HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-04 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa'7
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Unruh in Ba~e
Assembly Chief Chiill.enges Reaga
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Democratic
Assembly Leader ·Jesse M. Unruh
challenged Republican incumbent Ronald
Reagan for the governorship of California
today, charging the State Capitol is con-
trolled by a "handful of Half-hidden
THURSDAY f.FTERNOON, DECEMBER 4, '1969
Nixon i).pplands
Baynswor~h's
Vow to Stay 0
Y°'-U. NO, JM. 4 SICTIOfllL JI PA•tl
millionaires."
The 47-year~ld Unruh, the 196&
California leader of the late Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy's presidential campaign,
made his long-awaited entrance into the
race in a statement to a news conference
at his suburban home near l.A>S Angeles.
Jn becoming the first announced can-
didate in the 1970 governorship election,
Unruh, former speaker of the Assembly,
aimed his fire at the governor and
Reagan's so-<:alled "kitchen cabinet.''
That's a group of wealthy businessmen
who are friendly with Reagan and help
finance his political campaigns.
''The handfu l of the half-hidden
millionaires who call the shots in
Sacramento today do not represent
California," said Unruh.
"They must be told that it is your state
and your future. We will say to them,
'No, you cannot buy our government like
you bought a mansion for Ronald
Reagan.' "
PAYS RENT
He referred to "kitchen · ·cabinet''
members and others who contributed
more than $150,000 for a fashionable
Sacramento home for the Reagan family.
Reagan pays $1 ,250 a month rent to the
group, which includes Ben Swig, a pro-
minent San Francisco Democrat.
Unruh, a powerfuJ figure in state
politics for more than a decade, is ex·
pected lo face opposition in the primary
from San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto,
with Uie winner becoming the party
nominee. Early public opinion polls say
.Unruh is the favorite.
Reagan, according to aides, will an-
nounce his candidacy for a second tenn
later next year. He expects no· major
primary opposition.
Unruh, son of an illiterate Tei:a.s
sharecropper, recalled how "I-hitchhiked
here frorp Texas nearly 30 yejrs ago with
little more than the clothes <11 my back."
CLIMB FROM POVERTY
He r<coUlli.d hi! climb from poYft'\11 -
aircraft plant • 'orker, Navy enlisted _
man, GI Bill gri<!ua!ii"bl the tfaiftnity
of SouUlem California, elecUon to the
Assembly in 1954 and finally in 19'1 as
speaker -an offJ:ce held longer than any
olher man. He lost the job this year when
the Republicans took over the Assembly.
"CalUornia has kept the promise it-held
for me," he said. "I run for governor
because I want to keep the promise of
California alive and growing for
everyone."
As speaker, Unruh won many friends
and made many enemies. But even his
roes credit hlm with mak.ing major in·/
ternal reforms in the Assembly.
He hired young consultanls to ad vise
UPIT ......
ROOM AT TH~ TOP?
Gubtrn.torl1I C1ndid11t1 Unruh
1egi'slators in an effort. he said, 1o reduce
the lawmakers• dependence on s'pecla1 in·
terest Jobbyisb. He Jed the fight for a
full-time legislature, and for an incre.ue
in legislative salaries.
· But his foes also accused him of being
a bully and hung the name of "Big Dad·
dy" on him. That was when he weighed
almost 290 pounds. Since then, he has
dieted down to 190.
In 1963, Unruh, trying to push then
Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown's
fiscal program through the legislature, he
got into a fight with minority Republicans
and refused to let them ·1eave -the
Assembly Chamber -the llillOll! "lock·
in" incident."
JiEunEb 1llTB BROWN
UnnilM1lao lelidod wllll'11fmin. Arid lie ~t.ci -· ~ In Jiii ... tllOy ·wd'.he .~t".~ lllP"
port .IO Jluberl H •. ~ • .&lie party's
presjaenUal nominee. Many Of . Huro-
pJ:trey's suppOrters art now backing
Alioto.
As a legislator, Unruh wu the auth:>"r
of civil rights laws, con~.protecUon.
legislation and school finance plans.·
Unruh was the manage?" of John Ken-
nedy.'s Southern California preiklenUal
campaign in 1!160 and a leader in Presi· cteDt Johnson's presidential campaign in
1964. He later broke wiUt Johnson over
the Vietnam war, which Unruh oppo5e5.
Tate Suspects to Fight
Extradition for Trial
W.cKJNNEY, TeJ. (AP) -Charles D.
Watson's lawyer indicated today that he
will ask psychiatric examination for the
bearded former fQl)tball pfayer, who is
charged in one of the California murders
.at th~ home of actress Sharon Tate.
"f personally have some serious doubts
about his mental state," said the lawyer,
Bill Boyd of McKhmey,
BoyP, ·a former district and county at·
tomey, also said h!J client will fight ez.
tradition. Two IM Angeles detecUves
who have come here to take him into
custody then sta~ back home.
\Vat.son, 24, surrendered Sunday on
learning California auUtorlties held a
warrant for his arrest. He ls charged
with murder· in the · slaying oC Steven
Parent, a caretaker who was killed along
with Miss Tate and three other persom
last Aug. 9.
Another suspect id the case, Linda
Louise Kasabian, 20, one of three persons
facing murder charges in the 1laying of
actress Sharon Tate and four others, wu .
returned to Los Angel'5 Wednesday night
*
from Conctlrd, N.H.
Mrs. Kasabian "·as whisked off a plane
from. Boston into an u~arked Police ear
which sped away immediately. Newsmen
were not allowed to QUf:slion her .
She wore a brown polo coat with ctlllar
turned up and held the collar tightly
against her face. She carried a brown
paper bag. '
Jn Mobile, Ala. a Orcult Court hearing
was set for today on a motion seelcing'tbe
bond release of the third penon 'charged
in the case.
Lawyers for Patricia Krenwintel, 22,
moved for a writ of ·habeu corpus
Wednesday. ' · ' •
Miss Krenwinkel did not appear ln
court fw filing of the0 1Vrl1. which al!o
challenged the .warrant Wlder which she
is held. .
Miss KrenwM1'1 1tto.mey, M. A.
Marsal, bas said she ,. wwld !lght er·
trpdition. He contended that the fugitive
warrant wu -faulty on se\feral &rounds,
lliee SUSPECTs, Pap IJ
* * * .....
No 'Retirement'
'
For Haynsworth
Hid • ID (;uphoard
WASHINGTON (AP) -President NI«
on announced today that Judge Clement
F. Haynsw«lh Jr. will continue to setVe
11 ctuet' judge of ·the Fourlh U.S. Circuit
Coor! ol Appolis.
With Ha)'!llWOrth standing at his side,
Nixon wenf before newsmen at the White
Houae to· dtlcrl.be his r-'jected noml,.
fcrr the Sdpreme Court ·as a ylcllm of ' Cult Leader Found in Raid
INDEPENDENCE, Calif. (UPI) -
Charles Manson, the hypK>llc leader gl a
nomaarc cult susPected tn--ihe slhyfiip ot
Sharon Tate and It othlr persons, was
found "hiding in a Uny cupboard" when
au1horiHes r.a lded his commune in Death
Valley in October.
The California Highway Petrolman
"'ho led a posse In the raJd testilied
Wednesday at ~f1nBOn·1 court hearing on
relatively minor auto theft cnarges that
the long·halred cult leader was captured
cowering In the cupboard.
Jamea Puree!!, the only patrolman
usually .on thC 3,000..squhe-mlle beat,
,;aid the bearded Manson w11s "hiding In
a tiny cupboard beneath the sink. It was
perhaps three feet hi&~. 11 to 20 Inches
\
''brutallY: vicious" attacks. In lhe face of · ;~and1ol2.!°w~~" deep. It tooll1'Jm 111 .... the Pmldenhaid, the iU<!I• might I
MaOsoi:i, who held a mystei-Jous •••Y wtll have-considtrtdrttepping down-frOlft
the clttult l>ench. over his follower1, wu the only one of "A weak man would." sald Nixon. "A
the nioe pcrson.s Gl'l'Clkd.:lrrthenld wllo f u man WOlllil~eJOOil<li not a
hid when the posse ductnded on the weak man."
threM'OOm house wh1ch w11 the but Nixon said he was delighted by
e1mp for the nOmadic commune. Haynrwortb's decision tJ'KI cited what he
Before the end ol the sir-llour pre!Jm. · dettrlbed u his own philoooplly tblt an
fnary hearing, the d~frlct ·attorney '• Mduol ,II lltl'er. without ddeat
office here said Monoon would be r.. "'"1ewhere .i..c· Ille line ~t he ohould I
leased to Loi Angeles authorttlet U a never be fe•l'f'O~; . I . ·1
murdtr wan-ant was Issued. The court '11l11 wu the ~ e that Nixon ~·ancs ;
ruled there wu sufficient evidence of · ~aYniWorth haw ) Stepphlc to iie 1 receiving stolen IJl'Oper\y to bring Man-lo"ll!lllcll.!1 ~~ ...tel<no*l!d&eil ,
· (See MANSON, ·Pate I) 1S.. 11.-n;....ORTll, Poff I) .. .
·e ' Q 1""Aot Y'1
0021...._~
~T1t-l&
CHr<_\~~ M !'\? -rRo:.e
A,_,D 13.'>FI T 1"i" RF\ PF
t>EC.· I? -;1..3
Newport's Boat Parade . . .
Sets Sail Dec. 19-23
\
Newport Be'ach.'s traditional Floating An average of 50 boats partlclpated In
Christmas Tree and Bbat Parade will run the procession each evening last year.
from Dec. tttl.tlroqgh z; "1&.tl scpres ,of Over the weekends more yachtsmen join·
!Jecorat.e~ bolls ~pected lo tour itie bay tid the parade, 1v.·elling the ranks .up to
eacb JUght. 100 on several evenings.
The parade will .begth .each evening at · No entry reea or blanks are necessary,
\he ·Balboi islahd ieri-y lanCling ·at 6:~ JAck Barnett, manager of the. Newport
.Militants
:Open Fire
On Officers
CH1CAGO (UPI) - A 15-minute gun·
fight erupted today when state's at·
torney's police entered a Black Panther
stronghold to search for weapons. Two
Black Panthers were killed and four
wounded.
The dead Included Fred Hampton,
about 22, Illinois chairman of the Blact
Panther party.
Jwo policemen were wounded In the
battle, which broke out when the
authorities entered an apartment near
Black Panlher headquarters on the
outskirts of Chicago's \Vest Side skid row.
Fourteen men made up the unit that
look part in the early morning raid. They
had a warrant signed by Judge Robert
Collins, according to a spokesman for the
State 's Attorney'3 Office. obtained after
sawed~ff shotguns and other illegal
\Vea pons were reported to be in the
ap;irtment.
When the authorities I d e n t 1 f I e d
th emselves, the spokesmen said, voices
on the ot her side of the door began asking
''\\'ho?" "Who?" Then, he said, the door
was opened and "eight or more in·
dividuals began firing with carbines,
1hotguns and handguns:"
The apartment,. aCctJrding to the
spokesm an, belonged 'to a Fred Johnson,
an alias used by Hampton. ln it police
said they found 12 shotguns, eight pistol.!
and'5,000 rounds ci! amrnunJUon. He sajd
Hampton was felled after he' bad. shot at
(S.. SHOOTOUT, Page I)
Orange Coast
Weather
\Ve'll have a little bit of every·
thing Friday -sunny skies, early
mom1ng clouds and gusty norlh-
east winds -while the tempera•
turt rests In the middle 70'1.
INSIDE TODA. Y
p.m .. After l.olJ(iul ,the trt~ of ~e.~r\ Harbor Chamber of Comrne~e. ex· Nt:t ~ear thci oovtrnmtnt
Jiarbor. tbe.bi>ais will tvbclude tbe pn> plained._ -will come to lulp of P4''""·
ma.ion each llv• .. 1 .... at 9:1$ p.m.. Pa-n.l~PlTits neea only show \.IP ii the but this ChrUtm41 it's e-U~'1/ ~-• ferry fa"ndin& to join in the p~ion. I hf 111" h k' t -------------...l:liii>hiu..a'lll.he a•·atded 10 w.lnil\OJt>-1"--l--i~n or mst 11 c tc 111g ou
~tewardesses to Strike severaJ,dlvl.olon~ . --'. 1~i;m--o/'11tW111Jlr.-l'ap
Winners .are announred b t f o t e
Chrlfunas, bul lhf' awards will be kf\'en
NEW YORK (UPI) -The TranSport oul1 at lhc Chamt..er11 aMual installation
Workers UnSon announced WedneMay dinner In January. ·
ftew"!llet ~ ~ ~.-iltikel Co-sponSdn of the annual even t are ttle
Nortbweat /Jr' .,. ~ ... 11 ••. • • ,. Chamber. and the Newpo rt Beach City
."1.A· 1 • ..,_~· • Em$ye s Asncl•tlon. ' Tht•\lnkln adv-"' ~e. .., ~'"' t . A rds will be presented tn boat
bient-1o' ft}•~~ ~tbtr.; . . ' . ~ rlas lcatlon1 of power or Jait-up to~23"' bperi\1111. ~~ , . ~ feet :'•from 21 to tO feet, 11nd 41 feet and
l"lth the in£1itarf air -~:over. •
C.H+-1' I
Cl•\t !ltd 2'·~' ca111:u n
Cno:i.twcnl t ()•Jiit '"11ttt ,.
O!Mtfft 14 Ct.'.tw:.. P"" 4
.,.!ert•!l!lllffll ft
,.lt:i!ltf »-tt
Hlr.!'to.. 11
Al!" L•Mlen 11 MJl!lln 4
Mi!TI~ UCl!ltH l t MHl!fttt 14
1
I
I
s Thursday,' Dtttmbff •, 196~
Allie·s Chase Reds to Ca·mhodia
U.S., South Viets Announce Holida y Truce Periods
SAJGO..'\' I l"PI) -Allifd •·arplane.s.
.artillery and IJ'OOpS raided into C..mbodia
ln ~'cl a bartered Ncnb \'ietname.se
·baU&Don m n1h1in1 rtported tod1y.
Prtsldftlt Ngu~'tn Van Thieu announced
-the allit$ 'll'OUld honor ft.hour trUces for
O.ristmas and New \'e.:tr's.
Thieu emugtd from a tG-mioute meet-
b\g •ith U.S. AmWssador Ellsworth
,Bwiktr and announetd the truee.s for
"humanitarian reasons." There have
bren J3 l,ruces so far in the v.·ar' all or
them marred by fight1ng.
U.S. ~pokesmen said Americ1n fore~
l\'OOld honor lhe cease-fires bl.It there
Board Urges
Civil Servant
·'
5% Pay Hike
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The Slate
Personnel Board proposed a five perctnt
11cross-the-board pay hike for the &tale's
103,000 fulltime civil servants today.
The increase v.·oold cost $86.3 million.
This compared v.·ilh boosts ranging
from siI percent to 20 percent aod total-
ing $148 million sought by the California
State Employ es A s s o c i a t ion \.\1hich
represents most -of the workers.
The board. in sending its final recom-
mendations to Gov. Reagan. modified it.!
earlier tentaUve proJKl58.1 th.at thtre be a
10 pen:ent ceiling on Ult amount ol raises
for any one category .
The hikes proposed by the board range
from the general five pcrcenl up to 12\2
percent for employes in classes .. in whicil
salar1 problems are acute.''
The board said those higher increases
"are necessary to match sa1aries pa.id 1or
similar work in private industry and
other public jurisdictions."
A CSEA spokesman said the group was
disappointed with the recommendations.
He said it was "insufficient to meet the
needs of stale employes • , , It's a bad
6ituaUon."
For Uie first time this year, the CSEA
coovention voted to drop its no-strike
pledge. However, that action still is pen-
ding ratification and there ls no legal
framework pennilling any $trike by state
public employes.
'The boarCI also Rlterated previoos pro-
posals f<r these empioye bebefits1
-That the state pay the full cost of
basic employe' health iMuranre.
-Night ijoiy · dllle«iillal "'I h,er'e
justifi~ by )ftfailing practice."
-U11f11'JpJoyment insurance for state
employee: who are laid off "for no fault or
thert owni" ' -
-nme and ooe half for overtime for
emplayM whose. counterparts in private
industry receive il.
f 'rom Pnge l
HAYNSWORTH
that "no one likes to lose."
But he said he had been ltre.atly en-
couraged, since the ~S Seoale vote
against his nomination on Nov. 21 by
thousands of lettirs.
HaynSY."Orlil said he has learned that
the judges or the Fourth Circuit want
him to retain tile chief judgeship and Ulat
the bar •·wants me back."
Turning to Nixon, Haynsworth said: "l
am \'ery grateful to you for your stead-
! ast support."
Nixon began by reminding newmnen
that he _had telephoned ~ynsworth, im·
mediately after the·Senate vote, to urge
that he remain on the circuit bench.
At that lime Haynsworth said he
wanted a couple of weeks in v.il.ich t-o
contemplate whelher the Senate battle
over his nomination would impair his
ability to continue as chief judge of the
fourth circuit.
O/\ILY f'I LOI
....,... .... tlu;d.a•w .....
L...---: ............ ""'
CAUPOINIA
OANfGI COAS1 "lllLISWING C0M'"'H'I'
'•"rt "'· w ••• ,.,.....,,, .,... l"Wli.MI
J•t.lt l . C111l1y
VJ<•~ -GMwl' .. Ml~lfll
Th•m11 1C1"!1 ....
Tli•11111 A. M•,.,.hl~• ' ~l!•ilOr -c.i. -..1 ,. ""'' .... ,,_.. ......,,.loMdl. m1 "'"'"' .. -... ,..,.._. L"ilUN hwll! ,,, ~-ti .. _
............... .. Kfll Jiii llfl llrMI
•
was no word from the Viet Cong or North
Vietnamese, who u:sually beat Saigon to
the punch in proclaiming holiday truces.
Field reports said the North Vletnam-
~se battalion that was chased into Cam·
bodia had sed the neighboring nation as
a springboard for Jts attack early \\'ed·
nesday on a border town and two U.S.
Green Beret camps, kllling 25 South
Vietnamese.
The guerrillas ll'tre thro"'n hack \\'IUl
166 men slain and heaclt'd bllck ·.ac.rou
the border with U,S". Y.'arplanes and
artillery ind a Soulh Vietnamese platoon
in pursu.iL.
Too Well Known
'
Headquarttn said the 1JUe1 had an
"lnhertnt rlabt" to fire back ir fired upon
lrom Cambodia.
U.S. spckesipen acknowledge the alr
raid& into-Calnl>Odiil, the second 1u~
strikes in three week11, bot· said pothlng
ol Jlle ,arUlley strikes or South.,!{Jeloam·
... platoon. ' Reoottl' of the acUon sa mllea ·wut-
oorlbwesl' of. Salgoo coincided wltb the
wee.kW: cuualty reporf lhowing 70 Amer·
ic.anl killed 1ut week, the third Jowtst
number of dealhs since 1966.
Another 1,049 G.Js were v.·ounded. Only
Lennon Won't Be Jesus
In Cathedral Pageant
LONDON (APl -Beatie John Lennon'
won't be portraying Jesus in SL Paul's
Cathedral artei: all because Lennon's
personality might shove Christ into the
background. a record company an-
nounced today.
The long-haired Beatie had been con-
sidered for the lead in a pop musical call-
ed "Jesus Christ" in Lhe cathedral next
1pring. But the v•riters of the show and
the recording company said they were
convinced that a relatJve unknown should
be the Slar.
"Someone like Lennon would imprint
his own personality to such an e:1tent that
people would rea d the star's character in-
to the cilaracter of the part,·· said a
spokesman~ for the Music Corp. of
America-U.K. Record Co.
Lennon, himself, V.'as barely involved in
the issue but was quoted as saying he
would be interested in the part as loog as
his wife, Yoko Ono, could take Uie role of
Mary Magdalene.
Jt was Lennon who aroused outraged
protest in the United Slates a few years
ago by saying that the Beatles at the
time were more popular than Christ.
The musical about Christ's last six
days on earth, by composer Tlm Rice. 25,
and producer Andrew Lloyd-Webster, 21.
is being written for the MCA-UK Record
Co., and is to be issued as an album.
· A spokesman for the company said the
' s_. . Coast Lawyer
;Nruited Judge
By Gov. Reagan
A San Clemente attorney received a
personal phone call from Governor
Ronald Reagan this week to C-Onfirm his
appointment as judge of the Laguna
Beach.San Clemente Municipal Court.
Frailk Domenichlni, 46, was named by
the governor to fill the vacancy created
by the nUrement on Sept. 23 of J udge J.
Parley Smith o{ Dana Point.
Presiding Judge • Richard Hamil ton.
who will sh.are the bench duties in the
South County Judicial District with
Domenichlni, hailed the appointmen t as
"e:1oellent"
"I've known him for years. He ls well
liked and very v.'eli thought of by
everyone. He will make a fine judge,"
said Hamilton.
A resident of San Clemen lc,
Domenic~.ini has had a general law prac-
tice in that city for more than 17 years.
He is married and the fat her of four
children. three girls and a boy.
In 1968 he served as president or the
Orange County Bar Association.
Hamilton, who has-been assisted by
several different judges fron1 other
judicial districts since Smilh·s retire-
ment, said he hoped Domenichini would
be able to assume his new duUes by the
first or the year.
He noted that , since Domenichini ha s
maintained a single law practice, rather
than a partnership, he ls raced with a
subslantial task in finding .and briefing
attorneys to take over cases now pending
in his Office.
statement about Lennon p o s !!I I b I y
()vershadowing Jesus was not meant to
cause any offense. He explained that he
'vas referring of offense to Lennon.
"It's not that the \Yrilers don't \Vant
Lennon involved but lhey feel an
unknown would be more suilable,'' he
said.
St. Paul's, one of Europe's most
celebrated cathedrals, has had a pop
policy for the past year, with a fashion
show in the crypt and parachute jumping
in front of the great doors. The pop opera
is the latest project for the 300-year-0ld
cathedral.
Mesa Mother's
Newest Infant
No Little Tot
A Costa l\1esa woman gave birth
\Vcdnesday night to a bouncing baby boy
who has jiggled the scales as the heaviest
inrant in the history of Orange County
~1edical Center.
The heavyweight champ a
phenomenal 14 pounds. 9 ounces -hasn 't
been given his official name yet, but grin-
ning nurses have dubbed him Atlas,
Rocky or other such titles in the mean·
time.
The fourtil son of "1r. and l\trs. Alex
Stepanenko, of 882 Towne St., is 24 1'? f1che.s long and is doing fine today. along
with his 33-year-0ld mother Louise.
Brothers Gregory, 13. Danny, 12, Den·
nis, lt, and sisters Linda, 9, and Krissy.
8, are waiting at home for the.arrival of
their big baby brother, who was delivered
by Dr. J<>hn Wambo.
"A new baby that big is a medical rari-
ty these days," observed Nursing
Supervisor Geraldine ~1cGeehan.
Motorist Tells
Mesa Kidnaping
Held at knifepoint by a teenager who
hopped into his car at a Costa Mesa In·
tersectlnn, a motorist was forced to drive
the sullen kidnaper to Lclng Beach
Wednesday night and then released.
Alfred A. Duplessis, 28. of 2652 Santa
Ana Ave., v.·as never harmed du ring the
kidnap-assault case, but told police the
abductor v.·as extremely unsociable.
Officer Dick DeFrancisco said
Duplessis told of trying to make con-
versation with the youth arter he got in at
7 p.1n. on fairvie1v noad at \Vilson
Street, flashing a four-inch blade.
"Shut up.'' he was told.
'Phe victi1n said his young abductor
ordered him to slop al Broadway and
Cherry Avenue near downtown L()ng
Beach, got out of the car and disappeared
into the" night.
Duplessis v.·ent to the nearby Long
Beach Police Depart1ncnl and related
\1•hat happened , then followed that up
v.·ilh a report to Costa lt1esa authorities .
Gifts Beje~ted
VC I Med Students Say Bags 'Threa.t'
Fourleen or 6~ studenl!'l In the rre!lhman ''The instn1ments and bags arc offered
class or UC trvine's School or !\tedicine 11•i\h the expectation that they \vill be
have rejected gift of a black medical bag useful. Quite naturally, It is our desire to
containing stethoscope, tuning fork and acquaint students with the Lilly nan1e as
rubber hammer from a pharmaccutlcal a manufacturer of qual!ty medicines.
company. "At the same time 1ve do not believ e
Tbe students feel aeeeptance or the that this assistance: will affect the im-
glflj; might Impinge on their future In· partial judgments of physicians in their
tegrity 11 phy1icians and could cost con· care of patients."
sumer,\ of the drug company·s products On the second issue, the students
by higher prices. according to freshman ~·rote :
ll\f':dic1J student Jerry Boss. ". , .we quertlon the source or the
The fourteen students sent a lellcr lo money used 10 pay for these gifl.$, It ap..
Eli Ully PharmaceuUcal Company re-£ pears to us the drug consumer -mainly
Jecting the gills and received a lcllcr in .. the chronically ill and aged -1s the one
Wrote the students :
--,.,,.,..,,1ttm11ety-shoutderr1nc-cost" or
these 'ift.s. We feel·v.·e can better afford
the pncc of our black bags than can our
medically Indigent patients.''
" .. .fully cognltant Ultrc is no obllga.
lion attached 10 accepting lhese glfLs. u·c
\'lcw them as a potential threat to our
future integrity as physicians. \Ve \YOUld
preter to be. completely free or any non-
b u 1 in es s tran sac tions with
ph11rmaceutlcal companies.··
Replied Htnry F. DcBotst, \'let prtsi-
dent of corporate affairs for the Liiiy
Company: ·
(
Responded DeBoesJ:
•· ... during the past 10 year~. as shou11
by the Ully price index, the ave.rage
price or our company·s pharmaceuticals
has declined morft. than 10 ptrcentagc
pqints. Because of Us limited site. the
~ludent program has _had virtually no er.
feet on the prices of our products."
• '
two othd-Umu al..nct 1118 bas the wetk-
ly death toll bttn lowtr-the week of Oct.
4 when M Ola dJed and the first week
ol 1967 when 17 were killed.
Military spokesmw conflrmed......whal
&O\lrces had (ijsi:l011ed earlier-that U.S.
casualties fat the War Surpas.sed' the
300,000 mark last week, with 39,842 killed,
259,838 wounded and 1,359 missing or
captured-a total of 300,&29. ;
The U.S death figure was a sharp
dro'p from the 130 Gia slain the previous
wff.k. South Vietnamese losses fell tOo.
to 373 killed and 9S3 wounded, with 2,177
COntmWllsts rcporled sl•in.
-tr -!:r -tr
Lodge Leaves
Paris, Holds
Hope for Peace
PARIS (UPI) -Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodee bowed out of the Paris
peace talks today with a farewell speech
reviev.·ing the past and expressing hope
for the future. The Communists ushered
hirn out with a renewal of all the charges
that made him quit in the first place.
Adding to a romplaint by North Vici·
nam negotiator Xuan Thuy thal there had
been no progress in 10 montrurof negotia·
tiona with Lodge was a series or new
charges thal the United States had com-
mitted '"thousands oI barbarous crimes''
in South Vietnam.
Lodge, 67, has been a key figute in
American Vietnam war policies since the
early 1960s. Today was his last as chief
negotiator. On Saturday he plans to leave
Paris for his home in Boston.
He summarized his p~g speech as a
review of "the thingS--\.vhich we on our
side have proposed, what the other side 's
reactions haev bee n, what are some of
the most persistent and erroneous beliefs
which impede progress, an~ what is the
hope for the future."
Lodge cited a number or allied CJ)n·
cessions including a U.S. offer to
withdraw its troops within a year. a pro-
posal for a cease-fire under international
supervision. Saigon's offer to hold direct .
secret talks with the Communists and an
offer to settle the war through jointly
controlled and Internationally supervised
elections.
Addressing himself to the Communists
seated across the 26-foot negotiating table
he ~aid, "the obstacle is your side's
absolute refusal to join us in seeking a
just peace." He said they had the oppor-
tunity to negotiate but '·you have been un-
willing to do so in any meeting place,
public or private."
"With re!erence to your statements
concerning Scing My," he stated. "I will
say: an Incident such as that alleged in
this case is in direct violation not only of
U.S. military policy, but it is also
abhorrent to the conscience of all the
American people.
"Whatever happened \\'ill be know n.
btcause v.•e do not ronceal the truth. In
all this. l subpUt, our policy is in direct
contrast to your own deliberate use or
terrorism as .a matter of conscious
policy ...
UC I Slates Major
In Classical Life
A new major In classical cil'ilization
was approved Wednesday by UC Irvine's
academic senate. -
Students majoring in the new field.
called the most basic or all humanistic
disciplines. will be required to cotnplete
nine major courses including a year of a
classical language to earn a bachelor's
degree.
•
F
He's the "Win1ie1·'
Richard. Stolman, a l9-year--0ld Universi1y of \V1sconsi n sophomore
\vhose birthday just happens to be Sept. 14. lhe number one slot in th e
draft lottery, has a brother Douglas at the University of Kansas
whose birthday is April 24 __:. the nun:i ber two spot.
Fro1n Page 1
MANSON FOUND HIDING • • •
son lo trial. Bail \vas srt at $25 .000.
The stooped. slight Manson was \\'Car-
ing blue denim jail clothes v.·hen he wtis
led into the Inyo County courthouse in
chains to face the charges involving
stolen vehicles.
One of the witnesses to testify was
Paul \Vatkins, 18, a former member of
the "family" cult.
l\.Ianson doodled on a piece of ye!IO\Y .
paper u·hile witnesses testified lo ~he
charge of receiving stolen property dur-
ing raids by "the h1anson family" from
a base camp in the Dealt\ Valley area .
Another member of tile cult, nO\Y in
custody in Los Angeles, said through her
attorney that Manson, 34, held an "in·
sane, almost hypotie influence" over his
.. family.'' She said his followers called
him "Jesus.''
The girl, Susan Atkins. 19, held as a
suspect in the stabbing death of a man
which has been connected to the group.
said Manson was an aspiring soul singer
and guitar player.
She said he was embillered at Terry
~1elcher, son of Doris Day, because
~1elcher refused to help him produce a
record. Melciler's home, later rented by
Miss Tate, became a "symbol of rejec·
tion.'' she said, and 11anson ordered al!
f'ro1n Pnge 1
SUSPECTS. • •
including one that it failed to com ply with
Alabama Jaw.
lt~arsal sa id, ''The only basis ror the
v.•arrant was a statement made by Capl.
Don Riddle of the Mobile Police Depart-
ment that he had been advised by a Sgt.
\\'illiam Carey of the Los Angeles Police
Depart1ncnt that Miss Krcnwinkcl is
charged there with tnurder.
"This is hearsay and insufficient cause
to have a fugitive warTant issued.''
lts occupants slain.
Miss Tate. three friends and an 18·
year-old boy visiting the estate's care·
taker, were stabbed and shot to death.
Fro1n 1•11ge 1
SHOOTOUT. • •
the authorities \Vith a .45 automata! and ::-
~hotgun.
The other dead man \1·as identified a~
~lark Clark , 22, of Peoria, Ill. There hac:
been reports earlier !his y('ar tl1<1t the
Pa!!lhers had attempted to organize
young · peQple in that dou•nslate com-
n1unity.
Four persons were taken into custody
after the baltle, including a woman iden·
lilied as Deborah Johnson , 19, said lo be
about eight months pregnant.
Before the 15-minute gun b:ittle ended
1nore than 50 p.:>licemen had been called
to the scene, near "''here rioting liad oc·
curred two years ago. They brought
rnarhine guns an d tear g:.is but clid nol
USC them .
Jo y Ride W1·ecks
Valley ~rop Field
Joy riding vandals tore through a field
of celery in Fountain Valley \Vcdnesday
on the (armer·s own tractor. causing
about Si,700 damage to the crop.
Police said several loops \Yere taken
through the field at Bushard Street and
Edinger Avenue early \\'cdnesday. cut·
ting celery stalks and rarnniing a
portable privvy. The tractor used was :t
D-6 caterpillar v.·hich had been left on the
field overnight. The vandalisn1 v.·.i~
reported by To1nio Matsumoto, 1652 1
Marie Lane. Huntington Beach.
A GIFT TO TRWURE AHO ENJOY FOR YEARS
,-.
• Custom quality U1rough-out •
l~uxurioui cushioning • Your
choice of colors fron1 an extcnsirc
selection ol lln•t leather texlurcs .
fro1n $199
• • '
1
I
I
I
\
-. .. •• u ,, • . . -.
.--. " . ·B•ni111gton ·Beaeh··-. .
. ~ ... .,
"• '
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... ·-· ...
> I -·N.-Y. Stocki -
YO.L. 62; NO. 2tQ,_'4_S.ECTIONS • .so_eA_~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY., DECEMBER 4, l t 69 TEN C!NTS
IMAGINATIVE DESIGN OF ROBERT GISLER SCHOOL BRINGS NATIONAL RECOGNITION
Gisler School .
Give n Honor
By U.S. Group
Fountain Valley's Robert Gi,sler School
has been selected as a demonstration
school by the American Association of
School;A<im1Ulrai9fl, , •
As a resUlf.. an atch.J1etl's ni.odel and
photographs of the school will be o_n ~x.
hibiUon Feb. 14-18 as the assoctation
holds Its' annual conVention in Atlanilc Ci·
ty. N.J.
ln selecting Gisler School from among
the 2 500 nomi nated for the honor. the
jury ~sidered as it.s criteri~ exceplional
eJucational programs. grouping areas. ~of'.
instruction, expandabilily, community
use. safety and enviropmental controls
such a~ light: air and sound.
Jn 1967, Fountain Valley's Harry C.
Fulton SChOOI was selected for the same
award. . For the last five year'I, six o.ut of the
district's 12 schools have won stat.e and
natiooal awards for architecture and
educational d~sign.
Ma sked Bandit
Holds Up Station
A masked bandit \\'ednesday night rob·
hed a Westminster service station at·
tendanl or $139 in receipts then cl_outed
the attendant over ,he head with a
revolver and lbcked him up in the
restroom. The aUendant, Roger S. Ml\ler, 18, of
19362 Brookhurst St., HunUnglon Beach,
,va:a discovered on the floor of the sta·
lion's bathroom by a customer shortly
after 9:35 p.m.
He was taken to Wesbninstfr Com·
munity'Hospital where he was treat~ for .
cuts and bruises.
Police said the robber. u·ho ~ore a
,\·Qma11•9 stocking over his head, threat-
ened Miller wU.h a chrome-plated revol-
ver before the ~ating too~ place.
Tate Suspects to· Fight
Extradition for Trial
?.~cKINNEY, Tex. (AP) -Charles D.
w.atson's. lawyer in~icated today that tie
will ask psyChlatric examlnatton for the
bellrded fonn<r football playif, w!Jo, la•
* * * Sharon's Father
Became Hippie
Hunting Killers
P AL0S VERDES (UPI) -The father
of slain actress Sharon Tate, a fonner
Anny intelligence officer. says he grew.a
must.ache and beard , and ~gled with
drug users for four ·months while trying
to track down. his $~ter's ~illers.
Paul J:Tate, 46,.sald he•iriasqueraded
as a hippie, freq uented hlpple hangouts
and lived in cpmmunes.tn his buht for the
persons V.·llo. ca rried out the Aug. 9
murders.
"Anything I know about the case· will
be told at the proper time," Tate said 111
declining to say if his efforts were of
value in the arrests of three suspects.
He was concerned with the recent
revelations about details of the crime.
"You don't go around telling the world
what infonnation or evidence you have,"
he said. "You neve r know for sure
v.·hether you have an alrtisht case."
He said the implication of a cult known
as "The Manson Family" in the mu rders
or his daughter and six other persons had
"taken a great weight off my mind."
However, he expressed bitterness about
reports in the "sensational prUs" over
the background of his daughter. ·
"My wile ls on the verge of a nervws
breakdov.n . W.y other daughter hM: been
extremely upset. We are a very close
family ." He said much oC wtiat has been
sa id and written about his-daughter "ls
jmt nOt true." ·
Tate said he \\'Orked alone and with
Southern caliromia authorities on his in-
vestigation. Before Tate conflnned he
conducted his own investigation, Los
Angeles police detectives and narcotics
officers said he had no connecUon with
lheir investiga tion of the case.
"Someday I would like to air fTIY feel·
lngs,'' Tate said, "but this isn't the pro-
per iime."
charaed in one of the California rriUiders
at the.home of actress Sharon Tale.
• "I Pof>9M\\Y l!Jve ~ seriGUJ.daiibta
fhout.h~ p1ental •late,' !'id lhc lawyer,
Bill il!!Yd ol Mcllim>eI , '
Boyd, a former district and county at.-
tomey, llsb sald his cilOnt wur light ...
trad1Uon. TwD Los Angeles detectives
v.·ho have come here to take bim into
custody then started back home.
Wa.tson, 24, surrendered Sunday on
learning California authorities held a
v.•arrant for his arrest. He is charged
"'·ith murder in µie slaying ol Steven
Parent, a caretaker who wa s killed along
with Miss Tate and three other persons
last Aug. 9.
Anpther suspect in the case, Lind&
Louise Kasabian, 20, one of three penons
facing murder cha'rge.s in the slaying or
actress Sharon T.ate and four others, was
returned to Los Angeles Wednesday n!&ht
from Concord, N.H. Mn. Kasabian was whisked off a plane
from Boston into an urunarked police car
which sped away immediately. Newsmen
were not allowed to question her.
She v.·ore a brown polo coat with colla r
tumed up and held the collar ti ghtl y
against her face. She carried a brown
paper bag.
In Mobile, Ala. a Circuit Court hearing
was set for today on a motion seeking the
bond release of lhe third person charged
in the case.
Lawyers for Patricia Krenwinkel, 22,
moved for a writ of habi>!!!: corpus
Wednesday,
Miss Krenwinkel did not appear tn
court ror filing of the writ, whi ch also .
challenged the WJrrant under which she
ts beld. .
Miss Krenwinkel's attorney, l\t. A.
Marsal , ha~ sa id she would · fight ex-
tradiUon. He contended that the fugitive
v.'8l'rant was faulty on :several grounds,
including one that it failed to comply with
Alabama law. .
W.arsal said, "The only basis for the
warrant was a statement made by Capl
Don Riddle of the Mobile Police Depart·
ment that he had been advised by a Sgt.
William Carey of the Los Angeles Police
OeparlZJlent that Miss Krenwinkel is
charged there with murder.
"This Is hearsay and insufficient cause
to have a fU&itive warrant issued."
2 Panthers Slain -~
Gunfight .Erupts at.Party's Strong~~
CHICAGO <UPI) -A !$-minute gun-
fight erupted today when state's at4
torney's police entered a Black Panther
stronJhold to' Se.arch for weapons. Two
Black Panthers were killed and four
wouiided.
The dead Included Fred •lampton,
about 22, Illinois chairman of the Black
Panther party.
Two policen1en were wounded in the
battle, Y•hich broke out when the
authorities entered an apartment near
Black Panther headquarters on the
outskirts .Qf Chicago's West Side sYjd row.
Board lJrges
Civil Servant
5% Pay Hike
SACRAMENTO CAP) -The Stale
Personnel Board pr-oposed a five percent
;i;cross-the-board pa.v hike for the _state's
103.000 fulltime civil servants today.
The increase woo!d cost $86.3 million.
11lis compared wilh boosts ranging
from six-percent to 20 percent and total·
ing $148 million sought by the California
State EmPloyes A s s o c i a t ion which
represents most of the workers.
The board; in sending its final reeom·
mend a lions to Gov. Reagan, modified its
earlier tentative proposal that there be a
10 percent cttllng on the amount of raises
for all)' one cUejory. · nie hikH ..:....-. by tf!e boan! range frt1ot"lil'e~;j"flv. ~ ·Uf!to "U>\
percent for enip'loyes in classes "in which
salar/ probWQs m acute."
The boon! said those "blgller· lncrea,.. "°" ~to matdl oi!Arl .. paid f"" Similar -k ~ prtv1te llldusb'1 IDd
other pubUc jutildictlons.119
A CS EA spOl:l!sman said the group was
disappointed with the ' recommendations.
He said •It was "Insufficien t to m~t the
needs of st.ate employes ..• It's a bid situation.'~ 1 •
Fc>r the first .time this year, the CSEA
convention voted to drop its no-strike
pledie. However, that action .sUll Is pen-
ding raUficaUon and there 1s no legal
framework permitting any strike by state
wblic employet Ttie board also reiterated 'previous pro-
posals far the!e employe benefits: •
-That the state pay lhe'full' -of
basic ·employe health insurilnce. -Night pay· differential'· ' ' w .b er e
justified by pre.wiling praetice.~'
-Unemploym&>t insurance· for stat_e
emple>yes who a?t laid off "for rio fault of
Uleir own."
-Time and one half for overtime for
erriployes whose· counterparts in private
industry receive iL
112,021 Persons
l1i Huntington
Huntington Beach's official population
ls 112.021. " "
The final figtire from the special
federal census o( Sept. JS was announced
today by Robert F. Drury, deputy dlrec4
tor of the U.S. Census Buteau.
Planning Department officials estimate
the preaent population of the city at
tt'4 ooo and roreeaSt an increase of lZ,000 • next year. .
SCo<'k Market . -
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market
prices remained broadly lower in laLe
afternoon tra~ing ~ay, but continued to
recover some of their f:barp l~ses of
earlier in the day. (See quotations, Pages
22·23 ).
Fourteen men made up the unit that the apartmtfit, accordln&" ,tD 1 tbe
t~ part ln the early morning raid. They spokesman, belonged to a Frtd Jo11111oa, had a warrant siined by ·Judge Robert 1 __ Collins, accordin g to a spokesman for the an alias uaei1 by ll&DJPton. In. •tt.-ptlict:
State's Attorney '3 Offlti!, obtained after said they foUnd ll sbQ.tgtlru:, cla:ht *'>ls
sawed-off shotguns and other illegal and s,000 rounds of ammanttlon. He aa1d
'veapons were reported to ·be in the Jiampten was felled after tie had lbot at.
apartment. th$! authorities witji a -~ automatic and a
When the authoriUes l d e ntl f le.d &hot&Un. ... ·..... y•.:.w
themselves, the spokesmen said, voices ''fbe ·other dea'd.man was ldenUflid ·as'"'
on the other side of the door began asking. ?ifirk Clark,,2%,iof:}'eorla, 111. There.' had
"Who?" "Who?" Then, he said, the door '1 been ~poru earlier. th!~ Y.ear tl)~ the
was opened and "eight or more in-Pil\tbien had attempted to orpnize
dividuals began firing with carblnea, young people In tb• d1nmstate_...J com.
shotguns and handguns.'' muntty.
19 Bags Full
""
Students at Huntinfton Beach's Golden i'test College pr!'Jlare to ship
19 bags of win~r Clothing to needy children in Southealteril U.S.
Clothing was collected in campus drive. Loading bags are (from left)
Bonnie Foster of Garden Grove, Lilly Yamaoka of Westminster,
Sheila J ohansen of 1Garden Grove and Linda \Vhite of Huntington
Beach.
. '
Garden Grove Won't O~ay
Valley Students . Trans£ er ·
Two Fountain Valley High School
Students who were taken from V'eir
classes by their parents because of aUeg·
ed drug abuse by other students, have·
been turned away by the Garden Grove
Unified School District.
James Griffith, welfai-e a~ attendance
officer at the Garden Grove district, said
Kathleen, 17, arid cindaCe, 15, Alerldge,
will not·, become part of that school
system "because there are no ex·
tenuaUng circumstances to justify it.''
t·The district transfer committee held a
long meeting on that subject last Monday
and decid!d that it Is not within current
policy tG accept the students for that
reason,'~ he explained.
made with the family now will have to
com~ througl1 that agency."
He indicated it Is possible the girlS may·
be made wards of the court throuah
juvenile proceedings to lMure Ulelr atten-
dance if they art not immedlate.ly return-
. ed to school.
"lf the probatlGJ1· authority files a'.pet.1-
tiofi "and It Is upbe htby a coatt decision,
the girls would. be ~expecte4 to go to
school and woOld have. to nodfy-their ~
bation officer on any day·lbey might be
unable to attend."
The Aleridges, 'meanwhile, , 1re • con·
sidering the sale of ~eir home and a
move to another school distil.ct.
Orange Cout
Wea ... er '
'GWC ·Cool to Moratorium
"Even if parents asked the school
district io move their children from one
of our schools. to a.nother ovet alleged
drug abuse, we could not de> it. So it
would be very difficult to justify moving
children from an entirely different school
district Into ours."
We'll. have • ·11tue bit ol tveQ-
thihg Friday -soriny skin, earl,
momlrii clouds ·and ply north-
east winds -while the !1!1J1per'lt-
ture resta ·ln1he middle 70's.
"OAtt.Y ,,~OT Stiff,...._
WATCH ING MOVEMENT DI E
1 Mor•tOrlum Leader L•a•r
But Student.Activist Makes Plans for Dec. 12
The girls have .been absent Crom
classes aince early November whtn Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Aleridge withdrew them
from !Chool, vowing never to return~ INSmE TODAY
~ .
-By llUDI NmDm:tBIU -on all campu><~ I just hope the move-°''"" ot11Y ... .., ,.... ment dGe:Sn't die out."
Student enthusiasm for another Vie{. To stir the stud:?nts from Ultlt -.,,....,.,rmoratOn\.~lden-Wat e gy, sa e m1g ry toOrlng
• (,ollege c.ampus._~dyini. some bands out for the next demon.stra.
' '
f'l•nked by an American nag, sym· uon.
boUcally ~rrourw:led by several plaUc .. We might try to run a program of
ft>wen. Bill Lagtr, studtnt·t1cllvist and . musk: ancr entertainment with it." he organizer.~ the past two Gold~ West _ sa.ld. "f.1uslc always attracts people."
d'"'°"'trationl, Wednesday typed out He added that the third oC the"serles ol ·
SGme plans for the nut observance, mGl'atoriums is supposed to have a com-
scbeduled for Dtc. 12. Hia face v,:11 k>na. munlt1 emphasis.
"For the Clrst one we had artat ••The Idea is to oot Into the commwUty
response, but lhe list one fluted." the lft.. with leaflets and talk to thet peqple 1bout
)'ear<ild student 1eader aald. our beliefs but t don't know l1ow many
"But that's what has been happenlnf we can 11ei to go out and pOrticl[!ete.'' •
I
'
t f ta! v l'-High beca f Nezt I/far the QovernmeKt Lager, who44ys he hasl>ad knees lnd c> • 'Olin n a, .. , · • use 0 will come to 1telp of parents,
will "probabl)t be 4-F myself," Claims a11eaed drug abuses on campus. but thiJ Christmas, it'• eveJ:ll
that the ntw draft lottery really doesn't . F•ffii with Uuancy Jtocttding,;;~.;thr:•;:Y.-~~"'-11>!.JlJIJ" ,.~ 'lti
provide 1ny snswerrtornnb·J~e ns er Uiti!' aaulfl . the dongtra of Hew f:111~(lQc
"In my 0plnl"'· conseriptlon -lfl a Bolsa Chica Hl&h S"ctuiol lh the Garden democratic IQciely is a contradiction," he Grove dlstrict. . JO.
said. "l tl\lnk taklna: people by chance on H. w. Standard, Grlffilh's counterpart C•t11W11t• •
their birthday Is a bad way of deciding In the llunUngton Beach Union · Hlah &-:~~.. »fi
v..hether he I.I wUling to give up his life or School District, said truancy reports h11ve ~:",.':n"' ,:
not." alfeady reaChed the Councy Schobl' Of-0 1•-u
"W• should move toward an aD-lice for furtlttr' action. :::::.:= ,:
.volunteer army because there au lo~ of . ~g~ly, bo(h girl~ must rem1ln In . ·==~ ~
people who[ff'O\!Jd be, Willing to M!fV,8 i!' clWCI un/JJ \hey lf'e 13 years •oJd Q]' ' AM Lt.lldtn It
that c1pae11¥. It ·wookt be altnctive . arduale lrom high school. • • ~~ uc.-i ,:
_.. " Mat••• ,... ."-, .. ., .. , ...... °' .... ~ 14 •"'* """' • MC:lal ..... • ... ·-""" llSCt,..,... ... ,. ,..'"'... . = 'l O!flltlWllfll' •II ::.:... ...... ,~1 ·llnandally: For IQl'Zle Jt wwld be· a good . "The .caie ll ou,t or our ~~1 no~1.. 1 ~ ••
thins' to do:.. ~· , 'la.la Standard. "Wfiat:ivcr co~iacb · ar,e L-------..,.--'-"--._,_,
I
•
DAILY ,ILOT SltN ,,_,.
'HUNTINGTON'S BONFA LECTURES IN EVENING CLASS
At Golden Witt Coll191, 8rukint the le• for No Credit
. Beach City Attorney Puts
In ~Ha~dNight's Worl{Too
•
By TERRY COVILLE
Of lfle Dally Plltl Slotff
a small yen for teaching," cx:plained Bon·
fa, "and I also felt there was a great
Don Bonfa puts in a hard day's WQrK need for basic information an local city
five days a week "as. clly attorney for i;ovemment -there's a lot of misin·
lluntington Beach. ' form ation abou t it tha t gets around."
But one night \a week he pons fl The course Don teaches is titled "11ow
tcach"'•·~,1~.Wes( Coll!&< '!14 City i:..w #1'<1 CitiJ!ns" ,nd Is given
becomes tlie bOJ ol' a class in ~1ly for no· ci'edit eaeh Wednesday night. It
.~overnment. Why? , was devised by .Bonfa who hopes to some·
"Nol .!'II Ill• .~1· he'·~·!~"'' ,tj;,r,;P,ak~ ·" a <rfdJI cour~ · Wed~~--ml'lfl!I"" lh.rlf ~,\ '\lfOjir, l'ilt,...t "OJwolimliit• fnv'ol~ cl.11.ss. ~ \( ~.~i · • ..,., · . .
"l riilly dld ·Jt beCaust I've alw~s had mostly local residents, people involved in
~ • l1omeowner1 associations • and such.
;1
Valley Planners
Okay OV Plans
On New School
Pmn;}_ion vs given to Ill! Ocean
View Sd7001 Dis'.rict to build an elemen·
tary school Jn the area of Magnolia Street
and Heil Avenue by the Fountain Valley
Planning Commission \Vednesday night.
In a shart, routine mee ting. planners
:i!so granted a use va riance to permit a
11·ood storage yard on property on the
southeast comer of Warner Avenue and
Newhope Street.
Commercial zoning for property an lhe
e11st side of Magnolia Street, between the
San Di2go Freeway and the Ocean View
flood control channel. was also granted
hy the C-Ommission. Tentative plans call
for construction of a miniature golf
center on the site .
The planning staff also informed the
commission that a complete report on the
city's preseflt and fuiure apartment
situation will be presented Dec. 17. At
that time planners are expected to set a
public hearing to determine future plan·
nlng for apartments in U1e city.
DAILY PILOT
OtANOl COA5T P\Jll •~l11NG COM~A'l'I'
Sfudents don't attend. because lhey want
C!edit for the lime they sptnd," he said.
About 20 individuals attend the class
regularly. Though the course title in·
dlcates an emphasis on law, Bonfa has
arranged each session ln a dialogue
format with various city officials invited
to explain the operation af th_eir segment
of government.
Last week the class took a physical l~ur of local ·police facilities. Wednesday
night the press was Invited to talk to the
class about the interaction between
gove_rnmenl, the press and the public.
•·These people are getting their fi rst
cliance to really sit down and discuss on
a per~on·to-1".'rson level ~hat really hap-
pens, . exp\~ined Bon(a, "it also provides
the city with a fresh viewpoint from
(•itizens."
Some of the guest speakers have in·
eluded f\fayor Jack Green , Police Chief
Earl Robit aille and Fire Chief Ray
P1rard.
"Once the ice is broken betv.•een the or-
li cial and the class some of the sessions
rea lly become interesting," l!aid Bonfa.
Bonfa pointed to a statement by Golden
'Vest College President Dudley Boyce to
explain the ideal aspect of the class.
Dr. Boyce sald, "It's a pioneer group of
citizens on the threshhold of developing a
joint, cooperative effort be(ween the city
government and commu nity college.
'Vhat would be more natural than a mar•
rlage between the city and the college
serving the city.''
"That's really why I 'm in i1," smiled
Bonfa.
-I INDFJ'ENDENCE, Ctlif, (UPI) -•
CharlK Iii ...... the hn>notlc -of •• nomadlc·cult auspectid In the !l•Yinil of lhai'eil T1ti Mil 11 llhlt Jk!:raona. was
found •1hldlq .in a tiny C\.l)tboard" when
authorities raldtd hls commune Jn Death
Valley in October.
The California Highway Patrolman
who led a posse in the r!lid teslifled
Wednesday at Manson's court hearing on
relatively minor auto theft .charges that
the long.haired cult leader was captured
cowering in the cupboard.
James Purcell, the only patrolman
usually on the 3,000..square·mile beat,
said tbe bearded Manson was "hiding in
a tiny cupboard beneath the sink. It was
perhaps lhree let! high, II lo IO l~es
wldo and U to ll lochel de<p. It took him
1 tlme to unwind."
Maneoa, who held a mysterious sway
.over hil followers. was the only one of tJie nlnt ptrlOnS arrested in the raid who
IUd when the posse descencied on the
thr~room house which was the base
camp for the nomadic conunune.
Before the end ol the sl11:-hour prelim·
!nary hearing. the district attorney's
afflce here Sfid Manson would be re-
leased to Los Angeles authorities if a
murder warrant wa.s issued. The court
ruled there was sufficient evidence of
-receiving stolen property to bring Man·
son to trial. Bail was ~t at fZS,000.
Too Well Known
Lennon Won't Be Jesus
In Cathedral Pageant
J,ONDON (AP) -Beatie John Lennon
won't be portraying Jesus in St. Paul's
Cathedral after all because Lennon's
personality might shove Christ into the
background , a · record company an·
nounced today.
The long.haired Beatie had been con-
sidered for the lead in a pop musical call-
ed "Jesus Christ" in the cathedral next
spring. But the writers of the show and
the recording company said they were
Mesa Mother's
Newest Infant
No Little Tot
A Costa Mesa \VOman ga ve birtll
'Vedoesday night to a boun cing baby boy
who has jiggled 'the scales as the heaviest
infant in the history of Orange County
Medical Center .
The heavywe ight champ a
phenamenal 14 pounds, 9 ounces-hasn't
been given his official name yet, but grin·
ning nurses have dubbed him Atlas,
Rocky ar ather such titles in the mean·
time.
The fourth son af Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Stepanenko. af 882 Towne SL, is 241.'i
indies long and is doing fine today, along
with his 33-year-old mather Louise.
Brothers Gregory, 13, Danny, 12. Den·
nis. Il. and sisters Linda, 9, and Krissy,
8. are waiting al home for the arri.val or
their big baby brother, who was delivered
by Dr. John Warnix>.
··A new baby that big is a medica l rari-
ty these days." observed Nursing
Supervisor Geraldine ~1cGeehan.
Vandalism Oaim
Agent Assigned
Repeated incidents of vandalism at
Westmont School has ¢'ompled the
Ocean View School Di.strict 'Board of
Trustees to appoint ilS principal, Don
Devor. as· its agent in pursuing small
claims actions in court.
He will represent the di strict in an ~
damage suit against lt\t parents of fi ve
former students who allegedly broke
several classroom "'indows over the sum-
mer . A district spokesman said the amount
of damage was originally set . much
higher but was brought do"·n \\'hen the
parents reportedly agretd to pay the $84.
convinced that a relative unknown should
be the star.
"Someone like Lennon would imprint
his own personality to such an extent that
people would read the star's character in·
lo the character of the pa rt,'' said a
.spokesman for the Music Corp. of
Ameri ca-U.K. Record Co.
Lennon, himself, \\'as barely involved in
the issue but was quoted as saying he
would be interested in the part as long as
his wi fe, Yoko Ono, could take the role of
l\1ary Magdalene.
Il was Lennon who aroused outraced
protest in the United States a teW years:
110 by saying that the Beatles ..,at the
time were more popular than Christ.
The musical about Christ 's last si:t
days an earth, by camposer Tim Rice. 25,
and producer Andrew Lloy d.Webster. 21 .
is being written for the 1'i!CA·UK Rcl'Qrd
Co., and is to be issued as an album.
A spokesman for the company said the
statement about Lennon p o s s i b I y
overshadov.·ing Jesus \\'as not meant to
cause any offense. He explained that he
was referring of offense to Lennon.
"It's not that the wTiter!i' don't want
Lennon involved but they feel an
unknown would be more su itable,·• he
said.
St. Paul's. one of Europe's most
celebrated cathedrals, has had a pop
policy for the past year, with a fashion
.show.in the crypt and parachute jumping
in front of the great doors. The pop apera
is the latest project for the JOO.year-old
cathedral.
Beacl1 Men Get
Theft Sentences
Tu·o Huntington Beach men ha ve
drawn IS.year tenns in federal prison for
their holdup of a Long Beach bank.
Gathel Ammon Beaton, 26, of 611 5th
St. and Ruben Emest Grif(in, 31, of 17256
Beach Boule'(ard were senlenced in Los
Angeles federal court by U.S. District
Caurl Judge Warren J. Ferguson.
Both men were arrested last July 16
shortly after the robbery of lhe east Long
Beach branch af the Security Pacific Na-
tional Bank. They were identified as the
duo \!.'ho took $1,500 at gunpoint from the
bank.
FBI agents recovered the stolen money
along with the revolver used in the
holdup from a Long Beach apartment OC·
cupied by the two men. Both were traced
after witnesses gave the license number
of their getaway car to police.
Cupboard • Ill
The 1tooped, alight M1naon Vf'U wear-
Jni blue denim jail clothu when he w11
led Into the Inyo County courthouse In
chains to fac~ the charge.s involving
sto len vehicles .
One af the witne sses to testify was
Paul Wa tkins. 18, a former member or
the "family" cult.
Manson doodled on a piece of yellow
paper while \\'ltnesses testified to the
charge of receiving stolen property dur·
ing raids by "the l\1anson family" from
a base camp in .the Death Valley area .
Another member of the cult. OO\V in
custody in Los Angeles, said through her
attorney that Manson, 34. herd an "in·
.&ane, almost hypotlc inrluenc~" over his
DAILY 'ILOT S!fll Phfte
She'• Queen
~farina High School senior
Chris Linton. 17, is reigning
over Westminster-iVJarina Ro·
tary Invitational Basketball
1'ournament under tvay this
.. '''eek at both schools. See
sports.
Joy Ride Wrecks
Valley Crop Field
Joy riding vandals tore through a field
of celery in Fountain Valley Wednesday
on the farmer's oy,·n tractor. causing
about $1 ,700 damage to the crop.
Police said s've.ral loops were taken
through the field at Bushard Street and
Ed inger Avenue early Wednesday, cut-
ting celery stalks and ramming a
portable privvy. The tractar used was a
0-6 caterpillar which had been left on the
fiel d overnight. The vandalism was
reported by Tomio Matsumoto, 16521
Marie Lane , Huntington Beach.
Alcatraz Island
Taken Off Market
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Alcatraz
Island "'as taken off the market \Ved-
nesday as a possible buy for the city or
San Francisco.
City offici al were notified by the U.S.
General Ser\'ices Administration that the
island is no longer for sale.
GSA Regional Administrator Thomas
Hannon said the decision was based on a
request by Interior Secretary \\falter
Hickel for an itWefinite extension of time
to study passible uses for the abandoned
island.
''family,'' She said his followtrs ca'f!e!
hlm "J esua."
The girl, Susan Atk1ns. lt, held as a
suspec t in the suibbing death of i man
\\•h.ich has been COMected to the group,
said i\tanson was an aspiring soul singer
and guitar player.
She said he wa.s embittered al Terry
Melcher, son of Doris Day, because
Melche r -refused to help him produce a •
record . l\1elcher's home. later rented by
hllss Tate. became a "symbol of rejee·
lion,'' she sa id, and l\1anson ordered all
ils occupants slain.
Miss Tate, three Jriends and an 18-
year.cld boy visiting the estate's care·
taker. were stabbed and shot to death.
Lodge Leaves
•
Paris, Holds ·
Hope for Peace
PARIS <UPI) -Ambassador Henry
Cabol Lodge bowed out or the Pari~
peace tal~s today with a farewell speech
reviev.·ing the past and expressing hope
for the future. The Communists ushered
him out with a renewal of all the charges
that made him quit in the first place.
Addi ng lo a complaint by North Viet·
nam negotiator Xuan Thuy that there had
been no progress in JO months of negotia·
tions with Lodge was a series of new
charges that the United States had com-
mitted "thousands of barbarau.s crimes"
in South Vietnam.
Lodge, 67, has been a key figure In
American Vietnam war policies since the
early 1960s. Today was his last as chief
negotiator. On Saturday he plans to leave
Paris for his heme in Boston.
He summarized his parting speech as 1
re\•iew of "the things which v.·e on our
~ide have proposed. what the ether side '~
reactio ns have been, v.•hat are some of
the most persistent and erroneous beliefs
\l'hich i1npede progress, and \vhat is the
hope for the future."
Lodge cited a nun1ber of allied co n·
cessions including a U.S.· offer lo
11·ithdra\v its troops \\'ithin a year, a pro-
posa l for a cease.fire under international
supervision. Saigon's offer to hold direct,
.secret talks '\'ith the Communists and an
offer to settle the war thraugh jointly
controlled and internat ionally supervised
elections.
Addressing himself to the Communist:'!
seated acrass the 26-foot negotiating table
he said. "the obstacle is your side'~
absolute refusal to join us in seeking a
just peace." He said they had the appor·
I unity to negoti ate but "you have been un·
willing lo do so in any mttting place,
public or private."
"\Vith reference to your statement~
conceming Song ~1y," he stated, "t l'.'ill
say : an incident such as that alleged in
!his case is in direct violation not only or
U.S. military policy, but it is al~
.ibharrent to the conscience of all the
American people.
"Whatever happened will be known,
because \1;e do not conceal the truth. Jn
all this , I submit. aur policy is Jn direct
contrast to your O\vn deliberate use of
terrorism as a matter af conscious
policy.''
Freed POWs Flown
To Fa111il y Reunions
SEOUL fUPJ )-Three U.S. helicopter
crewmen. freed \Vednesday after 108
days in a Nort h Korean prison. flew home
today for family reunions and further
medical treatment.
The three originally had been sched·
uled to ny to Andrev.·s Air Force Bas!':
near \Vashington transfer to Walter Reed
Army Hospital. But pla ns were changed
to fly them to air bases near th.eir home~.
Failure by the parents to pay the set·
tied amount will result,tn a small claims
suit by Devor. No fila~ o( hearing has
been set yeL
Seal Week Declared
---MtifiiillillirlMMJiDrliMiifiiifif_,.JllliMM_, .... ~~,
I ~· .JJ. J. (Jarrett P reJenb ~ I The week of Dec. 7·13 has been pro-
clai Christmas Seal Week In Foun-
tain ey by M a y o r Edward Just.
Christma Seals are sold ta raise funds
to baUle t rcu losis, emphysema and
respiratory · sease. I " a very special purchase from a ~ i
fob1rt N W•1d
rrt)lnrn• •nd Pyb"l~tr
J .~~ It C~•lev
Vl(t l'fll'Gl"t ·~o C.r~tt•I J.'1~1,11 Gilts Reje~tetl i famous c1uality m·aker of I
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UC I MedStudent.s Say Bags 'Threat'
fourteen of 64 students in the fre shman
class of UC Irvln,'s School of Medicine
have rejected gift of a black medical bag
containing stethoscope, tuning fork and
rubber hammer from a pharmaceutical
company.
The students feel acceptance of the
gifts might Impinge on their future in·
tegrity as physicians and oould cost eon·
i;umers of the drug company's products
by higher prices, according to freshman
medical student Jerry Boss.
Tiic fourt,cn students sent a letter to
Ell Lill Pharmaceutical Compan)' rr·
Jee mg e g1 -i le1t-er in
rep/)',
\\'rote the students:
" .. .fully cognlz11nt there is no obliga·
lion attached to accepting these &lfta, v. e
''iew them as a potential lhrc:it lo our
future integrity as physicians. We would
prefer 10 be complclely free of 3ny non·
business transactions with
pharmaccutlc~I companies."
Replied Henry F. OtBoest, vict presi-
dent of corporate affairs for the Ully
Company:
"The instruments and bags are offered
with the ex pectation that they will be
useful. Quite naturally, it is our desire to
acquaint students with the Lilly name as
a manufacturer of quality medicines.
"At the same time we do not believe
that tbis assistance will affect the lm·
partlal judgmenl3 of physicians in thelr
care of patients."
On the seeond issue . lhtl studenU
\\'rott!
". • :we question the souree of the
money used to pay fOr these 1Uts. It a~
P'ilrs to us the drug consumer -mainly
the-chronically-l~flnd·ogtd-ia iti.. Q
"'ho ultlmate1y shoulders the cost of
these gifts. We feel v.·e can better afford
1he prlte of our black bags than can our
medically Indigent patients."
Responded OeBoe.st :
", .. during tilt' pas1 10 years. as shown
by lhe Liiiy pr,ce Index. the 1ver•1e
price or our comJ)lny'& pharmacelltic1\s
has de<:llned more than JO ptrctntaie
points. Bec•tise of its limited 1!1c, the
student program hu had vlrtually no cf·
feet on the prlccs oI our products.''
t
i A GlfT TO TIWURE All> WOY FOR YURS I I
i
• Ctlltom qulllly through-out •
tw1hloning • Your
choice of oolan from an ut.emive
selection ol finest leather l-.
from $199
. '
' I
' I
" Thur5d11, Dtumbtr 4, 1969 H DAIL y PILOT. I
Governor's
Job Sought
By Unruh
County Welfare Pro~ests Due?
Director ~lans Meeting With Rights Movement
~ . .
IJPI T•i..titllw
R60M AT THE TOP?
Gubernatorial Candidate Unruh
Nixo11 Sa)'S
Hav11sworth
"
To Keep Post
WASHINGTON (AP) -President Nix·
on announced today that Judge Clement
F. Haynsworth Jr. will continue to serve
as chief judge of the Fourth U.S. Circuit
Court of Appeals.
\Vith Haynsworth standing at hls side,
Nixon went before newsmen al the White
House to describe his rejected nominee
tor the Supreme Court as a victim of
"brutally vicious" attacks. In the face of
these, the President said , the judge might
\veil have conside red stepping down from
the circuit bench.
"A weak man would.'' said Nixon. "A
fearful man would. The judge is nol a
weak man."
Nixon said he v.•as delighted by
liaynsworth's decision and cited what he
described as ttls oWn philosophy that an
individual is never without defeat
somewhere along the line but he sbould
never be fearfuJ,
This was the first time that Nixon and
Haynsworth have met. Stepping to the
microphone, Haynsworth acknowledged
that "no one likes to lose."
But he said he had been greatly en·
couraged, s.ince the 55-45 Senate vote
against llis nomination on Nov. 21 by
thousands (Jf letters.
Hayn~'Orlh said he has learned that
the judges .of the Fourth Circuit want
him to retain the chief judgeship and that
the bar "wants me back ."
Turning to Nixon, Haynsv>'orth said ; "T
am very grateful to you for your stead-
fast support." ·
Nixon began by reminding nev•smen
that he had telephoned Haynsworth, im·
mediately after I.he Senate vote, to urge
that he remain on the circuit bench.
At that time Haynsworth said he
wanted a coople of weeks in which to
contemplate whether the Senate battle
over ·his nomination wtluld impair his
ability to continue as chief judge of the
fourth circuit.
..
INGLE\VOOD (AP) -Den1ocratic
Assembly Leader Jesse M. Unruh
challenged Republican incumbent Ronald
Reagan for the governorship or California
today. charging the State Capitol ls con-
trolled by a "handful or half.hidden
millionaires."
The '4'7·year-old Unruh, the 1968
California leader of the late Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy's presidential campaig,n,
made his long-awaited entrance Jnto the
race in a statement to a news conference
al his suburban home near Los Angeles.
In becoming the first announced can4
didate in the 1970 governorship election,
Unruh, former speaker or the Assembly,
aimed his fire at the governor .and
Reagan's so-called "kitchen cabinet."
Thal 's a group of wealthy businessmen
v.•ho are friend ly with Reagan and help
finance his political campaigns.
"The handful of the half-hidden
millionaires who call lhe shots in
Sacramento today do not represent
Calirornia," said Unruh.
"They must be told that it is your state
and your future. We \\'ill say to them,
'No, you cannot buy our government like
you bought a mansion for Ronald
Reagan.' "
PAYS RENT
He referred to "kit~en cabinet"
members and others wbb .contributed
more than $150,000 foc a fashionable
Sacramento home for the Reagan family.
Reagan pays $1,2,50 a month rent to the
group, which includes Ben Swig, a pro-
minent San Francisco Democrat.
Unruh. a powerful figure in state
politics for more than a decade, is ex-
pected to face opposition in the primary
from San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto.
with lhe winner becoming the party
nominee. Early public opinion polls say
Unruh is the favorite.
Reagan, according to aides. \Vill an·
nounce his candidacy for a second term
later next year. He expects no major
primary opposition.
Unruh, son of an illiterate Texas
sharecropper. recalled how "I hitchhiked
tlcre from Texas nearly 30 years ago with
little more than the clothes on my back."
CUJ\IB FROM POVERTY
He recounted his climb from poverty -
aircraft plant worker, Navy enli.sted
man, GI Bill graduate of the University
of Southern California, election to the
A~mbl~ in 1954 and finally in 19ftl as
speaketl""'"-an office held longer than any
olher man. He lost the job this year when
the Republicans took over the Assembly.
"California has kept the promise it held
for me," he said. "I run for governor
because I want to keep the pron1ise of
California alive and growing Co r
everyone.''
As speaker, Unruh v.•on many friends
.and made many enemies. But even his
foes credit him with making major in·
t{'rnal refonns in the Assembly.
He hired young consultants to advise
legislators in an effort, he said, to reduce
the lawmakers' dependence on special in·
terest lobbyists. lie led the fight for a
full·time legislature, and for an increase
in legislative salaries.
But his foes also accused him of being
a bully and hung the name of "Big Dad·
dy" on him. That was when he weighed
almost 290 pounds. Since lhen , he has
dieted dov.'Jl to 190.
By TOl\1 BARLEY
Of "'' 0•11)' Plitl Sl•lt
\Vorried \Velfare Director Granville
Peoples today warned that Orange Coun·
ty may be lhe next larget for
demonstrators who have d i s r u p t e d
welfare department meetings in
neighboring counties.
Peoples has set Dec. 12 as the date on
v.•hich he will diKUss Orange County
welfare operations -and in particular its
AFDC (Aid to Families with Dependent
Children} program -wit.b what he said
Allies Pursue
Cong Forces
111 Ca111bodia
SAIGON (UPI) -Allied warplanes,
artillery and troops raided into Cambodia
in pursuit of a battered North Vietnamese
battalion in fighting reported today.
President Nguyen Van Thie u announced
the allies would honor 24-hour truces for
Christmas and New Year's.
Thieu emerged from a 9(1.minutc meet·
Ing wilh U.S. Ambassadcr Ellsworth
Bunker and announced lhe truces for
"humanitarian reasons." Th~re have
been 13 truci!S SO far in the \lo'ar, aJI of
them marred by fighting.
U.S. spokesmen said American forces
would honor the cease.fires but there
was no word from the Viet Cong or North
Vietnamese, who usually beat Saigon to
the punch in proclaiming holiday truces.
Field reports said the No1·;n Vietnam·
ese bi'lltalion that \vas chased into Cam·
bodia had used the neighboring nation as
a springboard for its attack earJy Wed·
nesday on a border town and two U.S.
Green Beret camps, killing 2S South
Vietnamese.
The guerrillas v.•ere thrown back with
166 men slain and headed back across
the border with U.S. warplanes and
artillery and a South Vietnamese platoon
in pursuit.
Headquarters said the allies bad an
"inherent right" to fire back if fired upon
from Cambodia.
U.S. spokesmen acknowledge the air
raids into Cambodia, the second such
strikes in three weeks, but 1aid nothing
of the artilley strikes or·Soutb Vietnam·
ese platoon.
Reports of the action 58 miles \\'C"l·
northwest of Saigon coincided with the
weekly ca'lualty report showin~ 70 Amer·
·icans killed last week, the third lowest
number of deaths slnce 1966.
Another 1,04!1 Gls were wounded. Only
two other times since 1966 has the v.·cck·
ly death toll been lower-the week of Oct .
4 when 64 Gfs died and the first week
of 1967 when 67 were killed.
Mililary spokcs1nen confirmed wh:it
sources had ' dlstlosed earlier-that U.S.
casualties for the war su rpassed the :mo 000 mark last week, ""·ith 39,642 killed,
259'.828 wounded and 1.359 missing or
captured-a total of 300,829.
The U.S. death figure was a sharp
drop from the 130 Gls slain the previous
week. South Vietnamese losses fell too.
to 373 killed and 95.1 wounded, with 2,177
Communists reported sla in.
Coynty Sets Smog Tests
Year-long Study Gratis to Taxpayers
By J ACK BROBAC K
011111 Dt!lr Pllol 5"ft
Orange County will conduct.• year·l~ng
experiment in the field of air pollut1on
and it won't cost the. taxpayers a pe nny.
County Supervisor:. Wednesday ac-
cepted the offer of Pacific Lighting
Service Co. (Parent Company of Southern
Counties Gas) lo loan six natural gas
conversion kits to be used on county
vehicles.
Included in the offer by Reine J.
Corbeil; project manager £or Pacific
Lighting Is free compressed natural gas.
Supervisors saw two vehicles that had
been converted from gasoline to natural
DAil Y 'II.OT lttlt PMlt
PAC IFI C LIG HTING'S CORBE IL 'FI LLS 'ER UP'
f or Countv Cars.. A Dlfftrtnt Kind of Ga1
I
gas. a 1967 Chrysler New Yorker and a
1968 Dodge service truck.
Corbeil invited the county leaders to
check the exhaust pipes of the conve~ted
cars, but none did.
The gas company represeatative said
lhe cars greatly outperformed gasoline
p(lv.·ered vehicles in lack of emissions of
air pollutants and more than met all
standards set by the state !or 1970 and
1974 . .
Jn carbon monoxide emi ssions. natur111
gas powered cars produce only 2.11
grams per mile compared with 28.Z with
gasoline. Figures for hydrocarbons lll>~re
J.41 and 2.56, and for oxides of nitrogen,
.SI and 3.82.
Cost of conversion to natural gas wa~
estimated at $300 per vehicle. More lhan
30 cars have been so equipped and are
being tested today.
Other advantages claimed for gas In·
elude cleaner engine oil. longer spark
plug life, smoother operation and lower
cost.
'Pacific •Lighting, ·corbeil said. plans to
convert additional vehicles and to market
the dual.fuel system to other companies
which operate large vehicle fleets .
.(JJ cars 'are equipped with a dashboard
control to switch from natural gas to
gasoline. With a limited number of aim·
pressed ga.s outlets. the dual -fuel system
permits'oPeration·of a vehicle on natural
gas for stop-and-go driving In congested
high pollution areas and a rwilch lo
gasoline on longer trips.
Special compressed gas tank! Installed
In lhe trunk or passenger cars provide
f'n('lllgh fuel for 100 miles travel In cars
similar to the demonlltraUon model which
gets only JO miles per gallon on gilsoline.
Better mileage can be expected from
can1 more eC<1nomlcal on gasoline,
Corbeil snld.
R. I. "Cuba'' Morris, county dlrtctor of
transportation, said he had vehicles
ready for conversion. At the sugge11tlon of
Supervisor David L. Baker, Morrts 1ald
he would use older (Ounty cars as well as
newer models ln lhe test.
1vcre "self-proclaimed Orange County
representatives of the National Welfare
Rights movement."
lie identified the movement spokesman
as t-.1rs. Alice Silvas of Santa Ana, the
author of a widely.cireulated pamphlet
which is calling on AFDC mothers to
mount "a.dynamic assault on Granville
Peoples' ivory tower."
But Peoples warned newsmen "Welfare
is only one piece of this. This pressure is
being imposed by militant groups from
outside Orange County who are seizing on
welfare and some admitted deficiencies
to promote their cause." •
He would not identify the militants or
co1nmenl on whal he said were "the true
alms" of the movement.
"We are going to try to avoid the
disruption that has occurred in such
places as Los Angeles and San Diego,"
Peoples said.
The weUare director said he was one of
a number of welfare workers from
several Southern Clllfornla counties who
rt:cenUy had to call Off a San Diego con·
venUon when "welfare rtghta agitators
walked in and took over the meeting.,._
Peoples conceded that the central •rCU·
ment of the demonstrators -the con·
teoUon that aid to mothers with familits
was far from sufficient -was ju1Ufled.
And be pointed out thal ald levels set ht
California 12 years qo have never been
revised while ilvlng coets have mounted
in that time by 26 pel'OOlt.
OPl:N 6 NIGHTS A WEB:
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVEN1ENCS
It's iust not Christmas
without a real· tree!
LIKE IT ...
CHARGE IT!
'
'
CHRISTMAS TREES!
Sc:otc:h pine tree. A tree with its own beoutif4I
shade of green ••• needles that a re luxu riously long.
Branches reta in thei r needles longe r than other fi rs, so
you can enjoy your tree much longer.
5 ft,., ft.
6.49
2Wf1 .• 3~ h. Scolch pt-.4At-
6 h. • 7 h. Scotch pine 7,ff
7 h. • 8 h. Scotch pine .. _ .• _: I.ff
N1tural Dou9l11 fir thrillmos tr111I Strolght, sturdt,
lu.tllt ;r11n, w• f\lthtd these down from mountoln for·
1st1 to fill your home with tht 'joy of Chrittmos. Salte:!
from a voritty of tir••·
Pl1nt1tion grown Douglas fir trMt. A mo11 ~
tr•• d1M to Its NII pyramldol rymMttry4 Th. colof ft
d1nslty of Douglas fir branchts ha 'l't beeft tnhancied try
y1arly 1hearlng and shaping.
2 h .-3 h ............... -.............................. 99c
•
3 It .• 4 ft. ---f:ff 7 ft. -8 ft. ·-~~--~.69
5 ft.-6 ft. ·--··3-~9 9 ft.-10 ft. ---... 6.99
-~s ~h-~· 6~h.'.:. • .:::·--=·-:.::-·;.::· .. ::;:----;.::-·::; .. ··;;;; .. i.:::---· 8.49 ~
'"'" _, no1u OPIH )
MJMOAY fOOI
11 ... ,...-,
DOWNEY
I·
6 h. 4 7 ft, Douglas fit tree .. 9.99
7 ft.· 8 ft. Oov9la1 flr lrff ·----··-····--11 .99
MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH
•
• '
•
..
Thursday, Otctmbtr 4, 196'
CC...llt4 h' Wit 0-tl'I' l'lftt lt1ff)
New York's Atty. Oen. Lout1 J.
Lefkowitz sent this letter to e a c b
of the state's 150 assemblymen:
"It h as come to my attention that
t.he consumer action bulletin from
my office wa s sent to you in an e~ ..
velope in which you \Vere not adot,,
dressed with your full title, but in
an abbreviated form. It was care-
less of my office to have address-
ed you in this fashion and I'm sor-
ry 1'l happened." The bulletin's ad·
d ress used the first three letters
of the assemblymen's title. •
Brad Lindskog, 11 , of. Proph.tU..
toiµn. Ill., poses with his steer, Cono-
ro, the grand champion of this year'•
livestock sliow in Chicago. The steer
~old for $15,180. Brad, who is the
!loungest steer exliibitor to ever win
top hOnors f1L the history of the 70.
11ear-old shoW, paid a little more than
$300 for the steer t1uo years ago . • President Nixon, who freq uently
lunches on cottage cheese and cat-
sup, revealed the reaction to hi s
\veight-watchin g scheme in an
aside to a White House Confer-
ence on Food, N u trition and
Health. "You can't imagine how
1nany letters I got," he said. "The
catsup industry wrote and to1d me
1 o try it on my cereal. And others
'vrote and told me that catsup with
cottage cheese had to be unheal·
thy." Nixon countered by saying
I.hat his grandmother "lived to be
93 and ate it all her life.'' •
A highway ice warning dtvice
that refl.ects a red light w he n
temperatures drop to fretting
toas displayed by a: West Ger·
man Ttsearch firm in Frankfurt.
1 The ~l_l~ Institute which de-
) veloped . ~ device, said it U
~ m.01l11ted ·Oil roadside. guard
iJ rails and in headlight reflect-
ions shows Ted when the tem-
peratures drop to freeztn'g, yel·
low wlie1t t.emperatures a re
slightly 1narm er and green when
there is 110 chance of ice.
L==::::.--::.:~ = ===-• Duke Ellington and his 17-man
band r eturned from a good-will
tour of 12 E uropean nations, and
the bandleader said "I have a lot
of \\'onderful impressions." Elling-
ton 'told nei'1s1nen in New York
tllal Jn Prague, Czechoslovakia
after the sho\v. some young kids
iollo\ved me to my -hotel room
\vhere they gave me enameled ani·
mals a nd other gifts. lt was all
done \Vithou t ,,·ords, so J asked
them for their names and ad-
dresses so I co uld send them
Ch,ristmas greetings. a-nd it turned
out that they "'ere all Russian rnu-
5icians -it \Vas wonderful.
Jmpartifll lnqulr1
G.oldherg Urges
Massacre Probe
•
By Uolled Pml latorudoul
Former Supreme Court Justice Arthur
Goldberg and more than 30 other govern·
ment officials, international lawyen: and
professors called on President Nixon t().
day to a~int an impartial commlsslon
to study erlcan conduct in Vietnam in
the light o alleged massacre of clvlliam
by U.S. troops.
The massacre assertedly occurred in
March of 1968.
President
May Summon
Cong·ress Back
W ASHJNGTON (AP) -President Nix-
on told Republic'an congressiona1 leaders
today he will call Congress back into
session Dec. %6 if it does not C<Jmplete ac-
tion before Christmas on all ap-
propriation bills.
And, H~ GOP Leader Gerald R.
Ford told newsmen after the weekly GOP
leader:Wp meeting with Nixon, the Presi·
dent a1so is considering calling Congress
back to Capitol Hill the day after
Otristmas 1f there is no "movement" on
bis antk:rime legislation.
'"lbe President is very finn that action
must be taken ." related Sen ate
Republican Leader Hugh Scott. "I have ·
never 6ttn the Presldent any tougher
than be was today."
Shcrlly after Scott and Ford met with
newsmen at the White House, the Senate
completed action on a $4.8 billion public
works money bill. Jt was the fifth of 13
appropriatlon measures sent to Nixon
thJs year.
1be need f« anticrime legislation was
a major tbeme of Nixon's presidential
campaign but none of his recom-
mendations has: gotten vuy far in eon_..
No date has been aet for the Christ.mas
holiday adjournment but Fon! indicated
the dates be.ing diSCWIS«l are "anywhere rrom De<:. 20 to the 24th. Under the cur·
rent cireumstances we will have to be
bere Christm&1 Eve."
Senate Democratic Leader M i k e
Mansfield, who raised Monday the
possibility of Senate meetings between
Christmas and New Year's to finish
money bjlls, told a newsman, "We are
making every effort to let the ap.
propriations bills through. It Is going to
be nJp m:t tuck'."
"The allegations. of atrocities commit-
ted in Vietnam are hurting the reputa·
tion (and) the consclence or all law
respecting Am ericans," Goldberg said in
a crowded office at New York Univer-
gjty.
"We urge the President to reject lhe
vlew that atrocities may ln any way be
justified, by any side, as a necessity of
war. This case (of the My Lai massacre)
offers an opportunity for the reaffirma.·
tion of an ational commibnent to lhe
rule of law."
After reading a three-page statement.
dra\Vll up by an ad hoc group of lawyers
in Ntw York , Gold berg suggested that
lhe commission could be made up of
"concerned and patriotic Americans''
such as former Supreme Court JU6tice
Earl Warren and retire<! Army General
l\fatthew D. Ridgeway.
Gold berg said he did not want to spec·
ulate on the possible conclusions wh ich mi ght be reached by the commission,
but said recent news stories about U.S.
conduct of the war indicate "th ere is
enougli io this to warrant an investiga-
. lion."
He was asked what the policy of the
commission should be since policy
decisions concerning the conduct of the
war were made at the hit:hest level of
the government.
"Let the chips faU where they may,''
11aid Goldberg.
Rails, Unions
OK Agreement;
Strike Averted
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Agreement
""as reached today on a ne\v contract
between the country's railroads and four
shopcraft unions, averting a th reatened
nationwide rail shutdown .
The agreement, announced by Labor
Secretary George P. Shult z arter an all·
night session between negotiators, will
have to be ratified by the union mem·
bershi p.
At 8:30 a.m. (PST). afte r first maklng
a hurried trip to the Wllite House to give
President Nixon the word, Shultz told
reporters;
··1 am very pleased to be. able to an·
nouoct: here that free c o JI e ct i'v e
bargaining has triumphed."
•·we do havei a settlemeni. volun,tarily
agreed to by management and the shop-
craft unions. There will not <be a railroad
1trike."
Mechanical Failure Told
Before Air France Crash
CARACAS (UPI) -Investigators said
today the last words of an Air France
jelliner pilot indicated that mechanical
failure and not sabotage or a hijack at.
tempt caused the plane to fall Into the
&ea Wednesday night with lo6s of· all 62
persons aboard.
"I am losing altitude 8J'Jd I cannot con-
trol the plane," Capt. Henry Valter rad.i·
oed the control tower from 4,500 feet two
minute.s out of Maiquetia Airport. on a
fiight bound for Paris. The Boeing 707 .
plane fell four milea from the airport and
explodoo In an orange fireball.
The disaster was witnessed by another
pilot, Capt. Jose Cabezas of the
Venezuelan domestic airline Aeropostal
Venezolana, who was fiylng 2,000 feet
above the Air France jet.
"I saw the plane begin to rise from
~iaiquetia and then suddenly it started
downwards," he said. "There was an ex-
plosion and fire on impact." It fell into
the sea where a Pan American plane
crashed OD Dec. 12, 1968 with Uie loss of
so lives.
CLAY NO CHA!tlP
AT BOX OFFICE
NEW YORK (AP) -0 Big. Time Buck
White,'' the musical featuring former
ht:avywelght champion Cassius Clay, also
known aa Muhammad ~. will close
Saturday night after six performances,
the show's management announced to·
day.
The presentation won only one
favorable review hefe and will sustain a
loss of about $125,000.
Bitter Chill Grips East
Buffalo, Rochester Record Heavy Snoivfalls
Cnllfornla
lO~ ,1.N GEL ES AND .VICINITY-
MOlll'f lU"n" Frldt.,. l ow IOll!tt1t !1.
Gu•t., wi"Cll ~low t invoru Frld1Y.
Hit~ Frid-Iv 711
POINT CONCEPTION TO Ml!lttC,t.N
e O!!OEll.-Llghl Yft1Ab!e w1"<11 '*
tomi!'l'J "'•lltlr 10 111 !9 ~'ICh In tl!e,.
noon Fr"'-Y t-.11 l'IOl'l~ll wl'ldt 15 to ~ ~'>Ott 11 llmfl outet too1111 w•Ttr~.
M0$11., IUM., dtr Diii IO<ne .. fl'I'
'°'°'"l~t lo# tloo.Hh n'IOSll., 1outM1n
PO>llOI',, "' little "''""'' Frkl1Y, COASTAL ,t..NO IN'TE llM£01,lTI!
VAlL.EY~llr Ill"">' FridtY. l ow
l?"ltl'll oil) lo $1. A llllle -•mer Fri.
rl•Y w1!ll 111111 Tl) lo IO. Gul!'f wl11G1
MloN t l"'l'V"t 111'~1.,,
Arl1n11
&1k.,1lleld
lll1m1rCk
&olst
l ottoll
l ...,f'l'lvlll•
......
Dt:!l'Olt '
Hitt! lew Prtt.
" Joi ,S7
" " " ,, " " " " " " ,.
" " •
" " " .. ,,
" "
T•
•
.
National Church Council Elects Woman President -. . ' DETROIT (UPI) -Dr. Cynthia Wedel,
10 outspoken advocate of women's rights,
tod ay was elected the first-woman presi-
dent of the National Council of Churches.
Episcopalian from Washington, D.C.,
defeated the Rev. Albert B. Cleage Jr., a
Detrolt NJ:gro )>88tor, in ,.cm balloting
at the·NCC's triennial general assembly.
hll!hest office of the .nation's lar1eot
Mrs. Wedel, a 61-year-old white She will suve a three-year term in the
cooperative religious body. 'Ille NCC is
com~ed of _33 Protes tant and orthodox
denominations with •s million memben.
Open
fore Chrisl,1nas.
-------------------------------------· I I
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I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
I I
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: I I ·-------------------------------------
All it takes ia a little application to open a
Filllt Bancharge Reserve account. Simply fill
out the one above and bring it in or se nd it
to any of the 90-plus offices of First Western
Bank. It's that eas y.
l'!esent your card for presents. First Ban·
-charge Reserve can be used to purchase up
to $2,400 worth of presents at just about any
place in California. It's like a charge account,
except you use a· check instead of a charge
card. 'Vhen you do, the service charge is no
more than at most department stores.
If you're traveling during the holidays
anirun a little short of cash, First Bancharge
Reserve can be used as a check guarantee
card. It's like instant money, up to $100 in
cold, hard cash at any one of a thousand
banks , coast-to-coast. Once you've opened
your First Bancharge Reserve account it's
open not only for Christmas, but for the 364
hill-paying days in between, too.
First . Ban charge·
Reserve
Membe:r Fe<lual Deposit b111.1ran_.c-c CofJll'l"'t.ion
iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
THE GREATEST SPORT
I!" since the Wright Brothers got off the ground at Kitty Hawk ""· ..
TESTOR'S R/C Plan• is completely 1ssemblt d
••• ready to fly ••• right out of the box!
FOR MEN
FROM .10 TO 100
Complete set Includes everything you
need to fly -plus the battery recharg·
er 50 you can use the Cadmi um Cell
batteries that come with the plane.
1'NI SKY·H-WK It VUlTIJAllY IHOl!lTRUCTllLE-
IAST TO l"LY
T~!1 p1111• Is midi Of 111-lmpect 1tvren1 , • • 11mcJl
11nbr•ak1bJ1. BIO "" tn•rlv ••J wlr.o•pa" . • • '7"
fu1ell0f, 11.IOltf .., riv " IOOll •• YG'U ltk• It out of t~e bo.ir,
• H!-Toni~ .IMf t.I. lnfwrn1t combustlori tnglnt.
• UO Ml!llw•t1 tr•na!Jtw fl' .... mltttr
e t l ••n1l1tor Svperht lt,rOC'yn1 rtt1lv1r wi!I! pulu w\clll! dte0dt11111 e Tn.t1 11Vl11 piworl~I fldlo ton!~!
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lM1 glen! pl1nt under '(11\lf (OrUro1 -l rHI !e~•n ll>t b,u lt'
of llylllf. Otlltr now -"' h•v• l1rgt IUPf'IY -bvl ll11rry1 lh11 00 latll
i • • • • II • a • • 11 • • • • • HOBBY PEOPLE, Dtpt. H
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• Los Angeles, California, 90011
Get ready t o t1ke off
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•JOIJNTAIN AREAS-Motll'f tunn.,
t r,ftt.,, Little l•motrlN•• ci..,,.-,.,
!'o!•Ollt tu1tv norfll to nOtlhftU wll!l!I
IO'O"t •~1 F'rldl'l'o '• i.ell•~t'!I (t1ifor11t1 llllf IU"l~ln" """
, )11'1.!:'0lt"' elr to!My. wllll 91,11tf "'1>'111
,, "-O•llltllt wnkh tKtttlto:I Fr"ltY. II
Wt.l t \ffMl., «Qlft.
Tl'lt· hll!> '' 1.-,1 -'~9,;;, ·r,111~ Ctn•
!•• w11 n. d0•11 two cl9'•••• from w""'n.,dlv'• m1,1"1v'".
Coastal
S-Ullf'I., tciiltV, \.--.-.l rfl'llN Wlffdi
Jl illll I nd ll'IOl"l'lnt hlvrt llfcfl""11\I
not'lllwttll'f'IY 1) to 11 kMO WI fllfl"•
,,_ to4t~ t11111 ,rktfV. HltM ""' ~-
V.S. S11mmnr11
A-'Ot ~ ot At'fllc -.TI' Wtl'd
ecro\t 1119 fft,.,,. POl'llO'I ol t!te <OV,,..
trv tOOWv l(t om,1nl9CI O'f """' •noor ., _ _.~.
On Moln• "•l•ti.1111.• ..... ...,
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Los A11ee11t
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-ie..tl 8' -•.tf.l,lo lb.."""°'fl'd• OI IHI 111!<1 ...
th\111 lol l h.rl!!lftl!td NIY!•r E(llo ltttlhtt -"':'"
a .. dt .,.., "•cl ••rlr morfllnt Jew
,.liwdfi, but' ofM•"'l~ l' ""'' tUllllY
W1111 !lit~ ~·f 10 •'Id ,,.,. ,...,,. "·
'' w11 f!'l'MllY wn,.., '" Ille "1ounte1n•
Ind OtM•" wu~ llltl'lt nt•r 50 11 moun•
11" rtlO"I• ~ \.cul '"''"' llO!'ll111rl., Wlfld5. Ti.. dt,,..,, !ltd l'l!flll Mt• ·~
1n tM ,,.,,,... .... 11.,.. end 1110ut rs In
.,,. lower V&IJWt.
J111t1 111blr1 l'led ttlt' """°"'' lllohftt ,_..ll'lf Wttli>ftd-1., 11 M. Olhtf
111,.,, Wtfl\tldlV 111d fol"«•'! 111,..1
to111., tnci\ldff 1.e<1t lt•t" 11-1s. 111111
Mol!kl 1WO. 11/rMM. 1•1-" Ml. Wlio
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10.l'O, Plll!'I $1irl111' 71.73, t!•k•fllltld
.ui. s·.n Oi'" 11·10 1nd 111111 ltr·
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' r
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S11n, Mi>on. '.l'ldt!•
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Fountain Valley
VOL. 62, NO. 290, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUiolTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER, 4, 1969 ---
. . . ·· -
· ,· . :~
2 Panthers Slain -.
Gunfight Erupts atParty'sStrong~ld
CIUCAGO (UPI) - A 15-minut. sun·
light erupted loday when state's at·
tomey's police entered a Black Panther
stroqghold to search for weapona. Two
Black Panthers were tilled and four
wounded.
The dead included Fred Hampton,
about 22, Illinois chairman of the Black
Panther party.
Two policemen were wounded in the
battle, which broke· out when the
authorities entered an apartment near
Black Panther headquarters on the
vutskirtso! Chicago's West Side s)'jd row.
Board Urges
Civil Servant
5% Pay Hike
Fourteen men made up tht unit that
loot part in the early mornln( raid. They
bad a warrant signed by Judce Robert
Collins, accordlng to a spokesman for the
State's Attorney's Offloe; obtained after
.sawed4f shotguns and ether jDepl
weapons were re parted. to be ID tbe
apartment.
' When · Ule authorities I d e n t1 f, I e d
themselves, the spokeimen said, vc}ceS
dn~the other side of the door began asking
"Wha?" "WOO?" Then, he Aki, the door
was opened and 0 elght or more In:
dlviduals began. firing with ·catbipts,
ihotguns and handguns."
The · aparimenl, According to the
apokesman, belon,ied to a Fred J<mson,
an· alias used by H_ampton. In tt police
lald _Jheq found II altolguJls, elgil\ pistols
and $ 900 rounds of ammun!Uon. He al.id Jturi~ was felled after be bad:.sbof at
· the autbwiUu with a .t$ automaUC.00 1 shot~ . ,. . -
• The Other ilead man was identified· as
Mark Clark,'21, ol Peoria, DI. Tben!bad
been reports earlier this year that the
Panthers had alttmpted to orpnlro
~ peopl< ·1n Ulat dowmlale .,....
munity.
li.\AGINAT IVE DESIGN OF ROBERT GISLER SCHOoL .BRINGS .NATIONAL RECOGNITION .
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The St.ate
Personnel Board· proposed a rive pl!rcent
across-the-board pay hike Jor the sta.te's
103.000 fut1ume civil servants'toda y.
Gisler Scl1ool
Given H onor
By_ U.S. Group
Fo~tain Valley's Rebert Gisler School
has ~en selected as a demonstration
school by the American Associalian cf
School Adminislrators.
As a result. an archit.ect'..s mo:iel and phatogriplij-:Or~-moor.-wifl l:ie-oo ex·
hibitioo Feb. 14-fB as the associatian
haldll its annual eoiivanlion in Atlantic Ci-
ty, N.J. .
In selecting Gisler School f.rom amang
the 2.500 .nominated for the honer~ the
jury considered as its criteria exceptional
eJucatkmal programs. grouping areas ~er
instruction, expandability, commuruty
use, safety and enviranment.al controls
such as Hght, air and S()Und.
In 1967, Fountain Valley 's Harry C.
Fulton School was selected far t~ same
award. Far the last five years, six out of the
district's 12 schools have wan state and
national awards for architeeture and
educational design.
Masked Bandit
Holds Up Station
A masked bandit Ylednesday night rob-
bed a \\festm inster service station at-
tendant cf $139 in receipts then cl.outed
the attendant aver the head '."'1th a
revofver and locket:! him up in the
restroom. The attendant , Roger S. Miller, 18, of
19362 Brookhurst St.. Huntington Beach;
was dtscovered on the noor al the sla·
tion'll baUrroom by a customer shortly
after 9:35 p.m. He was taken to \Vestminster Cam-
munitY Hospital where he 'A'3S treated ~or
cuts ape! bruises. Police said the robber. who wore a ~"Olllan's stocking over his head. threat·
ened Miller with 8 chro1ne-plated revol·
ver before the bea"ng took place.
Tate Suspects to Figh t The increase would cost $86.3 milUon.
Th.is com.pared with boosts ranging
rrom six percent 'to 20 percent and total-
ing $148 million sought by the CalUornla
State Eriiployes A s s o c i a t ion which
represen ts most of tht wcrkers. Extradition for Trial .. The board. in sending Its fina.1 recom-
mendaticns to Gcv. Rtagan, modified its
earlier tentative proposal that there be a
W.cKlN NEY, Tex. (AP) -Charles D.
Watson's lawyer indicated taday that he
will ask psychiatric examination for the
bearded fonner . football player. "'ho is
.I
Sharon's Father
'
Became Hippie
Hunting Killers
PALOS VERDES (U PI) -The father
of slain actress Sharan Tate, a former
Army intelligence officer, says he grew a
mustache and beard and mingled with
drug users for faur mooths while trying
ta track dawn. his daughter's killers.
Paul J . Tate, 46, said he masqueraded
as a hippie, frequented hippie hangouts
and lived in cammunes in his hunt for the
persons wha carried oot the Aug. 9
murders.
"Anything I know a boot the case will
be told at.the proper tim~." Tate said in
declining ta say if his efforts were cf
value in the arrests of three suspects.
He "'as concerned with the rettnt
revelations abclut details of the crime.
"Yoo don't go around telling the world
what infarmation er evidence yoo have,"
he said. ''You never know for sure
whether yoo have an airtight case."
· He said the implication or.; cult kna"'"
as "The Manson Family" in the murders
of his daughter and six other persons had
"taken a great weight aff my mind."
Howe ver, he expressed bitterness aboot
reparts in the "sensational press" over
the backgroond of his daughter.
"My wife is an the verge of a nervoos
breakdown. Ply ether daughter h~ been
extremely upset. We are a yery close
famil y." He said much of what has been
said and written abaut his daughter "is
just not true ." ·
Tate said he warked alone and with
Sauthern Callfarnia aulharitie11 an his in·
vestlgaUon. Befare Tate confirmed he
conducted • his· own investlga.tian. Los
Angeles police detectives rand narcotics
officer! said he had oo connection with
their investigatian of the case.
"Sameday J wauld like to air .my feel-
ings." Tate said, "but t.b.l.s: isn't the pro-
per Ume."
charged in ane cf the California murders 10 percent ceiling an the am~t cf .raises far any ane categary. at the home of actress Sharon Tate. Tht hikes propased by the beard range
"( persanally have SCtT!e seriaus daubls from the general flve percent up to 121i1
·~ 1\is mental~tal<"Jaid lbeoJLWI~.!.. ,pmlfl!~.io ~~·~wJ!lcl' BID BoYa orMcKIMey. ·. salaf/ )>t<bteiris ·II'. acute.
Bayd, a former district and county at-The boatd ~. thatetdl hlgh<r1_ 1 ~JRl1 t al ·d h' 1· 1 ·11 1. ht ••are nece!lllr)' to ml aa ares....,... or o~y. sa sai 1s c ien w1 1g es:-. 11 • It In , private indllltrJ· and
tradition. Twa Los Angeles detectives :r·~u=j\IJiJdk:tion!." .
""ha have come here ta lake him into A CSEA spOtesnian said 'the group was
custady then started back heme. disappainted with the recommendations.
Watson, 24, surrendered Sunday on He said ft wat "ln!ufficlent to meet the
learning Califarnia authorities held a needs of state emplayes • • -.It's a bad situatlan. ,-, warrant for his arrest. He is charged Far the first time th.ls year, the CSEA
with murder in the slaying of Steven convention voted ta drop its no-11trlke
Parent. a c.aretaker wha was kiJ(ed alang pledge. However, that action still is pen-
with Miss Tate and three other persans ding ratifblkin and there is no legal
last Aug. 9. framework pennitUng any strike by state
A.nether suspect in the case, Linda public .emplayes. .
Louise Kasabian, 20, ane of three persons The board also reiterated prn:ICIO!I pro-
faclng murder charges in the slaying cf JX1S81S for these emplaye bene(rta:
actress Sharon Tate and four ethers, was -That the state pay the full cost of
returned to Los Angeles Wednesday night basiC emPtaye health Insurance.
from Can cord, N .H. -Night pay differential ' ' w h er e
Mrs. Kasabian was whisked off a plane justilied by prevailing practice."
from Basten inta an unmarked palice car -Unemplayment insurance far state
which sped away immediately. Newsmen em pl ayes who are laid off "for n<> fault of
were riot allowed ta question her. their own."
She v.·ore a brown palo coa t wilh collar -Time and one half far avertime far
turned up and held the cellar tightly employes whose counterparts tn private
against her face. She carried a brown indtlSU)' receive il
paper bag.
In Mobile, Ala. a Circuit Coort hearing
was set for taday on a motion seeking the
band release of the third person charged
in the case.
Lawyers for Patricia Krenwinkel. 22,
moved for a writ of habeas corpus
Wednesday .
Miss Krenwinkel did not appear ln
court for filing of the writ , ~·hich also
challenged the warrant under which she
is held.
Mi ss Krenwinkel's attorney, tit. A.
1'-farsal, has said she woold fight ex·
tradition. He contended that the fugitive
warrant was faulty on several grounds,
including ane that.it failed to comply with
Alabama law.
W.arsal said, "The only basis for the·
warrant was a statement made by Capt.
Don Riddle of the Mobile Palice Depart-
ment that he had been advised"'by a Sgt.
William Carey cf the Los Angeles Police
Department that Miss Krenwinkel is
charged there with murder.
"This Is hearsay and insufficient cause
to have a fugiUve warrant issued.''
112,021 Persons
In Huntin gton
Huntington Beach's afficial population
is IIZ,021.
The final figure tram the srecial
federal census of Sept. 15 was annou~ed
tnday by Robert ~· Dnlry, deputy direc-
tor cf the U.S. Census Bureau.
Planning Department afflclals estimate
the present p<>pulaticn cf the tjty at
114,000 aild farec8st an Increase of 12,000
next year.
St04'k Market
NEW YORK (AP) -Stoct market
prices remained broadly lower ill late
afternoon trading today, but continued to
recawr some of their sharp laues of
earlier in the day. (See·quotatiOM, Pages
~-23).
GWC Cool to Moratorium
But Student Activi.st Makes Pl.ans fo·r Dec. 12
19 Bags Full.· . ' .
Students · at Huntington Beach'• Golden. West College prepare to •hip
19 bags .of winter clothing to needy children in Southeastern U.S.
Clothing was collected in campus drive. Loading bags are (from left)
Bonnie Foster of Garden Grove, .Lilly Yamaoka of Westminster,
Sheila Johansen .of Garden Grove and Linda While of Huntington
Beach.
Garden Grove Won't Okay
Valley Students Trans£ er
Two Fountain Valley High Schoo1
students wha ~:ere taken from thei.r
clas.ses by their parents because a( alleg-
ed drug abuse by other student!!, have
been turned away by the Garden Grove
Unified School District.
James Griffith, wel!art ~ 1ttendance
(!(fleer at the Garden Grove district, said
Kathi'een, 17, 8.nd ea.Odace,, IS, Alerldge,
wfll nOl betome ·part·· of that 11Chool
system "because there are oa ex-
tenuating circumstances ta justify IL"
"The di.str~t (fansfeJ committee held a
long meeting oo lhat oubject last Monday
and dee fded that it is oot within current
palicy ta accept the students far that
reason," lfe explained.
"Even if P.reots asked the 5Cboo1
district ta move th·eir children from one
of our .schools \o anatl)ef over alleged
drug abuse, we could not do ·it. Sa It
would be very c:tlllicu1t to justify moving
children from an e.nUrely dUfemit school
district Into curs."
The ,girls . have . been abstnt from
classes Pnce early November when Mr:
made with the family new Will have to
'cOm'e through thl!t agency."
He lndfcated It is passlble the gtr\s may
bt made wards of the court through
juvenile proceedings to Insure their attert-
dance ii they are not immedl~y return-
ed to school.
"U I.he probaUan autharity files a petJ.
Uon and it Is upheld by a court decWoo,
the girls would be e:rpeded to go to
school and woUld have te""notlty their pro-
batlan officer on any W they might be
unable ta attend."
The Alerldges, meanwhile, are con-
sidering the, sal~ 9f µielr home and a
move to anather sdiool district.
Oraal(e
W1111t11er
W.e'11 haVe a little bit of every. thiiii Friday -IWVIY 111des, early
mornlnl cloudt' and "gusty norlb-'east winds -wl\lle the temPefa·
hire rub in the middle !V's. ·
• ml Mn. Peul Alerldie withdrew them INSmE TODA)'
from ,qKlol, vowinc'Denr to re~ them
' ' F ta1o Ue High becaua' of Ntzt ttear tht govtrruntnt By J\UDI NIEDZIEJ.S!l on ,all campuses. J Just hope the movt· .Laaer, who a.ya he:Jw bad ~ees Md ' ta .oun a -1...__ ~-·~ ,_ -r Will ~come co Mlp of .parnt1}
0t ~ o.ttr l'Jw 11•H ~ nt!J'l d91!6n't die aUl.11 will, "probably .be ,4-F my~}f,;' · ~~s ill~ dnll a~~.es an' ~pus.-[j~~~-:·~~:~&:nl4s ~eta e»arttr--
Student enthuslam .fOr another Vle'"l·r-~o"·_.,ur e_.stud~ls Jrom lheir-lhat-tht new-drAl iout~~ ,aa;.r-,nth;" truap1ttc~'~ , mcn /dr htmttff bi check;i,ng citi( JJ--11arn-ww moratm1mr.titrtfl"E"~ttltrrwe lethargy, he says he might try ta bring provide ·any answen fw '*'Ir objet\on.; I~ to =ti :~ dal! tht dahofri ·of 11e10~tots.' Page
College cambpus Is dAmylng.. 0 some bands oot for the next demoostra-''In my oPfnlon, conscriptior1 .ln ·• &Ju Chica High hoOl ln the '. ,-• : 10 •.• \ • • ' , . ' • , ,' j
DAILT ltlLOT IMff '"'"'
WATCHING MOVEMENT DIE
Moratorium Leader Lager
'} . ·-i'
Flanked Y an er1can ag, aym-Uon. , de:mocraUc IOC~Y ls a 'CODtrfdlcUon,/' he Grovl district. . · , • ~.'7 • . 1 •
bolically surrounded by several plastic ""re ·migbt__try to run a program nr sakt "I think takJng people by.chance on ff. w,. Standard, Orifflth11 mun~ · ~ ..J , =1.._..,,.; 1:
nawm, Bill Lager. student-actfvtst-and music and entertainment With It," he their birthday Is a bad way of_ decktlng In the Huntincton Bfiach Union High C.lh.. • 11 ........ ""' •
organize.r of the pasf twa GOlden Wast said. "Music always attracts people." v..hether be ls williri& to give up.his Ufe or School Dlatrict, said truancy reports have ==t:..c. ,: t::=:' ;
demanstraUoos, Wednesday typed out He added that the third cf the aeries a( not.11 alrt&dy reached the Count)' Sd\OC, ls Of. ~ H ~'!!. ,... ,~,. I f l.))e xt bse 1.i,...IM ,_ ' ._. .. some P ans <>r nt 0 rvance, moratoriums is supposed ta have a com-· "We should move towud "' afI-fkt f~ further acUoo. · .•r.ttrttfwMelll '" ·~.,., '.tt
1cheduled for Der. 12. H.is fa ce was long. munlt)' emphasis. volunteer amt)' becaU!IC there are ~or Legally, both girls ,must remain in r_~ n·;: .;:...,.. ' :
··for the flr!l one we had great ''The Idea is t(> out lnta the community peaple wha would bt wUling to eene In classes uut.11~: are 18 7ears old or A• "-t.w.n " •:;tr, "' • ic~~;1~t'~~Je~te t~~~e~n!a~~~led," the lB-:!~'t!:1~~~s ~ t t~:n!~ ~o!h~ ~~ ~f.fi~~I~~ !m~~~1jd :!tr:~O:: "~!~!:m~ h!~ ~1 hands ~ ." $ ~ 1l :rtt!i.. l~
"But thal't what has been happening we can get toga oot and par~pater ~-to .clo.'' said Standard. ''Whauv.-~tactl are .._ _______ \, ___ ....__.
r .( . I
: ·.2 Oll\.Y PILOT --H
DAILY ,ILOT l letl l"Mte
HUNTll'Jl;TON'S BONFA LECTURES IN EVENING CLASS
At Gofden West College, BrMklng the Ice for No Credit
Beach City Attorney. Puts
In Hard Night'~ Work To~
Dy TERRY CO~ILLE
Of llM DIH1 ... 11•1 Sti ff
Don Bonfa puts in a hard day's work
five days a week il!!I city attorney for
liunt,ington Beach.
But one night a w~k he dons a
teacher's cap at Golden We.st College and
'becomea l~ 00!1 ·of a cla_ss in city
government. Why?
"Nol for the money," he laughed
\\'edneail:N, following. aoot.2er three~
class. ' "I reaUy did· It because I've always had
Valley Planners
Okay OV Plans
i,,On New School
Perm ission \vas given lo t~ Ocean
View Sctlool Dis:tict to build an elemen.
tary school in the area or P.1agnolla Street
and Heil Avenue by the Fountain Valley
Planning Comrrtission \Vednesday night.
Jn a sh<lr1. routine mef:ting, planners
also granted a use "ariance ta permit a
1o1·ood storage yard on property on the
soulheast comer of \Varner Avcoue and
Ne\o\'hope Strcc>l.
Commercial zoning for property on the
Past side of 1iiai;nolia Street, between the
Sa n Di~go Freeway and ,µie Ocean VJew
flood control channel, was also granted
hy the commi s:;ion. Tentative plans call
for t'-Onstruction of a n1!niature golf
center on the .site .
The planning staff also informed the
commission lhal a complete report on U1e
city's present and future apartment
situation will be presented Dec. 17. At
that time planners are expected to set a
public hearing lo dctcnninc future plan·
ning for apartn1cnts in the city.
DAILY PILOT
a small yen fer teaching,'' explained Bon-
fa, "and I also felt tMre was a great
. need for basic infonnation on local city
governmtnt -there's a lot of misin·
formatlon about it that gets arou.nd."
The oourse Don teaches is titled "How
City Law Aff~t Citizens" and i5 given
for no credit each Wednesday night. It
was devised by Bonfti'who hopes to some-
day 1Dake; it a credit coorse. HQur\t~Mrfit enrollmentt lnvoJyes
mostly loc~ risiden~ people Jnvolved in
homeowners associations and such.
Students don 't attend because they want
credit for the time they spend;" he sa.id.
About 20 individuals attend the clalls r~gularly. Though the course title in-
dicates an emphasis on Jaw, Bonra has
arranged. each . sess~ Jn a dialogue
fonnat wit h various city officials invited
lo explain the operation or their i;egmcnt
of government.
Last week the class took a physical t~ur of local police facilities. \Vednesday
night. the press was invited to talk to t~
class about the interaction between
government, the press and the public.
. "These people are getting their first
cnance to really sit down and discuss on
a person-t.o-person level what really hap-
pen!,''. expl~ined Bonfa, "It also provides
the city w1lh a fresh viewpoint from citizens."~
Some or t guest speakers have in·
eluded ?\layor a Green, Police Chier
Earl Robitaille and Fire Chief Ray
Picard.
"'Once the ice is broken between the of·
licial and t~ class some of lhe sessions
really becOme interesting," said Bonfa .
Bonfa pointed t.o a statement by Golden
\Vest College President Dudley Boyce to
explain the ideal aspect of the cla1s.
Dr. Boyce.said, "It's a pioneer grrup of
ciiiz_ens on the threshhold of developing a
joLri!, cooperative effort between the city
government and community college,
\I/hat would be more natural than.a mar·
riage between the city and the college
serving the City."
"'That's really why I'm in it," smiled
U.nla.
·cult Le·ader Hid • Ill Cupboard
INDEPENDENCE, C.lil. !UPI) -
O.rlu MaMOn~the b ni:ltic 1-dtr ot a nomidlc culL • Ille alayhlfl of 8haftm 'htl U .oQier ,per19ft1, ·.-as
found "hldlnJ Ill 1 tiny cupboUd" when
authorlUes raided his commune in Death
Valley in October.
