend a game since
official statistics were beg1,111 22 years
ago.
The previous h\gh of 103,234 also was
at Michigan Stadium In 1959 when the
Wol verines played Michigan State, ac--
cording to the national collegiate sports
services.
The second highest attendance figure
of the day was 90, 814 fans for Southern
California's lf..12 victory over UCLA in
the Los Ange(es Coliseum.
•
BOSTON -Bill Veeck escaped un-
scathed from a fire Tuesday which did
$18,000 damage to his Suffolk Downs
racetrack clubhouse.
The one-time baseball entrepreneur,
who has an artificial leg, clambered out
a window and reached a ledge leading
to an outside stairway.
Veeck lost his leg as a result of wounds
suffered during World War 11 while serv ..
ing In the South Pacific with the Marines.
•
ANN ARBOR, Mich. -The Rose Bowl
ticket crush is on. ,
University of Michigan officials have
been allotted 13,000 tickets to the New
Year's Day classic in Pasadena, Calif.,
which matches Michigan against South·
em Cal. But the U-1\.t ticket department
expects 80,000 to 100,000 applications.
Near Miss by Phipps
Angers Purdue Coach
LAFAVETIE. Ind. (AP) -Mike
Phipps, the third Purdue foot.ball player
to just miss receiving the Helsman Tro-
phy in recent years. said Tuesday he was
'"a little disappoi nted."
llis coach, Jack ~1ollenkopf, was "dis-
appointed and damn mad."
~1ollenkopf said. "I'm not criticizing
the selection of Steve Owens. I'm sure
he's a fine player ••• but they didn't
have to call a press conference to tell
J\f\ke he didn"t win it."
The Downtown Athletic Club of New
''ork, which presents the award, con·
tacted Purdue last Friday and as ked lhat
Phipps be available at 12 :45 p.m . Tues·
day for a telephone interview, Mollen·
kopf said. Purdue was told to keep lhc
arrangements secret.
"I'm afraid I built up Mike's hopes,"
1ilo11enkopf said Tuesday in Indianapolis.
"l told him. 'lhis isn"t a sure thing, but it
looks like the real McCoy' . "
Phipps was in the office of Purdue
president Frederick Hovde when the
phone call came, telling him he was sec·
ond in the voting.
. .,
breath test. • ~:
Ramos initially entered a guilty plea'\-,~
and was fined $150 and given a '6-daf .. v :;
suspended ,sentence by San Pedro ~·"
Municipal Judge Waller ~inns. ,:.·: ..
But at the request of Ramos' lawyet ,' • ... f.
Clift.on A. Hix, the court later agreed tO
allow the. fighter to change his plea to not ··
guilty and set Dec. IS for the jury trial -" /
rt was only hours aft.er the arrear;_ .. , '
however, that the Califonlla Athletfe'.: .:,. J ~ommission suspended Ramos' boxifti!' '·' lice:11se. ·.
Its executive officer, Bob Turley, salif.'_"
In Sacramento that lhe action was in "t.bc · .
best interests or boxing" and pointed opt''° .• '
that the eommWlon"'earlier had deckied
against a ~1:15pension pending disPosiUon:' 1 of the marijuana case. · .
However, with this additional arrest~"·:· '·
said Turley's statement, "and believing
that an) champion has a publlc · ,;
responsibility t.o conduct himself in a
manner above reproach at all times, ttie•
commission now feels lhat it is consistent
with the best interests of boxing to ten),:.
porarilf suspend Ramos' license ••• pe~ .
ding the outcome of his difficulties." ' -
The suspension technically only bars
Ramos from lighUng ii\ California. H£ · .•·
has no matches booked in the stale -but., ••
he is scheduled to defend his title Jan. U ..
against Ismael Laguna In Panama.
Turley acknowledged Panama may OOt • ~
recognize the suspension but added: ~·1.:
would hope that Ramos would appear
before us to seek reinstatement .rather
than go through with the scheduled fight ....: •
whi le under suspension here." ' . ,.
UCI Varsity
Faces Frosh
; i .i lj
. ~ . ' -: -·1
' ·.
Cage rs Tonigh~.·.:;j
By HOWARD L. HANDY ' ·: · ..
Of ltle Daltp Plitt Staff -. ' · '· -Jt's a family afrair at UC Irvine tonight .
when the Anteater varsity basketball
team uader new head coach Tim Tlrt.:
tangles with a potent freshman squad hf ~
Crawford Hall. Tipoff Is at 7:30. ··.• · .
,Tift will preview most of his vars~·. •.
squ ad during the action although two or ..
the probable starters next week agaimf-
Nebraska and Colorado are sideUnea ~ · ··
with injuries. .,.,..'
Jeff Curmingha m, All.American can-?' ·
didate at forward, has been running m .. -:.
hasn't eq>erienced any problems wllH' i ··
Jeg injury to date. The 6-4. star was mo8t
valuable player for the Anteaters last ···· ·
season and averaged 21.0 Points per ... '
game. He is a doubtful participant ih ·~·--
tonight's action. .
Bill :P.1oore, U forward. will start tn'1 • -'
place of Cunningham and will team wUh •
John Farwell (6-4) at the other forwatd' ·:·
position.
Mike Barnes (5-10) guard ls the othM' -.: '.
probable slarter for the regular season .
who will remain,on the sidelines tonight:'• -
Barnes suffered a broken nose in practlc:e ·-
and hasn't done any running for severci!' 1
days. :
~placi~g Barnes In the starting II neap ;"'
tonight will be one of three stars ill-·
eluding letterman Keith Bea'n and .-
sophomores Brad Baker and Gary FOx. -•
Fox paced the Anteater freshman team-• ·
last year with a 17.4 average.
Steve Sabins (S.Z) will start al the ~ ·
other guard post after recovering from" ·
an ankle sprain. Sabins Is a letterman
~·ho averaged 12.8 points per game last •
season. . .... ~ ·
One of the 'big problems facing Tift this : •
season is in finding a replat>ement for AU·• ~
NCAA district center Mike Heckman. ·\~ ·, .,
Owens Celebr a tes With Hard Work
Phipps thf.n called Mollenkopf, who
was in Indianapolis for a football lunch-
eon. Phipps '\\'as asked later what his
coach had to say.
•·t can't repeat that." Phipps said. "but
he was disappointed."
Bill George, a 6-7 sophomore who~-:
averaged 11.9 points and 8.2 rebounds for-'"'~
the frosh last season, gets the starllnlJ ~ 1
nod. ,,,)'.)'
The Anteaters have -another outst.and •• ~~-...
NORMAN. Okla. CAP) - It's "Steve
Otrtnl Day'1 in Oklahoma, by pro-
clamltion of the governor, but the 1969
Hellman Trophy winner is right back on
the football field putting in another hard·
working afternoon.
Ok1aboma's great tailback was award·
ed the Heiaman by a narrow margin
TUaday over Purdue quarterback Mike
Phlppo.
Ona& received 1.'88 point! from the
192 .,,-tswrltera and broadcasters who
-· Pi!Jppo had t,334. Owns didn't hive long to relax and en-n bein( '-'«I U the 01Uon'1 betl
iollep 1-D pllytr. Oklahoma has a
-S.tunlay with Oklahom• State •nd
practice aoes on1 Heilman Trophy or no
' '
Hcisman Trophy.
'1fs the greatest thing that's ever hap-
pened to me;• O"·ens said. ..11 · s
somethh1g that every football player
dreams of. ll 's sorl of unbelievable ."
Owens won the award wilh a three·
season display of amazini; consistency
and durability. He rushed for 100 or more
yards in 17 consecutive ga1nes and scored
at least one touchdown in 16 straight
games. .
ltc hold6 the NCAA career reco rds for
most carries 18501. rnosl yards rui>hini;
(3,606) and nwst 1ouchdO\\'llS In three
years 154).
He's in the running for thi~ yeor"s na·
Uonal rufihlng 111d scoring cham·
pionships. and ht needs only 51 yards on
the ground agalnst Oklahoma State for
an un precedented third straight Big
Eight Conferenee rushing title.
O"·ens has ne ver missed a game. lie
has a simple explanation for his ability to
take the punishmen t he"s had lo take .
··1 alwa y!! try to go full speed ," he said
Tuesday. "I feel like if you're going full
speed }"ou're not going to get hurt.
'"I've always been in good condition,
and J'vc never worried about injuries."
Owens plans u pro football carct'r artc.r
an Army Reserve stint, 1ond he says he
docsn·t ca re which team draft5 him .
"J'll be happy anywhere ." Phipps'
finishing second was a bitter pill for
Purdue bRCkCr5 to swallow. It marked
lhe jhlrcf lin1e ln four years a
Boilermaker star had been rurmer·up in
lhe Helsman Trophy balloting.
The others were Bob Griese, lo
Florida's Steve Spurrier In 1966, and
Leroy Keyes, to Southern CaUfornla 's 0.
J . Simpson last year.
Phl'pps Is an out.standing passer con·
&idertd by many the llltely No. 1 choice in
the 1970 professional draft.
Following Owens and Phipps in the
balloting were a pair of quarterbacks.
Rex Kern of Ohio Slate and Archie Min·
nlng of MIBSl!l&ippi, Kern earned 8$6
points, MantUng saz. Both are juniors.
Finishing fifth and 1lllh wert two big
dcfenstve linemen , MJke Reid of Penn
Slale and Mike MCCoy of Notre Dame. A
defensive player has never won the
lleiilllan Trophy.
Phipps said the Ohio State game, a 4Z.
14 defeat in which he had five passes in-
lertept.ed, was a bigger dlsappolnlment
than the Reisman Trophy outcome.
Asked if he thought the Obin State
game cost him th e award, Phipps said.
••tf I'd had just an ordinary day that
might have made the difference, but I
didn't have a good day,"
All-American halfback Leroy Keyes nr
Purdue was 11econd to Southern Cal's
O.J. Simpson In tut year's Heisman vot-
lni:t: and third In tlie 1967 voting.
Bollennaker quarterback 8-0b Griese
was runner up to Flortdll's Steve Spur-
rier in 1966.
But Keyes and Griese weren't asked tit
be ready for telephone Interviews, h-tol-
lenkopf .aid"
"\Vhy do they have lo kick a guy in
the stomach?" the coach said.
Ing group of freshmen ready for ~··
1969-70 campaign . : l.. •
Pacing the yearlings is Bob Black, •
graduate of Taft High School in Los
Angeles where he played center.forward. ;;.·
Black averaged 18 points per game and~
15 rebounds last season. -·;
Garrick Barr and Tom Hanson wl1J"
open at the forward Positions. Barr
averaged 23.6 points per game at Avia-
tion High School and was an All-Clf r
5eleclion. • •· •
ltanson was player of the year In the:, •
1ifoore Le.ague at Long Beach Poly and
averaged 17 points per game. , 1" ,1
Robbie Fowler, a RedoOOo Beach!!": :1
graduate will start at one guard po11t wl"1 \ / 1
the other !!pol a tossup betwetn Rod •• 1·,
Smith and Paul Lawryk. Smith is from ~1•
Bishop High and Lawryk is a graduate OfR •.
Bell High where he averaged 1' poio~.i ,
per game last year. R ,. ,
••• .t1
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r~-~-.............. .,,.,.>,.,,··'"""'"""',..,....,.,.,,_. ..... _____________________________ -~ --------~-
Hoop~r's
-~~oopers
Jlr eeze, 14-1
•
· " ( lly GLl!lNN WHITE
' • .,, Of ... o.ltr ""' '"'" LONG BEACH . -Vlsuallie lharks
swtmiillnc uirouch • achoo! ol minnows
and .,WhaPI YOt.!-'11 hav~ some idea of
whal ll'1111P!Hd Tueodly afternoon at
Lonr Beach Mllllbn ID&h School In the
CIF water polo playoff quorter finals.
Matched were uodefealed Corona del
Mar and twice-beaten Oxnard. Corona is
c~lon of the Irvine U:ague, Oxnard is
ChlnMI League tiULst. Conceivably, it
could be cloae. .
However. -it was close only until lhe
game stomd. Oolch Cliff Hooper's magnlflcent
forces namped the Yellowjactet.s, 14-1,
to pul" Corona del Mar in nut Tue>day
nl&hl'I .. mUlnals at llelJnont Plaza pool.
They will be ~g for their 21st
straight victory qalnst Fullerton, a team
they downed earlier, 7-5.
Fullerton topped Lakewood, 7-6, rally·
tng from a f.2 deficit and getting tbe win~
nlng"goal 2:59 Into audden death alter
going. through a pair of scoreless
overtime periods. ,
ffooper'a troopers look more like they llhouW-be playln& in the upcoming na-
tion.U:l co11egi~te champlonsbipa. Tbef . lhow potent olfense, preuure def~ and have excellent depth. Their we~ is lack of aerloua opposlUon to
keep 1.beM on their toes.
For .example, against the Channel loop
chantl¥ they racked up seven goals
berore. Oxnard couk! get off a shot.
AJ ' 'toacb Tom Hermstad of Golden
West''observes ... you can't shoot with
theni -the Only way to beat them ls by
conlrotling the bill." Go.,, by Garth Bergeson, Scot!
NewcCimb and Brad Jackson made it S-0
in t.he'first t :~ of play and after that is
was obvloualy a question of only the mar·
gin ofyldory for the Sea Kings.
It wu 5-0 at the quarter mark. But the
bombt;rdment didn't let up u Corona
forgea 'to a M halltlme bulge and a 13--0
lead aft.tr three quarters. oui&rd finally dented the acorlng col-umn lrith 3:03 to ploy on a penally goal.
TboYellowjockell only gol olf II sholl
durtnr the malch. Newcomb led scoring with fi ve while
Bergel:>n nailed three. Brett Bernard,
Bruci Black and Jack&oo bad two apiece. ..
Newport Rolls
Into Semifinals
With 9-3 Win
By ROGER CARUION
... Of .. o.llY , ... l l•ff • LAKEWOOD ..... A near perfect
performance In the second half propelled
Newport Harbor High School into the
aemifinal11 of the ClF water polo playoffs
as the';Sailors ripped Garden Grove, 9-3,
Tueadaj afternoon at Lakewood High in
quart.tr,' finalJ play.
Victory puts the Sailors at Belmont
Plaza.~ Tuesday with a 9 p.m. test
against Sunset League r u n n e r u. p
AiiabeJili,
The -~lonists disposed of Downey, 7-4,
to earil i shot at Newport.
Coach Bill Barnett's Newport outfit
displaf.id an overpowering offense the
final \wp periods to snap a 3-3 deadlock
with lbe Garden Grove League cham·
pions.· BarAeit was jubilant with his team 's
effort in the second half and called it the
best two periods of play the Tars have
come up with this year.
He credited the lmp~ved second half
play tq better control of the ball.
lt was goalie Ed White, however, who
kept the Sanora alive in the first half.
\Vhittt:w:as tremendous, blocking 1 total
o{ 11 shots,. including two penalty tries by
the Argonauts.
In the ~first half when Garden Grove
was doing most of Its shooting -14 at·
templl-he stopped nine tough shots.
In tbe: second half he dJdn't need to do
much M lhe Argoneuta could only get off
four attempts from the lleld.
Newport almply played up to Its poten·
tial and that wu the end of Garden
Grover. It WIS Bob Searles and Nat Greer who
toaed'4n goals in the third period to
make : it S-3 and lat.er in the fourth
quarter Jeff, Wilcox and Tom Warnecke
made good on a penalty shot and a seve n·
footer·ID put It out of iland.
tn all, Wilcox made four goals -two
on penalty shots -and Warnecke chip.
ped ln,..with two. Bruce Talmage made
the ot.btt one to put five Sailors In the
acoriog column. Newport never trailed, taking 1..0 and 3-
1 Jeadt,befort the half. Despite the tie at
half, Garden Grove seemed to dominate
lirst Ulf acUon. . .
SA,DDLEBACK ATTACK-Talented Toby Whipple (25) follows a wave
~f mterference to keep the Saddleback College oUense in gear. Head·
mg the way are Rocky Flelcher (30), Bob Urell (65) and Jack Virden
0.f.ILY PILOT l'~efot ~1 Lff l'rtll9
(64), all-conference selec tees'. as is Whipple, Tbey match talents with
unbeaten Reedley Saturday rught at Santa An a Bowl in the first of the .
state playofis.
Buckland Breaks Monopoly Gaucho Boss
Has It Mad e
Rustler W hiz Bags Area JC Sc or ing Crown · Or Does He? Charlie Buckland of Golden West edged
into the scoring lead to break the Sad·
dleback statistica.J monopoly for Orange
Coast area junior colleges at conclusion
of the regular ·sea.son.
Saddlebaek's potent offensive machine
has an opportunity to add to the totals.
They already lead jn rushing, paslsng.
receiving and total offense with an ex-
cellent opportunity to tie or go ahead in
the scoring race. The Gauchos play
Reedley in state playoff competition
Saturday night at Santa Ana Bowl.
Rod Graves, outrtanding quarterback
leader for coach George Hartman'a Sad·
d1eback team, is the leader In total of·
tense with 2,099 yards. Tony Bonwell of
Golden West is set"Ond with 1,561 and
lttike Tamiyasu of Ora.age Coast is third
with 1,139.
In the rushing department, Toby Whip--
ple (Sad.) ha! 1,167 yards to lead
Buckland (!Ma). Graves ls tblrd (526) and
Ramon Ricardo, OCC (487), ts fourth . .--
Graves leads the passing contingent
'1.·ith 1,573 followed by Tamiyasu wilh
J,001 and Bonwell with 613.
Leading receivers in the area·are Marc
Hardy (Sad.} 486 and Gery Rossman
(Sad.) 434. Roger Parkman o( Golden
West is next with 425 followed by Roberl
CasUllo of OCC with 349.
Final staUstics for Orange Coast were
printed last week with Golden West final
averages and the Saddleback regular
season stats below:
SADDL•IACK
'' O•mn -•n• 1tn11"r l••-1
Wl\lpplt
Gr1~t1
ai.ctmon
Flt ldle• ,,.
O'll•lefl ......
SHdbtrf Hector
Ronm1n
O.rbY"1ire
RuP1r
KrtUIH
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Grlvts
"4K!Gr
HOJ'I
Hl,,,V
Ranm1n
W!illlf>ll
ltllPl l o.,
Bonnell
1t1nlll1111 I(• ,.,
115 lltl
lOS ill
.. 111
~ ..
2' 101 10 •2
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7' 11'1
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Thanksgiving
TV Menu
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Golden Wes t Foe
Mt. I AC Calls on Brown
T ~Make Cag e Team Go
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 th1 a.Ur l"llOI Stiff
Brown Is a common name.
One usually find s pages. and pages or
Browns in !be Jocal telephone book.
Mt San Jacinto College's basketball
team also hes a preponderance of Browns
-three to be exact-and all play pretty
good basketball, according to Eagles'
coach Bob Guiman.
All three will be in action Friday night
.when Golden West opens its season at ~1l.
JAC.
The leading Brown is Alonzo, a second
team all-Desert Conference selection last
year. He averaged 21 points a game at
his forward spot.
to Mt. JAC.
Mike Hobbs (5-9) from Beaumont will
be at one of the guard spots with either
Stanley Moore (6-0) or Robert Wilson (6·
OJ at the other guard position. Moore is
from Perris and Wiison comes from In·
dia napolls, Ind. Both are freshmen .
Guiman is optimistic about the coming
season. ''I think It looks pretty good. Last
year at this time, we were working with
about severi boys and now \Ve have 12 out
for practice."
Mt. San Jacinto compiled an 11·14
record last season and finished with a 7.7
conference mark, placing fourth in the
standings.
r By ROS EVANS
Of l~I Dtlty l"lltt fl•U
George Hartman has it made.
All he has to do to make Ille cham·
pionship round of lhe sta le junior college
football playoffs is win Saturday night at
Santa Ana Bowl.
And that really shouldn 't be too much
nf a chore for Saddleback, the team rank-
ed secood amons the slate's small
schools .
Or should it?
Fllrther examination of the tilt reveals
that Reedley is the state's No. 1 team.
Furtller, Ille Tigers have a passing attack
!hat makes Hartman nervous just tllink·
u1g about how he'll defend against it.
"\Ve ha ven't played anyone that throws
like they do," he admits. "All three of
their kids throw well and their receivers
are outstanding. They're fast and they
make great catches.
"Their offense is like looking al the
pros. The two games we scouted they·
started of~lth scree n passes. They are
tou1h to defend because if you rush theqt
they toss a screen or run that fullback
draw.
•·u you drop back they pick you aparl
with the short ones," Hartman says.
The solution? "Pray for rain," says the
Saddleback chief. Logically, he says it's a
matter o! ootgucssing Reedley.
''They run just enough to keep you
honest, but that fullback Junior Square or
theirs is something else. He's as fa st as
greased lightning and really makes the
draw work."
Hartman's ceusc ~·as r el a rd e d
somewhat by the loss of end ~1arc liardy .
Rick Day will replace Hardy.
The Gaucho boss says Reedley and
Saddleback appear to be evenly matched
in ~he line where both outfits boast small,
quick performers.
Alonzo will not be at a starling position
Friday night, having just reported to the
basketball court after checking in his
football gear. He was an-all league
halfback this past season for the Eagles.
He is 6-3 and 205 pounds.
The other two Browns are brothers.
Calvin is a 6-5 freshman, just ou t of lhe
service, and George is a 6-4 flrst·year
1nan from Banning High.
Sacldl ehack Hoop Ri val s
Onl y A verage -Coacl1es
Calvin will open at one of tl1e forward
spots along with Norman Johnson.
anotller Banning product. The &-4
Johnson. along with Calvin Brown, are
regarded as good rebounders and One
defensive players by Guiman .
The starting center for Mt. San Jacinto
will be Galvin Lewis, a U ?lichlgan pro.
duct. Lewis played a year of junior col·
lege ball in Michigan before transferring
CIF Tilt Tonight
CIF football playoff fans can get in an
extra game this week as Whittier and
Lakewood will meet tonight at Cerritos
College in a AAA.A quarterfinals game.
The winner will meet the survivor of
the Blair.Senta Monica· game f'ridey
night the following week.
Ga1ne time is 8 o'clock.
Snddlcback College's basketball team
will be feeing a pair of average clubs this
weekend when il meets San Diego Mesa
and Gross1nont, according to the coaches
of those two teams.
The Gauchos face ~'fesa J•'riday night at
Mira Costa College and U1cn meet Gross-
monl Saturday al r-..telia. Both games
begin at 7.
Mesa L'Oil.Ch Jay ~1ulvehal calls the
1969-70 club "the \11eakest team we"vc
ever had." The Olympians compiled a 12·
15 reco rd !<isl season, finishing with a 6-6
n1ark in the South Coast Confercn<..'C.
Three lettermen return for W.esa and
all played on a part·tlme basis last year.
They are guard1 Dennis Cramer (6.0 ) and
John Haven (6-2) and forward Dennis
Downie (6-4).
all-league selection last season.
Other lettermen returning Include
guards Roger Landis and Gary Caredona,
along with forwards Randy Hamilton,
Dave Lauer and Dan Morrow. Hamilton
is the biggest of the Grossmont players
at 6-5. ,
Grossmont finished with a 1~17 record
last year. The Griffs run out of a three
forward, two guard offense.
JC
... ~·
Pressure's on Foothill Ends
Cramer averaged about 12 points a
game for the Olympians last season y.·hllc
Downie· bit at about an eight-point clip .
Botll will start Friday night.
Steve Clifford1 a 6-3 freshman, Is e:1:.
peeled to open at center while either Tim
Galleghar (S.t) or Don f\1cCormick is ex·
pee led to nu the other forward spot. The
other guard spot is up for grabs, says
Mulvehlll. Coach Ed Bain ol f'oothlll High's c-League chAmplons doesn 't
havt .. ., bird tuk ptllnl his gridders
mmta111 rudy for Rolling• Hills t'riday
nll!fll 'al SAnll Anl Slldlum.
AH 1ie .itetds to do ls to point lo last
vcar•a·MA quarterf1M1 mcelinll between hollinl . Hllls and Crestview champ
Lagun•Booch. Thi ronner routed prcv.iously un·
defeated Laguna. C-14, and led 3$..Q at
the half.
Bain says Rolling llills reminds him of
•
Orange in its ~yle oi play vr'ith it.s opUon
and belly series.
And It's those two offensive thrusts that
he says his club must contain lo beat the
Sky League tltlists.
The pressure figures to be on defensive
tnds Bill Shambron and Doug fl.11tten
along ~·Ith corncrbacks John Fletcher
and Jim Votl'lw, 11loni:: with lineb acker
1 Doog Rothrock.
Offt:nsively, Bain'~ crew wlll be going
t\'lth the same formul;, that hu led tho
Knights to a JO.() record.
JlalCback Bob Speicher is the. big threat
for Foothill , He's scored 17 tou chdowns
and it Includes 1,08.'.I yards in 115 carrle~
for a ~.s average.
Votaw, a fullback in the Knights' full·
house T formation, baa a 5. 7 average on
107 trips and $ht louchdowns.
Quarterback Bob Black lidge has not
nroved a runnlns lhreat for thr Knights
but his passing ottack ho s run iH a 50
percent clip.
The &-1. 180 pound i;enlor has complcled
66 or 131 tor seven touchdown s.
~1esa will be wlthoul the services of
\Vllbur Strong, the San Diego County
player of the year last season. He has
been sidelined with a knee injury and
~1ulvchal doesn't know when he will
return. Strong averaged 23.8 points a
garnc last season as a prepstcr.
(:rossn1on t L'03Ch Bill Gillespie c:.ills hi!I;
1069-70 club "aver3gc", 11lthough there
arc seven lcttern1en returning .
Guard Blake Mathews Is lhe best of the
returnee~. llo was an honoroble mention
DAVE GRAVEN
Golden W11t
Dltl 'I l'lt.Dl ) 1
12 Gaucho s
On Desert
All-stars
Rod Graves, Mr. Offense for the cbam·
plonship Saddleback College footbal l
team, was named Most Valuable Player
on offense in the Desert Conference by
vote of circuit coaches,
Selection of Graves lo the hahored spot
was released along with first and second
team offensive and defensive units
selected . by member coaches early Lhill
week. \V1lhe Buchan;;in of Mira Costa was
P!ck~ as the top defensive player in the
c1rcu1t.
Coach George Hart.man's Gaucho!!
dontinated the selections with 12 of '"
players named to the four teams frOm
the Saddleback squad.
Fl1IST TEAM OFFENSE
Pos. Name ud Scbool Wt. Cless
&-Hardy, Saddleback 215 So.
&-Moreno, Col of Desert 175 Fr
T-Finn, Saddleback 190 So:
T-Howington, Imp. Valley 215 So.
G--Salinas, Mt. JAC 235 So.
~Virden, SaddJeback 20s So,
...-Berger, Mt. JAC 210 So.
~w'haves. Saddleback 110 So.
o-lpple, Saddleback 1as Fr
B-Brown , W.t. JAC 205 So.
B-Evans, Barstow 180 So:
SECOND TEAM OFFENSE
~heatwood, Imp. Valley 155 Fr.
T H
oen, Mira Costa 220 So.
-enderson, Barstow 210 Fr
T-Schleich, Mira Costa 190 Fr' G-Beal~, Col. of Desert 235 So.
G-Urell, Saddleback 180 So.
C-Livingslon, Barstow 210 So0
B-Leyvas, Imp. Vall~y 160 Fr:
&-Fletcher, Saddleback JSO Fr.
B-Autry, Victor Valley 185 So. •
B-Benson, Mt. JAC 185 Fr.
FIRST TEA.l'.f DEFENSE
TL-Christensen, Victor Valley 225 So.
lL----Colbert. Saddleback 212 Fr •
lL-Karuzlch, Col. of Desert 230 So
lL--Molilua, Mira Costa 274 Fr:
LB-Fletcher, Saddleback 185 Fr.
LB-Lewis, Imp. Valley 185 Fr.
LB-Paopao, W.ira Costa 235 So.
LB-Root, Col. or Desert 190 so.
S-Buchanon, Mira Costa 180 So,
S-Hector, Saddlebaek 170 So,
&-Johnson, Mira Costa IGa So.
SECOND TEAM DEFENSE
IL-Cassel, Col. of Desert 220 Fr.
IL-Curtis, ?\-1l. JAC 230 Fr.
IL-Haley, Mira Costa 200 Fr.
lL-Romberg, Mt. JAC 210 So.
LB-Burkholder, Saddleback 180 So,
LB-McCorkJe. Mt. JAC 215 So.
LB-Tillman, W.ira Costa 200 SO.
L.8--Williams, Barstow 175 So.
S-Crlpe, Mt. JAC 185 So.
S-Seed~rg, Saddleback 145 Fr.
~WagstaU, Barstow J7S So.
llr-lnterior Linemen.
LB-Linebackers. 5-Secondary.
Fullerton Hit
By Injurie s
Fullerton High moves Into t h e
quarterfinals of the CIF AAA football
playoffs _Friday night at Arcadia High
School against No. I seeded South
Pasadena.
But Uie Indians of coaches Gil Tucker
and George Van Vliet must do it without
two gridders who've been instrumental in
the Tribe's 8-2 overall record, whlch in·
eludes seven straight victories.
Bruce Clark, a split end end defensive
ha\lback. broke his hand in the Damien
game while Tom Severns, a special unit
player. is out with a knee injury sus·
tained in the same game.
Replacing Clark will probably be
sophomore Sam Perales, a 145--pouncler.
1t's not certain who will take over for
Severns. -
Tucker says his Freeway League
champions have to cut down South
Pasadena's running game .
''They cerlainly appear lo rate the No.
1 rank ing they've had for \Uost ot the
year and I think it's the ir running power
t.hal has made them so good.
"We 're aware of their passing ability.
but the running game must be stopped
first," says Tucker.
The lndien.s have a groWld atla:ck going
for them loo.
Leading ru sher has been J o e y
Hernandez, a JOO.pound, 6-0 senior who's
run for 10 touchdowns from hi!: fullback
post.
Stars
ROD GRAVES
S1ddl1b&ek
••• . . ....... •
JI DAllV I'll.OT
WHAT'S l•N-
OUTDOORS?
