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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-18 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa• -' ' ew er ur ~oas I • • ' w ' ' THURSDAY . l'l'ERlilOON, "DECEMBER 118. 1969 VO&l tt. MO. a J llc;flOMS.-.4fJ"AllJ Tiny UPI ,....,_,. TINY TIM, 37i CUDDLES WITH llRIDE,·MISS 'VICKI, 17 Cherin Dickens H11 Nothing On Thia Ch1r1de.r f I Tipt~s to Altar ' Tin y, V~i Won't Get 'fuffed Up' NEW YORK (UPI) , TlnY Tim and his ' teen.age bride were off today on a honey. moon that 'vill intr~uce them to the rigors of a series of rharriage vows that included being "not pUUed up." The sweel singer of falsetto notes wrote practically Lhe entire service hirrtself - partcularly the connubial vows -he disclosed alter lhe ceremony on the NBC "Tonight" show Wednesday night. The service, read by the Rev. William Glenesk, a New York Presbyterian minister, started twith the g r o o m repeating his real name after the pastor: "I, HerOert Bucki4gham Khaury, being of sound mind .•• ' At a news cont ence afterwards, the long-tressed sing•, rolling his eyes ao that heaven seemed to be. peeking through them, said: "I put in 'being of sound mind' so .everybody will know I know what I a"\ doing." And as for getting married nn television bel;;/ a bit eccentric: "It doesn't matter Where you're married - on television or on the sea -11 Jong as you lrcep the marriage laws,,-, Tiny Tim is not an act. He is for real. And after the ceremony his father-in-law, Allan Budlnger, a Haddonfiekl, N.J. art· supply dealerbsaid : "His best feature is sincerity _.. ut I don 't think it's ap- preciated." Johnny Canon. ~tar of .. Tonight," on wh\ch Tiny IOlped lb faint-in 11 singular appearances as a Singer in a year and a half, was among the notables . who at· tended a post-wedding reception for Khaury and his bride. Victoria May Budinger, 17. Cary Grant was .among those who dropped in. ' On the show, after the ceremony, the wedded couple drank milk laced wittt honey while the other guests drUk cham- pagne. "This, you know,. is the ·good Lord's food," Tiny said. explai ning he had given up alcohol since he met "Miss Vicki." The groom-authored vows Included being "sweet, geritle, kind, pallent, not Puffed up, charitable. slow to anger , and swift to forgive.~• Afterw ards. Tiny"explained that "being puffed up is one of l?J)' biggest faults -[ get puffed up at· a ballgame : I'm a real Dodgers fan, you know." His idea of "puffed up" is not keeping calm. Tiny's oft-repeated booeymoc;m edlc:t:of an initial three days ·ol ·complete con· tinence -"not having any. s+x ,or anything" -came frOm reading 'the bi~lical prophets,1~rly Toblaii be said. , Did he have any advice for you"4'. mar. rieds? "Yes...., put the'<Lord fint aild yw will never be last." The couple wlll' honeymoon in ~ Bahamas and mate .tbelr home_in New York. -_, ---l ... -~. --··--· . -' Nude -Frisbee Froli~s . -'nled Illegal 1'Y .Jory • -- Coll;egian · Collegiate boneplly ooot the life of a La Habra student Wednealay night when -crawling aJong a narrow. ninth floor ledge during a water fight -he lost his balance and plunaed from an apartment building. Scuffed hand marks showed William Scherer's desperate attempt to cling to the edge of the structure adjacent to the UCLA campus in Westwood , investigators laid. Scherer, 20, of lMl E . North Hills Drive, La ·Habra, was killed lnstanUy when his body slammed intO the pave. ment below. Police said Scherer and several other students had been engaged in a water fighl earlier in lhe evening, but one stu- dent quit and went to bed. lie also locked his door to prevent a midnight dousing. Scherer apparenUy climbed out of another apartment and was inching his way on hands and knees along the two. foot·wide l~e to the sleeping youth'1 room when he slipped and clung momen- tarily by his fingerUps. -M ick J agger Pleads Innocent to Drug Rap LONDON (AP) -Roiling Stone · Mick Jager and Marianne Falthfull. h1s for· mer ,glrl ·friend, pleaded innnocent today to drug charges resulting from a police search · ol Jagger' a London home last May. Jauer,• ti-year-old leader of the pop group,,...., ~ f'altliull, :11-yoor-old actresa and linger, were accused of poueaalng hashish. Both were released oo blil ud the beariJ11 was adjourned lllllll •Ju. II. _ - NEW YOllK (AP) -Nine penons dJed today. when a 6", believed'to have ignil<d by Christmaa Ugh.., swept through a 2~·story frame building in Brpoldyn, ·the Fire Dej>ar)menl ·said. Seven other occupanta were injured, 1everal criUcally, the department re- ported. The dead were. not lden!ifled !mnied· lately. Firtmen Aid most of tbe dead were believed to be, the children of Geor1la· Tate. ?bey were trapped in their apartment on the top floor of the building ln the Bu.shwick section of Brooklyn. · The fire Department oakl ·ft tliduiht a display of electrJc Chrtstmn tights In a llving·room window may have ignited curtains. The fire broke out in a second-floor living room and leaped up to the attic ' ' ' .. ' level, where 13 peraons wt.re rported to have "be;en sleeping. · "When we reached the attic room you could hear them moaning and scream· i!lg," said Lt. Stanley LOua of the Fire Department. · ''They were scattered all over the ' place, some dead, some aHve." . He said the attic Was a mass of name and smoke when firemen reaChed it and began carrying out bedclothed young. sters by aerial Jadder and down the building's stalrs. "It's a miracle any got out alive," Lous said. Jn addlUon to the 13 in the attic, there were four persona asleep on lhe scond floor, Chief·Fire Marshal Vincent Canty said. Thirteen of the occupants were be- lieved to be members of the aame fam· iJy, tbe rest frlenda of the f~lly. More Killer Surf to Hit _Along Coastline Tonight Abnonna1 hip Udes ud fowerll!I while av.raging 8 to 10 reet an predicted breaters· identlcat. to thole which rav-from Uie atorm now off the Oregon coalt, iahed the C4lllornla coastline last. week-· the fourth such weather front ·to hit end are mi . the.Ir way_. aga!D. ~.. ·beach~ so tar this month. . whipped up by a atorm IOO milts at aea. Maximum damage will occur dUring . The , U.S. Wu"tber Burtau warns that tl}e highest tides, occurring at 5:54 a.m. damage II to be upeded. F Ida -~ •.30 ·Sa"•""-_;._, "At the Pr"'"I llm< tt II expected that . , ' Y ~~ •· a.m. -....,, •··~~ ·the heavy turf will start, etrJy Jlrtday; · ~· to .. weathfr .forecasters. , reach a maximum on Saturday and Tb1s siege of very heavy surf and decline by Sunday," uya the announc.~ above-nonnal high tides ia expected to be ment. very stmllar to last weekend 's heavy Waves peak1nc in IOIDe Ids at 11 feet; battering," uJd a weather bureau.• fPOkesman. "Low-lying beach areas will face about the aame flooding potential aa during the l¥t several perlods oC heavy surf," be added. Pip_e ·Spll.t . -' F~ine -· -.' ~ Platform SANTA BARBAl!A (AP) -An oll alick covering SO square~miles of the Pacific drifted slowly southward today after a new leak developed Crom an Offshore drilling rig ln the Santa Barbara Channel, scene oC a massive oil slick early thb year. Tiie fresh seepage,. detected Wed. nesday, spurted between 6,000 and 9,000 gallons of oil from a weld in an undersea pipe at the same Union Oil Co. platform where the disastrous blowout started last Jan. 28. That slick spread over 1,800 square miles of the Pacific in 11 days, blackened Heaches In Santa Barbara County Ind smirched the Southern CalifornJa coast for miles'north and south. At last report, the new teardrop-shaped slick was five miles off Ventura County cOastal communiUes as oil company crews w.qrked to skim it up before it ~ld reach beach areas. Th-e seepage was discove~~d by a com- mercial fisherman's spotter plane and d>ntinned by a U.S. G<ologicai Survey inspector. Union Oil divers told the Coaat Guard there was an eight-inch split in a pipe c~ing crude oil from the plalfonn to Union's Rincon plant in Ven.tura County. «:eu& w-t1aer It's still' llOlhg · ro be hard 10 ldenlify the sun Friday, With local Cog In the morning lioun £!>!lowed ' by 11tuy' stnflihllf~ ·eoastat ·te'mf>er. atures are pegged at 65, slightly higher inland. ' INSmE TODAY 2nd J et Crashes ,\ . At Clemente Isle Nude Frisbee· Flings I·Q.egal . A second navy jet pla~ crashed this The saine comblniUon Jast Wetk coa\ 1 four lives, Jncludl na: those of a WJiitUer man dun1ped frtim' a capsizing boat off Huntin(ton Beach •and a Stanton 1e - worker-klst--near ()Dard.---'- The . Briwl> guemua lillhi.. seft& to Vittnqm b11 Pre!ident Ni:Dtm ICJIS .Saigan .is "010 sa/f!r for a nighttime stroll than Washington. The 1torv fa on Page 27. .. , .. Olli---.. r~ ''Week on Sa n Cl~ente Island, 50 miles BERKELEY'fAP)-'Playlng1Nbee·fu. from the mai~'f.· The pUot. 1ike the the nude is against the rules today. 11n~ parachuted .oafely Iron. b~ n . A Bert!iey,.Municipll Court jury made Crusader jet. ~ it ..ilic.lal Jn a case against a Plif ror A. spokesman at"Mi~amar "Naval . Air froUcktng sans aprui,..J an Facult Glide Station between Escondido and Sin Diego ,..... ~ . Y said both planes were on tralninl filahts al the Unl•ersity of CaUfornia. when the pilots reported nameouts. 1 Aber ~ hours of deliberation Tues· Cmdr. Richard .A. Peters, 311 para· day , nl&ht, JUl'On convicted non.students. chuted Wednelldoi' plane cr11bed , Recmald Gull<k. 21, and C.lla Slrlter,_Jt. 2\.1 mne.t: DJthe -Ult Jaland._Jir-<J&, nude e1posure, a misdemeanor J1111. He wu pie p by-atN.,y'lltll-punbhoble,by-nqrmore'1han stx 1l)Qtthl coplir crew. The '!!oni!ay w., LL io. l>tl-. ud tlOI filll. Rlchlrd -0 • ..Am~~ I 11111-fa& the-trial,.. Cllllpul-poll_.., ••• • . t • Ralph·Geno said that on Sept. 1$, "I lr~bee." a...,. ol·AClllll ud·catdllnr observed ~ eouple ""1111& lril)i¥ ;.,. •l!ldll'J plulk.dlica: · '.' '· the nude." -1'All of u.s are tubjeded to stranp, "l waa offended/' he continued. unU1ual tNnP, ilJ1le fta.Y.1,111..14R1· Asst. • Lawrence Stark, an optometry ~ Dist. Atty~ Gflbert Jensen, "i:iUt we .must [essor, testified thal "aome other pro-insist on et:rtain standarda among us." fetaor and t saw them in U'8 nllcle. all Defeme aUomey Sydney T a·n n er rlgh~ aa we we"' strollinll·tllroucb· We 11'1\le<I !hot the -an bocty, la not lewd. were commenting how nice it was People '1Thb 'II totnethinc we've been. taupt, could do -thing, llM thll in Ille '"Y ,.. mlpt ooce have been toupt Betkekey.• r -111•1 m.lnloldrll ..ci-nd dmaes were Gullet, l'ho Jw 1on,, ~lond hair, aald: lewd."' "Jlella'I clml .WU up and lt WU SentmcinSwa11c.11edulidforJan.lt. ' I Heavy flooding also struck Seal Be•~. Surfllkle, Sllllaet Beach and spOta oo ~ Balboa P<o\lnsuia-•Qd 'Bfllboa JsJaod; • wJth some homes and bUsinwu ltJU P!<>tecled by lllndbrt. :, I " . '!llgli lfdel pushin mo<!!rite y ton waves apllled over · crest of Boin Chica State Beach today, but there was no flooding of Paclflc c:...t Highway. Damace from last weekend'• ttorm aurl and Odes caUled more thu •t mil · Don dam.ti• to the lJffl Mandala1 Beach community at Olnard, daptte tmel'- ll!llCY barrfcadlnl by Navy Se.abeea and ciliKna. I 'CHRIMuaa" I '"I""~. , ;w_.· • ...l ,. M " ~ ..... .. " " ' ' L ·z OAil.Y PllQT _ s Bandits Rob · 6 in Laguna, Collect $517 A bandJt trio armed wUh a . 45 callbet automatic dropped In at 1214 Falrywood Walk in Laguna Canyon Wednesday night apd fled with a bagful or $517. . Ponce said five men and a woman in !be house were loroed by the robbers to empt7 their pockets ~nd lie face down on ~ floor while one,..j)f the intruders, a young woman, collected the money in a paper_ bag. Victims were Thomu Allen Eu:D, 21, wbo lives al the Falrywood Walk address and turned over $17, and a guest, Daniel Micba•J Commerford, IO, of 17(t5, Vil San- to Tomas. San Clemente, who contributed the remaining $500. The other guests had DO money, police sai~. Two men and Jo w burst into the house when = Gray, of ZIZ N. Coast HJp,r..ay red their knock on the door, the told police. One of Uio men P"Ueil the gun and an- nounced. "Everybody back inside -this ls a ~·ip-off!" He added that he had been the vJeUm of a 11r1p-o1r• (robbery) the night before and the robber bad "walked bact in th1s dlrecUon." 11le victims complied with his order to lie on the floor while the girl picked up their money. He then herded them into the bathroom and said, "If you tum the door knob I'll put a hole in you!" They emerged alter bearing a car drive away, police said .... The man with gun was described as 11 to 2.1 years old, 5 feet IO, 185 pound&, wtth black hair and mustache ud wearing a brown coat and dark pets. With hin. was a girl JO to 2S 1ean old. 5 feet 9, 150 pounds. wllh bleacbod blorile hair, wore a suede coat and black sweat..:.r arxl capris, the victims said. The second man, they said, stood by 1he door and did not speak during the robbery. He was described as 20 to 22, $ feet 10, 150 pounds, with reddish blonde hair and freckles, wetU'iJJc a green !aUgue jacket and light brown puts. Bobbre Gentry To Wed Neveda Gambler Today Fnm Wire Services ·, RENO, Nev. -Sln8ei" Bobble ·Gentry and Willimn Harrah, Nevada'• N-0. 1 gambll!r, wi1) be . married today, ac- cording to cloee ~- Harrah, 11, ...a ·w .. Gentry. 21, ob- tained a maniqe lioente · at nearby Minden M~, Douglu Cocmly Clerk Earnhart Thran aald, · It would l>e U.. ·llrll "nlOIJla• !or Mllil-G<ntri: "'-"Ode to Billy , .... mode· her a star In tbe pop mum. field la 1911. She hu -a !reqtrent companion of. Harrah since he dlvorced his wife last March. Neither wu available for commeitt. One of Harrah's buaineu auoclates, who• would neither confirm nor deny manilijl'.e plaM, said H&ZTah would continue hil practl~ of avoiding publicity. Harrah's former wife of 20 yeara, Sher· ry, divorced him last March on grounds of incompatibility. She has custody of their two adopted sons, John Adam and Toey Lee. Unions Together; Boast 500,000 Workers WASHINGTON (UPI) -Five diasldent uniorui banded together today to create a new raJlroad federation Which they said would represent more than 500,000 worken. The group to be known u the Congress of Railway Unions consists of the United Tramportatlon Union, the Brotherhood 'Of Ma1ntenance of Way Employes, the Brotherhood of Railway & Airline Clerks and ,the Hotel & Restaurant Employes Union and the Seafarers International Unirel. DAILY PILOT N_,..,IMcll H•itri"""IMU Let ... hec• ........ 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"""'""' ., °'""'''" -· r.-t1"& ...... ,.N 11 H...,,,.n ltutl 11!f CO.II M91. (lollf.,11lil, ~ W urrltf 11.n .......,, ..,. 1Mfl U.IO "*""'" mllllttf ... llMlllM, II.IS ll*!lflff, • ~1LV PILOT'""""" 11'1 p'at O'DlflMh Color Them Curimu: 'I Have Awarene••' • . -l Manson to· "Act . -As Ow~ Lllwye~~ '!;;,. '. . ., LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charlet .M. . ~ IP--1-llaBlanca oand ~la Manson, facing trial ~ murder-Coo-'~;··ti•,,~;." sixth. member of the spiracy char&" in oeven slaylnp wants · M"'"°" ·~iilniiy. It charged only Jn the . ' \ L@lo~ kllllnp • to act q hil own a~. ,~ •Mani& was Jed uu,.eowt for the 'Ille 35-year-old c:ult leader mode the spoc:WfY CfllVeoed beaiq flWed by surprlle nqu!Sl Weda!lday .to Supodot . two ·~ Luke Mcltluact, ~ .. a Court Judge Wllllam B. Keene, wbcl aU!; '""'-·lljel~~~l. Court aldel, and he would COn!ldor IL ' ~ ~~..._.,.,and Stelnbq an- Manson. bemled and long-hair«!, •J> Ucipated DIOfelY a motion to substitute preached the bench with pad and pencil . the private atorneya for the public in hand and said, "Your . honor, I am defender'• Office aa counsel for the defen- competent to stand and talk to you .. .I dant. .. . ~ have the awarenen to UDdentand Ult Qut Manmn told Keene: I woWd ~ke charges . .uainst me and I have some to ~resen\.myself, and then 1 would hk~ kTiowledge ol the law." -Mr. Mc£laiiick and Mr. S1elrib!rgto help The BO!t-cpol<en delfSldanl ·declared, me fl poulble.": "nien is no way t Can give· up QlY own 'Ibe court· denied the rtqUM\. fGI' the A new flick opened Wecjnesday night at NeWJ)ort Beach's Balboa Theater and our photographer was on band to reCord these t.wo scenes. The abo ve photo was laken at 6:·35 p.m. before the box office o~d. The p,hoto below was .•napped about 10 miilutes later 'vhen the theater opened -for busi- ness. Our photographer did not stick around to see if Mrs. Onassis was in the. audience. voice in this matter. If there Is no way I Ume ~· saring, "This wJll r99uire cao speak free\!' ii Ueo my haoda and I oome inlemlpti<lll by me to determine JI might aa well;;;;{ have a defense.'' Mr. Mamou .is capable tA repraen.Ung Manaon la charged along with !oor of h!msell." Keene promlsed •, declsloo Dec. his followers bt the gunahoWta.bblng 22, the date set for Mamon 1 plea. deaths of actress Sharon Tate and four When{ Steinberg and McKilaack ob- other perso.ol at her rented Benedict jected to the delay on the decl.lton, Canyon ellate Aua:. t. , Mamon aaid with a broad 1mlle, "I think Shoppers Corral Texan In Credit -·Catd Fraud A Texas man allegedly on 1 buying spree with a stolen credit card was ar· rested Wedne!day night at ~ ·<;:osta ·Mesa department store after being subdued by security guards and Christmas shoppers in a struggle. John A. Cullom, 26, of Texarkana, was booked on .a charge of theft by credit card, according to police. Officers were called to Sears, Roebuck & Companf, 3333 S. Bristol Sl, where Cullom was taken into custody at tlie 5eCUtity office. Store guard Roger B. Ramm &aid he and guard Charles E. Renfroe detai ned the suspect. who they claim had purchas· eel S&1 worth of stereo tapes, \.\o·hen notified a stolen card was being used. 1 Investigators said the card belonged to Robert Underwood and was reported stolen along with other credit cards last June in Newport Beac' • CUUom claimed the card was loaned to him by a friend who owed him money aod offered the easy credit plan instead. Police sent to pick up Cullom also Hoag Appeals For Blood Donors It happen,, every hollday season. Emergl!l'ICJ blood supplies in Orange County run low. For that reason, said Hoag Memorial Hospital spokesmen today. a Red Cross bloodmobile wiU visit the hospital from 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday. ·"it's an emergency situ ation," said Pat Zebal, Hoag public relations director. "Every December the normal blood sup- ply dw:lndles because people are too busy shopping or otherwise involved with holi- day activities to take time to donate blood ." Edward Colburn, manager or tho Orange County chapter of the Red Cross, sald the Blood Bank serves Ole need s of 23 hospitals throughout the county. Traf- fic accidents during the holidays In. tenslfles the ne~. he added . Mrs. t.ebal u.id no appolntment!I are need~ to done.te blood. The Red Cross unit will be located in Hoag·s Conference Ctnter. Bob Hope Entertains 7,000 in West Berlin BERLIN CAP)-Bob Hope, starting his .wiual Chrlstma1 tour of U.S. troop installiations abroad, entertained 7 .000 soldiers and alrmen In West Berlin's Otutschland Halle Wednesday. "We art performing here bthlnd the Iron CUrtaln. But that's the 1atcst place for an act like mine," he remarked :is his audlcnct ro:irl'd. Hope and his troupt will travel 26,00!I miles and plny 2l shows in the next 15 days: I ·brought three young girls back to the sla- tlon, charged with burglary after they were caught with three wallets. The cousins, aged 20, 15 and 14, had allegedly hidden them in a shopping bag which contained merchandise from other stores, but tiad no receipts indicating payment. Saucer Watchers ' Laud Air Force Drop of UFOs WASHINGTON (UPl)-A 10,000,mem- ber saucer-watching assa<;iolion today welcomeO the Air Force's decision to stop Us investigation of flying saucers. It paves the way for a Iresb,.niore thorough ~ien.tific.study, the group 6'i~L The National Invesligalions Committee for Aerial Phenomena (NICAP) said Air For:ce abandonment of 11, 2J·year-old pro- ject Bluebook program mean.s uniden- tified flying objects (UFOs) "can now be given the serious, scientific attention they require, free from m i l i t a r y con- slderatlorui. ·• Air Force Secretary Robert C . Seamans Jr. said in announcing tennina- tion of the Bluebook program that it ''no longer can be justllied either on the ground of national security or in the in- terest of science." The Air Force said It had investigated l!,&18 teport.s of UFO sightings and only 701 still were classified as unidentified. • And among those too, it said1 there y.•as no evidence of any threat to national security. Pel'sonal Income Up $3.2 Billion WASHINGTON (AP) -Personal ln· come rose $.1.2 billion in November, $200 million more than the October iacrease but considerably below the average monthly gain for the first eight months lhe yca ri the Commerce Department N!port.?d od8:y . \\!age and salary disbursement, which to1:flcd $524.4 bnlion at a seasonally Ad- justed ann uaJ rate in November, l'05e $2.2 billion -about th.:: same 8.11 the month bcforC! -despite lhe fact that 1trikes c.auscd a $1 billion cut in factory payrolls. Tot.a l personal Income for the month, at nn annual rate, wris $766.9 billion tom- 1).'lred to $763.7 billion In October and SiG0.7 binion in Septembe~. Tn November 1!'38, the tl'l!Ure wn.s 1711 .~bllllon, an In· crcn~ or $5.3 billion over the prevlou.s month: 1 New Rug Standards . Issued for Imports All !Ive lll8o are· acc:1lHd Jn the knl!Jng the judge has Aid what he has Hid. He deaths the followlnl ni(bt of wealtby la the mao." Figure in Landmark Case JailedonNewTheftCounts A Santa Ana man who won a U.S. S~preme Court declalon whi¥utically changed the rules of police aearch and seizure known as the Chhnel ~bion is back in jail today. · Ted Steven Chhnel of 5310 W. Chestnut St., Santa Ana, wu arrested by police from seven different jurlsdlcUons early this morning on chargn or recelv:lni stolen property. District Attorney's investigators and detectives also arrt1ted an alleged ac-- complice in the case in Fountain Valley at about the same Ume. A~ Tury McCarter, 33, of 10055 La Quinta St., Fountain Valley, was amsted at about the same time and booked on similar charges ol receiving stolen p~ perty. Investigators said they seiJed stamps and rare coins aUegedly ttolen in and seizure procedures employed durin& bis original amt! hut Y•llr. The Supreme Court, in one of its final decisions before the retirement of Chief Justice Earl Warren, decided that ooly evidence within reach of the suspect Could be I.lied in the cue. Chime! was set free. 'Ille ruling waa termed a landmark decl!ion and it drew severe crlUcism from law enforcement officials. Chlmel and Mc.Carter were arrested by detectives trom police departments in Newport Beach, Santa. Ana, Fullerton •. Cypresa, Anaheim and Huntm,ton Beach, alon1 wltb the DA aides. Canada Relief Plane Destroyed in Biafra bur&Jaries. · ~ Both -w•re held uncle!" heavy bail. COPENHAGEN (AP) -A bambinl at- One Investigator said Cbimel's bail wu tack on the Ult airstrip in Biafra Wednee- WASH!NGTON (Ufl) -rhe Com-$62,000. • l .' • day night cleslroyed a Canadian. Super merce Department has announced ®Y \Vhat sparked the invatigatlon, ·they Conltellatioo relief plane that had just standardl!I hi-the·rnfIUons ·ot ·carpekand said, was tusplcjon that there were landed and killed five Biafran iround rugs impOrted ihto "the United States stamps taken in ' a recent-bur&lary in workers, Joint Church Aid airlift head- cach year. Chlmel's home. quarters here announced. The department said the ·standards are Officers anned with aearch and arrett The headquarters said the four crew intended "to protect the public from warrants arrested both men shortly after members. escaped injury. unreasonable risk of death, injury or J a.m. The Canair relief plane had arrived ~onomic Joss from fires." About 58.8 Both were being held at Onmge County tton\ ·Sao' Tome · island· and was bein« mill~on ntg! were imparled into th is J ail today. unloaded when bombs began falling,· 1 COtlntry during the first 10 months of Chimel, appealing a conviction for headquarters said. The plane carried food. this year. burglary, successfully challenged search and medical supplies. _ .... __ _ __ .. ___ -·---GllMD lllUl't-·-------·-_ ... __ ,,_ .. ,_ -- H.J.GARRETT fURNfl1JRE • . ' I . ' " ' .. ,. ..... ~ ... , .. ._ ..... ----='<"~~~--···~· ~·· ----·--.... -~ .... ...,, ........... ~~·----~--.,,.--:.-~ ................. • : . Buntin:gton Bea~h · . iOli[ION Toda)"s l'l••I N.Y.S'""8 • VOL '62, NO. 302, 3 SECTlpNS, 4-4 PAGES - DAil Y f"llOT Steff l"llfh; GATHERING GIFTS FOR YOUNGSTERS AT FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL _ Los Amigos High Sophi Gail Sh1p•rd (left), Sheil• R1•d Valley Teenagers Collect . Toys, Cash for Fair"'.iew "Everyone shoukt have so1r.ething for Christmas," says Sheila Read, a pretty JS-year-old sophomore at Los Amglos High School in Fountain Valley . So Sheila and her classmates have col· lecled more than 300 new toys and more than $400 for more toys for mentally retarded youngsters at Fairview State Hospital in C:Osta Mesa . And the students at the city's other high school, Fountain Valley High, will donate all proceeds from a basketball game and dance Friday night to buy toys for more Fairvie\v patients. The Los Amigos students started their drive last we-ek, und er the leadership ~f Ed Hoke, last year's student body pres1- Beacl1 Hospital Sued for Bat·rii1g • Doctor on Staff denl and Interc\ub Council Commissioner this year. Highlight of the drive was a free lun chtime performance by the •·carnivorous Butterfly" rock band, 'fuesday. Casey Spencer, student body president at Fountain Valley High, was responsible fnr the launching and planning of his school's dri ve. "\Ve have enough money in this area that we can certainly afford to help somebody else," ·he says. The varsity bask-etball gaine between :Fountain Valley and Anaheim at 7 p.m., }~riday, will serve as the focal point for Spencer's school. Proceeds from that game and the sock hop afterwards will go toward playground equipment an d Christn1as g.ifts at Fairview. Student.s may also donate new toys to the drive. The Los Amigos youngsters plan to <lclivcr their gifts to the hospital on Mon- day, and a group of stud en ti plans to vtsit the children at Fairview on Christmas aftemoon .for about two hours. Ed Hoke 'plans to play Santa Claus Christmas day .at Fairview. . . - ORANGE COUNTY, CALIF()RNIA THURSDAY, DECEt.4BER 1t,' '19•9 TEN CENTS .. Building Ban Suggested Edison Denies Expansion Pollution Charges By J~CK BROBACK Of "'9 Dfll1 ,1191 Sltff Orange County Supervisor Robert W. Battin would be· willing to impose a building moratorium in the county If that becomes necessary to prevent further air pollution. B8ttin. ;testifying before the California Public Utilities Commission -hea ring in Fountain Valley on the proposed ex· pansion o( the Southern California Edison Company's Huntington Beach . steam Morg·ent1ia.u Defies Nixo1i, Stavs on Job " Ngw· YORK (UPI) -U.S. Attorney Robert M. Morgentha1.1, a · Democratic holdover in the nation's No. 2 appoiiitive legal post, is refusing to make way for tile man President Nixon has chosen to succeed him. The White House announced Wed· nesday that Nixon has designated former New York State Sen. Whitney North Seymour Jr. to repl ace Morgenthau as U.S. attorney for the Southern district of New York. The 5(}.year-old incumbent, however, says he inte,nds to stay on the job until "I am satisfied that my obligations are fulfilled'' -or until June 11 , 1971, when his legal claim to the office expires. New York's leadi~g ~blicans . - Gov. Nel&Oll A. lloc1'eftller, !IF· J°""9i K. Javits and Charles E. GOodtll and ' ' " . Mayor John V. Lindsay.<-leaped in to offer Morgentha11 their support. .Javita and Goodell criticized the way the nomination was handled and threaten~ to hold up action on Seymour's nomination. But White House Press Secretary R,onald L. Ziegler said today that Morgenthau 's removal was discussed in advance with the two senators. Ziegler said it was his understanding that Attorney General John N. Mitchell \•:ent through the "normal contact" pro- cedure with the senators concerning the President's intention to rep I ace Morgenthau with Seymour. Ziegler added that some of the discussions with Javits and Goodell took place "as early as last summer." The press secretary added, however, that he did not know how recently Mitchell may have been in touch with the two. Morgenthau refused early this year to submit his resignation, as custom re· quires when there is a change of ad· ministration an d as most of the 93 U.S. attorneys did . Eighty four of the :!I· Lorneys have been replaced. U.S. attorneys are appointed to serve four-year terms "al the pleasure of the President," and the statute creating tile office specifies that the President may remove a U.S. attorney from office. The holder of the southern New York assignment is regarded as the most im· portant of the U.S. attorneys, second only to the attorney general among appointive legal officials. PD!f•linl plan~ Ja!d H a polrtr shO<tage shoWd.1 develop because EcUton was denied j)ermiasion to ex~ the plant he peraOnaUy would be for a building mqratorium. • "l npresent the people who are here now, not time who are coming,'' ~ supenisor told P U C commiSBloner Thomas Moran. Moran asked the hypotbeUcat question: ••1£ it should develop tbat t.be only way to supply the necessary .power ao Qranae Danaage Due County h1 the nm few years ·would be expamion of the plant, would the iillpervison be willing to suspend all con- -Btruction ?" Battin said he could not speak for the other supervisors but he would be for a suspension of all types of construction if necessary. - Tbe supervisor was one of rune wit· nesses who testified before Moran and PUC examiner ArCh E, Main. Six op- po&ed expansion of the Huntington Beach More Killer Surf ' . To Hit Coastline Abnormal high tides and towertnc breakers identical to those which rav· ished the California coastline last week· battering,'" said a weather bureau 1pokesman. "Low·IYing beach areas wilJ race about the -e;ame flooding potential as during the er.d are on their way again today. last several periods of heavy surf,'' he whipped up by a storm 800 miles at aea. added. The U.S. Weather Bureau warn11 that 'The same combination last week cost damage is to be expected. four lives, including those 0£ a WhitUer "At the present time it is expected that man dumped from a capsizing bc!at off Huntington Beach and a Stanton barge the heavy surf will start ·early Friday, worker Josl near Oxnard • plant, one supported Edison and twowere Edison Company executives. Edison Senior . Vice President William R. Gould said load projectJon left little doubt that the plant must be eipanded to meet the company 's increased system r• quirements in the period 1973-75. He .said. ground level effect Of gaseous emiS!ion from the Huntington Beach plant after expansion would be aubstan- (See EDISON, Pase I) Another Oil Slick Moves Down .Coast SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An oll alic~ _, covering 50 square miles of ,tbe Pacific drifted slowly southward today after a new leak deve[oped from ·an offshore drilling rig In the Santa Barbara Channel, scene of a massive oil slick early thil year. The fre sh seepage, detected Wed· nesday, spurted bet Ween 6.000 and 9,000 gallons of oll from a v.-eld in an undersea pipe at the same Unk>n Oil Co. platform where the disastrous blowout started last Jan~ 21. ' reach a maximum on Saturday and ·Heavy Ooodl11g also struck seal Beach. decline by· Sunday/' says the ·announce-Surfside; Sunset Beach and spcrta on the !hat slick spread ·over 1,800 square ment. . Balboa Peninsula and · Balboa Illand, milea of the Pacific in 11 days, blackened Waves pea!ting in some sets at 1$ feet, with &&me homes and busines'sea still beaches in Sal)ta B;arbara County and while averaging a to 10 feet are predicted protected .by sandbags. smirched the Southern California coast from the atorm now off the Ore1on coast, High tide.a pushing m~er•tely tall for miles norlh and south. . the fourth such -weather tront to hit waves, spilled over ihe mst of · Bolla At.last report;. the. new teardroJHU.ped beaJ!~m~~·~•n\I\., . .. ...... ~ f111e 1Je•cl\.1Crn!· 1 .. llM3 '"· ,11ck ., .. fivo ~ o11 ven1ur• c.unty . . , .~ ~ '!'-.. ,. M ~·if P~tl{le .~ay. coastal comptunitla as oil cOrqpany the hlahest tidu, «cUrfifti It 11~~~· ~ ~m t from lut w end's .torm.1 crews wotted &o ·stlJn, it Up ~ore it Frjday and l o30 a.m. SatOl'du, ~-• Uda .. ...,i."""-~tli.l.n'.tl,inJJ.. could;._..s)l beach anii. ll1f to weall>er loncutm,. ·, . lioo clam.op to lb! new Mqj/alay ""I'll Tho ~ nl di.cO.tnd~· • •. ....,. "TltlJ ljep· of very llta~vy and c~ty at~ :;11 _. rnei<lal fillltriluift'~ ~· and abi>ve-lici'fnal ."lh Udos II · to lit •"'"'-' <•-''"-"" Na ~ · ~~-· "' '' I -· ~•-·-1. -~ ... ..:· "~ ~~··· ~' .... ~~,cl::::."""' . ··~ . . . . . ~.,..,.. .• , .•. ..,, " . """""'' v ry MPIMll. ti ~· ~·~"" • uu"fl a "'"'°'· , in8pector. . ' . New Apartment Cutback Hearing Set by Valley A proposed 40 percent reductlOn· bi apartment construction will rtteive a publlc hearing.before the Fou~ V~ey PJanning Commi~lon ·Jan .. 7. BANDITS HOLD VP BANK IN BEACH Two bandits struck at the First West· ern Bank at 16932 Goldenwest Street in Huntington Beach shortly after 12 :30 p.m. today, escaping with an undeter· mined amount of cash. Witnesses told police one gunman entered .'.he bank while lhe second remained in the getaway car. There were no injuries. Police were reportedly in pursuit of lhe getaway auto at press time. Wecb\eaday night plllllleri. listentd to the racta and figure. ot tht proposed reduction aa explained by the planning 1tarr. Stan Mansfield, city 'Plannina: director. said that Wlder the current· gtl'lerat.plan of. the· city apartment construction would equal 40 percent of the tota1 residenUal units in the city. Under the new proposal, he expla.ined, apartment construction would equal 28 percent of total residential units In Faun. lain Valley. The apartment reduction, ordered by both the f.lannlng commission and the ci· ty counci , was the result of a month.Jong 1tudy conducted by the planning staff . New figures were found by studying the general plan and eliminating questionable apartment !iites and taking of sites master-planned for apartments but which had actually been developed in CQM• merclal. or slnlle !amlly, Ja!d M""'lleld. Union Oil divers told the Coast Guard there wa1 an eiaht-inch split in a. pipe carrying ,crude o1J from the platform to Union's Rln;con plant in Ventura County. Officials immediately stopped the flow in the pipe and said 'it wodld .take about 36 houn to repair the break. Floating booms were placed around the slick and skimmer boats began pumpina: the crilde from the surface of the aea. Valley to Give 2-day New Years Employes . ol the· city ol Fcuntaln Valley will have a two-day boliday1 Jan. 1·2. The city council has agreed to allow them to take off Jan. 2 in exchange for working on Lincoln's birthday. Stol'lc Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks continued to gain today on the heels of tight-money remarks by Federal Reserve Board nom- inee Arthur Bums. (See q~ Pages 34-35 ), Oranae A Hurltinglon "Beach doctor has sued the Huntington Intercommunity Hospital and nine members of its executive com· mittee·for $2 million in a Superior Court suit accusing them. of unlawfull y barring him from practicing at the facility. Dr. Ralph Sher claims M the action he filed Wednesday that he was dismissed from the committee last Nov. 7 "without cause and without hearing." He has since then, he alleges. been compelled to treat his patients without. the privilc~e .or ad- ministering to their needs w1th1n the hos'pital. Beach . ~ Cu~b Study AsKed Near.ly ·all apartments now proposed loi .the city lie in the corridor bordered by Brookhurst and Euclid Stnets and nmnllif .llOIJ!h . ol f!llle Square Pan. H~;i.'viest concentration Is in the city center area and alon& Brookhunt Street. Maps showing the remaining propoted ap8rtmeiits will be available for the publlC to view in the planning depart.. menl · Weadter It's still going to be hard to Identify the sun Friday, with local fog in the morning hours followed by hazy sunshine. Coastal · teptper~ atures are pegged at 65, sU,htly higher inland. 1 Dr. Sher stales that his practicr has been substantially damagerl by the lack of hospital fa cilities and by the defe~­ dants' circulation of the facts of his dismissal. , Dr. Sher today refused to reveal the reasons on which the commitfee based its action. Or. Paul McB'rlde· of H1.mtington Beach. one of the defendants listed by Dr. Sher as a member of the.> hospital commiuec, today refused to coinment on dispute. Valley School Boa1·d Holds l\leet .'fouight Routine business items .domio,'llC .tht agenda for tonight's. 7:3& mtej.lng .of the Fountain Valley School Ol~tric't Board of Trustees at Oile Lighthou se Lane. Fountain Valley. rncluded among the action items are contract awards for Cox School physical education equipment. public~Uon depart. merit equipment and-Bprinklcr.s for C-f$ler School. County Eyes Santa Barbara Land Controls A st udy on protective ct1nlrols over private development of public beach. lands -eattemed on Santa Barbara 's n1ethod -has been held for further study ordered by the Orange County Board or Supervisors. Stuart Bailey, asslstant'county plaonlng director. reviewed the a~Iysis of the Santa Barbara County Beach Devt top. mt.nl District befo'"" aupervisots Wednea. day. The same principle should be ,applied here, he said. I Supervisors listened lo Bai\ey's•report' and requested more study by the Orange connty Planning Commission. w i t h another 'repOrt at their February meeting. ' , The area involved in tho.Orang~ County stuqy lies betwl!t!n Newport ~ach and San Clem~nte. the largest stretch of county-controlled beach property on the local coastline. "Almos\ all the shorelines between Newport Beach and Seal Beach lie within city boundaries," Bailey explains in his report.__ Certain controls already exist under tht county"s B-t Burrer Distrlct. but only on roads, parking facilities, landscape plan· ting, non-view blocking mesh fences, agricultural crops and produce sale stands. Pennanent bulldin~. with the ex· ception of restroonis ' vided at recrea- tion areas,.-.ere· not co ed by I.he buffer dJstrlct, Bailey'• report el]llains. Tbe beach development district under consideration would apply to commercial and residential areas that are already in the works for the south county shorel ine. Santa Barbara's development district Is designed to preserve and protect beache« and bluffs.from damage due ill effects 0£ storm s and erosion on manm ade altera· tlons·,of the tandSCape. Slippage an4 tlrth slides plaguing !he Palos '9erdes Pentnsul8 area are a prime example of the potential problems the district would intend to control. ' "The Santa Barbara Beach Develop. mcnt District I! .•. an area lying between a line ooe mile staward, parallel to the mean high ·tide line and a beach setback lint.'!.Bailey't report statet. "Wilhln this district, only beach- recreational activities and their ac· cessory structures are pennitted," it con· tinuei. County authorities might achieve the safne effec(s through careful zone changes or · zoning Jaw amendments. Bailey suggests ·1n· the ttporl The county plannlnl dopartmenl staff, • Valley District Concerned About . . Play Accidents however, believet: the objectives could Fountain V&lley Schdol J>-l·s t T 1 c·t better be ·carried OJt by cruUon of such lruateea have gtv,t.n school tdmlntstraton six months to ' reduct· iccMWnta on~ a district, <\earfy. llalinl II• intent. · playcround equipment: ·" "Or by estab11sh1n1 building setback . FllW'I' "'leased by the district sh'"! line• af<l.l!g,l~I""' ol \II< ~ach re-thit ·:it lnluri<S_li\toM\11 ". ~irWi>d.­ qulrlll(I: pi-Otectlon and prtservatkm."' the eqillpment havel betn l'tci>rded over ... the _... .. ~ I I pist II months, incl1Jdlng 17 . frlcturd. reporl.d~ll~l;lcu Wedo~ay exp ans .• '' two concuulons and 'One set. of .broke:i\ Orange County authorities bave been . teeth. . particularly concerned with protection o1 Dlstrtcl Sufierintendent Mike B~ck lold public beach lands al'nce the l'l'elt and school fruatees the injury rate Is not ex~ conUnuina controversy over a ban· eeulve1 eapeclally since · the school donment ol ·Sall Creek !toad to the distrlcl contains 10.000 children. 1.aguna Niguel Corporallon. HOW.Ver,1 IJl>stea -•ed school ·Id-That acUon by tlie Board o I mlnlstralon to devtlop 1 ......, "COlll- Sttperviop?J ellecUvtly clooed . m11 ... !I piiltetlive phy'ical fitneoa program and ~ic..-tlint,:.tnd~~.>:19 J!llbLt0 __ to Inc~ playcr01Jnd 111pe_rv111on by use, through lack of proper 1ecess rOutes. tuchen . .~ •, INSmE TOD-'l' ., ij ' " ' ' The Britbh guenillo figh~,,. 11 3t'nt to Vietnam b11 Prerident ~ Niion 8CYS SaigO'l'I i1,now safer ' jor a nighttime 1troll than Washing ton. Tht .tt0111 is on Page 21. '· ' ', I ' J D.lll Y P!lOT " Marriages Eclipsing Old Mark ·-just 10 l!ild1ing days left In 1969, marriage licenses Issued in Orange Coun- ty Wednesday eclipsed the all-time rte· orcJ ~t in 1968. -· --. . . . . Fret11 P .. e 1 JtDISON ..• ·1 lijlUy lea& than lbe original four units lo 19St .•. "AD improved :'cooibusUon technique, " conventon to low 1t1lpltur oil for aup- , .~Ill fuel, .... blgb -heights r wlll ,,.mbine lo produce slgnlllcalit . "'11~l10111i lo lbe .alrudY minimal groond leVel effect cl the'bperatlon of the plant," Gould testified. He ouUined the increased demand for power due to growth and said if the ad· diUonaJ units were not ctinstructed 70 . percent of the eoergy requirements oI the county would have ·to be imported by Ji"/S. He repeated previous Edison testimony that ;w altemaUves to meet the required increa~ ih capacity woulc' be available iil time. --.--· Landmark ~Case .. -' fig~re A Santa Ana man who won a U.S.·· Supreme Court detision which drastlcaMy ~ perly. . . changed the rules or police ·a~IJ'.Cb. "Jlqd : ~atJ&,tQrs saJd Jh.ey · s'.eiF<f. stilin·p; · seizure kno~n as. thl!,.~him~l De~ion is i and raPe ~in~ "'llegedly st.o!en in. back In jajl today. burglaries. Ted ~teven Ctµmel of 3310 W, ~&tnut 'i. .~.h me~ were httld 11nder heavy bail. St., Santa. Ana. was aq~t~'lbj police ~Oile:,1nvesUgator said Chlmel's ball wus from seven different J~clioiel early $:$2,000. this. morning on charges of. receiving \Vbat sparked the Jnvestlgation, they: stolen property. • ~said, was suspicion that there were District Attorney's ipvestig&tors and ' stamps taken in a reeent burglary in detectives also arrested an alleged ·ac-Chimel's home, Cupid's unerring aim has sent more than 10 717 couples -·the total the bow· man ratud up Jast year -into the bust· Ung marriage liceoff division of the county courthouse. It seems certain, says Supervisor Phyllis Hahson, that the 1969 total will exceed 11 ,000. December has been a rugged month fe>r the county clerk's marriage bureau and predictiom are that the Dec. ~1 tally will reveal that more than 11,000 licenses were issued. Gould also played down the con· tribution of power plants to air pollu4on. "It sOOuld be clear to anyooe who wishes to examine the facts that power plants are only insignificant cootributors to smog and have little effect on the en· vironrnent." coinplice in the case ;1n ·tountaJn VaJley Officers armed with· search and arrest at about the san:ie ti~e. . i warrants arrested both men shortly ~ftcr + AC1!: Terry McCarter, ~~ of i,100$5 l;a l a.m. This year's top month was June when 1,377 licenses were issued. JuJy, AuguJt , and October we.re close behind and ei&ht of the 11 months thus far tallied are all record breakers in a ·record-breaking year. Record breaking is not confined to mar- ri ages and new marks have been set by the office's less heralded function-pass· port applications. The total has closely followed that of Its more c·elebrated co-functjon and stood at close to 11,000 late Wed.nesch1y. If it · also hits ils expected mark cf 12,000 il will have eclipsed the 1968 total by more than 4,000. Records indicate that the annual Orange County total of passport applica· tions was fewer than 300 just 20 years. ago. lt broke the 1,000 mark in 1957, passed the 7,000 tally 10 years later and just missed the 8,000 plateau last year. Huntington Adds 2 More Officers To Copter Force ·-TINY TIM, 37, CUDDLES WITH BRIDE , MISS VICKI, 17 Ch1rle1 Dicken1 H11 Nothing On Thi1 Characte.r · 0 lll'I Ttll,~eM ·Tiptoes to Altar Tiny, Vicki Won't Get 'Puffed Vp' Officers Paul M. White, 28, and James K. Lail, 26, have been added to the list of NEW YORK (UPl) -Ttny Tim and his television being a bit eccentric: "It pilots for the HunUngfon Beach Police teen-age bride were off today on a lioney. doesn't matter where you're married - Department's two heJicontA..... moon that . will introduce them to the on television or on the sea -as long as t'_... you keep the marriage laws." Both men completed their pilot training rigors of a series of marriage vows that Tiny Tim is not an act. He is for real. this month and are now on regular fiying lnchided being "not puffed up." And after the ceremony his father.in· law, status. Prior to pilot training they served 'MJe sweet singer of falsetto notes wrote Allan Budinger, a Haddonfield, N.J. art· as patrol officers. -supply dealer, said: "His best feat ure is The city now has four police pilots for · practically I.be entire service himself -· sincerity -but I don't think it's ap. the two Hughes 300 pouee· helicopters. partcularly the ctinnubial vows -he preciated ... Sgl Robert Morrison and Officer Floyd dlJCJosed alter the ceremony on the NBC Johnny Carson, star of "Tonight," on Stafford were the fiNt men trained' when ••tonight" show Wednesday night. which Tiny leaped to fame in 18 singular the air surv~r=· am was staned. The service, read .by-the Rev. William apnr>arances as a singer 1·n a year and a ""--new . .in---.. · .. dommerclll Genes•,· l N-y·.,.k ~. byt•·1·an " 11"" a. ;, ........ • • .... l""1"1t Q half, Was among the notables who at. helicopter titlQ['S li~,,:..ne at ~ mlni-;ter', ~· with tilt, 8'~.9'0 i:n tended a post-wedding reception · for olhen. Sgt.~ !t!@!lf.mli addlliorl!ll. .......,,..,., ... ...,., ~~al••"",_.,,s!Qt'.:·' Khaury and 'his bride,. Victoria May lnstructor'1 Uctnseo · \~.;. '1 · · ~.~-B~ii!gblm. K~;-befng 'Budinger, 17. Cary Grant was among Cost of tralnlnl the two ne.r pilots was of1 souhd mind •• .'" those who dropped in. only $5,000 .e~c.:Ji, ,~mpared *P1 ~10~-· 'At a news ~nference .~terwards, the On the show, afttr the ceremony, the each for; Ir~ t)le,flr11 ~ nliiJI; ~ ill ....... ,.tnae' _,..., "'• VII /I'! wesWed couple drank milk laced with Sgt. ....... ~ ,tbe ;~w;i ,, · qiem Aldl 11tfput fl\'~ ~. ''This, you know, is the good men •. ' ~:at~&tilill ·brtr: t ";:~~~~'l"ffi,~ ;:~.~~ boiiY while the other guests drank cham· aald ci*J',. · r-aOiand mhxr:~ eVerybody Wili kiiow · LOt'd's food," Tiny said, explaining he "' ·~ :·:} · · : · llnoW w}lf.t 1 am doing." had given up alcohol since he met "Miss .,·.1 • · And as for ·getting · manied on Vicki." Bobbie Gentry To Wed Nevada Gambler Today From Wire Sentces RENO, Nev. -Si111er Bobbie Gentry and William HarFah, Nevada's No. 1 gambl .. .r, will be married today, ac- cording to close friends. · Harrah, 58, and Miss Gentry, 27, ob- tained a marriage license at nearby Minden Monday, Douglas County Clerk Earnhart Thran said. It would be the first marriage for Miss Gentry, whose "Ode to Billy Joe" made her a star in the pop music field in 1967. She has been a frequent companion of Harrah since he divorced his wife last March. Neither was available for comment. One of Harrah's business associates, who would neither conlinn nor deny marriage plans, said Harrah would continue his practice of avoiding publicity. . DAILY PILOT Oll:ANGE COAST PUILl1H1NG COMPANY R.ob•rf N, W11d Pra:d1111 -P11bli1~1~ Jeck R. C11rl1v V fct Prt!licllnl eftd Gl'flrr1I M.ll\f9tl' Tho"''' Ke•,,JI Editor 7~011111 A. M11rphin• M~"'t Edit« Albert W. 11111 AUOC.111t E"l!Or H11•ti...-• IMcll OHie• 11l7S lt1ch 8ou!1Y1rd M1lfit"19 A,4r111= P.O. In 7tO, 92,41 0 .... """" Llllllll ltKfl: ttt F~'°'t .1,, .. 1'11,11 COit• Ml»: llt Wnl l •f it•11t HtwpOl'I INdl: nn Wtlol llU:IM &tult11tr4i . Playing F~isbee in Nude Now Against the Rules BERKELEY (AP) - Playing irlsbee in th~ nude is.against .the:ru.les ~1·:, A Berkeley Municipal, Court jury made it offictal in a case against a pair fur frolicking sans appiirel On Faculty Glade at the University of Califofnia. After three hours of deliberation Tues· day night, jurors convicted nonstudents Reginald Gulick. 21 , and Della Striker, 19, of nude exposure, a misdemeanor punishable by not more than six months in prison and $500 fine. Duitng the trial, campus poli ceman Ralph Gano said that on Sept. 25, '"I observed this ctiUple playing frisbee in the nude." "I was ofCended," he continued. Lawrence Stark, an optometry pro- fessor, testified that "some other pr<r fessor and I saw them in the nude, all right, as we were strolling through . We were commenting how nice it was people could do something like this i n Berkekey." . . . Gulick who has long blond hair, said : ••Della's' dress was tight and it was frisbee," a game of sailing and catching gliding plastic discs. "All of us are subjected to strange, unusual things these days," said Asst. Dist. Atty. Gilbert Jensen, "but we musL insist on certain standards among us." Defense attorney Sydney T a n n e r argUed that the human body Is not lewd. "This is something we've been taught, Streets to Get Artificial Grass Artificial grass was-recommended for use on a limited basis on small syeet medians in Fountain Valley WedncSday night by the Parks and Recreation Com· mission. The project is experimental, and com· missioners made it clear the art.Uiclal turf would not be used on major medians or in the city center area. Stan Stafford. parks and ttereation dittetor, said the arUficial grass should cul down maintenance problems and cosll In dlfflatlt anoas. the wif \Vt·:tn_i.gbt once have been taught th~t -minis~ir~ and red dresses were lewd." Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 29. Sb·eet Repaving Nears Completion The $1 million widening and repaving project on Golden West Street between Pacific Coast Highway and Warner Avenue will be completed by the first of the year, Huntington Beach Public \Vorks nft.ector Jim Wheeler announced today. The project has been under way for six months and will provide a divided four. Jane highway fo r the three miles. The project has been financed through the Orange County Arterial Highway Program and with city fund s. Valley to Screen Films for Y outl1s Films for school age youngsters will be shown at 10 a.m. Saturday in the Foun· Lain Valley Library. at the civic center. Movies scheduled are "The Red Balloon'' and "The Goldfish". They "'ill be repeated at 10 a.m. Jan. 3. Films will be shO\vn on a brand new 16mm ·pro}ector presented Ao the library by th& Friends of Library AssociaLion. Justice Douglas' Heart Pace r Replaced WASHINGTON (AP l-Justlct William o. Dougl:is spent five days in the hospital Jast month having the batteries of his f!i!arl pacem11ker rrplaced, a spokesman says. . Douglas was at \Valter Reed ,Army hospital from Nov. 3 to Nov. 8. The pact· make.r was implanted in the 71·year-old jusUce In June 1968 to correct an ab- normally slow pulse ratr. A possible jurisdictional. dispute in the granU:ig of the pennit for expansion of the plant was hinted at by Leonard Saider, PUC attorney. He .said tbe Orange County Air Pollution Control Di!trict's deniaJ of a permit to Edison could cause problems. Saider addtd. however, that state law instituting the PUC empowers the com~ mission to order public utility con- struction ii such expansion is found lo be a public necessity. George Hallen, 16481 Morse Circle, Huntington Beach: "I am a mechanical engineer and I favor the addition. I fear the curtailinent of power. Edi Son has spent millions in research on pollution control." Paul Ryckoff, 1200 S. Bayfront, Balbocl Island: "With their produdioq of oxides of nitrogen the plants should be called Edison's inferno. Edison promotes the sale of electrical appliances along with a request. for more facilities. '!be pta.nt in Huntington Beach could increase nitrogen oxide em.mission to 110 tons a day. Charles R. Wright, 9152 Bermuda Drive, Huntington Beach : "I represent the . coneemed citizens who live in the area near the Edison plant. Trees have been killed, clothing ruined, walkways spotted and paint deteriorated. Edison ia an unfit neighbor." Ruth Duemler, representing Stamp Out Smog and the Women·s Auxiliary of the Los Angeles County Medical Associatk1n: "There is no doubt of the health hazard of pollutants. Utilities on the West Coast have Jagged behind in development of nuclear plants. There are only three in the entire area." David A. Kirchner, 1744 Miramar, Balboa: "I offer a third alternative, geo- thermal power in the lower Colwado River basi n. "There is potential power there for all the utilities in the world for millions of years. Edison bas not investigated this possibility ... John s. Wright, Santa Ana: "I am the past president of the Orange County Proper\)I ~. ~atlon,J>l.S\ direc- tor of lllo'OPan&l>•OOunty farmoaii.eu: and a member of the 1967 Orange County Grand Jury, , "Smog damage to· agr5cultural crops amounts to $100 million a year and 100,000 trees are dying in the San Bernardino National Forest. Nuclear power plants such as that at San Onofre are the answer." Quinta St., Fountain Valley, was arrested Both were being held at Orange County at about the same time and booted on Jail today. D41LY PILOT Staff f'llq!I Bridging tlae Gap Marina High junior Robin Spicer, 16, confers with \Villiam Reed, public information officer for the city of Huntington Beach, on some graphic design work. Robin and 25 other student government offi- cers from ·three Huntington Beach high schools were at city hall Mon- day, working with tbeir municipal counterparts. Program was spon- sored by Youth Coalition, the city and Huntington Beach Union High school District. 1 • .., .. ,..,.. ... .,..;..,.""""""""""""'""""''"'"'"""""'""""""""~~'=iut$ll:ll~Ji:IBJ11P.t~=a~till?i~~~,_J6\I Christmas Suggestions from Garrett's by Heritage I I I '1 11 I ••• fJ1!111 frum Heritage -a.---·· ......... .......... -..._ .... _.,. _ .. ___ __ _., __ ,, -..-.-.-. ___ ..... -~-_,,, __ __ ... _ -- I !! I i H.J.GAl\RE1T fURN1111RE • PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BLVD. I W INTERIOR DESIGNE'RS COST A MESA, CALIF. I -M--"'· -"46-0275 •---•••----••~~·•••--•ww••~••...n; • , . • ' • l • ' ' I _l_ . . ~--.. . . . OAIL T PILOT Pllei. " Ltt1 "''"" RINGING, THE BELL FOR THE SALVATION ARMY Santa Ana's Anna Waltermire Soul · Soldiers S,alvatwn Army Starts Yule Work ChrillmasUme is much like any other Sunshine bags, parcels of both useruI time in the Army -the Salvation Army · and recreati~nal gifts, will be distributed -where the troops . know you d?D't as·wep during the-Salvation Army rounds minister to souls by neglecting bodies, of area hospitals and rest hor!'ies. hearti arid ~n~ . . . Citing the Army's ~967« 811J!U&I The orgamzation. IS planning its annu~l report, Captain Cisar said a • total ·Clf Christmas program, HK years after 1t . Wa5 founded, providing as much as it can ~l~ Orange ~ty residents --~t to help th~ poor, sick aOO the forgotten of Just m the Santa Ana area -were helped Orange eounty. last .Ctuistmas se~son. Preliminary estimates are that more All this requires funds, however, and than 1.000 families throughout the county besides the United Fund. Community will receive Salvation Artny assistance Chest and other ~ch. sources, the Salva· this holiday season, accordin& to Captain tion Army lassie with lhe o\d.fashioned Tom Ch!lar. ': kett}e is out on the st.reeta again. The Santa}Ana area commanding of· Vo!W\~rs. as. well as . ~e wo~en ficer says the Anny ha.! also liberated wh>se SituaUon m life reqwres Salvation more than 5,00'.I new toys for distribuUon .Army assistance are manning the lo children Santa Claus might otherwise Christmas kettles and keeping that bypais. familiar holiday bell ringing. "Volt Rubbe(' and many other large Captain Cisar noted Monday that many manufacturers are helping out," said ol them are working in far different en- Captain Cisar, while the job of bringing virons -such as modem shopping Christm~ cheer extends down through centers -than the lassie who set up the the ranks of the Army. first Christmas kettle. AttenUon cost. little. itself. and many Salvation Army workers were feedin g ghut-ft and ~·cfderl·Jnvallds will gei a the jobless, cold and hungry on the chilly \.isit 'by 1 S um... 1trrJri ~ ~ · ~s of SattPrtncltt»,in 1913 when t.bey caroling choir. • -· . ran out of food and mo1:'t'Y· -. . Captain Cisar estimates 2,800 will have One resourceful lassie carried a ~111- the ir holidays brightened this way. while warm stewpot QUt to the nearby bustling the convalescent home visits will be sup-<iireitt c»mer ...S, a caqilian ~at h•1 plem'11ted by personal appearances at siirvived and grown 56 years was launch- private homes. ed. Pilot Logbook Trauma of Induction Comes on Both Sides By ARTHUR R. VINSEL 01 Ille DeilY "'ll•t Stefl SIX YEARS AGO to the day - almost the very hour -the assembly tine trauma of being Jibsorbed into the U.S. Army was mine,' so I could idenUfv with the kid in the short story I wa s reading. ''The Trainee," (Esquire, January) is in hi s first day too. Coincidentally. on the other side of the country, my kid brother was cele- brating bis discharge Dec. II, after four years' service instead or three. He was conned into elCira lime by a recruiter who has a great future selling used cars. I had been drafted and was bitter. He had joined and was an idealist ' STUBBORN ABOUT li stening to the voice of ex- perieflct -a typica.1 kid brother -he had to learn the waste, sham and hypocrisy of the military system for him· self if he was evt-r to learn iL He learned. One other young · man from my mother's house once left for the miUtary. He boarded there in college. His name · was Dinh. He was from the Republic of South Vlelnam. He wu married with four );ids. His induction notice came the same Christmas season as mine. only he was to go into the Saigon regime's army. Binh ck>sed his door and was quiet for many hours afterward. Ex cept under certain circumstances, such as imminent slaughter by !!Oldiers (Life, Dec. 5, Page 37) the Vietnamese cry quietly. Thal was five years before My Lai, where scores of dead people may or may not have been murdered. "Your son must go to war?" Binh had asked his landlady In sympathy that December. A,, it turned out, her son must only go to type Jeep mainten- ance records and answer telef)hones in a Maryland camp. "It Is like leaving lJl1 own borne and family," Blnh said when his turn came. AND BINK "'ENT awsy to war. while the war comes without mercy to many of his countrymen. whether they support Washington and Saigon, Hanoi, or don't care either way. Binh was a hortlailture student and enjoyed working In my mother's yard. where flowers and shrubs crow in colorful. non·mllitary profusion and disorder. He experimented with grafUng citrus and eadl Chrislmas, the oranie tree in front bears lemon11 rrom the bush in the back too. Ea ch Christmu since 196S, a card with 1 Saigon pmtmark has carried best w1shea from Binh and his Vietnamese family. Each Cbrtstmas since 1963, my mother has sent Christmas and New Year's hopes and news from the people he called his American family. mE SON BJNH playod Monopoly with on Saturday nights Is out ol lh• Army (the m11jor was displeased but h.ad no ~uthor!ty to for bkl h.is off-duty participation In ~foratorlum Oa.y observancea m Boston} ... the girl bi -.·In. nlng awards ln high school drama .•• the ol.de.r son is still a newspaperman ..• The news wnl be the sam~· sort e'll:hange:t by countless f1milles this lime of year. The lemons are out on the orange lree. The season for pcact on earth and good will toward men has come again, So far. the card Crom Saigon hasn'L • .. Thur~, Duenibtr 18, 196~ H DAILY I'll.Of J. Manson Ask _s to .. Defend JSelf ·: . -I I Judge Aware Suspect Aware, But Not How Much ' . ' ~. - . •, ' LOS ANGELES (AP) -Chari" M. Manson, facing trial on murder<:on- spiracy charges in seven slaylnga, ~·ants to ad as his own attorney. The 35-year-old cult leader made the surprise request Wednesday to Superior Court Judge William B. Keene, who said he would com;ider it. Manson, bearded and long-haired, ap- proached the bencl:\ with pad and pencil in hand and said, "Your honor, 1 am competent to stand and talk to you .