The California Highway Patrolman
1••ho led a posse in the raid test"lfied
Wednesday at Manson's court hearin& on
relatively minor auto theft charges that
the long-haired cult leader was captured
cowering in the cupboard.
James Purcell, the only patrolman
usually on the 3,Gro-square-mile beat,
said the bearded Manson was "hiding in
~ tiny cupboard beneath the sink. It was
Too Well Known
perblps lhre• feel blah, 11 to Ill lnohes
Widc llld 1J to ll lncheJ detp. II toot him a time.to wtwlnd."
Manaoa, wbo beid a mysterious sway
over hla followen:, was the only one of
the nlne persons arrested in the raid who
hid when the posse descended on the
three-room house which was the base
camp for the nomadic commune.
Before the end of the six-hour prelim·
!nary heating, the district attorney's
ofrlce here said Manson would be re-
leased t.o Los Angeles authorities if a
murdtr warrant was issued. The court
ruled there was sufficient evidence or
receiving stolen properly to bring ~1an
:wn to trial. Bail was set at $25,000.
Lennon Won't Be Jesus
1111 Cathearal Pageant
LONDON (AP) -Beatie John Lennon
won't be portraying Jesus in St. Paul's
Cathedral after all because Lennon's
personallty might shove Christ into the
background, a record company an-
nounced. today.
The long-haired Beatie had been con·
sjde red for the lead in a pop musical call-
ed "Jesus Christ" in the cathedral next
spring. But the writers of the show and
the recording company said they were
Mesa Mother's
Newest Infant
No Little Tot
A Costa Mesa woman gave birth
"'ed.nesday night to a bouncing baby boy
who has ;iggled the scales as the heaviest
Infant in the history of Orange County
Medical Center.
The heavyweight champ ;i
phenomenal 14 pounds, 9 ounces -hasn't
been given his official name yet, but grin-
ning nurses have dubbed him Atlas,
Rocky or other such titles in the mean·
time.
The fourth son of hfr. and htrs. Alex
·Stepe.nenko, of 882. Towne St., is 141.<z
inches long and is doing fine today, along
with his 33-year-old mother Louise.
BroUters Gregory. 13, Danny, 12, Den·
nis, t 1, and sisters Linda. 9. and Krissy.
8 are waiting at home for the arrival of
their big baby brother, who was delivered
by Dr. John Wambo.
"A new baby that big is .a medical rari·
ty these days," observed N~ing
Supervisor Geraldine. McGeehan.
Vandalism Claim
Agent Assigned
Repeated lnciden\3 of \'andalism at
Westmont School has prompted. the
Ocean View School District Board of
Trustees to appoint its principal, Don
Devor. as its agent in pursuing small
claims acttoru in court.
He will represent the district in an ~4
damage suit against the parents of five
former students ~·ho allegedly broke
several cla.s.sroom Ydndows over the sum·
mer. A district spokesman :!laid tht amount
(if damage was originally set much
higher but was brought down "'hen the
parenlo; reportedly agreed to pay the $84.
Failure by the parents to pay the :set·
lied amount will result In a small claiml'I
suit by Devor. No date of hearing has
been set yel.
Seal Week Declared
The ~·eek of Dec. 7·13 has been pro-
claimed Christmas Seal Week in Foun·
tain Valley by f\t a y o r Edwa rd Just.
Christmas Seals are sold to raise fu nds
to batUe tuberculosis, emphysema and
respirator)' disease.
convinced that a relative unknown should
be the star.
"Someone like Lennon would imprint
his own personality to such an ertent that
people would read the star's characte,r in·
to the character or the part," said a
spokesman for the Music Corp. of
America·U.K. Record Co.
LeMon, himself, was barely involved in
the issue but was quoted as saying he
~·ould be intere5ted in the part as long as
his wife, Yoko Ono, could take the role or
~tary ~1agdalene.
It was Lennon who aroused outraged
protest in the United States a few years
1Jgo by saylng that the BeaUes at the
time were more popular than Christ.
The musical about Christ's last six
days on earth, by composer Tim Rice, 25,
and producer Andrew Lloyd-Webster, 21,
J~ being written for the MCA-UK Record
Co., and is to be issued as an album.
A spokesman for the company said the
statement about Lennon p o s s i b I y
oyershadO\\'ing Jesus was not meant to
cause any offense. He explained that he
v.·as referring or offense lo Lennon .
"It's not that the writers don't want
Lennon involved but they feel an
unknown would be more suitable."' he
said.
St. Paul"s, one o( Europe's most
alebrated cathedrals, has had a pop
policy for the past year. with a fashion
show in the crypt and parachute jumping
in front of the great doors. The pop opera
is the latest project for the 300-year-old
cathedral.
Beach Men Get
Theft Sente11ces
Two Huntington Beach men havf"
drawn IS.year tenns in federal prison for
their holdup on: Long Beach bank.
Gathel Ammon Beaton. 26, of 611 5th
SI. and Ruben Ernest Griffin. 31, of 17256
Beach Boulevard were senlenced in Los
Angeles federal court by U.S. District
Court Judge \\'arren J. Ferguson.
Both men ~·ere arrested last July 16
shortly alter the robbery of the east Long
Beach branch of the Security Pacific Na-
tional Bank. They were identified as the
duo who took $1,SOO at .gunpoint from the
bank .
FBI agents recovered the stolen money
along with the revolver used in the
holdup from a Long Beach apartment OC·
cupied by the tv.·o men. Both were traced
after witnesses gave the l!cense number
or their getaway car to police.
1-·--~·
I
i
The stooped, sUaht ~ti.nson was wtar-
ing blue den.Im jail clolhes when he wu
led into the Inyo County courthouse in
chains to face the charges in\'olvinc
stolen vehicles.
One of the witnesses to testify w;;is
Paul \Vatkins. 13, a farmer member of
the "family" cult .
Manson doodled 011 a piece or yellO\V
paper while witnesses testified to the
charge of receiving stolen property dur·
ing raids by "the Manson family" fron1
a base camp in the Death Valley area.
Another member of the cult, now in
custody in Los Angeles, 5aid through her
attorney that Manson, 34, held an "in-
une, almost hypotic W:luence" over his
"familY." She said h1s f0Uowtr1 callca
h1m ".luu.a."
The glrl, Susan Atkins , 19, held .as '
suspect in th~ stabbing death of • man
which has been C:OMected to the group .
:!aid 1ifanson "'as an aspiring soul singer
and guitar player.
She said he was embittered at Terry
1i1elcher, son o! Doris Day, because
Melcher refused to help him produce a
rW)rd. fltelcher's home , later rented by
~tlss Tate, becaine a "'symbol of rejec-
tion,'' she said. and Manson ordered all
its occupants slain.
f\.1iss Tate, three friends ~nd an 13-
year-old boy visiting the estate's Clrt·
taker, were stabbed and shot to death.
, Lodge Leaves
Paris, Hold s
Hope for Peace
PARIS (UPI) -Ambassador Henry
Cabot Lodge bowed out of the Paris
peace talks today with a rarewell speech
re\·iewing the past and expressing hope
for the future. The Communists ushered
him out with a renewal of all the charges
that made him quit in the first place.
Adding to a complaint by North Viel·
nam negotiator Xuan Thuy that there had
been oo progress in 10 months of negotia ·
tions \Vith Lodge "'as a series of ne1¥
charges that the United States hid com·
milled "thousands of barbarous crimes"
in South Vietnam.
Lodge, 67, has been a key figure In
American Vietnam war policies since the
early 1960s. Today was his la5t as chief
DAILY l'•LOT s••ll l'tio•• negotiator. On Saturday he plans to leave
Q1ree11 '-Paris for his home in Boston. She's
Marina l·ligh School senior
Chris Linton, 17, is reigning
over \Vestminster·Marina Ro·
tary Invitationa l Basketball
Tournament under \vay th is
'veek at boU1 schools. See
sports.
Joy Ride Wrecks
Valley Crop Fi eld
.Toy riding \'andals tore through a field
nf celery in Fountain Valley \Vednesday
on the fanner's own tractor, causing
about $1,700 da1nage to the crop.
Police said several loops were taken
th.rough the field at Bushard Street and
Edinger Avenue early \Ved nesday, cut-
ting celery stalks and ran1ming a
portable privvy. The tractor used ·was a
D-6 caterpillar which had been Jett on U1e
field overnight. The vandalism wa~
reported by Tomio Matsumoto, 1652t
fl.farle Lane, Huntington Beach.
Alcatraz Isla11d
TakenOffMarket
SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) -Alcatra7.
lsland was taken off the market Wed-
nesday as a possible buy for the city of
San Francisco.
City official "'ere notified by the U.S.
General Ser\'iCes Adminis!ralion that the
island is no longer for sale.
GSA Regional Administrator TOOma.o;
llannon said the decision \\'as based on a
request by Interio r Secretary \'1alter
llickel for an indefinite extension of time
lo study possible uses for the abandoned
island.
•
He summarized h1s parting speech as A
review of "the things which we on our
side ha~·e proposed. what the other side'.11:
reactions have been. \.\'hat are some of
!he most persistent and erroneous belief.-.
\1•hich impede progress, and what is the
hope for the future .··
Lodge cited a number of allied con·
cessions including a U.S. offer In
11·ithdraw i:Eoops "'ithin a year. a pro,-
posa l for a ce ·fire under international
supervision, Saig n's offer to ho ld direct.
secret talks with the Communists and an
offer to settle the "''ar through jointly
(_·ontrolled and internationally supervised
elections.
Addressing himself to the Communist.~
seated across the 26-foot negotiating tablP.
he said, "the obstacle is your side'.~
absolute refu~al to join us in seeking a
just peace." He said they had the oppor·
!unity to negotiate but "'you have been un·
wllling to do so in any meeting place,
public or prl\'ate."
''\Vith reference to your statemenl"i
concerning Song My." he stated. "I will
say : an incident such as that alleged in
this case is in direct violation not only or
U.S. military policy, bul it is alsn
abhorrent lo the conscienc>e of all the
American people.
"Whatever happened "'it! be known.
because. 1ve do not conceal the truth. ln
all this. r submit, our policy is in direct
contrast lo your 011·n deliberate use of
lerrorism a~ a matter or consciou~
policy."'
Freed POWs l~Jown
'fo Fa1nil y Reunions
SEOUL (UPi l-Three U.S. helicopter
crewmen, freed \'1ednesday after 108
days in a North Korean prison, flew home
today for family reunions and further
medical treatment.
The three originally had been ached·
uled to fly to Andre\o\'s Air Force Bas+>
near \\'ashington transfer to Walt.er Reed
Army Hospita l. But plans were changed
to fly them to air bases near their home~.
Robt•! 1-1. Wttd M"t•...,' • .., Pub1<1~·r
J•~\ JI , Curl1v
"'" FrCl•Offtl ~fld C.c"'''' ,..,,.,~,f Gifts R~je~ted I
a ver y,_ special purchase from a
famous quality maker · of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAffiS T ~o,..•• k•rv11
1;~1101
T~'""'' A. Mu•ph;,.,
Mllllt••o lo11llf
"11<.eoi W. 1~;.,
.li.ot•t!r tO•'~'
H~11tln1Jl•11 l••ch Olfiet
JC'I !ill. Shttl
1..tt •l;"!1 Add•1u; P.O. l o• 790, ,2641
Otht' Ollie"
V CI Med Students Say Bags 'Tlireat'
''The Instruments and bags arc offered
\\'ilh the expectation that they will be
useful. Quite naturally, it is our desire to
acquaint students ~·Ith the Lilly name as
a m1nufacturer ol quality medicines.
I
I I I I I I
A GlfT TO lllWURE Alll ENJOY-FOR YEARS
• CUit.om qua.lity through.out •
Luxutious cushiooing • Your
l'hoice of rolors from an exttnaive I
. ,..
•
Nt,U>oi•I flr•<ft .)II W• t (loltJ'' ll!\l!l~I!.
l:e>'• A"••o Jj.:J W~'' 111¥ S!rt"'I
I ,'hi~ Cf.Cfl. J;l l'Grt.I A •e~~•
----t)l ttT""1"1t , 1 I Ct •'I! t .. , .. , ,, .......... ,,,.,.,. <H•h •• , •• , !·.~
•t~ ., _,,._.,111 ...,..,,. ..., "4wt1ht1t !•'i
8Ct(ft, ......... .., Vot lfl, CM!f I.I( .. , lllt•·
nirt •~•<" ••d 1.~ovM 11,tcto, •·-"'1"' ,,. ..... _., <d•'•O!'• o .. ~ve (11"11• rut•,.~
..,. '411'1N<11· °'"'1"" p..onlo •" •t :11• """'' ll•lt'M t lwl N•.,1'1:•• fl•~rft. -JJO y.r>t Ao• ... ,.1, (e1t• l>'fll
Fourteen or 64 students In the freshm11n
cl11ss or UC Irvine's School or f\tedlcine
hRve rejecled gift of a block medical bag
c011tainlng stethoscope, tuning fork and
rubber hammer from a pharmaceutical
company.
The students reel acceptance of the
gifts might Impinge on their future In·
tegrlty as physicians and could cost con·
sumers of the drug comi>'ay's produc\3
by higher prices, according LO freshman
'medical 1tu
ourteen students senl a etter to
EU Ully Pharmattutical Comp11ny re-
jecting the gifts and rttelved a letter in
reply.
"Al the same time ~·e do not belic\'e
that this aS!istance "'iii affect the lm-
partiaJ judpents of physicians in their
care of paUents."
I
I I On the second i"uc. the students
'vrote: I .. . ... _.....-,,,... .. -ti..-J-11-,---~~;;
money used \o pay for these gifts. It a~ I
pe:1rs to us the dru£ consumer -main ly
·'::,.·;;99_·-+---'-,I----
'
1'1lt,h•r1• 111 41 642°4121
'''"' We1t11ilr1lff'r C1U 540.1110
Cl11tlfk• Ai•Hll1lr1t •41·1611 <•vt .. 111, lttt, Otft'GI (tllll "utJ·\~•"1
C111'1ot•1 Nt i.wl 1101 l t1. ~l\IV•••t >.. ""''e<••' 1111tll•1 '' ont•l<iJ'mt••o "''f"' """'DI ""'CIUtltl ••"'Ol•I •ut<1•I ~t.,.!Oile.11
e-i ''J\.•tlll' ef>•fl t•C.~I ci.1* C:()$'~• I• d 11 •11\Mf'I 81J•'
1fl(I tu.it /Mu, C•h''"'' ~.t1v ~1,,· •• <1,.1<• lltt mC~"'f>'. 0~ "'''I~··~"'°"" •I
!-'ll1•r1' fklln•,.1-. llt'll •~•v.
Wrote the students :
" .. .fully_ cogniz.anL the.re is no obhi;a·
Uon attached to accepting these gift.I, \o\'e
vltw them as a potential tl\reat to our
ru1ure Integrity as physicians. We would
prefer to be completely fl'ff or any noo-
bus Ines s tran s actions "·ith
pllarn1aceutieal coml)lnlcs." •
RcpUcd llenry F. Oe.Boest, ''Ice presl·
dent of corporate afralrs for the Lilly
Company:
the chronically 111 and •aed -is the one
\li'ho ultimately shou1dert the cosl of
these gUll. We ffel we c•n better afford I
the price of our black bags than can our JI
medically indigent patients."
R•sponded Delloest •
-
INTERIOR DESIGNERS
0,.. M• .. rim., Ptl. '""
2215 HARBOR BLVD.
646-0275
..... during the past 10 yea!'!, as shown
by 1he Lilly price index, the average
price of our company's phann1ctutleals
h11s de~llned mo~ than 10 percenta1e
point!. Bec1u1e of its llmlttd site, the
fttudent program has had virtually. no ef.
feet on the prices of our product.s.." ~ ................. ""' ..... '"""""" _______ __.. ___________________ .,... . .
I I,' . (
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Lariun"a . '8 \
".t'otlay~s l'ln•I . . . '
N.Y. Stock&
•
VOL. 62, NO. 290: 4 SECTIQNS, 50 P~GES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA / -THURSDAY. DECEMBER 41 1969 . . TEN CENTS . . -
. . .
Playhou·s\e Parki.ng Site. Ol('d Despit·e Protests
' -
By RICHARD P. NAU.
Of """ De/11 .... , '""
The old Laguna Playhouse - a
landmark foJ more than 40 years-comes
down thi! month.
C®neilmen appro.ved the $2,flOb demoli-
tion' Wednesday night and despite
organized opposition from businessn:i.en of
Sooth Coast Highway also agreed by split
vote to acquire Forest Avenue frontage
beslae the playhouse site.
The ptoeerty conglomerate will serve.
-temporarily at least, as a parking area.
A peHtiOn opposing the $70,000 property
acquisition was signed by 79 tenants or
landlords 8tong South Coast Highw!ly who
argued that the city should.. use the-in-.
creased meter !unds t.b acquire parking
for them. l ~
They malqtained tliat:
-Downtown parking areas .:. leased or
purchased 09.er the years by the city -
operate at a k>ss and hence.are subsidiz-
ed b.Y public funds., ~
DAll.Y Pll.OT Stiff ~
-The cUy has never provided parking
for the highway businesses despite heavy
returns fram sales and bed tax in the
area .
-"An analysis or downtown businesses
will show a very large proeortion of them
to be banks, stockbrokers, insurance
agents, realtors. doctors, attorneys, nurs-
ing homes .and many other types or
serVices which do not return any sales
tax or bed tax · to the city."
-Bed and sales tu from part ol the
businesses In nve blocks of South· Coast
Highway amount to mort. than $150,000 in
a year.
-some businesses lumish parking lots.
pay laxes on it and have the property
lied up, thus helpins pay for. public park·
ing liut receiving tione.
-The city should cancel its plans for
mo!"!: downtown , par\lna: and promptly
purchase more for lhe South Coast
'·Highway area. ·
City ?.tanager James D. Wheatoo
pointed out that the counctl doubled
downtown parking meter charges this
year and agretd at the time to eannark
the additional review 'or downtown park-
ip.g faciliUes. ·
Businessman Roy Childs said, "We've
been paying for years to subsidize the
GleMeyre lot; it's time we got some con-
sideration on our first nickel (a nickel
was formerly the C05t to park one
hiiur)."
Business Harry Lawrence said he felt
2 Blacl{ Panthers
•
that Coast Highway ' probably ..creates
more sales tax revenue.J.or city coffers
than .does the downtown basin.
He suggested parking areas at M~
lain Drive and Cress Street. "The con--
gesUon ls. impossible for .us," said
Lawrence. He said the heart of the In-
come area is around Creu and Mountain
Streets.
Councilmen In favQr of acquiring the
63-feet of Forest Avenue frontage pointed
(See PLAYHOUSE, Pl(< I)
Slain
In Chicago Gun · Bitttle
Mental Tests Sought
Tate Suspects
'fo _Fight Return
Manal. hll!. ~:· she ; 1"Nl4 (1111(, '!'' tradlUOn. Iii QK~.~llpillUV.
warran t wu fa·u ty On ie.vefal grOunds,
in~udlng one that it Jailed to comply with
Alabama law.
·Militants
Open Fire
On Officers
e!UCAGO (UP!) -A !~minute gun.
fight erupted today when ·state's at-
19rney's pollce onll!red a Btack panther
ltrohilt>Old to IUrdl -for weapons, Two
Black, ·Panthers weie tilled and {OQ;f
woundt<I, .
RICKIE WEIR, TOM TRULIS COMPE t.E WITH RAINBOW "t Ch•mber Bre•kf•1t, Plenty of Fashion Pl•t•s
,11;~. Tex. (Af) -.Chari~ t>.
W'aiiOii'! .!iw)'er Indi"*fed todly ·l!ia1 11e
""ill ask psychiatric examination for tbe
bearde"d f0rmer i{ootba1l player, who Is
charP,d bi -al the CiJUornla ,miirde'n
at the·home o( actress Sharon Tate.
.. I prrlOllally have some serious doubts
about his mental state,'' said the lawyer,
Bill Boyd of McKinney.
' .
Council Nixes
Krishna Group
Soliciting Plea
. ~ -;IDcll\dld "161 · llanlpton, abCRrt '22, IJlliw;u diilrine ol tW 'Btack
P""ther party. -
·Two pOlicemen' Were· wounded ' Jn the
battle, wblcb broke out when · the
authorities entered an a~ent near
Black PanUier beidqua:rter1 on the
oµtskl rts of Ch.ic21go's We!it Side iJdd row, Right in -Style Boyd, a fonner district and county at-
torney, also said his Client will fight ex-
tradition. Two Los Angeles detectives
who have come here to take him · into
custody then started back home.
Fourteen men made up the unit Uiat
took part Jn the early mornini raid. They
had a warrant signed by Judge Rbbert
Collins, aocordlng to a ·spokesman for the
State's Attorney's Office, obtalned '1fter
sawed~ff shotguns and other tnegal
weapons were reportid ·to be 1ii the
apartment.
Cliamber Offers Fqshion Shoiv
Tom Trulis looked ready for an Apache
dance Wednesda,t, despite the early hour.
His fashionable con1panion, Rickie
Weir, in purple tunic top and pants, look·
ed equal to the task.
They were part of a \Vednesday "mix·
ed" rashlon show or local businessmen
and young ladies ~l ~he Chamber of Com·
merce breakfast . gathering in 11otel.
Laguna.
Trulis' dark beret topped a many-splcn·
dQCed "sandv.•ich island shirt."
Then came insurance man Roy
HarCum , dapper in .-cardigan and
turUeneck swealers, colored ··mock
turU1f'. Jle accompanied Doris Lindsey
clad in a brov.·n leopard designed tunic
top and pants.
Zachary and Myrth Malaby weren't
fa shionable for once. They dressed as
hobos in comic relief.
So it weot for the Chamber's teCOnd
'fMhion event sponsored. by Sh'an'l
Clothes Horse and Lois Paul'Originals.
The only disappointment 'came when
last show's fashion plate, hotel mogul
Loren Haneline,. announced he had
retired from the ranks and was wearing
last year's fashion.
The master. of ceremorlies declared It
still fash.ionable.
Watson, 24, surrendered SUnday on
learning California authorities held a Lagwll Beach cooncllmen Wednesda y
warrant for his arrest. He is charged by a 3 to 2 spilt vote tutne<f. down a
\\!Ith murder in the Slaying 0£ Steven reUgious group's application to· solicit
Parent; a caretaker who was killed along funds on the street.
• ROOM ·AT TH• TOP?
GuH"rn•torlal C1~idate Unruh
with Mi!! Tate and three other persons ·The vote went the same Way it did last l~~i'l!/· .. spe<:t In the case, Linda May fer the Internation&t SOclety cf tJ nrith Declares
Louise Kasabtan, 20, one of three persons Krishna Consclouneas, headquartered
facing murder charges in the slaying of locally on Woodland Drive.
actress Sharon Tate and four others, was Kelly SmJth. spokesman for the group, He 's in Race returned to Los Angeles Wednesday night called it a non-sectarian phlk>5ophy that
frpm Concord. N.H. attempts to ' make rtlilisll come to the
Mn. Kasabian was whJsked olf a plane street and works parliciJlarly with drug· Ag· ·a:nst Reagan Crom Boston into an unmarked police car addicted yoolh. .,
which sped away Immediately. Newsmen Said Smith, "Ont boy this week came ~o
were not allowed to question her. out or the caves (of Laguna's hills) and INGLEWOOD {AP) -Democratic
She wore a brown polo .coat with collar has given up drugs and nonsense ac-Assembly Leader Jes~e M. Unruh
When the authoritlea I d e n t I f I e d
them!elves, the spokefl11"en Mild, voices
on the Other skle of the doOr began aiktng
''Who?" "Who?" Tben, he .said, the door
was opened· and "eight or more m.
dividuals began firing with clrbiou,
shotguns and handguns."
· The apartment, according to the
spokem\an, belonged to a Fred Johnson,
an alias used by Hampton. In I~ police
said they found 12 sliolguns. eight piltols
and s;ooo rounds ' of ammunition. Re said
Hampton was felled after he had shot at
the authorities with a .45 automatic anc;I •
t.holgun. .
Reaga11 Notifies Clemente
Lawyer of New Judges~p
turned up and ' held the collar tightly Uv1tles." challenged Republican incumbent Ronald
against her face . She carried a brown City Attorney Jack J. Rimel advised Reagan for the governorship of California
paper bag. councilmen if requirements of the In ~1oblle, Ala . a Circuit Court hearing solicitation ordinance ale met councilmen today, charging the State Capitol is con.
was set for today on a motion seeking the max not dlscrimlnatorny deny a-group trolled by a ''handful of hall-hidden
bond release of the third person charged solicitation rights. ; millionaires."
in the case. Cit M J o Wheaton id The 47·year~ld Unruh, the 1968 Lawyers for Patricia Krenwinkel, 22, Y inager ames: · sa mov'ed ror a, writ · or liabeas corpus · the appUcants had met ·the-ordinance re-California leader of the late Sen, Robert
Wednesday. quirements. F. Kennedy's presidential campai&n.·
The other dead man was identified as
?\.lark Clark, 22, of Peorja, Ill. Thei'e h.ad
been reports earlier this year that the
Panthers had attempted to organlie
young people in that downstate com-
munity. .
Four persons were taken into custody
after the battle, including a woman iden--
tilled as Deborah· John>on, 19, said to be
aOOut eight monlha pregnanl .
A scin Clemente1 attorney received a
personal phone call from Governor
Ronald Reagan this week to confirm his
appointment as judge' of the Laguna
Beach.San Clemente Pifu nicipal Court.
Frank Domenichlni , 46. wa s named by
the governor to fill the vaci!ncy cr:eatcd
El Toro to Get
Chu1ik of Funds ...
A· giant military construction bid or
Sl.69 billion was approved by the Senate
Appropriations Committee Wednesday,
indudlnt a tentative $4·.~2.000 to El Toro
1'.tartne Corps Air Sta.liQrl. · •
'me final approval must come from
Pr side t o JJ<li<leJLmucb mere than the Senate committee ap.
proved, although it went farther than the
JtoUse of Representatives' or I g In a I
amount. ne House bad tentatively alloctited
$1 ,088,000 for the Orange County ln-
a.tallation. AntlloriUes at El Toro said today the
~tual use . of whatever Is finally
ted will be determined at that time,
on how much money-is available·
•-~ !90,064.000 tot.al c<instrucuon bill
Wednesd•y lo rthe fl.seal year
ne 30. 1810. is $152,887,000 more
td by the ltouse, but '313,8M,OOO
budgcted by.tl>e president. .. __ ._.,
f\.flss Krenwinkel did not appear in Rimel said ~ did have the made bis ·long-awaited entrance into the
by the retirement on Sept. 23 of Judge J. court for filing of lhe writ, whi:tji also right to name the kind, method and time race in a statement to a news conference
Parley Smith of Dana Point: challenged the warrant wtder which she of solicitation. at his suburban home l)eir l.os Anaetes,
Presiding Judge Richard Jtamil\on, i! held. Mayw 9lepn . Vedder who opposed the In becoming the first announced can.
who will share the bench duties in the Af.iss Krenwinkel's attorney, ?i.1. A. application named other ·90llcitaUon didate In the 1970 governonhlp election,
South County Judicial . District wlth permits granted . to organizations this Unruh, fonner speaker of the Assembly.
Domenichinl, hailed the appointment as , year. • aimed ... his lire at the governor and
•·excellent.'~ J • H l 0 They included veterans poppy sales on Reagan·s so-called "kitchen cabinet."
"l'\"e knO\\'R him for years:. Re is well rVl,JJ,e e ps Ut th e streets, door-to-door solicltaUons That's a group of wealthy buslnessmen
liked and very well thought of .by (~Ix), UNICEF hal1owft'!1 ~citations ,by who are friendly with Reagan and help
everyone. He -will make a fine judge," B Cl b G ch.ildren, ~farch of Dimes,. five rummage , finance his pOllUcal campaigns.
said .Hamilton. OYS U Y11l aales, g~l-&eo11l eookle sales door lo door, "The handful of the hall-hidden
A resident Of San C I e m e n t e • mall aollcialion and Community Chest. millionaires who call the shots in
Before the I>mll!ute gun baW• ended
more than iO p01lcemen had bl!<n called·
to the scene, ne&; w~ .rlotinl bad oew·
curred two y~ars . .,go. They brought
machine guns and tear gas but dkl not
use them.
Orange C:out
Domenict,ini has had a 'gener~l law prac. The Boys' Club of Laguna Beach wlll Also, Red· CrOll, bake sales, flower Sacramerilo tOday do not represent
lice in that cily:lor more than 17 years. have ils gymnasium ill time for the grand sales, flood vh:tims drive •. League of California," said Unruh. Weather
Jle is married and the father of foUr opening oI the new canyon facility, Women Voters sollcltatlon, .Phone "Thty must be told that it la your.atate
, chlldien, three girls and a boy.. thanks. to a $25,000 grant from the James solicltatlona, American cancer Society and your fOtute. We will say to them, We'll have l ·uttte bU of every~
In 1968 he served as president oI the Irvine Foundation, Boys' Club President and ,Unttarl~Unive:rsallst. FeUOwsh}p. 'No, you.canpot buy. our government like thtng Friday -SUMf skits, early
Orange County Bar Association. A1bert v-1es has announctd. VI-· Mavrir J--'-O'Sullivan sakl he '-'--'· hi ,_ f Ro aid mornltta.._clouds ~ ausl1 north· Hamilton~ Who has been lllilted by -... ad-· Ch · ii t ...... 1 -· """"l"' th robe you uvug a mansKJD or n e< W1r& -while the temper• several dillerent judges from other •nu vuce nstmas 1 t came a a bad-.teen ~ XrilhD• 1rou1r~wl s ~agan.'" lure resu·tn·the: mtddJe·'1'1>'1.·
judicial districts since Smith'• retire. mOmtnt when club officials were afraid and partially sh111v~ed~beo~da~) :::·"~lh~uf~Ol~ng~-ll~"'llEJN'l'-':"'"~-:::-:::---:-:--:::--t-=-';;;;';;:;;;';'-";~~~;--j--,
ment. said he hop.;cj DommiolllnL-~'ook!L-fiithat. construeUon of the gymna~g lM llljhwor. ' · h bl " INSIDE .TODAY De able lo assumniis new duties by the wowa tiive lo be temporarily discon· "l ·can't aee where a JTOUP should be He .mt~ to ''k.itc en ~· net
first of the year. Unued. because of lack or (unds. (SH KRISHNA( PlfB l) memberba and .others( wbo. ;n rlbu1j1 ' Ne::i:t _,tar' tht ~govrrnmrnt
He noted that, sil'l(e Domenlchlnl bas :•KnowJnc we will ha ve the Irvine · :.an!en~-=or>or-U:.-~ •• :::iy~ uiUt cOJM "lo h:th> oJ -JJG"Htl';
main tained a sing'· Jaw praclle•, rat"'£-Foundation'! IUnds·to coo.nt on," said EC· ' -e bat· "t'"-s Chrbtmai· ft'1 ·~
.. ~ 1= ''w no p-·---• to complete UCJ 'SI Ma' Re1111:ran·nav. $1,25e a month rtnt '°the 1 ·-·• than a partnerShip. he Is faced with a :s·'"""~' w can nx.~ · ates _ JOr ~P. whk:b includes Ben Swig; a pro-manjorkfmsc/in"e.ltcelriMf'OWt
aubstantlal task in finding and briering &J •" 11 r the ,. mlnent San Fre.ncllCO Democrat. &Jlc danocrt o/ new '°Ml· Paff attorneys to take over cases now pending First phase of .con~truc on ° new J Cl ., l Lif · · JO. · in hi s of£ice . , club al .1118.1 Laguna Canyon Ro~d, the 11 88SIC8 C U)!Mlh, I powerCul llgure in IUlo
main building housing clubroom!i, llbrary, politics for more than. a decade, is ex·
Sto<'k Market
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock marktt
prices remained broadly 1ot.·er in late
afternoon ttadlng today, but continued to
recover some Of their !'harp Jos."JeS of
earlier in the day. (See quotations, Pages
:t-23), .
kitchen , craft! rooms aAd offices. is fund· A ntw major In classical clvlllzaUol\ pC<:ltd to fact opposition in the primary
ed •IJ<I nearing completion. Ecclu ,.Id. was awaved Wednesday by UC Irvlnt'• from Son FranclJCO Ml}'Or Jooep& Altoto,
nie &Ymnaslwn for which the lrvme gill aOdemic oenato. • • With the winner bt<omlng the party
is earmarked, repreaents the second Students ma.forinl ·in the new field, nominee. Early public opinion polls 11y
phase. called the moot basic of •II humanllllk: Unruh Is the favorite. .
The club Is expected to move to the dl11tl plines, wl!I Ile required to complelo lleqin, according· to 'aides, wlll II>
Cany()D facility alter lhe first of the year, nine major count1 lncllkilng a year of a " nounC'! hta candidacy ror a:aeoonct term '
with a grand opening tentalively tel for clUlical language to earn a bacbllor11 later nut year. He erpecta: no •major
mid-February. c1tsree. lllel IJNJUJB, P111 I)
··~~~~~~~~----~--,.._;~-------------------
'2 IWLY PILOT L
Count¥·Welfare Prote.sts Due? .,
.. Dir~ctor .Pln:ns Meeting With Rights Mo vement . . ; . . ... By TO~I BARLEY Gut.st.de Orange Coiinty who art 11:itln1 on Sl'8 a month for the indl1ent mother wllh °' .... Der1y "1111 $••ff welfare and eomt admitted delictencJes one child, S17Z a month for the woman
.' \Vorried Welfare Director Granville to promote their cause." . ll.·llh two children, $220 a monlh for the
l>eoples today warned that Orange COUn· [te would no~jdenUfy the militants or mother wllh three cttlldren to support
ly may be the next target for comment on whet he said were ''lhe true and $245 a month for the molht'r with,
demonstrators who have d i s r u p t-e d aims" of the movement. four children. ·
welfare dl!partmenl meeUnga in .''We . are · going tn try to a~oid the Legislation aimed al raisiOg those
neighb9ring counties. disruption that has occurred 1n . sue~ levels to at least correspond with cost of ~ Peoples has scl Dec. lZ as the dale on places as ~ Angeles and San Diego, living incn:ases and providing automatic ~·hid\ he will discuss Orange CoWJty Peoples SaJd. . . future increases to relate to cost of living
v.·,lfare operations -and in particular Its The 'llftlfare director said he was one or hikes was. rejected by the legislature in
AFDC (Aid to Families with Dependent a number of welf~re . worker~ from !he last session Peoples said. Children) program -with what he said several Southern Caldorn1a counties who . ' . .
'"ere "self-proclaimed Orange County ~ecently had to call off 8 San Diego con-l'e.oples_ said h1~ department ~s. pro-
representatives of the National \Velfare vention when "welfare righls agitators less uig. aid for 7,500 A_FOC fam1hes tn
Rights movement." · walked in and took over the meeting." Or_ange ~~nty "and dorng all v.·e can to
He identified the movement spokesman Peoples conceded that the central argu· bring add1t1onal help lo people who are,
as Mrs. Alice Siivas or Santa Ana, the ment of the demonstrators -the con-let's face it, considerably underpaid."
author of a widely~irculated pamphlet tention that aid to mothers with families California's welfare directors and its
which is calling on AFDC mothers to was far from sufficient -was justified. orgiinized county supervisors at~ all on
mount "a dynamic assault on Granville And he pointed out that aid levels set in record, Peoples said, as favoring in·
Peoples' ivory tower." California 12 years ago have never been c.""tases in weUare payments for at least
But Peoples warned newsmen "Welfare revised while Uving costs have mounted lhe AFOC category.
is only one piece of this. This pressure is in that time by 26 percent. A central issue in the npresentations
bein& imposed by mllilant groups from Orange County aid levels are aet al made lo Peoples by county delegates has
Trustees Ask
Bids on Bonds
After Election
San Joaquin School District trustees
Wednesday night called far bMls on
purchase or $1.9 million in school bonds
the district may now sell thanks to suc--
cessful bond rate election I~ week.
Sale of the $1.9 million on Feb, 1 would
bring the school district up to its legal
bonding capacity. five percent of total
assessed valuation, said Assistant Supt.
for Business Sefvices Rex S. Nerison.
The five percent will include bonded in.-
debtedness carried forward Ir om
previous years.
The vote last week was to hike the
permissible interest rate from five to
seven percent on $3.4 million of unsold
bonds from a successful $5 million bond
election last year.
Nerison said a Nov. 1 municipal finan·
t.ing newsletter showed public agency
bonds were being bought al about six per•
cent interest, some a litUe under, some a
litle over, at that" time.
"We're a little fearful becat13e we now
can go to seven percent that is what the
bids will be, "ti .et Jw•I we11 gel lo otll.
them," Nerison said.
In another ad.Ion Wednesday nigh(. the
school board agreed the district will pay
$45 tumaa "'!'r. of Ii "achen, ·""' •
from each ~ al'KF.-Clfte frnm the
district otnce .. to attend-a Yfinter quarter
UC lrvine Ext~lon course on drug
abuse. ·
The participants then will share what
t.h<y I~ in the course with other
teachers at lhtir IChooJ, .
N eri50ll said the claa is a step toward
developing a drug edue1tion program for
the elementary school district. IL
prtsenUy does not have one.
lw~y Adulter y
Law 'Updated'
RO~fE (UPI) -Italy's higM.st court
ruled today it is no crime for a wife to
commit adultery or for a husband to keep
a mistress.
The ruling of the constitutional court
()verturned a Fascist-era penal code
which held that wives could be convicted
of adultery but husbands couk1 not unless
!hey lived in open concubinage l'.'ilh a
1voman.
The court said the law was written at
,ri time when women did nol want equality
with men.
"It ls not up to the court to modify
law based on social changes," it said.
"But it is indisputable that lhe court
has the right to assure equality among
all citizens, regardless of sex or other
considerations."
Strike Threat Blanaed
No Pay Increase
For Lifeguards
San Clemente lifeguards, who threaten-
ed a strike last August in an effort to
secure a pay increase, were lert out when
the City Council \'ot.ed raises for oU\er
ciU\ personnel Wednesday night
City Manager Kenneth Carr indicated
to the counciJ that his failure to recom·
mend an increase for the lifeguards could
be attributed to "current event!."
Had the "events" been different, he
said, he mignt have made a different
recommendation.
The lifeguard strike threat, which was
halted by a court order, WaJ followed by
the firing ol Lt. Steve Chorak who had
acted as spokesman for the guard! and
by the.resignatioltol two oUler~guards.
Cllorak bas been granted a hearing
before the city personnel board ~fonday
night. He served as a full time guard for
six years and as a part time guard for
four years prior to that.
Councilman Thomas o ·Kecfe sought a S
percent pay increase for the lifeguards,
but his motion was defeated.
Increases voted by the council included
212 percent raises for firemen and police
officers and five percent salary boosls for
the city manager, lifeguard chief, fire
chief, police chief, assistant police chief
and sergeant.
The pay raises ,viJI cost the city $l4,566
for the six-month period prior to July
1970, when a new budget will go into ef-
fect , and will be covered by a $21,000
reserve in the existing budget
San ~Joaquin :Teachers
~ ' : .. -. -r , -6et Drug ~·buse Course
. .
~ Ttaehert In the San. Joaquin Elemen•
li.rf School District will be going beck lo
school to learn about drug abuse.
Members of the Board of Trutt~
authori!ed A s s i s t an 1 Superintendent
WUllam Stocks to arrange for the enroll-
ment of 10 teachers at district expense in
a UCI course called "The Drug Scene."
The instruction of district teachers is
the first of a series of proposals the ad-
ministration hapes to make in an effort
to fight drug abuse in the district.
Dr. Stocks lamented. the slowness or
progress but told the board each .sltp
Fro1n Page l
PtAYHOUSE • • •
out that parking use is only temporary. It
...,·as said that the property between
Forest and Ocean Avenues might later be
assigned use as a street lo improve
do\4·ntown circulation.
This th~ reasoned lhat fun ds from
gas tax or oilier ·~urces could then be
routed to provision of park:ing along
South Coast Highway.
Vice Ma yor Joseph O'Sullivan said,
''The lots (from the Hugo Lindberg
estate) are available now. 'There is some
implication for traffic now also."
taken would place them closer to their
goal.
He said there would be a mieting Fri-
day of teachers and administrators who
are willing to become involved in a drug
abuse pro1fam. The all-day meeting will
be an information sharing session with
police representatives. nurses and others
ll.'ho have knowledge of drug abuse.
Or. Stocks also reported that funds are
being sought for community action pro-
gram! through the Health, Education and
\Velfare Department.
He said that the district would be work-
ing with other school district& and area
high schools arid would be seek:ing parent
involvement throu~h the di st r i c l 's
coordinating council. This group is made
up of t1!presentatives of each of lhe
parent teacher organizations, the board
and the administration.
The action to send at least one teache r
from each of the district's schools to the
drug Information class was initiated by
Stocks •
The district will pay ~O per teacher
111ith the teacher contribuling $5. The $5
will be reimbursed if the teacher attends
at least 80 percent of the 11 classes.
The board also stated that before the
fees are paid a firm commitment will be
obtained from each teacher to follow
through in the drug abuse program
developed by the district
From Page l
betn the ,Oranie County office's failure tG
implement a clause In the 1967 Social
Services Act -the setting up of a com·
mittee in which AFDC mothers could
discuss problen1s with the welrare
department and offer advice and possible
solutioru on claimed inequities.
"We have delayed formation of th is
comm.itttt because of staff shortages and
r'Jated problems," P.eoples said. "But t
don 't thlnk that if we had formed the
i,:roup at the time the federal act was
pa!.sed Iha( v.•e would have a11erted the
unrest that laces us no"'.
"What I plan to do," Peoples said. "is
to discuss the issu'5 being raised by
these people and to assure them that they
hav e our full ~peration in seeking
IPgislatl ve remedies. But I don't think.·•
the welfare director added. "that agita•
lion along the lines of what we have seen
in Los Angeles County is going to do very
much i;ood for the cause of AFDC
mothers in Orange County."
Frotn Page l
UN RUH·. • •
primary opposition.
Unruh, son of an illiterate Texa.~
sharecropper, recalled how "l hitchhiked
here from Texas nearly 30 years ago tA·ith
little more than the ck1thes on my back.·•
CUi\tB FROM POVERTY 1
He recounted his climb from poverty -
' aircraft plant worker, Navy enlisted
man, GI Bill graduate of the University
of Southern California, election to the
As.sembly in 1954 and finally in 1961 as
speaker -an office held longer than any
other man. He lost the job this year when
the Republicans took over the Assembly.
"Call!ornia has kept the promise it held
for me," he said. "I run for governor
because I want to keep the promise of
California alive and growing for
everyone.·•
/Is speaker, Unruh won ntany friend!'
and made many enemies. But~evcn his
foes credit him with making ·major in-
ternal refonns in the Assembly .
He hired young consultants to advise
legislators in an effort. he said, to reduce
the lawmakers' dependence on special in·
terest lobby1sts. }le led the fight.!Pr._;:i.
full-lime legislature. and for an increase
in legislati ve salaries.
But his foes also accused him of being
~ bully and hung the name of "Big Dad-
dy " on him. That was when he weighed
almost 290 pounds. Since then, he has
dieted down to 190.
In 1963, Unruh, trying to puslt lAen
Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown 's
fiscal program through the legislature, he
got into a fight with minority Republicans
and re!used to let them leave the
Assembly Chamber -the famous "lock-
in" incident."
FEUDED WITH BROWN
Unruh also feuded with Brown. And he
alienated some Democrats in 1968 when
they said he refused wholehearted sup-
port to Hubert H. Humphrey, Uie party's
preside ntial nominee. Many of Hum-
phrey's supporters are now backing
Alioto.
As a legislator. Unruh was the author
of civil rights laws. consumer protection
legislation and school finance plans.
Unruh was the manager of John Ken-
nedy's Southern California presidential
campaign in 1960 and a leader in Presi-
1lent Johnson 's presidential campaign in
1964. He later broke with Johnson over
the Vietnam war, which Unruh opposes.
Arn1s trong Pick ed
\\'ASHINGTON (UPl) -President
Nixon has appointed Neil A. Armstrong.
the first man to walk on the moon, as
chairman of the Peace Corps National
advisory Council.
He's the 'Winner'
Richard Stolman, a 19-year-old University of \Visconsin sophomore
whose birthday just happens to be Sept. 14, the number one slot in the
draft lottery, has a brother Douglas at the University of Kansai
whose birthday is April 24 -the number two spot.
'.Allies Chase N ortll Viets
Jo Cambodia; Truce Eyed
SAIGON (UPI) -Allied warplanes,
artillery and troops raided into Cambodia
in pursuit of a battered North Vietnamese
battalion in fighting reported today.
President Nguyen Van Thieu announced
the allies would honor 24-hour truces for
Christmas and New Year's.
Thieu emerged from a 90-minute meet-
ing with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker and announced the truces for
"humanitarian reasons." There have
been 13 truces so far in the w:i.r, all of
Toro Divider
Plans Dela yed
A proposal lo build a landscaped
divider strip.on El Toro Road just norlh.
or the San Diego Freeway resulted in a
controversy Wednesday and county
supervisors postponed a decision for two
1veeks.
The tree-lined divider is proposed by
Deane Brothers of Newp0rt Beach who
\\ant il lo beautify the ent rance to their
Lake Forest development.
The median stri p would be 600 feet long
extending from Bridger Road to Rock-
lield Boulevard.
Objecting lo the plan was Donald
Frisc~r, traffic engineer ·representing
lhe Toro Shopping Center. The center.
!orated midway on the stretch proposed
For beautification would be cut off front
left-turning \'Chicles by the im provement.
frischer said the plan was unsafe and
'vould c0ntribute to greate r traffic con-
&estion in the area.
Supervisors ask representatives or
Denne Bros. and the shopping cente r to
gel together \vith the county Road
Departrnenl oind work out a solution
\•:ithin two 'vceks .
them marred by lighting.
U.S. spoke smen said American forces
would honor the cease-fires but there
was no word from the Viet Cong or North
Vietnamese, v.'ho usually beat Saigon to
the punch in proclaiming holiday truces.
Field reports said the North Vietnam-
ese battaliOn that was chased into Cam-
bodia had used the ne ighboring nation as
a springboard for its attack early Wed-
nesday on a border town and two U.S.
Green Beret camps, killing 25 South
Vietnamese.
1'he guerrillas v.·ere thrown back with
166 men slain and headed back acro s.,
the border v.·i th U.S. warplane~ and
artillery and a South Vietnamese platoon
in pursuit.
Headquarters said the allies had an
"inherent right'' to lire back if fired upon
from Cambodia.
U.S. spokesmen acknow ledge. the air
raids into Cambodia, the second such
strikes in three weeks, but said nothing
or the artilley strikes or South Vietnam·
cse platoon.
Reports of lhe action 58 miles wesf-
northwest of Saigon coincided with the
'~eekly casualty report showing 70 Amer-
icans killed last week, the third lowest
number of deaths since 1966.
• Anolher 1,049 Gls were wounded. Only
two other times since 1966 has the wetk-
Jy de.1th toll been lower-the v.·eek of Oct.
1 when H. Gis died and the first week
of 1967 v.·hen 67 were killed.
~filit.ary spokesmen confirmed what
sources h3d disclosed earlier-that U.S.
casualties for the war surpassed the
300,000 mark last week, with 39.642 killed,
259.828 wounded and 1.359 missing or
captured-a total of 300.829.
The U.S. death figure was a sharp
drop from the 130 Gls slain the previous
\Veek. South Vietnamese losses fell too.
to 373 killed and 953 n·ounded , with 2,177
Communists reported slain.
OIAMG& COo\ft PU It «'HI~ ~IN'
l•Mrt H. W11I f'r.....,._. ...........
J •ek I , Cit!..,
Councilman RGy Hohn said the pro-
perty location is "very strategic" since it
is adjacent the city-owned playhouse
land . KRI SHNA ...
W.ayor Glenn Vedder said he had never
considered the area as a fixed parking allov.'ed to ralse money on the street."
location. He said discussion had been held said the vice mayor. He said he did not
a very special purch~se from a
famous quality maker of
vi. ""'lflfl' .. °"'" MINtlt
111111"1 K11,il
l!~illl' GENUINE LEATHER CHAffiS for years over extending Second Street think it good for the community to have
through the area and eliminating the the group playing cymbals .
short Beach Street. Vedder said, "The method of solicita~
Counc ilmen Richard Goldberg and lion is whal bothers me. I don't think ii is lh•''"' A.. M•r,hiftt Mt.,.,i,,. l•it.r
a1cl!1r4 P. Nill L"-.. ~It (11, lfllfr
Charlton Bo)'d opposed lhe acquisillon. what"'' in Laguna Beach prefer to sec."
Goldberg said he wasn·t sure the city The group said it would distribute lt~
could tum around and sell the property 1nagazine "Back to Godhead" and solicit
for more than it paid. that he wasn't funds from those persons ...,·ho see1ned L•"'"" Oftke sure the city was getting ils money 's agreeable.
2J2 ,.,.,, it.¥•· worth. Boyd moved to defer the Councilman Richard Goldberg asked
MtHl11t "'''''"P.O. 1•• ''" '2111 purchase. questions about use of runds solicited and °"" om.. The property acquisition passed 3 to 2 said he did not think the application was ~~~-1~_-.··.~=~.·~ .... ·""::;. ... ~1--~·~'~'tbb.GG4W~dbbe~r~s~·~nd<l..llBo~X~IL~11:!":'"'.'::".":-..:0'.:---'•-pl'O!l<>-.... def~nd--<!lljeeted-t<.-1fte,-j.-i-~~~....J~ .. Councilmen also seemed Agrttd that A mtt od of solicitation. ---:::::;oo
plan should be 'A'Orked out fo help solve CooncUman Charlton Boyd said, "In I
the olf<fllrttt park:ing shorta&e for South the interests or d<>ing the f1ir thing; it ••
Coast. H.lihway busineues. \\'ould seem to me that they're
automatically permitted a perm.it unless
it is shown to be illegal."
Councilman Roy liolm asked ir sale or L
the Los Angeles Free Press. lndianhead
and local papers on the streets was legal
:i;ince it ii done .
A Gin TO llfASIJRE AllD ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Cwtom quality tJu·ough-out •
Lu1urious cushioning • ).'our
c-hoke of coin from an exte.n&lve
selection ol !inmt leathtr texlurf!I.
from $199 Car Burglar Does
Yule Shopping Early
Rimel said, "I can't say that it ii; ii· H J GARREIT f URNfll} RE le.gal to sell newspapers or other publics· •
lions on the strett.'1
~rolrn and Boyd were on the abort end • •
of the vote on o·su111"n'1 motion lo deny PROF£SSIONAL COSTA MESA', CALIF.
I
Somebody stepped into that new ste~in
rear door fl a Laguna ~ch woman's
station wagon Wtdntlday and atepped
out again with UM worth or newly
purdiased metthandl.5t.
Mrs. Ell:tabeth LI' Rankin, or 128~
Starlit Drive, tald Costa Mesa police the
bur&llll' occurred "'till• 1he wu &hop.
pin& in Sooth Coa1t Plaia Cf!nter.
the application.
Part of theaudience heartily applauded I INTERIOR· DESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD. I
the denial. Vtdd<ir rapped his g•vcl (or 1· 0,.. w .... nr.,.., l'rt. 1'!'11. 04b-0276
order and the Krishna represen~ativt.1
tc.fl.-..w•••••www•~••••w~...-••------••••~r.www.,,,;
l I
I I l
I
I
I
•
LSGAL NOTICE
SC:NOOL •ONO t!l.ICT ON NOT CS
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LEGAL NOTICE
lLIJCftON P'RICINCT NO 11
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NOT Cl!: TO Cll:EO 70 11$
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE OFF c J~PiE:1.10.... ' ,. CT T DUI NAMI
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N• A+t~1 f's Ir o SHf'llMAN ALWYN SHAW
Oecte1fd
HOT CE IS HEREllY G VE N to II•
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LEGAL NOTICE
NOTICI! TO Clll'!OITOlll
S l'ElllOI. C:OUllT Of' THI!
Slit.TIE Of CALIPOllN A 1'0111
TN£ COUNTY 01' ORANOI'
Nt A ""91
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o..-·~ d
NOT CE
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t"IC71TIOVI NAMIJ
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Your Money's \Vortl1 Y orli Stoel\. List '
Non-foods Fatten OVER THE COUNTER NEW YOllC tAPl Y~urtd<IY • c-ltltl llln Nil fl•w Yor~ S!«k Extllt-prlct1 wllh (1141 ) Hltll Ltw Cl ... Chi
triwmulftl VQlllmt" C CA.Oii .j t!11 !i\4 611, tl\:o -\\ ftdP~~8d 1 -A-c!:!PLr \ '*2 ~1 300.. JO~ , F P41l pll ~ Slltl Ntl C.rplcll .IO ~} 11\0 3"'° 2HI -..1 F*ISIQ~5 , • .,,,.,,,.:::;:,,,,.,oz:r.r:a""--.,. ..................... "'""~"""""""""'"""""" ... "'.'"'"'i '""' , Hlctll Low er .... (119 CMrlrrC• A(,I m ~-~»I,, 3' -3 FIOOl!PIS!r lw Abl(llJ Al );( jn• ~ j)l, -:W. C•tt Pf~.U i10 \~ ~ 3"I • Ftd Ml.II lj!
NASO Llst'ngs for W-'n•sday D•c•mb•r 3 19'9 A~Jt..1b 110 n s11 1s Js>o + \• c1rrGn :! :itt 2 v. .. lfll -•• F•rra ca S k B ·zz .., . ' g ACF ll'IO 2'° l'9 41l<t-.. 4~-l·C.•ltrW .~ )) :JO ..,. r.~-11 Fi.rtDni 10 t .-.t~CI 1A<I• 11 72l't n ll + ~• C•U JI 11 1.-~ i. 1 -'ti F/'"'j '-"' Upermar e l lt•Pl'tff"llllYI lnltNltlltr 'l\IOl•I-• II ••P ... lll!Mltly t AM .... '"NASO ... (IM Mk! 7b 1 ~h :JIJ\'o" t.tJtll'Ckt 40 111 "',' 3011 ~ + l•FtlrQ!
•
"
.. ' ' '
... O OO -• O • .-.dtmE I ilo •1 14~1 l•'h 1•\it -~(I trTr I~ 1 '°'' ..0\> •11 -'II F/n F ttlln , .. "' ~ .,.., rt 1 •r -·~up, m1 OGWfl •r c•mm 11 n. ~t.f':!~u,1 l ~f ill: Ut;, n~ :f:it? ~~/ ,cor:., is s: 111 21 • ,: • _ .. ~.~~~~ /:f
8) SYLVIA PORTER
1r you re gr1p1ng about your
soar ing food 011\s today of
course )OU have reason The •
food we buv lo est Ill hornc
cOSL'i c lose to 6 percent 1nore
tha i a year ago -and for
111eat.s J)Oullry a nd hs h the
sales shp ts u1i nearly 12 per
cent But the story 1s not
mer~ one or higher price
tags on all foods across-the-
board I ts far ntore complex
a nd far more fascinating than
that
Part of our higher grocer\
supennarket bills a lso can be
traced to our ever rising
prefe rence for gourmet foods
and 1elat1\ely expensive con
d1ments 10ur s pendi1g Jor
barbecue ingredients such as
barbecue sauce n1 u s I a r d
relishes p ickles paper cups
and plates 1s soaring )
PARf OF the bigger bills
can also be traced as we all
know lo our e\ er r1s1ng
preference for convenience
foods r anging from prepared
baby formulas to JUSt add
water meals
Part can be traced to our
ever r1s 1ng fond1ess for
snacks which are on the way
to becoming a kind of ' fourth
1neal 1n the American home
Our spending for snack s 1s a
to .... ering 68 percent higher
than a decade ago
But the most dramatic of
the e xplanations for o u r
record high grocery.
supermarket bills 1sn t 1n the
food categroy at all for the
big surge r 1 spending has been
in NON FOODS -and these
n O\V r ep1 e sent 23 percenl of
our total s tore bills vs only 14
percent a s recently as one
decade ago
ITEl'lf A full h\e our of 10 of
t he fastest s ale gainers in the
nations s upern1arkets and
grocery stores tn 1968 were
non fo0ds a ccording to a 1e\v
stud y of c;o n s umer ex
pend1tures for Superniarkettng
magazine T he leader s v.ere
paper t owels g r eeting cards
d1sh\vasher c o m p o u n d s
fu1 n 1lu1c pol is h and deodorant
:;oaps
ITE1'11 Also ;11nong the
fastest gainer~ \1~re dry cat
tood and can1tcd cat food can
ied sofl <[,inks and dietcuc
sofl drinks T he sole basic
food item for hun1an con
sumpt1on ainong the 1op
gainers w as frozen prepared
foods
One factor b ehind lhe n o n
I
GIVE YOUR SECRETARY
A HELPING HAND'
TAB ANSWERING-
IUllEAU
"'---.._ . ljEWYOitl(f>,,)Allle<I fQ tt. J1ti 8illu111W 1•1 •l•Kt!aGrn 411 ~ Unll•c 7 '>J llW1nhw l 'I t .-.<1mlrtl •l lS\1 U 1 tt"-\•~Kolor1> YO ,, J~, r,~ 2j\•-ll'F•tNClty 2,~ .. ---......... -"1~1 lol"fowlno Dld A.lpn Wo l l!lt! 11 ro Son lS :lei l<IVlll\ 4, 5 U" OOtlr 2•1.o WtW! NG li~ U\i AttM~111.o 3C1 ~7 ~ .ill •H• CtlfMH>CO , 1l )t 1111 ) ~I V. FitNflSlt Q •nd 1~~.., a11011.-.maoc 1~. 11,_ .. r1cPw ~· ••l<f<1rT l A1,u•u" l+luM 11 ~lfV.Wt1~11E 1'~11"AelnaL plJ t "1V. 39h ,,.,,+V.ctloon1>1A•)O ; S6\i ).I.. u 1,+1 F1cht>c:/\ $\I
roud Up'w'ng In rood St.re• o~ IClf>I 1110011~ by Am &u$11 10 11 "''~ tH ~' :U._l(eHel! "''I Vn McGll I !1-W•• Tr '" !5 .-.ou!rrt co 1J "'• li/J 16Vt-•Cen<olni ;)(I \(; •,",,'',,•,1 •1••.; .,Fl•~•F-d 03d .~ ~ "1~ Nt!IOl'l•l AuOC) A El ~lb 1 • Ill. llOG\lt t:.I J lfl K,.llwd 3) ~l\l U11 R.i11 I,\, l " tDll R1 l•\• 1114 .i.!r Prl)(I lOb <ti 3111.t U 360\ +l•t Ce"!FCY 40d II" -\• Fl~ht Sd Ii the domesllc dO-Jl)Ou(.Se\l "1011 01 Sec;11rlll•1Am E~P• 11.1J.•><11 8~• ''•ts l<PtJtf £ u 1 15, us D~no1 11.u wt1<11rn 16 11 Al•lled l lS<i 211 i1, 11 l'•-••1enl-lud 1;111 16 1\'• n•• 1'"' Ficmlno » Dtl~'I !~ ... AM Furn ' f l, owll'W C ~· ~I l(eye Flb l 0\1 15 US '""" J\1 ' W~Unt M tt 1( AJ lndustr n 94 )\. ('., I~• + ~, en 11 LI 1 l? ;'O ) , 111 1 ~~"--• Fl ntKOtf 0 trt?nd 1n our land We are l'Kll tdv•• t1•n11c A•n tn•a 181"1 29 l oc • .C1 Ii "' n l<e•s Cu• n '' 'i us Env•t 1<l )2 w1111A G ia u 1i. "• G1• 1 10 i1 11•, 16. u ~ -1.. 11111 ot• )0 ,oo oi • 11 61 -h Fl /"' o A1 so
I I ' ed I °"' by! &re ....... Mii• 8 at. ··~ l>•t<I ~~, .... , 2W I(~''' PC I ~ ' us ~u1Ar .. .,, .. VYtint ,. ll, 9\, AIDerlOC 71 n ,5 )0• :I.I'll --.. ~II PS-I 11 .. 1r1 7 ~ "'~ ,1 m ol~) l ) s pending s 1arp y r 1<:teas fltll!Jt!Yt ln!e .. A ,,.,..., CP 13 ' )' ~ .. ~WY ll II 1~ l<lng Int ., •• 11."< us tr L 3' :Ill Nslf\ NA 117'11 11~ Ah::1n.-.1u 1 '}(I 2<11 '' 11.. u -\I ent Li El 1 )II ii ' 70"!· '° . -I F\• E (o.lJI
k r d•1ler 11tlett1 •• olAn Pl~ :xi :HI~ urKi S~• :a 2Jl,ol(n~• El •~• 1\'i U• PenP n -.n.w"" Mii 6~, .-.1c<1$l&fld ~?~ ll 21•1 71 21\•-\\ •nMPw 110 ~ll 161 u•. li-'1-'~F• C.'1i >O amounls 1n supermarcts or 8PP•o11lna1ev J ASIGoo s i~urwn "' l~.IJ•KltkCP n ll u1~11SL<1 ~ .. 111w11111u11 1• 11u.i.ie.xfld••'""" 11 ;1, is. 2So+~•Cenl5W 1$0 ll '.181 3e· lS••-l·rl6.,ow1oO
'"Ch thongs " 110011" s·~t p'" ~t WM(~ 111•-'' AS! G "' • • 6•v1ll bf 2•~ jj. ICn•p Vol ;i11 iltli Utft Ind :JO '1 Wlnt Wll I ... ,,~ Allto Cg 20a ~· ll > iv. 13\. -~. C~nt Savo llO i9 ,, •• 2/W. 7,',!• -• ·.1.·p~.·.',,' ,'
u uS ~ I'" Stt~•lt• CouloAm ltlY 11\)11\<obYc~ev IU ~l l\•l(rel•lr t 7\~Vll LO •• t•t<Nl~ , 111.IAtlfll 6<>1 60 1 5(1 ... Sil SO -4.i..C~n TtllJ 18b l 15• 13t .. ~
Cleaning fl"ldS elf poliSI ng ~•vf l>te" 11;,1r Annoui B '1 1 \~ bu•nvo S 19~ 70 LMC Do t 1 • :ll'o Vlll(Ce $1 It 'Xlt-1 W/•~ T 111_., ) AlleaLou l •O 31 40 • 41)10 •O'I• -'' CtfrO 1 40b ?ll 1S l• • 11 • -'• Fl<>Ofl .. o 'Qlf " S l! <h~)l'd •~l~ed1 MAn~enC l'o I l>~•"~>i"-ll~<i•luu:• In :r.>.il7\.\Y!1lfClf> :lt\lt ,7\~ IV.ll\'1Alt.<IL11d1>ll 14.11 ••1> ••1+ •Certlted 80 J;19 tl o 11• )!\,-,, •fll>Ot111B3 floor waxes shoe pohshes ~n1d (bid I ntcr Arc•• " l••• Jt\ CIC wltt• ••• 9 • L•l'ld• '" l • 1 • v v WOd H. ,.,, '"... ., ' Al~ Pw 1.J? 1~ 20~, 10 ;olo !ett 1.., 111 90 ~1 n n n + 1\1 F v ll~~r 10 • 'D••ln• morl<t!SA•t• Ina 11v,11 ,L•• ~v 2.,,.,,.L•~ Wd l• l4'1ii W9"•W-P 211,no., ...... w 1•\01t~A!!l111C~ 1?0 2)5 ,1. 16•• 16>o -\ •Hl!OA llOb 311'/"t 11~ n •.+1 FMC CP 65 housewares c~•n?f '~'°"!ill> .-..~n M 11\o 12_.,,, l,a ... cQ 10 211\ L•••on s 'l ~ w llefi'.le iu •v. Y•dnv E 1 11; .-.111dM111 41lb 79 .u l31t 3'•1 +1 Fl su ao~ 1 ?0, U\t 10, • • FMC 1111 n out l~f ~IV Prlt<>S A•Oen pl ;.t )I> '""' M /5 1i L•rwn M 11 o II' All!edM II II ?I J.I\• l • l41t -l'o ~ha.,br~ !oc 10' U>• Ill• U 1 ..-fl)(;OFalr '1(1
Another "factor ls the s trady ~:" I n()I ..:~~':!· ~~~9~ ~~; :i~ l:~~ II ,~ t 1; •• t:~°Co~~ ~ .. 1l ~ . ~ ~ ~U1~srrd1 !8 ~~ ~ ! ro 1 38 ; !.1,,. ~~:ii:.sN~ ~ ;; lli.. ~h-!'' r ., ~::; 'i1 n ltll
Upgrading 1n OUr hea[lh and mtr•dawn or'""' .-.vde IJV,I• c,•o Svw J6...,.IS"'L•h11r G 3• 35 .-.11eaSt p! j t!?O SS\• SS"• 51lo Cl>oseMn Ito 581 S01 '' 'i0 1>+H•Foa!e pt220 muon AtCC Bo! 101>11\'> 10 I""' ?'• l•Lt~n ln •l~ '" MUTUAL .-.11eosu1> Ml ••1 13 17\, 11•,_..,11ct.~cke •Mo1 1 9 n 19 'F, 1 0 sanitary standa rds This ex AA.-. En• 12 111,>, Auto sci l! 16 $~olc",, s 1 ~ L• .. 11 eF 11 11~. •111• Cht•m atr1 ?•, 1• ?•"11 -h '"""'!!•n lb •• 16'• 76 16'1 =•• 0• Moi 1
I h I A.-.1 Corp Sit 1 '> Avemco I 8+'! ...... rie Slo 6 • L ti• Ell t6, 91 Al1>1!1PC .OU 8 19 ~ .,191~' I~~ C~!mNY ) Ml IS l.8 5.\ ~ Slit +1>, ~~~.c'K:n ~
p il.JnS I e IU£e Increases Jn AFAPr $ 11 23 SobDltl 6 • I-C1rtr ~8 n .... ~f(~ t:i11~dV ~\~ : ~~~·h~l;bOl 60 1~ ~~: ?I\ ~;~: + ~. ~~:,m~~ 1~~ 3~ ;.: 1 l'f' j~ _ , F6'1 Whl M)4
supermarkets or sales of ~~'J I:~< 1g • :~.,; ::.'e~ At 1: • J :.1~e-•2 •J Lw e1 ~ '' n , AMBAC 50 ,.13 iau 11 1 111, + '' Cl'lt• Ofllo 4 1s s»1 'iO'• s.Po Fo~i Wh Pf 1 A El 9 10 B~I P• ' 1 1 ~ Can vp's 11 ' II LVl'>Ch c 3• 36 Am••E• • ;o • n 1 11 n -'• c~,~b·a~ I 66 t9 . 4f • •9, ~ • Fo~bOrO 60 aerosol h ou sehold d e odorizers A~~: v11 J1' 38' B6n 1u (; 9 ~ •~• .llbtl All 1, 6 , Mad GE! n '11•i FUNDS .-.mrlh ,,n60 s '° 19 Ji _ \'o en cE.u1 11 10 1111 i~ 11 -~. F•an~ Str •O
d d r I t I t f I .-.u Mou> l9 10 31 wck 10 , 11 Cnarl 0 H • l 'I> Ma~ c Cf\ 17't 11 Am Me~! 119 11' 30 t JO 30, -, Cn1MS1PP (t 35 lt U; 19 flPf.'PSvl I 60 an 1sr1 ec an S Pas IC J m Air ll'ldu• 1, 6 Ba•I" p 1•, 11. c11n Lt• 11 ~ ll, Ma Rllv s , 9 A.melf ,.13'10 311 66"0 t 5 ~ 6»o -H'>CMSP ot e11 13 o, '2 .,,,_ ~F umc .. 110
"raps for food storages •,,f.~'," .f i110>0' ',', •. ',•,e•,,,',' o!t •7 C~em!d 1 • 1 •Ml ill•t '° & ~ AA •Flitt 10 6l .0 'I Ji , •0 'I +~-Ch/ M\l)lt 1 61 16 11 1& ~ '•Fuqua h ft/f .,., ., , • 11~0 n ~ C~t• Ind 6 • 6\4 M11m1 A~ J 3,, Am Alrt" 90 :Ml :».;., ?9>+ )0~1 + io en P11evr 1 20 lS'i l••• 1S
uarbage can liners drain Alber1• 11 1 "' aeecllM 1i 11 c~.~ u1 • lS 16 Man n M J , "' " ao~er 1so 95 u u '> 11 .i. , ChR1P c1 UP' 1 21 • zi ,, n 1 .. • AllCO Lnd 16V> II ~ Belle hie 15/) 16 Ch a.,., 6• 66 Menor c lQ 1n > - ---•• , Am 8r'11'1d ) 1 .;os ll'io .M't JI + '• CnRIP ttNW 1) 101. 19'o ?Qo. GA( CP '5(1
c leaner s deodorant soaps .-.1111 ftev ,;i. 4. aetm tnd 10 11 Cflrl>1 s 91 1w Merm Gr n 1~, .-,,,,&de~• 1 ~ 1ro 51 1 ss ll" +1 cnoc~F11l1 60 1110 0 ",',• ",,·, "',•,+, ,, oG'•'• <,•,•,•-•
Id __ ,,, JI Alig Pep 5 5 Berk H" •1 ~l C~r sl or 91 I M 8 owr ~I 32 1 Am Can 7?0 185 "4• ••I <44 •-1'1C~r 1C1t D d II 1 , -<v persona ICVUOrfilllli._a. types Alld Ae•a 3.,, l • &ttz Lab 1S It J6 ~ C taae1 ~ •~~ Mayer o .>II\• .i Dti: s !nv•1 &cu 11 94 u 01 "'"" pl 1 JS ' u 2•'• l! + , ccn t vpl 10d • 1l • 21 71 ' .,. '' Gam Sko 30 Or r'rsl a'd eq"1pmenl Of Cl!l1 u JI 71, 11> McQuY 18~ 19 ~ NEW YORI( (AP) lnve1!Qf! G•0<.>1> Am Ccm 60 ll I • 11 llh .... \ ,ccn P•~l ' 1 13 > 1311 If'> -•• Gans pt ]j " C!1UO 1S .76 .. fAedlt l-I 19 10 ~-Tllt lcllawno""°" IDS ndi 51316)A(h•ln1~ 1•30 JO JO-• nromell 1• .007<> '1 1t ~'·G~mSpt/JO
'our s. th'' also reflect' 'he CIMk Ml 24 15 Me~1r11 JS •l'•1111on1 sunPlle<I bv Mui 914IOIOAmCN1dl ... 20 11• 73~ 731,_J_, I v•cl' 7 $) .)6\, l!• :i.s • .-1 (iBnnel! •• (ldYIO<I , l • MN Po I • i • 1ne Naflonet AHO<I Proo SO• ! 4 A.Crv5ug I 'II 6 21'• i1 t n•o -"'t S:lnnGE I 40 30 l• 7l • ?l • d '(;or Wool!
g radua l transformaUon ot the c nt Mer 10 • \l •Men Gen s . ~. •t °" of secur lie) Sl<><:t 19" 11 oo .-.mcvan 1 71 211 21 • 76\o w, • -1, "c'•"'G', '", 1$ 1~0 &1 66' i7 1-1 '> GarcDtn i 30 B km U Clln!cn 0 r~ I 'Mldld (o 11 1 11 Dt•ler• ..111( •re Stle(! 179 9 •5 Am 01!1 II l 11 70\• 10 IO'• -t n I> f ill! ~I r S6 ' ~ • + I• Gar ock 80
SUper1narket back to the ec an p fo~o~ 'l,o l,1 ', ~; ' ~!.:,",",o,T, l~lo ~~I :~~pr~ $'e',11";fl ~ ln~a~~~ ~ ~ ~ ~ !8u'~lJ11 :~: :: rl~ l& ~ ?~ ! + 4' ~C\~sFZrc:, ,i.~g ,,,:.,' l,h:, ~h~. i,',, :,• -;I, ' s=~~:n c:~P
g eneral store'of longago .,, ~ JO' Jl ;(O\lld hav,., ~n111~1 1111n1tADu~1111 l•a 1 ll 1;. 1l n ,,., ... Ge,,,1n1n sea Coll"' " ?• 11 '"'11$ VIG 18. 1!\o ~Old !b1dl 0( bou~l\1 '""'' 1S 16 16 51 A.mEIPW IM 416 1S. 211, ;es. + • i··.~es Svc,,•,, 191 41•, '°'" •1 • + ,., \Vanl lo know hO\V you Colon Sir 14\• 11 • M~ ll><h 5'• 6 (askeal w~dn•dY iv• 1 47 11 11 Am Ef111.a 1 11 79, 2~ ?9 ~ cvp "3 12'• n~ 71'o -1 • GnA!nv 7369
I b I I Q t Corn.tfl 3a •O MOil Sc I~, t i\ Bid Jilk J 1-intoc;k ll• 901 Am EtP Ind 104 12\o 10'• 11~':1 + ~ C •"< '°' •""•'! J6l 2111 21 11 f + \ GAmQU ~OD (IVLdeupa$20 1l1nthe 11 ua1·e1· ICom CI• •J •• ~Ollwkll:'10 11 Aberdn 2ll1!'6JOl1n•Tn 21J521lSAEtlndl>fA6l,006• 63 6' ynvo 1374 ., .. +i,GAT•anl60
k t d ? Ca" lnll l • l 1 Mon n Pk 14 H ' Ad• .,, l ,, 1 95 KtY>IOl!<I Fvndt .-.Genlns 50 167 75 10~ 1l , ~ ·~ C ty SI i •~ 1l 10 o 10'1!. IO•r G~n Sane M> super mar e grocery to ay com Go1 1 •, 11'1> Mr>0 ~ P a•, a•, An 1 aid 111 7 17 CYs 81 11 :u lt IS AGnln pll 80 ,1 JS 1, 341 ~. , _ , C/•r~En 1 •O 16 JS J• J4<, + ~Gen Cab I! 111
llere you are com TPI 111 r.i ~ Mr>0•~ s 14 11~'l A!utre 10 n 10 ,1 Cu• B7 n 6-111 •l ""'"'"l•t 10 10 111, 11~! ll'• + 'h c,,!':~,,,o,, , ,•, ~ ,',' ,•,·.• ,',', ~·,• ',',"••~•"• ',,m, F Com Mm ll.t,;11 Mote~ M 1f• I .-.11Am F 16 9• Cu\ 8 4 89S 971A Home llO 11 6(1• 6( 6•~~ ~• ~ • MPt! 1>11 POUl!t1 $.1•3 lrS\-{)U8rler earnings In Com P•v 11 lS ~'-101 Club 11 16 All>h• Fd 11191299 Cv• l(t 174 l4!Al-lome l>f1 1 96 95 'Id +Y>~:e,',"e"',,',°'o SI 17/J ll\a J2 +Vi GenOvn<t"' 1 Produte 1 01 d 29 t 4 Cam~ A J), •~• Mve l~r 10 0 l1 ' AmtaP 6 07 6 51 Cus 1(2 5 30 119 Am l-IO•P 11 'lOS 44 • •l'• 131, C l!O 7~ I ~6\1 16 ' G!n El« 1 60
Ot"erd .. 91'oc6rlci 1 5~ crease perccnona per cmpCm J8 'Cl MCRIE! 4 •• Ame,,. 3°'3 14 c 11ss117 8119 ,9 Am1nv.,110 11]611 1~·~161-•, orox1a ~i:~J,,]J 54,:t i!~g;.;r::i:3
Otlry oroduth 1 O Cent gatn Ln sales Beckn1an ~~~ 11n~I ~~\~ /~J• ~afra~cc 11• I ' Am D•ln 10 :Ill 11 Joi Cv& S1 9 96 0 II AmMFdY 90 11! 1~ • 19 > l8l. -• ~:::::1l~""p1 ~O •• 71'• 10 1 ?J\1 + >,Gen Mo~I c """d !oods 1 0 I I d Cmp Mt~ i ;-.,,,, NI I! 11. 1• •£• •Pl 999 Cu5 Sl 1S1 a19 ... Me!CI~ lo(! H9 j I Jll1 J3'• +1. CNAF nl )0 51~ 1l n > '12 , -'''" '"'' ... , "st'u'nents 'le reporte to • ! • rnc l• 4•Am Gr ll 59J 6" Cus S4 119 S61AMe!CI• pf' J 17 !Iii• 87 CN• <>O<O l < •o< -"' + -Alea'"'' t beverag~> 91 ' mp tc 19v, iO Ni!Cor R. 11 I' • Am In• 1 M 1 64 Pol1r • 11 • ~ Am Moo 5 110 10 , 9 10 ~ + \, Coast ft Gb' ~ • " • ' Genln• • Pf l
F<o<en food• 9• day ~:''ik ~ l~ h ~~lm~~~r .J • §3-li Am Mui 8 96 9 1'1 l<n c~b 6 t? 1 5t AmN~!G~s 1 6S ll • 31 l JI , -• (oc8Col I J1 18~1 4:0 4~8l , 'io --;:-1 > a:~iXclt ls4 ~ ~~~~co"°:':ciuc11 ~: For the Lhrce n1onlhs ended ~~n~~;31Q l': ~~ ~.tt:g fl 3] ' !~NP:c'h 1: J ~~ ~;!<tG•~~ 1~ t li!j ~R°,~8e101 D~1 ~~~ I~ : n • J~'; +,._: ~~1ci6i.10f 1 Jl 7ig ~~': ~:, ;! '~ : g nt'r 5g/i /s
Co!!•e •'ldca !i <'-""Bk Contran J l '•N!Llb .~.;!j~A1c::11G•~PO'J9~1t:~~"."c~1~;:J2ll~;;:~~aftl60 ,t~5!~~,:~{+\,CO!IP o!J5(1 l~S1 11 u 1 GMolplJ/j So&os •~d Crtrtotn'1 SQ .;x;pl Ull eC man earntOJ;S Coct>er I.. 19 ; 10 l N:ll MO'd Je 39 Grw h 11611318 Libor!v 6 16 6 1J A 5,,,. l 90 289 30'• 2a , JO~• -~~ ~~ o'o"o'• •0 k .! ~I 1•'o 1l'' 14'0 GonPCem 80 Salldrn•~ Al \\ere $875411 on sales o(Co•P S lS 11 Nol Pet 1•·• incm~ !119JJLleS1k 511s91 AmS.OA1r10 J•J1•1l6 031 -••,_., •"" ~J l9 •3at,391,+:;.GPubu11w OIMYr 79 ?9l,tfMSttR ll <l• F"lnv 971106,Ll!e lnv l••ai9 AmS1dl JCjJ,,Jt.l•o )1\, .. l y,COIOlntJt 60 19J1\,J6.37>,+! GenRelr6cl C""d ment~ d•ess n9) •el nt, 1 S3 1 640 546 Cotnpared with rwt•d h i i6 • Nat S~ow .µ, t A• oc ~ 111 1 38 Ling 5 21 s 16 AmS1d Pl• H 6 IOl 101;, 101 Colt Ind !9 x~• ii 21 • 11 -G..., So 110 COOIC~S ttac~er~ 31 1creatMh !?>11\>.!No! Sjlvr 1) a Aitron 61 1 661 Loom1<1Saye, An Stell'' 11 ll• 19 .30 _p,Cgllln Pl4 2S •S SJ SI 53 +~1 GenS!llnd no P•o""' ~ood• 11 earnings of $676 648 on s ales o C•o<• co "" • .i~ NMal 1 a , A•e 1-1ou9h!Clf> can~d "04 41 0, A Sve1ar 1 w 21 21 • n •t 2l , css 1 ..co '°" ~\, ·~ ., ., G T~I El 1 s2 8•tiida•• tereal• ,, h' f Cru!th I? 10\'i II NE11 GE 11 ll'a F~nd A 62! 6!J Capt l1 Sl ll 52 AmSuort 61 10 9. ' 9\1 CBS pf I 10 19 11. 19 .._ • GlelEI Pl1 $(1 Call<ly indc~•wnqw"' 11 $304253091ntc1rslquarter cvpresc 11 U NJN&1G 18 19 Fund & 191860 Ml U61U61AmT& 2~ llill.'iO )'iO so>o -\~tcivGa• 160 S2711lS11s -,CTeF01~s
r f I 1968 E 0'1nV M 12.,,ll•Nl(h5n F J 37 51ock 6 27 6 !0Mant>ln 1•6 11sAmWWit~ }6 16 9~, 9 9 o ColuPo<t 6~Q 33 i.11 B i6;+1• GTel OIBIJO Flour otnt• o~-nv ,,..t~s 11 0 I SC a arn1ngs per o.ia D>11 l 1<. " , " e, A l' 11 s.c CP 4 93 s 36 Mas5 Fd 10 94 11 96 Awwi;il' 1 75 1100 16 1 11. , 16 , cotSoOh l 10 Ill .1 19 Iii Jo -2 Gen Tim~ 1111 509~' 11 share increased to 25 cents B:~~i" F: 111~ 1~" ~11511~1, 36 • JI > B•b1on 114 1 s. M•n G1h i; Jt n ~· AW orcr l 1s , 110 16 15 • •5 , -• comc£n 1 •O 1 1.,, n 14•, • 11. G~n T •t lb
Pot1!0 t~lo• Orf II•" PCl>t0'" 15 d Ith 20 cent <<O tllC D~V Mir 71 l ll , NC•• NG ; 3 !!er11 l(nt 9 69 9 69 Mass Tr JS 28 16 70 AW I l~t I d i 1S<I 20 • ~a ?0 o -1 Co,,,ISolv •n 101 ?1'11 2.'i'~ 11 ! 1~ g~~t~n 01~ ~ 1-itahn and i,e~111y a d1 67 compare w s Decor In iov, 11 , Nf. .. , 011 ~ • 10 • B a , Fd I 1 66 n 14 Mattl!i s i1 5 i1 Am Z nc 6 21~, ll • 7l c,,.,.,1501 ~1 oO 6 1! 111, 16 Gfnst&r Lta llo~sew~•es :IG O AP I \ ~ l>, 4 , Bon(l!lk 6S8 719M81ntfS 1!171217Amr!ek Mo 11111 n , 1l •Ce>m;;Ed '?~ 2•6 31 , Joi\• 3611 -1 Genon•Pl$ J
o1ner f\Qn tood1 I s1 same quarter o[ 1968 o~~i~ en ss 'J\• fwAN~t~ 1;,, il,. ~~~lO<\Fd~ i~~ i~t~ ~c;it'Mu !lt ;~ ~l!\:!'t':i' :JO 111~' 1~\· 2~.· 2~!·--• ~~!-ofrn 1~ 16: ~1 ' ~~' ~g :i ': g~P~t'pr~~1>4
The comp a ny executive s 8:1 ~&~1 J~1~ ~~,:-'i~•• P~5,,• •,; ,", ~ aos'°" a 1J 11 " M~v CP 1• 31 U64 ~~~~1~0.~• l~~ ~ , ~· • s,•, "• •co"'""' sci s11 lO'> 21 , 30 +? 1 r.~P•c ~1 ,0
Long Beac'h1
Space Asked
l " • 8tQ3d St 1•"51561 ......,ys 1Jl.81'8' .,-. '' >+ 'CPmkll 781 11 151, 11 + Gerber In said fir st-quarter r esults were 8~".i ~~p n~. I~>!. S::1g ~~~ ~~, 11 Bull<><:~ H •5 lS Bl Morton Fund• ~m~lfd ri iO ~t r;,~ f1 I T' • Cone Mllh j 14 l•> 11 f 1 • -• Ge!lvO I )8q
I OE I I '>:i'fCGFd 911991G<w!ll 969105!.-.me I l lo J•o Ccnr•tCPOO J6Jloll<l1"-t C.el!v o!l1(1 niaiked by gains 1n lle in 0 r:,:;vc, 191!70 5~:,,l_~an ss Ml t"dn•an 11112031 lncom 39l •J1 An•~0"" 9(1 31 n>t 2 21 ,+••conEa11 1ao J$S 11 .. 21 1 2s•-••r.•~t PC iiO
I I d 0 1 ~· II•' C•aamr B~? t oo ln!Y• 170 1199 nc Moc~ *° 9• •n~ •1"' •1 + conEcs 1'16 1' 1', 11. 1'I, r,br•lt Fin cJUSlTla 11\ternafJOna an DIYMCnv 21l~Zl'o'.l!ler lP 1j1 l: C•Pl1 Inv •21 •61MIF Fd 111190~::zioffaN ~2J 314 J\ 41l10~•J1 + 'Confd s pt S ?• 6•• 61• 6l >-1 "~dLew ~O
I I t oo':t'1 i"' 21'" ~(• 5ver f\IA O < ' O\ Cao t Shr I ti 111 MIF Gin 5 6i 6 14 Jloatl>e~P 20 B'l 1(, 'i lO 20i, ; Can Food l 10 116 , •0' .\.0\ G lle"e 1 iO
C ec r ontC C 0 ITI p 0 n e n S "" 0u • •vCol 0 ,. '' • cent snr )1 5t n 51 Mu OmG ~ 16 s 61 ''I"' <••-'' ,, '' 00 -+, • ConFd 014 so j ''' ,',• ,• ''' ', -1, ' r; mbe ar 0
r ""•Md 9 . 9>.l P€( I rl ·• 'C~ann!nQ Fon(li Mu Omln 9751060 -'" I 1 ' C f o -> segm ents o the company S Cow Jon 61 , 6J P~b•t Br •5 •S , eaiao 11 S• 11 61 Mut snrs 11 97 l1 n l" .o. Svc 9& 79 n1 1 11 , 110 , -J on ~ gn1 1 ~l 7B ?e • ?8 • " .. ~n Iden
bus 'ness Res trlc l'ons 0 n °'o,.'.e R!J 11, '",. ·.~~ A,•,•,o l'I, s Cam SI I II I !I Mo! '"I '49 1 '9 ArchOan 1 60 10 }6'• 5)~. ) ... -•• Con LeaslnQ ,79 10 !O lO. + f r. ~nA d pf 1 "~ ··-35 Jf.l..O Grwl~ 6l16!5NEAMul1061101J'"'PSvc108 69l'Ol•101o?O-...-">conNMG116 1115,71 75 , r-e~r.1~1 ~s
t r d r Oun~n D 21 ,77 Pa~toCo 5V. 6 l'l<:Pm 761 !l7N•tWStt 1 ~11012[11•1&n;OS ;o 51 11• 11 2 + ,Co111Pwr 190 111 j)l, 3l JJ o +i•r.o.,~ Man goverM1en un Ing orouriron IJ 'J l•t>P•ncol • '"" SPf'CI 21110,N•t Ind 109010911 A•mcosr 160 111 26'• 16 '6' + ,conPw PJ•S2 1JO il 61 61 r.101>1>u11 s~
A'r Cal'rorn'a ll"S notofoe<I 1 ese"<Ch programs throughout ',',,,' 5•!11 2~01• 210,•, ~.••,,•.Du~ u • 1> Cha~ Groug Na! 1nvs1 1 ll 9 01 A•mou• 1 <IO l 4J • •J • •J>o -• conPw "" 'iO J180 61+. t? 61» + i, l'OO?<lr c~ 1 r> ., " " .-n 16 'l lll> Fufld n•l1i•9Na! Set~t St• Armr DI 415 1 S6'• }6 S6•-I Co~Pw pi.1& tlO ~1 1 Slo 51"\o-,r.roi<v~~r ·~
\hl' Cahfoi nia Pubhc UUhLJes t he nation continued lo lu111t ~~~~ ~~? · ~~11 ~\• ~.·~,1y1•, P 9 • 9 • Frnt 91/11 01 °' Bal•~ 10 :19 11 .16 A m~c• Bo 611 ;i.t 6 JJ • :i.i>o + •Con A •L so 16' 13 • n • n • -~""'"J1vA ''
k S • 1~1.11, Shrl>d llllll.16 eona j•IS9ll~·mRkb0!1llJJl~~~1~S ~~ +1 (Gn!C"'1110 17 7&,JS-..16l•+·r:~~t~c";i:~
Com1111ss\on that it will pro sales 1n the sclenllflc mar et ~c vs • 1'' P..,.r1e. T ?• 7S,) SO!l(I o J? 10 19 o "'" ?3 • 62 Ar~ c~,11 90 11 1: ~~, 1; _ ci can pt• is 1rn 61 • 6> ' 65 • "'~"~" 11n~ l:If E~lll l l..,PenO•L •(•S•Ch•mcl \9052<111 Grwlh 91Jt98A•nlfldl !~?:! lJ 13,1 ~Con1CoP:lOll x:!Oll 10,11,+.,r:r~nnv~·~
v1de service betw een San \:\ N~~ 11,. jg ~ ~= 'b'tv7 ,:,~ )1 • co1cn1•1 Pr s•k 6 63 1 2s Ast.Id 0 1 1 ~~ 199 1, ! 2• 24, -~1 co11c 0111s i Oil IA ' " ~ 11 l '"r~n ec .,,
D'ego and San Jose Oakland .. ,,,,,... , <\, ''"" ,,, , ' EoulY • 6l S 0'6 lncom 5 21 S 16 As"Oll ~12 <O 1 1~ 1 52 , '' '-_,, onl P 7 15 AJ • 4 1 41 • +I ~ ,_ an ~v I •O " • .-•. •o4• Fur>d 1011111S S!<><:k tl1181 ' •CtCPot.-.2 SO 1'1AS' 15 AS>, "•anWl ...
"nd that It woll negotiate .. oth p B i; 11•~m~vs !~: f , ~',",",, '•'• 10 • 100•~ Crwltl • •S 1 os No1 we,1 6 9J 1 51 ~~~ o't"~ 20 i~ !~ , !!'• J! • -(' con• M ~ 1 l1 n :!'I 18') l9 1 + " ~v!'lr~ ,~ " " O)'S 11, ' ven1 667 ll'9N~1 Gn~ 96JIOUA dS 110 5 32,1 •-ContMo 100 16 11 !8'• 18 r:1 A!-P "l
the C ity of Long Beach for ep ~ 1
e ~t~~1 1
:; ~ 1~~ ~:k~11 ,•f : .~\ ~~~~111 1~ ~! ]~ ~ ~:::_ .. 1~1<1 ~l ~~ \~ ~~ ~t~,~~r 1 J~ ;! g•• !~ ! ~!~ :j: '• ~~ 0~11 .. \ S~ .,.7 ~ ~ • ~'• ~~~; -I'• ~ ~~P1~,, \'~
terminal s pace and operating Em~S G'b !76 • 17 • C~11d~11:' 1~'1io Jf Corn$ 8d s 15 s 60 NY Vent II 89 2CI 63 All I{ c~r!lf 2 s 11 11'1' 86 ~ 88 : .:::. ,,• Con! SH I ~ 30 • l'l4 30 • -t, r; No p "' ·~ Enorov C SO SJ Pnota" ' (""'monwll~ Fd• N!W °" 16 ll 1115 ... !I Ren Dfl 15 110 Sl SJ 5l + Con! lei 1? 91 17 1 21 11' " t "' l>v 1 r1ghtsatLong B ea chA1rport s o EnerQ Re .,5 Pie Pd 2~,~..; C•PFd •691059 tfore"51 l•9'11~'7At1Rchnl 6 .,8 ,1,3 11.a..__5\con1010.~ Jll? 1,i10 1 6 ! "w-,•F1~1 tol•e pe11...:. Fnn 0 9 '° P • tncOl'n 19s 9 e1 Ocngpn 1 so e s2 AH Reh 012 8!l 160 58 51 ~ + • c~o~ P1• >a 1200 I? ' 59 , -~ ~un 1 °" Last month the P U <.: o En,,,' ,1 ;o 10, Po~~~1':.Jic ;~ ~~~ lnvell t 1710 ~1 Omraa a 11 e ;11 Al as c~e"' 1 lll n : 2tl ' 11 • • CO<'lwOd 1 !IOa 11 l1 ' Jl • Jl. -"" n oll ~·
d C I r h Eon Corp 1 1 , Pro Co 1 • • Slack 8 &7 9 6• 100 Fd 13 96 U )6 Al a• Cora l~S • 4 -'Cool< Uni! SO J9 39•. JB JI 1 • "tW• ~•n •n grante Air a I orni:i au\ OTI Eou 1 011 12 13 "''"" An~ 11 ' 13 c .... 1~ Afl 1 11 1 S• 10 Fd 9 57 10 40 ATO inc ot1 1111 11 • 1, , 1~ • ~ "Ceop~"" i '° a 16 1;, 1i • i-"••••'"'ni ~.
I I t t fl I t E< ~ Tee 10 11 PuDS NH 4 • 5 Cwllh CD 168 11! On~ WmS 1616 1616 Au or~ p a.~ 14 16 tS • lS' Coo<>~• TR I 01 lll1 11 • 11\o "'"""~~ 1 ;~ Y O opera e non:; Op 1g l !I The P ep Boys Manny Moe E•lf•ln ,5 •6 , Pubs NM ~~ • J6 ' C.yno A• 11 9716 •' D Nell 14 n 15611 Autom ,.. r!l 166 11,, 10 , 11,; :;1 'clfi P•l 15 4 1s • 1~, 111• "•~v~o~-~ 1 fion1San01cgoloSa Jos Fsc,co s1 6 1 p~~SNC 1 '1~ COtT1i>e• in 11 99 01>0enh 1 i.1.i..o.vcoc11 1io 112;4 ,;J,llo+~·c r>11IO lJ9 •l1 •l' .-,.,.,9" n c andJacknat1ona\aut on1ot1veFftrl!lT 6,, 1 ,Puci'~ 1~ 1,•comoed 9 >G91•P•teFfld1113116A•<Qg1J10 o4 ~l so s1 ~1 coo <1•SClb l •6n2 6 •" ""''"'rD 1
Oaldani.I At the sanle time I 1 Ii h Id Fa n<i 15 1.11~ Pu•~ • • Cpmp Fa 9 '• 10 O• Pen~ SQ 111a , 1a Averv oa 1!l •6 n , J? , J<•' .._ co is' 1 ?O JI 19 is 1s1• ""' ..,~1~ ·~ ond lire spec1a1ss \\I 0 i:,dN Mt IQ lll p aeon.i 26 ~ Como!k 11• J6?P~ Mui 811 s 11 1J\v~1!nc •O 1so 11•. 11 1~· ,•en ~1~& ~11 ~· 79 ?Oo 111 -'"'~I'~ i•, the P UC temporarily dc111ei.1 <in u{ftcial "rand opening of F•t 80, ~1 ,6 Pu•• 51 1~ ls concod ll•S!J •SPh!~ 1•9l 636Avo~Pd 1~0 w.1 1"" 166 ,1~9 "+1 :corGw 1~0~ 2l759• 25.1 h91 ~l" "I l\n
anA1rCahforniaapp\lcauon " Fi iGRE 1' 11 POuac<> J26'Eg~~1 11~1~~1~~~i'~1"' ;H~~Aieoouc;, 32 U•ll >12•• ~~ron~11"10 12 2tf •n •H•~ ·~· .. ~es~,".. th ell new \Vestm1nster slo1 e aR~ W.1' ~ ,{. ~a?1 ~~01 10,\ lf Cont G1h 9 ll 9 OI Pint St 10 .IS 10 SS -8-ICo•B!l{OS 50 Jl 46' 161' •b • -• ~110~. 1 , for se1v1cc be1v.ee11 L ong d toe cccenter atr.11 1 3 a A ''Co•PL.,,47l1S6\PlonEM1i.1.i. CPC1M110 ?l6 Jl<~1;•,)3 •t ~1<u an au s rv1 ~oe ~1 ••llAn•bEl:tJ Jl cn1yc""ll~914111Po,,Fndl'l:lllllS•llaPc~w1361t716 7l'•?l 231,-1-1,ca,.,.!6!lb ,.7~47 .i • .i•+ ~11 •• "~,~~
Beach and San Jose until the 15221 Beach Blvd 0 n g1~0·~ !3, .~1 ~••<n ti> 1;~ 2~; crn wo,v 6 11 1 u Pl111 Inv 11 •112 •9 sa~ro11r ~• .l6 n 1 11 • ?2 , _ '• cr~d 111 F n 1 1 16 , 19 • is'• -• ~ , , pu 0
a <rllnC QUJd SeCUr 0pc13i<ng r.1~t1elt 31 Jl •R•YmEp l CrnW0~1117•1711Prl(uFur>ds Ba•GE 1/Q lS :lO ;9 , '9••-l•l•om~l(n 80 6 ISo H'• l!•.,. ,,.. •/n ~h; <.: e J hursday GI w 71 a eco~ Q f>ll > ~9 1 jeY~" M on"V•ll Grwl~ 151•1S 7• SnlG PIB• ~ 110 6) 61 6J C•oo•Pl-llnd 1 11 71 , i1~\ ;; o n1 r >< r1rrhts fron1 the City of Lon" l!obeaiG b ·.: 11 1 ~tr (Ml~ '~. 1~ D•<~t Int 11 031708 N E·~ 9 IO 9 70 B•noP~nr 6G lJO 11 ~ 16 . 11 ? + •t Crowca I Qlf Jn• 7Sl• 71 ,, .. -1 ~ • ' " b A g rand onr-n1ngsalC\'llllGoldCcvH 11'~ ·~'' tJel~w" 17•11'~1 NHor79~71•61l•nQPnf? !ilB•on,71 ,-1 ,crownCcrk no16,lS0 16•0+1i .-~~. Beach llCh opposed ex ,~ (;ood L5 w ' 11 ~ : 1~J ~IP ~~ ~i o~ua Tr I 11 116 Pro Fufld 10 ... 1~ 4• I Ban-of NY 7 16 •O'• •A • "61, C•w~Z•ll I 60 •1~) 3!1 • l• • JS • T l\J r I lj
Slarl "l 'am Thursdayand o-•••< 1 ..,, a.1 • 1 DvdStir J.~13 9JProvdnt ~51so1Ban~Tr71• 15All•6P 6~ i.,Crnlgl42o iJ00 39 58 58 pa ofa1rser\ICe<llLUl1g " "" 9 1 10 ~~ob~ M '3 ~ Oown1 F 6016.SOPurllan 91810&91larb011J6r JI 11, S! 11'•+\.ClSCorD •O 1111 > 17 11 ,..1 Ind
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'
"Ch •orpoot continue through Salurda) g••g;; ~n J9 40 °~an • O•exnl 161•!61•Putn•m F~nas B•rd Cl? 1s ~':.a s1 , s11--.Coda~v co a n . 111 l~,.,_·i 1 ~ " " r.~:~n M~ 11 , 11,,~ov ~1a•I :itl l1' D ~" Fd ?97 Ull Eou! 9'111091 Bait Inc 80 I 15, 15 15 _ , Cudnv pfl 75 6 11' 11 17 , + ,
lh I B he C The store service cenlerGrnu RE n 70 l?Yi :'/ 28 1s;o .,1L•17)1)114! G~o•g U0611 l1 B•1es Mro • s 9 , o, 9 ,4 ,cu11~an 8 11 21 11 -l1 HackWat'ilt ; ~. 1&, 36,.+·~ 1 ~ong eac 1ty oun i:.rinn• 111 ,11 ,s:;i"e 0 1 a'E>to~~How~•d Gr1~ 101111 05fl•e•Mfpf l l ll ll 13 + ,cummn~o ll38•J8•3j ~-1 Ha11 ~~r1 1os lO•ss s1,51 t'
II S''bseq"Cnlly onstructed <, aiid I'"' kong area encompasses o 0 ,, , a&l•n 10 51 1 ·~ •n<OfTI 1 ~a s 6t Batll Ind Jo ro1, 19 10 , curt >& wt1 ' n 19 18 ~ 1 '• -li•mN•1 .56t 10 n tJi " 1 11 ~ " " •Ovflr } 4 Sc4nln f '• ~. Grwlh 13131131 lnvei;I 160!Jl8~!h lnoll SO •I •9 •9 49 -•.CurtWrA2 ''8118> ?&• lia,,,mPaol 1J 16 26 ?6• •
ivadininistratorslonegotialc ovct l!OOOOsquareleet Jt1sg~~dc~ 1 ~ 1~ sc"0~11 'j,·1~ •nco,, 6M6&i v sM 1D261121 fl•u1<:"Lo ao J3 n 69 10 .-117 Cot1er11110 11l 36'> 3~, :11>1-+1 1i•m"'"d 10 1059 10, 11 'l' 11 =1': G II T 1 9) 10. c 0 • • • SP~r 10-11 !4 Yoy~g 815 9 07 1!~~1 Lab 10 195 JO ~ 79 . JO -1, (YCOP~ 110 )l 7 3). 331, -lj l-lern:ll ....... .60 101" 39. l11o 3B ' +" \\Ith Air Cahfornt) rnr thl'th1rd Pcp Boyssto1 c1n theG~rOC1nn ,;10 ~11 s<:in1 ,/1•,f SO<~ 1''\4HB91l:ec TPCh •91 $4)80¥\l~CQ 50 10 10. to 10 -,cr11•usMl•O 11 11. Sil•· ll•+'<•HandHM n 111•1 11,, 11 >-•·
b th H S 71 ?• • o Eht"I 13 :M 1' 60 !?ever,, t2 91u11 Be• "9& 1 9 •6'• •6, 46 • -•, D
1
1-11ne1Co 90 16 16 1 1' 16 , _ , 83 5-7777 te rminal :;pace and operating lOUnty and num e r 134 1n e ... ~l~~vr J i./ 11 ' s <r1Pf' ~ ii '~ F~·~i 111i" •1 ll:ost"t" 1 :111 1 01 e~at Fa• 1 12 '.19'• 3111, l'I -'• - -Honn•M 1 l~ ~ J6 , J6 , :1.1" + , H 1 7 •0 •cr"o '•F-,,1qSe 764!J5S~l•mFd 60,66.iBellFd1 or • 299 99 '1 9'1 1 Horcoyrll ?QSIO,S6 56 -'~ """""""""""""""""~-~,~·~~h~1~s .. ___________ ~n~a~t~·~o~n~----------1:Mri~enMQ~ 1). 11 • , .. , ", "' ',', ,11 r ... ,., ~v \) 93 ll 9J Sc"us ' 15 IS 11" Btckm~i> •o 169 49 •• , • ~9 +1 ·~ R•n ~, .. ',19 10 11•1 II u~. + "k<1rr11 l~t I 10 I• 1 7J. 13 • -"
3M CO'S
DYNACHROME FILM SALE!
• Includes
SUPER 8ASA64
20
20
Exp.
Exp.
35mm ASA64
126 ASA64
Processin9 • REG
'"
313
313
NEW 3M COLOR PRINT FILM
For All tn•t1im1t1c C1mer11 126 Size Includes P roce111ng & Prints
SALE
2.99
2.19
2.19
3.69
VIVITAR MOVIE CAMERA
SUPER 8 -J 4 to 1 ZOOM LENS
COMPLETE WITH
Case
Movie
Film
Lite
...
16.95
17.95
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NEW 'ORK (UPI) -Stock market average•
finished 1n1xed Thursday as a result of a strong
COl'neback late 111 the sess100 Trading was bnsk
file Oo\v Jones mdustrlaJ average was up 2 97
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or the 1 624 issues crossing the tape 744 tic
cl1nc d and 617 advanced
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n1ng ahead of \Vednesday s pace
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cd as a key suppo 1 t area
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b1okc1age sai d \Vedn esday s sli de in th e DJ '~a~ a
ps) cholog1cal blow to n1any investors but he felt
the n1a1 ket \\;;is deeply ovc1 sold and due fo1 a snap-
back soon
A111ong the days n1ost actJ \C 1ssnes \\Cre Ryder
Sys te1n \\ lu ch expected a lO pe1 ce nt ri se 111 pe1
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unchJngcd at 28-3/4
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change 111 1noderate turnove1
ThurSday Dtctmbtr 4 1%9 L
St9cl,: E~change List
Com11lete Closi11g Prices -A1nerican Stocli Exchange List
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T~y, OKtmbtr 4, 1 %9
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JOIN THE EXCITEMENT
; .
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'one-stop' shopping
at its finest!
OPEN THURSDAY & MONDAY EVENINGS
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WHEN HE . ARRIVES
AT THE GIANT SNOWMAN
-\ ' .
10 A M SA TURD A y · DEC.\·;\ 6
(J ' ,,
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LISTEN FOR THE SIREN AND BELLS ON THE BIG NEWPORT BEACH FIRE TRUCK
FREE CA·NDY
FOR THE YOUNGSTERS
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ED Ill ON N.Y. Steeb
VOL 62, NO. 290, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES I • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THU RSDAY, DECEMBER 4, 1969 TEN CENTS
Playhou·se Parking Site 01\'d Despite Protests
By RICHARD P. NALL •
01 tt19 Diii~ , .. ,, 51111
The old Laglll'la Playhouse - a
landmark !or more than 40 years-<:omes
down this month.
Councilmen approved lhe $2,500 demoli-
tion Wednesday night and despite
orgarlized opposition rrom businessmen of
Sou~ Coast Highway also agreed by split
vote: to acquire Forest Avenue frontage
beside the playhouse sife.
The property conglomerate will serve,
temPQrarily at least, u a parktag area.
A petition oppoolng the $70,000 property
acquisilioo wa.s signed by 71 tenanLI or
landlords along South Coast Hi8hway~wbo
argued that the city .~Id use the in-
creased meter funds to ~uire. parking
for them. ·
They maintained that:
-Downtown.parking areas -le&Mlil or
purchased over the years by the city -
operate 11t a loss and hencf. are subiidiz..
ed ·by public funds.
. '
-The city has never provided parking
for the' highway buslnesst:s despite bqvy
returns from sales aod bed lU in the
area. . ,
-~·An analysis of downtown businesses
will show a ~ry largt proporlioo of them
to be banks, stockbrOkers, insur'ance
agents, realtors; doctors, attorneys, nurs-.
ing homes-and many .other t,ypes or
servicts Which do not return any sates tax or bed tax'to the 'city."
,-Bed and sales tax from part. of the
businesses in five blocks of South Coast
Highway amount to more· than $150,000 in
a year.
-Some businesses Curnish parking Jots,
pay taxes on it and hive the Property
tied up. thus helping pay for public park· ing but recelving nooe. . . .
-1be city should cancel Its plans for
more downtown. pai'king and prorilptly
purchase more for the South Coast
Highway area.
City Manager James O. \Vheaton
polllled out that rlhe council doubled
downtown parking meter charges this
year and agreed at the time to earmark
lhe addiUonal review for downtown park·
ing facil ities. . ·
Businessman Roy Childs said. "We'v~
been paying for years to Rbsidize the
Glenneyre lot; ll's time we got IOJDe con·
sideration on our first nickel (a nickel
was formerly the cost to park one
hour)."
Business Harry Lawrence said he fell
2 ~ Black. Panthers
that Coast Highway probably croat"
more &ales· tu: revenue for city cofler1
lhal) does. lbe liowtdown basin.· ·
He suggested parking i•eu-at• ?rfO!Jn.
t.aln Drive and Cress Street ... "The ci>n-
gestion · is impossible for as;" said
Lawrence. He 6atd the hurt of the in·
come uea· b arOund Crtas IDd Mounllia
Streets.
Councilmen In favor of acquirina the
60-feet of FOrest Avenue frontaee pointed
IS.. PLAYHOUSE, P11e I)
111; Chicago Gun Battle
Mental Tests Sought.
Tate Suspects
.
To Fight Return.
V.cKJNNEY, Tex. (AP) -Charles D.
Watson'•Jawy" indioilcd t<>40Y 'that lie·
.j ~ DAn.Y Pll,.e1' II•" l"lltt•
\ wiJ\ pt Pfl'\'hi•tiic exii\ninatloii lor .Ille'
l\eardod !«mer football player, who ts
cbaried m eoe or th~ ciutornla murders
al tbe ~-Qf.-Bharon Tate. RICK IE WEIR , TOM TRUL IS COMPETE·WITH RAINBOW
At Chamber Br1•kfa1t, Plenty of· Fashion Plates ·" .
e Right ID Style
C1tmiebe r Offers Fas hion Sho w
Tom Trulis looked ready for an Apache
dance \Vednesday, despite the early hour.
His fash ionable companion, Rickie
Weir, in purple tunic top and pants, look·
ed e·qual to the task.
They were part of a \Vednesday "mix-
ed" fashion show of local businessmen
and· young ladies at the Chamber of Com-
merce breakfast gathering in Hotel
Laguna.
'I'rulis' dark be ret topped a many-splen·
dared "sand.,•:ich island shirt.''
Then came insurance man Roy
Jlarcum, dapper in cardigan and
turtleneck S\Vcatcrs, colored "mock
turtle". He accompanied Doris Lindsey
clad in a brown leopard designed tUnic
top and pants.
· Zachary and Myrth Malaby weren't
fashionable for once. They dre~ed as ·
hobos in Comic 'relief.
So it Went rOr the Chamber's seeond
·fashion event sponsored by Shan's
Clothes Horse and Lois Paul Originals.
The only disappointment carpe when,
last show's fashion plate, hotel mogu1
Lo~n Haneline, announced he had
retired from the ranks and was wearing
last year's fashion.
The master of ceremonies declared it
still fash.ionablc.
Rea gan Notifies Clemente
Lawye r of New J:ndgeship
A San Clemente attorney recei\"ed a
perBOnal phone· call from Governor
Ronald Reagan th is week to confirm his
appointment as judge of the Laguna
Beach-San Clemente r-.iunicipal Court.
Frank Domenichini, 46, was named by
the governor t.o fill the vacancy created
•
by the retirement b.i Sept. ~of Judge J.
Parley Smith M ·D!Jlla Point.
Presiding Judge Richard Hamilton,
who will share the bench duties in the
South County· Judi cial District wilh
Domenichinl, hailed the appointment as
"excellent." · .
"I've known him for years. He Is weQ
liked and . very well thought of bt
everyone. He will make a fine judge,,.
satd·Hamilton.
A __ i;.esiden~ oi San Clemente,
"I p<raooally have aome seriOlll doubts
about hls mental state," said the lawyer,
Bill Boyd of McKinney.
Boyd, a former district and county at-
torney, also said his client will fight ex-
tradition. Two Los · Aogeles detectives
who have come here to take him into
custody then' started bade home.
Wat.son, 24, surrendered Suaday on
learning California aJJlhorities held a
warrant !or hJs arrest He is charged
with murder in the ·slaying of Steven ~arent: a caretaker who was ldlled along
"1th Mis.5 Tat! Mil three other persoos last Aug. 9.
Another suspect ln the case, Linda
Louise Kasabian, 20, one of three persons
facing murder charges in the slaying of
actress Sharon Tate and four others, was
returned to Los Angeles Wednesday night
from Concord, N.H.
Mrs. Kasabian was whisked off a pLane
from Boston into an unmarked police car
which sped away immediately. Newsmen
were not allowed to question her.
She wore a brown polo coat with collar
turned up and held the collar tightly
against her face. She carried a brown
paper bag.
Jn Mobile, Ala. a Circuit Court hearing
was set for today on a mcition ·seeking the
bond rel~se of lhe lhlrd person charged
in lhe case.
Lc\wyers for Patricia Krenwlnkel, 22.
moved for a ~rit of habeas corpus
\Vednesday. ·
Miss Krenv.inkel did not appear in
ct1urt. for filing of the writ, which also
challenged the warrant under which she
is held.
l\1iss Krenw inkel's attorney, M. A.
Irvi ne Helps Out
Boys Club Gy m I El Toro to Get
Ch unk of Funds Domenict.ini has had a general law prac-The Boys• Club of Laguna Beach will
tice in that city for more than 17 yeani. have Jli gymnasium in lime for the erand H~ is nlarried and the father o( four Openlna of tbe new canyon facility, ' bill r childi'en, lhrff girls and a'rboy. t•-n•· lo a -.ooo ~ant from the James A gi an t military const.ruct1pn · o · th 1968 h d Ide ·t or lb , .. aa -•·
$1.69 billion was approved by the senate e .serve as P~ n 1 Irvine Foundation, Boys' Club President
I U C .11 W •-sd , Oraooe. CQ\lnly ·Bar ASSOCIBlion. ..~ ~... blS' .~ Appropr a ons omuu • e\lu'C ay, He°fuilt'on who has beea iutlted''by 1UUU• 1:4-utll annou • ..,.~.
lncluding a tentative $4,642.,.000 to El To~: _se.v.etal different jud«-'. from. othtr 'nit ldvance Ouistmas gill came at a
Mana~ bof aaid !he ~ fjJ~l •I·
tradiUoa. lf• COlllel>ded that !)!9'.Jliglllvo
warnnt-Wll fautty on MVerll tmmdf,
including ODt that it failed to-comply with
Alabama law.
Council Nixes
Krishna Group
Soliciting Plea
. Laguna Beach councilmen Wednesday
~Y a 3 lo Z •plit vole .~urned down a
religious fl'Oli"P,'a applicaUon to 80licit
funds on the street .•
·Ttie 'vote went the same ,.ay it did last
May for the lnltmatlonal Society of
Krishna Contclouness, headquartered
locally on Woodland Drive..
Kelly Sinlth, spokesman for the group.
called it a non-sectarian phi1080phy that
attempts to make..rellgkm come to the
street and works partJcularly with drug.
addicted youth.
Said Smith, "One boy this week came
out of the caves (of Laguna 's hills) and
has given ,.up drugs and. nonsense ac·
tlvilles."
City Attorney Jack J_ Rimel advised
coundlrnen 1£ requirements or . the
solicitation ordinance are met councilmen
may not discriminatorily deny a group
:sollcltallon rights.
City Manager James O. Wheaton said
the applicants hitd met lhe ordinance re·
quirements.
Rimel said councilmen did . have the
right to name the kind, method and time
of solicitation.
Mayor Glenn· Vedder who opposed the
application named other solicitation
permlts granted to orgaililatlons this
year.
They lnc!Uded veterans poppy sales on
the streets, door·to-door solicitations
(six), UNICEF halloween solicitations by
children, March of Djmes, five rummage
sales, girl 8COUt cooltle sales door to door,
mall soliclatlon and Community Chesl.
Also, Red Crol. bake sales, flower
sales, fiood vlcthns drive, League or
Women Voters solicitation, phone
so1Jc.lt.8tlons, An\erlcan Cooker Society
and Unltarian-Unlversalist Fellowship.
Vice Mayor Joseph O'~ulliva~ said he
had' .... 'tbe Krl>bna__groop (with~
' ROOM AT THE TOP.?
