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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. . .Ir.vine .... ., .. •• . ' V --· - OW·S - • • -. ~ -• . . . , I • . - I I -'" ~- • --' ·-. -~ . ~ -- ' • -•• ·" ~· ... •• • .! . < • AcCess Sho:C~-. . • Ill Ne·w· . l!lanni11g ·· DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * F.RIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER · 5, .1 969 'VOL. '2. NO. tn, 4 SICTIOl'fl.·•·PA911~ --··--_ ' ·ir :~\ ·. ' • • .. .. ,, ' • • ··~trip Nude -~ Bandits· Bob 3 Gas Stations -. -·a-:.m. '.I ... ' ' . ' ' ' ' ' ; • • ipe"·W-: · · · ·S~ . . ~ . ·~ . . . ' " ''.. . ..,. ?1 • . .. . --Hawaii Wave s To Hit Here In 24 Hours Thundering surf -an echo ot murderous, storm-spawned breakers bat. tering Hawaii today -is· expected to strike the Orange Coast wilhin Z4 hours, followed by abnolJrlally high tides com- pounding the problems Monday. Trouble may be brewing for some areas, including Laguna Beach, where a similar combination in July, 1949, Sent surf ~ir\ing over and beyond Pacific Coast HighWay, according·to.one veteran. Waves geiierated by . a·· pair of lw!> severe .storms in the western Pacific smacked the··Califomia coastline Thurs· day, ranging up to 15 feet in the Sant~ Barbara area. Treacherous surf capsized a skiff car- rying two treasure-hwiters in their mid- . twenties orf Suiiimerland ~ach ·Bnd the men vanished io the crashing waters. A lf.year-old Sl!rfer nar('.9wly _escaped , drowning: off Hermosa Beach , when , he fought the seas for •·hall-hour·after'behlg knocked from his board, but w·as rescued by lifeguards. The swells spawned by twin storms between the Philippine :and the Aleutian Islands subsided a bit Thursday night. dropping as low as two feet today along the Orange Coast Weather forecasters comparing ex· peeled tides and new, incoming sets o( breakers say the surf which rea.Qhed a mulmum of eight to ten feet In Laguna Beach is just a _taste oLmore to come. Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the lame combination of seven-foot tides aod (See SURF, Page Z) Irvine CO 'illJ!JUY Vo ws Public, Private Vses B1'111ROME r. COLLINS Of 111t 0.lly P*1 Miff A combination o1 Public· aJJd private developneahlf 1he C08llal ara .between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach '!\'BS •. "We do not intend to create an en- flq>osed today by WU!iam R. Mason, vironment thal will deny public access to .president of The Irvine .Company. the c;oastal tidelands ·as in the· case of the . • $400,000 Missing ,. . . .. Lawyer .so·riglit In Bond Theft , By TOM BARLEY recently appointed his wife, Mn. Helen Of tll• o.iiy '"1"' s11" F. Salmond and his son, John SalmOiid ;·'M~IF~J)~· ~t'.>OritiC::S ~ay_.~oln.e~. the Jr., 16921 Bedford Lane, Hunt.lngtoQ FBI .w .. 1nve1Ugatore: .Jft'om 'ihe/15--,· ~.Beaclt.'\l,,cOnaetv&tmis·Of ~tbe estate..., · Diego County Oiatrict.Attomey's office in . · . , -" ' ~ • r • . a widening search for an -attorney ac· San Diego pivestigatora today said M!t• cused or stealing nearly $400,000 in bonds ton was hlred as the family attorney and !rom the estate of a Newport Beach man. is believed to be the author of a typewrit· The search for Escondido lawyer ten unsigned Jettier which the younger Patrick S. M. Mitton, 47, is centering on Salmond subsequently received in U. Ensenada, tbe Mexican city where · he mail allegedly cashed a check for $5,000 last Th. 1 1 " lh 'd ~ Nov. 25. a eHer, ey sa1 , was r"''"'~ • .,.. Federal and San Diego County com· Nov, 22. and it suggested th~~ .Salm9".,. plaint.a accuse Mitton of grand theft and who is vice presldeht of California sta~ attempted e~torllon, charges ste mmlng College at Los.AilgrJes, should pay Mltto~ from Jils alleged theft of bonds held in the one~half of lhl! value of the .missing bond! eState of John Salmond 79 2164 Vista -esttm'ated· by ·1nvesUgators as being, Entrada, Newport Beach'. • . , worth about $400,000.. . . -". . The retired• Union Oil Company ex· lnvesUgator Larry Bpcker said the ·let. ecutivt',•de&ol'l~ed.~Y br;.~Aa~ei:·.l te;i; .warne~ ~-l!~~~nd that the bon~ woulcf; in·law as being "a very slck nian " · ftll bt"lt'~-~~~ LagUlla Police Save Transient from Bad. Trip ' ed half of tbell' vakte. ~ • .weailaer Mason said the company, sole owner ot' · recent Salt Creek matter. What is more, .. the 3lh mile stretch of virtually we are not oppoeei:r to·public aequJslUo'n ·A 20-yearo0ld transient rrom Ullnols · · .,,.·-.. unlnh:abi£ed shoreline property, said that and development Of portions of the coast--who' told Wuna Beach pollce he bid MPS Arrest 3 Suspects '. " . • tbe 'c<nlJl&lll'..'•, ll!8't" plan '!YL,.reflect al land for publie>purposes.!' ' ll!k•~ LSD,.~ was ."dying", WI! "a unique blend Of_ developments thal 'MilsOn's "Salt Creek'" refel-ehCe' Was lOl -recovering, ·pollce 1 allege; rrwn 1hiS'• bad : I wiR include pUblic access to the the county's abiridon'rnent of Salt Creek trip this mor$ll and awaiting ar- Udetands." &lad in ... tagW;a'lifjfiel, soUth~ of Laiuila . n1gmftent on a Charl&~o1 belnlunder Uie The surf will be up and the ,.. will be oul tl\i!: we<kend, ·-balmy temperatures In !he uflllli' 70's warming the <>ran£e Coast. INSrDB ' ~nA'Y Almost a ylii.f ofter he ~hell· : ec£ out $900 to · bail UC l tviM : . students 0~1 of ;an i]l Ber~ley,. ChanceUor,Dgnutl_Aldr.ich.is bb.- ginning to· get some o/ hit money back. Page B. I 'Nud 0 ., 8 . bb . • . He asked atate,,countJ and municipal Beach, early • lest year. The road had influence of'4f'ugs. ' n 'In 0 n py n~ government offtdali Intemted In the served a! quqsiLpub\lc' ~g to Salt Anmrjril a call 'Jbunday afternoon --(J.:; · 6-f~----putillc'1-.ccess-1o·OC<8ll·~etandnmd'the . ~ .... ~ lleach. fl<ivmal-ol the COjlOtyis ac--reporting a man lyil!i11D tM'-1¥ aL . acqui!ttlon of bllc~beach re st join tfon· has been vlgor°'1sly sought ever !_.pgima ~ Rol~d -~1 Cinyon Acres • • ,_ pu a a o • sine. by citizens' ~·ps in the south Drive, police picked ue ·Gec>rge Audie . '111roegasstatlonsalongtheSanDiego Johnson, 21, ts fv .CU!lody al Camp· with the ·company IS tt begins 1ts·ptan-cowrt atea '!""' · Cook,wllooaldheC1111efron)llilnOls. ~--held -""'-1-"-·-Pendleton. ntng for the area. ,.. ! , · . . ... Help. me,' J'm A.rm .. ,'" be~ Ulll'tedly · ,.~a,y were up wiwiui one •IVIU" .. -.A Incl•..;,.. o! pub"· ace••• to the Irvme 1 M ..... _ aald "· -pany I ..,.~ ..... ·--·-' and the' ·~ ts I 'lbe mles o! holdups began at 2:30 "~ -= -. -· •= -": told· officers. "I'm lmtng a bad trip and e .... , i1iiu;,uay I?' a~11.1an arc· i .m. ThUl"lday when a <i,Br occupied bY. tidelands and the pf'OVlsjon for their ac· m&-1n concern never has been with the I'm dying,, · .. ed to atrlp naked by a trio o! robbfn who three men drove lnlo!a service statloo al qufsiUon ol .publlc beaches along the question of wheiher public fadlitles , En ,....~to the station. police said, he collected $160 fn cash. • ~ La ~81 Road and the San Diego Freeway. Irvine cout may come as a surprise to s~ be lpcat.cd on lands owned by ~ cl>mp1a&ted, "l can't breathe!" When · an · Allepd bold-up men,~ Mlrli!e corporal Whlfe one"<>! the relibo!'I ,_.; ~~are unfamiliar with our hi!toly firm. "We are, bOwever, concemed'With ol!Icer 'aiiaested he put his head close to and two civilians, were taken into hlm WiUt a butcher tntfe. attendant Art clPliUinlna::W"slffd'M'ason:-1ul•Jt·!hould) 1tht .~··.for , ·,~bl~c". t~lans ~ be .the ~ of the police car, Cook custody by military police when they ar· Houston· was forced to !trip oft hiJ not. coordtnaled witb •arid cotiijiUmentlfy tO ···re.Ddndldr•1rt'il110use ... 1:can'tbrtl\bei l • rived at lhe San Onofre gate al Camp clothes, which were taken by the bold up ''The Irvine Company has long ~tanned private jevelopinents." tOo' Ui[) and I'm dying." Pendleton. men, along with f40 in cMll. recocnizOcl and been an ~vocale o! the In order to brlng about this coordlna-Al the ataUori, pol(ce reported, !he r.o of the suspects, Delbert ·s. Finger, FUteen minutes· tater the procedure need for joint •public.and private cooper• Uon, M'uon aald, the cOmpariy i1 call~g Y9W11 man sµddeit1J became violent and 2.1, of Dana Poln~ and Kenneth G. was npeated al a station at, &I Toro Uon lo U,-.-llv• deM!ollmenl of "" on !he · Slalo O,,partment o! Parks and · lore 'hta clothes of!. Placed 6t !he Jail'• Carpenler, 25, ol Cordna. were turned Road and the San Dit{O FneWay; where envfriiimenl.""-· ' Recreatllill,"Cilunly 1overnmenl Md the dnink ltn)C ·for Slf<ty, he quteted·c!Own · over to San Cl<mente police. I attendant Bill Matlell wu lhe·vlc:llm.and 'l.11o Irvine mcutfve, an ..,.ineer by clUes· of Newport Beach and .~ •pd -bQoked on IUiPlaOD ct belnC 'lbe llllrd •uspcct, Cpl RoMle Ru,. l8ll was taken. · pn>feoslon, emphasized: (!ee Ill Pip I) ui>der tho lllllueoca ct drvp. ~~~-'-~~~~~~-M>;.-~~~~~~·~~·~~~~~---"~~~~~~~-·.-~~.~.~~- . - ~20~ .CHRISTMAS . . / .. .. I l j ! L ~ --·---·----·---------~------------·-------------·-----. ~ --- , -il' 1141lY PILOT. .. t. Calley I ·Questioned .:By Pentagon ... •I WASHINGTON (UPI) -Flnt LL . :Jillliam L. Calley Jr. was !iummooed to ihe Pentagon today for qu¢ioning by a ~ llPICial panel attempting to detennine if there mJ&bt have been a wh!Wwastt. of an original Army jnvestigation of the killing of South Vietnamese civllans at My Lai. Fnd.,, D1<1mbor 5, 1969 The 2&.year-old Calley is accused of pre.meditated murder of 109 persons in the alleged massacre. He was ~ · mander of a pl&toon of a company_bg(t-_ ed by Capl Ernest A. Medina, who denied Thunday eitber ordering or &eeing any miss &layings in the village. • -. ' • ·-~-. Cong J)eclares r: Own Cease-Fires SAIGON cAPl -The Viet Cong Friday proclaimed three-Oay cease-fires ·for Christmas and New Year's Day and declared an,y allied vi.olations would be punished. The proclamation, read over the secret Viet Cong radio, made no mention of one· day cease-fires for the two holidays an· From Page ~ IRVINE ... Beach "to combille their individual ideas, l'nlerests and desires during tbe early stages of planning." nounced Thursday by South Vietnam and the United States. As in the past, the Viet ~ong fnade nc> reference W standoff· by North Viet· namese troops , North Vietnam never ha! publicly admHted its troops arc in South Vietnam although it has come close to saying so on occ.asions. During an holiday cease-fires in· the pai;t. each side has accused the other of repeated violations. ' The Viet Cong said the ce~fires would last 72 hours beginning at 1 fl.ID. Dec. 24, Saigon tlmt!, al)d 1 a.m. Dec. 30. The allied cease·flres will begin at 6 p.m. Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year·s Eve. The Pentipl inquiry board appartintly • ' plans to q!Jeatlon almost everyone with a connection tn the case and Calley was on- ly. one of several called _ today. A •ijpkesman !aid it was possible he might not be heard until late today, or possibly even tater. : Calley is the only person speeifically RESCUERS RIG LINE IN EFFORT TO AID MEN WHO TOPPLED INTO RAVINE WITH ~RANE In Orange County's Modje1ka Canyon, Death Lurked on • Soft Shoulder Letters outlining the Irvine proposal ha\re bee n sent to \Villiam Penn Mott, Jr., di rector of the state department of parks and recreation; William Hirstein, chair- man of the Orange County Board of Su • pervisors: Doreen Marshan, ma yor of Newport Beach, and Glenn Vedder, may· During iLs cease-fires, the Viet Cong said, "all National Liberation forces in all areas of South Vietnam must cease all military operations.'' • e;birged with murder in the case, a~ more than a tc0re of men \vho · wt!re' there at the time are under in· ~afjon. and one eergeant has been ac- culled ol assault with intent to murder. 'Calley, who is to be.tried by an Army coorl martial nm month at Ft. Benning, Ga., was called· before the 11).Cllled Peers tisvelt.lpUon Board which was formed to 'tOol trito whether a low-level in- 'vestigaUon soon after the March 16, 1968, Girl. Suspect Tells Jury Details of Tate Slayings incident amounted to little more than a LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney ~~::~ headed by Lt. Gen. William for Susan Denise Atkins ·said today she 1B..Pee.rs heard Medina Thursday beh1nd would tell the grand jury investigating dO,sed doors. Afterward Medina, com· the murders of Sharon Tate and others. nfander of Company C, lSt BattaltioO, of -·ait the details of .the Tate mU:rder," in-·tffe 200th infantry at the time, held a •fttWs conference to deny any knowledge eluding l?mv she was "hypnotized" into ·"'-mass killings of civilians, participating in it. ~n a subsequent interview, Medina As he ente red the grand jury ac:li;nowledged, however, that under courtroom comPlex, where 18 witnesses, orders from higher up, he had directed their attorneys and others were noisily tilil men to dl!stroy My Lai 4, a part of assembling, ruchard Caballero said ~1iss the village of Song My, because it was Atkins still feels under the power of ·l!illlSJ)ected as a haven for the Viet Cong Charles M. Manson, 35, bearded leader or 4ltb battalion . a hippie-style clan that is figuring heavily . He stressed that advance intelligence in the investigation. ~ said the women and children left Prosecutors have said they will seek to '!¥~ ~g_!t 7._The @ltack lndict-MIUlSO!l·WHh-conspiracy t<> commit was set for 7:30 a.m. murder. · ."The orders I passed were instructions "She still fears him," Caballero said of ·10 destroy the village, burn the village, l\1anson's influence over his client. ti11 the livestock," Medina said. "I did He said Miss Atkins, 21, charged with not give orders to shoot innocent murder in ·a separate case, will 'vaive civilians." rights against self incrimination in hopes ' "ledina denied that he WM present and that her v91unlaJ1 testimony will save c<i\ld have siq,ped. any indiscriminate her from the gas chamber. ktTilngs. t She will admit freely, he said~ that she -Paul Me<Uo, a former private tn accompanied members of the clan as Calley's platoon -and as such a member they killed Miss Tate, actress \Yife of ti. Medina's colnpany-said· in an earlier Polish film director Roman Polan*i.Jand interview that Medina could have halted ro..ir others last summer -but her 'what Med.lo de&cribed as slaughter of defense will be she v.•as temporarily ln- \\-'O!Tlen, children and old men . , sane ,vhile under the clan leader's "hyp- Medina said he did not order any kill· notic spell" and "had noUtlng w do with ~· did not see any and did not receive the murders." ~ o{ any atrociti~s after the attack. "If a witness ls tnithful and honest t lie said he did see bodies of some WOTI'.!en think some consideralion will be given to j.nd chil~en !n the village. ;, . :".~ that, .. Caballero said . Ile added that Miss ·: Ask.ed if his men '!'ere gtven the im-Atkins is "quite upset, qu ite remorsefuL" j>ress1on that tber might be able ~.:tak~ " Prosecutors arrived for ·the grand jury ~ven~e on. the vlila.ge for caS\la\ties siil'· session with three pictures to show the t~red m sk~shes in that area previ~-jurors. One shows a length of rope abou~ Jy, Medina said ~em~~ may ha~e'fe!l ft 43 feet Jong, another shows a gun, and a ~as an opportunity to pay back the VC third shows an aerial view of the home or .,th Battalion. 1 fro a couple killed the day after the Tate : · ~·we bad lost • lot o( good peop e . m murders. i.}11per fire and booby traps at My Lai. Also among the 18 scheduled witnesses : : Medina dec~ed, ho~ever: "I ~I~, not \Vas producer Terry Melcher, 27-year.olrl ~ any ~ of ltlDocent civihans son of singer-actress Doris Day. Melcher 1'hataoever · has declined comment : • Miss Atkins' aUOrneys said Melcher i;;o.· artbquake Recorded . was visited by Charles M. ManiOll, 35, ~ known as the leader· of a qUasirengious i· clan of hippie types who knew Manson as "God" and "Satan." Manson was un&UCCessful in seeking 1t1elcher's help tc> record some songs when Melcher lived in the Tate home in fashionable '8el Air before Miss Tate and her husband moved in, the attorneys said. Deput.y Dist, Atty. Aaron Slovitz said Thursday he .,.,.ould ask the grand jury to indict Manson on a charge of conspiracy to commit murder, and would seek murder and conspiracy indictments against at least five other persons. It was the first word that Manson, held for trial in Independence, Cali!., on charges of possessing stolen property and Jirlvtng -a stolen-vehicle, would be --a- target for prosecution in the slayings. Shot or stabbed with Miss Tate, 26, at her rented $200,000 hoine la st Aug. 9 were l!oll y\\'ood hair slyli st Jay Sebr ing. 35, coffee heiress Abigail Folger, 26, Polish playboy Voltyck Frokowsky, 37 and Steven Parent, 18, a friend of the caretaker. A wealthy market executive, Leno LaBianca, 44, and his wife Rosemary, 38, 'vere stabbed to death at their Hollywood home the next day. Miss Atkins' lawyers said she told them that members of Manson's group, who clresse<l in black for the occasion, com· mitted Uie Tale slayings, then killed the LaBiancas to prove their nerve. They reported she said Manson was not -with them. Police have said three of the , Jn. dictment -targets are P a l r it i a Krenwinke( 21, in custody in Mobile, Ala.: Charles D. Wat.son, 24, jailed in McKinney,·Tex.; and Linda Louise Ka sa- bian, 20, arraigned here Thursday. Police said they were arrested on murder war. rants in the Tate case and were involved in the LaBianca slayings. ln addition to' them and Miss Atkins, the Times said, others against whom prG- sccutors are expected to seek Indictments are Stev Grogan, 18, also known as Clem Tufts, and Leslie Sankston, about 20, a young woman. The newspaper identified them as member~ oC Manson's hippie. style "family." Off Coast' of Baja : . * * * Manson's * * * Magi~ l-PASADENA (UPI) -An earthquake b?nt.ered in the gulf of Baja California :With a inagnitude on the Richter Scale or .;.s-~ was registe~ at 10:07 p.m. Thurs- l(ay nlghl ·'The -seismological lal;Joratory at the California Institute of Teclmology said ihe temblor was centered in a lt>uthtasterly directed some 150 miles from Palomar, Calif. Friends TeU How He Rules Clan '• i·,~~~~~~~~~~~~ .. l LOS ANGELES CAP) · -"Black. magic" .• "He believes that 1le, and all human beings, are God'', "There Is no crime, there is ·no sin''. ,"The -women \Vere the key to everything," • l ' ' l l I ' •• I DAILY ~I LOT .. , ................ ..... --_,..., --CAUl'OllllA OUM8 CD111 f'Ull.llMfMO CCNM' l•"'1H.W• .. _ ... _ J•d: a. c • .i.., ""*,,....... ..... .., .. ......., n•111•• , • ..,u -n.-1 A. M.,,ti• ..... IE .. ' -C:... ... I 1)1 'lhlf 161\1 a..t .....,~:m•w.: ..... ._.._. ....... ~VJ.,_ .. ,,_ ""'" u ~.,.,. '""' Three fr iends of Charles !\t ~1anson us- ed those words Thorsday to describe hint and the way they say he ruled a clan or nomadic hippie.types on a commune 11ear Death Valley. Prosecutors say they will seek an in· dictment charging Manson, 35, with con· spiracy to com mil murder. Several m~m­ bcrs of his clan are aC<'Used of slaying actress Sharon Tate and six o:thers. The three friends -miner Paul Crockett, SO;'guitar player Paul Watkins. 19: and Brooks Poston, 21 -gave the description&. "The whole thing W?S he~d together ~y black magic," said Watkins, who hi• followed Man90n since they met two years ago in the 11aigbl-Ashbury distric t, then the hippie haven In San Francisco . .. You don 't believe it? Well. il really e1Jst.s, and It Is powerful,'* Watkins said. "He (Manson) believes that he, and all human beings, are God and the de vil al \, the same tlrne. lie believes all huntan { beings are part of each other," said ~ Ololl.Y ~ • .-~ • ~· ... Poston, a Manson follower for two years. > ::"t":.':.-.:..i;::~;:.':"~ "You see what lhal means," Crockett ~; ...,.. ...., ...,_ ~ ..........,... said. "ll vieans that human life ha!i no ~ =..--... ':*'~.:-i...~..,:: value. If you kill• human t>alng, you are l ,· ·~ .....,. .. ffi" --' "'' .... ju-' "'illlng a part of yourself. So It's all )• ..... ....._ .....,_., •-Uio ... • a~ ,. ... Mt ...... <till WM, light," >' :::zt.:•• t7t4t Ml .. ,n But, ~aid Crockett, by J\lanson's ~: a • .-... Mt:1:1...., MJ..1671 philosophy "you can't kill an nnfmal. Not ,• ~ -..... t-. PlllM.... i.,, not i. •'-: Tbcrt (! j:. ~ • -,,."" ..,.,,........ a uug, a 11na11.e, notJung. w re. .... "' ...., • •vm1"-" ..,.... snakes all over the desert. Th~y go! In _, .. ,,.,..,~_,...,. B Id ..._ .. ...,... .... ....,, the ('Gbin and cveryv.+ht!:rc. ut you cou ·-. ~ ;.:-.:.~~ :::C':"~,:·: · never kill ont. Thl!y picked up tll8ke! in lJ.•=:••::""::•:•:•:m~"~"~ """~":":··~::":"':..L.iithe~ houS<! and ca.fried tbe.tn t side Jlnd ___, r a.,.._ aa.-"*'1t11r. tw:ned-.-thc.m loose.•• , . "That's right" Po:;;ton sald ... , saw them c:i.rry a foot-long sidewinder out of the cabin one day ." "And you couldn·t ~al 1neat." said \Valkins, ''because you were kllled an animal. f~ was crazy!' tilanson 's talent as a nlusician .:.. he played the guitar -and his slow. deliberate and moody way of moving gave bhn a sort of hypnotic power over y,·omen, lhe t.hrf!e men said. "This sort of pov.·er takes a long time to work an effect," Crockett said ... Mo- tions are tied to emotions. Certain mo- tions create. certain response.s if you know ho'' to use them." '1'he women around the place were always his property," Wat1dns Slid. Poston added: "You were alway!! welcome lo share them. but Olen you became his property too." l·He needed to have some men around. There was a limit lo what any man can do. But then, you see, the women held _ po\ver over the_Q.tber me9," Watkins al(\ . "That way," Crockttt said, "thO: wo1nen were the key lo evcrythlng." When the commune needed money, Crockett said, ~tanson would send the ""'omen out to panhandle -"the:y could beg more In two hours than you and I could earn working In a week." There was no prostitution, \Vatklns said~ .. They wert so gQOd at panhandling, they didn't have to hustle ... Watklns and Poston said it was Crockett'!! warnings that awakened them to the power Manson held over them. Both left the clan1 Watkins ln May, PO!ton in mld.october. Poston said the words lo one ~tanson 80ng .,cnt:. "There is no good, there is no bad . "There is no cr~e, there is no sin." County Worker Dies as Crane · Falls in Canyon A County of Orange road worker was killed a11d his companion seriously in- jured Thursday when the crane they were operating toppl!d into a Modjeska Can- yon ravine. Trapped beneath the huge rig was Luther 0. Kaun1 81, Orange. Seriously in- jured but sala bjr Chapman General Hospital officials today to be "slightly improved " \VBS crane drive r John A. Kowatch, 53. of 13782 11001•er St.. \Vestminsler. Kowatch is being tr~at.ed in the in· tensive care unit of the Orange hospital. Co-workers said the two men were part of a crew dumping dirt and rocks along flood-ravaged Modjeska Canyon Road just north of Cook's Corner when the five. ton crane moved to the edge <lf the jag- gtd "l'Oad:" -~ -~ Both n1en saw the danger and both tried to jump clear as the rig broke through the soft ·shoulder al the edge of the ravine. Kowatch scrambled from the crane as it neared the end of its 20()..foot drop but Kaun j'-'as pinned in the wreckage. Firemen and State Forest ry workers struggled for more than twc> hours to ex· tricate Kaun's bOOy from the shattered crane while Kowatch was carried in a lit· ter up the slope lo the road. Corone r's investigators said it was almost certain that Kaun was killed In· stanlly when the crane smashed into !he floor of the ravine. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Grandstand Kills 10 CARACAS, Venezuela (AP) -An overweighted grandstand at an im- provised bull ring collapsed Thursday in the southwestern town of Santa Barbara de Barinas, killing 10 persons and in· juring 60. " or of Laguna Beach, f\.1ason said. - DETAILED STUDIES "Tc> date," he explained, "the com· pany's coastal studies-have pertained to surveying and analyzing soil !!Onditions, &lopes, utility systems, road aligmnents, \"!ew potentials, an d nlarket conditions. Only now is the company pre paring lo e1nbark on detailed studies relating to the for~ulation of a precise land use plan for the coast."· Further inspiration 'for achieving a balance of public and private uses of the generally rugged coastline and -its scat· tering of swimming beaches came Crom a fectnt Lour of Mediterranean resort _ areas by Mas9n and a four-man company task fo~e. • The IrVine representatives visited such coastal d'evi!Jopmenls as the Algarve Coast in Portugal, the Costa del, SOl and Costa BriYa in Spain, the French Riviera 'and lta1y's Ligurian and Amalft coasts. Mason said it was a highly instructive tour. ;'The most obvious failillg we observed is that those coasLal ar:eas that were -developed-exclusively for private use appeared sterile. uninteresting and \\·llhoul a fee.ling of place or context." DULL AREAS Areas developed exclusively !Or the public didn't look much better. he said. "They were dull, unattractive and in most instances they had spoiled the natural beauty of the coasl\ine, often a~ pearing as if they had been dedicated to parking lots and trash receptacles!' It is to avoid either extreme, ~fason said, that the company feels a cooperative planning effo rt between the public and private inte rests "is man- datory." Before the Mediterranean lfip in October, Irvine officials already had decided on making access available to the public tidelands, Mason noted. This was indicated last April when the company sent a repcesentativt to Sacramento to appear before: the Assembly Committee on Local Govern· ment The Irvine aide voiced support of proposed legislation bearillg on public ac. cess to shoreline areas. "We approved the concept," said Mason. ri"\,e 0 . It declared the allles must call off all military activitie! ineluding "aerial reconnaissance, strafing, bombiOJ or defoliating with chemical poison and operations by naval and river craft and artillery in any area of South V~nam-" "Such activities will be, considered violaUcins of the cease-fire. , .and will be punished.'.' the -broadcast said, adding that Viet Cone: troops v.·oold increase their vigilance and be ''ready to fight and destroy the enemy." From Pate 1« SURF ... storm-spawned surf hit the Art Celony on July 4, 194.9, washing over the coastal hl&hway. _ lf predictions ol todiy bold up, ti e warned, the crashing ,Surf will be up tc> the boardwalk: ·area and may spll,1 over and down Broadway. "Then again, they could be wrong." he said. Lifeguards and police along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach-to San Clemente generally reported the same thing: high , surf Thursday. lapsing to little wave s to- da y and no damage. Seal Beach police set out barricades along the beach Thursday night when the pounding surf washed away portions and appeared ready to cause more trouble, buL the swells were down to three feet this mOrning. Surfside reported no problem, but the little colony, inundated by waves due to erosion in the early sixties, could get some standing beach pools if surf crests over the high-tide line Saturday. Huntington Beach lifeguards .sai<l sur r was fi ve to seven feet Thursday -higher than nonnal -but they expect a moun· ting height by late Saturday morning. Ne\1•port Beach authorities said waves hit about the same height Thursday, but there was llO damage and trucks involved in the sand haul antl~rosion project kept up lhe normal pace. if anything, sa id one ofriclal, the waves arc giving a chance to study the erfect of heavy surf on the newly-dumped sand and little was ca rried away by the wave action. FINISHID. IN MIMOSA YELLOW Ol GREEN. HAND DECOllATID IN CHAI.It WHITE , •• GLASS SHll.YU AND lWO INTUIOl UCiHTS. $799 1Y DREXEL, THE MOST TIUSUD NAME IN FURNITURE. .. -........................... .. • YOUR 'LOCAL DEALER FOR DREXEL -HENREDON. HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1n1 w .. 1c1111 Dr .. 642·20SO OrlN H.IDAf "TIL t INTERIORS Profeufon1I Interior Oesf9nen Avoil1blt>--AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. O,IN •tlOA't 'TIL t ' 494-4551 \ \ 'I. I I I I I 't. I I I •' . . . • • •/ -·· . ,. ... --. .. .. ,,. ~ ~ ........ ,,,__. r ........... . . , -...... r -,. .. . ' -~ . --4. .. Huntington •ea~bf' Today's Fl•al • • El> ITI 0 t'I .. . ,--,. . YOt.:. i2,.NO. 291', 4 SECTIONS, 48 PA6ES. ORAN6E COUNTY, t:lACIFOR~ •• • •• • FRIDAY',. DEceMBE~ S, ., 96, ' .. ·'"' eENTS ··~-.. .. '· ... . , .. . . ......... -···-~ ... Tate S~uspects TeStifY ' Prosecuto~s Ask Plot Indictment.for Manson .. LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney for Susan Denise Atkins said today she wlll1d telf the grand, jury investigating the murden: of Shanti Tate and others, ''all the detaib of the Tate murder," In- cluding how she wu '1hypnolized" into participating in it. As he entered the grand jury courtroom complex, where 18 witnesses, their attorneys and others were noisily ~sembling, Richard Caballero said Miss Atkins still feels under the power of Charles M. Manson, 35, bearded leader of a hippie-style clan that is figuring heavily in the investigation. Irvine Urges Public, Private Shoreline Plan Jly JEROME F. COLLlNS Ot ll'lt Dilly l'llOI lllff A combination of public and private de-velopment ol the coastal area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach was proposed today by William R. f\.1ason, president of the Irvine Company. P.ta.son said the company, sole owner of tbe 31h mile stretch of virtu~llY. ~abited shoreline property, said that the company's master Plan will reflect ••a unique blend ot developments lhat Will include public access to the tidelands." He asked slate, county and municipal government officials interested in the pubtk's access to ocean Udelands and the acquisition of public beach 1reas to join with lhe company as it bqiM its plan- ning for the area. "The Inclusion of public acce!ls to the tid elands and the proviskln for the ir ac· quisltion of public beaches · along . the Jrvine coast may come as a surprise to those who are unfamiliar with our history of planni ng," said Mason. "But it should not. "The Irvine Company has long recognized and been an advocate of the need for joint public and private coopera· tion in the creative development of our environment." The Irvine executive, an engineer by profession, emphasized: "We do not intend ·to create an en- vironment that will deny public access to the coastal tidelands as in the case of the recent Salt Creek matter. What Is more, We are not opposed to public acquisition and development of portions of the coast· al land for public purposes." Mason's "Salt Creek'•tcre.rence was to the county's abancklnment of Salt Creek Road in Laguna Niguel, south of Laguna Beach, early last yea r. The road had fierved as quasi-public access to Salt Creek beach. Reversal of the county's ac· t.ion has been vigorously sought ever !lince by citizens' groups in the south county area . Jrvine's Mason said his company's main concern never has been with the question o( whether public facilities 5hould be located on lands owned by the firm. "We are, however, concerned with the need for t>tlblic plans to be coordinated with and complbnenta7 to planned private ,jevelopment:!I." In ord er to bring about this coordina· Uon, Mason said, the company is calling on the State Department of Parks and Recreation, county government and the cities of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach "lo combine their individual ideas, (See IRVINE, Page Zl Beauty Parlor Shooting Kills Westminster Man 'A Westmlnsler muns ohol llJd tilled Chia morning In a -.in, lncklent which scattered the clientele In a Garden Grove beauty aalon. - RicbaM W. O'NOll, 23, of !051 P.1ahogany Circle, died In Orange County Medical center two hours after he was admiUed with bullet wounds in the chest and abdomen. · Booked on murder charges ii Marlc B. Challen, 23. Anaheim. Of'fkou• said witnesses told them O'Neal wu Cha\Jen'a target wht:n the arrested man burst into 'he Playboy Beauty Salon on Chapman Avenue. • ln.,.stipton have not Jtl ..tabll!hed tl>e motiva behind Challtn'• 1Uegtd lhoollTia of O'Neal. Challen ind wlme,... to tht ibootinl were beJDt quelltloned II prw lime. - Prooecuton hive aald Ibey will seek to Indict -wllll amplracy to commit murder. . "Sile lllll rean· him " C.blllero aald of ' . MaMOD's inOuence aver his client. . He aid'Mlss Atkins. 21. Cborged with murder in a .lepll'Bte case, will waiV.e righll agalnllt aelf incrimination in hopes that her voluntary -testimony will save her from the gilB chamber. She will admit freely, he said, that she accompanied members of tt>e: clan A! they killed Miss Tate. aclrea wife of Polish film director Roman Polanski, and four other1 last :sununer -bul her " . • r NAMED McDOWELL l'lllNCll'AL Rolond Gllmoro .rer.,' PL be she,... temporlrily · in. sane while ll!lder 1he clan leader'• "'hypo notlc spelI"'· llJd ''had nothing to do· wiUt ~murders." "'II a wtlness Is lnlthlul llJd honest I think some cooolclenlkln wtll be gt,.. to that," Caballero Wd. He added'thal Miss Atkirul is "quite UJ)!!let, quite remorseful." ProSecutors arrived for the grand juty gesslon with three pictures to show the jurors. One shows a length or rope a bout 43 feet loog. another shows a gun, ,and a Utird shows an aerial view of the home of a couple killed the day alter the Tate murders. ' .. MOVES TO FRONT OFFICI · Bill Bomoa Alao ..,... .. tlie;1a 1Cheduled .w11nesse1 was producrr Torry 'M~cher.17·yw-old oon.of ""'8«-Doris Day .. Melcber has .declined comment. ' Miss Atkins' ai&Orne:yl &&td . Melcher was visited by Charles M. Manson, 35, known as the, leader of a quaSli'~li1iou1 clan of hippie types iwho knew Manson as "God" and "Satan." Manson· was wsuccesSful in seeking Melcher's help to record some. songs when Melcher lived in the Tate hom e in fashionable Del Air before Miss Tate and her husband moved in, th~ attorn eys said. * * * Trio Describe 'Black. Magic' Of Cult Chief LOS ANGELES (AP) -"'Black magic'' .. "He believes that he, and all human beings, are God", "There is no crime, there is no r;ln". ."The women \'t'ere the key lo everything." Three friends of Charles M. Manson US• ed tbOse words Thunday to describe him and the way they uy be ruled a clan of nomadic htpple-types on • a compi.une near Death V811ey. ·Prosecutors say they will tetk an ln- cllctment chorgtng MaJlllOO, !15. wHh COil· spir1cy to. commit murder. ·Several mem· bers of his ctan are a~ of slaying octr.., Sharorf .TJle and •ll !lfl>en. .....;; ~-~Ml! P14l ~·. ·, 1p1.;w .... . it'(..... . · I I -... , tht ~ •'\ bloell magic,'\. I Wotldls. who has DAILY PILOT Sllfl PMtl CHECKING SURF FOR THE HIGH HARD ONES FROM HAWAII Ed Farwell, Joe Wall, Chuck Moyer, Steve Chulo (from left) Echo From Hawaii Coast Braces for Next Onslaught Qf High Surf • -. -· Thundering surf -an echo of knocked from his board. but WU reseaed by meguardJ. Top Administrative Posts ·~.-~~~~ foUoftd Maftim1 • met two m .... In· the · " dlltrlct, ye .... . ·-~-~ . theft the hlppl•·-In--.. ~. "'You don't bellne Hf Wtll;. II reall,y exists, and It 11 powtrful;" Wttldi'll aald. • inurdfr~, 1tonn°spawned breaker.s bat. tetlnl Haw1ii today -Is eipe~ to stttke the' Orange Coast within 24 bDUrs, followed ~ abnonnally high ildes cot11- poundlnf the probltms Monday. Trouble may be brewing for some areas, including Laguna Beach, where: a 1imllar combination in July, 1949, sent 1urf swirllng over and beyond Pacific Coast Highway, aecordlng to one veteran. The .,;.u. 1powned by twfti - 1><tw .. 1(lhe'Ph1Upplne and !he AleUtlu Islands sub>lded a bit Thursday nlghl, dropping 1s !ow as two feet today alon& the Orange Coast. Given 2 Valley. Educators "He (Manson) believes that he, and all human beings, are God and the devil at the same time. He believes all human beings are part of each other," said Poston, a MaMOn follower for twD years. Two "educators ha ve been appointed to top administrative positions by the Foun· tain Valley School District Board of Trustees. They are Roland -Gilmore, 51, new principal of McDowell School and Bill Barnes, 36, wh~ is the district's new educational services administrator. Gilmore comes lo Fountain Valley after 18 years or experience in education.' Jfe last served RS principal in the Garden Grove Unified School District, a position he held for four years. fie began his teaching career In the Cr1mpton City Schools and later held posi· lio ns with the Magnolia, Alamitos and Los Angeles City School Districts. His ) YMCA. Men's Club Plans Yule Tree Lot Huntington Beach YMCA Y's Men Club will open a Christmas tree lot Slturday to raise funds for the y<IUU) organization. The lot will be located in front of !he Montgomery Ward departmelll.etore In Huntington Center. "You see whaf. th.It means," Crockett wife is a principal in the Downty Sc~ saJd.· "lt mew that human life has no District. value. lf you kill * hulllln being, you are Barnes, who held the McDowell Schoo: just kllllng a part of yourseU. So It'• all prlncipalship before assumlng his new right." . . , job has been with the Fountain Valley But, ll1d · Crockett, by Manson s School District since July. 1969. philoeophy '"you.ctn'! kill an animal Not Prlor to that he served as prlndpat. a bug, not a·anake, nothlnc· 1'hen were teacher and administrator ln tbe ·Garden lnlkfs all aver the d.n. 'They, got in Grove Unified School District. the ca~ and everywht!!:re. ~ut you cou!d His new duties include 1upervfsor·of tht never kill one. The~ picked up sn;akes in dis trict's curriculum materials center the home and carried them outinde and · ' baned them loose " development of new teacher tralrung Pl)>" "That' rl ht'" ·p lo ·d '"l grams and ' coordination of the Slunn1tr 1 g os n ~ · saw school program. them c~ry a foot-Jong s1dewtnder out of the cabin one day." SfOC'k lllarltet NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices turned lower in 11low lradlng late this afternoon after giving up early mod- erate gains. (See quot.atloM, Pages 10. II.) At Z p.m. tho Dow Jooa avenge ol 111 lndllllrlals wu otf S.24 11713.211. Earlier, It bid been up more thin I points. Declining st«ks outnumtered advances by 7" t~ 5" -·a revers .. ) of the momlng trtnd when~wlnntrs held a substanUal margin ·over loSers. "And you couldn't eat meat," r;ald Watklns, ''because you were killed an animal. lt was crazy." M.anson's talent as a musician -he played the gulllor -and his slow, deliberate and moody way of moving gave him a IOri of hypnoUc power over women, the three men said. 1'1\il sort of power tuu a long 11me to wort an effect, .. CfockeU aaid. "Mo- tiom are tied to emotioni. Certain mo- tiim a:e1te' certal.D re.~ 1! you tm,r ho·1t»to.uee thero.". · '"11>e womtn araund the place were always his property," WaWnl sal.d. Poston added :~ . "You . were ·always (See MAGIC, Page %) Waves generated by a pair of two severe storms ln the western Pacific smacked the California coastline Thurs- day, ranging up to 15 feet in the Santa Barbara area. Treacherous surf cap!ized a slclff car· rylng two trea.sute-hunter1 In their mid· twenlle:s.Off Sumrherland Beach and the men vanished in the crashing waters. , A 14-year-old surfer narrowly escaped drowntng off Hermosa Beach when he fought the seas for a half-hour after being * * * Storm-battered · Oahu Escapes More Damages .... HONOLULU (AP) -The storm·bal· tered north shore of Oahu Island escaped further damage early today when an e1· peeled monster surf crested a critical 10 feet lower than' predict~. More·· than 1,700 realdent.s had been evacuated as the north shore, on the o~ posite side d.' the island from Hono1ulu, braced far towering walls of water. $400,000 Bonds Miss.ing The surf peaked at 30 !eel, ar high tide. not high enough to cauae ptoperly damage. This was 20 fett below the waves that smashed 58 ~es and caused II mlWon in property damage Monday . .r FBI HuntS Attorney in Beacli Man's Estate P,tobe Tod"y'• waves had been ·predicted tcf hit ~ feet, .tho ·belg!lt 'they reached Tlrunday. A mld·Paclllc ,-.., aome, l ,000 --"'llawall l(>llwned Jly'roM~ °'"" .............. Mmcan autbor!tl<s ·today joined tho Fiil and lnvestlgal«I lnml lhl 6111 Diego County Dlatrtct Atlcnloy"• -In a widonlng awth for ., .atlorney oc- C\ISed.of 1t11lln1 noarly-,000 ln-booda from tbe est.le of 1 NewpOrt Beach man. The search for Escondido lawyer Patrick S. M. Milton, 47,~is centering on Ensenada, the Mex.lean city where he aUegedly cashed" a check for $5,000 last Nov. 25. Federal ind San Dleg~ County com- plaints occu,. Mitton of grand lhelt end attempted e1lortlon, charges stemming from his alleged theft of bonds held in the cstote ol John Salmond. 79, ltll Vim Entrada, Newport Beech. Tfle retlred Unloit Oil Company n• ecuUve, dOICl'lbed too., bJ his dlugltter- tn-law u being 11a •fSf1 tick run," recenlly •ppalol<d his vl!fe, Mrs. Helea I'. Salmond and hll oon, John Solmotld Jr., .11111 Jledlonl Lane. Huntington Beacb, as conservaton of the estate. San Di~ ln..Upl«l loday said Mil· Ion wN hind 11 the !omlly oUorney llJd Is believed to be the llithor of a typewrlt- IA!n unsigned letter which !he 1"W"'1" 5almond-1!11bsequontly tecel...t In the msll. That Jetter, they said, was received Nov. 22 and It suggested that Salmond, wbo is vice president of CallfOrnJa State COiiege at Las Angeles, should p1y ~Jltton one-half tA the value: of the mls.slng bonds -eotjmated ~ lnvesUsators .. beloc ""'111 about $400,000. lnveoUsatm' I.my Bricker U!d the ki- ter warned Salmond that the booda wvald not be returaad .-lllo '"1rr '""""' td hall of t!IOlii...... ' ...... ; The (;,ttef """ polnlad <lit\ """ • meeUnt would be orranl"\l llet-a\O ponies at whlch ·deialll fl Iii _... of bonds llJd -~"' ........ At about !hot Ume. Bricker aalll, Mii· the -... waveo,Cllllc1ole;Jlld• Dollpllo tho clqrr, Clio._ ....... ton llOh! hit -do 11• pl'llctlce ind ........... ---olgitl' to 11111\0 wentooavocotion..Hewu·-"J>Olled -1e. l'o!lc6 Aid U..,·<lemod'hlln· .. ·~.been -·ltt ~ -an.a. o1---.11un; ... ._ ~ he Wbeil the li,Otll ~ · threllmlaC ·1o hrle lbelr can towed St!t. •--ol"ibe-E!Rlod• nay:-·• Police Dlpu1ment-aald ·pallce In-four Offk:lals ·lald"Mond"T 11111 "l'utsday's Mellcall jltwlncea wm In · · ion 61 damog& -llnall"s WWII Milton's plctun! and dncri~ that nat\U'•l, dl&a~~ 1lnee 1 J9:60 t!dal wave: .tn intensive lelrch 11 under we,y. killed fl ptl'SOnl aqd ~uxd ns mllllbn "We undentalld, that he ta no ltral'llfr tn dam1n on the Jsla'nd of Hawaii. to Mexico,'" tbt. _._t said, "and lhlt ~: More· than 400 poUce, flrem~ and he baa ~ !rlalda .do!m hero. Thia will p.tbllc -ks flnplof'" had been ordtted not belp eur awth. ol coune. bu\. we are Into. ""'1h ~ . .,... of> Jjoool\llu In 1'<>•klo(wttb -. .....,~Ille.-ai,. i'l!Wlltldl ·1or1·aie· _... ,...., tbaf ..., .. _) llllttlie 1'111:" • • ' ·JGia -1r1 '""-'~'to -.-.to!!v, · · · ~~,.:...~~~~-· ~tlit,~Bt:·=~~ilt: --llJd -GfMllloa,. Is ........ u. <!( HaWalt 1;tind.-11it .S.rai-i eta a ,,certlfild ~-.: ~1•il•unt. dmt ~Uqi IUlt&ined·fKI0,000 Jn dalriige, ··lmllaiJ-ld ....._.......... Til!*r .. llclod\icthe • ol -ol· .. dl-mxti o.ara-""""'-lileL , . ' -·-· • • Weather forecasters comparing er. peeled tides and new, Incoming aets of. breakers say the surf which reached a maximum of eight to ten feet ID Laguna Beach is just a taste of more· tO come. Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePauHs said the ssme comblnaUon of seven-foot tides and stonn·spawned surf hit the Art Colt.111 ·on July 4,. 1949, washing over the coastal highway. If predictions or today hold up. i,. Warned, the crashing surf will be up'.tf the boardwalk area and may spill aY!J-- and down Broadway. "Then again, they could be wrong," he said. Lifeguards and police along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Cleme:ot.e generally reported the same thing: high &urr Thursday, lapsing to little waves~ day and no damage. Seal Beach police set out barricades along the 6ea'ch Thursday night when th, pow\_ding surf washed away portions Bnd appeared ready to cause more troub}t. but the s"''tlls were down to three f~' this morning. Surfside reported no problem. but the little colony, Inundated by waves due1o erosion in the early alxlies,. coo1d aet some standing beach pools lf surf crestl over the high:tide line Saturday. . ' " ' ' Orange .Coast ' \Vea&Jaer The surf1 will be uP and the sun I wtll I>< O!It lh.1' .... ~end. with balmy te.mperature:1 In the upper 70's ~~ming the•Or~e Qoaat. : ~SJDE .. ~D-':Y · Al"""I a rear 'ajln he I/le!~ .~ · ou( $900 'to ball UC ln>iM a&udmitl OUl·Of·jaU In BnKtie11. ChanuUor Danitl A.ldricJ&.. ii be- ginning Ja geC .J!°'"e oJ his mone11 baek. Pa.gt a ... l IM1"'9 . It C1llltntll 1 '""!'* ..... ~Ii ~~ 1._,•, I ~ Mltlinll• 11:.. ' • ·--,~ 19-11 --" Allll .L-.n , tJ Mt1'111eit u...-• -. I I • l • -. ------·~-----. -.. ---·----------------..-·-- : . :· .. ·-- •' .· DAILY PILOT St.It rt1et9 -· • • • ' . • • 1 l " ~ Citi1eiis' Group A nsw~rs· 300 Calls 4 ; " ... • -It TBRJlY COVILLE -One problem the 35 backers or Help ., ... ....., .. 1111 tttff Line faee is the uncedtainty abo1.1t what ' . ~ ll Help Llne, tht telephone system sei up happens to the young . ca er on the other to ctte drug'ysers an .. w.l" if the)! want e~-:_Wben ~ caner a.s. referred to pro- -it, al'ParenflY hai been a' moderate suc· 1 fesSlon~l medical or psyCh~a~ help cess,-a&:ordlhg to Rev.· Fred~Overbj,' "there ~s· no way to know If he went associate paslclr of the Commnnity because names are not used. Methodist CJuaeh [n Huntington Beach. "In . the near future we hope. lo .. , · · estabh.sh our own center of operations ·I doubt that we vc do~ ~ lot fqr the where callers can actually come in and ,drug 'f'r"OP},em a.s a whole, sal~ (he Rey. see our people," said Overby, "we also Overbf1 but our concern,, is ~he in-hope to open up more lines." dividUIJ, the one on the line. Surprisingly Help Line has receivcrl Help Line wa~ ~tabll.shed in Au~l by few crank calls or haras:wient. "When • group of c1t1ze rui from H~nttnston \re started we expected much more.·• Beach, Westminster and Fountain Valle.y remarked Overby, "but we haven't to try and reac1), the drug useri of this received more than 25 such calls." area. "A lot of calls we get," he continued. Their piJrpose was simply lei prt1vl4e a ••are kids experimenting with drup.s. met.hod whereby users could receive They are on a bad trip and want to know verbal help without fear of the law. A how to come down. We try to tell them. THIS IS PORTION OF IRVINE COASTAL AREA BETWEEN CAMEO.SHORES (LEFT), CRYSTAL COVE . " thin telephone line is ·the only current · "The ·only disappointments we suffer method of contact. come five minutes after hanging up the Rev. Overby, a member of Help Line's phone. Sometimes you realize you should .. • :Beach School District From Page I IRVINE ... boar~ of directors, said the group has have said something else." ~e1ved allghUy more than 300 calls More parent! have called Help Line since the number 894-4242 was an-than kids, added Overby. "And of the kids noonced. who call most are on speed. We get very "Our . intention is to work with young few calls from kids on marijuana, but a pe?ple and dr~gs," he expl~ined, "\Ve ., lot from parents concerning pot." Set,s Pollution Seminar interests and desires during the early stages of planni ng.·• · Letters outlining the Irvine proposal have bten sent to William Penn Mott, Jr., director of the state department of parks and recreaUon; \Vi lliam Hirstein, chair· man ol the Orange County Board of Su· pervisors; Doreen Marshall, mayor of Newport Beach, and Glenn Vedder, may. or pl Laguna Beach, ~1ason said. pass out a plain card that simply 1Says •·we knew there was a serious drug Help Line and gives the number." Dot.i1.v '"1LOT '"11 .,,..,, problem here when we started," ex· That plain card has produced a number 'INDIVIDUAL OUR CONCERN' plained Overby, "and we haven't been of .surprises for JM:.Ople manning the Hel p Help J.. ine's Rev. Overby disappointed. Right no1v we expect a Water pollution -and what can be done about it -is the topie of the first senior seminar of the Huntington Beach • L;nJon High School District Monday. ~ before 30 seniors at the 7:30 ~~. session jn the district board room ~~ii be Richard Beueermann, a director !!ftiJ the State Water Purity Control Board. -• Student participants for the session _,.were dlosen C!om otitstandinf 12th grade ., students at Marina, Hllfl Ungton Beach ;: ;.nd Edi.son High School. · ; "':'Other lclpics to be discussed during the : ~ :~';i=yw':r~:g: !:s!~~e~:c: .:;_~ogram, capital punishment and the !.:.~·ace Corps. ~:.-v Seminar participants by school are the following : ~tarina High School -Phyllis Anwyl , Gary Campbell, Robert Dorla, Glen E. Dysinger, Robert Eldon, Rhonda Marti n. Greogry Narog,' Susan Revere, Janet Squeglia and Diane Taylor. Huntington Beach Hlgb S<hool Sharon L. Andtrsen, Ellen J'. Bessho, Shelly I. Boyer, Peter L. Bi'ueggeman, Catherine M. Durkee, Nonnan J .. Furula, Albert Globus, Tina L. Hanna, Rory M . O'Lougblin and Steven E. Spickard. Edison High School -Cilules L. Ashmore, Scott Coleman, Molly Fisher, Tom Ha.stings, Todd Lee, Beth Martus, ~1erri ~tonks, Keith Orahood, Craig Shucker and Robert Whitaker. ""To -date," he explained, "the com- pany's coastal studies have pertained to .surveying 11.nd analyzing soil conditions, slopes, utility systems, road alignments, view potentials, and market conditions. Only .now is the company preparing to embark on detailed .studies relating to the formulation of a precise land use plan for the CQast." Further inspiration {or achieving 11 Line phone 2~ hours a day. ·'We've large increase in ca lls around Christmas re<:elved a number of cal ls from older when more you ng people are home ancl' people about problems having nothing to to preach or moralize about dru gs \\'ilh nothing tp do." W> with drugs." because the calfer v.·ould soon cut off the ··our reputation is spreading because. "I guess being broad is good , as long as conversalion. the calls are increasing. Apparently l\'t' v.·e can help everyone," said Overby. During August a number o( callers haven't· made any serious mista kes yet. Tbe basis of the Help Line philosophy is were referied to the crises center at lf you do your calls stop and some thal members man the phone.s primarily Orange County Medical center, said similar programs have come to a halt in to answer questions and give confid ence Overby. They did go, according to other cities. Ours is going strong," he to the caller. Individuals are warned not medical center officials, he added. concluded . Cong Set 3-day Truces For Christmas, New Year Beach Impalas Play for Midget Football Title irentagon Panel_ Questions balance of public and private uses of the / generally rugged coastline and il:i scat-SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong Friday . said, "all National Liberation forces in all tering of swimming beaches came from a 1 1 d thr -d f f areas of South Vietnam must ~ase all recen~ tou r of. Mediterranean resort proc a me ee ay ~ase· ires or Christmas and New Year's Day ·and military operations." Championship of Southern California u· Junior All·America midget division foot- ball circles is at stake Saturday afternoon v1hen the Huntington Beach }mpalas pla~ host to the Lawndale Buccaneers on the Orange Coast College football fielc!. Kic koff is at 4 o'clock. alley on My Lai Probe ;;::sr::c:.tason and a four.man company declared any allied violations would be It declared the allies must call off all punished. milit3ry activities including "aerial The Irvine representatives vi.sited such The proclamation, feaa 'over the secret reconnaissance, strafiOg, bombing or coastal developments as the Algarve Viet Cong radio, made no mention of one· defoli~ting with chemical poison and ·-· WASHINGTON fUPIJ -First Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was summoned to the Pentagon today for questioning by a speclal panel attempting to detennlne if theTe might have been a whitewash of an origina] Army investigation of I.he .killing Valley Trustees !f·Welcome 21 :: Grove Families . , -; ., .. ·' Fountain Valley School Dist r l ct trustees Thursday approved a resoluiion which wotild shift 21 families from the Gardeh Grove Unified School District into tlteir system. f" The families, located \vithin ap. • proximately one-half square mile of land, ·rough!)' bounded by Warner Avenue, Euclid Street and Ward Street, asked for ~ boundary change early last summer through a petition. Should the resolution be approved by the Garden Grove Unified School District and !he Huntington B~ach Uni on High School District, the boundary change should become effective by July 1. 1970. Fountain Valley School Dist. Supt. Mike Brick said the .other school districts in- .-"'olved had already give n their verbal ap proval to the change. . •' :: •: . .. . ' •' . ; " : , •• n ,. ... ,. ' • • " ,. ' • " " ,. ,. ... • l .. -~ " .. . .. • • • The families involved petitioned for in- clusion in the Fountain Valley School District since they actually live within the Fountain Valley city limits but had to send their children to Garden Gro\·e i;choo}s, . , DAILY PILOT llol>trt t-1. Wt1d r r,•idf:nl atld l>ubllilll:r J1c1i "· c u.r ... ., \11(1 Pro'<M!nl and G•~r•I MI M"1' Th11"''' l<11wil IEt<lor" Tb•""'' A. M111 phin1 ~n11l~1 E~Mr A!htrl W. 8qt,, AuOC.ll lt EdlffW' H•11tl"9f.11 •11ch Offlc1 JOt $th S"t•I M1iti119 A4d11n1 ,,0 , a,, 7•0, '2641 Otlltr OfficH ..... __. lftt)I• ,111 Wt \! !W!bl!t lle~ll~ll· (0$11 lo'(,..; 1)11 WC•I I •• S•1rcl l."11"' ICM:lll JU FettU AYlll\il Dlll.Y l'ILOJ, wllll Mlkll It <lllTlt•""d !'ot .. _.Pl'C». • -..UtMt: IUd• ••CfM ,~,._ t•y Ill .-rill 1tt1i... tw HUl'f""!:lll, ll~l(t\. ,..,,,111r1 \lt lle .... tel.It M~. Nrw. l)llrl Sfft PI ..... ytvnl l\MCPI. •*'O '<rill\ h>ll '"i...t HllleM.. ON"" CM1I l'wbl~ ... ..., C'"'*'fl't '""'"'-p~n!I ••t •I trll Wt•I ••ll!IN II~•. l<ftwt6o'I 9HtPI.' •1111 a» Wtll ll"' '""''· Ct~!• A•tM • . fft,,.. ... 1114J MJ-4)11 kflft Wttt"'1Hltt Cifl ''O.l?JI a..HIH Atl•ntfal ... '414'11 C...,r loifll, !.... OI•-(Nrl fl'Wii.11"'9 (........,,. ... -J , •• 1 ............ le!ol. etll.,.~ "'f ll'ft Cf '""'''" .... "" htrtlr> .,..., W 1-lflltN .. Imo.it -t\111 1•-~lelt ...... ,, .. ~, l:#l'fl .... ---: ltu ... els•• f.Cl'"1f ~•I ti Nto.ttr• 8tf(fl •t'lf (Clft ,,,., .. , C,.. t•rr.t •tt itt Dtt(• tf ,.,.,.11, u• ~,..,..,, ""~" v 't ~"'' ,.,ll,S..., tulllltlil<lt. II 1111 -lll•t. ' Coast in Portugal, the Cosla del Sol and day cea.se-fires for the two holidays" an-operations by naval and river craft and of South Vietnamese civlians at !\.1y Lai. Costa Brava in Spain, the French Riv iera noun~ Thursday by South Vi'etnam and ... ~ artillery in any area of South Vietn,a:m." The 26-year-0ld Calley is accused or and Italy's Ligurian and Amalli coasts. Lhe United Slates. "Such activities will be considered J>l'themedllitaedted murder of Hl09 persons in ~1ason said it was a highly instructive As in the pastr the Viet Cong msde no \'iolations of the cease-fire .•. and will be e a eg massacre. e was com· tour. "The most obvious fa iling we mander of a platoon of a company head-b ed . th tho.s 1 h refertnce to standoff by North Vie t-punished," the broatlcast said, adding ed by Capt. Emest A. Medina, who 0_ sen~ 1~ pedal t ~oaslyta f areas\ t ~t namese troops. North Vietnam never has that Viet Cong troops would increase denied Thursday either ordering or were eve 0 ex~ u.siv~ or pr va e publicly admitted its troops are in South their vigilance and be "ready to fight and seeing any mass slaylngs in the village. 1 u~e appeared. sterile, UflUlteresUng .~nd Vietnam althouah it has come close to destroy the enemy." The Pentagon inquiry board apparently \Vjtho ut a feeling of place 0.r context. saying so on oct.a~ions. Jn past truces, the U.S. Command has plarus to question almost everyone with a Ar.eas . d~veloped exclusively for. t_he connection in the case and Calley was on-~ubhc d1dn t look much bet~, he sa1?. During all holiday cea~·fires in Lhe reserved th!! right to conduct ground and ly one of several called today. A ·They . were dull. unattractive and 1n past, eaefl side has accused the other or aerial reconnaissance lo s a f e g u a rd . · "bl h . h mo.st tnslances they had .spoiled the repeated violations. All]e rican forc::s and lo light back in case spokesman said ~t was J>C&I e e m~g t natural beauty of the coastline, often ap.. of attack. not be heard until late tod,ay, or possibly pearing as if they had been dedicated to The Viet Cong said th:! cease-fires There never has been a cease·fire in even later. . . parking lots and trash re<:ept.acles." \\'OUld last 72 hours beginning at I a.m. Vietnam that was not marked by Calley is the only person specilieally It is to avoid either extreme Ma.son Dec. 24, Saigon time, and l a.m. Dec. 30. 5µo radi c fighting. Last year, lh e South charged with murder in the case, said, that the company feels a The_ allied cease-fires will begin at 6 P·n:'· Vielnan1ese governn1ent refused to pro- althoogh more than a_ score of men w~o cooperative planning effort between the .. Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year s claim a New Year's truce because it were there at the time are under 1~ public and private interesbl "Is man-Eve. claimed the enemy had broken the The Impalas earned the right to play In the championship fin als by defeating the Rialto Colts at Hemet High School last week, 20·18. Coach Bob Justice of the Huntington Beach team. has guided his young charges (12·1 4 ye ars of age) lo a 9·2-0 season record. There are 33 players on the rmpala roster and top playing weight is I 15 pounds. Dan Troup, Tom Baker and Brian Edwards are the offensive stars of the Impala team. Troup is the leading passer while Baker is his favorite target. Edwards does a lol of the running and plays defense as well . The Impal as v.·ere forced to come from behind a 12--0 deficit to defeat Rialto las~ .week. vestigation and one se.rseant has been ac-datory." During its ce11Se-fires, the Viet Cong Christma;; cease.fire 114 times. cused of assault with intent to murder. Before the Mediterranean trip In -~:;;;;;m;iliiiiii;;ii;ii;ii;iiiiiiiiiiiillmiili~;;,;;;;;;;;iliiiiiiiiiiiliili19iiiiii;;;m ___________ :-_ Calley, who is lo be tried by an Army October , Irvine officials already had .. 0 2 ' coort martial ne:rt month at Ft. Benning, decided on making access available to ( b Ga., was called before the so-called ~eers the publlc tidelands, Mason noted. a Investigation Board which was formed to This was Indicated last April when the n 1, look into whether a \ow~evel in· company sent a representative to ~ vestigation soon after the ~fareh 16. 1968, Sacramento to appear before the ot1't· e incident amounted to little more than a Assembly Committee on Local Govern-I v.·hitewasli. ment. The Irvine aide voiced support of «-"1,,....1 The board headed by LL Gen . \Villiam proposed legislation bearing on public ac· ""'I: R. Peers heard ~l edina Thursday behind ces.s to shoreline areas. "We approved closed doors. Afterward f\ledina com-the concept;• said Ma.son. ma~der of Company C, tst Battallion. of lrvine senior vice president ~y !he 2001h infantry <1t the time held a \V al.son, who oversees the company s news con{erence to deny any k~ov.·ledge long-range planning, saJd ·apJ>l?intment of of mass killings of ci vilians. a "public coordlnaUng committee" may In a subsequent interview. ti1ed ina be the be.st approach to the master plan acknowledged. however. that under prqblem. The committee's membership orders !romj higher up, he had directed \VOuld comprise representatives of state, his men to i:!estroy ~1y Lai 4, a part of Cl)unty and local agencies who WOl;'ld the village of Song My, because it was \1,1ork with Irvine pl:tnner.s "to esta~hsh suspected as a haven for the Viet Cong the needs and destres of the vanous 48th battalion. levels of govemm~ts with respect to Low Bid Gives Big Head Start To Vista School Con.o;truetion of the new Vi!ta View School in the Ocean View School District could be sin -almost immediately, ac• cording to D i s t r i c t Superintendent Clarence Hall. public areas." The committee, he said, would function as the official llalson between the com- pany and the public . "ThrOugh coordinated ac_tion a n d cooperation,'' Wat.son concluded, "a development plan can 7merge tha~ will make it possible to achieve an optimum blend of public and private u:;es that might not otherwise be possible." From Page l MAGIC ... welcome to share them . but then you became his property too." A $990,424 bid received from liar-Wick and Son Construction Co. of Newport Beach was well below the maximum C'08t ;allowed for the proj ect through the State Aid Building f'togram, he said. Administrators originally feared that the bids would be tn u:cess o! I.be amount ;illowed, a hindrance which caused the last Ocean View SchoOI to a:o through a 'Process of re-bidding and effected a two. month delay. "He needed to have some men around. n.ere was a limJt to what any man can do. But' then, yo11 see. the Vt'OOlen held power over lhe other men." WatklM aid. "That way," Crockett • said, "lhe women were the key to everything." '1NISHID 0 IN MIMOSA TtUOW OI GREEN . HAND DICOR.t.TID IN CH.t.LK WHIR , , • GU.SS SNILVIS 4ND TWO INTIRIOR LIGHTS. $799 IT0 DRDD.. THI Mosr-nusno-N.t.ME IN PUINITVIE. __ ,, _____ ,, __ "When we have to re·bid a achoo! It causes a delay of at least two months sinee certain features have to be cut out and the project has to go baclt to the bonrd o( trasltts and the st.alt. Ultimait · lY it means double seulons for the chil· drtn." tl11U said. ~ "Ir Lhe tnistees approve the bid D!c. 15 and baning any unforeseen probltrM such as strikes or bad weather, we should be rrady tor occupancy In September of 1170." ':'be new school wl ll ht located at two 1~1ekory SI., Fountain Valley, and house i20 students. ,• When the commullfl needed money, Crockett said, Manson would Rnd the women out to panhandle -"they aould beg more In two hours than you and I could earn workin,-rii'a wttk." There was no prosUtuUon. Watkins •aid. '"ll!ty wue so good 11 panhondUl\f, they didn't ha ve to hustle." \\11tkins ;ind POllton said It WIS Crocketi's ~·•mJngs that awakened them to the power MAnaon held over them. Both left Ult clan, Watkln.s in May, Poston In mid-October . Poston said the "ords to one Manson &0ni; weal : "There is no i;ocxf. thtte ls no bad. "There Is uo crUnt', there is no Jln. ·· YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR DREXEL-HENREDON-HERITAGE NEWPORT IEACH 1721 WHlcllff Dr., 641°1050 ortN FllDAT 'TR. t • INTERIORS Profnsfon1I lnt•rior Oulgn1n Av1!11blo-AID-NSIO LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Cout Hwy. Ol'IN H:IPAf 'TIL f • 494-6551 ' 1 11 I I 1 • ,. I \ 11 I 11 -. .. . ~. • RESCU ERS RIG LINE IN EFFORT TO AID MEN WHO TOPPLED INTO RAVINE WITH CRANE· In Orange County's Modj11ka C•nyon, 0.ath Lurked on a Soft Shoulder Count y Worker Dies as Cran e . . Fa lls in Can yon A County of Orange road worker "A'aS killed and his companion seriously in· jured Thursday when lhe crane they were operating toppled into a Modje.ska Can- ~·on ravine. Trapped beneath the huge rig ·was Luther 0 . Kaun, 61 , Orange. Seriously in- jured but said by Chapman General l~ospital ufficials today lo be "slightly irnproved" was crane driver John A. Kowatch, 53, of 13782 Hoover St. \Vestminster. Kowatch is being treated in the in- tensive care unit of the Orange hospital. Co-workers said the two men were part (I( a crew dumping dirt and rocks along flood-ravaged ~1odjeska Canyon Road just north of Cook's Corner when the (ive- ton crane moved to Lhe edge of the jag- ged road. Both men sav.• the danger and both tried lo ju1np clear as the rig broke through the sort shou lder at the edge of the ravine. Kowatch scrambled from the crane as it neared the end of its 200-fool drop but Kaun \l'as pinned in the wreckage. Firemen and Slate Forestry workers struggled for more than two hours lo ex- tricate Kaun 's body from the shattered crane while Kowatch was carried in a lit· !er up the slope to the foad. Coroner's investigators said lt was almost certain that Kaun was killed in· st.antly when the crane smashed into the floor of the ravine. He was pronounced dead at the scene. Ba11dits Force Tl1ree Station Aides to Strip Three gas stations along the San Diego freeway were held up within one hour early Thursday and their altendants fore· cd to strip naked by a trio of robbers v.·ho collected $160 in cash. Alleged hold-up men, a Marine e<>rporal and two civilians. were taken into cu!tody by military police when they ar· ri ved at the San Onofre gate at Camp Pendleton. Two of the suspects, Delbert S. Finger, 25, of Dana Point, and Kenneth G. Ca rpent er, 25, of Corona . were turned over to San Clemente po lice. The third suspect, Cpl. Ronnie Russ .Jo~nson. 21, is in custody at Camp Pendleton. The series of holdups began at 2:30 a.m. Thursday when a car occupied by three men drove intu a service station at La Paz Road and the San Diego Freeway. While one of the robbers threatened him with a butcher knife, attendant Art Houston wa s forced to strip off his clothes. which were taken by the holdup men. along v.·ith $40 in cash. Cqrpenter In Statement GOP Official Skeptical Of Unruh Governor Bid Barely able to keep from yawning at the drama of Assemblyman Jesse Unruh's formal leap into the 1970 gubernatorial race, the state Republican" Party chief Thursday urged him to at least give up the post of Minority Leader. Speaking at his Republican State cin- tral Committee headquarters at 3916 Campus Drive, Newport Be a ch, Chairman Dennis E. Carpenter warned that campaigning against Gov. Ronald Reagan will be a full-time job. He also said Unruh is the epitome o[ the wrong man for governor. "Mr. Unruh's announcement had about as much sus pense in it as a traffic signal changing from green to red," said GOP JCader Carpenter, who added it seems ob· vious Gov . Reagan will run again. "\Vhi le J don't think he said much. if anything, new today. hi s formal an· nouncement docs make some subtle but significant changes in the character of the gut>ernatorial race," Ca rpenter ad- ded. He chucklingly agreed with one press: corps pundit from a news radio station that Unruh is just following the lead set bl .LSD researcher Dr. Timothy Leary, 'Who threw his hea~band in the ring earlier. Carpenter reviewed Assembly Minority Uader Unruti's past record in the press· release prepared for newsmen, dis- counting his qualifications and con- tradicUng announcement remarks made earlier in the day. "First, Mr. Unruh talked abciut re.sponsibillty to the peOple o ( ~alifornia," said Carpenter. He said Unruh will show responsibility by not seeking another term as minority leader, because the narrow division between Democrats and Republicans will reqoire hard work and leadership. •·As a candidate for governor, he quite obviously isn't, going to have hi.a mind on the business of the legislature." "Second, J think that there is a serious question about 'Big Daddy's' ability to solve the real problems of California,'' Carpenter e<>ntinued, saying his 14 years in th: Assembly show little. Quoting Unruh remarks on taxation. Carpenter charged that the Texas-born politican <iuthored a 1967 bill lifting all limits off school taxes, while the GOP fought for a ceiling to protect middle-in· come homeowners. "And his record on taxes look s still lousier when we recall that property tax- es in California virtually doubled during his seven years as Speaker," he added. "Or take N.:r. Unruh-'s school aid bill of '66-'67,'' ~Carpenter continued, .. It con· tained an error of $50 million. J don't know whether it was just plaln stupidity or gross carelessness." The GOP handout itself· originally set that figure as $145 million, but this had been crossed rut in ink and the lower figure inserted, leading to queaLlon! (r"om the noor. Carpenter quipped that he was sorry the figure wasn't the higher c.ue, because it would make better ammunition, but also a larger loss to overe<>me. "In either case. it casts serious doubt on his ability to de·:elop sound programs for the state," the GOP chii?f from Newport Beach said of Unruh's error. "And it isn't just Unruh's 11ecord in developing programs that is deficient It's also how his grasp of leadership operates," he e<>ntinued. · Carpenter said the I n g I e w o o d Democrat m11;y not only fin~ the expected u'phill fight against Republicans. but some or his own party members still bearing whiplash scars from his years as Majority Leader. "The guiding hand of ~1r . Unruh the n \Vas about as gentle as that of a Golden Gloves boxer," sai d Carpenter, adding that he showed a preference for diclaling answers rather than debating problems and reaching a e<>nsensus. Carpenter charged during informal discussion after reading the prepared release that Unruh is what he called self. centered, personally-oriented and wanl.5" power for power·s sake. "He is · the epitome ~f tbe wrong person for state office.'" · Concerning San Francisco . Mayor J~ph ~ Alloto's potential t·h-r e .rt, Carpenter said Unruh seems the likely Democratic nominee, since Aliolo is new to politics and Unruh. is not. LAFC Receives Dana-Capo Beach, Incorporation Bid A formal application was lo be filed to- day to make Dana Point.Capistrano Beach Orange Cou!Vy's next incorporated city. The Citize ns Committee for Incctporation told a capacity audience,.at Serra School auditorium Thursday night that the Local Agency Formation C.Om- mission (LAFC ) would receive the docu· ment today. Alex Lake who with Or. Roger San- derson, Arthur Humburg and .Joe Cole are spearheading the movement said the committee hopes for a January hearing date. Local tontrol of local artairs was the major point stressed bf th espeakers who indicated particular interest in the loss of beaches through sale to land developen, rt?Uling of a scenic highway which may bypass the commifnity's commerc ial sec· lion, and beautification proposals inade by the South Coast Scenic Improve ment Project. ' One-man School Jorda1i Makes .(Jharge; Mitcliell Says Balone y Orange CoUnty school Trustee Donald Jordan Thursday accused board Presi· dent Clay Mitchell of acting as a ~man committee representing the board and running up excessive' mileage at public eirpense. · -"All of this accusation stuff Is a bWJch of baloney," retorted Mllchell of South Laguna. "You can't operate a car at six cents a mile. I'm giving a hell of a lot or time. Actually. t count on about two days a week ori this school stuff." Jordan said he had checked the books 11nd found W..itchell during the last year h11d driven over 9.000 miles to attend 139 meetings on county schools business at a to"t of more than $8.iO. The other four board members turned tn mileage voucllers for $69, $60, $47 and S81 . Jordan said. , '·Thi!! to me isn't so much a matter o[ enc peNion buildintup mileage," remark- ed Jordan. "It i!I that only one board 1nembcr Is representing this board at all these meetings." Jordan e<>mplained that he hadn't been assigned to any committees this year. "I can't help but conclude our chalnnan is a committee of one," he said. Milctlet1 pointed out that ht had to m de committee ~lgnments, that it was done 8.t a mealng at which J'Otaan was absent, and that he should have read it in the mfnute1. "I was never notified as has been customary In the past," Jord"Ah said. Jordan nol<d thaL Mitchell had put In mileage for attendance at 14 Saddltback Junior Coll•1• board meeUog• ··and he couldn't.-quit& get the connection with county schools busness: He said hta check or the. record showed Mlfchell had come to Santa Anll from hb home in Three Arch Bay, South Laguna, 53 limt-1 to meet with the county.schools staff. "'There aeema to mi no tt:ason why this committee wor'k shOOldn't be dJvlded," ht said., "I would like other board members to consider the necessity a n .d responsibility of relieving our chainnan of some or his tommittee,asslgmenta Alld this excessive mileage." Mitchell said he made trips to meet with the county schools alaff on "ctrtaln lnfonnatioo I was wor!dng on ." ''Tbarcertiiif"tiifOmR!ition Is not com· mlttee wofk," Jordan snapped. Jontan said Mitchell had atlended II Commtmlty Action Council meetings. MJtcbtll ·aatd those meeUngs weren't very happy ~ things: and that he'd like Jof'\lan to take it on. "I'd like to move he be appointed to Jt," lnte!rjected trustee Dr. Dale Rallbon. "Mr. IRalll!on, you move for younelt," snapped Jordan. Afterward, Mitchell said, 11He's just trying to coine on with a personal attack . 1·m just damn sick ~nd tirtd of hlm snip- ing around." So ended another county ,i-;hool board meeting. Br. Aldrich Censure Bid . . • Witl1drawn Oranae Cpunty ... Board oC Education Truslee •Or. Vale El. Ralllac>n Thu\'.ld•Y withdrew~ his resolution· calllng~ tor. censure o! UC Irvine C¥ncellor Daniel G. 2'Jdrich Jr. Rallison said he has arrwed lo meet penonally with Dr. Aldrich 'to ·discuss remarks the chanceilor alleg~ly made at a meeUo( of Orange CountY Town Hall ln Octobet. Rallison aaid he.decided oh that course after Alan Stont.,111an, chaiiman of Town HaJI, provided him Monday nighl with a tape recording of the speech and the questions and answers that followed . Ranison said tie called Aldrich Thurs. day and arranged a meeting with him in late January . County School Trustee A. E. "'Pat'' Arnold said he was prepared to discuss the matter had Rallison not withdrawn his resolution and had brought 15 pages 0( material with him. Another of the county school board 's bitter battles apparently was in the o[· fing. Rallison said after the board meeting he had decided not to push for the censure resoluti on because "it would have created more hard fetlings in the schools. "·hich really affects our bonds.'' A~kt"d his reaction to the tape or Al- drich's comn1ents. he said, "I've really, kind of decided not to give a reaclion. It ''"ould defeat the v.·hole purpose of doing this person-to-person.'' At a pre\'ious meeting Rallison had made known his intent to ask for a resolution similar to a Tustin Union High School District board resolution which called for UC regents to dismiss Aldrich. Rallison is a member of the ultra right· wing John Birch Society. Two Tustin board members are Birch society members and another ran with one of them on a slate in getting elected earlier this year. In a story on the Town Hall meeting a Santa Ana newspaper quoted Aldrich as saying that the use of four-letter words in the cam pus newspaper New UniVersity ... is merely a reflection or the society or .Orange County ." The tape ree<>rding of Aldrich's stale· ment is: ··sut one cannot expect, if no law ex- ists. that necessarily what goes on on the campus be different from that which the society permits. because the campus is, in part. the mirror of the society, v.•hether il has lo do with what is said, or how it is said, how people shall deport themselves.'' Despite a retraction by the ne.wspapcr, the Tustin school board last week arter hearing the tape reaffinned its resoltftion condemning Aldrich. • DAILY "LOT S Aha1ado1a11ae1at ita Stanto1a ·- Llct Carl Bradley escorts Nina l\T. \Ve rner. 20. into Stanton P olice Headqua rters followi ng her arrest Thursday on suspic ion of oltild a bandonn1cl1't. A seve n-month-old infant. identified as Yolanda Mi\fie Lupien. \Vas found on a Stanton doorstep \Vednesday. An anonymous phon.e call Jed police to the \Verner woman. Meanwhi le, the baby. apparently healthy and reasonably happy, \Vas being cared for in county's Sitton Home. Clirist1nas is tlae time for givi119 •• Omega is tlae - right Gift. otRGA Omega is one of the world's most dependable watches , .. selected as the official watch of the 1967 Pon-American Games in Conodo and the 1968 Olympics in Mexico. The fir!>t American ostronouts to walk in outer space, orbiting ol 17,000 miles per hour, wore Omega watches. Choose from our torge collect ion for men and women. •· The PeerlH1 0...111• 17·jcwcl h i1h·~rtti1io" "'ave"'•"'· 14'K whir. or ,.n.... s97so tolill-fllletl ca••· ---·d?·--"I.. Tht Store "STORE HOURS Tbat Ccntideaee BWlt JE'NEl.EllSFOR 41YEAJIS Mon. thru Sat .. 10 'tll ·9 p.m.~ Sunday, 11 'Ill S p.m. 'Ill Chri1tnlu Harbor Shoppin,.-Center--Huntington. c ....Jr 2300 Harbor Blvd., t osta M11a Huntington Beach l. s4s.1os 1n.sso1 .• • ,. --•• 4 DAILY PILOT ~. fao'Mlltll ...... Ollw .... lttfn I, 1 ho r Secrtt•ry 0ffrge P. Shuft-i ts not the sort who tries to falre tbe song when be doesn't knGW -the words. At a news confer· enci •. about providing jobs for pe0pi1, a reporter asked Shultz what his department meant when It pid "flexible training options" wonld be ·offered. The former col· lea'<> professor looked around at Al'fKtld Weber, his assistant for Jn6npower, smiled and s a i d : "'{-eah. What does 'fie.Ible train- in( options' mean, Arnie?" Weber snllled back and explained it mOOnt the department would let buiinesscs have a bigger choice o[ tr..Wning methods for the program. • • : f1. : harried waitress was at- ~pttng to field breakfast orcf.. fTI from a mob of mwamen that descended on the small iown of Independence for the Court appearance of a Sharon I fate case 1USpect ... J'Ul give 11ou fuvr a Mad!iM, .. aM ueUtd in tmsprnition. ~attrus Gata . 1'fad, Shoots 34 R<porlirs.• • • Th• Klein's Sports Shop In the sul!Urba~ Evergreen sbopptng plaza near Chicago is offenng a 1968 "Henway" for sale at a terrific batrain -down from $10 to 99 ceals. A good deal -except there is no such thing as a "Henway." Bt4, says salesman Bill Olson, that doesn't stop some customers from being interested. • i truck careening out of control in Londop hit a baby carriage con- tatning Juli• Whymark, 2, and sn:tashed it against a walll as her mother looked on in horror. Then, from the debris, a giggle. The girl escaped without a scratch. Her mother Mr•. Val•rl• Whymark, 22, \VllS treated for sl}ock. • \ 14 Allies to Challenge Soviets on Troop Cuts BRUs.sEUl (AP) -Fourteen foreign ministers of the North Atlantic Alliance agreed today to challenge the Soviet bloc to discuss mutual troop reductions as a demonstration thJ1,t the Communim are really serious in proposing a European security conference. France was reported holding aloof because it is not pert of the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization's unified military command. The French govemnent believes, therefore, that It can have no part in a program of NATO-Warsaw Pact troop reductions. The decision to renew the 18-month-old offet to taJk troop reductions emerged at lhe Windup session of the NATO Council of Foreign Mini~. The ministers were completing a joint declaraUon on Eaat- West relations and on the Soviet bloc call for a Pan-European security conference in the next six months. · France opposes tht division o( Europe in· to blocks. NATO first offered to negotiate mutual reductions in armed strength in June J968. before the Soviet Invasion of Ciechoslovakia. Moscow ignored the of. fer. Instead, the Soviets and their allies proposed a big European security con· ference. After some hesitation, they acknowledged that the United St.ates and Canada could also take part. CTiticiz.ed for not proposlng anything specific for the conference to talk about, the Com- munists Came U? with two suggestions: renunciations of the use of force, and more cooperatlo-n in trade and science. At the NATO meeting Thursday, U.S. Secretary of State William P. Roiers C<lTltended that the sole purpose of the Soviet proposal was to perpetuate lifoscow's rule in Eastern Europe. Profanity at Busher's Cafe in Cillctru>lti coots the patrons but helps needy children. Mrs. DelorH 11--'~.md!~k at,!h•. cale. decided · :;January she tiaif lieara e11<>ugh language and decided lo let ••neediest kids of an" charity flilld capitalize on fl. "Keep It up aDd it's going to cost you," she 'w81J1ed the palrons, and establish-. ed-a "cuss fund" with a penalty of fiv.e cents a word. She gave the ch .. rity this week the contents of tho fund -$700. Foreign Minister Maurice Schumann of France also objected to a West Gennan proposal that the alliance reject the Sovlel bloc demanded at tts ~foscow sum- mit meeting Thursday for international recognition of the East Gennan regime. Schumann saki such a re}ection would tmply acceptance of Ile principle of negotialions_l:Htti!"f:~n two bloc~ and Walter Scheel. West Germany's new foreign minister, expressed doubt that Gennany could take pa.rt soon in a security conference because the country is still divided. He proposed that the United St.ates, Britain, France and the Soviet Union get together with the two dennan governments in the meantime ~ni_ l!la!e~me temporary settlements. Frustration 0'7er 1, r • l!'lli:"""""""..,....,...,~,.,.....,.n Word-coint1'1 on tlit Dtmo· patic Notional Commitkt'a JtUb- «cation "Dtmo Memo" now have cemt up with .. NiJ;onomici." • Alexander Tonls of Mountain View parked the car in bis drive.. way recenUy and left the enilne ruilning )'lhile he went inside for a m~enL The cat, with an a ut o transmission, shifted itsell into re. vef..se, backed across the street ani shoved neighbor William Ebel- int"• car into his dining room. Then, the vacant car shifted into a !Orward gear, crossed the street again and crashed into its oWner's g~age door. Lodge Quit s Talks, But Not Retiring -PARIS (UPt\.-The fruslrat.iol' of each Thursday S«med lo deepen the liries in the handsome millionaire's race. But when he strode out of the Vietnam talks for the last Ume. Henry Cabot Lodge, 67, made it clear it was far from his farewell as a diplomat : "I'm resigning, not retiring. I'm loo young to retire." It ~·as a mark of lhe man. Lodge still believes he can play a slgn1flcant role In U.S. diplomacy If the Pmident a1k5 him to. Four presidents have asked In the past 16 years. Dwight D. Eisenhower named him ambas!ador to the United Nations, John F. Kennedy made him the U.S en· voy to South Vietnam. Lyndon B. Johnson returned Wm to Saigon and President Nixon sent him to Paris to try to end the war. After more than 40 unsuccesslul peace talks &eS!ions, Lodge asked oU the job. He told President Nixon he was resigning "for personal reasons ." Lodge looked weary as he walked out of the former lrtajestic Hotel for the last time Thursday. He leaves Paris .with a sense of frustration at the lack of pro- gress during the !est 10 months. todge once said the only acreemtnt ever reached at -Paris was that the con· feren ce table be round -Ind lhat was before he arrived. Toward the end, Lodge t.old friends he doubted there would ever be progress in the talks, suggesting the war would one day merely fade away without any fonnal agreement to end jt. He declared in his final appearance Thursday to ex· pres$ that outlook in public. "\Ve would like to have a negotiated !ettlement in the classical way,'' he said . ''But if that is not obtainable then we can get de facto arrangements where people don·~ kiU each other anymore. That's the important thing, isn't it?" :Midsection of U.S. Cold W inte r Storm Spreading Sno w Ove r Wide Area C•llfornln co .. t.1 Molnr """"" toMY. lltht v1rltblt w!Mt 11'9tlt IM _.,_,,.. llt\lrW Ho (Ol'nlfltl _, ... iv ,. to ,. ."°'. hi """~ tmtr •IMI S.l\orNr. M191'1t 11411• "· Cot\11! """"r1t11r11 '"'" """" U '-n. 1111"" ,...,.....1vttt ,..,,. ,_ JO ,, u. w11 .. t-••tu,. 61. SuM, /tloon, TWes , ..... ., Ste~ llltll . J.tcOM llw • ... 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' Con g in Mekon g Ambusl1 Navy Patrol Convo y • SAIGON (UPI) -Viel Co!Jg in the Mekong Delta battled South Vietnamese troops \\·est of Saigon, ambushed a U.S. Navy patrol boat convoy and heavily shelled a government outpost in fighting reported today. · For the third successive day, the focus of the war turned to the delta west and south of Saigon, where lhe Saigon government's Army Is in the process of taking over for American forces. · . The biggest battle Thursday saw government troops kill 17 Viet Cong 103 mll~est of Saigon. Headquarters said three South Vietnamese were killed and 32 wounded. Four American advisers also suffered wounds. 11:ilitary spokesmen said the ambush or the patrol boats on South Vietnam's southern tip Thursday killed t\li'O Navy men and wounded five -the sailors' heaviest losses since moving into the area five months ago to rebuild Nan Can, a base destroyed in the 1968 Tet.. of· tensive. • .. "We get hit every lime \\'ego in there,'' a U.S. Navy spokesman said. "You go up a canal and thjJ know you've got to come back, so they jlltit set up an ambu~1•• • Tallu t o R e•ume?' U.S., ·Red Chiria In 'High~ Contact' WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United State..iw mlde.a.hli!lle.v~l~ wllJl. mainland China -and may have urged the two nations resume ambassadorial talk .. The State DepartmeDt, adapting an ell'.· tremely cauUou1 attitude, acknowledged only that the U.S. amba&sador to Poland, Wlllter J. Stoessel Jr., and "Chinese of· rtclals'' met Wednesday at a Yugoslav reception in Ute Palace of CUiture in Warsaw. Privately, State Department officials said Stoe5'el confmed briefly at lbe receplloo wilh an akle of tbe Communist Chinese charge d'affaires, Lei Yang. They characterized the meeting as a "chance encounter" bul gave lhe lm· 'Tell Hanoi' Draws Heavv ,/ Nixon Backing 'VASHINGTON (AP) -Pr3ident Nixon received today a delegation with four mail sacks full or 350,000 names or persons supporting his efforts in Viet· nam. Nixon rtad some of the letters and telegrams that were sent lo a committee called "Tell it to Hanoi." The committee published ads in nine papers across Ille country last Oct. 15 and in two New Yo!Tpapers Nov. 17 ask- ing Americans to "tell Hanoi we support our President." From the coupons and petitions. the committee has received I.I mltllon names ,;as of yesterday, and we're still counting.'' William J. O'Hara told a news conference prior to the White House ap- pointment. He brought just parl of the names, he said. O'Hara, a New York attorney, and chairman or the committee, said he and others formed the commlltee and ran the ads. ··The response was so great 'A'e fell \\'e should in some \Vay tell the President about this great silent majority," he said. ~1orris I. Leibman, a Chicago attorney \\'ho is secretary of Ille committee, said he is a "liberal DemOcrat'' and the "Tell il to Hanoi" effort is a ''.slrictlf bipartfsaii, arnatetirlsh thing." "The rsponse has betn absolutely unbelleva* for us;. we're still searc~ng for volunteers,juft to count .the mall,' ~ said. .,. preuion the two diplomats did more than merely exchange ~~tries. U.S. analylsts, however, remained cautious on the prospects of renewing the ta!U. They said they detected nothing in Peking's public posture to irldicate China was ready to talk again. Probably furthu quiet diplomatic exchanges will be re· quired to set in motion the machinery for renewing the discussions. Secretary of St.ate WUllam P. Rogers is on record in favor or renewing the U.S.· Communist Chinese ambassadorial talks in-Wanaw-or in another mutually ac- ceptable city. The 135th meeting oC these talk!, which' started in Geneva in 1955, was postponed suddenly by Peking Feb. 18. Peking de· nounced the United States then for having granted political asylum to a high-rank· ing Communist Chinese diplomat two weeks earlier. Since the postponement, the Nixon ad· minist.ration has waited for an •P· propriate moment to try to get the talks going again. On Aug. 8 Rogers told the National Press Club in Canberra, Australla, the United States · would .. soon be making another approach to see if a dialogue with Peking can be resumed." At a 'Vashington news conference 12 days later, Rogers said the approach would be made "at the appropriate time." On a CBS program Nov. 18, Rogers said "we somewhere along the line" will make a suggestion to renew the talks. Jobless Rate _r Drops Sharply '\IASHINGTON (APl -The nation'" unemployment rate took its sharpest monthly drop in 10 years in November. declining five-tenths of one percent to 3.4 percent of the labor force, the Labor Department said today. However, most of the sharp drop was accounted for by \\'Orkers leaving Ille labor force and "this doesn't really represent a turnaround" in the 'economic slowdown, a government spokesman said. The report showed a small rise or 45,000 to a total of 78.7 million employed Americans. "There is a continued slovtdo~·n in employment growth ," said Howard Stambler, chief of the Divisk>n of Employment Analysis. The civilian labor force declined 83,000 as many ~led "secondary" workers -teenagers, women and young mea - lert the labor force, Stam.bier said. 1003 APPRECIATION .. GUARANTEED PRE-PAID INTEREST ONLY DOWN INTEREST ONLY 10 YEARS We ,Now Can Offer Down Payment Consisting of pre-poid interest only on the best of RANCHO CALIFORNIA Land with 100% Appreciation Guaranteed . ' You ROY interest only for 10 years . Other ~guaranteed areas avail'1ble ·---------·-·---····-···-·-· .. ·-·"·-··"•"·---1 TO: KIRK COUNTY LAND CO • 1311 E~lt W•hl ...... Ploca M4 Santa Ana, Catof. (~1) P"-714 (W ·P379J Gentlemen please contact mnegardina land oppOrtunttits: Nam''------------------ Addre'"--------.,.--------- City _ (tlp),---- SAN DI EGO ~ MyTeltph6neNumbor1L--~-~-~----- '----===•=•=--=---====•--==~•= • I / ~ ' 111 / - \ frldn, btctmbtr 5, 1969 DAILY Pllof" i~ House Cut~ Deep Into Foreign Aid , Dine on Caviar ·:..-: Suit Urges ,Freedom for W innie Judd WASHINGTON (AP) -Ai> propriatloM for the embattled r~lgn ~ program may tumble to a new low point this year, possibly $1 bllllon less than the spending celling sought by President Nlton. A bou>e appn>ptlaUO<IS 1ub-mnm1tt .. -1.-.·epme<1·1o have whacked the aid meuure down lo the neighborhood of sl.s billlon, includlnil d"1! slashes in major economic aid cconponents. · President Nixon has sought a 12.6 billJon spending celling for the overall J>l'Oll'am in the year that beian laSt July. The House trimmed that lo $2.19 PHOENIX (UPI) -A bllllon and the admlnlstralioo superior court sult filed Thurs-~ent to the Senate for help in day asks the court to order the • ] th •-1e ~-~ of rd and 1ncreas ng e money S1<11 LNCl.lu P-! om authcrizatkm. ' paroles to recommend the One of the. major fights re!ease of convicted slaY,er • looms in the military section W1nnle Ruth J udd. ·of the bill. nie subcommittee, The suit was filed by 1 Phoenix attorney Larry Debus and San Francisco attorney Li F iJs 1 Melvin Belli, who represented Ve f 8 ; Mr.i. Judd in an appearance >- headed by Rep. Otto E. Passman (D-La.), wu said to have added ... '5fi,5 mtlllon to 1rnanc'e a iquadron ot llgtiter planes for NaUonalllt China. The HOUJe, ln the separate authoriJatlon bill, · apprvved authcrity for the planes but the Sena\< Foreign-RelaUO<IS C<rnmttlee, still wortln• on•its version of that measure, promptly knocked It out. In 1968, Congress cut about $1 billion from President Jsi'IRJon'• fore I g n aid aufhoriqtion request, leaving it below lhe $2 billion level for the fi rst time at $1.97 billion. But the actaal appropriations lo finance the global aid ~ gram dropped to l!.75 billion. Blacks Take Building At Harvard QUEENIE B)" Phll lnterlandl "Hi• Royal Biglin ...... and all-around, general big cheese •• •N JFK 's Fortune Listed Oct. 27 before ..the paroles B D board. The board. in ... 2.1 · oy ies cAMBruooE. Mass. (AP) 'A $l 9 M · zz · Pl vote, creclined lo recomme nd -Between 50 and 100 blacks t I wn us to Gov. Jack Willi ams that the DENVER (AP) _ A small seized control of Harvard • .... " famed trunk murderess of the s ttl bo d"ed 1 'lb u n iverslt"'s administrath~ 1930s be released from the ea e y I ate urs-' state prison. day, less than 24 hour( after nerve c:enter, University Hall, BOSTON (UPI) -President trust his father set up for JFK The suit charged Uiat the surgeons gave him a today to dramatize several John F. Kennedy left a in 1936. board·s action "was an transplanted chimpan?.ee nver d~nds..;..,..1p moved in 1.ust pe~nal fortune of almost $1 .9 The only land Kennedy own- arbitrary and capricious abuse in a last-chance effort to save bef-~::. ci the business million when he died, not ed kl Massachusetts was his of discretion for the reason his life. . -' •~ • T~-I llowin th I' bo day and placed wooden bars counling many millions believ-house ,in the family compound that no scintilla of evidence c;:,i.:. o g e .. -ur was before the board upon operatioo at the . University ol over tbe wilxton and doors. ed left in trust (or members of at Hyanni s Port, valued at which it could base the findin:UColorado M~cal Center Emp)oyes reporting for work bis family. $46,150. His cash balance in of fa<:!t and conclusion ••. " showed the liver was func. were turned away. The amount was disclosed In various banks, Uiauding ac- The suit also said the boar ~ but the 7~-old There were reporb that a 'an inventory of ~ which coonts kept. for members of Improperly failed lo· credit l!il!d remained critically IU, ::fy ~j:'!iloy:'y h:;: 1:!' Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the hb family and close friends, Mrs. Judd with 29 years she su~vingaslonguhedJdon-t'"..,--t of th sin led was $116,377.37. spent in the Arizona State ly with the aid of a rtsplrator. test.en, but lhe university said execu or e assas a Much of his fortune was tn Hospilal after being found in-The child, not Identified these Wtre erroneous. President's will, filed with tax-free municipal securilies, sane. FurUienn9re, the suit further by the hospl~l, grew "My ·understanding Is that state authorilies on Feb. 19, Jncluding bonds issued by the said, Mrs. Judd has been in-weaker during th~ night and there was no violence," said 1965. It was not made publi c state of V.assachusetts, the carcerated more than twice as died shortly before midnight, a liarvard College Dean Ernen until Uie state at t 0 r n e y cJUes of New York, Blnn- long as most persons sen-spokesman sald. R. May. general gave his permission ingham, Ala. and San Antonio, tenced to life in Arizona. Odds against his survival Using a bullhorn, May told Thursday. Texas. Mrs. Judd Was convicted of were tremendous. There are the protesters about 4 5 The exac t f I g u 're, KcMedy owned common killing one of two women no known cases of survival for minutes after the seizure that $1,890,MS.45 is o'lly the stock in two oil companies, friends whose b u t c h e r e d more Ulan· a few days after they might be liable to amount of cash and property Barber Oil Corp. and Signal bodies were shipped to Los anlmal-~man transplant of criminal trespass prosecution· pas.5ed on to Kennedy 's heirs Oil &: Gas: Co.; Connecticut Angeles in a trunk. vital organs. If they remained. and not the extent of his General Life Imurance Co.; ------------------------------estate;-according to Tax Com-Ken Industries; the Hyannis missioner Cleo F. Jaillet. Corp.; and Park Agency, Inc. One reason Ke n n e d y • 1 lie had a $577 ,341 interest In fortune Is dlfficult to esUmate Merchandise M a rt , the , is that there are a number of building his father, Jo~h P. . Interlocking family trusts, the Kennedy, bought in Chicago. commissioner said. · The Inventory lists more • U.S., R.uss Continue Talks HELSINKI (UPI) -The the smarl Savoy Restaurant In North AUanllc T r .-at y Ucll«I States and the SOYlet downtown Heulnk!. The Or11Jl!zaUon (NATO) lorefln .. Uoioa tbday held thdr reventh Soviet.a were host at a similar mlnlsters lo Brussels Thur5- metUng on ways to curb the affair last week at their em-day the Helsiail SALT talb. nuclear 1rma race . and then buly. were off to a good 11tart w_lth,: luncbtd together on caviar-fill· In keeping with the strict the Soviets adopUOJ a • ed Rua&lan pancakei at a ptllicy of no public an-bualnesslike attitude. ~ i Helsinki restaurant. nouncements about the. talks, He said the prelltninf7. ~ -Amerlean s poke 1 m e-n neither-aide co.mm e.n t • d 1ta1e -ol the talks ahould en<I described' the 9 0 ~ m I n u t e following today's s e s s i on • ~ about two wttks. seuion of the Strategic Arms Conlerence sources 1a1d the Conference sources i a 1 d· LlmltaUon Talks (SALT) at preliminary talks probably both sides have Ileen !IV' the u.s.· embassy 11 "ef. will last through next week tempting to define what ;s· rneent by "1trateglo .. f i c i e n t , c o r di a I a n d and poaslbly into ,tN. week weapons," thus establishing ._ bu s In es s 11 k e w I thout after. common basis for negotiatlons polemics." 1be next meelin&: U.S. Secretary of State expected to.start m the latter·~·· will be Monday at the Soviet, p;;W;;;;;;llliam;;. ;;;;;;;;P;;.;;. Ros.,;;;ii;;ers;;i;;;;;lo;iiidi;;ithe;ii;;;;Pi;artii;;;;iiof;;J;;iamwy;i;;;i;i;;";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; ' embassi, 11 The chief U.S. negotiator, Gerard C. Smith, hosted the .infonnal luncheon for the 10 loJI delegates on bo!h aides at Philip's ' Mother Sµccumhs LONDON (API -Price Philip's mother, P r 1 n c e a s Andrew of Greece, died in her sleep at Buckingtiam Palace early today. She was s4'and had been in poor health for some time. The cause of death was not announced. Born Princess Allee of Bat- tenberg, Princess Andrew was a Briton by birth, a gn!at- granddaughter of Queen V]c. torla, a sister of Earl Mountbatten of Burma, the wife of a prince of Denmark and Greece, and a sister or the late Queen Louise of Sweden. After her marriage ln lll03 to a younger son of Kirig George I of Greece, she was known by her husband's name, ac· oordlng to the Greek custom. When the Greeka dethroned George II in 1924, Prince Andrew and his family fled to Paris and the princess opened a jewelry and embroidery shop. In 1929, when Philip was 8, his parents sent him to be raised by Lord Mountbatten i.D Britain. , •• 111IW,WAl.IS1111 lllOW' I • u_w AIDUMD THE HDIE .NO MORE ~~ OR YOUR MONEY BACKI HOW'D YOU LIKE TO PATCH WALL.' rgBB '.- so THEY WONT EVER COMEBACK?: Quick, Eny, lnvislble. NoMua Ho Sandlilg. SH Ut Now. • • Pint Kit $2.99 · . ·· Contains everythln1 you nMd tO L--------' pe rmanantl y rep11r· 1a ft. of:· cracks. '-../ COME ON IN ••• We'll ahow you how to do it with amaz- ing time-proved TU F F-KOTE and Glass Fabric. · .. .. ' than 1106,000 payable lo the Fr· e"'"" But Frozen President from three existing ~ trustS: one from Joseph P. Kendedy Jr., a bn>tbar killed In World War II; another from Kathle£11 Kenned1 Hartington, ~".' a.rlls&ei" who djecf' in a plane crash; and a third from · a Czecli ·Escapes bx. Air ---....,.---.-' -.; . . ly FA<;TORY REPRESENTATIVE 10:00 A.M;-tir4:00 P;M. SATURDAY -December 6th ' !/ <. i• ' .. ~ . ! , ,. .-LONDON (UPI] -British g,._en, Lond011"lmml1raUon baggage handlers found the officials climbed Into the teen-age boy huddled behind Czech plane and carried him suitcases in the cargo hold of away, In a heated alrpoct a Czechoslovak airliner from room, they fed him brandy. ' ' "''' T.....,. Spiro at !feyboard Vice President Spiro 'I. Agnew gives an unscheduled perfonnance for Washing- ton press women at a party ~iven by bis wife. He played "Sophisticated Lady" on the piano and told the distaff reporters they were "prettier and more ob- jective' than their male colleagues. CJTom yout"'PIJ111911tlz, dealer! ctA daring deal ori Ex-bit Player ' Acts in Tragedy PITI'SBURGH (UPI) -An unemployed man, who said be was a former bit player on Broadway and in Hollywood, shot and killed a fellow roomer and wounded another before being subdued with tear giu early today after a gun battle widrpolice. The l!Uspecl, Ohannes J. Denarki!Sian, who gave his age as 39, was taken in custody after f i r I n g in- termittently at police for 21/i hours with a rifle from his third-floor apartment ~l the Negro hill district. Prague. Jn broken English the "You're fn England now, youngster said he wanted to boy," one .said. His teeth chat-stay in England. He said he teeing, the youth somehow had friends here. . managed to smile. The -youth wore only street VISTA PAINTS 2931 BRISTOL STREET COSTA MESA (I MILi SOUTH OF SOUTH COAST PLAZA) "The boy was almost frozen clot.hes. "It must have been to death," a BriUsh European ~ a~," an airport of· Airlines spokesman said to-ii~fi~c1~al~said~~·Oiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~~i;ii;i~i;ii~iiiiii:i:;:ii~ day. "He ~as very lucky to,,. .. ,...,..,...,...,. ................. ,._ get away with it. The tern-E::;.~.~1';': ~~"!: ~~ i ~ HARBOR CENTER'S The 19-year-oJd student had flown 700 miles -most of It at I :1' altitudes up to 28,000 feet -In his flight Thursday night from the Communist capital. Alerted by the British bag-1 I ~ying 'C~da! I GIGANTIC ART SHOW Over 600 Paintings Presented. by Californl.a Outdoor Art Association , -SAfllRDAY &-SUNDAY MOST STORES OPEN SUNDAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING PLEASURE -. •.. Santa Stopped Here First • • • : Whg Don't You? . ' . ,• :• l.ee White Chrysler-Plymouth Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. i ' __ 1_''-'-' _1_eac11 __ BIY_d_ .. _H_unt1_·..,,_on_1eac __ h_, _ca_llf_. ___ 2_92_9_H_a_rbo_r _•o_ui._v_a_rd_, _c_os_ta_M_na_,_c_a_li_f._1l2~~!~!!~°.!'!~-~!.l, ,. I ' . I J I J • -------------·-·-·-----------------• • DAILY PILOT EDITO~L P~GE - Partner·s: • After years of fruitless negotiations, Huntington ' Beach city officials apparently have found the answer to development of state beaches in the city. RecenUy they lnvited William Perin Mott Jr., state director of recreation and parks, to Vi sit the community and taJk about beach development. · Mott impressed by the city's recently-improved mile of ~l>eaclilronrbetween -the -municipal pier end Beach Boulevard, expressed enthusiasm for jomt ltate-- cily cooperation to develop Bolsa Chica Slate Beach, the one.time •iTin Can Beach." . The three-mile stretch of sand has ne ver come close to its potential. Now it can look forward 10 pr~ gressive development through the new understanding. First step necessary is/state acquisition of the Pac- ific Electric righ'l-of-way which separates the beach from Pacific Coast Highway. Once this is accomplished, joint development of parking areas, concessions, landscaping and lighting could move fonvard. . . Money invested by the city and state will be offset by revenue gained at the beach itself. Jn-this case. maybe two head~are be~el' Utan one. Two powers just might be able to accomplish what one alone could not. A voiding Sign Clutter Pandora's box bas been shut in tounlain Valley by the plannir1g corrunission. It was al_most opened by a proposed city ordinance change which would have al· lowed temporary, small directional signs about the city as guides for home.hunters. -· -. The ordinance change could have cluttered the city. City Harper and Ron Shenkman. who listened to the ~leas of one company which makes and places the direc- tional signs and · felt it mtihl help. developers move quickly in and out of the aty and at the same time help house bunters buy in Fountain Valley. Developers are already allowed to install a Utnited number of the large dlrectional signs on major a.trttt -corners. And-.anyone dciv.ing-.around._Fqu~n Valley _ knO \VS the city is small enough that by following dlrec· tions on the large si'gns any tract can easily be found - eve n by complete strangers. The council should sup port the planning conimis· sion's recommendations that the ordinance stay as it is. r Lea1·ning From the Inside One reason today's youth so often .. kes pot shots at government may be a lack of faIQiliarity with gov· ernmental structures -what they are aod. how ·they work. Schools can show students the organization charts and statistics of g·overnment, but· there is lltUe oppor· tunity to see what it's really like where the people who contribute that government work. · Fountain Valley, in cooperatlon with the higb school district, has initiated a small step toward bridging that gap. Currently, two high school girls are employed afternoons at city hall, learning the ropes from the in• side. Plans call for more youths to work in various city functions. • • Provisions for removal of the signs during the week were almost unenforceable. · It's all part of a gene ral work experience program dedicated to giving students a taste of "real life." The hope is th at students will appreciate some of the prob- lems of government, and perhaps some of youth's young id ealis1n might rub off on the older generation. A little mi xing of the t"'o could certainly improve .-both areas. 'l understand IM;/re nlaud but I'm not sure just how.' It was brought up by two city councilmen, John H VniWd 'States -· Justice Needs Overlwuling: Dear Gloomy Gus: Switelaing Awa11 fi'rmn Democratk Liberalisna ' '\ )}', -..... -> (i __ ~~~ .. ~~ey ). Harris ~ --/ To ·tfi peoPJe who mindlessly shout. the 11ogan "Law and order!.'' the obvious retort 'is that if we had better law, we would have· more order. By "better" law, 1 do not me.an more Jaw or harsher law, but swifter and more equitable law. JL is unfairnen and delay that frustrate and exasperate people to the point that the whole.~5tructpre oi law In tbe U.S. falls prey to cynicism and disgusL This is not just the v~w or an lm· peUenl and ignorant layman who m~y be •U1pected o( "HberaJ" ·a y m p a l h 1 e s • -=-wfiiteVer they-ma,.-bt. J~ is .an-accur~te R:flection of the attitude Of ~ef Justice Warren E. Burger ·of the Soprelne Court. a hardheaded but not hardbe3rted con· wvative. IN A 1ALK to·the American Bar Asso· ciaUon UUs summer, Chief Justice Berg· er repealed the question that baffles and troubles millions of Americans: "Why does American justice. take so long?" And he answered, in brief. that our trial procedures are antiquated. and our courts Jack modern standards o f manageinent, as· well as tne trained managers lo apply them. . He pointed out sharply that 1n medicine, except for anatomy, almost all buic medical knowledge of 25 years ago Is obsolete; that business techniques and industrial production have changc_d drastically in that period; and that air Nixo~ Baffles Washington Veterans What can be done about the.dell v· eryman wh9 sta~kJ dOiens of crates of empty milk bottles on the curb on Newland St. near Atlanta where our Huntington Beach kids can smish them? I'm tired of dodging broken glass in the street. -.............. \\'ASHI NGTON -What makes the'Ni:r- on\Ad ministration so baffling to many people who have been in Washington a long time is its ability to identify with and exploit conventional and lradilional thought. -L.RB. Tiii• lt1turt fllltm rwMtrl' vii-... Mt Re(IUlril, lhl!M et !flit _,,,,,, S"'4 yW( H I -Vt "' Gt-y ~ o.ur Plltt. trans port and t h e space prop-am have altered even more radically, not in 25, but in the last 10 years. BUT, EXCEPT IN details. "a civil or criminal trial today is essentially the 8ame as in Daniel Webster's time.'' Citizens called for jury service tihd-v'BO -percent of their lime is spent "j~st -""'ailing.·• \Vitnesse.s called for a precise d'1 and hour also find lhel)\Selves spen· dilfg most of their time waiting. And, or course, the defendant himself may spend months or years in litigation, before the appeals and other processes • are conc luded. one of the oldest legal dictums is that "Justice del ayed is jus· lice denied"-and our chroni c long.tern1 delays are a blanket denial of justice in our courls, al every level. The Nixon Administration rides over the fixed ideas wtiich have grown up in the capital in the__past 30 years or so on the fun ction of the federal government. Thus it is th at ideas expressed by some of the leading figures of the Nixon Administration seem awkwardly left· footed in a \Vashington community more attuned to delicacy in /rleal ing with minorilties, advanced polll'ical ideas, and 1he general spectrum or Democratic liberalism. This kind of liberalism ha s prevailed, ,..with only a brier break, for 4f) years and has created a large pernfanent reservoir of officiald om, lawyel'l!I, I o.b b y i s.t s , journalists and others who are &:hooled in the political mores or Democratic liberalis1n. TO THESE MUST be added the powerful pressure grou ps of labor. agriculture and, lately. civil rights and general protest as a part ol the "'ashington community which takes .a dlm vie.,.,. ol the Nixon Administration. or W'I J!t I, 8,0~ •, awai ts with eagerness if! next boo-boo. The Nixon Administration Is made up o( outlanders who have come into the precincts of~ the knowing 11-nd initiated and are blundering about committing all manner of gaucheries in the view of the permanent Washington community. 'llhe wife of the attorney general, Mrs. John Mitchell, induced a CO!IVUlsive gasp in this Washington community by talking some or the more wacky are Trotskyite!I. They created more trouble a n d disturbance than they should have. in lheir brief Washington visit. But Mrs. ~Utcbell had it rii!1t when, in her own way, she reflected the main body or conventional and traditional thought on anti-war demonstrations and public disorder. Spiro T. Agnew has. or course. plumbed the very depths of shuddering horror in the liberal Washington community, which has nevertheless come to the conclusion that he may ~speaking ll-'hat is on the publl~'s mind. on television, as if she were a nro-John 1N RUNNING DOWN the list of Nixon Bircher. about the "liberal Communists'' offic1.9.kjom it is hard to find many not of the Washington anti·war cjemonstra· regarded in the Washington comm~nllVf> lion whom she and her husband thought 81 hoQe~ly square cm maladroit 1* . created scenes in the capital renUniscen.&.,.., ravor:ite .ot the group is Robert Finch, of the Russian revolution. . secretary of health, education and THE A TTOR.i'iEY GENERAL later ex. plai ned that Mr;;. Mitchell was imprecise in her terminology and shoo.Id have refer· red to violence-prone elements inste."ad of liberal Communists. Indeed ~lrs. Mitchell "·as imprecise. The Communists in the war protest movement are not liberal ft1oSC<lw is too liberal for them. They are conservative Afaols t Communists ·and weUare, whose style is pleasiftg .to Spiro Agnew's "effete snobs," and it is vety rare that Finch gets a bad press. The Washington groap has decided that Fioch ought to run for the Smale from California if they can persuade Sen. George Murphy that he Should T-etire. Commerce Secrttary M3urice Stans, for all of being a big game hunter, is classed wilh Interior Secretary Walter Hickel and TreaSury Secretary David Kennedy as unexciting. So it goes \•iilh other Nixon Adn1inistration persona\llies. They do not turn on those types \vho' are forever searchin:; !ur the Kennedy charisma. The Presidenrs security ad· viser, Henry Kissinger, is definitely in the swim but the secretary of state. \Villi am P. Rogers, is too bland for the excitement huntets. THIS JS THE 'VASHINGTON atmosphere accompanying the findings or the poll takers that three out or four peo- ple in the rest of the country arc now reasonably well satisfied with the Ni xon Admini~tration . It is little \vonder then that lhe Nixon Administration is not much interested in approval by the "eastern 'establishment." This "establishment'' is not eastern in origin : almost everyone who might qualify ror membership in it comes from somewhere else. But the term is an easy classification used by Ni xon officials to characterize those who take a superior and condescending attitude toward the conventiona l values of the Nixo n Admini stration . The conventional values. at least for the moment, seem in the ascendancy and that ls·solace enou~ for the Nixon squares. IT lS NOT law-breakers. or anarchists, who erode public faith and confidence in our legal and judicial system. It is the system itself, which refu~s to change with the limtt and adapt it.self to the modern problems of a huge. complex, and urban.lied popuJation. When the law is t10 dilatory. order can be imposed only \Jy rorcc, and not by the weight of public op\nion,' a!U rightfully should be. CIA Director Wins Senate Favor WASHINGTON -It is hard to believe, but Rich ard Helms, director of the much· criticized Central "Intelligence Agency, has become a darling of the Senate dovecote. Fulbright has frequently complained that ill.timed (and ill·fated) CIA operations, such as the U·2 incident, have harmed' U.S. foreign relations. 'Both Patient, Impatient A ca r!!er Intelligence officer. wilh CIA since it.s fo11nding in 1947. Helms was named director by President Johnson in 1966. President Nixon renewed the a~ poinlment early I.his year. In subordinate posts Helms had seen CIA blamed abroad and at home, f o r goofs of all pr'Oportions. He served under two colorful and much·publiciied direc· tors of central intelligence. gentleman· spy Allen W. Du lles and hard-driving in- dustrialist John A. McCone. co nsiderably, at least in the congressional community," says Mansfield . ALSO FULBRIGHT-Mansfield made those comments in the Senate's secret debate on the ABM Safeguard system weeks ago. The transcript of that debate, censored and reviewed . was made public only last week. CIA data was quoted by both sides in the secret discussion: but Safeguard opponents stressed the ilgen· cy's finding, made without further evaluation or comparison . that Russia tiad suspended work on Its antl ·missile sy!il.em. According to Fulbright, Helms' ABM appraisal "convinced me he was a com- petent man who was not swayed by. any outside inf\uen~e: lhal he was gi ving us the nearest to an honest assessment of all the coinbined forces of the ·intelligence community. Helms has always enjoyed the con· fidence of the rather hawkish senior members of the House and Senat! who ride herd on CIA operations through special intelligence subcommittees. Ther• is therefore. a real significance in his . present high slanding among the agen- cy's long-time critics. HE .HAS, IN THE first place. made it clear that, as the nation 's top intelligence officer, he will provide the best possible reading, without bias and without trying to evalu ate events abroa !'.I against developments (weapon or otherwise) in the United' States. In short, Helms will provide the best available basis (or U.S. policies without try ing to make them. By ELLSWORTH L. RICHARDSON 1 f\tlnls&er ' NelJbborilood Cougreg1tional Church Lllgun• Beach ts patienct a virtue or is i\5 practice a long lost art? I know of a mother who is put out because Junior cannot. read. He isn't in first grade yet and she is very upset. I tried to1eU her that the psychologists say that the muscular and ner vous structure of the eye is not nonnally developed enough for reading until the child is about six years or age. Yet she is impatient because her child is so stupid ! Next time I'll quote Dr. Alvarez~ BENNETT CERF GAVE us some idea of what patience is when he described a' school teacher. "A teacher is courage " I t h Kleenex ln'ber pocket, 1ympathy strugglln& with a snow Juit and patience with papen to grade ••• She is one who likes somebody else's children, and stHI has strength left to go to PTA mtttlngs.'' J know ol fathers Y!'ho would rather go to the opera than to bt led by the nose to a PTA meeting. So pa Uence i8 here and we -•lute thoM<few who.have IU Kahlil Gibran speaking. or Jesus said that "he was patient, patient like a mountain in the wind." And u~ he went m with this parado1: "YET HE WAI the. molt 1mpatlent of men. He wu impatient with those who weighed •nd measured the day and the ntahl before they would trust their dreams lo dawn or eventide. He w:i5 Im· P'~~t with iliMe who belleved not in upt because they theroselvu dwelt in 1hldow ; and W"lth those: who aoughl after ~~c ratber than in their own So* art occuion• when P•· r ---~~-,.­ E"-eryday Problet.ns -....... ... ' "'"'k..~lli'.:i·~' ~ .......... ..,;,)_ .II tlence is not ~ virtue. There are times when those Vi'ho are patient a~ overtaken by the str11tegy of those who cannot be tamed . SOMETL,tES PA.TlE.~CE is used as an excuse for doing nothing, for not taking sides. Then lethargy sets in. The people that comprised ·the Protestant Reforma· tlon tlad little patienct with "slaying Jltll." The Protestant h8itag~ compr ises those who ulterly refuse lo 11tay put. Voltaire said there are two classes of people: those who m•ke history and those who 11-rc made by it. Which are \ft'! The 19th ctntury gave. vent to the doc· trioe of rug1ed individualism, not all of which was virtuo us! The early part of the 2oth century can be characlerlied as a period when patient people endured the JDOnotony o1 conformity, not all oi which wu vlrtuous. TlUS l.A lTER HALI' or lhe Wth ~CTI· lury Is !Omething else. People are no longer paUent ••• no l011ger patient with Inequality .. , no longer patient with evil where life is hard, raw and ugly • , • no longer patient with the pollution that robs our streams of laughter ind our skle:1 of gaiety ••• no longer palient with tht cor· ruption of public figurts In high ofrlct nor ""'Ith the pilfering or small people in supcnnarkelS. Speaking \'try personally, 1 am lm· paUent wlth those who don't like what 1 write ! \ Now it is being sa id -and by the mo'st crlUcal or the Senate doves -that career-man Helms has brought a new respectability to the quiet campus-like CIA headq uarters in nearby Langley, Va. EXHIBIT A IN this regard Is Sen. 1.fike 1.!ansfield, Mont .. the Senate Democratic leade r. Mansfield has been a frequent critic of Vietnam policies and of other a~pccls of naUonal security planning by l\'•o administrati ons. For years ~l ansfi~ld has, in addition, been a leader of a so-far unsuCctssful drive to apply a tighter congressional O\'erslght to CIA activities. Yet Mansfield says Helms "has brought a respectabil11y and Integrity to tbe CIA .•. and given it the kind of. standing which It lacked prior to lhe li me be took over. "I must say, like all those who Mve come in contact with him, I have been trtmcndously Impressed. I think he is by far the best director the! CIA has !ver hnd. Because of Mr. Helms that agency 's in tegrity and standing have increased 811 George _ _;_ Dear Georp: -I Sotnebody wrote in and asked ""·ha! you Vi'OOld do It a woman at a party ~'as making a bl& play for all lhe marrlcd men present. You aaid nolh ing because your wlfe watches you like a hawk. Well, 1 just think lh"t's lerrlble. only to atve an answer like that! MRS. .I Dear ~lrs. U.I.: Boy. me. too. Say! Would you mt,1d tttlking To my wife fo r me~ In the same debate similar views were expressed by the Senate's super-d ove, Chai rman J. William Fulbright, D-Ark., o( the Foreign Relations Committee. "HE llAS GIVEN lhe committees .• the: befit available information. That is what inspired in us confidence and trust in the integrity, honesty and good judg- ment of Mr. llelms," said Fulbright. Helms and the CIA have also had another recent accolade from Fulbright, who sharply criticized the clandestine U.S. involvement in Laos (which is operated by CIA), bul said he does not blame Helms because the intelligence boss was operating under instructions from higher authority. The Tower of Babel The. State Board of F.ducation (ame out eounding like the Tower of Babet in its recent approval of science guidelines for elementary textbooks. Set':king LO please all sides, from scien- UN to bumanlsti to Bible ' fun- damentalist.a, the managed to -pr&o duce a compound wtuc II satisfy few, let 11-lone the lntere·st. of tion and ln partlcular the te~'!I of 1el . Underlying the~ misadventure is a commonplace ml!i:take which has ~on­ ta.mlnated thinking on the fUbject for 10me years. Thls ls the noUon that the • «1neept or evolution, as an upla.naUon of man'a origin&, Is aomehow at odd! with 11ny religious bf:Uer that man Is the crea- Uon of a..supernaturl.I being, or God. mE BUSINF.SS or Bcience. 1nd its teaching, Is the observation and cor- ttlaUon ot verifiable facts 1bol.It llfc and matter. ln this sense. evolution. or the po!tuh1te that man evolved from some ll! yet unknown pri m!Uve form of lower life, hM much evktence to suppcrt It and ytt mough missing data to deter lls dogrriatlc acceptance. ( • ; ,·, Gutst' ~itor.ial ' . • I ' Scienct and Its teaching ln the scbools need not concerh Itself with the u1Um1te caus'8 of the origin ol btlnl and JIUltter. JL! dlaciptine is to ob9erve and correlate. It would be unscientJfic, in that Mnse, to propo&e that lht workl and man were not m 1ted by a supernatural supreme beln1. This Is a matt.e:r beyond lclenc::e'1 purview. • TllAT OUGHT TO be the pdellne al· tllude taken by the State Board ol Educa· lion. Not one which eodorsa or 11 tn- lmlcal lo rtllglous concepts aboul Cfttl· Lion, but on< which lllckl lo the Iden· tificallY determined faets. 1e1vln& the hyP.Oth"" as to _their orial,,. to the ph1 ~p1Ues or bellefJ which 111 ln- dlvlduaLs are free to hold. nc Sacramea&o ~ • CIA critics were never sure that Dulles and McCone were willing to stop at that. \Vilh respect to CIA 's operational responsibi liti es. those shadowy clan- destine activities which have provoked most of CIA "s criticism over the years, 1-lelms has carefull y lived up to a pledge 1nade during hi,s Senate confirmation hearings in 19M:I "Sir,'' said Helms on that occasion. •·the Central Intelligence Agency lakes no actions without approval from the ap- propriate of ficials of the U.S. Govern· meat, and they are not in the CIA." After more ttian three years, CIA '1 critics are beginning to believe him. By Robcrl S. Allen 111d Jobn A. Goldtmltb --~-- Friday, Dec~ber 5, 1969 Th• •dHorfal peg• Of th< Dollr Pilot 1tek1 to inform and 1tim- ulat1 reader• b11 prtsntina thii mw1po:per'1 opiniont and com- mentary on topie1 of interta:t and 1fgnlficanc1. bu provid!n.a a /orum for the t xprt 1sion o our rtodtrt' opfnlOM, an prc1t ntfn11 tht diotr1t point.J of informed obs and spokesmen on topics of r e do~. Robert N. Weed , Publisher r I r' . . . • DOING THEIR SHARE -Helping Mrs. Robert .Wall tum Huntington Beach into a Christmas City ate (bot- tom, left) Mrs. Edward J. Casey. and Mrs. Ray Jllore- house. president and vice president-elect of the Wom- en's Division, Chamber Of Commerce. Deadline for en- Women's Divis ion Needs Entries ' .. . .. -.. .. -..... tries in the Christmas decorating contest will be Wed- nesday, Dec. 10, with judging to take place Sunday and Monday, Dec. 14 and 15, according to·rv,trs. \Vall, contest chitinnan. • &men JOD!AN H.'STINGS, '42-4321 ......... "*' ...... ,, 'Nautical Experts' Committee. Announces Boat Parade Judges , . :· ·: :· •• .,. : .. : •• . :· •• .. .. ·: .• . ... I· ••• ... .. ' . •• :: 1: •• .. •• ·:! .. •• •• .. I·: .. .. •• : . • .. •• . ; . . .. :-•t .. .:: •• ~ :· .. -! •• Wanted: Citizens to Decorate A collection of nautical ex- perts \\'ill be among the distinguished assemblage in· vited to judge the seventh an- nual Christmas boat parades sponsored by Ure Huntlngtbn Harbour Cmunittce of the Orange ~ty Philharmonic Committee. age categories in the d8y parade .only. Judging or decorated born~ will take place Thursday and Friday, Dec. l 1 and 12, and Mrs. Arthur Knox, general chairman oC I.be Christmu~ event, has requested that all := residents complete---<t-h1t .. decorations by next Wedo."'T. nesday in order to be. elJ&ible-:: for pr:i.ies. ·:: \Vanted.: rriore community-minded citizens to share their Christmas spirit! ?i.1embers of the Women's Division, Huntington Beach Chamber of Commerce, again are coordinating the annual citywide decorating contest, ~nd. with dead- line for entries but five days away, applications have been fewer than in past years, according to Mrs. Rob- ert \Vall, contest chainnan. ~ Theme of th.is year's contest is Christmas City, and a total of 38 trophies are waiting to be presented to 'vinners. Awards will include one sweepstakes, 12 grand awards and 25 special awards. Judging will be in JO categories including tile best Christmas theme; chi"ldren's fantasy; indoor tree and display; religious display ; outdoor tree; mobile b om e display; neighborhood group; merchant's window aad commercial, school or civic exhibits. Area merchants have agreed to sponsor trophies and dinners for two at an awards banquet which w i 11 take place in tile Jolly Ox Wednesday, Jan. 7, 1970. Win- ners of the special awards will claim th~r prizes at the Chamber of Commerce office. · \ Deadline for accepting entries \Vill be Wednesday, Dec. 10, and judging will take place Sunday and Mon- day. Doc. 14 and 15. Any~ne wishing to enter'the contest is 1nv1ted to call the Huntington Beach Cha1;11ber of Com- merce, 962-6661, and leave a name, address, telephone nwnber and category of entry. Serving as judges for the contest will be Mrs. Jake Stewart, president of the \Vomen's Division; Bill Woods, president of the chamber and Jack CleVeland, safety and building director. . Among area .bu"sinesses which are sponsoring tro. plues are Si~nal 011 and Gas Co.; ~fercury Savings and Loan Association; Montgomery Ward; Southern Cali- fornia Edison Co.: Huntington Center: Harbour Volks- wagen; McDonnell-Douglas Corporation; Rainbow Dis- posal, and the Women's Division. A Christmas theme will prevail \Vhen new: ~ffi­ cers of the Women's Division are installed during.a din- ner dance tonight in the Meadowlark Country · C1ub. Taking office wiTI be the Mmes. Edward J . Cas- ey, president; Arnold J . Podsade and Ray Morehouse vice presidents; Harry Bo'vman recording 'secretary: ~obn Irminger1 .treasurer and Jofui Seltzer, corresj>ond: 1ng secretary. . The first meeting of the new bQard is sCheduJed for 10 a.m. Wednesday,-Ja.n. 7, in the chamber office and among plaM to .. be discussed. will be .a citywidti youth program. · . Mrs. Poc;lsade; rriember.ship chainnan, is accept- ing memberships for the coni'ing year and area ·Women interested in civic and community improvement are· il't- vited to contact her at 962-8318. · ' The first general meeting of the new year Will take place Wednesday, Jan. 14,. in the chamber office. Among those casting their votes wiU be Adm. Richard Byrd, commodore o£ the Navy's Pacific Fleet; Rear Adm. Olarles Tighe, com· mande·r of the 1 ltlt Coast Guard District; Maj . Gen. Robert Owen. commanding general of the Third Afarine Air Wing, El Toro, and Capt. Charlc:i Staftny, commanding officer of the Tenninal Island Navy Base. · Also acting as judges will be Senator George Dukmejian : Don Leedom. commodore of the Long Beach Yacht Club, and Dr. Clarence H a 11 , superintendent of schools for Ocean View School District. The boat parades wlll take place -rain or shine -Satur- day and Sunday, Dec. ·t3 and 14, with the day parade begin- ning al 1 p.m. Saturday and the night parades starting at 6 J>.m. both days. Trophies will be awarded for beauty and originality and there will be special trqphies for youth-<lecorated boats in 7 through IZ and 13 thrqugh 17 ' City's First Contest Holiday Lights Shine :.: ·: :: -;. .,. ~ .r ;. / .,. .-/ •' Jt will be Fountain Valley's "first.'' ::,. A citywide decorating contest will be sponsored. -!"/:- by the Chamber of Commerc·e in conjunction with ~ the recently formed Women's Division, and dead-.;; line for entries will be midnight Wednesday, Dec. 17. · ~ . Both homeowners 8nd businesses are invited ~ to compete in sep~ate .categories for the first con-; test· which the sponsoring organizations hope to :,.: make an annual affair. · -Cate~ories in the home division will include the !: best Christmas scene; most religious: most unusu-:~ al, and a Santa's•Special, accordin~ to Mn. Rich· ard Gillum, conte.st~ chairman. Spec1al awards aJso • • • • will be presented· for the best cooperative neighbor- hood decorations. :::· Businesses will be judged on the basis of the • • best indoor and ~r decorations, windO)V dee-~~ orations, and' the best-decorated shopping center. "..: Plaques and .ce.r.tificates will be awarded the ~ • winners. ~ :.:. Entry fonns now are available at the commun-'·• ity center; city hall : the fire stations; Security Pac. :: ific and Crocker Citizen's Banks, and Dr, Adler t: optometrist. ' ~ Additional Information.may be obtalned by call-~ Ing tile chamber office, 968-2018, or Mrs. Gillum. ;:: Your Idol Wasn.'t l,dl.e When It Cam~ to -S~-swing Clay Feet ·= '~· t:-" ""': !:' :-:. DEAR ANN LANDERS:· Pl~lie tell me U J am normal or a candidate ror the net 1·m beginning to v.-onder. Yesterday I went to my doctor for'« checkup. t'm not the type who runs to the doctor with every little ache and pain. ANN LANDERS ril But t had been feeling poorly for M!veral ., . . . dayi!I and decided to ha~ myself looked .an unexpected stabbing pam. Wllhout at. thinking I pvt hJ11 arm a hit. tt wu My doctor is a general practitioner -more of an au&omaOc ~ than a and bas been 'A'onderfully klrl<\. and con· display of arcer. All:houih I didn't hJt siderate to our. entire family throu~h the him verj bard, he became fwious with years. He delivered my three chil~ren me . In a voice that C91Jkt be heard all and !IW my husband t.hroogh some over the·offtee ht lhoukd "Don't evtt 6erious illnesses. We all worship him. do that again 1or you wil1° have to get When the doctor examined me, he anothtr doctor." Then ht proctedt.