• .I have the awareness to understand the Holiday Lights Set Fire, With • Death to Nine NEW YORK (AP) -Nine persons died today when a fire, believed to have ignited by Christmas lights, swept through a 21h-story frame building in Brooklyn, the Fire Department said. Se ven other occupants were injured, several critically, the department re- ported . The dead \\'ere not identified lmmed· iately. Firemen said most of the dead were believed to be the children of Georgia Tate. They were trapped in their apartment on the top floor of the building in the Bushwick section of Brooklyn. The Fire Department said It thought a display of electric Christmas lights in a living-room window may have Ignited curtains. The fire bro);e out in a second-floor liviQg rQOm and leaped up to the attic level, where 13 persons were rported to have been sleeping. "When we reached the attic room you could hear them moaning and scream· ing," said Lt. Stanley Lpus of the Fire Department. "They were scattered all over I.ht place, some dead, some alive." He said the attic was a mass of name and smoke whtfl firemen reached it and began carrying out bedclolhed young· sters by aerial ladder and down the building's stairs. "It's a miracle any got out alive," Lous said. In addition to the 13 in the attic, there were four persons asleep on the scorn! floor, .Chief Fire lo.1arshal Vincent Canty ,;aid. Thirteen or the occupants were be- lieved to be members of the same fam- ily, the rea\ friends of tht family. ' county St~dent At UCLA Killed In Horseplay Collegiate horseplay co.st the life of a La Habra student Wednesday night when -crawling along a narrow, ninth floor ledge during a water fight -he lost his balance and plunged from an apartment building. Scuffed hand marks showed William Scherer's desperate attempt to cling to the edge of the structure adjactnt to the UCLA campus in Westwood, investigators 58id. Scherer. 20, of 1841 E. North Hills Drive, La Habra, was killed instantly when his body slammed into the pave- ment below. Police said Scherer and several other students had been engaged in a water fight earlier in the evening, but one stu- dent quit and went lo bed. fie also locked his door to prevent a midnight dousing. Schl?rer apparently climbed out of another apartment and was inching his way on hands and knees along the two- foot·'A'ide ledge to the sleeping youth's rocrm when he slipped and clung momen. tartly by his !ing;rtips. Personal Income Up $3.2 Billion WASHINGTON . (AP) -Personal In- come rose $3.2 billion in November, $200 million more than the October Increase but considerably below the average monthly gain for the first eight months the yf.ar, the COmmerce Department report...>d today. Wage and salary disbursement, which totaled .$524.t billion at a seasonaJly ad· justed annual rate In November, rose $2.2 billion -atiou\ th: same as the month before -despite the fact that rtrtkes c•usoi a, $1 billion p.it In factory payrolls. To91 personal incolhe for the month, at an annual rate, ••s $766.1 billion com- plll"t<I i w 1713.7 billion In October 111d f/611.7 billloa tn Sepjember. In. November 1958, the figure was '711 .$ billion, 1n in· creaae of -4$.3 blllion over the previous monlh. · Burtons in New York NEW YORK !AP) -Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor )lave flown tn from Or:neva for their first v1sit to the United States in a year. They told reporters at Kennedy Alr· port Wodnuday they would atay a "'hilt in New York bt!ore eolng on to Hawall to visit Miss Ttylor'1 brother J!oward. charges aga.lnst me and ~1 have some knowledge or the law.". . The soft-spoken defendant declared, ''There la no way I can give up my own voice !n this matter. lf there is no way I can ipeak freely, it ties my hands and I might 11 well not have a defense." All five also are accused In• the tcdifing dlatM the !ollowlng nJght of wealthy Hollywood grocer Leno LaBlanca and his , ie, Rosemary •. A sixth member of the •nson "fam.Uy" Ii charged only ip tho the private atorneya for the pubud: de fender 's office a.a counae.I for the deftn-:' dant. La"aianca killings . · ' ·Minson was led Into court for the speCially convened hearing flanked by tWo atofneys, Luke McKissac k. 32, and 'lwrence Steinberg, 51. Court aides, and But Manson told Keene : "l woukt like to repn?sent myself, and then I would Uke Mr. McKissack and Mr. Stelnber1 to help .: me If possible." . Mamon Is <:barged along with four Of his followers in the gunshOl-stabbing deattu of actreas Sharon Tate and four other persons at her rented Benedict Canyon estate Aug. 9. apparently McKissack and Steinberg an- ticipated merely a motion to substitute The court denied the request for tht . time being, gaying, "This will require' some interrogaUon by me to detmnlne if Mr. Manson ls capable of reprete'J1tlrlg ... himself." Keene promised a declllloa Dec.· 22. the date set for 1tfanson's plea. ·.,. ALL STORES OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEEK FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVl:NIENCEI 1-t' s iust not Christmas without a real tree! LIKE IT ... CHARGE IT! CHRISTMAS TREES! Scotch pine tree. A tree with Its own beautiful shade of green ••• needles that are luxuriously long. Branches retain their needles longer than other firs, 'o you can enjoy your tree much longer. · 5 ft.·6 ft. 6.49 211 ff, • 311 ft. Scctch pm..__ 4.4t Natural Dougln fir Chrl1tmo• tr•••I Stroighl, 11urd'y, luthly 9rHn, we f\IShecf these down from mountain f9t· nt1 to fill 'f""' home with the Joy of Chtinmo'-Stltct fro"' a voriety of aiz:es.. 2 ft.·3 ft. ·--··-·---·-·······················-99c 3 ft ••• ft. -·-·-1. 99 7 ft •• 8 ft. -4.69 'ft.·6 ft. __ 3.49 9 ft .• 10 ft. _6,99 6 ft,.,7 .ft. Scotch pine 7,99 7 ft.· 8 ft. Scotch plM 1.99 Plantation grown Dof.ISllo' fir trMl..A. ft10ft PoPtAs tree d'ue to It• fult pyramidal ~· 1he cioliW • density of Dougloo ft, br...i... ho,. i.... .. hon<M lly yearly thearlnt aod •hoping. 5 ft.·6 ft. ··---·--·--·8.49 6 ft .• 7 ft. Dougi.. fit .... 9.99 7 ft •• e ft. bo09lat ftr "" _ 11 .99 ..... ' .,_, .... " IUNOAY TOOi I DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH 11 ti ..... ' I I • • I I ·; '•- ' .1 •, . • . • ' . ' ' .. -. • • ---- DAJLT PILOT ' ... \,' .-r I • ' i. f TOIAY'S-·IEWS : ~ .• ~ . . I : .. ~ ~ .. "' .. °""' ..... '"*' :t Arlttotl• Ona11i1 is giving two i1'roerican nuns a. (:hristmas pres- 'lmt-en expense-paid holiday t rip to Bethlehem. Sister Margaret O'· Neill o! Englewood, N.J., and Sis- ter Alodi11 Ci111rn1y of Dyersville, J0\\'3, said they had tried in vain for the past six years to earn their "''ay on a Holy Land visit. Finally they asked Onassis if he could help. They said an Onassis aide ad· vised them the Greek shipping ty. coon would foot the bill for the trip. The nuns left for Israel on a plane of Olympic Airways, which Onassis owns. ' I· ... • SeLJ·defense is Linda Morse'' motto t hese days. The 26-year old Berkeley resident testif ied as a defense witne11 in tlte riot coiupiracy trial of the "Chi· cago Se1.1en." She told the court that the 1968 Democratk' convention con- vinced her "we had to defend our· .selves or be wiped out." ,She ha.9 since . taken up karatt ana targq. shooting. • Comocllon loll Hopo is. taking a new message this fear to the thou· sands of Gls he will cheer up on his annual Christmas holidays ov· erseas trip: 1'Sign ~ now to con· tinue your schooling. 1 Hope repre- sentative Bill Feith told a reporter the "Hope for education" program is being pushed at the request of Defense Secretary M • I v I n R. Laird. • In Saii J11011, Puerto Rico eiglLt color tel evision sets are being installed at a cos t of $3,. 400 in public plazas for the id- lers, most of them e/derl11 benchwarmers. fi l'V•l''<i'W :._ • • The Gurkha Wel!are Appeal In Singapore is campaignin·~ for $2.5 million to help the tough htUe sold· iers from Nepal who have served the British military for 150 years. ll says that by 1971 only about 6,000 Gurkhas will remain in the British army but the number of ex-sen.r· icemen and 1.heir dependents will soar to 125,000. Stag Partv ·Clay Shaw Judge Nabbed in Raid NEW ORI.EANS (AP) -Polle< cresb- ed an alieJed ~ a penon atag perty in a. motel ioom Wednesday Oight and tr· niled everyooe preaont; ll'oeludlng the - judge whb prealded at tht Clay Shaw u:ial. Newsmen who came on what they thought would· ""be ·a routine raid aaw silver-ha!red Judge Edward A. Haggerty Jr. struggling to get away. He was sub- dued and handcuffed. Police Maj. Joseph Murry ~aid Hag· gerty was booked on charges ol soliciting for prostitution, obscenity, resisting ar· rest and four counts of assault on a policeman. Haggerty, S!; d New Ol'leano, a judge in the state Criminal District Court. presided at the mooll>long trill of Shaw, who was cleared of a charge of con-- spiring to murder President John F. Ken· nedy. Murry said three women and 10 other men-arrested at" Ult!: midcity motel were each bookt!:d on the obsctnity charge. The newsmen, who included television cameramt!:n, were allowed in the room aboot a minute after police broke in. . Haggerty's brief struggle with officer• was Jn tht!: fun glare of TV camera.s. Tht!: judge suffered a small cut on lht!: forehead. ~ Police Sgt. William Nolan said a 1tag movie was being shown in conjunction U,I TtfffMlll STAG PARTY SUSPECT Judge Edward Haggerty with live entertainment. fie did not elaborate. Haggerty was rtlt!:ared from central lockup on his ovm recognizance. Peace Talks Recessed After U.S.-Red Hassle PARIS (UP!) -Allied and Communi!t negotiaton: today argued over the alleged downgrading by President Nixon of the Vielnam peace 1'.lks and decided not to bold their regular meeUng next week. Delegates emerging from the con- ference hall said they "8d agreed to a 1%· day recess jn tht!: talks because or lhe •· Christmas holidays . Hanoi's chief negotiator had boycotted the meeting for the second w"k to pro- test Nixon's alleged att.empt.s to sabotage the. ~ks by refusU,g_ to aend a replace· ment o( ~qual stature for Henry Cabot Gol(,iwate,r, Urges Nixon Resume Bo~ing North W ASlilNG'l'ON (UPI) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, lust bac klrom Vietnam, urg .. ed President Nixon today to 1'tlUDle born· bing North Vlelnam and lo destroy tho port o! Haiphong. UnlesS tht United States resumes bom~ bing to deltroy suppUea stored Jn the 11Qrth, the ;Arizona Republican told the Senate, the conflict will become "a never ending war which neither Ult!: Preside.ot nor the American people would allow." We are flghting a war of the passes," gaid Goldwater. " ..• We are fighting a war to stop !IUJ>Plieii moving through these passes rather than a war directed at the reservoirs which hold these MIJ> plies ill the north . "As long as the 10urces of these sup- plies go untouched, our task ••• la a little like trying to hold back the tides. No maUer how much of the iuppUes and equipment we ~t!:stroy 1n the pasaes, more of the aamt!: wlll be coming ..• so long as th4!: railroads continue to· run down from China 'Into North Vietnim and the Communist port. controlled by Hanai remain OJ>t!:D to supply ships from .Russia and other Ew"opean countrtet." Uxlge, who reeisneif u chief U.S. negotiator earlier this month. Ambassador Philip C. Habib, acting chief U.S. delegate, reminded the Com- munist side of Nixon's statement thal ''our delegation at these meetings has full authority to discuss any proposal that will contribute lo a just peace.1• Brushing aside the Communist clir.arges that the Nixon administration was "downgrading" and thereby "sabotag- ing" the talks, Habib told the North Viet- nam and Viet Cong delegates that "what is important at these talks is a readiness to negotiate seriously." ''Your refusal to enter into genuine discussior.s with aU Ole parties, as well as your refusal to consider mutual action, ahows clearly tbat it is your side which i.s not ~kin.a: thest meetings seriously," Heblb IBid. Habib was reCerring to the Communist refusal to have any dealings with the Saigon delegation and lo discuss the withdrawal of North Vietnamese troops from South Vietnam. Battle Deaths N~ring 40,000 SAIGON (AP) ..,.-American battlefiel d deaths In nine years of the Vietnam war will total more than 40,000 by Jan. 1 if the current rate continues. .The U.S. Command announced toda y that 85 Americans were k.llld in action last weei:i i$ leas than the previous week. Thls raised the number of U.S. battlefield dead since Jan. 1, 1981 to 38,827. · For the past •lx weeks, the total of U.S. combat dead has averaged about 100, and there is no expectation that thia will decrease substant!ally any ti.me soon. South Vietnamese headquarteri said 421 government troops were Jdtled in ac· tion last 'week," 10 more than the week before, and 1,436 government troops we.re wouoded. Gales Lashing Northwest Snoiv, Freezing Drizzle Spreads Over Midivest California !.OUTHIEltN (Al lFOll:NIA -V•rl •bll 11111! dolidlNH Th11'""e'f •nd F,1d1Y Mid ._ c!Olld~ from coe•t 1fl!lrd lo CDe$1~1 tlOot't of ll'>e mollfl· l•l~t mor~ina 1>our1. Not "'II!" 11"1' ""'"-'re '"'"'•· l05 ANGELES ANO \llCll<llTY- CloudY In morn;,... l>oufl al'd ti.1Y iuntl!Hw wlll! "1•11 cloudt Tl!url411' .n .. -'"" Frld1Y, not lnlK" ,_ ...,.111/r1 c"'""'· Lo* Tl'lurtc11'f n!~I JJ. 11191! Tlll.onll•Y 61. POINT CONCEPTION TO MEXICAN toll:OEll-W!Mt illcoml"' lOlll"wat tti wnt I .. lJ kMlt Ir! .n.,.._., Tr.t1nd1Y lad frlHY. H11.,., wnllrh' 1*911 -Ulftl11 Wtlert lft!I "191! bfwkllll WIYff l iont C.,.11. C lt'lUel' 1fl morntn11 with "lt l!\< ~ M "Nv'f' "Ill bvt NfflY .,...,,., 1n lft!rl'IOCl~t. lltlll t-.ilur'e ctlt.,... $0UTHl!RH Hl\IADA -,.,,, will! VM!fblt 1'11111 ~ Tl'lu•Mltf " l'rlHY. HOii ll'IUCfl ·-·"''' dlt"91. lOWll fol'lltM Ind Tlll.wldfY nltl'll D fa .U. Hlll'lt Tl'lurMltY 6) to 77. COASTAL AND INTliRMEO!ATE VALl•n -low clovdl: tnd PlldlY fol or lliMno M• morni-•Piii "-"' """*""" wtttl v1•l1bll 1'1'9ftl C~l In '""'_... Tl'lunNr •!'Id "'"-"· t n. ti. ,.,.._,...,,... die,,... l"'* Tl'lur1" <UI.-fllfl\t lnOllllV Cl I'll JO. 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Moo". rid•• f1irl\td 11 MIOW 11 hl11\t1" t!tvtlloM. • . ~ A --ttot'lft lf'Ol'll *II .,.,.ffO'llll THllll:S'QA'f'. -1. ll1M -· lrNll"9 r•lft • ..., frHI• l«Ol'llJ """ ............ s.• t .lfl. ~-' • Int drlul• oKrott IM Mkl'Ml1t -trom Sfl;OAIJ low ll:U 1.m. 1.t Wl'ICflllflll 19 ""' ·-¢'\lo v 111 ..... fll.IOA'f' ffler1 11:00 M'I 1 ftw V10* fl11r• Fl"' 1111111 . • • l ;J<I 1.1t1. J.t •It• CIVIi !ht ~lltlfrn llOrllon of ,.,.,, !OW '.... • "°' ,,..,. '·' ""' (..,,..,.,. SICOr'4 ""' ............ 11» 11.111. J.I Tiit,.., ti IM 11•Tlorl wit •-•llT Stc0na ID• • ............ •. • . ···•·• cltlr •l\d cllld. '"' colltrtl toot w11 Cfll\Cerd, N.H.. """"' Tiit 11 llllOW S•11 Ill-l:J2 1 111, Ith I:~ 11.m, ........ llfd fllt ACWd IOW M 11111 M-. lllltl l:IS a.If!. krl l;IO 1.lfl. cl1tw. ' l't!tn.iterat•res HI .... l-,nc. Altlo!Jaut•1111 " " Anc110r111 n " At11~t .. " &lklf"tlilkl " ,, l lln'lltCk • ~ " .... a " ...... " " 1 ,owr11v1H1 " " CJ'llCllll " " " Clflflnt'tttf " n ,, -.. ,. DH Mol"'' n • Otlroll .. n F•lrbtlllc1 10 -· l'or1 Worlll ~ " .. ....... .. .. ... ,_ .. " ,, -·· " .. K1n111 CllY .. " , __ .. " Mi.me n .. Mlfll'lff"tl1 " .. •.M Ntw Of1 .. M .. " NIW VIN't " " 0.kl•!'ld " " .. Ol!t•""919 '" " .. ...... " " ,.,Ill Slll"lnt11 " .. , ... ltol:ll•• .. .. 'llNfll• " .. l'ertl•M " .. ·" ll•~lf (111 .. .. lttd l lllff .. • ·" ·-" .. $1cr1,........1~ • " .. Stlt l.1k• '" " " '" o•-.. .. ,., P'r1nc:1Kt .. " .. $11ttl1 n " ·" , ....... " n .. T"'""•I " .. W1.rtlnttoo1 " .. ' Nixon Asks ' SolonsCurb Spending WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nixon u.ys the Dt!:mocratlc-controlled Coniress. by increasing government spending and cutting taxes, is adding to "inflaUon -the hole in everybody's pocket." In a tart me11sag4!: to leaders of the Senate and House, Nixon Wednesday ask- ed the lawmakers to stop boosting his budget requests "no matter what the cost ln political popularity." He said, "The Congress appears to be Wt!:ll on its way to substituting tax reduc· tion for tax rerarm. This will harm rather than help the average taxpayer. InnaUon ••• Is the most unfair tax of all." . A few hours after Nixon's messagt, the House passed 259 to 156 a bill to give the President standby power to order con· trols over consumer and business credit traruacUons. The bill, which Nixon did not ask and Republicall.'l opposed, ·wa~ 'sent to cnnference committee to work out dl£1erences with a Senate measure. Under the House bill, Nixon, if he chost!:, could activate con trols and the Federal Reserve System could apply ceil· , ings on interest rates, conditions on con· sumer purchases bought on time, and other regulations. In the bill's report, Democrats on the house banking Com· mittee wrote the Nixon administration's policy "fails to curb inflalion, hurts hous· ing, hurts employment, raises interest rates ••. " Nixon's letter said bills already passed by at least one chamber of Congress would add about $4 billion to government spending during the current fiscal year. He said an additional $1 billioo. has been lost through congressional inaction on his plan to make the Post Office self·sup- partlng. "This combination of action and in- action woWd load an additional $5 billion onto an already overheated economy," 1 Nixon said. Como le Included BACK AT WORK N•wark Mayor Addonltlo Ne,vark Mayor RettU'llS to work NE\\'ARK, N.J. (UPI) -Mayor Hugh . . J. Addonizio, indicted Wednesday on tax evasion and extortion charges by a federal grand jury investigating P.fafia control of gambling and official cor· ruption, returned to rus city hall office to- day for business as usual. Addonlz.io arrived at city hall at 8:30 a.m. In the only public statement he has issued since the indictments he said: "I can't say anything at this titne, but we will have our day in court on Friday at the arraignment. In th4!: meantime, we will continue to run the city in its usual effective maMer." Fifteen persons were named fn the federal indictment Wednesday. They in· eluded a reputed Mafia lieutenant and nine present or former Newark officials in addition to the mayor. ., . . ' '.' . , ~ .. " .;,;. ·I• ff ..::~.;)4'1i. -·-·="'"' ... ~ l Hangman Banished In Britain LONDON (AP) -)'h< Houae d !Mds today penwienUy bani.shecl the dtath penalty for mW'der in BrU.aJn ifter 1 two- ·~ day debate that crOssed party lines. 11 The l«ds appr6ved without a formal ~"'ote count a Labor government motion to · make penn~ a four->:ear experiment Idling the li&ngman ~esiili, atrong ' con· aervatlve opposition .. an<f.,publie, qpinion polls showjng repewell 1UPPoli !er ualni the gallows. A key to the abolition victory· tn what both parties called a maUer or con· science appeared to be t!ie alternative: a return to the unpopular 1957 Homicide Act. Even the hanging lobby wanted to avoid that because of complicated defini· lions in It of which murders could be punished by death. Stubborn attempt! by Lords who sUli favored the gallows failed to · delay the showdown veMict proposed by Home Secretary James Calla.ihan. Lord Brooke of Cumnor propoSed that the V{)te be delayed until murder and violence statistics for 1969 were available in mid·l9i0. Lord Dilhorn. lorn1cr Conservative lord chancellor. moved thal 1he experimental abolition be continued until 1973. The abolition may last only until " Conservative government gains power. The vole cli1naxed 40 years of attempts to root out the death penalty for murder. The House of Lords delayed even an ex· perimenlal recess for 20 years unlll 1964. Il finally approved temJX)rary abolition to end July 31, 1970, beginning in November 1965. If Parliament had taken no a~ion, the llomicide Act would have returned as Jaw, a result apparently ;:>leasing to neither side. The act divided murder Into capital and noncapital categories. Capital crimes were defined as murders committed in the course of theft. by shooting or explosion, t.J prevent arrest, of policemen and prison officials an d second murders. This meant that a murderer could poison but not shoot a victim ·without risking the noose. Sears Kenmore Console Sewing Macine • Overcast!, satin stitches, monogram aod makes decors· $ live stitches manually • Sewa on huttow, ·makes buttonholes • Fronted mounted bobbin winder •Walnut finish conoole.,, oimulated drawer with brass plated pull ••• Model 1204/9100 Aok About Sean Convenient Credit Plano Sean Low Price! • . ·. ,. . . . . • • •••• . . . .... .. ' ' I ~ ,: .. Zig-Zag Portable Sewing Machines .. . . Sean Low Price • Overcasts, eatin 1tit<:be1, aewt on buttons, makes buttonholes • Monograms and makes decorative 1ti1<:bea man- ually •Front mounted bobbin winder with automatic cut-ofr when bobbin i• full. Model 1204/9?07 . ·.-. : M-' Abo Anilahle al Sean Appliance and Catalog Sales Stores • , _________________________________________________ , I --ll 1,00-. n1.1u• •-Ola.HI! --Ml I.flt! -· '""· ...... f,J1t 1.W-SI . "-llwt ... ., -~·n .... M.lJU __ , • .,,, .,_,O! .. l'°'OWll •-•->'4 1.0lt ,...,u-11 1.JJn _,,.,,1111 I I _ ...... I, ....... ...-IDNfU -~·1100 ~ _A,.Vt-.i,..•11 ~•4Jffl'O Jl<ll0 f1fol1Jf I -IMIAl -ot••11 ._111.n11.u1on __ ,,,..,11 _P1.,.1t11 '·------------------~---~--Sears -----------------' .. .._.. .................... A.&tt•ra......, 11:,._.,,... --•• .-s.thf .... G11•a1111ll•l'wrMMlyhdr" • ( . ' I ' T ' - Fountain Valley Today'• Fln•I N.Y. Steeb voe. o2. NO. ')02, 3 SECTIONS. 44 P>\GES DAILY PILOT IWI ....... GATHERING GIFTS FOR YOUNGSTERS AT FAIRVIEW HOSPITAL Los Amlp High Soph• Goil Shepord (loft), Sheil. Rood - Valley Teenagers Collect Toys, Cash for Fairview "Everyone should have sorr.ething fo r Christmas," says Sheila Read, a pretty IS.year-old sophomore at Los Amgios High School in Fountain Valley. So Sbeila and her classmates have col· Jected more than 300 new toys and more than $400 for more toys for mentally retarded youngsters at Fairview State Hospital in Costa Mesa. And the students at the city's other high school, Fountain Valley High, will donate all proceeds frnm a basketball game and dance Friday night to buy toys for more Fairview patienls. . The Los Amigos students started their drive last week, under the leadership ~[ Ed Hoke, lasl year's sludent body pres1- Beacl1 Hospital Sued for Barring Doctor on Staff dent and Interclub Council Commissioner this year. Highlight of the drive wa s a free lunchtime perfonn ance by the "Carnivorous Butterfly'' rock band, Tuesday. Casey Spencer, student body president at Fountain Valley High, was responsible fb r the launching a,nd planning or his sch ool's drive. "We have enough money in this area that we can certainly afford to help so1nebody else," he says. The varsity bask-etball game between Fountain Valley and Anaheim at 7 p.m., Friday, will serve as the focal point for Spencer's school. Proceeds from that game and the sock ho p afterwards will go to\vard playground equipment and Christmas gifts at Fairview. Sludenls may also donate new toys to the drive. The Los Amigos youngsters plan to deliver their gifts to the hospital on Mon- day, and a group of stude11ts plans to visit the children at Fairview on Christmas afternoon for about two hours. Ed Hoke plans to play Santa Claus Christmas day at Fairview. ORANG E COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSQAY, DECEMBER 18, 1969 TE~ CENTS Building Ban Suggested ·· Edison Denies Expansion Pollution Charges By JACK BROBACK Of ,... Delly ,lltt 51•1r Orange County Supervisor Robert W. Battin woeld be willing to impose a building moratorium in the county if that becomes necessary to prevent further air pollution. Battin, testifying before the California Public Utilities Commission hearing in Fountain Valley on the proposed ex· pansion of the Southern California Edison Company's Huntington Beach steam Morgentliau Defies Nixon, Stavs on Job ., NEW YORK (UPI) -U.S. Attorney Robert M. Morgenthau, a 'Democratic holdover in the nation's No. 2 appointive legal post. is refusing to make way for the man President Nixon has chosen to succeed him. The White House announced Wed- nesday that Nixon has designat~d for mer Nevi York State Sen. Wh itney North Seymour Jr. to replace MorgenU1au as U.S. attorney for the Southern district o{ New York. The SO-year-0ld incumbent, bo\vevcr, says he intends to stay on the job until "l am satisfied that my obligations are fulfilled" -or until June 11, 1971, when his legal claim to the office expires. New York's leadiJ\c Republicans - Gi)v. Nelson A. Rockefell«, Sens. Jacob K. Javits and Charles E. Gooden and Mayor Johp V. Lindsay -leaped in to offer MoraeDtbau their support. J11vlts and Goodell criticized the way the nomination was handled a n d threatened ta hold up action on Seymour's nomination. But White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said today that MorgenUiau's removal was discussed in advance with Uie two senators. Ziegler said it \vas his understanding Uiat Attorney General John N. MilcheJI went through the ''nonnal contact" pro- cedure with the senators concerning the President's intention to rep I ace Morgenthau with Seymour. Ziegler added that some of the dlscussions with Javits and Goodell took place "as early as last summer." The press secretary add~, however. that he did not know how rer.:ently Mitchell may h~ve been in touch with the two. Morgenthau refused early this year ti, submit his r~signation. as custom re- quires when there is a change of ad· ministration and as most or the 93 U.S. allomeys did. Eighty fou r of the at- torneys have been replaced . U.S. attorneys are appointed to serve four-year tenns "at the pleasure oi the President." and the statute creating the office specifies that the President may remove a U.S. attorney from office. The hokier of the southern New York assignment is regarded as the mosl im- portant of the U.S. attorneys, secon~ o~ly to the attorney general among appo1nl!ve legal officials. generating plant, aa.ld U a power shortage should 1 dev~lop became Edison -was denied pennlatiloo to Upand the plant he personally would be for a building moratoriwn. "I reprtsent the •people who are here now, not those who are coming," the supe.rJisor told P U C commiasloner Thomas Moran. Moran ~ked the hypothetical question : ''If it sho\M develop that the only way to 5u pp ly the neces5ary power to Orange County In the next few yean: would be expansion of the plant, would the supervisors be willing to suspend all con- struction ?" Batt.in said he could not apeat for the other supervl1SOrs but he would be for a suspenalon of all types of conatrucUon if neeessal")'. The supervisor was one of nine wi~ nes~ who teaUfled before Moran and PUC examiner Arch E. Main. Six op- posed expansion or the HunUnaton Beach plant, one .supported Ediaon and two were Edison Company executives. Edison Senior Vice President WJIUam R. Gould said load projection left little doubt that the plant must be expanded to meet !he company's increased 1ystem r• qulrements in the period 1973.-75. He said ground level effect of gaseous emission from the Huntlngt.ln Beach plant after expansion would be substan- (See EDlSO~, Pase I) DamageDUe Another Oil More Killer Surf Slick Moves To Hit Coastline Abnormal high tides and towering breakers ide ntical lo those which rav· ished the California coastline last week· end are on their way again today, whipped up by a storm 800 miles at sea. The U.S. Weather Bureau warns that damage is to be expected. "At the present time it is expected that the heavy surf will start early Friday. reach a maxi mum on Saturday and decline by Sunday," says· the ;i.nnounce- ment. Waves peaking in some sets at 15 feet, while averaging a to 10 feet are predicted froriP'the storm now off the Oreion coast, tho foutlh ' such-weather fr01j! lo htt bea-...... lliM•"""11b' ''" " Muimunf ~ wi• ·aceur durinc the hlghell ti!ieo, ciOl:urrinc at l :M a.m. Friday and 1:30 .a.m. Saturday, accord- ing to wealhtr forecasters .. "This · ..,,. ~ lv'1"Y beavy turf and above-nonnal high Uiles U ~ to bt very slmJlar to lali wffkend'I he1vy battering," said a weather bureau spokesman. "Low-lying beach areas will face about the same flooding potenUal as durin~ the last several periods of heavy surf, ' he added . The same combination last week cost four livu, including those of a Whittier man dumped from a capsizing boat off Hµn Ungton Beach and a Stanton barge worker lost near Oxnard. ·Heavy flooding allo struck. Seal Beach, Surfside,· Sunset Beach and spoti on the Balboa PeniMUla aod Bllboa laland, with some OOmes and businesses still protected by sandbags. lli&h tid" ~ moderate)r tall '!~V~ . opilll!l,.:r .lbe qelt cl ~ a.IC&,.,.... but u.m . .. ..... ,...., . . ,, no Ooodlo( · Piel~ lligtn .. y. Damage from Jqt weekend'• storm aurf and tfdei caused l1101'flll1wf fI-m:ff.. lJon damqe to the new Mlndalay Beach cOlllllliullt.Y ,, O..ard """''te . • p,,.Y ijJrr{:.d!Jti by' Na\')' au"b:. WllC1dtiHbL New Apartment Cutback Hearing Set by Valley A proposed 40 percent reduct.Ion in apartment construction will receive a public hearlnc befere the Fountain Valley Planning Commission Jan. 7. BA.IVDITS HOLD VP BANK iN BEA.CH Two bandits. struck at the First West· ern Bank at 16932 Goldenwe:st Street in Huntington Beach shortly after 12:30 p.m. today, escaping with an undeter· mined amount of cash. Witnesses told pollce one gunman entered the bank ~ wh.ile the second remained in the getaway car. There were no Injuries, Police were reportedly In pursuit of the getaway auto at press time. Wl!dnesdoy night planners-listened lo the facts and fil'Jrel of the proposed reduction u explained by the plannlng stall. · Stan Mansfield, city planning director, satd that under the current general plan of the city apartment conatrucUon would e<jual 40 percent of the total residential units in the city, Under the new proposal, he explained, apartment construction would equal 18 percent of total residential units In Foun- tain Valley. The apartment reduction, ordered by both the planning commission and the ci- ty council, was the result of a month-long study conducted by the planning staff. New figures were found by studying the general plan and eliminating questionable 1partment sites and taking of sites master-planned for apartments but which had actually been developed in com- mercial or single family, said M&Mfield. Down Coast SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An oil 1lick covering 50 square miles of the Ptcific drifted slowly southward today after a new leak developed from an oCfshore drilli ng r1g In the Santa Barbara Channel, scene of a massive oil slick early this year. The fresh seepage, detected Wed- nesday, spurted between 6,000 and 9,00G gallons of oil from a weld in an underaea pipe at the same Union Oil Co. plaUorm where the disastrous blowout started last Jan. 28. ~al slick spre:ad ovtt 1,800 square miles of the Pacific in 11 day~ blackened beaches in Santa Barbara Co4qty .and smirched the Southern Califorriia coast for miles north and south. At lut report, Ibo new ttarclrpp.tl\aped slick was fivt miles mr Ventura County coastal communiUes u oll · 0>m'pany crews worked to skim it up before it could reach beach areas. The. '!'<Pill' WU discovered by a •COii\• marclah f1&hennan '1 apotttr pl... and coiiliiiDed by a U.S.' Gooiofl<al llurvey ln•pector. . ' . Union Oil divers told the Cout Guard there was an eight-Inch split in a pipe carrying, crude oil from the platform to Union's Rincon plant ln'Ventura County. Officials immediately stopped the flow in the pipe: and said· it would take about 16 houri to repair the break. Floating booms were placed around the slick arid skimmer boats began pumping the crude from the surface of the 11ea. Valley to Give 2-day New Years Employes or the city of Fountain Valley will ha~ a two-day holiday, Jan. J.2. The city council has agreed to allow them to take off Jan. 2 in exchange for working on Lincoln's birthday. Stor.k Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks continued to gain today on the heels or tight-money remarks by Federal Reserye Board nom· inee Arthur Burns. (See quotatlona, Pages 34-35). OrllJlCe Cou& A Huntington Beach doctor has sued the Huntington Intercommunily H~ilal and nine members of its executive com· mlltee for $2 million in a Superior Court suit a·ccusing them of unlawful.I~ barring him (tom practicing at the facility . Or Ralph Sher claims in the action he filed· Wednesday that he was d~.sn:iissed rrom the committee last Nov . 7 without cause and withoul hearing." He has since then he .. \eges. been compelled to treat his Patients without the privile~c .of ad· ministering to their needs w1th1n the Beach Curp Study Asked Nearly all apartmenta now proposed for the· city lie in the corridor bordered by Brookhum. and Euclid Street.a and running !<lUlh ot Mile Sq""" Parl<. Heaviest concentratlm ls In the city cehter area and along Brookhurst Street. 1'-faps showing the remaining proposed apartmenb will be avaUable for the public to view in the plannJng depart· men!. I Weatller It's still going to be hard to identify the sun Friday, with local fog in the morning hours followed by hazy sunshine. Coaatal temper- atures are pegged at 65, slightly higher inland. hospital. . Dr. Sher states that his practice has been substantially da1naged by the lack of hospit al facilities and by the dcfe~· danls' circulation or the (acts of Jns dismissal. Or. Sher today refused ~o revtal ~10 reasons on which the comnuttee based 1ls 1ctloo. • Dr. Paul McBride of HunUngton Beach. ont or·the defendants listed by· Dr. Sher u a member of the hospital committee, today refused to comment on dispute. Valley Sc hool Board Holds 1\[cet TonighL Rou tine business Items dominate the &genda for toolghfs 7:30 meeting of the fountain Valley School District Board or Tnlstees et One Lighthouse Lane. Fountain VaUey. 1.ncluded 11imong tnr action Items are contract awards for Cox School physical cduca.OOn equipment, public•tion depart· me't1t equipment and sprinklers for Gisler School. County Eyes Santa Barbara Land Controls A study on protective controls over private developm~nt or public beach lands -patterned on Santa Barbara's method -has been held for further study ordered by the Otange County ·Board of Supervisors. Stuart Bailey, a111lstant county planning diredor, reviewed the antl)'llf ol the Santa Barbara COunty B6och lltvdop- ment District before supentilon 'Wednel-- day. 1'he same principle should bt applied here. he said. Supervisors listened to Bailey's report and requested more study by the Orange Co;v1ty Planning Cornml$skln. w I t h another report at their February meeting. The aru involved In the Orange County study lies between NewPort Beach and San Clemente, the largest stret~h o( county-controlled beach property on the local coastline. "Almost all the shorelines between NcwpoiLBeach and Seal8e1ch lie wilhin c.lly boundaries," Baile,y ,txplains ln his report. Certain controls alreldresiat under the CO\lnty's B·I Bufrer District. but only on roads, parking facillties, landscape plan- ting, non-view blocking mesh fences, agliCultural crops and produce sale stands. Penntntnt buUdings, with the ex- ception ()f restrooms provided at recrea- tion 1re:u, are not.covered by the buffer djstrict,. Bailey's report explains. The beach development district under conskler1tion would apply to rommerclal ind residential arw that are already In the works for the IOUth county shoreline. SanLI Barbara's development district is designed to preserve and protect beeches and bluffs from damage: due to effects of stonns and erosion on manmade altera- tions of the landscape. Sllppage and earth slides plaguing the Palos Verdes Peninsula area are a prime t:xl:'lmple o( the potential problems the district would 'Intend to conlrol. "The Santa Barbara Be•ch Develop- mtnt District Is .•. an area lylni between a line one mile..sia:ward_,_waUel to the mean hi&h tide line and a beich setback lloo," S.Uey"• report "'t"" "Wilhin this diatric~ only • llcacb· recrealional activities and their I C:· cessory stru cturea are permitted," it con· tlnues. County authorities might achieve the same effects through careful zone changes or zoning law amendments, Bailey suggesta in the report. The county p1anntng -depa11ment 11aff, however, believes tbe objtctlvn could better be carried out by cruUon. of such a district, clearly statlll( Its Intent. "Or by embllsbing bulkllng setback lines along those portions of the beach re. quirlni protection and presen1aUon," the report delivered Wednuday exph1lns. Or1n.ge County autbor:IUes have been • particularly concerned with protection of pubUc: beach lands aince the great afld contlnuln& controversy o v e r aban-- doument ol Sall Creek Road to !be Laguna Niguel Corporation. • That acUon bx lht Board o t ~~pervilOl'I tlftcUvety closed niitn of ocenlc coutllne ~pd bufl>a lo public uoe, thtovib lad"<l! proper......,. routes. -l Valley District C.Oncenied About Play Accidents Fountofn Valley School Dlstrlct trustees lilve glvm achool administrators •Ix -lhl lo -•cddtllll .. pioy8'<>J11d tqUipmtnl. Filll'tt• rel,.led by the district show tHat :JO lnlurles lnv0Mn1 ploJjp'OUOd equfprnerit have been recorded over the ' past. If monlhl, lncludlnc 17 ftactur,., two concuulons and one set of broken teeth. District Superintendent Mike Blick tokl achoor trustees the IQ.jury rate Is not ex· cesslve. especially &ince lb& tchool district contains 10,GOO chlld~n. However, tNateea ordered iChool tct.- mfnlstrator1 to d~elop 1 more com· pi<lih!Slvt phystcaf ntneii prOl'lm lrtd lo lncrcue pliy jp'OWld ~pervllloo by lachtra. INS~E TODAY The BriU.sh guerrilla fighter stnt to Vittnom bt1 PrtskUnt Nizon aa111 Saigon U nmo IOftt for a nfghttimt 1troU than Washington. Tht •tor11 ii on Page 21, 7 I ~HRISTMAI ~ ........... , ......... ~ • .. -.-------~.,----------------------- f DAllY PILOT H Marriages ; Eclipsing Old Mark With just 10 hikhlng days left In 1969, marrt&&• 11-es bsued In Oran&• Coun· ty Wednesday ec.llpsed the all·lime rec· ord set in 1968. CUpid's unerring a1m has sent more than 1G,n7 couples· -the total the bow· man racked up last ,.er -Into the bust· ling maniage Ucenae divisioa . of the county courthouse. It seems certain, says: Supervisor Phyllis Hanson, that the 1969 total will ex.ceed 11 ,000. Decmiber has been a rugged mouth for the county clerk's marriage bureau and predictions are that the Dec. 31 ta.Hy lliill reveal that more than 11,000 licenses were issued. This year's top month was June when 1,377 llcenRS were Issued. July, August and October.were close behind and efght af the 11 months th1:15 (ar tallied are all record breakers in a record-breaking year. Record br,aking Is not confined to mar- riages and new marks have been set by the office's less heralded function-pass· port applications. The total has closely followed that of its more celebrated co.function and atood at close to 11,000 late Wednesday. If it also hits its expected mark or 12,000 it v.·ill have eclipsed the 1968 tolal by more than 4,000. ' ·-----------------------------------------------·----.. --- ,.,.. .. Page 1· ED ISON ..• i Ually leaa than the orll!inal four W1its In 1918. "An lmproV'Cld ~btlst.lon technique, --· to low "'"""" oil lor lilt plemcntal luel, and hllh ilack belghts will ~ 1o prodUCCI significant reductlolll in the already mirUmal ground level effect or the Opt!'., a lion of the plant," Gould ttstllled. He outlined the increased demand for power due to growth and said if the ad- d.IUonal units were not constructed 70 percent of the energy requirements of lhe county would have to be imported by lfl:i. He repeated previous F.dison tesUmony that ;10 alternatives to mffl the required increa~ ll1 capacity wouk' be available in Ume. • Gould also played do11.'Tl Lhe con· tribuUon ot p0wer plants to air pollution. "It should be clear to anyone who wishes to examine the facts that po11.·er plants are only insignificant contributors lo smog and have UttJe effect on the en· vironment." A possible jurildktional dispute fn the granti."lg of the permit for expansion of the plant was hinted at )Jy .Leonard Saide.r, PUC attorney. He said the Orange County Air Pollution Control Di1trict'1 denial of a permit to Edison could cause problems. Saidee added. however, that state law lnstJtuting the PUC empowers the com- mission to order public utility con· strucUon ii such expansion is found lo be a pub/le necesslty. George Ballen, 16481 Morse Circle, Huntington Beach : "I am a mechanical engineer and I favor the ~ddition. I fear the curtailment of power. Edison has spent millions in research on pollution control." Landmark · Ca~~ Figure j~-.~~il -. A Santa Ana man wbo won a U.S. Supreme Court decision which drasucany ch anged the rules o( police search and- seizure known as the Chlmel DeClsloo ·is back in jail today. . Ted Steven Chime I of 3310 W. Chestnut St., Santa Ana, was arrested b)' p:iUce frdm seven differ~nt jurl&dlctlolll early this morning on charges of receiving stolen property. -<1 District Atlorney',s lnvestlgators and detectives aiso arrested an alltpd ac- complice in the case In Fountain Valley at about the same lime. Ace Terry McCarter, 33, of 1. Lo Quinla St., Fountain Valley, wu arrested at about the same Ume and booked on ·similar charge! ol recelvlnt stolen wo- perty. · ~ ) ·lnveitis_at0;rs aaid .they.-'l!ized fiampi· and rare coinS alltigedly · Stole:il jn · burglaries. Both men were held under heavy ball. one investigator said Cblnlel's ball was '62.000. ' \Vhat sparked the ·lnvestlaation, they , s.aid_, was s11spicion that there were stamps taken In a recent burglary in Chimel's home. Officers armed with search and arrest w"1'ants arrested. both meo shortly after 1 ·a:rp. r Both wei:e being oeld at Oranse County Jail today. Records Indicate that the l.nnual Orange County tolal of pas.sport applica- tions was fewer than 300 just 20 years 1ago, It broke the J,000 mart in 1157, passed lbe 7,000 tally 10 yean later and jUst missed the B,<m plateau la.st year. TINY TIM, 37, CUDDLES WITH BR IDE, MISS VICKI, 17 Charlea Dickens H11 Nothing On Thia Character Ul"I Tt1t~ Paul Ryckoff, 1200 S. Bayfront, Balboa Tsland : "With their production of oxides of nitrogen lhe plants should be called Edison's inferno. Edison promotes the sale of electrical appliances aJoag wilh a request for moce facilities. The plant in Huntington Beach cookl increase nitrogen oxlde emmission to 110 tons a day. Huntington Adds 2 More Officers To Copter Force Tiptoes to Altar Cbarles R. Wri&b~ 9152 Bermuda Drive, Huntington Beach: "I represent the co"ncemed citizens who live In t.he area near the Ediaon plant. Trees have been killed, ck>thing ruined, walkways spotted and paint dete riorated. Edison ii an unfit neighbor." Tiny, Vicki Won't Get 'Puffed Vp' Officers Paul M. White, 28, and James WEW YORK (UPI) -Tinv. Tim and his K. Lail, 26, have been added to lbe U.t ti pilots for the HunUngton Beach Police teen-age bride were off today on a honey. Department's two helicopters. moon that will· introduce them lo the Both men completed their pilot tratning rigors of a series of marriage vows lhat thls month and are now on regular flying included be.ing "not puffed up.11 status. Prior lo pilot train1na: they 1erved The sweet singer of falsetto notes wrote as patrol officers. The city now has four poljoe pilota (or pr:actically the entire service himself - the two Hughes 300 p:iliee beUcoptera. partcularly the coMubial vows -he Sgt. Robert Morrison and Offic.er Floyd dilcloeed after the ceremony on the NBC Stafford were the f1r6 men trained when "Tonight" show Wednesday night. the aJr surveillance:tivlraPl was st.acted. ?he service. read by· the Rev .. Wtllism The new • ~--!11!!\1 .........W Gltnesi, a New YO?k J'reibyt~an heUcoplor Dilil'1. ~ 8'me .. 'Ibo. lll!niff, ""'"8d ' wtlh. ~ 1 r a o l{I olhen. Sgt." Morr1aon holds: aO'llddlikNI · r<i>elllllll bl.n"1 no.mo a!tet the pastor: lnstnictor's llci<nae: "~ Herb<rt Buckingham Khaury, being Cost o! tralnlng lbe two new ptlo!s was ol sound mind ••• " . e'"aclyh~::M,.com~;!})~riito f!0-,000 1\1 a '1"""-\'911f~ .. alif,4&, !lie; ·~' . ,.,,. . . ' ..........., ...... ~ "'"!* .. men ~~ Pi!! . . ~ "1 t!llf' ~ llMmed to I*. · Sgt. -11!1¥>·~-twllliil . Cool,'' thriugh *m, aeJ4: "t put In ' . -pl, wd cJtr ~· 1 , BOl6d mind' so everybody wUI know I • ' kuo;w what I am doing." .Gd as for aetUng married on • television being a bil eccentric: "It doesn 't matter where you're married - on television or on the sea -as long all you keep the marriage laws." Tiny Tim is not an act. He is £or real. And after the ceremony his father.in-law, Allan Budinger, a Haddonfield, N.J. art· supply dealer, said : "His best feature is" sincerity -but I don't think it's ap- preciated." Johnny Carson, star of "Tonight," on which Tiny leaped to fame in 18 singular appearances as a singer in a year and a half, was among the nolables who at· tended a post-wedding rectpllon for Khaury and his bride, Victoria 1.-fay Budinger, 17. Cary Grant was among tbo5e who dropped jn. On the show, after the ceremony, the wecWed couple drank milk laced with l'oneY while the other guests drank cham· pagne. "This, you know, is the good Lord's food," Tiny said, explaining he had given up alcohol since he met "Miss Vicki.'.• Ruth Que mler, representing Stamp Out Smog and the Women's Auxiliary of the Los Angeles County Medical Assoclati.m: "There is no doubt of lhe health hazard of p:>llut.a.nUi. Utilities on the West Coast have lagged behind in development of 11uclear plants. There are only three in the entire ana." David A. KJrcbner, 1744 fl.firamar, Bllboa: "l offer a third alternative, geo- thermal power in the lower Colorado ruver basin. "There is potential power there for all the utilitia in the workl for millions of years." EdiM:ln bu not, investigated L'iis possibility ... Jolm S. Wright, Sa!ila Ana : "1 am the past preskient of the Orange County Pr~.~.~·Uoo .. ~ 4ife<:· tor ·or o;e Orange C<iunty tarm Boruu and a member ol the 1967 <>range County Grand J ury. , Bridging tlte Gap DAil Y ,II.Of. Stiff Plltlt Bobbie Gentry To Wed Nevada Playing Frisbee in Nude "Smog damage to agricullural crops amounts to $100 million a year and 100,000 trees are d)'in& in the San Bernardino National Forest. Nuclear power plants such as that at San Onofre are the answer." Marina High junior Robin Spicer, 16, confers Vi'ith William Reed, public information officer for the city of Huntington Beach, on some grap.hic design work. Robin and 25 other student government offi .. cers from three Huntington Beach high schools were at city hall Mon· day, working with their municipal counterparts. Program was spon· sored by Youth Coalition, the city and Huntington Beach Union High school District. Christmas Sugge;:;s"'~::·~:;:*"b;'~::;"*''"'"'I Gambler Toda y From Wirt Servl«s RENO, Nev. -Singer Bobbie Gentry and William Harrah, Nevada's No. 1 gamb\'!r, will be married today, ac- cording to close friend s. Harrah, 58, and Miss Gentry, 27, o~ tained a marriage license at nearby Minden Monday, Douglas County Clerk Earnhart Thran said. It would be the first marriage for Miss Gentry, whose ''Ode lo Billy Joe" made her a star tn the pop music field in 19117. She has been a frequent companion of Harrah since he divorced his wtre last March. Neilher was available for comment. One of Harrah's business associates, who would neither confirm nor deny marriage plans, said Harrah would continue bJs pracUce of avoiding publicity. DAILY PILOT ()llANGE COA&T l"UlllihltlG COMPANY 1'oliort N. W11d Prn:.ffftl -l'ullll>ltlr J1tlr II. Cvrloy Vkl Pruillent •n!I Citntn l Men.ta" lh1111111 k11wil Elllllr l~e,,.tl A. Mwrp .. 1111 Mttllll ... ll1lllr Allltrt W. 11111 Auocl1!1 El 1IOI' H11tti .. te11 lffcll Offke 171 7' l111h leul1~1rill M1 ifift9 Addrt11: P.O. 1011 190, 92641 OHier Offlc" L.,Vfll INd>: 22t ~.,.,, A.,.,.,111 Cni. Melot: »O Wnl ••~ l trltt HtwllOl'I 1-.fll llll Wu! ltl .... teultVt"' OAll"I' ~llOT, "'11'1 ..,\di h t.-"'td "" ... .,. ......... -· ""':1, ..... <llt!ly •• , • ....,,. •• , ... ..,.,,,. Mllliolll ............ •••<"-.,,.....,., ... ~11. Ctfll ,,.,__ """'11"9'1M leKll .... ,_11111 V1I"'• t*'I .. uti 1 .. a tetlt:w! c"lt'°"'· 0• ...... CMll P..-lltti~ ,........,., ... w 1111 ...... ,,. ,, nu w.u l •lllO• .,.. • ~ ..... , ltMll. ..... JJt Wnl IUr Streff, C..lt Mnl, T...,.._ C1141 '4J-4JJ1 ,._ w .. ...i ...... C ... 141·1UI c1-.MH Amuw .. 64l·S67a °"""""'' llltt, Or ... • ._.,,, Pl,>lll!tfllnl c;.mptftr. ... "''" l..,IH, llkn!rtl!IM. l410.i.I 1'1111 .. Ill' f1WtrJ l-ft11 }It .. ~ -• o. rtttc:<ll...ciM .,,fMvl ui«llT flt"' no'91ltn tl c.ltlV•lellt •-· Mc .... t lOH ,.., ..... t<ll t i NC11¥5111'l l t lOI -''"" -· C..lfftrftle ...... (J'.llOfl ti' '-'"1111' P.••_..,"' '' "'911 l) ... -•~1¥'1 .... """ Ml'llmllrta, ,, .. """"""· • . Now Against the Rules BERKELEY (AP) -Playing 'rr1sbee in . the nude Is· against the rules today; · A Berkeley Municipal Court jury made it official in a case against a palr for frolicking sans apparel on Faculty Glade at ·the University of CaJifornia. After three hours of deliberation Tue'" day night, jurors convicted nonstudents Reginald Gulick, 21, and Della Striker, 19, of nude exposure, a misdemeanor punishable by not more than six months in pr,ison and $$00 fine. During the trial, campus poli~an Ralph Gano said that on Sept. 25, "l observed this couple playing frisbee in the nude." "I was offended," he continued. Lawrence Stark, an optometry pro- fessor testified that "some other pro- fessor' and 1 saw them in the nude, all right, as we were strolling through. We were commenting how nice it was people could do something like th is i n Berketey." . . Gulick who has long blond hair, said: ••0ena•s' dress was tight and it was frisbee," a game of sailing and catching gUding plastic discs. "All of us are subjected to stran ge, unusual things these days," said AS!t. Dist. Atty. Gilbert Jensen, "but we ~ust insist on certain standards among us. Defense attorney Sydney T a n n e r argued that the human body Is not lewd. "This is something \\'e've been taught, Streets to Get Artificial Grass Arilficlal grass was recommended for use on a llnUted bas\1 on small strttt medians In Fountain Valley Wednesday nlght by the Park! and Recreation Com- mission. The project Is eitperlmental. and rom· mi~loners made II cl,ar the artlfirial 1url wou ld not be used on m1jor medlan1 or in the city centf.r arta. Stan Stafford . park~ and rec:reallon dlrtttor, said the artlflt'lal gr11~'i should cut do\•n mainltnAnct problt ms and costs in difficult areas. the way we m\gbt once bave been taught I th.at mini.skim; ·and red dresses were I lewd." Sentencing was scheduled for Jan. 21. Street Repavin g Nears Completion The $1 million widening and repaving project on Golden West Street between Pacific Coast Highway and Warner Avenue will be completed by lhe first of the y!!ar, Huntington Beach Public Works Director Jim Wheeler announced today. The project has been under way for six monlhs and will provide a divided four· lane ilighway for the three miles. The project has been financed through the Orange Counly Arterial Highv.•ay Program and wilh city funds. I I Va ll ey to Screen 1 Films for Youtl1s I Films for school age youngsters will be 1 1 shov.-n at 10 e.m. Salurday in the Foun· I lain V11lley Library, at the civic center. Movies sched uled are ''The Red I• Balloon'' and "The Goldfish". They ""·Ul I be repeated at 10 a.m. Jan. 3. Films will be shown on a brand new 16mm projector presented lo the library by the Friends of Library Association. Justice Douglas' Hea1·l Pacer Replaced Vt'ASHlNGTON (AP )-Justice William O. Douglas spent five: days In the hospital last month having the Mtttries of hl5 ht!art pace maker replaced, a spokesman I I I •• • -ftcm Heritag< _ .. _ .. __ -~--..._ ... _.., --·---_ _, __ --------.-.--------·-_ .. , __ ·-.. ----·-·----· _..__ __ .. ........... _. H.J.GAl\RtfT fURNf!URE I I fi8YS. • • Oougll1~ "''as IH Vt'alter Rl'td Army ho~piu1J fr o1n Nov. 3 to Nov. 8. The pict· m:i kt!r "'•~ implanted in the 71-year-old ju~ire in .June· 1968-to correct ao ab- normally ~low pulse rate. I PROFESSIONAL 22 15 HARBOR BLVD. I INTERIOR DESIGNERS COST A MESA, CALIF, I I -..... ......_ "'· ,_ 646-0275 • "•--••--•••••~~-~•----••~•w~~••••••••.._... . ' I I . ' I ' . . .. -· \ Beaeh EDl ·IION ___.. N.Y. Steeb • voi:. 02, NO. 302, l SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE ~UNTY, CALIFORNIA'. . . .. \ THURSDAY, ·oECEMBER •ra. 969 TEN CENTS ••• -, j Laguna Cancels Main B e~~h H;otel Agreement By RICHARD P. NALL Of N DtllJ 1"11•1 Stafl - Laguna Beach councihnen Wednoday unanimously agreed to cancel their Main Beach hotel agreement with B u d Holscher & Associates and decide early next year what new tack to take. After a flurry of suggestions and discussioo on the best means to a hotel and conference facility to help pay for the $3 million Main Beach and revitalize the. downtown, councilmen agreed to ew B.andit,s Hit Home, Get $517 Loot A bandit trio armed wilh a .45 caliber automatic .dropped in at 1214 Fairywood Walk in Laguna Canyon Wednesday night and fled with a bagful of $517. Police said five· men and a woman· in the house were forced by the robbers to empty their pockets and lie fa ce down on the floor while one of the iittrude.rs, a young woman, collected the money in a papet beg. Vktlms were Thomas Allen Ezell, 21, who'll"' at the FairyWood Walk address and turned over $17, arxl a guest, Daniel Micha"ll Commerford, 20, of m» Via San- to Tomu1 San Clemenw, who contributed tho ftmaining !$00. The olber ruesll bad oo money, polict said. Two men and a v.·oman tnirst into the house when Michael Gray. of 212 N. Coast Highway answered their knock on the door, the victims told police. One of the men pulled the gun and an- nounced. "Everybody back inside ...l; this is a .·ip-off!" He added that be had been the victim of a "rip-off" (robbery) the night before and µie robber had "walked back in lhis direction.'' The victims complied with his order to )ie on the floor while the girl picked up their money. He then herded them into the bathroom and said, "lf you tum the door knob I'll put a ho1e in you!" They emerged after hearing a car drive away, polict said. The man with gun was described as 21 to 23 years old, 5 feet 10, 165 pounds, with black hair and mustache and wearing a brown coat and dark pants. With run, was a girl 20 to 23 years old, S feet 9, 150 pounds, with bleached blonde hair. \\'ore a suede coat and black sweatl!r and capris, the victims said. The second man, they sald, stood by the door and did not speak during the robbery. He was described as 7D to 22, 5 reet IO. 150 pounds, with reddish blonde hair and freckles, "'earing a green fatigue jacket and light brown pants. Burtons in New York NEW YORK (AP) -Richard Burton and Ellubeth Taylor have flown in fn;im Geneva for their first visit to the United Slates in a year. They told reporters at Kennedy Air· port Wednesday they would stay a while in New York before golnrg on to Hawai i to visit Miss Taylor's brother Howard. await recommendations by Mayor Gltnn Vedder Jan. 7. Tennination of the Hobcher agreement ended a council hope ol having tht firm put together and iplplement a iponey. making hotel package for the clly for 110,000. After spending M,000 for an initial study, the city learned that (eeslbility experu considered the 65 percent Laguna occupancy-rate coupled with high interest rates oo financlni was not sumtjeppy at· • l Damage Dqe tractive to tempt nart hotel money. Councilmlli seemed generally agreed tbat they should invite proposals by hotel interests to develop a hote1~£erence facility on about 200 lineal feet of beach next to the Hotel Laguna. It seemed the consemUJ also that the city should stand ready to acquire the triangular property bolinded by Laguna Avenue. Coast Highway and El Paseo i( this would put over a financially at· tractive hotel package. • • IC More Killer Surf / To Hit Coastline Abnormal high tides and towering breakers identical to those which rav· ished the California coasUine last week- end are on their way .again today, whipped up by a stonn 800 mUes at sea. The U.S. Weatbe.r Bureau warns that damage is to be expected. "At the present Ume it is expected that the heavy surf will start tarly ' Friday, reach a maximum on Saturday and d«JU.,l ~1 ~·"·..,. 1". ~ men . Waves peaking in SOITJt .sets at 15 feet. · while averagi"I a to 10 feet ti!! J)redlded from the dorm now Off &he or.coo cout, the fourth such .. -!root to hit beaches so far this month. Maximum damage wlD occur during the highest tides, occurring at l :H a.m. Friday and 1:80 a.m. Saturday, accord- ing to weather forecasters; ''This siege of very heavy surf and .above-normal high tides is expected to be very similar to last weekend'& heavy battering," said a weather bureau spokesman. "Low-lying beach areas will face about the same flooding potential as during the last .several periods ol heavy surf," be added. - The same combination last week cost four Jives, including those of a Whittier man dumped from a capsizinl boat off Huntington Bead!i and a Stanton barge worker lost near Oxnard. Heavy flooding also struck Seal Beach, Surfside, Sunset ·Beach and spots on the. Balboa Peninsula and Balboa Island, with some homes and businesses still protected by sandbags. High tides pushing moderat.ly tall waves apUled over the crest of Bolsa Chica State Beach today,· but there was no flooding of Pacific Coast Highway. Damage from last weekend's storm OFFICIA L CAUGHT ON OWN LEAS H surf and tides caused more than $1 mJJ.. lion damage to the new Mandalay Beach community at Oxnard, despite emer- gency barricading by Navy Seabees and ciliiens. Park A.venue ·. ' . . ' AbandOnment U-ruhr Study Abandonment of the one-way segment ol Park Avenue was commenced Wednes- day night by Laguna Beach councilmen as one of several steps toward expansion ol lhe county branch library. Councilmen set a March 4 public hear- ing on 1be action which -everything being on schedule -should be I.he day following county purchase of a triangle acrorM Park Avenue from the existing library. The city plunked down $5,000 in escro\Y with the ovmers of the parcel, James Schmitz and Richard Burt. They are sell· ing it for ~,000. Escrow cl05ing date is Feb. 1. City Manager James D. Wheaton ~aid because of the time schedule in the com· plicated city-county process he has asked Burt and Schmitz to extend the escrow ck>Sing date but received no reply ye t. The balance of the $80,000 is due Feb. t. "The whole process depends on the willingness of Mr. Burt and ~1r. Schmitz to extend the date or cancel escrow .and enter an agreement with the county.'" said the city manager. Asked Councilman Roy Holm, "If they are unwilling to do it, do we have enough "'wking capital to buy it ourselves?" Wheaton said the funds could be !Craped together probably. UTICA, N.Y. (AP)-A dty councilman Mayor Glenn Vedder announced a ten. who wrote Utica's present dog leash law 1 · 1 ol and fought for ita passage found out Wed-tat ve it nerary . library steps: nesday how well it works. ~an. 7 the ctty would take necessary Democratic Councilman Anthony Gar· •; action on COUntf documents. . rone forfeited ~ bf City Court on a aum--Jan. 20 . ~ ~.of supervisors mons from the citt humane offic'tr. Tbe =~~ it.! ~enuon to purchase city charged that G~'I doc wu _found -April..! io 10 the county auditor woold on property olllfr &bin tdJ °""" issue a check to purchase the triangle. ·-' ' .... The question of degree that the city should .plan Main Beach Park and Hotel U1e before calling for divelopment pro- posals remained an open one . MerrUI Johnson, owner of the Surf·and Sand Hotel, urged the city to spell out at least its financial requirements for pot.en· _ Ual 'hotel entrepreneurs. Jollnfon estimated that a facility ol 175 to 200 rooms might generate $60.000 to $C5.000 annually in additional sales and bed tax revenue. · Referring to the price the city pa.id for the fl.fain Beach land -which Johnson said had been too mueh -the hotel owner said. ''You're goiilg to have to do some good trading or good leasing. •·You're going to have.to get a return (f rom leasing) of 8 to 10 percei:it an<fyou sl1ould tell the developer that in lhe t.eginning. Tell them 'bere is ttie price we need.' Come up with a figure you lthe,ci· ty) can live with." Loren Haneline, hotel owner, said the ' ' -TI NY TIM, 37, CUDDLES WITH BR IDE, MISS VICKI , 17 Chari•• Dickens Has Nothint on This Ch1r1cter Tiptoes 'to Altar Tiny, Vicki Won't Get 'Puffed Up' NEW YORK !UPI) -Tiny Tim and his teen-age bride were off today on a hOJley. moon that will introduce them to the rigors of a series of marriage vows that included being "not puffed up." The sweet singer of falsetto notes wrole practically the entire service himself - partcularly the connubial vows -he disclosed after the ceremony on the NBC "Tonight" show Wednesday night. . we;dded couple drank milk ll'!ced with honey while the other guests dr8.nk cham· pagne .. "·This, you l(nQ".: is · the:~· Lord'S food ," Tiny said, explaiiUna he had given up alcohol since he met ''Miss Vicki." Beach Curb Study Asked The service, recid by the Rev. William Glenesk, a New York Presbyter:ian minister, started with the groom PC>ttery Shack Holiday Winner repeating his real name after lhe pastor: The colorful PotlttY Shack, 1211 S. "I, Herbert Buckingham Khaury, beina: Coast Highway, is overall winner in lhe of sound mind. • ·" business dl\'ision or Laguna Beach's 196t At • news conference afterwards, the Christmas Decoration Conte$~. C t E S ta B bar La d C t ls long-tressed singer, rolling his eyes so Judges also voted a special award ror OUn Y yes Un Q J: Q n , On rO that heaven seemed lo be peeking the City Hall decorations. 