~J J.cli A-y
OPTOME1'RIST
J. P. Connole O.D.
e EYES EXAMINED e CONTACT LENSES
e PRESCR IPTIONS FILLED
e BROADWAY CHARGE AVAILABLE
OfPICIS In Tho BROADWAY, FASHION ISLAND
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497
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Says Anaheim Coach
FISK AUTO FLOOR MATS
OPl'QUR': "F\in F.....t or Pw1l "-
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MINI TESTERS
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IUKE
OVERHAUL
2788
• ~.-ithw.w lillina:
• N99' wheel e711!1dt.-kii. inllalltid
• 1'uni •II dnama and ranrface lin1ns'
• Mu\ft" c,ylind.-aod pow• c,yu.I•
lritplld;ion . """""'-...... • Blelll and l llllh htd,.alic .,..._
• &Id W9l b tnte perfonnanc. • F1-1 .~a,-•=•.ioi
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WESTMINSTER BUENA PARK BUENA PARK COSTA MESA SANTA ANA
154401!1<111'4. 11 Mdodd"
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LEGAL NOl'ICll
LEGAL NOl'ICE
HOTICI! TO Cll!DITOltl
SUfll!lllOI COUllT Ofl TM•
STATE 01" CALl,OltNIA 1"011
THa COUNTY 0 .. OIA ....
N&. Moll11' E1tet1 of FRANK It. USEDOM,
~11rd. NOTICE IS HEREllY OIVl!:N te "'9
u edllor. Df the 1bDY1 """'"' dec:H ..rt
tt11t 111 ""'"'" l'lavlnto ci.rm1 .,.1n1t 11141 .-Id decedffll '"' rMUlred t. tli. tlHliw. Wltll llM! M(HUry VWdlfn:, llJ tht otflce
of l!'le cltrt ol Tiie 1~ ""'"* eourt, Ill' lo 1>rnent ,.....,, With !tie llKNUrY
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mon"'9 ettu tht fl f'$1 pub11cetlon M this
notice.
O.lld NoYtmbfr 7, ''"· Oorolhr E. Uudom
UNITED CALIFORNIA IANIC,
t C0<1IOl'"t llort
BY: Oer1t 0. HollbY Tru1f Acl!Tllnl1tr1tor Co-E~..:utora DI the win
DI tho obo\1 rt•med clecldtt!t Wtllworth. S91HI a Crill
HU Wtslcllff Dr ..
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Alttnlr/'1 W C .. l~teutert
Pub!l!J\td Ort..,.e C<>11t Ctl,., l"tlot,
N<wetnbtr lt, 2t tnd OKtmbtr I, !~,
196t 21°"6'
LEGAL NOTICE .....
NOTIClr TO CltEDITOlll
SUl"l!lllOlt COUltT OP Tlfe STATE OP CALIFOltNIA POil
THI! COUKTY OF OltANe• Nt. A.-64117
Esltlt DI THERON P. $AGEll:, o.ce ... ...
NOTICE IS HERESY GIVEN te Th~
c•ed!lo~ DI !ht tboYt 11amtc1 decelltnl
lhll Ill Sler'IOl11 h1tvl1111 Cltlml tlllllS! lllt wlcl cl"""'°"t .,., reciulNCI to f!lt thoem,
wlTh lllt necess.ry ~ lrt lllt Dlflc.
DI !"'-Cle~ DI lllt tbo\lt tntltled court, Dr lo P"'M'flt tlltm, wllh lht _ .. ..,
~. to !ht llN!tn'911ed t i the Dlflct
DI BRENT & PRINCE, AltomtJ't. Hot
A.Wf\Ue DI the Sti rs. SUI .. lM , CtntvrY
City, LOI A."'tlu, Ctlllotnlt fOIM1, Wllldl
Is lllt pltct DI bullntu of !he lf!idtn1t ntd
In 111 m1ti.n pert1lnl"' to lllt at11t1 DI Mid doceocltnt, within four mO!lltll ll'ltr 1111 flr11 PUbllcallon of 11111 notltt, D1led NOYtmbtr ,, 1'69,
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------------------~----------------•
· PERKINS
JUDGE PARKER
MOON MUWN$
GORDO
"I , .. ··''
ly Tom IC. Ryan ly a..ri.s lilnottt ' .
T~ GJ,. ~;...:th S.w.....
T-1.. Ma.. """' °"""-~..,.,,.At.
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t>O ·~ou WANT MY •
F,AMOOs 901.0<SNA SANDWICH, 01'< .
MY F,AMOUS
~IV61'< $AUSA6E
SANDWICH?
I
~
By John Mlln
ly Harold Lii Dou
By Ferd Johnson
I
By Saunden and Overgard
AS SOOtrl AS l GOOO llllWKlNG, KIO.I
FINISH, I'll.~ •W<E YOUR TIME/
lO ,..._L ~IM-t'tL SEE .....r IT SAIS
ANO ATLEAST 5'Y ABOUT Tl!E P-'CKERS' fM IOlllCY/ Cf-W.ICES NElCT
~y--/_
READY TI> PROTECT
MYSELF AGAINST IJIOLE~
FRoM AU. COMERS!
'1Ul:l<Z'f,"
• ,, ,.,,. . _,, -... .-.. ;:. .,,
I
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YIHYNOT --l\AVINGA I~ POUIO ~ ·~· Pl• -
-----~ --..L -
By Mell
'WOULD YOU L.ll<e
~.SU.I.UT-=-::. ..
0
0 ,,, " \ .. ..., .... .. ~
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PEANUTS By Charles M. Schulz
llltJU. NE'/J!R 11E Al!Lf 1'0 HaJ>.A RJQRY KITIEN IN
YOOR ARMS.ANO STROO IT
AllO LISTEl(TO IT PllRR ••
.
11LL Tfl!i TO SURVl'IE
TELEVISION VIEWS
Clear Effort
To Intimidate
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -Network television's top
anchormen and news anaJysls see in Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew's rec::.ent spe~bes criticizing broad·
casters what Walter Cronkite called "a clear eUort
of intimidation."
IN A CBS News Departmellt program, "60 Min·
utes," Tuesday night, the Agnew speech and it~ re--
percussions were discussed from several viewpoints.
The first half of the hour was a taped r.eport of
a question.and-answer session between Cronkite.
CBS' top newscaster, and citizens of his home town
of St. Joseph, Mo.
To a question \Vhether the press and broadcast·
ing had not overreacted to the speeches, he replied:
"No -perrbaps.we didn't react eDQUgh. We react·
ed to an implied threat to free ·speech Bnd when
there is that, we must react tough , we must react
hard."
DAVID BRINKLEY of NBC said, "If one
•gaggle of commentators' was replaced by another
1gaggle of commentators, 1 the resuJls would be the
same." The 'gaggle of commentators' phrase was
the vice president's. ,
Brinkley declared that politicians have 'always
reacted to criticism and "all thaV.s new is that this time it came as a threat."
ABC's Howard K. Smith suggested that both
sides HJower their voices" and consider the . prolr
)ems involved in covering the news fairly and posi·
tively. ·
CBS' Eric Sevareid, referring to the sug~estion
that "coverage reflect the mood of the majonty, de-
clared, ult would not always be in the best interests
of the public."
FINAL SEGMENT of the program was a dis-
cussion with H~.rbert Klein, fresi4eRt Nixon's
communiCatfOns director, and Bill 1Moyirs, fonner
press secretary to President Lyndon B. Johnson.
Klein said that the President 11abhors any
thought af censorship," that he thought there had
been an overreaction by the communications media,
and that the speech was the vice president's idea
and contained rnateriaJ about which be had spoken
priva1.ely.
Moyers said "To give a President 30 minutes of
uninterrupted access to 60 million people is too great
a J>O\Ver: comment provides a good balance."
It was a clear-presentation of"c:ml! 'S\dt of a con·
troversial stibject.
JOEY BISHOP'S departure from his late-ni ~hl
talk show marks the end of a 2112.year losing battle,,
Bishop announced Tuesday night at the taping for
tonight's show that he was leaving then Walked out
without completing the program. ABC had announc.
ed earlier the 0 Joey Bishop Show" would be tenni·
nated at the end of the year.
Bishop's principal problem was the impreg.
nable posiUott of Johnny Carson in the,Jate"'evening
field . complicated last September by more com·
petition from Merv Griffin. Also, ABC was never
able to persuade all its affiliated stations to run the
show.
Dennis tlae Menace
0
\
•
•
'
•• •
.. ·ENGLISH
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LET'S DEAL ON A NEW '70! ·:~_-"H_ave _~ ~Jc, 'Dayl"
UNIEATAll:E VOWMI SAYINGS •T. lfflrHOME OF
''THI SHARPES'( PENCIL IN-Tl:IE WESl"
'66 Chevrolet
SUNI SPORT
Con¥trl. 196 turbo jet e11f.,
euto., P.S., rfflo, heeter,
wide •vel tir11, buc••t
Meh. co111ole. (TE& 2211
$1490
--,64 DODGE
1/1 TON
n c•up, lorttb.d, v.1, •• ,..
.• ..
THIO~ORI
ROllNS, SR. THI ODO RI
ROllNS, JR.
. . .. ._.
All . Remqining _!69's Now Slashed to Rock
Bottom For Immediate Clearance!
STILL A GOOD SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM.
SKI
WEEKENDS ..,
•
•
WINTER
VACATIONS ..,
•
Ill I AL NO. 1 I ll
I 9 +
Go Where a_ild -.W~n. r-Au )Vant' to ·Witho_ut Reservations
••• qn ~ Fq1'1d.V.{8.N·9~t That t,1akes Sense! · ·'i . .. . -· .. '.; i-.! ~ ~.' .·-' -~
BRAND ''NEW ·ELDORADO lOY2 FT. CAMPER
UST PRICE SALE PRICE DISCOUNT
m•tic, c111tom ceb, he•IM. •SAV1NGSI
ll26l-421
READY-l'O. INSTALL
ON YOUR PRESENT
PICK~UP OR A
NEW FORD
PICK·UP!
rneludes 1ressure Water System,
_ Sink; Stove with Oven, lee Box; Mat·
tresses, Drapes, Electric and Gas
. Ughts, Vinyl Floors, Ete.
'64 PONTIAC
TIMPDT STA. WASON
FACTORY .Al II. CONDI·
TIO NING, eutom•tic, re·
dlo, heeler, power 1!Mrin9.
I FNA 11461
$890
'67 DA!SUN
WAGON
Stic• 1hi ~ -low mile•9e.
ITWV 079)
$1290
'68 DODGE
COlONIT 4-0001 SIDAN
v.1, power 1t11rin9, power
br•k11, ti••l•t. D1t1ctive
Ctr. 11 151711
$1350
'69 FORD
CUSTOM
4 Or. Sid. 429 VI . •wlo.,
pow1r 1t11rin9 & di1c
br••••· h11t1r. City of Co1·
It M11• f'olic1 C••· Com·
p11!1ly mtin1li11ed •I Th10•
dor1 Robin1. R1m1irid1r tf
f•cl. W•rr. •v•il. 19JSIKI/
1-4019) IS+•. No. 9141 11
$1790
SAVJNGSI
'66 CHEVY
WA.ON
v.t , •ulometrc, r1dlo, heet·
er, power 1l11rln9. IYCP
100)1
$1290
'65 Chevrolet
IMPALA
4-DoM sM.11. v.1, FAc:
TORY AIR, 111fott11tic, re·
dio, h1cl1t. IXEV 7761
$890
'69 MACH 1
190 VI , P.S .... P.di1c lira•••·
AM-FM 1ler10 r-dio, cr11i1·
om1tic, wlde ov1I lir11,
while w/\1111.• Interior. Re·
_m til'td•t of fcctory w•rr t ll·
ty 1y•il1bl1. IYCU4S2>
$AVl
'68 FORD
CUSTOM
190 VI •~giri•, powt r tt11r•
Ing, cr11itomati1 lran1mi•·
1io11, r •d i • end h1•f•r.
Police C.r. 1115540)
$145 0
OYER 411 CAMPERS . IN STOCK! REDUCED TO CLEAR!
SAVINGS!
SAVINGS!
'64 Thunderbird ··-..
Hardtop. FACTORY AIR,
•utomtllc, R&H, f'.S., f'.I ...
P-window1. IOTW 7711
'69 CHEV.
w.-GoN
Ki1191wood. 396 VI , auto.,
f•clory eir, P.S., P-ditc
br1•11, lu99191 r•t•. t ll
vinyl i11t.r. · Appx. 16,900
mil11. 102 74141 !Stk, # SAVINGS!
f'14l 1 J;
1ur rou• ·TkUC!C & CAMl!lk FROM THEODORE ROllNS fOltD
AUTHOllZID TAUCI & CAMPIR OU.Liit
~l:fEltl fJ~~NCING IS A!~U.~ILE ON THE ENT IRI PACKAGE.
NO SHORTAGE OF
·MAV~RICKS HERE!
•
Vinually Every Color And
Option Made Now In Stock And
_Ready .For Immediate . Delivery
At Robins Volume Savin9s!
LEAS E A NEW
1970!
All Popular Makes And Models
We Are A Member Of The Ford Authoriied
Leasing System
~ ..... •. q p M M()l.U,\) '>IJA l • \ATURDAY 8 AM TO 6 p M PARTS E. SERVICE HOURS PARTS ONLY
. '..'"'"" :o ,,m to 6 pm I A~· 11.' o If.' MONDAY • 7 AM TO 6 PM TUE SDA! FRIDA! 6 AM 10 6 PM SATURDAr
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Wtdnesday, Ncwtrfl't>er 26, 196'
I • l I • ' /\ T ' DAil. Y pft.Or
.
.. ,
• •
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·.'
CADILL AC Nl·NETEE 1V ~E:J 1E NT1 T
..
USED,~ LOW
MILEAGI
Exquisite Sapphire 8lu• Firemtst w7J
white padd•d top & white leather ex-
terior, Factory Air, Fpll Power, Ster10
AM, Powei-door locks, tilt & tellscopic
steering wheel, etc., etc •
,(Ser. H910179H
. .
1967. C4Dl~C
'Coupe De Ville,, B1Jck e:xtirlor with blick
, p&dded tqfi anll.•bl&Ck cloth· & leather inter-'
· ior. FuU · powel', factory air, power door
Jocks, AM-FM radio, t wilight sentinel, etc.
(llTK685l, .
. 19~7 Fi.rETWOOD .
Brougham. Embassy black with black top
and black leather Interior. Full power, tac-·
tory 14r, tilt wheel, stereo AM·F~t. power
door locks, power trunk release, Vogue pre-mium tires, etc., etc, (UPS731)
-
PllCE
SALE $3600
PRICE
SALE
EXCEIJ..ENT SELECTION
OF-MODELS & COLORS AVAILABLE. FOR
LEASE' ·OR PURCHASE
Even when measured: by Cadill.ac standards Of ex·
cellence, the 1970 Cadillac is sure to exceed your
greatest expectations. Let's get together ~oon for a
demonstration drive.
1969 c
f:)' ER ::o 01 · \ T.l rr ( \ 1)11.L \(. • T O SELF' T f'B« >\I , . '
L \J(1 ;1 ·:ST ~l :LE« l'f(1\
Of\ \\(;I': COl'\T.,:
U>w mlloa~!~!..~t!~Lr~;w~i~~~&:riuxY!~~E& loath"
trimmed plush Jntcri{)r: Factory air cond., full .power, stereo AM-tM
radio, Cruise Control,1tilt & tclcflcoplc wheel, split h·onl seats with sepa-
rate adjustment, reer window defogger, door guard, power door locks,
headlamp dimmers, wsw tlre11, remote trunk opfncr. twllii ht sentinel,
etc., etc. Absolutely 'every option on this luxurious motor car (Ser.
B9132943). Mus~ be seen & driven!
1966 PONTIAC
Bonneville H.T. coupe. Mist green with black
vinyl trim. Automatic, power steering, pow-er brakes, power windows, factory air con·
ditionlng, Low mileage. Exceptionally clean
car. CSGL676)
$1700
1962 MERCEDES BNZ
230 S Sedan, Mercedes blue with natural
leather interior. 4 speed, radio, heater, air
conditioning, radial tires. 40,500 miles. Im-
peccable. (JNA586J
1969 CADILLAC
Sedan ~Ville. Ermine whlt.e with exquJsite
aqua cloth & leather Delphine interior. Full
power, factory air conditioning, AJ\.1-FM ra-
dio. (ZRF112).
1965 CADILLAC
Sedan De Ville. Popular Newport Blue wl
dhc. interior, Factory Air Cond.. Full Pow~.
signal seeking Radio. tilt a: telescopic wheel.
all Dix. Xtras. Cl\VD204).
PRICE
PRICE
• . ,
2600 Harbor Blvd.,
Costa Mesa
. SALES DEPARTMENT OPEN· . . .
• •
OR A
PRICE
1968 CADILLAC
Coupe de Ville. Nonnandy blue With .hiack
Landau and blue leather trim. Full powel,",
fact.Ory air Conditlonlrig, tllt-tele wheel,
AM-Fliif radto, etc. Local one owner. (VGZU~) -
1967 THUNDERBIRD
AIPinc Y:hile with black vlf\Yl Interior. Full
J>O"-'er, factory ah',' Abl-Fl\.1, tilt steerln&
wheel, { UTC387l •.
t968 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVille. Emperor blue with white
vinyl top and white leather hr.crier. Full
power, factory air conditioning. AM.FM ra·
dlo, power door locks, rear window defog·
ger, etc. LocaJ, 1 owner. tVTJ\12741
1966 TORONADO
• •
Deluxe. Full r>ower, factoJ'y air condltlonll'lg,
lilt wheel, Al\I-FM rad.!01 silver blue finish,.
vinyl top, deluxe Interior. (10081)
1961 CADILLAC
Sedan DeVine. Sil•er blue 'vith n1atchlng
cloth &: leather Interior. Full power. factory
air conditioning. signal '11eeklng radio, pow·
er door locks. (lFD824J , . , . . , .
19,8 CONTINENTAL
Sedan. Glacier green with green leather In·
tmor. FµU ·power, faCloty alt. Ali-t-FM radio.
CV\VK492) .
' .
PRICE
•
PRICE
PRICE
PRICE .
NABERS CADILLAC
. '
• LEASE DIRECT .
lmmedlete delivery • bcollent Soloctlon
Over four ·-of factory author•
lied '°'91 Cacllllac facllitlff design•
•d to better sell and service new
and· med Cadllac olltOmoblln.
. . ,
8:30 AM·t0·9:00·PM··Mon. thru-Fri. • 9:00-AM:to.6:00.·PM .Sat. an.r'Sun.
All CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR SALE. ALL SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1969
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HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSI S l'OR SALE , • I
HOUSES l'OR S4LE ' HOUSES FOR SALE HOUS ES l'OR"SALE
l!r~~::•:•':..._ ___ ~1ooo=l;G;;;ono~r;;;o~l ~~~~1;;;000;.Go __ "_•_•_•1 ____ 1_000_ _°"'_.,._,_ .. ___ • _•_1000_ ;Go:;;ne;;;-,..;;;';;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1000;;;, I ;;;Go;;;"";;;;;'";;;';;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'llllll;;;. Cooto -·
1100 Nt wport llOoch 1200 Unlvonlty Pork 1237
fOREST E. SPACIOUS 4 BDRM-$21,750 TOTAL PRICE 1.o1 °"""'".. . ~.~ .. ;,._sa,,:: .. 0 l S 0 N GI oR FHA A 3-11ec1room College Park. 3 UNITS $48S. $6.500 dn. P rico '. MESA VERDE with a big play yanl ocu • HO;!lle $35,000. Nortb CM, By
schools & walk to shopping, FOR ONLY Wi"th p I $29~958 owner. 534-356lafl5PM.
Thia lQwty ?.1esa Ver. 4 BEDROOMS nice sized 00 Easls!de C:OSta Mesa. Span. HUGE 9 room + gUeSt house
de Cambridge is ready and 111': baths. CUstom stone $10, 995 $26,950 ish tile roof, rentals on large & pool. OwOCT. $38,950 •
for your move-in. Con1-FIREPLACE! Carpets & BUILT ON 77xl;.(I' lot. Income S.l85 ~==&16-~2544::0=*=5'8.&33==== CUSTOM pletely carpeted & drap-Drapes! BUILT IN KlTOJ. 4 bd rm 2 bath on Fordham month. Our best \Ocome re--..
NEW Gl D oo, 2 covered patios, EN! Excellent area! You YOUR LAND• Drive. Thll ls BEST POOL tW'D in area. ~11 EN AN n e w dishwasher + just can't beat this for'-•ro. FEATURING : HOME BUY IN AREA. Exclu1ive With
I. FARM cushion linoleum itt TAL Sll60 cosr to you VETS • lDSG sq, Jt. Exclusive With
'ii..: fabulous New•""rt Beach. kitchen & family 1oom. with possession like, •. SOON • Double garage Thls is Cororu.; del Mar'a
N ,... 0 .,, 8 , yo• q""'"y. • All lath and plaster NeWport Newport D-1 B•v lo a FOUR bed ' mast•' ,, .•• bed"""ms. 2 nly ....,,500. & 01t.'tlCt ...,....... P··"-··-ba ~ " · • • '" ""'" ....... ,vill cany 211d TD. Let's WE SELL A HOME e ...... ,...,, th at room VIEW hrutie-with a
pill baths. }'ann kitchen -iO lll!'e it. EVERY Sl MINUTES •Spacious wardrobes at Victoria healed and filtered large
pantry -deJUXe built-ins. CALL 537~ Vi POOL, ~·o full baths, a din-
·Kur,e 3.5 Ft, New England CQA Walker & Lee •Jn TnOllt Orange County and ctori• 646-1111 ing roon1, ii hOusewile's
lrr. Realton; •
MoN dtl Mor 1105
NO TURKEY
LEASE
LEASE OPTION
SELL
Immediate cx.'Cllpancy iii
available on this ve-ry VB·
c:atit and ve-ry handsome 3
BR townhouse in beautifUJ
master planned University
Park. Situated right on the
greenbelt. The ul timate-in
caref1-ce living. Only i29J/
mo or $31,900 with only $5000
dowo.
67U550
-O THE REAL
"\.. ESTATERS ffamilyroom with tans of old • TS olher approved · areas, 646-lllJ (anyt ime) DREAMKITCHENoverlook-
b r I ck fireplace. \Vinding & 2190 Harbor Blvd. at Adams STANCO i.og the pool, a ~way fill· I===-==~=.;:;
i\aircase to unique heavy WAL.LACI: MS;0465 Open 'tit 9 PM ( t" ) place and the FUU. PRICE HARBOR HI GHL AN DS. ~amed studio or -Huge · REAL TOR$1 oT=H=E,_-,M~O~S=T---Builders Inc. any •me Is $55.~. Owner transfer. Believe us, the11e homes are °"'" bedroom. a~2% annual 546 tl41-OPEN 7 Days OPEN DAILY 1-S '-a...1 .. _. • '"'-ail bl u ,,,__ 1220 D lph' T C rod Eaal. See. this t_.-·!· ....... lo UI..,, Bnght, clean,
7fJ rate loan av a e. n. _,...... Evaai ... FOR VERY LITTLE 10066 \Vestminster Ave. WHAT A GIFT! o in err, dM Vogel c. 2667 E. Cout H;;;, 3 bdrm 2 bath home with ~ualed at $38,950. Dial Now! 1'l:Z:=lz:iz;:z;:z;:zz;:=! 5ive-bedrooms, a &iant mas-Gardea Grove Fonnfll dining rooni, 3 BR.s CdM. 673-2000 · cozy fireplace, patio " nice-~~ 1• ter be'droom -Large ia.mil.Y Balanced Power Homes Christma11 is coming & you 2 baths, huge living room Jy landacaped. \Va I k i n-c BEACON IAY room with a wet bar-For. can be Sania of the century. with lirepht<.-c -!· family Me.-"',;;••=-V::.•:::nl:;::•:..... __ .;..:.11:,:::10 dlltanc:e to MariDe'ra School.
t 4 BDRM + FAM ma! dlnlne romt\ -Very LIDO ISLE Clvc youi· Iamily this beau-room overlooking llirge pa. -Prl<.'1! $28,&IO. Cill 545-8424
Excepdorally spacious home cl 1 tllul spacious. 4 bdrm Sher-tlo. 2500 ft u l · F ••~ASJ'Ic R E P +RUMPUS with 3 bedrooms, family eatt-A comer ot -2700 llere·s·a cute v.·ood Estate!> home. Bontls &CJ Vlliatea. ;;;~• i bao UBL.IC Copen IWY) South C.OU:t
rorun &: ti,_..lace plus sep. aq. ft. Garden kitc:hf n -:: }>edroom home me n a lute perfect I: Real E&tlte. •. WHAT'S THIS !! ·~r Pride ol. ownership atta -features incl: luxw·iOUI .6haa .sparkllni cond, it!Qn. '4 lar&e 1 -~==' ... ,,;;;,VIEW:,,,~DUP=LEX=-arate apartment with 2 bed+ Walk t --.,,. ..., .,M IJJ\ the Eut end qiflng, Roman bath, hl'1> ~--3 ba·~ ~"' d. ~-· ;" $18,500 rooms. Awooderlul,loeation ° ..... ....._ -..,,....,., ol exclusive Lido l&le-. Jandacaping & S'lo FINi\NC '::.'~m, ;::,,:-1,~ ... -~ 4 BR. 2 Br .. ~t. Walk to ~ '· c•"•---··-'ty clown, $32,950, Smalt ya~ ING "tME -~-_..., -~ -•-.,. -A9d only 6 years ~ Fan. .wr •-.i.1"QJ ..... ~ 5*-2J1J '"' &: ..,, DlATE OCClJ. room A: huce m.Uter'bdrm.· . -·-n&• ~
iUtic: terms too! Get togetfl. beach • tennis courts .. -pier ·ll.ll&ehed garage, PAN CY· " • Popular model with 3 cu URGENTLY. need 2-4 uni ta;
• Sl.30o and that's all )'OU &: noats. 'Ibis could be a a real a:em $39,000 d:f ~~E~:·~655 garage. Priced for lm· beach lln!A. Haw bizyers! ~ single home with either 5 or $M 950 --·"· I "'2-2752 A ti B'·· --'. ! 4 .:!OOd size bedrooms , '· ' ·~le A e: at .$46,950. .... ny me, iu-. <"""-6 bed--· $19 500 can ,,,.. ....Qted cxclusivelY w1·1h ,_ 2 baths -kitchen with "''"""· ' • .,. CALL 54S-84U (open eves) DLX. Condo. 2 BR 2 BA, fpl ,
itlullt-ins. Family t rumpus a~p't. GOV'J REPO Soulh.Cout Real Estate view of pool. STl,500. H.
room. BeautifuJ, well kept, 1ohn macnab Unqua lified Beauty 4 BR, 2 BA, fm rm, exec ?i.lcKenzie Realtor 646--0732
tre-e lined community. Where (])4) 642_,235 Jl's plush! Nothing bas been Large 4 bdnn 2 bath in Costa home. Bltns, goorl cond, Pvt
in the world can you find a 9a1 Dover Drive-, Suite 1:11 spared in making this a Mesa for $20,000 full price walled lmt P.atio, lge htd
';IMP.=·• a:,i" I~ thiS.. · Move fast? Ne-wport Beach shaw place. 4 bdrms, formal on big <.'Orner lot. With swim pool wfslide &: div -~ I ;=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:==:;:=:;:~! din rm & 4l: fam rm, nr new $1500 down total payment brd. Prof landscpng, lo Ii carpets thruout, terrific $22,500 TOTAL PRICE is $177/mo. including taxes. tnainl Xlnt neighborbd.
H ighly Desirable 6ideyard for boat or trlr. zz;:z;:=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:z;:: FHA OR GI Available for non-ve\1 or 1-'$43=,960=·,.:540-:::_.::15:;13:_ __ _ 645-0303
at Harbor Center
• 2299 Hartior Blvd., C.?.1'.
COMFORTABLE
TWO BEDROOM
I ON HARDWOOD FLOORS.
Extra large master bed·
BAYCREST Priced at $44,500 in beauti. with $1.200 down to any qual-vets. Vacant • see today, BEAUTIFUL 4 Bedroom, 3
Big enough to house the most f Lli Mesa Verde, NEW Hied buyer and payments CALL f>40.ll51 lferitage Real bath tri-level. Large family
active family. 4 bdnns, 3 LESS THAN RENT at LOW Estate (open eves) rm. separate din rm. Nm
baths & lovely separate BA JS HORE 7%% a nnual inlcrest! 3 bl& I ;=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:~=:;:::=E I to Country Club, Owner,
family room opening on to LISTING bedrooms &: 2 baths! Car. Ii $45,500. 546-5745, 546-i559'
covered patio &: beautifully pets &: Drape-g included! Pools-Pool1-PoolsJ
landscaped yard. $67,500 1193 Baker, C.M, . 546-5440 Cape Cod 2 BR. v.·/open Everythlng'1 B-1-G, kitchen, 4 + family room ~t_b... Ct College P t.:rk
be ·un living room, yard, trees and loan oI $22,200 at $191' 1ncL
111S
A
lo;=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:=:;:==:;:=:;:~! am c:ei g, SIOll<! Iront, VALUE! Move In before all . or lovely l\.1esa Vetde 3 BR. -$27,200
I• . shake roof, lge. sunny.patio ..... ~--3 + lamily ~ dinin"' room•~ 27 Fl rv ....,, I "' M ..... GoHers-Take Notti w/room to add on. Priv . ..._,,,,-munol!!! ·~ "" • 1 ' ~.... ""' .,.,u.,.,
We have-new listings of ~V· beach & boat storage. $35,SOO WE SELL A HOME Ca.mbrid&:e Seri~. Cpts, drps, bltna. Lge. lo~
• ioom. 00'/:f kitchen and din.
• !/'< ..... Allaohed •• ,.., Barrett Realty
-l!Xlra large lot. E.xcellent
Nawport Htlghto 1210
OCEAN VIEW
2 Bcinn., 2 baths, balcony PB·
tio. SEE th.is bright & cheer.
tu: home witr. a Catalina
view, Nee-cts some v.'Ork.
Askine ;a1,soo.
Graham Rlty. 646-2414
Ne-ar Newport Post Office
CLlfFHAVEN
Ne\f liltlng! 3 Bdnns.. 2
baths + V:ciling family nn.
&: kitc:h. combo. Great for
Jamil,y. Only $35,500 •
CALL NOW!
Scenic PropeTtie-s 6TN726
LOW PRICE LUXU"Y
Immac. 3 + fam, Marquette
model on gJttnbdt by adult
pool. Low down, F.P. $.18,SCQ
f· worth it!
• red hill ~·: . ' . REAi.TY
Univ. Park Center, Irvin.?.
Call Aeytime 833-0820 ! : ... • ".
1,c;o;;'°";;;;";;;;dt;;l;;;;Mo;;;;r;;;;1;250;,;I: !
i I/I
180' OCEAN VIEW
And, that's not all you get
in this custom blt. 3 Bdrm.