-d to pressed a tender spot and I expericncod bawl me ool for 10 minutes. The nurse - who was in the room was as surprised al I. When the doctor finished chewing me out, I began to cry and couldn 't !lop. I don't know what came over me. 1 just sat there like a fool and sobbed my head ofr. Today 1 leel depr~ and remoneful. rm ashamed or my .. 11. Am I becoming mtntally 111 ? Why did I lose my grip? Whal do you think about this cpi:!Odo? -LONGTIME 'Kil . DEAR L.T.f .: I cbecked wltb four J*yakilDI aocl tJtt:lr , YtrdJct W I I -..ntmom. Yeardtder nerrelded. He may wtll ·uve Mea overworked ud drtd. (Doctors are. l11un1n, yoa know.) Your bltd.11 Ma arm, w~. of coune, y .... _ ....... d-) probably irlg· gered Ck ufortaftllie mponte. cryla1 11 )'Ga did ..., ~-..aL Yoa wt.rt andeab\edl7 not bart but dttpty df11ppalnted tit discover '' your Idol bad f«t ti city. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband and J have two lovely chlJdren. We figured our family was complete and were well satisfied. When I le8Jl)ed I was preinant again, I wasn't happy but I decidod to make the best of It. Whtn I told my hu!band, he IJew into a rage. l don 'l think l'Ve ever seen hlm 90 mad. He called me. an ldtot and a dUmb- bell ~ ended up Mylng wt: woUld bave to give the baby away. I wu aure he'd cool off and change his mind. but foot months have passed and he is 51.111 repeating his demands. He says he wouldn't "11ell" the baby, but be would expect tho people who adopt it lo pay the hospital and doclor bllla. . Lost nlgtlt 1 tAlld him lo quit acttamlng ~-that my mind was m•de up. I j\11\ couldn't carry a child for .nine monlhl •nd gtv~ It away.ult lt were a puppy.,:-;: He said, "You wUl or l'm leaving."';t: Please help me, Ann. I'm ubarned to 1 ~·~ stir\-my 111me. I'm~ you've never bad ,S': a . let.tu u straDle as thlrooe: ~ MOTHER OF TWO AND A JiALF. ,: ..... ,. DEAi\ Ml1l'llER:·Voar allutloo lo•~1a .. t!Mrly, •• iitru;e .. )'fl tMnt. Eveq."" few moa&U 1 bear no.rt • nt like ,... balblod. lavarlobly --<11u11 :.1r ~· ud I'm ~ ytm_ .m, :~ 1?01 AM Landers "lilll be 1lad lo lllllp you " with ,,,.,,. probitms. Send lbem to b<r i. care or lbe DAILY PILOT, mcloolnc • .. u-addrtssod, llamped envtlope. I • • ., • J 4 OAll. Y PILOT There'll Be Something for Everyone ' t ! No holiday party Is complete without gifts, so Jef- frey Sklansky, Allen Menton and Mark Sklansky (lelt to right) are helping make sure there will be enough for everyone when the UCI Facul~y/Staff Wives hosl festivities Sunday, Dec. 7. Husbands Santa Ana Home Carole Grinder Wed Late afternoon w e d d I n g vows were exchanged by Carole Bonnie -Gtjpder and Terry Grant Wells at the altar of the Lutheran Church of the ?I-faster, Corona del Mar, dur- ing a ceremony performed by the Rev. \Villiam R. Eller. The bridal couple are the daughter and son of riirs. 'Robert D. Grinder of Irvine and the late itr. Grinder and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wells of Corona del llar, Given in marriage by her uncle, John Zelonis of Van Nuys, the bride '\'ore a silk organza over. taffeta gown y,·ith a ven.lse lace bodice, full slee-ves and cathedral train. lier bouquet was a..c8scade of caltleya orchids and white roses. and children of the members have been invited to a holiday party from 2 to 4 p.m. in UCI Commons, and a magician, UCI Professor Rich-ar4 _ Bj,:uutia, will be there to entertain the children. ~· Jonas Schultz is chairman. Alumnae Party Small Fee Big Help Several Harbor Area residents will be among Sift-bearing University of Southern California alumnae and gues ts making the trek to the Riv iera Country Club for a Christ- tnas party Saturday, Dec. iJ. Unlike the \Vise men of old. their gifts ''•ill not be spices and oils, but toys and school supplies for the Avalon Carver Com- munity Center in Los Angeles, where USC carries out a tutorial project. The toys and supplies will be the only ad- mission fee for the party, y,•hich is sponsored by the Trojan Junior Auxiliary's provisional members. . Among patronesses, \vhp 'viii be greeted by Santa Claus HS they arrive, \viii be Mrs. Page Parker of Corona del Mar. • Ho roscope Aquarius: Review Career SATVRDAY DECEMBER 6 lly SYDNEY OMARR Lwtar potltlon f1vorable for n1htn1. • Teen daUng •lnts: Many are tn mood &o let emotions above Jogtc aside. Know that you do bave &o f11ce consequeaces - and yourself la momln1. Oriental food and m a s I e tonl11lt combine for f1scla1tl•J dt\e plan. Romance ablnes for Cancer. wbile Libra could get 1Uack wltb check. Scorpio 11 tbe peraooaUty kid, whUe T1uru1 Insists on more thorough understaadlng of 1pt<1l1I rela- lionsb.Jp. Blind date could be New Sculptors In Exhibition The opening or F i v e Sculptor! wlil be calebrated by Univenilty GaUery Associates during a reception in the gallery Sunday, Dec. 7. Featuring the recent works of a group of artists new to the UCI Gallery, the exhibition will be ope n to the pubUc without charge between l and 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9, through Jan. 18 except th e week beginning Monday, Dec. 22, when the gallery will be closed for the holidays. Gallery Associates who will host the opening event are Mrs. Charles Hendrickson, Lido Isle; Mrs. Alan J. Mickle, Lido Isle, and Mrs. Thomas P. Wilder, Newport Beach. Viewed will be the works of Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert hoforrls and Richard Serra. All are New York artists who use con- temporary m a.t er I a Is to stretch the boundaries of three-dimensional form. The show was organized by John Coplans, curator of the Pasadena Art Museum and former director of the UCI Art Gallery. Staffing the sales de~k dur- ing the exhibition will be , Jobs Open In Alaska Galler'y" Associates coordinated by Mrs. Nelle Duggan, Newport Beach, staf· ling. chairman. A special ex- hibition brochure also will be available. ?o.frs. Th<lmas Frank, 838- 1647, may be telephtned tor additional infonnahon. The support group to the UCI Gallery also is making preparations for a special tour of the new Pasadena Art Museum \llednesday, Dec. 10. The opening exhibition, Ne1Y York 1945-1969, was coordinated by UCI A r t Gallery d !rector Alan Solomon, and guiding the associates during the tour will be Mrs. Thomas Terbell, wife of lhe museum's acting dlrec· \or. h-trs. TerbeU will host the associates during a luncheon in her h<iine where they will have an opportunity to view the Terbell cullecnon of con· tempora ry art. Opening concurrently with the New York show in Pasadena Is West Coast 1945- 1969 directed by Coplans. This event is the second in a series of museum t o u r s coordinated by Galle r y Associate Mrs. Patrick E. Cory,. Laguna Beach. Last ntonth the group gathered for a tour of the Van Gogh ex· hibition. The ~xt tour y,·ill be an ex- hibition fr om the Cloisters rituseum in New York City Registered nurses interested following the holidays. In becoming nurses for the The associates provide bus U.S. Public }!ealth Service in transportation . for members Alaska are invited to meet and guests and serve coffee and Danlsh pastry en route to Mis.s Diana Carlson. RN , in the museums. Los Angeles through Dec. 12. The Gallery Assoc I ates fealottd !or S.1lt1arl••· AIUES !March 21-April 19): Put ott final decision on money quest:IJ>n: You ·will be in better position let decide when older lndtvidl.J&]. finds face-sav- ing device. Realize thts and act accordingly. TAURUS (Aprll :!ll-May 20): rlnlah tuk whlch has caused concern. Now is time when you get not .only sympathy, but !Olld ..,pport. Realize this, and move with confidence. Be kind to one who confides pro- blem. GEMINI (May 2J..June 20): Otherwise, you could find yourself on wild-goose chase. UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22): Money pressure exists. llave fun tonight but be aware of budget. Realize also that you get nothing for nothing. Avoid one with wild scheme which could bring trouble fron1 law. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov , 21): Threat to your security may mezely be affront to your vanity. Be mature -arid analytical. Not fayorable for signing of legal docWTients or formulating of partnersh.ips. SAGmARIUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Cooperate with persons whose J>Wl)05C Is to aid those confined to homes or h05Pitals. Evening features the mysterious or behind· scenes activities. Streaa originality , in- dependence of thought and ac- tion. Some matters wh.lcb had been hldden become open secret. Maintain poise. Steer c 1 e a r o f organU:atioflal dispute. CANCER (June 21.July 22): You are .90mewhat re!lricted to fulfilling desires. But don't be dl!COW'aged by minor rebuf f . Your acumen regarding money and home ' pays off In long run. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan •• . 19): Some friends may appear gloomy. Be patient. Offer moral support. But don 't become involved fn any finan- cial scheming. Allow only fac- tural information to motivate you. LE(\ (July 23-Aug. 22): Ob- tain valid hlnt from Cancer message. Don't rush. lf in too much of a hurry, you lose sense of proportion. A~nt is on location, property value, dome!tic harmony -or lack ot It. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 ): Not wise to embark on journey, u n 1 e e: s absolutely ·necessary. Key Is to be obser- va n t. Che ck deta_ils . Jewish Singles Planning ~cial AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feti. 18): Career opportunities should be review~. Strive for objectivity. Know that some :r e s po n s i bilities demand almost immediate attention. PISCES (Feb. l&-?-.1arch 20): News from afar might be In different form than an. ticipated. Stick to principles and adhere to Golden Rule. Then you will be moving in constructive direction. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you · have basic des.ire to make loved ones happy -even if it means self. sacrifice. Financial picture due to brighten. Emotional confusion clears and is replac-- Orange County Jew ts h ed by greater self.sufficiency. Tl! find 0',11 Who'I luckv tGr Vllll 1 .. Singles are aponsoring a n'IOtllV lrnl lovt. 11roer Svdntv Om1rr'1 Ch kah boolll1t, "Sttrll Hinh lor l'/r'n 1nd . anu party tomorrow wom1n." Stnd blr1rw:i111 •nd . .\0 cen11 .v.nlng at 9 In the Gr... to Om•rr A1lr0Toci~j•creh. the DAILY PILOT. Bow Y.l.O. ri nd Ct ntrtl St .. Valley famUy c I u b h 0 u 1 e, 11ori, N1w "'°'t, N •• 11K111. . Fountain Valley. :•J!:i:li•M•MMM~~ D a n c I n g, entertainment. • games and refreshments will I spark the party. Admission is I $1.511 for members and $2.50 ~ - for nonmembers. FIRST LINE The group also wit! meet ~ $4750 'Thursday Dec. JI at 8:30 p.m. R Jn Temple Beth Emet,1- Anahelm, for a program on I lsrael Today. I!! Currently the fall mem-fl bership drh•e is under way ti and yearly dues are $5. n Soro rity Lunch ~ i W M1uic For Orange County Alumnae I 'I Club of Alpha XI Delta sorori· W Everyo1te. ty "'ill gather for a luncheon W "From lach to Rock" Monday, Dec. S, at noon In i COAST uus1c SERVICE ~ Bullock's. ~rther informat!on If 1fl I may be received ~y contacti:.1g Jt: Down~'Wll C"ta Mna n Mrs .. James Deindoerfer of I 646-0271 ~ MRS. WELLS Miss ?o.1ilanna Grinder. si~ of the bride was maid of honor and bridesmaids were Miss Christine Wells, sister of the bridegroom, Mrs. Robert Kelley and Mrs. 1'.1icheal Orbach. They wofe red gowns with white accessories. Miss Carlson, a bush nurse fonned to support activities or in Alaska, will be available for the UCI Art Gallery. Members interviews in the Mayflower provide the invitational open. Hotel or may be contacted ing receptions and staff the after Dec. 12 at Area Person-g;illery sales des k in addition nel. Alaska Area Native to sponsoring st udent events Health Services, P. O. Box 7-and attending lectures by the 741, Anchorage. Alaska. !J?501. art faculty. .~~~~~~~~~~~~ Hunlington Beach. ~~~g:i,~--~\;l;!WM Seys Vows '9 Leche League Airs Problem s The second meeting in a series of four on breastfeeding and problems of motherhoOd "'ill be presented for members of Costa J\.fesa Chapter of La Leche League on Tuesday, Dec. 9, 7:45 p.m . The publlc is Invited to parilcipate Jn i n f o r m a I dlSCU!sion in the Newport Beach residence of liofrs. David McLaren. Information may be obtained by phoning W.rs. McLaren at 642·5567. Wig Maste r Tells Secrets; For those interested In spe- cial care and styling of wigs and balrpieces, a master styJ. ist for a natlonaJ magar:ine will present a demonstratio.n of techniques and arranging secrets Monday morning, De<:. •• · A Continental breakfast will be served at 10 a.m. in the Mission Viejo Reereation Cen- ter at a cost of SI for guests and .50 cents for members. UN ITt:D NATIONS ASIOCIATION otn swpr l111porttd Wlft1-U111ctf Ct r41 2204 H. M11!11, St11ft A11t Mt"41v thrv S•lurilty-11 ·4 \ Chris tm as Fete • Noted Author Invited The bridegroom's brother, John Wells served as best man and ushers were Peter Ezzell, Tom Thomson nnd Orbach. Following the ceremony th e couple received their guests in the home of Ule bridegroom's parents. The new ?o.1rs. \Velis at- tended Corona del ritar Hlgh School and Orange Coast College. Her husbapd attended CdMHS, lhe University of Oregon and California State College at Long Beach. He af- f i 11 ate d with Theta Chi fraternity. After honeymooning I n northern California a n d Oregnn, they will make their home in Santa Ana. Christmas y,·i\1 be celebrated by the Alliance Francaise de la Rl\•iera Califomlenne Fri· day, Dec. 12, with a fete in the Outrigger restaurant, Laguna Beach. Song Fe st Programm ed Two students from UCJ's School of Ft.1e Arts will offer a program of English, French and Germ.an songs when members of the ritusic Section of. UCI Town and Gown gather Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 10 a.m, in lhe Ne"·po rt Beach home of rilrs. Alan C. Stoneman. Gala Features Miss Susnn Boalman and Thomas Anthony are both stu- Gl.ft Exchange dyt.ig voice at the universtly. ri1rs. Christopher Kitching is ,. chai rm an of the section and Plans for a Chrlstmil$ party assis ting the hostess will be llighligh ting the banquet will be an appearance by Jacques Borel, noted contemporary French no\•elist. Borel, also distinguished as a literary critic, has written, in addition to his novels and poems, articles for France's leading periodicals, including Le Figaro of Paris. In 1965 he was aw arded the Prix Goncourt by t h e Academy Goncourt for his novel, '"L"Adoratio n." He has been a visiting professor in many cOl:nlries including the United SI.ates. Bore\"s lecture topic fO!' the Christmas fete will be "La Vie d'un livrc.'' Ho spitali ly arrangements for the meeting are under the direction of rifrs. J asper ?i-1organ, chit irman, and the ?o.lmes. Paul Schneeberger, George Arie, Laura Duval and Charles Root. will be finalized by Delta Beta l\trs. c. c. Austin and l\1rs. Ze:ta ChapU!r of Beta Sigma Ralph H. Hilmer. Phi during a meeting at 8 p.n1. ,.~~~===========~====== Tuesday, Dec. 9, in the home r of-Mrs. Ronald Woodside. I ~ The party is planned for 8 • ~1 p.m. Saturday. Dec. 13, In the : ~ ~ Huntington Beach home of Mn. Robert McAdams. At um time secret sisters will exchange gifl.$ and gag gilts will be. 'given to members' husbands. DUNH ILL CASTELLO COMOYS CHARA TAN SAVI NELLI SAStEM t f eaturing Ora nge Co1111111'• Largest ~erllon of q uafltu Pipes AND ACCESSORtES EASY·CARE Jfl amrenre IAR CO 1J,ii/orm6 "JUST FOR YOU" Smart ftthions, car•·fr•• fabric• f••· turin9 IARCO end other famous br•nd ( ri•m••· M••Y otyloo to ch-.from. '8 98 Som••• low•• • Cathy's Uniforms 1767 Newport llYll. Costa Mno 646-SJll J ip e ~hoppe H.ncfmtdt ci91n for the d i1(ri111!~•I• 1111ok•r #S TOWN & COUNTltY, ORANGE, CALIFOltNIA 542-8752 STORI HOUltl DAILY t TO t SUNDAY IJ TO I • ..,. MllTCHMllKERS 1.-ABSOLUTELT NO 8-NO C-Nlll ~RE D-YES E-ABSOLUTILT T!:S l i~. , .. , .. 1. A c D £ ls It dltflcalt fir 711 te tcHpt critlefl•f 1 1 ,,!/!-, t a c o £ Are ron11ca11!1rt.J-l• 11111u11 111• p1apl1? 1~ 1 A C D E Sbtuld 111 tdaca:lloa bt hu1ht outside 11 ttlt •• .. 1 I 4. 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Testify Prosecutors Ask Plot Indictment for Manson LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attom<y fer Sulan Detlise Atkins said today she would tell the grand jury investigating the murders of Sharon Taie""and•ollters, "all the details of the Tate niurder." in- cludinl how obe was "hypnotlud" Into participating in iL M he enler'ed Uie grand jury CCIJJ'tl'Oom complex, where 18 witnesses, tbeJr attorneys and others were noisily uaembllng, Richard Caballero said Miss Atklns at.HI feels under the JX>Wef of Qi.aries M. Manson, 35, bearded leader of a bippl~yle clan thal is figuring heavily in the lnveotigalion. Irvine Urges Public, Private Shoreline Plan By JEROME F. COLLINS OI tlll O.lly Pllll SI.ti A ~bination of public and pri_vale developmeot of the coastal area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach was pi opoeed today by William R. Mason, pmldent of the Irvine. Company. Muon saJd the company, sole owner of tbe !l'h mfle stretch of virtually uninhabtted shoreline property, said that the company's m~er_plan will reflect ''a unique blend of development.'! that "1ill include public acce~s to the tidelands." He asked slate, county and municipal IOVttMJent officials interested in the public's access t-0 ocean tidelands and the acquisition o£ public beach areas to join with the company as it begins ibi plan· ning ror the area. • .,,.,1ndaliori or public access to the tideland! aDd U:le provision for lhtir ac· quisiUon of public beaches along the Irvine COl!t may come as a surprise to those who are unfamiliar witp our history (I( plani)lng,"-said Mason. "But It should not. "The Irvine Company has long recognlzed and b@en an advocate of the need for joint public and private coopera· tion in the creative development of our environment." The Irvine execuUve, an engineer by prot'esf!ion, emphasized: _ "We ~ nof intend t:O create an en- 'Vlrmmenl lhal will deny public access to :' the coastal tidelands as in the case of the ' recent Salt Creek matter. What is more. we art .n¢ opposed to publ ic acquisition and develoSnent of portions of the coast- •! land ftJr [public purposes." Muon'.11 ''Salt Creek" reference was to the county's abandonment of Sall Creek Road in Laguqa Niguel, aouth of Laguna Beach, early -last year. The road had u:rved as quasi-public access to Salt Creek beach. Reversal of the county's ac- tion has been vigorously sought e~er since by citizens' groups in the south county area. Irvine's Mason said his . company's main concern never has been with the queslioo of whether public facllitit! 11hou1d be located on lands owned by the finn. "We are, however, concerned with the need for public plans to be coordinated with and complimentary to planned private .jevelopmenb." In order to bring about this coordina- tion, Mason said, the company i:s calling on the State Deparbnent or Parks and Recreation county government and the cities o( Newport Beach and Laguna Beach "to combine their individual ideas, !See IRVINE, Pal:J).- Beauty ,Parlor Shooting Kills West.min ster Man A Westminster man was shot and killed this Jmrnlng in a -, 1nckl<nt which 8C&ttered the clientl.te in a Garden Grove beauty 18lon .• Rldianl W. O"Ne1l, 13, o! . !OSI Mahogany Clr<le, di<d in Orange Comity Medical Center two holln lltu he wu admitted with bullet wounds in the chest ond•bdom<n. Book"1 on murder charges lo Mm B. Cball..,_ 13, Anaheim. OOk:ero said wttotsees told them O'Neal Wll Oiallen'• ti.reef. whtn the arrested min bunt Into the Playboy Beauty Salon on Chapman Avenue. ~ lnv..Ugaton have not yet eotabillhtd the motive behind Challen'• all"llO'I ol'oool1lll d O'Neal. Chll1"' Md wt- lo tllo ihootlng wero bdll8 queatloned at prMIUmt. Prosecutors hava sakl they will seek to lndlet Manoon wit!) COMJ>lracy to comqiif murder. "'"'She still fean blm,'' Caballero said of Manson's influence over his cli.eni. ' . He said Mlso Alkins, 21, cbargecl_w#t m~er in a !tp8ra~ -c~, ~ W&Jie rights,.galnst .. u incrimlnalloa in hopes that her voluntary leltimony' wilt save her fronl'the gas chamber. ' She will admit free!)', be sal~, that sl;le accompanied members « the clan ·as they killed MiM Tate, actres:s wife of Polish film direct.or Raman Polanski, and four others last nmmer -but her NA/y\ED McDOWE\.L ,P,l\llJ. , • · :· Rolond GI.I~ '·. . . defense will ·be 5he was lemlA"arily in- sane wh1le ttnder the clan leader's "hyp.. nOtic spell" and "had nothing to do with the. murders.'' "1£ a witnea: ts truthful and honest 1 think some consideration will be given to that," Caballero said. He added that Miss Atkins iS "quite upset, quite remorseful." Prosecutors arrived for the grand jury session with three · pictures to show the jurors.· One shows a length of rope about 43 feet·Jong,·another·!hows a gir.,, and·a third shows an aerial view of the home oP a couple killed the day after the Tate murders. MOVE$ TO F,ROl'IT OFFICE . ' ' 11111 81~ .. ,,, " Also among the· 18 scheduled witnesses Wu producer TeTry Melcher, 27-jrear-old son of singer-actress Doris Day. Mtlcher has declined comment. Miss Atkb\5' attorneys said '-1elcher was visited by Charles M. Manson, ~. known as the. leader of a quasir~llgioua clan of !Uppie types who knew Manson as "God" and "Satan." · Manson was unsuccessful in sei:king l\felcher's help to record some songs wh en Melcher lived in the Tate home in fashionable aet Alr before Mi~ Tale and h.S' hW:band moved in, the attorneys said. * * * Trio Describe . '~lack· Magic' Of Cult Chief LOS ANGELES (API -"Black magic'' .. "He believes that he, and all human -beings, are God". -"There ·is rro crin1e. there is ·no sin". ."The wome1t were the key le everylhing." Three friends of Charles 1'-1. Manson us-- ed those words Thursday to describe him and the way they say he ruled a clan of nomadic hippie.types on a commune near Death Valley. Prosecutors say they will seek an in- dictment charging l\1anson, ~with con- spi~cy to commit murder. Several mem· ber of his clan are accused of slaying act s Sharon Tate and six others. T e three friends -miner Paul Crockett, SO; guitar player P•ul Watkins, ~.9.; and Brooks ·Potton, ~1 -gave . the d~~·' ·~.~ ' 1 .,.;.• Top Admiiiistrative Posts '··'F!ie1wliOlt'·thllir'was lielil ·~lllir by blael!· 'll!llijlc"," Ai4 Wa-~ _.,has lollowed -.aince they met t"" yeara ago Ill lllt.llalght-Allhbllry dlotricl, then the hippie hlven in Se.n Franci9CO. "Yau don~ ~ k? !foll. It rto!lJ exlst.s, a!Xl it ts pOw9ful. ",-:attbts illlcL 'ill• fM~IOG) bellev,a th,tl be, .Ind all huiMn betJlal, ~ God. ind 1!1<·<1<vU al Ute -. ..... · µ,me. He. belleVea aD 'hlllllfn t>e1np ·~' Part Pf.• eaeli, Other,•• mt Poston", a 1of1osqn..folto;rer. for ty;o yean! . . Given 2 Valley Educators . Two educators have been appoinled to top administrative positions by the Foun- tain Valley School District Board of Trui;tees. They t1re Roland Gilmore, 51, new principal of r-.tcDowell School and Bill Barnes. ::16, \l:ho is the district's new educational services 3dministrator. Gilmore comes to Fountain Valley alter 18 years of experience Jn education. He last served as principal ln Ule Garden Grove Unified School District, a position he held for four years. He began his teaching <:Breer In the Compton City Schools and later held posi- tions with the Mag1101ia, Alamitos and Los Angeles City School Districts. His YMCA Men's Clul> Plans Yule Tree Lot , Huntington Beach YMCA Y's Men Club will open a Christmas tree kit Saturday to raise funds for the youth organizatio,. The lot will be ioqlted in front o! the Montgomery Ward department store in Huntington Center. wife Ls a princi~l ·fn the Downey School District. Ba.mes, who held the McDoweU School princlpalship before ~sswning his new j<>b, has been with the .~-.m.,.Valley School District "Since July, 1969. Prior· to that he served as prii\Ctpal, teacher and administrator in the Garden Grove Unified School Di.strict. His new duties include superviSor ofthe districl's curriculum materials center, development of new teacher training pro- grams and coordination of the summer school program. Stook ltlarket NEW YORK {AP) -Stock market 'price~ turned lower in slow trading late this aflernoon after giving up early mod· • .-rale gains. (See quotations, Pages 10- 11.) At 2 p:m. the" DO'lf Jones avl'!rage « 30· Industrials was off 3.24 at 793.29. Earlier, It had been up more than 3 points. Declining stocks outnumbered advances by 709 to 596 -a reversal of the morning trend when winners held a sub~tantial margin over losers. "You ·aee what that meam:" Ctoctett sai<!; ··~t means. thit hum81l :wci has nO value: lr yoU kill a human betng,,~ are just killing '• part of yourseU: ~ li's all . h\" rig .. . . But, said Croclc:etl, by Manson's philosophy "you can't kill 8(li anlmal. Not a' tiug, not a snake; noth!ng. There were &nakes· ell over the desert. They got ,In the Cabin and evefywhere. But you could nevef kill ~one. They picked up snakes In the house and carried them outside and tllrned them loose." .. 1'bat's right" Poston said. "I saw them carry a .foot.long sidewinder out of the cabin one day." · "And you couldn't eat mest," said Watkins~ "because you were killed an animal. It was crazy ." Manson's talent as a musician -he played the guitar -and his slow, deliberate ahd moody way of moving gave him a sort of hypnotic power over Women, the three men said. 0 This sort of power takes a long time l.o""wort--an ~tte-tr,"'-ctoclt:ett said: ... M~ lions .ire'" Ued 10 emoUons. Certain m~ lions create certain responses lf you know hov" to use them." "The womt!n around lhe place were always his property," Watkim said. Poston added: "You were always ISee MAGIC, Page %) $400,_000 Bonds Missing FBI Hunts Attorney in Bea.ch Ma.n's Estate Probe • By TOM BARLEY OI .. ~lfJ PllM It'" Mexican authoriUea today Joined the FBI and invel!llgators from the San Diego County Dl&trlct At!Drney's omc. In a widening Rlttb. for 1n attorney a<:· cu!<d of stullng aearly '400,000 in bonds from the estate of a NeWport Beach man. 11te &earth for Escondido lawyer Patrick S, M. Mltlon,-fl,'ls c:<iilering on Enaenada, the Mexican city where he aUeged!y cubed a check for $5,000 l8't Nov.15. FOderal and San (Diego County c:om- plolnts OCCUM Mltloil ol i?lnd theft and aUempted extortion, charges stemming from his allei!<d theft of boiids held In the estate of Jolin Salmond, 79, 2114 Vllia Entrada, Newport Beodl, Tbe rellred Union O!I COmpany ••· <CUUV.. deac:ribed lodl1 by bll ~ In-law as btlng 0 1 wry. ate~ "*1, .. recently 1ppololed his wtle; Mri. lleleo F. Salmond and bis son, John SallnOnd At about that Ume, Bricker said, Mil· Jr., 169:11 Bedford Lane, HunUngton Ion sold his Escondido law pracUce and Beach, as conservators of the estate. went on a vacaUon: He was nest reported San Diego invesUgators today said Mil· ton was hired u the. family attorney and as having been 11ttn In En&enlda where Is beUeved'to be the author of a typewrit· he cashed the '5,000 ~k. ten uMigmd letter which the younger S5. Jesus Suenor of the Ensenada Salmond subsequenUy received tn ·the Police Department said police in four ma.ii. r-.texk:an province.1 were In poases.sl011 of _ That JeUerJ they utd, was reeei ed Milton's picture !nd d~riptlon and that Nov. 22 and ii suggested that Salmond, aiflilttnslve search la under way. . who is vJce president of California St.ate "We underatand that he· la no ltrana:er College at Los AnJ!eles, shou!J pay Milton to Meld®," the Rrgelllt sald,'''ll!d thal one-haH·d the vafu• ol the ml"1ng bonds he ha> many !Hendo down ber<. This wUI -eltlmated by lnvestlgators as betng" not help our search, of count, but we are worth about '400,000. working with your poople (the district 11- lnveoligator. Larry Bricker ...Jd the 1e~ lorney'• dflce) l1!d the FBI." ter warned Salmond that the bonds -Id John Solmond Jr. !0\111 nfuled to !>Ol be returned uni .. the laW)'er """'•· ·-· op the """'111d·thefl or""1dii ed hall "' their ••lue. frOm lils lltlloc'J -to. . The ktter alto. pobllld Got . that • 1 • • llellllna ud frMDdo orMl!bi.~"'"'" .,,eeq.,,.--......i·-'tlio .• _ ..... ·"'-Jl\lllltt .~"-~---­parlleo Ill which 4Nlb It-the~. lllllillirlr-lo c!idoo-':lalorjv'· o! bonds ind money CUlldobe manpd. . <!iuppoonnco, .. , ' . l " , . I ' TEN afilTS DAILY PILOT ... ff ,,.... CHECKING SURF FOR THE HIGH HARD ONES FROM HAWAII Ed Farwell, Joe Well, Chuck Moyer, St1v1 Chula (from leftl Echo From Hawaii Coast Braces for Next . 011slaught 'of High Surf .\'"'::.·;·} ~· ''"llft'I•• ·,~ .,. "t . . r :rhundtiiing. surf -aft .. ectio: of knocked from ·bis board, but wn-rncued cur---'Jtomi.ip&wwd mutet1. baf.o 'by lifeguards. terinc l!awaii today :.4° Is upected to The swells spawned by twltt llonm @ Orange Coast w.lthin 2l hou'5, be-the PbilJpplne Ind the -~ ="~~e· 't'll~ --• hit ,,,_., lllPI. may be brewing' !or oorne cfroppiq 11 W• -*'.""'"1 Mil ..-.. ~ac:li11(1 Laguna }Jeacb, wheN a 'the Orange cout. abqUaf, ~blnation in · Jul~~ 1949, sent weather, Iorecasl.er1 comparina .u~ surf swlrUrig over and beyo?Cf Pac(flc pedect U«les and new, 1ncqnUng m of Ceaat Highway, according to one veteran. · · . Wavu ge~rated by a pair of tWo breakers say the surf which r8acbed • sevir;e -;forms lo tlie-,.!stern Paclllc inUlmmn of elebt to ten lt'et ·ln Lat!uol ."l'W<ed',tlfe ,Callfonil' ooasUlne Th!JB: Bead! la'jllll'a wte of mor< lo come. ~· (anging up lo ll' feet 'in the' Saola Ltfeguaid LL Eugene DePaulls, Aid !ha "Bar:bara ar~f· same comblnaUoii or seven.foot tidea and Trea.cquoua surf caps~. a. skiff car; storm-spawned surf hit the· Art CoJOay on rylng' two treasure-hunter& Ill U1elr ml~-July 4 •. 194.i . washing over the coaital tw.e!1Ues Off S~pimerfand Beacp an!! the highway. . ' ' men venished 1n the c~ashlng waters: : If; predictions or today hold up, .he A U·yea r-old su rf.er narr~wl,Y escaped warned, the crashing surf will _be up to drowning off Hermosa Beach when., he the boardwalk area and may spill over fought the seas for a half-hour after being and down Broadway. * * * . Storm-battered Oahµ Esca pes "Then again, they could be wrong,"· be said. · Lifeguards and police. along the <>rUa:e Coast from Seal Beach to San CleineMt gener.aUy reported the same lhing: high surf Thursday, lapsing to little wavu.~ day BJld no damage. More · Damages Seal Beach police set out. barrieadel along' the beach Thursday night wh·en the pound,lng surf washed aw~y pa~Jona ml appeared ready to cause more ,trouble. J btlt the swells wert down to thr~1 feet HONOLULU (AP) -The slorm·b•t· tered nor.th shore ol Oahu Island ·escaped further damage early today when an ex- pected monster 6Urf crested a critical 10 (eel lower than predicted. More than 1,700 residents had been evacuated as the north shore, on~the op- posite side .of ·the Island from Jronolulu, braced fpr ~il}g Wall.11 Of wat:er. The surf peak"1 al 30 feet at high tide, not high enougJ\ lo cauoe pn>perty damage. 'lbll was 20 feet below' the waves that smaahed 58 homes and camed Ii mlllloo In pcoperty ~Monday. Today's waves bad been' predicted. to Ml jj) 'feet,' the height they ..ached 'J'hunday, A mld.Pai:lflc atorm llOme l,000 miles northweol of Hawlll apawned the maaatve waves, officlaJs said. Delph.e tbe' deger, the mualve waves rep<-·• spectocular alghl to aome people. Pollce Aid •lllty cleared bun· -"'~-thebeocbesby threatenlni lo have their ~ iow..i a"IY· Oflldals oald Mondof l!lld 'l'Ulalay'S damqe c:<nalitUted Haw1U'1 . 'liom natui1l disaster stnee a 1980 Udll wav.e tm..i 11 pe,,_, anclaul!Od '25 m11uoh • In dam.,. on the lalan<l ol l!l!rl)I. More.' than· •• polk:e, -. Ind prbllc works employ•. hod•been O!d<rwl lnlo north --.,... "' -""' In readlnesl for the rnona&er wavt1 that never came today. , .. Alii> ........ 'fl'Olii>,flrrtller Hralllk\t! ;""' 111o?tiY)lablilr' .... ol •llolll lll\ tlio ..... ·I'( Hmllltllllni!. ,,.. -, ' ~~~=~·I ~· ........ ,.....,.fleet. eatrtdJi!r . ..-. 1 1•V ~_., •· ,, j • ·"~ . ' . this morning. r . . , . ;---y-• ...,. Surf.side reported no problem, but thll lilUe colony, inundated by w:a~ dUe Ut erosion in the early siIUes, could Pt some standing beach pOoll JI' surf crests _. over the hl.gh~ld< lint Sa,turday; Orange Wedller The surf will "be •up anti ~ sun . will be out thls weekend, with . balmy ten,peratnres in· the upper 70's wanning the Orahge Coa5t. . . . INSWE TOD-''l' . . ' . ' Almoa'i ,a year\.aJ.&er ht ghell· ·ed out' $900, to Dail UC l rviflt studenti out of jail in Btrktley, Cluinceilor dqniel Aldrich 'it bf:. ginning to gtt aome of his moneg back. Page 3. Oely·20 '' . ·~ CHRISTMAS .•. 'J· ti' . -· ~, .. • . .. r i • .. -----------------· ' ••• • •• \ . . % DAil V ~!LOT H D-'IL Y PILOT J..if PW. THIS ·IS PORTION OF IRVINE COASTAL AREA 'BJ TWEEN CAMEO SHORES (LEFT !, CRYSTAL COVE Beach School District Sets Pollution Seminar .. Water pollution -and what can be doae about it -is the topic of lhe first seriior seminar of the Huntington Beach L:nion High School District Monday. • Speaking before 30 seniors at the: 7:30 :;p~. eession In the district board room :wt.ti be ·ruchard Beueermann, a director t<JI. the state Water Purity c.ontrol Boaril. :.. : :student partlcipa.Ilb for the session ':"'ere chosen from outatanding. 12th grade ·students at Marina, Huntington Beach 21nd Edison High School. -other topics to be dl5CU!Sed during the ;t\,ice-monthly meetings this year include ·'the Vietnam war, drug abilse, the 11paei! _pn'.>gram, capital punishment and the -Peace Corps. ~ Seminar participants by school are the following : Prtertna High School -Phyllis Anwyl, Gary Campbell, Robert Doria, Glen E. Dysinger, Robert Eldon, Rhonda Martyn , GrfOgry Narog, Susan Revere, Janet Squeglia and Diane Taylor. , Huntington Beach . High SchQol - Sharon L. Andinen, Ellen J. Bessho, Shelly I. Boyer. Peter L. Brueggeman, Catherine M. Durkee, Nonnan J . Furuta, Albert GlobuJ, Tina L, Hanna, Rory M. O'Loughlln and Steven E. Spickard. Edison High School -Cilarleo L. Ashmore, Scott Coleman, Molly Fisher, Tom Hasti ngs, Todd Let. Beth Martus. f\1erri 1t1onks, Keith Orahood, Craig Shucker and Robert Whitaker. :Pentagon ~anel Questions . . J.alley on My Lai Probe \VASHJNGTON IUPll -First LL . William L. Calley Jr. Vlas swnmooed to !he Pentagon today for quest.ioning by a special panel attempting to determine if there might have been a whit.ewash of an ori&inaJ. Army inve.sUgation of tbe killing _ y alley Trustees ::-.-Welcome 21 ·' ·· Grove Families Fountain Valley School District .. trustees Thursday approved a re~lution ~ '"'hich ~·ould shift 21 families from the Garden Grove UnUied School District into :· ·their system . The families, located within ap- proximately one·half square mile of land, roughly bounded by Warner Avenue, "Euclid Street and Ward Slreet. asked for the boundary change early last summer through a petition. Should the resolution be approved by .. the Garden Grove Unified School District '· and the Huntington Beach Union High ~-School District, the boundary change ~ 5hould become effective by-July 1, 1970. Fountain Valley School Dist. Supt. Milce Brick ~aid the other school dlstrlcls in- \·olved had already given their verbal ap- proval to the change. The families involved petitioned for in. clu1ion in the Fountain Valley School • District since they actually live within ' the Fountain Valley city limits hut had to send their children to Garden Grove tchools. . ·:· .. ~· ·, . .. ' ·' .. ~· . -- 1 • --·l ~ .. i: .. .. .. . .. )! .-.. .. .. •• .. ' DAILY PILOT ClltANGI COAST PUBL)SHING (OMl'All'I' lt11itrl ti, Wttd r tu.ltenl ....., Pliblishu Jttlc ft. Curi,., \'k• PrU!(lt!l'I 11\1 c.tMrlll Mtnl;!r Thom•• l<•••il EO+tQr Tlo.o..,ts Jo. Mu•p~int M1n111111 t••tOt J,lhtrl W , 11+11 "'*'"' Ed!l0t H•11tl"t'•" l1acll 0111'• JOt Sth Str11t M•ilint A4d1t n: P.O. lot 1t0, '111i~I Otlllr OlflcH Ht'l>Mrl Brllh: ,111 W"'' B•ltltlf 110!.llt•t r• Col!I Mesa: U0 Wt1t BIW Slrttl L"u"41 8r.i:ll! ~U Fcrtsl ""''""" OA!l. Y PILOT, •1111 Wflk lt •1 ~e'!l~t"(d 1~1 "''"'' "•n.. 11 ....i11bJO 11111, t•··~• s~,... t11y 111 ''"'''' tdlllom it'I' M•iru.,gi.:o .,Kfl, J.-llill VtHl'y, CMll 1'",•w. r11w. s:ell '-" .,... ~ .... Cl'I. ·~ W>lll 1-·~-I td.!10111, ()r1..,. C..•I l'ull•-1.,• 1119 (c"'""r Pl'll'll"' JllHitt. ••• 11 nu .,.,. .. , •11eu 11.,.. Nf .. tur • •-11. "l'IO illl Wiii ~. :Oll ftl, (Ollt MtW, r.i:.,i... 11141 642-4J21 "•• Wft1rnl111ttt Cell 140.1221 c1 .. 11ne• .,.,.,. .. ,~ '41·1•71 (o1y•Jt!ll, If.,, Otl"ff (.NII P11t1U11 .. ,,. (Ol'l'Hf'• "'-.,.,... ,,,,;1 -, 11-.r.to11<0~1. tlflor:.I mt"" et ....,.,11,e·-1111 l>frt"' ,...,, tit.,.,,_,, "''n11u1 U1td1tl ~•llWI ti «Pl"1911• '"'" M(("f t •t tt 'Cl'~• •t•d 11 llt.,-1 .. t<\ IJ•6 (,,,. NI 11 . Ct .•e·~ • l'l~t1c, ... 1, ... t • ,,,,;u •100 """"''~; ,, .... ,. IJ_)l _1'11~· 1t11l•l•'f .. ,,..,.,_, II~ _.,1,,1w. ·. ;. '-~~~~~~~~~-· of South Vietn a1ncse civlians at J\ly Lai. The 26-year-old Calley is accuatd of premeditated murder of 109 persons in the alleged massacre. lie was com- mander or a platoon of a company head· ed by Capt. Ernest A. Medina, who denied Thursday either ordering or r;eeing any mass 15layings in the village. 'l'he Pentagon inquiry board apparently plans to question almost everyone with a connection in the case and Calley was on- ly one or several called today. A spokesman said it was possible he might not be heard until late today, or possiblJ even later. Calley is the only person specifica,lly charged w1th murd~ tn the case, although more than a score of-men who were th're at · the lime are und'r In- vestigation and one sergeant has been ac. cuscd of assault with intent to murder. Calley, who is to be tried by an Army court martial next month at Ft. Benninj, Ga .. was called before the so-called Peers Investigation Board which was fonned to look into whether a low·level in- vestigation soon after the Jl,farch 16. 1988, Incident amounted to little more thsn a whitewash. The board headed by Lt. Gen. William R. Peers heard Medina Thursday behind closed doors. Afterward Jl,fedlna, com- mander of Company C, Isl Battaltion. of the 2001h infantry at the time, held a news conference to deny any knowledge of 1nass killings of civilians. Jn a subsequent inlervlew. ?ileciina acknowledged, however, U1al under orders from higher up, he had directed his 1nen to destroy J\1y Lai -4, a part of the village of Song My, because It was suspected as a ha\·en for the Viet Cong 48th batlalion. Low Bid Gives Big _Head Start To Vista School Construction of the new Vista Vie1v School in the Oce1n View School Di!trlct could begin almost immediately, ac- cording to 0 i s l r I c t Superintendent Clarence Hall. A $990,t24 bid received from Harwick and Son Construction Co. or Ne"·port Beach v.·as well below the maximum cost allov.·ed ror the project through the State Aicl Building Progran1, he said. Adminlslrators originally feartd lh1t the bich ~·ou\d be In exctss of the amount al!GV.·ed, a hindrance which caused the last Ocean View School to go through a process of re-bidding and effected I two- month delay . "When we have to re-bid a school It <'auses a dela.v of al least two months lliince certain featurt.s have to be cut ouL and the project his to go back to the boArd ol trustees and the state. Ultimate- ly it means double 1es.siona: tor the chll- dren, '' Hall 111d. "lf lhe trustets approve the bkt Dec. 15 •nd barring any unloresttn problen1s 5Uch a~ strlkes or bad weather, we 11hould be rtady for occupancy in September of 1970 ... ':"ht rttw school will be located al 16250 Jllckory St., fountain Valley, and house no students. • Fr~Psge l IRVINE. •• lnteresta and desires during the early 1tages of planning." Lellel'll ouU!ning the Irvin< proJl0.'81 have been stnt to William Penn Mott, Jr., direct.or of I.he state department of parks and recreation : William Hirsttin, chair· man of the Orange County Board or Su- perviSO(S: Doreen Marshall, mayor of NewporfBeach, and Glenn Vedder, may- or pf Laguna Beach, Mason satd. "To date,'' he explained, "the com- pany's coastal atudies have pertained to sur\·cying and analyzing soil conditions, slopes, utility systems, road aligrunenta, view potenllals, and market condlUons. Only now Is the rompany preparing to embark on detailed studies relating to the formula tion of a precise land use plan for the coast." Further inspiration for achieving a balance of public and private uses of the generally rugged coastline and it.s scat· tering of swlnuning beaches came from a recent tour of Mediterranean resort areae by Mason and a four.man company task force. The Irvine representatives visited such coastal developments as the Algan-e Cout in Portugal, the Costa de! Sol and Costa Brava in Spain, tbe French Riviera and Italy's Ligurian and Amalfi coasts. J\1ason said it was a highly inslructjve tour. 1'The most obvious failing we observed is that those coulal areas that were developed exclusively for private use appeared sl.t!rlle, uninteresting and without a feeling of place or context." Areas developed exclusively for the public didn't look much better, he s1id. .. They were dull, unattractive and in m01t instance1 they hid spoiled the natural beauty of the coastline, often ap- pearing aa if they ~ad been dedic~led to parking Jots and trash receptacles," It is to avoid either extreme, Mason said, that the company feels a cooperative plaMlng effort: betVi·t en the public and prlv1te interests "la ' man- datory." Be!ore the J\1editerranean trip in October, Irvine of!iclals already had decided on making accus avall1ble to the public tidelands, Mason noted. This Was indicated lasL April when the company sent a representative to Sacramento to appear before the Assembly Commiltee on Local Govern- ment. The Irvine aide voiced supPort of proposed legislaUon bearing on public ac· cess ~ shoreline areas. "We approved the concept," Wd Mason. Irvine senior vice president Ray Watson, v.·ho oversees the company's Jong-ranie planning, sald appointment o( a "public coordlnating commiltee" may be the best approach to the masLer plan problem. The commitlee"1 membership \\·ould comprise representatives ol state, counly and local agencies who would work with Irvlrle planners "to establish the needs and desires o( the various levels of governments with respecl to pul>lic areas." , . The committee. he said, would fWlCllon as the official liaison between the com- pany and the pubUc. "Through coordinated action a n 'd cooperation." \Vat.son concluded, '.'a del'elopmenl plan can emerge that will make it possible to achle\•e an optimum blend of public and private USfl that might not otherwise be poulblt." From P•9" l MAGIC ... > welcome to 11hare thfm. but t.he.n you became hi! property too.'' ''He needed to have some men uound. 11lere was a llmlL to what any man can do But thtn you Sff, Uie women held pci~er over the other men,11 Watklm aid . "That way " Crockett said , "the "''omen ~·ert the key to eveeythlng." \\'hen the comtn'\U'lt needed money, Crockett zald, Manson ~·oukf stnd the women out to panhandle -"they could beg more In two hours thin you and I could earn working In a week." Tlltrt wa1 no prosUtutlon. W1tklns 11ald. "They ••ere so good at panhandllna:, they didn't ha\•e to huirtle." Watldns and Poston Wd It was CtocktU's waminp· th1t awakened them to the power Jl,(aMOn held over lhfm. Both left the clan, Watkins in Pif1y1 Poston In mld~tobe'r. Poston said the "·ordl to one Manton song went : "Then! Is no good. lht're Is no hod. ''Thtrt: Js no c:rlme. lbert Is no sil\." ' • . ....... . • '·Q~n·g.;Dialei;s,·~~el . H•!~ Ljne. the.Ielepbone sy1lem "'up to live di'ug u11er1 an "out',..lf'they want tt. appart.ntly hu been a .moderate.1uc- ctu, according to Rev. Fred Overby, f.S!C>Cia~ P.aStor of the Community Mtthodilt Church In Huntlngtoo Beach. "I doubt that we 've done a Jol for the drug problem a:i a whole," said tht Rev. Overby. "but our concern lJ the tn-. divldUIT, the one on the line." Help Line was established in August by a group of citizens from Hunllngton Beach, \Vestminster and Fountain Valley to tty and reach the drui usera of this arta. - Their pw'P08e was simply to provide a method whereby users could r~ive. verbal help without feaJI' of the law. A thin telephone line is the only current method of contact. .. Rev. Overby, a member of Help Une's ~ board of directors, said the group has received elightly more than 300 calls llnce -the number 894--4242 was an- nounced. "Our intentioo is to work with young pe:>ple and drug1," be explained, ""'e pass out a plain card that simply 11ays Hel p Line and gives the number." That plain card has produced a number of surprises for people manning the Help Line phone 24 hours a day. "We've received a number or calls from older people about problems having nothing to do with drugs.'' "I guess being broad is good, as long as we can help everyone," 11aid Overby. The baab of lbe U•IP Une pluiooophy 11 that members man the l)hooes primarily to answer quesUons and gtve confidence lo the caller. lodividuala are warned not DAILY PILOT Sllll ''"''• 'INOIVIDUAL OUR CONCERN' Help Line's Rev. Overby to preach or moralize about drugs because the caller would soon cut off the conversation. During August a number of callers were ·referred to the crises center aL Orange County J\tedlcal center, said Overby. 11ley did go. according to medical center officiab, he added. Cong Set 3-day Truces For Christ d, New Year SAIGON (AP) -The Viet Cong Friday proclaimed three-day ceax·flres for Christmu and New Year's Day and declared any allied violaUons would be punished. 'Ille proclamaUon, read over the secret Vitt Cong radio, made no mention of one- d1y ctast?·fire1 for the two holidays an- nounced Thursday by South Vietnam and the United States. As in the past, the Viet Cong made no reference to 11tandoff by North Viet- namese troops. North Vietnam never has publicly admilled its troops are in South Vietnam although it has come close to .saying so on occ.asions. During all holiday ceasc·flres in the past, each side has accused the other or repeated violations. The Viet Cong 11aid the cease·fires would last 72 hours beginning at I a.m. Dec. 24, Saigon time, and I a.m. Dec. 30. The allied cease-fires will begin at 6 p.m. Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year's Eve. During Its ce:i.se-fires, the Viet Cons I said, "all National Liberation forces in all areas of South Vietnam must cease all military operations." It declared the allies must call off all military activities including "aerial reconnaissance, strafing, bombing or d~folialing "dth chemical poison and operations by naval and river craft and artillery in any area of South Vietnam .'' "Such activities will be considered \'iolations of lite cease-fire .•. and will be P•gt" the broadcast said, adding ~. Cong troops would increase their v, ance and be "ready to fight and destroy" the enemy." In past truces. the U.S. Command has reserved the right to conduct ground and aerial reconnaissance to s afeguard American for~s and to fight back in case of attack. There never has been a ('ease-fire in Vietnam that was not marked by sporadic fighting. Last year, lhe South Vietnamese govcrn1ne11l refused to pro- claim a New Year's truce because it claimed the enemy had broken the Christmas cease-fire 114 times. l '· One problem. the 3S backers of llelp Une fact i! tbe unctd&alnty about 'A'hal .h.appens to th~ young caUe~ on the ,olhcr , tnd. Wlten a ca)ler 'is 1efJrttd to pr0o tesaional medical or psyclilatrlc help there is no way to know ll he wenl betause names are not used . "In the near future we. hope In establish our own ctnter ol operations where cAUers can ectually CGme in and set our people," said Overby, "We also hope to open up more lines.'' Surprisingly Help Line has received few crank calls or harassment "When \ve started we expected rquch more,"' ren1arked Overby, "but we haven 't receh•ed more than 25 such calls.,. "A Jot of cal.ls we get." he continued. "are kids experimenting with drugs. They are on a bad trip and want to know how to come down. We try to tell. them. · "The only disappointments we suffer come five..lninutes after hanging up the Phone. Sometimes you realize you should have said someUtlng else." More parents ha ve called Help Line than kids, added Overby. "And of the kids who call most are on speed. We get very few calls from kids on marijuana, but a lot from parents concerning pot." "We knew there was a serious drug problem here when we started," ex- plained Overby, ''and we haven't been disappointed. Right now v•e expect a larse increase in calls around Christmas "'hen more young people are home and \rith nothing to do." "Our reputation is spreading because the calls are in('reasing. Appare ntly v.c haven't made any serious mistakes yet. If you do your ca lls stop and some similar programs ha ve come to a halt in other cities. Ours is going strong," he concluded. Beach Impalas Play for Midget Football Title Championship of Southern California in Junior All·America midget division foot,. ball circles is at..sto.ke Saturday afternoon \vhen the Huntington Beach Impalas plaf host to the Lawndale Buccaneers on the Orange Coast Coll~ge football field. Kickoff is at 4 o'clock. The Impalas earned the right lo play ln the championship finals by defeating the H.ialto Colts at Hemet High School last "'eek, 20-18. Coach Bob Justice or the Huntingtlln Beach team, has guided his young charges 112-1 4 years of age) to a .9·2~ season record. There are 33 players on the Impala roster and top playing weight is 115 pounds. Dan Troup, Tom Baker and Brian Ed\vards are the offensive stars of the Impala team. Troup is the leading passer v.·hile Baker is his ra,•orite target. Edwards does a lot of the running and plays defense as well. The Impalas were forced to come from behind a 12.0 deficit to defeat Rialto last week. ( < \,e orw" Q. L'lq PINISHID' IN MIMOSA YIUOW 01 CUEIN . HAND DICOllATID IN CHAU WHm ••• •LAU SHll.YIS AND TWO INTlllOI LIGHTS. $799 IY DllXIL. THI MOST TIUSTED NAM( IN fUINITUIL ------------- YOUR LOCA t OEAL£R FOR DREXEL -HENRl:OON-HERITAGE • NEWPO~T BEACH 1721 W"tcllff Or., 642·2050 Gnfl PllDAY 'TIL ' INTERIORS Pro(essional Interior Designers Av•ll•bl,._AIO-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 Nonh Co••t Hwy. OPIN NIDAY 'TIL ' 4'"-4551 I , I I ' I 'I 13 13 - Laguna ·nea,h . EDltlON *~ * YO!,; ~2. NO. 2~ I , 4 Sl\CWNS, ~ P !6ES O~GE ~COUNl'Y, CALIFOltNIA • rv1ne ares Strip Rob-.eries - Trio Hold Up Three Stations 'nlree gas 11t.atlons along the San Diego Freeway . were held up within one hour early Thursday and their attendants forc- ed to strip naked by a trio of robbers who collected $160 in cash. Alleged bold-up men, a Marine corporal and two civilians, were taken into custody by military police when they ar· rived at the San Onofre gate at Camp P~ndleton. Two of the suspects, Delbert S. Finger, 25, of Dana Point, and Kenneth G. Carpenter, 25, .:>f Corona, were turned over to San Clemente police. ·The. third 1uspeet, Cpl. Ronn~. Russ Johnson, 21, is in custody at Camp Pendleton. Houston wu forced to strip off his clothes, which were taken ~y .the holdup men, along with 'fO in cash. Fifteen n1inutes later the procedure was repeated at -a station at El Toro Road and the San Diego Freeway, where attendant Bill MaUell was the victlm and $80 was taken. ,. A generJI] alarm was broadcast by the Orange· County Sheriff's office, but th!? three bandits managed to stclke a third station, at Avenida Pico and the freeway in San Clemente. Here Clavi A. Pera.la was forced at knife point to st.rip and hand over $40. Alerted by the alann, military police al Camp Pendleton were on watch for the car and it11 occupants and made the ar- . rests. • • DAll,Y-PILOT .......... The series of holdups began at 2:30 a.m. 'Ibursday when a car occupied by three men drove intci a service station at La Pu Road and the San Diego Freeway. While one of the robbers threatened hhn with a butcher knife, attendant Art San Clemente police said the three t<>b- bets apparently met In a bl< In that city before aeWn& out on their round of holdups. THIS IS PORTION OF IRVINE COASTAL AREA BETWEEN CAMEO SHORES (LEFT!, CRYSTAL COVE Echo From Hawaii Coast Braces for Next Onslaught of High Surf LAFC Receives Dana-Capo Beach Incorporation Bid By PAMELA HAILAN Of ... t»Uy '11" Iliff A formal application was to be filed to- day to make Dana Point.-Capiru'ano Thundering surf -an echo of murdon>u1, mrm·IJllwntd llreakln l>a~ surf Thursday, lapgfng to little waves to-Beach Orange County's next incu'porated '-tertng Hawaii today -is expected to strike the Orange Coast within it hours, followed by abnormally high tides com~ poonding the proble1DB Monday. - dllY ond no ..,.,._ •. ..__. ..~, ctt,._ 5eat Bead! poHce ·Ill!! lllil ,,.n;.,_. -· C" C I t I I almg the beach Thunday night when the .1.i11:: ~Uzens <t'm ~ t! e or pounding gurf washed·sway portions Md/ Incorporation told a capaclty audience at -appeared ready to cause more trouble, Serra School auditorium '}'h!lfSday night but the swells wert down to three feet that the Local Agency Format.ion Com· Trouble may be brewing for IOITle areas, including Laguna Beach, wher'!l a similar combination in July, 1949, sent surf swirling over and beyond' Pacific Coast Highway, according to one Veteran. this morning. I · (LAFC) Id · lh. •-· Surfside reported no problem, but tht m ss1on wou receive .e \Nl,;ll" little colony, mundated by waves due to ment today. erosion 'in the early sixties, could get Alex Lake who with Dr. Roger San- some st.anding beach pools if silrf creslll derson, Arthur Humburg and Joe Cole Waves generated by a pair of two .severe storms in the western Pacific ' smacked the California CQ8stline Thurs- day, ranging up to IS feet in the Santa over the high-tide line Saturday· are spearheading the movement said the . Huntingtm Beach lifeguards said surf was five to seven feet Thursday-higher committee hopes for a January hearing Barbara area. . _ than nonnal -but they expect a moun· date. Treacherous surf capsized a skiff car- rying two treasure-hunters in their mid· twenties off Summerland Beach and the men vanished in the crashing waters. ting height by late Saturday morning. Local control of local affairs· was the Newport Beach authorities said waves hit about the same height Thursday, but there was no damage and trucks Involved in the sand haul antl-trolion projeft kept A 14-year-<ild surfer narrowly escaped drowning of( H~nnosa Beach when he fought the seas for a half-hour after being knocked from his board, but was rescued by lifeguards. The swells spawned by twin stonns between the Philippine and the Aleutian Js\ands subsided a bit Thursday night, dropping as low as two feet today along the Orange Coast. Weather forecasters comparing ex· pected Udes· and new. incoming sets of breakers gay the surf which reached a maximum of eight to ten feet in Laguna Beach is just a taste of more to come. Llleguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the game combination or seven-foot tides and stonn-spawned surf hit the Art Colony on July 4, 1949, washing over the coastal highway. If predictions or today hold up. he warned, the .crashing surf will be up to the boardwalk area and may spill over and down Broadway. "Then again, they could be wrong," he said. ureguardl and police along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach to San Clemente genera14' reported the same thing: high up the normal pace. Sound Improved. i;:or High School Laguna Be.ach High School studenlll will not only be sitting in new seats and resti ng their feet on new carpeting come April, they will also be able to enjoy better sound projection. Laguna Beach Unified School District trustees took the advice of high school principal Robert Reeves Tuesday night as tlley okayed $3,042 worth of improve- ments to the projection room after bids on carpets and seal,s for the auditorium came in well under the $40,000 available for improvements. Charles Benton won the low bid for. renovation 6l the projection room after trusttt!i accepted a low bid of $9,159 by Lawrence W. Rosine Co. for carpeting and the lowest bid meeting IP'ciflcalion ror aeata ol $21,995 by American Sating Co. major point stressed by th espeikers who indicated particular interest in the loss of beaches through sale to land developers, rooting of a .scenic highway wtUch may bypass the community's commercial &ec· lion, and beautification proposal!! made by the South Coast Scenic"lmprovement Project. Dean Evans, who authored a feasibility report on incorporation when the com· munity attempted to become a city two years ago, presented updated figures. He said his report will not be complete until next week. ~ "We have a much better chance this lime," said Lake, "things have been hap- pening around us that are detrtmental to the area and are getting attention. People now realize they need a city gov~rnment to wurk in their interests." !{e said that many who were against incorporation two years ago are for It now. Financial support has been steadily coming in and the group has collected ap- proximately $450. (.{: Humburg asked the audience o con- tinue tbe1t contributioos since ey's fees will nm $1 ,500 and the easibility r<pOl't wtll -1750, Sands-Shoals Make Waves Doubts Raised Over Previous City Actions By RICHARD P. NALL \\'ay or strett.'4:!nd of Bluebird Canyon Of tltt Delly f"llel SIHf Drive. The Sands vs. Shoals hassle over apart. The planning mmmluion had granted menl additloos and use of a public 5trttt Shoal• owner Richard D. Burt permJM!on right-of-way made waves clear into to add 3Z units. A private drlvewa)' and Laguna Beach council chambers this retaining wall pr-mly oenlng tbe pro- week raising serious doubts about: perty are on publlc -rtgbt«-•IF --A post actloo of tho c:<llllltll In lilt thal -estimate at a »tool "" that apparenUy penntUed The Shoall, c:roachmenL 1101 S. Coast Highway, to build partially The netpboring Sl!ldl ""!ch b flchtlng on the Met.end right~·way for the ackfition was ltlelf rranted a variance Blueblro Canyon Drive. In 11!0 thal pennlUtd ft me ol tbe street -Illegal planning commission fssu.ance and aa a private drlW:W&f· rather than nf v1rlances wilhout legal justlfk:aUon taking access from SOutb Cout Hi&hW•Y· for more than I\) yean despite: In· After dlsttt!Std eommenll Wednetday, ~truction by the ci ty attorney on court councilmen aent the: whole mallet back t.o decisions. the pl1U111lng commlsslon to re-evaluate The Shoals is.'lue was brnugl)t to the the~viriaACe Ind see what could be done council In the Conn of •n appeal IJJed by aboul reclllming lo>t publlc rlihl'ol"llay. • neighboring apartment development, City Atlorney Jock Rimel said In eflecl Tbe Sands, 1185 S. Coast Highway. that the variance was lll•gal, that tho 'Ibo l!N 1J[!IC!ures lractet ~ rlibkl!-___J>[annln( "'"""l•lon llad DOI suppor1ed ~ with legally required findings or fa ct. Most vocal critic. Councilman Roy Holm said, "I! the Shoals is denied, J'n1 curioua about what our position is in g~t­ tfng back any of tbat dedicated street c:umntly used solely by the Shoals lor In· cress .and egress. -Rimel-said, "It-was never dedicated for other than public use.'' Holm asked ll then had been an agree· mmt to allow the Shoals to build a private drive on a publlc righk>f~way. J°"'ph Sweany, clly public works dirtetor, sald, "t.he city de81gned the wall; I'm nol sure If the city or -the Shoal~ paid for it." Holm said. .. t•m In- . Jeresled In gelling back as much of Ille rlght-cl-way·1s wt ctn.~ · Vice ldayor Joseph_(fsu'ruva.,uld, "Jt 11 unfortuoatt that JD°"ara past,'~ publto rood was given up to yrivai. Interest. I (See SBOA14 Pago I) ' • . --- I )·" CROSS.HATCHED AREA IS VACANT IRVINE COASTAL LAND ,3 of Man$on's Frieiids Tell of Hypnotic Effect LOS ANGELES (AP) -"Black the house and carried them outside and magic" .. "He believes that he, and all turned them loose." " lruman beings. are God", "There ·ts no ''That's right" Poston said. "t saw crime, there ls no sin". ."The women them carry a fool-long sidewinder out of were the key to everything." lhe cabin oiie day." · Three friends of Charlee At .MllMOO us-"And-you couldn't eat meat," said ed those words Thursday to "descrlbe him-WaWu, "becauee. )'Vt! were tllled an and the way they SI)' he ruled a clan of animal. It waa c:Tazy." · nomadic hippie-t.ypel ·on a commune a.t1r110n'1 .ta1ent U · a mJJS1dan -be near Deoth Valley. played . tho . sullar -and bis slow, Prosecutors say they will seek an In-deliberate aDlj niooi!y way ol moving dlctment chaiglng'Manson, 35, with con-gave him a IClt of.hJpnottc powtr OYer · Se al women, the three men Hid. splracy to commit murder. ver mem· '"I1il8 ·sort of·pcnrfl: tN:ea 1 Jons time bcrs of his clan are accused of i18ylng lo work , an effect," ~ aid. ••Mo-actress Sharon Tate and six others. The three friends -miner Pa'UI Uons are Ued to emotJons. Certain mo- Crockett, 50: guitar pl,i ye'r Paul Watkins, ~= == =~:~~· if ·you 19; and Brooks P05ton, 21 -gave· the "The women .around tht place were dt'.~~~~t~:ie thing was h~ld together.by always hla propert.Y.'~ WatJdn1 · said. black magic," said Watkins, who has POiton add~: .. yoo were aJWays followed Manson eince they met two = ~~ "::.:• ~ theft: YOU years ago In the Halghl-Aahbury district, , "He -to.ba .. -aoale -around. then the hlpple haVen in San Francisco. There wu a Jlmlt .to ,whl.t'lllJ 1nao can. "You don' belleve Hl Well, tt really ... _ · beld exis<,, and it ilpowerfUl,"WaUdnuald. ~~".U;~~~=ald. · "He (Mal1>on) btlleves tbal be.-and all ~ .. - hnman belnU,-m Goa0and"lbe"de.tl at ~~u;:·~=;;..-"lba. Che same llrne. He .beUevef all human beln•• are ••• of each other," aald When tho ~·~ money, ~ ~. ( Crockelt aald, would -' the. Postoil, a Mamon ollower for two yean. women out Id.~ _ ··~ could "You aee what that rilwis," Croc~lt .... ..,,.. In -......._ tllan·•ou ·-' I' said. .. It means that btman Hfe hal no --e """' ...,.,.. • i -fY value. Jr.you tJll a hulDla be:lq, you ate ~ ti{n.1~.fJl 1 we,t.'. 111111<1111ng a !>Pl ·or ,......11.i;o 1111. a11 • • · • • • •• . tIRJrt." , · , • , : .,.s-~ts·. ~.rice& . ; BUl,o • said Crocb(t, by MIDIOO'I ' ' -: phll-hy "you can't tlD .-. ulmaL Not. NEW\ "Ydjuc .(AP.)' _. -Stod; 1n0rl<et a btJti, not ·a·ahift.~ Tlim _,, .,n... turned ,..,ef.hr•1low lrlldlq Joie -ke1'ill owr'tlle """"'"""·P Jli· ihJ.;af1A11iooii alW<IJYingup·eai'l~mod-Ule.ca~ and'~ lll"You ~ •1lolf~1(W~P....,IO. MVV kill ~fte7·~~-e!re' la · 11.f. •• ~'.··· :. .. .... -~Ji.. ' • • ~ 4 • ..... -.J ·-.-.. _____ i:.. ' Today's Fhuil'. TEN CENTS an Mason Asks , Both Public, -Private Use By JllROME F. COUJNS ot Ille 0.lty ,,.., Sid A comblnaUon of public and prlvat. development oJ the coastal aru bet....,. Corona del Mar and Laluna Beach wU l"OJ>!'i'd today by WtJl!am R. M...., -pr<sldent of the. l!:vlne Company. Muon aild-the company, liiie owner Of the ·3\; mile stretch Ii virlual1j 1inliiliabitod -l"vpelly, said that tho company.'& mast.r-plan 'lri!f refleel "a WJ!que blend ol deve!opmerrta U. wtll Include public accea · to 1111 tideland!." He uted ilate, county and munlclpll (O\'inllnenl offlclala Interested In tlll publlc'• -to -Udeland1 and !hf acqnloltlon " public beach ..... to Jdll 'lrith the company u It begins tts pl11> nlng for the area. 0 Tbe incluaion of public access to the lldelanda and the provtalon for their a<> quisilion of publlc beachea along "Ult Irvine coast may come a.1 a surprise to thoae wbo are unfamiliar with our histor7 cf planning;'' said Muon. "But it lboWd not. -"The Irvine Company has l<lb( recognlied and been .an advocate of UM need ror joint public and private ceopera. lion in the creative development of O.:S environment.'' The Irvine execlitive, an engineer "' ,..i...ion. ~: -. "We do 11"1 lnteod to cnote an • yirooment tba.t will deny public access Ill the coallal lldeJands u lo !hi c:aao Ii tho -receol Sall Creek matter. What II men, we ite not oppoaed to J>Ubllc acquJaltlae slnd dOvel<*niint " . ..,,,_ of tlii coallo M IW'd f~'JxJbUc JIUlllOHI.'• . ' Mallm'1 °Wt· cfen:" reference ns .. thli county's aba~ent ol Salt Creel Road in Laguna Niguel, sooth of Laguna Beach, early last year. Tbe road.. had .served u quaal-publlo access ,.. to Salt Creei: beach. Reversal of the county'• ac> tion has been · vigorously sought evei slnc:o by citlzena' grwps in tho .... ~ county area. ll'vine'a Muon &aid bis comPoOY'S main. concern never hu been with a..I Question of whether publlc faclllll!I should be localed on lands owned by the firin. "We &re,: however. concerned wtdl the need for public plans to bf coordinated with and complimentary &i planned private :tevelopments. "· Jn order to bring 1bout this coordhw, tion, Ma.son said, the company ill callinf on the State Department of Parks aRil Recreation, county government and ~ cities of Newport Beach and Lagun• Beach "lo combine their Individual klea_ lnleresls ~d desires d!fing the •"'1 stages of plaMJng." . Letters outlining the Jrv':ln, propo111 ha Ve been sent to William Penn Mott, Jr., airector of the state department of parkl and recreation; Wllllam Hirstein, chait• mari' of the orange County Board of SU. pervisors; Doreen Manhal!, mayor ~.r Newport Beach, and"Glenn Vedder, mar· (IT of Lagµna Beach, Mason 1ald. .. "To dale,'' he explained, "lhe com• (S.. IRVINE, Pqt I) Oraage 'ft'eatlaer The surf will bl up and the sun will be out thll weekend, with balmy temperatures· In 'the upper 7(1's warming the Orange Coast. INSIDE TODAY Alm.oat 'a 11tar fl/fer h1 1htri- ed ou< $SW ~ bah VC Irvine studntl ou&. of jaJl in Bcrktle~ . , · ChanceUO< Daniel Aldrlc~·ll be-· ginning t.o gtt .«>mt of 1'il ,... moneu ~"' P"'1• 8. ~20-~. ' CHRISTMAS' • • -' ~~-~--------~~~~~~~~~-~~- • - ------·--·· . -· -· ·--·-·---·-. -.. • .. -. Z OA!l V PILOT • L Lt. Calley • Senate Plan Defeat.ed Foundations • Sur-vive Questioned By Pentagon --~-J'Nal1nte Sen1ct1 + ·aoverUs!' Kello-a:" th is because what you 're going to do fs eliminate the element ol priva te charity in America." ... WASHJNGTON !UPI) -Fim Lt. William L. Calley Jr. was summoned to ihe Pentagon today for questioning by a ~Rtclal panel attempting to determine ir there might have been a wbltewash C?f an original Army inveltigaUon or the killing of South Vietnamese civlians at ~1y Lai. The 26-year-okl Calley is accused or premeditated. murder of 109 persons in the Alleged massacre. J1e was com- mander of a plaloon of a company head- ed by Capt. Ernest A. Medina, who denied Thursc!aY either ardering ot 6eeing any mas.s slayings in the village. The Penlagon inq uiry board apparently ..Plans to question almost everyone with a ~n in the aase and Calley was oo- JS> ~one 0( several called today. A spokesman said it was possible he might not be heard until late today, <lr possibly ·e.\·en later. ·Calley is the only person specilieally rl!arged with murder in the case. 8k.hough more than a score of men who v;ere there at the time are under in· ustigation and one sergeant has been ac· c:used of assaull v.'ith intent to murder. . Calley, who is to be tried by an Anny ·c0w1. martial next month at Ft. Benning, GB:, was called before the so-called Peers Tlwestigation Board which. was formed lo took into whether a low-level in- vestigation soon after the 1'1arch 16, 1968, ioeident amounted to little more than a . 1\'hitewash. · 'Mle board headed by Lt. Gen. William 1\. Peers heard Medina Thursday 'behind Closed doors. Afterward Medina, com- . tnander of Company C, 1st Battaltion, of Ute 200lh infantry at the time, held a news conference to deny any knowledge of mass killings of civillans. In a subsequent interview, Medina ·acknowledged, however, that under 'erciers from higher up, he had directed his men to destroy h1y Lai 4, a part of .the village of Song My. because it was 5\ISpected as a havea for the Viet Cong . 48th battalion. ~ Ae stressed thal ad vance Intelligence rePorts ·iaJd the women·and children left the village each morning at 7. re attack was set for 7:30 a.m. * * * Robb Repudiates _Ch~rges Outfit .Did Atrocities LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) -Marine P.1aj. Cllarles Robb, Conner President ~Jl'l!lon B. Johnson:s son-in-law, has lEPiid.iated allegations the men under his fommand in Vietnam· comm J t t c d ,;ftrocities similar' to those sai~ to have ~ceurred at My Lai. ~·"Our policy, orders and deeds preclude ~uch activity.''. Rcibb said at a news eop..' ference Thursday. · ': "We did not participate in any type ·oC ~ctivity what has been asSfrted. Oilr ac•' i"ions were quite to the contrary. l'n fl)Ct \pe bent over backwards to avoid in· bictiilg casualties to innocent civilians," lie 11dded. :: Robb, here to attend a t2th 1'1arine b islrlct Conference. made his remarks ii\ ftsponse. to charges by Ahtbony R. ~1artin-Trigona, 24, a real estate and in· ~estment broker from Champaign, Ill. :: Martin-Trigona, who visited Robb's unit, )P;hile serving .as a correspondent for the JJ'niversity of llllnoi.s student newspaper,_ :the Daily Illini. made his charges in a let,.. Ur to Sen. Charles H. Percy (R-111.) : : Percy forwarded the letter to De£ en~ l:iecretary 1'1elvin R. Laird, urging "full ~ttenUon to .and investigation of" ~tarlin­ !l'rigona's claims. .; Robb, who was a captain when Martin· ?trigona visted his unit, said he recalled 4!ffing Marlin·Trigona and added he ad· )pired him for going along with his unit bn some minor military-operations. • • ' ' • .. • • • .. .. .. ' •• •• • .. j . •• r I· , I' .. ' ' j f ' l • • fiAllY PllQI OIU.NO~ CO.US P!Jal ISMIHe CCIMNHY A•Mrt N. W•tl p~ .... ""'41 ..... Jeclr I. c.r1.., .... ,,....... W '-'" MIMtrt n•111•1 IC ... il . ... f'ltt111•1 A. Mc.,hfN ~·~lfolt l fcl"r4 P. N1Q ..__ C"1 «•tw '--- \ UPIT ....... N LIEUTENANT CALLEY ARRIVES AT PENTAGON Fac11 Panel Probing 'Whitewash' at My Lei Appeal for ·Arbitratwn In Guar_d Issue Rejected By BARBARA KREIBICH Of tht Dilly ~lkll Sl.rf ' A request for neutral arbitralion in San Clemente lifeguard Lt. Steve Chorak's appeal of his cLismissal by the city has been lurne<l down, City Manager Kenneth Carr said loday. HO--.·ever, his hearing before the city personnel board, l.chedulcrl for 7:30 p.n1. ~1ondar. will be open to the public, Carr said. "\Vc do not feel the use of a single Arbitrator in this case would he useful or appropriate." Carr explained. "But .we are quite willing to have an open hearing as Chorak has asked:' Chesler -Brisco, ~nta Ana atlornry who ha s gervcd as legal counsel for the lifeguard in his coofronlat.ion~ with_ the l'ity, expressed himself as "very d1.sap- pointed that the city does not see ht to submit this t.o a neutral party," The city, Brisco said, is acting ~s "judge, jury and prosecutor and thats supposed to be prohibited by the con· stitution.'' - Chorak, who spearheaded a 6l rike threat by 30 San Clemente lifeguards seeking pay increases last summer, w~s di smissed by the city last month after six years of service as a full-time guard and four yeMs as a part-time guard. Alt.hough the city c i l e d .an "Wlsatisfactory record of service" as the reason for his dismissal, the 29-year-old lifeguard litulenant said he was con· vinced the action was taken be<::a~ of his role in the strike threat. A court order prevented the strike. Qlorak pointed out that only last year he had been given a five-yea r service · certificate wllich took note or ~ "ex· ceptlonal ability" and pr~lsed hts hand!· ing nf men and m-iergenc1es. Advised that San Clemente"s five city councilmen, s;g as a personnel board, v•ould hear 'ak's appeal, attorney Trustee Recalls Resolution for Aldricl1 Censm·e Orange County 'Board of Education Trustee Or. Dale E. ~\Uson 'I!'ursday withdrew his re Solutton calhng f.or censure of UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr. Rallison said lie has arranged to meet personally with Dr. Aldrich to discuss remarks the chancellor allegedly made ~I " meeting of Orange County Town Hall in October . Rallison said he decided on that course. alter Alan Stoneman, chalnnan of 1'ov.·n Jlall , provided him Monday night with a tape recorQing of the _ ~~ch and the questions and answers tllM\l'Ollowed . Rallison said he called Alarlch Thurs- day and arranged a meeting with him in late January. .. County School Tnlstee A. E. "Pat Arnold said he wa11 prtpared to di !cuss the mtttltr had &lllson not wlthdrav"n his ft301utlon -•M had brought 15 pagell or materlal wlt.h htm. Another of lhe. county 5ehool board"s bitter ballles apparenUy was in the of- llng. Rallison said afttr the board meeting he .tiad decided not to push for the censure resolulloo because "II would ha\·t created mort hard feelings In the sdlools, "·hlch really affect.'I our bonds." t\.•ktd his reacUon to the tape of Al~ drich's comm-enu. he said, "I've really kind of decided nol. lo give a react.Ion. fl would defeat the who!& purpoSfl of doing thl5 pmon.tc>person." At a prtviou1 mHtlng Rallison hid made known his Intent to ask for a ruoluUon similar Lo• Tustin Union 1111#1 • hnol Oi!llrl<~t boar~ rtsolulion which Brisco said, "We feel that since the city fired him. it is hardly qualified to act as judge in his appeal.'' lfe proposed that a neutral arbitrator be selected from three names submitted by the National Academy of Arbitrators of Southern California. Under this pro- c<'dure, each party to a dispute strikes out one name and the remaining arbitrator hears the case and rerxlers a decision. Chorak, Br isco said, would be glad to have his case presented to any impartial body. The arbitration plea refused, he now plans to make a formal presentation al Monday night's hearing, to which the pubUc will be admitted. The Brown Act pennlts public bodies to schedule executive {closed) sessions when personnel and salary matte'rs are being discussed , but in this instance will accede to Chorak's request for an open hearing. From Page 1 SHOALS .•• favor referring it back to the planning commission to try and protect. public -rights giving up in the past." Rimel said it is illegal to give up public right-of-way. The council has in the past been critical of the controversial county action in abandoning Salt Creek Road to the corporation owning surrounding land. In a letter to the council concerning the Shoals, Mrs. Mary V. Lounsbery, 666 Ramona Ave., said: .. This matter was brought to the at- tention of the planning commission sometime ago, when J notified them that this particular access to the beach was a full-dedicated-40.root city street (now reduced to less than 20 feet by allowing a 15 to 20 foot encroachment by The Shoals Apt.) ''After checking many council minutes, it \\·as ascertained that on Jan. 5, 1949 a omlion by Mr. (William) Moorehead, 2nd by Fitts was carried to allow Mr. Robert Schoenleber to construct a relt'lning wall JSO feet from South Coast Boulevard to the ocean . .Joseph T. Enright, attorney ror The Sands, said if the Shoals is to be pennil· ted it.s 32-unit structure It would have to be after complete re-ionlng of the p~ perty -that a variance Is not a proper procedure . City 1'.ttomeJ Rimel told councilmen, "The variance, i( attacked in court, would not hold water because it does not make findings of fact necessary." Rimel had pointed out the legal ~ssitles lo bac kgranting of a variance by a June 20, 1967 letter lo Clyde Z. Springe, city building and planning dlret· tor, he said. liolm said, "variances have been a very serious problem in this to"11 for many years. 'nlat lJ why I tried to get on this side ol the bench (be a counciln11n). Variances have been granted for years th11t were Illegal." Rimel agreed that necessary facts to gupport a variance have been supplied io only a few Cue5, Anthony Demelriadts, president of Laguna Buch CJ.le Leogue, 511d, "I ,.1 the impression thtre has betn very llltle put wisdon1 over public u.&e of Blueblrd. '"\Ve ihould give prtferential treatment to strctt tnds, they are our bmthing po re$ to the 11e11. I have lived In Laguna six years and I didrft realize th•t w1ao't a private drive." • ca.lltd for UC regen~ to dismiss Aldrich. He said restor1Uon of the street's 40. foot width would atve the public more parking. The Civic Ltague made a list Of specl!Jc rtcMnmtt1daUM1 concernina the ij.~ue th al is no\Y back in lhe laps of plan· nerl. '!be James Irvine Foundation and !lmllar tax-txtmpt organizations appear to have won a new lease on life today after the Senate defeated a plan to strip away their tax sanctuary. Senate action came in Washington after an emotionally charged shouting debate on tht floor. • The tax amendrr.ent, if il had been ,. adopted, would have stripped Ute foun- dation& of laX-4:Jempt stafus after fO years. It was caUed "the death sentence" for foundations. The final vote against the amendment was 69 to JS. In Orana:e County, lhe~es Irvine Foundation owns 459 ,twre;~ 54.4 per- cent of Irvine Compar.iy stock. At Its last ~ale in November of 1958, the stock drew $250,000 per share. From its tax-exempt haven, the Irvine Foundation has distributed millions to local cultural and charity groups since ii w8! founded in 1935 by lhe late James Irvine. Jn the fiscal year ending March 31, the Jnine Foundatioh gave grants totalling $2.7 million to state and local groups. In the Senate debate today, Sen. Albert E. Gore (0-Tenn.), fighting to maintain the 40-year lifespan provision in the bill, argued that an overwhelming majority of private foundations were created by millionaire! to serve as tax havens and to publicize the name of their creator in perpelulty. - GO;re said even the Kellogg Foundation or Baille Creek, Mich., which he describ- ed u one of "the g~ foundations," had managed to increase its assel..5 from $40 million to $408 million -all of it exempt from taxation. Flailing his arm! and pacing between the rows of desks on the 11enale floor, Gore shouted that its chief purpose "'is to Lagtina Police Save Transient From Bacl Trip A 20-year-old transient from ll!inol.~ \l'ho told Laguna Beach police he had taken LSD and was "dying", was recovering, police allege, from his bad trip this morning and a\Yaiting ar- raignmen t on a charge of being under the influence of drugs. Answering a call Thursday afternoon reporting a man lying in the road\vay at Laguna Canyon Road and Canyon Acres Drive, police picked up George Audie Cook, who said he came from Illinois. "Help me, I'm dying," he assertedly told officers. "I'm having a bad trip and 1 'm dying." En route to the station. police said, ho complained, "I can't breathe!" When an officer !uggested he put his head close to the window of the police car, Cook responded, "It's no use. J can't breathe. I took LSD and I'm dying." At the station, police reported, the young man suddenly became violent and tore his clothes off. Placed in the jairs drunk tank for safety, he quieted do"'" and was booked on suspicion of being under the influence of drugs. ( Kellogg ! Kellogg! Ke 11.o g gl" he shouted. "KeUogg! Kellogg! Kellogg! How long can thJs go on? Is 40 years too long? !tow long Is for ever?" " But Gore's ar11wnents were unsuc- cesiful in the end . Senators ad opted an amendment sponsored by Sen. Walter F. Mondale (0.Minn.), to delete I.be re1tric· lions on foµndations, placed in. the bill by the Senatt: finance committee. 1.fondale argued . th at the · provision woul~ d~stroy one or the most innovative, creative and experimental forces in American society. Sen. John 0. Pastore (D·R.l ), joined ~londale in defending foundations . "Don't crucify the~,'' Pastore said. "Don"t do Gore said the vote reflected heavy lob- bying by the foundations. As drarted the 40-~·ear lifespan reflected the conceri, of both conservatives and liberals over the power foundations exercise through their great wealth and of failure by some to JliY o~t to charity any of their asset:i: or tfieit income. Another sensitive amendment to the tax reform bill -a 15 percent increase in social security ber.eflts -is the next clash the Senate faces. Senate Republican whip Robert P. Gr if- fin attacked the SOC'ial security ame nd- ment as a "political maneuver." From Page 1 IRVINE SHORE PLAN . • • pany's coastal studies have Mrtained to surveying and analyzing soir" conditions, slopes, utility systems, road alignments, view potentials, and market condilions. Only now is the company preparing to embark on detalled studies relating to the formulation of a precise land use plan for I.he coast." Further Inspiration for achieving a balance of public and private uses of the generally rugged coastline and its scat· lerlng of swimn1ing beaches came from a recent tour of Mediterranean resort areas by ~1ason and a four-man company task force. The Irvine representatives visited such coastal developments as the Algarve Coast in Portugal, the Costa del Sol and Costa Brava in Spain, the French Riviera and Italy 's Ligurian and Amalfi coasts. 1'.Iason said it was a highly instructive tour. "'The most obvious failing \\'C observed is that those coastal areas that \\'ere developed exclusively for private use appeared sterile, uninteresting and \1 ithoul a fe eling of place OJ context." Areas devclo~d exclusively for lhe public didn't look much better, he 6aid . "They were dull , unatlractive and in 1nost instances they had spoiled U1c natur;il beauty of lhe coastline, often ap· pca ring as if they had been dedicated lo parkin g lots and trash receptacles." ft is to avoid either extreme. !\1ason said, that the company feeJS a cooperaLive planning efforl between the public and pri \•atc interests "is man- datory." Before the rrteditcrranean trip in October, Irvine officials already had decided on making access available to the pubiic ·tide\ands, J\1ason noted. This was indicated last April Vt'hen the con1pany sent a representative to Sac ramento to appear before the Assembly Con11nillee on Local Govern· ment. The Irvi ne aide voiced support of .proposed legislation bearing on public ac- cess to shoreline areas. ''\Ve approved the concept," said J\.1ason. Irvine senior vice president Ray \Vatson , who oversees the company's long-range planning, said appointment of a "public coordinating comn1iltec" may be the besl approach lo the master plan probl~m. The committee's membership would comprise representalives of state, Nunty and local agencies \Vho W'Ould \vork with lrylne planners "to establis.h the needs and desires of the various levels of governments \vith respect to puLlic areas." The committee, he said. would fun ction as the official liaison between lhe com. pany and the public. "Through coordinated action a n d cooperation," \Vatson concluded , '"a development plan can emerge that will make it possi ble to achieve an optimum blend of publ ic and private uses that might not otherwise be possible." Mr. Hommema Services Set Funeral services will be held at 2 p.n1. Sa!urday in Sheffer Laguna Beach l'\!orluary Chapel for Waller William Hommema, 75, who died Tuesday in South Coast Community Hospital. The Re v. Albert 0 . Hj erpe will officiate. J\1r. llommema, a native of Wisconsin "'ho retired to Laguna Beach two years ago, made his home at 363 J\lyrtle St. He had been employed for 30 years with the Motor Transport Company in \Visconsin . }fe is survived by his wido\V, Helen C. of the home, a sister. J\1rs. A. A. Af· flerbaugh of \\1i~cons1n and by sevcr:l l nirces and nephews. Poll Finds· Most Approve Nixon NE\V YORK (:\P) -A CBS television poll taken late last month and aired Thursday night shows that 81 percent of .those queried were satisfied with President Nixon 's performance. Only 18 percent expressed dissatisfaction. The poll "'as based oo a sample of tis.I persons telephoned late in November, CHS News said. It showed that Nixon was strongest in the South with 86 percent .a pproval. He was v.•eakest in the \Vest 'vhere only 77 percent l'!'ere satisfied l'l'ith th e President's performance. The Midwest and East ranked second and third, CBS saic-L • a ' Q. L'1_Q - JllNISHID. IN MIMOSA YIUOW 01 CUllN . HA~D· DIC:OUj lN C:HAUt WfflTf ., • GLASS SHELVIS .AND TWO INTUIOI LIGHTS. $799 IY DIEXE1,. THI MOST TIUSTID NAME IN FUINITUIL --·--·--...... .. YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR DREXEL -HENREDON-HERITAGE NEWl'ORT BEACH 1717 w .. 1c1iff Dr., 642-.2050 Of'llf NIDAY '1'1L 9 INTERIORS Prof•1lon1I Interior O..fgn1n Anil•blo--AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co•at Hwy. o''" ,_llDAT in. ' .... Ttlt '"9 .... ef Or...,. C-"'7 M0..126J • I ... . 49~551 ' • I - " • I I 'I I ~ I ... ... -----..---.. . . . .. . . .. ~ • MR.MUM I " tl " " :j " CHECKING •UP• Marriages Rocky h1 Atla11tic Cit y ' By L. l\1. BOYD OUR LOVE AND WAR J\IAN has filed the fact that AUantic City, N. J ., ~s the in- fidelity capital of the world .• , DO YOU KNOW what would sell well right now? f\.1ustache cups. I mean ii IN TOKYO, THE LA \V says you can 't buy a car unless you can prove you have a place to pa rk it . ,'"":"INHERITANCE TAX lt.ECORDS sh:>\\'S nl o s t millionaires put about \\\'O- thirds of their money in to cor- porate ' stocks • • EVEllY 11VENTY-F1FTH SOUL you sec on the street now \vears contact lenses. G 0 0 D N I G II T I S\\'EET PRlNCE -Suspect you have heard the report repeatedl y. About this feJIOIY or that one. Who drank his numerous cocktails like a pe r f e c t gentleman . With ne ver a slur in hi.s speech nor a blur in hls eye. Until suddenly he sank to the floor in complete collapse. Now there's a medical ex- planation for such a stunning: performance. Occasionlll y when a man is exceed ingly tense, the pyloric valves in his slomach clam p shut. i::ven- tually. ho"'ever, he relaxes, and they open. Then woosh goes the alcohol in to his bloodstream. \Vaiter. 'M'Ould )~ou kindly call this old boy a c:ab? CUSTOMER SERVICE ' Q. ''\Vhat's this 'pod' you refer to. dad ? Not mar ijuana surely. Do you mean 'pot'?" A. Look. young fellow. it's pronounced "pol," but spelled ''pod .'' How come you didn'l kn ow a thing like thal, boy? You been gone? • , . Q. "WE'VE GOT A BET on as to how much money parking meters take in. On the average, I mean. It's less than SIOO a year, correct?" A. Correct. sir, considerably less in little tow ns, a !Jule less in the cities. FICTION -In my d:iily work of late 1 have occasion now and then to read fiction n1anuscripts. 'The third paragraph of one suclt piece, \\'Jlich crossed the desk yester- day, went: ''Looking backward orer hi s shoulder. the blond q ua r t erba c k ~u rveyed his rear-view rene<:- lion in the lull-length mirror : th en smiling in apparent satis faction. he curled up in the overstulled chair vt'ith his feet tocked under him and fil~ ed his nails while he waited for the etiach." Can't say what that writer will do in the future. but. .that quarterbaCk . \vi ii never maltc it to the pro's. IF SO~IE CULPR I T snatched your purse tOOay , how much money \\'OUld he get? Don't answer, it's an im- pertinent question. Merely in- quire preliminary to report the average take in ~­ snatcbirigs nationwide no\v runs approximately $45 ••• "I NEVER HEARD of an old man ever forgetting where he hid his money." So said the Roman Cicero. In reply to tha t ancien t clai m that the elderly te nd to become forgetful . IJe got that right. I think. Moslly, the elderly forget on ly what they don't think is worth remembering. HAPlD RE PLY: DID I SAY J\i ary Tudor lost her head ? Call me dum-dum. ll was Mary Stuart who lost her head. Your questions and ccnn· 1ne11ts are welcomed o.nd will be used whenever pos- sible ht "Cliecking Up." Please address your mail to L. Af. Boyd, i n care of Daily Pilot. Newport Beach, Calif., 92663. SPECIAL!· ALL YOU CAN EAT!! ITALIAN SPAGHETTI with Meat Sauce 57~ Includes Parrnesian Ch•-· Crisp Col• sra,,,. Roll ~ Butter ! 2200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ., wn ... St. Frid.tf, Dtctmbtr 5, 1%~ . Survevor ~my Psy chologist's Opinion • To Provide Revenge Cited as Massacr e Moti ve ' SAN FRANCISCO <UPI ) -children and other civ ilians in ROTC iitudent wno was sent lo The Wrst psychologi st to serve 1961. Vietnam after receiving his Ke'' Clues • \\'ith the Anny in Vietnan1 '"rhi.ngs like this have oo-doctorate at YaJe, saki the PASADENA , Calif. (AP ) -curred before, but not on this nature of the war me anl says if U.S. s oldier s I H LesMJns \\'hicb could m•ide the scale.'' he said. ··~ty own ex· stress 'A'as·a ways present. t' .. y massacerd civilians .at My ·d Id d design or interplanetary perience talking with special sa1 no area was cons ere 'pa-all for year• lo -me Lai, revenge was undoubtedly r "ft . safe from ambush, terrorist "'"'"' ... v their motive. orces groups w .. u were 1n-. . . 1 Th may be learned when volved was that they were activity or sruper ire. e Surveyor 3's television camera "It's_ a central part of our always connected with the resultant tension was the ma- and other parts are returned society," said Albert Kastl. death of a frier)(I or buddy. jor problem encountered by u. Jet Propulsion 4_boratory "We see it on television, in our "Then all the stops came p s ychiatri s t~ and alter t in years on the tnoon. children's 'e<1J>i and robbers' oul. There was an incredlble 'psychologists \\'Orking with The camera, a soil S"""'p. games, and in our treatment sense of revenge· . 'nley wented soldiers in Vietnam. ...... or criminals. ....... . two pieces of tubing and to kill everybody they could by "iuere IS an enormous fear several lengths of television "We all believe \Ve've got to the most hideous methods and you think everyone is your · cable were removed from get back at someone who does poss ible." enemy," he said. "You can't Surveyor 3 by astronauts something to us." said Kastl. Kastl , a bearded 36-year-0ld believe you can trust the Viet- Cbarlcs Conrad Jr. and Alan 'M'ho spent a yea r at the 93rd \\'ho was a st rong supporter of namese. so each oriental L. Bean during their walk on Evacuation Hospital in Viet-the wa~ \\'hile in Vietnam but becomes a potential killer in the m?On Nov. 19. nam during 1965 and 1966. has sinCe marched in antiwar yoUr Q1ind. 1 Noiv in quarantlitl in Kastl, inter v i e we d at p a r ad e s , sa i d o the r "The American soldier fet:ls nlixlure or inJecurity and patriotism.'' He said Virlnamese 'M'omen and chi1di·en were distrusted. because the Viet Cong in- cluded women in their ranks and the youngsters were apt to be thieves and beggars. lie said breaching or the ."ki lling barrier" and the in· rtu ence o f "professional soldiers who enjoy killing" on' you ng recruits resulted in a changed att itude toward kill- ing and brutallly. "Once you kill, it's a little different after that," Kastl said. I A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Jtouston, Tex. along with the University of Pacific P.1ed\cal psyc.hological IBflOrs included he has to slick 'M"ith the whlte( astronauts and 90 pounds of Cent.er where hc1s-a--t>linlcal . the continual stJ'fSS ca uaed by or black race. It 's not a fcel- moon rock, the Surveyor parts psydlologist_, S:aid retribution Ruerri\la '\l.'arl&fc, prejudice, ing to be proud of: it's not in arc to be released early in would be the strongest of and changes in values once a vogue. Bul l felt ijlat way· . • .. J d several factors \\'hich could soldier crosses the "killing myselfwhile-t\\'as thlre. ~11 .s nol l'ond1t1ons, but 1hr anu.ary an sent to· the Jet have led to the alleged killing barrier." "\Ve-felt thal whatev •r we rnind al nnr that. ca!! niakr Propulsion Laboratory here, of hundreds of w 0 me 0 , Th n 1 . t 1 d.< c ) anyonr ha ppy or miscrablr. where the spacecraft was --;==========='=P='Y='~r,.'ffg:='=' =· =·='='m:::"=='";:w;:•::;'::';:k::•::Y·::'::'=w=as=so~r:-.:l..:of::..:a 1 -Sir Roger L 'Estrange made. _,, . PA:ESEN TEO ... s A Exhaustive studies which It's Habit-forming "' PU11L1c ~Ei:rv 1cE f;VEA:Y 011v 11v: may take up lo a year are ex-Don't get wtarr. Rrad lrary, BUI ltary's one-11ne cornmrnts on the w01ld around us ca't Lee Roofi ng Co. ~ --• DAil V PllDf p_ "" • I ,., ,, '· •, l'r•cllt•I I Scl..,tlf)( H .. ,, h ,, ' e T1•h1 lits e M•del Co1t~t o rEN 1 DAf S .- ~ TED'S HOliY and RACEWAY e aACES 'Ill. & SAT. NIGHTS 1 P• to f p• Cl~~lT:~:~Ailt.J.~~·, pcct.ed to show : t.r habi t-forming. Check today's Graff lU by lrary. ust ,~;:.::·;.~~ C~••• Mu"''-'2.1211 1. The rate or degradation of --...'.::===========================,)__ _ _!!:==========!'.:========== the materials from solar radiation and meteorite im-lr"----------------------------------------------------.., pact since Surveyor 3 landed in a lunar crater April 19, 1967. 2. The ~et or color change caused by sunlight. T h e spactcraft. originally painted 'M'hite. 'M'IS reported by the astronauts to have turned light broY.11. 3. Whether any c a rt h microgenns on the unsteriliz- ed spacecraft survived the lunar environment, in which temperatures ranged from 250 degrees below to 250 degrees above zero Fahrenheit. "What we learn aboot long- term degradation of materials in space will have an im· poriant bearing on the design of the vehicles we plan to send to the other planets - journeys which w.ill take many years," Milt Go,ldfine , coordinator of the ~1udies al the laboratory, said in an in· terview. "It may be that materials we are using now would not survive extremely long trips and we will have to find substitutes. Also many signifi- cant change in paint color would be import.ant because we use paint to control the amount of heat reflected or absorbed by spacecraft." Goldfine said th e television camera probably w o u 1-d receive' first attention. "With its lens and filters. electronic c ircuitry, and metal housing it represents all the material likely to be used in a Spacecraft," he said. After examining the camera for surface damage, scientists then v1ill sec if it still works. If it doesn't thfy'll take it apart pieee by piece until they find the component.s that failed. From this they hope to learn how cameras can operate in.I definitely in space . Surveyor 3 sent back 6,315 closeups of il3 landing site during its first 2 weeks -one I luna!' day - on the moon. It· lvas shut down for the two week lunar night but failed to resume operating on com- man:I during the following lunar day. The spacecraft's hand-sized scoop, which dilk: the first man-made trenches on lunar soil, Y.'iil b~ studied to see Jf its joints and hinges function . They may ha ve Qeen welded tight by the co ld vacuum of the moon, which would tell scientists to alter such design in future planetary ex- ,plorations. DAILT 10.10 Big picture console-et t•ble model price I Wh"y settle for small screen viewin g when you can enjoy 1he life-like realism of 267 sq. in. color pictures plus outstending Magnavox performance. Coloniel model 6414 has Chroma· 1one plus many olher quality leatu1es. Also evail11b\11 in Contemporary styling. You r choi ce, 1398 .50 B••utlful Mobile Color TV-Contemporary model 6310 will bring you ye1rs of colorful entertainment with big 227 sq, in. picturas, Chromatone, Qu ick· On, plus f11mo us Magnavox reliability and fine performance . Use on anrac- live mobile c1rt (opti onal), tables, or shelves. t398.50 T~e Ideal Second Set Comp1c1 Color TV -will deligh t you with its v1.,id 180 sq. in. colot'"""pic1u1es, Ch 1ome1one, and ma 11 y mo1• Magna.,o.o:: Quali ty 11a1ure1. Model 6260 m1y be used on l1ne-tur111ture c111 01 on tables, 1h11lves, bookc1se1 -1n 1ny roo m 1n your home. •359so Option1I mobil e cart SWIVEL CONSOLE only s479so SEEIT FROM ANY ANGLE/I You'll always be "front -row -center"-when you watch your favor ite shows on I model 68101 Included among ils fine features are: brilliant-color 295 sq . in. screen for life-like pictures: Ch romatone adds depth and dimension to color, warmth ta , black and white; Quick -On giv es insta nt pict ures and sound; Cejpr Purifier auto• matlcally keeps all pictures pure; Automatic Picture·Sound Stabilizers (Keyed AGC ) for optimum performance; and exclusive Magnavox Bonded Circuitry Chassis with 31.F. Stages assures lasting 1eliabi,lity. ' NEW PORTABLE COLOR TV Enjoy bi9-1et perform· •nc • I MOdel 6224 h11 102 sq, in . 1er11n, Chrom11one. Ouick·On, 11le1 c op ing dipolt 1nt1 nn1, plus Magna .. ox l1111ng rtliablhty. Wonder- ful lo own -ind 10 givt. ld11I for shelv es i nd 11blt1. too. '299 90 Complete with Mobile Cert KERM RIMA -MAGNAVOX /tlag1aavox Honae E11tertai1111ae11t Center Factory Dit•ect Deale•· 2666 Harltor Blvll. 6151 Westminster 121 1 6 S. Brookhurat 12191 Chapman Costa Meaa, Callf. ' ' Weatmlnater, Callf. Gartlen Grove, Callf. Callf. S46·1691 894-2350 530-4360 · 636-1250 Garden Grove, EXPERT F-ACTORY SERVICE pay ments 'ti/ 1970 ~========~1._ ___ ......;... _______ ~..,.__ __ _i .: ' Lay-A-Way Now • • .!!!:. DAIL V PILOT l FridU' Dtctmbtr 5 196~ -. l.'our 1'1oney's Worth OVER THE COUNTER Complete-Ne'v Yori{ Stock List Bulls and Bears NASO Ll1t1ngs1for Thurtdty, Oec.emlMr 41 1969 ••IK Nt; tilth.I Hltll i..w CltM Clltl Jtltt Nfl tllft J Httll l.tw Cl"' ("' 011 PK l'JO 1' II 6S -ll'i l"H l'lrl 1tfl ;fir-Ille ·~ I~ l I f; '"~M 0 " 11)-.iRO 1.lO j 2• • 14 • • 1 I• 1'1t City 2 C S.la "!ti (Ml I Nll ll ltW (MM Ck. •..,.._11111<11 1111.,..altt' •""••t•n• .-,.,.... m1111r ' • M , .. m NASO. "-b.tt11t .,, -A-"'1P C BdCil li 3Slo JJ\li J lt1 Fj1N'1Slr 11 trbtun I 40 I d ~ .S\lo Uo F tchDUI AO S 11 21 't -\:, 1rll•lt 60 lS IJ 1 11\11 llll -It Fl)l'lt Fd OSO Now Ob s-o lete? Prkft .. llM Ille ... '"'II " IOM"'-11 .. Ml111!6tw• .. t•mmlM-AbbtL•b I.It ACF lrll i• -lt IOUeWlllO llid Dttw NL i 1 Nell Mo d 31 'I Jll...., ScO! ~ 1• ll iltici....CI I olOe Md •sk~ _ -11 Du<ll\Lft 0 »>l jl 'I N1r Ptt l~o I ~ 116> H l•' \1 At ,.... M~t iD lltnl -llt<I by 0...11'911 l)•) • • Nil !.4<11 \l, 1• :>er OUI A • ~. A<11mE 1 i\,! ~NlllDMI Auoc:I· EZ Pllo'll ,. ~ 21 NI ~llow • '"' •rle cif U\o lit.. •d Mli" Jr ii 1i , 1•, 1•~ -11 t roPLI 1.C •I llh 30\. ll + 111o Fhtltrkl " •I 4 l• •I • -Vo 1roTCl'I I iO 11 11to 21 17 -I Fltml"f loll 11 n . 71 i. " .. -1 ...... le<CP .. ,,. "I ll ""' -~~ Fllnl•Dtt t I• 19t Jf, ,,, 01N P!l1S iHI :Joi l<l\.o0 111.o "'"~ plA•loO l "._ 14 1 u .. .,. ' 1rrG11 l lM t 19 o '9t 2'h + ~ Flln1 ~tn 11 «I l• • ll Ul.'t -\\ 1rtwW «11 11' JG 19 ~ 'Jtl, -!Ji Fil E Cot11 By SYLVIA PORTER lf you own 18~1 you h1,1ve a profit so far In 1969 of more than 14 percen1 If )OU ov.n Control Data }Our paper loss to date 1s a !al 19 percent If you ov. n Standard OH of Ohrc your 69 gain is a v. hop-- ping 39 percent H you ha1 e Unuin Oil of Califo!n1a }Our years loss Ls close to 4l percent If you re a shareholder ln P olaroid your gain Is more than 16 percent lf you re an owner o( Bell a nd Howell you J>l'iO\V a loss of 8 percent It has. been tough enough to pick ttie right 1ndustr1e.s In this \ear of generally sagging slock prices Assuming you were s mart e:1ough 4 tO do so though y01.J at least might have expected that stocks \\llhlll thal right indus try \vould go up -even t hough some might have gone up much more Lhan others But as the Boston invest ment firm or Vance Sanders and Co pomts out even this {.'()nSIStency 1 Within rldustry grou ps of stock.""; has been lacking this year IN FAC1', 1f aH you looked :it "'tre the above price con lr asts yoo would be hard put t o tell whether there has b een a bull 1narket or a bear tnarkel 1n 1969 lhe firm remarks -adding that the ter m s bull and bellr could LEGAL NOTICE Leon Nntm•n Cla k Adil' 1111,,etor w th t~t WI I •nne•!'CI cl !he E•IB1t ol Sad Oecea•f:O !COSTAS aHD POTTE ll 3'•1 tlh Strttl Et ll l'•lll'Hl•!t c11 t Ttl on1 WIMhO• 7 lltS 411, ""'' ltr •ctmln 1trlltr Pub 1heO o 1nvt cou 01 ~ " o Ott""'"" s & 17 1969 ,, 1161 69 l F.G!iL NOTICE -NOTlC:E 0' PUlll.1C HE"AiTNG- NOT CE 15 HERE8Y GIVEI hi II>• 1~ (nun< I al !ht C I~ o• (<>'it• "•H ., 1 fli:ld 1 11ubl t M~ no on O•ltm""r 1• 1'6f II ~, l'toll OI 7 CIO OtllK~ om 11 8s ..on th• 'al!P ~• t~e mal •r m•• be ~eard n lht Ceunc; I ChamCf'f • ti!• C tv H• 11 F~ Ori..-Cg ~ Mti• on th• 11> own~ <1r1tr beO ~1011• •~ on Re1on• P•l lkln R 1169 lo K~ tn • FPnn UU P 1c•nl 8 "'"~nut N•woo ""•ti! Ct !D n 1 to ~ermlHIOI! 10 <efOM Lo•• 1 ~nd ? ot II oe~ A t oc • 1 ~I •l'oOW" on A '"'~" !CO Oed 1• r\lltt! an..,. I Mia• !JQ(llo 70 01•• 1 ecoros ol O 1"9t Coun!v trom R• CP '" lli,ld rtll o OD•rlY I• lor•IO'!I •1 1°'1 '°'" p ~••~' • 4v•nu• (nJI~ Me<.a NOTICE IS FUll:ff<Elil GIVE~ ll>~I ! 11\P I"'' end o act ~nav• mtn on•O any ~nd •I ~t•W~I lnt~"'''" m•Y ~0-~"d be h•• o b• In• C ri Cou"t I on •'1110 1',.~IOnt Pell Oil II I '" ' C: K PD IE$f C •Ctr~o • C i. o Co• o Mir;• Publ 11>!'CI 0 ~~9• COll~1 Df 11 • !QI rlKtrnber S. 1t6t ~1•1"'9 LEGAL NOTICE o.1i.n7 •i:uru:: 1:::i \.b J~ S:t; ~t1" ~b£' 1!~ 1,t! ~ v~fNJ ~! 1: .. ::i;r.~ 1 become obsolete In the years rro:.,.1e111.1'11 •r•~EM.,Et 1~~ 11 o ~Jcr:t'l ~~ ~~ v"'t.1~1° ~ ~ !:~rr.;,' c~~ re14nl.rl"' lnttr II "llte t 'I 101/t Nltls A l6 ll loner Co I I'< ilt,lr Prod '100 .lle.d '' the divergence' In 0Nt1r 1rlc11 D ol Niue 11 1 I, Nit 1 B 3' ll g•I We1 11 u Ajr P11 ou 1$ •D11ro11lm&lt/Y ) l~l(OY • 1. NA Rtl{ J l I NE Ttl JIO.. ,. • A rRtcl 1 ISO k thl 0 I'll II wll en •llelt ll•om s ' 6 NC• NG , •• 1n IJ~ 1G 1S 15 " AJ IOOutl ~ ~toe prices WI n any given U<:11ru1e~ cMild 1 c ~v• • ':i s1. r.rEu o 1 J , • , w Gsco n1, """A• G1• 1 1u d b l'llVI n OYr-I 0., 11-1 !•~ NP4 GI> 16 11 ~ EISWt U IS• AltMtllo( H 111 UStr) gTOUp t C 0 m e th•* lltdj or I oMll!Ul 6 I lllW N• G Uo '"'° 1cerw •II> IQ • • tt<'IA ~ I )0 i.old (b f. 11 .. r Ell<; C1g » , U • .. W,PuSw 11 11\< f RW1$ 7S 1', A tCl$1•11111 " greater rather than smaile.r o.•itr m4r11.t1• emos 011 11 1 2111 Nut RK 11 » t~ Sc•'" 10 10t. Ale~ndrs lOd The reason for th1~" Agari ou1 1ht elev l>r k" l!)r.e a Ile •'• •'• • 1N11 Ml'r N 11 "' o s r 111. u Alleo 6ol oo en..-11\r-h-EMrov ( loO Jl ~ o Ar1 IO>\i 11111 "" HPd 11 1•\~ 4 11'11 (D .20.t I lh Id :1111 not ,,::~ e:i'W:~,a ,il! ~' ~•n 5; ~~ 1~':;; f! '~1. $! ':1i:t:::= ~~ \ s e ever v. e n Ing ni.rkclolfl'n °' ~Eon Coro 2i... 1\ 11r TP 16"-11, U<ld•I F t • , .. Allt11 Pw l.Jl 'nstltut'o •• l'z.t'on Or the ..., Hl(lrl Ea111! 01 12 • n 8"'' NA •• 1;. lllNI Ft J. )~, AIJledCh 11'0 ,.,. ... en• 11 11\.'f E•k> Te< p 10 1 .,,. I n Ttmo• 21l 116 Al lclMM .ail 11 AAI Coro s' 1\11 E1!tr1n 4Sl. .i.1.o PEC 1, I 11 • ll'ft Tlfl(ltr I tl7 ... ur:M II IS stock marpet \V t l so many l'res lde ttt AFAPr s io ,, Fa ceco • 6, P1b!.1 er 4• 4SV. r1~'"e u ~ iv. All"' Pel .. All~ lllC 10, \1'111 Ft!rt d T t 6'11 P•t Au o l .... S T•v!Or W •1 IJ 1 All ~1" 1 «I Professionals Se CU t I l I e S AVM Co t i• ~VI Ft r1t111 1•"' I•'~ Ptc FaE "lo!> J:5 't t enn1nt 1 ~ 19 •"I tel up 60 Acme E t\0 la~ FtdN M! \Sl lSI Plkto (o S Ste. T•~•I AS 1 1 4 , A II (l'lllm analysts I n v es Im e n t Ji Dean Renfro O\\ n A<rne vR 11 » F11 80• •• "" P•nco1 J, • o The•m .., s1 6 } AIPlllPf "' Ari HO\e It 1 to ') F•IG llE 1•\ 2! Pkw• 0 1 h !~"" T lllW Co 25C 25>.; A CCMI IO managers etc tan esumated er and adm1n1strator o[ 1o1r 1..._ j • 5"' F11 Reou 31, J>, Park'" t< is 1...., T 1fnw n •~· lOh •m•1~1111 1 .o 15 000 d A rbrn F 1 "111 Fsl WF n • • > Ptultr. P 9\0 9\0 Tll•" Go lj 11 AMllAC SO now) stu ying every Laguna Beach Nursing AIDH 1-1 11 11111Fll<kny '! o lP• P•V•lt H 1s Trac coo s'll. AmerE1 116 C-mpany In e'ery detail t"e Albtf"I• 10 1 II J. Fl11M $•1 2 ;. 1•~ PttflH T ,, 2• • TrM.nl G ll'lo 11 Am Hfii 15':1 ·" 11 11ome has been elect A•k.o Lnc1 u ~ u"" Food ,. s J1>. P~n 01.L ~ , '"' T ...:.n1 a J\l •v. Amet< Pl so different fortunes o( d1ffere1t iltil o 8tv ~~ ~ For11 Oii 11111 11 P• ENI n no •~ Tr.l'ld in n n , M l Flnr 10 Cd pTeS1dent O{ the J 100 Alla Pea • !J,F0I G•nl .H Jl Pa G&W 71l 26lo Trl(O Pd 19 lC 4mAr ~ IO con1parues w1th1n the same 1n A1 d At<o 3. 1~ Foloc:hr 1,,. 11. """n Pt< •l1 • ~ T• <1•1• 11 n~ A B•k" 1Jp n1ember Caltforn1a As~ All ec1 Ea 1l~ jl'l-Fotom 11 1t Ptnn llE 10 ' 10<1\ I'.., c• J'I ~ 11 •mak Noe • dus+,.,_, are bound to be un 1n iltilon Ge11 1""° 1 v;, F011r SI!• 2• ~ 1Sl P•o~1 w. '" '·'~ v~ Fd u • ""'"'ma ~nc1~ 1 "'1 s oc1at1on o! N ur s g 4m•dt '~ 1!oFrnkt Co , .. 1•1 Pe•nl I ·~1 1.Jn lec 1 ' Am8dc>1 lill derscored 1n the marketplace Am Bu•" 10 11 Frnkln E 24 o;, 1s Pe• 61 t l1 ., un Doll• 2• 1• • Am Bdt1t w1 ~l omes A El L•b 6l• 7 FulVtW s I Phllclo pt 6] 61 Un Ilium 11 w. Am C1n 210 There WOn t be OllS Or ----------------I Am 11Ero 7111 71 Fll<IU• 7) 10 101 Pl'l 1 S~b 'XI\ 11 '>Un MtG I I 8~ A(an OI I IS f f Arrt Furn t •Vi Fuoul to t~> 10 PNHon Ill • lt •Un Rtlo l ., 11 Aft}~~·, m M ' papers ' or slee s a I act A Grt1e •• •I\:. G1rll'll< 11 u Pk dP l~• l"" u s Skno1 11 • 11 A ..., ... n 1 60 •-Th f\ -"m ln•d 21 19 G•• Swc l• l I•• Pink In 76 77 us Crvm l 'l:I • 4mCl'H I IO 1ng tu~ sam~ way ere WI A Mt, 8 I ' I Aire!! } ' 5 t Por• HI( 2.!1~ 16. us Envel 'XI '1'I ACrySua 1 olll be hundr•ds of compames "Ith PLC Gan" l S A MHko ll\• 11. 1C1 ... 1c ;)It 1.w P•D Go1 111 111.o us suaar .,.., ... Ac .... a1 •so • Am Plot 19 10l't RI Ell I 9 P<OQ Ane • 1 S US TrkL 3l 36 1 iltimCVi~ I 1S P -•sely def•n-• strengths • s1 Gao • • S\4 "'ti 1. i"" Pubs NH 1s4 •• , ua PPnP 1 2 n~ Am c 11rn1 1 f'".,,_. C\.I AS! G or I• ll~ Gjften IJ IS>, PubS NM ,51, 76 U ~h Slcl 6 61> AO ~ T!! •OD weaknesses and potentials ' Am Telv o 11,,. G nos •1 • •l •Pubs ,.,c 11 n •o u • Ind 31' 11 .t.OY11v '"' Anl'leut 8 ni, 7)'11, ltrltll JG ~ Pub I~ 16•1 16 •Val LO 8 9 40Yll O 1•6 \1 Lth1n the groups respondr1g Co Ank•n c 1h "' ~·~ w ~s ~ ""1 Pu ea1 6, i v~...:e 5• 11 ~ n AmEIPw 111 d 2 ty Artllt H ll lt Rub ·~ ! , P f:l~n~et 7! :i. V•ron ~~~ 36 J Am Er.Ka II to the consid ered JU gments o( llll Ara ind 111. u•~ c,c H 1 11\11 Pur iv s1 16 ~ 11 v1v woct 1<1. n:i.. Am E•11 Ind 'he Pros Ar6tn M U 11'1'1 L~ 1G> 1t POuo Co 'I'• ~ 0 Wtri•w II 2, 1• "'E•lnd D Al A doln cit J.; Joi C 1 I' llid Ovn lS 'I' 11 ., N Roadol S r t AGenln1 .SO As 'I I LL I ON S h Ark MoP UV. U'J. rloll Sc :!'\ IO llt Tr~ 10 11 1 <hw s 8 o AGn n on 10 " ave Co t A.r-H •7 O'/ teen Ml 11 l1 '1 R•n1t1EI }1 -,:)7\.\ e1h Nr: 1•• 4•oAmf<o •t 10 dlSCOVered to their SOrrOW In mpa1ues Arv Cit 1Jl't ll't rnlt RE II • ltlo llt•<h l'D 1~1 1.. l•h llE 10 • 11 • 4 Hamt! I 40 AiCC llol "J0\'1 11V. Grlnl'lel 112 ~11• > ll1•m Cn 1J ?S W01 T I• lllo "'HorTW OI 2 'his dismal 1969 It 8 becom'ng .t.u10 Sci U 16 Growe Pr ll 141/o lltcoa Eo 9<I 70 bb llt 1\~ 16'-I "'m Ho~ 2• Av"'1<o I Mio ,,. h In 16" ll' Ilea Mo 16 16 ~ Wtld rn 151 M>.:; Amlnvst I 10 ever more dilf1c ult to be a BlbtlJn •l'I 1 uere1 c:11 5 5 ~ 11.1 Cred •l>J. •'\lo we'"" M :t»4 11111 "ff:Fdv I'll el Pacil'c Llghflng Corp a Belrd Al I 1'4 u I Int '~ 101'1 111..-Sto 11 7S WeU~ll G 11>;, 1'"" A Cl~ l IO SUCCCSSfUJ dO-ll yours f In • lle~r 26 21 v ocln t • 10 llOIO F~ 711'1 71\'I W11nl P •.. <> f.. Cl~ C>I ' d1str1butor o( natural gas 1n l!l•I P•lll! •U 1·~ •nov• s 21 2• llob n M 2fi YI ....,, n Nt. l""' 11 Am Molon vestor B•f'lstr c ll'o ·~ H•tlnd 1 n 11 ~ 11o•t n" 1 •~ w. n Mio S\IO 6 \ A.mNa G11 7 Here are Other Price 'ar'a Southern Cahfomia plans t'J ll•rYtC~ 1u 10"" Hevtn 1n 1 • i llo• r-1i1 •I'> 1 w n I' b 1• 1<'1 Am Pl co 11 0 C I ll••ln p l'llo no H!th MQI' 1 •4 t? ous s w :in •1 w "" wn <> 't 9\lo All.tsOv lGll tions within industry groups acquire ty,o range oun Y aeumr1 4••~ 4.S'lo t-Jonrect F 11' JS 11.~., Ho 21 ;, 2• ~1 nb4o :i;i..., 2 ~ 11.m s...1 1 real esfal. d'"'elopment com B•v ,.. 1101 1, !~ ~ ,f:!lt<o<1 .,,'"' 1v. • ~•di'-• 1 11. v n11'" T • 7'4 Am sn1a '° sefected by Vance Sanders "'' enchm .... ~.," ,.,.11 ~c~"" E s '"'""'PL ,....,,, A sme 190 d Iv d Btllt 1sle I J~ 16' t-ro m EP 61 H <cllo n 1 1' .., ~ w it ~ ~ i>t "'m5"Alr 70 The dates art 12-31 68 to 10-31 panies it announce C se m tnd '" 1oi~ Hoover 19 JO <cl r-~ r J 1v. wr "M w 1•~· i• Am s d d Y Rerk Ha H ~l HOIJ!I F • 2 7 • Scl Ind .... l>lo Y<dnv E t\ti 1 ~ 4mS d ot• IS 69 -during which period the nes a Btt• L•b "~ ~ HI>(); "'' 1>11 1 • Am S•er ' •s Dow-J'"es industnal stock Pacific s board of directors a 11 ... os w 1~ 111o Hud PP JI..., 1'" ... -. A Suo• '10 ...., ll•d Son J5 :II HllQ Gt• 1•~ IU •m5 o or OJ aver.-decl•o-• 9 3 percent agreed to acquire Dun n Brrtcnr ''• 61-t Hurst P 11 11 UTU:.\L Am r&r 110 ie1-i:u 1111ck HI :n :n:11. Hv1n co 111; JS M " Amwwk 1 ~s coPPe• Properties Cotp of Santa Ana Raoue El > 1Vt J"d G•• 11V1 l1 AW <:> e1 1 15 Pht ps Oocltt t 1•, h f 500 000 R¢H e,, II l•l,I Ind Neu! l'IV:I ll Am l nc ... -----~. 5l l'• ror exc ange o com Boo he c 1•\".> 21'1'1 lnte et ,, •, Amt1ek 60~ -· h d F d k Bo! C•a u., J IM•rd S ~ .t.m!~cnc ao 1non s ares an re e n c s a. d sv• .o ,, n cont 1• , 15\; AM'I. co 10 Development Corp or Fullelon ~·~~v5t~ ~'Z ~;ir.. 1~~::., 5~~ 1t l( :~!'..1n~0 ~· o•uos l lllv (Et I .... I ELICT•OHICS AM• Ml lc<'Y lnll P1oer H•mme mill l'"'Pl!ll SO'T O•INKS CO<• Co!• Ro,tl Crawn STl!ll.S Tlltll •U•••• +'91••· '" .. ,.:; •.. 19 .... "I I~ • 111 . +11 0. 1S 3 , .. l 0 • 11 t!. +• ~·· ~·· Gulf Tells Earnings Gulf 01\ Corp 1 o d a y 1 reported its consohdated net income for Lhe first nine ~ months of 1969 was $472 Gn 000 a two percent...-1n crease over the $463 594 000 earned 1n the same penod las\ ~ year ror 275000 PaClfic Lighting R~:z-::. ~~ i~, ~~ .~· ~W~l'I ,:\ 1~, FUNDS :::ie~d1i•0 Ommon Shares \he Company Butktv . 10 ~ 11 nt Ille r • • lo>o An•COfld t l'O C Rurll!IO s-It 1' ~ 1n1 s v1 n , 11 ~ BncnHoc:~ IO said ~?C''"~e:. 1r! 1~~ :~: TV:~' ·~ 1: • :;-:~ac~~~s1 ,:, The acqui.s111ons s a Id Cal IN SY ''Ii )j n t•I 11 , 11 I A~cn!CP 70 C:tmco 1'1'1 '1 Ion C• ,... 71 Aoc<>O •11 Pac1hc Lighting President r•r111n M 11 11 It SotJ• " JO NEW VORK fAP > 1"we1!0•1 G•oua Aou• Chtm C4n~M a i1 n1 J4co~I F ti 5 -T~e lo ow "111 quo-IOS nd( S 1) S ~ Alf"-Swc; 9~ Paul A M1Uer Continues our ~:~··S'c,., ,! ~ 1~ 1:~u~.~ l\ • 1~"' 1~~ 0~11 ~~o ~~r. ~~!i ! ~ 1~ ~~ : fr.l's ... ~ 1 Iii program for building substan c:ao tn!A J ,., J•me1 15 1 76 l • o" o1 5«11rft fs sock 1tJ12011 A ans os 10 f It db l'&nTt~ •'i 5 J8moov ll l?iOtet• Inc ae Soiltcl 1111 tu ArmcD$ 11-0 t1a nonregu a e us toess In [• 1e 111 '"" ~l' J nv O• • , 1 th• or c•• at '"h Cl\ V•r P1 111 a 51 • mou 1 60 th I td r-1 Ir (.~ 'In 7"I K1 ''' S• n ni... tht t .ecu Ill• lnw R•)l'I 5 02 5" A mr C>I •IS 0 er 1e s ••C NG I •• , ... Kl IS DI " 1\1 CDU d l'l1¥e bet" hltl l2 7l ,, " A m1 Ck !O Dunn Properties 1:; priman Cente~ 41 • n \ K• var JI :111~. okl Ito d or 11ou9111 •¥•11 1s '' , • ._, A.rmCk ofJ 11 •n yo5 11' I~~ 1(&1' Grn • • 5 !1s•t<1) Tl>u s.OY •Y I •l I •l ArmRuo I 60 fy a de\' eloper 0£ 1ndustr1aJ cn,.rl RA S>t l • K1v•m • > 5 I HnrtKk I ll t lft Aro CD P oO harl O S o •~Ketr T u ,\S lld Ai•Jar.11!'!~ 216]'16JA•n nd :tnd commercial build1ne-s C:hm t.e• 11 ~ JJ Ke11e11 6 , •'• Abf dn ? l• 1 5l Kt"'• on• F ~d Ai;nk! o 10 IO' Chl!ITI d l ' l" l(el wd l l JJ\1 Adv \. 111 I ~s CUI l!I R l• 19 u As d 8 'IN Fredencks Dtvelopmenl 1s an c"e• lnd ~ :W Keulf I' I•~ n AttHed 1 JO '" cu•"' 1•r,,.11.,i •sdOG J:?o CheitJll lS 16 K•veFb 111 5 Atute 10?510 ' Cus II• 39197•A •dS~'>l ?ft 1partmenl buLldcr 1n Orange en a &I M "' Kevs Cu> 11 2•h AllAm "' !7 9! c~, 10 11 ~ '1 A•i.t:1Tr~n •o Ch 1 S tS 91 Kevsl PC I~ I' Ali:>h~ Fa 1 901)01 Cus Kl Sll 581 A CvEI !l t..;ounty ch 111 DI t11 1n1 Kfl<I 1n n i.:. 11"' AmceD •oo eS6 Cu• s 1191 91! A. llcMld 1 C1&tle I l 'll K1nosEI 6 't l \11 Am8us JOIJ:r!r Cuo S1 995lOMARcnp/Jl5 Fi11ance Brief s NE\V YORK (lJPI l C: 1 U 4 2!; 'U K r1< (o 11 • IJ\ Am Ov ~ ID lO 11 lJ Cus SJ I 9 J l9 •11 ll lch Pi J Ct 1 tJ B JS\~ 7614 Knao Val 11 > 1• AE• \Pl JO 0? Cu-i S• 5 l~ 5 1' A 11th o 110 Clerk Ml 1• 2.1 Kre •I I\ 1 l:i Am G•1~ S 9"I 6 41 Pol~• • ?R • 69 Alias cnem 1 ',',•,•,I~.,-1 •'•"• c,•,Ac__ Oa~ 1> 3 Am In~ univ II I(" t~b Ii tl 1st All~~ Cora II ' • ,~ •.. 16 ,,, Am Mui 19'1 91l Knck r.1 11 7511 17 ATO nc QA~ c nlon o 1 0 1 L•nd• In 1 »• "'mill G n l (I;) l )l1L~• G<lh •n• 7S 9 o Autor~ p ~ Cow Co 11 21\.'I LIM Wd 1• 1•>,Am P~c 7JJ I DSltX nvt •u \03' ... ulom ln Ind I COO• C:o 11 /1 L• ;on • ,.., AnCl>o G O D L•• 11\cn BJ; 6 I) Avco (~ I 70 Co om E 1 61 L~rwn M l o 11 Cao 9 0~ 9!'0 1,.~etr• 6 l~f Avta p/J ;>O C:alln• F 7l ,.~ Le,a VLd ,, ,.,. 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Htmm PiP J 1e 1 11 i ~ ~i': t~:: tri: = ':~TS ~.:~· ~ 1~ f~ •• fi 1 t; • =', ~~~~ !& 'fl ~. ~ ! 1!;! +' The earnings v.ere equal to $2 28 per s hare five cents 1nore than the $2 Z3 a share for tlle first three quarters of 1968 Madison Square Garde" Corp (mo nst 11)1 lj'' M•1 RI!~ 7' I ~ 811 F'd 11 M11 u Met~· s 17 ! 1111 llin<rP pt 1 " C:mo Mll'I 1 1"Mt lkrt Ml "' Bond•k 661 111Mt 00<l Ill 9~ B•n<tf' p/l l5 Cmc T• c 10 lt•Mom A• 2'• l~ llo11on St 7AJ 15"MaA MiJ •ll 130 aanko!N'I' 1 a nd Ptuhp Levins G & \V C:om •s lo t'l\Manln M •• ···B<ljl Fan all tllM<Wll•C~ •J715l'llBankTr 21• l }1•) " " ... ·1 r.ud1hY ro I 6 u 13•, ,,,, IH•"" H•r n s ,,,, • I 1J > 2l l 7l 1 -1(o CudftY pll 1J 11 11'> 17-. 11'\ -, t1antiCo 90 / 16,, l7 ' 2/\J 31 Oil •7 •I .. , ltu ll91n '11 1• 1° o l•' ltl -1 Hann•M 1 30 , lli:. 16 l~;•. '1 • 9l 61 , 61 621'i -+ t Cummln l~b 16 JI JI o J1 '> -1 ~•rceY• 1 11 SI Jl'o ~ -+ Increased earnings were Jn part accounted for by record \ olumes of cr ude 011 con densate and natural gas h quids p roduced Id {I e Id s outside the US and or natural gas produced both 111 the U S and overseas ,1c cording to E 0 Brockett board cha1nnan However tnese \Vere ofrsel by rtsin& costs of operations as a result ot new labor agreements 1n flalion and a substantial 111 crease 1n the cor poration s lux bill • Rapid Bu ys Irvine Site C Con Roi:k '9 Jl MIFIOf C IU 10 ~ Boslon t 12 I II Moodv s \J 6S U t1 9 bO 7 JM I and & Development o a c s1r~111 J<• •, MB•m Gr 12 ~ u ,-, a oil<! s1 1•51 rs IJ Mo• an Fund• 11! d CR 71 f I th G Ir &Contrl!I t ll~M llrowr .)(IV :l"l Fl l<>t~ l•dlSll Grwn 9J~l0619811c rn: ao JO nl Ven Ure WI U COnlrln J l•• Mt vet 0 •D • CG Fd • 18 9 t'1 Inc om J 9 • l!l ' I d C00ot L 19\ll l'O~McOuv 11 19 C11n•dn 116ll'019 Insur B26 90S ••t In' 80 Western Jndustr1es nc Sal rci a s 2s '7 Mede H 111 1 21 cap~mr 112 tu! MF Fd 81~ 8.,1 Flas c 01 2so h d Cosm Yr 11\o 19 1Me<1trn JI J9 (llP nw ~27 •61MIF Gh S~9 6 S B~te1 Mio t ey now are CORSI er1fng Crwt o 7SU "'"'Mt DB ' 1 =~ ~:~I ~r l~ n 1~ :~ ~ 8:?.. ~ ~ 1~JI ~~\;J ""ldPI 1 resolving their rival bids or ~~:! 't~ ~ ~ !i ::::~rd cc: 1 n Channlfl9 Fund• Mut s.,F") 11 a111 81 B11uoc~Lb 80 control of R-ooRvelt RaccY.ay ~~':,~~~ ~ l~~ n ~ ~l~tGT 1i~1 1~') ~!.:"51 1: ~ 1 ~:: ~~~ 1t' '~~~ill 11,11:~~.~'t: ~ nn Long Island in a Joint 1 en oantw M 11 11., Mol• G•• :JC '°' Grw"' • u 'tJ 1r1~1 wsec-9 •110 11 ," ,~• 1 ,.,,. OS'> I 111/oMU vc. U 'i ni lncom 76l ll•Nnr nd I 00 1 'IO t8 d> 1 turc But they said no agree 06lllln p I'• I I.lo lbch I Jo 51>t<: ,,. JIONal !nvst !)) 90111'" F 01110 h h d Davis Fd I 11 Moel s' I 9 C:~••f G OllO lllrt $Ku 5~ 8etkman 10 1nenl y et as been reac e oav M r 11 ~ 11 .. 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H 11 o 2i i 711., ~ o Ima Co Am 1"5 • IJ 0 IP o _ I II , 11 ? 15 0 + 0 fVIUICo lb 1S ,. 28•1 "!' -INA (p 1 (() It"/ JI Jl ll , t 2• ,. , 11 , 111,_ Ou-ePw l '° • JO•• ,.1, lO • '" •• n<Dl'"ht c~n r 11 11>0 1J o , a - P i.sn• department st ores has a balhst1c aerial target systl'.m Cliltfl,IC4TI! OF •USINESI d d -· I l ,1ctirious N•ME purc hase an moVt.."-1 n o a -to the US Navy TM undt1S!•n"' don ctrtl!v lh&• "' lt 20 000-square fool Cacj)ity in The 1n1llal sales are for 100 <onctuc.UMJ • 1rutlntu at 1m E•s 17 ~ the Irvine 1odustnal complex of 1he J6-!001 [nng rocket 11r<r Slrttl !>In!• Alie.-Calltor"I' Ur.def l~t v ,. t cllti(M ll•rn n&m' ol C.OLONIAL And adJOln1ng )ot of 48 000 pelled targets boug ht by the ::_~1:re~tt~ :'!Of\:·"'~1:; 1'.:.:'e square feet has been leased Navy for test and evalullon n•tnt '" tu 1 1n<1 ai.ct o1 P'llOtnt' " 1' lor expansion purposes The iiohrl fuel ro ck<' t '~1~1 d 11 Tu•ne• 76ll En1 s1nlt Rapid Merchand1s1ng \V<t 5 s 1n1ulates a tactical airplane s c 11 • 5•~11 "'n• ''' • locat-• I" Anaheim prior to d d h d th 0.1111 111ovtmbfc 2 10.. ..,... " Spee an ex aust an us oona c1 11: "Tu,,., moving its \Vei;t Coast head can provide a low cost train111g !.TATE OF C.•LIFORN A ORANG!! couNTY quarters and nallonal data target for both co1vcnt1onal Of! NOWtmbfr " lt6' t)fln I mt t e ter to the C0ffi t ft d f Not••v P.Hllot: tn 1n11 tor •~If s111t processing c n an 1a1rcra guMery •n or ,....,on1 1v •""""° Do1111t1 11 Tu•ne• plex the heat seeking rtde\e an.-~-ft 10 mt to l>t tht ~'1<1" '""°"J;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;~"~--, ~-I tubK71tl'Od " IM .. n~I~ I~ U•umtnl Ind ltk"'°""le<lffd ~ '"e.;\lll'd ,.,, 11mt fOFFIC:IAL SEAL) llon"le J Sdttlllcll No11•Y l'ubll' C•I fO ". P nt Ptl Otll~ In O••nft C-1• 1~• c.,..m1H Of! Eo•i,., JU • )(L 1'71 SCHMl'(SING • I SEE BY TODAY'S WANT ADS De"r S"1tnte 'fr1I f' n11n<:> mink NC\li nr.tur11l 1nur nallnr :sll'ullr1 lrnJi:th fron1 JlobTnson" e 8'>}-"'I -.1!1 prll:c a Sch\1 inn "t1~ ra,.v ~hock 11.btwirber ~ knobbi' r iJt co11C11uo11 only $35 • t ron1 Ollf' v. ho •! )"OUti; a l tican 10 ricllg/4 ttrr p1:<(1t's and clON In \1lUr ll!r 11) thl11 chllrirf't ll ha.u'll•h•I tor 1 nrw look 1n11tat1ng a tucucal Jet s pass 1n(om 601 16J vev~• 111 t J awns._ 1 ~0 S!>ftl lOllllll R'o Tech SOl !SQllun•wk lOa lO 18 ,. 18 + 1 Ou~,p 016 JS 3 10'/'o IOI l01•o -•In ~Cwm ':?, 1? t>1 9 9 3.1 •• 19 , It: OYnBcll Q1 •O SJ,_. 53 llt.-J.>,tnda"f<d 6 !111>0 n t ?• -\o 11vcr dclendr.d ground fXlSI Stoc:~ • •111 tit llt•e • 1l o u 1; ButvEr 1 lll EW >I IJ 32 U SI llo1rntt. I IO I OR Budd Co IO • ' •• , I 10 ,"".,a.!.n, ',-o,A l l ?5~. 2••· 24. -'• lnOHd gU~ 1 91 90 l'O -1 6 ~· ,., 115 10. 10.S 105 "' Mol!Pl I SO 1• 7} 1l o ?l , Lion 1n111al EQrt ll )0 U .ii S•~m Fd I> I] I 10 llYCIV f Q M Emr9 Sc J&t l•~'cnu,rr lS tJll •J Bud~•1 n t• 1 Ii.. 1' T'' •duPonl a!•IO t• 6So ~··• 60I•-1 Mf'l 1>1611 fO 1(1 I'll 1• 1t l!•t 1S•• -'duPont afl '° ' .Si I 51 • ,, • -indll*MP IO 5 :n , I ll + fhghl • f E"t••Y 11"UttScll04e• F~nd1 8uttFo g 1 10 EntOtst 110 106 Int In• lo IS lol!l llylov1W 60 I ")6 lS I 3" +.11o[)llQLI 1tl t1 l'l"'i 7l o 11 )-4-1n11e•lla"" 2 ·~ l'o Jto :n -'• 10 'I o Jllo J7 1 -1 Do • 10ofl OS 11'0 71 71 JI l~I ...... ,", ", J l • ~ 11 Joi > - unrunncr h E'W t• t " 10 l • $pcl >3 If JI.I? Bunk ll~m" 11 e rc 1nade I IS Eou G h 11 01 1• 1• 11~ is 16 11 1• aur'A 011 so 1•t 11 l • n • 0Yo1.1 ..,, 1 .. lll 77 '"' ;110 1 •1 31 11' I 1 o.o '1 1I ~ 76 + .., lnmo"•Co 16 1t 16 l.S + I 0 _ ~J lO o JP J51.r -1'\0o 11501117 1)0 7•'1 7to 1•• Inmont e>t•SO 11.00 51 .SI SI -1 En t• 1110 C:om 51 11 111 T.t llu•I l~d Oii the US \\lar1neEvt • In n '1n11\t<-DI• 10S9 tl•!fluncl• 111 1 2• 1»• 2J>.t -\'Do 'llll>fl 10 110 11, 1n. ,,., -, •nil Cl 11)11 310 1• 11 1 731 '1 "IJl1 1g II t nrps P11ln1s I E•aO l•U,!&IStcEQUI jfO•lfBu•r<1h Ml B a S l' fl\ Cil y n1ne Fllf!O 11 ll I• ~~[.\"" ?5 I II B~hUnv ! 17f F~rm au 11l0 1?115• Am 1a1t11 c7 l•l 1~1'. IS~ 151. -1 Ovmotno '1! ?!'> u I U•o IJ•· -~'"'I( 11A! 2.S 75'' 1•. 1•. + 16 ?O lt • lt~o -• Dvn• Am •O 71 t n~ 11 11\o 11~,,o ~ Ofl1 103' 11 SPo SJ • s.i•o + c E 1.. " ,. "10 11 11'• 21'· +-"'a G•h UOOljJOSel HCS 1•.tOlltJ Fld C8P 11 n l '' sri1 Dt•n 10 "IQ ;o in c~tNr• '" 611 Tl f t Fd Ful'ld 110.11 •1~,. 10 0 1,7 ( ! F I lC 3~1 HI argct w I SFd Tr!l(J ll10210fjl•m~ 1or.n01c::iah~a"1:1t ---·.----11"'~"•,s i 10 1fl 21~ 10 U•o + 11 3 '1 ~! 3!~ ~ lfe~tPcll 10 / l'll '9 II 1t•J60 35.ioJSI el I, I I -It Ees(O Cll to H ll ~ 1 ' Int leFr .Ob 161 12•\ ,, 61"o ~I •• 1•• 72t"o n•~-')EeslAlt i>o 20S I > 7 4t 211 + >tn!H&rv llO 1111•• H~ 13 '1 1 db h Flnllli:I P•oa Inv ll lltl loOc Ill u1 dt:s1gned and deve ope y t e ov""' • si .., n ~ 1m1 rr 9 30 o 16 c::::::sP 110 nav~1 • O •d~"' II t11 fll i.o !Po 11•~ 1r i , 6 • ~~ J5'• -·~ lnlHold l 100 1~ lP• 11 + 1~ 14'• .).I\• lo~ t• ~::: ifiri r.: 1n ~"" 1""' I~~.:. ; .~ lrld"°':l1,, ~ ::. : tt"' ~· =: ~hss1le S) stems D1v1slon of ...:.om • n • 11 Swn Inv 9 u t 01 V•nt l•l tiSwnvGI 1 91lil \tlantlc• Research C o s I a ~~lfn "o•, 11 !~1~ B ~~~ir~nv 1l 'J 1&~~ l\lesa to meet the n11htary ~:: \~~: 1i~1lftf,r,~m5f1 ~rs 5f~ scrv1ccs nr-eds for a ball\sllc ~·: 'i:~11 ; ~ ; a $I~~"'.~~ "u.:11110 Fs1 S e • una•t I F~u< 1.16 I ff air tar!Jilt system (BATS) to ,'•''11 ,c,.aP 1•1 Scttn •60 )O• o~ • S-1 Strn Roe Fd1 tnun anhaircrall personnel ~::. i~ 11 l~ !r: :!i 00 ~~~~~ Gunrunner uses a S.lnch FounOr• °' 1 •• lo<"-1.11 I•~ F.,.;rM 11 :It U JI 5u• trC.I 6 I' J SJ rilnmetcr HV AH rocket motor F •"'*-ll" G•r,o i.u.1"'' • H 10 6 h C:0"1 $1 .. IUl"'ll(f GI 10'11100 t ot Is ;iva1lable 1n qu11n11t y C:tl cw Tc 10.01 ,, .. I"-" •o H •1 1 As I b I f IJ 60' '''i'e8r~" 100110" a ~urpus ass ro1n govern ncqm 10' l1t '""n"" 111 •fil nicnl stock Fhght 1tur~t1on ~~··1~~ 1 1~ ; I ~ ~~~~~1 u~•·~ ' I r.1 1;~,~~: 1 nn be \ arltd bv 11!llng !he ~~~ 5!;' 10 ~ 1& ~I ~0 M'I 6 n l.J• llVARmotor Y.1thor\1llhoul aG~~1t• 10 111 0:11r~"c10 llS 111 0-aua '"'< T !• ee to 0:5 10 •11 susuuncr 1notor developed b/ A~ o S<, 1 s? 'J111uoot "~ 16 31 n " '"'" $ 17 )1 1111 T'"'IC Gt • .. 1 •I Allanllc Rese:irch f' l 1 g h Fttl e.o •"' ,. T .. ne '"' ~ ~ • t.i ll"' "",..,,,. U~I Mui 1•n •1P performance alsn can be )!"'v°"" 1s 11 u ?t u111M • n 10 i. changed by using llJSl.atner ;;-:.'ff."on l •" 1' 12 u~=.. Fu"°i'" 1 , motors of varied lengths ~~~ ~"1it\ 1~ 1 1~~1~~ H1no•r I l' I 11 U~ (ti! 1.4• t.tt He bol' 11' •~1 aiu. lll'lf fo "!rlw 1 11 .. 1' l• val LI" 11' !f, tt c 1, ... 1111neo !"'"°"' sirt H•(I~ 0.0.. • l 1-11 Iii 5 1 f t) I I Hrd~t 1 )~1 2v...:.1s v>I IOJ I ll H11li;ie J" t 1• 1U1t • Ji'onodt·y !S la lecl ~ M9"" 1 JG I, u lntttll1t9 f'r LOS A~GELES (tiPll -A 1!1°8'~ f_l! se1 v!~111 •Jtt :~ J l ndus1r1cs Inc announc:«l 1/m,.;t " :i; ;Hl~1t1~"°11 :!l !n 11 will build a foundry al Bfn =i t:" ;q 161 t,tw~ ft"j~ l~~:,,, 1onvlllc Ark to 11u1ke prn "<. ~G 1,. ~1 ~,~Mu lt~'j" ""~ l~.a.1 ~....-11'111~ 11 t o Prietary :llttl produc lll 1 he 1M1 r .M 1)~1J ,, ~~ • 1 11 l'O•lrv I • Wf'trhl l•:M MI G• projct l wlll be flnanctd bv 11 ~·•~ s -j • ''l w ~" "" • •l !' $5m1lllonlocal l11dustnul lxr1d ll~: G:"11 1 'i :~11~~1'4 1'~' f~ •·sur l•v •not"' ll•f"'"' '' >!It Jfl J;J '""•I lo! 1Jllll$! W. ~ l llQ 1!1 • Bangor A ppeal~ NEW YORK E111Codek I• $U ,,., 121. 7J) J~Mlf1!! 7 .. So In IJ 17 \ 11 • -.. E•lon'f• 1.. l4 •I\, "'°"' d .,. M"'-•I 1i>t tr I•, Ech ll'INll 11 11 21 t 15"1 ll 1 i I'• in! Nie~ I 2'11 :rtS •7 , •! 1 • t, _ , ea.rd J ~ 1•1 "• i!!:' n -I • in Pio 1 i.o ~~ r,10 ,. ,, EdlMnllrot I 10• jS o ..,.._ 15'• -!I nll R«t I ;Ill ••~ 14 ~ 1• \ _ ~, EG&G 10 1 1l'> 21 13 • 1n1 sin 1 "° 1 n\i l5 3p , + EJM11tlc Ci'!<1 >'>"I •ll I Int T& T I OS ''l 5, )6 14 -l'tcl .., .. oc: 12 11 • r,~ -•1 n T!l.T atF • 11 tSt 158 1~' -.S 1 EIMln\M .. I 1J ' ~ :!' 1 1 lotT&T OIH • ~ llO lilt l~ 1 ll I ~ E Me,., Mlq 16l 1,1 ... 1n • -2. In l!fl•SO J 106 } 106 l!la.' t u UJfJ EIMM10 Oi i '° u." rit'r&T O/i' • ,., ot .... , ' r;,E1onN1 Ind !• •~ 11 •• ~ 'nT.t.T cil(' 11 •• •• •• ~ l1r!sr:e.,~ '.~ ~· H' n .. _ lnTl oLSS(I 1UCI 1l 11 IJ 4 1 fUPI) -E, 1 011 •O 14G ?I\ 21'• !? _..+ Emtt E~t I 1'06 SI • Sh o _.. Pnnla Bangor Punta Corp has ap-~;:.~~: ~,: Jt ~, U"" Ullo - pealed I rtCent ruhng b y the ~:::J~I~ 1i;! ~ ! n ~ ~ 1 1'1arl~et ,Synabols EnoJollf! ol. I" ~ ... 'I us Court of Appeals f~vonng EFIO l'IM n "° ,, " ~ " J1 ' .. ' ~nnt,au• •• " 11, 36 ~ l6 r £ lhc rival claims of Chris Cr11ft Ei~ G~ '1~ ,: j~'· J~ ~~ -,, l'orp of Oakland Calif:. for ~!r~, f 10 g ~·: n.: n:• ~ • Thi 1111_. nt • • k"' •1 ••-'-uw' ',. \ ' • I • > ' >" >•' ' 11 fhl ·~ ...,,.,..," rwiorl .. c~"•I>• C'Olllrol of Piper Aircraft Corp ;,:~ .. a "'° • :. fk; ~H lft -l °'"" of Lock ltaven,. Pa 1be oourt t~~~1;11~ al •• ., .., ;-:,~ S.1t1 !leltl'tt .,, ""°"ltJ•L hl'.ld tft"l 11 .... ..,,. Punta which f~~~~&'Pt '' • ~~ ~ ~· i 1 ' -..~ nTr1 ar ntr• .. ~,_.1 .,.,, "t" ......., ... ..,. Ft~~ a 2l1 ]I•, JJ~' JTI} '1 l::fo llUI '\'l dlvkHnth ..._.DtHt•M has obtaJned an a11rl'Hlt'l"Jenl 1n F•C111• A sa M "~ •l .:> + 1, .... ?9 111 " v~•r i-:, .... tti. ft r """ "':'lie JO 14'1 o ... f:I ~ ._ J,' ""'lf!t I tulfrl11to:1 ''"' •tu• cl I I Pl h d' 1 111 1._ ' 1,,. '''' +_._\lock Ol•ld•l'ld e-0« .. 1'1'!1 o (H~ •tlut pr1n p e to acqu rt per, a ":1~ 1"" • 11,, 1• 1'"" +---..,. 1r11>C11y10tN1 ., u-d111r1ttu;1on 0•1t ' .I II • !1,. \I ,1!;' II '-1 P11d ''' "'' fl.-O.Cl1rtc1 or 0~ d \lolated Securities nnd Ex it:m ii~ , 30 to! ,;;: ~ • tt• 1~11 or"IM"" or 111111 Ill'. h Co I J "'"''"' 'rt. I 1 I If'~ -I 1t-Dtc1,rec1 It! 11tlii 11'11~ ''''1 ... eo C '"°' mm1•• 00 aun Um I l• 101 ' lJlt ' -t Wmultl~ it-•ITll Olvlo!o"o$ " a• ,,,. .-.~ "••Wr11 " •""I~•-'•"~' -"•d ~1ttt1r dlvk:i•noomlt~ ping rules by the icqulsltlon~1,~:.-',:i ,lJ ~!1: ~ rl -1"'~,:·~~'""FIO~W:r.~':.~;1~~~~ h k or "" fltlO '°t<il~n «I 111 )1 ltPt 3"'• -• erv. \le-e\ dlvHit"l'I ;-Jf•.,lb"° In '""" on t e open mar el ..u rt"',.""•-,1 !!1 n 2J '' 1' ~ '• :i~r"" uu • .,,11m•IN (_.11 v11~ ., p. It ~ ·~ JO H~ 1 ~'1 1.._ + .. '11•fl:frnG °' t11.+fldrl11Utlefl q a. •-1.• shnre:s of Plptr alter an :.b"!..'1 l' 1J ' ha! y ' + h '111011~ •111-.0 nQUnctng ti formal tender (or ~=~s5,, ~ !l ~·· ~; • lf• -t; •-"~ '" "'' lhf' lh:ire~ Chris Crart I~ ~::,0 c'. 1;i; ,: ,t~ .;'• 1r:: ri•r,.."u ""'--"" ~"M' ... ;;:~ ,i"',~ ~eking 10 force! Bangor Punt.al:l:f:,~ 1 L '1 U ' ~ • ~·· + '" ....i-*-u"'" fttU!MO!I"" 1ut11. M-N•-' I di f lf I th h F 1re1 ' ,\ l' o .Jt>y n11 -..,.~ I! lt• ~et .. ,_..._.,.., u~ tt• n \ C!SI 1 se o csc s arts F ~ Fte1•••1n ?• 11 o '° , tt , -" clll-(1'" u.-•• • v Nno a-<111-1: • ~ I • r • • • • l • • -•• ' '• ~ • .. .~ ' '• ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • ' " ' + • ' • t • + ' • ' • • j • +• " -. -' + + + + ' • + " + -. -· + _, + _, ,+ •• + • ·-' . + ·-: t ' _, ·-·--.. _, • ,_ ·-' ·=· 'j + ;t "' I -i r 0 . -' -· ·-' -• ' + • .. -. .. W•"" ... -N•' ' b• .... '°'-"'' - ) ---... r:'"'I' ,.., I U I .to u-1 !11, Kt DIS Int II •l'IO il \111tf0& , nr. ~p.., I 4 low• s,rl IH ;• 11 ow1Pl IOWtPS~ I OC'O I Qloll l'f mo t~ (0'11 Friday's • e &¥¢A 4 ESQ!(i&M JP J ca;; 2 AA,»; • +•z::E!>• <rn>::>t -,.....--... --........... ~ ........ , L .. . .. . DAIL V 'ilDf J J Closing 1 Prices -Complete New York Stock Exchange List • ~.::, ..... t. a.t:l~ill-=""'""'_ .. _______________ ., !ll.!i Y~ ~: ~a~.§ ..... h ~+lo lb\\ -_, M 8 211 --• n ,n: ,"'f ' , -~. lOf 41~ '!t .. M -It. ,\ ~HI~ fF I! ~ . ' lO\'J :16;.. ••• 1 i.fl, '''• ... ... \!0$151 1 "' •1•1 1-+ ' ' • 111.t lit. + " ,. 111'1 t~ J' , 2; ~1v. ~ .. Jtt +. I If.! ~11 ~~ t ~ UI 1 ._ 111'1 llMo :J: " .cth .,~ "~ • ll 11\ IJ + '-!lllo l I ~ ! ll)f °' Oii ~ 1 J7 :»lo )6 o t ~' :11•1 3' ,. •1 in l2 " JI~ 11>o - • Cl. -~ .. • .. 1~' ~1: ~\.'I :l 1 7t 11lo ll~ l -~ ' 21-lt ,. 11\Ci -\ti Market Suffers Another Decline NEW YORK (UPll-The st0<k market declined today 1n moderate trading Analysts attnbuted the bearish tone to year end tax selhng normal pre \\eekend porUoho lighterung by investors and mounting concern over tight cred l 11'4 ' 141 ! .. ' t d nil ti 1111 ,, n.+~ 1 an 1 a on 711~11 7') n !2 500 SO•-'• SU o U ••+ HO JCI"' 30 ., 300 1 1 " 151 1,1, ~ 1 ;>II\\ ,.OV. 2t _, " •l ,,.. ,, -• It 3l1~ 1314 )J~ -~ 2 l ""' 4.1'14 " ... 1• n\ u , ''"" .i. , 1t 72!o 21\\ ,.,,,, -.. 11, 1 h ll 11 + The UPI 1na r kel\\ 1de indicator showed a loss of O 50 percent whlle the Dow Jones average blue chip industrials was oU 3 96 at 792 ~7 Of the 1 602 issues traded 811 advanced of 30 and Tl IJV. TO\lo Tl t + t. ~ nv, TOt U\o +I 11 1 vt 11'4 11~ -"535 dechned A volume of around 11 m1lhon shares 11 ~ "'"" s~, +1 1'°' U"-0 U1 ~ 1s """ ,,,, ,. -1 was about 2 million shar"s belO\Y Th ursday ?!Hli o \1 +1 l'1?V,7J o 21~-I ) 6'\!o ''* 61 1 Iii J It U ff +1 ?1 ~1i •1 -U JI l@o •to <lti -1 \ llO !1'4 ! •• ' ' --. s ''"" ,,.., ?t•~ -• 1 111 16i 11 1 -~ ll I lOlo Do -i1 !? so . <It~. <It _._,, 791 46\'I ~ ..iv. + 4 Jtt 1?'4 61\\ 11 • + '4 lot ., " ,, -1 ' 150 JI !7 !7 +1, 35tot\t -•1 '°Ila 11't 1J +t-. JS 10' 10Vr 10 \ -n.. n•o 21.., -Ii 7 Ol •S eo •Jl+ .. 10 1s-.111J -i 7 1 ,, , ..... ~ ~ ~ l!'• ii .:. ;• 00 1 0•ilD 17 ~~ ~·, ~i:+1'' ll ,,.. ,. .... -• I J6 1 l61o :Iola -'~ 11) H 11 110 -"' ill • Ii ' ~ AJnong the day s most act1\.e issues were Jun \Valter Corp Gu1f Otl and Sperry Rand Jim Wal· ter traded an early block of 125 000 shares at 331A 1n a cros s transaction of~~ and Gulf a bl ock of 78 200 at 28\io cross Other heavily lraded stock included Texaco AMK Corp Midland Ross Occi ental lnternation al Telephone Apco 011 and American Telephone Electronic issues ranged to more than 2 lower Oils traded 1n both d1recl1ons although most point- sized movers were po1nUng JO\\ er "-l ~< 1 JI Jj o JI, l1 ?t" 21\'J 11' lg"-'"'"'"'"'"''-'"'"'"''"'"'"'"'""~ '"'"'"""''-'"""-'-""'"'"'" U4ill:C:D 10 10,.,. --<1.--.r UGIC1>l:llt .... 111t '"" Nlf ,_I lfltal.AIWCllllCM (NLJMlllt"9C._Clla. 21 ., J:'l 1'*-• DOW JOND •VERA.GD -W X-Y·l- \gl ,, ~~ ~--~.~R.(SM;fAll'll'll\f 0owJ-•v.,Ht1'Q::fo~ '''1• 111 ilu Ut. 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We -----,. . ·---•ii! a 't11ow.ar. l'P ........ ,- 117 ICJICBSUTI ' Hapn Sanks light• ., .. ' 'delight tile lld1 load ~ thrt kid who )\Ill ~led IU.1 two front tMthr h1'1 ~DOW cmd ba Cl wide crteJ t'. 1" CJIBiS1jW· MOuSE L lttlamou•~.......Ur a11d watch•• oyar •'ferJl.biDv •. T.U tM kld1 . ha'• a compa.Mr Jior Seta and l1 wukhlllf. wutsiwio.. -· 2• ' 38 .Ln'£ TIBLE TREE. ~ Foot high trM Ugtlta 111.P lrom t••lde. com•• wit• appcond cord ad. lNib. •ie. tor )Ilda ........ CllCMr taWe. otar. .... ............ --.... 1.,. • .-.i 199 TOY TIB1'£ sac and J88 . u,.. .... '"'""-'..n1?1t Ds• T '9'' •~a ..... ,. ....... ,. .... ............. .-111: ... ..,. • • Ln'EIQUEBS ,,...· ......... tput .... ,. ...... u.. . roof:.., .. .,. JM:I' •• .. .., bttiit •trlat'lat' 9"!' bolWaf. 1.9c ~IG. QPIZ -llllllTUBE BEPLICEKllT Ll'i'ES 29C CARI> OF.5 ·. • • • 4 • .. • . . . . . 699v.' . . ... . . . . . ;' BLICK 81 DECKER ·· BELTS PRICES ' • .xi::\ Tll.·· -~ ILICI • BLACK • DECIEI · · DECKER BLACI • JID. 7021 ID 7 ... 1 DECKER .. 10. 1111 'f, rica· · . 71/4".SIW SWEl llT 1. YlllllLE .,,. . s ....... o•••an• ~ SPEED DRILL m . ' . ·j II. 1'...tol I BP tDOlor llpl eae.trol tor a becnatthd Xtt iact.t. 31 pi.:.: t111011att. tDugbMl cuttll9 6nlah nerr time. n.wa drill. wbMI arbor. a drlll )Dbl. latra de.p tm.tf llGDdl cm 3 .id-. l!t 1»1111, rabbet bacldltf ..... Comeswtt• IKl•dffllCIDd.,,ID ,, .~grlridlDgwheel..4 r:t;;r;~~ =::r .. ~. _c, ·t:u'::'~•-!l.'!:ck • ,limadymcm. • filer. •palala. ....,., hf ldd..-cmd IS · lultad10111e pla1Uc mcmding d!KL (cmd tU . ' ·j-1 ' ' carrflng COM. drUL ot cowvJ SUPREME • w1msonE1EB F11ll1 cnatomollc. •arlobl• HCbmg• MtllDg with hrm• IDY•r adJ••l••nt. Ro Jol1rrapllo11 of u ... 1enlc1 d•rlag recllari•• lLOOOGnala ....... t• 177" CUDLETREE New idea lrom ao old <:andlecp:ker kl!UWhMI ill Alcnka. Wax 11 shaped In . tb1 Iona of a Clulatma• 1 ..... foot tall. hmm loDg. 139 FWBEB PLUGS !liak oa ad oU. DO hmm to <:lmllt or bu,Ib. Put a 1t1lDg of tben•p aacl Ut.• nelghlliori. will ddU JO'& . ....... BYISPUY ·· PlllT GUii Compr•11or wot kl Ol'I ho••• c•n••t. -If to d-.fGt .. pcrnm•. For lat1rlor. oat1rlor • •• , ..... ti.c.. .... --. 9" '· .Ad•ertlnd spec:lal1 good ·lhru Docember 10. 1969. DAISY UMP PNtty. looks lib on up1ld1 do"11. Dower or a right 1ld1 u.p Daisy Lamp •blch 11 what II la. Cbok::• ol colors, J thlnk. 9" 3 PIECE SHELF UNIT Th• complete deal tor und•r a tin. Unit lncludn three 8x31 lnch th•IYllo odJu1tabl1 trO'ck brack•1• and towel bar. In hanHt gold OI O'fOCDdo. BAllDY CABll£1S Neat 11111• •lonig• dro•er• lor th• hoiu• handyman who want• thin;• melhodlcal. Nie• tor hobbyl1t. IUtl1 ll:lds. --121 · DAISY FOOTLOCIER • 711 Fe·C111t !ifaae41oodoclw0""'1ii .... w..l9tftllr .. ~ ............ ,_ ....... ........ llclt ... .., .. t.1 ••• , • . . ...-.. .. . •. .,----. . . . . •I • • ' hrlectlt fba1IW cablllet 1a ..... _, 00w. moldod cu.ltv.r..t aotble top. · mod.a kmcl&. ON111.alr: lacluded. Wlpeiil deem .. ...,. "''"-doth. ....... MOD SPUJPlllT Lllr:1 wild. 9low1 uacl9r. blaclr: lite, acrylic matte . 1prDJ• on Uk• a . p1fch1d11!<: dotd.teom • Colon tMt DN out of t!gllt. . ···Q'1 ¥nt that drpr~won't fMl Ilk• ~ ··-;-o g 'rebtthe ' · le.iD:Sorf ~ ' .~~"": : 1be.W1~~~too.. . ';.; . 7r; 897 '•'i ' .• ~, ; '\·. ·~-~ \: .. ''·· ,11!.n . . ... • ·.t .. ,, . ' ,. '• : . 8311P ' lcomi>pm£_ ~- \;&:j,iJ•,~·· ..•. · ... ~ ''..;t'1fi·" ,~ .. ! ' We tlll.pped e1 eGH ol t.beM lo IMca Hcntill'• Mu-10 fOU lmow lt'1· to;!' mcnif thick ho lor rich natural look. Elegmt.tlf tape*- 1n. FLOCKED ' I ' . 192 BBllCB BBDCB DOWllSWEPT LOlfG NEEDLE PUIE Of Dam• retmde:nt PVC pla11ic Jor IOl.tf. Joob lib th• recd th.Lag.F.cnlerto OIMmbll them f°" thi.all: (If you gi.,. thlng1 llD that much thought). · 1997 • ,, .... , '! • ... 13 • Saddlehaek ' ED Il l ON • ~t:. 62, NO. 291, 4 SOCTIONS, 48 PAGES • rv1ne ares • Strip ·.Robberies Trio H oUI V p Three Stations Tbree gas atations along the San Diego freeway were held ·up within one hour eMly Thursday and their attendants forc- ed to 15lrlp naked by a trio of robbers who collected $160 in cash. Alleged bold-up men , a r.tarine corporal and two civilians, were taken into custody by military police when they ar- rived at the San Onofre gate at Camp Pendleton. Two of the suspect,,, Delbert S. Finger, 25 of Dana Point, and Kenneth G. ~rpent.e.r, 2.5, oC Corona, were turned over to San Clemente police. The third suspect, Cpl. Ronnie Russ Johnson, 21, is in custody ilt Camp Pendleton. Houston was forced to strip off hl1 clothe!, which were taken by the holdup men, aJong with $40 in cuh. Fifteen minutes later the procedure was repealed at a station at El Toro Road and the San Diego Freeway, where attendant Bill Mattell was the victim and $80 was taken. • A general alarm was broadcut by the Orange County She.riff's office, but the three bandits managed to strike a third· station, at Avenida Pico and the freewa y in San Clemente. Here Cl1vi .A. Perala was rorcect at knife point to strip and band over $40. Alerted by the alarm, military poHce at Camp Pendleton were on watch ror the car and its occupants and made the ar- ttsls. • ... f • FRIDA'(. DECEt.lllElfJf 1969 .. .... .... -· • DAILY ,ILOT ,..,, ,...._ The series of. holdups began at 2:30 a.rn. Thursday when a car occupied tiy three men drove ini<t a service station at La Paz Road and the San Diego Freeway. While one of the robbers threatened hlm with a butcher knife, attendant Art San Clemente police said the three rob- bers apparently met Jn 1 baf in that city btfore settlng out on tbelr round of holdups. THIS IS PORTION OF IRVINE COASTAL AREA BETWEEN.CAMEO SHORES (LEFT), CRYSTAL COVE IEeho From .... Bawall LAFC Receives Dana-Capo Beach Incorporation Bid Coast Braces for Next Onslaught of Higl1 Surf By PAMELA HALLAN Of #19 DllllJ ,lltl Sl•ff A formal applicaUon was to be filed tG- day to n:iake ... Da,na Polnt..Caplstrano Beath Qrange ~nty'i; ,riext incorporated 'ntandering surf -an echo ·a( murderous, alarm-spawned breakers bat- tering" Hawaii today -is expected to atrike the Orange Coast within 24 hours. followed by abnormally high tides com- pounding the problems Monday. Trouble may be brewing for some areas including Laguna Beach, where a simil~r combination in July. 1949, sent surf swirling over and beyond Pacific Coast Highway, according lo one ve teran. Waves generated by a pair of t.~o aevere storms in the west.em Pac1f1c 11nitlcked the California coastline Thurs- day. ranging up to 15 feet in the Santa Barbara area. Treacherous surf capsized a skiff car- rying two treasure.hunters in their mid- twenties off Summcrland Beach and the men vanished in the crashing waters. A 14-year-old surfer narro"'ly escaped drowning off Hennosa Beach "·hen he fought the seas for a halr·hour after being knocked fi'om his board, but was rescued by lifeguards. surf 'Jbunday. lapsinJ: l9 UtUe waves .to- d111 llld .. -..... ' . . · Seal Beach lJC)llce ae\ out""barrlcades alarig the beach Thursdly ntgbt when the pounding surf washed away poctiom: and appeared ready lo caUH more trouble. but the swells were down to Uiree ·fee t this morning. Surfside reported no problem, but the little colony, inundated bY. waves due to erosion in the early sixties, could get some standing' beach pooh if surf crests over the high-tide line Saturday. Huntington Beach lifeguards aald surf was five to seven feet Thursday -highe r than nonnal -but they expect a moun- ting height by Jat.e Saturday morntiig. •: I~ • ' .,, t I • e1ty.~· • ~ ,,~1"r. '!be ~s c O'm m I tl·e e.. roe Incorporation tola a capacity audl!!nce af Serra School auditorium Thursday night that the Local Agency Formation Com· mission (LAFC) would receive the docu· ment today. Alex Lake who with Dr. Roger San- derson, Arthur Humburg and Joe Cole are spearheading the movenrent said the committee hopes for a January hearing dale. Local control of local affairs was the Newport Beach authorities said waves hit about the same height Thursday, but major point stressed by th espeakers who there was no damage and truckJ involved indicated particular interest in the Jo-,;s of in the sand haul anU~rosion project kept. beaches through sale to land devek>pers, up the normal pace. -rooting of a scenic highway which may bypass the community's commercial llfC" . . ' ... •• #' ... ...-- ,II ') /. . ' ... ... I• . 'ol I ' YI.,,,,.,, ... ~ ! • • • .,., ' . • .: . LA,UNA l ~~~~H "·') • 1be swells spawned by twin storms between the Philippine and the Ale~tian islands subsided a bit Thursday night, dropping as lo\Y as two feet today along Sound Improved For .fligh School lion, and beautilication proposals mlde by the South Coast ScerUc Improvement Project. Dean Evans, who auth<red a feasibility report on tncorporatJon when the com4 CROSS.HATCH~O ."A~EA IS VACANT ·IRVINE COASTAL LAND the Orange Coasl. . . Laguna Beach HJgh School students munity attempted to bectttne a city two WeaU1er forecaster!!' com;>ar1ng elt- pected tides and new, incoming sets of bre akers say the surf which reached a maltimum of eight to ten feet in Laguna Beach is just a taste of more to come. • will not only ~sitting in new seats and years ago, presented updated figures. He resting their f on new carpeting come said his report will not be complete until April, they will lso be able to enjoy next week. better sound projection. "We have a much better chance this 3 of Manson's Friends Laguna Beach Unified School District time," said Lake, "things have been hap-Llfeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said the game combination of seven-foot tides and istorm-spawned surf hit the Art Colony on July 4, 1949, washing over the coastal highway. trustees took the advice or hlgh a:chool pening·around U! that are detrimental to principal Ro~rt Reeves TueS<f~y night ,lie area and are getting attention. People as they, okayed $3,042 worth of improve-~ realize they need a city govirmnent men LI to the projection room after bids to work in their interests." on caryets and seals for the auditorium He said that many. who were against Tell of Hypnotic Effect I! predictions or today hold up, he warned the crashing surf will be up lo the boa1rdwalk area and may spill over and down Broadway. . "Then again, they could be wrong," he said. Lifiguards and police along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach lo 5an Clemente Rener.Uy reported the same thins: high cam.e 1n well under lhe $40,000 available incorporation two years · ago are for Jt for unprovements. Fl · 1 pport h ~-I Charles Beaton won the low bid for "°"·. nancia SU as L,l'l;:'C"ll stead ly renovation of the projection room after com~g in and the group has collected ap- trustees accepted a low bid of $9,159 by proximately $450. . Lawrence W Rosine Q) (or carpeUng Hmnburg asked lhe audience tG \.'Orr and the low~ bkl ~ speclfle11tion. tlhUe their contributions since attorney's 10< !UIJ ol 124,llli by American Selling f,.. will nm 11 ,500 and the feasibility Co. ._t.wilJ coot 1750. Sands-Shoals Make Waves LOS ANGELES (AP) -''BJ.ck magic" .. "He believes that he, and all human belngs, are God". "There 11 no crime. there is no gin" ..• "The women were .the key to everything." Three friends of Charles M. Manson us- . ed those words Thursday to describe him and the way they aay he ruled a&J,an of nomadic hippie-type! On a com'rtiune near Death Valley. frosecutors say they wtll seek an Jn· dlctment charging Manson, ~. with con- spiracy to commit mllrd:er: Several mem- bers of his clan are · accused of slaying actress Sharon Tale and six others. The three filends -miner PaUJ Doubts Raised Over .~r ioiu City Actions ~97°!~~l·:r;.,r,1lP'o.1'~';i•u1 ;~;ki1i;; descriptions. By RICHARD P. NALL way or street~ ueblrd Cll\)'OD with legally required findings of tact. "The whole thing was held together by °' .... o.11J l'1i.1 s11tt Drive. ' Most vocal critic, ~ncilman Roy black magic," said Watkin!:, who bas The Sands vs, Shoals hassle over apart· The planning commfulon bad granted ~ said, "ll the Shoal! is denied , I'm followed Man~n since they met two ment addlUona and we of a public street Shoals owner Rlc:hanfD. Burt permatori curious about what our positlon la·in get-years ago In the Halghl-Alhbury district. right.<il·way made waves clear into to add 32 unJta. A private driveway and Uni bact u:f' of that dedicated 11treet th~i!'-~me~~~ ift~]iL~i:ity Laguna Beach council chambers this nta.ining wall~ le!'Vinl the pn> cumutly aolely by the Shoals for in-e1istt, and.It Is powtrlul," Watldns said. week ralslng l!erlous doubts about: _perty are on public street 'rigbt.U-wq ~ and--e~ . . , -A nsui:t acUoo of lhe CC'.kmeil Jn 1949 tbat tome eaUmate al a 20-foot en--Rimel uJd, 0 Jl was never dedicated for ~,"HelMinSOn) bellewJ tbat·he, arid all ~ u rmli'•d -· Shoal -·~--· o".·-••--pub"· use." human beir«S. are God and ll1e devil al lhal ' apparen y pe ~ "~ " ··-~ .. ~·· ·~ --lhe. """ ume. He believe& an -.. J!Ol s. Coast Highway, lo il'Jild porUally Tbe nel&hborlng Sanda whldl 11 llghllng Holm ukod-if there had been an..,.,.. b>Jnp . .n part o! ...i. other," &aid on lhe sir.et-end rlgbl-ol·way for tho addlllon wa u .. 11 l1'nl<d a variance meat lo allow lhe Shoals lo build a p-, 1 Manson follower f<r lwo 1..,., Bluebird Canyon Drive. In llllO lhal pennllled 11-ol lbe llreel prlvala drive oo a public rJihk>l·way. "You &11""11&~ lllll .-,• QoCblt -Illegal planning commlDlon 1......,. and u . a privala c1r1....., ralber Iha Jooe))ll Swt"':y• cll)o public -aaljf.,•)f '!'WI! Jbol,bmnah .llft his no nf variances wUhoul legal juslillcaUoo laldng aa:eso hvm Soulll Cooll Hl ...... 11. director, .lffd, 'lite city dalgnod 'IJ\e . 'vil\11!.lf )ilu _ll)l.a ~ 1>eJN. yo/I°" l fur more. than l\i yeal'I despite ln· After diltrtUecl couwnenta Wednttday, wall;" I'm not turt lf the rdlr or ~tM ~ ~··a'Pan or.~: &o'}\'• all strucllon by the city attorney on COW1 councilmen aent the whole matter back IO Shoals paJd for tt!' HOim 11,jd, -"'l'rri .jn. lrJOL "" · · 1 • 1 ~ • • decisions. Ille plannlng comml11lon lo rwvlluale lerested. In ,.wng bac_t u •"1U<h..i llll 'llu!, Mid Qoocttft, • by, ~·a The Shoals 1,.., wu brouil>t lo ll!e the .. r1ance Md -·wllOI oould be "-right.of....,. u ,.. can." ' phllooophy "you can' klD'an lllbDal; Nol · council In Ille l1rn1 or an appeal filed by about nclalmlnl>lool publk: rJihl.<lf·"<Y· Viet Mo:yor Jooeph O'BulUvm Aid. ·"It a l>uc. oo1 t lllltt, DlillJ!ol. ~...,. a nelg)lborlng apartment developmen~ Cl!1 All«ney Jact llllnel •Id In elfeCI 11 unfortunlle lhal :Ill yon pal; a pub1lo 1111Rs an ...r lbe" duOrt. '!'bl!' lot. in Th< Sanda, 1585 S. Co&!l Highway. Iha! the vl!iance_ wu Illegal, lhal tho road ..,., given up lo priYllA! lnlmsl..L lht cobln qd et&Jlllert. llut'JW- Tht two 1lruclures bracket lhe right-of· pl>nnlng oommlsslOn had oot suppo<lad It • (5" SHOALS, Pat• I) never ldll,... 'llleJ plaed 1111 "'8tW\ln I -. ' . ' . i;4 .,( ~ I • . :\ !. ' ' the houae and carried them 01.1tside ·and turned them loose." "That's ri*ht"' Poston Mid. "I saw them carry a foOt-long sidewinder oui or the cabin One day." "And you couldn't elf. meat," said Watkins, "beca111t you were kllled In animal. Jt wu crazy." Manaoh's talent·a.s,a·mualclan -he played ·the guitar -and . hla liow, deUberala Md ·moody "111' o1 moving gave'blm a IOrt of bypnoUc power'over- women, the-three men aid. "1bla .... o1 -· takes • 1.., t1me to work~ an eHel:f/~ Crockett said. "M~ lions are·· tied to' emotions. · Cer1.iJn, mo- tloria create certain ! rnpomu U you know boir lo -them."'. "The """"' -..I ·tho . place ..... alw171 : hla properly.I' WaWnll &aid. Poston added: "Yoa were alw8Ja wticome lo lban ....,,,,. bul then you beoamehla~l)otoo.• ~ .. ''lie -la ---,.;,..,.i. Thero·wu a llmlf Ill -• .., man can dO. Bui· then, YOU ..,;,<the -bold po""'"°"' lbe olber ~Wllklu old. "Thllt way," ·Crockett Aid, '·'lbe · women •ere the key to ev~ -,.-When the """"""'"-~ .-._,, CrockeU llld,-M-WOllld laJl .lhe · W9IDfJi oat •to pubancQe -·"U.,.roould , bet mqn lo two•i.ur.thoir,...,and I · couJd.ur;n.-tin( 11>-~·-t.·:·. . ' . . . . . . . . . . ' 8UH'Je ' ...... ,,.,... . ' ·, . ' . . ' ' ' . ' . . ·I .. -·-- \ ~ -/ Today~a 1 l'l••I" ' .. • ·• -N.Y.-Sieeb-.. . . TEN CENT! an • Mason Asks • Both Puhli~ Private Use ~ By JEROME !''. COLLINS or 11M DllllJ ,!Mt 1'9ft ·- !t cooib~ation of public aad PriVall development of the coastal area beewe(; Corona del Mar and Laguna Beacfi wa;: pn>poeed lodsy by Wlllllm R. MaaO,\ pmidenl of lhe Irvine Company. · Muon Aid the company,_ 1o1e owner d lhe 31> mile llr<lch .ol ~ ~bilad -.., prnper Jy, Aid lhaf -company's .muter plan w!IYreflecf "• ·unlque blend of dmlopmenll °"' will Include public acceu lo tlY. tidelands." . • . He asked Btate, county and munlclp,.1 government olllciala lnferetled Jn !hi public's attesa to ocean tidelands.and tt)l:J acqulsllloa ol publlc beocb areaa 1o join wllb lhe company u II begin& Jls piaJ:. Ding for the area. "The inclusion of pubUc access to th\! Udelands Md the provision for their ao qulsllion ol public . ~ along iho Irvtoe cout may come u a surpriae: to those who are unfamiliar with our hiAqrr of planning," aald Ma~ "But It~ not. . . "The Irvine Company has btl recognized a~ been an advocate of ttti need for j~tnt public and private cooper. tlon in the crea.Uve devektpment of _. environment." The 1rv1ne ,.ecutitt, 1n ~ 1ir profession, emphuiied: "W~ do not Wend to el'tlMI a en. v~ Iha! wl)J deoy_ public -to the --.. Jn 'the . .,_.ol lhl .....i.t Sall Creek mailer. Whal II ,.... .. ... .,... not bppoood .1o·pulillc' ~ and. devdoj>ment Of por!Joos Of lbe CQUI. al lall!f for public purpom.'' . · Ma.son's uS&Jt,Cteek" ret'efence wa1 ·to lbe Colinly's abandonment al Satt er.et Road in Laguna N)&uel, south o! Lquna Beach, early last. year. The road hK served as quasi-public accesa ·to 8alt creet beach. Reversal of the county:1 "°' tJon has been vigorously 10Ufbt iftr. s!Rct by clUzens' groups Jn the eoUth coonty area. Irvine's Mason saJd his company'I main concern never has been with tlll question of whether public f8cllltiei sliould be loca\!'d.on lands owned by tho firm. "We are, ·JJoweveir,. concemea wit& the need for pabllC plans to ·ba coordinated with and comj:lllmentarj • planned private jevelopments." ·In·. order to bring about thill coordlni-~ tion, Mason aaid, the company ia calll,dt on the State Department of parks ana:· ltecre.aUon, county government .and the cities 0£ Newport Be~ch and Laguna Beach "to combine their lndlvidUal idUlj-. interests and desires during tbe ear)J, stages of planning." Letters outlining the lrvine p~l have been sent to William Penn Mott. Jr: •. director ol lhe slate department o! park;• and recreation : William Hirstein. chai~ man or lhe Orange County Board ol Sit" pervisors; Doreen Marshall. mayor af Newport Beach, and Glenn Vedder, may.· or. of Leguna Beach, Muon said. ~ "To dat~" he JexpJalned, "the eoi1;.. !See Ill~ Pop II Orange W~tller The surf will be .up. and the sun will be . out this wffkend, with balmy temperature.. la ·the upper·· 70's war~ng the Orange Coaat. · JN8mE TODAY ·AlmosC a pear a/ctr he ahtlJ. ··. td out 1900 lo ball UC 11'1111Ul tt!ldentt oui.o/ jGll-"'1 8-rktl<u. • C"4netUor Danh! Aldrich II be· ' ginning to get some of hit mo1Uly bock. ~· I. °""20~ CHlilll'JMAI ' !!!!!'L . • •;'. ·== -· "1: . " ~· .............. .. c..c.: ., '·" ...... ~ • c,...,...., • """' .... " =-...... I •11'11Mi ... ...... ,.. : . =-· ....... ::Itri I WIWIP IA .. ~ ,_ »II ,....,.. ~ ~·=:::t . n ·:~e:i.. J ......... : ::JJ-lt:J ' .. • . -·-=:·· --::- ~-DAILY PILOT L Qu~~tj.o~e~ .~Y Pentagon .,.: WASIUNGTON (UPI) -Firot Lt. 'William L. Calley Jr. wai summoned to the Pentagon tod ay for questioning by a .~ panel attempting to determine II thefe might have beeb·a Whitewash of·an otiglnal Anny iuvtst.igation of the killln& of Sooth Vietnamese civlians at ~ty Lai. The 26-year-old Calley is accused or premeditated murder of 10'9 persons in the alleged massacre. He v.·as com· mander or a pl11toon of a company head· ed by Capt. Ernest A. J\ledina, who denied 'nrunday either ordering or seeing any mass slaytngs in the village. The Pentagon Inquiry board apparently -pJ.ans to question almost everyone w:ith a -...c;tmect.lon in the case and Ca11ey was Oil· ly ' ·one of · several ca.Ued today. A spokesman said it was possible he might not be heard until fate today, er possibly ~ven Tater. ' • •. I ' " ..,, 'kltW-~ 1W:. " ,.. .. • . ·Calley is the only person specil\cally (:tlarged v.•ith murder in the case, 'aJ!hough more than a score of men who were there at the time are under in· vesiigation and one sergeant-has been BC· cuSed of assault with inlent to murder. ·calley, who is to be tried by an Anny <1J(lrt martial next month at Ft. Benning, U'I Ttlqfltlt LIEUTENANT CALLEY ARRIVES AT PENTAGON Qi:, was called before the so-called Peers lnvestigation Board which was formed to look into whether a k>w·level in- vestigation soon after Ule March 16, 1968. iQaident amounted to little mere than a ~tewash. 'l1le board headed by Lt. Gen. William R.. Peers heard Medina Thurs4ay behind closed doors. Afterward Medina, com• m'a,J1der oC Company C, Isl Battaltion, of t~e ZOOth Wantry at the time, held a neWs conference to deny any knowledge of ··inas.s killings er civilians. Jn a subsequent interview, 1tfedina e:da;lowledged, however, that under ·Orders from higher up, he had directed mi .men to destroy My Lal 4, a part of . UM Village of Song l\ly, because it was ~ed as a haven for the Viet Cong ~ batlalilJll. · , ·.He !tressed that advanQt.JnteJUgence reports said the' women and children left. Ute village each morning at 7. The attack waS get for 7:30 a.m. * * * ·Robb Repudiates Qiarges Outfit Did Atrocities • LAS VEGAS, Nev. <UPI) -Marine P.taj. Charles Robb, former President W~on B. Johnson's son-In-law, has ~ated allegations the men under his tommand in Vletnam co m m I t t e d titrocities similar to those said to have C>ccurred at My Lai. : "Our polk:.y, orders and deeds preclude· f;bch activity/' Robb said at a news con· ftrence Thursday. ; "We did not participate in any type of f_ctivity what has been asserted. Our ac· µons were quite to the contrary. ln fact ~e bent over backwards to avoid in· ctirig casuaJlies to innocent civilians,'' e added. ; ;Robb-. here lo attend a 12th Marine ~istrict Co.nference, made hLs remarks in ttspo~ to charges by Anthony R. Martin·Trigona, 24, a real estate and in· t"estment brcker from Champaign, Ill. :· r.1artin-Trigon a, who vi sited Robb's unit ~hile serving as a correspondent for the µniverslty of Ill inois' student newspaper, pie Daily Illini, made his charges in a let· ~to Sen. Charles H. Percy (R-lll.) •·Percy forwarded the letter to De!en~e tecretary Melvin R.. Laird, urging .. full itJtention to ind investigation of" A-1artin· '2rigona 's cla ims. : ·Robb, who was a captain when l\tartin- Trlgona visted his unit, 11aid he recalled teeing Martin·Trigona and added he ad- tnired him for going along with his unit ~n some minor military cperatlons. . • • • • . • ! • • • l . . • &Alli <'llOf OAAHO'! CO.U1 PUil ~ING COMH.Nt a.i..rt "'· w.,4 ,,.~ ... '""')Mr J.<i:. I. c •• ,.., ""' ,.,...... -Gtlwal......, , 1k111•t ketvU .... TM111•• A. M11~l~• Mtn91 ....... , .... i 1.Ji1r4 P. Htl ·--City l._ ~ ........... Ofllle t • 211 F•rtd A••· : ~ Mafhf·Mth•MI •.o ..... ,R, f!ll! l • ! °"" OMl9t F•c•• Panel Probing 'Whit•w11h' at My Lal Appeal for Arbitration ln Guard Issue Rejected By BARBARA KREIBICll 01 lht D•llY ,lit! lllH A request for neutral arbitration in San Clemente lifeguard Lt. Steve OlOtak's appea l of his dismissal by the city has been turned down , City r-.tanager Kenneth Carr sakl today. llowever, his hearing berore the city personnel board, scheduled for 7:30 p.m. Atonday, will be open to the public, Carr said. "We do not feel the use of a single arbitrator in this case \vould be useful or appropriate," Carr explained. ''But ."''e are quite willing lo have an open hea,.ng as Chorak has asked ." Chester Brisco, Santa Ana attorney '9:ho has served as legaf counsel for the lifeguard in his confrontatioos with the city, expressed himself as "very di_sap- pointed Ulat lhe city does not see fit to submit Lhis to a neutral party." The city, Brisco said, is acting ~s "judge-, jury and pros~utor and thats sqpposed to be prohibited by the con· stitution." -' Chm-ak, who 11pearheaded .a strike U1re<1 l by 30 San Clemente lifeguards seeking pay increases last summer, w~!I dismissed by the city last month after scc yea rs of service as a full·tlme guard and fou r years as a part-time guard. Although the city c i t e d an "unsatisfactory record of service" as the reason f« his dismissal, the 29-year-old Jifeguard lieutenant said he was COO· ,,ince<I the action was taken because of his rol e ln the strike threat. A court order prevented the strike. Chorak pointed out that only last y~ar be had been given a five-year servJce certificate which took note of his "ex· ceptional ability" and pr~lsed his hand\-, ing of men and emergenci~. Ad vised that San Clemente's fh•e city councilmen, siUing as a personnel board, \\·ould hear Chorak's appeal, attorney 'l'l'1tste e Recalls Resolution f or J\.ldrich Censm·e Orange Ccunty Board of Education Trustee Dr. Dale E. Rallison Thursday withdrew his resolution calling f.or censure of UC Irvine Chancellor Daniel G. Aldrich Jr . Rallison said he has arranged to meet penonally with Dr. Aldrich to discuss remarks the chancellor alle#dly made ~t a mettlng of Orange County Town Hall in October . Rallison said he decided on lhat course after Alan Stoneman, chainnan of Town J~all, provided him Monday night with a tape recording of the speech and the questions and anRwe-rs th at foll~·ed . Rallison said he called Aldrich 'nlur5- dsy and arranged a meeUng with hlm In late January. County School Trustet A. E. "Pat" Arnold said he was prtpand to discuss . lhe matttt had Rallison not withdrawn hls.tt!Olution and-had brought 15 pages ol mattMal wlth llim. Another of the counly school bonrd's bitter batliei apparently WIS in the Of· fin JI. RalJl:IOn said afttr the board meeting h• had decided not to p\Jlh (or the ce1\$ute resolution bec:ause "it would have created more hard feelings In the school!. which really affect. our bonds." Asked his react:lon to tha tape· of Al- drlch's co1unientll, he 111ld, "I've mlly kind of decided not. to &Jve • re11ctlon. lt would der .. 1 the •hole purpost of doing . .... ..... .. ~ lhL'l pe:rs""no.rperaon.· At 1 pre\ilous mettln1 Rallison had made known h~ Intent to ask for a re!IOJutkm llmll.v to a Tu~Un Union High ·School Di5trlct board resolullol'I ~,hlch called for UC rtgenls to dismiss Aldrich. ':lrisco.sai~. ~·\\'e feel that since lhr city fired him, lt Is hardly qualified fo act ns judge in his appeal." He proposed that a neutral arbi trator be selected froin three names submitted by the National Academy of Arbitratcrs of Southern California . Under th.is pro- cedure, each party to a dispute strikf's out one name and the remaining arbitrator hears the case and rerxlers' a decision. Chorak, Brisco said, would be glad to have his case presented to any impartial body. The arbitration plea refused , he now plans to make a fonnal presentation al A-1ond.ay night's hearing, lo which the public will he admitted. 'M\e Brown Act perni11.5 public bodies to schedule executive (cl06ed) sessioos when personnel and salary matters are being discussed, but in this instance will accede to Chorak's request for an open hearing. From P119e 1 SHOALS .•• favor referring It back to the planning' commission to try and protect public rights giving up in the past.'' Rimel said it ls Illegal to give up publ ic right-of-way. The couneil has in the past been criti cal of the controversial county actiot1 in abandoning Salt Creek Road to the corporation owning surrounding land. Jn a letter to the council concerning the Shoals, Mrs. l\1ary V. Lounsbery, 666 Ramona Ave., said: "This matter was brought to the al· tention of th e planning commission sometime ago, When I notified them that this particular access to the beach v.·as a ful\-dedicated-41).foot city street (no\V reduced to less than 20 feet by allowing a 15 to 20 foot encroachment by The Shoals Apt.) ''After checking many council minutes, It 11·as ascertained that on Jan. 5, 1949 a omlion by r.tr. (Wiiliam) Moorehead, 2nd by Fitts was carried to allow Mr. Robert Schoenleber to construct a retaining wall 150 feet from Sout h Coast Boulevard to the ocean. Joseph T. Enright, attorney for The Sands, said if U1e Shoals is to be pennit· ted jts 32·unlt structure it would have to be after complete re-z.oning of the pr~ perty -that a variance is not a proper proctdure. City Attorney Rimel told councilmen, "The variance, if etlacke.d In court, "·ould not hold water because it does not make findings or fact necessary." Rimel had pointed out the legal necessities to bac kgranting or a variance by a June 20, 1967 Jetter to Clyde Z. Springe, city bulldlng and planning diret· tor. he said. , Holm s!Ud, "varianet1 have been a very serious problem in this town for many years. That Is \thy I tried to gtt on lhls side of the bench (be a councllmanl . Variancet have been gr1nted for years th1tt Wttf Illegal .'' Rimel agreed that necessAry fitcls to suppart a varianee have been supplied in only a few cases. · Anthony Demetriade!, president of Laguna Be1ch Civic League, said, "I att the impression there has bet!) very little pasl wisdom over pubnc use of Bluebird. "\Ve 11hould give prtfercnUal treatment lo street endl, they are our breathing pores to the sea. t have Uved In Laguna six years and I didn't realize tbat wasn't a private drive." He. said restoration of the 1trttt's 4G- foot width "'ould give lhe publlc more parking. The Civic League made a list er spectfic recommcndlUw coneernlng the l!!l1e that Is no1v back In the laps of plan- ners. • I . . .. •, ~ '• -.. Senate Plan Defeat,ed ' Foundations.· Su·rvive From Wirt Service• The James Irvine Foundat.ion and similar tax-exempt. organizations appear to have won a new lease on lUe today after the ~ate defeated a plan to strip away their taz sanctuary. Senate action came in Washington after an emotionally charged shouting debate OD the floor. The taz 8J11endrr.ent, if it had been adopted, would have slripped Lhe foun· dations or tax-e1empt status after 40 )'.tars. It was called "the death sentence" Aor foundations. The final vote against the amendment WAS 69 lo 18. In Orange County, the .Ames Irvine Foundation owns 4.59 shares or M.4 pe:r. cent of Irvine Company stock. At its last · 11ale in NoVember of 1968, the stock drew ~.ooo per share. From 115 tax-e1empt haven, the Irvine Foundation has distributed millions to local cultural and charity groups since it was founded in 1935 by the late James Irvine. In the fJscal year ending March 31, the Irvine Foundation .gave granl.5 totalling $2.7 million to state and lqcal groups. ln the Senate debate today, Sen. A1bert E. Gore (0-Tenn,), flghting to maintain the 40-year ll!espan provision in the bill. argued that an overwhelming majority of private foundations were created by millionaires to serve as tax havens and to publicize the name of their creator ia perpetuity. Gore uld even the Kellogg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich .• whlch he describ- ed as one of "the good foundations," had mana~ to increase its assel.5 from .$40 million to $408 million -all oC it exempt from taxation. Flailing his arms and pacing between the rows of desks on the senate floor, Gore &houted that its chief purpo~e "is. to La g una Police ' Save Transient Fro.m Bad Trip A 20.year-old transient from Illinois ~·ho told Laguna Beach police he had taken LSD and ,was ''d}•ing", was recove ring. police allege, from his bad trip lhis morning and awaiting ar- raignment on a charge of being unde r the Jn!luence of drugs. Answering a call Thursday artemoon reporting a man lying in the roadway at Laguna Canyon Road and Canyon Acres Dri ve, police picked up George Audie Cook. who said he came from Illinois. "Help me, I'm dying,'' he assertedly told orncers. "I'm having a bad trip and I'm dying." . En route ,to the station, poli ce said, he complained, "I ca n't breathe!" Whf'n an cfficer suggested he put his head close to the v.·indow of the police car, Cook responded, "It's no use. I can't breathe. l took LSD and I'm dying.''. Al the station. police reported, the young man suddenly became violent and tore his clothes off. Placed in the jail's drunk tank for safety, he quieted down and was booked oo suspicion of being under the influence of drugs. ( advertise Kellogg." Kellogg! Kellogg! Kello&g! .. be shouted. "Kellogg! Kellogg! Kellogg! How long can this go on? ls 40 yeats too long? How long is forever?" But Core's arguments were un suc· ccssful in the end. Senators adopted an amendment sponsored by Sen, \Valter f. A1oodale (0..Minn.), to delete the reslric· tlons 9n !oun~alion.S; p~ased in Uie bill by the Seoate finance committee. Mondale argued that the provision v.·ouJd d~stroy one ol the lll<>St hmovative creative and experimental forces i~ American society. Sen. John 0. Pastore {D·R.I.), joined Afondale'in defending foundations. ''Don't crueify lhem," Pastore said. ''Don't do ' th is because what you 're golng lo do Is ~llminate the element of private charity In America." Gore said the vote reflecled heavy lob- bying by the foundations. As drafted thE' 40..year lifespan reflected the conce~ or both conservatives and liberals over tht power foundations exercise through their great w~alth and of failure by some to ~y out· to chatity any of their assets or tneir income. Another sensitive amendment to tht tax reform bill -a 15 percent increase in socJal security ber.efits -is the nexl clash the Senate faces. Senate Republican whip Robert P. Gri f· fin attacked the social serurity amend· ment as a 11political maneuver." , F rom Page 1 IRVI NE SHORE PLA N • • • pany's coastal studies ha~ pertained to surveying and analyzing soil conditions, sJopes, utili ty sys te1ns, road alignments, vie1v potentials, and market condilions. Only now is . the company preparing to tmbark on detailed studies relating to the formulation of a precise land use plan for the coast•• f urther inspiration for achieving a balance of public and private uses of the generally rugged coastline and its scat- tering of sv.'imming beach.es came from a recent lour of Mediterranean resort areas by l\lason and a four-man company tasli force. The Irvine representatives visited such coastal developments as the Algarve Coast in Portugal, the Costa del Sol and Costa Brava ln Spain, the French Riviera and Italy's Llgurian and Amalll coasts. l\1ason said it v.·as a highly instructive lou r. "The most obvious failing we observed ls that those coastal areas that were 'de\'eloped exclusively for private use appeared sterile, uninteres t.ing and without a feeling of place or contex t." Areas developed exclusively for the public didn't look much better, he said. "They were dull, unattractive and in n1ost instances they had spoiled the natural beauty <1f the coastline, ofte n ap- pearing as if they had been dedicated lo parking lots and trash receptacles.~ l l is to avoid either' exlre1ne. l\1ason said, that the company feels a cooperative planning effort between the public and private interests "is -· n1an· datory." Berore the ~-lediterranean trip in October, Irvine officials al ready had decided on making access available ID the public tidelands, Mason noted. This was indicated l~t April when the company sent a representative lD Sac ramento to appear before the Assembly Committee on Local Goverrt- mcnt The Irvine aide voiced support of proposed legislalion bearing on public ac· cess ~o shoreline areas. "\Ve approved the concept." said Mason. Irvine senior vice president Ray \Vatson, who oversees the company's long.range planning, :said appointment of a "public coordinating committee" may be the best approach to the master plan problem. The committee's membe rship \l:ou ld comprise representatives of state, county and local ageneies who would \\'Ork ,vith Irvine planners ''to establish the needs and desires of the variou., lcvel.s or governments with respeet tu pubhc areas." The committee, he said, v.·oukf functior. as the official liaison between the com· pany and the public. "Through coordinated action a n C cooperation." \Vat.son concluded, ··a development plan can emerge that "''ii! make it possible to achieve an optimum bl~nd of public and private uses tha·. might not oUlerv.'ise be possible." Ml'. Hommema Services Set Funeral services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday in Shef fer Laguna Beach l\1ortuary Chapel for \Valter William liommema, 75, who died 'fl./esday in South Coast Community Hospital. Tb:: Rev. Albert 0 . Hjerpe will officiate. Mr. Hommema , a nati~·e of \Visconsir: \Vho retired to Laguna Beach two years ago, mfide his home at 363 Myrtle St. He had been emplcyed for 30 years with the Afotor Transport Company in Wisconsin. He is survived by his widow, Helen C. of the home, a sister, Mrs. A. A. Ar. fl erbaugh of \\'lsconsin and by sevcru: nieces and nepheY.'s. Poll Finds Most Approve Nixon NEW YORK (AP) -A CBS television poll taken late last month · and aired Thursday night shows that 81 percent of these queried were satisfied with President Nixon's performance. Only IF. percent expressed dissatisfact ion. The poll was based on a sample cf 1154 persons telephoned late in November , CHS Ney,·s said. It showed that Nixon was strongest in the South with 86 percent approval. He was v.·eakest in the West where only 77 percent were satisfied with t h e Presiden t's performance. Tbe Midwest and East ranked second and third, CBS said. 0 • 22 ' l'INISHID IN MIMOSA TILLOW Ol OlRN. HAND DICOlATID IN CHAU WHIT! ••. OLASS SHILVU AND TWO INTlllOl LIGHn. $ IT DllXEL, THI MOST n umD NAMI IN FUl NITUU. --··---·-·--··-·.. 799 YOUR LOCA L DEALER FOR DREXEL-HENREDON-HERITAGE INmlORS LAGU NA BEACH NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wootdlff Dr., 642·2050 O"M 'l lDAT ,.IL t ProfHtion•I Interior o .. 11nert Av1il1bl~AID-NSIO 3-45 North Co11t Hwy. 49USS 1 onH NfDAY "flL ' ...... , .. , "'-..... ., o...,. c...., 14 .. 1 Jt.J ( I I I I ' 11 11 • Newp•rt. DarhoJJ ED•TION * 1/0l 62, NO. 291', 4 SE.cTIONS, '48 PAGES FRIDAY, DECEl.f8ER~S •• 19't . . . . ' ... --~·-.---. • L rv1ne ares $400,000 Mi1111ing Lawyer Sought - In Bond Theft By TOM BARLEY Of Ille ti.lily f'llDI llMt Mexican authorities today joined the FBI and investigators from the San Diego County District AUorney's office in a ·widening search for an attorney ac- cused of stealing nearly $400,000 in bonds . b:om tbe estate of a Newport Beach man. · The search for Escondido lawyer Patrick S. M. Mitton, 471 ls centering on Ensenada, the Mexican city where he allegedly cash<d a check for IS.000 last Nov. 25. , Federal and San Diego County com· plaint& accuse Mitton of grand theft and Coast Braces For Hawaii Surf-to Hit 'I11undering surf, -an echo o{ murderous, ltonn-spawned breakers bat- tering IJawap today -is expected to strike Utt Orange Coast wifhin M hours. followed by abnormally high tides com· . . -poond!ng the problems Monday. Trouble may be brewini for some artal'!, including Laguna Beach, where A. 1lmilar Ct1mbination in July, l1M9, sent aurf swirling over and beyond Pacific Coast Highway. according to one veteran. Waves · generaled by a pair or two severe storms in the ,.,.estem Pacific 11macked the California coastline Thurs- day. ra~ging up to IS feet In the Santa Barbara area. Treacherous surf capsized a skiff car- rying two treasure-hunters In their mid- twenties off Summerland Beach and the men vanished in the crashing waters. A 14-year-old surfer narrowly escaped drowning off Hermosa Beach when he fought the seas for a half-hour after being knocked from his board, but was rescued by lifeguards. The swells spawned by twin stonns between the Philippine and the Aleutian islands subsided a bit Thursday night, dropping as low as. two feet today along the Orange Coast. \Veather forecas ters comparing ex - pected tides and new, in coming sets of breaker.i say the surf which reached a maximi:m of eight to ten feet in Laguna Beach is just a la ste of more to come ." Lifeguard Lt. Eugene DePaulis said lhe· l'!1ir11e combination or seven-foot tides and r;tonn·spawned surf hit the Art Colony on July 4, 1949, washing over the coastal highway. • If predictions of today hold up, he warned, the crashing surf will be up to ttMI boardwalk area and may spill -over ~down Broadway. 0 '11len again, they could be wrong." he said. Lifeguards and police along the Orange Coan from Seal Beach to San Clemente generally teported the same thing: high (See SURF, Page II * * -ti altempted extortion, charges stemming from his alleged theft of bonds held In the estate of John Salmond, 79, 2164 Vista Entrada, Newport Beach. The retired Union Oil Company 1!X· ecutive, deS;Cli.bed today by his daughter- ln·law u being "a very r;lck man,'' recently appointed his wife.. Mn. Helen F. Salmond and his son, John Salmond Jr .• 16921 Bedford Lane, Huntington Beach, as conservatorr; of the estate. San Diego investigators today said Mlt· ton was hired as the family attorney and is believed to be the author of a typewrit· ten unsigned letter which the younger Salmond subsequently received in the mail. That letter. they said, was received Nov . 22 and it suggested that Salmond, Y.•ho is vice president of California State College at Los Angeles, should pay Mitton one-half of the value of the missing lxiflds -estimated by investigators as being \\'Orth about '400,000. In vestigator Larry Bricker said the let- ter warned Salmond that the bonds would not be returned unless the lawyer receiv· eel hali of their value. The Jetter aJ50 pointed out that A meeti11g would be arranged between tbe parties at which details of the exchange of bonds and money could be arranged. At about that Orne, Brlcker said, Mif· ton sold..hi& Escondido law ptacUce and went on 1 vacation. He was next reported as having been seen in Ensenada where he cashed the $.5,000 check. Sgt. Jesus Suenor or the Ensenada Police Department said police In four J\1exican provinces were in possession of Mitten's picture and description and th at an intensive search Is under way. "We understand that he i! no stranger to Mexico," the sergeant said, "and that he has many friends down here. This will not help our search, of course, but we are .,.,orking with your people (the district at· torney's office) and the FBI." John Salmond Jr. today refused tG comment on the reported theft of .bonds from his father's estate. Relallyes and friends of Mitton, who is also a certified public a~lant, similarly refused lo dJscuss the lawyer's disappearance. · 'Y' Opens Doors To Early Birds The early bird gets the workoot at the y Thal.'s becaulit', beginning Jan. 2 (a lot of people would benefit if it began Jan. I) the Orange Coa st YMCA will open at ? a.m. for those in need of a little stimula· Oon of the system. . Physical Director Bill Brown says handball players, joggers, weigbWftera and swimmers can start the day right, topping It oil with a 1tint in the steamroom. Phy'sical fitness cllSleS for men will be offered Monda)'I, Wedneodays and Fridays, with various htm1 Of the day &et aside for 1peclal !nSrucllon. Monster Surf R.eturns .ToOahu,ButNoDamage HONOLULU (AP) -'Tho s1<lrtn·ba~ lend nonh llxn cl OOlm Island .... ped furlher damage earlf todar when an er· pected lll<Jl\Oler llUlf cmlM a critical 10 led lowtr than pnodided. More than t;JOO midenta had betd evacuated as the north shore, on the op- ~lte 11ide of the island from Honolulu, braced for towering walls or water: The wt peaked al 311 feet al high lid•. Ml high · enouah to cau.. properly damage. This was 20 ~ bt\ow the wavlflll that smashed 58 homes lod CJ.used II mllilon In propeny damage MOllday. Today's waves had been predicted to hit 40 feel, the heigh\ they reach<d 'fhuraday. A mid·Pacirlc •tonn 80l'Tle \ t.000 mite. nortbwest ol lla"a!I spawned Che massive wavt5, offlclals ~id. Despite iho da.llgcr, the massive waves ' re:pc eser\tett I apectacular light to llOIDI people. Pol!Cll aid the7 clwod bun- dre" -"'--. -the -br thr 'II to bave tl>eir WI lowed away. -~i. aaJo!_ Mondi)' and~y·s damage c::oNi.lluled Hawaii'• worn: natural disaster alnce a 1960 UdaJ wave killed 61 perl!Olls and cauaed $2$ million in damage on lh< i!lapd"tf Hawaii. Mono than lOO pol!t<, f!rmien and pibllc ·wort....,,,..,,. llad '1'<n ordered into JIOl'th ...... ...... o! 'llOnoliltit in readiness for lht iboMter waves th1t never came today. Al'° spared l"1m further devastation was the tiny fishing vill&p ol Miloll! to the south of HawaU Island. The tlO-retil· dent v!Jlege suslalDed 1100,000 In damage Tl!e>day, Including the i..1 of moat o! It. outri"er fllhln& canoe fieeL OAILY T hlff ...... THIS IS PORTION OF IRVINE COASTAL AREA BETWEEN CAMEO SHORES (LEFT), CRYSTAL cove ' Tate Suspects Give Evidence To Gr~d Jury LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney for Susan Denise Atkins said today she would , tell the .grand ~ invesUa~tl~& the· rnurders· Gf Sharon 'Fate and ether~. "all the details of the Tate murder," in. eluding how she was "hypnotized'~ into participating in it. As he entered the grand jury courtroom complex, where ts witnesses, their attorneys and othe~ were noisily assembling. Ri chard Caballero said Miss Alkins :i;till feels under( the pow er of Charles M. J\1anson. 35. bNirded leader or a hippie-styl e clan that ls flgurlng hea.,.ily in the in.,.esligation. Prosecutors have said they will setk lo indict Manson with conspiracy to commit murder. "She still fears him," Caballero said of Manson's innuence over his client. He said Miss Atkins, 21. charged with. murder in a separate cas~. will waive rights against self incrimination fn hopes that her voluntary teStimony will save her from the gas chamber. She will admit freely, he said, that r;he accompanied members cf the clan as I.hey killed Miss Tate, actress wife of Polish film director Roman Polanski, and four others last summer -but her defense will be she was temporarily in- CROSS-HATCHED AREA IS VACANT IRV!NE COASTAL LAND s<1ne while under the clan leader's "hyp- noti c sp£'11" ;ind "had oot.hing to do with. the murders." "Ir a "'itncss is tn1thful and honest l 1hink :;.ome ronsideration will be given to lhat," Caballero said. He added that Miss Atkins is "quite upset, quite remorseful ." Prosecutors arrived for the grand jury session with three pictures to show the jurors. One shows a length of rope about Undergroun_d Paper Story On The.ft Alarms Glavas 43 feet long, aoother shews a gun, and a Nellioport Beach 'Police Chief B. James third shows an aerial view of the home of Clavas today told his ,concern about the a couple killed the day after the Tate passing c;iut at local ~lgh school_s of an murders. underground newspaper c9ntaining: an Also among the 18 scheduled witnesses article advocating shoplifting. • .was producer Terry Melcher. 27·year-old The chief ·&aid because of Supreme eon of 1ioger..actres~ Doris Day. Melcher Court decisions lnlerpretlng free· speech has declined con1mcnL he J;uows of · no way lo prosecute the Miss Atkins' aUorr.r y:o; ~aid 1\tclcher publishers o.r distributors of ,;From O~t was visited by Charlei; ~r. ~1anson. 3.5. or Sher'>''ood Foresl," publi shed loca lly kiiown as the leader of " ri11~c;irel 1gious in Newport Beach. clan of hippie ty pes "'ho knr1.,. Mf'nsrin as Po!iCf' were c..i.lled tO lhe Corona del "God" and "Satan." fl far lfigh School .can1pus earlie r thi !i ~1anson was unsuccc~:-ful in :-cekfns "·eek ·bu t when U1ey arri\"t?d a bearded Melcher's help to ret:ord ~me songs )'oung man and a girl who were hand· when Melcher lived in the Tate home in ing out Cople~ of the underground papc?r fashionable Ile! Air before Miss Tale and just . beyond t~e school premises were her husband movlid in, tile attorneys gone. aald. ''Unfortunately, court decisions of the Deputy· Dist. Atty. Aaron SlOvitz siid last few •yeirs have given )>e(>ple who have utmnely bad bile much latitude 'ntunday be would ask the grand jury to in the~ aru1," Chltt Qlavaa said. tDdlct ManlOD on. a,cbarge of conspiracy ''They have not only .IUbjecied young lo commlt murder, and would aeek people lo filth bojt In b!lhlY. sugestfble inurder and coftapiracy indictmqls minds have created doubt about the agalnR a\ least five other persons. moral structure. When· theY advocate It :was the_fil'Jt word that )t~scm, held theft to the effect that those who have for · trial 'in lndependtnce, Calif., on -100UJCJ--niVe it ll:ken iWiy1 tJilfJ.1f it's charges of possessing stolen property and going preUy far. That article. wasn~t a drfv1ng a ,stolen vehicle, would be a put on." r • ' 'brget for prosecution il'i' the alayig,ga. , l ,.!f~-'-~r~.ferred , lo f. story .he~dllz1:ed -Shot"' stabbed w1t1r•·Tale, "·f 1 ·,,.,..... l!hlff"-ll..,..:by-M>lllll llOcid. !llM. TL c.us.·J'qe 1) The li••r.t<HloJt otory .. _lbop1!tt(nc ' , , , •j-'o:.Y• :"S!ea)ll1fl l/Vm ·c<>m_... wb!cli . . • ·f'. • . . _ . 1 41' ~llnr. 'Crom ,tile ~Jiit ~I~ Jilt. T 0 ' ·•-Public. 11on... l'r<ill\'ts tlfdl" ••• ,we""'~ .... 1 our pen ..., : 1o 11ut1 ..,. !ndli!dul -~ ~ . .,t . don't lf you ltffl! tiorrf' eom- saturday mon>ina'i Wol ~New• I )>die~" • ' . • ' po<t Bay will ~n •t't ·a:m. 1~1"e'h11«· · Glllvar;remtfUl]y noted, the Jp. states 1ect100· OlllaCl<-Bij'Jl!lve and-Ea"*U-~there i&\noihliig 1U>lawt\ll abllidiadvoc.i,. Drive at the nonheo.t: ,tnd of the .lily. l.'1,:' long H· ,OU do01 oonsplte;10 ptt· It Is open to the ~ ,. • !ht· ad' with --. ~ , The undergroun~ sheet cont.alnl words and pictures th.It generally Would · be consldertd obscene, along Wllh Its social comment. He remarked, ".;.s. you. arf: aware, the Supreme Court has said ihere Is no such thing as ob8Cenity." · Regarding· the dlslributiM 1 at Corona del Mar High' Sebool, he said, "If they are qff of the achoo! grounds and not solicitiq ~subscriptlOM or charginr there apparently Is nothing we can do." Corona · del Mar 1111b· Principal Lton tifeeks said, "I don 't· think they gave out.more than 100 or 200 cOples." He aald ·polk:e ·we:re ealltl u 100n·as a student pl~ed up· a copy of the pojler and came runninc to • the · office with IL Dick "llfcl;y" era.. D-)'UN>ld .part 0"'1<r of Bini In 5Mrcll of •·Cato Book· stc:re, ·Dn .w ... Balboa· smt .... ·the pape< 11 ·pablllhed. ,Aid be• dldn1 -about lllJ'Clle bl....,, oal ,tlla•popor al Corona de! Mat' m.,.. • -, . He uld.tlle ...._ prmou!y hia been given · afty oi' IOld' ..at UC . ltvl.ne, ,O.an118~CoUl\llllqei,1(""1!0rl Blrbcir and Westminster 'hlp ochooll. al !bops in Laguna Beacb and a,t the Sant. -Peace Center. # • -• ~ •O'. or ... , ...... ""'"" to tho .... ·.lnll«n." ol "'1oi'"Ci1ii"ol''~ 'iJ: :ett• iricbli . ·~ QCC .......... I!< -."klold -.111o.. · -r-;v trilildo lo t)le~l!ll!"" ~elaton. :Ii no~l&pa!d · >• ' I S~ ~·ibe·-lf"'l•~·to'_.,. 11r•ni' C<ditr'• -. .... Ml ~ tikt r,., ~ei ... ,,,..~,._, 'Jit.t0. markld...B Id II» .naa w~ &<co11ie ~ood,'F°""' carrlit--dus!~mylho with IL ' • ' TOtlay'•~ . ' . l~.Y. Steeb TEN CENTS , ' ' an Mason Asks Both Public, Private Use By JEROME F. COUJNS ot flMI lllillr l'li.t stttr ' A eombinaUOn of public and private developrrient of the roast.al area between Corona del Mar and Laguna Beach was proposed today by William· R. Mason, pr•si\I~ of lh< Irvine Coll)pany. MUJO &aid the comJ>l:Dy, aWe owner ot the 3li mile streldl · of v!ttually uninhabited llhorelfno Pi"!J'llJ, said ~ the company's. maltet plan· will reflect "a unique blend of de"1opments thal will Include public acceso to the tidelands. u He asked !!late, county apd municipal government o!pclal& fnterestoa fn the public's access. to ocean tidelands and the acquJsltlon of public ·beach areas t.o join with the company as it begins its plan-, ning for the. area. "The Inclusion of public access to the tidelands and the provision 1£or their ~ .qu!sitlon of public beachea along the Irvine coast: may co:me as a ltll'Jlfiae to tnose Who are unfamlllar witli oUr-hislOry of planning," said Mason. "But it should not. "The Irvine Company bu long recogniil'.d and been an lldVOcite al ~ n<ed for joint public •nil· privale -·· tion in \he creative deYtlopment II fur · envtrorunenl .. ~ Irvine executJve, Ill ~ b1, pnlf ... l<m. tmplwlud; "W~ do 'not Intend to create an tn• v~ a..1 will dear publ!c -1o tho..,....!~-al In tho cue·ol the rec.nt Silt c.-·matter. What i; biore, •• _,. not oppoted to publ!t acqU!aflfnq_ and dtvelopment of. portions of. the ·c:oan. ,al land for public purposes." Mason's "Salt Creek" reference was to the county's abandomnent of Salt Creek Road in· Laguna Niguel, oOuth of LMima Beiicb, early l&ot ytar. The mad had served as quaai-public access to Sett Creek beach. Revenal of the county'• le.. Uoo bu ~been vigorously sought ever sin<:<! by c!U"!"' ·groups In the ooulb county are 'J Irvine'• Mason aaid his comP1DY1 main cOncem never baa been with the ' que.tlon r of whether public facllltles should be localed on Janda owned by. the firm. "We are, 1¥>Wever, concerned with the . Med for · publk: plans to be coordinated With and complimentary to planned private jevelopments." Jn order to bring about this coordina· lion·. Mason said, the company is callillg on the State Department ·of Parks and Recreation. county government· and the cities of NewP,Orl Beach and Laguna Beach "to combine their individual ideas, (See IRVINE, Page. Zl Stork Merket NEW YORK (AP) -Stock mal'RI -prices turned lower in slow tradlnC late thts·a!tunoon alter giving up eerty mod· er'it•-tains. (See .quotation&, Pag'" 10. )!.} Orange I I ·•Co.st Weafller The surf Wiil 1Hf up ·and the sun will be out thl1 weekend, with balmy temperatures ln the upper 70's warming the Orange Coat. , . INSWE ·TODAY Almost a VN' after h« sheri. .•d out $900 lo· baU UC Inn., 1t'"1tnti oui a/, jajl tta· B.frk.4~11, Chcncl!!Uor Doniel Aldrich ii be-- ginning to ~ o«& .rome o/ hi1 money bacl<. Page 3. Owly20 .~ C.GRISTMAS · -" •c.a-.. ~·· c ......... . ........ , .. .. ~· . . --. ·-. ...... ,. ' 1-111 s J DM ....... "'" 1•esw•e '' -'~li -. I I , J , • ·!· • ~ DAil Y 1'1LOT " • ' • Irvine F oundation Sur~iye s . ' ·Senate .·T·ax Mo ve . . 1'nlll ""' s...- ,,,. JI-lm!ll PoundolJm, aod 1lmillr tax.f:xtmpt organizations appear to have v.·on a new tease on life today after lhe Seftate defeated a plan to strip away their tax sanctuary. Senate action came In Washln&ton after an emot.ionally charged shoullng debate on the floor. . The tax amendrr.ent, U it hid been adopted, v.'OUld have stripped the foun. d&Uonl ot ta1-enmpt status after 40 years. It wu called "the death sentence'' 3 City Aides Quit to Join ~·Homes Co. ' ' Three key Newport Beach city aides have resigned to join a newly <>rganized factory-built homes firm. Deron Groth, princjpal pllMl!r: senlor plaMer Brian Hawley, 31, and Derek J Vhite, 34, civil engineer, all v.ill begin their new jobs ?i.londay v.ilh Housing Systems, Inc .• of Newport Beach. The firm is a division of 1'i1acco. Groth has been .lith the city for three years; Ha,,.,·ley joined the municipal staff ii year ago : \Vhite has served tlu'ee year& ~ • on the public w..otka stall. . t:: ne· three m'en's roles will be active t: :ants In the j>l&nning divisions of the firm r.:;est.ablilbe.d J three montltJ age>. > :° G!Vib )'iJ1 be director Of· planning for • housing gy,tems. Hawl<y will be his • ·am.tanL ~ '. While wlli' be director of engineering : • !or the mobile· home park dev<Jopment : • division. The firm apecialiies in modular and factory-built homes. Some 30 projects : : across the country are · already under :.:·way by the cOrporatie>n. Groth said. :: "By the ni.id·l970s," he predicted. :~ "aboot 80 percent or all new homes will : • be factory-built because or rising labor _: and materil!l costs." ·:: . ff~ Syst~s· chief txecutive of· ·• ficer 1s· Pete We1tgraven. 'The company 'i. -:nalional headquarters, Groth said, would ~:---rt'mafn in Newport. ~; )-.. .From Page I --.{,- 3. ~ , , , r .. .· , ~ .. .· - ~ ·' -:, _, ·' J .. ·' ·' -_y .. J -· J . , -• J • , . < _, , , • • • ·:· ~ :· .. " -~ -, ' :· ' .. ~ ' ' ' ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ., , _, ~ ' ' , " ., ' 1 . .. " ' , • SURF .•• surf Thursday. lapsing to Utile wave.s tt> day and DG damage. Seal Beach police set out barricades alq the beach Thul'ldly nl&hl when the paunding aurf washed away Jl(Jl'tlona and appeared ready to cause mort trouble, but ·the swe'lls were down to three feet this morning. Surfs!~ reported no problem, but the little colony, inundated by waves due to erosion in the early sixties. could get &Ol1le st.anding beach pools if surf crests over the high-tide line Saturday. H\mlinglon Beach lifeguards said surf was tive to seven feet Thursday.-'. bfgher than normal -but they expect a MOW\· Ung hei&:ht by late Saturday morning, Newport Beach authorities satd waves hit about the same height Thursday, but there was no damage and trucks Involved in the sand haul anti-erosion project kept · up the normal pace. If anythlng, said one official. the waves are giving a chance to !ludy the effect of heavy 11w1 on the newly-dumped sand and lltUe was carried away by the wave action. Mrs. Hearst, 38, Dies PACIFIC PALISADES IU P!l -M"- Mary Thompson Hearst, 38, former wife of new1piper publisher George Randolph flearst Jr., died ThursdaY at her home . Mrs. Hearst recently underwent surg· ery of an undiscl~ nature. Hearst flt>w In from Honolulu after learnlng of the death of his fonrier wife. ln addillon lo her former husband, Mrs. Hearst is sur· vived by four children. , DAILV PILOT ClllMGI COA1l "Ult 1$HIMO. C0M'ANT l •IMfl N. W••4 ·~ n l'\lbllll'llr JM\ I. Cini.., ~ ~ _, Otfworll M-ttr t••"'" i .... n ..... l\t11te• A. M"''hi11• -.. ..... ,"' . J.re111• F. ce11r., "~ t!N<fl °" .... ---,211 Wtt+ l•llH11 IHl•••fi Mantti1.AIUreu:1.0. l1r 117S, '?''J. --°""' Mfte1 m """' ... '""' '--'-": m ,_. ·-~-IMcll:. ""'"'"' t Cor ttcmitlens~ •• -, '· . Tl1e f!Jlll .. le ... ~ u.., ...... 1111 QS fl to 11. .- Ill Orana• Caunty, Ille J'., .. Irvine Foundatlon owru: ~ sbartr'Or: $4,4 per~ cent of Irvtne Company 1tock. At tts last aaJe. in November of 1968, the &tock drew $250,00l per share. From its tax~xempt haven, the Irvine Foundation has diatributed mlUlOl'll to loci! cultural and charity groups sil'!Ct it was founded in 1936 by Ult late James Irvine. SEEKS JOINT EFFORT Irvine Compt1ny'1 M1son , . ~ . ..: ... ...... -- ' Ill Ille lflW "" ..U.. M&ICh lj Ille '~ le ~ \If • ll'l)I ~, M--!o.MIM-), lo ~i.te !!le ...,irlc· .J"lllo F...Ulioo '-~~ ~-·"'""!!i=m!Ulio-lf.if h ..... t1klll!l!oi{I~, ~hi ihe~W-b)' IU mllllell lo -.1e 1114 ~ Dull. fraoll' ~e Senate linuce commltl ... In ~ Senale <ltblle lodQ, Im. '"'"rt FWJll!I bll lt'IN aod pacing beill!PI -Mondale argued !hot Jhe provilion E. Gore (0.Tenn..). tlgbdna to malntaln ~the ~ ~ -.0 on the &enate floor, would des1roy one of the most Jnnov1Uve, tht 40-year ll!espan provisk>n in the bill.. Gore lhouted that lta chlef purpose "~ td creative i!.nd · experimental. forces . ln 11rgued that an overwhelming majority of· ad\'trtJse Kello~~.:.·~ American society. ' ' ' private· foundaUOna were created by ~ .Kellog! •• Kel"~t . Ke 11 o i g!" he · Sen. John o •. PMtor• (.[).R.1.), jointd mlllionaires to serve as tax havens and to shouted. "Kello11 . Kellot:g ! Kellogg! Mondale in defending foundations. "Don't publicize lhe name of their creator in How long can this go on? Is 40 years too crucify them," Pastore said. "Don't do perpetuity. Jong? How long Is forever?" this beeauae what· you're going to do is Gore said even the Kellogg Foundation,. But Gore's arguments were unsuc· eliminate tht element of private charity of !a.tile Crtelc, Mlch., wtuch be de,,c:rib-cessful in the .end. Senator' adopted an ln America." ed aa one of .. the good foundations," had .mendment spomored by Sen. Walter F'. Gott Wd.the vote reflected heavy lob- l>yinf by tl)e 'f9tind1\jon1. 'M dfaltod, \iJt 40-yelf llf"P'n r~'fl«I th< coa<:ern or both conserv•Uves 11rld liberals 6vtr the pawer foundatJans l!lercise through their great wealth and or failart by some to -pay ·oul to charit)I any Qf their assets or • their income. · · · · Another sensitive amendment ·to the tax reform bill -a 15 percent increase 111 social security ber.efits -is U\e next clash the Senate faces. Senate Republican whip Robert P. Grif· fin a.ttacked the social security· aJJlCnd- ment as a ''political maneuver." Pa~el Quizzes _Lt. Calle y 'MAY BE BEST WAY' lrvlnt Planner Watson Pentagon Probes Or ig inal My ~i Investigation,· WASlllNGTON (UPI) -First U . WiWam L. caijey Jr. was aummoned to the Pentap today for qutlllooing by a special panel attemptlr!a to determine if there ml&ht have been a whitewash of an original Anny lnvesUaation of the kilting of South Vietnamese civllau ~t My Lai. The 26-year-okl Calley is accused of premeditated murder of 109 persons in the alleged massacre. He was com· F rom Page I TATE CASE. • • her rented $200,000 homt last Aug. 9 were Hollywood hair stylist Jay Sebring, 35, ~ .. bel,... Abigail Fol1er, 2&, Polish playboy VolJYck Frokowsky, 37 aod Steven Parent, 18, a friend of the c:aretaku. A wealthy market executive. Leno mander of a platoon .. or a company head- ed by Capt. Ernest A. Medina, who denied n,ursday either ordering or seeing any mass slayings in the village. The Pentagon inquj.ry board apparently plans to question almost everyone with a connection in the case and Calley was on· ly one of seve ral called toda y. A spokesman said it was possible he might nof be heard until late today . or possibly f\•en hit er. Calley is the only person specifica lly charged with murder in the case, although more thal\ a score of men who were there ' S:t the, lime are under in· vestigat~on and one sergeant has been ac· cused or assault with intent to murder. Calley, who is to be tried by an Anny court martial neit month at Ft. Benning, Ga., was called before the so-called Peers Investigation Board which was formed to look into whether a low-level in· vestigation soon after the. March 16. 1968 , incident amounted lo little more than a whitewash. The board headed by Lt. Gen . William R. Peers heard tfedina Thursday behin11 closed doors. Afterward >.1edina, coin· mander -Of Company C, lst Battaltion. cif the 200lh infantry at the time. held a news conference to deny any knov.'ledgc of mass killings of civilians. In a subsequent intervie\'.', l'l'ledina acknowledged. however. that under orders from higher up, he bad directed his men lo destroy ~-ty Lai 4. a part o~ the vil lage of Song My, because it was suspected as a haven for lhe Viet ConJ 48th battalion. From Page 1 LaBianca, «,and his wife Rosemary, 33, were stabbed to death at their HoJlyv.·ood home the next day. · Cong Set 3-day Truces For Christmas, New Year , IRVINE SHORE PLAN ••• ~liss Atkins' lawyers said she told them that members of li-fanson's group, who interests and desires during the early stages of planning." Let ters outlining the Irvine proposal have been sent lo \Villiam Penn A1ott, Jr., director of the state department of parks and recreation: \\'illian1 Hirstein, chair· man of the Orange County Board of Su· pervisors: Doreen Marshall, mayor of Newport Beach, and Glenn Vedder, may. or of Laguna Beach, Mason said. "To date," he explained, "the com- pany's coastal studies have pertained lo surveying and analyzing soil conditions, slopes, utilily systems, road alignments, v:e,v potentials, and market conditions. Only now is the company preparing to embark on detailed studies relating to the formulation of a precise land use plan for the coast." Further inspiration for achieving a balance. of public and private uses of the generally rugged coastline and il3 scat- tering of swimming beach~s came from a recent tour of ti.1editerranean resort areas by rtlason and a four-man company task force. The Irvine representatives: visited such Medical Students Reject Gifts From Company Fourteen of 64 students tn the freshma n ciass of UC Irvine's School of Medi cine have rejected gift of a black medical bag containing stethoscope. tuning fork and rubber hammer from a pharn1accutical CQmpany. The studenls feel acceptance of the gifts might Impinge on their future in· tegrity as physicians and could cost con· sumers or the dn1g company's prodlJ('t!I by higher prices, according to freshman medical student Je"rry Boss. The fourteen students sent a letter to Eli Wily Pharmaceutical Company re· jecting the gifts and received a letter in reply, • \Vrote the studenls : " ... fully coenizant there is no obliga· lion attached to accepting these elfts, "'·e view them as a potential threat to our Juture integrity as physicians. We WCMJ\d prrfer to be: completely free of any non- . business tran s actions with pharmaceutical companies." Replied Henry F. De Doest, vice p~si· dent of corporate affairs for the lJlly . Company: "The instruments and bags are offered with the expectation that they will bt: useful. Q1.dle naturally, It is our desire to acquaint student~ with the Lilly name as a manufacturet or quality medicines. "At the same time we do not belleve that this a.ulslance \lo'lll affect the Im· partial judgments of physicians in thtlr cart or patients ... On lhti second issue, lbe students Mele:. ". • . we quesUon the source of the m-oney Ustd to pay for thtse lifts. lt IP. pt&n to us the drug consumer -mainly lhe chronically ill and aa:ed -ls the one v.·ho ultimately shoutders the cost of these &iftl. We feel we can better afford the price of our black bags thao can our medtcally indigent paUents. '' Responded DeBoest: " ••. durtna the past 10 years, u shown by the Lilly price index, the average price of our company's pharmaceuticals has declined more than IO percentage points:. Because of It.! limited size, the 1;ludent program has had virtually no ti· feet on the prlees or our products." I dressed in black for the occasion, com· coastal de\'elopments as the Algarve mitted the Tate slayings, then killed the Coast in Portugal, Ute Costa del Sol and LaBiancas to pro\"e their nerVe. They Costa Brava in Spain, the French Ri viera reported she said Manson v.·as not with SAlGON (AP) -The Viet Cong Friday said, "all Nalional Liberation forces in al! and Italy's Ligurian and Amalfi couts. lhe.m. proclaimed three-day cease-fires for areas of South Vietnam must cease all r._fason said it WjiS a hJghly instructive Police have said three of lhe in-Christmas and New Year's Day and military operations.'' dictment targets are Pat r i c i a d I e<i 11-d -J u· Id be Jl d J e<i th 11· J tour. ''The most obvioua raUi"" we cc ar any a 1e v10 a ons v.•ou ec ar e a 1es must cal off all •-o Krenwinkel. 21. in custody in ~foblle, d obser\'ed is th8t lho.!e coastal areas that Ala.: Charles D. Watson, 24, jailed 'in punlshe · n1ilitary activities including '1aeria! were de\'eloped exclusively for private' , McKinney, Tex.; and Linda Louise Kasa-The proclamation, read over the secret reconnaissance. strafing. bombing or use appeared sterile, uninteresting and bian , 2Q, arraigned here Thursday. Police Viet Cong radio, made no mention of one-defoliating with chenlical poison anci v.ithout a feeling of place or context." said they were arrested on murder war-day cease-fires for the two holidays an· operations by naval and rive r crart and Areas developed exclusively for the rants in the Tate case and were involved nounced Thursday by South Vietnam and artillery Jn any area of South Vietnam." public didn't look much better,. he said. in the LaBianca slayings. lhc United SLates. "Such activities will be considered In addition to them and i1iss Atkins, · "They were dull. unattractive and in the Times said, others against whom pro-As in the past. the Viel Cong made no \'io lations of lhe cease-fire .•. and will be moat instanceS thty had spoiled the secuton are expected to seek indictments reference to stcl.ndofr by North Viet-punished,'' the broadcast said, adding natural beauty of the coastline, often ap-are Stev Grogan, .18, also known as Clem namese troops. NortlJ Vietnam never has that Viet Cong troops would increase puring as Jf they had been dedicated to Tuft.s j and Lealle Sankston, about 20, a publicty admitt"ed 1ts troops are in South their vigilance and be ·•ready to·fight and pirldni lots and tr as Ii receptacles... young wom1n. 1be rl'tWspaper identified Vietnam although it has come close to destroy the enemy." them as member• o! Manson's "hippie· · · ~t is to avoid either extreme, ~1ason style "family ." saying so on OClasions. In past truces, the U.S. Command has said, that the company reels a During all holiday cease-fires in the reserved the. right to conduct ground and cooperative planrung effort between the past, each side has accused the other of aerial reconnaissance to sa feguar d ~~~.'~ private interest$ "l!i man· Grand!iiiland Kills IO repeated violations. :fmaet~~c:k~ forces and to fight back in case Before the; Mediterranean trip in The Viel Cong !:aid the cease-fires T·here never has been a cease-fire Jn October, Irvine . officials already had CARACAS. Venezuela (AP) -An would last 72 hours beginnina at 1 a.m. \1iet nam that \\'SS not . marked by decided on making acce.ss available to O\'trweighted grandstand at an im-Dec. 24, Saigon time, and I a.m. Dec. 30. sporadic fighting . Last year, the South the public tidelands, Mason noted. provised bull rine collapsed Thursday in The allied cease-fires will begin at 8.p.m. Vietnamese government refused to pro- Thls was indicated tut April v.·ben the the Southwestern town of Santa Barbara Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year's claim a New Year's truee because ii company sent a representative to de Barinas, killing 10 persons and in· Eve. claimed the enemy had broken thf! Sacramento to ap~ar before the juring 60. During its ceiise-fires, the Viet Cong Christmas cease-fire 114 times. Assembly Committee on IAcal Govern· j--:;;;;ii19iiiii;iliilliilliilliiiiliiiim;;o;ii0iiiliiiiiiiiii00iiiiii0iiiiiii9ii0iiiiiiiiiii.;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;::-·ment. The Irvine aide voiced support of proposed legislation bearing on public &c· cess to shoreline areas. "We approved the concept," said Mason. Irvine senior vice president Ra y Wat.son, who oversees the company's long-range planning. said appointment of a "public coordinaUng committee" may be the best approach to the masttr plan problem. The committee's membership \\·ould comprise representatives of state. county and local agencies \\'ho would work with Irvine plaMers "to establiJh the needs and desires of · the various levels of governments "'ith respect to public areas." The committee. he said, would.Iunclion 83 the official li aison be:tv.·een tht com· pany and the public . "Through coordinated action and coope.ration,'' '\'atson concluded, "a devtlopment plan can emerie that will make Jt possible to achieve an opUmum blend or public and private uses that might not otherwise be possible.·· * * * Ma yor Praises Irvi ne's Joit1t Deve lopment Plan Ne'>''port Beach Mayor Dorttn Mar· .shall today praised the trvin@ Company for Its announced intention lo combint public and private uses in t!Je dt\'elop. mtnt of its downco.ast propertie5. ''This ii Ytty welcome," she said. "I think lhelr e1preS&ed COl'ICel'n for the nttd1 ol"4the ;aublk: it hiahly l.t.udabJe." She Slid she will diocuM wllh lb• city council ~fonday rrvlnt'.1 propo11l to form a "public coordinating com{Tllttet" to assist in lhe prepar•Lion or a master plen for the coastal area aoqth of C«ona dtl Mar. Either • council mtmber or • m•m· bei o/ the city •t.ff -.Id ..,. .... the ccmmlttee, iJong with rtprtuntaUvu of other public aaencies. "This ctnalnly should give us a fOOCf opportunity lo particlP1te on I conUn· ,ulng basis In the developmtnt of this Vt'ry Important public and prlvite ruource," ~aid !\lrs. f\.1a rshan. NNISHID IN MIMOSA Yru.ow Oil CHON. HAND Drcoum IN CH ALK~ .•. •LAU SHllVIS AND TWO INTUIOl LIGHTS. $ 99 IY DllDIL. Tiii MOST n umD NAME_f_N FURNITURE. ---------------7 YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR DRE XEL. HENREDON. HERITAGE NlW,ORT BEACH 1n1 Wfftcllff Or.,"42·2050 ' • om PAID.AT -rt1. t INTERIORS ltrof111lon1I Interior O.Sftnt rt Avallabl-.0.ID-NSID LAGUNA l!ACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. OPIH Pll:IDAT ,IL ' ' 49~551 I ! I I Suit Urges Freedom for Winnie Judd PHOENIX (UPI) -A superior court suit filed Thurs- day asks the court to order the state board of pardons and paroles to recommend the release of convicted slayer Winnie Ruth Judd. The suit was filed, by Phoeni:r attorney Lany Debus and San Francisco attorney Melvin Belli, who represented Mrs. Judd in an appearance Oct. 27 before the paroles board. The board, in a 2-l vote, declined to recommend to Gov. Jack Williams that the famed trunk murderess of the 1930s be released from the state prisoll. The ·Suit charged that the board's action "was an arbitrary and capricious abuse of discretion for the reason that no scintilla o( evidence wa! before the board upon which it could base the finding of fact and conclusion •.• " The suit also said the board lmprop«ly !ailed lo credit Mrs. Judd wiUi 29 years she spent in the Arizona State HO"Spital 'after being found in· sane. Furthennore, the suit said, Mrs. Judd has been in- carcerated more than twice as Jong as most persons sen- tenced tp life in Arizona. Mrs. Judd was convicted of killing one of two women friends w;hose but ch ered bodi~ were shipped to Los Angeles in a trunk. Ho use ·c~ts Deep Into F oreign_Aid __,· WASHINGTON (AP) -Ap- propriations for the embattled foreign akl · program may tumble to a new low point this year, poulbly $1 bYlion less than the spending e<iling aought by President NU.on. A hoose appn>priatloos sub- committee is reported to have whacked the aid mearue down to Ille neigbbofbood of $1.S billioo, Including deep sla*es in major economJc aid compopenta. President Nixoo has sought · a $2.6 billk>n spending ceiling for the overall program in the year that began last July. The House trimmed that to $2.19 billion and the admin istration went to the senate for help in increasing· the money autbocization. One ot the major fights looms In the military seotion of the bill. 'The subcommittee, Liver Fails; Boy Dies DENVER (AP) -A small Seattle boy died late Thurs- day, less than 24 hours after surgeons gave h i m a transplanted chimpanzee liver in a last-chance effort to save his life. Tests following the 14-hour operatioo at the University of Colorado Medical Ceflter shawed the liver was fuoo- tioning hut the 7-month-old child ·remained critically ill, surviving as tong as he did on-- ly with the aid of a respirator. The child, not identified further bf the hospital, grew weaker dtu'ing the night and died shortly before midnight, a spokesman said. Odds against his .survival were tremendous. 'I11ere are no .known cases of survival for more than a few days after animal-t<>-man transplant of vital Organs. headed by Rep. Otto E.; Passman (D-La.), was said to have Olld<d 1$1.$ million lo finance i aqua"""' ol lighter planes for Nat.ionillst China. The Home, in the aepa,rate authorization bill, approved auth<rity fcr the planes but the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, atill working on Its Vel'sioo of that measure, promptly knocked lt oot. In t968, Congress cut about $1 biWon from Pre.sklent Johnson's 'foreign aid authorization request, leaving it below the $2 billion level for the first tlme at $1.97 billion. But the actual appropriations to finance the global aid pro- gram dr\>P]led to ll.7S billion. Blacks Take Building At Harvard CAMBRIDGE, Mas•. (AP) -Between SO and 100 blacks seized control of Harvard U n iversity's administrative nerve center, University Hall, today to dramatize several demands. The 8f.WP moved in just before !tart of the business day and placed wooden bars over the windows and door~. EmployeS reporting for work were turned away. There were reports that a handful of employes had been fcrdbly ejected by the pn> testers, but the univenity said these were erroneous. "My understanding is that there was no violence," said Harvard College Dean Ernest R. May. . Using a bullhorn, May told the protesters about 4 5 minutes after the seizure that they might )le liable to criminal trespas.!1 prosecution if thef remained. UPI T•""°" , Spiro at Keyboard Vice President Spiro T. Agnew give-s an unscheduled perfonnance for Washing. ton press women at a party given by his wife. He played "Sophisticated Lady" on the piano and told the distaff reporters they were 41prettier and more otr jective'. than their male colleagues. eA darmgdeal ori ' ·----~~ --~ -·-------~. ------. QUEENIE I . ~''~d~u~·°"==""~"""'-'5~·~196'1:..:::._ ______ ...,;::D"::.::lV~P~ll~6T::,_,S~. Dine OD Caviar . "· l U.S ., Russ Con tinue ·Ta lks -t By Phd lnt1rland1 --'-!--ijE!.5iNKI (UP -• Unlkd Staks and the Soviet Union today held their seventh meetb;1c. on ways to curb .the nuclear arms race and · theo Junchtd together on cavlar.flU. ed Russian pancak~ at a Helsinki restaurant. smart SiVoy Reitauranl Iii ~ NOilli AUsnUc T r·e a l'y~ - downtown H•lslnkl. The OrganlzaUon (NATO) fore1'111 Sovleta were host at a slmUar mlnlsten Ur Brussels '1111~ a/fair last week at their em· day 1be Helsinki SALT ~ bassy. were on to a good start wtt!i: American ,·po k·• •men descrlbed the to.minute aesslon of the Stratettc Arms Llmltatlot Talks (S~T) at the U.S. embassy as "ef. flclent, cordial and businesslike without polemics." The next meeUng will be Mondty at.the Soviet embassy. ~ -In keeping wllh lhe strict lhe Soviets adopting •• policy of no public an-bu&lnessllke attllude. -~ nouncemenl5 about lhe talks, He 18ld Ille preliJn!M!i; neither aide· comm en t e d stage of the talks ~ eDd. following today'& a e s a I on . in about two weeks. - Conference aourtes said the Cooference sourcu s a i d pr<llmlnary talks probably both sides have been a~ will last through next week tempting to define what . ·~~ and -~ibly into the week meant by "st rate g' 9 .. r--weapor15," thus establishing i : Alter. common basis for negotiatiohs'" U.S. Secrelary of State expected to start ln the lattef:f Wllliam P. llof!ers told the part of Januacy. . ., " "His Ri>yal Highness •• , and all-arouna, general · • big cheese ..... The chief U.S. negotiator, Cerard C..... Smith, hosted the lnlonllllf lilncheon for the 10 tOp delegates on both aldea at. I • 111 IW, WAUS 1111 11111111 AREAS AROUND THE IDllE JFK 's For tu ne Listed A t $1.9 Mi llion Plus Philip's Mother Succumbs LONDON (AP) -Price Philip's mother, P r I n c e s i Andrew of Greece, died in her sleep at Buckingham Palace early today. She was 84 and had ~ in poor health for some time. NOMORE -~ OR YOUR MONEY BACKI HOW'D YOU LIKE TO BOSTON {UPI) -President John F. Kennedy left a personal fortune of almost $1 .9 million when he died, not counting many millions believ· ed left in trust for members of his lamlly.,, The amount was di!lclosed in an inventory or asset! which Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the executor of the ull&Sinated President's will, filed with state authorities on Feb. 19, 1965. It was not made public until the state attorney general gave his permission Thursday. The exac t figure , $1,890,646.45 is only l he amount of cash and property passed on to KeMedy's heirs and not the extent of his estate, acoording to Tax Com- missioner Cleo F. Jaillet. One reason Kennedy's fortune is difficult to estimate is that there are a nwnber of interlocking family trustll, the commissioner said. The inventory lists more than $106,000 payable to the President from three existing trusls: one from Joseph P . . Kennedy Jr., a brother killed In Workf W_arJI; another from Kathleen Kennedy Hartirlgton, a sister who died in a plane era.sh; and a third from a Ex-bit Player Acts in T ragedy PilTSBURGH (UPI) -An unemployed man, who said he was a fonner bit player on Broadway and in liollywood, shot and killed a fellow roomer and wounded another before being subdued with tear gu early today after a gun battle with police. The suspect, Ohames J. Dersarkissian, who gave his age a.s 39, was taken in custody after f i r i n g in· tennittently at police for 2'h hours with a rifle from his third.floor apartment in the Negro hill district. fl"u!;t his father set up for JFK in 19::S. The only land Kennedy own· ed in Massachuaetta was bis house in the family compound at Hyannis Port, valued at $46,250. Hls cash balance in various banks, including ac. counts kept for members of his family and close frierids, was $116,377.37. Much cf his fortune was In tax-free municipal securities, including bonds issued by the state of M'assachusetts, the cities of New York, Binn· Ingham, Ala. and San Antonio, Texas. Kennedy owned common stock in two oil companies, Barber Oil Corp. and Signal Oil & Gas Co.; Connecticut General Life Insurance Co.; Ken IndUslrles; the Hyannis Corp.; and Park Agency, Inc. He had a $577 ,341 interest in Merchandise M a rt , the buildifli hill father, Joseph P. Kennedy, bought in Chicago. The cause of death was not announced. · Born Princess Alice of Bat~ tenberg, Princess Andrew was a Briton by birth, a great. granddaughter of Queen Vic- toria. a sister ol Earl Mountbatten of Burma, the wife ot a prin<'e of Denmark and Greece, and a sister of the late Queen Louile of Sweden. After her marriage In 1903 to a younger son of Klng George t of Greect, she was known by her husband's name, ac- cording to the Grttk custom. When the Greeks dethroned George It ln 1924, Prince Andrew end his-family fled to Paris and the princess opened a jewelry and embroidery shop. In 1929,. when Philip was 8, his parents sent him to be raised by Lord Mountbatten in Britain. Free But Frozen Czecli E-scapes by"lir LONDON (UPI) -Bril~h gagemen, London lmmlgraUon Daggage handlers found the officials climbed Into tbe teen-age boy huddled behind Czedl plane and carried him suitcases in the cargo hold of away. In a heated airport a Czecho&lovak airliner from room, they fed him brandy. Prague. In broken Engliltt the "You're In England now, younlster said he wanted to boy," one said. His teeth chat-stay in England. He said be tering, the youth somehow had friends here. managed to smile. The youth wore only street "The boy was almost frozen clothes. "It must have been Meer agony," an alrpmt of. '/~~p1ATCH WALL •. :! I i HI CEILING · ' l IJJ~~~Mil'. ~ ~~~~-~ SO THEY 1 . : WON'T EVER COMEBACK?· Quick, Easy, lnvlllble. Ho Alea: '. • Sandli111-SH U1 How. . • Pint Kil $2,99 . : Contein1 everythlna you nMcl to P•rmenently repelr' 18 ft of • '----------' ,,.ck1. ., " COME ON IN ••• We'll show you how to do it with amaz- ing time-proved TU FF-KOTE and Glaaa Fabric. l~ " By , FACTORY-REPRESENTATIVE 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P.M. ' . SATURDAY -December 6th VISTA PAINTS 2931 BR ISTOL STREET COSTA MESA (I MILi SOUTH OF SOUTH COAST PL AZA) ' ' ' ' ' . . I . . ,' to death," a British European ficial said. Airlines spokesman said to-~ii;~~iiiiiiiiiii'iiiiiiii;~!iiiiiiiiii:iiii~:iiii'iiiiiiiiiiiii day. "He was very lucky to ii •••---••••M*11MiM__,.JIUllll,...,... get away with it. The tem- perature in the baggage hold of the TU104 airliner was subzero." 1be 19-year-old student had flown 700 miles -most of. it at altitudes up to 28,000 feet -in his flight Thursday night from the Communist capital. Alerted by the Brftish bag. HARBOR CENTER'S -· ~ying 'Cuda!/ GIGANTIC ART SHOW Over 600 Paintings Presented by California Outdoor Art Association ' 1 SATURDAY & SUNDAY ' " ·Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Bo ulevard, Costa Maa, Calif • • • .. • . .. • DA.IL Y P ILOT E DITORJAL PAG.E • -LobhJiiig Roy ~1arcom, a director o_r the aJ;lti·oil Coastal Area Protective League (CAPL), had some unsettling news tbe other day. He said it would cost perhaps as much as $100,000 to hire a lobbyist to help push the Cranston-Murphy oUshore drilling ban bill through Congress. The m easure, if passed, would assurtfno repetition of the Santa Barbara blowout disaster in federal waters off the Orange Coast. Some of the money for .lobhyis.t. expenses will · be provided by CAPL contributors. The rest. Marcom in- dicated, m ay have to come out of the treasuries of cities and other public agencies. Jl cou1d be money well spent. Nevertheless, it is a terrible pity tha t oil industry lobbyists have such enor- mous influence in the halls of Congress that the ·public must hire its own lobbyists in self-<1efense. But reality must be faced. And lo~bying is a fact of life in Wasbington. Surfers Rewarded . Surfers will soon not have lo pay to ride their Necessity the cooperation and behavior of the city's once-rowdy surfing element. The program was established originally lor two purposes: -'Jo provide the city with funds to pay lor enforce- ment of surfing restrictions and controls. -To discourage nQn-resident surfers from over-run· ning Newport's waters and beaches. The program W8$ the city's reaction to the surfers' apparent inability to police themselves. And , everyone now concedes, it worked. The surf· ers have put their house in order. · ' Perhaps the most graphic demon stratiori of their new maturity was the. manner in which their spokes· man sought -and won -retie~ from Newport's re-- strictions. They engaged in no campaign of vitu~ration. In· stead they went through the proc·ess of petitioning itheir ' city representatives and then wElited quietly for the response. That response came last week. Councilmen unani- mously agreed to m a ke time and area regulations on the sport more flexible . and they voted to abandon the board licensing requirement. boards along Newport's shores. · City councilmen last \\•e~k ordered a start on the paperwork required to do away \Vi lh the four-year-old s urfboard licensing program. ' Th'e surfers did not get everything they wanted. There will be no all-d ay, year-around surfing area set aside for their exclusive use, as they had requested. But they got much else. Before the end of this month, the $3 annual fee will The responsibility for any further changes -for better or worse -in the city's softening surfing poli· cies now rests solely \vi th the surfers themselves. '1 wukrstand they're re~ted but I 'm not 3ure just lww.' be a thing of the past. · \.\'hether it stays in the past depends, of course, on !Nl United-States - J ustice Needs Over1iauling Dear Gloomy Gus: Switching Away ·From Denaocratic l..iberalist1i To the f)e(>ple who mindlessly shout the slogan, ''Law and order!," lhe obvious retort is that if we had betler law, we would have mQre order. By "'better" law, I do not mean more Jaw or harsher law. but swifter and more eqliitable law. Jt.is unfairness and delay that frustrate and exasperate people to the p:int that the wbble atructure of law in the U.S. falls prey to cynicism and di•gusl. l ' This is not just the. v\e'I\. of an tm· patient and ignoranl.laymab who may be suspected of "liberal" a y mp a t h i ·e s , whatever they .may be. i t is an accurate • · renectioh of the attitude ol. Chief Justice warren E. Burger of the Supieme Courl. a hardheaded but not. hardhearled con- 1ervative. lN A TALK to lhe American Bar Ass0o cia~ summer, Chief Justice Berg- tt the question that baffles and troub es millions of Americans: "Why does American justice take so Jong?" And he ·ansv.·ered , in brief, that our trial procedures are antiquated, and our courts lack modern standards o r manaiemenl, as well as the trained manqers to apply them. He pointed out sharply lhat in medidne, except for anatomy, almost all basic medical knowledge of 25 years ago is obeolele; that business techniques and industrial production have changed drutlcidly in that period; and that air Nixon BaffleSr Washington Veterans Congratulations to the chief offi· cers of the Newpcrt Beach Fire Department for lowering morale another notch by their untimely assignment transfers prior to the holidays , causing family gather- ings to be cancelled due to drastic changes in days off! --0. H. Thil ftll~rl relllCll r ... tn' v-.., Nit "'K'l'"•l•r tnow ot ,,.. .. ....,.,.,,.. tl'H '''" .... '"YI .. GIMmr Gut. O•ltr Pllef, transport and th c space program have altered even more radically, not in 25, but in the last 10 years. WASHINGTON -Whal makes the Nix· on Administration so baffling to many people 1o1·ho have been in Washington a long time is its ability to identify with and exploit conventional and traditional thought. . The 1" ~on Administration ·rides over lhe fixed ideas \vhlch have grown up in the capital in the past 30 years or so on the function of the federal government. Thus it is th at ideas expressed by some of the leading figures of the Nixon Administra tion seem awk,vardly left. footed in a \Vashington community more attuned to delicacy in dealing with minorities. advanced political ideas, and lhe general spectrum of Democratic BUT, EXCEPT IN details. "a civil or liberalism. criminal t~ial tod~y is essen,llally u~. This kind of liberalism ha.s prevailed, s~'!l' as 1n Darue~ Webster,5 d~e. j with onl)'a brief break, fot''40 years and Citizens called .for ~ury ~r~~ · luil treated i lli'ge Permanent reservoir percent of their time is . . of officialdom lawyers I o b by i s t s waiting." Witl}~ses, call"! for ~· journalists owd__Qfbers ~~ _scl:!o<!Jed day and llour also find themsef\1eSspelF in the polillcal mores of Democratic. ding most of tfleir time waiting. liberalism And, of courSe.~the defendant himself · may spend months or years in litigation, TO THESE l\IUST be added the before the appeals and other processes powerful pressure groups of labor, are concluded. One of the oldest legal agriculture an d. lately, civil rights and dictums is lttat "Justiee delayed is jus-general protest as a part or lhe tice den ied"-and our chronic long-term \Vashington community which takes a delays are a blanket denial or justice in dim view of the Nixon Administration or our courts,• at every level f,.., '•Richard ' . ' ·.; Wilson I some of the more wacky are Trotskyites. They created mOre trouble a n d disturbance than they should have in their brief Y.'ashington visit. But lt1rs. f\1itchell had it right when , in her own ~'ay, she reflected the main body awaits with ea·g~s·lts next boo-boo. of conventional and traditional thought on The Nixon Administration is made up anti-war defnonstration.s · and public of outlanders ~·ho have come into the disorder. t Precincts of the knowing and 'initiated Spiro T. Agnew has. or course, plumbed Hickel and Treasury Secretary David Kennedy as unexciting. So it goes with other Nixon Administration personalities. They do not turn on those types who are forever searching for the Kennedy charisma. The President's security ad· viser, Henry l)issinger. is definitely in the swim but the secretary of state,• William P. Rogers, is too bland for the excitement hun\ers. and are blundering about committing all the very depths of shuddering horror in manner of gaucberits in the view of the the liberal Washington community, which THIS IS THE \YA SH I NG T 0 N permanent Washington community. has nevertheless come to the cooclusion atmosphere accompanying the findings of The wife of the attorney general, f\fr s. that he may be speaking what is on the the poll takers that three out of four peo- John Mitchell , induced a convulsive gasp public's Jlind. pie in the resf of the country are now in this Washington community by talking reasonably well satisfied with the Nixon on television, as tf she "·ere a neo-John IN RUNNING DOWN the list or Nixon Administration. Bircher, about the "libl!:ral COmmunilis" offtcialdom it is hard to find many fl0,1 U is_ little. \VOnder then that the Nimn or the Washington anli·WI{ ,,demonslra. re&.arde4 in the Washington ci>mmitilty AflministratiOn is not 1tlUCh interested in lion whom she and her hu91)Jnd :tboUlht as•ihopeleiSIY square or rrial~t.>.The approv~I by the "eastern establiShf\\enj.,. creal'td scenes in the capital re~ f-avorlte 'of the group is Robert Finch, This "establishment" is not eastl!:tn in of lhr: Russian revolution. .. ;! ~ • •• secretary of health, educ a lion and origin: almost everyone who might -~-wellare.l. whosl!: style !J ple~ing t? Spiro qualily for membership in it ~es from THE AtrORNEY GENERAL li ter t • Agnew's ,<effe te snobs,'ranQJt1rvery-som!'!fh·ere elst:-But-the-term-I! an-ea!y~ plained that P..lrs. Mitchell was imprecise rate that Finch ge~ a bad press. Th~ • cl assificati on used by Nixon oUiciafs to in her terminology and should haVe refer· Washington group has decided that Finch characterize those who take a 8\lperior red to \'iolence-prone elements instead of ought to run for the · Senate from and condescending attitude toward lhe liberal Communists. Indeed Mrs. Mitchell California if they· can persuade Sen. conventional values of the N i J o n was impreCise. The Communists in the George Murphy that be should retire. Administration. Thi!: conventional values, 'var protest movement are not liberal. Commerce Secrel.8l'J.. Maurlct Stans, at least for the moment, seem in the ti.loscow is too liberal for them. They are for all o! beirig a big game hunter, is ascendancy and thaL is solace enough for conservative l\.1aois1 Conununisls and clawd wWI Interior secretary WaJfer the Nixon squares. lT ts NOT law-breakers. or anarchists. \\·ho erode public faith and confidence in our legal and judicial system. It is the system itaeli~ which refuses to change with the times and adapt itself to the modem problems of a huge, complex, 1md urbanized population. When the law is so dilatory, on:l:er can be imposed only by forte, and·not by lhe weight of public opinion; as it righLfully should be. CIA Director Wins Senate Favor ' WASHINGTON -It is hard to believr:, but Richard llelms, director of the much· criticized Central Jnlelligence Agency, has bl!:come a darling of the Senate dovecote. Fulbright has frequently conlplained that iU.tlmed Cand ill-fated) CIA operaUom, such as the U-2 Incident, have hanned U.S. foreign relations. Both Patient, ·Impatient A career Intelligence officer, with CIA since its founding in 1947. llelms v•as named director by President Johnson in 1966. President Nixon renewed the ap- JlOlntment .early this year. In subordinate posts •!elms had seen CIA blamed abroad and at home , for goofs of all proportions. He served under tWo colorful and much·publicized direc· tors of central intelligence. genlle1nan· spy Allen W. Dulles and hard-driving in· dllltrlali st. John A .. ?ilcCone. considerably, at least in the congressional community," says Mansfir:ld. ALSO FULBRIGHT-Mansfield madr: those comments In the Senate's-secret debate on the AB~1 Safeguard system v.·eeks ago. The transcript of that debate, «nsored and revie\ved, wu made PJlbllc only last week. CIA data was quoted by both sides in the secret discussion, but Safeguard opponents stressed the agen - cy's finding, made without further evaluation or comparison, that Rus!ia had suspended work on itl· anti·missile system. Accord ing to Fulbright, Helms' ABl\t appraisal "convinced me he wu a com· petent man who was not swayed .by any outside influence ; that he was giving us the near~st to an horiest assessment of all tOe combined forces of the intelligence community. Helms has always enjoyed the ctn· fideoce of the rather hawki sh senior members of the House and Senate who ride herd on CIA operations through special intelligence subcommittees. Thert is therefore, a real significance in his present high standing amOng the agen· cy's Jong·time critics. HE HAS, IN THE first place. made it clear that, as the nation's top intelligence officer, he will provide the best possible reading, without bias and without trying to eva luate events abroad against developments (\.l'eapon or otherw ise) in the United Stales. In short, Helms will provide the best available basis fo r U.S. policies without trying to make them . By ELLSWORTH L. RICllA'RDSON Mllllster Ne1Pbor1tood Congregational Church Lapna Beach Ts l)tttence a \llrtue or is its practice a Jong lost art? I know of a mother who Is put out ~uae Junhw 0cannot read. He isn't In flf'st arade yet and she is very, upset. ~ tried to tell her that the psychologists Y1 Uia&jhe muscular and nervous st.ruct\lre or {he eye is .not normally deve.loptd enough for reading until the child is a.boot six years of age. Yet she is impatient because her child is so stupid : Next time J'll quote Dr. Alvarei!.. ' BENNETT CERF GAVE us some idea of what patience is v.·btn he described a icltool teacher. ''A teacller is cour•1e w 1 t h Kleenex ln her pockel sympathy lltfUUilng wllh a snow sWt and pat\erw:t with papers to grade ••• She is ooe who Win eomebody else's children. 3nd 1Ull tau strength left to go to PTA meetings.'' J-lsnoW oLJathen who would rather go to tht opera lhan -to be led by the nose to a PTA meeting. So p;i;Uence 1$ here and we II.Jute those few-who have It! KJhlil' Glbran .speaking of Jesu,; sald that "he was patient, patient like i mount.In In the wind ." And thcp he went as witb this paradox : nygr HE 1f.U tbe most 'm""llult of men. He w.s impaOeni with those Who wel1bed and meuur«J the day and the nl&ht befon! they would trust tJ~r cfrtlml to dawn or evtnUdt. He was un· patient v.1th those who belie~ not in Jlaht beCaust lhty thtmselves dwelt In -· aod wtU. those •ho aough l after lip 1n' lbt Ml' ralher-lbln ilLlbcir ow1 """"·" ( . So ll1tll there ar< o<Qslons when p.i• \ ..u..:.::.· ....;~ ..... l'l..'ll:B:ll.: uince is not a. virtue: There are Umes when those who are patient are overtaken .bJ:lhe.stratea (If those who cannot be tamed. SOJllETIMES0PATIENCE ~used as an excuse for doing nothing, for noL taking r;ides. ThenJethargy sets in. The people thal comprtged ihe PJ'1llestanl Reforma· Uon had little patitrlce with "staying put." Tht Protcslilnt heritage comprises tho.'lt wbo utterly: refuse to stay put. Voltaire st.id there. are two classe1 of ~le~ lhote who make hisl«Y and those w'ho are made by it. Which are We? The 19th century gave venl to the doc· trine of rugged indivl<luallsm. not all or "'hi ch \\'ilS virtuous! Tht early part of the 20th century can be chara-cterlzcd as a period when patient people tndured the: 111onotony or conformlly, not all of "'hich wss ''lnuous. TIOS LATTER HALF of the 20th cen· tury is something else, People arc no Jonger P.Btltnt ••. no longer pJlicnt "'Ith inequahty .•. no longer patient 1o1·lth evil whe:rr: llfe is hard, raw and ugly ... no longer palient with the pollution that roba our streams of lsughttr and our aklea of gaiety • , . no longer patient wllh the cor· ruplion or public figures in high office nor with the pilfering of 5ma!I people In suptrm11:rket.s.· Sptaklng 'r'try personally, 1 am im- pallenl ..tlh tbooe who don 1 Uk• Whal l "T11e! NQW it is being said -and by the most •crltlcal qf the Senate doves -tha t career·man Ii.elms has brought a new rerpectability to the quiet campus.like CIA headquarters in nearby Langley, Va. EXIDBIT A IN this regard is Sen. f\like 1'1ansfield, ti.tool., !he Senate Democratic leader. Mansfield has"' been ' a frequent critic of Vietnam policies and of othfr aspects or national security plannina by f\vo admin istrations. For years ?i-lansfield has, ln addition. been a leader of a so-far unsuccessful drivr: to apply a tighter Congressional oversigh t to CIA activities. Yet lttansfleld says Heinl! "has.brought a respectability snd integrity to the CIA . , • and given it the klnd of standing which it lacked prior fo the lime he took over. "l must say, like all those who have come in conUict with tum, t have been tre.mr:ndously impressed. I thlnk he is by far the best director the CIA ttas ever hid. Bec:aUU: ol Mt_HtlniJ that agr:ncy's integrity and standing have increased · Bu George---, Dear George: Son1tbod)' wrote In and asked \\'hat you ~·ould do if 11 woman at a psrty "·as making a big plu for all thr: married men present. 'iou nld nothing because your wife watches you like a hawk. We.U, I Jutl think that's terrible, ooly to Jive an answer like that! • MRS. U.l , Otar fi.lrs. U.I.: Boy, me. too . Sly! Y.'ould )'OU mi'.1d talking to my wire ror me? 1 In the same debale similar vie11o·s \\'ere expressed by the Senate's super-dove, Chairman J. William Fulbright. D-ArJ., of lhe Foreign Relations Committee. "HE llAS GIVEN the committees . , the best available Information. That ls what Inspired in us confidence and trust in the integrity, honesty and good judg· menl of lt1r. Helms," said Fulbright. Helms and the CIA have also had another recent accolade from FUibright, who sharply cr!Uclzed the clandestine U.S. in,·olvemr:nt in Laos (wh}ch is operated by ClA), but said he does not blame flelms because the intelligence boss "'as operating under instructions from higher authority, The Tower of Babel 'f·he State Board of Education camr: ou t soundlna, like lhe Tower of Babel in its rece.nt approval of science 1t1ideline1 for elementary textbooks.· Seeking.to pleaae all sides, from scien· lists l.o humanists to Bible fun· damentalists, the board managed to pro- d~ 1 compOund which will satiafy fr:w, let alone the Interests of education and In partk:ular-the leaching pf ACltnce. Underlying the whole misadventure Is a commonplace mistake which has con· laminated thinking on lht subject for aome )'f:&rl. Thls is the tloUon that the conctpt of evofullon. as an explanation o( man's origins, is somehow 111t odds with MY rr:Uglous btller that man is the crea· tkm of a supernatural beiria:. or God. • THE BUSINESS OF aclence, an<! lt1 leaching, is the observation ind cor- rtlallon of verlflable lactl about llfe •nd matter. In this sense, evoluUon. or the · postulat.e that man evolved rrom some as yet unknown primitive form Of lowtr life, hal much e\•ldence to support it.and yr:t enOuab missing data to deter Its dogmaUc acceptance. [ GueS!-EditoiiaJ ~ Sciencr: and·its teaching In the schools need not concern Itself with the ultimate causes of the otj.gin of beinl and matt.er. Its dllcipllne ii lo obaerve and correlate. It would be unscientific, in that tense, to propose that the: y,1>rld and man were not ctfated by a supernatural supreme being. This is a matter beyond lclence'1 purvltw. THAT OUGIIT TO be tbe guideline al· Utude taken by the State Board of Educ•· tlon. Not one which endorses or ls In- imical lo rellgloos concep11 •bout .,,.., lion, but one whkh sticks to the scien· tificalty determined facts, leaving the hypolht.1t1 as to their oriitns to the philosophies or ·beliefs which all ill> dlvlduals m rrtt to hold. • n.soc....,....11« CIA critics were ne·ver sure that Dulles and McCone were willing-to stop at that. With respect to CIA 's operational responsibilities. lhose shadowy clan· destine activities which have ~ovoked most of CIA 's criti cism over t e years, }!elms has carefully lived up to pledge made during his Senate confirmatiOn hearings in 1966: ''Sir," said Helms on that occasion. ''the Central Intelligence Agency takes no actions without approval from the ap- propriate officials or lhe U.S. Govr:rn· ment. and they are, not in lhe ClA." Af~ more thsn three years, CIA ·1 criUcs are beginning to believe him. Byllob<TtS. Alln • alld JN• A. Goldamlllt --·---Frlday.'December·5, "69 Tht ediloritJI pop• of !he Dally Pilot stek1 to inform and 1tfm- 1date reoder1 by presenting thft mwspaper't opinions and com- m~1tary on topici of inrere1t and siQnificonce, bf/ providing ca fOrtlm for the t~reiiion of onr readers• opinion&, and b11 prertrtting the diwrse vitu>- J)Ofnts of informed obitrvtn and rpolce.rmen on topic1 of the cloy. Robert N. Weed, Publisher " , • ' ' 1 • l l j l· .. ii ri 11 , 1 I I I • • !I I ~ I· ·' I ' •• I " I BEA ANDER SON, Editor ''""' 0«....,11« " 1ff' N l"•H 1~ Patrons Continue Generous Support For the 16th year Newpo~t Hatbor Auxiliary of Children's Horrie Society \Vill present a debutant'e ball duriilg the Christmas h61idays. And, for the 16th year many Joyal supporters again will con. tinue tO give generously to the society's statewide adoption program by contributing as patrons . Those 'vho have served in this capacity for 16 consecutive years beginning with the fir st ball:in 1954 are Mrs. Joseph Allan Beek, Mrs. George Yardley Jr. and the Messrs. and lo.Imes. Lyman Howes Far· \Veil. EdWard H. Groenendyke. Edgar R. Hill, George Holstein III, Moreland Leithold, Paul Arthur Palmer, 0. \V. Richard, Paul Milton Rogers, Denis Sullivan and Thomas Campbell Webster. Other patrons, manY of whom have served a nwnb~r of years, include Judge and r..1rs. Elisha Avery Crary, Judge and Mrs. Robert Gardner. Col. and Mrs. Alan Jocelyn Mickle and Ors. and Mmes. Daniel Gaskill Aldrich Jr., Robert Floyd Beauchamp, John Kenneth Hamel, Emory Speer Moore Jr., aJ!d Harry E. Stickler. More are the Messrs. and Mmes. Bewley Allen, Wallace Whi~e , Barnes, Chester E. Brabyn, Laurence Edward Brown, Walter Bur- roughs, Joseph Logan Carver, William Boucher Clark, Earl George , Corkett, A. Alexander Hamilton, Rolla R. 1-Iays Jr .. Lloyd Lees Au· bert, Leroy· Langhenry Carver Jr., Charles P. Cotton, Lowell Win- ston ~vans and Byron Farwell. ...,,---~--------------...-~·-.., • ' l it . . .. , . -. . . ' •• . . ,•. ::; ··• ,. ••• •• •• ... ·' ••• ·-· . . --·· ·:·: :a ·::~ :--: .•. J 1 I 'I L Also supporting the endeavor are Robert Guggenheim and the l'vlessrs. and Mines. Norman Alexander Gamble, \Vatter Gayner, W. Allen Gfubb, Jar;nes \Valtham Laws III, Mauriec Coyle McCray, T. Phillip Morgan, Paul Nissen, George T. Pfleger, Chester Purcell, John F. Porter and Edward Angus Raulston. TONIGHT WE DANCE -Ready for the grand promenade to the Candy Cane Ball are (left to right) Dr. atid Mrs. M. Joe Brock- man, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Schag Jr. and ·Mr. and Mrs. Jay D. Buchanan. Mrs. Brockman ts ~hairman of the sponsoring-or~ani:­ zation; the Junior Auxiliary of Newpor1; Beach Assistan.Ce J1eague. " ~ •• :;.. 'ff .. :-. c C01npleting the list are the Messrs. and Mmes. Haster R. Ring, Henry T. Segei'!itrom. Richard Steele. John J. Sw.igart, Richard C~ Vernon, Edward C. War1nington. Robert Nauer Weed, Charles S. \Vheeler. Horace S. \Vil son Jr., George Perkins Yule and Mrs. Rus· sell Le\vis J. Iseli. Parties ·Spark ' . • I Debutantes who will be presented Saturday, Dec. 27, are t b • ~: Misses Elizabeth Hanson Carver. Marianne Emison Cox, Terry An n ~ Ellis, Laurie Ellen Fraser, Virginia Claire Howell, Karen Kuemmel ~: Jackson, Jessica Morford Jones, Lauren Ann Kalmbach, Linda Les· I lee Littlejohn, Katl)ryh Leona Lynch, Pamela J ean Meserve, Mar· . garet Lenore Parke'r. Deanna Kay Peyton, Diane Plumb and Sharon ~ thompson. Ir X..!,' --.-i:-:--; ____ \"· ' --..7\"'Y'i:,.--..<J';l~~'.Ej:/·tt~~ Delta Gammas Wreathed in Holiday Spirit Aglow with. anticipation for the long-awaited Candy Cane Ball are the sponsors - members uf the Junior Aux- iliary, rlewport Be a ch Assistance League -and . . their guests who-will gather in the · Balboa Bay Club tonight for 1he 21st annual hol;day celebration. The traditional black-tie gala is presented to rai se Extravaganz.a -~ . •;;:: ';·s funds for the auxi\iary's l~oose home. Attending will be and 1wtr. and Mrs. Brenton ·~ nu~erous .projects and th: Anthony Moisos, Taylor Ogden Wlli join (or~ Jn ~ phllanthrop1e:s. R1chardsons, R~ D?-leys, Ben hostini· a party for 2Z .party.. .-~ Th ballroom will glitter with &linson·s., .. Charlet H<JO:;es, . • ·~ holiday ornaments adorning Kent Berges, Edward ~a!etus, goers. t . • • ~ BOfilo.n fern cent~P,)..eces and Robert Curtjs, J~-O'Don· At a preparty celeb:a.t1on 1n $ lighted Chfistmas .. : trees nells, ruchard Berteas, Philip th.e Michael E. Helm hame --;' .. : strategically placed throughout Davises and Dr. and Mrs. will ht; Rich;1!d Silver, James !. •. !; the room. A sumptuous buffet Allen · Cottle. CJa:k and Richard Church and -:;: and dancing to the music of the Sitting 'at . the Th 0 m as thell' guests and the Mess~s. ·:'::! ~ociety for the Preservation of Ro lot , tab! and and Mmes. James Hehlnn, •.!· BigBandsispartoftheextrav-u~e 5 es -being .Hall Seeley, Roger Shennan. ~ agan7.a scheduled to begin at 8. entertained in their home ·Henry ••~00hberg, G'a r r-y !~ before the gala w1ll be the """"""" •· Prior to -arriving fo r Phili p Battaglias, D av i d Short' and Rbnald Foell. :;: festivities, many members Ryans, Gary Myers, Craig Joining the•J8mes Sinks in ;?-ha~e in~ited guests to preball Combs, Bing B 0 rd 1er 5 , their home befOre the ball end ::; celebrations. Richard Cramers, 8 arr y sitting at their table Will be '!T• Mrs. M. Joe Brockman, Silvers, Frank ·FrosL!!, John the Paul Ege!ef'!, Eugene '~!< Junio.rs chairman w1th her Cochtans, .Bob Gairdners and He~ps, Ttq·Merta:s and Dr .• j:! husband, Dr. Brockman and Bob Halleys. and Mrs. Dudley Boyce, while . ~ Mrs. Conrad-Schweitzer, first 4~~sts ·o1 Mr. and Mrs. guests ot · .Mr. and ·Mrs.~~ vice chairman and her· hus-Theodore Robins Jr. and Mr. Howard ·Martyn are the Louis "'"$1 band will co-host one such and '' Mrs. Gerald Kingsley ln· Laios, William Staws, Lyell ':~ gathering. elude the Messrs. and Mmes. Evanaes, Willll!m Mannings, !'1 Their guests will be the James Ewart, Dwight Gick, Lawrence Quadnuns, John ~..r,: Messrs . and Mmes. James David White, Jack Penney, Caneers and Dr. and Mrs. ~ Wix, J{lhn Keating. Lewis r,,itatt . Os born e, James Roger .Riley. ; .. Akermarl Jr .. Leon Doty. Lan· Truesdell, Edward Kalarqulst Mr. and Mrs. Ric b Ard don Exley, Donald Scott, Paul and Ray Lenahan ahd Dr. and Newell have invited Drs. and ~'§ Calhoun, Wal ter R. Gayner, Mrs. Norman Von fferzen. Mmes. David Davis, John ~ Rel Schmidt, E...-r;-e n e Dr. and Mrs. Victor Granzella, Gerald Doan . and S Brockman, Allen G a I I lo n , Westover ·will entertain before Schuyler C. ·Joyner. and the ~ Edward Marshall and Dan the-ball Ors. and Mmes. Messi'&. and Mmes. Richard ~ Bayless. Albert Pizzo.. O o u g I as Pauley, John Wells, Wtlllani :S Mrs. Wallace Gerrie, ball Newcomb, Fritz Westerhout, SteWlSdn and W i 11 Jam ~~ chairman and her husbaild, Richard Mehren and Mr. and Patrick. · -~ Dr. Gerrie ha"ve invited the Mrs. John Ralphs. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bien ~ · Messrs. and Mmes. Mark Co-1\00ing a preball party and Mr. and ~· Ste;wrrt ~ Soden, Paul Marx, Horace for 16 guests are Mr. and Mrs. Clark will joinUy entertairi the 1 Benjamin, Sydney Lucas, Har· Jerry Parker and _~r. and Georg'e Koehlers, Mau,rice .:• ry Johnson and Dr. and Mrs. Mrs. Jam~s Pe~s Jr. , Walshs,.J.osepli CubOnes,.Ter· ;: Gi!orge deBeaUll\®t. Guests Guests of Mr. and Mrs. ry WeJshs, Richard Broomses, ~ of Mr. and Mrs: Ernest Schag Allen Goody are Dr. and Mrs. ROben.. DeRufrs;. jfl i-·a 'n k Jr. are the Messrs. and Mines. Paul Kuhn, Dr. and Mts...._G,lles ~ck~I's, Douglas oa.t t' o·n s. Charles Franklin, R i' c h a rd Allison ·and the Messrs. and Steven Fenleys and Robert Sewell, John Carlson. George Mmes. Ronald Faell, Frank Hard~ys. · Bethel, Timothy St rad c r , Hughes,. Warren Fix, 'Riehard . Mr. and Mrs. Richard Ferda Richard ~1arston, Larry RameOa and James Case, wlll hpst the Messrs. and McDonell, Rio:hard D. Allen, while the Kae A.·Ewlngs ·iiive MmeS."'Jay D. Buchanan, Kent Samuel Abbott. <.nd Dr. and in\>ltett to their·hOme the1.1lck Snyder, Donald Pennington. Mrs . W. K. Watson. Patu&hinS, Don Adkiniotis. William Coufter, Hor a ce Putting a festive touch on the Costa Mesa home of the Donald M. Sutherlands are {le ft to right) the Mmes. John Coyne, Sutherland and Lewis MacDonald. The occasion is the annual Christmas cock· tail party of Santa Ana.Newport Chapter of Delta Gamma Alum· nae which will be given ·at 6 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13, in the Suth· erland borne. Hostesses are bo8rd members. The Clinton Hooses and the Btad Millen, RObart 'SinithS Gillett, Albert Skinner and Robert Ewin gs are ha ving a and Pl!ter 'Rothscilildi. · ,. Edward Starnes and Dr. and " preball celebration in· the Mr. ·anc1 1Mr&. Albert iAuer Mrs. Donald ·McGUUs. ' I ' ' Your Idol Wasn't Idle When It Came to Show·i .. 8.9 ·Clay ·:F:eet • . I DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please tell me 1f I am nonnal or a candidate ror the net. J1m beginning to wonder. Yesterday I went to my doctor for a checkup. I'm not the type who runs to the doctor with every little aehe and pain. But 1 had been feeling poorly for several days and decided to have myself looked al. My doclor is a general practitioner - and has been wonderfully kind and con· giderate to our entire family through the years. He delivered my three children and saw my husband through i0f1le serious illnesses. We all worship him. When the doctor examined me, he pressed a tender spot and I experienced ANN LANDERS ~ an unexpected stabbing paln. Without thinking I gave .his arm a hi~ It was inonr-or an automatic response than a display ol •OJ«· A!lbough I didn't hit him very hard, he tiecame fllrioua with me. Jn a voice that could be. heard all aver the otflce, he shoottd, "Don't ever do that again or you will have to get another doctor."_ Then he proceeded to bawl me out for 10 minutes. The nurse ., who was In the room was as surprisod as I. When the doctor finished chewing me out, I began to cry and couldn 't stop. I don't know what came over me. I just sat thereJlke a lool and sobbed my head off. Today I reel depressed and ·remorseful. I'm asl!amed of my>Cil. Am I becoming menially Ill? Why did ) '"'my grip? Wbal do you Wnk aboul Ws episode? -"LONGTIME' FAN DEAR L.T.F.: I checked witb four pbstcJans · ~· their verd1£l_ w a s unailmou•. Yocir d~tor ovemac:;itd . He I . nJ&Y well ~ve been overworked and Ured. IDoctori •re haman, you 1':now.) Your hitUn1 :,11 arm, wblch, of course, yfu 1bouJd aot have doae \ p,obably trig· gered the unlortun•te n~nse. Crytn1 11 • yoa did WB• not abaorm•I. You were 1ndoubtedly not only hurt but detply dJ11ppOlnttd to discover that your Idol bad led of clay. • DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband and I have two lovcly children. We figured our lamlly· was C0111plete end-- were well satisfied. Whtn I learned l was pregnant again, I wasn't happy .. but I . -decided to make-the best-of iL • . - When I told my husband, he fi~w Int<> a rage. I don't think I've ever seen him so mad. He called me an.idiot and a dumb- bell and tn<led up saying we·would have to glve tbe baby away. I was sure he'd cool off and change his mind." bul fotir months have passtd and he is still repeating his ifemands. He says he wouldn'I "sell" the baby, but be would cxp<et the peoplo who adopt h to pay the hospital and doctot .bllls. Last night I ,\old him lo quit ocreaming -that my mind was made up. I just couldn't C"1T)' a child /or nine monlht and ·give tt away u U It ,..,.. a JlUllPY. He said, "You wAi or I'm leavtng." Please help me, Ann. I'm ashamed to sign my·namt. l'm·aire you.-ve~ had a letter as ·stran,e as this · one. - MOTHER OF TWO AND A HALF. DEAR MOTHER: Your sllualloo lsn1 ottrly ,I.I 1t1ang:e !II yoa U.IU. Evtrr rew monC111 I bear about • nit HQ yoer husband. Invariably Utcae ktok1 C... 'J.,_ their minds, and 1"1, bettha1 ywn ~' ,;;: .... Ann Land$-s wll be rtaa to btlp you . with your problems. Stnd lh<rn to her In care of Ill< DAILY Pllhr, e!lCk\slnc l &ell...tdreased, Umped envtlope. ' Ji DAILY ~ILOT Frid», -5, 1969 ' Horoscope Aquarius: Review .Career SATURDAY DECEMBER 6 By SYDNEY OMARR featured for SaglUlrfll.1. ARI.ES (March %1-April 19): Otherwise. you could find yourself on wild·goose chase. Lunar po1Jllo11 ravorable for • fishing. and your1tlf In morning. Oriental food and m u Ii I c t o ni ght combi ne I.or fa1cloatlng date plan. Romantt shines for Cancer, wblle Libra could get 1luck with check. Scorpio b the peraonallty kid, whlle Taurus insists on more thorough undentandlng of special rela- tionsblp. Blind date could be Put olf final decision on money question. You v.•ill be in better position to decide when older lndlvidual finds face-sav· ing device. Realize this and act accordingly. LIBRA (S.pl. 22-0ct. 22)' l\1oney pressure exists. Have fun tonight but be aware or budget. ReaUie also that you gel nothing for nothing. Avoid one with wild scheme which could bring trouble from law. ·. " •• • I .. There'll Be Something for Everyone No holiday party is complete without gifts, so Jef. frey Sldansky, Allen Menton and Afark Sklansky (left to right) are helping make sure there will be enough for everyone when the UCJ Faculty/Staff \Viv.,· host festivities Sunday, Dec. 7. Husbands Santa Ana 'Home···· Carole Grinde'r-".Wed j $n11M11,MM MRS. WELLS Says Vows leche league Airs Problems The second meeting in a series of four on breastfeeding and problems of motherhood will be presented for members of Costa Mesa Chapter of La Leche League on Tuesday, Dee. 9, 7,45 p.m. The public is invited to participate in i n f o r m a I dlscussion in the Newport Beach residence of Mrs. David McLaren. Jnfonnation may.be obtained by phoning V.rs. ?tfcLartn at 6'2-5567. Wig Moster Tells Secrets Late afternoon w e d d i n g vows were exchanged by Carole Bonnie Grinder and Terry Grant Wells at the altar of the Lutheran Church of the 1.faster, Corona de! Mar, dur- ing a ceremony performed by the Rev. William R. Eller. The bridal couple are the daughter and son of-• ~1rs. Robert D. Grinder of Irvine and the late Mr. Grinder and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wells of Corona del Kar. Given in marriage by her uncle, John Zelonis of Van Nuys, the bride wore a silk organza over taffeta gown with a venise lace bodice, full sleeves and cathedral train. Her ·bouquet was a cascade of cattleya orchids and v•hite roses. Miss ~1ilanna Grinder. sister or the bride was maid of honor and bridesmaids were ~1iss Christine Wells, sister of the bridegroom, Mrs. Ro b e r t Kelley and Mrs. Micheal Orbach. They wore red gowns with white accessories. The bridegroom's brother, John Wells served as best man and ushers were Peter Euell, Tom Thomson and Orbach. Following the ceremony the couple received their guests in the home of the bridegroom 's parents. The new Mrs. \Velis at- tended Corona de! 1.1ar High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband attended CdMHS, the : University of Oregon and California State College at Long Beach. He af- filiated with Theta Chi fraternity. After honeymooning I n northern Calirornla and Oregon, they will make their home in Santa Ana. Galo Features Gift Exchange and children of the members have been invited to a holiday party from 2 to 4 p.m. in UCI Commons, and a magician, UCI Professor Richard Barrutia, will be there to entertain the children. Mrs. Jonas Schultz is Chairman. • •J • ,. ..... ,, ' . ' -·Alumnae P.arty Small Fee Big Help Several 1-Iarbor Area residents 1A•ill be among gift-bearing University of Southern Cal ifornia alumnae and guests making the trek to the Riviera Country Club for a Christ- n1as party Saturday, Dec.13. Unlike 1.he "'isc men of old. their gifts \vi\J not be spices and oils. but toys and school supplies for the Avalon Carver Com· munity Center in Los Angeles, \\'here USC carries out a tutorial project. The toys and supplies will be the only ad· mission fee for the party, which is sponsored by the Trojan Junior Auxiliary's provisional members. Among patronesses, who \Vill be greeted by Santa Claus as they arrive. will be Mrs. P age Parker of Corona del Mar. Christmas Fete Noted Author Invited Christmas will be celebrated by the Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Califomicnne Fri· day, Dec. 12, with a fete in the Oulrigger restaurant, Laguna Beach. Song Fest Programmed Two students from UCl's School of Fbe Arts will offer a program of Eriglish, French and German songs when members of the A1uslc Section of UCI Town and Gown gather Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 10 a.m. In the Newport Beach home of Mrs. Alan C. Stoneman. ·Miss Susan Boatman and Thomas-Anthony are both stu- dyi'.1g voice at the university . llighlighting the banquet will be an appearance by Jacques Borel, noted contemporary French novelist. Borel, also distinguished as a literary critic, has written, in additioo to his novels and poems, articles for France's leading periodicals, including Le Figaro of Paris. Tn 1965 he was awarded the Prix Goncoort by t h e Academy Goncourt for his novel, "L' Adorallon." He ha! been a visiting professor ln many countries including the United State!. Borel's lecture topic for the Clu'istmas fete will be "La \7ie d'un livre ." For those interested In ape. cial care and atylln& of wlgs and hairpieces, a master styl- ist for a natianal magazine will pre$e.nt a demonstration of techn!quu and arranging skrets Monday morning, Dec. •• A ConUnentat breakfa1t will be served at 10 a.m. in the Mrs. Christophe r Kitching is chairman of the section and Pl&lls for a Christmas party aastsUng the hostess will be will be finalized by Delta Beta Mrs. c . C. Austin and ~lrs. Zeta Chapter of Beta Sigma Ralph H. Hilmer. H o spllaUty arrangements for the meeUng are under the direction or ~irs. J a s p e r '-10rgan, chainnan. and the Mmes. Paul Schneeberger, George Arie, Laura Duval and Charles Root. · MJsaion Viejo Recrtation Cen- ' ter at a cost of SI for guests Phi during a meeting at 8 p.m.1if,:!i!!i!!i!!i!;;;;;;!i!!i!!;!!~;;;; Tu~ay, Dec. 9. in the home ~- of Mn. Ronald Woodsid•. ~-~-, · featuri 11.g Ora119e Co1111ly'• Largest Selection and ~ cents for members. UNlnD NATIONS ASSOCIATION el" SHOP lmp•rt.il 6 1fb-Unic.•f c.rd, 2204 N. M1l11, S111t1 A~• M•Mlrt thr11 S1t11rd1y-I 1·4 The party is planned fOT 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13, In the Huntington Beach home of Mr~ RiJllert McAdom~ At OUNHILL this time secret alstera will CASTELLO exchange gills and gag llJUI COMOVS \\'ill be given t.o members' CHARATAN husbands. SAVI NELLI SASIEMI of fl11allly Pipes AND ACCESSORIES EASY·CARE 'lfn.i/ornt6 "JUST FOR YOU" Jllamrenre IUolCO Smart feshiofls, c1rt·fr1• fabrics fee• turino BARCO and other femou• bra nd n1m11. Many 1tyl1t to ichotH fr.m. '8 9" Som• 11 low 11 • U Cathy's Uniform_s 1767 " ... ""' ...... C-M-646-IJll ~hoppe HJ11dm1d1 ci~•ri fot fht dl1c,ll'l'll11•I• 11110••;\. #5 TOWN & COUNfllY, ORANCif, CALIFORNIA 542-8752 STOlll HOURI DAILY t TO 9 SUNDAY' 12 TO I Tea datln& btnt1: Many are fQ mood to let em0Uoa1 above logic aside. Know illat you do bave to face coasequentt1 - New Sculptors In Exhibition . The opening of Five Gillery As s ociates Sculptors will be celebrated by coordinated by Mrs. tfelle University Gallery Associates Duggan, Newport Beach. sta(- during a reception in ·the fing. chairrnan. A special ex· gallery Sunday, Dec. 7. hibition brochure also will be Featuring the recent \\'Orks available. of a group of artists new to ~1rs. Thornas Frank, 838· the UCl Gallery, the exhibition ·J647, may ~ telcphcned for will be open to the public additional infonnalion. without charge between I and The support group to the 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9, UCI Gallery also is making through Jan. 18 except the preparations for a special tour week ~nnlng ~1onday, Dec. of the new Pasadena Art 22, when the gallery will be Museum \Vednesday. Dec. to. closed for the holidays. 'i'he opening exhibition, New Gallery Associates who will York I 9 4 5. J 9 6 9 , y,·as host the opening event are coordinated by UC I Art Mrs. Charles Hendrickson , Gallery d ire ct or Alan Lido Isle; Mrs. Alen J. Mickle, Solomon, and guiding the Lido Isle. and Mrs. Thomas P. associates during the tour will \Vilder, Newport Beach. be Mrs. Thomas Terbell, wife Viewed will be the works of of the museum's acting dire c· Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, tor. Donald Judd, Robert ~torris "'1rs. Terbell will ho!il the and Richard Serra. All are associales during a luncheon New York artists who use con· in her home where they \viii temporary mater i a 1 s to have an opportunity lo view stretch the boundaries of !he Tcrbell collection o[ con- three-<iimensional fonn. temporary art. The show was organ ized by Opening concurrently "'ith John Coplans.....ou:ator Qf the the New York show in PasaOena Art ~1useun't and Pasadena ls \Vest Coast 1945-- former director of the UCI Art · 1969 direcUtd· jijt Coplans. Gallery. This event is the second in a Starnng the sales desk dur· series or museum tours ing the exhibition \\'ill be coordinated by G a 11 er y Jobs Open In Alaska Registered nurses interested In becoming nurses for the U.S. Public Health Service in Alaska are invited to meet Miss Dian_a Carlson. f\N, in Los Angeles through Dec. 12. Miss Carlson, a bush nurse fn Alaska. y,·ill be available for interviews in the l\1ayflower Hotel or may be contacted after Dec. 12 at Area Person- nel, Alaska Area Native Heallh Services, P. 0 . Box 7- 741, ~oragc, Alaska, 99501. Associate Mrs. Patrick E. Cory. Laguna Beach. Last month 'the group galhertd for a tour of the Van Gogh e»- hibition . The n~xt lour \\·ill be an ex· hibition frcn1 the Cloisters ~luseu1n in Ne1v York City fol101\•ing the holiday!i. The associates prov ide bus transportation for members and guests and serve coffee and Dani~h pastry en route to !he mu seums. '4 The Gallery As soc i ales formed to support activities of the UCI Art Gallery. Membe rs provide the invitational open· ing receptions and staff the ga yery sales msk in addition to sponsoring student events and attending lectures by the art faculty. TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20): Finish task which has caused conCtm. Now is time when you get not only sympathy, but solid support. Realite this, and move with confidence. Be kind to one who confides pro- blem. GE!\1lrl.'l (!\fay 21.June 20): Stress originalit y , in- dependence of thought and ac· Uon. Some mailers which had been hidden become open secret. !\1aintain poise. Steer cl ea r of organizational dispute. CANCER (June 21.July 22): You are somewhat restr icted to fulfilling desires. But don't be discooraged by minor re bu f I, Your acumen regarding money and home pays off in long run. LEO /July 23-Aug. 22 ): Ob- tain valid hint from Cancer mes.sage. Don't ru sh. If in too much o[ a hurry. you lose sense of proportion. Accent is on location, property value, domestic harmony -or lack of it. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22)' Not wise to embark" on journey, u n I e !i s absolutely necessary. Key is lo be obser· vant. Che ck details . Jewish Singles Planning Social SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Threat to your security may merely be affront to your vanity. Be mature -and analytical. Not fa\'orable for signing of legal documents or formulating of partneTships. SAGITrARJUS (Nov. 22· Dec. 21): Cooperate wilh persons whose purpose is to aid those confined to homes or hospitals. Evening features the mysterious or behind· scenes aetivities. CAPRICORN (Di!c. 22-Jan. 19): Some friends may appear gloomy. Be patient. Offer moral support. But don't become involved in any finan- cial scheming. Allow only fac. tural infonnaUon to motivate you. AQUARIUS (Jan. 20·Feti. 18): Career opportunities should be reviewed. Strive for objectivity. Know that some r e s p Q n s i biliUes demand almost immediate attention. PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20): Nen·s from afa r might be in different form than an. tici pated. Stick to principles and adhere to Golden Rule. Then you will be moving in constructive direction. lF TODAY IS YOUR BIRmDA Y you have basic desire to make lovtd ones happy -even if it means self· ~acrifice. Fina ncia l picture due to brighten. Emotional confusion clears and is replac- Orange County Jewi sh ed by greater self.sufficiency. Singles are sponso ring a m!~:;~~d0Y~,,;":"~;~,:ui~~,,!~ o~~rr'!', boo*-111, "Secre1 Hints for Men 111<1 Chanukah party tomorrow women." se...i bir1~d•11 and ~Q cen11 e"en1'ng at 9 1'n the Green lo Omerr Aslroloav Secr~!J. !P>I OAILT v PILOT. llo• 12~, Gr•n'1 Ctn1rll St• Valley family c 1 u b h 0 use' lion. New Yor~. M.V. 10011. Fountain Valley. AiJ:;llM~~;iillSjJll:F.li;ciQJllll~~ D a n c i n g, entertainment, I ! gan1es and r~freshments will I ' • ! spark the party. Admission is a \t $1.50 for members and $2.50 11 _ -ill for nonmembers. & FIRST LINE I The group also will meet " s47so l! ~hursday Dec. 11 at 8:30 p.m. K I 1n Temple Beth E me I, ~ _ ~ Anaheim. for a progra1n on I '"'"'d" Israel Today. It'! Currently the fall niem· I~ TMnlr.9 t' ond bership drive is under \\'ay 1 51,.,i;a and yearly dues are $5. b ~ Sorority Lunch ! • Jlu sic For Orange County Alumnae i r Club of Alpha Xi Delta_ sorori · W Ever)'011e. ty will gather for a luncheon I "'from hc.h to "oc.k" Monda y, Dec. 8' at noon In •COAST MUSIC SERVICE Bullock's. Further information I" may be reetived by contaetbg DiwitoW11 Costti Mna Mrs. James, Dei.ndoerfer of I ~271 Huntington Beach. W'w!lll'.~llll•!a••• ... MllTCHMllKERS A-ABSOLUTELY NO 8-ICO C-NOT SURE D-YES E-ABSOLUTELY TIS I 1. a 1 c o E h n •1mc1tt fer"' 11 •etJt crltlcls111! I Z. A I C D E An Jll 111t111f1rtJbl1 •11t111111w ''''lo! 3, A I C D E Sllo1I• 1111•11utlo11 l1t tn11rt 11t1ld1 ti tht llt•t? I 4. A II c D E Dt r•• iJl'lltr ICtlrilltl w1tll 111t 1pp11lft ltl •• ,. "'" "'°' Jiit •••? I !. A II C D E Dt roo b•lltrt ,,,,., c•• lntlvenct)'Dlf llh? I l A C O E D1 ,.., 101111tl111s lint t111dach11 1r ,1t,1ch11 1ft1r 1 •irne1H flJT I r. 