505 Forest t through them, said : "l put in 'being of Ave., the sponsoring Junior Chamber of A study on protective controls o\'er private development of public beach lands -patterned on Santa Barbara's method -has been held for further study ordered by the Orange Couow Board of Supervisors. Stuart Balley, assistant county planning director, reviewed the analysis of the Santa Barbara Coon\)' Beach Develop- mtnt Dlstrict before supervisors Wednes. day. • The same principle shoold be applied here, he Miid. I Supe11isort listenedlo ifalley's rtPorl l'nd reque:stcd more study by tht Orange County Planntna Commission, w t t h Bnother rtport at their February meeting. The arta involved in Utt Orange County 1htdy lia betwttn Ntwp&rt ~adi and San Clemente, the largest stretch ol county~trolled beach pnperty on Utt local coasUine. _ •. Alm0$l all lht ahorellna btlm Newport Beach and Seal Buch lie within city boundaries," BIUey aplatn. in. blt report. Certain control1 already nilt under !ht county 's B-1 Buffer DiJtrirt, but only on roads, parkin11 fadUties, ~ape plan- ting_. non-view bloctlqg mesh fences, agncultural crops ml produce aale •Uindl.. ~enntnent~ l:lHldinp, with thl -ti· c:<ptlon of .. .-pi'oVJCled •l r<crt>• lion areu, are not covtred by the bufier district, Balley's report erplaln$. The btach development dlttrk:t under c:onskleraUon would apply to commercial ;iind residenUal areas that are already in the works for the IOUUl county &horellne. Sant. Barbara's development district is ,designed to priservt and protect. beaches sound mind' so everybody will know 1 Commerce announced today. and.bluffa.lroni damqe due to effects of know v.•hat 1 am doing." . Awards were made In three separate Md as for getting married on areas of the community and u .... r-'Jow·~ .atonnl and·erosion on manmade altera-•-le •·! be! bit trlc "It "~ ~ ui: Vais on ng a eccen : winners will receive trophies for their • Uooa « the landJcaP,!'. doesn't matter where you're married -forts : SllppaJt and earth slides plaguing the on television or on the sea -as Jone as North t.iuna: Best Building -Gallery Pa1oa(Ytrdet Peninlula area are a prime you keep the maniagt law1.'' Row (group effort) 300 block, t(orth example fl the poteftual problems the Tiny Tim is not an ICL' He ii for real Coast Jliihway; Belt Window .. -f.wln dl!trict W'QUld intend -to control. And Jfter the ceremony his father-in-law, Cahnons -AnUques, 1088 N., Co 11 t "The Santa Barbara Beach Develop. Allan n ... u-u a !Uddonfteld, N.J art· HJ h men! D!Jtrict is ••. an orea ly!ni btiw ... ' ... ppiy';. iaid: llffls ,besl f .. im.. ls ' ~.:.~ i..g,11: JI<>\ Bulldillg .,. SrilJI . • line one milt seaward, ponli<I to the al-lty ;;-but ·1 don'I lhlni:· ii"• ap. AhOy.,4111 s .. CQost Hlfbway; ~st WJn. mean hi~ Ude line and a beach aetback pr~ated. 1 • doW -Escbbe..cl)'.s,,230 ·8road\yay, -Une,r ljo~e:r'• reJl!>rt'atalls. JofiM)' C.-: atar of '"lonl!lhl," on• Soiath t.qu•: B<sl · B<uil~l!li . .,. ""Within this illstdct, only be1ch-which Ti'1J'1eoped to lime 10 18 tlngull(l Monorc;.h .Bay Plai,a {group tlfort! ~· recreational activities and their ac-ippcarancts 11 a singer in a yur and a ~ Hlghway, 1.aguna Niguel: Btst cusory 1tructures are penn1t\fd,'' it con. half, was: atnonc the notal*s who at· Window -Rusi Hind JeVi·elry, 127S S. tinues. te.ndtd a po,tt-weddlng rtetptloo for Co4st. "HigtiWay. County authorities might achieve the Kt\lury and hts bride, Victoria May Judging o/ rtsldtnUai 'dtcorations In 1a1ne effects ~gh careful zone _.Budl~ -11..-cat'y Gram wu: ilmonc the.lhfff ire111 ls.under way-and 'f'l~ • chang,. or zoning I•• omendments, those 1j11o dn>Jll"'! In. concluded Sanday ,Ugh~ a<cordlng to IS.. STIJDY, P• 11 ' On "" -· -the 'cir•mbo\1. the Jayoee pruldeot Mille MOY.' I .. -< .... I~' city would need to reeeive 5even percent of the land 's market value per year in a lease arrangement. He said be thought the only serioua bid- ders for a hotel development woukl be the Hotel Laguna or the owners of the triangttlar property or pouibly the two working in concert. ' !\ofanagement of the Hotel Laguna hu made a' general proposal ror ttpanSion IS.. MAIN BEACH, Pop I) 50-mile Seep Move_s Southward SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An oil 1Uck covering 50 square miles of. the Pacific drifted slowly aouthward today after a new leak developed from an offshore drilling rig in the Santa Barbara Channel, scene of a ·massive oll slick early thfs: year. '!)le fresh ... page, del«ted Wed· ne.day. spurted bitween 1,000 ml 9,000 1allonl of oil from a weld. In m un<loreea plfe a\ tho -\JJl!ae .OU Co. platform wbere the di......,. blowout atmed last Jan. :II. Tbot aJlclc · ~ over l ,lllO JCJIW'I lnllel ol tho Pacllle 111 II <11111. &-DHI lleocMs In sMt. BU'llara County and sDtirched the sOOlhern Cl!lifon>la c:out for miles north and south. At last report, the OeW teardrop-ihaped slick was five miles off Ventura County coastal communities as oil company crews worked to skim it up befora it could reach "beach areas. The seepage was di.scovertd by a com- mercial fisherman's spotter plane and confinned by a U.S. ~logical Survey inspector. U-OU divers told the Coast Guan! there was an eight-inch spllt Bl a pipe carrying crude oil from the platform to Union's Rincon plant in Ventura County. Officials immedlat.ly $PPed tho flow bt the pipe and said it wOOid take about Jf hours to repair the break. Floating booms were pli:ced around the slick and skimmer boats began pwnplng the crude from the surface o( the ·.._ Si-It Mar lut NEW YORK IAP) -Slocks cOnllnued to gain today on the heels of tight-money remarks by FederaJ Reserve Board nom- inee Arthur Bums. (See quotaUc:n, Pages 34-35). Bums, appearing befcn the Senate Banking Committee, said, .. In normal circumstances, I would think the Ume h~ for some easing o( monetary conditions." 0r .. ge WeaUier It's still going to bt hard to identify the sun Friday, with local fog in the morning boun followed by hazy sunshine. Coastal temper- atures are pegged at I&, sll1bU, higher inland. · INSmE ·TODAY Tht Briti.th guerrilta fightn .sent to Vietnam b11 Pretidcnt Ni:zon aau' Saigon b noto aa/cr Jor ·a nighttime .stroll than Wa.thington. TM 1torv ii oa Page 27. • °"" 1-~ CHRllTMAI • ............. 1. 1 ............... ....... c::..tf " ,. SYMt """" • M ..... ... .. ........... .... ' ".......... . » -.. ... -. " ---II ,, .......... ,,. » --.. -\ - . . • • l>All"f PILOT l. Drug Ring _ Chief Sent To Prison A t.quna Beach man who wu describ-ed dl,lt'ina: bi.s Superior Qiw1 trial as ~ng the mastennind of a widespread drug selling ring is today on hls way to ilate prison and a one to five year sentence. Arthur SU.sney. 37, ol ll8li Anllo St., drew lh-1 jail terO'l Wednesday from Judge Byron K. McMillan immediately after a Superior Court jury ended a three-day trial with a short recess an d a guilty verdict. .. DAll.V PILOT Stiff l'Mft Opposition Due ' Planned~ Tirac·ts -Up·;.'.1for AC:titin · ·~ .. . . .. A controveraiaJ planned community coocePt for Ill acres of Laguna's hill· 6.ides will surface be!ore p!Jflnlng com~ mlia'-t apln J,londay-dll<CUy under the ..... of -g nelthborllood .op- posl\ion. The 7:30 p.m. study session is a prelude to a Jan. 5 public hearing on the proposal by M_ark Gwnbiner and art:hitect Peter Ostrai>der. of OUler areas to ..,..,. the cost ol upgrading existing sewers w h i c 11 presently are adequate for their oeeds,1' he maintains. He stat..i tbat gre<nbett .,... shown in the Pl•nl\Od. residential ~evelopment ~te all either cut slOJ)e-S or steep arroyos unsuitable for sports or play and designated gree nbelt because they are useless fCI' other purposes. Stasney asked that he be immediately sentenced oo charges of selling dangeroos drugs. lt took Judge McMillan less than a minute to comply with the request. DEVELOPER GUMBINER !LEFT), ARCHITECT OSTRANDER STUDY HILLSIDE PLANS Trying to Tako the High Ground Under the Guns of Neighborhood Opposition They seelc planning cm\ml~ion ap- proval of their concept at this stage be- fore committing funds to ei:pens!ve geo- logical, engineering and water studies ol the arta above Morningside Drive. He has suggested additionally that the developers should be required to funti sh and maintain a bond covering any Joss or darnage.s caused by grading operations or their failure (hillside slipPage). He also sentenced three other Laguna Beach men who were arrested with Stasney last Sept. 22 in the parking lot of a shopping complex south or the Laguna city limits and who were indicted om iden- tical charges by the Orange County Grand Jury. But he suspended for five years the identical jail terms handed .to Kent Kelvin Kelley, 20, of 625 Sea View St., Mark John Simmons, 19, oI 789 Park Ave. and John Pastorello. 19, of 10910 Amery, South Laguna. Stasney's three co-defen- danta were placed an probation far the term (If that suspension. Testimony of£ered by the three men against Stasney was borne in mind by Judge McM illan when he suspended their one to five year sentences, Arrest of the four men followed pro- longed investigation (If their drug selling activi ties by Laguna Beach police, the Los Angeles County sheriff's office and , Downey police. Among drugs seized at the time of their arrest was a one pound bundle or LSD valued by investigators ~s being worth '135,000 on the underworld market. Detectives purchased LSD valued by them at $12,000 from the four men im~ mediately prior to the arrest. Oemente Council Won't OK Sign Reversing a recommendation of the planning commission, ~ Clemente city councilmen Wednesday night refused to approve three propo<ed high-rise signs to identify a new shopping. center at Gamino de Estrella 8nd the San Dle·go Free.way. 1be signs were .denied ln the wak,.e of Council OKs Separating Plan, /Juilding Offices A plan to separate city building and planning departments while upgrading planning won unanimous Laguna Beach City Council approval Wednesday alter initial objections to both the cost and ne1v chain of command. City Manager James D. Wheaton pro- posed to the council that college-bound ci· ty planner Al Autry be retained on a part-t ime basis to continue working on the city's general plan program . Ii.. new city planner would be bumped up to ~enl head. status with a pay increue cl four ranges. Autry's range has been $888 to $1,064: monthly. The new planning range would he 11,064to11,276, Autry would he responsible directly lo Wh-, This caused questions. So did the increased cost which Wheaton estimated at about Sl3,000 annually. Autty would receive about $3,200 for 2~ to 30 hours weekly 8nd fuJl-time summers. Coun<:llman Roy Holm agreed to the departmental separation but said, "I question the repor\Jng relationship." He asked · about Autry being directly responsible to -, Wheaton said, ••He would act as a coordlnalar with all departments." · "lt aounds weird to me," said Holm, "to have a high paid planning director who really isn't responsible for all plan· ning. It eeems to me you've got the seeds had better go !or a saff that can handle Jt." Mark Gumbiner, chairman of th e coun- cil-appointed Ci tizens Advisory Com· mittee (CAC}, strongly supported the plan. The CAC, he said, had discussed an assistant city manager who would find the money to iini)lement the general plan. ''What we're really talking about is money lo implement," said Gumbiner. "The opportunity to use Al would be tremendous." He aa.ld tbe proposal was exciting. Boyd and Holm recalculated and agreed it was exclUng. Holm ,said In light o! the explanations It sounded as if Autry'• new role would car- ry more reaponalbllity than that ol plan- ning director. . Vice Mayor Joeeph ti'Su!Jivan said a lot of money and thouaands of man hours have been invested in the general plan and should not be w•ted, "We need sQinebody to be the honclx> and ramrod it through," he said. Although he didn't proclaim-ex- citement, Councilman Goldberg gave in: "I Confess, J lhlnk I've just been sold a t12,000 Christmas pre.sent. .. Supervisors Okay of a reel problem." :::i1s;~~,;.~.;:i.; :.:; .. ~ P~-r,1~~ ;i;; El Toro 'Strip' comJi!a!nini 'Iha\ t!Mlr View tiUti -pfannliig dlroctor and plannbii com-• Estates would "be impaired and property mission. He said Au~ would be in a new La. d Plan values lowered. ~ roles· d' the general p,!an: , n scape Permtss!~ he~'!' tucb·IJtns woedd " wor' .f0r,;1tf&.Ji!p1Mwlta-.,.~J11 .. rf• 1 be 25 !fftiln-fo)iimlt'<f.v ...... >· with ~tl iltd r--ll>Je t.i" lo 1 3 to I vote Wed ... day, the Orange o~ .I.he ·~PP.lng a;oter to Install ·•JP DOQ6. .;-, CoUnty Board of Supervisors voted to ap. \1~b]e !~ the freew~, p18:f1Dinc .com· Whelton spoke of an assistant city proved "ln principle" a compromise plan m1ss10Deri had rec.ommended allowmg a m.anaPr in Anaheim responsible kl for a landscaped median sbip on El Toro h~ight ol 30,.~ and~, feet for the new eoonom'ic deeelopmtnt. Road between Rockfield Boulevard and signs. "PJiiinfug directori run into CQflflicts Bridger Street. The 20-aore·eenter,-a prjlject of W"'1,<r with city .,,g1nem and other depart> Objections to the original plan sub- Develcpment Co. of Los Angeles Will m· menti· " don't want t.hat to hap. mltted bf Deane Brothers, Inc. of elude a 100,000-square-foot W. T. Grant pen in 't.eguria,'' sald Wheaton. N;wport Beach were raised by the county Store , a s~permarket, bank and several Cotincllman Richard Goldberg men• road department. . other businesses, with parking for 600 tioned that the council would be adding Repre.aentaUves said the median strip cars. an on-going bud1etary item of tt2,QOO or should brconUnuo1:1s for the length or the Police Oiecking Fingerprints Laguna Beach police art checldng fingerprint.. left by would-be burglars In an apparent attempt to e~er the Boat Canyon Post Office 8Ubstati on Tuesday night. The substatiOll is located in the Boat Canyon Baiaar. 624 N. Coast Hi&hway. where six glass louvers were removed from a door. and a screen pushed In dur- ing the attempted break-In. Police said a screwdriver was used to remove the louvers but the intruder ap- parenUy had abandoned his task because the door rem.med bolted from the inside and nothing was missing from tho! jn. terlor. DAILY PILOT CUNG!: COAIT PUBLISHING (OMPANY llob1rt N. w.,d Prnl011<1l Mii P..tltli.ller J1ck It. Cur11y V!tf Pre.~tnl 1r4 G-1 ,,...,.Otr n ..... , 1(11vil E•ltor Tho"'•' A. Murphint Mlllltlflt lfll"° l lch1r4 P. Nill ... ,~ Bffell C 1y EdllOI' let••• h-' 0Mc1 ~21 F1ro1t Av1 ... u1 M•illng Adch111• P.O. 101 666, 91612 Offler <>Men Clll• Mou: SJ) Wn t BIY $tfffl tOWOlrl BHUI: 2111 WMt B11W1 l""'ltv1t4I ttu!\t"'tlO,, l•cll: lltll k l(ll IW>t•t1• so an,nually. He suggested delay in hiring sirtet or it should not be built at all and a new city platmer to replace Autry, whQ left·tum poc11:eta: be painted Instead. leaves his full-time status tn Pebrua.ry A compromise plan, submitted with the for Cal.State Fullerton, until next fiscal t.01animous •pproval or the A l l s o year. Homeowners Aasociatlon, the busine311e1 "It's very easy to add additional help lo located in the, El Toro shoppil);g center, the payroll but It's quite 1 blgjtem when Humble OJI Company, Shell OU Company, you add it all up.~' aald Goldberg. Holm and the Schwartz Land Development agr9ed that tt was a lot of money and Company, was placed before the board sugruted hiring be delayed until July I. by Deane Brothers. Councilman Charlton Boyd suggested The compromise called for a median appointment of a cora.mit.tee to report . divider strip . broken in two places to back with ncommendaUons Feb. 1. Dur· aUow {or left tum \)OC:kets. Represen- ing discussion Wheaton praised Autry's tatlves from concerned groups who ap- dedication and said he has been working proved the plan cited safety. convenience 51J.and 60 hour weeks as a normal thing. ahd aesthetics in perferring their plan After the three councilmen had picked over the road deparlment'i alternatives. at Wheaton'1 plan for awhile, the tide The measufe was approved in principle turned. for referal to the road department for ex- Said Mayor Glenn Vedder, "I can't feel set specification as to size of the turn it would be wise tp delay the time to pockets .in quest.ion. recruit. We're right now in thie general Supervisor David Baker ca11t the one plan. Things are comi ng at us at an ac-dissenUng ·vote saying the problem ce\erated rate. If we ever needed presented by. the road department was anybody in planning we·netd him right ' ~enlially an engineering one and "there now. ~ is no room for compromise ln engineer. "When you go for~ general plan. you ing." r Fron& Page 1 MAIN BEACH .. onto cily land but has n<>t talked terms as yet Vice Mayor Joseph O'Sullivan sug- gested allowing 120 days for othtt hotel interests lo bring in proposals . Councilmen Rlehard Goldberg and Charlton Boyd suggested formation or a committee. It could, sald rr0ldberR:. spell out the factt, necessities irnd ordinance requirements for potential developers. "I do thinlc ·with a development of this magnitude," said Goldbcrg1 "that we ctr- tainly could wall until February or March." Boyd sa.ld he felt essentially the same because of the compltxity and ex- treme importance of lhe matter. Mark Gumtilner, chaJrmM of the Cill'zens Advisory Committee (CAC), pretented a CAC statement on Main Beach Parle development. tt recommended condemnation of the trian~lar pr~rty by the state to str1t.lghten' Coast HiAAway with the clly ha\•ing first rlaht or public purchase or lht. excess lands. An elternallve was condemnation by the clty in light or an acetptable private development plan. th.e relmburscm~nt to come from the plan. "Two Important goals or the com· munity relaUng to lhe Main Beach are that any hotel development there be cconomlcaTiy practical and t sthetlcally appropriate," said the report. It' stated that effective and imaginative development of the Main Beach Park will add significant revenues to th• cily as \\'ell as providing necessary impetus to re,•italize the downtown basin. Gumbiner said the value of the city's land would depend on just how much the city would allow to be built on lt. "We're not concerned about heigbt and density, We're concerned about how It looks and where It is (located)," he said. Eichmann Aide Gets Nine-year Sentence VIENNA (AP) -Franz Nova), 1 former SS Eli te Guard captain and wartime aide of Adolf E~maM was sentenced today to nine years tm· pril1onment for his role t s transportation chief in mass extermination1 of European Jews. It wRs the third time Novak, 55. had been tried. Jn the first trial. in 1964, he was scnlenctd to en eight-year prlton term, but the verdict wu thrown out by the Supreme Court on appeal In 1966, the second trial ended with a hung Jury. Battin Supports Building Curbs To Fight Smog By JACK BROBACK Of the O.llJ Pli.t It.rt Orange County SupervilOr Robert W. Bttijn would be willing to Impose a , bu.ikting moratoritun in the county if that becomes necessary to prevent further air pollutiOn. Batun, testifying before the California Public Utiliti~ Commission bearing in Fountain Valley on the proposed ex· pansion of the Southern California Edison C.Ompany's Huntingt-On Beach steam generating plant, said if a power shortage should develop because Edison waa denlrd pertnluloo to expand the Plant be personally would be for a building moratorium. "I represent the people whG are here now, not thole who are coming," the !upervi90r told P U C commissioner Thomas Moran. Moran aslced the hypothetical question: ''If it should develop that the only way to supply the necessary power to Orange County in the next few years would be expansion of the plant, would the supervisors be willing to suspend all con· structlon?'' Ballin said he could not speak for the other supervisors but he would be for a suspension of all types of construction if neces&ary. The su~rvisor was one of nine wit- nesses wbO testified before Moran and PUC i?:x:aminer ~cb E. Main. Sis ()P- posed etpan1ion of the Hunlington Beach plant, one supported Edison and two wtre Edison Company executives. Edison Senior Vlte President Wllltam R. Gould said load projecllon left llltle doubt that the plant must be expanded to meet the company's increased system re· quiremenl! In the period 1973-75. He ~d ground level effect of gaseous emiSsion from the Huntington Beach plant af'tet expanaion would be substan- tially less than the orlglnal four units in 111'8, If developecl as ipitially proposed the area wtth R-1 (~lngle (amlly residenc~) · zoning would have 111 single famIIY dwtllinp, 107 •mUltlple dwellings such as duplezes ·and 490' apartments, 1 total of 715 units. It might alao include a small commercial zooe for convenience shop- ping semces. One opponent o! the projecl, Merrit A. Trease, lff9 Bluebird Canyon Drive, a retired civil engineer, has charged that the planned commuhity concept in this case is being used to circumvent the mn- ing Jaw. "The premise that adjoining land areas, buHdable or unbuildable. be utiliz- ed to just.ify the construction or multiple dwellings within an R-1 district is un- tenable and derogatory to the welfare and best interests of the residents and Janel owners of Bluebird Canyon," Trease wrote. . The development, Trease estimated, would increase the volume of rain runoff from three to fiVe times. He stated this y,"OU}d, among other ~np. require enltrgement of J1l0!9t drilnace facilities in ~uebird Canyon from Morningside Drive to the sea. Trease expressed doubt that the ex- isting sewer system below the proposed development would accommodate the ad- ded burden ot 715 dwelling units plus a commercial center. ''In such case it would be unreasonable and inequitable to expect the taxpayers From Pqe l STUDY ••• Bailey suggesta in the report . The county planning department staff;- however, believes the objectives could better be carried out by creation of such a district, clearly stating lts intent. "Or by establlshing-blllldlng setback lines along those portions of the beach re- quiring protecUon and preservaUon," the report delivered Wednesday explains. Orange County authorities have been particularly concerned with protection of public beach lands 1ince the great and continuing controversy o v e r aban. donment ol Salt Creek Road to the Laguna Niguel Corporation. Tbat acUon by the Board o f Supervisors effectively closed miles of scenic coasUine and beaches to public iue, through lack of proper access routes. Planning Commission chairman 1''red Briggs said at an earH~ .session that he favored the idea of a plaruied community. Howe ver, Brlgp said he felt it ad· visable to require more than 6,000 square feet for each unit. It had been estimated that 30 percent of the terrain in question is unbuildable. ''We might even want to require 10 or 15,000," Briggs said. Mike Easely, assistant city planner, said today th/' commission may decide to def« action, on the propopl until the general plan·s completion: ~t will , he said, likely have spec 1f1 c recon1· mendations on the problems of Laguna hillside development. Parking Officers Give 'Greetings' To Motorists Laguna Beach parking officers this week began delivering th eir annual Christmas greetings to downtown employes in the form of little buff-c<llored cards tucked unde r windshields. While resembling run -of-the-mill park· Ing tickets, and carrying the sa me fine ($1), the Yuletide varie ty has a special notation pointing out th at it's for meter feeding rather than straight overtime parking. Strictly speaking, meter feeding now ts Illegal all year round in downtown Laguna, but the p~ure ol chalk mark· ing tires to spot cars that are overstaying -the two-hollr limit on most meters is not put into effect until Chrismas shopping causes a shortage of parking spaces. It's all part or a procedure worked ()Ut by merchants and the city to free more parking spaces for would-be shoppers. Employes who leave the.ir cars downtown all day are invited to patroni~ the foor-hour and 10-hour meters in the Glenneyre Street municipal lot or the boardwalk lot. Altema t.ive is to move to another park· Ing space every two hours. Some call it mu sical cars. Just leaving the ticket under the. windshield won 't help a bit. The parking officer will add another one next time he stops by. ----------------------~-~-Ml Christmas Suggestions from Garrett's by Heritage 11 qRJND cr/el!R., . -- -.i._ .. _ --· ... t-..._ .... _ ... _ .. ___ _ _ .. __ -·-------....... ----_ .. ,... -"'·---~-----------'4 ... __ _ I· I I : HsJ.GARl\ETf fURNffURE PROFE$S ~ONAL 2215 HARBOR flVD. INTERIOR DESIGNERS COST A MESA, ,.CALIF, .I -............ M. .... • ~-0275 t;a---------------------······---------------.a. I I ~ 'I I WHAT'S INRm- 'OUTDOORS? ~y Jecl A.-y Ari's Landing, Davey's Locker and San Clemente Sportfishlng report lhal fishing is up and. down. All of the landing~ are running surface fishing and rock cod boats, but best catches are coming off lhe boats fishing deep water. The action for borlito, barracuda and bass has been very slow on some days and hot again on others. A few large white sea bass are also being brought to gaff on the all day boats to rou.nd out the dee~ sea pic- ture. 1 Small boat fishermen fishing in Newport Harbor are checking in a fair number of bay bass and croaker at the Pavilion and at Art's Landing, but for the most part the action can be rated spotty. The best bite is on the incoming and outgoing tides, and anglers trolling deep running plugs and feathers are i; out.producing still fishermen using live ~ait. Phil Tozer. at the wheel at Davey's Locker, an· nounced that the annual Whale hunt t rips will begin this weekend. The large boat "Island Holiday". '"ill be departing from the Balboa Pavilion every da~ at 1 p.m. For more information and advance reservations phone. 673-5245 VAIL LAKE PODUCES BASS & CRAPPIE Last weekend's bass fishing tournament and clinic sponsored by the Southern California Bass Masters, was called a success. The Bass Masters fished for two days and picked up 84 bass whose weight averaged out at more than 21h pounds each. The group of 16 fishermen did not keep any bass under 12 inches. Bill Young of Sun Valley took top honors in the tournament, \veighing in 19 pounds·4 oz. of bass. !\-lost of the fish were taken in about 30 feet of water on rubber worms. Purple Bandits and Smithwick \Valer· Gators. The bronzebacks are hiding in the trees {lnd off the rock ledges. Other fishermen on the lake found excellent crappie fishing anchoring in about 20 feet of water. Dave Raven. croft and Elmer Goodwin of Los Angeles \veighed in limits of crappie \vhich totaled more than 48 pounds of fi sh. Yellow and \Vhite jigs fished slowly oU the bottom produced the best results. Lake Henshaw, in San Diego county, has been giv· ing up fair numbers of crappie to 2 pounds but bass fishing has been slo\v. Casitas. Cachuma. Piru and Puddingstone lakes in Los Angeles county all report fair trout action on planted fish, \Vith bass fishing being on the slo\v side. Big Bear Lake is slow \Vith only a few trout runnin!:! to 2V2 pounds being .taken by shore fishermen on TNT floating cheese bait and salmon eggs. DUCK HUNTING PROSPECTS GOOD There should be good duck hunting this weekend in all parts of Southern California. A storm front is \Vor~­ iiig its way dov.rn and pushing down ducks and geese in front of it, so reports game officials in Northern California. The buildup of honkers at the Salton Sea is p~o­ ducing a fe\\' birds for Christmas, but tiunters who 1n· tend to bag a big honker on the \Vister Refuge l1ad better do it this \veekend as the season closes on the refuge Sunday. The remaining part of the Imperial Valley \Vill be open to goose hunters throughout the general duck season. Lou Csenar. general manager of the Roper· Ranger's Hunt Club in San Jacinto called to report good duck hunting and that snow geese and honkers are working over the ponds. The club has memberships available for duck and pheasant hunters and is only 90 minutes from Orang-e County. For more information on the club phone (714) 673-2378 or 675--2818, both are local numbers. Low fog in the San Joaquin Valley made for noor hunting over the past weekend. But officials at the Kern \Vildlife Refuge and the Gilbreath Bros. Duck Club sa:v that the poor shooting last weekend \Vilt make for great shooting this weekend. The pigeon season got ofr to a very slo\\' start and the prospects for this \veekend are not any better. There is just not the normal population of birds in Southern California even though the acorn an d pinion crops are above average. The most oroductive areas '''ere on the western slopes of the Sierras from Fresno south. The usuaIJy j?Ood areas of Paso Robles, Frasier Mountain and San Jacinto produced very fe\v birds, even though the bun· ting pressure was heavy. Quail are \Videly scattered in the foothills and very T1ard to work. l:lunting· the hills of San Diego last \veekend this \Vriter managed only to bag a handful of birds. Our small party spotted a Jot of coveys but before \ve could get into a working po sition the birds flushed out many yards ahead of shotgun range. This has been the story told by most scatter gunners this year. and can probably be blamed on the excellent feed and water conditions throughout the state. SOFT SELL SAM By Marvin Myers r,::::=1=~'1="°":=::::;-i\ (J\MIPA<iNf I fl\ 6H7.' ~I ... . """'' \ 11.I'M ON THc \Vil(ai, DOJ..L '" AAYt' YOU C:i?T A GRA~M1 C.~ACK.fRS N'-IP "MILi< FtJGHT2" ,. .. -.-·~·4•' .... ---~-· . . ... ·---..... ·-···--~-... DAILY PILOT 3J At1 Anny Br.at Montana Woman Becomes Deadeye BOZEMAN, Mont.-Antonia Rhein, a s.J1,~ black halred beauty al Mootana Stale University, is literally gunning for a berth on the neltl U.S. Olympic team. Miss ,Rhein. who prerers Toni to Antonia and lives in Stevensville, Mont., when not attending school. said she has been aiming for the Olympic riOe team position for the past six years. "This is just about all I've been thinking of," the female sharpshooter sa id. ''Up until no\V, they ve never allowed a woman to be a member of the team. In 1968 competition v•omen could shoot \\·ith t e a m members, but not CQmpele." Toni utilizes a n un· conventional Anschutz Gennan-Austrian target rifle in her pursuit. ''It weights 18 pounds and has to be braced while I'm fir· Ing," Toni said in a telephone interview. The rifle doesn't look like a weapon. Someone described it as a home-made bass fiddle without the washtub. I-low does a pretly woman sludent become attracted to the deadly art or shooting in this age of mini-skirls and gu n control? '"l"m an Army brat," she said matter-of-factly . ''My father is an officer in the Army and I just picked it up while he was stationed at Ft. Huachuca, Ariz. \Vhen the Army transferred him to Ft. Harrison, Ind .. I signed up the Pioneer Jr. Rifle Club of Indianapolis.'' the first riOe marksmanship class for military dependents under a sponsored summer program. Toni currently claims 11 na. tional shooting records, the biggest of which ill the 20-shot. offhand record in the st~ding position. In capturing it, Toni had te1 pick off 195 bull's-eyes out of a possible 200. She got it in 1968. At MSU, Toni is a certified NRA instructor and has taught physical education classes in marksmanship for the past three years. This yea r she is the primary marksmanship in· structor. The 1972 Olympics a t Munich, Germany, is not the only thing Toni is setting her' sights on. She plans to marry an Army officer Jan. 10. No. she said, he doesn't shoot. Toni is a member of the \Vomen's Army Corps and i~ on a scholarship from the Army and she'll be com4 missioned an officer in June. She has won dozens or state and regional championship~ and recently took the Sectional Indoor championship touma· menl sponsored by t h e J\.tissoula RiOe Club. Toni's coach, Sgt. Maj . Jack Greenway. (Ret .), rates her as a "very strong candidate ror this year's All·American rifle team." He also said she has a dislinct possibility c! beroming the first woman on the U.S. Olympic rifle team. "I Jove shooting," Toni said. "I think it is the greatest thing in the world." MEAT ON THE TABLE -This ·is-the-resull of a morning's hunt at"the Roper -Ranger's Hunt Club Jn San Jacinto. Lou Csenar (left) of Balboa Island and general manager of the club helps Ray Rossi of Costa Mesa hold up a sno\V goose while Rossi has his hands full with a limit of ducks and a phea· sant. Rossi's dog sits in front after having a field day retrieving the do\vned gan1e. She not only signed up. but Collegi"ate at th e age of IS wa ~ a member or lhe Pi oneer t-.·laids \Vho placed rourlh in the nation in Cage Scores 1963. In 1006 she was the high Dave Hill Latest Pro To Enter Dave Hill, a slender touring professional from Jackson, l\fichigan. is the latest e.1trant in the $52,000 Soulhern California Open Golf Tourna· ment at Mission Viejo Golf Club according to tournament director Jack Fleck . Hill was recently named winner of the Vardon Trophy for the best scoMng ave rage on the pro golf tour for 1969. lie is also the No. 2 money wirn1er with $155,849. In 90 rounds of tournament competition . Hill had an average of 70.344 strokes. He won three tournaments during the year. Other touring pros set to play lbe tricky course include Billy t-.1axv;ell, Bobby Nichols, Bob Rosburg. Al Geiberger and Dave Douglas. Former pro great La\\'son Little will be represented in the event. His son, Lawson, Jr., now living at Pebble Beach, has contacted Fleck for a spot in the tournament . Play in the S4-hole open gels under "·ay Dec. 26 with a practice round followed by the pro-am on Dec. 27·28. First round play will be held on the following Monday, Tuesday and Friday with time off for practice and New Year 's celebratini: ln bet\\'een. Final two rounds are :;et for Saturday, Ja:.1. 3 and Sunday, Jan. 4. Eakin Wins Fun Shoot Eldon Eakin of Torrance took first place Sunday in the Coto de Caza Classic, a five· e\1ent fun shoot for 2S or Southern California's top all· aroond shotgunnen. Eakin shot 77 out ol a passi· ble HK birds, according to Hugh Roberts, rangemaster at Coto de Caza. the 5,000.acre recreational club that has jwit opened in southeaster11 Orange Coonty. M high gun, Eak.in received a silver and gold belt buckle containing .a $20 gold piece. Co~ in a close second was Di. AKio Ml'limura OfHa· cienda Heights, who hit 74 birds and received the run-- nerup ~. Winners of the individual evenL.\ were: Quall ·\Valk, Roger Kerley, 9 out or 12; Duck Tower, Bill Lamb, 18 out of 2S: Cc:Jirtlnental. Pete Ocam· po. 25AJ.t_of: 25;...Crazy Quall, Chuck Farnum. 1 out of 12 ; Doubles, Brent Turner, 24 out oI 36. Each rece"ived an ac· ~;isory award. Junior charnpion in the Na-E•1t · I R ·r Prl<1ceto<1 67, N1vv 60 tiona it c Ass ociation co1vmt1i1 '°· Fo•dfl•m ff. OT \Vomcn's Postal l\·latchen . cor>1ell 11. Ftoc11es1,, l' H sw• er laU1cr, Lt. Col. Leo A. Nerti\ CtroHna SI, 16. AUbu•<I ., nhein. fret.). WaS transferred l<v. W~1lev1n 80. Ev1n1vlll1 16 . . . p c1e-rn1on lo.I. Jr,ltb•m• ts aga in, this hn1c to uerto w,~, For1tS1 SJ. e111 c1ro1;.,, n Rico. M1&1w1M Minourl 11, Colo. S!. U. !S "I \l'aS really disappointed OeP1u1 tl. s1. M1rv'1 c1u1." Laguna Nips Diablos when I discovered there was 01110 u . ~. No. 111. n Laguna Beach High cap-the 50 free and S\o\vsky won for Mission Viejo as the no rifle team." the MSU ~~,'~. "'i1;,11·M11~~-"~~-on ..,61 lured its first swim meet of the 100 back with a I: l 1.8. Diablos began their swimming histo ry major said. SOUl~w••' I' th f. t h' T d kouiion '1. s1m1 c11r1 n the 1969-70 campaign \Ved· was e irs ever meet 1story ues ay. She organized ;:ind· •taught Okie"°"'• st. s.i, T•11.•• !l nesday afternoon with a 50-36 ----------------.-----------------"----------- decision over invading Mission Viejo in a non-league meet. The Artists were overturned in the lower classes with the Cees dropping a 61-16 verdict to the Diablo& and the Bees forfelting due to a Jack of swimmers. -Mission 'Viejo c a p t u r e d every e-vent in the Cee com· petition. Amory Ware led the Artists In varsity action. winning the 200 and 400 freestyles in 2:06.4 and 4:34.3. Coach George Carey's outfit also picked up first place ef- forts from Scott Sumner and John SloWsky. Sumner turned In a 24 .1 in * * * ! ' ' • j I • i I I i V1ni1Y .. l~ul\ll •••ell CSOJ I.Ml Mls1le!I v1ei. 4 Tl~: ~~~1y RtllY-1. Mluloo Vlt lo. e IL~ i'~'1;;1st!i,"t~~l'.~~2:' ft.~ ; SO FrH-1. Sum"'' CLBI J. S!owskv .... ' ll81 3. LO!l<ller IMVJ. Thm: ,,_,_ t . ~c~rr!'~~~~~ ~t'tlev1~1F:i~~l11~~~ I Time: ,,,, J. 100 Flv-1. Le10.ie fMV) 2. 0. Wirt ll 8) i. Wll1't'ftsor! (MVJ. Tlm1: 1:02.3. 100 F'H-1. Ltlolle CMV) 2. Sumner fLBl l. V1"0'"" .. " CLBl. Time: i$.t. 100 ll•ck-1. s1ow1ky lllll 2. Londot1 lMVl 3. Mc(leM..... !Lil. Time: 1:11 .• .00 FrH-1. A. Wtrt !Ll!ll 7. W1ll1lry llB) l . llllCkll-(MVJ. TlmR: ,,l,.3. 100 8re11t-1. kos~c~•o IMVI '· Gul!edat llll) 3. Tu!!l1 fMVl. Time: I: 1'.I. •OQ Frff RtllY-1. l1aun.t Bite~ !Sumner, D. Wtr1, Slow1kv. A. Wirt). T!me: 3:57 1. • ••• Mlss\Ofl V!elt won bv lorlei!. "'' 'l.1111111 a .. c~ (U) (U) Min ..... Vlllt 1llO MtdllY Rtl•v-1. Ml1llon Vltlo. Tl'TIP! 2:1).j.3. l'OO FtH-1. Ktkthul\ll (MVl 2. ~~~~~v CLB) l. Bu"fl"° 'LBJ. Time: SO Free-1. Andrews fMVl !. Arntdtn fllll 3. Rtdwll1 ll81. Tll'M': 71.2. 100 lncllvlou11 Mtdltv-1, ""''"" IMV> \ Rtdwlll llll l. ICtkl~un& MVl. lme: 1:11.1. SO Flv-1. Lv11 CMVI 2. C1tmJlbeH fMVl ). Ill..., II.I). Time: )J,t, 100 Fret-I. Alln\-<I !MVI 2. t"l'l (MVl l. ll•ol~••'Otl (Lil. Time: 1 :nt.~. 50 l1di-1, ~hllllrm IMVI t. l!l111ott fMV! J. ll•VlltSI IMVl Time; 30.1. $n ...... 1-1, El/loft IMVI 2. ICr•ss llll1 I. C1motlt'll MV). Tll'l'\t: .f<I.•. 700 Frff R1l1v-1. Ml1110r1 Vl1lo, Tl"'*: 1:5'.0. Trophy Bull Elk Bagged Hunters bagged a minimum of eight elk, including one large trophy bull, in \he state's first hunt ror rocky moot1tain elk in the rugged Squaw Creek area of Shasta and Siskiyou counties, the De~rtment o!.J:[_sll and Game reports. A total of 100 permits was awarded for the special rocky mountain elk hunt, so the hunter success was eight percent, about what the DFG had predicted in view of the steep, brushy terrain. Fi ve bulls, two cows and one female calf 'f\:ere taken in the hul)t, the fi rst ever held for the herd ol 700-900 rocky mountain elk in the area tall and llOrlluf Shalla Lak<. • • • • . . ' •• '. • • • • 1 .. -.... " . . • • . . . . . ~. - L TiMJridq, D«tmbtt 18, 196~ Your Money~s Worth OVER THE COU.NTER Complete-New Are You Homo Urbanus? NIW YOJllC fAPj• 'TllvMlll't'I <omplef• l••••••B••••••••n!ll•••lll•••m••••••ilN'w YC llock aclllnee P<tt: ,.... "'"' 1"*-1 ff .... L..-CltM Cllt By SYLVIA PORTER ''our spltll, &I an Am,rican conswnt.r. in U1t 1950s and early 1960s was "homo ac· qulrtns," the acqlilsit1ve. In the early f)OSt·World War fl yeers, you loaded up first with goods to satisfy your basic physical needs and the!\ f.tilh possessions of userur and bl!aulllul things rangtn~ from automobiles 10 TV sets, radios and records. Your spirit, as an American consumer, in the late 1960's, became '·homo ludens," with .Ume to kill. In these rtcent years, you 've been buying ever more goods and services to occupy your leisure hours Now, as you enter the 1970s, will your spirit, as a n American consumer, turn to "homo urbanus,'' the cultivated, sociable fellow whn is trying to make something or himself? THIS IS the absorbing ques· llon raised by Harlow Osborne of the U.S. Dept. of Commerce in a paper presented be£ore Jhe National I nd u s t r 1 a I Conference Board and sum- ]Ilarized in the NICB's Decem· ber "Record." \Vhat Osborne is pondering Is the life.style our younger people appear to be em· bracing. What he 1s trying to project are the patterns sug· gested by Harold Leav1tt's hierachy of human needs physical needs first: social n~ds second; self-realizi ng achievement third. That we are moving into an era of vastly expanded con- sumer buying s e e m s in· d1Sputable. Even if the Nllon Administration, this Congrtss and this Federal Reserve Board of Governors make all the economic errors they can itiink o!, I doubt if they can choke ofr our economy's powerful long.term uptrend. IT'S GENER ALLY an- llc1pated that the growth in your income and spending as a consumer vdll be close to 5 percent a year during the next eight to IO years (good and bad years a veraged ). To put this 1n perspective. th e average annual growth ln the entire 20th Century to date has been 3 percent; since World \Var II. 31/z percent; since Korea, 4 percent; since 1959, more than 4 percent Even if the figure 1s closer to 4 than S percent, thls is a mighty im- pressive expansion indeed. But v.·here will your spen- ding grow the fastest'..' Hov,o will you make your choice between personal possessions and personal development'..' During the 1960s. the most rapid gains came in durable goods. Our buying or durable goods soared 90 percent, with virtually none of the rise due to pnce inflation This type of .spending, says Osborne, "v.•as an obvious and sensible lhln1 to do with the ntra SISO a nlonth of real purchasing pow· er added to the average fam- ily budget over the period." BUT EVEN in the dunble goods we bought -hobby coods and book!, speeiallud health products. household ap- pliances. tel,phoneJ, auto ac- cessories, toys Osborne se~s "a 1row l ng un- dercurrent or interest in self· development, a desirt to be healthier, handsomer, better· infonned and more sociable people " \Vhat is so clearly implied is an unrelenting and explosive demand by all of us for services. Probably being overstated are our demands !or such old· NA.SD Ll1tlngt for Wednesday, D.umber 17, 1t6t -bols or "•h u 1.... .......... ......... .., ....,... .. ...,.1 .. w:'9f1; , AM. f1-....... -~·.. . we v .... U ..,.... • • ~ rweu., •rHll. ~·., a 11·t• ~"'! .. ·"" 1lcohol1c bevera1es, ~~110 tt.s1aurant meal.J hotels ...a -'<It': .!ill t~ =•" c ,, ,, l'I•• L~ 4 °" i •'}'__ ,... ~ ~ '·~ , a~ M ~,,_. rr ~ I~'' M•ll MO 4l\lt 4c '?Lh 11 i1 M:mtMllf a resorts, ho me appliances. t.c.n.1 .• ~"fn.f6t!: •11'"~t11 2 .,.. ': ~:1• f:1t 1tv. 1 ;i;:i; 4 ""' '"" ="'~',, ,1 .. ~ Probablf being undertlated !1fo..H•!1"~~ ~\~11 • iJ ~·, ~ t'4 ri. flf ~,.., 1• ~,I,._. •• our d -~-f II n.a &:1.,. '""· ••• ..n I 11• !• ·~ ,m 141'.o • c1r1, ,,.. t4\\ Il l r tmal,ll,l.ll or a "'"' "°' "i..fu .. 11 1r1.-.ec> Nn• v. v. ,,.,, 1"" jN i/r ""~ ""'t" 1 . .0 thlnss and non-things con-i1on1,,,'iT~ •rt ,..... ""'°~ ijtt n~ ..,,.,. »ll"" U" i1,i"w"t1 "M:!l: .,c.,,, nttled wlth our social ao. :t'.,'1c-.u ~"'!; 1t "" r' t!l!t ~ '' ~ 1 ~ 1 " !fl" .•~ Uvltles, personal broadenlng ~~~11"=1·~ """: u~fn 1J~u~Vt ~ii,,1tm ~ iti : ~:' 1~ I~ :t. '1'...sJtl J a'1rse1r.1mprovement. ~;' "i.ri =:• ~· ~ 'tl RP~· J!li J14 ~ I: lfs:C 1~v. 11o :1:.1~' _;, 0 u .. to m•an soar':ft "'•"'••'""'! .,. ""'' M', rl~ r,,,. Nw ,,.,,a '~ '•"' trlZ1, tl~ "" •k•""''" 1.:io DAO Miid lc:IJ. llllf• ,..,.. ... c ·m .. ~w "MS¥ II lN ~-~ !: ~" Alco!!!.,1111 ~ spending for education of al :::::. ;;:~~ :r: :· IYI 1~ ;~ At~ ~~fl.~ r: .. t1~ fi'v. rw. ::l:icp .XII kinds for art in all Its forms ..-1 ,,.. 11.,. ,.,lcn 11rwt,1 1 1~ 1o wet 21 iii\ tr-f! JI SJ Alic '"' ·'° • , .so not lnclucle °" c'-!1' 1 f'lo Seen J2 S5 f.j1 . IE • All111Lr.H:1 t ..i for ITIVeJ in alJ its •-e for ret1lt m111111e. WI! L lj 11-1'1'1\0AI 7 . t~ I , i.,. ·~ AlltQC..r.H:I .,., S h Ith I -r .. -· :t:••t1own er ,.,.. rre ..c t\~ llV T,. 11 11i., 1MM1 I'll •i.r. "I"' .. 1.'11 e1 w th all its ramlfica-"' uion. 11«111 alo6 '°" NA ,j• ,'!" ,-•-"• n1 224 A t1'6Cll 1 lions, for recreaUon with ill ,.,.... Ent 1\>lo • "~ ~ ;:: :~ £'1~1 ,:~ itU :m::,;,n ·~ its off-shoots. ~~1 ,.c,.orr 4v. J111 ~~1':. T ,~~ ,m =" '.:~ ~~ 1~il l=:,w t!u ''14 ~11:"'111'dsfr11 t'!o Doesn't th! In ·-· I At' Inc: ~ m FedM MT Ill 1» ,.a(. F1E Jll'I :n r .... AS ., 4 A' .. Su .. :JO S f g \.I ue 0 YOU AV Co IV. tYI Ftl 1,1 ~t '" P1lu10 Co ! S T~m A "' Sl'I ,AUit 0-.lrn -you cult1vated, sociable=~~ ,: ~" ~:;~ .,.~ nl~ H ~=~101. 1f~ ilttt11i1~~ f: ro~ fl14 1t:'f.o• fellow trying to m 1 k e A~r,•P 11 22v. ~·' •ffl'I v. )'Ii P1r~w H 1no """ r 1111 GP N a\~ Ami'"'' 1.a soinelhing of yourself' lt does : ~~~ ,~v. ,~.,., "'r1"-~111 ,m 1ltt ~:~:ir. p 1~\il ir' i~~nf"' 1~\1. ,m ~.A~ ·ri10 to me With you ~o ur-~ •'t" :U I~ ~= 'If.' 7~' "1~ :::-'31([ 'Iv. '! t~~· 1 5 ,Jl? ,ili ::'~;. • .n1,.M • • Alce nll Ullo 16 F0!'1 Oii l '-' I 'Ii Pl Ef!111n N , .... Ttleo P~ 11'h 1t" AMeff .,n.50 banus, I feel completely at 'I •n JV.. '"' filll Grnl "" 33'-' P• a .. w 2SV. 'U Trld•lr JOY, 1114 Mlrl"Utl' .• A It P•• 5" FO!Odlr \'I 2V. "-Pac l t't ·~ Tr1111lc1 ~ lS\i ""' • ease. Alld A,ro 2V. J\/,i Flllom I I' PMll RE 11'1o IOV. TwHft "d ll 15'4 A =r.AlrHn >lM Am .. E• t tioi l'our k• '!VJ 11V. PtPSI WI 1 '"" UnltK ~ "'" . ,. ""'" GM ,,,~ 'Al "'''*' cl \lo 1" ,.,lnl ~ , ... \JOI Dollr , 12 ~ ,11. N•I• I Atl'll<k 1llt 1\li Fmlllrl 1 V. \'YI PtlrotU «I 41 U11 llli,rm 711' 2M6 Afti.:'1!.'?°\ J, County, Coast Cities Get Road Tax Shares n:1·~~;· 'ti: l~ ~~~ 13 ~ ~~ ~r.'\ir tk ~\'I ~~ ':~11 1~ I~ M 'Cir: .f 20 Am EaPr " '9\'i Fuw1 ea l\'I f'4 ""°'°" u 11V. ul llknot 1 \~ l6\li AC1n •' l 1J Am Furn t l'I t trl""I l!\li IW Pie r>d 1 ""'U t~• i!"° Am Cetl'I '° A Grwt 4 1'1 ff\11 11 Svc: 1•'41 U\I Ph ... rln 7J 7, U JMll 1 A Ol1ln 1.llO Al'l'I 11\111 " "' Aird! •1" 511o Portr HIC 2•\li 7Wi u Ut•t £5\'I 1 Alll(rtoellt ·'° A Mtlr I t1" t \lo Kint!!< 71,1, 1~) Pro Goll t'.lo HO U rtr.L ti\'I 36\.'J AC~O I.• ... Mt<f!co 11\.li 321,!i Jll Ell 111;1 t \li "'ll An• ' •1.0 U• p..,,. ti n Am Ill 1,2S Atl'I Pjpt t l~ !ti 1\\ l Pub MH jolU U'4 Ulolh St.cl ~\II Pol Am 111111 I A $1 GCll.I ~ s~~ ~l•n 16 ""' Pub MM JOA. 15"' UH i 11111 • A~!Ttl ea 4$1 G pl I"' 1.,. no'1 '5\~ .ti11lo Pu NC ll~ 11.,. v11 LO \'I fl~ A lvt ,l)q """' ltlv I~ ltV. llell llllit 32 Publihr 1 ,.,,, Vtn« SI 1 1•1'1 A I Of ... Afthll,!I 8 70V. 71 f!!tn W .. \'I .cf\'I PurtH \:. 1\li VltlrQl'I 31 )'! Am lll'w 1.« :~:r. 'k J14 ~11" ;; ~~ ,; 1iv. ;y~:n1: l, n~) ~;d,~,. n"' n1"" :~8 EE.rt•.: SACRAMENTO -St a I e Controller Houston 1. Flournoy today announced the diStnbu- tion of $64,951,304 among the state. cities and counties as the November apportionment of highway users taxes. Orange County's share was $865,5.19. Shares for cities on the Orange Coat were as follows : Costa Mesa, $51,581 ; Newport Beach, $32,063; Huntington Beach, $77,347; Laguna Beach, $9,948. San Clemente, $12,370; San Juan Capistrano, $2,769 ; Fountain Valley, S 2 1 , 3 2 I : Westminster, $41,330, and Seal Beach lt7,Q.19. A total of $14,317,699 went directly lo the counties : $10,725,632 to cities, and $39,907 ,973 for expenditures on State highways. The total was derived from the following sources: gasoline Datatron to Buy Bouse for Stock Datatron Inc of Santa Ana has taken the hrst step to ac· quire Bouse Manufacturing Co , Santa Ana, for an un· disclosed amount of common stock. The acquisition of Bouse is subject to approval of the boards of directors or each company and regulatory agen· c1es. Bouse recently contracted for a new 20,000 sq. ft budding in the Irvine Indu stria l Complex. The firm w 1 11 operate as 'a Oatatron subsidiary, with Thom as Bouse remairung as president. Ara Ind I'll \'I LS 10''o !VI Pouo C1t Jl'o 54' W Jlt-" 11.'t A afnd DI .. , I "9 1~ "'1 d. I r I Atl!tn M 101'1 lOV. W't c •YI 714 JI.cl OVll 16\.lo ,. w .. lhw • ~ " '"'"' 50 ax, "" , ... ,"" ; 1ese ue Ardtn pf n :M ••lltl '" ,,~ 11v. R•n Tl• .., 10 W•lh MG 1svt 'Siio ~ 11111 I"' • lax H 780 160 b t r Al1c Mo#' 1n;, ll\\ rtlltl $c JIV. lt R1111b I tf\'1 lll\li WIJll RE 11"4 II~ .. mHol1 10 , ..,, , : Y rans er Arrow H '5V. •7 Yt r...,, Ml 16~• 11:i. J11vc11 • 2u 2,1 w11 Tr 1~14 u ~"Hom• 1 • rrom the Mo•·r V 0 h 1· I A•~IO• 11\.lo n rnH JI E n 211 JI•'"' " n\'I 11 w~ '' 1svi 16\li .. -Df 1 w c e A.CC eot ltV. 20"4 ~OYe "'' 121'1 llV. RKOll 4 11 n Wtlc!l•ll 17'.l ,~ Al'l'I Holp 2• TransportaUon Tai: Fund , Auto kl 1Jl7 16\.'J rwlll '" 1Jv, l•llt llu Mt• 16 '"'• Wtll"" M 2G" 2j"" Am111 .... t 110 Avemco 11t t \4 1rO 01 • .._ J\.lo Jlrl Crecf .a.i1,li 45\11 WtlliJI O llt\o 1 \.\ AmMFd't to $2,058,141 . ll•bOlll ·~ 6'-ulf lnl N 10\'o Jl lltr 510 23 U Wstnl P n.:. Ill AMllCt• 1 411 ll•l•d Al n.;, •~ vrod11 '"' t•Jo Jloao E• 21\'i 2111o w11n NA I V. t Am Molon The apportionment w a s I"''' :u.. 261'1 H•.-• s n 21 J1ot>111 M ~ "° w11n "''' 5"" ,..., Amto1~t(';,, ' 12•7,968 less than that for the 11 P1lnl fV. 1 H•rlnd J H 11\/i JIC11•11 t \\ lt\o Wlln Pub ll°'J UV. :i; -~to 1ol,2 •nl1tr c ,,., • H•Ytn Ill 7\\ 1~ "'"' •II ]V. •V. WIM Wll 61'1o 11'1 .. •• . di h T I I •rw<• t>.O f \'1 Hiii! Mor 10•., 1 Jlu1 tOY ~ Jl>rl. Wlnbt• '' 21 '" I"' ' prece ng mont • o a !••In P 7\t 1~• l'te11rtd F :M'4 3sv. •v•11 Ho 30.\ll 21 wlnttw T 2v. 2~ ""' ritp ·'° I I r h lllfl'\rl d .il H!Ooc Int 6\ii. 11,!i mlltr 61'1 7'.6 W K PL 10\\ ?0\':i 4 Sm,lt I fO gaso me ax income or t e e1v1t•' 1°"' 11v. H111t1vn ll"'< 11\.\ ntn E J'h , wrc11w E 1\:1 l ~m•'"•"•·~,, month dee ea d 11138 ... ·~111'1'1 ".,, :MV. -EP Jt ,. oll• In I ~· W•ltht w 101.l. 21\lt .. ,,, ", II f Se , ,u..ov, ie la bit 15'4 16'/• Hoovtr 7t'J :x!Y, I Coif 2~io l' f Vrdn~ E 1 71'1 Am Sid 1 dl• .. el fuel tax 1·ncrea••d • m tnd t'lo lo!/, Huck Ml 1 tv. AmStd "" 1s ..., ""' "~ H1 41 •l Hud PP lOVI ?l\11 Am Sttrll 4' $202,131, transfers from the ,•,,t. L•wb ~ 3'"" Hut G#I• ,~.,., 1J•1i A •• ~~·',,',~,, • ·~" v. 7l'o •~ Hurl! P 16"° 11"4 _., D Motor Vehicle Transportation e,1~, ~Son l2 ii Hvttt c. l!'tlo "" MUTUAL •,~su,•,~,:!:.., . flChr '1• •YI Ind G11 21 21:U. T, · Tax Fund mcreased 5699,182, •di HJ1 ln• st 1n11 Null lSl't »\' :c;ww:,.•, u and miscellaneous income was a:t'11"a., fl~ ,~)! \~~~~ ~~ fl' AW l'fof 1 •J d 110 .....,., loot111 C if :ts 1111 Cqnl i ~ 14\'t Al'l'I ZI"" own ,Wool. ar..:i 5,, -"l't •I" 111<:11 SY• 16"A 11 FUNDS Amettli: ·'°• 8ftt..., G n n lntrm In 10111. 11 Amltctl!C Ill ll1c1 kt nv. '""° !Oii 8Wsfl !" 61'1 AMI( Co .JO rw11 Ar 12~ ll\'l lnl Miil 2 26 ~11 ... lrv)ll le 2:1..; lJ lnl Nclr Mi t !J. ,_.,,. ~.,• lldlt't l:W. ,,,., In I" lJ l' "" . ur1111P s 24 24"' int ~ Pl ' J,,., A,m111 !t IC Lt11 111 1(.lo 1111 TeJHI I t M COIWI I JO 11 W S't 10'1 20 .. ,ntt~I 1~1 11"' AllChHock .I~ 1mco 16 II onlCI IW. 21',0, DK. 11 l11Vtt!or1 Grou~· AOICOl'OMSV I •J'IOll M n 15 II SoUlll 21\0 7t•..:. Nl!W VORIC ~AP ) 105 ncn J 01 5" A/Id c.11v 1.1<1 •nnM 8 61 71 JatobJ F ·~· 5'' -The to!'°W!"" <IUO-MUI 9 65 10.•t Ao1th*Co ?J Ul<ld J J"' JltQUn c 11Vt nv. t1t1on1 lllPPlltO br "'"" ••• J l4 ADCOOll I 411 111 Sow 14 U'l Jtm W~I 1'\ I lhe Nl!IOllll 41,oc: Stock 1111211 ll il1>ue Chem •P ln!A jll 6~. J1m•1 F 16t:. 11:U. a!lon or Stcur !111 $elecl 1.1 t" AJIA, Svc t4 11>Tc11 ,.,, •\o Jam•bo 11 U\~ Oe11!11, Inc , trt V1r Pv 7 6t I :W ill,rc~04n 1 4n ••It Bl Sli 1(.lo Jltrv f'O• J"i A•. !lie prices a l Whldl Inv lhlJ'I • t• j oKI ""'fP$vc I /Ill •rt• Gp u 1'1h KelH• St n~· nlit tlles'l IKU•llltl 1•ltl 21 .14 2 11 Arlt11t DS '° It( NG n IH~ K•l1St Pl 11 " <O\llO ll•Ve 1>1111 vy , " ?I "'''"'OS! I~ t11lt• 44\lt '5 V, 1<1tv1r 401' .n M>kl (blO) or bouonl J Hncoclr I 1• I.IS Armour 1 U' en VP$ 11'" Ill-1(1t1 Grn ••-5 (11ktdj W!Ontdp J°"n1ln 2! 0171 02 A•m• cf 'IS Air West Makes 10% Payroll Cut fh•rl RA •'1 ,S\o IC•V'lm •'• 4•1 1Cr1t1one F11nch '""''(Ir t~ llt•I 0 1•1 P o Kear T 1•'• IS'• 111' A•lr Cus Bl 11 n II.II l.r..,rt ofl,IS SAN FRANCISCO (AP} -hm l e• 1 1 ~11\o Krlltl ~·• 6'•AberOn 1111 05 Cu1 111 lf?0 2G t ! •r..,P•b I.~, A W I !hes Ind s !\~ Kellwa 37 321, Aovlsrs 7 0$ 1 17 1"' 114 1 u t '5 Atn Co,.. .ta 1r est, nc af1llounced a 10 1111 u1u ,. lS ICeulf E ,1., u At1m110 1 n1 ,,s u• K1 7 6.l I JJ Arv111 Ind l I lb k I rr Ill flr&I 60 61 Kt'tt ~lb ll\, U •fvlrt 9 19 '" 111 K2 !ll S U •s"'"Oll 1,70 percen CU ac In S a llrl&I 5 91 tl K•v• Cui 20 21 All Am F II 19 Cul 11 11 Joi 19 11 ill,sll"'il 012 «I re-tly " to a.·d the n~sent Cllrhl Pl t5 tt Kt111 PC 111 I\\ Allltlt Fd 11 61 12A9 Cui 7 9 u 10.s2 i11,11st1 Brew """ r -Clt10tl I l \lt l(lno Int 10 lD~ l.MC•P Sa 6 4l CUI !l 1 :M I 01 l.•«i "'(': I 'II\ eco-mic c1rcumsta-s of the '"I• u " '' 211~ 1<1n~1 E• 6 1 Am Bui Joo > 2s cu, s 1' s ,, Assd ~"' 1 ?n ''" ""~ Cll r UB 14'~2•~ Kt lr CP 11''1•'4 Am Ovln t?l1090 Poltr 411 451 ••..,,Tr~~·~ company " Cl1rlr Ml ,,,,. 2l•J K~ ... Vlo l\ • Tl\• AE• ·~I t Oii ICnlckb 661 i l l Atl("lvft ':\.t ' Ci11!1>n 2 1v, Krelslr 6'• 7 Am Gr!ll ! 76 6 'll ICnltk Cl 11 2112.2! A•ICl'I o<5 I• The cutback would eliminate cunt Mer 11or, 12•. LMC OM 1•, 2'• Am Inv 1 ?J 1 ;1 L•• Gr~ • 69 10.JY An R1m1111 ' Clinton O 1:i. Ho l•nc,, In J.j' • 'IS Am M11t a )5 ~ S6 Lt( tnvit ~ 1• \0 10 •1,ech Pl~ 7~ about 400 1obs based on last c~w Ci> '' 2t1 L•rio• 1~ 2•• 2~. AmN c111 'l n 1 ,, L•~ R1t11 ls it,, s1 All J1rc1i pf J . C091r Cl 59 6l L•fll Wd 11 11~ Am f>1c 1 !'9 I 97 L lberl~ !I 19 6 '' l.11Rc~ nil 1'1 SUm1ner's employment figure !oltm E •I~ s•.; Ltrson 4" J 4ncllor Group Liie S!k !I 22 5 71 All~! C~fm 1 r ollln1 F 7 1\~ 77 \oo Lirwn M 16', 16'o CIPll I 10 t !J tilt Inv 113 7 .0 A•T•1 Corn (] 3,890 WOfkerS at &'J 3.l.rportS olon S1r 'll'll 231t, lfaOv LO :ui, 251-, Orwlll l Z 1' ll 3$ 111<1 '17 j J1 ATO t11c Mt I ht ta C I omct! '! -16'~ L•ll Cotl 4,,. o, lntme A 71 tm l09"'11 S111ts· Av"''I" Pit• n eJg Western S {es, a• Com Cir 42 •l llt Ltltur G ll JZ'~ Fd Inv t l S lf/'S C1111C1 111.a.i .II) .a.i Autorn•n Ind Ca d d 'f ti Com fnll 'l>I , .. Ltvln ln S 1 A .. oc\1 1 rt 1 JJ C•Pll 11Ol11 QI Av.;o C" l 20 gary, na a an ., aza an ~om ~•1 1ot, 1 n~ Lewi• BF 11~'1 ,,.~ Al!ron s 71 6 JO M~1 u u ,,,33 ""'o 1>1J 10 and Puerta Vallerta Mexico om ti 21~\ 21'1 L!llv Ell 100 101 A•e Houe!'lton M•n11tn 1 sj 1:21 Averv Pd .:w1 ' . om H/111 l•l· l~ lotlllW ,, ' I Fund A 6 GI I lj M111 Fd 116 11 .. A~nel lr>r: ·"° Th . 1· ., f om P!V 14 I•' Lett Cdt 4\o 41. Ful\ll I 16J Man Gth 1 1 ll 21 A't"411 of 1 f ti.II Jne Sal Jn 3 Stile-omp A l ,\t LCl9 E'.trn lt 11 jttclr S ti • S M•u 1r 1417 1' 'IS AYOll Pd 1.IG menl it was furloughing em-m11 Cm l.I l6 Lvncn ~ 1s J6'~ cl Cc • n Ju Mlle• 111.1 ! 1 A11..c 011 01 mp Ind 'll 15 M..:I G r n 121-. B•-I 71 t 11 Mtt!'ltrs 11 61 1111 Ployes in an effort to reduce mp '"" 10" 111~ Mar ie 11 11 •\ 11 llt•t 1<n1 •.so •n Meo°" 1"' ''' mp Miii ,,~ ,., Ml JlllW I\~ II~ Bl1lr Fd 11 6! n.7 MIOA Mu 6,46 1 °' 81bdc w , 3' costs appro.1lmately 10 per-~P T.c: 111.11 M•ll~•* s• &0'~ e-111o •Jt •• Moecto C• 1311\JO!i 11~~ro11r •s ~·r. 9~ tg•• M9m1 '°'' 1''• 2" BoslOll St 1 M l .ll MCID<l't'I 13 l2 14 56 ll1tt0E 110 Cent. Oii ocll 11•·,711 M~nl11 M l 'i ''•Bos! Fd" 10Slll n Morlon Fu;.;/1 111!1': pUU SO , • • I $tr1!0 2', l'l Manor C ,.i:, 10', Bllotl"" 7 96 111'.1 Grwlll 9 jj 10 06 Jl1hO pf(I John Lindsay assistant vice on1r10 ,,, •·~Mn• Mia 1•1• u~. Broed SI u u 1 .tt lncom l • 10 fl•n•Pun1 60 ·de f ' · i""'''" l '• 3\o Morm Or 1'11 IOYt 8~11ock 1'111 .til lnwr 1 16 161 ll•n•" pf 7 pres1 nt or advertising and _., L. 11 n M B•ow• 37 33 CG Fo 111 '"'MIF Fd 1t0 1ss B•n•P ,.,1 1~ publicity, said this meant an ~ 5vr ~~ nr: ~~St', 0 ~~~. ~:; ~:~::'.i. 1f ~ 1: r~ ~~F o~'2 ! g i :; =:~~ r::. Nr.1 . I to t' I rr rw!rO 26'!. 11 Medic H 11 !ti• C•PI' Inv '16 •.56 M~ Om In '$3 10 3d ll••b01t 2,l•f approx.1mae percen sa ~"'''Mil 111~12!/:I M!'dtrn 1, J9•,C•11t Sh• 101 161M11t s11r1161$16,15 "~'d cJI ,, reduction in all departments rou Co Jt~ «1 ~1.,., ''~ 1~. Ctnr Sii• 11 01120l Mu! Tru 1" 2" l'l111c 1"c '0 • n1lcll ll l\lo 9'4 MoOld C• lO'• 11 Chanr,l11t Ful\d• NEI. Mui 10 3'1051 P.a•IC Pl 150 Ai Wt f d I Vl>l'tlC 11V,lJ\'I MldltX ~1 1 j Bt tn 111"11 31 Nf!WS.c t 611Glt)llll!HM1t r es was orme n 1n" M '"' iot~ M111w G 2 ii•, 1 ·~ com st 1 " 111 N11 1 o•.o 1 ..01111 "'"''' M• ltf 1 Apnl t968 '" the merger I 011• 011 • ~ Mi>•• G•1 211. 11"' Grw111 '°" • 60 N•• tn..,11 • 21 1 » e1·~ 1nd "'' 0 Oetllft P ,,, t\10 MIH V!G 171 111 lncom 1 ll I 07 N•I Stc:\lr Ser· ll1lhln pf1 '! Bonam.a Pacific and West ~v11 Fo 11•" 12 H1J R•ch s ' ,,; Sc>td 111 2" B•l•n 10.n 1117 11~11•cllLb • • , tY Mir 11 .... 11\~ MO<I Sc i 1n1, llh Cllt!I Groi.11· I-J.:M SM J11~trL•b lft Crossword Puzzle /*ftOll 52 Fema1ts' Slang I tltrfa,e 54 Indian 1 ,acing a struc111res 1l1cier of the 10 Sound of Southwtst disapproval 58 Mus1c- l4 Actot m1k 111g Richard -·· dev1cr 15 Puerto Rito 59 ·-111n por t 60 Chicago 16 Oppo sed feature 17 Srsters 62 Highly 18 Kind of fla mmable 9overnm e11! material 19 British pokey &5 Game tnd1n9 20 Delivr as a l·l,2·2, etc : conclus1011 2 words 22W 1ndsup b7Grer~ 24 Pa1crl cil philos opl1e r land b9 Num rri cal 2~ Go lf cl ubs pre fix 27 Complet ely 70 Sa11 29 Thing la Franc isco be add rd or Toron!il 32 Ba lhr•om 71 Ma de le ~s llrm onrrGus J3 Outla wed 7Z Ra in bow: group 111 Comb. far m Ireland. Abbr. 73 Otherwise '~ USS R toi11 74 Non·WOfk'r JO S1n11, '"a 75 Naval craft wa~ Abbr. •o Schoo l sub1rc1· lnformol 42 Showe d f![m a11ain ,-14 "E11corr'" .. 5 High ln prie r 47 Co me lo full bloom 49 Ha id liquor SD G11ve~tont 1bbrtv11l10" "' • 1 '" ['° DOWN 1 Par'/ Z Kin of lever J One asp1r1119 10 office ~ Made certain ~ Grandeul b Exc essively 7 11 rve1 " S Not abu ndant 9 Not ~try ofttn 10 C1one 11 All together . 2 words lZ Mll•mald's ac,essory 13 Full of s edim ent 21 Blow on the head: Sltng 2J ··-··put•" 2& Above: Comb. form 28 Nucltar compl ex ~ ObJ,CllV!i 30 Wo1d or annoyance Jl Ercetlence J5 Jav• cotton J-7 Wlell- mtan1ng people 38 N. American lake ' 12/18/trS 39 Camera part 41 Man's n1cknamt •3 Roundwor11 46 The ···-: c CllltO'ttf'S i al medlc1n ' 48 C.oe bbtls or Goerhl9 51 E:rh1usttd: Slang SJ Mass or lymphoid tll$Ut 54 Rivtr of 8.C . and Atbe1\a 55 Up to tilt 11me when 56 Blue1)enc lls: 57 -· S)'Slttll f:il -Robles, Ctllf. ti) Give olf ti• Frees •• A1ten11v, look •a KO count " " Coasl air lines The Hughes 1n • "' Mon,..k R 11 it Ful\d 10,tJ 11 n 01v10 '01 ,_,s 11ayu11C1• J.O • I AP I I\\ Mollm Plr 1' IS\o Frnl 9• 91" 1' Orwll'I 1 ll tAj lltl•l"tl I Tool Co. agreed to buy lhe o,i.i. en s1 s2 -e p 1., , s~rhd 10 f7 11 tl Pr s11r , ..i 1.06 111•1 Fdl 1 • 1· ~-968 d h Oft Cjnl' 11'' 16 Moore S 11'• lJ\o SPK I 9 ~ t Ill IOICom J 16 S .. lltckm~" 50 a ir me un:. 31, 1 an t e get 1 r l"" 1:0,:,10 Mote~ M ,,, r c11e..,c1 1t o110 1s sroc• 1 1• 162 11ec101ct ...., h d I t IV Am 1 12 Mot Club l • 15 Colonl•I: NI! Wnl 71' 7IO Re<td\Ar t!b pure ase was approve as §'v App 11""1' Mu•llt• 1cµ,1 11~ E•vtv ,., 4H N11 Gr111 f:J61011e1k0Pi1 ~ July by th. CIVIi AvlaUon ..,.,,., E I'~ t'Jo MutR! Ei ]>. ,,, F11nd 10•111 3• Neuwlh 'j·'''lff 8•111Mtl 6411:1 !em Cr 11""' 11•;, NCC l'I I 11'> Grwlh 6 21 6 It Ntw Wld I 06 U 27 1\111 How .O Board Ol•c lr'IC •\:o 51·\ N1<r111 c '''· 's-.:. Ven! 6 ll • 9' NY Ven! 1 "20 u 11•11 ln!•rc"" · ~ver CM ]'II ]'it M1t Brnd ]' • l \'o Col Grlll 13 lS 13 JS NtNIOll 16 10 17 60 l'leml• C1> 1 But the airline has not been U!ll 'I llO N•ICtr 11 l !'; 11\'t Commc 9 J\ 10 11 "lore••• 1•60 u 60 1\tnOl( l '° • e>!IY Md • I\~ NCm1> c.. , ... ?•Jo ComS Bd Jn J !I gcn•llll 7 Jt IOI "'""'" Pr ] able to come up with the Jon 6Z•.:. 63'!1 Net Ec~1 •s u Commonwnh F01 met• 1 06 1 11 Beftf!fFln 11111 H h t lllOll IJl<.ll\l,N FdPd ,. " C10 Fo ''"IO))l(IOFd ll ••1•1'11ent1F ,,·," ug es purchase agreement s rew NL Ju. '"" N11 G&o 1• .. 1s\.\ IOICom en t s..i 101 Fo •:101oos B•"''F :,,30 rib nt L l11vrsr 9 ~7 ttl 8 ... WmS U66U66 I\ F I f1S0 net wo requU'eme . ast srocJC •JO • 7t 'Nell 11 u ,, 16 e:~. tr P k th ·d I CwJlhAB 1]4 l•l -..II '1116 u wee , e company sa1 J Cw1111 co 160 , n P•ce Fnd 117301/l ,"",,.""' 1" I I I ro d Como As l• if u 10 Penn ~q 1 lt t •rl<Pho .nt p ans o rep ace a p pose t' com ... 1 1,11 1 n P• Mut 7 61 711 .,,,mtc c .. ,., $20 million convertJble deben· C0tno Dd • u •.