Sep. dining rm.; on 90 ft. · •
frontage. Top CdM Area. •' •
20X31 LIV. rm., wet bar, 2 '
pali011; ntee!s rigid qualily •
standards. Make this the
ailt oI a liletime for your-
famU, $69,500 .• ""1000. .
INVESTMENT RIPE . , :
6 Delue units near Shor@oi 4
•
cllttll, O>roM. ·del Mar. At;-f
aured income-, a11t.'8ys rent· l l
ed: all units have elec. kitcb-1 • :
e1111. Heated & flltel'ed pool. l
Owner very t.w perative on 1
financing. cau for complete 1·;
details. 675-300'.l ' I
$3,000 PRICE CUT .
Sharp 3 bdrm. Corona High· .' •
lands charm home. Extra :
Jge, living nn.: be-aut. Blue ;
}faven pool. Cozy patio for :
entertaining. Perle<:t condi· ~;
tion . thruout. Now $56,(Q).
ti"lS-300'.l.
mun ,\ Ill , IC'll
llE.IU l l~L
[ <, t ' • ; t'' •' ,
ONE OF A KIND
7 BEDROOMS!!
Unique-, !ttodem. Beautiful!
:
"
'neighborhood -beautifUJ
I lined street. Seeing is
0 lle-ving, ONL y · $21,500
16'6 \Ve-stcliU Dr,
N.B.
'42·S200
eral large Custom • Built J. ClarkJon EVERY ~1 MINUTES ~ .546·51110 ""'/cov. boat storage. Top loc~ ~... -.. "'"• "' """'"' ...,.,,. Walker & l ___ , coRBIN·MARTIN ot beautiful Mesa Verde ee LEGE REALTY G75-lG62 REAL~~ Eve'!. Dover Shor• 1227 Family nn. + den. On Jari. :;,,;,;,c;.;__;c.;,:..,;,.;._ ___ I est panoramic harbor view wrm TERMS.
'" HERE IT IS!
!£xceptkmal 3 bedrooin, 2 'i\ie.th. Home located in best
Cos ta j\fesa area, Deluxe
c)aha_g cilrpeting throughout,
FORCEb SALE!
GOOD INVESTMENT!
Death in family causes '151.le-
of this commercial money
maker. 3 stories • laundta·
mat, beer tavern & TV n!.
pair t:hop, Everything goe-s
ft°:i?~!~. ~to;;: i: 21'JO Harbor Blvd. at Adams 1.,,.,..,..,..,""'".,..,.".,
1.,'";,"".,oCll,.. I 3036 E. Coast Hwy.,.CCIM
lurther d•tails. Coldwell, Inker & Co. 561M9l 0"'" 'til 9 PM $26,950 LG. 4 bd~ 2 ba. A"•mabfa
550..Newport Center Dr. low inl loan. 23.19 Colgate
5cg.5110 ...Hlwpor1 Booch, c.n1. Mesa Del Mar 5 BEDRM oc. ,,,.. '""~·1•m ..n.
___ , 133-G700 644-2430 + POOL PERRON RLTY 642-IM
LLEGE REALTY 5 bdm1s, 3 baths, dini ng 3 baths, full dining room. N Be h 1200 -.Sii-WESTCLIFF room. Wal k;,,. wstanoo from Rl<h ""°' .,.,,.Ung • hand· owport ••
wttb 1au••k•ma.t. •!her 2 Vacant and Riltldy ~eased, Priced at onl,y You can be settled in your
$15. own home for C'hrislmu, J
POOL HOME Kiodecgarten lo College. """' b"'1klast bar, Arta EXECUTIVE LIVING
3 bedroom 2 bath home in $38..500. of mo~ con v e n i e D c e. Corona dd Liar view home.
heaotifol w""lilf on • Investment Income 540-11'0. Privacy behind 1 ..... '"""· NON . BUSY street, Court-TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor scpg. Xlnt for children & en..
nl tertaining. $69,500 · l:OJ I'\\ I .\\ Ill I I
~l \H\111\\
K I \ I I \
ya cnll·ance, covered pa. i UNITS, large lol 132x305'; 3 BR 2 bath home, corner PROPERTIES WEST
tio, separate-playyard for room 10 build 5 more. SOO,OOO lot 130x180 • add 5 m<re kiddie.a. l nimediak: ™'~ses-unit•. Dl'ivc by 1~,· •·-ia 67>4130 675-1642
"¥¥ Owner will carry h t TD, ""' <><1W
I ,.richly paneled in walnut, big U1l3 Baker
1 "covered patio with profe-• '
bedroom, 11}1. batlls, built.In
kitchen, Fenced yard, 2 e&.1'
ga1-age. $17,900 and lets talk
tenns.
c.M. 546-,... Colesworthy & Ca. slon possible. $47,500" 10% Well s·McCardle, Rltrs. Ana Ave. then call BEST BUY -VACANT
down. ,..7171 1s10 Newport Blvd., c.M, llaula ltea{h• S33,ooo • PDOc
aional laDdscaping, water-
; tall and garden lights. All
• · t in kitchen, forced air
' heat lt'a one of a kind at
"Agent" "For A Wbe•Buy"
642-7111
.,... 548-77'19 644.ai84 eves. •9 Blutfa, $42. mo. assn fee. 3
64U560 Br. 2l2l East BluU Dr.
-0 THE REAL
\"\.. ESTATERS '---' . .
$23,000 OCEANFRONT 6"""1
5 BEDROOMS
*JrrepJ Qceable Vie\Y* lot! J ust listed exclusiw.J.y
B~y & Mountalns1 at only .$89,500.
Regal "Old World" Contem· DON v: FRANKLIN
porary plc:turesque home w/ REAL TOR
unobstructed view • most e 673-2222 e
rooms. 4 Br's, 4"' Ba + I !!!!!!!!"'!!~~~!!!!!!!!I
maids qtn. Ideal ror enter-$l9 ,BSO
taining. Ea1Y maint. Immed
oe<:•p, f'Urnllh<d. $118,000. Rock bottom price
Asaume 61n% loan. 548-7249 CdM, R·Z lot. remodeled,
Tl~ FOR ""'Y I B' cott.,., m .. ;'""
ed '8-rde-n, $4900 down,
Cj)UICK CASH mo. 614 %· Jot. 'hx" 1246• Owner on preml11es daily
THROUGH A HI oold. 518 F•rnleaf 673-0173
BUSIE'SI' marketplace ln · j
DAILY PILOT town. The DAILY PILO'I' •
Claslil!od ... tio"' S ' VO
WANT AD I moocy, tim• " ellort. Look
now!!!
)21.!150,
' -·' .i ,
6,fO/o Loan
·LOWEST PRICE 1 ______ :;:: FANTASTIC 1d .. 1 Loc•tion
"Bluffs" 3 +BR's $22,500 OCEAN VIEW $S4,ooo 1f. STAR GA'ZEK-~
A · h · h George Williamson t:-"~'i'i :!Lill.=:....=.:., ~ •y I.PO Now under constrUction! 4 Beams I: adobe plus expaMC! LOY" LY ltrac:tJve ome \\-'It many ~
bd balh I I l I ki •• handy work features. Large REALTOR M Y.w ft..11.. J.~ GviiJit M nns, 3 s, v ew home o gM.!I over oo ni green 0 673-4350 Eves. 673-1564 y """'--J'"' y ·. ORANGE COUNTY'S ·with over 3CDJ sq ft of living. be-It, 2% bath & e-xtra room P OL HOME valuable lot. Unobsll'Uc tcd Aec01d/11g lo lh t Stors.
LARGEST · 11 lbe to La 3 "R, 2 BA I ·• To dr;e1--*........, for ThurscloV, • ~ Spectacular view, I a r g e for maid. Convenient Joca· Exquisl!c 15 x 36 It. pool. VIC\'/ a way guna. o • amuy room. ....., ··---,,
.'. 2629 HARBOR BLVD. game room & an assumable tion. Right price 531,950. Loods or decking. Covered % mile 10 !\1arina. prof decor. l~J yr old-xlnt ~~woz:d'f::~~·to.l"UT!bet5 f i:==
' 546 1640 6.9% loan. Ottered at $83,SOO. Low down. patio. Geocl'ous bedroom.11, TARBELL 830-6060 cood. SJl.500. 21.352 Fleet 1 ~ 31 £,,_ 611~
OPEN EVES Till 1:30 Riddle & Ross 675-7225 2 baths, electric buill·ins, A Private Glimpse Lane, l-tB. Owner &16-4323 ii: ~~U!llr9 ~~
, EASTSIDE -$21,950 Full dining room. Into llil1 excitin& world ol Costa Meu 1100 A y.,. ~Alt*'9:1 "'Pi.bile ~ Cozy, Private, on a cul de PLANS CHANGED 846+0604 ' TARBELL the mo.11t exclusive resident • ..;ccc;;..,;..;,;.:.:_ __ ;..,;.cc.;: !~ ~~ ::e~
1 sacamidneatlyke-pthomes. -"="='="'"='""=:""== Chvncrwillsacrlfice6mos. $24950 ia'.scc:tlonoritheBackBay ASSUME GI ',~~ JJ1'70oo~ ~~
" Large lot with .several Uuit ·$22,500 • ne.w $hoy,•case home-w/ 1 in Dover Shores. 3 brand ,F:,"' J9Eid;;• 6'Po,_.,
•-trees and room for a gar· SJ' ~' LOAN many cust. extras. 3 BR. & Mesa Verde new models. "-bclnns, 3¥.i lOAnd 40Ma)' 10 T,,.
I. ::den. IO% doWll to qualill.ed 74 70 ram ., 28' liv. rm, \Valk-In 4 Bd baths. Spat'kling pool. Roy LOAN with low low inleresl. l ~~-!~~ ~~~ ·~~~~
I "buyer. 5*'1oannualpctcentageloan closets.Garaiew/boatdoor. rm .. + Den J. \Vnrd 1430' Calaxy Dr. 3bdnn2bathhonie.Priced lJDan't AJM 73 ,...,.......,,~ ' · Ms-nn e 546-2313 ncrw on property with rent Walk:lni dist. to beach. Al.I Please home with modern '"" 1550 at $23.500 • $171/nio pays tA Ente~ « o.+.r 7A~'• " f $"~l011 ~ all Aki 0 •· "'"1151 !51r'll A5A...old 75f'olilnot • · like payments • Oversized new or '"· ,....., n erms. built In kitchen. Covered pa· · s or an o..ce ;,...,. 6 Ir'• '46 1~ 76 .._
living room, fireplace. Cozy Hal P lnchln &. Assoc. tion . Large recrcilion room. NEWPORT BEACH Heritage Real Estate \open 110ut .. 1 ~ n To ':'HE REAL R J:STATERS study. Charming borne • 3900 E. Coo.st Hwy. 675-4392 540-17'10. Ow-ming 3 BR.. w / tarae 1 ,_•.,ve001,.>7"',,__~~~--::~ !;i~ ~~ ...
near beach MESA VERDE TARBELL 2955 Harbor fncd. )'?', cov. patio. Hdwd. 3 BR & den, ]l~ BA, cpts, 20To !IOH..-b , IOSociGI AQU.WW
TARBE LL 142-6691 fin:., frpl., bltn. kitcb, Nr. drps, bl~ins. Halccrest. Lg ~~ ~~' ~~ IAH.'» ~ n~=!!n~~m BAYCREST SPECIAL ~:;ns':.Vc~u~:1!! $25,900 ~~~v1~r~~~. tn.=J>S· ~:,:~:1~.t ~ ,r~:t. 1;;it~ ~~~ t F"' ~~ 111""t~,~~~,.~~ ~ with wet bar, built-in refrig. tails to delight a professional 4 BR w/pool, fam _rm, I~ Walker Rlty. '75-5200 deep. Fruit ll'et's. Yre.sh 26For 56 W_. 86Thelr ~ ,M."5 ~ "•tor. 4 bednns, 3 bll.thl. 4 bdmi + formal dining + decorator. Tasteftl.I wall pa. ha. Near schools &: So. Coast 3306 Via Lido, NB Open Sun, paint inside & out. $26.500. ~~rlt!llQ· i~~ g.~st!.-. ,_ .
'Gorgeous landscaped yard. pool Move-i 11 condition. call Pf!l", all dectric kitchen. Plaza. Immed. po&&. Small BEACH DUPLEX Owner M0-2847 29~ ~~ 19klM lfl.•.~.
( An addn.'Ss of executive us today. Family room. Fireplace. down. 2 BR & 1 BR., eood income, OLDER 2 BR house, 2 car 1 ,.stff, JJ JOT....._• .o e; tOWt( ·;Ai.a~
t homes. 541).17'20 DAVIDSON Realty 51().1720. Ceil Ma rtin Rltr. Lee Pereyd a Real Estate gar. Lrg lot ~ suitable for ·1.s.19-lS' . ~Good @Adft:ne ()N~ 1-·6-37..fl
' .TARBELL 2955 Harbor 546-5460 Eves. 544-1833 TARBELL 2955 Herbor 548-6332 499-1990 or 4M-54SS building. a-15-6001 :===J~,,....~;;"~~·'lll;;~~~~~~~~~=i~~~~===I :l =~~====~=i.::===========~~==========~-======~====!...=~;;;~~==~~~======~
,, ..
•• "
.General 1000General tOOOGeneral 1000 General t.000 General tOOOGene r•I 1000 Gonorol 1000G.nero1I lDDI
2043 Westcflff Dr. •t Irvine Open Evenings
DANCE UNDER THI STARS
On the vast dee.ks o1 lhll 36' CUSTOM POOL.. Entertain In the Hu~ Uving Room
with )1usivr: Antique Brlck Fh't!plac:e. All ele-ctrlc bullt·ins, BIG family room with
Beanvd Ceiling&. 4 Spacious bedrooms, 2 b&thg, CUstom carpels 11.nd Drapes. Ter·
rifle value at 335,695 with a beautiful F.H.A. loan ASSU?.IABLE at LO\V in·
t.erest!
''YE OLDE FARMHOUSE"
J U1tl 1 block to Wrstc:lifi Plua shopping. A qU.lnt exterior and up 1:0 dale ln-
ttrlor. \\oilh ltARDWOOD FLOORS. buill·ln kitchen, MASSIVE }"ffiEPLACE and
~-tiled baths. Stt a bargain at $31,500 with choice tt.rms!
HOISi RANCH WITH POOL
Enjoy the luxury of country living just 10 minutes from Orange County. 20 X 38
POOL with slldt. end Jots of de-eking! 378' detl) lot with BARN and CORRAL.
Sharp 5 room home nestled aml'ing g1ant shade trce1. AU. for just $26,500 wiUi
VA no DOWN or F.1 1.A. Low DOWN!
II
.--1111842-4455
Opeo lt•lltl 7612 1c11., .. Ol'll'OSITI!
MUMTINGTOM C•MTElt
TOTAL PAYMINT $134 PEI MONTH
Real sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath home. Frtshly painted. GI loan or $15,SOO at 5~~ %
annual interesL You can't beat tt! Service Porch. Double Garag~. Forced air heat .
Complrtely fenced. Sprinklers. cai·pets & Drapes throughout. Family room. Let
us sho'v ll to you!!
$11,'50 IELIEVE ME!
Total payment on this high F.H.A. loan is 122 includes all "'itlt 51.4 % annual
rate. 3 bedrooms that a~ huie. liugc yard completely e-:nclosed. Covered patio
11 X 22. This Is a ~IUST SEE.
$22,000 4 IE DROOM "VACANT"
$140 ricr n1onth include-s all on e:d~tlng lonn anyone can assume "'lthout (!Uttll·
rylng! Fpaturlng 4 huge-bedrooms. 2 luxurious baths. Charming "'Quern11'• kitrh·
l'n. Great living room w ith rich paneling. Ankll' deep c:arpeling. Ex~llent c:ul-
de-sac. \Vill sell FHA and VA.
51/•'i• TOTAL ANNUAL llATE ON THI
G.I. LOAN ANYONI CAN ASSUM£!
St t 18l'fl SPANlSli STYLE 3 bedroon1 famll)' room. Fnrm•t dlnl nr t~
11tt ru Cllrpr-1.A A Drapeos throu~hout. Ui\'t>ly rnodrrn kit chen. Truly SPA NISH.
To pa mcnl $155 includes all. Prlctd :lt $26,900.
WI SILL A HOMI IVERY 31 MINUftS
'
c
2790 HAHOR ILYD.· Opoo honl111 'tll t P.M.
THIEi CAI GARAGE -S'/o DOWN -LISS , THAN .PHA
Interest at 7.2i;~ annually. :4 BEOR,00~1 S & 2 luxurious pullma.n baths New Shag
Carpets! CATlfEDRAL t:iEA~IED CEILI.l\'GS. l\lodern as tomorrow all electric
kitchen. Entertaining FORf.IAL DINING R00!\1. 7,200 sq. ft. large lot all BLOCK
WALLED! Executi\•c prestige area with pride of ownenhip! Enjoy true Cali·
fornla PATIO KITCHEN ,,,\th $1 .700 down payment and $178 P .t I per month,
IUILDUS' CLOSE OUT!ll -$1,400 DOWN 19UALS So/.
to LO\V, LOW Interest in Beach Area! MASSIVE BEDROOMS plus 1prawling
living 4: FA.l\ULY R001\I with fl oor lo ttilln& Fm EPLACE! Briehl as sunshine
Cali.fornla gard<'n electric kitchen and di1hwasher! Pllilh 1haf carpets from
BEAMED CEUJNG Jiving room to te-cluded mll!Ster bcdrQOm plus scrumptiou!
pulln1an marble baths. POOL SfZED, block walled back yard wtlh profe-~_slon·
ally landscaped front v.•ith sprinklers! TOTAL ONLY $27,900. MOVE NO\V!
WHY IENT?71 -$750 TOTAL DOWN GI
with pa)>n1cnt11 less lh!\n the rent Yo~I pay th1t roes DOWN THE DRAIN!! Gt>t
this .. THREE BEDROO?ifS . , carpets .. Drapt.1 .. Range A: Oven . , Refrigerator
Quiel Street •. Fenced Yard , • Many 1rtts , . Near School •. \Valk to shops
.• Quick Possession. Don't wait, brln& your mate to
·u1.soo -COSTA MHA
Sl,000 TOTAL DOWN FHA In most demanded are& near just about everythlna
• , . 1c:hool4 .•• shopping .•. beach! Super Clt'an 3 8edf'Ob#n1 & ·1 bath with
carpets I. dtape1! 1'.bundanee Of i1hade lrec!S and ROO!tt TO nOA?.1 for the kids.
The "St1u1er fOl' tht: Smarter"!
-&loo IC. .... _
r
. ·-··---,-~~ ... --. -.. -~-----.------....--...... -----·-----------·---------.. ----.----~----..-·--~--~--------,------:-.~•
Jf PILOT·ADVt~R Wed.,..,, N"'-26, 191,9 . ~' ""'""'' 26, 1969
HOUSIS FOR ~LI HPUSES l'OR SAtl ~, HOUSl!5 POR SALi' lllNTAU, '"'ITALS RINTALS R~AL~ ,At;NT • RENTA
DAILY l'JLllT
.. • .
I
liH\ln~·~· ~ll~?e~~i~·~•~dl~1~400~~H~..,~tl~•~•~•on~'~•~1di~'~1a~· ~,~~~;;~l~N~c~h~~-~1~7~05 Hov-UftfuM111hed Hou111 Unfunollhod Ai!I.: ""'""""" 'A;lo. l'vrnloh'!' • • , f'•I•. :unt~rnl••od A•I•. UliNnil-' ' -Co,..,,. •I Mer 3250 ~-I 5000' Gener1l 0.-11· 4000 Nwport ... ch ' 4200 _.... Coti1 -s1•
C11h flor Clrl1fll • 4 BR, 211 Ba. ·<l•ptex. 2'lOO NEW HOME
IMMEDIATE MOYE 1.N
4 BDRMS , l 1/2 BATHS
l/4 MILE FROM ,BEACH
P lot\e Rollif $250. 3 Br l lam nn, 2 Ba. Sq. IL Btdna, dllhwu"'r, 14 BLK trom .,.an, ""'· • RENT •
\\'e ·Jlll¥ $2.50 ee.eh for piano I ~N~Kl'~'!-~~bay~~-;:O.!'v~acon..,...t •. l l;lr~pl~.~l300;:;:~M=oo::. '=..,.;·;541>-:;;75;¥.73 s·,. ngle Mod. 3 Br, 2 Ba downstairs, 3 Rooms Furnltur• rolla marbd "Amp1co "\,Blue Deacon -645-0lll furn. Cf partly fum. 10!> 34th $ &
"o...M''or''Wel ... 'I Roti. $175. -· 2 er & den. ~ldo lilt 135.1 SL, N.B. 675-33ts 19.95 UP
mu,t be in aood playable ~ bltina. pr. Blue WRITER'S hldeawa)' 2 Br Adults WATERFRONT w/boat l :ont,h.To-Montb Rentals
cOiidltkan. Theee ra8i Mre Beacon &f5.-0U1. ·fer lease or aale, 213: dock. Lovely 2 BR, patio. . WIDE SELECTION ~GE clean 2 BR du
ma.de from 1906 to 1935· for -845-6628 or 14>917' Yrly Jse. 673-0000 or NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. ·
-
. SJ0.990 -
HUNTINGTON BEACH can Nloiw 962· t353
u-on el~ pianos. Other Colt• Mell 3100 697..oot8 HFRC .FW'Dlture ·Rental.s apt. $140. 2 childrn OK.
ty of pJa "-t t ~ Lux · sl I 1 •-517 W 19th ~ 548-3481 peta N'r'Ne....,,art neew., i>e5 norol.ll> no ':"8° • , Huntl"lfOn Beach 3400 ury ng e, °' 2 1 BR rum apt. No children or · · ' ' Palisades. S48-4989.
ed. Will pay $2.50 eaCJ for 2 Br. New crpts, new drpa. --bedroom la~ments pets. 240l>JA lGth St. N.B. $115. 2 Br lower, Patio, Rto.1:.:.;:=::o::::.:;::=:=:
"Duc>Art", "Welte", and Interior newJ.y dee. '160 14 f:'R. l" BA. la_e llvtncrm furnishe4 anf;l unf~ 646-4664 w1w, 1f!!:· Redec. Child . ,,
"Wurliaer" pipe oraan rolls child ok no .peta. 1043 W. with trplc, kiUf~ _ rm nished, with complete ~EACX>N Bay 2 Br. frpl, pvt. welcome. Bia 534-62llO Meil yncle
al10. Encloee· invoice and Wlilon *"1574, 642-8213, combo, only 2 Yl'1; olct.i Nice-privacy and /andscap-pjer .\dock. $225 mo. $12.5. 2 Br, stove, cpts &:
ship .via U.S. mail usina 968.2158 ly lardscpd. Avail Dec. 10. ed try I b 1 .,.,... """' drps. Childrtn welcome. 2 BR. Cpts. drps, eJec. blbWI
' • · •':...!l-L .-"Special 4th Oau Rate-ior ' $230 Per mo 96l-4642 coon <: u a· "''"""'""' r.............. Adu!•· S.lltH ·Penlnaut1 1300 Hunt_lngton ~ 1..., So nd ... __ _., ' hi II VACANT, 3 bdrm home with . mosphere including Blue Beacon 645-01..11 ........ _... ..., .no
-------. -·---
u ~ ngs ' w ch blt~.ins, firep'ace, large !enc· LEASE $215 per mo. 2 story $750 000 W Or I h of $150 1 BR furn apt. Crpts. . 646-4200 or 557-3400 1---------MOVING-Must aell! Assume inexpensive Immediate -y. _.. .... ..... I FAM 3 BR 2" BA Sbo-I ' drpg, bltns. Pool. 1525 $13S 2 Br. New crpt&, bit-in ~velope~• DupleX Lti FHA loan ·on elepnt 4 ment eent ~pon satisracto'IY iLl:'OMS. Aat~l4l· tract.' H.B. call 548-4905·~ rec~eational facilities Placentia tanP I oven. Fenced. Gar-Newport ... ch
Tbree bedroom upper two Bclnn, 3 Ba, .condo. Sw1m examination. Or, brine the * COTrAGE 1 6 or wknd•. des1Wled al\d operat-1 BR large. Near ocean. age. WUe Beae<m. 66-0111. -=;.,.,;==-.;.:;;;;-1
t:ledroom lower, In very good pocil, tenm., crt. Walk to rolls to our office in person . -. . Bdr. Stove, ed Just for s1 n g I e Upstairs, $150 Yrly. Util pd. S'M.JDlO, 4 BR, 2'1SI BA
renW area. Now fUlly l:ta. schools & shops. 5 min to and receive "'l.Yn1ent on the ref:rig. Util pd. $140. No 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA, frplc, people SUndeck. 673--8088 IC;;os~lo~M;:";;;:0~;;;;;5;1;00;1 dishwaaber .. l blk ~-GOOd Jl'Owt:b ·J?Otential. freeway &' beacb. Total !POt. We're ~pen Monday-Pets. StS-6294. 55'1-MIXI. new cpts &:: drpf;, dbl gar, ttEN-fs FROM $145. __ 11 'ocean. $300 mo /)'rl7 . ~.500. -~ price $26,fJOO, ~ Friday 9 to noon and 1 to 5 3 BR. 2 BA, tamUy> rm, fencd back yd, $250. 962-8994 . Coron• del Mir 4250 . MERRIMAC WOODS 673-245.5.
BURR WHITE p.m, Sahu'day• (uaUaltyJ 1 frples, blbm. $2.11 mo/lse. 3 BDR, 2 BA, Compl. ''"°'"· ANAHEIM .lu•t romploted, I or 2 BR, 21'3~B~R-.. ~,,...,,Ba.-, "'s"PA"et=oo±~o.I
Fount1ln Y-llity .. '1410 to 4. Telephone tor appoint· No.pets 6'13-8213 · blt,..ins. Vacant ,.. ~ rno. LARGE, Private. view BA with air cond, com-Crptli, drpg., .tlrtpl., bllG.
'RESALE 4 ttdnn. ·2 ba ment first. Reference: We CONDOMINIUM 3 BR, 2~ Call <2131 AT 4-~ (l2~kSoSoB7thurst bachelor. So. ot 'hiWay. pletely soundp~ self 1 blk. to beach. $2llO. G~ for trailer ~/~ are_the~~·stargestdeal-'Ba, 2 Car~. roo t & ,/2 BDR?.! house. 1 or 2 lit<&J ·~eoln) Refrig & hp only. $115. cleaning ovel\6, WOOiS ceil·,=61641==1.==-:--;-,--,,,-_I
REALTOR
2901 Newport Blvd., N.B.
m-4630 . 642-225.1 Ews.
Linda 1111 1306
boat. beautiful yitrds, close er in anu,..., autorg.atic m-.. Fa.tjl!tiea p95 mo. 540-5310 children OK. Fenced yard. 67J..&I04 Inga, dishwashers, 1 u 1 b r SINGLE Matured Lady
to schools, $?,000 down. ~~ imN~~us(~1= 3 BR,.b;iic,_cpts, drps, i700 $90 qw. 847-3833 GARDEN GROVE S11JDJO APT nr bch. $115 landscaping with stream.I A: quiet Newport bland. 2 lir
,16 L!nd• Isle Drive 6"'% loan. 839-tiOSl, l.l88'l paid). HAmAWAY AND ruo. ~o pets. 545--2813, 2 BR, Crpts., drps, $145 mo. 13100 Chapman Ave. ~~~:Su~f,_~ days ~~~~~.' !!:S.~~~ ~~ ~crve, $1fJO yrty ~qulsltely decor. 5 BR, 5 cW:;:":="':nai·ir'=:.,..v..,.. ==== BOW.t:RS, INC.; Ol;!pt.,PR, 540-69'la Adults. "·'""o'"' <~ blks W. santaAna Fwy.) swim pools priv gar w/ »k neW home w/ upstairs ,., ·HatbawayandBowc~.J Suild-$200. CLEAN 3 Br, 1% Ba, ~ (7141 636-3030 I lbol 4300 storage. ~hint n°ew. 4 BR. ~2;~ BA. Diabwbr ~ew ot Corona det Mar hills. S•nt• An• HgtL 1630 ing· ll975 E Florence Ave-den,. double 1araae~ West • NEWPORT BEACH a Starting at $140. Adults Studio apt. 1 blk
3-frpks & BBQ. cantilever-*" ACRE 2 Bd. nn, frple, n~; Sa:1ta' Fe Sprinp, Side, refs. 646-2984 Fountiin Valley :MlO . CLEAN Bachelor Apts. please. Jmt East of 2600 beact>. m. yrly. 613--2455
, 7:1 , IRVINE ANO 116tb II tit •~-t •oi: ' ~patio deck. Dock. $14;1,000 heated pool, fenced, room Caltl'. 90070. Te I. (213) FOR leue $210; 4 Br, 2 Ba, 3 BR, 2 BA, 8 mo. old. lge cn4J 645-«>50 A u u.,. -up Harbor mvd, next to Nabeni 2 OR. unfum apl. $150. Pa
L:lnd• ltle Development· for horses. Owner. 54S-69C8 8.q.-87'14. ~ lcil:lotl & ~p·a:-,Avail fam nn, crpts, drps. blt-i.ns, 8 ~E. Balboa mv~994~ C&dillac at 425 Atettlmac &: pool. Cr'Pts. drpB & bl
.:nm Grundy 675-3210 ~~~~~~~~j 12!1. 'Call 549o<l9tlll $265 mo. 002-582'l, 213• NE South Bay Club A 6 ' Way. 545-6300 1525 Pla.,.,ntU..
Laguna Be.ch 1705 $1.!!(l.3 BR. famiJ.Y nn, 2 BA. 5-6183 1 BR near bay, trpl, pre.fer
Wdo lt le 1351 ;;;.;;="'-..;....-'----L11un1 Niguel 1707 , * &1s.m * RANCHO r.:1esa 1 yr old, 3 Apartments single woman nt5 mo yrly, NEW APTS THE . .. Br, 2 Ba, fam rm, din rm, util pd. 673-1178
BA YFRONT SEA SHANTY LAGUNA N;gucl Te....a... By Met1 Vo,i"d1 3110 d.,,., crp" $235. 968-5662 Costa Miii 4100 Bllboo. f11ond >Q55
~ar new 5 Br, &: 4ij bath need• some work owner 3 Br, .2 Ba, tam rm, LOVELY oountry club villa. 3 BDR. 2 Ba, crpts & drps. BAYfii6NT: S BR. 2 ba. $150 & $175
1'ome. Piern~o.~· srrrING ON A B L U FF . pool,· some VIew. 4~1860 2 BR, i'-6. BA colldo Appl bit-ins. Lease -$320 mo. + H ~ d~"ex yearly._ ·~ THE SEA WITH .;..., adlti. $2111. 54""'700 ' deposiL Call 838-$48. ARBOR Sallobwy Realty · 613-6900 UTILITIES PAIO
llDO REAi,. TY INC. ~E INSPiruNG viEw San JU1n · _ 4 ·BR SPANISH 'tOWNRSE, . . ' . 1 1:=::======== t & 2 Bdrn1. 2 swim pools.