Gube rnatorial Ci1nclld1t• Unruh
U nruli Declar es
He's in R(l.Ce
Against Reagan
INGLEWOOD (AP) -Democrallc
Assembly Leader · Jes8e M. Unruh
challenged Republican Incumbent Ronald
Reagan for ttie goverl'lorshlp of California
today, charging the State Capitol ls con-
trolled by a "handful or hall-hidden
millionaires." '
• The 47-year-old Unruh, the 1968
CalifoJnla leader of the )ale Sen. Robert
F. Kennedy's presidential campaign,
made his long-awaited entrance Into the
ra~ in a statement to a new, conference
a\ his subu rban home itear Los Angeles.
. In becomil'!g the first announced can-
didate In the 1970 govemor&hlp election,
Unruh( former epeaker of the Assembly,
aimed his fire at the • governor and
Reagan's so-<:alled "kitchen cabinet/'
That's a group of wealthy bus.lneumm
~ho are friendly with Reagan and help
flnance his political campal.gos.
"The handful or tl\e half-hidden
millionaires who call the ahots in
Sacramento today do not represent
California;" said Unruh. '
HThey•mµst,be told that It Is your state
and your future. We will 'a«iy to them,
'No, you cannot buy·our government like
you boughL a mansion for Rooatd.
Reag~.' " '
Militants
Open Fire
On O.fficers
ClllCAG0-(~1)-"'A-liknli\Ule £U!>"
fight' erupted today when atalt'a· a~
lorney's pollce 'antfft4 a Blact 'Pani!itf
'1t~o1tt 10 'np!ll' I · · . T,..
llla1k' Paq!ben · WOR \u-:r:'l four
Wouncje<f, -
~ deli lnclllled Fr<d llamplaa,
about II, lllioots cbalrma1t ol lht Black i'lilllier ·paitj, " .
Two policemfn .•OR· 'llllUl1dld In 1111
hatlle, which broke oul wban the
authoritie§ .entered an 4partment neat
Black Pan\her l\eadquarten on tho
outskirts of Chic.io'a West Skle.sr.id row.
· Fourteen men made up Jbe unit that
took part in the early morning r11d. They
had .a warrant signed by J udge Robert
Collins, accordlng to a spokesman for the
State's Attoriley's Offlce, obtained after
sawed-off shotguns and other illegal
weapons were reported ·to be· in tbe
apartment.
When the authorities I d e n't I f J e d
themselves, the spokesmen said, voice.!
on the other side of the door began asking
"'Wbo'" "Who?" Then. he said, the. door
was Opened -and "eight or more in-
dividuals began firiili _with carbines,
ihotguns and handguns."
The apartment, according to the
spokesman', belonged to a Fred Jobolon,
an alias used by Hampton. In It pollce
said they fowid IZ sholgwls, eight pil!Ola
and 5,000 rounds of ammunition .. He said
Hampton was felled after ·he had lhQt at
the authorilies·with a .4S automatic and a
shotgun.
The other dead man was Identified u
Mark Clatk, 22, of Peoria, Ill . There h~d
been reports earlier this year that the
Panthers had atl!mpted to organize
young people in that dowiislate com·
muntty.
Four persons were taken Into cUstody
after Lhe battle,jncludln& a woman id,n·
ttfied as Deborah John90fl, 11, said to be
about eight monShl pregnatil'
Before tbe !s.'.aiiauta 1'111 ball!• ended
more than 50 p.'.)llcernen tiid'betn called
to the scene, near where rioting ·had oc-
curred two years qo. They brought
machine guns and tear gas but did ntt
use them.
Oraage c ....
Weadler ·
Marine Corps Air Statton. -.-moment when club officials were afraid
-_._ ___ ,_,,..._,, .... ....., 1 t 1 jndicla1 djstricls srnce Smllb'1 Allr• -ADiitWon d ..,_ avmnag u 11l!lna ... ;:p1uva 111us tv11re10111 id he h · ~ ................. UI we e.r .... . President Nixon, who budgetttl much ment, 53 oped Q(>menichinl 1"JIU1d woWd hive to be tem~rarily dlscon·
arll n ahav l!Uda "tbu!Olng
a on; way. He referred to 11tltche.n cabinet''
members and · others who contributed
more than $150;000 for a fashionable
Sacramento home for the Reagan famlly;-
Reagan pay, ti .2'11 a month rut'ld1he·
group, which Includes Ben Swig, a pro-
· We11t·have :; 11t~ 'blt of. eY11'7·
thing Friday -IUMY ·lkit.s, early 1
mominr ·clouds• and gully north-
elst wil!di .-10hllt ,tho tempera·
tiiffl'tiO In tbe lnlddle 70'1.
INSmE TODAY
more than the Senate coquniltee ap-~ able tto assume his new duUes by tbe tlnµed btcluse of lack of funds .
proved. although it went farther than the first of he year· . . . "Kncnylng we will have the Irvine
I-louse of Rcpresentatives1 o r I g i n a 1 11~ "?led that, since. Oomen~hini..has FOtindittoii'i1Wia:Sto count on," slid EC"
amount. maintained a sin~ la)V _pr~ll~~the~er.-"wT"i'iiOW can ptiSCted Co complete
The House had lf'ntativcly alloca ted tha n a partnersh_tp, he _is faced With a the am ...
Sl ,088;000 !or the Orange County In-substantial task in finding and brle~ng Finl phase.of conatruction or the new
stallatlon. ~tt~neys _lo take over cases now pending club at 1~ Laguna Canyon Road, the
Autho"illes at El Toro said today the Ul bis ofCice. main building housing clubrooms, library,
eventual use of whatever is finally kitchen, erafta rooms and offief.S, is fWJd..
allocated will be determined at that lime, Sto<-k ,•l•rket tel ·and neartna completion, Eccles aald.
based on how much money is a\la.Uable The gymnasium for which the trvine a:lft
for use. NEW YORK CAP} -Stock market Is earmarked, represent.I the second
The $1,690,064,000 total construction bill prices remained broadly lower In laNpbase.
•pproved \Vednesday fo rthe fiscal year afternoon trading today, but continued 1be club ls e~ to move to the
C?ndlng June 30, 1970, Is $15Z887,000 more recover aome Of their sharp IOllSU of . !\yon fac1Uty·after1the'tint of the year.•
than vo{ed by the House, but $313,854,000 earlier in the day. (See quotations, Paa es with a rrand openln& temaUv.elY aet, tor'
more than budieted by the President. 23·23). · mid-February.
, J '
"J can't see where a group··should be
(Sn Jp\ISllNA, Pace,&)
.(JC:Ulale8 l\lajol'
In Classical Life
(
A new major in clllMical civilization
V<U appn>ved \Vedne!day by UC ltvlne'1 •cademlc Rnaae.
Studtnia ma)orlnr In tbe new field, '
c1lled tho moot basic of all buman!JUc '
dl"'1lllne1, wUI be requlnd' lo complete ,
nine /noJor Couraa inc!udtni I ')'ear ,ol a· 1 cltatc1f'1anauage to eW • bacbelor'a '
·~ ..
~· •
minent San Fnnc!llCO Democ:r '
• Unruh. a powcrh1l figure '1n"'-1t1te
pol.iUca for more thin a decade, fl ex·
pecltd lo foe. oppo!lllon In tbe primary
lr9m San Francloco May<M" looeph Alioto,
with the winner becoming the party
nominee. Early pubUc oplolon polb say
Unruh Is the favorite. '
Reagan,· accordJni to alde1, will ~· nounce hla ~.for a iltcood tarm tater nest fearl'lle c'xpecla no major :
. CS.. IJNRllll, P"lo. I) '
•
~-
. '
Nt:t ,cc, tht fO'Mmlmcn&
..UI --lo htlp of port•I"
bwl thlt ehrill!llOs 11'1 ""'11 man for hfmulf1n c~cldng otcf ..
U..e dt:lnoer1 of ntw tori. PQQc
10. _.. "
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•
2 OAllY PILOT ThursdiJ, Dtctmbtr •, 1'69
CountyWelfare Pro.tests ·Due?
Di,_-~ctor Plans Meeiing With Rights Movemen t
By TOM BARLEY
O! 11M o.11~ 'l•I ll•lf
Worried WelfJre Director Granville
P.eoplts today warned I.hat Orange Coun·
ty may be Jhe next target for
demoostralors who have d i s r u p t e d
\\'elf are department meetings i n
neighboring counUes.
Peoples has set Dec. 12 as the date on
which he will discuss Orance County
Welfare· operations -and in partlcul~ its
AFDC (Aid to Families with Dependent
Children) program -with what he said
were "self·proclaimed Orange County
representatives of the National Welfare
Rights movement."
He identified the movement spokesman
as Mrs. Alice Silvas of Santa Ana, the
author of a widely-circulated pamphlet
which ls calling on AFDC mothers to
mount •·a· dynamic assault on Granvijle
Peoples" ivory tower."
But PJ!Oples warned newsmen "Welfare
ls only one pieee of this. This pressure is
beinc imposed by militant groups from
Trustees Ask
Bids on Bond s
After Electio11
San Joaquin School District trustees
Wednesday night called for bids on
purchase of $1.9 millioo in school bonds
the district may now sell thanks to &UC·
cessful bond rate election 1ast week.
Sale of the $1.9 million on Feb, l would
bring the school district up to its legal
bJOding capacity. fi ve percent or total
assessed valuation , said Assistant Supt.
Jor Business Services Rex S. Nerison.
The five percent Will include bonded in·
debtedness carried fonvard r r o m
previous years.
The \'Ote last week was to hike the
permissible interest rate from five to
seven percent on $3.4 million of 1,1nsold
bonds from a "successful $5 million"'"bond
election last year.
Nerison said a Nov. 1 municipal finan·
cing newsletter showed public agency
bonds were being bought at about s,jx per·
cerit interest, some a lit:Ue under, some a
litle over, at that time.
·•we're a little fearful because we now
can go lo ~veO. Peff:ent that is what the
bids will'be, but at IWt we:U get lo &ell
them "·N~'i£k4 ··~ ~
ln :.noilier'!ictlon Wedneoda~ n,1d;t. the
~hool board agreed the district Will pay
S45 tuitiOn . !er "Cb of ui!· cher1, one
from. tod\ «boo!'"~ fm91 ·~ districl'llllicl'."'fl"at1il1d ~. cj\lar!er
U<:: .tr.ADI Extension r<.'OUJ'lt oo ·drug
abuse. ·
The ~rtk'Jpal'rt.r. then will share w~t
they learned 'In· the coUrse with other
teachers at their school.
Nerison said. the class is • step towar4
developing a dnlg education program for
the elementary school district. It
presently does not have one.
ltnly Adultery
Laiv 'Updated'
R0~1E fUPI) -llaly's highest court
ruled today it is no crime for a wife to
commit adultery or for a husband lo keep
a mistress.
The ruling of the constitutional court
nverturned a Fascist-era penal code
111hich held thal wives could be convicted
of adultery but husbands could not unless
they lived in open concubinage with a
woman.
The court said the law was "'ritten at
; time 'A'hen \\'Omen did oot want equality
with men.
"It is not up to the courl to modify
law based on social changes," it u.id.
•·But it is indisputable that the court
has the right lo assure equality among
au citizens, regardless of sex or other
considerations."
llhl!Y PttO l
OllAJrlCil CO.UI f'Vtll$+41NQ COM ..... 1111'
l:•"tt N. W114
P'nllltnl '"' PUllll1ohtt
J•t~ It C••lty
\Ii« Prt1-I t M Ciol'ltf.i Mtl\llfff
11.t"'•• K•t•il ••* Tht"''' A. M11rpl.i1'1
-···"' l!tllOI a11h1,., "· Mt11 ---'"" €.i!Of
outllde Or•nae County who are ,ellln& on
welfare and t0me admitted deficlencies
to promOle thelr cause."
He woold not identify the militants or
comment on what he' said were "the true
alms" of the movement. ~
"We are going to try to avoid the
disruption that has occurred in such
places as Lo.s Angeles aqd San Diego,"
Peoples aajd.
The welfare director said he Yr'as one of
a number of welfart y,·or kers from
several Southern California counties who
:ecently had to call off a San Diego con-
ventiO!l when "welfare rights agitators
walked in and took over the meeting."
Peoples conceded that the central argu.
ment of the demonstrators -the con·
tent.ion that aid to mothers with families
was far from sufficient -was justified.
-And he pointed' out that aid levels set in
California 12 years ago have never been
revised while ilving costs have mounted
in that time by 26 percent.
Orange County aid levels arc set at
ilia a month for !he tndiaent mother with
one child, •in a month for the woman
wl lh two children, $220 a month for tilt!;
mother with three children to .support
and $245 a monLh for the 1nother with
lour children.
Legislation aimed at raising those
levels to at least correspond with cost or
living increases and providing automatic
future increases to relate to cost of living
hikes was rejected by the legislature in
lhe last session, Peoples said.
Peoples said his department is pro-
ceSl!yig aid for 7 ,500 AFOC families in
Orange County "and doing all we can to
bring additional help to people who are;
Jet 's face it, considerably underpaid."
California's welfare directors and lt.s
organized county supervisors are all on
record, Peoples said, as favoring in·
creases in welfare payments for al least
the AFOC cat~gory.
A central issue in the representations
made to Peoples by county delegates has
Strike Threat Blat1aed
No PaYi Increase
For Lifeguards
San Clemente lifeguards, who threaten·
ed a strike last August in an effort to
secure a pay increase. were left out when
the City Council voted raises for other
cith persoMel Wednesday night.
City Manager Kenneth Carr indicated
to the t"ouncil that hls failure lo recom.
mend ari increase for the lifeguards could
be attributed to ''current events."
Had the "events" been different. he
said, he mignt have made a different
recommendation.
The lifeguard strike threat, which was
haJ ted by a court order, was followed by
the firing of Lt. Steve Chorak who had
acted as spokesman for the guards and
by the resignation of two other guards.
Chonk bu hem lfl'Ulted • bearing
before the city personnel board Monday
night. He served as a full time guard for
six years and as a part time guard for
four yea rs prior to that.
Councilman Thomas O'Keefe sought a 5
percent pay Increase for the lifeguards,
but his motion was defeated.
Increases voted by the council included
21 ~ percent raises for firemen and p::ilice
officers and five percent salary boosts for
the city manager, lifeguard chief, fire
chief, police chief, assist.ant police chief
and sergeant.
The pay raises will cost the city $14.566
for the six-month period prior to July
1970, when a new budget will go into ef·
feet. and will be covtred by a $21,000
rmerve in the-elist.ing budget.
San }Qflquin ,Teachers
Get ·D ~ug Alluse Course
Teachers In the San Joaquin Elemen·
tJy Schoof District wllf be JIOing back lo
school to learn about drug abuse.
Members of the Board of Trustees
authorized A s s i s l an l Superintendent
William Stocks to arrange for the enroll·
ment of 10 teachers at district expense in
a UCI course called "The Drug Scene."
The Instruction of di strict teachers is
the first of a series of. proposals the ad-
ministration hopes to make. in an effort
lo fight drug abuse in lhe district.
Dr. Stocks lamented the slowness of
progress but told the board each ilep
'
· From Page .J.
PLAYHO US E • • •
out that parking use is only temporary. It
\vas said that the property belY."etn
Forest and Ocean Avenues might later be
assigned use as a street to improve
downtown circulation.
nus thesis reasoned that funds (rom
gas ta:ii: or other sources could then be
routed to provision of parking along
South Coast Highway.
Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan said,
"The lots (from the Hugo Lindberg
est.ate) are available now. There Is some
implication for traffic flow also."
Cowtcllman Roy Holm said the pro-
perty location is "very strategic'' since it
is adjacent the city-owned playhouse.
land.
•
taken ..,,·ould place them closer to their
goal.
He siUd there would be a meeting Fri·
day or teachers and adminislrators \vho
are v.·iiling to become involved in a drug
abuse program. The all-day meeting will
be an infonnation sharing session with
police representatives, nurses and others
who have knowledge or brug· abuse.
Dr. Stocks also reported that funds are
beiiig sought for community action pro-
grams through the Health, Education and
Welfare Department..
lie said that the district would be work-
ing with other scOOol districts and area
high schools and would be seeking pan!nt
involvement through the d i fi t r i c t ' s
coordinating council. This group is made
up of representatives of each of the
parent teacher organizations, the board
and the administration.
Tile action lo send at least one teacher
from each of the districl's schools to the
drug information class was initiated by
Stocks.
The district l\ill pay $40 per teacher
\vith the teacher contributing $5. The $5
v.•ill be reimbursed if the teacher atlends
at least 80 percent of th e 11 classes.
The board also stated that before the
fees are paid a firm commltment wlll be
obtained from each teacher to follow
through in the drug abuse program
developed by the districL
From Page 1
KRISHNA ...
W.ayor Glenn Vedder said he had ne,•er
considered the area as a fixed parking ;il\owed to raise mone y on the street."
location. He said discugsion had been held sai d lhe vice mavor. He said he dld not
for years over extending Second Street think it good for ·the community to havt
through the area and eliminating the the group playing cymbals.
short Beach Str~et. Vedder said, "The method of soliclla·
Councilmen Richard Golclberg and tion is what both~rs me. I don't think it is
Charlton Boyd opposed the acqui sition, what we in J,.aguna Beach prefer to see ."
Goldberg said he wa sn·t sure the city The group said it wotJld distribute its
could turn around and sell the property magazine·" Back to Godhead" and solicit
for more t.han it paid, that he v.·asn't funds from those persons who seemed a..,.. ...... Offk-~urt lhe city was getting its money's agreeable.
212 h••1t A••· worth. Boyd moved to deter the Councilman Richard Go\dber~asked M•m., M •-1 r.o. 1 .. .u. nu? purchase. questions about use of funds 501ic1 d and °""' °""" The property acquisition passed 3 lo 2 said he did not think the application wu
,been the Orange County office's failure to
lmplemtot a clause in the 1967 Social
services Act -the setting up ot a coin·'
mlttee in which AFOC mothers could
disc..-uss problems with the welfare
tlepartment and offer advice. and poss ible
solutions on claimed inequities.
''\Ye have delayed formation of this
committee because of staff shortages and
related problems," Peoples said. ··eut r
don 't think that i! we had formed tho
group at !he time the federal act was
passed that "'e would have averted the
unrest that faCf:s us now.
"What I plan to do," Peoples said, "js
to discuss the issues being raised by
these people and to assure them that they
have our full cooperation in seeking
legislative reme:dies. But I don't think."
the welfare director added, "that agita4
lion along the lines of what we have seen
in Los Angeles County is going to do very
much i;ood for the cause of AFDC
mothers in Orange County."
Front Page J
UN RUH • • •
primary opposition.
Unruh, son of an illiterate 'l'exa!'l
sharecropper. recalled how "I hitchhiked
here from Texas nearly 30 years ago with
little more than the clothes on my back.''
CUMB FROM POVERTY
He recounted his climb from poverty -
aircraft plant worker, Navy enlisted
man, G[ Bill gradu ate of the University
of Southern California, election to the
Assembly in 1954 and finally in 1961 as
speaker -an office held longer than any
olher man. He lost the job this yi:.ar when
the Republicans took.over the Assembly.
"California has kept the promise it held
for me," he said. ·•1 run for governor
because I want to keep the promise of
California alive and growing for
everyone."
As speaker, Unruh won many friend.s
and made many enemies. But even his
foe s credit him V>'ith making major in-
ternal reforms in the Assembly.
He hired young consultants to advise
legislators in an effort. he sa id, to reduce
!he lawmakers' dependence on special in·
terest lobbyists. He led the fight for a
full·time legislature, and for an increase
in legislative salaries.
But his foe:;: also accused him of being
11 bully and hung the name. of "Big Dad ·
dy" on him. That was when he weighed
almost 290 pounds. Since then, he has
dieted down to 190.
In 1963. Unruh, trying to push then
Democratic Gov. Edmund G. Brown's
fiscal program through the legislature, he
got into a fight wi1h minority Republicans
and refused to lcl them leave the
Assembly Chamber -the famous "lock·
in '' incident."
FEUDED WITH BROWN
JJnruh also feuded with Brown. And he
alienated some Democrats in 1968 when
the}' said he refused wholehearted sup.
port to Hubert H. Humphrey, the party's
presidential nominee. ltfany of Hum·
phtey's supporters are now backing
AJioto.
As a legislator, Unruh was the author
o! civil rights laws, consumer protection
legislation and school finance plans. ,,
Unruh was the manager of John Ken-
nedy 's Southern California presidential
campaign in 1960 and a leader in Presi·
dent Johnson's presidential campaign in
11164. He later broke with Johnson over
the Vietnam war, which Unruh opposes.·
Anustron" Picked t:>
Be's the ~wi1a1ier' •
Richard Stollnan, a 19-year-o()ld University of \Visconsin sopho_more
whose birthday just happens to be Sept. 14. the number one slot 1D the
drait lottery, has a brother Douglas at the University of Kansas who~e birthday is April 24 -.the n).111lber two spot.
J\.llies . Chase North Viets
To Cambodia; Truce Eyett
SAIGON (UPI) -Allied warplanes,
artillery and troops raided into Cambodia
in pursuit of a battered North Vietna1nese
battaJJon in fighting reported today.
President Nguyen Van Thieu announced
the allies would honor 24·hour truces for
Christmas and New Year's.
Thieu emerged from a 90-minute meet-
ing with U.S. Ambassador Ellsworth
Bunker and announced the truces for
'·humanitarian reasons." There have
been 13 truces so far in the war, all o!
Toro Divide r
Plans Delayed
them marred by fighting .
U.S. spokesmen said American forces
'vould honor the cease·fires but there
was no V.'Orrl from the Viet Cong or North
Vietnamese. who usually beat Saigon to
!he punch in Proclaiming holiday truces.
Field reports ~id the Nort h Vietnam·
ese battalion that was chased into Cam·
bodia had used the neighboring nation as
a springboard for its attack early Wed·
nesday on a border town and two U.S,
Green Beret camps, killing 25 South
Vietnamese.
The guerrillas 1vcre lhro1\'n back with
166 znen slain and headed back acroS!
the border v.•it h U,S. warplanes and
artillery and a South Vietnamese platoon
in pursuit.
Headquarters said thr all ies had an
A proposa l to build a landscaped "inherent righ~" to fire back if fired upon
divider strip on El Toro Road just norlh Crom Cambodia.
·of the San Diego Freeway resulted in a U.S. spokesmen ackno1vlc<lge the air
controversy Wednesday and county raids into Cambodia, the second s11th
supervisors postponed a deci'slon for two strikes in three v.·eeks, but said nothing
"eeks. of the arti\ley strikes or South Vietnam·
The tree·lined divider is proposed by csc platoon . .
Deane Brothers of Newport Beach who Reports of the action 53 miles "'est-
\\.ant it to beautify the entrance to their northwest of Saigon coincided with the
Lake Forest development. \veekly casualty report showing 70 Amer.
The median strip would be 600 feet long icans killed last week. the third lowest
extending from Bridger Road to Rock-number of dealhs since 1966.
field lioulevard. Another 1,049 Gls were wounded. Only
Objecting to the plan was Donald tv.·o other times since 1966 has the .,.,.eek-Frisc~r. traffic engineer representing ly death toll been lo\\·er-the week of Oct.
-4 when 64 Gls died and the first week the Toro Shopping Center. The center, of 1967 when 67 were killed.
located midv•ay on the stretch proposed Military spokesmen confirmed v.·hal
for beautilication would be cut off (ron1 sources had disclosed earlier-that U.S.
left.turning vehicles by the improvement. casualties fo r the "'ar surpassed the
f"rischer said the plan was unsafe and 300,000 mark last week, with 39.6'12 killed,
v.•ou\d contribute to greater traffic con· 259.828 \vounded and 1.359 missing or
gest ion in the area. captured-a total of 300.829.
\VASHINGTON (UPI) -Piesident Supervisors ask representatives or The U.S. death figure "'as a sharp
Nixon has appointed Neil A. Armslrong, De:tne Bros. and the shopping center to drop from the 130 Gls slain the previous
the first man to "'alk on the moon, ·a~ get together v.·ith the county Road 1veek. South Vietnamese losses fell too.
chairman of the Peace Corps Nationa l Department and work out a solution lo 373 killed and 95.1 wounded, with 2,177
advisory Council. \vithin two weeks. Communists reported slain.
i---------------~-------------,...,.~~----,
j ~.JI. J. (Jarrell PrejenlJ ~~I i al'· a ver y special purchase from a . .. :· 1 ~ ~~ a i famous quality maker of I
I GENUINE LEATHER CHAIRS i
A GIFT TO TRWURE AllD ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Cus1om quality through-out •
Luxwioo. cwhloning • Your
c:hoke of ml.ors from u extensive .....,C:-~t11~w':.~.!:.":'....,.. wtth Goldberg and Boyd voting no. in roper ord. ~r ~nd obJtcled to the 1----1--'=~-•·•--"· •""'•"''""-.:.=~1--Gou!'lelll'MO al10 5eotnC"1d~a~g~"""~~th~a~l;~-<~~~~'.1";~~::-;;:::::;-::;::;--;;;:~-i----~.;~ plan should be Y,.orked out to help solve Councilman Charlton Boyd said, "Jn
&election ol fioi&t leather textures.
'
the off.strffl parking shortage for South the interests of doing the fair thing. It
Coast Hlahway buslne.sses. v:ould seem to me that they're
automatically T>@nnltted a permit unless
Car Rnrglar Docs
Yul e Shopping Early
Somebody stepped into that ew st ·ln
re~r door or a Laguna ch an·s
station "'11.gon \Vednesday and step~
out again with nM worth or nev.·ly
Purcllased me:rchandi.st.
Mn. Eliz.abeth L. Rankin, o{ 1264
Starlit OrlV!, I.old OOsta Mesa poltce the
burllary oc('llf'f'tld while she was sho1>-
plng In Saui!I Coast Plua ceni.r.
I
\ I
It !s sho"'" 10 be illegal.·•
Cou ncilman Roy Holni asked if sale or
the 1..os Angeles Free "Pre». Jndlanhead
and local papers on the streets was legal
since it rs done
Rimel sl\id, "I can·1 ~ay that il i:o; il·
legal to sell nt:"·spapers or other publlca·
1tons on the street ."'
Holm and Boyd "·ere on the shorl end
al Ult! vote on o ·suHivan·s moUoo to deny
the application.
Part of the aud ltnct heartily applauded
lhe denial. Vtddtr rapped his gavel for
order and the Krishna representatives
kfl. ,
I fro111 $199
a
l! i PROFESS~~~L I GA R~ ETT f u RN 1~10~ ~MESA, CALIF.
; INTERIOR DESIGNERS 2215 HARBOR BLVD.
I ---M-, ~m~
~-... ·-----------------------------------...,.~
' •
7
7
· NeWport . Barbor · .T~y,'s Fl••I
. N.Y.· Stoeks
' .
VOL.. 62, NO. 290, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, D'ECEMBER ~. '191>9 ' TEN, CENTS
' -. -
2 P'a:nthers Slain
Gunfigh.t Erupts. at Pafty'i·si;,onghold
CHICAGO. (UPll - A. t~minuie . iun·
fight erupted today when state·s a~·
torney·s PotlCe erltefed a Black Panther
slronghold to' search for .weapons. Two
Black Panthers ~·ere killed and 'four
\VOunded.
The .de~d · lnctudCd Fred Hampton·,
about 22. ·nlinois chairma:n of the Black
Panther pa,rty.
T\•:o poliCe1tlen were wounded in t~
batlle, which broke out _ when the
aulhorities entered an apartment near
Black Panther headquarters on the
outskirts of Chicago's West Side s\rJd row.
Fourteen men made up the unit that
took part ,ln \he .. e~'rty morning raid. They
had a warrant s1Sfied by Judge Robert
Collins, according to a spokesman for the ~~t-l 6 State's Attor:ne:y '.3 Office. obtained after
C\-t"-\ ~'"'(" M ~ "T'R.CE' ' sawed-off shotguns and other illegal
'
AtJI> "9l>~-t' ~AR~ 'DE" \\'eapons were reported to be in the
lt"""'o,,,Rrlment. l~~~~~~:~~~~i~l=========~:i>:EC.:~-~f~'f~-:'-~'3~=====JJ \ hen the authorities Iden ti f 1 e d (t!tC, · themselves, the spokesmen said, voices
~1 • · ~··. 1 ! ··' • ·' ·-• :..._. · • on the other side of the door began asking
•. ,\'ho?" "Who?" Then, he said, the door
Nen'port Yuletide
Harbor Parade
Sails on Dec. 19
Newport Beach"s traditional Floating
Chri~lnwls Tree and Boat Parade will run
from Dec. 19 ~ugh .23 with scores of
decorited boals ~xpected to tour the bay
each nighL •
The parade will begin each evening al
the Balboa Island ferry l•ndin&· at 6:30
p.m. After touring the fringes of N.ewport
Harbor, the boats will conclude the pr~
ce1ssl0n '~ach evenlng at 9:15 p.m: ·
An average of 50 boats partlctpat~ in ~ procession tach evf:nlng last year.
Over the. weekends more yachtsmen join·
ed the parade, &\\·elling the ranks up ti>
100 on several evenings.
No entry fees or blanks are nece.S!ary,
Jack Barnett, manager of the New]Xlrt
Harbpr Cjt';"mber or Commerce, ex-
plained ..
Partlcipants need only show up at U)e
ferry landing to join in the procession.
Trophies will be ·awarded to winners in
1evrcral divisions.
Winners are announced be f o r e
Christmas, but the awards Will be given
out at the Chamber's aMual installation
dinner in January.
Co-sponsors of the annual event are the
Chamber and the New]Xlrt Beach City
£.mploye's Assxiation.
Awards wiU be presented in boat
clas.!ilfications of po~·er or sail up to 20
reet· from 21 to 4Q feet, and 41' feet and
ove;.'
Physician Assistants
To Fill 'Health Gap'?
SACRA~fENTO (UPI) -The chairman
of the Assembly Health and Welfare
Committee today proposed the use of
physician's assistants to help relieve ~e
worsening shortage of doctors 1 n
California•.
In 11emarks prepared for a hearing of
his committee on the p r o b I e m •
Asseniblyman Gordon Duffy said a phys i·
cian's assistant doing some of the tasks
now exclusivelY performed by the
medical doctor "·ould be one method of
filling the "health manpo\\·er gap."
Orange
Sandy Peril
Beacli Banks Could Become Tornb .. ' . .. -""'-~ . . ~
~--
DAILY ,ILO'T Sl1ll l'ltet9
SURVEYS OANGEROUS BANK
Lif99uard ·Dave Harshbarger
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of tllt Dtily ,1111 Sllll
•·tO put it bluntly, t .don't want to drive
down the beach one day and fi nd a child's:
legs sticking out of that ledge."
·The cryptic statement \\'as ,art of a
stern warning to Newport Be.aeh parents
today by Marine Safety..:Dtrector' Robert
·E. Reed, ur1i.ng parents to );-eep children
from playing or digging into the steep, u~ble banks created by the .sand haul
project,
R~. citing the .death or a teenage
youth three 'years ago in a ledge created
by cinother ' sand haul, in Balboa said he
has seen traces of digging along toe
ledges which reach a height· of almost 10
feet in some places along west Newport's
shoreline.
"There was nothing: we could ·do for
that boy three years ago but call the cor.
oner. and we never want lo do. that same
thing again."
The steep ledge of ·wet. unstable sand
stretches from the 36th Street groin up-
coast nearly to the Santa Ana River.
The material, constanlly chewed away
by the wave action. can collapse without
\\o·arning e\'en if children are not diggi ng
into it, Reed said.
"Burrowing into the bank just makes it
~-orse.'' he added.
Another danger In the area -one
.,,•hich will linger Jong after the sand
haulers are through - is created by the
stone groins themselves.
Fishennen, already realizing the slony
projections' advantages to angling, arc
using the groins as fishi ng spots.
But the constructions are not high
enoogh to protect persons from a large
v•ave. Often, during periods or hlgh tides
and moderate tn heavy surf, waves crash
tompletely over the groins.
"They could sweep a fi shennan right
off, or throw him against the rocks,''
Reed said.
The jagged granite is extremely
hazardous to a person thrown off balance
(SM DANGER, Page %)
Tate Suspects to Fight
Extradition for Trial
Weather rlcKrNNEY, Tex. <AP \ -Charles D. from Concord. N.H.
Wat5on's la14'}'Cr indicated today that he \\'e·u have a little bit of every· w~ll ask -psychiatric examination for the
thing Friday -Sunny skie!, early bearded former football player, who is
mornln; clouds and gusty north· charged in one: of the California murders
Mrs. Kasablan was whisked off a plane
from Boston Into an unmarked police car
which sped away immediately. Newsmen
\\'ere not allowed to question her.
Perpetual Flame
Helps Newport
Bear Gas Odor
By 'JOHN VALTERZA
Of ffle ~ll't' P!ltt lt1te
West Ntw(>O!'.l: Btact) now bu ' 'Pfl'• petual nami all ill own, but It Wll light,..
ed thii weet w\fh no' fanfare what!~
evtr. . .
Thire ~'t trjbutea to falltD sol·
dten. o!' -~· or ipokllts. -Just quiet ~1hl .of rellel.. . .
The ooly SllJl!fic&n<e O[ th< !!,hour
nickering · ngttt Is that · finally, after
years of breath-holding. nearby resi·
dents. service· station· patrons · and pa&-
sers by along West Pacific COast High-
way can breathe comfortably again.
The flame is consuming much of the
steady leakage of swamp gas which gives
off the distinct odor of fetid eggs.
The flame might connote war of some
sort. however. and some battles were
nearly'"' lost, city engineering aides con-
ceded fod!IV. 1
The majOr ballle. after findinl the s~.500 from several sources for a burn-
ing apparatus. was steadily leaking
water which had clogged collector P.ipes
and caused a Jong delay in in.mllation
of a blower.
Without the b!O'l'-'er. the ~as would not
have lighted. engineers said.
After ~·eeks of looking for the source
of the underground swamp, city ere.ws
discovered 3. faulty water coMecUon
nearby and fixed It.
The blower was put into place, then
the flame, which burns almost uMoticed,
wa~ sparked. ,,t passed the rain test this p~st
.,,·eekend " said Phil Betencourt. adm1n·
istrative ' assistant to City ?\-tanager Har·
,:ev Hurlburt.
;, And. none ·or ·us are scientists. bot this
!:xoeriment seems to be working." .
He said money came' on a matching
ha.sis from the Union.Oil Co .• which owns
the land on which the gas seeps; the
citv, and nearby property owners.
Jf the project continues as it ~hould.
Betencoort said, similar experunents
might be tried with olher noiious gas
seeps in the· city. .
So resident& and passen by alike may
not have a real monument. but the per·
petu1l flame merits a salute just the
same-perhaRS . just slight gesture of
thumb a~ forefinger raised toward the
nose, thm stopping midway.
was · opened. 8nd · .. e:ig'tlt' or mare 1n'.
dividuals ·began firing wUh c~rbines·,
.shotguns a!'ld h~dg_un.s. ".
'the apartment, accoriling to t~
·spo~~sinan; beloncecf to a·~ Johnsgn,
,an ··allas· Wed by HRmJiton. In it police
said:tbey.foUnd 12 shotguils,'cilbt.Plstols
and. 5,000 rounds of 'lmmunlUon; He said
J1amptqn wits felled. a_fter he.. h;ad sbot at
'the aiithorities vo'ith i .45 autorDaUc and I
~hot gun. ,
·The. otht>T dead mar. Was Identified as
fi.1ark Clark. 22. of Peoria, 111. There had
been reports earlier thlJ )'Ur that the
Pa11lhers bad atl.!mpted • to Qr~
young )>e(lple in that downstate com.
mu nity. •
f our persons were taken into custody
after the battle,.including a woman iden·
lilied as Deborah John!IOD., It, l4fd to be
about eight monihs prepant. ·r
Before the IS-minute gun b3ttle ended
more than 50 put.icemen bad been called
to the scene, near where rioting had OC· -
curred two years ago. They brought
machine guns and te.ar gu but did not
use them •
u''·''..,... SLAIN BY POLICE
P'anther Leeder Hampton
More Than 50% of Piers
To Escape N ewpo·rt Fees
s, JEROME f'. COLLIMI Among ams excluded from the tide.
· OI .. ~Mr "11'1 "'" lands use fee • .awaiting final council ac--J.~~ler~·Jrn"!,r~~ lloo"" J,lec. Ii, lrt Ltc!i> Ille, the Balboa
·cilyt1 prapost.d tidtlandl ·uee fee i>latl. Bay Cll\b, the Balboa Yacht Basin, New-
lllUllidPll aldoo-~ied toda)o. . ~ hi&iV~·1¥ve, Unda lslo
· Of ·.r.· cl17'1 ol 3,131 ~ -i!!!l, ll'>ver Sbom. ·
lrid />~lat flin.<lior l!"IJi·W ."-'-·'_iilli ud.!laliils· A--Oeorge
·t,111-WI! be 'Upped .foo ltiolt o«U' bo..J ~ned U,11 Mn. oi thfle wa-pancy o/ city-tered publlC Wlte!' • . · · , , , · ·wa}'1. · t~rent sites ha:ve . P,Jera . that extend
All piers, however, will be oubject to Into ,11!11eased city .~-QnlY those
a··f !O ·annual -Inspect.ion fee.· whkh .will p~s that do will lie su~Jett to the $15
go into effect tf the contrdver11Lal tide-r~tlal -~ fee. Conunerclal lnstalla·
lands uae lerJ.ia fonnftlly adopted b.Y the tfons wUl be Charged a itSe'fee of 50 cents
City coonc1C · • w. lineal foot· of. sliP!'-and . side-ties.
DaWes noted that of 890 reSidentlal
piers in th8 JoWer baf, only 314 are af·
fected by the city proposal. He ~aid the
rJ,Sl of the hpmeowners' slips are loCated
over leased city tidelands (187), county
tidelands (81), _dedicated right · of· way
(J82) or private Waterways (146).
'
Ttustees De'lay
'
Deci.swn on 5%. ' . . .
Bond Sale Try
I \ Newpoi-t.~teSa iehool trustees have
postponed untU Jl:ec· ti a decision on
whether to go~thi'ough the· moUons of
trying to sell school bonds at a five per.
cent interest rate.
Board members this week quesUoned
Supt. William Cunnlngham·s recom-
mendation they prove the point they can't
sell the bonds at {Ive percent, befor'e
going to the ~Qters Feb. HJ with a request
to Increase the penn.issible interest rate
to· seven pecent ..
The futility of a try al five percent
1'eems So .cert&.n that bo'ard member
Thomas C. Casey wondered whether it
was worth it to spend about $100 for legal
advertisement for bids.
1
Dr. CUnnln&harp had recommended
bil:ls be asked on $4.S million sale of
bonds Jan. 21 so no one can say "You
don 't really know you can't aell them at
five percent" when voters art. uked to
approve an Interest rate ihcreue to
seve'\ percent Olf' Feb. 10.
The schools superiptendenl tried a
private bond · plaoement but told the
board he had no luck ln lllkfng to I.Cal
banbn and de.velopm •.
HOlderS of ·com"inefci81 pier permit!
will. bear the brunt.of the 'use fee legis-
lation.· Dawes s'aid it ¥.·ilJ ·be applttable
to 1J&8 c0mmerda1 · slips and slde'.-tle!.
.There ar.e a tot.Pl of %,540 sueb inslalla· tion.S iri the cily.
He said Lido J11e Is exempt rrom the
legfsla~n becaµse its piers are located
on. wattn already leased to the. island
association tiy the city. 'The lease fee is
$750. aMUaUy. The agreement expires lb
six years.
Leasing a~eemenls also are In · ef£ect
11t the B81boa Bay Club and Balboa
Yacht ·Basin, Dawes noted.
The channels 11urrounding Newt>Ort
Island are excluded from the use fee
plan because they are dedicated Tights-
of.way, and nOt lgally considered city
tidelanW, he said. ·
Bayshore Drive •. Linda Isle and Oaver
Shores are exempted .because their piers
ar located over. combinations of county
'(See Tll>ELA~'DS, Page t)
NEW YO!Ur (AP) -St'!i:k market
prices remafnedr broadly Joffer ln late
al~ trldlng.toilly, but.Q)l)Unutd to recover some ol. their eharp losses or
earlier in t)\e day. (Set quollUons, P1ges
22·23). .
" '
east llllnds -while the tempera· at the home. of actress:Sharon Tate. -----lf-ltll'H'e6'5-iA~w.·._ __ -t---"l'!lt.,.Mlly-ha"e: so111e serious dOtlbts She wore a brown polo coat wjth collar
lo11itd up and held the collar t
agaJnst her face. She carried 3 brown
paper bag.
""'SIDE TODA'\' about his mental slate," 53id the lawyer,
AJ, "Bill Boyd of McKinney.
Ne.rt 11ear tht go11t'rnmt11t Bcyd, a former district and countf at.
will conle ,0 htlp of parinli. t~~· also sar~ his client will fight ex·
but this Chriltmos it'& every tradition. 1Vto Los Angeles delectives man for hlmself ;11 checking out \\·ho have come here to take him inlo p custody then !tarted back home. t he dangtr& ·01 tiew toVS. oge Wa~ 24. surrtndered' Sunday on
10. learning California authorities held a
Mtviott tt Mtltfll ,!Pllft t1
l'ltlltftfl ftllWt ... ,
0.•llfl CMlllllY ,. s11vi. , .. ., n
IKltl Nt'#t 1t·M
SMt" H-H ltKtr Mktttt V·tl ''"vi•'-'! Jl l'jHtlotn 2t w-. OleM WMlt 'H w ... 111 ft... •·1 Wtm"''' lolrwt 1'·P
•
warrant for his arrest. ffe is charged
\\ith murder In the slaying • of Steven
Parent, a caret11ker \\ho was killed along
with Miss Tate and three otl)er persons
last Aug. ~.
Another suspect In Uie ca&e, Linda
Louise: l\asablan. 20, one of three persons
facfng murder charges in the ilaylng of
actress Sharon Tate and four others, wa1
returned to Los Ange.lei Wedne11day nl&ht
In Jtlobile. Ali . a Clrcoit Court hearing
was set for today on 1 motion seeking the
bond' release Ol the third person charged
in the. case.
Lawyers for Patricia Krenwinkel. 22.
moved for a writ of habeas corpus
Wednesday.
Miss Krenwinkel did net appear ln
court for filing of the writ, which also
dl1llenaed the warrant under which she
Is held . _
Miss Krenwinkel's attorney, M. A.
itarsal, has 'Said she would fight ex·
tradition. He contended that the fugi tive
warrant was faulty on several grounds.
lncludln~ one !bat it failed to compcy with
Alab~a Jaw.1 • L.
I·
•
• --· ~·! .i '°";. l .,; i,!."o, .• ! II ' ' '. •• OA.ft..'f ftll.01'° .... ....,
THis• HANDS Jt?o To A_H~!lllER, ~ A~SO WAS A D~IVER -SE~ !'AGE 12 . .
'
"
•
~:t OAllY PILO\
Kindergarten to · Change to Single Sessions 1
•
By THOMAS ~OR~E
6f ""' Delly '"'"' lltff
Tile Newport-Mesa Un~ltd School
District will switch from two-a-day
'-indergancn sessions to longer single
,fessions at the start of the second
, semester Feb. 2.
· Stltdents then will spend three hours
cichrday In the rlassroom Instead CJf the
present two and one-half hours,
· Since teachen will teach only one class
']>er day instead o{ two, ball the kin·
derprten, aiude1its wiU have a different.•
teacher. Al>out 119 ~lorlen atudenta amonc tl14oe·· a{ttndJnc Ibo ~
dlllrict'• ll el~ 1dio0ii wlll Ill
•wltcbtd lo alicitnu IChool. •
"The achool prlnelpat. wW be Hktd to
\\'Ork _.;.arefully selectin1 the 1tudents that
are most ll)ature and adaptable as the
one!I to have a different teacher," Supl.
\V\lham L. Cunningham said.
He told school board members th is
\\·eek new state legislation Will penalire
school dlstrlcU 90! on single ltlndor1at1tn
1esalon 111 amount,about..equlvatent to the
•44illoJ1f1 l'l!'I 1 " "'In • h~w.•h. t!i•f~ will· be"no 1l1nm-
c:ant dllterenci 'between llnile and double
ses!lon in cost," he~said.
He said niost kindergarten teacher!
[avor the 5ingle session for its educa-
tional value buL many principals do not
agree with his reconlmendalion for a
mid·year switch over.
Without disse:it, board members ap.
·A.rrested in Assault
Jail Visitor Now Guest
A Newport Beach waterfront dweller
goofed Wednesday night when he wen t
10 polict headquarters to visit a friend
arrested on cha rge's of assault with a
Cilcote enter the police department. J1e
identified the man as one of his alleged
assailants ..
• As he joined them out.side: to settle
the matter. he said, one of the pair pull-
ed a knife, but did not use it during the
fight that followed.
' deadly weapon after a tavern fight.
Police arrested the \•isitor. too, and
booked him on the same charges.
The fight, a knife-flashing, kicking and
slugging incklent. started at The Place
Tavern at 2000 W. Balboa Bou levard.
Police said Eldridge had several scalp
cuts and bruises from being kicked . He
5ought treatment from his doctor.
'
Officers said Lester Maurice Cilcotc.
27. of 2006 W. Ocean Front, was arrested
<\fler he tried to visit with the friend ,
Stanley Sunderland, 39, same ~--The victim of the fracas, oftlCel'I ):ild,
"-'IS talking to investigators when be saw •
Bethel L. Eldridge, 34, Huntington
Beach, told police two men started argu·
ing with him at lhe tavern before mid·
rUghl.
Eldridae left !or the Stag Bar across
).fcFadden Square.
The two men followed him, he said.
Suntler!and was arrested outside' the
bar.
A short time later, Cileote arrived for
a viSit and was also arrested.
The pair face charges of assault v.'ilh
a deadly weapon.
They were still in custody this morning.
Resident o'f Back Bay From l'age l
DANGER • • •
Opposes Annex. to Mes _a by a wave.
Reed advised parents to keep children
from the banks and warned per.5()nS
~·ishing LG walk on top ()f the groins to
study the surf h>r a time to judge if any
waves might crash over them.
Despite a petition carrying signatures
of a majority of homeowners involv~.
not everyone in Costa fl.tesa 's proposed
Back Bay Annexation Number One are a
is in favor, according to one of them.
B. Douglas Sawtelle, of 2668 Santa Ana
Ave,, told the City Council Monday thal
he is opposed to joinin& the city and no
·valid arguments have been offered by the
city yet.
"Some of us would like ·to point out
there will be a tu increase," aplaioed
E.rohate Top_ic
For Bar · Meet ·
5.twttlle, who said the whole issue has
caused hard feeling among some long-
time nelghborhOOd friends. ·
•·J came away \'cry unsalisfied," he
added, conce rning his City Council ap-
pearance and subsequent discussion of
the annexation matter.
Sawtelle told cowicilmen that the voter~
affected were ·led to believe if they did
not annex to Cos la ~fesa, Newport Beach
would encircle their unin corporated area.
"Petition carriers said we had to go
to one or the other." he explained, noting
that the trurd alternative is to do neither,
He said some large surf might arrive
along the coast this weekend -tailings
from the pounding ~·aves which hit
11awaii earlier this week.
"There is a chance we might have four·
to-seven-foot v.•aves this weekend •
sometime, and a wave of that size can
easily wash ()ver some of the groins when
eondiLions are right," he said.
''J-'m ctrtain-_there-was nothing irregu·
lar about the annexalion, jusl a Jack ol Wa shini?tonian }leads information," he said. .....,
Several public mttlings were held on Hi.,.,h\vay Safety. Uni"t the ~., c J t y ;o(licials pointed oul • ~' tiUt 'Sawtelle'wu unable to at-tend due lo his working how-s and ap-SEA1iLE. \Vash. <AP) -Douglas
A program called "'The Truth About parenUy so were othere:. Toms, \\'ashington state highways direc-
Probate" will be presented b)' the 9naP ~ City cau~ilmen lift Ftb. 6 u t1'e elet· tor, has accepted the job of direclor of
County BeMlociaUOn •J tordlbe;AIC , W.4.1~ .lbe -.auce, which was the National Highway Safety Bureau,
t\ewport Harbor fli&b'ScMttf'1udl\oflDm. ..p,ro.e.t_ latt June by the' Local Alt&-Rep . Tom Pelly (R·Wash.), said Thurs,
Four apeiker• rro,m the Bar Assoita. ciea Formation Commission. day.
tion will talk on "Why Have a Will,'' ----------------'------------
~·common 'Criticisms of Prottfte." "When
Probate Is Not Necesal?)'" a n d
"Procedure& and Problems Relatl~ tG
Probate.'•
A half hour question 1nd ari!wer per1od
will follow. Admission ie: free .
U.S. Education Aide ·
Speaks at Cd!\i High
Dr. Paul F. Lawrence. regional a!llst·
ant cornrnW;ioner of the U.S. Office of
Education, wUI speak at Corona del M~r
High School tonight, Dec. 4, on public
school finance.
The public is: invited lo join teachers in
hearing Dr. Lawrence at his 7 o'clock
talk in the Little Theater. He is one
speaker in a series on school flna~
~rranged by Ne"'·porl • Ptfesa Unified
School District.
Tuition Fee Loss Seen
With Lower Vote Ag~
' CHICO (UPI) -A state collep official
says the 19-<:ampus system would 'lo!t
$2.16 million a year In tu!Uon feee for out-
of·state: students If lhc voting age L!
l~·ered to 18.
DAllY PllOI
o••Mot (1).Ut ll'Vl t llftlMO cOMPA>rt
..... , .... w ••• "'"'*"' 9NI l'WI.,_
J11li I . Cw.l1y
\'>e:t .. ,.,.,.. .... Glfor• .. ~
Th•••• "''"'ii ·-n ... n A Mtr,hl..t -·-• J1r•111• '· c.JllH --(llY l.llllw ---2111 Wftt l.tlMI ...... ,..,
ll .... -P.O.l.117~tl'6>,
Dl?EO.~E
AIUA
MAP P INPOINTS LOCATIONS IN DREDGING PROJECT
Rush Job on Dredging
Bay Ski Zone Planned
---l----e-W ..._ Orang bt1nt.yilarbor..Dlstrlct affidala •-':"'.::iii';;;'";;;;::~'"'•"'•"'•""• --1--,tho-'ll~·-~k~a~p"!plltd for hurried permlulon
.... -: • •-by the Army Corps of Engineers for
Th•_estl~~ tailings will be scattered ov thf mouth
of Big Canyon-on Irvine ny land
-eut of Back Bay Drive. '
• •
the restoration Jnd dred&ini or Upper
Newport Bay's water ski zone, a Job
which muK-be done by lall J1nuary in
order to qualify for a federal refund .
No problems were u:pec:ted from the
corps. and the projttt Is for@cllt to beo.
gin within the next few weeks.
Shellmaker . Inc .. of Ne:wport Beach,
which origin1Jly dredged the 1tonn-dam·
aced skJ zone when it was created In
1964, has entered a low bid of $1$4,900.
A rontract bu not yet been awarded.
however.
The ski zone was destroyed early this
year by record flood ing \\'hich brou&Jlt
5ilt and dtsbris into the Back Bay.
The dredae$ wlll restore the ski tone
to ill previous condition. but make n6
~11ew devtlopmenls of the estuary.
'
To insure that the dumped sllt would
not clog rain runoU tbrou&h The C!nyon,
dlstrJct aides said. a chlnntl would be
cut lhrouch It, leading lo the bay.
The project must be completed bv
Jin. 26 In order ror the district to bt
reimbur.sed hy the federal covernment
under the disaster reliel program.
The skJ zone was entirely clogged hv
material deposited by last wlnter'!I:
s:torms and has remained eloaed ever
&ince.
B1Qk' Bay Orh·e, the main access rnarl
to tne ski zone by land. v.·as hea\•ily
damaged, too, but alttr a closure or Sf'\'•
cr11l month!i, cily r.re'i\'S opened lhe rolld·
way and rtslored Jt 10 passable, but :;till
substandard, condition.
proved lhe chan1e to single session,
•·we believe it has significant ad· ·
vantaae to the chlld." Dr. Cunningham
!aid. He indicated that \l•ilh the ad-
dil ional half hour kindergarten teachers
could do more In reading readiness.
ClaS5 sizes \\'Iii have lo be a. little
l.lrger. Cunningham said, closet to the JI
)<:lutlent11 per teacher sla te maximu1n
than the present 25 per cli1ss loading.
Board President J\1rs. Marian Bergeson
said she agreed with Dr. Cunningha1n
tha t "the public relatlons aspect of the
changeovel' will be moat slgnl!lcant."
The school district had lhree·hour.
single-ses.sio(l kindergarten last year, but
had to switch back lo double session9 this
#}'t::ir t>ecause of the c05t.
Fincc one teacher teaches bolh 2\i-hour
~cssions in Jhe classroom each day, twice
di' many teachers must be employed for
the 5ing!e sessio:i program , cosling the
school district lwice as much in wages.
Assistant Supt. for Personnel Kevin
0.lll Y l'tLOT i lllf l'Mt1
CITY AIDE SUSAN RYAN DOES SOME HOMEWORK
N•wport Tomorrow Report Now Availabl• to Public
Cupboard Hid • Ill
Cult Leader Found in Raid
' INDEPENDENCE. Calir. (UPI) ._
Charles J\fanson. the hypnotic leader of a
non1adic cua suspected in the slayings of
Sharon Tate and 11 other persons, "'as
round .. hiding in a tiny cupboard" when
;iurhorities raided his commune in Death
Valley in October. ·
The California High\\•ay Patrolman
'~·ho led a po~se in the raid teslified
\Vednesday at r.1anson's court hearing on
relativel y minor auto theft charges that
the long.haired cult leader was ca ptured
co11.•ering in the cupboard.
James Purcell, the only patrolman
usually on the J,000-square-mile beat.
said the bearded r.lanson "·as "hiding in
a 11ny cupboard beneath the sink. It \\'as
perhaps three feel high, 18 to 20 inches
wide ;ind 12 to 18 inches deep. It took him
a time 10 unwind."
~1 anson. who held a myster ious s1\·ay
o\'e r hi!i followers. was the only one of
the nine persons arrested in !he raid "-'ho
hid when the posse descended on the
lhree-room house which \\'as the ba~e
camp for the nomarlic commune.
Before the end or the six·hour prelim·
inary hearing, the district attorney·~
office here said Manson would be r<'·
leased to Los Angeles authorities if a
1nurder warrant was issued. The court
ruled there "'as sufficient evidence of
receiving stolen property to bring Man-
:.on to trial. Bail was set al $25,000.
The stooped, slight Manson was wear·
Ing blue denim jail clothes when he was
led into the Inyet County courthouse in
chai ns to face the charges involving
stole n veh icles.
One of the witnesses lo testify ~·as
Paul \Vatkins. 18, a former member of
the "family'' cult.
i\1anson doodled on a piece or yellow
paper ~·hile witnesses testified to the
charge of receiving stolen property dur·
ing raids by ;'the i'.tanson family" from
a base camp In the Death Valley area.
Another member of the cult, now in
custody in Los Angeles, said through her
<ittorney that J\1anson, 34, held an "in-
!'iane, almost hypotic influence" over his
"family." She said his followers called
hin1 "Jesus."
Wheeler ~aid he will begin rlaht awa:f
recruiting kJnde:1111en teacher• tor Iha 1 second semester.
Teachers who taught kindergarten last
yea r and then were moved Into the
primary grades this fall when the
nwnber or kindergarten openings were
halved will remain with their present
classes the rest .,f the year, Cunningham
said. They will be gi ven first opportunity
to take kindergarten openings subsequ~t
years.
.'TomoITow'
Brochures
Mailed Out
'.4 Newport Beach city aides today trun·
dled bundles of Newport Tomorrow
digest 5ummaries to the post office fo~
mailing to 17,000 homes.
The brochures, which cost the city
about $800 to print and address. point up
the recommendations of !he 80-member
goals study committee.
Phil Bettencourt, assistant to the city
manager, said in adttition to the singlt·
sheet brochures, 1,000 copies of the full
2().page Newport Tomorrow report will
also be made available to the publie
starting today at city hall and at the
city's three libraries. They will be given
out on a first-come, fint-served basis.
There is no charge .
Bettencourt noted that owners or New-
port properties who live out of town will
also receive copies of the brochure.
The mailing should total about 4,000,
he said. ·
There are several reasons why the city
council ordered the mailing. Bettencourt
i;aid among them is the city's hope to
!ilimulate as much community interest in
the Newport Tomorrow findings as pos·
sible.
The Newport Tomorrow committee,
headed by John Macnab. formally su b-
mitted its final report to the council two
months ago. At that lime. l\1ayor Doreen
l\1arshall vowed that thr report "will
gather no dust on a sQelf."
The city Planning Commission is now
studying the various recommendation.~
on guidelines for the future. Implem'en-
tation of the many proposals is expected
lo take several months.
''\Ve're hoping for a lot of feedback'
from the public on this," said Mrs.
fl.tar.shall.·
From Pnge l
TIDELANDS. • •
tidelands and private v.·aterways.
Under the recently revised use r~
plan. favored by a 4 to 3 council majority.
the annual revenue to the city is expected
to be about $40,000. All that income. by
la\\·. must be punlped back into harbor
operations.
1-Iere is how the fee system will work:
-All residential and con1mercial pier!,
regardless of their location in the harh<lr.
v.•ill be charged a $10 annual pier regis·
tral ion or inspection fee. Commercial in·
stallations will also be charged registra·
lion fees of 25 cents to SI for each slip,
depending on the number of slips.
Burglar Takes 830
A burglar apparently starting out witJ;
small stakes looted a Costa r.1esa youth'11
bedroom of $30 in newspaper roulfi
receipts \Vednesday, the victim told
police.
Steve Dardin. of 265 \V akc Forest Road,
told officers the money was taken from a
clay pot on his dresse r, \Vhile nothing else
was disturbed.
Yer~' special purchase · from a
famous quality maker of
I
I i
GENUINE LEATHER CHAffiS .
A GlfT TO TRWllRE AllD ENJOY FOR YEARS
• Cuatom qu&!ily tl\rough-ou( •
Lunrious CU9hibning • Your
clioice o! a>lors from an e.xtenlive
I
I from $199 i I ~ .
I INTERIOR DESIGNERS .2215 HARBOR BLVD. I o,.. w .... ,...... ... ..... 646-0275 .
!www..·~--------------------------,.,.--...J r '
I
i
'
I
I
)
I
I
J
t
I
' I
Anitraals Into the Act
1'Verrry Eeeenteresting,'' says Chester the Chimp
as he acts the part of a forlorn Gennan Lancer du r-
ing a perfonnance at Sea World in San Diego. Be-
hind him, Aphrodite, world champion high jumping
dolphin, comes up for air. BOih are part of the da ily
show in the lagoon at the equatic park in Mission
Bay.
Reno, Las Vegas to Cooperate Buy The DAILY PILOT
Just for 'Pea nuts'
Thunday, Decrmbtr C, 1969 DAILY Pll'Of J3
Rallng Heads for High Court
' . .
Judge Sirikes Dow11 Ahortio11 Ban
WASHINGTON (AP) -A
federal judge bas struck· down
a District of Co!Ul'Dbia law
harming ¥borti6ns performed
by doctOrs and Urged that his
decision be appealed quickly
t.o the Suprtme Court.
Should the high cou rt uphold
the ruling, prohibitions on
abortion -some enacted a
century ago -could come
tumbllng· down in scoru of
states.
U.S. District Court Judge
Gerhard A. Gessell's decision
held Monday that a physician
may not be prosecuted for
performing an abortion.
persom, the doctor , ind 1 The District of Columbia beallh. or when caused h)'
nurses aide, asked -him to law is similar to lawfi in 40 rape or· incest.
dismiss their lndict.ment.s on :states. A few states, of which That position is embodied In
Colorado was tbe first, have a model law prepared by thfi
the basis of a California laws allowing doctors to American Medical Association
Supreme Court decision that perform abortions w h c n and was brought before 11
California's law was not "suf-pregnancy e nd a nger s a number of state Jegislature5
ficiently artain to satisfy due woman's physical or menlal (his year.
process requirements.'' lp;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"i
Gessel\ refused lo dismiss
the indictment against the
aide, saying lheir is "ample
evidence" that "infecUon and
death still often at lend
clumsy, unskilled termination
of pregnancy performed by
nonphysicians."
Since the law Is a feder al
one, the ruling could be ap-
pealed directly to the Supr.eme
Court. Gessell also suggested
that Congress mlfhl want to
rt\\Tile it. providing more
concrete tenrui. ·
''GIFTABLE'' .. ys SANT A
SONY Take it
An~hereTV' Gessell ruled that the 1901
law banning abortions except
,~·hen necessary to save a
pregnant woman's life Clr·l-----------11
health was so vague and in-
definite as to b e un-
const itutional.
Although his rtlling dealt
n1ost dire ctly with the rights
of a Wa shington doctor ac-
cused of perfonning an illegal
abortion, the judge added :
"There has been increasing
indicntion in decisions of the
Su preme Court of the United
States thai as a secu lar mat-
ter, a woman's liberty and
right of privacy extends to
famil y, marriage and sex
matteM', and may \\'ell include
the right to remove an
unwanted child, at least in the
early stages of pregnancy."
247 8ro1dway
L ........ ~-4t4.f174
Hours: 11 1.m. to I 0 p.m.
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP)-
The district attorney thinks
Las Vegas could give Reno
smne excess convention busi-
ness. A Las Vegas convention
official has other ideas.
Rawlings said that if the cily Ing Nev.:;da but •·1·m not sor=;:::::::::::::::::::::::"::is=ru=l=in=g=c=am=e=a=f=te=r;:t=w=o:;i ... '"";;:;:=====:::---ll knows in advance it won't sure the convention field \Vould Sony's new portable TV
lias a place 'neath your tree
"Actually. Reno and Las Ve-
gas are like appleii and or·
anges." liaid Barney Rawlingl'i,
secretary ·of i.he Convention
Authority. "They have a dif-
ferent kind of appeal."
Although the oranges in the
slot machine are the main a~
peal of both ciUes, he says
northern Nevada has more ski·
ing a n d outdoorsmanship,
while Las Vegas fias more en-
ttrtairunent.
Dist. Atty. George Franklin
of Clark County told a Reno
audience las t \\'eek that Las
Vegas could have channeled
some business to Reno whije
It had 40.000 delegate.& at a.
com puter convention.
Suggesting a hot line be·
tv.·een the two cities, he said,
"if tlle tourist bureau Worked
together conventioneers would
be sold on the entire stat!."
have room it will suggest to a be the best 1vay.''
convention a change in dates. He said Las Vegas would be
"If the city wa~ full when "shooting itself oul of the sad-
lhey arrived, we couldn't say: die'' by di·•erting sonie con-
'Sorry, we're overbooked. We venlions because many, for
"'ill have to send you to instance v.•ill meet in the West
Reno.'' only once every ~ou r yea rs.
Las Vegas, #I miles south-Rawlings said some conven·
east of Reno, boasts it had 256 lions could not be ~ent north trade shows and convention1 in 1968 with 206,709 delega tes because Reno might not be
who spent $34,107,950. able to guarantee lhe same
Reno officials iay J.91 con· facilities. Both ciiiC'S have
ventions In f I s c a 1 1963-69 8.000 sent convtntion centers.
brought.bt~.690 delega\~ who \Vashoe County says it has
spent $6.2 million. 10,000 hotel and motel rooms.
"Artistry in Moving" fo.-the
BEST MOYE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-1025
\Viii Jerglns, convention di· v.·hile Las Vegas claims 25,000. rector for the Greater Reno-----~-------------------------------------·!!
Chamber of Commerce. said
the hot line is a good idea.
"We certainly think it would
be wonderful to have coopera·
lion that would channel con·
ventions lo us instead of let-
ting them go out of the state.•·
Rawlings said he welcomed
"the opportunity to work with
the boys in Reno" on promol·
ODI s
GROD:CNB %rJr C}lJ1§tma§
'W.ta_pping F'onnerfy Mullen & Bluett
OPINIUNDAY
12tol P.M.
MlrldtMllt, --· TopenpPlw,.
Santa Montq.
l 1k1wood, .
Anlhtlm, ""' ..... Manttt1lr,
Si n Dle&O
Cloud .. olt Elllron•
Fleece Robes by
Raymond Halpern Lo~ngewear
Marvelous pre-h oliday values
in fireside robes-to give or
treasure for yourself. Two
dreamy versions In feather-
light Estron acetats-nylon
fleece. With shirred yoke and
embroidered choir collar or
with dramatic front panel
embroidery. Both avatlobfa
long or ahort In Jada
Gr8"n or Cherry Pink.
Short '7
Leng '9
T~t Sany TV-710U w•itJhl • liltl• OY•r ' lb1.
vau c1n lak• ii 1n,,.wh111 -b11ch, bo•t, bou·
doir or btck,,.1rd. Plu, • 7-inch di1gan1l 1cr1•n
lh1t 11h \fall 1h11• t~• fun wilh th• whal•
f1m ily. Sh1rp pictur17 You b11 .,TV.710U ow••
ii •II to Son,,.'t •d•anc•d 1alid 1!1!1 circuitry
~ •nd • farwa1d AGC '"'''"" for 11n1itj.,.,
••e•p!ia11. O p1r1+•1 on AC. Plug1 into e111
And both wit~ oplian11 1cc111ori11. You·.,.,
!;Ill la 111 ii lo b1li 1•• it.
FOR ONLY· 99.95
Take it to the beach,
boat, ball game
or bedroom!
Sanyt TV920U, 11 11 •••Y lo w1teh autdaort 11
111ywh•r• in yaur ha"'' -with it1 I " bl 1c~
di•9on1llv l"•11ur•d pictur1. And it w•i9h1
anly 10 lb1.!
'GIFT •RICED .•• 129.95
High Flying
Butt
Sony's Team TY, for
,..._ __ -Jl---~::!'!'.o le who follow
Raincoat by Harbor Mailer
For th& man who demands more from a raincoat
than mare protection. Uke quality -that you can
lee/ In the •llky Imported Swiss fabric of·polyes!er
and combed cotton. And great fashion-that you
can see In the dashi ng double breasted styling
wllh Its unique double row of buttons. Designed for
all the high flyers-and thpse who would llko to be.
$67.50
Other H1rbor Mtlttrt from $SS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MISA
IROAOWAY·ANAHl lM CI NTIR LAklWOOD CINTH
.AMhelfft Lanw..4
•
SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Costa Mesa; ANAHEIM, Broadway-Anaheim Center; LAKEWOOD, Lakewood Center
I• • •
•
the cidlonl
w ,+h ltt I I" di•')On•I 1crt111, 1n1p-i1 I •"•P·
e11t flll1t -it ie el••'· 1.11••• fr•• .,;,..tn9.
Op•Ti••• on So~y b•tle•v. 12 .... 11 ,,1,/bo•t
b•lt•ty '' AC h•u1• t11rr t nl.
UND U YOUR TRU •OR ••. 1'39.95
~DAVIS BROWN
411 E. 11th St. ·Costa Mesa
D•lly 9.9, 5•turd•y '·' ~hon• 646-1614
I
••
'] 4 DAil V PllOT '
•·
For the Record Mnsieal Benehes?
1J1UJ.1Mwi.ck ~ County's Judges Switch Assig1iments
MEETINGS
CJ1ritll•11 •ont.-"°"n"t C11m111llttt. ....,nllntloll lffch, M1nnv1, 1'02
Edlnt1'' Awt .. H.I . 1:00 '·"'· Mu"liftllOft 8NCll l ionl Cllllt, H,,,..
!l"'IOll ~.c:lltt Cou..,lrv Club, J000
,.,.,,, Avf ., HIJ!'ll11'8lon Beat,,_ t .lO
·~· 11\1....,k Locl'i•· tOOF "! t I I , Wntmlrosltt ,tiv1nuc. W1!tm11Ultf,
.!~~k11~0.it Ard1•11C1lotV l.ol;l.iv,
11-., M11-. S."11 A"'· 1:30
11,m,
H1.W ArN TN •lm••••r c~. ~ Vff"lM (-lf\I Club. Ccnl1 ~ 1:311
N:.;:o,, Htrtior Ei..s Club, (!let Lodte,
3"56 V'9 OPOtto. N.-t llttcl'I. I •m· Alftlf1all U.\ol'I Pill! •JJ, Ame•ltt n
L"lol! Hill, ~ W. 1tlh $!,. C0$1t
Mfta, I 11.m.
Amet"lc.811 L"loll hsl 1)3 f1f Hllfl·
l"'-19'1 I HCh, ...,,,.rlctn Lttilon Ht ll.
Civic Ctnt.r, Hunt"'9111M .. Kl\, f
H~Mtort llMdl Junior Cti.mbtr .. c~ ~ton INcil kin, ... ..,...
1111t1tlln 8fKll, • 11.m. Ht'"tlnttoll lle&dl BtrT&Cil:I No. nlO. Vtt.11,_ f1f WOl'ld Wtr I, V.F.W. Hill, 'I' Vork'""" Avt .• Hun1lng!on
BHCll. 2 ~10 11.m. l='Olllll t ln Vtlie'I 1Ciw111ll Clvli. Ft1n·
a.!1', llUI llltftCh Blvd., H11nll1111!on
llH<h. 12:1i-11.m.
Newoert J.11 rb0r Junior 011..,ber er
Comf'l'l¥Cf, 1'17 Wt~tcllll Or,. Nt w·
oorl a.1ch. Felld1"°''• 161 n West·
• cllfl Or., NewllOrt lll!llch, 7 p.m.
Births
DEATH NOTICES
CECIL
M•r••tel 0 , Cecil, 66' W. lt!h ~I ..
Cost• Mn•. CMll'r of "-"'· ~-J. Sunrl....:t b'f 111ugllf1r, Mrs. \llrglnl1
O'Donnell, of OF'llllftl rwe sllte<-•,
Mrt. Amt C•f'Vff, P•sa<1en1; Mr1.
Flor....:1 lllakHlef!, 0..!1rla1 ,.,..
•r1nckl'llldrtn.. SoeNices will bl held
Mond•r. I PM, l.eH a ... a.... .... Ch1pel.
1n1enri..,1, Forl 11owcr1n1 Met1 ..... 1
C.metwrv, s.an Ditto. 8•11 lll'09dwar
Morlu1ry, Cos11 M111. Olrterors.
DRIGGS
J1rm-s Drltie1. 921 Molll'IO, Lon~
llffCh. "'" ''' a.re of dt&lh, ~. 1. S<it>rlved br wife, lmNI; d•uvMer 1nd JO'Hf>-ll W, H91en L, I nd Jolllt It. MC· Allb!ch; tour 1r1!ldcl'lllllr""• JOfl", MJ.
dlMI, l"l'flll'f I nd Judllh. ~rvlcet,
Frldl'f, 10 AM, Smllh• Chloe!. 1n1e ..
mn. Good Sll~erd Cem111rY. Smlthl Morftll~, OlrKtorl.
LORENZEN
Minelli Llll'Wllen. L-flOT>t reoldffll
t'.f Huntlrltlon 8e1C'\-Su•vlm 1w """9hl1r. M,.. Flddl'l'l'llt<t af R<nevl!le,
C1llf. Slrvltl's. SllUn!IY, 10 AM,
Sml"'• Ch111e'i. lntfrmen!, We1ll'PU"n•
~t~ Me.,,orl1I P1r~. Sml1111 Marru1•v, CHr«ton,
RUTAN
Mtriln £. 1tut1n, .t.91 14, of 1'S1 Avt•
Ion SI,, co.11 Mft<I. O.!e of pee!h,
OKemtll• 7. Surviwd by ll'>Cl!her. M",
E""""'o J. R11t1n. CO'll1 Mt11; 111111•,
ltobtri lt ut1n, 8urbllnl!; lour li11f'I·
l.turel 1nd ltatoh1. Co1!1 Me11; Ma•· ci•. Pnwldtt1ce. II.I.; Mrs. J1101tn
~rriot!. Gold~. Color.o:lo: two brot~
"'S. ltkh1rd . .t.d1m1vl1lt. JI I.; OontlO.
llflld<lo'I, M111.; tr1nd1>1ren11. M"
•nd Mro. WlllOn l.. JI U11", Phoe"'~' Mr. 1nd Mrs, J, W. Hilly.,., Sent•
Ysabe!l1, C•lil, Jlt<iu!e<n Miss. S•lur-
tl•'f, 10 iltM, SI. JOM !ht 811>1>!1 Ct1h·
.. nc Churcn. lnttrm~!. Good She..ht•d c~eter¥, 11111z MCN"tuerv, co,i1 Mtli&.
Dlreclort.
SAMPSON
I l!li•fl 51mD!.M. 13'5 S1n•1 Anll Avt .• CO•'• Mes•. 0111 ol Marn, OH. t.
~left ..... dl'!ll 11 lltll BrotCIW•Y Mortv41ry, Co<1l1 Mew.
SCHl\UD'f
F."rN rl Schmidt. A1e IS. ol 1JJ7 S.
Cypreu. s.ant1 An•. 0111 ol OH!~.
0ec .... t11r J. Service• 1>1:todl"11 11 8tll
Sl'Mll..,..,. Mort111..,, c1111 1 Me:11.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westclirr J\Jortu5ry
4%7 E. 17th St., Cost• l\1esa
646-4811 • BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Coron• del ltlar OR 3.9450
Costa l\-te1a ftO &-%U4 • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
llt Broadway, Costa l\fesl
LI 1-3433 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huntington Valley
Mortuary
litll Beach Blvd.
llunilngton Beach
m.m1 • PACIFIC \1EW
MEMORIAL PARK e Mortu•rr
ope
asot Pacific Vltw Drf'·e
Newport ll<8dl, Cal~oralo
M4.%711 • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
IJOM&
':Ill Bolu A''e.
Westminster m.:su • SHEFFER MORTIJARY
l.Apllo Bu<b <IM-11131
Su Onl'"lt 4UIOI • S.llJTIJS' MORTUARY
617 l\lal1 St.
llunlln gion Btar-
511W21
OC Nurs e,
Pair Held
In Fraud
LOS ANGELES (AP)
Three persons, including a
nurse from Orange, have been
ordered to trial on charges in-
volving a "catalytic·cellular
the rapy'' treatment which
state and federal h e a I t h
autho rities say has no medica l
Yalue.
The th ree are Wendell G.
Jlendricks, 55, Sa n Diego
osteopath ; the ReY. Kenneth
\V. Knox, presiden t of the
Universal Life Re search Foun·
dation ol San Bernardino. and
Mrs. Patricia Arbatch. 69, of
Orange, a retired nurse.
Municipal Cou rt J u d g e
Patrick T. PlcCorm ick of
Glendale ordered them ar·
raigned in Superior Court Dec.
16. He made the ruling Tues-
day after a f ive -da y
pre liminary hearing.
Each defendant is charged
with attempted grand then.
practicing medicine without a
liceose and conspiring to do
both. Hendricks' m e d ic a I
license reportedly has been
revoked,
SOS to Conve ne
ORANGE -Orange Coun-
ty's Stamp Out Smog (SOS)
organization meets Friday at
7:30 p.m. in the basement of
the Union Bank Building here.
The meeting is open to anyone
interested in air pollution, an
SOS spokesman said.
·Villa Park
Ma yor Eyes
Board Seat
By TOM BARLEY
01 1M Olllr l"llOI 51111
Department Iii, 1 general trial William L. f\1urray.
bench. Department 11, gen er a II
SANTA ANA _ Most of Or-Judge Harmon G. Scoville of trial-crimblal panel, Robert
Weslmlnster moves from Gardner. I ange County's 21 Superior al domestic rtlations to gener Department 12, g e n e r a I Court judges will find them· trial from January lO June trial-mental health, H.
selves Jn untamiliar court· and takes over from JUc!ge Walter Steiner.
rooms Jan. 5 whel\ Judge Wil· Corfman in la w and motion for Dep.m'rnent 13, gen e r a J
llam Speirs or Newport Beach the second hatr of the coo rt trial, flerbert s. H.erlands. takes over as presiding judge. r
J dg S · ed th yea· Department 14, general u e pe1rs announc e Judge Speirs' postings are: 1r· 1 w·u· s Lee massive reshuffle 1· ust one Depa One · 1a , J 1am • • rtment , presiding month before he moves into judge, William Speirs. Department 15, I e n e Ta l
the executive chambers to ~ trial-criminal panel, Kenneth
Yacated by J udge Samuel ~partment Two, lawrf and Williams.
Dreizen. The Neowport Beach mot.ion, Robert L. Co man Department 16. ~n e r a 1 . . th , (January through June) and lrt'al, Judge H n G . 1urist was e co u rt !I H G •-•11 (J I unanimous choice last month armon · ~vyi e u Y SCoville (January th r o u g b
th d . . 1· . b through December). June) and n-~ L. "-~-lor e a m1n1stra ive JO • i WLICl • VJt 1111-· Department Three, general (July thr ... ,..., December ). Among those warming. new · I bat Ra d """" In tr1 a ·pro e, ymon Department 17, "e neral benches lhe coming year Th e ompson. triak ri minal panel, Byron will be Judge Robert Gardner VILLA PARK -Villa Park of Newport Beach, swilched Department Four, domestic K. McMillan:
WORLD LEADER IN RECREATION
CO ... IUMt " OMllON/•lllu,.twte .. COllO'OlllAflO"
POOL TABLES AT
FRO M $275 AND UP
OPIN
.. UljOAYS
Cfiuc£6
0
COMI IN
AND Sii
ITORI
DISPLAY
LAY·A-WAY NOW FOR CHRISTMAS
AT COSTA MESA 'S EXCLUSIVE
BRUNSWICK DEALER . . . . . Mayor James T. Workman is from presiding ~udge or the relation!, Claude M. Owens Department 13, g ene ra 1
loday campaigning for the criminal calendar and Grand (January through Ma r ch), tr i a I -se t t I ement con·
Fourth District scat on the Jury liaison to Department 11• Bruce W. Sumne r (J u I y fer e nc es-settlement con-
Orange County Board of a genera I tdal-criminal through fle<ember). The r ere n c e s• Lesier Vanli1 /?'.UC I •, BOWLING & BILLIARDS Supervisors <ind it appears panel court and Judge Bruce depa rtmen t is. open for the Tatenhove. LIL k ~
unlikely that he will be op!. Sumner of Laguna Beach. period April.June. Department 19, g en e r a I 2750 HARBOR BLVD. AT ADAMS
posed by incumbent \Viltiam from presid ing judge of the Department Five, criminal lrial~riminal panel, Howard In Colles. • Center ..._ COSTA MESA _ 540-7303
1-Jirstein. juvenile court to a two-fold calendar-grand jury, James F .. -~C~. ~C~a~m~e:ro~n:· ______ _!!,,===='=================:::: Hlrslein, current chairman 1970 assignment_ in domestic Judge. I·
of the board, ronfirmed that relations from January to Department Six, open. (Pcn-
"it is verj likely" that he will April and July to December ding appoinlmenl of a ne w
not ru n for office In 1970. The and in the Fullerton branch of judge).
veteran supervisor is com-th rt al tri'al k hi h . fr e cou on gener wor Department Seven, general pleting s 16t year in ° ice. from January to July. trial-settlement conferences, Workman, 61, made his an-nouncement Tuesday shortly Judge Robert L. Corfman of Raymond F. Vincent,
be fore he discussed the matter Newport Beach is one of the Department Eight, general
with Hirstein. few judges to retain his cur· trial-settlement conferences,
The public relations ex-rent spot -the law and mo-Charles A. Bauer.
ecutive is currently chainnan lion department. But he only Department Nine, open.
~oufh Coast '1ua
86 STORES ...
~ALL IN SHELTERED COMFORT
of Orange County's Local slays in Department Twc> until Department 10, g e n e r a 1
Agency F 0 rm at i 0 n Com·,_J_u_l~y_1_w_h_e_n_h_e_mo_v_es __ 1o __ tr_ia1_-cr __ ,·m_ln_a_l-<nrnm __ · _·_•_I ~pan_e_I~, --------~-------.,-----------------mission (LAFC) and is a
member of the boa rd of U1e l r-;::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::::;~~~~~~~"'."~~~~~~~~~~~~~::::;;;;--:::-1 Ofange'Cou n ty Sanitalionl j _,.._
District. ---workman's am,ounc.ment COMMUNITY EVENTS CAUFORNIA
,,.,.as re l eased by his FOUR FEDERAL
employers, Clea ry, Hitt and Do your "TH ING " fo, U1tit1d Fund. It'• MEET ANN I USTAMANTI SAVINGS .
Company of Santa Anahbut the on1 Timi of the v••r wh1n you c;11t MAXIMUM ;·s;++;;; organization director C. i p Cleary stressed that the firm h1lp !h<111 1111 fortun1l1. 22 loc1I ,9,".
will not handle Workman's (i1J r1I-,. on United f unds for iupport, yo!Jr INTEREST
election campaign. •u~port.
Expansion
Move OK'd
SANT A ANA -Orange
County superv isors ha" e
agreed to ex pand the head-
quarters of the H ar b.o r
Distri ct at J901 Bayside Drive
in Nev.•port Beach.
It \\'as agreetl that ex·
pansioo would be necessary to
house additional staff and
facilities needed as a result of
the board's recent decision to
convert the district into an
Orange County Parks. Recrea-
tion and Harbor District.
A date ha!'i not yet been se t
by the board for acceptance of
bids on the expansion. It was
noted that construction costs
will be drawn from the
di strict's funds of $85,000
devoted to that purpose.
:'.;,'.'"' •• , •• '"' hw~•·v b.ii. PLANS AT
"Gal of tho Month" CALIFORNIA
lt tltetl '" Na•lher" Cali!o..,11, A~" Bu~t1m1111e
•nd Husb.tnd, F••nk own W.t lr hom. Willl •
~ l'I Gtr!Mlt (;•o"''· Join"" bv their lhr~~
Children, lhty ""'10'1' ou!door •ctivllles ,...,. •oo-
(lt lly llshln!I.
' FEDERAL """ lo.al bttn wllh Callfoml• Fldtrel !Or n1n1 yNr$ I nd II tires....ir., .....
•i•lanl Slvl'IO~ ~1rtmenl Heed. SIV
"I-Hiio" ind '" '"°"'~' prl11 wln• n1"D 1ml!1.
Party Cliiefs Okay
Furid T cictics Sivitcli
ANAHELV! -Orange Coun·
ly central committee:s o( three
Political parties have joined
hands in a campaign to S\\'itch
fund raising emphasis fro m
$100-a-plate dinners and coslly
cocktail parties to the dime-
<1nd-Oollar contributions nf the
a\'erage \'Oler.
Christened the ''4-C Plan"
(Ci tizens' Contributions 1 o
Central Committees), the pro-
posal has the backing of c~n
ty headquarters of l h e
Re publican. Democratic and
American J ndep e nd ~nt
parties. Chaired by Joseph E.
Irvine, the fund-raising group
plans to accept contributions
at 191 branc~ ol 1~ county
ban ks.
The plan "broadens the base
ror fund raising so the par.t ie"'
will not have to tot~lly rel y on
the large dooon as in the
past," lrvine said. And ll will,
he added, "provide an op-
portunity ftlr well qualified
candidates to enter various
races with the backing of
funds not previously available
because of the lack of an
organized approach
gathering them."
PoUtical contributions raised
by the group ·wilt be used by
the central committees to help
niain tain offices, su pport can· -
didates for election and CQn·
\·ey party activities and goals
to supporte rs, Irvine said.
lrvioe sai d inte rested county
rcsidenls should call the cen·
tral committee of their choice
llnd ask for the "4C'' brochure
11·hich contains the necessary
sign-up card.
The completed card i>hould
indicate the amount or the
monthly pa}•ment 1\•hich the
party supporter \1•ishes to
donate . H i ;o; auttlOrizatlon
1>ermits the p11rty lo issue a
draft that \\!ill be h:inored by
his bank and debilcd to his ac-
count in exactl.v the same
manner as any other busincs.-;
transaction.
A Cflnlributor l'an cancel the
agreement al any lime. lrvine
stressed. by notifying the cen-
tral committee of his in-~
tentions. j
BIBLE THOUG llTS
s •••• 1 li11111•r•llty ft t.ond •l'l'lfted b., the
l ·bl1, Rom. 1;14.)2, H•b. ll :-t. God
1. The Guaranteed Growth Plan.
Deposit Sl ,000 or more for 3. 4 or 5 yea rs. For each
year all your principal and interest remain, we'll guar-
antee a 5.25~'0 annual rate, compounded daily. It adds up
to 5.39~:. a yea r. ""'\
2. The Guaranteed Income Plan.
Open an account of $1,000 or more for 36 to 60 months.
We'll guarantee you a 5.25% annu al rate, compounded
daily, with in terest paid out to you each qua rter.
111 case ol hardship or emergency, you can withdraw at any
lime \v1:h fu!l 1nteres1 paid to the end of the previous quarter.
3o The Bonus Plan.
Earn a bon us of 1/4 c:.:. a year VJhen yol1r account is held
lo 3-year maturity. This is in addition to the regular S~o
current annual rate. Regular interest is compoun ded
dally and mny be credited quarterly for extra earnings.
Withdrawals before maturity earn al the regular r assbook
rale. Any amount of $1 ,000 or more opens and ma intains
your bonus account. All funds held lo maturity earn an
effective annual rate of 5.25°k .
4. The Basic Plan .
The most flexible plan. You can invest any amount of
money and wilhdraw it whenever you wish. If you leave
all you r money an d interest in your account for a year at
our current 5~·:. annual rate witlllnlerest compounded
daily, you 'll receive an annual yield of 5.13°/o. You earn
<., inlerest from the day you deposil your money 'tit the day
you wilhdraw II. Plus ... the money you deposit by the
10th of any monlh ei'lrns interest from the 1st. when It
remains until quarler's end.
lt---!"'''-'OJiE IMtLl"'-'ll< l!\t..OW'-1H------be 11T~•I comp1nio111, for lif1, i" m1r•
ri191, lnl1rcour11, euhid1 of w1dlo(~, i1t
SIN: No fo•nic1le• or 1duh111r thtll e"•
111 He'"'"' /I Car. 6:•1 Ho1t1011•111IH"
;, 1n 1ilo,..in1bl1,1in, ll1vi1:c1" 11-117,
~om. l ;27·2t, I l ill'I, 1:10, G t n. 19 :•-t I, Jud911 19:72 -211.
N1w1p1p1n fod1y teitotf i"1mOr1lily of lh1 bod'r' en 1v1ry hind
ind i• l'l'lf n iv1 1u1mbli1u ("lov1" i11,, 11wd:1 9•!h1ri1191, rotk
n1utic ctowds, 1lc.); 10 n1uch 10 th1t w1 ••• remind 1d ol Er.
32:6, 21-21, i nd Gtft, 6:S. How lon9 c•n God !ol1r1 t1 111,ll
wid11pr11d imfnor1lity •• he '''' tll10119houl lht world] Poi•
1ibly th• 111d of tin1e io n11r; CfllTA INLY Jucl9"''"' of ll't•nv
immor1I 01111 ii n11r. for 1t11ny of them di1 ~.a., 111d 90 lo
tll•l• et11n1I d11tiny UNPREPARED. IG1!. 6:7.1 1.
Our n1tion, Ot ANY n.-tio n, i1 8od1111d to dtt•Y 1111110 ;1 C•'I
ln1tl U i11 ifl pwbli' '" intolr••"'' for fl19r•lll ,.,o!•t:on of '"1n•
c>pl•1 of d1cencr. Let 111 m•kt 1 fi~t lor COMMO N DECENCY
in '"''Y ••111111 of lilt , in ou1 1"""111 1<l•,.;li11, !t 0111 publi,
b1h1wior, 111 our pol1llc,I i nd VOTJNG Hf1, '" ow• SHOPPING
1011•1, :11 •ht pl1c11 of AMUSEMENT w1 p1tron;11 ; lit "' pwl
1"111111• for d1c111cy wh1re it will COUNT .-t t •••v <1ppo1 l1111ity.
D!11rth of Ch•i1t, 211 W. W1l1011 SI., C~11•1 lo',11•, C ,, ti6~1.
NATION'S LARGEST FED£RAL
•'
COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300
CllFFOAD M. WESOOAF, VICE PRESIDENT & MANAGER
J
j
·t;osia Mesa · Toda~'s Fina) --
N. t'. Stocks
VO[. 62, NO. 290, 4 SECTIONS, 50 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY, DECEMBER -4, 1969 TEN CENTS
' .
Council Splits; M~sa Blufftop· ~ei~ne . Fails
.\ maneuver by Costa f\.lesa ~ome
0'1Vl'ltrs to change zoning on adjacent in-
dustrial land has gene aground, leading
to an entirely new study of blufHop pr~
perty which may one day overlook a
marina.
The Costa....M"esa City Council failed to
rezone the in'ifustrial land to single fainlly
home use Tuesdi:ty night on a 2 to 2 vote,
based on a theory of original property
rights versus long-range land values.
The Marina Highlands Homeowners
Association enthusiastically supported the
rezoning on bol"i sides of Valley Road,
ranging 400 feel south from the center
lini! ol Victoria Srteet.
All four owners of the land invol~ed,
however, asked that the property remain
;,s designated, since it is used by a
garbage disposal service, a construction
company, and fishing rod plant.
Councilman Willard T. Jordan moved
for denial of the rezoning after hearing
iirgwnents for and against it, chiding the
homeowners somewhat for their &elf-in·
tereste<i role!.
He pointed out that it seems strange,
but is perfectly legal in California, for
people other than property owners lo re·
qi1Ml a zone cba,ige on certain land.
"But three-fourths of the ov.1ners don't
want a change." ~observed.
Councilman William L. St. Clair hap.
~-r11-J(',.
cw~' !:>-r "' er.. -ri<:c.e
~I> "Bo!>f')-r" 'l'f'R..I'\ \)""'
l>E<:... , , -;t?.
Tate Susp_ects to fight
Extradition for Trial
Newport Yuletide
Harbor Parade
Sails on Dec. 19
h~C!Kll\~EY. Tex. ·(AP) -Charles D.
W1lts9n's lawyer indicat~d today .tbi:it he
will .ask psychiatric examination for the
bearded former football player, v.•ho · is
charaed in one of the California murders
at the home of actress Sharon Tate.
"I personally have some serious doubts
about his mental state," said the l<iwyer,
Bill Boyd of ~fcKinney.
Boyd, a former' district and county al·
torney, also said his client \viii fight ex·
tradition. Two Los Angeles detectives
who have come here to take him into
custody then started back home .
Watson, 24. surrendered Sunday on
learning California authorities held a
warrant for his arrest. He is charged
with murder in the slaying or Steven
Parent, a caretaker who was killed along
with f\.1iss Tate and three olher persons
last Aug. 9.
Another suspect in the case, Linda
I,,ouise Kasablan, 20. one of three persons
facir\g mut'der charges in the slaying oC
actress Sharon Tate and four others. was
returned to Los Angeles \Vednesday night
from Concord, N.H.
fl.trs. Kasabian was whisked off a plane
from Boston into an unmarked police car
\l.'hich sped away immediately. Newsmen
"'·ere not allowed to question her.
She v.·ori a brown polo coat with collar
turned up and held the collar tightly
'
Orange Coast
Weather
'Ve'JI have a little bit of every-
thing Friday -sunny S:Jties, early
morning clouds and gusty north-
east wind' -while the tempera·
ure res s 1n
INSIDE TODAY
Nez:t year tJ1e govern.ntcnt
will come to help !11 J?CrtllU,
but this Christmas it'1 t111t1ru
ma11 jor himself in cllecklna out
the dangers of new toys. Page
10. .
C1Hf9ml1 I ClffflnH It-IF
(tfftl(• " C""'RN I
09..rtl "'111:" 14
D!wrwt U ........... , ... I ................ " ''°"""'' »·n "''""" " """' Ufllftn n Nl•ll"'• I MlrtllH Lltl!ltlf 1f Mfttlltll ,.
against her face . She carried a brown
.paper bag. . ,
In Mobile, Ala. a Circuit Court hearing
\v.a! set for today on a motion ·seeking tfie
bond release of the third person charged
in the case.
,La\\'}'ers for Patricia Krenwinkel, 22.
moved for a writ of habeas corpus
Wednesday.
~fiss Krenwinkel did not appear in
court for filing of the writ, which a]sQ
challenged the warrant under which she
is held.
fl.fi ss Kren\\·inkers attorney. M. A.
Marsal, has said she would fight ex·
tradition. He contended that the fugitive
·warrant was (aulty on several grounds,
including one that it failed lo comply with
Alabama law.
More Huge Waves
Racing T owa,rd,
Hawaiian Isles
HONOLULU (UPl)-Sea swells· up to
40 feet driven by gale force winds todiy
raced toward the Hawaiian Islands. The
weather bureau warned of another on·
slaught of dang¢.rous surf.
The bureau In a 'sl?!Cial bulletin Issued
Wedne!day night said the hiah waves
were backed by a wind from the nortb.
west at I~ to 25 miles per hour, tending
to drive the surl. It urged that tvery precaution be
be taken in preparation ror "this dan·
gerous £ituation.'
. Newport Beach's. traditional Floati~g
Ch:fistmas Tree and Boat Parade w>II run
from Dec. 19 through 23 with scores or dec~!ated boati expected to tour lhe bay
each-rJght. .
The parade will begin each e\'ening at
the Balboa Island ferry l&.'lding at 6:30
p.m. After tonring the fring~s of Newport
Harbor, the boats will conclude the pro-
cession each evening at 9: IS p.m.
An average of SO boats participated in
the procession each even ing last year .
Over the weekends more yachtsmen join-
ed the parade, sv;elling the ranks up to
JOO on several evenings.
No entry fees or blanks are necessary,
Jaek Barnett. manager of the Newport
Harbor Chamber of Commerce,. ex-
plained .
Participants need only show up at the
!erry landir& to join in the procession.
Trophies will .be awarded to winners in
several divisions.
Winners are announced b e f o r e
Christmas. 'but thtt .awards will be given
out at the Chamber's annual installation
dinner Jn Janµary.
Co-sponsors of the annual event are the
Chamber and the Newport Beach City
Employe's Assx:iation.
Awards will be presented in boat
classUlcalions of po"''er or sail up to 20
feet; from 21 to 40 feet, and 41 feet and
over.
Motorist Tells
Mesa Kidnaping
The giant waves, some as high as 50
feet, began Monday nigh!, forcing more Held at knifepoint by a teenager who
than 1,000 residents along northern hopped Into his car at a Costa fl.1esa tn-
sharu or the islanda: to flee their homes. terseetion, a motorist was forced to dri\'e
""Two j)mOns were--mi!51nJ,I. Udl"Ul'f\,an the. sullen ~dnaper to tA:mg Beach
died Of a neart attact"1lftote.-r~hr!'elmpi!.111,..,•..!l1lllr1 -,w""'ed"n'"i!d""a'f""n"1gh"""t MRl'then rel .
nigh~long rescue operations, and public Alfred A. Duplessi11, 28, of 2li52 Santa
officials estimated . property dama ge at Ana Ave .• was never harmed during the
more than Sl million throu1hout the kidnap-assaull case. but told police the
6tat1. abdlfCtor was txtremely umociable.
The new 5'torm. 1.100 miles away, ~ orncer 'Dlclf ~FranC!iSCO s I Id
er11.td winds up to 69 mileJ an hour and J)Jpltssls told of lrylng to mat;e con·
prod\K"lf massive sea swells. But the versatlon wt'th the. youth after he got in at
weatfltr bureau said it was not as JlO'>''• 7 p.m. on Fairview Road at Wllllon
ttful as the Monday storm which h. r 1 h bl d
lau..,.htd the Initial rampaa• of Surf. Street, fla• 1ng a our· nc a e. '"" .,.. "Shul up," he was told .
The victim said hi11 young abductor
, ordered him to stop at Broadway and
Cherry Avenue near downtown Long
Beach, aot out of the car and disappeared
Into the· ntaht.
Stwlc llfarlcet
NEW YORK (AP) -Stock markt1 •
prices remained broadly lower In late
afl.emoon trading today, but conUnued to
recover 11ome of th~lr sharp looses of
earlier iD lhe day. (See quotalions, Pages
:z;.23).
f
Duples>I• wtnt to the near)>y Long
Btach Police Department and related
what haPJiened, then followed th111t up
"''Ith a report to Costa Mesa authorities.
plly joined on that side, oUertng a second
lo the motion for denial, but Mayor Alvin
L. Pinkley atnd Counc~man Geor1e A.
Tucker chose the e~act opposite sWl<f.
"We should Joek farther than the end or
our nose," said Tucker. launching into an
.analysis. 'of fQtur11 development tn the
area. compared to a who-was·lhere-first?
outlook.
He sua~ted holdln&· the matter for
more study.
"Surprislllgiy, I agree w1th about 73
percent or wt)at YO;U just. ~d, George;"
comment~ Miyor · flnkley, Y.'ho. rarely
,,ides with Tucker on .anything. ·
Vice Mayol-Robert M. Wil5'.lfl 'was at-
tending a California League ot.Cit'ies con·
_fe~ence ii'\ San Dieg9., Thus thi ~ote reT
mafned deadlocked.
Jan:lan· then suggest¢. a thorough re-
.study of the entire westside area; since
zoning is geperally spotty, *-1uding
, ' . ~.-' I
2 Panthers
res!dentlal, lndustrlal and commercial
. designations.
Piapning Direc .or William L. Dunn 1aid
h( w'ould p"1'er four months for a study
when questioned by the council, since his
!taff is currently wind ing up two other
sucll. p~jects.
Councilmen told him to try 90 day~ and a~k,'for more if needed , then unan~ously
approved the review of the are11 in terms
Of future use ·and development lrends.
Slain
·Gunfight · Erupts at Party's Stronghold
CHICAGO CUPll -A lS.mlnutt sun·
fight eruPted · today when state's at-
tornCy•s police. entered a Black Panther
stronghold to search for weapons. Two
Black Panthers ¥.'ere killed and -four
\Vounded.
The dead included Fred Hampton.
about 22, Illinois chairman of the Black
Panther party.
Two policemen were wounded in the
battle, which broke out •when the
authorities entered.;1n apartment near
Bta&'Panther headquarters on Lhe
outskirts of Chicago's West Side sf.id row.
Fourteen men made up the unit that
took part in the early morninl rilid . 'they
-had a:warraqt signed by Judge Robert
Collins, according lo a spokesmary [or the
S~te's Attorriey'J. Office, obtained after
sawed~({ shotguns ~ other illegal
\lo'e•Plfll. were . ~po~ to lit i~ UJe
apartment. .
1 When the authorities l d e n t I f l e d
them.elves, the spokesmen 11aid, voices
on the .9Ute.r tjde ol the door ~la,t,askirJ&
•'Who?'' "'Who?" Then, he said, the door
y,·avopened and "eight ·or more ln-
di«duals began flrtng wit?"·carbines,
shotguns and handguns."
The apartment, according to the
spokesman, belonged to a ·Fred Johnson,
an alias used by Hampton. In it police
said they found IZ shotguns, eight pistols
and 5,000 rounds of ammunition. He said
Hampton was felled after he had £hot at
lhe authorities wlth a .45 automatic and a
£hotgun .
The other dead mar. was Identified as
1\Iark Clark, 22, of 'Peoria, Ill. There had·
been reports earlier this year that the
Panthers had auemrttd to organize
yolll\g .people in tha dowNl.Jte com-
munity.
Four pe'rsons wen taken-inter custody
after the battle, including a wom~ Iden~
tlfled as Deborah Jolinson. 11, Hid to be
abc;lut eight·mont~ Pft:pa11L
Before !lit lS.'1ti!IUio·t111' 1"tlle :..,.....
mol-e thai\ So p.:>lktmen iiad been ca1lf:d
to the scene, near where ri0Un1 had oc-
curred twO yean· ago. They brou.a:ht
.mael)lne -and tear au ·but dld not i*tbim. ·i·· '
Resident of Back Bay
Opposes Annex to Mesa
Despite a petition .carrying slsnature1
of a majority of homeowners. ll)VOlved.
not -everyo~ in ,Coata. M~'• proposed
Back Bay Annei:ation Number One area
is in favor, according to.one of.tMJn. ·
B • .' DQuglas slwtelle, o! 26611 Sania Ana
Ave .• told the City Council Monday that
he is opposed to joining the city and no
valid arguments have been offered by the
city yet. ·
"Some o( us would like to point out
the re will be a tax increase," explained
Sav.1elle, who said the whole issue has
caused hard feeling among some long-
time neighborhood friends.
U.S. Education Aide
Speaks at Cd'f High
Dr. Paul F." Lawrence, regional· assist·
ant commissioner of the U.S. Office of
Education, will speak at CorOna del Mar
I-Ugh Sch()!)l .tonight, Dec. 4, ,on public
school finance. ·
The public is invited to join teachers in
hearing Or. Lawrence •t his 7 o'clock
talk irt the Little Theater. He is one
speaker in ·a series on school finance
arranged by Newport • Mesa Unified
School pisbict.
· •·r· cam·e away very unsatlsfJed." he
added, .conc~rnlng his City Council ap..
pearance and subsequent dillcus1lon of
the aMexatlon matttr. -
Sawtelle told eounc:llmie.n that the voter•
1ffected were led · to believe If they did
not annex to Costa M~. 'Newport Beaci
·•·ould endicle their unincorporated area .
"Petition CfllTlet1'0Hid we had to go
to one or the other," he explained, noting
that the third alternative is ·to do neither.
"I'm certain there was nothing irregu·
Jar about the annexaUon, just a lack· of
infonnation," he. uid.
Several public meetin~s were held on
the matter, c It y officials pointed out
Tuesday, but Sawtelle was unable to at-
tend due to hi! working hours and ap-
parently so were other's.
City co\Jncllmen set Feb. 5 as the elec·
tion date for the annexaUon, Which was
approved !art June by the Local Agen·
cies Formation Commission.
Stewardesse~ to Stri~e
NEW YORK fUPI) -The Transport
Workers Union aMOUnced Wednesday
5tewsrdesses and pursers wouta strike
Northwest Airlines Saturday.
The union advised the Defense Depart~
ment to make other arrangements for
operating NOrthwest planes. COMected
with the. milillrY air command.
5 Percent Raise
For O.lifo)·nia
Employes Aske.d
SACRAMENTO (AP) -The State
Personnel Beard proposed a five percent
across,the-board pay hike for the state's
103,000 fuiltime civil servants today.
Tb! increase would cost $8S.3 million.
This compar~ with boosts ranging
from · six percent tO %0 percent and total·
ing $148.million.sought by the California
·state · EmploYes A s s·o c I a t ion which
represerils most of the workers.
Th~ ·hliard; in sending its final recom·
mendations lo Gov. Reagan. modified its
earlier tentative proposal that there be a
JO perooiL.ceillng on the amount of raises
for any one ci.tegory: · · · ·
The hikes proposed by the board range
from dle general five percent up to IZ1h
percent !or employes in .classes ~'in which
salar; problem s are acute ."
The board said those higher increa ses
••are necessary to match salilries paid for
similar work in private Industry and
other public jurisdictions ."
A CSEA spokesman said the group wa!
disappointed with the recommendations.
He said it was "insufficient to meet the
needs of state employes ••• It's a bad
6ituatlon."
For the firlll lime this year, the ·csEA
convention voted to drop its no-strike
pledge. However, that actiori still is'pen·
ding ratification ·and there is no legal
framework pennltting any strike by state
public employes.
.. -' • ·~·.. • • DAILYPl&.OTll .. PiiMI . -. . . ., . . .
TRESl·HANDS BELONG TO .. AN'IMBllER WHO-ALSO WAS A DRIVER -SEE PAGE 12
•
~Z OAllY PllOT c
l{indergarteii fo . C:hange to Single
By THOMAS FORT\JNE
Of ...... .,,,, ......
'lllt Newport.M... Vnllled School
District will s1vltch from two-a-day
kindergarten sessions 10 long er single
~ssions at the start or the second
·:semester Feb. 2.
· • Students then v.•ill spend three hours
each day in the <'lassroom instead of the
present two and one-hair hours .
·Since teachers will teach only one class
per day instead of two, half the Ide·
dtrprten ,atudenu will have a .c::11rterent
teacbtr. About lXI kindergarten students
amon1 thole atlenciin& ttlJ ~hoot
district'& u eltm'1tary school& will He
awitched to another Khoo!.
0 Tbe school prlnctp1ls will be asked to
\\'O!'k carefully selecting the atudents that
are most mature and adaptable as the
ones to have a different teacher," Supt.
\Yilliam L. Cunningham said.
He told school board members this
\1 eek new slate legislation will penalize
school districts not on single klnde.rgarten-proved the change to single seuion. that "the public relatk>ns aspect of the
&ession an amourit about equlva1~ot to the • "We believe it has significant ad· changeqve1· will be moet slgnific•nt."
adqjtlon.111 ~s~. , • _.. \Rntage to the child," Or. Cunningham The school district had three-hour,
·iln a nUts~ell, there ~ill be no signifi-' said. He indicated that with the ad· single·session kindergarlen last year , but
cant difference between stn&le and double dll ional half hoot kindergarten teachers had to""'s~·i1ch back to double sessions this
se~slon in cost," he said. C'OUld do more in reading readiness. ) t::lr because of the cost.
He said nlost kindergarten t~achers Class 5izes \viii have to be a little ~1nce one teacher leaches both 2\J-hour
favor the single session for Its educa-larger. Cunningham said. closer to the 3l i.cssions in the classroom each day. twice
lional value but many principals do not ~tudents per teacher state maximu1n as m.any teacher~ must be employed for
agree with his recommendation !or a th::in the present 25 per class loading. the single sessio.'l program. costing the
mid-year s....,•itch over. Hoard President ~1rs. f\1arian Bergeson , :;chool district twice as much in wages.,
\Vithout dissc~ll. board members ap-said .5hc agreed wilh Dr. Cunningham Assistant Supt. for Personnel Kevin
\\'heeler said he will be&in rlaht awa y
recruitlnc klodera:arten teacher• for the
seccnd 1emester.
Teachers who taught kindergarten last
year and thea were moved into the
primary grades this fall lYhen the
number of kindergarten openings were
halved wi ll remain 'A'il.h their present
classes the rest al the year, Cunningham
said. They will be given first opportunity
to take kindergarten openings subsequent
years.
Schaol Trustees Delay Servi~ Slated
For Electrocuted
Mesa Youth, 14 Decision . on Bond S.ale
-Newport-1'-fesa school trustees have
postponed until Dec. 16 a decision on
whether to go through the motions of
lrying to sell school bonds at a five per·
cent interest rate.
Board members this "'eek questioned
Supt. \Villiam Cunningham's recom·
mendation they prove the point they can't
ticll Lhe bonds at five percent, before
going to the vote rs Feb. JO with a reque st
to increase the pennis.sible interest rate
to seven pecent.
The futility of a l.ry at five perctnt
seems .50 certain that board membet:
Thomas C. Casey wond.ered whether lt
was worth it to spend about $100 for legal
advertisement for bids.
Dr. Cunningham had recommended
bids be asked on $4 .5 million sale of
bonds Jan. 21 so no one can say "You
don 't really know you can't sell them ;;t
five percent" when v"6ters are asked to
approve an interest rate increase lo
seven percent on Feb. 10.
The schools sUperintendent tried a
private bond placement but told the
board he had no luck in talking to local
bankers and developers.
Requiem mass has · been scheduled
Saturday ror a Costa Mesa boy elec-
trocuted Tuesday by 66,000 volts as he
climbed .a structure in an electrical
plant.
The rites for Martin E. Rutan. 14. of
2257 Avalon St .. will be at 10 a.m. in SL
John the Baptist Catholic Church, with
Interment in Good Shepherd Cemetery ,
.. f Huntington Beach.
' The boy died instanlly in the accident
Garden Gro~e ~on't Okay
Valley· Students ~ransf er
:/. Tuesday at the Southern California
Edison Company SU.bstation on Fariview
Road and \Vilson Street, dropping 25 feet
to .the ground.
Survivors include his mother. ~1rs.
Evonne J. Rutan, of the home address,
his rather, Robert Rutan, of Burbank,
sisters Laurel and Robin, of the home,
Marcia Rutan, of Providence, R. I.. and
?.frs. Judith Marriott, Golden, Colo.:
brothers ruchard, Adamsville, R.I., and
Donald, Brockton, Mass., plus his
maternal and paternal grandparents.
Two Foqntain Valley High School
students who were taken from their
classes by their parents because of alleg-
ed drug abuse by other students, have.
been turned away by the Garden Grove
Local Candidates
Will Be Filing
Finance Reports
Just. like their t>ig league counterparts
in Sacramento pd Wa.!ihinP>n. clty and
county candidates 'for electoral dtices
will soon issue. financial statement.\ with
their filing papers. ."".
Cos la Meaa .City Oounoilman George A,
Tucker 'proj>oleij il 1lwi!'1/ -rtmning
into a wall of oppositlon -before City
Attorney Roy June explained .5uch
legislation U now on Ule way.
June said the: City Attorneys' Assreia~
tjon is currently 1tudying the proposed
. law on certain types of income lo
determine ju11t how flt down into the
ranks of public servants it !hould apply.
They hope to decide in the nell three
\\'ttks.
l\tenlioning in stances of conf1ict-Of-in·
t6est and tarnished political images in
the nalional news, Tucker proposed doing
the same at city and county levels.
··11 a citizen has a right to know for
them. he has a right to know for all ,"
Tucker ob5Crved.
Councilman William L. SI. Clair was
against Tucker's idea.
"\\'hen you talk aboul planning corn·
missioners. sanitation district directors
who are appointed, :you're talking about
"'·age earners." he snapped.
Tucker explained he meant only elected
oificlals.
•·1 think you're a dreamer," St. Cl.air
continued. "On the surface, it looks good.
but you're limiting the men who would
run.··
St. Clair said a person's financial mat-
ters are o( na concern to any other
citizen undEI" such circumstances as long
as his office poses no conflict of interest.
Jun'e said the proposed state law on
reporting income begins at $10,000 in cor·
porate interests.
DAllY PllO I
QUM05 COA•r PU•l 1Nt1H• COMll'AH'f
tl•\•rl N. W•14
Prulftfll 9"' hbtllfln
J1tlr •. C11rlw
V1ot Pr•lltill • .,. OIM!'tc M ...... r
1~.,,.., ~ •• .,a ....
n•"'•• A.. M,,,,._;" ~"""'9«•1w
Unified School District.
James Grirfith, welfare and attendance
officer ,;i.t the Garden Grove district, said
Kathleen. 17, and Candace, 15, Aleridge,
will not become part or that school
system "because there are no ex-
tenuating circumstances to justify it.·•
''The district transfer committee held a
tong meeting on that subject last Monday
and decided that it iJ not within current
·Policy to accept the students for that ...
_reason," he explaine~. .
"Even if parents asked the school
district to move their children from one
of oor achools to another over alleged
drug abuse. we could not do it. So it
would be· \'t?J difficult lo justify moving
children from an entirely diRerent school
district into ours."
The glrls have been absent from
da:aes since early Novem~r when. Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Alerfdge wlthd"" them
from school, vowing never to return them
to Fountain Valley High, because o!
alleged drug abuses OD campll!.
Faced with truancy proceeding&. they
altempted to transfer their daughte rs ID
Blllsa Chica High School in the Garden
Grove district.
H. W. Standard , Griffith's counterpart
In the Huntlngt.on Beach Union H\gb
School District, said truancy reparts have
already reached the County Schools Of-
fice for further action.
Legally, both girls must remain in
classes until they ;ire 18 years old or
graduate from high school.
"The case is out of our hands now.''
1;ald Standard. "Whatever contacts are
made with the family now will have to
come through that agency ."
He indicated it is poss1ble the girls may
be made wards or the court through
juvenile proceedings to insu re their atten-
dance if they are not immediately return·
ed to school.
··u the pr'obation authority files a peti-
tion and it is upheld by a court decision.'
the girls would be expected to go to
school and would have to notify their pro-
bation officer on any day they might be
unable to attend."
The Aleridges, meanwhile. are con-
sidering the sale of their home and a
move to another school district.
Tuition Fee Loss Seen
CHICO {UPI) -A state college ofricial
llays the 19-eampus system would lose
Sl.IS million a year in tuition recs for oul-
of.state students if the voting age is
lowered to 18.
Baig Exter•ninated, D1·iuer Lives
l\1otorist Susan I-I. Gronemeyer. 21, of 15943 l\1yrtle
Ave., Tustin, is in fair condition today \vith multiple
lacerations and abrasion s after being pried from
her car Wednesday on San Diego Free\vay in Costa
crcte blocks from rear. John Norwood. 42, El
.Segundo. \Vho \Vas at the \Yheel of the truck and
his passenger. I-Jarry Mitchell, 29, Torrance., suf~
fcrcd less serious injuries.
• Mesa. Driving south , she rammed truckload of con-
Mesa Mother's
Ne -west l11fant
No Little Tot
A Costa J\1esa \voman g::ive birlh
\Vednesday night to a bouncing baby boy
who has jiggled the scales as the heavie~t
infant in the history of Orange County
Medical Center.
'I'he hea\'y1vcight champ ;i
pheyiomenal 14 pounds. 9 ounces -hasn't
been given his official name yet. but grin·
ning nurses have dubbed him Atlas.
Rocky or other such title s in the n1ean-
tlme.
The fourth son of Mr. and l\1rs. Alex
Stepan~ko, of 882 Towne St., IS 24 ' ~
inches long and is doing fine today. along
with his 3.1-year-old mother Louise .
Brothers Cregory. 13. Da nny. 12. Den·
n1s, 11, and sisters Linda, 9. and Krissy.
8. are 1vailing at home for the arrival of
their big baby brother, who was delivered
by Dr. John \Vambo.
"A new baby that big is a medical rari-
ty these da~'s," obscrverf Nurs111g
Supervisor Geraldine ~1cGeehan .
Burgla1· Takes S3 0
A burglar apparently .5larting out "'ilh
small stake~ looted a Costa Mesa youth's
bedroom of $30 in newspaper rou1c
re'ceipts \Vednesday, the victi1n told
pollce.