•1 P11111 14,01 1s 36 ~r,"' .... 511 1 ~ Comp FO I fl t IS Pll1rlm t 40 10 11 """ -• tu re offering with the sale or Com•~ ' •• s •1 Pl~! 7 JI I OS :i:c, ·,~~ 1 "'• • • Concord n 51 11 !7 ,.Ina St lj l! 1 lS ' ,..,~ "up to S30 million' o{ a new c ..... 01 1" 111112.11 P1on Ent ,JI 111 •11•• l~ut 1 f d k I Conlu In ••O •II Pl9n f'l\d 119SIJ'6 11.Ttck H'll '' pre erre stoc issue to mee cont G111 t 11 • l6 Pion 1nv 11 otn12 11" • B•ll 1.so th t orth II t Co<P ld 1112 U 11 PrlCI f'und1 "ollhlf II.-\• e ne w comm men s. cnt~ c1p , ,, u l1 Grw1n 15 •o 1.s 'll ""~'"" 1.,., C1n WOlv 611 661 N Erl '4l 913 "111·>:"' 1!b CrnWD al 10 •t11..i N tl or 21 11 21 11"n11ll ~!rs ' dt\IPll M ~l 6t 62 6t Pro Fund 10 J& !Q 16 lloo~Mlll 1 )I FINGERNAIL BITING CAN BE EMOTIONAL lllr TllRY GIANT, R.,h Fon91rn•ilt bitte"' dtwft to !hilt ..,,,.., t tl9t1 •r• not only ltft· 1•9htl\I, but ceuld ¥1ty wt !I b1 tlM• lo ''"'' tl•tlurbin9 1mo· t1onel 1ilu1tion. Thl1 it pou1ble not •nly 1n 1cluft, but •••n ill ve1y 1lfl1ll childrtn. In !he .r.111 ef clultlrtPI wh1rt 11 11 ·/yd • b•d htbll, w• c1rry •1 ~1 r1 protluc+1 ihll Mlkt finttflllil l;-111119 Mii • plt111 11t 111d c1n help bre1 k +~• h1bit. St riout f111gtrn11I b1H119 ift th• 1tlult •• tho 1ilolt1c111t thould bo lotktd into 11101• clo11ly lo d1!1rm lnt tho ceute. If ii c111~ot b1 luoktn by • 1h1w •f vrU\ptwor, • phytici•n 1howltl b1 co1111thod. YOU Ok YOU~ DOCTO" CAN PHONE US wh1n yo1 "''" • Cellv•'l• W, will Cell••r ,rornplly wlth•ul ••Ir• ch•l'9•· A t•t•I lfleny petp!t r1ly 011 ~I for their heollh 11•t'•· Wt wel· Clll'lt r.ctl/tlh f•t 4t/i"•'l ltt•• 1,1 11141 chtrft 1CC6Ufth. PAIK LIDO ,HARMACY UI H•plt•I IMlll HIW"" l.W-64J..1SIO ,,.. Dtffnry Vice Presldet1t \Vallace D. Silver has Ott;el Inc 10 11 11 11 Provdnt , Jl , n "o•d~ft 1 ffl D•l•wre 12 It ll J; Purlltn t Sl 10 Q "'oroW~• 1 '' 81111 Tr I 04 11' Putnem Fur.as· "0•"'~"1 l'l'I l~ld ~nr l JO 3 l l -EQUI! t jJ 10 ?1 '°'Ot Ec111 J 01 Oawnt F J 67 '16 Gtort lJ, I 11 OS "-""''"' Inc Ort••I l J n 1! 11 Grtll t I• I IJ "'•~n11Al• .~ §rt'tl Fd U 51 ll19 lrocotn 1 10 .11 1!••19SI J ....,_ rtvf Lv U.3C 1l ~ tnvttl 1 JI I o !l rt•t MW 1.1'0 1t011 .. H-aro Vhia 1011 11.n 1>.r!llM• °'' l•len 10.7' 11 j! "'°''' I 21 IN l\<!wY H•Uo 1 Grwt~ IJ.Of U, \ JllP TKll 1 Ill S ]! .,.....,H~ pt .. , •I01Corn l.tl ' 4' "'~"! 11,Jl ll n •kl'l'nUt:: 1 n ?K! IOQl10JtRownh 1 06 111 "'row" (o Stock ,, ,, u ,,j s.1..,.. Fd $II ,,l! "'-~ Co pl ;btrll ll 00 U jl SC!\uslr lJ ,, lf,tl llwn Shiro 1 trol 11 ll ll S Scudder Fund1• l\wnSl'l<'t l '° lmro Sc: 11'0 1,11 ln1 ln't !l16ll!1 •run"~• l•o ~~~:e 1Jfi'l!i 1~1 r;~!~~ ~ llvcvE 1 '11" ault't I.ff .r. Com$! 1011 1091 :uoo ro ' Equl GI~ 11.21 11,11 SK Olv 10.l! 11 It I!~ i~ _."'.~ Et11x ,,,, ~ e ... 11 161 4Gj " J"'"' '" 1l $J u ,, ~:f. 111'1 1·,, I , ~"'fiF' In,·~: F:v,:.0 au :0 1 ~ l~ ri 1:\~~1 J0 1,fi 1, :i 11~1.w:"w 60 f'td Ort~ 1 ,11 U &I 11 D~•n 1 51 11'11 '°'U"-RelTI~ F\d (IP 110Sl20I Ide tto1o't J '°'Ull~t'I ell,<0 F d Fund ,, :M 11.11 511..,1 1 5f I' Ii f!ul h•cl l .cl Fld TrPld 2• 111• JI Stt t11v 11'.a.i f =~!:!~ ·~ Fl111ncl1t P•Oll §'1111 Tr tGI ' """' "' 0YNTI ''5 1 QI 111'1 ' t'•s ... , 1111\Unv I 6:1f lnOult l.0 • l! w11 Inv 06 I 11 lnc om •o• •'5 wlf\\I' Ot 7.SI 1'.1t Vonl I t• I te t r ·~" " .. " 10 C•bol Co 641 FllF Vt 10,31 11 :)ol SPtcl•I t ti ,..., C1! F!nt11! f'1!1n 01t 1.Sl 9 Jt 51Frm Gt s JS J JS C1t11hM 1)1 been named vice pres· "" 111G111 '" 10 11 s111e s1 .. 1s o ,5 c1m•J1c.. -••• F•I lnSt• I S6 t JI S!r..:lmtn Fundjj C~1T11>Sp l 10 ' 'd ent, operations, for F'' Mum '1' •" Am Ind 10 11 1, Cda.w ·'°' Fil Har 1 11 , .. FlcluG ,,, 161 Cclfl P•C ,,0 , "•' s1er1 "2 11'.1 '6 ll Sc:ltn i:w 4 n CdPote •~l.10 Varian Data ~Jacl11nes, F111 ''" 111 s1~1n ~ /Cd1 · c1 .... 111.a 110 F!tt Fl\ll •)I !let 1! 3s 'tt IS Ceo C Bdc'"I Jrvine-based computer Ft9 01~ 1a1 11! C•c o .. 1 • 3u 'as C&bun 1.0 Fnd Chi J H •Of S!tc;k 14 l n 1• 1C Ctll1I~ 60 b d . I V · f'0<0ndr1 1 &! I Y Sue lnGI I 1'I 1..3• C•o Ct.Oh J SU SI Jary (I ar1an FW•illl 10 ,. 11 " Supl~SI .• , 10.'2 C••l'L! 1 '5 ",•nlll"• O•OUP, \Yll(r GI 10 '' 11 " C•pT~h 1,60 Associates . lie \Viii be -'s1 1u M11 Ap 1t.:io1!°' c11tep 1C1 OMTC ttSIO SI TttCh" t ~t tt C•Gtl 2~ responsible for manu· u111 j·f1 •"' TKhflCI • ia ,:..,, c11.w .. lr><om OI 2 lf TtclW!ol 111 ) 'l CIM J I facturing, purchasing ~~~ut ::t :;; rl:;~ ~~ ',~,f 'flf 1c:: .. ~:1·:: d Fund.~~ t "o 11 n ''" C11 JJ 1:f1 ~teT 1.1' • an quality control. gtn -... '~ 1 io j••v £e l" 10.,. c1 c ... '\·--"--'C..=::!-:..:.::.::_::_c_ __ I lb••llr 1'.011• UClor Fd 1 14 t,M Cl CD 1tf1 u 11 •111111 $11:1 Tw~ •• • I <t.U c..coCep " ""'' Sc: • n 1,n r., 11\C '! 4 ,. c111"'9Kii 2 ~~ ~~ i!1::i 1;~ li~:111 Mui i: ~ 'S:Q ~et•n JlfA~!O H • ) G ~·~ "' '""·Jl "~"' ,,..,. . ,::m_M M osp1ta s et ~~~~~ ~·nl~u .:c~ 1l:i'l,t!l rnn~, \~ H1mll~u ~cl•~ I" 1111.1 oU-"D P M g~I 1 it ' 1' U d C111 ~'llVl!I enlll,.S l lt arty Oney "•'~! f.~ f1: "'\.~ l,~,,. 1.,1· e$ :.,'1,.\,'w E,1,1! ''""' IJS 1)1 1~ 411 ~ t111IW 11111 "t"wlt u.~ If t• .fit 111 ? 'a. fl '"'Sn• ID SAN DIEGO (AP) -Paclllc =~ ~ 11 n ·ft~:.:~~ ... f'to II c~nT,IU Mb Hte19.., H I) 1'.'6 Vlf!90 !I al ·n !~~"\, Southwest Alr!mH Ill can. H•rlttt J" ! M ver, 1 ,.. • ~ f: "''"'" itotr Mtmo 1 -llO 1 .,. Vil ftt '· ~I 511 IOI <'<lin• II> ~~-tmu party this 11ut»""' ,.,. . 1 w1u11 1 .. \'· u. 1 cr11rn ·11K • Vu.I~ 111 Otll 5.~ 10 Wi th Mw I n. I '"~fMtS , ,., year. Instead, President J. I..:~;<~ ' 1'i'1 :1•1 w1i:~1" ~1'1·U.. 11:~-a:,Y, lo, ll'l'IP ao 1e i.1il' 1•. ! l lltt;lltr Mot Floyd Andrews uld, the 1-F ; 1 ' ,.,.,..., 1) 1 ~'"' f;, money wllJ be sent to military !:'~ ; lffi'.11 ~: 1 tt n 91 """Mv .W: ::3 ""' 11 ·it w1,. !~' •·.u ~ ... v. '·r hospital• al San Francisco. "'l1~" s111 t . ~f1w1111" 1 11"ff ::""~,ft!)~:~ 1 Oakland Lon• Re111;:b San 11 ... coA. " u Wl~te "' I'' ff ' ~~' 11' • ·~ • Inv Guld 10$ !I l"'ltlt! , II tll'll I DI••• and camp Pendle!on •• "I" l':JJ I 'I K .. ' ' "" • "I f!i • 11v" OJ I ortti 11111 01 CMS,. ol CI ' - York Stock List S•1tt "'" Illa.) Hlell Ld Ci.MC ..... Market Synabols • I I I I I I • ~·-~·······~····· ······~···,·~·-·····~~-~-~ Thursday's Closing It.. .....------------< CJila.) Hiii! 1. .. ci.. tr., .. • '" • • "' ~ ' . " " ' .. ll 21~ ,2~ 19..t ,, h"' 20 •1\'> ,6 7J to 1, 76 " ' " u '" ii•O as • ' " ' ", • "' • " "' ' • , . .. • " " ' " • • ' " " ~ l~ -N- - ::i , 1:W~ " " ' 'l " ' . ". "" •• ,. ll~ ,. " .. ' n " .. ,. • 121 nl ' " M " r. "" ' " " "' '~ M '" ' " " • ~ • "" ·~ 'l ,,. .. ,1 "' ' " , • " " . • , ,. , "' "' .. ,,., , . , • •• " .. ·~· l! '" l' , " " " " " ~ "' l S~ .. f, • '~ '" " l ' , .. • i: ,, 7 • • '"' "" • • 3,~. y,1 4 0 '"" " ... ' " ,. ... " '" "' ,, •• ''" ,. ,.. .. , .. '" ... "" • "" ' ll "" i " '" l ' 1'~· " .. '"' ,. '" llVr ' . "" '" " ~. ,,_ n'-1. .,, ... " .,. ~ !. ' ,'/" "' k •• '" " '" ti .. ~ ~ . Ii~ " " 4~ 7 ........ -' Prices-Complete New York Stock Market Cl1alks Up Good Gait1 At Last NEW YORK (UPI) -The $lock market Thurs day chalked Ufl rls best gtHn 1n several weeks 1n re sponse to co mm en t frotn incoming Federal Re- serve Board Cha1nnan Arthur F Burns that he hopes the fed will soon reconsider it s tight credit poJjcy Tradrng,_ was bnsk Burns statement to rt.he Senate Banking Com m1ttee \Vh1ch unarumously approved lus nomina t1on to U1e post was con strued as a sign there may soon be some relaxation of 1he squeeze on money a major fa ctor 1n the market s deep sli de during 1969 The UP I 1narkelw1de 1nd1cato1 measunng all stock s traded showed a gain of I 02 percent while the Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average of 30 selected blue chips Jumped 13 33 lo 783 26 Of the l 625 issues traded 98? advanced and 409 retreated Turnover exceeded IS 000 000 shares ''ell ahead of Wednesday s pace Electronics sported unpress1\ e ga111s in a nun1 ber of UlS't ances \vh1Je oi ls also followed a finner pattern IBM was one of the strongest features in the electronics closing up 8 3/4 at 360 114 Steels atracted good demand \111th U S Steel leadmg the \Vay with a gain lo 35-1 /8 at the close up 2-1/8 The No 1 s1eel producer conUrmed a re-- port of an extensive iron ore find in Nevada Chem.teals rails airlines and aircraft al so pcunted. higher m many cases Pnces advanced on the A1ner1can Slack Ex ~""'m " ll(hl nd IQ lldt p'J 50 11$11 M11 .Jt '"Ir "' ""° •• Pn*Gn 40 Supmk llf XI swvvFo .I09 s ...... '°" s .. m c11 "'° Swln1111ne .o l·~-· .. Yb Oii ~fll 'fl Oii OOn11 • " .. • • " " • , ~· " " • "' " • ' • 's Po I~• -UV- " ' • " . ~ • T~ursday Dec:tmbe:r 18 1%9 ,... t DAIL V PILOT :JtJ • Exchange List Complete Closing Prices -A1nerican Stocli Excha11ge List • ' .. ' ' . ... • " . .. ' '' ' •• ' ' .. ,,. " ' .. . .. "" • ' . • • ' . ~ ... li ~ 7 , ' m • 3s •a ~ 1 :nv. ,6 j} -. . ' . . ' " ' JC l!'ltr ' ' " . ' ' " 6§ olO " 11 Ull< 17 5'1 ., 3:1.4 . ,, . " . " . " " . • • 111 2 a ' ' . .. ' ' " " .. . ?J ... SS l .. o tr • " s 2 'a 1'l ''~ .. . .. 21'1 11 • ' . ; 1: ,, . " 11 s" 11t 3;~ 39 1AIM " J 2~'1 h :1~ t9 '~~ &5 31! .. ' .. " " ' .. " " • • ~ ,, ' ,1 ~ " ~ " " • " : .. " l "" • ?,,. '" " .. "' •• " ,. ' . '" " .. no ' . ' " ~. • •• " " " ' '• • .. •• " ' "" .. • " ' . ... "' " ... • " 1ru "" " .. " " •• •• ,.. '" ~· •• •' ' . " " " ., .. ... ,. ' "" 7 ... " " "' .. •• .. .. • ~~ m o ' ~~ .. ... " "' •• " ~?: ,!,. " "' ' ... , ~~'· »• "' . " • 'l " . ' ,, . '' . l)'I 2 I l~lt G ii I),, " .,, '" ,, ~ ., ' " ~ ' .. 1J o ) I 1l n ~ ". 111 • .. ~­,, ,,,... .. "' " • " " " • 1 ' ~ • • • ~· , • • :: .l '1 ,, " " ' • • II " ' 'M '" ,, '1 " " • " • • ' . • • • l. '" .. ,,, " ' ,,• ' " . "' Fino/ Stocks In All Home Editions ' .. ... ~~ .. ~......... . .~. . "" . I . :ti D.t.11; ~ ~l\.OT -. -• 1UMILEWEEDS By T:im K. Ryan AHAH!~ING- "TllE &ANK A6"AIN1 EH, SNAKE-EYE?! llkJPE ! .. THE &ANK DON'T HAVE NO MONEY IN IT TH IS AFTERNOON 'CAUSE ITWAS R086E01HISMORNIN'! , TELEVISION VIEWS ·Will Barnyard ·Humor Charm? By CYNTHIA LOWRY NE\V YORK '(AP) -"Hee Haw'' returned to CBS Wednesday night with all the .characters and jokes that made the program .a summer-season hi~. The question, which only time can answer. lS whether the barnyard humor that charmed the hot- weather audi ence bored by reruns will exert the same fascination at another season. MOST attractive aspect of the shO\V is its music. The beat was infectious and the tunes attractive. There was even a song with off-beat lyrics. "Okie From Muskogee." sung by l\1erle Hag gard -a pre- E ~tablislunent song that condemned pot and ad· vocated. respect for the fla g. . The vie\ver must r eact to the show 's jokes in one of three ways. Take a sample one-liner: "People in the roofing business tend to get shingles." The viewer must find this fA) nove l and funny, IBl ·torny and sqtiare, or (C) so corny and square that it is funny. AT LEAST, "Hee Ha\v'' is honest. \Vhen 1be jokes are old and pretty bad, the jokesters are like- ly to be standing in the middle of a cornfield Y.'hen they tell them. GREAT SCOT!! HOW MUCH WAS 17\KEN?! JUDGE PARKER HOW ,f,RE Yell, ~Ill? PIP VOii M,f,VE A 600P TRIP?' MOON MULLINS I i:tlN'T KNOW, .. I AIN"f COUNT!:D IT YET! --..-:--· - I PICKED UP A FEW PIEC.E5 OF SCJIL.PTll~ POWE BY A. Fina.IP OF Ml~E TM,f,T r u. mm 5ElL F05! ~IM! • ! • > { ly John Miles By Harold Le Doux war ~LY.. TI4AT WONi llE NECESSARY? &UT I'll SHOW !Y TME WAY, I SENT ll\t5S IT 10 YOU 11: JASP.EI INTO TOWN OM 50ME YOU WISl-I ! ERRANDS~ SHE SMOULP !e &\CK If AN HOUR OR: TWO! -By Ferd ·Johnsonj STAY ON t>UTY, Pl.USllSOTTOM·· VI.I. 8E RIGHT iH~e! · ly Charles lanottl ~~!/ .--...... ..... ~ ....... -(Cj (Ol) ""' ...... D Im ..... let tie (C) ('JO) 0 ll!HII II """ •~ !<I (IOI "I Oidn~ Kl¥t the Yqte fkitloll ... ~duslon. Ann 11141 DOii Naliltt Whlll tfitY 1Mm ttlll Marti Hthlis 1rr1n1ed Don'• ..,....i """ilp tf 1flOWtirl JMMI .. I )Dt;L Jack CnsidJ Md ltoPI Ho11Ur lllllt. ID -,_ ' .., (C) \30I ·-_f ... M (!II) 11!1•--" -(C) (30) ............ Pol ·-- -(Cl (90) ••• h•lll .i.cboll, HMdrt 1!1d Ullltt, t:• 8 ..... (C) ~ . Wlllitm MmdtalM', ind Nii• lfle 0 (l!l mg INI:* I (C) (30) 5MI l\lfSl. "Slnt1 ~ Te VWl, Md st1J1 0111: O"Qlct: .... (t) -n 1fld SU,.." S.111rtll~ ~ ,,_ ti Ilk• ltnll"' (mrsitrY) ttu S.1111 Cllua. llil tNn ... ,.,,._ '56 -Vall JohlllOll, Ytr1 MU11, dell ts Cftriltlllff 1ullh. lloruld Ctcil l'lrbf. A blilMI pltywriihl LMI pllJS !Inti. owthurs • tid111ppi111. 1nurcltr 1nd m hM frnl (Q (90) extortio11 plot, •IMI coll1bor1tes 'lrithl ID TM lit ,...., (C) (60) Scotland Y1rd ff track down 1n --1Wrt (60} undllfWOl1d 11n1. Ull 'Tmtlltt e Diel v .. °"9 (30) ~~~ : ~ Pl111111t m,... ..... (30) sltrs in .1t1n Ano111lh'1 dr•m• about (D Stir TM (C) (60) 1 man liltlo c:tllllllt """""* tlit @CIJ MIU ....... .(C) (10) Piil or ldlntity. fl!) WW• -(30) 81 ·-I -(C) (30) a ()) C11 -1<1 <30I QI-I-POI c:8 ._ (C) (60) jed; Whitt. l :IO D llNIC ,. ..... (t} (30) 01'91HNll• (C) (30) 18 Te Td a. Tnllll fC) (30) EE otfla 11 t111 rr111c1111t (30) @Ci) Hl11tlef-&rilltliy IC) (30) fD T1 "'-l"""9'1' (30) "Foun. tain Houst." A 'reh1bilit1tlon cen- ter tor ment1llr i11 1dult1, in the! He!!'1 Kitclltn aection of Htw York Citr, ii aplo11d. I jl(l)De ....... (30) EE Nftidn J4 (CJ 160) @D KMlll Ntn (C) (30) 7!CI 8 CIS Evtn in1 Ntws (C) (30) CJ Wlllt'1 My Lh11? (C) (30) m1 .... "" <'°' ID 1111. 11t a.ct IC) 1301 @E CMllldltJ/MdAl Flll'ld llD) @Ill-Wod \C) \l~ m....., (30) 0 Bob Hope Special with * Andy Williams • Anthony Newley • Elke Sommer I. Look All America Team O ®OO @DllHCIAIM ..... Sii" (C) (60) Andy Wlllitmt. All· thony Ntw1ey, Elk• Sotnmtr ind Uok M11sziM'1 Nl·Arntfk:I foot- ball hem l\llll Miiiie W lM Brown 11M1 His Bind Gt ltlflO'lll"ll O @CIJ !llT• -\Cl (60) Liu Mlnnelli, Pat Cooper, Fralllllit V1urt1111 11.1at. m bitnlltr• (30) s:JO a ...... cc> 13DJ 1ntw .,,,.,, OJ Ml Slid, Siii Slid (C) (30) Ul """ .,.... (SD) m•--\30I ID:tOQ@IIJ!J!DNo ._ (C) Qt CIJ Tmlt " Ct111111•Mt1 (C) (60) Georp Gobel, Gina lttllobria- fD TrH AlhllrM• (C) (30) id•. 0'10fl Wiiia, O..rlts lftllol m ntt l lrl IC) (30) Rtill~ Ind Tiit Golddlnws .,, Dt1n s 1uesb . om-1<1 (301 1 Roy Clark, who is 1nore interesting \vhen he is playing the guitar than when clo\vni.ng, and Buck Owens. who, has an interesting singing style, are lthe stars of the show. They are surrounded by a Jarge assortment of country-style comic and excel: lent country-western singers. including Hagga rd ~nd Tammy Wynette. .C..!:LU'.L..C.. ~[L.LJ.~ll L-"'~-''---....1.--''---"' I 7:JO 1J Cll (I) f1•ilr Aff•lr (C) (30) u Oil rn m n T••, n• (C) (60) "Tol ur• 1 Min." To uwt the lift fl hit d1!1, Al M1114J qr-. ta lure tilt SIA·s Mr. Jad ti I mMtln1 with 1 Rid "'' th!tl, JI. '9Ph r.otl111, Wilfiid Hyde.Whitt 11111 ChrlltiN Siftltra r-t, / The program has been called. imprecisely. a country-styl e "Laugh-I n'' -but it had what sound- ~d like an enthusiastic studio audience laughing at ~ts ol d old jokes. I ! TINY TIM and his l\·liss \r'icki v.·ere married. et\veen t\\'0 commercial breaks. during · the Jast alf hou r of the "Tonight Sh0\\1." It is doubtful that he ceremony will start a ne\\• fad or even sti1nulate return of "Bride and Groom ." The ceremony itself. in spite of 1.he advance xploitation and publicity. had a certain amount or dignity. But once it 'vas over. the couple \valked briskly a few feet to one side, into Johnny Carson's desk-and-sofa set. The bridegroom made a beeline for the seat or honor and mixed himself and h.is bride a glass of milk and honey. Then he read off a long list of plugs and credits covering everyth ing from hairdos to honeymoon facilit ies. 1 THE WHOLE proceeding seemed a\v k\vard and tnore like a stunt than a 'veddin~. Carson's usual pppreciative audience seemed subdued through the lvhole sho~· and the hou r of preliminary comedy on stage \Vas not as fast-mov ing as usual. Most puzzling aspect of the ceremony came as the couple repeated after the minister some' un - familiar vows. includi ng a pledge "not to be puffed µp ." Carson explained later th at the bride and b ridegroom themselves had done a little re,vriting pf the ceremony. Dennis il1e Met1ace I ·a l~ I l I ' STEVE ROPER By Sa~nders and Ove_!gard iiiii!iiii::~w~f~T~~~.~D~TO;S~TOP~"f'~c;.~.~!Y;;;~~ID~s.7•~H;,E"S~""1::;;:;~Tll~E~=====o:.::==:=:========::=~~~ ld1 Lup!no 1111kta 111 lnfr1q11tnt 1ctin1 app11r1nct 11 lldr 1111rch· wood, 1 we1lthr En1lbh widow ·~ offers her llllld to Mr. frtneh . Ann·I •It• Ctbot, a. dl•stltlr " Sf!.I 1Mlti1n C.bot. pilrl, • small role as 1 tlC:tttliy. 1HE LAO WA5 OM A DR:l.17 ~TR1P; HJM, BUT HE FtRST ONE l'VE SEElrl 'M-1() I O~F!CER!-COMES Oril Ol.JJl SHOP ZOOMED "'1GHT 7HOU6HT HE COULD FLY FOR ~ERVICE ... A~D ALL AT ONCE OVER TH£ WALL ! -·AFTE!il A SMOT ~-· J.iE YELLs :•rM A AOCKET!.oil~~~ PILOT.''" ···At-JD lifADS FOil iHE ROOF.' Mun AND JEFF SURE,l 'M R.ollN D .ANO a f:A,., BUT l 'M l-I APPY! • ''1"15 'THE SEASON TO ' ' ee JOI.LY-.,_ .-~o ~-::3/, " --= • • ·-:i.-. __..,,-.. ""' By Al Smith o 9 oo m' c111•a!IJ<:ll1A11J• 1111 Utt!• Dru•-a., (C) (30) An 1nim1ted cnusiCll 1!*1111 for the Chriatm1s season ftalurin1 1111 off.amer1 voices ef Grnr G1r10n, Jose Ferrer, Teddr Eccln Ind Th• Vltnnl Boys' Choir. fJ Dtlll! (C) (60) Tom Plttlr1oll. Leip F~ 1unt. l!l ""1 ·-\ID) mn.-... !ti c&o1 cRl 0 • ., .. stan cc> <30l Joi 10-.JO m Cristi111 ...... (30) Cam111111tl1, Y1ra Mil11, DIYid Htrt· n11n 1uest. 11:00118 D ID""" CC> o imrn mn.. '""' .. MrL on. • ......,. Meir (C) (30) "KGll: to the Ghost." ,,. Ml\. , .. 11 tit Wttl (C) C..pt•in GrtU Is C11rmore's houst· - aunt wti i1• ,1111 Cotti,. Is Nin1 m °""" Ultlb: ,.,.;,... I l!ilCIJ @ IIJlllJ()J-(C) 0 Mlllltll $ llltrir. ·~•· JiM" (dr1m1J '42 -ErrOI Flynn. CD m OJ .... (C) Alelis Sm!lh. )&ck Canon, Wtrd Bond, Al111 )hit. Story of. Jtmu ll;JO II Qt (I) Mtrf l riftill jC) J. Ccrbe1t's areer, lnelud1n1 1111 championship !lout with John L.I O ~ 00 m lilMI"' tenet IC) S11mw111. I O Merit: "lt•CU•'• .. ,ilMllt" m Trvtll tr Ct11~11111tt1 (C) j30) {1dvtntur1) '41-0itlt l'vtrttl, M1t· h Toren, Slephtn MeN1llr, Y111clllt OJ Jlldd fer ftlt Dtftll11 (C) (60) Priu. PB Techical "'-(30) J O @ Cf) al Th JteJ ~ m-.... \Cl (!o> ,,.. ,.,. 1<1 · eritie Ht! M1rilllftl1I looks 11 sev·i fJ ..,;r. fq .,.. ill ttM 1,., trll "*'• fl'M tht Los An11lu 1 n111llll kl" (dr111'11) '56-Grqory City Colltl' prodactlon of "A GIP' Pert, Jtnnifer lonet. Frtdric !11111:11. In Gt11trlttons.. Marill Pm11, l11 J. Cobb. IE Cll1cht ti II* (JO) m 1t1t¥1« -r11t c.,tiwt "-t9 .... ~ .... ~ c~ ... ~--~~~ ..... '-·• _..,&•1 .. ..._ _ ............. .__...;.;_..;;,. ___ ::;.,;:"':!;'C<';:;"'::;•":;:'~:J ---<;...:;.,o.-... ~"'""''*'_'_ ._~_-_--_T_~------------""'O:""::J I 1:00 IJ lft ()) JIM •llwl (C) (60) {drama) '47 -Mlcl111I lltdp' BUI llldforL GORDO MISS PEACH ~ o-i o' (,A ,. POOR U!J&J.E &0£00,f l(E1S P.JT [JP Wl'nt A ;.or FJ<O« ME All 7HE5E YE.AR.S f • 9Uil 'llOS, VCIU SROUQHT lf1D6RING YOU TD ME.11:> THIS THE DANCE! DANCE ... -· ·EJUT OTHElt Ti.<AN TMAT I CAME A~O NI§, DIDN"f l t By Gus Arriola By Men BiN 0.111 iunlt. 12:00 m MM: ~ (iu111t11tt) 'M C!I '1J (J) Im 116<!41 liAt _, -hth1ri11t ~r11, llotltrt YOVlll Cnl T.U-Acll• ltr tilt flrat Ti11111 (C) {60) Bin i Cmby ind Carol Bumttt pr1sMI 1 speelll m11-1:00 ti MtYle: "1ttt1t If Vilt CMil 1i<1I u lutt to tht Yule se1son tt l&h· Sff" (dt1mt) '$t-C!ilf kobtrtson, 1i11:httd bJ 1 Christmas pantomlmt D 0 Ktwa (C) st1r1d Jn 1 m1Jor Los An11\ts dt·' putmenl t1011. Julitt Prow't tnd 0 Ct11mu11ity llllltl1 ..... (C) Aoy Cl11': 1uest. ! (D C.untr1 Mnic Tillll (C) 0 Jtct l11111r (30) Buddy Adl11 I 11ld Vt n Johnson 1utsl. I 1:)(1 m All·Nidlt Shew: "foftle cf 1111· O Meet Mr1. Holllncer * on THAT GIRL tonicht MARLO THOMAS stars. ~R ID AY OA YTIME MOVIES S:ODQ"'TlMi c....-(drama) '45- Joseph Schi!<l~raut. BUiit llurt1. j t :JCI e ....... , •••• ill 1411"' (mmtdy) 'l 9 -Frid M11r:Murr1r, M1deltilll C.'1'011. Allan j(lf!U. culst," "lldl1111,'" "Ti1M: little IJltnd." ID "LIOlfff'ltlU ......... .... (drtrnt) '41-.loift font.al11t, Loub Jotrden. • Jl:OOO"Smllttn" (ceniedy) ·.a - JJcklt CooPf1, Bet!J Fle!d. 1:00 at °'Diiiy lltftJ'Ot" (IOl!lllltl drt- 1111) '47-Mn Cr1wford, O.rra a. drews. H1nry Fonda: 2:l0 G CCI "TM a... ii ..._ ....... (d.tlll'll) ·~1-11111 llutlll~ lllr:lllnl l 1an, Je1n 111111. 17 17 , I ... • • • . . • ·· S1'lddleh~ek EDITION N.Y. Stee~ ' . ,, .......... -· VO~. 62, NO. 302, 3 SECTIONS, « PAGES ORANGE eouNTY, t:A[IFORNI~ • i:. THURSDAY, DECEMBER '18, t969 TEN CENTS Laguna Can·cels Main Beach Hotel .Agreement B.!, RICHARJi P. NALL Of ,... 0.ltr l"llet Sl•fl Lagana Beach councilmen \Vednesday unanimously agreed to cancel their Main Beaeh hotel agreement with B u d Holscher & Asooclates and decide early next year what new tack to take. After a flurry of suggestioos and discussion on the best means to a hotel and conference facility lo help pay for the $.1 rnllllon Main Beach and revitalize the downtown, councilmen agreed to ew Bandits Hit await recommendations by ~1ayor Glenn Vedder Jan. 7. Tennlnat.ioo of the Holscher agreement ended a council hope of having the !inn put together and implement .a money- making hotel package for the city for $10,000. After spending $4,000 for an initial study, the city learned that feasib!Uty e:<perts considered the M percent Laguna occupancy rate coupled with high interest rates on financing was not sufficiently at· • I Dat1aage Due traclive to tempt smart hotel money, Councilman seemed generally agreed that they should invite proposals by hotel interests to develop a bote1<00ference facility on about 200 lineal feet of beach next to the H~ Laguna. rt seemed the coosensus also that the city Slould st.and ready to ·acquire the triangular propertyi bounded by Laguna Avenue, Coast ijighway and El Paseo U this would put over a financially at- tractive hotel package . • IC Home, Get M·ore Killer Surf $517 Loot To Hit Coastline A bandit trio arml'd with a .45 caliber automatic dr---' in at 1214 Fairywood Abnormal high tides and towering "l'~ breakers identical to those which rav~ Walk in Laguna Canyon Wednesday night ished the California coastline last week- and fled with a bagful of $517. end are on their way again today, Police said five men and a woman in whipped up by a storm 800 miles at, sea. the howle were forced by the robbers to The U.S. Weather Bureau warns that empty their pockets and lie face down on damage is to be expected. the floor while one of the Intruders, a "At the present time it is expected that · young woman,_coJlected the moDey in a lhe heavy surf will start early Friday, paper bag. _ reach a maximum on Saturday and Vlctin)s Wtr• Thomas. l\ll~n Efeµ, !I. de<:line by llwidaJ," -tht ·~ who llves at the Faii'y wood Walk address ment. ' and turned over $17, and a iuest, Daniel WJVtf'Pftlting in !OMt·• •"JS ftet, Mlcha~l Commerford , 20, of 2705 Via San-while averaging 8 to 11, feet are predl~ted to Tomas, San Clemente, who contributed from the storm now off the Oregon coast, the remaining $500. The other tpiests had the fourth such weather froat to' hit no money, police said. beaches so far this month. Two men and a woman burst into the Maximum damage will occur durin& house when Michael Gray, of 212 N. the ttighesl tides, occurring at 5:54 a.m. Coast Highway answe red their knock on Friday and 6:30 a.m. Saturday , accord· the door, the victi~ told police. ing to wea ther forecasters. One of the men pulled the gun and an· "This siege of very heavy surf and nounced, "Everybody back inside -this above-normal high tides is expected to be is a ;·ip-off!" He added that he had been very s.lmilar to last weekend 's heavy the victim of a "rip-off" (robbery) the battering," said a weather bureau night before and the robber had "walked spokesman . back Jn this direction." "Low-lying beach areas will face about The victims complied with his order to the same flooding potential as during fhe Jie on the floor while the girl picked up last several periods of heavy surf,'' he their money. added. He then herded them into the bathroom The same combination las t week cost and said. "If you turn the door knob I'll four lives, including those of a Whittier put a hole in you!" They emerged after man . dumped from a capsil.ing boat off hearing a car drive away, police said. Hunungton l\each and a Stanton barge The man with gun was described as 21 "worker lost near Oxnard. to 23 years old , 5 feet 10. 16S pounds, wif He~vy. flooding also struck Seal Beach, black hair and mustache and wearing Surfside, Sunset Beach and spota on the brown coat and da rk pants. B~lboa Peninsula and Bal~a Isla~. With hlrr, was a girl 20 to 23 years old, with some homes and businesses ttill fi feet 9 150 pound s with bleached blonde protected by sandbags. hair, ~ore a su~e coat and black High ti~es pu shing moderately tall sweat<!r and capris, the victims said . wa.ves spilled lf\rer the crest of Bolsa The second men, they said, stood by Chica State Jteach .today, but there was the door and did not spea k during the no flooding of ·Pactflc Coast H!ghway. robbery. He was described as 20 to 22. 5 Damage from last wee kend s storm feet 10, 150 pounds, wilh reddish blonde hair and freckles, wearing a green OFFICIAL CAVGHT fatigue jackel and lighl brown pants. Burtons in New York NEW YORK CAP) -Richard Burton and Eliza beth Taylor have flown in !tom Geneva for their first visit to the United States in a year. They told reporters at Kennedy Air· port Wednesday they would stay a while in New York before going on to Hawaii to visit f\tiss Taylor's brother Howard. ON OWN LEASH UTICA, N.Y. CAP J-A city councilman who wrote Utica's present dog leash law and fought for its passage found out Wed- nesday how well it works. Democratic CoullCilman Anthony Gar- rone forfeited $5 in City Court on a sum· mons fro m the city humane officer. The city charged that Garone's dog was found on property other than his own. surf and tides caused more than $1 mil- lion damage to 'the new Mandalay Beach community at Oxnard, despite emer· gency barricading by Navy Seabees and citizens. Park Aveniw ' t I ..... ... • ft·Y ~ t (i•i i'J.~, Abandmiment Under Study Abandonment of the one·way segment of Park Avenue was commenced Wednes- day night by Laguna Beach councilmen aS" one of several steps toward expansion of the county branch library. Councilmen set a March 4 public hear· fng on the action which -everything being on schedule -should be the day follqwing county purchase of a triangle across Park Avenue from the existing library. The city plunked down $5,000 in escro1v with the QWners ol the parcel, James Schmitz and Richard Burt. They are sc-11· ing it for $80,000. Escrow closing date is Feb. t. City Manager James D. Wheaton £aid because ol.· the time schedule in the com- plicated city<00nty process he has asked Burt and Schmitz to extend the escrow closing date but received no reply yet- The balance of the $80,000 is due Feb. I. "The whole process depends on the willingness of Mr. Burt and Mr. Schmitz to extend the date or cancel escrow 11nd enter an agreement with the county," said the city manager. Asked Cooncilman Roy Holm, "lf they are unwilling to do it, do we have enough working capital to buy it oorselvcs?" Wheaton said the funds could be scraped together proba bly. Mayor Glenn Vedder announced a ten- tative itinerary of library steps: -J1n. 7 the city woukf take necessary action on county documents. -Jan. 20 the board of supervisors would declare its intention to purchase Ihe triangle. -April 1 to IO the county auditor would issue a check to pUrchase the triangle. Beach Curb Study Asked ' County Eyes Santa Barbara J,aiad Controls A study on protective controls over private development or public beach fi nds -patterned on Santa Barbara's method -has been held for further study ordered by the Orange County Board of supervisors. .. Stuart Bailey, assistant coonly planni ng director, reviewed the analysis of the Soulia Barbara CAunty Beacb Develop. mcnt District before supervisors Wednes-day. ., The ·same principle should be applied here, he said. SOpervisors llsttned to Bllley!s report and requested more study by.lhe.~e County Planning €ommia10n, w I fh another ' report lit their ' February . meeting. The arta Involved in the Orange County 1tudy lies between Newport Beach and San Cltmcme. lh• largest stretch of county-controlled beach property on the local coastline. ' "Almost all the 1bortllnes btlWffn Newport Buch and Seal Beacll lie within cily boundaries," Bailey uplalns ln bis report. Certain controls already e1.ist under the collflty's B·I Buffer District, but. only on roads, parking facilities, landscape. plan- ting, non-view blocking mesh fences, agricultural crops and product sale stand.I. Permanent buUdings, with the es:- ttption or restrooms provided at recrea· lion 1ll(eas, are not covered by Ult buffer dlStrlct, Bailey's rtport txplalns. The beach development district under consideration would apply to commtrclal and residential areas that are already io the works for the !Ottth counl y shoN!:Llne. Santi Barbara's dtvtlopmtrit di.Stria ii . t dftiped IO preserve and protect beaches and-bluffs from damage due to effecb of storms and erosion on manmade altera- Uons ol lhe,landscape. Stlppqe aod earth slides plaguing the Pabl Verdes P.tninsula area are a prime exam~ of the potential problems the district would intend to control. "The Santa Barbara Beach Develop- ment District 11 .•. an area lying between a line one mUe seaward, parallel to the mean hlgh tide line and a beach IM!lback line," Bailey's re~ statet~ ''Within this dl!iliict', "'11Y btacl>-· recreaUonal activities ·and their ac· ctmry structures are permitted." It.~ tlnues. County authorities miibt achieve the same effecu: through careful JOfM1 changes or toning law amendmhlts;- lS.. STUDY, Pqo II The question of degree that the city should plan Main Beach Park and Hotel use before calling for development pro- po.sals remained an open one. Merrill Johnson, owner of the Surf and Sand Hotel, urged the city to spell out at least Its financial reciuirements for poten- tial hotel enlreprenWrs. Johnson estimated that a facility of 175 to 200 rooms might generate $60.000 to $G5.000 annually in additional sales and bed tax revenue. · .. \\ Referring lo the prlce lhe"city paid for the t.1aln Beach land -which Johnson said had been too much -the hotel owner said, "You're goin& to have to do some good trading or good leasing. "You're going to have to get a return (from leasing) <A. 8 to 10 percent and ·you should tell the developer that in the lieginning. Tell them 'here is the price we f!eed.' Come up with a figure you (the ci- ly) can live with." Loren Haneline, hotel owner,.s<iid the ' TINY TIM, 37, CUDDtES WITH BRIDE, MISS VICKI, 17 Charles Dickens Has Nothing On Thia Charactt.r Tiptoes to Alt~r Tiny, Vicki Won't Get 'Puffed Up' NEW YORK (UPI) -Tiny Tim and his teen·age bride were off today on a honey- moon that will introduce them to the rigors or a seri es of marriage vows that included being "not puffed up." The sweet singer of fal setto notes wrote practically the entire service himself - partcularly the connubial vows -he disclosed after the ceremony on the NBC "Tonight" show Wednesday night. The service, read by the Rev. William Glcnesk, a New York Presbyterian minister, started with tbt groom rtpeating his real name after the pastor: "I, Herbert Buckingham Khaury, being of sound mind ... " At a news conference afterwards, the long·tressed singer, rolling his eyes so that heaven seemed to be peeking through them, said : "l put in 'being of sound mind' so everybody will know I know what I am doing." And as for getting married on television being a bit eccentric: "It doesn't tnatter where you're married - on te:levlsk>n or on the sea -IS long Ill! you keep the marriage laws." Tiny Tim 11 not 1n jlct. He Is for real. And after the ceremony hls father·in·law, Allan Budinger, a H&ddonneld , N.J. art- supply dealer,•said: 0 His best feature is ' sll>Cttlly -but 1 don'l 1hlnlc II'• •P- preciated." JotirmY ~aon .. star of ~'Tonight," on . whldl''liny lellped lo• fame In 18 llngular appearances as a singer in a year and " · half, wu among the notables who at· . tended a post-wedding recepUon for Khaury ind his bride, Victoria P.1ay 8udlngtrJ , 17. Cary Grant was amona thOM who' dropped tn. On 1lll .,,., all« lhe cmmony, tho wedded couple drank milk laced wlth honey while Lile other guests drank cham. pagne. "This, you know, is the good Lord's food," Tiny said, explaining he had given up alcohol since he met "Miss Vicki." Pottery Shack Holiday Winner The colorful Pottery Shack, 1112 S. Coast Highway, ls overall winner ln the business division or Laguno Beach's 1969 Christmas Decoration Contest. Judges also voted a special award for the City Hall decorations, 505 Forest Ave., the spon&0ring J!Jnior Chamber of Commerce announced today. Awards ~·ere made in three separate areas of the community and I.he following winners will rttclve trophies for their er. forts: Nonh Lap .. : Best Building -Gallery Row (group effort) 300 block, North Coast Highway; Best Window ._ TWin Cannon.. AnUques, 1088 N. Coast Highway. . . Central Llpna: Btst BuUdlJlg, -Ship Ahoy, l80 S. Coast, Highway ; .~It Win- d"'! ~ Eochbaco·1, Z30 Broa<\way .... S..lh Lagun•: Bell Bulldlng - Monarch Bay .Pl aza (groop errort) s . Coast Highway, Laguna Niguel; Best W.lfldow -Rus! H1nd Jewelry, 1273 S. Co3!t Hlghw•Y· Judging of r~ldentlal decorations in the t~r,ce areas Is under way and will be co.ncluded Sunday nt&llt. acco~tna lo Jaycee presl dfnt Mike May. city would need to rtttive seven percent of the land's market value per year in a lease arrangtment. He·said he thought tho only ~ bid- ders for a hotel development would be the Hotel Laguna or the owners Of the triangular property « possibly the two working in concert. . Managemen~ of the llotel Laguna has made a general proposal for es:pan.sion (See MAIN BEACH, P ... II 50-mile Seep Moves Southward SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An on slick covering 50 square miles of the Pacifk: drifted slowly aouthward today after a new leak developed from an offshore drilling rig in the Santa Barbara Channel, see~ of a massive oil slick early this yfar. The fresh 1eepage, detected Wed- nesday .. spurted between·f,000 and 1,000 gaUona of oil from a weld in an undenea I al 1lie same IJnicin Oji Co. _,,,.__ p ,!" , " " . P..,.-~ wnere the dlaUtrotis blowout started lea Jan. 28. 'l'hol llick, ~ over· l,lllll 11quan miles ol lhe. Pactl!c: In u da71. 1*Ji•...t. buc:hts In -·Barbaro 'COoaly and •mlrcbed the SoUtbOtn• Clllllornla cout fol miles north and.aouth. At last report, th~ Mw teai'drop..shaped slick was five miles <A.f Ventura County coastal communities as oil company crews worked to skim It up before it could reach' beach areas. The seepage was discoVered by a com- merc ial fishennan's spotter plane and confirmed by a U.S. Geological Survey inspector. Union Oil divers told the Coast Guard there was an eight.Inch split Wt a pipe carrying crude oil from the platform to Union's Rincon plant in Ventura County. Officials imn1'!dialely lliOpped lhe flow In the pipe and said It would take about JI hours to repair the break. Floating booms were placed around the. stick and skimmer boat. be1an pumping the crude from the surface of the tea. NEW YORK (AP) -Slocks contlnu..t to gain today on the heels ol tight·mOney relltarks by Federal Reserve Board nom~ iriee Arthur Burns:. (See quotatklnl, Pages 34-35). ;, Bums. appearing before tho S<naie Banking Committee, said, "In normal circumstances, I would · think'-the time has come for some euing ol monetary conditions." • Orange Weadier _, It's still going to bt hard to identify the sun .Friday, wilh local 108 In the morning houri followed by hazy sunshine. Coastal temper- atures are peued at 15, sll&btly higher inland. INSIDE TODA '1i The BrllUh 0gutrrllla fiahl<r $tnt to Vietnam b11 Prerident NUon ao;is Saigon b noto 1<1Jer· for a nlghtU1)1t atrotl than· \Vaslilngton. TM 1Coru ii on PaQt 21, I l • I DAl\'I l'ILOT l l)rug Ring 1 Chief Sent To Prison A 1..a"'11& Belch man "''ho W&$ describ-t~ dur111g his Superior Coun trial 11 ?king the maslennlnd of a widespread cf.ug selling ring is today on his way to mte prison and a one to five year ~ntence. · Arthur Slasney, 37, o( 688 Anita St., drew that Jail term Wednesday from Jodge. Byron K. McMillan immediately after a Superior Court jury ended a three-day trial with a short recess and a guilty vetdlct. SLa.sney asked that he be immtdiately 5enlenctd on charges of selling dangerous dNgs. lt took Judge McMillan less than a minute to comply with the request. He also sentenced three other Laguna Beach men who were arrested with Slallney last Sept. 22 In th< parking lot of a shopping complex south or the Laguna city limit& and who were indicted on iden- tical charges by the Orange County Grand Jury. But he suspended for five years the Identical jail terms handed to Kent Kelvin Kelley, 20, of 625 Sea View St., Mark John Simmons, 19, of 789 Park Ave. and John Pastorello, 19, of 10910 Amery, South Laguna. Sla!ney's three co.defen- (lantg were placed on probaUon for the term of that suspen sion. TesUmony offered by the Uiree men against Stasney was borne ln mind by Judge McMillan when he suspended their one to five year sentences. Arrest of t.he four men followed pr~ longed invesUgaUon ol their drug selling activities by Lagwia Beach po lice, the Los Angeles County sheriff's office and Downey police. Among drugs seized at the time of their arrest was a one pound bundle of LSD valued by investigators as being worth $135,000 on the underworld market. Detectives purchased LSD valued by them at $12,000 from the four men iffi.. mediately.priot to the arrest. Oemente Council ' Won't OK Sign Reversing • recommendation of the planning commission, San Clemente city councilmen Wednesdaf. night refu!(ed to approve three proposed high-rise signs to identify a new shopping. center at Camino de Estrella and the Sin Diego' Freeway. 1be signs were denied in the wake ot protests lrom property ownen who ap- pearod In p<rl01I and signed ' pe4~""' complaining that. tbdr Yiew from Harbor Estates would be Impaired and property \'aiues '°we('ed. Pmnisslble he181>t ol sucti olgns wO<lld be 15 feel In mlor lo pemilt developon of the shopptni center to lllstall signs visible from the freeway, planning com- missioners had recommended allowing a height of 30, 50 and 70 !eet !or the new signs. The 20-acre center, a project of Wagner Development Co. of Los Angeles will in· elude a 100,000-square-foot W. T. Grant Store, a supennarket, bank and several other businesses, wltfl parking for 600 cars. Police Checking Fingerprints Laguna Beach police are checking fingerprints left by would-be burglars In an apparent attempt to enter the Boat Canyon Post Office substation TUesday Dighl The substaUon Is located Jn the Boal Canyon Baiaar, 624 N. Coast Highway, vthere six glass louvers were removed from a door, and a screen pushed ln dur- ing the attempted break-in. Police said a screwdriver wu u,ed to remove the louvers but the intruder ap- parently had abandoned his task because the door remained bolted from the inside and nothing was missing from the in· terior. DAILY PILOT OltAHGE COit.IT"f'UlllSHING tOMPAWY Jl elltrl N. Wtlfl f'•n141..it tl'lll P'llltlhl'IH J,c~ JI. c ... ,1.y V1(t Prnldtn! .... 0-tl M-.ef' The"''' IC1t•il Editor n.e..,11 A. Mu11hi11t Mtlltllril l:dtlor ftl,~trd '-Nill L•IUM IHdl City IEdlter L..tn • ..... O f'ftc:1 222 Fe111! A•t ftW• Mtlliftg Adclr1111 P.O. l or 661, •26$2 0ttiw Offlc.M (' .. le MN~ llO WH! 111 StrHI """°" ln<fl1 nn ""'"' t11bait hvlfn,. .. \lfll"'vlf<l'I IHdl; 1111J llMll 1 )114•1•• DAll.Y f'1l0T, Wl!1< ... k!I Jo cOf'IOIMll! .... ""-"..-. ...... 'ltfl!' dtll\I' "'''' "~ ... , lio -·" .. u-... ,.. ~ ''"'"· .. ..,..., .. ~. C..• Mew. """'""'16'1; k>CfO Mii f'-Ulfl Yfllor1, t'9/lf wlltl ,... "' ..... ' ............ Ot' .... (NII l'\11>1111> .... (""""' ........... l'itftll f 'f ti :1111 WH, .... , •1'1'11.. ~ lf;Cll. '"" QI Wftl hr Jtntl, c-i. Mft.I. TllQf•••• fTI 4) 494·t4~ C ....... IM tfipt. MJ.-4111 CWlfM, INt. ~ C..111 l'llM!~ C-"111-... -110rtn. lnu1lr•!-. .. 11 ... 111 _.,.,. .. '""'"ltcmJfo!t ....... ,i.y .... ~ "'"""""' .,.Ciel "'" "'1Mlt1 .,_ *"7111'11 ·-· ,_..,. c::llu ,..._.., ,..,. ., '+••,..., ••Ml' '"" Ca•• ~ (tlller1<1to. koOK•ltl .., ey c •nlw U 01 ,.,111111 h>I" mill U.)6 "*""'11 ...,..ii.,, '"'""' ... A.Cit -·~·f, • • ri: , ~ ~ 1 , ir;; , ~~·[',"':'.rt '"'";'.:"".r.;,_,o,,.,,,, <~.:O> ":.l"' "'""·-" s"''"·'"' _,_,.,.,., .,.,,..,-•<'.:"":',"'' ,.,..,.,,.,,.,.,,., "'""'' _,,,,F..,..O'Tt••-••>"''"''"•:0''""""''"'"'""• _,. .. .,,_..,., ,, __ u,,1-••-----~·--•--,,.,..---.---.. -. -~ ~ .... -,. Opposition Due Planned Tracts Up for .·A~ti6n · ... o( ~ area5 to assume the cost of upgrading existing sewers w h i l~ h presenlly are adequate for their. need~.·· he maintains. lle,\itai.d that greenbelt~ ahc?wn In ~ planned re51dential develOpmeat ire all t ither cut slopes or steep arroyos unsuitable for sports or play and designated greenbelt because lhey arc useless for other purposes. ~ OAll.Y jttllOT lllK f'~ll9 He has suggested additionally that the developers should be required to furn ish and maintain a bond covering any lolls or damages caused by grading operaUons or their failure (hillslde slippage). DEVELOPER GUMBINER (LEFT ), ARCHITECT OSTRANDER STUDY HILLSIDE PLANS Trying to T•k• the High Ground Under tht Guns of Neighborhood Opposition Council OKs Separating Plan, Building Offices From Page l MAIN BEACH •. onto city land but has not talked tenns as yet. Viet Mayor Joseph o ·sulllvan sug- gested alJowing 120 dayJ for other hotel interests to bring in proposals. Councilmen Richard Goldberg and Charltcn Boyd suggested formation of a committee. lt could, said Goldber$t', spell out the facts, nectsslUes and ordlnanee requirements for potent111:l rleveloper!!. "1 do think with a development of this magnitude." said Goldberg, "that we ctr· tainly could wait until February ar ~i::irch." Boyd said he ft.It essentltllly tht same Ix-cause of the complexity and e1- treme lmJ)Ortance ol the matter. fl.1atk Gumblntr, chairman or tl\e Citizens Advisory Committee (CACl. presented a CA.C !Statement on ~1aln Beach Park development. It rtc0mmended c:ondcmnation of t~ triangular property by tbe state to stralghteri Coast HIR)tway with the city having nnt right of public purchase of the e~ceu bnds. An altem.aUvt "'as condemnation by the city in ~ht or an acceptable prh•11:tl'.! dcvelo?fl'ltn{ plan, the reimbursement to tome Crom the plan. "Two Important goals of the com· munity rtlatJng to the Main Beach are that any hole.I development there be • tc0nomJcaUy practical and estheUcaTiy appropriate," said the report . Jt stated that effective and imag\nallve development of the fl.fain Beach Park will add significant revenues to the .city as v.·ell as providing necessary impetm to rl'vit.alize the downtown basi n. Gumblner said the value of the city's land would depend on just how much the tily would allow le be built on It. "We're not concerned about height and density, we're ronce.rned about OOw it looks and ·where it is (located)," he said. Eiclunann Aide Gets Nine-year Sentence VIENNA (A.P l -Franz Novak, 1 former SS Elite Gu1rd captain and wartime aide or Adolf Eichmann WIJ senl.Cnced today to nine years Im· prlsonment ror his role as traru:portaUon chief in mass e1t.trmlnations of £uropean JI!:""''· Jt \\'IS the third time: Novak. 5$, hAd been tried. ln the first trial, in 1964, he \vas sentenced to an tight-year prison term , but the verdlci. wu thrown out by lhft Supl'f!mt: COUrt on appell In 1986, lho second trial ended with a hun1 jury. Battin Supports Building Curbs To Figlit Smog By JACK BROBACK Ot 1111 0-11)' Plltt stiff Planniiig Commiaslon chairman Fred Briggs said al an earlier session that he favored the idea of a pl~ed conµnunit y. However, Briggs said he felt it ad· visable to require more than 6,000 square feet for each unit. lt had been estimated that 30 percent of the terrain in question is unbuildable. "We mighl even want to require 10 or 15,000," Briggs said. Mike Easely, assistant cily planner, said today the commission may decide to defer action on the proposal until the general plan's completion. It will, he said , likely have s pecific reco1n- mendati oiµ on the problem! of Laguna hillside dev~lopment. Parking Officers Give 'Greetings' To Motorists Ch~istmas Suggestions from Garrett's by Heritage I I I I I I , • , -from Htrilage ----~-.... -.. _ ..... __ _ -·--__ ,.__ _ .. _ _ ... __ -~---_, .. _ .... _ ----' ... __ _ -----__ ..,,,... .... .._., -·- I PROFESSIONAL 22 15 HARBOR !l VD. L:2~:~~:_ ______ :::::2~:~~J • • I 17 17 'T I -~-------..-------~ ---~-----. . . ·-----·-·· ·-···----.. -....-• --~--· • . . I Nef¥Port Barhor --; ' . EDITIO N N.Y. Steeb , • • f VO L 62, NO. 302, J SECTIONS, 44 PAGES ORANGE .CO ONTY, CAt lFORNIA tHURSDAY, DECEM BE~ 18, '1969 TEN CENTS High Tide s, Surf Headed For Coa st . '1 ' Abnormal high tides and toweringr breakers 'identical ·to those which -tav- ~shed the California coastline last week- end are on their way again today, whipped up by a storm 800 miles at sea. - The U.S. Weather Bureau warns that ttamage is to ~ expected. ';At th e present time it is expected lhat the heavy surf will start early Friday, reach a maximum on Sa turday and decline by Sunday," says I.he announce- ment. Waves peaking in some sets at 15 feet, while averaging 8 to 10 feet are predicted from the storm now off the Oregon coast, Ule fourth sucti weather front to hit beaches sa far. this month. Maximum damage will occur during the highest tides. occurring at 5:54 a.m. Friday and 6:30 a.m. Saturday, accord- ing to weather forecasters. · "This siege of very heavy surf and above-normal high tides is expected to be very similar to last' weekend 's heavy batt.ering," said it weather bureau spokesman. "Low·lying beach areas will face about the same flooding potential as during the last several periods of heavy surf," he added. The same combination last v.•eek cost four lives, including those of a Whittier man dumpe<j. from a capsizing boat off Huntington Beach and a Stanton barge worker lost near Oxnard. Hea vy flooiting also struck Seal Beach, Surfside, Sunset Beach and spots on the Balboa Peninsula and Balboa Island. with some homes and businesses still protected by sandbags. High tides pushing mod erately tall waves spilled over the crest of Bolsa Chica State Beach today, but there was II? flooding of Pacific . Coast Highway. Damage· fropl last weekend's storrn anrf and'·\Jdes caased more than $1 mil· lion damage to the new Mandajay Beach community at Oxnard, d~pite emer- 1ency barricadiDa: by Navy ·Sea bees And citizens. Hoag Appeals For Blood Donors It happens every holiday season. Emerge11cy blood supplies in Orange County run low. For that reason, said Hoag Memorial Hospital spokesmen today, a ·Red Cross bloodmobile will visit the hospital from 2:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday. "It's an emergency situation," said Pat ZebaJ, Hoag public relations director. "Every December the normal blood sup- ply dwindles because people are too busy shopping or otherwise involved with holi- day activities to take time to dbnate blood." Edward Colburn, manager or the Orange County chapter of the Red Cross, eaid the Blood Bank serves the needs or 23 hospitals throughout the eounty. Traf- fic accide'Ots during the holidays in- . tensifies the need, he added. Mrs. ZebaJ said no appointments are needed to donate blood . The Red Cross un it will be located in Hoag's ainference Center. · Slick Heads South ' New Leak. Spru'f!g :off Santa Barbara . .,, ' SANTA BARBARA (AP) -An oil slick covering 50 square miles of the Pacific drifted slowly southward today after a new leak de veloped from an offshore drilling rig in the Santa Barbara Chiniitl. scene of a massive oil slick early this year: ' The fresh seepage, detected Wed- nasday, ·spurted between &,000 and 9,000 gallons of oil from a \\1eld in In undersea pipe at the same Union Oir Co. platform where the disastrous blowout started last Jan. 28. Man in Key Court Ruling B~~\in Jail ·~~'Santa Ana man who won a U.S. ~ ~ Supre.me Court decision which drasUcally ~ ~ changed the rul~ of police search and .. seiz.ure known as the Chimel Decision is baCl< injail ~ay. · DAILY P11.DT I'll.,. bY tlltkll1rd ~o.lli.r Reflecting on Christmas \Vith .colored lights in their rigging, boats moored at Ardell 's l\ilarina in Newport Harbor offer nautical salute to Christmas season. Dec· orated yachts are familiar sight to motorists passing marina on Pac- ific Coast Hig)lway. " ' Girls l(ept From Sch-ool, Spark Search for Drugs By THOMAS FORTUNE Of lltt D1ily P!lol Sl1H Two Costa Mesa fa thers have pulled their 13-year·old daughters out of Maude Davis lntermecllate School afler finding out the girls. had taken LSD and other drugs allegedly obtained · at the school. Davis Principal Werner Carlson said he has beglin an investigation and opened the lockers of Ulree implicated students in their presence without lurning up any drugs. The fathers believe strongly lhal their daugh ters are better off getting no ed- ucation for awhile than being exposed to what they claim is widespread drug lraf· fie at the school. Acting on information supplied by the girls, Costa Mesa police Wednesday night made four arrest~. One 13-year-old Davis girl was arrested for lack of par- ental cootrol, a 16-year-old Costa Mesa High boy on the same charge, a IS.year· old Costa 1\-Tesa High boy on possession of marijuana, and an 18-year-old boy on possession of dangerous . drugs. All ar- rests were at the youths' home s. "A few weeks of school is just not thal in1portant,'' said one fa ther. "I'd rather have my daughters safe at home than have them become vegetables." He also removed a 14-year-o\d daughter and a 16-year-old son from Costa f\.1esa lligh School until the drug situation he claims exist there is cleaned up." The other father sai d today, "It isn't just a small group of kids at Davis. The more we have delved into it, there may be 100 if not 200 involved." Principal Carlson said he talked to the daughter and "the young lady stated 15 to 2() students are involved in drug activ- ity, not the larger number.'' Superintendent of the Newport-~1esa School Dis trict Willia1n Cunningham ccmmented. "You know. I think before a person makes these kinds of allegations to a newspaper he should be able to doc- ument his case in some specifics. He gave us the names of some students and there (See FATHERS, Page 2) Ted Steven Chime! of 3310 W. Chestnut s.t. •.. Santa Ana; was arres~· by poliCe from ~even' dlffer~pt jurisdiclipns early this morning on oharges of •receiving stolen property. District Attorney 's Jnvestiga'.tors and detectives i.lso arrested an alleged ac- corriplice in the case in Fountain Vailey at about the same Ume. Ace Terry McCarter, 33, of 10055 La Quinta SL. Fountain Valley, was a;rested at about the same time and boolted on similar charges of receiving stolen pro- perty. Investigators said they seiied stamps and rare coins allegedly stolen in burglal'ils. Both "men were btld under heavy bail. One investigator said Chbn,r1. ball was $62,000. \Vhat spfrkechlhe lnv~tigation, they said, was · suspicion that there. were stamps taken ib A ··recent burglary in Chlmel's home. Officers armed with search and arrest warrants arrested b6lh men shortly afte r J a.m. Both were being held at orange County Jail today . Elks to Provide Baskets to Needy Newport Beach Elks will assemble nearly 100 Christmas gift baskets for the area's needy families Christmas Eve at the lodge. The baskets, containing food staples and a few luxuries for Christmas dinner for a family o{ five, will also include l'resents for the children in the needy famille5. runds for the annual gifts come from the United Fund and contributions by in- dividual Elks . It will be the 21st year .that the mem· bers of Lodge 1767 have participated in the holiday basket campaign. Donations of candy were recei ved from the Newport Beach and Costa Mesa , po- lice departmenl3. Toys were donated by a major discount department store and a national toy manufacturer. Stof'k Merket NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks continued to gain tOOay on the heels of tight•money remar~ by FederaJ Reaerve Board nom· inee Arthur Bums. (See quotations, Pages 34-35). I . Thlit slick spio~ad ' over 1,800 square miles of lhe Pacific}n 11 days, blackened beaches in santa Barbara C~ty and smin::hed the Soutbetn Californi w coi.st tor miles north and south.· At last report, the new teardrop-shaped slick wa.s five rti)les ol.f Ventura County coastal communities as ' oil company crews wo rked to skim it ·up before it could reach beach areas. The seepage was discovered by a com· mer~ial fisherman'.s spotter plane and ~1rmed by a U.S. Geological Survey inspector. U,Uon Oil divers told the Coast Guard there was an eight·irich sj;lit in a pipe carrying crude otJ from the' platform to ~niWl's Rincon plant in Venturf; County. Officia ls immediateJy stopped the flow In the pipe and said it would take about 36 hours to repair the break. Floating booms were placed around the slick and skimmer boats began pumping the crude from the surface of the au. Voters Get Data On Club's Lease By J EROME F. COLLINS Of lfll Dally l'li.t !I.., _ What are the m~jor dlff~ences be- tween the Balboa . Bay Club 1 existiOg lease of city-owned bayfront property and the proposed amended lease? City AttomeY. Tully Seymour sum- marized them tOday, at the direction of the City Council. He g'ave no opinions and his analysis was not read by any council member before it was sent to the printers, according to City Clerk Laura Lagios. ~ Some 25,000 city voters -Will be mailed copies of Seymour's findings. prior to the Jan. 13 special elecl.{on on Ult amend· eel lease proposition. The ma:illng will be included with the standard ballot in- formation, said Mrs. Lagios. Councilmen two weeks ago unanimous- ly authorized Seymour. to ~Plfei tPt a~al1. , ~ng t!itH . •oti .. · 111l'l!'!•I we?e Ro1>ert Shelton "and PBul ' J. Ghi-· ~r. who.are publicly opposed to the. pro- posed lease extension. Real B.eard Helps This Santa Make Success of Role Most men known as Santa Claus this season have one basic frailty-the beard on their face ·which can destroy a child'! dream with one tug or a tiny band. Bui Santa, who appeared for 30 young- sters most in need of drei ms this week on -~lboa Island, had no problem what- soever. His beard was real. And the squealina: children from the Orange County Society for Crippled C~ildrf!n and Adults could yank it all they wanted. The appearance by· the jolly fat man, played this year by Les lngledue from the South Coast Repe rtory Theater, was part of the Village Inn restaurant 's annual party for the crippled· children, and true to form, it was a success. Other merilbers of the theater group served as santa's helpers and carolert at the spirited event. The Inn's customers, following tradl· ti on, brought gifts for the 30 youngsters, who were bused to the party in a chartel- coach hired by Mrs. Frank Usedom, pro- prietor of the Testaurant. Caroling and refreshments, along with a pre~hristmas dinner also was a part ot the late afternoon party. · Mrs. Usedom said gifts left over from the party were given to children whoae handicap kept them from attendina:. Here are Seymour 's principal conclu· sions : -"Term: The existing lease has 28 years remaining and wiU terminate on A_ugust 31, 1998. The am~ed I e a s.e would extend the term to a total of 55 years, commencing in 1970." -uuse of Property: Under both the existing and amended lease the property may be used for any purpose permitted under the applicable zoning regulations. The present zoning on the entire Bay Clu~ sit~ is R-4 which permits primarily res1dent1al-lype uses; it also allows pro- fessional offices, restaurants and on-sale liquor establishments. Maximum height limit is 50 feet." ~Rental: T.he minimum rental under the existing lease is $45,000 per year. Under the amended lease. the minimum WO\lld ~ increued to ·tti0,000 per year. Furthennore, the amended · lease pro- vides that during the period from 1970 to 198o the minlnium annual rental is sub- ~ to readj~bnent every five years in accordance with the Consumer Price Intle1. "The ~tqe rents! •hich la pay- abJe only to the extent thB.t it el'Ceeds the minimum rental is based on the following formula in the present lease: 5 percent of a:ross r~eJpts up to f130,000; 4 percent in excess or f150,000; J per- cent in excess of $1 million. ·"Under the amended lease, this for- mula would remain unchana:ed until Oct. I. 1990, Wih the eicception that the city. \vould reecive 6~ percent of the gross receipts in excess of $3.5 million. The amended lease provides that be~nning Oct. t, 1990, the city will receive 6~ percent of all gross receipts." -"Renegotiation of Minimum and Percent.age Rental: In 1990 and at 10 year intervals thereafter during the re- maining term of the lease, the amended lease provides for renegotiation of both minimum and percentage rentals based upon professional appraisals of the rental value of the property. The exlstin,r lease- contains no provision for renegotiation." -"Arclrlteel)aral Control: Under terms of the amended lease, approval of archi· tectural design and location of new buildings, and mapor alteraUons or addi· tions to existing buildings wh.icti affect !he exterior appearances of the buildings 1s reserved to the City Council. There is no provision for architectural control under the existing lease." City councllmen asked Seymour to (See BAY CLUB, Pap I) Orange Weather Floating Tree Parade Set for Friday Launch Ifs still going to be hard to Identify the sun Friday1 with local fog in the mornina: hours 'followed by hazy sunshine. Coastal temper· atures are pegged at 65, sliahtly higher inland. " INSWE TODAY . . The British gueriilla fighter sent to Vietnam by P.re.sident Nixon saya Saig<m is now 1a/er for a nighttime 1troll than Washington, T"e &tory i& on Page 27. ~TlN G. C.H<l,\!>"t"M f\? TRt::c .,,..,I> ~l')"T" ~f'Rl'I O~ :i>e::.-I? -;1..'3 • ' ' .. • Chnstm .. lights and otber Yule decor, Including plasUc Santa, are being In- stalled on vessels all over Newport HSTbor ·IA)day in preparation for tfii !Ith annu'll Floating Christmas Tree and Bott Parade. The proca~on stari. Friday at 6:30 p.m. al the· ftrrf landing on Balboa Island. Each night· after that through Tuesday, Dec. 23, the paradt of an estimated 100 vessels will wind it& way around the harbor, finishing where it bea:an at 0:30 p.m. Lead vessel again will be the City Employees Association's • • FI oat in g Christmas Tree" barge, which is actually a ferry donated by the Balboa Island F'erry Boat Corp. The firm wlJJ .also pro-- vide a pilot. Jimmy harse.!!z president ol lhe Employ~-i.oc1ill0n; oiiial1ii:iricl•· tion be&an in 1055. ''At that llmt. we ask· I • ( ed other boats to fall In line. The first year we had 10. Now we get about 100 each year." The "FJoating Christmas Tree" it.self was eotnpleted · this morning by city crews. They set·up on the ferry a steel pipe to serve as the "tree" tnlnt and from that struna: wires from which ban& colored lights and other decorations. . 'O.ly 7 Lol\g·Ume Yule boa! parade-wa1cher1 point out that during the wetkend the CHRISTMAS proceulor. is i;sually at II• most colorful. I More bo&t-owners are able to participate 12•••••••:.,._..tl lheo. · C•MffrRI• 1 Jn addition to the bright Ughll, decor a· i~n:1 ·• v, ' ti ens and other glitter, tht partdo I.his c~~~" ..,.J y1 ·1r will feature carol sina:ing lrom ~:"~ r. m'.•ny veSStls. ••1tor111 ,._ , Newport Har.P91" C}t,mber of COm-=~_,,~.._, ,..= mercU!i~ger Jack Barnett aaldJiB.c-....,_ -~~.,..-ff .... T\fjila.ria to Ulnlttbe event for showlna O'll ,:.,,.....,,,.,,.. ,, national televl5'on. ' ' Z DAILY PILOT N Ediso11 Gets Oppositio11 From Battin By JACK BROBACK Of Wit CMl!f' ,Jltt ll•ff Orange County Supervisor Robert W. RaUin would be willing to impose a building moratorium in the county if that becomes necessary to prevent further ait Jkillution. Battin, testifying before the California Public Utilities Commission hearing in Fountain Valley on the proposed ex- pansion of the Southern California Edison Company's Huntington Beach steam generating plant, said if a power shortage should de velop because Edison was denied permission to expaod the plant he personally would be for a building moratorium. Land Develo pment , .