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I" 11 A ,.4 11. l C D E D1 ,.. .,,,..,, " •lfTfd ..... 11111 t11 twc• 1ltt9I tk llH'P ti.A..., """"14if 20. A C I l Wllld urT1111 Wfttl•lt p1d senll rtlltl1t111dp '' t1Ust•ttry • J'"f 7-- ~£ : 1 : : ~ ::·,.~::.!~~':'" •: .. ~·~, •nlclltr ••ttw ""'-? SINGLE 2l. A I c D [ DI Jll '""'' att ti "" 11t-coler jlkn •IMI 1tort1s? 24, A I C D l •rt tt11n 111nr n!lJtctl r,• wo11d ratt11r lllt dlsctu titel"tfT 2L A I C O l Shtuld """ trr It c11Un1 !Mir lttl'flllt II tti •r •ite••• fh11tldl1d! 25. a I C D l 11r11r1!111101 •• t1c11 .naln 1111"11w11ttIf11111? WI I OWE I 21. l I C D l h II llnp1rtMt thll 1111 first rHllllCI co11T1t1 llnqll11t 9Srl1ttl 29. A I t D E Do 1011 •11ie•t It Is J111port1111 to 1lt1nd ch urtb re1tl11tyl 29. l I C D E Ari you luppy D!Ort 1!1111 ltltn moocty aad d1pr1ss1d! DIVORCE 1 311. l B C D' E Would ye~ r1th1r lint 1 relltCllY1 Mitt ltltn I lftllflon 11111 31. l B C D E When/ow h11r 11ood story dt yoe 01111llr tell It to 1th1r1? 32. A I C D E Showl •t1111e1 n11 fer P111ld1nt of tht U11lh' Sbtts? SJ, l I C 0 E h11lf'lllll1r1r,1 Merl 1w1r111ttlt1pp11l11111? 34. l I C D E Will WI •1 tri1I 1«0111t1bl1 !tr•• btltnler 11 ttll1 R" lftw ft die? 35. A I C D E DI• J111 111jtJ 1111 wt1111 JGI wttl 1 cltlld! 36. A I C 0 [ tint ro1 '''' tra111d tht 1tr11t 11affld1111ti111111111111? )1. A B C 0 E Do ya11 think J11d111 fntf 11m1 ll'l'Jtrl? 31. A B C D E Is It 1ccepbbl1 Of 11chool ttaclttr to smoke 1r drtfll Iii p11bnc? 311. • c 0 E II~"'' tit lllllClrl ltlPll frtt~ll"' Olf Sthlll c1111p11s11 th111 Ctys? 40. A c 0 I. teold ,.. llllw ,,,, clllN ti ChDOll I rtlllfH ttilr 11111 pml ti. A C D ( h Jtl pt 1111'11nttr tr tre_.1U,1 t2. A C D I. 01 r•• tiff "'"'" tt11'111 dowa 11 atllm? 4l. l C 0 I. Wtuld Jll ,nl1r ti '' wldl 1 lflllJ ti PHP1t ntlltf ftl9I •111? 44. l C O I. D1 rat lhl1k thtrt lfl t¥er tlrt11111t11ce1 t?tlt c111d Jntlfy 1 U..ft! t5. A C 0 £ II ttlt aubJcct tf 111 b111!1 1v1r..c1plolt1d •r 11r 111.ss •tllll11 41. A C D I. Sho11N 111 chlldte1 r1c11v1 101111 nH1lot1 IMlrtctl11? 47. l C D E Dt JO• f'IMtMb1r Jo•11111d flli;t pltnurt In n11ll11tti111tt1tflm! 41. l C D [ Shttld 111ltrT\1d tlUP1tt 11 Ill 111 1 trip lftthiptrtft!df 4!. l C D I Ct1N Jtl h triarn 111.nt1d ti 11111HKttt1'1tt llltll :so. a c I I S!lttlf mt.ti•• h tnPt"'"' "'lk sclftth1 '/'°"'au Jnte~ated in meet.I ns hightr corn.patibl• people •.• 1t-lected eapeciall1 for JOU fro !II amonr thouaandl. " 'P'"' 4'te R .. d7 (or a dramatlc and e:I• dtin1 chanp ia 10ur aociaJ ltre. Tiiis t11 Wiii dt•ltt l1t1ttsl "' t1101t II "'" 1t e1111ptmlH1J ••fnt• ""''' 111d s1lo1llf 111t J / - _ •• c•11Uru1d as b1ln1 1b11 t1 1lla1d psytbolo1tca1 dl111111l1. ~ "8ITl·-·------llld11.--------~ I !_!tt__hoft'le f)hone, ____ woo phont: ____ °'°'peittOfl,_":":-:--~:- OCI" ID/24 II Moil to' :: MfiTCHMliKERS 1 ••• Fill out .and mall OM flhll· ml11ar1 profile tbda1 . • • \Ve t1COH It and lit 7ou know .,, bat th e .. N'11khm1kln1t ('ompuut• ran do for 7ou. Th1re'1 no tOet or obllraUon, of coune. If MOt:I COHYtHIOff U.U.1 500 So. Main St., Suite 1105, Oran"• California 92668 ou.•H cou•TT t11 41 """" '2 •os AHGILlS ,,, ... ,. l /, I I l I Costa Mesa Today'11 Fln~I N.Y. Stocks EDIJION * VOi:. iz, NO. 29f, 4 S6CTl9N$, '48 PAGES CROSS.HATCHED AREA IS VACANT IRVINE COASTAL LAND Shoreline Development Plan Proeosed by.Jrvine By JEROME F, COWNS ot fltt ~lly Plltt lllft A combination of public and private Mvelopment of the ~l area between Comia del Mar and Laguna Beach was propo5elf today by William R. Mason, president nf the Irvine Company. 1.tason said the cmnpany, sole owner of Uie :1 1 ~ mile st retch of virtually uninhabited .~horeline property, said that U'le company's master plan will reflecl "a unique blend or developments that will include 11ublic access to the tidel ands.'' He asked state. c6unty and municipal government officials interested in the public's access to ocean tidelands and the acquisition of public beach areas lo join with the company as it begins its plan- ning for the area, "The Inclusion of public access to the tidelands and the provision for their ac- quisition of public beaches along the Jrvine coast may come as a surprise to those who are unfamiliar with our history of planning," aaid Mason. "But it &bould oot. "The lrvtnc Company has long recognized and been an advocale or the need for joint puh!ic anti private coopera- 1 ion in the creative development of our environment." 1'he Jrvinr. exrc11tivc. an engineer by profession, e1npl1;i.'>izetl ; '"\Ve do nol u11end to create an en· vironment that win deny public access to the coastal tidelands as in the case of the recent Salt Creek matter. What ts more, we are. not opposed lo public acquisition and development of portiou of-the coast4 al land for public ·purposes." Mason's~"Sall Crttk" reference was lo the county·s abandonment of Salt Creek Road in .Laguna Niguel, south or Laguna Beach. early last year. The road had i;erved as quasi-public access to Salt Creek beach. Reversal of the county's ac- tion has been vigorously sought ever since by citizens' groups ln the south county area. Irvine's Mason said his company's main concern never has been with the question or whether public facilities should be located on lands owned by the firm. "We are, bow ever, concerned with the need for public plans lo be coordinated with and complimentary to planned private developments." Jn order to bring about this coordina- tion, Mason said, the company 111 calling on the State Department of Parks and Reereatlon, county government and the cities of Newport Beach and Laguna Beach '"lo comhine their individual ideas, intcrrsls and de sires during the. ·.early ~Irie.cs or planning.'' Letters outlining the Irvine propo!tal (See IRVINE, Page Zl Echo Front llawail Coast Braces for Next Onslaught of High Surf Thundering :i:11rf -an f'cho (Ir murderous. slorm-spdwned breakers bat. tering l~awaii tod11y -is etpected lrt s!rike the Or;i ngr Cn:i<;f within 24 hour;;, fC1l1011"('rl hv ahntJrm;il ly l1H•h tidr;o; Cflm· rnunfhnA lhr problen1.: i\1nntl;i\' Trouble ni:1v .!If' brr·.~ ult,: for ~01e 11 reas. i11rlud11ig Laguna l\f'ach. 11'hl're a similar tnmbinalinn In .July. 1!H9. senl surf swilling over anrl bC'yond Pacific Coast Highway, according to one veteran. Waves generated by a pair of two 1everc storms In the western Paclfjc 1macked the Califom\a coastline Thurs. day, ranging up to 15 feet in the Santa Barbara area. Treacherous surf capsized a skiff cat• rying two treasure-hunters In their mlQ. twtndes off Summerland Beach and the men vanished tn the crashing waters. A If-year-old surfer narrowly escaped drowning ofr Hennosa Beach when he twghL the M18s ror a hali·bour after be.Ing knocked from his board. but was rescued by nrr:guard s. ~e swells spa'>'·ned by hivin stonns hetween the Philippin!I: J'lnd the Aitutlan 1slands subsided a bit Thursday night. cl ropplng: 11s low as two feet ~ay along t:he or11nge coast. . \Ve.ather forecastcri; com~r1ng ex- f)ec:U!d lides and new. lncommg sets of breakers say the surf which reached A 11a1tmum of eight to ten feet ln Laguna 'leach ls just a wte of more to come. Lifeguard Lt. Eugene De.PauU.. sald the eAmfl combination of 1even.foot tldet and ~-rurf hit th~ Art ColOO)' on • July 4., 1949, wasblng over the coastal highway. • rr prediction! or today hold up. he warned, the crashing surf will be up to the boardwalk area and may spill over and clown Broadway . "Then again, they could be. wrong," he said . r.ifeguards and police along the Orange Coast from Seal Beach lo San Clemente generally reported. the same thing: high wrf Thul'!day, laJX'liJ:lg to UtUe waves to- day and no dainqe., Seal Buch police eel out barrlcade1 Blong the beach 'l'hllndl1 nlaht when the pounding sulf ..-n11 porllona Md sppeared ready to .. 1111 m<ll't tn>ubl., but the IWeJla ...... down to Ihm feet this morning. . Surfside rtpor1ed DO J>n)blem, but the lltUe col0011 lmmdated by Waves due to erosion In the early alnlea, could 1et some standing beacll pool> U surf aesi. over the hlgb·tide line Saturday. . lluntington Beach lifeguards sak! !Urf was n .. ·e to seven £eel Thursday -higher than normal -but they expect a moun- ting height by late Saturday morning. Newport Beach authorities said waves hit aboot lhP. same height Thursdo.y, but thett1 was no damage and t.rucb Involved tn the sand haul anU~roslon project kept. up the normal pace. If anything, aald one o(flclal, lhe waves are giving a chance. to study the effect of heavy 1url on the newly-dumped oand and little was carrlcd away by the wave •dion. ORANGE COUNTY, eAQFORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 5, i969 TEN CENTl .. Tate Prosecutors'. Ask Plot Indictment for Manson LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney for Susan Denise Atkins said today 11be would tell the grand jury lnY<StigaUng the murders of Sharon Tate and others, •'aU the details of the Tate murder," in· cluctJng how she was "hypnotized" Into participating in it. As he entered the [!:rand jury courtroom complex, '~ere 18 witnesses, I.heir atlorneys and tJthers were noi sily assembling, Richard l!'a6allero said l\1iss At.kins still feels under the "power of Charles M. Manson. 35, bearded leader or a hippie-style clan that is figuring heavily in the invesliga~ion. * * * 'Black Magic' Manson's Key, Friends Claim LOS ANGELES (AP) -•·mack magic" •• "He believes that he, and all human beings, are God", "There i.'i no crime. there is no sin". ."The wamen were the key to everything." Three rriends of Charles M. Manson us- ed .those words Thursday to describe him and the way they say he ruled a clan or nomadic hJppie-types on a commune near Death Valley, Prosecutors~ -they will "'k an In· tlictment charging Ma~ 35, with con- spiracy to commit mmder. Several mem• bets of hi& clan are accused of slaying ectrtss Sharon Tate IDd six others. The three [riendt .:..... mJne.r Paul Croc~ett, 50; gul\af ,..,., ):>aul WllJIW, 19; and Brooks Poston, 11 -gave the descriptions. "The whole thing WRS'ht!ld together by black mag\c," said Watkins, who has follo~·ed Manson since they met two years ago in the Haight-Ashbury district, then the hippie haverr in San Francisco. "You don't believe it? Well. It really exists, and it is powerful," Watkins said. .. He (Jlr1anson~ believes that he, and all human beings, are God and the devil at the same time. He believes all human beings are part of each other," said Poston, a Manson foJlower for two years. "You see what that means," Crockett said. "It means that humao life has no value. Jf you kill a human being, you are just killing a part of yourself. So it's all right" But, said Crockett, by ?i-fanson's philosophy "you can't kill an animal. Not a bug, not a snake. nothing. There were snake11 all over the desert. They got in !he cabin and everywhere. But you could never kHl one. They picked up snakes tn the house and carried them outside and turned them loose." "That's right" Poston said. ''I saw them carry a foot-long sidewinder out of (See MAGIC, Page :Z) Mesa GI IGlled In Viet C:Omhat A former Orange oCast College student serving as a machinegunner with the Army's 199th lnlanlry bas been killed In Vietnam comba~ bb fonnlly bus been II> formed by the militarf. He was Spec!4 John W. Roles, 21. son of Mrs. Lois Roles, of 1675 Gisler Ave., Costa Mesa. "'rhe Villa Park High School gradu ate entered the Army last January. • "'-don bave Aid they will -to lndlet Manm·wlili complracy to commit murder. "She still fears him," Caballero said of M&M011'1 influence over his clltnt. He said Mbs Atkins, 21, charged wlth murder in a separate case, will waive rlg~1 against self incrimination in hopes that her voluntary-testimony will save her from the gas chamber. §he will admit freely, he said, that she accompenied members of the clan as they )llled ·Miss Tate, actress wife of Polilh-fibn' director Roman Polanski, anti lour .GtJlert. last summer -but her Dealer Suspeet defense wfU ,,;~she was temporari]y·ln-' u.ne 1'hlle under the clan leader.'1 "hfp. notlc 11><ll" and "bad nothing to do wtth the mqrden." "If a wltnas 1s truthful and honest I think some conslderaUon will be given to that," Caballero satd. He added that Mis.!! Atkins ts "Quite upset, quite remorseful." Prosecutors arrived for the grand jury 11ession with three pictures to show the jurors. One shows a length of rope about 43 feet long, another shows a gun, and a third shows an aerial view of the home or a couple killed ·the day after the Tate murders. Estancia Student Cited on Drugs A 15-year-old sophon1ore v;as arrested by Costa trfesa police Thursday after Estancia High School· administrators, informed be might be a dealer, found 17 purple drug capsules ·after opening hit locker. Detectives said the contraband wu •P- parenUy mescaline. They .ar..:n:r.a11o foqnd a quantity o( b.ash1sh ( mar• ijuana) in the suspect'• pocket liter, lnvostigoton sai4 the t.enagar .told o! 1elling ~ ):4Ufw $1.50 aft<r;s1!130 far ll!t ·!ui~ ~ · · lli""' .ill{h~..,,. aa. I mn111 SChoot 6fO~ials Wei.i notified of.the iiti tJatlon earlier and c~H~ PQUce, who took Cle youngster into custody on ch4raea of possession of dangerous drugs and hash- ish. · He was placed in Orange County Juve- nile Halt Another 17-year-old Costa ,.1e· aan wound up in juvenile hall early today fol lowing a mlnor auto accident on New- port Baolmml at lndullrlal·Way. In.uatorl aald·he was driving along the "tluleVard when his car hit a guard· rall·aad a..aearth -when lt_w~ ~l_u­ d«t ht ,. .. under the infh"°""' ..,. turned ;iljbU'~l!l\lw'1te aJld 11 lll!plietan\lpe The suspect was charged with Po11ses- 1ion ·of dangerous drµgs and driVing un.- dei' the influence. ' · Underground Paper Story On Theft Alarms Glavas Newpcii Bach Police Chief B. Jame11 Glavas today told his conc;ern about the passing out at local high schools of an underground newspaper containing an artlcle advocating shoplifting. The chler said because of Supreme Court decisions interpreting free speech he knows of no way lo prosecute the publishers or distributors of "From Out of Sherwood Forest,'' published locally in Newport Beach. Police were called to the Corona r1~1 Mar lllgh School campu' earlier !his week bul when they arrived a bearded young man and a girl who were hand· Ing out copies of the underground paper just beyond the school premises were go"' "Unforhm.ately, court decisions of the laJt few years have given people who bave extremely bad taste much latitude 1n these areas," Chief Glavas said. "They have not only subjected young people to f11th but In highly suggesUble minds have created doubt about . the mor8l structure. When they advocate theft to the . effect that those who have lhould have it. taken away I think it's going prttty far. That article W3#fl't a put on." He referred lo a story headlined ''Outlaw Blues" signed by Robbin' Hood. The how-to-do-it story on shoplifting ' saYJ "Stealing from companies which are stuling. from the people is not dis- honest. Profit ls theft ••• \ve don 't want tG hurt any individual person. which you don't if you steal from }Jrge com- ""'panles." Glavas regretfully noted the law states 0 there Is nothing unlawful about advocat- ing as long as you don't conspire lo per· form the act with someone." The underground sheet contains words and picture!! that generally would be considered obscene, along with its socia l comment. He remarked, "As you are a'>'•are. the Supreme Court ha!I 5aid there Is no suc h thing as obM:enily .'' Regardln~ the distribution at Corona del Mar High School, he said, "If they are off of the school grounds and not soliciUng subscriptions or charging there apparently Is nothing we can do." Corona del Mar High Principal Uon Meeks said, "l ·don't think they gave out more than 100 or 200 copies." He said police were called as soon as a student picked up a copy of the.paper and came running . to the office with jt. Dick "Ricky" Croas, D-year-old part owner of Bird ln Search of a Cage Book- store, 2307 W. Balboa Blvd .• where the paptr is published,' said he didn 't know (Sff SHOPUfT, P1ge I) $400,000 Bonds Missing FBI Hunts Attorney in Coast Man's Estale Probe Bv TOM BARLEY . ~ ... °""' ,,,.. '''" Mexican au1hor!Ues today Joined the FBI and·· 1Dves11,-a from Ille San Dltgo County Dlstrlci A~.omey'a offiC<! In • widtnlng search Cor 111 attorney ac- cused of stealing' nearly $400,000 In bonds ·from the esiai.t._Qf_a li.ewport Beach min. The search for E!COndido lawyer Patrick S. ?tt. Mitton, 47, is centering on Ensenada, \he Mexican city v.•he.re he allegedly cashed a check for $5,000 last Nov. 25. Federal and San Diego County com· plaints accuse l?fitton of grand tbeft and attempted n:torUon, charges stemJhlng from bl.s a11eged thelt of bondl held In the estate of John Salmond, 71, 2164 VIila Entrtlda, Newport Bach. The reUrnd Union• 011 Company n• ecutlve, desc:n'bed 1odl)' by bis dallihtt" ln-law u belq -.•a .Yer)' 1lct ma." recenUT lppolDlet bb wil., Mrs. u.1ea F. Salmond Ind hll IOl1, John Salmorid Jr., 11911 ·EOrd Lane, HunUngton Buch, a co ators of lhe estate. San Diego ptor1 today said Mil· ton "'' hired tJie fomlly attorney and Is bellt...r to be the author of a t~wri~ ten un~p!ld ltlt!T which the younger Salmortd_suj)s~nlli' re:ce~ in the mail. · · That letter, they said, was received Nov. 22 and it 11uggested that Saln1ond. who Is vice president of C,Ufomla St.:ite College.at Los Angeles, should pay Mitton one·half of lbe v1fue of the m1aslng bonds -estimated by tovtlllsaton 11 belng · worth about $!00,0GO. Invu:Uptor Larry Bricker 18.id the Jet- ter warned Salmond !hot lbe hoods would not be roturDed unlOll lbe· ln)'tr r<etlv· ed haU of lhtlr value. The ·I-. abo polni.d · out !hot . a -ting -i• be c;raoged•bot-Ibo pll'tlu 11.llllldl delilll cLU.·adlup . "' . • -·-' of -·andmoney"""'1d'be-~. Al about lllat Umo, BTicUr Mid, Mil· ton aold hil -la• practice Ind went oo a •-Oil. He --rtpOl1'd as hlvlnl been eeen. ht EnMaada where he cubeil the 15,000 cbect. Sgt. JelUI Sutnor of the Enaeoada Police Department said police In four Mex1can ptov\nces wert-ln" poeseulon of ~itton'a picture and description and that an Intensive search ts under way . ''\Ve understand that he la no stranger .to '-fcxfco,' lhC sergeant said, "and tha.t ho has many Crtends ~hd!:. This will not help oor search, of COU[le, but we are wotklOf with YOW' people (the dlstrlet at. torney'• omce) and the FBI." John Stlmond Jr. today re!US<d to eonpnent on the reported !belt ol hoods from hla lather'• estate. ' lleloUvtt and frfenda of Milton, who Is· lilo a cert!Oed publlo aecounllnt, llmlllrly -te cliaclm the 'lawyer'• ~--· ).- A1>o am011g the 18 scbeduled w11nesstl was' producer Terry. r.telcher, 27-year~d 900.of singer.actress Dori!! Day. Mekhei has declined comment. Mi ss Atkins' attorneys satd Melche1 v;as visited by Charles M. Manson, 35, kno\Yn as· the leader of a quasireUgiou~ clan or hippie types Y.'ho k11ew Manson as ''God" and "Satan," Manson was unsuccessful In &eekinS ?i-1elcher's hel p to record some 50ngs when Melcher lived in the Tale home in fashionable Bel Air before Miss Tate and (See TATE CASE, Pa&e. I) Calley Faces Pentagon's · . My L.ai Probe WASHINGTON (UPI) -First Lt William L. Calley Jr. wa!I summoned tG the Pentagon today for Questioning .bY a special panel attempting to detennine ii there might have been a whltewash of aa original Anny investigation of the kllling of South Vietnamese civlians at My Lai. The 26-year-old Calley is -accuSe.d. ol premeditated murder of 109 penons in the alleged massacre. He was com- mander of a platoon of a c:umpany head· ed by Capt. Ernest A. Medina, WM denied '!'hur>day either orcierblg. '" seeing any mass slaylngs in the village.. The Pentagon Inquiry board al!Pl'ently plaM to question almost everyone with 1 connection in the case and calley was oni ly one of several called -today: A spokesman said it was possible he might not be beard until late today, or possibly even later. Calley Is the only perSQn specllically charged with murder In the case, although more than a score of men who were there at the .time are under 1n- vestigation and one sergeant lias been Ao cused of assault with Intent to murder .. i Calley, wha ls to be tried by an AnnJ court martial next month at Ft. Bennin& Ga., was called before the so--calted Peer1 Investigation Board which waa formed ta look into whether a low-level in. vesUgation soon after the March JS, 1988i .incident amounted to little· more than 1 whitewash. The board headed by Lt. Gen. Willian1 R. Peef5 heard Medina Thursday behind closed doors. Afterward Med.1na, com· mander of Company C, tst Battaltion, ot the 200lh infanlry at the time. held a news conference to dmy any knowledge of 1nass killings of civilians. In a subsequent inlervie1v, l\.tedini!I a.cknowledged. ho"·ever. that undet orders from .higher up, he had directed his men to destroy My Lai 4, a part of the vil lage or Song My. because· it wall suspected as a haven for the Viet Col!JI 48th battalion. Stork Mark,et NEW YORK (AP) -Stock market prices turned lower in slow trading: late this afternoon after giving up early mod- erate gains. (See quotations, Pages 10. 11.) "'- Orange Coast \\leather TI1e surf will be up and the sun will be out this weekend, with balmy temperature!! in the upper 70's warming the Orange Coast, INSmE TODAY Almost a fjtar oft.n ht 1h.eU· td out $900 to bail UC Inn., studenti ou1. of jail in Btrkelty. C'lancellor Do:rtie' Aldrich ii bt· ginning to gei 1ome of his money back. PaQe 8. Only 20 -~ CHRISTMAS ' ~-: J DAILY PILOT c F'rldu1 DtuNw .5, J.'69 .bc....:.:.::::;..-"'~~~~-'--~~-,-~~"""~',.;:..~;o;_.,,,..:..·..;..;... • • .• Irvine Foundation ·sur viVes . Senate .. Tax • fnm Wirt &en!ctf '1'1!t J... ltvln• Powldatloa and 1in\il•r tal~t:mpt qrganliat\ons appear to have WM a new lease on life today after t1' Senate defeaied a plan to strip away their t.aa. &anctuary. Stn1te ~came In Washington after an emotionally charged shouting debate on the floor. Tile ,., amendn:tnl, if ll had been ~doPted, .wo11ld have ttrlpped the foun· <liitions of tu..e11:tmpt 1tatus after -40 yws. lt w;11 called "the death sentence" for lounda~Olll. 'nit final vote qalnsl Ille ~ent was 61to18.. In Orange, COunty. lhe, JIJ'Dtl lrvlne roundaUon OWJ'IS ~.59 shates qr 54.t per- cent of Irvine Company stock. :i.t !ta la.c;t We Jn November ol 1968, the stock drew i2;-i0,ooo per share. Fram Its tax.exempt haven, the Jrvine Foundation has distributed millions lo local cultural and charJ\y groups since it was founded in 1935 by the late J ames Irvine. In 11\0 fjacaI yen endJi>I March 31, th< l{v!M F®rr~l\'1n 11ve Ir!'"' tolalllng li .t il!Jlltt!" lol,llili'iid16ial groupo. In tlie i;tnate debate today, Sen. ~btrf E. Gore (D-Tenn!), ligbtlng IQ matntaln the 40-year lifespan provision In the bill, argued that an overwhelming majority of private foundations were created by 1nill ionaires to serve as tax havens and to publicize the name of their creator in perpetuity. Gore slid even the Kelk>gg Foundation of Battle Creek, Mich., which he describ- ed as one of "the good foundations," had From Page I IRVINE SHORE .PLAN • • • • have betn sent to William Penn Mott, Jr., directM of the·alale department ol parks and recreation; William Hirstein, chair;-!! man ,of. t,ht 'Orange County Board o( Su- r# pe.rvilors: Doreen Marshall, mayor of ., 1 ··Newport Beach, and Glenn Vedder, may- or of Laguna Beach,l\tason said. .. To date," he exp)alned, "the com· pany's coastal studies have pertained to surveying and analyzing soil conditions, 11)opes, utility systems, road aligrunent s, view pot.e.ntlals, and market conditions. · Only now js the company preparing to ' embark on detailed studerelating lo the formu lation of a precise land USC plan for the coast." Further jnspiration for achieving a !1balaWof. pub~c and private uses or t~ ·gmair;i tugged cOastlin,e and its stat· ' 'tering: o( swjpunlng beaches came from a recent. tour . of Mediterranean resort : areas by Mason and a f9Uf·rnan company task force. f, 'Ibe Irvine repr!setitaUves visited such coastal developments as the Algarve ! Coast in Poriugal, the Costa del Sol and .' Costa Brava in Spain, the French Riviera 1! ,and Italy's Ligurlan and Amalfl coasts. '!l Muan said it was a highly instructive f:'tour. 11The most obvious failing we ~. observed is that U1ose Coastal areas that • were develop!d exclusively for private !: iue ;appeared sterile, uninteresting and : • w.Jthoui a feeling of place or CQntext." T. ·liiias-dt:veloped exclusively lot the ·~ pubij.c· .didn't look much bet~r. he sai~. ~ • "They .. were dull, lµlattractive and 1n !: : Jnosl' lmtancts they had spoiled the .. ·natitral be:am:t of the coastline, often ap- pear!ni ii tt they luld been dedicated IO parting JoU arid·~ recepta~ea." _ It ii to avtkl either e1treme,;;11Uon said. that the CQmpany fells a cooperative planning effort between the JJOblic and private interests "is man· dai,t1." I f ' Cycling Couple f;' Escape in Craslt ·. .. . < < ~ ' . l ~ j ' , ·' :~ ·' .. ·' , ~ . ;; , :::... . ·' .. .. .. .. • • •. •. :: ' . :· , '· =-.: :i • •• • ' •. ' • ' . A youne Air Force enlisted man and a Newport Beach girl riding behind him escaped· serious injury Thu rsdf!-y · night when their motorcycle collided with a. car in C:C.ta Me!a. Robert A. McSherry, 20. of Pieo Rivera, and Norma L. Schmidt, 16, o{ 1501 Sylvia Lane, Newport Beach, 5\lffered ankle and ann injuries. They were mated at COl51.a ti.1esa Me- morial Hos~lal and rtleased . Police said the driver of the ca r was Judith G. Seaborn, 26, of 2Q4 35th SL. Nowporl Beach . The accident occurred ·al 17lh Street and Irvine: Avenue. Mrs. Hearst, 38, Dies PACIFIC PALISADES IUPil .:_ Mrs . Mary Thompson Hearst. 38, former wife of newspaper publisher George Randolph Hearrt Jr., died Thursday al her home • Mrs. Hearst recenlly under\vent surg· ery of an undisclosed nature. Hear5t fle'"' in from Jtonolulu after learning or the death of his former wife. Jn addition to her former husband, Mrs. J:learst is sur· vived by four children. OAlll Pl lOT CUHOI CQl.<it .Ull Wt1M• COM1AH"I ••Mrt N. w,,4 tornr.llnl.,... ''*I~, J•ck l. Cvr/tj V9t ............ •1111 o-.i ""'''" T~t1'"' r,..,11 . ... n•••• A. Mv,,111,., ~Etlltw c---lJO Wttt lrt StrMt M.lit?atl AMmu P.O. I• 11.0. ttJl6 --......., tffol12'Jll Wwt ... .....,.,. .....,......,.!ntf-'•-"""""* IMllil; -.. , .... ~ , Be.fore the ?liediterranean trip in Od.ober, Irvine officials already had decided on making accw available to the public tidelands, Masoi1 noted • Tbls waa indicated last April when the CQmpany sent a representative to Sacramento to appear before the Assembly Committee on Local Govern· ment. The Irvine aide voiced support of proposed legislation bearing on public ac- cess to shoreline areas. "We approved the concept," said Mason. Irvine senior \'ice president Ray Wat.&on, who oversees the company's Jong-range planning, said appointrnent of a "public coordinal!ng co1nm iltee" may be the bes't approach to the master plan problem. The committee's membershi p wou ld comprise repre!enta tives or state, county and local agencies who would \Vork with Irvin~ planners "to establish the needs and deslrts of the various levels o( · IOVt:rmnents with respect to public ~as .... " The.committee, he said, would fun ctio n as the ofHcial liaison between the com- pany and the public. "Through coordinated action a n d c:ooperation," Watson concluded, ·•a development plan can emerge that will make it possible to achieve an optimum blend or public and private u~es lhat might not olherwise be possible." Landscaping Plan Coming Up Roses Everything ls coming up . roses for the prospect or beautilyfng the ~e:n, weedy N~port Boulevard cen~ divtder from uudtown Costa Mesa northward. City Manager Arthur R. McKenzie has MnOunced to city councilmen that the St.ate Division of Highways is giving pennission for planting or shrubbery and flowers in the median section. 'J'he concept was first menlioned several months age. \vith a vision of area nurserymen using the fallow ground to grow stock for sale and brighten up the boulevard at the same time. J\fcKenzie said the sta te has also ap- p'l'ved installation of sprinkler systen1s 16 water the plants, adding to the ef· ficiency of a C(lnctpl \Vhich seemed doubtful of acceptance at on e time . Costa Mesa Beautification Co111n1ittcl! members are expected lo proceed with lhe project soon. From Page· I SHOPLIFf ••. about anyone hand ing aul the paper al Corona. del Mar High. He said the ne\11spaper previously has been given a\l'aY or sold at UC Irvine. Orange Coast College, Newport Harbor and Westminster high schools. at shop,, in Laguna Beach and al the Santa Ana Peace Center . The 10 or so contributors tG the fir~l edil ion of "From Out of Sherwood For· est" include UCI and OCC students. he said . He said . a.JI the persons \l'hG con· tribute to the paper are its editors and no one is paid. Supporters of lhe paper \Vant It to be Orange County's underrround newspaper like Lo.s Angeles' Free Pre.s&, be re· marked. He said the name wu chosen because Sherwood Foresl carries some class struggle myths with lL The newspaper Is a forum for persons to express their feelings and tell about things that have happened to them, Cross :;aid. ,;We kind ot want to make ~ple aware of different things that take place other than \.li'hat the DAILY PILOT comes out ~·ith.'' SEEKS JOINT EFFORT Irvine Company's Mason Celtics' Russell Slated for Talk At Orange Coast Big Bill Russe ll. the man who made the Boston C~ltics a powerhouse for more than a decade, ~'ill speak al Orange Coast College Dec. 9 on "Go Up For Glory." Russell will speak in the OCC auditorium at II a.m. as part of the tu- d e n t body-sponsored Distinguished Spetiker Series. There is no admission charge. The 6-9 Russell made defense a by\vord in the Nationa l Basketball Association in his duels with \Vilt. Chamberlain. The former University of San Francisco All American retir::d this yea r after a stint as player-coach of the Celtics. The public is Invited lo the talk by Ru~sell 011 a space-availa ble basis. Sludents get fir st call on scats in I.he 1.200-sertl auditorium. Remaining speakers in the stries in· elude feb. 10, Dr . J\taxv.•ell J\1altz, p!a:.tlc i;urgeon and authot. on ·'Psy cho· cybernetics:·· l\1arch 17, PietTe Salinger. former ·press sec retary to Presidents John F. "Kennedy and Lyndon Johnson. on "The Kennedy Ye ars: and · Arter ;" ·and April 14; Dick Gregory. comedian and Civil Rlghls leader, on "Civil Rights and Black POwer.'' All lalks v.·iU be in the auditorium at 11 a.m. From Page 1 TATE CASE. •• her husband fnoved in, the attorneys: said. Deput.y Di st. Atty. Aaron Sto\·itz said Thursday he \l'OUld ask the grand jury to indict J\1anson on a charge of conspiracy to commit murder, and v.·ould seek 1nurder and conspiracy ill!ilctments againsl al least five other persons. It was the first word that Manson, held for trial in Independence, Calif., on charges of possessing stolen property and driving a stolen vehicle, would be a target for prosecution in the slayings. Shot or stabbed with J\1iss Tale, 26, al her rented $200,000 home tart _Aug. 9 were Hollywood hair stylist ·Jay Sebring, 35, cOffee htiress Abigail Folger, 2ti. Polish playboy Voilyck F'rokQ\l'Sky. 37 and Sleven Parent, 18. a friend of the caretaker. Monster Surf Returns To Oahu, But-No Damage HONOLULU !AP) -Th• stonn-ba\. tertd ncnb Me of Oahu J1J1nd tM:a~ further damage early today when an eI· .pected monster surf crested a crttlcal 10 !eel. lower than predicted. fl.fore tban 1,700 resldenLs hid been t vacuatf!d as: the north sbore, on !he o~ posite sidt of tht island from Honolulu, braced for towering walls ot ,.val6. 'Mle surf pe11ked at 30 fett at hl&h tide • not high enough to cause property damage. Th.is was 20 f~t ~klw the wa..-m that smashed 51 hornet 100 caused $1 mUlion tn propfrty dama1e J\fonday. Today's ~1avei; had bttn predicted to hit 40 !eel. the h•lght lhoy readied Thursday. A mld·PJicUic ~tonn some 1.000 miles northwest of Haw11li spawned the massive ~·•v~. official! !aid. .Dcsp!te the danger, the n1115si1·c "'a,·c9 reprtSented 1 spectacular sight to some people. Police said they cleared hun- dreds ol spectel<n from the btachea by thttatenlng to have lhelr cars towed away. Officials said J\1onday and Tuesday's damage constituted Hawali's -4 wont natur.11il disaster since a 1960 lidal wave killed 61 person~ and caused m million in d11mage on the island or Hawaii . More than 400 polltt. firemen and publlc W0rki1 employes had betn ordered into north 1;hore areas of Honolulu In readlnt$S for the mons-ter waves: that ne.vtr came today. Also ~p11red from further devastation wns the tiny fishing village or Mllolll to lhe south of liawaU l5"land. The IO-rtsl.- rient village sustafntd $100,000 in damage 1'ue~11y. Including the loss of m<nt of Its outrigger fishing canoo llctt. . . m~n~ 1o lncruM Ill-$#il!I' ~ $411' Mort<lalt fJ>.MINI.), IO delete the ~ m11IjOQ lo 14111 ~ion-,it or R ~Pl lions on'IOlll!datfoi)I. plalod In Ille bUf bJ ·lrs>m tuatlon. * 'the Stnate fi nance ~commlttff. . FlallJnc bis amlJ and pac.ing. belweer1 ~1ondale ilr~ I hat lhe provhloo tl1' rowe of desks on the senate noor. v.·ould destroy one·ol' the most innovatf.ve, Gore .5b04_ted that jts chie! Wfpose "4 to' creative and experimental. IO(Ces , in: advertise Kellogg." · \ American society. 1 • · • • Kellogg! Kell0£8! Ke 1.1 o g g!". he -.y-Sen. Jolin 0. PaalDrt:...(D-R.1.), Joiiwd shouted. "Kellogg! Kellogg! Kellogg! lilondalc in defending foundations. ''Don"! How long can this go on? Is .W.years too crucify lhem," Pastore said. "Don 't do long? How Jong is foreve"r?" this because what you're going to do is But Gore 's arguments were unsuc· eliminate the element of private charib' ce!sful in the end. Senators adopted .an in America." amendment ~pon$0rtd by Sen. Walter f. Gore said the vote reflected heavy lob- 3·day Tnrees Cong Declares Own Cease-Fires SA IGON (AP ) -The Viel Cong Friday proclaimed three-day cease-fires for Christmas an.d New Year's Day and declared any allied \•iolallons \l'Ould be punished. The proclamation. read over the secret Viet Cong radio. made no mention of one· day cease-fires for the hvo holidays an· nounced Thursday by South Vietnam anti the United States. A5 In the past, the Viet Cong made no reference to standoff by North Viet· namese troops. North Vietnam never has p1,1blicly a.dmitte.J its troops are in South Vietna_m although il bas come close to saying so on oc<.asions. During all holiday cease-fires in the past, each side has accused the other of repeated violation s. The Vi et Cong said the cease-fires would last 72 hours beginning al l a.m. Dec. 24. Sa igon time, and 1 a.m. Dec. 30. The allied 'cease-fires wi ll begin at 6 p.m. Christmas Eve and 6 p.m. New Year's ErC'. During its ce::ise-flres, the Viet Cong said. "all National Liberation forces in all areas of South. Vietnam must cease all niilliary operations.'' II declared the allies must call off all military activities including "aerial reconnaissance, strafing, bombing or Course Offered In Wrestling Television-style, it's called rasslin'. but wrestling instrucUon will be offtred ~ to Costa Mesa boys for the four-month season beginning next week. The city Recreation Department· sponsored classes will be litonday and Thursday from 7 to 9 p.m. in the Estan· cla High School gym, "'ith registration being taken now. Fee is $5 and boys may regis!er and pay at Room 305 of the Costa ~fesa Civic Center during busine!s hours. \Vrestling skills and pr~r conditioning v.•ill be taught and toumamenls will be scheduled with other recreation groups and clubs around Orange Counlf . dtfoliating with chemical poison and opera.lions by na val and river craft and ar!lllery in any area of Sou th Vietnam.'' "Such activities will be considered \'iolations of the cease-fire ... and will be µ11nished.'' the broadcast said, adding thr;t Viet Cong troops would increase 1heir vigilance and be "ready to fight and destroy the enemy.'' In past truces, the U.S. Command has reserved the right to conduct ground and aerial reconnaissance to s a I e g u a r d American forces and to fight back in case of attack. There never has been a cease-fire in Vietnam that was not marked by s.poradic fighting . Last year, the South Vietnamese government refused to pro· claim a New Year's truce because it C'laimed the cnerr1y had broken the Christ1nas cease-fi re 114 times. Males to Take ' Over Mail Dut y At City Oerk's The males niay examine lhe mails for awhile al the Costa Mesa City Clerk's of· fice. following receipt today of cor· respondence which will definitely not turn up before the city council Monday night. A feminine employe in C. K. "Charlie'' Priest's office nearly fell off her chair when she opened an envelope and out poured printed materials of a distinclly pomographle flavor. Torn into small pieces. the invitation IG mail off for n1ore and better reading matter v1as dumped Into the trash for in· cineralion ~nd the red-faced ladies got back to v.•ork. City Clerk Priest emphasized the New Jersey-mailed items were addressed to him by his title and apparently have been sent to other clerks many of whom are women, by obL1ining a municipality mail ing list. "It was pretty heavy stuff," he observ· ed. Move bytq b)l"lbe l~tiOlll. As drafted, !he *.year· li!espen reflected the" CORCern of both conservaUvts •nil 1l~rala over the power foundation' exercise through their great wealth ilM of failure · by SOITIC In pay out to .chafity, any oI their assets or 1 their income. · . Another sensitive amendmenl lo lhe t.ax reform bill -a 15 percent increasr in social ,security ber1efits ~ is th.e next clash the Senate races. Senate Republican whip Robert P. Gr1f· fin attacked the social security amend· meilt as a "political maneuver." Fro11• Page 1 MAGIC. •• the cabin one-day." "And you couldn't eat meat ," sa1rl \Vatkins, "because you were killed an animal. It. was crazy ." ?1-fanson's talent as a musiCian -hr. played the guitar -and his slow . deliberate and mOody way of movins gave him a sort of hypnotic power ovrr women, the three men said. "This sort of power tak~ a long tin1<' to ""'Ork an effect," Crockett said. "l\to· tions are tied to en1otions. Certai n mo· lions <'reate certain responses If )·o·· know how lo use them ." "The won1ei\ around the place .,,,·err~ always his property." Walkins said. Poston added : "You were alway' \l'elcome to share them. but then yoi:. became his property too.'' "He needed to have some men around There was a limit to what any man car do. But then, you see, the women held power over the other men," Watkins aid. "That way," Crockett said, "thr. women were the key to cverythiog." ' \Vhen tile commune needed money, Crockett said, .Manson would send lhf'I. V.'01nen out to panhandle -"they coul•! beg n1ore in two hour s than you and I could earn working in a week .'' There was no pro·slilution. \\la1kin ; :<;Jid. ''They \vere so good at panhandlin[. they didn't have to hustle.'' \Va!kins and Posto n sa id it wa~ Crockett's warnings that awakene: them to the po\l·er ?i1anson held O\'C'7 them . Both left the clan, \Vat kins in f',1ay Poston in mid-October. Poston said the words to one fl.1anso i song went : "there is no good, there is no bad. "There is no crime, there is no sin." Signups Slated For Ba sketball Basketball leagues for men 16 and up are now being formed by the Costa Mes• Recreation Departm~nt, wllh Dec. 12 a ; the deadline for payment of entry fees. Municipal and industrial leagues will begin play Jan. 12 at Estancia High School, with competition scheduled J\1on· da y, Tuesday and Thursday nigh.ts. Further information a.bout the popu\a : program may be obtained by calling Jim Erwin at the Costa ?11esa Recreation Department. ( 0 • Q . ''lq FINISHID IN MIMOSA YELLOW OR GRUN . HAND DICOIIAm> TN CH.AL~ WHm ••• Gl..AU S AND TWO INTUIOII LIGHTS. $799 IY DlllXIL. E MOST-TaUSTID II.AME IN FVRNITUIL -·-........ YOUR LOCAL DEALER FOR DREXEL -HENRED!)N . HERITAGE ' INTERIORS NEWl'ORT BEACH 1 n1 Wo1tcllff Or., 642·21150 GnN lllDAT "TIL t Profeuiottal Inter .. !' Dtslgntra Avolltb!o-AID-NSID LAGUNA BEACH 345 North Co11t Hwy. . Of'IN JllDAT "YIL t 494 -<lll 1 l I I i l I ' I I J I I I \ I I I II ---~---. -------.,-----~--------·----~ -------~- Suit Urges Freedo m fo r Winnie Judd PHOENIX (UPI) -A superior court suit filed Thurs- day asks the court to order the st.ate board of pardons and paro1es to recommend the release of convicted slayer Winnie Ruth Judd. The suit was filed by Phoenlx attorney Larry Debug and San Francisco attorney ~1elvin Belli, who represented Mrs. Judd in an appearance Oct. 27 before the paroles board. The board, in a 2-1 vote, declined to recommend t11 Gov. Jack Williams that the famed trunk murderess of the 1930s be released from the state prison. The suit charged that the board's action "was an arbitrary and capricious abuse or discretion for the reason that 00 scintilla of evidence was before Ute board upon which it could base the finding of fact an<i conclusion •.• " The suit also said the board Improperly failed to credit Mrs. Judd with 29 years she spent in the Arizona State Hospital after being found in- sane. Furthermore, the suit said, Mrs. Judd has been in- carcerated more Ulan twice as long as most persons sen- tenced to life in Arizona. Mrs. Judd was convic~ed of killing one of two women- friends whose butchered bodies were shipped to L<ls Angeles in a trunk. Ho use Cuts n ·ee p Into Foreign Aid WASj!INGTON (AP) -Ap- propriations for the embattled foreign aid program may tumble to a· new low point this year, pooBibly $1 billion less than tbe opending celllilg eoughl by President NIJon. A house appropriations sub- committee is reported to have whacked the . aid measure down to the neighborhood of $1.6 billion, including detp !lashes in major economic aid. components. President Nixon has sought a $2.6 billion spending ceillog for the overall program in the year that began last July. The House trimmed that to $2.19 billion and the administration, went to the Senate for help in increasing the money authorization. One of tbe major . fights looms in the military section of the bilL The .subcommittee, Liver Fails; Boy Di~ DENVER (AP) -A small Seattle boy died late Thurs· day, Jess than 24 hours after surgeons gave h i m a transplanted chimpanzee liver in a last~ance effort to save his life. Tests following the 14.hour operation at the University of Colorado Medical Center showed the Uver was fun<' tioning but the 7-month-old child remained . critically lll, surviving as long as he did on· ly with the aid of a respirator. The child, not identified further by the hospital, grew weaker during the night and died shortly before midnight, a spokesman said. Odds against his survival were tremendous. There are no known cases of survival for more than a few days after anim,al-to-man transplant • of vital organs. headed by ~p. otto E. Pas.wan (D-La.). wu said to have added SM.$ million to finance a equadron ci fighter planes for NaUonalill China. The Houae, in the separate authoritatJon bill, approved auth<rity for the planes but · the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, still working on its version of that measure, promptly knocked It oot. In 1968, Congress cut about $1 billion from President Johnson's fore I g n aid authorization request, leaving it below the $2 billion level for the first time at $1.97 billion. But the actual appropriations to finance the global aid pn> gram dropped to $1.75 billion. Blacks Take Building At Harvard CAMBRIDGE. Mass. CAP) -Between 50 and 100 blacks seized control of Harvard University's administrative nerve center, Uriiver sity Hall, today to dramatize several demands. The group moved in just befoce start of the business day and placed wooden bars over the windows and doors. Employes reporting foc work were turned away. There were reports that a handful <i employes had been forcibly ejected by tbe pro- testers, but the university said these were erroneous. "My understanding Is that there was no violence," said Harvard College Dean Ernest R. May. Using a bullhorn, May told the protesters about 4 5 minutes alter the seizure that they might be liable to criminal trespass prosecution if they remained. QUEENIE By Phil .lnterlandt • •• Ftldq,. Dtctm~r ? 1969 DAILY PILOT ~ • ., • ''-1 Dine on Caviar .. . U.S., R.uss Con tinue Talks HELSINKI (UPI) -The the smart Savoy Restaurant In North Atlantic Treaty United States and the Soviet downtown Helsinki. The Organization (NATO) foreign Union today held their seventh Soviets were host at a similar ministers in Brussels Thurs.- meeting on ways to curb the affair tut Wttk at their em-day the Helsinki SALT tatkJ nuclear amu race and then busy. were otf to a good start with #: lunched together on cavtar-fW· In keeping with the slrlct the SOVleta adopting a. · ... ed Russian pancakes at a policy ol no public an-buJlnessllke .altitude. '· .. -~ Helsinki restaurant. , nouncements about the talb, He said the preliminary · • American s po k e 1 m en neither side c om men t e d stage ol the talks should end . ' described the 9 0-minute followtna: today's s es s Ion. in about two weeks. .; teSSlon of the Strategic Anns canference sources aald the Conference sources s a Id· • ·:.,.· LimltaUon Talks (SALT) at prelJmtnary talks probably .both sides have been at· ·; the U.S. embassy As "ef· will last through next week tempting to define what is meant by "strategic· f i c I en t, cord i a I and and possibly into the week weapons,'' thus eslablishing a ·• · bus Ines s 1 i k e without after. common basis· for negotiations ·\ polemics." The next meeting U.S. Secretary of State expected to start in the latter l f wUI be Monday at the Soviet. ;;W;;;;;;ill;;;ia;;;m;;;;;;P;;;.;;;Roi;;;;ii;er;;;s;;;;;t•;;;ldi;;;;;tb;;;e;;;;;;pi;a;;;rt;;;;;;of;;;J;;;ani;;u;;;ary;;i;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; embassy. 11 "His Reyal Highness ••• and aJJ.around, general / bircheeae ••• • The chief U.S. riegotlator, Gerard C. Smith, hosted the lnlonnal ·luncheon for the 10 lop delegates on botb sides al I • ' IN ROOf, WWS aid WINDOW' • ARWAROUND THE HOii£ JFK's Fortune Listed '.A t $1.9 Million Plus Philip's Mother Succwrihs -LONDON CAP) -Price BOSTON (UPI) -President John F. Kennedy Jeii a personal fortune of almost.$1.9 million when he died, not counting many millions believ· ed left 1n trust for memben oC his family. The amount was disclosed in an inventory of assets which Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the ~xecutor of the assassinated President's will, filed with st.ate authorities on Feb./"19, 1965. It was not made public until the state attorney general gave his pennission Thursday. The exact figure, $1,890,646.45 is only the amoWlt of cash and property passed on to Kennedy's heirs and not the extent. of his estate, according to Tax Com- missioner Cleo F. Jaillet. One reason Ke n nedy's fortune Js difficult to esUmate is that there are a number of Interlocking lamlly trusts, the commissioner said. The inventory lists more than $106,000 payable to the Presldenl from lh~ exisllng trusU: one from Joseph P. Kermedy Jr .• a brothe? killed in World War II; another from Kalhleen Kennedy Hartington, a sister who died In a plane crash; and a third from a Ex-bit Player A cts in Tragedy . PIITSBURGH (UPI) -An unemployed man, who said he was a former bit player on Broadway and in Hollywood, shot .and killed a fellow roomer and wounded another trust his father set up for JFK in 19:36. , The only land Kennedy own- ed In Massachusetts was his house In the family compound at Hyannis Port, valued at $46,250. His cash balance in various ·banks, including ac- counts kept for members of his family and close friends, was $116,377.37. Much of his fortune was In tax.free municipal securities, including bonds issued by the state of ¥.assachusetts, the cities of New York, Binn~ ingham, Ala. and San Antonio, Texas. Kennedy owned common stock in two oil companies, Barber Oil Corp. and Signal Oil & Gas Co.; Connecticut General Life Insurance Co.; Ken ll)dustries: the Hyannis Corp.; and Park Agency, Inc. He had a $577 ,341 interest In Merchandise M a rt , the building his father, Joseph P. KeMedy, bought in Chicago. Philip's mother, Pr 1 n c es s Andrew of Greece, died in her sleep at Buckingham Palace early today. She was 84 and had been in poor health for some time. The cause of death was not announced. Born Princess Allee of Bat- tenberg, Princess Andrew was a Briton by birth, a great- granddaughter of Queen Vic- toria, a sister of Earl Mountbatten of Burma, the wife of a prince of Denmark and Greece, and a sister of the late Queen Louise of Sweden . After her marriage in 1903 to a younger son of King George J of Greece, she was known by tier husband's naroe, ac.' cording to the Greek custom. When the Greeks dethroned George 11 in 1924, Prince Andrew and his family fled to Paris and the princess opened a jewelry and embroidery shop. In 1929, when Philip was 8, hts parents sent him to be raised by Lord Mountbatten in Britain. Free But F1•ozen Czech Escapes by Air LONDON (UPI) -British gagemen, Londori lmmfgratJon baggage handlers found the officials cllmbed Into the teen-age boy huddled behind Czech plane and carried him , suitcases in the cargo hold of away. In a heated airport a Cz.echoslovak airliner from room, they fed him brandy. Prague. In broken English t h e "You're tn England now, youngster said he wanted to boy," one said. His teeth chat· stay in England. He said he tering, the youth somehow had friends here. managed to smile. The yooth wore only meet "1'le boy was almost frozen clothes. "It must ha ve been sh«!' a~v," an airport <i· to death," a British European ov .. ,,. '. ~·-·· i ·. ' I ' NO MORE . " , OR YOUR MONEY B Kl COME ON JN ••• We'll ahow you how to do it with amaz- ing time-prov8d TU FF·KOTE and Glass Fabric. !: By FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P .M. SATURDAY -December 6th VISTA PAINTS 2931 BRISTOL STREET COSTA MESA (I MILi SOUTH OP SOUTH COAST PL.UA) '• • . ' • . • ,. ' •. ... ·~ .. ·: . ·"- • ... . .. 1 before being sutxlued with tear gas early today after a gun battle with police. Airlines : spokesman said. to--i,fi~ci~al~w~·d~.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'iiiii~iiiiiiiii~i':ii:ii:ii~iiii:iiiiiiii~i':ii:ii:ii:i day. ''He was very lucky to fl JlllliM._ .. _,.,..,.,.,....,,.,..JilllM:lllllMMJllFIJlllM--- get away with it. The tem· ;:.rature In the baggage hold of the TI1104 airliner was subzero." HARBOR CENTER'S UPI T1ltJlltt9 Spiro at Keyboard Vice President Spiro 1. Agnew gives an tmscheduied performance for Washing~ ton press women at a party given by his wile. He played "Sophisticated Lady" on the piano and told the distaff reporters they were "prettier and more ob- jective' than their male colleagues. The suspect, Ohanne! J. Dersarkissian, who gave his age as :39, was taken in custody alter f i r i n g in- termittently al police for 4-lh hours with a rifle from his third-floor apartment in the Negro hill district. The 19-year-01d student had flown 700 miles -most of it at a!UtU<fes up lo 18,000 f,.t -In his flight Th\lrsday nlght from the Communist capital. Alerted by the &IUsh bag· 'Promyouf 'Pl)11loutJi dealer-! t:JA :darmg.deal 011. ~ying 'Cuda! I Lee White Chryslet'!-Plymouth 16661 Beach Blvd., Huntl119ton Beach, Calif. Atlas Chrysler-Plymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa, Calif. GIGANTIC • ART SHOW Over 600 ·Paintings Presented by California Outdoor Art As·sociation SATURDAY & SUNDAY MOST STORES OPEN SUNDAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING PLEASURE Santa Stopped Here Fi rst ••• -W.lt y Dmi't Y ou? I 2300 Harbor at Wilson,.. Costi Mesa ~~-~~-~~~~---~~------~~-------~~---~~~~-~--~~--""' ................................................................. ..... - . -------- '. ... ... ·-.. . . .. , ... • .. j .. ' .~'"t • • DA.ILY PROT EDI TORIA.L .. A.GE --. • Mesa on the Move On the surface, Costa Mesa seems to have been a pretty dull place in past months. In fact, ever since en- thusiasm was drummed up .for the new civic center Md the opening of South Coast Plaza two years ago, gener- al activity around the city seems to have been lo\v: But that dullness is only superficial -at least to- day. Consider these projects that are on their \Vay :· -Construction programs are being mapped for a giant hotel -the Marriott Inn -'"hich "'ill be one of the largest hotels in Orange County. It \viii be located at Bristol and the San Diego 1',ree\va y in the South Coast Plaza complex. - A discount store. a home-builder's mart and two new banks are expected to open on Harbor Boulevard in 1970. These are only the major projects, the ones finnly in the cards in the months just ahead. Many more (i.Jt.. eluding a half million dollar expansion of the DAILY PILOT, we might pQint out J a re ahead as Costa Mesa enters a new decade. The way it is startin~. it may be the Svringin' Sev· cnties. Lobb ying a Necessity Roy Marcom, a director of U1e anti-oil Coastal Area Protective League (CAPL), had some unsetUing news -Construction 'viii begin early next year on Costa l\lesa's largest -and most expensive -apartment . complex, the lavish 1160-unit development to be con- s tructed on the south side of Ada 1ns in U1e Mesa Verde ·area. _ the other day. . -Long· rumored expansion ··of the overwhelmingly successful South_ Coast Plaza maY be anticip<!ted_in ear· ly 1970, \Vhile stze and scop~ of the exp~ns1on ts no. t known. it wiU add substantially to the image of this powerful merchandising center. -Closer to the "~d" :iec'tion of Costa Mesa. con- tinued construction is ahead on East 17th Street. A ne\v market, a savings and loan and other shops will be add· ed next year. -\Vhile any construction is :-.till several year5 ahead, look for imaginative and far.reaching plans .for downtown Costa Mesa , 'the area generally centenng around the Newport Boulevard-Harbor Boulevard inter· section. This program \viii be tied to the approaching Ne"rport F reeway. and could spark an entirely .n e \V approach in downtown development. ·-· UJtited States Justice Needs Overhauli1ig· -To the people who mindlessly shout the slogan, "LaW and order!.'' the ob\·ious ntort is Uiat if we had better law. we would have more order. By "bettu" law, I do not mean more Jaw or harsher law,'but swifter and more equitable Jaw. It is unfairness and delay that frustrate and exasperate people tG the point that the w~ structure Gf law in the U.S. falls prey 'to cyniciim and disgust. • • Thia is mt just the v1ew of an Im· patient and i~ant layman who may be suspected of "liberal" s y m p a t h i e s , whatever they may be. It is an accurate reflection of the atUtude of Chief Ju~ticc Warren E. Burger of the Supreme Court, a hardheaded but not hardhearted con- RCVative . JN A TALK to the American Bar Asso- c:iation this summer, Chief Justice Berg· er repeated the question that bafOes and troubles millions of Americans: .. \\:'hy does American justice take so long ~" And he answered, in brief, that our trial procedures are antiquated, and our :; courts lack modern standards 0 r "! tnanagemenL, as well as the trained : • manqers to apply them. He pointed out sharply thoit In : • : medicine. except for anatomy. almost all ~:: basic medical knowledge of 25 years ago Dear . Gloomy Gus: Those hippies around Costa Mesa who do things because they·re "groovy" ¥.·Ill eventually discover that there's Uttle difference be- tween a groove and a rut. -II. 8. M. Tll•I lt•t~rt ,.llt<h ""'rl' wltwl, 11et 11.c•-ril1 t~ew el ths ..ewm.-. s"" '"' '91--w• "' Gi.mr~ Delll' f'tltt. . . - transport and t h e space pr ogram have altered even more radically, not in 25, but in the last 10 years. BUT, EXCEPT lN details. ''a Ci\lil or criminal trial today is essentially the same as in Daniel Websttt!s lime..!.' Citizens called for jury servke find 80 percent of their lime is spent "just waiting," \Vitnesses called1 £or a pre<;ise day aud hour also find the1nselves s?en· ding most of their time waiting. And, of course. lhe defendant himself rnay spend months or years in litigation, before the appeals and othe r processes are concluded. One of lhe oldest legal dictums Is that "Justice delayed is jus· lice denied "-and our Chronic long.term delays are a blanket denial or justice in our courts, at every level. He· said it would cost perhaps as much as '100,000 lo hire a lobbyist to help push the Cran•ton-Murphy offshore drilling ban bill through Congr:ess. The measure, if passed, would.assure no .repetition of the Santa Barbara blowo ut disaster in federal waters off the Orange Coast. Some of the money for lobbyist expenses 'vill be provi ded by CAPL contributors. The rest, Marcom in· dicated, may have to come out of the treasuries 0£ cities and other public agencies. It could be money \veil spent. Nevertheless, it is a tenibl_e pity tha.t oil industry lobbyists have such enor· rnous influence tn the halls of Congress that the public must hire its O\Vn lobbyists in self-defense. But reality must be Jaced. And lobbying is a fact of life in Washington. '[ wukrstand the/re related but I'm not sure just MU'.' (C) Switching Awag From Democratic Liberalistti I Nixon Baffles Washington Veterans V!'ASHINGTON -What makes the Nix- on Administration so baffling to many people who have been in \\'ashington a long lime is its ability lo identify with and exploit conventional and traditional thought. The Nixon Administration rideg over the fixed ideas which have grown up in the capital in the past 30 years or so on the func1ion of the federal government. Thus il is that ideas expressed by some of the leading figures of the Nixon Adm inistration seem awk\\'ardly'1eft. rooted in a Washington community more attuned to delicacy in dealing with minorities. advanced political ideas, and lhe general spectrum oi Democratic liberalism. Th.is kind of liberalism has prevailed, '11th only a brief break. frir 40 years and has created a large permanent reservoir of officialdom, lawyers. Io b by i s t s. journalists and others iA'ho are schooled .in the political mores of Democratic liberali sm. TO THESE l\IUST be added tht: JlO"'erful pressure groups of labor,' agriculture and, lately, civil rights and general protest as a part of lhe \Vashington community \vhich takes a di m viev1 of lhe Nixon Adm inis tration or f Richard Wilson .• awaits with. eagerness its next boo-boo. The Nixon Administration is made up of outlanders who have come into the precincts of the knowing and init iated and are blundering aboul committing all manner or gaucheries in the View of the pennanent Washington community. The wife of the attorney general, Mrs. John t-.1itchell, ·induced a convulsive gasp In this Washington community by talking on television, as i! she were a neo-John Bireher, about the "liberal Communists" or the \\'ashington • anti-war demonstra- tion v.·hom she and her hut:band-thought created scenes in the capital reminiscent of the Russian revolution. THE AITORNEY GENERAL later ex· plained that r.trs. llfilchell was im precise in her terminology and should ha\'e refer- red to vio lence-prone elements instead of liberal Communists. Indeed 11lrs. Mitchell 'vas imprecise. The Communists in the ·war protest movement are not liberal. MoSCO\Y is too liberal for them. They are conservative Maoist Communists and some llf the more \\'acky arc Trotskyitcs. They created more trouble and disturbance than they should have in their brief ?.1ashington ''isit. But lifr s. t-.litchell had it right \\'hen, in her own v.•ay, she reflected the nlain body of conventional and traditional thought on anti-"·ar demonstrations and public disorder. Spiro T. Agnew has. of course. plumbed the very depths of shuddering horror in the liberal Ylashington community, which has n~ertheless come to the conclusion that he may be speaking what is On the public's mind. IN RUNNING OOWN the llst of Nixon officialdom it is hard to find many pot regarded in the Washington community as hopelessly square or maladroit. The favorite of the gtoup b Robert Finch, secretary of health, education and ,.,.elf are, ~·hose style is pleasing to Spiro Agnew 's "effete snobs,"-and it is very rare that Finch gels a bad press. The Washington group has decided that Finch oughl to run for the Sep.ate !rom California if they can persuade Sen. George Murphy that he should retire. Commerce Secretary l\taurice Stans, for all o~ being a big game hu nter. is classed with Interior Secretary Walter fli ckcl and Treasury Secretary Da,·id Kennedy as u ncxcitin~. So il goes wilh other Ni xon Adn)inistl'ation µerso rialilies. They do not turn 011 those lypcs who are fore\'er searchin~ foi: the Kennedy charisma. The Presidenr s security ad· vise r, Henfy Kissinger. i~ definitely in the sv.·im but lhe :-:eC'rctciry of state. \Villiam P. Rogers, is loo liland for t11e cxcitemenl hunters. THIS IS THE \\'A S il I NG TO~ atmosphere accompanying lhe findings of the. poll takers that three out of four peo- ple in the rest of tbe country arc OO\f reasonably v.·ell lialisfied with the Nixon Administration. Tt is little \\'Onller the~ that the Nixon Administration is not much interested in appro\•al by the ~eastern establishment." This "establishment " is not eastern in origin: almost everyone v.·ho might qualify for membership in it comes from somewhere else. But the tenn is an easy classification used by Nixon officials to characterize those who take a superior and condescending attitude toward the conventional values of the Ni 'I' on Administration. The con ventional values. at least for the moment. seem in the ascendancy and that is solace enough for the Nixon squares. CIA Director Wins Senate Favor '•: • ls obsolete; that business techniques and • industrial production have changed :: · drastically in that period; and that air IT IS NOT law·breakers. or anarchists, "'ho e'ode public faith and confidence in our legal and ju'dicial system. It is the i;ystem itself. Y.'hich refuses to change with the times and adapt itself to the modern problems of a huge, complex. and urbanized population. \Vhen the law is so dilatory. order can be imposed only by fOrce, and not by the ~,eight ol public opinion , as it righlfully should be. WASHINGTON -It is ha rd to believe, but Richard Helms, director of the much· <:rilicized Central Intelligence Agency, has become a darling of the Senate dovecote. A career intelligence officer . \\'ith CIA since its founding in 1947. Helms was named director by President Johnson in 1966. President Nixon renewed the ap- pointment early this year. . , Fulbright has frequently complained that ~ ' ill-timed <and ill·fated) CIA operations, such as the u.2 incident, have harmed U.S. foreign relations. According to Fulbright. Helms' AB:'>·1 appraisal "convinced me he was a com- petent man who 14-·as not s"'·ayed by any outside influence: that he v.·as gi\flng us Helms has always enjoyed the con· fidence of the rather ha11,,kish 1enior members of the House and Senate who ride herd o'n CIA operations through special intelligence subcommittees. Thert is therefore, a real significance In his prei;ent high standing among the agcn· cy's long-lime critics. ... ... Both Patient, Impatient In subordinate posts Helms had seen CJA blamed abroad and at home. f o r goofs of aU proportions. He served under two colorful and much·publicized direc· tors of central intelli gence. gentleman· ,spy Allen W. Dulles and hard-driving in. du5triallst John A. McCone . ·'. ·. By EW~'ORTH L. RICHARDSON r.1In11ttr Ntlgllborbood Coagngational Church Laguna Beach ls patience a virtue or is its practice a Jong lost art? I know of a mother who Is put out because Junior cannot read. H~ Isn't in •• first grade Ytl and she is very upseLJ :·. tried to tell her that the psychologists ~Y -:· .. . that the muscular and nrrvous ~tructure ~ of the eye is nol normally developed ~~ enough tor reading unt il the child is aboul .. :six yrars of age. Yet she is impsti~nt ~: because her chi ld is so stupid I Next time -: ;.: • l 'U quote Dr. Alvarez! .... "'. BENNETT CERF GA \'E us some Idea ~ of what patience is v.·hen he descri bed a , • :1ehool teacher. "A teacher is cooragc "': 1" i t b J\leenex In her pocket, sympathy : atniggling with a snow suit and paUence . ~ with~ to grade , • , She is one l''ho ~-llkef'SOi&body else's children. and still '"' has strength left to go to PTA meetings." -f knOWOClalni?rs who v.·Outa rather go to the oprera than to be led by ~ nose to a PTA meeting. So patience is here and we ,. Wute those few who have it: ~. Kahlil GlbrM speak.Ing of Jesus sajd '· tha t ''he was patient, patient like a mount.aln tn lbe wind ." And then ht wenl on w11.h this paradox: .,,. i.l'ET HE WAS t~ mo51 impatient o( mtn. He WU bnpaOtnt ~·ith lhor.c who •fllbed and meaaund the day and the night btfore they wou ld trust thtir dreams to dawn or evenu~. He wall Im· paHtnt with those who btl ievtd not in light bectlute they tbemsehit~ dwelt in ihadow ; and w'lth thoSe who Jf0t1ghl aftl'r alint in the. HJ rather tha.n in their o#I\ burta.• So lhen tberf: are occasiON "''ben pa- ( ,. I· \i--·-··. Every,day- Pa:ob).ents ., ~· ·! ' tience is not a virtu~ The.re are limea when those who are patient art·overtaken by the strategy of tho~ who cannol be tamed. .. Now It is being said -and by the most critical of the Senate doves -that career·man HelltlJ has brought W new respectability to the quiel ca mpus-like ClA headquarters in nearby Langley, Va. EXHIBIT A IN this regard Is Sen. f\.11ke f\lensfield. ~font, the Senate Democratic leader. f\lansfield ha s been a frequen t SO~JETtl\tES PATIENCE is used as an critic of Vietnam polities and of other ~xCuse for doing nothing. for not taking aspects of national seeurity planning by sides. Then leth argy ~ts in. The people t~·o administrations. that comprised the Protestant Refor ma· For years Mansfield has, in addition. been a leader of a so-far unsuccessful ·lion had litt le patience with ''!rtaying dri\'e to apply a tighter rongressional put." The Proleslant he.ritage comprises O\'ersight to CIA activities. Vet Mansfield lhose ,.,.ho utterly refuse to stay put. My$ flelms "has brought a respectability Voltaire s&id there are t~·o cluses, or and Integrity to the ClA ... and given it ,_..,,le : tfk>se who make history aDCI u.e the kind or standing whlch it lacked prior ,...-,. -to the time he look O\·er. who are made by It. Which are we? "f must say, llke all those \\'ho l\avt The 19th century gave vent to the doc· come In contact wlth him, 1 have betn trlne of rugged individua lls1n, not all of lremendously impresSt\i. I think he is by ,,fllch ~·as virtuous! 'Ille ciarly part of the far tilt bcst_director the CIA has ever. 20th century can be characlerlzed as a • ~ad. Becau~ of Mr. ~tehns that. agency .. , period when paUenl people endured the ~ integrity and standing hi\'e increased monotony of coofonvity, not all of which was virtuous. THIS LATTER HALF of the 20th ct n· tury I~ .something else. People are no Jon~er pallent .•. no longer patient v.•ilh tneq11allty .•. no longer pntlent with evil where life i!i hard , nw and ugly ••. no longer patient with the polluUon lhal robs our 5lrcams of laupier and our 1kies of gaiety .•• no longer patient with the cor· rupllon of pJbllc figum In trifh oflkt nor \\'ilh the' pilfering of smal people in supermarkets. Speaking ,·cry personally. 1 anl I~ patient -,,·Ith those who don 't Uke "'hat t write! .---Bu George---. Dear George: Somebody wrote In and asked \\'hill you v.·0t1ld do If • woman at a party v•11~ making able play for all rhe marrl~ men present. \'ou said nolhing because your wife watches you l!kc a ha\\·k. Well, t just tblnk that's terrible, only to &Ive an \' onsv.cr like th.all MRS. U.I Dear ~trs. U.t.: Boy. n1e, too. Say! \\'ould )'OU mi.id lalkina lo IJ'Y wife for me? considerably. at least in the congressionaf" community,'' says Mansfield. ALSO FULBRIGHT-Mansfield made those comments in the Senate 's secret debate on the ABltf Safegusrd system y.·eeks ago. The transcript of that debate, «nsored and revie\\'ed, was made public only last week. CIA data y,·as quoted by both sides in the secret discussion, but Safeguard opponents stressed the agen- cy's finding, made wiUtout further evaluation or ,comparison. that Russia had suspended wort on its anti-misSile system. In the same debate similar views were expressed by the Senate·s super-dove, Chairman J. W0liam Fulbright. 0-Ark., or the Foreign Relation5 Committee. the nearest to an honest assessment of all • the co1nb ined forces of the intelligenc~ community. '•HE HAS GIVEN the committees .. the best available information. That is what inspired in us confidence and trust in the integrity. honesty and good judg- ment of Mr. Helms," said Fulbright. Helms and the CIA have also had another recent accolade from Fulbright. \\'ho sharply criUclzed the clandestine U.S. involvement in Laos (which is operated by CIA), but JaJd he does not blame Helms because the intelligence boss was operating under instructions from higher authority. The Tower of -Babel The Slate Board of Education came out soundinJ like the Tower of Babel in It! recent approval of science guidelines for elementary tertbooks. Seeking: to please all sides, from scien- Ust:s to humanists lo Bible fun- damtnt&llsts, the board man1ged to pro- duce a compound which will satisfy few, let 11ont the Interests of education and In p1rtlcu1ar lbt teac:hina ol sclen«. .-1.Jnderlylng the whole mls.adtrenture is a commonplaC't mlstake 111hkh has con- taminated thinking on the subject for aome years: ThJ.s ls the notion that the (MCtpt or·evolution. •s an explan•Uon of m1n's origins, ls aomehow 1t odds with any religious bellef that main is the crea· tlon of 1 supernatW'al being, or God. THE BUSINW OF' lcience, and its teechina, is the obstrv•tion and cor· relation or ve:rlflable facts about Uie and matter. In tl\ls sense. evolution, or the postulate: that man evol\1ed from somt. 1$ yet unknown primltl\•e fonn of l~r life, has much evidence to support It d yet ,nough mlulng data to dct it' docmatic acceptance. l ~uest Edi.t~rial • I Science and its teaching ln the school.s need not concern Itself wtlh the ultimate causes at the ori&ln of beidg and matter. It! dloclpllnt 15 to oboerve and comtai.. It wouJd be unSdenUfic, in -that senst, to propose lhat the •'Orld and man wtre not created by a aupem1tura1 supreme be.Ina. Thi• i1 1 matter beyond scleace'I purview. THAT OUGHT TO lie the pdellne at• till>de taktn by the State &ard of Educa- tion. Not one which endorses or ii In- imical to reUgtous concepu about crta- tlon, bot ont which llicks to the scltn· tmcally detennind tacts. luving fhc hYpot.heses as to their origins to the philoso1,htes or beUeJs wbkh all in· di,'ittuals are free to hold . ne S.Cramento Bet HE HAS. IN THE first place. made il clear that , as the nation's lop intelligence officer. he "'ill provide the best possible reading, without bias and "'ilhout try ing to evaluate events abroad against developments (weapon or otherwise) in the Uoited Stales. Jn short, Helms will provide the best available basis for U.S. policies without trying to make them. CIA critics were never sure that Dulles and MCCone were willing to stop at that . \\1ith respect to CIA 's operational re.sponsibilities. those shadowy clan- destine activities which have provoked mo st of CIA 's criticism over the yeari;. l'leh11s has carefully lived up lo a pledge. made du ring his Senate confirmation, hearings in 1966: "Si r," said Helm~ on that occasion. •·1he Central Intelligence Agency takes no actions \\'ilhout app ro\lal fro m the af' propri ale officials of the U.S. Govern· ment. and lhey are not in the CIA.'' After more than three years. CIA 's critics. are beginning to believe him. By Robert S. ADtn ud Jollie A. Goklsmltb ........ iiiliiilml-. Friday, December 5, 11169 Tht tditorio: pogt of tht Da.ilrf Pilot lttkl to Inf orm ond· 1tim. ulott rtadt r11 bv pre1enting thf.t 11t w.spnpe:r'1 opinions and com- mentaru 011 topics of fl1 tere1 t and 1ignf/fcottce:, by providf11g n. Jonim for tht t zprtssio n of our rtadtrs' opi11iont. and bu prt1tntin11 the diverse t1lew- 1>0Ent1 of Info rmed observers and 1po ktsmtn on tovics of the dav. Robert N. Weed. Pub!Jslie r l I I· r I -l ------------------------------------·--------------~--- } I ! Down the Mission r-rrail Viejo Students Giving to Needy M1SSlON VIEJO -Following the theme of the second week o f Mission Viejo's Community Christmas observance-, "Christmas Is a Time for Giving," high school students will begin their collection of toys, food and clothing for needy families. Two student groups from Mission Viejo ltigh School, Viejo Amigos a n d Apal.hetics Anonymous will man a gift· box-shaped booth near the community Christmas tree at La Paz Road and Cbrisanla Avenue to accept donations from residents. Infonnal programs of carols will be l>resented on Wednesday and Friday nights, Dec. IO and 12, with singing by the junior choir of the Presbyterian Church or the Master, Sing Out Amigos and Sweet Adelines. e Chnrcl• Bil• 50 \'ears SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The Com- munity Presbyterian Church w i 11 celebrate its 50th birthda y Sunday, Dec. 1. The church organized Dec. 7. 1919 \vas the first Protestant facility in the historic community. Forty-eight signatures appeared on the original petition stating an intent to crganize the church. Some of those who signed will be present at the lG a.m. service Sunday. e Pancake Feed Slated MISSION VIEJO -The th ird annual pancake breakfast sponsored by ~lis~ion Viejo High School athletic booster club will be staged Saturday, Dec. 6. The event which will help buy sports equipment and aid sports programs v.111 take place from 7 io II a.m. in La Pai Plaza shopping center parking lot. e Reading Teacher OK'd SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District were told Wednesday that fun. ding has been obtained for a. _second reading teacher unde~ the prov1s1ons of theJdiller-Unruh reading program. The district, at its own expense, ~ad hired nine full time and one part time teacher so that each school would ha ve a remedial reading expert. Last month the state infonned the district that funding would be available for the teacher at Gates School. A few days ago word was received that a se· cood teacher at El Toro Schpol, would also be twid~d. ~ · I Abandontnent in Stanto11 Oet. Carl Bradley escorts Nina M. \Verner, 20, into Stanton Police Headquarters following ber arrest Thursday on suspicion of child abandonment. A seven-month-old infant, identified as Yolanda Marie Lupien, was found on a Stanton doorstep \Vednesday. An anonymous phone call led police to the Werner woman. !viean,vhile, the baby, ·apparently healthy and reasonably happy, \vas being cared for in ·county's Sitton Home. e 2 Gra·l' Club• Formed s l p b • CL_ G~~0~~!A~,:1~;:~~Tw:;:;~ o ons ro ing · 1uirge dlehack Valley. . The new groups, with 12 members each, are the Mis sion Viejo Bruins and Of p ndle p • the Capistrano Valley Vikings. e ton erversion Activities include sports competitions between the two groups and joint cam· ping expeditions. For further information on the Jonna· lion of Gra-Y clubs contact Cliff Hansen at 837-7324. e Fore1uic Bo1uwr MISSION VIEJO -Saddleback College fore nsic students brought home honors from a recent invitational forensic tournament in Riverside. Reaching the fi nals we-re Bob Yount and Susan Killion, winning first place awards· Mike Bielitz, second; Mike Stoel· dard a~d Lou Pellon, ti'es for fourth : Gabrielle :W.arcereau, second, and Pam Downs, third. e Trusl.,e• l'i<'•Cl Film• SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Three con- troversial film s will be reviewed by the board of trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District at a workshop Dec. 18. The film s on the rstricted list in the county schools film library were denied to one teacher in the district because the · board has not formulated a definite.. policy on their use. To be viewed by the board will be e Dana Ch.a1nber ~feet• DANA POI NT -?i.lembers and guests C)f the Dana Point Chamber of Commerce will gather tonight"from a to 9 o'clock ror an informal dessert party. The event will take place ln the Southern California First National Ban" on La Plaza Street in Dana Point. . e Control Polic11 Told SADDLEBACK VALLEY -A proposal tO consider fonnulating an Instructional control policy throughout I.he San Joaquin Elementary School District. was heard by the Board of Trustees Wednesday. The idea was presented by Assistant Superlnttndent William Stocks \\tho said Chat although no specific instances have provoked-the need for such a_ pol.icy. _i t would be in the best interesl.3 of the • dlBtrict. to have O&f. 'lfe said that---5'6ch programs as se-x- education could better be controlled if sucb a policy existed. A further clariflca· tion of the proposal will be presented at nert month's meeting. ~ Cltorale to Sing LAGUNA HTU.S -A pn>gram of Qui&tmas music· will be staged Sunday, De<. 7. • Tht Los Angtlts Valley College choir chamber chorale and t ns lr um en tat tAJ01$1e will pretent the concert in ~ Prtsbyterian Church. nit pubUc prtmitation ltd by mchard A. Kaox will begin at 7 p.m. 1 From Wire Servicts l 1 Congressmen investigating charges of a brut.al hierarchy or black supremacy in the Camp Pendleton brig -with wtUte . prisoqers even kept for homosel:ual ~ dallia!ice -began .inspec4ng the baSe to- day. ~ The House subcommittee group will at· tempt to determine during its two-Oay visit what improvements have been made since an earlier probe by the parent House Armed Services Subcommittee. "We'll be taki ng testiinony from prisoners and officials as well as taking a careful look at conditions there ," said Rep. William J. nandall (0.Mo.) upon ar- rival A chi lling report with tales of savage bn.ttality and kangaroo courts t o discipline whites v.'ho fa iled lo -;;;;ry out orders imposed by the black rulers was released earlier this week in Washington. CIAIL Y l"ILOT Sllfl , ..... Proj~ting for Club Dan Les!~ (left), president of the 86-member Laguna Beach City Emp)oyes Association, helps Bill Cook. executive director of 'the La· ~una Beach Boys Club carry associaton's gift, a 16 mm movie pro-- Jector Into new Canyon Clubhou se. · Associatlorr members raised money for gift by selling frozen bananas at Festival of Arts. • 4, • . f.:.t_ ~ '. Qr.,ige eoilnty· llCbool Trustee Dooald " Jor<lan Tlnir&day acal1ld board Pres!· dent Q4Y Mitchell of •ctlna: 11.a one-man committee ,.preoenting the, l!oard and • runnlnc Up excessive ri'\i)eqe at IJUlllic expense. ··~-· 0 AU oI thls accusation, stuff Is l bunch of baloney,'' retorted "Mitchell of South La,U@I. "You caci't operale a. car at six •cents ·• rnUe. I'm glv~· a hell. of a lot of time. Actu~ 1 COlq}t on '"bout.two days .. ;::.~said :.:~ ~ed !he bool<s and 'found .?illdlel.1 during the last year had driVeJi over t ,000 miles-lo attend 139 meeUngs on county schoola business at a cost of more than $850. _ The other f6'il board rilembers turned In mifeage vouChers for $69, '80, $f7 and $81, Jordan said. • Frldly, Oeeembt, 5, 1%' ' ' S DAJL V PILOT :J ~~ .. of """or bb commluee wilmenta and this txcetalVe ~;,. Mltdlell...aid be made trips to meet with the county schools staff on "certain lnfonnaUOn I wu working on." 11That·etrt.aiq information is not coni· mlttee work." Jtrdan snapped. Jordan aald Mitchell' had atiended 18 CQmmunlty Action:. Council meetings. Mitchell iald tho5e meetings weren't ~ery boppy things and. that he'd like : ~ Jordan lo lake ll on. ~ "l'd like to move he be appointeltto ii," Interjected trustee Dr. Dale Rallison . "Mr. Rallison, you move for yourself," snapped Jordan. • Afterward,· Mitchell said, "H!'s :jtlst trying to come on with a personal attack. J'm just dan1n sick and tired of him·sniP- ing around." • m:t~~ed anoUler county school ~d Lagunc Teen Corner ,. ~ +· .. ..•. Student's .Day in Court .. "'"This to me isn't so ,mµch ~ matter of one person building up plileage," remark· ·"' ed Jordan. "It is that· only one board member is represenling this board at all these · meetings." . WinsSuspendedSenten~~ ' ·~ Jordan complained that he hadn 'L been assigned to any committees this year. ··1 can't help but conclude our chairman is a committee of one," he said. Mitchell pointed out that he had . to made committee assignments, that it '"as done at a meeting at which Jordan '''as absent, and that he should have read ii in the minutes. · ··1 was never notified as has been customary in the past," Jordan said. Jordan noted that Mitchelhl:!._&(l put in mileage for attendance at 14 Sliadleback Junior Cotlege board meetings and he couldn't quite get th e connection with county schools busness. He said his check cf the record showed Mitchelf bad come to Santa Ana from his home In Three An::h Bay, South Laguna, 53 times lo meet with the county schools staff. "There seems lo me no reason why this committee work shouldn't be divided." he said. "I would like other board members 1 to consider the necessity and responsibility of relieving our chairman Panther Lawyer Wanis U.N. Talk SAN FRANCISCO (UPJ)-An attorney for a Black Panther Party leader accused of threatening the life of President Nixon says he will go before the United Nations to charge the U.S. with ''genocide" o( militant blacks. The attorney, Charles Garry, cited the fata l shooting of two Panthers in a ·gun· fight with Chicago police early Thursday as an example Of a deliberate extermina· tion policy aimed against the party. Garry told newsmen be would •I.so demand~ a Congressional-lny~ation into "the efforts to bring fortfr a f&sclst police state in this country." By FRED SCHOEMEHL 01 11M OlllJI Piiot Slttf WHILE MANY students w~re an. licipating the start of Thanksgiving vaca· tion , I was hardly looking forward to the day because I had been issued a citation to appear in Student Court. 'My sideburns were ruled loo long. and not in line with the Laguna Beach High School dress codes. Wednesday morning 1 was there at school -lYOndering more than worrying -about.the action the court Would take. I felt consoled in that I had trimmed my sideburns the night before. WHEN fttY CASE came up, after only ~ 45 minute wait, 1 was slowly led into the chambers by Sergeant at Anns Den· ny Schmitz and told to tum around two times so the court could inspect my sideburns. Then I was led out while the court deliberated my case. In a few minutes. I was again led into the chambers, where a seemingly bored thief Ju.st.ice Mark Sizelove passed the verdict : "'Guilty as charged, with a suspended sentence in that my sideburns "'ere trimmed to comply with the dress codes. Excellent attitude ." I felt somewhat amused lhat the court didn't sentence me,_ until I got the resl·O( il. "Although the court has suspended sentence, we will recommend that the person charged surrender his camera for a period of one week." That hurt. I love to take pictures. A fate worse than death, you might say. . * * * THE PROGRESSIVE f;DlleATl\)N CLU)J, having met many of lhe goal.$:,it set-up this year, is beginning-to expand its base througholit the Orange Cou'tjty nrea. The group sponsored an Orange, County Progre~ive EduCation 'Club meeting last Tuesday in the I.8~,0a school cafeteria. Among the high schoW::s in Orange County that sent rep~~­ tatives were Foothill, San Cle~tc. Corona del Mar, Newport Harbor, Sunny Hills, Foothill, and Villa Park. " At the meeting, past PE C preskll!jit and now ASB president at Laguna Hii:fi, Hov;ard Hills, discussed aspects or .gr:O.. gressive education and need to · .aet students involved in curriculum. . .. : Hills also screened a video tape recording of the first day of the mJAi· · course on drugs, which feature<!:.Qr. li1ichael Brown, from Cal State Fuller(oo. The mini-course program, which allqws stpdents to plan and fxearte, curriculum, has been the most nolewor{ijy endJ?3:vor of the Progressive Education Club. 1 ~· ALL THE mGH SCHOOL represe~ tatives who attended seemed lo ag~.on one thing -the time is now for. studenU: tO get in and help prOO.uce the educatior6tl environment. Those who attended · ~ach took with thelJl 2 copy of a model chaitCr for a prog~ive education club if t~ scboo~ dec-ide to initiate one . · CAN YOU f.ICTURE Mike Schwafti, an LBHS American Government 'studeat, as major:ity leader in the Senate?· .Qr Maureen Wilson as minority whip? Thit11 ·what's happening in Miss Linda ISaiCS' second period American Governi:rie11t class, as the students prepare lo fqllOW the w.orkings of the .'United S~tM Congress. ·For two or three weeks, dei)endiilg'._1ft the .enthusiamtf.aJl-3Z ·students-will ~ on committees, research bills '°nd do' fll the things that _Washington does. '.._ Christmas is tlae time for giving •• Omega is tlie right Gift. oMlJGA Om~o is one of the world's most dependable. watches ... selected as the offi-cial watch of tho 1967 Pon-American Gomes in Canada and the 1968 Olympics in Mexico. The fi rst American astronauts to walk in outer space, orbiting ot 17,000 mi les per hour, wore Omega watches. Choose from · our large collection for· men and women. •· TII• r...i-Owt.t• 17·iew•I . hith.,rtthf.-_..,...,.,.,, 14K ...... ,..... sa710 ,.t4-fift94 iteM. 4. H•it.._• 14K MJi4 ,.WW.- &.t -kh. Al'I ••c•ptJGMI WM'C .. for fhti tit•rt .,._ .,. SlllOOO .. •· DittMctrr. -"l•i• .i....-4. , .. .,. ltw .. M flit~,,.cl•io" ·-· ......... ' ,~ •· GI ... "'"' th. C..1t•ll.tt.rt, • :· •t.-41tol ch,..._.,....., wittl 2.4. ;! -n-t. ...... .. s9710 ,..._ ,.W.ff!W .... . .. .,,.., _ ............ ,.,,,.., f ~:";.1,.~ ..... ,. •1uoo f, S.tf·wl ..... , s..--., wtttt ..... cl>tift9i1tt co'9,.thr. 14K ,_w. fl11o4 MM witflt Metefltltt - •4jwll...... S1A&AO .... ,.i... 'IU9 i J"---d'.71-........._ --Tbal ConMnc• lullt STORE HOURS t Mjln. thru Sat., 10 'Ill 9 p.m. • Sund1y, 11 'til S p.m. 'tll Chrlttmat j JIWlURJ FOB Cl YEllll . Harbor Sllopplng Center 2JOO H•rbor Blvd., Coste Mes• 545-94'5 Huntington Centw Hun11=:i .. ch -' l • --.,--·- • • DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Mesa on the Move On the surface, Costa Me~a seem& to have been a pretty dull place in past moilths. In fact, ever since en· thusia!m was drummed up for the new civic center and the openlng of South Coast Plaza l\vO years ago, gent?r· al activity around the city seems to have been lo\v, But that dullness is only superficial -at least to- da~'· Consider these projects that are on their \\'ay : -Construction programs are being mapped for a giant hotel -the l\1arriott Inn -\\'hich will be one of the largest hotels in Orange County. It \Viii be located at Bristol and the San Diego Freeway in the South )Coast Plaza complex . .::::... Construction will begin early next year on Costa J..Iesa's largest -and most expensive -apartment complex, the lavish 1160-unit development to be con- structed on the south side of Adams in the Mesa Verde area. ~ -Long-rumored expansion of the overwhelmingly successful South Coast Plaia may be anticipated in ear .. Jy 1970. While size and scope of the expansion is n o t known. it will add substantially to the image of this powerful merchandising center. -Closer to the "ofd" ~ec'tion of Costa Mesa. con· tinued construction is ahead on East 17th Street. A ne\V market, a savings and loan and other shops will be add .. ed next year. -While any construction is ::;till ::;everal years ahead. look for imaginative and favreaching plans for downtown Costa l\1esa, 1he area generally centering around the Newport Boulevard-Harbor Boulevard inter· section. This program will be tied to the atiproaching Newport Freeway. and could spai'k an entirely n e \V approach in downtown development. - A discount store. a home-builder's mart and two new banks are expected to open on Harbor Boulevard in 1970. These are onJy the major projects, the ones finnly in the cards in the months just ahead. Many more (l~ eluding a bait million dollar expansion of the DAILY PILOT, \Ye mi'ght pQinl out ) are ahead as Costa Mesa enters a new decade: The way it is starting. it n1ay be the Sv,oingin1 Sev· cnt.ies. Lobb ying a Necessity Roy ~tarcom, a director of the anti-oil Coastal Area Protective League (CAPL), had some Wl!ettling news the other day. He said it would cost perhaps as much as $100,000 to hire a lobbyist to help push the Cransto""Murphy offshore drilJing ban bill through Congi:ess. The measure, iI passed, would. assure no .repetition of lhe Sant.a Barbara blowout disaster in federal waters off Ute Orange Coast. Some of the money for lobbyist expenses \Vilt be provided by CAPL contributors,. The rest, Marcom in .. dicated, may have to come out of the treasuries of cities and other public agencies. It could be money \Vell spent. Nevertheless, it is a terrible pity that oil industry lobbyists have such enor· n1ous influence in the halls of Congress that the public must hire its own lobbyists in self-defense. But reality must be faced. And lobbying is a fact of life in Washington. "l Ullderstan.d theire relaled but I'm Mt sure just hllw.' CC> ·.·. U11,ited States Justice Needs Overhauling· Dear . Gloomy Gus: Those hippie! around Costa Metia who do things because they'rt: "groovy" will eventually discover that there's little difference be- tween a groove and a rut. Switching Away From Democratic Liberalis1ti I Nixon Baffles Washington Veterans V!'ASHJNGTON -\\'hat makes the NiX'- on Administration so baffling to many people who have been in Washington a Jong lime is its ability to identify with and exploit conventional and traditional thought. , ' some llf the mort wacky arc Trotskyitcs. They created more trou ble and disturbance than they should have in their brief Washington visit. lfickel and Treasury Sccrcliiry David Kennedy as unexciting. So il goes with other Nixon Adinlnistr.ition pcrsor.alities. They do not turn on lhusc types \11ho are fore \"er searching for !he Kennedy charisma. The Presi dent's security ad· viser, Henry Kissinge r. is deOnitely in the S\\'im but the ~etrct~rvl of stal e. William P. Rogers. is loo bland for the excitemenl hunters. ' . ' I To the people who mindlessly shout the slogan, "Law and order!.'' the obvious retort is that if we had better law. we would have more order. By .. betttr" law. 1 do not mean more law or harsher law,' but swifter and more equitable law. It is unfairness and delay that frustrate and ~xasperate people tp the point that the Whq\e; structure of ]a\V in the U.S. falll pref 'to cyniciim and disgusl Thia 11 not }ust the view of ·an Im- patient and IB'?orant layman who may be suapected of "liberal" s y m p a t h i e s , whatever they may be. It is an accurate reflect.ion of the atUtude of Chief Jus.ticc Warren E. Burger of the Supreme Court, a haidheaded but not hardhearted COT}o axervative. tN A TALK to the American Bar Asso- ciation this summer, Chief Justice Berg .. er repeated the question that bafnes and troubles millions of Americans : "Why does American jU11t.ite take so long ?" ~: And he answered, in brief, that our trial procedures are antiquated, and our ,; courts lack modern standards of .. ; management, as well as the trained -• manq:ers to apply them. . ... .. : . ~:- He pointed out sharply that in medicine. except for anatomy. almost all Wic medical knoWledge or 2S years ago ls obsolete; that business techniques and industrial production have changed drasUcally in that -period; and that air -II. B. M. Tll;. le1t~" rtlltcfs '""''' vllwt, !lot llKnil filf lllOM ot !ht ~........ !tll<I y911r ,., ,...., t.. GI-• Gin, CMllY ,llet, transport and the space program have altered even more radically, DOI. in 25, but in the last 10 years. BUT, EXCEPT IN delails, "a civil Qr criminal trial today i~ essentiall~ the same as in Danie l Webster"a: tiine." Citizens called for jury servJce find 80 perccnl of their time is spent "just waiting.·• \Vilnesses called for' a pre~ise day and hour also find the1nselves spen- ding-most of their time waiting. And, of course, the defendant himself ,may spend months or years i11 litigation, before the appeals and olher processes ;are concluded. Ont: of the oldest legal dictums ls that "Justice delayed is jus- tice denied "-and our chronic long.term delays are a blanket denial of justice in our courts, at every le vel. n IS NOT law-breakers. or anarchists, y,•ho erode public faith and confidence in our legal and judicial syslem. It is the system itself. which refuses to cha.nge wilh the times and adapt itself lo the rnodern proble1TL5 of a huge, complex, and urbanized populalion. When the law is so dilatory, order can be imposed only by fOrce. and not by...U.weight of public opinion, as it rightfully should be. .. ~; Both; Patient, Impatient .... .... .. . :;. · .. :-.. By ELLSWORTH t.. RICHARDS ON A1hrister Nel1bborhood Congregational Church Laguna Beach Is patience a virtue or is Its practice a t ...... lost art'! ' ~ ... . : I ~w or a mother who is put out . _. because Junior cannot read. He isn't in .: tint grade yet and she is very upsel. 1 ~, tried lo tell her that the psychologists say ::--: that the muscular and nervous structure ;; ; af lhe eye is nol normally developed ::_. ~nough ror reading until the child is about • six years Or age. Yet she is i111p3tit?nl ~ '. btocause her child is so slupid ! Next time :: : J'U quote Dr. Alvarez! ' ::: 8ENNE1T CERF GAVE us some Idea ~.: of what patience Is \.\'hen he described a '· tchool teacher. "A leacher i! courage ~-.... w It b Kleenex In her pocket, sympathy -.. : slruggling with a snow suit and palicnee .s~ with papers to grade ••. She is one who .:. · likes somebody elst's children. and still .. has stnng1h left 10 go to PTA meetings ." J know of fathers who "'·ould rather go ttl tht opera than to be led by the nose lo a PTA meellng. So paUenu-1' hert and we qJute tho!e rew who have ii ! Kahlil Glbran lipeak ing of Jesu! said ·. that ''he l''IS patient, p11tient like a matintain In lht wlnd." And then ht wtnt oa wtlh this paradox; ., "YET HE WAS the mn~t tmpalleol er men. He was Jmpat.Jtnt ~·ith those woo weighed and measured the day and tnc nl&ht before the.y would trust their dreams to dawn· or even Ude. Ht w;1 s im· patient with I.hose "'ho believed not in Haht becau1te they themselves rlwclt In shadow ; and trith those who sough~ <tfter Mans in the !ky rather than In their own htarts." So then there are occaslona when p3· ( i ' '/ _,.,....._ ' tience Is not a virtue. There are times when those who are patient art 'o"ertaken by the strategy o( those who cannot be lamed. SO~lETli\IES PATIENCE is used as an excuse ror diling nolhing, for not ta~ing sides. Then)etl}argy sets In. The people th11t comprised the Protestant Reforma· 1ion had liUle patience with "slaying put." The Protestan t heritage comprlsei1 !hose \Vho utterly refuse lo !lt&y put .. Voltaire said there are two classes oC people : those who make history and ~ who arc made by it. Which art we'! The 19th century gave vent lo the doc .. trine of rugged individualism, not all or v.•hich v.·as virtuous! Tht tarly part of the 20th ctntury can be characterized as a perkMI when patient people endured t.ht monotony of conlormlly, not all of \Vhich "'as virtuous. TIUS LATTER RALF of the 20th ~n· lur)' Is somethlng else. Peo ple are no )On gcr patient . , . no longer patient 1\'llh lnequallly .. \no longer pat ie nt with e\•il v.•here lift.. I~ hard, raw and ugly .•• no longer patient wlthJhe pollullon that' rob..• our s1rcam1-of1afghter and our 1kle1 uf gaiety ••• no lon5er p'l:IUc.nt v.·lth the cor· ruption of public figures in high office nor wilh the pilfering· of small ~pie in supermarkets. Sptak.lng 1"ery personally. 1 an1 lip· patient -.11th lhose who don't like \\•hat 1 write! The Nixon Administrat\on rides O\'er the fixed ideas whlch have grown up in lhe ~apital in the past 30 years or so on the function or the federal government . Thus it is that ideas expressed by some nf the leading figures of the Nixon Administration seem awk"'ardly left. footed in a Washington community more attuned to delicacy in dealing v.·ith minorilies. advanced political ideas, and the general speclrum of Democratic liberalism. This kind of liberalism has prevailed, with only a brief break, for 40 years and has created a large per1nanent reservoir of officialdom. lawyers, Io b by is ts. joumalisls and others v.1ho are schoo led in the political mores of Democratic liberalism. · TO THESE i\IUST be added the powerful pressure groups of labor. agriculture and, lately , civil rights and general protest as a part of the \\'ashington community y,·hich takes a dim vie\v of the Nixon Administration or Rjchard Wilson awaits with eagerness its next boo-boo. The NU:on Administration is made up or outlanders who have come into the precincts of the knowing and initiated and are blundering about committing all manner of gaucheries in tht \liew of tbe permanent Washington community. The wife of the attorney general, Mrs. John ~fitchell,jnduced a convulsive gasp in this Washington community by talking on television, as if she were a neo-John Bircher, about the "liberal Communists'• or the WashinitQn anti·war demonstr~ lion "'horn she and her husband tbotight · created scenes in the capitaJ remi.ci.5Ce.nt of the Russian revolution. THE ATI'ORNEV GENERAL later ex- plained that l\1r!. hfitchell was imprecise in her terminology and should have refer· red to violence-prone elements instead of liberal Communists. Indeed l\1rs. Mitchell ·was imprecise. The Communists in the y,·ar protest movement are not liberal. MosCO\Y is too liberal for them. They are conservative ~1aoist Communists and But Mrs. l\fitchell had it right \1·hen, in her own v.·ay, she renecled the main body of conventional and traditional thou5ht on anU-y,·ar demonslratioll! and public disorder. Spiro T. Agnew has. of cour~. plumbed the very depths of shuddering horror in the liberal Washington community, which has nevertheless come la the conclusion that he may be speaking what is on the public's mind. IN RUNNING DOWN the list or Nixon officialdom it ia hard to find many Q2\ regarded in the Washington communify as hopelessly square or maladroit. The favorite ol the group is Robert Finch, secretary of health, education and \\'eliare, whose style is pleasing to Spiro Agnew's "effete snobs," and it is very rare that Finch gets a bad press. The · Washington group has decided that Finch ought to run for the Senate from Calitornia if they can persuade Sen. George Murphy that he should retire. Commerce Secretary Maurice. Stans, for all o~ being a big game hunter. is classed with Interior Secretary Walter THIS IS THE \\'ASHINGTOS almosphere acco1npanying the findinss or the poll takers that three out of four peo- ple in the rest of tlie rounlry arc TIO\• reasonably \\'eU satisfied with the Nixon Administration. It is little \vonder then that lhe Nixon Administration is not much iolereste~n approval by the "eastern establishment.'' This "establishn1enl" is nOt eastern in origin: almost eve ryone \.\'ho might qualify for membership in it comes from so1newhere else. But the term is an easy classification used by Nixon officials to characterize those who take a superior and condescending attitude toward the conventional values of the Ni 1 on Administration. The conven tional values. at Jeasl for the moment, seem in lhe- ascendancy and that is solace enough for the Nixon squares. CIA Director Wins Senate Favor "''ASHfNGTON -It is hard to believe, but Richard Helms, director of lhc much- criticized Central lnlelligence A5ency, has become a dar1ing of the Senate dovecote. A career intelligence office r. \\'ilh CIA since its founding in 19~7. Helms was named director by President Johnson in 1966. Presi dent Nixon renewed lhe ap- poinlment early thls year. In subordinate posts Helms had seen CIA blamed abroad and at home. for goofs of all proportions. He served under two colorful and much·publi cized direc· tors of cenlral intelligence. gentlem an- spy Allen W. Dulles and hard-driving in- dustrialist John A. ~1eCone. Now it is being said -and by the most critical of the Senate doves -lbat career-man Helms has brou5hL a new respectability to the <iuiel campus-Jike CIA headquarters in nearby Langley, Va. EXHIBIT A IN this regard is Sen. f.fike f.lan sfield . f\·lonl.. the Senate Democratic leader. ~1ansfield has bei!n a frequent critic of Vietnam policie s and of other aspects of na1ional security planning by tv.•o administrations. For years ~1ansfield has, in addition, tw.en a leader of a so-far unsuccessful drh•c lo ap1>ly a tighter congressional oversight 10 CIA activities. Yet Mansfield says •!elms "has brought a respectability and integrity lo tM CIA ... and given it the kind Of standing which it lacked prior to the lime M took over. •·1 must say, like all those who have come in contact with him. 1 ha~'f: been tremrndously impressed. J think ht is by far lhe be st director the CIA has ever had. Btcause of Mr. Helms that agency's inlrg:rity al'ld staD<iinj ha\'t increased .---B y George---. De11r George: Somebody "ATOle In and asked v.·hat you "'ould do it a woman at a party was making a b~ play for all rhc married men present. Yro said nothing because your wife 'A'atches ~'OU like a hawk. \\'ell. I just think th at's terrible, only 'te a:lve an ans"·cr like that! MRS. U.I DcRr ?\1n . U.I.: Boy. nie, t~. Sayt \\'ould you ·mr.1d lalking to my wife for me? -r it • • -1: ... ... • i. ... Alle~..6ola@i.i~ith , Fulbright has !requently complained that ill·limed fand ill-fa.led) CIA operations, such as the U-2 incident, ha ve harmed U.S. foreign relations. ' . 'W considerably, at least in the congressional community," says Mansfield. ALSO FULBRIOHT-~fansfield made those comments in the Senate's secret debate on the ABP..f Safeguard system \.\'eeks ago. The transcript of that debate, censored and reviewed, was made public only last v.·eek. CIA data was quoted by both sides In the secret discussion, but Safeguard opponents stressed lhe agen· cy's finding, made without further evaluation or comp&ri.son. that Russia had suspended work on its .:tnti·missile !ystem . In the same debate similar views were e1pressed by the Senate's super-dove, Chairman J. \l.'illiam Fulbright. D-Ark., of the Foreign Relations Committee. According to Fulbright, Helms' ABM appraisal "convinced nle he was a com· petent man y,•ho was not swayed by any outside influence; that he u•as giving us the nearest to an honest assessment of all • the co111bined forces of the intelligence community. "HE HAS GIVEN tht: committees .• the best available information. That i! what inspired in us confidence and trust in the integrity. honesty and good judg· ment of ~1r. Helms," said Fulbright. Helms and the CIA have also had another r~nt accolade from Fulbright, v.·ho sharply criticized the clandestine U.S. involvement In Laos (which is operated by CIA), but said he doe.<1 not blame Helms because: the intelligence boss ~as operatln5 under instruclions from lftgher authority. Tlie Tower of Babel The State Board of Education can1e out sound.Ina: like the Tower or·~abel in its rttent approval of science guidelint:.s for elementary lextbooks. Steldng to please all sidt!, from scien· tills to humanists to Bible fun. damentallsta. the board managed to pro- duce 1 compound which will satisly few. ltt alone the interests of education and In particular the teachln& of science. Underlying the-whole misadventure is a commonplace ~ mlstake which hls -con- taminated lhlnklng on the subject for 1001C ye•rs. This is the notion that the conct:pl of evolution, as an explanatiOJI of man's origins, Is .,me.how at odds wUh 1ny religious btller lhal riian Is tl'4!I aea- tlon of a supernatural being, or God. THE BUSINESS OF acitnet, and its teaching, Is tht observation and C9r· rele.Uon of verifiable tacts 1bout life a'nd matter. In this 1enst, evolution, or the postulate that n1an e1olvtd from M>mt as yet unknown primitive form of IOY.·er life, hall much evidence lo support It and yet enou1h missing dala lo deter its doa:matk: 1ctcptance. ' G~est Editorial"" • • ' Scleoce and IU teaching in ~ schools need not c:oncem itself with the ultimate causes ol lhe ori&in or bel111 and maUer. Jts ditcipUne is to oblerve and coml1te.. It wcxdd be unscienWic, tn lhll aens:e. to propoat: tlllt ~ world 1nct' man were not created by a aupt:matural supreme being. Thb: it 1 matter beyond sdenct's purview. THAT OUGIIT TO tit the auid<Une al· lltll_de taken by the State Board or &duca· lion. Not one which endoraes or la in- lmlc•I to nllglous concepu about crea· tlon, but one which 11.lcks lo the sclen- tlflcally determined licts. leaving tht hypotheses as to their orl&ins to lhe philosophies or bellera whlc.h all in· di vldual! are free to hold . 'Jlll S1crameato Bta Helms has always enjoyed the eon· fidenct of the rather hawkish seni or members of the HQuse and Senate who ride herd on CIA operations through special intelligence subcommiltees. There is therefore, a real significance In his present high standing among the agen· cy 's long.time critics. •. HE HAS. IN THE first place, made It clear that. as the nation 's top intelli5ence officer. he \l'ill provide the best possible reading, without bias and \\'ithout trying to evaluate events abroad against ~velopments (weapon or otherwise) in the United States. In short . Helms will provide the best available basis for U.S. policies without lrying lo make them. CIA Critics were never sure that Dulles and PlfCCone were willing to !lop at that . With respeet lo CIA 's operational responsibilities. those shadowy clan.. destine activities v.·hich have provoked most of CIA 's criticism over the years. J~elms has carefully lived up to a pl.edge made during hi s Senate confirmation hearings in 1966: "Sir." said Helms on that occasion. "the Central Intelligence Agcnry takes no Actions 1vithout apprQval from the arr propriate officials of the U.S. Govern· ment. and they are not in Ule CIA ." After more than three years, CIA·~ critics are beginning to believe him. By Robert 15. Allen and Joba A. Goldamllb ----- Friday, December 5, 1969 The tditorlot pag1 of tht Daffy Pilot 1eeks to i1i/orm. and 1tim- ulatt1 re4der1 bu presenting chis 11eic.rpaper'1 optnlo11s and com- mentary 011 topi's of ft1ttTta:t and tignifieo tu:e, b11 provid;og o Jorum Jor the ezpressio" of our readers' opi11fons, and b11 presenring tile dlvt tse view- pobtfs of in/ornted observer1 and spokesmen on topics of the day. Robert N. \\'eed, Publisher I ! I I I I . . I I J ( j I ' I' ! ., , . I 11 ' • Down tlae Mission ;r:rail Viejo Students Giving to Needy MISSlON VIEJO -Following the theme of the second week o f Mission Viejo's Community Christmas observance, "Christmas ls a Time for Giving," high school student., will begin their collect.ion of toys, rood and clothing &or needy families. Two student groups from Mission Viejo liigh School, Viejo Amigos and Apathetics Anonymous will man a gifl- box-shaped booth near the community Christmas tree at La Paz Road and Cbrisanta Avenue to act-ept donations from residents. Informal programs of carols will be i>resented on Wednesday and Friday night.'J, Dec. 10 and 12, with singing by the junior choir of the Presbyteri an Church of the Mastet, Sing Oul Amigos and Sweet Adelines. e Churclr Bio 50 l'ears SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -The Com- munity Presbyterian Church w i I I celebrate its SOth birthday Sunday, Dec. 7. The church organized Dec. 7. 1919 \Vas the first Protestant facility in the historic community. Forty-eight signatures appeared on the ariginal petition stating an inten t-to organize the church. Some of those who signed will be present al the Ht a.m. service Sunday. ·e Pat1cake. Feed Slaied MISSIO~ VIEJO -The third annual pancake breakfast spons~red by 1.'lission Viejo High School athletic booster club will be staged Saturd ay, Dec. 6. The event which will help buy sports equipment and aid sports programs will take place from 7 to II a.m. in La Paz Pina shopping center parking lot. e Readh1g Teac h e r OK'd SADDLEBACK VALLEY -'l'rustees of _the San Joaquin Elementary School District were told Wednesday that fun~ ding has been obtained for a second reading teacher under the provisions of the Miller-Un ruh reading program. The district, a't its own expense, had hired nine full time and one part time teacher so that each school would have a remedial feading expert. Last month the state infonned the district that funding would be available for the teacher at Gates Sch<>!>l. A few days ago word was received that a se- cond teacher, at El Toro School, would also be funded . .e 2 Gra-Y Club• Formed SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Two new Gra-Y clubs have fanned in the Sad· dlehack Valley. · The new groups. with 12 members each, are the Mission Viejo Bruins and 1 the Capistrano Valley Vikings. . . Activities include sports competitions between the two groups and joint cam· ping expeditions. For further infonnation on the forma· tion of Gra-Y clubs contact Cliff Hansen at 837-7324. e Forer11ic fforaors MISSION VIEJO -Saddleback College forensic students brought home honors from a recent invit ational foren sic tournament in Riverside. Reaching the finals '"'eTe Bob Yount and Susan Killion, winning first place awards; Mike Bielitz, second ; Mike Stod· dard and Lou Pellon, ties for fourth : Gabrielle W.arcereau, second, and Pam Downs, third. e Trustee• VI""' l'lhn• SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Three con· troversial films will be rev iewed by the board of trustees of the San Joaquin Elementary School District at a workshop Dec. 18. The films on the rstricted list in the county schools film library were denied to one teacher in the district bf!cause the board has not formulated a ... definite.. policy on their use. To be viewed by the board will be e Dana Chamber llleets DANA POINT -Members and guests o£ the Dana Point Chamber of Commerce \l'ill gather lonight'from 8 lo 9 o'clock fo..r an infonnal dessert party. The event ~·ill take place in the Southern California First Natiooal Bank on La Plaza Street in Dana Point. " · e Cot1irol Pollc11 Told SADDLEBACK v ALLEY -A proposal te consider formulating an Instructional control policy throughout th e San Joaquin .EJe:mentary School District was heard by the Board of Trustees Wednesday. The idea was presented by .i\ssistant Superintendent William Stocks who said that althougb no specifi c instances have provoked the need for such a policy, it, would be in the best interests or the . clstrict to have one. ~e said ttlat such prosrams as ser tetucation coold better be oontrolled ir such a policy extSted. A further clarifica. tlon of lhe proposal will be presented at next month's meetins. ~ Cltorale to S lug LAGUNA HULS -A progTlm of OuVtmes music will be staged Sunday. Dec. 7. Tht Los Angtles Valley College choir ch11mber chorale and Instrument a I ~e~le will present the concert in ~Presbyterian Church. ,,.. public pre.stnUttlon ltd 6y Richard A. KIOX wtll begin at 7 p.m. 1 / Abandoninent iii net. Carl Bradley escorts Nina M. Werner, 20, into Slanivu Police Headquarters following her arrest Thursday on suspicion of child abandonment. A seven-month-old infant, identified as Yolanda Marie Lupien, \Va s found on a Stanton doorstep Wednesday. An anonymous phone caJl led police to the \Verner woman. Meanwhile, the baby. a pparcnUy healthy and reasonably happy, was being cared for in county's Sitton Home. Solons Probing Charge Of Pendleton Perversion From Wire Strvicts Congressmen investigating charges of a brutal hierarchy of black supremacy in the Camp Pendleton brig -with white $ prisoqers even kept for nomosUual dalliance -began inspectjng the ba'Se .to- day. The House subcommittee group will at- tempt to determine during ils two-day visil ~·hat improvements have been made since an earlier pr obe by the parent House Armed Services Subcommittee. "We'll be taking tcslimony from prisoners and officials as well as taking a careful look at conditions there,'' said Rep. William J . Randall (0.Mo.) upon ar- rival A chllling report with tales or savage brutality and kangaroo courts to discipline whites who failed to carry out orders imposed by the black rulers was released earlier this week in Washington. OAll.Y ,II.OT Sltfl ~ Projectitag for Club Dan Leslie (Jell), president of the 116-member Laguna Beach City Employes Association1 helps Bill Cook, executive director of 'l.he La- ~una Beach Boys Club carry assoclaton's gift, a 16 mm movie pro- jector into new Canyon clubh-011se. Association members raised money for gift by selling frozen bananas at Festival of Arts. J; , __ Frldt1, Oe<tmbtr 5, 1%t# · 1 S DAil V PILOT :J '·i~mafi "·~chQ:O.l Boar_d? ·• . ... -. . •; ' -' . . Jorif!in .Charg~:.Mitchell Says 'Baloney',l ~ C61in1y odlOOI Tru!I,. Donald Jordan Tharsday accuted board Pr<sl· dent Clay Mltchell ol acUng at.a one-man comnilttee representing the ~d and nmninC up excessive 11\ileage •t publk: ~e.. ... "All or this accusaliqn atuft ls a bunch or balQ!lel'," retorted "Mildlell of South ~-"You can't operate a. car at si:r ·Cents a miJe.,l'm ctvlnc a hell ol a lot o( 'time', Actu1Uy, I count-on 'about.two days a week on this school stuff.''.' • · Jontan said he had checked the boob and 'found~J(.Jtchell during the last year had driven over t,000 mtles to attend 139 meetings m county schools business at a cost of more thin '850. ·The other fOV board members turned In mfl8age \IOUChm l9r $69, $60, $47•and '81. Jordan said. ''This to me tsn't so much a matter of one person building up ptlleage," rtmark· ed Jordan. "It Is that· only' one board member is representing this board at all these·meet.lngs." Jordan coiTiplalned that he hadn't been assigned to any committees this year. "I can't help but conclude our chairman is a committee of one." he said. Mitchell pointed out that he had ta made committee assignments. that it \Vas done at a meeting at \vhich Jordan \vas absent, and that he should have read il in the minutes. "I "'as never nollfied as has been customary in the past," Jordan said. Jordan noted that Mitchell had put in mileage for attendance at 14 Saddleback Junior College board meetings and he couldn't quite get the connection with county schools busness. He said his check of the record showed Mitchell had come to Santa Ana from his home In Three Arch Bay, South Laguna, &3 times to meet with the county schools sta ff. "There seems to me no reason why this committee work shouldn't be divided,"~ said. "I would like other board merubtrs to consider the necessity a n d responsibility o! relieving our chairman Panther Lawyer Wants U.N. Talk SAN' FRANCISCO (UPl)-An attorney ror a Black Panther Party leader accused of threatening the life of President Nixon says he will go before the United Nations to charge the u .s. with "genocide" or militant blacks. The attorney, Charles Garry, cited the fa tal shooting of two Panthers in a gun- fight with Chicago police early Thursday as an example of a deliberate extermina- tion poUcy aimed against the party. Garry told newsmen be would also demand · a Congrusional investigation into "the efforts to bring forth a fascist police state in this country." " . al llCllM, al hb cmunlllft ualgm-and Ibis .-tv mileage." Mitchell ~d be made trips to meet with tho Ci.Inly acbooJs_ stall on "certain JnfonnaUOn l waa working on." "11\at cakl~ Information is not com· mlttee. work.'' Jordan snapped. Jordan aald MllcheU bad attended ti C«nmunll)' Actlol( Council meetings. Mitchell said thole meeUngs weren't ~ery hippy Jhlngs and Jhat he'd like : ;. Jordan to take It on. ~ ~ •"I'd like lo' move he be appointM·lo It," interjected trustee Or. Dale Rallison. "Mr. Rallison, you move for yourself,'' snapped Jordan. _ • Afterward, Mitchell said, "H~'s :j{lst trying lo come on with a personal attack. I'm just damn sick and tired of him·Rlip- ing around.'' So ended another coonty school ~d meeting. · :_. Laguna Teen Corner . ' Student's .Day in Court ,. ,- .,. WinsSuspendedSentene~ By FRED SCHOEMEHL 01 11111 O•llY ,llol 11111 WHILE MANY students were an- ticipating the start of Thanksgiving vaca· lion, r watt hardly looking forward to the day because I had been issued a citation to appear in Student Court. ·My sideburns were ruled too long. and not in line with the Laguna Beach High School dress codes. Wednesday morning I was there at school -wondering more than worrying -about the action the court Would take. I felt consoled in that I had trimmed my sideburns the night before. WHEN MY CASE came up, after only 11 45 minute wail, I was slowly Jed into lhe chambers by Sergeant at Arms Oen· ny Schmitz and told ta tum around two limts so the court could inspect my ~ideburns. Then I was led ouL while the court deliberated my case. In a few minutes, I was again led Into the chambers, where a seemingly bored Chief Justice Mark Sizelove passed the verdict: "Guilty as charsed, with a suspended sentence in that my sideburns ~'ere trimmed to CQmply with t.he dress codes. Excellent altitude." I felt somewhat amused that the court didn't sentence me, until l got the rest of it-..-r'~ ·~ "Although lhe coort has suspended sentence. we will recommend that the person charged surrender his camera for a period of one week." That hurt. I love to take pictures. A fate worse than death, you might say. . * * * '111E PROG~IVE EDUCATION CLVB, .having met many ol. the goals:.it set up this year, is beginning to expand Hs base lhroughoLit the Orang'! Cowjty area. The group sponsored an Orange '·. County Progressive F.duCation CluD meeting last Tuesday in the U~a school cafeteria. Among the high schOO'ls in Orange County that sent represen· tatives were Foothill, San Clemente. Corona del Mar, Newport Harbor, Sunny Hills, Foothill, and Villa Park. " At the meeting, past PEC presidciit and now ASB president at Laguna Hij:ll, Ho\vard Hills, discussed aspects of .gQ>. gressive education and netd to ~t students involved in curriculum. . Hills also screei'led a video ta~ recording of the first day of the mJni· course on drugs, which fealured :,Qr. l\Uchael Brown, from Cal Stale Fullerton. The mini-course program, which aUQ.s students to plan and execute curriculum, has been the most noteworthy endeavor or the Progressive Education Club .. '. ~ ALL THE IUGH SCHOOL repr~se~. talives who attended seemed to agre,.on one thing :___ U1e time is now for studenls to get in and help produce the educatiorial environment. Those who attended . each took with them 2 -:opy of a model charter for a progressi'!'e education club if tfi_~ schools decide to initiate otft. · CAN YOU PICTURE Mike Schwart;, an LBHS American Government itudeot, as majority leader in the Senate? :.or Maurefll Wilson 3S minority whip? That'• what's happenlns in Miss Linda ISailci' second period American GoverntPvit class, as the students prepare to f9~W the wprkings of the :.United S~tes Congress. \ For two·or1hree•weekt, dei)endfng:.Jin lhe enthusiamt, all 32·stu~ts will~ oo committees, research bills Jnd do' JU. the things that Washington does. '• ' ; ~~~~!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!!!~~!!!!!!!!~-~ • Christmas is the time iclc ~-,. for giving •• Omega is the right Gift. OM~GA Omega is one of the 'world's most dependable. watches , • , selected os the official watch of the 1967 Pon-American Gomes in Canada and the 1968 Olympics in Mexico. The first American astronauts to walk in outer spoce, orbiting a t 17,000 miles per hour, WO<e Omega watches. Choose from our large collection fOt" men and W9'1'1e'n . L .. _ .. ili8f ............ ..,. IMCWHy ........... ~·· .......... o..,.,_...__ .... 17 .. ..,._. 14K .,.,.._. _ .. ...... ,... s72500 Mcehtw.tclri, ' --d1r·-......._, Tbo lllaro STORE HOURS ; M,n. lhru Sat., 10 'Iii 9 p.m. • Tbat CoDldnc• lullt J!Wtl,DlS POB U YUJlS Sundey, 11 'tll 5 p.m. 'til Chrl1tm1t i Harbor Shoppln9 Center 2300 Harbor Blvd., Costa 'M.sa 545-9415 Huntlnl)ttln Cet1ter Huntington &t1ch 192.5501 ' <. ,C:1Wt V Pll.OT cc-w ., ... a.DY f'a.t 11.m Labor Secretary Georg• P. Shults: is not the sort who tries to fake the song when he doesn't knoW the words. At a nev.'s confer· enc9 about providing jobs for people, a reporter asked Shultz 'Y'at bis department meant when it :said "flexible training options" \vOutd be offered. The former col· leJe professor looked around at A~ld Webe r, his assistant .ror 1*rtpower, smiled and s a l .d: ••teah. What does 'fle~ib1l,e tratn· ink options' mean , Arnie? . Web~r srfiiled back and explained 1t ni;ant the department would let bdsinesses have a bigger choice of trliining methods' for the program. I .-• ~::7:;·::::="=-::1 ttcmpti'ng to field breakfast OTd- . 1ert from a mob of newsmen ~thM descencUd on the small ho&Dn of lndependtnce for the t tcoort appearance of a Sharon iTale case suspect. "J'lU give ~u ~guys a headline," she yelled tn • :exmperation. "Waitrt!S Goe& ' ;Mad Shoots 34 Rtporttrs." ' ' r ' ' . be Klein's Sports Shop in the suburban Evergreen shoppmg plaza nE; Chicago is offering a l~ .. enway" for sale at a terrific b gain _ down from $10 to .99 clfnts. A good deal -e~,cept ther:; ;!!·no such thing as a Henway. t. says salesman Bill Olson, that d sn't st.op some customers from +g interested. • • ' • • Talk• to Resunae? U.S., Red Chin~. In 'High Contaet' U~fT ......... WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Unil<d States has made • high level conlad with mainland China -and may have urged lhe two naUOl'll resume ambassadorial talkl. The State Department, adopUng an ex- tremely cautious atUlude, acknowledged only that lhe U.S. ambassador to Poland, Walter J. Stoessel Jr., and "Clline.se of- ficiab" met Wednesday at a Yug08lav reception in the Palace of CUlture in Warsaw. Privately, State Departmenl officials aaid Stoessel conferred briefly at the recepUon. wUh an aide of the Communist Chinese charge d'affalre.s, Le1 Yang. They characterized the meeting as a "chance encounter" but gave the im· 'Tell Hanoi' BODIES OF COMMUNIST GUERRILLAS KILLED IN ALLIED AMllUSH SEARCHED FOR WEAPONS Vietnam••• Villa91r1 Watch as Soldiers Collect 40 Tons of Guns and Ammunition Draws Heavy Nixon Backing 14 Allies to Challenge Cong in Mekqng Ambush Navy WASHINGT(IN (AP) -P"ident Nixon receivtd today a delegation with four P I Co mail sacks full of 350,000 names of atrO DVOY persoos supporting his efforts in Viet- nam. S0viets on Troop Cuts BRUSSELS (AP) -Fourteen foreign min:bten of the North Atlantic Alliance agreed today to challenge the Soviet bloc to discuss mutual troop reductions as a demonstraUon that the Communists are really serious in proposing a European 6ecurily conference. France was reported holding aloof because it is not part of the North Atlan- tic Treaty Organization's unified military command. The French govenwnent believes, therefore, that it can have no part in a program of NATO-Warsaw Pact troop reductions. France 0~ ,._ division ol Europe in-SAIGON (UPI) -Viet Qmg In the Nixon read some of the leUers and .,. ... = M ...... Delta battled •-·th VI tn ....,... telegrams that were sent to a committee to blocks. eAVI._ ~ e am-.-. called "Tell U to Hanoi." NATO first offered to negoUate mutual troops west of Saigon, ambushed a U.S. reductions in armed &tmigth in June Navy patrol boat convoy and heavily The committee published ads in nine papers across the country last Oct. 15 1968, before the Soviet invasion of shelled a government ·outpost·in fighting and in two New York papers Nov. 17 ask- Czechoslovakla. Moscow ignored the of· reported today. ing Americans to "tell Hanoi we support fc~~tead, the Soviets and their allies For the third successive day, the f~u.s our President." f ••-urned the d !ta d From the coupons and petitions, the proposed a big European security con-0 Luc war t to e west an committee has received t.l million ference. After some hesitation, they south of Saigon, where the Saigon names "as of yesterday, and we're still acknowledged that the United States and governmen t'• Army is in the process of counting," William J, O'Hara told a news Canada could also take part. Criticized taking over. for American forces. cOnference prior lo the White House ap- ror not pro}X>Sing anything 'specific for The biggest batUe Thursday saw polntment. He brought just part of the the conference to talk about, tht~Com-government troops k1ll 17 Viet Cong 103 names, he said. .munlsts came up with two suggestions : miles west of Saigon. Headquarters said O'Hara, a New York attorney, and pression the two diplomats did mo~e fJ1an merely exchange pleasantries. U.S. analyists, however. rema ined cauUous on the prospects of renewing the talks. They said they detected nothing in Peking's public posture to indicate China was ready to talk again. Probably further quiet diplomatic e.1changes will be re· quired to set in motion the machinery for renewing the discuss.ions. Secretary of State William P. Rogers i.!I on record in favor of renewing the U.S.· Communist Chinese ambassadorial talk! in Warsaw or ih anolher mutually ac· ceptable city. The 135th meeting of th ese talks, which started in Gilneva in 1955, was postponed suddenly by Peking Feb. 18. Peking de· nounced the United St.ates then for having granted political asylwn to a high-rank· ing Communist Chinese diplomat two weeks earlier. Since the postponement, the Nixon ad· ministration has waited for an ap- propriate moment to try to get the talks going again. On Aug. 8 Rogers lold lhe National Press Club in Canberra, Australia, th e United St.ates would •·soon be making another approach to see if a dialogue with Peking can be resumed." Al a Washington news conference 12 days later, Rogers said the approach would be made ''at the appropriate time." On a CBS program Nov. 18, Rogers said ''we somewhere along the line" will make a suggestion to renew the talks. Jobless Rate Drops Sharply \YASHINGTON (AP) -The nation's unemployment rate took its sharpest monthly drop in 10 years in November. declining five-tenths of one percent to 3.4 percent of the labor force, the Labor Department said today. )r,. truck careening out of control iii London bit a baby carriage con- 1$ning Julie Whymerk! 2. and srpashed. tt against a walll as her llf)ther looked on in horror. Tht'..n, !rpm the debris. a giggle. The girl es:,aped without a scratch. Her lt'fltber Mrt. Valerie Whymark, 22, . "°'' treated for shock. 'Ille decision to renew the 18-mooth-old offer t.O talk troop reducUons emerged at ( the windup session of the NATO Couneil1 of Foreign Ministers. The ministers were completing a joint declarati~n on East- West relations and on the SoV1et bloc call for a Pan-European security conference renunciations of the use of forct, and three South Vietnamue were killed and chairman of the committee, said he and more cooperation in trade and science. 32 wounded. Four American advisers also others formed the committee and ran the At the NATO meeUng Thursday, U.S. suffered wounds. ds Secretary of State William P · Rogers Military spokesmen said the ambush of a "The response was so great we felt we contended that the sole purpose of the the patrol boats on South Vietnam's should in some way tell the President Soviet proposal was to perpetuate southern tip Thursday killed two Navy about this great silent majority," he said. /\1oscow's rule ln Eastern Europe. men and wounded five -the sailors• Morris I. Leibman, a Chicago attorney However, most or the sharp drop was accounted for by workers leaving the labor for ce and "this doesn't really represent a turnaround" in the economic slov.'dO\l!TI, a government spokcsma~ said. The report showed a small rise or 45,000 to a lotal of 78.7 million employed .Americans. in the next six months. /"'""> l'~oreign Minister Maurice Schumann of France also objected to a West Gennan proposal that the alliance reject the SoVlet bl1lc" demanded at Its M08COw .sum- mit .ineedng Thursday for international ricogn!llon of the East O.rrnan r<tlme~ SchumaM said such a rejection would imply acceptance of the principle of negotiations between two blocks, and Walter Scheel, West Germany's new heaviest kpes since .moving into tht who is 5ecrttary of the committee, said foreign minister, expressed doubt . that area five months ago to rebuild Nan Can, he is a "liberal Democrat" and the "Tell "There is a continued slowdO\l!TI in employment gi-owth," said Howard Stambler, chief of the ,Division ol Gennany could take part soon m a a base destroyed in the 11168 Tet of· it to Hmot." eUort is a "stricUy security cmfereoot-because the country fenslve. .