~71~'~,~~8:~7300 ~~ UT~i;, I ~T~N s~~ C1pl1tr•no 1720 Newpo.rt BNch 3200 =~ ~~;1~ $26(). NEAR rowNHOUSE t:'~'!tlngton Be·~~-_4400 ~d~l~re~l~y&12~ts. Furn
4000 SQ. FT. ROCKS,&: sandy beach~-DlVORcED. Must Sell. 4 Br, B/B -------. AVAIL. 1 & 2 Bdr. Spac. 301 A\tocado St, C.M.
4;BR, :{';• BA, 3 car garage. low. Archaic <' J bouse, W/ 2 ba. 4 yn. $26,950. $1.SOO dn. . Lagun1 IHch 3705 2'1~7 Harbor near Wllson pool, bit-ins. Enjoy the bch. &-c Mgr on p1-en1ises
(!rpts, drps, unusual featur-EXTERIOR OF B k RN Isf. T .D. $24,250. 492--0969 • -TOWNHOUSE Furn Bachelor $.120 AdJts $135 + · 219 15th St., GRAND "OPENING
es. Built 1967. Owner C. Jl. TYPE SIDING, WEATHER.-• ~ 3 &lrrns., 2% baths. Adults ELEGANT Ocean Vw; O Heated pool. Adult.a: only H.B. THE VICTORIAN ~angl. 213 1 244-3101; eves EDtl~~ ~~ru::;· D1n1 Point 1730 1 onlylay,Faces&pooleal,$275Mho. ~o~~'. ~~r~r~:·:~ e Nopets-AdJioshoppitJ& BA1140CHELORAd~~ BR turn, New,large28CrpR,l~BA.$150 Coron• del Mir..
113' J 24!-0100, Open:.. • nes :iea . s, .
1
c Days. 837,..2970, eves, 535.00 ...... Up up. , no pets. Adults only. ts-urps-bltftl,,
Ccinvenlent Luxu.ry a~ enclosed. w I rambling $17,950. Small, clean 3 Br, 1 R•ilty, Inc. 494-4390 "" 17301 Keel.son Ln. 842--7848 Sound proofed, pti gar w/
M ill I ba j f picket fence. ba,.no gar. Nr Harbor. $3900 901 n--r 0 , NB Sult ~-•Studio&: 1 Br Apb. (West of ~ach nr Slater). stonage. Fenced yd 'v/patlo . . agn ce? . v ~ ew. f!'m Co uvv"'" ., e .uo LARGE I red 1-Br ~ Bd, 2 ba ~; trpl, Spaciousd grot1nd~:..-a~pl'O-'Cold. ~.?.; .~ pper 4-n~· 66-200> Eves. MU966 d pl • nn:_:;; viewe<:i.dults. • PboKitchen & TV incl. 2 BR le bachelOr apts. Waler pd. Gardener main-
TelT, Bl kit, $21S/mo. maint. 150 fl. eep. AUutt:nt1c ~ u e~. $17s mo ~ly • • .ne service a: Pool lfealed pool. Util paid. tained. · 661 Victoria St.
Gd tin ... n .......,., • .,",,,.,. Sea Coast Doo.' plan .• tea-RENTALS FINER RENTALS nope 5• ·ye · e Maid .service incl. v•-roy Apts, 1014 Geo-'a •8364liiii .. "'iiii ................ ' ._,,._, .,........ . .,...,,v.N. lures unique hv. m>., WI . PLACE REALTY 494-9704 e Day week & M th = •-·•· R. C. GREER Re•lty HIGH VA'" =o CATuII' HOUHI fumlthed · B$..Yfront 3 &: den. Pier, Ooat • . on St, Apt A. H.B . .....,...2914 ·~·v1 L'do , ........ ,... .., ..... "' n.c.. I 1·~ th 23'1GNewportBlvd. S48-97S5FURN I SHEO 2 BR, "¥""' a 1 ,,....,...,,, DR.AL BEAM CEILINGS, Newport Bo--• 2200 m~~-........., mon • S•n Clemente 3710 TIED BY HEAVY. CROSS _,, M~nif1cent 4 bdrm., 4 bath $135. month. Deluxe Mobile downtO\vn Hntg Sch, 526
Huntrngton lleach 1400 TIMBERS. Dttp stained 'FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr,. 2 VIew home. U,000 mo. 2 BR + extra room off home comp. furn. Heated Main St., 536-7396
wood panelled walls, MAS ba., p&tio, adults. Bayside John Macrnab 642-8235 garage., Near beach. Has pool, adulll, no pets. 4
SJVE ANTIQUATED OLD Villaj::e. Until July 1st. $3)). WATER.FRONT Lux. Apt. on pool. 1~-: BA, crpls, drps & Sca.&0na Mob. Est. 23J9 New-laaunl 8ee(h
BRICK FiREP~CE; FROM C. ll (213) ~ or673-Ml9. the J'enl.n. New 2 bdr., 2 stLLove.WILLIAMS REALTY ,o'°,:.',;,1,:.518<;332~;:.;,-----I FLOOR TO CEILING. Huge --· ba., pool. Lse. adults. Boat BI CHATEAU ' LA p 0 l NT E OCEAN front guest apt on
picture windows that afford Rentals to Share 1005 slips avail. Caribe Balboa, 239 Delntar, S. C. 49'l-Sl"15 Lovely 2 Br furn a,pt. pool, pvt bl!ach. 2 1'00'!'8• 2 bas,
a view or the Islands. - -. 310 Fernando Rd., fll4l C d -. I carport, adults no pets, $150 patio, garage. S2'la inc. util.
Modemiied. Scullery type $00. Incl. util. near beach. 673-3003. on °""'" um 3950 1941 Pomona. 499-3768 or 213: TS'l-6163.
~ilchen, ha.s . COVED CEn.-~"!'con ~~~e. Blue TOWNHOUSE,: a Br, 2~1 BA, 2 Bdr. 2 Ba. Pool. bit-ins·. 1 BR, elec bltns, closed .1 BR cottage, poolside, nr
INGS \V/ HE>1VY BEAM •-frplc, patio, pool 2 car gar; crpts & drps. S200 a mo. garage. Quiet. $125. to beach, Llreplace • .$JJO be.
TThfBERS, BILT·IN RANGE Corone•clel Mar 2250 aJJ bltins, cpts, drps. Lse Call_ 646-9683, Agent. responsible ply. Adults, no 4M-32Qll alt 4:M
4705
3 BR 1'4 bath $1.j(l/mG.
Well.,McCardl•, Rltrs.
1810 Newport Blvd .• C.M.
548-7729 644-0684 eves.
Fairway Villa Apts
Near Orange Co Airport &.
UCI. '.Adu!.l.s only. 20122-
Santa Ana Ave. aro-2796
Y .~ Loan· A11umptlon
with $-1,lm total down pay-
ment for this 6% annual
G I. Loan is $la2 .•. no hid-
~n coslll. Oean 3 bedl"oom
ready for occupancy. Two
gorgeous baths. Cal'Qets &
Draxis. »¥'9Ulhp;ut • ..Qou_!>l,e
Garage~ Two Patios. Oose
to school & sbopping. Seeing
is ~Heying!! & OVEN, DISHMSTR., RE----$325 per mo. Avail 12/L l AL> pets. Refs. &tG-4224. 4740 FRIG ETC ~·-un"'ue 871 °~• '·'"2497 .~c •'<I D1n1 Point VILLA MESA APTS
~;-..
ON TEN ACRES·
1 & 2 BR. Fum t. Unloni
Fb'l!_Placea I prlv, patioe
Pool8. Temd.s .. Contnt'I
llOiJ Sea Lene, CdM ""1'Ijl
(MacArthur nr. Cont
6'1UOh 0 'G 0 _.,, ,, ...
. WE SELL A HOME
EVERY ll MINUTES
Walker & Lee
., · "= ·• * BEAUTIFUL cornH -u °' ~ Apt F lthod Its.I -ATJ'RAC'ITVE, 1 bdr .. i"-'=--------' olde house, overlookinc the home. comp furn. View. 2 w 1 NT ER RENTAL • 'Til s. um pool, ulil paid, prden Jiv-A'I"i'RACTIVE lrg 1 BR apt 2 BR unfurn, pri patios, htd sea NEEDS PAIN'r. ~GEN 2 BA. 4000 f du! pool, 2 car encJ'd g•-. ,....II-COROUDO AP:'S. 2
ERA, L REPAIRS. 'It' • BR, conv de'n. 6 mo June -The BluUs. 3 Br, O.neral ng, a ta. oo pell. 1800 w/poo\, on Blllifs overlook· .... """ Lo ,_ 1 -~~ , s an $350 N Wall A c M dren welcome, no p e t s wer u:W s, •wu.--. pent!:, tstarxf al t or more. . o pets. den, crpts, drps, frpl, 2 ace ve.. · . lng harbor. 1 yrs lease $15.S please! $l60. Also tum $135. house, Frplcs.. PXll. d~~
ou
5
m
2
g
6
v
5
u00e a 673-9005 patios, pools. 615-4497 or LOVELY APTS. 1. BR furn apt. Adulta, no mo. 495-5489, 49fr.2409 719 W. Wilson &46-I251 carports, pa.liot. $1l!O.
7682 Edinger , 644--0449 Very low wkly rates. Ideal pets. $60 mo . 1876 Fullerton ·{t:N I AL~ , • 673-3378
842-<455D.OLL. OpHen O'tllU9SPEM FULL PRICE B1lbo1 2300 BAYCRESf. Fam. Home. 4 far aingl~ or ~arrided cpt Ave, 548-1356 \ , Aptl. Unfurnished v::UE~ a=~-co=.o~yp;°;, l:SH;u.Ac;;RP;;;-;;2-;br;:::-, -:So;:.-::-=-:ltl
VACANT! SEE ':"ODAY! SPACIOUS 2 sto ...... 3 ll!.I-. 2 Br. 2 Ba. Fenced yd. Child, Compl hnens, aun roma W-SIDE 1 Bdrm furnished H n-. t dk
fretty as a pictw-e. Lovely MISSION REAL TY ba. Bayview •• ,,.Fa mily. pets, OK. $350. 646--3513 , TVPh• btd. i:· st:: =:a~. lower, parking area, $13.3 0..-r•I 5000 ::_w~ ;~~ili~~-quiet. pZ.' 1;;";"'ar ~~· :r~
2 Bdrm home in pride of 985 So. Coast Hwy. Laguna Winttr-Yrly, KI 6-9ST4 CHARMING, pool, 3 Br. $325 · • any e • -mo. 6'13--5729 l.l;· ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 548-6878 or 642-4429 rno + $100 depos. 421~
Ownership neighborhood. On. Phone {714) 4M-o731 Ki:iNT~LS m:>. 2323 East Bluff Dr. gona. TRAILER. Bachelor only. VENDOME CdM. 675-0633 ly $16,500. See this one lt> I--~=='==--* 675-6044 * Th<' GORGEOUS New Ideal for student or retired BRAND New 1 & ·2 BR. ;;-m><;;:---;:o-;:;::;--:::::ill BEAUTIFUL Hou-Unfvrnl1hod VAL D'ISERE W/W cpt" au bltno tnol. 2 BR .. So. ol Hwy. "" day! man S6i+ 842-3315, g.:7440 Utll' lu-'d ~"" BEACH HOME ,..~--I 3000 Newport Helghti 3210 IMMACULATE APTS! I telf cleaning oven. Patioe. s. '" · •.w.io-mQ! in lovely Laguna condo. com--r1 Sina:le-1 br-2 br. Fu111.-unr. 1 & 2 BR rum & unfurn. 2020 ADULT &: FAMll..'l gRrages. Adults. 645-2108. Rel's. req'd. Mr, F~
munity; fnx1tlna: on magnif-FOR RENT 2 BDRM 2-atory, t "-bath, Sauna, Act'y -~m. Billiards Fullerton St., C.M. :r.1gr 011 SECTIONS AVA.n..ABLE 37'1 W. Wilson. Bkr. 540-3862 _J.
icent heated pool, 100 steps 1rz playroom, big yard. Therapy·& 45 pool, BBQs prernise15, Clote to lhoppl,., Pirie A'M'RACTIV.t.A!lean 2 BR. LARGE New 2 BR. 2 BA.
.lrom priv. bch .... tennis-cts. $235/Mo. for sharp 4 Bed-Occup Jan, 1. $225 mo. 32'7 20Co PartonS Rd. 642--8670 FURNISHED 1 BR apt. SUJ. *Spacious 3 Br'1, 2 Ba crpt:s, drps, bltns. carport, p1u.s den. Crptl, drpa, bl~ ~tc. Comp. attractive furn, room, 2 Bath, Built-ins. Wall-Fullerton Ave'. HOLIDAY PLAZA Furn studio apt $110. 2135 * 2 Bedroom.II Adullll, no pcta. $13 5. View. 1'12-IXJ67 or 5J5.386C ~:
include w/w carpt'g, drps., eel yard, double garage, DELUXE, spacious 1 Bdrm. Elden, C.M. See Mgr apt 6. * Swim Pool, Put/pen ~ SMALL 1 BR. View $. cl;
lcgu muter bed; location WE SELL A HOME University P1rlr 3237 Fum apl $135 p I us utll. 1 Br turn apt $12> mo 1ncl. * FrpJ, lndlv/lndry fac'll 1028 El Camino Drlve ,Hwy. New carpets t
decor. 2 BRs, z BAs, sep. EVERY ~I MINUTES Heated pool, ample parking. util. NG children or pets. 1145 An1helm Ave. Deluxe 3 BR, 2 BA apt Drps. drllpes. SlfiO, 6'15-6354.
I dm. --· la ·th /d w lk & L 2 BR. tnhouse • ·••• •••••• $250 No children-oo pets. .., • ., 11ug COSTA MESA 642.2824 ~
17097 f.-lagnolia, FV
545-0458
$18,300 ;u,r., 2~'g:·;~er~ev: a er ee 3BR."2ba.houseavaU.on6 1965 Pomona, C.l\1. .,...,........ ~cpU. 54IJ..M8l or S.lbN 5'°'
4 bdnn 2 bath, 6 years old el. See to appreciate. Shown 204,1 w · mos lease ' .... ·· .•••.•. $32S $160 2 Br RIO W/W drps· Newport Beech 4200 HARBOR GREENS oil •& •how TLC Ve·y clean by estcliff Dr. 3 BR. 2 ha. ho~ avail. '. ' ..:..., ' ' 2 'BR garage apt. Refrig, BACH -a ..... t, oofabed, -' , s · • ' owner, call for app'L 646-77ll r~ruo~ lat ••.•••••••• •""" 2 min to fwy • .._,uJdren .\pet ~· ->With ··-t• & drape• 2 ''' ,~2152 S37-019I '" _, ~ 1 BKR "' -2 BDRM back dplx. Nr stove, cptil. Couple only. ...a w/w crp• utll pd M~ · ~ .. -' "m>-or • $"~. 2 Br duplx. y,~, RIO, 3 BR. & •--tty rm., lu•n. we come. ...,......,i7C'U BACHELOR ·•·-I '~ ' -gal'age & la1 back yard ,_,,,, '" ._..,. • ocean $150 yrly nu cpts Uiu w ·u r 0 m $15() mo. 646-8226 Prof person only 673--6165 · !:
: 'gC. . . • DISTRESS SALE • W/W, -. w--·--~-,. Avail. Dec. 10th ....... $4.25 . . . $110. Also avail 1 • 2 le 3 ,Just ,vhat you re looking . ....,.. .......... ~.J'" TIME FOR patio. Avail Dec 1.s t. Bdrm H ted ls child NEW, Extra large 2 BR. 2 _,...J. :to-isn't it • Oceanview home. Low down hook-up. Children welcome. • Red Hill Realty 833--0820 67J.-9027. 1281h-46th st. (213) .... .._ .:... •• :~ • .1~ pooto • ..:p ,_ Ba., upper In 4-plex on Huntl_._ 8eKh MUU ., •• ' to assume xlnt IGa.n. S yr. BKR. 534-6980 ........,""" ...,. ...,. ...., p .. ,. ....... j
I flllm Id 3 BR !"' 248-19'21 No pe•a ' ' quiet cul~e-eac. ~2321 ~ ·:w~'li\~11 ° Red~.,;::·~~ LARGE I am 11 y homo c0-· clel Mer 3250 QUICK CASH LOVELY 2 hr apt. Alm .. t .roe; p, ....... Way LARGE 1 BR, Carpots, dnp. 2 BDRMS. -2 BA ;
.; -Ol PLACE REALTY <ffi4.9704 Baycrest. 4 bdrm, fatn. rm, l BR. UNFURN ••.. $165 mo. new. Furn. ~-) blk to ocean Costa Mesa 546-03'10 es. stove refrigerator. , 1
: Owner Tr•n1ferred ~~n2-52001~ nn, den & pool. Avail 2 BR. UNFURN •••. $275 mo. THROUGH A & bay. 1905 \V. Balboa Blvd. NEW Deluxe Exec. Type 3 Adults, no pets. $120 642-8579 $150/Mo. HEATED POOU~·
BUSIES'I' .~ tpl I ~ ! BR FURN $"'" Sun. OR 3--9209. Wkdays .fncd, ""ti~-Kldl OK : Sharp 2 story 3 bdrm 21,~ m ...... e ace n . · ....... ...., mo. Bdr Apt $2SO Fr p I ace 2 BR "'""'ts. ........ stove no "' -II!' ... ...,. · t --DAILY PILOT LARGE 2 •-· 3 4 B"· 3 BR FURN "'"""" (213\ 795-0661 • ' • ' ' ...... "'"°' ' DEI.;AW..\RE snJDIO .tDt:llll,,' bath, On ron>er lot. Ca~ own. ''."' , .s..,.J' or .""" · ······....,..mo. DAILY PILOT _ Jocked gar, Nr. Freewa,y &: pets, adults only $130 mo. :,,--...~"l · ets/drapes, all' built-ins. For-money, time t, _effort. Look 13x21 rwnpus room. blt-1m, RIDDLE & ROSS TRAILER, 1 adult, poat, wa.. .shopng. Adlts. 546-4016 9&-3886 26'lO Delaware, H.B. 1
: mat dining room, service Classified sectiOn. Save newly decorated. $2'10/mo. 3535 E. Coast Hwy, CdM ter & gas paid . Senior cit,izen $l55. 2 Br. UtU pd, gar, LOVELY new 1 BR, bltna. nr &t2-2m. anytime 536-lqS
porch, family room. Assume now!!! '62--0302 675-122S WANT AD $l00 ~0• Ll 8-8724 c;r stove. Children OK. Avail So Coast Plaza. J:>&OO, view, 2 ~ newly decorafe41
, 6% GI loan • price $35,900. THE SUN NEVER SETS $60. Small house. UUI pd. 3 BR, fam. rm, din, $450 mo MI 6-62;;5 now. 8KR 53M980 pvt play area. 54S-69T6 Refrig & bit-ins, cpta/~,
Paul Jones Re•lty .. , on Baby, small pet OK. BKR. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2 story $275 -ocean view. $155/pe.;. _847-1266 Eve. 847-8919 Classifieds actkln power. ~ 2 BR. den, frplc. $~ Newport Beech 4200 Newport Be•ch 4200 $155 3 BR. O'pts, Dl'PS, Bit-2 BR. $155. ~ts. clrpi;, month. Adults preferred. , For an ad to sell an>und the I ~;;::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 lna. Children &-pets OK. Blue bltns. Pvt patio, encl gar. Tradewlnds Realty · 847....,U kUNTINGTON Harbour! clock d1al 6'12·5673. $200. 4 Br, new. Many extras. 3 BR. 3 BA Lwrury apt $32j ]I Beacon 645--0lll AduJIJ 549-0433 '
:took at this! big beauty & ' Children & pets welcome. University Realty 673-6510 Grand Opening -lmmedli te Occupancy ' • NICE 2 & 3 bdra. Crpted le:
:tell us how you want to DAILY PIWf t.IME·A· Bf{R..5J4...6980 CUTE 3 bd. 1"-ba. home. OAKWOOD Hvntlntfon BNch 4400Huntlngton luch 4400 drped.'Nwly decor. 3 bt~i
:work out details. You can LINES. You can use them $180. 3 Br, tge fenced yd. Lots ot yard &: parking' from bch. 3 bdr w/dbl a,~
:ITS.de vac. land, lease, tor jtlst pennies a day. Dial Children & pets OK. Avail space. ·Adulta. $285.. mo. tac~gar&frplace.5.16-lT~
:J•.,./optlon, oon!"'cL pre· PILOT Classified ad. u.1. BKR. 5.14-691<1 <213J -The bell of two• worlds • • . t THE NEW BEACHBLU. lj, » ·.Pd tnL or ?-1"""""' oc-, .,.. • . HUNTINGTON CAPRI APARTMENTS ·N.,.. 24·l1IR. 2 BA. ,F ',
:cupancy. Rex. L. !lodges GenW1l '"' 4000 G1nerol 40000.narol 4000 your home and your country dub dlohw.•hl's, patioo, pool.
:Ritts. 8'7-252S for your homo, Hied loom single, one ond • "'""'R SINGLE ADULTS • • • • ·847-3957 • ' ·''Better Than New'' Q/;Q-Q J'\"t.. l f)-C ~Q.1 two bedroom •p.1rtment1. Furnl1h.d_ or un· "' MOD 2 bdi''• AU X'~1 p\!t l'Qtl ~J>-'lt J:J(,/.;,; furnishod, u<h is profeuionelly deooroted • , • WHERE UYING IS FUN! Some w/pool, S1;!>$145f"
,; LARGE S BDRM •nd includes c•rpetin9, draperies, all·tlectric Kld847.~ •• ?.K. ac.nro., ·.'
ed d f d Sol .. • Slmp~ S~mblcd Won! Pun~ for•. Cllt1tkl• w . h I' t F I hod Mod I "--s~ u-. ~ 1-~ • Carpet , rapes. en<:e • a1t1ng oust 1pp 11nce1, 1 or I 9 • 1p1ce urn I e • -..-• ••·" ~. •nn .,,...,.. ,-;;;;--===,,.._=,.-,-'
Prestige area. O• ~ el .,. • ....-..... -----..._...-.. •plenty and prlv1te b1lcony p1tio. CUSTOM l, 2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS. 1 BR. fenced yard. $UIJ *-'
HAFF DAL REAL TY ,...,,,.. ~-· f d • h I Id lat' Lut i«Jd, OiMnn oK. 842-4405 four mombltd wordl .,.. Just steps rom your oor •• • ':"' _o • wor FROM $140. I.Call 90-1.961. j
low to fomi four""""' 'Mlf& of •xclusive country club racre1t1on: S •
$24,950 1 · • Profenionol ,;,. Tennis Courts FURN! HED & UNFURN15HEO 2 A 3 BDl<MS. 2 BA. Jitt. , 0 Y II A D • R 'd t T • p f I I d Sh (As low u $85. Furn. if Shared by 2 Friends) patio, hoaled pool, -!dusr·sELL 3 large BR 1~4 • ••• en &nn11 ro ••• one •n op hook up. 96W994 I
ba, dining room. Adult ()Co I I I r I . Olympic sis• Swimmin9 Pool SOUNDPROOl'!D PRIVACY ,OR
cupled only. Low down " * Whirlpool Both• RELAXING OR ENTERTAINING AND S. Ant H.lthll 5"°
presentffnanclni. Qulckpos. I SY GOO I • Poddle Tonnis, Volloyboll, k•htboll SHOPPIN!J WITHIN 1h IL~K. PLUS
.SRASHEAR REALTY • • Courh FUN & GAMES TO MATCH ANY MOOD. 1 mi.apt, otove Ii-. flS. ~ 16952 Beach Blvd., H.B\ f I j1 I Ancl • 20,000 1qu1re foot clubhous• offers aduit prderred. 8'13-1185 J
147-850"7 4.11-3769 968-U78 - - - -th••• fe•tures: EnJoy • f11t Mt of Tennl1,. 1 pme of VOiiey.. Dine Point SJ: '
SACRlRCE ~ I • Soporote Men'• ond Womtn'• boll or lllllordl. Shop 1 up In -of the
3 bdrm 2 ba. txrwd nn., 14 NY' IP Haalth Clubs wtth Seun11 Gymn11lvm1 or '"9l1x In 1 S.unt1 -the
, month old 22x36' heated Ii: I' I I I OYwheotd on Mfomf leoch: • Indoor Golf Drlvin9 R1n9•, J1euul ., In the 1vn around the Pool.
filtertd pool. $111 f)l'r month _ • _ _ _ "Al a berthing beavty, she'• Billi•rcl1 Room
pays au. .--------hardly worth -fot." • Th••tr• TV Lounge, Art Studio1 Your. Socl1f Director wlll 1rr1n .. p1rtfes In
Tho RHI Eolet1 Mort ~H~O_Y~N...;A.;,.;.W.__~, 11·~· Porty R...,, the lobulovo C1prl Room & -lvn lrlpt
147-ISSl I I I I I r • ~ .... --Modolt Opon 10 A.M. To • P.M. Doily .. Me-th, v-· or ?
BDRM. 1!4 b&\h, 1 Y1" old. . ,... :!!,"t.'::,::. -::..""?.::. UNn NOM SlH lo $311 511 THI HUNTINGTON CAPRI AT
m1n11, rtplc, patio. Nr achll 6200 Edi .:\O·~t· ... ~"'~1".:'::r: •'•\t;it;j~~sllmtltN I' I' I' I' ,. r I OAKWOOD ..... A .... Huntington .... h
1• Ml--0824 lt. MllM.W .. tl ................ .....
BY OWNEn. t .. nst. must •• ~~~N= If~ GARDEN APARTMENTS -· __ .,.,.l•1••h II.
aeu 3 ea + den. 2 b&, trp!c, l · 1700 • f6'fh Street, ~ewport l•1ch
I bltna. ,.,., crpfC. 54 GI SCRAM-LETS ANSW'iRs I CLASSIFICATIO.N 9odQ Pt.one: 642,t1 7o loe.n. $25.!I» M74865
PHONE 17141 B46-0619 4
------------
NEW 3 BR, 2~' Bath •
Carpets, clra-pea. r e tr l
stove. dlhwhl'. -
U4: rro-o42t &It $
REAL ESTATI
0.-11 •
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1
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!-: t~· L 111
<
•
'
3 LINES
2 TIMES
2 DOLLARS
• ' .
"
· (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less)
Pin~h You1·s el:i A Pile Of Pennies
(01· Eve11 Dolla1•s)
Penny Pinchers
Pile Up Profits
Dial Direct for Details
642-5678
North County, 540-1220, Toll Free
DAILY PILOT PE NNY PINCHER WANT ADS
-·-· , ....
lt••l•ls w ......
• RENTAU WANTED
·'*HOMES .• DUPLEXES · * GUEST HOUS!S ; '!r APARTMEN'J'S nw: SERVICE
· GOLDEN WU? RENTALS
: " 5»8llO
, SINGLE emp}Q;yed )'UWlC
woman llteda room or
• • would ahatt apt in v1c. 11th
; .1: Irvine. Call Ml-Z196
: : i LANDLORDS i
' ·FREE RENTAL SERVICE
: : Broker 5M-89S1 •
-.--9
4090
NEW IUILDIN5
l2IO 1"pa Ave., O>lla .....
Eoch Wilt 11'1 .. It, 2 oil·
leet, 2 mt rooma. 110/230
-trle.Amllle~
C.RobtrtNtt1mtReol""
Colt& Mna f0.14a
(;> 1>ldr with ,.v;i -1115 mo. U3 '4-. Vlota,
CM MMTIO
A•-'° ........ So. Calli. 125. DOWN, 125. PER MONTIJ.
$2,4t5. f'Ut..L PRICE. L
Sbowlol~ 3'6 w. """" st.,
I L.A. Phone: (21J)~01
10 ACRES -PRIME. Near
Jarae lalce. $25 a mo. can tn•> 894-474!.
6202
~ •e Free Rental 5'Tvk:e e 3 ADJOINING h lll•lde ~ Brolml I Merl. I Owntra laktview Jots. near cu1Do
' PlosiertM W91t 61S-I&a $3,CO'.I. 53WoM9
' · S ACRES 40 mUa north ot ; Roomt hr Rent 5"5 Rena DIU' Hoftey Lake at
:"ruc.....RN=l&HED;...;.;c...;o;room;;:;;c_. -Pri=..,.'-"te foot of Slfrtu. Level, clrir,
! ·home. Nev lhopplng. Cor. ,_.;cl3::.•®=·..;51&.JM!;;:.;. ___ _
: .Baker I Fairview. 563298
· \eva. ' It. I. WantH '. i>RivATE entrance, nr bath.
: men only. S45 mo. Call
· · before noon. 548-.3696. NOTICE
6240
: FURN SltepUw nn, pr1 BA, U Yo\I have a 3 or f bedroom
· pri ent. $60 mo. 2135 Elden, borne for Ille or for nnt,
C.M. See Mar, apt fi. call ua today. We reprHtnl
'15 WK I: up w/ kltchtn. U. emplo)'Ha of. a W'l9 ftrm movine to tbe Harbor ' $35. wk 1tudio apt. 2318 Ate& am tbty m•t bavt
Newport mvd. 541-9755. · boullna! All cub u elem.I •
-CallFanvw-
-1 .. Trlr. Crto. 5"7 IUSINW -
SANDY'S TRAILER COURT l'INANCIAL
• Spaces avail now. Max 26'.
. Call646-il81 .... ~'*
WEEKLY ratet Sea Lark
Jdotel, 2301. Newport mvd.,
Calta Me• AUTOMOTIVE
DIALlll
'A'
...... ,, ...................................... ,.. ..... ..,"""'!"'~""'"'
'A'
w ........ 11o ...... 2', 1169 • ~
JOU I IMPLOYMINTJClll I llMl'LOT
When You
Wont it done
right •••
Coll one of
the experts
listed be/owl/ •=ttrc:,~~ NATURAL 1011H IWAPPlll lllVICI DIRICTOltY llRVICI DIUCTORY $IRVICI DIRICTOllY
...... i .... .._... 6ICIO c ..... c .... .., "" "-'""'"' $LM-1--S...... := 673$
-·Jiu Gtiiml * * Hou1ewlve1 and Mothers
Ear• extra -fw * CHRISTMAS *
J. C. P ..... y ComDC111y
....... 1.--Naw,ort ......