• t Cou nty Sfutlie~·· Coa st Cuntrt1ls · ~· A study on protective controls over private development or public beach lands -patterned on Santa Barbara's ' method -has been beJd for fUrther l!ltlJdy ordered by the Oran&• CoUnty Boan! or· Supervison: Slu;irl Bailey, asmtant ~oµnty plannfnj director, reviewed the analysia>-of Ute Santa Barbara County Beach Devekip- ment District_ before aupervisors Wfldnts. day. , " The same principle should~,be applied -here, he slid. . , . Supenrisors Jis~ed to Bailey's r.,rt and requejted mare •ludy by the Orana• County Planning Commission, 'f',l th another. . ~ · at their Febtuary meeUng, t ·• ·1 I •;. I -' . ' ' S~la ~"41•'• deve!~Pll\"11 district)> designed to. preserve and prote(t ~aches and bluffs from damage due to effects of storms and ·ei'os1oo on manrDadt ' altera.- tions (II the landscape. • Slfppa~ ind ear'th ·slide) plaguing lhf: Palos Verdes Peninsula area are a prime example of the po.tential problems ihe district would intend to control. _ "The Santa, Bar~ar, Beaci\ DeyelOp- ment District is ... an area lying between a line one mile seaward, parallel to the mean high tide line and •:i. beach sett..aa line," Bailey's report· stata. • ,• "Within · this disb'ict, only beaCh· re~reational activities and their ac- cessory structures are permitted," it con- tinues. · · · · ''l represeQt the people who are here now, ~t those who are 'coming," the supervJSOr told PU C commissioner Thomas Moran. Color Them CuriOUJ The area involv'ed in the qrange dounty atudy Ila bet)'ten ·Newport Be.th and San Clemente, the largest str#<h· ol county·controlled beach property' 'on lhe local coasUine. County authorities mlgbt achieve· the same effects through .careful ion~ changes or zoning law amendments, Bailey suggests in the report. Moran asked the hypothetical question : "If it should develop that the only way to supplv the nece~ power to Orange County ht the nelJ:t few years would be expans!on of the plant, would the supervisors be willing to suspend all con- ,;truction?" A new flick opened Wednesday night at Newport Beach's Balboa Theater and our photographer was on hand to record these two scenes. The above photo 'vas taken at 6:35 p.m. before the box office op_ened. The photo below was $napped about 10 mmutes later 'vhen the theater opened for busi- ness. Our photographer did not stick around to see if Mrs. Onassis was in the audience. "Almost all the shorelines .between Newport Beach and 5611 Beach lie within city boundaries," Bailey explains in his report. The coun~y planning department staff. however. believes the objective!! coulC beuer be carried out by creation of such a district, clearly stating it!I intent. Ballin said he could not speak for the other supervisors but he would be for a suSpensiot1 of all types of construction if necessary. The supervisor was one of nine wit.. tiesses who testified before Moran and PUC examiner Arch E. Main. Six op· posed expa nsion of the Huntington Beach plant, one supported Edison and two were Edison Company executives. Edison Senior Vice President William· R. Go1Jld said load projection left little ' doul:lt thet the plant must be expanded to meet ~he company's increased system re- quirements in the period 1973-75. ~e ~aid ground level effect of gaseous em1ss1on from the Huntington Beach plant after expansion would be substan- tially less than the original four units in 1968. "An ~mproved combustion technique, conversion to low 8Ulphur oil for sup- plemental fuel , and l1lgb stack heights will t:ombine to produce .. &gni{icant reductions in the already minimal ground level effect of the operation of the plant," Gould testilied. Certain controls already exist under the county's B·t Buffer District. but only on roads, parking facilities, lands.cape plan· ting, non·view blocking mesh fences, agricultural crops and produce sale stands. Permanent buildings, with the ex· ception of restr~s provided at recrea- tion areas, are not covered by the buffer district, Bailey's report explains. The beach 4evelopment d)strict under consideration would apply to commercial anO·realdential areas that are already in the works for the south cowrty shoreline. "Or by establishing building setback lin"2S along those portions of the beach re· quiring protection and preservation," the repor t delivered ·wednesday e:.:J)lains. Orange County authorities have been particularly concerned with protection or public beach lands since the great and continuing controversy over ' aban· donment of Salt Creek Road to the Laguna Niguel Corporation. That action by the Board o f Supervisors effectively cloMd miles or scenic coasUine and beaches to public use, through lack or proper access routes. Tiptoes to Altar Tiri y, Vicki Won't Get 'Puff ed Up' N~W YORK (UPI) -Tiny Tim and his tele vision being a bit eccentric: 1'll teen-age bride were of( today on a honey. doesn 't matter where you're married - moon that wili' introduce them to the on television or on the sea -as long as rigors of a series of marriage vows that you keep the marriage laws." included being "not puffed up." After the ceremony his father-in-law. The sweet singer of falsetto notes Wrote Allan Budinger, a Haddonfield, N.J. art· practically the entire service him.self -supply dealer. said : "His best feature is He outlined the Increased demand for power due to growth and ·said if the ad· ditional units were· .ftot. constructed 70 percent of the energy·reqUirementsOf the county would ha'f&'~tO' be imported/bY 1975. . ... • ,.. I \-..----· Frona P q e 1 Harbor Boys Club Set11 Holiday Hou1·s particularly the connubial VO\\'S -he sincerity -but I don 't think it's ap- disclosed after the ceremony on the NBC preciated." He repeatlJd~~·tesll . · : that ;io al~ IO~ t>e rel&': ' F A,r.rt;'-'l"RS J increa5e i11c"jla~ty •Ol.ilc.t.'beavallabte ln • · · \'.I. .UU ~,.. •.•. time.-·· - Gould also played down the con-is no indication they are involved in any lribuUon of poWer pT=aJr pollution way." t "It •"fll14il>< clear!<>' ''iwli<> ~ , 'l'ht1~~"tll.I~~ l<hqifl · to exi!')lnJ111'!UMli · ti,l'!i'!'r 'ti1in1ii ' ~Y~ ·~-·~ue a ill"~' are tllt':·liiill(illlliionl r,.._toi-0 16 ac~ Pie .lltu.1 on. oliee Jnv<f. smog-have: Utile efleCt On ·U.. eij. tii1!0rs asSlgned fo Ifie c pus wero In vlromnerit. n ·.. · · · · · the:_ ~~efd lnd unaval({lbte for CMwbient.·-, A posslble jbri<dict!Onal dispute In the "'!hesO ·are goOd kids well dreised grantiig of the 'permit for exPansion of not dirty," said one fa~r. "My daugh: ~ plant wa.s Oirite<I it • by Leonan:t ter was a ·B student until the last report Sa1der, PUC attorney. He Said tb'e card. She was elected ·gueen Of 1h6 Cllfilt- Orange County Air Pollution ·Control mas dance .last Week. District's denia1 or a pennit to Edi!IOn. "Usten, l 've tried~" ,he saic!. "l read could cause problems. . tbe paper and watch the news. I've talked Saider added, however, that state Jaw to 11!>' ~aughter and We've sat ilnd watch~ ln~ti~uting the PUC empowCT'S the com. ed l~ialS ~n 'drug&. She's' been ·using • m1ss1~n !? order public utility con-~~.in for a year «md J was unaware of , strucbon 11 such expansion is found to be 1.. -.. • a public necessity. The .other fat~er·~ai~ ·his dailghter. Just Fro m Page J BAY CLUB •.. draw up the summary because they said they doubted that many voters wou1<1 care to wade through the 30 pages of the proposed new lease to find out its pro- visions. Coples of the lease document "'ill also be sent to the voters. Seymour emphasized at the outset of lhe analysis that: "It is intended to present the fa cts in an impart.la! manner and is not to be CQnstrued as advocating either a Ye! or No vote on the proposi tion." DAILY PILOT O~A.NGE co•st PUIL1$HING COM"ANY ltob1rt N. W11d f'reskltftl •lid ·f'ubll•lltr J1t1c R;. Cw1!1y ~ 1(6 Ptfl•dtnt 1r.cl G-tl N.tnegrr 1•om11 Keevil Editor lhom11 A. Murofil~• M1~1olng Elli10• J1rom1 F. Colli"' Nt""PO•' lle•<ll Clly Edllor N-pert lffcli Office 121 I W11t 81lbt11 l oul1•1rd M1iffn9 Adcl11u : P.0.1011175, 92661 Otlltr Offlc" (:Oj,11 M'n•: "° WH! B•v Sttl)et t.at!IM lt•dl: 121 'o•n• ..__.....,. .. ~nllnOIOlt kllc.11: 11~/j l:l•Kll e.~.r.~l>'d __ , DAU.~ PILOT, "'"" -Id! ;, C°""lllef ,.,_ ,,,_.,.fft •. h ""'"""f'lf •h!I~ t.•(flll ~ ..... ,,.., In MPMtte Hll~ f6r L•Oll,.. lltu11. Ht..,,.n lffdl, CO.I• Mt... 11u~!l"fl!""' I~ •Nt F~Jll \tfl'-1'• t lOrtg "'Ill\ IW~ ... ~, tdl11w1t. Ortntt Ct111 Pue!l1~"'9 (-llY 'IOl'lllllnl plt111t tt'f t i )111 Wnt ll•lt>Ot lh"d" N_. &t•tll, t t,.S ~ Wlhl Btr Strf'tt. (•1' MtM. 1.i., ..... (7141 '41·4fl1 Cl .. tlfiftl A4'wertlfl .. 641·5671 (~~•M, !Hf, Ottlltlt C.HI P11t1!;1111"0 ~nY. No ,.... 111t•ltJ. rllu•lr•I ~'II. n1.r.,i.1 ""'"tr ., ,d-11..-~•1 "''•"' 11'1'1' M r~.S w1t"6uf w>tCi.! ,... m1u1M el ttf»'!')ttll ""''· S.."'1 df»_,_.... ... ., t i NewllO"I lttcll •-4 GM1t -· Clllfft11lt, l*t'ffl""' ~1 '•"lt:r ,,_.. -lfllr1 w ,...1~ i J.ll -!fl1r1 l'l'lllttt•r 11f'11Ntlelit. N.ot """''11r. h~.~ hfµ' 13th b~~h~a}'. yesterdaY,. You ~ a !Qd only th ls old, there is no r~on in God's world why she should be subJected to drugs.... · . Jie iaid; .'i'They're down there In the fift h and sixth grade playing witb the stu.rf now. How can you iet them th rough a ]Ungle like 1het without them experi- ~ting with it?'' He said Police told him high school Allen Promises To Keep Mind Open on Court By JANICE BERMAN 01 111• 0.ltr Pll91 lltff Or~e County Fifth D l a t r i c t S~perv1sor Alton E. Allen said tOday he ~1 11 "keep an open mind" on plans for a site for a new Orange County municipal cou rt complex. ' Two prime contenders ror the court site are the cities of Newport Beach and Costa Mesa. Newport would locate the court at Newport Center, near Fashion l slan~. v.'hil e Cosla Mesa would oner land that 1s now Orange County Fairgrounds property. Spea king at a meeting of the CiUze ns llarbor Area Research Tean1 (CHART) Allen sa id the fair board has offered "~ concrete deal as ye t'' to the Board 0£ Supervisors, resJXlnsible for selecting the location . Allen predicted the city or Newport Beach "will come up with a suggestion that wUl be very compeUUve'' with the Falt Board's proposal. Co..!a Mesa City Councilman WllUam SL Clair disputed Allen's open-minded i;tance. St. Clair said the Fair Board has received a letter from StanJey Krause. Orange County director of real property servt~s. which said the price of the fairgrounds property was more th an the i;upervJ.'K,rs wish the county to pay and that the Newport Beach site was favored . Allen replied that the price quot~ lo him was between $70,000 and $80,000 per acre, adding, "We don't know what price you 're talking about.'' Said St. Clair. "We don't know what land you want." Allen reiterated th11t the r;uptrvisor1 Are "very interested" in both sites. ''Tonight" show Wednesday ni&bt. Johnny Carson, star of "Tonight," on • The service, read by the Rev. William which Tiny leaped lo fame in 18 5ingular kids are beg1nnlng to become aware of Special holiday hours will be obse rved Glenesk, a New York Presbyterian appearances as a singer in a year and a · drug dangers and are starting to tum it by the Boys Club of the Harbor Area dur-minister, started with the groom halr. was among the notables who at. away so the pushers are looking to the repealing his real name afler the pastor: tended a post-wedding reception for yOunger kids . ing tpe Christmas season, at both "I. Herbert Buckingham Khaury, bein& Khail1'Y and his bride, V!Ctorla May The other father claimed the drugs are branches. Budinger, 17. Cary Grant wu amon& ~ing passed over the fence to Davil of soi.Ind mind. • ·" those who dropped in. , SChool ·rrom Costa Mesa High School. Beginning Saturday, through Jan. 3, the At a news conference afterwards, the On the show, arter the ceremony, the. He said, "There is a boy over in Sonora clubs will be open 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., six long-tressed singer, rolling his eyes so wedded couple drank milk laced with Elementary who was busted in the fifth that heaven seemed to be peeking honey while the other guests drank cham· grade and.is back in school. If they are days per week, except for Dec. 24, through them, said: "I put in 'being of pagne. "This, you know, is the good going to send th ese people back into the Chri stmas Day and New Year's Day, sound mind' so everybody will know I Lord's food ," Tin y sai d, explaining he · schools they are not going to get rid of know what I am doing." had given up alcohol since he met "Miss th e problem." when both branches will be closed . And as for getting married on Vicki." Carlson said in the year and a hair 1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~D;;;;;;;;~:;o;;;;:;;;;;;;;;~;;;;~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;::;:;;:::::::::::::::=====- he has been principal at Davis Inter· mediate there has been "only one prov- able instance" of drug usc. He said that ch lid._ i.~ b'.aCk in school. "We thinK 'vie keep a close check on ev:eryone .who . needs to be checked I ~ J' . ' closely1" lie said. I ~ A~rtl't>. lnTT!J); _The man with the two daughters said I ":;¥ JJ.'C!j.L'IJUJ \#'~\.... they are relieved this is over, that they •cocrorTJCM ·' ,_ I are caught and _now they can talk about I it. · . I ·· -new fttJm HeriJage He said, 0 1 would sit in front of TV .... _,,._,...... d th . __ .__ ... ~~~q--~--I 'Man that is terrible.' Actually I was 1 --=-·~ frightening them out of teliing me -...=.i..::.: about il." · -___ .,,._ The other father said his daughter too I ---::..-:: I was gl~d it had come out; she had lived _ .. ...,... under stress for a year. -:;"' ... ::::::"= He said when he first confronted her with information that a girl friend had implicated her and she wouldn't admit much. ''The story starts, 'Well so and so tried a coliple of things but this was a long time ago. they quit.' It is the same cop out all of the time. . "She admitted one time trying marl· Juana, then a red, then one LSD pill . Now it has gotten up to six times on LSD. reds, whites, hashish, shooting wine in the veins, everything. "I've talked to some parents," he said. "They know their child can't be Involved'. There hasn't been one child named yet that has been a false implication. 'The father of a daughter called us last night and ta lked about lawsuits for having his daughter implicated. I know what a S\veet. nice girl she is. But while 1 \\'as talking on the telephone the police C'arne to his door and gave him informa· tion that wilhout any doubt his daughter Is implicated." The fathers said they are going to !he newspapers to arouse the public. "There are people working on it and th at is very' encouraging," said one. "But the general I public is just not awake to it. A Jot of educators are blind to It." The other -father said, "I'll tell you I'm going to use every resource avallable lo me to stop this thing. I'm not going to'stop W'Jtll there Is some action taken. "I'm not -trying to throw a tl&m at Costa Mesa," he said. "J understand this thing is everywhere. The police are discouraged : they can1t get anything done. 1 don't know what the answer Js except for people to get involved." --..... -. .... I Tiny Tin1 Get s Scale I H.J.Gill\l\ETf fURNfjlJ RE i PROFESSIONAL 2215 HARBOR BLVD. l I INTERIOR DESIGNERS COSTA MESA, CALIF. I NEW YORK (LJPIJ-Tiny Tim, mar-- rl!d to 17·yt'ar-old Victoria May Budin· ger nn NBC.TV's "Tonight" show Wed- nesday, received the uruon scale $265 ror his appea rance. I ..... MM.,, .......... ·-. 64~-0275 I ~------------------------------------------.d ., I, •• Thursdiy, Dt"ctmbfr 111, ltf69 bAll Y "lCf U l Sleek Slant Cbilc;/ren Need lnstr uc fio!I S Be Careful 1 New Mexico Tradition Luminarias to Glow .. . Glowing Iwnlnarlas will bl;ilht•n the ' darkness Christmas ~ve In ljewport Beach, carrying out a traditioil from New Mulco. ' ' . C ~rJ stmas Pet ;. Not a By PA'rRJCµ I!{~ that the~ed pet wilJ,llOI clock.wrapped in a ballt tow•! · • K ( Pl · 1r be '·1oy.. : J'ln bod with him. The Ucklng; NJ;:JV YOR u ) 7 • Small chlldrtn ahouJd.sf~on,. 11'1-iald, remlnda hlm of bis ·~;""in~ 11r.1:'fct"·=·;~~ Ute noor, ~n theY cuddle i ~('• he~t and helps f •. , , c·~~-ts 111)•11 arumal. him feel.,..... socun. am1 y s ·•~•nU pres<n ' ~-,,---in th kit·•· Toy learn to.a:o to that place When It's mealtime. ' ... -A puppy or kltten under 111 months of age requires two Or three tetdtngs a day. When Wateri ng Holiday Plants v.n·t o ....... 1er holl&if plant" The lumi.narias, which are votive caDdles ... ued In brown paper baas filled with aand, are lighted by the 'tbousaiida each Chris1m .. eve In Albuquerque, be(om!ng a sight that travelers come from miles arouDd to see. ~ children iW to bo briefed To help Ute pet in his ad--·-~a corner e o~n before-hand .:.. for the ~ell«--Justroent remember thlt all ,•where ptl can eat without Inc of U. pujipy or kitten. young anlmab ··need Iota of worrying about setting step- Th t' · first ~ · shuteye 'nle bod. lhould be in · ped on. I! yoo always feed hun li ke e h~!n ooes, wu~1~ a wann: .quiet.place and out qt in tbe ·.-e place, be will IOOn -Don't let amall children scold or sParik a puppy-or kit· ten. •H0111ebrealdf!.I and obe· dJt:nee training are• jobs for teen1pr1 or·.auJtJ. Horticullur•I expert.I ''Y that over-wateri.nl i1 1 teadi.ni reason for J!rtm1ture fadinc of holiday flit plants. Touch the top 10i1 o! Utt • ' plant with your thumb, Jf Jt • 1 fetls dry, water plant. Use :S• water al room temperature. LutinJ<. 1J boys and flrb toot the . m11111tre1m of famllj\ Yule horns lit the animal's traffic. . . More than a inillion Jina the streets, walks and rooftops of the resldeiic" ol Albu· querque and are spectacular when viewed from the air: , ears, tug at his tail and Cats Uke· s~ng places ,-.otherwise upset him, you're that are completely enclosed. liable to have a skitU&h four-Dogs need more room. footed friend on your bands. Othe~ lips from authorities Th.,. first lumlnarias were Uehted more than 300 years ago In Spain and Mexico to light the way of the Christ Chili!. In the early fonn they were boofires of criss-crossed pin· ion ·boughs built in squares three feet bigll. Newport Beach residents c/1rry!ng out the tradition will be the Messrs. and Mmes. James While, Robert Lieb; Larr). Whitesides and Dr. and Mrs. Johnnie R. Bet8on. • TD e luminaries m ay be vi tweet· in. the 1300 block of Galuy Drive oo Christmas eve, .. HB Art League I I !# .9459 $1ZES lOJ!i'.11 ~ i . £y 11f ~;~ 11Tt.;t' ... First off. then, according to at the institute: autbor'ities at the Pet Food -If your new arrival howls bUUtute, teach the children in the night, put an alarm ~uden~-~udy Heart Two Orange County college P. SatUer. sai_d scholarships stuaents will be eligible -to will cover·lO weeks of living join 33 state stuaenla this ei:penleS to begin after June summer to work in heart re-I. County students will be sup. search with medical acien-ported by funds donated by tists. Arnolit . 0. Beclcman, chair- Students mu.st file •pplica: man of the board of Beckman tion f«ms with the Orange Instruments ·and 1969 Orange County Heart Association by County Heart Fund chair· Feb. 1 in order to be eligible man. ~ LET'S BE FRIENDLY Huntington Beach A r t for a f750 scholarship in the Dr. S8ttler encouraged stu- 1970 Student Research Associ- dents of physics and chfmistry Sleekest slant on slimming ates program. to apply because of the grow· down your midriff! Sew thiS< Orange County Research ing i m JtO r t an c e or basic U you have new neighbors or know of anyone moving to our area. please tell UI 10 that we may elrtend a friendly welcome and help them to become aeciua!uted ln their new aurro~- League recently enjoyed a Christmas party and installed new officers. 1be Mariners from Marina High Sd>ool offered a musical progani and board memhen .perfi:Jrmed tn a skit . unusually elegant dress with ;•. _Co_m_m_itt_ee_chalr_-_m_a_n_D_r_. F_r_ed __ <e_ie_nc_e_t_o_m_ed_i_ca_l_r_es_ea_rc_h_. ----- diagonal detail and side pleat SO, Coasl Yisffor Yule Flowers • 1n knit, crepe, blend. Printed Pattern 9459: NEW Half Sizes 10~~. l21k, 141h, 16-, 11%. Size 141/it (bust 37) take.s 2~ yards 45-inclt fabric. 494.0579 494.9361 Harbor Visitor Azaleas, appropriate f o r Christmu giving, will bloosom lonpr if kept our of direct 11.1Dlight ·m a cool room and away from radiators and other direct heat. 81XTY·FIVE CENTS in coins for each patte rn ,-add · 15 cents for each pattern for firJt.clau mailing and 1peeial handling; otherwise third-class: delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to Marian Martin, Ute DA ILY PILOT, -442 Pattern Dept., 23% West 18th St., New York, N. Y. 10011. Print NAME, AD- DRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. · Fabrics NOW OPEN/ .. IMPORTS UNIQUE FABRICS e UNUSUA~ fRIMS NEEDLE WORK e RU6 KITS 494·2330 472 SO. COAST HWY. LAGUNA BEACH -I NEW FALL-WI NTER PAT· TERN CATALOG -over 100 styles, free pattern coupon. 50 cents.· · INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew today, wear tomorrow. $1. HAVING A PAim OUtdoora ol-Jn.!-"'. MCMtSI OF PAPll ,,i;H lt9!1' U.e11 thl11ij• vpl 1 : .. .... 7MTS KARLS TOYS 50 F11hion Island Newport Be1c:h 6444911 Bring this handy shopping list with you. It win help to remind you·of all your CHRISTMAS CARD needs ... ··r-~R:E~~~TI~VE;-~~~~~~~--., SPECIAL TITLES -fine folks ...:Mother -Father -Wife -Swethtarl -Huabond -".oront• -Sisler, Sitler & Husbond ~ Brethlr, Brother &Wi,1. -..:.. Oaulflter, Deulhler& Hushl!nd -Son. Son & Wilt -Grandmoth<ir -Grandfllhor -HousetoHouse -Nti&hbor -from Our Ho use -AcroSsthcMites -Special fricind -Baby's first'-._. -Bondl!Older \ -Moneyiiolder 1 -Christmi sCheer -Christmas Birthday -T•acher -Boss -Doctor -Gift Enclosure Karls FLA TStl DOLL --.................. .._ "' ... .... ., ... .i ............ . fteg. $3.SO Only $1,99 TASCO 4YTI !!!l~f!_ l!!!!_CTOI fw ...... "_, ...... "'1::11 •••. $12.97 • •14.tl TASCO • 710 POWll MICROSCOPE . e.._.. .. WM4 Cae ... Aoc.., ....... ..,. ........ 111-. .... 11.11.1.n •. ·-. ~Ul ',NOW $16,99 ~ ' t"""'' • -. . .. ·I'.],( ' • !" . . . ' ' . .~oJ.J-' i~ ~ -,....._ '·" .. '-'.JJ-• .. ,._,_,,." ' ·-....,-"·" ,. ,___, .. ,, . ,..,. .... Road Race -. ELDON -"'Over · 1nd 1111dlr" Ht with ovtr 40 piton lncludlng .. ,.. •nd rhtMtat fiend eontrela. ft11u!•r '20.00 ff! 99 Value 7, MONOtUAM a.sz At .$15.00 IATIUJIO ,_ .. ........... ._. ........... ... ._. ...... W....-1 ..... ................. _ ..... .Jllol ....._I_,, . ' ... CIAL $1.99 ....................... ..... _,... .. .,,, ....... ..... "'0· f5.&o Only $2. 99 11. JM GAMES INO..C-,f ... ......,_:,, ··-$7.95 ................. "' ....... ~ l'I,.,. ...... MMtlft!NJI H., Ulf ._ ....... ,,. ..... .... ,.._ ..................... . ,..i •.ei. .... 1 W•JtM1 M lit.. ••I· SJl.00 $13.97 ,.. Ont....... j ""-:-!r: ................ _ ...... ::.= :... ,_-. ~ '22r•, -SPECIAL-··· " HO REMOTE CONTROL SWITCJtD ' C_,.... IWlh• -.lttl """llt -4 Nlf.P ............ - 3.99 .... N-GAUGE ROLLING STOCK 6.76 lft ''"· •••er .. , twl• ...,,..., ._., ....,., fl.t. f• U.11 ....... ,1 • To '2.&0 V1lu11 99c COX MUST AN•: P·ll • ,,, ....... ., .......... ,w.w ...... ....... ~ .......... ........ ................... floMfl111iz..~ II • ...... ....., .... II ... " ""' •1• ...... ,...., -.... - -..-. • ••• f13.00 .. , ........ '11.99 0. '·'· r.y .................. -.... ............ ..__,.. ........... . ....... ....,.._.~ .... ..... ,.....,_ .......... -_$8.~l SHOW 'N TILL ,..... ............... u.. ...... .._... ...... ,. win ....... le-• WELLER SOLDERING SET ....... ,.,, ...... 11lt1"'*tl ir. •i ,, •• hr ... ....,., ., .. -.... • .......................... .. .., _ _. .... ... ..,.._ .......... ..... ............ IAL.£ PRICE $7.61 ,.. ................. ...... ......................... ........ ,. ........... ..... "·" .... ............ .:.. ........ ., __ -Niece -NtphtW -Cousin -Aunt RELIGIOUS TITLES -R°"ry -Prltit. -Sister ....:Pntor -Ip Git's Service ~:::.e. :.;, ~ -::,~ .. rYco· • .~:~ $9.76 :'jgure "8" ---~-----,..---car z111• -Mlnialw1nd -Unelt -Godpar9nit Fmil1. -Godthffd -PntoundWilo •• ..,..lloladChri-Card1 -airlelMisGiftW111p y '-T .. s.lfs.111t1T11Pt -ClirlalNsllll*lnlBows -Cltl'ill1111t l'lrlyGoods Choose from our Beautiful Selection , of~~ Christmas Cards SO FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH e 644-0911 8¥Aii LBEXTIBAI WDTCMnm -.. , w .• , .. ST. t.OS AN•ILD -J674 W. S... ~,. CANHA PAii -........... .,. T • ·------ APOUO/SATVIN •-•ocm .... ............ ,....1 .... , ....... _. ..................... _..._ .............................. ..., ... ~--·--­w:;;l i::..~..: ........... ., ... • 4 • TIANSISTOI m OP J WALllll T.UllllS .... ...,~ ....... , ................. . .......... ......, e ..... .. -.......... $9.99 50 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH 644-0981 IOppo1ltt tht Bro1dw1y) · Other Store1: WESTCHE5TER, LOS ANGELES, CANOGA PAR K 1 IOOK T"" ~Diii -tlT ...... ..,.. ............. ........ . ............. .....,. . I "'• tt7.ot OnfY RIMCOJaUI SMQUDUCI ' j ' .. • " " .\ '• ,, " ' " ... •• I• ! . _ .......... ~-~--.,-.~----~-~ ~ •• , --·~·---~__....,. r·~ r..o:w;>>b)C,¥2 ·~11$\'.JC!-,CPC4 PIS40C * ·™ s;a e,s a ery;pq w 4 C(P,4 \ '''· t .. s;susc P f ... W!fl4V• ,, 9 4 •••• 4 . :e; ·'-'-''™·-lb!\-\GP ?.• \T'O "'' ..:• ... •--=~ •..• -,,.~-- • -t:24 D.llCY PILOT IN) ThlW'SdAY, Dectmb~ 18, 1%9 . ·-=~A .Yule Pageant Means Work and Worry. ,•, •• :!: •• ... . • -~. ' l . • -. COSTA MESA'S ADAMS SCH9()L CAST SHOWS' POLISH OF PRODUCTION NUMBER IN 'LAS POSADAS : A CHRISTMAS IN EARLY CALIFORNIA' TO BE STAGED TONIGHl'. ' . --~ ... .i • ···~,.. • , t """'Ill ~ I , __ ' , • J»t. BUT iT WAS NOT ALWAYS THUS IN REHEARSAL AS KELLY DOWNS POINTS WITH ALARM, TEACHER ANN SHUCK POINTS WITH DETERMINATION AND BRUCE COHEN JUST RESTS ;, f .· . ' ' '· • , . School Holiday Shows A1·e Practice-And Hope Young, nervous and untried. but enjoying every second of it children at each school put on th eir Christmas play. At Adams School in Costa 1'.·tesa the curtain parts tonight. l·lo\V \Vil! the children do ? "Oh, I don 't think it 's safe to say at thi s poin'I." said co-di· rector ?-.1rs. Kay Manning at dress rehearsal \Vednesday. '·\ve·n do all right. \Ve've practiced a lat," said nine-year.old Kelly, Downs. But earlier she had furgotten stage presence to yell to the teacher that the pinata ,,·ouldn't break. Ten-year-old Robert Zuniga kept slugging 3\\1ay \\tith the base. ball bat and finally did break the pinata. fie smiled broadly and told ho'" it "felt good" to be picked for the parl. Practice bega n the day after Thangsgiving for the 119 young· sters in the fourth grade classes. Tl took a lot of days to satisfy the teachers . Narrator Bruce Cohen . eight. sun1med up. "The guys some· times don't cooperate but I think they 'vill do better just because their parents are going to \Va tch," Bruce didn 't feel he is going to give a perfect performance. "I'm going to make one mistake for sure. You see, rigb1 here I say ,,. It's getting to be a habit ." .AJvena Castro. nine, isn't going to forget her line. "The pin~ le. the pinata, can \Ve have the pinata." she says .• 6ind she kno,vs her cue -"right alter the dance." Dress rehearsal \Vcdnesday '''as st.ill just another rehearsal to the children. A girl couldn't resist the urge to posit.ion a boy '"ho 'vasn·t standing just right. Girls fidgeted in mother's clothes that didn 't fit.. frequently adjusting their sha"'·ts. ADAMS SCHOOL CHISTMAS SINGERS ENJOYING THEIR WORK In Sont (left to right ) Paul• Whi1entind, Avena Castro, 0 Denls1 Holt "Kids, we 've blown it." 1'1rs. B. J . Wright said \rith exasper· ation. "TI1is i~ your last chance to do it totally right \\'ilhout a n y help ." Dnl/11 Pllol Stntt Photos B11 Patrick O'Donnell t The curtain parts at 7:30 tonight for "Las Posadas : A Chr1 s'I.· mas in Early Calilornia '' at Adams School, 2850 Club house RfJad, Costa Mesa. .. CHORUS PRACTICE DRAWS VARIED REACTIONS FROM MEMBERS Mott Are Serious But This Time, Fred Svenson Stifles a Grin I 7 I I 7 • I I I ,. ~osia Mesa voe. 62, NO. 302, 3 SECTIONS, « PAGES .. •• ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA THURSDAY. DECEMBER 18, "[969 Slicl{ Heads South New Leak Sprung Off Santa Barbara SANTA·BARBARA (AP) -An oil·slick covering:.$(! squ~re miles of the Pacific drifted ·SloWly southward today after a new leak .developed frqm an offshore drilling rig id the Santa Barbara Channel, scene or a massive oil slick early this year. · The fresh seepage, detected Wed· nesday, spurted between 6,000 and 9,000 gallons of oil from a weld in an undersea pipe al the same Union Oil Co. platform • where the disastrous blowout started last Jan. 23. Set for Feb.· 28 That -alick .splead over .1 . .:io .square miles of the Pacifie in.111day1,blackefttd . beaches in Santa Barbara County and smirched the Southern-Califprnia coast tor miles north and sooth. At last report, the new teardrop-shaped slick was five miles off Ventura County coastal communities ~ as-oil company crews worked . to skim it up before ·it could · reach beach areas. ' 'f.he seepage was-discovered by a com· Mesa Anti-drug Rally To Cost About $4,000 City and civic officiB.ls and police are ironing out the details of a Costa l\1esa youth rally aimed at helping youngsters and parents who \Vant lo know more ahout drug abuse, as well as those v1ho want to stop using: drugs. The rally will take place Feb. 28. Jc· c9rding to Police Department Coinmunity Relations Ofricer Austin Smith. Included will be a performance by a Hoag Appeals F or Blood Donors It ~appens every holiday season. Emera:ency blood supplies ia Orang~ County run low. "For thal reason. said Hoag Memori§I Hospital spokesmen today, a Red Cross bloodmoblle Will visit the hospital from %:30 to 7:30 p.m. Friday. "It's an emergency situation," said Pet Zebal, Hoag public relations director. "Every December the normal blood sup- ply dwindles because people are too busy shopping or otherwise involved with holi· day activities to take time to donate blood." Edward Colburn. manager of the Orange County chnpler of the Red Cross, eaid the Blood Bank serves the needs of 23 hospitals throughout the county. Trar-· fie accide·,1ts during the holidays in- tensifies the need. he added. Mrs. ZebaJ said no appointment~ are needed to donate blood. The Red Cross ··~i t 1vill be located in Hoag's Conference Center.· rock band, guest·speakers, aild discussion groups and clinics conducted by and for teens. Costs of the rally, which may be held at the Orange County fairgrounds, are estimated at $4,000, Smith said. 1'-1oney will be provided by various city civic groups, and Smith indicated the city council may also be asked for financial support. Smith emphasized that young people will be closely involved with plaMing and policing the day-long session. He said student.s from Orange Coast College and UCLA have offered t.heit help. ·He called the program a means of "communiation .. We're not Coins out to seui than ·anytNpc~" : 111 program· will bave a prev1.ew at a met<ing al the Police Deparllnent Dec. 30, when each group will ~hre a brief sample of what they'll do m r~bnmy. The run-through will be video.taped to show other cotnmunJtiea int.erelted in • similar p<Ogtan\. · "We're hoping to make this a pilot pro- ject that's so effective, other cities will want to do the same thing," Smith said. Hf!" said he hoped to draw 5,00'.I persons from Costa Mesa and nearby com- munities to the Feb. 28 event. S ....,k ltl•rket NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks CO!ltinued to gain today on the heels of tight·money remarks by Federal ReS"trve Board ~­ inee Arthur Burns. (See quotations, Pages 34.-35). mercial fisherman's spotter plane and confirmed by a U.S. Geological Survey inspector. Union Oil divers told the C®st Guard there was an eight-inch split in a pipe carrying crude oil from the plaUonn to Union's Rincon plant in Ventura County. Officials immediately stopped the flow in the pipe and said it would take about 36 hours to ·repair the break. Flcating booms were placed around the slick and skimmer boats began pumpina: the crude £rom the surface of the sea. Allen Pledges To Keep Mind Open on Court By JANICE BERMAN Of llltl ~"' ,, ... Sl.tf Orange County Fifth D I s tr i c t Supervisor Alton E. Allen said today he will "keep an open mind" on plans for a site for a new Orange County municipal court complex. U,I TeltltM .. Two prime contenders for the court site are the cities of Newport Beach. and Costa Mesa. Newport would locate the court at Newport Center, near Fashion Island, while Costa Mesa would offer land that is now Orange C.Ounty Fairgrounds property. Speaking at a meeUng of the Citizens Harbor Area Research Team (CHART). Allen said the fair board has offered "no concrete deal as yet" to the Board of ~uperviaor.s, responsible for selecting the }OcaUon. TlNY TIM, 37, CUDDLES WITH BRIDE, MISS VICKI , 17 Charin Dick•n•· Hal Nothing On Th is Ch1r1cter Allen predicted the city or Newport Beach 1'will come up wHh a suuesUon that will be veey competifJ.ve" with the Fair Board's proposal. Cruta MOJa City CowJcllman WIWam St. Clair dlepuled Allen's open-mlnded stance. St. Clair said the Fair Board bas received a letter from Stanley Kraue, Orange County director of real property services, which said the price of the fairgrounds property was more than the supervi!ors wish the county to pay and Lhat the Newport Beach site was favored. Tiny,-Vic hi Won't Get 'PuH~d Up' Allen replied that the price quoted to him was between $70,000 and $80,000 per acre, adding, "We don 't know what price you're talking about." Seid St. Clair, "We don't know what land you wanL" Allen reiterated that the supervisors are "very interested" in both sites. Slwppers Help Guards Corral Texan in St ore NEW YORK (UPI) -Tiny Tim and hi• f.een·age bride were off Laday on a honey. moon that will introduce them to the rigors or a series of marriage vows that included being "not purled up." 'Ibe sweet singer of falset.to notes wrote practicaJly the entire service himself - particularly the connubial vows -he disclosed afler the ceremony on the NBC "Tonight" show Wednesday night. The service, read by the Rev. William Glenesk, • New York Presbyterian minister, started with the groom repealing his real name after the pastor: "l, Herbert Buckingham Khaury, being or sound mind .•. " At a news conlerenct afterwards, the long.tressed singer, ri>lllng his eyes so that heaven seemed to be peeking through them, said: "I pul in 'being of sound mind' so everybody will know I know what I am doi ng." And as for getting married on television being I bit ' ettentrfc: '"'It doesn 't matter where you 're mmled - on televlsi on or on the sea -as long as you keep the marriage laws." After the ,ceremony his father·in·law, Allan Budlnger, a Haddonfield, N.J. art- supply dealer, said : "His best feature Is sincerity -but I don't think it's a~ prcciated." Johnny Carson, star of "Tonight," on whicll Tin)' leape4 to fame in 18 singular appearances as a singer 1n a year and a half. was among the notables who at- tended a post·wedding reception for Khaury and his bride. Vicforia May Budinger, 17. Cary Grant was among those who dropped in. On the show, after lhe ceremony, the wedded couple dfank milk laced with honey while the other guests drank-cham. pagne. "This, you know, is the good Lord's food," Tiny sald, explaining he had given up alcohol since he met "Miss Vicki." A Texas man allegedly on a buying spree with a stolen credit card was ar· rested Wednesday night at a Costa Mesa department store after being subdued by security guards and Christmas shoppers in a struggle. John A. Cullom, 26, of Texarkana, was booked on a charge of theft by credit card, according to police. Girl s l(ept Fron1 School, Spark Search for Drugs Officers were called to Sears. Roebuck & Company, 3333 S. Bristol St., where. BJ THOMAS FORnJNE CuUom was taken into custody at the Of llMI C11111y '""' staff security office. Two C0&ta Mesa falhers have pulled Store guard Roger 8. Ramm liiaid he their 13-year·old daughters out of Maude and guard Charles E. Renfroe detained the suspect, who they claim had purchas· Davis Intermediate School after finding ed 183 worth of stereo tapes. when out the' girls had taken 'tso and other notified a stolen card was being used. drugs ~llegedly obtained at the school. Investigators said the card belonged to Davia Princ ipal Werner Carlson said Robert Underwood and was reported he has begun an invesUgation and opened stolen along with other credit cards lasl the Jockers of three implicated students Ju_!!e In Newport Beach. in their presence without turning up any Cullom claimed the card was loaned to drugs. him by a friend who owed him money The fathers beUeve strongly that their and offered the easy credit plan instead . daughters are betttr off getting no ed· Police si!nt to pick up Cullom also ucation for awhile than being exposed to be 100 if not 200 involved." Principal Carlson said. he talked 'to the daughter and "th.e young lady .stated 15 to 20 students are involved in drug activ- ity. not the larger number." Superintendent of the Newport.Meu School District William Cunningham commented, "You know, I think before a person makes these kinds of allegations to a newspaper he should be able to doc- ument his case in some specifics. He gave us the names of some students and there is no indication they are involved in any way." brought three yoong girls back to Ute sta-what they claim is widespread drug traf· . lioll, charged with burglary after they . fie at the scbool. were caught with three waJlets. Acting on information supplied by lhe The fathers say that maybe tht: school system 'doesn't, but Costa· M"a. police ac~ledge the situation. Poll~e inves- tigators assigned to the campus w,m in the field and· unavailable for·comment. DAILY' 'II.Of Sl•ff ~ L ett ffr s for l'iettaam · ·· Mark Ekobich fini shes a letter while Kathy Dresbach and teacher . Mrs. PauJine Gardner. gather up Christmas cards for mailing to servicemen in Vietnam . Members of fourth graae class at Wilson School in Costa Mesa made 70 cards and wrote letters to accompany each one in ef!orJ to cheer U.S. troops. Mark's brother and Kathy" rather are serving overseas. The cousins, aged 20, 15 and 14, had glrl1, Colta Mesa police Wednesday 1llegedly hidden them in a shopping bag nlgbt made four arrests. One 13-year-old which contained merchandise from other Davis.girl was .arrested for lack ·or par· stares, but had oo receipts iDdlcaUng ental control, a 16-year..old Costa Mesa payment. High boy oa the .11ame charge, a 15-year-· old Co&ta P.lesa High boy on possession Harbor Boys Clw> Sets Holidav Hours - Special holiday hours will be observed by the Boys Club of the Harbor Area dur· ing) the Christmas season, at both branches. Beginning 5alurday, through Jan. 3, the clubs will be open 10 •.m. to$ p.m., six days per week. except for Ott. 2.4, Chrtstmas Day and New Yea.r's Day, wh<n both br111cbes will be cloaed. of marijuana, and an JS.year.()ld boy on J)06llession of dangerous drugs. All ar- rest& were at the youths' homes. "A rew weeks or schoolis just not th11t Important." isaid one father. "I'd rather have my dau1hter11 safe at home than have them become vegetables." He ah10 removed a 14-yeir-old daughter and a 16-year-old •son from Costa ~tesa Hlgh School unUI the dnig situation he lcJalma exlJt t~ Is cleaned up." The other father said today, "It isn't just a small group of kids at oavle. The more we have dtlved. Into it. \Mre may "These are ,good -kids,, well dieatd. not dirty." said one falher: .. t•My daush· ter was a B studenl ·untll.the·Jait.report card. She was e~~ queen-of the Chri&t- mas dance last week. · ·· · "Us ten. I've tried ."· he said. "I' reed the paper and watch the new1: l~e t.iilked to my daughter and we've sat and watch· ed ~peclal~ on dn1gs. She'.& been using them for a year and I was unaware of It." The other father' said his daugh~r just had her 13th birthday yesterday. "You gct a kid only this old. there Is no rea!llon in God's world wh-f she should be subjected to·drugs." , lie said, "ThtY,.e dOwn t.btre In lhe filth and •lxt~ grad< pJsylng with the atuII aow. How can you get,.abem through (See FATHERS, !'If' 11 ·' .... •t ·-· - Today's F l•al N. Y. St.oeks TEN CENTS City M·ul~ Next Step On Crossing The State Division ol Highways givetJi and the Stale Division of llighw1ys taketh away. ·Most recently, it1 took away 3 con· troverslal ·Costa ~esa .crosswaJt by mistake, erroneously th inking the City Council had intended f~ it to be done. Loss of the souf.IJerly crossing •l Newport and Harbor boulevards may - as a result -le.ad to reopening of Fat ttul Street, wb.ich was cl06ed to traffic four years ago despite heavy protest. A delegation of downtown businellmert went before the City Council Monday to discuss the Cl'06SWalk issue, which baa cut pedestrian access to many stores this holiday season. Unhappy city officials are scheduled tO CMfer with the Divtsion of • Highwar- DiSCrict 7. authorities In · Loi Angele1 about aome re""me.dy for the crouwalt· closed -isoue. "I think it's Imperative that we g:et a crosswalk so people don't' have to cross five highways," said Mayor Alvin L. Pinkley, whose drug store is a few doors away. "l get about 90 percent of the com· plaints," he added. Downtown Businessmen's Association spokesmen Tom Nelson and J. C. Humphries appeared Monday and sug· gested a study directed toward solving -the traffic matters. Nelson suggested preparing an outline before approaching st.ate officials . ''I. don't think we'll get any help without a complete study," added Humphries. . City 0Hicial1 Aid the engineering: firm of Williamson and Schmidt estimall>s the nqulttci study wwld coot la.000 and lak• jO clays. Citizens Aiding .~ ' Fairview Ydle Santa Claus ·gets no allocation in Gov. Ronald Reagan's multi·mllUon budgtt, so many Harbor Area organizations are pro- viding Christmas parties for patlents: at Fairview State Hospital. Or. Anthony M. Toto, supertntegdent and medical director of the Costa Mesa facility for the mentally retatded esUmates that more than .fO such events are beJng held this holiday season. Bearing gifts donated or provided at special discounl by local merchants, members of Costa Mesa MOOle Lod&e 4157 visited Ward 31 Wednesday night to • bring special holiday cheer. BANDITS HOLD UP BAlVK I N BEACH rw:\:.ndit.s struck at the First West· ern Barik at 16932 Goldenwest Street in Huntington Beach shortly arter 12:30 p.m. today, escaping with an undeter- min~ amount of cash. Witnesses told police one gunman entered the bank whJJe the second remained in lhe getaway car. There were no injuries. Police were reportedly in pursuit of the getaway auto at prea time. Weather It's still going to be hard to idenllfy lhe sun Friday, with local fog in the morning hours followed by hazy sunshine. C.Oastal temper· atures are pegged at 65, slightly higher inland. INSWE TODA 11' The Britbh guerrilla fighter ttnt to Vietnam b11 Prerident NI.ton IGJIS Saige711 ii now sc.fer for a nighttime 1troll than Wa.shington. TM 'tor11 i..s on Page 27. °"" 7 o;r; 1 CHRISTMAS m .... ...., .... ,....,,.,..t:I • ' 2 DAttY PllOT c ' Edison Gets Opposition From Battin Jly JACK BROBACK Of 1111 0.11\' Pilot Stllff Orange County Supervisor Robert \V, • -'Battin would be willing to impose a bui lding moratorium in the county if thal become1 necessary to prevent further air pollulion. Battin, testifying before the Callfamia Public Utilities C.ommission hearing ln Fountain Valley on the proposed ex- pansion of jht·Southem California Edison Company's Huntington Beach steam generating plant, said if a power shortage should develop because Edison was denied pennisslon to expand the plant he personally would be for a building moratorium. "I represent the people who are here now, not those who are coming," the supervisor told P UC rommissioner .. Thomas Moran. ' Moran asked the hypothetical que!tion: .. If it should develop that the only way to supply the necessary power to Orange County hi the next few years would be . . -...... ~ .. 7;40 e ,._40% 11' t.O 00214Jt ~"t"l .. G. c1-tn.\~"'t".Ml'r!> ~"t'""R""c~e At-it> ~Pi"?" ~P.RAt>~ l>e<::.· I? -;t3 -. Cotancll OKs Action City to ·nem~nd _, Debtors Pay Up A crackdown on small·potat"' ~btqrl \\.'hose bills add up ~o a big loo Jn city revenue has been airhorized byrthl Costa Mesa City Council. The acli"' was taken Tuesday follow· ing discussions between Finaoce Director Robert Oman and •City Atlorney Roy June, generated by a budget controversy last month. JWle said fn a report to counCilmen that the individuaJ debts are relatively , Morgenthau Defies Nixon, Stavs on Job ,,, -. untm~ by s\ze, bu~ I.he t•ct the~ Ira uncoflected is bad business. One man on the city attorney's stafl will be assigned to start contacting the debtors and requesting payment ·or the bills. most ot Qlem under '5001 but addint up to thousands. ''Many can be clea red up ,by a letter or. phone call,'' Jwie ex plained. while Mayor Pinkley noted it would cOst four limes tbe amount of the de bt to c<1\lect many negligible sums. A large number of the unpaid bills in- volve claims refused by insurance C<>n)-- panies and some of these will eventually be written off as too expensive in terms of subsequent legal fees included. A ~epo as requested last month .as the result Councilman William L. St. Clair' criticism of a number of poin in the city's annual budget. The city also authorized Orange County authorities to represent them in another financial matter Tuesday, a suit by lhe bankrupt operators of the municipal eolf course to get back tax money. Action brought by PRO Enterprises expansion ()f the plant, would tM Fl t • supervisors be willing to suspend all con·-00 zng struction?" Tree Parade More High Tides, Surf to Pound Mong Coastline NEIV YORK (UPI) -U.S. /;uorney Robert M. Morgenthau, a Democratic holdover in the nation's No. 2 appointive legal post. is refusing to make way for the man President Nixon has chosen lo succeed him. The White fl ousc announced Wed· nesday that Nixon has deslgnated forn:ier New York State Sen. Whitney Norlh Seymour Jr. to replace Morgenthau as U.S. attorney fer the Southern district of New York. • seeks the re tum of $57 .000 in possessory interest taxes paid by the partnership for its profit from the city-owned course. City Attorney Jun e told councilmen the county should represent the city in the court case, since a share of the $S7,000 would go into the Costa Mesa treasury. ·Battin said he. could not speak for the other supervisors but &! would be for a suspensior. of all types of construction if necessary. The superviBOr was one of nine wit- nesses who testified before Moran and • PUC examiner Arch E. Main. Sis op- posed expansion ol the Huntington Beach plant. one supported Edison and two were Edison Company executives. Edison Senior Vice President WlJllam R. Go1Jld said load projection left little douht th2t the plant must be expanded to meet 'he company's increased system re· quirernents in the period 1973-75. 2 Valley ·Schools Collect Toys For Fairview "Everyone should hll.ve sorr.ething for Christmas," says Sheila Read, a pretty 15-year-old sophomore at Los Amgi<>.!I High Schoo1 in Fountain Valley. So Shella and her classmates have col- lected more lhan 300 new>toys and more , than $400 for _ llJOr" toys for mentally ~ • retarded roungsters at Fairview State • Hospittl in COsta Mesa. • And the 1tudeqts at the city's, ~ high oiiioolr Tou~.,v· lli&ll., !!It" donate ' . ..,.-']ll'oceeds from & baabtbaD game aDd dance Friday night to buy toy! for mort Fa'lrvieW'patients. The Los Amigos students start.d their drive last week, under the leadership of Ed Hoke, last year's student body pre1J. dent and Interclub Council Commissioner this year., Highlight of the drive was a free lunchlime perfonnance by the "Carnivorous Butterfly" rock band, Tuesday. Casey Spencer, student body president at Fountain Valley High, was respon&ible for the launching and planning of his school's drive. "We have enough money in this area that we can certainly afford to help somebody else," he says. The va rsity bask-ttball game between Fountain Valley and Anaheim at 7 p.m., Friday, will serve as the focal point for Spencer's school. Proceeds from that game and the sock hop afterwards will go to,vard playg round equipment an d C"nristmas gifts at Fairview. Students may also donate new toys to the drive. The Los Amigos youngsters plan to deliver their gifts to the hospital on Mon· day, and a group of students plans to visit the children at Fairview on Christmas afternoon for about two hours. Ed Hoke plans to play Santa Clam Chrisbnas day at Fairview. DAILY PILOT 011.AN~f (()AS t PU!Ll~H1NG COM,Alf'f ll:o\.1rt N. W11d P•tskltnl •t'ld Pub!Wllr J,,. ll, Curl.y \11(.t Pft$idt111 tno Gfl'ltrtl M1M1Jtr Thom11 K11~il f:dhor lh1111111 A. Murphint M•!\41911'19 ldl10r Cott• M.wt OHk. Jlo w,,, ••v St1••• M•ili119 A,4,.11: ,,0 . loa 1160, t2ltl OtMr OfficitS H,._. kldi; 2711 W•l l1ll:IH .... 1-... ~ ··~: nt ,_, """"'" H111111ngron tff<h; 11111 1t11t11 •~~"'" 0-.IL.V PILOT, wll~ ""'!do 11 tomblft~ tt1e Nnt·I'•-'-l)ub'ltfv.f <'IJllV t•t•pl 5.M• fl•'I' If> ._ •• ,. tclll~ '"' Lff\IM ll11dl. N_.t l toKll• C.11 Mtu. ""'"'"°''~ ""'" w "-""' v•ri.v. '""' .,.,.., 1..., , .. !efl.! dlOo ... , Ot•• Cot•! PlflllilM"I c-"'' 6'11111,,. ~· ··~ '' »n w.'*' •• ,., ''""'~ .. _... .... ~. '"' lJO W.I ''' $trMt, C-M M-. f ........ 1714J MJ..UJ:I ~..4 A'-"'lait 641·U.11 ~~t, lfff, 0t•1'0• C.111 P..-!!•"'"' c;.e,...,., .... -,1 .. :..., l!hl•llfl..,,,, d !!Otl.11 -"41' ., ,,_.., .. _.... llrr'tlft "''' .. '"""'""" •i!Nvl Nlf(it! "" ...... ff _,...... -· ~ <lffl _._ "'Iii 11 N••;iitn lttth .-:• C-lt "'-· ~'"" l ··""'illlllll .. ..... ..,. C. -!hlf l ..,. "'tll 1.2.f& "*"""~I ll'IJln.ry jfft!llt41!*'t, »·• ,..,~,Ji'. Set for Friday Launch C1in11mu Ughtl and other Yule decor, h>c:iudtq plaatle Santu, are being In- stalled on vessels all over Newport Harbor loday in preparation for the 14th anJ11'1 Floating Christmas Tree and Boat Parade. The procelllon starts Frklay at S:30 p.m. at the fm:y landing on Balboa lsland. Each nlght after that through Tuesday, Dec. 23, the parade of an estimatett 100 vessels will wind its way around the harbor, finishing where It began al 9:30 p.m. Lead vessel again will be the City Employees Aseociation's • • F lo a t in g Christmas Tree" barge, which ts actually a ferry don~ted by the Balboa Island Ferry Boat Q)rp. The flrm will also prC>o vide a pilot. Jimmy Larsen, president of the Employe<:s' Association, said the tradi· tlon began in 1955. "At that time, we ask· ed other boats to fall in line. The first year we had 10. Now we get about 100 each yur." . . n. ".F"loafin& Christmas : Trte" it:llell was COMPieted this morning by city Zone &.~pJioa-1 1 Okayed' for cat e ·Tbt restatnnt chain is Mori -only one i>ow in Omaha -but brandling ou(. westward to c.osta Me!a. A zone exception pennit allowin( con- struction of a Here's Johnny's,.c.aft in a commercial area at the southweSt corner of Bak« and Bti!tol stre$ Was ap- profeC! Tuesday by the City Cowx!ili Kathy lnvesbn Company, 416 F tllh st,, ia the e for th Nebraaka·bued restaurant ·zatir and a spokesman said the ta Me· project is ita·initial California. e sion. Fall-Board to Stud~ Swap Meet Limits Plans for Costa Mesa city regulal190 o' swap meets at ' the Orange County Fairgrounds will be discussed at tonight's meeting of the Fair Board. The 32nd Agricultural DI st r I ct '! meeting wlll be held at 8 p.m. in the board room, 88 Fair Drive, C03ta Mesa. mm. They aet up oo the feny a steel pipe to aerve u the "tree" trunk and from that strung wires from which banJ colored lights and other decoraUons. Long-time Yule boat parade-watchers point oul that during the -kend the proc...ton Is usually at Its moot c<>JorfuL More bm&t-ownen are able to participate then. In addiUon to the bright iighls, decora- tions and other glitter, the parade this year will feature carol aingjng from many vessels. Newport Harbor Chamber of Com- merce Manager Jack BarneU said NBC. TV planl to film the event for allowing on naUona.I televlsion. f.ounty Marriage Licenses Surpass Record in '68 ·With Just to httching days left In 1969, 1!)¥riage lictnBes issued io Orange Coun-- ty' Wednesday ec:Dpoed the aii-tiJne rec- ord set in 1961. Cupid's wttrrinc aim bas sent more tllan 10,717 couples -the total the bow· man racked up last yell' -into the bust· ling marriage liet!Ne division of the ty coiD1bouae. It seems certain, says rvisor Phyllis Hlll!OD, that the 11168 will exceed 11 ,000, December ·bu been a rugged month 'or the county clerk's marriage bureau and prediction. art that the Dec. 31 tally rill rt:veal that more the 11,000 licensee 1ert issued. This year'• top month was June when 1.377 \icenses were issued. July, August and October were close behind and eight of the 11 months thus far tallied are all record breakers in a record-breaking yeat. Record 'breaking is: not confined to mar· rlages and new marks have been set by the office's less heralded function -pass-- port applications. The total has closely followed that or iLs more celebrated co-function and stood at close to 11 ,000 late Wednesday. If It also hits ils n:pected mark of 12,000 it will have ecllpHCI the 1968 tot.II by mairt than 4,000. f'rom Page l FATHERS .•• A jungle llke that without them experi· menting with it?'' He said police told him high school kids are beginning to become aware of drug dangers and are starting to tum it away so the pushers are looking to the )'Olinger kids. The other father claimed the drugs are being passed over the fence to Davis School from Costa Mesa High School. He said, "There i& a boy over in Sonora Elementary who was busted in the fifth grade and ls back in school. If they are going to send these people ba ck lnto the schools they are not going to get rJd of the problem." Carlson said In the year and a half he has been principal at Davis I.nter· mediate there has been "only one prov- able Instinct" of drug use. He said that child Is back In ochool, "We think we .:r-a ckm chetk on everyone who 5 to be chttlted clM<iy," he said. The m•n with the twO daughtm sald they are relieved this Is over, that they 11re caught and now they can talk about it He Biid, "I 9t'OU)d Bit In front of TV and liet something about dope and 5ay, '1'1an that Js tttrlble.' Actually I waa rrlghttnlng them out ol telllng me abc>ut it." • The other father said his daughter too "'a~ glad It had come out: she had Jived under stre1s for a year . He said when }le firsl cqnfronted htr with Jnfo'rmatiM thlt a girl rrltnd find implicated Mr and !he wouldn't adm much . ''The story starts, 'Well so and so tried a couple of things but this was a long time ago. they quit.' It Is the sa me cop out all of the time. "She admitted one time trying mari~ juana, then a red, then one LSD pill. Now it bas gotten up to six times on LSD, reds, whites. hashish, shooting wine in the veins, everything. "I've talk ed to some parents," he said. "They know their child can't be involved. There hasn't been one child named yet that has been a fa lse impllcaUon. 'The father of a daughter called us last night and talked a.bout lawsutta for having his daughter implicated. I know what a sweet, nice g1rl she Js. But while I was talking on the telephone the police came to his door and gave him tn!onn•· tlon that without any doubt bls daughter is implicated." The fsthers lllld they m going to the newspapers to arouse the public. ''Thtte are people ,_.-orklng on it and that Is very eneouraglng," said one. "But the general public is jusl not awake to It. A lot of educators are blind to It." The other father 11aid. "J'll tell you 1·m going to use every resource av1Jlable to me to stop this thing. I'm not going to slOp until thtre I! some 11dion taken. "I'm not trying to throw • slam al Cos11 Mesa ,•• he said. "I understand thjs thing is evcrywhtte. The police are discouraged: they cin't get anythin& done. I don't ~aw what the answtr II eJctpt for people to gel inv~ved." Abnonnll hlah tides and towering breall;ert identical to those· whfuh rav· ished the California coastline last week· end are on their way again today, whipped up by a storm 800 miles at sea. The U.S. Weather Bureau warna that damage is to be expected. "At the present time lt is expected that the heavy surf will start early Friday, reach a maximum on Saturday and decline by Sunday," says the announ ce· ment. Wave1 peaking in some sets at 15 reel, while averaging 8 to 10 feet are predicted from the. storm now off the Oregon c<1ast, the fourth sucb weather front to hit bt.a.cbe.s '° far this month. Maximum damage will occur during the highest tides, occurring at S:M a.m. Friday and fi :30 a.m. Saturday, accord· ing to weather forecasters. "This alege of very heavy surf and above.normal blgb tides is expected to be very almllar to last weekend's heavy ~tt.eJ1ng," saJd a weather ~ureay spokeJman. . "Low-lying beach areas will face about the same flooding potential as during the last several periods of hea.vy surf," he added.,'" _1 .,. The 11me combliliUon Wt tweek cost four lives, including those cf a Whittier man dumped fnim a capslzipg boat off Hunlli)gton Beach ajld a Stanton barge worker Jost nea.r Otnard. Heavy flooding also struck Sea1 Beach, Surfside, Sunset Beach and spot.I on the Balboa Penb1'ula and Balboa Island, with some homes and businesse.s still proi.cted by sandbags. The 50-year~ld incumbent, however, says he intends to stay on the job until "I am satisfied th.at my obligations are fulfilled" -or until June 11, 1971, when his legal claim to the office expires. New York's leading Republicarl,' - Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller, Sens. Jacob K. JaviLs and Charles E. Goodell and ~1ayor John V. Lind say - leaped in to ofrer ~lorgenthau their support. Javits and Goodell criticized the way the nomination was handled an d threatened to hold up act.ion on Seymour·s nominal.ion. But White House Press Secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said today that Morgenthau's removal was discussed in advance with the two senators. Ziegler said il was his understanding that Attorney General John N. Mitchell went through the "normal contact" pro- cedure with the senators concerning the President's intention to replace Morgenlhau with Seymour. Ziegler added that some of the discuss~ with Javits and Goodell took place "as early as last summer." ·The press &ecret.ary added, however, that he did not know how recently Mitchell may have been in touch with the two. Morgenthau refused early this year to submit his resignation, as custom re-- quires when there is a change or ad- ministration and as most or the 93 U.S. attorneys did. Eighty four of the al· torneys have been replaced. Officers' Bonus Almost 'Shot' A Christmas bonus was almost mit for 98 Costa Mesa pollce pistol marksmen. The men qualified for the overtime pay when they underwent required shooling time on the range, but never got the funds. A pay warrant ror more lhan $2,000 OW· ed them was quickly approved Tuesday by the Costa Mesa City Council , atter • staff explanation. The city adn'linistration is comprised of straight-shooters, but they are only human, Assistant City Manager }~red Sorsabal reveaJed. He said the ntteSSary paperwork was temporarily lost in the busy shufRe on somebody's desk. Red China H-homh Blamed for Fallout LONDON (UPI) -ScJentisls Wednes. day blamed a Chinest Communist hydro- gen bomb test in December, 1968, for about 70 percent of the radioactive fallout of StronUum 90 and Cesium 137 over Britain last summer. A report by the Health Physics and Medical Division or the United Kingdom . Atomic Energy Authority said the re- maining 30 percent was primarily caused by China's first H-bomb test in 1967. ......... """"'""'""' ........................................ ..,. ............ ~ .. .., .. ..,,...., ...... .., .................................... .., .. .., ............ ..,.~~--:~ I I i I I I Christmas Suggestions from Garrett's by Heritage qRJND eW!!J!(, -- ••• tlt,117 jmm Htril4f,e .. ---_,.,....,,.._ ... _ .... _... ... __ .. ___ _,,, __ -·-----------------"'·--__ ... _ _ .... __ -·- I I I "o''"o'~ ,J, GA RREfT f URN ~'~~000 ~" I l .. ::~~;::=:~tw-----.. ::::!