-bJpartlsan;-amateartshihing."" · mplO)'M•nCAJWysr;-. -c ·--; •. ~anity at Bu<her's Cafe In CJlncinn&ti costs the patrons but hflps needy children. Mrt. Delor•• Pflum, a cook at the cafe, decided js sWl divided. He propoeed that the "W t hit •:--· · there •• "The npmse has been abloluteJy •'-;ted Sta•-·, Br!ta!n, France and the e ge evtry ""'"' we &om · ' , m htng The civilian labor force declined 83,000 as many so-called "secondary" wprkers -teenagers, women and young men - left the labor force, Stambler said. v1u ... ~ a U.S. Navy spokesman said. "You go up unbelievable for us; we re tt eearc Soviet Union get together with the two 8 canal and they know you've got to come for voluntcen just to count the mall,"1ie· Gennan governments in the meantime back, so they just &et up an ambush." said. and make 50me tsnporary set~ement.s. ....'.~'::..'.'.'...':'.::.!::..:::::.:'."...::::.:::::::::::_ __ ...:::::: _____________________ -:==--- ~. ·January she had heard enough f language and decided to let 11neediest kids of all" charity f1'id capitalize on it. "Keep It up aid it's going to cost you," she warned the patrons, and establish· e4 a "cuss fund" with a penalty of fite cents a -word. She gave the ci:arity this week the contents of Iii> fund -$700. l • ~ Word-coiurs on the Dtm.o- . !~tic National Committtt'• pub- JiCotion "Demo lifemo" now have ~..come up t.Oi!h. "Nizonomics." .. • ~lexander Tonia of Mountain ~w parked the car in his drive-'"-Y rec011t!y and le(t the engine T11nning while he went inside for a momenl. The car, with an a u to ttansmisslon, shifted itself ioto re-. v~se backed across the street · alld shoved neighbor William Ebel· int'• car into his dining room. 'I'1;1en the vacant car shifted into a jo~ard gear, crossed the street again and crashed into its owner's g1\f3ge door. Frustration Ov~r Lodge Quits Talks, But Not Retiring PARIS (UPI) -The frustration of each Thursday seemed to deepen the lines in the handsome millionaire's face. But when he strode out or the Vietnam talks for the last time, Henry Cabot Lodge, 67, made it clear it was far from Ns farewell as a diplomat: "I'm resigning, not retiring. I'm too young to retire." It was a mark of the man. Lodge still believes he can play a significant role in U.S. diplomacy if the President asks him . to. Four presidents have asked in the past 16 years. Dwight D. Eisenhower named him amtiassador to Ute United Nalions, John F. Kennedy made him the U.S en· voy to South Vietnam, Lyndon B. johnson returned him to Saigon and President Nixon sent him to Paris to try lo end the war. After more than 40 unsuccessful peace talks sessions, Lodge asked off the job. l-le told President Nixon he was resigning "for personal reasons ." Lodge looked weary as he walked out of the former Majestic Hotel for the last time Thursday. He leaves Paris with a sense of fruatralion at the lack of pro- gress during the last 10 months. Lodge once said the (Inly agree1'9'nt ever reached al Paris was that tl)r'con- ference table be round -and that was before he arrived. To\'1ard the end. Lodge told friends he doubted there would ever be progress In the talks, suggesting the war would one day merely fade away without any formal agreement to end it. He declared in his final appearance Thunday to ex· press that outlook in public. "W:e would like to have a negotiated seltle?nent in the classical way," he said. ''But if that is not obtainable'then we can gel de facto arrangements where people don't kill each other anymore. That'a the important thing, isn't it?" ··Midsection of U.S. Cold l ' Winter Storm Spreadfng Sn,o·w Over Wide Area CaHfornla co .. tal ' • M6fttl' -tod•"· llft'll v.rlallff wl11C11 l'lltlll ll'ld '"""1"' """" tl9o wntns W11ltfhr 10 >o ti k"411 111 •It.,._ 10Clt1 1.W S.l\lrOl'tl, Hllh1 ,,..., "· . c-11• .......,.,,.,,,,., • .,... '""' Ji to n, •~''""' i.m"''''"" ''"'' mim -lo 7J. ""Wtl.r !t1mHr11V,...,.J. Sn, Moo11, Tides 11•10,1.y SATUrtOAY •:• "·""· l • 11 :4 11.m. I.I ,,", hltfl " •.• • f :l, 1.11'1. ,,0 ''"' 1W ......... , •.•.• 1:24 """'O.l S.....0 hltfl ............ , 1;D II.If\. J.1 J.«.Ol'MI low • . • • • . • ' •• V.S. S11mmaru A win!" II-•l'tlMll Wll IP ..... Int -1!'!t Jtotl'-tnd Plaint lllltl 111111¥. dUft"IPlns tnow, llt<fl Ind 1,...1lnt rtln lrem I_. M N.,. -"'· Tr1~ w1rnlnt1 Weft In eff9ct !fr l'I00111Wt ll K1n111, (911irtl N••M• 111C1 -'"'"' IOW'I. wtltrt -lo ,.,.. IMlltl ol l"'7W ttll fllund1¥. 5rocw, ocu11or1tl!v mixed will\ tlffl, w11 <on!lnulftt lft l~t 1r11 lo!lav. ' a-w11 1111lnv •l•aclllv aver !ht 1-!ll ol tM ltoctr.111. O•lnd JUM• lltn, CCIII!.. r-!td llirM IMllfl tnd POl'lloro• ol litw MtJko ,...,. UPlf(ltd to r1<11Vt '91/r o• "'°'' lntllll.. ll1!n Wll ltlllnt In Mlllll'll.,.. Toti ti l'Pltl .. l~rt '"°"' !tie Glllf of Muluo Pllll'IHd lt'llO 1 ... llfrrtl tV"f",l'!I rem.,aoturea ,l.l~UertrlM n " ,._rw;l'lor89t " " A!ltnta .. " 811~1tnllt!d .. " e1,"'1rdr. 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(92701) PhoM 714 (547-9379) Gentlem1t1 pl-contact me reearding land opportunities: l Na1mo.--------------- A~I""'------------- Cl1!J'----------(Zip11---- SAN DtEGO ~ My Telephone Number 1'----------'-==••============---=====•-- • • . Suit f!rg es Freedom for WinnieJ~dd PHOENIX !UPI) -A House Cuts Deep Into F 01·eign Aid :WASHINGTON '(AP) -Ap- propriaUops for the embattled fottlgn •Id program may twnble to a new low·point this year• poesibly $1 'bllllon less lhan lhe spending ,,.;Jing llOllgllt by President NIIon. A -appropriations sub-committee ls reported to have whacked the aid measure down to the neighborhood of 11.6 blWon, Including dttp slashes in major economic aid compClllenta. headed by Rep. Otto E. Passmen (D-La.), wu said to have added $54..S mlllJon to finance a squadron of flghter planes for Nationalilt Chlna. The House, in the separate authoriu.Uon bill, approved . authority fer the planes but the Senate Foreign Relations Commhtee, still working on Its version of that measure, promptly knocked It oot. In 1968, Congress cut about $1 billion from PresKtent Johnaon'a fore l g n aid authorization request, leaving · it below the $2 billion level for the first lime at $1.97 billion. But the actual appropriations to finance the global aid prt> gram dropped to $1.75 biWQO. QUEENIE By'Phll lnterlandl • "''-''d:.:'1:..:•..:°'.;..'c.'m'-bt-'-•-5::.·..:l:.:96c.9 _______ _:D.;_Al::.LV.;_.;_Pl::.LD:;T;_,!S., -: -~ Dine on Caviar U.S., Russ Continue Talks .;!: .- :~ HELSlNKI (UPI) -The the smart Savoy Restaurant in North Atlantic Tr e •'.f'P United States and the Sovltt downtown Helsinki. The Organization (NATO) fo~ Union today held theJr teVenth Sovleb were host at a similar minister&· 1n · Brussels ~ meeUng en ways to curb tho alfatr tut week at their em-day tbe Helsinkl SALT ~ nuclear anns race and then bauy. were off to • good start lunched together on cavlar-fllJ. In keeping w1th the strict the Soviets adopting : &; ed Russian pancakes at 1 policy of no public an-bu!'inesslike attitude. ; Helsinki restaurant. nouncements about the talks, He said the prelimh:lpl?:. .. American s p o k e 1 m e n neither side co m m en t e d stage of the talks should el(. ... described the 9 O -m I n u t e following today's s e s s I on , in about two weeks. • session of the Strategic Arms Confer'1'.lce sources said the Conference sources s a I d Limitation Talb (SALT) at prellmlnary talks prob.ably both sides have been .. a~ the U.S. embassy as .. ef.. will last through next week tempting to define what )I_·. II I I meant by "Jtrateglc. c e n t 1 c o rd la I a n d and posslb Y Into the week v•eapons," thus establishing· a . b u 11 l n e 1' s I J k e w I thout after. common basis fOI" negotiations '• polemJcs." The next meeting U.S. Secrttary of State expected to start in the laltt-1" will be Monday at the Soviet ;;;W;;;t;;;lll;;;am;;;;;;;;P;;;. ;;;R;;;og;i;;;;m;;;;;to;;;;;ld;;;;;th;;;e;;;;;ip;;;a;;;rt;;;o;;;I;;;J;;;an;;;u;;;ary;i;;;;. ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;Oi;; embassy. II " .. fiuperlor court ·suit filed Thurs· day asks the court to order the state board of pardons and paroles to recommend the release of convicted slayer Winnie Ruth Judd. President Nixon has sought a 12.6 billion spending ceiling for the overall program in the year that began last July. The House · trimmed that to '2.19 billion and the administration went to the Senate for help in inCreasing the money aulhorizatlon. One of the major fights looms in the military section of the bill.-The subcorrunittee, Blacks Take Building "His RoyBI Highness ••• and an-around, general big cheese ••• " The chief U.s: negotiatcr, Gerard C. Smith, hoste:d the inform~ luncheon for the 10 top delegates on both sides at • IN ROOF, WAUS 1111 DIDOW' ' ARUS AROUND THE HOllE , NOMORE ~-~ At Harvard OR YOUR MONEY BACKI The suit was filed by Phoenix attorney Larry Debus and San Francisco attorney Melvin Belli, who represented Mrs. Judd in an appearance Oct. 27 before the paroles board. The board, in a 2-1 vote, declined to recommend to Gov. Jack \Villiams that the famed trunk murderess of the 1930s be released from the state prison. Liver Fails; Boy Di~ DENVER (AP) - A small Seattle boy died late Thurs· day, les.! than 24 hours after surgeons gave h i m a transplanted chimpanzee liver in a last..chance effort to save his life. CAMBRIDGE, Mass. (AP) -Between 50 and 100 blacks seized control of Harvard University's administrative nerve center, University Hall, toclaY to dramatize several demands. }Fl('s Fortune Listed 'At $1.9 Million Plus Philip's Mother Succumbs HOW'D YOU LIKE TO The suit charged that the board's action "was an arbitrary and capricious abuse of discretion for the reason that no scintilla or evidence was before the board upon which it could base the finding of fact and conclusion ••. " The suit also said the board improperly failed to credit Mrs. Judd with 29 years she spent in the Arizona State Hospital after being found in- sane. Furthermore, the suit said, Mrs. Judd has been in- carcerated more than twice as long as most , persons sen- tenced to life in Arizona. Mrs. Judd was convicted of killing one of two women friends whose butchered bodies were shipped to Los Angeles in a trunk. Te&ts following the 14-hour operation at the University of Co!orada Medical Center showed the liver was funr- tioning but the 7-month-old child remained critically Ill, surviving as Jong as be dJd on· ly with the aid of a respirlltor. The child, not identified further by the hospital, grew weaker during the nlght and died shortly before midnight, a spokesman said. Odds against his survival were tremendous. 'Ibere are no known cases of survival far more than a few days after animal-to-man transplant of vital organs. Spiro at Keyboar~ .. The group moved in just before start of the business day and placed wooden bars over the windo'Ws and doors. Empioy'8 reporting for work were turned away. There were reports that I handful d. employes had betn foreibly ejected by the pro- testers, but the university said these were erroneous. "My understanding Is that there was no violence," said Harvanl College Dean Ernest R. May. . Using a .bullhorn, li-tay told the protesters about 4 5 minutes after the seizure that they might be liable tO crjminal trespass prosecution if they remained. ' Vice President Spiro 'I. Agnew gives an unscheduled perfonnance for \Vashing- ton press women at a party ~.iven by his wife. He played "Sophisticated Lady" on the piano and told the distaff reporters they wert "prettier and more o~ Jective' than their male coUeagues. - 'Prom youf PlJ{lloutJi dealer-! ~ diJrmg deal 011. BOS'fON (UPI) -President John F. Kennedy left a personal fortune of almast $1.9 mllllon when he died, not counting many millions believ- ed left in trust for members of his family. The amount was rl\sclosed in an inventory or ~ssets which Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, the executor of the assassinated President's will, filed with state authorities on Feb. 19, 1965. It was not made public until the state attorney general gave his pennission Thursday. The exact fl ~ur e, $1,890,646.45 is only the amount of cash and property passed on to Kennedy's heirs and not 'the extent of his estate, according to Tax Com· missioner Cleo F. Jaillet. One reason Kennedy's ·fortune Is difficult to estimate is that there are a number or Interlocking family trusts, the commissioner said. The inventory Jlsts mare than $106,000 payable to the President from three exisUng trusts: one from JO!eph P . Kennedy Jr., a brother killed in World War n; another from Kathleen Kennedy Ha$1gton, a sister who died in a plane crash i and a third from a Ex-bi~ Player . A:ct1t in Tragedy PITISBURGH !UPI) -An unelnployed man, who said he was a former bit player on Broadway and in Hollywctid, shot and killed a fellow roomer and wounded another before being subdued with tear gaJ early today after a gun battle with police. 111e suspect, Ohannes J. Dersafkisslan, who gave his age a.s 39, was taken in custody after f i r i n g ln· tenntttently at police for 2 ~ hours with a rifle from his third-floor apartmer.t in the Negro bill district. trust his father set up ror JFK in 1936. The only land Kennedy own- ed in Massachusetts was hls "house in the family compound at Hyannis Port, valued at $46,250. His cash balance in various banks, including ac- count.a kept for members of his family and close friends, was $116,377.37. Much or his fortune was In tax.free municipal securities, including bonds Issued by the state of Aeassachusetts, the cities of New York, Blnn- ingham, Ala. and San Antonio, Texas. Kennedy owned common stock in two oil companies, Barber Oil Corp. and Sign.JI Oil &: Gas Co.; Connecticut General Life Insurance Co.; Ken Industries; the Hyannis Corp.; and Park Agency, Inc. He had a $577,341 Jnterert ln Merchandise M a r t , the building his father, Joseph P. . ~nnedy, bought in Chicago. Free But Froien Czech Escapes by Air LONDON (UPI) -British gagemen, London lmmlgratlon baggage handlers found the officials climbed into the teen-age boy huddled behind Czech plane and carried him suitcases in the cargo hold of awa y. In a heated airport a Cr.ech08lovak airliner from room, they fed him brandy. Prague. In broken English t he HYou're In England naw, youngster saJd he wanted to boy," one said. His teeth chat-stay in England. He aald be tering, the youth somehow had friends here. managed to smile. . The youth wore only street COME ON IN.;. We'll show you how to do it with amaz- ing time-proved TU F F·KOTE and Glass Fabric •. _ By FACTORY REPRESENTATIVE 10:00 A.M. to 4:00 P .M. SATURDAY -December 6th VISTA .PAINTS 2931 BRISTOL STREET COSTA MESA (1 MILi SOUTH 01' SOUTH COAST PLAZA) "The boy was almost frozen clothes, "It t{lust have been to death," a BiiUsh European sheer agony,'"en airport of. Airlines spokesman said to-i,!'~·c~ia~I ~said~·~·;;;;p;;;;ii<iiiiiiiOi~iiiii=iiiiii:iiii'~ii:ii~ii~iiii;iii:ii'iiii day. "He wu very lucky to.ii •••~••••••--••--••••~JllllMMMJllJlfl get away with it. The tern-HARBO.R CENTER'S peralure in the baggage hold of the TU104 airliner was subzero." The 19-year-old student had flown 700 miles -most of it at BIUtudes up to 23,000 I..t -In his flight 'Ibursday night from the Communist capital. I Alerted by the British bag· 1 ~ying 'Cuda! GIGANTIC ART SHOW Over 600 Paintings Presented by California Outdoor Art A$sociatlon SATURDAY & SUNDAY MOST STORES OPEN SUNDAY FOR YOUR SHOPPING PLEASURE Santa Stopped Here First ••• · Why Doaa't You? Lee White Chrysler-Plymouth 16661 leach Blvd., Huntington Beach, Calif, Atlas Chrysler-Pfymouth, Inc. 2929 Harbor Boulevard, Costa Mesa, Calif. - • I 2300 Harbor at Wilson, Costa.'Mesa ~~~~~~~~~~~-;-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1'4JllOlll ..................................... ~ ...... ~\ ' / -------~~~~~....--~~~~~~~~~~~--,~~~~~~~~~~~--,,....~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~·--~~--~~~~--=~ • ~ . . • ·t· ... ---., • • DAILY PILOT EDITQ.RIAL PA(!~ Librar.y lf the '"ords spoken over Laguna's library needs were printed, certainly the 2.200-square--foot ~ounty bral'Jch building \VOuld hardly hold them. The verbal torrent from concerne<J, Lagunans has flow ed for years. Everyone agreed the li ttle library was inadequate. But 'I.here \\'as spirited di sagreement over a new location. The torrent shou ld dry up now. Harmony should prevail. The City Council fo r the second time has unani- mous1y agreed on a site for library expansion. The first site, on Third Street. didn't pan out. It began to seem too expe.nsive and the county ~alked at cost figures. Condeffil:'lat1on costs were a question mark. Simmering li brary enthusiasts, heated by years of delay, began to boil. A mayor's library committee was appointed tO bring in cluick recommendations. It did. The pendulun1 of opinion had S\Vung solidly bac~ to expansion at the existing site. The council, again unan· imously, accepted the recon1mendation. The plao no\v calls tor acquisition of a triangle of property slightly less tho:in 6,000 square feet fo r $80 ,000. This along with abandonment of the one-way segm ent of P ark Avenue between the triangle and library, would create a site of more '1.ha n 20,000 square feet .· The pl an· leaves many loose ends .. It_ presupposes addition of about 6.000 square feet of building to the ex· isling structure. This building the city O\vns . It also houses th~ Chamber of Commerce. \vhich is guaranteed. office space in perpetuity. \Vh ether and ho\v the citY '''ill be compensated for ils property n1ust be worked out. Site Settled Probably all these technical matters can be worked out with county assistance. The once bwnlng question of .where seems settled. The paramount issues now are when and bow. Laguna Copes With Growth In a recent discussion about a development that in.ight eventually bring u)> to 2.000 more residents· to La~una, concern was vtnced about providing school, police. fire and hospital protection for all these people. 1'The city obviously couldn't cope with it," was the way it was put. . , It should be pointed out Ula'.t in the past -three years, plus a few rnorrtl1s, Laguna has: -Passed a $3.49 million ~cbool bond issue that made it possible to buil~ two new schools. both con- sidered model educational plants, at the same time greatly_ enlarging ttie caoacity of the hieh school by freeing· the old intermediate school J>uildings. -Built, staffed. equipped and placed in operation two new fire stations. -Found the funds to provide the police department \vith needed ·additional staff and equipment. -Seen a h1ospital building program that approxi· mately doubled the capacity of 1hat facility. -Bought itself a $3 million beach. And, on the uru.ce to have" side, acquired twn new theaters and a Boys' Club. nearing completion. NOt to mention taking giant strides toward acquisition of a new library. • • I ( .. The method of fi nancing the trifjngle purchase and construction of a library addition also are-unsolved. \Viii the county allocate the funds outriJtht. or will the more expensive lease-purchase method of fi na ncing fall to the city with the county leasing the property? Lagunais population growth has been slow, fortu· nately, but there has been growth -and it wou1d ap. pear that the needs of the increasing population are be· ing me't. ·'I undusttur,d ~·re re laud but I'm twt.aure just hew.' United States Justice Needs Overhauling "'!' . . To the people who mindlessly shoul_ lhe :slogan, "Law and order!." the obv1ou_s retort is that if we had better law, we would have more orJil(. By "better" law, I do not mean more law or bars her law, but swifter and niore equitable law. It is unfairness and delay that frustrate and exasperate people to the point that the whole structure of la\v in the U.S. falls prey to Cynicism and dis~t. . . · l . ·. This is not 1ust the ~·of. an tm· patient and ignorant layman '!ho m~y be suspected of "liberal" s y mp at h 1 es. whatever they may be. It l! an accurate reflection of the attitude of Chief Justice Warren E. Burger of the Supfe me Courl. a hardheaded but not hardhearted con· iet'Vative. , IN A TALK to llie American Bar Asso· ciation this summer, Chief Justice Berg· er repeated the question that baffles and troubles millions or Americans: .. \\'hy does American justice take so long'?'' And he answered, in brief. that our trial procedures are antiquated. and ciur courts lack modern standards o r management, as well as the trained managers to apply them. He pointed out sharply that in medicine, except for anaton1y, almost all basic medical knowledge of 25 years ago is obsolete; that business techniques and industrial production have changed drastically in that period; and that air s Dear Gloomy Gus: Switching Awa11 From Democratic. Liberalis111 Nixon Baffles Washington· Veterans Those Laguna Beach hippies' who do t h ings b,ecause.they 're "groovy" wUI eventually discover that there's little difference be- tween ·a groove and a rut. -H. B.M. Thil ltll~rt rl'!t.'b l"tllltrt.' view., 11111 nKtUlrllv lhg1t of tllt """'1p1ptr. Stntl Yfltr Pt! MtVI "' Glotmy Gui. inilY "'"'· , \VASHINGTON -What makes the Nil'· on Administration so baffling lo many people who have been in Washington a Jong time'is its ability to idenUfy with and exploit conventional and tr.iiditlonal thought. The Nixon Administration rides over the fixed ideas which have grown up in the capital in the past 30 years or so on the functiOn of the federal government. Thus it Js that ideas expressed by some of the leading figures of the Nixon Administration seem awk\vardly left. transport and the space program ha ve footed in a \Vashington rommunity more alte~ed even more radical!y, not in 25, attuned to delicacy in dealing with but 111 the last 10 years. minorities, advanced polilical ideas, and . the gene ral spectrum of Democratic BUT, EXCEPT IN details. •·a civil or liberalism. ' inal trial lod~y is ess~n~ially .~th,~ ; This ·kind of liberalism has prevailed, e as In Darue~ Webste_r s ,J~4r'" ~ ..... wilb .only .a brief break, for 40 years and ens called .for 1ury ~rv1ce ~!lb has created a large permanent reservoir ~c~nt ., of their time is spent . JO st of officialdom •. lawyers, I o b b y i s t s , \YaJ l1ng. \Vitncsses. called for a precise journi!lists and others who are schooled day and hour al:;a !tnd th~~elves, spen-in the political mores of Democratic ding most or the1t t~ wa1t1ng. liberalism. And, oi course. the defendant himself may spend months· or years in litigation, before the appeals· and other processes arc concluded. One of the oldest legal dictums is that "Ju stice delayed is jus· llce denied" -and our chronic long·ter1n delays are a blanket denial of justice in our courts, at every level. TO THESE MUST be added the powerful pressure groups of labof. agriculture and. lately. civil rights af!d general protest as a part of the \Vashington community which takes .a dim vie1v of lhe Nixon Administration or awaits with eag~ its next-boo-boo, The Nh:on Admlnlatration is made up of outlanders who have come into · the precincts of the knowing-and initiated and are bl~dering. about committing all manner of gaucheries in the view' of the permanent Washington community. The wife of the attorney. gentral, Mrs. -. some·cif the more wacky ate.Tf9tsk yites. They created more trouble a n d disturbance than they shouru · have in their.bri ef Wasliington Vls~t. ... · BU\ Mrs. Mitchell ~d. it..riJh~ w~n, in her own way, she reflected ~.m~ bo<Jy of conventional and traditiona~ 'thought on anU·war demonstrations and public disorder. Spiro T. Agnew has._of course, plumbed the vefy depths of shuddering hcirror in the liberal \Va shington community, which has nevertheless come to the conclusion that he may be ·speaking what is on the public:'s mind. John Mitchell, induced a C90vulslve gasp in'thls Washington community by talking on television, as if she Mre a neo.John . IN RUNNING DOWN the list or Nixon Bircher,' about the "liberal Cominunim" official49u it is bard to find many not of the Washington .nu.war demQl\lk:I-re~itt· Ji\ the Washington CQm~nity tion whom she and .her husband6in .;. U -~ square or maladroit. The created Scenes in the capital re ~ '~ favor1te ·.ac )!If group is Robert Finch. of the Russian "revolution. ·-..:; ""'· ik:retary ~ cit ... health', education and ~ ·~·: .wprare, whbst ttyle is pleasing .tq Spiro THE A11'0RNEY GENERAL later ~x-• "Ag.w'a "e~;soobs," and·Jt is very plained that Mr1:-?.fitchell was impreCise ra,e that ~'@ts a bad:;pr-ess. ·The in her terminology and should Have refer· Washington gNUp~~U declded~that Finch red to violence-prone elements instead of ought· to run . fpr the sma,te from liberal Commanists. Tndeed A-trs. Mitchell California --~1 .. yiey can petSUade sen. was imprecise. Tbe Communists in the George trlQf1?llY that._he ~ould reUre'. war protest mov~ment are not liberal. . Commerce ~ Maurice Sians, Moscow is too liberal for ~em. They aie ·to~· All o!' ~ a "big game hUrit.er. is conservative lfla.oist COmmunists and c!Used 'Wltb~~rior Secretary Wa1ter •• . ' Hickel and Treasury Secretary David Kennedy as unexciting. So it goes with other Nixon Administration personalities. They do not tum on those types who are fore"'.er . searching for the Kennedy cbari.sma. The Presiden1's securit y ad- viser, Henry }\issinger, is definitely in ''"' s1,·irn b11t the seereto ry of state . William P. Roge rs. is too blatld for th~ t!X..:nenu:nl hunters. THIS tS THE '\'AS lll NG TON atmosphere accompanying the finding s o[ the poll takers that three out of fou r peo- ple in the rest of the country are no\' reasonably well satisfied with the Nixon Administration. lt is,.llttle wonder then that the Nixon Administration is not much intE:rested in approval by the'"eastern establishment." This "eStablishment" is not eastern in orig\n ; almost everyone who might qualify for membership in it comes from somewhere else. But the term is an easy classification used by Nixon officials tll characterize those who take a superior and condescending att.!tl.!de toward the conventional values of tbe Nixon Administration. The conventional values, at least for the moment, seem in the ascendancy and that is solace enough lor the Nixon squares. tT IS NOT law-breakers, or anarchists, \1·ho erode public faith and confidence in our legal• and judicial systen1. It is the svste1n itself. which refuses to chan ge \Vith the times 3nd adapt itself to the modern problems of a huge, complex, and urbanized population. \Vhen the lav1 is so dilaiory, order can be imposed only IJy force, and not by the weight of public opinion, as it righlfully should be. CIA Director Wins· Senate Favor . . . ''\ ~. 'VASHlNGTON -It is har.d to believe, , fulbright ha' (requefiUy complained that but Richard Helms, director of the much· ill-timed (anc1 ilJ;fated• C:lA', operationS, criticiied Central Intelligence Agency, such as the U..i lncldent, have harmed has be<:ome a darling o[ the Senate 1 U.S. foreign relations. dovecote. According to Fulbright, Helms' ABJ\.t A career intelligence officer, ~1ith CIA. appra~al "convloced me he was a com. Helms has always enjoyed the con· fidenct of the rather hawkish senior Both Patient, Impatient since its founding in 1947, Helms was considerably, at least in the congressional pe~nt man who was.not swayed by any named director by President Johnson i.n community," says ManSfleld. oUla:lde influence: that he was giVirtg us 1966'. President Nixon renewed the ap-. • the nearest to ·an honest assessment of all pointmenl early this year. Al.SO n.JLBRIGHl'-Mansfield· made tlle combined _forces .cOf the intelligeoce tn subordinate posts Helms had seen those comments 1U lhe Senatt's secret community. members or the House and Senate who ride herd on CIA operations through special intelligenae subcommittees. There is therefore, a real significance In his pre~nt high standing among the agen· cy's long·thne critics. HE HAS, JN THE first place, made it clear lhat, as the nation's top intelligence officer. he will provide the best possible reading, without bias and without trying to evaluate events abroad against developments (weapon or olherwise) in the United States. In short. Helms will provide th e best available basis for U.S. policies without trying to make them. By ELl.SWORTH L. RICHARDSON, !\llni1ter Nelgbborbood Cong~alional Church Laguna Beach Is patience a·virtue or is its practice a Jong lost art'? 1 know of a mother who is pu t out because Junior cannot read. He isn't in first grade yet and she is very upset. I tried to telt her that the psychologists say that the muscular and nervous structure or the t?ye is not normally r1evelopcd e:nough for reading until the child is about , lix years of age. Yet she is irn patie nt becau se her child Is so stupid ~ Next linie 1'11 quote Dr. Alvarez! "BENNE'l"r CERF GAVE us soine iden or what patience is v.·hen he described a 1ehool teacher. "A 1eacher is rourage wit b Kleenex In her pocket, sympathy struggling with 11 snow suit and patience with papers fo grade •.. She is one who lites somebody else's children. and still has strength left to go to PT A meetings." t know of fathers \vho v.·ould rather go to the opera than to be led by the nose to a PTA meeting. So patience is here and we !!Alute those few v.·bo have it! Kahlil Cibran .speaking of Jesus sald that "he w1s patient, paUcnl llke 11 mountain In tbe wind ." And .then he "·enl on wilh this paradox: "'YET llE WAS tht. most lmpatltnl ()f mtn •• •1~as impatient with lhosc who 11o·eigbed and mtasurtcl the day and lbc night btrore lbey \llOUld trust l~ir drtama lo dawn or e-vtoUdr. Mr. \\'as tm· patient with those who btUcved not In light because thl)' themselves dwelt \11 Wdow· and with~ Vi'ho sougbt alttr ~lans tn' the sky rather than In their o"'n heart.I." So then there art occasions when pa· / •• ~·-·-"""! ·:r-, .... . tience is not a virtue. 1'here. are times when those \vho are patient are OV!!rtaken by the strategy of those who cannot be tamed~ SO~IETIA1F..S PATIENCE is used as an <'Xcuse for doing nothin)-. for not taking sides. Then lethargy sets in. The people that compr'isl-d the frotestant Re£orma· tlon bad little patience with "staying put:"' The Prottst3.nt heritage comprises those who utterly reruse to slay put. Voltaire said ther~. are two ... classes or people: lttose Who make history and those \vho are made by it. Which are we? The 19th century gave vent to the doc· lrlne or rugoed individualism, not all or whicb was virtuous! The early part of the 20Ur century.·can ~ characterized flS a period when patient people endured the n1onotony or conformity, not all of "''hich was virtuous. TfUS LATTER. HALF of the 20th cen· tury Is something else. People arc no longer patient .•. no longer patient with Jncquallly ... l}O longl'r patlenl with evil where Ille Is hard, raw and ugly •.. no longer paticot with the pollu_tion that rob!'! our streams of laughter and o:ur skits of gaiety . , . no longer palient wlth the cor· ruption of public figures In high orfice nor Wilh the pilfering or -small people In iupmnark.l!la. Speaking vPry personally, l am Im· r11 t.1ent "'Ith those who don·t like' wbal .l Vi'r11el CIA blamed abroad and at home, f o r debate on the ABM Safeguard' ·S)'sttm goofs or all proportions. He served under weeks ago. The transcript of that debate , ' two colorful and much..publiciied dlrec· censored and reviewed, was made public tors of central intelligence. gentleman-only last week. CIA data was quoted by spy Allen \V. Dulles and hard-driving in· both s.ides in the secrtt discussion, but duslrialisl John A. McCone. Safeguard opponents stressed the agen· Now it is being said -and by the·most cy 's finding, made without further critlcal of the Senate doves -that ev1.luaUon or comparison, that Russia career~man Helms has brought a new had suspended •ork on its antl·missile respectability to the quiet campus·llke system. CJ.A Qeadquarters in nearby Langley, Va. In the same debate similar views were expressed by the Senate's super-dove. Chairman J. \Villiam Fulbright. 0.Ark., of lhe Foreign RelaUons Committee. 1•HE HAS GIVEN the committees .. the best available irifOrmation. Thal is what inspil-ed in us confidence and trust in the integrity, honesty and good judg- ment of Mr. Helms,""· said Fulbrigbt. Helms and the CIA have also had another recent accolade from Fulbright, who sharply criUciltd the clandestine U.S. involvement id Laos (Whlth is operated by CIA), but said he does 'not blame Helms because the intellige nce boss was operating under instructions from higher authority. EXHIBIT A JN this regard is Sen. Mike Man.stield. tlolont .. the Senate Democratic leader. Mansfield has been a frequent <:rltic of Vietnam policies and of other aspects of national security planning by two administrations. . For yeaNi ~tansfield has, in addition. ~en a leader of a so-far unsuccessful drive to apply a tighter congressional oversight to CIA actiyities. Yet A-lansfield says Helms "has brought a respectability and Integrity to the CIA ... and given it Ute kind of standing which it lacked prior to the time he took ove r. The Tower of Babel "I must" say, like all those who have rome in contact with him, T have been tremendou:dy impressed. I think he is by far the best director the CIA has ever had. Because. olMr.'Helms that agency's integrity and standing have inaeased B11 George --~ Dear G-eorge : Somebody wrote in and asked \\'hat you would do if a woman at a party ~·as n1aklng a big play for all the married men present. You fi&id nothing because your wife v.·atches you like a hawk. Well, I just think that's terrible, only to give. an ans\\·er like th11t! MRS. U.J Dear ftfrs:. U.t.: Boy, 1ne. too, Say! \\"ould you mi'.1d talking to my ~·Ut: for me? The State Board of Education came out sounding like the Tower or ii1b.i·,11»11s recent approval of acience guldellnes for tlementary" textbooka:. Setking to please all sides, from scien- Usts lo humantsta · to Bible fun- damentalist&, the boaid manqed to pro- duce • compound whJch will saUsfy few, let alone: the interests or educaUon·and ill' particular the ,.aching.of ldencl: • Underlying u.e whole misadventure ls a commonplace mistake which has con- taminated thinking• on the "'bject for some ytars. This la: the nbtlon that the conctpt-of evolution, .. an erplaniUon ol man·1 ori(IM, Is oomt'-It oddl with any religious beUef tha~ mM ii the Crta- Uon of a· supernatural beihg, or God. THE BUSINEIS OF 1tience, Ind Jts ltachln1, is the obeervation and COl"- rtlation of verUlable farts about Ufe and matter. In thlJ .senat, evoll.ttlon: or the postulate that man evotved,(rom some as yet unknown prlmlUve form Of 10\.ter life, has much tvidence to· support It and yet enough ,miasins data 10 dei.er l\J dormatlc acceptance. Science and Its telchin11 'In the ac:hools netd not concern itself with the. ultimate causts of the origin:of being and matt.tr, Its dlsctpuno'll1o obHryt-.nd coml11<. It would. be ~miscBU.nc; in-that aerue, lO pro-that the . ..Orld and -not crealtd by a sut><rn.turll .._being. Thll Is • lllflttr beyood ~·· purview. THAT OUGIIT TO be the aufdeline a~ Uioo. taken by the S!ate llolrd of EdUCB· lion. Not one which end0f1a..,. ii Jn. imic.11 to religtou1 conceptg 1bQut crea- tion, but one which stitkl lo the IClen· Ufically dethlnlned facts, leaving the hypolheses as to lbtir origins .to. the phllG.'!Ophtta or betltfs which a.11 ln- dlvlduab are free lo hold. . n.s ......... 1a11te CIA critics were never sure that Dulles and McCone were willing to slop at lhal. 'With respect to CIA 's operational resp:insibilities. those shadowy clan· destine activities which have provoked most of CIA's criticism ov;r the years. •1elms has carefully lived up to a pledge made ! during his Senate confirmation hearirtgs in 1966: "Sir," said Helms on that occasio'n, •·the Central Intelligence Agency takes no actions without approval from the ap- propriate officials of the U.S. Govern· ment. and they are not in the CIA." After more than lhree years, CTA ·s critics are begiM.ing to believe him. · By Robttl S~ Alltn and Jobi A. Goldlmllb --~-- Friday, December 5, 1969 The tditorfal pagt of lk• Daily Pilot seek& to inform and tum. ulak. reade1'1. bv presenting thi1 newlJ>(lper '1 opftt.iOJtl 4nd com- mentaty on topics of inte rclt and tlanifitance, b31 protridino " jor:um few the tzpre&.sion of our rtcdtn' opi.niOT13', cind br presenting the d.Everie t>tttoo point& of informed observen ond spokesmen.on topic., of the dC1!/. Robert N. Weed, Publisher ···----------------· 'Look' Authors' 'A' Student Caged Boy's Mom Faces NI e11tal Test tNDlO (AP) -Beverly June Gibbons. whose 6-year· old son Anthony was found chained inside a box on .a desert ranch last summer, is to undergo psychiatric tests \vith three others before sentenci ng on felony child ;ibuse convictions. Superior Court Judge War· ren E. Slaughter ordered the tests Thursday, saying the 90- day examinations w ? u I d detennine "what moti vated ·the four to blindly follow the orders of a cult v.·hich would allow a child to be severely mistreated." ~1rs. Gibbons, 36. Palricia Ann t.1osher, 27, Jeffrey Flynn, 22, and Gardner Reynolds, 21, were convicted by a jury Nov, 13. Judge Slaughter delayed sentencing until alter the tests. Officers testified they found the boy last July 26 on a desert commune, reportedly placed in the box as punish- ment for starting a fire. The child, undernourished and exhausted when freed from the box, has been declared a ward of the ruverside County court. Minority Coalition For Um·uh? LOS ANGELES (AP) - Assembly Democratic leader Jesse M. Unruh says he will run for governor of California y,•ith the help of the poor, the blacks and the Mexican Americam:. Republican Gov. R o n al d Reagan's administration, he says is for "the white, the co~rvatlve and the rich." With those words Unruh, a leader in the 1'te Sen. ~ F. Kennedy's presidential campajgn became the first an- nounced candidate for the governorship of the most populous stale in the 1970 elec· lion. In challenging Reagan. ex· peeled to seek a second term. Unruh f.1voked the words or 1he Jale President John F. Kennedy, a triend of his. H.e said he intended to make this a "campaj(n between the con· cemed and the comfortable." Reagan has run a.n ad· ministration "of lhe ehte, by the elite and for the elite."1 The gover.ior ls beholden, he 1 . charged to "a handful of half hidden m1111onaires" who ad· vise him on government policy. VNl-'l'ED · S 'I' A 'l'E S N A 'I' I o°"'N~A"""t-I BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NO'W o.aN SATURDAYS t M I P.M. MOM.-THUll. 1t.I P.M, •ttDAYI lf.6 P.M. f7141140.1111. l.M.tH 1111: s .. CMtt ,,_., CMt• M ... .t.HI. ltKt f'.-.,-Mllleflt" E. H. LEVAN 'feen Bookccl In Dad's Death CLAREMONT (AP) -A 17- year-old youth who police say had a drinking problem has been booked for investigation of murder arter his father was shot to death ~fter an argir ment. Donald C. Tulley, 41, of Poma.1a was shot In the Chest. thighs and hands Thursday at an apartment v;here his son, Donald. lived with police of- fi~r William Schneid, 27. :· • ... ~ ·_: ·;;; The New KitchenAid Dishwasher with , exclusiveSOAK CYCLE does your soaking automatically_,_ PllCES START ., The meMieft. kittbel\cleen· uJ) job bu alway• beeb · removing crueted-oD foodt from pot., pana and CUle· roles. And tometiDMt "trom dishee. · Until now, Now, the Kitch•nAid Superba model hM •·..,. ei:clueive Soak Cycle that automatically .OaU -and loo•en1 encru1ted foH•. 'l'hen.i~~waebM, rin.. and drlea •Verythinf. · .... ",.. ... ,. fUtc"811N• $tt.. ,., .... •lsll· ..... r.,...1•t •Ill 111•ntll"1 ........ of '"' D,jjuly Jfltl. ' ... -. .,. .. • ~ .! " .. • . ""' ,. :- . - . . ., .. ' ... Co.oll -(Lhia.ts ~ • • ' .. . ·~·· .. . ' .;. . •• ... ... ,. . .. ' ' . , ~· ' • • ' -• • t11'1p9d1l ··-qmi~io•Mf111 ._ ••r•-te· _ .. ,. .... ::totde in.$1ltt ?ac:kates .._ ,_i. I • t' -• • .,... •I "'' "· 1 ·r ' '>. ' .• ' • • ' ' • ~ •.• ~and at the"Gr;andest Mall of .All we've ones, too. All South Coast Plaza slores make SALES· SERVICE .:· 1815 Newport Blvd. • Oowntowi:t Costa Mesa . 1;1ready .. pi.tt on ... ~u~ wirfter Co~i aoq· te(laied it po!siblc lo use their convel\ienl lay11:wa y. oitrael~M lor tho Cl1riStmu.· season. ,f.11 of -Sllop ti\is Chri~tn1as at Santa's Hon1e Av>'ay 'oUt 110rfs" ••• ahd there are 86 to hq·cxticl Fr6rn Homo in the sliehe red comfort of our . • • ·• hav~ just what you're looking ror--:.t..110 .'.cnc~~OO m!\11. ·Alw11 ys open nightly 'tit 9:30 Wg important giflll and 1M small tl1ougbtlul ·.':.,.and Sw1day 12 to 5. • ' I Frl~ay, Drcembtr 5, 1969 ••sy·c•r• active weer for men and boy t hang-ten sox all color!. DAILY '1LOT • 7 7 f11hio11 i1l111d, 111wport bt 1c~ • .,,. •• 5010 • b1n.1m1ric1rd * m11itt ch1r91 II ) ' -· ......... 5011,th toast ?tua •llllOl AT MM OllOO flllWAT, C:OSfl. MllA • .. • ' .. '> -· :s • . -· • .. .. ' -- ; ,. , .. ~ .. , --~· . : • .. .. · " . .. .. --~. ... . • . . .. . ~. _,, ... . ' ·• ~."""'.~~""::--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ .... ~~~~~:::~~~~-:~--:.~~~:-~~~~~~""'..~.:"""'":~~~-:-::-:::-~.'-~""":~~--:-:~-:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-::;::-::~::;;::::!:· .. ;;:~ I Dlll y l'ILOT For the MEETINGS - Frlday, Otctmbtr 5, 1%9 Record a1rwltk, Joen... Mt•lr YI lt:llberl ,_, Ttllllfl, Sl\lron v• Gfotllorv L J-l<ll"tl\ fi.11>1 VI And1ew Ftf<O!I Plll lOAY H~~::: EYt l\>n P1ulent YI LIWffflCI H!Jfttlng._, 1lt41Cll lllf)flrv CI u b • Rlcllmond, Pllrlclt Je1n v• A-M, $Mr1ton Sellcll Inn, Hu11U1191on 8•oc•e", Ollvll Vl JOflllhin Rlcklltd lleac:I\, n :IO 11.m, Aurer, A~rko Y~ Oolo••• N. M ......... L'°"' CIW. Stutr-StrM, »11..., Gentry, Elli L. YI Earll• W. COISI Hl1~1y, New'°'! 8e1c:J1, I llloblrl" OM111 Gtll v1 Geol'lle llffllfll lt:U 11.m. Hu1i•. Aullrey 111111 vs Ktfl"'lll Trov Mir Vl•ll Mai(WllC LOOI!•· M11611lc Morion, N1ld1 H1rm1,.. V• Dou•l11 Ttm11l1, 1.01 Ulh SI., NtWPOrl Allen 9eacll. 7:)0 11.m. DOwn1, Mfftlff L. VI Robert JOl\n P1r1nl1 Without Plrlntti., Orll'IOI Jonu, Rill Ann Yl H1rry Rlcll\1d coun!Y, Cosl• Miii, GOl! tnd Cou"' , ~i:v'.1t~,==~)~1/t.v~sCt11:.!c.".Ji Irv Club, Co~ta M ...... I "·"'· G1rcl1, Jot C, vo Rulllt Lov\11 SATUlllD.AY S!etn. M1r11ror Jt1n Yt Albert VldM (hrl1!l111 llut!/\411-·1 (omt""ll!N . c ....... Thonwit AnOrew YI Bftly Ellen ll1lbot 1l1y (II.lb. Nt.vl'Orl 811cll, l("'lf" llow-marv H, v1 ROQerl Earl 7:JO l .m. OIVf<I, L111'r1r ... "' J.U Divorces DIVORC IS 'ILfD P1r»ell, Jamt• M. tJ •• Su1•n l. Wolll9tn•nl, F•lnk A. •• Ire.,. Smith, Laur• 5. VI Jtmn M, ArrlfT, Vern..., Eowara v• Bf11Y Je1n V...i11. l<elllleen M. v1 ~rrvl J. (Mnllor, Floyd V. VI Ann Pluml1lth OeM•lllt , JoanM L. vs Ant~y Nltk Tu"ln, Cti1rle• O. vi Baro.rt A. Fr1nc:k. TMre•I• VI O.Utl ... W\Klmltl<, Germaine 0 . VI Robe<I w. Fr111...-. Adeline II. VI ••vm<>n<I v. l(rol. Dokl••• M. VI MllcM ll M. Melt.,,.,, 1(1tt.1een \_, vs Rob<'rl L. Ml11U9t't, Rl'91Mld O. vs Juanlll M, Btbcoclr;, Jan\1 w. v1 Edward Vt•notl G1tnon, Ale<>• Anrw VI Jolln P1u1 5w"tl11'1C1, S1'1dr1 H. vs OoNld 0. (trr, Ml1Y K1th1rlnt VI Wllll1m TP1Urm1n Md(lt, M1r111r1rt 011 vs John R. Barter, Vt ronltl v1 Gordo11 Ntvll B•vtn, Bttlrlce v, w1111,,., J. Welch, Jr~ Homer Fronk Yl (hff)'1 Ml tlon Sllttl'I•"' G!1drs 1<1111et1ne "' Peter Dtv!d Gll~rt. Doth J•1n VI H1rrell G. (t~lfr. Am1n01 llo111ltl•n1 v1 •ot.ort L<'(IOI Nlcotll , 01m!at10 Nl<Oli1 Y1 lfM T, Hlll'n, GI!)' (,YI Sll1rDl'I M. 11.,.,...IOfl, S1nOr1 l. 111 Edwin l)orlnell)', Ellr.1~111 A. VI Oonlkl l. 8f'f"lllf, MlfY H. vs 8rl~n A. Jobtll1.s, Slllrie'f l . vs Chltltt W. llond, T~• H<ow1rd v• Be1!rlce Joy RIJ'IO, R1cMel Jol nne VI Mlrk ( .... !II FNn•'••· Judllll A. VI M1rvln o . Rol1nO, M1~!e Ltt vs Francis 81rre1t, Gr.•c• JaM Yl Joftn Lewis Brr1nl, Jeanntll• L. Yl Jamn W. ltVlnt, Nellie 8. VI Rlclla•d S. lll1k..ier, lllcllard K. Y1 Cindi Dl1na Creed, Arlene Fral'l(:PS 111 Elmer Leroy $1'11M. Helene Svhole v1 81rrv Al1n 811110naclo. JOlffh N. YI Eml!Y l. ,. .. ,_ h ill' VI G1rv lrlt•• J_....t!e EmmY VI John Sc.olt W1<Mf, Dt'lorH 8. VI D1vld II , Scfl~ylfr, Allee E. v1 W1rren J. llllll. Mlrla Helen YI ,,.,. ...... Ktll'f, l 1rb&r1 Ann \II Mlcn1•I W. Goodffl~•cyn1t1l1 Jane v• Oon1ld Allen Weir, M1rlf:ne Mvrtle YI Melvin LN 8tc1. JllHl>ft R, YS JCYCI C. •1111110, G1l1 A. v1 An!l'leny P. Oe L• Torre1,.8erltl1V.111 Monico S. (111111. •lcllard Lynn YS !n11rld Glesl• · DEATH NOTICES GLIDDEN l \111111 h 11MI Glidden. Allt 50, of 11't Gevloll Dr .• L111un1 Bt1cll. M.mbtr of ao.n1 al DlrKlori ol Alner l~n Cancer $CKlt lY. Dl!t of del!h, Dtc...,. bl!' f, $urvlwd bY tiu1blnd, torn G!lddtn. of L&llUnl Be1ch; lh•N d1U11hitrs. Ann Eckt. Off Main••· low1; Ht!dl Gllddt<I, L&11un1 8e1ch1 c11I•• Glidden, La .1<1!11 : 11>". ee ... l1m ln Tr.om11 G!ldden, Jr_. Sin OI· 090; -11r1ndthlld i nd lwo 1l1t1r1. Vl11!1Hon 11 Pacific View Ch1ptl 1n dtY Sund1v untl! Mor>dav noon. Grl Y .. 91de lfrY!te•. Ml>"dlV. 1 PM, P1clllc View Me""Clrlal Per~. with Rtv. (, C. 111con ol Ofl Molne1, offlc11!1n,. l-lll11enf1ld Mortu1ry, Anaheim, Ol· rKtor1. LORENZEN Mlllf\t'lll 11.. Lortnun. ,t,119 71. for• ""'1Y ol (\7 1"h $!., Hunllntlon 11.-c11. 0.11 °' m 1t1. o.c.mw 1. Survl..ed bl' davtll'ller, MfS, Col" F ldct'l'ment1 mother el Ille life Ttd Ind s•-•rT MeKI. Aho lUrvlv.d bY brDtllll', Let.fer lt'""'f •fld ~ l is-t.~. Mrt. Art.nll Full""4111, MIU Gl1d'r1 R!ttfl', M~. Cl'l111(:le ICt Yfl uven tr•rMlctlltdr911 1nd on1 1re1!- 1rarwlch!ld. M""btr DI' Flrlt M1lhodl1t Cl>urCll. Hunllnglon 811c11. Strvlt11. S1turdlY ,10 AM. Smlth1 Ch11H11. FlMI rfl!lnll plec1, We1tmln1t1r M11'10rl1l Ptr111. Smllh1 Mon111rv. DfrKIOfl. SAMPSON Lllll1n F. hmpl<HI. AH 1s, of ms ~1nle An1 Avt ., Coll• Me ... 011t ol IMl!tl. Dtctmbtr 1. Survlv..i by hu" btfld, Herbert; 1111. Htrbtrt F .. ol (111!1 Meu1 brothlr. Murrt Y 0otl1y, L-11fftl'll 1!•1tr, Mr1. lrtN H11!h, Ml1-nr lwO 1r1n0"°"'' Ch1rlt1 1nd S'"'"'9fl S1m1>1011, COlll MHl1 tour 1r11\dc111ld•fl'. S.....lc11, $iilurdlY, 11 AM, 8ttl 8roedw1Y CNP•l, wllh Rtv. Devld D! Proflo ottlcl1lln1. En!omb- "'ent, M1lrose Abbn. F1mllY rtQ\Jtlll t111t tht rl bl llO rMrr-!11 conlrlbv· t1on1, &etl 11roadw•, MOflu•ry, Co,11 M ... , OlrKIOfl. SANDERS Moye, Glori• An11 Yt Rober! w. WnNlw•lt hl, Judllll Clll•• VI Jdln ltWll l(lt liC'll, EvtlYn HIH:l1 YI Ci.\'kln RIC111rd MMnnu, Sl'laron Petrkl• \'I D11t Pltrr1 Jtnklns, Doroen Ill. v1 w11111m t . Howtll, 11 .. YI Tllort'ltl 1'1•11 Moa<e, Shirley J . "lRoberl O. Mc(llmtnt, Klrtn . YI llobtrt W. H11low, (e•ol ,., 111 Oun1t S. Lel,..u, H1rold Arthur \II 011111 Gill Soue, SMr~ M. v1 o,vld v. Hafflntion. 11:111 A. VI RIY G. e ........ 111on. OorOlllY M ..... David f . Sllt lden, J1m11 J1., "' Kathtrlnt Jt1n Slftdero. Slll•lt" A. Yl OIVld II. Gt•Dllf•. Llillln G. v• Steollen Wt!IS, R11mond L. YI. Sll•rvl L. OUtr. Nanc, vi R-rt M1tthewi., G-fr1n!c VI Mary Elltn Untwortfl, JOhn Gordon v1 Cori Riii Martin, JOln J, YI Gtrlld R. Sl>f'f"m,n. JOln G. vs Harmond J. Sch<>QK•, Mart~• E, Vt How1rd GtrDMr, Denni• G. YI Liit M, Wetvtr, Ann Loul11 Yl E1rl J1mt1 O...lfy, Ml rtl'll JO YI Petet Ttrrl nCt Rima•. PorUrt1 Y• •011ndo $, F ire, Ort Mtl YI Aubrey II, 8urreH. G!lbtrl EU11ent "' S111h Sl'llr!tY, Rill M. VI ROfllld R. P1lnl1r, S~1ron ltt YI (,I ll Chrl1 P090GlllY Myr1 VI Edwin G. Cdn~Y. Gweodoll'n f . v1 H1rry L, :;"ti~~.n·M~~?::: ~H11~,e~~y~1\71ey i~~~.~t.!I':~ ~· R~~~~:.1ct Miller, Oetiorell Ann YI Fr•l'ICll P. Morrow, Thon>11 F. 111 SlltrOll L. Pe1r1<1t1. Mlrltm Ernootfll v• C1rnon Juliu1 Co•. Loi• VI R<>YC• Ellwtrd Pt1111lone. Cl\ervl Ann vs 51'1!ollen Rkt>lrd llalellOll, Gill f . YI H1me11 C. 8run11tr, H1rrY A. VI Rub" G•Y Sav1111, Wlllltm II. vi Ellltbtlh Smlm, Larrv DOllald YI D!1n1 Allee H1wley, Merv J e1n "' S!epllen Wavn1 Btnntlt, Carol I. YI Gerald R. Lewli.on, Sl1ona YI Eu11ene Dile Wiiiey, Jr., Ch1rles $, v1 Janlt M. King, Jolln Duene vi J11ll1nnt Rum G1et1, Be NI J, vs Jol'ln ' L1nOl1. GtnflY E. 11'1 J.mn . 8r .. 1w. A. lorr1ln1 Yf Cl1rtl'ICI ,, ••1111. w11n1m E. vs Sl'l1r6n H. COllln1, Elln• 11111 YI e111y Onn Oe Flon, O!•ff LN VI W"lllllm OewlY A1•l11i.on. Cvnml1 L. vs Ch1rln T. c1 .. 1m.,., Ml/"1111 L ..... OWl1hl L. Mllll'lirw1. Mlclle!I• YI llo!tnO Walet Dunn. No'"'' Jetn v1 am 0111 Mtl'ICurl, SlllrleV Yt Frank J. F1lr-amer, J11nne vi 01vld Lkrfd Hiii, Ellwerll G. Vt ShlrltY $. Kellr, Roxanne M1rll vi f r111ll: Herbert Herlflll, JO•tPh Yt (ynthlt M, Htldl, BY•Oll E.~Ys Juno E. 1t!btrt, Olive YI JatklOn 1"••cv, lttlll YI L111re hmpson, Emmell L. VI Ron Merli H1mlln, No,..,an Gtorte VI Cllr1 ST. Plf'f"rl, Lrn A. vs EdW•rd J, Grh!1111, Gloria VI Alllllony AnOreaw, ICl!hlltl\ Jo \'I Otrrtl! A. Mill, Erl•• I . VI Charin w. 8tl'll. H~d Dtn!ll V'I Lorr1ln1 Ml~ Jotw\ton, Mtorllnl vs NIH Ptr!Cer Hipp, OlllNI Kay V'I J1me1 (ll'Dt Plltte, (llrl M1rl1n YI Albert Ht nrY Wiiton, M. SUI VI Jell/\ F. Sl1pl ... Nellie YI (hlrle1 II . ,,.,.Iner, Don Grotllo,rv YI H1Itl 01rlene Bt ... Aill, Leonie VI Vltlor Collini., E1t111rDe1l1 v1 Timothy J1mu 01vl1, Jlll S. v1 Howard A. El·Hlnn, Jo Anllf VI JOHPh o . Stone. R01tr IC. YS Shell• 0. F innicum. TornmY v1 LOftlll V1u111. Jo Ann YI FOr!ll Hwh H1rrl1, Mi ry O. YI Wlllllm E. 81ba. 0 1111!1 \II L&11l1 P. 8e11w, Sh.ell• Ann v1 lllch1rd Kll'llld Bovd. IC1HY H. VI J11n A, Phlllkol, G•""'1"Y W. VI Al¥1 l . H1vlkll\, Mlrlll'll I. vs lllkhan:I Mt rtln Keller. M•rY L. VI (ltucM J, II. WIHll-MllrY Leu V'I Jl ll'lff A. A..,,.., Eva \II Wlllll"l 1lenllf11 lltct.llM. $1'11ron Atlfn1 vs Doutl•• "" P~. Edna VI Glll\1rvl'I Ar1y1, Sl1lll n 01n1tl Vots, ltofWll• vs HMICtl F. Hun!, 1tlckl1 C. v1 Su11n H. Ford, Sherm.ii A. YI Stl\Clr1 c. Jank-I-kl, P1uUn1 Frall(:tl YI Tl'!Omll """ 8unMl1, K1ren L. VI Ch1rlt1 I!. Arch ... , JK<lllilfn• VI Cl'llrlH Ill. W!1sot1. Murltl Je1n YI c..,..ttr J1m11 J1ck10n. Oontld 51dner YI Vlr1l11l1 Ann Wln111e. ~"''"'' VI C~rln J . M1t R•t, ROfllfd C. v1 Sltlll E. Truh!I!, OeUI P. VI Pttrkk A. H1YMS, (ll lrl LYMtlle vi Robert Andrew Jolln!oOn. Oorttn M. V'I LYN1t l1 0, 80Ullhlpn, Lindi M. VI O.v1d E. Cllurch, G1rtY R. vi 81rbar1 J, J°"l\IOn, lltlle Ann vi 01vld LH Wtary, P1!flcl1 F1lrchlld VI Ktn11<1lll Edwin More11nd, llrwlt VI H1rold IE. C1rro!I, Deborah L. YI Ron1ld E. 01r, Judllh ICIY VI G1rv Sweeney, llDnl M1rl• VI Robert E. DIYll, Oren Woodr-VI l llllt Annt (;1IOW.ll, N1ncy L. VI -t r J. Clerk, Conni R1t VI Ltrrv W11m1n Mtwr1>1, R-M. VI MIClll •I Wrlehl. Frenc11 ••II• YI Uw1• Conn LGYtrldtt. P•lll ftlldl ll YI v-- DAILY ~ILOT Slt tf S-111111 Co1irt Nears Cm1ipletion He'll Get It Ba~k Studenu Repaying UCI's Chancellor By THOM.U FORTl1NE Of "" Dlltr ,..-. ti.If IRVINE -UC Irvine CllanceU.. Daniel C. Aldz1Ch Jr. fU,.Uy II beJq repaid sc:rne ·of the money he pe-.lly Jooned lo bad nut UC! llludents arreoted trl Berkeley lul iprtng. Profel90l"I attending an Academic Senate meet 1 n g Wedneeday voted to contribute 1131.50 remalnlng fNllll tbtlr collection during tbt · aprins People's Park crisis to the chancellor. Dr. Aldrich's loan d. $900 ac- tually was to the atudtnt body but no money has yet been repaid by the students. The faculty collection was for legal defense of those ar- rested and '600 along with $150 collected by students was used to pay attorneys. The $139.SO left over now goes toward the 1900 bail debt. C-Olleotions foll owed arrest May 22 of Student Activities Advlltr Nell Malmherg and JO UCI atudentt who went to Berkeley on a fad . finding mislton durin& the cri!!lis ove r People's Part. They were caught in a police sweep that rounded up 482 pers:oN and charged with disturbing the peace, blocking traffic and maintaining a public nuhanct. Malmbtrg, who is ~. said chargts agalMt all 482 subse- quently were dropped at mid· swnmer because the officers who did the arresting did not wltne&1 anyone taking part in a march. Following atte!t they were taken to Santa Rita Detention Center, held overnight and allegedly mistreated by guards. Malmberg said he and one UCI student are parties to a suit charging false arrest are asking $50 ,000 each coordinated by the Berktley. Albany chapter of th e American Civil L I b e r I i e 1 Union. He said he has received let- ters from Berkel~y Police and Alameda County S h e r I f f saying thorough investigation has shown there was no misconduct on the part of of- ficers involved. Dr. Aldrich said in loaning the money he was not pre- judging the si t ua tion "although some people mlgilt well interpret it as aiding and abetting." South Orange County court personnel are 1ooking forward to a Christmas pres- ent scheduled for delivery Dec. 23, the date set for completion of new county Regional Civic Center in Laguna Niguel. Court personnel will have shiny new facilities and, at long last, a parking lot when they move from current location in Laguna Beach shortly alter Jan. 1. Building is at Alicia arld Crown Valley Parkways, closer to ul timate center of south county popul ation. Computers for Math At Huntington High IRVINE -The Huntington Be;lch Union High Sdlool District has been invited by the Orange County Schools of. actually lmprov~ s t u d e n t understanding and achieve- ment. It will also seek to determine the grade levels at which students are ready to use the devices, the ability level necessary for their operation and how to validate the results in tenns or student achievement and cost -e f. fectiveness. Ald rich said he loaned the money to the Associated Students Bail Bond Fund from a personal account of his own. This account he uses for loan- ing money on a rotating basis because he recognized a need lo help people out from time to time such as a new faculty member arriving on the scene. Breakatvay Employes Forming Ou'n Group By TOM BARLEY OJ 1M 0111, Piiot $1111 SANTA ANA - A white col- lar faction seeking to break off from t1)e 6 ,000-member Ora!lge County E m p I o y e s Association is continuing to canvass prospective members despite a stern warning from OCEA executives. Both sides in the bitter dispute will have to debate their points of view Dec. 17 before Superio r Court Judge Robert Coriman, but, by that lime, spokesmen or the spinoff group .insist, they will have formed t h e I r Independent org-*aticm. Judgi Corfman ref u sed Wednesday to ban t h e organizational meeting called by the newly formed Administ rative and Manage- ment Employes AssD;Ciation and its organizers and possible members met as planned at the Santa -Ana Community llospital auditorium. Co ·u n t y communications supervisor Tom Ega n said lhe meeting v.·s "a pretty sue- School Bo11d cessful , one" and that lt was ''designed to acquaint all those interested with what we are trying to achieve by breaking away from OCEA." Egan, 2 11 2 2 Lockhaven , Huntington Beach. said his break 11Way group's next ac- tion will be to hold an election v.·hich wJll determine the pro- posed Secession from the parent organization. Egan said organizers of the nevi em pl oyes group represented the opinion of "many administrative and management personnel that we are inadequatel y represented by OCEA. Al l levels o[ employment in the county group are expected to speaklthrough one voice and I just don't see how our own level can be ad eq uatel y represented in that manner," he said. Egan predicted that "possibly some 250 county employes will be attracted to our new organization." OCEA director John Sawyer dismissed that comment as "ridiculous" and argued that "many of those being peti·. tioned by this new group's organization intend to retain their membership in our group. "They a r e superfluous," Sawyer said , "and by breaking off in this marmer they do a great deal of hann to our organization. It is far better that county employes speak Governor, Um'llh Set For Talks flee to participate in a $250,000 Nations! Science Foundation program using computers in mathematics education. Administered through UC, Irvine, Uie program will begin next August with the training of, teachers to be used in the spec:ialized classes. SANTA ANA _ Governor A major part of the project Other school districts scheduled to participate in tile year-long program are the Fullerton Union High School District and the Newport-Mesa Unified School DistricL RegardiJ18 repayment of the $000 by the students, he said, ''I have not pressed them although I presumed in time, when they could, they would pay it back. '1 Claud e Dorais, associated students secretary, told the Academic Senate that students felt responsible for the whole debt and would repay the chancellor. R o n a I d R e a g a n a n d will consist of controlled ex- Assemblyman Jesse Unruh peri.ments in which carefullyJ--;;;:::::::::::::::::;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-- are scheduled 1o de l t "' matched classes wm be com· AWARD WINNING SHOE SERVICE keynote addresses Saturday pared . One group will be ex· Jt~ during a collegiate conference posed to t r a d i t i o n a I .in-' on "The Political OuUook for structional techniques and the California in 1970" at Santa other to techniques enhanced Ana College. by technological aids. COMPLETE SHOE O LUGGAGE Governor Reagan will open Most of these devices will be e HAND BAG REPAIR the conference with a speech In dustry-provided desk-top at 10 a.m. in Phillips Hall, calculators, with som e SHOES RESTYLED while Unruh will address students to be given the op-TO THE NEW LOOK! d t bl~ f J ch (P•l•t.I lllM ••• ln...iff t• Ro1u1d 1 .. n slu ens assem o:u or un portunity to acquire deeper ''' at 12:15 p.m. in SAC's student knowledge of mathematical ,--s CONVENIENT SHOPS --dining hall. aid! U..0U"h use of rented e MH I . COAST MWY. e 1101 IRVINE AYL au c......., Mir, m-.. w..~ltf ~Ila The conference ls WllYISOred computer terminals. eMU v~ L100 "'-' 1..0. ....__ ~,,-.· ' """"" ll9dl. '1MUt ••DllNlON'I by tbe Southern Caiifornia Among the questions to be •" •.UMJON HLANO ,,~ '°" 1111..,. Center for Education in Publicli~answ~~.,.~ed~by~tbe~.:I""~J:·..,:t~ac~e~1~·r~~~~=~~~·~··~"'~'~'~-~~..,~·~·~~·~--~~·~M~"'~~~~;;;; Affairs. Program chainnan is the US& ot computJnc devices Dr. Ba;bara S. Stone, Cal State Fullerton p o I i t i c a 1 science profe ss o r and daughter of former GOP Assemblyman Joseph Shell, During the conference, a number of prominent political leaders will participate in a series of panel discussions on current political issues in California. FtUDAY & SATURDAY SPECIAL! ALL YOU CAN EAT!! ITALIAN SPAGHETTI with Meat Sauce Arlhv• 11. SlnOlrl 111. '371 A!Mnl o r.. H1111tlll9!0n 8Nch. Survived bY wilt . Ma r111rt1 L. $1ncllrt1 1!1Pdeutrh- t1r, Joelll IClrtlvr t11h1r. Ar!~~· R, $11161,... 11 : two 1l1ltr1. Ptlrk!t Sit• •NI Ellubtlh KOICkrllll 1teplllher, l.. f . LubtMo. Slrvkn, S1lurdlr, 11 AM, Pffk F1mllY Colol\!11 Fuf!fr1I H~. ARBUCKLE & SON We1tcllff Mortuary Raise Vote Postponed D• } d y.•ith one voice and I don't see 1sney an what they hope to achieve by WESTMINSTER -An elec-breaking awa y like this." Panel members will Include Assemblyman Rdbert Badham (R-Ne wp o rt Beach); Assemblyman John Burton (D-San Francisco), president ot the California Democratic Council (CDC); Southern California Democratic Party Chariman Leon Cooper of Los Angeles; Dr. Tirso Del Junco of Huntington Beach, presi- dent of the Cali fornia Republican Assembly (CRA); Assemblyman Bill Greene (D· Los Angeles). and Pa t Livermore of San Francisco, vice chairman of t h e Republican State C e n tr a l Committee. 57~ U7 E. 17th St., Costa Me11 -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del ltlar OR S-HH Coslll M,.. Ml 1-ZUI • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 111 Brad"ay, Coltl l\teaa IJ 14433 • Dll.DAY BROTHERS u .. tiur;IOa Valley Mortaary 17111 Boda Blvd. Hulhlr;IOa Buch 11%-1171 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK C.metery e M-., CUpd SSOI Pacific View Drtve Newport Beadl, Caillorol1 lff.!70I • PEElt FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7801 Boin A,.,, Wetl.mle.lk:r m.as1S • SHEFFER MORTUARY Lap111 Beacb 414-1531 Sa aemeate 41UIOI • SMITIIS' MORTUARY IZ7 Mala S• Radn1ton Red U&-"31 tlon for the purpose or raising Sawyer argues in h I s Will Open the interest ceiling on $707 ,ooo Superior Court complaint that in unsold school bonds has Egan 's group acted illegally ANAHEIM Disneyland been delayed until 1972 by when it canvassed prospecUve trustees of the Westminster members during w o r k l n g "·ill be open to the public ~fon· School District. hours "and by using county da y for "Catholic Schools "We might be a b I t facilities and mail carriers to Includes Parmeslan Chffse, Crisp Cole Slaw, Roll and Butter! Day ." Hours are 10 a.m. to 6 premature in calling the elec-deliver their message to-=====:::==::::::::::,!! p.m. tion now," said Dist. Supt. selected county employes." ,. Scheduled for the day are John F. Land, Jr. "It's possi--His OCEA action also asks Final Stocls In All Homo Editions 2200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa et Wllto11 It, DAILY 10.10 concerts and parades by the ble ,tha t the interest rate for the awarding of ns.ooo in Disneyland Marching Band , might go down by 1972 when damages and identifies a performances by the Ag-we will need to sell the group of alleged organizers gregationpopgrouplnTomo~.~1>9r>~ds~."~=======~";·n~i~ch~m~c~lu~d~es~E~ga~n~.==~::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:~:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:::;:;:;~ rowland, and strolling jaiz1· presentations by the Royal Street Bachelors in New Orleans Square. During its winter season, Dilneyland is cbsed Mondays and Tuesdays, exctpt for special Occasions. It will be closed on Tuesday, Dec. 9. Laguna's Larsen Playing Santa GARDEN GROVE -Fam· ed Laguna greeter Eiler Larsen will appear as Santa Clause Sunday at the Danish Club "Viking" Christmas par· ty scheduled for 4 p.m. lo 10 p.m. at lhe Garden Grove \\1oman'r Civic Club, 9501 Chapman Avf. • All OranR:e County residents of Danish dtscent are Invited. The prict of admission Is 50 ceots for members iod $1 for non-members. ' . -'->-. Huntington Beach Office: Located at 91 Huntington Center at Edinger Ave. & Beach Blvd., adjoining the San Diego Freeway, in Huntington Beath. MAIN D,-,IC[! 9\h l Hiii, Loi An;•l•1 • 623·1351 Olhtf•lflt11: WtLINllll O"IC[: 31U w11"''" &111!1. • SN·1215 l..A. CIVIC ClNTll': :no I lro•llw''l' • 629-1102 • TAllZANA1 117&1 "''"'~'·!!I'd .• 3-'~4114 IANTA MONICAi 711 Wllthlrt !ll'd. • ltJ.07•C IAN lfllOlll01 tOlh & ~41Clllt1 • Q'-2M1 WllT COVINA! t11!1W1C1 Shopp1ri1 Ctr.• ia1.na1 IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD ••• Huntington Beach Office of Coast & Southern Federal Savings, where your account is IAFE • CONYENllNT • AVAILABLE Mtrktl nuctuatlon• don, worry COllt al'ld Sovth1m hY'IP9 •.• rMlt capltal II .tw.,. """' In VllUI. And ~·,. 1Uf9 ol 11'1• hlvh•t umlngt contllttnt with utety whM you ""' at Cout 1nd Southern. · Fortmott ••urancti ol lh ... bentflt:I II flt outttandtng flnanclal 1trength malnlatned ltuouoh tht yea11 by th• ~ 1g11mtnl ot Coa1t 1nd Soutf'lem F•dtrtil S.VlftOL INSURANCE TO $15,0llO/!ESOUICU IYEI 108 lllLLIOM !'ANDlllAMA Cln'l 1111 Vtn Hur-8!Yd. t lt2·1171 LONO llACMl H.IOHEST PREVAILING RATES 5E,~~ 12.:,~ .. ~~y ~o:.~23 DIVIDENDS TO DATE OF WITHDRAWAL • COAST 3rll l LKult • 437·7411 S.tJn"A AfllA AND SOUTHERN FEDERAL SAVINGS LOAN 1•111YICI AQUteTi 1~ No. M1ln IL • {714) 6474211 \ •, I ' • • . ' . : I r . . . . . I ' I . . ·' • . ,...,,,,__ MR.MUM CHECKING •UP• Marriages Rocky In Atlantic .City Dy L. 1\1. 80\'D OUR LOVE AND \VAR l\IAN has filed the fact lhat Atlantic City, N. J., is the in- fidelity capital of the world ... 00 YOU KNOW what would sell well right now ? Mustache cups. I mean it . , . , IN TOKYO, THE LAW says you can't buy ;t car unlesS you can prove you have a place to park it , • , INHERITANCE TAX RECORDS sh:nvs most niil!ionaires put about lv•O· thirds of their money into cor. porate stocks . . . EVEllY TWENTY -FIFTH SOUL you see on the street l)OW wears contact lenses. G OODNIGHT , SWEET PRINCE -Suspect you have heard the report repeatedly. About this fellow or that one. \Vho drank hls numerous cocktails like a pert e ct gentleman. With never a slur in his speech nor a blur in his eye. Until suddenly be sank to the floor in complete collapse. Now there's a medical ex- planation for such a stunning p e r fonnance. Occasionally 'rhen a man is exceedingly tense, the pyloric valves in his stomach clamp shut. Eveil· tually, however, he re laxes, and they open. Then woosh goes the alcohol into his bloodstream. \\laiter. would )'OO kindly call this old boy a ca b? CUSTOMER SERVICE o Q. ''What's this 'pod' you refer to, dad ? Not marijuana surely. Do you mean •pot'?" A. Look, young fellow, it's pronounced "pot," but spelled "pod." How come you didn't know a thing like that, boy? You been gone? ... Q, "WE'VE GOT A BET on as to bow much money parking meters lake in. On the average, J mean. It's less than $100 a year. correct?" A. Correct, s.ir, considerably less in little towns, a little less in the cities. FICTION -In my daily work of late I have occasion now and then to read fiction manuscripts. The l h i r d paragraph of one such piece, which crossed the desk yester- day, went: ''Looking backward over his sboulder, the blond quarterback surveyed his rear-view reflec· lion In the full-length mirror; then smiling in appartnl satisfaction, he curled up Jn the overstuf£ed chair with his feel tucked under him lbd f;J. ed his nails while he' 11aited f'-' the coach." Can't aay wtiat that writer will do ia the future, but that quarwbl<k will never make it to the pro's. IF SOME C ULPRIT snatched )'Ollf purse . l~ay, how much money Would he get? Don'l answer, it's an im- pertinent question. Merely in· quire preliminary to report the average take in purse· anat.chings nationwide now runs approximately $4$ ••• j'I NEVER HEARD 0£ an old man ever forget.ling when he hid his money." So said the Roman Cicero. In reply to that ancieflt claim that the elderly tend to become !orgeUuL lfe got that right, I think. MOltly, the elderly forget only what they don't think is worth remembtring. RAPID REPLY' DID I SAY l\.1ary Tudor lost her head? Call me dum~um. It was Mary Stuart who lost her head. Your questions and com· ments are welcomed and will be used 10/U'never pos· sible in "Cheeking Up." Please address your mail to L. M. Boyd, 'in care of Daily Pilot, Newport Beach, Calif., 92663. SPECIAL! ALL YOU CAN EAT!! ITALIAN SPAGHETTI with Meat Sauce lndldn f'nllla11 c11 •• .,, . Crisp Cole Slaw, Roll 1111c1 llltffr ! 2200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa et wnu. "· cr..:"d::'::.'·..:o.;."::.'"..:bt:::...' :::'·..:1..:96:.~ _______ _:DAIL y p~~".__J. Survevor Army Psyehologlst~s Opinion • • To Provide I ~ • .R.evenge Ci~fl as Mass ae re Motive Ke v Clues SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -thildren and other civilians In ROTC student who was sent to nlixture or insecurity and • The fint psychologist to serve 198&. Vietnam •fter reeelving his patrio11sm." with the Ann y m Vletnam "Things like this havt OC· doctorate at Yale, said the ~le said Vietnamese women PASADENA, Cal l!. (AP) -says if U.S. s 0 1 di, r s cUl'ttd before, but not on this nature. ol the war meant aOO children v.•ere dislrusted, Lessons which could guide the massacerd civilians at My scale_," he said . "My own ex-stress was always prtse~t. He because the. Viet Cong in·l deaign of Interplanetary La' d b 1 perience taltlng with special said no area \Vas consklered eluded ...,·omrn in their rank s! .pa-art for years •• com... I, revenge WU un OU ted y r b . safe f-m am"··sh le-isl ' d h I ......... w ..... th · u orces group$ w o were 1n-.. . .... ~ ' ••v• an t e youngsters were apt to may be learned when eir mo ve. '"' volved was that they were aellvdy or s.ruper fire . The ' be thieves and begga rs. I Surveyor J's television camera "It's a central part or our always CCllMCted \f:llh the ~su!tant tension was the ma-He said breaching of the and other parts are returned society," said Albert Ka8U. death ol a friend or buddy. }QI' prob!em eacountered by ''killing barrier" and the in-I •· Jet ~pu151·00 Labora•-· "We see it on television, in our p s v c h 1 a •r I s I s a n d w nv _, chiJ•-• , nd ob , "1ben all the stops cnme " . ,. . • fluence of "professional a!Ur 21A years on the moon. """'n s cops a r · btrs out. There wu an incredible ps~~logists: working with · soldiers who enjoy killing" on 'Ibe camera, a soil scoop. !~~.In our treatment sense of rey_enge. They wanted so~s 1~ Vietnam. . young recruils resulted in a two pieces or tubing and to kiU everybody they could by There 1~ aw enormous fear changed attitude toward kill· several lengths of televisioq "We all believe we've got to the most hideous methods and yoo thtnk eve ryone Js your ing and brutality. cable.' were urnoved front get back at someone who does possible." enc.my ," he said. "You c~n't . ''Once you kill , it's a little, Surveyor 3 by astronauts something to us," said Kastl. Kastl, a bearded 3Q.year-0ld believe you can trust tbe .. Viet-dirft!rent after that ," Kastl I Charla Conrad Jr. and Alan who spent a year at the Hrd who was 'a strong supporter of namMC, so each oriental said \ L. Bean during their walk on Evacuation HO!ipltal in Vief... the war while in Vietnam but becomes a potential killer in •· ==· =======::::; the moon Nov. 19. nam during 1985 and 1966. has since marched ln antiwar your mind . I,. Now in quarantine 10 Kastl, interviewed at par ad es, said o the r "The American soldier feels i Houston, Tex. along with the.. University of Pacific Medical psychological factors Included he Jlas to stick with the wbile \ astronauts and 90 pounds or Center where he is a ~llnical the continual stress ca~ by or black race . It 's ool a f~l­ ·moon rock, the Surveyor parts psyl'hologist, said retribution guerrilla war(are, prejudi~. ing to be proud of: it 's not in 1 t •• 1 . would be the strongest of and changes in values once a vogue. Bu t 1 felt thal wav1 are 0 uc re eased early in several factors which could l · · 1 January and sent to the Jet so dier crosses the "killing myselr while t v.1as there. Propulsion Labontory here, have led to the alleged killing barrier." "\Ye felt that whatever v.•e where the spacecraft was __ o_r _hrun=d;l-.l=s=o;r =w;o;m=e;n;.=:i:n>;;~:':;~;:P.:;!Y;';ho::l•::g::i•::t·=';r;o;nn=er==d·='d::w:as=:· '*':=Y::·:;':;' :;w;,:as~so~rt:..:;•I:..:•' made. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY 11 ·~ no! eondition~. hul •hr n1ind lllonC' that can make anyone ha11py or n1iS(lrabll'. -Sir Roger L'E:stra119e PJtESENTED 'AS A PU&LIC SEJtVICE i:lo'EJtY DAY aY: Elhausti"" studies which It 's Hab it.forming . may take up to a year are ex-Don't 9tt wtll'J. "'ld ltary. BUI Lrary's OM·llnt comments on tilt world aroUnd 11' ci n lee Roofing Co. MOD Er~ ·ROCKETS • . ' FROM EITEi INDU\IRIEI ill w .. , • ! ,., ,, .. , ... , ; ·~ ScieflMi( I ·-· t?i' , I • ' • ... N'\ e Trethl kl,;, e MocMI Co11t~I Ol"EN 7 DAYS TED'S HOBBY ond RACEWAY e RACES FRI. It SAT. NICiHTS 1 p111 to 9 '"' 1111 HAllaOR llLVD. COSTA MESA-S4 ... ltll pected to shoW: be hablt·formln~. Chtck tod1y's Gr1ffltl by Lta ry. ,4 Ywu 111 C•ll• M.w !OJ su,..ri.i-1tv1. '4l·ln1 J. The rate of degradation of --...'.::=========================:;==L.._.!1,,=:::,,,;;;,,,;,;;,,========;,!I=========== the materials from solar1~'::~"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""'""'..;...,~ ... ~ .................. ~ ... ~"'"'"'""'""'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'"'1 radiation and meteorite lm-11 pact since Surveyor 3 landed in a lunar crater April UI, 1967. 2. The degree of color change caused by sunlight. T h e spacecraft, originally painted white, was reported by the astronauts to have turned light brown. 3. Whether any earth microgenns oil the wl.!ta11iz.. ed spacecraft survived the lunar enviromnent, in which temperatures ranged from Z50 degrees below to 250 derrees above zero Fahrenheit. "What we learn about long- term deuadation or materials in space will have an im- portant bearing Oil the design of the vehicles we plan to send lo the other planets - journeys which will take many years," Milt Goldfine, coordinator of the studies at the laboratory, said in an in- terview. · '"It may be that materials we are using now v.·ould not survive extremely long trips and we will have to find .aubstitutes. Also many s.ignifi- cant change in paint color would be important because we use paint to control the amount of beat reflected or absorbed by spacecraft." Goldfme said the television camera -probably w o u 1 d r,ecelve first attention. ''With. il.s lens and fillers, electronlc cir c 11 it r y, and metal housing It re:preenta all the material likely to be used in a spacecraft," be said. After examining the camera for surface damage, scientists: then will see if it still works. If it doesn't they 'll take it apart pieee by piece until they find the components that failed. From this they hope to learn how cameras can operate in· definitely in space. Surveyor 3 sent back 1,315 closeups of its landing site durlnt its fint 2 weeks -one luna: day -on the moon. It was shut down for the two week lunar night but failed to resume operating on com- man::I during the following lunar day. The spacecraft's hand·sized scoop. which dug the first man-made trenches on lunar soil, will b! studied to see U its joints and hinges function. They may have been welded tight by the cold vacuum of the moon, which v."OOld tell scientist& to aher such design in future planetary e:r- plorat~. DAILY 10-10 Big picture console-•t t •ble model price I Wh°y settle for small screen \tiewing when you can •njoy 1he life.lik• r•alism of 2~7 sq. in. color pit:tures plus outstanding M-anwox perform•nc•. Colonial model 9414 h•s Chroma - ton. pl us many olhtr quality features. Also •vailable in Contemporary styling. Your choice, t n8.50 BHutiful Mobile Color TV-Contemporary model 631 0 will bring you ye1rs of colorful 1n1ertalnment with big 227 sq. in. pictures, (;hromaton e. Quick-On , plus fsmous Megnavox reliability and fine performance. Use on anrac- 1ive mobile c•rt. (optional), tablas, or shalves. t 398.60 The Ideal Second Set Comp1ct Color TV-will dalighl you with its ~iv1d 180 sq, in. color pictu11s, Chrom11one, ind m1n't' mo11 M1gn111 0K <1Ut lity f11tures. Modtt 6260 m1y bt u1td on fin1-lurnitu1t c1r1 or on 11bles, shtlvts, baokc11e1 -in anv room in vour ~mt. *35960 Option1l mobil1 cart SWIVEL COl_VSOLE • only s47950 SEEIT FROM ANY ANGLE/ i You'll a lways be "front·row-center" -when you watch your favorite shoi,vs on ~ model 681 O I Included among its fine features are: 6rill iant ·color 295 sq. in . screen l fo r life-like pictures; Chroma1one adds deplh and dimension to color, warmth to } black and whi te; Quick·On gives inslant pictures and sound; Color Purif ier auto- matically keeps all pictures pure; Automatic Picture-Sound Stabilizers {Keyed AGC) " for optimum performance; and exclusive Magnavox Bonded Circuitry Chassis with ~.F. Stages assures lasting reliability. NEW PORTABLE COLOR TV Enjoy blt ·ltt p1tform- •nc1 I Model 6224 h11 102 10. in. 1cretn, Ch1om1ton1. Ou ick·On, 11 l11 copi ng d ipo t1 1nt1nn1, pl us M1gnlVOK lasting reli1bill1y. Wonder- ful 10 own -i nd to give. td11I for 1helv11 i nd t1bt1s, too . •299eo Compl1t1 with Mobil• Cert KERM .RIMA MAGNAVOX Magnav ox Bonae Etate rta.i1anaen t Ce n ter Factory Direct De ale•· 2666 Harltor llvd. 6155 We1tmlrilter 12116 ,,s. lrookhur1t 1289 I Chapman Co1ta Mesa , Callf. Westminster, Callf. Garden Grove, Callf. Garden Grove, Callf. . ' EXPERT FACTORY SERVICE - 5 46·169' 894-2350 530·4360 636·1250 Lay-A-Way Now No payments 'til 1970 ~========~~::::::::~::::::::~::::::::::::::::::::::::~::::::::~1 • - --,. rr I l Je OAILV PILOT S r.ij11, O...~btt 5, 19., Your Money's Worth Complete-New York -Stock list Bulls and Bears. ~rw VOltl( IA!fl-~"" ~ltlt S.ln "" '················•'!"•••••••••••E•I tw Y«i Slock f.acr..,.... •r""I 'Ifill\ lllft.I Mlt1i l • er ... ,.,, r l'IC4'rnlllllt VOhlmt; -A-'·i:,f~~ ':!l'" i'f: ~ ~ ~:-h 'f".r.p·-:r. Ii OVER THE COUNTER NASD L l1tlft11 for Thuraday, D-mbar 4, l"t hie• 11111 C•t;TC~ \. ·>-~-.i. I + ~' ;o lllU.l ltlMI lN Cl ... C C•i'ltf 31\\ ~ flCI !Sir-I ·~--:. ':"""...:. ::i:-.:n.:...-::r:"' I# '"t: :;-.... Ml.ID, ffl~ut~~ ff ~'n Jtlo ~J'W, !" V. •• II l ~ i!,~ \ .:: \\~"rt t", l'i; "' I 1..-. I' 12\'I + ~ -nr lt §" l?t: =I•~ 0<1'7J 11:. -Tt 1~"""4~ Or.-w1o1"'b ~ 1f1\ ~"'::1 ::;'· ~ ~Y) ~-~H {!!..\ ~l'I ~~\-t"f: '~ J'~ ,J: m: ;;·.,. 1!r~1.l :'i i .. ~ ~._. ! ~ ~~i\J...~111 It. :NII" llY ~Miii ·~ .... 14" ., = 11-a 14 Sil:!: A ~ 114 M llt .20 " I • lm + ~ '· C•• .... 11'1 ·~ "hf'"'"" l .iO Now Obs olere? By SVLVJA POR'fER lt you own 187'-1, Y<l'I ha,·e a pfolit so far in 1969 of more than 14 percent. If you own Control Data. your pape r loss 10 d ate. is a Fat 19 percent. 1f you own Standard Oil ol Ohio, your '69 gain is a \\'hoir ping SS percent. If you ha\·e Union Oil ot Califo_:nia, your y ear's lcw is close lo 43 percent 1r you're a 's hareholder in Polaroid, your gain ill more than 16 percent. If you 're an owner of Bell a nd Howe ll, you ~how a loss of 8 percent. It ha& been tough enough to pick the right industries in this year of geoeraUy sagging sloek prices. Assuming you. we.re smart e.1ough to do so, though, you al least might have expected that s tocks within that .righ t industry \\"OUid go up -even lhough !!Ome might have gone up much m ore than others. BuI as the Boston invest· ment firm of Vance, Sanders and Co. points out. even this consistency within i',idustry groups or stocks has been lacking this year. lN FACT, jf all you looked at were the above price con· -trasts, you "would be hard put to tell whether thert has been a bull mar ket or a bear n1arket Jn 1969,'' U1e firm remar ks - a d d ing that the terms "bull" and "bear" could LEGAL NO'l1CE ,_ SUPaRIOR COURT 01' THa STATI Oii' CAl.IPOtt lllA l'OR TMll SOUMTY OJ' LOS AMOl!l.l!t H1.NO P n l ttOTICl OJ' SALE OJ' •llAI.. Pl:O· il'li•TY AT f'RIVATE S•LI In mt M.ttltr pt Ille E1i.1t ol RUTH El.LA TET'TEl.1,.,CH CL.ARK, "'K"' ltVlH eLt.l!!N 'TETTELllACM CU.Rk. AKA lllUTH T, CLARK. Oec11~. Ne>flet ii 11etfO'I' glvlfl lt.-1 I~ VII• 11 ...... ltl'llll wlll Mil .t Prtv1lt Site, to Ill• "itllesl 1nd bit! bldillef, 111bled tll ~ llr""'llon DI 111<1 SUC>erll>r Court, Of' e>r ltf'ff tT>t 2Jnd d1Y Pl DKtmber, 1Nf. ti fM oftlce Pl KOSTAS "'NO POTT ER , At· tl>flltYI 11 1.1w. 38306 Norllt flh Strf'tl Ei.t. '•lmdtlt , centornlt , tlS50, 111 tllt 1lfhl !\!It ~ lnltrHI of ••kl dect••td t i l~t tlmt DI dttlfl Ind 111 flghl, lilt. •nd ieterest 11111 11>e es111, of 11\lll dect1wd l>ld 1ca11ire<t bv OPt ••llon o1 1tw or olherwlu , olMr lntn "' ln ..:idlll.,. 1o m1t ol !il ld Oec .. t•ed, ti Ille time ol attlh, Jn i nd to t i! 11111 tt rllln rll l o•o-~,.,,. 1itulled ln IM Cwntv ol O•l llff· s111 .. of CollfOf"nlt , 01rllt11lt rl• dnc:rlbtd •• 't~~:"'~ and ic ot eicc~ 11' p1 Hu" 11.,,,ton lle1t ll 111'> Sl•eet Secl•on e>I Hunllnt1Cn ll~t(~. •• dnl11n1ltd 11'11 Cll!llMl!od U"'1 I Cf!rtl i" lfllt' o1 Sl\d lrKI. recorded ... P•Dt 10 ol llQOIC 4 "' '"' Mltt•lll"'°"' Maps, recenl• ol 111!:1 C-1'1' of Or•naf, s11te of C1lllorn11. Ttrm• o1 i.tlt: Cnll in 1twf11I -y DI tl'lt u"lltd 5111H on contl•m•llon e>'I 111e. or p1rt ce)l't 1nd bll•I'« Wldenctd b¥ -ie-llCUf"llll 11'1' Morlttte or Tf'lllf Offtl ...., lllt 1.....m sa sold. 'TM! "'ctn! el trnounl bkl 11 be ~llN with bid. ekls Of" ollt•J to bit In wrlllnt •rid. will be rKtlved ~I tttr aforeJ4ild olf!cr II 1nv t(mt •lier the nm ....,bllc•lion h•rfol •rid btl.,..e d1!e ol 11le. D.\TEO lftJ.i 71th di¥ of NoYernllf•, ,., •. lf'l>f' Ncrmen Cllrll, ,\dmlniltrotor ...,,II !Pit Wiii "'"naxo:d ot Ille Eslllt Ill Seki O~••td. llCOST•I ANO ponER ••• ft-ll•ttf lt•fl P1....._.1t, Ct lll. T•I= 1rn1 Wlnlltl>f 7·)1!S Allarflw• ''" A•mlnlslrt1.i-P11bll•ll..i Drlntlf (PUI 0111¥ P1lct. Dtcombet S, 6, IJ, !Ht 2261-49 LEGAL NOTICE 110TICll 0, PUt LIC Nl!ARIHO' HOTICE IS HEREllY GtVEH 11111 the C itv c .... ncn el lllt Cltv of Co1I• 1<1111 wilt held • public lle1 rl"9 tit! Otcemller 1• l'6t. " 111e IK!Ur o1 1 oa o'clock p.m .. ~r' Iii 141>" 111.re11ttr •• Ille miller lfllY be 11e1rd. Jn !ht Counctl C~1mbl!o" 11 Ille Clfv Ht11, 17 F1T• Orlve. Co•lf Mtst• on Ill• tollowln9 a~icrlb!!d r•ro"e .,el!llon: llltlOlle Pet•llon R-116' le>r K••om I. Ftnn. 1Sl4 PlacenH• ,.,v•nue. NtwPC•I IHdl, C1ll!ornl1, for •ffmlHll>ft to rtron• l.011 I 1!ICll 1 cl !10Cll A, Tt1CI Ill, J1 lllOW" Ct! I map rtcDt"d<'ll ln lo\loc•lllnfOUS Mlo>i 11<>0!( 10. aH f 1, •tce1"1• Pl Orl fl<lt ccunrr, lrHn llfj.CP " M;;.ld re1I ~roeerlv 11 loc•!•d II 10t1·l'09'1 P11centl1 Aven~. Cos!e Mes• NOTICE IS FURTHEll. GIVEN 11111 1-i ff1e lime ">Cf place 1bo\I• mt nlloMd •"¥ t rld 111 ""°"~ lnletnl9d m•v a-If 1!'1d ~ llt••d b¥ 1~ Clh CouncH .,. '11111 Jltll>rl• Ptllt!°" 11_.17~ C. IC, Ptt!EST C!IY Cltr• of 11•• Clfv of (OSI• MllU ,ublklled 0•1"9• Ccttl D1U1 l'l'e•. Dou...-$. 1'6t "'l-4f LEGAL NOTICE P-JS..J• CIRTll'ICAT• 01' 1ui111•s1 "" ll '4MC~ n"f.11r1t ,..,. 21'1* " 6 •1~ llfle •I I~ H~ ~.._ l IA ~11 ~ '-II +!Iii ·c1 cl .tl.U t .,. ~ -_, ,','I ',~•n"~ f l!O S.C\ltltlet 111 Sii f1.I t \(o It $11\fr 71'1 ' 11 (,,_ jSlll ii; ....,., tit • 1 ... \~ 111 -\G IQ \.OtP tt !• 2111 i!C' "' Otllff._ llllj , •t• con \lb 511'1 sa"' JI GE 1W. 1 'fl 4 4\lo ~!::tit 1.411 >01 4 4 \o'i +"' tll.....CI'' 71 >t !1"'1 F1tH1I r l become obsolete In the years r:w I ,.,,,,,. ~ lr 1~ \~ ~·'j 1t 1 YI ... n r § AQUltf'I t:' 2~ l l? l "' "' Yi llln .iAA.MI 4 :t"'., ~· Vi +I F "'"~h .tu ahead as th• d ivergences in •• 1tt a. °' e Hluc: n.,, 1 11 • " " c11 W• "'l' ' ·-1 1o '" 1nli' 1v. -. 1n 1111 \ ,. u• it• .. .. 1W''" • •tock prices within any given •~ ... • ~' ••• ""U !i"l"' '" ·~ ~ " NG l:i ' "" ••". ·~ :u" "" " lt "~ '"' -• . '\ •i• >M "" " I -"~· • •'<• t_,.Ol!hnl tlv 'E~ov I~ 1 i RtK l j V. NE 'Tt l 3 i 1-J I rk-1 t4 11 6" 11'1 + ~ 1 t "» 10 21111 l'OV. loo -"' 1 nlkoi, 1 induslry group be(' 0 m . C:-11 ~. Eu'b.f;• 1~~·,4: A r G~ 1• ,f• ltf..~ l~1% I ~ :i:::~~ i11 20 2071 2t l:1. ~" ="' :.1 'Ji11 j" irt? ~ -. .:.:1 "~I Epl~J.fr ...... <o "\ w E llM""' 4 I NW H1 tG Hit ~'lo Irv t l'I \lo A Mill ~ IJ 2\•i 21 !ill -, J·it '"• IA ng -Ii Pll Gu .Ml le 'he th II ....-· -IWtll. n••· 1 "! D\'I W NW 1>usv 11 1~ .. 1. 2J'4 11o lldor1 --" 15"'° 2J~ + \'I ~ :MllA _ tt o<le Pow 1 .o grea r ra r an sma er. ""'"" ~rllttt "'°' o 1 !\ ,,.. Muc1 bt 11 20 111 krw JO" •• ~lr.l"'• ''°' SI 1i\~ 12'Llo ,, -" 1 • ,,~ 2,.. ! -" ... "t=JP~1.1 ;, Th I lhl ClllllOf tllroo,M1I>-111rov .U I Af1 1"11 ll'lolo lln HPlll 14.. 611 M t SOYt IO !O -Al 111'1 ti ~ '"' 'l~1 l.i _ •\ F s1"1 1 e reason or s! Agai.1, llUI' 11111 H v. Pr1c11 111,. Jl• '" .i• 1o w11 21\1, 2tV. r.r1e str 1111o u A'I "~~ 2.41 » ~ ci'i _.. -~ "'" . 2 ft ' v. uh -""F ,. 2.0J1 tlO ntt Jncludt 1Ml• • II\ t i'> 1 k•n J..I S1 lr•w Cl $1 5J I"" "'J 1 4•(1 Af\-1 .U.,. + V. 1 .o x~ 2 ~. JIVt 21\'t _. ~ Fluot p1 Bl it'• lht ever "i d en in I ,.t•H ...,kw; ntwift It~~ j rnDlll • •~ bK Tv J"' 41't : w, ,'·! U6 :io'\ 21 gv. ... a i.t .t. II:: fi +111i Fl'f Tl''' 1o re~ ,,, c-. .,. C•• 11.~ .._ 1191 Tl" ,..., ,,,._ tt F ti~ .... II "" m 21v. !!:• .--..., tuntA b " 2 ... +• FMC CP ·u "institulionalli.aUon'' of the "'.. 111111 on 12v. 1 r HA 114 l:w. 111111 Fd 11142 ~ : "In ''~ if H I\ 11o -+I Fl 111 ;r· ~"' 1 •~ .-. \~FMC "'2 ,.1 "' u 11V. •le TllC ,,, ii· i.{'1 11 I 1m1>JC 2) 11··' .. Pd ... ' 11 • ~ -"' ltellltirt nc I ... l I .... i li FoodF•lr" '° l k I W'lh Ml Corr >•ii. 11tr1n 4.S~ Iii ( trf HV. I \.'I T1-r I ., ... l 301'1 :IOV, +l ,,_ .JI .4f 21'\ro l' "" ' O • S 0C marpe , I SO many r-•Jll-t AFAil'r 211 F C.q_ 6 !: P1 1 er .U~ 4 \Ii l••~'-Ill~ l '4 :n st:',.'-" ,nn ~<l If. JOI\ -~ llanll" 1 n 4\~ ,._ .e\IO F:::: ~I" .IO of . I . t . • ~ ~-AITS Ill(: )Dr, l Iii F11ttld T • Pac AlllO )\Ai j T•Ylor w 12 U'h • ' !!\II JSU .... llaHoWI l.JO JU SI\\ ... 'Ill\ +ll't F .. pr ess1ona s, I e c u r I I e I "VM ~ Ml 10\lt "•rrlM 1•'4 1 ,..c F•E )1\.1 '5\lt l t ...... nl 111'1 ltioii At"-' II ... .. !' • "'lil" + Vo e rMol , 1• 1, It -YI OOI• .2G analy~.. 1• 0 y • g t m e D t H n. R nf -'CIM I t it lOl.li Ftft-1 Ml IS3 151 Pakco Co j ~ Tn11 A~ 3V. •l'I :~ifch1lm I02 ·~ 2 74 -10 rn lb t4 ~ ,, W 'o -" ~~ 2 •• • ew • uean e r O, 0\\IJ}o Acmt R :ti JI Flt losl U 41 P1ncol l!f II.Ii lt.-rm A W. ·~ .Cll I tV. ltlo'i I ... Y 2.61 U 51 Si''t 5fll +1 Pf,..., 1 man'i"'· •'·. (an es"-ated er and a d rnlru'slralor of •tt ~ 1t1't 20Y1: FtlG RE 2-11• "1,1,. Pit-D'1 " u 1.1 T111nv c o "~ 15\li :!",,~•-•, ~ •», ','!.~ "~ tt•~ +""' "nl ·11!'!. >.i 11 10'° 1 ... ~~. -~, 1~ ""' uu.< All' 11.t .f\I. •""' J11io J>,a. P1r•w " l PA 16"4 Tlffrw In t~ l~ .-'"" 17-11"o\ ... es 1 1.... J JS 3, 34 _ ~ • .--..1 .......... Js.000 now) studyt'ng· ev•.,, La Bea h N . Alf"Wn 1 1~ ,, 11 wFlll '"' •l'I P1111er P '"' Ml jlT•n Go 1ov. 1 -AMIA' .511... •7l lP~ 17'.., ttu + ,,. "" hie> 4 11 ~• ~ .. 1. F""1 wh p1 1 ~1 "11na C UfStng Alllet H l' '!~ ""M l!ll lt'lo P1 .... 1i. 11 lS rac Coa SV. f !.... • U\.'I !'l 21 -\ii ~,~ l M ... \.\ .'f\fo + ~ FOICbof"ll . .C company in e\fo>l'\I detail. the H .. -· A!Mrl OOA 1 II FIRhl ""' 2~ Pffl'IH T JJ 74\oli rnc!'ll 0 ll"i I Atn' •E• 1>12.60 s 411 Jt :M -Vt c ••I Ill 10 '"" 12 n -\1 Fr1.-Sit ''°° ~·i ome, haS been elect• "lie., IHI UV. I \Ii Foad p $'' P•l'I Diil •i'f S~ Trncnl 0 l \'J "4 m fi1u .159 114 JO'lo 30 :)O~'o -I\ hMSIPP cl JS Ji . It'll It • l'rlltf> .... I 1.eO different fortUr>eS Of differe"Jt ,ed' 1'-'den t Of the 1,100 Am tV ,,_. •\4 !°''' 011 11\~ Jl f't Ellllln ·~ 4\t Trtrld In 71 21\.'I ~T', ",, l'll.50 Jll '61,lo 6S1~ •HI -11'1 I" pl Cl S ll 4 '1• 4 0~ -'11 FrvthC11 1.10 companies within the same in-'mem ber Calilorni·a A s· " A••t J"" t~ otoc:hr i" )\IJ Pllnn Pk ~ '"" Tr11111r n 11~ Am8 Arr In .eo 36J :ioto 2fh '.IMO " 11 PntuT ' 20 l.St> >.i•• » -1 1 ~in A Pto 4'b ru OSI Grnt 3214 \4 Pl G&.W 2''4 16* ltl(O Pd '9 lO ..... ' I/• -'II 6' ..... 3t\!o 40V. i >,:; h M"'lc I •l H 25 M + 11 F11<1111 1,. .t71 dus try are to un.. s oci·ati'on ol Nursm· g Al1111 G" ICl'lo ii Four St• 241~ 2s~ PM>ll w. r1~ ,1o11 T¥1on Fii u.,., i.v. :m:ir•nd• ' Cl5 J7h :ie1. 11 ~ ~R1P cl""' ,, '°""" 1~ y; ..•. GAc c,. 1,)11 bound be Altdl!!a "Vi f<otom 1 If P-RE lOV.10 ... l roolct :>tlV.31 Alkff .7SI> tSlJ U\\IJ -. \~hRIP ttUP 1 11V.21\'l!!l:\>t,,.., d d I •C-marketpJa Amide: t41o n'o l'rr1ltl (p 71\ 7'6 Ptrlnl I l\'i UnllK I • m 0 1 IM 1112 St\"1 S5 57.. 2 r,rkf'ul .60 40 lg.;\ 101<1. 10 + !'GAF Cor_p «I erscore n 1.uc: ce. Homes. ""' 1111n la 11 Fr'*lfl E 111'1 21..., !lr.11111 " "2 un Dl>llr ,, 2~ Arn c1n t.20 11s •s·~ !'"" ""~• -·~ • en '°"!'~ nt 'j 101,. 11 + Q GAF p11.N There on't be "oils" or Ii Et Liil •V. 1 FlllY'IW J!ll • P dci l>f ~ ,, Un 111um ,. lf\I. AC•n pf 1.11 • u '"° 2s + 14 c cvllf~ ' 2 "' 22 221/11 + .,. g..,, Slco 1 30 w ---------------·IA"' •I!!•• ~ ,, FU0\11.,, ,, •• I SUb :IOVi 21\'IUn M<Gll . N ,-,.s~,"' l3 nv. 11 11v. +"' ,en PtPI I 13\> IJ"' 13\11 -"' ams pfl h "papers" or "steels" all act· Am Furn • Wt Fwut IO •V. 1ow. PMt"' ui.. """Un "'''° lN 14 .. n ·" 14 :io » JO -v. ..-11 "4 • " 27 2t }1"' 1ms .,,,1 60 A G,..11 " ~ tr1n111 1s 1s.u Pie •. llP ,,._ S\li I eknot 11y, 11\lo Ame, •.ott .to 20 7•l~ 7J\~ rn• --. "~!' 2 400 llll lH'o 3''~ 1 Gllll'lln ;1 'ng the same way ~-. wi'JI Am /nsd :n 2' 11 svc 1•1'> u~ Plnkr'I" 1' n u crwn w. • Ai;rysu, 1,ci 6 22\' 2210 1fl\ -,.. 1.ci :io u 21\:o n~• "'G •• I • 4 UQ AMlt I 114 ' Alrcft SY, ri Portr HK ~~ ~ Eowtl 2'0 'n AmCy1n 1.2s 221 27\'I 2~ 2t!O -\'I ' Pf4.7J l6G ., 6'\ii 61 l '"G!~Oe..-1 JO be hundreds ol COnlpitlles with p· LC G . A Mldlco ,,w; ~\lo KINtlc: :m p,., Golf Uta 'l\11 us il11G1r ....... " """ w•llll 1 11 20V. 10 10\.'i -'-" n ~ pf 4 1271 51 '11 561/o 56.... \~ . .. precis~y defined stren~. ams :i, pct: 1~ ""(? '111.F11 1~: J\'I ru:l ~';: ,:~ 2""' e: ~~~ 1",~ ~ll :8:.'11\n :tf: ~ ~~ W1 ~ 1'1~ :+: ~ ll~s_1.1..,T~:. l= 11 ;r:i 1~~ Uim"• :..:1··· &G[~n ~~~.· kn d pot 1 11 .\l l G pf n. f14 IOtn IS UU Pvb5 NM 25-loi2'\loV11PI Sl.d •V:t AOutl ot.Ua 7 lJ 2~• I ,.. oFI .... 1116' l7•"o M>oi '+I,\ ...., wea esses a n en s m t11v 11 11.,. ~· ,2V.4Y,Put1S NC 1! l~ 111 1nc1 :io n Ame1,;: 1.61 •U ,,,, a11i 211.+1"' ,11usv,..,2 •• 1n ,,., il11 41 +v..GG~,,'"1",·~ 'Jh' •'-~ .i;... Anr..111 • n1~ ,,.. •Ii.If lJO J2 Pllbllhr l \'I ljllo VII 1.0 1-llo 9\lo Am nW1 l 11 '9\~ " " IS (VP••.µ J n~. ~-11'4 -7'~ n ..... . .... \\'I tn r.>n: groups respon'lr.lg 2 Co "'*'" C ro, 1\lli 11_ W '51'1 :m Purnt 6\li V. V1~ $.e 17\\ lt ~ :111 trwl 104 22\lo HU 2lVI \. '\t t,!r. lnv,,,30b »J l'IO 2 27h + v, GGA!rOll MO I th •'d d . d ~. f unty "'rcttt M :J9 3' lob 1t11b 4V. \lo P ltnnet 211 2t Vl•lron 3S11J :l6Y, A •Ind Pl.U 000 64 63-61 ,.1nv II IJ2 • D . • + 'rl -'••trl l . .O o econ .... ere JU gme ..... o Aru lrld 111Jo itvo ..ill CK 15""' 1 Purltv s1 11"" '' vtv woc1 211\~ ~ A '"1n1 .\0 162 15 ''* 2••Ji + ~ ltv•-1'" ,.40 13 10~ 1°" \O!; t.,, !!!~ •,•nc .56 the pros "'"''" M lt 1~ LS IOU !lit POUO Co SloO ~i ld1w P 22 24 "' nln PO.II) .i J,S•~ loll~ l.lh -I.ii '" ~ .a 2' l.S :U jJ~ .,. ......., Miii It • ...roe .. pf Joi » c ' ra lll1d OVl'I ISY, 11Vt w Rtldt IVI ' Nl!He>hl .10 IO 13'• 17\'ii 1311 + ... l1r1r. I ,41 !I 11 ,~.. 1 I'll Gtn Cl11 1.20 AS Ml LL l ON S hav e 4rk Mof' lJ\~ l:J.I~ '""' s.c ""' 40 ••U 'Tr•I 10 11 W1rt1>w 1 1u A Home 1_40 111 "~' " ...,~ '""c," 1,.-s l a """ 41!Jo -1 G110ev11 741 Co I A"lf'N H 47 '9 rtlfl Ml 17 17Vr R-nM, El 31\'t l2.... uh NG 16~'o 1 ..... A Homt pf 2 1 h t S t6 + \'t t•v ~II flM S7 Jfi!t f:~ :l'2 + \.lo G .. oynW'l'I I d iscovered lo their sorrow in mpames Z~'t1o1 ~~ ~m ,r:::,.r£ 1~~1}:~ ==~"~:'fl ~ w:IPl'T~e l:"" l:)l ::::1n~'1:lO '?! l':~! 8!; ::;~ :.::v. ~.p l~p ,,1 m J.~ ,1'" tt~ ·1··~g:nFf,':f ~J.': this dismal 1969, it's becoming Awlo kl is " ,.,, 1w. "Iii R-Eo ,. 111 ebb llt 15'4 t~ AmMFdv .to 111 lA'• lll't 11:1,.; -1· ~ell "' · ~-a • :mi. '""Gt" Fd• 1.60 .Ver more d"ficult '· be a Avt 0 I A rwlh I~ 1'3.i ljU ll.11> Ml<I 1' 1'1h Wtldtrn 1$>4 '"'" """9tclll 1.40 lit llh Jl"io n~ +1\4 ~:. 1"' L. ,•,•, ,',11' 20:~ 11%. + ... Gt" Hot! ll w . . • • • II 6\ft 7 u d Cll s .... Ill ' cm '1'!l ""' • lflQ 2204 2~ AMetC•~ pf 4 J II t.l'lo jf " •"" 2'.2 • l \fo -.... G•n l"•I S~t successful d1>-it·yourself in· dlst"b r •• I .. " ' ¥ro0n '""' 11 Rold E• 2 Vi Wiles• p IV. • "'"'"•I 15 ) 6$ ll'o 3H't Jl \IJ -1, • ( • "" Mllil .u Vestor. 11 utor o natur., gas n 1 P11n1 '"' w. ·-• s n ,. bb\11 M M 'I w1tn l'fA 1"\IJ 11 Am Photo .12 310 11~4 u u"" + 11o 1~,'if/ \lt_ 7•5 !,., !!'I.I ao Tl\'t t~Mot 4.Jl)Q Sou'"• C J" ml pl •-8'1'11tilr C f!'o ~ t rlfld J II 17\lo ll11$1!lon !""' '1 W1!n MIO ~ '"" AResOv .lor. ll• 19~ 71''< '91/11 -+1~ 0 1 11 ·•• .,., •• 2t"O T '• c; Met Sol ~ Here a r e other price varia• 1.1n:m a u o a, ans w 11"Wd! 1?:! :ill ..,.,. 11 N J ""' c .. 1 v. !"' W•ln Pub 14 14V. Am St11 i l 21•, 1~ 11,.., . . . ,010 P11 1.~o 1u ,s.. 44', -u -(" G Mot 1>fl 1s . I 0 ,........... t11ft p 1111 Miii'" 11a1 111.:1 •us Stl>Y .. )I Wll'IO Wll •141 ·~ ...... Shl11 60 11 7(1\~ ltlli 10\lo + \') olij p ofJ.50 lfO S7 S2 n + h G MCI Oil 75 tions within industry O"Nlll"" acqwre wo range '-"'Y.ll..., -" .,..td " s.ffi ''"' 11.v1n H• 21V1 11i~ Wlnbta 20"" 2114 A smen (" 1n 30u ,,.~ :io>.< _ 'Ii co111n1 Alk 1 " w 1 wo 2~~ + ~~ ~PC•m :. o·--~ reaJ estaJt deve•~ment .....,.._ ltvlt•u 11V, 12 Hldoc Int 11,lo S•dller 1 1.\11 WlflllW T !'4 2'4 ArnSoAtr .70 l • ll~ l6"r 37 -'-' ColH"RH .IO U :tf'~ 341~ J9fo + 11. PubUt 1.69 select.ed by Vance. Sanders. "'}' ........... llt•dlm ll1' :WV. Hutlm'I 14 u Scl!ll" E ' 5\-; WIK Pl. ~ ''"' Am SICI I \OS l2\4o Jiil.:. Jl\li +lV. Colotnt•I 1.61 '' l1U 36~ 31"' +1 " R•l•KI The dates are t• •t ~ lo l "l l· paaies, it announced Wed-1,.,,. •,•,..'-l 5-\li 16~1 Holm EP 63 67 Scl'llft In 111~ u wrdlw !" ""' 3\0 Ams1111 Pl• 15 6 ljj 101 11, 1o:1 .... '. Coll hlCll lr :x4.I 71 2&10 v -I'< "' 5io 1.20 ~ """° V" ""' t'b JIM r 2tl'< JO Sci Ce>lr JV. :Jldi riaM W l•Y, 1t'' Am 51tf"ll 4 21 1•~ 2f :Ill -Ill Coll lft "U,1$ l<J Sl Jl'lo SJ + \~ 5tllrld .JO 69 -dur1'ng wh1"ch -"od the nesday. S.rk H• "·' '3 HouJI Flt j'4 ?\~ kl lrld ~·" ~ Yrd"" E ''4 w. A SW•• 1.'<I !J '• ~. 2)'h ·····CBS I Cb 20t ~·· ~ 40\1 •. Ttl El l..S7 .. -• • lletz I.lb UV. """ HVCk Ml u.1 •14 Am51111 pf ·" 10 9'Jo • '~" ..... cas pf I 10 79 71'~ 2t + I.fl GTflEI l>f.I M Dow.Jon" industrial stock Paclnc•s boa.rd of directors emuo\ w -,.. 1\11 Hiid PP 31\o'I ~ Am r& T t.llO 1307 sot.. so ~• -h co1~G11 1 . .0 s1 ~ 1sv. n•~ +•,. 1Te1F 011.u • I'd on lS l! Huo Gii 14"-!~ AmWWk5 .56 21 t li •~ •~1 •••. CoNPlcl '°" SI 2'11 ·2s 211'1 +II~ lfl ollll.30 avtrage d«llned 9.3 percent. ag re.ed to aequJre Dun D Ir'<"' 1'"' Hu''' fj ti B MUTUAL Awws"' 1.2s 1100 1'~· "'" 11v. -'h ce>rSoOti 1.1• 131 11 1~ :io _2,\ •nflme .ao P-~· Corp (Sa (a 1-aCll. Ht H~tt CO ~ ' AW pre! l.1S zl7tl 16 1~ lSj"• -\~ CombE" J.40 • JI 7m n 1~1 t11to en Tltl! lb COPPIR • v~ .. ea . 0 n l'Qa ut IEI )I'> t G•• 14 AW 4.lot 1.43 L2lo0 2Cl'/o 20 -2Cl I -'A Com1Sol¥ ,«I 101 2Hi m' 11V. .. H\ enes(<'> 1 .0 :~!*'" -51::~ for ei:change of 500,000 ~ ~M~ ~\~ i~~t 11n~c@/ ~ :::;.,~~"'.'Ga 11 '£~ Y:Z n:i .:..:·~ ~:::~~·d 11;:;: ,J 1f ... ID: u •• :..:.1 =::r '1'ici10 01uo1 mon share and Frede"""-8ol c11 121.., u nlrerd Vi '"" A'"1,c1nc .IO 31 s111o ~ jl)\i -\>o corn e ..,, n " 1,,. """ 241, 1., '""'"eP1s 1 S •-a.Ill &1rd SvJ -411 .i tnl Cont 1•11 UY, A.MK Cp .JO 109 26'~ U'li 1~ -~ComwOll :.0 10. 21 • :ia11 ,,,,: \~ I Pie .IOI> Dev.lopmenl Corp Of Fulle•-a,icw, G 7SV. r•v. Inell s.,.. 16\lo U A.MP Ill( .4 103 56 S•l4 S6 +in corn11111 kl I" JO'~ 21111 30, 1,~ 1P1c 1>11,64 Lillv (Erl) +"-'"• · wu 11'11;1 Sc• 221' n lntrm In lJ 111~ FUNDS Ampe• Core> 119 u •;, '3'1 44V. +li~COl!'litl 11 51\~ 5.5>11 511~ +i" ~Ptc ort . .o for 275,000 Pacific I l~ting ·.~'. '•'• 12 n lrli llW•PI ¥1 ,•,\~ ~· •• ·r ••.• ,•, ~.,:~. ~w'" J,•.~ ., ... Cone Mlll1 1 14 14'• 14'\ 14\lo -'" .~ ....... . .....,.. !I u• 14>~ ~~ fnl M111 2<!Vll \.) ,-.. • ' ' 1 ' ..... ConracCp 60 :U 11" JI"' J2\ + •~,. '!.~"' '' -Common Shares "· -mpany l uduv 10'.li n Int Ncl• '"' 1~1 ,,.conc1 .1111 2.lJ 19~ 21"1 ! 'I c ' , · 1 • •• "r." P "" , • '""' '""' urnuo s lt nv. I 1 5>n 11\lo 231~ AnchHock .IO t• "'' •t•l 41 t·, c°" d 1 1,IO lU 21•1 ""' 251~ -~. G an1 PC .60 'a d O ' l n SI lS l;Vll AllCOrpN$v I 4 21 ~ 1J 1 &nEdl1 1>! 6 12 191t 79''4 19~~ GllH"ilt F•n I . c:11t 1111 :u 1r~ /::i T'Zot IV.. And Cl•~ 1.20 :n ID·~ «l\11 «I\'• • ConElllll pf Ji 24 64\? tll~ •l \} _,,~ r.11<d Lew A& The acquisitions, s a l d c!1 JI';: U\~ 'S " I 12\\ IJ\~ AINIC~CI> 111 111 :IO'·~ 20 20'\1 :..·~· ConFood 1 16 126 41\:ti ~i "°'' -\l Gllltllt l,«I c lt\\'1 1",i'' 20 21 c -r.. Aqu• c1iu n 31 49v, •1\'o "'9'>+1'h c°"Fd 01450 •lo1111o.11.,1011V.t 1 r.11n~1er 1 Pacific Lightln~ President r:::i11 M '' 77 1:"Uut11 ..,i;, 301.4 NEW YO"K CAP! lllllelkN'9 Grou1: ARA Svc ·" 29111" 115'~ 115\lt-3 ConFrt1Dlll I l3 ,.,~ 'l\i , ••• + •• r.tt" "'klfn C1nl'IM 9 :11 G7 Jt<obl F HI JV. -Tiit JollowlM llUO-IDS ncU .S.U !.51 ArchO.n l.•O 10 561• 5Jlo ~~. -l~ Con Le1Jtnt1 22' 1~. 10 1~1 + ~o r:JtnAld o! J Patil A. Mllle.r. .. onUnues our C1nr1d 5~\ Sl'J Jtcoun c 11\'t 11'A l•llons, -lied bl' Mui t ,7J·l .IO ArhPSl'C l.OI ff Mt'1 ~ 20.>t -., ConNtlG l.16 131 15\1 25 lJ\~ Ri!C~I Pl2.1S r ~"Id! bs r11> S-1•\~ 15V. Jam W•I 7 1 ... ll>e N•llon11 Auoc:i--Prw '·" . .c.J ArllnJ OS .20 51 ll~I :n 1)'1) +Vt Con1Pwr 1.fO 11J 33'• ll lJ11 + \1 f'i.,...! Mt rl" program o r uul ng SU Lan-ceo 1"1" ,,_,, ru jtmes u v. ')l't ••ton o1 s.cwtti. Stock n.21 2'.u Armc.os1 1 60 111 ,..,. 21 uu + •• ConPw 1>U.s2 zlO 61 •1 .i • ,:lobeVn .111 t'·' -·"ted i... .. ' • r:,,,.. •" > •-'I > " •• ,~. ll'ICw trf S.iocl f.71t f.« A•lnl>llr l . .O J •llli 4 ~! 43"'11 -~l ConPw pl4.)0 1790 •1"11 ,, e2~ + 41 .. oodrkl! 1.7' 1 ... J10nre5.... uuSznesB Ill i..rte"" I ~~ 6" ~~~"'j,.. \'I n ~ ';fites •I whldl V•r PY 7.111 l..S7 AAtll'lr pl 4.1S I 56111 56'1! 56~1 -1 ConPw pl<t." 11lG JI!~ 5170 511'11 -Vi ~~ea,,,• "' other fie:ids " C1rlr ao )it 71 IW 51 7' 72~ thtst ac:urttloH 1"¥ Rt$11 5.02 5.'9 ''"'IC~ .IO •SI J.410 JR< Jol.!'i + 1,~ Co:H'tAlrl. .50 160 l:P,, 11'~ 1Jlli -\l iOr'<:I~ A .14 • t.tK NG ll~lll't 111$1 al It 2lil c:ould ~1"9 bffl'lltlel n,.un, •. n~~l\,°'jl·:J J !~ ~~ ,•,, 5! +I (1>ntC1n 2.20 12 11Vt 75\s 761<.+~~~~~~r: Dunn Propertie s is primari ~1n111 1114 .011i 1tvw 31 Jll'I r.1<1 lbldl or bou9hl 1n 11 1 ........ A ~cu . ... •• ,... •... Ct C1n pu.1.s 110 '1\\ uv. 651'1 ... ,.; bY 1.:. I r . W• ~ffl VPS 17\ii 11\lo lkl Grn 41• $ lsll.tdl 'ThUrMIY'. 1¥'fH ·-•,.•,, •,-", A~ ,. or~ ·~ lo' 2•!,, >"> ).!, -Yi Ce>nt CllP .30t xJO 11'4 l~''r 11 "' + ~. ,.;~:~" ·~· y a developer o mdustr Ch1•1 ,. I~ I\) 1¥U11_ 4'" s J nc...... • . o ~ .,. ...... -~. c1 COP ~1.H r 100 u v, 1~1'1 lit). .. ,., 1 c · and , comme· ~al bu1·ld'•gs. f~,,;-L~ • .,.. •1• T 14\\ JS\(, Aber111n t1!11' ~t k_Mnm-·· 21.,J21 • ., ~r"°1f1~,r:· "1 ~:..: 1:,~ 1;~ ~;1 ,,,,, c-11 7 '5 '°'• •11' Al'• +1 ~~ r.~:~1:: ... 1'::0 ... .. ! 12 13 •!J•" t""~t~AdYllfS ,., 1"01 (¥11°71F1~~lit14 Aud BreW lO 12\' IH ~2" ,::ci co1>1A7 50,,., 4~ 4s .rn1 . "•1ntW lffl Fredericks Development is an ::,m11~ ?11.1 rJ •;0E ~41<11 AHlli.111 1:~ 1:19 c~: 8119.16 11°4S ... 1SdfiG 1.20 12 44': 44•: .... ~=v.E:;::~r 1~ rl r.~ r.:: r~i+"·gilY0.-11.70 b 'Id . 0 ~· Utli 15 1' !S•Y• Fib 11\'I I! Alul•t 10. s H.1S ~Ill 84 I.fl '14 :u:T PO 1.20 5 31'1 llV. 12\l -., Cont 011 ·, 50 ,,. !S~ 2•t• ?S' l .•••. citN!r~p 11.:i 'cpantment w er in range E,,,11f'\1 ;: ~ RW.icP~ 2l11o2:£?:::,,.~ .. ~ 1 1:~n::i c:: ~~ ~:~ :::~:n'c:r:tr 1:~ ;i ~r· £:: lll~ti;~::io~:1 ~r·1 ~ ~ •• ~~; ~!~=1~~:~~~i"f: oun y. Christ 01 t1 101 klna In• 17\4, lJit A1nc111 •.ao 6.:11 cus s1 n .•s1•.11 c~11<1 ! s 11 " 1&'1 n i,,-~'•cont Tel rr ,1 11,, 2n~ 21"' !r.1 N n St•rlt ·S "• •LICT•ONICI ,,, .. +u.1·~ M•llOl'Y •If.I"• P.\PIJl t ~lt. P111er .... ~·. H•nlll'lerm\lt ·11.1;, SOl'T Dlll lNllCI Cl>CI Colt +11.0·• 11.0Y•I Crown .JS 3'• STE•t..s -· 1-3 00• v.s. 5teel ·ll.<r.11 "Jllll./RUl lllll Goe>dvur •••. 1 .. (ioCldrkh .;w.go;. Gulf Tells Earnings i 11rrrre : n~ it:~:; v~ ~~ ~: :r. 8:11" \i~ l:'.13 ~~! li tn lli: :,A\1,1:?,,,h"~~ ~ 1*~ 1~:~ t~~ ~5n ~~:t,3~~~ .. rrx\:U'~~~~\~~~J1!~~ ~~~~~.~~4 ,..,,.,. ... ,.. .. ,,. .... .,._~·"'1. l••-Mf 2• 2s K,..111r 6'1:.W.-'mGrlh Sfl •..a Pollo• •11''' lll~ml 131 2!•,;ia 21 -'\cOOkvrt "MI 3'3"'-18 JI •ll'o . ,"0 l•vlon p; l\lo I.MC 0•1 ""' 3\!i ""' llw un1v11t Knlckb e.tl 1 5t All•s Corp 7.t.I" 4'i 4" 4•~ -<• COOPerrn f 4o 11 16,1 25,'t 16.,_. +I'> ~t\l.P~ln .<n Gulf Oil ~ Corp. today ' reported it!! consolidated net income for the first nine months of 1969 w a s $472,677,000, a two percent in· crease over the $463.$94,000 earned in the same period la st year. The earnings were equal to $2.28 per share, riv e cents more than tht $2.23 a share. for the first three q uarters of 19118. Increased earnings were in part accounled for by record volumes of crude oil. con· densale and n atural gas Ji. quids produced in f i e I d s outside the U .S., a nd of natural gas p roduced both in the U .S . and o verseas, ac· cording to E. D. Brockell, board chairman. However. lnese. ••ere offset by rising costs of operations as a result or new labor agreemenl.!i, in· llation, and a substantial in· crease. in the e-0rporation·s tax bill. Rapid Bu ys Irvine Site Rapid ?.terchandising Co .• ~ C!!nl Mtr t>~ 10,_. 1.tntt '" l6V. 21\IO "'m Mui I ... t .IJ Knick GI 11 75 12 17 "',l o Inc••°'"' Ill 11 17'~ ll + '• COOPer Tff" 1 21 1 ~: 171"a 1111 ..;;::" s',,"1 1 -~. i. C\1"1°" 0 711 II~ l'ldl In 2\'o J\'o AmN Gltl 1.00 l .19 tfW Gr!PI 4111 7S ' 6 llfl>rl • u 1' n •o n•• -·~ Coor>T ;1 ?S 11' 11~ 11• . !\ • " Ii,. Clew Co ,,· '1\':I Li nt Will 14\~ 111.l. Am PM 1.31 1,0,, •~ tn~tl t . .u io :ri :u•omtn Ind 16$ 111\ 10'4 1110 +lll COHll.,;: i.1o j Jfi·' ~ Jt•Z -,, ;:re~llo<l;"O 1 •& ~:'e'.::. c: ': 71,_. l::~= M 1h~ lif' A'(;c::ft Gr~~o1 t.to Lr.:e,r/ch 1~_l~ ltf. .. :~: oFJ ~10 l;J ~~:,~ nl'• i~:~ 1, v. COl>PR/,e .SOb 1•1 11\~ 6.P~ n,, +l•l ,.:;~~:;,nCp l :~ ~:\Es F 21 , '"1 1.etlll vLd t2 :;,• 2911 ~~: llJt 1~:~ l:ll: f~~ t ;; i:~ :::r :;.~ '.~ 1;t ~~~ ff Vt fi:! f :'! l:m\11Y .1~ 1: J:,~ J.~ .~!:~ .:..: ;~ ~:;i;1~~1~ ir~ ; omC•l5" Jr..; L~ t:~IH'c~ 11~ J~ Fd '"" 7.1S 1, ... LIM! S.37 5 17 :v::i p8111-: IDS 161 166'' 1/if + l~ l=11J.50A ll 2if:~ 2ff....r. 2rn t'l;! ~~:: ~II 1.)11 , om Clt 4J .U\li Levin 'Tn •'h •11> Auoc:it 1.26 .ll _..,11 Sl~lel: l ' 1 » lp,jj lfl'i 17'\ ····Cowin 20· ' 11 " 11 11 i "R eir~-. ~ om 1n1t 21~ J 1.1:w11 !F u 11>.~ "''"'" 6,12 Mt C1n111 40.ts 40.•1 -B--c~elllcli1 51 :l'2 ...,._;1 411; 66,,. .:.:.·(, ..;\',p es 111.111 -"l 11'!0 J:tv. LlllY EH ff\lt tJ'i'I ""' Mlluefttr>,.= I I! (1plt l lMI 11.60 CPC Inn ,:,, 2si :m. 31:t4 ll -",;,u .. ;.~ot' ·;;'. C-'! tt \;, ")) CIOllW 6"1 7 Fund A ._ • Mvt U.&.414.64 ltlK~ 'N 1 • .W x2TI lJl:. 2J 23>' + t Cr1nt IAOll "21 0 ~!'~ •1•1 + 1A " lt~IJ 1i Com ~.·. n v. UV. Loll cov S\lo ' Fund I 7.~ =·~ MINllft l"i! 1.:11 IHrOU'T .u .\6 721. 17'"1 n..£ -·! l;rec!Ull Fl" I I 11·~ 11~1 II•\ -'•"~"Cl! :i/~ ' ~~ 04 '°,,) l~:i f-M,,,,'"~" n_,1 U'h ~~Cl t .. 5"31 ~:u ~:I, \i 43 \~~ 61HGE 1.1' lS lll 1tl• 7'Q -\'o Crem.aKn .IO 6 151• 14'' IS\\ + 1-'o "'11l"''ln 4ft• -·· .., "''" • ,t '0 '" M " ,, ·, > -ll1IG 1>184 SO DO 6J 61 6J Cro111eHlnd 1 17 72>.{, ~ m, ... -:u1no.< pn 75 Cmo Cm 31',\ )f'.-'I Mtd G I 12-. n.~ lltbton · · •n t U. I I.•~ lll'IOPunl .o !JO 17\~ 1 1;, UV.+\" CrowCol 1 071 JI' 28>1 71 77•0 -1 "''''"" ,., <n NE W (UPI) Finance Br iefs YORK ~ /~:, ~ 1ftt •"":?'\tit!' 1ru 111~ lr.r. ~~' 1~-~ 1•1-{: ~\r..-s 1~·;: 1~·;; e•naP .,, :l s ,.., 21•i. 11~ -n~ c·-~ c"rt. 210 1P.. 1S>. i.~• + ...., ...:,,."" :n ., M adison Squ are Garden Corp 2 :11 60 • \~ [' 1111, ,:., ·:n M~O°" 1"13 ·~ lti:t: or NY ' h ~&~• -·~ ~ ••.• , CrwnZ ell 1.60 •1'5 ]5\• l 4'" lS'.• +ll'l "11"W of! IJ and Phi.tip Le VI' n 's G. & w'. ',J~" c " ,rn ~:J.~" ... ,. 2'9 Jiit O•-St 1 'l 1:u Mk! ... Mu" ,:n 1.l6 s:~ti0Ti' 21J11 j~ ti~: 11•:. ;t.~ :t: }, ~;.~ ~J"·~ I~ ~'"' tt ff,., . ·~ ';ul!on Ind •• 1~• ·--M1nln M 4\i ·~ I Fdl'I 1.,, 1.17 ~¥ Co H.lt IS.IO Berd Cll 1S 11 51 '~.~ 5111 .~ Ci.ldeh¥ ~o " ll•i 12'"• IJ'• 11~~ L nd " De I I Co on l:oc:~ 2'\'J )I M•nor c 10 lOV. OS!Otl •. 2 1.81 Mood¥'1 13.65 !'.fl ll11lc l"c IO 7 15'0 I 15 -,, CYdhV pl! lS 6 11'" 11 1 'l + ·~ a Ve Opmen ,, a (I 51rl1'11 l'lli 4Vo Mtrm Gr 12 .... 14\'I l rNd SI 141J 1$,1J Morll>n Fund<: ll!i!I Mio" S 9•t t 'oi 114 + ,, C111Ut1o1n j1 11 ll !1 21 -1; Hlt~Wtt 11" 2 )611 31'~ 3'•0 ~ 1\ J'o1'nt ........ w1"th Gulf & C~·.·.·. ••i I}; M lrl>Wr lJO'i'I :n lklllock 14. l5!? Grwlll '-'4 10.61 8 l~I Ml DI I ) lJ\'o lJ ll + "· Cum"lln .ltib ll Jib Jl'i lA\1 -1 Mt lllb\Jrt 1.0S IQ.I 55 51t, SS +2 W .. ternlndustrl ... Inc said _,I. lt',~20Vi Mt0.'f 11,. 1ftldn 11 .• 720.l ln11 .. l ?6 t OSe11hln olt)O ~I.rt •• ..,·:..:.·,i;curt Wr ... z 4 )'1'~11hll'1 H1"'"'Pl1>l 7J76'~26 ,. -1· -1'"" J'lo m MIYtr 0 40\lo " ~ Fd '11 •. ,, tnc:om l 9, 4.lO ll•lh Ind 10 20\'o lt 20\' Curl111 wrr I n 19 II~ 111\ -,, MlmWat .561 10 !?'Ai 12\t 11\oi + I\ • ., ....a S 2S 17 Mo:dle H lt\~ 21 •P8ft'I~ l.n t.01 IF Fd 1.1• 1.9) lltUJ(hLD .IO )I 71 If 10\• -l•'r Culllr H l.20 2:J l6'"o 1''~ 3''• -I\ M1"1mrld .10 !Off It" 171<, 17'7 -I'• !hey now are considering ~T,,vr 11.:. """ MtdT•n .111• :tt\Co 11>11 trrv 4.11 AM IF Giii s 6t •.u 111~trL1b .10 195 :ie•7 ltt~ :io _ ·~ Cvcloos 1.IG 1 34\/i w~ lJ'\ _ >i Hlndlmn .60 1o.s 31'• 31•. 31v, + ,, c.... 25'6 2''.-'I MtlO•t 71 ..... IDll Sh~ 1.15 7.ts Mu OmG 5 :iCI .S.65 l1vukCl11 )II 10 101, 10 10 ' C~Pt\l"'I I olO 24 51Y. lll~ j ] \. + ~ Hind 1-jlr .11 7 ,, •• 77.... 2W. I re'°lvl'ng Jhe•'r rl'Vai b1"ds for C,..11 MP! 11 ll lch Gen 11'. 111. tnl Siii' 11.U lJ.6' Mu Omln 9 1110.51 lloarlno1 i t '6>.l 40'> "I' -,, . · HlnHCO f(I 11 16'0 1. 16,, = ,~ Co 40\lt 42 Mldld C• ll'Jt 12 t MlM FllrldJ; Mui Sh•• 11,17 11.17 l!ll Fds l 72 1''• JIU ); ' -1' -0 -H1nn1M i.lO ' 16'0 31~1 36'• + 11 c ontrol of Roosevelt Raceway "'1ch R lOY, 11 Id!•• · 5• "" e111n n ..s1 U.64 Mv1 'Trit J 50 7.S!l 1••t Fd9 pf • 1 ,.~, ""' .,,,, -• H1n:our1 i 10 51,~ 56 S6 _ •• Lo l I nd , , , t Wlttt C 10~ 11\lo !<tw GT 11\lo "tt Com SI 1 71 I.II NEA Mui u"ft¥111 11<k"1an j,(I lAI 491~ d 'o 49"4 +i~ 01n II.Ive• I• 111 11~• II'• ll'• + •i1 Htrrl' Int 1 lO 14'~ 11•• 13~0 _ '• on ng sa 1na JOln ven·Otnl'Y M 11~i1W. OltGIJ XI 30 Grw111 61•6.tlMtlWSte ttl t013 8tcl 0 1ctc·:io 53 .0"· .,. .. U8na C11 "1i:. 21 1J ,,, .• 12\J-~H1'1CO(pl lt 19~. l \~ 19••-•• tlat1 Os.a 11 11" Ml!• V1G 11\\ 111 !ftCoOITI 7.f3 •. 3, NII Incl ll.00 1!,00 Beeth,l.,r iSll ~ 19 111: II ·,, O•r! Ind JOb "6 .SO •9~0 .)I) -\> Htr!SMr• .llO 194 JO'" 30'1 JO'"+ 1, ture. But they said 00 agree• Ollll" P R:O I o Roell S\\ R'o PKI 2,M l.10 M1I l~vtt I JI 9.0! lletco P~I . O Sl 21''< 2''!1 n•.~ -~i D••I Incl pl Z I lJl/o ~!,, . .U1,\ -... Harv Al I lO 167 2~'~ l~•t 251•1 _ '• ment )'et has been reached. &::1• ,/;~ ~:~ l~'.-'I ~=.,iclJl 1:a ,:... Chf~~ Gr~~~1f 12.5' M•J,1!~' 105fl ·n J.I n:wi~w ·':: l~ u:1; ~; l:~ ~1:\ g:~~~d t. ~ ?': ~tt ~ffi J:~ + ~ ~:~1ffi° 1:~ 1~ J/~ ,I{~ :O::l = i\ CHICAGO <UPI) -York· Shipley. division o r Compu· dy ne Corp., has obtained a $1.4 million g l)vemment order to make fuel mixing and water healing units for trailer· mounted field shov:er baths ror troops in combat ione1. l)o<'Pf In 1a1111 oninPk 14111 '1" ... "'"' N.ISUl!.lt eoi..i .S..<4 S.9S ee111n1ercon l1 ·~·' t":t DPL1>1AJ.1S l.W '9\/i ....... '9\\ •.. ,Hl'fe!, ... lb I 17 17 11\\ 16'~-·· 0.111! ,.,p ~t~ I~ -· r t\41 ,. Slimd 11.1111..)i Olvld •71 •60 l!amls Co I 6 171, 21'\ 1717 ., ~ OPL e>t8l.IS l2t lOW ,~,\~ 50'.• -I'• H1zelll""' .U lS>f 1J!\ l!' Otlu• c~ JS ~ l\i'o l~ Spe<l t.35 11.22 t';rwrti • 1S lft.00 !encllw 1.611 IS :w. JS"-. 311 -OPL plC 3.90 lJ:I SJ jJ -1 • Ht(llM"9 ,70 SI 2' 21'. 21·! :... ··-0.1 C1"T 1.\\~ li!Ai o!cll M 7 N rl'i]htfnc! . lt.10 20.11 Pf Sii< •.>I 7. U lendlw o! 3 • 611~ 61 ,, 61, 1 '' ·~ ~trt Co 1 1• •11'1 41 •I -'• Htln: HJ k St 151~ 3'11 3o1to1 _2 Dtl lllr flll, 1'<-'I I Club 15 1• toni.I: lllCllfTI 5'11 $75 11-tFln 16' ik "°' .r• 4t,; -\4 ~llflltl" l,OI l4 ltt'J lt l't lf'o -'• Ht~nt! (l/l"l 41 II'• 11'\ 111~ _ ,, Otv Am 2 IJ utli.r IDVrt 11111 QUfy '·" J.Ot Stl>Ck l .ll I" lltnlll' pfS050 I 1~ 146 146 ::s Dtl """" I.tu 111 Uh :II 21>:. -.,. H•ll Co.t .IO 212 ?6•1 ?6•~ 21\~ -\'ol Otv ... Ill' 1."' 14\~ 1111111 E1 j\~ • ..., FuM 10,1• 11.1' N•• WtJI 6,'3 7.S1 Bfflll' 11!4°SO Y20 SI " j l Dt!TtAlr .«I U1 32~• JH~ J2\~ + \~ Htllt• In! .60 ,. "'" ,. 1'1ii ..... Dewl¥ E 7 n(. CC Lt• l 111) Grwltl 6 .... 7.06 Me! Gr!ll t ,1010,5'1enlF 1>tiJt S n 16'0 16'' +• Ot!lt<: Int 62 17'• ll''o 12lo +Vt Ht lrnt Pd• I 11 1,7'1 !7•'i Ult +• n11m Cr l~'~ lt!'JI 'hrrea c 7:11"' 2''41 \ltnl &.n 1.M N1111w1h 74 IS 2~.15 BenF .11>12 Ml vl-"O 331~ 11,_ 33,~ +i •? °""" Miii .ao fl 2J•\ 72'~ 11''11 -•\ HtlfnrhP 10 :n 1 16'"' 17 + i: Oise '"' JI~ 9 1 'I""" Jr• '"' 1o1 Grlfl ll.11 lJ.tl N,w Wllll 11.JfU.6] e1n1111tl · m 13'• U•) 12,, ,. O.nt!Mlq 1>11 1 191 .. 19"4 1•v. -l:i.:. Httnl•IM'I ce11 •4 6'• s•o si, _Vt i'>IYet CM 4\l '"" I C1r R 1 l'Ra Of'l'lm< t.77 lf-'1 NY Vtnl lB Ill '10 61 1ef!Qul! In lf 11''1 11'> 1711 -1 Ot~"YAll 0' .U 11 20 21 + II) l-ll'fnllnc .6JQ J 1•l 7 7 OIY M1n¥ " 1A\fl "(ml'I C1> , .... J ..... S Id jll .IUNewton 11.3717.19 1r~Pllo .111 M 1•'• 16 Mh -•t OnllJlf¥ 1.11111 I 41\lo 41'"' 41\, ... Hfrcl11 l?ll<t l~! ,",,, l\'? l2 _,: 1, l')ocu!el 25 2f 'itl E<"tol •I 511 Cl>'>\l'llonWllh Fdt: NOf"t l!I 14,tflllltf le•mK Coro Ill 6~o 6,. 6, 0."RGr I IQ lS lf'l 11'• 1)1, -•, Htrs11Fd 1 lD ,~ 7l•i 1l"• _ "• Oollv Md t•~ UI N I'd Pd :ltl/lo >"YI C~o Fd t .1<t 10.6t C"'l>ll 111 1,54 lie!!\ Sil I to 3U ~ l6lo ?I ' t , 0.rtco pf A I S7l< 12'• Slll -J\IJ M~bleln 10 117 Jt~o 21'• 1''• 4 I•, !'\ow Jon Al Ill'• "!11 G.\O 1•14 lJ lftCoOITI t .OCI t .I• t l>I I.II l,lO llHM Incl 1':111 ..., •~ ., .. 19> ,~ l>er~co Pt I IJ 11'< 5)1, SI'•+\, MtwPtc~ 1Q 'A 1G1 01>; IGl +l''> Oovot 0 B Jlvt """ NII Llb '''Ii d nvut ,,,, 10.2• 100 Fd ll.•s 1.S.25 1111 Tll•ft :IO ,, "'• '3V. .,,; -'• OeSololnc fO ll 3H"o 30'" 31\\ + ', Hiii!> Vc!!.g' ,. 1) 71 •~ 2l t .. Sflldl; l.N '·"'" Fd l.olt 1G.J1 1!•c~Olt 170 In>--, 711 , n _._ •... O.\E'dlt l.«I l lO 1l't ,,, .. 21'1 -1~H1ltonH1>lfl 1 "I? e1i . 61 '• CWlll All 1.04 l.S1gn1 'HM! 16,'916.11 Blt lrJOl'ln ,ol :it 7J 1JV, 22·, 1 OelEo1>!S,JO 10 11>; 10'11 IOlo -'~H!co lS '°7 76Gi U 'o '26'\+'• C.wlfl CD l.'6 l.'9 'Niii B.~!r& .... l l!H Liiii I 1 20 76 76 -DetSttl .Jr;p •I 11>1 11 11'• .. ,,. Hllco irfA ."I 2 7310 1J', 711'<-'• Con11 Al U.J:I 11.1' 0~ 7.11 I $(1 lllocl{ Hll 2' 221 Sol'O 53'~ 54~ • 0.>if, ·'' I ll~I JJ,,, DI-I , , Hobert 1.:!G ll IJI~ d "• 0 \(, ->, !Olnl)tl • It l .M PttT Fnd 11 lS 11.1' &tu, l tll fJQ 4 51'. 11 5; • = .: D!llF1n1" 50 ,. 11 IOV. 11 + .... HoernW1t .n l t l••; 74V,. 1.f'ii . omp lld l.!,S t .'9 Pffln Sq l,94 lf4 jcbblt llrk1 ?O 11'• ll•o 11•~ , Oll"!lnU I.to 46 •1'> 41 41'• .... Hptf EIKlrn 74 1!') 10 IO'>li -a." omo Fd t'lll ll.11~1 Miii 151 1.11 e>eln11 l :KI 491 :l!llo JG 30:1 - 1'Di1Sh11n 1.40 21,1 n v, lf'n H'~+"'Holldvlnn ,lO 1$' •'• 41 n~~+'·• Ol'l'>tl'o !·" S,IS Phll• 14,"1•.'3 ao11c11 :151> 164 71't 1S•o ~.~,,"DitSh p!Cl n,,,., ,., 1ll1->.tHOll'fS1111.:ie1 'n•. 21'ii 1Ho -•o oncon:I I .7j U.2• Pl'8rlm • • .u 10.'1 8Dnd trs I 1l 11\t 11111 :HI". -~; 011$ Pl Dl.10 l"I JS ,,"" + I,(, l+<lmfllkt ,4(1 n lt ll \1 !I'll -h At la ntic Resear ch Sells • Oll$0 I" n .n 12.62 PIJl>f 1.13 • .(.! llOOkM!n l ,. !1 23 'V ,3 t i Oltlll>ll°" .41 110 ,,\. 23~. 1110 -... HPnl'V'Wl 1 2Cl 11/ 14 1• 1"7 I... +t ~Ol'lll In 4,6J !,OI Pint Sl lOSI 10,Sf llotde" 1 2(i 183 2S"• 24'1 2•1• _'•Diebold .d b :io,, 611~ 6' ~, .• ,1. HOO\' I I LXl1 2 JI'< )0\i lei•-·~~ Olll Gin 'fol ,,N Pl ... Ent 8pr1W•• 1.7S 9? ,, 15'o 7!.. ,,. OIGlorolo .IO 22'< :161• n~. + • Host lnl1 .» ,., '°1'0 ~7 42 -1 T R k N otll L• l•.OI U.•7 PIOI' Frid 1, :II 1J.S3 &nrm1n1 10 11 11~~ 1'l• Uh -,; DltllflQhm .1a 26 :II<!) .·.~ 21~1 T V. Hatol (p A"' 53 1 1'~ lll't 11''< _ 'i arget OC ets to avy n!Y Cto ll.'6 l•,71 Pi.n 1"¥ 11.><I U.61 80I EOl1 i.OI ?• 31>~ JO ~ 301~ ="" Ollln<1 ot ... 2 I Il Sl -1\1 Hl>lld Ind .IO :r32 14'> 14 141, + '• rn WDlv •. IS 7.4t Prlct Funcl•: llourn1 Inc: SI 7J'o :!?\.\ 2l'o :t ->.ii Ollln<1 Pl II 7 I I) 6J ~ .. , l1olHI' Pl 2 ll xi 71'1> "'• 171, _ ,, rn Wb1 11.22 11.16 Grwltl 2S tl 15.13 llr1nllA!r .,SI :!?l 11• 1 10'' 11" 1~ Dhlcneo .J6b lo 1••• 15'1 lS' l -I HOU'I Miii ".•O 2 21•; 711'& »'~ t o, \loll M '1.t•'1.t4 s E•• t.11 t,718rletS!1.ICI II 12" Sl'l s, ... _,, Dl!ltrClub .Ml 71 "'• l• l• -•oHousot>F 1,10 111 ')>; 4] Q'i '• ti Inc il,0112.DI S Hpr M.SO 21.fl l!lrh l M• 1.1' 161 1011 •11~ /'OI .._,\; Dllnt¥ ,JOb 2~1 121\lt l:IO 174>1 t 4 Hou1F of4.CI 12 UH\ 1'9 lJIV. 1,1 national di stri but or or Atla.1tic Research t oday an· ' llMl n ,Sl UM .... Fund II.SS 11.!S llrl1tM¥ pf 1 ' 44'1 ,. "'~ ± 10 Ol•ISeaa .110· 7 4t•1 ., ., -'I Hou1F Pf1 l7 31 Ml , 65'~ •Jl<o -· t\aircrafl rol.SSile employed by t ilt Tr t 22 1,,1 PrOYdnl I.SI '-" let..,. Mete I ,2 ~ ]f )t ~· g i••rtlf\d 3A Ill 111> 1110 11 ..• Hou11l.P 1:12 "II 40~, Jt:ll ot0 + 'I • lvkl Slit 3.51 l.'2 Purlla" •.11 I0.6f llw•Ht pr Al ..,. 4,i; 44J,,, _1 ,p..,~, .fO tl ,,,., 4f'• d'o -1 ttall11NG1 .10 "' •\• 4-,.1 a _ 1, lht Arm" and f\.ianne! 'llit IF S ... 6,5'Pulnt111 Fundi; llkl'fnUG l,n <1 1S'~ 14'1 ,.,.,_,,OomeMrn .IO U 41'• 4&i1 46'•-)'~"euG' 1>fl .SO l B '"' 17'•-'• l . rt~el U.ll16.31 EQYI! 10Gl10h llrow" Co 14 10'• l!Ho IO•i , OtmFd .IS f 11l•t ~101 + 1 ll\~1-j-Jolln '' to II'• 11'\ lJ.lo -~o rocket flies al ov er 400 kno•~ revt Fd 110114,21 G"'>tt t•.101J.41 Brown c~ 01 13 ,.,, J•'• 1.i-.=•i0omFo Lita s 11•-12•1 12••+~•Howrne1 10 JI 2611 ,5., ?Hi -'• ~ "'!'' Lv I ,JI n .51 Grll! to. 1111.13 awn s111re l tr 1s•o 1110 151, _ \O Oo"ntll•• llO H lli'o :u·~ lli'• .• , Hlld111I J.408 1 10 10 111 _ ,_. I ti I I t • l E• """'MOW•rd: lncom I.ff l.61 Bw"$11oe 1,SO '1 :ie :tt'1 :tt'li 'o DarlC Co .:1'2 1) 71!1 11" 11'o -I-Hll<IB lnl •O. 1 '' 16 1.i phonograph records and pre-nounced development and in-- rec<>rtlcd tapes for chain and itial sales of the Gunrunner - department s t o r e s • has a balll..stic aerial targel system on area vey OW r aJecory &.iiltl'I l0.5S1\,Sl l"vett 1.e&11.1111ru"1wk to, sn 11 11,, 11 -t,,oon or+vt r 11U\\12!.'I 12v.-•·•H111!h~I·~., 11,0 11,, 17,0 • • • • • Gl"Wlll ll.1'114,d Vlttt 10.4711 .lt llucvEr f20 ~7 lt'l 1'' It"" 1\Dov.,C1> .~ It '3V. ll\lo 4]11o -'it ldthoPw 1"60 tO lt\.o :i11 31' urutaUng a tacucal )el'lJ pass !ncom 6.01 •.ll v....... 1.si •.11 llUlld co ·.to SI ''" 11 • 1•\!i _ 1-;i DowChm 2.M 2.s1 67'• u , ,,,,. ! '? 1d11111es1c', 1ao 12 11 ~! 111: = i~ l>llCI 10.11 n .M Jl,o Ttch S.(13 S.50 8Udt F o! H I ''· 11, 1•o \• OrtvoCp l,00 16 'lt1"o n·~ lt\' ' ldt•l9 pU 7S ' ......... ~ II'\ -•• purchased and moved into a -to the U .S . Navy. P!CTITIOUI HAMii I . '"" vnaertJ~·&oes cer11+. th11 "" 1, 20,000-squart-fool faci ity in The initial sales are for 100 > ,orw11tC11"' • 11u11"°' t i im E1.i 111" the Irvine industrial compleic. ot the JS.foot.Jong rocket-pr .. 5trfotl, S..nlt A"'' C•llfornlt , urldtr 1P11 of 41 000 1kfl11o111 •1"" Nnw 111 co1.0N••L And adjoining lot , pelled targets, bought by the "uoc1,.,TE1 11111 ""'1 Hiii !l•m i. -..,,uare feel has been leesed N f t t d I ti ... iet1 e1 111• io11ow1,.. --· .,,,..,.., "" avy or es an eva u on. "lmt In 1\111 11M11 111.tct o1 1e•1t11nce 11 11 for expansion purposes. Tiie solid-fuel r o c k e t 1011~1d R. Tu""''· toJt E••• 11n1t Rapid 1'-ferchandlsing ~a!I simulates a tactical a irplane's ~~:: ~=:::..:.n:·,i1{~ located tn Anaheim prior lo s peed and exhaust and thus • 0on1111 11.. T"""" moving JU West Coast head· can nrovidt a low~t training STATE OF CAl.IFOlllN IA, nd "•••J d ( r 011.AHGE cOVHT'I': quarttts a naUVI.. a a 11r,et for both COJventional 0n li<l'¥fllflti.r u. l'"· brio•t mt , • proce!Sin1r center lo th& com· anllatrcraft "''nne.ry tnd for ,.,ltrt' P!lblk In 1nd '°"' Jiii! Stilt. • aw .... -u ... t -•rM 0ent111 •. Tllffllt pltt. the. heat.·setking rtdt)·e 1n- ,,_ 1• -9t M lllt ... ,_ wllaHl:;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;,I "•mt Is 1uti.c-,ibtd to 111• within I~ .. .,,_,., ~ 1cionowlllllltetf '" ••flCUl'lol ,,.u_ lOl'f"K:l,t..L Sl!ALI eonni. J. khmldl No••·~ PubHt • C•hlOrnl• Prll'ltle>•I Otflt' In O••"•t (Oll~IY My CommiU;or. [k11lr.,. Jut¥ lJO, 1f12 JAMIS A. iCHMll!ltllt, ........ llU ~ Ori-t llllt • .,_.,.,. ... , •• c11tt. ""' Pu11111'MCI Ori..., (-t IJ•ltv 11'11114, NoYtmlltr Jl. 21 1114 Otc.•mlle• ), 11, '"' 21J.H'I LEGAL NO'l'ICE • , • I SEE BY TODA Y'S WANT ADS e "Dnr Sallta: r.ra.k~ m ine mink". New naNtal tour- ma.Unr: stroller lenrth tram """""°"'· e 8o)•1 "'·UI pr{lf" a Schw[nn SUna·m. tho<'k e b$orber. oew knobby. r ill condition, only $33. • """" Oft( 911lo ll )"OUT\& at Mart. 10 d~llaht lhf' plli& and el/Jns In your lif6, try l'h.11 t'hild"'"' hW-liyU.t, klr a n~v look. over defended ground posi· SfGCk 11.n \S,fl •• ....,, ll.OI 11.:n 11u111e1 •n :., 10 u•. 15,, 1su = , 0r1111nd 1.40 IJJ JJ•~ :u ll1\ " 111 cent 1.i• • 14 30.~ 29,, JO''"_ ·~ lbtol llf. •.fl Ro.entlt 1.411 l,Ol lullFotl 1.10 ! lS'i 15·0 lS'\ Orn11 pft7t lt 311'> 30\\ t. I IHCen l>llSO 21 j,01 4'' lions. ''-' ll 1'A Stiern l"d &.IJ 1,1' !ulovt w 60 ,.. Jt J&'l :11 ..... ~· 0rHlf "' 12 I fll:i. 21\-li n ~ -·~ Ill POWtf" ; 11 31': 341~ ~~ 1" mrv 5c 1. ' 1·CI Scnulll' l!,,l 17.43 111!11( ••mO 304 ll'I 12'~ '""' :61 I 'lf"t¥flll(p lb 4' 2t ,, •• 1th + •• HI Pw or'l JS . 110 31 la 31 'I ll'o\ + •• lnl". I r1· ht 1 •• I ntf11¥ ,,_.,l ... ~ Fuf!(ls: eunkR pfl.JO • ...,. JI\\ •O'lo +2 Di>t•llw 1.«I 1• ~,,.. )0 -1'.~ 'II p ori 10 ll 2' a 1g es~ 0 '"-1.2' I.JI f"\ -ll'IV 16.IS 16..40 lurl lfld 1.40 lOS 371\ 3'1 ],.,. + ·~ OulrtP ~.1S I l!IN, 102\a 1014'1 + ~ I p: pn"°' 1:00 11'~ ;:.~ ~·~ t ·~ G d th. tUlfv t ,4' 11.J.i Std ll.H lJ.IJ lurnd~ 70 71 23'• 21 1Jllo + ~I Dunlrd I 10. 31 51'1 SJ » Im C A 1't unrunner were ma e 1s 1111 G1t1 i1.~11t.7' e11 11.11 u .11 ""'tr.h• · . .o 561) UH• 1~,,. 1611, :11" o..,,...,ft ~ .. ?s·~ ,,., 2s•i +1~• 1Nf c: 1 ._ 211 ~: ~ ;~ ... · sprt.1g at the. \LS Marine ~:~1 1n ~l.~f 1,.21 cci1!1 li:H ll:Il Ith ft¥ 1 •" 1 JO 1'h 10 i.. ~~~'/ !. ~.1' '1 1:\iJi 1Hf? 1:m, = t 1nc5-, c•o,.1r 11, •,•,•• 1,l:'; ""' + •• • llllol' 74.1~2 .61 Ewtt 1.llO •.!! -<;;-duP.,. ~,!4 7 51,,_ S!l'o l'~ 1 • !',. '",..·" > >'•· 2' ''" -'• Cor..., Base Twenly·n ineFatnd 11.111 .l't<lnv t111.ccbO'lc .o ,1 11, 3 civ.L ... 1113,,,23 ':WO"' •n . • 1 1•\i -t•. y a • "''"' au 11; I .7t tit\ Am 10.1 11.R c:r Fi..:n1• 112 1,~ ~·~ :nW,~ ~ ~ OQ ~ 1s,i2.01 110 21·~ a 1. 2l\i u ,:::;i=.r"L..J'tt 1s, 2,.i" 21 n·~ -11 p J F.0 ~"" 14. 1·'° I HCJ ''·'°° 17. l l 1llt hM 73! ).i 14 1j" -&:'\' lt>I 1 Il'Oll ,.,,, 26'1 2411 ..... .,.... '° t0 a m s. 1'1111 10 11 1 .4S ON~ :!G.101'. 1mpJll. .-'SI ,. lilt I l I t -•• J.7Se>ll .11 llt ,~,. ,, •• ,... lnEIMe• ..Sl'll I 1•, 1'• 7'1 + ., The aerlaJ target w 1 s ~~ l~= ltl ~:&: 1 ig::~ H::: :~:,: ~ 1;: >::Z 3: ' ~ ~ ~ imn!;='12~W "l: l! :t.. ~ ~ ~ :~,~~a ·~ 11: J:;? :: ~1 .+' • Fl"1ncl1I ,l'OI: low 11IO11.'° o Pt<·, 20 ,. Utl •SJ' MV. Ill DyN All\ . "' \Of 11'' 10¥1 111\ t to ,,.., pf'f,lS l J.111 l4~ 541, designed and dfveloptd b y the Ov!lln •.n J,u • Tr •.» 10.16 1~ c eeks• 1, 33i:. n•i ,,.,, -t •:. · r L • tnklrld sit 2 111 11•, 71'\ 11~. + '• lnclll9f 1.1a t,d 1111 II •.II •.II 1tbrun 1 H I 41 ~,, ~ 'Ill -·r-l"lftOl'!fCO .7' SO l''' l N 16•, l\1iulle Systems Division of •ncom t .tl •.11 "'" 1"" 1.u t .a1 1tH•le 60 ~ 1 "' 1,.i 1~, ·~ E111ePct1 ... It n•i. 71'i 2f' • -\i lnsl!fl .10tt ss ,., • n ·,. n ~ .:. ·, v ... 1 t.U 1,t6 win¥ GI 7" l.•3 · -Enco CO ... 1 llfo 71'' 1 '• -'I lntp;' COP :Ill 17 J4 n $!\~ -1, Atlantic R esearch c 0 s t a "'IF VI 10,IS 11n , l"v lJ.tf u .a1 E••I Air .Jip ll? lt'~ 1~ 16'" -+ ,, tnTtrcco I.IC 11 ,. ,,,, n .. '• • Ftln Oh I.ff t ~!rt t1510.o.J f:t11G, l2f n 16~o ,1\, 15',1 -l \~l"hrlkSI 1.10 11 2•11 11\o 1•'"1-'• 'I 1 1 lh llita "'' '"Giii 10.lt n . !IFrm GI 5.)(1 S.511 )f VIit l 411 ,. 20Vi .~1··· 20 -"" lllM 4 110 ll1\l ]Sl•-. lSI t'" i•esa , o mec em ry F•• 1"$•• •.te .. 111e s1 !IO.l5511s •1kooS••'11 !fl 11 n 1J',->1o 1ni,11Fr .40b I' u•i; 60l' •1 ·~ 1 , •· ( b JJ' · Fii Multi t.60 f .J lltd"I•~ F~ncl•• 8 p ttonYt I 46 11 &I d + \t lnl 1'1;1"" l.IO 1 s ,,._ U'• 1J"\ _ •Ji services neewi or a a 1st1c Fsi 11111 1 .... 1.1 Am 1nc1 11"' u .1G 8D!!Ot• ltnla ec1111nM1 ·,, ls 15110 1 '~ u ,, _ • ., 1n1Ho1d l.10g 21 11 u •, 1,,-, _ ·~ Ftl Siert un•v1H Flduc 1.26 ltl ...., Ecktn:I J 20 tt :»•• lll• lJ'• +11. tnl !fl.di.I<! 4n 41'• '° t 41" ·~ air target system (BAT$) to Fltt C1p , .. , ...• 5clfn 4.60 J.04 EGlton8toS I )4 21 25'"J 2 lo -.,. tnl lrld 1111 II " 53'1 54 ' .SDi -:. ... Flt! fnd 'u ' '"" •111 Fd1· EG&.G ,11 12J "'• '2 ll\' -... ln!MI..., ·'~ ,,, 1n . '''" 13\o -' train artlaireraft personnel. Fi. G1t1 . 1 .n 111 20.41111.41 Appeals R--"~g EW.11t1e .ot. 1•1 !'" ••1 ,,. -\' lftl,,.,,,.,.... ,., • , so so 50 ,.., • Inch-Frid Gt" 5. •.II f• 0.. H.»1S.J! W.W E\Mus 1.._,11t11 1,1i '' ,l·~ H" 1n1 Mno ,40lf » 1111 14 lfl J Gunrunntr uses a 5-~~_.., 1f:,.1f:=: 'i1'n01 1~ 1:.is ~1::1-!":1 4 ~~ ~·~ 1 :-t'~~ diamtter HV AR rocket motor Ft ft Grm: Pln.$1 .... ~.•I NE El M .... M•r 'l,' !1 7~(' fl Pi lhat la available in quantity a.1 H cs1 1.: ii.~ """'' f.' l~.:t ~t.n w Y ORK (UPI) -~~1::"'.::, rnd I& .... Jf4 u~ !.'1t Market a surplus bas is from govern· ~:im ': t t::~::C'f 1!:!f 't:~ Ban«or Punta Corp. has ap-E1l,~'-~c;1 ~ ~~~ 1t1~ \e; \f,, '· mtnt stock. Flight duration ~d~u1 il:l: 1l:t t~:1 1.~r11,\11' pealed • recent ruling by the i~•EH,\ ~ 'l l~Wt »" U'' !·~ S••mLo•., t'afttie virltaOy u iif1lie ~~ ,::ll ~:~ ~::r 3• 'JJJ't~ U.S. Court o( Appeals favoring E~•~• '1 't0 1l ~ JAu. \& :... ,., :1 V 1-o f:fVAR motor with or without a 8~;nr"'-'H.~ 14'• t~:: g• 11:~ 11:\111 the rival c la1ms of Chris O'aft @~' a: · ~ \l ~JO. ~"' = ~ n. sustainer motor developed by ~.,,Sc 1.J2 'fl*' Fd 16.1111. 1::.T..M ·1,. , n> 221• '12'~-"' ftrli ~,.rt 1 1o:"' te MMrolt vwt Atlantic R uearch. Fl i 'ht ~:fi" .. 5J ,,,,; 11,. ~ ~ ::: ! :: Corp., or O•kland, eaur.. ror Efld.19111'1 Pl f I~ 4f . ... 41 -1 :... a*k "''""' ,_,.,.. ......... I be ~tltt t ... l .'1 fl.Iii Unit Mll1 !D.7? 11.11 t ! of pj Aj fl C E11tllW.lfl A 1lt'22 11 '1' ti • \\ performance: a so can ,.,oh" u .u ,.,. Unj1<1 • n 10 14 con ro per rtra orp, E11nhlllll " 1• 31,, 31 ,..~ _ u S.IM flturtt ,,. IHIOflkli L h ed b . st • u1f"CI" 14,n u.v u~ '~ Fw!IOI: 1 Lock H p ,,.., Elllll'Gt1 J"ll , f' " lJl' ... 11 c ang y using su a 1ner "Ml\tto"; Accm '·"' 1 it o l\ltn, a . 111e oourt 151 lnt • 1 .-: ,. _ •0111 ~-atra ., .,,,,,_ """""'~'1 "~"! motors of \'t ried lengths. o"' 1·.tt 1\:i~ 1'if: 1;:J~ 1j·H held that Bangor Punta. which ~j1i, · 1 '11 s.o,. ~ 'f, 1 'r.1 . .!. i: "' :f.. •::s ,~I :1~#:~~'hy='Tii H1n11vr 1.3' Jl V d Cl1' f .14 .11 , H~ j, a 4$ 41 (J"' +J l!Wk d!.lrl"' Ml, . lltl1"lltd• rti. •Ill• Hi l"bllr 'I "~ ~ \1nt I'd: has obtained 1n •-rnt1rt in ,~,. C• '.1• 1 ~· " ~1, • 1~ •fodt d.!.'!.1:11!""· d-4kcttrM or t..tih 1ril\le "t't"'" 1•, 'I·' • L" !} t ·so ....,. ~...... Elh 'O .,. -" o: ... ~. "" n111itrlbltllof\ dim F dr SI led ~ ..... 't: 'l 't· :Ml, J-0 a:H principle to a<qul1'1! Piper, h ad ·~ , .i:' •" • • "';-•Et' ~i:....':."°":"'n!l -~ oun y a ~.or.. 'I: '. rm~:"'.'.~·" vlolattd Sttbrlttts and EJ· l~'l.. .H n~ ~ ~.:~~It t:.."~"'~ ~:Q "".t:."" I M lnW'lllM .. 1:i.::.. lil" I~ JI:: II" mt • ~ ... ~ -''° ;~ .. 'l'Br, ilt..~ °"' LOS ANGELES (UPI) -A ~""' 1 · v...o.-i I:fl 1.g; change CommWlon gun Jum-'"".., _i.. • "t ~·~ 411 -1, ., .. I(_""" '""' ., 1t1t J tndustrl.., Inc announ~d /ii fr:' f · v ':"', y,..., "',11 t ping rules by the .1""'1.1Wllon ~=~"1'C 'r, f~. '1"'•• !1~ '4_~ ~'":1,1'..~~'L"l.:";b'::\."'J.t: ' •• ~~.I< t t·fi' "L... .tl ,-ff -~'t ''l'l'Ntll j I Ir-~ lit ;t; -\) r nt'iltt. ft'ff11111'N Cf\fl 1rtlul _, q. it will buOd 1 foundry 1 t Sm-1m: aii' J· 1 ~J w-iufi""J1", 1••1.u 11] on lhe optn market of 236,000 ~:~.a 1 • 1 !~ lf~"' 'f"' :.'~ f\11~'::. ri .. ~11,111u11on ., .. -.1,,.1o tonvtlll!, Ark .• to make pro-'fl(,:::,': 16 10_45 :~~'" u 11:'ll J ;~; ahnre1 of Ptper aner tfl-~=l·f~ J.1!' ff 1!;-: ft:: it ~ • "'"'*'" !tt 11111. prld.ary ·~ product.5. The ~ Tmd 1!:ft11l'w:r1 Ind 1~-" .11 nounc:lng a fonnal Wwfr:t for f•r$t ~~ 1l' 11-"'ll 1J;,~ lfli 1, dliirii uiion. •r f t rllhl\. w·l!lllll project •ill be financed by I i':':~r$111 ''1'1 t}1=~':1kd •j J,~l the shart:s. Chrts Craft Is '~'1,'Jt e fi j:tt11 a~-1""..,.rr•111J. _:w,111 .:~.~'' SS milUon local lnduslrlal bcr.ld ~ ~~ 1l:ii 1:;~ :=ti t,. 1 : seek Ina to force Ba111or Punl.8\~.. Li-. 1~ L.;: if '1:: _,.. 11 .,.,_s.currr!Q '*""'" er 9UCl. M-H.1' isaut. \~~.;1:,; U::ill;l WIK~ Fii HI :1 lo divest itself of these shirts. ;r~:= ~n1 1, 1•~ i:.~ f;·.-:.. 1f1 ~~;:r'~a..f.-~~~~t": • •• .... -" -" + " _ .. _,, t '..: -'• -i :: '• '• + ., _., -1'. -·· -'· +1 .. _,, t " '• + .. + " -" +" -" -t :: ,, " + " -.. -'• -" t .. ,, . + '• -'• ---'• -'· _., + " -.. -· _., + •• + '• -'• + .. + •• +1'• t .. +1\: _, -,, +<• + '• _.., -'• + •• -'· + '• ... -1·~ •-'· •!lo -,, • + '• + •• ' + '• . -.. '+ .. -i '+ '" + " •+ '• ' • + •• ·-'· I +l•o • -l{o ,_. _, _, '+ •t '=t"· ' '~· . ' . -'\ -" • + •• ·-·· . -.. , -''* • ..! •• _, , -'• . -.. . _,,, . -" . -'• • .1, .,, ...... ,. + ,, . -'· • + '• + .. ii -•• • J. " ~ ... , .. . .. '· ...... + '• ~ -'• ~ -'• " -.. -" , + '" , _, ., +"' -· -'• _, + .. +~ I .,j. ''i ., "+ '" -'• , -1'• 'i + lo " -'• 'a -·~ • + '• -'• .. -., " -~. 't + '· ,._,, . -'• 4-l't i -•· • '• -u '_, .. -''I "_ ,. " + •• • + " +" 'ii -1'1 + " 4 -" '• +1•. +l'• + '• + .. \ + '• 4 -lj . -.. ; .. + ·~ .., + '• ... -'• ,, -.. +I '~ -H\ _, .. -'• ... + '• . -.. • + '• .. + " "'+11, '_, + ' -'· . -'• lo -•• ~ = :, ··-·· . -.. \ -.. ' -'" • 1 +'• .... ,., +< 4 + ·~ • ,., + '• " -'• ' +•. I -\o ... , ...... ,. " 1, + '• • ' -. ,_., , .. ' -, ..;-1 •0 • +• . -'\ '• -•s ... -1\ •••• •• -to H ' . "" _,. • Thursday's Oo8i ng · \ I .. .. . . Prices-. Comple~ ,LNew t . : •• York ~~ -~change .List ..... ·--.. . . . ' \ -.. U..1-U.a..CH, ,__, lillllll .._,.. °"' G- , ,-DOii JONll:I AVERA -Y.~'l .• !\ ,. .. " ·91~ im ~'"'::n w· ·aII Str·e~e· t Ha s" ~)a:I· :·~ ......... ,, ... _..._ ... ...,_. !:I,\~.·"~~~ :r.:=·~ •l.::: 41 -I i i' + ~lfO<U • U f;if.Jt OOI )Mio_..~-... lt ~ 'J"' -14 ' -1... f r:r rJ~.fl +. tHiJ 1&,tttiCf: a: 11 .,.,_ 6Sl'o ~, -\o •" -~ q Ii= !it ~!tt,,~~" ·1~·1i1'.1du =.!i~=~·e,_;;1 : ll'.i r. ;::=.~ ~ ~ t 'M,~ =+',,. , l" ~~ mi -.,. Y1k '61.\\ HS.tt ut,, •• + • 'v= ili "'i ~ »'\ ~ -'• -!'"+-~ ' .ID ,.u ;i • Fl ft1Ktkwo1 "' sloclr.t 11....i "' •W'9.lt: VM\do Co tO •• llW. 16"' '"" +1. \~ ... 1:: 15, Ul.oio »I + \0 1111111• • • • ...... 1,m.~ Vl(!Comp JO H lO :If ,... -t•· &'\" bv. \\I~ Strong Comeba i..1-., ':l! '~ r~ ~I J !15 hll•, ······ ............. IM,IM ~~i'f=til .:fin: s:: €\i:1 H f11'! I.lo-+ t' th J ~ f; -llt: tllet .... lo'OllGrllC IM !JO M\'. M 11''o -• 20 ~• I 1.l, f I~,.;. I I -a !lift.I ... U. C...C.ltt Vor,..00 lfi J\\t W t !!:t -'• 1r. ~ ~v. r ~'II ~ ".\. , -flcr mt rt = tt ~~~.~.,J.t •, , ffl: m: 1';l; .!1:: ,,; r:~ n f,r~~1'.4 NEW YORK {UPI) -Stock market averages ni!or~.i I~ fl ~·. :"1~:i'1~ ~ 1~u h~ If~!1U\IWllU~ll ~w~X~~~ ·~•->. , n . '14 "'+ "' finished rruxed Thur-•••. u • result of a s"ong 11•A1 • _.,.tt, Jh: " L l i~ ,,,... •ro~ "I l! 11. • ' w1~11 "'114 ,100 .o 5 S ' JJ u-. u ~+to 3\1-, .., .,. rllCo M J! '' ~ Ill r1vt lflr1 IO 1o1 01 ll~ »t.t +-w 1, ..., I 12 ''" '•: ., l.J 1111 111 It\\. l'•CICI IM I 1,.-~'j;" •I t It '• U\:i 41-•-'"w'o"H '"' '' ' ' ,, '•'• u •• ~ u "' comeback late in the session. Trading was brisk ' '° 1 u ~ ' iir, ., lllR• lO\\ 30;, .. ~' • k• .. ,. ~. '" 11~ 4)"o -! ~ wf!Oltm 40 / t• »" _m • 1' f' Oii Pl 4 Ml'> M\-. lA\lt -'• WIJ.I Mvrrt I • n t"'4 J4V. 'ti' -• , ~ I • Jll,S:: 1n 'Mle Dow Jones Indu strial average was up 2.97 ~0~1· .ir,s '""' ~~ ~rt' =Ii t'1i~ '1' :f n;: l."' Y'' -"=:l!.~'t1! ~ "1~ '1 ... ..,.111 -'• Vt ti. SY,_.,.. '° -,, 11 ut,t s +" l•"•J•so • ii' to 111 -'" w1~dFJ"1 1or lt l )Ol. s +•, 1, .._ ~· at 796.33 alter plunging through the 800 line Wed· Sur1C1•t•"" '° 11 2t\'f ,. .1., .. \t l w • • • I n·~ ,,y, •nt .:l W••~ • • 11 11 ,, '. iill •.... ~ .. Su..OSI ..... .so s ... ~ "' -i ltW ...... 'J "' m m WtFft COJ 1" 2 "~ '411 ...... -• "' i! '111 m: -\Z nesday. The UPl marketwtde indicator, measwing sun.1ri.~·~ n s1 " 111'> '"" -')I 1sc 1i.., '° n 11\i. -11~ j!'l • 1e vt•rt.•m 11• sat 11 1. "'~ l'Dl• ... t • I ~ 1 im l\4 Slit Vtlu l lo 11 1ll't 'l\11 2J.I'.' IC 11111 '"JO 1 I \\ lltl '' + )'.! Willi Sw , .\:.'° 14 )lh JI Jllo ,. 2• ~ = ~ all stocks traded, wa1 oU 0.10 111rcent. ~~8,,_ 1'2 J '~"11i 1;i" 1~ +'11i =~r ~ ,:f ti~ lit ~ + ~ ::~t~ '14· 11~ '~ \'.\', ~· •"-: ~ + " 7" d ~Ir .tt•:ll t 2N ,,.,_ -H.. -tJ .. y _ <--Wtl Wit I" 16 '°"' » 2&\~ -'' ll . .n~ + ~ Of the 1,624 issues crossing the tape, "" e-~J"d .-11 •'• •1• w1111.1n. JOMt 1>1' 11v. U1.¢1 !'\• +'• t l'I 0 41\'I , W•r>k .e,., Jt 111, l) IJ•o +''UAL lac 1 ,., :lOYi tf\it 10'\ Wl l'lll':li ho 7 16l\ 11\'o •Yo +'• ~ 11v. 1 t11 11" clined and 617 advancM. witt co '° 133 1 '• 11•, 1111 -,, u ... 11co 110 .,. :w" 33,."' u>;;. +i"' w .... u • :u 1oh •r, • -• l?. ... 1 ~111tt -"' w, .... 11,.. e t-'H !"•'* +·~UGJCPl 10 1•101\ •i:io>.+1tW••"8'11t JI• l tlJI•-~ mt "'(£:' "a;,_:~ A turnover of around 13 million shares was run~ ~t::'tn~ 'r i~t ll~~ it1i :; ~: tl~~c~1111ci72 " Ji::1~! U~ \g~ + ·~ ::::t·'8,1 ~ .J: 1'A. l\~ ii/::-.. ,: • " ning ahead of Wedne·•ay's pace s"''°" Donn 1N 1~. ?•'• i•h -'"'yftnNv 1,,,. " wo tt ....i1 w.11 Mk1 _., • ' u•. is ~--" ,. *'" -IV; au. T .. c."' .. 1 ,, 7'lo ,, ... -•\ Wt ll>ll! 07t 16 Slo Pt .~· 1''. "'-.... -, Analys" said mu,.. ·• the initial selling was a Tin ••d '6 ,, m. """ tt1• -\Jo uni"" corp r. •• ,"' I'• -••we" •• ,JSt l 1s1-. u u \, -'• ~ >•• i ~\ - -ft Clrbltlt t Ml. 11'.\ Jn.+ '~WlSCjF IJJt ll Jf '> ~ 14 '1 +, v .~ ~ 1= -t,111 ... \;II, """" t,·,•.•,•m,.J 1• 11 11 lOh ,, u .. 1• 1 M t' 11\\ r .... 1 + ... WPP DI .. $(1 Od ., '61\ .... +~. ill't "' " furth_ er reaction to the f811 through 800, long r..aani· 1~ .... 1.a.1 " 31 .,.., + ' u.. 1 .,,. ~. •'0 •1-. '°"' ... .., w11"'' 1 •s. 20 w~ ,...., ,.., 1j'\(jc IN I _ ~ "'& T,,-H, E<~•'' 12J ?J 21>. 1' + ~ Ufl El r''~ llO 60 • iii 61) +l'I WMlrl .JOI> tt 7911< l'O\lt ~-'• ,. gg -h ed • rt lldY ,.. 116 Milo ~\\ •• ->.0 U'!OllC1 1 IO )(If 17 ~. 37 + ·~ Wn. line I JO ll ilii' Al'lt • + le UI\ +"' as a .. ey SUppO area. TtPPlnCO •O 11 ,... , ••• +Iii UOC1I pUi,CI ,. 50 ft1o "\~-·~w.1nNtd IMI 11 l' " • , !'.!: 1, + • E •,•,.~,!!!~, llf u 1•1 •• '" -\lo Uft P1c c~ t 1«1 •114 q t, .s +"' w5tnP.c: 2,. is •• t~\ 2 '• -• • .. Newton Zinder, analysts for the F. Hutton "''" .. " ••~· " + ~ un.1onP1cn 1 2f •1:i. ~ "..,. wn.vr11 l '° 111 ..... •JU ,.., 12.S ''" o40YI I'll -YI Te~nt '" 36\l l.V. ~-+ ~ UnP1t 111.IO 21 ,,,, 7'\ 1'• Wn Un "' 611 ' ""'• 90\li "'"' -I~ 1J &11v. •11, •714 -~ brokerage s"'d Wedne ·•-y•s slide in the DJ was a Tt .,,,,i,o n: ui ut. 1 -• unlarlfIT 1 40 • • •v. .eto w~ u .. pu.. , •CM 101 104 _,,.,. 11 11\'< r. ·11:-" > ..... ~ T• ..,.. " Ill'< IOV. 'lo -1 uri.1••v• 'II Ht 20\\ 1t\t .,., -I> Wtll,EI I IO n' 51 II ,. -+ '• .. n'A. I I i . pSyChOlomcaJ blO\V tO many inveS!OrS, but he felt Tlnl!l rf tS IJ :IO'~ lf '• flo -"' UFI. rov• ti I lnD IG1 100\~ 100 'J -'• Wts! PU IC 1200 W'• JI\~ s.l"i t "' 2 ~ &• Ten"eco 131 ?It 7:111 ?J 1Jl1 -h Unl~~tCll JO --,j At'tl '1 41'• -I, Wttlvc;o I OS 10 1'11 11\(j 7'111 -I\ "j " • 'J" " th k d I Id ndd f TennK Pl$.l0 1• M l''• jS\~-'•Un!IAlrc .1111 13' 17 I0\1 •I'• WnlvopU SO 110 1S 1 1S ~M ,,. 