H .. peal! ..... -In
*Sales aUllt -Ill> MMt INCLUOI REMINGTON Winamu:tt:r, A..OK ahampoo Chriltmu CARPETS. Wlndowl. fin, ~.":-. ...... ..:.'~ ---= c :-...,•.,: model rm Tru. Uled only. mpeci&I $7.50 nn.-1HI for etc. Ra or Comc'l, Xlnt SChedultl including afternoom, ennm11 and ~HINe Nii Ml!:: n.t.HI .,.,.,. moa. uz. sa-om ba1la etc. Ala> comp wort Reul Rm. Ml-4lll combinaUon ot, both.
"llONI Mll•Nn houoedn'1 127-3182 Finest conditions -Top nporvlolon -b
Te Ploc• v-Tr-. PtrMleo M ~It, ,Olla 6520 CARPET • Fiim. ele••lnr: Janitorial · 679CI cellent benefill including diicowit prlvU.ce.
Cliolco 3 BR eutmde -HAVE; Ooounttclal lot, SEALING • PATCHING , ~ ~ ~..:..:-"~ DUTCH Malnt Serv, "'1>1 * ""'ly Naw *
Mar Back~. Tract. S900o clMr, US.OCO. ~ Amfw. RAl:ldendal ·Indus · Come I .......... tneu' ~ dna, Or ~. wlndow 10 .._ M. 9 p M. ~.~ 111 ,.~.
tqlllty '"a..., lT-10' n.v. bud IUl,000 "*<. WANT Comj>l -:-. eun.nu, -.... · wuhloS. !lan"y van Beynon ~· 19 • • ~ay N •-Y
el trall<r •• "'"truck or ~ ... -,.. ..... -.. City" c.>I.... RINTAL READIER 537-JSOll Uno ana call alt 3 J. c. P-ney "bn1-y
? '!' Call N6-8t$ Q . ~ Q) ll:MIQl. ttnet nP:n&n. 5'0-39'Jt SPARKLE Ja.nltorial I: Win-Sii .... r-•
;;::::] Du--........... -NATO CX>RP. ' dow deaninl Serv. win. #~ ,. .... _ 1-·-~ ...... ~ • ~ ~~ l'l'ad< up. bouae with bade C..1 Con-63S-581ll Carpel Leyt,. l d..., ...ic1 comcl eonot. ~ ...,_ -
"'· ...-. Wiii .... ha, vlOw at 23SS """"' Repelr ~ Clemlp. ,..;;. .,L si..'891 Newpol'I ... ch, Callfwnla for pwer lawn vac., .;'loo A~ •• tor vacant or 4 to 100 .. ..,.....,. I '550 --*------*....._
turn. Y:~t~rtors Cl')'ltal or unit•. Aalftt m.cm or FOR CARPETING MllOfttv lrlck 6UO ~In 11 I~ 1 ""'86l8 twt. &71-012!·alt & pm. UCDISED c:hlld c:ano, ..,. DR CARPIT LAYING =="'--"'-' =-'---"-~~4' Jan!'; ;:'"' iz. want 4 BR, 2 BR .. 0oe .... ~;-: 2 ~ M~': c. A. Pase 6l2-l01ll RICHARD AWN ANNOUNCIMINTI J•• Men w-nao
rum • c:rptd 118,lllO. Ex· alre" daplex. Have dear _. > ~ 1ua llestrlcal · Custom l Sflanlah oncl NOTICIS ' •
chanaeS&OOOtcitftorboUM ~v~t::,~a:,lot :.e._~ t P ELreIRICAL service~ ::CT'ilr~~'f.::C'::,~ ~ncen•ntt 6410 8:r~lrttcJ8:u~m!!
.. o...,.. °'· ~ &n.TGO YSITl'ING, My -· repair. 24 .... T days. No "'" lot. 6"-UQ SENSITMTY TRAINlNG m-me
4 UNITS. LaaUna. 1 bloeJc 115 -It. 91t-11l6 job ... amall. Re-model • WORK SHOP ~*"""a=,.,.1=n=a"'1A,....*~1
to be&Cb. Income $'1'tlO I Trd. $1600 E'4 ID Newpart Jb 9ddl.&m. u 1r1 electl1cal, Movlnt, Steri.. 6'40 A procram. of interpenonal Pvt or hllJ. ttme. year. (~ce SSW dear) s.JlbOtt, Comp, race eqUip, BABYSl'ITINC, DAYS OR we fix it! MS-m2 om:taes for small tell-..... n . -....._t ..,_ .-
Take Small bGme. Roy J, Auto pilot. Wa.nt travel NITES. Rl:A.90NABLE. MOVING. HAULING ittr.cted &l"OUPI· Mln1mal 'j'ftr -. . ----
Arntson. l\ltr. 496-1*. e&mPft I trailer, 0eu. &tf.79a ''"" 6665 % ton Van, Rep. 5J8.6l2S charge call 642-81'301.:...:i.i·Ohl~:-iii;;iii;I B&a11tll\il 41' Non.-ejzan equal valt1t. 6t6-0647 iAJiYSITJ'ING, my home lOAM~M C.lhtef' • H11te111
............ ~ .. ~.e;ij HAVE d,... Nor1h t.aauna C.'4. (11th A ~· ..... ~ "= ::"-. P'pa~,.i,. 6150 C-ry Lota 6411 Ne<t •P-. -. II, ~-~ -3 BR. ~ den, 1% + II ba. Luneb A Is< yard. MOI> • _,. alntt,. eq11Jty tor b:>me, TD, car or MS-2754 I---'-::...----'-'"' -fWI dme. *"'· la ,._,
'!'? Mf.G5 WANT btach income. * PAINTING, int &: ext. FOR 8&le by owner. 6 x:: _ _,,__t . Io ' Oceano &0-2TS2 BABYSITI1NC, My home 0.rHnh'I 6'IO Back from Vietnam. 8&c:k Pacific View cemetery lot.a. IOl'S llG IOY i ~-vo• " Cal! a?Q'tlme. Bloktr lunch furnished I: yard. 1n bu&lneu qaln. Free Call mom1np 60-1323 154 E, lM. CM • =Be~ a:"~ 10 ACIU:B, Jt..1, Omud Man thru Fri. 6tl-GTl6 NEW lawm/re-1eedtn1. e1timatn. Will tuboontract JOis & IMPLOYMIHT *CLERICAL* ._ anu> care my home, Want Complete lawn care. Clean MS-1089 ,..,...,...._,GS ~1:e /~d $l5~;:!: ic:= =1ta. or prHChOol. Llc 8594. :u:: '::or mont!, ~ WBURBAN Paintl!lg/Dec Job W•nted, Men 7000 Loeated:Q;g ..._
ST3-43Q.1 ?ilr. COnrad Rlvltn. Realty 541--lT12 M&-09S2 E:xpm Cuarantffd Work COLLEGE 1tudent needs .Experienct ........
Mite. ... ,.Ii 5"9
HOOSIERS Trailer Court,
' 525 Falrfl.X Dr., C.M. Adlt
~ Parle In heart of town. 2
: spact:a Up to 38'. 541-2370
Tani dinltri Mt. 11 49f..2IOO · $1330 EYft. OIILD Cart, luncbn I: fenc-and Fn!e nt No job too 1arp p/tbne work. Afternoon, Salary :;..,
Actm WI.th SIS,CllO to inve1t. :i~tina'. c~ar clw:1t. an~ utWty tl'liler 4X8, fUllf en• 6 .. yard, wkly. Vic Sprinl-G~ENIN.G I: 11ea":.!~· or too •mall. 494-3190 eve1., dependable. 61'5-3.191 Pleue call lleftllJ DlwM,
0ranp C:OU.Ol)t exclllllve. d•lk, Prov. tablt. Want den cloeed. i:iew ttru, $100 val. 4'1• I: Warner, MMA39_:_ ~~~x!t,~ •re~'. HOLIDAY SPECIAL, Int &: after 5 P.M. (n4) ~·
. FULLY Enc!Oled garqe, SI)
per mo. C:O.ta.'Mesa. * 548--2821 *
: *CAR.ACE fur rent -Eut
: Side, Coat& Mesa. Pl mo . ...._.
Top in field, 25 )Tl Nation-film, ftir area ?'1111. blrda Marlcom: li!arine DF radkl, lrl4 MaMn It 67S-U66 Ext paintlna. Uc &: ID111rd. C.W.C. SELF-SUPPORT art COiiTAL AGliiCY
ally. Extremely hilh return. or ? &TJ.3524 $10) val. Trade/rtfie or lbot· ry, c. '560 AL'S c.ro.imv le Lawn Free ms. 1«al resf. Call itudent. N r. starvation. P........._1
pll.ll exctllent ..-,.. Prln-Beau.t. oc1an view lot, altfft l\l" ol t<I· val. l'B-U0.1 Maintimance. Coromttcial, Chuck ~ De1perate. 912-21.M? ltnployment
cipal eelected must have \0 at.rle~ So. l..alUAl. Want 1118 ULANDm 21 Qoop. BUILD, RemodeJ, repair 1mtQ1tr1a1 I: retkt9ntial. EXI'ERIOR-INTERIOR AlailtMCe
manaaerlal back;round. A~ lncome llftlts. SllOO value. CLnMd IHp Brick. b&ock, concrete, * .....a&29 * &: MAINTENANCE JobW1nted, A member ot
tomotlw aperlence not IAe Pereyda Real E1tate avail nr. Balboa Pavilion). CU119ntry, no Job too mnall. WOULD Ulce to buy prden-• 646-J18S • Wom.n 7020 SneDJ.rw A: SneJUna Inc.
necell&tY. WUI train. Your 499-1980 $..s4ll Trade fer U.~ eecurtties. Llc. Ctmtr. 96M945 trrc route in Nwpt Bch or For Bettu Palnttnc, Inter-Home c.are avail. 54&-45TO 2790 Harbor Bl, or 51).«1&
inveltip.tlob 9."tl~. Call Bea11dtlll 15Qid.50' lot bt 6f3.4303 Co1ta Mesa. 961-1928. lot. aterior, acouatlc oej,. • Allied Nllnel I: Aldn • Rarbor mvd. at Adlnui
for appl for this once in a srowini Yu.cca Valley a1• Lovely bomt Ir IWhn PoOf C.~nt 6191 o..EAN·UP SPECIALIST llnal. 646-407'7, SU...3SQ2 Ot O.C. Nurse1 Rqi1try COFFEE SHOP MANAGER
WANTED: Garq:e to ttnt lifetime. exceptional oppor-down • dean s bdr. 2 ba I: famU,y style cale U~lp CAR,INTRY Mowina edaiJW odd ;lobe RENTAL RIAOllR . 2729 \Y. Ltngan Lane, S.A. Exp'd only. Start Sl1' tpt. :a~~Tr~orN.B. ~~.Ken Clittord <n'> bomelnCbttaMta.*1b-~~~~y'°ee':r.c;:;;llINORRl:PAIR&.NoJoll ~nable.·~. Stl)J9'J4 HOUSECLEANING -=A~~,.;:'·~~ ;;;:=;;;;;;;=;;,,==~I AUIUate mit otfera to P.O. Bos &86. 1or Owner Mf.lm Too &nail. Cabtmt In pr-JIM'S GardeniJ:le " lawn *PAINTING lnterior/EJcter. Wttkdays only, re.llable, 5S2 W. 19th st. CM.
I .. .., -c•NDY VINDING Tustin. acreaie. ... 6 eth•r cablnltl. maintenance. RH. A Com-ior. l.acal referencei, Im-$2.SO per hr., 841'-1*4 -1,,_;:,;;;.;~,;;.;;..=::__.._, • ....,. 1'!!!'!:". • ~ * * * * * -'r.I, U no .,._ ..... merclal. * "'°"""· mtd. "rviee . ......,, 847..,., COFFEE Shop Wal-~~~0~ 1\ IDll at Mf.2ST2. IL O. TREE SERVICE. etn'l yard • HOUSECLEANING. Ex· experie:nced. Call BSJJ IN SMOG l'ltll COME ttl1llinL: local ro11te ~ cleanup. Sp RINK LE R Pla1ter1ng, Rep.11ir 6110 perienced. OWn tramporta. Johnlon TJl..1'9111, Pauma Valley ot ""*candy"""""" ma. tU•IN II ..... CARPENTRY, Cablneb REPAIRS. -*PATCH PLASTERING lion. Sl8-M3l COMPANION • • ..
Lovely h<We • •wiln pool chines. No s.Il1ng roquittd. l'INANCIAL ancl NDTICIS -·No job bl miall, G All typea. ,_ Htlmate bouae-* 5 days-. Ao<
next to I ho1' -" <:<>11ne. MODEST INVESTMENT ..__ ••-' ~ ~•1 qua! ....._ Call .._,.,. EXPER. Japaneoe ardener. Call ~ -Jollo Mon. Wom. 7100 "° buTler. 9111-D .~ "-=~"-"1'9;..IM=•.:.-----•-!!!_• ____ _!-~liii:P:mi;p;:;:;;&;;;:-sm;; Comple1e Yd. Service. >ne I =====-==== Al8o an unusual family style atarts )'Oil In your own busi---REPAIR. Partitions. Small Estimates. Call M0-1332 1 •
restaurant. with pepper tree neu. Profits beain immtdi-2nd TD Loan SIAMESE Clt, dark 1'"m 6 Rftnodtl, etc. Nlte ot day. ~mltf119 6190 ·..!....,~~.= Hu!~l~ •• ~: patio, complett:ly @Q"Uipped atel.Y. For tull detaill f.rom beip, blue tya; fiea colllr. Reu! CID KEN sto-4819 0. I ~--.1~ 66U r-·---v
4 in operation. Bam1 for the NATIONAL LEADER Lt atrlp9 on back lep, nick REPAIRS ALTERATIONS Mf'I __...,_. PLUMBING Repa1.rin&' 1.r: Beach Convale1cenl
horaes. All on s be1.utlfiill)> OF THE INDUSTRY, send Prompt, oaafldtnt1d llt'\ltce on ear. ·Harbor Hilhlandl CABINET. lut)' me job. 2 COlJ.ECE Men Wlll Do Remodel.lna:. Electric sewer Hospital, 18792 Delaware,
lalllhcaped acres. By Own. nam~. addreu, A phone M2ol171 54S-1111 ana.5'1-8844 25 yn: 5'M1l3 Small Tree 4 Rock c ·e1.nln·. :\II work1_H;;:""=L.::Bch.=-----
CONSTRUCTION
SUPERINTENDENT ( Offsltht) .
er. 644-l'm number to ME'l'R().VENDA, Se~ HarbOr al'la ao )'fl, LOST iiJOndlt Female CilCki'r . ~ Removal. Yard Clean-up &: llJU'l.!'lteed. 642-8583 Adwrtldns A&ency One of Southern Cl11fomla'1 J~"""""!~!l!l!I"'"""''!'"'~ I P.O. Box SJS~ Oaltland, So S.W E.~~2!,~e. -Vic. ,..,. V-. ~ Clllaolo UDO HauJm,. Call !i.16-3UO aft PLUMBING REPAIR lharp Secretory for Wpst land d....,..,.. ""
COSTA MESA home ·•· 9 Calif. M8C6 OtUdrtn heartbroken. ' 8PM. Eltimatea wUl be No job too small fast. ,.ad Ntwpwt an immediate OP8ftifw tor
units plus room to bld. Attlllate 5tl-Om CEMENT WORK, no job too stven. • 6CJ..3l28 e h•ch AttncY· Type an OU11&ht SUpertnbmdot.
$125,IX». ~% dn. Owner CANDY SUPPLY lltial tot ... LHM 6'40 ---------11. "-""· ,_ RAIN Gu-ln•ta lled . 65-70. -ancl 100, Experiellced ln laJp ..i-
54Ml07 ROUTI Pltl'Mfttls 640I -. H. stu!IJdc !llS-'815 Rainy ...,. i. _, n.e Rooflnt 6950 orionlso & f e 11 e w ume sradlnc operatloos. Thi · •·-•-· It""'•' 6060 CNo eellln& lnvol\'fd) INVESTMENT ll'<lllP bu PAnOS • Drlwwa)'I • eatm. ~uonbl. -..m ALL typea rock. wood &: t h r u • U n d • r 35. polltion offen; c~.
-·-I':xoellent Income tor few ::... ~ ~ ":°1:;, :.~ PALMISTRY l l'taoten • _,. taneea • Experienced BARTENDERS upball """""· LEAKS Phone: '42-3910. 425 :::"·.::',. =.::~
oq. tt. at &2B w. Uth St., "°""' Wffkly ••rl<. <Daya ..... TllL Bkr. 51U31J. CARD lllADINGS Room add!-. 64Ml52 """"" all 0raoao °"""1· REPAIRED. w"" ..... N. Newport IMI. with .._ s...i ,..
c.11. Avail Dec. ht. and Ev.nl.ntl>. RatUllnc and day or ewr. lrlne Yeur Pr•l1rn1 te * <X>NCRETE ~·" m-rm MT-lUS * AIDES *· Expen!nclld, IUme to Ody Piiot Bea
• 548-11'18 * collect!nc money from coiD CALL HARl>EITY Me -I Wiii Itel, y .. pallOo, <tc. -~ All ahllll. ROBHns ... _,, H·U.
: ROOM' Sullable "" sift ..... ........ "'-" In 0.. For ....._ ..... no-. -· -4 Htllll.. •no ..... , -Convalneanf Hoop., 11792 ........... "!'!I ......... . ; men'• shop GI' ladln lhop. &nee <». and surround.ins 6'15-2181 J live advkle .on aD matttn -Delaware. H.B. (11') I'
· 6T3-M05 lreL We estaliilb route. * * of life, .au low. court-ChlW (.,. '610 YARD/Gu , eteanup e Dreamak1nc • Alten.tlonl lfi7-35lS *COOK -Apply
· Call Jim Berbhlft. <Rudle• name brand candy ----ablp .;..,,...., d'-<e, bus. • -·-••• $1 O /Io ad -lea Speda1 °" coat hema lcAIDiiO::riii'.:,,N=•:::---,,,,,-_,,,.,-, Tile ~ ,..... -.70 and anacb). Sl.515.00 cash ..._.., w....... a.so int ' truaactkm& of aD _"--,-...,. c....... Utt. DU' freel ~ tNet.. tvy * MM64I * _., 1111 ..... ~" flt ~ N.B. : •. Office lttntal .v _ .. '-"'.For penonal Inter. ·=·;:;;::i..:;:.:=::;::;:._..:;;:;: • home are 2-5 Mon tbru ' I ,~ over prtf'd Part Ume avail. .~, .... qa .. • " kinda. banlte tie ...-r-Fri. Fenctd ~. Lancbel· arade 96UT45 A tera ~~ Call for apj,l n 4 • 494-8075
LAGUNA 1aACH view in Oranp Co. ara, 1.4 t.o 10" on ywr br¥Ut-atld, CUM speedy and hap. I: mack. so. Cout Plua Cletn Up •nd Htu1 Neat, accurate, XI )Tl. ekP·hA"'v°'o"'N;;:;_="-':.:..;..;;;;;.;.;.;:. Air Conclltlontd send name, address and m1nt We cu place )"Ollr py marN.ltl, oNl'Cll:lmt ri. Uta. Ml-4038 $l0 • lo.cl 148-2528 ~" CALLING
ON FORESI' AVENUE· phone number to MULTI-flmd9 dlnct to the borrower nil. 1oftn cumll. e\'11 • TILE, C1nmlc ...,,.
Desk apace available In STATE DIST., ItfC., 1111 W, on title lnl. re&1 ertat.Jo1.J11 ~ta, 1tmnblinc b1ocb d. UCl:HSD Qdld Care -HAULING. Ha\te "T PIU Don't ju1t think
newest office bulldlnr ·at B~dway, An&Mtm, Cali-@no extra COit to tbe ltnd-all k1ndt. 1'blle ii no blart Neid dilld qe ""4 for com· Anythlna • trul'I tD furn. S8 1t Verne, The Tile Mari* about being a
prime Socatlon In doWlltown !orn1a 92li02. (TI.4) 1'1Ul$J. er. Skip In er ctll, 1S2l N'. to be.d or home IO drMry pan. my chtld. 56MiOfS bd + mJ&, 494-1003 Cust. work. Install I: ttpalni, reprnentatlve
La.run& Beacl\, Air condl· EXCEPTIONAL EARN· Bl'Oldway, SA ('PU'kinl on that I cannot brinC &W'llbiM LITE HauJln&. cleanup + No job loo mnall. Pleater BE ONE
Uoned, carpead, beautitul INGS. Part-Ume snack our llfOl!elV) scs..1311 di.)' tnto tt Jn. tact, no matter ,....._..... 6620 $1J a load patch. Lealdns • ho we r ACT NOW •••••••••••• CALL
entrance1: J'l'ontqe on rauta. Avail In many areas. or"""'· what in13 be YoUr hope. ~THtet'I *ia.oo.Sl* ttpalr. 841'-195'1'/8'6-0'JOO 540-7GU or 5t6--435l
Fotelt Ave;, rear ll'adl to Men er womt11 to reftock U&r or ambttlon, FRED IL GERWIOC BABYSITI'ER Wanted in
DENTA( OFFICES
• Alslatantl e lnlurance Girls
e11«ept1onJJi.
• Intonnatkla std (E\te)
Prepare rsume. must hive
two yn dental .,.r, Day a: eve. bn. AD wdon bene-
1111. 81.lary $3.44 per br. Call
for appoinlmtnt: 633-?IS7t. Munclpat -Iota. ISO tna<k --• eo11eet ANNOUNCIMINTI SEE THE 1"illdllW tlootra-Tr" S."lea 6'IO Monm. Villa School Ar.a lo
per montb for space. Delk money (days or tws). NO anti NOTICU PAJ..MISl'RY JtUJ>!R. Fam. nm, bdl'ml, patios HWMCluftl"I ms ~ pruned. t 0 pp e d I care tor 3 ~ren, Tuesday Dental ANl•tMt
and chain available for ~ SELLING • WE FtJ'RNISH PeUNI (II .... AtkJ '400 I wW. tell )'Oil Jut what J"OG: ~ attmatn Jl.trltortaJ. nmowd. 3i yn aper ONLY -2:30 tD 5 PM. Call a.aJ.r..akte. LoYe1y C 0 1 ta
Businell boUn annerlrc LOCATIONS. $900 req'd for want to Jmqw, f'73..40&1. • SG4170 Bf..:. ~ .. ~-..... __ A er i a I tow e r e q u t p : -&U-38H eves A wkends or Meu omce. Some exper. ,. service available for SlO. ,.rt-time ~. fUll time Avail far putin """'~...-. '-'t".., "'u1UUW11, UIAll'll, 638-1234 8Q..SZ'Z3 days Unde Salary All utnldn pakl except route• alto avail ACT NOW Wi:lMARANER. Or Vlada W\th ThLi Card and SI.Cl) etc. Ra &: Comm c' l . _!49>-5405~~·~~~---1.;;;~;;;;:i~C-::;;:;:::;-= qulttd. r 30 )'n.
telephone. FOR OIOICI: LOCATIONS puppy Y1c Gokknrod 6 Cst Rective $5.00 Radlnc Caf'Mt Claanlne 6'U Wrltll GENE'S TREE SERV: BABYSJ'ITER wanted, near open.
DAILY PILOJ' in ----,._._,_ Vendlnr u..,.., CdM on wx. Call ,......._ n-n...,. .w 10 PM ;;J;,;;..,;. • WINDOW3 DIRTYT Trees. shrubbery trtnuned, Fountain Valley Drive-In. ... ........ ~....,. ..,._., ..._...,. 61)..52'l'T .... .-. ~ to * Diamondl are m9uured. 1,~·~';~"~""'~~~.~~~·~-· ~= ~~~· Mon Un Fri. P1nonnel MIMy 222 FORESI' AVEi,u.c. Div. 1901 Awnue of lht J'llD)' ~ , I Fret C l5 ,.u'I ftl'· • ~ .,....~ _ ... ,~ Haun:~ LAGUNA BEACI Stan, Suite 585. etntury SCH\VINN Bieyclt, adu.lta. Oft (2U) llT.trn OJY qualltJ, ID ate we Johnny Dunn IG--23M
...... Ciru ~· -lo n-..-Continental, ytUOW, comb. 210 w' -~-Blvd DIAMOl<D C4RP!:T Uwholstll?Y 6f90 BARMAID Bri6ab. to wort 133 Dover Dr., NB
1000 Sqaare Feet
Office Space Avail
JC» l'i'th Street. H.B.
536-llGI
V• ~. -.. v·-~--. -~·-.. •«mT-*AP!' CLEANING* ~ ~ .. -PDb. Call ·--~-ci Co. cln (TH).... lock .--L ~ eond. Lo Hain &iim -64Ul.64 •• -•• ~·
•1ao,ooo PEit YEAR ldent!IY -• .o:!!""''"'' ......... ~ ~ ..... ~~s ~~~ ..... 64M930. alt 5 pm. ~~AL ........ "!l.:. ~
• ~ SM. Sham blk,.,,,.,. pup-,., .... ~ .... -· ---~ w~ BEU. ..... Sleraldn (lu.eb -~• --Minimum inoom1 fur ......... tao ,_ h 1 ====~=====:] ~·-•-Rnulll -· For RENTAL RIADllR 100,._ fir.It &0-1'54 IM ,_ -.~ .. a~ ~ -man to parUcl~te in htrhiy PY -... p, w t spot °" 1, • .........,.~ HMi9'll 540o39M 1131 Nt'Wplll't Blv CM .. _._--.,-.,.. r 1---'-"-------I protltable realty inve1tment chest. Vic F.V. IUlb Sehl. flw at, ·' . pl!catianl for the position d DISHWASHIR
ottlces on Ne"JIOl'I Bay! Ac-NAVY Blue bo)'& double time -11 PM-?AM shift. A~ Eves. PremJwn 11'QeL operation. Plulh mi carpet l:i86J..15;.;,;;;.":.:.,,..,...,..--,.= • bell man. P/tlme A full Dinner Hau.e. Exp'd oatY.
ttve at inactive! Invt1tment bre11ted blanr. About n . &. ANNOUNCIMINTS ply In penan, 21112 Ocean, Appty In penon
MODERN 3 room suite, required! wm tra.1n quail-Found Ba11hor•1. ANNOUNCIMINTS al'MI NOTICIS H.B. DIRIY
<P•., etr "'"'·Janitor""· 11'\d pu1y1 '615T4 day or Rob"*na labtl 543-ntl '. ~oncl~~NO~Tl~IC~ll==~!I llOAT CARPINTIRS RISTAUllANT vlSo~e~~P~ ~!~1':k Bid&. evt. a«ilfuAifuA -about ...._.... 6405 ,.,.._.,. '40J Experienced. Top-pq. t.arp Im PaU.-.
DIE l'i'th street COIN taundfitl..Frltldaire. Ncmmber lit betwftn O&y cunom )'achtl. WtDard Boat s.nta A'na °"'" M~ 1142-1485 ,.,... 1&,soo to 10.5oo . and 8aodl. 1•••tlly, Happy ·LOSE LICINSID wort<a, 1216 su.r, eo.ta DISHWASH&
Anaheim, Colla M eu • ;i':9Q.~-'i:::===::-:::;: Spfrltual ........... advice M-Co1ll. --
: Ottl:iNz~lO!. =:.~·~i;:.:.;.:,; ~:"v':'~.':': Thanksgiving WEIGHT C:::!t"~"b:m! .. t ~ -~ • . '41-5012 Beach, Stoia -'l'uslln, Ill., c.x. --4111-9136, '92-0076 : · .,__.... or La Mirada. FOUND: &1i£ Uc Pil:te, anril the a.at 11) AM • 10 PM t· omCE w1lh ... ...,... Call CbArtle 52:>-1ISI u-. ·-1-111 c.M T•r~y a~.;r..
BOOKKEEPER
Local Colla Mt• Kututao. Apply In penon 1ur1,_ orm o< ~ ..,..,,.... SURI' l SIRLOIN
-....... .......,.. lO !!ll30 Padtlc °'"" Hwy. • · JttVke turnllh9d for rent nv...-• ...u. on uJl • • K• -• SL C tnl CM. tu:m'AURANT Call a.ft S:30, 541-82
• 535 Center UP9 · · 1if06J' POPULAR SCHNAUZER, ancUpped. From
000' SHOP, omCE. For Sole , -642M05
• •
2:J40 Newparl Blvd., O.f H.K. --..t41S
$75. ---l.-111-.,,,... "'° LMt Commordtl tOIS ,ANTASTIC
RIAL TY PROJECT LOIT' 0..,. w.-.
Primo Commtrelal """""" $SOO,IXIO povtlt return wllhbt --A -st,
132"2!0'. C.2. Beach -·· 911 days, $25,000 cub --CM. ~ -· -· Hunttnaton Beacb. ,!2. 750 ed. 8i.>t5'1'2 d...JI ar m . ~
6411
Cnh down. Owner Clflo roa-SaJe t., owntt-:-i ;,LOSl';s;;F;;:•c..malo_,....,b .. la-ck'""ld"'-.~J
,. rt 15 ye't._ lit c!'2't ~ PacUlc View tt1Mlery klU. mo. old en Balboa lllancl. , ""olonom~· rp. Call momlnp IG-13:13 Rowal\l. Call ·~UM ~ DIAL dadl-,h:~ back°"= DAIL~ PILOl' D IM E . A. Small Ptt ~. Vh:.
lo your • phO!lt rtrw• f.JNES, You. can UM them Ar.Iona. (Little 111.J t. lllttn to ' the ' for J•t pnom a dal· Dial 81Jbo& ll1lnd. m..1012.
Nowl ~ LOfi• Small l;i;;iO 6 wbllt J IT'S Beach IOJ.M du·1~ s: DAifr PILOI' O•alfted cat. Me. v.id;U..., ' ~.J..~ e;;".i.r Alltll llClloo NOW! 5ll-l6G or -
Marie
Callenders
., •• ""' It. c--641"'22 *Don't!
can UI u you 1ttu bt
cave •tyle da~
la SINGLES daJ1C.'t every Wed.
,. Hr ncord • I Int ORANGE CO
COUPLE, ••••
• 54T-
no childrtn.
home W/ Ta meet or ii.re
otllor epL call
•Wed.-
&-T pm. Tiit.
I: 30 to 12. tox trot. twine • lotln. Meadowlark Olley
0.b. H.B. 3 ml. W. ot
Beach, oil w.-. Adm. 12
~llOUC:S Anon>mOUI MS.-1211 •• wrftllt tu
P.O. ll!s l.2ZI Ooalo V...