Steve Dardin. of 265 \Vakc Forest Road,
told officers tl1e money 11·as taken rron1 a
t•la y pot on his dresse r. 11·hile nothing else
11'as disturbed.
Rush Job on Dredging
Bay Ski Zone Planned
Orange County Harbor Distr ict officials
this week applied for hurried permission
by the Anny Corps of F:ngineers for
the restoration and dredging of Upper
Ne,vport Bay's wa ter ski zone, a job
\l'hich must be done by late January in
order to qualify for a federal .refund.
No problems 1verc expected from the
corps, and th e project is forecast to be·
gin within the next f.tw weeks.
·shellmaker. Inc .. of Ne"•port Beach,
"·hich originally dredged !he storm-{jam·
;igerf ski zone "'hen It 11·as created in
l[lij4. has entered a low bid of $154.800.
1\ contract has not yet been awarded
ho11·cvcr.
The ::.ki zone \\'as destroyed early th1"
yea r by record flooding "'hich brought
l'llll and desbris int o the BaC'k Bay.
The dredges will restore the ski zone
to its previous condition, but make no
ne1v developments of 1he estuary.
The estimated 250,000 cubic yards or
tailings will be scattered over the mouth
of Big Canyoll--<in Irvine Company land
-cast of Back Bay Drive.
To in~ure tha t the dumped sBt would
not clog rain runoff through the canyon,
district aides said. a channel would be
cut through it, leading to the bay.
The project must be com pleted by
.Jan. 26 in order for the district to be
reimbursed by the federal government
under the disaster relief program.
The ski zone was entirely clogged by
material deposited by last winter's
storn1s and has remained closed ever
since.
Back Bay Drive. !he main access road
to the ski zone by land, was heavily
damaged, too, but after a closure of sev-
eral months, city crews opened the road·
way and restored 1t to passable, but still
substandard. condition.
OCC Pep Group
Performs 011 TV
Gi\·e iem an 0, give 'em a C .••• give
'cm another C ..•• yay, OCC!
That's what Orange Coast fans can dtJ
Saturday while sitting before the tube as
the OCC yell and songleaders are
featured in halftime ceremonies shown
across the nation.
The 13 spirited CQ!legians will perform
during the San Francisco 49er.Chicaga
Bear game at Kezar Stadium, competing
with 15 other schools.
The OCC Pirate cheerleaders took firsl
place in Western States competition thi!
fall at Santa Barbara. winning the trip tc
San Francisco and a shot at another title.
Songleaders. include Marti IJ.ainey,
.Janet Coontz, Nancy Larson. Ka thj
Yurenka. ~1aureen Teeter, Cheryl Bruce,
and Carolyn Kato.
Yell leaders are Dave Ambrose, Bit
Landers, Debbie Trotter, Marti Kipper.
Geri Garrison and Sylvia McQuarrie.
Motorist Dies
Before /Accident
A Yorba Linda man who died ·at tht
wheel of this car shortly before he wai
Wwolved in a trafrtc accident was the vie
f tim of a heart attack. the Orange Count!
Coroner's Office ruled today.
The autopsy was held on the body o
Floyd Lafayette Nay, 49. who die1
\Vedncsday afternoon as he· was drivi OJ
near his home.
Witnesses told officers Nay slumpe1
O\'e r the wheel of his car and the autt
swerved into a telephone company truck
l'ee red across Yorba Llnda Boulevarc
and came to a halt in a service statio1
parking lot. No other person was injurrt
in the incident, police said.
Gifts Reje~ted
a very special purchase from a
famous quality maker of
GENUINE LEATHER CHAffiS UCI Med Students Say Bags 'Threat' A GIFT TO 1RWUR£ AllO ENJOY FOR YEARS
C.... .._ ._ Fourteen of ststudent.'l 1n the freshman ''The lnstruments and bags are offered
JJO W1at 1-t Ser..• class of UC Irvine's School of Medicine with the expectation that they \\'ill be
M1llf~9Mh-1 P.o.a..1No.tZ•l• have rejected gift or a black medical bag useful. Qulte naturally, it Is our desire to °""" °"'991 containing stethoacopt, tuning fork. and acquaint students with I.he Lilly name as
• CUJtom quality tbrough-out •
Luxurious rulhioninf • '\'our
choice of Ml.ors from an extensive
'---.mictiurnt-finel!He·1111tr·-1aturar.-t~~-o~-tt
......,.. ...,.i it11 ww .... ..._. rubber hamme;;fr;.o~m~a~p;b;•;nn;•«~u;tic~a;l~~a~m~•n;u~fa~cilu~r~e~r ~o~f ~qu~a~li~ly~m~ed~l;c~ln~es~.:,ri~--:._-~~~~~ '='9~~ ~Ji= com~y. -·~At the same time· we do not belirve
1-----t----~--------·t--~'l'bl'lw1e.....t1tudent, ftel 1ooeptanct cif lb• &bat thl• assistance will af(e
gifts might Impinge OD thdr ruture 1n• parti1l judgments of physicians in their ii
' '
i
•
•
)
ltgrlty es physicians and could cost con· care or patients." ~
aumers of the drug comp1ny'1 products 011 the second issue, the students ~
by hl&htr prices. acCording to freshman l''f'Ot.e : a
medical student Jerry Boss. ''. •. we questicm the .source or !he I
The fourteen &tudents sent a letter to money used to pay for these gifts. It .1p-~
Ell UUy Pharrnle.utlul Company re-pears 1o us the drug consumer -mainly ta!
Jcctlng the gifts d received a letter in the chronically Ill en<t aged -ls 1he onl' ~
reply. 'A'ho ultJmately shoulder$ th<' cost of n
Wrote the 1tudents lhese glf(j. \Ve feel we Cin better allord ~
" •• .fully cognb:ant there is no obliga. the price or our black bags lhan can our ~
lion attached to accepting these. 1flfts. we medically Indigent patients." • ~W
view them 11 a potential thre1t to our Responded De8oest :
future integrity as physicians. We would " ... during Lht past 10 years. as sho\\ n 11 prtfer to be completely frte of 1ny non-by the Ully price index. the aver3RC f{
bu s Ines 1 transactio ns wllh prict of our company's phann11ceulicals W
phArm1ceutic11 companies." has declined more than 10 percentage ~
Replied Htnry F. DeBoest, \•Ice prc~l· J)Olnrs. Because flf its limited slzt, the I
from $199
PROFESS~~~L 1 GARREJT f.URNll1}0~~ MESA, CALIF.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS 22 15 HARBOR BLVD.
646.02 75
dent of corporate alfairs for the LtUy ~tudent program hl'ls had virlually no c(. Company: feet on the, prices or our products." ,_.._. ______________________________________ .-:
I I'
Down the
Mission
Trail
MisSio11 Viejo
A,vards Pla nned
f.11SSJON VIEJO -1'1ission Viejo
residents are invited to say thank you to
the meo and women they {eel have done
1nost ror the community in 196i by
casting their ballois for the first
•· Emvee" awards, to be presented at the
Snow• Ball, Dec. 19.
The ~1ission Viejo Activity Committee
has sent all residenLo; a Christmas card,
part of which is an Emvee Award ballot,
which families may return with their
votes for the two men and two women
they nominate for the service award.
Ballots must be returi\'ed by Dec. IS. e U'ig Style r• ~Jeet
~1ISSION \'IEJO-Distaff" residents are
invited to a wig styling session Monday at
the recre3.Uon center.
Miss Yolanda Smithson, master stylist
for Wigs and Hair Pieces, a magazine on
the care and styling of wigs, will
demonstrate the latest techniques and ar·
ranging ideas.
The event will begin al JO a.m. and v•itl
Include a breakfast buffet. Fees are SO
cents for members and $l for guests. e J11l e rse rlion V nsafe'!
CAPJSTRANO HIGHLANDS -
Members of the Capistrano Highlands
Homeowners Association have expressed
concern about the -{afety of the in·
tcrsection of La Paz and Paseo de Valen-
cia.
f\·lrs. Frances Jehle, representing the
organization, asked the San Joaquin
Elementary School Board of Trustees
Wednesday night to support them in their
efforts to get a traffic signal at the in-
tersection.
Mrs. Jehle said that though a traffic
guard will be stationed there during
school hours, children crossing the street
.i.(ler school to use the playground would
19t be safe. The board is studying the
matter. e S1111lr1 A sk s Letter•
LAKE FOREST -Children of the Lake
Forest comn1unity can start thinking
about what Lo ask Santa for this year.
\Vhen they've decided they can drop
thei r letters in Santa's mailbox in front of
!he Beach and Tennis Club from Dec. 8
1hrough Dec. 22. Each letter will be
answered.
• T ica Amrtrded Grr111I•
LAGUNA HILLS -Scholarships con-
tributed by the Laguna Hills Rotary Club
will benefit two married students at Sad·
dleback College.
The board of trustees has approved
awards of $125 each to David C. Smith
and Ronald B. Skillings, both of Tustin,
and both maintaining grade averages
above B. e D1111ce i11 Saddle bark
SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Students in
1he ninth through 12lh grades arc invited
to a dance Saturday.
Sponsored by the neWly organized Teen
Club at St. Nicholas Catholic Church ,
Laguna !fills the event \~ill lake place at
8 p.m. in La Paz Intermediate School in
1-iission Viejo.
~1usic will be provided by the Great
\Vesle rn Reclamation . Admission is Sl
per person or $1.75 per couple.
r
DAILY mot 3
Captives'· Wives Seek Aid
Support Soug ht From Saddleback Valle y
Saddleback Valley organizaUons in..
terested in helping Americans taken
prisoner or listed as missing in action in
Vietnam are invited to send a} represen-
tative to an information meeting Tues-
day, Dec. 9.
l\trs. Lee KellQgg will sponsor the pro-
gram at her home, !4116 Birdrock Drive,
El Toro and Mrs. Stephen Hanson of El
Toro, Orange County Coordinator for the
National League of Families of American
Prisoners In Southeast Asia will be
present to explain the program
Mrs. Hanson's husband, heliC()pter pllol
Capt, Stephen Hanson, w8.!i &hot down in ..
Vietnam two years ago and Is listed as
missing, although his wife hrul recognized
him in a picture of American prisoners
published in a North Vietnam newspaper.
Mrs. Hanson plans to visit' Paris at
Christmas Jn· tht: hope o( conferring with
1nembers of the North Vietnam peace
delegation regarding handling of
An1erican prisoners and Is spearheading
a letter writing drive to draw allentlon to
the plight of the prisoners.
The League seeks help In wrltlnc let.
ters both to the prllonenl and to
newspapers and governmtnt oft1clall
throughout lbe wor~ and In a drive to
send Christmu cards to the Norlh Viet-
nam camps.
Detalb will be explaln<d b)I Mrs.
Kellogg and Mn. flanson at the 1\Jllday
meeting. eo1r .. wtll be 11UVed rr..n t ::lll
a.m. and lnlen!<ted ....i-.. -tnv11<d lo drop in at any time durint: the mom·
ing. Mn. Kellogg said •.
OPEN 6 NIGHTS A wm;
FOR YOUR SHOl'PING CONVENl!NCEI
Tearing Thi1ags Up •
It's iust not · Christmas
without a real tree!
From the looks of the old fishing pier at Dana Point, you can't gel
there from here. \Vork on pier, which lies inside ne'v Dana Harbor.
is being carried out in connection with harbor improvements. Old
pier eventually will be eliminated.
Marines to the Rescue;
Boys Club Gets Flagpole
\Vith everyone from the city or Laguna
Beach to E l Toro 's recently retired Major
Gen. Charles J. Quilter in the act, it
seems that the Boys' Club of Laguna
Beach will have a flag pole for its new
canyon clubhouse by lhe lime con·
:st.c.uc®n is com~Jeted .
Seeking a nag poie about 30 feet high.
building coordinator Bernard Syfan ap-
Lagu11a Thief's
Tastes Excellent.
A thief with a taste for the finer things
browsed through Laguna's exclusive
Warren Imports, 1462 S. Coast Highway
this week and selected a valuable jade
tree, police v.•ere advised Wednesday.
The decorative tree of rose quartz and
jade valued at $395, apparently wa"s
removed during business hours though
employes did not nolice any suspiCiou!J
bcha,·ior among the early Christmas
shoppers. •
Taken from an interior wall on the se-
cond noor of the art goods shop, it was a
creation o£ pink rose quartz flowers and
green jade leaves and stems in a blue
.noral cloisonne pot and weighed about
five or six pounds, police were told.
proached the city and was told he coyld
have, rot the moving, the pole rrom the
hill above the Festival grounds.
To his dismay, Syfan discovered this
was a kini;-size 58-foot model in a
thoroughly inaccessible location.
"lt would take a helicopter t.o get it out
of there ," he mused.
Thal thought led him lo a conference
wit.h his neighbor, Emerald Bay
Association manager ?.ierlin Dake, a
?-.1arine Corps veteran wHh many years
of experience as a helicopter pilot.
Dake thought a 'copter might do the
job and contacted General Quilter, also
an En1erald Bay resident, who in turn
flagged El Toro for help.
On·site inspection by a pair of captains
rrom the l\.tarine Air Corps base resulted
in the conclusion that the pole probably
could be moved by helicopter but low ,
level mancu\'ering over the Festival and
Boys' Club areas might not be too ad·
vi sablc.
"\Vhy don't we n1<1kc up a rJag pole?"
the Marines offered.
Syfan is now on the trail of three or
four sections of galvanized pipe in vary-
ing diameters to fit together, telescope-1 style. \\'hen they arc found, the Marines
will weld'them into a flag pole, haul it to
the Boys' Club and set it up -hope'fully
in time for the grand opening.
LIKE IT ...
CHARGE IT!
·"
•
County Sets Smog Tests
Y earlong Study Gratis to Ta xpayers /
By JACK BROBACK
01 Int D1Uy Plllll Still
Crnngc County will conduct a year-long
exl><.'ii1nent in the field or air pollution
and it '~·on't cost the taxpayers a penny.
County . Supervisors \Vednesday ac-
repted 1he offer of Pacific Lighting
Servi ce Co. (Parent Company o( Southern
CounUes Gas) to loan six natural gns
conversion kits lo be ust:d on coun1y
ve hicles.
Included in the offer by Re ine ,J
Corbeil. project manager for Pacific
Lighting is free compressed nalura l gas
Supervisors sa\Y two vehicles that had
been coaverted from gasoline lo natural
gas, a 1967 Chrysler New Yorker and a
1968 Dodge service truck.
Corbeil invited the county leaders to
check the exhaust pipes of the converted
cars, but none did.
The gas company representative said
the cars greatly outperfonned gasoline
powered vehicles in lack of emissions of
air pollutants and more than met all
standards set by the state for 1979 and
1974.
In carbon 1nonoxide emissions, natural
gas~ered cars produce only 2.11
grams per mile compared with 28.2 with
gasoline. Figu res for hydrocarbons were
1.41 and 2.56, and for oxides of nitrogen,
.51 and 3.82.
Cost of conversion to natural gas was
estimated at $300 per vehicle. f\1ore than
30 cars have been so equipped and are
being tested today.
Other advantages claimed ror gas In·
elude cleaner engine oil, longer spark
plug life, smoother operation and lower
cost.
Pacific Lighting, Corbeil said, plans lo
convert additional vehicle11 and lo market
the dual-fuel system to olher companJes
which operate large vehicle fleets.
All cars are equipped with a dashboard
-control to switch fivnr ·mtcmil gas-to
gasoline. \Vilh a limited number of com·
pressed gas outlets. the dUaJ.fuel system
permits operation or 111 vehicle on natural
gas for stop-and.go driving in congested
high pollution areas and a switch to
gasoline on longer trips.
Special CQmpressed gas tank!ll Installed
In the trunk or passenger can provide
enough fu el ror 100 miles travel in can
similar to the demonstration modtl which
gct.oi on 10 miles per gallon on ga!IO!ine.
0.1,(1,y ,II.OT lllff lt~t!t
Better mileage can be expected ·rrom
cars more economlctll on gasollnt,
Cnrbell ~aid.
R. I. "Cuba" Morris, coonly director or
transportation. Mid he had vehicles
ready for conversion. At the suggestlon of
Supervl~or David J •• Baker, l\1orrls 8ald
PACIFIC LIGHTING'S CORBEIL 'FILLS .'ER UP'
for County Cer1, A Different Kind of Gas
he '"ould use older C'Ounly cars as well is
newer models In the test. .. I
CHRISTMAS TREES!
Scotch pine tree, A treo witn its own beoutifu l
·shade of grffn , •• needles that are luxuriously long.
Branches retain their needles longer than othe r fi rs, 10
you con enjoy your tree much longer.
5 ft.•6ft.
6.49
-· -.. -.
Natural Dougl11 f irChri.tmos trees! Streight, th1rdy,
luthly green, W• Nlhed these down from moun1oin for-•tt• to fltl your hom• wilh lh• joy of Chri11rnos. Seleor;t
from o vorl•ty of MzeJ.
2 ft.-3 ft. -~----··-······ .................... -.. 99c
3 h.•4 h. __ l .99 7 ft.•8 h ..•. -...... 4.69
l h.·6 h. __ 3.49 9 h.-10 h. _6.99
'""'
2~ ft •• 3~ ft. Scolch pi..__ 4At
6 ft •• 7 ft. Scotch pine 7,,,
7 ft.· 8 ft. Scotch pine--I."
Pl1nl1tlon grown Dou;lot fir -A -..\'!! I
tree due to its fvn P'f'Omldot 'YfNl"'•J• the ..-_.
density of Douglas fir ~ how.._. el It 11• "r
yearly aheorlng ond .hoping.
~ ft.·6 ft .... --·------8.49
6 h •• 7 h. Dovoloo fit ------'·" 7 h.-8 ft. Dovola• fir -_ 11,.,
' -
STDllS ortH
IUNOAY tOC:il
1l te . '""' DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH
I
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•
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OAILY PILOT Thursday, Drcember 4, 1961)
· Inapartial lnqulr11 -
(l;•m•llld Irr 1l'lt Dolll~ 'II" lt•ttl
Ne'v York's Atty. Gin. Louis J,
Lefkowitz sent Utls letter to e a c h
of the state's 150 assern blyn1en:
•·it has conic to my at·lention that
1 he consumer action bulletin fron1
n1y office \\(as sent to you in an en-
''eiope in '''hich you were not ad·
dressed \vith you r full title, but in
an abbreviated form. It '''as care-
less of my office to have address-
ed you in this fashion and l.'n;t sor-
rv it happened ." The bulletin s ad·
d'ress used the first three letters
of the assemblymen's title. •
Brad Li~kog, 11. of Prophfts-
tow1t, I/l ., Pos es with his steer, Cono-
co, the grand, cltanipion. of-tliis year's
livestock show i11 Ch icago. The steer
f.o/d for $15,180. Brad, who is th.e
11otJUgest stePr exhibitor to ever win
iop honors in the liistory of the 7().
11eor-old shoio. pa id a li ttle more than
$300 for tlie steer two years ago. • President Ni xon, who frequently
lunches on cottage cheese and cat·
sup revealed lhe reaction to hi ·s·
\veight-Watching scheme in an
aside to a \~hite House Confer·
ence on Food, Nu tr i ti on and
Health. "You cart't imagine how
many letters I goto" he said. "The
calsup industry wrote and told me
10 try it on my cereal. And others
'"rote and told me that catsup with
cottage cheese had to be unheal·
thy.'' Nixon countered by saying
thiit his grandmother ''lived to be
93 and ate it all her life." • <
·; A highwa.y ice warning device
that reflects a red light when
ten1 pe1atures drop to freezing
tea~ displayed by a \Vest Ger·
•, 1nan research firm in Frankfurt. ~I The Bate/le Institute which de·
vcloped. the de vice. said it is
1 1noun tc cl oit roads ide guard It rn ils onr! iit l1eod/igl1t reflect.
I io ns s/1ouJs red 1cl1en the tem· i pcratures drop to freez i'ng, ye l·
/otv 10/ien temperatures a re i 1 slightly wa rmer and rireen whe1t
} tliere 1s no chance of i.ce. 1 i-:.:=-=-..=_-~7.:--. :.Z-2 ' :t:.t!,J • Duke Ellington and his 17-man
band returned fro1n a good-\vill
I.our of 12 Europea n nations, and
the bandleader sai d "I have a lot
oi \t·onderful impressions." Elling ..
ton told ne\\'S n1en in New York
that in Prague. Czechoslovakia
after the shO\\'. some young kids
followe d me lo my hotel room
"'here they gave 1ne enameled ani-
tnals and other ,gifts. Jt 'vas all
rlone \Vilho11t 'vofds, so I asked
them for their names <1nd ad·
rlresses So I could sen d them
Christmas greetings. and it turned
out that they 'vcrc all Russian n1u·
a;ician s -it \Vas 'vonderiul.
Goldberg Urges
Massacre Probe
By Ualted Prns lnt.erutloDlf
Former Supreme Court JusUce Arthur
Gol9berg and more than 30 other govern·
rnenl officials, international lawyers and
professors called . on President Nixon to-
day to appoint an impartial commiulon
to study Am erican conduct in Vletn'am In
the light of alteged massacre of civilians
by U.S. troops.
The massacre assertedly occurred in
1farch or 1968.
President
May Summon
Congress Back
\\'ASHINGTON CAP) -President Nix·
on told Republican congressional leaders
tOOay he will call Congress back into
session Dec. 26 if it does not complete ac·
lion before Christmas en all ap-
propriation bills.
And. Hoose GOP Leader Gerald R.
Fon! told OC\li5men aft.er the Y,'tekly GOP
leadership meeting with Nixon, the Presi· ·
dent also is considering calling Congress
back lo Capitol Hill the day after
Ori.st.mas if there is no "movement" on
hlS anticrime legislation.
"The President is very firm tJ1at action
must be taken,'' related Sen ate
Republican Leader Hugh Scott. "1 have
never seen the President any tougher
than he was today."
Shortly after Scott and Ford met .with
n~en at the \Vhite }louse. the Senate
completed action on a $4.8 billion public
works money bill. It was the fifth of 13
appropriation measures sent t() Nixon
this year.
The need for anticrime legislati()f'l was
a major theme of Nixon's presidential
campaign but none of his recom·
mendations has gotlen very far in
Congress.
NO date has been set for the Christmas
holiday adjournment but Ford indicated
the dates being discussed are "anywhere
from Dec, 20 to the 24th. Under the cur·
rent circumstances we will have to be
here Christmas Eve."
Senate Democratic Leader M 1 k e
Y..1ansfield. who raised Monday the
poosibility of Senate meetings between
Christmas and New Year 's to finish
money bills, told a newsman. "We are
making every effort to get the-ap-
propriations bills tlu'OOgh. It is going to
be nip and tuck."
"The alltgaUons of atrocitlea commJt· led In Vietnam are hurtin& the rtp.da-
Uon (and) the con1clence of all law
respeeUng Americana," Goldberg aald in
a crowded offlc! at New York Univer·
s.ity.
"We urge the Pre&ldent to reject the
view that atrocities may in any way be
justified, by any side, as a necessity of
war. This case (of the My Lai massacre)
offers an opportunity for the reaffirma·
tion of an ational commitment to the
rule of law."
~er reading a three-page statement.
drawrtup bY. an ad hoc group of lawyers
in New York, Goldberg suggested that
the commission could be made up of
••concerned and patriotic Americana"
such as former Supreme Court JusUce
Earl WatTtn and retired Army General
Malthtw D. Ridgeway.
Goldberg said he did not want to spec·
ulate on the possible conclusions which
might be re.ached by the commission,
bu t said recent news stories about U.S.
conduct of the war indicate "there is
enough in this to warrant an investiga-
Uon."
He was asktd what the policy of the
commission ahould be since policy
decisions concerning the conduct or the
war were made at the highest level of
the government,
"Let the chips fall where they may,"
said Goldberg.
Rails, Unions
OK Agreement;
Shike Averted
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Agreement
was reached today on a new contract
between the country's railroads and tour
shopcraft unionS, averting a threatened
nationwide rail shutdown.
Tl]e agreement, announced by Labor
SE\(!f"etary George P. Shultz after an all·
night session betwetn negotiators. will
have to be ratified by the union mem·
bership.
At 8:30 a.m. (PST), after first making
a hurried trip to the White House to give
President Nixon the word, Shultz told
reporters:
"I am very pleased to be able to an·
nounce here that free co 11 e c t i v e
bargainin& has triumphed."
"We do have a settlement, voluntarily
agreed to by management and the shop-
craft unions. There will not be a railroad
1trike."
Mechanical Failure Told
Before Air France Crash
CARACAS (UPI) -lnvestigaj.on said
today the last words of an Air France
jelliner pilot indicated that mechanical
failure and not saOOtage or a hijack at·
tempt caused the plane to fall into the
sea Wednesday night with lo6s ol all 62
persons aboard.
"I am loolng altitude and I cannot con··
trol the plane," Capt. Henry Valter radi·
oed the control tower from 4.500 feet two
minutes out of Maiquetia Airport on a
flight bound for Paris. The Boeing 707
plane fell four miles from the ai;port apd
exploded in an orange fireball.
The disaster was witnessed by anothtr
pilot, Capt. Jose Cabe·l.83 o( the
Venezuelan domestic airline Ae~tal
Venezolana. who was flying 2,000 feet
above the Air France jeL
"I saw the plane begin to rise from
?-laiquet.ia and then suddenly it started
downward!," he said. "There was an ex·
ptomon and fire on impact." It fell into
the sea where a Pan American plane
crashed oo Dec. 12, 1988 with the loss of
50 lives.
CLAY NO Cf/AMP
.4T BOX OFFICE
NEW YORK (AP) -"'Bi& Time Buck
White," the musical featuring fonner
heavyweight champion Cassius Clay, also
known as Muhammad All, will close
Saturday night after 1ix performances,
the show'• management announced to-
day.
The presenla.U()f'l won only o n e
favorable revJew heTe and will sustain a
Joss of about $125,000.
Bitter Chill Grips East
Buffalo, Rochester Record Heavy Snowfalls
Callfo,.nln
. .. -National Church Council Elects Woman Presiclent ' . '
DETROIT (UPI) -Dr. Cynlhla Wedel,
an outapoten advocate of women'• rights,
lod•Y WU elected the lint W0111M pr<a~
dent ol the Natlooal COOncU ol Church".
Eplseopallan from Washington, D.C.,
dt!feated the Rev. Albert B. Cleage Jr., a
.Detroil Negro pastor, in oeeret balloUna
at the NCC's triennial general assembly.
highest office of the nation's largest
cooperative relif ous body. The NCC ls
composed of 33 Protestant and orthodoI
denominations with 45 million memben. Mn. Wedtl, a 81-year-old white She wlll serve a three-year term in the
en
fore Chrisl.1nas.
-----------·-------------------------· • .,._. Baanc·'-a._ D----AppU-·•=-n Flrtt. Wet}'m 8•nk OHie• o.i. Sl\olll tti~ imount °-' cuti ~ $ I I ll:'UM D •&"'~.... ~ :iouwou1dl1ke1.,.,111>1e 7
I y--.AddfHli City Stl tft Zip Co0• JIC"' i.or.11 I
I 0 111111• 0 leptr•t.d No.GICllptndttitt Nl!llt.I' $oclll Secutitl' Nutn!Si!r Ori'letl. ~~llllM Numb•< D Own MQnlnly R•n!,,,. $ I
0 ....,,ltd 0 ~ O llenl MQlll•le Payme"I I I l'rwtoweadr9M ll' SU.19 How lon&I . 1e'1 irll no me Mor1&a1e holder"• n.om• •nd a<ldre~ I
I 8ullnul ~ How Ions ~ployeo! Ck:cupation MonJh!y ta~ $ I
I Yr•. Mo$ home ~y
llnpl0Jer'1ptw:inm tlUllltMt f-.-npq..,r fom>1t •mployu'11~<1re11 How ltml em~? I
I --1
I ~lltl'IOIOJW IPOUll'lwnlllO)'er ~ Spoule',...,plO)'er phone oo. How l<>nl unplayo(!! Oc=p•t,on Monthly take $
Yr-. Mo~. flame pay I
I HMM .,oJlbwlk lnr;l\«a6Clrs» O ~vin11 O ~n AUlom«l•••·m.~e Tear Mon!hlvAulo $ O Che<;kinr P•Yn!~nt I
I Cradil r.i..ncel! l 1nl<s. v.:lh carrtl, eredl! on"itini. t.11111« <O''-Complote h1tor all de1>1s owin1 (open"' cl"""d) luJtomoDife !rn•ncea p~ (e•en 11 ti••') I
Alta(h IOd!Hon1I ..,..,l ii neo••w I N1mt1 Add<IM kcount num~ 81ltne• oue Mo. paymtnt I
I Nclmt Ad<ll9U Ar.<;.eunt numtiu 11111nce due ~·o JWyment Ne.It~ r~1l10•, nam• I
I NllM AOdf-Ar.countnUmllU t1~1-ia 11ue M0."•1ment Nefle•!1e111•••'•1C1dros1 I
I ~ '4::11114 """'aunt wm~r 8111/\CAI due Mo. pfY'Mn\ Si1111wr1 I
I I
·----~-------------------------------
. ,
All it takes 18 a little application to open a
First Bancharge Reserve accoµnt. Simply fill
out the one above and bring it in or send it
to any of the 90-plus offices of Fi.nit Westem
·Bank. It's that easy.
Prelent your cant for presents. First Ban·
·charge Reserve can be used to purchase up
to $2,400 worth of presents.at just about any
' place jn California. It's like a charge account,
except you USC a check instead of a charge
card. 'Vhen you do, the service charge is no
more than at most department stores.
If you're traveling during the holidays
and run a little short of cash, Frnt·Bancharge
Reserve can be used as a check guarantee
"'rd. It's like instant money, up to $100 in
cold, hard cash at any one of a thousand
hanks, coast-to-coast. Once you've opened
your First Bancharge Reserve account it's
open qot only for Christmas, but for the 364
bill.paying days in between, too.
[lf!Ntlll' ·~ First
r'r· '"'" . .,,, .... /.',, · • · · ' Bancharge ' .2'f1··'«:.:V·1"~·l-''(4,-~-... , ' ~· _ .,._¥., , _,,,_ ..._.;_ ---.... • R · : eserve
THE GREATEST SPORT
tJ since the Wright Brothers got off the ground at Kitty Hawk
TESTOR'S ""R/C Plane i1 completel'y assembled
••• ready to fly ••• right out of the box!
FOR MEN
FROM 10 TO 100
lleg. $100.
SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY
$6999 •.
Complete set Includes everything you
nud to fly -plus the battery recharg·
er so you can use the Cadmium Cell
batterie1 that come with the plane.
TMI Jl(Y'ol't'AWI( IS YUtTVALLY INOl$fllUCTl•LE-
IA$Y TO l'LY
Tiils 11lan• It miff Df llHmpeCI •fY•..... . . . •llTIOSI
unbrt•k11>i.. lllg .i.I" {n"rly 4'1 wlnQH>ll~ , . . ''" t\IMI .... A:Mdy lo fly IS atlOI\ ., VOii rt•• II DUI ol lht box.
• Ml·Toniut ,c., t .I. lnltrn•I comM!IDn tf'llllnt
e UO Mllllw11t rr1n.i1tor 1r1nsmlntr et Tr1n1IJ10r SuPtr11'1trDdynt receiver wllll puls1
Wldlh illt'cOdlnO
• Trll'f Pulst Pl'fllX>•llonal r1d1D control e C:omplt!tly 9...-nn!-
Ul"·UP..f.ND AWAYI
DOI!'! mls1 fll• lncrtdlfl!t tun •nd t •Clltmenl of 5,!!ng 111!1 t lt nl pltn• IJ'!ll .. yGVr tontrol -•nd IMrn th~ W~kl
of flvlno. Ord•r l'IOW -~ ht~• t1rgt I UPPlt -but
llllHY! thtr 110 f11t!
I
' i ••••••a••••••• HOBBY PEOPLE, Dept. H
• 130 E. 33rd Street
• Los Angeles, California, 90011
Get ready to take off
for a real thrill. All of
the excitement of fly•
ing your own plane
• .• because this plane
is under your control.
No wires ••• it's all
done via remote
RADIO control.
Moil todo1 for prom!ll
1llipm1nt before Chrillmos
• 0 CHECK 0 MON EY ORDE R
• Ple•1• •11 11! m• .... , , .. , . , , .... , ... , ... , , com pl ale t11dy la fly
T11ior1 R/C Sk.,kewlr Airpl•n•(1) @) tk• d i1c.ovnt prlt• of $b9.'19 •
• 11th pl ~1 t 1.50 po1!•9• .ind h•ndl in9 . C1liforn i1 r11id•nh edd S %
• S1l11 T•11. •
• N11m• , • , ••••••••••••••••••••• Addr•1• • , ••• , , • , •• , • • • • • •• •• • • crt., ••• ; • • • • • • . •• •• • St••• • •• • • •• • • •• • • •• • • • Zip •••••• • ~-·····················~ Now! Create your own instant Cape Kennedy in any open area!
AMAZING LIQUID-PROPELLANT
LOS ANGELES AN O \'ICI NITY-
Ml>'tly SY111''r' Frld9'r', LIM tonlvl!l 51.
C.Ull'r' winds bf:'lo,. c•nYOlll frldly,
!'llQPI Fr\dlY 71.
Mltlt Low'~· VALKYRIE-2 R POINT tONCEP'!'ION 1'0 "'E)l.l(.lN
l\OROEilfl:-Llghl v•rlt~I~ wl'ICll '*'
,.,..,,...., W9Jltrlv 10 lo 11 kroob In •11••·
1""'111 Fr~Y tM,ot """"""" wln<11 15 IO lO kno!t .Iii ·tllli• outer co.111! w111n .
Mo1t1v Wlf"l'I' d•~ bwl 1om• eorl'I'
mornlnl IOW d""'c!s moslly tout~"' l'lO<'llOf'I, A IJ!llf WAmlt• l'r lOOY.
CO.lS'!'AL .A'lO l•ITERMtO!.lTE
\'ALLEV~-Mt•tl'r' IC'~l'Y F'1 dov. l ow
f1'>111tl'! «! 10 ». A 111!11 w1•111or l'ri·
<'l•'r' wl!PI P\lpl! ~ to IO. Gll'1l' '*t'i11!11
btlow e.11-FJldev. 1.•QUNTAIN Al!:t;A.5-M<n!ly r111111v
r "1dlY. l~ .__,,_ ti>• ... ~•
~"'0'!1 111111'1' nOl'fh IO northtAll '*t'1r>d•
.,..,,, 1•e•1 Fr1<11v. ~ou•"91'11 C:t!lhlr11•.t lied 1u111'11"~ •"i ~""otl•~• e!r lod•Y• wlm flV~!v 1'0<'!~ •o ~IY!ht•tl wn!dt ,.i>e(teci l'r1d1v. I!
1111•t 111.ritlY coo!~r. TM nlsl'I ti LO'! Anfff"1 (IY1C ,.,.. t~r WI• 7'· ~~ l NO dt••OH lrom
w~''"" .. -· &ftd> •~11 to.ff ..,.,,,. """•"IM 1-
t !OV(I,._ tN! ot<>trw1'• II "''' '"""" ... +,,, ...... _, 11) •nd '"-' .... ,., ''·
IT .., .•• rno1U1 tul'Wt'I' In !Pit 11'1111"!41M
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tll" t l'WT\ '"" i.ietl ')U\IV f!O•l"ttl'r'
Wind'-,,,. out••• ht<:i ~·1n• "''' '' •~ Tng VJM' v•n.,. •M 1tl00! It I" ·~.......,. ..... "" .. U f!tl 9trtltoR h9d llW ,..,1~
~"'""' rt.ell.,_ W~tc!f¥ " tJ C)ll'pfr ~lfloot Wcd~V f!ld lctl <•l! '°lltl!I
IOCle'P IM,..... ...._ •••t11 e1.1s. kr!11
f.lonlu I0-10. f!lv~tlM>f. 11 1i M• W1I-
'"" l! ,~, P•l~4 • 4!-•l. l1~rnlott
~iri. ,. .. 1,.. s ,..1"" ,..,,. e.~,.,1101d
f l4 l,. I•'\ C7\fH /I rJ '""'~"If 91,. ......... ,,,
Coattai
~11n11, todh', Llthl V'111~ll WIMI!
n<~~· •~" rnoni+nt l'lou•1 btco"""' !l!ll"!h,.._tt.,.1¥ ti 10 11 l(flOlt Ill ,tJltt-
~-' IOCll'I' and Frld1y, Hlol'lt 1111r ~. Cnt11~1 ,...,,oe•1•ur..1 ''"'' from ,q
10 Tl. 1111'"° ltm"''"""' r1n•• from JO ID n. Wt!tr ltmPMtllll• 61,
S11a, ~lnnH. Tides
TH\,li.;SOAY
Second 1'1t1~ J:SI '·""· J.S leco'ld +ow _ 11 :11 p.m, I.I
,ll:IOAY
1'!r1t lllth .. . •......• S:" ~ m, l J !!In• IOW .... ...... l t:ft •.m, 0,4
Se(omi 111•1! ......... , •·•I>"' ! 6 SKO!ld low ............ 11:41 ,,,..,. 1.t
,u'I 11.IK• I I) t ""' Ith •:U, "''
Moon 11:1 .. 1 1 ;~ I "'· Sttt 1.,1 I'""
v.s. s ......... ,.11
A w1ci. Olnd of Art"llt •fr "''". t tl'Oll ll'lt .. t!Kfl ""1IOl'I OI thl COO"°
,.., llldtY IC(-ttlllCI Irr llffV'I' 1.-
1 t i.omt M'dloni..
lll!!er c11t11 1110 grlllflff '"'-mrlb·
t rn 1!1tt• "°"" ~t u1>111r M lnlu lt "I
\'t!!t,. 1crou Ill• Orttl """' In .. Nt w E:ntltnd,
0"11 10 th•« lnchn of 1now tell
tlll•in1 • 11~.novr Hrlod. 1ut<l1ltr
Jn 1119 1,...1 1dlt<""' to ltlltS lrt• •I'd Onllrlo. l vtl1lo, N.Y .. mttw•ed
t tvtn fnttlt'I (In lf\e f•Ollfld """"' l!:K htl'-'• NY,, ll•d 1lol'll.
"'' tll• ~Old .... ,. _..., IOl)lh ,..,,,
w1rnlllfl wt•• lfldl(1t.., l9f nortti.m
Flo•lclt .
To '"'-Wt1t, '''" "''' ''"'''' fr--' Tl•t t IO •ooi•M •f! Arllonl wl'll
...... \flJ!l>o• •• ~ l!!•~tf t!tYf!J°"t
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LIFTS OFF TO OVER 1,000 FEE1
IN LES~ THAN 10 SECONDS!
Mow, ,,.,... ,_,_,.~ '9 .,..,!Idol.,,., tflltl' •II m.t •~clff-' 91111 ..,.,., 91 r
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CHECKING •UP•
A Masterf11l Man
Is Mo st · Appealu1g
~y L, ~1. BOYD
LOVE AND WAR
'·\Vomen wa:.1t a n1an who >A'ill
say, 'Come here, you.' then
k.iss them until they \ can't
breathe," claimed G 'r e t a
Lamb. Maybe she was right.
But what she left unsaid is not
many men can gel away with
that kind of mu scu lar
behavjor. Takes a certain
knack. Like sporting a beard
takes a certain knack. Or
smoking with a silver cigarcl
holder. Or wearing yellow
knickers. In this game of Love
cr.1d War. not every Tom , Dick
and What's-His-Name can kiss
the girls breathless without in·
curring nipped lips. ~1ore on
th.is !_;lter.
THERE AREN'T m a n v
Great Danes in Denmark. 10
fact. hardly any ... .IF THE
\YORLD'S best dessert isn't
spumoni, what is? , , . BALD-
HEADED MEN outnumber
bald-headed women by 20 to 1.
but women v.·ho Y:e<i r wigs
outnumber men \\•ho v.·ear
hairpieces by 10 lo I. ... 00
YOU KNOW why Rodi·,,·s
"The Thinker" is sitting
down? His feet hurt. Take a
close look. Big bunions on both
feet. . . . HALF THE NA-
TIONS widov.·ers r e m a r r y
within five yea rs.
l\1EAL TICKETS -Do
eafes still sell meal tis~eJ.s?
Certainly some must. I just ·
don't get around enough .
Years ago as a fra ction of
a lad, I was farmed out for a
couple of weeks to the care of
a widow woman who above all
else hated drink and drinkers.
One day she took me to a
small cafe, which sported a
"No Drinking" sig.1, where she
expected to pay for our
sandwiches with her meal
ticket. A ragged old boy v.ith a
distinctive fragrance about
him sat down on the stool next
to me, ordered a large lunch,
then slipped a liquor bottle out
of his pocket and took a pull .
The widow promptly beClt.oncd
the waitress ove r, and Minted
significantly to the character.
The waitress nodded sweetl}lo
picked up the widow·s meal
I~ Al Luo 116 Sllll
1912 ~ARIOR ILYD.
COSTA MESA
Dally 1 D-• e Sat. 9-&
••'*Am•rkl nl e M11l1r (hl1'9I
I
ticket, ant.I -pu1K'h, pu.1ch,
punch -drilled out the price
of the old boy's lunch. \Ve left.
Swiftly .
CUSTOMER SERV ICE' Q.
"On a TV crime s h o w the
other night, a character was
portrayed as running from his
ofrice to his car, carrying a
suitcaS;e containing ' o n e
million dollars in $20 . bills,•
Could man lift that much?" A.
Could lift it all right. Mi~t
have a little trouble runn r.lg
with it. It would Weigh about
102 pounds .... Q. ' 'N 0 W
0 U R NEIG HBORHOOD
Q_~idge champion, chief joke
tClter, and foremost collector
of useless data contends the
official 1nSJgn1a of t h e
Republican party Is nol the
elephant,. but the eagle. How
about it?" A. He's got that
right. Furthermore, the of·
ficial insignia af the Democrat
party is not the donkey, but a
star.
PUZZLE-A mathemalicaly
1ninded fellow in Toledo, 0.,
says the puzzles which appear
herein from lime to time are
too easy. Does.1·1 even bother
lo us~ a pencil, he says. All
right, here's one for him: "1
spent one sixth of my years as
a boy in Canada," said the
genlleman with the white
bea rs, "and one twelfth with
l~e police department in
Chicago, and one seventh plus
five years running a cafe in
Cleveland. This took me up to
the time my son Pete was
born. Well, he took over the
cafe just four years ago when
he was exactly half my
present age." How old is the
gentleman with the white
beard'!
Yo11r questions n11cL com·
me11ts are welcomed and
1vill be u.!ed whenev~ po.!·
sible iii "Checkuia Up."
Please addre.!.! yo1ir mail to
L.A1. Boyd in care of Daily
Pilot, Box 1815. Newport
Beach, Cati/. 92663. ·
Bla ze Goes
'I'o F iren1 en
THOMASVILLE, ~a. (AP)
-This city 's fire department
didn't have to go to one fire
recently. The fire came to it.
A city garbage truck, !lames
pouring from the rear, pulled
up to fire station. Firemen
da shed from the station and
qui ckly extt.lguished the blaze.
The garbage truck continue<!
on ils rounds.
Thtr1day, Dtce mber 4, 1%9 DAIL V Pll Cl' §
..
may co costa mesa Will be open sunday from noon 'til S p.m. Shop silndays from now 'til Christmas.
' Every merchandise depar.tmeJit 'and the -restaur.ant will be open to make your gift shopping. easier.
what could be a prettier gift
than soft and lacy panties
Little under pretties. Maybe she ntt<ls them.
!\taybc she simply loves nice things. \'('c
' have them sheer and opaqur, lacy and em·
broidcred, in brief or bikini st}1e. All ¥>fr
a.nd feminine. We 'how h\·o. There· s Jots
more. White or pijtcls. '-6-7. 1.35
a. bikini, sheer nylon sprinkled .with po6ie5
b. Allitd Caprolan® satin nylon brie[
1nay co daJM?e lingerie ~8
-
bras that scoop low, for under
dresses that do the sa me
· Holiday drrssing . Daring. Baring. They netd
bra.5 that ht . , , plunge .•. scoop lo"··
.a. Hollywood Vassarcttc nylon deep plunge
bra, smooth and natural, ••hite, black,
nude. In .sizes )2-)6 A. B, C 6.00
b. Maidcnform nylon tricot push up deco!.
lete bras, underivirr. ·~rliite. beige colors,
in sizes 3!-36 A, B, C. 6.50
may co foundations 44
•
/
' f
I
-
-
merry slippers ...
the softest Christmas gift
Brightly wrapp<d. Und« the tree. So many
dif(rrent sl ippers. Pumps, boots, scuffs.
ballerianas, skimmers . In brocade$, Mylar
fabric, fluffy Orlon ® acrylic. 'Il)ere·s no
end to our K-lection of slippers .. By Bertlyn,
[)(arfoam5, Feathermocs, or Mukluk's.
Warm and cuddly •tippers ju!! rif!bt for
Christma5 morning. 3.00 to 7.00
may (O hosiery 7
•
Sony FM/AM portable.
fl uffy-trimmed sleepwear, for
misses who love soft things
Brushed nylon sleepwear generously splash-
ed with plush flufh of nylon pile. So wum,
w feminine, she'll love wearing them. '.And
kno"·ing that they're ~'ash-wear, euy-care.
Choose her favorite bedtime style in Ligh t
bright shades of blue, cOral or pink . .And add
a pair of matching scuffs for a lovely
Christmas package. By Henson Kickcmick.
SOUNDS AS GOOD AS IT
LOOKS UND ER THE TREE
·t¥.
:(" ~. '$.''
. u~ A constant companlOO, . 'r ,
this Ughtweight Sony portable 6F·l9W.
1Just gra b the handle and olf it goes with you. To the
beach. To the park. On a boat. Anywhere. Also plays on
I JI:, (AC cord optional) so you can leave it plugged in at
home, adding to the life of your batterieS. And it gives far
ritcw powerful performance than the kind of radio that
fits iA a pock9t. Sharp, stroni FM { AM sound that comes
through a bi g 31h" speaker. Sony's solid state AFC cir·
cuitry provides drift.free FM . Slide rule dial for easy
1
1
station selection; Easy-Grip bar handle; FM telescopfc
antenna. Comes complete with battery and earphone.
i sty1ed slim and sleek-like all the areat beauties today ..
See il You 'll want it. SONY•
JUST $29.95
Ou r 22nd Year in the Harbo r Ar11
~DAVIS -BROWN
411 E. 17111 St.
Do ily 9.9, Sat. 9·6
Costa Mesa
646-1684
• -
may co-south coast plat e, sen die go fwy et bristol, coste mesa; 546-932 1
shop mondey thru 11 turd1y I 0 a.m. to 9:3 0 p.m., sundey noon 'til S p.m.
.. •
·-:--•'" ·!~g go"'n, p·s-m-112.00
h. pajamas, J2·J8 14.00
c. matching scuffs. •·m-l 3.50
ma y co lin gerie 10
MAVCO
'·
r
• . ,
• " . •• .. .. .. .. •, ..
.;
. :·
' I
i :! :I ·l
' ' I .
' .
" • . • • . • i '• .. • i
. •
t
• •
•
• DA.ILY PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE
Defining the Tidelands
Rising concern over public acc~s lo Orange COW1·
ty's 42-miles of shoreline has produced heated and
somewhat acrimonious debate. But through it all no
one has kno\vn precisely what are the boundarie.s of
public tidelands.
owners to make up the difference. 'J'he unfairness in
this has long been recognized but getting !!Ction from
the Legislature has been something el se again.
County Supervisor David Baker accordingly pro-
posed, and his fellow superviso rs unanimi>usly con-
curred. that the State LatJds Commission be asked to
examine and redefine if necessary the high tide lines
from one end of the county shoreline to the other. And
to do so at an early date.
Baker explained the survey is needed in light of re·
cent actions by the board -including i1s concern for
public access to public lands following the Salt Creek
Road furor, the acquisition of shoreline frontage and
the board's ~ecis ion to itself rule on all land matters
affecting shoreline property.
Webster's first defini'tion of "tidelands" applies:
-"Land overflowed during flood tide."
Debate over '"hat is or is not in the public domai n
is meaningless without an official survey and ruling.
The supervisors' move to get this from the state is
clearly in order.
For P1·op erty Tax Relief
Proposals and actual moves to bring relief to Cali-
fornia's overburdened property taxpayers have been
many. They've been ""ell meant in some instances,
dangerous deceptions in others.
Now a move is under way \Vhich carries real prom·
ise. ,
A state tax reform inlllative Is being sponsored by
the California Teachers Associ'ation and the County
Supervisors Association. Its purpose is to require the
state to pay at least 50 percent of public sc hool costs
and 90 percent of welfare ~osts.
\Valter W. Heller, former presidential advisor on
economics. looked at the initiative's provisions recently
and gave his unqualified approval. He called the prop--
erty tax "regressive, repressive and sluggish." And he
said that the other forms of taxation needed to supply
the funds can be so set up that they \viU be !airer to
''the little guy_"
\Vh.ile normal.ly it is better to get needed tax re·
forms in the Legislature, rather than by initiative. the
:;tate legislators' faiJure to act justifies use of the in·
illative in this instance.
Costl y Store Thievery
. Shopli!Ling's peak season is here again, but with a
difference. \Vhere merchants formerly hesitated to
\varn their. customers for fear of offending, they now
use both signs and recorded sales talks interspersed
\vilh, .. Shoplifting is a c riminal offense."
They're using .one:-way m!rrors, ceiling peek holes
;and even closed c1rcwt TV with tapes later admissible
1n court. And all the while the state, with its far broader tax
base, bas allowed its share of school and 'velfare costs
to slip, thereby increasing the burden on property own·
ers (and renters indirectly).
Formerly paying about half of public school costs,
the state now pays only about 35 percent. And it pays
only 65 percent of welfare costs, leaving local property
Shoplifters used to be mainly middle·aged women.
'{-.'o\v more than half are under 18 and the number is
growing -producing a multi-million dollar loss which
honest customers mus~ make up in higher prices.
Merchants and police have every reason and right
to crack down on the thieves.
Agnew's Critieis11i of Bias
TV Moguls Miss the Point
\VASHINGTON -The avai l able
evidence suggests that Vice President
Agnew's criticism of bias in the mass
media struck a responsive chord among
lhe general public. There Is nothing to
suggest, however, that the tonal grada·
lions of the responsive chord have
penetrated very deeply into the hushed
chambers where radio-TV network policy
is made.
A tonal deafness seems to ha ve
developed on what it was Vice President
Agnew was talking about , with the
netwwk moguls all professing to see a
clangerous frontal challenge to freedom of
speecll in their government licensed
medium.
The radio-TV eiteculives lherefore may
well ask themselves why it is that as
many as three out or four people think
that Agnew had a valid point.
THE ANSWER TO THAT question
could prove to be quite disconcerting. It
may merely involve the si1nple con·
clusion (If a great many people that the
commentators now practicing are not
qualified by background, informalion and
depth of thought to share equal time witti
the President of the United Stales. This is
the equivalent of heresy io the broad-
casting business. It is unthinkable ttiat
some handsome, well-spoken broadcaster
with five or JO years experience should
not be entitled to go on the air with his
authoritative analysis and be listened to
with the same attention and respect as
the President or whomever it is he is
analyllng and judging.
"Ri chard Wilson
DR. FRANK STANTON, president of
Columbia Broadcasting System, Inc., ex-
pounds the current thought in lhe in·
dustry on the point !·le attributes to these
instant analyzers the ability to call •·at.
len tion to emphases, omissions, unex·
peeled matters of substance, long an·
ticipated attitudet. changes of vieY:s,
methods of advocacy and any other
as~t of the speectl." The analyzers
function as critics, in other y..·ords. judg-
ing this omission or that change of at·
titude as it seems to strike them in the
spirit o{ guiding and instructing the
public on what they ought to think about
the speech they have just heard.
IN THE CASE OF the Presidenl's
speech on Vietnam, Dr. Stanton points
out that the text was handed oul to the
press and to radio-TV analyzers two
hours in advance of delivery. 11e adds,
''If a professional reporter could not ar-
rive at some meaningful observations un·
der those circum stances, 'vc would qucs·
ti on his competence." T\\'O hours is
enough, it is judged, to permit these
highly skilled professionals to gather
their thoughts for airing lo an audience
which assembled before their lelevision
sets to hear the President of the United
States make a major announcement after
y,·eeks of study. Otherwise they had bel·
ler look ror work clse~·here than CBS.
IT JS AT THIS POINT that a great
n1any TV viewers tum off their sets and
turn off Dr. Stanton. They are simply not
convinced that the analyzers are pro-
fessional enough, informed eqough or
profound enough lo share time with the
President of the United States on major
U.S,. policy, ln..lhe case of Nixon 's speech
two hours or deep thought \vas not enough
to reveal to the analyze rs that lour out or
five of the listeners they v:cre instructing
would approve of Nixon's staled views on
Vietnam.
The TV moguls, in their profound con-
cern for the right of analyzers to say
anything that occurs to them after their
gruelling two hours of thought, have
simply missed the central point that a
vast host of TV watchers do not share the
respect with which the analyzers vie'v
themselves.
TIUS WOULD BE as hard for ;i TV
co1nmentator to accept a~ for a
newspaper columnist, the difference
really being that many nc1vspaper s give
their readers a wider choice of opinion
which they can usually adequately sam-
ple by reading the .Lirst and last
paragra~ and thus turn off before they
become too deeply involved.
Analysis and interpretation is a great
art whi ch only a few. such as Eric
Sevareid." have wholly mastered. As
Scvareid handles his art, it is to explore a
subject rather than to arrive at con·
clusions on it. and in lttiS: \Vay lo open his
o\\'n mind and the minds of listeners to
''arious inherent possibilities.
Marine General: 'Thanks!'
To the Editor:
Last year, I had the pleasu re of thank·
Ing you wonderful people of Las Angeles
and Orange Counlies and the various
community service organization s for your
generosity in opening your hearts and
homes to Marines from Camp Pendleton
and sharing with them your TJ1anksgiving
holiday.
Agaln this year, your hospitality ancl
generosity were overwhelming and }'Ou
made it possible for even more Marines
lo become part of your family for the day
and to share your blessings,
THANKSGIVING is the tractiUonal holi-_
day for families to gathe r together :
h~·ever, for the young ~1arlne who is
perhaps away from home for the fir st
time, it could pe a very long and lonely
day. The cook in the mess hall devotes
speci al care in preparing the turkey and
all the trimmings, bul he cannot provide
the feeling of belonging which a rainily
lends to this season.
THIS YOU GAVE lo the nearly 3.400
J\tarlnts th at you took inlo your homes.
--.. --
Thursday, December 4, 1969
The editorial page of llle Daily
Pilot 1eeka to inform and slim·
t1loU rtadtrs by prese ntin g this
~r'I opjnion.t and com.
men~ oh topia of inttrt.tt
IJ1lcl 1tgn l/iamct, bu pro . •u a
foru.m for tht erpr &lo
our r1a.dna' opin io ns, n b
prt1tntin17 tlui diverse vie
pofnt.t of fn{ormt d observtrs
Otld 1poktJmc11 O"PI topics of the <1av.
Robert N. Wood, Publisher
{
' i\fa ilhox
Letters fro111 ,.eaders are wclco11rc.
Normall!f write rs s/lou!d convey their
1nessages i11 300 ioo rds or le ss. The
right to condense fellers lo fi t. space
or eliminate /ibct is reserved , All let -
ters TllUSt i11clucle signature a'!ld nioiL·
in g address. but 110111es may be with·
held 011 reque st if sufficient rcaso11
is apparent PotH 1·y will 11ot be p11b-
l1shcri.
and you provided lheir familie s across
the United States '~ith the comfort of
kno"'lng thai their sons were not alone
for Thanksgiving,
Your kindness Inst Thursday is proof
that the citizens of Southern California do
care and that as Ameri cans, we have
much for which to he lhankful.
DONN J. ROBERTSON
Major General,
1.J.S. ~1 arine Corps
Comrnnnding General
.1\'ew Dr<1 rt L<11r
To tN;! Editor :
J fttl that Presidenl J\"1xon·s new dralt
law ls a great breakthrough In Induction
procedures that in the fmSI \\'Cre unjust
to American men o11nd ceono1n1cally
unsound .
This plan, u cluct!:ng the volunteer
army, 11 by far the most fo11vorable
method. II eliminates any question of
fairness. discrimination or loyalty and
would tnable ntore students and gradu-
<ites to further their cclucetion \'o'ilhout
th e constant rear of being called.
Those who choose lo :serve before
entering collcgr could do so and then
begin their studies \1·ithout llressurc or
worr)'.
ALSO TllE PLAN would 1nakc room
for those individuals who really wanl to
get an education rather than just at-
tending lo avoid being drafted.
The law would al1nost guarantee that
nien over 19 or 20 years old \Vould not be
called and it would greatly reduce lhe
amounl of time they would ha\'e to serve.
This would curb the number of objections
lhal were being raised under the previous
system.
Economically speaking. this new Jaw
does not reduce the amoun t or ex-
penditure to any significant degree. TIM!
cost is about the same as it \Vas under
lhc old system. Howe ver. it ll'OUld
deprive the country of its professiona l
people by calling them to serve at this
definite time period.
HOPEFULLY, in the near future. if th e
,·o!untcer army is put into effect it ,1·ould
benefil our country in every way possi-
ble.
But until this becomes a workable plan,
Nixon's new law is by far one of the
greatest improvements in the Se lective
Service system . This la\\' is :i Ions
awaited change that had to he clone.
JOY DOWDEN
Dea1·
Gloomy
Gus:
!low foolish Yi'e are to spend money
on Christmas card! to send to
people ,1·e sre In person all the
time. They should be sent only lo
far away friends and relati ves. not
orrice associntes who can be grttt·
cd in pccson .
-D \\'. A • ....,
T~lf l•1!ur-••(,di rw.111"..-1' '11..Wt.. ft OI ~taU11llJ l~N ti 1111 MWtlt-tt. J,ft.
reov~ "'' ~,,.,, tt c;1~""' Cl~•· Dl!IY ,,101
Laws Against
r .
A bortion A re
Hard on Poor
·Edi.tonal -
Research
'
Except that all birth control method!
seem lo be fallible, few '"omen \vou!d go
to a doctor -reputable or a quack -for
an abortion . Yet despite all kinds of le·
niencies in sex laws, Prof. Andras Klin-
ger, a Hungarian demographer,
estimates that about 30 million abortions
are performed in the world each year.
A landmark ruling in the District of
Columbia on Nov. 10 by District Judge
Gerhard A. Gesell shields physicians
from prosecution for abortion. Gesell, a
son -interestingly enough -of the well
known pediatrician, Dr, Arnold Gesell ,
~Jed lhal any "competent licensed prac-
titioner of medicine" could legally
perform an abortion in his juristiction for
rea50ns satisfactory to the doctor and his
patient. Judge Gesell invited the District
Attorney's office to appeal his ruling to
the U.S. Supreme Court and urged the
Congress to look again al abortion la1v
"In the light ·of current conditions.·•
SOME 40 STATES have. statutes that
pennit therapeutic abortions to preserve
lhe mother's life or physical health.
Others -Arkansas, California. Colorado ,
Delaware, Georgia, Kansas, Maryland ,
North Carolina, New li-1exico, and Oregon
-have liberalized their laws along lines
suggested by the American L a "'
Institute.
That philosophy is to permit abortion!
lo preserve the mother's health, or when
pregnancy is the result of rape or incest,
or when the child \VOuld be born
deformed. The District of Columbia by
virtue of the recent court decision ha s
become the only jurisdiction in the United
States in whicti thert is no law in erfect
that forbids doctors to perform abortions,
BUT THE srrUATION in D.C. is not
clear. One Maryland surgeon who by his
own estimate has been arrested ··12 or 14
times'' for allegedly perfonning illega l
abortions is undecided about moving his
office to Washington. lie told a
Wlltlhington Post reporter that he fears a
new law will be enacted which. y,•hile
spelling out the conditions for legal abor·
lions more clearly. will require that a
doctor seek concurrence of two other doc·
lors before performing the operation.
The surgeon. incidentally, on Nov. 18
\\'R!i sentenced to one year in prison and
finOO SS.000 for an abortion he was con-
victed or performing last November. The
judge said lhe defendant had shown a
"total lack of remorse·• over the abor·
lion.
AN ABORTION JS and probably Y..'ill
remain -a lux ury. The poor have little
access to the psychiatrists and obstelri·
cinns who can rule on abortions even in
those stales \\•here the operation is legal.
Nc.vc.rtheless, Prof. Klinger says 1hat
there is more than one abortion for every
rour llve births. And the abortion is still
lhc most widely ust>d method of birth
control -despite. lhc rhythm method . the
mechanical devices, and the pill. Prof.
Ktlngcr's studies show that countries with
liberal abortion Jaw1 bave on the average
S4 to '81 aborUons for every JOO live
births. In colt.tries with less Uberal laws,
lhe flgu res art said to be exactly the
same.
The condemnation or abortion is com·
Ing to be regarded a& an outdated
hypocrisy, Almost rvery community -
like Peyton Plaee -has Its abortlonlst
' Often he Is a prosperous and "'ell
respected surgeon.
_,
'Chief say he might go as high as '24.00 for island.'.
Shots, Pills Are
Wildly Over-used
The clinic in my office building was of.
fering employes fr'ee flu shots last month,
and I declined a little ungracioosly, tell·
ing the nurse that the only time I took a
preventive flu shot, live "'inters ago, \\"aS
the only winter I caught the flLI;-a few
weeks later.
She snorted at this primitive attitude or
mine. suggesting that a man as
knowledgeable as r pretend to be ought to
have no truck with such old wives' tales.
I shrugged, smiled wanly, and still declin·
ed, feeling a trifle loolish and stubborn.
VINDICATION FAST followt!d. A fe\v
days later I picked up the paper and read
that the U.S. Public Health Service's ad ·
visory committee on immunization "ex-
cludes all healthy adults and children
from its list of persons who should be im.
munized before the coming flu season."
As the co1pmittee lactlully put it,
neatly reversing il5 field, "lhe simple
facts are !hat the flu vaccine is not
highly effective, and it docs have a high
frequency of local and systemic reac-
tions.'' This means, in even simpler
words, that it won'L help you much. and
is more likely to give you flu symptoms
than prevent them. Just what I
1nunnured in our nur,se·s sea·shell car ..
BEFO RE THE TURN of this century,
Sir 'Villiam Osler, the great physician.
made a remark to his students that every
doctor should pass out along with
a prescription: "The desire to take
. .
( ~ ,,,., '{1
Sydney> J. l:l a rris
'
medicine." Osler said. ''is perhaps the
greatest teature which distinguishes man
lrom the animals."'
Thi s nation rushed Into a flu·vaccine
program long before an yone had properly
evaluated its efficacy, or ils dangers. \V<'
are now in the midst of a birth-control·pill
program of vast dimenstons. when all the
possible side-effects and I o n g • t e r m
genetic consequences of the pill are still
unknown.
PEOPLE RAVE become conditioned In
demand shots and pills for every ailment,
and are provided them even when the
doctors privately know that their value is
negligible or nil. This is simp ly "good
merchandising" on their part. !or the pa·
tient who is refused such dubious treat-
ment will just move on to a less
scrupulous doctor. ·
The antibiotics. life·saving as ihey arr
In some cases, are fraught \Vith peril and
wildly over.used; and even the vitamins.
1vhen taken excessively and in place ot
balanced -nourishment, can produce
"vitaminosis." a pathological condition
seen only in super-civilized societies.
~skimos. of course, never got the flu , un·
t1l y,•e raised those primitive people to our
O\vn standard of sickness.
A Show Business Classic
_Berl Lahr .'v~s a performer equipped
\\'Jth speed, timing, a joyous celebration
of a present. He had a talent for un·
complicated buffoonery lhal made him a
show business legend in the 1920s and
Thirties. lf few recall him now in the
George \Yhite or Zlegfeld shows of 40
years or so ago, or in such comic classics
as "DuBarry Was a Lady" or ''The Show
ls On," "'ith Beatrice Lillie. they pro-
bably remember Lahr's late r movie
period, especially his classic perform-
ance as the Cowardly Lion in MGM·s
"The \\'izard of Oz" (1939).
BERT LAHR is the subject of a full.
dress biography, "Notes on a Cowardly
Lion." It is by the late comic's son, John
Lahr. a drama critic born in 1941 when
l'tolt~ ., • C1w1rtl1Y" Litt!. Ir '°'"' L111r,
KM,11 Jll ~.; 11 .... t,; 11.K.
his father 1vas in his late 50s. It is a l:_OU!·
ing, nostalglc excursion into 20th Century
show business, from the time Lahr (born
Irving Lahrhelm) ~jected his father's
New York upholstery business to excel in
that raucous. marvelous training ground
for comedy, burlesque: then onward and
up\\·ard to the giddy. frustrating and
ortc.n emotionally exhausting pinnacle of
his craft. stardom.
Lahr had great personal style: he
roared. pranced, "mugged like a
demented elephant,'' as h~ biographer·
son puts It. His talent Included gut
r cs p onses.freneUc g~ures and
n touching. elusive sense of thC ~·orld,
"·hich prtlly much describe! his in·
tcrprctatlon of the movie Co\vardly Lion .
But superb a.s ii was in Lahr"s hands,
buffoonery went Into decline. As 81"'9C>ks
Atkill$01l once noted, "By abandoning
buffoons, the musical stage Jo.rt one of Ill
most leglUmate 11ssels."
t.AllR'S CAREER entered a new
phase, 'mphastzed by his d a r I n g
performitncc In Beckett's "\ValllnR for
Godot," a controver!l:i l role in \vhich
Lahr tum(td his comic style completely
around, and later as lloUom in "A
Tli.e Bookn1 a n
i
t1idsummer Night's Dream." For, as 1he
aging Lahr saw il: "My vic\v of !-.1r.
Shakespeare is he wrote for the con1·
edians, the low comedians."'
Lahr remai~ed .a personal ity on s
0
tag e
and off, creating 1nstanl affection. But 10
his son. the star is remembered chiefly
as a "friendly absence"' which, in a
sense, allows John Lahr R ce1tain ob·
jectlvity as a biographer or a n1an \Vhll
was a legend years before his son was
born. This montage of a half·ccntury
career in the theater and films does, at
the same time. ha ve the advantr1ge of
family archives in the background. and a
frank discussion of Bert J. a h r ' s
~ea.rtbreaks_. marital hi story and Jlrc·
1ud1ces. which in so1nc cases were pro-
foundly emotional,
YET THJ_:: BOOK rings vnth laughter,
Bert, for instance , \vondcrcd how 1ho
C9wardly Lion would wag the tail of his
!~pound lion suit. and how you teach 3~11.1
midgets to si ng "We \Velcon1c You to
?i!unchkin Land" y,•hen two-thirds of the
llttl~ people spoke only German. A shov.·
business classic.
\\'illlam Hogilo
~--By 6 eorye ---
Otar George :
Do you thlnk the reason 1'1n nol
so popular with 1he girls Is th at I
don't danct enough ?
FRED
Dear Fred:
Dancing i!i a greal asset in &0elal
popularity and the re Is no doubl
th"t the smooth R'.1d lilracefu!
dancer Is very -... on1 c to think or
It. ho1vert!r. Fred. old bov. I don 't
even kno\v you. J\laybe );Ou dance
TOO much.
GOP Feud
Brewing
111 Senate .
WASHING TON (UPI) -
After suffering its s~nd
legislative setback in \ a
fortnight, the N j x o n ad·
mi nistratioo is facing an open
feud with its own Senate
leadership. l
Senate Republican Lea~er
Hugh D. Scott took the fl~r
Wed.1esday to accuse the •d·
ministration of undercutl~g
his efforts to steer a GOP
program through a
Democratic Congress. He s.Ud
it took ''a hard-aosed attitude''
toward sugges ted com·
I
By.Phil lnlerland i
promises and refused to listen ll;i~t;!~;:::;~~~:!::=~=.!:;=~:!::!.:.:::J to his vote counts.
Then Sen. Howard H. Baker
Jr. (R·Tenn.}, the corr--------------------
servaUves' choice whom SCo1t
defeated in the leadership
election In September, arose
to face Scott, Ile accused the
Pennsylv;r.1.ia senator o £
"washing dirty linen i n
public" and said -his remarks
were not "in good grace."
Selective Service Board
Answers Draft Queries
. ,.
• Violenee Report
Protect Assembly
·Right, Panel Asks
' .
Ti.w.iay. --4, 1969 DAILY PILOT 7
Rogers Says Progress
At SALT Plea~es U.S.
BRUSSELS ( U P.1 ) ministers thal the Helsinki ex•
Secretary of State \Villiam P. changes have apened a
Rogers said today t h e positive a n d constructive
r;trategic anns limitation talks ·American-Soviet dialogue on a
(SALT) in Helsinki have got continuing s tr a l e gic rcla· \VASHING TON (UPI) -test group whose acliviUes got off to a good start with tJie tionsh.ip.
The National Comn1ission on out of hand or at public of· Soviets adopting a businesslike He said the preUminary
Causes and Pre\•ention of fi cials who refused to give attltude. stage of the talks in the Fio-
Violence has concluded protest demonstrators a p a r a d e u s off' · Is 'd R · deinonstrations arc most apt · · tcia mu og-ers nish capital sl'iould end in
lo become violent when socie· --=pe=r=m=i'=· ================;::::=''::ld::th=e::othe=r::l::l::N=A;:TO:::;f:::;ore=;ign;;;•;bo;u;;t;t•;;";;w;ee;k;'·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ty docs not protect an in· r
c.!h·idual 's or a group's right to
free spccch and assembly.
That happens too often, the
t3-mcn1ber commission said
Wednesday in a report on
''Group Violence," and there
is a definite need for ne\Y
legislation guaranteeing every
An1erican's privilege to ex-
ercise these First Amendment
freedoins.
"Society's {allure lo affora
full protection to the exercise'
of these rights is probably a
1najor reason • \Yhy protest
son1etimcs r c s u I t s in
violence." the report said.
"Although these ri ghts are
safeguarded by the federal
Constitution, th e existing"'!
remedies to aggrieved persons
are not adequate."
this time LAST year?
Bak'er said Senate
Republicans no1v have suf.
fered t'vo bitter defeats -re.
jection of the Supreme Court
nomination of Clemente F.
Haynsworth Jr, and 11.1 income
tax exemption -and • Scott
was following "a bighly con·
fu sing strategy."
To correct this situation, the
panel headed by Dr. Milton S.
\VASHINGTON" (UPI) -!hat time. Eisenho1ver urged President
Don't get caught short next year! You won't miss
the $5 or $10 you put in each week, and next
year at this time, you'll have a nice enough
check to assure a very Merry Christmas indeed!
'fhree days after the draft lot· Q. A young man already has Nixon to propose a bill giving
tery selections for next year, received an ordrr Lo report for federal courts the pov.·er to
these are the questions the induction. Docs he con1e under grant injun ctions a g a i n s t
the lottery? threatened or a c t u a I in·
Selective Service says it is A: No. I nduction~ being cal!· terference \Yilh the right to
receiving most £requenlly: ed now are for this month 's spe;;ik freely or assemble.
Question: Who is affected by draft quotas. Th e January Under its plan. the court ,
the lottery: draft quota of 12,500 for 1vhich orders could be issued at the j
F First National ~Bank oF oRANGE couNrv
Fir.st i11 Ptr!ona' Banking Service Binet 1906 The sharp exchange -
highlighting the differences
betweeo the liberal Scott and
the GOP conservatives -
came after the Senate had
voted on two plans to increase
the personal income tax ex·
Answer: Those young men young men will begin rcceiv· request of the attorney I
born between Jan. l, 1944, and ing notification '."le>.:t mon th, general or a pri vate in -
will be the first one filled div idual. They could be aimed, I
Dec. 31, 1950. 1 _'U~n~der:'._lt~he~lo~ll:'er?'.Y..''~Y''.'.'':'m~·c_ __ I~o::_r :'"'.:'~m'!'p~Ic:., a:i· ':.''~c::a~m'!'p'.!':us~p~rc-o-:!.':==================================' Q: \Vhat erfect will the new I·
emptia.1.
The Senate voted down a
proposal by Sen. Charles If.
Percy (R·lll.), and pushed by
Scott. to incl'ease the ex-
emption to $750 by 1972. The
administration opposed the
proposa l . and Senate
Republicans themselves were
about evenly divided.
-Then the Se11ate passed a
more liberal proposal
sponsored by the Demorats to
increase lhe_txemption to
$800. Scott said this let Lhe
Democrats walk away with
the credit for g i v i •.1 g
Americans a cut in their tax
bill.
Scott, in an intervie1v, said
he thought he "should be
trusted to exercii;e judgment
up here." From now on, he
said, he WQuld try to gain the
President's ear rather than
deal with subordi11ates.
The Percy plan differed
from Sen. Albert Gore's $800
plan in i.hat it would not have
taken full effect until 1972· -
presumably after t.1flationary
fires had been danwened. But
the administration apparently
decided Wednesday\morning it
\Vas against eilher amendment
-and told Republican con·
servatives that when they
checked with lhe' Treasury
Department.
system have on deferments?
A: It doesn't ·have any i?f·
feet. Only those holding IA or
JAO (Conscientious objector)
\\'ill be called.
Q. Can a student whose
number looks good to him
(low in the draft call order) go
to his local board and ask that
his student deferme.1t be
changed to IA so he can end
his obligation next year by sit·
ting safely through t.he sele.c·
lion?
A: The Selective Service
headquarters, ' • p e n d i n g
further clarification,'' is ad-
vising those persons to "sit
light." But it suggests such a
move probably wouldn 't be ad-
vantageous because the stu·
dent will hold the same posi·
tion in the draft when bis
defenne.1t ends and there
might be fewer men drafted at
No, By God!
NEW DELHI (AP) - A
Socialist n1ember of India's
Parliament who said he did
not believe in God was over-
ruled by an 111-5 vote when he
proposed deleting the phrase
from judicial oaths: "I swear
in the name of God.••
Justices Get Filni-
Curious or Yellow?
WASlilNGTON CAP) , considered a crime.
Distributors o! "1 Am Curious "There is no r a l i o n a I
Yellow" have sent a copy of distinction ," attorneys for
the Swedish sex fi lm to U1e Grove Press said, "between
Supreme Court along with a the right of a person to satisfy
plea that would make legal .-his intellectual and emotional
history. needs in the priv acy of his
Grove Press, Inc., asked the own home and his righ t to
justices Wednesday t~ conduct satisfy those needs in the
their own private showing of privacy of a movie theater."
t.he erotic hit and C{IDClude it Besides, they added, "only
is not obscene. adults who voluntarily elect to
Beyond th at, thoJgh, the see the film will view lt, and
American distribut~ asked they are free ~G l~a~e the
the justices to rule t114t no of· theater at any tune if it does
ficlal may prevent ~d~~ from not meet t.heir expecla~ions."
seeing any moVle 1n an The Supreme Court, 1n 1961,
American theater -•hether ruled the Constitution pennits
ft is obscene or not. ()fficials to censor films before
'I'his plea seeks to c:cpand a they are shown publicly. Since
major free speech n1ling by then , however, the coort has
the court last April th at upset various, film bans and
possess.ion ol obscene Jams or warned that distributors must
printed matter in the jt'ivacy have a chance to test the
of a man's home cannot be censors' rulings quickly.
PEPPER DINE COLLEGE
announces tha t
THE PEPPER~INE SCHOOL OF LAW
I fc111n.,~ Or1119e Univ111ity I
IS NOW RECEIVING APPLICATIONS
FOR THE SPRING TERM BEGINNING
'
Janu•ry 26
For lnf•rm1llon contact
THE OFFICE OF THE DEAN
THE PEPPER ONE SCHOOL OF LAW
12345 Westminster
Santa. An.o, California 92703
(714) 531-8581
Applicalions should be on me
• before December 20
CULTURED PEARL l!INGS
10 Kaia! white or yellow gQld. Se¥Cro l styles.
MOTHER'S PIN
With bir thsi'orM' "jewel" fQf'
MCh precious chtld Of orond·
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in sterling silYer or gold filled.
F"m $J 250
I' Karo l, ottrac.tivefy ttylc:d' to ma1c.h any mood.
Tremendov.. !>1!1ectiori, $250 ·-------*
FREE
26 Pc. PUNCH BOWL SET
With Single Purchase of $29.00 or More
FIREBIRD
BUTANE
GAS LIGHTERS
., Col ....
Attrocli\19 leatherette ·co • •
choice of 4 colors.• J yr. guor-
ontee • Positive oction.
50
PIECE
SERVICE
FOR 8
"CORDOVA"
Solid t toinless steef. Erlra heavy quolity, perfectly
bolanced ond groded. s299s
DATEFINDER
14 KARAT
CHRISTMAS
CHARMS
·-
SPEIDEL WATCH BAND
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LA.Y•Al'fAY TODAY FOR C:HBISTMAS *-----
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A1 k About Our
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JEWELEllS POii '2 YEARS
HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER HUNTINGT.ON CENTER
2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa MtH HUNTINGTON BEACH
54S.9485 192.5501
STORE HOURS: Mon. thru /.1. 10 'tll 9 p.m.
Sunday 11 'tll S p.m. 'Ill Chrlstmu
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Ex-Pendleton Brig ·Chief Refut~ Riv¢rs
. \ ·n
..... '. ~· 11· " • . ' i' • '
Mineral King 'Plish'
Urged in U.S. Motion
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -
'!be ICh U.S. Cireuit Court of
Appeals will cor...sider Monday
a motion l:ly the federal
government asking the court
to move faster Jn settling a
dhpule that bas halted tile
$35.S mjlll<>n Mlneral King
win1'r sports re>ort develop.
ment in 5equoia National
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' '
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Total benefit• on Jour $500.00
anlnga-1 =='3t!!
_J Stop bp mid -us to open your account.
Wi ~to~ for. iocr..
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A
former commander of the
Camp Pendletoo brig says he
could recaU QP)y one lncident
wheo Negfo pr18oner! tried to
or~anlie 800 asserts con-
ditions were not as bad as
reported by Rep. L. Mendel
Riven (D-S.C.)
'Man Held
In Threat
• TWD.YE omCES TO SEllVE;\'OV ' ••
IOWIU.uDWDCID
-17 1•M
wa1rr.-sta11
GILB 111--.
IACllPCEITA ---
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WT IOI Ml!llD ---lOPAllSAl'WA
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ARCADIA
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1001.~A".
SOUTH COAST l'WA --Coll. WHITTilll DDWllS
ft215 E. w , ..... SW.
IEU IARDEllS
17411 E.-A"'
Lt. Col. Neil Diamond, who
retired last June after 27
years, serVice, told the San
Diego Union Wednesday night
that he denies "the gravity of
the charges" reported to a
Charleston, S.C., newspaper
by lUvers, chairman or the
House Armed Services Com-
mittee.
Rivers said Negro prisonen Diamond. who llvu ln termer brig olne<r.
"Thert 'waa Orie incident
where thls was trying to occur
when I was there." ~d
said or Negro prisoners at·
tempting to organize.
are better org~zed ...
White prisonen: were Jess
organized and rot led 11 well
as the_ blacks, he laid.
in the brig enslaved white nearby San Clemente, w1s
prisoners a.id baffled guards. commander •of Headquarters
His report was based on fin-Regime"Jt at Camp Pendleton
dings or two investigators he from April 1968 until bis retir·
sent to visit the brig last ment. His command included
September after allegations of the brig and he was the im-
pr1soner maltreatment ap-mediate commanding officer
peared in nalional magazine,. -of Maj. Wilson A. Voight,
•·nie black militants areiar·
dent segrecatio:!lsts and wpnt
to be together," he sild.
"They hang OUI together and I
''We had the mllitants In .the
brig spotted and we had them
"'tll under control,'' he sald.
•·1 ~eel quite sure that this sort
of.+thing was not rampant in
""brig."
Reform Plan
Talks on Tax Shift Open
i
'MeanwhUe, an official at
Cjnnp Pe:idleton said he would Nit comment on the Rivers'
rfport . and ~ no copies . of
tile report have been-provided.
I. Marine Corp investigation of
~egations is continuing.
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c .. caM. AIM ~ wlH .. t. MMt1
"'"
Reg. $14.00' $7.91
Mllto• lrad19y'1
DYNAMITE SHACK
FUN GAME SEEN ON T.V.
....... 00 '"'' '2. 91
AURORA'S SHUFFLU
n.. hlble-top sai.m. .... .... fw ,.. ...... ...lly. Plcrys ... KMft !Ai:e Niii S!Nffte ...._
~~gL.:1~:~ •... _ ................. _ .. _ ...... ,. ..... -··--$4. 99
VOICE CONTROi.
ASTRONAUT IASE
·-..., ... ~ i.-. .. ,.., .. ~ ··-· • i.•• ...., ....... ..,. ...... \ ..u.t .i..ii. ....... _...._. ..... .., .. i.-cll ~· .... • ,,,.. __ $11.44
APOUO/SATUlll .
f MOON l?CKn """' ............ =: ..... ·' ..... ... ... ....................... _, ... _ = =-~ .. ~ ... = .. "C..: :.;::·, .... _ ......................... .. --, ........ $8.88
,_._.........._u.t. .._ .............. _,.. ......... _
SCOOTA . IOARD
==~~·~ =-= .... ,.-He. .. .,., ...... ............. ' ....... -$7.76
Reg. $9.00
EAST IAlll OYIN
SALE PRICE , $7.61
ALL·PIO HOCKIT
UNITED 727 JET MAINLINll
... ltewtlfll .... _... ~ .....
,__.,.. ,i... ..., -... ""'""""
·~, ...1.•.;_ .. .. -%•
•kin. ""''' 4 ,... .......... ....... 11" •'911 wffll • 31'' ........... , .... _. __
~!1.QO $14.71 .
H.O. ROAD IACIHG sn .., nco
~-...... 2-. ..... h-Mw, ....... ,_.... ....._WM..._ .
-$12.87
... ..,~ ......... ._ ... ... • ...,.,,...lsio..-d!W .. ....
... .ict.r.s -........... .... ... Ule. ................. ... t:;-.... ..._, ........ ..
•• ;:;~... $14.84
SOMA GAME
.~,. $7.67
CHRISTMAS
·HOURS:
WESTCHESTER, LOS ANGELES, CANOGA PARK
OPENSU~Y
'
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•
• •
.,
I
~
• II
• n
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1t
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Air~lanti Buff
Miss Ida Holdgreve, 88, Of Daytona, vie\\'S the plane
in which she took her first airplane ride last month
(iop photo). But her interest in aviation started
Jong ago -the bottom photo shows Miss Holdgreve
sewing the cloth of an airplane at the \Vlight Broth-
ers' Dayton plant in the early 1900's. The Dayton
Chamber of Ca.mmerce arranged the flight, ful -
filling .Miss Holdgreve's dream of flying at least
once.
Crossword P uzzle
ACROSS 49 Winn in g Yesterday's Puzzle Solved:
serve In • J One who tennis looks 50 Container Intently 52 Viol ent ' Tlghtly publ ic closed disorder hand 53 Stilte: Abb r. 10 Perfume 54 Choose base S1 Quick 14 Symbol of escape: stubbomess: Slang 2 words 59 0{ Norway 15 1ta11an city 01 K· nd of pet: 10 llll rs. Shake· Z words speare 64 ·small 12/4/119 17 Robin's 117 Knob sweetheart: •a linter 7 Os iris' wife JS Kind of 2 words Olympics 8 !table contest 19 Group or parti cipan t: com~artment 39 Word of ·relatives Z words 9 Muc approval 20 Make 70 Single smaller 41 Sk ill beloved 71 Ananias 10 Ratio to 43 Shows 21 Havin g a JZ Fem inin e sp eed of excessive
sUpfiery name sound ~leasuie :i:· lty 73 -·-!lilt 11 Not rented ~Ii indof log 23 eath genus 74 Educational 12 An imal · 48 One engigrd
ZS Chica~o in stilulion catching in work Cubs igure 75 Smells de vice suspension 211 Beverage stnmgly 13 African· 51 Saloon i 27 Go astray republic habitue Z~ Raise DOWN 18 Mov1n3· on 1 54 Confe ss: I 31 Comm it curve path 2 words
I crime 1 Warden's 2Z Carousel 55 Sound:
33 Namely concern 24 Walk.inp Comb. ror111
34 Dtrls ive 2 To·-: 27 Sinful Sb k"lnd of wa vt sound Everyont: 28 Auto trip 58 "West Side 3• Numer ica l 2 words JO Mort loyal Slory" song prefix 3 Neth trlands 32 Wager \ LO Not frnh 411 Thought Inlet: 35 Trans· -LZ Narrate 42 Fruit 2 words portation bl Duck. 44 Dodgers 4 Shrub mtdlum LS llllactous or Expos 5 Posts again 37 Kitchen plant 45 Suspic ious Ii A long llrm: Lb Set eagles 47 Rips way on 2 words 6' Btfore
J • .. •
70
Read tlie Stars Witli 0111arr
.J
V al"le y Eyes Budgeting I or S,f hoo ls
1/2 OIL. SILE By RUDI NIEDZIELSKI
Of tM Diiiy ,lltt Slftf
use of manpower, materials the eduCatlonal dollar," he
and equipment to reach goats . said.
Calllornta Commls&lon a n
School Dllt~ct Budgeting and
Accounting to pioneer it. Budgeting the educational
dollar to produce the m~t
services for clilldren has been
one of the major headaches
confronting sch o o I ad-
ministrators.
At the Fountain Valley
School District this problem is
now under study through a
$7 ,500 grant from the persa.1al
budget of the Govembr's Of-
fie<.
The new approach to the
financial maze is c-a 11 e d
• ' ' P 1 a p n i n g Programming
Budgeting Systan (PPBS)."
: Its purpose is to organize
. m!X'e efficient and eUectiVe
tbat are prepared each )'ear .
Up to now school districts
have been u!ing "horse a:id
carria8;e" planning a n d
budg(Jjng mqhods tG solve
the mounllng financial pro-
blems, according to ~like
Brick, superintendent of the
Fountain Valley S c hoo I
District.
"Allocation or funds has
bee:i based on individual re·
quests by the district ad·
ministrators and principals.
Up to now It has been im-
po.5Sible to determine where in
the school program we are
geting the most mileage out of
2666 HARBOR BLVD.
546·7080 COSTA MESA
WEEKDAYS 9 to 9
SATURDAY 9 to 5:30
SUNDAY 10 to 5:00
DOUBLE BATH SWAG
A little 1plt ndor for •
prtlfy dull room,
I dunno, oura 91fl pt•tly 11 .... 1., ..... ....,
mornin9 •ilouf 7:10, lik•
• sc1111 from • Ki119
fel'rl ily rtunion
911
3 "CUTAWAY
PULLMAN
0 l•1u!Hutly fini1h1d
with •l'rlple 1tot19•
loelow 1ink •n'*i i11
dr•w•r•.
0 Complet• with
m1rblo top, sink, •nd
f•uc•I,
12995
WOOD FRAMED MEDICINE
CABINET
i 0 Dtlu•t 1tyli"9 lik• ri9~t
i fro'" lnltrior. le•utiful.
"·· 0 f . 'I . ••lur11 1nttqu• 11 ••r
'"·) ) wood fr•m•.
~ D ln1'1ll1 quiekly ri9ht A.··~ wh•re tho old tully 0110
~ e•m• out.
'
GLIDDEN ANTIQUING
KIT
l tfore you tltrow if
t w•y, •11liqu• it ( yo~r
r1•i9hbor1 will think you
r••lly 90! cl•n.)
Wid• ehOic o of colors
•nd woodto11t1 i11 •••v
, 1ttp kit.
For furnitur•, p•11t li119,
plcfuto fr•m••· . 2•7 _.
MULTl·COLORID COCOA
MAT
D A lltW '"'' '"•Y h•lp to ttf fht ki..!1 to wipo
th•ir fief.
D lvt you 'll fttl li•tt•r,
'J'Oll trfod, CJ A"4 fllt11 •ttl11, tt
111•'1' flot.
77' •
•
He Indicated that under the
new system a school district
will be better eble to explain
"what" it is trying to ac-
complish, ';bow much" educa-
tion is costing, its level of ef-
ficiency and "how effecdve" it
is. The budget will be geared
to the curriculum and will
fa cililate decisiO'.lS on how the
dollars should be spent.
The plan for local school
districts in California to move
inta PPB& was approved by
the State Legislature in 1967.
To date, the Foontaln Valley
SchOOl District is the only
school district in Orange
County selected by t h e
Vatican: Holier
Than Thou?
VATICAN CITY (UPJ)
The Vatican hu annoonctd
~ew rules for accreditation of
newsmen and warned it may
ban thGSe who show an "in-
correct attitude" tciward the
Roman Catholic church and
the Holy See .
va9can officials denied the
new regulation was an at·
tempt at censoring the press.
s9aa-
CHEERS
26 PIECE
PUNCH BOWL
SET
•
•
•
2••
' Horo'1•punchDowl11t th•t kttjH ih cool (1itl'!'• whot v•r ht •rd of w•111'.pu11ch1)
0 26 'P;,,. 11t con1i1h of 11/J qt. bowl , I? fiv• 01. cups, p111tic l1dl1, 1n.d 12
cup hook1 , cup1 .nJ bowl •r• sp1r~lin9 9l1u. , • Advtrli~•1Laoeel1!1 gODd ltlfu Occembtr 111.-1'6t (So?)
Black & Decker No. 1360
'RADIAL SAW
19995
Black & Decker U-153
JIG SAW
D S•v•11 , •• , 111 on•.
D Cuts eurvt 1, 1croll1 or
1tr•i9ht i11 wooC,
m•t•l1, pl•1tic1.
0 11.d., "•If WltllC",
"old•r i11clud•d.
1488
T .. 011 I ..lo11'f "•v• 1•
f•r to f•ll wht11 I
f•l11t.
Qu••n 1i1• for • bi9
ltro•k'f•1t in btd.
88'
REPLACEMENT BULBS
0 Rtpl•C•lll•flf llulb1 •f • prico fli•t
t11rn1 In• 011.
D Choico of indoor or outdoor, m•11y
colort •
INDOOR
C-71/2
OUTDOOll
C-91/a
6CEA.
IC EA.
INTERMATIC TIME·ALL .
•
0 Jyif ••I •Ml forget,
m19lc 111lrtd will 1t1rt Ill•
coif•• • ulomt tlc•lly.
0 Or UIO fe r19ul•ft ....
Clirl1t11111 llthh if yow Ilk•. •
5''
Black & Decker No. U· 144
BELT SANptR
. . O• H.,.', 1 '91t th1f1 ••rt .. 11 .... , ..
0 W•u,'t tilt or tevt•
(it fithh f•ir.J
·-· hcfff , ... 4999
!
LUFKIN . MIZURLOK
TAPE
l it l,li inch lty 16 fttf.
Now utf• li9hfwti9h+
e110, •••Y fe91l• lock.
F•1furof cu1hien•d lilH•
rtfu,1t; ,.,..uu1 hook
loro•k•9•·
449
TINSEL GARLAND
I I
I
In lirillitnt 1liirn11101int
holid•y colors. ·
~ 0 Fim'llY •11chorM, won't ~ f111l •p•ri ••fo1e s.1111
I t•f1 htre. ' 'i 0 U1t to trlll'I tra•,
'' deeor•f• m1nll•1, I.order
off • 1enter,it u .
39c
6 FOOT
SCOTCH
' PINE ·
CHRl$TMAS . '
'f REE
0 Why ltuy • t•w frff 1v•rv yl•r, tt.11 f/,.. ,...,... ... ""9
h ..l1tltM..I "kr· ye.,, 1f tM¥ico.
0 v.,, r11111ti1 .,.ith bo11•1htd 11oedln, 1tur..ly 1t1M, t1"4
111 lio••d f1t lltW tlttlf.. ' .
I
i
• -~ .
J 0 DAIL V PILOT Thurlday, Dtctmbtr 4, 1%t Check Out_ Those Toys for-Christmas
UNSAFE TOYS -This doll is highly flammable
and during a dcn1onstration burst into flames \Yhen
a m atch \Vas tout'.hcd to it. .o\lso sho\vn are an oven
that heats up tD 600 degrees; an eas ily broken r atlle
with spikes inside · a doll \l'il h pins in its hair: and
pointed darts.
WASf!INGTON (UPI)
'rhis Christmas season, mon\
and dad, you still are on your
own in buying safe toys for Lhc
kids. Next Christmas the
government can help.
A bill enacted by Congress
this fall and recently signed
Into law by Pre:iident Nixo.\
gives the government authorj.
ty to ban the sale or dangerous
toys -and there are plenty of
them. But it does not take ef-
fect until Jan. 10.
A 1966 law, with '"limited ap-
plication, ruled out .some.
dangerous ·toys but most "·ere
nol covered.
The Nalional Cemmission on
Jlroduct Safety has assen1bled
a ghastly chamber.of-toy-bor-
rors to show how hazardous
some toys are, yet how in-
•.ioceol they look. "nte room
resembles any budget toy
department at your favorite
store.
TEST DOW
Take the pretty dolls on the
shelves. One cutie with golden
tresses has a hair ribbon. The
ribbon is fastened with n
sharp pin. A child can twi st
I AMPEX I MICRO 88 PORTABLE STEREO
Cassette Player/Recorder System
Here's a complete com pact stereo system and re cord·
ing center in a hand some Samsonite case. Speakers
separate up to 20 feet and there's power aplenty for big,
ric l1 room .f1fli ng sound.
OR~LEAVE IT! -. ' ~--:c--r .ft_
"" '
..
MICRO 86 HOME STEREO IN WALNU_T
Stere o for butterfi.1gers. Playing and re cording conve-
nient cassette tapes, your finge rs never !ouch the con·
•:en1ent cassette tape s. l uxur ious oiled wain ut cabinets.
$1 89 95 <Om"""""m "'" rrnc•oDhOJ~":
r
COME IN AND HEAR A COMPACT-CONCERTI ,
Automatic Cassette
Changer in
CompleJ· Stereo Sys m
Pl•vt 11p to 6 tnet•·
tepe1 eu!orn•li<:.tll -,,
re'o":I 2 llourt "1lereo
wit!, C-120 caue!te l•pe1.
Weln11! c ~bi"'' & •pet k-
••1. !nd. •lareo rn ike1 &
,, • .,d.
JUST
j AMPEX ]
Micro 14 Cassette
Player/Recorder
with Automatic
Ba ttery Recharger
R1d•ar9e1 ih own Ni-Cad
b•tt,,;,, when p1ey>n&J on
AC. Plev1 '" t ulo with I 2 "'or t •d•Pl1r. l " .. , ..
1o~tk1r. lnc.lu d11 plug -in
""~t . e trpliont, C••t end
C -60 '•utt!e.
JUST
AMPEXTAPE BONUS-SAVE OVER 503!
' . • ( :
Your choice of prerecorded slereo tapes or blank 1ape
with purchase of any Ampex Tape Recorder.
lt1 Ou1· 221111 )"cur Se1•1·i11~/ 1'he ll1.11•l111r Area
• 1 411 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa •
Daily 9.9, Sat. 9 ·6 Phone 646 • 1684
the head off another doll to It docs suggest that they be -1'est doll heads. T¥.'ilit and might. Look ror sharp edges. -If a toy comes only in a
reveat a naked spike. more careful in choosing tW'll the head, as well as the -Make sure the eyes and package, ask the retailer for a
'·A street gang could use toys. arms aDd legs, as a child ears of toy anlmals are firm. sample you can examine.
this as a sec ret weapon ," the li"";;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;iiiiiioiii~;;;;;;;;;;o.,.iii..ioii;..;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i~
commission's c hi e f in· REMODELING vesligalor, Larry A. Achott.
:;aid.
, Son1e of the dolls are highly
flammable. So is a collapsible
cloth turocl full of intriguirlf
I wists and turns.
A llk.:ent dart gun which
''\\'en t over like hotcakes in
the Philadelphia area" injured
I t children, Schott sald. The
victims had one-inch plastic
darts removed from their
lungs becau se they inhaled
before blowing out.
SA'V DANGER
The automobile industry
recognized the danger of
sharply protruding f l n s
several years ago and got rid
of em, but one toy spact
r et offers the same sharp
ints lo boys and girl s.
Also on display is a bike for
one·lo-three-year .olds, \Vi th
handlebar grips which come
off easily, exposing sharp~
surfaces. One child fell again.It!
the unprotecled 1netal arid loaf
an eye.
Easily broken rattles with
spikes inside; teddy bears and
stuffed rabbits with eyes and
ears fastc.ied by sharp metal
points which can cause serioua
puncture wounds; toy ap-
pliances for little girls "'hich
heat to more than 600 degrees
or become electrically live If
mishandled: toy telephone&:
with cords that strangle.
These are not the products
of monstrous men who want to
maim or kill little children.
The men who make these toy1
have children of their own .
They are ·.1ot intentionally
malicious, but t h c com-
mission says they are some·
times dangerou sly ca reless.
toys.
SAFE PRODUCT
"Our observation ha s been
that manufacturers, domestic
manufacturers, \Vant to make
a safe product,'' commission
chairman . Arnold B. Elkind
said. "They don't want to in-
, jure people.
(
o ..... tic rtduciti(ln1 ... all m1rclla~dl11 In th1 1tort -l1kt Id· v1ht1111 of lhe1a IPI• clal prl''' 11 mtkt wt)' jar 011r r1m ocl1l-
SPORT COAT
SAU
39.SO •••.•.•• , ........... 27.88
0.50 .................... 29.88
45.00 •••••.•••...••• '. ' •. 32.88
51.50 .................... 37.88
65.00 ••••...••......••.•• 44.88
7f,OO I .' - . -. --- ---. -.. -.. 49.88
SPCF.T COATS-(wilh Slt tk1l
1911. Pritt
95 00
105"'
.... - - -. -. - - - -.
SLACK SALE
1911. ,,. .. SALE
I ,,_oo .......................... . ....... , , .....
J I .SO .,.-............................................. 71.11
.l0.00 .................................................. 1 1.11
?8.50 ···-·········· .. ···-···········-·•""""•"•·····-19.11
:·s.oo .. -----·································-········ 11.11 ~2.00 .. --·~························-········ .. ···• 11.11
!
·---~ I \''-. \
\
:'0.00 ...... _ ......... ·-·····-··•••"'••••·· .. -1 ~.11
lb 9 S ,. ...... ·--···--·---11.11
1 1 .9~ ··------· 7.11
LONG SLEEVE .... FOR Fill BELL BOTTOMS SWIATERS
Reg. Prica SALE leg. Pri'• SALE
18 .. '' 12"
30';0 ...... --. -. 21 ~1 -. 'SHOIT SlfEVE ..... -. - -.. 27"' 19" DRESS SHIRTS 16 .. , 11 " . -. ' ... ' -.. .......... -25n~ 17" 8" 5" 14Ql 10" ........... .................. - --..... - -. 22"' 15" ]"'' 4• 12'"' B" . .......... -.... ' ............
'.' ... '. --. 20'1!1 13" 6•' 3• 11 " 7" , , . •'.•,,,I .... -' -........... . -. --. . - - -. 18"' 12" 4" 2" . ......... -.... --- -. --.......
TIES SOX S. S. SWEATUS f'le~. price SAL E ~•II· prl'c SA L i!: MOD JACKJT f .stfTl:TS 72.00 15,fl MOD SHllT -..... ___
•
<.oo 2" 1.50 1.05 . ---. -20.00 1.1.11 1395 9" J.50 ................ 22 50 -1511 4" -250 ------·-1.75 ...••• 1.24 18.95 12.11 3" --·--~--2.00 . --. - . 1.40 5.00 ....... 15.95 -·--~ 10.11
"The problem is: one of
moti vat ion , of really geltinr
them going a.id making them
do something about this pro-
blcn1."
Some design changes have
been made after compl aints,
in items displayed in the
chan1ber-of-horror-loys a n d
some toys ha ve been recalled ,
commission officials said. But
most are still being sold.
. P.J.'• ' WORK SHIRT I 1 r•~ ...... 1,a '"' . s.aa r. .. c ....... ~.~1.~
4 -~ ASCOT ~ 88 g"o ...... 5n
DRESS SHllTS I 8.50 ... --5.11
9.50 -- - -. 6.81
10.00 ..... 7.11
vt\OUR SHIRT I V"EROE SllOES I
14.9' gaa 19" .... 13"
17" 11"
&ODY SHIRT
11 '~ ....• 891
12 ~5 ••••• a"
The commission stressed
that it does not offer its cham-
ber of horrors to scare the
"·Its out of mom and dad. But
_A J!'efeganl
m.n ~ S~or,,.
JJ.i.i Jlia Lido, Net£port Beach, Calif.
675-3871
NEXT TO eLUE DOL~HIN l'IESTAUl'IANT
Anolher ~ir:Jl al Springdale fiardware
PREFINISHED. FULL 4X8 PANELING.
Prefinished Finished in Plain ~~-~--V·Grooved, Prefinished Y·9roo'f'l'd, pfefillllhed •lld lo•elr to look at. At
thil pdte yo• tell h11•• the ricl<t look ef pa11eti119
without lhe hlth cost.
P'relh1b hocl c~o•
And ready fo r l111tallation llt's •asler than yo11
tl<tlnk. Ask any of o .. r solHtn•ll for f.,)/ hrformo•
ti on.
... ullf~I champa9H witfl 1111 the rich color I•
91 with •ny Illa-.
lnrrod.,tt•ry $2. 99 FULL
Offer 4 l I lntr•d11etory $1. 99 PULL
Offer 4 1 I
lntrod11etory $2. 99 FULL
Offtt 411
Full Set
COLOR WHEEL
. For an ever chang·
ing kaleidescope of color
on your tree, or other
Christme5 decorations,
this is just the thing. Will
last for many seasons.
SALE 3'' PRICE . • IUY NOW
INDOOR
CHRISTMAS LIGHTS \ .. , Indoor replacement bulbs
for Christmas tree lights •••
and 11 real savings. .... ,,1 .. 188 $2.98
SALE PRICE IUT NOW •
15960 SPRllllALE
Christmas
Trees
F1al'!lcproof mosterplete
q•olity tr"' -No11c fl11·
er 111.,where. A bM11tlf11I
l ft. Scetc.111 P'llle t• th•
mnterplec• •f tlllm all.
' ft,
LOW •• $5.45
SN tfte111 11 c•l•r tit41y
l•t S,ri119d•le H•tdw•re
I• tk S,rltttH~ SH,.
pl119 C111ter.
25 LIGHT
OUTDOOR LITE SET
, •• Outdoor light sets,
with connectors to hook
up as long • string a•
you nHd. Save Now!
Reg. Price $3.91
2!?NOW
•
Fun Ll~ht
Set ....... .
INDOOR
REPLACEMENT LIGHTS
, •• Indoor lights to
dress up your trH • , • •"d • reel saving.
littJ. Prlcc 6 2for15c C
SALE PRICE IUT NOW
'
-:-----------------------------------------------•
News Crash
Logistics Part
Of Calley Trial
MD Raps
Vietnam
Taboos
•
Fiesta for RFK Unit
A Mexican riesla, complete
with flamenco gultarb1t and
Spanish dancers \Viii 'be held
Saturday at the home of Carl
Damron. 8362 Alvarsdo Dr.,
Huntington B e a c h , by
members of the Robert S.
Kennedy Memorial Society.
MeKican buffet will b e
prepared by women . from
, Ju11rtz Colony in Fountain
Valley.
For further information and
tickets phone Mrs. John Ber·
ry, 897·7398: or Mrs. Fred
Voss. 962-8955.
-South Coast 1tua-
oRANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST
FASHION CENTER
~·.,--,_.,.~ ...
By JACK Sm.I.MAN Calley's defense v.•ould prob-
ably object.
PHILADELPHLA {AP) -A FcsOvltles begin at 8 p,m. A woman doctor who served--------'----------------------------------------
One high-ranking o r I I c e r
said "tile-court's ffrst ·question
wou1d be, 'Why do you want ta
mo\'e the lrlal!'
FT. BENNING, Ga . (AP) -
Military authorities are__JitcN_
with a dUficult decision in
determining where to hold the
general (..'OUf'l-martial of Lt.
William L. Calley Jr. "Naturally, the answer is
N~ly the trial would be going to be lo accommOO.ate
conducted in !he new J y the press. And the defense will
renovated general courtroom have a right to argue that the
in Building 5 on tbe Benning Army is making hls trial a
reservation. But there are ob-sideshow."
\'ious problems. The decision rests with Maj.
with the U~. anned forces In
Vietnam said today trying to
heal the ~sant.ry is an 1,1,phill
fight against superstiUon in·
grained ror centuries.
Lt. Cot. Atma M. Brady, the
only orthopedic su rgeon of her
sex in the Army, cited some
odd beliefs she encountered
du ring 101h months at a
hospital in Chu Lai ;
-ff.ultiple births are b3d
Juck.. A ~ielnamese mother
who bore twins or triplet!
might walk orr and leave them
at the hospital.
keeps the ''Jingle'' in
Au._lhorities are cxpeeUng Gel'!. Orwin C. Talbott, the
hundreds of A m e r i c a n commanding officer of Ft.
newsmen to request creden· Benning and trial judge LL
tials to cover the trial. And Col. Reid W. Kennedy who will
worldwide i n t e r e s t has hear argmnents on charges
brought requests from the that Calley, 26-year-old pla-
roreign pres!. · toon leader, murdered 1 109
Window screens and baby
crib nets intended to bar Ch • t •
malarial mosquitos also p~ rts mas. vent the passage of spirits.
''They would take them off to
SAVE 1 70 ·
ORTOOS newest, ultra luxurious KING
The courtroom,.i where a Vietnamese civilians at My
dozen military trials are held. Lai , Vielnam in March 1968.
each month, contairi11 only 32 Sourees close to Talbott in·
theater-type seats for spec-1 dicate that the general does
tators and · the news media. not. want the trial moved.
let the good sp~its in and only .~
put them back to keep the bad . , • Q
spirits out." " \ rtho keeps the
Col. Bra~y, SS, said Viel-'·"''"!".T;ngle'' ;n ~'OUr namese cultural taboos which ; ,.-ii!J..~ J '1 • ,y
hinder doctors often stem bank account too, ~o~munication racilities are Both defense a n d pro-
hm1ted. secution have said it would be
from Ignorance of v.·hat 1s •
going"" in the modern world. Tremendous holiday
The Army already has an· at least March before they're
nounced that some system of ready for trial. Many Vietnamese c a n • l[
neither read nor write and savings are a yours. ... on
pooling coverage will have to Calley·s military defense
be used. Closed circuit counsel Maj. Kenneth Raby ,
lclevision Is a possibility. has been denied a reque.st for
!here i~ no radio or tel"i.sion all of our f;ne mattresses in prov1nc1al areas. she said. •
No da le has been sel for lhe qn injunction by the U.S.
trial. The question of moving ~1ilitary Coort ol Appeals that th~ proceeding elsewhere is a the press be barred from
legal one. It can be done, but r eporting further accounts of
some authorities stress that • the alleged massacre.
Some Vieln~ese who r:ach , , , at all tJf OUr Stores,
U.S. Anny field hospitals •
recei" medical care ror the Merry Christmas and
fir st time, she said, because TI '"' 1\. T D r
lher• are only eoo physicians na.J!PY .L"ew reams.
mlhcrountry. ~~~
Jtr; • • • ..,...._ •• ..,.., • • • • p p
m rmunc
. SIUY SAND
. '""'1~ott1 131 • COllr!d sllld ••1-2.17
S.11.ESTAllS
TINRS.. DEC.• ' oms SUN, DEC. 1
OPEN
SUNDAYS
'Til 5:00
MMl:l'Mll
FAIRY TAlE DOLLS
AS~llltftdolldrr:!!led i• 121 JOIJ flVllo'ite 1airy 1'1.-:
Wfumt. • ••• Z.11
unu•ss 1DWEI ~
FUSSY ~.J' ' miJ
5se
£0UTH COA~T l'LAl.A
COSTA Miii. -"""'L"'tJ l"lllOIM1 ........ ----um a-cm __ ..,."""'
QS11 •1l ilm AUi IUD •llllfll cmtt
t101 ..... fUU
_...,_
1~1n•mm ..__ --·:-.:c .. .. -·--""lo-~--.,._ ==~-...... _., ... --r....-imn•• _a&l.IK ... ..,. •
:.[:. . n:e Value King ~:, i SAVE s30 ~t
.... tr.. King size quilted mattress and 2 box springs,
)!/:-Deep-sleep comfort with rich, decorator tick ·
~ Ing. Christma s elega nce at 1 great saving! i Reg.~~4! $118 '
~'}.prfi51~q~f .
~· . ·-"*'·. '
'
.
THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN
FOUNTAIN VALLEY
16131 Harbor Blvd.
INut to Zody'1 l
Phone: 839-4570
Cloud-soft splendoff -42 aq. ft of quatity·
crafted mattrtU with bMIJtiful quilted cover
and matchin1· box 1prin1s.
Your best Chrlshnls bJy!.
. MERRY
CHRISTMAS
AND TO ALL
A GOODNIGHT
ReJ,Dember:
You can only our d1e1mltndodtluxe twin or full tlze m1ttrass with
match in& bOic sp1lna. An extr1·we1r Christmas s1vlnsf
buy ,ORTHO . R•f.$69.95 $58
Mattresses j' Now
at ORT'.'Ho ;(" ... , _ _._ ·'
Pl•.UC fl ...... rlf .. fit (not .. llfU9trntlH) .."'°! , "i~ arid IMl•I framt ·' • C Stores... ~ .11,.c..i·~ 'R~ t
~ ' .·
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LAKEWOOD
4!133 Cancllt-wood Dr.
(Acro11 from L1kewood Center} . .
' Pho e: .Utl 4134
OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS
• ANAHEIM
1811 W. Llncoln .Blvd.'
IJust E11t .! FedM1rtl
Phone: n6-2590
' •'
. .
.. . ·
..
. • • • • . . . • •
• ' .
OPEN DAILY 10-~•SAT. 10-0•SUN. 12·6•1MMEDIATE DELIVERY•EASY CREDIT TERMS•BANKAMERICARD•MASTER CHARGE i ' -t-• .-. -
---.. l \
J
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'
2 DAILY PILOT Tnur~ar. Dettmbfr' 1%9
USC lnstrumen1~ Package -May Go to .Jupiter
• An ~ment package to be oor lnslrumentalton will givt Carlson t.iplained l h at basic research, ther'e also 1nay bon. a spacicraft wiU have to Information ts expected to
8fnt on the Hrs! spacecraft sci ence the first close-up J upiter and -Saturn, un1ike the be m0te immediate practical pass through. tht asteroids, a l>e-Ua:n:.vnttted before, during
flight t.o Jupitt>r 1n 1972 -tu analysis of 11,'' Dr. Judgr !:a id f'arlh and olber planets oioser significance : It is not in-va.m bell of irregular. rock-like and possibly after the Jupiter
arford ICieoce its fir.it close-up in an interview. to the su.n. have retained their conceivable that man some debris orbiting between the fly-by. Judg(: $3..ld the
study of -the plancl·s at--Tht USC scientist explained . ., day wiU go to Jupiter :lr.d outer-and innu planets. The spacecraft carrying his •Jevice
mosptle:tt -is under develo~ that a koo1vledge of the rauo primary atmosphere~. 'o\·hil'h other ooter planets. asteroids vary from mountain-and other experimental gear·
ment by scientist! al the ol the two elements and th e appear to be e s s e n I i a 11 Y But there are fonnidable sized masses lo dust-grain will not return t.o earth, but
Universit y of Su u 1 he r " e~act percentage of the al-11nchanged since the planets' obstacles to be surmoonted particles. will keep going in outer space
Californ111. it 1\'as disclosed tu· mospher!' which !hey con-lurn1ati on. be(ore that becomes pos3ible, •·we don't expect there will with its signal becoming
da v. lltilule: 1s important because "Kno"1!edge or Jupiter·;; at-Judge said. Jupiter is t>n-be a collision or any hindrance_ weaker. until it is never heard
\\'eigbin~ let:os th:tn lwo ·''then, we will have a signifr· 1110:-iphcre • 11·ill give us in-circled by a radiation belt, and of the spacecraft or its ex· from gain.
I pounds, the devk·t· "'ill be rant insight into the ;i t~ tu rmation ·about conditions lhe teplpetature there is about periment packages," Judge The devk:t will be sensitive
J ~lmilar ir. runcllon h• light inospherc or 1he plane!." :\n before and during !he forma-300 degrees F. below zero. .said, "all.hough the spacecraft to ultra-violet light rays. It
:1neters USel"I by photogr.i phcrs, understanding of 1 hr al· lion c;f the so lar system. ~ a C.arlson added there is some may enc o u n t er dust \\•Ul detect amoonta o {
{occording to its 1~1gners. Dr. mospherc. in tum. may be a more informed study ol ho\v doubt as to whether the planet particles." hydrogen and hellom by "look· Carlson, who is due to recil•e
1 llarrell L .. Judge and Robert key in time to understanding planets were formed ~ill be has any defined sol.id surface. The ~vice Y(iil transmit at-ing at" mOlecules and atoms the PhD degree at USC in the
; Carlson ol ~sc·~ 11hysics rie· the evo\ulion of the solar possible." .be said. For the first time, because ~ data back to earth that have absorbed light from near future lives at 9'l4 E. Pop-
fL! WlfM LIV0.16 IN nus
POl.1.Uft:P WATefl.-f'."< 61~~S
AR"e POO~D!"
: part.men!. system. Altboogh cl~ified as pore, of the,distance ,to its destina· via radiO signal. the sun. pyfields Dr., A1tadena. ; Judge and Carlson. who•1--=------------~....::. _____ :.._ ___ ...:._ __ _:_ _________ _:_ ______ --___________ .:,.:_ ___ :.._ _______________ _
: i1a1·e nu1de ::imilar del'ices tor
•c:irlh :ninC.!pin:n· cxpl.1r;.ilion,
'.;i re Jx.ulding 11le soph1sl1caled
•'·black box" under a conrract ~of more than $750,()(1(1 from
: i\ASA. The grant <.'Ol'<'f:i in·
!'lr11111enta!1on fur 11•.'o
: ::.rJ)'3ratt' space fl ights.