2 21 -,., e mar et \Va s eep y overso a ue or a snap-,,.,,o 1 '° 11H ~ • 1•1 ., un.11 c, 7Co 1J 101, 10 , 1D. +l\ w~vbtr• , :io n JI)\~ JO'li !!\' -·· ., Mlh Ii M + ., Tt~ET•FI. l,..t(I ,. ,., s ~·~ -•• Unit Fin C1j 19-,, .... HI\ 16',\ wev .... 111r t\! II 0 l \b '\'J + '• • nu 1to 22~ -~ back soon. T1•~•·' l •• 111 ~ ,,., 1' +11' u n. Frvn 1 '° n •l •Wa '' _, w .... ~, f'' 1s ~ 101>, 101 10 • -•. to ~Ill $2111 -\I Tex ! llf1 SO ,, YI 7'\1 \~+\~Uni! Ind 20 J7 .,_.. 17 U WhfflP\1 Su :16 11h Into l~o -'• 11 1''• U •\ Uh Am n th d • t t • e er Rd lfX 111 .60 l l6 171~ !''' J1l<+'4 un1•rnd Cll•t ' 11. JI\ 7 1 -V.WNl•I" "' 1100" u .. -'· 1~'°'·i~~*'+,,. og e aysmos aC'1ve1ssusw eyer T•••1tnd 111 1-u•. •'•!•l•-"•un.tMMll& 3211 ~,.111 1''•-V.W!!ti:IPll r's 1110 ~ sY<51 -· t'I :tM. ~ Ji -\'I S s\ ~-• I d 20 t Ttxa11~sl ta Uo 11•1• I 7 I •~• +11\ u" N11<Jr '11 n l'O'.<o ltlli 20 _ "' Whir! C• '° 111 ~·· 51\.\ y v1 + •, " l!~" ~ .. !Jll = !1' y em, WJ1K,;J1 expec e a percen rise 1n per r,~, '"•":fi. u •, :,' .i , ffi~ +\c un11 P-Ml.. lJ N 5 s'' -.... w~utCn '°" 11 n 11 1• '"' + >1 " " E \ I " n • • 1 u!FMS .t11a 1s-:m~ » n•. +\' withcn. l'IC, 1 n » 2:1 + '• "' • tl share earnings in 1970, n"'ehard Minerals, Amen~ '," .,.' '• " 'l'" ii 13'• + 11 u Freo1 110 • :1111' 30'-to JO'' -\< W1111.cr11 ,.. 20 "'• "'""' ,.,.., -•· JO '5\t .Wiit \II \Ill &' ,,J I\\ I\\ 11'• -"USGYOlm Se 31 Ula U ~ Wl'lt!t Mot 2 1S l1 \~ lt'" itl\ + 1• Jl! 1"'" it 11 -"' can Telephone H·--o d Corp Texaco and Pola ,., • ...., .n °' 1 :i. ffi' "'· -u. u,G,. p11 t0 • ll1~ 3' :i. -/o w111tt1k... u:J 11'• ''"" 11 +1 ... 21 tJV1 tth In\ -,, o ,...,....., R 'P • f1xtm 8'140 l 26>• ~· i'" U lnduil ..S IN. 'U .. t"'° l:S°"' -\lo Wldt. .. Cort I If .ct :tt''t .. + •\ ' .. " 11\11 1~ ~ __:_,, roid =Tl'lklllel .. , IM 100 11•• Ill; Pt -"'u PtyCh II l?I )Jiit ,, •• J)\fo +1~ wi.111111 .2(111 t4 11 101"1 i• -.. t1 -. !l\11 -vo lff 1 .II) :1 1;}: ni? :;~-I IJ "!" 9'5 Je JliO 7J'~ ,n. 1$'.~ -'' Wiii 11111 » U 61\1 )''• 1~~ -'~ lt; n~ ~.: 1l~ = ~· 'T&T c-sed at ~3/8 off 1/8, ""•d Texac• \Vas " 20 '"' Tit It'\ .. ,. u ,. "' pll.» JO "~ »Yi> :'Ult + '111 Wlln•m• ... ff :n :i. ,,,.. )fl +l • ,·• •·•·-••"'i' n. ..,. ~ ""'' "' TI • ,~ "~ .,.! '"' • u ~" :is nu. n n Wmilr tfto 111 1• u 251, "°" .ir.,: QI\ fu1 ·~ ':::::S?...1. "'S:, J .a·~ Cll; ..,,, + \~ u! Smett 111 11 ., ... o11• •1"io +1\11 WlMOll 1112 .. ~~ ~ ,,,,, -,, iru 79 ,..., " lt.<i unchanged at 28-3/4, 1...., 11, 190 ie> 79~. 79 ,.., us,,.. P'J.Jo ' 10\. '°''• 101• w11Et"'"' IAI )I. 1~ i1 i1 '' '' '.' '.' ,, .,,,. ''' .. •• ,, n• '' u SJt•I 1 ~ _,,, lS \II-~ " -1-•• 'N1iP$VC II " n. Jjl\ IJ'o -1\ <u n" ~' ,,,,• -i ~ 1'eb1n .. t .. ~ 11 ~· 10•: 10;• , UIToblc I 10 11 I•'• 11 • II'\-... Wltca C~ n t 11t't 11'' 11i, + •o " .. ,... .,. .. 1~ Prices were softer on the American Stock Ex· TOd<ISM 1,. n n 3,,, 35 • -• un.11 urn " . , ... ,,.., n " woiv ww ·• si 1sv, 1"• 4•• -t~ 1 61 6 " 2 h od TOJtedl!d lM 11 11' 1 ?1 71 •J,, UnUl!I 1111 t5' II m 71h 1710 Womt!c' '1 ll' 1'1• \Iii 19\lo +. '~ , "'· "'" ,,\II~ 11o c ange m m er<lte turnover. T~R•n __,, b " ~1• "'' ,1,1 -u~uu1 o11 so • l'~ ll ii•. -" v1ood1 c 11 .. 11 ,.t, 111·~ "'' +t•• J6 j&l , * JOV. +IU. TNM Ce ,iQ J1 71..; l' .,,,~ -.. UeVl••' I 511 1 r.. '1'• '"' -•• WOO!wth 1111 fl lit~ l1'"tl ~ -•• 7 lO'. ,,... 30 + \~ Tr•ntUn 1.J• 11 l7'J 1 31 -'? Univ() Pd IO ,, ,,,. fl'~ 1'1.:. + '\ Woolw .,,, ,. I 561'\ 54~ s.P~ _,,. IJ tl'f 11141 I~ t 1\ Tt nWAlr .:1'11> 11 11'~ 11 "'' -1 UftlYHW Cm• ''° 111"' t l» IOO'o +l'lo World AlrwY Sil 11'1 lllf, Ill\.+ 'o .a 1110 10'.'I 11 \Ct "'"•••········ .................... ,.,..,.,,.orJTmWA!t ''t )0 fflo ?~' 1~·~ -•; UPlollft l llO 182 50,., ••lo 5" ~ +'4 Wri.lflY 1-1 lot lot lot -~'> ffl .ft'it a 'i'o ..._ "H Tt1nWf' ttl' .W JO }Ot: 10'\li -\t Uril l ldg 41 ICM ~ U lino -1~ Wurllh.,. .. 11 Ullo 14lto 1.fn American Stock Exchange List 1 '0J ... , 1;1. +no ,f'• .. ~ . l)'o + 'o ~-'· n"' +2i . II +4\o • I I ! OAIL Y PILOT 444 ·99f. POUi I nooa Ju• TULIP lltlS DOUBLE CLOSET LICHT 117 14DfCBSUTI 1". CBBimw KOOS£ l.it1l• _, .. imDee ...ur oad watch•• o••r •"'fth1DV· T.U the ldcl• j h_.• a CO.-P'I~ lor Semi~ aod l1 watch18g. watch.Ing, watcbinv. 288 38 LITE TDLETliEE' TOY Tl•µ: ·sac Giid . 111 . U pa'.,. got let• ol ....U 'fly,.,...,.. or 1te1Qbhorhood11Wa,.......... ... .......... _ _.. ... -.... • ,.--• 4 WCI• DECIEB OumiOB • LITE lnuDS' ·. 29C CAii!> OF.5 BWI• DECIEB BLACK • 10: 7021 DECKER io. n 11 'I• 11ca· SAIDER KIT . VARIABLE . 5•00,., on••••• ~ SPEED DRILL -llT • Jwellll l RP~ slf9 cmttoi b a. ..._tiM , Zit :bid I• 11 P*-llarolirb·-.... ~ ttimlt*"'7'ftllae. P!udl.·' 6111. ftMll'Olbllr:Sdflll · )ot..E:sbact.., llClfetr • ...S. oa ~ .W... l!t , J>i111, 111bMrbackbttr pard.Comes•ltk q Snc:lad.-KD.der.lS • ,pqd.grlDdlllgwMet.t ' HO 7301 7 1/4" .SAW ~ bla4•• abMtl ol Clbtallff· 9'cnt.. l adapter. glftbtbe, JIClll«olos.cawood:· lraUlagwta..t.clnaclc 1kad}........ · fllln. spala.la, 'bf• by hold.-a:Dd 15 I · haad1om• pla1tlc wandiag dlKL·(cmd th carrrlttg ca•. ddlL o! cour•.) SOPBEME • WATER SOFTEJIEB Ful!y cn:ito~all'e, ._..1aial• ndtmv• MftJJlg wttll.~ SCITIJ adJ111tmeDt.1'0 l11temtpUODO( hoa1e ••"le~ d•rl11r rechm8•· 18.000Grala~. 1-.77. 1J ', ... CAllDLE TBEE N1w.ld•a I ram 1111 o)d candlemall:er 1amewbere ta Ala1lla. Wax 11 thaPed in. lh• Iona af a Clirilitm.01 tr ... loot tall. 1Nra1 long. 139 l\ISIEB PLUGS Blhak oa mui otl. no harm to clrcWt « bu)b. Pv.t a 1trl.Dg of tb ... up aad tbo n9'fhhata will thld ~ •tnldl'oll. BYI SPUY · PADfTliOI ComprM11or "°'kt •a lto•u carreat, "''to clea..P alee fuOIO!ltee. Fot lal•rlor. •ltertor. dllCOl'CltbiJ ....... --MWloll v." .... ~ . \ I ' .. 9~ • .. • ' , ' ' .. ' . .. ' . 411..,,,. i.a.. .. .. . , ·'*'t" -~ .. .,.1v,-~1 .. ·~,_.. '." """'" YOUR CIOJCE Ad-iaod apeclala good ·tbru l>ocember 10. 1969. , DAISY LAMP Pretty. loob like IJD upside down Dow• or a right aide up l>cri•f Lamp •blcb i• "'bat It la. Choice of colors. I lhlo>. 9" 3 PIECE SHELF om Th• eomplete deal fof under a fui. Unit lDcl11d• lhffe lx31inch1heh•e1. adju1table lracll: brocll:etl and towel bar. In b(lf"felt gold or ayocado. 444 . UIDY CABllM Meer! 11111• 1torag• dl'OWlr• f~r the home handyman 'WbOWGDfl thlngl .. ttiodlc:al. Mice lor iOWtylsl. llttle kids. --121 DAISY FOOTLOCKER 711 I ;i MOD SPUY PAIRT . Like wild, glow• under. black lit•. acrylic mall•. 1prcry1 011 Uk• a · p1ychedellc daydi•am. Colon that Cini CNI of L\gbL 24 ·llCB wattE • GOLD POLIJWI ... ..... , •. , .. '!~ . ' ... ,. S!:I!!. . . i~ We UIP1*f a eaM of .... lo Dean Mmttn'• ...... "JOU bow It'•· = many thick he1 lor rtcb llGtUfGl look. ElegaDtlf tapered. 697 7 FT. I. ' 19Z BIWICll BBUCB DOWIS WEPT LONG NEEDLE PINE 01 llame relardenl PVC pla11ic: for Mlhtr• looll:1 ll.b the real th!Jlg.F.culwto aueinbie them TOil think Of you gm. tblng• ll• that muc:b thought). .1997 .. • ! • If" • • 4 , ... .1 : • " .;i --. I . • -i ... I • I . . • I 7•ft. Royal SCotch Pine Tree~ Mlfldll, 1on1· nttcal• Chrlstmat trH Wiil l•lt for years. F11mtproof, non·toxfc, no•·•ller1fc. E11~ to 1111mbl1, dll• ......... -..... Prfca lncludtl ~~ .... metal.stand. $9.88*. -.ta.11 · 2t pc. tiollu1 Gift WrlP KJt -Slx roff1 of IHfcftt paper,· two rona of patt.mtd fOR, one roll of rux~ paP!'f Ind twenty ~ bows In I 8* ~lor variety of hfatHhttn OOlori. A ftntlatfO, mOnl)'• ...,."' ¥11ue1 · ggc ~ c RCA Cordleu Mini SdllOf'I -Smooth and fut cuttln1 with elCtra sharp repl1ct1btt, e1rt>on ltlll blad-. BMttrt powered, permanently fubriclted motor. Extra M\ of lalldff frH, 81tt9ry not lncfucled. $2.49* ........ . . . , - , . 2-RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, Friday, December 5. 1969 .. Buy Note lor C'larbtnau DeH.,erg o6mputer Crafttd Stereo Module Syltem-from:JJCA .. . tbt a.ooo SUIQ ltlrM lllllllUlt S111t111 llKll SS6000 lWNrToUI lttrto sound , ROM from Computer Crefted redio, $199'5 del11n ch1nger, 4 1pe1kers, 100 wtttl peek power. BIJDGET TERMS ,.. ....,,..,WHl'Trl RCATable...W Color'IY Instant-Pie, 1utomaUc ''Locked· In" fine tvntns (AFT) Ind llahttd eh1nnel lndlc1tors. 26,500-v. Tr1ns Vista• ChlHil. New 100% 'brighter HHO'E '70 Pic:ture tube, bll1nced sound with 5• oval speaker. SALES & SERVICE SERVING BAJUIOR AREA SIN<:£ J9M Advtrllsemtnt Computer Brightens Color In· 1970 Models for RCA Big«ftm television b y the Mine -viewer a ~cture RCA, naw db the new m-llricll4..-unparalleled la UTE '?t pidur't 1*, pve1 · lf:A liWarJ. . . FRONT, BACK-Here are boUl aldet ol the RCA Cheede9cler ""ltorJ." Front view offen hint of Its pctme darity, euy-to-lumdle controls. Bact view 1bows 1aow portable De1t ''penoall TV" model really ii. The ID-LITE "10 ~ure ~ la.. been eampater. ... _. engineere4 to Cfve lOI peteent m • r e brigtitnea to 110111e 1970 Trans Vista models. . The HI-UTE ..,. scrft.D bas eomputer~ eo&or . targetl -J.2 million of them -surrOCDled by RCA'a new t.ld IBltm wbich helps keep colors~. Inside the HI-LITE "10 tube RCA has inetalled ita 11eret ,..,... • • • a camprter- ~ electron gun which acCullly moots • mllllori ~ throaCll Its lbadow mask. Fer ~t, vivid colcr in lelected Trans Vista model!, . BCA bis crea&ed the "LlttJe Mol*E.'_ to 1too1t_ bum-cur· nm _, *1lver a bonus of picture ,. •• RCA has also ck .... _Jts most accurate, depeadlblt aUtunatie fine tunm,. 'Ibil is achieved bJ a com- put.er-tested integrated dreult that now heilps replace wenty- four other parts. AutAlmatJc fme tuning is available Jn moet of RCA'a 1970 models. 44Computer Crafted Coler t" said one RCA dealer, "11 the greatest technical advanee the company bas ever offeft4 the home viewer. Even IO, lt wouldn't give nearly II macb pleasure if tt were not fer the fact RCA is now producinc its most elegant and beaqliul cabinets. Styles range !om Mediterranean to Swedilb and Elrly American traditionala to JtCA's greatest color cruUon -fte "Two 1bousand." AD RCA television witb the new JD-Lite '70 color ICl'eeD ls ~Y America's faftl'ite ( aU-1-nUy lift foe· antmas. A.._.. WM with yu RCA .... .._be a wi8e Jcltl. I I ,, . . RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, Friday, December 5. 1969-3 .-. TONIGHT OUR FIRST MAJOR EVENT! 3 GREAT WAYS TO SA·VE! ' FRJDAY, bit 5th 7-10 .~P;M. ·. - All RADIOS & STEREOS have been priced down to clearance prices, most AT or BELOW cost. H you plan to give stereo or radio. here a1·e un· matched values. (Quantity limited.) Fantastic COLOR SET VALUES on one-oC-a-kind models in stock. Such as: AM PORTABLE RADIOS RLG 34 .......... Reg. 29.95 Now 19.00' RLG 20 .......... Reg. I 0.95 Now '5.50 RLG 12 .. : . Reg. 7.95 Now 4.so 2 MODEL GL 692 -Beautiful moorish design console with oyerbanging top & lnasstve plinth base-, .. vertical overlays wilh half-tµrned ~ilas«u-s adorll,,.. richly-patterned fabric speaker grille s. Same size a~ GM 6~1 t>e1ow. Fea .. tures automatic fine tuning, 25,00-0 volt chassis. new vista tun~. . · . specially prlc~ $599.00-·· AM/FM RADIOS RLM 68 .. .. Req. ~ 1.95 Now 30.00 RLC 20 .....• Reg. ··~24.95 Now 15.00 RJM 36 ~-· ... 'Reg. 2'6.95 Mow 19.00 R-JO 50 .... ~ .... Reg. 89.95 Now 69.00 .. 3 MODEL GJ 737 -Big screen (23") television in clabinetr~ that calls t9· mind the stateliness of 18th century english manor house furniture. Rolls on concealed ca sters, automatic fine-tuning, 25,000 volt chassis. ·RJC 36 .. . . . Reg. 64.95 Now 49.00 MANY OTHERS ' Sale Priced $572.00 toAM/ CLOCK RADIOS RZD '415 .. . . Reg. 19.95 Now 16.00 RZD 19 ... .. Reg. 24.95 Now 18.00 RZD 422 •....... Re9. 26.95 Now 22.00 ALL RCA Color TV prices reduced for this 3 ·Hour $ale~ Befow our regu- lar low price. Includes all orders placed-during sale. Examples: MANY OTHERS CONSOLE STEREO VLT 3l •.......• Reg.· 349.95 Now 270.00 ...... """23" ell ... , 295 •Cf·'"· pktat9 Th• C•ptiv1ting STEFANO RCA New Viste® Color TV A m•gnifictnt ubin et fn the finest Spenish tr•dition. Hidden co11trol ''"el witfi Autom1tic Fini T11ni11g. Ad· Hnced Vist• Color 26,000-v. cheui1. Super-bright Hi Lile Color Picture Tube. Put it right nut to tht family Christmas trtt! SALE $649 VLT, 52 ........ _ Reg. 479.95 Now 365.00 VlT '49 ............ Reg. '479.95 Now 265.00 .. --------------------------· Modtl GM-Ill U ' dl•C.1 2'5 tq. ln,,plcMt •one tube rectifier Th• Cl1ssic BELLINI RCA Trans Viste® Solid Stet•• Color TV Futures RCA'• tdvenctd t11lorn•tic "locked-in" t.ne tuning (AFT> end l111t111t-Picl Tilt.out control p•nel, 1uper-bright HI-lite Color picture tube. 26,500-v. color cheui1, Two- t puker, extended 1ound •v•tenf. Tll, "{otever" Christmu gift! SA· LE 5724 REG. $750. AS ALWAYS, WE PROMISE "THE BEST SERVICE YOU .HAVE EVER HAD.'' - .. I , ... 4-RC..\ Supplement to THE ·DAILY PILOT, Friday, December 5, 19d9 The lasting gitt·rof RC -,~.,, , ... a& t:/tg ..4/gltfA and AOW al IN ·HARBOR 'CENTER • 2: Tht Captivatin& STEFANO RCA New Vista• Color TV A magnificent cabinet in the finest Spanish tradition. Hidden control panel with Automatic Firte Tuning. Advanced Vista Color 25,000·v. chassis. New 100 % brighter HI-LITE '70 picture tube. Put it right next to the family Christmas tree! The luxurious l.ANZAHO RCA Trans VisQ• Color TV A solid state 26,500-v. chassis sets a new standard· for performance and reliability. New super brite HI· LITE '70 picture tube , •• 100% brighter than any previous RCA model and automatic "Locked·in'' fine tuning. The Dramatic KARLSBERG RCA New Vista• Color TV Scandinavian styling in a custom-designed cabi· net! Electronic/automatic fine tuning on VHF/ UHF channels. 25,000·V. color chassis. Two 6• oval duo-cone speakers. Santa's choice for the .all-family gift! I The Thrilling TONSBERG . Model GM-599 2~ The Classic l RCA New Vista• c Advanced au "Locked·in" finE (AFT) -With ti powerful tuner ii industry. 25,00C Vista color ch as! super· bright, picture tut>. ar balanced sound· The Hnsatic farr RCA Computer Crafted Color Television S'candi~avian-inspired cabinet wah louvered twin speaker grilles. Tran~ V.ista• sohd state 26,500 volt chassis with lnsta.nt Pie and RCA's iiddle-frett tuning (AFT); The brightest big-screen color television you ~n·buy thanh to the.HI· LITE 70 color tube. Detent tu.ier makes UHF as easyt.Otune as VHF. The most sparkling gift under the treel . $ 69500 RCA SUfJ?1!neot to THE DAILY PILOT, Frida!'. December 1. 1969-~ .CA Television and , • 2300 HARBOR, COST~ MESA I GM-599 23~ di11.1 295 aq .. IA. picture Classic LINARES $s7500 iw Vlsta• Color TV ranced automat:c ~d·in" fine tuning I -with the most 'ul tuner in the TV 'Y. 25,000·v. new oror chassis. RCA er·bright, Hl·LITE re. tube and ton .. ed sound system. e sensational 111· famifY_l iftl The a......._ FAIRWAY RcA New VJsta• Portable TV VwJd color ••• bic scrffft wtth · famous RCA color quality. 21,500·•· Sportabout color chassis and super·briSttt Hl·LITE CoJor. picture tube provide top perfor1t1ance and lona·lastinr dependability. On tverybody's "most Ytanted" aift list! The Glare-Proof WHITBY RCA Teble Modef CGlorlV Instant-Pie, automatic "locked-In" fine tuning {AfT) Ind llahted ctiann.t indicators. 26,500-v. Tr11ns V,.. ,chassis. New 100% bticttter Hl~UTE '70 picture tube, baJ1nced sound with 5" oval $peaktr. s59900 Terms of Course 54·0.7137 ,. . ' ~ \{ista• ree anhto sVHF. ... TM C9"1•mporary8RtUANGER s57500 RCA New Vistl' Color TV The Ncmtic beauty featuring RCA advanced auto- matic "~,k~in". fine tuhjng (~fl)! Tilt·o~t conttol panef. 25,000.v. New Vista· COfor 1V Ct1assis/ .... Hi~Ute COior picture tube •• -.~· · · proof and dust· proof. Make Christmas day RCA day! ' p,500 . MM,iAM-JIM'N ta• dJac,, 111 lq. In. pictur. Top Convenience and E'.xcelltnt Performance' Bia sc:rHn bfack •net white portable With matchlnc roll· abovt stand tt no bt1I coltl 17,000·v. chassis with 4-clrcutt VHF;~ ..... UHF JD,_., A. •. 1pec111 RCA for th-..holl~J . .. t ....... YMTtl The Incomparable JATIVA s455oq RCA Computer Crafted Stereo A wedding of bold Spanish end romantic Moorish design! Computer Crafted AM·FM·FM Stereo Radio; 200·watt solid state amplifier. Automatic manual turntable with feather-action tone arm. 8-speakers. Santa's best Christmas buy! JlCA Computw Cr1fted 4-pc. STEREO MODULE SYSTEM MMtl IUOOO four piece ensemble module il'toorporates 100-watt peak power receiver lnclucllng Computer Crafted tuner. Studiomatlc turntable and auled speaker units. DuraUf .. Diamond Stylus, The superb Christmu lift for all ages! Ultra-crand GRANOLLERS RCA ~pater Crafted Stereo Ma~ifkence in the Spanish tradition of design. Mark tstudiomatic automatic/manual turntabfe • Tubular feather.action tone arm. Duralife' dia· mOnd stylus. 500·Watt peak power amplttier. 10 speakers. Perfect present 'for music lovers o' all agesl "' 569500 e TERMS OF COURSE e HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD. PH. 540-7131 DAil Y 9:00 to 9:00 SAT. 9:00 to 6:00 SUN. 12:00 to 5:00 COSTA MESA • 1;-RCA Supplement to THE DAI LY PILOT, Friday, December 5, 1969 Desk, typewriter and notebook-Hugh .Mulligan,. Associated Press special correspondent, has switched his base from New York to London. From there, he roams wh erever the news takes him -the British Isles. conti- nental Europe, Africa, the Middle East. N ot t hJ the;e is a lack of stories on this side of the Allantic fo r t his talented reporter. It's just that Mulli· gan's uncommon touch, his insight, his humor, hiS in- terest in people, fit righ t into plans of The Associated Press to bring you more stoiies about the people -not n ecessarily lhe governments -that make up the world. Mulligan is recognized as one of the great reporters of qur day. He has brought us eyewitness accounts of the war in Vietnam and the fighting in Biafra. On the plea- santer.side, he has told us what it's like to carry a spear in an opera company, to fly on a Navy blimp to the North Pole, t o ride a truck from Ohio to Alaska, to travel with -Louis Armstrong's band on one-nig~t stands. In his new assignment, Mulligan doesn't hesitate to drop into a foreign ministry, if necessary. But gener- ally, he leaves that type of story to AP's huge European . ' .· ..... ~....._ .... ·.: ·-· staff. Usually he gets his story from the guy or gal on the street in London, the housewife of Toulouse, the facrory worker in Zurich or Milan, the shopkeeper of Cairo. Much of the world has.urbai\-problems, educati<>nal c~ises, traffic headaches. Like us, people seek new forms of le~ure, new cultural channels, new trends away from tradition. This newspaper plans to tell you more about human affairs around the world through sueh underitanding. AP writers as Hugh Mulligan . Watch for these stories in ... DAILY PILOT "We believe ti.e "11MC qfaeers couldn't h a v e piblic ls eoOOed to --~t about as 900ll u they dependablt color rt lidtes did wstbout computers. = • . ~ ,admittedly wort • • faster • • • and •hJ · mHffOm141 times faster. than RCAb)X'OUdly b t.u.a Computer ~ Colad,, men ~ ft"'4 confirms, work ' men aceurat.e}J~ 'lb1I prompt After ~1'CA'1 mt ted eApw«a· to w · Cl9o color teJmtlDD --.... often to help IOlvt .. statement bj ' • RC A 4et1cn p:"Oblema. In a • tr spokesma m11 .-... • W actoal cues RCA bU,... actuality rather' a.a paere «*I*' cut m "'2P* wishful tblnkln& for -. .., ..,. fl'GID color T'f ~· turners. meat schedule•.~ 'lbe 19'10 BCA eolor TV II 41Q11dly,'' RCA ....... ...., the red ol hn:r ' the 1re l:drt' I lw _.... apeeci and eccuraey the mare _....... e. 10 r cunputtt to kill bamt a.. teltrillaD ' '..., 1uter ~ dimcts l m p •rt a n t Id. f!llfll IMlfln... • vancementa ln color televlaJon. O ru ta Cnfted. Colar, Betta' color, Uley say, wttb ICA b1lllfllt 11.··n.plN Ne D1<ft IOUd ltafe ~ far Ill MW' llmlllnl fl fllllll- and featuret tban e.ea U.-ty. To be man lf!et'lc, RCA blghly lltilled .IDd ploDeertllC ..... ~ .. IPdJ, RCA Supplement to THE DAILY PILOT, Friday, December S, 1969-7 $459.95 -( $41.9.95 . $599 • ..... Niii .... -~ ........ ••0ar 22Dd YtM' In Tlal Barbor Area" DAVIS-BROWN 41 I E. I '7tll St., Con ..... F _, ' ' I ' ' • i> • ' • l " J I 'o#t\•.\ -' •' ·' ~ f l 1 r1'1,;;~ 1.1· ,\ :; j<i; .. ~!''~ Ai . .p " I I ~'4:~ + :~ i .... .• ' , BRUSHING UP ON RECIPES-. Laguna artist Nick Pasko-prom· -~Carl Manus get ready to take down the facts. Artistnvill'join res- ises. to reveal ingredien~ or a favorite recipe a~ Laguna Beach id~n~s · in 'f!ubmittin~ recipes for a cookbook .entitled, Ar.tistry ·in Juruor \Vomen (left to right} Mrs. Kenneth Erikson and Mrs. Cws1ne being compiled for January publication. A Patient Pro;ecf At-home Presents Bring Yule Cheer Monday mcrning doesn't designate the only ·day of the week me~bers of Monday Morning Club of Laguna are busy. December has been~an unusually active month for the women \vho bring both companionship and joy into tile lives of elderly resi- dents. While occupied year around with sending birthday greetings and planning birthday parties for patients in Laguna Beach Nursing Home, l\'londay Morning Club members are gathering ingredients for a Christmas party in the nursing home on Friday, Dec. 19, at 2 p.m An entertaining program of Christmas carols by the Communi- ty Presbyterian ·Chutth Bell Ringers will add to the holiday spirit as \vomen patients receive bed jackets and men discover a new pai r of slippers for their Christmas stockings. Serving on a committee headed by Mrs. Clyde Kilbride are co- chairman Mrs. Lester C. Lowe and the Mmes. \Vatter Sherry, El· m er \Vagner, Robert W. Roper, Fred E.·Anderson, Helen Perkins and Lucille Johnson. Contributing cookies for the party are the Mmes. Howard Mof- fitt, Ralph J. David, Frank J. Levins, Jerome V. Jefferds, Calvin M. Gibbens, John B. ruchards, Cornel Wikan, Edith Saunders and Blanche Smith. Bright holiday wrappings for the gifts will be provided by the ?-.Imes. S. L. Guttridge, James \V. Murray, Chester A. Welday and 11alister M. Calkins. The regular monthly meeting of the club Is scheduled for the evening of Monday, Dec. 8, in Irvine Country Club. ,_ .. ' • llARBAR'A DUAR'l'I!, --'"*'• .,........ .. .... • . ,_ ,. Culinary Capers Art Cooks In Ki tchen What could be mor.e belilting to the Art Colony than a cookbook containing art1slry conjured in the kitchen P rather than in the studio? With an eye to this goa1, members of Laguna Beach Junior Woman's Club are busily compiling community recipes for their latest project -Artistry ill Cuisine. To make the cookbook truly representative of Laguna Beach, a special section for recipes donated by artists will be included as well as favorites offered by residents and civic leaders. All recipes will be identified by the donor's name. The cookbook. a ways and means project, Will be financed by space ordered by businessmen and sale of Artistry in Cuisine at a cost of $1.50 shortly after the first of the year. · Any resident may support the project by donating a recipe and/or purchasing a cookbook. This year, Laguna Beach Juniot.s have. projected their. budget to cover donations to South Coast Community Hospital (one-third of a $1,000 pledge), and support of the Boys Club, Bluebird Park and YMCA, as well as donations to national and international charitable cr,anizations which depend en contributions from philanthropic groups. Further information may be obtained by phoning Mrs. -<Ronald '.Dugan,-ways and me.ails chairman,_ 4.94-:4855, or those interested may send a favorite recipe to the Junior Woman'• Club, 286 St. Ann's Drive, Laguna Beach. , . .. 1: •• •! :· . : " .. •• Pro~ram for the special Christmas meeting will be the violin artistry 01 Jan Rubini featuring his Victor Borge r;tyle humor. Rubini \vill be accompanied by his son Michael, a concert pianist and re-- cording artist. REA DY· FOR GIFT WRAPPI NG -Members of .Monday Morn· ing Club of Laguna admire pretty bed ja.cket destined for women patients in Laguna Beach Nursing Horne. Getting ready to place lbe jacket in a gift lioX · are (left to right) the Mmes. How· srd· Moffitt, W8lterSherry, Clyde Kilbride and Robert W. Roper. Mrs. Sherry holds a pair of slippers which will be given to male patients. :: •• '· • ·: .. .. •• :1 ., Your Idol Wasn't Idle When It Came to Showing ~lay Feet ir . i1 DEAR ANN LANDERS: Please telJ·me if I am normal or a candidate for the net, I'm beginning to wonder. · Yesterday J wtnt to my doctor for a r.heckup. I'm not the type who runs to lhe doctor with every little ache and pain. But 1 had been feeling poorly for seve.ral days and decided to have myself looked at. l\1y doctor is a general practilloner - and has been •·onderlully kind and con- siderate to our entire family through the years. He delivered _roy . three chiktren and saw my husband through some serious illnesses. We all worship him. When the doctor examined me, he pressed a tender spot and I experienced ' 'ANN LANDERS ~: an unexpected stabbing pain. Without thinking I -gave his ann a hit. Jt was more or an automatic response lhao a display of anger. Although I didn't hit him vtty haJ'd, he became furioua with me. Jn a wfce that could be heard all over the office, he &hooted, "Don't ever do that again · or )'.'XI will have to get another doctor.'' Then he proceeded to bawl me out for 10 minutes. The nurse ' who was In the room was as surprised aa I. When Ute doctor finished chewing me out, I began to cry and couldn 't stop. I don 't know what.came over me. I just 11at there like a fool aod sobbed my head off. Today I feel depressed and remorseful. I'm ashamed of myself. Am I becoming mentally ill? Why dkl I lose my grip? Whai do you think about this episode! -LONGTIME FAN DEAR LT .F .. : I cM:bd wttb four physicians and their vefdlct w a • Unanlinou11. Your doctor o'erreacted. He may wtll . have been overworked and tired. (De::~on are ltuman, yoa know.) Your bllUiig bis arm: w1alcll, of course, yoa shon!d noi 'Hve do1el probably trig- gered Utt mfuhulate response. Cryt-s -yoa did was IOt abnormaL You were •ndoubtedly 'not only ltart but deeply "dluppolnkd kl dlsctver tha1 your Idol bad leel o1 ·ci.7. DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband and J have two lovely children. We figured our family .,.... complete and were well saUsfled. When I learned I was pregnant ACain, I wasn't happy but 1 decided t.o make the best of It. When ! told my buibiiia; be 0... Into a rage. I don't think I've ever .een hlm so mad. He called me an idiot and a dum~ bell and ended up saying we would b1ve to give lhe baby away. J was sure he'd cool off and chance his mind, but four months have pasoed and be Is atlll repeaUng his demands. He says he wouldn't "aeU" the· baby, but he would expect the people who adopt * to pay the booplta! and doctor bills. Laat night I told him to quit screarnlnc -that my mind wu made up. I jult couldn't ca,w • child for nine• moolbl • and give tt. away as tr It were a puppy. I He aa.ld, "Y.ou will or I'm Jeaving.'' f Plea.oe belp me, Ann. I'm asbarnei! to sign my name. l'm sure you've never had a =tetter -a!i etrange as th.ls one. MOTHER OF 'J'WO AND A HALF. DEAR MOTHER: Your llt111tfen Isn't .,. nearly 11 1tru1e 11 you tlllnk. Every few monills I ltear 1bout a 111t lite yoar -. •ub •. Invariably these kooks c.han1•' • their mlllds, ud I'm beUlng youn wiD, _: .... . Ann Landers w!D be glad to help 1~ with -your problems. Send them to her in .. ; cll'9'of the DAILY PILOT, encloslnc-•; .Ou..adresoed, stamped envelope. .......................................................................................................................... ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~--~~-- 14 CA!t.Y '11.0T Frid.,, -5, 1969 Th ere'll Be Something · for Everyone No holiday pariy is complete without gifts, so Jef4 frey Sklansky, Allen Menton and Mark Sk.lansky (left to right) are helping : make sure there will be enough for everyone when the UCI Faculty/StaU Wives host f~vities Sunday, Dec. 7. Husbands Santa Ana Home Carole Grinder Wed end children of the members have been invited to a holiday -party from 2 to 4 p.m. in UCI Commons, and a magician, UCI Professor Richard Barrutia, will be there to entertain the children. Mrs. Jonas Schultz is chairman. Alumnae Party j f. .... •' Late afternoon w e d d I n g vowa were exchanged by Carole Bonnie Grinder and Terry Grant Wells at the altar of the Lutheran Church of the 1'1aster, Corona del Mar, dur· ing a ceremony performed by the Rev. William R. Elter. Small Fee Big Help· • ' " ~ j 1 I • 1 .. The bridal couple are the daughter and son of h1rs. Robert D. Grinder of Irvine and the late Mr. Grinder and Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Wells of Corona del ·!f.ar. Several Harbor Area residents will be among ~ift-bearing University of Southern California alumnae and guests making the trek to the Ri viera Country Club for a Christ- mas party Saturday, De<:. 13. Unlike the wise men of old, their gifts will not be ~piceS and oils, but toys an,d school supplies for the Avalon Carver Com~ munity Center in Los ,Angeles, where USC carries. out a tutorial project. The toys and supplies will be the only ad- mission fee for the party, which is sponsored by the Trojan Junior Auxiliary's provisional members . Among patronesses, who will be greeted by Santa Claus as they arrive, will be Mrs. Page Parker of Corona del Mar. I • I Given in marriage by her uncle, Johit Zelon.is of Van Nuys, tbe bride wore a silk organza over taffeta gown with a venise lace bodiCe, full sleeves and cathedral train. Her booquet was a cascade of cattleya orchids and white ...... MRS. WELLS Says Vows Leche League Airs Problems The second meeting in 1 serie3 of four on breastfeeding and problems of motherhood will be presented for members of Costa Mesa Chapter or La Lec:he League on Tuesday, Dec. 9, 7,45 p.m. The public is invited to participate in inform a I discussion In the Newport Beach residence of Mrs. David McLaren. Information may be obtained by phoning N.'rs. McLaren at &t2-5S67. Wig Maste r -, Tell s Secrets A1iss MUanna Grinder, sister of the bri'de was maid or honor and bridesmaids were MW Christine Wells, sister of the bridegroom, Mrs. R ob e r t Kelley and Mrs. Micheal Orbach. The"y wore red gowns with white accessories. The bridegroom's brother, John Wells served as be.st man and ushers were Peter Euell, Tom Thomson and Orbach. Following the ceremony the couple received their guests in the home of the bridegroom's parents. The new Mrs. Wells at· tended Corona del 11-far High School and Orange Coast College. Her husband attended CdMHS, the University of Oregon and California State College al Long Beach. He af· f iliate d with Theta Chi fratemlty. After honeymooning 1 n northern CJlifomia a n d Oregon, they will make their borne In Santa Ana. Gola Features Gift Exchange Christmas Fefe Noted Author Invited Christmas will be celebrated by the Alliance Francaise de la Riviera Califomienne Fri· day, Dec. 12, with a fete in the Outrigger restaurant, Laguna Beach. Song Fest Prog rammed Two students from UCl's School of Fb e Arts will offer a. program of English, French and German songs when members of the Music Section of UCI Town and Gown gather Tuesday, Dec. 9, at 10 a.m. in the N.ewport Beach home of Mrs. Alan C. Stoneman. !Ughlighllng the banquet will be an appearance by Jacques Borel, . noled cootempo<ary French nove list. D;:rel, also distinguished as a literary criUc, has written, in addition to his novels and poems, articles for France's leading periodicals, including Le Figaro of Paris, In 1965 he was awarded the Prix Goncourt by t h e Academy Goncourt for hb novel, "L'Adoration." He bas been a visiting pnt.,... In many countries including the United States. Borel's lecture topic for the Christmas fet.e will be "La Vie d'un livre." For those interested in spe- cial care and styling of wigs and hairpieces, a master styl- ist for a nat1onal maga?ine will present a demonstration of techniques and arranging secrets Monday morning, Dec. 8. A Continental breakfast will be served at 10 a.m. in the Mission Viejo Recreation Cen- ter at a cost of $1 for guests and 50 cents for members. Miss Susan Boatman and 111omas Anthony are both slu- dyi'.1g voice at the university. h1rs. Christopher Kitching is chairman of the section and H o spltality arrangements for lhe meeting are ,under the direction of Mrs. J a 1 p er Morgan, chairman, and the Mmes. Paul Schneeberger, George Arie, Lauri Duval and Char1"' Root Plans for a Christmas party assisting the hostess wlll be will be finali?ed by Delta Beta htrs. c. c . Austin and ?i-1rs. Zeta Chapter of Beta Sigma Ralph H. Hilmer. Phi during a meeting at 8 p.m. ii'!=============~=====~ UNITlD NATIONS ASSOCIATION GIFT SHOP' lmporttd Gifh-Uftictl C•rd1 2204 N. M.;,.,, S•11I• A11• Mort4•'t thu1 S•tw rd•v-,11 ·4 Tuesday. Dec. 9. in the home 1 1 of :Pt1rs. Ronald Woodside. The party is planned for 8 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 13, in the' Huntlngtoo Beach..;i..a,e oil Mrs. Robert McAdams. At th.ls time secret sisters will1 exchange gilts and gag gilts will be given to members' husbands. EASY·CARE Uii/o rin:J '~UST FOR YOU" Sm1rf f•,hio«1, clte·frte f1bric1 fee· turin9 BARCO and oth1r famous brend n•mes. M>nr ,.,,,.,. •1*o• "°'"· '8 9D lomt ••low•• • • Cathy's Uniforms 1767 Newport 111¥4. c.,ta MttG M6-SJ88 • DUNHILL CASTELLO COMOYS CHARA TAN SAVINELLI SAS I EM I f eatur ing Orange Count11'• Lar gest Selection of (l11a llt11 Plpu AND ACCESSORIES J!Iamrenre ., J ipe j hoppe #S TOWN & C.OUNTlY. OU.NGI, CALIFORNIA ' 542-8752 STOil HOURS DAILY t TO t SUNDAY 12 TO I Ho roscope -Aquarius: Review Career SATURDAY DECEMBER 6 By SYDNEY OMAl\ll l.ulr polldoa favorable for fllblo1. . Tee• dldag lllats: Mqy •re ta mood to let emotions above Ioele: Qide.. JtnoW tUt you do bave io face comeq1ence1 - and yourself In monJa1. orteni.J food and m a s l c toal&bt combine for fa1claatl11 date pl1n. Romance sblnes for Can«r, while Libra could (tt 1t11ck wltb cheek. Scorpio Is tbe penonality kid, wbile Taurus bnlsll on IDOl'e tboroagb llltdentaodlng of special rel•· Uoollhip. Blind date co.Id be New Sculptors In Exhibition The opening or F i v e Sculptors will be celebrated by University Gallery Associates during a reception in the gall<ry Sunday, Dec. 7. Featuring ~e recent works of a group of artists new to the UCI Gallery, the exhibition will be open to the public without charge between 1 and 5 p.m. Tuesday, Dec. 9, through Jan. 18 except the week beginning Monday, Dec. 22, when the gallery will be closed for the holidays. Gallery Asaociates who will host the opening evenl are Mrs. Charles Hendrickson, Udo Isle; Mrs. Alan J . Mickle, Udo Lsle, and Mrs. Thomas P. Wilder, Newport Beach. Viewed will be the works of Carl Andre, Dan Flavin, Donald Judd, Robert Morr~ and Richard SerrL All are New York artists who use con- temporary materials to stretch the boundaries of three-dimensional form. The show. was organized by John Coplans, curator of the Piuadena Art Museum and former director of the UCI Art Gallery. Stafftfig the sales desk dut;.- ing the exhibition will be Jobs Open In Alaska Registered nurses interested In becoming nurses fcrr the U.S. Public Health Service in Alaska ~ invited to meel Miss Diana Carl.son, RN, In Los Angel., through Dec. t2. Miss Carl!On, a bush nurse In Ala.ska, will be available for interviews in the Maynower Hotel or may be contacted after Dec:. 12 at Area Person· nel, Alaska Area N a t 1 v e Health Services, P. O. Box 7- 741, Anchorage, Alaska, 99501. Gallery As soc iates coordinated by Mrs. Nelle Duggan, Newport Beach, staf. ling chairman. A special ex~ hibition brochure also will be available. Mrs. Thomas Frank. 838o 1647, may be telephcned for additional information. The support group to the UCI Gallery also is making preparations for a special tour of the new Pasadena Art Museum Wednesday, Dec. 10. The opening exhibition, New York 1945-1969, was coordinated by UCI A r l Gallery director Alan Solomon, and guiding the associates during the tour will be Mrs. Thomas Terbell, wife of the museum's acting direc· tor. Mrs. Terbell will host the associates during a luncheon in her home where they will have· an opportunity to view the Terbell collection of con- temporary art. Opening concurrently with the New York show in Pasadena Is West Coast 194a. 1969 directed by Coplans. This event ls the second in a series of museum t o u r s coordinated by G a 11 e r y Associate Mrs. Patrick E. Cory; Laguna Beach. Last month the group gathered for a tour of the Voo Gogh ex· hibition. The next tour will be an ex· hibition from the Cloisters Museum in New York City following the holidays. 'The associates provide bus tfansportation for members and guests and serv e coffee and Danish pastry en route to the museums. The Gallery As soc I ates formed fo support activities of the UC! Art Gallery. Members provide the invitational open- ing receptions and staff the gallery sales desk in addition to sponsoring student events and attending lectures by the art faculty. r-!or Sllptwi••· ARIES (Mardi %1-AprU 19): Put off final declsJon on money question. You will be in better poslU.oo to decide when older lndlvidual finds face-sav· Ing device. Rea!Ju lhls and ad accordingly. TAURUS (April 20-May 20), Finish Wk which has caused concern. Now ls Ume when you gel not cnly sympathy, but 90lid support. Rea!Ju lhls, and move with confldence. Be kind to one who confidu pro- blem. GEMINI (May 2t.June 20): Stress originality, in- dependence of thought and ac· tloo. Some matters wtUch had .been hidden become open secret. Maintain poise. Steer c I e a r of organizational dispute. CANCER (June 21.July 22): YOU are somewtlat restricted to fulfilling desires. But don't be discouraged by minor rebuff. Your acumen regarding tmoney and hpme pays off in long run. LEO (July 2!-Aug. 22): Ob- tain valid hint from Cancer message. Don't rush. U in too much of a hUM')', you lose sense of proportion. Accent is on location, property value, domestic harmony -or Jack of it. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sepl. 22): Not wise to embark on journey, u n 1 es s absolutely necessary. Key is to be obser- vant. Check details. Jewish Singles 'Planning Social Otherwise, )'VII could nod yourself on wtld·goose chase. IJBRA !Sept. 23-0ct. 22)' Money preS.!W'e exists. Have full ton.ight 'but be aware of budget. Realize also that you get nothing for nothing. Avoid one with wild scheme which could bring trouble from law. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): 'nlreat to your security may merely be affront to yoor vanity . Be mature -and analytical. Not fa\'orable for fiigning of legal docwnents or form ulating of partnerships. SAGJ1TARIUS (Nov. 22· Dee. 21 J: Cooperate with persons whose purpose is to aid those confined to homes or hoopitals. Evening feature s the mysterious or behind· scenes activitie s. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan. 19); Some friends may appear gloomy. Be patient. Offer moral support. But don't become involved In any finan· cial scheming. Allow only fac- tural information to motivate yuu. . AQUARIUS (Jan. 2()..Feb. 18): Career opportunities should be reviewed. Strive for objectivity. Know thal some r es po n s i bililies demand almost immediate attention. PISCES (Feb. l!J...March 20): News from afar might be in different form t h a n an· ticipated. Stick to principles and adhere to Golden Rule. Then you will be moving in constructive direction. IF TODAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you have basic desire to make loved ones happy -even if it means·self. sacrifice. Financial picture due to brighten. Emotiooa1 confusion clears and is replac· Orange County Jew ls h ed by greater self.sufficiency. To !Ind out who'J lu{~Y 'or YOU 1" Singles are sponsoring a tMoev •na love. croer Svdnev Om•rr'5 Ch k h boo~le!. ··secr1r Hinh lor Men •n<I anu a party tomorrow Women." Sena blr1~a.1e and 50 ctnf1 .veru·ng at 9 Jn the Green fc Om1rr A1rrotoov Stcrels. 11'1e OAIL Y PILOT. Boic 12.0. Gra~d C1n1r1I Sr1-VaJley family c 1 u b h 0 use , 11cn, Nr.v Yark. N.Y. 1Gat1. Fountain Valley. RJCS~~l:$~J:11u::.$::s~~ D a n c l n g, entertainment, I I games and refreshments wlU I ~ spark the party. Admission is i I :~r50n!~e~~r~rs and ;2.50 I F IRST LINE g The gr'"p also will meet " s47so a Thursday Dec. 11 al 8:30 p.m. ~ ~ in Temple Beth Emet.W-~ Anaheim, for a program on 11 iii Israel Today. u l11clude1 a Currently the fall mem· ! Tuning 'It t'i a11d if! bership drive is under way ii j and yearly dues "'e $.I. Ii S Sorority Lunch I '"·'"""'" · I W Music For ~ Orange County Alumnae I , l1 Club of Alpha Xi Delta sorori· W EL'Cf)'Orre. ~ ty will gather for a luncheon W ''ff1111 l a,11 to Rock" U Monday, Dec. 8, at noon in •COAST MUSIC SERVICE ~ Bullock's. Further informat~n ~ M may be received ~y contactr.1g a: Dowlltow11 Coua Mna: ~ htrs .. James De1ndoerfer of I 646-0271 t,_ Hwitington Beach. r.•~s:=:g:zi:!al:l:ss:=:B:C\;:::!~~ .. MllTCHMllKERS A-ABSOLUTnY NO B-110 C--NOT SURE D-YES 1. a I c b It lllfllttn fir re• t• 1mpt crtttcl1111! E-ABSOUITTLY YES l I z. a c All Pl nctllfort911 ... tine 1rw people! l A C SllNll IU 1Mltio1 111 bll&~ 1ubld1 et tlt1 H11t! l 4., A C h '" llflhr 1ttlfltiU -.!!Iii tltt 1ppnlb 111 Mlrt th1111'1tll J1W nr11 I I. A C Ct rn btlln•,,..,... en 11no1nct yovr nte! L a C Dt "' •••tl•u •m ll11dxh11 tr llackache1 tfttt 1 C11flc1ft 111? 1. A C flt ,.. 11/Q partlclpat1111 h dllls lfld 1ocl1I 1rr1nir1t11111? 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I 7 ...... 37 •• I c • ( DI,., ttilR jlidr.• fMr Hflll I ? I 31. A I c D [ Is It 1ece,t11111 or a Hllttl tt1e• h ••Ill•'' 'rlllll 11 ,.11nc? 1 lnterut.ed tn me.ritinr highly n. a I C D l 11 ltlt rt: tee Mell ..... ,"'"'• ,., nlltll cni,n11 tll"t U,S? compatible ~pie ••• l("!ected 40. A I C D [ Cn" rn 1lltw,..... c~ll• te di1 11 r1R&lt1 ttHr tu.,..,., especially for you from 41, a l ·C D ( Dt Jll ltl lll'J tally" ~ltlJ? I amonir \houaandL 4L A I C I l Dt re• fl.-111utlf tMklllf .. .,. 11 10iim? I •1. ' I c D l •••l• '" ""'" II •• Wiltl • .,.., ,, ,.., .. ntfl11 ........ , I " 44.. • I c I £ DI,.. ltll .. tlltfl .. mr ctrmlst.tlCH ~ tt•1• )ftltty I tlltflf 'ID'' A. LI es, I I C D ( II llit •)Mt 11 ltl Miit "1f41Jhlted ., .. MIU Mdia? l ..,. ...... ~ 41. a I c D l StlnN II df'*tt flHht Stl'll n1111011 .atnct111? I 41. I I C I E Dt,.. ,...._)lbs•"*',.._.,. la rtlltllll 8'111 ti ttlillnr RHdr f01t a dramatic: and n· 4&. A I C I l SllttN ~ _,. I' '"11 • Mii llldi'1111ttt11e•I eitin;-chanre la rour aocllll et. a I C I l CnN ,.._ .. ._,a.mt a.• ...ntct1111t1 .... , I tit~ SO. A I C I l lh.td ""9tln" lit t111it It 1W ... lie acllMlt? Riii lnt .in ftplct lltmst 111d nl1111 ii a11n 11 c1.,Jtlllllltf lltlwltt ,ers111 11d 1hHJd Mt J 1//////1./ -_ ,, c••ltnn• ••• ,"' ..... .,,.,. ,.,,"'"'le.al .i.,. •• 1" I ~ , , , Fill out and rnall O\l"I' 11n.n-,.,._ _______ ....,,ra dtJ min•l"J profile lod17 • • • Man,., t1 MliTCHMliKERS OCP 10/24 We kOl't It and let 11>0 lmow "ta at th• "M1t.chm1kin1r Compu\tr" can do for JOG. Then'• no eo1t or atill&"ationr. ., ....... 500 So. Main St., Suite 1105, Oron9e Callfomla 92668 ou••• cou""' 111 41 141-1111 LOS ANGIUS 6Sl·tl71 I~ f!IOr• t011••1d•11t 111ell te: 6505" Wll1hit• 11..1., Selle SOS, ln .l11~11, Cellf. fD"I .~ """--------------------------------------------.... ~---~-----..... -..·--· ...... -.·~-·--·---·-· ~ l l • I ~ • ·' • HEIDI LYLE Ft bru1ry D1t1 UCLA Grads To Say Vows During a dinner party in the San Bernar- dipo home of l\1r. and l\1rs. M. Louis DeLlsle Ute ~gage 1nent of thei r niece, Heidi Eliza-b~ Lyle to Army 2nd Lt. Lawrence Dennis CaJUP'eUi was announced. The future bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Grant Lyle of Irvine, is a 1965 National Charity League debutante. A g'raduate of Newport Harbor High School, she attended Ute University of Cali- fornia, Santa Barbara where she pledged Alpha Delta PL Sile graduatl!d from UCLA wttere she majored in polltic(ll science and now is working for her teaqjiing credential at.CaJifornia State College at Fullerton. lier fiance is the ~son ol Mr. and )1r1. Nicholas Robert. Canarelli of Madera. Jie is a graduate of Madera High Sghool and UCLA where he majored in econcnntcs and afflliat· ed with Sigma Nu. He is a llltrDbor•of llJu• Ke)' national men's honorary and is a dt .. tin•uished military graduate. · The qoup~ P,lan to marry Feb. 14 lr! CCJl'O!UI d f( M,t Community Congregationil CljUreh. • • Specilll flllells 'l\t!endlng the aniJ<lunce- rntmt p!~/r were Mr .. and Mrs, Janies E. Le!>, gr parents of, the bride.tleot. Couple Married I ·In NB Nuptials lid &Ira: .\Ur.ci lie Cito : 'l"if ow 4!]( ' ..... ,. d~ed Juan 1C1p11trano have will.. U.,;Dlllflag•'ill her Fltigfi •~ his brothef'1 r. M'arj~ Jean bf.St m. p -ushen were to Thomas J"""' ~Jjane, J4J11es D. ' ¥.~'ilk~ -~·,' !lld~ ~·!!!~~ ~~ ~~~ ~~ j -I . (?!. ~~i!f a ~ "1 utln -.. ~ gown wllh lrbh lace panelbg Following a wedding trip to and a shoulder length veil Shelter Island the bridal cou- caught lo flowers edged in tiny pie will ru.ide in Costa Mesa. aeed pearls. She c a r r -i e .d 'Ibe new Mrs. Fitzgerald Ls yellow and white miniature a graduate of San Clemente pOmpon chrysanthemums. IDgb School and her husb8'.1d ~frs. Douglas McKeand, the is a'n alumnus of Newport bride's sister was matron of Harbor High School an d honor -"" Mrs. John A. Callfornla State College at F!tiierald-Jr., and Miu Joan Long Beach where he af. fti,Jpps were bridesmaids. fillated with Theta C b l Ttiey donned brow.1 velve-fraternity. teep gowns with bows in their Special guests at the wed- hatr ~nd carried yellow pom· ding were Mrs. A. W. Carley p>n cbrysa.nthemums. of Costa M e s a the Hek!n Marte Jakubka, niece b r I degroom's gran~r of the benedict and Tina Marie and Mr. and Mrs . E. C. ~f~Keand, the bride's niece Slngelyn of Menlo Park, bis ,_ were flower &iris in dress~ of un~ ""1 aunt. Secretary's Life Wa ~ Hectic Too FNm Ille Wire Servlc41 P,.sldent Johnson S41d, "1111'• . Jiive to sit there irid fWl!ft, Life as Lady B!nl~~·· that's what v;e'll. ""," u~. '!n Mfl'll!lf• Li. Carpenter said. r::'·· •·-IA , .. tlhlt' "" .,. " ""' Wji! .@ .,. • hoc ~I~ 6ifJini.f ~)'f. Lady1Bird frequ.-itly r~Jv­ @d giftS from P r tsl d ~q' "I just had to wOTf)' abou\ J .. l.......... d ·c1, "L women, dogs, Luci .. l.an aing .............. an _ ~qi rn- "f' "" don indulges JJ1f ttmYch JnOFI! 1 •he spelling of her name, Luci · expensive thhw U\llri ~wquld ' hecoming a Catholie, Luci II · li1f--· to having her ears pierped, Luei ~~w Qlfl8 • ·· ng t . ed ' ... I ""•· CllfJ>enter. . ~· Ung '"gag , """' gell!DI 8,,. dJa not w~1'! •IJoul how fllarried, Lynda'!! e•pgement; g u.-, J=~~ ......., on inida's weddiJll, a h o t. ~ .. , .,... .... tempered Fren@ti ~f §Plf 4b or vthef • , ~ Lady Bird trj"-" ~ saya in ~ ~ ~etary says the , a copy rip t liticJe in fprmq Preside;it never rtally _J\tcCall's mag·ipln!.-understood the press,,.... and One problem that arose dur· never was understood by it. ing the planning for Luci 's Mrs. Carpenter said Johnson wedding was Mrs. Carpenter's couldn't undentaml the inadverte:it involvement in a press's habit o{ criticizing, while newsmen could not labor strike, she write!!. fathom his "desire to hold The NaUonal Shrine of the back news until it w•• •fact." Immaculate Conception , "He made the mi1rttke of where Luci marria: Patrick J. assuming that re po rter s Nugent in August, 1966, was should be particlpanta -more not air-conditioned and United obliged to be cililtnl that Airlines, then in the midst of a critics," Mrs. Carpeftler !Said. strike offered to send some "'~e never saw the prea.s as a Idled aJr-conditioning t.rucks to vast industry with hourly belp out. needs to prod uce a pl'044ct in Mn. · · Carpe.1ter accepted, print or on the air, f Jlttd that ·~ recalled,· but President requires some degrp o1,1an- JQhfwon found out and told hei" ning." · UI clt~k wH.h Labor Secretary Mrs. Johnson t re a le d WUJ~d Wirtz. · reporters with greater w1rmth ''No l -Nfl," she said V!1irtz and re spect, Mn. Carpenter t.eld hef, 'I know it's tough, said, perhaps J>ecause m her bin this strike affects 35,000 four years of journalillft at the men • • • au we need is a University of Texas. Volunteers Are Typical st ru tk 'airline tru c k "But she seldOm read her pho t o~tl·P be d at the own press. which surprised Exh. iblt Shows Pru!® I daughter's w..i. a.id sUghtly annoyed me," the di~· C• them off!" former press secretary said. Student•' Art rueµ W"' -bad< and "The Pre~dent and I read • ,.., every·Jlne •• ;he "°ould hold a press conference ia his office A i;o!ledion 11Lll )llcturr -Emblem Club and before the reporters were from Japanese ~ ii 0.1 out the door, running for the display trus m(!ftth In the Gathering foi' b u s J n e 1 s phones, the President would Corona de! Mar Ubrary. sessions and programs are be waiting impatiently at the 11le art, which b an ex· members ol Newport Harbor news ticken. If the stories change for similar works from Emblem Club every aecond didn't click off fa<tt enough he elementary students in the Tuesday at a p.m. in the Elks would •.• P:Ull out the copy as Nuptial Vows Read In Episcopal Church • DAILY PILOT J/l Honoro ry Las Da mas Mts. Nixon Adds Name . ' I~-~~~ bas ..,_ "'~· of 1116 Cblllftn'1 n llOcle•r. San e1em .. io. MOWD for her generous IUP. of pnluUoaa dedlcatod Itare of chlldren, the · 'i Wiii llJM * ~ted" th to J" r!taD4 ~~.~ "oplendl . • 11 ~~·" 1111 Qi!Wm ·~ Mrs. Ni.Ion now has becOme cne of more than 12,000 people who donate time and talent lo the society each year. Last year, 21 percent of their operating Income was pro- \lided by fund-raising efforta or these volunteers. Boutique Calendared . " NEW MEMBER • Mrs. Richard Nixon Holiday Date ~ Holiday Goodie Exchange Will take place Monday, Dee. Baked goods and Christmas ~l-trom 10 a.m. until noon in boutique items will be offered • Village Park Recreation by the Hildred Ferrel Circle of Canter Clubhouse, ·Irvine. the Florence Crittenton Home Those attending will bring tom<>rrOW from 9 a.m. to 5 hol~y cookies along with P.m. at ruchard's Market, cgpies of the recipes. Coffee will be served with the cookies Newport Beaeh. and guests may take borne Mrs. Darrel Anderson of any recipes they wish. Irvine is president ol the cir·r'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij cle which supports the new I~ Orange County home, which still is under construction. NB Auxil iary CAKES FOR ALL OCCASIONS '" Wffrlni her mother's wed-esta~h their home In Corona Th Lad. • A ·u r d!';f .__ al. •a'"'leli'ghl sa"n d 1 e 1es ux1 ary o ....... "" ,.. u e ar. Newport Beach Fire Deparl-"1 . ·a lfusstls lace yoke, Th'1 . bride graduated from ment gathers the third 20 MINUTES • W~ftdy Baker became the NtwP.Wt Harbor Hlgh School Wednesdays at 8 p.m. in ""'"',.i::~'l.;;;~~.,~­ bride of Jerry Roy Clark in and 4fteDded the University of various locations. Infonnation QANICA PASTRY SHOP lat! afternoon rites ,. in SL Oregon. Her husband is an regarding location may be ob-11• w. u LaoA a1.vo. •1:1-1'11 James Episcopal Church. alllltUIJll of NHHS and at-tai.ied by calling 11rs, T. c. Co11 t'9 r .. 1 ... 1.1 The ceremony linking the,. _:l<nd::!:'.:;'4~0r~an'.'.!ge:_COM~~l:_;Co;!!!ll~•g!:•;.· ..,.:o~.u~· ~·y~._:54~8-':'983~5:... ____ .:!!!ll!!'!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!'!!! daughter of Mrs. Arthur B.r Williams of Newport Beach a1d William Baker of San <0;;;;;;9;!&"'!1•llll.,. ... ii0iiii!lj .. 1ii;;;;;;ii0ii0ii0;;;;;;ii0iilll!!O;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiii;;;;;;;;; Franci sco and the IOD of Mr. 11• and Mrs. Gene Owtn Clark of Corona del Mar were aolem· nized J>y lhe R<v. Jg(m_ P. AShey II. . . To complement her g()1'fl, the bride wore a silk iUusioft \leil and carried ivory roees, st.ephanotis and baby's breath. Maid of honor WM Miss Mary Linn Baker, lil\lr et Lhe bride, ~nd brl~smttdi wtrl the M1!1ses Peggy flodprt, cousi.1 of the bride1 Melinda Beeman, and Su 11 nn e Williaµis. They wore emerald green gowns and canie'.d rust, yellow and gold chrysan- themums. Flower.girls were Kory and Stacey Brunner, nieces of the bridegroom, · and rtng bearer was Geoffrey William!!. Walter Michael Brunner was best man and ushers were WilUam Baker III. brother of the bride, Joto. T. Boyd III and John Smith. Following the ceremony the newlyweds greeted t h e I r guests in the home of the bride'a mother where Miss Vicki Brunner, n~ of the benedict circulated d"9 f,111t book. - After honeymoonifll t ft Oregon. the couple w J.11 Mike • Shup Tradt; Use Dlm•A.Llnes °""DAILY 10.10, SU_NDAY 10.10 c:m r""f: ... ,.......... , •• 9 • --1 7 •• n•o.1 t ,,,nlDAY AllD SATURDAY OllLY The typi cal vo lunte1r worker, according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, is a woman in the prime of life, somewhere betwein the ages of 25 and «. She's married and she's a mother. Newport-Mesa Unified School Lodge, Newport Beach. tl\OUgb t.o speed it up." rnstrtct, ;, sponsored by t11el.=:"=~~~~~~==~~~~~~==~==:!1E;=.:•=== Her hu~band 's likely to be a white collar worker vdlh a moderate income. Survey Shows What Women Wa nt Most A survey shows l h a t homemakers under 25 want recipes for two thal are hearty and filling, v.•hile women from ZS to 35 look for recipes that will delight th eir children. women with higher income!! want intcresling c o m p a n y. menus, foreign food s. and desse rts other than cakes and pies. SPANISH·FRENCH PROF£5SIONAL TUTOR IS yn. i" +ht H1rber Ar11 ld••rd• S4 8-3 7 t 0 Newport Beach City Arts Committee. Also on exhibil are three en- tries by students from Harbor View Elementary School. Toy in Mind During lhe C hr ist ma s seaSon, 65 percent of the toy buyers have a particular toy in mind before lhey go shop- ping . In almost four out ol 10 cases, v.·hen the buyer has a particular toy 111. mind, It is because the child asked for it. Adelines Sing Afission Viejo Cha pter of Sweet Adelines, Inc. will sing on Tuesdays al 7:30 p.m. In the community room o f Downey Savings and Loan building, Mission Viejo. Women interested in learn· ing four-part b arbershop harmony are invited to attend'. and may phone 11.'rs. Jerry Steven!!. 494-4e2, for · further information. • FASHION FAIR CLEANERS AND COIN LAUNDRY ~70 W. 19th St., Cost• Me .. , Calif. .54a.91n QUALITY CLE AN ING & PRESS ING MllM S.11'1 ••••••·•·• St.2t ~ S•it. , ,,,,,, ,, , S1 .Jt Tre...n , •••• ·•••••••, ,61 o,..... ... ·•••••••• S1.2f ,, Spett Jee .... , ,, • , • , • , , .60 Sleclll• , , , , , •• ,, , , • , , , , , , Al 5wfftlol'l ••••••••••••••• 15 ., .................. ,.. • .71 SA.ME DAY' SERVICE-J:LUFF & FOLD LAUNDRY Soft W1ter Wai1hed, Fluff Dried, and Foldtd -15c per pound. Op1n -1 1.m. to lO p.m: 7 Days A WHk -' ----------- MAN HOURS Glycine sets the pace again this yeor In n'liged w rtches for yoi.-kind of man.. Left to right: Automo1lc Dey one! Dota. $75. Ainnan P. for the fl yet, 24 hour clal. e 125. Automatic calendar, 070. S~VICK'S J•w•l•r• Sh1te 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND · NEW.PORT BEACH -64,4.1310 0,... M....., tl!rt l et•rll.y •llffl t ill I NYLON 'QUILT ROBES ' IN PRINTS, SOLIDS I 2'' REG. 3.97 Euy-<:are, no Jlm!S nylon robes at a pr!co Uutt says: "l'ake two!'" Pink, blue, matzo, mint, prinll dalntibl trimmed. Machine washable. Sizes ].().18. •• AVAILABLE WESTMINSTER ORANGE SANTA ANA AT Tff&SE S'l'OllES ONLYI .... ......_...,.....,.. W. Tllttlll • T .. . ....... ,.,. ....... ,,.. ......... , .... t ..... -·-• BUENA PARK BUENA PARK COSTA MESA . 'FULURTOll L..._ M \'.._ \'W ...... ., .. ....,....... ~.........., ....... ,.._,.. ....... l.Wa -...-..... ...... .............. -,..,... tfW. lnl ... ~ ..... ). - j I DAil Y PILDl . - • \ '· ' . . ' .. • , ' • . .. -t ' ' ' ' . ., SAN 01rtO . . • • '• Pacific Coast Highway.betw~en Jamboree anci MacArthur. freeway minutes away. .. .. . ~· , • i I • .. • • • . . . ... . •.. . .. . . .. , ... • • • ai-f int0 GBY1 ~tm as . ~ (.:_.-.~ ... -witB 5anta! SEE HIM DAILY IN HIS SNOW HOUSE ON THE .MALL AT FASHION ISLAND 11 A .M. TO 9 P.M.-(SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. J listen to deligl:ttful caroling and be sure to see our gaily ·de.corated Columbia 57 sailing boat now on the mall 'at Fashion island in Newport Center •.. the talk of the Harbor Area A.LL 58 STORES OfEN 10_A.M. TO 9·30 P.M. MQMJ..AY THROUGH SATURDAY. -FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS SHOPPING CONVENIENCE . Free parking for 5500 cars close by your favorite stores . 1 .. -.-- FASHION JI NEWPORT CENTER P•dfic Coost Hlghway·between Jomboree ud MacArthur, freeway minutes •woy, .. •I • •• .- Yankees Dump Co11 trover·sial Pepitone ' . Something· Br•g ~ .. , • 1n Miami? ..... . . MIAMI. Fla. -Gay B"'wer Is playing leM now apdtenjoying it more. "With Utt •purses as. big as they are now, you pn afford to -lake more time ofJ," tht puposed veteran said Thuraday after sbootiq ·a ~ ·record-matclling 65 and tatlni the first roond lead in the 4115.000 DoMy Thomas.Diploma! aoll classic. Brewer ,,a' ponwinner on the PGA \our for more :tb'.in two years, held .a two 5lroke h;ad over Tommy Aaron, R.H. Slkea and rookie Jim Jamieson, tied at 67 going into.today's second round. Nine were tted at 61, !our under par, ln· eluding Arnqld Palmer, winner of last week's Heritage Golf Clas.sic and the pre- t.cip'ney ravorite. • LOS ANGELES -Rumors that UCLA assistant coach John Jardine would be the successor of fired Wisconsin coach John Coatta were not subSt.arrlated by Jardine: he's" heard nothing but rumor&, J loo. Contacted .at his horn< Thunday nigh~ Jardine slid he'd heard his name men - tioned in conned.ion with the post but "I have had no personal contact with Elroy Hirsch. .. Hirsch. Wisconsin athletic director, wu tn Southern California to talk to·at least one coach about the job, though. Don Coryell, successful San Diego State head man, said Thursday he and Hirsch had discussed the position. He rerused to say whether Hirsch had ofrered him the pOst but admitted he didn't want to leave San Diego. •• LOS ANGELES -Metico City•s world bantamweight champion, Rube1tOlivares, defendJ his title for the first Ume tonjght and he picked a tough one -Atari Rudkin of England, the British Empire 111-pound champion. . I • The ]ft.round match 15 set for the Forum in auburban Inglewood , the same ') site where, the 2I~year~ld Olivares. -,:on . the crown on a fifili-round tnock~_ciVer, Australia's{.Iionel Rose Aug. ~ ... ~ , The Meqcan gl,lJltcock is fa9Cinlt, ~ his 28-ye>Mld chalfeng<r from ~I. But whether he can embelllab his amaz.. ing knockOut record over ft!idkin is debatable. ~ ·. THE RECORD HOLDER -l<:orrner Green Bay Packer great Don Hutson is shown in 1943 when he set consecutive game. pass catching record for UPI T ........ profe ssional football. Hutson caught passes in 94 consecutive games to set longevity mark . Al'.'V:~rth N e.ariQg Record . ' ' Needs One Caicli. to Tie Huts on's Mark . . •• SAN JOSE . -The Uruvmity of s... Francisco Dons and the St. Louis University Billikens will meet Saturday for the NCAA soccer championsbJp. •. 4 • ' . SAN DIEGO (AP.) -·~Shllcb.11 ·says 'Lance Alworth, "I thougfit you were sup- posed 'to cetch one in. every game -al Jeaa. One." ·Diego lvaS playing Denver . '"l lvas looking up to see flhat down it was and how far we had to go and 'they flashed on the scoreboard that 1 had a st.r;ing of 93 games. I thought to myself, 1.Yi)CS \\'ho. came. out of Arkan~as. Hutson, a nalive of Lone Pine, Ark., \vent to the University of Alabama. Al· \\•orth, from Brookhaven, A1iss., chose the Universi ty of Arkansas. USF downed Maryland 1.0 on Ted Psaras • second period goal Thunday night In a quarterfma1 match. and handed the Terps their first &hutout iR four years. In the night's first contest before 3,500. St. Louis clipped Harvard, 2-t, as Al Trost's last ~iod eoal Crom five yards broke a 1·1 Ue. • WASHINGTON Sens. R a I p h Yarborough of Texu and William J. Fulbright of Arkansas have wagered a Senate banquet on the outcome of Saturday's football game between Texa.s and Arkansas. If Texas wins, Fulbright will serve Arkansas pork spareribs to Yarborough and guests at a luncheon in the Senate <linin;:; room. If the Longhorns Jose. Yarboroogh will provide Texas beet steak for Fulbright and fri<ods. • LOS ANGELES -The Los Azlieles Laken, ab6orbing their sixth straight defeat Thursday nighl to Phoenix 119-109, try to rebound tonight as the expected return of Keith Erickson return.. them to nel'tf full strength. Connie Hawkins .9CO?'ed 2& points to lead Phoenix while Happy Haimon led Los Angtle1 with 25. Jerry West got 20 and Elain Baylor Ii for the Lal<ers al!O. • BATON ROUGE -Louisiant Slate'1· Pete ~taravich poured in 43 polnta Thllfloo day night to spark the Tigers to a.aeuon- openlng 94.72 victory over Oregon State. · Maravich's performance sent him toar- lng ahead o( five past scorin& Jaulen ·~ left him only 617 poillla ally of Cln· clnnaU's Oscar Robtrtaon as college basketball's all-time top acortt wJlh the whole IWIOD before him. RookieorYear Comin g to BBC Dodpr Ted Sizemore. National League rook1e or the year for 1969, will be one or: fi ve major ~1 bueblll players, ap- peartna at Balboa 111,y Club Dec. 14. The occasion will be the Baaeball Writers ol Amerlca.Oirtsttnaa party for the Or>nl• County ........ o! R<talded Children. -' • I The writers have already purchased Ill" for the klcll and Santi Clau. will be on hand to d!Jlrlbule them. Joining Sbemore (a L<I J{abr1 resi· denl), wlll be Claude O....n of the Dodgera (1 Brean): Angels Tom ~tuTphy. ~en Tatum and J11 Johnstone. The '.Sall" Diego Charger wide receiver bu ea11gbt passes ha 94 con9Ktltive Am· ericM' Football League g&mes. This Sun- ~be' IS expected to tie.t~pro footb all rriark set 'n years ago by HaU-of-Famec Dori Hutson. ~· ~ .~ "Tbe only reason this.one means any· thirig to me is that It Was. tron 11~on who ~et it," Alworth ·sald~Thl.irsUy. • ' "Give him my very best wishes," saJd . Hutson, now 56, at his Palm Springs y,inter homt1 "and tell him I hope he.has many fine yean ahead of him ." Alworth, 30, has achieved in eight sea· sons what it took Hutson 11 with the Green Bay J?acken ol the National Fool· ball League. Alworth. who has ca11ght 51 passes this season and 445 for hi.I career, said he didn't know he was approaching Hutson's record until two weeks ago when San ·well, I'll be darned.'" . , Al worth can tie Hutson Sunday against Boston. Then he would have to break the mark in the season finale the next "·eek against Buffalo. But flutsori"s feat. considering the cir- cumstances when he played, will still stand highly regarded. Hutson, who caught 488 passes for lhc Packers between IV15 and 1945, \\'as playing when the forward pass wasn't used as much as it is n-O\v. "A big game," Hutson recalled, ""'ould be about 20 passes." Hutson also played defensive free safe· ty for the Packers. Alworth returned punts as a rookie but since has been a full-time pasS<atcher. 1berc are striking similarities between Hutson and Alworth, both Jean, country , Hutson was S..foot-1, 180 pounds \\'hen he joined the Packers. Those are also the diinensions of Alworµi . "He's tremendous," said Hutson, who has walched Alworth perform on tele- \'ision. "So much has been said about him that anything I would say would be just frosting on the cake. He's everything they've said ." Hutson operates a Ra cine, \Vis., auto agency, is an officer of a bank and a 1nember of the Packers' board of direc- tors. He said the role of the football receiver hasri't changed over the years. "One ot.the few things in football which h~'t changed Is pass patterns," he said . "I suppose they never will. What more can anybOOy do?" SEEKI NG TO .TJE MARK -La~e A1.;&;o;, s.~ ~ Dt'J~ _Charger: pass re~t!iver, wlU .be seekin g t~ lit!·. lfi! record of Don Huison for consecutive games pal!••· Alwortll wlU be in the Charger lineup against the Boston Palrlot. Sunday In Sa n Diego. ltls first pa!s1tompletlon will tie him with Don Hu1· son at 9f !trai~ht }tames in \vhich he's made at lea~ one rcccpt.ioo. 1 NY First,.sacker to Astros; F ee·ney Succeeds Giles MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Joe P<J>l-·mlaht feel -lool loo awhlle doep in the hean <I Tuu, but Ou\ Blelary 1houlH•el rlaht at home at· Y..U. Stadium. New York dumped the emitroveniat Pepitone to the HOUiton Astroo Thunday for Blefary, a fonner Yankee. ·bonus · baby, In a straight swap or colorful, Brooklyn born first basemen, 1be trade was one of four con. summited on the fifth day ol baaebtll'.s winter meetings - a day capped by the selection of a new Naliooal Lurue presi· DiMaggio Still Draws Crowd; Seeks Work dent, looltfm' Sin Francisco Giants' ex· ICtltive Ow-lea "'Chub" Feeney. ,_,elected _,lmously by the NL club owntn, IUCCeed& Warren Giles; retirin1 after :11 yean aa·Uae league boss, jn a· devdopinent •tly \o bb:k any im· mediate reoreanizaUon of .the game'• ad· ministrative 1tructurt. . · ··· Feeney, 41, iiccepted µ,e job only after assurances from the owners that his J>O"''tt'S wijl not be diminished. He tteeiv- ed a four-year contract, at an estimated. $75,000 a ytar, and will move the league offiu from Cincinnati to San Francisco. Proposals to place both le.ague offices and that ol. Commissioner Bowie Kuhn under the same roof are part of 1 rMtrUeturin& plan, to be considered Saturday, and also would centralize power in the commission. Feuiey's lint ofHclal act was the an- nouncement that Cincinnati will host. the 1970 All.Star Game on July 14 in its new stadium, due for completion June 30. San bi.ego traded pitcher Joe Nlekro tn Detroit for pitcher Pat Dobson and in- fielder Dave Campbell In the day 's olher MIAMI BEACH (UPl)-Through lhese inler·leaeue transaction. portals here in the lobby of the hotel Seattle aent pitcher George Brunet to serving as headquarters for the baseball Washington for pitcher Dave Baldwin and meetings pass some of the loremost the Olicago Cuba swapped pitcher Rich figures of Uie game, men like Ted Nye for St. Louil! outfielder Charles Williams and Stan Musial. Then there's "Boots" Day. one they never Jet pass at all. But the blgest deal 90 ~ rar •at. Joe DiMaggio merely comes throu1h personaUUes were concerned, saw the lhe front door and walkl a couple ofi Yanks part ,with Pepitone, the tern~ steps Inside when he auddenly discovers peramental, long-haired slugger who hit it's practically impoalble to move any· 186 home runs in eight turbulent more. American Leque seasons. In reacquiring Joe D at Pie moment Is, as they say Biefary, the Yanks receive a playe~ in the theater, at liberty. theY,'ve cov~ted sinct losing on waivers kl He was vice president and coach with Balimore six years ago. the Oakland As the. past two seasons "•e didn't ·come here to get rid o! • and hla contract with them ran out aix Joe,'' said Yanb Manager Ra1ph Houk. week5 ago. · "But when this opportwlity came up, W.! The fact he managed .to last two years couldn't resin it. We 've wanted B)efary with Oakland's uni:redlctable Charlle b I Finley is ranked by aome amoni Joe'a back !or a king .~rrw, ut we never cou d most notable triumphs, because when 1e; him, before. . ,. Joe aigned on with tbe A1 the pneral 'That a the . way it IQeS, said consensus wu he and Pinley couldn't ..... Pepitone, w:bo bit .W, with ~club hi&b 21 stay together two months. homers, 1ut aeuon but fell mto disf.avor "The man gets. I Jot or unfair criti· ~ w•lkin& °':It on the club three timei clsm," DiMaggio says of Finley. "I know m August. . ·. he has had 1 lot of problems, but we The disappearing acts, which ~e bla.m- never had One. Our relationship couddn't ed on personal. problems, cost him a fm-! possibly have been better." and brief suspenaion. The quesUon everybody's ukinc about DIMag now is what he plana to do? "I'd like to stay in bueball in tome capacity," says the trim. ereyin1 ~ year-old el·Yankee ,rtat 1Jho aetnu to '8tl~, -· wilh .... · ·• ~ a number al. 'elfm, but. t hoven; ,ill'clded what i'm ""'1f to do yet. . · I dGA't particularly want · to coach any. mare, and that'• partially because of the traveling involved. I love to ti-ave!, but not eve.ry few .days. I Just don't like traveling on any set IChedule." Finley has asked DiM1gglo to talk with him first ·berore he decides what ' he'.! going to do nn:t year and Joe promised he wou1d. Lately, there ha.s also been a move to get him gack wJlh the Yankees but ao far nothlnc more bas happened in that direction. There are. tfloee whet uy DlMllfio has become. somewhat cool toward his old ball ckJb, the Yankee&. rather c11JJJ. ·lusioned about ba1eball aenerally and poalbly a bit praaled economically. None of the. suppositiom 1quare with th• !acta. ' Regarding the Yanke.es he".aayr: "Personally, I'll always hive a warm feeling fe< them and I boolofly hopo they can regain lbeir old ·ltlture." Regardlnc baseball: "It'll always be the No. t 1ame;'ror me and there'• a atronc plllllbllity I'll be back in It next staSOCI." And aa for economics, there will never have to be any benefit• for DiM•c ~ cause he's okay, He. came here. directly from Topeka, Kans., where a string of DiMaggio'• franchise sphlgettl take-out restaurant:i will be started ln a few mart weeks. All-America Team Picked m;w YORK (AP)-Mllooig\, their ZJ. game winn1nl atreak ttas snapped by Michigan ln the season's nnale, the. Ohia State Bucke~I placed three players on the All-AmeMcan college rootblll team as selected by The Associated Press. USC's Jim Guon was the only South- lander on the first units. · , r.£t !nd -Jlltl ~!.!l"'..!1c:111 .. 11: •. ... , ..... -\111~;'~(1 • ft !thfrletld. 1a -a.11 ~r . .,. ~ ... , J01tn w•r•. Ole,.,_.,• s11i. . GuMfl -1 1h arl<fttt.. Hovston1 c11i. Kell, T•r~ 1-. en1'r -lllodM¥ I PI ArlClllMI • u1.rf..O.dt -"il)H ~P"· l'u!!"•· .-<kl -r.""'9 OW.n1. '"Oii1111omt1 to:I A~n. C1lor1clt.. ' · l"ullblell -Jim Of!liii~~I*'"· l!l'ld9 -Jjm"'"' 0111111, S.UtMnl Clllfof'llllo,1 Piil! .,,..,,. Ult ll II ... "'~ -Miki lll1ld, Pinn Sllltl Mlk9 MtCl'f, Notrt 1me . Mldlllt Gu•" -ill!'I Stltl"tton, Oltll Stile. . llftlblell9fl -,_ Kl,,.... Tltllftll-; D-11 ON.tit. P-:&ir.1 Oilft Ptr!ll'I.. St.nfwd IKb -. J 'l[f(;Ollla St1i.r torn Curll'-Mldlll1111 I Mc Aubvr11. "' SI T'AM Tilllr l!"nd -J1m McF1':/tnd. Mtbr1tk1. Wi.t. ll!eul""' -l!lmO WP'llM, Howllon. Ttdtlls -l ob Al"9r, V111cl1rbllf; Sid Smlfll. $oiltMl'I! C111for11l1 Guercl1 -J.,.n> o....,, ArUns.u i Al.,ln S.m•let. "!'•llt1111. tnf ... -111 111 l<lllHS. 1 "£'£ _ 5Y"' ~r1111k1tt. s11111ord. I W -Jolwl 1.-.Mrtier, lnclfll'lll Jim Sir-. t10011 • Put -!llYI Wl'!\11[• T1•11. oi:ndl -11!1 ... ,::r;,_•Nl111" BUI Bruncll11. c •. ll:ktlf!:. -Al C1wllne1. Soutti.,.11 C1lltor~!11 Ftovd •5• LA. It u.1'111 -C1rl Cr-..!. Wnt Vlrttnl•. L -G"'°'" 81V1111il. Lav!1l,n1 Still; Bn• •:a •-•• /,.. Smt Tht C ~l T I -DM'lfM u , Tt•" T«h1 C:lll1 ~ t l O.nt .,.,._.,., Nlbr11-•~ Trojans, Broncos Unveil Top Cage Squads Tonight By THE ASSOCIATED PUSS Two ·or the Weat Cout'1 lop bukatb1U teams wl\1 be te.sled tonltht at lhe. Los Angeles Sports Arena and at Stanford. The . Unlvenlly o! Soutbecn California unveils it'.s 1Nt-7t squad in I.GI Anplea against Colorado, the dtlandln1 Bia Eight champion which compiled a 11·7 mark last year. At Stanford, the Jndian1, 1.0, entertain Santa Clara, the Welt Colli Athletic Conference power. 'Tbe Broncs. allll t.O, finlahed 1t 27-1 lut Year, includtnc a ku to UCLA In the NCM quar1etllnlil. use,, tnexperlencod-bot"rw ... tm-.,.....1, • .,..,P of~ and Junior college lranllm, and -the deJ>llrlUN from ucu~o1 IA• Alctndor, II a thrt•t for the P1ctnc.a Utle. ... Tw~ other Pulllc.a·IHllll, Ore1on ind uregon Stale, ..turnel! home loday Iller belni vlcllmlzed In the Soulh Thunday night. • Al Tallahaaaee, Florida stale Ultd a full COW1 pttll to' cooct ldvantqc In a ICJ0.14 victory over Ortcon. Dave Cowens and Vernell Ellzy poced FJor1da &ale wilh 21 polnlJ each. Leonmt Jacklon led Oregon with 21. At Baton Rouge, La., Pete Maravlch put ln 43 polnll In Jeldl"8 Loulalana Stale to a 94·72 victory over Orecon State In LSU's season opentt. The loll' wu the leoond In three stuU for the Beavers. DaJl!l)' Hult(• 15 poln" for I.SU bock· ed up Mara\'ich. OSU 'J.foofler Vie Bartoiome led the Beavers with %2, followed by Biiiy Nlckelberry wllh II. One of Santa Clara's strongest WCAC opponents, University of San Francisco, trounced San Francisco State, 71-$, u a- foot-I center Pete Croes poured ln 32 polnll and grabbed 21 "'bounds. , In lhe. Aztec lnvitaUona.I tournament in S111 Diego, University ol San Diego defeated UnlV<Tllly of Calllomla at Davia .. 71 and Tahoe Colleae clowned United states lnternallonal Unlvtnlly -in quorterflnal 11""'1· San Diqo Stat. and UC San Dlqe won quut¢lnal vi<toritt Wednuclay nlaht. • • · Bob Scollan'• 20 polnlJ led USO, and .iletbJe Whlle'12t paced Tahoe . In other top-pma tonJll!I, Washin(ton enterta!M Seattle, Loo An&•ltl Stile entertains NO(them Arlton1, afK\ Tulu ts at Loni BtlCb. S&ate, a t.eam that wu 23-- 3Jut year. In other contest.I, Wuhlniton stale Is al Hawall, St Mary 's al Fruno stale,-. Nevada, 1ltno at San J... State, Slellon of Florida al UC Santa Barbara and Callfornl1 at Bripam YOW\I. Jn ·&•mes lnvoMnc . CaUklmla amall eolle1e1, l!aywanl Stile lJ at Cal Pott ol San l.uia ObSapo, Fullerton State Is •• Sta~lau1 St.ate, Cal ·Tech is al Lot Anaele1 Baptllt, w .. tmont at tlccldental and Whllll.,. at EvWVllle, Ind. \ ~l~\IL!llm ... ~t•."'9•"P.~1 44'''~••:~;"sZl\illl'l •&•s511!;s.zp,~q~s'4~:;1"'!,.~a.,.a~.P1 ... """11~•@""'14•4!"'""!!'"' ... i~.,,~.,..,, •• ..,.~~.., .. ~.~."!'!.**···!!~ .• ~:"!'"""~":!"~~.~.""'!'~~~»~··.~~~=~~~~~~-.. ~-~~~~~~~-c~-:::------~--. . ,,, ............ -·-~· • • JI DAILY PILOT Def ending Champion Tars Face ·Unbeaten Sea Kings CIF Crown Up for Grabs At Belmont By GLENN WHITE Of ..... 0911'1' l"llet ll•tf ' Undefeated Corona del Mar and two-time defending charp- pion Newport Harbor, collide tonight at Belmont Plaza pool f\ in Leng Beach for the CIF .f. championship. _ i,. ~,: The all-Newport District ex- travagani.a gets under way immediately after the duel for • third place between Anaheim t' and Fullerton. That contest opens at 7:30, meaning the ti- tle tiff should begin at ap- proximately 8:30. Corona del Mar has been built inlG an invincible force-by its 2Z-O record and by coaching experts. Lakewood coach Ken Ham- dorf picks CdM's Sea Kings by three goals, saying simply, "Corona del Mar makes no mistakes.'' Ernte Polle of Fullerton JC says. •·man for man no one can compare with them. 'Ibey have a nice drop back and don't commit many errors." And even Newport coach Bill Barnett iS heavy in his praise for coach Cliff Hooper's unbeaten p:iwer. "They're like a baskelball team with Will Chamberlain and Lew Alcindor playing on each post. • .frankly, it's a lit~ Ue ridiculous," opines Barnett. "It's tough to play a team as well balanced as they are. If you stop1 (Bruce) Black, <Garth) Bergeson kills you. and vice versa. You have to play them . honest but it's rough because they can all score and they all swim well. "They are better than either or the two teams we beat in the last two ClF finals games. They are the best high shcool team l 've ever seen. "They get about twice as much workout time as us because we don't have a pool tG practice in . They play three-fourths of the year round and in the summer they go against teams . like UCI, so they are heavily experie nced." Hooper already owns a 7-4 triumph over the Sailors. But he is still cautious about overconfidence. "We're pro- bably feeling a litUe pressure from being undefeated and you c a n ' t underestimate Barnett. He's a h ell uva coach , •• he can really do the job." Newport has been called a two-man team with Tom Warnecke and Jeff Wilcox the stars. It was that combo tbaL led Newport over Anaheim in the semifinals as Warnecke had a particularly r i n e perfonnance. Black and Bergeson are the guns for Corona del Mar ind lhey spearhea ded the slau~hter of Fullerton In the .semis. Tonight\-; tiff may be a preview of next year's ClF finals. Each team is starting three juniors. LINEUPS Newport Corona del Mar Jo:d Whi~ Roger Hughes Bob Searles Garth Bergeson .J im Smith Brett Bernard Tom Warnecke Bruce Black B. Talmage K. Krumpholi Jeff Wilcox Bill Loitz ti.al Greer Scott Newcomb Jeisy Quits As Triton Track Boss Don Jeisy, successful track and cross country coach at San Clemente High Sct!OOI, has q1tit to concentrate on <"las.voom assignments, the DAILY PILOT learned ex- clusively toda y. Jeisy quits after serving as track coach for four seasons aria Cro9& country mentor ;or five seasons. He says Ray Reeve! wUI take over as track coacb and probably for cross country too. Jeisy, 32. came to San Clemtnte after coaehing tht Quantko Marines for Ont ye11.r. fib cr05s country teem won lc:ague till~ twice in the pibt lhreie Years. ln the last frur seasom hfs ' crou country runMn lost on- ly Ihm du.I -ta -all 10 El Modena. Jeil)r'r best Jnd!viduaJ pro- d\ICll on WllS Belden Burch, who ran a 9: 10 tw<>-mlle and finished lhlnl in lhe CIF linaio in 1966. , SAILOR SPARKPLUG -Tom Warnecke is expected to pace Newport Harbor offensively and defensjvely tonight when the two-time defending CIF cham- pion Sailors meet unbeaten Corona de! J\tar at Belmont Plaza pool in Long Beach. At stake is the CIF crown. CLASSY SEA KING -Bruce Black, stro ng candidate for CIF player of t b e year laureb, w!ll p-.Corona de! Ma r's undefeated water polo forces tonight against Newport as th e Sea Kin~s seek lo re gain the CIF ti lie they held in 1966-67. Newport has a 17·5 record this year and won CIF honors the pas1 two )'ears. Rustlers .In 85-76 Oller• D11ntped Lions Test Bears Reversal In Tourney Semis By llrEVE ANDREWS Boes Try Ventura Tonight ot 11111 DMIW '"" St.ff MOORP•nv By HOWARD L. H.\NDY Ann -A &earth ls Of n. Dlllr •IS.I St•ff still being conducted for a Westminster High School is formula which wilt· bring the the 1one IU{Vlvor from the Gjtlden Wftt RusUei-s their Orqe C6&st area in the fifth fint basketball win of the annual Weatminster · Marina young campaign. Rotary Invitational basketball tOurnament's s e m i f i n a I s CoachDickStrlcklln'r rowxl hoopsters lost their tbtrd Coach Don Leavy will send stratgbt game, 85-78, !11ruraday his Lion quintet against afternoon to San Diego City favored Warren in semifinal Coll · action at Westminster tonight ege m the first round of at 1:30. Los Alamitos, surprise the first annual Moorpark winner over Santiago, 59-SO, Winter Toprnament held in the will contest Loog Beach Pol MOOl'park gymna.siwn. 1 at Marina for tbe right to 1n The Rustlers now f l n d the other championshi nals By CRAIG SHEFF themselves in the loser's berth. Of n. o.ur •111• s11H Huntington will play Orange Coast C 0 11 e g e's bracket where they face Long Beach Wilson at 7 in the basketball team, derailed by a Cuesta College this afternoon W e s t m idSter preliminary talltr Allen Hancock quintet at 5. while host Marina will face Thursday night, tries to get Slricklin tried something Santiago. back on the winning track new in the San Diego en-Consolation act.Ion moves to tonight when the Pirates face counter - a full-court press. Huntington Beach High this Ventura. lt worked in the first half as evening with Valencia and Tonight's game will get t.he Rustlers went into the Loara tangling in the upper under way at 7 at Sent.a Ana dressing room with a 39-38 ad· bracket and Garden Grove College. Hancock faces Santa vantage, the first lead they faclng Bolsa Grande in the Ana in the .!eCOIXt half of the have enjoyed at halftime this lower half. doubleheader at 9. season. A new name will be added to In Thunday night's games, However, no press was used the tournament record books Hancock, showing good board in the second half until the follGwing last night's action. strength and some fine outside desperation stages of the Gary Valbuena brought a sbootJ.ng, routed OCC, 106-32. game, but then Golden West spark of light to ·Fountain Jn an earlier game, Ventura was unable to take advantage Valley cage hopes for the toyed with Santa Ana, 94-68. of the Knigtits' mi$akes future when he scored 32 The loss was the first for because of cold shooting. points in a losing cause coach Herb Livsey's outfit 1 Tumovers crippled t h e against Bol!a Grande, 65-56. after opening the season last Rustlers' offense for the third Gary Koerner of LB Wilson weekend with victories over El consecutive game. G 0 Iden set the mark Valbuena tied. Camino and Golden West. \Vest turned the ball over 00 Warren Higb's hefty front· Hot-shooting Pirate guard 17 oCcasions in the first half three towered above the Hun- Jim Kindeloo was held to 22 and a back-breaking 11 in the tlngton Beach quintet and points, 16 of those coming in final 20 minutes. after the Oilers scored the lhe second hall. Chris Thompson was the first basket, this triumvirate Ktndelon came Into the Han-high scorer for the Rustlers took command and held the cock game with unbelie"!able with 19 points. Rick Barnes advantage for the balance of shoo~lng statistics. In the two added 17 and Jeff Powers, 12. the night, 81-70. previous games, the 6-I Dave Hard.Ing, the g.g cmter, Dave Baker (6-8) and Bill sophomore star bad scored 45 did a good job on the boards Alexander (6·7) are both and 42 polnU. before picking up his fourth juniors and despite added He had averaged 66 percent perlienal fou1 with 15 minutes weight put on fGr the football from the field, prior to the to play. He also netted 14 campaign, they had little trou· Hancock game, hitting on 35 of points. ble controlling 'both boards, pel"l-ent of their shots from the floor while the shorter Hun· tington Beach quintet hit on only 31 percent, scoring 10 less baskets from the field . At the charity toss line , the Oilers hit 24 of 32 for 75 per· cent while the Bears hit 15 of 25 for M percerit. Los AJaniitos moved into the semifjnal round of play with Long Beach Poly by winning over Santiago. Fountain V·alley, d e s p I t e V uena's valiant efforts in he scoring column, !ell far behind in the first quarter. 12- 5 .. The .B.aroot were n~ver able to get closer than three points for the balance of the night. At one juncture in the game. Valbuen·a scored 13 successive points for the Barons. MUNTINGTOH ll!"ACM 170) W11ter• C1!• Dtl~ltton w'" C•rll"" "fhom•I H•rr•ll Total1 Ba~er Al1•1l'ldlr "~ G•!len' ,,_ Tollt fs"" TO!l lS ,o fT PP' ,.P l 4 ' ia I 7 ) ~ ' ' , ,, I ' .1 11 I 0 l l •' a 1 o I l 1 I• ,, '' 16 11) WAllRl!H Ull l"G FJ Pl' "fl' 7 I )I 10 ? " ) .1 ' II I 1 2 10 l 1 ' I 1 0 l I 33 15 21 11 Sc1r1 '" ou1r11.-. Hu1>l!,.,lon Bl•Clt 16 U 17 ?3-111 W1rr11"n 1• ?• 1f ~I l'OUNTAIH VALLEY IHI fG P'f ""' T' Ger~r 0 11 1 lllld1r l 0 3 I ICrl•llnlol r I 5 I Sh1w n?J l V1l1>11en1 14 I J ll Good•ktr o o A l Powtr J Oii Pl•" ?'11 LYrlCh 0 0 I ( Tol1!5 ?l 10 21 S6 BOLSA Oll:AHOI!! UJI 1Ctrli11 Ward Ellis Fole1 MlramO!ltei Forster Aoa ms l'G ff ,.,. T' .1 6 J 1: • l ' l! 1 ' 1 11 3 I 1 I 1 l 1 J I 1 1 le 0 II 1 ~ Total1 '3 19 16 61 sco..1 bt ou1rltr• Foun11ili ValltJ' S 21 ,, 16-M lolN Grlfl<le 12 11 10 21-.U 53 shots. Against Hancock, giving the Oilers one shot and Kmdelon could only connect on {( {( {( sending the action to !he other Oiler Football nine of 24 shots for 37.5 per· end o( the court. They v.·ere -t. GOLDEN WEST oo i·oined in the forward line by '"'-" flll•I" Kindelon hit en seven of 1e ~:~~~. I ~ ~ I! Dee King (1>-5J. Diw1cr Sunday field goals in the second half ~=i;-1 I t : :; Baker poured in 21 points and wound up with 22 points to ~.';!'t.: J 1 : t and Alexander 22 while King The Huntington Beach Oiler take scoring honors for the S~:~~u o o 1 o seUled for 17 as the Bears con-Boosters Banquet honorin g th e Pirates. Forward Phil Jordan Tor•!• ,~ :: ,; 1: tralled the action all the way. varsily football team "'ill be followed with 17. sAH ortoo u/i ff 1'f '' The taller \Varren team held at Sam's Sea Food Hancock's S-7 cent.er M.ike ~}:fii'~~'[ l f ; l; forced Huntington Beach to Restaurant in Sunset Beach Jackson controlled the boards Xt.:~.=• ~ ~ ~ 1? shoot from outside m6st of the Sunday afternoon at 4. in the first haU and also con-~r11;~ l ; f ;1 night and it was one shot and Guest speaker is J t rn tMbuted 17 points to keep '"e P~'""'" ~ l , 1s no follow when the Bear Stangeland, coach al Cal Slate '"'' Q11l.amb;n9 2 0 2 1 d f II ed th Bulldogs in command. To1a11 :12 11 11 1s e ense co aps on e (Long Beach!. Th ts. "Sc.,. •r H•tw• boards. All interested parties arc ln-e OU Jde shooting of Han-Gold'" w.,1 3' 31' -JI ""--w·-B-·· h1'I •• 44 cock guard Jim G I es s 0 n ;--'-'-"_0_"_:_~ ___ _.c»...:."----="---"__:_~.:.::-:.:::··.:.::"c.:·=-:-:.::::.::-::..:'.:_.:.'.::it:ed:.::l•:::•'::t•:n:d:_· ----- helped the Bulldogs maintain a 20 point lead through the se· cond half. Glesson finished with 33 points while Jackson ended with 28. HANCOCK OHi ,-~ ,-T •I' f" O'lr!~ 1 o A 2 C!nson lS l J ll JldcSOft 11 ' l :it Oornp11lnt J a a 1 tllotll S a S ID Goocl bol a 1 1 2 1 Howl"' 0 I 2 I Itk an Old Forester kind of season. """"' l016 M•rl!l"I 9010 Ztl1lor J J ! lJ G11ltert"11 o o 1 a To11l1 4'5 11 ll 10& OllAN•• COAIT 1121 Jlo1pll I 2 A 11 KlllClllOl'I • I 2 :H Sllclttlmlll r 3 1 I JJ Jord111 1 J 2 17 PllH 11 23 lll1cl~ 1 o G 1 L,,.,.1 0 I I l 0 11111 2 011 Holmn 20 0• IEr..,.lnt O 2 I 2 Tot1l1 31 JO 17 11 H•llllm•: Ht1't0C.~ SS, Ot1no1 Cot$t ~ Shedd, Tripp Split Honors Bill Shedd and Bob Tripp shared honors Thursday night at Newport Harbor Hlgh's an· nual foot.ball awards dinner at lhe Ba-Bay Club. Shedd, besides being picked as captain of the Sailors varsity, received the lilatt Ober award as the most valuable player on the team. Most outstanding p I a y e r selection and the reeipient of a "' special Rotary award was E] lineman Tripp. ; • The most improved hOll()r · · went to tight end Jerry Smith. ..( Coach Wade Watts' Blue- jackets posted a 6-3 record for the sea90n, the third such wirr ning mark in the past four years. Vikes Honor Top Gridders Marina High &hool loonor<d Its 11169 vmlly footl!all leam Thurlday night at Meadowlark Country Club and S t e v e Mooahi.n WIS named Most V1Juable Player. Dennis Kennedy and Dove Teel were named co-captains and Jtm Unk garnered the Most Improved award. • Most JnspiraUonal went to 86 proof RI Sa • 86 00 oof "Th . th ' be . ck emao and a Special .nt or 1 pr . crt 1• no 1~1 tttr in the market." $6 } g'f'fth Etfttt honor· wenl to' Steve Decanter and Gift Wrip at QP c.xtrii cost. • 1 O'llare. '------~------------->---------·.::'::":'::"':___r • Mays 300 Qualifying Under Way RIVERSIDE -Qualifying runs for Sunday's Rei: Mays USAC championship r a c e began today with C o s ta !\1esa's Dan Gurney clearly· established as the man to beat. In the 2.~mile Riverside lnternational Raceway road course whcrt Gurney won the Cor\'etle feature 12 years ago, the day the track open ed, he is feared by drivers like Marlo Andretti. A. J. Foyt, Al and Bobby Unser and R o g e r !llcCluskey. ti.1cCluskey, Foyl's team- mate in the final Indy car race of the season, swns up the feelings of his peers: r . -------.------... ' ' , DAILY PILOf J If Classy QB s Duel Tonight at Big A By HOWARD L. HANDY °' ,... Otll'I' ,. .... tll ll Jt isn'l often one quarterback will try to stop another from a defensive post. tion in this day of football specialization. But that's exactly the case tonight when highly louted junior signal caller Pat Haden of Bishop Amat leads the Lancers against G e o r g e Fraser and the ·Anaheim Colonists in Anaheim Stadium. A crowd of more than 2{),000 is expected for the ClF AAAA playoff ..semifinal game with kickoff at 8 o'clock. KEZY (ll!KI) will broadcast the game beginning at 7:45. The matchup between these two will highlight tonight's ac- tion and the battle between them when the Lanctrs are on offense will be watched with a great deal of interest. Leading receiver for Rishop Amat is young Jolin McKay, Jr .. son of the USC coach. Ile is a juni()f and has drawn about as much praise as Haden. i\1cKay has caught 93 passes for 1,450 yards and 14 touchdowns this year. When lfaden calls on h.ls leading NMer, hi"' \Viii send i\lanuel f:strada, a 165 pound tailback, into action. Estrada has gained 982 yards and has scored 10 touchdo"·ns this St'ason. '·Gurney knows the track so well that we all start in the - hole." TRAIL. 'S END -Thirt.y-thr.ee champion, ship cars begin the Jong famed "Championsh1·p T1·a1·1 " 'l th 150 1 · ed Gurney, who ha s won thi·s ·~mil t k R d . . ll ore an en r1es are expect .J\1\1" e re over 1vers1 e International Raceway's 2.6 mile \vhen the Rex 'lay " d th T ·1 R. ·d race both times 1·1 was run, d · 1 , · JI s race aeia1n en s e ra1 at. 1vcrs1 e Sun- The two quarterbacks will n1ove to center stage when their res~ive teams are on offense: Fraser is a two-lime All.CIF selection and has be..!n the spark of coach Claire VanHoorebeke's team this season.~ t-'raser's top n1nning back ls 178 pound Tim Thorn while his favorite receiver in playoff ac · tion has Ocen halfback Cary Tozer. roa course m ast year s Rex Mays 300, the last stop on the day Qua11·fy1·ng •ot d tod di sagrees. ---------=--------'-'--'CC:...:::c=--:.=...::2 _::::__::::__:::::_:·__::=:::: " un er \Vay ay. "I don't believe in the hometown advantage," h e said. "ll there is any ad- vantage it is in how you set your car up. "But I'll le i! you one thing, If I have any advantage. I'm going to ta ke advantage of it.'' Gurney will be at the wheel of the Olsonite Eagle he drove to a sect1nd place finish at Jn. dianapolis behind Andretti la st r.·lemori~I Day. It will be powered - perhaps for the last time-by a. stock block Ford engine pioneered by the Californian. He is already at work developing a new turtxr-Offy for Indianapolis next year. Sunday's season finale will also ·mark a couple o f milestones in current racing hislory: 1. It will be the final race for htario Andretti's veteran crew chief, Clint Brawner, before he moves to Tucson to take over the racing fortunes of V.cCluskey. Brawner has been with Andretti since the Italian-born drive·r broke into the big time five years ago. 2. It wil l be the last ap- pearance in-a USAC cham- pionship race for four-wheel· drive cars. Road r a c in g veterans George Follmer and Sam Posey will drive two Plymouth-pov.•ered STP cars lhat also feature automatic transmissions. Two days of qualifying wi ll precede the Sunday JOO.miler, \Vilh Gurney also favored to Area Girls In Skating Competition Cindy Solberg of Cost.a. h1esa and Susan McCarthy of Foun· tain Valley will C<lmpete with more than 170 ice skaters from 17 clubs in Southern California, Arizona an d Nevada in the 1970 Southwest Pacific figure skating cham- pionships at Culver City begin· ning Dec. 12. Both girls will be skating for the Glacier Falls Figure Skating club along with a large list of Orange County skaters. Cindy is a seventh grader at the TeWinkle lntennediate School in Costa Mesa. She is entered in the Intermediate Ladies 'Division in the com· petition that lasts for six days over two weekends. Susan is a riinlh grade stu- dent at Fountain Valley High School and is also enlered in the Intermediate L a d i e s group. The rink ts located ~t 4545 Sepulveda Blvd., Culver City. Competition begins at 7 a.m. Edison Banquet \\'in the pole position. Euro-Edison High School will pean style qualifying, wilh honor its fall sports athletes every lap of every driver on with a banquet in the school the clock, will be held from 2 , cafeteria Tuesday night at lo 5 p.m. today and Saturday. 7:30. The 300-mile race will start at In their first year of opera- 1 p.m. Sunday. tion, the Chargers football More . than $75,000 in prize team compiled a 4-3-2 overall money 1s at stake, with about record and finished third in $20,000 going to the winner. the Irvine League. _,' FLY ~. M~ ~bHo~o~~rt~l~~ will be ot our Santo Ano store this Saturday, Dec. 6th, 10 till 4. He will demonstrate the art of fly tieing. We will soon be forming new classes, so come on in and see what you will learn if you decide to join one of our fly tie classes. NEALS Santa Ana Store Only 219 E. 4th St. Sporting Goo.ds Kl 7-5723 Cage Scl1olarship Off ered; All-loop Piel\: Questio11ed From the mailbag: Reader \\'alter 0 . Ruffner 0£ Seal Beach \\'role concerning the selection of Marina High football players to the all-Sunset League honorable mention list. " •• , I don't know \l.'ho is responsible for these selections but there couldn't have pos· sibly have been any objectively in this one." Sorry Walt, you've got the wrong paper. ROGER CARLSON '******~·····**· \\'hen selections for all-league gel lo ihe point or honotable mention, this publication stops ri ght there. Honorable n1cnlion is strictly a ne\vspapcr gimmick, usually lo satisfy the readers of a certain area. It appears the guilty ones de- cided they'd better get a Marina back in there. Unforunately, they picked the \.\'rong one and came out looking rather foolish. * * * Another \l'rong number frnm the maila:: "I \!.'ant to take this opporlunlty lo express our interest Jn you as a student.athlete al th e Univenity of California San Diego, ", , • If you need financiaJ aid to continue your l'ducalion, our campus has a Financial Aids Office \o\'hiCh provides many scholar- ships and lo:ins to students Y1ho need financ- ial assis tancP. " ... I hope you "'ill make plans to ,·isit our cam pus this spring." (signed) Barry l.Unnlngham, Head basket- ba ll coach. Sorry Barry, but I've been red-shirtin g for thl' past few seasons in hopes that Tim Tift of UC Irvine "''ill somhow set tbe light and ex tend a similar invitation. , * * * ti.lilrV Bai n of ~later Dci has been named assistant athletic director at tht:! par6chi;1! in stitution. !Jain, an assistant rootball coach under Bob \Voods, is lhc brother or Ed Bilin . Foothill High's successfu l coach. * * * \\'ould yon b<'lit\'C Edis.on High School's basketb all pro j:!ram is in no bttter condition lhan Us football team in regards to facilities·~ Tbars right 'fhere are still no lighls in the gym und the stands ha\'t not been corn- plctcd. Presl'nlly coach Da\•e !\lohs' uuUil \\"orks out at lluntington Beach "·hen the Chargers can be fitted in. Latest pro~rcss report on the ~ym st11les co rnpletion tin1c around the first of the year. Don't bet on it. * * * T"'O for1ner Fountain Va!ll'y a;rapplcrs dre faring well in collegiate circles. Chris Sones is the 118-pound st<irler al the Universi!y of Iowa and Glen Anderson i:: !he varsity 130-1>0under at Cal J>oty San Luis Obispo. ' Both-"·crc CIF' champions la st yc.'.lr as Barons, Sones at 106 and Anderson at 123 . Holmes, Perez Ear1i Sau f.lc111cul c J\JVP t u Divel Missio1i Viejo Honors Steve Divel was nan1ed most \·al uable and capl:iin of the varsity football team Thurs- Sophomore Aundre llolmes caplains: Craig Citro and Joe day night at San Clc1ncntc was named the outstanding Jones. lligh where the Tr it on s player for Mission Viejo Cec _ MVP : Ron llaynes; honored their fall sports H.igh"s football team Thursday ~lost Valuable Lineman: John athletes. fall sports awards banquet. Schaeffer: W.ost Va I u a b I e try was Craig sterling. night at the school's annual Most valuable in cross coun- 1 Holmes was also named Back -Dave Le I r o ; Foo1D111 most valuable lineman for the Defensi\'e Leader: Mike ~-lac· te .... ~::~iv Mo•t fo\Q~~.P~~~i'o°n".e1~: ~~~~ Diablo \'arsil.\. Brown. MVP sie-.e Olvr!. Ou1111...,1n11 •· b II ST•-.e Olvel r 001 a 11arris. !Ire -MVP: Tom Ttrry, carone; ?\lost lmpro\ed : 81'ad J.,mor Aw ord; Tim o .. -.111i C1Pl1ln I Varsity Co-captains: c .. e -MvP •. Jim Allb•loM. H I L h I 'I · k Cross Counlry C•oit c""""' ui;: 1 cal er ant " 1 e V8 ... 1v -(•11111n: !lab L!neb8c\: Becker: i\1V Ilvck: Aundrc Varsity -i\lost Qutstand-~~~~1.~~~;1"" 8~~·9 !'.~;~~· :=l Holml'S: Mos1 V a I u a b 1 e ing Ray Perez. i\I o s t ~Z'.:l~~v~ .... ~~~, B~1\e<J::::: g:jl:::~:~:11 L1nc1n<·11. Rich \Ve i;; t I er: Inspirational: Mike Rattray. ~~~~~~~·"~ ...... ~~:;@ R~~"7.:i"@7.1~~·~~""1~• Leading 'Tackler· Doy 1 e Douglas: Outstanding Player: 1t~J::iot11 WATCH FOR SPEC IAL EACH WEEK OMJCfl'A Aundre }iolmcs. i ~j FRIDAY & SATURDAY I ~ SAVE ON THIS BIG SPECIAL M IE~~~~~~;;;,< I~ M ., 11 GIVE A ~ i " l/o,i;~;;;;;.ii;;;;;~~ ~ ~ :~MUSICAL GIFT ~ SPECIAL! ALL YOU CAN EAT!! 'ITALIAN SPAGHETTI with Meat-Sauce ( ii NEW TH~~E~~ELKS ~ ,. ~ /! CREEDENCE i 1 11 1 CLEARWATER !I I "WILLY and THE s4as I POOR BOYS" 11 8 Tra<k & CuHtle ONLY Griffins Gun11i11g For Cro,v11 By CRAIG SllEFF Of '"-Dill~ l'llfl $1UI Los Alamitos and Barstow, a pair or football teams that like to run and shoot, put all their guns on the table tonig ht \\'hen they duel for the CIF AA championship at B a r s t o w High. Game time ls 8. Both clubs holster some all'esome personnel. Los Alamitos' big gun is quarterback Vic Pereboom . His rifle arm has been ac- eurat4r 60 percent of the time this season.1The ~10, 165-poun- dcr has been on target 81 tin1 cs in 135 allempls for 1,400 yards and 13 touchdowns. The-Anaheim signal caller has directed the Coloay to a 9- 2 record, has hurled three touchdown passes in llvo playoff games and has run ror another. He also eicells In the Anaheim defensive seeondary ana last week made a key in- terception to set up the win- ning toochdown against Retl- lands. No quarterback in recent CIF annals has drawn as much publicity as Haden. The yoong passing star of the Angelus League champions has already set a new career passing record with another full season ahead of him in 1970. He has thrown for 3,S02 yards and in lhe playoffs has connected on 28 of 45 passes for 335 yards. Vanlloorebeke sums il up thusly. "If \V(' don't Pl'rform any better U1an "'e rlid the other night against Redlands, v.·c \rill be run out of the stadium. '"They arc a deceiving team. l\obody talks about their run· ning game but they use it almost 50 percent of the time. And they run \\•ell." Gary 1\larinovich, coach <l( thl'" Lancers, is fearfu l (){ the i;tunti ng Anaheim dcrense as \1·ell as its <lffensive might. "They do a lot of things on defense you don't have time to Leach your kids. This will µresent a lot of problems for us along \Ylth their bal.aoced a!tack." \\'inner of this one will race the survivor of a similar game. between Lakewood and Blair. \\'hich is being contested at the Coliseum tonigh1. Foothill, Bo11ita Collide In Grid Plavoff Battle .; llis chief rccei\·er is fleet-Foothill and Bonita Hig h per outing. fooled Jeff Ticehurst, a 150-Schools, a pair of high-seorin~ Both clubs feature exceUent pounder who has pockl'led 47 AAA football learns, clasn· . k receptions for 649 yards and runn ing attac s. :;even touchdowns. tonight at (8) at i\1t. San Coach Ed Bain 's Knights are Junior Mike H ix 5 0 n Antonio College in CIF playoff Jed by all-county selecLion Boll spearheads the Gr i l fins competition with the winner Speicher, who has rambled fpr ground game. A ben ch· advancing to the llnals next J,143 yards in 2.o2 carries for a v.·arn1er for the first l'ight games of the season, Hix son v.•eek. 5.7 averag!"'. He has scorOO 18 has stepped in to fill injured The learn thal plays !he besl Louchdowns. Ju Ju Predisik's shoes ade-defensive football will prv-fullback Jim Vola1v is the quately. bably come away the winner. second leading Foothill rusher Hixson has accounted for 501 yards, with most or the total And, Foothill has the helter v.·lth 697 yards in 126 tries. coining in the rinal regular defensive reeord. The Knig:h!s Quarterback Bob Blacklidge se<.1so11 gaine and the two have allowed just SI points complements the r u n n in g playoff tilts. (4.6 average) In racing :o an game with his pa ssi ng. Barstow. like Los Alamitos, B!acklidge hus th rown 145 boasts an 11-0 mark. ll-0 record. Bonita has ~iven passes th.is season. rompleting The Riffians attack ls led by up 143 point! (13 per game) in 72 (49 percent). brothers Robert and Garland posting an identical mark. Speicher and Votaw are fine Evans. orrensively, Bonita has defensive st.andouls as well. Robert, a senior, has ac-averaged 33.9 points a game. Speicher plays mid d J e counted for 1.210 yards, scoring 373 while FoothHI has linebacker and Votaw is a avcraginc 6.2 per carry. He posted 345 points, a 31.4 clip halfback. has scored 27 touchdowns.1-----------'------------ Brolhcr Garlenl, a Sophomore, has rolled up 882 yards for an 8.3 average, scoring nine touchdowns. Great gift to trim a tree with. Say M•"'7 Chl1..mnas "With a MoCullooh Power Ibo e., the world'• llght..t oWn ... .,. Th• onl7 •aw In the six-pound. ot aeel Zip• throu gh an 8·lnoh log in ju1t 8 second•. Cuta a winter'• worth of firewood. qulok 11.nd au7. Plenl7 or power. Plent7 oC featunL Bn' gift under UJ' tHe. $179.95 FREE OeL th .. llflllwetsht ff.IT7i•e ciue(~~!l4,11"1~,._ wh•• you. bu.,. PD_. llii •er Pow•r tl •e • Aato••tl .. 611ppl)" lhlllt•d. -- DUNTON FORD 1 2240 SO. MAIN SANTA ANA Prtsents JOE HARRIS 'S Football Forecasts Be A Winner With DUNTON FORD SATUIOAY, OlCl"MIEll '• UU PltOU.IF.I WIHHllllS • SCOlllS ,llDl.\aLI LOSl•S I SCO•lS ,...,.161 A. I M .•..•••..•••••.•..• M Gram1>llng .•.•......••.••..••• lJ SAH DIEGO STATE ...... .,, • .,., ll BOSTON U ....•.•.......•••...• 14 Tl!.XA$ ............................ 24 •AltKAlllSAS •..........••...•••••• 14 HATIOM.\L l'OOTIALL Lf.\GUE •SAN ~ltAlllCISCO •..•••....••••• II CHICAGO .... ·············· 16 Al!lll"(.\H fOOTIALL LEAGUE HE W 'l'Ol!IC JETS ,. •.•. ., 2' •HOUSTON ••.•..• , , .••• ,,,., 20 SUNDAY, DECllMIEll 1, 1tH H.\TIOHAL '00TIALL LE.\OUE •ATLANTA , .. , ................. , 71 •l.\LT!MOl!E .................... J• •CLEVELAND .................... :N DALLAS ...•••..•.••••.•..•..••.•• 31 MllllNf:SOTA •...........•...•..••• 17 ST. F.0U15 ••...•....•.•......•. 7• WAIHINGTDN , ...•..• ,~ .......... 16 NEW OltLEIO.NS .............. , • ., 2' OETl!O!T • ......•• ,., ....•. , 70 GltEEN 11#.Y ..................... 11 •PJTTSBUllGH .•.•..•.••..••.•.• , 13 •LOS AlllGELES ..•••••••••• '' •NEW YOlll( GIA/olTS ...•..•. •· ]J •PH!LAOELPHI" ,.,, • , •• 14 AM1111CAH "OOTl.\LL LE.\GUE •l(.\Hl.\S CITY ................. ,JO •MIAMI ........................... 11 •OAICF.AND ...................... )t •SAN 01EGO •...•...••..••..•..• 21 llUl'F•LO . •• .•• • . •'""It DE/olVEll ...••• ,.,,, ............. " CINCIN NATI ,,,.., ................ 1~ BOSTON , ................. , •• ,, 14 DUNTON 1 !!=ORD Includes Parmnlan ChHse, Crisp Cole Slaw, Roll and Butter! I MUNTZ COSTA MESA s.1 ....... 1 •• I TAPE CITY Ron'• Mlnl.Cyclo City S.r.i11t AU of Orang1 Cettattty For°"" soy.,.. Over •oo N1w and I Us1d C•tt •nd True.kt to Choo1e "Ho,.t of 2200 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa ·· et Wits .. St. DAI LY 10.10 17216 l1at.h f!I~. Rtd c..p.. Sorvlco" U1td C..-546-7076 Hew Can-546·7071 : 17th AT NEWPORT BLVD. i ..__1_"_•i_"_'_·21 _ 11 _ __, ----------------------------t'li ........... -......................... ,. ... _,,,.,..§'---------.'------------------- ----- .. • !0 DAI L V PI LOT F'rldill)', D«tmbtr 5, 1969 -. ' . GETTING SET -In training for their races against Northern C~alifornia teams, membe rs of Cal 1State Long Beach Shell and Oar orga11ization spl as h their \Vay daintily through practice al Long Beach Ma- U,IT ..... rine Stadium ~or ;the December 13 Forty·Niner Christmas Spnnt Regatta over an .8~met.er course. Girls "borroW" boy coxswai1,1s from Cal State LB's varsity ••• but do the hard work themselves. Newport's Pruett in· B~Race 1.EGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE ,_.,., Oll"A•TMINT 01' PUil.i( WOltKI Cl•Tll"ICATI Oii •UttNUI OIVlllON 0, MIOHWAYI 1"4)<11t •1CTITIOUI lllAMI NO'ftCI TO CONTRACTORS Cl ltftl'ICATI OF IUSIHllSI TM ''"'°''..,_ • nrtlfY """' 1n1 ltllld ,,_." will be nmlvtll •I 1'l'IOI P"ICTITIOIJS NAME COflilllld\'lf 1 Mlnflt " I' O a.. M oHICe ti -S!ill HklltwlW £11111-'• tiw uNM,..l•llN OOC. «rtl!1 1119 It fon-CM-. Ml Mir, (;elllor11l1, -,.,. ,~ llOMI «II. .zt!"'lllofl ot Hltll"'ll't'I Wldl ... , Ml ..... I buiJllftl II 331'1 M#ln.t \1111 • Hllol.lt llnft -"' CATEllllfO 1211 ,..,It! Sllrl"9 StrHI, LOI Atlef .... Orl't'•, D11111 Pol"'· (;et[lp"'la. Ulldtf' '"• lmLIMITfO Ml tlltf wW flm'I 19 -C.lttor•a. untO 1 o'clodl """-Oii lktj11ou1 tlrtt. l'l•llW all GltlY,\.J\T IN· ...C " "'-fo1111w111e --..._ ~ 11, \t.tf, 1t Wflldl llllW ~ TllUOlll Ind IW f-lld firm Ii ,,_.....~ -ho tvN Mii ~ all raldlftu ~· 1111111 a. ..ullltclr °""'° t/111 l'Hd 111 llOOlll at 1'-to11ow1,,. """"' w(!OM Mn\41 i. •• fol ..... : I ~ tlld llulldll'lt, tor UMlrll(tloftf Oii' l\llf •l'MI 116c1 of rfslo#nct" II hlJl,,.. EWP\ln V. lllCN,.._ UOI W, llfltt St•h 11 ........ Y In KCV"'...U Wltll "'Ii JUHEMAltlll;' (;-1.Y, )3141' Mir"'' Cll r1, l•lltil .~ .C:.lllor1111. ~11-lt!erwtor. to ~Id! uiecl-1 ""1• Orlvf, ~~ Palf!!_~ (1lltorn11, Jerry f , 0.Wln,,,.. 2t!PI $!., Htwllort r"""'f'I« b fl'lldt. '' lollOW1l Cltl.,:I Na\lfmlli'I' 10, ltt". • -..c-J\. C111lorfll1. Ot...-Caunt1, Ill Cotl1 ~"' · " JUWIMl.ltll! GllAY Burly ~ p--t 0 f D1llld Nov...,blf ll, INt. •-c1111ntetlo!ll. •' H1rllw 1tvlw1rd a11te of C•lltattll.I, 9'°'"" Cauntv; uvu '''"" , Jwrr P'. Govlll 101.er..-n.,). tr1"lc 11.ntl •NII Oii NOv.,;.,btr 1'C. lMt, bPla-• "'"· • Newport Buch mechanlc·and E""'• v. lt lcf\arW hlthwl~ lltMlnt 111tm1t lo 01 Hol•'l' PYblk Ir. v<i ta. ••Id ~!1•t. -·~ ~ ~-1;., .... , Stilt Ill C1llfon!L1, 0rlftll c.ouroy• modtfi.d. --..[IY ·-attd J\lftlm1roe Gflw ~1V1:11 IV' ~ I Vinc:efl;Q Oft NIW. l:t. lNt. bNr'I !!!fl. 1 'Noflf\I Bick -'' """lr\'11 hr IM tllllrt lftloOl'l' ~II It ,.,,. to bl ~he oenoio """'°'• B•......,...,.i dbring bJs worid l"lllHIC h1 ....4. for 1114 111t., MnMl lly dflC-•lbld l'llr1!11. ~ I• wbtcribld .to "°"' ""~'" .... • ..:.::.~ ... I pal _,,.., Ewl'/11 V, llklllf'• • JtrrY F. l"Ll n&, -lfluUons. 1NI .,_., t!Nmtftl ..... tcknowteQted w t•Ku•M \,:u .. :uysvu...,.,p 1111 Cllft gD Goo/In ~ t. -to 11t ,._ ""°"" fol'l'll !Of" blddll'l9 ltlli llr'OIKI Clll Otll'f W; 1114' ~ -• ••• drl ' I ,_ IJ-wtiose """"' ,,.. ~lbH lit W11 Wlltll11 ol:llllllH •t 1"-ofllc:• DI' "" "-le f~EAl.J '>-1111.1 a s.. ver .u , .. own lnltr\ll'Mllt .,. ~ltdttd ltwll ,11• M~w•Y 1E,.1,....,, Public worti• a1111c11nt. ·o,ho!'~ll P. l lnd , ~ _!!~_m!!!_ fl~A.West :f,'rici::LT.U., :r:r:,.mon,:ik~11':t"1;~.·n:,,T,•1 H':r: ~~1-ro!::~;~~on E~11,., •~" t"'""!r .....,., rac-Mii\' I(, MtnrY ll!'"'l""r 11 SKr1me1110. •"" rM 01,1r1t1 M•1 •· IJTJ -~ .. debut $at,.M·...;,. In 1.-n NGMN l"ubllC'CtlHl;i'l"lllt (Nlllffrl 11 L01.-.1111tltl. SM! fr111Clsco. HEINLY & ll!'DDENS U-. ..,_, ..,.,..'6 l"•lnciNI Dn'la lft 1'1111 IM 111$1rlct 111 wlll<h 11>1 worll 1, Altern,vt A L1w Beach'! Rwn Rua IV, Or1nte ~ 1111111N. . •11 er.le ,.., ... D•lv• wu 1 ~--l . MY Comml\llM E.ul"" l"Yr1u111I '9 371'6 Of Ille Lie.or s ... 11 An•, C1lil. '27h r11n:t , a ncent unm\grant Nov. 14, 1ttz Gaclf, 111e OtN• .,,,.,,,....,"''Br: H1r1111 1. H•'"'' lo Newport Beach fr 0 m l"Vblhl>td 0r.,,.. COMt DIHY 1"11t1. ,._..,1 .,...,.111,.,, r•• of •A9H 111 t11e T-'nC4 • Fl "·-nd bef NovMlttlr 14 u, n 11111 Dtumbtr J. -"'In wttlcll "" -Ii lo bll .,_, to Publl5Md Orl!Wle Ca.ost D• t~ •l>e'. ! 01UM1 a ore that from 'Ifft 2114-H bl ..., hied 111 It'• o .. rtrnent of Pullll< No~flnbtf u •"° D«emDe-r j, u. t• Italy was named Friday •• ' ~c.. NOTICE worki. 01v1•1ciro o1 Hfv~w11• 111.11111c111en 1969 7100.6, • w ~ ~ Gt,....•I Prev.iltr.I W19• R1t.1, ~1led 1-------------- IUb for 1968 APBA outboard l"-UW NoV11m111r. Ifft. ~lass ff bore h kin D Cl!llTll"l(ATt 0, BUSINISI DEPARTMENT OF l"UBLlt Robert o s c amp r. l"ICTITIOUt NAMt WOltKS B,\ll JI" Magoon of Mi ami as TM Ullcltr1l.ntti do urllf¥ """ ... DIVISION Of l'!IGHWAY$ NOTIC.E TO CllEDtTORS driver of the 23-foot Memoo ~.,:1":,~~=n1':. ~~ fie: i;.~~ ~~!:,11:,,.1,_r ~¥:~:1g: c.~~~:~11~rA ~~= hull Andrea, powered by a trio ti!'°""HOO,fl~ .. "~," •.u,•,1n,o FLYING ri.!T'w!:"C:~ lO.c!.~· Dilly Pila!. TH E C.OUHTY OF ORANGE Of 'lercury I""................... -........... 11 m 1 com_..i No ~ :11 a. Dft(tmbl • 1M• 1111-11' Ht. A"4»t " ;1.r...,. ............ er of"" fotlowlllll Plrwrll. wftoSI Ill"'" I" v~ . r .. Eil•le ol EL&IE $,. HASTR£tTEll, outboards. ~1 ... ~ ,.11as at rtildlncc '" 11 LEGAL NOTICE DK••1ied. R R Iv he •vo • NOT!CI!' 15 HEREB'f GIVEN lo th• um un - t name Is Lts11t A. Wiley, lit P'lor• SI .. L•t""'' (r~cliTori ol ·~ •l:i.V! Mm .... clK-1'tl bo ed f I. 811cll, · IUl"llllOll COUllT 01' THE • , ,, • ' , . rrow rom lQUOr·smug-Mljh••• 0 . Brv1nt. ''°' w .• ,.... ITATI 01' CALll"OllHll. FOlt " • 1tf•U> 111 ""v ne '"""' "~~1111t !!,. II I of f 1HI COUHTY Of ORANGE $81d dKlltl•nl """ •e<l~lried IO 111! !h•m, g ng exp Oils the Roaring ron • NewPO(I lt1ch. CASE NUMBEll l•HJI wl1h !he r11ceu•rY VOIJ<llt"' ln lht o!ll(• ~·, · ~-'le print f D1tt'd Novfmber 17, Ifft, S ...... 01 lh• (If'~ al mt •b<:lv• enlltlf!od tour! o• Ml -~IS a .....,UI S tom MICl'IHI D, 8rY1nl u.......,NS to On!lofnl '"'°m, W•lll lh• flKfll~•Y LEGAL l\'OTICE Gal Rowers Get Out Oars· or. l.ong Beach to· Ne W p or t s11i. "'L(!\~~,;:,'1g,v.,... c-iv· tr~~ 1!:u~ ~·1~Y~~~~~E~~ :i°u=~=r~n~~~~~ t,:1=:,~~11'; . Harbor and. back . to Loog Ort HovtmlMr" 12. lff,, betOr•. "''' • ~~~~II tr!~!e:i.lnl= Y1 c~~~Hl lllmtt. tOI Cove~ Or .. Sit. :!01, f.'rw11>11rf Beacb .. A fleet.of as .... any ,.0 Not""' Public In llMI !or Niii. St1N. ltEEO •TOHJ' LIEE' Rl!E.D DO& j le;o_cll. C•lll . w111c11 i1 lpte Pl•~ ot "'" ....., --.Hy •-••Id LlliU1 A. Wiiey end ' ' buS!llf11 ct 11\e unders19ne<I in •II m•11tn. 28 'rat;:ers roars away from MkhHI o. Brvan1 k"°""" to me "'"' m. 1~-,0~.v,. 1~F111s,mE Dmttd5,,r:"~, CALI· ~r111ni1111 to 1i.e e1tt1f. ct se•c1 c1t1:..:i•~1. B I nt Shor P• al O Plflot\t wtloll "'"'" 1r1 1ubs.crlbtd lo " wUhln lour monlh1 ~fltr 1n1 li•SI publ•<~· e mo e ler ·I a.m. 1111 wllllln l111lr11'11tnl 1r.d acknawledtld' FORH1ill to llle abovt 111med Oefeno1nt!: !Ion of !hh no!lc•. While the 6-4 !l'pound th" tMttlrted !ht .amt, Vau ere lllftb¥ dl•tcl" la lilt • ..,.,,. Oot..t No•em~r" lH9 • • . "' (OFFICIAL SEAL} It!> p!.11111111 In rtu•onst la lh• Ytritled Cd•Yt p G•~h'am • Pruett will be driving in a •~h E. Dtvli cotr1Pi.l111 of the llCO\I• n1mecl o11lr1tlll• .. .,...1111~·,,~,,,s 01 !tit ~•hl• P 'f' Off••-p Boa Noll•¥ Publk · C1llfornl1 wlttl IM clerk of lht Ibo"" en!lltfd cwtl o! 1ht 1bov~ 1111,,.....i ~··"tl•nl &C~ IC ""IUl 'c: OWer t Prlncil>lt 0Hlc1 In ln the lboYt tnlll!ecl acllon brou9hl OUllY EA, CAR l"ENfEll i llA.RNES Racing Assu. event fOf' the Or1nee Counl'I' a>11lnst Yau In s•kl caur1, wllhl~ TEN 11¥ Ernt!! J. sc1111 J•. Collegiate Season Set Dec. 13 • in Long Beach California nars1nen gel a jump on their rowing rivals ;1cross the nalion December 13 \\'hen nearly a dozen college and club teams ron1pete in the second annual Cal State U>ng Beach Forty-Niner Christmas Spr1nl Regatta at Long Beach. l\-larine Stadium. \Yarm Derember weather \\•ill permit an 8 a.n1. starting time for U1e first of 18 events over an abbreviated 82tl-meter course. lt \\·ill Slart in the far \\·est end of Marine Stadium and finish eastward, opposite t he spectator area at the T·n'o Experts Differ Oil stadium boath-Ouse. Admission to the event. co- sponsored by the Cal Stale College Long Beach student newspaper. the Forty·Niner, and the Long Beach Rowing Assn., \\'iii be free . Entered along \\11th the host college and club will be teams from Santa Clara and st. Mary's in Northern California. plus San Diego State, .use, ·uc Irvine and the San J>iego Row· ing Assn. A special set . of races will match girls' ,teams repre.sen· tiog lhe cat State LB Shel l a,nd Oar l!irls' auxiliary and three East Bay area teams from Northern CALifornia"s Lake Merritt Rowing Assn. "The 820·meter d i s t a n c e proved ideal in the inaugural Christmas rel!atta a year-ago -short enough to permit all- out eJ(ort, nOt too kmg so thal ,all-Out-e£fort can't be main· r" tai~ this early in the teams' t~ajning, schedules.1' said Cal State LS' .COach Bill Lcickyer, rega~ .$QQrdlnator. 'R!lct.s -ate' scheduled for s1ng1&8Ctdl~s. doubles, pairs wi!b · and .without conwains, . . ' U.S. Satellite Finds fours wilh and without CQX· swainsc and fer fr05h 0 in· te nnediate and he8eyweight eight-oared shells. The feature race will be for college eights with the Forty· Niner Trophy at" stake, · The program will be the first on an expanded 1970 schedule of coll~giate 41nd club roiA•ing event$ at Marine Stadiwn, climaxing in mid- May when the leading coJleges of the Pacific Coast a'rea com- pete in the Western Sprints <1ver the regulation 2000.meter Olympic course. . • My CammlPlon EllPl•e1 d•~• lfltr llW wrvlce 1111 ,au ol !hos 1Vl"I· tol Dovff Dr Sit l'!ll first tune, he's no stranl!er to . June 11, 1'70 mon1. If served w1111111 the 1boYe ""med NPW1H>rf ,,~;11, (,111. Westem boating fans He vron l"llbiiSllied 0r111111 Cae.Jt D•I"' 1"11ot, coun1,, °" wlll'll11 THIRTY dlYJ If servt<I Tel: !TUJ ,41."°° • NOYffflbtr 14, 21, 21 11111 Dt«ml>!• s. tlsewhere. Atlomt~I !or l.dmlniJ!r•lrl• last October's Lak'e EISW<>re Ifft 11°'"6t You 1r1 hrrrbY no!lflecl '~"' unleoi Yoo Pubrl•h..:I O•a"qt c.,.,1 Daltv ,.,1_,, •M -~ and b t'!ln LEGAL NOTICE so !I~ • wrmen 1uoonslv1 pl•a<tl"ll, 11l<t No~'mber n ""° oe,rmtitr 5 I? 1, OllJU' ~urO .,Wa! at g 1>lllnlln1 wilt t1Mt lu<tgmenl fM I/IV 1969 ' 7;tJ.1,o? f '" I d · J t ....J..' ,,,_... or d...,lf'S ""'•ndld' In the · ,pl° lollll: ea m • 8S W....,. S NOTICE TO ClllOITORS vtrllled comPlf!nl ..s 1rl1l"9 ul>Ofl eo"· Lake Havasu City Outboard 1UPl!lllOll COUllT OP TNt: trtct. 0, will -ty to IM coud for any LEGAL NOTICE STATE 01" CALlll'OINIA l'Olt _._, •-~-)11-~'--------------World Champ1onship u n ti I THI! COUNTY OI' 0111.MGt: ~=~11r:,1~·1 Ol!fN~ "' .... wr <VI l"·lHOI ·1ower unit problems .slowed "'''''of Wl~~:.!~"loAMs Otc Yov m•Y sffti; 1111 ldvlct of'" l'llorntv CElflFICATE OF I USINESS hi nd . td • , , ... "" .,,, -t1tel' connecled wit~ Ille co.... FICTIT IOUS NAMI!' ma until his Jones tunnel NoTKE IS HElllEBY GIVEN to "" •Lllnl or 11111 '"'"""°""· Such '""'new • 11f!dt:rii9nt(I <to cert.r¥ fl\ev •·• hull was hit by another racer rec111o of tlll ba¥ il\Oulcl bl consullecl w1111lft ll'lt 11..,. 1!11'111 con<tucu.., a blltl~ 11 J:io H CM i • f11a1 tf' 11 1iflfl1 ~r* clr:tdffil lltlttd In 'tt11s sull\fl'Mlf>I '°' flllnt 1 wr111'11 Hlt1/IW1v, Ltgun1 Be•cll. Callfarnl~. ~n<!••• Magoon had planned to .aid ~~T.;',1<1ufr1t1 m:r, ~r. 111~:::, Pl••dln9 "' tne corn11111t11, ~'Ez~~~~e~~" 1:~:; 1:;',;'r,,~11, ~:;!;;o'!:; come West for the race, but ;11::,. fllt T:r.-:: YOUci1t .... In th• ottlcf Dllt'd w$tpE •s,!'fc>,..N Cle k 11! tno l!lllowlng Pf•~o111, Wll<l•t n,,.,., :n notified sponsors that his eye 10 ~r:!~, """'·'~ii'~ •n~t~ed =~~·.~ aY M'a•Y Lou ~,;. · ;~i:O.,.~~d 01•<e• er •e•l11ent1 "" ei surgery practice in MiamJ ;';::";~s. ~:~ ,::_ers~~j. 1~~117~· wALaw~:'.}1~ f:{~1L a. c11:•iL 5•~ Juan 1:n1•rn•i1f1 lnt .. ~JC?l c~u. kl t "" tri "' · ' 1411 wnkMff 'Dfrw Sultl tot Per!fcto. Sin Juan (ap\!>lram Call! WOl.I pr even ,..,. p. wh.k.11 11 tM 1111ct DI' billl~. o1 1h1 _-' B 11 ,.;,~ ,,... Ma!l•teln• M P~Qu~1•t. 3)1i11 o;."' Pruett SUpervised the undets19nH Ill I ll ""lllff'S -tl•nlne to C'14)·6tt·,.:; ;r 54M-4n I Or., Dine l'olnt, Call!. o•~?9 • IM esltlt tlf Mid dKidfflt, wllllln four . Th•~ bu•l~n ~cuooh no 1i.teihtir• ,., maintenance of Balestrleri's :::'""' lfltt' "" llril pUb!lcallClll Of lllls "=:~-~~.:.ffkca11I 011.., l'lloi 11'1• G81~rl• (•l•nnr lo<~l!'(f IJ '!IA' Yellow Tornado durinl! the 6::,;.,, Hovemblr 1J, lt6t P+ovtlml!U' 21 1nd Dtcember J, 11. ,.; ~''ct~~;:~:v~¥•~1~ La!NOI. which 1968 season and Jate that yeat WILLIAM 0 • .A.Oi.MS, lNt 71ff .. O Da!e!I Ncv~mOl'-r 26, , ... ~ . , . , E~«UIQ:r" ..t IM Wiii JAMES E. FlTl"!IA'°' proved hts offshore dr1vml! ot 'lie ~'""' n~"'"" detecl•nl LEGAL NOTICE ""1<dcn1. Fl.enc. lrman skill by capturing the Hen-1"11..t.NICLIN AHo 'U.NKLIN ~·" Juen E~1e•n•h•• ' . . w ~tlWt'lltl'I• •I LIW BAii !111 Ma<telolne M. P1QUt)lt nessy M1am1-Key est race. ,., E, llftil ''· NOTICE TO Cll•DITORI STATE '.IF CALIFORNl,t,, . . C•r. Mfll. C1t ... r11l1 SUl"ElllOlll COUllT Of TH I! Oll:A'"'' <O""'" He continued to campaign Ttl: cn•1 S4f.ns1 .. v "" ·: . . '\ I Atlwltll'\ fw l!•ICll'ltf' STATt: OF CALlll'OIHlill FOii On Nov. 16. 1'69, bofllf~ "°'' 1 Not~·~ Insl,Sls AJ•t ~'Ith Balestner1 unll late ast Pubnsl'ttd °''""' c,,.,1 oi·1y ,,1101 THI: cou•"'•Y OI" 011..t.1101E Put111c 1". 11nc1 tor ~a•n s1•"'· De•)o"•u~ ' .. •-he t··.--.1 .,. ' ' '· ~ •"llt<O•ecl J~~ E i:i11>11n and Mllll'!le'n• 'sprmg, WllCll re WllCU ... Nevtmbtt' 2t •Ml Oteemblr 5. ll, 1t. £1J1t1 of GEORGE CORNES MAT· M. P~<!Ufllt ~ ..... ;..n lo --to bi I~ --->" Lhe United States to work in 1''' 71""' TfSON. OtttllSecl. 1>erson1 wlla,e nam-. ''" ~UO.c>ltltd +~ Mussolliu · . . and to NOTIC.E l,S ~fl:EBY GIVE N lo !he "'" wlltll11 lntlru...ent •Ml ac~nowiec1gtd I R I · } srna:D boat engmeenng LEGAL NOTICE crecl"a~ Of IN' •baYi nftmfl! dK<'den• •hN er~vte,; the ""W""' \VASHINGTON' '(UPI) ex,;ioded about 10 billiOn yea'rs . s ap tae coi'i1pete in marathon and IAlll 1171 :~T~ '.!!c:s'e';ii"'.~:v;::vi~::i"':., ·r1~~n~~.'~~ (Om<ltl St~~,¥ K 1-1~~ ... Universe F t;ir Big get Th d • · offShore events. HOTtCI! TO Clll!OITORS with !he n«tu1ry vaucr.ers. ln '"-olfl~e Ne1a•y Publlt . C•llrGrn111 e space ageocy reporte ago. The out\\·ardly fl ying 1u,.ERIDlll COUlllT OP TNI' o1 t~t clerk of"" above en!ltlfll cl!IJl'l, or Prlnc1cat 011 • .,., in FLORENCE, Italy (AP) -evidence Saturday that the PARIS (UPI) _ Maurice STATI! OF CALll"OllNll. FOlll •a P••i•nl '~'"'· wl!h !lit n•<••si1rv O•anQe Counr~ I fragments. since <.ilagulated THI! COUNTY op oltAHCiE ~auche11. te th! unckrslgnied 11 "'' olllce Mv c°"""'''•;o., E~oire~ f\l ussolini was a bigamist with universe may be •·several into galaiies. constitute the Paquet .says the painting of 'Cat' Left Est•"' 01 AN~EL"'.. '4o'."ovH1.Rz.1.a•L, ~n1~' e:~':'~:U!~e HS:~~~ Ts~,&~,:.'=: Pvbii,llod N~;~~~p Hf-,.,,1 0.,,., Pn~t. 3 secret Austrian wile wh() times larger than previoUsly presentJ_y.. ! , exp 8 n din g . the Virgin Mary he found in o..:nH<I. 0•1r'9e. c1111Qrn11, which 11 lht 1111te or '4aviem11tr 71 a..ci Dtct'mt>or s. 11, 19, hi B .. h SUppo6ed." NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVE N lo ll>e buslne.s of IM undetslgnt<I 111 all mat~r1 1969 7?C7~ bore m a son, a rltJS be Universe.•;. . his attic m 1958 is • genuine (rl!(lltort of Ille tboVt lllmecl dtCfl!tnl 11trl•lnl119 la 11\t flf•lt ct Slkl decedenl, 1 '"r'1ter ''·"'· An It a 11· a II It also may ••open" m. A ....... h' h h Ra h I z ' ,.,.,Ill J>e•IOll• hlVIM cl1lm1 •g1l11!I the wllhln lour mOtllhi 1tter !he first l>Ublk•·, ____ ._EcGcA~Lc,;N,o::..CT~IC=E:.... __ _ .. _, stead of i.closed" (as Albert CCOTuu'l5 .o t IS t eory, t e Pae. Q OO S Mid dtcttre11• ,., ,..,u1rec1 ff 11111 them. flan at !Ills 111111<:e. . 1· h . t I d' --• t d " Univer,. ClLI Ila dly be m H .J l wl!h lhf necen••Y vouc1>1r1, In Ille ettke OttKI Nowmt.r 21, H6•. l"·l~n ' IS or an 1Sagr~-u 0 a / • Einstein t b o 1.1 i: pt. and r ore e says at least one other ~ ct ll'le cler-°' ''" ib<:lve fflllll~ caurl. or Jav Met~ ca11>eu11 c;ERTll"!Cill TF. oto 9ll51NESS I Du had · ht ba It • _., J _ tbap •. n lig~ ye11rs ii) . . "' 11"stn' them with ltlt nK'l•.arv E•ttu!rl• el the w111 "''CTITtous MillMI saying ) CC etg per J>I WOil t •~art coJ~ d' I · • • • ·J>e~.500 19 C 0 n V I 0 Ced SUf• vaucherl, lo f!>t uncltrllOl'led ti the otllce of !he lbr>vt "~-"<! dPteclent Tiit V..de"l~necl d06 Morebv c•r!ll~ h h t lapsing c::atas•-'-ically UN'ln 18 . 1ght ear 'being I' . ti D te ct ~1. lllo<llPVI NAGEL, REGAN .. HAl"lll, SILLS .. WOOD lh~I Tl 11 lhe Grne,•I P1t/ne• nt ... ('.hildren by t ree women, U "">"' !"'" the IS a' e\ \ighl traveJs· in . IClen Y tO" offer ' hiin ·more oors p OAVIDSON, IGIO Norlh Mlln Str~t. Su\tf Uni.oi link S•uars L•Milecl p,,,,,..,s~ip torn:lvclf~~ bv.,n•., I f h ' 't00ll a few lr'"1'ng •-res Of •-··· T S>• -· •t 1611 W~1tt!U1 Orht, II•, .. -,, '''''' he lnarr.,ed on y one o t c "" u• ,,,_., 36.\ d 1 t86 000 ·1 than II m•'l\i'on for 1·1. ~10, s.n11 "'""· c111tom11, wl'lith 11 !hr 3WV _... • "' , ,,, , ·- b .11-I 1.-.. ays a . ml es a SC· Pltte of buslllfll Of"" unden19"ecl Ill •II °'""'' C1IH. ~ o•n •. u11 .. er Ill<:' 1;e1;11Q,,; """" ot m others. J ions o years '"''"'e, cond . But OA02 seems to he p t . f ""'""' "''''1n1.., ta tt>t "'"~ "' i11d T11, cno u1.m 1 t1.woooRU"'"' APnR.TMENT~ Grounds for at least con-aque IS a armer near the ALBUQUERQUE, N.~f. dttiedtflt, wllllln four mon111s 1111r 111e Alt_.,.,..,. E'J0tc1trlr COMPANY Du llio Susmcl, \1·ho edited su ggesting that the 1miver~ is Brittany town of Sa'int Do\ay (AP) _ Ever have a cat 11,,1 P11bUt11lo11 o11111s nt1t1c1, PltbllshM Or•nG• ce1Jf tleltor Pill>!. ar>d 111e1 '~· 11l>d•,.1q~"1 ha• ti··~ •e· templating these notions have "several •+-es" tha. t big. • . 011111 Navtmbtr n. ""· NoYtmbtr 71 1nc1 OKemMr J, i1, 1•. ""'"IN! 111, !>!tow 11st•o L lmH~a p,,,~,.,. 1111 Clf fo,·lussolini"s 'vorks and bec-.1 supplied by the orbiting ,.... He discovered the "Raphael''· ·dumped on your doorstep 1n 01111d s. Hlourr• 1tdf 110>-~• lrYe 1nc1 1ew1v1 1nor111~ 1or '"" ~v•na1• Einsteinian .t h e 0 r y • ac-th~ dark I I ht b . m........ Exfclllor Of "" Wiii or execoll11q, llck~oWl!'(fol~ ~nd ••ro•<lir~ :_.;pcechcs, said British writer a s tronomical observatory j11 19SB and say h h t :\."" o n g Y so .. ~.e of 1111 1txive ... mec1 11t'totn1 LEGAL NOTICE !hi• cer11uc11e of eu1;~.,. Flcll!•cY' 4oAOZ ) Jau ndied a year ago cordini to mathematicians s e as spen hoPini you'd gi ve it a home? NAGl!t.. 1tECiAN a cAv1osoN ' N11me. Charles Foley misinterpreted on Dec. 7 by the National "·ho Jk,lrport to undetstand it , the last JI years gathering T)l8t happened at the Albu· i~~:."'5~: MAI~ st, NOTtcl! o, 1N1 E1r1T101r1 TO ENGlllOE P:,';~,s:~"~!r~om~~;., 0~·:~. 10~;,:;,:: documents 1talian authorities says the universe is finite 3'..ld evidence' o( its authentici'ly Que?""" zoe only the cat was 111tt• ..,,.., cerH0tnl• tN, .. TH!' SALE OF l.LCOHOL tc M"""' and tnt111p,, w~a•t namt• and · d d · g \Vorld War 1 Aeronautics and Space Ad· t • 2,-. Id' Al . 1. Ti•• cn,1 Ml·"" B •l!•AGES ,_,_.,, '· ,.., re11drnai ~·p ., 1a1iow..; JSSU(' unn . ministration. "cosed." Space curves upon But the French irt work! i.s a -year-o ncan ioness A"'"1tn tw ••tcu..,. TO WHOAA lT Ml.Y coNCERN: G~•at Part,,.,r· n.,f,:101.~ey Te~erog~:p\~ ~~a Loy nt~~~ itself. U JOU could travel long not convinced. wd ho eats 14 pounds of meat a .. ;,~:;~ 21 o',",;'' o::C"::.'tie~'~;' 1 PllGt, Subltct 10 tnu1nc1 01 ,~. 11cense ... P~:~~~ON.RE1..,'("11~0~nT,A ~0~.~?!: FIRST OBSERVATORY enoug-, in an undeviating "Th b " (I ay. 1,., im.~; Plltll far. 1111t1ce 11 ~ereb' ;!ven 1~11111\e 161~ we,1e11tr 0,;~r, Newt>or1 11,1,~. ]'.1ussolini, the Fascist dictator tr i'""tc !hie th h ey nng out a a se r ul>d ... ilt1tlfd ··-es 111 sell •lcol>ollc C•l1!ornl1. I I t f t922 r l OA02, the nation's first s a,... roug space ' The mystery 1oness, now LEGAL NOTICE 1>ev.raee1 "' "'' preml~u. d"crlbed •• Limllt!<t P~dno": "'ho ru ed ta Y rom un I Ja rge space observatory and .you eventual!)' would wind up Raphael every three months named Annie. arrived at the 101~' Thalia sir .. i, Euqrn• c Bou111"Q~~u~ -v1,01n1t 1943, n1arried Illa Dalser, an th t 1 alt where you'tlarted 1·ust as you d f I D VJ li th' k · th A. 11c~111n9hQu•!. Jo1~1 r~n11n1~ w1•• . h 1 e mos compex.cr eyer . , . • . an a ase a ncievery six zoo ear er . 1s wee in e BAlt·tlH t &gun• Beach '1iQM o1 surv1 .. 0,,h;.,, 779 11:1110,..,~~ Austrian beauty. 1n a as Y · h would il '-'ou travelled 1n o e b k of ~. tru k 110T1CI! o' TIUITl!E'I SI.Lr Pur1u·1n1 to well lnle~llll". '"" un· 0 1 M put In orbil. as bee'n · .. '(., n months," said MIUTice ac a p1c11.u~ c·. N•.•"'" denleM<I 15 8,..1vino ia the OP<>~rtment rv~. an•ov1~.ce111am1~91016 ,09v,~ t•hil ceremony in November r eporting visions of 1 he . d1recuon :arou nd the g~ o( The tru k dr ver t ld the o ,. Id J 1 1no 1 11 llO at .A.1 a11o11c 1 c ,,,. 1or · w. Bul1titk. soso Auburn O•lv~ ~·~ 1915, one 1nonlh before he "'ed universe Seen in tJJtraviolet ear.th, . . 'RJhef ~ll)S, art expert t!'d ~a\er. night atte~ant I ttiat ~he 'ZOO A.M~. S~E~Alll~n~'i'LE' COMP:NY of bl" 1'.1n1ltr ~er:f .~C:..011c =::~: ~;~:~ec:_11~~~~9n:1f~s J::~I 1. Bi~t;;: Rachele (iuidi. Jv.iss Dalser , ' 1t were a tme n aphael it O!l:ANGE COUNTY,• tor1111r111an 1s duly license lor 11censesl far 1M1e 11rM1!11!S 15 AvPnue. Anahpim. c~i;..,,,.1~ 01.,.~, 4UV) light v;hfch does not REACH U~ltr \\'ould ·be worth between $& director had agree~ to accept ~.:'n!~<\;::;s1;:1,':i"'Tu0!~3~~7~tt1,~~ fatto;~:SAL~ BEER., WtNE M''' s. o •• ,,.., •. 1n11 DPI 11•w s"P•'. r an ~1ilan's first beauty salon pe-.1etrate earth's atmosphere. and $12 million the beast. The lioness was ..:uled iw CECIL STANLEY .a.No RUTH l&on• Fide Pllbllc Eet11'9 1"1ece1 ~!7vi~:1eoJtc~1i;1~~~~·,,:~1o10l~~~~~·\! and helped fin ;;ince fo,1ussolini's The . 4,400-pound spacecraft ~r the uni verse, is indeed p el · R h . transferred to a cage and the STANLEY, husl>tlld •ml wl!• '"° •Ko•d· l.nYont dnlrlM to P•0Te1t 1111 issue...:~ .1..,..eN-1. ca1111>r~•~ 9~~· L••~ ,.,.1. newspaper, J~opolo d'ltalia, · t th I I . closed, the flying gal axies aqu says e I m s dr. d ted, 'd t'f d t'd Stlllt!"'btl' 3· lKl. 11 ln1lr. No, '.I'll. In el i~cl'I 11censt (1l m•v 1111 • vtdllecl 11ra. 9004, •101 Alllnd• Prte o e .. ·oriv i;i•~. \\'I\ l e U travio el eyes JS eve' ntually will ·e~ch the· Clld himself offered to buy the 1ver epar uru t'.l I te • book noi.. 1>•11• HJ, cf O!Ucl•I ll:tcord, Jn 1e11 w11~ 1ny otfl(e cf ttie oe111rtmen1 01 c~1110,nia 'O:'IC; '-'lld-.cl Gtl~...,,-i. ,11~ l"olc,v said. orbi'ti'ng the earth 1·n a nearly .,. . . . · "Bui I hadn't talked to '~! ellke cl th• coun!'I' lttcarder ct atco11o11c BPVe•agt Co111ru1, w!lhTn lo ,,,,. •Y .. , , .. I th I Painting after Conf1rrn1'ng 1't ' . Dr1119e Coun!'I', C1!11er11l1, da't of N'I! d1te lf'lt pfOJ>OSld premlse-s ·" ,.,, '11 "'~ l60!, l..c.• Fo!ey'cited a <.-ertifica\(' o[ circular orbil 80 miles high, 0 eir gravitaliona tether d fi .t 1 16 anybody about accepting a WILL SELL .a.T PUBLIC l.UCTtON To..,..,, 11rs1 POstHI. 11111n9 9,wnc1, ,0, r.np•lf,, c•11'10•n1~ '0061; c1>~••r• maintenance awarded ~llss far above the atmospheric and begin to fall back .towa rd was e 1n1 e Y th Century lion " director Bruce Stringer HIGHEST 1100£11 FOil CASH 1111v1b1e c1en11t •s 1>rey;m,11 "" 1ew. Tl>e 0,,,.,;"") ~;~m~~111~~~1~ ~~;.0 E~~;~~~. ~:"~ D 1 · d b the yor oE b · h' the starting point where crea-and possibly painted by the ·d' ~• )lrne "' Mle 111 1&wtul "'°""" ol the ••• """" nc,....ed 1o1 lht 11~ at 11c11Mlic 11'1 o, Ar11, "~·-i. s .. ~ct J-8. S•i a ser s1gnc Y ma. arr1er w 1ch· keeps UV radia- 11 . 00 began wi'th the "bi'g ltal'ian 'I st sa1 . Un>IM 1111,.1 11 '"' Sautll (Iron!) ,,.. be"''''"· The farm al vtrlllc~llon m•v 0.....,,, C•IHorn•a ,7109, Jolin G. H~•·ll 'l'I n n Oct 21 19t6 ,,·h1'ch 1· f d' I st d "a er. "Sn Ann· has a•• home t<•llC'I to ine eou..iv courtltolrM. 200 Ill ob111"" '""" •n• o11lce of th' •" ' 1•' I a n , • • lOnS rom tSlan at'5 an But Rheims repJ'ied"'lf 'f le '"'"W , Block Wtsl Sl~lll Slr~t. Sin!• I.Ill, Dl'Plrt!n..,I. ..argare Y. H•u!I 7"1J CM•IJt• w ... said, "The famil y of Mussolonl galaxies fr"'"' re a< h 1· n g baag"' of JO billion 8ears ago. . · 1• r. plenty to eat, and a boyfriend. c1111orn11 1111 •lfhl, 11111 •Ml 1111tre"11 con· Allred attest El c111~n. c91110'"11 ~I'?!!; c•~· E·•~•~; ~" To, • 'Slipp~ lhe necessary Paquet dares to pretend that I "\'"th b d t th 't v1vec1 to 1nc1"""" held iw 11 uflCler 111ld JO!! E. Luwltt l"rTm•n & Atlee Matt• Her ... •"· 1··~ Benito consists or his wife Illa observa tories on earth. h f d 11 1 h. Tl our u ge e way I DHd of Tnu1 1n iM 1arP''"" ,11w1..:t '" 1•v111 11. L!vln r.~•v••!on M•"''· ~A" Dltn~. CAlltorn. Dillscr Hnd on e child." • I h rod d g~1vitatioli force to produ ce ave oun a C ent or IS is \\'e realiy don 't need ''Id counh ~n<t 11111 d•terlbtd 1i: Pybll1r>tct or1n91 c1>11st D•ilv P11()1. "11~' M•ri~~ t H~s" -S'llll r.1~ •• 1"~ t as P uce m a n·y , ~retended Raphael 1'11 take 'ot1 th t f---' ,, Lcf 41 cf Tr1c1 'In. In '~ cll'f ct Otctmber J. 1tt9 ns~.69 s1•••1. No. 11,. Lii<'~ B•at/!, c;111orn , Foley also said a certificate surprises for astronomers, such a con'traction, hw-ever. it . 1 ,. • an 1er mou o 1.-..-u, c01011 M•••· 11 111own on• m•I' recllfd· 'oe13, Dr F'•n~11n o. J"""'· 7'~ for '' '", r a1'd dated Oct. 22 ""me of whom hav• ranked"-has been calculated that there •m 0 court. St · 'd "8 t 'th th ed 111 Baattt ,,.., "'"1 ,1 •nd t2 °' LEGAL NOTICE arook~""1 St•••t, Ana~"1"'· CaPMo•• " ,,., .. \r p t I th I -·· ringer SaJ . u WI e Mlicellantous MIPI. In 1111 o!Uc• ot""' J. '"'~·· lyen, IJO Nrrt~ Cl"'"'" refeiTed to Ida as ~1ussollni's A02 with invention or the would have to be a lot more aque ~so sa~s e 1.NUVre price of young lions, we're -.mlY •K11ttlf'• o1 i1ld °''""' counl>'. •~•""'· • 01 ,.,.,.,.,, c~"'r,nl• 0 .... 