I ··--·-~~~~~·~~~~
NOW'S THE
TIME FOi
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
64~1
hi do ..,..n • ....., 2"' 1 __ ...:.,....,.~r:,;,;",.11e.,,;.;aec..b __ 1 handle acclt "°"'"ble • DiUVIR
--3'd type...... TOUR GUIDI • ._... Sllar>' "'° lo Orivor/Nana.,. <I mlllJ • .., .......................
Stllll (Dl'J'± ftllllmll, to ltstltMtt!W alOUlld HfiWJOitl Must know harbor.,., Cd P.O. Box !IOI, Dan, Piiot fU.llU ...., 1 PM,
IOYS 11• 14 DISHWASHER. -· NII
Oorrt. -()pea lime ......... -tor Benton'• OJfM Shop
t.aaaa -· !o . ._ 1!3 & °"" ""'" llcll DAILY PILDl' DOORMAN, parltl'ar a
tc-m1 tendant. Day or nilo Nti~ .
""""· ret• . ..........
BUsu;sT -In ~1700. Exl!I.»-& town. 'rt. .DAJL Y PILOT PM. 0 wl:ald #Ctlon. lave =, ........ -·f ...111
I
i
I I
•
. . .
.If:;. DAll,Y.1'11.QT· • w....,. ""'..., 26. lM • • . . . .. . . • Wedotsd.r;.lliw-26, 1'69 _mor.aovunsu .111~ '. ~!@L9!M!lf!· JOllJ;IMl'!>OW. _JOiSllM!L0¥MINT Ml~ FOi Ml~SI FOii l~~ ... ·· .1 t· '='• ·fl: · .• ArNn , • ''"' ~ '1
Jo•f Mon. w-7100 Jo• Moo, w-_71 .. ,, • ., ............. J!I• __.,..AND • ., ·1 ~!Pf!: , ' SALi Affp . Tl!ADI '~It E_ T.0 ·YOO I ~ & y~ ,fOOO ~I:!!!...-. ·-•
-~ : '.MOTEL DESI(· CWIK. ' SECRETARY l'vm,_. '¢~. 'lj!IO °"!d'l;loo ~ ·: 1110 ·!'"~:ifii:ti=-· ~ lfeollllY .,;I.. tCl·AU ',IEJS " BAY HAllCJI " I * DlmtD *' pm 1o m\dn!Jht El<per. t• l!U0.00 sevml ~ __. • · • • I · ' il!lliiiQL_.01-'4 "°""""' doer 1tr1J>'d'Jdtte/,, ........ . Mol>lle ...._ S.IM . I
No bpeflwt ~ 4:~~cBe~ ~tne~~~~~ SAClfll ·~'.C' :!s~:·~=~ -=~•6 •cs.s to -=.:....~·,.;.;'i ' · ~ .. ~~~;· i
M"" ~="J!-:".::O."'· to Box f'l--1111 Dai-:.1.";.~:::: .. ,:~ rim~~~ ~OW• Iii; ~115~ iU~u ,i°ft M1u1•n~ :,--•-.--::it; ~N!!ERS ~ · ~-~ :-:J1 !
--1'l1l1 MO'JllER'S HELl'Ell. 3 ... SEllVICE StatlOO attendants hdbd, be~~-,,:...; Rf!*-18$1 'E>lrop Hu-POCi. TA1u:9 .' .u;ioa•lri.e:-Cliil ll&ll:1s ...,.. _.~m,-1as '\l:... ~ 0C"~~' l ~LOW c11 CO. da>• ""-""'t have °"", 11111 A put time. '1: Enco: quilted. Olio' ldlt A 1IMl a., ~·_$1>0 a. up. l ' -~\ ""'!old. J!" '!' •. l!lllt. !« ~ oa 114~ Ii blockEutoi~~' • -......._ Bl>!f· H.•tl>•ur. Bn>okbunt ia.'IE Infer DECOR<\TOAJTEM• • .. Will:luC:~1Jio,ru""""1)lO. BRUllS!Jllllt -:a.tr ' ......... ~ lltadlt~•·a"'""',_" Coot&u.,. '(Tltl ~""" •1 us ·a:; 18111 St. -• > • Widi;i • .,.,...,165 DtnJrc • ~ ll!'o11'Ulp· ·1-K ' ,,,.. ,.,. ,......,. ' ' . .... • ~N
CosM lliesa F.1'. Call~· . Ref. l!".r·J;.,11.., iao.oo tUlo " ~ china ,,,_.. , '• · · ' -J! -.,.. Iba'~~-""'.lh W MOliiLE Home For Sale ·· 'j Foctory NURSES·->even-SERy;ICESta"'i"~·KING~~'¥--t~.'MUCMM "I ,_Flnanc!nir '•-.' BEAIJTlriiij, 1-balnd (Of."• ,, ~,.\ Utl8. Sl!Jhll> used,,l,l!o\:
In& 4 lli&ht '-· "'· eomm. ·• -· -~lbiiii 0""mll!e: 11t11io1; .-. -i6ii'f.,Ji,~. oi,.I= * SECAJU>..i'OOLS * "'""lwkl1t ........ \jtto"' r I MUST BE Ni A 7Y now. !2:•~". FQrc<d ... ! "'-~~-~·''' -.. benolits. Apply""'°"""' UnlooOU'.OR'l'mi,'' cuslquUlol:IJolir,chol"'-· t,1 , ' i · ID-llllfl, , , V!Jf.1~, _•;!'> -·y-,: 1-ftt.alrcoal.AiN!t~ _ • -otrecttr, So.·· OJat Com· SHEIL s.rv J Sta..c r-..._ Res. R .i.,,,._. l(ow sa.:io _..,,,..L ~ ll2b 311 s. MUI l lt\ t'lfJ~ ldftd ~ 81$-111.23 fl' To ucrince my 2 ~cabin Nwpt Bth. A Beaut1 'b ,
munlty, Holpy ,aJ.m .Coast , • "':l "1Ll. llae tJINXQble, IOft ~ ,~ • ,-\ J"='s ; m .. J.m. • 11/28 CNl.ra. Both ill milrt oortd. $5300 Call ... M6-.f)752 • Hwy.,S:i.~a1Uu. expd. pump ·lslaod CUttq1Jllted,he:adb4,1PN14, ""'"' -: POOL , PUPPm .\lattaer~ 2J'j:30'-l'tnandila;;[nqo-· : l e TURRET LATHE
SETUP &
OPERATE
ext. 356 :es:::-J: ~ ~~ beoch_ One onb! Avomdo.. SINGER :trlbuJll~wal !L~T lfulky •• ~-Terrier ance avail.·~! ~! Mlftl tiJlie . ;ft75 1
Offlce H t Goldenrod. ....... in Re1. $289.50 ···• Now$1~_.~ ~ • ..zi&~z.ea,-.Malllll TABLES Cockatoo. 6 wks. C.U. Dem· &&.5-1442, -· • •'I ' Work •ncf Pt.y wy a -<'lf'l" e Mattreu • & . SpriacS 41 btlUoo hpin:, ~ 5 ., lt6--58ll : 1lJiT BOAT A: TRAILER , , • .. :.t l
THE · penon -~ ... -Kh~.Set$99.95Queen$89.95 Y~pw:.Yllll&C'ice$31.Jt . • . • · ,· ...,. ~-~. -~BIKE~ C~.L~1 · w1111,;, Girl Shlppl"t/R ... lvl"t ' Full s.1154,95 Twin 144,'!5 .,.15.:111 mo . ......,. • Ouiltmu SpOctal ~ op. s;=. .. 2 = ~ '!,u~~H.:! ~""; ··:· ~ ';,.'::'""ii'f' I
• S'-'ll'PING·AND . WAY to fl,90 hr. Top, •!able Co. SIESTA SUEP SHOP • . . CH"C~ . oi>!i-365 -81 ' "d>in.,ttwY~. Moat Soll _,.,. • •• ;!t I in ~ adv~ment oppor-_ _ __ -, PMtlctl \lrwt;J _\t ~~ 1125 2750 Harbor! atl~' CM c.iit 1 .-... .;..:. $100 .. ~ f33.0G6f • ·: tunlty Top loenefits. cau I .. ~"° -' . . ' . RECEIVING Earn "'0"'' •on Int........ John 5'&wo . . 19Z7 Harbor mvd C..ta ll!e.. . . .. *' AUCTIOlt·-tti Til!lliti\ .... t_ •7 .... • '~ IO' '!"P· 12" oJiSh'c -..ye... 930CI'
temporal')' iwiJ'nmenls, and JASON BEST • 64$~ • SHER.WOOD /.mPlifier 100 u~)Ul.1.dl 1.Jl'iW'Wt I temaN, ·•ho(s, Jiwts ~boat. l'HSOl)ll1*.., -'·. CLE~~ ~l~~:~~~r our tun dis-Emplbyment'Agency Daib' 10-t Sat 10-8 Strn' U-S ~~~: ~ twe Wlrld.Y a try i' chll_i!ren. After I~ !alt , *· .,.._ .. *' '•61· WftJtDj1'.j I
• u111. o. DRI" _2207 So. Main, San1a Ana 20 ~...!'MADRID" 12i5.' fu. Now G::;i Auctl'ool; ~-~!'Hi.m. &>< -ru,a s. · . .. '-w , ,;;_r. i..1" "• j
.....,_, ...-' W11t'tro'Gh11 Inc. •1 srATISl'ICAL TYPISI' • . · -"330" ~~ b0.1, W'MNlf'tA~·B,m !PVABLE ,<:ny 1\rl p od lllloO!o · ""'10 ill1R '""'Ml!"!"\
OPERATOR , "67i)\1cAftburmvd. Typi.vRecoptiqnlst-'ll'Oqt -!o~O:ELG= ~W w/cue, · P•~· ""5l>N._i!X,"'-6 =..."::"',::!;,';"'':f tlKIJAlklNGf *.!7~ ·I l SWte l't4, ?\eWpOrt ·eeaq. omce tor · Public! Acmunt . , . 5'8--5«15 att,~ PM'. · • &hind~Ol\f'a-~\Mat1. · -r. r ~ e .. o~ TH.E!sE,T ' -. ---r :i
AUposltiwarequirtsome " MO.OS15,_i Nea\.appee.ranee.-~-~~2~~:A::.IJJ'lD~ .M~ .,.elec YEU..OW·~hide-a· m-e.att.rS, llli$ •'~ti. JiJ&h '..blt.rest, ~ .~1
experience. .' OFFICE Coordinator, Intel-ffil:ER -rote,ff ColJe.:. fee ·~~-Z'lml~&_:-dr.U,s. "'tlr.(&dehqce'revfttian\P. bed, 1'rut~1!onao"leldei'eo PLAYP'UL· ICtteo; tfO!t: ,4 de~~latfOn.'~l'l p._'"n.tal, 0 -, -·i '1•
,_.,.. liae'nt orpniud matutt Uon.' Call ~r. !Newport 6~1~-headbi>aid-$20Qftnn. 54IJ..1412· -.•. record'·playftY~:D&nijh _cuddly,~ female, ~b-~.~.etc, ~· 1 !
UBERAL FRINGE ~ ( woman. ~TUU In.elude Natlonal Bank', Mr.: Carter. 'Ciullted b:O>f i"ri.Dg. &: matt-ELECTRIC" G~ _ Del tnodern sol& ~·1~1 Deed ~eaned. A box-~ :i"E~ ~T : A I f B~EFIT ,PRCXi~t •'*'eoordlh.~;,-~s, 14p-.3m· 1 ' res,,_. 5 pc_ ·dliilnr roO,:n; Rey. Pe~cond • .$6l., clna", ye11ow ·~r'80&, . -... "'""·"' LoW co.t,. no WORK & • ~"~·.• J
tun!· .. .-.i..... payablH. •paptr"''""'ttow , 'ffLEPffdNEan.w'eli,na-ser-tablelr.f"bi.back-chain. , clft . .!~·.~~· ~ CCl04 •.. <.I':; Schwinn BEWTjJih, •• ~ •. bw-~~~~~!.1,,.,1 '\ · 1 ::, I
F.qual oppor ty ,,e ... ..-1tt custome('>~ ~ *Ice ope~. •3-11--.-wk-COMPARE AT $149.95 ., _ bUU!;$10, ~ ,". -~balftd w~ 1 cat , u . ._, • ·
1485 Dale \Vay :=ma ~.:e:mg, ~. lA& Be~ 494-1420 -·--.S~f9 . Pi•nos & Ortlns 1130 SACRIFICE: eolle ctor'a -=ra.tb.. : .. ·~ ~~~~ci.UB • .• ··:.
Costa Meta.,"cllit. ·-mini.talon' i&lel. ~ 'iliLEPl{O~ Answertrw Nn down-i:tn11 only $16 ~. • · &raphicl A lithop'aph&.. --•· e 81$-nOO e' M9-3(B11Ext. 66 or ff.,· I
• . -. -. • iomco-El<p'd m' WEI.II'$ 11111mOUSE . . .2 Dall, . ....._. qh~l•ll' ABANDONEI>, -..... . lll10!WUIORBLVD " Phone' >68%51 PRESS .DP~RATORS • ' Call s,l,..;. ' ' ~ ...... SEE . OUR _ T~P Fri-, Mooilrlln, Bui'. S.10 -i.,,.ie, lovUle, COMl'IEl'E CUllOl1l SABOT COSTA MESA, • : , I 1-=--,~=.,.-,,=:== worn .. worlc !or plastics • . . . ·sELECllON ' lot, Dufy. -mlllt -· ....ru;. nm or ...... your own ,from our I Forelp C•r Mech•nict molding plant ·Eve '· shift J._ TR~INEE· $.7511 6CQ W. 4~ St.~. Santa .p . . raise cub. Thurs ,thni sUn BEA.irn:roL Male~ fiberalaa hull . in time for BEAl1J'lFUL Bike, 1969 300 I
Goodco.benrllts_inclpU:l st&-3370 , ·,,. !!il.les Ena:l~r-_Requlres . Open·I?aily9-9 ofrecond1ti~~"~uaran~ onlY.,Call 4M:«ll:J · ,1~ .Free:to.___.·home repaiJ'...riytime. Sabot Ave~ Kawuaki. Top_-•
vacation. vouP tns,. uni-I ' 'f.ravel. All expenses . pejd -. Sat. 9-6 ti . Sun U-6 ORGANS that have bf!en . . yn. Iii"'!'-' ' hard,,are ii. new s.bot Cond. Like New, S675. l
forms fumished free. Good PUB~I~ RELATIONS Car ·P~.ided .·Fee Neioti-FURNI'fUREYreturned from trad~ I, on new Conn&: KIRBY ~A~. ~ &U :sl!Qts. ~7'5 · -111-28 •J*rtl: mut, booms, lee ~-, . -1 '
oomm. scll@dule, J\Sk for Attractive, well groome~· '1ale, Call Ann,-Merchanta dlsplay "5nxlioS, model Wurll~n.. . wtth a.ttac hm ,enta It CRO~Y elec~ stove, boerd .. ·rudders • ~N. 'M~Honct. C1-1JO ._] I
Joe &1oore Ph. 5017M. )'OWi& lady be~een 211: 45 ~~l, 200 .. WeatcliU homer, decora"tors cancella· SAMPLE.SAVINGS: _ ~~~ ~-= free to you_ HS, Sittb St, Flnllhed.'u MU u unfin-QOod ConclftiOn , l l
Genrnl: YOU!li .,,. 0 man Ior public relatio~ l aulst.. Drive, N.B. 645--2Ti'O· l1Qn. Spanl&h " MediterrQ-Hammond chord • :· •.. $~95 ~.40. 1 ~t Dept. CM. _ _, _ 1:1_1'7 .~· Open wMdaya s: 30-$300. S47-31S21I l wan~ PJrt --time. WW ant to the president._ Must UPH0tsn:RER. Trainee • een etc. Hammond M-3 ........ $500 ~1289 l BEAU, nulch ~liita. 3 bub-8~ W~ 1().6 PM'. !&2 TRIUMPH Bonnevfile: •
train. ARPllY'S c II ... unencumbe .... & -to RD' FUR' NITU BakhO!n """'' ........ 1645 . . . • -..... -mi,..., male. -m'w. 17th 8-t CM ·: : o e. trave:I on ·exteiive. y;ichl Some exper w/s~p&oe gun JtE Gulf!rPaen theater •.•• $895 BEAifi1riiL ~1 ;.mted . ' .. 11121 . . 64Ul51, M&-6219 Rebttl.IL Xtra chrome. Xlnl : l
SOOp. 3021-8 Harbor Blvd., cruises to Acapulco, Br¢sh prefen-ed. App9' m pmioo 1144· Newport Blvd., CM Alleli'"CaroUsd CcU1Nnt mo-oil J>Ottrl:it of· )'OU or )'Oil' ' , -cond. BEST. 0 F FEk .; I
C.t.f. ' Horxh1ru, Jamaica-A Carib-Johanatn &: Chti&ten&en, ,898 -~~night 'til 9 del-w/.Oyini: hainmefll) $1395 ch11dren.fr9m,·a~~ JRISH SEllER. to ~ • (j~ 38 .544-9123 '
GENERAL Office cl erk • ~ l!lands& other inter-~tli l:tbM St., viN.B~ .Coriler \Ved., ·Sat. & Stm. 'til 6 Allen, theater (w(extra speak· A· wtinderful~~ .. ~f;c!t.; ~t ;:=• fenced~~~ ""'l'tl ~ Kawuakl ~· full raoe,,1 ! loo4 with figures. Apply methate points on one of the • • ' onro a. 3 ROOMS of S er & sleigh bells;) -. , • , $1495 special Cbr1stniU . ¥It t . .:::::!! care,._ • ~ -•. "· , ~ -X'tras. $425. Clll .. :;GT-9988]
MeGrep l'acht c.otp., 1631 finest, mottlwcurious yachla VARITYPER or IBM Com· ,--, PANISt.f ~y cmtERS!! ' ~. --. _ :"" -~ MM.E·beqle1 l yr . .-olcl· J.ovft DEM.,.ONS'l'ltAT,OR aft 3 PM • 1,;: Placentta.~C.M1 • ,on the West coast, salt,ll")' poser operator. Part 1tlme. : : i!.ilvand.~ve seat GOULD MUSIC FIREWOOD for aade-CiJt' ·to cblldrtn, lr'N to·eood borpe. Fully·todiid. ~tter ~-ne.w. ,67 YAMAHA· 'lOO TwlJ(I
GIRL F~Ai'.:~ ol-open. CHALLENG~G OP-~rience necessary:. • 5· p ·ec.e-Bed roo~ set !,I\,, ~ Sfi.,oosl yo u r 'IPMitl~~i wttl 1$47-49'5 _ "SUlOO under'wliit: RUNS GOOO! Be!Dre '•l i l
nee, uviWitt~dl SIP Co .• POR~! 64.S-lm. '\c!«}' ~ -~~-:-'RI~~ 2045 N, Ma_ .SA •.... ·. ~ Deliv_'~~-@~Jf TWO 'Frisicy bladr male' kit· HollMMI YH:ftt1 tACl.0139 ~72. ,A!J. 5--54G-83DI~ : 1
16842 s. Harbor-· 'Slnla' or.......... . -WAITRESS u . ' . .F.f!CT~lf . ' "°"· 'm~ 1'''1:, ;47:!1rc: ·-.put Sia.,..., 1 ..... • . ! Ana. >31..,,, . RECEPTIONIST oe "'!! 11""'·•"""• ptan! CLEARANCE\ ... CaU c01l.ct <n<> ·••16.e ·Old. 6*;1333 . '. · 1T O'DAY ll<yWlor 63 BSA -$400. Good Cond.I • E•porl-od ~Otf Fumitvro Factory on!<n cleannce o1 • . -~ • , · 'D<n\o llS9li U"" W15 Noods M'--2390 GIRL nw>AX $400.00 for the mature aat 2159 Harbpr-eJri.· 548-9660 all .. "d. - . -COI.J..tlERS ~ABANDONED, fem.,-yoahi, 14' O'DAY used $495 Westminster Pl., C.M. I
9 am to noon.~! Ph whowantstowo~inbeach '. 4PPIY in person_ KINCBR~t.·trl,p)e~~ ·lloor~s i,';"4 re. Xlnt COfoXI· ·+-... _ .,'s .. friendly tip!' cat. &a-:17'f l'un·li:9neBoat.Co. Balboa _ HONDAS0-."1965' '
&a-'lt30 tor illtuvieW. area. call Loraine, Mtt-'SURF & SIRLOIN hi-bo).> ·1 land & bdbn1° turned PilulOa A c)ipns. boob $180.: Call 67$4981 a.ft "" ll/2'1 -. Good CondiUon "Beat !
HAIR SJ1:UST_wllollowin&:. ::tsW~~~~r:"'I!~'. 5930 P•c. C1t. Hwy. '"'al_nul ~~-prov. ·eofl hai sa"v.inJ:i up "to,,3990, 5. _ ~ 1 ~ . .f:JJVELY ~ spaye(1 ~t. o::-=. =~~~~!: OUet. Call _-6'>-1451. .-I -!
Good location busy shop. ~ • ,· Newport Beach S995 new_. ·sac $375 .. Everythiilg guaran~ like 7 DRAWER -~esk~ elisa,~ .. Free to rood h o m-e . &ell $350/caah ofter 1969 YAllfAHA 125 ! '
Male pref. 673-5342 NB. _ AbsoluteJy like new! Also new_._s.te.lla;llted _to s~citlc $45. New 8 _tableclo~' U , 484-7096 . um _675-7579 · Street B~. ·Like : I
HIGHSCHOOL or .College Restaurant "t~t~~ !~e~·s1:: ~Coe~: 'valgut I~n-prov -bl.dfet. atclclc: -so hurry!· NO-money nap~, white '1D &e:t. MACE, sreY &: * b~' atrlpid , . N~. $425: Sf&..2674 : t
Boy, ·tor Wkly Maintena.nce. Cost $595, sac. $DI. 642-0006 do)W OAC,: 5 years lo.-pay. 6n.:9141 -· ' short ha1r 'kl~D. •,go wks. 21 !'AClFIC -Re~table ~ l I !~J! :~::~,~~.; tu~:~/s . ;~11emura~r"'0r~ i.;~'2. ~t1~ ,!~ .. ~;~ff= ';;~.£! :00 !!~~-• ~: ~!,~;· "':" .. !:::.'-· ·~j ' ~~er. per . App"· In person WAITlt!:SSES wanted. Eve Iartest. ~~t -UOUJual . un. r-n W-.-• l'flte .,,,,,,. ·1--·-·-..... okl._ blk, 1 male, i fe~e. sails head :l~Outhoards .1-' -I Y • flniJhed tutruture store Cor VI"" ""•c•;, '"""' '""'or V'U"'ftM 6f6.:.231I L • , 11:/21 . • , , ....,. . e e HOUSEKEEPER: ~ • -. j: graveyud. Ar.' in Redhill 11:· Santa Ana -~· &: Sunday Aftemoon. ' **...,..ff' ' -1
, . 4• extras. Dfh'r. 548-3l65 BEAOI
Apply ;n penon only,'Hun-Reu~ •• ·f."leo person Odie's .II<' -~ Tuafih: I mlSo. ol N•wpOrt •. PRE""''DAY SAlE FAMILY -. • p In~!.:.:.:="'~~ u· FllERf;LAS L·l:6-A s . I ' ti~ Beacll Convalescent 151 E. Coast H'fll1., N.B. r400 w_ Coast H~')'. N.B. Fwy. Open 362 days per )'l'. . _ -:nvu 1rv1ne ,,Cod( C'.oUiftry Oub ~ -~OOD 1962 $2500. Henry 64,;.0222 uto upp Y·. i,
HospiW. 18792 Delaware, RESTAURANT All upeeta 'l=as-Cb~~: 544-5470 PJANOS.& ORGANS tor sale. Pvt._pt;y.~ ~Place CM -11/2'1 CAL 20 # 1112 -
Hunt. Bcb: of restaurant work for a --RIVIERA so~ bed, good Some . of the mcist· ~ CARPET· rnltl£f·.bU one -" ' s ' OWNER -* ~noo WholeseJe i
HOUSEKEEPER -Mature IJWingip& new 'Piahi.club. 333 J:l~wport Blvd., N.B, cond. $40-~ige so.I a , ,modeh: includina:: ·Hammond roll. avocado nylon ~t. , FJt.ATOR. -~ rl!:r . · Price. to All •• 1
womal). ~-~ 1'."'TV. Bays1c'ie Df .. 'Newti<rt Far' WIG STYLIST -tweed. good ; cond. r $46, X'l?', H-100, £..100, B-3. T-200 double jute-badmcL ,,WiB aell ~ $«l64 • Poww CrvlNrs 9020 O>ml)iete Machine SbciD 'J
Ute ~Worlt. no chlldttn. West ~lees ~_Apply In pi!J'l!On 6'2-4.514 _etc. ~-3 ..».AY . ~ all or part ,13/yard~ .5:46"'~ -~· "frlsQ ft~ ..PJl;PPY_ all -, . . 1SPEED EQ~ -I ,
Spanish speaking ok. $1.00 RESERVATIONS CLERk Personnel Ollke Bf\.'.\NO pew ~-Prov. 5 ~ \Tl:GAS HOLIDAY"with pur-Ni'W ~ hiili0mal1e em-~ ,.644-0.178 . ~~ Stll!V l'f% Fiberglaas REBUILT ENGINES • l
pet' mo. 568-6$4 _ nJLL & PART..--mtE. Jr~~k;nRZ!!t.~ ~ -bedrm~ &et to\-.· sale. Cost ct-•11 ! . ·.... -.. brold. sheep vem... Jtht PITS ..... U~OC:K EL co'ld s~ ;a~ 1125 V1etorla CM stl-«611 -
HOUSEKEEPER k child 9AM-5PM-S2 HR. Reply $9CXKI, will sacri f ice. ,·~-~9-W~•-. ~1.· vests. ~l d,•,~:fl • l • kr. ~ . '\ • ...,,.,ee--•si'v•HB· 0 ,;,;;.,,.,.
care, 5% da. wk, $50 wk. + Box 516M, Daily Pilot. i Equal opportunity employer 642-9112 1!1 o:M.DNA"e\'::t.k.AR.. jewelry. fMi..tlD93 "WI P9tl Gener1I llOO -~ oP'EN 7 'DAYS.,.~...,_.. ~~ boanl. Pd. vac. f.eeBitty Bruce at ~~~~~ p~ti::~ 8~A.s:;'c~qu~& ~P~c;;;" ~~G::1° sg~~ :r:i: = ~· <-~~·Nu? .. I Marll!IJl ·lf1Ulp. 9035
YOUNG.:P.lan -p/time \\"Ork, m l 67~_7357, after 6 PM. Matebin11: Io v e seat $~. NEW It USED , 1 ~~~-:nower. sm.... ele;c ap.: ! ~ CW. 8Pecialt: .at 6 C)ol di8.1eng.3 to1 redlk.'-
my home, boats, yard & • (lJ 776-0592 • Yamaha Pianos & Orga.na ~ I: misc. ~14M . ~ "18 TIJOl1"1~ _J:ISH tlon unit. Fresh water. !!!,!!•r. Trawl N25
etc. $2 per hr. Reply Bo:< f..1.1 · XeC School ... lnttrvcfion 7600 OOUBLE bed $20, 2 couchei e TJ:iomu Grians _ Slate bed 'POOL TABLES. 9080 Ed~ (at Magnolia) cooled. Brand new, still ln 69-ll' x 2S', Was $5000. Cut ·•
515M, Daily ?ilot Agency for Career Girls $35 1 ,Ii. $10, ... BBQ iio. • ~ball Pianos r :r.ttg's Close-Outs. All ac-F.V. 't * . 842-4530 crate .. ractory. COIL ~~ to Sl995. One block frvm
KOSTESS • -410 w:Coaft H")'., N.B... 1 ' . ~Wlrllbcr'·•jukebox $1'50. e Kohler .Ir: Campbell ceuor1es lQcL.-~ tidan-·. · J • 1 after4 PM. ·"' &hopp1na. 1640 Newport NO'..