; The fi rst 'A'itl be launched.
: along with other experimental
: izear. on a three-stage AU as-
; Lentaur-TE 364 rockel from 1 Cape Kennedy in ~arch, 1972.
!The journey lo Jupiter. at !he
closest point 1nore than 400
million miles lrom earth, will
take about two years
l Specifically, the CSC-buill
rtevice 's principal mission is to ANOTHER NEW LUCKY STO\E OPENS IN WHITIIER-11750 EAST WHITIIER BLVD. AT SORENSEN TMUISDAT,
DICIMlll 4tfl
l determine the amounts or
primary cons t i l u en l s in
.Jupiter's atmosphere. That is,
il will be designed to pinpoint
relative amounts of molecular f hydrogen and ~tomic heliu1n.
"We only know a b o u t J Jupiter's atmosphere from
i remote observation. The plan-t ned fly-by oi the planet "'ilh • , • 1 : Behavior • j
1 Studied ,
J By G~'IC
• ' .! Golden \\lest College l'iill
particij>ate in a !ll'o-year
: research project l\"ith tWo
• other junior colleges to find
~· out how they are changing stu·
dent behavior. r I The study. lo be conducted
In cooperation with Compton
\ and ~1l. San Jacinto junior
:. colleges, will seek 1 o
} detennine if students learn
~ and how they form attitudes
~ and values.
{ Dr. Arl-hur Cohen. 'vho Is
: directing the projecl for
: UCLA 's graduate school said,
~ ··most institutions have in-~ formation about how many
~ students transfer to four -year $ colleges or universities, their
t grade-point average, and hO\I'
: many go to work after com·
~ p 1 et in g occupational pro-
• gram 5. Except for thi s data.
, the colleges know little about
:. their actual effect on their
~ ~tudents.''
~ Through the study Cohen1
: wants lo develop an assess·
( ment model or a better tool to
i tell colleges ho\v "·ell they arc
~ helping students realize goals,
1 l."hange attitudes and values in ~ positive directions, and help
~ them learn.
• Golden \\'esL Compton. and
1 \It. San Jacinto "'erc selected
; because th ey represcnl new
and old institutions cnrollin~
students from widel y differen t
: backgrounds. ! The study involves lesllng
: this year's incoming freshmen ! al regul ar intervals over I l\'O 1
year.i. This fall the freshm:!n
, look several tests, including
j personality in v en I or y . a
::.urvey on goals and percep.
lions ol the college . essa)I
writing sample, and critical ~ thinking ability .
In addition. the faculty Is
: hcing measured to find out
how they regard teaching,
' !heir students and their col-
lege. Thi~ information, ac·
rording lo Cohen. may be
useful in changing the co\. •
lr.ge·s approach as well. as
showing "·helher nbji-cti\'cs
are being met.
Jail Wedding
i Bid De1ued
LOS ANGELES 1\;PI \ -A
woman v.·bo atlemptl?d lo
; 8muggle a gun into the cttl of
! c'Oltvicted m~derer GrtgOry
.. ULll Po\\·eU. y.•as denied
~ permisslon ri.tonday lo v.'rd
! him in county jail.
Pn\vell . 36, faces death in
: the gas chamber . ror hi.!i cnn.
: vktion or sla ying ~ l.n..
.. Angeles polict officer in an
: onion patch near B:tkersfie kl '
: In 1913.
l Mn. Sylvia Ruby Dorsey,
56, who is on proba.Uon for the
I IUO 1mtJ811lng after J»eadifl&
I guilty. WIS denied htr at>
plication for a marriage
license: becaust or lt•gal com·
plie1tions.
A trieod of lilt couple sald. ! ''They art \'tr)' anxious 10 act
married. They're in \o\t · -
Pric:H or• Oi$COl.lnted E1tcepl on fair-Troded
and Government Controlled hem,, 11·4.6? •LOOK FDR THE LUCKY BONO ON THE PACKAGE ••• 1rs YUUR UNCONDITIONAL GUARANTEE OF CDMPLm SATl,SFACTIDN DR YOUR MONEY CHEERfULLT REFUNDED.
•
CHUCK GROUND ROUND RIB STANDING T-BONE • USOA GRADE A
URGE IND FRESH
ROAST
BLADI CUT
39l~
RUMP ROAST ....................... 79'
CHUCK ROAST c11111•tu1 .......... 11.47c
SIRLOIN SJEAK ........................ 93'
IOUND S"ftAK 10111lU, ............ t1.89c
PORTERHOUSE ~~::,•1tMOv11 ......... '1'5
LINK SAUSAGE :~:,~ ........ 1.L1.,...891
( i J11JIED,_JOOOl -:;'''1'.'f"'
JUNIOR FOOD ~~·:~~.•,•:.~ ................. 12'
BABY FOOD !f~·:~:::~.1.~~ ................. 9'
BABY CEREAL 51Dll ... /lllAIUJ0AfMIAl35' OIMllfO)IOl.101 .•.•..•...•
MAXWELL HOUSE
COFFEE ~!:~: ................. 73·.
~!:~: .......... '1'' :::~: ...... '2~.'
INSTANT ~·:~~~,.~~.~~.~~~.~-'.1 :;
UBAN ~·~:~:.'.~~~.'.1.1.: ....... '1.
TEA BAGS ~~~·,~•01 ......... 46
PEARS ~~~~:,': ............... 45 :
PEACHES OllMOMfl(lll" 29' 2• 01. CAI .......... .
~· ... 4&y1---i
l FRUIT COCKTAIL ~ . 33 •' Dfl MONTI ( ~ JO OUHC( (AN t-.................... .. ...... -· vv ~...-""
DOLE PINEAPPLE \:~« ................ 37'
APPLESAUCE :~00•,1.~:, •..••••••••••••••••••• 22c
MO TI'S FRUIT TREATS :::~ ......... 35'
BORDO GRAPEFRUIT ~~c~:~~!li ....... 30<
ORANGE DRINK ::::~·u ................. 49 '
DEL MONTE CORN ~:>':Z1~ •••.•.•..•••.• 23'
GREEN BEAN ,11115111•11!1(1111 25' IU(ID. 1• or. CAI ............. .
... 4&yt·--
DEL MONTE RELISH
12 ,::..1:; JAR 2 9 (
DEL MONTE SPINACH '"'·"• ...... 21 '
TOMATOES ~!10~.1~ ••••••••••••••.•••••••••• 29 '
POTATOES ~::;~:~:~.~--~~-'-~.·.~ ........... 14'
REFRIED BEANS ~°!i'1~~','• ................ 29'
SLICED BEETS :!~.' ................. 21 '
FRENCHIES l':.~c':'.~~-~-~'.~.'.~.1.\ .............. 23'
TOMATO JUICE :::;~<•• ................. 34'
STAR KIST TUNA !~u:; c•• ............. 32'
PINK SALMON \',~::~~~A .................. asc
~· .... 4~1....---.
TASTY SNACKS
GINl:Rll MlllS 3 7 (
•' r OUHCI IOl
BEEF STEAK ROAST STEAK FRYERS
FllSll & LIAN CENm C11T TINDER & JUICY TAILS HMOVID WNOlE IOllY CHICllllS
.i9l~ 79l~. 79~. IAR·l-CUE $1~.~ 29~. OR
BROil
CROSS RIB ROAST
10111\fU ................ , ••••..
RIB STEAK
" 79c
... 89<
~!:!'!.!~!,!~~ ........... 33<
~~~G,~n1u1111 .........•. ,,.,.,. 33c
~· .... 4&;-1--..
DEL MONTE PEAS
fARlY GARD(N
17 OUN(f CAN 19c
LIBBY CORNED BEEF ,,. ............. 59'
HORMEL CHILI ~I~'r~~! .................... 57'
. \UNT JEMIMA SYRUP""·""'" 68 '
1 RESERVES ~::~~~~~-'-~.·-~~-~~~.~: .... ~. 59'
.,EANUT BUTTER ~~:.~:: ............... 17'
HOUSEHOLD If.Hit _ . ·
WATER sonENER ::~~~:i.~~ ........... 57'
\\'HITE KING "D" ''''"1•, 68 ' 4tOr.IOJ .•....••.••..•
WHITE KING SOAP ::~;~~~~~ ......... 69 c
DUPONT SPONGES."""' ............ 35'
GOODWIN AMMONIA MH.m ...... 45 '
IVORY SNOW ~~~~~~···········-···· 82'
~' .... ~·&yr~,,_,
~ DU MONTE CA TS UP !
' TOMATO 25 C l l .. 20~~~~~~0-T:~(·--. l ... ._..._. --·····-CASCADE ;;~1:.~':i.1.1.~.~:.'.;.~~'.'. ........... 59'
GAIN DETERGENT M ................... 1"
.YIDE ::~i~:'i ...................................... 12<
DOWNY SOJ.uNiR ~~~~-'•"-···········79'
MR. CLEAN ~~~~1~~~-~'.; ................... 6•<
ZEST SOAP .., .............................. 20'
JOHNSON KLEAR ~~0:11.~a'.' .............. 93'
.. ~13.y!-.. ..,
NESTLES' QUIK < 79c (NOCOlllf
32 OUN(l CAN
LEG OF LAMB 89<
li!IOI CIOt(l ••.•••.............. , .•.•••..• ,.\I.
RIB LAMB CHOPS $129
V,.I <llOIU .......................... ,., •.. \I.
SMALL LOIN CHOPS $159
~'11 CIJllUUMI , •• r,,, .............. ,,,,,, ll.
THIN SLICED BACON 79<
OKll JMYH ........................ 11-lt. ••I.
CREAM PIES ~:~;'.~'1r ........................ 27' !IAllAllA-CllOCOlAQ -COCOlllT -U•Oll-STl•Wllllf)
BREAD r::"~~~~~ ~~.~~~.~~-·-.. ······ ......... 48'
TOTINES PIIIA ,,,._.., ................. .79'
tC•llll, U.llSAil. M llA .. 111511!
POTATOES::~~~~::.~~~'.~~~ ................. 28(
FRIED HALIBUT :~~.':.~~;.~ ............. 16'
CHICKEN PIE i:·~~~~:::~ .................. 39'
ORANGE JUICE!~".'~! ..................... 26'
~ •.... ~&y!""""i
! DEL MONTE DRINK l
rlHIAPPll· 25 ( · GIAPlflUlT t--~~~~~~E-~__" ~----------} mu:uwwm UUV~4*4
COOK IN BAG:~~::~ ...................... 27c
OIKIO lllf, llKK TIHIT,(111(111 All U~l
APPLE JUICE!:.~~~ ....................... 20'
PIZZA ROLLS ~;r.i~~?.~.1~.1
............ 6 l '
SIRLOIN TIPS :~'t:~~~ ...................... 43 '
BEEF STEAKS :~·i~!~~~-·.~~~.~~~ ............. 69"
BEEF STEW !~lt:~~ ............................ 35'
BANQUET MEAT PIES ............... 19'
!CllKlll, lllf, Ol IUllU!
FISHSTICKS ~~-:::':::~ ................. 65'
BREADED SHflMP ~:'.':'.':::~ ........... 2*'
OH BOY SANDWICHES," ...... 63'
l•AITIAMI Ol IM 11111
MEXICAN DINNERS :~.~~.' ........... 44'
(Clllftl llK .. lfff Ill<•~ .. IC.II.(-. PlAT()
BREAD •••'IDT,,, 10filll 10t (II•••••• 25' I fl,Alle4ill l601.llAI ................. .
OATMEAL MAlllt•Hllllt••"l.IA1$111 • 41 ' ... ,"", t 11 ..................... .
~BREAKFAST ~,'m~:':~~.~~ ....... 49'
MJB RICE ~~:::~ ......................... -41'
.,,+ SPAGHml ::~: .................. 39'
LUCKY FIATUHS CALIFORNIA AVOCADOS AT lOW EVERYDAY Pll(U!
lU(llY IRAHD
SLICED BACON ··-69c .. ,.
•ATH. HOIMEt.. WllSON ., SWlfT
'SLICED BACON 77c
~· ... ~&y/.
. HAWAIIAN PUNCH
DRINK 29(
•• OUN(l CAii
RAVlOLI ~"':t:!it•.~.' .......................... 78c
S •lllT ,IMIT 2 < WHITE AUCE ""'"'" .................. S
CAMPBELL SOUP ~:~.1~~~~:~~ ......... 19c
~SAUCE MIX ;t~:r~::~~~.~~ ....... 21'
POMPEIAN OLIVE Oil noo.u• ..... 83'
ALPD BEEF CHUNKS~:!~':'i ......... 30'
PAMPERS DIAPERS :!~~::: ........... 1"
~~~;.~~f~.~~.LA .. 72<
!~!~~.~~.~~?.~~-~~"'" 3''
~ LUCKY VODKA 299
Jtt. IOfTI.I, If PIOOf , •• ., •• , .••••.•• ,., ••••
... t•r It• 1h11s hshf 1a t•1s ,arr c111titlt1 j1st 1
1111111 s1111,H11 11 n1 1•11u1f1 1t It•. •1sc111t "'ice'
11 st111 ltr 1•• II t1c•1.
OUR LOW EVERYDAY
DISCOUNT PRICI
•
92c
BROMO SELTZER
FARMER JOHN BACON 71c UKll .•. ,,, .•.• , • , •• , ...... 1.•111• •&CIMI
Rl~~!~~!~~.~.~5~! .. cut. 79c
LUCKY LUNCH MEATS C ·==~~.~.~~-.. 35
LONGHORN CNl!ll C ..,__ . 69
M19111111.~CllH.U .•• ,,.tt.OL'1'-
AMERICAN CHEESE
t•<•t 11Knnocns """''"""" 68C wtM••• MU ..•.....•.•.•. ii.er.•••·
:~~.~; .. o~! ~:~~~J.,... ac
PlllSBURT COOKIES -44c
CllOCOIAH CllW All Milli.,,. l Mt nt1
~!~~.!>.~~·.~ .. ~~~·~·~···~~ •h~f.fll( 19c
ALL MEAT FRANKS 66C
fAIMll IOllll-WIUOll-110.--IATI 11111 Mll ••.•. , ............ 1.tt. PRI •
AVOCADO DIP 55c
IOl'S -I KUl>IOI llOT ....... , S.Ol. C•r
~!,~~~~.~.~~~~ ........ -wr.PU. 39c
!~~~'~'~~~~~.~.~-~~.~tMr.11• 37e
AlllD EXTRA DRY
ANTI. PEISPllAllT
!!~!~~1!. $122
Prict itd1fu 15c tll l*tL
fAMILY Siii
MACLEAllS TOOTHPASTE
UltCllTl tt••tJ t;sli1W ,.. J
ti1t•. •ns• ltslt . h icr
Mtl1fn lk 11111•e1.
OUllOW 73c PRICE
Prm•t .iisot•fort lro• tnro1li11 ANACIN TABLETS and tr~1111r1 sltMltlil 5 8 ,
1pstls. r 1st aclilll 11• C • At1l11sie ta\ttts ter Int ~
1111!11. La r1c silt ~ti. 1 • fr1• •tH•• ad $) 09
} -CtW SJ ...... Ill· OUTDOOR r ···-tit ot 111 blltl<
25-&.AMP DRllTAN -
LIGHT SIT , -· -.!~~.:.':!:.. 'I"'
!KO
1
'"' .... '''''"'""'· ;:< .. DlllST0 N 5p••y' MIST Ul ··~..... ... $2'' ,.. . -111lt r11r .... -lAltr SIJI ' ., .. " s""'•trr· .._.... ,..... ,_ .........
"--11!1 nt.11 M It II,. ., ....... ,. ... ,,.
., ...
' : . . ·
•. ··----· -·------------------------------------------------------------··----·-----.
A11i111als Into the Act
"Verrry Eeecnteresting," says Chester the Chimp
as he ac'ls the part of a forlorn German Lancer dur·
ing a performance at Sea World ir. San Diego. Be·
hind him, Aphrodite. \vorld champion high jumping
Reno , L~ Vegas to
J
-_,
~II!
l t •.
~ .. -
dolphin, comes up for air. Both a'.e parl o_f the _da_ily
~how in the lagoon at the equallc park 1n f\11s~•on
Bay.
Cooperate Buy The DAILY PILOT
Just for 'Peanuts'
•
DAILY PILOf J:J
Rtiling Beads for B!gla Court
Judge Str~es ~ow11 Abo1~ion Bru1
·-\VASHINGTON (AP) -A persons, the doctor and a ' The District or Columbia health .. or when caused by
federal judge has struck down nurses aide, .. Jsked him to law is similar to laws in 40 rapt or incest.
a Distric t or Columbia law dismiss their Indictments on states. A few states. of which That position is embodied In Colorado was the first, have a model law prepared by t.~
banning abortions performed the basis or a CalUomia laws allowing doctors to American Medical Asscicialion
by doctors and urged lhnt his Supreme Court decision that pcrfornl abortions w h c n and was brought before •
decisio n be appealed quickly California's law was not "sur-pregnancy en dang e r s a number of state legislatures
ficiently certain to satisfy due woman's physical or mental this year.
to the Supreme Court. process requirements." ';o--;;io;i;;;;ii;;;i;;;;;;;ioiOiiiOii.:0.;o;;iiiii;,;;i;iiii; ______ ;;
Should the high courl uphold Gessel! refused to dismissll
the ruling, prohibitions on the indictmenl against the
abortion -some enacted a aide, saying the.ir is "ample
cent ury ago -could come evidence" that "infection and
tumbling dov.·n in scores of death still often at ten d elumsy, unskilled termination 1 states. of pregnancy perfonned by
U.S. District Court Judge nonphysicians ."
Gerhard A. Gessell's deeision Since the Jaw is a federal
held ·Monday that a physician one, the ruling could be ap-
may not be prosecuted for pealed directly to the Supreme
performing an abortion. Court. Gessell also suggested
Gessel! ruled that the 1901 that Corigress might want to
law banning abortions except rev•rile it. providing more
\vhen necessary to save a concrete terms.
pregnant woman 's life C'ri-----------11
health was so vague and.. In-
definite as to b e un-1
constitutional.
Although his ruling dealt
most directly with the rights
of a Was~ington doctor ac·
cused of performing an illegal
abortion, the judge added :
··There has been increasing
indication in deci sions of the
Supreme Court of the United
States lh<1t as a secular mllt·
IE'r. a woman's liberty and
.1 ight of privacy extends to
family. marriage and sex
matters, and may well incl ude
th~ right to remove an
unwanted child. at least in the
early stages of pregnancy:'
247 Brotdw1y
lotllM leocll-4f4-fl74
Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m.
''GIFTABLE'' .. Y· SANTA
SONY Take it ' Anywhere TV
LAS VEGAS. Nev. (AP)-
The 4istrict attorney thinks
Las Vegas could give Reno
some excess convention busi-
ness. A Las Vegas convention
official has other ideas.
Rawlings said that if the city ing Nevada but "rm not so1'==;=:::=:::=:::S::==:H:is=ru=li=·ng==":m:•:::•:fl::•:':'::"':':;::;:.;;:=;;::====;;::::--[I knows in advance it v.·onl sure the convention field v.·ould 1
Sony's new portable TY
has a place 'neath your tree
"Actually, Reno and Las Ve-
gas are like apples and or-
anges," said Barney Rawlihgs,
secretary of the Convention
Authority. "They have a dif·
ferent kind of appeal."
Although the <lranges in the
slot machine are the mai{I ap.
peal of both cities, he says
northern Nevada has more ski-
ing a n d outdoorsmanship,
"'hile Las Vegas has mote en-
tertainment.
have room it will suggesl lo a be the best v.·ay.•·
con vention a change in dates. lie saitl Las Vegas would be
.. If the cily was lull when "shooting itsell out of the sad-
they arrived, v.·e couldn 't say: "di e" by dh·erting some con-
'Sorry, we're overbooked. \Ve ventions because many. for
will have to send you to instance will meet in the West
Reno." only once every :our years.
Las Vegas, 444 miles south· Rawlings said some conven-
east of Reno, boasts it had 266 tions could nol be sent north
trade shows and conventions in 1968 with 206,709 delegates because Reno might not be
\.\'ho spent $34,107,951). able to ' guarantee the same
Reno officials say 198 con-facilities. Both cities ha'''
ventlons in f is ca 1 1968-69 8,000 seat convention centers.
brooghtin .ui,690 delegates \\'ho Washoe County says it has
spent $6.2 million. 10.000 hotel and motel rooms.
"Artistry h1 1'1oving" for the
BEST MOVE
of
YOUR LIFE
Call:
494-.1025
Dist. Atty. George franklin
<lf Cla rk Coun ly told a Reno
audience last week that Las
Vegas could have channeled
some business to Reno while
IL had 40,000 del~ates at a
computer convention.
\Viii Jergins, convenlion di-\\'hile Las Vegas claims 25.000.
rector for the Greater Reno------'---------------------------------------·!!
Chamber of Commerce, said
Suggesting a hot line be·
tween the two cilies, he said,
"if the tourist bureau worked
together conventioneers would
be sold on the entire state."
the hot line is a good idea.
•·\Ve certainly think it would
be wonderful to have coopera-
tion lhat would .channel con-
ventions to us lnstead of let-
ting them go out of the state."
Rawlings said he welcomed
"the opportunity to work with
the boys in Reno" on ptomot-
GRODI:NS ·
Form11rly Mullen 6. Bluitt
OPlHSUNDAY
12tolP.M.
Mlr•d• Milt,
Datrntawn,
Tope:ap Pim.
$anti Monlu_
l akewOOd, Ml--· .... Montdeir,
SanDlein
•
High Flying_
Buttoneer
Raincoat by Harbor Masler
for the man who demands more from a raincoat
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feel In the silky Imported SWiss fabric of polyesler
end combed cotton. And great fashion-that you
can see In the dashing double breasled styling
with Its unique double row of buttons.Designed for
all the high llyera-and those who would Ilka to be.
$67.50
Olhor Halbor M1111rs from $SS
SOUTH COAST PLAZA
G
f ' .. . .
" • ' ~ 4 ''f.1i.; " ' . ' . ... ~ .., '. ·. "i I
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I ~: , "' .\.
'
I
ODI s
C£arl.y" Clz.tiStma§
'Wmpping
Cloud-101! Eslron•
Fleece Robes by
Raymond Halpern Lo~ngewear
Marvelous pre-holiday values
in fireside robes-to give or
1reasure for yourself. Two
dreamy versions in feather·
light Estron acetate-nylon
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embroidered choir collar or
with dramatic front panel
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long or short In Jad9
Green or Cherry Pink.
Short 17
Long 19
Th• Sonv TV. 71 OU wei9h1 • lit!1t ow tr t Ib a,
vou c111 tikt ii 1nvwht te -bt1ch. bo1t, bou-r
doir or b1ckv11d. Plus 1 7-inch cli111on1l 1cr11n
lh•I l1h you 1h1re !h1 fun wilh the .... holt
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11c1plion. Operet1~ on AC . Plu 91 into cen
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901 to. se• it to be!ie¥e ii.
FOR ON L.Y 99.95
•
Take it to the beach;
boat, ball game
or bedroom!
Sonv1 TV920U , 11 11 etsy lo w•lch outdoora 11
1nywher• in your home -wilh ils I " bl1ck
cl it9on•llv m1•1ur1d piclur1. And it w1i9h1
only 10 Iba.!
GIFT PRICED .• , 129.95
Sony's Team TY, for
people who follow
the adionl
With ih 11" clie9onef 1,reen, '"•p-i n l 1n10·
out filt1r -if ia (l1•r, 9!,111 free Yit wlng.
Qp1r1+11 on Sonv b1Ht"rv, 11 "'oil 1ute/bo1t
b1itt •V or .AC ~Owle <un t nl.
UNDIO YOUO Tllll •OO .•• 139.95
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SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Costa Mesa; ANAHijM, Broadway-Anaheim Center; LAKEWOOD, Lakewood Center1
~ COSTA MUA • 411 E. 17th St. Costa Mesa
lllOAOWAY·ANAHllM CINTiR LAKEWOOD CIHTIR
Anth.tm L•ktweOd Dally 9-91 S•turd1y t-6
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-!·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Ii...~~~~~~ ... ~~~~~~_.
I
'
•
•
I
14 DAILY PILOI
.For
• • ~
the
MEETINGS
(n•hllfn Bu5lMUmt n'• Comn,,ur~.
Huntl"!llon fl••th, MannY•· 1.01
Eal ..... , AvP., H.8. 1!00 1,m
HU!llint lon aNrl'I l ions Clull. l<un·
flftll!On $HCl!ft (9Unlnr (IUD. :IOC'~
Palm A~ .. • Hun!lng!°" 8t•cn, • lO
,lril:;:;k lo09f', IOOF ;; • I!.
Wnll'Tlhlsh'r A•onut, Wt1tm1n,ror,
J;lO p.m. P1clflc (OMI Ard1il"OIOll¥ $oc,.•v. ~ Mv~. $.lnl• """· 1.JD
H:.:-r Ar~• lolt51m••1•• CluD, "'""' v...ie ,_,,.., Clu&.. Ca.111 "'""· 1 lO
N::;o.., Ha•t>ot Ellu C l~tl. ll•~ LoO~. l.s6 YI.I ()f>Orlo, f,je.rl>Gl"t Bt•cn, ~
,..,;;:ic1 n LPQIGll PO'S! •1S, llmtrlc•n
Letlon He!!, so.s w. 111n ~,,, Co•1•
Mrw, I P.m. ..,.....,;c.an L~lon Po•! lll c;t 1-'un•
1!"910ft Bt•(h. Amr"c'°" LtoiOll H111. Civic ,.,,,,,, Hun11119ton Btttn, t
... ;~i:;;..tatt Btacll Junior Cn1m11t• <>l
Commerce, siwrllon Btltll Inn, H\lf'·
li"9kll> &eiltll, I p.m, Muntln9lon Buell 81rr1c-s No 1)60.
V•l•f"" o1 world War I, "'. F W,
1-1111, 31t Y«~lown 1'v~ .• Hunnng""'
Be.ch. t :)I •.m. FOU0111ln V"lll''I" K\wa~I• Club, Fran-
col•"· 11n1 ~Kii Blvd, Hunl•ntlon 8HCll, 12:1S p.m.
Nt,.PO•I H1rt»r Junu>r (ll•ml>i'r c•
Commerce, !ol7 Weuc!llf D• , Nfw, "°'"' Be.oc~. Felico1ne·1. 1611! Welt-
cl!!f Dr' NeWPOC1 B••<~. / p.m.
Births • 110.t."' ,..~.,,,.,., .. L .,.,,,..ITAL ...............
Mr. •nD Mrl, "'""~'" c, .-1r~1, Jr., ..161 !II•• l>I., L<ltli ,.,.,, •• Pl'V Mr. ane ~. -''"""" J<>lln 8.c~Mt+, "/>&I .><111 ~nl'"""· FO..rnoln •~•>t"I•
M~.'11,no Mrs. Davia l l•1>ltv. l?lln
Llrt.Wnli '-"-t1Un"'><11'"1 <><•(II. "'"''
Mr. •Jlol M,.. k""•'" '-'°""'· 1111.,; ;i,nil•i i • .. .-1111n'"'" v11,.v, .,..,
Mr. •nu """· n..w•ro MU;N~. 1~101 ,.,...,o~,.. ... e_ ""''· .;d, •11•""· "'" M r. "''° Mrl.. volt>i'tl lou!(A<"•~ oiOJ t_.
llaol>(li l>IV<I., 1>4>00M, "'" Mr. •/IO MU. JOlln ... lln<l>lll<<I, 1;t12
WllG<l!IUO kV(., lll•On,.OCV M•. •nu Mr•. Joe h<"l•••· 1J.1)2 El ,:Or100 l?-0, U.<G<"A Grow~. bcv Mr. 1no """' t'll 1.0<.flflt>t. l•i Pe1rl
51., 111'-Illa/Id, POV HOvtmDer H Mr. 1no Mrs. "'-"""(' Wnlla>er. 10121 Mer~olll Dr., M11n"rllll011 8e1C11. ODv Mr. •OO Mrs. Je"' L•lt. I-Urao ... e /l,yf .• (O;ltl Mei.I. be'/" Mr .al\ll Mrs. Jirnfl Serr11111. 1411 Miu.on, A~I. I, l Uilln. bell Mr. 11\11 Mr•. 5tm Kom1tM111<1 lli, UJ' PliKen1l1, C<Ull Mew, qorl Mr~~.'!,.'frtff'::~:,_, l(Oll. Xll:t 1 )1~ s1 ..
Mt. '"" M ..... Cna·~· G1llo, )111) Brtlon LIM. Hun1.n1~"" 1>fd(ft, t.ov NO•emoe.-lS Mr. i nd MT>. l<ooe" f Jtnnln<U. ~16!A Amencan Ave., C0»11 Me..,, <1l•l M r. and Mr>. Oitnnl• M(l{own, 101'1
CIWuCftt• Ln .. Hunr.11111on beacn. DO•
Mr. •lld Ml•. Rtl< Brunn•• 2J2J S1nta Anl ,t,•e .• (0»!1 ""81. bo1 Mr. 1/ld Nlfl. Geot"<!t ll'IOm1i. 6h
Ce<1ler 5! .. ,t,1>1. 6. Co•l• Me~-DO• Mr. 100 Mrl. cn1r1es Potier, 1191
Or11111e Ave .• Costa ff.t~. <1lrl Mt. Incl Mr$ J1cl R. Neutle<-1, .110.1 lti•er. NewOor-1 Bea<:n. Do• Mr. ancl Mr,. Jell 'I'. lalr.1!1, '119 Dranoe A•eN~:i~'f.1, 11lrl
Mr. 1no Mrs. Jolin Hiii, lrll u ..... an l1..r, $tnla Ant. ~1•1 Mr. Incl Mn.. JlmPI Cc•lf'lg lon 13312 E.,.,lna W1v, Tu•i.ia. a lrt Mr. 1n dMc-1. CIWr~i Rlmokll, ll?t 810011. $tn11 Ana, Dov Mr. Incl NI"-. Dof'lald Jon•», 16691 81rlltll Liil"· No. 4, l1un1it1<11on Beach. 11irl Mr Incl Mt1. G!Mn Etwln. Mil 5t , /l,11g11stln1 Or ., H11n!l1111lon 8tecn. bov Mr. Ir.cl Mr1. IC.enne!n !.llnneu. 2?36 N. Sllltler. Or11"011e. ODv
DEATH NOTICES
CECIL
MtrQartt 0, Cecil. 666. W. 19111 ~!,
Cinlt Mt:ia. 0..le ot dtllll, Dec. l_
5urvl•ed b"f' <li1<19111tt. Ml>. VitOiftll O'DooMll, ol Or1nve; rwo •ister~.
Mr•. ,t,me C1rver, P11111tna; Mt>.
Florence Blakeslee, On11rio; rwo-
11r1n«:lllldren. Service!. wiU i.. l>tl<I
M-.v. 1 PM, B..il a.-., CIM..e!.
lntermenl, F11rt lloseu•nt. N•lklrwl
Cll'Mlerv, Si n 01-. 11•11 flrctdwf V
Mort111r~, Cost. Mew. Olrte!ors.
DRIGGS
J1mH DrhHll. '21 Molino, l -
flt1tPt. AM ''; d1I• 9' Oflrti, Dec. !.
SUrvl-...:1 bv wife, lrm.oi 1111111111..-1""
JOtt-il'l-ltw. Helen L and .lohft R. Mc·
,t,nlMhl four 9r•ndC"hlldA11, John. Mi+
dlaO'I, P111nv •"" Judl1h. 5trvke1, FrlO AV, 10 AM, Smithl Ch-I. lnler-
mtf"ll, Good Slle""""d Ctmelf•v. Smit/ls
Mor!uarv, Dlredon..
LORENZEN
M•r>eltll l~. lGn!t 011>1 re!~otnl
ol Huntfn91on Sff.Ch. ~11r•lv~ 11'1"
0.11<11\!t r, Mrs, Fl<ldvment at RD'f'\1111•,
Ctlll. ServlcH, St lutdAv. 10 AM,
SmllhS (hl!>el. lnl•rmPnl. We>tn-.in-
slf!' Memorl1I P1rk. Smith• Mo,luarv.
D!r1Klon.
RUTAN
Mtt!;~ £. ll ul1n. A11t 1-, ol HS1 j11,v1•
Ion St .• C<nta MHa. 011e o1 d•a•h,
O.C....btr 1. Survived b~ motl>tr. M<\.
Evonne J. Rutan, Cos11 Me•ll !illler,
llobe•I Rutar" 8urti~nk ; '""' sl•""' lt~rel t/ld Rabl!I, COITI Mesa: M•f·
cla. P,..,..l<lence, R.I.; M•S Jud1!~
M~rrlot1. r.o!M.f'I, Co!ora<lo: lwo b•ot~
.,., llleftard. A<1a.m1ville, RI.• Oon•l<I,
ll•oc~ton. M1111.: or1ri<11>1~nt,. M•.
A..cr Mo. Wilton l . Ru Tin Pno•n":
Mr. 1"4 M" J W. li;!lver, S9n•a
Y11bt1!1, (eh!. ll~U•l'm Min. SMU•·
da'I", ID l.M, 51. J<>f>n tho ll•oli•I C•t"·
olit Churth. ln!erm""'· GDO<t Sheoherd
<.l'mt ltrv. 81111 Mcrlu1r'>". (1>1!1 Me;a,
Pirtclon..
SAMPSON
Lllll•n S1mo>Ot1. ml ~·~•1 "'"' "'••.
COSll Mftl, Diie ol de"!~. Ott -Swvkws penct!nv 111 Bell B•oa<tW••
Mo•tua,.,., Costa Mt"'.
SCl~11DT E""''' 5ctiml<11. Agl ll al 1'31 S.
Cvores•, San!a Ana. Dale of de~th,
Otcembtr J. 5trvltt• l>l'ndlnw ~I Bell
llrotdwl'I" MOrtu11rv, Co••• M~••·
ARBUCKLE & SON
WestcWI l\·lnrt11ary
427 E. 17th St., Costa r.1esa -• BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Corona dr:I Mar OR 3-9458
Costa P.tr:sa ~O 5-!414 • BEU. BROAD\YA. V
1'110RTUARY
110 Broadway, Cost.a l\tr:sa
LI s..34ll • DILDAY BROTHEHS
Huntington V allr:y
l\lortaary
r:9U Beach Blvd.
lluntington Stieb
IU-1711 • PACIFIC VIEW
l\tEl\10RIAL PARK
Cemetery e l\lortu.11ry
Chap<I
3000 Pacific View Drive
Newport Beach. CaWonda
54.C..t700 • PEEK FAM!Ll'
COLONIAL l'UNERAL
ITO ME
':'ltl Bolu Avr:.
Wettmlnsltr ~ • SHEFFER MORTUARY
Lapa Bexh · 4!N-153S s.. a.m.ni. 4!11-11111 • S.lllTIIS' MORTl;,IRV
C7 llain s~.
ll111t11c1on Jkac•
SSM$.":9
lhurMtay, Dttrmbtr 4, l9b9
Record
Villa Park
Mayor Eyes
Board Seal
County's Judges SuJitch Assignments
By TO'.\I BAR1..£Y Department 16, a genera l trial
bench.
' \Villiam L. ~1utray.
Department 11. gent r a I
SANTA ANA -Most of Or-Judge H3.rmon C, Scoville of tr1al-crlminal panel, Robert
ange County's 21 Superior \Vest1nlnster moves ( r o 01 Gardttt.'1'. )
Court i"udncs v.·ill find thcn1· domestic relations to general Department 12. gt! n c r a JI
" trial fron1 January lo June t · I I I ho llh II selves 1n uniamiliar court-r1a -men a a • · .ind takes over from Judge \Va lter Steiner, rooms J an. 5 .... ·hen Judge \\"11· Corfman 1n l:nv and 1notion tor
liam Speirs of Newport Beach the second hair of the 1.:ourt Depiirlment 13, gener a 1
takes over a.~ presiding i·udgl:'. trlu l, Herbert S. ller!and5. year.
Judge Speirs anno\fl1cca the S , Department 14, g e n e r a 11 . h ffl . Judge peirs postings are: trial. \Villiam S. 1£e. '1 massive res u c JUst one J>:partmenl One. presiding
1nonth before he moves into judge, \Villiam Speirs. Department 15, gene r 1'11
the execuli"ve chambers to be Department Two, Jaw and lrial-criminaf panel, Kenneth j
vacated by .Judge San1ucl Y/illiams. · ,
Dreizen. The NewPQrt Brach motion, Robert L. Corfman Oeparl.ment J6, gen c r a JI
jurist \vas th(· co u rt ' s 1 January through June) rind trial. Judge Harmon G .
unanimous choice last n;onth Harmon G. Scoville (July Scoville (January I hr o ugh
for the administrati \'C JOb. ihrough December). June ) and Robert L. Corfman
A th . Depart1nent Three. general (July lhrough Decem""'rJ. mong ose warming 11ew · I b ~
FlOM
WORLO LEAOER IN RECREATION
c o .. tu..,111 o•vot>0,. / •~.iN1W11;;,,.·c o"P0""'10 .,
POOL TABLES AT ~
$275 AND UP
CliuckJ
0
COME IN
ANO SEE
STORE
DISPL.Al' benches Jn the coming year 1r 1 a ·Pr 0 ate, IU!ymond Department 17, gene r a 1
\l'ill be J udge Robert Gardner Thoinpson, trial-criminal panel, 'BYfon J LAY-A.WAY NO\A/ FOR CHRISTMAS
VILLA PARK -Villa Park of Ne .... ·port Beach, switched Departincnt Four, domestic K. J\1cl\1il!an. r. 1 AT COSTA MESA'S EXCLUSIVE
J\layor ;iames T. \Yorkma n is from presiding judge of the relations, Claude M.· Owens Department 18, genera I
today campaigning for the criminal calendar <ind Grand tJanuary through 1.-1 a r c hJ, I r i a 1-se tt I ement cOn·1 BRUNSWICK DEALER . , . , ,
Fourth District seat on lhe ,Jury liaison to Deparuncnt l l, Bruce \\', Sumner (Ju I Y~ fer c nc es-settlement con-
Orange Counly Board of a general 1rial-criminul lhrough December). The fere n ces , Lesler Van /)/LUC~', BOWLING & BILLIARDS Supervisors and it dppcars panel courl and J udge Bruce depa rtment is open fo r the Tatenhovc. ) L/1 Ii._,
unlikely that he will be op· Sumner of Laguna Beach, period April·.lune. Department 19. g: e n e r al, 2750 HARBOR BLVD. AT ADAMS
OC Nurse ,
Pair Held
posed by incumbent \Viltiorn from presiding judge of the Departn1cnt Five, criminal trial-criminal panel, HO\\'ard/ In College Cente r _ COST A MESA _ 540-7303
Hi rstein. juvenile court to a two-fold Jcaudtc;,d_ar·grand jury, James F.1_~C:·~C~a~m~e~ro_'.'.'.'.n·:_ _____ -'======================== Hirstein , current tha1r1nan 1970 assignment -in don1estie ..,-
of the board, confirmed th<J.t relations fron1 January lo D:;ipartrncnt Six, open . (Pen·
"it is very likely"' thal he will April and .Ju ly to December ding appointment of a nC\\'
not run for office in 1970. The and in the Fullerton branch of judge). s Ci ?t
In Fraud
veteran supervisor is com-the court on general trial work {'-s~ o~ith oast aza plcting his 16th year in oHice. ...-parl!ncnt • eve 1• i::r·nr·ral K \Vorkman, 61 , made his an · from January to J uly. lri<1l·sctllerncnt , nfercnccs,
nouncement Tuesday shortly N .Judpogel l~b"erlt I~. Corfm ar"11nf HaDymon11! r. Vil~~elnll. I 86 STORES ... before he discussed the inal!cr ew r ucac I rs one o . ic epar incnt :.1g. 1 , gc11cr<r
with llirstein. few judges to retain his tur-triuJ-s(•ttl e1n('nl eonfcrcnl'C)i. ALL IN SHELTERED COM FORT
The public relations ex. rent spot -the la\V and 1110-Chu rles A. Bauer.
cculive is currently <:hairman lio n department. But he onlv Ocµartment Nine. open.
of Orange County's Local stays in Department Two untll Depa rtment 10. g e n er a 1
LOS ANGELES (APl -
Three persons, including a
nurse from Orange, have been
ordered to trial on charges in-
vo lving a "catalytic--cellular
therapy" treatment w hich
state and federal h e a 1 t h
<1u lhorities say has no medical
value.'\J'
Agency F 0 rm a t i 0 n conl· July I when he moves In tri<:1l-criminal-criminal panel.
mission t LAFC) and is a 1 ----------------------'----'----------------------------------~
member of the boa rd of thel.--------------,.--------------------------------------------i Orange Co u n t y Sanitation
The three ;ire Wendell G.
l~end ricks. 55, Sa n Diego
osteop.ath; the Rev. Kenneth
\V. Knox, presiden~ of the
Universal Life Research Foun-
dation of San Bernardino. and
Mrs. Patricia Arbatch. 69, of
Orange. a retired nurse. '
Municipal Coui"t ,f u d g c
Patrick T, rll'Connick of
(;Jenda le ordered them ar·
raigncd in SUpcrior Court Dec.
16. He made the ru ling 'fues·
day arler a r ive-d ay
preliminary hearing.
Each defendant is charged
\\'ith attempted grand theft.
practicing medici ne without a
license and conspiring to do
both. Hendricks' medic a I
license reportedly has been
revoked.
SOS lo Convene
ORAN GE -Orange Coun·
l,y's Stamp Out Smog (SOS)
organization meets Friday at
7:30 p.m. in the basement of
the Union Bank Building here.
The meeting is open to anyone
interested in air pollution, an
SOS spokesman said.
District.
\Vorkman's announccrnent
was r e l eased by his
employers. Cleary. llitt and
Company of Santa Ana but
organization director C h i p
Cleary stressed that the firm
will no t handle \Vorkman's
election campaign.
Expansio11
Move OK'd
SANTA ANA -Orange
County supervisors h a v c
agreed to expand the head·
quarlers of lhc H a r b or
District at J90 1 Bayside Drive
in Newport Beach.
It was agreed that ex·
pansion would be necessary to
house additional staff and
facilities needed" as a result of
the board's recent decision to
convert the district into an
Orange County Parks. Rec.Tea.
lion and Harbor District.
A date has not ye t been set
by th e boa rd fo r acccpt;111ce of
bids on the expansion. ll \Vas
noted that construction costs I
will he drawn rrom thr
district ·s fund s of $85,000 I
devoted to that purpose.
Party Chiefs Okay
Fu1id Tactics Switcli
ANA l-lf":ll\1 -Orange Coun-
ty central t'f)mmitrees of threr
political parties ha l'e joincrl
hands in a campaign t-o switch
fund raisfng emphasis from
$100-a·plate dinners and costly
cocktail parties lo the dime·
and.dollar contributions of the
avrrage voter,
Christened the ''4..C Plan"'
!Citizens' Contributions I O
Cent ral Committees). lhe pro·
posal has the backing or coun-
ty headquarters ()f t h t>
Republican, Dc1noc ratic and
American I n d e pen d r. n I
parties. Chaired by Joseph E.
Irvine, the fund-raising group
plans to accept contributions
at 191 branches of 14 county
bar\ks.
The plan "broa dens the base
for fund r aising so the parties
will ilot have to totally rely on
the large donors as in the
past," Irvine said. And it "'ill,
he added. "provide an op-
po rl.unily for well qualified
cundidates to enJcr v:irioos
races with the backing of
funds· not previously available
because of the lack of an
11rganizc~! approach
Aa thering then' ··
Political contributions raised
by the group will be used by
the central commiHecs to help
maintain offices . su pport can·
d1da\es for eleclion and con·
vey pa rty activities and goals
lo supporlcrs, Irvine said.
Irv ine said inlercstcd counly
residents should tall the ct·n-
1ral tomn1i\t l'e or their 1•hn1re
:ind ask for the '"4C'' brochurt'
which cont<tUlS th1• !l('{"eSSilry
sign.up c<1n.L
The complelc<l c;1rtl i>hoo1d
in dicate 111(' an1oonl of !ht'
monthly paymrnt \vhich lhe
party supporter \\•ishes lo
donate . Hi s authorization
permits the p<irl y lo issue a
11raft that will be honored hy
his bank and debited lo his ac·
count in exactly thr same
manner ~s any othrr business
tran~nct ion ,
A contribu1ur can c~ncf'l !he
;igre<"ment nt uny time, Irvine
~1rrssed. by nolifying the ten-
lral con1nutl~ of his Ill·
ten lions. j
BJBLE TllO UG HTS
St•wol l111morolhy i1 tond~m111d bv !ht
8:bl•, rl:o"". I :2"·ll. H eb I): ... G od
1n1dt ONE ~"i/'i fpr ONE WOMAN !o
b e •t•u-1 CDlllDlni(!l">i, le• l;/o, in m~r
••191. lnlertcuH!, ou1tid1 c l w1dlock, ;n
'SI N. N11 lo•nit 1lo' 01 •du!t1r1• •/.all I/\•
lt r H11•1n! I I Co~ 6:9 ) Homa•t•u•l,1,
'' 111 1bo,.,i•1b!t ''" tlt••licu• 11:4 1,
R11111. 1.21 -21, I ''"'· 1:10, G rn. 19~4 -lt Jud911 19·?1-]jl
N1 .. •paptri 1odt¥ •tpo•I ;m,,,01 •lil1 e f I~• lioclv o" ••••v ~t"d
i nd '" ""IU;•• •U•mhlir• l ""Lo•t " i"1. nud,, 9•th1r1~9" <O~~
,.,u1ic c•owd1, •It.I: •O 111ud1 11 th1t "' e•t rr m1nd•d off•.
)2.6, 22·11, 111d Gia, 6:~. Ho .. lcnq e•n God tcl1r•l1 1~ch
wid11p•11d ;,.,,.,.,,,1;1¥ 11 h1 11e• thro119ho11I th• ""llrld 1 Pn,.
t ibly !ht '"" of 1;mt i1 /\I••: CE:ll:TAINLY J vd9111e n1 of'"•"~
i"'"""r1I 0111i •t n11r, lcr n'ltnv of th11111 d ie d1ily .,..d qo •o
thfft 1ttrn1I d11tiny UNPREPAA:EO. fG,.I, 6:7.l l.
Ou• n1tio11, er ANY ntlion . ., d oo1T11d lo dtt•v 1t/\!1u ii C•fl
in1till in :to public 111 1nlolt.r1,..c1 for fl 19r1nl ,.;olttion of P"""
r.1pl11 of d1c111cy, ltl 111 111111 1 1:9ht for CO MM ON DECENCY
ill 1v1ry 1•1nu1 of lif1, in ""'' ptiv1l1 1tlovolif 1, ;,.. 011• publ"c
bell .... ,.,,, in 011• p11t,1:tal 111d "VOllNG lift . ;,.. owr SHOPPING
lou•1. !11 '111 plt c•• of AMUS[MENT "'' p•troni111; l,1 u1 p~t
p•tUM•f for dttl/\t "f' wht•t ti will COUNT el flw11y 11ppo•t1t11 ity,
C/.u•Gh cl Cht••'· 217 w. w ;l1011 SI., Coit• Mt11, c::'.1. 92621,
COMMUNITY EVENTS
1------------------------1
Do vou1 "THING" lcr U~l ted J:1111d. !!'1
the Dne Timi of lh1 yrlr whc11 you t~n
help tho•• It" forlun1t1. 22 local •gen·
c•1•'1clv on U nit~d Fund• for >uppod, vn ''
lU PP<irl.•
Do vou• t~in9 6nd hear your h11lid6y b1!1,
rin9.
"Gal of the Month"
R,+ied In Nntlh.,~ (al!!n1nla, Ann f!u~t~m~n•~
6n<I l-!111ll '"~· ~ ·~n~ 11"'" '"~" ~~m~ l!f'd~ "
r:ooo! \n G~•den G•Q•~ !n•ncct nv '~''.:,, 1n;"•
C"•ldrrn, rney fn]ll'(" Ollldocr t cfi•ltle, a"(f ,,,..
rl~llV lilh•ftV,
.t<-
' "~---.~~;,.; ..
M[t"l ANN IU~TAMAN Tt:
• !-~~ ""' 11r•~ wllh c~hlo•~·• l"t'll•f~I
'' • t ''" vra" .. ~o " 11·~~en11y ~, J>t,;•.t ~lfllll DtD~flmVll H....s. 5-oy "Hrlla" ana •re t•ltUhe• D"lC w!n·
nmg smlle,
•
1. The Guaranteed Groivth Plan.
Deposit S1 .000 or mor11 for 3, t. or 5 years. F0r c11rh
vc;ir all your principttl !lnrl 1ntr tf'!'it rc1ni]1 n, v:P. II ,..guar-
antee a 5.25~o an nua.I rJ1c. cornpoundf'd <lady It ,idds 11p
to 5.39"·0 ;i year.
FOUR.
MAXIMUM
INTEREST
PLANS AT
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
~
CALIFORNIA
FEDERAL
SAVINGS ...... " .............
VtEl'f'b**3
2. The Guaranteed Income Plan.
Open .1n Jccount of S 1.000 or more for 36 lo 60 tnonths.
Wc "ll guara ntee you a 5.25~0 ."lnnual 1;i1c. compounded
d,;1ly. wilh 1n1e1c st pr11d out to you each qu211ter.
111 ( 1-~
li rnc ·.·,
t1:,rr!"-h1 n or cn1rrgency. you cJn \v1thdrJw ttl any
h '1· 11nlc>1f'st pri1d to the end of the previous quarter,
3. The Bonus Plan.
Earn a bonus of 1,i ~o r1 yf',11 v,h ... n yr: 11 .1rCOlJn t rs htld
lo 1-ye<1r mJtunty. This 1-; 1n <1dd1f1011 10 rhc 1egut;:ir 5°n
cur1ent ann uri l ra!P. R1'0lil:'l r 1n1 c rcst is con1poundc d
dilily and n1My be 110ddf!d _Qucnlerly for e xtra ea1nings.
Withdr;iwals before 111.ttuiity enin ;:i t !he 1rgul;ir p;issbook
rate. Any <imount or St .000 or 1norc opf'ns .1nd ma1nl ;:11ns
your bonus ,1ccount. All tunds held lo 1n illur11y cci rn :in
('flcc11ve <lnnu.:i! ra!e ol 5.25~ ...
4. The Basic Pla n.
The most flrx1blc plan. You can invest nny ;imount of
money and vnthdraw it \Vhcncvcr you wish. 11 you le11ve
JH your money nnd 1n1erest ttl your ;iccount 'or a ye.;tr ;it
our current ~'"" c1nnu;:il 1t'l le with 1nlcres1 1;on1poundcd
dnily, you 'll 1Pce1vc an r:ir1nu<1l yield o ! 5.13°.,. You earn
1nte1est horn the day you deposit your money 'Iii the d;iy
you wrthdrr1W 11. Plus ... 1he money you rlrpos1t by the
101h of any mon1h e;irns 1ntercs~ lrom Ille 1st. when rt
1 cn1a1ns until quarter ·s encl.
C~!.~f2r!!!.~ss;!~~~!!!!,w§~!!!!gS ,. NATION'S LARGEST FEDERAL
COSTA MESA OFFICE:
2700 Harbor Blvd. near Adams • 546·2300
CLIFFORD M. WESDORF, VICE PRESI DENT & MANAGER
I
'
'•
• ... ----~·-----------------
.
UPI llid<OPl'IOIO
B llttle Sca1•s
\\'carin ~ a gas n1ask, a r..Iontaknard soldier picks
his \ray through lhi: debris left after cncn1y n1ortar
rounds hit a buildin).{ at lhr U.S. :-ipecial forces camp
near flu !)rang:, South Vietnan1. 'file jagged holes
\Vcre,.n1ad e by !:ih rapnel.
~ ... ········~·······················•++-fo.••••t • • ! MERCURY SA VIN GS ! • • • · u11 d Ju(l/J us~ur ia 1 ;1111 ii • • • • : NOW OPEN . ! • • : EVERY. SA TU RDA Y i • • ! 10 a.m .• 4 p.m. ! • • • • ! BUENA PARK HUNTINGTON BEACH ! * ;\Jcrl·ury Savings Hldg. l\Jcrtur.v Savings Bldg. ! ! Yalle} \'icw <1t Linl:oln Edinger at Beach .., • • •******************************************t
Thur\d~y. Dectmbe r 4, 1969 DAILY PILOT I f;
Cancer Victim 's Dad Pleads Research Aid
\VASHINCTON (UP I) -A children. some or whon1 arc coold h<' prolooged \\' i l h ntent." -lnclu<.hng 50,000 dead -in \Volk also prescnled the
California doctor'" whose 9-already dead." \;ir1ous drugs. The doctOr told lhl' senators thl' V1el11am \V<ir. <'01nm11tce with petitions from
year-Old son is suffering from The physician said hr l\'!l~ "ll is at this point that that cancer is k1\11ng 1norc ··During t he course or this thousand!'> of ''ordinar y
acute leukemia pleaded with •·specially qualified" to (estiry parents of such <:hildren nui:-t school children each year than year, this country has lost ~ 1>eople" who had endorsed the
Congress \Vednesday not to · suppo t of rnore funds fJr <iny other disease. 1nilhon of its citizens fro 111 Candlelighters' plea tor·<J.n 111•
cut funds for ca ncer research. ~:ncer ~earch becau~c hi~ niakC? a very basic decision -lie noted the United St;i!l'11 t•ant·cr: <1nd 35 ,000 of thl:'se crease of <It least 20per1·ent 1n 10 treat or not to treat," he has suffered 300.000 casualties \l'Crc sc hool children." he said . funds for eancc r re:1ral'l'h. Or. Richard \Volk. a prac· o.,_·n son, Brian. was stricken said. "Some parents havf' ff'!t ------------------------------
!icing family physician in San in February. 1hat no treatment was more
llafael, said thousands of "When we firs! lcarncrl that n1creifu l than prolonging U1e
parents with ch ildren dooined Brian had what the doctor life or a duon1ed child. Most
by cancer try to keep them tenned a 'fatal iliness.' my paren t_, elect treatment on the
alive for a few years throu gh wife and I went through all the basis that some additional life
of ten painful treatments. grief that people usually feel is better tha n none at all.
The parenls, he said, do this when Lhey have lost a loved "\Vithout treatnient, \\' e
in the }.ope that medical onr." he said. knciv that Brian would di('
research will come up with a \Volk said. however. lhl'i r \\•ithin f~'\'.l months. \Vith treat·
South Coast 'llaza
SANTA'S HOME ...
AWAY FROM HOME
way to control cancer. grief was tempered by the 111cnt he eoullt Ji\'C t\VO 01 1,,51'> .. 1 $•N P1tco fRlEW•t. <os1 .. ~ls"
"If not for our children .. _k~·n~ow".:'_'.led~g:<''_..'.'~he~ir:.._so~n~'s_..'.li~rc:_1~h~"='~l~'~"'~'·:_'~V~e~c~lec~t~cd~lr~'"~':)· -~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--perhaps intensive researchr
can provide help for those
5,000 other American school
children who might otherwise
die in 1970." the doctor told a
Scnale appropriations 1 SUb·
committee.
Budget ruts requested by
J>residcnt Nixon and approved
by the House. he said. had
t•auscd sotne cancer resea rch
projects to be abahdonetl and
had "seri ously c r i pp I c d ' '
1Jlhers.
\Volk. \\'ho had been re-
quested to testify by Sen. Alan1
Cranston. I D·C a I i f .) is
chairman or lhe Ca11dlelight·
crs. an organization of pa renls
v:ith children stricken by can-
cec
"Since our ch1ldrf'n have no
lobby to represent them . it is
my responsibility l() inform
you of U1eir needs." he told
the subcommittee headed by
Sen. Warren G. Magnusoo (D-
\Vash .J.
The doctor. saying h e
\vanted to point out that he
was talking about '·human
beings. noL just abslr<icl
figures." a!so passed around a
photograph alb um •·o{ our
BE SAFE!
NEVER BEFORE 0 0 0
a More Beautiful Selection
of Forest Fresh Christmas Trees.
READY NOW! * SILVER TIP * SCOTC H PINE * DOUGlAS FIR * NOBLE ~IR * WHITE FIR
FROM ALL ARO UND THE NATION -EXPER T FLOCK-
ING TO ORDER -WE HAVE MANY EXTRA LARGE
TREES -UP TO 18' FOR COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS
OR LARGER HOMES .
Flame Proof You r Christmas Tree
Livi ng Christmas Trees * Colorado Blue Spruce
at $16.95 * Monterey Pine
at $9.95 .
$249 CALIF. No. 55-1 QT.
* Deodar Cedar
at $19.95
Plant in Tub or Containe r, Use
Inside During C hristma s -en ough fo r a 6 fool tree
l 'OR
FIRE Dfl"ARTMENT APPROVED Pl ant in Garde n Later.
Sl'ECl.111, ClllU.'i'l'•H;l .'i CllAR.U! .••
'{. HOLLISTER'S Original Wreaths
with Matching Centerpieces
and Arrangements.
11ncf]uallcd in quality & design.
n1ade of cvertasling n1alcrials. We v1ill ,be ope~
Every Night . ~ ¢
till 9.
Would you believe? .•. 87 Different
Christmas Light Combinations!
Th ril l 10 Br illia nt Color pic tures-the most natural c~r. You'll enjoy your
favorite pro']rJms Jnd exerting sporls events with big 180 sq. in. pic(ures; Chroma·
t one gives depth and dimension to color, pleasing warmth to black and white; and
3 l.F. Stacie Bonded Circuitry Chassis assures famous Magnavox lasting reliability.
Model 6260 is. .i ts o idcnl on tables or shelves. Don·t you owe yourse lf the pleasure
of O\.vning J magn1f1cent Magnavox? Put son1e color in10 your life today I
Free To
All Kids
A REAL
LIVE
CHRISTMAS
TREE •.•
ALL YOUR
OWN!
We Have all Colors a nd Si zes ... From the
Tiniest to t·he Full Size Indoor and Outdoor.
FLASHERS TWINKLERS STEADIES
lONY JQ't'A1f
NEW COLOR PORTABLE TV
Enjoy big -set 1e•1ures t nd perform•nce-,'nd
102 sq. in. brillianl·color pktu1e\ on this SUPt1b·
I pfrlorriirg Magnavox: n1odel 6224 lh~t has Chrom~·
to11e. Ouick·On, Bor1ded Ci1cu1try ChAss15, plus tel11·
scopHl!I dipole ant~nna and carrying h1ndl~. Pedet1
in ar•( room or off1ce-•r1d a grea1 g1!1, 1001
s29990 Compl ete with
Mobile Cart
MA GNAVOX HOME ENTERTAINMENT CENTER
Direct Friclor11 Denier
401 Main St. Brookhurst & Warner
Huntington Deai:h Fountain Valley
536-75 61 962-2456
I ..
plant it in the
ya rd after
Christmas anrt
\Vatch il gro,v!
Bo nk of
Am e ri ca
A HOT CHRISTMAS HOLIDAY TIP • • •
Order Christma s Flowe.rs Early --Avoid Disappointment --
We Send Flowers Worldwide · · E'a ch Order Receive s Special
Attention by Ex:perts --Our Deliveries are Very Prompt.
CHAR GE BY TELEPHONE ON YOUR CR EDIT CARD:
Master
Charge
Ame rican
Express
Diner's
Club
Carte
Bla nche
American
Torch
2640 Harbor Blvd.
COSTA MESA
CALL 546-5525 BE
•i-""!'.--.... --~""!"".,..-'"",...,..~----------------------------------~--------------------.•-:--r ,-.. -
J OAILV PILOT Thur5d•Y. Oec•mber 4, 1%9
~«~~~.;.···~(~~~~~!JC~ I RION HARDWARE IS t
~ ...
~ ~ HOURS' M'"doy oh~ Fridoy 9 " 9 ' 9 " 6 "''""' 10 " 4 "''''Y ~·~-------------------------------------
No unhappy returns when you
' GREAT GIFTS FOR DAD
~
LOWEST COST 'I<'' DRILL
The ideal gi!t or line first
toot for any man's workshop.
Priced low enough for any
potkDlboo.k. Wilh accessones,
11 po11shos, sharpens. buffs. cleans,
-~ . , • ''r;;::r ...... -' .. ~
' .
~-
say it with
01t'J1.R
LOWEST COST ¥." DRILL
Gearing and chuck to handle
bigger drilling jobs at very little
more cost. Full torque action.
Anolher tremendou& value !rorn
Slack & Oeckar. (~7100)
~ """ (:$9:·99 $ g.99
~==========;;:============
Black & Decker
2-Speed Jig Saw
Q.. <2J S·Gal. Utility Vacuum Cleaner ~
S elect t he hlgh
speed lor wood, low
s peed for metal,
hardboard, etc. In·
c!udes wood cu1l1ng
IJ l!lO
1D·GAL. VACUUM
(U-191) ............. $39.95
18-GAL. VACUUM
(U-292) . . . . . . ... $44.95
LARGE SELECTION OU: D&D POWER TOOLS
SPECIAL
pURCHASE!
29 Pc. SOCKET &
WRENCH SET
SET HD. 85306 -Contains these
tools:
1/4" SQ. ORlV£-E1ght 6 Pt. ·socket
sizes 3/16" to 7/16"; spinner dr1~e
handle; 3/8" x 1/4'' adaptor.
3/8" SO:. DRIVE-One 3/8", 6 Pt.
soc ket; nine lZ PL $OC ket sizes
7/16 " to I"; spark plug socket,
13} 16"; extension; re~ersibte ratchet.
5 Pc. COMBINATIOI\ WRENCH SET-
Sires 3/8", 7/16", l /2", 9/16",
5/8".
molded \'.·11h
l /4'
&
3/8"'
Drive
So ckets
&
Fittin gs
Special
Sale Price
A $37.29
Value!
• ALL
AMERICAN
FUN 'N GAMES
FROM 3M
r
FACTS IN FIVE
FACTS JN FtV E is the
sl imu!ating new game of
knowledge that pits up to
5 players against each
other -and time. Brisk
competition reveals play-
ers' abilities for quick re·
call of facts and final re-
sults of mem ory searching
can lead to mi11 ny a spirit.
ed discussion and eve n a
l<!!ugh or two. Aver<!lge
pleying lime per game: I
hour,
PRO
FOOTBALL
PRO FOOTBALL is for
gran dstand qu<!l rterbacks
of all ages, fwo players.
Ga m e includes colorful
vinyl-covered fold-n-sn<!lp
gam e bo<!lrd , calculator,
shift cards, magnetic yard.
age marker, ru ler tabu-
la tor, dic e, special mark.
ing pen cil , storage fra y
and insrtuct ions.
SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION
OF 3M BOOl<SHELF GAMES
ALL -
GAMES
$795
ea.
"~-~ ... ~«&ef * f t l
f
Beautiful looking ... beautiful cooking ...
FARBERWARE®
AUTOMATIC ELECTRIC
COOKWARE * Enjoy carefree cooking
and elegant serving
•
"OPEN HEAllTH"a BROILER/ROTISSERIE.
A new concep t in cooking. the new
.. cool zone'' broiling method lair
circuliltlon acound cooking meatl seals
in all the flavorful, heal thful juices •••
only the fat drips away. NO SMOKE.
NO SPATTER. No hood or enclosure that
tends lo dry out meats.
with beautiful Farbenvare ...
truly America's finest automatic
electric cookware!
HEW SfflSH-ltlBAB ACCESSORY ... has five
. stainless steel skewers In rack for shlsh·
\eb1b fans! Just load 'em up with your favor·
. te vari1tlons and drop them Into place on
1•our wonderful "Open Hearth" Broller/Ro-
tisserie. How eas1 cfn the llvin' be?
"OP EN HEARTH"• fiECTRIC BROILER •••
Uclusive "cool zone" bro1lin1 seals In the
flavor and nutrients -gives that delk:ious
outdoor flavor indoo1s. Compact, easy to-<:!eati
~
$4499
, .. ~ ) .. ,,;;?"'-,.__,
AUl OMATIC CAN OPENER l KNIFE SHARPENER
... can is pierced automat ically, Stops au1o·
matlcaUy, magnet dra"ls lid away from can.
Cul edges are rotted bnk for safety. Shtr~
ener helps you keep your knives efficiently
5harpened. $1599
$998
STAINLESS STEEL COFFEEMAKERS .• , fas!er
ttian instants ... exclusive SUPER·FAST brew-
ing action assures a rich, perfect brew every
time! Temperillure contJnl keeps It piping
hot. Truly the fines!, most beautiful coffee·
maker made. Crafted In gleaming STAINLESS
STEEL $199, • '" ""' $2299
drip lr!y. NO SMOKE, NO SPATTER means
cleaner kitchen walls and cabinets, too. &Ir•
large to• x is-broillng suilace,
528"
STAIHLESS STEEt FRY PAN ... for the ulli·
mate in every kind of tas ty dishe5! Steak,
?t ew, or elaborate gourmet creations, just
dial the right temperature for perfect re·
suits without hot spots or sCCrching. tlilnks:
lo FARBERWARE'S aluminum dad bottom on
easy·to-clean STAINLISS STfEL $27,,
&;:.
Saturday, December 6-10:00 a.m. ·5:00 p.m. ·~
&;:;
FREE
FANCY
(;/FT
WRAP
INTRODUCING
I .
Ember Glow ...
a delicate flameli ke design
on a rich flore ntine back·
ground. Your table will be
enhanced with its fresh
sparkling beauty.
ONEIDACRAFT'
DELUXE STAINLESS
~
Large Selection
of Stai11less
S teel Flatwar e
011 Display
I
.NEW!:
POWERLDCK
TAPE RUtE
• EXTIIA LIGHT -EXTRA STRONG
• LONGER LASTING YELLOW
MYLAR& CL.AO BLADE
• POSITIVE LOCKON 8lAD[ -
PREVENTS CREEPING
Const.int·!OrQue, perm1nent-ma11net
motor gi ~es tnis hand arinder over
1w<ce the power ot previous models. ~ ',
Turns out 30,000 rpm -will nol stall
under normal load! Runs cool and
vibration·tree Weighs only 11 oz.
lakes 1/8'", 3/32", l/16", l/Ji" col·
lc.s. U L. Listed.
No. 271 Moto-Tool tii:!I with 34 acces-~ '!.Qries ar1d caSfl as shoWtl .. S39 t S
No. 270 Molo-1001 only .... S2t ts
' ~ Outdoor lighting you
never thought you could afford!
A quality system you install yourself ...
in minutes. with complete safety.
No perm its. conduit or dit1inr necesury .. , iust plul i11! • UL appr~1d,
12.,011 1ptem 1hso!utt!y shockproof. child·salel • Thest low-volta11 sets
are complete wi!h 6 larze sealed beam lithts and colored lenses (2 ~mber.
1reen. pink, blue. ind •hilt). 100 Itel of we31herpr11ol cable, tr1nsformtr
with bui!l-in 1utom1!1c timer, arou nd sti~es and wall brackets • Use 1h1s
e•cil in1 flew li1ht1n1 lrom AMF i11 df)(tns ol W!JS throu1hou1 the ye1r tor
set11tilj' 1nd outdoor beotDlf.
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6men
th11n4tr, Decemllllf "' IHt '"' 11
Spiced
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Season
With Yule Tea
For an old-fashioned Christmas, take son1e sugar and spice and stir
them up \vith everything nice.
This is precisely \\'hat th e La,vyers' \Vives of Orange County plan to
do for their annual Christn1as Tea, to 'lake place Thursday, Dec. 11, fro1n 2
to 4 p.m. in the Santa Ana ho1ne of Mrs. Paul Ackerman.
.... 1'he sugar will be in the forn1 of delicate tea dainties. to be furnished
by new members under t.he direction of ~l rs. Arthur J. Donahue. Spices
'viii be found throughout the appointments of the tea table, as that will be
the tea's theme. •
Centering the table \Vill be an arrangement of lighted red candles
scented with ,spice, candied re<!_~ppl~ and holly leaves,
C<rehairmen ol the tea, a highlight of the year for Lawyers' \Vives,
are f\'Irs. Keoneth \Villiari1s 'and Mrs. Jack Lincoln.
Ne,v ·members who will furni sh sweets and assist with other prepara-
tions are the Mmes. Eugen Andres , Arthur Aune, Robert Bean , George
Bethel, Robert Be\vley. John Bovee, David Brickner and Robert Brodie.
Others are !he 1Vfmes. Hubert Clark, James Cline , James Cook . An·
dre\v Di Marco, \Villian1 Dolan, Harold Edwards, Elton Eilert, Jot\n Gaug-
han, Carl J.lilliard, Allen McGurk, Gregory Munoz and John Patterson.
J\'lore are the f\1me s. Peter Pelkofer. James Perry, Rolf Pitts, John
Quigley. George Rogers, Roger Ressell, Dean Sandford, Frank Scanlon,
Frank Schmeh r. Russell Serber, Garvin ~hallenberger, Marvin Warren,
f\'lartin Cohen, Emmett Tompkins and Sealy Yates.
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HEIRLOOM RECIPE ~ Sweets and spicy punch, ingredi-
ents for an old-fashioned Christmas will fill the tea table
\vhen Lawyers' Wives of Orange County gather in the Santa
Ana home of Mrs. Paul Ackerman for a Christmas Tea.
The traditional holiday event \vill take place from
2 to 4 p.m. Thursday, Dec. 11. Preparing spice-laden sweets
are (left to right) 1.he Mmes. J\1artin fleneghan. Grover Fra-
ter and George Bethel.
Completing the li st are the Mmes. Ward Morris, Lawrence Kirk, Wil·
Jiam Mock , Bryan Brown, John Downer, Stuart Knight, Landon Morris,
Dani,el Kelly, Lawrence Harvey and Harry Fox.
Mrs. Hayward P. LeCone, hostess chairman, will gieet guests at. the
door along with the Mmes. Grover Frater, D. Reginald Gustaveson. Ken-
neth Lae, Richard J\1adory, R. L. Riemer, Furman Robert'\, \Vill iam \Vood·
yard and Morgan \Vright.
UCI Music Professor
Next Concert Previewer
Dr. Maurice Allard, UCI
assistant proressor or music
and conductor of the lrvlne
J\-1aster Chora le, will preview
the next concert in the current
aubscripUon series of Orange
County Philharmonic Society.
He will lecture at 10:45 a.m.
Wednesday, Dec. 10, in the
Fashion Island Cin'ema, and
his subject will be the pro-
gram to be played by the Los
Angeles Philharmonic
Podium Spotlights
Israeli Conductor
Daniel Barenboim, talented young Israeli maes-
tro , will conduct the Los Angeles Philharmonic Or-
chestra in the next concert program scheduled by
the Orange County Philharmonic Society.
The concert. to begin promptly at 8:30 p.m.
Saturday, Dec. 13, will be played in Orange Coast
College auditorium. The program will include Bee-
thoven's Overture Prometheus. Haydn's Symphony
No. 95 and Symphony No. 1 in C Minor, Opus 68 by
Brahms.
Known throughout the international music
\Vorld as a top ranking concert pianist, Barenboim
is rapidly' gaining prominence as a conductor. In
this capacity he appeared with the Los Angeles
Philharmonic during the 1968 Hollywood Bowl sea-
son and conducted the English Chamber Orchestra
In Southern California during a tour last spring.
Orchestra Saturday, Dec. 13.
Dr .. Allard h:ilds a bachelor
of music degree from the Uni·
iversity of Indiana, a masters
of arts degree from New York
Univel"!ily and a doctor of
musical arts degree from the
University of Southern
California.
He has done graduate st udy
In Paris fur t"'·o years with
Pierre Bernac and Nadia
Sou.Jang er, has taught in many
colleges and universities and
has a great deal of pro-
fessional singing experience
including lead roles in opera in
the United Stales and Europe.
While studying in France, he
1~·as presented in recitals in
Paris, Grenoble. Lyon and
Clermont-Ferrand by the U.S.
Information Service.
All previews are open lo the
public and students arc ad·
milled frtt. Tickets, at $1,
.. may be purchased at Ule door.
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Born in Argentina and raised in Israel, Baren-
boim demonstrated musical talent at the age of 5.
and his parents, both pianists, supervised his early
studies. At 10. he was invited to appear at the Salz-
burg .Afozarteum. In 1956 he made his London debut
as a piano soloist and the following ye ar he was
heard for the first time in I.his country.
Concert tickets, at '4, are on sale at the Pbil-
hannonic office, 201 \V. Coast Highway, Newport
Beach. Student tickets are $1.75 .
Chairman of the preview
series is Mrs. F..dward W.
Schumacher and serving on
her commi\tee are the Mmes.
Gilbert Thompson, Frank A.
Cooney, Kenneth 1\1. Smith, E.
l\1organ Quinn, H e r m a n
J,ohnson, Richard Brockmeyer
and J. Donald Fergu.son.
MUSIC , MUSIC, MUSIC -Dr. Maurice Allard, UC! assistant
music professor will take ti1nc out from teaching Cameron Quinn,
Susan Boatman and other music students \Vednesday, Dec. 10, to•
previe\v the next concert. Students are admitted free.
/
Real Friends Spare Grief-Forget Speaking Piece of Mind ".
DEAR ANN LANDERS : A dear friend
of mine 11 being pla yed for a fool. Her
husband, who Is crowding 60, is fooling
around-with a woman 25 years his junior.
He belongs to a club that meets twice a
month. Alter he .says hello to everyone
and is recorded as "present," he sneaks
out. The babe meell him at the door and
they go oH together. My hu.sband is in the
club and so is my son-in-law. They are
both on to the game -and so is everyone
else.
This bum has a wonderful ~ess and
1 fine family. I hate to see him get away
wtth such cheap hi-Jinks. Tr my husband
were cheating, J'd ctrtalnly appreciate it
If someone wised ME up. Should I be a
true friend and tell her? -LONDON,
ANN LANDERS ~
ONT.
DEAR OONDON: Be a true frlead ind
keep yoor moalJI slnn. More oft.en than
aot Ule 'Jife is 1w1f'e but sbe prefers &o
bebave u II site knows nolhln1. n11 ex·
COltS lier frQm making a move which
might .not be In lier belt lateret&-or I•
tlle be1t lnttml or btr f•mlly. lnformlag
"' 11·omlln that htr busba.ad 11 cheadng
11 no act of frfend1hlp. Real Crlcnds spare
. --
you grid. They don't come wtch stories
Ol.at tlurt your hfarL
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Sooner or
later your ~lymn hits everybody
bet.ween the eyes. We got nurs a few day5
ago. lt was that letter .from the woman
whose son looked just Ukc "the other
man."
We too have A son Who bears n 'slartl·
Ing fand embarrassing) resemblance to
''lh c other man ." But emotionally he's·
mine and Ulis is what counts.
There's more to being a Tather than
being a party to the conception. J couldn 't
be prouder of this lad if I were certain he
was flesh of my flesh. He is everything a
father could want in a son. The gnawing
SL!Spiclon that he Is another man's chlld
doesn't diminish my love for him one
Iota.
The "other man" lives In this city and
we see him and his wife from lime to
lime. They have several daughters -no
sons. 1 'm sure every time he looks at this
boy he di~11 a little. Fate can be cruel. l
figure T was the lucky one. Print this If
you think iL will help that poor son-of·&·
gun who signed himself "Tortured by
Doubts." -ALSO DOUBTING BUT NO
LONGER TORTURED
DEAR ALSO: Hett: lt 11 11·1th m1
1peclal Ull.aks for sharing somelhhlg
painfully close &o you.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: \\'heneve.r my
husband and l are out In 1 50Cial group I
am embarrassed to tears. All my hus-
band wanu to talk about Is sex. He tells
such raw jokes I wanL to crawl uoder the
table and st.ay there. He docsn"t .seem to
know any clean stories -only dirty onea.
To li1ten to him tal)c you'd think sex
was the most lmportanL thln{in his life.
And this Is what bnfiles me. To put It
bluntly, Ann, he is completely O\'t!r ffic
hlll And I mean completely. '
Wouldn'l you think a man who CAN~
perform would stay off the subject~
Please explain. -RAU:IG•I . N.C. •
DEAR IL: !\1en wlto CAN perform 00
stay off the sabjttt. The one11 who lrt
over tbe blll have the one track minds -
ed the track Is usually muddy.
Tbe noaperformtrs talk about tel
betause that's au tbey tan do -poor
thtn1s. Now do you get It, hooey?
Ann L.nders will be glad ID help yOii
with your problems. Send them to her m
care of the DAILY PlLOT:enck>sina ~
sett.addressed, stamped envelope.
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Dawson Claims
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Robert
Bride In HB Nuptials
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MRS. ROBERT E. DAWSON Ill
Former Kathlyn Jo Kelly ,.. ....... ~,
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Horoscope
The first ChriS1ian Church
In Huntington Beach was the.
ietting for the afternoon wed-
ding of Kathlyn Jo Kelly and
Robert E. Dawson Ill. both of
J{untington Beach. The Rev.
Dan J. Moss performed the
double ring nuptl_als.
Parents of the bridal couple
are f\1 r. and Mrs. Frederick
H. Kelly Jr. of Huntington
Beach and f\trs. Alethea Daw·
soo of Vista and Robert E.
Da\\'SOn or San P.iarcos.
The bride wore an origini!I
gown or French brida l satin
with high empire b o d i c e
enhanced with Uny ruffles of
lace trimming and s e e d
pearls. Her IQflg full skirt fell
rom the waisl in unpressed
plea t! and her tv.·o-tiered
finger tipped veiling v.·as
caught to a headpiece of
mal.Ch.ing satin and l::ice,
adorned with ~ar\s and se-
quins, and on each side
featured tiny rose buds or
lace. The hand-knitted cap
was made by the bride's
grandmother.
The new Mrs. DawSOn car.
ried a circle of yellow and
\11hite roses with a cascade of
flowers aiid ribbon .
\fiss Sally Servies wa s maid
of honor and ~1isl!i Nancy
Pisces: Help
Received Is
'!'VESTCLrF PLAZA
17th Af'O IRV'l\E ~-41?1
NEWPCRT BE.AO-l CAL..r.
FRIDAY
DECEMBER 5
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
By lonight you come out of
low cycle. Life takes on
brighter hue. Good dinner with
mate, partner. other in-
divi dual close In you strongly
C1dvocaled. Differences settled
with fam ily member.
TAURUS (April 20-i\tay 201 :
This evening could find you
the recipient of some kind of
av.•ard, special recognition.
Whatever. there is definite
public reaction to your efforts.
GE~UNI (May 21.June 20):
You are able to finish what
was recently initiated. M
result, you gain g r e a t e r
recogni tion. You also auracl
people to you with their pro-
blems.
CANCER (June 21 -July 22):
Your home -the way it looks
and where it is located -apt
to be spollighted. Be original.
Nol necessary to follow the
crowd . But be sure you know
Art Sale
Servies was the bridesmaitl.
The Donor attendant wore a
floor length empire style gow11
in kelly green peau de soie
and a Jullet cap and held a
bouquet of autumn colored
blo.ssoms. Dressed identically
in a gown of antique gold wa s
the bridesmaid'.
Floyd Stafford was best n1an
and u.shering gu ests to their
seats were Rick Kelly. thl'
bride's brother, Ken Hall and
Ivan Neil.
The receptlon foll:>\\'ed in
the P.feadow Lark Country
Club where Miss Sandra Han.
cock circulated the guest book.
The newlyweds wlll hon<'Y·
moon In San F'r;inclsco and
111ake their horne 1n Hun-
tington Beach.
The for1nl!r t.Iiss Kt!lly is a
~raduate or ll unllngton Beach
liigh Sch09I a11d is auendlng
Orange Coast College. Her
husband is an ;ilumnus or
Californ ia Slate College at
Long 8('<tch where he received
hi!I BS in criminology .
Special gul'Sls :it the \\'l->d·
<ling and reccp! ion were Or.
and ~1 r::.. Frederick H. Kelly
nr Goldfield. lcm·a. the bride's
i;i:ran<lparents and ~1rs. 0. B.
Forbes of 3oone, Iowa.
CHRISTY MIKELS-
Will Wed
Harborites Recite Vows
Si rH; 4Z·52.
ho'" $1J.OO
1-----0lh•r Gift Sug ge1tions ----,
e DRESSES e GOWN S e ROBES e SLIPS e CAP,RfS O BLOUSES
O PANTY HOSE
lAYAWAY • GIFT ftO Xl:i • CIFT
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Homecoming Queen
Christy Mikels Engaged
The eng.lgement or ChriSlf
Atikels lo Steven Klosterman
has been announced by the
bride-elecl's parents, Mr. and
Mn. Robert Mikels of Laguna
Beach.
AUss MJkels was graduated
fr o m Laguna Beach High
School where she ~as home·
eomlng queen and 1tendl: Or-
ange Coast Colltae.
The brldeiroom-elect, son
of tt1r. •Dd Mr1. Walter KIOJ·
termiin of South Upna, was
graduattd from l..ai\Ull Beach
High-School and la a fre.!lh-
man at UCLA.
No date tw been :1et for the
wedding.
Champagne Buffet
Bridal Pair Honored
One hundred guests altended
a candlelight buffet in tl\e
Laguna Beach home of the
Otho Budds honoring the mar-
' riage of Dana Jones CUn-
11 in g ham and Harold
Fitzwater.
The bride-elect, daughter of
P.its. Dana King Jones of
Laguna Beach, "'ore a long·
sleeved go,vn of mo.ss green
lace over deep pink satin and
carried a single matching rose
pink chiffon gown and carried
a bouquet of-pi nk carnations.
The bridegroom, son of ?I-its.
Hazel S. Fitzwater or Orlando.
Fla., was attended by besl
man Frank Visco.
The new Mrs. Pjtlwater at·
tended Laguna Beach JChools.
Her husband is a graduate or
the Univ ersity of Cincinnati
and received an MA at UCLA.
The couple wlll reside In
Hunt1na:ton Beach.
for the · late a f t e r n o o n ,.===========, ceremony in St. Francis-by-
the-Sea chapel. The Rev.
Elsworth Richardson officiat-
ed.
Andy's n.,.
Ask any kid. "Ask Andy'" Is fun.
Str It Saturdays ln the DAILY
PJLOT.
y 11111 lfl•ll '""' ,....,..bl•
,,111!'1 , ... 511•wfl 1111 ,,..
•lllCl1I fnilhrt.-4. 'f'er..t
fetorlc. •T ONl.T
Co3ta /lle•a'•
Uldut
Uome•Oumed
Furniture Store!
l! i·
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... -~-~-------~--------------------------.... -~---,,.., ....... ,.,.-~_,. ........ ,..,. ................ ....,...,..t"'TT4f,..M ..... "'ff"il""""""'ll\¥Ci ........ 14f'"pY"'--"""l-•~·~~n·~·w--~-· ........... ._ .... .,...,...._
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Surprises in Store for Lido Isle Commodore
• DAILV PILOT JIJ
Greeting Card Trends '
---
Discussed by Expert Not M11eh ·Scr•tellf • ,
Trr.-x1.s ln greeting cards will gounnet Items whlch will be
be dlscusied by Bill Brewer, sold. Proceeds will augmenl!
director of. editorial and art in the club tfreasury . [
A Bool•·Gltt Is a Nfltell/ t
the contemporary h u m o r Assisting lhe hosts will be •
divi•ion of Buzza-Cardozo 1he Mmes. Ralph T. Goodhue., The Bookst all
cards. Ruth Dygert, Harry H. Casey 1
He will speak before the and Willsey Coke. Reserva-1 333 E, 17th St., Costa Mes11
Orange County Club of Theta lions are to be made by Fri· 548-481 1
·.t: ... . , ...
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Sigma Phi at noon Tuesday, day. Dec. 5 with Mrs. Russell '
Dec. 9, ln the Costa Mesa. ~Quak~'.'.'.e~nb~u~s~h,~54'.'.~::'.6722'.::. ___ 1======='=""='='"='="'='~="='=""""==' ====== horue of Mrs. Robert F.i~
Sanders.
Accompanying the spealter
will be his wife, Polly, an
B.rtist who follows a more
traditional ve,Ut for California
Artists greeting cards. Both
will show examples of their
work in Christmas ll'.1d other
types of cards which will point
up the contrast in Brewer's
bold style and ~1rs. Brew,er's
delicate florals.
Brewer, a graduate of the
University of California,
Berkeley, also attended the
Art Center and Choulnard Art
Institute, Los Angeles. His
wife a t t e n d e d Plymputh
School of Art, Plymouth. Eng-
land and the Boston Museum
School of Fine Arts.
Furthering the Christmas
theme, members will bring .
•
Double Role
For a Drug
A drug used to treat
asthmatic children now is con·
sidertd as a treatment In the
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Aiming for the pinata \Vhich will spill out surprises
for the incoming comJTiodore of Lido Isle Yacht
Club is Don Ray, while retiring commodore Roy
B. \Voolsey makes the game challenging. Cheering
on the new 1eader are Mrs. Woolsey (Jeff) and Mrs.
Ray. This will be part of the festivities during the
club's annual dinner dance Saturday, Dec. 6, in Lido
Isle Clubhouse. Serving · with Ray will be Roger
MacGregor, Edward Hayes, Allen Campbell and
Buster Bruce.
inducement of weight gain and
appelile, reports a physician
at the University of
California's Medical Center.
Dr. Rudolf E. Noble, clinical
instructor of medicine, tested
the drug, cyphept.adine, in an
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W hy Get
Involved?
Volunteer work is as much
an American tradition as
poUtics and apple pie.
\Vhy do busy women gel in·
vol ved Jn volunteer v.·ork?
The Fed.era! Bureau of
Labor Statistics says a study
showed that 38 perce'ilt or the
'vomen volunteers s i m p I y
wanted lD help people, a
specific organization of a com-
munity; 29 percent expressed
a "sense of duty" to their
communities; 36 percent said
they simply enjoy doing
volunteer l\'Ork and gain seU-
salisfaction from it.
Xi Xi Pis
H~ar' Music
Members or Xi Xi Pi
Chapter, Beta Sigma Phi. will
host a reception in the Long
Beach 1.1useum Or Art Sunday,~
Dec. 7.
Gre eting guests will be thel
Mmes. Eldon Dvorak, presi·
dent; Ken Moore, Robert
Shay, Henry Kelly, John 1t.it>-
quin, Ron Sarouhan, Robert I
Kremer and Norman
Niebcrlcin.
The program will b e 1 presented by Los Cantores del •
Camino Real directed by
Charles and Mary Margaret
Trousdale. 1'.fusicial selections
will be from medieval and
renaissance periods.
Make this a
Leave-it-to-Singer
. Christmas.
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t .,. t;
i kb:
Fashion Mate•r,,.ZagSewing Machine bJSliwer. Dams, mends,
monograms.Sews buttonsandbuttonholes. Q J 588 lt~quietandvibrationfl:ee.Withcarfyingcase n y
FlllSllE!lll FIJI Mlmll:ATSllll!·
from a sewing machine to a sewing
notion. From an LP album to a ~colorTV.
FllE SD\llGl.malS!Singergivesfree
lessoos oo how-to-use a sewing machine
Witheverymachinepurchased.
F1IE lllMllT anywhere in the U.S.A.
lncludini; Alaska and Hawaii. Saves you
miney, ume and trouble!
RI' lddress cf store nearest )OU, see v.tttte
_ .. ......_bookunderSINGER~
ITl!IGFTWRAP-all bright and b&nb-
boned. So you won't get all tied up in
thatlitUedetail.
BUT NOW al TIE SllD I ·TG36 CR!lllT ACaUn',
and if you choose, defer monthly pay-
ments until February, 1970..
OR use the Singer Lay-Away Plan-
a small deposit will hold any item until
Dec.20. -
SINGE·R
lt\ot; ntw/orklmamJfll 11 at SINCE It tOfliaMt•
•A Tr•den111rtt Of THE SINGER COMPANY
COSTA MESA
l rlttol I Su11flowt•
!40-263)
Soullot Co•1f Pl•1•
COSTA MESA
2100 H~rbor llvcl.
HU NTINGTON BEACH
Edl11111r .•t l11~k
-
Kl 9. I 195
H1 rbor Ctnttr
,,, .. ,041
Hvntl111iJlo" Bttc.lot C111t1r
•
Film-o-rama
experiment involving 2 0
underweight adults.
, ·Patients taking it gained 8.4
. . . 'pounds on the average_ during
A collection ·of l1lms 1s the· two months of testing.
available-Ui registered patrons
over 21 at the Audio.visual
department in the Mariners
Branch Library. Lists of new
films are available at all three
city lib.rary branches.
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Cactu• Society
Orange County Cactus and
Succulent Society meets the
first Wednesday at noon in
Odd Fellows Hall. Costa Mesa.
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:J.air
THE JULIET BRA CHEMISE
And you thought you'd never find o bro
chemise t hat fit as well os _your favorite
Juliet ·bra.' How wrong you were! Here it
is! 'Hidden under lhe brief little slro ight-
line, nylon tricot chemise. Unseen your Ju.
lie! bro scoops lhe pretty neckl ine, lifts
'do inty cups with o wisp of lined fiberfill, o
hint of under wiring. Buy for gifts, for your·
self! Beige, black or white in sizes 32 to 36,
Bond C cups. $11.
fashions for . . . I
'-F1shlon lsl•nd, Newpo rt Beech
Stonewood Center, Downey
Cfll•l'I every 11l9kl 'ti! t for yo11t thoppl119 c.011v•11l111G•
l1nkA1111ric11cl, M11t1r Clote19e, le femm1 Ch•tt•
I "
-'\;· ·~£'
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CANVAS
SUDDENLY IMPORTANT.
SHAPED BY
HOWARD WOLF'
INTO CRISP LITTLE
SllAPES ••• &'IAPPED
WITH ATTENTION GETTING
POCKETS •• , BOLD BUTTONS
AND BUCKLED BELTS.
DOUBLE BELTED DRESS IN
•
.NATURAL WITH COFFE~N, 52 .00
SAFARI DRESS, NATURAL WITH
COFFEE STITCHING,. 44.00,
BOTll lN .SIZES 6-14.
DRESS SHOP
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Shop morning, noon·and night, ~londtt.)' thru Satwday .at till nioo Buffums'
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Newport Center et f"1shlon !Sl"1d • "44·2200 t Mond~y throuah Saturdn' tO:OO 1.m, tlll 9:30 pJa.' '
,..,-.... ----------..... -----~----~--~----~--~·----------~------------·--------·-··· ··---···.
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Donna Walker Become.s
Mrs. Raleigh B. Hawk
Students
Have Rival
Compulua ,_ are vyl.11
Shoppers
Benefit
Hospital
Auxiliary
In Offing
MRS. RALEIGH HAWK
Home in Long Beach
Read the Stars With Omarr
Following a honeymoon in
the mountains, R • I e I g h
llra<lley Hawk and his bride ,
the former Donna Lte \\'alker
of Newport Beach will realde
in Long Beach.
Performing the double ring
ceremony in the First United
Methodist Church, Seal Beach
was the Rev, Clyde E. Ervin.
The newlyweds are t h e
daughter of Mr. and ri.irs. Carl
L. Walker of Santa Ana and
the son of the late ri.1r. and
?\irs. Rolland B. Hawk!.
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gov.•n
of bridal satin fashioned with
alencon lace bodice a n-d
sleeves and the lace alsG
bordered her hem and her
manlilla styled veil of English
illusion.
In green velvet gowns were
Pt1iss Elizabeth Weidman •
maid of booor and Mrs. F •.
Ha rr y Roberts Jr .~
bridesmaid. Attending the
.bridegroom were John C. Glo.-,
ver, best man, and James
W. Pelers and Carl L. Walker
Jr., the bride's brother,
lJshers.
Assisting at the reception in
the Old Ranch Coontry Club,
Seal Beach was Miss Nicolette
BEFORE YOU WALK DOWN THAT AISLE,
WALK DOWN OURS.
Engagement rings in every delicious size, shape and finish.
· · Top row from left: $195., $300., $11 O.
Bottom: $850., $695 .• $525 .. $825. ·we cater weddin'gs.
SLAVICK'S
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -M~-1310
OINR Mo11Hr riiru S9turdcry 11111til 9:JO P·"'·
celebrate!
Flor1heim shoes •r•
som•thin9 spe,iial at
Holid1y time.
lh•y not only m•ke
much·1pptec.i1ted
gifts for the imporf•nt
men on your list, but
if you'v e 1 yin for th•
long-l1sfin9 1dvi1nf1911
of fine qu1lity f11h ion ,
they'll mi ke your
holid1y just th1t mu'h
more proud i nd hippy!
And don 't forget
Flor1heim gift
certific1t11. No
gu esswork. They 9iv1
your •peci1I people
•cho ice of 300 stylei.
e nd eneble them to
enjoy the 1dv1ntia91
of prof111ion1I fittin9.
'
H1rv11I
e l •ow11
• 11.~tr
e Cordov•11
Widths A to E
Si111 b1/1 tol l
Moil Ffo1t .. t <'ll 1lyltt $1'·'1to11'·'$
Mco1! lmptr:tl dylt1 Sl9,,S
1831 NEWPORT BL YD.
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA.
PHONE 548-9744
Curran.
'Mle bride ls a graduate of
De Pauw University where sbe
pledg<d Pi Beta Phi. Htt hus·
band received his bachelors
~gree from C.lifomla State
College at IAng Beach and his
masters from c h a pm a n
College.
El Camino
Hosted·
By Juniors
Members of El Camino Real
Junior Woman's Club served
their senior club at a Chri1t-
mas luncbeon to d a y in the
Co mmunity House, Dana
Point.
San Clemente High School
Choir presented a program
for the U:30 affair hosted by
the Mmes. Robert Warner,
Harry Sowden, George Men-
d\eson, Jean Obers, Harry
Rogers and Rose Walker.
History and Landmarks Sec-
tion will host .a bicentenni~l
Christmas party In the club-
house at 7 p.m., Friday, Dec.
12. Members and husbands
will attend the potluck M~
ican diMer.
Floating Tree
Bids Welcome
To Associates
Pinatas. lanterru and a
noatr.ig Christmas tree will
pro vide a gay ~fexican
background for a Fiesta de
Navldad Wnner party on Sun-
day, Dec. 7, at IS p.m. in the
Eastbluff residence of Mr. and
Mrs. John Arens.
Members or Easlbluff
Associates, w o m e n ' s com-
mittee of Orange County
Philharmonic Society, and
their husbands v.111 :!ilp cham·
pag.ie around the pool before
enjoying a sooth.of-the-border
buffet supper prepared by
members.
DiMer chairman ls P.lrs.
'Varner Bordier assisted by
the ?\-Imes. Theodore Tafe,
Jack Lee, Janusz Zaleski,
Robert Rosenberg and Angelo
Palmieri.
Group Dances
Into Holidays
Christmas will be celebrated
with dual eve.its by members
of the Mesa-Harbor Club.
A Christmas Ball in Balboa
Bay Club will launch the
season on Saturday evening,
Dec. 6. Mrs. W 111 i am
PtfcNaughton has ananged an
evening of cocktails, buffet
supper and dancing, assisted
by the ~Imes. L e w i s
-.Bradshaw. Richard Danielson,
Robe rt ~fcLaren. D o n a I d
Price a:.1d Edward Zielinski.
On Thursday, Dec .. 11. the
club v•ill gather in the ~fesa
Verde Country Club for a cof·
fee hour and luncheon.
Program chairman Pt1 r s •
Marshall Co\\•ley promises
surprises and a Christmas
caroling SW!lion.
I
Eastern Star
Group Active
'I'hree upcoming events have
been scheduled by Laguna
Beach Chapter, Order o! the
Eastern Star.
The first stated meeting In
December will be tomorro1v at
8 p.m. in ~,asonic Temple.
Luncheon vdll be ser\'ed et
noon on Saturday, Dec. 6, also
in the Temple.
Slar Club v.·ill install dire<:·
tors at a Christmas party on
\Vednesday, Dec. IO, at 7:30
p.m. in Laguna Federal Sav-
ings building.
CONSULTANT
Mrs. Cral1
Sing-out
Amigos Lift
Audience
!or Ult attention ol Mn. Shoppers wilt btnellt when
JITanc:a J. Crall, aJonc Willi Golden Kty thrift I h Op
the futurt t.eadttn ahe ad-celebratea a fint anniversary
viltfJ at UCl. In It.I new HunUnitoa Beach
Mra. Cral1, UCJ'a locaUon.
tupervbot ot SWdent tucbers, An a:utlvenary sale will
hu acc:tpled a pooltlon u a tak• pla« In !ht ahop Wedne,.
par t-Uml cun1culum CGlt-day, Dec. 10, and will include
aultant for a firm wbkh many items at half-price in
manufactures' amall, &abJ&.top addtUon to any merchandise~
educ&Uonal com~s. remalnlnc after the group's
She win cc;nfer with the buaar Saturday, Dec. fi, ac·
authors and ttaff of the firm cordJn1 to Mn. Paul Frizzell,
Ind edit matulals dellptd thrift shop chairman.
for the ltuden1& usins the Mrs. Frilzell aho will host
Compuiers. the rel\llar meeUng of the
Area rtsidents who met ror
the purpose of forming an
auxiliary lo the City of Hope
Hospital are making plans to
attend a public tour nezt
Saturday.
Guests will view the nonsec-
tarian hOSJ>ilal and vi.w
facilities utiliied in the battle
2.gainst catastrophic diseases.
Present at the meetin1 in
the home of the Earle
Richmonds were the Messrs.
and :Ptfmes. L. K. Reynolds,
Floyd E. Lee, L. H. Hoyt.
Joseph Simmons, W. H. Beat-
ty and the Mmes.. Victor C.
Andrews. Donald H. Arnold.
Jeanne Rappaport, Nell Balke
and Ray Wolshin.
. The portablt compulen, 1upPort aroop to !ht Child
usable even by kiodertartr.1 Guidance Center of Orange
students, are manufactured In County cr.1 TUtsday1 Dec. 9.
San Jt11e and Mrs. Cra11 an-Memben: will gather ln her
Uclpates several trips a month Santa •i home at 10 a.m. to
to the Bay Area. bear resulta of the bazaar and
MrL Cralf, the mother or plan a IOcial evening for Mesa Rebekah"
three children and a Colta. husbands and friends i n
Meta resident. a1ao t.eacbes February. Mrs. Bill Susman is Every first and third Tun:·
lancuase arta:, IOCia1 science in charae of arrangements for day of the month members or
The '°n1lll~-are __ !'eat:11th•y and rtadlna at the elementary a theater party Feb. 14 to see Mesa R ebekah Lodae
commu Cl-e -•uu I 0 " level in ut1•1 • d u c I t I 0 n "The Im-'ble Years" in the assemble in Odd Fellows Ha!J, youth to express their ideals. d _._ ...-
Son1s wtll ·be rendered hYl-:::;;';;.-="'=~"·,,l=======H=un=Un=at«i~=Be~ac=h::::P:::;l,;:•Y::hou~s=e·:,,;Costa~~M=esa~·,:,•t,,s='p'=.m.===:;
Sing-out ·A m I Io 1, an out..11
growth of Sina-out OraJ11t
County formed by the natlonaJ
cast of Up With People. AJN.
goe, comprised of Youn& peo-
ple from ninth grade throu&b
college residing: in Oraq:e
County, will · preaent muslc
from Up With J>eople tomor-
row night, Dec. 5, at 7 p.m. in
San Clemente Prubyterian
Church.
Admlss.ion of $1 for adults
and 50 cents for children will
be asked at the door.
Sleighbell
Supper Set
Santa Ana·s Junior Auziliary
of the Assistance League will
ho.st its 20th annual Slelghbell
Supper dinner dance in the
Santa Ana Elks Club tomor-
row.
The Linda Isle home of the
James Knapps will be the set-
ting for one of the nve
prepartles given by members
for guest!. -
t.tembers from the beach
area include the chairman of
lhe eve-.1t ?\frs. Cliff Hostetler
and the J\.lmes. C. K e i t h
'\'elputt, Alezander Nalle, Guy
Li vingston Jr., t.f e 1 burn
Harvey, John W. Carlyle III
and htertan D. Butler.
SOFT and
FEMININE
25 TO. 35 YEAR OLD PARENTS.
WITH ROCK & ROLL KIDS
A WURLITZER
ORGAN
11 the answer!
Children •nd Adults Leam and
Love To f'lciy! lrighMn Your
Home and Keop Your Fcimily
Together-
You'll le Am11od at
What $744 S.und1 Llkt
'"A Wurllher Or11n.
Como lnl Soo 111 Hear It! s744
PERHAPS YOU PREFER
'
PIANOS
SEE OUR l'.INE SELECTION NOW
PAYMENTS TO FIT
YOUR BUDGET I
GRANDS 40-/, OF
NEW COST
PRICES
v ... u" ......... s595 "1~11:...L ... Mus:·eC~._, at the "Miity yew ~~ ~ '.i.9;)'' 1et ., ....... . ••I•• ... 1. at SOUTH COAST PLAZA
COSTA MESA -PHONE 540-3165
CLOSED
SUNDAY,1""
WE WILL
BE PLEASED
TO SERVE
YOU SIX
DAYS A WEEK
MONDAY •
through
SATURDAY
10 •.m. • 9:30 p.m.
South Coast Pin•
t rht .. StrHt l11tr1•"• .. ,_...,
J, M•h• •M U.S. N .. 'I. hilt
Co1ta Mo,. 546-2066
•
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
-
LEGAL NOTICE
ICW~ onT•ICT TAK •AT•
NC•RAS• l'l•CTION NOT c;•
NOT ICE 1$ Hll!llflY (i!Vf.N IO 119
Qulll loeo •la< Drl ..i '"" Nt wpgrl '-Wiii
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nit• MUm 1• fl t lor i.tld Dll let bl> I,..
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ptK 11e 1 po1 no 11111«"1 1nd ottla 1 ·~
llO lllecl 0 COlldlKI ll'l 1 I K Ion I I "'
MlllW IS 114! pr•c nc l, pol llQ pl1ct1 I/Id
of tt I llPIJO II ed re cond\ICI Ml d bOl'l(I
eKlon
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
,. J1111
(&Rfll'l(AT• 0,
f'ICl T CIU!i NAMIE:
llle Un0• lifMd -· (t llY l~fy e f CondllCtltil I 11111 lliUI I 211 20!1'1 $
Ne"""° 1 ll••C" C• ~,.,., • "'""' "' 1 e ' ''°"' ' ""' llllM ol ••unot. FA5H ON llOA,. & YACHT CL[AN NG 5EltV CE
'"" 1111 1114 I m $ COltl!IOlld of Ill ollow nt •• Sllf\I w~ ,...,..,.... \ft lul
•
LEGAL NOTICE
•
l ltur\d.,. Dtctrnbtt 4 ] 96q
LEGAL NOTICE
DAILY PILOT 2[
LEGAL NOTICE
\UI'•• Cl. COllltT 01' ""· ;
3TAT• Of' CALl,,0•1nA l'Olt
Tiii COUNTY 01' OltAlffl• },
NI A"'4"4 J;.
NCITICI 01' Nf:Alt NO 01' l'l'TITI ...
PCllt PltO.Afl' 01" W 1.1. ANO ffk
Ll!Tili•i Tl$TAMl!NTAltY
E1t1111 tJI H 1.M.ll A l'ITl'ltlON .,.
!11 1ll0 1C.ct1 of ft Hnc• • r 11 lo low• MllMA PE"'fERSON Dt<it•...:I
HOT CE 1$ HElll!IY 0 VEN Tiit ~ E !WI ROOI-fttt I i.d Ill tlt1 1 _,
5TATE OF CALIPClllN A 1'01
THE COUNTY OF ORANGE
E t~ f' ol V Cl( J STU ... llT •"l.11 VE RE
J SCHUi.Tl ~-· V Cit E K HULTZ end t~I VERE J WACHSTETTEI Ott tll"ll
NOTICE 5 H!RE9Y Cl VEN c P'f
c I'd on o1 1111 tbovt t11me<1 d«c"lllln
11111 ' t)t' toni ntw,. c 1 "" 1~• n1 Ille ild dl>.CHI~ t t l!f!U td lo f l'lt.,.. w Ill II'!! 11ec ... 1~rv woutht ' 11 IV off ct
Cl! llt er.'°'""" 1bowe t n ltd cov" o
Gtll'M Wt1vt , )I h $ Nt-l t acn C1 lat11 •
• Id FfYt ltol Ap 0 Ot IYil t $1
H11n 1111<><1 •t1cl'I (l o n I
D1 HI NOYIMl>lf , '"' G.o or WttYt
I Id Fye
si. e or C• fo n • o 1n1t '°"" v
On Novtmbf ! '"' W o r "'' 1 Nol• y Pulltc II •NI 0 ••d 5• t
Pl ""'' y IPl>ll td Oto •• W••ve • ...,
I Id F Y• ~nown G me lo lie ""' Pt O(ll\I
WllOU lllllMI lr'I l!JllK.r ~ O hi W h n
111 u1111nl tnd 11cknowltdu1cr h«v ~~
ecu H 11e 11me
OFF CIAL ,E ... L)
/Nlry It h Mo on No 1ry Pub CCI a,..
Pnt.,..Olc111 0 11'111 (QUI> y
Mv Comm ulon E..1 ...
... p • ,,.
Pub 1n..i o t"9• COi• o~ Y P lo
N&vtm!Ho ll l'O 11 t l'MI Orctmb• f ffl tOU_.t
, ___ L_E_G-;A;;;L;~;;;O;T_I_CE ___ \ __ __':L~E::'.G~AL~NOTICE
I IAll 1141 ,.JJUI
NCllll;I! TO CllCllTOllS CllT F c;ATI Of' IUSINIE!i!i
IUf'EllOI COi/iT OF THI! flCT Tl0U5 NAME
0 n•Y• • l lw
Ro1d 0 1no• Cl
P 1c• o b<ls 11eu o ml•ll>P ftn11g o f\f~ftO
dPCe<ll "' h n ou mo11 1\1
1 •~bc~onol h noce
D• td Nov•mt>' 1 fff
Me t Shi'"
Aamn1 10 o "Es1eo
~~ tllOV~ II~ ... d (I Cfl!tn
COOl(SIY SCHUMo\C"l'I COLIMAN
MINYAllO I NOWAID
UJ T-ft & C1u~ v l&.1~
Or1n•t C• ti '9
Tel !7' !O!I -..
The .,-~ g"fd ooe. ce ll' Ill 1 con
crox 1111 • bu$11ttl • P 0 l o• 1"
't:M0<\6 d• Ml C• to n t und• ht c
I I Oul I m 111mt of NOEl(AP l r.d 111
ii d m • (OffU>OSe<l 0 "• lo .,.. "II 1>e son wllO>e nl-n u I na o lt t o
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L•~ Co 11<11 de Me Ot e<1 Nov•mbr a 06' Robe L v ng• on
Sa e o (1 Olll l
0 t"llP Coun v
On Nov•mll<r • lOt• NO.JV P~b( 11 1>0 o
Pf $0111 V IOOl't td Pobfo
~no• amt ob~ hfn
n1m• • IVll•C ~ 0 " s umen 1nd 1ckno,.lf:clgf'd
hr 1111• OFF (AL SEAL!
Ml v I( He11rv
"IO $fV P~b CCt 0 I
P nt1>• Off ct n
011<>tCounv
~ v Comm 11 <1<1 E~P
Nov 4 911
P b\l•f'd Oanoe Cw• O~v P ~
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Ai. 111v1 IOI' Adm 111 r• Of LEGA.L
Pun 1nta Ot•nv• Cea 01 v P lot ;-------No ernbf J XI 11 1<'d Dtctmn i
t4f Ctt-4~
LEt AL NOTICE -----T .. '4tJ
NOTICE TO Clll!OITOllS
l'ElllCIR COUIT Cl' TM!':
i TATE OF CA1. l'CllNIA FCll
THE COUNTY 01' OIANGE Nt AMU4
WISHBUllN
I F:r. Al NOTICI --SAi ' ,,
NOT CE TO CllED TOii \
S l'Fll 011. CCIUllT 01' THE
STtfE OF CAL FOINIA FOi
THE c;OUNTY 0, Ollo\NGE
No A ••n1 E• I ~ o W,,_LTER R ST .. Bl' D~tt•I
"' NOT CE IS HEllEIY GIVEN o h•
G e<I O!'•G
I EGAL NOTICE 1---~•UIT CE fO CRPO TOlll
~ PEI OR COUllT OF TME
Sl•TE OF CALIFORN A 1"011
fHE CO NTY OF ORANOE
Nt • Motl
o LAURA M,,_R l' SHAW
'c
CllTll" CAflf_ OF coii'Oiii"i'ON""PO.
TRANSA(f ON CIF •USINESS UNOR I
F CT TICIUI NAME
THE VNDEllS (;NED COllPORAT ON
We• 111 env ..,..., h tr11 ~ cO<>duG nv •
llul n~n IOCI "° A rl1l H • II 0
Bout •O Cos• Mt•• Ct 0 11 1 vnot
"' c ou1 m l\Dll1~ o SULLY S
COF'F'EE SHOP and "" ;. d "' comPOI~ o ,,,. lo low n~ (O Po 1 Oii
W~O( p ~~Oi PICf 0 b~IM• •I ••• '" '"' M~ • C
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f'vbl thl'll O 1111111 c111111
Deeembe t 1 10 ,.,
LEGAL NOTICE
•
E Vt~
Co11 01v P ~
J P6' 7hS.o9
. " 1!1J ,.
I EGAL NOTIC E IEl'f'lltl': TME-PUBL C-UT l T E\>'----------------l;OMM SS ON OF TNE STATE OF• CALIFOINIA P JU I
N THE MA YER ~ t,• CEIT F CATI! 01' &U$1Nl:St
""" c• <><! cl 501JT ERN F Cf T OUS NAME
CAL FOllN ,,_ EO SO
l':OM PANY 11> I ce 1 ""Or • qnra "°'' co ., !l!l•y " 1 conduel ng f bll1 nr11 t •101 l• L""'•
Stn • ,,_,.. Ct om 1 \lndt hr c °"'
m "'""' a B & R ENTERPR SES -"Ill Ill M <I m s comll'Ole<I ol Ill• lollow n~ ~ "°"I Wl\oll Ill-" hi 1f>dj o K•• e • ~entf • e Ii lo low•
II " E S • "' •702 l• l orn1 Son 1
" Ct on• t710S
R"'· C We911t 111 I ve vow
0 ~no" C1 O nl1 ""'1 o, M:I Novembe 71, '6t
I! E s a r
Rov C Wf911f Seto/Cf..,11 1
LOI """" ~ Coun y On 1 -69 bt Ott me t Mnltry .011b c
<Intl Dr ~ d S llf 1>e 'IOlll Y IPP I (j
B E s 1 • Ind ll•v c We111t k,..,.,...
nt ~ • I lo mt o be ,.e ""°"'' WlloH 111mn o fte 11e1 ne n lie tub:lc bra o ht w h 11 M rvm~n i nd
tbO ~ ~" od mo ~r o e Comm J.. I Ck"""' e<1qed hev e•ecu td thf 1am1
1ont MOI" 1nd E11m nt! Miii lat OFF(AL5EALI
W~ntldll~ Oect mbt 1 ff• I 0 00 8 Iv A lie
1m n ~e Aud o ~"' Comm n v No •rv Pvb r
Ct 11 1 C ~ HI ComP e~ C v o "v Comm nnn (•• e1
Foun •n Y1 ev Ca ona 1 wh h Mec11 • 91
me •nd "><'e • 11 ~es ea oa C PAUL DIJBO I
nnoe• •n~ be htt a " 0 ne~ I Law 01 v f' o llY Oll OER OF THE IU 0o "° 0 ve
Oec,mbe ' UT L TIES COMM SSIO NtWPorl •••cft Cal trn .
:IOl>t 0o t<t " $811 F l fte ICO II i ~I ,. dtl' T 4~ ----01--C-E-~~~"lo Novtmbe t6t Pub ~d O an11• Cot LE(; AL N I WILLIAM w OUNLOI' Otctml>I! ' 11 15 l6t
IAll 1 41
NOTICE TO CRl!:D TOii
SUl"Ell 0111: COUllT 01' T"I STATE OF CALl,OINIA 1"011
THE COUNTY 01" OllANOIE
Mt A-M11t
E• It o R.ON ... LO SPENCF=R DeGtO ed
NOT CE S H~REIY GIVEll to M
C -0 Of'• Of llt 8boYf nlofflt'lf dt"teclfnl
lh•t 1 l>t >0111 l'lt Ylr'lt cltlm1 •ti 11sl llt
Stec a • P~bl C U f" (0111111 H Oto
~110 C1fM11 t
Pub lhtll 0 11191 (!I'll
Dec...,~ 4 t&f
I EGAL NOTICE
.. ,, ... ,
I cw -.. •
.!2 Olll Y PILOT 5
Your Money's Worth
Non-foods Fatten OVER THE COUNTER
Supermarket Bill NASO Ll1tlng1 for Wednesd•y, December 3,. 1969
By SYLVIA PORTER
lf you're griping about your
soaring food bills today. of
c::ourse you have reason '!'he
food we buy to eat at home
cOSt.s close to 6 percent n1ore:
thr.i a yea r ago -and for
meats, poultry and fJsh, the
sales slip 15 up nearly 12 ptr·
cent But the story is not
merely one of higher price
tags oo all foods ac ross-the.
board. Jl's far 1nore com plex
and far more fascinating than
tbal.
Part of our h1ghl'r grocery-
supermarket bills also can be
1 raced to · our ever r1s1ng
preference for gour1nel foods
and relatively expensive con-
diments. (Our spend1.1g for
barbecue 1ngred1ents such as
barbecue sauce, m u s I a r d •
relishes, pick.Jes, paper cups
and plates is soaring ~
PART OF the bigger bills
"tan also be traced. as we all
know, to our ever ~1s1ng
preference for converuence
roods, ranging rrom prepared
baby formulas to "JUSt add
water" meals.
Part can be !raced to our
ever rising lood'.1ess J o r
:;nacks, "·b1ch are on the way
to becoming a kind of .. fourth
meal'' m the America n home.