£~:~~.J I -.. . . Best to Watch For Yule Gyps NEW. YORK WPll -Ti• the 1eUOn to be wary -·of l)'Jlachemeo. Take some examples listed by the Better Business Bureau of Metropolitan New York : -Soliclations from charities that benefit the solicitor more than t he beneficiaries. Be suspicious when approached for a dona. Uon for an untamillar charity. return ll. acknowledge receJpt, or pay for it. -Sidewalk 5ales of ties, cheap watches, perfume, toys, gadgets and other Werior rnerc~i.Se pose a no the r trap for the unwary consumer. General stiopping guidelines f<1r all Christmas shoppers: -If you are buying something on the layaway plan, be certain that you will be able t.o meet all j>.ayments as they come due. • -Don't believe the claims of retailers who seem to be continqally selling all their merchandise a ~ wholesale priceS. \ To avoid disappointment, -prospective brides are remlN!ed to have lheir wedding stories wiUt black and white ~ossy P.hoto- glaphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De- partment one week before the wedding. Pjctures received following the wedding will not be used. f'or engagement announcements it is imperative that the sf.ory, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-- milled six weekS or more before the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirements on boUt wed· ding and engagement stories, forms are available In all Of the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be enswered~y Women's Section sWf members at 642-4321 or 494-9468. -Mail order swindles. In one mail order racket, a customer is aellt a claim stub ltatlng that the shipper is h>ldlng a package that will be ROt on return of the stub and • IUld. amount of money. If the consumer sends t h e moriey, be gets the merchan- dJse which usually is a cheap pen and pencil set or &1me other over·priced item. , -U you ihake a major purchase, ...a all the papen you are asked to!ign and keep ,_ __________________ _.I -Receiving merchandise which you didn 't order 0 ll; another tricky situation. According lo the bureau, you are under no obligation to SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER FllP·OUICk lea EJactor Kii '11" ONLY An ideal' 'Little aomething for tht home" gift! Just flip the handle and you tim Ice cubes Instantly, eas- lly. Offer Includes two specia l 20<\Jbe Ice Ejector trays, as nil n handy 80-cube $4!:rvtr! na.&Yi8ION•APPLIANCU 411 E. 17th St. Coll• Mesa -646-1684 • LACY SHEER GOWN From our collec- tion of gift trel· sures for her, choose this eapti. vating nylon tricot gown in lady-in- red or pink shim· mered with satin ribbon, swinging open to •how its own opaque gown. xs.s.M . $11 I,' ~ fashions for .•. I copies of them. If you aren't sure about something in the contract, ask questions. Remember, whatever you are told does not mean anything unless it also is written in the contract. -Watch out for com- parative price claims on seasonal rn e rch and i se, particularly at the beginning of the season. -It you're buying a toy, check to see if it needs bat- teries. -li you're buying an easy- t!>-assemble toy, try to put it together mme days before CbriStmas. '!bat way, if a part fs nmsing or parts don't fit, you'll have plenty of time to straighten out the dlffk:ulty before Santa arrives. Working Women Of the nation's nearly rt million · \!.'omen workill~ in w h 1 t e collar, professional, sales or industrial job.!, 19 percent are widowed, divorced or separated. Fifty-nine percent are mar- ried and living with their hus- bands, the Institute of Life Insurance reports. B'nai 'B'ritfi Orange Coast Chapter of B'nai B'rifll Women gather the first Thursdays at 8 p.m. in h1ercury Savi:.igs Bank, Hun· tington Beach. • • Fashion l1l1ncl, Newport BHch Stonewood Center, Downey o,... ..... ,... 'tn ' , .... ...... Mlric_.,_ M•ttt CMrte. Le hfl!IM c...,._ ' Kathleen Keyes Becomes Bride Kathleen Keyes became the • bride of Ronald Phelps during double ring nupUals in WesL Anaheim Methodist Church. Parentl!I of the couple are ~tr. B.Ild Mrs. C. E. Phelps of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Keyes of West- minster. For the early evening cere- mony the bride selected a white satin gown and carried white orchlds. Attetiding her were Mrs. Toni Goodall, matron of honor ; ~fiss Harriet Keyes, maid of honor; and the Misses Donna Andersen, Diane Governor and Candy Keyes, bridesmaids. Best man was Ron Keyes and ushers were Lloyd llano, J ohn Lowry, Dan Howard and RU!y Newton. Jami McCabe was . nower girl and Jami Newton was ring bearer. MRS. PHELPS Exchanges Vows Costa Mesa women's Club was the reception s e t t i n g where Miss Kathy Belohovek circulated the guest book. The couple, are making their home .in Garden Grove. Plants 'n Heat Keep plants away from radiators and other heat sources. Porous clay con- tainers help planbi tolerate ordinary heat. They keep root 11trµctures 10 to 15 degrees c(der than nonporous con-tainers . ·Dance Club The ftrst, third and fifth Fridays of the month are the d<r1ee dates selected by Lace 'n J.,eather Square Dance Club members. The music starts at 8 p.m. -in the RecreaUon Center, Huntington Beach. • FOUll·P,RT BEAUTY GIFT HOLIDAY PACKAGED &0.00 72.00 value = -· !. Restor Wave Pe rmanent reg. 35.00 2. London-Look Cut reg. 3.50 3. Res tor ·Treatment reg. 3.50 4. Fayrelle Stietch Wig reg. 30.00 A gift certificata tells Iler~ Ute gift. she makes har appolnlllent, $elects her own wig fr0111 an excittng &!OUP of nalllral colors. It's a twice-as-nice gift clioice • , • a new hair style !11 the holidays, plus a wig for a quick change. Beauty Studi~ Buffums'. Monday lhru Salurdey '!OtOO A.M. t;J .t :JO P.M • N•wport Center No. I Fashion 11l1~d 644·2201 DAILV PnoT JO A BRIGHT GIFT IDEA •.• VERA'S PRINTS AND PANTS FORTHETREVIRA®ERA INSPIRED BY A RECENT TRIP TO INDIA, VEftA PAINTS ffER MOST AMAZIHG-:BUY:ING , PRINT COLLECTION, JUST IN TIME TO IRIGHTIH THC HOLIDAYS. COLORFUL SH.IRTS OP' SA.TEEN CbTTbN, VIVID.IHIRTS OP' BtuC• 23.()().30.00; ALL TO COORDINATE WITH PAttrl OJl' JQO .%11".ftEVJRM POL.YDTP TO GlVI YOU 'l'HE B~ll'Ui.;' IAL.AHCE OF aTHETICS AND PER,ORMAHCE NEVER KNOWN BEP'OftS THE TREVIRAe ERA! LIL.AC, PINK, ORAN;E, YELLOW, DIU.. GREIN, ROYA&. -.UI', &ACX, HAW Oft WHITE, 20.00. IN SIZES 8 TO 16. MAIL AND PHONC ORDEJltl• Ai lift IPOln'SWCAlt.SEPAJV.TES, ROBINSON'S • NEWFOITT ·FASHION ISlAND • 644-2800 , " .\ , • , -' ' • , ' '· ' ' • ' ; ' • • I, . 1 ! . ·' " i l ~' q, • '. .<t)IJ:JIP J .,., •1 4 ...... *Io ~ ot >C!JO •"""'" -, ....................... -..... . -. • c cw 1-li !£$1¥,;o._z p;z z ~•W -=+F . 44 < ••••-V -,::_.":,•'"':.~"r" l ft, DAILV PILOT Thurs.day, btctmbtr 18, 1969 ! . --Choral Group Harbor TOPS ,...,-Ch ristmas Aro un d the Wo rld Evey-Monday II 7:30. p.m. Horper School lo Coota i!to~ro ol the J>...pocUve i'Meaa Is the location ,;.here Ahao Valley Cbaptu ol Sweet ··~emben ol TOPS Harbor f ~in· ~ convene in MllSl<o tighters gatbm: eacli,Mooday Viejo High.School. • '""'""al 7~. ~"·~ Ch-ildren Frolic While in Holida·y Mood .• PHONE 642-1197 Veta's lllT111ATt APPAIEL ..................... --- 0/-welcome 9ift, no mafier· who's S anta.f The large selectiqii of fine jewelry and rare gems together with un us ual importations from over the world in Gilt Open daily ~ MARCHING MOTH.ER Mrs. K19ol ·chairman Announced. Joining hands In the filhl against birth def~ m the National Fountdation-Mareh ·of Dimes and Mn. stantey Kegel. . ' By RA"(lllCIA MqCORMACK NEW YORK (UPl)-ln the name of Chriltmas, chik:lren ot the world do seemingly str1~e tlUnp: when following traditional YuJe ritual. Any othei-ilme of the year, what chUdrea ln Yugoslavia do would be eomldered auel and Inhuman to parenta. The st· cond Sunday before Christmas they sneak up to Mother, Ue her feet to a' chair and ex· claim -"Mother's Day, Mother'& Day, what will you pay to pt away?'' M<m is untied when she glvH Ille joyflll boys an~ girls .... . ... -. ..~ .. Dad doesn't escape this hoJ&Jp. 'Ibe ntxt Sunday he sets the ume treatment. Kid· diet set more gifts. These warm-up ex"trcises are follow· ed by more gifts Christmas day. The wife aL.au Orange Coun- ty pediatric cardiologist will be the new Oranp CtJunty ,,. Mothers Marth Chairman dur- ~ ing the 1970 campaign. I Mrs. Kegel Is one of the n ' founding me111bens of Orange The gift CUit.om is rushed a bit, too, in the. Netherlandl5, Luxembourc and Belgium . On St. Nicholas Day, Dec. IS. a man dressed in the regal robe3 of a bishop repre:Jenls 1he saint. He quiue.s the boys and girls about their behavior since. the last time be was around. To the good children, he promises to return in the night with gilts. .I~ County Jewish Community Council, member of t h e Orange County Heart Associa- tion Slid InlerfaJth Foundation at UCI. I Ther~ is a total family ill- votvement in the March of Dimes; Di:"· Kegel frequenU y treats children lxlrn wilh •-canilae problems while his wife hu joined the fight to see that all womtn are provided with and take advantage of good prenatal care. The thrtt children also are involved. Re~n Fetes Pair In SWitZlerland, children do a tot .of drinking: -of wa ter - In COMection with Christmas eve customs. They visit nine fount.aim on their way to mid· night church servicts. Each takea: three alps from a roun- tain-27 5.lps In all. . Doing this properly, ac- cording to legend, gives a child a chance to find future Peering Around Sw;an Howard <Jf Beverly HHls. became the bride of ~ ~ :N'9rn LeWIS Afartin Decker of Hun--- tington Beach in an_ early ART WORK l Claren ce afternoon ceremony 1n the 0 home of the bride·s parenU;,. Gray of Costa l\1esa is Dr. and Mrs. John R. Howard fealured at the Workshop- of Downey. Gallerie in Los A n g e I es. The Rev. John B. Toay of Bronze, marble and glass the First Presbyterian Church sculptures and stained glas~ of Downey officiated. are being exhibited daily until ' Mis& Carole Lang of Bel Alr Christmas eve. and Donald Ste.neck o f Lynwood, attended the couple A champagne reception fo~ close friends and relatives followed the ceremony. The newlywds honeymooned at Lake Arrowhead and now are at home In Huntington Beach. Emblem Club Gathering for bu 1 I n e s s sesiions and programs are members of Newport Harbor Emblem Club every second Tuesday at 8 p.m. In the Elks Lodge, Newport Beach. For tota l fe mini nity CELEBRATI NG her 75th birthday during a family din- ner party in the Villa Nova was "frs. Howard Fisher of Newport Beach. The celebra· lion wa.5 planned by her hus- band. Among family members al· tending ~·ere the Fishers' daughters and families, ~tr. and Mrs. Robert Francis and 90!\S of Los Angeles and Mrs. Marilou Bennett and daughter of Cardiff: and their sons and families, William Fisher and sons of Encinitas and ?-.fr. and Mrs. Dan Fisher and daugh- ters of Costa Mesa . RICHARD OUELLETTE proudly p r e•e nt• f h e ope ni ng o f JON PETERS BEAUTY SALON Introd ucin g Our Sftff ol Heir Stylists: ARMAND BAINE RU DY CHAVIRA JIM DOZAL JUDY GENTRY JON DEN OUDEN ORLANDO RODRIGUEZ WESLEY TAYLOR -M•~• Up- BETIY RO ESLER -R.•c•ptioni,t- CONNIE EVANS u~ares, loaf ;' 9 lo 5 -' •-pl Sunc/oy I OPEN MONDAY THR.U SA.TUR.CAY -f:VENIN~ AP'°IN'TMENTS GUGLIELMO CINI, INC. I~ 867 SOUTH COAST HWY. -LAGUNA 8EAGH. CAI.JI' 824$1 494.1 440--~ . ~: rn 64Z·l970 64l-l974 · 1 ' I •1 .~ ' --~~~~~~~~~~..ii : I husband or wife waiting 011 the church doorstep. A crock's irivolved In tradi- lional IU!lian Yule going' on. The Chri&tmas gilts art stash· ed In it. the so-called Um of Fate... The children line up and the Santa or the famll)t dips into ·the crock and retil!ve1 gifts: for dlst:rlbutlon. In Franct, children doing the £raditional C h r i s t m a s things put shoes on door&teps Christmaa Eve. The Petit Noel, Chri~t Child, fills them with gi!t.s. It's strictly a case o~ those with the largest shoes getting the biggest share of goodies. Some old-fashioned German homes prepare for the coming of Santa by erecting a Yule tree for each member of lhe family. Each is decorated "'ith lights and candy. Gift distribu· lion follows the lighting of the lrees Christmas eve. The favorite German Christmas meal consists of roast goose. Polish Ls to fast the liar. before Christ.mas and have a feast at nightfall. At this fest.Ive table there 's aupposed to be 1 va- cant chair -for the · Christ Child . In the name of lradillon, straw, such as that tUed in stables, is scattered about the floor to remind the Polish merrymakers that Christ was born in a stable.-· Christians Jn. China and Japan observe C.b r i at ma 1 tradiliona much like those practiced in America. The Chinese Santa Claui, ac- cording to World , J3 o o k Encyclopedia historians, goq by name of Dun Che Lao Ren. It translates -Christmu Old flt an. The Santa In Japan is the ancient god Hotelosho - believed to have eyes in the back of his head, all the easier to watch children's behavior throughout the year. The longest Chris tm as celebration occurs in Latin America. In Mexico, for ex- ample, festivities start Dec. 16 and, In. ·one way or the other C!'l1!-iflue ~Ul ~an. IS. ,,.. bi:ulwig or th• pinata makes .the m0f1 111errlment. Chrt!ltmas, giving money to milkman, postman and other~ who faithfully serve theni throughout the year. The time set aside for th i" kind act is ·called Boxing Day. ~ is~ 'a ·.crock or pa· pier ~Clie ljgure filled with gtlta an~ Cil\dY,Jl,bangs rrom,-:;p;;;Oiiiiiiiiii;;;,;;;;;~ the ceiling of a· l'IXln or the I branch .of' a. tree. Children. bllodlolded, take turns trying to break i\ wilh a stick. When H ls broken, the goodies rain down. · , Tbe British rilly .round Father Christ.mu. He's the 91le who fills stockings with 1ilta. And lhe British, In their tn.Ically sensible approach to life, h•ve figufed out a way to deal with the matter of tipping at Christmas. ?bey do it the day after So ropti mi.+s Soroptimist Club or Hun- tington Beach gathers at 12 : 15 p.m. the second and fourth Tuesdays in F rancois restaurant. WMm_"~t..: .. '. / " l Some shootin.S: o c c u r s out.side Norwegia n homes Christmas night. No violence and nothing of Scrooge about it. The notion is that witches1;====================;1 appear on Christmas night. So . ' when children go visiting, they creep up on a house and go bang-bang to scare the wit- ches. In Scandinavian countries. Christmas is for the birds as well as the children. Gift s of extra grain are left in yards on Christmas eve. Seeds, nuts and insects birds usually feast on are covered with snow and it's figured the extra grain will help the feathered friends survive. The tradition among the Zodiac Decor 7247 HOW TIME FLIES The Glycine Airman watch, created especially for fi lers, has been acclairhed by commercia l, military and private airmen throughout the world. Special featu'res include: 24 hour luminous dial "Hack Feature" allows exact correction Wcirld time zone compensati on dial Automatic calendar, anti-magnetic, shock. moisture and dust resistant Unbreakable mainspring Including_ stainless expansion band. $125. l et us demonstrate this remarkable timepiece. SLAVICK'S J.welerr. Sines 1917 18 FASHION ISLAND NiWPORT BEACH -644-llSO 'ftJIJf Cll•l'll• ActoU!lt W•!tomt -l •nlcArMrltetd, M•iNr Clltr~t. too. 0,... MoM1y thru l1turd1y untll f :JO OPEN 6 NIGHTS ~~ascinate everybody with --~~ Fi'.AC'LJIQN '""l ISLAND lhis zodiac decoupage tree. ~ ~ ' New, uruque , fun to make? I.=~~=:::::::~·~--~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~·~~=~~~~~~~~== hclflc Coast H!~1y Decoupage zodiac sign on one Mtw.n J•mboru •"" MKA.U.ur. side of disc and photo plus ,,...w•y "''"ut" •-Y· name, birthdate on other. Pat- lern 7i47: t~·elve 2•.l" motifs , direclions stand. discs. FIPrY CENTS (coins) for each pattern -add 15 cents , for each pattern for first-class1 mailing and special handling : Clt!1erwise third-class delivery will take three weeks or more. Send lo Alice Brooks DA ILY PILOT 105 Netdlecraft De.pl., Box 163, Old Chelsea Station, New York. N.Y. IOOll . Print Namt. Addres111. Zip, Pattern . Number. BIG 1970 Netdlecraft Catalog -"o pages, over 200 design!'. 3 free patterns! Knit, croche~ lni;\anti;, a r g y I e S\\"eat.er. ha1~. dresses. swim suit. Quill . embroider. "'·eave:. f\fak e loys. girts, afghans. Send ~JI) CPO!~. 50 INSl.ANT Gifts. Make to. dar-gh· to111orro1v. 50 cents "16 J ffy Rugs" to knlt, ·weave. l'if'\\•, hook . SO cents. Book o{ 12 Prlie Afgban1. 50 cents. •t 1y•t t r• 1etive w11r fo , m•n •nd boy1 glos~o orion h its for men. m~i:.hlne washeble -machine dryeble bright cob;. ' r~1hlo11 l1l1nd, 11cwport b •• c:t. + 644.§010 b111•1r1i.ri&t "' * ""'"'' c:h1rtt , • ··. I I I I , I ...... -------------· CAIL Y l"ILOT rMM r, LM r1yM RINGING THE BELL FOR THE SALVATION ARMY Santa Ana's Anna Walt1rmir1 Soul Soldiers Salvation Army Starts Yule Work Christmastime is much like any other time Pl the Al'llly -the Salvation Anny -where the troops know you don't minister to souls by neglecting bodies, hearts and minds. ·'Mle organization is planning its annual Christmas program, 104 years after it was founded, provlding as much as it can to help the poor, sick and the forgotten of Orange County. Preliminary estimates are that more than 1,000 families throughout the county will receive Salvation Anny assistance this holiday season, according to Captain Tom Cisar. The Santa Ana area commanding of· ficer says the Army has also liberated m<re than 5,000 new toys for distribution to children Santa Claus might otherwise bypass. "Voit Rubber and many other large manufacturers are helping out." said Captain Cisar, while the job of bringing Christmas cheer extends down through the ranks oC the Anny. ( Attention costs little itself, and many shut-ins and ~dden invatlds will get a visit by a Salvation Army band and caroling choir. • Captain Cisar estimates 2,800 will have 1 their holidays brightened this way, while the convalescent home visits will be sup- plemented by personal appearances at private homes. Piiot ·• Logbook Sunshine bags, parcels of both useful and recreationa.1 gifts, will be distributed as well during the Salvallon Anny rounds of area hospitals and rest homes. Citing the Army'.1 1967-68 annual report, Captain Cisar sakl a total or 11 ,125 Orange County residents -not just in the Santa Ana area -were helped last Christmas seaSon. All this requires funds, however, and besides the United FWld, Community Chest and other such sources, the Salva· tlon Army lassie with the old-fashioned kettle is out on the streets again. Volunteers as well a.s some women whose situation in life requires Salvation Anny as.sistance are manning the Christmas kettles and keeping that familiar holiday bell ringing. Captain Cisar noted Monday that many of them are working in far different en- virons -such as modem shopping centers -than the lassie who set up the first Christmas kettl,e. Salvation Anny workers were feeding the jobless, cokl and hungry on the chilly docks of San Francisco in 1913 when they ran out of food and money. One resourceful lassie carried a ltill- warm stewpot. out to the near6y bustling street corner and a campaign that has survived and grown 56 years was launch- ed. ·Trauma of Induction Comes on Both Sides By ARTIWR R. VINSEL I ot Ille Dt41r Pli.t Sltfl SIX YEARS AGO to the day -almost the very hour -the assembly line trauma of being asb6orbed into lhe U.S. Army was mine, so I could · identifv with the kid in the short story J \\'BS reading. ''The Trainee," (Esquire. January) is in his first day too. Coincidentally. on the other side of the country, my kid brother was cele- brating his discharge Dec. 11 , after four years' service instead of three. He was conned into extra time by a recruiter \lt'hO has a great ~ future selling used cars. ,.;,. I had been drafted and was bitter. J He had joined and was an Idealist. STUBBORN ABOUT listening to the voice of ex- perience - a typical kid brother -he had to learn the wa ste, sham and hypocrisy of the military system for him· self i! he was ever to learn it. He learned. One other young man from my mother's house once left for the military. He boarded there in college. His name wa&: Binh. lie was from the Republic of South Vietnam. He was married with four kids. His induction noUce-came the same Christmas season as mine, only he was to go into the Saigon regime's army. Binh closed his door and was quiet for many hours afterward. Exti!pl under certain circumstances, such as Imminent slaughter by ; soldiers (Life. Dec. 5, Page 37) the Vietnamese cry quietly. That was five years "before 1.ly Lai, where scores ol dead people may or may not have been murdered. "Your son must go to war?" Blnh had asked his landlady In sympathy • that December. As it turned out, her son must only go to type Jeep mail'Jten. ance records and answer telephones in a l\faryland camp. "ll is like leaving my own home and family," Binh said when his tum came. AND BINH WENT away to war, while the war comes without.mercy to many of his coontrymen, whe\ber they support Washington and Saigon, Hanoi, or don't care either way. Blnh was a horticuffi.zre student and enjoyed work1n1 In my mother'• ye.rd where flowers and shru"bs grow in colorful. non-m.Ultary profusion and · disorder. He experimented with grafting ~itrus and eaclt Christmas, the orange treti in front bears lemons from the bush 1n the back too. Each Christmas since 1963, a card with a Saigon postmark has carried best wishes from Blnh and his Vietnamese family. Each Christmas since 1963, my mother has sent Christmas and New Year's hopes and news frOm the people he called bis American family. 111E SPN BINll playod MO!IO!>OIY wllh on Saturday nighil Is nul of the Anny (the Major was dis:pleaaM!d but had no authority to forbid bis o!f-duty participation in Moratorium Day ob&erv&11ces In Boston) ••• the girl 11 wlrr n.ing awards in high school drama ••• the older son Is •Ulla newspaperman .•• The news wiU be the same &Ort exhanged by countless families tbls Ume of year. The lemons are out on the orange tree. The season for peace on earth and good will toward mt.rt hu come again. So far, the card from Saigon hasn't. f . n.. .. .,., °'""'"" 18, 1969 s DAILY Pfl07 J Stu~enfs Off for Fun Over Holidays By FRED SCllOEMEHL Of tlMi ~ ,. ..... bargain• oonsidering exceptlolial quallly Seglsmundo 01)1 Din Font Elca!ONI, If d the arj. !ludenl from Spain. &r.ly don he 1IO 111 WITH ICROOL oot of the way and 17 Laguna Many people wandering through the ac· his eight names-He'a seUUnc for Fm11n- day1 of Chri.stmu vacation approaching, tlvitjes office have noticed a tired Ron do. many Laguna lilgh ltudtnil will be di to R<>u, 1dviser to sludenl Council and math Whal has excited AFS ls 1.., hiih see relalfvea, eat lots of turkey, and build Teen tnstruc:tor, on the telephone or at 1least ·schools ever have more than two u;- up another y~'• supply of ute!esa gil"ta. siWna: near it. Bul he baa good rea.300 -change studentl, and wttb three, Jt eer. Still othen will be doing eome travelln; any day now he Is to be a father. · · tainly speaks well for the Laguna while enjoying1he holldu .....n. Corner Mr. Ross seems 10 be laking 11 In chapter. Greg KeSSler ts oU to HawaH for 1 nve strlde, though. All he is boping for.Ls "to AFS also sponsored a party last Friday day visit to the islands. He tdmits that «et It over with , so we can make · 1110me night., which wu attended by e:r:chanc• since his •parents are Finl u -,en, that holiday plans, and get this sword, SU!pl!Jl-students and friends from all over lhl his ·part of the trip will be spent u. a -.....1 ded over mY he:'!d, away." Orange Coast. With all the discussion we ''beach ~.''. With Ill the be1ullfUl offerlq a """lllmu Auction and Ari AMERICAN FIELD SERVICE, which had, ii reinforced the thought !hat when Hawallan · femaies alid 1rnowtn1 Grq'1 -Sa~. featurlq: workl ckdk:ated to the sponsors foreign · .-tudenb . here In we can walk togelher, t.alk together, tht.o natur.e, there will be no problem. holiday MUOn. America, has hit the jackpot at the high we will have peace. · P.1exiCO ii beckoning: Carol Duaer aitd To tome, the price tap may be more school. Arrivtng to live with the Corey With such groups as AFS, that dream her family. The:y·wiU be leaving the day attnctive tbm the wuts. They are family i.1 Fernando Pablo Esteban ~ay someday become reality. after Christmu,~ and i.e.ding for •the ' -----------------~---------'-------------fl>hlni ...,port.ol Ouqmas. lleadina in the oppOsite, dftd.lon will be Chrls Lan)bert. He plam to via~ !<~Uvea Jn Oregon. . • A VlD SIUlf:RS wlll be' headlna far the 2J.lnch "'°"·al M&mmolb . .Bill Ro!mer, Marsha IUJiwood. Tom -. 'MlrfOI Cather, and Dale Andenon will Nt the slopes ln thal ski resort and apend' the chilly evening by the, fireside. enne~·· The Art Gallery, fcrmerly the Purple Haze, has openod al Lq\&na Beach lllJlh. AUNAW FIRST CIUAUTY The gallery offers a. variety ol ltudent All STORES OPEN 6 NIGHTS A WEB: FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE! art, delving into batiks, llCU!plure, photography, pollety Ind polnllna. AMONG THE MANY slud<nl con- tribizt.ors are Hedy Bu.tan, Paul Bou, and Tim Volz. The gallery is under the faculty direction of· Mrs. JoAi:in Malol:ie. member d die art department at the high school. Tonight al 7:.30 o'clock, the alll<ry ii DoWn the · Mission Trait · Candle Parade · Slated in Viejo MISSION VIEJO -Cllmutna lhe Twe!Ve 'Alghts oC Christmas program will be a candlelight procession Sunday. The parade wiij begin at 6:30 p.m. and will feature: children from Misslon Viejo Elementary schools hokiinC battery operated candles. The proceWon will * zag across La Piz: Road from the top cit the hill lo the lnleriect1cm « La Pu and Chrlsanla om.. Featured aUraellons will be a Uvlq tableau of the NaUvtty some and a con- cert presented by the combined choirs of Mls.sioo Viejo's drurthes. e Cate Dolt• Part11 SAN JUAN CAPISTRANO -Members of the Chamber or Commerce a.rt inviting all area reslden'ta especially children to a porty wlth the Iheme Chrislmu In Mu· loo. nie plnabi·.pa.rty will take place Fri- day, at 7 p.m. .at 26840 Ortega Highway, a building dirtclly acros.1 from the ml.ssion. Children lUlder Il will be Invited to take a swing at a surprise filled plnata. Win- ners of the adult home and business decoratlng contest will be announced dur· Ing the evening. e Rf!ll. . Bush Electf!rl SADDLEBACK V Alil:Y -'lbe Rev. Richard Buah of Presbyterian Church of the Master, Mi.s!ion Viejo bu been elected president of the newly organized Saddleback Valley Ministerial Auocia· lion. Other officers are Rev. Domenick TamieUI, Shepherd of the Hills ·United Methodist Church, vice pr e s i d e n t ; \\'illlam Tolbert, Southern Ba pt la L ~hurch, secretary and Huvey Kaplan, i"emple Ellat, treasurer. Keep Yule Trees Fresh· lo A void Threat of 'Fire A freshly cut Christmas tree is not a significant fire haurd, said Lasuna Beach •Flre Marshal J~1 Prtslon, · if It i1 kept frah. · Shooting for a fire-free Yuletide, J>reasoa had lhest ilpo on Chrlllmaa treu: -Keep the tree moist and cool until ready to bring indoors. -Cut off ·the end of the trunk dlap ally 1boul one Inch above !ht orlpnol cut. , . -Place trft: tn cont.Iner of wattr or wet sand · and keep as cool n ponlblt. Addlilon d vll>n\ln B-1 lld1 the lrM. Jn •-bins moiJlure ' Ind siaYinl -long<r. -Make sure the trte 11 well 111pporied and IWl1 from fireplacts, heliln1 unlll, TV seta or other but sourcea. · -t11e Underwrttfr'1 Laboratory or Factory Mulll1l aJ>11r9Ved tree llahil. , -Do not use candles or other open flame devices. · · --Oleck frequenUy for dry)J11 needles around bulbe: and relocate bulbs if thl1 OC<Url. -Do not leave llghil on for lonl ptr'- lods Of Whttl IWa)' from homf. -Flame proofed tren ar1 11rer but more cotUy. -A tree lhal his· dried oul ii li1Pi1 flammable. -If metal tna are uffd, do not UH llghil because of the !Ward d eledrlcal short clrcuttl. • It's iust not Christmas ·without a real tree! • LID IT••• CHAR5E IT! CHRISTMAS TREES! Scotch pine tree, A tree with its own beautiful shade of grMn ... noedlet that aro luxuriously long. .lranche1 retain their needl11 longer than other firs, so you can enjoy your tree much longer. 5 ft.·6 ft. 6.49 2\i It .• 3\i It. Scotch p1..__ 4.49· 6 It,· 7, It. Scotch plno. 7,99 7 It.· 8 It. Scotch pin•·····--8.99 Nolunl Douglas flrCllristmas -I Stroighl, •urdy, Wily.,...,, wt rvtliecl thtlt dqwn from mountain for· 11111,. fin yow homt.with the }oy of Chrbtmos. S.lect ~-~o1 .... 2 ft,., ft. --·••••U••>••-••·-·--·99c 3ft,.,,,, 1.99 7 ft .• 11t. 4.69 5 lt.·6 ft. S.49 9 fi:. lD It. ___ .6.99 Plantation grown ~la1 fir tr .... Ii.., popular tre• due to lt1 hill pyramidal aymmetrf. The colof ft density of Do11gla1 fir brandies how been en~ yearly 1htorlng and shaping. 5 ft.0 6 fl,' ·--·---··-·-···-··-··--8.49 6 ft,.7 'ft, Dougla1 flr tree 9.99 7 It.· 8 It. Doogl., fir -· 11.99 .. :.-' -·-· t n111r.11.J DOWNEY MONTCLAIR NEWPORT BEACH ,. ............... ----~·· .. ,., ... _., . • --··~--~··· .. -~~~· .. ~~~---~----------------------------- . . ~: .. , ........................ .. · . • On•••1• i.s giving two A1neric uns a Christmas pres· ent-an expense-paid holiday trip to Bethlehem. Sister Margaret O' .. Neill of Englewood, N.J .• and Sis- t er Alod ia Carney of Dyersville, Jowa, said they had tried in vain for the past six years to earn their \Yay on a Holy Land visit. Finally they asked Onassis if he could help. They said an Onassis aide ad· vised them the Greek shipping ty· coon would foot the bill for the trip. The nuns left for Israel on a plane of Olympic Aiiways, which Onassis owns. • -. . Self-defen.se is Linda Morse's motto t hese days. The 26-year okt Berkeley Tesident testified 4$ a defe nse witness in tile riot co11.sp~racy trial oj the "Chi· cago Seven!' She told the court that t he 1968 Democratic ~nvrition ccm-- vinced her "we had to defend our· Je lves or be wiptid out." She htu since &aken up karate ana target 4hooti'ng. • 1, ·, Comedian Bob Hof)* is taking-a new message this year to the thou .. sands of Gls he will cheer up on his annual Christmas holidays ov- erseas trip: ·0 Sign ur, now to co~ tinue your schooling. ' Hope repre-- sentative Bill Faith told a reporter ithe 0 Hope for education" program i s being . pushed al the request of Defense Sec retary M e I v i n R. Laird. 111 San Jtta n. Puerto Rico eigl~t color television sets are being installed at a cost of $3.- 400 ill public plazas fo r the id- lers, most of llieni elderly be1ichwarmers. • The Gurkha Welfa re Appeal In Singapore is campaignin~ for $2.5 million to help the tough httle sold- iers from Nepal who "have served the British military for 150 years. It says that by 1971 only about 6,000 Gurkhas will remain in the British army but the number of ex-s.e.rv- icemen and thei r dependents will •oar to 125,000. Stag Party Clay Shaw J-udge • Nabbed NEW ORLEANS !AP) -Police croah- ed. an i.lteged SS a person gtag patty in a motel room Wednesday night and ar· rested everyone present, including the judge who presided at the Clay Shaw trial. · !'ie:wsmeq_ wh9 came on w:bat. they thooght would be a routine raid saw silver-haired Judge Edward A. Haggerty Jr. struggling to get away. He was su~ dued and handcuffed. Police :P.taj. Joseph Murry .58.id Hag- gerty was booked on charges ol soliciting for prostitution, obscenity, resisting ar- rest and four counts of assault on a policeman. Haggerty, SS, of New OrJea~. a judge in the state Criminal Di!trlct Court. presld~ at the month-Jong trial of Shaw, who was cleared of a charge of con- spiring to murder President John F. l\en- nedy. ·· . Murry uid three women and 10 other men arrested at the mldclty motel were each booked on the obscenity charge. The newsmen, who"included. television cameramen, were allowed in the room about a minute after police broke in. Haggerty's brief struggle with officers ' was in the full glare of TV cameras. The judge suffered a small cut on the forehead. Police Sgt. Willlam Nolan said a stag movie was being shown in conjunction • l ·Il' Raid Ul"I Ttle!lhtlt STAG PARTY SUSPECT Judge Edward. Haggerty with live entertairunent. He did not elaborate. Haggerty was re!eased from l'tDtral lockup on his own recognizance. Peace Talks Recessed After U.S.-Red Hassle PARIS (UPI) -Allied and Communist negotiators today argued over the alleged downgrading by President Nixon of the Vietnam peace talks and decided not to bold their regular mee~g next week. Delegates emerging from the con· ference hall said they had agreed to a 12· day · recess in the talks because of the Christmas holidays. Hanoi's chief negotiator had boycotted the meeting for the second week to pro- test Nixon's alleged attempls to sabotaga the t.aiks by refusing to send a replace. ment of equal stature for Henry Cabo t Goldwater" Urges NiXon; Resume > Bombing Nortl1 . . . : WASHING TON (UP!) -Sen. Barry M. Goldwater, just bac Jcfrom Vietnam, urg· ed President Nixon today to resume born· bing North Vietnam and to destroy tht l"'rt of Haiphong: Unless the United States resumes born· bing to destroy sup)ilies stored in the north, the Arizona Republ1can told the Senate, the conflict will become "a never ending war which neither the President nor the American people would allow." We are fightinf. a war of the passes," said Goldwater. ' ..• ·we are fighting a war to stop supplies moving through these passes rather than a war directed at the reservoirs which hold these sup. pile! in the north. "As long as the aou.rces of these sup. plies go untouched, otit task ••• is a little like trying to hold back the tides, No matter hov1 much of the supplies and equipment we destroy in the passes, more of the same will be coming .•. so long as the -railroads continue to .run down from China into North Vietnam and the Communist ports controlled by Hanoi remain open to supply ships from Russia and other European C0W1tries. '' • Lodge, who resigned as chief U.S. negotia_tor earlier this month. Ambassador Philip C. Habib, ac:tlng chief U.S. delegate, reminded the Com- n1unlst side of Nixon's statement that "our delegation at these meetings has full author1t.y to discuss any proposal that will contribute to a just peace." Brushing aside the Communist charges that the Nixon administration was ''downgrading'' and thereby "sabotag- ing" t~e talks, Habib told the North Viet- nam and Viel Cong delegates that "what is lmportant at these talks is a read iness i.o· negotiate seriously." "Yoor re£usal to enter into genuine discussions with. all the parties, as well as yqur refusal to consider mutual action, .shows cle'arly that it ls Your side which is not taking these meelings seriously," Habib sald. Habib was referring to the communist refusal to have any dealings with lhe Saigon delegation and ta discuss lhe wilhdrawal of North Vietnamese troops from Soulh Vietnam. Battle Deaths Nearing 40,000 SAIGON (AP) -American battlerield deaths in nine years of the Vietnam war will total more than 40,000 by Jan. I if the current rate' continues. The U.S. Command announced today that 85 Americans were ltilld in action last week, 15 less than the previous week . Thi!·raised the number of U.S. battlefield dead slnce Jan. 1, 1961 to 38,827. For Uie pa.st aix weeks, the total oi U.S. combat dead has averaged· about 100, and there Is no expectaUoD that this will decrease subst.anUally anY time soon. South Vietnamese headquarters said 421 government troops were killed in ac· tlon last week, 10 more than the week before, and l,'39 government troops were wounded. Gales Lashing Northwest • Snow, Fre ezing Drizzle Spreads Over Midive st California SOUTHEiltN CALIFORNl.t. -V1rl• •b!• flltfl cloudlrin1 TflurMl•r -nd Ffldf'I tnd loW claudl from t Ol ll }1>11"'3 to CMllll 1!0Pe1 of llW lllOUll• ltlnl '"°'111'"' l!ovrl. Nol much tem- pef"lllltf Cl'l1-. LOS ,lNGELES ANO VICINITT- CloudY ht mc1t11ln9 houri 1rld ft1rv 1vnshlnt wllll 111111 clotldt Tllu,,.,1\1' al~-I nd Ftld1y, nol ""1ttl ltm- -•kl1'11 w ..... Low Tfl~r.0.Y nttnt n Hklll Tflw•l<l•r 61. POINT CONCEPTION TO M!XICAN M)ltOEilt.-Wl"'31 ltKoml'"' _,,,,_,, lo Wfll I to ls 1r.no11 '" •"--' 'fllv.-my 1rWf Friday. H"~ wt1t1rl¥ swell -ro.ollet w11..-1 ...:I 11191'1 t>rMlr.I'"' W•\lft 1!cnt (:Oii,!, CIOoUd¥ In moml"91 wllll .,.,,,,., lot f1' hffv" ,..,. bu! Nrttr """"' In 1n1r_,1, L!ttll t-.111<'9 CfllntN. Coutel V.S. 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In fllt lft"'loo' !I tu•ntf to ,,.,... ti fllt!IH" t lev1tlon1, A w9" llo<ITI lf'Olll Wll llfladlnl l!tfll anew, l•1tr'"9 r1!11 aM "'"1' lnl dftlJlt KfMI fllt Mhtro'lnl f!'Om Wl1e..,tln to !fie leww Ciiio Vttlt'I, H ..... 0r1Mnl H• VOl'lf O&IMtrWf Okl1l'IOIVMI Cll\I' ...... ,..,... 5•flnll l"110 ltobltt l"ll~ht """"' 1t111d Clty "" lllltf ·-S1c.r1m.,,lt Sill L1lo1 (Irr Sa n Olfl!O .. .. ,. " .. " .. ~ " ,. " ~ " .. ,. 4 " • ·" " ~ " .. ·" " .. " .. .. .. .. .. n • Nixon Asks Solons Curb Spending WASHING TON (UPI) -President Nl'xon says the Democr8tic-controlled Congress, by increasing government spending and cutting taxes, is adding to "inflation -the hole !rt everybody's pocket." In a tart message to leadl!rs of the Senate and House, Ni.Ion Wednesday ask· ed the lawmakers to .>top boosting his budget requests "no matter what the cost in political popularity.·• He said, :'The Congress appears to ~ well on its way to substituting tax reduc- tion for tax reform. This will harm rather than help the average taxpayer. Inflation ••• is µie mo:;t unfair ta.I· of all." A few hours after Nixon's message, the HOWie passed 259 lo 156 a bill to give the Presiden t standby power to order con- trols over consumer and business credit transactions. The bill, which Nixon did not ask and Republicans opposed, v.·as sent to conference conuni.ttee · to work out differences with a Sena~ measure. Under the House bill , Nixon, if he chose, could activate controls and the Federal Reserve System could apply ceil- ings on interest rates, conditions on con- sumer purchases bought on lime, and other regulations. Jn the bill 's report, Democrats on the house banking Com- mittee wrote the Nix"on administration's policy "fails to curb innation, hurts hous- ing, hurts employment, raises interest rates •.• " • Nixon's letter 58.id bills already passed by at least one chamber of Congress would add about $4 billion to government spending during the current fiscal year. -He Wd.an additional $1 biUion has been Jost through congressional inaction on his plan to make the Post Office sell-sup- porting. "This combination of action and in- action would load an additional $5 billion onto an already overheated ~onomy," 1 Nixon said. . BACK AT WORK 'Newark Mayor Addonlzio Newa rk Ma yor R eturns to Work NE\VARK , N.J. (UPI! -Mayor Hugh J . .Addonizio, ind icted \\'ednesdoy on tax evasion and ' extortion charges by a federal gr'and jury investigating Mafia control of gambling and official cor- ruption, returned to his city hall office to- day for business as usual. Addonizio arrived at city hall at 8:30 a.m. In the only public statement he bas issued si nce the indictments he said: "l can 't say anything at ~s time. but \\"e \\'ill have our day in court on Friday at the arraignment. In the 1neantimc, we \viii continue to n in the city in its usual effective ma nner." · Fifteen per.sons were named Jn the federal Jndiclment \Vednesday. They in- cluded a reputed Mafia lieutenant and nine presc9,1 or fonner Newark officials in addition to the mayor. Hangman Banished In Britain LONDON (AP) -The H .... ot tonls today pen;w...tly banbhed tho , death penalty l1X' 111W'der In Britah\ alt« a - day debato,lhat Cl'066ed !llrly -The Lordi approved wltlwt ., l<rmal vote count l Labor govemnent motion to make permanent a fwr·ynt apaJment idling the hangman despite lll'OOll 'con• gervalive opposition and public oplnkJn polls showing reoeweil silppClrt for uaina tbe gallows. · A key to the abolition. victory ID what both parties ca!Jed a matter ol con· science appeared to be the alternative: a return to the unpopular 1957 Homk:ide Act. Even the hanging lobby wanted to avoid that because (lf complicated defini- tions in it oC which murders could be punished by death. Stubborn attempts by Lords who sUll . fa vored the gallows failed to delay the showdown 'verdict proposed by Home Secreta"ry James Callaghan. Lord Brooke of Cumnor proposed that the vote be delayed until murder and violence statistics for 1969 were a~·ailable in mid·l970. Lord Dilhorn, former Conservative lord chancellor, moved that the experimental aboliUon be continued until 1973. The abolition may last only until a Conservative go\'ernment gains power. The vote climaxed 40 years of attempts to root out the death penalty for murder. 1·he House of Lords delayed even an ex- perimental recess for 20 years until 196~. It finally approved temporary abolition to end July 31, 1970, beginning Jn November J965. If Parliament had taken no action, the llomicide Act w:>uld have returned as law. a result apparently ;>leasing to neither side. The act divided murder into capital and noncapita\ categories. Capital crimes were defined u murders committed in the cou rse of lhefl. by shooting or explosion, lo prevent arrest, of policemen and prison officials and second murders. This meant th&t a murderer could poison bul not shoot & victim without risking the noose. SEARS Has Ev erythin g ... Including SUNDAY SHOPPING li :i'~":,~',:,1~'F-.1 • Contole Included • Overcasls, satin stitches, monograms and makes <le~ora· $ tive stitches manually .1 •Sews on buttons, makes huttonl1olcs • Fronted mounted bobbin winder •Walnut finish console ••• simulated drawer with bra .. plated pull •• , Model l204/9Hi0 Ask About Sears Convenient Credit Plans Sears Low Price! • • • .1• • • " . ~ Zig-zkg Portable , Sewing Machines . . . •••• I ' .. Sears Low Price • Overcasts, satin 6titches, liewe on buttons, makes buttonholes • Monogram• and makes decorative stitches man· oally •Front mounted bobbin winiler 'vitb automatic cut-off when bobbin is full. Model 121»/9(07 • . ·.~ . . . . -. . . . . . . . .. . . .. . ~· . Al•o Avail able at ean Appliance and Catalog Sales Stores .... • ,-------------------------------------------------, I __ ,.,.,...._,11..,.ut t1-Cl~ll -•0 .. 111 11 -.•t.1td,....,f•H•1.111WJI """""''""'ar -tltlotllfU.CllM.b:l.i ~ ,,. >tO-l!M• ._.°'~•DOI. a -11 •-, ...,,., •M •nu -· -a ,.,111 -1111.1111 I . ' INTlltlOlt ANO OW$1!1tT ltl!GIONS -fl'•lr TPlurMIY eflCI ,Nd.,, wl!ll """' Yl1"1tlllt ~i,... clGUdt, Lllllt lllfl'I· Nrtturt ctil"". lewt Tl'>llrtd•¥ 11ltnt 1S lo » lllW llllllt'lf alld J) to 41 lowtf" V4/ltrrs. Httr. "Olurldf'I if to 4of """' ,,.1iw1 .,.,.. " .. n 11..,-w11o .... '''" low ........... l :ot •·'"· 0.1 $f(O!\fl ftfil'I ............ 7\11 jl.ITI, 3.S Stc.'V!!! low ...... , •••··• , , . , .... , TP!trt t lllf _,, I '""' lno¥1 llu,.. rltl ..... , ,,,. l'IOl't1'IH1l•t1t llO'llfll ot f!ll routt!Pf, 1'1'1t !"ftl Ill 11•1 M iiin Wtl ttntl"lll'I cl"r •l'ICI cold, Thi cokl111 IPlll wtt Co~COl"cl. N,H,, ~rt tf\t If 11111°"" rtad!119 I~ UW rtoterd low fOf 1111• "-''· S.11 FrtM;llC:O S111Ut 5""-•nl TF\e,,,,tl W11llll!ltlll! .. " " " " " ., "' " ~-•n• -ot•·IJ" . ._ .. ,.,,II, ,,,.nn Sears __ .... ..,11 _" .. "1' I ~Mllt-JHl,1'111.J711 --llQMIO -•J?-JIOCI ~ _A .. _,..1111 _'°, ... ,, .... _I '·----------~--------------_________________ , '~R •IMI •ig •·'"• Siii 4: .. -·"'· M-ltlMS 1:13 P.I", Jlfj f :IO t .m, " .. .. •• lhlpHlel'lflMtncl.r.,....~,..JOUL•,..JOrA........,ll"-ttSr"' --•• "'Sotltl.m...OveNllfulfer.,_,Menerlledo" U,I l't)WiMft QUINN -AFTER FREEING HOSTAGES He Was Proteitlng Parole Denlal Inmate Rel.eases 23 Hostages Unharmed NASHVULE, Tenn. (UPI) ,_ A state prison inmate, di&grunUed over his failure to get a parole, held 2J persons hostage with a idot-loog, homemade dagger Wednesday before r eleasing them unharmed after five hours. The prisoner, H a y w o o d Quinn, 34, surrendered after State Correction s Com- missloner Lake Russell agreed to his demands, which · in- cluded cash payments to lhe hostages for t h c i r in- conve nience. Quinn was taken to a m~­ imum securily cell at c.entral State Mental Hospi tal for ex- amination. Serving· a 10 to 17-ycar term for armed robbery, Quinn rushed into the vi s itor s ' gallery in the main ad- ministration building of the prison and forced guards to give him the key to the room. He locked the door , keeping within the visitors, who in- cluded a one-year-old infant. Two guards, four fellow in- mates and their relatives who lvere visiting them were held hostage. Tile move appare11tly was triggered by Quinn's failure to receive a parole earlier this year. Quinn, described by a w.1son psychiatrist as "psychopiithic and p otentially (very dangerou s," doused one guard, Grorge Balthrop, with lighter fluid and threatened to set.him afire. He also held lhe knife to Balthrop's throat. Quirin told newsmen alter he surrendered that he would not have harmed anyone "unless they harmed me." Afterwards, Quinn wa s searched prior to being sent to the hospital and guards found one-half or a pair of scissors hidden under his clothing and two small homemade blades concealed in his shoes. Russell said the weapons w e r e "lethal." Russell agreed to four Quinn demands to obtain the rel ease of the hostages: The hostages lvould be paid ($100) each for their ''inconvenien~"; Quinn would not be placed in solitary confinement; he would not be transferred to Brushy Moun- tain State Prison at Petros, a maximum security prison in east Tennessee, and he would not be harmed by guards. Halt in F1unds Ordered panel of three fed eral judges has ordered the Georgi~ Board of Education to tmninate state funds to school riistrlcls whicll have not f i I e d desegregation plans byi ~larch 1970. The far-reaching decision Wednesday also: -Defines an iritegra ted !ichool system as one Jn which 75 per cent of all pupils of a minority race are c!Tolled in integrated facilities. -Requires the state boa rd, with the ass istance <l the U.S. Department of Heal!Ji. Educa· tion and Welfare (~EW), to process and review 1all school desegregation plait in the state before April 1. 1970. -DirecLs the stafF board, in • Church Pavs • 'In Li eu of Tax' OLYMPIA, Wash. (AP) - "In lieu of taxes," said the note accompanying a $350 check the city re~ived from the Rev. Maurice Haehlen, pastor of United Churches. Now T111:ough Sunday, January 4th I DEl,AfllEY BROS.:EAFOOD I Zlttl St. -O• Tllo lay -NEWPOU HACH Photoo: •673·l450 Phooo: 549·19ll ALASKA KINIO $2.70 CRAB MEA' (MY, I LOCKS) LI. DlLANEY ll!EDIUM $2 25 COOKED SHRIMP _.,. • u. MEDIUM $1 75 SHRIMP t:"l': ~to)'.1~ • • ••· NO. 1 WHITl-JUMIO ~ 95 PU WNS ,r• La. 1ox1 ....... ___ ......... • NEW ZEALAND-l'ETITE s29 95 LOBSTER TAILS .(~~>l~: • ol'IN ti.~JLV 8 A.M. • 5:!0 P.M. I Sydney Air Race Starts Survivors Outraged Senators Okay SST 3 Jailed in Dam Di-saster LONDON (APJ -The 12,000 mile London •• to • Sydney air race -74 light L'AQUJL.A, Italy fUPJ)-A planes chasing $100,000 in landsUde shoved millions ol prizes -got off the groond to-gallons of water over the top day after bad weather delayed of Vaiont Dam the night ot the start. Oct. 9, 1963. In six minutes, Maurice Clarke, a Britlslt the surging wave had swept businessman fl yi ng a 22-year-away JO Alpine villages and old, single-engine Auster, was killed 2,018 persons. first off from L o n d o n ' s A court Wednesday night Gatwick airport. convicted •the presideot o( the More than half the nlrcraft firm that built the '. the public works councl1 and a regional engineer of neglJ.. gence and manslaughter and sentenced each t.o m years in prison. The court freed Clve other officials charged wlth the same crimes. Survivors of t h e catastrophe screamed with outrage. "Gjve lhem a gold medal as well" shouted the wile of the mayor " Lon«arone, ,1. most wiped off the map by the torrent. Her ion was among thole killed. The prosecullon aocued the ddendanls of chootlni the dam aite without conslderifll the loose stnactW'e of Mt. Toe behind IL The enUre aide ol the mounta in fell Into lhe man-made lake behind the dam. WASHINGTON (UPI) The Stnate bu given a IO" ahead to construction of a 1lant-slze Jupersonlc · passenger plane despite ob-· jections by'' critics that it Js a g1ft to a few "jet-letters" at the expense of badly needed mass transit for the city com-muter. · were scheduled to leave dur· chairman of the go\ .nent Jng the day and the rest Fri--------'-------'------------------ day. Planes were expected to R d' 'h s w· h 0 The action came In a M-22 ' vote late Wednesday ln whlch the ienate turned down a pro- posal ~Y Sen. Wllliam Prox- mire (D-Wlsc.), to cut out MO million ror the supenonic transport (SST) plane begin arriving ton ight at ea t e tars It marr Athens. HURRY 1·N! SHOWING ENDS DEC. 22nd Sears Price& Effective Beginnidg Today GENUINE HAND-KNOTTED ORIENTAL-RUGS These fabulous hand made origi· naJs are an excel· lent investment, •• they increase in valueoverlbeyean. They mellow with age , cu hancing their ' Kiad Rago Crom INDIA 12x9 Chand II.I lx9 Chand 12x8.JO Cbond 9.8x8 Norjahan 12.lx8.8 Norjaban 11.9"8.9 Attar 9.10x7.9 Alllr ll.llx8.ll Rajkot 11.9"8.8 R.jkot 9.10.7.10 Rajkot 12x8.9 Chand J0.4x7.9 Norjahan 15.lxll.JOAttar Rap from PAKISTAN 3.6x2.7 Pakietan. 6.10x3.l Paki1tan 6.7x4.l Pakistan S.2x3.l Pakistan 3.9x2. 7 Pakistan S.10x4 P1kiat10 Rap from AFGHANISTAN B.6x6.2 Afghan ll.tx7.ll Afghan 5.8x4 Mgh1n 6.9s4.ll Afghan 7.9x6 Afghan 12.519.10 Afghan 12.10.6.10 Mghon 9"7.5 Mghon TURKISH PRAYER aucs 25x25-in. Ka)'ICri 39x 70-in.. Kayae.ri 39x70-in. Ka)'Hri 40x90-in. KaJ9Cri 20.140-in. Yutic JRANSAROUKS Color 2.6xl.10 2.8d.9 2.9sl.9 4.112.2 S.W.7 7.3x4.9 S.W.2 6.Jx3.7 6.10."3 2.512 6.8x4.3 7.3•4.lG 6.6x4.7 7.Sd.S Ghoradjeh Ghoracljeh Gboradjeb SU'Oak Red San>ak Red S1rouk Bia• Kerman Cream KuLlbad Red Mebrobaa Red Sm>ak PaabU SaroakMir. Red Oehvand Blae O.&.and lied Shabribat Blu • Price 1195 1195 1195 1485 1595 1550 1395 1775 1695 1550 1195 1490 1895 155 1130 1199 1125 155 1185 1335 1335 1240 1255 1199 1525 1495 1275 1125 1119 1189 8299 sB9 _._ror A Limited Time See This Precious Collection at ••• •Sean Tornnce •Sean Paudena • Sean Coat.a Mesa • Sun Canop Pak The following partial listin1 indicate. ns Ilise in feet end inches, eolor and_ price ••• pl.bend fnm India, Pakistan, Atgiianillm. Inn. VJ1it all four dore1 ind see the fa!J. alou1 eolleetion-Yalued at $1,000,000.. The $30,000 B;djar Rag will be on diaplay at lhe C1nop Park Store thm Dec. 12th. Costa Meea Store lhroagh Dec.19th. IGnd IRAN KERMANS Color Price ll.2x8.8 Kermoa Blue Sl295 J4.2xI0.9 Sorouk Red 11895 J0.9s6.ll Soroak Red 1795 ll.2x7.3 M;rabond Red S699 ll.Sx6.8 Mehraban Red 1675 ll.6x8. JO Sbabribaf Blae •2195 13.2x9.4 Tabria Red 1545 10.2s7.3 K•hotanhangCuam 1590 ll.7x7.9 Soraband Red 1485 llx8.2 SaroUk Blue 11350 13.l.x9.7 Kerman Red 1950 12.4x8.8 Sarouk Cream SI 195 Il.Sx9.2 Kerman Cream 11095 17.Sxll.8 Kerman Cream · 12890 1S.6x9.7 Kennan Cream 11995 J6.7x9.Il Kerman Cream 11650 17.Sxll.8 Kerman Cream 12890 17.2xl0.4 Kerman Red 12290 21.5xl2.3 Saroak Red •3375 4.llx3.S Sarook Cream 1199 2.7xl.JO Gharadjeh Cream •485 6.3x3.Z Ghoradjeb Creon tll 9 5.lx3.S Bortch11lu Red 199 S.6x3.8 KaLlbod Red 1145 J5.b9.IO Saroalt Red Sl 995 22.lxl2.3 Kerm1n Cream 13695 20.ll.xll.6ShobribaC Blue 1630!) · 23.7xl3.6 Bidj1r Bloe 130,000 11.10.8.9 Kabutarahong Blue I 790 12.llx9.9 Herioa Brown Sl695 J0.7x6.6 Yud Red 1575 14.2xl0.9 Soroak Blae S2350 7.b4.5 Mehrabm Red 1199 6.7d.4 Hamadan Red 1140 614.3 UUan Red 1185 6.8d.3 Aron Red 1185 6.10.4.7 DJ'f'liuin Red 1225 8.Sx4.3 Dardjuin Cream 1225 7.3x5.I Hm .. lnbad Red 12Z5 125 7.5xS.2 Kauhad Red 1225 125 S.2x3.S DardjuU. Blue 1119 l25 S.213.7 Dardju;n Cream 1119 i99 5.%xl.8 Dordju;n Creom 159 1119 4.W.6 Dardj..;n Cream 165 1525 RUNNERSltEs 1199 14.6x2.6 Korman Cream 1145 12.712.8 Sarouk Red tl 99 14.2'2.9 Darjoata Reel t45 16.8x.2.8 MehrabH Blue Sl50 llx3 Mehraban Red 1299 13.712.4 Sbahribal' Blue 1299 13.812.8 S...Ouk Croom 1675 1412.6 S..Oak Red 1380 1375 1250 1465 1195 1295 tl65 1395 Many More Coloni And Sizes to Choose From " ,-----------------------~~------------------------, I Above c..,..1a SEARSTornnce SE4RS P1uden1 SEAR$Cott1M-SEARSC.nopP.ari< I A"allablc •t the Hawthorne at E. Foo1hlll •t Brl1tolatSonnower · Victor;r Blvd. I Followlnc Sepulvetla Ro1emead. Phone ~ In So. Cou1 Piasa at Fall&.-ook l L • Sears Sloreo: Phone 542-1511 EL 5-4211-MU 1-3211 ears PhaneS40.Jl333 Phoae340·0661 , ~--------------------------------------------Shop Nithll Mooday tlvough Saturday 9:30 A.M. lo 9,30 P .M., s...ior 12....;, It S p .M. ---• "Soll1f•ctlon Gvara-.1 orYowMone7~• , .. ' . ,. , f.tY;t,a l 1t1•4C1-\I \.. ./ o :TJ '•·-"'•,...>7JTC"'V"""""""'""'""""'""""'"'"'---------------------------------~--------·-- • DML Y PILOT EDITORIAL PA.GE • Promise of 'Job·s '70' At least one of the programs lo ald Ibo "di•advan- ta&ed" begun In the JohNoo AdmlnlttraUoo 11 fittiog neatly Into President Nlxoo'a concept of Ibo New Fed· erllilm -Ibo 1oeklog ol leadenbip iD the private sec- tor with backlng by Ibo federal governmeol lt 15 the NaUonal Alliance of Businessmen program to hire, train and mrain the harckore unemployed. 'Ibo federal government peys t)!o expenses Involved in training wort en In ibis "unemployment" category, but Ibo businesses bear Ille brunt of the effort to solve ibis most crU!cal ol urban problems. Since tho ltart ol the program, the Department of Lebor baa signed 1,068 contracts with lnrge and small firms for a total federal commitment of $274 million. Results have been so encouraging nationwide that a neW joint program has been organized for the coming year. N~ed "Jobs '70," the program's goal is to see that at least 614,000 ,of the educationally and otherwise dis-- advantaged persons are hired and trained, by June, 1971. 'Ille new program, as described at a conference at '1tie NeWporter IM last week , will Include the National Assocla~n of Manufacturers as an active partner with NAB and the federal government. ·NAM's contribution could be substanllal. '!be "''°' · cWii>n inlti!uted in 1966, In hundreds of plants ol Ila Jn.embers. an tducaUona1 program emphasizing func-- ticmal lkill1 in mathematics and language. These have been major factors barring the hard-core unemployed from even the.limplest ol jobs. NAM has had a leading role In development of an operational computerized job matching system to as- sist marginally employable people. It has been tested successfully in North Carolina and is now available for use anywhere in the nation. try -for esaclly the right end, doetn! Jobi for those who need them.11 Jerome Rosow, assistant secretary of labor, in re- porting the Presidtnt's views at ttMi local manpower conference, added: "This administration is convinced that the latent and unused potenHal o! thousands o! un- deremployed and unemployed ghetto residents will, given more than half a chance, manifest itself best in private Industry. We do not intend -as urged by many -to set up the government aa the employer of last re-- sort. We will rely on the private sector." The program's greatest virtue is the promise it holds forth al avoiding the spiritually debilitatiog ef· fect of a dole and bringing pride In productive employ- ment to those who need it m~t. A Visitor to Welcome II you're a property taxpayer and you have a knock at your door, it could be a bearer of a petition every such t,axpayer • voter should welcome -and sign with enthusiasm. The petition is aimed at pulling an Initiative on the ballot at the next general electiou which, if passed, would require the state to pay at least 50 percent of pub- lic school costs and, 90 percent of welfare costs. The state, despite its broader tax base, now pays only about 35 percent of school costs and 65 percent of welfare costs, unfairly burdening property taspayers. Yet state-mandated. programs are a major element in increasing cosls both in education and weliare. 1he Reagan Administration has ducked the Issue (a. did its predecessor), and the Legislature has failed to act. "nW! initiative is the result. It will give the citi· zens a chance to make a long-needed policy detennina.o ·~ President Nixon has enthusiastically endorsed the 14Jobs, '70" program, sayin¥, "It is local and it is prag. matic. It uses exactJy the ngbt means -private indus· tion on tax reform. -'\HE LIKE~ MY 6RITS .'' ., Building Issues for 1970 Mrs. Mitchell Wins Freedom Fighter Prize Most Prisoners Nixon vs. 'Careless Men~ WASlUNGTON -'Ibe odds favor final emergence of. a tax bill President Nixon will sign and In the process he ti slowly bulldlng his 1970 luues for capturing con- trol ol Congress. This ls 1 complicated process not con- fined to the tu bill. It """1d be unfair as well u maccurate to deocribe thiJ proc- ea merely a1 a politically modvated echtme to perpetuate tbe Nixon ad· ministration. But what is emerging does cut the Nlson administration as responsibly ac- ting In the general public interest. against the ••careless men" and "fading poliU· clana" of the Democr1Uc opposition trying to mate political eapllal out ol tax Olla, pension booanw, and civil rights favarftism. TbfJ la the allnolpbero lhe Presldent II trying to create: R e1 poo1lble Republlcanlsm vs. D e m o c r a t 1 c op- portuniam. The b:sue 1'UOI ac:roa the hoard, from the rate and nature ()f the Vietnam withdrawal cm through welfare grants and lnflaUOIW'l' las bills. NOR IS THE ISSUE ABSENT from the President's Insistence <ln a voting rights bill applying unilormly in all the 50 slates instead of solely in seven slates of the 5outh. A certain rationality and even-han- dedDtlll attachea to the President'• posi· tion which Is naturally appealing ln the South and cannot be entirely rejected in the North although the Prtsident's bUI in fact aofttns up enforcement ()f equal voting rights guarantees. The President's position on all lhele Lma erpoaes him to bJtter criticism aa lnxllliUn lo the agonlea of tupayen, aa Resor Is WASHINGTON -The My Lal Incident II ~ Che fata ol Army Secretary Stanley S-. Whatever the ootcome al the rurl.ously controvenial Vietnam affair, he .L9 definitely goinc to i-tbe job he hns BOmehow m-ged to bold on to since Ju- ly 19$5. n.at's thre anphaUc am.trance being given ~'• nwneroua congressional cr!tlcs. Both Republicam and Democrats have beeii Irately opuUering about him since the llOITl' Gr..., Bettt boggle a few months ago. Much of the blame for that gr"OS3ly mi.shandled mm was charged to him. Now more incensed tha.n ever for -t they -the same kind of panlci<y and muddle-headed Ineptness and bunglinc In d<allng w11h My Lal, they are fllUy demanding Reecr's acalp. NO DATE J!OR ms departure ls belna lndicallJd, But Che auUlorltaUve lnsld< --~-- 'lbunday, December 18, 11169 '!'lie tdllorlol page of the Dollv Pilot sub lo inform and ••lm- 11late read<rr by pre1rn«ng thu UWJXlll<T'• ophUo!u and --TMntarr Oft topk:r oJ lnterrrt ond alg!dfi<G""•· bf providing • f"""" for U.. espr<uion of our rtcxltn' opfnlmu, and b11 pre1mtlng Ill< dlo<n• v1 .... points of mforflt<fl ob"""'' and l])Ol<fnMI °" loplu o/ tht dav. Robert N. Weed, Publisher gutting the civil rlghts act or 19$5, u .... tinuing a war ln which 100 Americans Mi! sUll dying every week, u Ignoring the nttds ()f the poor aod bunF.J· The President haJ evidently decided that this line of criticism is not shared by a reasonable majority; This reaaonable majority is credited with seeing the sense of continuing the fight on inflation without large personal income tu cull right now. The reasonable majority favors a measured and careful withdraw. al from Vietnam. The rtaSOnable major· tty Is tired ol aggre.uive and punitive measures enforcing integraUon. So goes the rationale of the Nixon •P!>""'ch, and tt will be eeverely tested in the ton· greutonal elections of 1970. VICE PRESIDENT SPIRO T. AGNEW has become the advance agent or the Nixon strategy wit h his recent attack on the 11careless men" up for reelection to the Senate in 1970 who are bringing on "national disaster" through t he cumulative lmpact of "currying political advantage for themselves." Two of the "careless men" for whom Agnew is gun- ning are Sen. A1bert Gore or Tennessee and Sen. Vance Hartke <lf Indiana. Gore authored the $800 Income tax deduction. Hartke fathered propo.sa.Js for tax credits for business. These Individual targets are probably less important than the general im· pre.saion of Democratic irresponsibility in COngresa whlch NlJon is trying to create. If the whole image ii completed Nh:on standl u the man of reason looking oot for the general interest. Jn .the constant assault of Democrats serving the clamor· Ing demaodl ol 1peclal · groupe and minorities. ln the past II hu often been &18Umed that the sum of thele specW groupe and ntlnoriUes ii greater in polJUcal power than the silent middle segment But Nix· on evidently believes that the tablr.a have turned or can be made to turn in favor of the middle course of reason. REASON, TRAT IS, from his point of view. From another poin1 of view he and Vice President Agnew an pu rchasing support at the cost of alienating a sizeable segment of tbe American public. This ls de.scribed u "polarizallon" by those who fear that d>elr own position on public lasues IDlll' become the minority position. In another sense Nixon Is most CU· tatnly trying to polarize the maximum support behind his policies of restraint in economic matters, careful liquidation of the Vietnam War withouf sacriflcing our major objectives, and general rerorm In social weUare policies. All this would be made easier, although not necessarily simple, if the RepubUcan Party should gain substantially in the congressional elections: or 1970. This would appear as a vote of lncrea!ing ~n­ fidence in the Nixon Admtrustratlon which the President evidently wants and feels he needs. Agnew's present forays are merely Pf"liminary to the more general effort which will be made next year to win an endorsement of Nixon's first two years. Our annual Fr«dom Fighter o1 the Year Award goes today by unanimous vote to Mrs. John Mitchell, the attractive wife of the U.S. Attorney General. In citing Mn. Mlitchetl's numerous con. b'ibutions to a better America during 1969, it is difficult to know where to begin. Le,. s begin with her onilllng pol To see what marijuana wu like, Mrs. Mitchell went down · to the Narcotics Bureau In Washhlgton and persuaded the chief medical officef' to light up a joint. "I stuck my lJ06e. in Jt," Mra. Mitchell told reporter Sarah McCleodon af. terward, "and the next morning I woke up with the mast horrible reaction you can imagine. My eyes were completely closed, my_ face was swollen, and I had the skin of an elephant." MRS. MITCHEIL SAID she wished anthropologist Margaret Mead and "the other spooks" who think pot hannless, coold see what it does "jU!t to the skin.