Dinner. House, Eves._ lolature By ap~t . 646-3939 I f 549".258s '. -· COAST "'U$1C ' c1rc ·-.av..i1. ~'142 ~ .; C.h • . 1121 10 HP~Johlwon OU~-• n CM ,,_ , NEWPORT & HAlU!Ok • · hn ' •• -'--·" · · · · • woman. Exp desiralJlt', not MA~~v9x. ~ a:d ~nd ' Cotta Neaa * ~ ~ ean>et la)'ft'.Jwi 1m Lo SEAL Polnt Siaml!Se Kitten, .,nee ove,-,wwi. 15' TRAILER, sleeps S. GOOa
nee. ~~! MORCONiroRT an;, -$130. Elec blankf:t. Dbl bed Open lQ.6 Fri lo.t s:iia -u.5 ri)'lmi '$1.99 yd: Sbl;I Be au t I t uJ.. Ideal tor. 675-aJ3i: Contl $300 or T. 0. P.1ol $3il
Apply In person \Ve are looking fur presently -never u.;d $13. Pole lite $5. St'll th B t y 1.11 '...:_, ~\$3,50 'UP,+ my 'la.Dor, Ch rt• t ma•. '$20. c:au Bilt Slip ~rf 9036 a mo. 963-«i63. 'REfT~~~NT , worldni: women with aa1n ....._ 536-1671 evf•• , • es .~u."'11 , 90c •pe11 yal'd...J47.J.519 5fG...0862 .. -. "I .
um Palisades force. No lranchia fee. \\1\j ;Hji; 4 PC. ·bdt. set, solid mapl~ F= :;:i~h~~~~~ FJRL)VOOD -~-'~· Dry }IQ.AT SLIP for mt: TrUdc. 9500
Unlimited potential. For job ~l 1l :i l~~\;;1 : 1 $175. or ~·ofter. Call """OtherexceptlonalvalUeS·lll:-~ Deli~ A: !'!Ofl .. 1125 $50-amonlh •6'Chev.Van
Santa.Ana ' or fittina: call Mrs..Conwa.y,' ~7083 -, • \Vur11tzer -~Knabe i stM:k!d. ~ . Call-675o-4433
INSURANCE -Commercial 968-Ql9 aft 6 & ~-or . , e Everett • Cable ·NeJiQn quauty·~;'6f!l-qui1ted~1 CHR.ISi'MAS JSNJ=;AR ! 108 in. VB, automatic traN. •
F1,.. a.too~. exp'•· Sal. write s.x 486. Hnl& Bc11, Dlllco ~··~"~'" ao.10 GOU' D MUSIC """"'·~-$!lltl,·wi>rlh "c ... ~~ ~' '~';i ~Ch'-.!~ ' # R37. $1711 "
&!")' open. Empire Insurance Cal. ~ ,_ . · ~ , _ , , $250. Mt, 5 lr•.wknds 842-6536 WW love 1or· . y 0 u , 11 J _ 9039
Co., lf412,~-:Broad_w~. san-SAl:.ES: ~ week in wlg &!" 'x34" o~ "office desk It. 21)15 N, Malil, SA,, .'5'17-0ifl For' Sale, . I }F.tft~. Christmb. cro . Fletcher Jones
ta Ana 5l7.tooa fashion field. Need S C~M~~~ ~~~i:!~l-swivel chair $65. HAMMOND -Stelb.way. Ya-<>ranae.& EucaJtPtul top Urit&.: .. PP1d & shots, • ~:.\.:.A~~TE~1• Chevrolet . -u~~~~~-p~n~~~ ?.UNG IS THE KEY TO 548-36ll -~ ~ ·~ed~ 8SM670.· f , M~TIN~ ~ lleeps 4. head" (alley, $50 Toll Free 139-JnJ / Janitors _,&_ .Cpls -Rohlnaon 842-4449 YOUR PROYITABLE Office Jqufpment I011 So~ caw. rilbl here . OVAL ·Bra\ded•rUa 12xl5' $50 * '* * • da.Y.-,$100 tor.full-weekend-6.1.13 Westminster Ave. _., I
Pt·llmo ...... aeon o!llces FUTURE! . . iicHMIDt MUSIC co. (includa ,$20 '"" cloanlnl> DARLING 1i'll' ... poodloL • 20' Balboa Day Sailer 12> LONG BED
N""'°" a C,M, Apply 123 Sal" . ESCROW O···-start ·-··. 1'.'{PEWRITER.. . Ad~ I n~ 1lit17 N. M·'-• Must sell. ~ ,itor 3 AKC. ~to. ~t & 1 day ,+ launcll lee, Insur-1910 G M c ""'·-~.h.: -I N. Olive. Orpee,~ Ptp. , ....,_,., .....,..... machine. c&Jculator, vefy Santa : NAUGAHYDE" Rlvien. .aofa champal:ne. '\Vill bok! ~r &nee avail Days 60-6'9C, · ~r.' ~ ~ QFFICEI ri~t ~=e~a:!l~a~ reasonable. ~ Xlnt c,o n d . PRIVATE PARTY WANTS fl'O_' 'stenotype _mac b t,n e • quilltn.ai;.. $:JJ. • u. p . evil/lli·1tn4s 64S-al62 $26'5 -1'
IXGAL ~tary. Exper Outstaritli11J o~l!Y for lties avallabl~! Real-time ~2.m ' TO BUY PIANO FOR tr\pod, book.I, $50. 91)2;.2630 846-3t05 UNIVERSITY
ttq. Full or· p/time.. Good ex;p'd. sates, esCrow ~r computer programming, ~~r'qe S.le · I022 CASH. -5t2--60t5 BABY crib $7.50. 1.0vety. Un-BA:~. FCir .Christmas! _Mobi .. H~ 92! OLDSMOBILE _-\ ~can -~~a or to wotk ui-oo.r-new~ 'IL~ Atadmty.. .·. -·.. , PIANO tot\ sale -·\VurHtztr ed. dacroD drapes ··i25 1&: AKC. ·~ ~. or .. will . . . , 2850 Harbor mvd.
Viejo, slvinp Ii l:.oM'wttCe. ··~ woRK..:.bench, wood desk, Maple Spinet, $550. usA $l..50. 549-469:1_ . -bolrd tot JOU, 496-:01S9 hfQDIL 1 SALE ! I Costa Mesa
t MAID, exper Pi'!:', APPiy Must be Capable '4-~, .bar stl;J;ol,_ ~.golf clubs, Mth st.. Np. 6~1932 aft 6 SINGER. set\fing:-Machine.: a MIJ:ll~'l'URE .Oa ch s ~ u !fd Now to •Dee. 1st N).$661) ~ ~ Vista Motor Hotel' akl eterOW'& for·eOtlWDUon-of ec ••• , ' ~-\Vroupt Von llCOnce. . p0und potU.~e. $55. new puppiet $35 e~. '65 FORD * T Pick Up, Xln< ' I:
535 S. O>ut, J..aauna Bch ol loam. Xlnt·w-eond. 'JCdr?v-1 ·1' Much ~ •\'.U must .. t Tolovisloo 1205 -condltliin . .,.:.2207 . 81M933 1'.M..l..f' llA.t. cond M "
MALE. ov 11. eves . 6 osil:ibrruilit)i tor 1TOWIJL•· 1H. •. 3034Madl!IOll,CMMG-U28 · u • OAK omce desk. $35. Bicy-AKC BASSET·T PUPS DIRI_, rGlll quick·u.Ie~~crttlce b' ·-·:
}'EMALE, ll-2 days App O>ntact _ RUMMAGE SALE! Lease eoJor T\f Of ~Ck cli! $5': • Tri-<Olor, $45-~. 540-8638 eve
aft "2 PM TASTEE OOWNEY SAVINGS" F\lrnJ do hi 1 · """ -An Adult Pi'iv•f• Oub 1959 FORD ~ truck. 6 --' ~rr-"TC' 29&1 Br1-tol. Ot LOAN ASSOCIATION Unlen hnk S.-re ture, ~ t IJ&, m SC. ~ \Vhite ... OptioTi.to"tiU,y, _......."' TOY poodle puppies. Black "'~ M'I I h O cy1 $325 '.ll
c ~ S3T-49h Seuth T.ww Sat, Nov. 29' <SAM -5PM). Free service. No deposit _ , with AKC papen.. 7_ •"Mica """• 1 • rom t • c•an • .-673-26l4 * , ,
MARINI MECHANIC hlh 4D 350 Thltd St., Laguna Beach A-AcUve TV Rental Co. Misc. Wt!'htd 1610 o1d $75. Main. 60-429t
E,xptrienced T Larae SALESMAN NEEDED ?r-...c.IH., t2'66 (l) 5D-1163. ' IN SMOG FREE '&f CHEVY% Ton P.U. New ·· 1
• cul1omyaci.11~~Boat JAN,llt , -Cellff7-M71 Allflll-llOD 21 .. SILVERTONE~ '~.WANTED " 6 "'.'!;,°'.~J:~~yod, Costa Mesa -.~ ... ~"~ _., WO~ 12$ Baker Costa Salesman for New -AtlanUc 1 '!''" •• ,.,......_., • Richfield Service Station on JOIN 'ftlE FIELD Refrigerators •••• trom $38. Portable $25 Good ulltd fumlture, •PP~-&13-07771.·Call after s pm. • -J. <\J j Meta. GE Portable Color TV, IS45-2'1'i6 an~, antiquee, color TV's, Newpart H..i..., JH"'" · 9S10 '.''.I HarbOr Blvd. al San Dieg'O \VITH A _~! ,_ __ • . ,:!i-KC Afpan Puppiet. . GlllUI ,.. MEDJCAL ___ ofUrr he l p .• Pl'ec!'Way. Full, 'p7Ume, I -'-le/education no b!'.!Til!rl Ukt nu ;,;,; .. : ........ $14.!Zi" CONSOLE 1V, ~cellent re.lrla;'a. stoves. 'vu~• -~colon ···1r· 2 --i
fmWe. Front office In-a:raveyatd Posit. Av a I I . L 1 118 help ......,., _,_11 .... _ Nla:ldai.J-e elec dryer $59.sa condition $35. 1909~federal. dryers, -itc. l pc Or hoUlit~ Call afhlri :'f PM $»-2875 .~ f-20 M--'-' C ) RARE '65 Kaiser jttpa, ' I IUl'9DOt: fllrms. ~..._.. 1 ,,_ 't-.ua.r GE 2 ""--n-1-1-S98 .....__,_ "-" ' , ~f hr service. CaB aG:#Ji ~ ' ' · ~ '""" ..,._,s 4x4. dlnd powered ca.mn. -I
• P')ly. ~. "1-.;--.;t Phone 613-3344 after 6 ~f IM\~T1i:,~ \Vhlrl;;t ~~~'6 ~~~· S50 ._,...,.es.a . wANfEo -_, ·TOY POODLES i , --~to mow tn tod8$1 era. Eve:ii. cn<11 962-8671 ..-:
: --IO A.M. SAWLADY Mtttllll...VApt """''Sehl GE wuhor/dcyor .. ,. $100 c ........ a...,.,. l300 PUtHOUSE " ~ ~ • Tait• Harli>r.BI~. to'lliti. St, MUsr s.u FAsr ... Toyota • i
• MEN CJ) beedld. to w1at C'urtains, Draperif3 It Clftll. A OMSION OF DUNLAP'S ' -· -' .CALL ~ ~. OJJ.EAT'DANE piJPpy AKC DriYe Wnt to 1150 Whittier LC. 1t, many xtru. wi"t :
' manqtr. and order UOOF F'S ANnlONY SOIOOJ.S 1~15 Newport Blvd. CJ.I \VIU.. BUY ) lS, nun proj \vaitied-RoUiOi) 'deik #i. 1909 FED~ C.i\11 , • clean. Make otter 67S-w3 , M,
votlllca--f1;25 per hr to H-Fumlthi"tt Int S. Bl!OOKHUR:.'T 541-7711 • . . =•.!;:ti.inti >:.:..be ;,, Needed be1oro Cbrutmu TRAHSPO!\TATIDN· (7141 642-1351 • I t ::::-::-~~«~ SouthCo••tPl•u ~~~~A 14 CUB. n: Westtnahou11e\VlU. s iareaJ".,,-td e.ral ~ -· I 14Niih&¥ttchtt 9000 llec:~~-r.V•hlclesfSI! .....
fe2...tm e Sale• Manager ror new PHONE FOR APPT. relrjgerator w/botto~ 1nr Et;a:larger . for 35 mm, Radl•I er Bench S.w IVY ' Jim NIW REDUCED ~ OU .
drea shop 1..agulUl Bew::ll., 44k tor Betty 7'16-5800 l145r ~ elec~ ,,,,r 2~ "X'.2JA. '', etc., in foldaway e s-is..:rr;,g e '64 .'19' awe111. ~ retrla. SIU ~ USU Sale. f'tG~ Cam p e ,~
: Men "1 MUil haw previbus ...-I! IdtRC ........ DISE _R $75.~'lrOfittte troner ~ AD cue 2/ma.sldnJ:: eascl1 \Vilt NEED bricks '° lOOO. depth firider, radi4>tele. JT Cooper Center · heed rngrft: sink • * OVDSEAI * ma naaerlal bper:luce. ""' "._ rv gd mnd. Sec. P\1. ·vrtJ tnidt on projector. can on _ ..... ~ · hn ainc:e .urvty_ lmmac. ·~··'Ice~~ 5~
' . bm -... r... -....... '"' 128-Cl.. ~~N.P TRADE -· . '. .. .... ~ Fl'!·~· l}U'll.~. ,.._...,., "';-""' -r"'" -· •1&0-a!I HlluYT¥._ ~~R•SAmL ... u_. eoo.r OolltL ~. "' cau -ru, 174-:!610 '-----s.··• ...._....., ' --···'-"· · llOLDER8 SECURITY GUARDS fumlturo -KENMORE Aulo wuhor. 2 ----= ·FREE TO · YOU pm. ' Wh. llno lo I" ,, ___ ...,. Full Ptice
Newport area. 637-3070 s~, 3 cycle. x!nt cond. $45. P.fAll!lYA Sckor TL-10001 ' lJGI Cbria 0"4 1l'ii;'. AU WE SER.VICE OM $500. Call. MS-Sm aft .
Y-•. ---Alwnlnum --SEClllTARY Quality kmc b<d-qullled. ~or 847~5 w/55mm. F 1.4 ,A talrumar t.OVAB\.1:'9 .""'1!1t '!Id \er-Gius. Twin ~.HP ~L· WlfAT',WE'SEU.! C;--;. . ~ .
&: Kapet:lum ';:rv ~ to$8!0 EPr MUil be mar,· Come*!~ S1l6. wm1h NORGE Auto wuber, ~ l3Smm. F 3.S &: ~· Xlnt r le r. Ft-mal t '\ Love1 , Fly Br1dp.~ 4 Gt.llty. 124 So Harbor suta Ana mpe '520 -~ :. exp · attractivt i. )'OU11t w/sut'. $251. .Aft 5 ,,_ wtam t4:U536 pertont, 2 yrs old. Ira: sile. cond. $225. Call ·-494-8860 -children. '199o Pomona, C.P.f. $8GIXI. Call 7353 -1 Blck ·~ ol &m, SJt.10661' Camper, lncli»ta lee IJtx ~MOLDERS riclenl _,,b11UctUoo to meet EARLY i\n;leric:all aOla $40. m . G46-8612, M.'l4US $ rtln Goods ISOO llouse tn bact of 191!11 ll/27 W GUSSPAR. cp.b ·en1a. MOVING to Northern c.Jlr. A butane stovt, & dnk. •
Pakl hoUdayt A vacallonl. dtgnltu'lts wdL Must have S5x46 map1;! dropleaf table ¥po 9 TO rood home, p/pe:rllan 11', 1561\p. VO. )D. ... trlr lllit50 Paramount mobUe Carpeted. Onr,' 2 yn Oldl""":"'
lllllnY Art-. S 11 b m It ral)ld ikilll & dlctsphnne l!ij, pads $5. 548-8611 Antlt1uet 1110 KITE No. 251 in IOOd con-klttene. ~ pla,ytul &: 6 utru. MU1\ ad'! sq...mi homt. Expanded nv nn, $795. ~ ·
rttl[lmt to: PAMCO, 2820 E. ab111tlet. Appllee.nt pay ree EARL~ Amtt. ChaJr, $25. 3 ANTIQUE t .mlly heirloom dlUon, $650. Pr. Head stan-hYlth)r. YfW t\t)P w/shott. 11' l'lbera:lua boat A trlr, Bdrrn, center kit., awnlnp, NEW • -DUl1 Pheenlx. Ar I z on• Jc* allo a.vailablt. Pc. Dtr.ette l. -$2Q. -Vt>ry "Haviland China. lO ptrftct dard ski•. $41. Boots alzt! a, 5e-4679 ol-• ~1 tlm Jed hp Chryt, Ne 1tU'L pa_Oo. A dolt park 1&'73 Nwpt 1969 Chevy CamJ>(':r, r«io ml ; • 1 ~·
DJID or call (9021 2Gl--02SI Newport Gd. Co:.cl. ~7.ftl.. place .eutnrs + '"'O 1tltlna:1 Sl5. &Th-3348 LOV ~ Gray 1 tr I pt d Seats 4. Sls&;i. 538--053:l. DJvd. 6f6..e&U ~-545-8.116 aft 4. •
MOTF.L MAID Per'IOftf'lel A.fency 8 Jo"'T'. SOf A, LIKE NE\V. J1t quail~ .. Over 90 pcs. lm· \VINCliESTER :ti 30, levtr miltt e.liibJ at. I 8lOf.. old; '611 -4 SPEED, low mlltqt. 8'x35' Beaut. Corxt ?jtat tell. 8' Cabovtr-SheU ":.i:"_~ ._~:DwerDr.:~__2'4l !:.~ ><rl -:°1~~-$.lllcish.~ jfs."'~·~ .. ?~~~ £=·=5.=: ~IP.J-_KIH112 .« ~.~~fM~. ~~~I _ .\~
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TRANS PoRfit1Qii, -TRAN~POR!ATi(!N ; .• ,,.cAlilSPOR:f~TION -. -T114fl~.RT~Tll)lj .; ,TllAll$~1ffA'tlQ!!;.; ,T\W"POR.TATIOlil ,' .TRANSPORTATION f RlNSPOliTATl6fl ~•uni... ;--1s25 1". __ ,-d • ~-· · -l ~mpprtO.I ·A-~ Ant1'juol.'c1~ MU A:W., t o.llM · :9910 u,.. c~ ~!':l\ ".'.• 111111 c...-· 9900 uc..rc.ro ,,, ,.~ ... --"-~'-·-m-or t fltU,_ • .,-. 1 -~ --, --,_ ---
'6' Ma"" lype Jl\jDe , i>ulgy lo °'._, -_____ ...,. • YOLKSWA.GEN · : .. ,17 ·..,,R&AN +'4 · ---,. CHIVIOLIT '·CHEVROLET.. ·CHRYSLER
DAICV "1.llT J7 1 ~ TRA!'SP~TA'tlOH ' ~
u.d , ... ,_ -,.
CONTINENTAL xlnt ~ril,m&?t 'VldeovaJ.a. 1 "'MG '• ,~ 1 .fi'··rr":. ......_"'_ i:x..' Ll!ASl·JllNt · -
air llftaJ radio, 1500 'ena· ' • ' • YW ml!A. ew :>Pt 1tf•-~· " · ''6C..elr~•! 1 -1966 CONTINENTAL $15Slor beatotrer.eull-:" · MQ .. . . .~ · cell@otf;oodft l'on,$1!!00. ORl>l•Y.OU.R .1.1 ,1,l ··'GSCJfEV NOVA '63'(hryiler
543-1626 ' _ -s.1'1, ~P.'fts -1 • ;642-112' .,..,, Pll. .. ·' "" 1'11'_TI!DAY ·-.U., hlot.r. #'1'9 llpon Coupo , SEDAN
ouN.E · 8uaY Buildtts! 63 Inliied!ate oeu.'efy, .. FROM ~ MOpEL T FcrdlCciQpe' f0ft 1!~RLIEST ~ -, . VS, A, PS,· PB; Sharpest 111. ~EW YORKF.R:'Full i>OW.er, ~bJl~·~~l ~
VW-l"i·V:Wtrano ! AllMod ...... , .. ·--$399 .a.in-_--.! -DliLIURY ' Fleiclitr..,a •• • 11e .~eliA10Wn.>')Jc ~ ~-fPI~·:·,.·, =======01·;1 •
w!U-Alphle .. u..~i""• • ...... , , ........... ·1 rsoo._ BmAI!,-.,......,,.,.,,..._ Ford -,· "Cllnrslit -m .su.t • '"'.". $41t -CORY.All "
oeiAI> tar .,,.,.. l2'lS' .or -. -., • " 'l<>dmnl, ~· 925'-m4,_ ••thod>ld ......., .,.. .... _ · T·" ' • ~ • ·p•-L--< 1..:
mm ott.r. s>;:8898 < MO <;OOO·JEL"CTION · , Gel Our Oommpetltlffi \4 Ralet ' "'' ''°" at-pn ·' ' • ....,...,. .... nes · · ' ~ •··t w ~ 9700 · g,m w-•-·r A""i Q ~' · · 1959 vw ou~ BU.a:Y ~-• . . • ~ · ti:"' • ·~·-, ' · 1. ,,.,, .. ,., •• • ...... ..,......_ '· : ~" • ~ • Che.vrolel, :·
>l32-D P)&Oentla, C.M . ft · ' ivE'PAY " , : ' • 'ROllNS FORD _S1Cllov.M<i;W..,_ To11 P.-U9-3n3
6'2-7'781 . 311!9 w, ~~Wiy ;N~-· ~~ ~ . ~. . "CASH ' -2090,Huta Blvd.. ~ ~~·t~r~=.-=:= ' ... .._ 6333 Weatrninalw.'Ave.
DUNE BUGGY, IOOd "'bbo'-642-11<115 "6;1164 I ' Colla -:6G-Olllo ~ tran1, -"ate.ring e'" • .... ·--------exctll!:nt rondlOoo. ~· . i Authorlzed MG O!:aler -,,_~' .... -· ·' . pov.ter brak@s,.auto trani'. '. CONTINENTAL
· 642-1788 'S& ~tG ROADSTER, -iT 1500 ' ' , . • J -\ ' LE.ASE AMY ·MAK& Must Ree lo appr@elate. R!:a· • , l====""'===I 0:imp. reblt eng, "Tear end, for med can ll nr:a just Qlt• MODIL · IObabl,)I pric!:d at $CiO Ms.3031 Ext. Fi6" or 6'l '66 Fin!: ConU~ntal 2 door SAVE 1.$350. 63 · Corwtte
•mpon.d A•Jfot"; .. 9600 n!:W.brak!:s, du~h;etc: Lo . ,call UI for fre.~fttlmate. t.e'1 our' iea. aperta abow Can 841·7187· ' 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 'hardtop. Full&: completely Roadster, 32'7 4 spd, 'tuel fn.
-"-------1 mil. Call days Sfl ..3884· pm &ROJH the best plan Jor ,6 M'Es' · luxury equipped Including jectlon, extra sharp,~! AUSTIN AMERICA: & wkends 642-Sl39 uk for. "5 1$.3031 Ext.66 or 67 -: • , ~raoMlnefdswlthoUt:it'.. 7 lmpAle ·.~' , COSTA A -.to.ctory air, full l!:ather, $1550. Da,y 642-1143 ,
' -. ~ ·Mr. J. Jones. ' : u:ro HARBOR BLVD. Mt tor &le9 .l§•nqer . p.dOn. ' • ... : Cpe. V8, automatic trans., 6$.lm,.l' Coupe built In tape 4eek, beautiful eves/wkn<J. 64s.-OlllD AU STIN AMERICA , . "cdSTA MESA lpll {ler.h ,1¥Yd.· ~ UNIYIRSIYY. PQMr at!:e$Tlq air. # 8~;\ RRdlo, beak!r,• a utomatic.' ·Bermuda yellow with con-LIKE new '69 , .Corvette
Sale S< 1 p ia , POJtSC11E , ~W '6:1 Soml-Ounper, Mint • • l'unt~ ~ .. -. ~lDSMOlil:E' ~Fl L. , .<-' power ''"'"""' ycll.,, w/ .t.-..Ung l andau lop. Fu lhoick. A-'~-~~la~~UV~ · · '.. . . Cond..·0n7 12,4'15 ~: FRc' ·; ·\ fAff.· ~-: .-··· , 2S5o ~t,m'{d. etcnwr JOnes black interior. RIN93: Compl!:t!: set ot .new tires. -~ ~1.1 ·~~ &f\, 5.
• All Modti.. '68 TAR.qA • $5400 or 1.18.ke re-blt eng. Sfer/rad10, ·pr!. ~ AY. ,,.'ftl ··Cost&. M!:Sa Chevrolet $1095 Pl)One 5'1S..2900 . $549a. Olt•r. Serloo• inquU·.,, ... pl,: 11•" m~>-8*-1011.. ·w~ .uun · S<i!S&<o • HARBOUR y 111 ll[. Days 5414465. Eves. OfUi:.-e1(2!3) .~ · 1 · · i. J 1 •• • • Toll FrH 1~3~l , •J.I• Imported Autol
551-85&! -• .-·~ '69 VW:2dq ed.robalt blue: fOR -YOUrtAR Used Caro ,.', -~~:,~,__. ... ,, _ .AihHoRJZED _ -~~-~~~-~jiiiiiiimiiiiiiii~~
•,;. 162 PO~·'!.• .Poniclilf }!hrrii ,.whls. '67 ,. ••J .-,1_,-.1·· .·•• • ..-. .. -..-:v._Ma}.ibU. SALESASERVJCE ' • . ~-
3iOOW,C:O.,l•ijwy.,"N.ll. )siw:!~"'.l'lf' .~D:,i1U'~;..,""'~: ~ C~ELL -: ( -·~~K ' ~i~:.~-w~~ ~~~l--B~c.4:35 ·v· o ... __ .. L,V_-, o_, •, ', , ..
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642.911); :.546-17&< · Ga,~ ... Ev ... si><HSll , CHi:::H<OLEl · '65.W~t Cf>'"!· ,..__ botw .. n 10 Ald-2 , · , •
· Aulhoriud MG pea1., : · 'SONl".,M ~'Oii Sal•: -,ooo Y•~• . 2828 H.,W ,m,,.i;.. Radio,.''!"""• .....,_.steer-,PM-: : .. , . .' ~ _-; , · · : '6 <hev •. lmpolo •
.. , ..,,_ ~ Cunv. •s..ooo .n1t Ne!:dll,, 'Costa 'Mie$8. __546.12QO. Ing·& bi"ak!:S,,whtte walls. 65·lf"ota·SS. bid 11eatt,·&11to Clle: V8, automatic ~s., m"' lOlllJE() . ' '06 SUNBEAM, AlpJ,,., ,R&H, "'".'• body work._ 615,2001 . 'WiHI ' ..... CU'!'916J -. """'· p/o, r/h, _..m, ~ Power ''"$72ii # R ' -:r;., · ~~: ,, · · ~; '"'~fw, conv. Must sell . ,all 6 . .UllJ .$"5. new tires, ~nt tune.up ,. '&7 ·ALFA ' ." BIO ·BOOk wrud11'15.·RoW• 19!8 VOLKSWAGEN; HARBOUR YW xlnt cond, By ~w ..... 1995. Fletcher Jones
. ' . • .: $1~.Y:ourprlce $1000.Caµ ·Oubim1'ro~.wood steerin,g r:urV,0 01::::, .... -• • ~~days; 6!3 -4566 Chevrolet
ROM En' _613-=""="'='=6=P'i:¥=· === 1 ....... -1: $'&5!. B'6l •""'· ""l·~ ••• ~ I. AIJTllOlil,ZED _,, ' -Toll ,_ ·-•n3 -. .Y'tS·lO ,""" .. ~ orna .....u: ....... , ·~••,,.._.LSERVICE 64Chev u----~---...,;. • . "¥ . · ""'~ 6'J3.0!ICX) • ' ~ a ' ~ 6333 Westmlnrt Av!: ·· . 10YOTA '67 VW 11,00D pit; xlnt con,f · • 18Tlt "BEACH BL.-;8424435 VI, au1omatic ~. po~r tr ·
4 Door Sedan,.'.dfr.~lminacu· ····-1~'t.pWV ,~·Priced WE PAY TO.P HVl"(rIN$N sciCH ~I· # Pl52. · Repo11e11ion Bar9lins
lat!:. Will take older car In JQYOJA . to ·.ell. &12-1049,0ll 642-7374~ . ··:.. ,DQLf.~ ·~ , .65 Rlv. cllS.lom' Glli'.n Sport. $1711 '64 Cllev Imp hit Coupe :gl81
trade. ·ffl\Z868LB. Call Keil .68 D~ ·~ 8._~, .. 000 •.• '°~ jooc], clean used cars. All _, ... ~ . Fletcher •--'63 O.@v ll tJova '647 '
4%9773 or ~· .; __..."!..., -· .w, mi., f.&IJ' l'hakes. See Gfora-e Ra)' • J>~__...,.. .:. all', many , · . ~ Can 1may 6e taken Ov!:r on SPECTACUl::Alt Like new: .Under, warranty . 'lbeodor. Robins f'ord xtru. -·~u top., new . Chevrolet lltUe or no down payment
YEAR END SALE . ~-64:-157~.:. ~ . . 2000 Hal'b!r 81\rd. · Miche:lir,i · Utts .• $ 2100 . ,Toll 'F ... 1337J·3 ' on approy~ credit. Call'Mr.·
All MODE;LS i969 ·--vw Square!ifi.ck. COco C.M: . r • ~10 496-3339, ~ ~ Westm1nster Ave. Everett ·M'r·9266. Halt Fin.
YOUR BEST-DEALS ~ls, AM-FM. _12300,. • ~ "111.n>riafi \\'ANTED * '64 SKYLARK ~ 2 Dr .-. ·...._""'4,~lh: • · ' anco ·Co.; 15(1).F N. Tust'hi
ARE STIIJ.. AT • 837-8615 ·. ~ CoJfnfieii Hdtp,: iOod. h . 54,ocxi u• ":nc.yc.LU:; ii.:5 396, 350 Ave.; Santa Ana:·
Roadster -DEAN LEWIS .. : . -~-wr . . TOP i$ BUYER , . mll!:ii,'i75o. Call 962--8331 ~rycl·;:~, 4 t:..~o i~~ EL Camino 'Qj. 421, 4 .spd.
Radio , h!:aler, n$d~ to go. . . . : JN ~'C p:>N~ITIOl't , BD.J.. MAXEY TOYqT·i' '59 llu,kli: l_n+icta. White, 4 oul OM oV:.nr, itM1ft see to map, AJ';f.FM, e x Ir a s .
#, 8406. . ·. .. . ~µies Harbor, C.hf. &&9303 1t1UST ~ GT:>-0615 11811 Beacb. Blvd. ·, dt. Pow@r tih.kes &: steer-appr'te. $2300 ufrn.~ 675-126;1.. m..ans
' $1999 ILL' --~ ,--"'3 VW <l,OOO mil .. only lSOO II. Bud>. _PIL 1111-""·Ill!'--· .1i6J IMPA~A ci>NvT. , . -·-B ~ l\fA"'lE¥ Eng. $650. N•w paint WAl1TE!l:,.~ CADllJ,.\C, FOR,~'69,l!Wd< Sl<yiark. Air, p/~ p/w, etc. russ. CHRYSLER
4 · · 67>2916 .. lrolfl::~r:lvat!: part;y ·S-U .aft. CHEAP, at~. vmyl top. ~JJ;owner.~ aft i PM .. ITIOIYIOITIAI '64 VIV, VERY CLEA<~. oni c6 \>.m, 546-8157 , Call 6'1>-3058 ' ' 1M7 Chrysler' ft · ~ · 'rib . owner, low miles. Best oU-WAt(l'i,Q: ;;-196!t CADILLAC. , I '66 CAPRICE. 2&,CXXI ~Ues . • N•w Yorker • ~~ ' o llUI BEACH .81-VD. er. 496-5217 froUi p~lv~e.'W(y ~I a ll . CA.~LLAC ~its Call btwn B.30-5, Custo1n 4 Dr Sedan, air con. ~ Hunt. ~ch 1;47-1555.-. ''64 .:vw CAMPER.. ·Full~ g lt"2~1 . ,. ~ • ~. dltionlna, automs.tJc trans.