Our spending ror snacks 1s a
towering 68 percent higher
lhan a decade ago.
But the most dramatic of
the explanations for o u r
record high g r oeery-
supermarket bills isn l in the
food categroy at all, for the
big surge r,1 spending has been
in NON-FOODS -and these
now represent 23 percent of
our total store bllls vs. only 14
percent as recently as one
detade ago.
JTDJ: A full Jive our of 10 or
the fastest sale gai ners in the
nation's supermarkets and
grocery stores in 1968 were.
non-foods, according to a ·.1ew
st udy o( co nsume r ex-
penditures for Supermarkellng
magazine. The leaders \\'ere
paper towels, greelLng cards,
dishwasher co mpound s.
furnllure polish and deodora nt
soaps.
Long Beach
Space Asked
ITEl'iJ: Also aniong the
fastest gaine rs \\'ere dry cat
food and canned cat food, can-
' led soft drinks and d1elet1c
S<lft drinks. The sole baste
rood uem for human con·
sumpl1on among the top
gainers was frozen prepared
foods.
One factor behind the non-.-====;;;o;i' GIYI YOUR SECRnAIY
A HtLPING HAND!
TAB
3M CO'S
DYNACHROME FILM SALE!
• Ip eludes Processing •
REG. SALE
SUPER a ASA" U? 2.99
20 Exp. 35m11.1 AsA" 3.13 2.19
20 Exp. 126 ASA64 3.1 3 2.19
NEW 3M COLOR PRINT FILM 3.69
f.or All ln1tamarlc Cam•ra1. 126 Slit. lnc.ludH Procn1lng & Prints.
VIVITAR MOVIE CAMERA
SUPER 8 -4 to 1 .ZOOM LENS
~ -
~· ~.\ ( : .;..._...---
' . . ,
"' • ,... • ,, I ·
e Battery oper•ltd or AC
• J.Fllmlng SpHd•
e Uu R•t:h•rgabl1 8att1ria1
•nd Cherge Built-In
• Power Zoom
• Super Shi1rp Vivitar \.en•
• Reflex View ing
C~MPLETE WITH
Case ..
Movie
Film
Lite
Save
....
16.95
17.95
3.20
38.10
***** VANIMAN CAMERA
8931 Adams Blvd.
Adems nt•t to Magnall•
Huntington Beach
962-5959
SPECIALIZING IN INDIVIDUAL ATTENTION
OPEN 11L CHRISTMAS, 9 'til 9 • N•1t te
Afltet-taon'1
M1rktf
Complete-Ne,v York Stock List
,.,.. "'' IMb.I ..... Ltw (.IHI Cftt,
ltla,.ket
Symbols
Lie G•• 1 .a L1msn ~•ss I l1r>ell v I '10 LanvRzllO LI -51 61) Lee S IQ SO te1 So 11!1 lS
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Weooesda y's_ Closing
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• " • • 19«! •• 1 JI I
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Complete York
Indust1·ial Mru·lc
Sags Below 800
Nl;:W YORK (UPI) -The Do• Jones Industrial
,1vcragc sagged belo\v the 800 line today as the
1narkel decline contrnucd unabated
Selling light n1ost of lhe session accelerated
near the close lea' 1ng declines \Vlth about a 5-to-1
111arg1n over gain ers Analysts sa.id morale was
broken ''hen th£' Dow stayed belo\v 800 long con
::.1dered a key resistance level
1hc OJI!\ \\luch reflects movement in 30 se-
lected blue cb1ps \vas off 7 99 at 793 36 well below
its closing low for 1969 and only about 2 points
ubove its th1ee year old of 79114 set on Jan 4 1967
The UPI market\V1de iudtcator sho\ved a loss o!
1 44 percent at that time of 1 592 issues traded 0£
these 1 147 declined 244 advanced
\ \Olu1ne of arouud 11 n11l11on shat cs 1an ahead
of ruesday at a co1nparable period
A.naly sts said \veakness or the Do\v encouraged
add1t1onal selhng although th ey no ted \Vall Street
111 ge ne1 al stLll 1va s concen1e d over lnOat1on tight
ct edit an d )lrospects for lo1vc1 lhan expected corp
orate profits next yca1
An1ong the day s mos~ active issues \Vere Del
\\ebb Grun1man and Occ idental Del \Vebb t1 ad ell
an early block of 199 900 shares and Grumman <1
block of 164 700 Both \vere ti ansacled al levels be
lo\v Tuesday s clos1ngs
Prices eased on the A e1rcan Stock Exchange
111 moderaate trading
-=
Oteembet 1%.t DAJt V ,JlOT ~-=--=-=:c.:.:..:c.:;...~~-~--
Stocli' Exchange List
-·~ _, ..
... -\f _,,
Final Stocks
Jn All Home
'' \-•9 •• " Editions
I• -
Com11lete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
!
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14 DAILY PILOT
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Thursday, Dttt mber •. 1%9
•
•o n e -sto p' shopping
at its finest !
OPEN TH URSDAY & MONDAY EVENINGS
JOIN THE EXCITEMENT
·~'""'OS>'" r-"" --. -.. --1 (
J -, ·/ .. ; ~ '· I . l . I I I I •' _) ' . L.i '/Y> • I ' • ' •. I J J . l ~ l ,. ~-1 • ~ ::.i=, :. .•
-:::rJ ·---' ~ ' . ... • ~_.;.-: . .z_.{! • ....._, :.:.:J) ~ ~ ---
WHEN HE ARRIVES
'
AT THE GIANT SNOWMAN
,,. I \ '" ' . ' ( • ' -, ' '· ~) ' ' < \ 1 < .,, ' • •
LISTEN FOR THE SI REN AND BELLS ON THE BIG NEWPORT BEAC H FIRE TRUCK
,
• •
FOR TH E YOU NG STERS
' .
-' . -'
UP'I TtlfMle ..
Museu11a on Move
Perry J . Rathbone, director of the Boston Museum
of Fine Arts, smiles as he holds copy of the Venus
de Milo while a work horse stands by to pull waga
on carrying art objects. The museum was staging
a recreation of the move to its piesent museum
from its original site in Copley Square. The origi·
naJ move took place in 1909.
OCC Forensics Team
Wins at Riverside
Orange Coast C ol I e ge' s
undefeated Forensics team
swept 34 awards including the
first place sweepstikeS trophy
to win the Riverside Junior
College In vitational Speech
Tourney recenlly.
The OCC sweep was com-
plete when Coach Barbara
Burgess won the Coaches'
after diMer melodrama
award, ~gged on_ by fe l101v
coaches J ack llolland, Freda
Sathre and Peg Taylor.
The OCC award winners:
Expository -Lyal ~lerrog,
Garden Grove, first place
men; Bill Landers, Cosla
~1esa, second place men;
Pierce Lucas, Garden Grove,
third place tie men; Greg
Bodenhamer, Garden Grove,
fourth place men; Nova
lrachez, Costa Mesa, first
place women: Jean
Q'fankenshlp, Costa ·?lesa, se-
cond place women.
Extemporaneous -Erjc
Samuelson, Garden Grove, se-
cond place men: D o n
Sizemore, Costa Mesa, third
place men.
lmpromp'tu Don
Sizemore,. Costa Mesa, third
pl ace men; Dorothy
MacMillan, Costa h1esa, third
place women; Cathy Barrett,
Corona del Mar, fourth place
\vOmen. ·
Persuasion -Lya l Herzog,
Garden Grove, third place
men.
Superior Certificates -Bill
Landers, Costa h1esa, novice
debate, second place; Jim
Farrmum, Newport Beach,
novice debate, second place;
Gregory Bodenhamer, Garden
Grove, Expository, fourth
place; Pierce Lucas, Garden
Grove. third place tie, Ex-
pository; Tom Hubble, Costa
Mesa , Oral Interpretation:
Cathy Barrett, Corona del
Y.ar, Impromptu, fourth
place: Alike Miklaus, Hun·
tington Beach, Impromptu,
Dorothy MacMillan, C o s t a
Mesa, Championship Debate;
Don Sizemore, Costa Mesa,
Championship debate: Jim
Odriozola, Bartsoa I s I a n·,d ,
Persuasion.
Excellent Certificates -
Jose W.:endoza, Costa Mesa,
Expository; Bob·Scott, Corona
del Mar, ExpOsitory; Wendy
Taylor, Costa Mesa, Oral
Interpretation ; Kathy Farrell,
co·sta Me s a, Or a l
Int e rpretation ; Eric
Samuelson, Garden Grove,
Championship Debate; Mike
Mik1aus, Hwitington Beach,
Championship Debate; Rita
Wakely, Costa Mesa,
Persu·asion; Wet)dy Taylor,
Costa P.lesa, Persuasion ; Nova
Hachez, CoSta Mesa,
Persuasion; Pierce Lucas,
Garden Grove, Persuasion;
Dorothy tlacMillan, Co s t a
1\1esa, E1temporaneous.
A Gift with a Lift • • • soNv·s·"
CLOCK RADIO
A radio that pou« out full, rich AM from
a cube sound-chamber cabinet And any·
thinli big clock radio can do, Sony's
6RC-23 can do too-but in less than 5•
x 5~ of space. Front clock switch makes
time-setting simple, and the large clock
face is designed • for · easy-reading.
Charming cube-shaped set comes in a
walnut-looking finish that's_ vert rich.
But you don't have to be to buy it. 801'1'"
.IUST $19.95
@DAVIS BROWN
411 E. 17th St., Costa Mesa
Dolly 9-9, Soturd•y 9-6 646-16'4
_/
Company -Acts
OAJL V PILOT .15
as Big D~ddy to Workers
TOKYO (UPI) -IJ> a nation
.when flrms are proud of their
paternalism, Mat.sushi~ Elec-
tric 11 a typically unibuhed
big daddy.
It boast.s tj)at""for Mal9ushita
employi:s ''every day begins
and ends with the singing of
the company song."
An American firm trying
Jhat might find JtselL dealing
wlth a revolt, a strike or at
least a un!Qn grievance. Not so
in Japan, where worker s
proudly wear lapel· pins bear-
ing their company's emblem.
· Matsushita takes pride in
what it calls its "own versioo
ot the famous saylngs or look after almost everything. '1
Cbalrmln Pf.ao -baMers ·Many Japanese· firms pro-
strung across th~ production vide rue medicaJ care, free
lines exhorting the 'Workers to educational courses, moothly
eVer~greater efforts to lm· family allowance1, holidays in
prove the quality of their prQ. company-owned villas and in·
ducts." expensive luhches in company
The electronics ii1m claims cafeterias.
that .. even centuries-old Zen Some companies provide
meditation techniques a r e employes 'With low:rent-hous·
made .use_of=to develop con-· lng, and whep a wor·ker -is
centration and improve the ready to buy a.. house his com.-
quality of soldering i n pany o~ loans him the
transistor radios." -money at less than the market
"The company is like a :ate, builds the _house and sells
parent " one of hfa~hita 's 1t to him at Jess than the
ads q~otes personnel director market price.
Hiroshi Yasukawa. "We must P.1atsushita contends that
when all those fringe benefll.9 bonuse:i:, which virtually all scheduled before the rush hour
are added up the sum gives finn1 pay, are rituallltlc and and tnd before It act.i.Jy
the lie tp the theory that almost never vioknL Workers starts. .
Japan's booming ecooomy b don head bands and stage To Westero ears that lyric
built on cheap labor. demonstrations burit's all might seem Jeu than Jn-
The , so-called "strikes" tn fairly friendly. spiratlmal, but you cm't
Japan for semi-annual A train strike olttn will be argue with su.ccea1. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiii~ .
Soatlt-(oast '1ua
OPEN SUNDA VS •.• 1·2~5
THROUGH CHRISTMAS ..rnor At IAN OLIGO flUWA:r. COllA. MBA
·GENUINE HAND~KNOTTED
Sears
Price• Effective Be1lnning Today
ORIENTAL RUGS
. .. ~~ ,, ~iYi··1 . ',"•
•.
' ' , .
4.:¥.i--;
For A Limited Time
See This Precious
Collection at , ••
•Sean Torr1nce • Sears P1s1den1
e Sears Co~ta rtles• e Sears Canoga P1rk
The follo.,.,·in;i: parlial listinµ: indicateli ru)t:
~ize in feet and inchts. color ilnd price • , •
;i.athered fro111 India, Paki,;tan .. .\f)t:hani~tiln,
Iran. \'i~it all four .. tores 'and see the fab·
ulous collection-\•a\ued 111 Sl,000,000.
The $30,()0(} Bjdjar Ru1 will be (In di1play •l
the Tornnee ··tore throagh. Dec. S. Canoga
Park 1tore through Dee. 12!
Hal9o'ai-Bidjar is a rug made over 80 years ag_o. There are no man made dyes used in the color·
jn& of this ru&. only plant and ve~erable dyes including barki of trees and dead bodies of fe.
male insects. 1'-fade of rhe finest Kashmir Wool selected for years from the shoulders of sheep.
Designs, motifs and colorings are not repeated thrqughour the rug. Jr rook a grandfather.
father and son to complete this rug. All generations worked for :r period of 19 years. This rug
was owned by a private family and was in constanc use in their home for over 73 years. Jn the
last 7 years ir has changed hands 8 rim.c s, each time bringing a i)igher price and an increase
in \•alue. This :is the only known specimen produced by ihe Halwai Family.
Kind Price Kind Color Price
Rup from INDl.~ lRAN.KERMANS
1.:?x9 Chand 1195 lf.2x8.8 'Kerman Blue 1 129:>
14xl0 Chand 1550 14.2:ii:l0.9 Sarouk R•d 31895
:? l.6x I:! C hand 1775 10:9x6.ll Sarouk Red 1795
'1.8x8 Norjah11n 1485 1 l.2xi.3 . f.1iraband Rod 1699
12.l:ii:S.8 Norjahan 1595 l l.5x6.8 Mehraban R~d 1675
I J.9x8.9 .4.nar 1550 l l.6x8.IO ,Shabribaf Blue $2\9:>
9.10x1.9 Anar 8395 13.2x9.4 Tabriz llod 8545
11.l Ix8.ll Rajkot S775 J0.2x1.3 Kahutarahang Cream 1590
ll.9x8.8 Rajkot 1695 ll.7x7.9 Saraband Red 848:>
9.10x7.10 Rajk0t 1550 JlxB.2 Sarouk Blue 11350
12xl8 Chan1l 1650 J3.lx9.7 Kerman Rod 1!950
10.4x7.9 Norji:han 1490 12.4x8.8 Sarouk Cream 81195
l.l.l.xl l.10 Allar 8895 Jl.5x9.2 Kerman (~ream 11095
Ru111 from PAl\IST.4;\i 17.B:ii:ll .8 Kerman Cream 12890
l5.6x9. 7 Kerman t.:ream 8199:>
:t6x2.7 Pakis111n 555 16. 7x9. l l Kerman Cream Sl650
6.10x3.l Paki11an 1130 17.S:ii:ll.8 Kerman Cream 12890
6.ix4.l Pakistan 1199 17.2xl0.4 Kern1an Rod 82290
5.1lx8.10 Pakh1tan S555 21 .Sx l2.3 Sarouk lied 83375
J.9x2.7 Paki6lan 15;;. 4.I Ix3.G Sa roUk t.:rea1n $199
2.ixl.10 Gharadjel1 Cream 1485 :;,JOxi&. Pakiatan Sl85 6.3x3.:! (;haradjeh C.reen Sl 19
Ru11 from AFGHANISTAN 5. lx3.:l Borlchalu Rod 899
8.6x6.2 Af~han 1335 5.6:ii:3.8 l\u1abad Red · 114:>
1J.lx7.ll Afghan 8335 J.'i.lx9.l0 Sarouk lloJ 11995
5.8x4 Afp:hin 1240 22.lxl2.3 Kerman· Cre1m 83695
6.9x4.ll Afghan 8255 20.l lxl 1.6 Shahribaf Blue 56300
7.9x6 Afghan 1199 23.7:ii:l3.6 Bidjar Blue $30,000
12.S:ii:9.l0 Afghan 8525 ll.10x8.9 K1butaral1ang Blue 1790
12.l0x6.l0 Afghan 8495 l2.llx9.9 11eriss Brown 11695
9x7.5 Afghan 1275 l0.i:ii:6.6 '\'azd Rod 1575
l•J.2:ii:l0.9 sarouk Blue 12350
TURKISH PRAYER RUGS 7.l:ii:4.5 l\1ehrahan R,d Sl99
25x25-in. K1yseri 1125 6. 7x4.4 H11n1ada11 Red . ' 1140
39:ii:70.in. Kayileri 8189 6x4.3 tilian _ Red 5185
:J9x70.in. l;ayseri SJ89 6.8x4.3 .A.ron Rf!rl. 1185
40x9().in.. Kayaeri 1299 6.10x4. 7 Oardjazin Red 1225
20x40-in. Y 11d• 189 8.5x4.:l Oardjazin Cr~an1 1225
Color 7.3x5.I. Husse inbad Red 1225-
IRAN SAROUJCS 7.5x5.:! l\.u1abad Red 1225
2.6xl.IO Gharadjeh 125 • 5.2x3.5 Dardjazin Blue lll9
2.Bxl.9 Char1djeh 825 5.2x3. 7 Dardjazin Cream lll9
2.9xl.9 Gharadjeh 825 5.2xl.8 Dardjatin Cream 159
4.lx2.2 Sarouk Red $99 4.2x2.6 Dardjazin Crean1 165
5. lx2.7 Sarouk Rod 1119
7.3x4.9 S1rouk Blue , 1525 R UNNER SIZES
5.lx3.2 Kerman Cream 1199 14.6x2.6 Kerman Creatn 1380
6.lx3.7 Kutabad Red 1145 l:?.7x2.8 S1rouk R•d S375
6.l0x4.3 1'1ehraban Rod 1199 14.2:ii:2.9 Darj1zin Red S250
:!.Sx2 S1rou le: Pu•hti 145 16.8x2.8 'tehraban Blue 8465
6.Bx4.3 ~arouk fl.Ur. Red 1350 '] l:ii:J ~lehrab1n Red 1195
i .3x4.10 O.hvand Blue S299 13.7x2.4 Shahribaf Blue 8295
6.6x4.7 0 1hvand Rod 129'1 13.8x2.8 S1 rook Cre1m 1565 .
7.5x4.5 Shahrib1r Blue S675 14x2.6 S1rouk Red 1395
,
. -·· -~ .. .. •• ,: .;·
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.,--------------------------------------~----------, I Al>Ove C1T"pf:l11 S EARS Ton-a nee SEARS P•t•dena. SEARS Co11a Me1a SEA_RS C.no11 Park I
Aval,lable •l the lf1w1hnrne at E. •,oolhilJ ti Brlitol 11 SunOower \'lctorr Blvd. I followins Sertulvr.Ja Rotf!mead. Phone ~ lnSo.Coa1tPlua. atFallbrook I
L s .... s...... Phone542-1511 EL5-4211-MUl-32ll ears Pbone540-3333 . Phone340-066l ~-------------------------· ___________________ ,
1 Shop NJahto Mond01 11ir.,,.i.so1unla1 t-.30 AM, to 9:30 r .M., sunc1a1 12 N-t• s r .M. .,.....,.._,. "Satltfoctlon Guciranlttd or Your.Monty lock"
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Thursday, Otctmbtr C, 1%9
Cracli Front Line Troop·s Battle in LA
GLENN WHITE •
Sports Editor
3 Rustlers
On Circuit
FiI·st Tea1n
Thr('C Golden \\'est football player!!
11 rrr named to firsl team berths on the
\II-Southern California Conference teams
~l'lrcted by vote of nl(?mber coaches an-
11ounced today.
Jl'ff Jorgensen. elected by teanuna\c!'I
;:i~ offensive captain. was listed al a
111cklc position on offense \1•hi!e l.1ike
:;;\monl' at end and Bill Thornhill at
l1neback{'r were picked for the defensive
unit.
Thrcl' Rusllers were na1ned to the se-
rond team offensive unit including
flanker Roger Parkman, guard Charles
l\lcvcretl and halfback Charlie Buckland .
S~>cond team defensive selections in-
l")uded interior linemen !\like Jones and
\like Rice: end Bob Serowi k; and
halfback Noel Paulson.
Gulden \\1e5t , players r e c c i v I n g
honorable mention included Tony Bonwell
;ind Mike Corrigan on offerlsc and Greg
Henrv and David Craven on defense.
ThC coaches selected a total or \2
J\hJycrs for each of the four teams with
the offensive backrield composed of a
quarterback. a flanker and tlu'ee running
backs On delense. four interior linemen were
selcclt.>d.,. along with two ends, three
lineb;icke1s and three llalfbacks.
The con1plet>e selections:
f'IRST TEA~1 OFFENSE
r os. 1"ame and School \Vt. '\'r. l·:-~Jathews. llio Hondo 193 Fr.
~-C'rosbv Harbor l80 So,
·r-Jorgen;en. G\VC 225 So.
"F-Rupert. Harbor 215 So.
(',.,,...Wortman, Rio Hondo 227 So.
':-l\1cDaniel. ELA t95 So.
C.:-Ellicciri, }!arbor 222 So.
QB-Sander. Harbor 190 So.
B-Jones. ELA 187 Fr.
H-Saluone. Harbor 178 So.
B-Vickers. Los Angele s 188 So.
FL--Coleman. ELA 168 Sn. .
SECOND TEAi\I OFFENSE
Pu~. :'\ame and School \\'t. '\'r.
1·:-Parkman. G\\'C · 175 So.
1 :-~lederios. Cypress 180 Fr.
T-Vcal. ELA 240 Fr.
T-Rahn. Cypress 1113 fr.
(;-l'lleyerett. G\l.'C 190 So.
<;-nanso1n, Los Angeles 205 Fr.
C-Shepard . ELA 175 · So.
\ t.)8-Jaramillo. ELA 175 So.
F~\\'alson . Los Angel es J70 Fr.
II-Buckland. C\VC 175 Fr.
H-L11mpkin. Harbor 170 So.
P, ..... :\loch. Los Angeles 163 Fr.
FIRST TEA:\1 DEFEXSE
Po~. '."\ame and School "'I. Yr.
IL-Rupert. Harbor 215 So.
lL-\\'hite. ELA 21a So.
11,,--Cibson. ELA 230 So.
11..--l\!Orrison, Los Angeles 220 Fr.
J)f.--Simone, GWC 192 So.
DE-Carter. Los Angeles 190 So.
L.U--Thomhill. ewe 115 Sn.
I .8 -?.1alone. Los Angeles 205 So.
I.a:-Howell. ELA 222 So.
lf&-.Thornton, Harbor 175 So.
1 ~Duren. Los Angeles 180 F'r. l ~I..awsori. Rio Hondo 11a So.
; SECOND TEA~I DEFENSE
P_f'. Name and School \VI. Yr.
l~ones. G\\'C 195 Su.
l{f:..R1ce. G\\"C 190 So. Jf~Davi!i, Harbor 252 So,
1 i;.:.. Wilson. Los Angeles 175 Fr.
1t.-sn1ilh. ELA 216 ·f'r.
ltBrembry. Harbor 195 So.
I, · Blake . Harbor 175 Fr.
I. • Busciglio, ~A 200 1-'r.
1$.-Serowik . G\\'C I~ So,
I Ii-Paulson, CWC 170 So.
llJ;-Rogers, ELA li6 Fr.
ti8--Ra1nirez, Harbor 160 fr. ,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The nation'!'
football fans will get to see two of profes-
sional football's most renowned front line
troops in action Sunday when the t.fin-
nesota Vikings and the Los Angeles
Rams collide in J\1emorlal Coliseum .
Unfortunately, the lines in question
\\'On't confront e~~h other since both play
011 defense and the way the game is
played-well. you get the point.
But there they'll be as winners of the
Cenlral Division, the Vikes, and the un·
beaten Coastal champions, the Raros,
•
meet in a preview of their Western Con-
ference Lille clash in the National Fool·
ball ~ague Dec. 27 in Minnesota.
The game here will draw a sellout
crowd or 78,000.
Grid fans are familiar with the mon-
sters to be seen-the Nor semen of i\1in·
nesola, Jim Marshall. Carl Eller, Alan
Pace and ex·Ram Gary Larsen and their
able replae&memi, such as Paul Dickson.
1'be Rams' Fearsome Fourso1ne, ~n·
eludes starters Deacon Jones, i\1erlin
Olsen, Coy Bacon and Diron Talbert, plus
....... ;..,.. •
Do Nt1t1abe1·s Ring a Bell7
reactivated Lamar Lundy, Roger Brown
and little-publicized Rick Cash.
Take-aways. -pass interceptions and
fltmbles recovered -are highly regard·
ed. R~ms Coach George Allen says, "lf
you can Lake the ball a\vay four 1ime.5
in this league you should never lose."
ln its 11 \\'inning gJlmes. Los Angeles
h{ls made 23 Interceptions and recove red
12 fumbles, Minnesota 25 interceptionl'I
and nine fumbles recovered. They are
one-two in (he NFL.
"It's going to De 1 long afternoon. I
•
,
u,-1 T1lt~~•lt
The l\VO not-too-happy gents are Detroit Tigers
Ton1 'frc.sh (l£'ft ~ and .Jim Norlhrup recuperating
at a Detroit Hospital fo!lowing surgery to repair
torn cartilages on their right knees. Doctors said
they would be ready for spring training.
Big Shoo.tout Coming Up
Texas , Arkansas lrnpressive Offensively
FAVETIEVILLE. Ark. (AP) -Choose
your \\'Capons for the .. big shootout.''
Texas' awesome ground attack. \1-i\h 11
dash or passing, or Arkansas' more
balanced offen!>C, only slightly less irn-
pressive.
The top-ranked Loni;:horns and the
second-ranked Hazorback s \1'\ll n1atch 9-0
records Saturday nt Fayetteville in the
gan1e of the year and perhaps thr gan1r.
of the century. President Nixon is n1aking
a speical trip to see it.
The Southwest Conference chan1-
pionsh.ip, a spot in the Cotton Bo~·! op-
posite Notre Danie and a possible na-
tional charnpionship are al stake.
The Looghorns have three of tht' lop 10
rushers in the S\\'C and only against in·
spited Oklahon1a hns the first tea1n been
forced to go all lhc 1v:1y.
Sopho1norf' ,Ji n1 Bl'rtelscn i ~ !hird in
!hr league v.·ith 711 yards nn !14 carric~
and fullback Steve \\lorstcr is seventh
with 555 ya rds on 111 attempl~.
Ted Koy, a 212-pounder \l'ilh good
speed. is 10th gaining 413 yards on 71 car·
ries. Both Bertelsen and \V orster "'ere
named to the all..confcrrnce tcatn.
Quarterback James Street has added
3~9 yard s on &:> attempts for Texas.
"Whatever 1ve decide to do.'' saitl
Arkansas coach l"rflnk Broyles. ''there is
nn ans\1•er. They\·1• ).lOl nine ba cks
\l'ho've averaged n1orc thllrl five yards a
carry.''
Street has thrown nnly 71 lin1es. com·
pleting :1.\ for 5ii yard~. Hts primary
receiver is Charles "Co non·· Spey rer, a
speedster 1rho has caught 26 for 427
ynrris-;.
"They've got a basically sound passing
at1ack. like any other team." said
Arko1nsas secondary coach ll o o lie
Ingram. •·They just haven't had to use
j l. ..
·rhe Longhorns' average total offense nf
482 yards breaks do1vn lo 376 rushing and
='>lightly 1nore than 100 passing.
The Razorback s have gained 41~ yardl'I
a game, 224 on the ground and 191 in the . . air.
Razorback tailback Bill Burnett leads
the conference in rushing and scoring. He
has gained 818 yards on 190 attempts and
has scored 19 touchdowns.
Barnett. a junior \Vho has scored 3S
1ouchdoYlns in two years, is particularly
adept at the goal line. slithering through
a crack in the defense or hurdling de-
fenders.
(JCI Coining Bacl{ Ho111e;
•
Fall s to· Buffaloes, 80-65
l
boULOER, Colo. -\\'ilh :i p::iir or
n•fcals ag1unst maior t:ollegh1te com-
11~1lll0i'I behind them. liC ll"Ytnc11 t>askCl -
h;il1 team \\•ill co1nc hon1f' tn lace. Ca l
tit;Jlf' 1 LA l Saturday niµht at 8.
:r11e Ant<'ulcrs .succ•umbed al thf"
I rli'\'f!rsity of Colotado1 80·6:>, \\'edncsctay
n1Bhl to rnd thri r brief 1v.1>-gnn1c road
I rip. l\tonday night. coach Tim Tift'~ club Hi>t a thriller 1-0 Nebraska. 76-73.
'lflrt pra1:1ed his club lor IL'I cflortl
a1a1n5t the ,.,.,.o Big Elght pov.·er-s.
"I was very happy ~'Ith lhr v.ay our
t~rn perlormtd on Uv: tr1p_Playing..1
Nebraska Ind Colorado Vo'aS wood eX'
rieri"nce for the learn . Ou r learn ac·
l'l'f"tliled thcm scl\'es very \\'Cll ..
t Cl h11rf ~ 12.-1 1 l'-•d over <"olnrndn
W\!h 14 nunu1es left in lhc first hJll .ind
•
v.·as thret" poinls behind (:zg..26) \\'ith three
minults to go. but Colorado "-enl on a l-0
spree lo t'llJOY A 36-26 advantage at the
1ntern11s~iQn.
Colorndo. sixth-ra!lked 1n 1h1· IJPI poll
~nd !Olh rated by /\!'. JUlllperi riut to a
big lead early in tht second half.
Guard Steve Sabin~ \\'3S the lradui~
l!C'Orer fo r thr Anteatt'rs 1\lllh 22 poull-s
u·hile fotl'·ard Jeff Cu nn1ngharn hod 19.
UC llltVIN( 011 (OLOlllADO UOI
,..,.....ng11, ...
""" ""~· ........
S1t11r!1 .,, • ..,,11
OM' ...
,,,.,.,, 1tn,i1r
I I l li (•Ulollt!lll 1 • 1 ol
I ) ) J W'°9•*0"1' 0 1 I ' I J l I 1''~01 , •~ I ) JI
1 ) ) l l -~ I G IJ
• lO 11 ,,,,(~•II I O ' 10
I I ) (Olf ~ ! 0 1 J
1 c • l J•,,.. .. 6, • l ' !
I ~ ) J lt·••l•D-I 1 1
&~•l•f1111>8"' 1 I J ) ~,.,11 J ~ l 1 •••• ~. 0 0 1~
<II'"'' U I ) ! 0 0 , " :-;~ l1 ~
G11111•tli111aof tlae Net
1'oronto r.taple Leaf~ ~oalle l\larv Ed\vards deflects the puck high
rnt n lht• Air af(er r-.·tinncsot11 No rth Stars· Hob Barlo\v tel fl y n shot
h'oin tlO~l' In \Vednc~d oy night. The t1vo lea1ns baltled lo a ~5 tie.'
Jn ot her .uclion, the I .. \ K ine!) fell to l1hiladelphin, 7-1.
think we'll be piJ)'ine this one just as
hard as any game we've been in thi1
1eason, '' said Viking Page on the eve
of the team's departure for L<is Angele s.
"It's a matter of wbo 'i up the most.
They'rt a great team. So are we." Thus
spoke Deacon Jones who, with Olaen,
leads the Rams in sacking quarterback.s,
tbe Deacon with 13, Merlin w!Lh 11.
Ttie successes of the two huge de!ens.
Ive lines depends, of course, on. the
efJorts of the opposing offensive l.llent.
Jooes ls lavish in praise oI the Ram s'
offensive fellows.
"They're the best line in the league.
Greet coordination and mobility. \\°e
have to fa~ them each week in prac-
tice and I know how good they are."
Undoubtedly defensive captain ~1ar·
shall and the Vikes feel the same w:iy
about their guy&, which leads to another
statistic.
Rams quarterback Roman Gabriel has
thrown only three intercepted passes,
111lnnesola's Joe Kapp 10.
Analyze that one any ~·ay you pleas e.
Trades Spotlight
Baseball Confabs
i\llAi\11 Beach, Fla. CAP) -Felipe
Alou 's return to the West Coast and the
New York homecoming of Joe Foy -key
moves in a pair of interleague trades at
baseball'!' winter meetings -stepped Lii>
trave l plans for Oakland's Charlie Finley
and the world champion Mels.
The Athletics obtained Alou, a gifted
but aging outfielder who began his 12-
year National League career in San
Francisco, from the AUanta Braves \\'ecl-
ne.sday in a straight swap for 24·ycar-old
pitcher Jim Nash.
Race Opening
At Santa Anita
Faces Delay
" ARCADIA <AP) -Spokesmen for the
California Race Track Association and
officials of the AFUIO S e r v i c e
Employes International Union s a i d
Wednesday differences at the bargaining
table may delay the start of the winter
racing meet al Santa Anita Park, slated
to begin Dec. 26.
The unions. representing all employe!I
.at all major tracks,-are-seeking a three·
year contract u·ith a basic $5 a day in-
crea!lt in each year plus other raises and
fringe benefits.
A management offer of a one·year pact
boosting wages and fringe benefits by $2
a day has already been rejected by the
unions.
Dick: Nash, Santa Anita's publicity
director, said more than 1,000 horges are
already at the track, that public workouts
would start Dec. 13 and that "we are
geared to open as usual Dee. 26."
And Leo Geffnu. attorney for the
union, said: "The situation is rough but
we sUll ha ve more negotiations schedul-
ed and we hope the management will
come up with some realistic offers.''
\Vith.in the wide pa}r .scales al the
tracks, doormen get $32.60 a day. sellers
earn $36.60 and cashiers make $39.150, aU
also rectiving fringe benefits.
Both sides admitled the possibility of a
strike is greater than at any time in re·
cent Santa Anita seasons.
A boycott called by race horse owner:1
closed the track for three days two years
ago and the union11 called a five-day
strike in il,963. But the opening of the
winter season has never been delayed.
Most recently the start of the inaugural
fall Oak Tree Racing Association season
at the track was postponed a week by
labor problems. But Oak Tree was not a
part of the statewide association.
lt1omenlS earlier the i\lets announced
they had landed third baseman Foy, a
n'ative New Yorker, in a 2-for-t deal th:il
senl young outfielder An1os Otis, a
former "untouchable," and pitching pro-
spect Bob Johnson to the Kansas Cit y
.koyals.
Kansas City also purchased fi\'e i\·lct
farmhands in a separale transaction and
the Detroit Tigers swapped pitchers \vith
,.1ontreal, gelling Jerry Robertson Jor
Joe Spann.a, as Lrading picked up after
three unevenUul days al nearby Fol'l
Lauderdale.
The acquisition of Alou. 3-1, 1narked U1c
first step in a three-stage trading pro-
gra1n Finley hopes will launcll the A's
to\vard the American League \Vest
Division title in 1970.
Alou was slo11;ed by injuries last year,
but still batted .7.82 in 129 games. The
hustling Dominican, \Vith a lifetime bat-
ting mark of .290, has been named t.o
ttlree NL All-St.ar squads.
"It's always tough to trade a ballplayer
like Alou," said Paul Richards, lhC'
Braves' general manager. "Age was a
factor_ but our need for another pitcher
\vas the basic thing."
Nash, the AL Rookie of the Year · in
1966 after a bMlliant 12·1 record \Vith the
Kansas City A's, v.•on 12 and 13 games thr.
fol101ving two seasons, then slipped to 8-8
la.st year.
He joined left-hander Larry Jaster, BC•
(jUired from i\1ontrea1 Tuesday !or right-
hander J im Britton, in the Braves'
wigv.·am.
The t.1els replaced retired Ed Charles
in' their third base p)aloon with Foy, 2ti,
'"ho hit .262 and stole 37 bases for the
Royals after being grabbed from Boston
in the AL expansion drafl.
Otis batted .325 in 78 games with the
J\fets' Tidewater farm in the lnterna:
lion.al League but just .151 in 48 Y.'ith the
parent club. Johnson, a 26-ycar-old rig ht-
hander, had a combined 13-5 record with
Tidewater and t.1emphis.
WHERE TO SEND
FOR NFL TICKETS
PLAYOFF TICKETS
'Yhen the Rams announced a plan for
selling playoff game tickets for Jan. 4,
they neglected to give the malling ad·
drtss where ehttks should be sen t for
purchase of ducats.
Send them lo: 10271 \Vesl Pico Blvd.,
L.A., 90064.
Season ticket holders wlll be allowed lo
purchase their !lame seal$ for the
playoffs with all others being sold on a
mail order basi1. Ticket prices are: $12.
SS and $6. No more than 10 tlcli;ets \Viii be
sold i.o any indiYidual.
Against Rival Circuits
Trojai1s, Michigan Spo1·t
Top lntersectio11al Marl{·s
No member of the Pacific-8 has en-
joyed more football success against Big
tO members than the University of
Southern California's Trojans.
Since a fa!l afternoon 4"4 years ago
"'hen USC slapped Iowa, 18--0, Trojan
varsilies have chalked up an enviable
mark of 28-17-% in duels with the Blg 10.
That's a \\'inning percentage· of .617
USC will carry to Pasadena come Jan. I
when it meets the University of Michi-
gan's Wolverines.
Michigan also bo&.slS enviable credcn·
·········*·-······ WHITE
WASH .....................
tlnls In Its confrontations v.'ilh schools
now enjoying Pac-8 membership.
The Wolve rintt have captured 20 or 2~
gamtl and have outscored tbeir riyals
(rom tbe west, 591-66-an a\·erage S.9 per
tllt. f\Uchlgan's winning percentsge. is
.133.
Only Cal and Slanford have cncked
Pi.flch11an 's armor. each winnln& • palr
from Ute Maize and Blue..
i\lo!IL scores l't11ve been of lhc run&.,..'AY
typ<
SQ lmpush\g Is the \Volverinc rte0rd
th111 \VC 1•111 present it belo\V,
VERSUS USC: 49-0, 16-fl, 20-19.
VERSUS UCLA ' 4'·13, ~.
VEHSUS CAL: 41 -0. 14-6, l0·7, 17·7, 9-ln',
7-21.
VERSUS STANFORD : 490. 49-13, 27·i.
13-23, 7·14.
VERSUS OREGON , 14--0, 21-0.
VERSUS OREGON STATE' 18·7, lH,
41.0.
VERSUS WASHINGTON ' SIM), 14-0, 4;.
7. .
H
For those who may ha\'t missed It,
litre's an Instant replay on the Dennis
Dummit column t h a t crcattd such a
hassle.
Only kldd inc. •
But bert is a reader who agreed with
the column.
"I would !Ike to gil't you 11 \'Ott or a~
pto\'a! on your colu~n about Denni~
Dummltl Tommy P"'tbro and the USC.
UCLA game.
"i\faybe t.lr. Ou1nmit dld nut do Jilnmv
Jones In the p1:1s~ln1t department of tb~~
game. But comparr holV much time
Jones had tfl pass O\S lb1tt or D1unmh'~
U1nr. I think you will find lb11l 1\lr. Jones
•·ins hand1 do..,n.
''Alto ctmpare tlow many Umt1 Jonc1
wa1 1ac:ked II to Dumm.It's. One llllsl
thin& anyone "111 lell you 11 that It 11 aot
1tatl &Ital ~DI; tt 11 Utt Wly the 1etrc
rtld1 •I late end of M mlautes: ..;
"USC 14, UCLA 11:· .
~llkt lletot<k
Nt1''Jlort Beach .
Thanks !\like. And I'll get you thai ··10
rbcck I proml5ed right •"'D)'.
' ,
Thursday, Ottembtr 4, 1%41 DAILY PILOT 1!7
..tlarstow ------
Menaces
Griffins
•
•
-HB, Warren Clash Tonight;
Lions Trip Wilson, 72-67
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 lh• D1llY P'll91 Still
"They are ready for us.
1'hey know we have good •
football in Orange County and
they're out to prove that they
have good football up there,
too."
The comments were those o[
Los Alamitos footb all coach
Frank Doretti and his subject
was Barstow, r~riday night's
opponent.
The two teams, both 11.Q,
met!t for the CIF AA cham·
pionstiip at Barstow High.
Doretti feels that Barstow is
the toughest club that Uie
Griffins will face in playoff
competition.
"They are a well-balanced
team. They have three fine
running backs a rr d a
quarterback who runs and
passes well ."
•
' ' \ • .
"' '
'
~ ~ '
• ~
•
r
By ROGER CARLSON
Of tM ~llY Plltl lllft
Huntington Beach meets
huge \Varren tonight (8 :30) al
_ the Westminster gym tn the
batUe of survival .in the fifth
annual Westmlnster-M a r in a
Rotary lnvilallooal buketball
toomamenL
Fountain Valley and Bolsa
Grande tangle in the 7 p.m.
pre.lim in the consolation
bracket.
The winner of the Hun·
tingtM-\Varren affalr will earn
the right to meet Westminsttr
in :he semifinals Friday night
aftu the Lions came through
with a 7U7 win over Long
Beach Wll!oo Wednes d ay
night at Westminster.
The rest of the Orange Coast
atta teams weren't quite so
fortunate.
Host Marina !>uilt up an ear-
ly 11)..polnt -lead, but lost in the
la!t minute of play, 61-60, to
Long Beach Poly.
The defeat drops the Vikings
out of championship coo-
tention. They'll meet the loser
of tonight's Los Alamitos.San-
tiago tussle Friday night in
the opener at Marina.
The Los Alamitos coach is
also concerned with the Grif·
fins' punting game -due
primarily to the presence of
Barstow's Dennis Owens, a
10.0 sprinter, \Vho is rated as an excellent punt returner. AWAI TING CIF 5':'10WDOWN -Cliff Hooper (left), coach of Corona del Mar's
The Griffins will miss the undefeated Se_a Kings, and counterpart Bill Barnett of Newport Harbor, ~o
And &!Ison fell out of com·
pelition after absorbing its se·
cond straight defeat, a M-49
decision to Valencia, a~
?-.farina.
serYices of defensive halfback over a fe~ points as they prepare for ~heir Friday night CIF championship
John Hamilton, an all-Orange conf~onta.t1~n at Belmont Plaza pool In Long Beach. Newport is twc>tirrie de--
League selection who suffered fend.in~ t1thst and has fallen once to the Sea Kings this year, 7--4. Friday's
a compound fracture of the game JS at 8:30. right wrist. -----------------------------------
Garden Grove r I p p e. d
1tfagnolia, 58-38, in other con-
solation action. The absence of Hamilton
means that Jeff Ticehurst will
have to go both way s.
Ticehurst intercepted a pair of
passes last week while seeing
·limited duty as a defensive
. halfback.
Do retti praised the play of
. Ticehurst and linemen Don
Mickelson, N e I so n Cham·
berlain and Jeff Dickey.
~Junior halfback rv:ike Hixson
picked up 199 yards last week
In the Griffins ' 4H victory
over Riverside Poly. Hixson
has be~n a starter for only
three games but already has
totaled 501 yards in 69 carries
Ior a 7.2 average.
Ticehurst has caught 47
passes for 649 yards and seven
touchdowns. Quarterback Vic
Pereboom has completed 81 of
135 passes for 1,403 yards and
13 touchdowns.
l\later Dei
Posts First
Wni,96-52
?\fater Dei outscored the
visitin~ Saddleback Roadrun-
ners, 25-8, in the second
QUart.er and went on to post its
rirst win of the campaign. 96-
52, in a non-league basketball
lilt \Vednesday night.
The Monarch s. who came
out pressing, forced t h e
Roadrunners into numerous
turnovers and took a lead they
never lost four minutes into
the first stanza.
Coach Jerry Tardie's crew
built up a 77.34 third quarter
margin , allowing him to
substitute freely in the fl?·
maining period.
Warner Raes paced the
Monarch attack with 19 points.
Tom McMenamin added 15 for
]\fater Oei and Torn Walker 14.
Steve Fritz tallied 11 points.
"'ith most coming in the final
quarter.
Senior forward Ralph Chan.
dos of Mater Dei left with the
regulars in the third quarter
but was able to gather in 18
rebounds before retiring. He
also added eight points.
Sc-llY OVerltn S.-d<lleb1c~ u t t7 11-51 Mti.r Of! l• 15 21 19-ff MATElt DE1 IHI
'~We~tr MCMtnaml~ "" .,"r,..1!1t1k
Rober II ""' Gcrm.n ICfmHr Frln
NH!I" lll"l~-"'D Tot1I•
"O "T '" T, l 2 1 I I I I 11 s l ' 15 ' I • It j 1 11 t n II 1 a
0 1 1 ' 1 0 , 1
l ' ' , 1 1 11
~ i ~ ~
" 12 21 ''
Gone Too Far to Blow It Now,
The game of lhe night Wa.5
the Poly-Marina struggle and
it wasn't decided until the
final three se<:0nds when
~1arina wu unable to convert
Says Saddleback's Hartman-
a one-and-one situation, trail·
ing, 61-&l.
The Vlkes had led nearly all
of the way, trailing 2--0 at the
outset, 57·56 with 2:32 re·
maining, 59-58 with 52 seconds
left and 61~ with 16 seconds
to go.
By GLENN WHITE
Of 1111 Of.Uy Piiot Slltf
As Saddleback f o o l b a 11
CQach George.._Hamilt.oo puts it,
"we 've gone too far now lo
blow this one."
He's referring to Satu rday
night's state junior college
championship game against
Yuba College at W.arysvillc
1-ligh School in Northern
California.
"All year we've been poin-
ting to being the No. I ranked
team in the stale. Now that
we 'ye gotlen there Yuba is in
the same position we were in
before when We were second
to Reedley (Saddleback bomb-
ed Reedley lasl week to
become No. 1).
Hartman believes h l s
smaller Gauchos will somehow
pull oil another v i ctory,
despite Yuba's wide edge Jn
weight in the line.
The 49ers are 29 pounds per
man heflier but Hartman s3ys
he's confident his forward wall
can meet the challenge. ''Mt.
San Jacinto aYeraged 226 per
man (Yuba averages 215) and
JC Poloists
Ga in SoCal
R ecog nition
Golden West and Orange
Coast College v;ater polo
tea1ns pl3ced on man each on
the All.Southern California
water Polo team selected by
vot e of the coaches with
Fullerton placing three and
Cerritos two on the JI-man
squad .
Don Lippoldt of Golden \\1est
and Steve Wagner at OCC
were honored on the first
te;im.
Second team selections in·
eluded Harry Noah of Golden
\Yest and hlike Allbright and
Doug Schaumb urg of Orange
Coast .
Honorable mention went In
David GriHiths. Roy Buell and
Kris Swenson of Golden West.
Joh n Blauer. Bob Moseley and
Gary Thompson were honored
from Otange Coast.
we did okay against them -
I'm confident our line can do
whatever it wants to do.
"But emotion is the big
thing In this game, anyway."
Hartman is hopeful injured
blocking back Rocky Fletcher
will be back on duty. But he
says there is no chance hob-
bled receiver r-.tarc Hardy will
be able to play.
Appraising Yuba, Hartman
says the 49e rs present more of
a problem than Reedley
because if you shut off one
phase of their game, they can
turn to other things.
Reedley was essentially a
passin1 club.
"We've got to stop Fred
Ri_ley _(.the .state's Jeading
scorer and a 9.9 sprinter).
We've got to keep him from
going outside and getting the
long gainer," sayd Hartman.
"But we also have to keep
their fullback (Tom Porter)
from grinding out the yards.
And, we have to keep a good
rush on their passer because
he is a good thrower."
Regarding the Gaucho of-
fense, Hartman believes jt can
move against anyone.
* * * Scwt ,, GVlrlffl
M•rlnt Is 11IJ 1 •~ LI PolY OU 111""-'1
ll1lrd
Mo11er
SlrlHOfd llt•I MtGu!r• E1rlt ,.,,~
Crrirl1e Tottli ....
11111•1• llulle• s1.,,,.,1~1
011111 Ml~IOl"I 'cro,~~d
MARINA IH) ,G "' "" '' I I J t
J j 1 u
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I D 0 I 0 1 I 1
1 0 • ' 0 1 I l
LI l'OLY 01P 16 13 '° 1'0 PT "" Tl' 1 0 l 1 l I 0 7
l 0 3 ' 0 l 2 ]
• ' l ,~ 1 0 0 1 2 0 I i 141]1561 lt..-1 ~r ONr....-. W11tml~111!1" 11 II 20 1~71
No Sugar Plums for Van,
He Dreams About Haden
LI Wltsor1 1111111,._..7 WIESTMIJrUT• !HI Ntwr.o.J~t ,~ '1 p~ T~
Mtnn Jl2t
lllM 020 1 MCLtndOll 1 1 l 11 ~f00ffl(k 1 11 4 JI ~!~wlU 1 0 S 2 Tol•I•· 21 30 lS n LI WI LSON un
l'G "' Pl' T~
By HOWARD L. HANDY
Of Ille Of.Hr l'Htt still
. 'Tis the Yuletide season, to
be sure.
But vision! of sugar plums
aren ·1 dancing in Anaheim
coach Clare VanHoorebeke's
head-far Crom it.
The ones dancing in his head
when he does get to sleep
these nights. are passe s
thrown by quarterback Pat
lfaden of Bishop Amat High
School.
Bishop Amat and Anaheim
meet in semi final ClF AAAA
football action at Anaheim
Stadium Friday night.
··1 cah see that Jillie Haden
in my sleep and 1 wake up
th inking about him,"
VanHoorebeke says.
"If that was all we had to
'\"Orry about {his passing) we
could drop back and wait for
lhe pass.
'·You newspaper guys talk
only about their passing and
it's natural when you have
(John) McKay's name to talk
about. McKay is Haden's
favorite receiver. Nobody
talks about their running
game.
''They do a good job running
and passing and it gels a little
ha iry. If you look at the
statistics you see they run
\\'ell. In f3cl, they have run
almost as much as they pass."
The Anaheim mentor con-
tinued talking about t h e
Lancer eleven and next turned
to the defense.
"They aren't as big as
Redlands but they are rangy
and quick. They load up and
come right at you. Just look at
the record and check how
many points the opponents
have scored against them;)_.
Turning to his own teani, "'tDe
Anaheim mentor says he h3s
no injuries for this one. He
al~ adds that he is disa~
pointed the way his team
played last week against
Redlands.
"They did a pretty good job
when they had to but if we
don't perform any better than
we did the other night, we will
be run right QUl of the
stadium."
1 2 ' ' J 2 S I
' 0 j 11 1 0 0 1 a o I t ] 1 J , s l J ll
j s 4 1l
1 2 j '
kW• or 0111r1:, 11 ts '' i::cti'°" 10 10 12 n-o
V11tnc:lt I CllSON c.Jil' 1112-Sol
"" l'T P" Tl' ' l 1 1 7 J ' 1• I I e l l I I 7 2 0 I l 2 0 ! j I 0 2 2 l 1 a 3
lt 11 10 ''
VALINCIA l~J l'T P" Tl' . . . , '
I I 1 2
I 0 l 12
' ' , 14 I .1 2 lS
' 1 J J 1 1 2 3 I I 0 J n I IS M
Top Athletes
Get Awards
At Estancia
Dave Johnson, Doug Weiler
Anaheim will be making its
fourth straight appearance in
a semifinal game Friday
night. The Colonists woo the
ClF title in 1967 but were
!idetracked the other two
years. and Terry Haun captured
14 most valuable aw a rd 5
6 Wednesday night at the annual
7 fall sports awards banquet for
16 Estancia High School.
ANAHEIM (II-%)
rT Chaffey
28 Redlands
14 Huntington Beach
23 Newport Harbor
15 Football 14 Foolhlll {Bakersfield)
6 Westminster
22 Marina
34 S8'.1l.a Ana
28 Western
24 Long Beach Wilson
14 Redlands
21 Varsity -Captain: Pa u I s Joyct: PlVP: Dave Johnson; o P.1ost Improved : Jim Schultz:
12 · Most Insplratlonal : Rod Felts; n Coaches Award: Joe Marrufo.
7 Soph -Captain: Lee Joyce;
MVP: O'Neil Brewer; Most
Improved: Pict Pyle.
Foothill Gets Biggest Test
Water Polo
Varsity -Captain: Dan
Hefferan; MV : Doug Weller ;
"1ost improved: Dan Zanella :
Best defensive : Mike
Granzella; Coaches Htad Up
Award: Ward Saunders. tn tt football 1:ames Lhis
.season, Fool.hill High has
allowed the opposition just 51
point.s. That's an average or
4.6 per game.
The moot points scored
against the unbeaten Knights
wa!: 12 by Orange in a 38-12
f'oothlll victory. ln their first
tw,. ClF AAA pla yoff g:imes
IS year, the Knights have
alb:ed a pair or high-
lng clubs by allow ing
just one TD each.
ever'; Friday night at
San Antonlo Colle1:e.
lhlll will get 11' biggest
yet against Bon\t11, a
team which has averaged 33.9
-
points per outing in racing to an 11--0 record.
"We're in for a rough nighl
U we don't play defen.o:,e" says
Foothill coach Ed Ba.Jn. adding
tha t Bonita ls jusl as physic;i l
as Nerr (The Knlghi.s defeated
Nef( 12·7 in the opening ClF
playoff game).
Bain points out that the
KnighLoi: must stop t h e
Bearcats' running a I t a c k •
spearheadtd by halfback Alli n
Carter and tailback Charil~
Schuhman.
Carter has picked up 1.570
yards this season, scori ni::· 150
points. Schuhman has added
a no the I' t ,390 yards and hns
J21i point.3 lo his credit.
Bain singled out Ute play-or
end Craig Grimm, guard Doug
Rothrock and defensive
halfback Gary Jackson for
lhelr "'ork in last week's 23-6
vict.ory over Rolling llillJ.
Jpckson got tht Knlghls n>ll·
Ing by ret.umlng a Rolling
Hill, punt 86 .yards for a
touchdD"'n to tic the score at 6-
6 midway through the second
quarter.
Grimm and Rothrock were
singled out for their play on
both offense and deCense by
Daln.
Rothrock gave the Knights 3
!I.fl e.dgt wlth a 2l·yard fie.Id
goal with 38 aeconds left in the
hatf. The 180-Pound senior has
booted six field goals this
season and has connected on
41 of 45 extra point attempts.
All-<.'Ot!nty selt'dion B o b
Speicher was the leading
rusher for the Knighl3 Ian
week with SI yards In 17 car-
ries. He now has carried lhe
baJI 202 times for 1,143 yards
and 18 louchdowns.
Secon<\·in rushing is lullbock
Jim Votaw with 697 yards In
126 carries and seven touch·
downs. Quarterback B o b
Blacklldge ha! ·completed "72
of 14S passes (49 percent) for
liCVen touchdowns.
Btt -Captainc 8 o b
Petrina; N:V: Tom John.ron :·
M05l lmptoved: Kurt Lov-
1nger.
Cet -Captain: ~tilton
Kawabe: MV: J EFF Littell:
Most ImproYed: Tom
Smallwood.
Cross Cou.ntry
Varsity -Captain: Terry
lt11un ; 1'1V: Terry Jlaun ; Most
Improved: Jack Moort : Most
Inspirational ; DeMIJ
GrHn.
Junior varsity -Captain :
Bob Bell ; fi.1V : Tony Kasper;
Most Improved : Rick Ne. a I;
"fost InapiraUonal: Jim Feff·
er.
Marina, despite hitting wall
from out.side, wu cold overall,
tank·ing only 22 or 60 attempts
for 36.7 percent.
trouble and was forced to sit
out most of the second period
and three minutes of the third
quarter.
free throws.
The talented front line of
Westminster carried coach
Don Leavy'! troop! over Long
Beach \Yllson with the duo of
Dan Broderick and SteYe
f.1cLendon accounling • for 5l
points.
Coach Jim Stephens' con·
tingent stayed close with good
shooting from the free throw
line. But in the end it was the
inability to hit on their la.st
four tries trom the gratis line
that sealed the verdict.
The lack of his rebounding
and s c o r i n g abilily kepL
Marlna from breaking it open.
Poly's guard Steve D.allas
(25) was impressive. Broderick was high with 31
Md the s.5 senior converted 17
free throws.
Ray StraUord and Rick
Mosier were high for Marina
with 20 and 14 point.Ii apiece,
alm05t exclusively f r o m
outside.
Valencia pulled away in the
second and third quarters to
slowly bury Edison in a rag-
ged game.
In all, the Lions out.scored
Wil son 30-15 from the gratis
stripe.
Vlke center Kipp Baird (S..SI
found himself in early foul
John Fisher, a 6-5 junior.
was the only effective of.
fcnsive weapon for coach
Dave ?o.1ohs' outfit, tanking. 19
on seven fi eld goals and fi ve
The wiMers broke it open·in
the third period with a 20-12
margin after a 36-all score at
the half.
Angels Missing Good Bet
.. ..
-Having Football Prelim
. • • •
The Angel! are missing a good bet In thei r
effort! to bring fans into the Big A.
They should schedule doubleheaders with a
high school or junior college football game as
a preliminary.
This weekend will find a pair of games
being played at Anaheim Stadium: Anaheim
against Bishop Amat High Schools Friday and
Fullerton Junior College against Bakersfield
Saturday.
Both games figure lo draw well in exces5 of
20,000 fans. The Angels could throw in a great
HOWAltO ltANCIY
HOWARD
HAN DY
· majority of their crowds and still have room
to spare.
Interest ln. football at this time of year is ~
peak on all level! -and well it should be.
Anaheim is a perennial contender for the
ClF's coveted crown and Bishop Amat bring!
a razzle-daule, offensive minded team lo the
Big A.
Fullerton ls likewise almost an aMual con-
tender for the state two-year college crown on
the large school level and Bakersfield i!
always a tough foe in the grid sport.
* * * Busiest golf course in the area Is li1ission
Viejo where workmen are working virtually
around the clock to prepare the layout for the
Champion
Tops FV
Awards
Bill Champion was named
most valuable player for the
Fountain Valley High varsity
football team Wednesday night
at the Barons' fall l!I p or t s
awards banquet.
Dan Shaw and Robert Hoff·
man were named co-captains.
Tim Funke (cross country)
and Bob Rice (water polo)
also picked up most valuable
awards.
Varsity -Co-captains: Dan
Shaw and Robert Hoffman;
MVP: Bill Champion;
Freshman (Irvine League)
-Co-captains : Bill Childers
and w.lke Mobley; MVP : Sam
Sepulveda.
Sophomore -C1>captalns:
Pat Lockman and M a r k
Mitchell; MVP: Tpny
Sepuveda.
Freshman (District) -C<>-
captains: Ken Dudrey and
Kevin Morris; MVP: Paul
Peterson.
Cros• C-trJ
Varsity Captain :
Cameron Haney; "1V: Tim
Funke
Junior Varsity -Captain :
Alan Glover; MV: Clyde
Stirewalt.
Water Polo
upcoming Southern California PGA
ment late this month.
touma·
One man who is spending every waking
hour al the course organizing committees.
o\·er-seeing the entire picture and spending
endless hours on the telephone is professional
Jack Fleck.
"We hope to change the image of the course
from 'Mission Impossible' which was coined
by sports"·riters to 'Mission Control', a
phrase that ·has been popularized ~y
America's space program,'' Jack says.
Jack goes on to explain ·hi! reasoning. "A
player who can control his tee and fairway
shots and then two-putt. is the one who will
win here.
"In too many tournaments these days the
cinphasis is placed on the long ball rather
lhan on accuracy. The hot putter is the one
\vho generally wins. ·
"On a shorter course (MW will play tn
about 6600 or 6700 yards), the putting chances
change considerably." .
Fl~c.lt points iwt several olher re.aturcs or
the SoCal event this year.
"This is the only tournament sponsored by
the PGA that takes all qualified amateurs and
professionals with no qualifying round
necessary. \Ve have three dates set aside !or
first round play and will add another \I
necessary. \Ve expect more than 300 players.
"Another lhing that will attract a large
number or pros is the prize money
breakdown. From llth to OOth position. we
have a better payoff scale than the $1511,000
tou rnaments.''
The pro or pros who finish SOth at Mission
Viejo will receive $300 for their efforts.
~ •
!
!
i
! 1 I
l •
Varsity -Captain : Russell
Solt; MY: Bob Rlct.
Prep Mat
Summaries
l'm·d· · , ' ing
of a Green
Christmas
V•"ll'f" W"tlllllldwr C•I fJll ,KlfM ~' CPI 6'c:, I. Mtmbrll1• !W); ...
lff-C•..0.Zt !I') ff(. I'. MffllbrUlt
IWI; 2-0
llS-ltnftt"• CWI dtc. ClltVft 11'11
11·1
1n--o,lllfld1 !I'' 1111, N-IW,1
11·1
llt-W-ldl: (WI •lllnW #NnoZ ,,,, 1:• -
l~I'. f'K!llt IWI tlrtw Tvtk"
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USH E R'S ·:.::.~·,:. .. .. ,.. @ -
.~[E N ..,1,,•· ....... _ .. l.Olllf:D SOOK~ :::.__..,. -USHER'S .,,..~ ...... ~: .... !!';....:._. --l -· .. -__ ,,,., __ GREEN STRIPE -·-.
Since 1853, lhc QIJ1inl!J light Scotch
Bt•ullf1.1.lly 11fc.wr1pptd fo. th• l1oUda,....
10·1 -----------------------
;
I
.~·
n ~ DAILY PILDT , ..
. J COLISEVJU
''TILT SET
~·-Blair and Lakewood mett in
the CIF AAAA semiflnals Fri·
day night (I) at the Los
Angeles C-OJiseuM. The winm!r
meeU the survivor ot the
'1.naheim-Blshop Amal clash a
Vi'tek later for the AAAA litle.
'Blair a:.1n1hilal.ed its first
two playoff oppOnents while
Lakewood, an up and down
tfam. has outpointed Compton
(28-12) and Whittier (33-13).
Blair is top seed in the 4-A.
•. 'LB Honors
Athletes
:At Banquet
• · Roland· ~tcElbany. J o h n
Enfield a1d Dave Hu!twick
garnered most· val u able
·awards Wednesday night at
Uie Fall Sports Awards ba n-
!~uet for Laguna Beach High
:&hool.
'. • l\fcElhany copped the award
·ror football and was also nam·
cd outstanding lineman of the
team while Enfield was named
19'r water polo and Hustwick
for cross country.
Football
Varsity -MVP: Roland
hlcElhany: Most Improved :
'Dale Andel'S0'.1; Most Inspira·
lional : Chris Bow man :
Out.standing Lineman : Roland
r.1 c EI ha n y ; Co-Captains :
Brian Ottmer and C h r i s
Bowman.
Thursd.1.y, Cceemb~r 4, 1969
------··-·----
SKIERS 1~~~
SKI PACKAGES
#1. II.AN SIC.IS
l...,,od: 1111111 ~l•tk tip Ht• with
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#2. MT GU.SS SUN YALLIY SKIS
c:.tt.;r -.p, fl1fplke '""'"' GI-Plltlf
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lecreatt...t 606 s.n" ...... Sl,1.00 Al.a Hart, ICnt .. ~1, Fltcner. Volkl, ll:OHlgna!, vo11. m.n~ more,
TH! NIW LOOK
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e SANTAANA
219 E. 41h St.
Kl 7.5723
-OUR 'CHRISTMAS .
GIFT SELECTIONS
ARE
-UNUSUAL
SANTA ANA
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STORES
-OUTSTANDING To Open Sundays
Dec. 14th & 21st
-UNIQUE 12 Noon to 5:00 p.m.
THOUSANDS OP GIPT ITIMs-l!VlltYTHING fOlt THI SflOltTSMAH
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sp••re rods & ree ls, Towns end Fish
Skinners, Fisherman's~ Friend, 17-
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Cemp tool s•fs, Woolrich Jeckets
& Shirt s.
INSTANT CREDIT
f ,ULLERTON
40' S. Euclid
871-5988
Fastest in West
e (jOLF
VOIT CELEBRITY Complete sat,
Woods, Irons, Putt•r, 2 B•gs , B•lls,
Covers. Volue 267.35 SALE 179.95
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LAYAWAY INVITED
NEWPORT BEACH
.i-27 Fashion l1lend
644-2121
Buy it. Stll it. Try the fastest response fn tht West against your own clock, Test Dime·
a-lint Ads, where the act ion Is, In Saturday's DAILY PILOT.
Bee -MVP: Pat Flahivt.:
Most Jmpcove<l c Marco Men· Gurney n: ~clai·ms Any <101.a; CD-Captains : Pat lti7
Flahive and Gary Irvin.
Cee -MVP : Dale Nitta;
~fost Improved : Bill Bi rd
and Johl1.ly Adakai ; C.Cap-H t Ad ta ~~';!~;~ale Nitta and Tim -ome own van ge
Waler POio ---_.....;; ~,·
Varsity -MV: .Joh n
Enfield: Most Improved: Jim
Orlowski ; ~aptians: John
Enfield iD<fBill Brown.
Bee -MY: Amory Ware :
?llost Improved : Steve ti1or-
r ea I e: Co-Captains: Vince
McC a lla and .Brad
McC\anahan.
Cee -?lfV: Larry Fisette:
Most Im pro.v e d : Neal
Amsden; Co-Captains: Tom
Redwitz a'.1d Tom Brotherton.
Cross Co11J1try
Varsity -MY: Dave
Hustwick: ?itost Improved :
Dave Hustwick: Co-CSptains:
Dave Hust\\'ick and Chris
Lamberl. Out.standing Junior;
Danny ?iloore: Outstanding
Freshman: Josh Bright ;
Coach'a; Award : Ned Blurock.
Basketball
Results
J'I IE!ULTS
..,,..,.,, .... _ flt) IH ) c-· tlt1 Mi r
1<:11mer OJ F !Sl 3ummer
~wick C7l F C1Cl Ou~en
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H1ltllme: Hunl\n1ton J.f.. l•l~t
Gr1na. 23.
•Et: lt:SULTI
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or-le< Ill G 111 Fortner Sctn ,,_Qu1""1
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FLYING FUN!
by WAYNE CHASE
Ho<w font Jo11 It •••• t• ,,,,,. t• fly?
Tht 1n1w11 t• tht f cl1p1nd1
1n t+i1 il'lllividu•I 1tud1nt. l•
••' y1ur lic1ni1,' you n11d 11
l111f Ji houit. Thi1 i1 t cfutl
flyil!f tlrr11. Twt l'lty ho11r1 of
thi• 111111! lit 1011. A114' tin
h0Uirlii111f be ttlO Cltll-CIUft•
fry flyl!l.f, Ye"' c•11 1 rr1n91
ve111 tchodult with yt•r flJ9ht
in1tr11cfo1. & G1n1r.n,, 1b•11t fw1 flytt.f
11u!o111 t w11k 111 bttt, You
t •I 111lly If yow welt f•• le11'
b1twe111 lt tt•tll, Of CilVrtl,
y111r il'l1frvcfor c111 •1w1y1 ti •
frtth y1111 '"'"'''"· A11 hovr or
'"' ol d111I ftltht c111 J1 'ii,
M1ny 1i114111h ''' co11i1nt to It~• 1 littf1 1•tt ._ 11,,,,_ Tk1v
-J,~11111t!y pul in •• '""'ch 11
1(rtv houn.
By DEKE HOULGATE
Ot IM t11rtr 1"1101 Sltll
Other drivers accuse him or
having a secret knowledge of
the track at Riverside Interna·
tional Raceway, but Dan
Gurney doesn't believe in the
hometown advantage.
ihe Costa Mesan who grew
to manhood near the in·
temationally koow n r o a d
course and launched his spec.
tacular career there is favored
to win the Rex Mays 300 USAC
championship race Sunday at
Riverside. It's a race nobody
else has been able to 'vin but
Gurn ey.
He ha:o> probably driven
more laps around the course
there, and he has certainly
won more important races
there than anybody.
Starting with the first sporL"
car race weekend ever held at
Riverside, 121h years ago,
when Gurney won the Corvette
race, Dan has \von five 500-
mile stock car races and both
prtvious Rex 111ays events.
Of the home track advan-
tage, Gurney said. "rm not
a great believer in that. There
might be some advantage for
certain drivers from track to
track, but the more you race
lhe more it diminishes.
"I'll say one thing, ii 1 dn
have an advantage a 1
Riverside. I'll be taking t1d-
vantage of it."
Gurney explained that ad·
vantages can be gained not in
Newport Fctes
Grid Stars
Newport •!arbor High School
held it.s annual awards night
for the lower level football
teams Tuesday night at the
school cafeteria.
The special award winners:
Bees
Captain: ?>.like Easterling :
'flfVP: Bruce Human : r.1ost
Improved: Tony Horvath. c ...
Captar.1: Bob Elswor1h :
tifVP : Ron Walker ; fl1ost
Improved : Karl Tahti.
Frosb
Captain: Brian Co k a~ :
MVP: Kevin Rt.eser: fllost
Improved: Russell \VesL
Al'ld why not1 You ttft 109
your houri 0" bu1i ~1i1 •fld ~•·
ct tion fli9hh.
Ctln9 lft IN llt II\ ti HI.JI.IOI
AVIATION Intl wl'll ~ •• , 1'111 fl
''' ...,ir VI. lllnlflh fl Id l'ttlr 1111.,.1, Wt _kl,.,. 'ffll It llJ ti
fllt a.,1 (tv' 1UH In Or11111 Ct-
''· A "1Yflt 111111 (ff,,.. ll flllf
lttt; ... MAll:.IOlt AVIATIOH, tUl
w1,,,... ...... '"'""· o,.. '"'" _ ....... -" ,,11p. ,.,,;,,. lft
"" c•i.-"" tt1 '"' 111 !lltl'lt ..,. ... ,,. ........
WATCH NEXT
WEEK FOR
"Mechanical
Krtow .. How"
. driver skill but in car handl·
ing.
"It's mostly how your car is
set up," he said. ''Every track
is different. 11 my car is right
Sunday, look out ."
T h e man who finished sec-
ond l w i c e at Indianapolis
plans to go for the pole posi-
tion in qua lifying and then try
lo stay out in front during the
race.
In an altempt lo get his
Olsonite Eagle 'vorking prop.
erly, Gurney has spent a lol
of testing time on the ne\.1-·ly
rebuilt 2.5-milc course at
Rive rside. He has consistently
lapped under the old course
record -his, of course -
'1' hi c h stands at I: 18.95.
Gurney's fastest lap time dur-
ing test runs to date has been
1:16.21 , or better than J20
n1iles an hour.
The pioneer of stock block
po1ver for Indy ca~s may be
going to lht. post for the £inal
time with his epic stock block
Ford "'ith Gurney cylioder ·
heads.
For various reasons, the
mosl compelling one a con-
tract to race for Plymouth
,next year, Gurney may be at
the lvheel of a Ford grodu ct
for the last time Sunday.
The 1967 Le Mans 1vinner in
a Ford GT is already hard at
1vork in his Santa Ana shops
developing a new Offenhauser-
powered Indy racer designed
by Len Terry, the British
genius who shaped Gurney·s
original Eagles.
The Gurney motr.1t a I
Rive rside .,,;ill be his sleek, low
1969 Indianapolis car. It is
likely lo become a backup car
for the new season and may
see limited service in 1970
1
road races on the USAC
champ tra il.
Gurney hinted that if a stock
block engine is used at all next '
yea r for any of the road races
he drives, it may be a 305 cu,
in. Plymouth.
His strategy for Sunday's
race?
"I'd like to get out in front,
away from the rest or the
guys. If anybody ca1 stay with
me, I'll probably have to run
hard all day," he said. "That's
i'I long race, and the winner
will be the one l11hose car
holds up."
Costa Mesa
Lauds Aces
Dick ·Ferryman and Pat
S1~·eetland were individually
honored \Vednesday night al
the awards banquet for the
Costa to.tesa High football team
in the school cafeteria.
Ferryman "''as named cap·
lain of the va rsity and
Swcetla.id garnered -11 Y P
hon ors. Sweetland is a junior.
Football
Varsity -Captain : Dick
Ferryrnan ; !\fVP : Pat
S>1'eetland.
Soph -Captain: Ken W<1.r-
ren : fl1VP : Gary Schoeller;
!o.1ost Improved : Flip Darnell.
Frosh -Captain: Frank
Fr egos I; MVP: Steve
Spielberger : tlost Improved :
!\like Lykins.
CONVERTIBLE
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Binoculars ~~~ :;;r, SPECIAL $21.88 . . . . Can of 3/1.75 Doz. 6.95
Stadium Seat ::;'.'ss.so '"ciAL $4.89 Pennsylvania Xtra Duty Tennis Balls·
w•A'"'" cH•c• -...... u -""'"""" $1•99 3/1.89 Doz. 7.50 WIND S,fED & DIRECTION
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sPEc•AL • Men's Tennis Shorts 4.95 to 12.95
Kul · Pak Ice Free Ice Chest Boy's Tennis Shorts 4.95
Sporter 3.25 Men's Tennis Shirts 5.00 · 6.00 · 7.00
Chill Master 141.8999 Sleeveless Tennis Sweaters 9.95
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an warmer one ui · Leather Tennis Shoes 12.95
Daiwa Spi~ning Reel 5.99 Ladies Tennis Shoes 7.25 & 7.95
Rapala K~1fe 3.99 Speedo Swim Suits & Trunks
Sale Tenms D~esses: 80 Dresses at Cost or less Table Tennis sets & Paddles
Thermos Outing Kit • 9.99 Horse Shoe Sets & Croquet Sets
Basketball Backboards 1 /2 & 5/8 Inch -Handball Gloves & Balls
Waterproof Masonite 12.95 & 14.95 OPEN Basketball Goal & Net , 3.95 & 5.95
Basketballs 5.95 to 12.95
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•
WHAT'S INN-
OU'IDOORS?
' • New flights of ducks and
.. geese have moved into the ,
southland, and the outlook for
this weekend's reopening or
the Southern California dw::k
season is excellent in all
areas.
Game wardens and private
. •: club managers are all en-
couraged by the number of
t waterfowl which have bee'=l
building up during the past 10
days OD tile lakes and ponds
locally.
Thousands of big duck! and
geese have been forced south
by the freezing weather in
.. Oregon and Northern
CaWornia. Game officials at " the Tulelake Wildllfe Refuge ~ report that about half the
·: birds on the lake during f. October and November have
,. moved out, and are heading ~ south towards more com-
,. fortable wi'.1tering grounds. ~ A good bet for unaUached
-. hunters this weekend will ·be
Baldwin and Big Bear Lakes.
The waterfowl population ·has
had a chance to build itself up
• and the second opener should
~ be better than the first.
Bill Wormsbecker of the
: • Lucky Boat Landing o n
·. · Baldwin Lake· said geese are
coming in and there are a lot
of mallards~ canvasbacks a'.ld
redheads on the lake.
* * * Temperatures !lave been on
the cold side with snow on the
ground Ind lakes rreeiing
around the edges at night, but
Worabecker believes that ii
•. hunten get out and hunt a lit·
lie, that limits will be com·
-. mon.
·: More last m in u t e in·
• • formation and boat reserva. •. ~· tions can be obtained by call-
-; ing the Lucky Boal Landing al
': (714) 866-7438.
., The Salton Sea is holding a
~ lot or birds, but the: )lwitJng
will depend on how bani the
wind blows. The birds are still
rafting out in the middle or the
sea and It will iake a good
blow to get them to ny within
the range of the duck bunters'
guns.
All of the reservation1. at
tbe Wister Area, are lllen for ·:
.·
"
·:
Turkey
Hunt Rated
A Success
•
NIGHTS
"SltNDAYS
&'
HO~IDAYS
Can be ,!"Ot•
Profltabl1
for you.
Saturday, but lbere art a few
left for Sunday,
* * * The oullook in lhe Wasco
area i4ood,-despile-Ule possi-
ble threat of fog. New fllghts
of birds have been coming in
dally reports the Gilbreath
Bros. Duclt Club, and on the
heels of the ducks are the big
bonkers, which a~ continually
building up in numbers.
Pheasant hunter! will really
have to work hard for their
birds this weekend, as these
upland game birds have scat·
tered, and it wiU be hard to
get them off the grO!,,!nd and
t1to target range. A good dog
is almost mandatory i n
nushing out these wily birds.
There are still plenty o[
birds in the Imperial Valley ,
but the other areas stocked by
the Department of Fish and
Game two weeks ago have
been cleaned out.
Quail hunters are rinding
.some fa ir action along th e
western slopes of the San
Bernardino MountaL1s, but
those scatter-gunners out in
quest of these fast flying birds
are having to hunt the birds in
heavy e-0ver.
This makes for difficult
shooting and retrieving or
downed birds .. , here again a
dog would be of great help.
The 14th annuarpresentation
of the Weatherby Big Game
Trophy will take place at the
Ce.itury Plaza Hotel Friday
nigllt. Seven international big
game hunters have been
nominated for the troPfiy.
Ken Niles of Ne1vport Beach
will be Master of Ceremonies
and the presentatio n of the
trophy will be made by Gov.
John Love of Colorado.
* * ... '\\'bat appears to be a good
run of spotfin croaker and sea
trout is developing in th e
Balboa Pa\'iiion area o (
Newport Harbor. Croa ker to
,. .,:, pounds have-been weighed
in at the Pavilion and Art's
Landing. Tbe croaker have
been bltting best on ruor
clams during the early morn·
ing and late evening hours.
Out in the briny deep,
anglers from Davey's Locker,
Art 's Landing and San
Clemente Sportlishing have
heen finding fair action on
barracuda, bass and bonito,
but most fishermen are filling
lbeir sacks and freezen with
rock cod. Down south a little
farther, Oceanside Sportfis.hi11r
personnel reporl a mucb more
consistent bite 011 ·medium sit·
ed bass, barracuda and bonito
wit h an occuional ye llo"·tail
and white sea bass being gal·
fed.
The barge olf Seal Beach Ii;
producing fair action on most
surface fish and the boats run-
ning out of Seal Beach
SporUisbing are gettin1 into
some mixed fish just a few
miles off the beach.
----~---·-----·----.. ··-~ ..... .,......_,....,._,_.....,.._--.......--.------------~
Fishi11g
Curtailed .
By Winds
Eve n though the weather
man was against most fresh
water rishennen last weekend ,
anglers managing to brave the
stiff winds at Vail Lake caught
nice strihgers -of bass an-d
crappie, according to the
lake's ma nag er , Dave
Brownell.
Scouting Vail Lake In ad-
vance of the free public bass
fishing clinic to be staged at
the lake Dec. 13 and 14 by the
Southern California Bg;ssmast.
ers.
Members Nonn Dye and
Larry ?o.tcCain found bass ac·
live as the two anglers bagged
limits on . plastic worms. The
bass ran to 3\~ pouoils .
Brownell feels that after the
lake has had time to settle
down, after the winds and
rain, that the bass, crappie
and bluegil 'A'Hl return to their
old 1~ves and produce ex·
ce llent fishing. '
More on the publi c bass CAUGHT OUT OF THE BLIND -Tom Wells of
fishing clinic r,exl week . Balboa Island looks up ju:;t in time to see a flight
All of the open Jakes 'in San of sprig go overhead as he picks up a widgeon he
Diego County also felt the cf· just dropped \vith hi s 12-gauge shotgun. The event
fects or the strong wind and took place last 1veek at the ROPER Ranger's Hunt
most anglers were forced off Club located in San Jacinto. The Southern Califor·
.,
Pheasant Kill Rated
DAIL V PILOT 11
Averag~
The openbt weekend of
California's 1969 p he a s a n t
season on public hunter areas
was ·rated average, about on a
par with last year, the Depart·
ment of Fish and Game.
reports.
Hot.. spots were the Sutter
Nationil Wildlife. Refuge and
. the DFG 's Gray Lodge and
Honey Lake wildlife areas,
whlc&averaged.close to a bird
per bunter.
The overall average for 10
reporting areas was .37 bird
per hunler based on a bag of
1,910 male pheasants by S.t~
hunters. Last year, S,127
....
·.·.·" . ·. ...
hti.1ters bagged l,'33 roosters California contlnu'5 Uuwp
L for a .28 average. Sunday.
This year's opening weekend ;==========:;;
produced a bag of 276 birds for I
304 hunters at Sutter, an
ave rage of .98 bird per hunter .
tloney Lake averaged .86 wilhl
"3$ hunters taking 376 birds,
and Gray Lodge averaged .84
on a bag of 783 pheasants by
93.1 hunters.
The DFG's Grlzzly lsland
Wild!Ue Area .bad lbe poorest
shooting, with 986 hunters tak·
Ing 50 pheasants for an
average of .05 per htr1ter.
The pbeaaant season in
nofthern and Ce ntral
·a THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
,.
'•
He that i~ good j\t maklnc: eoxcuses. is seldoml good for anything else.
-Be11jamit1 Frauaitt-
'"AESENTEo AS A _!
PUILIC SEltVICE EVEll:Y DAY l '(I
lff Roofing Co.
24 YNn "" CMll M .. 1'Sl s.,...iff AH. '411·1ttt
:' ........ . . . .... r ........ ····. .·· .·:· ... :.;_.:-.:: ....... . ... ..... ' Tis the :>::."-.. . .. . . . . : .. ': · .... : ... . "··· "·" .... .. : ...... . ·. " .. . . .. .. ~': .. .. ··:. ·. . ' . · ... .: ..•.
.. ...
: ::: .= ·., .. ....
" "· ..... ... . .... , ....
season to be
sippin . .. . . " ...... : ~·· .: _\ . . ...... . . . . • .. • ...... · .... · ...
EZRA BROOKS
the lakes Salurday, but when nia duck season reopens this weekend a nd lhe out-llE-'L 51..,1N. wt<tsKr' , NENiucK' 1111"11"' 1ou111°" wt<1s"r ' •
the winds !el up Sunday -~loo~k_i':'.s~e:x~c=•:IJll~e~n:l ~in'.'._'.a~ll~a.'.'re:-a:s::_. _________ ================================-fishiiig returned to normal. I·
Orville Ball ol lhe San Diego
Recreation Dept. sent out word
that bas~ to 61h pouads were
hitting and that the crappie
were staging a good showing.
Ball also is looki ng for a
good duck opener Saturday, on
the lakes which allow duck
hunling in San Diego. There
are st.ill reservations left for
Saturday on some Jakes. for
more infonnation phone l714)
236-5532.
Jack Ford at the Lake
Henshaw resort is looking
towards a good weekend, both
for fi shennen and d u c k
bunters.
The population of big ducks
has buill up and even though
Ford expects a large_ nurnbe.r_
of scatter.gunners, he feels
tha t there are plenty of birds
and good shooting should
prevail for everyone.
The bass have been very
reluctant to hi t with any C-On·
,sistency. primarily due to the.
·poor weather, but the crappie
have been giving anglers good
action on yellow and while
jigs.
I
Trout Plant
Follo\ving, by county, are
the Southern California waters
to be stocked this week with
trout:
Los Angeles-Big 1'ujunga
Greek upper section. Legg
L'"¥ke , Puddingstone
Reservoir : Sa nta Barbara -
Lake Cachuma; Ven·
tura--Casitas Lake, P i r u
Lake.
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-, ___________ _
-·-
•
She's a Heal Ba11dful
Al an llart finds himself \vi1.h his hands full as Barbara Garli ch passes out a t
sight of Edilh Goodmao in this scene fron1 the comedy ''An y \Vednesday,"
contlnuing Friday and Saturday at the Santa Ana Comm unity Playe rs Theater.
CSF Playing • Repertory in -Present and future ;ictil'ities
nl the Cal Sta te Fullerton
!heater department l' o n1 c
together this \\'CCkcnd 1o1.·hen
three fall productions begin
!heir addition:il run i n
repe rlorY and auditions start
for the spring season.
Each having completed a
fou r·night opening ru n ,
''Rasbo mo n ,'' "Major
Barbara" and "The Threepen·
ny Opera" now will com bine
for a total of 14 additiona l
performances in rotation on a
seven-night-a-week basis~
''Rashomon" will be staged
Dec. 5. 7, JI and 15, while Office. which is open daily cx-
··w.ajor Barbara" is scheduled cept Sunday from noon until 4
for tonight. Dec. 6. 10 and 14. p.m. The telephone numbe r is
Dates for· 'Th r e£· penny
Opera" <irr 'Dcc. 8, 12. 13, 16 87G-3371.
and 17. Meanwhile, audit ions are
Curtain ti1ne fo r Thursday. beginri1ng for three spring pro-
Friday . Saturday and Sunday ductions, \V itliam H anley·~
perfonnances is the tradi-"Slow Dance on the Killing
tional 8:30 p.m .. but il will be Ground," Peter We i s s '
an hou r earlier on other nights / "MaraVSade'' and George
to allow fo r a di scussion in-Bizet's "Carmen." Tryouts
volving the audience, players are open to all students and
and directors. members of the cornmunity.
Reserved se als for some Director R. Kirk Mee. assis-
J)elformance.s _sJj 11 are tanl professor or theater, will
available at the Theater Box be selecting actors for his pro-
duction or "litarat/Sade." 1\lee
Com1nunity Sy1nphony
Slates Classic Progra111
last season direct ed the
department's highly su~cess(ul
\>ersion of "Twelfth' Nig ht."
Two di rectors \\'ill be in-
terviewing talent for the big-
ges t production in CSCF's 11-
)'ear .h is to r y as the
departments of theater and
music combine to present
.. Carmen." Dr, Donald R.
Henry. associate professor or
theater, will stage the opera
while Clifford W. Re ims,
associate professor of music,
will handle the musical direc-
Three o( the most popu lar
pieces of classicia/ literature
'vill be perfonned in the open-
ing concert of the ye ar of the
No Survival
For Video's
'S . , urvivors
NEW YORI\ (AP) -ABC
\\'ill cancel ''The Survivors·· in
.January and replace it \\'ith an
~ntirely new dramatic sho"'
starring George Hamilto n.
Originally. ABC had planned
to retain Hamilton in ··111e
Survivors" after Lana T11rnr1
left the series at midscason.
The network said today the
new series \\'ill be called
''Paris 7.ooJ." Hamilton will
play a trouble shooter at-
tac hed to the American em-
bassy in Paris.
"The Survivors." based on a
pre mise by novetisl Harold
Robbins, was in trouble before
it eve n hit the air. Two
segme nts filmed in Europe
y,•ee scrapped at a loss nf SI
million, the Cflncepl Y•a"
changed and the show changed
producers three limes.
Jn the latest ratings period
ii ranks 78th among 79 shows_
Cutting llp
Orange Coast. College Com-
tnunily Symphony Orchestra
~unday afternoon.
The pcfrormance will begin
111 4 p.m. in the tX:C
Auditorium. Admi ssio n will be
SI. lion.
The orchestra. uov.• iu ils,:==========::I 10th season, v.•ill open the pro-I
gra m \Vith the overture,
"Russian Easter:• Op us 36 by
Rimsky-KorsakofL Di rec1.pr
.loseph Pearlman will then
condu ct Dvorak·s ··New
World, .. Symphony No. 5.
F o 1 Io wing interm ission.
Downey pianist 0 a v i d
S1.renson \1'\1\ join th e
orches tra 111 Concerto for
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
U you have new neighbors
ar kn01v of anyone movlnc
to our area. please tell UJ
so that u·e may extend a
friendly u·eloome and help
them ta become acquainted
in their new surrounclinp.
Piaoo ond Orchestrn b y So. Coast Visitor . R achman inorf. Th e
performance hy Swenson ll'il1 494-0579
bl> his 1hird 11·ith th e
orchestra. A near-flawless 494·9368
periormer at 18. S11·enson ha s b V' 'f
''"died for nine Y""' with ar or ISi or
Earle Voorhie~ of Californial ~~~~~~~~~ State College at Fullerton. Ir
The orchestra, co-sponsored l
by OCC and the Costa f\fesa
Recreation Department. plays!
10 capacity houses in the 1.200-,
seat OCC Auditorium. Other
peNormances scheduled 1h1:,;
year include guitarist Ernesto
Bitetti on ~tarch 8 performing1
the Rodrigo Concerto for
Guitar and Orchestra; and a
"first Chai r" eoncert June 7
featuring organist J ay Colyar.I
COSTA MESA
CIVIC
PLAYHOUSE
P''''"''
Th•r Nl•IMll
hi tN
lrlcutM-N•wlrf M11tlc•I
"STOP THE WORL0-
1 WANT TO GET OFF"
Frlct.., & Sttt•rHy Dec:. 5·'
1:30 P.M.
Community
Recr••tion Center
w .. t Gcm-
Ore .... C••"'Y h lrtrou11d1
Ad"'l.M-Sl.DD
Rner1otl-: I J4-5JDJ
Df!an !vlartin and Charles Nel son Rei lly ha\1e so1nt•
fun v.·ith no·my Schneide r's 1nn.iiu:;igc dlffi cully
'vith some Ame.rlcun wo rd on "The Dea n f\lal'tln
Saow" t.onighl at 9 on Chapnel L
•
•
Faithful to Co•nposer
Grove Offers Praiseworthy 'Messiah'
say today that they did and Soprano Amanda De Ryckc, with great feeling, obvious
that they laid the great ma-con1ra1to Florine Hemmings, faith and a deep respect for
We have always envied jorlty of our doubts to rest in tenor Paul Ma yo and bass the nature or the score.
those fellow music critics who a performance that w a s Paul Hinshaw wtre faultless That is all we have ever
By TOl\t BARLEY
Of "" 0.llJ l'llet 11111
can evaluate the worth of gratefully re~ived by a in their performances and two asked. d e I i i h t ll d -a n d members of the distinguished ;:==========:I Handel's "Messiah" P""'IY on ca~ci·[·y-•"dt.ence In lh•l ,.-_.. quartet gave a magnlfict'.1i
lts merits as an oratoric-and beaotlful, acoustically per-feet accoun t of themselves;n key
who can divorce any religious church. arias -Miss De Rycke for a
attachment they might have We seem to be clearly deeply moving • • Re j o i c
for the work from their fi nal ttmembered by inany music Greatly;, and Mayo fo r an
lovers -the point was raised equally splendid "Thou Shalt
a ss essme n t of l t s Sunday night _ for a scathlng Break Them ."
perfonnance. indictment we v.rrote a year And a very nne chorale did
It ts a blessed slate of ago oI a ''Messiah" that, we ev.erything. we are sure. that
detached objectivity that has wrote at the lime, sent us the 1neticulous Hall expected
always -and d o u b t I e s s from the concert hall f.i a it to do in a performance o
alw_ays will -eluded us. For state o(_bitterness and anger. the "J\1essiah" that did
to us, the "Messiah" ranks That had nothing to do with nothing to diminis h ou r
with the Lord's ·Prayer. the the baroque setting utilized by dependence on this act of faith.
Ten Commandments a1d the Hall at this more recent so ideally suited to our
Holy Communion as a performance -we were Christmas seasa.1 and so \·ery ~ligious rite that has bticome primarily con.:erned at that much a part of our Nativity
as hallowed as its forebears to earlier airing_ of the work with observances for so. many of
many of those who yield to the frantic pa"et: at which the
Christian disciplines. conductor (not Hall ) took ll. usjf we found .an occasiona l
For all that, we have nothing ~MBEWSHMENTS unnecessary gilding ·of •a -Alao---
but praise to offer for a \V d ed perfect lily, then it was quick-...,._. ___ _ 2001
performance of the "Messiah" e con emn urr.iecessary ly forgiven in the overall llght ..., _,. ~
Sund ay ni"ht that was in embellishments at the 1968 f I . . rf ~ 0•"111 nd ... performance and we were not o a sou -st1mng pc ormance. ""!.-v;lll 9 Q _ _
direct contrast to the multi· particularly happy wi th a few !i=O:":':':'M:':':':ia:h:":w="=':'":d:e:re:d~ tMLitde . voiced, heavil y orchestrated
oratorio that is better knO\Vn that came our way Sunday .. lie .'~
to us by time and tradition. night. But the overall effect of Ollll .
a IP aiceoclyt11J
CINIMA SCRllN
METROCOLOR
Directed by \Villiam Hall a'.ld }Jail's baroque arrange ment BALBOA r rr~
staged al the Garden Grove was one of simplicity and fa ith 67'1 A04I
Meth odist ch u r c h, the and it did leave four fine .._,
performance was, indeed, ut-soloists with the opportunity of Open
terly faithful to what actually richly capitalizing on a ,., r . a.u.!:45
were the composer's wishes glorious score -H.1 op-a.1111N P'Ptll"-'a
\\'hen he penned his act of portunity tha t does not exist
f · h · 7 under cond uctors of the more ail 1n l 41. NOW SHOWING modern approach .
This argu ment is, of course, '-===========:;II in defense of the Hall version. Ir Th• Best Double Feature
For there are many sup-
po rlers of the augment ed y,·ork
so popular today who will
quickly and correctl y point out
lhat Handel constant ly revised
the v.·ork right up to his death
i".1 1759.
Bul this is' not the point.
What matters is \.\1hcther Hall
and his splendid 32-mcmber
chorale captured the spiri t and
pathos of this magnificent
oratorio a:x:I we are able to
ALSO
Jackie Gle•son
In
"DON'T DRINK
THE WATER"
Eve Show Starts 7 p.m.
Cont. Sun From 2 p.m.
I SEE BY TODAY'S
WANT ADS
I ;'\Jo~ thnn t1i::h1s \viii
hrlghl<'n !<Omeorn!'s Chrisl·
n1e~: \1·n1c-h lho!e littl"'
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e STRIKES 1·i.11 hf•f'fntl(' 11
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. . ··-..... ..,,,., .. ..._, .....
UISl•MMIR
(!Jo ---ONCE UPON A TIME
IN THE WEST
JohnW!vne
Rock Hudson
·the
Undefealed
-{(llQl .. Dll...:. [!)
Plus Dick Van Dyke in
l!;!E MIRISCH ' 'SOME ~~~~KllDOFA r-ur·
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•47•ll•OS • HUNJ'l1'10TON 8Ul;H
Exclusive Orang•
County Engagement
"'Ont" Ult,..., llOSt ··--...... •lrllrmlCft. Uza llillttli
l lllll'JIS JS I .ajtr actiq:
tal11t !"' -CWttsci-.u•. u TIMI
""TtiE
C()MIC"
• ·.-~.~.-.....i
IOIAIOOOA.
USl'C>F JA1IJl
l£JEID TECHNICOLOR !ii
and from the stars of
''Born Free' comes
"RING OF
BRIGHT WATER"
STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY
Barbara Streisand
Omar Sharif
"FUNNY GIRL"
1 Nati~! General PICIUres Pre!.Cn1$
I L&&w.llCl.CU .
' •Dlo'I ~· .UO&R" --;; Sec:eM' ,.,., ...
Attt.ctlM
1 Mdr.Cel .. pa ..,. """"' 1n. ... ,, ....... Uwarll ......
~-l#Tlftc
Burt Lancaster
Deborah Karr
The Gypsy Moths1
COJ1UNO DICIMll R 11
Dfttl11 H•ff•,.._.MI~ fono••
.'<11~ •'~n!.,,, f <>• >''~''"~"
,OHN AND MAR
----:----
CONTINUOUS
SHOW FROM 2 p.m.
SAT. And SUN.
'WI J'outh Coast Repertory
HELO OVER
"A FUNNY THING HAPPENED
ON THE WAY TO THE FORUM"
1111 Nl:Wl'O•T ILVO., -• KlrMr Thwn .. Fri., S•I. -I:» ,,,.,_
lt...,.,1Tlon1 -lnllrr'l!lllO" -'46-llU
"Winnie tht l'ooll" -Ol:LIOHTl'UL SCR CHILOllEfll'S TH1!.1.Tltl Sun~•YI 11 l:M IN 11:111 '-"'· C1H I•• illlltl'Vlli9M
wi,.,~* 2nd
BIG WEEK
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2t05 Easf Ceast Hl9h-.y For lnform•tion Corcu10 det M.,_,ti. 673·6260
now you can SEE
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i=\ij'" CE'S
BESTAlJBANT"
' • ., .. ARL01lUTHRIE
COi.OR by Deluxe lhut1dArr11ls
(!p ....... 1' "' ~
Also Playing -"THE FIRST TIME"
Shows Start at 6:30 •Children Undar12 Freo!
LATE SHOW TONIGHT -ALL THEATRES see I OTH l'EATUltES .lS l .l.Tf_ ... , 11:)1 P.M.
Ario Guthrie
".lltCE•s ltEST.lUll.l.NT" flt)
Tht I N llH
"YELLOW IUIMAlt lNEn
LH V•11 (le" "D.l.Y 01" ANGIER" fM)
P•tty Dulct
"ME NAT.I.Lii!" !M\
Mt•lll!lllJt" Sch11t 011111 l•~er "Klt.1.1(.1.TO.l" 10)
Pl~• "111NG 0,. SRIOHT WATl!lt" 101
AMuk .l.!m1t Micll111 Y1rl!
"JUSTINE" lltl llicllt NI 8vrten lt u H1rr1M11
"STAllt(.1.51:" llt l
(llnl l•tt-f
"HANG 'EM N1Gt4" Ii.II
l!I! W1!11dl
THE UOLY" IMI
THE UGLY"
.. _ FiixsouTH coasT G!•m PLAZA THRATR•
CllRPOIUllllN San Diep frltWQ' at llistol • 546-2711
NOW PLAYING
THRU TUESDAY
ot
longlo1t-
the long
awaited
Lawrence
• DurTell't ........
comes to
th•'''"" .. 2o 00 ._::.·1:~ .. 111 ...
11' t~"t1ni.y Ooroe•
,,00\il!>Oft
SPECIAL
CHILDREN'S
MATINEE
Saturday,
12:30
JERRY LEWIS
"Hook, Line
& Sinker"
PLUS
EXCITING
ADVENTURE
FILM
"RHINO"
ALL SEATS lOc
..
..
TUMILEWllDS
WHO VA 'THINK I IS -w!LLYLIM Tat."?!
•
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.... ""' Sllal'll ptS.
ill LA. lV PREMIERE! * "TAMAHINE" IN COLOR
STARS NANCY. KWAN!
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STEVE ROPER
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THIN ·
By Ferd Johnson
By Sounders ond Overgarcl
AN/)AJ/ HOil~ LAr-,ll-WHl!'U Hf
'"SO I F16UA'E . SHOWS uP "TELL
THE KIO W!NT HIM NOT TO GO
i:::.1~:::,~ lJ~1!~.;~ i
OU6HTA DO, STE'IE! HE TALKS iO
1'1t1£. euT HE ONCE
5AID:"IF'TMEICE IS
NO P~ ELSE 1'0 ~li!OW A eAll ... NA Pe.el.. USE~ WAS'(~ MSICET-•
ME!
By Al Smith
,,,. -.,,. '%-z \. I I z 1,
1'HAT'S MY
lf.O!.E IN \.IFE •
A f'l.llLOSOP H~
ON GAICBAGE
Th11tJdl.y, Dtc1mbtr 4, 1%9'
... ~.;.·
~--· 114~.
~;t.?
• • •• • • • • ••• • • "·"
DAILY PILOT
I CAN!!
: (!~'.~· · · -~· . ·. ·. r I • • • • • • 0 t f • :.-.. .. • • i.1
• • ':Y J-)-•7 • • • I . . . :../../. .. . . . . . . . -...... ' .. --.-.. . . . ..
TELEVISION VIEWS
Jack Benny
Looks New
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -"Jack Benny's New Look"
on NBC \Vednesday night consisted of Jack Benny
wearing a Nehru jacket and turtleneck shirt and
talking about "bread'' and "being with it."
THAT HARDLY seems enough on which to bang
an hour special, but there really doesn't need to be .. .;
an excuse for a Benny shMV. To a large segment of .
the t~levision audience, a Benny a,Ppearance is a
visit from an old and dependable fnend.
He did not let them down, and 'vorked over
the familiar ground -the tightwad jokes, the long
passes as the laugh built, the violin and then a
sketch \Vith Gregory Peck in 'vhich Jack got all 'lhe .
laughs. Nancy Sinatra appeared in three numbers :
and there 'vas a singing group, Gary Puckett and
the Union Gap.
Peck, in his initial television appearance as an ;·
entertainer, \Vas amusing in a song-and-Oance ·
routine with Benny and George Burns.
ABC, AFTER studying the expensive \Vreckage ,
of "The Survivors" has decided not to attempt any . ·
salvage operations. Instead, George Hamilton will , ·.
star in a new series called "Paris 700," playing an
adventurer attached to our embassy in France and
assigned 0 to aid Americians caught in crisis situa .. •
tions."
Originally, ABC planned to keep the title.'
change the story line and get rid of all the expen-·· .
sive cast members except Hamilton. The new series
will start Jan. 22.
"The Survivors" is the most costly disaster of
recent television seasons. It is estimated that some
$8 milllion has gone into the making and remaking
of the trouble-ridden series. Lana Turner, the
shQ\v's top star, was reputedly making ,25,000 a
week.
THE SHOW will wind up the loose ends before
it leaves. In the final episode on Jan, 12, the no-good : ·
husband of the heroine -Miss Turner -will be ···
arrested for murder after trying to kill his wife.
Tracy, 1.he wife, and her former Jover will be re-
united., plan to marry and take their son away.
Duncan Carlyle, her brother who is played by
Hamilton, will decide to leave the family bank and
make a new life somewhere -presumably Paris
where he will be called Joe Shannon at the em-
bassy.
THE SUCCESS story of the season is CBS'.
"Doris ·oay Show ." It has gradually been gaining
in populanty until, in the most recent Nielsen rat-..
ings, it has landed among the top 10 most popular '·
progr&1Tis. ~
Whether its Increased popularity Is the resull
oi a radically revised format that took Doris out of
blue jeans and put her in city clothes, its new posj.
tion in the schedule after the popular "Mayberry
R.F.D .. " or a combination of both can be debated.
l
!
I
Dennis the Menace
r
I ,.
I
I
~ •
.. ..
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE i HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE RENTALS -o..o.~.;...;...;;.;.;..:.;..'-"--'-.;..;;-'--'--'-----1 Hou111 Furnished
General 1000 Gen1 r1Y 1000 G1ntr~I 1000 General lOOO Co1t1 Mesa 1100 Dover Shores 1227 l i]Hi"i"'i1"i9i'i""iiBieioichiil~400~~H~uinijtiijngil~oniii;illH~~c~h~l4~00jl;;,;;;;~~;;~2c)Oi L -Ii R1nt1l1 to Sh1r1 2005
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"Dg Ea
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$26 950 STONE FIREPLACE. o,·.. agL 540--838! or 546-4l4l ""obs•-·ct·' •v;-..• most -· ~ 1415 H B • or ""' ~'" ;, • •Parklin• •• "" ~ ~-1/4 MILE FROM BEACH .. -. -. . . (a Ken Koll home) bl1.1e pool, diving board and Inc. r:calton ing room \vith sliding glass O\VNER-A good buy. 3 BR rooms. S,OOQ sq, fl. 4 Br's, \VOMAN w/secur'fti Income Q>~ lot with special park. dttking to sunbath !he whole doors to a huge patio. Kitch-hOuse, \Vest sWe. Cpts, -i ii Ba + maids qtrs. Easy $20 990 · will share fovely, new 2 Br
lng area for bQ!Lt & camper! family, Modri'n styling is CUSTOM e:n bas built-ins, disposal, drps, stove, enc gar. n1alnt. Immed occup. Furn-I apt w/ume, over JO, 01.
-Nltilt-occupied home with the: keynote for this lovely 3 dlsh>A'asher. and dishmaster, f>.ls.:3026 ished. $178,00J. Consider ~~es Rell,, •
near new carpeting, Vacant bedrooia and family.room NEW ENGLAND 'nutt bedrooms, 1wo pulJ. OLDER 2 BR hoiae, 2 car trade/vac.lo!.Assume6~5~ HUNTINGTON BEACH S HARE I\1y elerant
& ready for your Christmas ,vilh parqlll?t floor. -Built· man baths, one with stall gar. Lrg lot -suitable for loan. s.18-7249 Call Now 962• 1°353 >A-aterfront home w/dock.
occupancy. can oow lo St'e. in kitchen v.•ith terrific count. FARM shower. ~e el'fclosed yard building. 545-GOOl P.tan 35 to 60 Yf'l'. $150 ·mo. ~ 1y d At rab"'-"' Newpmi 8,,,ch. with rock waterfall fruit I ~=="===========I
2 BEDROOM
Hardwood Floors $20,700
Clean, &harp home on R·2 lot.
Near new cpts in this adult
occupied home. Call now •
tomorrow could be too late,
Newport
et
• Victoria
M6.88U
~ytim1
Live
At The
Beach
$26,500
er space .... uur ar entroince ...., tl:ees and aJ.uminuiU tool Unlver1ity Park 1237 I. 67S-4331
on a non·lt'&Yclled \Vestcliff 4 n1a.stcr sltt bedrct0rv<. l house. This eJ-ant "·-o Meia Verd• 1110'1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;: l2SO I Huntington S.ach 140Dll•R~~=~1~.MA-TE=-w~an-,..-, -G~lrl~ St. -547,000 -10% do\\•n or full baths. Farm kitMen -~e. ........ , 'I' Corona del Mar. ._,,,..
I I. B · P'"lrY -delu.-..:e built-ins. can be yours for O·N LY 4 BR, 2 "\, !m m>, •x•c POQL T,ABLE ----------BY Owner· 2 story 3 BR 2'h to share 2 bdr. apt., CdM,· may case op ion. -ring ..,4.950. Pool, clubho"~~ a·• ~ F Cb~-E I • el 0 , Call 673-U82 after 5 PM your <:heckbook and let's llugc 3S Ft. N~ England ~ecreatlon facil>·"·s-avail'.~ hori1e. Bltns, good cond. Pvt or , ... tmas. \Ve have the XC USIV y Urs BA Sboreettat home. Crpts,
talk terms. family room with tons ot old bl '"' walled trnt patio, lge. htd c"act spot ~r it: See the 2 Bedroom and den, 2 haths <lrps, clec bltris. Fan1 nn, ROO~mtATES Wanted lo 646-7171 bf i ck fireplace. Winding a c. s\lim pool w/slide & div bonus room in this 3 Br. 2 quality cuslom built home frpJc, util rm. $36,500. share apts."Ma1c ot tcmale.
1-Q THE REAL
\"-ESTATERS
, I I ', '• 1 L ' r',
''*•• Finest Home
on l\lcsa Verde's Golf
Course. Vie w iron1 every
l'OOm. 4 bdrn1, beautiful
pool, hillside loc.'-owner
\\'ould lik<! to tt-ade do\1-·n
10 smaller home or whal·
have.you. Asking price
$155,000. Do yourself a
fa~·or & ,see this lovely
ho1ne iI you can.qualify.
staircase to unique heavy brd. Prof landscpng, Jo !'&·. tow~. You can be on Marigold plus a 1 Bed-As.'l\lnu? GI 6',4 Io an, BJue Beacon 645--0Ul
beamed studio O.L' -Jluge main!. $43,950. 540-7573 tn it by Chnstmas! $35,450 room garage apartmcnL 968-2363 2 BR 2 story apt. S.A., pool.
5th bedroom. 5~% annual • red hi·11 Close 10 Beach.and shops, • 4 BDR. 2¥.r Ba, kitchen . $65 mo + 1 util, w/ % ra!c loan available?. Un-Owi6 will cany 1st TD, ram. · Lrg den \Y/bar, 2250 t>mployed yng man. 67~
e qua I e d at $38,950. Dial College Park 1l l5 673-8550 sq rt. Assun1<' 6% GI. By
Now! 6'15-0303. Open Daily 1-5 PM . REALTY Owner. $2.-8923' or 546-71i0. Newport Beach 2200
LG. 4 bdrm 2 ba .. \&sumablc 4 BDRM + FAM
+ RUMPUS
WHAT'S THIS! !
$18,500
Evenings caH 646--4579
FINEST VIEW
F1'0m the top of
llarbor View Hills.
Lovely family home
\\'ilh 3 bedrooms, 3~~ baths
magnificent paneled den
with full bar and
s1one fireplace.
Big YiC\Y·Side kitchen
$119,000
01\•ner \\'ill Finance
low int loan. 2339 Colgiltc Fountain Valley 1410 J BR., CdM Oceanfront.
Dr. For Information call. I~!!!!~ ELEGANT MANSION Guest rn1 .• pool &: p1·ivale?
PERRON RLTY 642-1771 r OPEN DAILY 1.s b 2800 beach. $1,000 Month
1519 Bonnie Doone 4Rbdrnis 3d ~tbs, . sq _rt. 2 BR. Bayfronl apt. \V/dock EHi biuff 1242
Newport Beach 1200 OWNER sngle story condo. 3
WONDERFUL BR 2 ba '"" ~nr1. M'"Y :x-tras.. S42 ma1nt fee. Price WESTCUFF ""'"""' to 121.000. s.. a1
The gleaming noors and 62<1 HilYanat Sat &. Sun only.
fl'eshly painted interior de.
note true pr~e of ownc.r:s:hip El Toro 1244 here. ExcepDOnally function-~.;co:.;:_ ____ :.:::
al floor plan 1o1>i th spacious LAKE Forest Camelia model
rooms designed for real fam. Rc·sale. 4 BR. 2 BA. Cen.
ily enjoy1ncnL Ta.I I shade tra1 air, curtains & lavish
oman cs1gu s\111mm1ng .1 ~~ •1 r· Elegant 2 BR. + den. AU 1 'lh 1 t & flt a\'al . .,.,.,., "o. on case. wool cpts. Gold fi"1ures, poo "'1 .. K'a "r 1 er. Also avail. for short term.
shutlel'S & beaut. garden. formal di.ning. room, paneJ. 3 BR. Bluffs, nr. pool I: led d<'n \\"Jth fireplace, super ~'--· ""'):;Mo •·-Owner·Brokcr k"! 1 • h b nd f ;,uupp1ng. ~ • un ........ fi73.01A~ or 6i7>.403l J c lCn "'II a u ~rn:e o Riddle & Ross 67;}-7225 -.... cupboanfs. Josi repainted & --~=~~~~~-1
EASTBLUFF-VIEW decorated. $~7.950 takes all TOWNHOUSE; 3 BR, 2~
3 BR. l~ ba. Nice fpl. Din. .,, • ...,,..,..,..,.· BA, 1rplc, patio, pool, 2 car
area. Shows unusually well. If llltiI!Jj::::tQjlmlf1
1
.0Jfl f.:• .!~ b:=-. u~! ~:
Call for price & terms. '\!!MnT: !'fs:a=i .,_.,.. ..,.,.,, CORBIN-MARTIN Avail 1211. 871--8811 or
REALTORS 675-lliG'l ----w~o~w~,~,----l _64_2-_24_97_~~----"
3036 E. Coast iilyY .. Cd~t 1j'x30' Family Rl\f. FffiEPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2
•)1 ~\·s .1\ ~r~\ :)i, ,1lti'
546-5990 .
This is beach livini: at its -~~-~o;;··~-o;;;;iiOiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I bes t -2 big '*<Inns. plus a
And only 6 year.s young. Fan.
rastie tenns too! Get togeth·
er $1,300 and that's all you
nccdJ 4 good size bedrooms
-:! baths -kitchen v>'ith
built-ins. Family + rumpus
room. Beautiful, well kept.
lree lined commWlity. Where
in the \\·orld can you find a
bargain like this. t.love fast!
Dial &15-0303.
645-0303 COMP'ANY
REALTORS
673-4400
trees and beautilully land. gnrden. A ppr a i s e d at 2 GOOD houS<'s on 2 R-2 lots,
scaped grounds, Excellent $·11,000. 24136 Elrond Ln, 0 7 value at $42,950. 8.'ll-8620 S. of H"'Y· \VOCr. $5 ,500.
Better lhan new 3 b a.th, ba., patio, adults. Bayside
fonnal din. rm. 3 c. gar. Village. Until July ht. flll,
2jOO sq. rt. Block \\'all. C II 1213) 2224309 or 673-5419.
Largest lot ever -':'-n1ust OCEAN front house, Tops!
den -2 baths and 2 atrium
patios -all only 6 years old.
O\\'tler \Vil! carry the ff·1.
ancing with only $2000 down
-\VO\V?
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2619 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
OPEN EVES TILL a,30
3 BDRM HOME
13• baths. carpe l s
throughout, lircplace,
boat door. nicely land·
scaped. % block to ele·
mentary school, near
ne11• Edis on lligll.
fll.%0.
Jf!ia.. ~~TS
~ WALLACI
REALTORS
-->'54 .. 6 ... 4141-
l()pM Evenings!
HOUSE+
10 UNITS
BAYFRONT
Ready for immediate occu-
pancy. Large 2-stoty bay.
front home \\'i1h 4 spacious
bedrooms, large liYing room.
formal dining room; panel.
eel den with wet bar. Alaster
suite with sitting room. lire.
place & exll~d large dressing
room. Pier & float for la11;c
power or sailboat. See this
exciting buy ! Sl7j,(.OO :
john macnab
1714 ) 642-8135
!lOl Dover Drive, Suite 120
Newport Beach
WANT TO
TRADE?
2 blocks front hack bay!! 4
bedroom ::: bath excculi\'C',
ramily hon1c, 01\'ll('r \\'iii
ll'ade lot a smaller home in
Cogta l\Tesa area. Fe \V
at l larbor Cent~r
2299 I/arbor Blvd., C.M.
Mesa Del Mar
Big 4
•terc is a gleaming tri~ndly
family heme in a choice
area. Newly painted and
carpeted. Texas size bed-
rooms, 1 ~4 baths, dream
kitchen 1vlth refinish<!d satin
cabinets. Best of all only
$29,4<;0.
Colesworthy & Co.
.. Agent .. "For A \VMie Buy"
G~2· 7Tl7
ch'""' to Irv, '" We.rdrrr 1--=w~H~Y~R=E=N=T=1.-so easily. F or $53,200 . I-low
can you go...,,,·rong?
546-2313 $123.00 Month ,
Beautifully dccorall!d 4 BR.
2 baths, 4 year old house plus;! iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii"'"
Includes
Everything
ten 2 BR. 11,J bath, 2 i;tOl'Y
apartmenlS '"ith $1700 a
month iocomr. 4 units are
nicely lurnishcd. Large heat-
ed pool. S3S.OCIO d0\\11 will
buy at $169,jOO. Riddle & Ro11 675-721~
LIDO SANDS
BIG HOUSE-
SMALL PRICE
Gorgt"Clus 4 bd1m charmer.