19, \' , 1 ·fc. lie added."'Publi'c fumfs I I f matter in tb• universe than is P.1useum 1n Pans offered to lad t ha her "'e have a Slkl s11t wlll "" "'"'•· 11111 w;111ov1 su"'E111 10111 cou111T o, THE llorit<t w M11d1en. not G1'"""'~ IC eSCOpe as 8 tOO or ex· ..., buy th p 'nt' g B t 1 -· g 0 Ve · Tl coventnl w Wlrrtn!'I', l~t>rtu or ltnPJled, $TAT£ Of CALIFOllN IA 'Oii: Jlv•nue, Sen Dl~o. C•lllarn•• r.11• \\'OUld not ht1ve been paid O\'er ploring the universe, ' accounted for by stars. galax· . e ai in · u ~vre )'oung maJe and hope to breed re .. ,.,ine 11111. POSSt111on. or .,.. TH• coUNTT., '''"'' Ell••n ""· l<'•C11n11r. '"' 1 "' ~-· ies, and other celestial ob· officials say none of their staff h ., cumbr1nces. to Pl¥ ""' o•lndP•I • ..,.., ct "~"'""•'"· Les A~~11-.. c.erre•r • unless l da had produced her One of the surprises. was h th d t em . The note 11<...,.t'd '1'f 1•kl DPed at Tr1111, N•. A_..u4 900'7; w.,,,w L-. Mc(o11no/Q~ & a ... ·~• m:lrriage certificate and her that many dista".1t l!alaxies _ jecl.S. as ever seen e canvas an -Annie is s 1i ght1 y un· 1o«11: M.1•s.oo. with 1111eru1 ,...,.,, HOT•ct: OI" MEA1t1Nt.1 o, •ETIT•ON Fitut~ Mtr~ilflt~~. 1n1 ........ 1 L•·• &in·s birlh Cl'r\ifica tc." val'it star families like the Such matter. thln·lty "'.ouldnof~aveofferedan opi· derwelght. but otherwis ~~~~~5i11!:'.1u1.!.~~~'l:~~·::':.1.i '"011 "'110BATE 0, wiLt. AND FD11 ~~,,·~~".!..~::;;~.'"1':~·,,;~;;"i"~311 (Y:.'1>~; I R . h d p \ h l\1'lk \V h. b h hors d. tr'b led · b b ed n1on even if they had. h lth St · g sa·d She' Deed at Trvit, , .. s. ch••MS ""' ••Plt\1e1 Ll!TTE•s Tl!JTAMl!NTAlllY ~"'HI. oral!Q~, c•111o.,,11 •1~67, E ... , .Fo ('V said 1c Hr a C er. 1 Y ay w IC ar our IS 1 u , can e o serv Paquet who lives In 8 eta. y.14 rmnder 11 · Ii of ""e Tru'"'' '"" of t11t trvtt• ut•ltd Eiti!e o1 .. ILMA 1.. PETERSON ak! Jo~n P~~'~'· '°' J••"'11~q n•11 .. a r('tiied bank manager who sun and earth -are much only by the llfvisible rastiaUons · ea 1nl! pou s o meat a b'I' .aid otte1 d Tr\llt. HILMA •ETERSON. 01aasec1 Hill•1>r>rc.,.,h. r1111ern1~ "~in: t •1•• ~ · brighter in ultraviolet rad1·a· it eml~ 'n Apr1·1. 1963, nhval farmhouse that does not have day but •ill "· cut back to 12 TI>t btnt11c11rr u...,.r i11c1 Dff!I o1 NOT1cr 1s Hl'lREav G1vEN Tli•t M•• "'""'''· '~" ,,,..,,. A ••~·J• ~~., .... ~ married Jda Dal scr"s sister. > electric'ity 1.5 unfazed b the U'C Tr\111, b'I' "''°"of • btttch"' c1t11y11 111 et11e1 Robln1on 11.11111ec1 herein 1 pe1111.,,, o.~,. C•11'"'"'~ 9U•n.-Fctw~.., J•"'.,.. nro\"ided him \\'ith many 0£ tlon than scientist£ had sup-re!elr · laboratory .scientists • Y pounds ••hen she regains her ttie obf1u11ons iecurM 'he r • b •, w '"' ••t>bote o1 "" w111 "' lhe above· Pio..... iai.,. ~ ... ,.,.,A t ~~•. r,.~.'''""· •• d NASA 'd ::....:.a •!. b . r fuss. J1'onlsh f'1gur• """'°"'"' HK\Jltd fr.cl "'""''"" to "" n•""" dtt~I '"" far !he TSIU'l/l(f °' c.111 ... nh ~J.all : H•rnld 0 R.cll••d• .. Ida's records and papers. pose, SW , repo1~ 00..-•e aSJS 0 ""ray "'l'k-· talk lot . . ~'"""' 1 wr1ntt1 Oeclat111on M Mlt...-. 1~1,....,..1..., "° t h• 1111uoner. l ~'t J. ll '•he•tl, rn M!lr>••••!r Av•r•·• SUS n1eJ, :in Jtnlian historian observations \\'ilh 8 rocket ''""'3 a •pretending \Vhere dld Annie come °'41ull Incl Dem1'1CI far Salt.'"" wr111M rtltr....:t 111 which 11 m11dt far lurth{'• illu•~ VIiii. C•!l!••n•~ 9"·10; It•""•'~ lied lmlGHT OBJECT that there a~ared to be 100 that my Raphael Is false and from' Ntk:• ct b•M<h •"" 01 11tC11DJ1 to c1u1• PtrtlcYI••,, """ tl\At 111t 11~ '"" oiec• •·· """P...••. 1r-n "''"""'""" ~.~1~ A-•. '\'ho ls preparing a book ca ,.,,.. h . bee th . ,, · . the \fftdl!~'9""' to H~ 111d P-'Y to 0, ~•••!ni ttie sem• hes bffn $et ,.,.. C~nforltl• .,7f!., ~.,.., J ~·hu!1 A !.!•'"' "~lUS.'iOlini :ind the \Vomen," Such galaxies in tl1elr C'l\\·n times tr1orC matter noatlng a~n t (1 au et:i~icat~d, he "The only connection I can u11111 Pld eb111111on1, •Ml ll'ltr1!11Mr, °" OK,..,111, 19. 1Mt, 111 •::io 1.m .. tn ll'le ~:~;;.,;;,;u~":07'T~=~.~rjv•~~r~~~;~.'.; ~aid that besides rnarrylng neighborhood must be 1·c.x· loose."ln.the universe than was stha!d. "I'm certain of one make is that a fellow called ::o;~ O:i1c!'::·b!''::cn11=:'!\'::,~~u,'; ~;t':",:' c?:1~e2::.~: ~.~w_'w"' .. 1~·:~ Ju11e '""''· P~10 Ano. c~i.·~·~;1 o•v.1, b . h tremely bright o b j e cl r;.' ' represenlcd by galaxies. 1ng: 1'wo months ago I met. me some time ago trying to bl ~ecordltf 111book'°"'"•1n. DI' .a111 tti• cr1Y"' s.n11 1.111. c~m.wnr1. V•~11•11• v~• Dt.,,••~. 1~1n n .. •v Rachele Guidi. \\'ho g11vc 1rt ueh he S . N . OH•d•I R«onli DI r.i , 1~ ~v"""'" 1.-B••·~. c~•11e•nl • "0"'~1 to five children, 11 Duce hlld Jnasm as t Y seem lo be at a1nt aza1:e. a man ~·ho sell two jaguars and a1 O•l'KI eea.ntie, 1, lKt. ledw.~;."'s';r JOHN, ·c°'"'"' ciiik. c .. .-11. s v.,~,,.,.. a. 1.~~~ s v~·~·..,, extremely faint as \'iC\\'ed CLOSED UN IV ERSE o[fered to bu y 1l. Al""an 11·-ss. He had a fan· STEWl.lllT TITL' COMP.a.HY "•IYI• It. "'-· i•n T ... ,..u ~"·~1 l...,..u., r.1''"'" • l'l\'0 children out of wedlock by . • l ..... ""'" OF 011.1.NGE COU NTY "dll1; N,,,..,~~ v W•(i'•I~•. ~·· .., ... ~ '\lss Oalser :ind one by 8 from earth. they must be This supported the .. closeo · "fts for the expe rts. one of tastic price, and I told him •• .. 111 '""'" ~!..:;i".::C'~~ ~":;',;.R1, ,,... o""·"' o.iv~. L.,. ,...,., •. r,111~.". 1' very far away, per h a p s universe" th(!Ory of the late thtm told me the other day half·Joki'ngly 'When you get T. o. Strvlc• c_.,,., •••= nu1 ""'1"1 "!I!!••· L•'• ~ , ... ,, ... , ..... ~, •·"•r• t~r('nch wo1nan whom the h .1 . . • 1.11r111 A_.,• '"•"#t,,... .a.venut. L111 •~,...i .... c~1.10.~1, or.r••, "'riter declined to Identify. stvcral limes farther than was Albert Einstein. According lo t at 1 1 as~ 36 experts for tired Df trylna to sell that lion, w11da 111.H1111 Publlsllfd or•n• ca1st 01111 Pncrt. J-h o. wou,, .. ~•1t1 M wo110· A week before P.~ussolini previously assumed," this theory, as developed by advlct, finl\\-'OOld act 36 dif· you can donate her to the l"llbu.-:.• ~';.::"' Coail o.ur l"llat. 0«...,1111, •· Jo 1&. 1Kt nJut ~~~w',,,no,!;:'8"'~!11',.. '"'1'~·~~~,,~~v.,;.' An increasingly pop u 1 a r Einstein's followers, t he ferent op . ~s." Albuquerque zoo.'" D.i:tmblr J, n. ,,, Ifft 2nw• LEGAL NOTICE n.~~~•. c•111~•n1• •1u.1 rnarrledhe M 9 i 1 s: SGuidi 1 1 n theo ry amOl"\g astronomers is u{liverse explodes and con··i'~;;;~~~~~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~~~~~---;;;;:--l:::!L~E~G~A~LtN~O~TI~CE!:~"'.'.J--;:.;:~.~-:;n~•~l·:=:::---1 o1.tF.1~.,'1~~ri"'.,";:,~~~·r'~';"t 1 ' 6 ' Dcccm r l <>. usme COO· that all matter in the universe tracts \\'ilh a sucetssion orll c111T1,1c•T11 o" 11ut11t1 Es1 co111,.n111•T10N. llnued, ]\liss Onlser h3d him BA.HA'IS I fl.It 11n ll'ICT1T1ous Hl.M• ~ C•il!rrn11 ea•~o""~~ onct was condensed in a fan· "big bangs'' spaced about 80 MOT1c1 TO CltEOITOltt Ti.t .,,..,.,llflfd 11o ''"'""' "'"' ,.,, llY w1111."'" A 1~coon'"'· sign a Sl3tem~t before a tastically dense "Atom" whkh billion years apart. . ' ., o• COST· M·~· SU ... 1!111011 COUllT 0, !!:'!-~ .... bus!11t11 ., 6M E OCt•n Prt1•11··· not'ry •ay1'ng he \\'8S the ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; r "' ~ STATI 01" CALIJ(lllNIA ~ lt.d .. L-B~•d't. C1llfor'nl•. ""'°"' Ille f'y /M•~~ c~••.y. ~ I THt COUNTY OI' OIU.MOI lk:lllloln firm "'"" 11t Nl.T IONJlL ~.,.,.,~ • ., father or her son. i~ater. ~·hile PllttSINT ,... A"4W !lOUIPMENT EXCHANGE • ..,, ,..., "ld !-f ~f" f'Jf r,.1 l!"f'O•J•I 1 f ' I · WORLD'S LARGEST l1ttt. ol WI LLllllM M. GI.GE, Dtl:ttl~ """II C""'ilMsed If""' tollnwf~ '""or" CC"t'!NTY (It: c;t~I NGR 1 ., t.tussolini \\'0!$ 1ghl ng 1n • i<. Id. wl'.aH .,,..,,, 111 11111 '"" p!.tt;tl ct on ·~11 11+1 d•v .,. 0-Mt''" ,~,, ,,,. ..... \Vorld Y+'<i r I, Sus1nel ~aid. DUNE BUGGY S-UPER. MARKET SP~KER-ROBERT HART HOT•c• rs H'11:11v GIVEN '9 ll>f ,,,1c1.~t• •r• •• ~t?owi· -r•· '"' u~a••1lo••"-~ ,j .. ,,y i-·!;)lie .• I UftllltiQ. o1 11'\t 1tllrn. 1111Md diadMI 111v IC. '"'"°"' inn Qulnl•nt ln., tftd '9• """" (r''"'' """ ''"'" e•••n•~',J Miss Dalscr got the J\U an THEME ''POWER TO RENEW 111tt •II --i.evrnt ct11m1 •111M1"" Hv11llM1"" llNd'!. c1111. --·,.... w1111 .... 1o '-'•n-tt ~"'YIP"',.., .uth-1.tiC$ to release the two FUN FOR THE WHOLE F•Mf lY. , • , -*'111 6M:l'lltnl ''' rfClllll'f'd "'flit fl'lefll, ICAri. G. Robbl11•."l 1''1 Qui"''"' Ln .. "'" '"~· , ... .,,..,,~··· •~·1 JO'l~r~ c~·· · v+ "' THE WORLD" w!ll'I 1111 llKt..-•Y ¥VUcllVI. hi !ht elllct t-1u"ll""lot1 Bt1cl'I, C1111 ·•· ~"°"'• •~ ,.... 1r e• It-• ,,...,.1,.v •• gt;JtemenLJ entitling he r to SHOP NOW FOR CHRISTMAS "'!fie cM oi-•ba'tt ""tnlld ceurt, °' DatMI N_...."'", 13, 1 .. , ""' ce•l>Cl••''"~ ·~•• ••t<v'"~ ,~. w"~. h fll .,.._, 1111!'11, W!ll'I tltl nec\llllrY RIV P8~fan ""!"-""Ml ON'! ~""""" I• '"'' t~ t • ... 1tssistance pa)'ITitnts as t e !rt!-~ TIME-OECEMIER 1-1:00 P.M. 'l'OUdltfi.,. 1111 unoeriltllfd et !ht Dl'!l<t IC••~ G. 111obbl11t ,,~_. .,,..,,, •••.. ,,.~ , ..... .-~ ... V.'ife: ot a soldirr. But be said .. ,,., '"""""': ,.,,. .. w ... ""' IClll ST ... TE Of CALl"'OltNI... ''"'"''"! on b<.~· ! ,.,. "" ,~.,, ••• , ." • ...., ... .... I PLACE 915 VICTOR! A SltnfOll Aw .. B...-"••k. C1fff, •111. Olt ANGE COUNTY: ~~~'•In n•......, """ ••I ~~"'"'""'! 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'"'· • umef!I •1111 fd[MWlecltN llleY t•tCUlfC N•••·· """lie ·~ '"" lef' Atlss Dalscr died Dec. 13, "All mvi have been crealtd to aJT'l forward an ever· ~~~E; ;;_ ~~1 ;"Pici.t.L ,EA~, 1.M1•r':~',.c';;.:'~A'trt11 s1111 ]93$, in Veolct and her !On ad•~nci'ng d·""-t~n . , • ,. ot "" '""" 111m111 dKfllfllt 1 Je•" L .>obit 111 .. 1 Ot•~ Y. "''"'"'- died A 26 1912 I ~t .... • lotll-1.,.1-..,.. UNJMl Al 'O"Tl " •Alllilll Ho!'"' l"ublk: .. Ct1\totJ!I• ~··...-·· ~ u. ug. • . n om· ,._ Stttdy 1111m At! .. ,.,. IAH • 'U'LLAH •1 St•*'""' ,.,111c1111• 0ttl(1 11t 1 .. 1 "'""ft'" ., "" St .. ,. belto ~--Rachele no 77 "" ""' ._ .. .,.. c•. ""' °'"""' c-w st11•1 •• • uuuuo • "' • ." ... w w•RNER SANT' ANA T•h .., .. , ,.,,.. M .. c-1.,lor'! b""" "' ..... II\. c.1" ..... , is N!COIJl)zed as f\~11ssolini's -..... • ""' • "' "!Mntolt¥"' •teewtrl• M•rd'I ,, ttn "-'JUl otRclal widow and receives a , .s.46-4045 .:::,•.,lllH .. °' ..... Cont O•ll'f 1"11tr" ,1"u11n11>ec1 Or..,.. c°"" O••"' "lo!· •ut1111J!<'d Cl•,.., cto111 tl•1111 '"' '... r .. lftOI °"'""''"" ... 11. It , H.-blf u. 11. n '"" Dtclmbtt' J. ,._et'r 71 •"II O~bo-· ! ,, " go\'crnmenL pension. m1 . ., '"' '""'' 1w.• · "'" .i ... • • • "!'!"---------------------------------~-·••-•-••~•~••r•••-•-••••~"-'-•r••••-••••••-•-••""""'-"' ~--+•a •,...,._,___.,_ . ._...., . ...,_,__, ___ _..._ ---··-~-·-·-· •·-···--·~-··--.. ,, ' .';.;;'...,=".olltc=•m..:b<.;_r..:5::.., _196"--~ -~--=-..:D::..A:.:IL::..V.;_PILOT 2.f • EE -Kr· ER -' ' A Complete Guitle ••• Where . to _go :. • •• to tlo • •• Here's Where All the Cats Are Hanging Out . ' . ' ' 'L ISTEN, HOW COME YOU 'RE LEAVING ME HERE IN THIS KIND OF A CROWD?' Irvine Chorale Performs Concert Scheduled Saturday ut Melodyland The second season premie re conce rt or the Irvine JI.laster Chorale, Orange Coun- ty's resident master works choral group, will be performed on S aturd ay. December 6, at 8:30 p.m. in Jl.felodyland Theater, Anaheim under the direction of Dr. Jl.faurice Allard. The pre-Christmas concert, rirst of three planned for the current season. will include an unprecedented pe rformance of three master works. Included will be R. Vaughn Vlillia1n's "Hodie", four Christmas motets by Francis Poulenc and selections from G. F. Handel's "~1essiah.'' The four Poulenc motets v:ill be "0 r..tagnum r..t ysterium." Quern Vidislis Pastores Dicite." "Videntes Ste\lam '' and "Hodie Christus natus est." The five soloists selected for this event include Douglas Lay.•rence, baritone of Los Angeles, \Yhose experience ranges from being associate conductor of the U.S.C. Chamber Singers, to teaching, and performing on over 200 network ~elev!s!on shows, recordings. radios and telev1s1on commercials and numerous concert solos. ~1ichae1 Sells, tenor. also of Los Angeles. has appeared extensively in pro- fe ssional solo performances of opera, oratoria and recitals. ~!is concerts throughout the nation include solos v.·ith lhe \Vashlngton National Cathedral Choir. University of Kentucky, University of Maryland and the Santa f¥1oni ca Sym- phony. Jane We stbrook, American mezzo soprano, of Laguna Beach, has appeared as featured soloist with the Robert Shaw Chorale, American Opera Co. and scores of s,ervice and educational organiialions. Her concert resume i n c I u d e s perfonnances in the Hollywood Bowl, Laguna Festival of Opera and New I WEEKENDER INSIDE FEATURES Nonn Stanley's Out 'N' About column, on Pages 23 and 24, car- ries some timely advise about planninJ holiday dining and some suggeshons for relaxing and catch- ing one 's brealh during the big rush that Is upon us. Travel Guide to t•un In the Galleries Knoll's Berry F'arm Out 'N' About Disneyland Uve Tlttatcr Padu1's "Las Po1itd1s t'rossword l'uiilc Hollywood 81tck1tagc Guklt io ~10\·le1 Queenie Con1lc1 TV Vlt\I~ Televl1lon· l.oa: Peg~ Page JZ Page U Page U Page U.%4 Page ts Page Zi Page is Page 26 , l•age %Ii Page !6 Paae Zi Paqr z; l'tigt 21 Pnge %7 .,, York's Amato Opera Thealcr and many radio and tele\'isi11n appearances. DarreOyn Melilli , lyric coloratura, of Orange. will perforn1 solo~ fron1 lhc "J\1essiah" and "llcx!ie." She rrceived her training at \\lhcaton College. Illinois; and Louisiana State Univrrsi1y. Baton Rouge. Since 196.1. f\1iss J\1clilli has been a frequenl soloist at UC I under the direc- tion or J\1auricc Allard, Colin Slirn and Peter Odegard. Last J une, Miss ~1clilli recorded a sacred-classical album in London ~vith the \Vest1ninslcr Sinfonia Orchestra co n· ducted by Jimmy o .... ·ens. The rccOJ'ding has just been released in Holly\voocl. Vina Y.'illiams. soprano. of Tustin. i~ one or the choral group's newest nJCmbers and is currently the featured soloist at Aldcrsgatc United Methodist Church in Tustin . Previous appearances inc lude guest soloist for the ··~tci,siah" al a 1968 three-church presenta~ion and soprano soloist \vith the Downey United Methodist Church. The 116-member chorale will " he ac· companied by a fully con1plcn1cnted orchestra composed of some or thr. coun· ty's most ta lented n1usicians. Although the 3.flOO-seat ~lc lndyland is a theatcr·in-the-round. a rortiqn ol the stage will be blocked off with a hackdr op to provide visible access to everyone in the audience. "With a group the siie uf the Irvine Maste r Chorale, it becomes virtually impos_,iblc to perform in the round." Or. Allard commented. \Veekly rehearsals for the premiere performance have been in progress for more than two months and additionaJ rehearsal sessions ~·ere scheduled dur· ing the two weeks preceeding the concert. Tickets for the m11ster chorale's con· C1?rt are being sold :,y all membcri; of the group and may he purchased at Coast Mwic, 1839 Newport Bl vd .. CG.Sta Mesa . They range in price from ~ cents for children under 12, $1 for studenls 12 to 17 ~ f ~ JANE WESTBROOK, SOLOIST and $3 for Adulls . A special famil y fare L! available at 57. Regard less of the num ber in the family, there· is a flat charge of $7. Tickets. may be purchased at lhe·door on' the night of I.he perfor~ance. Acth1g R1111s h1 tl1e Family For Tl11·ee Eccles Children \\1hen a television casting rl irector call11 to his secretary : "Get me lht young Ee· cles actor's agrnl on the phone," the glrl is most apt to con\c back \\'ilh the ques· Uon: "\\'hich one'.' Robu1. Tec:tdy or Rnntly~" The reason? Because the two Eccles brothers and their sister 1are all actors! Rohin. a C'la s.ctfC' mold of thr beautUul blonde. i.s the old<'lll of the thret'. The hhw::~ved 16-yenr~ld lx·lle st;irlcd her ac· , 1111g l'.ar1·i:r ot ti'" trnc!er <"It" of :i;i:t 11" 11t h<; \\'h"ll /•~r p!'l'tl"'I h"fil/1 11 lo l'ITfl· 11'"!.t{'llt hrr 11a!"n11:•I n1r"'~11nc 1111 pu:o.ing "i'h lihnc·f tr! •\'1~t·n1 r•1i.1 n1frf'i:1l ~ Teddy, t•. no"' h;i,s lhe cx~rlcn<"!c of ' having made 40 television commen:ials and ha! appeared in nearly thal many series episodes. Randy, the youngest. at 13, has packed In nearly as much acting exptrience as hl:ii brothfr and S'ister. He was seen with l'ess Parker recently in 20th Century-Fox Television 's "Daniel Boone" 1er1·e 1 episode ... A Bearskin for Jam le Blue," on Channel t , In the episode, Randy pla yed 1n em· hiLtcrcd young indentured se.rvint who flnolly ltj1rn.s rrom arktr that"l~e are guutl 1X""ople "M ctn bt-'ruAted.-'-• · ·- " Danlt1 Boone'' aslo cc>-star!I Patricia Blair, Darby Hinton, Dalla!l .tilcKeMon And Ro~y Grier. ------------------------ 500Purring Machines In Anaheim .. ... If you hear a gentle, undulating_ sound this 1''ffkend it coold be caused by more than 500 cata purring to attract the attention of the juda:es in the laraest cat show e\•er to be held west of the Mississippi. It is sponsored by the Ha· clenda Cat Club .tnd is scheduled thlt Saturday and Sunday in the Arena of the Arlahelm Convention Center. Cat fanciers from West VirJ]nia, Okla· homa, Iowa, Idaho, Arizona and Wash- ington , with the majority from California, will have their top felines there to win trophl&1, ribbons, prizes and other honors. Back to try for top honors will be a Blue Point Himalafan lemaie named Grand Champion Chetermere Chahila which ls valued in eicea.s of $10,000 by tu o~'ner, William P. Thompson of Burbank. ?o.1any other cats, highly valued by their owners, also will be entered in the competition in a wide variety of breed classifications. Short haired cats reprtttnted will Include such · intertstln& breeds as tht Rex, the taHleu Manz, Russ.Ian Blue, Abyssinian, Burmese, American Short Hair, Siamese and the Koral, a Thailand cat relaUvely new to United States com- petition. The Jong haired cats will bt represented by Perfian.! and Himalayans. Even the common garden variety ot pussycat will have its day when cab and kittens are sho~'R in the Household Pet Show stt for l p.m. Saturday. Oecember 6. For this special event, Santa Claus himself wlll be giving out the final awards and present each cat entered with a (lit. Another special event will be the Mani: Specialty DIYlsion which hu shaped up to be the biggest evtr held In tht United States from point of cat and kitten "en- tries. sun another interestin& feature ot the show is the competition of decorating cages in the "Spanish ChristmaS'' theme of this season's event. The cat ls one of the most famlllar and best-loved of all household · pet8 around the world. They were, accordlna: to an· ..;iel)t Egyptian recotds, the first ·peta to live with people. Show hoots are: Saturday, 10 a.m. to 9 p.rii.; Sunday. io ·a.m. to I p.m. Ac:lmis· slon Is $1.50 for aduhs; 75 ctnts for chlJ.. dren, those llnder 10 free when a~ panled by an adulL Sl1elley Learns How Not To Be Fine Actress The role of Hilary Suon In "Bi'act- en's World" aeries epl.9ode enUtled, "The Package Deal," wu the most challlen&· Ing of her varied career, according to pretty pert brunette actretS Shelley Fa bares. The youthful veteran of television whO lite.rally gew up before telev.lslon. au· diences for elgbt"years as the daughter or DoMa Reed and Carl Betz In "The DoMa Reed S~·." portrayed the daughter of a famous actor who has no acting ability . .. t,f"Y father, Stuart Suon (Tim O'Con- mr), inslsttd 1 be cast In the picture he was lo star in for the flcticlou.11 Century Pictures before he woukt agree to tht contract.'' said Shelley. "Howev.er, t Md no uperience-a.nd was placed ln the 'studio' talent school to reheane a acene to be performd btfore a group of theater uhlbltor1. "When the big day arrlvtd. t was to com'plelely tall apart and prove what an ine):perle.nced actrus I re1U.V was" aakt Sh<lley. "After so many yeut in the busintSS, atudytn, a part on how not be an actress and yet be convlnclll1 w11 a areat Inion for me." "Bracken'• W"orld''. tetn Frlday'1 over Channel 4 at 10 p.m.. at1r1 Eleanor P1rker, Dennis Cole, EUaabeth Allen and Peter tlatkell ,..1th Unda Harrison. Ka~n J~n:st:n, Laraine Stephens. Stephen Oll\•tr. ~fadlyn Rhue, Jeanne Cooper and Gary Dubin. ' "WELL, I DON'T THINK IT'S sb HO, HO,' HO ••• ." · ' ' 'IN JUSTA MINUTE , l"LL BE DOWN· TO THE TUNA FISH CANDY' ' ' . Weeke11d Highlight~ REX MAYS 300 ·-The third annual Rex Mays 300 will be held at the Riverside International Raceway on lnterstate 11ighway-60,oll-Highway_JjjS.JIL.Ri.\'erside.Jhi~ Salw:dai and Sitnday starting at f p.m. A field of a5 drivers is ·expected with Dan Gurney there lo defend his titles. .., CHRISTMAS BAZAAR -The Las Briias del Mar Auxl· llary of the Children's Home Society is holding a benerit bazanr featuring Christmas decorations and handcrafted gi£l items, Uols Sunda y, lrom I lo 4 p.m. al 16752 Heritage Lane Hunting· tan Lane, Huntington Beach. · ' BALLET -The Laguna Beach Ballel Company may be seen performing u'I'tle Nutc·racker" th1s Sunday at 2:30 p.m. in lbe Newport liarbor High School Auditorium . The program is sponsored'by lhe B'Nal B'Rllh Women Inc. St• Gu1dt to Fun, P•g• 11 •• . • llAJLY PILOT r rida.J'. DtctnM S. JM Intermission I Countf; Playhouses Chronicled ) (Thia it Ill• ~ In • #ri<• of lhrff COis• I .. fl" -lop!!l<nt Of llH ,,...,. ht 0Noogt C-IJ o o er duel, for this ene:rttUc band of youthful O>hert ind hi!! Irvh\e Repertory Theater, talent offered a brand cf theater seldom soon t.o launch hs fourth season. 111<,.JIClll Jloi ~eon4 ' seen outside the prolessional houses. A pair or friendly but competitive littlt From Its first performance cf "~tuffe" theater groups -the Orange Stud io . . 8r TOM ftl'tJI ............... The "*"' " ilJlnl ~ h\ 0r...,. through a year highlighted by IQpeib JU--. Thea&er and the Anahehn Playhouse - dillons of "Waiting for Godot," .. •'The were oraani7.ed in mld-1965 by Mary Glass P.1enagerle," "Othello" and .. The i£<iltmaQ aDd Tony'Br~l rts.P"C!Jvely Birthday Party," SCR climbed quickly to and Hon mashrOOmed lnio two of t~ Ceunty rme1J bu -quo, ~ at no time -It ltf1 lea 10 tbon In HIS, when air new drama producing organitations took root with.in the county's boundaries. a position of dominance in Orange County finest pliy~s ln the county. Howeycr, theater. • t!ClMmlcs ended ihe career of tbe PttEANWHILE, IN neighboring Costa Ana:heln1 Playhou~ before Its first It was a year of innovation, of breaking new ground, of charting courses for the future, not all cf which were successful. But the three whi ch did succeed rank among the strongest in the county today, snd at least two al. the other! exhibited gome impressive productions before fall-1"' by the wa yside. J\.fesa, veteran actress and director Pali birthday, while lh~ Orange Thealer hung Tambellifli was organl&.ing the Civic on with sporadic success through 1968 Playhouse which filled the cap lert the "·hen the towel was reluctantly lttrown in. year before by the demise of the New1X>rt STILL ANOTHER theatrical oPera- Harbor Community Players. Started cn a lion was JaunChed during 1965 at the shoestring (and still known today as the Tustin Playhouse, bul lhis project-a pro- Pincbpenny Players). the Mesa group fessional stock groui>-sank in a sea or grew slowly bu( steadily into one of the red ink within a few months. The-play. county's lop community theaters. house returned lo cornmunity theater The survivors-South Coast Repert.ory. lhe C,oata Mesa Civic Playhouse and (though there was hardly a thought ol financial failure) UC Irvine's double bar·· reled drama program. UC Irvine's drama department, opened production, and for a time provided a ha- along with the university in the fall 'of ven for the deposed Anaheim Playhouse 1965, utilized outside talent in major roles thespians, before bowing out of ttle pie· through Its first year until a broad base lure fate in 1966. • The advent of SC R in a small, 00-seat lheater in Newport Beactt caused other theaten: to look t.o their cwn artistic pro- of student talent was fonncd. Principally \Vhile other groups were rising and fall· responsible for elevating the status or Ing. th e Laguna Playhouse rc1nained ttte undergraduate productlort.s was Bob strongest and most durable of lbe ipL Gulde to FWI , . lrvii1e Cho1·ale At Melodyland DEC. I CHORALE CONCERT -The Irvine Masttr Chorale will present three master wcrks in its first concert cf the season, Sal Dec. 6 at 8:30 p.m. in Melodyland Theater, 10 Freedman Way, Anaheim. The program will include R. Vaughn Wil- liam's "Hodie," four Christmas motets by Francis Poulenc and selections from G. F. Handel's "Messiah." Tickets are $3 f o r adults, $1 for students and SO cent.. for children under 12. A family package ticket for all costs $7. Available from Coast Music in Costa Mesa. Phone Mr. Gilinsky, 542-3511 for informition. DEC,, TEEN ci.us DANCE -The Y.'estminster Recreation and Parks Department will hold a Teen Club Dance in lhe com· Mwllty Center, 8200 Westminster Ave., (for -Westminster teens) each Sat. from a p.m. lo midnight. Admission, $1. for members, $1.SO for non -member&. "The Switch" group . will play for dancing, Dec. 6. · DEC. 6-7 C.4.T SHOW -The llacienda Ca t Club is sponsoring a .~cat show at the Anaheim Convention Center, 800 W. Katella, t Anahe.im, Dec. 6 and 7. Hours: Sat., 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.; SW!. : 10 a.m. to a p.m. Ticket3, $1.SO for adults, 75 ct!Rll for ... .: children 10 years and older. Those under 10 free. More than =-~ 500 en tr I es will compete for 10 awards in both long and :-... 1hcrt hair divisions. •• • ~ DEC. 6-7 1' HORSE SHOW -The California CutUng Horse Associa· ~ !' Uon'1 Annual Champion!hlp Show will be held Dec. f:.7 at :.: the Rancho California Arena, on Highway 395 near Teme- . • cula, midway between Riverside and San Diego. No cbara:e l · for admis&ion. More than 100 horses and 300 entries from 3: Calif., Nevada and Arizona will compete in eight dilferent • : classes. .. ~ DEC. 5 -JAN. 10 :~ CHRISTMAS PLAY -The Padua Hills Theater is staging ~ a Christmas Play through Jan. JO at the theater Jn the hllli; : .. above ClaremonL"Las Posadai;," a collorful folk play about : Chriatma.s in Me.x.ico, is an annual production which also ., Jncludes the traditional Christmas fiesta and the breaking ~ ct. the pinata. Show times are 8:30 p.m. Wed. through Sal. :t, with matinees at 2:30 p.m., on Wed. and Sal. The Padua .:.: dining room, serving Mexican and American food, ls open •• for lunch and dinner daily except Aton. Phone 1-626-1288. ;; DEC. 1-7 ·t. REX MAYS .al -The third annual Rex 1tfay1 300 will be: -~ held at Riverside International Raceway, Riverside, Dec. :; 6-7 st.arUng at 1 p.m. A !ield of 35 dri vers is expected with Dan Gurney defending his 1967 and 1968 titles, ';l"ickels $6-$12. DEC. 7 CHRISTMAS BAZAAR -The Las Brizas del ,.tar Auxiliary ol Children'! Home Society is holding a Bazaar reaturing handcrafted gift Jtems and Christmas decorations on Sun. Dec. 7 from 1 -4 p.m. at 16752 Heritage Lane, Hunlington Beach. For information phone 842-4864. DEC. 7 SYMPHONY CONCERT -Ttte Orange C o a s l COilege Symphony Orchestra, conducted by Joseph Pearlman, will be heard in concert in the OCC auditorium, 2701 Fairview Road, Costa Mesa, Sun., Dec. 7 al 4 p.m. David Sweniij>n will be the piano soloist. Tickets, $1, available at the door. DEC. 7-%1 BAU.ET -The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company is ICbeduled for a series of "The Nutcracker" ballels in Qr. anae County this month starting with a program at New- pott Harbor High School at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 7 sponsor«! by • lhe B'Nal B'Rith Women lnc.; Santa Ana High School au- : d ltorium, 2:30 p.m. Dec. 13, sponsored by Educate and Uni- verli.ty Part PTA; Fullerton Jr. College ·auditorium, 2:30 : and 7 p.m., Dec. 14, s~nsored by Speech and Language Development Center: Laguna Moulton PlayhOU!e, &:30 p.m., Dec. 11 1 n d at 2:30 p.m. Dec . .20, both membership pro-=; 1t 8:30 p.m. Dec. 20 the company will perform a l ahow for the Laguna Moulton Playhouse; Orange Coat Col!lege auditorium, 2:30 p.m. Dec. 21, sponsort<I by Services for the Blind. Tickets al the door. DEC. 7-Zt CIDLDREN'S THEATRE -"Winnie the Pooh" by South Coast Repertory Children's Theatre, 1&27 Newport Blvd., Cos&a Mesa. Admis.'rion: children, 75 cenl&; adults, $1.00. 11le A. A. Milne children's cl8Sllic will be presented Sundays th r o u i h Dec. 21. at I p.m. and 2;30 p.m. Reservations: ....... . _.._, ........ DEC. It AITERNOON CONCERTS -Presented by students and lac:ulty of the ~ment of li-fusic. UC Jr\•lne, Fridays at 1 p.m. tn foom 178 of the Fine Arts Bldg. Admission free. Re- clll.ts llCheduled include Student Instrumental Conctrl. Dec. 12. DEC. IZ CONCEIJT -_Saul 'tffiger Joe Cockrr "ill ht heard In con· ttrt at the Anaheim Conventloii Center, d W. Kalena-Aila· bolo!, at I p.m .. Dec. 12. Tickets, 13.50 • IS.SO ovauab1, at bu office and most ticket agencies. OEC. 11-ZI CHILDREN'S Tll~ATER -Golden '"c~t College Orama Department will present "Alice in \\'onderland" Dec. 12-14, ,,.. at 7:30 p.m. and Dec. 13 and :0 at t :30 p.m. in the Ac· • tcr'1 PJaybor. Tickets 2S centt fron1 the coUegc bookswre. • '• DEC. lll OC PJULHARrttONlC -T?te. Orange County Philharmonic ~ Society wUt present the Lo.II Xngele5 PhilharmoMc Orchestra : ,,. under lhl baton oC Daniel Barenbotm in OCC audJt.orlum, 2701 • Falrvi•w Road, Coal& Mesa, Dec. 13. 31 8:30 p.m. 'll<kell. ll, ' -•\ilflallle at;Jie door-or from the Socloty's ofDct, 201 \Vut Cout lflpway. Newport Beach. Phone ~6-6lll. DEC. IJ.tl CONCERT -Tht University of CSJUornia Irvine Chorus will be heard In a concttt of Ohriitmu music. Dec. 13 and II, Ill the S<:i•QC• Lecture Hall oo FJUljW' at 1:311 p.m. I I The YuJe ya,vl , ''Little Tool," \VU\ '''histlc a salute lo Christmas during performances of Fantasy on Parade, Disneyland's Christmas parade scheduled for December 19 through January 4. bt the Galleries Treasure Hunt Sale Featured i11 Laguna LAGUNA ART GALLERY -307 CI i ff Drive, Laguna Beach. Admission $1. Members and one gues t free . Hours: noon to 5 p.m. Annua l Arl Auction and Treasure lfunt sale, Dec. 4 tbrcugh 13. Main Gallery pre-bidding ~'ith vocal bid, 8 p.m. Dec. 13. LO\\'Cr Gallery, continuous sale Dec. 4·13. SADDLEBACK GA LLERY -Saddlcback I n n. Sunta Ana Freeway at Isl Sl.. Santa Ana. Hours: Tues. -Fri. -11 :30 a.m. -10 p.m.: Sat. 3 to II p.m.; Sun. 5 to 9 p.m.: l\1on. 11 :30 a.m. -2:30 p.m. Paintings by ,.,.cstcrn ar!ist Olaf \Vicghors\, through Dec. 31. 0CC ART GALLERY -2701 Fairview I~ o a(!, Costa. l\1esa. frours : 9 a.m. to 4 p .111 f\1on .• Fri .: \\1e1l. 7 · 10 p.m. On txhlbit through Dec. 20. pholography by Visual Dia· logue Fcundation of San Francisco. BOWERS MUSEUi\1 -2002 N. J\1ain St., Santa Ana. Hour~: 10 a.m. • 4:30 p.m. Tues. -Sat.: I lo 5 p.m. Sun.: \Ved. and Thurs. eve. 7-9 p.m. No charge. On exhibit through Dec .. antique toys from J\tuscum·s col!cc1ion : oil painlings by Evelyna Nunn t.liller. llUNTINGTON BEAClt LIBRARY -525 ri1ain Sl., llunt- ington Beach. On rshibit during rrgu!tir library llOlLr~ and Sundays J-5 p.m. through Dec., oil p<1intings by Syll'ia Paalus . COSTA 1'11F.sA COUNTRY CLUB -1701 Country Club Drive, Costa Mesa. Oil. acrylic and pastel paintings by Helen Pat· ze r will be on exhibit on the club 's 'ccond floor during the month of Dec. ' ftttrrUAL SAVINGS ANO LOAN -2867 E. Coast High· \vay, Corona del J\lar. On exhibit during regular business hours througll Dct-.. \\•atercolor s by Joyce Edwards. l\IESA ART LEA GliE -513 Cente r SL. Costa l\lcsa. I lou rs: Sal. and Sun. I to !i p.m. C.:011tin11 ous exhibit of art work in varioll! mcdio by Arl League n1c1nb<'r s. No admission charge. CIVIC CF.NTER GALLERY -1100 West Ne\.\'porl Blvd .• Newport Beach. Hours: 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. J\.1on. -F'ri. On cxhJblt through Dec., oil and walerl'lllor ptiintings by H a I Akins. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L. BANK -17122 Oc<ich BI v d., lluntington Beach. On exhibit tluri ng regular business hours. 1hrollgh Dec. 12, paintings by Ora Brimrr. COSTA i\IESA LIBHARV -$66 Cc n t er St .. Costa l\les11. On exhibit during rcKular library hours through Dec. Calir. China Panters Association exhibit. • l'llESA VEHDE Lf8RARV -2968 ,.1c.sa V<'rllc Drh·e East, Costa Mesa. On_ exhibit during regular library hours 1hro11gh _! the month or D«' .. oll paintings by rtlerlan 11nd Burrell Itfes. CORON,\ DEL i\IAR t.IBRARV -~20 ~lllrigold, Corona dcl .P.lar. ,On elhlbit through Dec .. during reg11lar library hours,.. an rxc.hange txhlbit of art fro1n the children of Japan. pan. CAi\IERA \\'01\K GALLERY -2400 '\'. Coal" t Jll~hway, Ne'A'J)Ort Brach. flours: Thurs. and Fri . 5 to !I p.m.; Sal 12 tot p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m. to 9 p.1n. G<lllery llmUrd 10 photo- gr11_pl1y, with work of Al Weber on exhibit through De(. ClfALUS GAU.ERV -1390 So. Coa~t J~lghway, L8gun• ·Beach. Jfours: 1 t a.m .• 5 p.m. daily. Currently on txhlblt through Dec .. ~inlings and drawings of Virginia Dan and watercolors by Frank llirnilton. l'llARl/l\ER'S WBhAHY -200.1 l)over Orl\'C, Nc"Wrt lll!.ach, During rcgu lnr libr11ry ho111·~. llll' .Jr. Ehcll Arli.!il ol the .P.1oolh rxhibil !rnturln~ oils, "al<'rcolors and <lCr) lic1 bf ~udrc¥ JUii, t/uough Ott. Mm:.1 ambltlous''of the communltf croup11 wHh a slx·show season wllh oM or two sunlmer attractions, the Laguna players n1arched inexorably toward a ne"' and modem theater ipto which they finally moved lhls !all. theater. dating from 1919, ·!•1111ht olf city plANI to level their Slllilll playhouse nenr the municipal stadium and finally celebrated their golden anniversary "'ith a new theater, converted by the city from a church. Mlsalon Vltlo area. Amblll°"' and energedc. they' contlnye to ~e that etuilat dream ' of amateur tbeaplani, a oome of their own. The HunUngton Beach Playhouse, only two years old during tbe •·renaissance·• of'l965, clearly profited from ltte county's upsweep of theatrical interest. Produc- tion da.tes were increased from three weekends to tour, and eventually lo rive as community support musllroo1ned. AT THE SOUTHERN tip of Orange CQunty, the San Clemente Community Theater showd In 1066 that persever- ance can pay off. Aller 14 years of searching for a permanent home, the group acquired the Cabrillo Playhouse which has housed its productions f o r th~ last four successful seasons. A home 11 not lhe overriding problen1 with tM Fullerton Foot1Jahter1-ratber, the space to atage more 'technically suspicious productions, a llmlled quan.Uty In the Muckenthaler Center where the Footligbten have been operating almost . since their birth in ISM. A few miles lo the north, the Westminster Players were beginning to shake themselves out of the doldrums. During the middle 60's the group was considering disbanding and joining the Huntington Beach Playhouse, but an upsurge of activily, rewarded by success at the box office, brought the players into ;1 new building and later saw them thr.ough eviction from that structure and into the planning stage ror a ne't' theater, earmarked for late 1970. Status quo is not an unkind word to the Lido Isle Players, who have operated out ct the Udo Isle Clubhouse in Newport Beach ror the past 13 years. The only drawback to their operation is scheduling or the facilities, wh.ich limits lhe players to just two shows a year. 1'hese arc the little thct1ler groups which are operational today in Orange County, but the list can change markedly AL least three other groups arc on lhe drawing boards-in Newport Beach, Tustin and Anahei1n, eactt hoping to make th at significant dent in the con1· munily thealer ranks \\•hich will insure a Jong span of performing life. The Santa Ana Community Players, ekier statesmen of Orange County little The yoWlgest of the cowity 's ac\i\'e producing groups, the two • year • old Rancho Community Players, a r e emulating the earlier years of other ttteate rs1 staging their shows in any available school auditoriu1n in the 1 Next week t11is col1011n recalls tltt! ;11clividual liio hlioll ts i1t five years 6/ livi11g theater ut Orat1ge Coun ty, pointing out Lhe top productiona aittl JJe1·Jorma11ces.) Travel Taxco 'Touristy' Mexican Shrine By.STAN DELAPLANE TAXCO, Mexico -The town hasn't changed. (It can't be changed in bulding. It's a National ~1onument.) Taxco is touristy. Everybody comes here on the way between Mexico City and Acapul- co. Still 1 like · to si t in the plaza under the Indian laurels, and . hear the deep bells of Santa Prisca ringing from the lowers of pink tezontle stone. * . This silver to\vn is much beloved by the Mex- ico guides. The shops give them a heavy com- mission on what you buy. You can figure where your guide takes you , th ey're adding 25 percent to the bill. l\.1aybe you can't beat this; so buy for quality not for price. I think the best in designs a re at Los Castillos, a block off the plaza. These people are artists. "* "We wculd likt to go to Portugal ntxt fall and tr•vel the pousada circuit .• .'' I did a lot of these Government-owned inns. 'l'hcy're attractive, co1nfortable and cheap. Problen1 is they're usually full in the summer season. Ask Casa de P ortugal (lhe Portuguese tourist office) for a list. And ask them for other private inns called pensaos or estalagems. These are so inexpensive you can luck ou t in them too. Address 570 Fifth Avenue, N~\v York. * "Ii it cheaper to r1nf a beach houie 1han a hotel in the Caribbean?'' It's al\vays been cheaper for me to live in a hous e than in a hotel. \Vhen you pack a pair of children with ,you, the breakfasts and lunches for four people eat you up. Peanut butter keeps your bank account healthy. Baggy Paiits B1aff 001a l·larry La ngdon appears in "When Comedy \Vas King," on .f'riday, December 12, al 2:30 p.m. on Channel 9. The program is a salute to the great laugh·n1akers of the silent screen and wili include many other co1nedia ns of th at era. Don't know prices on beach houses. Jamaica is ma~in.g a big thing of this. Thei r tourist people have li stings. I expect they're hi gh. But so are Car- ribbean hotel prices -really outrageous • * Sa11ta T alies Reside11ce L?.ok for so!lle ba rgain prices this 'vinter in Ha\vau. They bui lt 1nore hotels than they can fi ll - about ten are going to go broke. There's going to be some desperati on price cutting. * At Knott's Berry Farn1 'Vc're getting so1ne rWl1b!es on black backtash in the Caribbean. These ARE black islands. J~st coming out of colonial status. Sugar planters did \veil; th e cane cutters lived on rice and beans. The tourist comes in spending $75 a day for a ro~m and wants a lot of smiling service. An d he's getting resent1nenL All the del ightful signs or his lillle visitors. Christmas have started show· To add lo the atmosphere. ing up around Knotrs Berry directly ou t thei r back door Fann these days. stands a magnificent 40 fool . T~esc 'vere never Old Black Joe. pfckin'-on·a- banJO islands. They \Vere slave islands. \Vhen sl avery e.nded, there was still that cane to be cut. At cheap prices. Leas.t likely .to blo\v is. Haiti. They're ~esperate for tourists. Friend of mine writes me: The Army types have been put out of sight and the bully boys put out to pasture. Very peaceful look th.ese days to Port-au-Prince. And the people a re friendly." To start 'vith , that jolly--, tree -decorated with gigantic bearded old gentleman has ar· shiily crnaments. San la ' 1 rived lo lake up residence in home and the giant tree are his cheerfully de corated igloo, located in lhe parking lot Youngste rs arc wclco n1c to across from Virginia's Gift co1nc bend Santa's car any Shop. day irom noon to 8:30 p.m. All the shops at Knott's have right up until Christrnas Eve. their own ttoliday displays for l'llrs. Claus even Lakes a rest this happy shoppi ng i;eason from her busy ho I id a y and the streets and buildings schedule on the weekends and are ell decorated with wreaths comes to h2Jp Santa meet all and holly. 1hl Ill Jttf l1111ilr httlth fl Sttt We have eriouQh blue sky, I•· clean 1!r. 1nc1eclibte "¥iews, arid brllll;nt stars for every- one ... plus dozens ol hot mll'leral pools. modern mo-tels. and excellent mobile home tac!U1le1. c Com• to our healthful cily, Desert i'." Hot Sprlnos -101 .---week, o.t. tor a liletime -overlcoklng Palm Springs the gall capi- tal ol lhe world (onl~ JO ininutes ilway). l\''1/• /Ot '"'0"''"'''~ I Orocl>Y•• Ch•mb•r ot Commerce. D•pl. GN D•Mrl Hol $prl119s, Calif. Ol•1C111<1t: Oii 1"1tt1I•!• 10, "'Ir ,.~1 ... tp•l~o•. oo Nl'1~ "'" Oft• m H1t11 i.. .. n.o•h 10 011111 Ho! $prlno-. The DAILY PILOT- The One That Cares IT'S TIME TO SHIP FRUIT! •~Why not 1hip t t1rto11 o' 011n9e1. er • mi.,d c•r/011 of l1ncv Colilor";• f1uih to 'lour 1hiv11i119 fri1nd 1 b1cli:: 11111 You'll be l111in11 lh 1m with th1 fryil •nd lh•'l'll """'1nwy th1 fie.I th~! you 1r1 in 1unny C1lilorni1. 0011'! fo,. 911 your. 'u1lom1r1 !you c1n ch1191 it oH, il'1 ok with y1). PHONE US THI ADDRESS .•• WE DO THE REST -A FEW OF OUR MANY EVERY DAY SPECIALS -•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• a DELICIOUS • IDAHO BAKING a SHIPPING SPECIAL a a HONEY DEW a a 1S·Ll~.A~l~~EO~AV EL a • • • MELONS • POTATOES • ORANGES • L1r1• S 511• a a In 1 Gift loa a 3 s OO • 5 lb•. 29C a Shlppfll Anywh•r•I • ,., 1. • • s2 49 !Pl•• • a Limit l a Limit 2 lags • • Shipping) • • with this toujHln with thlJ cou,.n Limit l • • a • with this tOUjHln I . .............. ~ .............. . COUPONS EXPIRE DECEMBER 10 N(W,OIT IS 'AMOUS ,0. GOOD fOOD. TOU'LL AGall WITH US WHE N YOU T•Y • •• I. T~e •'••~ I lob1l•r c.ombin1lio11 •I CHUCK'S STlAI( HOUSE, N1wood 1. Thi S""or9•1bo•d 11 THI YlllNG!., Cod• M•••· 1 Th, c.hic~1n •1lhe111w CHOW IELL.Co1I• M111 ~ T~, 1p1•1 1ib1 1t LOVIS IAAIECUf, Hunt;119lo11 811c.h . S Thi SYnd1y bufl1t •I THE lLICS, N•wpotl, "ORANGE COUNTY'S FASTEST CROWING PRODUCE ORGANIZ.4TION" ~ NEWPORT PRODUCE i:~:~l: 2616 Htwpott loulttcrNf o• Tht 't11tn1uto "32 Y~nrJ of Prufiurt: ~·now 11010" -"\Vl1crt Qu.n/rru ts 1'l1 r: Ortl•r oJ tJ1c llo11sr: .. •, I I· ~ -~-- ----·--..;cc=:;;_ .. I ' . • r .,n.::d.:;•1::.· .:cD"='m-=""cc..:5::., ..:1..:%:...• _______ oATl y PrLOf I OUT -WEEKENDER 'N' I Dy I NOR~I STANL~)' ., ORANGE COUNTY'S Rf ST A UR ANT·, NIGHT CLUB AND r ENTERTAINMENT ' SCENE . ~: " 1111 ................................................................................ b:lm:l ........................................ ~!~·«.cS * ----' . ' ·- • F~asting Month > The Christmas countdown is under way. Tbankagiving more than a week past an4 the yule- tide less than three weeks away, So many more shopi)ing day& for mom and dad and so many suspense-filled days for the youngsters. And for our Jewish friends today starts Hanµk. kah, the 'eight-day Feast of Dedication or Lights with the beautiful and ceremonial nigbUy lighting of the menorah. Jn less than a month comes New Year's Day, which this time marks the end of one decape anc\ the beginning of another. Somewhere along the line, \he arrival ·of the first day of winter is prob· ably worth noting in some fashion too. MANY HOLIO•YS Altogether. in the immediate fUture , loom maD y occasions for revelry and feasting, good-time gath· erings and parties, consecration and rededication to our highest goals. , Beyond the holidays themselves, the rush of events between creates a stepped up tempo of daily living. Constantly on the go as we are throughout the period , the mo st relaxing moments are gener- ally .found at mealti me. . . It is then we can best sit back, unwind for a few moments and savor a little rest. Which is made even more enjoyable as long as we are in the com- pany of fine food and associates. So here's to maximum out 'n' abouting between now and January 2. It is necessary to sustain us through the 12 days or Christmas and considerably more. December Outing \Vi1h promise of a menu orchestrated in Orient- al tradition and hi story, members of La Societe de Bacchus et Epicurus \V i 11 gather fo r the year-end monthly-outing at George Lim's Restaurant. 840 1vaneois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE Famous For FLAMING DUCK Open 11 :00 A.M. -Clos1d Mondty HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLVD. 8~2-191V R•1•rvations: 494-6574 Open Daily ••• ••• n1e1awers e LUNCHEOI( • DINNER • • IESTAUIANT .AND e SUNDAY IRUNCH • COCKTAIL LOUNGE e LATE SUPPER • OINING OCEANFRONT DINING, ATOP TOWERS WING Of SURF And SAND HOTEL ISH SOUTH COAST HIOHWA'I" LAGUNA IEACH, CALl,Oll:NIA Open to the Public ~ Newly Enlarged Popular ... J LARK ROOM Entert•inmtnt Nightly Tu11d ay throug~ S•turday THE FABULOUS ROUNDERS * BANQUET FACILITIES FOR 450 * SERVING LUNCH AND DINNER DA ILY MEADOWLARK country c:lub GOMER SIMS, CECIL HOLLINGSWORTH, Co.Own•n 16712 lillAHAM STREO HUNTIN&TON HACH For Reservations Call 146-1186 or 846-1416 Proudly Announcing DICK LAPPE' Giiltonst - Sln9er App•wlllt T•es. tin Sat. LAGUNA FLEUR DE LIS Cocktellt 414·2077 1460 5. C-Hwy., Laguna ,_. N. Hill St., Los Angeles: The two-night round oi Cantonese feasting Js set for Monday and Tuesday, December 8 and 9. Dinner djshes, in order, will _consist of steamed , assorted fish rolls and liarbecued spareribs for t6e appetizer, 1000 arrow white cloud soup, whole rock cod, an intermezzo sherbet, aged tangerin~ peel roasted duck, gold coin . chicken, glassy lobst~r. ming's beef, shrimp Formosa, Mai Tai Soong salad, almond custard dessert with kwnquats, and lichee nuts and tea. • · \Vines slated to balance the classic Cantonese .bill of fare are Cresta Blanca's sweet vennouth, Samuele Sebastiani Green Hungarian and Weibell Royalty. Wrapping up the imbibing will be Bois Liqueurs Pousse Cafe. Tab, per person, is $13.50, tax and tip included. Inquiries or reservations can be directed to the So- ciete, P.O. Box 35014, Los Angeles 90035, or by tel- ephoning (213) 278-2882 or (213) 272-1%9. Matador Roon1 Buffet We took time out for a longer lunch than usual one day last week to pa rtake of the delec table new buffet being served in the Matador Rnom of Ana- hein1's Grand Hotel. It wo uld have been possible to eat and run, if necessary. but that would have elim- inated the five extra trips we made, even though satiated wiU1 food, just to stare at the wondrous spread. FULL ARRAY Fron1 the attractive buffet table, a patro n can choose as much as he likes from a mouth-watering array of salads, hors d'oeuvres, fresh fruits, deviled eggs and pickles ol every variety. By th e time we had tried to load some 15 or 16 items on our rlate- and that represented only a small portion o selec· tions-we gave up ev,er hoping to sample each dish. DON JOSE' Now Appearing The Sensational VIC G'ARCI~ LTD with vocals by GERMAINE IN TI!E F1ESTA ROOM FROM 8:30 P.M. lo 1:30 AM. F/NlST MlXICAN FOOD AT flEASONAILI PllCES e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Ad1m1 (at Mlgnolia) Hunt. Beach 962-7911 'lfe C£ido C£ounge The Herb & Joe Trio, Y.•ith thei r ovm special blend of music and laughter •.• lb ten and dance eve ry evening from 8:30 ti l 2:00. Also, he ar Bill McClure ;it the co~kt ai l piano \Yilh tunes of today and yesle rdoly •.. evenings from 5:30 Iii 8;00. lnjOy the Hl!rb &Joe Trio, :i nd Bill · McClure-1 tonight t , at the COilSt"S fine5t ho tel .•. 'R.efreshment ...Means a .(ot of 'Things A long look at the rolling sea HOT ENTREES As a follow up, though, there was a choice or three or four hot enlrees accompanied by several vegetables and potatoes. But if you can go that far your appetite is bigger than the ones we live with. A waitress will bring coffee or drlnk"from the bar, and service is prompt if it's a busy schedule you have to meet. Cost for the bountiful repast is $2.25 and it's served from 11 :30 a.m. to 2 p.m., Monday through Friday. Three ~ecial entrees are available for those wanting something other than buffet • ~ l!!:EJ MENU SERVICE They are London broil, petite fllet mignon broiled to order, served with long branch potatoes and sliced tomato, $2.75: broiled New York steak sandwich, on toast, sliced tomato, French fried po- tatoes, $3.75 ; combination sandwich, breast of tur· key, baked ham and swiss cheese on rye, with thou~ sand island dressing, $1:95. RELAXING ATMOSPHERE The Matador Room is a rich1y-paneled djning facili ty, accented by the dark red booths and table- cloths throughout. A relaxing kind of warmth is further enhanced by the artistic old Spanish maps on the \valls, as well as the bull fi ght scenes. The Grand J-lotel is located at 7 Freedman \Vay. Anaheim, directly across Harbor Blvd. from the main entrance to Disneyland. Dinner is also served nightJy in the Matador Room from 6 to 11 p.m. Boat House When you walk in Ute new spaper headline reads: HARDING DIES SUDDENLY OF APO- PLEXY; CA LVIN COOLIDGE NOW IS PRESI- DENT. But that barely scratches the surface or the sur- prises, hilarity and deviltry that will turn up during any period of time spent at the Boat House, 515 S. Main, Santa Ana. ltfaseolas Restaurant Proudly Prnents The Tafolla Bros., John & Noah Guitarists & Vocalist' Entert•inment In the Mod•rn Mod• Tu1sdey thru Saturd•y Nights 1615 E 17 .. St. 1 ... natloos Santo Ana 547-Hll Authentic Cantonese Cuisine Lunch1on • Dinner Otily 11 :30 e.m. -10 p.m. Sun. thru Thur1. • 11 :30 •. m.-12 p.m. Fri. end s.t . Fomlly Dl•nen ,,_ $1.11 Oriental Specielti11 • A I.. C1rt1 Dis hes Tenaple Gardens -: Chinese Restanrant 1500 • .._ IAt Httrhr) C11fe MIM h•ll"' &-Mfffl .. CoNrl .. Fo.dofe Ge Plle11e 540·1fl7 NOW OPEN for LUNCHEON WEEKIJA YS at 11 a.m: LUNCHEON SUGGESTIONS Omelettes ....................... , . . . . . . . . 1.6S Fi11t of Sole, Almondine ...... , , . , .......• 1.7S Chicken Livers and Mushrooms •.•.. , ..... 1.5S • Waist Watcher's Special Plate .....•.....• 1.7S ChoPPecl Sirloin Steak, brolled .•.•....••.• 1.15 Call'i: Liver, bacon or onion .........••...• 1.75 Top Sirloin Steak Sendwich . , . , ........... 2.95 -•"*'''' 11rv1d with p11!1!011 or 1p19h•lli- The ""'"lgic cry of ' PRIME RIB SPECIALS ---~ wheeling gull The floral artistry of 1 Barbecued Beef 8on11 . . . . . . . . . . . l .7S !•1 l'llllV 11 VOii lil e , , .) French Ga rden And, good food and drink French Dip or BBQ Betf Sandwich ..•• 1.45 · h l · 1 Prime Reuben Sandwich .............•• 1.65 1n sue a St: ling ndwl h 110 Hot Prime Rib Sa c . , . . . . . . . . . . . • . The VICTOR HUGO INN -'-•-•·-<Cold Prime Ri~ Plat_!t. chilled fruit .... 2~45 has Ileen fifrBhfi"lg-dlnm -Sp1,1111 wilh Pe!eto•• or Spefh•tti- and making memories for over a quarter or a century. Open Daily ltincheort-Dinnt!r- Codttails Champa.gne Brunth- Sunda.y from 11 :301.m. to2p.m, Cliff o,1ve :at CO.St Highw~guna Buch V1croR UUGO Im 494-9<9 A 1ubsidl1ry of AMIAC, INC. We A,.o FeatNre Sondwiches S.lod• Dess;erts ind Beverages; NOW Sll'f'IN• DINHO 7 DA Tl PRIME RIB DINNER (4-6 p.m. weekdeys) 2.95 Bnrs & Wines -COCKTAIL LOUNGE (0,.. S..1 t -lllo•,.•nrvoief1o'-• ..,. __ 428 EAST 17th STREET COSTA MESA 645.0990 ---------~------------ As a matter of fact, the newspaper., dated Au- gust 3, 1923, is probably one of the nt!west artifacts ! · you will encounter among the incredible conversa-i · lion pieces that plastei nearly every square inch of I' this bar. And the eyes are hard pressed. to take in •' one thing before moving on to the next. . ': !' . ' SHEER NONSENSE ·Patterned along lines of the famous Oar 1-lousc · up the coast in Venice, the Santa Ana establishment · manages to exert its own distinctive personality and ' sp~cial br~ of madness. A lunacy, le.t it be added, 1. the \\!Orld should have more of to enjoy. Aside from the wonderland of ob~ects incorpor· •. ated into the decor, loud taped music rises above '· the din of voices \Vi'lh every bea t 'Crom the 20 's th ro ugh the 60's. I nterrupted occas ionally by the sudden sound effects of wailing sirens, machine gun battles , jets blasting off and trains bearing down the track. Novelties of every kind , size and description are packed in to the Boat House like a museum gone maniac. Th ere are enough signs, posters and old photographs alone to occupy several good gaping hours. ANO MORE One moves on, though, to behold such articles as stuffed birds. scales. n1anikins dressed in bi· za rre clothes, bea1.·up kiddie cars, an Indi an canoe, an ~sklmo kayak, a toboggan, li cense plates, bomb casings , a many-1niles-later wheel chair, little r ed 'va~ons, se,ving machines, an antique dentist's chair, an elk-head hat rack and a whale vertebra. \Vhat is probably one of the first model washin~ machines serves a s the container for the free pop- co~n availa~le at all times. Every table has a board painted on 1t so the customers can engage· in end· less checkers and chess gam es. THREE ROOMS Th ree mai n rooms or areas provide space for all Continued on Page 24 MONDAY THRU SATURDAY ARLENE SKILES and the DICK POWELL TRIO 37 FASHION ISlAND NEWPORT CENTER letW .... •llfl'•1t1• & .,... •• A1t1,.. P•rll:lfl9 ,._,.,,1Uo"' ....... 2030• .. • .;;-,~-r-.-.,,,. " .. ,f ~.t,JLY PILOT • ARCADIA $1NCE tt.)f -AIRPORT FeoturilMJ Steak • Chlcke" • Italian Culilnt Serving Late Dinners ·WEEKENDER ,. 'N . ABO -UT r """'··'t!Hilr. 11 ... M •• \:W A..M. l:ltl P#I LISAOtS RO COSlA MESA ....,,. l'ri.·& Sii, U:•l :>t A.M. lll E HUNTINGTON OR. AltCAO•,.. 4'17 .. 11) • '. •r 1/,e FLING "----'' ENTERTAINMENT • 1 NIGHTS A WEEK DAl lNC:ING * HAP HALL DUO Wllh JOlll' Rlit'rl °"' &IU Th11r. thr11 51111. -------~ MON .. TUn •• w•··~ * L•rry Like Singer Guitarist ~ ME5it. C f U-R1ar•Mf!SI Theater ~0v,..11:l: os a rmna 145 E. 1'tli St. Jwst •ff Newport ll•d. NOW OPEN OrarHJf! County's New Intimate and Deliqhtful FRENCH RESTAURANT !Formerly Gerard'iil tlinner 5:30 -10:00 p.m. Tuesday thr11 Sunday Corner of Rendolph and &rl1tol Coilo M~o 540·1641 Contl.nvod from P• .. 21 the Boat House action. The smallest ol these is what they .call the TV-Boller Room, a kind ol quiet.- er back bar where interested patrons can watch sporting events 01! color~TV. One of the two larger Tooms up front js devoted to frequent showings of. old-time silent movies. A who's who ol yesteryear's stars-Charlie Chaplin, IV. C. Fields and Laurel and Hardy-pace throogb their timelessly funny antics. WHO NEEDS A MENU? The bill of fare Js riloatly beer and more beer- draft or botUed Lowenbrau-but one can also obtain sandwiches. pizza, peanuts and sod.a pop. So only a piker would fill up on the free popcorn. One special feature that brings the regulars around like clockwork is the daily happy hour from 4 to 7. Order a beer during_ this period and you will automatically receive two-for the price of one. Open since June of 1968, the Boat House has spawned a legion of dedicated fans who can't get enough of the place. While the principal appeal is probably to the younger set, one wou ld have to be a sourpuss of the first order not to have a good time here. Age places no restriction on fun , so S\Yinging over-30's can get \vith it too. Priine Rib Inn • Time doesn't always permit us to attend a restaurant's grand opening but circum!tances happily conspired to m ake it possible early last 'veek to view and sample the fare of a sterling new addition to the Costa Mesa dining scene. The Road Bo11ae At Isadore's LI 'S IS RECOMMENDED BY THE GOURMAND COLUMNISTS' * Dliie Grefll-0. C. Ewen:nq New 1 * frol'!li Mo,..i11r1-Th., Ro9i1 ler • Nor111 Sto11ley-D.iily Pilot + Tedd Thomey-Lonq Brodi IP.T ENTERTAINMENT .Fiii. & lt61 ADAMS AYE. fat Mog11a/lal HUNTINCiTON IEACH SAT. 968-5050 TUE OCEA1V AT l 'OUR TABLE! SEAFOOD, STEAl<S ANO GOURMET ENTREES DINE AND DANCE WITH JESS, PARKER AT THE HAMMOND X-66 IAN9un FACILITIES ore:N SEVEN DAYS 11 to 2 A.114. 536-255 .5 FOii llESEltVATtOHi ]17 rociflc C091t Hwy. H1i11ri1t11e11 leoch • "" This newest of the ne\v spots is the Prime Rib Inn at 428 E. 17th Street. And if the excitement it stirred the day the doors opened is any indication of things to come, the house is likely to be packed on a regular basis before the month is out, Occupying the former quarters of the old Amigos restaurant, the extensive remodeling and renovation given to the premises by the new owner, tl1ac Rosen, leaves no point of recognition of th e previous facilities. IT'S ALL NEW Furnshings, decor, atmosphere, every change has been aimed in the ~\lCcessful direction of establishing a first-class dinner house. To the modernized and relaxing surroundings have been added such welcome touches as ca"nd.Jes on each table and ·waitresses attired in some of the most attractively feminine and frilly ouUits \Ve've seen recently. Real Cantonese Food ••t ht,.. or to1k1 home. STAG CHINESE WINO 111 2ht pl., N•wport 8Mch ORiol• 3-9560 o,.e Y .. lre1MI Mtt 12·12 -M . •Ml S.. 'HI J •·•· OBERHANSLl'S ENGLISH MEAT PJES Steik e St1o1k & Kidn•y Steik end Mushrooms e Pork Veal & Hem e Cornish Isa!lore's quietly opened .its doors this past Wednes- day night as tfie newest venture of the Far West Services, Inc., ·better·knoWn to Orange.Coasters as Reuben's Restaurants. "Izzy's" occupies the build~ ing where \VuBen's held forth on Bayside Drive just off the Coast Highway in Newport Beach. It has been. redone wit h colorful hard-edge pop murals and HOUSE SPECIAL TY . The food, too. measured up in every partic- ular to the sense of discovery pro~ided by the Inn itself. As the restaurant's name implies, the specialty is roast prime ribs of beef-although ther(l is a total of eight entrees on the dinner menu. One may eventually \\'ant to try all of them ·but the nod the first time out should ·certainly go to . the prime rib. Our succulent ·portions were tender, juicy and generous. ··~· .. Served with fresh· vegetables, fluffy whJpped potatoes, natural gravy and creamed horseradish sauce. the regular cut goes for the reasonable tab of $3.85 and the larger Diamond Jim Brady cut for $4.85. A child's portion is rice~ at $1 .50. Servin g Luncheon and Dinner lfonday through Saturda11. Closed Sundays Danci119 Niglicly 'fucsduy tltru S1111day A P11ties • Saus191 Ro\11 W• ••• locate.J ne)(f to I. IMrO RT ED IRITISH FOODS • All fOOD TO •o J g ~ lk•• Yllw OitlillC DIM1n ffMI $4.50 D s~~f:.!~~~ Th N t I ! BTH I Ano•t•d C•"•P•• For Cocktail P1rti11, Et,, the Mey Co. in South e a ura s MONTH -I HOURS: 10 A.M.-7 P.M .• Si t. 10 ••• CLOSED SUNDAY Coest Pl1i1. --1724 N. Tvstl11 A••· 270 I. 17ftl 5t. ]J]J s. lrlitol S ' I S d B h t O 30 2 30 I Orftlf l 6]7·0144 Ceste M.. 641·2252 pec11 un ay rune - : • : C.1N w... 540·]140 31106 COAST HJ()HWAY, SOUTH LAGUNA li~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~l~:i:~:S:::-::1:°-:i:--:i:~I Reser:vations 499·2663 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •• --------•1: r@. ~/~•-L .. _,ell/l5·-·.~ t:=d.._ Caribe Room : 1 "'y .. o"""u ... t.._l. .... EN .. J'-'OY--OJU..:,R 1 1: ~gl~ ~ \,:'/IUJ PRESENTS :1 MIDDAY •' FAEI\ :1 SUNDAY ENTERTAINMENT - l SHOWS NIGHTLY -DANCING 11•1 Wi ii COAST MIGHlll•T IOfwroflf H.t.Cll 0"11) .. .....,,. . . . . . Tiffany . lamps seij.ing the scene and the mod-mad music ol. The · R.oad Home group (.Denise U-Ren, Pet.er ·Wickersham and Gregory U-Ren, from left). doing the enlertaining Tuesday through Saturday from 9 p.m. Other entertainers will play Sunday and Monday,:making "it a seven nights of music at this restaurant on the bay. ,, All dinnera also lncltide soup dti jbur or fossed chille4 ,gr~ns, with choic~ of dressing, and a whole loaf o( seui'dough bread-.· Again,. a special 'no!e' Of recommendation must be· made for the salad. OUrs came .as near to. perfection as· any we have be!n served in recent years. · . - OTHER ENTREEl! Hea:ding the other dinner eiltrees, alJ of which are served with fresh ·vegetables, French fried potatoes or sp~gh_e.,W, is .barb.~ued_-bet:t bones (as !11any as you lik~"'8ftteaty _ p~ ,n~ ~nes, baked in the Inn's special .barbecue 1siUce;·'1.9S. : Next in line came top sirloiii:.i te8k;·$4.25 ; chop- pe'd sirloin, $2.85 ; lobster taj.!s.,: :lo\25·;· prime rib steak, $4.45 ; New York cul· ·sirloip, $4.95; steak 'n lobster, $5.25. · · ·"ti : · One special feature bound to• atlr'act a Jot ol people is the early bird dinner, served~ from 4 to 6 p:m. weekdays. During that time the fegular cut on the prime rib dinner ·wi11 go for 'l less at $2.85. :• . . . . ' ' . . . " ENTERTAINMENT TO COME : According .to manager Joe Martinez, the res- ~aurant's cocktail Jounge . (still being completed) is. scheduled to ha~e a mid-December opening. It will feat.ure entertainment and be open seven nights a wcek .unt.i.l 2 a.m. At the present time th.e Inn is open for lunch only five days a . week# Monday through Friday, 1 starting at 11 a.m. and ·continuing to 4 p.m . The midday bill of fare offers such items as a prime rjb sandwich, a prime rib cold cut plate, the barbecued beef bones, yf\rious sandwiche.s, filet of sole·, a mushroom omelette and a daily special. . <;>pening hour f~r dinner Saturdays and Sundays IS 4 p.m. Monday thru Saturd•y JACK COSTANZO •' The Costa Mesa Prime Rib Inn Is the first ol this new chain to open in Orange County and the fourth in Southern CaJ.ifornia . Others are already operatin~ in Glendale, Torrance and \Yest Covjna. It is anticipated that 30 or more Jnns will be serv-12 l'.M. TO 4 P!M,· ing the public by the end of 1970. , :1 JFM ·~ 1/1•= ====, ==.lji· I ;;;";;;;Buon;;;;;;;,m;;;;an1;;;;""";;;;·;;;;roman:;;;;=.;t;;;;;;;• TOP SIRLOIN .................. $1.49 In cludes Baked Potato or French Fri ei •nd Spe~i•I Si11ler To•1t. NEW YORK STEAK ........ $1.59 Includes Bak8d Potato or French Forie1 and Speci•I Si11ler To•st. E¥ER.Y-~fQNDAY.. NJGR IS .f'A~11L Y NIGHT TOP SIRLOIN SPECIAL .. $1.29 Includes B•ked Pot•to or Forench Fries and Speci al Si11ler Toe st. ALL SlllLEJI: STEAKS All.E U.S. GOVT ... INS,lCTf D 011t •olu"'• buyi"t .,now1 10 te eti11el ffi.t "110\lty a11ywlltft •' 9•1 111~ rtduc.4 ,,;,.,, MILLAlllJI IOllA.llE HUNTINGTON BEACH l COSTA MESA TOWllJ. COUNT•T &SHtfll• r1nco J.TAT IOM 1..a, tt«1t ,,... • fd.mt 1 11111 • MtM• ...... ...,.,., CtflLD'i l'OJITION HALr r•ICE 1Ch1klrw-•J21 P'HONl IN •• , AU ltlM.S AWAll.A.lll lO V.11 OUT .. Featuring GERRIE WOO CONTINENT AL CUISINE •1 fint Oiuiu11 Si11ct 196.)... Go Out To • ~c dolce vita ... 380l EAST (.o...sr 11JGH ~'AY 4': • c011QNA Dlil. MAR, C...UFO!tNIA r, . (714) 642.9111 • P110Nr:: (714) 675-1374 2SOOJ'tc.:~CoutHW)' .. ,• • 1: 21112 OCEAN AVI. !C-t Hwy.I -HUNTINGTON IEA".H -S36·1421 • Dinner This •··--ENTERTAINMENT ~································, PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS Now Me 'n Ed's mobile ovens 11pffd delicious p1p1n1.not pizz.as to your door in minutes. ror prompt service phone 646~7136 (Newport Beach/Costa Mes..: 17th •!'Kt Tustin) ., &47·1214 (Huntinaton a.-•nd Holl~ Get the Pizza with Pinaz 'ltWn-~ 'Whe.rt Exciti111 'lJ'in15 c51.rt Happenin6! 'fftefaMfll "'rltN• c .. ,,.,,,- i" tlrfl Sf!otlle L.~ DU.U.1 U. lire Meliliflil Milffor ..... ... dLMC.-.. GRAND HOTEL 7 f'llttt>M:AN \\'A Y A!"All t.I ~f. CAt.lF. -;72.7777 Weekend BY THE PHIL DE SANTO TRIO Old Brus1els· RC.$taurant WINTIR sr!CIAl -EARLt DINNERS $2.H SHC .. L mtT 04{ IUN. THIU THUL 1nmAnO!f1 494.7447 • • 2007 SOUTH COAST HIWAY -LAGUNA IEACH • • • Friday, DKtmbar 5, 1969 ·DAILY PILOT 26 <" • f, ... • ••OltO 11ua10 D~AMS IN . LAS PO SAD~ . ,His ,Natl~lty fc ':l1u~,1 Como le Llhi i I '• ~ .. ·.;·i,>·' ~~.l"' : ' .. . . ~' ScrQt>ge~ri.:~G~--~.,· ·· 1 ·. . . -~ . ·'Posadas' . P~eant .At Padua ~, •• : 411 ~ ,,,. • --tlon • GI "LU i>..-•<atPlidua ........ Tboilre ii qaln.~ltn. ·~ -;'hil ..r. illful · .. loll\ pllly a b o't>I !}'~Ill M1Jlco 11'.always \ ·a pit~ ugOrie.C., . ., • ., 1 . f« ""'"' who "!" •)& riery • 1~· ~·· . Tl!e starring role' ol ,, ... 1 cbltA> It played lhlll ,_ b • ~ appealing ,...,, boys. Pedre Rubio, Roberto Miranda and Rafael Cfarcia. w b 0 . 1ltem1te· perf°"'1ancu. When PanChito dreams that his n1Uvity •figures' come to, life, the bockdrop rises and the story ol Chrjstmas I s ,presented In a ''Coijaqulo." 'Ibis particular ·part of \he ploy has be<n preserve<! sine• the middle ases of· Europe whe(e -it was always ,a part er the celebration of ~mas. nie· name "Las Posadas" Was • chosen for the play, bee,.._ the people of Mexico, each day· for nine days before Chriat.inas, sing their songs in · · ' y,rocession to represent the ho- < y family seeking shelter, or "pdllada. tt " ,.. .. ' . · .. Statt1esque .Inga Nielsen . . The lnllutnc~ 'dt Oiarl<s'.' .re.Hor Cl~ Gn!gg, 1ets Dickens hli ~nneJ1tt4! toth '~Oie1call as DiC1t9ti1' Eben~r C e n tu r Y,·Foi ·Televlak>o's ~e in ~'The Ghost of romantic h.Jf~bour comedy~' diiistmas Pa:St .. setfuent, air- "The Gl:lost and Mrs. Mlijr,", inc 'l'hurtdl), December 2S on at least for the forthcoming Channel 7. Thia annual production also hltlu(Jes ·tbe traditional ChrUtmas fiesta of · t h e ·modern day family i:.1 Mexico with their preparations and the gaiety . of breaking the family pinata. It took t\vo views of this· 6--3 Holly\vood actress to record the 1970 sports sched- ule which will be shown on Channel 4 starting January 1. If one is not reluct- ant'. to stare it is possible to locate some dozen events on this in-person sports calendar live and colorful; holiday season. Reilly, who ts a veteran of Charles Nelson Reilly, the all entertainment media, "was gifted comic who portrays delighted to even come close · · ·· · 10 ·1 Dick.eris chancter. It's TROPICAL FISH ... SOUTH SEAS Largest S<ledion ol Tropical Fish & Supplies .in the area. · M.wll.MetlMI the first time. Even thoogh my 'Scrooge' still ha! to Stay in the character af 'Claymore.'" The whole Dl.ck ensian Christmas 1ltory is centered around a dream had by Mrs. Muir, v.·ho is played by Emmy-winner Hope Lange. . llt.1'• WJUON,COITA MIU. (.tr f1t;'llr# llld.. ,..1"1 "It's somf: kirld of dream .'' said ReillY. "PJtttng the penurious Claymore· intO the out-and-out s k I n f 11 n t of ScrooMe. And it's all done in such fun." 111+0.' llll'wriW. Or. -\ft-' e..d. l~fl'llf'OltOtflU)~ ·-I THOUGHTFUL GIFTS· FOR THE HOLIDAY~ With the Chri1tmos MGIOft drawing n~or; give gifh rhot . Jost from ,..ar to -pa,r: Gihs with meaning, love 11;1nd car• ji which young ond old alike can share. f9 ~ fUl,.VU COVER ALBUM '>. ~ ~ I ~ Stort someone on the faKinGting road of collecriftgJfint day Cbvers by moking a gift of rhis hond1CMM Ful-V11 I Cover Album. Clear cellulOJI acetot• en~lopes potect covers from creasing and frnger-marks. EOch emoefope holds 2 covers bock-to-back. Easy to mount and easy to 1 .,, display ••• justflKk your finger end rhere is yow cover. Black or brown simulated leather portfolio coVer. Al'bum 1-50 c-u, 4'.25,·.100 covers, l.75. T~et•'• ::at fun in collectinQ stamps tho1 hO"N: actually ~ traveled from distant places through rhe mail •• ..and eve rt 3 more fun having them come. from the cities ~ere they ~ w.re first iuved. Here is on ellcellent telection of Fir1t Ji Dofcovers to highlight your colle ction. ~ A FIRST DA'( COVER SETS PACKETS AND MINT STATIONERY • Ht of 35 !"blocks of .4 ••••• , ••••••• ~· ••••• 3S.00 I fomovs.America-n tuve, 1940, ,Pverrvn Countries issue, 19•3·.44, . · setof13inbfocksof4 ••••••••••••••• ,,,.,,15.00 i Same os abov• in Art<roft, blocks of 4 •• , ••••. 35.00 .. Proj•<t Mercury, 1962 •.•••••••••••••••••••••• 50c 1. Same os obove in plate block of 4 ,, •..••••... 1.25 Gemini Spoc• Covers #1·.Jj) • , , , ••••• , ••• , •• , •• l .o6 ' "' Apollo Space Covers #1-17 •• , ••• , •••• ,; ••••• , . 1.35 • 10 differei:it fir11 day coven in block of ..C: • • • • • .3.00 i •25 diffe·rent first day covm, o 7.25 value •••••. S.95 "Las Posadas'' will run through January 10th with ~urtain time at 8:30 p.m. on Wednesdays through Saturdays with matinees at 2:30 p.m. on Wednesdays and Saturdays. Patrons will find Padua Hills especially atlractive dur4 ing this· holiday season. The director .ir.1d his staff have decorated the lobby with beautiful trimmings f r o m Mexico. The Padua Dining Room is festive and serves Mexican ·and American food for lunch and dinner, daily ex- cept Mandays. The holiday air is appamit in the studio shgp, the art stud.lo, pottery and glass blower ~hops. 'Fantasy' to Parade Disneyland Salute Opens Dec. 20 Reservatiom for the Padua Dining Room and Theatre are recommended for this current play. The office pl:looe number al this year around theatre is (714) . 626-1288. It is located in the hills above Claremont". °Fantasy on Para de, 11 Disneyla:.1d's color-filled, ac- tion-packed salute to the Holidays, highlights the 1969 Yule Season with 26 presen- tations by more than 500 performers. Premiering Saturday even· Ing, December 20 al 9 p.m .• the gala procession will be presented dally through Sun- day afternoon, January 4. Bigger than ever this year. "Fantasy on Parade '' magically brbgs to life Disney favorites -from Mickey · Mouse, aboard the world's Terence Youna largest bass drum, to .Winnie . 0 the Pooh, accompanied by Simed for'Filn1 ;Heffalumps. Woozl•s,. Tigger b ' • r an(! other fanc1ful friends. Tertnce Youni:, tht English ,And that same magtc puts dl~r, has been signf!tl by into motion giant !ea.cup.s, Warner Bros.-Seven Arls to serving up a taste of • Alice in direct Japan's leading star, Wonderland,"' and hu~ mobile Toshiro Mi!une, in a story of Christmas Trees whicll form the early West, "Red Sun." tile perfect backdrop for the Comin9 Dec. 6 Fainily ~ekly • ' .. ,) ·\ "' star or 1he "show~..: <1ld Santa Claus himself. SL Nick will make his triumphant journey d o w ~1 ~1ain Street U.S.A. on a toy· · studded sleigh. · His lovely helper! from the North Pole will flank the float while eight ridiculous reindeer and a com· pany .of toy &0ldiers frqm "Babes in Toyland'' make way for the entQurage. . From the world <1f make- bclieve il)io ,,lhe r'lality r oJ. ··Fantasy on Parade" step such old acquaint~ances as "Sleeping Beauty" ir,1d her ~ince, Alice . and. her friend s from Wonderland, including a deck of marching 1 playing cards. and "Peter ·l'an" with hi's yoUng companioM 'and old en emies. · ''Cinderella" fbds her glass 11ipi)er 4m}p·g~ the-parade, much to the dismay of her di.sm~I ·s tep m Other and stepsisters. And Donald Duck. Pluto, Goofy, "Snow White and the Seven Dwar&," "Pin- nocchio," Mr. T<1ad and ~·Mary Poppln~" .add to .the excitement and' merriment. "'Fantasia's" beauty and humor combine. t.1 live-action .!ils Disneyland w e I c o m e s bal"r1na oi>triches, uriental muShrooirtg~ ·tangy alligators and ,u'ngah;ty hippos from the famous Disney motion picture. 'the . swingin' set ls represented ii'!. the Holiday parade by Kirtg Louis, Baloo• an'd Mowgll, along with Cola.iet Hathi and his elephan t pftrol. all from • ' J u n g I e Book.'' 1 • Grace in sti'ong cont rast to' the "Ugly Bug &.nd" is pro. vi~ by a fllglit of six dancing butterflies. w h o magically . take shape from a comic caterpillar. Followhig Its -popul<ir tta41- tion, "Fantasy an Parade" · will be launched again this year. with the magnificent, d e e ply-stirring Candlelight Caroling cerema.1y.~preseoted by more than 1,000 blended voices. .. -., ....... <00-JohnW!vne Rock Hudson •die Undefeated Plus Dick Van Dyke In . plilNEr ul, APES i rH· • • •lllCM 81N . AT lll.t.la • • •t't. ll;OAIT HWY.• ft.H 01100 P~. IM7·•00I •HUNTINGTON •llM:H" Live Theater 'Stop World' Ends; .. • 'Forum'Held Over A comedy abou.t mismal· cJ1ed lovers ls on stage at the San C I e m en t e C:Ommunity Theater, 20Z Avenida C'abrillo, Thurs-Sat. through Dec. 6 al 8:30 f .m. Reservations, 4!)2. 0465 • ... Stop tbe World - I Wanl to Get Off" A musical comedy is being staged by the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse on the Orange CoU".1ly ·Fairgrounds (enter v.esl gate). Fri. and Sat., through Dec. 6 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations, iJ4.a303. "A Funny Tblng ll appened .. en the Y.'ay to the Forum" l'tlusical comedy on stage at South Coast Re pertory, 1827 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa, Dec. S-6 at 8:30 p.m. An eve· nJng of one-act plays by Span- ish play\\Tighl Arribal, will be pre~nted Dec .. 7 -9, 18 . 21. "JnvltaUon lo a l'tturder'' A murder myste ry is the fare being staged at the Hun- tington Beach Playhou se. 2110 Pi.fa in St., Huatington Beach, Fri. and Sal., through Dec. 20 at 8:30 p.m. Reservations, 536- 8861. -.. _ ...... M»JJJ "Any Wedoetday" Comedy about marital and extra-marital prob~nu: will be on stage at the Santa Ana · Community Playh<>use, Sixth and Ross St.s., Santa Ana, Fri.- Sal. at 1:30 ~.m . through Dec. lS. Reservations, 53f..7'47. "Harvey" Perennial favorite , a com- edy of a man iind 8'.1 Invisible -, rabbit will be on sta1e at the Fullerton Playhouse, I I I Buena Vista Drive, Fullerton at 8:30 p.m. Frl.-Sat. through. Dec. 13. Reservations, 827- 1339. "Clcta.1 Fknttr" A comedy a bout a denlist who cheats on a non-existent wife, will be on stage at the Laguna Moulton Pla)'bouse, 606 Laguna Canyon Road , La· guna B e a c h, TUes. -Sat., through Dec. IS at 8:30 p.m. ReservaUons-494-2550. > 'Chaillot' Uses Big Orchestra Arll OVfllrls "ALICl'I lllllTAUllAHT" 1111) n. '""" "YlLLOW IUIMAlttNI" LM V•ll Cletl' "DA\' M AHOllll" CMI "'"" 01111• "Ml HATALll"· !Ml MfKlmUllM kM" DllM ....., "ltlllltKATOA" 101 ·~ "llNI Of' llllOHT WATlll" (I) Anewll Al-Mkll ... \'e.1f "IUSTIHl" 1111) llllt~•N IUt'ltll ltlll Hlrri-"ITAlltCASI" Cllll Cllllt l1thfMlll "NAlfO 'IM HIGH" (Ml I M Wllli<tl THI UOL Y" IM) THI UGLY" . • •JS different first dOy covert of station ery •••••• S.25 ':J; •12 diffeNht mint 1totiooery •.•••.••••••••• , .1.99 I~ •100 different mtnt stationery ••••••••••••••. .49..50 ~ 1.FIJ the President That presentation will be of- fered two evenings <1nly, Saturday and Sun day , • December 20 and 21, at 6 p.m. The parade foUows at 9 p,m, .Exclu1ive Or1nge ll _~~~~~:gg:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ' County Engagement II ' I Set of 2 mlAt entires 1876 ~ntenniol iisue •••••• , 20.00 ~!J Set of ..C: mint entires 1893 columbion expo. issue ••• 6.00 ij Set of 6 mj11t et1tire1 1932 woshington bicent. is1v., .5.00 ~! $et of 4 embouud. enYelopes In first day covers, ij 1965,.1 1~,,,!i,8¢ ••••••••••••••••••••••••• 1.•s A ••r..t.tiH ~ All ,,,;.:,, Cl'fl t1tbj!ct ID Lhotit11 lrill\Aof ,..,;~,. ' ~ M~KUS STAMP JOUR~AL i ~ for on excrtfng experience in pJlllotely, ".-och for tllls ~ brightly ilhmrated quarterly. You'Kiind fOldnotli!t ortl• g cles and informotl•e special dtporln'lentl inducing new I~ iuwi,. topiceif lhitin'lit, 1ta~ PfOgroms, hurncw, quft.[es. Si c:hanc• ·to win];:ri11-manero11d .,.1 -. 2 .00 ptr, l":J S.00 for 3 yn., ~.00 per yr. outside U.S. ji: $TAMP AND COIN NfWS ••• 160 pa;e:s of excittntt i Chrittn\as gif t sele<tlon,, ·;tst . ComFli : !n:~r'y V..llh order1 S.G; o13.oo........ j RQ.Blli~S2tJ 'S I Lt. Col. Rolph Albertaule tells obout h!s ,, .. rnendous retponsibility being Pre1ident_N ixOn's pilot. T.he article deJCribes his superb quolifico· tio~s for having been cho1en America'• number- one pilot. e NO GAM! .:.. Making toys Is mostly work and hardly 1ny play. "The Not·so-playful Game of Toymaking" lakes a look al multi·million·dollar cold·bloodedly efficient industry. e IN OR OUT?-Quiz helps you find out whether you:rt an (ntrovert or an extrovert and ~·hal the terms reilly mean. e UNUSUAL -Article lists s e v en uncomm~:t Christmas gilts you may never have thought or. ALL COMl,.G SATURDAY IN THE Hooks Joins 'Old Men' Film Cast . Robert Jlooks, who. recently completed hi5 starring role with Jame's Coburn -and Lynn Redgrave in Sidney Lumet's motion picture production ol "Blood Kin" for Warner Bros.· ·Seven Art., will 9'tar in e m lion picture version o f .•• "Ceremonies in Dark Old fdto," the stage· htt' produhed l3st season by the Negro En.serilble Company of which HoOb"fg a· founder and dtrtt- tor. The film is to' go before the cameras ID Decembet iD . ·Hariem. LOS ANGl\lf • Nnt'°"1 "' J I I '~.:::it · N.~~=-2·;.1 .... ___ n_A_·1_LY_P_1_L_o_1 ___ . , · Meanwhile, Hooks Is ap- pe.1rlng In the '1 Sllent 'Partner" segmttiL of "The F'Bl.;"8n ABCJr< iiries made by QM Productl6n ln.auoda. lion wllh \Varner Bros.-&ven Aft$, • -0.• tf tM ,..-s lllnt 111t1111r· •It ,.,.,.,_*· Liza Ml111DI 111111111 U I .Wl}of Ktilll uitat!" "'-Chtt•CWttll .. u. 11-Eve Show 'St1rtt 1 P.M. CONTINUOUS SHOW SATURDAY, SUNDAY FROM 2 ':M. HELD OVER 2nd WEEK I I . '* THAT •• . ·LIVU -- fOl~EI • , f I ! . ' ft OAIL Y PILOT Jloll11wood Blick•t,age Joan Crawford Still Goin~ Strong , By VERNON SOOIT UN Mf~C~ HOLLY\VOOD -Joan Crawford is tasily the most durablt aclress \\'orking today. She made her movie de but in 192$ in ''Pretty Ladies." Now, almost 4S ytars later, she haa completed a t1eienct-fictlon thriller and is preparing a guest star appearance in "'lbe Virginian... a television horse opera. Joan was an ingenue when talkies were a pipe dream, lel alone television. Of her contemporaries she and she alone survives. There isn't another first rate star in the- old tradition who still commands the at· tention that Crawford does. Mo~ver, she ls a more attractive woman-by today's standards than she ~·as as a girl. Westerns aren't new to Joan. Her first was "The Law of the Range," a 1928 epic with Tim McCoy. "Westerns weren't my fo(te ," Joan said. "I only appeart'd in three or them. [ preferred roles with. mag n i rice n L wardrobes., "Once you've been dressed by Helen Ro&e, Edith Htld, Adrian, Jean Louis and lreDe you become a Hille spoiled. They l'tl't: the very best and they gave me that longJ<gged look." Joan still bas it. · Her co-st.an down thrOugh the years have become a legion atomlled by death or obacurlty. A nm-. pll nc: eons~ Bennet~ Georie K. Arthur. Harry Lang. don, Charles Ray, Owen Moen, Fran- cis Bushman. Lon Chaney, J 0 h n au. Gi l ger t William Haines, J&meJ Mur- ray, Ramon Novar· r o. 'OAN CllAW,.O•o As a reigning beauty queen, Crawford often shocked the waning Victorian mores of her time. "I never wen girdles or bras In pic- tures," she recaUed, "because I liked the naturaJ appearance of the feminine form. But I'd have refused to do nude scenes Uke aome .....,,.. are ploying IOOay. "And not because 1 don't have O'erything In the right J!lace. Nude scenes ,never pccurred to us in the. old dlya. I believed then and .UU do that a pereon'a body is private.. 1'U's not a milter of rnwality, l think It adds up to taste and dignlly." Jn addition to appearing iJJ the 90 minute NBC western, Joan tteen.Uy com- plded ~ 14th motion picture. "Trog." lt wilJ oot go down as one ol her Javor· _. ites. She recalls moat fondly the role that woo her an a~y award in UMS, ''MUdred Pierce." She also favors her performances 'in "P06Se8sed," and ''Humoresque." "Throughout my career I've tried to keep the name Joan Crawford magical," she .said. "Part of that wu-a certain amount of se1 appeaJ, but something was always held in reserve." Miss Crawford was dressed in a chic fur hat and impeccable black suit. And there could be oo doubt the word magic 1Ull applied. 'Billy Kid' -Weekend Guide to Movies Makes Debut In 'Chisum' Anouk Aimee Plays Amoral Wife in 'Justine' West ("1): Villian, Henry Fon- da , hired to clear the way for a new railroad, murders a rancher and his children in this western. C t a u d i a Cardinale, Jason Robards. co- star. a.1d tribulations or an American family ab r o a d . Jackie Gleason, Es t e 11 e Parsons star. 2001: A Space Odt":ssey: • '" Pod Rau Keir Dullea. left, and Gary Lockwood star in "2001: A Space Odys- sey," a drama of ad- venture and explora'- tion in Cinerama , cur- rently showing at the Cinedome 21 Theater. Shown in photo arc as. tronaut suits hanging at right and space pods at le(t. Film Debut For Dodger 1 WMCl.11C-"6~AWMD11 A CfJlfl F{Jrll mJl,CDI e!f~Fl.M DOCTOR -. ZHMGO" .. -.."" and If IT:S TiJESlli~ JHiS lllUST Sf Bel.SllJlll Ille 2001 Hollywood's new Billy the Kid is Geoffrev Deuel, making his moUon picture debut with JoJln Wayne i.1 "Chisum," the Batjac Production for Warner Bros. now being filmed on location at rxirango, 1.'texico. Pttvlous film Billy-the-Kids have been George O'Brien, Robert Taylor,· Scott Brady, Don •'Red'' ,Barry. Audie liturj,hy, Jack Beutel and Paul Newman. Editor's Note: This movie guide \;js prepared by the film& committee of Harbor Council PTA. 11frs. John Clark is preiident and llfrs. Hart Sweeney is committee chairman. I t is intended as a reference in determining suitable films for certain age gToupr and wilt appear we ekly. Your vitwi are solicited. Jlfail them to Mo· vit Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT. Just.i nt fR): Anouk Aimee is Justine, the exotic, amoral Jewish wife of a powerful financier in Alexandria i11 the 1930s. She is dedicated to smuggling arms to PaleSUne as the British prepare to restore Egypt to self.govern- ment. Dick Bogarde also stars in this complicated story of i'.r trigue. TEENS AND ADULTS Don't Drink the Waler (GI: Screen adaptation of Woody Allen's play about the trials Fasclliating fUm about the history of formation of earth through the development or man to travel in space. Spec- tacular visual effecLs. Kier Dullea, Gary Lockwood. Willie Davis , the L o s Angeles. Dodgers star, hasj been si~ned to make his 1 feature film debut in ''\Vhichl 'Vay To The Front?," the l \Varner Bros. comedy of' "'hich Jerry Lewis will be the producer, director and star. Davis will co-star .as one or l'=':;;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::=::;::;::::;::~=::::;;;;;;;~~~~~­ The role is one of the most import.ant in "Chisum," a Techn.icolor-Panavisio.1 f 11 m being di rected by Andrew McLaglen for executive pro- ducer Micl1ael Wayne. Although Geoffrey fits the picture of Billy the Kid, the baby-faced killer of 21 men, he will play him a little dif· ferenUy than have the 01hers. Previous actors have depicted Billy is le ft.handed but writer· producer Andrew J. Fenady says that was only beeause an early photo oE Billy the Kid was reversed, showing him with a gtin on hi.s left hip. So G<offrey will he the only right-handed Billy the Kid. aninrn.Tuwcr ma• r.tllp"tlr JI PICKWICK~ ~~.!!'!~! M0-21!1 11U lllf"l>--=...._,,- tlll.,._. UlJJ tlO Niii . * * * Last Summer (R): A drama about a group of teenagers thro\\71 together for a :sum· mer. Barbara Her s h ey , Richard Thomas. Marlotfe (M): While ADULTS searching for a client's miss· Premiere Of 'Horses' Announced Alice's Res&aurant (RJ: ing brol.her, private Philip Story of Arlo Guthrie's search 1t1arlowe (James Garner) gets for his "thjng" in life. It is set mixed up with some ice-pick in Massachusetts w h e rt e murders and a complicated Guthrie is guest of friends who blackmail plot. b h ch d t ·1 · 1 The \\f'est Coast premiere on uy a c ur an urn 1 in o a 1\te, Natalie (~fl: Pally restaurant. Film shows yot.r.1g Duke portrays an adolescent December 17 of' "They Shoot people in the background Qf a who is hurt and embarrassed Horses. non·t They?" will commune. by her own lack of appeal and launch an exclusive unlimited The Good, the Bad. and the her par&nlLJlttempts to mar· engagement of the ABC Pic- Ugly: A violent Spanish-Italian ry her off. An affair with a tures Corp. drama at the Western with Clint Eastwood married man and life in Picwood Theatre in L 0 s and Eli Wallach. Gree:iWich Village give her Angeles. Gyp.y Moth. (R): Drama in :ielf-aS!Ul'ance. Th . S I e mot.ion picture, set which the leader of a ""Skydlv· ta rcaae CR): RI ch a rd . the b B rton d Re H 1 agaJnst ackdrop of the Ing trio falls in love with the u an x anison P ay marathon dance craze which faithless wife of a dull, small· unhappy, unfulfilled people in swept America in the 30's. town business man. Burt Lan· this study of two aging stars Jane Fonda, Michael caster, Deborah Kerr. homosexual barbers. Sarrazin, Susannah York, Gig Hell'• Angel• •a <Ml~ Two .The .seen~. Cllckoo <.~~): Young and Red Buttons. wealthy brothers crash Hell 's L-na At1nnelli gives.a sensitive The film recreates the fran- Angels' membership in order .. performance in Uus ~tory of to use them as 8 diverslonarY l~o loll'ely college .kids .who tic desperation pathos, panic, tactic while a Las Vegas find love for the first tune. and humor or the Great casino is robbed. Torn Stern, Wendell Burton also stars. Depression and the hungry generation which was both Jeremy Slate. &IA.TRUE TEENS turned on by the bizarre dance ANO ADULTS marathon fad and turned to it The Undefeated (G ): Post civil war story of a friendship that blossoms between tY.'O Colonels, John Wayne, Uniorl -Rock Hudson, Co.1federate, y,·ho meet en route to Mexico. FAMILY Chitty Chitty Bang Bang (G): Dick Van Dyke portrays lhe crackpot inventor of Jan Fleming's fantasy. }le remodels an old racing car and spins fabulous yarns to the amusement of his adoring children. Sally A·.1n liowes co- stars. Darby O'Gill and lbt Little People (GI : A reissue of Wall Disney's fantasy abou t a com- pulsive old Irish story teller who gets into a batUe of wits with leprechauns, A I b e r t Sharpe, Sean Connery, Janet Munro. Krakatoa, East of Java (G): Awe~ome, volcanic eruption of Krakatoa and the monstrous Udal wave that follows furnish the framework and climax of this tale or a sunke-.1 treasure. Spectacular special effects. Maximilian Schelle, Bria n Keith. six misfits who throw both the U.S. Army and enemy com· mand t.1to upheaval ·in the World War II comedy satire. I The screenplay. by Gerald Gardner and Dee Caruso, is l based on an original story by Les Colodny and Richard Bakalayan. The film i s scheduled lo go before the ca1neras In December at the \Vai:_ner Bras. Studios. BOTH "G" RATED Crossword Puzzle Day of Anger tM J: Lee Vr.1 for sheer Cleef stars· as a gunfighter "They Shoot Horses, Don't wbo teaches his protege the They?" was filmed on a set values of the v.1!apon they live replica of Los Angeles' famed by. Aragon Ballroom where the Oliver ( G I : Spectacular musical version of Dickens' classic about an orphaned waif cast into the teeming squ alor of the lo\\·er class. lie finally escapes to the elegance of the upper class. f\Iark Lester, Jack \\lild and Oliver Reed. • .. l.if~. ,,,,_,,..,.,. KRAIOOOA USTOFJAYA ACROSS l Adept S·Dtct il 9 Timbtrs 114 Crucl 1I point '15 lsr1etl diner 16 Kind of food .17 Dtssert 18 ~~·, A1i "i St1son1": 2 words I• Typr 20 At 1nytimt 21 Fabric 2) Haro ld -: 1934 Nobtf Prlrt winne r 2C Infers Z6 Follow stealthlly 28 C.1rmtn,I; Inform it 241 l %6 0SClt• winning son11: 2 'llfords 31 Yawned J9 Account tntly 37 Be under the Wtllhtt 38 Ch•rtcttrf.itd -by trdor 39 F're•·'f«Hll , .. •O Bus iness est&bl lstnntnl 0 • 41 Rtcrtalion: Abbi, •2 Nul 41 -Island 44 Boasllul person •6 Because 47 Assrss 48 Ros e high 52 Ctntr1I Afr ican n1live SS Worr : 2 words 57 Bird 58 Shoppin g center 60 Propel 61 Chrn11e 62 Turk ish Lll'lit of valut 63 Actor Jilllnlngs 64 Noled school 65 ··-01mr 66 Cut In to cubes 67 T111st DOWN ·1 Frlgned 2 Intrepid J Entlctd 4 Stuck out S Protec trd •~• rl•re l Dwtl Ing un its 7 Island ntar lrtl1nd 8 Minnesot&n's neighbor If Ranch sound l D Ovffwlltlni 11 Rtd al~ar r~tnic hon 12 liltllUre ll Wr1vrr'1-rerd 1Z Formtr Vanleer !real Z5 omtthing ruminated • 27 lnterrst . Abbr. 29 F11hrred JD Form ol prt• clpllltlon Jl Hibern ia, today 32 Aboundln9 1n crrta in trrts ll Attirr 1VY119 Dr. Zhivago: Story of young rriarathon craze reached il<J Russian doctor and -poet peak. Miss Fonda, shedding caught in his country's revolu-her sex kitten·ifnage, portrays tlonary upheaval. 0 ma r a marathon dancer embi ttered Sharif, Geraldine C fl a P 1 i D, toward Ji!e and Michael Sar· Julie Christle. razin stani as a placiq dancer The Finl Time (Ml : Three in Ctlnlrol or her desUOy. Miss adolescent boys look for sex-York is an emotionally driven ual experience during swnmer contestant. desperately hoping vacation . \Ves Stern, Jae· to be "disC1:1vered'' in the queline Bisset. grueling, exhausting marathon Hang 'Em Rlgb: Cll·.1t emceed by Gig Young. Red J4 Dtc:lare Eastwood is a Deputy Marshal Buttons, in his most important confldrntlY hunting vigilantes who tried role since his Oscar-winning l5 Type to lynch him, performance in "Saunnara," lio Abat ed " .,-·· 39 One of two U It 's Tueiiday, Tbf1 ~1ast is also a marathon contestant. crrta!nt\rs be Belgium (G): A busload of The dance marathon craze, 40 Woodsman American tourists whizzing never witne ssed by halt the 4Z Profts$lon•I hilariously through Europe in nation's population \Vho ha\'e 43 ~r:r'!::a~l~~i search ol instant culture are been born !lince it was outlaw· 4S Rai;t 1nlm1I shepherded by a jaded young ed. thrived during a period ~6 C1rrss Englishman. Ian ?rfcShane, when people were the ultimate 48 Kind of Suzanne Pleshette. spectacle and survival was medlc;inr Once u ...... • Time •-the lh · I 4•Way li~;;;;;;;'';;-;;;;;;~g;;:;;;;;;;~c~ir4on~y;;co;n;c;er;n;.;;;;;;;;I SD Actor ' ll ~~I;;·;;;. r 111i .. ;11i·.:°'= ................ , . 54 Eng ros srd y II i SO Nu111erlc1I OU Wint te M tome item prrflx that yeu no longer need but 59 P•t of MmNI .. ehe can UM for "to be" 11 I NOT OYER $50 ? ? ? ? ? ? YOUI ANSWEI: Yov call THE DA1l Y PILOT, ••k 1w CIOlllflod MNrttli,., •nd pl-• PILOT PENNY PINCHER ~!l!i.,-., CLASSIFIED AD AT OUR SPECIAL LOW llATE 3 UNIS 2 TIMIS 2 DOI.LAU .AHi> YOUR CREDIT IS GOOD I Peter Pan: Disney's animated version of James Barrie's classic story Of the boy who never grows up. Ring ol Bright Water (Gl: Bill Tra vers a:id Vi rginia f\;fcKenna play the leading roles in thi5 film about a vlriter who settles in an an· cient seaside cottage in the Scottish Highlands so his pel otter will have living space. The Yellow Submarine IGl: Sparkling animated cartoon featuring the special humor and music or the Beatles. as they become the heroes in a right to save Pepperla:.1d from the Blue Meanies. * • • The letter immediately after the title indicates the rating given t he picture by tl1e Motion Picture Code . The /.lotion Picture Code A 'id Rating Program tnay1 be fou nd 01i the motion picture 7Mge, TH! MOTION PICTURE CODE AND RA TINIO PROIORAM Thi Motion Picf11r1 Coclo ancl R1ll119 Acl'"l11l1tratio11 •ppli11 fht followin9 r1tin91 to fil'"' di1tribul1d in th1 U.S.A. Pie.· !11r11 rtttcl G, M or R q111lify for tfl• Cocl1 S11l. ..., 'lct11ro1 1at1cl X clo 1101 r1c1i"1 • Saal, Thi ratin91 1pply to pfc.t11r11 11l1t1•cl 1H1r Nol'I'"• I btr I, lf6&, ,lc.f\lt1• relo1t1cl boforo fir.at cl•I• ••• d11 <rlb. ocl ft prtwloutly ( 0. i ncl/or SMA I. {W-S1199l1t•d for GINllAL 111clitn'''' 1MJ-S119911ttd fer MA.TUii •11dianc1• I P1t111!1I clh. crotieft 1cl•i1adl. 1:ID -1m11cT1D -'•110111 1 1111cl1t 16 not 1cl'"itl1d, unl111 atco"'p1nf1cl by ~•ront •t •clwlt g11&tcl· ••n. lllAL NOW DIRECT! i 6 4 2 • 5 6 7 8 @ ......... ·-" ... I.fil@ TECHNICOLOR § end from the stars of "Born Free' comes "RING OF BRIGHT WATER " STARTS CHRISTMAS DAY B1rbar1 Streisand Omar Sharif "FUNNY GIRL" ~---5.c.oM ,o,11l1111r .Anroc,I01t <M ,,_.,. c.-, '*1ZltJ ,tnc.!1011 '"•Y h1 ~r,~., i •tlmlttff. Thit •t• , •. •••••~•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••1**~.,_~~1-'-'-"-''-''~·-"-''~c-'_••_•Jl"llllllllll .. llllli• ~,Pa!~f ~ 1'05 Ent Coost Hlgllwo'f Corino del M-tolJ. 673·6260 now you can SEE anyll1ing you want ~iciEis ItmAUMNT" • .... , ARLO GUTHRIE COLOR by OeLu-~ Unlltd Arl1st1 ~ 1'" ._., ... 3rd BIG WEEK c.n 673-6260 For Information Continuous Show Sunday From 2 p.m. HELD OVER _Cll"' ... IOl- JohnWwne Rode Hudson ~the Undefeated "'"'" C-j"ixsoUTH COAST C!NtRIL r PLAZA THEATRB CCRPl!RUlnN San Oie&O Frttw111t l!.ritt.,. • 546°271 t NOW PLAYING TH RU TUESDAY SPECIAL 00-2o. ... -.. ~ .. ·t-,.,,..1 .. 1 CHILDREN'S MATINEE Saturday, 12:30 JERRY LEWIS "Hook, Line & Sinker" ' PLUS EXCITING ADVENTURE FILM "RHINO" ALL SEATS SOe t TUMBLEWEEDS YAAAAAAA! l'M 61TI'IN' R£;AOV FER"lllE' Ill~ llATll.E! ll\l ~IN'RE!RfAllN' By Tom K: Ryan IF I WAS PRACK'SIN' A1TACKIN1l'D1!E RUNNllllTllE on£R Pll!ECKSHUN151!JOPl!l! SALLY BANANAS S~M.-.R.i.# ,.,;Lt c-. .,,.J. :t.J... I 'IHOOOlf~ WtllE PRACllON' A1fAOllNG! . ~-··#tr.~ PLAIN JANE [ftrv 'DAILY ~OG ______ , DECEMBER 5 DECEMBER 6 EVtNING • "*' 1 •ir ..._ (C) (&0) Jtny Dunphy, ~ 00 ~ H . m lhldeJ-ltinkllJ (C) (30) (Iii (JJ m St.. .W.. (C) (90) Joe Tu, Mr. Wlshbo111 (C} Ch1ries Nt!Di R~i!IJ, leonMd 8111 Ftllr Hit C.t (CJ 111d -""' Colllns ,uest. 1:25 Gift Ui nil a.,. (t) 0 "BABY THE RAIN 7"0 """" "'"""' ctl * MUST FAU"-STEVE lil1J '"''" """"' (C) <R> @(})@ s..u, tllt ••• McQUEEN, LEE REMICK Rudi~1 Wltll ltlll' Cllild fJ Sb' O'et.dl: 111ow1« ... .., 1111 Ion Ult Clon (C) PERKINS 111• Mnt Fall" (drama) '65 -....00 Qf.t~ TIM JtbOns (C) Stt\'t Mc.Qu•n, let Remick. Don • ta) 6 6E Mtrt Com11 !tit MutrlJ. GrMlllP ) , Diet •• °"' <JO> I @ rn m c.ttanot1• Cits <CJ .... ,... (30) IUftlbl (C) ltllr Trek (C) (60) Ttlts ti Wdla Fa111 NET Qildm't Sptdal (C) (60) GumbJ {t) n.p. di f"lrdol (30) l :l00®([)8up 11111111/ltold br.-"9n (C) {60) Jatk WhitL ntr Hour (C) 1:36 uec ,..._rwkt (C) (30) -~(j)m!ink P•ntMr <C> 1'e Ii•• C1111t (C) (30) ta•!* l'follle (C J Tt TIO 1111 Tnrth (C) (30) M11tie: "Tht Gold~ M18" (Id· Office lff tlle Pruidttlt {30) VMhll't) ·•54 -Van Heflin, W1nd1 Ncitidtrt 3C (C) (60) Hendrix. 7:DD CIS Evtninf News (C) (30) Rodcet Robin Hood (C) JUDGE PARKER News (C) (30) -I Clst11 li:id • Whit's MJ line? (C) (30) 9:00 @ 00 @DH. R. Pufnstul (Cl I l.ftl lutJ (30) Movi1: "Entet Arsine Lupint" ''JI•-------... But tflt Clodc (C) (30) (rnyltery) '44-llla Raines. II C..lllOditJ/Mutu11 rund f!l @{i) GJ Hot Wheels (CJ · Altort! (30) m Movlt: "HlrhJJ D•nEMOUI'' (dr~· . Alltrit111 West (C) (30) 1111) '51 -Dane Cler~. Marg11tl • THt Cirl (C) (30) LDtk'flood. 7:30 a (I} Get Smut {C) (30)' I Rutt •rt Reddy {t) When retative\J younr CONTROL . C.!!Clo~n 1 Music• 11ents 111 turlll!d Info old men 9:30 ~Cl) Dnt.udly I M11ttle1 (C) witllln hours. Smart and 99 111 . a-, (6) ED 81n1n1 Splitt (CJ 1fter the ·mysterious KAOS egenl @ [~ Q) Tltfl H11dr 8oJS (C) with .Hie formul1 ~ 111 people IAmallnt Thret avn1ght,. ROI: realiz1~1 tMI lhe1 . Cu~du y Gurtann 1r1 llUI Oft hls Ust. 10:00 ®,; ® Penelop• Pttstop ('C) Q tr;) I SlllCIAL I "Rwdolph . th1 1fJ @ @ G,l NCM football (C) ... •otte1 RtlnllMt"' {C) (60) 8u1I l elas at Alkansas. t\111 Is Nrntor of this 1nnu1I 0 Mowie: (C) "Clr1tll CltJ"' (west·' Yuletide pmtntltion 1bout the ht· ern) '5Z-R111dolph Scott, Locll tit dtw whl "comes to Hit 1ld ol Noiman S1nt1.• _ (£) Mow.Ir. "'Pollet Doi'" (d11ma) I .._. .. Sbn (C) (30) ·s~Tim fumer, S.Adra DomL ( ) (30) Monty Hlfl hos1s. 10:30 ta([) icoobJ.DH (C) @(f)fDl.tt's M1'1 •hi/ IEl Dob' M Aatr · IJMllli.. $ Ml'lil: (C) "Diii 'M' . @@ml111bl (C) lor Ml_lfdtt"' (suspense) '54 -Ray Mowlt: .,.n In tt11 Iron Mm" Milland, Grtte l(all1, Robert Cum· (drama) '39-louis H8)'W1rd, mlnp. m Movie: "Tiii M1pllictnt Rough· I Tnrltl ., Conlq111r1C11 (C) (30) nttU" (drama) '56-.lack Cl1son, JlllH llir ttll Oeltll• (C) (60) Micli;ey Rooney, Haney G1tes. Tldlllail Corti• (30) . 11:00 EJ ® (J) TH A1dlil Sllow (C) n. '~ cw <30J Juli• o aioo mm Footb•M 1c> Child prtp.vec French Crepes n. (R) New Yor11 Jell n. HouJton Oiiers £E CIMtdlo ti Roto (30) 11 Houston. l:DD IJ Qf) Cl) Tlll Cood '"" (Cl (30) ll:JO 0 M"ic "Santi ft Trail" (west· Guest Eddie llb)'lhoff helps out In em) •4o:....£rro1 Fl)'n11. OIM1 d• 1 cri.sls wlleit 1 chimpanzee leR In Hayllland, Yan He!lln. Rufus' catl hims out to bt I lfUI (D Mft'it: "Jennn.-(drtrna) '53- Wlit• tnd sets n offer for 1 ras· Howard OU1"1. ld1 Lupi110. taur1nt al his owa. . r.rTrR ~i Qt)'I 8 llMtJ lnh111 Cnude (C) (60) ~ (l!(})Q)Th• Brady lundt ff (Cl (30) "Every Boy Does 1t.• Bob- by Brady h convinced that llObody lt:m D 9 Cl) Thi MIU• IC} . kwes hl111 and decide to run n ay. 0 Morie: "So• fll Montt Cristo" I Qun• fOf 1 hy (C) (30) (adventure) 40--Geor&a Sandlr&. Slodl 1f1rltt/ruts11 (30) Joa" e .. neft. LDuls Hll)'Ward. A,...,, kw atld~ (C) (JO)l l[w111s.Aont R1port (C) LKldtl (JO) I · Ttltrt F11nt!lar l:.JO @ (() ttot:111's tttr111 (C) (301 · 11~1 lshte Siio• (C) Thi Heroes .t!tmpl to toil 1n trie.-12:30 Inside footb1U (C} my plot to flood the neutr1I coun· Mfr'll~: -Hou• Ill Stt111.pn" tries with courrterfeit U.S. currencr. (dr1m1) 49--Edw~nl C. Rob1naon, D 9@ ~ N1m1 fll tflt Chm• Susan H1yward, A•chud Con!L (°?) (90) "H11h Card." Gert1 Barry, m Set !flt USA (C) as publisher Glenn Howard, is It-12:45 0 Hfl TodlY. (CJ Chlcaro Bt:111 euud of beln1 the rnan who tipp~d ,¥5. ~n fraoo!Co 4!:'1im It Sin olf the Cu~ns about the Bay ot franc1sc~. .. Pip kw1sioll, by 1 wn1tor who 1:00 D M~v11: "Tl!e 'rut Ch1sa {com· claims to h1v1 plloto1r1ph ic proof IM!y_) &3 -Buster Ke1ton, Peul tlf thl chirp I Wh1IP. Q @@tl>Mr. O.ds Goes 10 (i)lnlem1~1I Tr1dtr1 / Ho111• T.,,. (C) (30) "A Ransom in Small slr1d (C) _ Unmarked Rowen." De!Mls is acd i C.rc1I dt Mlf!trts denl1l1Y tldnaped wh'n ~·s car h. • Sjr!>lts Wor1d (CJ stolen by tWD boys. 1 ;30 ft1l CI! !ll Sky H1w\.1 (C) TIM I ii V1Htf (C) (60) · Ser Powtr (C) S.pb111sh Tht1tr1 (60) 2:000ISP[tiAL 1 .. 0. J.• Tom .Harmon Casals Muhr C11• (30) '11 ~ and narrator for thlt doco-- Necht1 T1pati11 (30) mentuy on one of Ille most rt· .UYSE rr'S JAY llAAGINA.TION •• !UT IT SES\S LIKE THAT CAR'S ~EN FOUOWING ME! MOON MULLINS Lor's 51'1' ... P.APoR· B,ACi<'.· .,, ' STEVE ROPER 6000 MORNING! ~WHAT CM! I 00 ~R ')OU! I Dnid Frost (CJ (90) Wr1s1Una: {C) l:OO Qt(J)Clllfrtdtylilowlr. "Hn· 111a1klble runnina: baclll M col· ln1 1 Wild Yflllltftd" (muk11) '65 jeg11te fcotball history. (R) -Thi Dan a.ra r~ 81111111 l @W al CulllY1t <'l ferns. • lrlfel thl Wortd IC) 8 "9rbtY Aftet" O.rt; (Cl (60) 2:JO fii)@ al r1nt1stic Vor111 (C) LOOK, )t)U0VE BEEN IN '™E SAME JOB 'R:>R'YEARS AND YolJ NEVER GOT AN I Gar A"TWO DOLL.AR RAISE 8uddr Greco Shari Lewis. Johnny · W1ron Tr11n {C) Jiois. J,ect c;,Mn al'ld Y¥Onne Wild· Chilttr er 1nd The Canned Heit 1~1 · The AMwer (C) O tmCf>®H11e Co1111 t~• J:OD • H11h Sdlool 8Wetb1JI (C) Irides (C) (60) "Thi Fetchin1 of Garnt of !ht Week. .ltnll)'." Jason attempts lo tetli 0 UCLA Bnt:etb1n Ct) Di'k [n· Jenny l lnd i!'l!o sin&in1 tor thtl berl e1 ll1 t1H1 action 11 the Bn.11n1 peoplt of Seattle, Mala Powen t~ke on thl Minnesoh Gop:htrs. 1UISll n J.mnr Lind 1nd Alan Hale I 0 t!!J m Gl Amulcan 11.tnds!lnd at Bil Luthi!'. I m~m~!JHobe J:1Uy's TOJ·A· m !fEc11it I H11n1tr. The Los An-Tho n (C) l ld RllPORM (C) (60) L m Ti1mpo de Perdo11 N1tw1 Cit1 MusiCll (30) tI) Bil PidUfl (C) t:lO ,.... (C) (30) Baxter Wa11I. J;JO 0 Mcwi1: •J,ect~I'" (drama) '62 Ht Slid, $bt Said (C) (30) -Wilh1m Hartntll, Betty M~w11L '~ 1111'11 Optlt (60) I llronco 1'tn0tr11111 1301 Upbt1! ICI ' 10:00 @rnm11.ue11'1we11d1tJ 4:00 St•P' t• lt1f'11nc 1Cl (60) "lt'a !ht !'ewer Shutlurt. · I Spy (C) IO:JO ""' 81by.• I"''~ Fro111 UNCl! CCl t 8 m NNS jC) (30) · E~lll" O'lotlt ~ (}) ® Ji•1111 Dmnt1 P~ 4:30 Tht New Socidf (C) P1u1 Udtll. Hiiis "'' LlllllM Sbters (C) (60) . '•ulh lfld tilt Police (C) "Drua: Miiion B1r1t, Jo Ann Castle. John lnlorme tion Pl~~H." Stewart autst . 0 OutOoors (CJ 0 0.111! (Cl (60) Phil Fosler, V1ck1 0 (it) (})ID i IPIC\AL I 1969 Lawr1nc1 ind fred Smoot auest USGA Hla:fllia:hb (C) Proa:rfm 111• '"" Mason (60) turn lhe bi1 rnomenh in tour m•· n.t H1pp1nlKI Up Tiie"~ (60) IOI 1011 \Mirnamenlt• The 1969 U.S. Certll dt Mujtrts (30) Ontn. fht U.S. Men's Am1!1ur cmtllll c1-11n (30) Champ:ionlhlp, tM Women's Open 0 0 m Nnn (C) i nd tht Wtlklr Cup f1n1IJ. .,.. ~ I UM• 30: Qkl111 (C) ,...... · TIM Worlli fll a.uty (C) INt' U.lb !:'Oii Y'llWpofnr(t) 1ere Wittt1 flosts. f"'fh sac• (R') , 1r1 M.ldemic (t) Competln1 Jl:JI Mel'I Criffln (t} IP1dllt Pa!ludts). Polyttth"lc Hllll Im News (C) hlth tchOO!s 1r1 P11isades Hl1h ID Jlllnny C1rien (C} 1 ('\un Vtlley) i nd W&rrtn Hl1h lllt'fll: ''Thi Plltllct" (com !Downey) 8) '48-Sob Hopt, Jant Ruu.u O Tllis Wtt-!11 ht rooth•R (Cl ~())fl) J017 l isllop (C) 0 @ r$) tl) Me's Wid1 World If Mtwte: '"Godllll1" ()ci·I•) 'M-Sports (C) former Olympic limy· R.,.mond Buff, wtil lll dlllTlpfotl Gtor1e forem111 tD ~ (C) "ttotM ii llldlln1• l11f'ib I llil·•·M-Nlecild 09!)0- (drtml) '444.0n McAJliStlf', Jc1nu ntnt Oft thl 11tt!mln.,y bout. Cr11ft. I TM m.111\ (CJ tt:DO ID lllt"'9: "frll" Cd11m1) 'SI -llkllrl IC} .IN• slmmot1J. Mldllll llll'lnle, ht• Ctlll Anfll Cnwford, , NJC;t Chell Cotb: "Itel Willl 1 :008lle\llr.~(C) "flit Cl'IN'dtd n(' Yiet1blff." (II) (dr11111) '60-Dlfll Andrewi, Elrt m -Tut!IOl·1otttr • 2imb1!1tt Jr~ R110nd1 fltm1ill, S:lO lhlpllc St111 (CJ fll') I 0 ftlWl CCI KNDC Ntwttl'ficl (C) CMntrJ Music Tim• ft) M1. aod Mf1. Nol'lll l :JS CM•lllitr llullttit1 10114 (C) M.t-1 lit PtrsPtthtt CCI (R) I AOVAN ENT.1 Tt-!REE YEARS MISS PEACH /<IARCJA1 IS™IS FAIRi' AOO ""' ~-in-.JJ. :tJ.;o.. i.IE'5 PULLING OFF 1HE ROAt> INTO THAf G-'S ~TATION: KNITTING,V c,AJ.JDY, """CilEWJf/<{ D .,,.. .,.... <il.IM ,/ YOlJ HAVE NO 1N1TrATIVE.I YOU HAVE NO DRIVE! NO FORWARDNESS!' YOU DON'T MAKE ANY ADVANCES! . By Frank llClfJlnUI , By John Miles · By Ferd Jo!inson ' rr•s MY FIF>ST DAY oi-J "THE .JOI> AND IIL~ Nol'D SOMETHING ;o DO W~ILo l'M WO!ll<ING ... ? ~h By AJ Smith AW,COME ON NOW, BAEIY. +PH Al!OllT A DATE ToNl~HT AT SEVEN? WHKr5AY7 ..... ,. ' • ' DAii. y Ion#! J1 By' C .. if .... Mllf, , f.\~,;t~ I ~:ta~.,,:., . I I'-. -a.~F~ ..... : .• • • .. PEANUTS :lly .c~s M. s.;•111 ---~ IST'OIRlllfr.ldICllQB) , l,N.SO CAN DfS1llW YCJJ_} • . TELEVISIOI! VJEWS Vid~o Rough On· Language • By CYNTHIA LOWRY ·; .. -. NEW YORK (AP) -With all the crlUclSlll ol televi!ion viol•l)C•.' it is surprising there 1\lvd'I bffn more complaints abOut the way it 111111d8,n tbe Erlgllah. laJil'Uf(e. Wba\'s more, the. dam•&• usually is prtmeditate?. 1 1'Jost t.1 th• slaughter is done in the lnlAlrull of Comedy' or estatiH•hing character. While ~ Dillon and Daniel· Boone, two hero types with bf' ·audiences of. children, are seldom guilty of. any·· thing mort1 1eripus than g-dropping. their CO\lllcal sidekicks 1'eally'a11ault the mother tongue. fESlVS oJ "Gunsmoke" produces a tortured brand of English that in addition to being ~tly ungr~alical ls often almQst impossible to· et· 8.tand. · Jiinmy Dean in Thursday night'•· '~Pllhiel Boone" was•sprinkling 11aint'' liberally thrqh·.hls sentences and usually used "done•' when he' meant .. did /' as in "he" done, it." · JlM NABORS does .Orne strange things to the Janguafe when he.~ into his "Gomer Pyle" ac- . cents. n the comedy sketch of his variety hour Thursday night btJ.·kept ca1ling a window a ''win- der" and generally ~tting the letttr r where nQne exists. . · 1 • Constant exposure to slopj>y apeech probably can't teally hurt young viewers, or interfere w'fth their development. But it does set a bad exani)lle and , most of the time, isn 't necessary. ·· NBC HAS stouUy maintained that it couldn't be done, but now. says it has found a way to ~· some of the frequent, annoying commercial bi'eaJi:1~ on the Johnny Carson Stfow. For one ihi111, aftff Jan. 1, the ahow will start with a Carson monologue, not, as now, a uleaipitch. .. , CBS AND NBC have<rilanaged another colliaion of spec!alt, On Saturday nigh~ •NBC hat a 90- minute "Hall of Fame" •~ial,. "The Littlest Angel" starting at 7:3!1 PST. Anr>-Margret'•.•1*!al, "From Hollywood, With t,ove," arrives on CilS at · 8:30. . . The sOCOlld Ann-Margr.t apeclaJ •baa a very busy star who sinis aruxi dances her way thrDuct( the hour -alonl( freewa:vs , on movi._ sets, in OJ)elt fi.elds, on the decks of a ahlp~ • -;1., • ' I '-• The program does not work '11 l"i!lJ 11 ~;r fliit 1peclal last 1ea1on, Pl'.O!>ably ~in1io· ·•Y~Y· was trying 10 haro to top, it. Th~ moot i)l~g 1egments were the •bot.I on location, Mo.I di•IP- pointing was a lonR comedy akttob· wtih Dean Mar- tin which was neither lullny nor smoothly played. LUCILLE BALL and Ann-Margret, dresstd In frlght wigs, sang a bright ·and amusing novelty son~ about autograph hunters . The hour is certainty worth a look -It onl:V tG catch a glimpse of the star's good-looking clalhet •. She changed costumes a iol. I Dennis the Menace • . - ... •••t•••.s•••a"a•t1&1•lt•1t 12121a11c1:•111t11111: 12• .. •t 1112•s11c .. ••-""""s• .. s••••: ... ""1""'11100!: ,,.., ... .,.,.,,.,, .. _,.,:'Y"!!"!,...L"', ,,... __ _, __ ..,..., -... ~,..,,,....; ,,,,.,....,..~ .. ~.,,.,.,_._"" -.... , •. -.:. ... _ ... l" ,.. __ _ • . • ' • • $· $ 1965 PLYMOUTH ·1arr1cudii Autometlc tr1n•mi•1io11, r1dio, fieeter, _bucket 11e!•· ~terrific ber91in. CSL· ~15 $795 - . 1967 CHRYLSER Newport Sedan V-1. radio, heifer, eutom•tic t r1n1• mh1ion, power 1t11dng, power br1k11, 1:11lr1m1ly 1:!1en. UQU 199 ~966 CHE·VELLE ... SUper .sport 2-Dr. ~1rdtop v.1, 4 1p11d, reclio, ·h11t1r. R11 Uv 9oe1. RIT 112 $1195 NEW 1970 VALIANT DUSTER 1968 CHRYSLER Town & Country Station Wag. 3 tlth, V.1, r1dio, li11t1r, pow1r tl11rin9. power br1k11, 1utom1fic fr1n1m i11ion, 1l1ctric wi11dow1, f1clory 1ir, 11199191 retk, loaded. 936 J4C . 1965 CHRYSLER· Newport Sed1n v.a, 1 ufom1tic fr•11•mi11io11, power 1te1ring, pow1r br1~1t, redio, heeler, etc . PCS940 $895 •• S•riel No. VL29BOB 187773 1966 OLDS 442 Holiday Coupe V.1. r1dio, h1•t11, i utom1tic fr11u. minion, power 1le1rin9, w~it1 w1ll1. SHARP ll SLV62l $1295 1968 CHEVROLET lmp1l1 2·Dr. Hardtop v.1. redio, "•efer, eulomelic !rent• min ion, power 1te1rin9 , power br1k1t, ~inyl top. low mi!11. ZLH9•l $1 995 1967 PONTIAC Grand Prix 2·0r. Hardtop v.1. r1dio, h11!1r, powe< •ie1rin9, power b11k111, fei;lo1y eir, el1clric window1, l1p1 deck. lo1d1d. TSAb .. O 1967 MERCURY Mlrquis 2·Dr. Hardtop v.1, redio, heeler. 1ulom1tic !rant· min ion, powtt d1ering, power ·bre~et, electric window1 and t1el, lendeu lop, fee, 1ir c~ilioning. SWW9 20 $1895 1968 PLYMOUTH Sport Satellite 2 Dr. Hardtop v.a . eulom 11ic +ren1mi11ion, redio, heeler, power 1t11rin9 , eir cond. buc· kit 111h, ele. REAL SAVINGS VTPJ 17 All prices are plus tax & lie. Prices valid until Sunday at 10:00 P.M., Dec. 7, 1969. Automobiles are subject to prior sale. · CHRYSLER PLYMOUTH . IMPERIAL - \ -..... -------------------~---.-------~·~...-~~~·~-------..-.~ .................. --.····-~· ...... _,_,_ .. --~......,....- . B ,AND·. NEW .1970 ·. . ·.. . . ~4·T. FORD TRUCK I EL DORADO CAMPER BIA. NEW .1.97,0 · · · .. $ · · · TORIN& .G.t. ~ 3488 l·DOOR HARDTOP -~ FULL PRICE ' . Sp>rtsroof .. a cyl.,' eolor-keytd · roci09 mirrors. hoodscoope, courtesy lights,' color •ke~.'"nylon '70 F-250 Carpet ing, fo.am padded seats, wide ovil belted , ti~ .S$l2?'8;·8.~ 2o. '111.>N IMMEDIATE DEUVER·Y ' ---------------------~---k-- .. : a: a.s.t:;: u ,c 1 &.a.ts o.u u;:: t.c t.:. s: *· .c.esz, o.o»s;:;Y.t.t>~t»as s.:4; :. :.41 •• e•s ~ t . ms ,., f ·*, s ..... • ' J . ,; .• 1,c r.~• r.• ... ' • l l • ' • . • • ' ' ' ! • l • ' j . I -· , . !:'£USES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSESFOR'SAL£ HOUSE$ FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOU$1S FOR ,SALE . I HOuSIS 'FDR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE ''GMMr1I 1000Gentral , 1000 ~~!.al J~ ~neral ' -_ '1C~ 09ner•I 1000 O.ner•t 1000 GMMr•I · lOOO General 1000 General 109Q , iiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii•Jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii l HEAVY I NEW VIEW HOMES FINER HOMES Open Hou! L,B & Son. l.S u~!!A8~~ !~~~VE COLLEGE PARK 'I . ,. • ,, -• .• , ... -I ''· .. THE ''MINI DOWN:' ... Comes to .< ·:. Fountain Valley.~ ,~It's True, for Only • ~ i~Vou can ow n a Century Home s Two Plan, 1Unit One and have all the feat ures lis ted 'be:ow included in the price of $39,950 el '' ~o blro Cost! ,, ::-J• .. Volley ~entury Home5 Feo tures. ot No xtra Cost incl udp: i7lltt1t .. rn12:t ' LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT l'.M. l1CI ,,...;,,.Avenue. ~.r~~=·~i:,~: (• K~!~~s~m•I 1 'JGlQ_:J4-·-' .-.i IN DOVER SHORES A fantastic bayfront bu)r. 3 large bedrooms, ~,;~:~~~ :~u.';!: i1e d~tinr greets you 81 Corner Jot with specW park- 1 3 baths: iieparate dining room ; 55 ft. of bay-lot5 of rlass to patiO & poqt.: you \f~ in\o.,lhe e;ll!Jant"liv. 1nr area for boat&: camper! ~Jvan Wells & Sons have just completed 3 front with pier & slip. Asking $105,000.·0pen Oolvn p&,yll1ent ~~ finanb: ·lhr ro6m. 'f'hM. targe bed. Adult occupied home "1th brand new homes, ready fo r immediate OCCU· Saturday & Sunday. 106 Linda Isle Drive . / ing fie!(lble to qua1ip~ Buy-roomi, Tv.·o Pullman baths. near new carpetifl:. Vac~t pancy. 4 bdrms, 3 baths plus powder room. er. ptitt. $49.500. , ~~U .t ~1~ .... kitchen,~• & ready !or ylij.lr Christmas PanelJed family room w/fireplace. Formal BAYFRONT ~%{OJ • Evtl."~ "" t-ins, ;, .... uulllJ new 1'"''' oceupancy. Call now to i;ee. 1 • dining r,oom-kitche'n breakfast a rea. Luxuri· Ready for immediate occupancy. Large 2· ;:::;·~~~~ ~~~ ously carpeted. Landscaped courtyard pools. story Ba_vfront home wi th 4 spacious bed· A:bsentee Owner anldou~ to al=.;,.,._ -.• v .. -• pa•-'"'· ~ Sl06 \JOO sell~ 3 bdnn 2~i bath 'fown. -c:_ ........ "v cu uv r rom , · rooms, I a r g e llvin·g room, fo r mal dining rounded-'~y beeuliW IJwn. ·IVAN WELLS & SONS 1430 Galaxy Drive (Optiq D1ily) 646.ISSO Roy J, Ward Co. Exdusive Agents General 1000 General. 1000 Private Work Shop $22,000 Price in c:\ceUen1 Coslll l\1esa. :i Nici' sized bedrooms anti a hous~ Juli of fresh carpel. Ovef'SUC'd lot with BIG, ~IG 14 x 30 \VORKSHOP for Dael ! To1vering trees oU huge custom covered patio! $1,2:i0 00\VN for any buyCr or NO DOWN VETS! , ,WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee 2790 l larhor Blvd. :ii Adams ;,.1;-,.040:i Opt'n 'Iii 9 P~I •MMJSJill'lfil•-"MM • MOVE IN FOR ,CHRIST~AS lmmediate poi;scasio'n to 11 • 11uallf.ed buyer. 3 Bedrooms. luxe lot with alley entrance Lor. boe.t or trailer + :? car garqt". 1 • Block lrom Ir· vine !'Aye. Cl~min~ East- slde Costa Mesa. Hop, skip and a jump from \VestcliU shopping. -$26,950, Lei's talk tern1s. 646-7171 1-0 THEREAL \'."\... ESTATERS 'J' '• _, .•• ' " •".' General 1000 General 1000 Coldwell,-Banker ·:OFFER$: FRONT ROW· CAMEO SHORES . , IJ<>~.J..,U.: pooj. in Ne•· · , room; paneled den with wet bar. Master suije'-porfBeacb. 1-·ive mlr1utts'to 1'11i.s home offers pride ot with sitting roo1n, fireplace & extra large .,Oce~ and Bay. Tem is will ownenh{p Md can be )'OW'I dressing room. Pier & float for large power detern1ine pl"iee! for !)n}y J;lt,.OCiO • or sailboat. See this exciting buy: $175,0QO. 6t}2000 Evei;. 548-6966 Open daily. 515 Bayside Drive. DOVER SHORES Sweeping bay, ocean & mountain view .. 4' Bedrooms, den with fireplace & wet bar; for· mat dlning roorn , glamorous master suite·; high ceilings. 1-"'loor to ceiling s!idin3 \Vall s. Definitely the finest view buy in the Newport Harbor area. ~95,000. Ope,n Sat. & Sun. 1374 Galaxy Dr. BAYFRONT Large forn1al 3 bedroom home \V ith paneled den, dining room & you r O\Yn "'ine cellar. Decorated in exquisite taste . Ov.iner must sell now. $139 ,500. Cal\ for App't. '' DOVER SHORES Dramatic home \Vith exotic a trium. 4 Bed· rooms, 3 baths & powder room. Mr. & l\1rs. baU1 ii1 master suite. Huge. new pool \Vith Jacuzzi. ·E lectric .blaekout drapes in family room. F enced. p3ved area for badminton or volley bsll. Holiie newly & artistically decor4 ated. S95.000. CaU for app't. john macnab REAL TY COMPANY 901 Dover Or., S.uite 120 642-8235 Ope11 Houses O~n House Sat. & Sun. 1.J P:~1. · 2'198 ,Watennan Way, Oorner•of 23rd, just East of · 'sanfa Ana Ave:, ~sta Mesa. J bdrine. <h'!n. dining room. 14uw Nice kitchen, covered patio. ,,.-- OY.·ner will ac('{"pt low down 1,,..,.Eiiviii•ii•ting;i·i;;'•Cal-lii6ii1,.._llii6 .. payment fro1n qualified Buy. r• l'r. Price -S34,500. Availablt for occupancy. · 6~.>200) Eve.!I. 5'IS-ti906 . BAY & BEAC!j R,l:ALJ'Y,. INC,. !lot Dover Dr., Sult(-,Iii NB . . . • ~ '4S..2oot ..... ; ' More People Go Home "Than an'yY.ilere." \Vhy not gl.'l one lo your lilting!· This rancho ·oUers a "hcap.o.liv. Ing. J bcd roon1s, 1he :.;1nall. est of which is just J5' x 12', large fan1lly 1'00m. Built-in rlecllic kilchcn plu5 utlli!y roon1. Complcrely fenced and private M!'IU' yard. Back Bay Newporl Beach. Priced ricbt at $17,1'50. Colesworthy & Co. OCEAN VIEW CAMEO SHORES No expense wa1 :spared lo make lhis home • lovely, comfortable 11 place to live. 3 Spacious bedrooms, .tamily rOon1 '°Mlh b1ick firrplai.-e rorrn&l dloin&: room S1~ livitii room. 17Xla Pool • IHl!.500' Lisred E."<cluslvely \Vith COMP'ANV REALTORS :·.673~400 ·-· SPARKLING CHAlEAU 2 BEDROOM f • ' ~ Harclwoocl Floors ... , . 7 , qo,roo i O'an, sharp home on R-2 IOt. Near ne\Y cpts in this adult occupied home. Ca ll no\Y • tomorrow could be loo late, Newport at Vidoria 6-16-8811 Anytime MOVE IN FOR CHRISTMAS\ 819 Governor. Costa 11esa :: BR l balh. NC'ol'ly painted inside .l out. La.l'gr, fenced yard. $20,500. Open Sal, & Sun. 1 to j , ,''OPEN SAT, SUN 1-5 416 KINGS PLACE Neyrpoi·t Beach. 4 BR., J ba. on 2-lrl'els, arfol'ding unus- ual fa n1ily privacy PLUS hobby roorii &: studio. Ideal for li\'t"-in n1aid or relative. 2,0CO sq. f1. Price $U,j()(]. Dul'ing 1veek by app'I. Call: l\1R, ROBINSON Davis Really 00-7000 Open Daily 1.5 1220 Qolphin1_'err, CdM Formal dining room, J BRs 2 baths, huge living room with fireplace + family l'OOffi overlooking large pa. tio. :!500 si (t Jiving area. ' -'· Lachenmyer Realtor • • -~ • Total I 100°/;J use of kill-size lo!: 12 to l 9ft. wide. s.~ce beside your hbme for b• recrebtional vehicle -boat, camper, tra ile~ -;-.or.use spOce how you wi sh. Designed for gracious couple living. Lush· ly plant.ed pool size patio; extra large beamed ceiling liv. rm. & master bdrm. suite \1:ith pan. view. Pan. den with frpl. . & wet bar. Din. r-m. Separa te guest quar· THIS WEEKENP ~" "Agcnl'' "ror A \Vise Buy'_' oo-nn only "2 ~ oid, ThiS home is a housewife's dream, br'lutifully appointed is\ancl, liled kitchen all' rooms ~. oversized • 2000 sq. ft. Jq all. - A Muter Bed'room su1t t" Ii! for a King and Queen. expen.sive Palos Ver. de !tone fittplace, heavy ~ l'OQt-If yo1:1 want a 1860 Newport Blvd ., CM CAU. 646-3928 Eves. 644-1&55 \ I • 1 ~ I I ( I • ' .. " , • Sturdy. ced ar shal:e roofs '·' Rugged. vaul ted, beam ceiling s Privacy -6ft . Cl ecorll tive block walls c omplete with gates. Fine qualit y wall-to-wa ll ca ~peting Hand some brick lir eplcices , 1.. •/j Separ.!l.le recrea tion rooms and st udies Patio4naster-bedroorn :-.~il es Undergrou_nd ut ilities " .. •• , r l' ~:' 'Continuous-<:l~c!ln i ng double ove ns I Garden kitch en\ rfl Sun ken living room• ~. Wide, deeP. w i ndow~ ,II· '.':· • Concrete driveweys • .r-• Specimen tree in every yo rd ;. YOU OWN TH E LAN D I"; 'HOW CAN IT BE TRUE? IT'S SIMPLE. ,, ,,WITH ABOVE DOWN PAYMENT OF '.:S 1550.00 THE TOTA L AMOUNT FIN-, ·,· ANCED IS $29,400.00 AND 360 PAY· MENTS OF $229.00 EACH, ··l lNCLUD · ·ING PRINCIPLE AND INTE REST AT ; 8.5 % ANNUA L PERC ENT AGE RAT E) j'; '",'PAY S THE LOAN OF F IN JO YEARS. • ,Century Homes/Fountoin V.!l !ley Best Doller Volue, No Opt;onol i.: h .: ' ' Minute s From Beo ch .. I . • ow, l pw Do wn Payme nt• Extrar,, i:: 962-5559 " . ·- E ·Century Ho~s/ ~ounlain Valley °" I Ulh1rd St rMt laet wetn 01rfl11d Ave. af'd Ell i1 Ave . ~· ters. 3 Car gara.ge. $147,500 Kathryn Raulston BAY & OCEAN VIEW Master bedroom & stunning ,bath· in one wing -3 bedrooms' & Z baths in sep. ~·ing of this near-new home in perfect condition. Fireplaces in liv. rm. & den. 3 Car garage. · S89,500 Carol Tatu1n 5 BDRM. HOME-$79,500 Ideal family trome. Lg .. !iv. rm. with beam· ed ceiliQ gs & attractive frpl. 3 Baths. Lge. So. patio. Lot 60 f~., street to street. Needs T.L.C. l\1ary Lou f\'larion IDEAL AREA Ne\vly decorated 3 bdrm. 2 bath home. LovelyD'ack yard. 2nd Story could be add· ed \Vhich \vould provide pan. ocean vie\v. 565,0IJ{) Kathryn Raulston IRVINE TERRACE Gracious 3 bdr n1. home on \vell lndscpd. .corner lot. F'am. rm .. lge. pool & deck area. Prox imity 'to U.C.I., beaches. shop- ping. ~.500 Cathryn Tennille 4 UNIT INCOME-EARNER F'ully & nicely furnished, close to best bay beach &. ocean. All units occupied & in top conditioi\. Sho,vn by app 't. $62.500 \V alter Haase GREAT VIEW -LUSK l·larbor View 1-Iills. 3 Car gar .. 4 BR .. 2 Ba .. Fan1. rm. -kitch. con1bo . F'ront.& rear ya rds prof. landscaped. S59.000 Al Finl< EASTBLUFF .._BEST BUY 4 Bdrm. ho1ne w/sparkllng pool·&: patio . Lrg. din . rm. & brkfst: room . View of back bay & Dover Shores. Owner must sell. $~7.500 · 1'1rs. Harvey PRESTIGE AREA T,1-0 bl!droo111 & den ho1ne. 2 Baths. Din· ing room with garden vie11'. 2 Fireplaces. Beautiful landscaping for m'inimun1 care; in Saycresl. $46:500 f: ~ary .. Lou Marjan ·•. 'IAYSH6RES OPEN .HOUSE Loads of charm in this Cape Cod stone fron~ shake roof., open beam: lots or rm. to 'add ,on. dPen Sun . 1-5 ; 2531 Crestvie\\1, S3$,000 . Joe Clarkson COLDWELL, BANKER & CO. 550 NEWPORT CENTER DR., NEWPbRT BEACH llttp rt.is ll•11dy dlrfttory Witll yo11 thlk w.-0114 n 'I•• t• llo1tM-1!1111tht9, All HI• loco1io111 llst-4 below ore ctacribocf I• '""'°' detoll tty .ctttrthfitt elw-wltero in tlMl•y'1 DAILY' PILOT WANT ADt. P•trau: sllowl'") •Pt'll ~ f•f 1010 er le 101tt •r• P99d hi lht J11ch i11formetio11 111 !Illa col11m11 -11 Fftfff.· • (2 Bedroo m) 253 1 Crestvie\v. (Bayshores) N.B. 833-0700 or 644-2430 (Sun 1-5) 934 f\.1 iramar, Laguna Beach 494-3066 (Sal & Su n 111-5) 12 Bed,oom & F•mi!y or De n) 1519 Bonnie Doone (Irvine Terrace) Cdrit 6?3-0145: 675-4031 (Daily 1-5) (l Bedroom) 2141 Vista Entrada (the Bluffs) NB 675-5930 !Sal & Sun 1·5 ) *5101 Bruce Crescent (Lido Sands) NB 642-5200 (Sun 1-51 870 Joann. (close to School s) Costa l\1esa 546-5460 : 549-1058 EYes. \Su n 12-5) 1600 1\ntigua \Vay (Dover Shores) N.B. 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) **106 Linda Isle Dr,, Ne\vport Beach 642·8235 (Sal & Sun) (J Bed,oo'TI & F•mily or Den) 324 Santa Ana 1\\c. (Nc\11port Hei ghts) NB. 646-1460 !Sal & Sun 1-51 *li42 Irvine (Baycrcst) Ne\vpor1 Beach 645-2()(){) I Sal & Sun 1-5) 2..'>98 \\'aterman \\'av, Costa rviesa 645-2()(){) · \Sal & Sun 1·5) (4 Bed,oom) *2001 f on1modore Road <Baycrestl NB 546-5460 :544·1833 \Sat & Sun 1·5) 14 Bed room & F•mily or Den) *1007 lloliday Road (Baycrest) NB til2-5200 \Sun 1·5) 1514 \Var\vick Lane (\\'estcl iff) NB 642-5200 (Sun 1·5) 10062 1'heseu s Drive, lluntington Beach 962·8923 : i40-7770 (Sat & Sun 1·5l * 1046 Pesc§'dor Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-$200 (Sun l·OJ 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dov er Shores) NB 649-1550 (Daily) 1374 Galaxy Dr. I Dover Shores) N.B. 6'12-8235 (Sat & Sun) **333 i\lorning Star l ... n. (Dover Shores) N.B. 642-8~ , (Sat & Sun) **515 Bayside Uf., Newpoff Beach 642-11235 (Sal & Sun) 1330 Galaxy Dr (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) 585 r..tarquette Circle. C~1 ' 545-5618 (Sat-Sun 12·5 PM) (5· Bedroom) ** 14 Linda lsle \\'r. l\c\Vport Beach 6428235 \Sal & Sun) HOUSE FOR RENT (4 Bedroom & Femily or Don) **1907 Holiday Rd. (Baycresl) N.B 642-5200 (Sun I~) '"' W•terh••f P••I •t14 W•forhoftf -~2~o=N~L.-o=To--I rMl executlve"'liiimf' • This Is 11. $23,500 EASTSIDE COSTA MESA n\·o l:!I SEPARATE, 2 Bed- room homes on" a CHOICE LOT with alley act'C':J.11. T\VO for the price of one at just S2J.51X} for bolh. $2.150 Down v;ill handle~ WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MJNIJTES Walker & Lee ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HilRBOR BLVD. 546 8640 OPEN EVES Tl~L 1,30· $2,650 DOWN for a lifetime or good family livilll:. Truly in1macu1arc :: 20.'3 \Ve5tcliff Dr. Bedroom ui th large FMl- 616-mt ILY ROOM and 2 baths. •....................... ,I TR£~1ENOOUS jitOragc clos. ets and LARGE PANTRY. Complete with FIREPLACE, VA-FHA BUYERS Call us n<>w! \\'e' havt" three brand l'll'W 4 BR & FR hom. es in good loC. ol CQiita i\lesa for only $29,175 no1v incl at no extra-cost are v.•/1v cpts/drps. Rear Jenc- ing, front landsc 6r sprink- lrrs .i. all bl1 -lns. PAUL;lfffilE CARNAHAN J.S.t.L :r cu. carpeting and drapes. Handy lo EXCELLENT SCHOOL and sh opping. AU for $26,500 \VITI! ]Qr,'., do11·n! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Walker & Lee ~10-13 \\"1.'slcliU Dr. 6-Ui-Tnl 11-.~~---~~Yl OCEAN VIEW On · t•ha nning OiU Dr. in ":::G::::=::::;:::;::::;::;E: I Newport tfeighl5. -3 Bed· • room&. dining roon1 , deluxe 1093 Baker. C.i\I. LAST OF THE BIG SPLENDORS ;i2' Lula !~le Bayfront. Pier & slip. Sandy Bt"acll. Ofder Bultt in kitl'fl<'n and a \l'f'- mendow; bascn.ent run1pU$ l'OOITI. * $39,900 * JUST A LIT"TLE 10?0 00\\'N 646-7171 $40,500 Largesl & finest 4 bdrm, din. ing & family-room, home valu!' n o \V on market. Roon1y & t.'tlmfortable exe- cutive type ho1ne. Large <."Orner location. Room for pool &: trailer. A h9me you'll enjOy seeing & Olltl'ninr. CALL .5*1151 Herit.qe ·~a\ Es. tat' lopl'n eve~) DiYbrce Forces Sale Lovely vic11.· home • Back Bay area. 4 lg. bt'.odrooms, lam & din. rin!. Vacant. Im. med. poss. See it • Make your ofter • Buy a bargain. 54!·1110 ( 1111r QnFtfTll "*"" DL1EGE REALi;.'l •1500 Albms It Ki"-r,- QUIET STREET 3 BR. 1~4 ba. 27 ft. liv, rm. Cp1 s, drps, bltn5. 4:'e lot , t·ov. boat storage. $27.200. CORBIN-MARTIN REALTORS 67j.1662 557-959j E\·e. 3036 E. Coa~t H'ol'Y .• Cd~f $20,000. G.I. Terms Spacinus home \vith cu!lom car peting-& d1·apes. fitt- plac!'. lJelighuid pa tio. 4 Yl"S, llt'W, .Sel'Cl\e Wl1'0fJnd· ing. 130-6060 TARBELL lalmly homC> in P•'t'stige \VANT to buy dup.lt>x or '-0' THE REAL \"-F.STATERS arta. J bd1'lll!i. 4 barhs + small house in Eastsk:lel n1aid·s. $1BS,OOO. Costa ?i.1esa. Princi pals cn- Roy J. Ward Co, \y. 67:,..0017 01· 642-186..1 I ' ·. . ' ' '·' t Bayci>est OOi.ce 1 \Vhlte aleµhants! Dlmc·11.· I 14.":0 Galaxy 6-16-lJ..iO line DAILY PILOT WANT GIVE Now -United Fwid ADS! done bes! , .... ~~~~ ..... ~~======~==""'--'-==========:::;­ Gener•I 1000 General 1000 Gener1I S@\\Q\llA-" t-~S" Th• Pun/• with +h• Bui/f./n Chuckle 0 !tecircn9• le111r1 of tho ,..--.... ... --'-.---... !c,.1r "'°'"'bled w0tdt b... / •.,, •o fo•IT' four :limple WOl'ds ITANINE I I I _, . IF OREY • r .1 1 1~1·_J I Ii .. dacJor llools ono1h1(s . potil!nl1, should he be sued · ~ for .ollenotion of-? " ITAPCIN I II·• ~ ·1 1; r ,~ 1 ~tti.fz~~.1 1 ·~in::.~'° 11 r r r r r I' 1· r r· 1 I I I I I I I I I 1000 SCRAM-LETS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 ., • -HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSIS l'Olt SALi , HOUSES FOii SAL! HOUSES FOii SALi HOUSIS 'OR SALi HOUSES POI! SACI -·." -el 1000-1000 Irvine -123(1"""°'~ 1231 j ~H~u~n~tl .. ~ton~l~1~1~ch.l400~~HWU..~t~"'t*-°"iiiii8~1~1~ch~l4ll~ L.ow<ino lolch OFORLEST5E •• 0 N .. ~:~ .... :~£ TURTLE ROCK. Hltl.S '. Atw asQ1 . o .... , •• BY. Oll'NµI' WOOD-OLASS 1 -Hoo~~·~··~·~U!!!tol~""'~~ltl~h~od~ 1705 BEAQI. Th 1 • '-"1•~ In The Master Pl1nned Co,,,munily IMMEDIATE MOVE IN ~.,..!t~ ~~;: ~ of Irvine 4 BDRMS 111> BATHS Howt dHS&ntd by Olda' Om.AC Til!4ve.l P.epubUc: Able. 2 BR, 2 BA, bltna. Jlome 5 Bdtnu • Fam Rm • \ frplc. VIEW. 141,500. OPEN Din Rm • 3 Ba Close to HOUSE Sat ! &in 10..S. 934 School.SOUth Coast Plaia l\liramar. Laruna Beach.. References J33j. 642-TT71 CUTE l Bdr. 8 .!~. "'ltrplt.ct. Nice Ya ~· °'''°""· =· l3$ijll II' 637+3052. i "'""" with , ••Int hruah. 1/4 MILE FROM BEACH BIG, BIG BEDROOAfS • ~ Art now offering for sale, their l\Vflrd WIO· $20.990 . Inc:. Real tors 494-3006 Apnt LOVELY, 1ml&ll 1 btan1ed ceillnt, bridt, pre! adults or 1 chOli CUSTOM hl'aulifalJy marWt!ci pullma11 ning S & 4 bedroom MODEL HOMES. HANDYMAN'S IB:OA;;Y"'CR""E"s=·r,.-,<-cbd-:-,-.,-. -1'",-m. baths, Huse ELECTRIC ME· • DAWON K11'C11EN! !>)lac. T)lese model homes are magnificently ap· HUNTINGTON llEACH ious FAMILY ROOM olr pri-poinled with the finest of carpels -drapes C II N 962 1353 NEW ENGL.~ND Special! <t J1x:onte units 120 nn. dining: rm. den ~ pool. ylls.. to beach. Pa~ decks A\'ail no\\'! $4:,0/mo. A:t \11/ocean view. Nds. paint, 642-5:..W 67>-4442 ! ~1· l BR, 2 BA.,:!11!· cl\en. Gar. Vw of ~·A Ba,y. AcU~. no pets:. •• Ue yrly. Call • 873*S.,! 2-BR. 1:undeck, nice gardeiier. s:no 1110 ft t 67>-0737 ""'' .,;de Tonuo ,.-and I I d a OW • "" -wal papers: p us· every mo el is prof es· At fabulous Newport Beach. sweeplna: heated POOL and sionally landscaped \\llth special walk\\'ays FARM eta.~ Should ll'OS! $9,000 yr, '1T.1g;;~·-"'.,'i-~B~R-. -.~~It~,,-.-.~.,,..,., Pr .. $69,900. Con1lder u·ad.!s. d1in.. 2 ii'Plcs. Childrtn It .i master size bedt·ooms. 'l low rnalntene.nce ya.rd SUI" lull baths. Farm kitchen -f'01Jnded by Ill block Jencini.:. & patios. pantry -delux1J bul.lt-ins. VA or FHA 1erms at a LOW 2 I -, MISSION RF..Al.TY 49.J.0731 pet! 0.1\. A\'ail 12/1$ Bkr . C __ o_ro_n_o_d.,;~_I _M_._, __ 1_50 Huntington leech 1400 VIE\\1, 3 BR, 2 BA, all elec,, 53~ HUif l.l Ft New England LOW r lve away $39,950. These homes are placed an q~te large & fBmily room ... Ith tons of oJd WE "SELL A HOME very private view sites that may 'be purcbas- b rt c: k· Oreplace. \Vinding EVERY 21 MINUTES ed on either leasehbld Qr fee ti t I e O\\'ner· :=.i"' ~::..:':-. ":i~ Wilker & Lee •hip. • 5th bedroom. ~~r.~k llMual 2'T90 Harbor Blvd. at Adanw Follo\V the !lens lo TURTLE ROCK HILLS, % r~te loan availa~e. ~n--G-9491 Ope 'til 9 PM one mile east o( the UNIVERSITY of CAL· e•q u a I e. d at SJS,9;;0. Dial a-n IFOllNIA et IRVINE, just off the intersec- Now! 64>-0lll. Mesa Verde lion or CMU'US & CULVER DRIVE. 'Lease Optiall ~1l1phono: au.11o2 1 ... l•.thor Information. Our Exclusive Erijoy fron1 l'\'l't'Y 1oon1 an ocean view ancl auruiet1 over Shore<:htrs wooded area from this IPHciou~ 3 bdnt1 .. tlen hon h'. The only noor pkln or Its kulll on Rox001·y 111 c:-.clusive CanH'O Shot"l'S $76.SOO $22,000 4 Bedroom "VACANT" ~'""'~~~~­bc a 1 n et>ilinp, crpts, df'J>3, LARGE 2 1lory 3 or 4 BRs I~ cor lot. .$36,000, Ownl!:1' l!xll' rumpus room, blt·ins, 49+-4726 ne11,·Jy decorated. f?'10/mo. LAGUNA·CHARM 337-1618 540-llil $1'40 per month includes all oi1 existing loan anyone can as!iUillf' "'ithout qualifying! Top location COt'Tler of Cl-eu $16a. 3 Br, 2 &. Bltns, ear. Feaiuring 4 huge bf'droonls. & Catalinii; ~units. SS9.500 ChildJ'eJI \\'t'lcome. Blue App 't. only. i\lrs. Hopper Beacon &&-0111 2 lu.'liurious balhs. Onu'ming Unive1iilty Realty 673-65101~=~~-~----••Queens·• kitchen. Great liv-;120. 2 Br. Fenc.'ed yd lor itig roon1 \\'ith rich paneling. lTOI children. Gal'. &\'ail l'IO\\'. Mi11ion Vie1·0 Bl "· 84'"lll Ankle dt>ep ca.1·pe11ns. E.xccL ----------1~;"':;~:::="='~"...:.:~~~:,...-- • 10,:'.,"v·uAl-<l. e-sac. \Vil! !!ell FHA ELDORADO HOME! Sl/J. :: BR1 lenced yd. y"/\\', ~ 'dlll!I. FamUy I.: pet O.K 4 BDRM + FAM + RUMPUS WHAT'S THIS 1 ! WE SELL A HOME _!L__yo\l can afford t!tlO a Bk1:. ~ Beautiful 3 btdrooin,:? bath EVERY 31 MINUTES month. rent, th.en you can .=;:=:;;:;=='==-I":===;:====:::;;::-! home wltn •puidini: .... "'Cost• Moll lll!O Newport leach 1200 Walker & Lee •II•« thi• Alond ... 3 Br, c .... MN ' JlOO H I .. h ......... ----------- $I 8.500 and -filJ~ pool, built·l? .,.._,_....,.. ..... -----------fam rm on \'iew Jot. !\Io\'~ ,. ~t "lfon ec ~ ki tchen, cozy brick fireplace. MESA VERDE CHIAP'IST IN ILUFFS in by Christmas. $27,900, AJ. 2 BEDROOfllS, ca.rpits tt'tw LEASE $27$ per mo.';! A'nd only 6 )'f!al'.> young. fan- tastic teMT1s too! Get togeth- er Sl,300 and that's all you need! 4 good size bcd1'00n1s -2 baths -kltc~n \\'Ith built-ins. Family + rumpus roorn. Beautiful, \\'!!II kept, tree lined con1mu;1ity. Where in lhe world can you find a bargain like lh.is. ~fove last! Dial ~:>0303. \Von't last ~ today. S300 Beautifully kept -qultt -SJi.~50 • 4 BR 842-4:'ss68'l o!~l~~r9 'pM sun1e 6~ ';~ l''HA loa.o. floo1-s. fireplace, , .bit/ins, 3 BR, 2~~ . BA, Shore • 111 per month. including poo1 sale -At~ Verdi' M.i.lh· Q\vner desperate -must sell. • * * * * dineue, gara.ge and large tract. H.B. Call 541-4 service. borhood. \Valk to llbrary'ancl easy·1e1·n11. 644-6-t&S. LA PAZ HOME! yard. Neu· llhoppi"" and c•-;•~•,,wk;;.=.;"'c:';;,·.-;;-;,.,-~rl Owner Desperate .... .-school. Squeaky acan 3 bed-BY O\vner. 4 BR, 3 Ba, fani fllu~I !idl _ transferred out ol j\\'hat a Package) ' transpottation, $150 a month, 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA, rooni 2 bath honie. Large r1n, din rm, cus bit. End of 2821 E . COAST HWY. ·r k ~ Gi1·e i·our fBm!ly thi• "·•ul. Broker 6·~ • ne\\' cpts " drp.oi, dbl " state. a c over 5,,1 % GJ, ""' ~:t:~1i!~lt~~1:~~~~ f~~: ~~~<" 363 Vista Baya Coro;;J.:;~0 Mar ~~~1~ ~~~-4 ~~:~;in~ ~i;t1~'.f~11 ;a~1" ~:~~~n ;!i~ 4 BR. l~f. ~i tlec. kitch. I :':'":cd::="":::•:k::y::d:. "'°:::;·::·::96l:::ir~'i=:·I ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. maintenance, lal"!le )'11.l'Cl.F '~o~R~E~C~L~0~5-0-R-E-,-3-8-R-.-.-2 L.: Io..,...=~,..=..,,,;:,..;,;,..,~..,;,,,""=·~,,.~. Sl9l. jnc:I '!. taxes " inll. \'OUl'5 for ~.900. Assume ~::~ nn.ioc. · :i:· ~: l'ount•ln V•lt.y •10 Ready 'for you at s~.950 BA. To11•nhouse, frpl c, pooL Home + Income \Vide open for olfet• on lisl· 6~0 FHA Joan, Call Net f>..:&-7260. with easy terms. Net'd . s27 500 · o1 $3.f 9.XI Shukes at flt~sion Viejo Rlt)'. 3 BR, 1~ BA, lge 1Wl\nn. S461'40 _ ~2213 ' s paint. · · 1'111 an extra nice 2 bc'droo1n Ing · -· 831 .• ,~ 0 , ~~. * COTTAGE I Bdr. Sto\'e, Chfld'a playhouse lt!ar. Liaison Co. 6-IB-07::.2 >N<N .-... -1w1-U U pd Sl'" "' HOfl rE 1vi1h a 2 bcdrooni ~ 546·5llO •"'•16· t • 'N· No Skle yard for boa~ ! ..,ell 645-0303 OPEN EVES TILL 1:30 ,-0 THE REAL '"'-ESTATERS Newport Heights 1210 ?.·!ONE\' li1AKER out back. lntarcinemathMtrt) RENTALS Pel!. ~ 537-MOO. landscaped. Close 10 ~I. Both unit11 arc owner occu-LLEGE.REALTV Hou1e1 Furnlthed HOUSE in court. Crpb. drps. 968-7100 alt a. l at Harbor Center ?299 Harbor Blvd., C.l\t. MEDITERRANEAN ' . A LITTLE pietl and 1la1vless. Situated JSOOAU!lsltHartlti,CM. Rentals to Share '200.S C14rp0rt 976-B \\'est 17th St. 3 BDR. 2 BA. crplll le:;;.. on a quiet tree lined Cor·. :::::;:=:=:=:o::;:==:I :~::~===~== ltosta ?lfesa \. bit-ins. Leak _ S320tf'Ht + ona dcl lifar street. Once D h . WO}.IAN' '''/steured income 3 BR k den, 1;~ ba. crptl. drposit. CaU ~· !:: you'\'e seen lhe re11l-Come • utc Haven will share lo\'ely, nt.W 2 Br df'p3,~frpl. bit-Ins, dtan.