- without even smoking it." In addition to Mn. Mitchell's trem~ dous breakthrough in medical re3earch, she was the first to identlfy a new mena ce to oor society and to establish a new goal for all Amertcans. 1be new menace is, « coune1 ••the liberal Commwtlsts ... Should Be Out The most abvious fact about jails, to anyone "bo has studied them, is that most men who are there do not belong there. About four-filths of t h e "criminals" behind bars could · be safely kept in some ether social setting i ooly abou t 20 percent require maximwn security. • The modern prison is an obsolete vestige of a bygone-era ln penology. It needs not merely refonn, but a radical transformation to bring it into the 20th Century. What keeps it so expensive, useless, and ttippling is the combined ig· narance, fear and apathy of the public. ONE OF THE WAYS we can begin to break out of this futile and self'-defeating ·system is by a "work-release" program, such as New York state instituted at Rlkers Island prison this spring, foll owing the lead of Wisconsin and North Carolina, where similar programs have been In ef· fect for many years with good results. More than 100 Riker• Island inmates are taking part in New York's first ex· perimental wort-release program which, as Corrections Commissioner George McGrath explained, "strikes at the very· roots of some al the greatest evils in. herenL in the jail system." These evils in. elude despair, cynicism, inertia, and lack ()f incentive to adjust to civilian society after rtlease. ' T H ES E HUNDRED-ODD prisoners leave ln the morning and return at night. They work as office c l e r k s , warehousemen, truckers' helpers, or at whatever skills they may have possessed before conviction. They receive the same pay as other employes, and give back to the jail only a $2-a-day charge for subsistence. 'fhe balance is deposited in the inffiate's account for use when he ls disc.barged. This is onty a tiny start, of course. Prisoners in for more than four months are not allowed to take part; ooly two peret!nt of t.he 5,000 men on Riker'3 lsland are involved in the program. But the most encouraging aspect is the in- creasing number of employers who are willing to accept the inmates on their payrolls. THE GREAT MAJORITY of the men ln prison are oot very different from the rest of us, although we like to think they are. Except for habitual criminals, and those with severe emotional disturbances, they are society's "losers" -men who could not cope with their environments, who succumbed to weaknesses, or who V.'E!nt from boy~ escapades to more serious criminality w i t h o u t com· prehending the consequences unW lt was too late. These are the men who can be saved - but who, in the present prison at· mosphere, are left to rot away and degenerate wit.h society's derelicts. Our indifference is a greater crime than their transgressions, on the Way Out In an interview with CBS after the Washington protest march. she warned, "I don't think the average Americans realize how desperate it ls when a group cf dea•onstrators, not pea c e f u I demonstrators, but the very liberal Com· munlsts, move into Washington ••• Yoo coold have OVf!r'/ building In Washington burned down.'' Def ending Your 'Castw' word is that "his resignation 11Vill be ac· cepted as aoon as the dust settles a lil- t.le." Big m}'lleTy b how and why Resor hos stayed OD so long 1n tbe Nixon regime. There are varloul accounts, but none "'fY ooovlnclng. One b that he Is highly regarded by Defense Secretary Laird, ~ worked closely with him as a senior Republican member of the House. Armed Services Canunhtee. That still doesn't explain why this choice patronage plum hasn't gone to a deserving Republican. Then are plenty of able ones w1lo would jwnp at the chance to grab it. COMPOUNDING mE mystery Is the fact Lbat Resor Is the only De:~aUc holdover in the Pentagon hierarthy - who baa been retained for nearly a yvi r by the Republlean AdmlnlsiraUon despite repealed emba!Tasslng bungling and steadily mowitlng · blparlissn hostWty toward him In Congress. The 52--year-old New York bwytr was appointed by Presktcnt Johnson 1 few months alter hll JllM landslide victory. He II a decocated wteran Of World War II, and a graduate ol Groton and Yale Law School CHANGE IN TOP BRAM -Thal tong. rumored cllanie In lhe top U.S. command In Vietnam ii -definltel,y tel for O>On alter the lint of the yur. Gen. Cttlghton Abrams, the Anny'• stellar offensive battle rommander, will be r'Placed by Geo. Fmllnand tiiesaret. head ol 01< Army'• Moterlel Command and the Army's representative on the U.S. delegation to the Unlled NaUons. Their specl31tiu and notable talent.. e11)>1aln the reason foe the Impending "1Ul Abrams ls an expert in •uresslve warfare who as a tank commander fooght across Europe under famed General Patton. With U.S. policy now firmly bent on withdrawing from Viet· nam, Abrams' combat-mettled type of leadership ls no longer required there. Also, he has been in Vietnam for some lhree years -an exceptklD&lly loog stretch in that let.kl cockpit Other olficen and men are requlred to serve ~ only One year. More than three centuries ago, THE EXISTENCE or 1 liberal Com· England's Loni Coke proclaimed that "a munist plot. against thls nation was not man 's house is his casUe." It still Is. even dreamed of before Mn. Mitchell's Gf.nerally speaking you have a right to revelation on naUanwkSe television. Most repel an unlawful intruder, using as much heartened by the news were Ul09e who force as is necessary -including even had been fighting conservaUve Com· deadly force. For example : munlsts f o r decades with a result.ant A home owner, hearing someone pry wearinets on both aides. open hi s kitchen door in the middle or the "A new menace ls just what we needed night, grabbed a gun and went to In- to wake this countey up fo the menace It vesligate. Entering the dark kitchen, he faces," said one con.ervative Ccmmunist demanded that the intruder identify fighter bappUy. himself. \Vhen the man instead began to But Mrs. MltcheU'1 outstanding con-move forward menacingly, the home CHESAREK IS AN outstandJns logtoti· trlbutlon as a Fftedom Fighter must be owner rired a fatal shot. cian and diplomat. With the U.S. steadily her efforts to set up a single goal which a reducing Its fighting forces and Viet· cQOfuaed and troubted society can march ALTHOUGH BROUGHT to trial later namltlng the prolongtd con!Uct, his ad-toward !lhouk!tr to Bhoukler, black and <ln a homicide charge, he was found not ministraUve ability and erperience 1111 whtte, rlcb and poor, young l.Dd old _ guilty. Ttie court said th.at, considering what are chiefly needed. The prime ex· lea freedom. the threatening circumstances, he was pertbe o( the top leadershi p has ch•naed "Man ••• ~ gtven ••· •-~om to a within his legal rights in defending the -• uu ll'C'l:ll 1ua "~ 1anctily of his "castle." from a combat to a Uquldatinc role. greater extent than ever be.fore, and The doctrine Is not meant to protect For that job, Cbe>arek hu no peer. that'• quite ......,g," Mrs. Mitchell told your home merely as a pile of bricks and By Robert S. Alln Ttme magazine in still another interview. mortar, bul rather as a pen1onal haven or ud John A. Goldlmldl .. Adults: like to be led. They would rather safety for you and your fanllly. Dear Gloomy Gus: When you break your back for I or 10 thousand per yw and rom• entcrtaJner mali:e! 4 or 5 P.111...LION per year, something 11 1"TOf\& iOm!plaCe. -N. I. Tlll• ,.thl,. ,.n.m, ,.. ... ,.,. WltWto - J!Kt:tMr!IY lll•M til TM __ ,_,, .... rwr "" _... " l lllffl1 1w .. O.llY f'ti.t, .\.. re!pOrKI to a form ol dilclpllne." There.fore, It applies just as much to _ THANKS TO MRS. MITCllEU, who premises .you rent u to premises you own. might be deacr lbed u '1bt Attorney Furthtrmore, you may act not only Geoeral't A(new," we can loot forwud against 1n intruder but 11.so against • to a gala. pttrlctJc Le,,s Freedom visitor who tt(U!es to leave when you ttll Crusade in every hamlet and lown. And if ... h1m to. every Amerfcao dQl!ll his part, we can march forward tog<lher to destroy the freedpms that ao plague our ooclety. So lleep a sharp eye pee.led for libersl Communists. (They're the ooe111 in Ivy League suits.) Join the Fr«dom Fighters In their fight against freedom and re-. noonce a freedom a day In arder to keep this country free. And, ror htaven'1 sake, take a whiff or marijuana smoke when1vtt you get the chance. The way thlngs art going we're all going to ne:ed the skin of an elephant to 5W'Vive. ON THE OTHER hand, you must not In any evtnt me more forO!I than Is reasonably necessary under t h e cireumstances. Take tlWJ cue: A man talking politics with • vtsltlns neighbor became lnctl'IRd and asked him to leave. The neighbor arose to go. But he did not move fast tnough f<lr hls erstwhile host., who speeded hlm elong with 1 vtclous ldck. Result: the home owner was held liable for as.'8ult and bat· tery. The court said the kick was slmply not JustUled by the c:ircumstuces. NO R MAY YOU ar1>lirarlljl widen you r ' L . ' aw 1q . -·- legitimate circle of defense. In another case a girl's protectlve rather saw, ap. proaching the house, a youth whom he had ordered to stay away. The father opened · his front door, stepped out.side, and shot the caller in the ann. Here, too, the home owner was on:lertd to pay damages. "A man 's house is his castle," said the court, "but he has no right to go (outside) and attempt to kiU a man who has done no act indicating the intention of making forcible entry." An American Bar Astm:iation pub- lic service feat1lre by Will Btrnard. .----B11 Geor9e ---. Dear George; Last summer J wrote to yoo lllg .. geming that If people who owned air conditioners v.·aukl tum them aff the weather outside: woold be much cooler because air ronditionen pour «rt ao much heat. You didn'l answer my letter, but 11ow you can see how much cooler it is now th11l ,u the alr coo- ~ilioners have been turned nff. GEORGE P. FIRMIN Dear Ge-Dear Mr. Firmin : Gtc, J want to apologize about oot lln!Wertng ~letter. Frankly, 1 didn't think It i'ou.ld work .•• <Problems solred while you ~alt. If you've lots ai*t lots of Ume, that b.) • • - -------------- CHECKING •UP• Do Any Songbirds Sing in Flight? By L. M. BOYD STEAKS - A restaurant man of long experience claims those customers who ask for their steaks rare get the superior beef. As far as he knows, it's not a house policy anywhere. It's just that the best rut comes out when the order reads rare, and tbe poorest cut when the orcler reads well done. Purely a personal penchant of tie chefs, he says , but it's almost universal. OPEN QUESTIONS: !. Can an alligator run on Its hi11:d legs? 2. Is there any scientilic evidence a boa con.strictor snake anywhere ever actuaDy squeezed a human being to death? 3. Do any songbirds sing in flight? Or only whtn perched? THE PtlA TCH -On the night of Jan. 20, upcoming, the late Rocky Marciano will fi&fit Muhammud Ali in a coin· puterized match to settle the heavyweight boxing chain· piOOJhip of all time. BU!lk! No, sir, not quite. True, this money maker will be shown nationwide on closed-circuit television. But to film the od· Snow Trip On Dec. 30 tr snow doesn't rau on Westminster during I h e Christmas season. it probably will at Camp Wint.aka, high in the San Bernardino f.,tlJUJl- tains. A trip there 'has been scheduled for Dec. 30 by the Westminster Recreation and Parks Department for children IO-years or older. The cost is $2.50, whicl tn· eludes transportation, use of the snow atta and camp lodge and he>!. drinks. Children wilf meet ~!their buses at Sigler Park, 7200 Plaza Ave., at 8:30 a.m and vl'ill return at approzima ly 5 p.m. l::l Parents may register their children now at the •tion and Parks Departmenij 8200 Westminster Ave. Last fay to sign up is Dec. 18. I fi/tar f/;ghf, dity, Marciaoo and Ali fou1ht 70 ro..nds. I said l"'lhl, not faked. Somethinc not altogether computerized hap- pened in the ring to those two personally proud gentlemen v.•hile th ey belled away at each tiler for footag e. And the result, I'm told, is absol utely electrifying. CUSIOMER SERVICE: Q. "How old is Jinuny Durante?" A. 79. Which brings to mind, a clleot once. asked if Mr. Durante were superstitious. Research turned up the fact he aJways insists on kissing a pretty girl before going to work. This policy has proved h ig h I y effective for Mr. Durante. Should it not be adopted by working men na· lion.wide? ••• Q. "That actor Gig Young -what's tbe Gig stand for ?" A. I don't know. His real name is Byron Barr. THE DRUG FIRMS have come up v.ith a tranquilizer to quiet barking dogs. Good news, what? The vets call this pill the hush puppy .•• , JUST BEEN INFORMED of a pumpkin, grown at Haysville, N.C., alleged to weigh 280 pounds. That is about as much pumpkin as a fellow needs, ac- tually .•. SAN DIEGO rankl No. 7 on· that list of towns where the citizenry would most like to live, the pollsters say. Honolulu ranks No .. I. ONE MAN in every 25 would rather be a woman ••. NEVER SAW a covered bridge in the Deep South. Must not be any. , .SCHOLARS at the University of Wisconsin say their studies prove women are far, but very far more parsi· monius than THE M 0 ST BEAUTIFUL of women must be the violet.eyed redhead, I'd guess. , .THAT PRO- TESTANT who contributes the most money to his church every year on the average is the Wesleyan Methodist. RAPID REPLY: No, sir, it only costs the Federal ta1 boys 40 cents to collect •too. How would you like to. have that franchise? Your question.t and com- ments are welcomed and will be used wherever po!· sible in "Checking Up." Please address your mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of DAILY PILOT, Bo< 1875, Newport Beach, Calif., 92663. fi/tar ~ri!Jhf • DIAMONDS SPEAK LOUDER THAN WORDS. CltARLBS H. BARR --__ .,. ------ -· -11, 1'169 \_ bright washable wool • by , jantzen ' give him " bright-lone Scotch Tumbler the pure wool machine-w111h11ble sweater Down with drab ! •.• owoy ~ith lacklus ter colors in sweeters ! , , . hoorey for the brighter ones thet ere mech ine wesheble en~ dryeble ! Jontzen's got th e right idea , the bright idea, in great looking sweaters of herdy pure ShetlenC: wool. Gi lt him one. M to XL. e. the cerdigen in gold. lime, blue, brown, nevy. 13.00 b. the pullover in bronze, blue, lime, brown, nevy. 11.00 may co men's sportswear 84 • ~----- may co south coast plaza, san die90, fwy at bristol, cost11 inesa; 546-932 r shop monday through saturdey 10 11.m. to 9:30 p.m. shop sunday noon 'til 5 p.m. through december 28th MAVCO DAll.YPIUIT T I ) ··~--~·~ ... -.... ~·-----------------------------·-------------1 - -·I o,llLY PILOT . -Calc utta Cas t 'Surrenders' LOS ANGELES (UPI) - Seven cast members aod the producer ol "Ob Calcutt.a!" IWTtlldered fully-clothed lo police Wednesday on war ... ranta charging th e m with lewd conduct and indecent ex· posure. The warranb wue i~~d by the city attorney's office af.ter three unidentlfled mu· ~lclpal C0\11\ judges and in- vesligatcr> from the police vice squad attended the show oPenint night Nov. 2S. The actors\ and actresses were released ~ bail in time to make the opening curtain for an evening performance but cance.lled the sOOw be- cause of "emotional strain," a spokesman said. Patrons were given tickets to other scheduled performances. "This show played to 200,000 people in New York v;ithout an arrest and we are at a loss to explain why Los An- geles police are taking this action," said Edward Mosk, one or a phalanx of l:aw)'ers for the C a 1 t and Actor'a Equity. Police Inspector Pete Hagen saJd the judges detennlned Iha! the producllon violated at.ate Jaws. The play, which began a New York run in August, was termed by the producers as "nothing but a healthy cele- bration of the body and a comic exposure of many of society's sexual hangups." WE SERVICE STEREO COMPONENTS. The performers appear nude In both acts, except for un- disce!Jlible bits of gauze IJ>- tended to prevent direct aei: .. uaJ contacL The manager d. the theater where the play Is sbowing, Jerry K a ti , who was not named in the warrants, said he expected the arrests would result in a bo:r office boom for the production, which has had generally poor reviews here . Crime Unit Says~oFile On Alioto ALL MAJOR BRANDS. . lVEl Y INTl RESTIN61 l f\l: 275 E. 17th St. • COSTA MESA 642-9746 RCA·ZENITH SALES !OVER 12 YEARS OF DEPENDABLE SERVICE) "Artistry in Moving" "It's a great show," Katz said; "but it's not 'My Falt Lady.' u School Qonds Sold at 5% SACRAMENTO (UPI) State Treasurer Ivy Baker Priest Wednesday sold $2.~ million worth · ol school cort- struclion' bonds al the 5 per- cent lntenst rate. for the BEST MOYE of _ YOUR LIFE con: 494-1025 REMEMBER WHEN SHOPPING WAS FUN? GIFTS GALORE I • • • IT STILL 151 ON LIDO ISLE PROMPT FRIENDLY . A L'ILl5AWT MIN'S JHOP Ain-f IHOI SUYICI Am--. M.ACIMA.fll LTO. IAN I Of AMll lCA IAHOWS m lSHlll'S llDWIU .... llllTOM etMotlft elM'S Murc - THE REAL OLD 11ME CHRISTMAS SPIRIT BURNS BRIGHTLY AMONG THE UDO ... ISLE MERCHANTS. OUR TREASURE CHESTS ARE OVERFLOWING WITH UNIQUE GIFTS NOT FOUND ELSEWHERE. THIS YEAR RELAX, REALLY ENJOY CHRISTMAS SHOPPING. IT'S ALL HERE PLUS MORE, AND ••• WE DELIGHT IN SERVING YOU ' I ,J SF Black Studies' ' By Phll lllterlcmdl • oa.,,_ ......... .._...._ ............ -_;...,,_ Fair Prospects Seen For Sea Nucl.ear Ban UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Prospects are con- sidered better thcr.1 even that a treaty to keep nucl ea r weapons c!'f the ocean floor will be finished and approved during the current U • N • General Assembly. A Western disarmament ex- pert said today he believes there is a "slightly beUer ~an 50 percent chance of gettins it through ," before the 126-nalon assembly adjourns b e f of e Christmas. 1 The Soviet UniOn a.1d the United States have a j~nt draft or the treaty before ,the assembly's Main PolidCa.I Committee. Canada is consulting other countries about amendments to remove objections. Under the treaty the big pawers proposed, s I g n e r s would pledge not to P,lant area shall be facilitated a-.1d that any_ signer of the treaty may ask U.N. Secretary· General U Thant to get the help ol a "technically com· petent" nation for the in- spection. The 1967 assembly adopl»I a resolution dedicating t h e ocean floor to "the klterest of m a i n t a n i n g international peace," and the Soviet Union and the United States pro- posed the next year that pro- posals to demilitarize the seabed be referred to the Geneva Disarmament Com- mittee. That committee took up the matter this.-year, and the result was the joint SoViet· U.S. draft. Bank Seel<lng Lost Painting nuclear weapons, launchb' in-TOKYO (AP)--A Japanese stallations or storage facilities bank hopes it can help solve on or under the ocean Door the mystery m_ who stole a ootside a nation's tenitfrial missing painting_ or at least ~~riJe..carrying submai,ne.a help brt..11 back the lost woold not be affected. ~Mitsubishi Bank ·Is The draft ;provides ~at any distributing calendarl bearing alpiatory: nation, by ~or a reproduction French art1at with the help of any na-Jlenri De' TOulouJe.Lautrec:'s lion.' "shall h~~ ~~ to °" Jt\inting ~Marcelle." T b e verify the ':~~ities . o[ calendars Will ~· ~istributed 1f those act1v1ties raise dbubta free to poliee stalions and about fulfillment of t!Mf( ban. schools 1 But some nations. contenfl that1'jiiiiii. iiiiiiiiiiiii th.is does not clear1y p#Jvide!I for close inspection _.ainst violations. ' Another objection is t"8t the draft does not specUicaUy pro- tect the rights of coastal states to the resources/of the continental shelf when It says verification shall not infrklge upon "rights recognized under international law Including the freedoms of the high sus." One prospective ~dian amendment would say clearly that inspection oC any suspect GREATEST Automobile OFFER SEE PAGE 44 Shuy's Team TV Jnt '13995 I © [) /\ v I s R R (l \\! N 411 E. 17th St., C.sta Mesa Dally 9.9, Sat. 9·6 ..:.. 6~1614 llAILY mer • Bus o ·rivers W .in· Plea to Keep Beards NEW YORK (AP) -An beards '"' bus driven beyond the frbge of ne1tneSJ?- authority told ~I. Jy IOfll sideburns Or other fa.. In 1170, horse-drawn trolley "'The rule must be In· an •oeaUy trtmmed. • " "I was not' completely clal, halr that detract.s from opuaton were bewhiskered, tupreted in light ot the Even lhou&h aome falDOIJI No, an arbitrator rultd, pointing oul lhal Uncle Sam, Moses and Abraham LincOln were never labeled slobs for their face hair. persuaded of the soundness Of · dlgnlfied appearaoce." Kheel noted. And what about times/' Kheel ruled. "I am of mtn .bave .been fiepicted with a the analogy," Kheel ruled. "A 1".ffnty-one bearded drivers Biblical characters, Arlatotlt, the opintoo, and hold, that flnwiDJ untrinuned beard. ht rigged beard can. be trimmed were ordered to shave . .Nine· Plato, King Arthur,, Father bearWI, sideburns or othf!r said, "I do not · believe 'th• back."J11ere is no legal retreat · ftfused and were ·brought nm.e, Uncle Sam and Santa 'facial foliage' or hair ~tyles riding pubUe is qWte ready for from prtgll&)CY." before a suspenslm hearing. Claus? he asked. are perrq.issible ~roviding they Ulat,". Ei1bt bearded bus drivers for lhe '4anhattan & Bronx: The authority had demanded One more 1ave in bare-face ------------'-"'---'"--"-....;..--'---:::::---,.- in a 1963 direc:Uve that driVers ly. · Surface-Tran• it Operating Authority were suspended for their foliage. The authority and the Transport workers Union 110Ught arbltraticn from labof lawyer Theodore Kheel. Any beard is all right if it is neatly trimmed, Kheel ruled Sunday, and the eight be.arm he surveyed were neat. A "neatly bimmed beard is like being a little bit preg· naat," a lawyer for the "must be clean-shaven whlle But the Be4rded Eight vow. on duty." lt made excepUon.s ed to ·fifht. "The beard is part for "neatly t I' i m m e d of JJle. want to be· me. This is mustaches," but f o r b· ad e "' my happlneas," one· driver ~'bealnik·t)'Pt! beards, UJlU!ual-told the hearin«·· Canned Food Goes to Needy More than 2,000 caM of canned food have been collect- eJ by Corona del Mar ]!Sh School students to be ll'Vin to needy Orange County fam- iliu. for Chrlst,rnm. The canned food drive is apol150rtd by lhe Simpalicos, student service club . . 'RELAX IT'S A HOLIDAY 2666 HARBOR BLVD. 546·7080 COSTA MESA WEEKDAYS 9 to 9 SATURDAY 9 to StlO SUNDAY 10 to 5a00 . MIDGn ICE GLOW LITE 'Sn ' a l ri9ht •nough fo r ·••n th. ti ll p1opl .. 8 For lt101, wilN!ow d11or1tion1, w•ll lit ••nt1rpio,01. 88' SANTA MUGS ~~· .. ...,··--;: D H1r1'1 •cul• it~m .. : 0 E1p•ci1lly if yo11'r• 111 elf. N;,, gift 1401 0 Or buy et bit t1¥i1191 for 1prir19 birthcf1y1, 1/2 OFF JUMBO SPRAY PAINT !'I'~ll?ii"!"'El ... ~~Q D E11i1r lh11t 111in9 1 brutlri. D t.1i clo11111p, I••• "'''' •'"' 1 nttltr i•b. 0 Cho••• f1ofl'I p•i"'•••· 1111mtl1, l1cquo11, the111 1nd1 .. ''''"· Black & Decker No. U· 1-.0 OUITAL SANDIR ""'-~~ D Ait el't.it1I ••-'•r with 1t.tM, 0 M ...... h•11 ytv'te tfwevth lit the .t.•p, yo1 , ... ,, ... yeut ~111h. D Wer•• fine 111 •II Mt .. rl1l1. -19" ILACI I DIClll TOOL DIMONSTU.TIO-!C. JO .. 1AdYOl'tlltd lptelt!S good thru DKornbff 14,. ,1'6f (Ind I Mil• !Mt IOI!• ebcM,it lllcllen5 IPI SWltttrlafMll; Wf\erl tl\ey MY I 11W1t -.., I llPICllllll-. ff ""'/ii ~!I ~I ¥015 kl!l«i by IPI IYllanchl.I .(l.OSIO CMIU~MAS OAY 20 LITE MIDGET SET 0 Mul+;-colorecf "'ini lithf 111 for • tho1111 nO ut1t. " ' D U.L •ppro¥14 lit t11r111 •ft Ur1el1 H1rry too.I WEATHERPROOF LAMP HOLDER DURA STEEL 30 INCH MEDICINE CABINET 0 A 1hl11y n•w chro"'' ho"'' for,•11 th1 "'•dicin• y111 i.11v i.11t ferg1t te ••••· 0 You'll 1t1U f•r9•t buf th1 toethp•tl1 WIU II•• th1 ,,..,. qu1rto,., 1s•• Black & Decker No. 730 I 7 1/•" CIRCULAR SAW f· t~"" I ·-·- t ..,._ ··,.. ·-i·7 ."' 0 I hp 1J1oter t l"'' 111 th1 .JI. , pow1r n11d1cl for l•11th11f '1 ' ~ c11ttin1 job1. ~, 0 Q uick b1¥1I ind d1~1h · 1dj111tm111tl . 0 1 V. inch '''"bin1fie11 bl1d1 lncl~cl.cl. Black· & Decker No. 136o RADIAL SAW 0 O r1• ef th1 lio .. 1 '9ift id111 I .,..,, '''" I •now it'1 ""''"' lio11t 11w wo,19 It. c•rny.I 0 Cvt1 • f1ll l l11ch1• d11p. D Up fr•11t 111111'111, ... ,,.,,.;,,, •• ••tit .... , .. Shop with a smile, don't push your• self too hard,· and why spend your• self into hock. 6 FOOT ALUMINUM SNOW FLOCKED TREE a Chri1hll11 1ho~ld b. 1hiny, e nd h •••.• I ;.,;,..,, •• rH1.r41114 th1t won 't f1'11lt wh111 tho 101io11'1 ow1r, 0 Snowy liff1b1 pro,..ide 1l191nt b1c•9ro11H for ye11 r bri9ht11t ern1fl'l1nh. ' ... ~as W!·WILL CLOSE ' AT S P.M. CHRISTMAS !Vl., DIC. 14 7 n. SCOTCH . . PINE TREE 0 H1r•'• • ,;,,. fw thrift., tc ,.,,.. .. yo111 j111t IN;iy it '"''· D i;,+ it'll! ·l .. li: to ff for Y•trt. 19 r1•fi1tic th1t our "'•n•t•r h1d.111 eff1t te 111bf1t te • f1fl'lilv of •P••r•~ .... fT1k1 it, Dick.tr :911. TINSEL GARLAND . ! ; 0 W11¥1 thr•uth th• lt11 br1r1ch11 for 1 rtillr prof1n ie111l leo•in1 d1cor1ti119 ieb. ; 0 Choict of ••"'•r1I bright holid1v col•tt. 8 PIECE TEFLON CLUB ALUMINUM COOKSn . 0 Our•be"d f111ri t1f11• for 1 t lft ef l11iln1 v1l111. D 111 1woc1de, 41111, ff poppy, 4888 26 PIECE PUNCHBOWL sn 0 l1~:tiful 11t for 9r11Je.:. .. t.tt1l11l~ Nf•t•, llitrl*f, ,,.. eft1r th1 hellll..,1 lw•w, '"yo• 1111111-.M +irM.I CJ 1 .... 1 h1ld1 t •"' ,,., lrt.lf.r1111••r+t ef ¥41" f.,....,a. .,,,.,,,,, pla1tl1 IHle M•••• fer •••Y t11ri119, 12 fl,. M'IC• s.itp. •M I Z cup Ii.el• c•111pl1t1 th• 4NL 2•• I ,. Jf DAll.Y ~ILOT Thmdar. Dt<tmbtr 18, 1%9 Verdict Awaited In Police Hearing BUENA PARK -A ven!icl is el"ptct.ed Friday in tht six- moatJ\.o1d htarii.11 involving a Buena Park police lieutenant charted with failure to follow up a report of a hit and run accidtnt involving a suptrior oflictr. City personnel board hear· ings are expected to be con- cluded in the case of Lt. Robert Reber who allegedly did not properly perform his duty in conntdion with the .June t traffic accident in· ''oiving Capt. Olivid Hopkins of Ill< Buena Park Polk< Dtpartri1ent. Police Chlel Dudley D. Gourley suspended the lieu· tenant for three days without p1y for bis failure to act in connection. with the incident. No action WIS taken 11ainst Capt. Hopkins. The hearings are being held to determine if the originaJ disciplinary action on the part or Chief Gourley was proper. Lt. Reber is charged with rour violations of department regulations. They Include : -He did not properly counsel subordinates, (three patrolmen) who informed him of the accident. -He failed to conduct a proper investigation into the accident. -He failed to report the in· cident to a superior oUicer. -He wu not Joyal to the department by not taking ac· tlon to detennine il the hit and run had or had not occurred. De£ense attorneys ·M at t Kurilich Jr., Richard Mather and Cecil Ricks of Fullerton have argued that t h e lieutenant. ""•as attempting to give the captain a chance to do the right thing himself," thus avoiding ' • a n y em- barrUSllle\t" to the captain or to the department. Insurance Changing Proposal Under Study SANTA ANA -Recom- mendations that Orange Coun- ty abandon the state-controlled system Of workmen's com- pensation In favor or a privately o r self-operated form ol. accident iruurance are under study by c o u n t y authorities today. C o u n t y supen1sors ap- peared unimpressed by the claimed, five-year savings or nearly $1 million and ordered County Counsel Adrian Kuyper and County Administrative Of. ficer Robert A. Thomas to study lhe proposal submiti.ct by an Orange County Chamber of Commute committee. A report from Kuyper and Thomas is due in a month . That committee was urged by Supervisor Robert Battin to bear In mind that Los A:.1geles, San Diego and San Bernardino counties and the dty of Los Anrelea "havt all gooe in for .elf-insurance in recent years and we abould. very seriously C<Jnstder taking the sune atep." The chamber committee ha~ UIUted the board that its own 1ystem. ol accident insurance could become ~fective by Ju- ly l, 1971 and would "almost immediately bring tremen- dous savings to the county." ThoH aavings, lhe chamber report indicates, w o u I d amount to at leut IJZ,000 in aro and W'Ot.lld incrtale until BEATH NOTICES BAYES lto11 Send• lav)•. "" ''· "' lffO Cllun:lt SI., C01!a Mt11. 0.11 of -.111, OK.mW 1'. su .... lvld b'I' two '""'' Ch1rlt1 8. of Nor-cc1 Huf!\ lt'l'IS, C01ta M11a1 dt111hl1r, Joyce. II" ,..,.,,, Co111 M1111 two b,.111.,s. GI.,,. Com1ti.t!, 111' Gr1s1 Vtllev, and Mui Como!Or!. Arlrone ; lS 1r1n<1c11;1. ,,.,. tnd 11 1r.,.!1r1Nkllltdr11t1. St "'• ~. l"rldtl'. 1 PM, Harber AS..mbl'I' of God Ct.l!"dl of Cmlt Mtu: will! Jltv . ..,......,,.. H. Mallla" offldallno. '"""""''· Harbor ll.11! Mtmorial P.rti:. I.ti l!lroadway Mcrtu1ry, Colla ~ .. Olre1=lor1. BLERSCH 1!!•r1 lltrt<.h. JOii FarnllHlll Line. c .. 1, Min.a. O.t. el tlH lll, Dec. 11. sv .... lvact bv wlft. Marl• El1111 d1110"°" tar, JMn l!I. G!IS0111 lllft.ln·law, Paul GlllO'I; t tt ndc:fllldrM, LINlt, St1v~. KtN"41h and Dw1'1'"' Gllt<:n. Strvlc11, s,111rdfv, DK. 20, 10 AM, Wnlcllfl Cl'ltHI MOrtuerr. lnt1rmw11, Wnimlli· ''" M-111 ParL Wtlldlff Ch111I Mwtuary, ~. Olr.ctors. PIERCE Mot\1 M, ,IM"«. Alt 7f, o! UI C0.11· llM, S..I 1-.cll. S11rvlvK trf 1en, T-.n11. lvl<tlt y, Ctlil. St rvlct s, l"licltl'. t l'M, Sml!lts Cht"I. Flflt l •ttllM "41C•, For .. , LIWl'I MM•c11i 1t l'trti:. GleNlt lt , Smiltla Morfu1f1', Olf-Klot•. ARBVCltLE • SON Westcllft Mortuary 01' E. 17tb St .. Costa l\fe11 -• BALTi MOR1VAlllES Clnla del ~tar OR s-tf5I Ctlla M,.. ~U 5-lm • BELL BROADW AV MORTVARY lll ar..Q11, Cotta Maa IJWCU • DILDAY llROTllEllS JmtlqtM Valley M-..Y l\'111--. Hallqtoo ... ~ io.m1 • PACIFIC VIEW lllDIOIUALPABK Cemrtwy e Mortuary Cllapd WI hrilJc View Drive N<wpMt Bucio, Callf ..... m::w • PEE:lt FAMILV COLONIAL FUNBllAL HOME 7111-Ave. .......... --• ADJEI MORnJARY '--IM-1111 .. a..... 4'1-41• • Pll'l1IS' llORT!IAllY G7.Mal08L 3 r:c.- they touched a peak ol $387 .000 in 1975. Savings would then level off, it iJ said, to a steady annual gain of $260,000 a year. By contrast. the board has been warned, State Com· pensation Insurance F u n d (SCIF) costs will rise in Orange County from $475,000 in .fiscal 1971).71 to $976,000 in J975. Supervisors have been urged to note that "\some 375 firms have left the state plan in favor of their own in!urance operation and 200 of those firms are 81 the Orange Coun- ty area." County records indicate that w o r II: m e n ' s compensation coverage baa been cosUng the county in excess of $1 million a year. Chamber analysts stale that SCIF profib amount to more than one third of thal figure. profits which, it is not.cl, could be passed on· to ttie county under an alternative insurance plan. Polish Ouh Meet Slated GARDEN GROVE -The Orqe County Polish Club will hold itl monlhly meeting at 7 p.m. Saturday at St. Calllstus Catholic Church Hall, 1291 Lewis St., Gaiden Grove. The meeting will be a pol luck dinner, and those at- tending are asked to bring a Polish-style dish that will serve five persons. . Thoae not bringing a dish should make a donation or $2.50. Polish folk dancing will follow the meal. For moce in· formation, call 54W011. Pick Date To Quit TUSTIN -"Pick a Date to Quit Cigarettes," is the theme for wallet-size plastic 1970 calendars being distributed by the American Cancer Society's Orange County Branch. The little card add s, ''21 million Americans have. You can too.·• For information on how to get a calendar, call the society at 831--0510. World Council Seeks Menibcrs SANTA ANA -Members of the Orange County World Ar. fairs Council sugaest guest membership in lheir organiza- tion as a unique Christmas gift. • Persons interested in ar· ranging for such a gift can contact the council at PO Box 1926, Santa Ana, 92706. Judge Baker P1·esiding Next Te1w WESTMlf~STER -Judge Celia Baker has been elected presiding judge of the ,\Vest Orange, County Jud I c i a I District Municipal Court for 1970. She succeeds Judge \Valier W. Charamza. Judge Bakt r was admitted lo the bar in California in 19U and appointed judge of the Huntingtori Beach City Court in October of that year. When the juslice courts were consolidated in 1953 she was elected to judge of the new Huntington Beach·Seal Beach Judicial District In 1959, when the justice court became a municipal court, Judge Baker was made a judge of that facility which is now located in Westminster. ' ' 835 Million Amed County Fraud Suit Filed SANT A A.NA -Former of-State Jnsur·anee in- ficers of an insurance com-vnU11tors movtd in o n pany formed wilh the stated Cuualty Jnsuranoe 1ut Dec. 1 Casually Compuy asselt to make the finn appear to be lnaolvtnt. intention of breaking an aDeg-and ruled thlt the weUare of ;==========:::;! cd monopoly on medical stockholdua ud p o 11 c y malpractice Insurance have holder• of the Want cor-Who Ustons ~w11 0 ~ hes more paperbaek 1toekin9 ~ stuffers than anybody? Eg. a B. Dalton, Bookseller S fed1ion lda,,d, Newport •••'"' 9J6io { 7141 644·004 I ,71 41 t !l-2200 sued a bevy ol state officials, poraUon wu in jeopardy. To Landen 1 a former assemblyman and Murphy's ~e complaint ~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiu;o;;o;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii;;;;: · ~!~:~~5~~~i :~=~='°~:~~,r--·ciiii5i'MA55PiciALiM~ .. ~~~l Ana also demanded through from compeling w!lh Ill< Net-I This Christmas Give the Faniily a ~ its organizer, attorney tleship Co. ol Los Angele1 In Ill chard Murphy, a court in· t h e malpractice insurance junction against the closure field. action of Slate Corporati9ns Murphy also accuaes the c o m m I • s i o n e ' Ant.bofty aitiBiliftU, ifMQ l ti e m Piemo. former A.uemblyman Wllllam The Orange County Superior l>annenK»cr, with f..t11 a Court lawsuit charges ~ ahln&e ol leadership ln the defendants with fraud, CCl"h: company, spiracy to defraud, restrain$ Murphy also claims that of trade and criminal ilh state officials conspired with terference wi.tb buflneu rel-. dlaaldent stockholden b y tionsh.ips. lo"ertng the valuation of ******************* MERCURY SAVINGS aM loan .-.ticlll "WP!~ Opoo Mon.-Tlus. 91.11,-4 p.m; Fri. 91.m.-6 flJll. Ol'EN SUNDAY • ~1an~ st.ylea to chqoat from • Complete with a~1orle1 • ~-a-way for Xtnts • Frff dellvtty I: lnatallation • Se~ our di.splay-we are open Sundays HOME TABLE FROM 275°0 AND UP ILACK BEAUTY 1•11, 819 & Shota. Rtg. 36.95 -Men-- $29.95 -Worntn- $26.95 ~~ ~=~ I ur A Z750H-.f,1Adomo 540·7303 IUlllA PAAK ~llTllllTilll IUCH I d'h t ' IOWLINCO, llLLIARDS & TROPHIES "'I 1 L-1 e./ IN C01.LEGE CENTf,:t, COSTA MESA * * * * * * * * * * * * * ~ * * :r.------~·!""-·--------------~I=---!L FINE CAMEO PENDANT AND EARRING ENSEMILE Eoc.h Cameo II hond corved from the finnt conch Wll ond ln4ividuo1t1 c,ofttd in 14 Korol oo!d. PM.... s5900 ~ s19•s MATCHED WEDDING BANDS 00~ yellow ookf. The endless rir.o °' gold, s13so FREE U Pe. PUNCH BOWL SET With WOMENS' & MENS' TIMEX WATCHES fmti..es ;nc.1ude: o..t. pnx>f, wMtrproof, sw .. p 'ecood h • n d,....,stoinla1 atnl bock ond l.....tire.k- oble mai" $pfing, AN4 electrics. Minillture Woofl Choppi~I Block With Knife • ld9ol for Gxktolh, hon d'oeuwTes. •200 S PC. INTERNATIONAL. SAL.AD IOWL SET • 10'"' Hut.cl crys~ .oJod bowl and~ bowl. .... 3 ;ii..ploted Wring pieces. ' Cc e' 1; •3" of $29.00 or Miil llOITTRRANEAN J!WRRY BOXES Modi of Phillppine mohogony finlshfd i" wolncA. This chint Is o collector..' item, M~icol woode/\ jeWi!lry boxes ovoilobte. PEARL PENDANTS Selec1 group of ft'IOOl"\ificent cu!tuted peorls In gold filled pendants. •N~ s39s , HEAD CHARMS . (j ~ , ... u .......... 1l ...... . Gold Fi-td « 14 K.-.t Gold. ,_s12s i.,,..,75¢ AIK AIOVT OUR COHYIHllHT QllHT TUMS IA.WC4MlltCARD • MASTU CMARGC nw. C-'dn •• hDI J'EWELlllS l'Oll 42 TIAllS • STORE HOURS: HUNTINeTON CINTU ""'"""''" -k m·UOI -MIL tin Sot. 'tll 9 !'-IL S.o<ley, 11 'tll I ...... 'Ill Cllrlot- HARIOll 5HOl'PIN• CINTU HDO H-...... C-. 11- 54S.94fl i --. --·-------------------------------------- • Thursday, Otctmber 18, l %9 Mom Fixes Dol"ls for South Viet Desertion Rate Rises, Slowly ChiMren WASHINGTON (AP) Defense Secretary Melvin R. Tbey Iii<! the main problem blem. for them to deliver mooey to Desertions from the South Laird recenUy told Conkress lies in the rqular South Viet· Apparently, these programs &heir famllles. You cannot do Vietnamese armed forces in· desertion ranks second only to namese army. Tbe record of either fell shcrt ln concept or lt through the mall 1ervm or O"tased this fall despite er-development of Vietnamese the elite Units such as the execuUon, probably the latter. anythlng else in South Viet. EL CAJON (AP) _ A fort,, to solve what officials military leadership u major Vietnamese marines, alrbome W.ird described the deser· nam. Many tlmes, after they " -•• who ~---hat lt'a say is the second mosl se rious problemt in "VietnamJrina'' and air 1_ JS. ··'d to be e·· ..... ._.. •uuw:J " -'O ., .... ~ No.I .. lion problem to the Senate have been gone after four or llke for chlldrea \0 have a problem In Vietnamlling. the war. tremely good. Foreign RelaUons Committee five months, they beg)n to toyleu Chrlltmas, ha.s opened The rise w~s relatively "With the exception of those up a "doll f•ctory." -.,.slight -some nine desertions two problems the forces are Also, desert Io ns are tbi.s way: worry how the family is get- And dolls which would have per 1,000 men in .September to well ahead of schedule in reported low in mil!Ua forces, "It is attributed largely to tin~ along ••. so they just wound up in the city dump are 10 per thousand 1n October -trainlng, in their oombat apparently because these men the fact that many of these pick up and leave. Many of going to make Christmas but officials are concerned responsibility, and In laking serve close to their homes. soldiers in the South Viet-them might show up later in brla;hter for about IOO un-because the rate is not dr~ over this ~ibillty," As far back as 1965, the U.S. namese forces dld not have the regional forces or the aome ol theae available for the lam.Illes ... "We are also encoura1iDg them to go forward with a means of seeing that the families can receive some allowaoces so that the men who are in the servlce do not have that parUcular concern." Plane Awaited DAJLV PILOT JJ .. AUXILIARY POWER S•llboats, Dlnghlos, r .... 1.11.,, Etc. COMMANDO Outboard Motqrs NOW! -Only 26 Lbs I High .. Thrust 5 Horn Power Air Cooled • •nd • Remote 011 Tank ***IDEAL GIFT**"" LOW PllCE s1941IO OF ONLY llll(lu!IM 1~ .. , .... 111111. ~ ,,._ ... llMI ... 1c1c .i-11. derprivUeged "'"ii ping. Laird said. command in the war zone was adequate contact with thelr .popular forces . ;. "h ... · ,, J ~ With more than one mill.ion U.S. officials took some work1ng, with Saigon's military family. Most of these de~r-"We are trying to set up LONDON (AP) 'Ibe Anglo- o years ago, oan men enrolled in the South comfort in the fact the deser· leadership on various a~ tions, when we traced them places where families can stay French supersonic ail'liner Boat Island, Inc. Stephanus said Mooday, "we Vietnamese forces the rate of lion rate this fall is still below proaches to improving the lot out and checked them out, are together. Under a rather Concorde thou1d be in service had ooly $lO. We had no 10 deserUons per ~e thousand last year's high of 14 deser· of the Vietnamese soldiers and the Soulh Vletnamese return-cheap sort of stt or con· by mid-1'13, a spokesman for 7 IO (·7~4)64";l63:,"· kL Christmu presents, but we men adds up to a loss of 10 000 lions per one thousand men in their families as a way of cur-ing to their families. ~ ttruction we encourage the the British Aircraft Corp. an-<DMen For: °"""'· Magnum. & tid~tm°'!~;~abeautiful ...'.'.men~~·~mo"'.'.'.'.n~~~·~~~~·~-Oc~to~ber~~I968"."":.~~~~~~~m!g~a~chrool~~·~deserti~~··~·~p~r~~:___:'"lll~~~·:u~no~w~a~y~rlgb~:t~now~_::Sou~~'.....:Vi~ie~t~nam...~~~to~~m~a~ke"_~noonced~~~lhis~·~w~ee~k~.~~~~~·~·M~....,...~~v~K~·"~'·~~~!"'!!! She and her husband, Ken- neth have two teen-age chlldttn. Stephanus bu had open heart surgery and may need another operatloo, she aaid. "He can't work," the aald. "I'll be b1unt beieauae we·re not a.shamed. We're on wel- fare." Jean's sister, Mrs. Earl Brown Jr'., bu five children and lives across the street. Her husb!nd has a disabling back injury and cannot work. They are on wtUare, too. Last month the sisters saw a newspaper article announcing the Marine Corps Reserve'• annual "Toya; for Tots" cam- paign for San Dtego County. 1bey called Master Sgt. Don Glbboos at the 4th Tani Bal· talioo. "Every year," Gibbons said, '"we receive thousands of dolls, BOmt .ID real bad shape. Most of them have to be thrown away. So when these women called, we had nothing to lose. "We tent them about 150 dolls, real raggedy, mostly without clothes. A coup1e days later they called again, asking for more dolls. We put about 600 on a truck and took them out l1> El Ca)Gn." That's when Gibbons di.scovered what was going on in the Stephanus' garage. "We found a doll factory," he said. Mrs. Stephanus, her sister and her sister's mother.in-law, Mrs. Earl Brown Sr., have an assembly line. Soiled dolls are scrubbed deaa in the kitdlen link, and Mrs. Brown and her mother- in-law aew clothes for the dolls. l Earl Brown Sr., who ts retired rewire! the beads, arms aDCI legs of acme of the dolls whlch &ni.ve in pieces. Mrs. Sl.ephanus touches up the dolls with paint and styles the hair. Her brush makes the eyes apark1e again. "My ll>year-<ld told some· one we collected and sold beverage bottles to buy the necessary thread and material f()l" the doll colthe.s, but ·that isn't true," Mrs. Stephanus said. "I toot some junk to a swap meet and sold it for $47. That helped and we have received some donaUons." She said at least 500 dolls will be spruced up in time for this ChrUtmas and picked up by the Marine reserves for distribution to needy famlles . But the "doll factory" won't be shutting down. "We'U cooUnue fiUng dolls for orphanages and poor children who have birthdays during the year,'' Mr s. Stephanus said. "And we'll get a good start for ne.xt year's 'Toys for Tots' drlve ." "The flnlshed product, .. aald Gibbons, "looks like It came right out o( a store." New Copter Fuel System ST. LOUIS CAP -The Anny's AvtaUon System s Command In St. Loola 1&ys more Ulan 11,000 military helicopters will be equipped with a new crash-resistan( fuel system . The llrst aircraft to have tile safety device wW be produced in the spring <:A. 1970. The Army said Tuesday it will be uaed mainly for A rm y helicopters but could be ap- plied to civilian aviaUon. n.e new system Is designed · to prevent fires which often follow a crash. It includes seU· sealing fuel tanks a n d breaUW'1f fuel fines, The Army aaya Ille new fuel syltan al.lo wW oUer more protection from .....,. -fire. A THOUGHT FOR TODAY -l'll;fSINT!D Al A l'UILIC l l RVICE .EVIRY DAY IYI L" Rocrll"t Co. ,.., .. ,. ... ...... 1111 ,......., ...... '°"" M.ake this year a . . . COLORFU~ WOMEN'S CHOWS The A·A·A·H gelttt1 thia Chriatmu. Soft comfy lnaole. Comes in LL Blue-Pink- Lime or Yellow. om.tmu special! ' 1 ·96 COIF Mid ~tort• ablt frfll'll our •IJD- i>er t.Na. Qtye th• warm. com!T '',oi:Ltt" thl1 Chrlttmw. OMEN'S AHD MISSl'S URRY BOOTS 2'6 Soft, fluffy end cuddly. W•rm •nd be•utiful in pink or blue. They're en~le w•rmers tool Another from our sl ipper tree. FREE CANDY FOR COWBOY BOOTS l &M 0 11r l&rll'• 11t1ltot.lon ol 'boot. t'Otlll'b an d re!odY to 1M l"ODed for Chrl.tmu. Th• little 011.rdner w ill 1u,. tnJoy th-. INFANTS S TO I unu GENTS 361 UTILE GENTS DRES5-UP OXFORDS ThtJ ..,,,. .. t1p hl'Oll"Ut 11 a muat tor "hla~ Chnlt• m & • -rdrnbe. Sl•r• I~ '" I -A.bit ••&ll&blt In tiny t.ot11l1e. 4 to • THE KIDDIES 2 96 ' ' CHRISTMAS~.-..: SLIPPERS 96c 8ott 1udd.jy 1llP· _,.,.. In eolor• w ith a 11 o r t 1d ha.ppy r-.ee animal ..... ''THE IDEAL GIFT" tor .. n )'OUl' t&YO?• Ile looka •• , a IOTI• IJ' aift too! . I PAIR HANDBAGS Sheer b 1 & u t,. and PrM:tle.i.I 11:lrt f(lr 7 0\l a nd «lft irl't'inK lflo. N•w •hi.de. tor lb• ho\Jd&Y&. 5898 Edin9er at Sprint)Clale Huntlnl)ton lleach-847·9125 PIOM 2 88 • MISSES ILACK PATENT PARTY ·sHOES Th• d~rllrull' or th• pat •n t 296 crowd. N!ct tor now, th• ,b.ollc!.&71 and &It dre11y oocu !on1. MISSES SIZES 81/1 to 3 UfFAlfl'S SIZES 4 to 8 WOMEN'S LOVE KNOT DRESS AND DANCING SANDALS The Id-.! d&ncin.I:' hel.r:h l h~I 111d 11lx daint y cro•• 1t""t1~ lied ln the mJ.ddl4 with love k not.. Match an7 outfit 'IVlth blt.ek O&tent. «old, .t1UY<er or black vea.u c!.e -.ale, 713 WOMAN'S NEW PO«THOLE SHOE ·-..... Jlaf!lltt "''"' Ifs _,. _,,,..,,, w--..... Ille tlol l<kryl Dtld lnlo .,..1ng. a-. NOUl'f lb# p!119ftl, NIWJ' • lttd, A ... & -· 691 10045 Aclatns at lroollhunt ljtintl119'°11 hoch-962·9178 (Nut to s...on Drvtl STORE HOURS--WEEK DAYS 9 TO 9--SUNDA YS 10 TO 7 ; . .. ' i ' ' I I• • . . ,__ ... ,,_._"•· if DAILY PILOT Thul'$daf, Dttrmbtr 18, 1%"1 ·' ' . ' ! .• ' ',. ,. • • ' • ' ,• . • GREATEST Automobile OFFER SEE PAGE~ You~g-~ang ~~~~:.;$!'.~ Hunted, Killed Cats PACIFICA (AP) -A "Cat Killer Club" of young boys subbed, stomped aQd mutilated household1 pe'ls over a period of months, Police Inspector Jla11 Karczewski said today. -- "Some kind or sickness permeates this whole thing," he added. Cat owners have reported to police they have received notes reading "Today cats, tomorrow people" and 11Your cat is No. Sin death row." . The club consisted of at least eight boys between ll ' and 16 years of age, KarczewslU said. Their names were withheld. Two of tbe boys were ar- rested a'lld placed in a juvenile "• ""'~'-'· home al nearby Belmont on '-"It~,.~ charges of cruelty to animals and the others are still being investigated, he said. Police estimated lhat at least IS cats had been killed and then mutilated by having their tails or legs cut off. Tribute to First Flight F-106 fighters from t~.S. Air Force Aerospace Defense Command pay tribute to man's first 'ght 66 years ago Dec. 17. The Wright brothers flight traveled 120 feet in 12 onds. The Fl06 travels 24,700 feet in the same time. The aircraft are framed iil bu sts of the Wrigb'l brothers at the U. S. Air Aca- demy at Colorado Springs, Colo. DAILY 9 'Iii 9 Parish Believes Icon F ~rming 'Tear Drops' TARPON SPRINGS, }~la. was first noticed by a cleaning (AP) -The pastor and woman Dec. 4 and had since parishioners of a G r e e k developed into a rivulet. "They look like little bits of Orthodox church say an icon crystal," he said. of St. Nicholas. is forming Father Kalariotes said the what appear to be tear drops. · moisture was forming on a The church serves the glass cover which nearly ramilies of Greek sponge touches the face of the paint· divers in this coastal city on cd icon. the Gulf of Mexico. St. ··1 examined lhe 'back of the Nicholas is the patron saint or icon , looking for an opening such seafarers, as he is or that moisture could get Christmas. through,. but it was sealed so Father Elias Kalarioles, the tight I couldn't even get a pastor. said moisture which razor blade through the looked like "little tear.drops" frame," he said. IN HARBOR CENTER 2300 HARBOR BLVD • COSTA MESA 540-7131 SAT. 9 'til 6 SUN. 12 'til S • TERMS OF COURSE • e NEW ADMIRAL AU TOMA TIC DOOR CLOSERS e CANTILEVER SHELVING e GIANT FOOD STORAGE CAPACITY e NO DEFROST REFRIGERATOR FREEZER . GIANT 22 CU. FT. CAPACITY ONLY s377oo COMPARE AT 499.95 lee Maker Optional - $ MODEL ND169~ Adn1lral .lMPUIAL DUPLEX" .16 S!AllS 11 .. DIPIOITIN•, Pllllll•IPl""-ATOtl Ollll' 11" WIDI .. TIT FULl SIZID IN IOTli FOOD AND-n1m• SICTIONSI . . n,;, ,,.."" 11,1.,, A,.,..;,.i oM'''~ •• e ....... ~ ,,..+. 111 •1111 I~ 1 t11J •11lit, 1lcl1 .. rtlcl1 f'fft1f"'.fr~1· ltr. L•r91 11.J c1.ft,r1fr it.,•l1r tN tlfflT lfl It.. ct· li'tt+ty• frttltt-16.1, .. f•. tf l~ICI iR ... 1-ll'•ct c11iii11ttl Frttlff tKfiM f11t-f.1 ,, .. •Wflii 11111.W. rW f!.Nti .. ,i.i ..... Sit 1..-tr• "'"'' c1-~ .... ; W'o4e ,,.,. 1t1nr,r1tw1 1Htr1I 1ll1wt ltf'Mll• t."'!"l'lf'I"' ttlttti... • ... , ............. ,,,,.,,, r. ... "'" ...Wrill lefttl1t '""'"" .. ,, • .u. •11•tj·-· ttlf•t• -•; lfffe' ) • ----------~ Pi·lots Blamed for Crashes WASHINGTON (UPI) Government s a f e t y ln- vesligatora said Wednesday pUot eVQr wu Involved in more thai1 four out of five ot all fatal accidents i'tported in ~general aviation last year. · The National TransPortatlon 'Safety Board · s81d the worst offender was the pilot · who flew for pleasure -the non. p r o f e s s ional "occasional flier." The board said he was responsible for ·384 of the 692 accidents -an increase of 24 percent over 1967. The board said 1,399 persons die in 1968 as a result of the 692 accidents compared·· to 1,223 M 1967. • General aviation includes .... . ·· . ·. . . ... both business and private pilots who fly a fleet Of ov~r 90.,000 planes. ........ . . . . . . .... • Ol'EN SUNDAY 12. 5 .··"··~ ..... .. .·:· ~ :.J.:·.:: ·.....• .. . ... 'Tis the season to be .· ..... ........ ··•• . ..... ! ••• • • •••. ...... · . ·· ...... :···. . ... : . ... . ·., .. •'" · .. . ...... : :·· .. ·-.;;·; ... ) .. ··: ... . .. :. ......... . •, . . ~ .... · ..... . . . . . .... · ..... . . ' 51pp1n · . ..... . . . .... _ . .,. ... · : ·. ···. : :.. : . . . . · .... · ... l'lfAl 61"'1N' WH161\1.T • tNTUCllY STlllAllOHT 80U11: N .WHtlflf'I' • DINS F"""8f!J Mullen I. Bluett ALL STORES OPEN EVERY NIGHT 'TIL I SUllOAYS 12 TO 5 Pll .. Famous Maker ·,Speqtacular Sportswe~r · Specials.! Blue, Green, Gold & Copper Tone COLOR COORDINATED GIFTS AT GREAT PRE-HOLi DAY SAVINGS! s20 Australian L.,ambswool Full-Fashioned Cardigans $12.90 Superb sweaters with expensive full fashioned detail ••. handsome heather tooes-S, M, L, XL. '12-'17 FaJl ~Fashioned Ban-Lon· Knit Shirts $7.99 Mlf'telous Ban-Lonl nylon-always keeps hs shape, washes automatically, pullov« and cardigan styles-S, M, L. XL. 1 '12 Permanently Pressed Casual Slacks I ., Perfect gift for the man w~ llkes hls lelsura. '1 Never needs ironing, popular belt loop styllng. 32~2 4 Ol'IN A QfllOOINI CMAltOI .ot llM BankAmtrieafd 01 Master Qlp~ l • .,..1.1. cirf.,.w .... 11 ... ,. ""' ... 1111111 '"'''""'' ... fttd fltMtf!d !t.tf, lt.,1ttttllf' lllltlf ~II 5 1h1lv11 pin 11'1• HllT1111t ktftr/ch1111 ,_,"*"'•Rh ,,.4 .,, 1htH. ~ •tRi!eJNi H •7/I" lliri JI" ... 16·1/I'' (. • SOUTH COAST PLAZA, Costa Mesa-ANAHEIM, Broadway-Anaheim Center.:-UKE·WOOO, Lakewood Cente~ . ~ .. -. ----------~----·------------------------------· ·H \ 1i I ~-­• Mii.MUM """"1, btumbtr I~ 1969 . • • • FROM RION HARDWARE - -HOURS: MON. THRU FRI. 9.9, SAT. 9-6, SUNDA;Y 10..r: A GREAT GIFT FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY ••• IRILATED Pam POK kHpl colfH hOI • anrwt1111 SPECIAL SALE!· Dremel Moto· Tool SuperrTahkers -Pose Catastrophic Issue i 4995 ! 23" Tex. Bar.IJ-q Kettle iR Comes with regulating daffip~ Plug It to to bt-12 to 30 eupa ol dollc:loua cof. -fM, automatieaJlr. n. 1 take it wherwer the fun Iii AJ.. -lc:od beverageal In Harv•t or Avocado. • · Ntw conltlftt·tot11111, pw111111t11t 11111· Mt motor Jnducn twlct tM l«qut of ')lr1violla lllOdeiL \llrtutllJ lttl1·proof, Mii wll•R rou tNH)' ~r tlowft. Com· P«t. H1htw1ltht-wfttl tll tht pow« rou nttd for ll'llldina. drllllnL pollsll· 1111, d1burrin1. 11ndl111. Tou1h. ahock· proof lu1n flouslnr. W1l1h1 only 9 OI. P'9duc11 30,000 IPM. . -NEW YORK <.\Pl -Tbe era «·<he 111perll!lbr haa broupl with It the thrtat ol catutrophlc oil spllla. 'This was pointed up when the 207,000-ton MllpOIU own- ed br Shell Ta!Wra.Lld. el· plodicf and sank M-y • miles off the <Out ol Weot Africa after making Ha first oil deilvery. While the Mlll'ptna had unloaded ita Cl1'CO It Rflt.. 1erdam and was empty, the 11nklng ... 1 lbiven through the ~ lndultry, w11ich is working to dtvelop means of preventing and contrOlllng oil !pills. A LOT OF OIL "There would have been a hell ol a lot of oil on the c:<IOlt of Africa if the Marpessa had been loaded,'' said a delegate lo an international confennce on prtVtntion and cmttol of Oil illcb w11idl Is undtr way hete. "We all recognize that I pruent technololl)' for hand!-i ini lari• spills -especially In Ille open ... -is, to .., the 1eut, primitive," L. P. Haiby, manager fGr aJr and water conservaticn' of Shell Dtveloi). I ment eo., toid the contemK.-e. I "Perhaps the most effective technique used to date wu to sprtad Jtnw as an ablorbent and pick it up with rakel and pitchfork.a U was done in San- ta Barbara, Calif. In an age when we can reach the moon, we should be· able to do•better Ulan thlll." K. E. Blglane, a divisional director in the Federal Water PelJutl-on Control Adminlst.raUon, said Monday that after "nearly three years 1f since the Torrey Canyon JI casualty, this .nation -and I I Cr A.Jl•t Card •uspect this ii true w ... ldwtde t:ll -still cannot mount llUfflclent technical or operation a I Accepted fQr responses to pocltlftly cootrol llrp-.pilla of oil ••• " . . ' " llillNG PLANll Bail, Fm. es Huh1 laid oil and lhlpillni «m...ie. have t.rmed alioort 1. 1!. ; •·IO ~u-to pllJ! for SA!( DIEGO (uPI)~t 'handlliic oil spllla, hopbir to cards, money orders ·~ use such equipment u floating checks may now be used _1n booms to contain the oll, lieu of cash for ball, of pns-chemical sprays and pumps. I oners In the c<JW1ty Jail. ~ . The county board ~of su · _ Apart fnm the cleaning up visors ruled Monday to vo alt« a major oil spill, • II the sheriff authorization to tbe·JD1:tter of. pr~ventlon. acoept credit cards payable / Change1 1n ship desip are for ball · -under sbldy. 'The ..;perv1sor, also lnltrue-• "'Mie continued uae of llngle led the dlld C<lll!!y olfi<li-to , lkln COllllluctlClll for bar.., inwstigate the feasibility o( and ships ts lerlously ques- the county's honoring credit tlooed," said Cmdr. Alvert G. c.-ds o1 persons payinl tu SUrlinl ol the U.S. Coast bills and purchasing permlt.!I Guard. In the slni;le skin for bulineues. deslsn the oul!ide hull fo"!1s 'The act!Clll WU pn>poled by the tank that holds the oil Ill. Sheriff J. C. O'Coonor who A rupluro ol the hull leads to said the ~ pay-spill~. ment would -" In futer In-Tl>i number ol supertankers mat> nleue !run 11ie· coun\l' has lncruaed subltantlally Jall,11vtngitothecounty,an! since. 1118. 'The need for impnwed publlc nlaUCN In veaels ol theJr Sise to carry the jaJI. oil throughout the world ln- The supen180l"S pointed out creased afttr the Sutz Canal that any check accepttd by was closed duril'lg the 1966 the sheriff woold have to be Israeli-Arab war. certlned and personal check 180 TANKERS offered by prisaners or their friends would still be-of no val- ue In bail or fine sitaations. Air Force ,Tests Re-entry Craft V ANl>ENBERG AFB (UPI) -A re-entry vehicle was launched atop a Minuteman 1 miaaile down th& Wettem Ttst Ranit at l :S3 p.m. PST Tue• day, '.Air Fon:e ollldals aid. The launch was dlreded by the ll8lth Am>Sp6"' Tat Wini ltatlontd btre and WIS pirt o~ a rt••rcb and devel_..1_,..,. The American Bureau of Sl'lipplng reports there are MW 180 tankers with a carrying capacity of 100,000 tons or more in service, compared with about ~ berore 1961. Only ... ol thes8 ..... 11 carries the U.S. na1 . - Humble Oil I; Reflnlnr. Ccl'i ~ Manhattan, the first ·com, mtrclal vtuel to neaotJ•te the loo-pecked Northwest Pllll(e above Canada. 'lbe BUTNU of Shippinl llJI 310 1Uptrtinken are on the drlirl!ll "'°""·. MMY of them will have 1 capedty OI men than 200,000 tons. and Mne more than •.ooo tom. PEPPER.DINE' COLLEGE THE PEPPERDINE SCHOOL OF lAYf lform.,fy Orang• Uftiversity} IS NOW RECEIVING APPLICATIONS FOR THE-SPlllN6 TERM BEGINNING JANUAltY 24 i , Mr inf•nMtiM c.lftfac.t THE OFFCE OF THE DEAN Tho P1pperdin1 School of Law 12345 W estminrler Santa Ana, C.tifMnio 92703 (714) 531-8511 ' ApplicetNM 1hould l:ie oft file before Dec1mb1r JO ers. Die-cast aluminum body. 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COMPLETE SERVICE FOR 8 INCLUDES: 8 dinner pletes e bread and butter plat• I cups platter 8 uucers servln1 bowl 8 aoup/"r"I bowls creamer ·, 2·pitca 1ua1r With 11d Every piece 1u'aranteed •1ainst breaking. craddna, chlppine. , and permanent stelnlna for 2 fun years. Dishwtlher utel The . only dec:oreted tnelamlnt dlnn1rwer1 rriolded to meet or exceed U.S. GoYlmment 1pedf\cat1on.. 16 PC. $rl 'I . S~T ("1\ /) A Qu11ity SR-40 . -Y~ ~Melamine Din ntrw•rt 5 Patterns To Choose From ' say it Wflf/1 J'®ll'JIJI this year with Blacks. DsckBr · LOWEST PRICE EVER ON 11&0 7V•• CIRCULAR SAW Powerful 1-HP molor zips through toughest culling jobs. Extra deep safety guatd. Combination blade included. A mU3t for every workshop. (~7301) . • SAVE $4.53 ON THIS FINISHING SANDER KIT Smooth. one-hand control tor a beautiful finish every flrne. Kit Includes U-140 saMl!r, 10 sheets or 9brasiYe paper, 6-oz. a n WOod filler, •patula, handy carrying case. f.:7411) SAYE '5.11 ON'rHIS ' DUAL-ACTION SANDER Sa ndi orbltally for last materiel removal, In atraigtit llne for fine finishing. Flush sanda on 3 sides.· Ideal tor furn,ture, wood- woril:, etc. ( U·240J SAVE $7.88 ON THIS 1/c'' VARIABLE SPEED DRILL KIT The ec:celerator controls lhe speed from O to :2250 RPM. Kit includ" 31 pieces : .:::7020 V.S. Drill; wheel arbor; 3 drill bits; grinding wheel; buffil'lg pad; 15 sanding discs, '4 sbckets. 1 ad~pttr; handsome'~rrying caH. (!:7021) Fancy Free fabulou •10pen Hearth" Electric Broiler/RotiaterW T iie perfect combination er ttt. "Open Hearth" brolll ng with II• llelo\jl rotllhrle cooking, Extrti ' h1avy duty motor turna mut al owly for EVEN 111f-tiutln9, NO IPA TT£A, NO 9MOKl-Justthe t11t111t meata yo11 'll ever eerve' "OPlM t1WTM" n£CTllC llOILU-b.e!usil't "cool ?OM" brollinl 11als In tlle fl1vor and J1Utri1nts-11Yn that dellciOUJ outdoor flmr lndocn. Compc~ aay.to<l11n STAINLESS STm broi11r with alumlrun drip tr11. HO SMOK£. NO SfATTER mt1111 cl111111 kllchell w1llt md Clbl111ts, loo. £1tr1 Lltp 10" 1 l~· brollln1 surftet. ----------------------. _ ... ' NEW ACCE;SSORY FOR SHISH-KEBAB FANS • :111 fivt atatnl•t stttl skewtrs in rtek for Sft. 1hi1h.l\lblb flMI Just loact 'tm up with your ~ favorite v1ri1tion1 ind drop thtfn lnto...plact ,on )'CM.Ir wondttful "Optn Hearth" Broiler Rotl11erit . How ·~· b n lfll li,Jn' btl' ,. Last Minute ·GI~ Suggestions • Waring llenderl, Corningware • • Case Knives, ·-Gerber Knlvesi Dishes,. Colorful Bar Sunbeam Irons, GE Appllances, Han~ Tools, . Power Glass Tools, Sets, 3M Book Shelf Games~ and many,. many .more gift Items. , .. ,," . ~ . ' . .c·..;,· .. .-.. ~..,_...,...,..,....,.~...,...,..,...,.~...,...,..,...,.~...,.l i._""' .. ...,. .. ,.......,..,,..,..,.....,.............,.., ............ ..............,.........,.,..,._...m_.... ...... ,...., .... ,..,....,..,...,...,.. .. .,. ,. .. --~----·---- ... .,.. --~- J4 DAILY PILOT p.s. Plans Jupiter Probes • I • ' 52 Navy Vets Recall Great White Fleet SAN DIEGO (AP) Another Great White Fleet woo.Id be "the greatest thing in the world." says the leader of the association of men who took part in the nalion's global seapower display 62 years ago. "But people wouldn't go for ii," Harry Morris, 82, said Tuesday night. ''The great minority wants to cut out bat· tl eships, but they don't realize that the Great White F.leet's cruise kept us in peace for many years." There were 19,000 Navy men aboard JS battleships, eight destroyers and four support vessels when the neet sailed from Hampton Roads, Va., on Dec. 16, 1907. F'ifty.two of the m e n gathered at the U.S. Grant Hotel for a banquet marking the anniversary of the fleet's departure. ~1orris, chair.man of the Great \Vhile Fleet Association, was a crewman of the bat· tleship Keanarge. ¥•, served in the Navy for mote than 50 years, retiring as a ·chief torpedoman's mate. HOLIDAY VALUES New! Hamilton Beach low-silhouette Blender. · · • ""' de-eof1tor tolor1 • 1 "do '"~lnr" 'Pfffs • 1'1111~bul1a11 ta11lrel1 t II OL 1)'!'11 to11llhlff" '27" llU•ltRMAIO •100 Sf'ACIMAltlJIS Off s,ec•m•kw Dr1w1r llo1de .......,mm,. lltt.11.15 NOW $49' AT SPRINGDALE'S ) ' lndudn 7'il.' power uw, e.rryln1 e.ise, rip fence 9"d Mnltootl'I camblnetlon bi.de. hf.Retell ~ $46.9S How Ofll)t .... -...a 574-2 s~1t.dRilL km )Mlud11 'A" cloubll ~tltd Driw-R· Drill, 6-plece aor:ket n t end un)'+fll cat. RllS"lar Rft.IM Sl8.95 ~It tzt.U Mao.I 456-2 ~~ ~® '1i!Q •• (!)