Entertainer's livi ng room
ttiling high fireplace. Large
master bdrm, all bit-in "'ife.
saYcr kitchen. Desirable
Mesa Del P.Iar Joe walk to
all i;C'hools. Hlll'l'Y its too
sharp 10 last at SJJ.500.
!l's a. 3 bcd1'00m home In
Cos1a i\1esa. there's no quaJ.
i!ying to assume the ~xisting
VA Loan v.•ith an annual per-
centage rate of 6%. l'Ull.
price is $21.950 -Best Buy
Around!
GREAT VIEW
LUSK
Jiarbor View Hills, 4 BR. 2
Ba .• 3 car gar, Combo kit.
lam. rm. J.,andscaping_p_~!
done. "'Sparkling" clean. s;s,rxx,.
Al Fink ...,...
Coldwell, Banker & Co.
550 Newport Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Calif. 833-0700 644-1430
$1100 DOWN
\Viii buy this Eastside 3 bd·
1m fixer upper ror a qual.
Hied FHA/VA buyer. Va-
cant & l\'aitini; for a new
O\'iner.
WE-SELL A HOME I=-======= 1,:;67;;;'"'=16
"'
9
=====
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2!>13 \VeStcliU Dr.
646-7711
HARBOR ltlGH LANOS .
Believe us. these homes are
hard to find. Bright, clean. 3
bdnn 2 bath home '"ith cozy
fh-epla1.:e, patio & niC<"ly
1·and sca pcd . \\lallcir\I.:
distance to !'.lariners School.
Price $28.500. Call 54:>-842-1
•open eves) Soul h Coasi
Real Estate.
Modern Duplexes
On Th1 Peninsula
2 BR, fjreplacc. enclosed gar.
age. each un it. Near beach.
Only $54,9j(}.
On Balboa Island
3 BR Jowcl' + 4 BR upper,
elec bltns, lireplacr. SS5.000
Riddle & Ress 675-7225
Corona del Mar 1250
Our Exclusive
Enjoy fn'.im every room
an ocean view and
sun sets over ShorecliUs
· \vooded area
J rom this ~pacious
:I hdrm., den homr.
Thl' only lloor plan
ol its kind
on Roxbury in
exclusive Can1co Shores
$76 . .JOO
sec-! Lg 2 BR. 2 BA. Frplc, crpt5,
Linda lsle 1306 1-lAFFDAL REALTY di·ps. yard, patio. $250. win. ;::;::.:.::..;::.;:. ___ ...:.::: ___ 842-4cc__405 1er. 673-8088
57 Linda Isle Drive -t---------1\1ust scC • 4 BR, it BA hon1c G.J. RESALE 4 ~'Ill., 2 ha., 2 BR, l BA, 1,2 blck rrom bay
w/ patio dCC'k, sltling nn & room for . trailer andfor & beach. $160 + util. \Vinter
boat, beautiful yards, close l'ental to July 1. 675-25.39
frplc in nlastcr BR suite, to schools, $7,000 down.I°"====='======
Fam rn1 has sunken conver. 61, o;o loan. 831Hi081, 11882
sation pit & fil!lc. $162,000. \V isteria }~.v. Corona del Mar 2250
Linda Isle Development
Bill Grundy 675-3210 Santa Ana Hgts. 1630 CUTE l Bclr separate house.
Yrly. Adlts. No Pel& $150
L'.do Isle 3 I '1,., ACRE. 2 Br., frplace,1 =m='=· Ca=="=·="='-='""=·===cl ;;.;.:;:__:oo;.. _____ l_c..5 heated pool, nn for Jiorses.1-
107 VIA EBOLI SJJ.500. ~vlll'r. 545-69-IS. Huntington Be1ch 2400
4000 SO. FT.
4 BR. 31~ BA, 3 car garage.
Crpts, drps, unusual featur.
es. Bu.ill 1967. Owner C. R.
Gangi. 213 I 24~·3101; eves
213 I 246-0700. Open,
Huntington Beach 1400
L1gun1 Beach 1705 VERY AttradiYe 2 BR. con-
BEAUTIFUL <lin1 .• comp!. furn'd. in Hun.
HOME Hngton Bay Townhouses. 1
BEACH child OK. $175. PreL )'I'.
in loYely Laguna condo. com-lease. Rltr. 546-5880
munlty: fronting on magnif·l...,==,.,-.------1
iccnt healed 1K>OI, 100 steps RENTALS
fl'on1 priv. bch .. tennis cts. Houses Unfurnlihlcl
2828 E. COAST HWY. Owner Desperate etc. Comp. attracliv(' furn.
Corona del Mar !\Tust sell . ll'a nsfcl'rftl out or
3 LRG. Bdr, 2\~ Ba. Fam. 673-3770 stale. Take ovrr 5~ '1h G.I.
rm. 2 frplace11, !'"Orick & l t--~~~~----Joan. Neat 4 & ram. rn1. \Y/
include \\'/\v crpt'g, drps .. General 3000
kgsz masl<'r bed; locationh.---·-----'-·I
(lccor. 2 BRs. 2 BAs. scp. Frie Rental Servi~•
Palos Verdes rock. Slate BEAUTIFUL fully ('(!pd. Anthony pool.
hall entry. J-lea\'y shakc rf. EXECUTIVE HOME $191. incl's. 1axr11 & ins.
Co1npl Inced yd. Profess. With a truly spacious ocean \Vide open for olfcr on list·
Landscaped. Sprinklers. Ex· vic\v, Absolutely immacu. j.ng of $34,9,j(l.
Iv .• din. rms; laun. wi!h w/d, for example:
stor., 2-car gar. lower lev· Beautiful 3 bcdrm., 2 bath
el. See to appreciate. Sho\\·n home with heated and fil·
by o~er, call ror app't. tered pool in !\1esa Verde,
499.2152 or 837-0i9l. it has built·ins, fjl"('piace, ec. I-Im on Cul-dc·sac St. 1 late! One of the finest 3 * 642·1771 Anytime* Blk lo Back Bay. $45.000. fklrms .. ram. rm. homes. ~(nt;~~~~~~eatrt\
646-6317. Fonnal dln. rm., 2~ baths. LLEGE REALTY Special! 4 Income units 120
SANTA ANA HEIGi-ITS Luxury Bayfron-1-Beaut. carpeting & drapes. l500AdamsatHartlor,CM. yds. to beach, Patios, decks
$23.000 excel terms. J BR, For $65,COO. Full BAY viC\I' Lanai overlooking Corona "'"""""""""""""""""" "'/ocean view, Nds. paint.
HANDYMAN'S forced air heating. We ha.Ye
more.
bdwd fin, eptd. frplc, patio, front each rooin or 3 Bd. dcl !\lar. Dbl. dct. gar. \\'/ Owner Transferred e lc, Should gross $9,000 yr,
bit-in R&O, Lg cor. lot, ·•-F I t r electric tloor opener. Xlnl Pr. $69.900. Consider ti-a.des. ,. conuum. rp . CTrace, J>OO • Sharp 2 story 3 bdrn1 21~ i\llSSJON REALTY 494-0ill ORAN...:11E COUNTY'S e e • • Boat privileges. GoOO trms, landscaping & fencing. Jr. L 4 BR 2 ba. nr WcstcliU R C GREER R It replaceable at S59,500! Only bath. On comer lot. Carp-J DlSJ'RESS SALE e ARGEST
5hopping $27,900. Cptd, ' • ea Y l k yrs. old. Slop by our off. ets/drapes, all built.ins. For. Oceanvie\V home. Low dO\\'n 2629 HARBOR BLVD,
screened patio, sep. block 335 ·-=S=V=ra=L~id=o~=="'=·9JOO~I il-e at the Jamaica Inn for mal dining rooin, service to assume xlnt Joan. 5 yr. ~ '
house "·orkshop. a\vard STEPS TO OCEAN your inspection of many po=-t"h, family roonl. Assunie old J BR. 1.;.1, ba. home. OPEN EVES TILL 1:30
winning child'• tr<e hou~a Like n!?\V 4 Br. 21~ baths; other homes or call. an"';me 6% GI loan • pi-ice s33.900. R·" ~ t .., 500 R -'" p I J R It ,...u,,.,... 0 ...._., ent or Lease Option e a e e bltns. Street · to -street lot. • 6n-3Zll or 541-6613 au one5 ea Y PLACE REALTY 49.1-9704 Large homf.', ltleaa Verde.
F. Kl-ard Real Esta'le Room for boat,. Only Sl1.SOO. e BILL HAVEN 8-17-12~ Eve. 8•17-8919 ··•-CAYWOOO REALT VJ E\V, 3 BR, 2 BA. all elec., New shag carpet &: paint: MI 2.2222 y REALTOR Buy of the Week bca.111 ceilings. crpts. drps, SZ50 mo.
PAUL•WHITE ORANL~~~~~:TY'S 3 BR 2 bath home, corner 6300 :·~~~\~,NB 2lll E. Coast, Cdl\l 673-3211 3 bdnn 2 ba. hc;\\'d firs .• J•l lg cor lot. $36.C.OO. 01~·ncr 546-9521 or 540-6631
CARNAHAN lot 130x180 • add 5 more · lOlS 8· l't1aln, S.A, ~l-6613 month old 22x36' hrared & -';'='"'=7="======~' ~ •&ALTY co. 2629 HARBOR 81'..VD. units. Dri .. ·e by 15<15 Santa BEST BUY· VACANT 180• Ocean-Bay View -filtered pool, $171 per month ;.
546-8640 Ana Ave. then call $33.000 • POOL Never Before Listed pays all.
JOO:: Baker. C.M. 5-16-5-1·10 OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 llittnia 1".-a(ftt Bluffs, $42. mo. assn Ice 3 Lrg 4 Bdr, :.!~l Ba, fam rm The Real Estate Mart I :iiii:·ii-::::-~~~···~~~-i !"':~"""""""'!':"':"':"""I '&\"' :::. :;.>-604~23 East BluU Dr. landscapecl-Lang AILA incl. --·-~~84~7-·~85~3~1____ 4 lxlnn, tam. ~..__ One . of. a -kind Newport Heights ----'"=2-6560~·:.:.C---swiln pool, Ilalio, auto gar. $ If you can afford $200 a rm, dining nn, den & pool.
"{-Pretentious 4000 sq. It. hon1c ROOM FOR BOAT $28,500 CHEAPEST IN ILUFFS opener, sprinklrrs. Draprs 24,950 month rent, then you can Avail now! $450/mo. Agt
Quiet street. 3 block.• lo
beach, 3 bdrms, open beam-
er) ceilings. Vacant -"·eU
priced at $2£,000. •
Barrett Realty
16C6 \Vestclrtf Dr., NB
I_~] J K. Nl(H0l5 Mission Viejo 1708
ELDORADO HOME! BAYCREST
641-5100
Divorce Forces Sale
Lovely view homt" • Back
Bay area. 4 lg. bl'drooms,
lam & din. rms. Vacant. Im.
med. poss. See it • ~fake
)'OUr otrcr • Buy a bargain.
SCl·SllO
c ... cilltrnl u.trt1 OUEGE REALTY -l51:11Adlms 1tli*,al
or goll course faiJway. Lu.'<. "·t , Bd & 1 $31 .$0 • 4 BR caq>cts. Nc\v Kllchenald P.1usr SELL 3 large BR l~.i afford this Alandra 3 Br, 642-5200 Lue -nn gues room. S B·,rm + Family rm · '-,,..,.--,-,=~=---urioUs air-cond. game rm.. WQ • Chvner c1es""ra1e. n1ust sell-Custo1n desk-sew Cl'nter-ba, dining room. Adult oc· fam rm on view lor. J\;love 1·119'. ·1 BR. Bit"'· w/>v Jorge family roon1 &. modern 2 bat"· d r -•-· · "" " :u fl . \\'Cl bar and all •ha! "'" en or •o:w..'<•ng. eas.v 1crn1s. 6#-&188. bcd-bkcascs. June occup. cupicd only. Low down to in by Christn1as. $27.900. As. •-s. 2 •-lcs. Ch.old-a •' '--'' kitchen. Obi. garage on aJ. El lri ,., "· d.p.. ......., ... P ... !!Ort of thing • plus a vie\\• ec c 1 c.,.,,n. new i,,. •• BY •~~r. , BR. 3 Ba. f•m Open Mouse 1·5 Sun. or by present financing. Quick pos. sume 6%. ':,~ FHA loan. pets O.K. Avail 12115 ••-. Icy. Ai1iple room for boat & washer. Elf.'gant firl'p!aCt'. ., appt 2815 Harbor vit'1'' Dr BRASHEAR REALTY -Uiat \\'<In'! quit. Corne see it! camper. Roo r ~-t S'"l""" rm, din rm, cus bit. End of · · * * ~ * 534-6980 m or .......... . -nr ·~"· 1 • .,., :-ioo Owner 644·2740 "'·•1 •~1 "l ,~. ~·r17S LA PAZ HOME' ':-==-=-...,--~--~ !46·5180 TARBELL 2955 Harbor ~2~~:~,•.c. 363 Vista Ba.ya .,.,..CA .. MEO SH.ORES .,... ..,,,.,. ...., -,.,... "'""" • 'LARGE 2 story 3 or 4 BR.s
(nArcinemathetflt) .,.. -vJ"t BY Ch\'TK'r - Assume 51A (\Vhat a Packag('I l3x21' nimpll$ room. bit-ins,
LLEGE REALTY \VANT To buy duplex or FORECLOSURE · J BR 21h $64,500 Loan. 3 Br. drn, lrg. faJT,, Give your family this beaut. nev.•ly decorated. ;270/mo.
l5IXI AdM'ls1IHartlof,CM. ~mall house in E-Cl\I area. BA. To\i•nhou~: frplc. Pooi. BEST B~Y !n this ex._crusive rm .. lrplact'. 2 hn. Islond spacious 3 Br, fam rm with 557-7648 54().1151
Principals only. 67;:,....cJ617 or N·-•s ,,,.,1. $21,500. af('a. \\ctlplanned. ., BR., ki tchen, bit.ins, 2 pan1rys. b ilr · ba "· 1~ -• 6'12-U163 ''''" u ·In r, ""a"" ....,...., $165. 3 Br, 2 Ba. Bltns, gar. 1860 Newport Blvd .. Cl\l . Liaison C.o. 646-0732 d('n, 3 baths; high. corner Boat gall'. Covered pulios. Yours for $38.900. Assume Children welcome. BI u c
CALL 646-3928 E\.'Cs. 6-l4-03t5 BY O"'ncr -lrg assun1able ----------. -vle\v lot: very p1·1va te & EZ care landscaping. Close 6-k FHA loan. Call Nel Beacon 64.>-0lll !~'!'!~~~""~~~,.I GI loan 3 Br. 2'~ ba, din LOVELY 4 Br. custom built, quiet. lo all schools. shoppng. bch. Sh k . . v· . ru
Lachenmyer
Realtor
Mesa Del Mar
l,laycn'!st area tgc backyd u es at J\;11ssion ICJO ty. "'"" 2 Br r ~ d
$25,. FHA rm, lan1 r m, \Valk to schls, · • i\lr.s. !lopper. Ai:;t. fiil--6.ilO $33,450. 962~. 837"500 01""""" ~~· · e • .._.,.. Y for QUIET STREET s bdrm&. 3 baths. dini ng 2001Leev.·ard.548--0773 1;;,:;;,:======!..=:==:;:,o;:=:====,,_:_::~·::;·~_::0!:,'!-~-:::!·:._ __ children. Gar ll
I " ba ~ r l" room.\Valkingdis1ancelrom bch, piinc. only. $33,500,1==========-1 • ava no,v, 3 BR, .,. . ,., t. iv. nn, 96S-ll09 Blue Beacon 6'15--0111 ~ o-s bltn~ Lg• to• Kl11d('1-gart~n - -College. • bt 1 1 t 1 I Newport H1l•ht1 1•10 ;;..':'·oo~:' ~orage~ 521.200." S38,500. ·~~:~ eo:V be~,~~ ~~ HORSES OR UNITS -• "' ~ sdi7s. 3 BRir ,',enced yd. wlw.
CORBIN-MARTIN Wells·McCardle, Rltrs. llnl'd atreel. This hOme Is: a ~ ae~ J Br, 2 ea, pool, as· SANTA fi~f Ir\ STAR. G AZEK:IC ~~ Br:,·~ &: pet O.K.
REALTORS 1810 Ne\l'port Blvd .• C.~t. real value. Lo1v do"'n pay. sume 6%~;. 0....'ner 531·7636. Al lfS Br CLAY JL POI.LAN 1 l.~;;c--;c=,-,~o-,..-,,.,--....1
6'5-1662 557.959j f~\'C', S.ffl·77'l9 6·1•1·0684 eves. men! -roon1 for boat or ~ HA~. :1 ~ Y0411' Ooflr .Acfrtily Guide Ji.. SltT.L 1~•.rl°"' $325. Lease S BR, 3 BA, liv
.• 3036 E . Coe.st Hwy., Cdl\I l """"""'!!'!!'~~~""""~l trailer. No credit qualillca-Costa Mesi 1100 His Arrived Early -~A,A.u T d .Acco,drngta rheStor1., oci-.1t~lW ~1S4~r~,elecklt.2GOOM1 'BAYCRESJ SPECIAL $26 950 >kma . I;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I , . ..,_.., o <Volop '""rogo '" Fndoy, S-><'1·<0 • ,.,95•1 •-,.3 I' Nr\\•pon llrights 2 ~'Clroom -C> S.16-71 reodwordsconespond1ng torl\rnbcrs 1.72.a.t.S.S
• 5 Bedrm +Pool .,_ • or ~ 1 FANTASTIC VALUE hotnc .Prlct'd atgrowidval· of)«ll"Zodiocbirrhsign, -
3 batiul, full dining room. l.at'l'e 3 lxhm 2 ba th fully uc alone. Zoning v.•ill permit ~ ~ ~~ ~· !~ ~:-'
Cost1 Meu ..3100
(;bdnn + JOm\al dining +
pool "'°"""' <On<lllloo. Coll .. .,,,.,.
DAVIDSON RHlty
~ EYH. 544-1811
, ROOM TO SPARE
·Callt. oontemponl)' w/S blg
bdmu, • l!aJ ... n. °"""" de! Mar 5dlool dilt. You
own the land.
Sfl.500
Hal P inchin & Assoc.
3!!00 E. 0..1 JI-cf', 6TM392
$20,0{IO.
G.I. Tenns
Spaelotts home wllh cu•lom
Rich \\'QOd pane-Jing • h:tnd· c&.Tpeled, draped, CQ\lf'rt'd 4 unira • To sclUe rstale, 3 A 33 A "-1 1n1u .. r
somt" bl'l'akrnst bat. R('al patio & deluxe intel'('Om "·ith Quick sale w lur. • Tajl l• Pet~1tff'« ,,. G:-.oad
r1unity living In an area or uw da\l•n.paymcnt 3511um;: $18.000 ~ ~;;6'1 ~ ~: ~ ~:.:"
nl05t conV('fllcntt. ;,.1a..li~'O. LIDO SANOS 6,._~ !Mn paynble nn/mo, 646-7171 1 ~ l, Good "' w ... ~
TARBELL 2955 Har bor 5 BEDROOMS r • c:o-oni-31 v..... ts !.f~1..ti "'°"· ,, ~ pays A I incl llUCA & W. ' F.-.....y , 39 u i... 69 ......i , •
A P • 1 GI" :? lllilhs. Ll\rge ya.n\. Full prk.'<' $13,:IOO, Joan })al. 10 c-<10 '"'"""";.,... 10 v etc. n ~l r1va e 1mp11 $-950 11 o.,...·, <1 1 '"'"-',... 11 ~,,,_, •>•·-•I Into !his exciting world 01 ... .,., a ncc SI~,iCO. To stt lhis 11 Plll-.ct ... , c;...,,,,_ 72 P..i•"'1 1)7..,-
Georg• Wllll1m son ~l\utltul ''l\lue tall SJO.tl5l • ll L"°"' •l """" 13 r..o.r, · th;:i nlO!ll cxclusiv,. residt-ttf. 14 ~...ff .... ~or 74 ... u la )ol'Ction on IM Back Bay H.EALTOR /l('ri lllitC Real Estal(' topen 15 Off A!>$<~ 7) Dny
I n... .........._ .._._, 673-4350 673-1564 Eves. ~vcsl A LITTLE 16 Mot"" ~ Mtr1 ,,, rOI' n ....,,Tr "'"''"5• 3 ..,,-,,,.... PRIVATE KINGOOM 17 T.. •7 Cwld 7' l""""' new niodf:ls. 4 bdnns, 3~1 $24 950 11 L1¥ft1 •8 ~ 18 ,.._......., bath~. Sporkll"" .........i. Roy • ..,.. LARGEST \\'ft.lied Pftllo, 3 Br.+ dln. + 19 o.. ..a Shell ,. Ct-lf'bforlf'D r..>""""~4 ··• ~ 4 8 d + F ii R PROPERTY IN f m"·· + ~-ft -" pur '° Co·•oAm ~ liwt.• 80 tJ111e J . Wn~ 1430 Cal..\xy Dr. I rm am Y m . a -v WJ'<.U • '™ • 11 o.,,, '' C:O.thillv 11 M&•
* CO'ITAGE 1 Bdr. Sto\i?,
ttfrig. Utll pd. $140. No
Pets. 545-629}, 557.-8400.
HOUSE In court. Crp1s, df'P'I,
carport 97'6-B \Vest 17th SL
Costa i\fesa
3 BR A dtn, l~~ ba. apls,
~ frlil, blt·W. clean. No. C:M: $215 mo. ~7153.
616-1.SJO Plcasl'3' hon1e "''Ith modem MESA DEL MAR. po1e room. $4!1,000 22 ~ 52 "°"'°mnu wt l:«IM'f
$23 000 built In kJtch<'n. Covertd By Ow11t.r '4 BR. 2 BA. dbl Walker Rlty. 675·5200 ~~ ~ ~ &-~ ¢::,""'. _
, p:1tlo. 01\"0l'r hrlps ~·ilh tin-scar. ftncloSoed main p.·ulo + 1'66 Vin Lido, NU ~n ~'\Jn. :n ~or ~~Or 115 It~~ 4 BEOR."\t', 2 ba, 111.rdn lnC".
OCEAN VIEW ancing. ~10-17'.'.'Cl. 2 npcu pn.tlos. Uni11ue ten· PRIME AREA VIRGO ~~ ~ ~ f: r, ~ ~~!i>~:!l $2$ mo. l st & las! mo. -
Mnodel Mor 3105
carpctlnJ: I dntPf'I. FlrP-.Attrar.ti\•c home ~·llh m~ny
pla(<e. Th:llaht.lu..I paUa. -I hllndy Y.'ork Jcaturei. l.a.rioo
)n. new. Sm!ne 1111rrwnd· valuable lot, lJnob$lt-ucted
Ina· \•few nil the y.·a.y 10 Lal'T\lnB.
TARBELL 2955 H a rbor tninet'. ~hrubs, h't'('S. ~1nny SEE this 3 BR. 2 Ba. Family. ~~ ~uG 11 <'8 IU ~s ""'4 '' ""•Q•dlrot $100 dep. Vac. 15 Dec. Ml "''000 ~"'"'767 "\ ,· 2'0f ~tfool ~Ma<. St Cl . 54"0"74 3 MR. 2 BA, rarn1ly l'OO!n, extras! .,.,.., · '"'""' a-ro-.:i roon1, trril, ho1nc In top nrt:11. ~ sHr. 11, JO "" 60 o...t.i1 ~ 11 • iur. """"'
prof decor. l 't yr old-xlnt 3 on lvJuse on \Vil.son $23.!'m. Asking S:U,~). 10.21.'79.38 \£) ® () ]11' 4 BR. 2 Ba. Crpt &. OT;p;~.
eond. i;i2,soo. 71~2 >1ttl Owner .• By appointn1rnt. Graham Rl ty. &46-2414 4f-6lU89 '' Good -Ad«nc Ntuiul sm: One ye11.r lease. Call
Ltl l'IC. 11 0.. Owner 646--431! r,.is-.203!J/G·l!H7CO Nr11r Nf"l\.J)!Jrt Pos1 Oflh•r '-------------------------....,.---l-',.._0:·:...::8580:::.;.."""';;...:·;_ __ _ !ao.4GIG~!!!, _ _!:TA~R~B~E~L~L l»-6060 TARBELL
I 1
...... ___ ,,._,,.,._..,..,=,..--..,,-........ ----------------------------------------·--·---··----~·-·--·--· . ~
RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS RENTALS
Hou .. 1 Unfurnlsshed Apta. Unfurnished • ....;.A.::;pt::;•:.:·_F::;u::;m··.:.;;:l•::;h;;;ed;:..._. Orange CoUntr 4600 1 __ A_P_t1._u_n_1u_m_1_shod ____ A~p-11_._..,_·._1_u_m_l_shod __
4:iot1I--------S.nta Ana • 5620$.tnta Ano 5620
SINGLE Adults.. 1 u x u r y 3705 Newport Beech Newport· INch 3200 --TOWNHOU$E
3 Bdrtnf., 2a bllh•. Adults
only. Faces pool. $m Mq,
8AY & BEACH
REAL TY, INC.
901 Do~r Dt., NB SUile 12fi
645-2000 Ev••· 548-6966
FINER RENTALS
Ba.yfront 3 & den. Pier, float.
Immac. $~ month,
Magnif.icent 4 bdrm., 4 bath
view bolnl!. $1,000 mo.
John Macnab 6t2-823S
For rent Of &ale C BR.
11ew, In J..a4:una, $300. n10
or $41.!iOO. 83G-4079
RENTALS
Apts. ~umlshed Ge-·· 4000
Tlr GORGEOUS New
.VAL D'ISERE
SiJ\ile-1 br-2 br--:-Furn.·unl.
Sauna, >.ct'y Rm, Billiards
Therapy &: 45' pool, BBQs
200'.) Panons Rd. 642-8670
HOLIDAY PLAZA
DELUXE, spacious 1 Bdrn1
Fu~ apt $135 plus util.
3 BR, 2 BA, walk to schls & HettM poot, ample parking
shop'g Cl!nter. PooL Avail · No children -no _pets.
Jan 1. "Thi! Blulis" $325. 1965 POmona, C.i\I.
WINTER RENTAL. 'Til
June; -The Bluffll. 3 Br,
den, crpts; drpa, frpl, 2
pe.tios, pools. 615-4491 or
6'4--0449
No p!!ls. 614--0350
3 BR horn!!, Bal Pt. yrly
$300. 3 BR apt, New. Sh. yr-
ly ;235. Frank ltlarshall
Rily 675-4600
S125. 1 Br spacious 4-plex
w/gar. Adults. Blue Beacon
645-0lll
$125. l BR. W/\V, drps. Baby
OK. • Bkr 534-6980
COCO PAlMS & SANDAl WOOD APTS.
?o{tWJ>Ort Stach i;arden o.plll, wltull recrea.
-GRANO OPENING Uon fecUltiea l complete
IMMEDIATE privacy. South Bay Club
OCCUPANCY Apta, 271 So. Brookhurst. Del111e 1 story Gard• A~fl
Luxury gaiden apartmenls Anaheim 1114) m4500 For Oi1tinctive Tenants in futtin At11
offering complete. privacy, -Finest in Or1n9• County
btau1iful landscaping &:~ Gi1rden Grove 4610 I, 2 & l BEDROOMS ADULTS ONLY paralleled recreational tacll e POOL e PATIO -
ilia: in a country club at· • SOUNDPROOF e AIR CONDITIONED mospherc. Now leasing in SINGLE Adu.Its . L u x u r y . Newport Beach. garden apts with country • FIREPLACES • BUil T -INS
Furnished or unfurnished club at.rnosphere and com· • CARPETS • DRAPES
Modets open 10 all\ to 8 pm ~~p~I:,)(. ~U~ .BAY Ne.tr 17th & Tustin Closa to 1hopprng
Rents &om SlS5 to $310. Ave., Garden Grove~~~ 2101 Pondaros• 547.1320 Mgr. Apt. 2-l OAKWOOD "'"'1!00 1.-. .~ ,., --. -.•.
GARDEN L1gun1 8Hch 4705 Co1ta Me11 5100 I APARTMENTS -c., ••• del Mor 5250
17~ 16th Street CHARf\.UNG Partly furn NEWLY dC(:Or. 4 BR, 2 BA. ---------
714: 6"2-8170 sculde st~dio bungalow, buill-lns, dshwhr, e1·pts, LARGE 2 BR, crpts drps
1 BR Jmrnac.·pali~lose to _garden selling. ~~~ $170 drp.c;, patio, i.:::.1 gar, pool~ bltns. Ocean V1c1v. Adult c~i bch 1 ,.,;,..,.1 inc gar, all ut1l1t lcs, NOPETS:-Call8.'*1-4976-l""OnlY, 00 pets m;:· 303
• -<e e man or marT Tele-clear Re.f.s 4M-2775 ' ' cpl. No chUd./pel.JI. $140 mo · · • 1iVO 2 BR apts, l lov.·er floor Femleaf. 673-5675
yrly-util pd. 9. 12 a.m, only, RENTALS • , & l splil level. Crpts, drps, NE\V, So. or Hwy. 2 Bdrms.,
642-3656 Apt1. Unfurrushtd bltns. No pets. 2S85 l\tcndoza beamed ecit., v.'ith deck &
IVATERFRONT Dr. 545-5-121 fireplace $230 ~fo. w/boa l G I 5000 dock. Lovely 2 BR. patio •n•rl LARGE 1 BR. Carpets, drps, Don V. Franklin Rltr 673-2222
Yl'ly lse. 6n-9060 orl;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;I stovt". refrig. Sll5. Adulls, CUTE 2 BR. aiil. Newly
* * r' .
-
*
Wheddya Wint? Wh1ddya Got?
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Sped1I Rite
S Line s -5 times -5 bucks
•ULES -.-o MUST INCLUDE
2 *
'-W"-' -NI~• to ITtl!lt. a.-W!I_. 'j'OIJ w•nl 111 ,, ...
'-YOUR pl!Ont '"°'"' tadrf:!,t. •...S n~. of '°"'''"'I"" ~01'HING fOlt &Ale -T'AOE$ ONL•I
PHONE 642,5678
To-P-l.1ce Your T rader's P.1raclise Ad
Stamp Collection: 1o~ In I!
cond. l\'lounted. '61 catalog
valu ol'r $800(). Trd 113
catalog for :nob·J hrn. or ru;
down on Orange Co. hn1.
4!17-1416.
Beautiful 41' Norwe1gan
Sailing Yarllilt. Lovi ngly car.
cd lor & C"quippcd. $16,00'.I
equity !or ho1nc, income,
TD'r., ca1·s or??. &l.J-.'1265
CHOICE Of 3 lovely 3 Bdrm
homes nr. ocean. $25(4275
yrly. Csywood R 1 ty.
548-1290 Costa MMa
697-5918 VEN DOME no pl'ts. 642-8579 decor. Cpts .. drps, stove. >---------4lOO LLA~R~C,CE,,'-l~B~R~.-.-,-..,,-.,-1.1 l BR. upper a pl. Single $150 Ptlo. Broker 67~2101 l Rcre improved vie1v lot.
DAILY •tLOT :J/l .·l
REAL ESTATI ~
General """'
Acre.1ge ·--6200-·1
===ll ' PRE-PAID ,
INTEREST . ·$
A small principal p-.ymenl {
will hand!~. alone with pre-:
paid lntere&t....!J.111 30 acre :
parrel. Prleed Ill $240,0XI. •
A~<iume 6\i~V flnanc:lng A '
carry with crops. Well JC). ~
catcd In Riverside with good
pot<!nllal. J-~or mon! tnforma. :
1!011, plC'11SC cull K. \V. small :
Eckhoff & Assoc., Inf;.
1818 W. Olllpma.n Ave,
Orange, Calif.
5-11·2621. Eves-\\·knda 538..M7J.
CABIN on 5 acres. lo lo down ~
& cai;y monthly paymen:>1 all
!01• ohly $3500. Breck-Noti
Rralty &12-00-l-t
10 ACRES -PRll>lE. Near
large lake. $25 a mo.
Call ITI4) SS.'-4143.
La:• 'ilsinore 6202
J ADJOINING hill'11 ld• I
lakeview lot.I'!, near c~lno
$3,000. 536-24t9
Upstairs. SUndeck, $140 yt· IMMACULATE .6Pl'S! adult. Stove & retrig. No B Ibo Tustin area. Equity $15,500.
Newport Heights 3210 $35.00 Wk. Up ly. Students ok. 673-&188 ADULT & F~.._ ..... ...,. JM!ls. &t;,...{1876. a • 5300 Trade for T.O.'s or?? J ACRF.:S 40 mil~ north ol
nw.a.J. * 548 !)3!17 * Reno near Honey Lake at • BR 2 BA DR d _ e Studio• I Be Ap'-. BACHELOR apt, 1 blck fl'Om SECTIONS AVAJLABLE 2 BEDROOi\1 duplex. prlva1e . f 1 Is· , -l l
Laguna Beach, 3 BR. & den
home, ocean l'ie1v. Ex·
1·1ta.nge for lot or duplex.
i\lr. Conrad Riviera Realty
4!'6-2800 49-1·1330 El'es.
.. en -, ""' "' c ba BACH Ba San Oen1ent 4 Commercial 00 0 1enas. '"""ve • c ear, ' ' • · ·• ' • e Kitchen ... TV 1·ncl. OL'ean, pool, garage. $130. Close to shoppl-, Park arage & ck yard. $1~ Yfl , sofabcd. patio 2 lovely townhouses Nell·'-·~ 000 "" ... 9 lrplc cpts drps 2000 sq ft "" 2 Ced B ·-. *&16-5386 d / ·1 Jo!s: Across !iii. troin bank. l=·=·'·=·=-=~====~I ~,-'mo. Q···l·l ,·,.""IA~" : • Phone Service & Pool JO Rl', N .. fl.1S-ll31 * SPf.Cfous 3 Br's, 2 Ba .. y ' w IV crpt, uh pcl S12:i. port Beach. 2 BR, 2 BA Albe . M --
-· " .. .,...,.. 'fW Prof "" 1 673 "765 · n.~ to rtson s arki!t. . • Maid service incl. $150 1 BR furn apt. Crpts. * 2 Bedroonlll NEAT 2 beclroon1s. Carpets, .,..rson on 'I +'(] • eaeh, $500 mo income. $9000 $t25,000. i;·01. Shop ping: Ctr f{. E. W1nted 6240 '
Corona del Mar 3250 • Doy, week & r.tonlh drps, bltns. Pool. ·~"~ * Swim Pool, Put/green drapes. bulll-1ns. Quiel. $130 equity. TRADE for hornl', -H I boa ., SA",..,.,,, or Apts Orange Co. 673-1883 2376 Newport BJvd. 54S-9T';>j Placentia. * F'rpl, Indivllndry fac'ls mo. 962-3SB6 unt ngton B••ch 5400 car, · t, • • Agent 'fU"V•..:0
SHbRECLl1'~F; large 3 Br. $25. Per Wk. & Up LID.."URIOUS single apts., co1:s Anaheim Ave. MODER.t'l 2 BR. Cpts, drps. 2 BDRMS .. 2 BATH 32 x ll x: 5 • Sailboat hull. 1967 32' Duis Crart, twin
family. Avail Feb. 15. $450 from $35. \\'kly. Just off .\ ,_fESA 612·2824 reltig, stove. Lari;c sunny lcleal i;·erro C<'n1cnt Forni. E'llg, fully equipped, \'<'!")' If )'OU have a 3 or 4 bedroom
SHOWPLACE: 3 Br. 2~i ba. Bachelor &. 1 BR, htd pool, beach -Laguna. 494-9436 e RENT • roon1s. Infant 01{. &t&-8226 T!'ade for machinery, tools, rlea11. \Vill trade equity for home for sale or for ~!. •
NOTICE
l ~ 15 -maid 8el'Vic.'C. Kitchens & h &14 1134 d Avai · V\<C. th. $32:> TV avail. 450 Victoria (Nr $100. NICELY turn is he d $115 PER n1o. 2 Bft. 1 small $150/?.fo. llEATED POOL ctr. omc 01· car. · · ' ays, ca!l us today. We rep1-ese111 •.
Mrs. Hopper, Agt. 67J.-6510 Harbor). trailer. Near ocean. 3 Roams Furniture chlld OK. No pcls. BH·ins, fncd, CJll/Urps, Kids oi..: Call 6-\2.S96l Anytin1r 6·12-47~1 allcr 6. the cniployccs ol a 111.fl:t!
E.XTRA Lge. 2 Br. house. 1% ====~~-~~ 642-1265 $19
0
95 & UP crpts. drps. 538-9462. Aft 5 DELA\VARI:: STUDIO Apts. Lovely home & swim pool /\KC Dolx>rman Pups, Avail. firn1 n1oving to the 1-larbor '
Ba., lgc. !iv. rm., formal FURNISHED b·lr, ad u 11 FURN 1 B D lx 11 · biles VERY nice 2 BR w/w cpl 2620 Dcla\1•are, H.B. & family st)-·le cafc {help able for lmdc of lools. !urn. Area and lhey mlL~t have
din nn fpl Priv 30 x 30' park, pool, wtr & gas pd. • r. P . "" :r:onth-To-hfonth Rentals d . . . $ ""' 6~2-2221 anytime 536-1816 runJ. Nex t to goU rourst'. itU1'('. ere. Good home. housing! ~ll cash if desired . . , . ' $100. MI 6-6255, LI S.8724, Kl lo ocean. $135 mo. yrly. \VIDE SELECTION rps: patio, garage. 1"""· 1,,-~~-'===--.:::= Call Farrow 541).864() encl. patio. S27S mo. yrly 9-0l40 aft G. Call • MIJ-2152 NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. call &1~3198 2 BR newly decorated. Near Valley Center. Trade Primr consid~Uon. Call
Scenic Properties 6(;>5726 =~====~-~ _ HFRC Fumitw'e Rentals 2 Br, ll,ii Ba. crpts, drps. Refrlg & bit-ins, cpts/drps, for acreage. Owner 64·1-17'Jl 6-t2.S961 BUSINESS and
3 BR. 2 ba. hon1e with $:1~ ~~~i~IVEgard~nix:f~'. Coron• del Mir 4250 517 w. 19th, CM S4S.J481 garage. Children ok. $150.' oc-ean vleiv, S 1 55 f Pc r ·53 t.'fiC'\ Jag. 4 dr. F.P. Lo llAVB clC!a r No1·th Laguna 1_F_"_lA_,,.._C_IA_L ___ _
outstanding view o( bay & 766 \V \Vilson Ms..ti731 month. Adults preferred. rni. AU!O·air·llC\V rad. tires, J BR. & den, l~l + ~; ba,
0ttan. ing, adults, no pets ]800 LRG atlrac 1 BR-nice Joe. $135. 2 BR, gar, po.tio, w/w, ' · · Tradewinds l{eal1y 8,17-S.ill brks. Al\-t-FM, stereo. Trade \VANT bcat~h income Bus. Opportunitiel 6300
F'boD Take oul in Balboa.
fine loc. gross $6SM !!Slab .•
4 1~ yrs,. includes V.W. van.
t.Iakl'ti lotsa loot and $7,500.
\\•ill get you in.
Don V. Franklin, lUtr Wallace Ave., C.2\-1. Nu J>:'lint & crptg. $Ul0. 2530 ~Avail. 12115• Bkr, Newport Be.1ch 5200 1 BR M(!{!allion Condo. Bit· 51200 cq. for late P.U., auto. &42-27fi2
673-2:?22 FURNISHED 1 Br. apt. $120. Seaview Ave. Wkdys aft -ins refrig "'"" d &12-157~ Call anytime. Bm'··, ==-7'-~C:,.--;;-:-:-I 5·30 67l-2823 • • •u, ryr.,_________ = CUTE 1 Bdr. Hse. Furn studio apt $110. 2135 · • $125" t BR, pool . Stove & EASTBLUFF Patio, pool. Quic-t $130. E-~idc 3 br hin & 2 rear t.huil trade my 2 cabin
w/frplace. Nice Yard. Gar. Elden, C.P.1. See 1\-lgr apt 6. 1 BR incl util, priv patio. re!ng. w/w, drps. ChildlN e \V 2 bdrm. :! ba. Cpts., 6Ja-5034. ripts SZ9.950 val. or 2 'hms cruisers. Both in niint rond.
Optional. $155, 835-5466 or AVAIL now, 2 BR furn apts.. locked gar. Close in. 501}~ O.K. Bkr. 534-.6980 drps .• · bltns. Chicrlooking ~N~c~w"'Q°'u~1=E1=.~,-B~R-.-,-,-0<e-an. Yi'/ 5 rear apts. n10 inc $788, 2.r &. 30'. Finc/Insu1-ance
637-3052. adult living. htd pool. 1-ec Larkspur. 838-7447 back bay. Xlnt loc. nr. shop. $12J pri deck or patio. $59.500 val. Trd Slli\f t'q for available. Trade for Car or
LOVELY, small 3 BR, room, good Joe. 646-SIWI Costa Me1.1 5100 cntr., churclll's, schools. etc. Singles & cpls only. 202 l<lth. S.Ca.J hm . o .... ·nr/bkr 646-3TJO Real Estate. Call Vena
beamed ceiling, brick patio, 1 &: 2 BR. 'furn & unfurn. 2020 Balboa . 4300 816 Ami gos \Vay. /\pl. D. 536-1319, 673-1784 8 acres comm. in Atasca· 64:r14.\2
No!ion and trimming ·shop ;
bui;y Harbor Blvd. Fine to
keep your wife outa trouble
and making money. F'UU ,
price $9,950. with terma.
pref adults or 1 child. $295. Fullerton St., C.M. r.tgr on CLEAN Bachelor Apts. MERRIMAC WOODS $250 pei· mo. yearly. NICE 2 & 3 bch"S. Crptcd & dero for Riverside prop, Ta. **********
6':>-4442 premises. All util l.ocl $85 up ,lust completed, 1 or 2 BR, 2 ", 675-&050 o drpcd. No,1•\y decor. 3 blks hoc lot for Big Bear 101. 24 unit Motel •·tith manager,
2 BR. ·2 BA. Electric Kit-315 E. Balboa BJvd . ., BA wiUt air cond, coin-• ... . irom bch. J bdr iv/dbl at-Tuslin hse for Rlvcrsidc Long Beach, equily S76,IXXI.
chen. Gar. Vw of Ocean &. Newport Beach 4200 BALBOA 673-9945 pletely soundproofed, sell UUM MllWWll CL,& tachcd gar & frplace. 536-1711 area home. 962-0027. 838-328 1 Trarle for home or ? ?! ! TV.'o fine beauty shops, 3 and
Bay. Adlls, no pets. S300 SINGLE Adults Lu xury -cleaning ovens, wood ccil-1 BR, 4 blks lo J:x>nch. HAV}o;: 50 aC:1'f!s F/C Ore· ::oc:B""'7'"""'.;;-;*.,,.:'"J:;.C:;C.725='c---l 6 :;talions in dO\l'll town
Lie yrly. Call -673-1953. garden apJs with country Huntington Be1ch 4400 lngs, dishwashers, 1 u s h Collcg<' :>tudents ok. SIOO. gou...._Jand. WANT: Units, 200 ac fine fishing & hunting Co!iila. r.1esa. Get t n I 0
2 BR, suntleck, niee patio, club almosphere anrl coni. BACl-IELOR & 1 BR~. landscaping wilh :streams & SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm 1110. 1st & last reqd. 002-Hllil hnu~r ! ? in 01·angt:i Couu. +-color mo~ !lln1 4· mail. business for .only $3.000.
gardener. $210 m on t b ly, plete privacy. SOUTH BA y $140 up. Adults, no pets . .,.,;a~c~alls, elevator~, BBQ1 '•' 2 bath. Nr. i hopping. 2 Br. 1 Ba. C1·pts, Drps. ty a1X'a. Nanl·y J. Moor, ini; Jisl or na n1cs for Hunt· tcrn1s to suit. '=7;.<J~'~",,...,,.,...~-,~.,...,,.1 CLUB APTS. Irvine at 16!11, 17301 Kectson Ln. 812-7&18 cu_ USC, saun~. ]acuzz $240 per mo. Bit-ins Nr. Bch. Sl3:i 1no. Rllr, 642-7000 ing cluh. Trarlc: 4 1vhl dr. THE REAL .Es TATE R S --N .,_ s1v1111 pools. pl'1v. gar. iv/ Call ,,., An11:0 • l'C'hi"I"''' ? -." ''·8671 &rtfi..1171 A.SK ,~R VAN 2 BR, ] ~2 BA dpb:. Pri heh. ewport oc:ach. ('\'est of Bea.ch nr Slater). rtorago E .. , ... .+~;..... _.....,.,., T1•adc up . hOUSt' with back .. < ., """' 'v
(714) "'"' n"'-" ., · • • .., .. ...,.,. n e IY. Mariner Squue Apts. "· · '353 View, (rplc. Adults, oo pets. ~ 2 BR & bachelor apts. Starting at $140. AdulL~ 2 & 3 BD1t.r.1s. 2 BA. pvt. .,.1.y vH:>1v at -Irvine \Vhat do you have to trade? High P rofit Potenti•I
$225 mo. 646-22W 2 BORi\1 back dplx. Nr Heated pool. Ulil paid. please. Just Easf or 2600 1244 Irvine Ave., N .B, patio, hes1ed pool, washer Ave., for vacant or 4 lo 100 List It here -in Orange Fitlllchise Opportunity with
$250 mo. 2 BR. frplc:, bltns. ocean. Sl50 yrly. nu cpts, Viet:!roy Apls, ]014 Geoll;ia Harbor m vd, next to Nabers,.,,,..,..,..,....,,..,..~ hook up . 962-8994 units. Agent 6Th-6252 or ~unty's la~es~ad b"Bd· Goodway, a 40 year old na.
Newly decorated. Walle to patio. Avail Jan 1 s t , St. Apt A. H.B. ~2914. Cadillac at 425 Menimac13 BR 2 BA REAL ESTATE 673.()823 aft 6 pm. post -ea deal lional printing company.
beach & 10 .... 'n. 6Th-7488 673-9027. 12811.i~th St l213J NE\V QUIET 1 BR, nr ocean. Way 54!KiSOO • • near ocean, Gen•r•I ..1. ·* * * * Proven coneept ·experience
===--=-_,,..-,.,,,,.I 248-1921 • frplc, dishwhr. cpts, drps. jii;;;;;i;IN.;.;;d"-59;;Q l ~"!!'!"!'"!'!i~~!!!!!!i!!!!!!'!!;j~!!J!!'!!~!!!!!!!!!*; not neressary. You· may DUPLEX. 2200 sq. ft. 4 BR, ==-------$14:i pri deck or patio. NEW APTS $235. mo. yrly, no pets. R I W d 5990 work in Center or be an ab-2~~ BA, bllns. frplc. Gar. FURN. oceanfront apt. 11•/1v Singles or epls only. 202 548--0897 wkdays. __ •n_t_•_• __ •_n_t_• ___ REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE senlce investor. Prime Jcr
~' mo/I'"' .... n 7, • ..,. ca1.,....ting, beaut. decora!t'd. 14th. 536-1319; 673-1784 ..,,...., ""· ,,...,... ,.. ··~ I J BR, den, 4 bR. \l.'af{'r(ront Gtner.11 Gener.11 cation no1v available in this
2 BR, So of hwy. Frplc. ad.ulll hlc:ple0• "" 67~ts2221· S250 STONEHENGE APTS. 2 BR. $375. 3 Br. 2 ba. $275 &: $250. •• Emmi· , , ·• area at $29,T';JO, financing
d bl Be n1 n y, y,•ner ia-or 2 BA. ~~ F1on'da. nc crpts, rps, lns. am ~ $150 & $175 Balboa Bay Prop. 673-7420 available, Reply to: Robert
clngs. $;z50. 673-6904 547-1641 Beach & Adams ~2730. SMALL 2 BR yearly. $l30. RE~J~~ ~~~~~S Income Property 6000 Office Rent.11 6070 Loew, Regional Director, 67Q ~
3 BR, fam. rm. din. S450 mo Huntington Be.1ch 4400 Huntington 8e1ch 4400 UTILITIES PAID Close to !'>hops & beach. r:t:_ -~» w. u111, et••• ll'n• ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;:;;:;;:;;::;;-1 ---------~u.~:.e~~~r~7:,","',· ~ f.
3 BR. 3 Ba luxu1y apt. $325 1 & 2 Bdl'lll, 2 swim pools. 642-61 88 aft 5. -1.-~ 4o45-0111 PRIME CORNER '"lU-1
University Realty 673-6.'ilO Adulls onl.y. no pets, Furn 4 BR 2,. BA 0 . h h ·1..--~1ri.11•1oi1 111ri1~•1•., IN SMOG FREE 213 · J83.1391. '
Huntington Be•ch 3400
LEASE $275 per mo. 2 story
3 BR, 2~3 BA, Shorccrest
tl'aCI, H.B. Call 548-4905 aft
6 or wknds.
4 LARGE BR, 2 BA, frplc.
new cpll$ & drps, dbl gar.
fencd back yd. $?50. 962-8994
NEW 4 Br $250, trailer space
&: ut'il. included.
53S-f,lil7
FOR· lease immac 4 BR, 2
BA. $195 mo.
*968--7448*
Fount•ln V.11ley 3410
3 BR. 1%, BA. Jge bonus rm.
Child's playhouse in rear.
Side yanl for boat or ? Well
landscaped. Close to school.
968-TIOO alt 5.
3 BDR. 2 BA, crptsc & dtl>S.
bit-ins. Lease • $320 mo. +
deposit. Ca.II m-5948.
3705
il d ·~ "'2 3m , )'2 • is w r. -·~·~-~-~:::=·=·~-~'~":':~:"::1$ Office or store in Lido s:hop-THE NEW esi. .. , •• .,.. · Studio a.pt. 1 blk froru --p v ping area (surplus space of COlN laundries-Frigidaire.
HUNTINGTON CAPRI APARTMENTS ~ ~."','0000 ps.:_:,.~~ beach. S300 yrly. 671.245.'l RENTALS WANTED auma alley Lido Realtyl. From S6,500 to S42 .so·o •.. .,,....,, '""' ..... " LIDO REALT Anaheim, Costa ,_fesa,
HARBOR GREENS 3 BR, 2 BA apt. Vie1v of *HOMES Good inwstmcnt. Unusual Y INC. Buena Park, Ful lerton, FOR SINGLE ADULTS • • • ocean. 1 blk fron1 beach. * DUPLEXES fan1ily s ! YI e restaurant. 3377 Via Lido 67~7300 G11rdcn Grove, Huntington
WHERE LIVING Is FUN I $.100 nio yrly. 6'1·1--0266. *GUEST 1;0USES bcaulifn l patio. Next 10 9 MODERN 3 room suite, Beach, Santa Ana, Tustin, ,
• • • • BACIIBLOR unturn 1 r om 2 BR 2 BA Duplex. Crpts, * AP/\RT?.lENTS hole golf course, al!IO lovely cpts., air cond, janitor ser. La l\lirada.
CUSTOM 1, 2 & 3 BEDROOM APTS. $ll0. Also avail 1 • 2 & 3 drps, bl1ns. Nr oc<!a n. $185 FREE SERVICE honie for owner. Ba.rns for vice. ample parking. Call Charlie
Bdrm. Ilcatcd pools. chlld n10. 548-8100. GOLDEN WEST RENTALS horses. All on S beautiful So. Calif. ls! Nat. Bk BJdg.
Furnished Models Ope._ Daily 11 em-6 pm. care ttntcr, adj to shopping.1 ~7.P~E:~---~~-5.10-6600 IandscaJ)C<I aC!X'S. 230 E. 17th Su-cct
No pets. DU L X, upper, \Valerfronl. BE SANTA to Teacher'!! GROWTH AREA Cosla l>fcsa &12-1485
FROM $14(1 2700 Peterson \Vay gar. 2 BR. 1v/1v cpls, drps,
FURNISHED & UNFU
• RNISHED Costa l\Tesa 54&-03?0 bltns. Adults. Sl!IO. 67~927 family or 4; dcsparately BY OWNER 644-1721 200 -1000 SQ. l-l. Newport
need house, under $200. Beach Civic Ctr. area.
(.t\s low as $85. Furn. if Shared by 2 Friends) GRAND OPENING 2. BR. unfurn ap!.$150. Patio J\.1us! he clean. two aUergic '"""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'" Secretarial services. 3345 THE VICTORIAN ~pool. Crpl.s, drps & bltns. children. 838-8496. URGENTLY need 2-6 units; Newport Blvd., N. B.
BOAT Ya.rd & ,_tarine Sales.
Take over operating boat rl!•
pair. hard\.\•are sal<!s &: boat
AAles. BusineSll in Newport
Beach. No invesunl!nt ~
quired. \Vrite Daily. Pilot .•
Box 1\-1 434
SOUNDPROOFED PRIVACY FOR New, large2 BR, l~a BA. $150 l;i2S Placcnua. >--.~L~A~N~D-L-O~R~D-S-.-beach area. Have buycts! 675-1601. NE\V 1'~ree stand;ng drlv• ln
RELAXING OR ENTERTAINING ANO Adult!lonJy.Crpts-drps-bltns. E t Bl ff 5242 FREE RENTAL SERVICE 1="='=·=27:52;An:=Y='='""'=·=B=k='·= 1736 ANAHEIM. C.l\-1. Ol· restaurant, hi traftlc loea.-
SHOPPING WITHIN ''• BLOCK. PLUS Sound pmofcd, pri gar ..... 1,_1_1 __ •______ B-ke< "" -·2 ~. 1; 1 •u ~ fices -2 wOohby • ground lfon, good business. Owner
FUN & GAMES TO MATCH ANY MOOD. storage. Fenced yd w/patio. e NEW DELUXE e \\'ANTED Garage to rcnl for Business Rental floor, $1 25. Sc:hworer, 673·2654 must sacrilice $3.500 dn. \V~ter pd. Gard;.ncr. main-3 Br, :? B~ opt. tor least storage. Coi\ta l\fcsa or ··-THE REAL ESTATERS
Enjoy I fast iet of Tennis,• game of Volley-tained. 66 • Victona St. Incl. spac. mash·. ~u:!e din Ncwpt Bch. 6T. ... 1841 Rooni 5. -&16-TITI Ask for Van.
ball or Bllli.1rds. S h • p e up in one of the 6364 I20 rn1, & dbl. i;:uragc, ~Ul!l. ATTRACTIVE shop. l200 Sq. Commercl1I 6085 EUROPEAN DelTca!essen,
Gymn.1siums or relax In • Saun• ~ the door opener avail. Pool & • Fret! RC!nbl Srrvlcc • It. Ideal for decorators, 1---------
F • Villa A t rec. area. NI'. CaUK1lic Brokers I 1\-lgrs. I OwneN> a1·chitects, antique!! or arlll repossc55cd salr. Must .&ell J .1cuui or in the sun •round the Poal. airway I p s a.u~h. Properties \Vest 67~1642 & crarts. Adequate parking. COAST l-1.ighway, So uth all o·r part. Rea!!'. 11214 '
"' Localed 2 blks. from Lido Lagur111. 5000 sq rt comm. Beach Blvd. H.B. 847·2151 ' Your Soci•I Director will arr.1nge p.1rtie1 in , . • ONLY S24J • BURNED· OUT family des-bldg 5 units (Q'HV'i Near Orange Co A1rnn t & 1 _, ' 1 3 Isle. Owner/a.gen!. 5T:H741 . .....,..,.., gross. DISTRIBUTORSHIP n-.... 1! th• fabulous Cf pri Room & those fun t rips • ...,r 865 AmigO!l \\'ay N.B. JM?ratey n,_.._,_, ~ arge or SS2,500 price. Cont act "''""15
M h V 1 UCI. Adults only. 20122 . BR house, C~t $150 mo. SOUTI-1 LAGUNA -top loc. Flo-n-'lcCu-. PETE Co. background dt!llirabll!. to •mmot , eg1s or Santa Ana Ave. "'"2196 NE\V 2700 sq fl J B. R &: fam •··'" ,,.,A._ 1 2 '" '"" " "'" Aul ·1 clean•-,,,·1 o" •L """' ....,.,..,,,.,., Coast I wy. at nd Streel. BARRETT REALTY "2.~-vvi o 01 "b • .....,,., rm, 3 BA. Owner s lux apt -"" ""'"" •<:UVI ,_ .. " oly
6060
SEE THE HUNTINGTON CAPRI AT 752 Amionc w""· 575-5033. Office or slort!. 800 sq It. ·.,.......,., requin:u. qppui 0 • ' LARGE, newly redec. 1-Br. ADULTS .,-~ "'I Rooms for Rent 5995 $160/mo. Pete BaTTCtl RJty LEASED Stores For Sale. 837-7310 •
duplex. Ocean view. Adults, 6200 Eding•r Ave., Huntington Beich 2 BR 1 BA Fire la bit 642-S200 Eve!!. 645--2123 lSth St. Nr. Bethel Towers. I -BA-.,R-BE-R~S-H-O~P~FO=B~S-A-l~E 1 ·
L1gun1 Baich
. ' . ' . P C'C, • Corona del Mir 5250 ROOM wl!h bath, private en-54~1768 or 646-74 14, Age nt.
no pets. $175 mo. yearly. 1 ~.Mil" Wftt •f leoell ll•d. & ,_ S-DI.,-ins, private patio. No pr.lsliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii J trance. Close to beach. $70 STORE. \V. 19th c .r..f., Nr. Bargain. 847·9163 PLACE REALTY 494-9704 $140 mo, 681.{! Plumer. Harbor. Hot spof. $135 utll. FrMwiry, Jnf I• •f Sprl•td• St. =..a """-1 mo. 675--0771 6320 lndustrl•I Rent1I 6090 Money to Loan LGE. 5 BR. 3 ha. To ~ ~=~=====~ incl. 642--0ai7
lb! famil R t -2 Bd J>' Ba B ~; ROOi\1 \VITII KITCHEN, :;""';c::.,:;;:;,,.,,.---.,,-,= respons e y. en or PHONE (714) 846·0619 nu n ll·ins, lJtiJ. ~ '" BATI{ -PRJVATE ENTR $TORE or Offi~ • Bayfront
lease. ity rm, gar. patio. new crpts "~• CALL _ a-ig..272Q • Balb!la Jsland. Will dC<.'Clratc NEW BUILDING 2nd TD loan M«<;;·~F~ogm~•~Y·~B~u:;;,,. ='::;i4o-3!<2~~!,!l!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~I N?\V drps, l mi. DCC No 1o suit. Lo Rent. 673-4300 ~ pets. $160. mo. + $.10 dep. • ON TEN ACRES PRIVATE 1wn1 -kitchen 1260 Logan Ave., Costa MeM 'Prompt, confidential !!.t!:rvl<:e
Gener.11 4000 0.neral 4000Gener•I 4000 968-Tl72 1 & 2 BR. Furn & Untum privll. Nr 21st & Santa Ana. STORE or OUi~. Newport & Each unit 1725 sq ft, 2 off· 642-2171 54S-0611 1 ..;;;;.:.;;;.:.O'-______ .;;.;;::;:.;..:.;. ____ _;.;o.:.:;..:;.:_..;;;;.:. ____ _..;::;::;:,.1;=-.;;,:..,=;;-:c-.,--.,~I ~-1 I • / $11 k 54•1~1 Bay Center. 2(1j2 Ncwpo<I · 2 l 110/~ r VALUE Adult coupleonl 2 ru-...paces pnv. patios \I'. ,,....,.,., Bh'\J. &~1252 • ices, res rooms, .wu SorvlngHarborarea·2t1yra:I'
S@ll~lA-""B~Ss
, The Punle with th~ Bui/f.fn Chuckle
fl PllNI N\JM8'Rf0 tEnfRS 11 ' I> r I' I' I' I IN THE SE SQUARES I I I I I I-
SCRAM·lETS ANSWER IN CLASSIFICATION 7600
,
-
BR ~ pets Drps, Yis Pool.t. Tennls. Contnt'I Bldst. $l5 WK & up w/ kitchen. ele<:lrie. Ample parking-. Sattler Mortgage Co.
dishwhr htd. pool q~et' 900 Sea Lane, CdM 64f.2611 $35. wk studio apl. 23i6 LEASE-30 x 60 C-2 bldg. C. Robert Nattresa Realtor 336 E. 17th Street
$1J5. 2295 Pacific A~c. · lMacArthu.r nr. Col.It Hwy) Newport BJvd. 548-975.5. Paved lot. Good tor office or Costa Mesa &12-1485 l=====··====~I
548-6878 or 642-4429 3 NEA.R ta lg l -ertylhing. 548--2039/64&-4160 \VANTED: 500 to IOCKI sq ft Re.11 estate Lo•nl 6340
BRAND New 1 & 2 BR. Br. 2 ha. nc, 7-f.~ ci.;. b~iu. Motels. ~~~ ROOM Suirable for gilt shop. electronic m!g. Vic San CALL ilARO~--uv men·s i;hop ar ladles shop. Diego Frwy. 213: 477-8620, UTI
W/W C:pls, all bltm Incl. Ins. deck. $195 to $"60 mo, SANDY 'S TRAILER. COURT Cail Jim Berkshire. 67}9-105 :2;1=3';"="-=97,,_t-•I ===== F'or Finanelrir self cleaning oven. Pal.los, NE\V l Br. 3 bn., cpl.!!, drpa, Spaces avall now. Max 26'. If 675-2866 *
i;:ara.ges.,. Adults. 66.2108. elec. bullt·ins, dishwasher; Call 646--9681 c)ffic'; Rentel 6070 Lots 6100A '"'N"N"'O"'u=N"'C"E°"M"E"N°"T"S,...~.1 • 371 \\'. \\ilaon. fireplace, patio. 0w=E=E=KL=-'Y,.;-"rn-1o-,~Sc-a-· ~t.a<-·-k 1----------:;;;::;;..... ____ ....;:.:.:;;; ind NOTICES
2 BR. oew paint. cpts, drpll. Don v . Franklin, Re11lltl1' idolcl, 2301 Neo,1'PQt't Blvd., LAGUNA BEACH llAVE S43,cm ln ~·l fee -------,--:
Stow, relrlg, Fenced yd. 3250 E. Coast Hwy. 673-2"122 Costa Mesa A ir COndltioned view lot, 112' x Th, Locat~ Found tF .... Aclt) 6400 ·
Gar. Xlnt Joe. No pets $135. COROWDO A.P':'S. 2 Br. ="'""'=======I ON FOREST AVENUE 2118 Leeward Ln., Dover
642--5531 Lo~"Cr lewis, studio..'I, pent-Guest Homft 5998 Desk space available In Shore!! ftrca. \Viii sell lo
PVT. llvlng, new 1pac. 3 Br houSt', Frpla., pool, dbl. newest office bulldlnit al down , !rd tor gel trust dec<I.
apt honic. Walk'ln cln$1!t.S. carpor~s. pa_tios. $180. $2211. PR1VATE room & balh for prltne location 1n do\vntown or n1ako ca•h otter. II. C.
f1i>I. eharn1ing patio, nr f\.\·y 673·3378 ambulatory pel"'S(ln. LtM!ly Lagttn.\ Beach. Air condl· Erickson, 547-4019. i;Vcs.
$250. ~016. NICE large 2 BR upper. home, nice 51ITT"OUndings, tJoned. carpe!cd. bca.utilUI 00~R='>-01!"="'~-~=~-
2 BR, 1 ~; BA. crpts. drps, etpts, drps, ·rnfrlg, range good flutrltimu; meals. Costa enln&nces: Frontaga on DOUBLE lot with Old S{lftn. blt·in~. patio & ganigc. gar. New 11c<:or. Adults. i\fe!!a. S.IS-475.1 Forc1t Aw .. rear leads to st)'I<! house, 3 Br, 1 Ba. /\dull~. nn petJ. $155 per Le&SE!, $110, 613-27j,'j Mlic. Rentelo 5_ Atunclpa._1 parking lots. $S0 l=Sl='=·ooo=·,.,eau==~==6;7==;; J540 El S4$-Z197 777 par month for i;J)3Ce. Desk -· mo. · m. · · 2 BR., So. of J-lwy. )"rly. and c:h!l.trs ftvallable for $5. Acreage 6200
2 BR. fn!ab p:i.int, new Ulil's lifrt,.d. $195 l\fo. STORAGE J..ot: Truc ks, Business hours an~C!rlng I ;.;o.;.;:;::"----....:=
drnpca. crpts, blms, patio. 1 R•lcrencu required. trallen:, cempcn, bo31t or service a\<&1111.ble far $10. 40 Al!Tff. So. Calif. $25,
child ok, oo pets. $125. Mr. f'Ol'ne)'. Bkr. 5-1G-3862 !. NB-C~t. Cell Lon All utilities pald CX((Jpl DOWN, $25. PER ~fONTI-1,
645--0562. 783 Shalimar Dr. LARGE New 2 BR, 2 BA 646-2486 tolcphone. $2.4~. FULL PRICE. L..
!..ARCE 2 BR, crpts, drps, plus den. Crp!s, dri-:, bltn&. SJ'ORACI:: gllnlgt', $-IS. per DA.rLY PILOT Shcwf(!\t, 3Ji W, Third St.,
cnrport & pool. KJds ok. View. m.o:l67, ~ or . month. 3bc25x:10' h igh , 2'l2 FOREST AVENUE L.A. Phonr: (213)623-5101
2'l14 Collci(!, Apt No. 2. 8314:171. Sch~t fm.-.26.'>I LACUNA BEACH 18 Acres m11.1ure xln1 pro-
BUCK & white mil~
Spaniel or B.ird tlog. Vic.
Von's Sboppin' Ce nter,
ft.f.a.gnolla &: filbt:rt. F.V.
8~7~
cxx:: i\talc: black w/aman
"'ht. iNirk on che5t 4 arN.0
nick in lclt car. WAClf eoJZ.X •
w/5Uvcr atads, C.M. Itta, 1
MM308 l
\VEIMARANER D< '°""' ..
ptJPfl)' Ylc Goldenrod I: QI 1
Hwy., Cdril on unt Call ' ..,,_.,.,,
StAME.tt·. cat fDund QIN
Hu flea collar.
613-1862 • 646-1{)9!1 UNF. Durilex. 2 Bl'lr. TI!E SU!'l NEVER SETS an ---~19<::..:_·9466:.:;:....~~-J ducins:; •YO<."adO!I + (l!rus.
$95, 2 BR, aar. t1u11Able for J.~rplace, ran1tc & l"C!lrig. DAILY Pllm WANT ADS! Nf:\VPORT OFFICES View 11ltt11, sewer & 1111 utU, ROX,CE UNlON boys blp:
coop.le or cJdcriy pcnion. A;llts. $175 fROo 6Z> Acadla, r~or DA.111 PUot W&nt Ada 1.41 &: sml. lx!liit bldg., Cou,t \VIII divide. P. O. Box 413, vie. No. llunlln;ton Btadl.
lli80Tustin ~T237 CdM. Ola.I &U-S6i8 llwy, $S0-$1'7! 138-l-425 ~F..:al:clbn>ok.:;.:.c;;_.;.C•_ll.;.l._9_2028-'--'-"""337--1------..
•
' -... ... , ..... . . . ' .... .
M DAIL v PILOT
ANOONCEMENTS
1nd NOTICES
Thi.nda1, Dtetmbtr 4, 196tf
ANNOUNC~MENTS
•nd NOTICES
Announcements 6" 1 O Announ cements 6410
Maitre De' Din ner House
719 \V. 19th St., Costa T\lesa tnear Stater Bros.)
• 642·2 I 07
\Veekend Italian Dinner Special !
Dec. 5th, 61h 5 to S::m P.M.
HIS HERS
LASAGNE ............ -. . $2.45
RAVIOLI ., .. __ .... _ .... ,,_ .. _ .... $2 .25
SPAGHETTI ... . .. .. . $1.75
I<
11
II
When You
Want it done
right •••
Call one of
the experts
listed below!!
NOTll'!I OF ,UlliC A 111 IM.
llFOlll THI CITY COUlitCIL. 01' THI CITY OF POUlfTAIH VAL.Ln
NOTICE IS HEllEIY GIVEN 111.t 911
ni.td1y, OK«nber I .. 1 .... 11 l :IMI •M.
In lllt COun.c:lt Cll•U\Qillr" Cltt H1ll. lnot
Slfll•r AYen.i., F0<,1nt1h1 V • 11 t t,
Ct lllomi., lllt City COllncll 'lrllfl hOlcl 1
rwbllc hf,trln1 IHI 1111 1011aw1111 :
I , ,..,. ti 1-CMllH 1k. 11' -,.,.
J>llullOll 111110.IM by '" ,IMnll'lt Corn·
inlulaol rtJOllll'l9 11r-rf'r loc.t ltcl ~
ol Ttlbert Aw-. IDO -Of' 1Ht ftet
1111 of MtDl'IOllt Slrffl, ffOffl 1111·1 to
ll»C1·10,000,
}, :t-ClllllSt Ht. 111 -ANllCtllon
submltltd by $1\ltlOI D•vtlt»IMftt C-
1>1nv for di•"" of 1-on 11rw.rtY
IOc:tled on !tie 10Ulhww11 c~ of
Edl1111tf' t nd 8roold'•ur1t tram l.1·1t0 Slntlt F1,.,11y A.uldaonct •f'ICI l"ltlll'll'd
D1vek>c>m1nt Comblnln, O 11 tr I ( t ~etul1tlon1 lo Cl lklll · 8 u1lilef1 D!alrl(f,
AL.SO FEATUfilNG
The Finest Choice Steak.~ l°t: Lobster SERVICE DIRECTORY
REMEMBER LI II Tues thru Thurs 5 -8:30 PM 8 b 111.
SERVICE DIRECTORY
3. AIM"'-t It Tit .. ti, tf MlllllclNI Cofe -Amefldtn""I lo Tltlt 21 ot Four>-SE RVJCE DIRECTORY ltlfl V1llt1 M\mlclNI COOi', 11 1melldtd, _____ _;,_;,.;.,;""-,:_ l•mcr>dlnt 11r011l1lofl1 rrl !he 111:1 Slntls
P h F1mlty llt11lcl&ncf Dl1trlct 1r>d PD Pllr>-aper angfng nH D1vtlof>me11t Comblnlnv Ol1trlcl
P • ti 6850 Reeu!1!1(1111. ' $3.SO • Y• mg 6550 Gardening 661D
Family of four people . . . . . LICENSED a&bysiuer, my GAllDENING & landscaping.
1~ yni exp.Cl ea n-up,
~prinklers inst'd & repaired.
G73-llli6
o_•~•nc;.;,n~g,._ ____ ::::: Ti..11 m•tt~rs 1r1 btlnt Proot..-1
PUnUtfll ~ Ille P11flrll ... LIWI of 1119 S!tlt
l:.}{-PAlNTER, now sch I "' C1Hf0tnl1 CGov'T. Cod• '5.000 ,, Mtl·I toaoh•r •ill · t & '""' the F(lljnllln V111eY z on l", v. pam eves Ordl1Mt1t.t. Tl'le l1111lnt Ordl1111na, zor.i,..
Soup and Salad, Spaghetti & Garlic Roll home ?>lon·1''r 1. Pre: * TUESDAY * All the Chicken you can eat =i~· OC CoUrgl' area.
4 -5 P!\I 49c. Adults over 21 only. \Veekr.nds. Xlnt \VOrkmllll-::•Pl. •nd El<hlbHI .... Oii 11111 '" ..,.
'h'. F"-• ( 6,0 ••fg ltnnlno 0fl)firlmenl Ind 1 " t 1vi lltbll _ _ _ ..-. .-. ..-. .-.-_ .-..-. __ -BABYSITI'ING, 1~ar Nrw AL'S Garoenlng & Lawn
-~~ Heller Purk. Lg. lncU. yd., ?>laintenanl'i?. Commercial,
p. ,.... es . ~......., Or for 11ubUc l111111C!l(lll •rid •••ml...-tlon. 5--IQ..(l(J62. Tllost d•slrlflt lo ltstlfr '"' t1vor or In
Found (Free-Ads) 6400 Personals 6405 Bal. lunch. Xlnt. care.' industrial & residential.
_.:,:::.,:.:::o_ ______ I 01>POlitol11 to ...,.,, 11r-.1s will bt 1lv1n
INT /EX1' Av•r. EX t 1u1 -lunltv to do Ml. If tvrltltr ,,..
645-ZT.'l'I * 6-16-3629 * · • • · • torm.111on 11 deslrfl!, vou mtv conttct t11t Sl27.j{) labor only. 8 yr. P11nnlnv Dts>trtmcnt 1t u2.2a4 1 n 0 guar. ""inling avaa Also refer to '"-1bove 111m1. fElilALE. Tt>n-ier. found
~·rlday Mesa Verde Ave.
Eai>t in Costa 1\1 es a.
:145-6171
DISABLED Vet legally lilin d \VI.LL bab)'sil by Lhc week or JAPAN ES!:: Garde nc r,
urgently rcqucsls personal eves. ).'ou Jurnish trans. l!Xp'd; t."Omp. yard se1vi<..'C. 1-.,. · CITY COUNCIL OF THE Apts & Comm'!. 548·1546 ~ CITY OF FOUNT.I.IN VALLEY \•olunt.eC'r aid hlon/\\'cd/Fri Call &12-1•107. 1''ree estimate. 968-2303
& dri\'e 1ny new Ren11ultl;;-mi"'::'c:::;-,,_ __ ~ I -~===~=~=,-1-IOLIDAY SPFClAL, l.nL &. ,,_.rv E. Coll, City CIMI Ext. pain•in,,. Lie • j~· .. --' 0 PubUs"-d Ol'lnte C:0.1t Dtllt' l"llGt. ' ~'b· 00 11'W.IU. Ktmbtr (, IHt, 2141.ff NOV, 2a ~ grayi5h cat wi th
orange i>l ttak on nose.
642-5736 ask for Gretchen
1\ed. ViSit n1e at 2U "A" CHJLD care, any1Lntc, )'"'dl'd-CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST
4lsl SL NB. ho! n1cals, HB area. l\lo,1<\ng, edging, odd jobs.
' •536-1069* Reasonable. Ms-6955 1' ree ests. 1.,occl refs. 30 yrs,l'-liii;ii;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiji-" ('Xper. "Chuck" &:l:>-0809 ·1
Announcements 6410 l\IY JIOl\1E. v I c 1N1 TY
K-l\tART. DA y s OR General ServiCft 6682
FLi'~R~Tk~eT ;;C;;'V;;;Ec;;N,.'IN"G"S"'.o:-=' ,7H='.:,'c-,c--i::. .... perienccd BARTENDERS
\i\'CA Santa Ana BABYSITTING: \Vould hl<c srrving all Orange County.
'
'ELLOIV & wht·•-kltteo, h•• Jill N B d lo l;;k(• care 1 child niy ti39-2'll3
SCH\\'INN Bicycle, adults.
C.Untmental, yellow, comb.
lork ufldl'r seat Poor cone!.
Identify 54S-54!H
SUBURBAN l~ainting!pec F ,.y.,
E)(IJ('rt Guaranteed \York n ft I}
F~ est. No .}Ob too large t A s H or too small. 494-3190 T * PAINTING • Int./Exl. -' 111! e
IC' " ' • roa way home, Costa i\'Jesa. ~18-7·186 -========='""= "ollar \\i!h bell. Balboa Is!e. Dec;; & 6 Noon-9 pn1. -Local refl'rences. lmmcd.
servil.'e. &lft-5242, 646-3657
Painting
67:l--;,:ro.1 Sna1:k bar. Antiques, dolls, B/\l3YSITIINt; =.,o=.~\l~E~RA~N=l~A~N-. ~v=;,-.~1~7=1,.-=&· I je1velry, gifls galore. bar. '.\!y home during the U;iy.
Pomona. ga111s: 6-12-1225
,\IALE COLLIE. tired &
hungry vie. Tustin Ave.
Park. 647-9541
ORANGE Tom Cat
SENS!TfV ITY TRAINING BABY::il'l1'JNG .\ly hornl'.
\\'ORI\: SHOP v;c Brookhu1·st & Adan\s.
A progran1 of interpersonal Sl2 "-'k. !lGS-7156
e.'<en:1scs for sn1 all F.etl-c:H--
.reeled groups. J\tinimal Brick, Masonry, etc.
charge call 6"2-8730. 10 Al\f-6560
Hauling 673.0
)'ARD/Ga1 .c l eanup
I Interior & Exterior Fences· $ l 0 I o ad. Salvagcablcs block y,•aJls. 546-7887 lJ"ec! Remove trees, ivy, 1-===.;:..::.:,:__:.:::c_ __
g1"Bt!e !16"~4~1 EXTERIOR-INTERIOR
llAUl.!NG. Jlave ~.&T P/U & l\IAINTENANCt.:
Any!hing -trash to furn. $S • 646-3185 •
loand + ml;;. 494-1003 PROFESSIONAL Pain I e r
5 Pl\f. MOVING HAULING "·ill trade work for Jumilure
BUILD 0 -od 1 or '!? &12->1558 ==========I , '""'m e , repair l';: Ion van, 1'Cas. 536-6126 s:-.lALL Sianiesc vie of Cemetarv Lots 6418 Brick, block, c-onc r c tc , Cl U d H !-~or Beller Paintin~ Inter-
• • 1 • carpentry, oo i'ob too sn1all. ean P an aul ior & exterior, acoustic cei-
vie Irvine Terr,
673-1332
Tu.sun & J9lh, C.l\I. $10 I d s•s '528 6-16-173.3 FOH. Sale by 0,vncr. 6 Lie. Contr. 962-ro.15 ..=::::::::::":::::"::::·::::":::·-== lings. 646-4077, 541-35()2
Bl.ACK Female kitten found Pacific View cemetery lots. RENTAL READIER Call morning!! 642-1323 Carpentering 659Q Housecleaning 6735 5'!"3924 1n Ne1vpol'I Shores. 642-3541. \;
-128 C.Olton St. f'RIC1'.:D lo sell [a.st! 2 1o1 s. . CARPENTRY BAY & Beach Janitorial PAINTING-ExC-lnt., 18 .}'T!'; ..
fE~1ALE Terrier. gold rol-
or. ,•ic. Costa !'>lcsa Golt
course. 540-3701
Lost 6401
FEN'.ALE Shepherd 4 yrs old
lost vie Wilson &. Placentia,
C.~l. Otild·s pcl., Rew'd,
531)..(1669
LOST: 34 carat diamond
stqne lrom setting prior lo
Su n. Nov 30. 51~2527
LOST 2 cats. l orange ton1,
'1.iU1 collar. llcartbroken.
Pacific"' Vieiv ~I e mo r i a I ~JINOR REPAIRS. No Job &rv. Cpls, \\'indo"•s, floors, Exp. Ins., Lie., J.'ree csl.
Park. 54~71 Too Small. Cabinet In gar-et{'. Res & Comm c' J, At"OUS!. ceiling. 675-4938
FOR SALE -2 lots ages & o I her cabinets. 646-:1401
PACIFIC VIE\V $350. 5'15-8175, U no answer leave C0:\1PLJ::TE J.lousecleanini:
./ 5-1S-1932 ./ msg at 646-237:?. IL 0. \V;i!Jl;, ,v\1alo,vs & floors
JOBS & EMPLOYMEN 1 / -And=',,",,0 "==--::-cc--:-lll9-::o53 ~ CARPENTRY, Cabinc!s t' \VINDO\V.3 DIRTY?
Job Wanted, Men 7000 Remod. No job loo small, J-Tee est. 15 yea.rs exp.
quo.I "'IJl'k. Call 6-1ti-2576 Johnny Dunn 642-~ SECURITY OFF!Cl::R
Beach area, days
6-lS.1537 bc l. 8 & 11 a.m .
Job Wanted,
Women 7020
REPAIR, Parlitlons. Sn1all
Re1nodl!/, 1•lc. Nile or day.
P.cas: Call KE N S.10-4679
JtE:PAJ l{S, ALTEltATIONS
CAeINJ::T. Any si7.e job.
2~1 yr~. cxpcr, 5'18-6713
* APT CLEANING *
F:ts.l .& tho\llugh 642-8164
\VILLIAt\15 Cleaning Serv.
RENTAL READIER
54().3924
Plastering, Repair 6880
•PATOI PLASrERING
All types. t"ree eslimalc
Call~
Plumbing ~ 6890
PLUMBING REPAIR
No job .too small
• 642-3128 •
Roofing 6950
J36...39-11 l\IOVTNG INTO AREA. l:~· ALL T\' Pl:S: rock, v.ood &
_H_o_u_s_•_cl_•_•_n_in_g"---6-7_3_5, 1 asphalt !>lungles. LEAKS IRISH Setter. Female 6 mo. tensi\'e c.'<pcr. i11 \1T1\1ng. Cement, Concrete 6600
Named Bonnie. Re ward !\lotion picture s lory
5-11-4510 Co.~ta ~lt>sa analysis. 1..ookini:: fo1· job in CE,...11'.:NT \\.ORK, no joh 100
LOST • \Vire Ten·icr, vie. P/R or allied fi<'kl. 67;i-16i6 sn1all, reasonable. Fi-cc <'sLim. 11 . S!uflick r.IS.SGlj Brookhun;t & Adams, H.B. Home Care a"ail. 5-16-4:l70
?>!ale. Reward. 962-4217 e Allied Nurses & Aides e PATIOS • DRIVE\VAYS j::========= I Of O.C. Nun:;es Rcgishy Planlcrs • Block Fences
P6rson1ls 6405 2729 \\'. Lini:;an La.nr, S.A. lloon1 additions 642-9852
1----------l ~IATURE \l'On1an, cll'fX'll-* C01'CRl:."Tl'.: }'LOGRS,
l!APPY BIRTHDAY rlablc. Ov.•n trans. \Vill patios, etc. Reasonable, Call
CARPf'.:I'S, \Vindo1vs, llrs,
etc. Res or <.:omc'I. Xlnt
1vork !teas! Rers. ~riS-4111
Ironing 6755
IRONING In my home Sl an
hou r; also alteralions &
babysitting. 545-7641
REPAIRED. \\'ork ;uar.
8-17-1136
Sewing' 6960
CUSTOi\I dressmaking &
alteration~. Neat & careful
\\'Ork. 962-4387
e Dressmaking -Alterations
Special on coat hems
GIARLES L. SHAFrER
\ baby·sit altrrnoons, cvcs,,~::'=::Do.="·:=6'~1~=8.i=-~l"""=;::::j ~J~a~n~,·~~·~··~~---~~7~9~0 VE LOVE YOU \1·eek-cnds. 6'12-7951
PERSONALIZED Christmas T.S.O. Operator, Dictaphone Child Car• 6610
* 646-644(; *
Alter at ion s-642-5845
Neat, accurate, 20 yn:, exp. Sllopping. Discriminat1>-Rea. sonable rates. Call ;)11>--6392. Secretary, Personal Ser. Al· CHil!Sfl\lAS VACATION
tracti\'e & Exp. 546-748.) n1y home $3.50 clay. 3 yr &
SPARKLE Janitorial & \Vin-
dov.· cleaning Serv. \Vin-
dO\\'S, resid., com!, const.
Clrflnu p. Free est. 968-2691
TILE, Ceramic 6974
Personals 6405
PALMISTRY &
CARD READINGS
Bring Your Prob(ems to
Me -I Will Help You
Solve Them.
I give advice on all mallers
of lile. su~h cu;; love. court-
ship, maniage, divorce, bus.
iness transactions of all
kinds, Reunitt> the separ-
at~. cause speedy and hap.
PY marriages, o\'ercome rL
vals. loven:; quarrels, evil
habits, stumbling blocks of
all kinds. There is no heart
so bad or home so dreary
that I cannot bri~ isunshtnc
into it. In fact, no 1nattrr
'vhat may be your hope,
fear or ambitJon,
SEE THE
PALt.IJSTRY READER
I \\ill tell you jusl what you
'vant to know.
Aval!. for parties
\Vith This Card and $3.00
Receive $5.00 Reading
Open Daily 10 Ahl to 10 Pll1
Fully Licensed
Off. (213> 697-92i:?
210 \V. \\'hittier Blvd.,
La Habra
RETIRED .JUDGE 0 R
TRIAL ATI'ORNEY \\'ho
\\"OUld be intl'rcsled in
joinlnc \Vith n1e to initiate
action (without r anco r )
\\'hich would benefit th1·
health, educition &. "'!'\fare
of our fellow men. (And, in-
cidentally, reduct ceneral
taxation) Write Dr. I..f'.
r·arber, 333 Gnuld Canal.
BiJboa Island Calif., or call
rnfl 684-3049.
*Alone?
. YES IT'S YOUR
FAULT ror recorded meMaie lhal wm change )'(>Ur life can
ORANGE CO. 5'47-6667
llOUSE\VORI\ wanted. Costa up. L; yrl, supervised ac-
lllcsa area. S2 per how·. Uvitics. t.!ake rcsv, 11ow,
(i.1~1 j 1"&1"2"-53=96====== TYPING, coallating, e I c. C
done in my homl', pick-up & .:.:•~n~t~ro~c~t=o~rs:_ __ ~6=6=2:.;0
1lrlivcr. Ref. 536-1545 Additions * Rcn1odelini;
Fl'C'd 11. Gc.n.\'ick, Lie.
~ving , Storage
MOVING
6840
Local. lv!C'dium distanc-c,
J?casonable. SJG..6126
* Verne, The Tile i\lan•
Cust. \\'Ork. Install & repairs.
No job_too sn1all. Pl11s1er
11alch. Leaking shower
repair. g.17-1957/SIG--0206.
Tree Service 6980
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 l=='="=-60="~*~"'~~::;":;:"~,, I Paperhanging TREES pruned, t opped , Painting 6850 removed. 26 yrs exper.
A , CJ k Carpet Cleaning 662S Ac ri a lto,v e req:u i p . CCOUntlnCj er ----, ITOP Painting Company now 493-5405, 638-7234
CARPET & 11pholsll'ry steA.m i::11ara.nteC'S Lo"·est Painting ---'-------
AC'C'Ounl~ N!l't!ivab!e •
Billing. One or more
years of cxpericnC(', ;ible
lo operate calculator·&
billing machine and posl
cus1oml'rs lcdi;er c;;i1i:l.s.
cl•••·-• •I-.,~I ,·0 TREES. llcdg°', fqpnnA, cut " "-''• ~ c · ''L -Priee s on Acoustic ceilings 1"'" slallation. Results guar. For & Exterior Painling due to removed, 30 yrs exp. Fully
!-• ''' ••II "'" =11 insured. Bi" John &12-4000 •L • L "".,......, develo pm e nt ol NPw 8
Cadillac Controls
Division of Ex-Cello Co1'p,_
1866 Whittier Ave.
Costa Mesa
646"2491
An t>qunl 011portunity
employer
A-OK shampoo Christn1ns
special S7.JO mt-less for
halls f'l c. Alw co nl p
housecln'g 827-:1182
CAR Pl-.."1' & 1'·nrn. clc;u1in~;
for 1 clay scrvic_'f! & qua.lily
\\'Ork. Call Sti'rlina: for
hrighllicss! &l2-S52l1
RENTAL READIER
:i-10.392,1
Carpet L1ylng &
Repair M26 Accounting Clerk FOR CARPETING
Posilion a,·nilnhlC' lmn1cdiatc. OR CARPET LAYING
ly. Ont> or n1orc :rears ex-C. A. Page G42·2070
pt>r\l'ncr. Allie lo opt>ralr
11cldi11g 1nacblnr. typing & Draperies 6630
heavy filin1::. 3 \\'eeks vacn.
t1on alter 3 years. group in· CUSTOM DRAPERIES
surence, credit union & ullicr Free Installations
b<"neflts.
Apply a! DAILY PILOT
330 \\'est Bay Sr .•
Costa ~!CAA, or 1·nl1
?ilrs. Greenman. 61243!1
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
Any \\'indow treatment. llun·
di'«ls of samples & dcsi,ns.
lllak<' nn aproin11nent ,1·/our
fif"COrntor. Call Stev~ ,lone11
ut Coinplrle Drapery Sen.•.
1cr 64j.22Q6
Electrical 6640
ELEClnlC.\L ll,Cf\ ice &
ri"pa1r. 21 hrs. 7 days. No
job 100 limall. Re-n1odrl &
adcJ!11on~. ti It's clectrlca.J. ,,·c IL'< It! 646-4772
Gardening 6680
rn,•ssurc airless sprny gun. Gl'.:NE'S TREE SERV:
CC'ilings Slil per room. Ex-Trees, shrubbery lrimn1cd,
ll'riors $230. Harris Painting &/or removed. 549-1359
6'12-4j58
* PAINTING, int & ext.
Cn.ck from Vietnam. Back
in busines1<: again. Free
estimates, \Vill ::ubcontract.
64~1089
Upholstery 6990
CZYKOSKI'S Cuslm. Uphol.
European Craftsmanship
l!Xl':, fin! 6-1~-l·l:ll
l :>::ll Nel\'fJOtl Blv, C;\T.
Need
re111odeJing?
See
want ad
--'2'-1L~.;.;;,~:..c.~=;=~""'"'-1 THROUGH A
OSCAH & TONY'~ gl\fd1'n1f'lg
~·r. Tn>r 8: t11'1'h;:c 1rl111·
rnif1S:'., hauling & l'l('a n 11ri
Comr1lt'!e sto nlcn1111; ~"r
t"rce <'!o;l. Also trrc pruning,
·l~3-4:m
classifications:
Spiritual Rc~lnrs, advice
on all m•ttct', 312 N. EJ
C&mlno Real, San Cemente
.C!n-913' 492®6
10 Ml .JO PM
SJNC~ dance every Wl"d.
8:,, to l2. fox trot. 1w1111.
lalln, Meadowlark Cub.
11 .s • .3 ml. W. of Beach. ofJ
\\~aM'W"r, Adm. $2
Al.a)HOUCS AnonymOUI
Ptalt M2-72ll or "'1te to po. ~ tnl O>istn ~1f'Slt.
_ CORffii·.0·s~~L-a-w-.,--,~,,-m-.
DAILY PILOT ~:~!.u:.~;'·;.~r:.~~
WANT AD
642-5678
Uten ~:Hl734 a.fl j Pi\1
JL\f'S Gartlrn1ns; & lawn
mainler.nncf'. P.e11 & com-
merc1nl • MG-4837
TREE SERVICE, Rtn'I )'l'lrd
cll!.'lnup. S PRIN!'OLER
REPAJR.."-. 646--SM.~
6500-6900
in the .
DAILY PILOT
FOR EXPERT HELP
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
llEST
1111\'S!
c;j 13-
6
4
2 -
5
6
7
8
D
A
I
y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A
s
s
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
-
5
6
7
8
No Matter What It Is-
YOU CAN
SELL IT
WITH A
DAILY
PILOT
WANT
AD!
DIAL DIRECT
642-5678
CHARGE IT!
--------.......... ,_ __________________________________________________ --
Thursday, Dtctmbtr 4, 1%9 DAILV PILOf 35
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIFIED
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Jobl--Men. Wom. 7100 I Jobt-Mon. Wom. 7100
J?BS & EMPLOYMINT J ~OBS & EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Joas· & EMPLOYMEN1 Joas & EM PLOYMENT ••
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 ~, Jobs-Me,,, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. ~100 I Joba-Man, Wom. 7100 School•ln1trudlon 7600 .·
INDEX
F9" Fut !tenlce ind Expert Aul1t1nc•
DIAL DIRECT 642·5878
Advt11lalng At1,e11cy
Sherp Secretary f o r
f•1t • paced Newport
Stach Agency. Type
65-70. Sho,th1nd 100, ~.~~~~s-.~~~ .. ~.~·~·~·1• ~Y,fe~TA.~~~:~s !::; orgeni1e & f o 11 ow
.'
.. IN OMI! PllOPEA.TY ·•••••••• 1eoo I h u d 3S COSTA MESA ................. -llU,INESS PROPERTY .OJ4 r u • n e r • Mlt:SA OIL MAii •.......•.•••. l lll llf .. IL!!!JI f>Altll:S olO:t Ph 642 3910 4•• M!" .... ¥EROE ··-·····"· ,.lllf •USINESS llENTAL ........... toll one: • • ~ coLL•oE PAllK .............. 1111 oFF1cE Rt:o1TA1. ....... " N. Newport Blvd. NfiWPOaT Bl!ACH .......... ,.ll'Of INOUSTlllAI. PltOf'EllTY , .... fOll NIW'°llT H•tOHTS .......... 111• COMMl!llCU1\. .......•. .OU 14Semhty BAL&OA COVl!S ............. 1111 INOUSTlllAL RENTAL ........ 6091 NfiWl"Oll:T SHOIES ........... Int LOTS ......... , .............. llM IAYC1tl!ST ········•••·•••·•••·1W ltANCHli:S "'·····-···-···-··UH IA YI HOil ES ................... 1n5 CITll:US Glt0¥fiS ............. flJI OOVlll: SMOllU •.....•••••.... ltt' lCA.2AOI! ..•••••••• ,.,.,fM WISTCl.U'F .... • ......... 11>1 LA•E ELSIHOllE , ............ ,Hi it•••o• HIOHLANOS ••.•••• ,12u ••SOl.T l'ltOPt:ltTY ......... ,es \,INIVlfltSITY PAlllC. •••••••••"lUJ OltANOI' CO. PROPl!llTY ., ... f111 11l¥1NE ...................... lUI our OF STATE PRO!", ....... 11111 IACK BAY ........ _ ........... 1UO ~UHTAIN & Dl"IRT •••·••• '110 ii!"AST&LUFI' ................... 1141 Hl&Dl¥1SION I.ANO . .... f211 El TH• nw tEAL ESTAT I! SEll¥1Cli •... •111 UIVINE TEllltACE ............ U4S t.E. EXCHANGE ............. flll COllONA IDEL MAil ........... 1Uil I. E. WANT~O ............. 11 .. IAL&OA PENINIUL.A ......... 11111 BUSINESS d l t:ACOH IAY ............ _ ••. UH an BAY ISLANDS ................. IHI FIN"''NCIAL LIDO ISLE . . ............... lHI l"I IALBOA ISLAND , ............ 1111 IUE!NE SS Ol"PORTUNITIES. flM HUNTI NGTON IEAC'H .. -.,.HM IUSINE$1 WANTED .....•.. fJOI HUNTINGTON HARBOUll .... ltH IN¥ESTMENT Op,.wf11~lllt1 , •. flll LIHOA ISLE llN IN¥ESTMl!NT WANTED ...... fllJ FOUNTA IN VAi.LET .......... 1411 MONE'I' TO LOAN .............. no SEAL IEACH ................. 14.lf PEA.ON$.AL LOANS ....... , .... t nJ iUHSl!T BEACH ............... 105 ~liWELllY LOA.NS _, ......... f:rJ~ GAJIOEN GROYIO .............. 1411 COi.LATERAL LOANS ...... ,. .• 1)5
LOHCI BEACH ·····•·•-·····•·•!SOI JIEAI. ESTATE 1.0ANS ·········~ AKIWOOO ... ., ............. list MORTGAGES, Trll~I De"5 ••• ~I )RA.NGI. COUNTY ······•••••••I ... MONl'Y WANT£0 . . .. · ,. llll
OUT OF COUNTY ············· UH ANNOUNCEMENTS OUT 01" $TATE ............ -.. 11111 STANTON .................. u11 and NOTICES .Vl.$TMINSTEll. ................ l6l2 FOUNG !Fr .. AdO ••.....•... '4CI MIDWAY CITY ................. ~:~: LOST ..................... , •. oMOI SANTA ANA · ·····•··•··•·""" l'EA.SOHALS ............. , .. oMtJ IAHTA ANA. HGT$ ............. 1Uf ANNOUNCIMfNTS ............ '410 ORANGE ............• ,.,. .•••. llll llJITtO .. , ............ , ....... oMll JUSTIN .......... , ....•...•• ,.1'4I FUHl!llALS ................. MU NORTH TUSTIN .... -......... lMI PAIO OB ITUAltY ......•..••. "411 ANAHEIM .. ·· ·•··••······•·1UO FUNl!A.AI. Dltll!CTOllS ....... "414 SIL¥1!t1A00 CANYON ......... 11SS FLOJlllT5 .................... u LAGUNA HILLS ................ 1709 CARO OF THANKS , ........... '416 LAGUNA IEACH .............. 1101 JN Ml!MOllJAM .......... , ... '411 LACIUNA NIG UEL ······•·•··· 1107 CEMETEJIY LOTS ............. Mii MISSION YIEJO ............ 11DI CEMl!TERY CRYPTS ......... 141' SAN CLEMENTI! ......... 1lll CEMETERY CRYPTS _ ......... U s•N JUAN CAPISTRANO ,,.,.,1120 :;JIEMATOJllES ........... .,1410 CA l'1$TRAN0 ll!ACH ......... Hts "IEMOJl.IAL PAJllCS •..........• 411 OANA 1'01HT ·······•····•· ... ,lllO 1,UCTIONS .. . ............. :If CARLSBAD ····•·······-·•·····lHO AVIATION SEJIVICE .......... 1431 OCEANSIDE ................... 1151 TJIA¥EL . ,, ........ 1411 SAN DIEGO .... , ·········•·•1115 Ali;! Ti;tANSl'OJITATIOH ... , .. 6"1 11.IVEtlSllDE COUNTY ......... llOI AUTO TRANSPORTATION ..... '40 MOUSES TO IE MOVED •..••. ltOI LEGAL NOTI CES .......... 51 CO NOOMINIUM ... . ......... nse GEllMAN & TUTORING ·-.. " OUl'LEXli5 FOR SALE ....... 1'15 SERVICE DIRECTORY APAllTMENTS FOil SALE .... nu
RENTALS ACCOUNTINO ........ IJ(tf ANSWEfllNG SERVICE . , .. , I.wt Houses furnished APPLIANCE RE PA111s, P...-11 1.111
GENEtlAL · .. i(E ·" · ~= :~~~A~~p~111~s··:::::::····::: :t~
RINTALS TO $~~·······--llOO AUTO, S••I ltllS. To••• Eh:, 4.HO ~':;'sTto~~s~JI. ···•··· ,1., IAIYSITTING .......... ,UI ROE 1111 BOAT MAll"TENANCI! ........ USJ MESA YE ...... ;......... IJll(:K, MAIONRY, ere. ....... 1160 ~~~::111.T PIAERA~H· ·::::::::::::~~ ~':,~~NoEJ:s SER"'.'~.~~ .• ::::::::.:::: NEWPOllT HGTS •. , ............ 1210 CATE RING ISll
ASSEMBLERS
EIC!C'tn;mechanical assembly
includlng i;oldcring,
Call Per1anntl Dept.
171 4) 494-9401
TEL ON IC
ENGINEERING
L19una Beach
Equal opportunity t>mployer
ASSEf\JBLY Trainees. day
shift, femall! age 18-28. no
rxp nee., but niust have
i::ood eyeslgh! & finger clt>X·
lerily. Apply in person SAE
Advanced Packaging, 1357
E. Edinger, S,A.
ASSISTANTS &
RECEPTIONIST
Prepared resume must have
,.,.,.o yrs. dental cxpc'rientt.
Eve. hrs. AU union benl!lits,
Salary $3.44 per hr. Call for
appt. for interview. 633-7:i31.
BABYSI1TER. 11te hskps for
2 childm; OC<'ass., some
Sa '. iltay cons·ider live in
lat('r. Cl\T. 6'16-2101 NEWl'OJIT SHOJIES ···•·•·•" 1110 CAllN ETMAKING , .• , .....•• ,.,510 BAYSHORES · ............... J?1I CARPENTER.ING .............. llff -BABVSJ~ER fo' 2 •ho'idmn OOVl!ll SHOlltES ............... 1211 CI MEJIT CN1cr1lt "'°° '' '" ''" ' WESTCl.IFF ............... 111f ' .. ·•··•···· 4 ' • UN1¥ElltSITY PAlllC ••··•····· 2111 CHILO CAllE, Llcel!Vd ........ 1110 & .1. Live-in or out.
lllVIHI: ........................ 2111 ~~=~:;c~~=~NIHG····"····: ::2~ 646-574:> aft 10 Ai\f BACK &AY ................... l l•O CAA.PET LAYING & ltEPAIA. 6111 Banking EAST ltLUFF ...... : ........... 12•1 DA.APEA.IES ... ····-······· .. "11 1E~v?:~ TEJIA.ACE ........... ~~:: OEMOLITION ............ llU , M•R _.., OA.AFTING SERVICE .... -.... Ull * COMMERCIAL
TELLER CORONA OE... • .............. El.ECTlllCAL . .. .. . ........ "'441 BALIOA .................... UH EQ UIPMENT RENTALS ....... U~O ,_-....,.. LIOO ISLE .................. 1n1 FENCIHc; ..................... N60 L AI' rt. Apply in f)("rson 1AY 1suHos ................. 1u• FL0011s .. .... . ....... -.... ..., Newport National BALIOA ISLANO .•...•..•. 2lS5 FUllNACE REPAIRS. Etc. ....... ,. Bank HUNTINGTON I EACH ...••••.. 1•ot FUltNITUA.E 11.l!STORIHCI FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......... fClO & REFINISHING fl7S !:; • & pt · SEAL IEACH ············-·· .14$6 OAJIDENIHG .•....... UIO ~urierior. arC'nhB, N .B. LONG IEACH · ............... lllM Gl!NEllAL SIJIVICES ......... 11n l ii""i0i""i0i""'"'""""~ ORANGE COUNfY ·······•···· llOf GJIAOIHG, DISCING ..... .,, ••. UU SANTA ANA .................. Ull GLASS 11'9 WESTMIN$TEA. •....... -.: ..•. 1,11 G•••N TH.UM······•······•····,,. MIDWAY CITY .............. 2fU .............. . SANTA ANA HEIGHTS ··•"'•• hJO GUN SHOP ................. 1111 COASTAL , , ................ 2100 ~:~tlTNHO CLUIS .............. :;:
LAGUNA l!IEAClt .............. tit$ HOUSECLEAN1i.IG·':····::::::::1135 LAGUNA NIGUEL ........... ,.1107 tNTEJllOJI OECO JIATING '131 MISSION VIEJO ........ -.... VOi INCOME TAX ..... '140 iAN CLEMENTE .....•.... J11t l•OH O-o ,., ''' ......... ,,. SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO , ..... UU ' ••• ,..." ' • •••• ., •• C I' STRANO &EACH 1110 IRONING ······· ........... ,.1155 ' ' •O ., ···-····,,,, INSULATING ........... , ...... '160 OANA I · • ........... INSURANCE ...... ,. ........ 1110 111¥ERSIOE COUNTY ........ 1IOI INVESTIGATt NO, D•l•cllw1 ••. 1110 VACATION RENTALS •..••.... .,... JANITOltlAL f1ff SUMMER ltENTAl.S ••••·•••• :rtlt JEWELRY JIEPAllt;•E!i::·::::::uot CONOOMINIUM ·····•··••••·•··''51 LANDSCAPING ·······•••••••··'111 OUPl.EXES l"Ul.H.. ······•••.,.l'1J '.OCl(SMITH .....•.•...... , •.. 1110 RENTALS M.ASONRY, ••ICI( ............ UlO
H U I I hed MOVING a STORAGE , ........ iMO ouses n urn s PAINTING. P111t•h•n1rn, ...... ruo OENEllAL ,,.,, ............. ,.JOOO PAINTING, Sltnl ............... llU COSTA MESA .................. 31M PATIOS ................. flll MESA OE\. MAit •.. , .......... J10S PHOTOGltAl'HY .. -. "' .,,. MESA ¥EltDE .... -.......... 3111 11'1.ASTEltlNG, P•l(ll, ltlPllr , .... I COLLEG E PARK , •..•..•..•. Jlll PLUMllNG .. ,. ............ lllH NEWPOJIT &l!ACH •..•.•••.... 3100 PET OJIOOM ING at00 NEWPORT HGHTS. , ........... lllf ll'OOL SERVICE ···-•·••··• •. f'20 NEWPOllT SHORES •.......•. Jttl ll'OWEtl SWEEPING ........... 1'15 IA¥5HORES ...........••.... 37.1$ PUMP 1Etl¥1CE .....•. ,. .••• ,.Int OOVElt SHOltES ............... tt11 ROOF ING ... ···••··••····lt$1 WESTCLll"F ................ mo JIADIO, RtNirs, EiC. .....••••. l tlll UH1¥ERSITY l'ARI( ......... ,.1"1 REMODELtNC. & 11.EPAttt 69•0 tlVINE , .......... , ...••.. -.. :HJI REMODELING, KITC HENS .... f'4S IACI( &AY ................... 3210 SCISSOllS SHAJIPEH .......... ltU IAST 11.UFI' ... , ........... ,..31•1 SEWI NG .. ,,. -. ··-·····• .ltlO El ror1 3144 SEWING MACHI NE REPAIRS ltl1 tR¥1NI! Tl!RtlACE ............ nu SEPTIC TANKS. Stw.n., l lC. .. ,tfl CORONA OEI. MAR ........... :nso TAILORING ............ 1'11 IALBOA .......•••••.••• ,,.JlOI TERMITE CONTROL .......••. •tn IAT ISLANDS ............ -... 1J50 TILE, Cirr1ml' ,., .......... , .• flt LIOO ISLE . • ............... 1JJ1 TILi!. Lln•l1um . Mlr~I• ...... ,,IS IALIO,. ISLAND , ............. JJSJ TA.EE SEllVICE .. , NeWPOllT WEST .. , ..••....•.. n1s TELEVISION,.JltP1lrt, lie.···!'" HUNTINGTON 8EACH .••• ,,,l•OO UP HOLSTEJl'I' .,., .......•...•. fttt HUNTINGTON HARIOUJI. _ ... )401 WELOLNt; ........... lttJ FOUNTAIN ¥ALLEY ..•..•.•• ,Jilt WINOOW CLEAN ING 6"1
SEAL 10.clt" ............... :Ms• JOBS & EMPLOYMENT OAROEN Gt10¥1! .............. S411 LONG IEACH .............. lSOO OR.ANGE COUNYY , ............ :ui&t SANTA ANA .................... :Ult WESTMINSTER ........... , .... Jill MIOWAY CIYY .......••..•. .,.Jllf SANTA ANA HEIOHTI ......... 3Ut COAITAL .... , .........•. 11111 LAGUNA. IEACH .............. Jltl LAGUNA NIGUEL ,., .......... 1701
MISSION Vll!JO --······•"• )IOI
JOB WANTED, Mtn · •..••••••••• JtGt JOB WANTED. wom~11 •••••••• 7020
JOB WANTED, MEN I WOMl!N •.• , ... 7031 SCHOOl.5 & INSTRUCTION •••. UOO
J08 PREPARATION ••....•.••. JIOI
THEATRICAL •.•..•. 71111
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE U.H 'CLEMENTE .............. 1n1 FURNITUllE ........... loot CAl'lSTllANO ............... sru OFFICE FUJINITUllE ........ ·~1• CAPISTllANO IEACM .... -... 17>1 OFFICE EQlllPMENT ......... 1011 OANA POINT ................. ,11'1 STOii. EQUIPMENT ••..••.•.. Mlt
BEAUTICIANS
3 NEEDED AT ONCE.
F El\IALE.
\Ve arc !urni.J1~ v.'ay business
1•v1•ryday, Ne«I capable
opr's. to take care of re·
quest custon1ers. Recent
grads \velcomc. Clicntl'le,
not necessary. Call Viola
Lovins. 548-991'!. l>r apply
in person, 267 E. 17th St.,
C.f\f.
BAR!\fAlD. s harp; al·
tractive. Full ti1nc, nWhts.
Nice bar. Good salary, 1vitl
train. Apply in person only
to San1, belWCf!n 11:30 Al\1
& G PM
Scoltles's 436 J::. 17th St.
Costa 1'.1esa ~B-91J.l9
BAR!\-1AlD • exp. P.l\t. shift.
Apply in person. Vegas
Roon1. 686 \\I. 19th, CM
BELL MAN
-:'. .. raton Beach
Inn
I!! no1v accepting appli·
1·at1on.s for the position o(
bell man. P /tl1nc & fl.
time, 11 pm-7 o.m shift.
Apply in pel"50n. 21112
Ocean, Hun l. Bch.
BOAT
.CARPENTERS
coNOOMIN IUM .............. mo CAFE, RESTAURANT ........ 111u E X p E R I E N C E O DUPLEXES UNFUltN, ......... 1'1J IAR t!:OUll'MENt ···-·······IOlJ JUMMl!lt Jll!frtTALS ........ ~."'5 HOUSEHOLO OOOOS .......... 1021
RENTAL) GARAGE SALE .. ·-••••••·.,.,1022 AnpJy
hed "Ui;tNITURE AUCTION ........ ms ,. Apt~ Furnia 1.PPLIANCEs ................. 1101 O'OAY YACHTS
QENl!llAL .................... •* l NTIOUE5 ............. 1111 3090 PULLMAN COSTA MESA .................. 4100 SEWING M•CHIHE . .. ..... 1121 COSTA MESA Ml!SA Vl!JIDI! .............. •111 "IUSICAL INSTRUMENT ...... ltU NEWPORT IEACH ............ 11911 PIANOS & ORGANS ............ llJO l=========--NIWPOA.T HEIG HTS ...•...•••• 110 llAOIO .................. ,.1100 H!WPORT SHOJI.ES , ..•.......• ,,. rELEVISIOH ··-···•············~OS WISTCLIFF ······•··• .•m Hl·FI. STEREO ............ 1111 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 lttllVERUYY PARK ........... 1111 TAPI! JIECOROEIS ..... ml BACI( IA y ... , ....•••..••... 1111 CAMERAS & EQUIPMENT •.. ,l»O, ----------EAST ILUFF •.......... ,.11•2 HOl!llY SUPPLIES .......••• ,.MOi i" COllONA DEL MAii. ........... 11!1 SPOltTING GOOOS .. , •... ,.ISOI 8 0 0 }\KEE P ER , J::x. BALllOA ................... •JIO llNOCULAlll, SCOPES •.• , ..... IJ!I BAY ISLANDS ................. 41'1 MISCELLANEOUS , ........... ,tiff LIDO ISLE . .. .... , ..•... , 13'1 MISC, WAJITEO ............... lilt IAl.IOA. ISUNO . . ........ ,lllJ MA.CHIHEltY, El<. •••..•....• ,llOI HUNT INGTON IEACH ••••..... UOI LUMBER .......... , ............ 1151 FOUNTAIN ¥ALLEY ......... 441t STORAGE ..............•..••.. 1715 Sl!AL BEACH .................. '450 I Ul\IDING MATElllA'.S ...... 11 .. ~ONCI l lACH ............ , .... 1100 IWA S ... lttt :i11AN01: couNTY ............. 1661 PETS< and LIVESTOCK OAJIOEN GROYI .. , ........... 1'11 PETS ,GENEll:AL .............. llOll WESTMINSTER , ............ .,.4'11 CATS •......... ,. ........... ,lftl ~IOWAY CITY .....••......... 411' DOGS ......................... Ull 'ANTA ANA • .......... 41,D HOllSES ................. ,. ,llM •ANTA ANA HEIGHTS ......... 41Jf Ll¥ESTOCK ,,., . ., ............. &Ml TUSTIN ....•.... , ............ 4 .. 1
CALIPORNIA LIVING
NUll SElllEi , , •.••.•.•••• tt1t
SWIMMtPtG POOL~ ........... H01
COAITAI. ,. . ............. •100 LAGUNA BEACH .............. lltl LAOUNA NIGUEi. ............ ''°' MISSION Yll!JO -··•····· .. •IOI P.llTIOS ............. ,.,._,,,, tfU
loWNINCS ....... , •• .,,., •••••mt \IACATIONS .... • ••.•• , •• 1'2111
IAN CL!MENTI: , .......... ,. Ull OANA POINT ..• , .............. •140 TltlPl.IX, ttr. , .............. l'fO tO NOOMINIUM ••• , .•.••...•... •tH
RENTALS TRANSPORTATION
Apts. Unfurnished
llt:NEllAL ····••· . .. !OOI COSTA MIS.I .............. )I•
BOATS a TACHTS •........... HOO IAILIOATS ............ •011 POWEii CRUISERS ............ 9021
MESA ¥EllOI! ·········•·• )111
pcrll!nccd, wanted in ac-
L'Ounring office. :;.10-3943 bet.
3.5 Pl\1.
BOYS 10 • 14
Carrier Routes Ope n
"' Laguna Beach, So. Laguna
DAILY PILOT
6l2-t.121
BOYS NEEDED
1\lu111 bf' reliable, lo del iver
flye~ Sat & Sun in tl.B. SID
pcr thousand. 962·2666
•. BUSBOYS: 1 days, 1
nights. App!y ln lll'rson, 329
E. 171h St., Co.~ta :O.fcsa.
*CLERICAL*
Ol)ENlNGS FASHION Manufacturing RECEPT • Knowltdgf! of •
Med. Jns. 9larp gal \vhu is TE A CHER 'S CHILDREN •
Located In ())sta ~leso.
Experience prtfC"rml.
Salary open.
Pica&' cllll Beverly David,
( 714) • :>46-3300
COFF'EE SHOP ~IANAGER
Exp'd only. Start SlT.> \Vk.
Apply 2-1 pn1 daily. TIIE
CO'M'AGE COFFEE SHOP
562 \V, 19th $t. Cl\1.
Cosmetologi.st
llAIR STYLJSTS. Top work·
ing conditions & percentage.
Pd vaca.tions. 847-2673 ,
847-9136 ask for Al.
C OASTAL AGENCY
Professionel
Employment
.Assiste~t
A member o(
Snelling & Snelling Inc.
2700 llarbor Bl, Cl\:J 54().6055
llarbor Blvd. at Adams
COOK •••
Experienced
Apply In person only
THE RIGGER,
# 16 Fashion Island
Newport Beach
COOK. Exp"d FRY COOK .
Must be fast. Call afler 3
pm. for appo in lmenl.
673-4166. e COUNTER GIRLS
Three shifts available
Apply
ONTRA CAFETERIA
# 60 Fashion Island
Ncwpo11 Shopping Center
Pacific Cbast H1vy at
1'.tcArthur, N.B.