3 ... 1 N' t H ,Bc,L Bank D.,...NHin '61 .Chevy Impala CobV miasiOn. power st!:er1113 &: ~ ·· . ..., ·1· 0 Cout wy,.on . • equjp"i:i, canpJll', ~ 1'~.:.Z 91 O ~~a $295 Good Transparta&'n · brakts, radio, heal~r. lilt &
TOYOTA 1961,' R&:H, Good ! $1250 * * S48-01U ~uti,iJ,....."f (i I • ' . • . , ·Call ~. · · , t!:lesooplc >wheel, sp!:ed &:
Ure1. Xlnt cond. ;n~. . '6' W . fii(ho,= new tfres: ··~·~ .... ~.SE' ~ 1968 'cl..d C ~ ~u&~m. Siafu'ICE •60 _lmp'a l a cnU.5!: control. N@w '}lttlTI·
549-3Q31 Ext; 66 or 87 -· Call • 644·14!i6 rilce: $.Y)S. • :. . • • • Ul~~ . .· · • Full power A: a)r condttioD-CoriVirt Fini nann!i'c cOOd' tum tires. Ablolut!:b'' like
1970 HARBO~ BLVD I <194-4925 I J97ll1 l\J11.~ . Tonno GT'. air il1g.' AM-FM l~re0: Tike ov. $100 6'13.376.1 . ntw. •. . : . , y· OL"SW·A·G-·E-N. . -: ;J"'N -poY.-er brakes &: steenn1. ·er paym@nta or we wiu re. . . $1199 COSTA ESA ,I\ . 1964 VOLKSWA u ~ radlo,-;-wide oval~wsw; J?l, finance OAC. Call 642J W'l96l 'Nova Wqcin, .Auto
The \Vorlds-Best S2CXX> car :65 KG H d ts .. t Squareback. xlnt co nd . 4 V '1\g41!· $99.50 ' 24 'mos: . ext 241 or 2.11 trans R&H. n!:W tires iood GOOD SELECTION
-. ; . ; ea e , .new ~in , SlOOO. Call 962·2596 SOUJ;'H 'COAST · · cond. Barg\lh $250. ¥.fl-1257
. ~~ •. °"'''" 11""· -voi.v:O .,, ' CAR 'LEASING CAD." ~~~E-'67, (51 1968 CHEVY lmpal.;,
•.u.&:I! ~Yl'JI '65 VW SUNRtiOF . SC ) W. C&l Hwy.. NB.~ZJ82 J..oaded .. Sl!:reo, leather, I01d!:d. Priced Jor quJ.ck
. . 646-1103 ' "'YOtYO' :\ .,·, nu.· '"'""R " 30,000, ml.13595 Firm, Day•~·· 11850. ~ "LeadU.In Th!: Beach Citll!s" · --· · -. .... ·rv 837!3'10. Eves. 494-4390 ~ Impala, 2 dr, 283 el'Ji". ZllilMeRMAN -.;;;.'::am.,t;;;,,:>"JH~ ... -c' ).' E ·RA-NC' E" NOWI . ' K' ' " . '69 sov; Only 3950 ml, New ...... _ lo .n!&'.-•lc, xlnl -·~ ---" fj)UIC eASH Eldorado 1;,. milt gold. "'""·Lo"""'· 645-1852 , 2845 HARBOR:. BLVD. bl:?r Blyd., C.~I. . . ' .. 142 :144-. 145. 164 . . . ren. l!:atber 19s.; ~ ro,; '.Sl a,ev. O/Hauled eng.,
540-6410 . 964 .vw .~ &Cl<. 1500 .S THE LOWEST PRJCES · . 'l.HROUGR .. A lully oqp'd. · ~ 'Ori• N•w tnna. Gd-Oond .. 2 de h
ORANGE COUNT.Y'S .Serie!!. Xlnt co~ • ..call YOUR BEST PEALS ~~·:.. . i ' J , • owner 644--0M!. . . 1 .t. $195. or bst orr: 64&-4385 ~~1 Ext. 66 'or 17
NO I 1142-l,2j2,-' A.'<E snu._ AT · ' ... a.ILY-PILOT ·
DATSUN
'67 . Dcitsuii: iooo
' '
-1970'• HERE NOW
Aft M9r.left-...., P• fmlMllllate Dellwery •
' ' PRICES TOO LOW TO
ADVER'nSE ON ALL
REMAINING '69!1
PRICES TOO LOW TO
ADVERTISE OK ALL
. llE.MAINING '69's
Dean lewis Imports
Or-.. c..ity'1 LM,est .i4"M• w.-.
·-,o,YOTA ; YOLYO DIAUI
1 tU HAllOI 64'-tJIJ ~ Malil
DATSUN DEALER '68VWBUG. ALL~ DEArt ·lEWIS '. 'II~ . . ~ ·~~~ir f~"t~ Tfi'~;.~~~~~D~~· 1970~;~;E~VD. DOT DATSUN EXCELLENT roNDrnON. • -" WANY AD • xb-u. --<1n.I============= '1!!1!!!!!1!!1!!!!!!!_~ ... !J!! __ !!!!!!!!!_!!!!!J!!_!!!!_ !!!'!!!!_ !!!!l!!_!!!w!I.!
18835 J3e&ch.mvd: : • .:. 'CALL -646-0889· . • i9s&'Harbor, C.M, 6t8=9303 .: · : . ·. • · .~ ~ • r • • New Cars "-9100 New 'Cars 9800 New Cart ... , 9~.New. C1rs __ -.-'~ . :~·=· . '
·~1~~: --• z:1MME'RMAN ---. W·E· INVITE -· ALL
~it~~i!~£~J~. ·DA·.-_"T--S-.u·· ·N-· · TH1NKma11 C
SALES • SERY:ICli " ' __ , . : '. .the. · thinM >in11 -'.
'69 MODELS . .. ~ . ''·'r'Jvu.Wllll . ~t"~'i!n"h'11 'NOT A .REVOLUTION putirra6f0ilt-bid.
LUXU·RY·,_-·,(AR OWNERS .. .· --· .... .
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Ro:NS'0F°0Ri> BUT A EVOLUTION. -. " 2060 Harbor mva. . .
Costa M!:sa 64i0010 · 1 · l""~~~~~~I Al -steel bed 6' x 4'8'" with en eesy----·-FERRARi ., . loading teil'gete. Perfect f,or pecking
' AND TH;os_E-WHO' WOULD LIKE TO BE ..
T-0 A ·10 .. MILE TES't .b~IVE IN T H E S E OUTSTANDING
19~0 Ll~Olf:I C~NllNENl ;ALS. BE~IEVE US ••• NOTHING
El.SE -~~~PAllES. WE JCNOW _IT, 4,.D., -rou Wli.L .TOO ,
FERRARI . . bikes, surfboer_c(s, or rugcj~~ w~rk loads
Newport tm-.u.i. °" up lo e half ton . R-oomy,.v1nyl-l1ne.d .cab,
:':.' 4':.~'• ~ ~ --slick 4-speed. White'tJlls, ·fest-acting· -
~-;:,rn~Cf~W.S ' h'eoter / defroster._ Proven · reliability.
042-,..f;;.,......, ~~,,:17114 De~su_!!'• theJ~lo._ I Selling lmpo_r:t l ~u·ck! . . · '
Aulhoriud F_errari ~l\cr f"'o. ,.......,. ___ _......, ______ _,,.... ___ .... .....,._ ____ "'"t
FIAT ... .
'68 Fiat 850 Spider,
Xlnt cond. Mwit sell.
$13f.i. 494.5957
JAGUAR
63 MKT X 4 dr. Auto. F:P.
Low ml, air, new,tire5,
brkl, si~reo, AM·Fr.1 •. f..1t.
~· 121JJO. 642-ISl4 '
:We Ha v11 :The Finest Stock.,of • '. • .. ,,
t-J · , ·.NEW DATSUNS
2000 '•': 's' S~eeds ._.1.600 'CC 4 S:~eld:Pick' lJps & 16!>0 Roa~•te~ •. '
2-Door Sedans • 4 Speeds t 4 Door.Sedans -4 Speeds or 3 Spee~ Au-
. to'matic e ·4 Door Stotio,n Wagons : ·4 ~jieeil 'or ~ufom~_t\c. .1.~ ·::; ..
Av11ilitble,' ~~,._-Delivery . JV,(jui!.,
'· ' ·.
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K41MANN GHl~-
1'-65 Kiirmi rii1 Ghl•
2-<loor .C.Oupe: Xliit ea,xl. ,
rmrf.aculate µi&lde and·.out!
ar;.owoer. See at~~ wa~, c .M. . _,.., George Zimmerm~n an.CJ. hi~_staff offer on j; of. ;h~ ,;,,o".t11J1.od-
MPCEDES Is.-. " , ; . . . " . , .. .. . _ , °' . • . I-+--..,.-~. -t rn of sporl ·--car-fac1//t1~s., T-he Se{VICO iJ~pf .. ~ftec1ng the finest of ser-, . . "'' . .. . ~ .. ,. .. ,._ \~ ~
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ER Must· $aCrlflce -
MG Auitln America
tni,_., -RAH, --Xln'I
$1SOO/oft<r. 675-6912,
, vjce for a/f, '!Jij'es of · SpQrf CQrS. ' ,,. ·-,-:·., -~' . . ;' ' ,.
e. HONE.lY _ ~ , t~J~'RITt-~~ Fili -DEALING_ Al i · .
GEORGE '. ·z.1·MM~~MAN ·
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' ·;_DA .TSU N ..
.. . . ' ' . s.ie., ... d Sere1ce
·-2145 HARBOR ILYD~-COSTA MESA: PHONI 540x6410 ~ ' .. ( • 1 • •
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MARK Ill CONTINENTAL SEDAN
PLEASE ASK FOR • • •
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• • WAYNI 19UID
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\ ' 540-5630
I uu HARBOR IOULIVARD, CQ~TA MISA
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L.
OPEN
THANKSGIVING DA YI!
BRA ND NEW
BltAND NEW
1970 OLDSMOBILE
SPORT COUPE
Fully f•rlorv 9<111ip.ped includi119 h••d ''1t1, •••t lt1lt1,
b•ck up ll9ht1, wind1hi•ld w11h•n, 011t1lde mirror, ~•r·
p1h, 1tc.
• Oii.DEii: TODAY
BRAND NEW
FULi:· ,
rklCE
1970 DELTA 88 2-DOOR 1970 98 4-DOOR SIDAN
Fu!lv i1cforv .-qi.1pp1d induding h11d r11h, 111! b1lh,
l.1ck up ligh•1, wind1hi1ld w11h1r1, ouhid1 minor, Cl•·
455 ~I, •11tom•tic., power •l•••int, pO••r tlieo: br•li-•1
•llCI oiher luitury e"rira1.
1"" ""s29 96 FULL
PRICE
$3896 FULL PRICE
ORDER TODAY ORDER TODAY
WE;RE WHEEL'IN & DEAL'IN ON ALL 1970 MODELS!
OVER 40
I Sl:RVICIE STALLS
TO ltEEP
YOU TRUCK
AT PEAK
EFFICIENCY!
THE GMC's FOR 1970 ARE
COMING IN BY THE
TRUCK LOAD!
' FROM PICKUPS TO HEAVY DUTYS •••
FROM CAMPER UNITS TO FOUR WHEEL
DRIVES • • . WHETHER A SINGLE UNIT
OR A LARGE FLEET •••
WE CAN SERVE YOUR TRUCK NEEDS BEST!
NEW 1970 G.M.C. 1/2 ·TON
WI DESI DE
G78XI S fib•rgla•s belted tires, backup li9ht5, header, amet·
9ency blinkers, duel mirrors, 2 speed electric wipers, spare
lire. ORDER TODAY.
NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY A . ·--· QUWTY VALUE-RATED IJSED CAR
• '67 OLDSMOBILE DELTA '65 OLDSMOBILE DElTA 88 '68 CHEVROLET CHEYO.LE
(llll'!>'TI I Or, II T, fTXV J«ll ili1,1tam1tlt. •Ir 2 t>r. H.T. INQX t n ) Aufom111c, •Ir cond.. W19Dn .• paHtnllfl', (YWU 510 Avtemllk:.
a>nlf , ""'.,."' ''t" o~. \ llf.H. pgw" ,teerlng, R&H, VI. pow1r tteerlng, VI. rldlo, hffl•r.
'66 OLDSMOBILE CUSTOM '65 OLDSMOBILE CUTLASS '65 CHEVROLET CORYAIR
!111nrtm1! ' Or. !SLW ~lll An 1trtolirtt ' Or. H.T. (lO.C '501 AutameHc, pgwer 11ter· ' Dr. H.1', (RON ~I ""'°""tic: tr1n1mi.
bl1111~ "-~"m1•1t, I t• cont!., P. S,, vinyl IQll, ln;, r.cllo, h•U••· VI. TOO long In O\lr 1tocll. 1lon, rlello, heater,
VI, Rt..H.
~1 745 $1245 $645
'66 OLDSMOBILE DELTA '69 TORONADO '66 FORD FAIRLANE
I D•. r;_11< '!I /11lu'''"'"'· !l(lW(r ·1-1,., (YCL '611 ,..,,_H~ full ~. faclofy 1lr, 500 t Dr. H.T. (Tl'C :IOfl ,..,,_,~-
1~· l ", VI. H~H. 'llnyl tcJ. 11wr1nu. vt. rldlo. hffter.
5 $4245 $1245
50 HARBOR BLVD.
OPEN 7 DAYS A . IEK
.·.
fl • • • ' , .,.. f '
• Wtdnt<d11, N"''!'bf• 26, 1969 PILOr.i.DV£RTISE~ 24 : •
TRANSPORTATION ~N.SPORTATION TRANSPORTATION T~PORTATION ~
ea,. 9900 ,Uaod•Caro '900 UIM Con '900 u..ic.,. -UMd ·c.r.__ 9'00 It
-COUGAR . . FAL«;ON FORD MEICURY l"ONTIAC :~
lt67 COUGAR '83 1FALCON ~e', '66 F,al'COft F.utur1 1963 Mercury Comei S-22; 2 '66·Pontlec Le Mans ~
V-8, ~ steering -'; brakes, , MOtor cornpletalJ, oftrtiauJL. l"ully factocy equipped. Olr. Dr. Bclrt Rall, cotw0le, vs, aulomatic trans., powtr :.~ radio. auto trans, waw, SZL. e4. in Sept New tlrtil.. air, , $695. > auto tran1: A/C. Very clean steerire, b.lcktt seata, ra· ~ l
U4. ttT50. &ts.2182 ndio $500. 830-«i32 , Ph)ne 64U113 1 owner~-833-0111 dio, heater. # '703.A. ::; ..,
------------.,---'67 FORD Galalde, P/S, ""1STANG . . 1 $13A DODGE FORD P/Jl. y.,_ .~. M"" ..u. . Fletther Jones
Going In ,.,.,.,.. 645-0157. '68 MWrANG, ' cyl. Excel. Chevrolet
'64, Polar• 2 ri., H. T. -·,,, ,__Ford R-oncL·ro ~ cond. New tune-up. TQe I ·-3n• ... "" LINCOLN ...,, pymn~ + SSO. ~No. To I FrH ~r • Radio. heater, automatic, V8, automatic trans., power ~ 3 NeWpOl't Blvd., ~ 6333-Weslminattr. Aw.
wlrlte 'nils. air cond., .pow. lteeriq. # Pls2~ 1 ·,-62--L-I NCOLN '67 Mus~. 3 spd. stick '68 Catalina. 4 dr hardtop,
er steering & brakes. (ON){. $17U shift, lime gold; Xln't cond. xlnt cond, 4 ntw tires. tup ,,
8B'l), .... 5 Fletcher JQnes $14!1; 642-4118 • pwr, ~ $2295. Call or"" al
..., CL... Continental, 'full P"\'r , dlr, ""'------:-:--Earl Williams Texaco Sta., • HARBOUR Y.W. Toll ;;_~"3 ~J s~1 ;".;;, i.o.;:.•>;~t _O_L_D_S_M_O_ll_Ll __
1
:'..: superior, c .M. ~s·
AllTIIORIZED 6333 W-ler Av.. 494-9713 "' ,..._ '66 Olds "88" LEAVING AREA ' :I
SALES & SERVlCE '66 COUNTRY . SQUIRE 10 ------Dynamic Convertible. PO'W· MUST ,SELL -1968 Bonne-! :
l87U BEACH BL., M2M35 pass auto, fact air, pis, MERCURY er steering & brakes, fac· ville, fully equip. Make off· "
HUNTINGTON BEACll p/b, Jag rack, 352 erw, etc. tory air, radio, beater, Lo-er. Xln't. terms. Ca 11 • 1· ~
'66 Dodgt Coronet 500 Lo mJg. MUst see! 673-3743 --,64-Mo-rc-u-ry--cal I owner beauty. Uc. 644-1381. •'
Radio, heater, VS, ;iutomatlc -,64 Ford 4 dr hardtop. Wagon. V8, power steering, TRK·228. 1969 FIREBlRD Pontiac. ...:
trans., power steering. # white w/ttd interior. automatic trans., radi o, ~ 15,000 actual milea1e !
182.A. $S50. Call 54!}.-1973. heater. # 126. Llpsttck otana:e w/ white .ot
$9U $988 " ~ ~ top. $29i0. -· .. :· fletcher Jones BUSIEST marlrelplaoe In fletcher Jones ...... Jl>an owner. 516-651~ . -'
Chevrolet :;:;1.!.'" =.". ~~ Chevrolet "1~o,(11i5 ·~m.·'·;;·_1:.~·.f:, i ~;::i.\ Toll Froo ~3 "'°""'' -~ el!ort. Look Toll FrH 139-3773 • ~ -~ ~~ ~ now!ll p 1 • 6333 Westminster Ave. 6333 Westminster Ave. r. • '•:.i
PONTIAC '68 GTO. Ram-air li:t
eng, auto, P/s, di.sc brim, ~"'\. lmportod Autos· '6001mportod Autos 96001mported Autos 9600 rtJS-3031 Ext. 66 or ti7
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
B·RAND COSTA MEM
'67 Olds 442
2 Dr H.T. Radio, htr., a.it
cood., pwr. st.!Cfing l-brak-
es, landau top, XGV420.
landau. 673-1842 aft 6 pm. ~.._
1960 PONTI.AC Bonneville, .;:;:
dr sedan, p/s, p/b, auto ~!:
tms, r&h $250. ~ .~::
'67 LE MANS ale p/s, viny ~
top, whiN: wheels. $100 · -s~
$17'5
HARBOUR Y.W. N;EW blue-book, &Th-2916 .:-;.~
PONTIAC GTO 1961,:::
PS/PB. air, console. Xln -0,:•
lhruout. Pvt ~ty. 540-0182 :li! A\.TI'HORIZED .. _..
BUG·s 1s;:i~fZ~35 RAMILER ~1
'69 OLDS cuuau station '65 RAMBLER ~; . =~· Fre~~;:i-.app~·~r~ Ambassador 990, air, dh'; ~~
'
steer. & brakes; sea green. loaded. one owner. Will ~: I· 970 S $3250. 644-07l.f. take older Mr in trade,: •
1966 Oldl F~ delx sed. New PDW138LB. Ca 11 !(en, .. $1 ON DISPLAY & READY TO 60 ""• •1• r/h. $1lD0-$300 4"-9'713 or 56-0034, : .5::
1 below BB. Pri pty. 846-9268 · •:.: ===·"='==== t-llRD . ~ CHOICE OF COLORS ANO MODELS AT • • • PLYMOUTH -:.5
C'H· ICK IViERSON 1969PlymoulhFueylll2dr. '66 T·llRD ~i · • H.T. V8 automatic power 2 Dr. HT, full pwr, ~Ir, dlr, ,.._:: ..
· · · ' ' pwr seats, brakes, windowl. -~ {, steenng, power. brakes, lac-Bil.le Book $7500 .. SA.CR.I: SJ"
. • tory air conditioning, green FICE $1685 or foreign car • ·• ' • with green vinyl roof and all . · tt1~ Harbor Ar.as Only:\ Authorized vw, Porsche Dealer vinyl interior. Excellent In trade. NPV132. can p~ ~
TWO LOCATIONS TO HIYI YOU condition. Call 831-9682 494-S'nl or st5-0634. t;-1'
445 EAST COAST HWY. ot BAYSIDE DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH
& 1970 HARBOR BLVD,. COSTA MESA
anytime. MWll sell. '57 PORIBOLE T·Bird, xlnt %~
concl. Nu inter. & paint: ~!!
Rcblt engine. Call 838--7&75 ~·
'!">8 2 dr T·Bird, 1 nwner rl PO~TIAC
673-0900 HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS 549°3031 '67 Gran Prix-Sharp!
Loaded! $1995. M&-11£0
~~ 2 DOOR SKYLARK
F1cto..Y Orde r No.
AE71 06
2 DOOR OPEL No. l l 92Jl90-4
n.tr good, needs paint, aea ~
CVl'L Qe&t offer. ~ ~
-_,llGSELECTION OF 1970's. NO BETIER PRICES ANYWHERE
POOLE'S BETTER USED CAR VALUES
WE ARE COMPlETELY SWAMPED WITH TRADE.INS!
CHECK THESE LOW MILEAGE CARS!
Open Mon. thn1 Fri. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. -Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 'p.m. -Sun. I 0 a.m. to 6 p.m.
"Ul;HORIZID Bf,llCK -QPEL -JAGUAR ·SALE~ I. SERVIC!'
• • • • • • • • . • • . • • •
E • ~ • • ' ' ' ~ ' '• ~ !I ~ ? ' i:
" :-·: .,
~: :: :~
• .. ..
• • .
I •
WIN A "SICOND" CAR
FREE!
Register in our Showrooms
Today for Drawings at
12 Noon-2 P.M.-4 P.M.-4 P.M.
O~er 60 New 1969's Now Slashed to Actual Factory In·
voice for Flnal Sell•Off! No Sales Expense, No Service
Charges -You Pay Exactly the Amount on Actual Fae·
tory Invoices. All New 1969 Lincolns, Mercurys, Mon·
tegos, Cougars in Our Stock Ar.e Included . in This Of·
SATURDAY, NOV. 29!
Four Good Transportatlop Cars Will
Be Given To Lucky Winners
ABSOLUTELY FREE !
Anyone 21 Or Older With A Valid
Driver's License Is Eligible To
Register Free, And W ithout Obligation
Of Any Kind!
YOU MUST BE PRESENT TO WIN
••• ONE WINNER PER FAMILY.
AmND ALL Dl\AWINGS !
fer!
. Open -
Thanks· • • g1vtng
TH FABULOUS
1970 MUSCLE CARS
ARE HERE
TEST DRIVE
YOUR FAVORITE
TODAY
Boss 302 Eliminator • C,yclo11e G'f
CJ-428 ERmlnator • Cyclone 429
Marauder X-100
Visit Our Complete High
Performance Sales-Service--
Parts Center!
NIW 1969
MONTlctO MX 2 DR. HD Tr
FULL
PRICE'
VS, Auto. trans., pwr. steer., rad., htr., tinted 9l1ss, Dix.
whl. covers, 775x 14 white walls &: more. 9H 11H6I0002
NEW 1969
COUGAR 2 DR. HD IP
FULL
PRICE $313472
va, 1Uto. trans., pwr. steer & disc brks, clecor qrp, r•d.,
htr., t int 9la1s, turbine whl covers, spec paint stripes
•nd mould in91, E78xl 4; w/w 1nd .mor•. 9F'llH58259l
OVER 5 DOZEN OTHER NEW 69's .NOW PRICED
AT ACTUAL FACTORY INVOICE!
OVERSTOCK CLEARANCE SALE OF TOP NOTCH TRADE-IN CARS!
1969 Mercury Montego 1964 Uncoln Continental 1961 Lincoln Continental 1967 Mercury Cougar H.T.
4 Dr. S•d•n. VI, •utom•tic, r1d io, h••ttr, white w•ll1, f1ctory V.I, fectory ~Ir conditioning, full power, r1dio, htel1r, whit1•1ll Full pow1t, f1clo ry 1lr, le1th1r inl1rior, r1dio, h11t1r, I.Mitt t!Mi V-1, 1utom•tl11, r1dlo, h11ter, powtr 1t11rhlf o whit• w•ll1 , vinyl
w1rr1nty. A b11utiful fire engine rtd, T1k1 • rid1 h1 thl1 one tir••• l lick with blick infi rior. licini• IFB 661 run1 like new. :FXD7l6l lop, 1lr t C11Hfitionin9. 0 111 1wn1r, run• like 111w. F1ctory Wi t•
tod1y. O/S Lie. No. 4571MU rtnly. fVSZ 101 I
51989 5889 ·5489 51989
1964 Oldsmobile Starfire 1964 Buick Skylark 1967 Mercury Pkln. Brougham 1969 Mercury Marquis H.T.
v.a, 1uto. tr1111., f1ctory 1ir cortel itionin9, full powtr, r1d io, v.1, 111!0. tr1n1., f1ctory 1ir cenditioning, pewer 1+.tring, pow· v.1, •ul•. tr11u., f•ctorv •ir ,oncfitioni119, full powor, R/H, w/w, V-1, •ut1. lr•n1., f•c:lory •ir c:onditio11ing, full pow•r, R/H, w/w
ht1!tr, buc ktt 1e1h, whitt inf•rior.'Licen1t IOR 517 er window1, r•cfio, h•1l•r. l it•n•• KIX 741 tlr•1, ... i11yl roof, th1ttd 9/1u, whl c:ovor1. B•lt M•rc: h•1 to off•r. tlr•1, vinyl roof, tint1cf gl111, whl. C:OY•rl, AM.FM Ster ... Ut.
UUV 509 XIH 166
5889 5989 51989· 53489
1963 Cadillac De Ville 1967 Toyota Corona 1968 Ford Torino G.T. Convt. 1969 Lincoln Continental
V-l , •uto. lr•111., f•c:lory •ir coiMlitioning, full power, r1cfio, 4 door 1ocfo11, 1tic:lc 1hiff, r•dio, h•1t1r, Wint e 901 11ver1 Try Y-l ,,i t1lo. t.r•ni., power .te•ring, riclio, ho•l•r, whitewell ,tirel.
heeler, whitew•11 tir••· l u11ury 1111 ih bell. l ic:111n1111 llf 911 thi1 011111. l ic:111n10 VOG 157 Low ,.,;1,11191 -fic:lory w•rri nly, Lic:•n•• WTZ 171
5889 5989 51889
V-1, f1c:tory 1ir c:oncfitioning, full powor, R/H, w/w +;,,,, t111tM
91•11, whl. c:ov1r1. Pric:1cf b•low blue beok -W•rr••tv· U·
c:111n1• XTP 212;
54589
LINCOLN MERCURY
ORANGE COUNTY COUGAR -.MONTEGO HEADQUARTERS
1301 NO. TUSTIN, SANTA ANA
t sED cARs-541.0101 ••we Appre~iate Your Business ~~
OPEN
Mon.· FrL 'Til 10 P.M.
Sat ·Sun. 9 P.M. ·
NEW CARS-547°9183
f ' \
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• • • • • •
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.-,-' --.. -----.,,;;;-iii-..... ,,. ••. .,ro·,.;·;,.;·:.;;-;.;;·~ -·--.. -;.;;-, .. ---------~~;:;; · .. :
---·· ....
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GIO! .
,., ,--.
·aoy TH·lS . G'T/0-~ •••• • • ~, 0·1 1 -NEW\ 1969 '.
' .
Brand new 1970 GTO. 400-4-bbl. V-8, turbo hy·
dramatic, power steering. power· disc brakes,
radio, heah!r, console, fiberglass b e I t e d tires,
etc. 2423700ZIC7970.
We can't pretend that we can offer any mod·
el, color or equipme'!t selection, alt h o u CJ h we
can deliver most models with a wide selection
of options. One thing! We are offering-unbeat•,
.·$]588
:! . •
able deals!
., •:,;D_· 1910 ·GRAND PRIX
The great new 1970 Grand Prix • • • A true luxul"f car·
for di1crimin41ting buyers -. ~ • _;Ri!~io/llee~er; eutometic
trensmiuion end many, many I u x-u ·ry items st~nd•rd on
-~~_:D · 1970· TEMPEST
.,
Gr11nd Prix. Order today. · · ,'
Tempest , • , whet 11 car! Big, bold, -ltandsom·e • • •
yet with II · pri:c:·e teg ·that c o m p a r e s with that of man y
economy -cars, l·n c (.u d i·n·g automatic transmi ssion e nd
power steering. Order today •
. ' .
·--~·-.-
'
:~H~~~·"·,h·r.•; ........ !.,, .. _ $2 ... 97· 7--.... ·· WHOLESALE VALUES '. :~~, .. ~~~~~~: .. ,, .. , ...... $2677
4-•peed, fector~ •ir, •h1yl top._ IX EL64}) , -· salt price low Kelly look ' · fettory air ,onditionlng. (VHA23<1J . . .
'68 CATALINA . , . $·211·1< -~~-~~:~,.~-·~11·-~~~'"''~· ..... ...... $777 $675 ... '68_0_L-DS-4-·4·-2 __ $..._2_9_7_7
• -ht ii (..lH099) 2 Dr. H'.T. Aulometic, power 1t11rin9, radio, 4-Door Std•n. v.t, hydr.malit fr1ri11t1iulon, · ···· --• 1119, w '•-Wt t , ,.. .
power ifttririg, ridicrr-..he_it.r, fett.fy eir . , ---..,.... --..,.------,--~,~--~-----heeler, factory eir, •inyl -top, power window1.
,:;··~:,:::1 -·_ $2> ·'-o ..... 7_, -7.: -_ · · :;~;.~~;;~ .... ., .. ,...... $977 ·1125 · ::;,·~ORVETTE $J· 97 7 427 VI, 4 1peed tr1n1m is1ion, red;o, h11ter.
white will•. ITRH5921 It rv ' I • '
VO, • ,,...,, .......... ,, .. oodio, hutoo, i>.7 . ""'NTIAC , a· 77· ,-925 .... IVCJ5741
4 Dr. auto., RlH, P.S., f1ttory 1ir, pow• ' , , 1
'68 .FORD T9Rlt{0 ..
2 dr. H.T., VI . automatic:, power 1te1rln9,
f111ctory 111ir, white w111ll1:_ (XOE102)
$ 2 5 7 7 --;,~-:~do-:~~-;:-~~!-~'~-~~-l~H-;::l-.:::.-,~--$-,-2-77_$_1_3_0_0_ l ;~~~:'i'~~•~i~~~~~~'~· $18 7 7 -----"!"'"""""'_"'!"" __________ . air, tordowa top. i'NQP551) • .• t· , ~
:~.,Ii~,~~;~~~~~,, powoo $2. ·2· 7 ·7·. :~~ H~.1v?. hydoo.,PS., RIH, WSW~ $1577 , 575 ;~~, .. ~:~;.~~;~.~~;,:~:;.·,. $ 2 4 7 7
1te1rin9, Vt. (WJC017) • . f1tfory-4lit, •iny'111eh. (l\~OOJl ITEY819 )
[(]
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.
Roy-.---CARYER PONTIAC
2~_~5 ' H4Jt•~'-~~:~~L_YD /:_~OSTA MESA
'
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-..• . ,. :. . . . ,;. ~
. ···~64444
, ..
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