~o. see the best. A Real £stat-apt \\'/1t.ame, owr 30, CM. C.M. $215 mo. M2-n53. LlfUnt luch CUSTOM· $34,900 Open Sundoy 1·5 FANTASTIC VALUE PRIVATE KINGDOM 1 1836 Santiago Drive Lara:e 3 bdrm 2 bath fully \\'ailed patio, 3 Br. + d in. + Sea uUy appointed home Exciting 4 bdnn 3~~ . bath carpet~. draped, covered family + 20x22 ti. all pur. in a me Back Bay loca"-WeUs' built home in Dover patio & deluxe intercon1 \\ith pose room. $49,000 el'3 E:Kclusive. 4 bd 2 •-h A "'" •-. , ... , Re"t•. 67M550 rm .,..t · nyont mlly ;:NJ-O.::r y~ IMMACULATE 1 ~BR duple.X' LARGE, ne\\1y ffiiec:. lion ·11·i1h 3 huge bcl1·ms & Shore!i. Unique atrium 1vith $3800 do\\'n payment assun1e Walker Rlty. 675--5200 lal'ge family room. Exterior retractable ,roof & adjacent 6% % loan payable Sln/mo. 3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. \o ·THEREAL 'C'-E.~'rf\!ERJ3 enhanced by exceptional wet bar for indoor _ outdoor pays all incl ta"es & ins. -- lanclscaping. Large patio entertaining at its best. Full price S23.5CO, loan baJ. Dover Shores 1227 with large outside built-in Separate 21 x 27 rumpus ance $19,700. To :;ee this I---------- !able & a SHAKE ROOJo'. room. Luxuriously carpeted, beautiful value call 5Kl-JJj1 'l'.llrreplaceable Vie\V* Loads of srorage spaces & draped & land9Caped. Pan-1Ie.1i tage Real E!ilate !open Bay & Mountains! 180" Ocean·Bay View buth·in cabinets. It'll our ex. oramic yiew! Priced .to • .liell. eves) Regal "Old \Vor!.d" Contcm· Never· Before Listed elusive so caU for details. Chvncr leilving area, Come ~~~""""""~~""" pol·ary picturesque home iv/ Lrg -1 Bdt·. 2\~ Bil, hun rn1 see. ma~oller. 1900 Federal Av $264j() unobsU'Ucted vie\v • niost landSc.:aped·Lan;:: AILA incl. • COATS Rof J, Wetd Co. ·.a BR stuc. 1% ba ne11'ly t'OOins. 5,00() sq_ fl,,. 4 Br's, s\i·in1 pool, patio, auto gar. & tBaycreat, Office) decor. c.1 lot fenced . 4Hi Ba + niaids qlrs . Easy opcncl', sprinklP1'S. D1·apes WALLA.Cl IP() Gal ~646-1550 E-.!l. ft on\~ 19th oPP big mainl. lninied occup. Furn. ca1·]){'1s. New l<i!chi'naid JlEAL TORS shOpPinc oor. Fine homt' • ished. SliS,OCO. Consider Cus1on1 desk-liC1\' crnrer- 546 4141-or rdltal. O\VC 70% on rent trade/vac. lot. Assume 6 ~~',(, bed·bkrases. Junr occu11. (Opeft £wni--• $1100 DOWN terms. Easy big profil in Joan. 5.18-7219 Open HollS(' 1.::; Sun. or by .,..,. Will buy th.is East.side 3 bd· few months. appt. '.!Sl:i Ha1·t1or view Or. r;i;i.;r.;;;;;;~;;1 ~ fllier upper 10r ll qual. LYTLE Rlty :& \.\~ 19t~ ? University Park 1237 $66.aotl OW'tll'r. 6~-1-27.io 1,$1?. *''•.· 1 1fied FHA/VA buyer. va. MS-~93 J.IS·2.>t~ VIEW·POOL-BEACH 1111~, ... 1111 cant l v.·aiting tor a ne,v LIKE New, ~ bdr .• 3 ba.; SELL' YOUR CAR! AskinG: only S91.500. This owner. Over 1700'. Vl'ry Lrg. Liv. \Valk 2 blocks 10 ~hopping Ca1nco SllOn'S 4 Bdrm. hon1r ·Rm • .,,,, •·1, ''odell has an rxn~nsiv, \•ir1v rro111 • " • · "' · n. rrom lhill "squeaky" clean .. ~ Finest Home crptng. Near OCC " schl s. 3 Br. 2 ba . tnhsC'. in xlnt thr din. rni ., liv . NTI. & nlstt'. ~ll'Sa Vei'Cl!''i; Golf Patio dbl. 1:ar, $33.950. cond $28 900 bdrm. Lgr. shcltrrrd pool & .,. -.,, Cou1~. View {1'01n rvery ·room. 4 bdrm, beautiful pool, hillslCle loc. O\vocr \\'Ould like to u-ade do\11n lo smaller home or what- have.you. Asking price S15J.OOO. Do yourself a favor & ~e this lo\'ely hoinc if you can qualify. '"l' · · '' 'r1 · . .,., · 1lh • ',•:Ou \1. l1 _r\,, I' • 546-5990 $25,000 FHA Ns::1;~R. 1 BA, .shag crpt, '.. ·r· e.d h"1ll ~:.tiol_g~~y;a1~~:1·::~1~~~~: Sho\\·n by app'L * 642·1771 Anytime* [)rps, dishwhsr, patio. beam · R iddle & Ro11 675·7225 l""'!'!~!'\"~!'!"~~~~·I ceiling, frplc, gar. Adults, SANTA ANA HEIGHTS no pets Sl65. 2650 Elden, REALTY CAMEO SHORES $23,900 excd tl!nns. 3 BR, 537-0062 after 7 pn1 & Sun. Univ. Park Center. Irv'ine S6~,j()(J hdl'.'d nrs, cptd, fli>lc, patio, O\VNER·A good buy. :i BR Call Anytime 833.QS:ztl BEST BUY in lhi.' rxcl uslve bit.in R&O, Lg cor. lot, house, \Vest side:. Cpts, I';':;!!:;=:::"'!:=::'';;';:; I a r..:•11. \Vrl\pl:unK•d J BR .. • · • • • drps. stove, enc gar. B k B 1240 den. ~ hath.~: high 1x11·11C'1' ~ BR 2 ha. n1· \Vrsklifr 546-8026 •c ay vi('11• lot; vi•1·y pri vate & snapping s21.900. C?td, BACK BAY HO"E riuict screened patio, sep. block BY Owner. 4 Bdrrn + !amily IVI r.1rs. llrn-iper, A,::I l)jJ.&.;10 rm. Large lot. Cul de sac:. OPEN HOUSE SAT & SUN house \VOrkshop. a\va1'CI Patio. 1 yr old. Nr Sears CAi\IEO SHORES -Laq.;c \vinnin1:; child's tree house $27,500. M::.-56IS 1750 !IQ . fL 3 BR 1 BA crwnrr lol 11/ Vir11', 4 Bit's, • • • • 2 rrplc. $34.j()(}, 10% dn 2·~ BA. frplc. crpls, <lrps. PEl=ll=ION T ~ .. -...... ~. , ..... r . Kingaard Real Estate 13 BR l>ow;e on \.\fiJson $23.:iOO. 2W7 Fafltiill Drive $64.~iOO. \\'ould '(' 0 n s id f" r Assun1able low interest loan. t.fl 2·?222 Owner. By appointment. REDUCED to sell. Large lea!lc ,r/ opOon. flexible Located on beautiful tree ~2039/646-4160 Spanish. casa on J'j acres 1e11ns. By 01\•ne1·. 673-5,148 linrd street, This home is a 2 HOMES 1 LOT PRICE reduced! 3 BR. den, for horses. $120,000, terms. BEAUTIFUL 3 BR Honie real \'aluc. Lo1v do1vn pay· din rm bltns crplli drps 64&-:i608 nicnt _ room ~oi· ~t . or 3 ~':Ill 2 bath., fireplace, '-IC. 1003 ~nge, 0,1 • plus new I BP. luxury apt. trailer. No crechl quahf1ca· buiJf.ins +a :1 &Inn hOme, .. ., Eaatbluff 1242 Or use as 4 BR, ran1lly rm. llons. fireplace _ $32,500 \Vith $6000 OLDER 2 BR h.ouse. 2 car Crpts, rlrapP.~. 2 tropical S46-9Sl1 or S4~6631 do1vn 01,·ner will carry @ aar. Lrg lot -suitable for VIEW POOL p.<lios. no ~ard work. 7~!!':'1 $225/mo. {18 years). building. 54f>-6001 ASSUMABLE $49,900 .. Owner. Gi5-rol2 Well.,McCardle, Rltr1. 3 Bd " b r· d · OPEN DAILY 1·S M V d I I ID nns., -.:i a. 1nlC' 1v1n. 1810 Newport Blvd., C.~1 . esa •r • do1vs; cust. dl'apes &: car-1519 Bonnie Doone 548-TI29 I 6+1--0684 e\lf!S 4 BR, :l BA, fn1 rm, exec j)('ls. Elei,!anl ~ BR . + dC't1. All h.ome. Bltns, good cond. Pvt 2141 Vista Entrada wool cpls. Gold r1.~•u1·cs, One. of· a -kind LOW INTEREST walled frnt patio, lge hid Open Set. & Sun. 1-5 shutters & beaut . i;arrlcn. Pretentious 4000 sq. fr . ho1ne Very nice 4 bdrm. with 1~ sivlm pool \v/slide & div BOYD REAL TY 01vne1·-81'0kc1· 01 golf courl!C frurway _ LLL\'.-baths; N~"·Jy painted inside brd. Pro! landscpng, lo 3029 E . Coos! Hi\'y, Cd~t 673.(llti or 67:1-•IO:Jl urious air-cond. gan1c rn1 .. & out. Air-cond. w/electron-main!. $43,950. SID-7573 675-5930 EASTBLUFF-VIEW 12 ft. 11'1'1 bat and all that ic alr filter; auto. doors in1;:;,:o=::===== · 1 · ? car garage Lge J 1 ~le a O\\'NER snglc story rondo. 3 3 BR. I·,~ ba. Nie:;" fpl. Din. sort or thing • P us a vie\v ~ · · 0 · · s College Park 1115 2 ba a1·c;1. Shows u1u1su:.lly w#. that won't qui!. Conie sec it! No11h area. Low down, · BR end unit. l\lany .ex-Call 1 .. ,. pri'""' .< ieiill•. I.,,.""" ,...__ D ·1 1 5 PM tras. $42 1nainl fee. Prire " ' '' '" ~.~ v,..n 11 Y • CORBIN-MARTIN lnearcin~~~~ •• ._1 Riddle & Ro11 675-7225 LG. 4 bdrm 2 ba. Ass umable reduced to $27,900. See at REA'TOR's ''"'"' ..,,"' I · t I 2339 Col te 624 Hllvanar Sat &..Sun only, .. ,,. - LLEGE REALTY LOOK o·" ,1~ . 081 '· ,. ·'lga 3036 E. Cua~1 lh\·y., Cdl\t lSOOAdams.11tHart>orC1A. r. or in orrna ion CIU . ' PERRON RLTY 642·l7TI El Toro 1244 2 GOOD hoUM's 011 2 R·2 lol~. I!!!!!!!!!!~~":::':'::""""" L o 1v interest a.s;iun1able S. or ll wy, Ch11ncr. $57,j()(), $26,950 loan.s. 3 & 4 BR 2 ba ho1nes. Nowport 61och 1200 LAl'\l: forest CarnC'lia model '673-4169 Rc·salC'. 4 BR. 2 BA. Cen---~-=~~=~~ 5 Bedrm + Pool DON'T DELAY!! tral <a ir, curt11ins & lavish .,.-CAMEO SHORES 3 buths, full dlnini.t room. CAUDELL. REAL TY HARBOR H 1 G H LANDS' ganlen. App r a i,. e d al 5 BR, Den. Pool. By Owner Rich "llOCI paneling · hand-:i46-54fiO Eves. ~IO =~! ~~~';~~7i':a:~ S41 ,0CO. 2~1:,ti Elrond Ln, S79.500. 615-li2o aft :>. some breakfast bar. Real 3 BR 2 balh home, cornf.!r bdrm 2 bath. home "ilh cozy 837-8620 ~-- family living: in an area of k>t 130xl80 • add 5 mlft fireplace patio l nit-ely --Linde late 1306 mOlit convcnltnt't'. :'40-1721J. units. Driv~ by 1545 Santa landt c.aped . \Yalking Corona del Mar 1150 TARBELL 295S Har bor Ana Ave. then call tlbtance to i\lartnen School. ---- 11 .., B!AUTIFUL $23,000 anla ... ealtu Prle< S2S,500. C•ll ,,.....,,. EXECUTl'l.-E HOME OCEAN VIEW !open eves) South Coa11t &12~ Real E.Btate. With a truly ~pac:ious oceB n Atti -arlivc home with many 528 500 1--:o=~~-~~'""~-vie1v. Absolutely immac1,1- hi1ndy ,110rk featunos. Largr 1 S LRG. Bdr, 2~1 Ba. Fam. lalt! One ol the> lincsr J "aluable Jot. Unob!llructed 5 Bedrm +-F•mily rm. rm. 2 frplaces, 1 brick & 1 B<lr1ns.. f;un, ri11. hon1es. ,.,<''" all I.he way 10 Laguna. 2 baths, den tor rrla,'(ing. Palos Verdes rock. SI.ate Fom1al din, nn .. 2111 ba1h~. 13~6060 TARBELL Elecll°ic kitchen, new dish-hall entry. Heavy shake rf. &au!, carrx:tu1jt & drupc.11. 90 L inda Isle O r . Exqui~l lely de1-or. 4 BR. 4 B1\ homr, Crpt'd l-draped, landscaped. So a t 51\p. $135,000 Linda Isle Development Bill Grundy 675-3210 Lido l ale 1111 assume S6COO do\1'n to $21.500, SH ARE f\1 y e I e g ant w/ 1a:r~ Apt B. 131 E. 21st duplex. Or.ean view, ' 6~ o/o loan. Ne1v catiicts, \Vaterfront hontt 1v/doCt. SI ,.... .. "'·'0 •=0~ • ·-'- =:::;;· ~"='" ~·~-~:..:"'°-,;-,c-=c no pets. S17S nio. ye 71; custom..<irapes, panelled gar· Alan 35 to 60 yrs. $UO mo. PLACE REALTY age, Newly painted inside & 67>-43l1 2 BR. 1989 -B Oiarle St. OUI 1----------S120 'mo. N~ pets. l ch.ild PARTI.Y furn. 01·-. - -f ' ROOi'.l·f.IATE \\'anted: Girl OK. &12-2259. -Katello Realty .. ..:;=.,=::,..-,,..,...,..-BR. 3 BA. olose in, . to 11hare 2 bdr. apt., ca~r .. 3-8-·R" -1 ... d 2 ,.,., w/iv -tr, "-u7·•·•1 C·'l 61'll82 ·•t 'P'I ' .. t' c, cp..,;, rps, car ~... ~ --_u __ ~ __ u_'-'c'.;_"__ ;:arage, S200 mo. Lg fenced built:illl. 494-7115: ' WJDO\V Y•anlll retpectable yd. 54:>-2813. 540-6975 :-,;,.--.-.=-'"°=-li-u I Owner Tr•nsferred Sha1·p 2 story 3 bdrm 21:: ba!h, On corner lot. Carp· els/drapes, all built.ins. For. nial dining room, service po"'Ch. IamLly roon1 . A~suine • ~ ~I loan . pri('t': S3:J.900. Paul Jone5 Realty 8-17-lzst: Eve. 8-17.8919 \\'0\\'! ! i:.·x;,o· Family R.t.'r. Bf>1h'r 1hlln nr1v J bath, lom1al din. rn1. :: c. gar. 2:-:ol sq. 11. Block \\<lll . LargC't:;I 101 CVC'r - A niust J-IAFfDAL REAl.T\' 842440.'i BY Ch\'ner -As!lu1ne 5~ Loan. l Br. den, lrg. lam. rm .. !rplace. 2 ba. Island kitctlC'n, bit-in.~. 2 pantrys. Boal g11lr , Covl'red p.:1tios. EZ ca1T lundscaping. Close ro all schools. shoppng, bch. $3J,4j(l, 9G2-8jj3 .. _, --- . $24,950 i\IUST SELL 3 large BR I~· ba. dining roon1. Adult Ot..'" cup1ed only. Low do1vn to present rinaOC'ing. Quick pos. BRASHEAR REAL TY 847-8507 431·3769 968-1178 4 BDR, 21 ~ Ba, kitchen · fan1. Lrg den \\'/bar, 2"-30 sq fl. AssumC' 6'~ GI. By Owner. 962-8923 or 5'1~1770. lady !o shatt 3 Br home. --- Share expenses. 54S-OS!ll. Mesa dol M.r 3105 ROOMflfATES Want~ to mare apts. ~tale or' female. Blue Beacon &G-Oll1 4 BEDR~I, 2 ba, ;art:ln inc. $29-) mo, 1st &; last mo: + $100 dep. Vac. 15 Dec. 843 2200 St. Clafr. 54&-857-1 Newport leach --Dan• Point .. • ---------If BR. 2 Ba. Crpt I: Drape11.1=.:::.'-'=--.f:'~"i $225; One year !cue. Call 3 BR., Cdi\I Ocl!anfront. S4" "''" , , 4 BR, family room, 2 G _,,_,.,.., \'e.. t d ..... _, uest rn1., pool &. private carpe s, rapes. r..-· 1-r':J beach. $1,000 i\tonth. mo. 4~1445 2 BR. Bayfront apt. \\'/dock Mesa Verde 3110 RENTALS f avail. $550 lilo. on lease:. a .... 1• ~urnl1hM ~ Also avail. for i;hor1 term. LEASE Executive home ..,.., _ 3 BR. Bluft~. nr. pool " w/boat 1torage. 4 BR. 3 G.ner•I . • shopping. $325 Mo. unfurn. BA, 3 car pr. Avail Jt.n. l. :~ Ri.ddle & ROM -67:i-7225 Refs, $360. 545--3528. The GORGEOUS Nt NfCELY turnll!hed 3 bdrm, VACANT, 3 BR. 2 BA, cov VAL D'ISEIE : 2!1 bath Townhouse. Five patio, fncd yard. Bltin TV. Single-I br-2 br. Ftq1i.odnf, minute!! tO Ocean & Bay. 2 $235. Call after 6 B:n-3139 Sauna, Ac:t'y Rm, llll1'rds Car garaa:;e. $300 f)l!r month. 4 BEDROOMS. VACAi~T Therapy&. 45' pool B~11 Bay • Beach Realty, Inc. l year lease $260/mo. 2000 Parsofll! Rd, "¥10 901 Dover Orh·~. Suite 126 NB Agt. 5'i!H14l - 64fr.2000 Eves, ~H966• j ============ HOLIDAY PLAZA.-· --DELUXE, spaciOUll 1 .,,, TOWNHOUSE; 3 BR, 2l" Newport leach 3200 Furn apt i135 pl~ ,,au. BA, frp.lc, patk>, pool, 2 car Heated pool, ample "Pu1ltns gal', all bltns, cpts, drps. ADULTS ONLY No children -no peU;. ,. Lse $32j. mo, unfurn S300. 2 bdnn, 2 baths. New paint, 1965 Pomona, <*1.,~ ! A11ail 12/L Bn-8&11 or new cpts, nt1v dra""'I -sw 1 B ~ .. ~~ ~ -·~ -Available Jan. 1st. $225. iv/gar. Adults. Blue n FI.REPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr .. 2 &t5--0lll " ba., patio, adullB. Bay11ide 3 bdrm, 2 baths, aplit-le\-eL ~· .. ~ 1 BR / ~ •by Village. Unlll July lst. $200. F .P .. Bit-ins -2 car glll·age, ·o;.·, . "'' \V, arpl. ~· r u 12131m-4309or673.-5419. !~~ pool. AVl.il Jan. 15th. _nkr 5.M.6980·l ·_ BAYFRONT 3 &. den, pier l: • =: Uoat. Furn or unturn. S600 Costl Mu• $ J'° mo. No. 2 Balboa Coves 1410 _61::.>-4:....:::3'::.I _____ 3 BDRM, 2 bath>, •Plit-le'<I. $35.00 Wk.• Available O@c. 20. $26:i. , OCEAN fron t house, Tops! CHAT EAU Bl NC Lg 2 BR, 2 BA. Frplc. crpts, A drps, yard, patio, $2j(l. win-:; bdrm, '.!~il baths. New paint, 111':\V c:rpts, new drapes. f .P. Bil-ins. 'Faces pool, A\'all no\\'. SZ7~. e Studio k 1 Br Apts, • PhOne Service I< P • Kitchen &: TV inctooij $500 Moves Yov In ter. 673-8008 Closing cos1 & in1pounds in· ..::::.c..::.:::c:.:::... ____ _ • 1"1aid service incl.I eluded in financing 7\~',C in-2 BR, 1 BA. ~~ blck h'Om bay ICl'<.'st, 7~.i. ';i interest\\'/ 10';1i & beach. $160 + utll. \\'Inter rJO\\'n, 3 Bcd1w n1, 2 & 3 rental to July I. 67::i-2:)39 83y & Be3ch Really, Inc. 001 Dover Dri\'e, SUlte 126 NB 645-2000 Eves. 548-6966 J BR. 2 BA, \\.'llik to schls & 11hop'a: center. Pool. Avail Jan t. "The BluUs" $325. No pett. 644--0350 e Day, \\1!ek &: Mon h ~· 2376 Newport Blvd. ~~ $25. Per Wk. & , Baths. 1730 sQ. It. 120 sq. ft: finished bonus room above 2 <'Or gara1:;cs. All built.ins. Privflle palios 11•/ B-B-Q's. S'.?:J.:i r1 10 $2.i.9,jO. CllATEAU BLANC 186.j() B1wkhUrs1 :-;1, 1~ n1il(' ~. ol thr ti<Jn Di1·~0 frce1\'l:IY 9Gl-::CO'.! ELEGANT MANSION 4 bd1·ms :i baths, 2800 sq ft, Ro rnan design ~1vimmina:; pool wi1 h heater &: filter, forn1al dining room, panel· led dC'n with fireplace, 11uper kitchen \\'It h abundal'ICC' or cupboai'tis. Just rtpainled .t: decorarcd. $·17,950 take11 all. ~!1?11\W G.J. RESALE <I Bdrni., 2 ba., roo1n fol' tTail('r and/or boll l, beautiful yard11, close 2250 4 BR/family room, co1npl funi. A"ail January th.nJ .June 11·h.!le O\\'fler!I trav~l. Fe:nced yd. 3 blk!! from beach. Children & ptls \\'e lcome. S,lOO mo. 673--0068. Bachtlor I: 1 BR, h'1 , maid acrvfce. Kitcht &: TV avail. 4:.0 Victefia;.(Nr Harbor). ~ $155 -ATTRA • 1 r ., pool, utl1 paid, ;.u'de llv· ing, adults, no pell SOO \Vallace Ave., C.?-l. 3 BR home, Bal Pt. yrly $300. a.en apt, Ne\\'. SJ1. )T· ly .$235. l"'rank J\Ian;hall Rily 675--4600 CUTE 1 Bdr separate house. 1''\JRNJSHED 1 er:. apt, Yrly. Adllll . No Pell. St.:iO CHOICE Of 3 lovcly 3 Bdrm Fum studio apt WO. mo. Call -673-19:il homes nr. ~an. S21()...$2E -------yTly. Caywood Rlty . Elden,C.lit.~l\ta:ra S. Huntington leach 2400 _;<,, .. ""'""'=o:· ===== I I: 2 BR. film"-unfurn~~ ~ Fullerton St., C.~t. ~I PHwpof't Heights 3210 pttmlses. ,:SUN=N"'Y,-;;2~BR=.-P"utl_,.,y-;it­ tington Bay TO\vnhouses. 1 3 BR, 2 BA. D.R.. den. 2 \VUJ complete lot em child OT\. $1~. Pref. yr. trp~c, cpts, dr)>g, 2000 sq. ft, i'°~ufpl~•;· ~J..r~an~t~O~K~. ~!~I VERY AttracUve 2 BR. con. din1., comp!. furn'd. in Hun- lease. Rllr. a4G-5880 $27.> mo. Qu~~~l~ 1 BR new carptt8, bit Kr:NTALS Newport SMr" 3220 mo. \Ves11side. AduJts Hou••• Unfurni11hed SU-:1897 Gener ii 3000 . -·--=:: Free Rental S.rviee ror ex11mtile: Roo,~M'-~T~o-"'s~P~A~R=ec-1 \\·a.~her. Elegant. fireplace. Comp! lnced yd. Profe113• Lanai ov!'dook1ng Coron!:! • ·IS b. Roo1n !or boat. .J.ic}.1720. Landscaped. Sprlnklen;. Ex-del i\tar. Dbl. dl"t, gar. 11·1 107 VIA EBOLI to schooh1. $7,000 do,vn, •-SQ FT 61.&7'd loon. 83MC81. lltW Beautiful 3 be:dl'm., 2 bath hom,. \\'Ith heated and fll- tertd pool In l\1es.1 Verde, II ha!! bullt·lns, flreplace, forced air heatlna. \\'t have mott. ~U;;n;.;l•;;••;.;•l;.cty:..;_P•;.;•;;k_;;3237 Calif. <."Ontemporary \\ ig TARBELL 2955 H bo ec. Hm ·on Cul-de-sac St. t C'lcctric door ojlf'ne1" Xlnt bdr1n!f, & 7500 sq. fl. Cot'Ona er r Blk to Back Bay. Stj,000. 1, ..... ,pl"g & 1,, .. ,,,, 1,. d<I ~lar srtiool diirL You BY 01vner • lrg: asS'Umable646-<J ·c:..='~'·-~~--nu.,.. " ... • -_ replaceablf' at 5.)9,~~ Only own lhe land. GI loan 3 Br, 211 ha, din BE 11,, yrs.-old. Stop b.)' our off- $49,:.00 rm. lam. nn, walk to schls, DIFFERENT icr at tht Jamaiu Inn for Hal P inchin--&-A11oc. bch. R(lnc. 0 n 1 Y-$33~500. -.-r. .. -y ... .o IN-' your ins ....... i..n-of m.a-n y ,.._ H 67>4392 968-1109 ....,ve on au • '"' .... , ....... r. .,.. .. .,u 3900 E .......... it wy, Buy this deluxe duplex. Live other Mm~• or call, anytimt LIDO SANDS HORSES OR UNITS tn"" • ""' 0,,.. 139.500 • o=rr °' ;i1"6I3 5 BEDROOMS •,; 3Crt' 3 Br, 2 Bi. pool,•• Graham Rlty. 646-1414 e BILL HAVEN 2 Baths, Lal'lc yard. .ume 6~<;f.. {)l\•ner Sll-1636. Neu Ntwpon Pot• Offlct REALTOR $2',950 -_ STEPS TO OCEAN 2111 E. eoo.1, CdM 61::.3'tt Geor,e Wllhemson Cost• Mna 1100 Uke new 4 'Br. 2'ii bath.II; 1018 s. ~lai n, S.A. 541-GGll R&\LTOR bltna. Slrftt-to ·atreet 101. CA.MEO SHORa-67)..4lS0 673-1564 Evet. ""' LARGEST Rooin for boet, Onty $3.1.;7.iOO. l11t Tim,. oUc.rlng. Gre111 lnr 950 PROPERTY IN CAYWOOD REALTY rnttrtalning, Lovely home $24, . MESA DEL MAR 11·ilh a m11.gnlCiccnt virw • Bedrm + Family Rm. By Owner ~ BR, 2 BA. dbl i30ll :· ~~~· NB from a liv. rm. that mea• PJc1111nc homt whb modem pr, tnclottd mata Pl''° + . urt1 •flprox. 31:<30 tt -lg:e. hu ll! In kltchro. COvt~ 1 open patios. t.l'nlque er>-llST BUY • VACANT enouah. tor a aamr table ' pnlio Owner he:lpt w1th ~ tn.net. Shtubt. trett-~tany $33.~ -P'OOL 1rand plMO bosidcs )'Our Ii"· 1in<"ln·~ ;;1().1720. htru! SM.000. Call $t&.3761 B1Uff1, $42. mo. l.'9n le~. 3 rm. furnia:hinas. 3.000 Total TARBELL 2955 Harbor ?\'1.JST 11ell l yr old 5 BR. 3 ~~2.1 Ea.st Blurt Dr. 1111· It of 11paelou.s rooms. 'WVV • ' \.\'lsll'rla Jo'.V. 4 6R, 3'1 BA, J car Klltage.I========== Crpt!I, d1'J)li, unusual fea.tur· t'S. Bullt 1007. Own!'r C. R. Gangl. 213· I :114-3101; e"et 1630 2ll -/ ~700. Open, ~> ACRE._l_ Br., frpla~. -Y-O~u-·c~A~N-'"'T-M-IS_S_ 1 hf:ttted pool, rm tor hones. A triplex on Lido lslt, Some SJl.SOO. Owl'ICr. a45-0!MS. ,.;1'¥1°, ~.2 Bctnn. with r u.."'11 rm I b~.. w I priv. r.ntry. SlM.000 ~lnl 1nn11 R. c .. GREER RHity 33ll Via Lido 673-9300 NE\V ~' Bdrm 41¥ BA Nord Bay rront · pier end s.llp. Arc1 '11 lxa:' buy. Owne1·, <19.S.-&ll:i L1gun• leach 170S BEAUTIFUL BEACH HOME ln lo\'Cly LAgUtlli condo. COii)· munlty; fronUna: on masnll· lcr.nl heated pool, 100 steps fro tn prh·. bch., tennis cti. t'lc, Comp. 1,UracUve tum. H_untlngton Be•ch 1400 lncludc w/w crpt'r, drp1., s l:JR 2 B.A tam1ly room. bath, l'tlSlotn hon1e wlth1~=-------- f 'aeror '111 yr old-.'Clnl pool. ?-le.11" Ve.rdc. A.siting LOVELY 4 6r. cuaton1 bunt. r~~. SJt5cki." 21~ f.1Ml $7:1,~ • ~Ake ayer. 0\\'11Cr 8aycre111t •rca, Jgr ~ btick;yd, kg1z m11;s1er bt'd; JocaOori BY Ch\'IW'r • 2 "101-y J BR, 21 ~ decor. 2 BRll, 2 BA1, ll4!p. DA Sho1i rt~1 horn ... C'rp111, Iv .• dln . rn11: laun. with w/d1 drp~. clcc bllnio.. FRn1 rn1, s1or , 2·cll.r (lll t. low·er Jcv- S74,'5oo. 0!1Cn. Sun, 1·5, 4GJ.j frplc, u1U y111. SJ6.~. rl. St't lO appt't!t~~ SbO\\'n Corhan1 Dr. A"1iumt< Gt '-0; ~ Io an. by 01vner, cll!l ror app'l. Chl?i1hlrr rtral L•r111,. fii~ti();; !IM-234.l.1 19!1·2132 or !3i Oi!ll . l.anc. llB. Q\.\·rwor &lfi.-.4J2S :rt. ~I or .,,j6...4141 2001 l.tt\1'al'd. :>IS-01il \ • . ---------1,,p::..::::....::c..:::..;.::.::. __ - ORAN3E COUNTY'S LARGIST 3 BOR?>f. 2~~ balh.J, 1r; a:;amt' room, prool privil. Almost ~ewport le•ch ne:w, 3315 mo·lea1t, 645-2996. NEED an Apl for 3 BDRM. n; batha...lr&.sam• holld&yol ~. 2 ...... pool· ,nvu. """°"' Klnr .... ~-Mil, new, $315 mo/~. ~2995. turn. \V1llntns. etc:. (\\rUl c:onaider a ltue) Caren• HI ~r 3250 MS-,79l:Z ot 64 262' HARIOl ILVD. SHOREa.tFF; laree l 0 Br. SINGLE Adults Lux 546 .,. family. Avail Feb. a S4iiO piWn apts with ~"\>I OPE~!VES TILL 1:30 SllO\VPLAO:; ! Br. 211 ba. _!lull oimoophm Ind Rent or LHle Option Avail. Dtc. 15th. $323 ~ privacy, SOUTH Larae homt!, Mesa Verde. lltn. Hopper, Aa:f.. 573-6510 CLUB APTS. Irvine: at New •baa carpet l pllnt. D."l'RA t.ct. 2 St. houw. 1% Newport 8taeh. mo mo. o... .... II\'. nn., 1onno1 (n41 ll<><llM 546-9521 er 5404631 dln rm., fpL J!riv. ZO x 30' 2 BDIUt blclc dplx. ~ U:ue 5 BR. 3 BA, llv nn, din rn\, eltt kU. 2600 »q ft s1s.1;, tncl. psdo. S27l mo. yrly oct1n. $150 )'11.y. nu Scenic Proptrtica tfl.5126 pallo_ Avail Jan J BR. 2 ba. home wllh 67W02'1. l28\T46th St. oul1IMdln& vln\v or bl)' A 24~19Zl =-:;;=,.,,-== ot'f:an, $100. NICEL)' r urn l Don V. 1·ran.klln, Ritt tn&iler. Ntilr ocean. 5:il-:m2 &U-UG:t ' , l I . I I ' ' • • I I • ' ' • ' • l ' --~: -.. - ., .. :,. ' 2. ¥.. Q,! .a t !_ S . 4 4 ? @ t I # 'I. q t : e z.. .. ".! t '.' 4.¥. e A " :::q; !&51¢2 SJSJJISLiJS.Ui ;ppof I 4 I • But People Keep Asking ·Me Why .. t ..... ~·· . . f ,. I '\ .. ,,.,•. " " ...... ;,. ,,. t '!" I t • l I ii t ,, 'i .r e "-" . .. . ... ' ' -• n .~Tis The Season • • • But What's The Rea·son? ·'. ,, ' .. , . :J . ' . -' .. , . ''' j • . ·, . ,. -. ~ .... . . . ,. .. . , Here are 5 good reasons for shopping early: 7. Stretching out the Christ mas sh opping se aso n gives retailers a chance to function more efficiently. When clerks are less harriecl, shopping 1s more pleasant for everyone. .. 2. Many retailers offer their rea lly special "specials" early in the season to encourage the pu blic to shop early and lo help alleviate the last-minute "panic" buying. 3. Just in case your favorite Christmas gift merchant has underestimated your enthusiasm for the season, a longer period of shopping gives him a chance I . to re-order popular items so he doesn't have to disappoint shoppers later in the season . 4. When you take more days lo shop you can do the job more thoroughly, visit more stores, compare prices and quality and be more satisfied with the gifts you finally decide to buy . 5. And there 's no secret about it, the Christmas shopping season is the biggest sales period of the year for most retailers . Support local merchants now and you'll help them make enough profit to keep their prices reaso,.;'able all year long . This 111 essage presented ns a Public Se1·vice on behnlf of our fri ends ond yours, lhe retail 11ierchants of the Orange Coa.~l Aren, by /he DAILY PILOT I ' . •'.!11"" .. llll••11111;ir;;:g;;ii;::;:,.,..:s•""'------.... ..,""' ............... -""""'~""""""'"'"""'·""· "· ...,.,,,.•;,.....,.,.,,,_..,,,,., .. s, .. N .... OC ............ R ...... ~ ..... ~ ...... w ... r·~M"•~• .. .,.r.~···-·~~·-------.·--· ...... ...-~~-· ... --··-·············· .. ·········-------~-,..,...., l r.td«1, -5, 1969 DAILY PILOT 33 RINTALS RINTALS RINTALI RINTALI UNT&I ", ' RINTALI llllAL .ISTATI •U•tNt»' ane ou>eNc» ana ¥1. l'Umhllad j..;·~"""-~!:...!·~"'~m~tlall~.~-~--1·.,.... """'"''0"""· Apls. u""'"''"""" .Apll. Uoufw;t:lo.... .--·u11.......... """"""' PINANCIAL PINANCIAL ~ N~-""'"",..,.--a.-·ach-----.....,...._ -Noopwt ~ DIONo••-t leoch 5200 5!iott• ANJ 56201ante Ano lnllMlee. Rantalt 5"9 ~ ~p;M11teo --O,parl'!l'~i?f: Newport Beach , WR8. tceanflvnt tt;pl. W/W Q' Sl'ORAGE Loi: Tr\lck1, , G~1Yf.%~~NG :O,T,~~=~ ::::"'~ SPACIOUS AND CONVENIENT COCO PALIS & SAllllAL• APT$. ~"'.""~ -~.'! · H£R£'S ~ ·' .occuPANcv ~~· ew--= "' ' -· 1 _, --~-"""'1""•1 -for ORANGE COUNtY DEALERS' -Lmn:u')' iaratn apart:mloll New 2 aad 3 bedroom, 2 baths. Shag carpels, for Di1tinctlv• Ttl'l1nt1 Tt1 T1i11tl11 Ar•• DiCl.OSED l'lll'l&fll nr. \ ontrlnr ~ JWtvacy WATERFRONT w I. boat linen drapes. We kil.cbens with buUt· iris. I Fin••• in Oran9e C.uftfy . airport. aultable bo • t Exciting • Nice business of your l beaut!M lands<tplng 1 .,,;. dock. Lowlf 2 BR. patio. Generous storaae space plus de<k or patio. I, t I 1 IEDROOMS ADULTS OHL Y ._ ... ' Broker 5fh1862 own • overnight! : · para]!eledna..tio\eal tacll· Yrly be. &n.!tOllt or Pool, recreation bldg .. next to shopping. '240 • POOL • PATIO , ttta hi a country club a~ 697.,,.11 1>0r month. Adults who like privacy. Furn· e SOUNDPROOF e AIR CONDITIONED ·-Pl aporty 'OIJO "M.klnt Monty lo Child's Play": ?J.: ; . = .. e.:: ''"""' In ~~:as~.::. blka !shed model by 8'11•. • FIREPlACES • IUILT-INS Workinr only 2 days every Wttk oJl!IT~ FurTUabed or llllllern1lhe<I !'all-Ml-2W MA!!INER SQUARE APARTMENTS · . e CARPETS • DRAPES earning potential of at least '993 or~ Models open 10 am to a pm 1244 ImDe Ave., Newport Beach-64$-0252 Naar ·1~tt. I T•cHo Clota .. tleopplo9 IN SMDO PREE (after upemes) each month. · '. ""'" "'-m 1155 to l3lo. ~ .. -4250 JustnorthofWestcliUDrtve 210 1 , .. , .... a 147-IUO Mgr. Apl. 2.0 Paama Valley Start In a modest way .•.. Yes! a total: OAKWOOD LRO attrae 1 BR-nice Joe. "!~~~~~~ cash investment of $4,llllO (!uliy secuffcl) GARDEN Nu pa11111< crptc. $190. :&a .= c_. dtl -5250 RIAL UTATI Good 1n .. 1tmenl Unusual should provide en ageressive go-getter~~ .a •..aRTMENTS Seovlaw A... Wlfd)'s aft • family , 1 y l • ttttaurant, almoat '1000 monthly profit.I servicing a MW ...... :;.'':;311:;•..;,"3-"'3.;._;..;...,,-...,..-,,... Cootl·-1100 Cetta -5100 COROLIDO AnS. , Br. 0-ral boautltul patio. N.xt to 1 nvolutlonary patent pending fully autotiiltlc! 1 BR tnc1 util. prtv patio, foinnv Ulllo IUll. t.owo. lMla, ......,, pea• hole ..U courw, aho '°""' system. " 1700 16th Street 114: 6CU110 locbd pr.•Qote ln. lilJl\I · --, -""I 1• "PW -. "'""" pool, dbl. Rantala Wi-s-bonle lor owner. Samo 1°' A ~-f J tail' I 1 ""tn' FURNISHED trlr, ad u t t Larlmpar. as..tut NEW APTS ,. ...... !... .. _ Co A;-._ ~' patlial. '3.IO • izao. """' bonl!L AU on 5 beautiful num~r o m• or re mg g ~·-• park. pool, wtr • IU pd. I;=:=:::;==== ,,_ v•-•· -~· • .,_,. Jandaooped .a... America have been experimenting wit!tfitli- $100. MI~. LI U72C, KI lilbN 4300 uct. Adults only, 2Ul22 SPACloVI. 1 Br GROWTH AJ\EA exclusive· totally automaUc method o·· • S.01<0 .. art 6. ;......_______ · Santa Ana Aw. 540-l1'8S Apt. w/w ---....--IV OWNER 644-tnt chandising and have been more than d · ~ LARGE 1 BR, nr oeean. CLEAN Beehelo< Apt.a. $150 & $175 1 ,,,=,,....,,....-,....,....~,,,.1 ~~~.".Tfi:."~:j ~ ed with the. results. Great repeat bus~! Upsf.a.ln SUndeek $1«1 yr. All uttl ~ $85 ·up UTILITIES PAID BRAND New 1 1r. 2 BR. AdJta only. $1511. m«m f-,,_ T• L•I•+ Sell our product at minimal prices and lriill:e=· ly. Stud~nts ok. sr3-a:tss ~AE. Balboa Bl~ 1 A 2 Bdrm. 2 IWim pools. WIW cp~ all bltna ind. ;: • w.,... a...,,_ IO-!. PLUS NETI fantastic profits year ... round (no solicitinl) .• • " BACllELORapt,lblckfl'om lBDRM,furnilbed 'apt.utll AdW.taonly, no'peta. FUrn ::_:~~~tt; a.lbN SJOO ·~~ ~·.._ BtaurtfUI 4 plex wUh own-A fortune ts waiting for the right =I' ocean, ~ range. $lll. lnd. Located on Bllbot. it dNittd. &C-lm 3n W. Wllaon. BAOI BQft. IOfabed, pa& • ·~ ..,... er's Wtit, bullt·lns incl~ who recoanize thii potenUal and ACT f; ... 110 Cedar. N.B. ~llll Pentmula. SlDlle: &hi 11-25. 301 Avocado St,, .C.M. ~. w/w apt. util pd $125. dllhwuher, carpeftd, drap. We help? ,. • ~~ l BR •~ I Crpb --.n·s. See Mu on~ u~ •-h 5200 ~ on! -_,, RENTAl.3 WANTED ed, private pe.O. A p.rqes --iu.w •P • · $125. .,,.,...,_ R9.,,port lll!:.9ac rlVl Pft'llllD Y .,, ...... ,_ *HOMES .l near achoo!. 11: "'--Ire. Dro~s a line·, let tis tell you more~~ P""" .. ..:.. .. ~ltns. Pool. 152$ n ...... ..,.. "R APT -Utll HARBOR l'Dalls -~· 'UT . .... ~ --II~ Huftll--leoch 5400 * DUPl.>:l!ES Cah "' 165,000 • prt., .,... ~ TIC HELIUM BALLOON 5YS · paid. l80 mo. 3lD E. Balboo EAITBLUFF = *GUEST llOUSES .mr 10%. UNIQUE OPERATIONS that assures a~· A·FRAME Bachelor. 1 blk bey a: ocean. $130. Ott. 14 - Jilly t. Zt 15th ·st. 615-fl69 LUXURIOUS •Ingle apts., from $35. wkly. Just oft be1eh -Lt.gun&. 494-8436 SIY8 ~ISHI ,...,, • c L A .5 5 I F I E D . - Blvd., BalboL BACHELOR untum tr om N e w 2 bdnn. 2. ba.. Cpts., NICE 2 Ir s bdn. Crpt.d 11: * APAJtTMENTS Pacific Shotts R.Mlty fi~ party of areat profitable expansion rint.:L $110. Allo ava.11 1 • :I • S drJM.. bltna. Overiookina drped. Nwty Mcor. s blQ !REE SERVI<% ~ or 847-8586 bllJUes. ~ ~- Huntington leech 4400 Bdnn. Heated poob. child ti.ck bay. '°11.t loe. nr. shop. from bdl. S ·bdr w/db! at· GOLDEN WEST RENTALS BACHELOR A 1 BR-;;;, :o'9 i:ter, adj to lhopplns. cntr., ehurche1, 11ehool1, etc. taehed pr A: frplace. 5;j&.17U 531).QJOO DOWNTOWN LAGUNA $140 up. Adults. no pet.. pe 816 Amip Way. Apt. D. CHEZ ORO APTs. 8234 , 17301 Kffl9on Ln. 80-7848 c!: ~~ $250 per mo. yearty. Atlanta, H.B. Nu, J. 2. S leema fer lent 5"5 25 Cout H"7 frontq:e w/ (Weit ()f Beach nr Slater). . 0 br'1. Priv. pr, pool. Util restaurant, 3 units ll extra ..;;.,,:;;..;,;,="'"~--"'-2 Bdrm 1% Ba. Blt·lns, Util->« &7J.QS0 • nn. 536-aC! «' 53&-21'21. ROOM with bath, private.,._ R-2 lat. $$1.000. $1,500 down. 2 BR I: b&cbt:lor apts. i~ nn, 1ar. patio•~ trpll --· I.... I BDR. Apl Adll •-·. trance. Ck>ee: to beach. f70 TIIE HUNI'SMAN 496-1268 Heated pc>OI. Util paid. new drps l mL OCC No -· · --v · A ts 1014 Gec>-.ta • wuhr/dryr .Bit·~ -... mo .. 6~ · URGENTLY need U unlta; ICel'O)' P • •a• pets. $160. mo. + $50 dep. WESTCLIFF Slla mo. '6w576 aft"Si ROOM WITH KITCHEN beach ateL Have buyers! St, Apt A. H.B. 536-2914· 968:7'lll RIVI ERA wknda. BAm -PRIVATE ENTi 64.Z-2'152 Anytime, Bier. 1 BR Medalllon Condo. Blt· VALUE, Adult couple ()nl)t. 2 Spacioua 2 Bedrooms l BR 4 "blk& to be h CALL . 541-27Z lnvesUgate: U you qualify, write 'Jilt. your business experience, etc .• please atve phone number for personal interview and amazlna: demonstration of equipment . MONEY-MAKERS Write Dally p.11ot Box M-15 NOTE : R .. fonel •r•• dlstrlbutorahlf •v•lh.i •ble with upwards of $40,000 •nnu• potM-: - tlal Income. l ;:_ !,!tt?:.~. ;-t ~~: :i1:hw;:, i::;-::X· q~:: ~ie: f:pe1 eoueie 1tudents o1c. ,~':.,: NICE Quiet Room 1n Lovely lutlneu Rentel 6060 · "'~ $135. 2295 Paci.fie Aw. Adults • No pets mo. ht a: lut reqd. ~19S1 Home, W/ttfric. ~-entr ATI'RACTIVE shop. 1200 511. I '!P!'~!Ji!'!'!!J!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!J!!!!!! sroNEHENGE APTS. 2 BR. 548-:6878 or 642-4429 1800 Westcliff Dr 2 Br, 1 Ba. Ctpta. Drpa. ii: ba. fl5 a wk. ~150 ft. Ideal for decoraton,fftEAL ESTATE · -._ ••• 2 BA. 2320 Florida, nr PVT livin& new apac 3 Br S BR. 2 BA • Bltaim: Nr. Bch. $135 mo. S16 NEAR 11th A lrviDe. archit~ts. ~ or art.I 0.nerel Bus. ""----ff " . Beach & Adami ~2130 • ' ' I • near ocean. c.all 84~ I 646-3716 & crafts. Adequate pukbw. -----...,.,... •-• """"'=='======·=· apt home. Walk-in closets, frple, dishwhr, cpll, drpl, Afttr 5 Pf.I 6 Weekend.I Located 2 blkl. 1rom Lido f~ustrlil Rental 6090 ~ 1• ~ _ Or1nge County 4600 ftp!, channln&: patio, nr fwy ~~:· no pell. 2:Ho~ ·~':8' ~ ~ PRIVATE room a kita:.n Ille. Owne:r/apnt. m..t74? ~;;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, P"""'r == $250. 546-4016. . hook ap .,.... prtvU Nr 21 it A Santa Ana. SOUnI LAGUNA • top loc. ~ VENETIAN GO SINGLE Adults, I u x u r Y 2 BR 1'h BA erpta, drps STEPS to beach. 2 BR, beam • $17 ~k ~l294 Cout Hwy. at 2nd Street. 3tOJ to 1000 aq ft. West 11th $25,000 a year ' ' • prden &Pll, w/fUJ.I re<:n!a. u.U: ' ' clng. Crpts, drps, stow. $1.55. 2 bedroom. carpets, ' ' otfice ()r 1tore. 800 aq tt. St. Cotta Mesa. 9%e per 1q ft Since 1933 Domenicfp\t: . .'jjQ tion facilities • aimplete b 5' patio le. garage. Quiet woritin& couple. No drapei, built-ins. EMPLOYED female, ldtcbtn $160/mo. Pete Barrett rucy Well..Mce•rcll•, Rttr1. le1'Yed superb ItaJfila-,bd, privacy. South Bay Oub Adults, oo pets. $l5S per pet1, $150 yrly. 615-0lTh SlOals.11 A: laWldry prtvile'"-"60 &G-5200 EYH. ~2123 1810 ~ Blvd., C.M. Woll.Id )'Ou like to ~Ale· to Apts, 277 So. Brookhlll'lt, m(), 1540 Elm. 545--2197" NICE 2 Br, pc>0l, garage bit-REAL ESTATE mo. IG-&.Yrl sroRE w 19th c M Nr 548-1729 ~ evet. do ttie 1ame withoo:tJ45P*V Anaheim <n4> 'l'l2""500 2 BR, freab paint, new ins, erpts, drps. Adil.I~, no GeMr•I $15 WK A up w/ kiteben, H~. H~t spot. ju5' utll: lna: It? Gondolas ''dflfttle -, drapes, crptl, bltns, pat!(), 1 peti. $150 mo. 64Z-8:Xll or $35, wk atucilo apt. 2376 Incl. 64l-0267 · WANTED to leue So. O.C. ii) appearance" .,.:_.,..._ Garden Gi:off 4610 ~-~ic._ ~-r.ets· ~ 642-8006 hnt11s W1ntecl 59'0 Newport Blvd, 5tl-9155. STORE ......,_ a .. .,,_ t 200l).3(QJ s.f., ttn, brick or comtructed ()n oUr tRLfl: ....,...,,._ .. , .... ~imu: v.-. -or vu. ... -.. • ._,, .. .,n water, llO 1-tollri fae, Will We need people to co.own 6 SINGLE' Adults Lax u r y l BR pri patio, all elee 3 BR, den, 4 ba. Waterfront BE SANTA to Teacher's Motefa. Trlr Crh. 5997 Balboa Island. WU1 decorate pay Up to 9c LL ~187tl. manqe them. Thefi:t. siO prden a.li'ts wHh country crpll: drps, carport. No pet~ $375. 3 Br. 2 ba. $115 I: $250. family ()f 4; desparately • to 11.dt. Lo Rent. 6'B-4D) _ cooking at au in thea~ club-at:mOilpbm: ·and com-()f ch 11 d re n •fffSPCK\Sible . Balboa Bay Prop. 6'13a7420 need boue, under $2)(), SANDY'S TRAILER t'OURT STORE or Office. Newport I: I.eta 6100 ins, take-out, fut t:il9 plete prtvaey. SOU111 BAY adults ()n)y. SUS."548-.llZZ ·s MAU.. 2 BR yearly. $130. M1.11t be eJ.n. two alltT&le Spa.cea avail now. Max a ·. Bay Center. am Ne;wpirt operations. $15.000~li CLUB API'S UlCO OYpman $95. 2 BR. 'ta bl 1 Claae: to shops &: beach. children. 838-M96. Call &f&..9681 Blvd 646-1252 needed. M~~ .; lll Ave., Garden Grove (n4) couple M ~~y' .. ~c::: 64Ul88 att 5. • LANDLORDS e WEEKLY rates Sea Lark LEA~ x 60 C2 bldi. HAVE 141,00> 1n R·l Fee receive ~ weeiur. ~ 636-3000 1685 Tustin 548-7237 4 BR, 21,i BA. Dishwhr. FREE RENTAL SERVICE ldotel, 2301 Newport Blvd., Paved lot. Good for <lttlce or view lot, Ill' x Th'. Located plus equal •hare ~ta: B-•-""" -..,_ta M 2118 Leeward Ln., Dover and real e1tate -ur... Leguna 8ueh 4705 NEWL'Y decor. 4 BR. 2 BA. Studi() apt. 1 blk from "Miu ~· ....... ua anythln&'. 548-n19/64M79) Shorn attL Will sell lo prefer those d;;: .. · 7J built-Ins, dshwhr, crpts, beach. $300 yrly. 673-2455 • Free Rental Strvb • ROOM Suitable f()f attt lhop, down.1trd for Id tru.lt deed, alternately deve • ~ CHARMING Partly furn drpa, paUo, dbl pr, pool. 3 B'iif 2 BA apt. View ()f Brokers I Msn. I ~n Guett tt...... 5991 men'• shop or lad.la shop. or make cash ()ftez. H. C. chain ()peration, 213; seaalde studio burwa}ow, NO PETS. Call 830-4976 ocean. 1 blk from beach. Propertin West f'1>1642 PRIVATE room Ir bath for Call Jlm Berklhire. 673-Nl5 Eriebon, 54.7...toJ.9. Evea. HE 7-6434 appoint:dlili. -• garden setful&'. Leue $170 $300 mo yrly. 6"--0266. BURNED. Olli' Wnlly de• ambula1Dry penon. Lovely OR 3-4751 i.ne pr, all 1.1 t I I { t I e • • ~~ ~ :! 1: :;; DUPLEX. upper, walr:rtrtint, perat.ely need 2 Wp or 3 home, nice IUn'CIWXflnp, Office . IMlt1f 6070 OOUBLE )ot with Old Span. Tele--clear. RefS. 494-7"5 · bttna. No pets. 2885 Mtndo~ 1ar. 2 BR. w/w-cpta:, drpa, BR house, CM $150 mo. iood nutrltioua meall. Co.ta LAGUNA BEACH atyle home, 3 Br, °l Ba. FOOD Takr: out in Balboa, Jlne k>c. a:rou $6SM l!IQ.b: 4% yrs.. includes vt;r. va4 Makes Iota loot a.iii $7.500. RENTALS °'· >1>5421 him.. Adulb. $l91!. 673-4921 ~45 • Mna. ,,.._.,., Air Condltiontd 119,010. Call 5l&-31V7 Apts. Unfvmfshed 2 BR Studio apt, llAI ba. encl. 2 BR.1lnfw'tt apt.$150. Pa& Tustin "40 T I 5640 ....___ OtlcN !:!._~a~~ In &--will pt you in. ~ General 5000 1ar. patio, epts/drps, bit· .l pool. Crpts., drps l blt.nl. ust n 1."11 .,_...... y .... w. -·--...--;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;I inl $150 Days 542-3524 EYH. 1525 Placentia. newett oftice bulldlnr at 1-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, I Notion and trimming ahop, -"' 6200 • 546-0689. prime location l.n downtown I 1 busy Harbor Blvd. Fine to VEN DOME MESA Verde 2 BR, ... w Nawport Shorn 5220 Laiw>• Beach. Alr "'""'~ PRE-PAID kttp yoor wil• outa trouble criits, ea.rage. fl()se to 2 BR 2 BA Duplex. Crpti, J<.nut/ic ~e~i!nt!:uU: INTEREST ~ce =':8 wi:o~ Full IMMACULATE API'SI ~~~Qo Adults. 968-6126, dt1>'S, hltns, Nr ocet.n. $185 1-Fcnll Av.., rur leads to A amall prlriclpal payment SE~~Js AA~~LE =-==---=-:--=,-I mo. 548-&190. MunclPIJ. parktna Iota. ~ wW handle, a1orw with pre-Two tine beauty shops. 3 and 2 BR, new paint, epts, drps. per month for space. Desk pakl Interest, thb 30 acre 6 1tatlona 1n down town CloM to ahopplng, P•rk Stow, rebig. Fenced yd. East lluff 5242 A ..J/i and chain available for $5. parcel. Priced at $240,00'.l. Co.ta 1'1esa~ Get i nt 0 * Spaclom 3 Br'a. 2 Ba Gar. Xlnt loc. No pet. $135. e NEW DELUXE e L { -~ I Buaine11 boun annerlnc Allume 6~% finaneinc & bullneu for only $3.000. * 2 Bedm>IDI 6U-4\1l ']Jartmen ome.., teMce availab&t a sio. carry with Cl'CJll9. wen Jo. 1mni to au1c •SwtroPoo!,l!'ut/Jrftn 2 BR + l~ ba, cpt!drps, 3 Br, 2 Ba apt. tor lease • All utWdet ~d except catedlnRivenidewithrood THE REAL ESTATERS * Frpl. lndtv/lndry fac'la bltna, wshr/dyr, nr shps " Incl. spac. ma.str. mite, din of telephone. patential. For more informa.. 646-nn ASK FOR VAN 1145 Anaheim Ave. bch, peta ()k. $185. 54S-TT47 rm. " dbl. lfSJ'8it, auto. DAll.Y PILOT tlan, please call K. W. Small COIN laundrles-f'l'i&kWn. ~CO~ST;;;A~ME~-:SA;... ... ~"";ll24;;;11i~B~Ri<:!iupPiperier'~ap;pi.i.:::-;Sln~gle :~ ~":_r ~:.11" ~~ :;, 222 FOREST AVENUE Eckheff & Assoc., Inc. From $8,500 to S•2,500 , • RENT • adult SI--• refrig No ~ .. -h dt• LAGUNA BEACH 1818 W. Olapman Ave. •-.L•Jm, r., .. Meta, • ..... • • .... 11 ... '" u tn ~9466 "'...-' ""' pets. 545--0876. e . ONL y $245 e Ml 2621. <>:,nie..:,~ 538-597l Buena Park, F u I I • r to JI , 3 Rooms Furniture 2 BEDROOM duple:ic, private 1165 Amigos Way, N.B. PRIME CORNER · • e........... GIU"den Grove, Hunttnaton $19. 95 & UP Garage • back yud. $150 NEW 2100 .. ft 3 BR • Wn First Time First Ever omce or 110 .. In Lido shop. '° Acnt, So. Calli. 125, ~a~""t"'" Ana, 1'liltln, ?:()nth-To.Month RenWa •646-5386* rm, 3 BA. Owner's lux apt ping area <aurpl.1.11 apace o1 DOWN, $25. PER MONTH, Call ~ 52s-'7133 WIDE SELECTION NEAT 2 bedrooms. carpets:, Th2 Amigos Way. 675-5033. Udo Realty), $2,495. FULL PRICE. L. ard & Marine Sala NO DEPOSlT O.A.C. drapes, buUt-ins. Quiet. ll.10 LIDO REAL TY INC. Sh<,,dolt. 326 W. Tblrd St., BOAT y . · HFRC Fumitunt Rental• mo. 96z...3886 Corona del Mir 5250 Pardon our dust, pardon the lncon· l377 Via Lido 67).7l00 L.A. Phone: f213l623-6iot Take over operatiJ11 boat,re- 517 w 1a.L CM sc&.lW. venltnce, we're atlll finishing up, but pair, hardware aa1e1 a:-boat • .. u., $ll5 PER mo. 2 BR. 1 small MODERN l room suite, 18 Acres mature xlnt pro-aales. Buitneu In Nnp:irt $135. 2 BR, pr, patiD, .ff/w, child OK. No pets, Bit-Ins, we thought you might like to stop epts., air cond, janitor ser. duclne avocados + t ltrus. Beach. No Investment re- drpa, Avail. 12115. Bkr, crpta, drpa. 538-&462. Aft 5 r:L c;:,,,, .. : by and see our FURNISHED 1 & 2 vice, ample parking:, View sl~s. ~l' A all utll. qUlred. Write Daily Pilot 53H98l DELUXE 2 BR. $13.5. Adults ~ BEDROOM MODEL APARTMENTS So. ':'E~~7~a~t!t81dr. ~~=.eC~if.O~ 473• "-Bo"'x"=M~434=,....'="',....,.--, ';;5rrl,~ Bw'iw.~~~tov~ll: = ~~i:M~ mngT 263 ON TEN AC\ES this weekend. Cmta Meu 642-1485 CABIN on 5 atte1, le> le> down Er!1:!:: aal~l~:-eae'ti O.K. Bkr. 534-fi'980 l BR UNFURN apt, llU'9.P· 1 Ir 2 BR. Furn 6 Unturn MARINER'S CENTER It euy monthly payrnena all all or part. Reu. 17214 Qul"t, retlnd only. N() pets. Fln!placn I priv. patios I So Mek• Your 1'1Mrv1tl0ft1 OUl.ce In Store Bldg. ~nl or for only $3500. Breck·N()tt Bn.ch Blvd. H.B. 847-2151 Coste MeM 5100 1 M Ori CM Pool.a. Tennla.C.ontnt'IBkflt.. Lae. $15-$125. Beauty 1hop, Realty 66-9044 ---------45 eta ve, . i 149 RI id 900 Sea W., OlM ......U EARL y _ EARLY "'me ""'p. vm ' TAKE ov" S ocr,. near lnv"lmtnl OPJ>OI'. 6310 LOVELY, all new lge 1 8?', * 2 BR, pr. new plush cpla, (MacArthur nr. Cout Hwy) Ave., N.B. ~2.414. Lak!' 6 town. $15 mo. blt·lns, ()H ffrJ S.C. Plaza. drpg $145. Adlts, no pets, bst 200 _ 1000 SQ. IT. Newport n•/89'-4743 Oilld ()k. 546-6976. area. 5574400 NEW DUPLEX Beach Civic Ctr. area. ========ol Pirtntrs $ lnvntwa 1 UNIT LEFTI January Move In S@efttarla.I servtca. 3345 Like Elsinore 6202 Active()!' inactive partki.,._ tk>n. 10% return A: rrowth 2 BR. 2 Ba. ($250). Priv, pa. Newport Blvd., N. B . -·•·• In ~" __ , t!o d -1 .. t. 3 ADJOINING hlllstde poteuwu aucce ...... RiU • cov. a:are.p, ept ·• drap-A GREAT NEW .. ~ w "' • ~ ......... .- Huntfngton BHch 4400Huntlngton Beach 4400 THE NEW HUNTINGTON CAPRI APARTMENTS ed. Comp. bltns. Beat loc, . WANTED; de1k apace by lakt!YWw lots. near culno ~f45 .-.,....... . 707~ ORallD real estate broker&: notary, $3,000. 536-~ ========'I FOR. SINGLE ADULTS ••• • • • WHERE LIVING IS FUN! CUSTOM 1, 2 I I . IEDROOM APTS. '-,. .. 0 APARTMENT COMMUNITY Be.ch .,.a prof. 53o.ol31. l ACRES 40 rnlJel north ol Montr le Loan 6320 '. ,....... • STORE •• m ... • ......... a..., "'"' H..., Lab "' 2nd TD Loa1 -· ._.. by 1142 N.....,.. mvd., CM root oi Siereu. Lowi. clear. REPUIUC HOMES, Corp. -».ooo. >1&-:uo 3 NEAR Dew apll. • Ip. 2 Br. 2 ba., trpl.; elec. built· lns, deck. ~ to $260 mo: Fumlohod Modelo Open Dally 11 am-6 pm. NEW 3 Br. 3 ha., cpto, d,.., e.lee. built-int. dishwasher; FROM $140. ttreptace, patio. FURNISHED I UNFURNISHED Don v. Franklin, Realtor . (A& low u $85. Fum. lf Shared by 2 Friends) 3250 E. Cout H..,. 673-2222 UNF. Duplex. 2 Bdr. SOUNDPRDDFED PRIVACY FOR Frptace, ,..,,.. • rofrir. RELAXING OR ENTERTAINING AND AdllS. 117' mo. 6lO Acac~. SHOPPING WITHIN 1'.i BLOCK. PLUS OlM. PUN I GAMES TO MATCH ANY MOOD. NICE larre 2 BR upper. -~ -I . 1:171" d!w. retrig, ""'' lnfoya laotlt!Of cann 1, a-o!Villiy. pr. New Clecor. Adults. ball or lllllanlL S h a p t up In one ef llMe Leue, 1110. OwMr m.m5. GyntMsluml ., rel•x In I S.une -the 2 BR., So.1.of Hwy. Yrly. ;,J1eunl er In the tun •round the Peol. uw·a tum'd. $195 Mo. Reftttnetl ttqUtred. Yovr SOdel btnc1or wlll .•rr1"91 pertl" In Mr. Forney, mer. 540-3982 FURNISHED & UNFURNISHED 1 & 2 Bedroom Apartments, sbaf c a r p e t s. d r a ~ t ·s, air -conditioned, diahwuhera, biJllt·inl W,. luxurious pool, lacuzzl · 'Whirlpool and Saunu. Gu and water paid. Adult LiYirt9. No childret1, n• pet• 1£AUTIFlll Y UllllSCAPfD GARDEN APARTMENJS FROM $150 NEWPORT OFFICES -• Prompt.-- 642-2171 -11 Sorvlnc Harbor area :tO yn. S.ttlar Mortti• C.. Le ' 1ml, beaut blda., Cout Hwy. $50-4175. ~142:5 COAST Hfchway, Sou t b Lquna. 5000 Ill ft· comm. bldr. 5 units $9300 ll'Oll· $82,500 ~. Contact f'l<lttnce McCure:. PETE BARRETT REAL TY 642-6200 LEASED Storea For SU.. 19th St. Nr. BetMI Towtra. ~1'1'51 or·MS--7414, Artnf:. R.l.Wa-62>40 NOTICE 336 E, 17tb Stnet If you have a 3 or 4 bedroom RMI 101..,.,:·1 --,. borne for .ale or for ttnt, ••• ..... call u. today. We rtpttient CALL HARDESTY ~tmplo)oec1~alarp hr11nancq ftnn movtcw to the Harbor • m.aa1 • Arta and they mlilt haw ~==~"""-'==~ "°"'""' All cuh u <laired. ANNOUNClMINTS Call r...,..., -and NOTICIS. iUSINlll eM ...... IF •..c..• _6al FINANCIAL ,.. --. nd I I R I ~ YELLOW I ""'" ktttao, bM I Ulfr 1 enta VV7V But. 0,partunltltt AOO eollar wtth bell. Bllbora 1*; ""' flllulout ~ -' !hoot fun lrlpt URGE 2 BR. -I B ST . .. Mammoth, V11n t< ? bltno, 0c<an vi.w"l'~.iuti'~ Sii THE HUNTINGTON CAPRI AT ~:;: ~ $225. 303 Freeway close from San Diego, Newport or Slllla Ana Freeways at NEW IUILDING NEW nee-.. drive In ~......,..~,.._,.,_..,...,.~~1 UGO Lopn Avt., Colla. Mn& "'taurant, h1 tratttc Joca· CALICO cat, kin& IWnd, ~ Each utdt 1TZ 11q ft, 2 oft· don, rocxl bu.W.. Owntt Ne~ A Mtaa Drivt, CM. ic.1, J mt roonu, 110/220 mU1t acrtac.. $.1.500 dn. ~"'~',,-n="-===-,....,.-~1 electric. AmPla parlrlna. Tl!E REAL ESTATERS MALE C0WE. tlftd i c. &btrt Nattreu Rdltor IMf.nTl Mk kif Van. bl&nlr1 ~ TUltia Aw. 11 J I! 6200 !4~ A ... Hun"""°" !IMch NEW, So. °' H..,. 2 Bdnn1., 14ft .......................... beamed ctll., with deck " n-12loMo . .......,, J.t .............. It. Don V. fun.klln RICr6n.2222 15497 Wll1-Sheet,. Tatln Call 135-5335 P'HONE (714) 846:.0619 CUTE 2 BR. apt. Newly E' ~ • decor. Cpts., dri>•· ltovt. , =.-=l.i,,,""'""'""''"""""""'""'""'""'""""""""""""""''"'"0:1 $150 Mo. Broker 6l>-7101!~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiiiiiimmi!i • • Cocla Meaa IQ.IC l>ISTIUBUTOR511P Onnp Puic. IU"""1 WAJllT mponslble part,y to Cl>. bt.dlri'OUnd MlratM. BLACK Pocd1tl \flc hJool sh&N >too 11q lt M·l bid& AutooUdtanlllt'tmlt.o'1.Ue Aw. F .V. Call to ldtatll)o1 16th St., c..M, 6'13-te65 • Sti&OO required. Appta onb'· llCJ.4Ml , DIAL di-"'-• Cbor1o llT-TalO ORANGE Tom ·iiiit _. ad, then tit bock and BARBERSHOP FOR SALE Y1c '"""' ,....., It.ten to lbe phonie r\ni! Bara:aln, &47·9163 m-4331 ' . l j \• .... 1!11,~Jlllli~Ylll'l&Qil!IL'EllO .. i!!ll•t••1111110111c1111:,,.a ... ~.·:~c~:·: .... a.:,.2•4"_"' .... RE~A~@~• ..... IPl .... #~l•:~s~:""'''''''~Sl"IU:••~.-~: .. ~s .. ~;~1•:~1~:~s .... """'~L,.,!'""•~••~> ... ..,f!lij!::::l:-',...""'.:~~·~~5~1,..,-·M1~~.~·~·~l~!~-~--~f"'l!1-;r-c-~~,~ ... • I I . I ! 11!All.V '11.PT *Ii * .--:1 • ·1~·~ . .,, * * JOU &·llMl'J..Qil'/lllNT JOIS A IMP.LOYMIN:f .JOIS.A.IMPl.0.'t#lil!T .JOlf A IMr~o~!!Jl .1o1o·'w-.i, Min 1000 r ... _,.,,,,. w ·· . 71.:1. , ;.. , &;.: w-.7•00-J1k1 · Mo"' w""". J1tt "! J ,. -• ........... ..... ....... ...... • -·-,..._ --... _ ' ''.. SECURftY b,.;,~ . . ~.. +_fli ,.., ',' _...,, •MAN ·--,CUIUSr---------~--i,I When You -·· · .,......., ...., · -~ .. ~!l1 '··'' : *'uu:sR 1RUSH * ,,.., Bay•\d• shoppili~ .. , -.un bet. a It 11 a.m. c:am.r. ncam1 o,. , , ~ 1. , ' Center. f1S:.338S -f '. Want '.it Clone .· . , c,., •. , ··""· · . ~..-, -MED1cu.TE01N1C11N tor .f. · .i. wo-; . ....., s.. 1-· '· iih•.W.y ·· 1 slrl Doctar'• .Wee ·"' rignt. .• . . . . ., DAILY Pll.01'· • ,O'lioo. £xC ..... 0.. -N~wport ll<uh. Write' ,Boot ... w...... 7o2o I I • MWm. fill. P*aant ..... ecnl.L. N..562, :Qtll1 Pilot Coll.one of aovs 'NEEOED -. t. liene11t1. 'Coll KO¥ •w.i1........ · h MOVING •!J"IO ABU. !>c· MDlt b.; ttllable, ., dollftf ~'·. J • -'. • • J. ¥1. ROl!NSON -t e expeds .. .. ............. ·In .Mitq. flloon°S.t 6 Son"' l!.e.110 J:UOH IEST HAS OPENING FOR ,11>. ,..., l1'•fe. d L-1-w,I.~. Motion plcturo ''"' ... ""'••od ..._. -~........, ... I ' : • '1e{" -"""''"· """""" far job .. • . . . mr $o •Mall\ ..... Ana I TEu•ucE ""' . Whoddyo Wont? Whocldyo Oort '·" P/l\c:ellllo<l.tleld.,r!>-'lljell0'£·-·tar·doek WOl1<. • .. ·• . .MAN "'"" ·•·n sPECIAL CLASSIPICATION ~R ' H0meeut . .ii.-'ii) .Safllnr·oxp.dulreabla.Ci!B.L.J'IUD~Y,lful.typina, MECHANIC •• E:U .SIJ!V.'CE.'.lllJllCTO•Y. SER.Y'I""" O, IU_ ToAY· SIRVICI PIRIC ·Y e Afll·• N•• • ,..,_ e Pono:, wknd.<bulL'· , .... ! •P-"9'· Call Mr-. Ex-ooe Proterred. ' NATURAL BORN sw~P ' " -..... = .... • ......... 17~ YOUJ>4. w.na. Collection ",". . spoclal Roi• .. ~'-•t11,.. " . .6sso l:orpot ca..111.. 6625 ,..._I • 6790 ..!?!. ow.c., ~=-. ~ ' BU •. 1 ,._ 1 Bure&ll d Weo)en1 l>ranr· APPLY PERllONllEL ' ' 5 Llneo -5 limoo -5 bucb ""' ••R · --,,_, &A. . .' ,;q,,ti.'~ In ~ S29 ·~ I' ASH ION ISLANO ___ auLEI -UJ ..WIT tNCLuce CA1tPtr 6' Furn:'cleanlnr; .,...... • .,..,.. .... <11.':.:.:o.1 .-... MATURE woman. -· ¥ 17 91. · · ·~~~ 11 • 1 NEWPORT ll"'ACH -........,.. ?W _,_. ,. """' ......,. .. yw ,_,.."'° """-UCQJSED Babyalttu, n1y ..._ 1 .:i. .... ~I q"-"ty .x-~ J&W.Wl'l&I .6. '!_. ··-~ -· ~ th • a.ta Mea.. ~,...,. v • n , . ,_. . ._VOUI ..... •Mlw ......_ •-' ..-_, M•••'llW ..,. "'CV _.. dow ,.1 ...... 1 .. ;. StJv Win. dable. Own .tft'm. Wlll ____._,_ ,_% ~ motbal'lil!11b0me N.B '&rel •An Ecr\llJ~~ ~ING '011 SALf -T,O.AC'Jlit OHl.YI born.~ Mon-Fri• • ~ Work, Call Sterline for ..,._ .. _ ... .., ' -~b)o.:.alt afttrbDom,, ew., • * ~LJ;•ICAL.c* . i J ttenqe.n. W~ :.rntb j ~. ' PHONE 642..5:671 IC~ 0C Colleae..-&re!L ·br1g)itrittil! ~· dowi,rei~ .• coml.c:onaL ftll!Wndl.:ta.1'951 .~ · OPENINGS --smteblkt~531.·1EO ~r . · ~To Pl1ce Your Trlefe~• P1radiM. .M 549-0706 Clf!&n!.lR.. J'ree -~ ~ ' -14)Cl.ted 111. O>lta ·Mai. • · ""' • Medlcal-Secfttuy_.. Stamp Collection: F i n ~ cond~ounted. '61 catalog ~Ju c:fVr SSOOO. Tu! 1/3 r~ta}li;for mob'I hm. or a11 dO'o!i'fl"" Orane:e Co. hill. ·197-l.1'6~ 1 • a~i improved view Joi. Tuslln..ai:ea. Equity Sl5,500. ~T.D.'s or '!? ~-... 'lo• 5'18-0!97 • 2 1oV'6)J townhoUses Ney,•. P!'lt~?-ch, 2 BR, 2 BA each, mo income. $9000 eQul '. TRADE for home. c;.r •. bal.t. ? ? Agent 646-0732 3§·,f"U ·~.; ~Sailboat hulL ld8ilf 'Ji;erro Cement Form. ~fl?! machinery, tools, eh:.·,-· •' t an 6~2-8961 Anytime LbVfk,l'iome & sWim pool &o • laMly style eafe (help 1,;ni: N ext to goU course. ~le:y Center. Trade r+i;~a~. Owner 644-lTll '1$3 MtOC Jag. 4 dr. F.P. Lo Aw.air:-.... ur... , .tfd.FM, !lleffil. Trade ~·for late P.U .. auto.. S-sl r ..J br hm & 2 rear aplaJ sa;l,.f50 val or 2 hms w/ S ~ apt.s, mo inc $188, , $i9.5(8. val. Trd .$33Af eq for s;caJ Wm. Ownr/b!'! 646-~750 8• .ae11i -' comm. in Atasca. defo.Mlt-aiwrside prop, Ta. hDe lot h>r Big Bear tot. ~ fOr RiVenide -• 96Ul027, 838-3284 HAVE:-50 a~s F/C Ore· a:t(l."1W1d· \VANT: Units, bOUse or ! '! 1n Orangc___Coun- IJ! vea1 Nancy J. Moor, Rlll';·~-7000 'J'Qd!' ~ -house \vith back bp.Y ' at 2353 Irvine Aye.. t vacant or-4 to 100 upitl-..Agent 61:..6252 or 6h-o823 ~ 6 pm. Stores It. Apt1 SieJTa .Area ·W ' BR baine or '! • CooilJiomai Co. Rl"' ,. {l4..1"6 or 833-S96 ~Glaa't!l"lliser; FB, RDF. , "Jtt:ainghy w/3 HP mo- tOr • ..hii\-cond. sips 6. Trade '15<1Jil·for clear C{lmper of-ff&C ag. 646-4619 ~ ~~ Acre, value $2495 or· ~ equitY in 5 acre tr.afi:;-BQth nr Palm Sprgs. fl>r .'Ol~v. Ford or Dodie ... :!1!; S3&-ll31 " YSIT11NG, near N~w Cl'rjtet t.:8Ylng ,. ' 'HOUSEWORK wanted.-eo.n., ~ prl'(6Nllll.. HOUSEICEEPER -• altter Penonable Cirl w/ lt(t\l,dft Bea1_:1tiful 4l' Norw~iaan -Heller .Park. ~ tncd. yd., R • ~26 ~,.,., Stor1p • 6MO 'Mesa art•; ~ per \~· ·, ri'~'~f,.r,,. llvS:int.or""" 2 itni 2 lc '~ foi: bua.Y.~urceon·· trdiit Oft saillngYa~t.Lovinglycar-Bal. ,)unch. Xlnt. care. , lpllr • I · ' ..,._ .' '. l'loUl'.c'all. u~~:-Dt·.LI ~hOJC.~17G& fioe. Must have 'exp.;wt.. . . • -"T-! '" ,,_ " ... ·MOY ~G ·. TYPING '-·-"·•1to-u..""'"' ,,.... :!uf~; ~or~~~:j~~: ~n:byaitbythe~kor· ;~~~:fU~I~ .. ~~~~=''.-donein~~:;::--;~!;~M2£¢~~ilffii~tti~fono= I~ ~=: :O~~, TD'~. can or ! '!. ~265 eYH. · You iamisb ~trans. C. 'A. Pqe 6f2.IJ10 • deliver. Ref.·~ Dcp~· onli., Start '1!7i··wk. ~.B. klCllt,lon. ~ SJ,Jary. , operr. ·Call , 8 ·5, Lquna Beach, 3 BR. & dell ~ Gq--1407.. . '' _ P•perhan9ing JOb. Me W 7100 Apply 2-4 pm daily. THE HOUSEKEEPER Ne e·4 e d: I~...,_=-=-'""°----. I ~e. ocean. view. Ex-CHILDcare,tnYt!.mt',yard-P,rapfflM. 6630 'aifttfne .--4150n. om. . COTI'AG£:,.plFFEE .SHOP Ll~~!*~ua.3 folEN (2J ·µxr 1round changt' for lot or-d~. hot meali HS area. . • . . ,_ ., Adve.rtmng: D1lplay ' · 562 W. lM&::~ OL ac"'b,I., ~ S20ll month. maintenance at Newporter ?.t•. Coru-ad, Rivi.era Realty *~1069• . . CUstoM DRAPERIES 1'9P f,ain~ ,CO-fnpany .WW IMMEDIATE • COitM~. _ · Hwi-t. Bch .re&. 968-3629 Inn._ Penna.nen~.,-~ ~ 400-2800 4M-ll30 E;..; . -Fr In I II 1· ............. tower! Paintll>e • . -.· HA1R . . ,...._ HOUSE-KEEPER• 'L(vo-in. Gui!•""" """· . EXCEU.E!'T fhild c au . •• • • • ions ~ ·..., A....,.. ...... · PART .. •M-' inr _M .. _ 6 -ntap. 1'>ft ·-. A . room + Men' .AKC Doberman Pups, Avan: done in my homto ~~ Anj v;lndow "treatinent. Hun-ir. EXlerior ':Paliitllla: dlit. to :ll It .,......,..__ ,_. .. ~ able for trade o~ tooi,s, fw1t-Exp'd with-infants. 642-2333. i1redi ot wnples A: desisn1. d.e.v.ela.p_xii.e.Dt •• o! . .New. HELP WANTED Pd v~t~ .. 84 7-26 ~3 aalsy •. Call befr-4 pm, *OVERSEAS* itu_rr, etc •.. -GOo!J. ~.e. BABYSl-ING, my ~me·, Make an:ipMin!Jn"'" w';,our pre111t1tt ....... ,. -·-' . • , 847·pt.36 Uk fOr ..µ. · _,, 518--lllf · . · 0 1Ve need yoU! Prune cona1d-eration. Ci.ll ,_. '' . 5 ~:'.-d 1· • Ca11~·5,-~ ," eeuiR--,,-::H; . .,._ · ~ · COSTAi'MESA MANUFAC-ou•~n -. CaU.snlltt)I:, nf: '174-2610 00 8961 , , , . San~ Ana Heights, ~·a . ecora or. . eve ones ... 60 .-per, room. Ex· Larr:e, national company,JeX· 1 • ~ H ~~ •• llve-tn, 2 · , · · . · . week. Ptibne: ~.·· ·:af·'COmplete Drapeey· Sehr-teriotB $230. Hanilf>aintin&: ~Ina: in ~e ~~r TUR~.a~ ~.6 ,to ~ . 6T~O ~ .•. M~L MAID ~ · HAVE clear Noctb 'U.runa Baby·-· ai;..,,.,. in My.Jfu'.me. _ice 64S2206 64);:4.558 --.-~----:--· has create<\ matli-open~s~ 10 pm lh~, walJf .CJ! d. -541-nt7 ·. I 'P•rt Tjma .. -.- 3 BR. I: den 1~ + % ba. . ·~ PAINTING · for male & Jemale.· to Work ~the Machinists, Crinden , JANrtOR.S, Waxera. Part &. 494-9436 WANT ~3.ch incOtne Child ap~ mo old. E1tctrtc4ir - . 6640 *sack from Vie~ ~ part time eveqina:s. No ex.. ~!~ _ _?Pfrsmp1" .e,.tod. ~~ .~ .¥J. .time. E:qle~nced only. e •·NEEDED . 642-2Th2 tn boalneu apin: _f'ioee .perience necessai}' u we ..... ~-Ye 0 . ··""."" w~n Good pay ~ ~'Odtl.n& con- Call anyti.me, Brokt'r ?.1Y .HOME. ,. VIC IN l TY ELEX:TRICAL . service &: eatlmatea. Will ndx:ontract. train. --to wqri( 4 hrs. eL ni&ht ~r dWons. 543-® ' . Tw Office Girls -;~~':t.~H~~~I K •••"T DAY S OR re,.,..;r. 24 hn.. 7 ..i ... ,·. No H'" hool d' 1 _._,,, xtra income. no.lo. •...-..d · *t* * * ***** -~Gs. 646-1491 job too .amall ~ &: Gts;.1089 -Ii~ &e ipoma ... Al one men -"'1/own·tiand''t~s ~ * LA·Dl.ES * Pk. up Must .be 25 and able to drloie 24 wut Motel ··11th m~r. . . . . . ,a;dditions,. U i~'S electrical, EX-P.AINTER.. ~w a c hl 'year re1kl'n~ ~ apply. Please call 545--7154 Ouilhnu money. Put out -APPLY - Long Beach, equity $76,001. BAB,'lsrrrtNC: Wou.Jd like ''ve fu: Jt? 646--4772 -' teacher will ·paint evts & C•ll for •ppt. . for further lnfortnaUon. cat. I: pk. UP. .orders-for_ W'E. lSll) St .. C.M'. Trade for home or ;! ? ? ! to take ea.re l child IJ'.IY· weeke1¥1A.. ..xinl. workman· 7,74-7251 :: -. -. -"1uer Brqsh, -$3.oo hr if-:----=--~--: ·· Bn:iker:-*· s·.t5-5725' home,·Q>l"-~esa_._548:-7~ o.icleftlftt--'6IO ahlp. Fttt e1t. 646-4519'or Advud•inll AaellCY . COASTAL··AG&NCY -' qu~;4. ,c-1 403. · ilnawpOrt _ 200 ac line 11$b1iig & hunting !f.<SYSI'ITING,' ..my; -~ SfG.0062. :'. .Sh.•rp Secret•ry f e r . .; .. •....:.._ I ·. [ • .-· -MACHINE Shop Opr; };.xper nAn._ onntl + color movie film + mail-Very exp'd Rae Sehl;·~ .. GARDENING & landscapiJl&. , . fast • ,.ced Newport: p ,r'O'Slt Dna ot1 drill preu '.& tm.' mach r•· it)a:listofname1..for.Hunt· C.M.Feneed yard.646-2191. :U~Yis .. e&J).Cl~q._n·,u p, INT./EXT •. Aver., E1't. Be•ch Agency. :r.ypei amployment tool&. Gd Mk»a: cond It 1gency· ing club. Tradto: 4 whJ. cir. BABYSITJ'INC . !JpriQkl.ers inat'd .& repaired. $l27.50 .... ~!!.: onl1i,,8 ~-6$.70. Shorth'•ncl t•• A1tll1•nc• be aet ta. ApJ11¥ 1604 vehicle or'! 962-8671: .. ·, My home dJlring the day. 673-1166 -·-· i'J&l'··~~-a ' · oreinlze I. f '• I l'e W . A. rne#Jber Of: !.fonrovia, N.B. 833 DOVER DRIVP! 1967 32' CbriA ·Craft, twin 642-1225 ~·s . Garoen1* &: Lawn Apts le' Co~'l: ~~ th r u • U n d .. r 35. Snellini: It Snelllng~ lnc .• * MAI6 '•· itJi &me:. App: NEWPORT BE:AQJ- eng. fully equ1pped. veey -Maintenance .. CorrunerOaJ. HOLIDAY,~ '.lriL -& Phone:-'42..J910 .. 425 2790 Harbor Bl, 'CM~ Be.n Brqwri'i ~i-Hotel, GG--3870 clean, \Vlll tn:de eq\lity ·tor Irick, ~ry, etc. ·lndus~~i¥:tiaL ~=~ r!, ~ N. Newport Blvd. Harbor Blvd, at ~apns SllDG ;s.. Cat; llw)', s. URGENTLY home or car or.anything'. ' 6560 exper .. "Clwck" 6f5.:(l809· A:;sembly Laa:ooa. · · . NEIDED; 644-1434 da)'S, 642'.:4741 aft 6. BUILD; -Remodel, repair· GORD1t·s La w.n Mailr SUBUJmAN ffe&iotinVUe:c COOK • • • MANAGE Aptl. Ideal for P/ff. Secty. to $00 IPF , Sa.n O~ment 4 Olnuil IOts . Brick. block, co nc._re te~ tVenanee ~~tw. 00~~!'~:'7'0' Expert G»•,...nteed W.Ork m· . tt1 '~; couple.~ C'Jl'<OWr who wants (Emp'--r -"" fee?l SkUii & ff AocroSs trt fro ,:,.., · b too mall , acuum . ..., P ne ._.-~ • -~· Expeiie:nce<r · lo •aupplernent ,Income. ovi~ ,,,..,,. · o ice: ·'· m carpen •• ,,,no)O · B • then S45-87J4aftS PM Ftte ·ett.Nojo~too.~ ~ PerCent:qf: ~furn ... -·+ &tbill~ln.-theart ~humari bank, nx to AlbertsOil's Jnkt. LR:: <;Jmtro. • . ~ . ': or too small. 494--3190 . ' . . . . _.. . relatlona-~ibe' topt, Also $~,!XX) eq. For Sho'ppirig . , .. , _ .... JIM S Gardening & , la,wn * PAlNTJNG -:'· . Int. rt. Apply in person ·only uWJ~h aft; 67M468 helpful to be politlc;.n)' mi Ctr or Apts Oi'an&e C.O • .lu1lneu--Servic1 6512 mainknance. Res & com· flOX. . ~ MALE COOK. -PM .. ffoap. ed 4: WJei>Cumbered · Csotnie ::t~trade 'm)' 2 .. u~;" ·SMILEY'S -;_· ,;:ws:;V~n1yard ~~.re-=-~· af•tp. THE ·RIQG£R1 :f;·.~~~~ ~~e~ved!) '"'""' mfnt cond, 13•.., B'Uslness Serv1'ce"$'· ,~ .. mp. SPRI NK~E R EXTERIOR.INTERIOR . ASSEMBLERS . . : Comm. Hoop. 3jm C..t.. ~Q'. Finc/ln!ural'lce ivail. - ' ' .. ·. . ~~ ~-& ?\IAlNTENANCE #16 F•&llloll t_m&nd ~~So:~-~l3ll. ~L ... 1 S.C_ty. $62!_ ~Pf. TT<tde for Car or Real Es-boo . JAPjJ"JESE , Gard e ner, • 646-3185--e Electro-mechanii!a.I i.S!lembly Newport Buch -· ·•• • Calli. I: i!Orpon.te e:qier. tate. Call Vena 645-1442 Tax!tl, C.P.A. kk~P~. exji'd comp yard sl!rVlce PROFESSIONAL P ai.fJ te r including_ soldering, , MAN w I woodworidna: exp., please.· '\'of'k fol-a sharp. · -· -· · · Insurance. Mutual funds ·& · ' ' ' · .will trade work.Jot furniture · t rk with th r.1 · be tifu1 Res Vu lot Hemet val $1000. Real Esta le investments. ~ estimat~ .. oog..23().1 orl7'! 642-4558.. ' COOK. Exp'd FR;y . COOK. o ~,, -. :)'Oil ,; ature young attorney in . au 170 Acs Yucca Valley va1 Notary. 646-9666 642-2T.li , CLEAN-UP SPECIALI5T Call P'rsonnel Dept. r.tust be tUt. Call after 3 or semt-J'fllftd. 842-8312 Newport Beach Oif:ice-s. (~e S400 ac. 2~· Owem crus, '· · 1.Io\ving, edging, odd jobS. fvr.l}ctter Painting, Inter· (714) 494-9401 pm. for a.ppointment . Manufacturin& also h~~ applicant· pa.id i?ad~ val $4200. Trade one/ Cirpenterl"ng -65_,. Reasonable. 54S-'39&:'> ior ·ft erterior; acoustic cei-· 673-4l6G. ' -~'~"==""~'"-o~"'-'~~-=-i all. clear. for TD ·or ? · lings. 646-4077, 541-3502 . TEL' ONIC .. EXP.LORER. has im-NlGHT Deak cl~ -auditor, "'""" Eve. CARPENTRY 6'norol SorvicH 6612 RENTAL READIER • COUNTER •GIRLS modll,,. , -., 6 . nit.,/wk, exp'd, Apply Neat cottage rear o1 R-2 l\ttNoR . REPAIRS. ~ Job· M0-39'l4 'Thtte' !hlf~ avallabll!' for -Ben Bro\\'n'a Motor 'Hotel, I~~-r· ~J-~-1.ili !:. s:an~ t~~~~ ~~OC:: ~~TEN~~ PAINTING-Ext~ .• u .yn.. ru"INEERING · -ONTRA "C~FETERIA -· ·---31106 s . c.oa.at. so. Laguna. ClS<O,{ ate el ·air cood. 'S45-&1T5 . U le9 . • ~ ~ . . E!xp. Ijls.; Lie., Free eiit. U1tl , , ¥ _. • •• • NURSES Registered • ewn- car·part eqtt; balance·$135 't ~~e~ ~· . ACOUst..ceiling. ~ · 1 # 60 Fashion I~ *~-Finlah men ing & ·night shifts. Ex. W · mo.. ti~~: 'li.73-0173 · f:e~n · --~II rip • 6730 L1gun1 leich..... Newport Shopplnr. C1111.ter. •l \Velder benefits. Apply Pe,rsonriel 12 um1_. close to Harber .t-1 •. ~ l!laste~ing,·.R_!P~_i_r:_~.eo, . · Pacllic Coast Hwy-. at · •1'-·Plutnb.d''•-helper Director, So. Coast Cam· Ne\VPort cit Va1ii~$95;000 . CARPENTRY, Cabinets Y'~'RD IC aJ'. Cleanup, •PATCH ~ •. ·~· ERIN. G Equal OPP9rlUl\lty_cml!lOY~t. ~tcArthbr, N.B. *f _Gen. .1,;sembly munlty HOSP/. 31872 Coast Want ~e.:QwnerwUlcar-.'~piod, N9 jot,, too &iuaJ.L._ i$lO/loe.d.' Salvageabl~ tree. ..-.wwi AS.SI STANT.$,&. . DENTAL OFFICES Hv.'Y·· So. Lasuna. 499-1311. ry·,fin. chge: Leon Vi qual;WoCk: Qe.U 646-~10. ~emo\·e. ivy: grade. All ~~i ~~~timate RE'CEPTIONIST • -ASStS·TANTS-*1 -!.flllm&n· ext. 356 Rltr: 5'f8~ an!>time.: ' REPAIR;. Panitions. ·Small' , ·. 2-87'1!1. ' -. P~resUme · inuSt. ii ave e Insurance ·girls. *3 -El~ 'P"A"l'"Nc;;T=E0R,-;*-*.,.-B""O"Ao;T;:;S'1 What do )'OU hl.Ve"tti trade'!· Remodi!I, etc. Nile or f!eY,· -H:&.ULlNG. Hii.ve ~T P/U P_lurnblng 6190 1.ro yrs. dental experi@rn. • Rectptioolst-(1. no' vOlt)' Exptrlenced only. Top pay. Llat It. here ·...;. in Qrana:e 'Reu! Call· KEN ~!19 ' :Anylhing · trash 1o fnrn, .$8 -a U union btfiefjts.· Prepared ft!ll.lll\e m\lit have Larg-e custom yachts. WJJJ.. Cbunty'1 larRest read trad· REPAJRS, Af.TERAriONS loand + mlg. 49--1-1003 PLUiriIBING REPAIR . (;: i.ry $3. per hr. Call for two yn. dental e~. PLE+$E APPLY ard Boat \Vorifa, l29S Baker, i111 post-~-~ a·~ CA'BtNET. Any size j6b •. · Hi\ULINC. Havr ~-lT P!U No job too :>inall illiP'· for inte1'View. ~tsJi. r:f'lif hours. All union bene-: ... '?~ :~ -Costa Mesa . *. . -· ..... . ~yrs .. ~xper. 548-6713., r,:'yfhing . lrash to furn. $8 • 642-3128 • BABYSITrER, lite ~gi..... tor Ht:s:-s at:µyS3.44 per_hr~·c.an -P-m-ME=,~1-..,....---,-.-u-r * d + t 4"'1003 ,,.....,., b'Plo~r ?ifotor Homt's · oa m I• ;n,. • 6950 2 chlldm; ocCassc,-90me for ~ppolnbnt'nt 63.J.~·-pioesent eam1nts frorit ,._::__ * * ANll!lNCEMENT.S ---------------------Cement, Concriete ·~ MOVING HAULING Roofint .. : Sn ·. May consider live in DENTAL RECEP110NIST, 3Q21. Newport Blvd. S200-ist'IO a mo., ·p/time. TV aiill-!llOTICES ANNOUNCl!MENTS .. • I\!. ton van, reas. j36-fil26 ALL TYPES; roe!!:. wood k later. Cftf. 64&-2101 . Exp'd. !or modem ·~ntal Co!ta -~lesa, Calif. leads turn. Call for a pPt . • CDIENl' \VORK. no .job .loo . . <n•I l<A ..... .,..... Ii!:.~;, ~-"DI\ ind NOTICES ~· :Small, reasorni.ble. Free Clean Up •nd Haul asphalt ~ shingles~ LEAKS BABYSI'l'11;R \vanted. 2 office, Hunt. Sch. 962-J319. . "'~ ~. Fouftcii (frH Ads) 6400 ---------·I ~·=•ti~m'.'..~H:;, . .:;S:::tu~ll'.!'.k~k..:54'.!'.:8-86=15 • $10 a load. 646-2528 REPAIRED. Work l:\lar. boys age11 2&5 .. Ste.it J11.n . PATIOS • onlVEWAYS 847..UJG ,,,d, 5 day wk ... ,., my DISHWASHER JolM "Mon. w ..... 7100 Jo"9 Mon. woin. 7100 eLACJs:::· & 1vhite ma I e Span\11' or Bird dog. Vic. \!on~ .. -Shopping Ce n t er, M~ &. Ta1bert, F.V. 847."861) DOG: )tale; black w/smaJI ' . v..~,:TnFk on chest & small nick in felt ear. Black collar ~Id.kt studs, C.~f. area, 548-8lll Wii$JARANER Or Vis:ila P'!i@ vie Goldenrod & C:St Hwy. CdM on W24. Call 67 t FOUND older fe1na1e reddish ~Type dog: Grieving. N~i cn\·ncr or new home-. ~ BEA\Jll'. Jong-haired female, calica:::at with nea collar. cat""MS--7260 or 545-1161 f~pm. s:£f'E.SE eat fOu.nd Cdr.I. .flea collar. . l 613-1862 RgYCE UNION boys bik~, vk!. No. HWltingtOa Beach. • 74 • Nr25 ~ sraylah cat wit h C9 streak oh rue. ~k for Grttcbcn Plrsonala · 4405 .Planter11 ·. ~Ock frr\ces Houncleaning 6735 Sewlni 6960 ~~\e~lust have awn trans, PALMISTRY & Room additions 642-S852 . * CONCRETE fU)(jRS, BAY &: Beach Janitorial e Dre!lStnB.king • Alterationa SJ'ITER. desperately needed CARD REA.DI. NOS .... lkls. etc. Reason. able, Call Serv. Cpts, 'vlndo,,-s, floors, Speclal on coat hems l·2 yr old (irl, 8-5 ?ifon-Fri. .SUARpFply .. tnSlpeRrsoLOnl·N elc. Ros & Commc'I. * 646-6446 ._ 642-1316. · Bring Your Problems to Dor't. 642-8514 G46-J40l -· 5930 Pacilie Coast Hwy; Me ·-I Wiii Help YoU --= Alterations-642·5145 Banking Newport Beach Solve Them. ·Child C1re 6610 COMPLETE Housecleaning Neat, accur~. al Yrs. exp. * COMMERCIAL Y.'alls, windows k floors '======::::::::::=:::I TELLER * •DISHWA_pHERS: II Or. I :Pv1 advice on all mauera . CHRIS'IMAS V,ACA'UON 839-3053 Dcp'd. A~ 1n person ov. Must . be neat in . ap- .of _lif~. su~h a& ~ove-, court-my home $3.5d day •. 3 b-r & -".~w=1N"oo=1=•·"· "0"1"R=TY=,-TJLE, ~.•r•rri~-. 6974 Newport Nation1I pear:ance. 3099 Britto.I. C.M. ~hip, mamage, _di':'O:ree, bus. up. Lg :yd, ·supervised ac-Free est. 15 years exp. * Verne, The Tile itan•. -Bank * DRIVERS * ine.~ transactions of . all tivjtles .. ?.lake resv. now:. ·Johnny Duhn, 642-2364 Cust. work. lna'·" & ·re""';..., ~.-... · · • k'.ndL R•"m't '"· ,._,,. uuo ......--. .,.. ..... 1·1or &: Placentia, N.B. N Exp •-· .. e · u.., ,...., ·642-5396 · · No ,,. b-too sinall. Plaster 0 -., .. nee . ated, cause s(ieedy and hap. * APT CLEANING * py marriages, overcome rt 6620 test &: thorough 642-8164 patch. Leaking ah 0 'we r BEAUTICIANS Neceuaiyl va1s, lovers quarrels,, evil Ceqtracton \VlLLIMtS Cleaning Serv. ttpair. 841-19al/846--0206. • 3 NEEDFD AT ONCE, ?ifu!I: ,have dean Calltonda habits. stumbling blocks of COLD 1.tedallion Duplex by RENTAL READIER T.rff , __ 1..... FD.lALE. drMna record. Apply - all kind s. There js no heart C. L. Kirohn«ir located at 540-3924 ;.;.~_:;.~;;;'.:.;. ·-:.:.. __ .;;6'-'-tlO w~ are turning way busineo!s YELLOW CAI CO. so bad or home ·90 dreary 7310 \V. Oceanfront. N.B. · everyday. Need capable 186 E. 1-St. th t I br' h. TREES pruned, to Pp e d ' opr'1. to take care of re-,, _ _._ ~w . • . cannot m; s.u~ me , Add'.lllons •· Remodellng Housecleanint 6735 n!moved. 26 yrs ex-per: Qltt'lt cuttomers Re e en t '-"-... mesa into Ll, Jn fact, no 1Jl3tter Fred H. Cerwick, Lie. A er i a I t ow e r e q u i p ; gntds welcome: Cllentele, D~tn.ll\ItR. itaJ1ir& group; what may ~.your hope, 673.oo-11 * 549-2170. CARPETS. \Vindows, fin, 49J..541R_ ·, 638-__ 7234 •• ~ ba ! -·' fear or amb1li0n, etc. Res or Come'\. Xlnt _;~..c:.~~----not necau.cy .. catl Viola •ocoou 8 • a ... ta,r UCV.or SEE. THE · "::(Irk Rea_s! ~ts. 54!J..41ll TREF.S. Hedges, topped, Cut Lo.ving, 548-9919. Or apply organ. No I! a 1r1 up•,~ PALl\flSTRY READER C•rpet ,(leaning 6625 removed, 30 Yfs ex-p, Flli!Y In person, 267 E. l'lth St.,,1_;67_;3-39-"-'IO'--. ------ I will tell you just what you CARPEi' &: upholstery stearil Ironing 6755 lns_u~ .. Bia: Joly! 642-4000 . C.l\I. * ELECTRONIC TECHS * "''nt to ~now. _ _ _ cle.lned, also carpet . ii\. GENE'S TREE SERV: Oveneu Opportunities ' Ava.II. for parties itallatiou. Resulls a:uar • .FOr. IRONING. In my home, 'I'r'fte~ ihiubbe.Ty trimmed, BAR..\IAID, '•harp. -at-Call Smftty 714: 77~2610 With This card a.nd "·00 free est. call 64(i..(J.971 6-p'd, You deliver & pick-&:/or remo\.-'ed. 5'19--1359 ~l\.-1!:, NJ time, nl&h~. FASHION . • Re-ceive $5.00 Reading up. Nice bar. Cooc:l-aalary, Wlll • ()ptn Daily 10 AM to 10 PM A-OK ahampoo Chris~as *-642.-02()j * Uphelstery 6990 · train. Apply In pel'90JI only l\1ant :your fr ee -Fuhion FulJ.y Liccflsed special $7:50 rm-less for!R ·-0-N-1-N"G-'1",=-..,.='-00-.,.-1-1-00-;°"';,;c;,:.;,;;;.!., ___ .;...., to Sam, bet\vee.n 11:30 AM Wardrobe b7 Ouistrnas ! M. Ofl. (213) 691·92'12 halla e tc. Also _comp ·hour; alao alterations f-CZVROSRI'S Custm, Upbol. &I PM icoine a Taablon Coasultanf! 210 \V, Whittier m vd., · l-""'=""='",,.'&,_,.877-.."=l-:82==--.baby,;=='tc;ti:,:ng,;·,;;4;-c_':..,,,764,;cl__ European craftsmanship Scottle~f1 · "36 E. 17th St. No lnvestmcmt -I-lithest W Bicycle. adults. La Habra RENTAL READIER -IRONING 100~ lin!· 64i:.145-l , Coat.a t.tesa 54a. Eamtrv1. Complete Traln- Ofhllnental, yellow, comb. RETIRED JUDG S4o-3924 n.;,... "ha .. -1831 Newport..Blv._O l. in&'. Full or p/time. Call Mr . ~ under seat. Poor cond. E 0 R ==---~_,.,,,....,,.-.... u .. own ''6'-'• .. ' ' IOAT Han!tn for interview en•) 1'-ntlfy MS-MM 11tlAL ATI'ORNEY who GlVE the "United Wa1''-6*'™3 .1 SOCK rr TO 'EM!, ~-10 A?.f-6 PM Df.lli. :oi; """" "' inleresl<d. • to CARPEJtn.,R$ FuhiOn Mtm>r, Corp. ~ 6401 jolnlni with m, lo initiate ~ . 1.;..;~----~--action (without t_...fni:or)t====------, . FemaleCOOK·PM Hospexp FDtALE Sl>ephm! < yn old which •""!d ~l the ANNOUNCIMENTS I ANNOUNCEMENTS I ANNOUNCIMINTS E X P & It I E NC E D r>ttf'd. Cool.ct PmoliMI k;it vie Y.'llllOll &: Pla~tia. t>talth. educMioft11(welfare ind NOTtCIS Dh'Ktor. So. Coot Coaint. <;jt. Child'• pet, R<w',d. of our f•Udl!'-m•._ (Anlj, In-• and NOTICfS and NOTIClf' Apply Hoop. ml2 Cot R,;;. 56. cldont'&lly, ~ ,. .. n1 . . O'DAY YACHT1 La(Ul'"!,'l&-1.!ll Ext0 '!8' . .. ., carat diA.....,nd taxation) Writ'e .Dr. "LF. P,!'ICNMl la _-. Cemetery Lots 6411 30fO PULLMAN """ ,llERGLASS ~ · ---· ,, -• A--'6410 " '" "'-:cOS'TA-MIBA· "';.AMIHATOltS --•ti'no .. m ..Wnc prior to '"'"· ~~~'1C(tiil, *'" -D 'fl FOR Sal•. by .....,, < 80 ~"--~Top .-.~< ~Nov :II. ~~2527 ~~~~-·er call . on. • Pac~c View cimetel')' lot&. AT Yard A 1\1~ Salts ........ l""rn:•~. pay."'!"\•" 1Rl6ii Setter. Female 6 mo. . ! . • CHRJmlAS , ' 'Call mamlnas 642-1323 Take OVfr opt.taUrw boat custom l11cht1t. WUfard .BOat "'-,-' Booolr. Reward DISABLEDYett.0...11., blind ~·~--· ~ . ~-, FLEA MARKET -repair, hardwart sa1n & Works,lltlBaku.·CJil, ,,., nA --~ ,.._" ;II tSU bellfv 111 PRICED to sell fast! 2 lota. boa al Int ~lO C.O.ta r.1ea urgently ·~~ .peraonaJ ..... "ta• ')'OU I e Y\VCA Sanla Ana Paci& V6ew Me m or I al t e1. Btil •a 1n forefgn Ctr Medtanla ~ voluntl!t'r aid Mppfl\Ved/Frl caw 1tyle.daU... 14.11 N. BroadY.'&,Y Newport .Beach; No In-Good p,.' benetlta, bid paid \VlfJTE Jong haired cat w/ & drive tn>' ... Renault ' ·u Hr record~ Dec s &; 6·Noon-9 pm. Pant. 549-0074 Vt!ll.ment requlmf. lVdlt va.e1tion, ,sroup Ins, .tllll- pllik collar. Los_t nr llartlor ~. Viatt mt .M :211 "A" OtµNCE CO. 547-8663 Snack bar Antiques. dolls FOR SALE -2 Iota Daily Ptlot 8oJC M Gt tomi1 f'Yrn.Wled ftte. Good: •1lal<or.O.l.5'l-$458 <lotSt.,NB. '' ••LICENSED ·. ·je.,.try, ilfU p1ott.i;.,.'. PACW!cVJEW '$.l50. BOOKKEEPE•R, Ex· ooaun. """"'uio. Aili.tor f ad pins! ./ !143-1"' .f """"""'· want.d tn ... J0e M,,.,.';'.'J'h. 51i).1'81. ~It MOS S~~~ U~-=.r' .:=: ~~~=,-2 N. ~ SENSITTVITI TRAINING BY Chmtr -2 Harbor Rut1 CGUntlnr oUkw. 54G--3943 bet. $500 ilLARY ~ Chri1bnu IAlll\, Meadowlark . Oµb, Camtoo lleal, San Clemente , WORK SlfOP ttmet~ . 'Iott. FUu:>nabie 3.$ P~f. Juat oUt ot milltap ~ \Ve m:anllfactti?e scientific instrumenta, sys- ·tems . and components. We ofier ail'. condi· tioned,sh9p,.Qp-\crdate equipment, ten paid ·holidays, and ot)ler "~lue Chip" benefits. If · you. consider.-youn:elf qualified for any of the folldWing we·· would like to discus's em- 'ployment possibilities. BENCH MACHINIST Will do band.fitting, machining & repair and f &Work as necessary. ti-lust be able to read •printr, use all normal hand tools and have knowledge in the use of macblne tocils. 2nd •hilt. HANO SCREW MACHINE . Will set-up aild operate hand screw ma .. cblne. Jllu•t i:e.•d detailed prints, follow op- eritfOn ' she~ts and work close tolerances. Srd shift . 1 , RAOIAL DRILL PRESS Will set-up and operate the No. 2 Burgmas· · ter. Mu.st be•fam!ljar with. the t111 of l'igs ind ~tures,' blue-prints and Close to er-anc.s. 2nd shift, < · . ·DRILL PRESS ,Will set-up and operate the single spindle drill press. Must be experie~d in the use ..of tumble jigs, fixtures, taps and reaming. la~ -2nd & 3rd shifts. .. . 1'\JRRET • ENGINE LATHE · Will set-up a'"1 operate the turret or'tngine lathe. Experienced In the use of blueprints ud the holding -of clo1e tolerances. 2nd & ·hd sblfll. . • MICL: SPECIALIST Wlll sel·up $nd ~rate vertical mills. Ex· l>eri'l'ce tn·t11<1. In n!latlon of blueprints , ltoldJng of close to erances. Ferrous and lton-forrou1 !ReW.. 3rd 1hift. ~BECKMAN- ." 1 ,INSTllllllNTS, INC:· ,. 'l j 2511· N1 Harbor Blvd. " UV. Dilcrlminatt-Re•-lt.B. 3 ml. w. of Beach. ou 49:1$136. 492-001ti A prorram ot Interpersonal Q.i>n:u fttl.',ro 646-3012. BUSIEST ~tJQce tn trlllf al 'IM!rvice mtf • .stnaD bit ralet. Call~. "'anltr. Adm. f2 ~~-... .JO PM 1nrr.lserror 11m11J &elf-di· DAILY PILOT D IME. A-to.wn. 'M\ll DAJCY PILOT P&rta m(f. firm. F'ft· ntiO. (N. 0 0 rtll O,f ,.1m 0 1perrilonal, _H l~hway) FASHION -Orl1tnal a AUX>HOIJCS ,f.non.ytnOUI ~led i:roup~. ~Unima! UNES. \'ou CAn· use thct11 Clasalficd 1ect!on. Save ClllAnn, NercMnts'Pcflll?.l\o • fie. l\\'Olntn'• ttady lo v.-eu) ... ~ 50-'l'ZIT o.· write t• tMrse call 6-12-$730. 10 Ai\f. PILOT ClusUlcd ad. money, lime It ettart. Look nel A;ency, 2043 WNlcfirl An eq~I opportunity emplover tni nk shov.int"'.l'iS-$800, P.o .. &oir.im Cblta P.te&11..... ! .P.M.-. ---for.fylt-peMiife: a_.,..DtaJ. now!!' ~D~r;,, .• _!N~·~"?"°!!":!,!lle~a~c~hc!&<&mo~~~lli----------ji!.;,;;;,:;;,:;•;,..,..,d II " *DAY BUSBOYS "* .NIGH;r • ,, • biSHWASHERS • ·A~iy in"':' person ~·. ' Retlie« ',E. J, .. JM..E. Cout Rwy_ Newpqrt • I}iac;h Restaurant ~I·• . •. , • .... e -V/it,ITRESSES -e ·e ·eusaovs -.. .... ...--·~ ----r.-----·· -... (' • ' ' s~~i>-\l and _;,. -· SPORTSWE~ ;. from JACK'S SPORTING GOODS '" . _, .~ ., ) I ,I .......... . -212 Marine, Ave.,,.; , lallloa . bland '" ' -..;;, l~ {• 673°8420 ' "; ,. Br1nd..,.m• PMuch "' ' MEN ·WOMEN • • -:!,,-;;;-;: : ... S. OAII. V I'll.OT '""'· Dtc1 it u .5, JM REE TO YOU -·""' l'OllTATION TWANSPOllTATION TltANSPOltTATION TltANIPORTATION TRANSPORTATION 1-------1--'-----•-•_ao Mori .. ~ tOH -....,.i.. noo ~-po.. mo '-rted A -'600 lmpomd Aulot - TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION lmporied ~ 9600 lmportod Aulot 11'1!: Tu qu&L b o m e HORSE COlnl b rtnt 135 1962 Of.EVY G re • n b r I • r · w/feocd,,., "Tana•• month.~ -..... SW01TERJ:>.IO-lod.2HONDA '°du. "ady, top Campo•. Fll1ly equlp•d, DATSU.N ColllO-Samo><d mla. 211 Ana u,u. 519-325> Ind. ,_.,, """ "" .,.. I ooncl 1185. Cllltom • hp mmplotd> mwt ....,,.,, 1---~----- ,,.,. -aD "'°IL Gd HORSE -!or ""'-llO l'l'o pm mnd. 0.t l2IO. --IJOO, D>-$231 °' l) 11 let 9525 wr.&chdoe. older ch I Id. are,. SS5 mo. 1618 Oreb&rd. price f/'5, m.3317. f91-311U une Uft ___ _ tJ06':md. S.781W &ftft' T S.A. Hata:. 5&-0058. Trail 6 mo. old, load om-'66~ HONDA 305 ntw eng. VW Du.ne BUUY. run1 eood. pm 542-MTB day1. 12/6 dlHon. cherry cond. XTRAS ~75. rood rubber. $495. 6U-T7811. FREE to IOOd home . Llvntodc IMO 811--M See at 9615 Kenalncton HD 2032-0 Placentia, CM wfftonced yrd, Lovable call ~1Ul. '62 vw Chu hi I 5 I a!n'1! bred b/w tmier type BANTAM Chicken Bttut:Y'• INt Slip Moorfnt fm6 '66 YAMAHA ~ cc Good on brand n:w' e':lnt. m~ dog, 9 mo&. old welahl 10 Aho Duckl $5 pr. 2lil2 Meu condition ~ before ! PM or OFFER * 6f2-4222 lbL lovn cblldttn. --:~ Dr. 543-5703 ltmt~':mS:.t !:.bit ;:_,kdays, all dQ wknda. VW Dune Burl)' S595 ~ ly kl F <'-~-~-r ·-30' A 35' 20J2...D Placentia, C.M. GOftvEOUS cudd tleN, or..,..... or ,....., ""1 Marina d.I Rey FOR SALE: 'CT HONDA 450, 642--'1'188 8 wkl. Perilan/Callco, a110 531-4410 or 6'73-HS9 New mcdei'n marina am Jeavtnc irtate. MUl't sell! 1========= /67 DATSUN .f fu, automatic transm1s. •Ion. white walla, 17,900 act. ua1 miles, drives like new! (VWJlO'I') $1095 Harbour V.W. aupt< 1ov1,,. blk/wht TRANSPORTATION Mll'lna City emp. S..at1'84MonrovlaApt>l, lmpo•tod Autoe 9600 Pttsian, housebroken, locl<· Jchn Guaman Dock Miiter or call 646-3451 alter 4: 30 Theo Worlds Best $2000 Car ·'"• '°' '°"""' •••• , .. -& Y1cht1 9000 (2)2) ~15 ... TRIUMPH BON· AUSTIN AMERICA AUTHORIZED SALES .l SERVICE 187ll BEACH BL., 8.f2.4.f35 HUNI'INGTON BEACH ~92 121 SCRAM LETS SUP WANTED '"' 25' NEVIU.E, lo mlluc•. . e . 11 MONnl old mal• black • SAILBOAT •poclal paint• chrome S.. AUSTIN AMERICA ..,. DAllUI ...,.. La~ AKC ftf· Nffd.1 ./ Call 5a-3955 ./ to apprec. 6?5-S5Sl Sal Service 19:rge yud. Xlnt with ANSWERS BALBOA Sllp. _,, baat With '6i BS4 "1 Victor, SlO mi. m:~late o;l~~ children. very rocd dog:. shower I: he d A parldtw Culll>m meat A oU tank. 4" All Models _, "Leader in The Be&eb Cities" ......,.. 1218 ronate-'"--Slllm-til611MO.Po~mo.oR>--· wide ....,, ban. ZIMMERMAN ABSOLUTELY adorable, Catnip_ INFECnONS Fork brace, sm. 5'0-&35. 2145 HARBOR BLVD. lovklc. 2 ~ old pu.ppy It a doctor 1teals 9J'JOther'1 lolt1 W1ntld 9050 1961. YAMAHA. 250cc Endure. 540-6410 . resrued near fwy. Truly patients should he be ~ $525. Call Tom 546-6100 ~s home. Pleue phone for aJi~tion ol. INFEC WANTED: Used .Udo 1.f or wttkda)'i or 6.f6...5432 eves Ii: NEW! "'"' 5, ,.....,,, 1218 TIONs? Cttonado 15, W>th tra11... ......... 3100 w Cout H N 8. '70 PICKUP FRE~ puppies -'iii S~r I MUST BE CRAZY 968-4793 evtl or wkndt. '65 HONDA 2'50 CC 642-94<5 • wy.,5fG.176.f W/camper, 96 hp overbl!ad SpanjeL Mott)er is Spnngu ' SCRAMBLER $275 Authoriz!d MG Dealer Spaniel. Males I: !!males. To sacrifice my 2 cabin Flylng Leteon1 9150 Call 614-lS.f? att' 5 pm -· _ cam, 4 spd, dlr, 6 ply tire•, M k good ts &: EZ t ruiffn Both · · t nd U back up llthb:, Ycu name a ' P' 0 c · '" mm co · LEARN TO FtY * '67 BSA IJchm•-"'° cc, A STIN HEALEY H! FUii prloe $2099. Talre trai~ 548-6687 1216 23' <l 30'. Fin&ncing·lnBur· 50 nlte hn "95 28 d---• • 22 I ...,;;-~ t:=:::--------ance avail Hu.....,r """"'' .,.. · uu very c ean. -or belt of· small dn or trade. Call Phil. MATCHED pa.Ir of Calico -_.,. _.,. solo. 1969 four teat Ceuna fer, Call 846-7385. REBUILT 1957 red Ausdn 494-ST13 or 545-0634. ~r ld ttem • buff & white Call Vena -6.f5.l4"2. tnc. smd . .chi I: supplln. , Healey, Removable hrd top. ---======c=- lnale kitten. Ne-ed special SACR!FICE ~ 26', 1968 Chris Eltab. A.an. KI >6203 69 H018~p~_ °:._ 350 BrXlntand 4 seats, good tires. Battery ORANGE COUNTY'S h omes. 546-3 58 6, Cavalier, 21D hp, radio, new '""•head under warrty. New Int 4 NO. 1 5t~1846 1218 !atho, load!<! w/extru. For Mobl .. Home1 9200 cond, $575 540-3198 p:iint Job. S1250. or beat of. DATSUN DEALER FREE .... •"'Y' 8 chkk•"'· quick "'• """· By ........ M 9350 '"· .......... DOT DATSUN I nbbl~ 2 cum.a pig•, 642-1717 MODEL SALE 11 atoncootera 'l'·12""SP=ru"T"°E.,-.,.-w-,""-· -..,..- flock of homina: piea:o111. 25' OWENS Cabin cnilser, RODDY Minibike. Excellent competition clutch, much 4M-896(L 12/5 a:ood rond. New motor; trlr; Now to Jen. I st condition. 3HP e.&-S eni. more new equip. Must KmJES, "Maxy,'t!ll" & canvas. $3100 firm. ~ at $155 new. Best Otte r. sacrifice this Wttk. $650 or "l'nl<lence·· -• w"" •1ac• 2155 s. c'"""' s.A. Call Greenleaf Park >18-6563 "'•t .... 592-5358. male & femal' Calico. 370 837-8620 * '60 SPRITE * La Perle Lane, C.M. 12/6 1966 Chris craft mi'. All An Adult Ptiv•t• Club Auto S.rvlcu GOOD CONDmON' BLONDE Afghan -newtered Glu&. Twin 185 HP eng's. Ont Milt from th• Oc1en & P1rt1 NOD CALL EVES: 646-5919 male. 6 yn: old, Good family .Fly Bridge. Head • Galley. '6T AUSTIN Heal~ Sprite, without children. 6t6-8S&I $8600. Call 646-7353 IN SMOG FREE &ood condition $USO. 18835 Beach mvd. Huntlncton Beach so.mi or 54().(IC42 '67 DATSUN PICKUP AD orlcinal inside &-out . .f spd, dlr, will fine prvt prty. Full price $1075. call Ken 494-m3. 12/ll 1963 TROJAN, 25', "' Costa Me BEACH · 83&-7619 1'B-LA~CK~M~;"~ .. -. Fn:--oc""'"h_,_,...., .Cl ............ baU lank. sa Auto Supply ... A.H. Sprito, -.,.nd., ENGLISH FORD die. Good w/chti-. Want ""· $521(). 842-6430 , no Int ll50 eood "'m•. '33-0837 847-5837 • Newport Harbor Wholesale w .. * ~ * PLYWOOD ICl'apti. 646· 16' XEN~Y, M h p 237'1 12/6 Homdlte, Trailer. bait tank, \ tboole from 20 Models Pr1cq to All VESTOCK clean. S650. SCS-6731. Complete Machine Shop PETS incl LI '68 GLASSPAR, cab crua, ready to mow 1n todayt SPEED EQUIPMENT .800 JB' 155 h I/O · hJ trlr REBUil.T ENGINES AUTHORIZED P.lt•, 0.ntr•I ' ~tru.PM:ust' ::; ~~28%1 Take Harbor mvd. to 19th SI ALFA ' ROMEO WOT'S NU? Drive West to 1150 Whittler. lU5 Victoria, CM 548-6550 DE !:&nta Claus Spec.lat, at '68, -,4 ~EµllOED, I~ .. m.!!,•· (714) 642-1250 183tit Beach mvd, HB 847-09!!1 ALER v~ tp nir"""'•or * OPEN7 DAYS * M 'Tis TROPICAL FISH .. , • · I !!~!'!!!!~!'!!!!...,~~I arquls Motars 9o8o Edinger (at Magnclla.) 494-6754. IUT J• NIW F~v. .,, * so.e30 19Gf. ·29· uNIFIJTE. ny snL Im uw .59 OLDS"""·· 900 So. est HJa:hway •••-Xln C """Y parta, ·chrome Laruna Beach CHR ISTMAS BuMies. ........ T. S. Loaded! t 00p8r rims. etc. @t75Cll ~ 540-'llOO Frl.puy bla~ &: white cond. $1f.700. 6'12,256.\ •-6"1'5·141! * $11>.. ..... ........ 50c • .,. •Jattbows n,,,,.. B..... TRAILER SALES 646-8177 • sedan 1965. $40,000 Pl or '~Buy from • min Tr1l'9r, Tr•wl I $50,000 DleRL 894-40IM who llve1 In ontl" ALFA ROMEO 9425 DATSUN ORANGE COUNTY'S VOLUME ENGLISH FORD DEALER SALES . SERVICE OVER 60 lN STOCK • 2 &: 4 Dr. Models • 2 & .f Dr. Dcluxes e ~ & 4 Dr. GT Models • Station Wagons Many with fully automatic trarui., air, radial tires, ra. dlo, vinyl roof, wsw tires. BRAND NEW SID. 2· DR. $1785 ruu. PRICE ORDER NOW Theodore C 1820 WE SERVICE FOR Sale: Bnnd New Tac· '67 srATION w 96 h • S.llbolts 9010 WHAT WE SELL! a·IAna: F1bera:la..u Trailer. gn. p. 2060 Harbor Blvd. ROBINS FORD FIAT FERRAm JAGUAR '6' Flol 124 Spt. Cpo, Tanatrtne exterior, blk, In- ter, Radio Ii: full chrome wbeelJ. Perf~ In eveey de- tail. J?rtuµo n ~l 1 11po 1 1 ~' 3100 W. O>ut HQ., N.B. FERRARI Nnport Imports Ltd. ()r. ana:• Cowat)''1 oaJ, author- ized dWer. sA!zs.SERVICZ.PARTS 3100 W. Cout Hwy. 1 Nfl'WPoM: Btach 6(2..~ 640-1764 Authorized :renut Dealer HILLMAN 642-~ $40-17641 --------- Autborl.zed MG Dealer TIME FOR QUICK CASH THROUGH A DAILY PILOT ·WANT AD 'SI Hiiiman $200 *54S<>l50* JAGUAR --~~~~--~ * 1968 JAGUAR XKE, XLNr COND. 53&4875 or 536-9.532 JAGUAR Authorized Dealer Tremenc1ous Savlncs! ONLY (3) '69'1 LEn" e The AU. NEW XJ SEDAN ava!lable lor dl!monstration. lif!l ll•r•u~ Umeters 900 So. e st. Hl9hw1y L•guna Beach 414-7503 * 540-3100 '69 JAG Rdster. \Vhlte w/tan int., wire whls, radio. PriY Pty. $4400. Call 646-9218 lmoorted Autot 9600 lmpomd Aut., 9600 l m~ortad Autos 9600 @ lt't th e·c•' th•t won't 91v' yo11 "1ythin9 to wo,,y ebo11t, ~ W• 111•~• -"''•of thtt. Wt 9ivt it th t VW 16.polnt 11f•· ty tnd pt rformtnct t1d. It ht• l•-p•11. So wt. 9ivt ii our 100% t 111rtnt1t th 1t wt'll rtpl1c1 111 m1jor Ill•· I c~1nlc11 ,,,,,• for ]0 d1y1 or 1000 mil t•, which1vtr co111tt first, l1R't th1t whit • MW 11r-owntr n1td11 A -b119 th 1t won't dri't• v•11 ftllll. · TRANSPORTATION VW BUGS FROM $399 Extr• clt1n l 1hoW't p•r· 1on1I c1r1. FM r1dio. Li~. <QP Ol.$999 '66 VW FHtback Sod. Extr1 clt111 I 1h1w1 ptr• 1on1I ctrt . FM r1dio. RQ P4ll. $1499 '64 VW CAMPER Split •••I, r1dio, ••c•tl•nt condition. lie. QSK 491. $1699 '69VW R1dio I olh1r f1ctory tx· fr11. Ukt new. $1899 '67 FORD CORTINA GT ' Hird Top Cpt . VI, 4 1pt .. tr1n~ Rwnt 111p•r n1w 1114 look1 9rt1tl lie. VTY Sl7. $1299 '66 Ghia Coupo Thi Pink l1dy R1dio ind h1 •l1r, SIK 7l9 $1699 '66 vw 113 H11rry on t h i 1 ont , l ie. TG F 419. $1399 1970 Harbor Blvd., Costa Mesa 6 ri>s old re a: I 1 t ere d 32.f So. Harbor, Santa Ana Bit for Sports can. Set up ~ lood cond. $1050. Costa Mesa 642.0010 Hldlw.yan male klttem, 2 CAL 2 1 Bick So. of Bo1aa 5.11·1006 for VW or Corve~. Cn4)• i-==·======--'"========i=o.:..= Setiiotnts.1Btuepoln t. 5 BAYHARIOR 847-6577 NtwC.n Strf, _ by Cbamplcn . Mobllt Home S•lta 1969 19~' AUO, fully aelt ri;;;;;::::;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiilliiiiiiiii 49tfl16. LOADED Casa Lama Roll • Away • contained, canopy, Ull!d on- itfSSINJAN KITTENS * With Slip * Sheraton .Muor • Homett. • ly 3 times. Sac. $300), t 2 Jen, 10 wks: old in Newport Kit • Preltfse _ &hara p:2650, :__ ~ 645-0llO AIL SIZES '19" HOl.IDAY travel tm, 4 NOW ON OJ.SPLAY mos old, all xtra:r. Mmt ~ 1825 CAL 20 No. 2116. clau race lt25 Baker St., Costa MeA sell, best offer. 644-6197. m4 Setter~ Male, 17 ·~. c~~P·or:ti ~::c~~:'otc~:,bo= 8' NIMl'tOD $225 mo.o: Champkln MU:terlal, Bkr. Day1 673-Xlfil; Eva. Rare opportunity. MOBILE ./ Call 548-3564 ./ 0~ Trained. Avail. to m-4030 -UVING on the BEAC'H. ~ home only. Tennt. SNOWBIRD, restored, 12' Llmlted 1pace1, in new •d· Trucks 9500 AI.,; 8 mo. ·~ female. wtdaeron Ail, host. 1trap1, 4,ition to Driftwood Beach CAMPER TRUCK ~ Kenia. 6U-S065. all acceuorlea. matching a b Mod I dl 1 wAii'EO=nog lover w/ fnd trailer $350 or make offer. u • e 1 on sp 11>' 1970 G.M.C. +. H.D. equip. )'d.,·~no child.. for oceu. 542-1589 or 675-1441 ~· 21462 Pac Hwy, H.B. VB, Ser. # 2250531. ' ~1513 $2995 •O>ib. vrnlte ca:e of timid, SWEDISH Vera ·71· sailboat. 12 ~ EXP I terrier 67~7447 x ""· · · llv rm + UNIVERSITY a:e •m1 · . Inbrd, radio, etc. New bot· cabana BR. New drps, lg OLDSMOBILE e am evt'I. tom ... i~1 xlnt c ond . -'-U E cl ........... po .... ., pa. c. n · re•r 2850 Harbor Blvd. • light butt cocker 714:644-4996. )lard. Choice 1pace. Adult Costa Mea puptC ·AKC rec'd.fihots-the SABOTS Pk. $7900. Pvt. Pty. Will 540-9640 pet1fct C'hrllbnas tUt. 0nty ~1~""""~~.,._~97!!.";_--,_ l·i3Fciiili-V.T<iCWui;'8;m 2 .._.PP. •-, 1-•t Call -· new complete · •• •• • Sil9. '63 FORD \' T w· --'C,..~ '°"'' '"'" TRANSPAC * 645-0222 12'x55' Skyline in very nice b1 t on, igwam ._.... park.2Br h8x24, camper, uane stove, tenien, 8 wks, fine 16' O'Day ~berglU1 Ailboat. • sun pen: • •tonge Icebox 9x9 at- ' AKC reg. Female Good cond1Uon. patio, spotless. ?-.fust SeU. tachtng' room. Very clean · male $150. \Vill hold * 675-0'737 * Call -&42-.f4JO. $895. 830-632.f alter 6 or un lXm.u. ~1401. 26' Thunderbird 51oop, new Motor Homet '215 1""w_k•="~d'=~~-~,--CHRfi;TMAs Pups. AK C boaUlen sails. $1650. · • M CHEV % Ton pickup. ~ns. Good Homes, * Call 64&9000 * 23• 1969 EXPLORER ?-.toter Radio, heater, alt cond. • Con side r ation. SUPER Sattellte 14'. Covtr . Home. Extru! $8495. Side tank!, overhead Trailer, storage avail, $575. * 642-8740 * springs, camper eqpt. LI ---.1i Cell 549-2156 -• 4-4779 all 4 PM Cham~ el I Fv~; ./SCHOCK GLASS SABOT Blcycf• 9225 '5"1' CHEVY 'iii ton PU, new tures. Also toy Ir SIOO BOYS Schwinn St I n gray englne. tires, radk>, good , 8.fZ-4742. 548-3554 shock absorber, new kno~ body. $400. Call 8:1)..2902 aft BRED German l.f' SateUlte with American by, Gilt condition $35. ,,,.•,..· -==,.....,=---= rd pups.' 10 weekll, trailer, a:ood cone!. $-125. 8~6-1847. '67 FORD Ranger, stick cnly. $35. MS--0116 548-8736 wtOD, very clean, low ml, attti:-2. 17. CATAMARAN with Min i Bibs 9275 l!le'etoapprec.$1750.MZ-1694 ADOMBLE Lhasa Apso fiberglass hulls $600. MINI-Elke, xlnt cond, only 11-,"',,,t ,,,5·==,,.-,:-=-::-;;-pupi:l~ mo&. okt. A.KC rq. . 6TS-25U yr old, seldom u.!ted. 3 hp 1!159 OIEVY 'iii Ton P.U. ~~ blood line 833-3258 Briggs I: Stratton, Bendix Runs. Needs Eng, Work. or S-8'7o7 Power CrulMn 9020 lhoebtake'SlOO. &'6-7535, $US. Call Sl&-1941 TOYfOOdie puppies. 6 week& '69 DORSET lT Catalina ?t1lNJ·BlKE TACO 1964 Chevy 'Ai ton Ieng bed, old ~' 3 HP -nins good, lo blue book $700. •• ~..-o papers. S25 each. cab, crulstt w/xtra1 , -•JV 536-3448 C&ll:.Iter 4, 962-1138 Ovmieas duty, m~ ltll. ~=~"::::.:7-:::7839;::_~--l<A"rnim-U-;;;;;o;;;-;;;;;­ MINJt(TURE Dachshund Days: 213: 43'7~27DUatt 6 I TACO Mini B~s. CUrrent '58 FORD 'iii ton P/U $650. pu •• m11-les. $35 each, PM: '11.f: 545-1497, capt. licenses. Llke new, $17S Minney 548-4192 or 54&--5039 :, 847-1931 Mackle. both. 5"-2533 N.B. 2 a,iiuahua dop. ma.le & ** Mini Bike * ·~ FORD Pick Up. .... AKC """''"""-Speed-Ski ..... 9030 EXCELLENT CONDmON Evfl"ythloe ..... Xlnt '"""· j • 9 5t&87f6 • c100 .ter7 lS48 Stt to appreciate? 548-8377 1969 B05TON Whaler, 40 hp "" ~~~· .~==~==~~ FE~t: Dachshund, •IM-Evlnrude & trlr 13', 2 mos NEAR New Roddy 3 HP 66 DODGE PICK-UP, lonr red, 8 v.ttk&, AKC. u1@d, estate .We, push-but. )'t!llow Mini Bike. SIOO. ~· = :~tk shift S. Lo~ ewrycne. 644-1177 ton starter, xtras $1850. ./ 673-0(31 I cy · $ • SlLYP, pocdle, AKC, pure. M.f...4774. _ 3 ~llNI Blke1. l-Heath1dt. l· '65 f ord V•n Ec onolin• tlmfJ $25 Mickey, l.Cat. A.II pert cond 546-mt __i__s4s.2997 Me rine Equip.. 9035 I. wry reast 846-762 DODGE Truck l'ii Ton. Xlnt ~Pups,~ Poodle, 2 Chrysler V-8 21D hp Marine MINI BIKE -TACO U wt for Plumber or elecirldan. bla from 12" h 11 b eng's, comp. with manifold, KOHLER $75 Ca.b HI UW bxes. 838-2613 $20. ,..,...,. al tomato~ A velvet drive, * 5'8-3551 * '68 CHEV 4 ][ 4 GER Shephm1I pure-Gd. runn1nc cond. Both for S bu ~~al -1 .. 2 ' tha. $950 or will HU eeparat,ty. Motorcyclet 9300 u rhn Van . Pl es"'""'' mon SJ&.!891.. . 3 teats v.a dlr, ~ iOO:rd6 -$411.,.., ~ M>-8.'n ROND..t6Soc, ·A modol, xlnt tinL ·' f.il ortcinol. Take iiSifiT AKC. f wb. WW DECCA 101 rad.an. One YI' COftd!Uon $12S. trade. 34413M, Call Pat, Orilunu $'15 1QI. okl, remowd tor tarrer 646-3721 494-97"1'3 or MS-0034 =· r:!.i~ ~: ~r:. '68 f!onda CL 450 ' sun Tmier. 7 wb. Newport Marine D'IC '11.f· EXCELLJ:";N'T CONDmON J ... ~"------­AK~ .. ~~i~ 0Wft9, lint. ~363.\ . . ~ •• 8.17M98 EARLY tifodtl Jttp body 1. $116 6 cYL die&el enc. 3 to 1 f7 Y AlilAHA JOO Twin b'a!TM! w/new iprinp. teat BR PuJll born reduction untt. Fresh water RUNS GOOD! Before 5: ftame1, tranamiulon • ~ S25 ea.. Call cooled. Brand new, still Jn $43-.5572 Aft. 5: 54!)...8308 transfer cut, plu1 many ' crate. Factmy orMt. ~10 1967 TRJU?>tPH T·100 c .. soa other features $175. 54&-0072 HAN HOUNDS alter 4'pm , cc. 5<m m1'1. Xlnt. $700. l=alt=SP=M====== ~ temaJcs, reu. A.KC \VANTEO: JohNon c r gn..1532 "C(~m""-=;-o;;;;;;,.-IEv1nrude 10 tip, '61~''3 cub -MU=sr~ .. -u-1-10-od-,-,,.~~CC:l ·C_o_m~po-•_• ___ _ AK SS &n PUPS er trade Johnlon 5 \.). New engine. $lM or be1t 19 CAMPER • 91,.ii tt El ~ 5'0-8638 eve 642-2019 offer. All 6 pm, 6f&-5123. Don.do .. Comanche • sleeps r;i;J~~Pu~pa, AKC, champ PLAnt 5atanl. pt:rf*Ct con-HONDA NJnl-Trall & mo11 I -fcebox, quttn size cab 1 Call'Ron c...,, ditlon. Pmdued Gtrrnan;y. old. eood condition. .ova-bounce-awap. C mot 1JIT a:tttr 5 PM. '250 cuh. l.fM23i neru,.._ 13.)..)(27 old. $1450. 64).0030 ' F1ctory Ord1r No. AE7106 OPEL 2 DOOR No. li92lt904 BIG SELECTION OF 1970's. NO BETTER PRICES ANYWHERE FINAL DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE Thne were our executlvn and salnmen•s penonal cars. Aft a re low mlleat• and In top notch c ondition. lmER HURRY th•y wao't Ian lent at th ... REDUCED PRICES. BIGGEST SAVINGS OF THE YEAR POOLE'S BETTER USED CAR VALUES WE ARE COMPLETELY SWAMPED WITM TRADE0 INS ! =.-.==c-•=---=-:~?. .. ~~~~ .. ~eluxe Coupe $1195 VOJ 401 '65 MUSTANG M1rdtop. Auto,"'"'·• pow1r tftttin9, r•dio, h••t1r. PJM •t7 $996 :~?. .~,~~~R~A~ COND. pow" $1898 1!tt r., r1dio, h11ltr. UVN I 2J :~!.~.~.~~,~·--..... --L--E --s--A--BR=E,--,.$~3-=3:-9=-3-::- F..ll pow1r. 4S4J99Cl004!9, :~?.~~.~.~~!.~.~~! .. ~.~~ala $1598 br1kt1, 111to1111tic h1n1111i11io11. UEU ]45 :~~.l!!~~~.~~~PE~-$·-3-4~· ,-5- viu 59J :~~~.~= .. ~=.~v~ .. :,=~.~=p=ER~s=po=R=Tc..-$1_3_9_4 RGH4l 3. Rtdio, ht•ltr·~· ===------,,-----'-:~~ '~~.~~0•~2~~0~ $1797 pow•r 1!tt rlnt TEY 01 I Open Mon. thru Fri. 8 a .m. to 9 p.m. -Sat. 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. -Sun, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. AUTHORI ZED BUICK· OPEL · H.GUAR SALES & SERVICE •' ' .. .• ·. : . : . TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ~RANSPORTA TION TRANSPORTATION 1,tt11....,_po_r_lff_A _____ ,_600_ lmporiod ""'°'--"°°-Imported AulM HOO fmponod A- JAGUAR MGB PORSCHE VOLKSWAGEN r RANSPORTATION TRANSPO RTATION 9620 Auto Leising 9110 U•ed Cers 9900 CADILLAC 1900 Used Cort ---"-' BUICK 394 CU. ln. Oldl tne. & atick 1-L-E_A_S_E_A_N_Y_MA_K_E_ uuna. DR MODEL .. 6T;,.1413 It 1962 BUlCK •.Special Convt. DAILY PILOT ,' TRAN POR UHCI C1r1 8EA1J XK-140 8lak '57 Jag Rda!r. Rd lethr In!. Gd ti res. Ju1np st. !"J'la-7133, 546--1532 '65 MGB Con~. ~ Por1eh• ''4 ''C" Coupe B.R.G ., blk, lllltr. fully . «<JU-ip, incld;. witt wh~ls, ln!b gn!tn w/l<lk. inter. rndk> &: tuned exhaust Beau-Flawle11 thnlO\lt. Evt'ry pas. YW BUGS ·-' 9700 Let our l•Ue ....... show N-n'palr. 122.l or oUer. '67 EI d 0 rad o· -;-c;,;;;;;;;,i Autot W 1n rwu you the best plan for ..,,,ur '66 SS lmJ)Bltt. Co ... ~-Mn l ....,.,.... ' ... _ .1;::., •S4;:!).;:l;:632======;: I BEST OFFER, '66 JAGUAR XKE R.{15ter. }\faroon. Xlnt, jui>t O\'t'rhaul- ,cd. $2995. M6-5041 o r .-1 tiful <.'QlldiUon · 1ible acee1sory. Hurry on · this o~. FROJ\t $399 JK'l'ayuu •~s Wlluuut O<IU' -Ownl!d by llttk old teacher • i,::allon. CADILLAC from Laguna Bc1o1ch. FUU Call aft 6. 9&8-8322 •. : •' :, UNI VERSI TY pl!.·r, raet air. dlr, extra, ex-·~ OIEVY SlaUon WQQil'." WE rAY ..• CASH GOOD SELECTION OLDSMOBIL E Ira clean!? Take trade or cyl stick shift. Bf~t :!S50 Harbor BJvd. SED. De Ville, G4. Xlnt cond. small down. ya,. 553. can reuonable ofr, M>-2936 -'- l<ARMANN 'GHIA 3100 W, Cot.•! Hwy .. N.B. ft~ ~~ J~rtllPOt l 311 11 µ 0 l l ~1 -'~rlllfl lll I ~l111p11 t I '' Costa Mesa mechan. Ir; appearance. Ken, 494-9773 or ~S.t'l634. """ swoo ~9&40 J\1any :xtru. Blue w/ blk I;><>;> KING D !:Nte ' .,1 LEASE .,1 '"'' top. Ol'ii; ow nu . '64 Sedan de Ville wag, 9 pu!, lot• of~·, &U·!Wri 54()..176'1 3100 W, Cout Hwy., N.B. ~ Authoriud F\fC Oea1er 6.tl·94ffi 54().1164 ~ . : 1965 K1rm1nn Ghia ....-....--644--03.24 27,000 Orig. M i. :xlnt cond. F .V. 96M113 ~. 1970 FORD Torino GT, air F\ill power, Fl\t, air, perfect (5) 1968 OIEVY lmPllM., power brake! & steering, 'G9 SDV, only 3950 mi, new cond, One owner, $1750. lotaded. J>rlced for quiQI(; radio, "'id• oval \\'"'W, 351, v• ....... £V sale• 11850 : 2-door Coupe, Xl.nt Cond. Immaculate inside and out! pne owner, Sl3o0. See at 480 Broadway. C.i\I. MG TD Authorilt'd f'1G Dealer .,, • ---------l'57 PORSCHE. New Urea. A ';-,:) MGTD. Xl.nt c 0 n d. chrome rims, fog lil!ll, . · J9 Ask for Sale1 Manacet l82ll Bearh Blvd. Hunfuvton Beacb KI 9-3331 Eldorado tire nWst gold, """",,....., ~~,E:~_,....,.__,~~!j .. gen. leather seats. blk lop, · · S•0v engine_ $99.50, 24 mos. fUlly eqp'd. $5875. Orig ''~67..-.C"AD=ILLA..,..,°"C,-c-o-,-.-,-,~t.-, '65 Impala, 2 dr, 283 erw. ' UTH COAS T owner 644-0343 "'hilt, black lthr. inter.; full NeW trans, lo .nlg, ale, Ui1 : KAR.lt1ANN Ghia Convt, Rf"d \\'I \Vhl top. Nu paint, IOp, lres. Cus. int. $995. 548-&48 '68 Convertible. beig<'. radio, \Vbt/blk. $900 Priv. Ply stereo. Beiil oUer ov.er ;,&. 3031 Ext, 66 or 67 Eves & Wkends 673-3489 $1350. 673-859.l 1J70 HARBOR BLVD. wt PAY WH FOR YOUR W CAR. LEASING 67 EL DORADO L'-·" pwr., aiNxlnd. Perf. cond. cond. Lo book. 66-1152 ·~'' 3CJ \\'. Cst Hwy, NB 64$-2182 , • £ uu pwr & .$3.450. Owner 675-4747 ' PORSCHE '61 Porsche 912 Teri• emu MESA FACTORY AIR CONDITTON-l---=~""C,::,"'---1 --------ING, 12.000 local mil ... ••~ SO VW's CONNELL automatic. $l93J. 494-9446 or PORSCHE '63 Super. Much 491-1666 eves. Nu Equip. $2500. Call Phil, ·~ KARMANN Chia. Red. 962-5521 or 847-1090 Exhaust headers. Xlnt $32.i. Porsch• ''5 S.C. Cou....., 64i;..M9t l"""' \ "'========o IBolt'ro red w/blk inter. Fully equip, Relltclor. Afeticulous MERCEDES BENZ care. _t~r lllf!Llil JI 111 po rI ~' rundY ~inish w/blk. intrr. 1960 Thru 1968 ... ~ driv. to b<Hev.. From Cl:IEYROW $495 2828 llirbot Blvd. _t1rtupo rt JI 111 po rI ~1 H b V W Costa Mi!Sa 5+6-1200 ar our , ,1-=wE~P=A=v -=To=p,..- AtmlORIZED DOLLAR SALES • SERVICE for suod. dean used ea.rs. 3100 W, Qlast HW)'., N.B. lBru !IEACH BL .• 8-IZ4'l5 all makes.' See G@Orge Ray 6'2-9.a!Jj 540-1764 IWNTINGTON BEACH Theodore Robins Ford Authorit.ed 1.fG Dealer 200J Harl>or Blvd. P "-,66 912 C BUG, Dark Green, new car C.M. , &t2-00lO Oran".).._' County's L.irq<'\I Se\ecflOPl New & lJ~"d /IAc"c'~dl'~ Bc111 Jim Sle mons Imps. o rSC09 oupe ruar. tranferab.te. under ---,.,='""",_---- 3 ""---N The best one anyw~~: Eb-9000 ml. auto. stick. J'adio, w·111 Bu~ .100 \V. \.Alllllt Hwy., :B. ony blk. \v/matc!tlng inter. onJoU Jug l'ack Re J &12·940:> 540-1164 AJ\t I Fri.f, Burch exhaust, 675-1898 Bu~. 645~189 2'· •• v-••-.. Po •-Authorized lt1C Dealer chrome wheels. See IU be-• · .i. our uuuiwagcn or .rscuc \'J.1rn('1 8. Main SI antaAn <1 546-4114 '6:t Porsche .Super 9 o, lieve $1&50. Ir: pay top dollars, Paid for le:-,,===,,...,===· I sunroof, lur rack. midnight · '65 V. W. or not, ea:= u .. d c.,.. '63 SPORT 1''ury, hdtp, dlr, good runner. full price ~99. 'lt1DRTI7 Call Phil .......,. '63 RAMBLER Amer, hdtp, dlr, runs good lull ptjce $29$. OOI..920, call Krn, 494-8773 '08 -4 speed, low milea&e. vinyl tp, $2000. KI 9-2002 or 1'.~~. BUICK verlible. Runs \Veil, blue/black int. 548-8985 Radio, hcal<'l'. 11·hi!I' 1valll-~==-===-· I IMPORTS \\'ANTED '65 Wildcat Convt, $1750 cash. 494-756.S Porsch• '67 912 Coup. tires. Runs good. (PEP5(}.j) ,._M~ ,. Radio, heater, po1i·cr slttr· I~========' I Ruby red exterior w/blk. in-$895 ...... a....,e •iO\lf\ties TOP I BUYER ini;, \\•indow~ & brak<'s, MG 1er. Eve...., extra incl, A?-1/ H b ., v w Bn.L MAXEY TOYOTA while walls, automatic trans, 1---------1 FM, chrome \\'heels, bumpe.r 3100 W. Coast Hwy., N.B. ar our • • l.8SSl Beach mvd. (UIB9761 ?>1G g_ua;ci. etc. 3ho\vroom conch-&12-94!!; 540-1764 H. Beach. Ph. 147..f':J!J $895 Sales, Scrvic..', Par1s lion. Authonzed 1.IG Dealct· Al.Tl'HORIZED J1nmediate Delivc1y, SALES"-SERVICE a 0 ff b V W AU ~lodels PORSQIE'S ·Every possible lBID BEAOI BL., 8424435 Auto Le•slng 9 l ar our • • ~. all colol's, all yean: I ~~H~U~N~TI~N~agro~Nge~E~A~et~1;'.:,ll.;;;;;;:~;f,f'.~f,;~;.;;, / Alfl'HORIZED J1rtt1por1 31111por1 ,,' 1958-1969. For the finest tnl1vw ,63 Se . "--LEASE -RENT used Porsche' See · m1-....uuper, Mint SALBS & SERV'ICE s. · Cond. Orily 12,475 mi. Fae Immediate delivery 18711 BEACH BL., 842-14lj re-bit eng .. Ster/radio, prt. on all HUNTINGTON Bl::AClf 3100 W, Coa..s t Hwy., N.B. pty n49-(7141 846-1017 ~lOO \V. Coast Hwy, N.8. 642-!MC6 a4G-1764 .......,; __ ,_;3· > ·~ _0 , °' Fl097RDDFOTRRDUSCK&S 1969 RIVIERA. 'f utl factory 642-940Ci 540-!764 Authori?.Cd MG Dealer vwt.-,: .u ~ p:>wrr & air. Many extras! J1rtuport 31111port s Authori!ed MG Dealer PORSCHE s d '67 VW -&&. xlnt cond. Ask· All popular makes. Ford TaPt' deck. Xlnt cond . .$4200. p e e s I e r . in& $1300. I 675 1ll02 Beautifully ----nd. n·st 3 Cou 846-0 authorized easin& aystem. ~ 1950 i\-fG TD. xlnt shape '="'-" uc:: 100 W t H-N B 109 c Ou ~ · ' °''°"==:-==----.,.,-S!IOO lirm, Oiler. Ball -5'i8-0342 • ~.1 ·• · · vet r ...... mpeUt1ve Rates 1 '68 BUICK Sport wagon. Air--:,_1~21G alter S pm "''6~9'"P~-c;-h-,9"1"2"'C.---1 "'·A940:'>..._ -"' "IG ne""'a1 1764 'Gl' BUG, new tires, new Theodore' eond. Xlnt cond. $2,&30, ors • oupe: Uluun~ ....... " er brakes, low mileage, excel. ROBINS FORD Private party 675--3201 1-===·-=·="·====0 !Bahama yellow w/blk. inter. '68 PORSCHE Targa 912 oond $1315, M5-M46 MGB Mf/FM, etc., etc. 10,00J Jo.. radio solid rear window l -"°"=~~-'-7----1 ~ H~ ffivd. '65 BUICK, ~nt cond, will air + $1200 e:xtru. Perl '64 IMPALA, tact. air, P"" , cond. I.J>Lo ml. Make ofter steer., R&H. New t*' • 614-4265. · CAMARO '""' "°""· 1995. ~' .~ ' Co h' •-· £51 1968 HEVY tm~1·!~ ~ 59 CAD. nvl. W 1le, "' nu. 68 -4 SPEED, low mileage, - Xln't cond. Best·oUer. Call vinyl· top, pioo. JO s..zoo2 or loaded! Priced for quid.' 12131 596-fil06. We! $l:i'75..53f4290 ~~ .. 494-6154. CAD -Late 61 -1-'Ulf P<>\'·er -========= I 1967 CHEVY Chevdle :~ Ai•. Good·looki"" 1295, 2269 CHEVROLET Delux" 2 Dr. w/ ab'. 2!;0 tu ~public, C.ltf. I ----------I in, 6 eyl. $13.5(1. 548-6113 ~ r': '6.l CAO. Convt. Good Cond. "61 Chevy Jrnpala Conv., '68 Chevy 108 Sport Vi& Air Cond. Fully Equipped. $295. Good Transportation. Perfect condition $2tiO ~j $995. Call Craig. 675-275.1. Call 642--0014. Pty. 642-6574 -· -· · • .,_ -. .. . •, ' '' "~ . .. , " -~· -,, ,), '. • < .. . . ' .. '68 MGB GT Coupe Primrose yellow w/blk. leath- er in1er. Radlo, wire wh<'els. ete; Only 7,000 miles. Show- room fresh. <'!li miles. New ~ar warran-xlnt ~nd. 6Th-2IS8 ' 1966 BU~.· cond. Cbsta Mesa . 642-00IO aell or trade for smaller ry. hnmpccablc 1n every d~-1-==========='I •~ l~~~~~~~~~~~,~~V\~•:,,· ~·t~,·~6~7~3-~39~1~0.'==-:::============================;.:!" taiL ROLLS ROYCE ,.._.,.. r 9800 New Cers ffM .. 55 V\V. Re-built engi~. God1 New-cars --'800New C-1r1 9800 N.w Cars 9.IOONew Cars ~ J1rtllPLll'l }l111po11•, ---------1 trans $27j. 642-5761 rot &. B ,. ROU.S '39, aide mounts, new Volks\\'ork. paint, new wsw tires, $4950.1',,,.="""v"oJ'""',-•-·•-,.-,-.-,-,~b-,-,~l-tl Pr!v. prty 84&-5041. 644--0.)07 engine, $350. · J1rtt!jJOrt 3\inµort s 673-6632 all 6 pn1. 3100 \V. Coast llwy., N.8. TOYOTA 642.941X> 54()..17&1 '63 \l'\V -Xln'I Cond. Blue. Autlloriz<'d MG Deall!r Radio. Nu valve5 & clutch. 3100 W. Ccast Hwy., N.B. PORSCH.E '66 912, 5 speed. '61 Toyota Corona $600. G7".HOOJ. 642·9405 54()..1764 Must sell. EiJras!.. $:5iQ. 2 Door Hardtop, Radio. heat. 1961 V\'! Sunroot. XI n t Authorized MG Dealer Call Sun 673--0GS4 er, automatic. raditi tina, ,,mechanical cond. $600 or or- '64 MCB, :xlnl oond. New '69 PORSCHE 912, new. 9,000 i{\ITM226t l.:"..-'·.,6.,75;-5-<>010-,,,,,-=--,,,..,,I tires, R&.R. 1 ownr $1195. miles, :r.1ag rims. Private $1395 '66 VW Sed. Grttn. Xln't After 4 pm. 835-0090 party; Best offer. SJ6...483S ff b V w Cmid. $ll75. Moving Out Of t=='====c:...:~=;::=:=;;==1 ar our ""'Cow>uy • .,,......,, H.B. lmponed A-H0.0 ' ' G8 vw SedM. ...,.11.,1 =::C:==:::::-'-::::__.,--,..;_,;..:;..c.._;,;;-'-tt· . AIJ'n{ORIZED oondition, 20,000 Miles. 1fJ1' what has your old car done for you lately! Cough? Smoke? St•ll a nd stutter? If th ef's e ll, then it's time you treded for • VW thet will 9ive you top perform enc• every d•y. Jf't th• VW th1! won't 9i•• you ,.,.,1hin9 lo worry tbovt. We m• .. • u1r• of th1f. w. 9i•• it th• VW I 6·point 11f1ty ind perform•nc• l•1f, It h11 to pin. So w1 9iv1 it our 100 ~ fY•r•ni•• th1! w1'll 11pf•c• 11! rn&jor tn•· th1vic1I ptrh• for 10 cl1y1 or 1000 ft'lilei., which1v1r come• firO. hn'f th1f wh1I • n1w c•1-own11 n11d11 A b19 th•f won't d•iv1 yow n11I\, '65 VW SEDAll £"'ill• ov,rh•wl•d \ty YI. Sptci•I p•i11t. Gold with d1r .. brow11 1h1tli119, Y'S '" $.1299 '63 VW SEDAN l1111fif11I ked, with coll· tr11ti119 !11t1r. TI.ii i1 !hi' 1h•rp11t '•J to b• fouftd lftywh1r1, l ie. OHZ-7tJ $1099 '66 VW Squere B•ck Ori9IR1I p1int. Economic1I 1111111 w19on. RPS 7'0 $1699 '61 vw S":I'"• lit• bl111 ori9in1I fini1h, 01111.-1 model, full f1ctory 1q11ipp1d inc!Hin9 r1dio, No. 70-24278 . $1699 '66 vw Fr11h POr1ch• 1il~1r p•l11t, 1i1ck inttri•r. lt•dlo, h11I· er, on• •wn1r c••· TDF610. $1499 '66 SUNROOF Sl!D. l1i91 ori9in1/ color, Sol4 fttw by u1, H11ny, S'f1'. f77 $1499 '69 VW SUN ROOF . SALES & SERVICE Many extras * 549-31:>8 18711 BEACH BL., 842-443.) 1''"68°'vw=•.:::..,=-.•UKE==NEW=""."'1-ow-1 dlUNTINGTON BEACH mile-age. warnnty, private BILL MAXEY 1 • .;p,,;.ty·=12595~.c.•.....,,~~-vw '68 Fastback, 13,000 mi. ITIOJY!OI TIAJ I o~o-"ood~"'o;,,.,_i_;~~,,i,,_Yc.J_l_6_&~7134-I '61 vw. -...i franl--+•tion, 11111 BEACH BLVD. •-~·-Hunt. BtKh 147.USS new paint. $.350 • ......... I mi N. of (but Hwy, on Bch 1967 V\Y, completely o/haul· ORANGE COAST'S eel motor, xlnt cond. Owner . "OLDEST' 11295· G<>-m<. 675-01« 59 V\V Sedan. Looks good. Toyota Dealer Runs good S375. 19 go -o"", CM back of 1988 SEE THE '64 vw s""roor $625. CORONA MARK 11 Good condilion 646-3834 Cou~ & Station \Vagons J--,,::-;-='°"=="."CC--1 Immediate Delivery 1964 V\Y Squattback l'if!l 181r,uis Untot1rs 1500-S. XJn Gond. Call -312-12'12 '64 V\V Good Condition $850 Call 545-7453 900 So. Cst. Highwey 1 ''64~vw=-Good~~Co-nd-i~tion--ltl50-. · Li19une Beech Call ~7 4f4.7503 * J40..3too1•· .. ~vw=',"',-o-..,,.,-,-• .,-..,,-.-ood- """'"~!'!~~~.,..,,.J miles left. TOYOTA 675-1328 1970 HERE NO\Y LOW PRICES ON WADED 19611 V\\I, Ai\l/F~1. lo ml g. i\IU!:il sc>U this REMAINING '69'~ weekend. S7:)..59.'l7 Your Beat Deals Are Slill Ar1-~~='~-'-~~- DEAN LEWIS '66 VW Sunroor. xlnL , .... "'"' "'"''· 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 *' M&-5257 * 1963 TOYOTA Cmona dlx 21-"·•"7"'V\'°Y""'SQ=u"'AR=EB=A~C~:K~ Dr. Hrdtp. AJ.l·FM, 4 spd. Excellent condiUon. $1550 10,000 mi. Orig owner Sl57S. 833-1132 after 7 Pf-,f 54S-1141 TRIUMPH TRIUMPfl GTS, 1967 $1900. White, good <.'Olldttion. Days IJ33..5149; eves 673....s249 VOLKSWAGEN VOLVO At.rrnORJZED VOLVO DEALER Marquis Motors 900 So. Cit Hi1h\\•1y V\V '67, onro 0\1T1Cr. Xlnl _ Lacuna Bctch. original cond, Beige, radio, 494-i;,()3 * ·MQ.:noo nu tires. Sl265. Joe VOLVO N~kcrt%. ll6 I n du s l r I a I 1r.o lt'ERE NOW }Vay, C_,M._ 67J...56J),_ • , J.&W PR.fCEs ON \ • YW '65, RMt, ne.w w/w REMAINING '69'1 ti~. Bl~ f!.nUh.. Xlnt cond, Your Best l>tala Art Still At .,.,, Xll'U. lllll), .,,..... Dl!AN UWIS aft 6. ta66 Harbor, C.M. 646-9'J03 19S4 VW Bua, \\ide ovala.i========"==il headers. imd. wood pantl. Ant;qu., Cl11sla 9615 Good c:ond. $1400. MB-3660. 1"'1 V\V Bug 4.IXltJ m"'~ '5 7 MORGAN + 4 prfVatP party. Bf:•t offl!r. New T)f>L MW brakes Ex. ~7848 ceUen1 c o a 4 I t Io n, ;1500. '66 VW lledan, good dean1 ·""=:.172;:<=•",,'='='=PM=·=== I condition. suoo Call aft!>r 6.1 .. f!>.oml. a-COrs. Redo H20 '62 VW. GOOD COND. RACING Com A Htt.n, ATB sao. * ' 64Ul9l cubunltor f01' 321 · CMv. "1 VW, 17,IDt ml. • Many ...J.14" v.1re wheel cova'J. Xtru. " Priced /., ..U. S... ollrr. lo.lltl2 Iller f Sfi.]()G f1!t SC..'1314 Jml.. "--------·· JOHN CONNRi' "NO GIMMICKS NO GIVEAWAYS" 1st Place Blue . Ribbon JUST 21 YEARS OF HONEST DEALIN.G SELLING CHEVROLETS CONNELL CHllYllOLIT BLUE RIBBON PRICES '62 Mere.des 220 4 Dr. IGWH7U\ '6S RAMB LER 770 Cle1sic Cpe. Air C-, J.T, A. .. H, $599 $1999 I '65 Berr•cud• VI, •~fOl'll•!I(, ltl.H, P.S" tac:1. 11•. !NMP· IH I Choon From °"' 300 llew Chevroltls, Used Cars I Tl'lllks , + Th• Li1rgest Selection of New Corvettu r In Ori1nge County .. Biggen Money Sm>ing Eoeat {n Orange Coanl:r SA BRAND NIW 1970 NOYA CPl • s1299 llllAND NIW 1970 ClffVEUE CPL • , ·~· . . ... . .. . , .-. .. . ,,, ': : . ..... . , '. .... '.· ' . . ' . • .. ": • ? ,•. ... ' ., - . . ·, . ... ' ' ! 11••~2 •t!l"~i!!!l!@~QJSl!lllll~~!l!IJllll!M!!!!!l!44!1114@111tf~dl!f.~Jllllll4Gl"!IP'!!Jl""!'t •4~.~!~U.i!!"'!•!"l!k~J~-~4!"'4•¥¥114"'50~•,.""''z~:""'' ~.s ~;""s~;~s~+Ji"•& ••~"'I'"' ~",..'!"!''~'"'"•-'s•tP""FF'!F~.~·~-~-~,:::·~~·"'."·,.....,.--,...,,,..,.~,,...-.~· ~.~.r· ~. "7r-;-irt. , • , " ~ .~ -. ~ ~ •• ~· ii ..,,,. ... -• ~ .. v I • 1ri:!.,, Dttwnbtr 5, 1%, TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION C1n 9900 Uhd C•r• ~ :-------- TRANS PORTATI ON ' TRANSPORTATION_ TRANSPORTATION ,T~NS!°RTATJON . ~NSPORTATION . UJMI Ca" "GO ·U•fd Cart' ' f!900 U1ed C1n , 9900 U..td C•ri ~t 9tOO Used Cira '? UHCl C•rt 9tOO 9900 Ustd c .... CHEVROLET 57 Chevy Bel Air Convl. ~: Aulo trans. R&H, ~ nu i • "'ht.,.,·alls. $41>. IM7~1182 i; '. r CHEVY Biscayne \\'agon, II body \\'Ork $375. . 7f8 .a.l'tl'r 4 IN'l1 CHEVROLET CHEVROLET CHRYSLER CONTINENTAL CORVETTE FORD '66 Musting Conv•" RAMBLER ~ V8, automatic, radio, heater. '63 Nova SS. bkt seata. auto rrans, pis, r/h, t'COflO/lll' 6, JM'W tirell, recent 1une-up xlnt cond. By o"'lll't $995. 831-~:.!tYl days;. 673-4566 ~ves. '50 CHEVY 1968 NE\VPORT 4 dr ~an, 1966 CONT'L 4 Dr Con"t. '63 STINGRAY. 2 Tops, :ao ·w COUNTRY Sedan \Vagnn, 1960 Co-••tt• , •• ,·,,,I• •i•l 24,<m ml, air, p/s. p/w, Russet\\'/ blk top, blk ltht HP:_4 spd., 41.l. ~0001., ltht. t(I passenger witlt popular 'v..._ ... ... " ·'" p/b $2350. 833-2490 af1er 6 int., .iilerro tape, air, full sc111a, A!\l/f"AI. ~. l\1i. side lacing 3J.'tl seal. Radio, rond. Nt'IP.' orang(' paint, new p\\T, lu.'<ury plua. Lo nli. OubiltandiJ'li 'o.ti(. con 0 . heater, po1ver li It er i ng, brakrs, new !Ires & n1ags. Orig ~·ner. Xlnt cond, _84_7-4812 __ . -------l power brakt'S, big V-8 Reali. priced. Sec lo apprt'C· COMET Sl ,8.10. 644--0772 '68 It.ft.1AC. 4 spd, hi-pel'f. engine. Priced lo mo\'e '&I CHEVY l~IPALA SS, fact iatc! 5-JS4£M2 327, BP, 2 tops., map, air, bef_9ft thil weekend. $1<0}. ( \\'Q\l/682) $895 Harbour V.W. air, pwr, id rubber, sole ''5 IMPALA CONVT. '62 cfi~tET, autom9.1ic, ex-COlYAIR lape. ~ ar 546-().195 644=U'olf Private Part,y O\l'nt'r, clean $850. Alter 60r 327 eng, ps. Pb. rh ccllent !ranspo11ation. ----------1 :::==;..;::;;::~~::;;:=.J.62 FORD Van, nc\v· po.int, ·sa V-3. PIS, PIB. Racin>.: AUTHORIZED SALES &: SERVICI:: lSTII BEACJI BL. 8~2-443a HUNTINGTON BEACH '65 RAMBLER . ADlbaS$adOI' 990, full P"r, fact air, dtr. loaded. One 011 ner \\liJJ tak(' older Cil' 1n tr~de. PD\Vl38L8. Call Ken, .!!H-9nJ or :'>15-0634, CHEVY Sta. \Vg. Auto -'-'"-'-""-•_962--0i>83 __ · ____ ~ under 30,000 mi. ~S-1098 1962 CORVAlR 4 door, stick. FALCON Otts, exhaust (carpet & Ciwn. Low dn. \V ; 11 lran!!. Gt'l 1ires R&H. Lo t.1\. ·54 CHEVY Impala SS r...... $1350 firrn. O\v11t!r 642·2079 N cw brakes, car b pa'-1~1. XJ-1 --•. I• ~ ~. $9j(). 84~3538. I '~ "·uJ-• "·' 000 I ~~~ "" =.1 " """"" " flnanct'. $995. CH.II -673-4.JW p S, R & H, auto 1rans. 1969 CHli:V Inlp..'lia 2 Dr. CONTINENTAL over,... ......... ..... n1 • .,.,..,.,. CLEAN 1961 ·ai del S<>tviCl' • mW!! sell~ SlCXXI. ======-=-=°"'--=-= ; :'t)5 IMPALA. 2 dr. 283 eng. Clean. Pl'i ply. $ 8 9 5. .wire V.'hls, alrlcond, auto 646-3431 F con x Sla 673-2096 OLDSMOBILE '6.1 RA!\1.BLER An1bass. A little eng. wrk "''Ill provide xln't lrans car. ,.~un p1Vr, lac air, nu tires. t.fake of· fer. 54>3930. . J'l• New trans. lo 1111..-. ale, xlnl 842-3.110 \vgn. $300. Call anytin1c. -'--~---~ • ----trllnli, 4000 mi. Like new. 63 li\Il\'IAC. Pampered, Ex. '62 CORVAIR, needs rninor a43-2all 'fi.I FORD Fail'lanc, f dr ----------~ (.'OIYi. Lo book. 61>Hi52 69 CHE'l. 1~ Van 307~. Sac-S29'J5. 968-2889. cond. Lealtte1·, 1''icto111 Air, \\'Ork • would rfial<e good ~an. Stick shift, Jow '60 OLBS 88 4 Dr Hardtop. P/1, P/b, air cond. Auto. , Needs so1nl'.' ruechanicaJ '67 REBEL 710. All po .... -,r . original 010o·ner. Unt.ler 20,\Xk) mi. $1395. Eves or wknds ,,....173 '61 CORVAIR, 4 cir, sta-V-8. auto trans, hvy duty '65 CHEVY t.t11.libu Super All power. &12-1521 aft 4 & Dune BU&gy Chassis, $100. FORD miles.' 1 owntt, top cond. ~; 1.1on \Oo'agon, &ood cond., $250 springs, low mi. Best oUer Sport BllJC. Pis. Plr,. Xlnt w~ 536-6958 S350. 646-5582 or 548-t550 "·"~'c..c."'-'-'-'-"-"-·_6_75-<X»l____ o,·ei; $2500. 54;;.-0612 cond. Call ~ 1966 C 0 NT) N ENT AL '63 CORVAIR convert.. 140 . '67 GALAXJE 50o, 2 di', r/h, .• ~ CHEV &>I Alr sta wag. '55 2 dr CHEVY, '64 eng, SEDAN hp, 6\lper charge, new trans 1961 FORD Ol;qntry Squire., air, 390 eng, auto trans, xlnt !: :;ractory <tir. p/s, perf cond. very good body $495. CHRYSLER Loaded! Xln'I Cone!. & rear end. Best oUer over Gd tires, $325,0r Qeat ofm'. corn!, orig owner $1495. Call .,,, .. 112s. >t&.5.18J T ·BIRD '65 STARFIHE. full poll·er ;: 4800 * 842-.~. ----"-~-""-----l _ --~ ~·--___ $1950. Call • 546-7843 $125 takea. ~~1706 Call -,54S-269f. eves & wkends 6'14-6098 : '1i6 CAPRICE 4 dr. P/G, atr, '59 CH.EVY Wagon, clean, li6 CHRYSLER Newport. 2 1965 'CONTINENTAL. Xlnt '64 CORVAIR SPYD~E~R--f'ORD Ranchtto '67. Auto 65 COUNTRY Squire Sta. ·! ~ig cng. Vinyl lop. Xlnt good C'{lndi1lon SZ7:> or best dr. H.T. Auto. New radial cond. Full p:>\\'er. air. $1~ $4oo. trans. Good cond, $1600 prlv Wag, RIH. Air. Rack. New inC'I. "'indows & scats, air '66 T-BIRD L..000 •. 1139:i 54n 5113 ? O trr full ' di .::;;;7""~=~.,;;;;.,,...,_. j ~ r. , p1vr, a r, r. STA WAG STEAL! pv.·r seats, b!:akes, 11•indows. :,'&,"""'f;;;;d=·=l='";:;'·=•="'-:=2.i00=·=·==-"'';";'='=",096;,Z-:993!l=::';;:;;===--'=lr=l''=·=<hocl<=='==$1=500=.=64=;.=='"'=·"'="="'='=':';"::"=·='=';.::;15=70===--====""""=="====.!.:'='='=ty.;:;S4=i-<6==59'=======I tires. Good -;ond. $1295. [". 673-=8478. . '65 F-8;; \\'ht \r11i;. Sac1'ifil:c 'e;ue Book $2500 -SACRl- Ori::. OWJ'IE'r. t_;.\ceptional.· FICE $1899. ·or foreign car 's1(Q() i 673.I:.?.3:.J. in lrBdl', NPVU2. ca.u Pili! t! J Johnson.son· .l!.il~lmlll ll.il mlGD~Tili!IUlll&!I. • lil£1FJI% ]][ • J:G~IFJ@llillilr • ~tmllilri&ll -.. . ' ' . . . -' . . 1969 EXECUTIVE CONTINENTAL SAVE BRAND NEW 1969 LINCOLN CONTINENTAL SEDAN This is your I.out c:h•11ce t i • btr9•i11 Ii~• this. leether interior, ble<:k vinyl ro of. while 1ide well., 6 WtY powef •••l, Iii! steer. wheel, t utomtli<; t emp, t it co11d., AM·FM 11d io, tinted 91111. APP. p1oh<:· lion qroup , power d oo•, fltred wheel co ... trl, Wi11dihleld price $7747.)0. John1011'1 c lo••·oul pri<:e only $60"0· Stock No, 11 99 S11. No. t Y82Al92l06. EXE1CUTIVE CONTINENT A( COUPE SAVE At Even . Greater Savings. Ask To See Stock #1205 at $5795. f'o1· '''''' L11xu1·u Cnr Q11es•io11s, Plet1se Asl~ $1707.30 On This Brand New Car WE ARE DOWN 10 OUR LAST FEW 1969 BRAND NEW OR NEAR NEW EXECUTIVE LINCOLN CONTINENTALS .--------, rnEll: ITHE GREE tll PILEUSES 101 MANGAN • ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS • Johsrson & So12 HfZ • TlzP Repzrlnlio 11 of Offerhsg Tise Fi12est SelectitUI of Vserl Cf£r< in Ilse Co112 2111! CONTINENTAL ~ MERCURY OTHER MAKES ,...,__..,_..,_,_..,_,.._..,_..,..._ .. _..,_.,._ ... _,_..,_,.._..,._ '68 CONTINENTAL COUPE '68 MERCURY CO\.Ol'IY PARK '67 PONTIAC GTO 2-DR. H.T. BARGAIN CORNER ltoyat M•r-rnet1lllc llnlsh w!1h mlltM1"9 1n!frler. bl•ck 1<>ndeu •ool. Lu•ury eoul~. Comcitt!rly !II! 111r•lo11 .,.hHI, faciory 1lr, l>O"'· tr door IOcks, tit. VTP ?~! $4195 '67 CONTINENTAL 4-DR SEO. Buutllul Huron blue melllllc Hnllh wl!h melth· 1119. INtM~ lnleflor. Blick ltnd•u roof, tu!ly l11Xury -tP!)ftl fll!d 18Cl'O•v •Ir conal!lot>l119, AM·FM redlo, 1trreo tape oorc:~. °""'°"""'' cir. BeauHfu!JY ,....111111ned, 1TN010, $3395 '68 CONTINENTAL 4-DR. SEO. AtlrKIM li91\! cnromt yellow will\ bite~ luth. ., !nll!FIOr .,,., i.nd.tu roe!, Full power rqy\p. ptd, IKIWJ 1lr, etc. WXF.JlS $4395 '67 CONT INENTAL COl!verllblc 11H1111fu1 Cle.Mn lu•o....,!st Unlth wolh m11d•ffl9 Interior and W\ll1t 1<11>. como•utiy !u•· vrv eaulP119d, l111t POWff, AM·FM rtOki. 1tctory l lr, l!!t wnttl, t!C, • new ll•tH, UOA114. $2795 '66 CONTINENTAL CONVT. Buu111u1 C•rtl~I red flnl1h wtth O!ltk 1on aNt oi.tctr tetlher ln!erlDr All I~ l11•u•Y '''' l'l.H'tl. lull -·· IKIOry t i• <'Olldllloni1>9. •'-•eo l•Pf ,.,.,...,, eulOINllc (FlllM tCllllrol, IK. EX· ttllMI COt'IClillon. SOi\tn ., $3295 67 COUGAR 2·DOOR Ll"" fro»! whll 1!'11!(1'11119 vlnyl bue~o11, eulo .. m "'91nf, l'.5., ll&H, ne-w c•r 1r10t·lft, ont OfoMr tncl lt!'Vlcell "' our compeny, VDRU3. $2175 '67 MONTCLAIR 1·Dool' HetdtoP. A•Cllc wtollt wflll bite~ h'o1••· kir 11111 t.ln'Uu raol. Futl PO-• l'Qulooed eno rectory 1lr cOfldlllllfllfltl, o ... ow111r. C1•e!ully melntllMCI. UOFl6G. $2395 '66 MERCURY PARK LANE 1 ooar ti1ro•oo. A•cllc wtille wl!h lvv oaolcl ,.,. ttd or tflCI bllC~ l~flCl~U rDlll, IU!O, R&H, P,S .. p ,5., IACIO•Y •If r-!llonit19, Rr•I lu•u•r I! ru1'0!\I01t prl<;:~. VlUl'CI $1995 '65 FORD o/• TON I' p'(tl,lfl. Lie. SVto\ Gold ml1t melllllt 1;,,;,1> '"''" b!1c~ 111.<ktl ''-''1· •u!o. rr101., ••d•O t. hcu'er, IXl"'C' t'H r• 1r>11, l1ctory 1lr. 8r1u•i!u1 col!dlllon. TRJ511l $2295 '67 MERCURY MONTE REY 7·Doo• H1rtl•oo, ~1110....liC "··~,.,, ~: "'1, tl<l<O. l>~ler, pOwor 1te-erlng l~d b• I.CO, l lr c-1. 1.0nong, l.•ncl1u l(lp, LI<", UOGC92 $1795 1967 MUSTANG 2 DR . H.T. S•llls!! r1c!019 ''"" linf~h wlllltc~ tlll<~tt ~'""' "' VI ..-g1f>t. Cllf\SOlt. ,..,,, htr .. llOW•t 11rg~ owr. Ork1., 1uro. ltl>ls., etc, TWVtlO $1795 '68 JAGUAR XK~·2 COUPE A1t•~ctlve arltlll'O R1clng "JSrnn finish wl!l'I 1111c~ IHll'ltr inllrlor. wlrt 'Whttls, 11'101" Ply !lrti, kl<;, lr1utnu1 c-lllon, WICW.Ol. $4595 '66 MERCURY MONTCLAIR •·OoOr Sf!'dan, Tr11ly p0"'er •oulopt.0 •at!D•Y •Ir. Llc. VCU111 $1595 '68 CADILLAC SEO. DE VILLE Mtroo" !!nit~ wll~ b!tt~ 11n0111 root ond bl:ct IM!llt'r On!t•ID•. ~u•u•v equlPIMld. Full POW9!'. ,lac!Df'f ei• c-l•lonlt111. IVA·FM st.,eo, telf" 1111 llHt!t111 ¥r1'fti. Ont O-r, bN11lllvlfJ ,.._!ft. 1e1Md. 20.0illl mllet. YllS:lf In Our Bargain Corner, ·we have numerou1 used cars. Some clean, S o m e not so clean. Some that are duplic•· tions, some we've had too long-in any event these cars are real bargains. LOOK 'EM OVER! '65 MIRCUllY 1·00.. M•nldtlr H.f, 'OO}OI '65 IUICI( ltl'l!l.ltA Slll Mt '66 l ·llllO L•IMI••• llTllU '68 ,L YMOUTN ltl.ililt w.,. Yl'Lnl $1275 $1575 $1375 $2075 $2275 $2695 . $AVE ohnso $4695 son ILO~©@Il.~ ©@~ii'O~~~'ii'&Il. • !ftil&OO~ m · ~~OO©ll!JOOW • ©@ll!J@&rnl I 2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA I NEW CARS 5.40=5630 642·0911 1 Mile South of the San Diego Freeway USED CARS ' 54Q-5635 '66 F•lcon Future · Fully tacl.ol'y equipped. Dlr. $695 .• === ~9~·97i3 or 545;()i34. PLYMOUTH Phone 6tl-6023 '69 Ply. Fury IIJ. Auto., ~.S., '&1 GALAX.IE SOOXL PIB, P .B., fact. air cond:, vinyl PIS, air. Ne1v t Ires. roof, Must ietl. Make oUcr. 545-2392 aft 6 W('('k day, all' "837=-9682======±= day v.·eekcndi;. I '68 LTD Sq. Wag fl P"'t'· disc __ _:_P_O:...:_NTI:.c.;:_A:_C __ & air $19'50 + '65 I '66 . Cor\•air or ? trade. 96Z..5810 66 PONTIAC Bonncv11Jc. 4 , . dr·Loadcd, full powl'r fuel 62 FORD Van, fine ~'1apc, injection. A Crea111puU by 31.0 ~th St.. Huntington 0\l'ner. Can be t1ee11 at 2l!Xl Beach, after •I p.m. College, Apt 31 aft 5 P~I (4) 1968 FORD Cpunh11 \966 Pontiac Le l\fa.nns, vinyl 1;edan wagons. l.OHded! top, PIS; PIS. air cont!. S2J00. * 534.5290 Auto trans. l\lu~t scli, cnakc MERCURY '62 l\IERC \Vagon, 9 pass. Xlnt (.'{ltKI. See to ap- preciate! S750. &14-0350 MUSTANG · offer. C,all -830-5588 '67 Gran Prix-Sharp! Loaded! $19$~ 846-llli,j 1965' CONVERT .. auto. air, Oew lop. & radhila. $675. or bSt otr. 6'J3..6132 · '62 TEMPEST sta "''ag. 4 cy\ erig, au!o trans. 54,000 mi. sno or bsl ofr. 842-3;}43 ·~ MUST. 2 + 1. Blu,, air ·~ BONNEVILLE, air cond. cone!., power, fult ly loaded. Gd tires & brakes Full p11T. Very clean snJ(J. Dan Gd Cone!. $673. 897-3145. Hillon. 5-18-8487 '68 LE t.tAN NS Sprt CouJ'I<', ·s.:; l\IUSfANC 2 Or . Air, pwr, buckets, lo mi. Hardtop. 34,CXXI scl 1ni .. ·L . vinyl top .. 842;2335. ov•ner. R/H, au1o, PIS, 289 '63 CATALlNA SJ()(). '59 Old! V-8, fac air cond. 613-3244 gg, $150, Both run good. MUSfANG '67 289 V-8, air, &1>.1294 pis, disc., radio. Crcy-blk =:;~=;o:==·==== vinyl. Gd. <OOd. II 6 1' RAMJLER 673-581 l 1966 MUSTANG V-8. R&H. auto. 1 Car 'Olvnc1', Xlnt Cone!. Call 675-585j ·&i Rambler dassic 770. V-8, pwr steering. · Xln't Cond. Best OUer. 494-5825 '67 T ·BIRD 2 dr. Landau, flill P"'I', air, nu tires, 8 ll'k stereo, 1vifcs car. Call I 6W-"'" . LADIES MANICURED • 60 1 CONVT T·Bi;RD. AL L P\V~: NU TIRES. PERI'_ I COND. 614·6:>38 OH.I 6-12~. T-Birrl 1967 Landau. 2 ctr. f1.1ll p\1'1', ll'ht w/dk na•y• lop. alt ,.;t1·as. I owner.j al10o·ayli i;urttgcd. Exe. coril.1 P1· pty 6·11--0307 I '66 T·BIRD. Ptrf cond. · 1' 01vi>er. lo n1ilc~. Sacrilitr~, 646-8760. &16-2672 * '67 T-BIRD. 2 cir Landau, ait, alt powrr, imn1ac:ulal£', low milt's. ti,12-0571 '60 T-BIRO. All white. Full po1vei:; fact. air. A·l L'O~. Private party. s.1;;....i211 '&.! T-BIRD, vl'ry cleaa : SS'lS 6 1~.{i'.!79 'j,g T·BIRD. looks good. ruhs 11·r.JJ $29j, ~24 after 6 pr 1\'kcnds '55 CLASSIC . !lfJNT cond $199::i. li13-58'<t2 19:>7 T-BIRD, JXll'I ho!Cs. !\lust SC<' lo appreciate! $1800. 833-76i::i. . TEMPEST '68 T~lP. R/H, ~td . ~hilt, Z'iO ci., li;i hp. $145Q. Best oiler. 962-3024 aft. 6 pn1 .• Imported Autos 9600 Imported Autos 961'10lrTiport,d Auf.'>s . 96qe> .BRAND N,EW ' BUGS 1970's ON OISPLA Y & READY TO 60 CHOICE OF COLORS AND MODELS AT • , • c ·HICK IVERSON Har bor Areas Only Authorized VW, Por1che Dealer • TWO LOCATIONS TO Sll'f'l YOU 445 EAST COAST HWY. 11 BAYSIDE DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH & 1970 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MESA . 673-0900 HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS 549.3031 9800 New Cars 9800New Cers 9800 FREE CA~f WITH THE PURCHASE OF A NEW CORTINA • 2 Doors • 4 Doors • GT's •Wagons 12,000 MILi . , ONl \'Ell WAIRANTY WHEN YOU IUT A NEW 1969 CORTINA fROM US WE WIU PAY fOJ ALL THE GAS IT USIS FOi TWO FULL MONTHS AU ,:•:i~:;.un AT SUNSET fORO ••• • ; '•Ir., 1.,..,. & (•vi._ • ••20•.•••l>ow"···: "'l•!•r N•. IA~l.JMOIM • TERMS: • , • $191.ot : Down, U1h ., Tri .. : 36 l11y P1ym1nt1 1f : $63.32. ANNUAL PfR. Cl NT AGI RA TE 12.IJ, DEFERRED ,AY"WR ,RICE $2470.52 ----""'"·""· ... · "'·"'·='""'· 7. ........ ,,....,,._,....,,'""'·"'·""·"·""~"·'"'I .... ,,.,,,..,. ... ==== ......... ,.,.~""...,.,.,...,.., . .,.,,,.....~=.,,...,., ... .,... _______ ... _ . .....,. . ...-., ... ____ -·----------:----~,·--·-- D1Nt:;f9GREAT. JUDGE FOR YOURSELF • • • YOU'VE NEVER SEEN A CAR .UKE . " . . . PONTIAC'S GREAT LIMITED-PRODUCTION Bili BR01HER TO THE GTO. HIGH PERFORMANCE FEATURES TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. NOW ON DISPLAY & FOR SALE. Hardtop Coupe. Turbo hydr•metic, fib.r9le1s ·white wells, push button r1dio, power sfe1rin9, pcwer br1k11, i;;ustom seet belts. l252l70CIO. ' 71691 2 , .. , waeon. . T11rbo ll}'dr1mallc, pUSll button rtdlo, remote ml,.OI', pO-11ttflng " d~ W&kH, tint..r oltu,. priwer wiMOws, 09111>tr ~111, 1rr concrtflonlng, whit• Wiiis, tic. n.s6:1H CIU71J) Lb! prlc1 $U!J.O' NEW '69 EXECUTIVE ' 2 tU! Wl!iOfl. Tu•DO hydruNlllC, P115h bt.n61r"••d.,, dtlu•• belll, -•r 1111r1t1o " dist brt kes, 11ntM 1 lt H, f'GWtr 1111 g.11!1 window, t lr condllionir>11, llilh!lt w1ll1. (25'1'Kll1'-llJ Lisi pria J.!1$2.11 NEW '69 BONNEVILLE H, T, CIH. Cordo~• top, turt>o hydramt!~ tMltflon rtdlo, rtmo!I mirror, pOWer lt"'1tlg, "°"''' llrtkn, 1!n!ld 'ill•». power wlndowt, t lr COllllll~, fl"ent &-rttr ,...,,, Wlll!t w1U1, d,,..I u:tw11,11ts. (l1Ul19C11'1-CSJ L"t Price SS21S.71 SM97 s4277 • . BRAND NEW '70. .LE MANS • • ' 2 Door hardtop. Decor 9roup, 1utom1tic, fiber· ..'.glass tires, push button redio, custom seat belts, power steering, tinted windshield. . ,1235l70Z600621 I , •· NEW '69 GTO· 2 OOor HT. T11r tl0 llydrtll\IHC, 111.111! bw!lon rod.,, •~· molt ,.,..lrror, dtl~••e btl1a, .. 1r1 IO'hH1 disc. consolt, po•••t• >letring I. di•L brlktt, tinted 118•.111 t lr cOfldl· t•onl.,.... (H2l1,Z116Xl!I Liii Prk1 S4-lll.!lll DEMO. '69 CATALINA 7 Or. H.T. Vinvl 1•1m, de<:or 11•D11P. l11rbo h)'llrlm-tlc, delu•• belts, ~Wfr l lttrl.,..., powtr br1k11, HI\'" CltH, air condltlol'lif'I, Wlll!I W1i11. f2S2l19Cl»2111 D~Q.: '69 BONNEVILLE H.T, ·""· Cordovi top, turllO 11-,clrtmatk, pgw1r 1n-1-.. p!,\111 bull°" rldro. r1mo11 mirror, dli\11(1 1Mn1. paw..-t l ... r!,,..., pgwer t1r1kts, tinted QJ.11, ilr condf. llonlflg, wMlt Wllll, Ill! wn11!, ·dlllll tlCtlllJlll. CM2l1J. C1U1~l) s43_97 s3343 s3773 • FANTASTIC FOR 1970 ! -THE "JUDGE . s4477 BRAND NEW '70 GRAND PRIX Turbo hydrametic transmission, fib1r9lasi tires, bucket 11111, power steering, power disc brekes, tinted windows, factory e.ir condition • ;q9. 1276570ZI 166151 DEMO. '69 CA'rALINA 2 IHI w1gon. DKw group, lurbt llydrtmtlk , '"llOlt mirror dtluxt belts, pOWef 1tw1<1g, POW•• <111c brtkr.., llntld 111u, llOWff IOU 11J1 wt~,_tlr cona1!1onln1, wn111 Wtlll, tie. (2521HCUUJO DEMO. '69 GRAND PRIX Cordo•• too, ~ eno , t..rllO llydrtmtti(, 111reo rtdl~. rtmo!t mirror, dtl11•1 bt!h , pawer 1tn rlno, DOWtr <II>< llnkn. 1111 wll111, 11111111 11111,. p0-.r """""'°"• t lr conc111-1na, """'°"' wt1e11 dlta. (176!17tP'269t'll DEMO. '69 CATALINA ~ Dr. H,T, Vinyl 1rlm, <!Kor ll'Olio. t11rtl0 llydrtmttlc, push bvttan radio, r1mo11 mirror, <1111/ll bttlt, POW tr •lttring, t lr condlllon!.,..., tlnttd wlndJhltld, llilhlte w1!11. C1SJJ9Kl20101 •OliMO. '69 BONNEVIUE • HT. CIH. Tu•DO h)'dr1m1tlc, ~ bull'On rad io, <11· lli•e btlls, pgwtr ••-lno, p0..., br•k•, tlnlld 111n, · p0w1r wlndowl, llr condltlol!lng, Iron! • reer mitt. wllllt w1ll1, d~I 11d1111111. 12'UnCl1'3n) s42~1L s45a9 s3744 RECORD BREAKING PRICE REDUCTIONS ON TRADE-INS ON THE WIDE-TRACKS! '67 COUGAR VS, 4 1p11J, power 1l11ri11,, rtdio, h11f1r, white ..0 1111. ITRH5,2l '68 FORD TORINO 2 dr. H.T .. 1/8, 1ufom1lic, pow•• il111in9, f1tlory •''· whil1 w1H1. IXOE2021 '68 BARRACUDA C1"v1rtil.l1. k1tli1, h11l1r, 1wfo111 11ic, ,o.,..1r 1t11ri....-. VI. IWIC0171 • MARK DOWNS_ • Wholesale Values• '68 OLl)S 4-4-2 Hie price lew Kiiiy look '65 TEMPEST VI, tMlomtli<. r1dio, h11!1r, powtt tlttt• ..... ;,_,._._•;•_· -··-"·-· '-"-"-"-"---~---~----11 '67 CORVETTE '67 SUNBEAM A!pin1 tporlt conv1d ibl1. A1dio, ~11!1r, 4 1p11d IVTL·i 41) '67 PONTIAC 427 VI, 4 1p11d lr1rtt!l'lis1io11, r1di1, h11i•r. R•d . IVCJS14) '68 VOLKSWAGEN 4 Dr. 1uto-. R&H, ,,S., f1clory 1ir, pow1r window1, cordovt lop: ITVH 5111 Aulo1111tic tr1n1111i11ie~, r1di1 '"d h11t1r. -------------~-----~-----.. l1i91. IWIEt241 '66 GTO ----------------------..... l dr, H.T. VI, ~ydr1., ,.S., RIH, WSW, '68 MUSTANG . VI, 1ulo!l'l1!it , pow1r tl11ri119, r14io, ~11t1r, f1clory 1ir conditio11111,. IVHA214) • ' . .. • f1 ,lor• eir, .,;11'(111th. I RTZOOJ I I I . PRICES PLUS LIC. & TAX '67 BONNEVILLE t p11t. S. W, turbo hydr11111lic, ,,,.,r 1t11r• in' I br1k1t, R I H, wh il1 ... u,, f1clor• t it c111ditioni119, IVRL0471 ROY CARVER PONTIAC 2925_..HARBOR BLVD/ COSTA MESA . ., • •• Kl-64444 I !r!!l"'llllJ!tl' .. !"' .. ,J~!""!~•JSIJlll!~Z~J·l•:•a•;•••ws~kY!!!l!IS~AS•.~-~·-•z:u .. a•s&PCCl!!IL@~•~s••>,..~6,..~US~i~j~"'~aP,•P"Sf.""".~1~t!i .... ~H•\•s .... , •.•• ~.~L .... ,~e~·~·,·~t-::i~-:-.O..,.,.~-...,.~-,..,..,.~.~.~.-.. ~-~~~~~~~~--~~~.·~ ~' .. ~ •.· l;Sl . .. . ' • " ENGLISH FORDS! L#s· DEA~-.'*: A ~NE\V '70! ~ . ~ ' . . . . .. • UNIEATAILE• VOLUME SAVINGS AT TifE :HOME OF ,. fjf ~~ . ' . ''THE St:IARPUT PENCIL IN THI, WEST." . . ., .t .. r OVER 60 IN STOCK! '., •• 'e 2 AND 4 DOOR STANDARDS 'e 2 AND 4 DOOR ·DELUXES .e 2 AND 4 DOOR GT MODELS •:9 STATJON WAGONS .;MANY W!TH FULLY AUTOMAT-l ciTRANS., . . !--AJR COND., RAD!AL PLY T.JRl!S,.RAD!O, ;:v:NYL ROOF, WH!TE WALL T!RES. BRAN CLME.W. STD -2~l)R. SHA.RP. Pl!Nt!I; • . SPtCiAL I .. · '"'°"OH •011NS, sa. . "" . ... , . . . THIODOlll :a~:NS. JI. t ••• ' .. :;-. All ~Remaining 269'$ ·.Now Sloili~d'. to Rock Bottom For Immediate · ·Clear:C.nce! . ·. . . . ~ .snu: A GOOD SELECTION TO dMOOSI "FROM •. ·. . . .•, . ' I• -1~" 1.>!.1' ; • • ,·· ~; : .. .... . . . . . ~ ·-. . . ~~.~-· ' $.17:85 · :;wEQ."DS ·-: ~-. ~ . WINTER · . " · VACATlONS • • FULL PRJCE USED CAR SPICrALS: FREE .... ,.. ,.. .. _ ~ .......... wi-.w. flU:E 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DA TS "· , I • ' C•l'9fl ell MecHlllc .. p.t1 t.IHI ........ Ii ·:: I hll1e .... UM, fttl' H4, ~~-J .._ lwolc-.........,,. n4 .......................... ~ ........... ··•--•!· ._.....,.. ..................... ~-. . . ·_..._.., ... SPECIAL OF THE WEEK . . ' '65 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4 Or. H.T . .A.utom t tic, po-r 1lttl'i119-brelre1·wirtdow1, FACTORY AIR ·coND1TIONIN6. IMOtor' No. 24in4J. '1090 .. '64 Continental 4 DOOl SEDAN Full power, FACTORY AI R CON DITIO NING. t ULf 7191 Stock 1600 $1290 '66 ~HEY. 'la TON • v.1, Loi.gl>ff,· 11i~-.. di•. : ....... JTIJ512)' $1.190 . '65 MUSTANG HAlDTOP VI , t1dio, h11t•r, llerid•r'- 1hifl. !OTD 52t l Stock f llA. '66 MERCURY MONTElllY 2 Dr. H.T, v.1, •uloffl•lic, ~1dio, heeter, powel" "•••· i119, ISLW 165 1, $1090 . '68 GOLDLINE Fib•rgl111 10 Ff. C1mp•r· in •11c11l1nt condition. ( 20. 7104311 Stock Pl427TC $1290 '6 7 Chevrolet IMl'ALA 2 Dlt1H.T. VI, eulo 111 etic, P.S., 'tad io. heater. lTS M 9661, Stock PIJll $1490 '68 FORP ··-· .,, t Dr. H.T. Lew "'il••9e. VI, vlityt reof, ••I~· P.S., IWXG-471) 5t0ck' 27llA. 'lt•111•ilMlw M f•ct. w•n •n· tY; ••• 11. $1990 '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP l9P YI, •ulo., fl .S,. R&H. '"THE HOT ONE" IFOZ )45) Stock 1217A $1590 '64 RAMBLER AMlllCAN JJI W•9011. Low mile19., •uto- "'•tic ft1n1minio11, .IKJF 69 2) Stock ll71A $690 '69 COBRA Sport llloo1, P.S., Pow•r tli1c br•~11, crui1ometic, 421 VI , poly9l11 witl• oV•I tir••· IZLH till $2790 '65 C.ORVAIR . MONZA 2: Dr. H.T. 4 1J1ttd, r1dio, htefer" .witt l"'hh ,cove11, red w/bleck interior. f PSC· 01 Jl, ' $790 '66 FORD fAIRLANI SGO 2 Dr. H.T. FACTORY AIR, VI , •uto.,".,.S., I R.lW IJJ) Stodt PIJ2i $.1390 '65 FORD GA~Xll 500 4 Dr. H.T. FACTORY All , Auto., lilH, P.S .. ,,I., p. winclow1, fl.1e1t. I PI~ JJ7J Stock l401f.. $.990 '67 PONTIAC LI MAN$ ' 2 Dr. H.T. 326 Vl , .. utom•· tic, P:S., It., H., 41,241 mile•. l uNJundy with bl•ck wi nyl int•rior. IYWS 049) $1890 ' '64 CORVETTE lt•fftow•bl• lop. 4 speed; retlio, he1ler, pow1r win· dow1, AM .FM r•dio. I RHC 90 11 $1890 '68. Continental ~ ~· .. ~•~.,Full power. fsc· lory ei r, AM.FM, wi"~l ro·of, loetk1r inter. I owner. (l VO 956) $~990 ·~7 FORD _ GAU.Ill 100- 4 Of,. S.d. 390 Vt, .U-10,, FACTORY Al ~. P.S .. P:8., r•ilio, n9et .... CIVE'-7121110 dt y or ~.o6o •ftli.! wtTrtnty. $1590. '64 DODGE Pickup, ·b 119btd, -V •I, eu+o· 1111tic, cu1 .. 1111 _b,•h•'•ler. (1263421 $990 '64 PPNTIAC • 11MPIS1 IT.A. WA60N FACTORY All CONDI· TtONIN6,r 1'ulo111•tic, ,,. tlJo, h•119t, ,a-r •l••ri119. IFNA .t-46) $790 '67 DATSUN WAGON Slick 1hift -.lo w ~il e19•. I TWV DJtt · "' $1290 '68 DODGE COllONIT'4·DOOI SEDAN Y-1, pow1r 1t••ri119, pow•r br1ke1, hoaler. Newport D1tecti•e C•r.11151711 $1350 '6~ •• ~Jli> 4 Or. Sid. 429 VI, 1ut1., pow~r 1l1•1in9 .& di1c b,1ke s, he1I••· City 11,f ~I· le Mes-• Police ci r .. co,,,. pl1t1 IV 111•int•in1d ,.t Tl.1 0. d~r• R1bi111. Reh11in.f1r of fief. W•rr. •••ii. l')SIKI· 14019 )Sltfil31 I . ' -~-. ~. , . , ., • '. ' • . • SAVJNG!SI~ ,, ,. ' SAVINGS! '66 CHfyv WAGON ' v.1, •u~•tic, r•dio, h••f·. •r, power 1t••ri119. lY,C,.. ]001, $1290'. '66 PLYMOUTR YALIANT 2 DOOl Sed1n. Economy plur FAC- TORY Alll, 3 1pe1d. l1QC 566) Stoc• 62SA '69 MACH 1 390 VS, P.S., P-di1c br•ke1, AM·FM STER EO RADIO, crui1offt1tj c, witle 0•11 tiral, whil• w/bl•ck int1rior. Re· fft•irider of f•clo•y w1rr1n· fy •y il•bl•. IYCU4S2 ) $AVE '68 FOllD CUSTOM 190 VI en9 ine,1power 1l1e•· ing, crui1om1fic I l••n1m i1- " 1ion, r e d i o 1nd h11t1r. Police Cir. 11 155401 $1290 . .. . ~- .. • ·, 1~ \Itta. NO. 1112 . ,...,. . -' ' '. ~ ,. ... I --~· Go Willer& and When You Wa ... to· Wiih~t··~rvati9ns • , I t I ..... :. ·1 I • ( · · •.•• ,on a ·Family Budget·1lt'ot -'t.lbkes .Seflse!' .. . ' . BRA.ND NEW ELDORADO 10¥2 FT. CAMPER ' , . . . .. ' ' . ' ..... . ' . . · • LIST PRICE SALE :Nitcia ' , 1 • . • • fljSQoAJNT '~201485 ~1'395 00 . ·~61,9~5 .. , ' READY TO INSTAll ON ~O~R PR~SENT PIG~·UP OR A ~-­~tiE\V -PORD PICK-UP! ' , . . ' . . . . , . ~ IUY TOUI TRUCK &tCAMPU fllOM THIODOllllOllNS·'JOll.D SAVJNGS! SAVINGSt '67 FIAT 150 .$p101it $AVE '69 CHEV. WAGON Kin91wood. )96 VB, IYio., f1 ciory i1ir, P.S .. · P.d:1t brake•. lugg19e r1 cl., •IL winyl int••· App11. 16.,00 mil11. !027414) !Stk. # 1'14111 $3290 • ;AVJHolrzrD.'T..uCK li·CAMkl DlAUll ' . ; . ' , ' ' ' . ' WHlkl 'RNANCING.:1s·AYAttAll.l·ON THI INntl PAC'KA•L SAVJNGS! SAVINGS! ·, . I I ' "> ... ~ < .-, I • • ' ........ .• ... NO SHORTAGE o·F M.AVERICKS . HERE! " ' ; :'' i ' ... ~·;,~ Virtucillj Every Color AIM' h t . Option Made Now In Stock And Reody For lmniediate belivery At· RobiM Volume ·Savln91! · LEASE~ NEW· . 1970! • • • ii.. All Pop,ular Mokes And Models We Are A Member Of The FqiJ Authorized Leasing System ' . • 7 •