DENTAL OFFICES
-ASSISTANTS--e Insurance girls e Rl'CeptioniSI.
\Va.nt your f ree Fuhion
\Vardrobe by Cl1rlsrma.s '!' Be.
C'OO\Q a Fashion Ctinsultantl
No Investment • Jllc:hesl
Earnina;s • Q:implete T~h1.
lng. FUJ.l or p/time. Call ?itr.
Hansen tor interview (TI4l
-EXPLORER has im·
mtdlale Opening!
'"' -
*~ -Finish men
~. 10 Al\t.S Pflt Daily. • 1 \Velder
""'::::':o"~~,"~'~';~,.~·~,·~· ~C7"~•-· __ 1 •I .. Plumber'a helper
Ft'n111le COOK-PM Hosp exp •4 -Gen. AllS(!mbly
pref'd. Contact Personnel * l -MUI man
Director. So. Cout Comm. *l _ Electricians
ltosp. 31B12 C11t. l{wy, So.
Laguna, 4!'&-1311 Ext 356. tl • 110 \>OltJ
* FIBERGLASS · PLEASE APPLY
neat can co far. Xlnt , loe., need mature Y1omu.n to I r
Pleuant worklng cond. To ~by&!t t!:l the.Ir home. Driv·
$375, Raise 3 mot., Call Jca.n ing required. Refs. nttdcd.
Brown, ~ Ml-4.ll7 118. 1 1~¥.~~~ COASTAL AGENCY 1·T'"E~A~C~H~E"R"S~-~T"l~,-y~T~ot
Snelling & Snrlllnit Pre-School. Tues & Th11n1
2790 Harbor Blvd., CM AM. S2.50 hr. For In. H \1\11 l ! \ i l:
formation cftll 837-¥.e4. : : : i ; \: i · Restaurant : ; i; I J ! · 1 TELEPHONE Answering * DAY BUSBOYS SeNlce Ex>'d pret.l l .~!;;!;~~:11i--
CaJ1 "0-"" I~ -* NIGHT Typl•t to $425 .
DISHWASHERS ABILITIES
UNLIMM'ED AGENC'l
488 E. 17th St, Sulte 224
C.OSta ltTesa 642-1470 Apply In person
LAMINATORS
Exporleoce<i. Top pay. l.a'i• • OR CALL -Reuben E. Lee WAITRESS
cus1on1 Yachts. Willard Boat
MEN I. WOMENI
COMPUTER PROGRAM·
MING IS THE KEY TO
YOUR rnOFJTABLE
FUTUP.£!
Class~ start soon. W •-,_ 0 ••• C • E.xplorer l\tolor llomes 151 E . Clll!t.I llwy. Experienced or~. U'1J .........,r, ·•·!. 3021 Nc"'!J>Ort ~_yd. Newport Beach
Foreign Cbr Mechanics Costa .r.tesa._.Calir. Restaw·ant. Apply In pe1'son
Good oo. bencllts, Incl paid SURF & SIRLOIN
Pllot progr11.m offering the
flnet.t eqtilpmeflt and racn-·
itie.!I available! Real-time
computer programmlnr. vacation, group lns, uni. 1714• 5-1&-3300 5930
!om>• fum~h«i tre.. Good MFG. • e WAITRESSES Pac. Cst. Hwy.
comm, schedule, Ask for A progressive manufacturing •• BUSBOYS Newport Beach The J\cadany
Joe 11-toore Ph. 54Q.11&1. company, \Vith exccl!enl * *WAITRESSES '*-"F°'U"L;;L'E'°"R"°B"R~U"S"H.-*,..1 work in i; conditions and -.1. C -
tttz..l4<Xl fringe benefits has immedi. -·Apply in person -1S to ::5, neat appearing, ... 'Ji~rn
ate opengs for. Full time, APP. in person 1.oWU..uaJ
Gal Friday A-Tool & Die Maker SNACK SHOP
to $500, Excellent Co, benc. n. General l"actory 3446 E. Coa.st Jlwy, BOB'S BIG BOY
lits. Pleasant working condi. Corona del !ifar 1a4. E. l7lh, c .M. ~nlon l11nk S•u•re
tions. Top bencllls. Call Kay Apply at RESTAURANT Exp'd f~RY \VAITRESS • Cook ta ; 1,' South Tower 546-5410. Suri. 40 JASON BEST Sfa Fa.<1t, Int'. COOK & \VAITRESS. Full exp'd. Apply 1703 SUpcrior "lr•nge. c .. Ut., '2'61
Employmrnt Ag""Y 640 S. Santa Fe SI. or part time. Coffee Shop Ave., CM. 6.\&-3993 • Call 547-9471
J';lission Vit>jo. 83l)..()528. • '":!~~~~~~~~!l!!I ~ So. Main, Santa Ana ---~Sa~"~ta~A~"'~-~-11 •..,..,..,.., ... ..,..,..,..,l \VO~fEN. full or part timcl"i
Genera l Office S400 e Medical &'a'Clal'Y e See Betty Bruce at needed iinmed, for: Child MERCHA'iDISE FOR
Good typina skills, YIO ap. Personable girl w/ initiative care, Aides or Companions. SALE A'ND TR.ADI ·~ f b · J t I m 6 Ages 21 to 65, &12-3Z74 pearall<.'t', "'.lit Loraine, or usy surgeons ron o • •
Merchants Personnel Agcn. ficl'. Must have ~xp. \vi tJ~ KeC We S it Better, Inc, Furniture
cy, 2Gt3 \VcstclilJ Dr., N. B. dictaphone & all forms of Agency for Career Girls Soulh c:oast Agency
645-mo insurance &. bookkeeping:. 4.10 \V Coast Hwy., .N.B. Youn9 Fry Cook G="°"===~-~--1 Salary open. Call 9 • 5 • By appoint. 61&3939 SELLING C.omple~ houaeful
of f.tedlterranean furn: sofa,
love seat, 2 oorTimode tamp
!ables, coffee table, JamJ>ll.
color TV, din set, re frig,
IRL FRIDAY. Good typing-, &ll>-4409
neat a ppearance, Call ~tr.
Young, 642-7749. Collection ~fEN (2) for gr o u n <I
Bureau of \Vestern Orange maintenance at Newporl e1·
County Inn. Pcnnanent. See !·lead
HOUSF.KEEPER I i v e . i n , _G_a_n1_,_.,.._c,~,P~li-'---
n1olherl1!ss home, N.B. area. !\ten:
2 teenagers. Woman with l * OVERSEAS •
sml child ok. 531-1450 \Ve need you! Call Smitty, 714 : 774-2S10 HAIRSTYLIST, niale or
female with following, good * l\tOTEL MAID *
N.B. location. 642-0844 Apply: 2205 ltarbor Blvd.
HOUSEKEEPER Needed. Costa ?i1esa, Calif.
Live-in. ?i1otherlfSS house. 3 * b10TEL l'otAID *
tichl. children. $200 month. Part Ti.me
Hunt. Sch area. 968-3629 49•1-!M36
HOUSE-KEEPER, Live-in, l'o10TIIER'S He Ip er or
Free Doard & room + mother to help bus. cpl. ear-
ulary. Call bcfr 4 pn1, ly dinner tneaJ only, S days.
5.\8-1214 ~1
Sall'!>
ESCROW
OFFICER
, or
Kitchen Trainee
Permanent, full 1Jmc job. stereo, king size bdrm .set.
Over IS, Neat appearance, Quttn bd rm &et. a alze
Outstanding opportunity for Chal'lee for advanr.ement, bedrm se1, swag lamp. pt.!-
exp"d. sales escrow olfieer APPLY IN PERSON lures, \vash('t & dryer. •
lo ""'Ork in our new l>tisslon n1!sc. 1'1ust Sacrifice! Call
Virjo, Savings & Loa.n office. Bob's Big Soy 8!».M?S
1.fust be capable of handling J~I E. 17tl1 Street 1--DO°"''°'N°''T;.,G=1v"E"°"U=P~ sales escrows for conve.ntion·, I
al loans. Xlnt Y:orking cond. Costa. Mesa You may tlnd it at America's
& ·ty f ·th ~ larxest, most unusual un-Con~~~rtuni or irov.: ' Schocls-ln1trudion 7600 finished furniture sfure. Cot.
00\VNEY SAVJNGS & ~ill & Santa Ana Fwy,
LOAN ASSOCIATION Tustin. l ml So. ot Newport
SALES: A'ITENTION ~tobilc hm. owners. Ladies that & ONLY USED 5 pc warnul bedroom
want lo suppleml!nt your m. franchised set $00. Used 6 drawer
J>rcpai-ed resume 1nusl have
h\·o yrs. dental experience.
Day hours. All union benP-
fits. Salary $3.44 per hr. CaU
for appointment 633-T:>.31.
DENTAL REO.:PTIONJST,
Exp'd, for niodcm dental
oflice, Hunt. Sch. 962-3319.
DENTAL :-,i: ,..,PO,. Re HOUSEKEEPER. live-in, 2
• ere ..... ,.:-~,. ceCaUP. school-agers. 67s.-0310 or e e NEEDED
837--49U ~' • The FIRsr ~54~pen 362 day.s per 'lT· .
come. No phone soliciting. modem dresser w/mirmr
Do not have to leave your Sl4. Used 5 pc white & gold
hm. 1,/timc "Tk .. r or info.. S-T·R-E·T-C-H French Provincial bedroom tiohist. A~e o..rov. • {)18-TI9l
~~3000 17~""~,-,,,--~~~
Dl-::NTAL Assis, Chair Side.
23 + yrs, 2 yrs exper. Reply
Box 517-1\t, Daily Pilot.
DENTAL J::xecu t a r y,
Newport. Xlnt position for
mature won1an \V/dental
exp. Send qua]ilications, etc
to Daily Pilot Box l\f-14.
DISHWASHER
Experienced
JANITORS, \Vaxe1'S. Part &
full time. Experienced only.
Good pay & v.·orking con·
dition5, 5-13-9393
•LADI ES • Pk. up
Christmas mol'l!.'y. Put out
cat. & pk. up orders for
·F'uller Brush. J3.00 hr ii
qual'd. 642-1403.
Two Office G irls
Mu9l be 25 and ahle to drive
-APPLY -
1S6 E, l6Lh $1., C.l\I.
newport .
personnel
agency
&33 DOVER DRIVJ-:
call 8.16-5441, l().6 & SEW (T.M.) scr m. The Factory, 1885
Store of Orange County lfarbor. 54Q..&42 SALES: A11cntion UcauH-
cians and X·Bc11u1icians CHRIST~fAS SHOP SINGLF.: bed, quilted mat·
that want to impplement tress, brass headboard com.
THE EASY \VAY!! p!clc with spread, electric your income • to style. & ~U blanket d heels
our fabulous Trci;s-Chic wtg. Learn to Sf!\\/ on "knit !ab-Gree~ :;:1ass 8 !able. ;~
For Intcrvw. cltll 836-5441 rics". ~lake stretch pants lamp, walnut end table
SALESLA.Dll!:S wanted part in 1 hr, a bathing suit for after 7 p.m. 96~2U '
time. Attractive prorits, $5.00 -even a gird.le! Im· MOVING· T ·a b
local business, Ph: 646-8670 agioe -T-shirts for W turnH • &.e":it c uys In
bctwee.n 2 & 5 pr,1 who' family Un? ecorator ac· "7=~-==--~·,.....,....~.· I .e • cess. Some antiques. 1519 SAL~S: $~ week in w1~ LESSONS: Morn, afternoon, Bonnie Doonc (Irvine Terr.)
Apply In person
SURF & SIRLOIN
5930 Pacific Coast H""'Y·
Newport Beach
* Maids * Full or part
time. Ken Niles Marina
~1o!rl, 1021 Bayside Dr ..
N.6.
l\'laintrnance
NEWPORT BEACll
642·3870 fashion field. Need ;J I& eve CcU.-f
saJe5p<>rsons. p ot c n t I a I s. 673--0145 or 675-4031 ., •
URGENTLY unlimited. Cnll l\lts. 7:1"1 E. Katella, Orange •• J. W. ROBINSON
IIAS OPENING FOR
Robinson 842-4449 USED 5 pc beige dinette sci
NEEDED: 633-2142 S19. Uaed 5 pc antique white ,
P /R Secty. to $650 EPF • Sales li-1anagcr for newl~========•I dining room 9cr S39. Used 5
!Employer pays fee!} Skills rlress shop Laguna Beach. * AIRLINE & pc walnut dining room set
& abili!y in human relalions l>fust have prevK>us sales & TRAVEL CAREERS * $58. The Factory, 1885
••DISHWASHERS: 18 or
ov. l\1ust be neat in ap.
pearance. 3099 Bristol, C.M. MAINTENANCE
MECHANIC
Experience Prel(lrred.
must betops.Alsohelpful to manage r ial experience. Hal'l>or, 5-10-6842.
* DRIVERS * be politlcaUy minded & un.' _Re_'-"='°'""'°''°'·'°'21'°'3~' .,.m.=Ol"°44_, I LGE GE Rer..1~1•-, 4 ~ 1 · Station Agent •'6 u ..... -.,.~ No Experience encumbercde (some interest· SALESLADY Ticket Sales old $165. Antiq round oak tbl • ,
APPLY PERSONNEL ing tra\l'('I involved!} New. Curtains. Draperies & Gilts. Reservations 60" $45. 9x12 shag Span.·: Necessary! FASHION ISLAND port Beach firm. UDOFF'S Air Fre.igbt. Cargo ~~"""carpet $25. Aft 5.
l\fust have clean Califomla NEWPORT BEACH • Home Furnishings Communications -.<J
driving record. Apply An Equal Opportunit,v Legel Secty. $625 EPF. South Coest Pleza Travel Agent
YELLOW CAB CO. Employer Calif. & corporate exper.
,0 0 please. \Vork for a •ha-, Savin.gs & Loan IRLINE
AhBEAUTCIAFRPUL gift for your _
omc. E11NG for • ,•
,l.C>'ll E. 16th SL ri.tAftAGE Apts. Ideal for • •· A un11na attorney in beauliful BRANCH Costa Mesa couple 40 or over who wan!s .,--...
Christmas -or the New
Year. Shags -lli·Lo Nylons
I I Newpo" B<neh olfa·••. tWe SCHOOLS DRU!\tl\IER starting group; lo suppement neon1e . MANAGER
need bass, gultar and/or Pc>rcenta,i:-e & turn apt + also have applleant • paid PACIFIC etc. Llc. contr. Free e.sL
5'1&-4478
organ. f.,'o hangups .' Ulil. Beach al't'a. 673-4458 Ice positions) Exp'd . Savings & Loan BUlLT\VEU.. daveno '50.
NlGHT Desk clerk_ auditor, Enjoy a rewarding Ca.n!er Inquire Today G! to U 673-3910. flfALE To a ss ist in and join a highly .!IUCCt'&Sful 5-13-6596 ass P oo ee table $7. 2 housekeeping. heavy chores, 6 nitcs/wk, exp'd. Apply Sa . walnut slep end tables $5 Exec. Secretary
Future unlimited, Top skills
req'.d. To $650 to star!,
Independent
Personnel Agency
1TI6 Orang~ Ave, Suite C
C.M. 642-0026, 545-0979
Ben Brown's Motor llotel, vings & Loan As110Ciat1on 610 E. 17th St., Santa Ana 24.. RCA TV •35 l\1alds. part-lime. Apply in the Newpo rt Beach area.'~=""''"-"=""""=-'o==I eu. · · ~ · Ben Bro·,••n's Mo1or Hotel, 31106 S. Coast. So. La,i:-una 1· Recliner chair $20. $100 "Cash
NURSES Thl:s position entails cha1· MEN -WOMEN takes all. 548-3795
3ll06 S. Coast llwy, So. Registered • even-lenging: duti<'s and Is adapt-BECOME AN
Laguna ing & night shifts. Ex. cd for an individual with USED 3 pc furqooise sec-
MALE COOK -PM. Hosp.~ benefits. Apply Personnel im11glnative and creative tionaJ f79. Used blu~n
Pxp. prcf'd. Contact Person-Director, So. Coast C.om-abilities. Excelll!nt fringe ANNOUNCER l!Ofa only. $35. Used patina
nel Director. So Coast inunity Hosp., 31872 Coasl bencfls, Call Mr. 1-fansley gree.n sofa-bed & chair S49.
Ov 0 Comm. Hosp. :!1872 Cs!. lhvy.
356
, So. Laguna. 499-1311, (2131 869--0512. "LEARN" The Factory 18S5 lfarbor, crscas pportu11itie:i1 t'XI. ~ 540-0842
Gall Sm11ty n4: 774-2610 Hwy. So. Laguna, 4~l3ll SEA~fSI'RESS: Exper. in On professional equipment in ===""°,,-...,-,.-.,-,-~
* ELECTRONIC TECHS *
Ext 356. •NURSES AIDES * J::xp'd. \\'Omrn's alterations. Full or a local radio station from SAVE $300! Used frost free l
1''00D SERVICE * f.tAN with nu rs<' ry, All shifts. Huntington Valley p/timr. CdM. Call • \vo1·king hroadcaslers. door GE Relrig. W·lce:
PF:RSONNEL gref'nhouse or garrlcning, to ~mvalcscent llosp. 8382 675--llSl For complete \/Olcc analysla inflker $119. Brand fK'W 30"
Jr you desire a pleasanl job .,.,'Ork in new Jackson ·& ewman Avl!., 11unL Bch. **;SECRETARY*** CALL kitche.n range. Be l o w
in ne\v facilitiC"S at Hyland Perkins Rase Re~arch & ,7SU-555==',--o------THE INSTITUTE OF whOlesalc, Sll9. Used 3 dr
Laboralor ics Food Service Facililies, on ll'\llne Blvd. i PtrIME : Increase Your Local ~1.fgr. JM!ed!I comb BROADCAST ARTS Bnlique green credem:a $29.
I-Co•ta '''" pl•a~" ....... .Bookk~pcr & Sc>crctary ""-e Fa•to~. ·~~ ll••boo· '' a " • ... "'"'._..,,,. nr. Sa.ncl Call""" Rd. \Vork present earnings fr om /10 · 1601 N e ·•lol SA '" '" • ., JJ>O.J .. !act Mr. Bill Rickman, rm. JV w or more yrs. exper. 1n · n , · • 5'10-6M2 involves growing & care of S200-S500 a mo., p/tlme. TV off employin .. " or _,.,..., 772-3800 -=~=-=~="°''°"'7.I 221. Vagabond l\:lotor Hotel, a.. .. b .• ,.. 1 1 I 1 d f Call f t " "' ........ '"' : OG !5 ·~ n ,.1ng & tea pants n ea s urn. or app . people. Mui;t be exp'd in Placement service SOLID MA H ANY 3 1 Harbor Blvd., C.M. Ap-........, .... -.. ~ .... garde•• "'" •o~ CH"~ ply in pcnon trom 9 ........... ,iuu .... "' •• • ' .,....."""'· payroll. Box l>f-514, Dai1y ·educa!lon loan ~· ·
AM-SPM, nee: '1th & Sth. Phone for appolntmcnl : --;p=B~X~O~P~E~RA~TO=R-.-Pilot JOIN TIIE FIELD EXCELLENT CONDffiON
An Equal Opportunlt~ &12-00SO da)'ll', 544-1235 Shnrt hrs., N.B. area. Exp. SECRETARY WITI-1 A FUTURE! $7S
-.·
_"7'~"-;"~"~'·,--,--,,---I prel'd. but not nee. Call &16-01{)!) Employer. ~ Good Slf and typing skills. Age/education no bfo..!Tier! . Sa-~,,~,~-------· IJ\IAN 111 I ""'oodworking ~xp. 613-1235 New &: growing C:O. alflllat-LC't U! help yau qualify. CUsrOr-.1 1'" URN 1 TUR _:E
FABRIC SALESWOMAN to work with youth. 1\-lature PLUMBING & Hea t 1 n g ed w! a leading Co. Ml.lSt IN?\"'KEEPERS INSTITUTE MADE TO ORDER: Repair
or ~mi-retired. 642-8372 Ser v ice 1\lan. Fully •. , ..,11.,1,""'· INTERNATIONAL YIOl'k a ·F-pcclalty. Zl4 W. 40 hrs wk , Salary + rom· <>c "" o u niissiOn. Vacation &. iiick l\1ANICURIST for busy ~hop Qualified. $1.2,tm + hrly MISS EXEC AGENCY ~foteVliotel/Apt Mgmt Sehl ~faple, range. Ca •
b e ne t i t 5, Mui;t have 11f'Br Boysidc Shoppi ng potential. Earl'! Plumhlng, 410 \V. Coast Hwy., N.Bi A DIVIS.ION OF ~6.19-309~~-'---~-..,,,~I
know!Nl&<' ol labri~5. Center. 61:>-3385 1~·., 1526 Newport Blvd. By Appoint · 646-3939 ANTIIONY SCHOO~.S 8' Sofa, never U8ed, quilted
Appll' in person hfEOICAL TECHNICIAN for C.1\1. S . 1n7 S. BR00Kl£Ulli.,. f1oral, scolchguardcd $US.
I _,1 1 p"'r~c~··o =,5,~f~N~--.~.~1 -1 ECRETARIES to $550 A~lb-f CAUFORNIA Matching love aeat $15. (l) No p IO~ ci:u 5 1 girl Doctor's office. n l"""' • A v.iante"' or J( yoo have !he ~kills, we Cla!'St'S fo~ every iveek 770-0592
THE SINGER CO. .Ne1\•por1 Beach. \Vr\tc: Box r.1ichle vertical. have the jobs in the brach PllONE FOR APPT. •
2300 111\rbor Blvd, C1\I l\1-562, Dally Pilot Ask for Beryl 548-~71 area, call Loraine, Mer-Ask for Betty ?7&.5800 DI.sn:tESSED Maple 6 chrsl
Nl~OltT ll!ACH ........... nM NIWPOllT HllONTI , ......... 1111
IPEED-SKI IOAT •.......... MH I OAT TRAILlltS '""'" ttn IOAT MAINTENANCE ••····· KU BOAT LAUNCHING ..... ,.,.tfl:M Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100Jobs--Men, Wom. 7100 chants Pe~nncl Agency & mUTOr $175. Maple head·
20l3 Wutclill o,., N.B: SCRAM-LETS boanl & ·""• '"00 $Ill. • NEWPORT SHOlll.li ........ ,,,511t *EITCLIFF ............. JJH UNl¥11tSITY PAltl( , ...•••.•.. sur IACIC&AY .................... SNt IAIT ILUl'I' ............ IJol! CORONA DEL MAil ........... StH BALIGA. . . ................. 5. IAY ISLANDS ................. JIM llDO ISl.l . . ............. sm BAL&OA 15LANO .......... ~n NUNTtNOTON llACM ......... .... 1'01,!JjTAIN YALl.IY ••...... ~11 11.(L DACM ................. J4M I.ONO 1aACM . , ..... ,. •• ,., I.Ht OltANOI. COUNTY ............. Wit GAll DaN OA.OVI , ............. M11 WESTMINITSlt ....... , -··· •• Jilt MIOWAY C:tTY .. .. .......... Mll l•NTA AJIA ,, ............ J"9 JANTA AMA NllGMft ··•··••• M)f ru1"T1 N ...... . ...••••.••.... JoMt COASTAL . • ..•..•••••.... 11" 1.aau,,i• BIA.CM ............. $H$ tAOUNA MIOUll. .......... ,.IN' JAN CLa'°'INTI ,. ........... In• IAN JUAN CAPllTliflD ••... 11U DANA PO INT , ........ 11 ..
REAL EST ATE.
Gentr•I
MARIN& l:QUIP. . ....... •ou l!IOAT SLIP, MOORING ..•.•... ttH BOAT SE•¥1CE$ .............. ,.n IOAT ltENTALS ··••••••••~ ... tl)I BOAT CNAltTEllt ................. » l'ISMtNO IOATS ............... fllt IOAT MOVING ............... ,fOU
BOAT STOlllAOI! "'·-·····• .,fll1 BOATS WANT'S.D ••.••...•••••. tts• •IRCtlAP"T •··········•• tlOI FLYING LElf.ONS ............ tl51 MOBILE HOMES .....•...•••. nt1 MOTOR HOMIS ............. , n1 s &ICTCLIS ............... nu t!LECTltlC C:Altl .............. n.so MINI 1t1cn ................. ,,,, MOTOltC YCLIS ............. tJ" MOTOlllCOOT••s .... •tso AUTO Sl!RVICll & l'AflTI .... t•OI AU.TD TOOU a l!QUll' .•.•.. ,.MU rll.AILtlt, Tit.AYR ........... H» TtlAILllt5. U!llllY ., •.••••.•••. tOI CAMPEltl •. ~ .................. tS11 TllUCkS ............ -......... tttll ll!'Il'S ............ t511 C.IMPiR lltlMTAU tm
OUMI auoo11s "" IMl'OllTtO AVlOS ............ t&ol 1PORT CA•I . , ......... t6ll •MTIOUI .. CU.SSIU ........... U r•IPl...I.)(, etc, .... ,, .... -"" tlACE CARS. RODS ...•..•. ,,,. COJIOOM!N IUM .. .,.., ltH •UTO •¥lHTS ............... t,11 ltfiNTALS WANTIO ......... Jm 1.UfOS WAJltl:O ., ....•.••.••. tlOI ROOMS POii llllNT ........... ,,., N!.W CAii .............. , flN ltOCM a IOAllD . JtN •UTC' l.fAllNO •• , ••...•.•.. tilt
*EXEC. SECRETARY*
Must be able lo lake shorthand at 100-110
'''pm. Ex perience at tho executive level in
a sales or marketing activity preferred.
\Viii also handle phones & travel arrange·
menls. Excellent opportunity. Salary coin·
mcnsura tc--with background.
Please apply in person or call f).1r. Kuechler
lor appointmen t, 835-4804,
GENERAL AUTOMATION
1402 E. CHESTNUT ST., SANTA ANA
An Equ al Opporlunily Em ployer M/F
Will be movtng-lo Irvine complex 1970
* PERSONNEL * GENERAL AUTOMATION
has an opening ln its Personnel Depart-
ment. reporting directly to the Employment
Supervisor.
Initial duties "·ill involve screeninB appll·
cants, typing correspondence, handling tele-
phone inquiries and making trave l arrange-
ments. Secretarial skills, including short·
hand would be heir.fut.
This is an excel ent op~ortunity with a
growing company. Appl y m person.
·GENERAL AUTOMATION '
.1402 E. CHESTNUT, SANTA ANA
An Equal Opportunity Employer
&fS.mo Chest &: m1mir $75. 642-5931
SERVI CE ·STATION ANSWERS BEDROO!\.T Set, rel:rf8 ••
A'ITNDNT. Full Ume eves, ·~· wringer washer. 1 pc
El<p'd. Neat ln aprvolU'anct H~'-·A n< .1. .... a dinette, twin or bunk beds, ..-• uuouou -r1P1;y -ne"e -odd chest YJ-0436 see J h-n.. 2500 Newport Co11Vt.t -CLOTHto s. "".
Bl vd., C.f.f. Slgn above door or Adl\m BEAUTJFUL King betl. qu!ll-
SERVICE STATION, dQ and Eve's hou": "We're ed ma.llt'f'Sll, Complete, un.
rnan. Over 21. Expe.rlt'nct'd, NeVtt CLO'MIF.D." ull'd S100, w or t h $250.
4!K> E. 17th, CM. The Newport 842-6536 cvcs.
SILK FINISllER al Expert S h I Of B I RA'ITAN 3 pc. 11CClional c O.:_O us ne11 .,,._ matc:hl.... cha.tr. 2 Clc11ncrs, COl!ta f\fcsa. Call .,.
646-5110 F'catum wcekl1 refresher tables &. Jampa. like new,
TRAINEE TO $.550 eouNn In the akllis )'Ou very sturdy. $50, 968-am:
St.able old line rtnanclal com· need to &ti t tho job )'OU BRAND new Fr. Prov. 5 tic
pany. Some coll'-le. Military want! bedrm 1et for sale. Cott
exl!mpl. Call Ann, fl.1erchants $900. Will •crlf!()I!. '4Ull2 -
Pmionncl A.rtntY. 2043 Weit· 833 Dover Dr., NA OLD fa.'ltOOnrd blah bead·
,clltf Or., N.B. ro.mo '12·3870 board, bed, complrtl!: chnt
mAINEE Fo' """"" & SINGING LESSONS •I.,. .... OOJl.IS7f all 5. • :,
Jllll1·lime dinner cook, Bukl technJque for any lt)'ll!. !J2" OFF Wlllle. Fabric Sita. •
oountry club LlguM Beach The perrttt gift! Like Ntw, $95. Kant·V.'d ,
. ,•_•_'~''~'-·-'_ .... _'-'-'-'-'-~-'-''-'~'-"~"-''-"-"'-"~'1 --~··-·-··_ .. _ .. _,.._1"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""" !! ........................................ """"'""'""'""'""'!!.I Art&. lf9&..S441J $43-7(U2 or ~5-511J ca.rted, $3i. ~ • • I -\ , -
•
•
l
---""'----------·-·-.. -i
,
' 1( Th,od.>y, D«t-4, 1969
----·---·•PETS ind LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION -··
38 D.lll V PILOT
MERCHANDISE F OR 1'\ERCHANDISE FOil FREE TO YOU MERCHANDISE FOR I MERCHANOtSI ,OR
SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADE SAlE AND TRAOE Dogs 1125 Boat Slip Mooring 9036 Troller, Tr1v1I 942.1
Fumltur• IOOOFurniture 8000 PJ1n01 & Or..-8130 Mi1cellaneou1 8600 MIJcellaneou. '600 FREE;;;:;:;:--;T;:o--q:woJ::;_'"'";h:".o:°'.m::"".el-CHRl.::__STl\ __ lAS--IS-N->:AR--l-Deluxe Boat Slips f"OR Sak; Brand Ne111 Tat· --
PRICES SLASHED -YEAR END
CLEARANCE-Up To 80°/o Savln<Js!
;;~~.';'~.'.~'~'. ............. NOW $199.95
S Pieu AVOCADO or Sl'ANISH OAK * 5 '/o OFF WITH COPY OF THIS AD *
Our Christm as G ift 'fo you!!
3 Rooms of Spanlslt Fumlt"'e
R"l $6'5. Doo't Ml" This NOW $388.9S
• 5 Pc. Authentic Spenish Geme Set, pedestal base,
--+.o~•k·cheirs. Reg. $299.95 Now $169.95 • 5 Pc Au-
thentic Mediterranean Bedroom Set. Reg. $249 .95
Now $159.95 • 8' DiYan plus matching Love Seat.
Ro9, S279.95 Now $159.95.
No Down on Apr;ovecl Credit and
No Payments til March 1970
UH ellf Store Chrge plt:111 or bOllk fh1011cl119 * Buy the Wife's Christmas Present Now-
h Complete!!
Wh ile Our Stock •
Furniture 8000 Appliancu 8100
FACTORY
CLEARANCE I
F&clory orden clearance of
all o~rage. demonstrators,
n oor model•. stud.lo & n-
tumed Pia.nos & Organs.
Real s;i.vings up to 30%.
EVt?rything guaranteed like
new. Sale limited to speeific
stock • so hurry! No money
down OAC, 5 years lo pay_
This rree,t sale only at:·
WARD'S BALDWIN STUDIO
1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484
Open Every Nile
& Swlday Afternoon
PRE-HOLIDAY SALE
P IANOS & ORGANS
Some of 1he most popular
mode!Slncluding: llammond
X77, H-100, E·lOO, B-l, T-200
etc. F'REE 3 DAY LAS
VEGAS JIOLIDAY ~·ilh pur·
cl.asc! ~ r
Trade-ins accepted & terms.
llAl\.11\tOND
in CORONA DEL h\AR
285, E. Coast llwy 6i3-8930
Open Evl!s & Sun. arternoon
DON'T BE MISLED!
* AUCTION * FRIDAY -DEC' 5th
SJ'lJRDY maple twin bedi.
v.·hile heirloom spreads:
Large 1naple drop-le!\f
table. Spo.n.IM din~ table,
round pedesta1 t,)'pe &
chairs. Dec.orator che!lts.
Cyclo massage new, at UJ
price. Picture frames, cod
f.ish netUng, glass floats,
corkll, art objects, many
n1isc. Near Lido I ' I e,
615--4141
7:30 P .M.
88.nkroptcles & Repos:ses-
slons, New & Used Furni·
lure. Top name Bedroom
:sets, Dining groups, Divans,
Loveseats, Chail's, Chests,
Desks, Dinettes. Callee ta.
ble.!1, Maitresses. La.nips, 8' COUCH &: matching chair,
Portable TV's, Stereos, Pie· Riviera couch, kit tbl & 4
lures, Cedar chests, China chrs, man11 chest & nlle-
cabinets, Bicycles, Power stand. '61 Pont. Bonneville,,
Mowers, Honda Trail Bike, port TV &: variou1 liml
Check \Vriter, Stenoi'f!ttc, item1. Moving, must sell by
• 12/11. Very reasonable ficfl'lgeralors, Stoves, \Vash-495--04!4 It 6 ers, Dl'Y('l'!I & P.f U CH a er ·
MORE!~!-----\VAREHOUSE SALE
WINDY'S AUCTION ORIENT~L RUGS
COME BRO\VSE AROUND
20Thh Newport Blvd.
Behind Tony's Bldg P..tarls
Costa Aft'sa * 646-8686
OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 1
2 days, Sat-sun, Dec. 6-7
10Ar.1·5PP.1
DON MARTIN
l\.10VING & STORAGE
1340 Logan Ave, C.P.T.
00 YOU ,_~ a shopping
companioo7 I have good * Specializing in taste in selection of clothes,
CUSTOM JEWELRY int. decor., gifts & have
We Can Make it or We refs. Will also chaulleur.
by fictitiou11 ivas-is prirts. Can TEACH YOU! Betty's-Shopping service.
LESSONS AVAILABLE 67' 00~ AM Shop where the selection is .>-OUUU 1
greatest & the pi·ic<'s are Some very good rings at dis. 2 COl\IPL }IQ train sel!
rii:h1! Choose fl'om Conn, eowit prices, Lapidary i;up. w/xtra cars. 4X8' HO la,yout
\Vurlitzt'r, Knabe, Everett, plies, casting supplies & tbl wltrack.s, K\Vilcl)('S &
Cable-Nelson, equip. Je'.1.•elry tools & i;up. transfinr.r. I set barbcUs.
0 Piles. 'Rough cui gem stones, )X'n Eves & .Sun 'Ill X-n1as Bx of Clu·istnias lghls. GOULD MUSIC rock cutting machinery. 5-10-2030 Some rxccllent rocks ready 204.i N. A1ain, S.A. 5'17-0681 to tumble in 1 lbpackages. R.EF"RACTOR Telescope
0 FIVE M GEM & 300x, tripod 1vith horizontal
PIAN s " ORGANS & vertical fine ad1'. BarlO\V NE\V & USED LAPIDARY SUPPLIES
e Yamaha Pianos & OrgaM Costa Mesa. Located at lens, 5 additional lenses. Ex e Thomas Organs the bac:k. of C1..llcgc Celiter cond. $75 &tl-0368
e Kimball ?Janos r :»9-:.!039 ELECTRIC di s hwasher, e Kohler & C8mpbell Mon. thru Sat. 9-5:30 couch, chair, 2 end lables,
COAST MUSIC l<'riday 9 to 9 air conditioner. tabla &: 4
SACRIFICE SALE! NE\V 2 dr. GE refrig., from NEWPORT & HARBOR 0i$neyland Special naughahyrl~ chairs. 900
w/fencd yrd, ''Tu s•a ' · * Re .. -., -··• ,,,.,._ limited nun1bt:r availablt" a·Long FiberKla.M Tr11.UC1r. "-"'-~---~ · 21 · •• • JV"' ...... JO' & ,.,... BJt for Sports cars. Set up ~•ou1""" rrux. •S Great Dane Puppy early! -yn. spayed, illll shots .. Cd Will lo\•c fot )' ou .111 lar1na de! Rty for V\V or Conoeite. tnit)
watchdog, alder ch 1 Id , Cbristmas. Cropped & 5hol$, Nt"w nK>dern mw:1na 8~1·6.177
preferred. SJ6...18(M alter 7 top lines ~1arina City Corp. ''·1-.-11-o_L_l_D_A_Y_"8_,-.,-l-U'-I-,-, 1
pm 542-3476 day1. 12/li MARTINi:REST KENNELS John liiwnian, Dock ~lastc1· ll'l06 old, all xt~. M~t
FREE to good home, **~* * 121.J)inJ-5.lJj sell.bt•stoff~r.fi.14--6197.
W/fcnced yrd. Lo.vable IRISli Setter Sho\V Male, 11 SLIP \\'ANTED fOl'
small bred b/w tem~r type nio. Champion M&.terial, SAILBOAT 9500
dog, 9 mos. _old weighs 10 Obecl. Trained. Avail. to ./ C.all 548-39.)5 I
lbs loves children 846-3818 B BOA 51 . '"'boat \"'th CAMPER TRUCK · • show hoine only, Tc1ms. AL ip. '"' · '.1 1910 C.M.C. t i. ~LL>. equ.ip. ===---""'=~U°'/"'5I Also. 8 nio. Miow IeilUlle. shower & ~ad & ___Nrk11!;~ -V~ -&!i• # ~!'~l · GORGEOUS cuddly kittens, Westshore Kcnls. 642-5065. tU 6/15/10. $.SO. n10, OR l--'7950 • • 52995 .
8 wlu;, Peralan/Calico, also WANTE~Dog lover 11!/ fnd flying Lessons 9150 UNIVERSITY supe~ loving blk/wht yd, no child. for occu. OLDSMOBILE ~w.n. houscbrokC'n, k>ok· day/ovmite ca.re of 1in1id, LEARN TO FLY :!Sj(l Harbor Blvd. ·~; loving peopke 6 gen., smt terrier. 613-1441 50 1'~1ue hrs $495. 28 dual & 2'.l Costn AIPsu
I early am/eves. solo. 1~ lour seat Cessn~ ~9640 F~ puppies· ~t Sp~r PUPPY, Only 1 male left. 8 Inc, grnd. schl & supplies .. =~=~~~-~--1 S~. Mother 11; Springer weeks old. Cross of Shellie Es1.ab. Allsn. Kl~ '63 fORD 12 Ton, Wigwam
Spani@f;-Males -1: females. mix and poodle. Free to ·-4~-camper, buiane ii love ,
P.1ake good prts & EZ to good home now 10 r Mobile Homes , 9200 istorage, it'i'boX. 9:..;9 a!-
lrain. 548--6681 1~/6 Christma,;. 614.174:! !aching room. Very clean
IUY J. NEW $89;,. ~ after 6 or
PUPPY· l male lefl. ~ wee~ PUT me under your SELL Im USED Wkcnds ·
old. Cross of Sheltle mix Christmas tree. Pekingese C l;o;-,=,,,....,.""'~-_.,-1
and Poodle, F'rre t? good male puppy AKC l'eg'd, 00per &I ~1-JEV ~, Ton. pickup.
home now for Christmas. Champ lllood line 8 ,vlu; TRAILER SALES R;adJO. healer, air concl.,
644-1142 12/6 old. 8'17-3449 ' 11 Side tanks, overhead! Buy fro~ a ~an ,, springs, camper eqpt. u 1
2 Yr. old female, bla~k, Scot-ClfRISThtAS Pups, A KC who lives In one! 4--4779 aft '1 Pl\1 I
ty Peke. Neflls big yard. Dobetmans. Good l{<1rncs, \VE SERVfCE ,. ~ ,.
Child 10-12 yrs. old. 841-2064 Pl'ime C 0 n 1 Id c ra t i 0 n. \VHAT W~LL! J1 CHEVY :: ton ~· new
10 AM ~ 3 PM only 12/4 642-S96l. 324 So. llarbor, Illa Ana engine. lire~, nidJO, good,
FREE •--• 8 hi k =====~---11 Bick So. ol -· 531-1006 bod6 Y· $400. <.:all s.»--2902 aftl pe .. o~uy: . C c ~ns, PUREBRED German .,..
1 rabbit, ., g. u1nea. pigs, <"\o-phe~ pup•, 10 ,,.,.,., BAY HARBOR , I fl k l ho ""K: •u " " • '67 VORD Rango.-. stick ' oc o ming piego,ns~ n1ales-only. $3.). 5-16--0116 M b I H S I 494-8960. 12/a after z. 0 ! • ome a es \1'/0D, ve1·y clean, Jo1v mi, C11.sa Con1a Roll • Away • see to apprec. $1750. 842-1694
BEAUTIFUi.. i\lale tabby CHRISTMAS poodle pups. S~e1·aton f.lanor -Ho1nettc -aft ;;.
cat_, 8 moa. old, gray/1vhl AKC, Champion .s i Iver Kit • P!'estigc . Sahara ------=---·-----stripes, la~-ge ~reed, Good miniatures. Also toy & ALL SIZES 195!1 CHEVY 1: Ton P.O.
house cal.~ aft S 12/4 teacup. 842-4742. NO\V ON DISPLAY Runs. l\eC'ds Eng. \\'ork,
SHO\~ Quality [em a Jc COCl}ER Pups. AKC, champ 1~2:i Baker St., Cos!a Mt'sa $125. Call &36-194.1
tortoise shell cat, 6 mos. sirid, 6 \\'ks. Call Ron Gray, % block East ol Harbor Blvd. 19&1 Che\'y 1 ~ ton long bed,
old, shots, '>''ormed, but has 213: 633-l261 after 5 P~f. Costa Mesa cn<Jl ~~IJ410 runs good, Jo· blue book $100.
no papers. 642--4424 12/4 Rare opportunily. r.10B1LE 536-3-148 L=--~~---------~1 KITIIES, "t.1axwell" & Horses 8830 LIVING on tl)(' BEACH. '59 FORD ·'~ ton P/U $650.
"Prudence" •• 6 \\"ks, black Limiled spaces, in ne1v ad-i\tinll(>y 5-18-4192 or 548-5039
male & female Calico. 370 HORSE stables for rent, lge dilion to Driftv.'OOd Beach N.B.
La Perl~ Lane, c.r.t 12/6 arena Sl5 mo. 1616 Orchard, Club • Models on display .~56~--,~0~R~o--p~;-,,--U-p-.'
BLONDE Afghan -ne~1ered S.A. Hgts. 5.49-0068. ~7.;31462 Pac Hwy, H,.B. Everything n<'\V. Xlnt cond .
male. 6 yr;; old. Good family TRANSPORTATION a See to appreciatt>! 5'18-8377
1vithout children. 646-8J6.1 , 24 . x 60 'li6 DODGE PICK-UP. Jong
12;5 l\oats & Yi1chts 9000 A"'.ni~gs, 1'atscd porch, full bt-cl. gOOd cond. st.k shift B-
1nodl'I home .......... $178 Costa 1t1esa * 642-2851 Fri. Dec 12, 8 P M to 1 Al\1 Cedar Pl, C.~
SLEEPER SOFA, beautiful. :? dr. RcfJ'i.gera101·. I1'0sl-frec, Open 10.6 F'ri 10.9 Sun 12·5 Sponsored by Young Life GO KART. Racing frame, ~
U d bottom freezer ........ SI.JS Club• ol So. Calli. To'cket• h.p. 4 cycle E'""·• slicks all ly qu tcrl, custom ~·!'lie . R r · 1 38 ° ·~ You r choice of colorii. l' rigel'atori; · .. · J'Oni S CHRIST!\IAS gifts -llam· only $5.00 each incl all rides around, di§C brake, Perfect LO=v~AB=~L«~.-b-la--~"part-=Coc~k-,, I T skn:ting, _sha_g crp';S thl'UQU1 , C')'I. $1000. 547-0933
269 Console Color TV, coutcmp mood, Steinway, Yamaha. & prkg. Proceeds toward cond. S125-Call 833--1751 :i~g(; ~ •1~~~h~;o~e~~et cab .. new picture tube · $:.?48 New & used pianos of most Christian training for hi 1 ~a~lt~o~o·~5,.:P,.:',.:I_~~~~~
\Vhirlpool auto 1vasher .. $ 50 mako• Be•t buy• ,·" So ·ohocl •1,d-t•, •1ao·1 o•--k d 'I ensemble, hdbd, sprd, bench, GE \V h ID $IOO ;,, " " ~ · " .. "" " ~· "~'" BEAlITIFUL King be -qui t-
~ ~ MUS BE CRAZY b1t-1ns. Set in s :star Pal'k, Spaniel, malo, 1 )TS old, \von--.~6~5-f~-d-V~~E~~,-. -l one niile .l1um ocran in or •n cono 1ne derful <.i'.lmpanion, 612·1316 To Sal·rifice n1y ~ cabin Coota Mesa. $ll,900, ;).16-99-;I
12/j rruist'r-s. Both in 1nln! cond. • 642•1352 •
i d Col . as er rycr .... C•lo'f al Schmo'dt .,,,,,.,Co •-100·0 n-o. 8, to You•g Lilo Co l cust qui 1c , or choice. DUNLAP'S " · " · · ""'" ..,._, " cc] n1attrcss. mp ete-un.
Reg, $330 ...... r-;0,.,, $269.50 181_ N t 81 tl C ~f 1901 N, Main, Santa Ana. fnc. P.O. Box 1731, Newport used. $l0;'5, iv 0 r 1 h szw. R~E-M_N_AN __ T~S~of--ga-,..-,,-,.-1~,-.' 23' .t: 30': ~inancingJnsur . .,,,--~~=~7.-'--~+ Jeeps
Bring truck. Take one, take ance avail. l!un:y! Jlu1Ty! 11 x 50. EXP. liv rm 9510
FULL size en~'n1b!c • .soft 1'011, J c~~1~788 v ·, '1 • Beach, Cal, 92663 842-6536 eves.
custquiltcd, headbd. ~prcad, POOL TABLES BRUNSWICK Bowling Ball,
all. 646-822ti 1216 Call VC'na. 6·1j·l442. cabana BR. Nc1v drps, lg EARLY i\Jodcl J~p body &
FLUF'F'Y loveable \\'hile kit· SACRIFICE • 26', 1008 Chris JlOl'Ch, pa.tio. Encl. rear 1ran1e w/ne1v springs, seat
bench. One onl;! Avocado, \VllJRLPOOL Gas d:;·cr, ""OPEN EVENINGS Sccard Pool $lS. J..laple C r ad le ,
Reg. $269.50 •.•• Now $119.50 late 1nodcl. xlnr cond. S65. AND SUNDAYS BRUNSWICK-AfltF Complete. ~t:i. Like New.
C I. , 0 yard. Choice space. Adult frames, transmission l: tens. After 6 p. m. ava iel', :.1 hp, radio, Pk $7900 p p .
64;,...2204 1216 rarho, loaded 1\'/C!.xlras. For · · vt. ty. \Vill transfer ca.sc. plus 111any
.e r.ra11rcss & Box Springs • 546--8672, 847-Sllj Until Christmas Custom Slate Table ti42-8:l2S.
K;,g Sci 199.95 QUO<'o $89.95 IF ;;;RE=E°"ZE"R;-ct>O=.i~t'°O'-o$7'°5. GOULD MUSIC From $289
quick sale $6500. By O'-''llC1'. finance 548-9141 orher features $175. 54S.0072
REGUITERED young mal~ 642-7271 12'x55' Skyline in very_nice aft 5Pi\!
· Full Se! S:i4.9j Twin $41.9;) Cross lop Refl•ig, $40. Both 20.1;; N. !\lain, SA 5-17..00Sl 100% Financing
F'REE 12 lb Turkey or 5 lb Gd. Cond. 536-1654 I ~~~~~~~~~~· I * SECARD POOLS *
2 SETS Double bed nntl· Siamrse cat. 1 ~2 yrs old. 25,,-~O~l~VE~N~'~s--=c~b-.----park. 2 Br, sun porcli Sx2~',l ==========I
tresses, springs' $2j a l5et. ;i49-1314 1'.?/5 a in cruiser, patio, spotless. !'.lust Sell. !June Buggies 9525 l\letal bed frame $ 5. good cond. New n1otor: trlr: ----~7510 evenings BEAGLE puppil's, 3 mal~. 2 canvas. $3100 lirm. See at -==Ca=ll=-=64=2-4=4=30=.=='IV\V Dune Buggy. runs good,
female. first ton1e first 215.,; s. Grand. :).A. Call ood bbl' s 9· Z..-7788 CARPET Installer has one served. &12-180'2 12/6 S3?-8620 Mini Bikes 9275 g 111 r . ~ J , &I ·
~a:do~~-v.·ith niin. pur. KEN:'llORE \Vasher & Gas I; 532-1.992
SIESTA SLEEP SHOP 0ry,,, "°'" ;, ""' cood. Television 8205 1333 s. Ma;o St. °''""'
1927 Harbor Blvd Cos1a l\lcsa
• 645-2760 •
Daily 10.9 Sat 10-6 .Sun l:?·:i
20 PC. "MADRID"
3 Room Group
"F'RO!\I l\fODEL HO!\tES
Includes: Quilled sol.a and
rhoir -2 end tables & cof·
Jee table -2 lan1ps -dress.
er -mirmr -headboard -
quilted bo.x spring & matt.
re~s -5 pc, rlining room;
table & II hi-bark chairs,
COi\lPARE AT $74.9.9J
$399
No rlD\1~l~n11!1 only 516 mo.
WEUl'S WAREHOUSE
600 W. 4th St., Santa Ana
Ope n Daily 9-9
Sat. 9-6 Sun 11-6
fUR:~ll'URE rc:1urned from
display !'ltudios, m o d l' I
$70. 5'16-SGTI. 847-8115. POOL
WA."if!ER & DRYER SACRIFICE: Beauliful RCA -
roil, avocado nylon carpet. '"'"'"=----~--=-------------2032-D Placentia. CM double jute-backed. '\Viii sell EAGER To please & lovi~g. 1966 Chris Craft 21~;·. All l\11NT-Bikr, :-.:Int c.-ond. only 1 "62 V\V Chassis, not 5 inin.,
all or pa1·t S31yard. 540-1245 8-10 \l'ks. old female terrier Class. Twin 18.:i HP cng·!'l. yr. old, sel~on1 used. :; hp on brand new engine. $300 1Fr1g1daire) in top con-color TV. Atediterra1l('an TABLES
chtion. $75. ~>693'1 stylc..o Like New. Cost $650. mi.x pup. 5.J6...S7\j l2/4 .Fly Bridgl'. Head & Galley. Bnggs & :St1·at1on. BenclLx or OFFEP. ... 642-4222 •
NE'IV EVEREST & Jennings FREE good homes: 2 mini $8600. call Ci46-7li1 shocbrake $12:J. 646-T.ll">. R El<'RIGER.ATOR, :.!-door, Sell for SJOO. Cash. \Vatch
goo.I condition Only $50. the Rose Bowl in colot•.
ti1&--1569 642-51A3. after 4PAI.
CARRIER 22 <'llbic
upright lrcl'ier $2:).
516-9941
"oot Lease Color TV or Bio.ck
& \Vhite. Option to buy.
Free setvice. No deposit
A-Active TV Rental Co,
Antiqu•s 11101 <l) 522-1153
----------J USED ZENITH TV set $25.
AL!llA 'S ANTIQ UES
REOPEN af1er i llne ss
Present stock j n t 1 u de S
bc111i1. cu1 glass, pitcher &. 6
tumblers. eompolcs, goblets
Good l'ondition.
646-3178
18" PORT. black &: \Vhf
1'1agnavox TV '~/i;tancl.
Xlnt concl. $99. 842-8074
& "·ines: child"s neerllcpoinl I~=========
rork<'r: unusual pine chest:
Ke\1'pic doll; beaut. grrcn
onyx clock; rare cameo
glass. \Vcd thn1 Sat l0-4.
Appl. anytime'. 823 \\'. 16th,
N.B. ,~ bl \V. Of Placentia.
518-1280.
Hi.Fi & Stereo 8210 ---\\' ALNUT stereo console,
Ai\l-fl.1 & phonograph. $12.i
Lovely OU'istmM g if t !
6i3-26l4 .
Christma!'l S~cial $27J ll \\'heclchair, Cost $300. Sac. d . t i ..... th ,,... p, $l 50. Call be1 8-12 Al\!. OXt!'~ -mus go .,,~e ~r, 16' 1\ENNEDY. ;,:-, hp 1\llN l-BIKE TACO
CHUCK'S 54.8-2a'19. no children, 494-8960. 12/;, Homelitr .• Trailcr, ha11 tank, 3 UP -$90
2750 Harbor at Adams. CM ====~-~,,..--,,::-IBLACK l\.1inia. French Poo-clean, $6.iO. 548--673\. 847-7839
V"\V Dull(' Buggy Sj!j:J
:?032-D Pla('('ntia, C.i\1.
6~2-7788
==--==,...--c-.;,...-1r1RE\VOOD for Sale. Dry HUGE .swimming pool 5 mos die. Good w/children. \Vant ·~ GLASSPAR, ca'' cru•, Eucalyptus. Dl'livcred & u " old incl filter, pump, ladder, stacked. MD-98S7 good home. 833--0831 lS'. 1;x. hp, 1/0, igc \vhl trlr
2 TACO l\.lini Bikes. Cur1·cn1 Imparted Autos 9600
lic!'nSt'S. Lik<' nr1v. $175
skimmer & life jacket. Ne1v '===~""-~-;;,c:-c: IT\VO Frisky black male kit· & extras. l\.1ust sell 549-28:.!i
$·9-.. A 'l' •2t10 89'3306 NE\VPORT Beach Tennis ooth. ;1s.2333 AUSTIN AMERICA
" J .,..cr1 ice " , ,,... . Club chru·ttr fa mi I Y tens, part .Siamese. 7 \l'Ceks "€8 -4 SPEED, low mileage.,
BALBOA Bay dub men1ber· membership. 5'16--40JG old. &lli-1338 vinyl Ip, $2000. KI S-2002 or
ship fol' sale. Ca 11 CZ13) COCKER. Shepherd pups • :? 49~7jt
372-&182 or (213) 313-5851 IM ::.::;i•~<~· ~W.:..,••~t~e~d:,._ _ _;8~6_1_0 I !"'!~Jc,. 2 fetnall'. Days only.t-4-3,--M-,-IO-he-,-,,--,.-1,-;-"<-E-,.-,.-,-,
ROGERS Snare Dl'Um, Ex-$ WE · BUY $ .'ltla Esther, C.i\T. 12/4 sedan ]96j, }10,000 gas or
e rc-)' c: Ir. W/speedometer. SIAi\lESE Cat, male, about 9 $50,000 Diesel. 8~·409~
* * 1\Jin1 Bike * .
EXCELLENT CONDITION
$100 •19i·l;).IS
NEAR Nrw Roddy 3 .HP
ye"llo\v 1\lini Bike, $100.
./ 673-0·13\ I
Both Xln'I. S3S ea. 53G-3S20. mos., 49)..55:?6 12/4
DRESSER. chest, nitestand $ FU RNITURE $ ~E~>~I A~L~E~Go~o·8/Sh§op~p=u~pp~y~·i;S;;a;;;il;bo;;;•:t~s~;;;~~90;;;;;1;;0 Motorcycles 9300 $50. Eleclric roas!er ,11•ilh A PPLIANCES 7 v.•ks old. 6~6-2119 t!/4 / :._ __ . __ ,e.:..;..c
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sales, Servirl', Paris
ln1n1cdiatc Delivery
All r-.!odels
J2rlujjort
3hnport s sLaod $5. 839-7356 after 6 • p~ "!A" '"D duck. '6612 llONDA 305 ne1v C'ng. Color TV1-Pi1not-Si••1ot s:..• " .......,..... CAL 25 che1•ry cond. XTH.AS ~75.
\VANTED: Soda foun1ain 1 Piec• or HollM f•ll 6~~IOl}J 12/~ See al 9615 Kensin"ton HB Jl.00 ~V. Coast Hwy., N.B.
adaptabll' for USC in honie CASH IN JO MINUTES II ·12 -541 .. &t!-9-lOJ 54Q.17&i e 5' I '531 • FREE Lumber -:you ha11l. LOADED ca ..> -t · Authorized AIG Dealtr
bar. s.;o..3m ·"' """ Call bet. J0-2. 673-7710 12/•l .. \Vith Slip • '66 '\'1\i\i1\ll1\ 2.;o cc Goodl""='=""°"OC''='~~=I
homes, decorators <':lnrt'll11-I •iiiiii0o;;;ii0iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•
~Z~',~;""~' • ""'Hmoo· ANTIQUE CLOCKS
G.E. stereo, A. 1\l . · F. i\1.
radio, record player, grcal
' for recreatlon room. S@,
8·11--0JlO
For Sale, Fire\\'OOd, \\'ANTED: Che\'Y Engine PLY\VOOD scraps:. 646· in Ne11·pol1 l'Ondition $300 bcfor<' 3 Pl\I AUSTIN HEALEY
Orange & Eucalyptus 283. 1962 -191)j, Call alter 6 2377 l2/6 645-0810 on \\·eekdays. all day \l'knds. ===7.,....=~1'-=-~ I ,.:P,.:•:..l·:..".,. .. :..9:..3_90 __ """"""= 897-6%"9 IR._E_B_U_l-LT--195-.7-cro--A-,-,-lin·I
RD FURNITURE
1844 ~ewport Blvd,, CM
C'\'el")' night 'Iii fl
\Ved., Sat. & SI.Jn. '!1] 6
USED assorted occasional
chairs $12. Us...'Ci ~·alnut :;tcp
tables S5.9j. AssortC'cl bl~d
headboards $7 <'a, 4;c col·
ored TV. · Salt'm 111aple
cabinet, \VOl'kS }:!'ood 59;,.
The Factory, 1885 Harbor,
540--6S42
BIJ'iOCU LARS, 10 x 80 '>''ith NEED bricks one to ltXKl, F:!~el i:a;;u Jhaa~l~ ~~.:rril~ (AL 'al N
1
o. 286.h clas.~ 1'uCf' 1'"0R SALE; '61 HONDA '150. Healey. Removable hrd lop.
:.!O ,\nhqur clocki1 incl., 4 REPOSSESSION s 1ere 0 , filters. \V\Vll Pan:ter tank, N!llsonably prict'd. 644-4~ .121~ gear. t f\SS c an1p. Out-am lea\·ing stale. i\lust sell! 4 st'ats. good t ires. Bal!er:y
· 'l k lripod mounted. 64j...Ii•l7 =-=--._---,...--,,--,c; board. Desperate! Ofrcr! See al 18&1 i\lonrovia Apt 26. ""oleo· ,,·aoTO)'. •,··cw O"I & Gi·andfather clocks, Cuckoo ,,. a e offer. Id " " clocks, old ~chool clocks & 64G-4S4t TANDEA1 Bike $35. 21" TV, Machinery, etc. 8700 l\1IXED ten·ier. 6 n"IOS 0 • Bkr. Days 673-20:il; t::i•es. or call 646--8451afler4:30 p:11 nt job. Sl2SO. or best of.
ood $,lj 8!Xl C .1 1 1 h11s all shots. ~H6-!J3!M 12/6 673--4030 f('·· 1\-12-8074 European 11·all r\()('ks. 01her G' • ap1 a• \\'CS t'ORKLIFTS: Pneu & solid '6!1 BSA 411 Victor, ~iOO mi.l'M~"Oti' ==-,-----
nuse Antiqut>S, No Junk. Sale Camera!..~~Equlp. 8300 1~·~'~"=·;_1'°_"~"-hoc--I_·~-~~ tires. financing if needed. SINGING canary, bl'ing your 17' O'DAY Days111lrr ~uslon1 s_ca! & oil 1ank. 4" '62 SPRITE, new eng, ne\!i
}'ri & Sat·, Doo 12 & 13 ... , •tUST "'ell h•alth c I u b 011·~ cage. SJ&..1862 1216· Demo Slj~.""i ll!<rd SllD:'i tire~. 1v1<lc handle bars. c:om""!ilion clutch, -uolo "" FOTRON I k · '' " ~ All machinr.11 gua.rnnteec!. ..-,.. 226 The Grand <''lnnl, Little 1 camera, a es PIC• 1ne1nbc'rshi p. 4 years $.1.00. 7S3 NCl\1.0n \Vay, C.l\f, otf BEAUTirUL Fluffy n111le 14' O'DAY. UsL'<l $•19j 1'~01·k brace, $81j. a.10-6335. mo1'C' ne1v 1'<111i11. ]I.lust
Balboa Island. lures in da r~. lifctinle devt>l. 8'12-39:'>.l Pl•centia, bcl\\·n 11th & ca! to adnlls 5-16--6207 12/6 F'un Zone Boal Co. Balboa ·i;;, HONDA 2 5 0 CC sacrifice this weck . .,JSjO or op·g cont. Cost $396 sell $150 o I I .... l 1 ·92 ·3•0
ROLLTOP De!!k $200. Na·
lional CttJSh Regisl<'r, solid
brass Si;1, Grandfalhcr's
clock, perfret condi tion
&12-5283 FIREWOOD 18th. 642-S.193. PETS and LIVESTOCK 16' 'Dt1y libe1-gass~aiJJOa1. SCRA~IBLER $275. ..,..~or. .i. -.) ·:lfJ·
637 "''l h Good condiOon. Call &l-l-11H7 aft :i r1~1 * '60 SPRIT"' * .....,~ 9" SOUTH Bend lalhc, UlUC ----------1 " * 675--0137 * (;()OD CONDlTlOV. PLAYHOUSE-s1\·ing S('! looling. \Valkcr Turner * '01 BSA Lighfning 630 er,
combo. Has ladder, slide, r<idinl drill press. 6" bench P •I•, Gen•ral 8800 SUPER Sattcli!c 14·. CO\'<'r. \'<'ry l·leun. S82j or bcsl ur-C,\LL EVES: 64&-:ill!J
Sporting Goods 8500
Office Furniture 801 c 1 "'$'="=· ="='=""="=1
====
1'9" SURF'BOARD $6.). \Vet
suit. n1<'dium $12. Ice skates
size 3 $3. 5'16-9!)41
rte. Goocl cond. $611. 675-0137 gTindcr & stand. 642-!)SOj -----------I Trailer. storage avail. SJ1:J. fer. Call 64G-138:J. ''·0=1,.-,A~c~·s=T~1'~.-l~l,-.,~1,-v~S~p-ri~l,.
C ' h \VOT',;: NU? Call 5-19-2156 '68 Ho~a CL 4~-" good condition Sl\ji, I Lange :ski boots, never Air on1prrssor. M p, ., "I-' ....,
usrd. sizl': 11 n1en's. BEST :t phlltif:. Good shnpc. !:anta Claus Specials at 14' Sa1eltite 11·irh ;\m,.ncan EXCELLENT CONDITION S36-7619
: USED O l flcc Df'sks
w/chairs. $»$30. !Ian~
Sailmakers. 8fil \V. 18th Sl.
Ci\I 548-3464
Sewing MachinH 8120 ----SINGER Automatic zig ug,
6 n1os old. No attach needed
to do dl'signs, monograms,
1-========== I blind hem~ <'tc.: auto bobbin
Office Equipment 8011
TYPE\VRITER. Adding
machine, calcuJator. very
reasonable. Xlnt c: on d.
892-2113
Garage Sale 8022
CHRl STl\.IA .S Fair &
NeighborhOod Garage Sale.
Ne1v toys, ha!'ldmade gi11s,
dl.Shwashcr, relrlg & funi..
clolhlng, mis. 19812 Lotus
Lane. HB foll Adams &
~lagnolia) Fri & Sat Dec. 5
& 6 9-5.
\\·1nder. S "\'ear i::uar.
A~sume pymts of $5.17 or
St\2.00 cash. 52&-6616
Musical Inst. 1125
ACCORDION
&aulilul • 9 nlOs old Conte].
lo. Bes! Oller takes i1.
!).18"8718
LIKF: new Conlc\lo n101 hel' of
pca!'I Acrordl:in, paid S:iT.-,,
!l.!!Crilit'e $175 <1r J>ei;t offer.
83~1481 ,.
GUJTAR & Case. liood con-
di ti on, REASONABLE.
6f6.-4592
GARAGE Sele: Thurs Thro I========= &t. ~ to Nut.Ji. Hl-ll +
A,1'1/FM, liC!Y,.lng macl1. 'an-
lkl:'.s. ~!$ Qf C<lodlci. llun-
ting ton Conl lnental
TownhouR, 9SS«i Contloental
Or.. 11.B. Turn in lrom
Broakhurst-
Hoo.ebold Furnf1h1n ;11 ,
Garden. A Pl11mbina loob.
Much marr! 2801 Setlll\g'
Sun Dr., QfM 644-6376
Pianos & Organs 1130
VERY rare pla,.\'Cf piam.
baby Jt'f'and, ".:.i,lh Amplco
expression. Heif Rarhman-
lnoff play his muSic his \\·ay,
A.sk que11ion:s! 494-6161
PRlVATF. PARTY \VANTS
TO BUY PIANO >"'OR
CASH. S12-oo.15
M iscellaneous 1600 OFFER. Call 61N770 eves. _;oo. can: 642-4261 'TIS TROPICAL FISH trailer. good cond. $425, S8.)(I * * 837-44!181"'========
PRQ:\l!SE HER ANYTHING
But give her CARPETING !or
Chi;strnas .•. or lhe New
Year. ShaJ:& -Hi-lo Nylons
etc. Lie Contr. Free est.
~0-1262 ~rl6-41l8
BEAtrnFUL hand paintl':d
oil portrait of ;,'Ou or your
children from a photograph.
A ~'Ondcrful idea for that
:special Christmas ll i f I .
. 646-Jlm.
9080 Edin~cr lat Alagnolia\ 5-IS.9T.'..6 DATSUN BEDS, Kg sizr, dual twin &. 12" ATLAS LATHE. '69 HOND A 3.)(1 S.S. Going to · $1'"" F'.V. * * 8-tl-'1530 !'•' CATA', !AR,\N ''''I h y· E II ---
l\10VING • Sectional sofa,
beautiful living room chain;,
(.'Omer !able, new shir15i ·
mi!IC, 7215 Slarr, nr \\'Ur.on.
CM
\\'ALNUT Cl'ib, uSC(I 4 mos.
tVSI $60 • .11('11 $30, 11190 mal-
1rcsg SlO. Infant's cnr !:>rd
$.'), 2 inlant sco.ls SI & $4.
1012! Signet Cir, JIB !J68...1742
T'OR SALE
Collec!Ot"!i ltrm OrlglnRI
"'j\f!CKEY l\10USE" watch
• prrfec:t running ronditlon
-$1::.0 837-4239.
NE\\' llbcf'llaY :skis ~·/bln
d1ngi; .. S65. Surfboard. Xlnl.
rond1Uon. (213' 592-tul
11.8.
C11rpe1 111.yt'r hA.11 Hi Lo
nylo~ $1.99 yt!. Shttgt
from :l.M up + my ll!'bor. me {lC1' )11.rd. ~41.1519
11VfN bookca~ headboanhi
$1:\., b:tra lomt rMll~s~s.
•pr!na~ It frames S2!i.
54~1
l.A\\1NMO\VER, 2 hp, King·
Q.l.A111'ft. Xtnl. t""Ond. ST~.
~'~'1
hvin. \Vasher. dryer, ·;>7 2 chucks & acccssoncs . ....,. " 1etnarn!! xce ent 1..'Cln--·
Che"", dreMCr. 645-1063 642-5761 8820 Jib<'rglass hulls $ti00. riition, 6-16-4940 al1. j, '67 DATSUN . ., Ci1ts 61~2311 1969 HONDA 90 door. automauc ~transmis-
M isc•llantous 1600 M iscelli1neous 1600
Sl(l ~\t '1'l~r and
SPORTSWEAR
WHITE STAG
ASPEN
HANG TEN
PU RITAN
from
JACK'S
SPORTING
GOODS
222 Marine Ave.
Balboa Island
673·8420
Brand·nome Product.
MEN-WOMEN
SPORT-08ERMEYER
JANTZEl'l .
TOP SIDER
LEVI
6 l\IOS old reg i st ere rl --$2,j(). Call 5-1~-*0 sion, While v.'alls, l 7.9CO act·
ll1malayan rn.'lle kittens, 2 Power Crulnri 9020 -~-----=-~-• ual n1il"s, drivr!I Jikr: n<'\VI '61 Y Al\IAHA 100 T\\1n Seal points. l B 1ul'P0 In I. 'fill DORSET 17' Col11l1na RUNS GOOD! Before 5: lV\VJIO'll
Sired by Champion. cab. cn1iscr \l'/:l"tras. 54&-5572 Aft. 5: 54~ $1095
·194-2316. Ovet"scas duty.. 1nust .sell.
1967 TRIUi\lPH T-100 c .. :i00 H b v w ABYSSINIAN KITIENS Days: 213: '131-2701/:tlt 6 ar our • , Only 2 l<'fl, 10 1vks old P1\t: 714: 54~1497, Cnpl. cc. ;i000 nii's. Xln1. SiOO.
646-8226 i\lackl<' . ======--Dogs 882S SpNd-Skl Bo1ts 9030 ---------1 ADORABLE Lhasa Apso 1969 BOSTON \\'hn lrr, '10 hp
pup11 3\1 mo~. old. AKC ~g. Evinrudc & !rlr J::', 2 nios
Champ. blood line 833-J~ used, estate sail'. 11ush-but·
or 540-9701 ton s1:1.rtc.r, xlras SlSJO.
P.tlNIATURE 0 a ch sh u ndl-=&1~1-1=l='4=.======o
puppies. nialcg. $3:> each. Marine Equip 9035 841·l9.\'l •
COCKAPOO Pu_ps_,_ ~ Poodle, DECCA 101 radar11. One )T
black, from J2" high olri, ttmoved for larger
~nts $20. 548-8819 radar. 12. 14 & 32 voe
GER:\IAN Shepherds, l>\ln'· $!9.iO. tnstnll<'d l\'Jth iUAr.
bred, males only. 2 montM. ~eiipoi_:t l\larUK' Eng. 7l4:
$45 each. Phone 642-&j1'2 ~:;is.~263.>--~-~-=--
BASSETT AKC. 1 "'k!'. "'ill 6 CYL. dltsrl t'"°'· J lo I
hold .1 ~-· 1.. ~n 11nl1. 1'Tesh "1'tl'r 002~ .... u i11tn1a11. IJ up. cooled Brand neu·. still In
crate, ctocy eo.111. 613-2910
B9Sf'ON Bull Tl'ITicr. 1 "'kl!. after ii pm
AKC. 4_ lei!. Champ. line, S\~"V_O_f_FE-"'R~D--I0-,,-_,--,,-.. ~.-2~
$100. M:>-1~15 I I ~ ' --' I th I n(. 11•·311$ l!:>CU eSll Rn
WEl!\fARANER Pups born yr, ptrf conc:I. Co!lt 5210,
912'.l no papers, S2:i ea. Call nrtct S+5. 536-3381.
142-822.1 ---,======~-Tr:iil 6 n1os old, goo:I COii• AF'CHAN HOUNDS dHlon.
l\lal!!s & lcn1a.le1, 11?a.s. AKC 833-1~27
reg. 962-9989 Pl.ATif Se:tlant, pet·fec:I con.
AK( BASSETT PUPS dl1lon, PUrch11sed G<!r1nan1.
Trlortilor. $45-$3, ~ f!VI!' $2:,0!r""'h. 642-4237 cventnw;.
675-1fi32
HONDA i\!1111-Trail ti
old. good condition.
8."..i-2·127
1110!
AUTHORIZED
SALES & SERVJQ:;
lSTJl BEACH BL., 81~·11Jj
HL:NTINGTON BEACI I
9350 The World!; Best S'1000 C1Jr Motorscooters R~O:.;_D_D_Y;__M_;,-n-,-,,-,_~E-,-cc-1-lo-oo $
candition. 311P B&S -rng, I AW DATSUN w1·te1
Slj,j nc\v. Best 0 f I er _
54~ ======:=:==,;: "Ltiulcr 1n Thr Beach C11tcs"
Auto S1t'Yice1 ZIMMERMAN
& Parts 9400 284S HARBOR BLVD.
BEAO{
Auto Supply
Wholesale
Prk:t11 IQ AU
Complcle ~IAchine Shop
SPEED EQUTPl\1ENT
REBUtLT &VClNES
l4~ID
ORANGE COUNTY'S
NO. I
DATSUN DEALER
DOT DATSUN
1~ lkarh Blvd.
lluntlneton Beach
812-1781 or $4().(l.14z
'67 DATSUN
PICKUP 11~ Vir torla. Ci\f 5'i!J-6j5() AU nri;";lnal ln~id~ k oul. 4 18361 Bench Blvd, HD 811--0!rn ~pr!. rllr, ivin fine pivt P~ * OPf:N 1 DAYS * run Pl1Ct> SlO'n. Call l\~~
i!l l-!mJ
'{J9 OLDS body !)3Ms, <.tlroniu '6i STATION _ \\·gn. ~· hp. 4
rlm.1, c11;. ' •]'IN'fl. ~ t"Ond. 110~
.. 6i:>-1.tl''· • ~~;:n, ·
..
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION • J'.@ANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION
• Th11rsd1y, Oeeember 4, 19611
TRANSPORTATION
---~
DAILY Pilaf :J'T
r KANSPORTA T!ON TRANSPORTATION !TRANSPORTATION
UMd C1rs 9900 U1.d C•rt 9900 Used Ca rs '900 lltod Caro 9900 lmpottH Autos 9600 Imported Autos ,.... _____ _ 9600 Autos Wanted 9700 Used Cars 9900 9600 I mportod Autos
DATSUN
"NEW!
'70 PICKUP
\\'/camper, 96 ~ o:wrhead
earn, 4 spd, dlr. 6 ply tlres,
b<'1ck up lia:hts. You rnune
il! Full 111'!L<e $2009. 1"11ke
sn111ll dn or trade. CW! Phil,
·1\14-9773 01' 5-15-0031.
ENGLISH FORD
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME ENGLISH
FORD OEALER
SALES -SERVICE
OVER 60 IN ::.TOC1'
• 2 .t;, 4 Dr. ~todels
• :. & 4 Dr. Dl-llL'l;t''
e :! & I Dr. CT l\lodels e Station \\'agons
:>.!any \\'ilh fully au10111at1c
!runs., air, 1·adiat urrs. t1'-
d10, vinyl roof, \\SW l111's,
BJ{AND NE\V STD. 1 DR.
$1785 F"L:LL. PRIC.I::
VRDf;R NO\V
Theodore
ROBINS".FORD
:..'COO I larl>or Blvd. Cos1a l'•IC!a 6i2·0010
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport Imports Ltd. Or-
ange Count)"s only author·
ized dPaler.
SALES-SERVICE-PARTS
3100 W . Coast 1-iwy.
Newport. Bea.ch
642-9405 5'10-1764 Authorizelt Ferr111·i Oraler
FIAT
'168 Fiat 124 Spt. Cpe.
Tangerine exterio1·, blk. in-
!rr. Radio & full chrome
11·hccls. Perfect in cvrry de-
tail.
J1rtuµort
Jlrnµorts
31CO \V, Coast lhl',V., N.B.
&12·91()5 540-1764
Authorized i\fG Dealer
HILLMAN
'jg HILtl\IAN $200
... 548-4150 *
CLASS 9600 :\USTl:'ol Tlt-:AL\'
"64 i\.H. SPRITE. ~ood cone!.
/lCW pain!, $S.'i0. * 64-t--O~ ...
JAGUAR·
BEAU XK·l·IO Blak ·:11 Jug
Rdslr. fuJ lcthr int. Gd
!ires Ju111p s~. ;).l;,..TilJ,
:>16-1 ~2
'66 JAGUAR Xi\!:: Rdstcr.
i\lal'Qon. Xlnl, j ust overhaul-
ed. $2995. 846-JO.ll or
&1-l-4221
+ 1968 JACUAR XJ{L,
'XL.NT COND.
536-487·1 or• ~6·9:'13'.?
KARMANN GHIA
· 1965 Karmann Ghia
2-door Coupe, -X1nl Cond.
tmmacu1arc inside and out!
One 011•nr r. Sec at 450· Broad-
1vay. C.i\1 .
KARi\IANN Chia Convt. r.NI
\\"{ \\"h1 lop. Nu paint, lop,
ires. Cus. inf. S995. !lls-ro•l8
'68 Convertible, beige, ra1ho.
aukJn1atic. Sl!l35. <19-t-!H•l6 or
·197-1666 CVC'S.
'61 l.·IERCEDES 220 SE con-
vertible. Ruos \\'Cl!." Riii.
$1750 cash. 494-756.'i
MG
MG
Sales, ~rv1c..:. Part.o;
lnuned!a te Delivery,
All '-lodels
J1rtuµort
Jhnµort s
::SIOO \V, Coast J-lwy . N.B.
6l2-941kl a.IO-li64
Authorized i\tG Dealer
MGB
MERCURY MGB ------1 _ _:_____ CADILLAC i-----CORVEnE TOYOTA \V t: f'AY ..• CHEVROLET
'&a filGB, xlnt cond. New ---------1
Ure,, R&H. 1 ownr $ll9.l. ·
Aller 1 pm. 835-0000 CASH '62 Cl\OILLAC Sedan tle
Ville SIS;;. Lo mli::, lo do\\'n
to 11ual. buyer. S<IS-4265
'63 SJ'lNGRAY. 2 Top!, :':·10
'6.) NoYa s.s. bkt is.eats, ti.Ulo HP. 4 spd .. 411 Posi,. lthr.
• ., MERc w"""· 9 ..... ___ P_o_NTI __ A_c __ 1
Xlnt cond. Set to ap-66 PONTJAC BonneY1Ue. 4
dr·l.Aaded. full pcl\Vtt fuel
injection. A Creamputt by
OwneJ'. Can be teen at 21~
College, Apt 31 aft 5 Pl\1
]Jl66 Pontiac Le l\tanns, vinyl ~op,__EJS. /B, ait cond.
Auto Iran.~. J\olust !ell, 1nake
{)ffer. Call -S:ID-5588
OPEL
'67 OPEL Deluxe Sport
Coupe, radio, v.•/s/w tires,
onJy 21.000 n\1. $ l 19 j,
5'16-l;'"ill.
-PORSCHE
TOYOTA
1970
HERE NOW
'63 CAD. Couvl. Good Cond.
Air Concl. Fully Equipped.
$935. Call Craig. 675-1753.
sea11, A.\l/Ftlt ~.<XXl P.11. trans, p/s, r/h, economy 6, Ou M'"" · d new tires, recent tune-up tsta ....... ,. ong. co n .
xlnt oond. By owntt $9!15. •8:::4::.7-4872..:::::·:_ ____ _
837-5202 days; 67l-4S66 '68 IMMAC. 4 spd. hi·pcrf.
eves. 327, BP, 2 tops, ni ags, air,
Low P rice• on CAMA0RO
R I I '69' Aak ror Sales Manager 1969 CHEV Jn1pala 2 Dr, ema n ng 5 18'2.ll Bearb Blvd. \Vire Whls, air/cotld, auto
tape. 675-0986 or 5-1fi...-O.l!l5
FAL_t:ON ''OUR BE$'!' DEALS Huntington Beach 6S -4 SPEED. low n1il!'agc. 1ran!. ·1000 nii. Like new.
ARE STILL AT Kl 9-33ll vinyl top, $2000. Kl 9-2002 or Sac $29!15. 968-RJ. DEAN LE-WIS --,,W"E=---=pe:A:':17. ::CJ:-:4S-:::-:H:._-_-I.'.'""''.-"-i'.tii.ll-lE' ___ v_Y_t,-1e_•_1_ .• -.,-s_-,-.,c CLEAN ll\61 '"•"•"do« •la
prceintt'~ $'150. 644-0350
MUSTANG
'66 Mustang Convert
VS, automati?, radio, bcAtl>f.
\ \\'Q\V682 ~ •
$895 ~
Harbour V.W. RAMB(ER
Porsche '66 912 Coupe 19661-iarbor, C.t.-1. 636-9303
The best onr anywhel'l.' EU. 1968 TOY OT A Corona dlx 2
ony tJ!k. 1~/ffi<1lching in!cr. Or. Hrdtp. Ai\1 -Fl\1. -4 l'!pd.
Ar.1 / F'.\1, Bun::h exhaust, 10.000 ·n1i. Orig O\vncr $157J.
chronic 11hccls. See to be. ~5-1141
heve. =========I
CHEVROLET air, py.1·, Md rubber, sole wgn. S300. Call anytime. o~·ncr, cleHn lS.'iO. After 6 or _54;1'-=25:;33======
AUTHORIZED
SALES &. SERVICE
18711 BEACll BL., 8424435 '65 RAMBLER FOR YOUR CAR wkeoo• 982-<J5SJ c ·57 ChC'\'Y Ile! Air Convt.1 ~~------
Auto Iran~. R&H, 4 nu '&t CHEVY ln1pala SS Cpe. FORD HUNTINGTON BEACH Amb&asador 990, f11JI pwr,
CONNELt wh111·11lls. $425. 847-1182 P I S, R & 11, auto l~n&. Cleen. Pl'i pty. $895,
CHEVROLEl '63 CHEVY ""'''"~ "'''•"· 84Z-:mo
'68 MUST, 2 + 2. 8.1~. air fact air, dlr, loaded. One
'65 COUNTRY Sedan \Vagon. cond., po11"t'r, fullly loaded. owner. \Viii take old!!r <'Br
1(1 passenger \l'ith popular Very clean $2200. Dan in trade. PD\Vl38W3. Call
J1rtuµon
31111µorts
3100 \\'. Coast Jl\\J'., N.B.
6-t!·9.IW /j<l!).17&1
Aulhotized !\la' Dralcr
PORSC'l!E'S -Every pos!ible
type, all colors, all years;
1958-191!9. For the Horst in
used Porsche's, ScC':
J1rtuµort
Jlruµorts
3100 \V, Coast Ji\\'y .. N.B.
6'1Z·~'IOCi 540..176-l
VOLKSWAGEN
VW BUGS
FRO:O.t
. $399
2828 ,,. __ ..__ Al·-'. • needs body \\Ork $J7j. ·::_ _____ _
no.1·-~vu 8'"'718 • 4 69 CHEV 108 Van 307 cu ln, Costa i1esa ~)""" .......... a.:l'.'r pm .u..o1• V-8, auto trans, h\'Y duty
WE PAY TOP '65 Il\.tPALA. 2 dr, 283 eni:". springs, low nil. Best oUu
DOLLAR New trans, lo ml,i:, air.:. xlnt owr $2500. ~5-{1612 cono. Lo book. &15--1852 I~======= for good, clean used cars,.1--,--------
all makes. See George Ra,y *. 61 CORVAJR. 4 dr, sta-
, 'fheodore Robins Ford t1on \\'agon, good t'Ond., $250 CHRYSLER
2060 HarbQr Blvd. er best offer. 67>-0006 --------
GOOD SELECTION C.1.f. 642-0010 '65 CHEVY i taJ1bu, :? dr. l968 NE\VPORT 4 dr sedan,
W'll B hrdlp, pl!, p/b, /Jucket sis, 24.000 mi, air, p/s, p/w, . I uy 32.ooo nii. $l300. !"i<is-7460. p1b s2350. 833-2400 aner 6
C li6 CHRYSLER Ne"'J>Ort. 2 ~ ~Your Volkswagen or Porsche '~ Ctl~V .~1 Aii· i;!a wag. rlr. 11 .T. Auto. New radial
0 & \ d II n-:d f Fa(·tuiy an. p/:;, pcrf ('.Ollcl. 1irl:'s · :'l'---k, 11500. 612-1948 pay op o ars . .-cu or SSOO * S·l'.?-58:.'9. "'"'
'
S or not. Call .Ralph • ~ ,o, · 673.0900 ·~ Chcl'y l~ S1~1~1 Va_n. COMET ~L, .J,P L'IPORTS \\'A.l\'TED Perfect co!1d1t1on SZ'l50 Pnv.
,,, Orange Counties l=P"IY~·,:,°',.:2-<i~o!~<--~~-fi.I CALIENTE 2 dr H.T. 289
TOP S BUYER '00 CAPHICE 4 di'. PIG, air. VS. Buckets, C'Onsole, fa c-
j.t9. 30:11 Ext. 66 or 67 Bll.L MAXEY TOYOTA big eng. Vinyl 1011. X!nt tory air, Ald/Ft.1. A.T.,
1970 l-IARBOR BLVD. J.8881 Beach Blvd. cond. $15:t5. 496-2500. P/B, P/S. $375. 54a.-4~
COsrA l\IESA H. Beacb. Pb. 847-8555 '61 Chevy Jmpala Conv.,
SO VW's $29j. Good Transportation. CONTINENTAL
side facinA: 3rd scat. Radio, Hilton, 548-Sl87 Ken, <l!H-9773 or S-1>063<1,
heater, power steerinR. tilUf ANG ,67 289 v.s. air. '67 REBEL 770. All power .
power brakes. big V-8 pl • disc., radio. Grey-blk original owner. Under 31,000
engine. Priced 10 move vin)l. Gd. cond. $16 75 mi. $1395. Eves or \\'knd!
bffore this \\'eekend. $1000. 673-5Sl I 546-8173
644-1742 Private Part)'. ---------1 =~~~~~~~~1 '6j V·8. PIS, PIB. Racing '64 Rambler Oasslc 770. V-8,
'64 FORD Fairlanc, •I dr Green. Lo\v dn. \Vi 11 pwr steering. Xln'l Cond .
sedan. Stick shilt, IO\Y finance. $995. Call • 6i3-4300 -""='=' o="'='=· =",, .. =58='='===ol miles. l 011o·ner, lop cond. ...
$350. &i&-5582 °' "'"-'!sso OBILE . T·BIRD
'67 GALAX!E, Fae. Alo, _ _:O:..:L:;D:_S:_M;..:.;_;_ __ I ---
P /S, P/B. lA !\ti. Nu !ires. '65 STARFIRE. ful\ po\ver '66 T·BIRD
Xln'I cond, SacrlfiC<', Going incl. \\•!ndO\\'i'I & seats, air Jn Service. Call -645-0757, :? Dr. 1-l'T, full p1vr, air. dlr, cond. $.1395. 5'1G-5113 P\\T scats. brakes, wlndO\\'S.
'67 GALAXII:: ~i&.i. 2 dr, r/h, STA WAG STEAL I Biue Book $2XIO • SACRI-
alr, :190 cng. auto trans, xlnt ·u:1 F'-8:> \Vhl \Vag. Sacrifice FICE nB99. or foreign car
cond. orig O\Yncr $1195. Call Orig, oivncr. Exceptional. Jn trade, NPV132. Cell Phil
eves & wkends &14--6098 $l().)O "* S73-l'.!32. 49-1.9773 or &5-CJ63.1.
'66 F alcon Fu'lur• 1966 Olds CUUass, ·:2-doo-,,-,n->· "T--;B"inI"'""'100=1-Land~-;.-"-.-,,,....,.d,,
Fully factory f'<!Uipped, Dlr. Dlac. 1 owner. Bkt seats. full P \\T, wht 1v/dk navy
S!i!lS. * 548--0769 '* lop, all :ictras. I owner,
Phone 6-l2·60'!3 always garaged. Exe:, oond.
Authorized J\IG Dc3ler
PORSCHE '63 Supt>r. l\luch
Nu Equip. S2500. Call Phil,
962-5521 or 847-IO!JO
Porsche '6S S.C. Coupe
Bolc1v red 1\/blk inler. 1''ully
t..'QUip. Reflc.>1:lor. illeticul91:1S
Cll.l'I!,
19GO Thru I~
Fron1
'64 GALAXIE 500XL P/B, PLYMOUTH Pr pry 644~307
CONTINENTAL PfS, air. New t l r e;u T-BIRD '64, air, all p~T. &
'66 SS Impala Convertible. SEDAN S'IS-2392 alt 6 \\'l!t'k day, '69 Ply. Fury III. Auto., P .S., X'tras. AmfFm radio. Ask-
Auto Le•sing 9810 Call li-12.ffil•I.
1966
LEASE -RENT BEST OFFER. J..oaried! Xln't Cond. day \Vcekcnds. p .6., fac:t. air cond., vinyl ing $950. 84&--0539 or (213J
lmm&diate delivery Cat: alt 6· 9C8-6322 $1950. caII • S46-'r843 '68 LTD Sq. \Vag U P\\T, disc tool, r.tu.st sell. Make oiler. 439-6119 \\"kdays 5-8PM
on all ·59 CHEVY Station \Va~n. 6 :;~======= & air. S1950 + '65 I '66 837-9682 ;-66 T-BrRD. Pert concl. 1
$495 I
Harbour V.W.
J1rtuµol'!
Jhnports
1970 FORDS & c:yl slick shit~. .Be.st CORYAIR Corvair or? trarle. 962-5810 owner. 10 miles. Sacrllicc!
AUTJ·IORIZED FORD TRUCKS reasonable ofr. S.1.>-2936 '62 FbRD Van, fine shur)(', PONTIAC . 646-8760, 646:26n
SALES S.· SERVICE AU popular n1akcs. Ford 1969 l~INGS\VOOJl Estate 1962 CORVAIR 4 door, stick. 310 5th SL, lluntington '64 T-BIRD, very clean
18TI1 BEACH BL., 8"24435 authorized leasint" system. ivag, 9 pass. lots o( extru, N ew brakes' car b c""='::'h:::·..:'::"::":..'.:.c:•·:::":::'"_~ '67 Gr~n Prlx-Sherpl $875
HUNTINGTON BEACH Get Our Competitive Rates xlnt cond. F.V. 96S-8173 O\'erhaulcd. 24,000 mi. $350. 1961 FORD Country Squire, Loaded! SIS95. S4&ll6S &14-6279
BUG, Dark Green, new car Theodore (5) 1968 CHEVY Impalas, 646-3431 · Gd tires. $325 or best offer. '68 LE MANNS Sprt Coupe. "·;s~T~-B~!R~D~: ~1 .. -.,-&<x><I-. ~.-ru-M '.1100 \V. Coast Hwy., N.B.
642·910:1 540-17&1
Authol'i.1:Cd ~IG Dealer
~ar. tranferablc, unclC't' ROBINS FORD loadC'd. Pric:ed for quick •62 CORVAIR, needs minor Call -54g..2696, Air, pwr, bucketK, lo mi. well $295. 830-6324 after 6.or 90ClO ml. auto, sticJ.;, r11dio. sale~ s1•·•. "" '5""" vinyl \op. 842-2335. "-"' ...,.,..... """ \l'Ork • \VOuld make good FORD Ranchero '67. Auto wkends
Porsche '64 "C" Coupe
Irish grf'E'll 1r/bJJ.;. inlt"r.
Ylawlcss thi·uout. Every po;;..
siblr acL-essory. Hun-y un
this one.
on/off lug. l"ack. Res. 206{tl-farbor Blvd: ·w 1 1 2 d 283 Dunc B"""'Y Chassis, ;100. trans. Good cond. '1600 prlv '63 CA'TALINA $300. '59 Old! --==-~~~=~~-I 67".>-1898 Bus. 6115-1992. C'.os14 i\ll'sa 6420010 inpaa, i·, eng. ...... '55 CLASSIC $l850. · Nc\11 tr,1ns, lo ,nlg, afc, xlnt c536-<:::..:"':::.______ .c•:.:'Y'-'·..:54:.:,_,.:_.:::59;,,,=~=~ 88. $150. Both run good.
'65 v.w. LEASE ANY MAKE cornl. LQ book. &1:'1-1852 '63 CORVAJR L'Onvert .. 14.0 THE SUN NEVER SETS on 645-1294 t.1INT mncl S\995. 673-5822
OR MODEL ·54 1\lALIBU, xlnt t-ond. nc\V hp, super charge, ne1v trans Classilied's action power. '&\ TEr.IPEST 2 dr. 6 cyl. 19:17 T-BJRD, porl holes.
Radlo, heate1·, white \\•all Let our )ease experts show 1\1-es. 1 owner $9."lt or olfcr. .~ ttar end. Best of.fer O\'er For an ad to sell a.round Ute au10 R/H r:<ccl. cond. J\·lust r.tul!t see lo appreciate?
tires. Runs good. tPEP50.)) you the bf-st plan for youri.;;"::"-=366:::::_::30:•~•='~"""=";:':::==-'-='=125=·=1a;k='='·="=:9-=:l7;:06::==-c i;:•;:loc;;k;;·~d;;;a1~6';;v.'"7:;;~'=· ==:..!.=';'ll~$G::;25;·=';:':;"""',;;;;:'·===-=':;';::800::;·=83S-:=;7;67'°5'=. ====-\
J1rWport
3hnµorts
$895 personal needs without obu.I · ..; Harbour V.W. ••1io~~~~~~11TI _1N-'-.•';,w'""•-'c:•;;'.''-.-;,-.~.-;,-.-."-;,'""oo;.N';.e""w;;!'c-';,.°;,";;;;;;;;;;;.-9~'-8.oo-;;;;~N~·.w::.•..:c~a~r•~;;;;;;9~e~o•o'"".-'-N~·~w;.c~.a:..:':•;~;;;;;9.e:coo~~N~·~w;c~a;'.·:...-.-.-.-.-.-.-9•8_00;
AUTHORIZED 2850 !-!arbor Blvd.
J JOO \\', Coast Hwy .. N.B. SALLS & SERVICE Costa '-1esa
632·94[.i 54(}.1761 lSnl BEACH: BL., 842-4435 5-1()..!)6.10
Authorized ?ilG Dealer HUNTINGTON BEACH
'j7 PORSCHE. l\'e1v lires, V\V '63 Semi-Camper. i\11nt IJlf' LEASE "1"
l:hro1nc runs, fog lites. Cond. Only 12,47j mi.· r·ac 1970 FORD Torino CT. air
stCJ"(.'(l. Best olfcr over re·blt eng. Ster/radio, pri. p<ll\:cr b.rakes & slei!ring,
$1350. 673--85,q,1 11ty. $149:i. {714) 8~6-1017 or 1·adio, \\'I.de oval wsw, 351, ~~~-~=~---1 Office 1213) 4J9..-0951 4 V engine. $99.50, 24 mos.·
'68 Porsche 91~ Targa SOUTH COAST FACTORY AIR CONDITION-V\V '67, one O\\'ncr. Xlnl JNG. 12.!XXI local miles. Bur-original cond, Beige, radio, CAR LEASING
gundy finish \V/blk, inter. nu !ires. Sl.265. Joe 3CJ \V. Cst H\vy, NB 645-2182
.$('(.' ,r., drive to believe. Nickcrtz, 116 1 n du s l r i a I U d C
\Vay, C.i\1. 673-5620. se ars 9900
_f2rtuµort
31rnµorts
:noo \V. Coast 11wy., N.8.
6-\2-!l.10Ci 540-1764
IOO:l V\V. Sunroof. N.:iwly
painted. Xlut cond. Lo\v
mileage. 84.7-7185 "63 SPORT Fury, hdlp, =~=~-.C...~. ~-~ dlr, good runner, full price
1964 VW ~us, wide ovals, $499. i\1DR717 Call Phil headers, 1nsl. \voorl pa nel. 545-0634
Good cond. $1400. 548-3660. 1---------•
i\uthorizrd i\1G ·Dealer 1970 V\V Bug 4,000 n1iles.
private party. Best oner. '63 RAl\lBLER Amer, hdtp,
'6i Porsche Super 90, 5.1G-7S4S dlr, runs good full price S299.
sunroof, Jug rack. mirinight .66 V\V sedan ... oOO clean 001.920, call Ken, 494-9773 ~rlbfck int. 54&-8985 ,.
Porsche '67 912 Coupe condition. $ll00 Call after 6 .. 1.,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,..,.,
Ruby 1~d exterior 1v/blk. in-6r;>-1300. '68 .-4 Spet!d. low mileage,
trr. Every extra incl. Ai\f/ V\V '69. 1\ulo1natic Slick. \•inyl Ip, $2000. KI 9-2002 or
f",\J. chrome \\•heels. bumper Pwidio. Call ;\ftcr 6 Pi\t, 1:-il-67~14.
guard, etc. J:iowroon1 conch-_>_1_1'-_98_97_. ______ I==========
lion. "&I BUG $8.)0. Perfect con· BUICK
dition by oriJ:" owner. 1----------' J1rtuµort
31rnµorts '
714; 644-2128 '65 Wildcat Convt.
'62 VW. GOOD CONO. Radio, heater, power stcer-
$600. * 646-3191 ing. \Vindow!I & brakes,
VIV 17 000 . ,1 white walls, automatic trans '67 , . m 1. * "any ( UlB976, ·
3100 \V. Coast Jlwy .. N.B. Xlrns. * Priced to sell. $895 642-9«Jj :.40-1764 &12-1049 or 642-737-1 -'-'"_th~izrd ~JG Dealer· -,,=:~"vw~,",300-s~,,._-.-xl<..,..,\,.-oo-,,""' •. -,.,.,...,.k-Harbour v .w I
P0RSCllE S peedster. ·~
Bc-nutifully rc~cond . Bcsl 816·010'.'I Al.IT!IORlZED
Offer. Ball -;~\S-03'12 · SALES & SERVICE ·57 BUG. ne\v !ires, new 18711 BEACH BL .. 842-4435
'69 Porsche 912 Coupe brakes, low mllcagc, excel. MUNTINGTON BEACH
Bahama ycllo\V 11•/b\k. inter. c.'OllC.I $1375. 645-0446
Ai\l l F'.1-1, cir., etc. 10,000 Jo. 1966 BUG. good cond. 1969 RIVIERA. "Full factory
ral milrs. Ne1v car \\'aPran· S9j(). power & air. N1any extras!
ty .. lmmpccable in every de· 968-4966 Tape" deck. Xlnt c.'Qnd. $4200.
rail. 67;>.1802
J1rtuµort
Jlruµorts
:nro W. Coast lh1·y., N.B.
6t.!-9-IO;i ~14(}.li&I
Authorized l\IC Dealer
55 VW. Rc:buill ~ngine. Goori '63 BUICK l£Sab1'C. Goorl
11'8115 $27.1. 642-'".1761 ti! & B nd bit Ori
Volk5"'0rk. co ·• ~ .. ~ng.540 "'£; =~~~----,--,..,cl 01vncr. <H--.JUU\l. ,,....,.,...,,
1956 Volk!IV.'l\l;Cll, r c bu I l I C\'e.
cn;;inc, SJ:iO. l_-1'i_B_U_!C_l_<.-xl-,.-, -.,,-.,.-.-,-\.i-111
=~'~'~,....--'-'~"~6.;•_m_.,,...--;-1 sell or. trade for smaller
1967 V\V, c.-omplct!'.'ly olhaul· car-V\V. etc. 673-3910.
cd rilotor. xlnl cond. Owner.l::=========I
S1295. 642--7374, 6T.r-Ol•l•I CADILLAC
RO_L __ L_S_R_O_Y_C_E_ VOLVO
·--------'67 Eldorado ROLLS 'J9, side mounts, nC'1v VOLVO paint. 11C\\' \V!'i\lo' l ircs, $19j().
Priv. pr1y 816-50 11. 614-0.)07
Owned by Jitrlc Old t~c-hcr
rron1 Lagun~ Beach. Full
JOHN CONNELL
"NO GIMMICKS
NO GIVEAWAYS"
1st Place
Blue
_Ribbon
JUST 21 YEARS OF HONEST DEALING
SELLING CHEVROLETS
• Choose From Over 300 New
Chevrolela, Used Cars l Trucks + The Largest Selection of New Corvettes
In Orange County
Biggeat Jlfo...;; Saving Evenl In
Orange County
S-.A~
IRAND NIW
1970 CHEVELLE CPt
CONNELL CHIVROLIT
BLUE RIBBON PRICES ~-
'62 Merc&des
220 4 De,
!GWNHll
$699
710 Classic Coe.
Air COl'd .. Al.° Ai.11,
CX\/Xt:l01
$599
• 01:011!_ ]'ODAY
ILUI ltlBION SALE
$2193
~
1970~ {l\\'l', fuel ail', dlr, extra, cX· '68 MGB GT Coupe TOYOTA HERE NOW ,. .• cloa"'' r,,, '"''' .,
Prin1rosc ycllo\v 1v/hlk. learli ---------· 6mall down, YCL 553. Call $)299
f"Utufl J dr. Avto .... tlt.
rtcllo, hMlef, IUSOS4l)
$999 ,., inter. nuitlo, "'.l!'l' 11·hrrls, '68 Toyota Corona Low Prices on Ken, <191.gm or 5.l:'>-0034.
etc. On\Y i.ooo n1l!cs. Show-2 Door Hudtop. Radio, heat. Remaining '69's SEO. D<? Ville, li4. Xlnl cond.
room tr-c!i'.h. rr, auton1atl1·, radial urcs. YOUR BEST DEALS mechan. &: appearance.
!VThtZ.lSi ARE STILL AT li!any xlras. Blue \V{ blk J1rtuµort
31rnµorts .
• JlCO \V. Co11sl II\\')'., N.R.
6U·9KlJi jl/J-li61
Au1hor11("fl \ll; t;x·alrr
'65 MGB Conv.
8 R.G., blk. 1ntl'r. r 111\y
rq111p. lneld. 11 1rr 1\h('('I~.
radio & tunrd e.\h.iust Beau.
11rut ('Ondniun.
s1395 DEAN LEWIS ~~~~·· Orig owoor Harbour v w 1066 u arn.,_ C.M. ....9.103 '69 SDV, ""'' -m;, • • Eldorado fire mi.SI gold,
~UTllORIZED Antiques, Cl111le:t 9615 gen. leather scats. blk lop,
SALES t.i ~ER\llCI~ lull)' cqp'd. ~7j. Orig
ll'ill BE,\CH BL , 1111-·U:ta '57 MORGAN + o4 riwll('r 644--0343
HUNTINGTON BEACH NC\Y T:>p, new_ b1akt>s. :.:<c. SACRIFICE
BILL 1\.-•XEY c'<'llent c; on d, t Ion. Sl500. CAD. SEO. DEVILLE, '67,
.Lil. 6•12-1724 ~~ 6 ~~-J.oflded. S1ciw, leather,
(TlOlY!OITIAI Raco Cirs, Rodi 9620 ~7~1~~ 0a,.
11181 BEACH BLVD.
Hunt. Be•ch 847-ISSS
3 mt N. of Coa3t Jl\yY, on Bel\
RACING Cam I llfterw, AFB '67 EL OORAOO. Fu.II P\\T I&
r<1rburetor 101• 327 Chev. air + Sl200 cxtraa, Pert
2-lf' wire w~I cove1·a. cond. Lo-IA ml. Make oUtr
R<>st oUcr. 842--1962 eller 6 &tM2&5.
J1rtuµort
31111µort s \\hire elephants! Din1<'·a·Hoo
:noo \V. c;oc111t lhv-y., N.R. \Vhlrc rleph11nt~! 1)11nt>·11·
612·9~ ~lfl..1761 lll'H' DAll.Y PlLOl' \YA.1111'
pm. l-.,,;,.,,.;.,,c"A"o-1 L-w-,-c-, o-" -.-,-,-, ..
~!)I CU. ln. Old111 cng. &· a!lck 1vhllt:. black l!hr. Inter.; full
b'ft.ns. pwr., a.lr-cond. Perr._ cond.
:'"ll•»i1"1 >JG ~ AD" • Gi5-lo&l3 + Sl.,150. Ov .. nrr 67H7fT
-------
$)999
P'l""""T---------------------------------------:---------.·· ,
I 31..,,._;0A_l_LY_P_ILO_T ___ _ lhurJday, Dectmbrt 4, 1969
• l • . • • • . 0 8 0 0 CJ
• . • •
.
'
. . . :1-~~~~---~~~-
: I
CADILLAC
NINETEEN SEVENTY
EXCELLENT SELEC110 N
OF l\IODELS & COLOR S
AVAILABLE FOR
LEASE OR PURCHASE
Even when measured by Cadillac standards of ex-
cellence, the 1970 Cadillac is sure to exceed your
greatest expectations. Let's get together soon for a
demonstration dfive.
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD. 540·9 I 00
COSTA MESA
DAii.UN
1970 PICKUPS
THE. No. 1 SEU ING IMPO.RT TRUCK
WITH @% MORE MUSCLE POWER .
96 H.P. ENGINE
Are Here Now For
DELIVERY TODAY!
DOT DATSUN
188J5 B~CH BOULEVARD
--... HUNTINGT-ON BEAGH-
842-7781 or 540-0442
I 1m·9 pm Mon-FrieS.t 8 am-5:30 pmeC:los1d Sun
THE GMC's FOR 1970 ARE
COMING IN BY T·HE
TRUCK LOAD!
From Pickups to Heavy Dutys ••• From
Camper Units to Four Wheel Drives
••• Whether a Sin9le Unit or a Lar9e
Fleet ~ ••
WE CAN SERVE YOUR TltUCK NEEOS BESTI
NEW 1970 G.M.C. 1/2 TON
WI DESI DE
G78XI 5 fiDerqle11 b11t1cl fir11, be,~11p liqhil, h11dtt, 1rT.1r·
9111cy bli11k1rt. du•I 111irrort, :Z 1peed elec.hic. wiptrt, t p1 r1
tire. ORDER TODAY.
$2195
_UNIVERSITY
OLDSMOBILE
GMC TRUCKS
2850 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA 540-9640
CONNELL CHEVROLET
Choose 'From Over 300 New
Chevrolets, Used Cars
& Trucks
Pkn Tiie Lartnt Selectlow of. Ntw Corvnr-.
In OretMJ• COURty!
llGGIST MIJNFf SAVING EVENT IN
OAANGE COUNTY! SALE
Brend New 1970 NOVA COUPE -•
-ORDER TODAY -
$2193
--CONNELL--
CHEVROLET
2121 HARBOR ILVD. COSTA. MESA
~: ••6· 1230 ~:r. 546· 1200
•
CHRISTMAS
GIFT IDIAs! .
NEW
1970
'
BUGS
On Display
&
Ritcldy
'To Go
CHOICE OF COLORS AND MODELS AT •••
CHICK IVERSON
H•rbar Are11 Only AMthari11d VW, Por1d11 011l1r
TWO LOCATIONS TO SERVI YOU
445 EAST COAST HWY. at IAYSIDl ·DllY~, NIWPORT IEACH
Ir 1970 HAllOl IL~D., COSTA MESA
671°0900 HOME OF ll:iE LOVE BUG SP'EC IALS 54t.JOJ1
•
AUSTIN AMERICA
HERE N.OWI
The FantHtlc Naw I 9-9 4 ;:1·~" ~~;~;~ $ .
Including
AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSION
NEWPORT IMPORTS LTD.
3100 W. COAST HWY.
NEWPORT BEACH
Oranoe Cou1lty's Only Authorized Ferrari Dealer
642•9405 • CLOSID SUNDAYS 540• 1764
FREE GAS!
WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW
CORTINA
l Doors-4 Doors-Gt·s~ WagH1
12,000 MILE °' ONl YEAR· WAUANTY
NO PAYMENT Till JANUAl\Y 16TH, 1970
IMAGINE I
WHEN YOU IUY A. NEW
Ifft COltTINA. FROM US
WE WILL "AY fOlt A.LL THI
GAS IT USES fOll
TWO FULL MONTHS
Al.I. OA.50LINE MUST
IE DISBURSED
AT SUH5ET fOltD , • •
Hwrry Thi1 Ofltr
E•ltncled to ~. U.
Pfltt, Ttrm1 &-EQMip.
an 2 Dr.
Motor No. BA92JAIOU6
TEliMS: ••• 11tl.H o.-.
C11h l1f' TrlClt. K E11r l'•Y· '""n11 ., ui.n.
ANNUAL l'EllCENTA.OE lt.t.TE
U.ll DEFEltltEO PAYMENT Plt!Ci U4TC.Sl. •
$1944
PLUS TA.X•l.ICEHSt
HOLIDAY DISCOUNTS .
LOOK AT THE SAVINGSll '65 MERCUR.Y 2-Door Monf,lt ir H.T.
PD050l '66 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-0r. Htrdtop.
SYFOS2. '65 IU ICK RIVIERA SRBHO
'68 PLYMOUTH S1t1llite Wtg.
VEL991
$1275
$1575
$1375
$2075
$2275
JOHNSON & SON
LINCOLN·MERCURY
COSTA MESA BRANCH
, 2626 HARBOR B~VD. COSTA MESA 54t.563!
( l
BEGIN YOUR HOUbA Y . BY SHOPPING Tf'tlS
GUIDI! OF NEW & USED' AUTOS & ACCESSORIES •
. BRAND NEW 1970
3/4·T: FORD TRUCK & EL DORADO CAMPER
Fl/LL PRICE
'10 F-250
STYLESJDE .
819 1.:1 CIO engl ..... pl1
llrtt, tmp • all u•1111•. Ser. Ho. F2SARG7·
!912.
EL OORAOO.
Fllll Ctb IYW
OTTOWA. cmp.
..... ton:N
DICK WILSON'S
WILSON FORD SALES
18255 BEACH BOU~EVARD
HUNTINGTON BEACH
540-7780 842-6611
VOLVO
~
1970's HERE NOW
A.LI. MOOEl.S REAOY fOlt IMMEDIATE DEl.1Vl;:f!T
PRICES TOO LOW TO ADVERTISE
ON ALL REMAINING '69's
1970's HERE NOW
A.LI. MODELS ltEA.D'I" fOlt IMMEDIATE DILIYERY
PRICES TOO LOW TO AOVERTISE
ON ALL REMAINING '69's
Dean Lewis_lmp.o.rts
Orange County's Largest and Most Modern
TOYOTA· VOLVO DEALER
1966 HARBOR 646-9303 COSTA MESA
· Over 80 Quality Cadillacs
To Select Froni!
Largest Selectiou In
Orange Cotmty! .
1969 CADILLAC
Cor.dovan exterior with bro\vn top' and cor.:.
dovan cloth and leather interior. Fun pow-
er, factory air conditioning, AM-FM radio,
power door locks, electric seat release, etc.
(J9154770 )
SALE $ s 444 PRICE
NABERS
2600 HARBOR BLVD~ 540-9100
COSTA MESA
:1970
TOYOTAS
IMMEOIATE OELIVERY NOW
1200 C.C. Corolla • Land Crulsen
Corona • Crown • Fanta•tic
New MKll • Toyota Pickup, The
Work Horse of the '70's!
BIG $$ SAVINGS
ON '69 NEW-DEMONSTRJ\TORS
BILL MAXEY
[i~(]~[irJ
IASY TO llACH AT GAIFllLD 6 IU.CH
11111 BEACH BLVD. PHone: 147.9555
HUNTINGTON BEACH
J Ml. M•rtfri •f P.clfle Co•t Hwy.•• '-t.Jt lutnorl
• Wholescile Values 9
'65 TEMPEST I yt, I UIOINlllc, rlllio. 1111r..r. po_. •lftrlnl>
whltl Wiiii, !PBHOff)
IA.I.I l'•ICI LOW ktLLY •OOI(
$675
'67 SUNBEAM I A.lplr11 1p0fh convertl~ll.
RMlla, iw.1«, 4 1peed
(YTl.WI
s977 s112s
'67 PONTIAC s1a77 s1925 A Or. MIO., lt&-H. l'.S .• fachlry . 11r, pO-r wl,..
do'<G, c:orc1W1 -(TYH ..,
'66 GTO s1577 · s1575 2 dr. H.T. Vt, h"tdr1.,
I'.$., •lt"H, WSW, IK~r"f'
11r, Vin11 INll. IRTZ .,,,
ROY CARVER
PONTIAC
2925 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
KIM~
CONNElL .C·HEVRdLET ""
BLUE RIBBON PRICES
'65 RAMBLER
770 Cl•11lc Cpe.
Air cand., AT, R&H
!XYX 9001
'62 MERCEDES
220 4 Dr.
IGWN 211)
$699
'67. -CHEVROLET
1/i Ian jtickup. IUl91tOI
'64 CORVETTE
Coup1. 4 1p1ed,".r.idio,
h1•l1r; IUPZ 076J
$1899 '
--CONNELL--, CHEVROLET
2828 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA
~::: 546·1230 ~!~546-1200
SHOPPING TO DO?
LET CHICK IVERSON
HELP YOU!
Auto Acc.e11ori11
Make Greet Gifts
For The VW Owner
"Sh1rp•" Chro1111 SKI -RACK 14 p1irl for your V.W. S14,tl
Eng fi1h 9lav1 l1•th1r STllN6 WHL. COVERS, l1c1 o" S6.50
COCOA MATS, v•riety calon, c.•~•• fMll floar 1r11, from $16.91
l1rg1 11lectio" of ha".l rubb14 101id w1lnut l l11th1r
GEAR SHIFT KNOBS fro111 51,75
K1.1111I "Cu1to111 500" WAX KIT, t~• v1r\. D11t SS.II
"LOVE BUG" toy b1tt1ry op1r1t1d INon-f1 U, l u111p·n Gal SJ.ts
''FORMULA VEE" lt1li1" d1lu•• waod 1!111ing' wh11I $4f.91
"1961-7 0" Chram1 Ofh1t Wh11l1 S" wid1 "Sp1ci1I Pric1"
$24 .95 e1ch
"MG MlnEN" C ir Cav1r far •ti VW'1 from S27.SO
"Autam1tic" AM .fM·MMltipl11c 'i •n4 I hick 1t1r10 • 5149.95
lnc.lude1 4 •P••k•ri ln1t1l11tion naf lnc.lud1dl
WI ACCEPT
B111kAl'tle1ic.1rd-M11t1n Ch1r91-Atn1ric•n E•pren
St1nd•rd Oil-Ch1wro~
445 E. COAST HWY.
(at B•yslde Drive)
NEWPORT BEACH
673-0900
F.REE • 100 GALLONS • FREE OF GAS
Yes, Free 1 00 Gals. of Gas wltll tht
'
furchase of Any New 1969 Cortino
or 1 9 6 9 New Ford, Executive Can
or Demonstraton.
F_REE '. '00o~A~l~NS • FREE
• THIS WEEKEND ONLY
.
DUNTON FORD ,.
546-7076
2240 S. MAIN
SANTA ANA
I '
13