@ 00 Includes all attachments lou'll need or fine rug and floor care. I 6950 FLOOR·A·MATIC Ru11/Floor Conditioner Power s~s. picks up scrub water, applies wax, polishes, buffs, mops, shampoos! •• (Ill Springd1le H•rdw1re 11 proud to be one of over 3,000 •fflll•ted in 49 st•tes •nd co-owners of an efficient, c1sh 11vlng warehouse ind distribution center. Our 3,000 h1rdw1r• stores have • volume purchasing pow1r equ•I to l1rg1 ch1lns. This me1ns you c1n buy for· 1111 whll• 1hopplnt In ' 1 friendly, perton.11iud store 11r'Vlce. We will continue to show our apprec:i1tion for your pttron- age by giving the bt1t service ind best v•lues found onywherol EKC.o IKCO COUNTlY' GAlDIN 'COOKINW 'SllYING Tooi.s mm .. ,,,., $14.9S ,-!.., SPECIAL LvJ $11.99 f·92 • SPRAY, STEAM lPB!JIQI IT'S I IRONS IN ONI Pizza Man Hot l'irms e Delicious Salads e Old-Fashion C.r.amy NOW IN · . ' . HUNTINGTON ·BEACH & FOUNTAIN VALLEY 962-7766 (Beach Blvd. and Yorktown) - - - - -CUT OFF AND SAVE $ - - - - - off on purchase of any large pirm, mention ttiis coupon, give it to the driver. GOOD Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun., December 17-21 Open, 4 to l am Sun. through Thurs.-Frl. & Sat. 4 to 3 am You can save up to $300 when you lease anew car from Fust Western Bank. ~t •tan.da to rcas9n that a $950 million bank that buys can all year long can get a bctttr deal than individuals who buy a new car every two or three years. Buying harder means bargaining power for people who have more important things to do than argue about the price of a car. It's also for people who dislilr.c down paymcnu and want to lease a car at low bank rates. But that's not all, 1be money'1actory saves )'OU~ We're the source of cash. There arc no financial middlemen who want to slap on extra cbargta and there arc no sale s commissions to pay. This is why you can save up ~ $300 on a two-year lease . Get ffte profeuiOllal advice. Come in to any of the 90.plus offices of Fi~t Western Banlr. and get unbiased, financial facu about car leas- ing. I.f you decicfe you'd rather buy th'.'" lease, you'll still be tallr.ing to the nght people. After all, our low mtereot car loans can save you money, too. And whether you lease a car from us or borrow the money to buy one, we'll still give you a free personal Fint Bancheclr.iog Acl:ouot. That's a promise you can bank on. ' . ,.,. First Ba near Lease 1 . • • i . , • • ' ,, , ' --------~---·-------------------------------- Thursda1, Deumbfr 18, l9b~ . . Ne'Vada Wants Some,,. Not Other Gamblers . . GREATEST Automobile OFFER • • • . , &AS VEGAS, Nev. ) - N.Vada'I top . , igency hal'· approved two · es in the state's strict gamin ron· trol regulations, one to bring certain people in and the other " ' .... _ .. 'oath Coa$f 'ftua OPEN SUNDAYS ••. 12-5 THROUGH CHRISTMAS FOR· THE GARDENER DELIGHT HIM WITH A BRAND NEW ROSE BUSH Beautifully Wrapped for CHRISTMAS Santa Claus will be here!! Saturdav and Sunday Afternoons L. e Fr•• with Reil, iv , Christmas l rees tor ~II Kids! Make Your Indoor ' Decorating Extra Nice This Christmas iuith -Wreaths and Centerpieces from Ho/listers ... In Colors You Wouldn't Believe! Oatst~rzdiqg l\RTIFICIAL CHRISTMAS . TREES -2 to 7 F+. Tall * PRE·•SSIMILED * INCLUDU STAND * GRl!iN, 11.Ul S~RUCI Ol WHITI * USI MINATU•E Ll•HTS . * STOii JOI USI Nm YUi from $39~ * AVAIL.AILI llTHll UPSWEPT Ok DOWNSWI" STYLI Come in and see a dozen fully Clecorated trees in different themes with tons of decorating ideas. CHRISTMAS TREES! THE FINEST SELECTION EVER OF FOREST-FRESH CHRISTMAS TREES SILVER TIP DOUGLAS Fm "· WHITE FIR SCOTCH PINE NOBLE Fm up to 16 ~.! All are beautiful & reasonably priced. • • • POINSEITIAS, AZALEAS, CHRYSANTHEMUMS -ALL WRAPPED IN CHRISTMAS DECOR. 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Brookhurst Garden Grove 5311-4360 N _])891 ~haJ!!llan Garden Grove 63~1250 1 ~ EXPERT FACTORY SERVICI -~~ ~ - ' - JI Oll~Y PILOT ·1 School District Figliting VILLE PLATTE , La. (API -Oesk3 sit idle in the public schools while hundreds or white elementary pupils carry their books daily to a nightclub. a grocery store and other makeshift school sites. High school stuaents attend classes In a converted cattle auction barn. It's part o( the protest in Evangeline Parish -French· speaking Cajun country - against federal court school desegregation orders. "The impetu.s of a common enemy -federal intervention -is our greatest asset." said the Rev. Melvin Plauche, president of the Evangeline Aca~emy, a new private schoi:ll system. The academy has collected some other as.sets durin g its short life ~ $400,000 in dona· lions. membersh.ips and tuition and a student body of some 2,fOO. /ls backers say a new $100,000 elementary school for the academy will open by the first of the year. Then the temporary facilities -some of ""'hich double for other use , at_ night and on .,.,.eekends - will be vacated by the ~ youngsters. · ~ The public schools have lost ,..some 3,000 pupils this fall to . t~ academy and parochial ~schools, leaving an enrollment estimated at 2,483 whiles and J,211 Negroes. Nat Manuel, parish school superintendent. said the public school system has not felt any ~financial effects. The State • Department of F.ducation is scheduled to revi se its alloca- tions -based on a variety of factors, but basically enroll· ment .-early next year, however. Manuel said the private schools are no threat to the public school system. "There will always be 11tudents who can't afford private schOO!s," Manuel s'i!id. The impetus for the private school system came May 28 from the 5th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals whi ch voided freedom-of.choice as an ac- ceptable means of school desegregation and ordered im - plementation of altemetive plans in 37 Louisiana disb'icts. "This is not segregation at all ," Plauche said. "I'm not a racist, but nobody will believe that" • Asked whether there were any Negroes in lhe academy, Plauche replied : "We havlilflo blacks. There 1nay be some Negroes, but J don't knOw. We don't give blood tests." "No_ blacks have applied ," he said. "If they do, I don 't know what th e board would do. It's their decision." Plauche, a Baptist minister Jn a predomffiantly Catholic area. asked late in September at a public meeting for dona. lions to start a private school system. On the first night , the group received $88,000 in donations and membership fees. Within a month, the total was up to $300,000 and 1'he academy had leased an auction barn for $1 a year for the high school. Space in about a dozen other buildings was donated for elementary schools. Plauche said there have been so many applications the board has had to tum down about 200 bids for family memberships, which sell for $300. ' The 600 high school gtudents in the academy will continue using. the converted barn for cla sses. but the academy board is considering several possibilities for mov- ing into more pennanent quarters. Plauche said the academy drew its teachers -74 of them -from the ranks of the re.Ured and those who quil in opposition to the ~ou r I desegregation ruling. The pay is comparable to salaries in • the public schools. Plauche said U1e only stale hel p the academy receives is textbooks, "the same as every olher public, private or parochial schopl." iiiiiiiiil GREATEST Automobile OFF.ER SEE PAGE 44 ON THE TUBE -----------------------------------------------·------··· ---.. ' . 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I ... -.... -·--·· ---·-··------------------------------------.,. • ... ,. . - PAST.,MEETS PRESENT -Modern Orange Countians (Mrs. Cora Peggy W·allace and Charles Tuffree} extend an invitation to early Californians (Mr. and Mrs. Bernardo M. Yorba) to a gala blcerttennial ball Saturday. Dec. 27, in the Disneyland Hotel. Sponsored by the ·Orange County Bicentennial Committee, the ev- ent will salute the men and women 'vho shaped California's - and Orange CountY's-destiny. The setting Ior the picture is the old Estancia in Costa Mesa, a restored adobe that now is a his· torical site. NEW YEAR OF 141s1c: .... _Ringing in the 1970 Orange County Plillh..--. ' monic Society's'•on a.re·,(llilt lx>~ght) Mrs, Richard Lee and Mrs •• A. Bay~Dod Jr,'!"'bit-•-t!Ui'lllr,l;concert wfil be played-Jan. 3. ; j Early -Californians S·aluted 11 Sounds of Music ti Concert Commemorates Beetbove.n'~/ Birthday ' Openin~ the,. new year wlth ,Ule sounds~ music will b• the Orange County PhilharmOnic Society which will present, the next concert in' t h e current subscriptiOn series. Returning tO the county podium to direct tbe Los Angel .. -Philhar- monic Orchestra at 8:30 p.m . Saturday, Jan. 3,. in Orange Coe.st Collete· Auditorium will be Zubin Mehta . An all-Beethoven program bas been selected to commernorw.te his 200th birthday. Included will be the Overture to "Egmont," Opus 84; Qx>- certo No. 3 in C Minor for Piano and Orchestra, Opus 37 featuring guest pianist Byron Janis, and Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Opus 92. Othe1 important anniversaries t.o be remembered during the 1970 season are the 50th anniversary of the orchestra and the eighth season that it has been brought to county audiences. -Concert tickets, at $4, are on sale in the Philharmonic office, 201 W. Coast Highway, Newport Beach, 926M, phone, -II. Student tickets are $!. 75. ' Janis, born in Pittsburgh, was a cbild prodigy and Horowitz' prize pupil. Bernafll Gavoty describes him as '.'a prince charming, Ule angels of his face , his anxious silhouette conjure up images of a thoroughbred nce- horse, a tigfiti'ol!" walker ih search of fragile •)ability -or more justly, a romantic.poet, victim of the anguish ofg eni,Qs. '.' His brilliant techniqQe and magic touch are well known to music lovers throughout Ule wona. If the dons and duenas who lived :in California before the days of statehood C1)U!d visit their descendants today and see the changes that have · taken place in their beloved state, they likely. ~ould be unable to gtasp the magnitude o( the new ways at first glance. 'Ibey probably; would be proud, however, -of the way · 1n which their sons and daughters and grandchildren have preserved their heritage, perpeb.lating the family names and managing the family estates to best carry on their historyl These early Californians will be saluted at a gala benefit ball Saturday, Dec. 27, in the Disneyland Hotel sponsored by the Bicentennial Committee for Orange County, marking the bicentennial year of the Golden State. The names of the committee members planning the ball are reminiscent of those pioneer days. and aeveral can trace their family histories back to the ranchero days and the days ol Spain's lnOuence in California. · Charles Tu£free, executive coordinator ror the ball, is a descendant of,P· B:.P.olhemus, fwnder of Sail.Mateo, and Col. J. K. Tuffttie1 for whom the Col. J .. K. Tu£free Jntennedlaie School on the original Rancho Buena Vista recently was,named. Polhemas, who was active tn early r. a i Ir o-a d enletl!riles, became ~·one .qI the ·owners.. of 200 -~ mlles d. ~ comprltillf. parlo •d. ll!t-Ban· dini, ~ • .YorOa 111d Domlnpoii ; ..-an11' 'w\><t> .... purchased the Don Abel Sterns Rancho Company. This transaction took place after he sold his railroad in· terests to Leland Stanford and C. P. Hunlington a n d Associates. Most of the more than 180,000 acres were sold in the 1850s for $1 to $1.50 per acre. The family retained a portion of the Rancho San Juan Cajon de Santa Ana, naming it Rancho Buena Vista . Bernardo M. Yorba, who will host a table with his wife and also is assisting with plans. carries one of the oldest names in California. In 1769 a Yorba, Jose Antonio Yorba, accompanied a Spanish expedition to Alta which was made for the purpose of establishing presidios and mi5Sions. After serving faithfully for 30 years, helping to construct and guard the missions and p~sidios, Yorba was reward· ed with grants of land 1n the valley of Santa Ana. The grant, later known as the ·Rancho Santiago de Santa · Ana, bisected what now is Orange County. Yorba 's son. Don Bernardo Yorba, added more land to the rancho when California was under Mexican rule and became so successful that he was known as "the greatest ranchero in the golden age of California." Bernardo M. Yorba, bom In Orange Qiunty, lives, with his wlfe and family, on some of the original property in the Sa~ta Ana. Canyon. . Others assisting with plans for the gala celebration ball ar•,Mn. Cora Peggy Wallace, public relations; Mr. and Mrs. 0. W. Richard and the Mmes. Peter E. Fluor, Floyd Blower, Leland Finley, Frederick J . Bastanchury and Marco F. Forster, Invitations, and the Mmes. Mildred M c G e e , Harold .Lang, Paut Brower, James Tuffree, Mildred Yorba McArthur and Bruce Gelker, reservations. designed by Mrs. Leonora Perotti and a special com- n1cmoralive program is being created by noted designer Toni "Duquette. Committee members, who also will host tables, are Mrs. Lewis F. Moulton; the Messrs. and Mmes. C. Stanley Chap- man, J. S. Flu or, William ~r. Spurgeon III, Edward Dunlap: ...;> Thompson and Judge and Mrs. Thurmond L, Clarke. The event will raise funds for the Orange County Historic Society's program for tht preservation of Orange Coun- ty's historic monuments and adobes, support of the Charlew W. Bowers Museum and a scholarship fund for Mexican- American students, represen-- t i n g California's historical past. • Deeorations are b e i n g Judge and ~1rs. Raymond Ticktocker Project Happiness Promoted Christmas is more than the season to be jolly for Nationa1 Charity League Ticktockers .... It's the season for sharing and giving and the girl• are busy with preparations to accomplish those goals. Some new.found friends \vill share Christmas ha ppiness with the sev· enth, eighth and niJJth grade Ticktockers, children in the three bilingual school s in Santa Ana. The schools, a pilot program of the city, are dev<>ted to training bilingual mothers and children in their own culture and language as weU as English ~o they can better fit into the community. A party will be given at each of the three schools by the Ticktockers. comple'te with Christmas trees and gifts. The girls will help the students make decorations beforeh·and so they can trim the trees. The 10th grade Ttcktocke:s have adopted two families and e a c h member has chosen a little brother or sister from the families. They cook· ed Thanksgiving dinners for their new friends and now are planning to bring them Christmas trees, gifts and dinners. , Birthdays of the children are remembered with cakes and gifts, and cards are sent on each holidaY. lhroughout the year. · · A f.amily with eight chJidren has been adopted by the 11th g r a d • Ticktockers, who plan to shower the family with gifts, a Christmas tree and a festive dinner. · Three families will be remembered by the 12th grade Ticktockers. who ga'tltered gifts, clothing,. orn'amfmlS, food and money at a recent meet .. ing whidl was their own Christmas party. The girls also will provide trees for their\ three families. · · Workers Sandwich ~ rn Pleasurable Business on Lunch Hour .· DEAR ANN LANDERS> How dumb c::an you get? I nearly got an attack of apoplexy when you told that woman,." A man who is home every night is not likely to be having an affair at the oflice durln& hi s lunch hour." It took me five years to figure out why my husband wa~ pooped all the lllne. Rlgbl alter dinner Glenn folded Ukt a t.enL One day I accidentally locked myself out of the house. I had to go to Glenn's place of business lo get a key. ft was then that 1 caught ·him -in broad daylight al l:15 p.m. In hia office wllb the door locked. So why £1on't you wak~ up end smelt lht coffee, kiddo? And tell me how you like it. -FORMER DUMBBELL DEAi\ FORMER1 ne coffee lmtlla ANN LANDERS ~ flne. ll'11be<mt of Ille 11«y IUt doem 'I 1mtU ao pod. Tbe .en let&er might. be or Interest to you. Read oe. DEAR ANN: So the man who is home every night Js not likely to be having an affair, th1 Well, you're wrong, honey, .and I've &een the proof with my own eyes. 11.iy office facts a parking lot that serves about. 250 people who&e ofricd are • in this building. You wouldn't believe what I see every day from my window from noon to 2 p.m. -And without binoculars. What do you have to say now. Ann Lan· dcrs? -TWENTY-TWENTY VISION DEAR VISl'JN~ l 11y, h'1 time )'911 JOI •way rrem th..: window ud went to hmcb • DEAR ANN LANDERS: J •lway1 was amused by the nitwits who sent OW p~ blems to you. Now I have a problem that is not verJ amusing. Last week my sister·in·law brought my broU.cr lo our home and dumped him here. She screamed, "You made him this way, now take care of him!" 'Mlen she threw Ills suitcase in the comer and left. My brother, Judd, is 52 and completely senile. His wlfe claims he began to act nuuy after I arranged for him to meet an old name in my home. I realize now V. was a mistake, but I had no idea it would create such a mess. Shortly alter that meeting_ Judd began to go. to piece!: phy~ically. The doctor advised his wife to take him to a psychiatrist The p!ychlatrl!t told my sister·in·law that he was aware oC Judd '•· long history of • romantic involvement,, because several of his women patients described affairs with him. My sister~in·law became so Jn. eensed she Went to a lawyer the next day and started divorce proceedings. My questions are as follows : Am I legally responsible for my brother? Can philandering cause senility? Is t~re a cure for it? Will a Home for the Aged take a man 52? Is he eligible for Medicare? Jf we keep Judd, could he be considered a deduction? Please answer. I'm stymied. -PENITENT CUPID IN ILLINOIS DEAR PEN: I find 11 dlfllcull to believe that a psy<!hiaU'tsl 1' o 111 d volunker information about olber pa· U.OU. I allO IU)d yoar Die d. Jbe WOnl -· ... uuy balfllng. u pbltandwg .. - your brother's breakdown, be 11 1111 1enile, be is emotionally dlsturbed:41 1MI Is Indeed a victim of prematun tenlll_ty1 .this is an orga'nlc lllae11 and not rel•&ell kl hJs la4y friends. · 1 1ugge;st that yoo take yoar brother tf- aaotbtr pbyslcjaa to evaluate :;,: psycblatrt~ needs., And r ~ )'Oii ' see a lawyer 'In regard to tbe ~gal 4'I . uon1. Laws vary according lo stale - what might .be legal In Illlaob mlgbt Doi; be legal elsewllere. j· .. Ann Landers wlll be glad to help yoa:· with your problem•. Send 1l>em to her 111; care of the DAll.Y PlLOT, e.nctoalr11 a self·oddresi<d, •tom'Ped envelope. L ' .k . • ---· ···· Hvsband Assists UPI l•i.tll>OIO Mom Delivers • Home In WASHINGTON (UPI ) Daniel Robert Alastair Kltt11: was born··at 3 in the morning in the living room of his par· enl,s' Bethesda home. Fivt hours Jater, his mother was out driviila: the school bus. .Sibyl Kitts lili:es having "home babieS,11 with on.ly her husband, Bernard, to help. "J werit under the shower for the worst pains. And you ha ve the Jove ol your family and ~urity around you." The pains? · ''Just held ~n to J3ernard's wrists for the· worst .pairu - we want ed to keep his hands sterile." • Kitts regp.rded his wife and newborn son ana said, ''It's not an easy thing !Or a woman to go through~ -and it's no -use a •man kidding hlmselr. ''I think it's good for men to apprecipte how much of an ex- perience it is to bear a child.'' She Said their first baby, Bernard Jr .• "was born in a hospital in the usual way." The second, Audrey, was born at horn~; 15 days before she was expected. "I was alone -Bernard was talking to a doc tor cm the phone - and then we had a rescue squad trip to the hospital. They put me in surgical and the baby in pediatrics. She couldn 't go in lhe nursery because she wa s "con- laminated" by being born outside of Uw: hospital. We were fallout victims." For Lhe ne.it one (Howard ) r went ahead of time to lhe hospital," Mrs. Kitts said. "'I was Jn lhe labQr room and I had tl)e baby all by myself. J'm still mad about that. "After that,·l was determin· ed I'd have Lee, the fourth. at home, re~ardless of what anyone said. I finally con· vinced Bernard but it was a hard conVJQCing. ·He was a medic in the Army bl.it he 'd never deliVered a baby." Morning Rites With no difficulty, Lee was born at home. He now is 5. The Kitt.. studied a half· dozen books. Tbe besl one, Mrs. Kit ts said, was called "What to Do for a Birth in an Air Raid." On the f\.1onday following Dan iel's birth, Mrs. Kitts resumed her job as a teaching assistant at Spring Billingual Montessori Academy. She takes the baby with her to school in the bus, along with the JO pupils she picks up on the way. The day he v.·as born, she left him at home. Wedding Date Told r The marriage of M r s . Kathryn Rupp Smith of Dana Point and John David Gilliland Jr. of San Juan Capist rano was solemnized in W£yfarers' Chapel~ Portuguese Bend. The former Mrs. Smith wore a long gown of ivory crepe trimmed in seed pearls and carried a white orchid. She was attended by her daug hter Kathleen Perry Smith who wore an empire gown of 11quamarine crepe. Best ~man was Chris Lopez of Palos Verdes Es tates, brot,her -i~·Jaw of the bridegr09m. Ushers we r e Wylie Boatright, Jack Mears and Thomas .. ~. Stoever. A reception for 75 guests took place in the Emerald Bay home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Reese Alli.son. Mrs. Dow Pat· lerson and Mrs. M e a r s assisted . Following a wedding trip, the couple will make their home in San Juan Capistrano. South Coast 1Jua· NO HOSPl.TAL BI L~S -Dani~! Robert Al ~slair _Kitts. \Vas born in the jiving room of hi s parents home. Jbs mother. Sibyl Kitts, likes ha ving her ba.bies a't .home with only her husband to assist. Five hours a fter Dan iel \V.a s born his mother was out driving the sch6ol bus. 86 STORES ..• ALL IN SHELTERED COMFORT 111510\. Al S"N DlfGO rllfWAf. CO$TA ~ t••tl:::..c;T":.!!'n"J ~ -,--___ -r31.:r--.a-a:x1r;;;u e-;;; . .,_., 1 ------------'"---------------------------~------- The Tee • '''" •.r~· ._:-11_ '\ !Editor'> Nolt A cnlu,..,n ot wo,..,rn' 100 golf Ka•t~ W•ll ePPeer t~cn wt•~ 1~ fhe DA it Y PILOT To •tlMlrl •<Orf• for IM wffli, P~l•t m8•• ll>tm !p P 0 1!~1 1!.60. Tl>ev mu•t be rrt~•vPG 1>r MDil<llY) llAHCHO SAH JOAOUl"I ACE DAY -Act oi lh• oav. II". Tl>orn&1 Bollst. 69; Flo9h) ;.., !ht"'""°'· Luna1tord J<>ne!., 8'. low <1•011; C r. 8a•thoN>mew, 76, low ne1; Jlkh•«• V•rJan, .... low o>ult>: Fli1M 8, !l>t Mmes. Ph<hP JC111n11on, tJ.. I-"''°"" JamH Kf'tler, l'-low net: Iv•" Shir<J!S, 71. low net; Gilberl loe. )J, low .,.,113., Fllvll! C, 11\t """"''· W ~ • r ~" Collins, Harvev G~ll•vhfor. 'I"/, law Tattler q•~''; rrAn~ Atkrn,on. l•. low oun1, f li9M o '"" MmC'1. Jot w .. 11na/1. !Gl, f~· ... <f'~'" F w. Pot•roon. 11, law .,.,. •i"v~v ltcClure, 11, law ""l; WOOdfQtJ • L•c~n•• JI. tow Pu!n, RYINE COAST lAOIES OAY1 lEAST PUTTS - ( l~u A, II\" Mme•. [cnl••nacn, JIOP A. V•av, TllOm•< Aikin~. Edward Milum, J6"n Cl•~• II. lne Mmes. 0""6kl II. M•rlln. l6; W1!11•m L•ster, ll"r; H. J. Swan<;1111, :ie·.: Cla" c. 11\e Mme" E:. Dick B~dl\am, :U; le>!ie T• .. r. l51'1; George 11. Grant, 361,; Cla .. 0 , 11\e Mrnn. P.ru<t ll E•ley, l6, G. Paul Klrm•n . Jahn J~<cbs, ll' i. UM OPEN SUNDAYS 12 TO 5 !£1¥t•4 •ltMo4 IN LARGE SIZES ••. 40 • SO ' 1ugar plum for Grondmo, f nylon for yo1,1r "b•tl gi11.• from $6.0D . f . :.-.t . ! .. j . ·~: ! I ! . ii I LARGE SIZE - BED JACKETS SfZE 40 ·SO i.om s500 \_\ -----Olher Gitt Suggestions -----.' I e DRESSES e SWEATERS e ROBES e SLIPS e CAPlllS e BLOUSES e HOSIERY e PANTY HOSE U.YAWA.Y e GIFT &OXES • GIFT CfJITIFICATfS ~~~'sHALF·SIZE SHOP ' Sprnig thinkers I Tf-r 1)o\c -ah ead slioes ,;1 .. t·r•r-r -:1-t r""'" Hrrr, 1"'e l"Udes-paled t~· " • "lC beige:;, danc in fresh sirap :;haping::.. Tr e. 'd one h~:. the HJrlow took ol a dolly toe and t't l I r•I, 10.9!'.l. The demure oric has delicat e ( t.J!ot.1 ~nd ttr.iight heel, 9.99. From a spring·rc.;;dv '0"' ';'at mostfy 9.99 and 10.99 • SOUTH COAST PLAZA Couple Set June Da te The engagement of Jill Seybert and Dway ne Rathburn has betn announced by her parents, f.1r. and Mrs. Robert A. Seybert of tluntington Beach. Miss Seybert, a graduate o( }luntington Beach High School, now is atten ding Bethany Nazarene College in Okla· ho ma. Her fiance, son of fi.lr. and Mrs. Harold Ra thburn of San Antonio. was graduated from San Antonio High School and also attends Bethany. The engaged cou ple plan to be married in June. ; 1 J ft..L SEYBERT Engaged ---- ,&.MERI C A'S LARGES T f"AM IL Y C LOTH I N G CH Ahlit OPEN SUNDAYS fl TO 5 Costa Mesa, 1601 Newport Blvd. at 16th Gorden Grove -12372Jiarden Grove Blvd. ' .. .. .. ' . . ' ., • '.• ' } . . Best to Watch For Yule ·Gyps NEW YORK '(UPI) -Tis the eeuon lo be wary -o[ l!'PICbaneJ.. Take some examples listed by the Better Business Bureau of Metropolitan New York: -SoJJcJatlon s from charltia that benefit the 10llcilor more than. the beneflclu1ea:. Be suspicious when approached for a dona- tion for an unfamlllar charity. ieturn it, aeknowledge receipt, or pay for IL r -Sldewallc sa1.. of ties, cheap watches, perfume, tofs, gadgets and other inferior merchandise pole a n o t b e r trap for tbe unwary con.sumer. General shopping guidelines !or all Christmas "1oppers: -U you are buying something on the layaway plan, be oertaiD that you will be able to meet all payments as they come due. -Don't believe the claims or retaUers who aeem to be continually selling all their merchandise a t wholesale prices. To avoid disappointment, prospective b~es an reminded to bave their weddinC aUjrjes w!tb black and white i!ossy r.J>ot<»· graphs to the. DAILY PILOT Women s D .. partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received following the wedding will not be used. For engagement announcements It ts Imperative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub- mitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. II deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To belp fill requirement.. on both wed· ding and engagement stories, fonns are available in all of the DAILY PILOT o!lices. Further questions will be answered by ..... Women's Section staff members at 64M321 ' or 494-9466. -Mall order swindles. In one mall order racket, a cu8tomer is aenl a claim stub statlng that the shipper is holding a package that will be sent en return of the stub and a smaJI amount of money. If the consumer sends t h.e money, he 1ets the merchan- dise which usually ls a cheap .pert and pencil set or some Other over-priced Item. -U you make a major purchase, read all the pepen you are asked to &ign and keep 1..-----------------.ll copies oC them. If you aren't -Receiving me.rchandise which you didn't order is another tricky situation. According to the bureau, you are under no obligation to • SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER FllP-Gulck lea E1ac10r Kii ONLY '11" An fdeal' 'Little aom.ething for the home" gift! .llatfllpthl llmldlund you """fee am fnatlntty, eas- Jfy. Olltt lncludlo two special Zl)<ubo Ice EjodM tnys, os •II • hm1d1 80<ube ,..,.,, nuvta1aN•ArP'LIANCU 411 E. 17th St. Co1ta Meu -646-1614 • LACY SHEER GOWN From our coll•c· tion of 9ift tre1- 1ure1 for her, choo1• this c1pti- v1tin9 nylon tricot 9own in l1dy0 in- t•d or pink shim- m•r•d with 11tin ribbon, 1win9in9 op•n to show its o•n op1qu• 9own. xs.s.M. $11 , sure about somelbing in the contract. ask questions. Remember, whatever you are told does not me~ anything wlleS! it also is written in. the contract. -Watch out for com- parative price claims on ~asonal merchandise, particularly at the beglnnlng of the season. ~ If you're buyjng a toy, cheek to see if it needs bat- teries. -U you're buying an easy- to-assemble toy, try to put it together some days before Christmas. That way, if a part Is m&ing or parts dtin'f flt,', you'll have plenty of tlme·)o !lralgbten out Ille dilllculty before Santa arrivei. ... ' WorkingWO·m~~' Of the., nB.tion's n~fy 21. million.~ women working in ~Jt '1 t e· collar, profesaioDal, wu ..:or industrial jobs, 19 percent are widowed, divorced or separated. Fifty-nine percent are mar· rled and living with their hus- bands, the lnslitute of Life Insurance reports. B'nei B'rith Orange Coast Chapter o! B'nai B'rith Women gather the first Thursdays at 8 p.m. in Mercury Savi.1gs Bank, Hun· tington Beach. ~ .. ' l'e1hl0ft loleftll, Newport l!Mch StoMWood Center, Downey _._ ....... . ..... , ........ M..., a.... y ..._. a.rte Kathleen Keyes Becomes Bri.de MRS. PHELPS Exch•nt•• Vows Plants 'n Heat Keep plants away from radiators ind other heat sources, Porous clay con- tainers help plaDts tolerate ordinary heat. They keep root structures 10 to 15 degrees co:hler than nonporous con- tainers. Kathleen Keyes became the bride of Ronald Phelps during double ring nuptials in West Anaheim Methodist Church. Parents of the couple are Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Phelps of Huntington Beach and Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Keyes of West- minster. For"the early evening cere- mony the bride selected a white aatin gown and carried white orchids. Attending her were ·Mrs. Toni Goodall, matron ci honor: Miss Harriet Keyes, maid of honor: and the Misses Donna Andersen, Diane Governor and Candy Keyes, bridesmaids. Best man was Ron Keyes and ushers were Lloyd Itano, John Lowry, Dan Howard and Billy Newton. Jami McCabe was flower girl and Jami Newton was ring bearer. Costa Mesa Women's Club was the reception s e t t I n g where Miss Kathy Belohovek circulated the guest book. The couple are making their home in Garden Grove. Da~e Club 'The first, third and fifth Fridays of the month are the da1ce dates selected. by Lace 'n Leather Square Dance Club members. The music starts at . 8 p.m. in the Recreation Center, Huntington Beach. FOUR·PAllT BEAUTY GIFT HOLIDAY PACKAGED IO,DG 72.00 value 1. Rester Wave Permanent reg. 35.00 2. Loodoo·Look Cut reg. 3.50 3. ~estor Treatment reg. 3.50 4. Fayrelle Stretch Wig reg. 30.00 A gift certificate. tells he~of the ell!. • she makes her appolnbnent; selects • her own wig frD111 an .xcltin1 pp . of natural colors. It's 1 twice-as-tiice ' gift cl)olce ••• anew hair style fer. . .. the holidays, plus it Wi& in a quidl change. Beeuty Slltdi~ • •• •' '. ' . ' . ,. ' . ' • • t' •.·· r . ' . " . • • • ... .. . . I ~ ' • ~T· .• •1 Monday lhru S1lurd1y 10:09 A.M. in ·~ ,,M. °(· r ! ..... ' /t , ' Nawporl Cantor No. I F1i!i1'on lolond 644..aJOf,. • ~. Dtctmbft> 18, 1969 • DAILY PILOT JQ ... • . . A BRIGHT GIFT IDEA ••• VERA'S PRINTS AND PANTS FORTHETREVIRA®ERA INSPIRED ISY A'ftEcrNT TftlP TO INDIA, VEAA PAINTS HEft MOST AMAZIHl;-:BL.AZING PRINT COLLECTJ'ON .. JUST IN TIMIC TO lftlGHTIN THE HOLIDAYS. COLORFUL SHIRTS . . OF SATEEN ~OH•• VIVID SHIRTS Oil' SIUC, 23.oC:J..30.00: ALt. TO COORDINATE WITH PAlfTS·OF )00 % ~REVIRAe .POLYESTER TO GIVE YOU THE IEAUTJP'UL BAu.H.CE OF' UTHETJCI Af'!D PERFORMAHCI NEVER KNOWN 81,0RE THE TREVIRM EftA~· LlL.A_c, PINK• OAANGE, Vil.LOW, DILt. GREEN, ttOYAL. -.UI, LACK, NAVY OR WHITE, 20.00. . . ' IH SIZES 8 TO )6. MAI L AND PHONE Olmlftl• tCTTS1t SftOftTSWEAR .SEPARATES. ROBINSON .'S ' NEVY.FORT ·FASHION ISLAND· 644-2800 • • ,, . • • DAILY PILOT .. Chor.I .Group ' ~rhc;~ 1oi>s-Cltriflmos ·Around the World . Every MO!ld>y al ~,30 p.m. . -ol lhe l'roopedlV< \ u.o·vaney ehapter of swt.t ellnM convene in MWlon High School. ·11arper ~1 In Colla ..Mesa b the JOC'ation where .members of TOPS ttarbor !Jghlen ·gat11er\ eoCb Mondajl eveo.!ng a~ 7:30. · ~ Children Frolic WJiilein Ho .l·iday Mood MARCHING MOTHIR Mn. K ... I Chairman .Annou,nced Jolnlnr handt In 1111 °"" aplnsl lilrlh d<fedl -1111 Natlooal Fountdatloi>-Mardo ol Dlmu and Mn. ~ Kegel. BJ PATRICIA McCOllMAClt husballd or wife waJti1C oa lhe ~ YOJIK (VPl)-Jii Ibo ~-::--~ ;In !rad! oameof~---o1 Ibo -Id · c1o teemingly Ilona! llallan. Yule 1fG111P on. lthM. lblno w11en lolJowlnC · ~~a cUts .aB.llOSh-tradlilooll YiiJo rlluaL ed In II, lhe so-caJied Um ol Ml ether time of the year Fate. Th~ children line up and --~1sv1so; ~ ss..ma.::c~n!.~~~= = lo )IU1llla. ~ ~ gills· !or ~ticm. cmd 111"*1 before Chriltmu In Fruce, children doing llw)' -ap lo -1Jo lhe tradlUOnal C b rl 1 Im a s her fell to a dlalr ... ex· Wop POii -CID docntepa dalm -"~• Day. Cbrtstmas Eve.·-Mollw'1 Day what will you The Petit Noel, Cbrlst Cllild, PIY io· pt aw~y?" . fllls them with gift.a. lt'1 · strlctly a cue or those with M\111 la .111Ued -she lhe largest 5boes getting lhe &tres tbe .Jqjtul boys and P'll biggest share of goodies. liftl. .• . . Some old-fashioned German Dad doie'& escape 'th1I homes prepare foe the com.ing ,holdup. ~ nut SundaJ he of Santa by erecting a Yule set!. tbe .-me-trtabntnt. Kid-tree for each member of the cUoi pl ·more gifts. ..,_ family. Each Is decorated wllh "&llJMll' uetdoe• are follow-lights and candy. Gift distribu- ed lit .-gifts Cbrlslmu !loo lollows lhe llg)lllng ol lhe day. trtea Christmat eve. 'Ibe The lift cmtam 11 rushed a fa..-orlte German Chri.slmas bit. too, in the Netberl'*'· meal consist.\ of roast goose. lAmmbouq: ad BeJctunu Some · shooUng o cc u r s ; ' Polish Is lo lat Ibo ~befcn and, In me wa7 .or lhe other Qir1'lmu and -• least at . cmlnu:t. "''"Jan. .. nfehllall Al !his clllllvt table 'Jbt Jnak1JiC , of lho 1 plnala the~'• IUppooed to . bt. • .,._ Diam Ibo q!oot.merrb!ient. eant chair -for lhe CbriJI 'll\IJ. j>, -a , crocl;-« pa· 'Child. I pier. macho . f1&un. Oiled 11llh In the nam• .of tradition, cllts andcudJ'd~banp from · straw. such ia . tbaV Used la tbl cellln« of • roam 'flt the atablff, Is _,.... abilul Ibo bronth of a tree. Childr<n, floor lo remind the Polbfi bUndloldod. laliO 1Uma trying merrymWn !hat Cbrilt WU lollroak II wtlh ·a,llidc, When born In a stable. It lo -... . u,. JOOCfll• rain . CllrtallMa In Ollna anil dcilin. . . ' Japan oblerve Cb r I It ma 1 · Tbe .Brttiltr rally round tradltlooa mud! ·JIM U-.'Folber airtslmu. He's the practiced in America. The one iwbo fills stoddn1s with Cblneoe Santa <:Jaw, ac-(llftr. cording lo Wqrld B o o t And lhe British, In !heir EncyclOPO<fia hlstorians, 1oes typically -ible appr\IOCll lO by name of Dun Che Lao Ren. life, have ftpred out &way to 11 trualatea -Cbrillmu Old deal wllh lhe matter ol Upping Man. ac Cbriltmu. The Sonia In Japan Is lhe • They do It lhe doy after ancionl god Hol<ioobo - ·believed to have eyes in the back ol hi• head, au the aster to watch children's behavior throughout the year. Soroptimhh Soropllmist Club of Hun- tington Beach gathers at 12:1$ p.m. the leoond and fourth Tuesdays in Franc<iis , restaurant. The wife of an ~ C- ly pediatric canfloloslst wtn be the -0ranie· COunty MolheB Mardi Chairman dur-llli lhe 11'/V campolcn. The longut Christmas celebration occurs in Latin AmtricL In Mal.co, for ex- ample, festivltlea slart Dec. 11 On SL Nlcbolaa Day, Dec. I, oolalde NorWeglan home 1 I mu dr.-d In thi: rqal Chrlatmas· night. No violence nibea of a blabop roin-nts and nothJng of Scrooge about lhe saJnl. He qalDea Ibo boys IL The notion ls Iha! wttches1;==================::;1 and gtrla: about thtlr behavior appear on Christmas night. So since: the Jut time he was when children go visiting, they around. To the rood cbllch.n, creep up on a house and go be pmnlloo lo nlunl In the bang-bang lo scare lhe wit· MB. Kefld ii one of lhe ICIWld!ni membeB of Orange Counly Jewllh . Community Council, number oi t h e Orange County Heart Associ .. lion and IDkrlallh FClWldaUon al UC!. 'lbere la a total famUy in- volvement In lhe March of Dimer; Dr. Kegel fr<quenUy truls chlldren bcim wilh cardiac problems while his wife hu joined. !he ll&ht lo ,.. that all wo~n are provided with and take advanta1e of good prenatal catt. 1be three cbJJdren also are lavolved. Reception Fetes Pair nlgbt wtlh gllls. ches. In Switlerland, dUl.drm do a In Scandinavian countries lot of drtnklnc -of water -Ouistmas is for the blrdJ ~ in cmpwtiaa, with Chrlltmu well as the children. Gills of eve QJlkml. 'Ibey vlllt nine extra grain are left ia yards fount.mm cm their way to mid-on Christmas eve. Seeds, nuts night dlun:b orricu. Each and Insects birds 113W1lly feast ti.tel three alpl from a foun-on are covered with snow and taln-27 l1DI in all. it's figured the extra grain Dalo& ihts properly, ac-will help lhe fealhered friends cordtac-to Je1end, gives a survive. cblld • chance to find future Tbt ."tradiijon among the Peering Around Zodioc Decor Susao Howard of Bever!)' Hilil became lhe bride of•--------Lewis Martin Decktr of Hun- PHONE 642-1197 Veta's 1111111Atl APPAlll .... ,._ .. , ..... ....... ,.a •• tlngton Be1ch in an early afternoon ctmnony in the home of Ibo bride's parents, Dr. and Mrs. John R. Howard ol Downey. The Rev. Jolm B. Tooy of the Flrat Pnobyterian Cllun:b ol llcJwMy ollicfaled. Ml" Carole Lang of Bel Air _J and Dooald Sleneck o I ,. ~ Lynwood, atlended lhe couple. -----•www.w...... A champagne reception for I I •---••---, close friends and relatives . followed the ceremony. • The newlywds hooeymooned at Like Arrowhead and now are at home Ill Huntlngton Beach. Emblem Club I Gat:her'inl for b U 11 D t I I aeuionl and i-oliatUI Ire members of Newport Harbor · Emblem Club e=f -! Tueoday at I p.m. In the Elb : l.OOge, Newport Bead!. For total femininity ART WORX of Cl8"'nce Gray of Costa Mesa L! featured. at the Worklhop- Gallerie in Loe: A n g e l t a • 'Bronze, marble and &1111 llClllpbue• and slalned ctsaa Ire bellli nhlblted dally mW Chrlstmu eve. CELEBRATING her 75th birthday during a family din- ner pll'ty in the VJlla Nova was Mn. Howard Fisher -of Newport Beach-The celebra- tion was planned by her h111- band. Arnool family mem-at- tending were the Fiabera' daulhten and families, Mr. and J\ln. Robert Francil and -of Loi Angeles and Mn. MuBau Bennett and daurbter of Oardllli and their IOllS and f...W... William Flabtr and ...,, of EDclnllu and Mr. aod Mn. Du Fillla' and daql> ten of Catla Mou. G,Aa. 'B .. .6. Fascinate everybody With lhb zodiac decouPll• tree. New. unique, run to make! The Glycine Airman watch. created especially for fliers. has been acclaimed by commercial. milillry ind private airmen throughout the world. Special featu"res include: 24 hour luminous dial "Hick Feature" allows exact correction World time zone compensation dial Automatic calendar, anti-magnetic, ahock. -moisture 1nd dust resistant Unbruklbll melnapring Including llllnl111 expansion band, $125. Lot us demonstr11t1 this remerklble tiroopilce. SLAVICK'S .s.w.i.r. Sint11917 II FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644· 1 llO . YM Cllll'M AcCWllt W*--.. l'lkAl'lltrlClrd, ~ Oltl'ft, too. 0,.. M9Rllay thr• .. turday uwtll t:SO CJl-welcome gift; no matter· who's Santa/ The large selection of lino jewelry and rare gems together wilh unusual importations from over, the world in RICHARD OUELLETTE Decoupaae 7.0dlac sign on one side ol disc and photo plus name, bhihdate on other. Pat-t=~~======.====~~==~=~~~~~~:=~ tern 7247: twelve 2Y.a" mows, directlon.s at.and, discs. Gilt -.• silver, iade, porcelain, · copper, etc., make ~'being Santa' simple. )<.. .~ Try it and see! ,~ ~ :~ .. ·9 to 5 · eJ«ept S.,ndriy GUGLIELMO CINI, INC. 867 SOUTH COAST HWY. l.AGUNJ" •JEAGHfCAUF. 1126!11 - 494-14if0 . . . praudly presents t~e apening af JON PETERS BEAUTY SALON lntroduc.lnt Our Staff of H1lr Styllah: ARMAND tAINE RUDY CHAVIRA JIM DOZAL JUDY GENTRY JON DEN OUDEN ORLANDO RODRIGUEZ WESLEY TAYLOR -Mike Up-- BETTY ROESLER -RK•,tioni•t- CONNIE EVANS OPEN MONDAY THlU SATURDAY -IVEMIN6 .4PPOINTMINTS ' ---~---. 1610 W. COAST Hl611WAl'. e NfWl'ORT IUCH · M2.J970 M2-Jt74 • ----~~---~ .. ___________ ,... _____ _,1 ' FIFl'Y CENTS (coinl) for each pattern -add 15 cents for each pattern for firrt...class malling and special handling; otherwise third-cla ss delivery will i.ake three weeks or more. Send lo Alice Brooks DAILY PILOT lOS Needlecraft Dept., Box J63, Old Cbebea StaUon, New York, N.Y. 10011. Print Nune, Addrtu, Zip, Pitter. Number. BIG 1'70 Needlecraft Catalof -40 pages, over 200 designs, 3 free patterns! Knit. crochet Instants, a r g y I e sweater, hat.s. dresses, swim suit Quilt, embroider, weave:. Make toys, gtrt.s, afghans. Send 50 cents. M INSTANT Gffll. Make to- day-give tomorrow. 50 cent.I. • •111 Jlffy ft.mp" to knit, weave, 1ew, hook. 50 cents. Book of II Prise Alpam. SO cents. •••y.ea,. activ• w•1r for men ind boy• glo s90 orion knits fo r men. mochine woshe ble...,. moc hine dryoble bright colors. ' f1 tlrtl•• hl1fllli, " .... ,.,. ... ,.. * 644-1070 lt111 ... _.,ri .. r4 * M1d9f' chi rt• ' . -. . - r ·- • ' • •• " l I -..... --------------------------------------------------------------.. , Women Physicists Overcrowding No Problem RIVERSWE -T o d 1 y , v.-omen in phy:iics are about U · rare u Albert EiNtein would have betn in home economic!. A few yeara ago, female pl\yslelatli weno pnctl<ally nooeJ)st.eat. EVen to:day at the Univenttyof Oa l If or n I a, Riveraide, a campua hl1hly orientm lo basic scleatlDc reaearch, there are only two v.-omen in the 26-member phyak:a faculty . • In the entire University of California ay3tem there are about 1,000 physlclsta w:ltb the equivalent of the doctorate. deSJ;et -1es,, than a dozen of the• are womtn. "I oftfn have asked myself why," aald Dr. Anne Kernan, " a nat.llie t4. Dublin, Ireland and a high 'M'l'1Y experimental phyalcilVat UC Riverside. "I don't know the answer," she &aid. "In Europe there are far more women in every field of ·science than there art in America. American women assume they are emancipated. but they aren't as emancipat.- ed as they think." Europeans, she continued, feel women should have career training, while many American women don't con· ROMANTIC IDEA Dr. ~nne Ktrn.n cern thtmaelves with career PHYSICS FASCINATING preparaUonlbelore man:iage. Dr. Hu•ng-Liu "l don't think there are any 1i";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ii;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'""il obstacle• thal prevert wome'n II lrom entering physics." ahe said ... But it's a vicious circle -thert artn't many women in physics, therefore they don't think to go into physics." Or. Nai Li Huang-Liu from Taiwan. .and al9o a member of the UCR physics faculty, con- curs with Dr. Kernan's analysis and ~.s "in this country, I cuess most women feel phye.ICI Is not an ap- propriate field for a career.'' But il's otivious that neither Dr. HUllli·UU nor Dr. 15eman foond ph)'>icp inappropriate. N~ther woman is preten- tious about the pioneering role she is playing iQ the not·SO- long-ago all-tnale world of phy&ic.s. And neither has had any trouble wocklng with all- m.ale colleagues. "nitre hun't been any pre- judice against me because I'm .a. woman," Dr. Kernan uid. ··0noe you show you can perfonn effeetively, there are no problems." ~ ta~ -to-'r'\ !Si~~~ ~- luf4tch\~ l>li~ J to.N\. \)o1i, ~ VMv OPEN DAILY I 0-9 SUNDAY 12-5 DAILY PllOl 21 "The men show m o r c rtspect," Dr. Huang·Llu con· curred, .. because they find it rare lo have a woman in thisl~::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::::;::~• field. To work at a university depends.on your competence, not your sex," she added. Why did they choose ph)'>ica as a carter? Dr. Huang-Liu, who earned her bachelOrs degree a t Taiwan University, her doc- torate at UCLA and did postdoctoral work at Harvard, r.ntered the field of physics becam;e it waa "fascinating to me." "It's very convnon in Taiwan to see girls major in physics and even engineer- ing," she said. "Why physics," Dr. Kernan repeated the question. •·1 doo't know. l'vt been interested in it from the time 1 wa.s in a:chool. • "1 guess t 'had a romantic idea about science." she said "'ith a smile, ''I read a lot about Mldame Curle when 1 was a girl and thou&hl about people nlruling around in white coats diacovering things." So !he attended the National Universlt)r or Ireland at University College in Dublin ~nd earned a bachelors and doctorate degree in physics. Dream Lend Scientists studylu1 s l.e e p report dreams· wually last betl\·een eight and 30 minutes apiece. lt'1 not unu!llll for a person to dream a total t:l. two or two- f.nd""4....half hours a nlaht. : ' .. . 'B'nai B'rith Orange C:Oa!t. Chapter ofl B'nai B'rilh Women gather lhe first Thursdays at 8 p.m. in Mercury ·Savings Bank , Hun.II tington Beach. •a1y-car1 active wear 1 •• ll'l•n and boys barefoot gea r. bro wn1 sun+on, blue "'"~'111.,lc•rd + "''''" di•riJ• 7 f,1hi•11 i1l,11d, n••petf li••r.h • 644·5070 Sale of Actionwear® Panty Hose SAVE 98° $ Regular 'l.99 . I pr. •Sheer stretch mesh knit in sunset1 mocha,·bare beige, black mad •Proportioned sizes in Petite, Average, and Tall Regular 2.49 Extra Lai;ge size panty ho•e in sunset and bare beig,~-----" pr. $4 Regulu 99c Aclionw.ea.-Hosiery ________________ _, pr. $2 • P~portioned medium and long length« fit oizM B'h to II \/z in fashion obades U•e Sears Revolving Charge • !~·------------------------------------------------, I IU&fA ,AK fl MONft lCINO W01 fllCO 9t........ POMONA IOlllH OJJillf IU.IA CANOCAPAS GllHDAlf t OlY.W.:'IOTO SANTAANA TOnANa I I CO#l'l'OH ~L'f"tll'QOC) • OIAMCI • ~ SANTA,, Sl'nfc;$ V.W.n' I COVINA INGLrw'OC» P.UAOtNA • • · SANT A MONIC;A \ldMCINr ~ .... 1 '-------------At-------------Sears----------------·• ..,M.,..,.,..lfl,..Ps.t.ni.,.tllOA.M.,NO r.M.,...,12 ....... s r.M. ----"Sctti1f.ctiot1Ch•••·•· ... ..., ...... J - IJ' DAil t' PllOT TlturJdU, D~einbtr 'lll, l%1t Horoscope - Aquari~s: Attend to Issues '. FRIDAY DECEM BER 19 By SYDNEY 0~1ARR ~lenu dp: Luoar positio n in· dlcatt1 most prefer hearty· type meals tonicbt. Bragole is 1a11e1ted disb. ARIES (~larch 2l·April 19 ): Conclusion ot transaction to· day makes you feel like celebrating tonight. fi1ccey 1ain indicated. You add to possessions. ff<>Ple seem to like your product -and you . TAURUS (April 20-May 20l: Cycle. is high ; you can make 1uccessfUI .appointments, take initiative and move ahead via original methods. D e v e I o p your 0Wt1 style. Ltad rather lhan folio'"· GDDNI (!-.lay 21-June 20 ): Best to re1G111.in behind 01e ietnes. You can get more done if you act b unobtrusive manntr. This does not mean you ha ve to be shrinking \'iolet. But it does mean bide your time. CANCER (June 21-July 2'.!): ''ou can ha,·e fun, bul don't lhink rules are tor everyone excittmtnt or btlng ,;\th, are in order. Avoid ltindency but you . Time your moves. male. Be dynamic. Tum on lo rush. Confide in friends. One contact cha rm , leacb to another -you 1nake SAGITTARlUS (Nov. 22• PlSC.D (Feb. 19-~1arch 20): I bl d. . Ideas abound. K..., i.!I to com· \'a ua e 1scovenes. Dec. 21 ): You le .. -lhlng• ., LEO (J I 23 A 221 -11 municate them. Comm It u Y • ug. : about yourself. Some hard thoughts to pa,.,.r. Embellish Drean11 are fi'.1e; so are il· core of ht1er wisdom :1urfaces. ~ l · B t d · f plans. You can achieve much usions. u on t C<ln use Heed intulti ve int e 11 e ct. h 'th i·t Tod if there is method to your 11e£. 1 em wt rea 1 y. ay you Special emphasis on work, forts. Reali&e thia ,· and act ac- get the story which has a solid health,, basic c,h Ores. cordlngly. base. You are able to elevate Streamline yooi methods. yourself -,If that is your CAPRICORN (Dec·. 22..Jan. IF TI'.>DAY IS Y 0 UR desire. t.t ): GoOd JUn-ar as...;;.. t""'· .... ·BIR111DAY you are in· VIRGO (Aug ., •·pl 22)• "" .. ~ vvaz dependent. on..i .... i ., many feel · ~ • coincides with love, creaUve .,.. .... A-nt 011 ""•-ys com you break numerous rules, ....... ,..._..... • • expression, satisfaction gained plelion of mission. Many today throurh children.. Be ei-traditions. But your success may ' --to Jack sense ol de ..... nds on confide':lCe in y-'" ~.. pansive -both in attitude and ,.... ...... humor. Don't push yOW' luck. actions. own ideas. What was recently Be clear in exphanatioru. You AQUARIUS !Jan .. 20.Feb. .started bcgiw to develop in caa go far-road is smooth if 18): Oet:ails \vhich had been fayorable manner. you are calm . Te t rM ...,, mor•·•tiovt Y1ur1•lt i nd ""RA fS t .. n.t 22! neglected come to fore. Attend utf .... y, ...w SYdn•~ om1rr'• .so. l..ol.Q ep · .w...,.,; ' : t b · · Qu ti f '"' beoll:i.1, The Trvth '°'tlo\lt Examine VariOU! pouitJilllies. o as1c issues. es on o Aatr11otv. ,_, ~.,, •nd so centa "r of mystery stems lo sale or purchase of property to om.rr •..iti.t. tti. DAILY "'LoT. ~ Jd · B ~ 12411, Grelld Ct11trll Sta!IM, Ntw prevail. Don't fear th e1_rou ___ ans_e_._•_su_r•__:P_•P":_"_..:vc:'"'c:..:"::·v:.:·..:"'=':::":..... unknown. Dig ~P for b· formaUoo. What you find could prove profitable. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Accent on permanent rela- tionships. If single. you could be with that special penon. If married, you could rediscover Valley Juniors Seek New Teenage Citizen RND OF1HE VVEEK Applications now art a\"ail- able for senior girls in !he F'oWlt.ain Valley High School ~rea 'A'ho \lt'ish to enter I.he ~fiss Teenage Citizen contest. 1.1rs. Paul Johnson, chair· man or the youth department nr South Coast Junior Worn· an's Club, announces tha t the applications may be obtained in the school's senior counsel· ing office. To qualify for considrration, the young \\'Omen must main· lain a V a\"erage in sc hool. Eastern Star A Christmas party y,·Hl follow the stated meeting of Laguna Beach Chapter, Order of the Eastern Star. tomorrow ~vening at 3. Worthy lltatron ~1rs. Norman Christensen and \Vorthy Patron No r m a n Ch ristensen will preside in thr l..aguna Beach ~I a s on i c Tt!mplr. subn1it a maximum or five persona l recommendations, and a twt>-page, d o u b J e- spaced essay on hersell. 'Vinner sponsored by the Junior club will compete against winners from Los Cerritos District, California Federation of Women 's Clubs, Junior membership:. District \\'i nner then will compete with other "''inners at the state level. Application s 1nust be re. ccived by the women's club no later than J\londay, Jan. 5, and judging will take place in February. Santa Claus was joined by Junior club members during a party in two admission v;ards at Fairview St.ate Hos- pital today. Pun ch, cookies and balloons were distributed by Mrs. Gerald Bennett, men- ial health chairman, and her committee, 1.frs. Carl Clea rv. ~·!rs. Dick Trodick ind :'llr.s.1 Gary Davis. I Season's Greetings. Come by for a cup of spiced apple cider. You ore merr il y invi!ed lo o holidoy "pen house, 5n our ne·,11]y redecorated office, Jrom now until Christmas. .. nT lllATIONAl PNK Costa Mesa 230East17lh Street I l<en Fowler, Assia'.an : Vice President C!lld Manage:. luminous jada fish diving into t ·the crest of a pearl wa Ve. 1 t Fish pin Swoboda $22.IO. · ·; SLAVICK'S Jtwt len Si~e• 1911 I a FASHION ISLAND NEW PORT BEACH -644· 1 llO C"r:cr.e11 me, yeu11 ''t<rnt c.u: cid.r ?eci!Jlt. V/a'll b. happy 1c th11reit "\'ti th you. ' .lfJERRY CHRISTMAS & TO ALL A GOOD NIGHTZ Reg.$199 96 I REGAL KING $ 9·5 HER8'S ,WHAT .:vou • • GET: King siz• m11tre11 and malchlng du1! bot springL l uxury quilt•d-•2 ,q,!f. · of •p•ciooa comfort! Buy at 1hla •Uper.aving pr lea for Chrlslmu givfng! PLUS OUR FAMOUS ORTHO-PAK: Fielder.St no-iron King-or Queen Size lhMt * Fitldc1Nf1no-iron King or Queen Silt titted bottom ahfft * 2 King or Queen Size bolster pinowa . * 2 pillow c11es * King or QUMn Siz• mallress pad ; * King or Queen Size. mtt•I lre.m• with ... y rolling cHlar1l ) I The Super Twin or Full Ala/ltes1 & 8o:t Spring The Arl•!~~~~.r:!~ o:~:=:'! l I S11perb1~1~ul11 ed cover wi1h Ottho'• buoyant innerspring constructicn, Choice cf Twin er Full Size mal1ress l!l nd matching · bolt' 1pri!lQ. PRICE INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS! S1v1 now! The Castle King ~ t.fat1re11 & Box Springs l O.ralnl Fall I Q' Iona, 60"wid9 for total alMplng comfort. Rich diamond.quilted m1llres1 i nd m1tching box spring. Jtlu. ytur Ortho-l'a lc MMH •bevel PRICE INO..UDES DOUBl.E IONUSI A f•at min~• cpponunity·buy! ,C•I W'•ll'll t Ult OlllTMO lrill fflllfl' ' . THE NATION'S LARGEST CHAIN OF MATTRESS SPECIALISTS FOUNTAIN VALLEY 16131 Harbor Blvd. (Ntxl It Zody'•) Phon•: 839-4570 . LAKEWOOD_. 4433 Canchwood . Dr. !Acro11 from Ltkt,..... Conltr) l'hoM: 213·634 4134 ANAHEIM • 1811 W. Uncoln ,Ave. (Juli 1 111 .'! ft4Mirl) l'haM: 7{6-2590 ------------------01 ftt l'i1llf 0 I ',,',I 1[ I· ~I HI 1? Ii l~IMl!Jlfdl [l!ll~IH!' r.,:iv l,IHOIT llhM'.; Aritll(,,,,111H[f,P!l M:.~-J lfi 111.,1a.1 -' • • . • • • • l • l • ' . ' . • ' : ' • ' • • • • ' • • l • • . ; .: I \ ·" ' • ~ •\ \ -·------------------------------------------------..... exico Tradition Lu mi rias to Glow Glowing I inarias will brighten tho darkness Chri tmas eve in Newport Beach, carrying out a radition from New Mexico. The Jumin ·as, "'bicb are votive candlu nestled in b paper bags filled with oand, are lighted by e thousands each Christmas eve in Albuq• rque, becoming a sight Ila! travelers com from miles around to see. More than a million line the streets, walks and roo ps of the residences of Albu- querque and · e spectacular when viewed from the air. The first minarias were lighted more than 300 year ago in Spain and Ji.fexico to ligh t the \Vay the Christ Child. In the early form they we ' bonfires of criss.crossed pin- ion boughs bu in squares three feet hlgh. Newport 'acb residents canying out the traQition ·u be the Messrs. and Mmes. James White, obert Lieb, Lany Wbjtealdes and Dr. and rs. Johnnie R. Betson. T h e I ·es may be viewed In the 1300 block of aluy Drive on Christmas eve. HB Art -League Sleek Slant 9459 $1Z!S lOlS~lll~ ""11f~: ... 1ff""1" ... Thursd11, Dtctmber 18, 1116~ Children Neec/ Instructions Ch.ristmas Pet Not a Toy By 'A1111CIA M~ NEW YORK (UPI) -1£ santa's lll\lflnf on Po<kinl a pet tn his uck with your• lamlly'I Qv1atmu: presents, chUdren need to be briefed btfor.hand -for the well.-be-Inf otthe·puppy or llltton. The pet':i: lint impressions, 1lke human ones, will be lasting. 1£ boy1 and atria toot Yule horns in the a.nlmal'1 ears, tug at his tall and otherwise upaet him, you're liablt to have a skittish four· footed friend on your handl. Fir1t off, then. accordin1 t.o authorities at the Pet Food l'nslitute, teach the children that the· •rpected ptt .-u1 not be a toy. Small childten lhould all on the floor when Utty cuddle a small ani?Qal. To help the pet in his ad- juat.mtnt remember that a.II YOllnJ anlmoll need lots oC shuteye. The bed lhould be Jn a warm, quiet pface atHI out ;)( the malnatrum o/ f...uly traffic. Cats like snoozinc places that are camplttely enclosed. Dogs need more room . Other tips from authorities al the institute: \. -tt your new arrival-~. ;11 1n the ftight, put an alarm Students Study Heart Two Or•nc• Cowlt,y c:olle1e P. Sattltt uid Kholanh1111 students will be e1flib1e to wUI cover 10 weeks of liVint join 33 state · 1b.ldent1 this ezpenses to begin after June summer to work in heart re-l . County ltudents will be sup. search with medical tcien-ported by l\lnds donated by Usts. Arnold 0. Beckman. Chair· Studentt muat file applica~ man of. the board of Beckman lion forms with the Orance Instruments and 1969 Or1n1e County Heart Association by County Heart Fund-chair· Feb. 1 in order to be eliJible. man. for a $750 ICholarlhip in the Dr. Sattler encouraged ltu· clock wrapped in a bath to\\·tl learn to ao to that place when in bed with him. The Ucldna, ~ ift mealti~. It's said, reminds him of his -A puppy or kitten under mother's heartbeat and helps six months of 11e requires t1''0 him feel more secure. or three feedhlgs a day. -FlJ a corner in the kitchen -Don't let small clilldren whtre pet can eat without scold or spank a puppy or kit· WOl?)'in& about getting step-ten. Mousebreaklni and obe- ped on. U you ahv1y1 feed hlrn dlence training are jobs tor in the wne place, he wlll t00r1 teenqers or adUILI. DAJLY PILOT •f:J Be Careful When Watering Holiday Plants Dott't over-water boUdq plants. Horticultural expert.'I RY that over-watering Is a leadln&' reaw11 for prematur& fadlfti o/ holiday gift plant.. Touch the top IOU of lht plant with your thumb. If it feels dry, water plant. Ult wa&er at room temperatU?e. Huntioaton Beach A r t LET'S BE DLY 1970 Student lltseuch A~i4 dents ofph)'llcs and chemistry Sleekest slant on :1limmin( ates program. to apply because of the frDW· down your midriff! Sew this · Orange County Research ing import a n c e ot basic ' :hbon or know ot anyo 1 movtn1 to our area. pie tell UJ 10 that we may Fxtend a trlendly wetco:;• d help Leal'Je recently 111joy~d a Chriatmas party and il!IWled new officen. The Mariners from i tarina High School offend· a musical Jl'Olfam and board membtrs pmormed in a aldL unusU&llf elepnt dress with, _eo_nuru_'t_t .. _ch_aum_· _an_Dr_. _Fr_ed __ ,_cJ•_•_ .. _to_m_edi_'c_aJ_r_e_sear_c_h._ dia1ona1 detail and side pleat In knit, crepe, bl•nd. them to become uairlted Printed Pattern 9459; NEW Half Sizes JO!h, U1,J0 14\2:, !~, 11\I. Siu U\!o (bwt 17) tu.s 21> yards c:;.tnch fabric. in their new und.lnp. So. Coast lsllor 494-057 494-936 ', Yule Flowers Azaleas, appropriate f o r Christmas giving, will blossom longtr if kept our of direct aunU1ht in a cool room and away from radiators and other direct heat. SIXTY·FIVE CKNT8 i n coins for each pattern -add IS cents tor each pattern tor firsklass mailing and special handling; otherwise third..clus delivery will take three weeks or more. Send to P.farian 1.fartin, the DAILY PILOT, 442 Pattern Dept .• 232 West. 18th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME. AD- DRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Harbor Vllifor ' Fabrics NEW FALL-WINTER PAT- TERN CATALOG -ovtr 100 styles, free pattern coupon. SO c:tnla. INSTANT SEWING BOOK sew todiy, wear tomorrow. $1. HAVING A PAim NOW OPEN! Outdoors or Jn.!!. · MOVSI Oil PAPll wllhet, ..... ~ •• 1 I IMl'ORTS UNIQU E Ff'BRICS e UNUSUA~ TRIMS NEEI E WORK ·-RU~ KITS 494·2330 472 ~O. COAST HWY. ~GUNA IEACH A 111 frent L11111t1 H1t1I .,.. 7 IA.ft KARLS TOYS SO F11shion f1l1ncl Ntwpert lt•ch 644-0911 Bring t 'shandy shopping list with you.' It will h p to remind you of all your CHRIS MAS CARD needs .. :1 ~.--=:~;:------~---------RElATIV( SPECIAL TCTL~S ·' 4 __:Mother -fine Folk• _Father -HousetoHouse -Wife .. -Ntilhbo< -S-htort -Fr0171 Our House -HMsband -~cross the Miles _r.,cnts ,. -•peciof Friend -~ister,Sitl«& -Baby's First H •--~ -Bandholder us...., .... __ ..,_.. ' -Bmther,lllalloer -CliristmasClller f & W'd• i -Christ--Daulfrttr, Olrtlod., DluaMar& -THtllv Husband -Boes -Son, Son lo Wil1 ' -Doctor _&;rancfrnottitr , -GillEnelolut• -Gr-h.,. ; Rfl!GIOUSTCTLES -N~ • -RoUiY .,_._ -l'riaot -·-.. ••• -Sielar -Cousirt .....;l'lllor -Aunt =·--· -1.-vict -Uncle _ and -llocfJJorlftb r .. ny. ~...,,.'Id -PlllwllldWiro . _ ... Olrile•Clfdt -CIW""""GillW,.. -Tep, illllt.llldT..--Clvillftm~lllows -Cllristm11 l'llty0oods ' Choo 1 from our Beautiful S1/1cfion of ~<!Jt.""o/ttChri6/mas'cards SO FASHION ISLAND .. ~ll1S •. -V ·I NIWl'OllT llACH • ~I MMI l8CJRAI -IClmlll -ent w. 171' tT. LOI A....US -HT4 w. --CAJlfM4. PAii -............. ----··....:..-~~ t, k.arls IUTSll IOl.L ti ............... ,"-., ... ........... .,. ... ......... ......... °"'' $1.99 TAICO 4YTI AITllOID IDUCTOI ...... ,,. ...... ,..,, ....... ......... _,-...a ...... .~r.. $12.97 TASCO • 710 POWU MIC&OSCON c..-...-.... c..•4-.................... .ii.... ... ~.:·· VA~US NOW $16, 99 -....,_ .. ,, -...... _.. ....... _11... ,. ,...._._,. ,.,._._, .... PJtwe .. ,. •••d ••c:• I L D 0 N -.,Ov1r •rt• U11de,... Mt with ~er 40 ,1 .... 1Mludl111 .. ,.. ani rll.-t h111tl efftl"911. fllttular 520.00 •9 99 Value • Ne • 111.oct ~'IOPS .. -::"=:-""" ::: tr ~ .. ":" ... "C -...... .-CIAL $1.ft ........................... -..... -· • .w. ,,... --..... llM OR iy $2.991a. JMUMD .... "i.a,•C:..~ .. $7.95 .. ••• -• ~-;;& ., ..... ,.......,. ft: 11 tin I 11.JMltl Ms Md .. ~_, .._.,.._ .................. _ ... .... ~·~, ... .... .......... $13.97 SlllDIDDLI llDDLU " ............ _ ... __ ...... """" ............. -- 4•TIAlllll10I SIT OP 2 WALllll TAUIU =-~···-..... ' .......... $9.99 SO FASHION ISLAND ...__ ....................... _ ......... -------'22.88 , .......... -SPECIAL- HO llMOTI CONTIOL SWITCHIS c ............. •"' ..... _, ........ _. ........... . 3.99 .... .J 6.76 N·•AUGI ""-- lOLLIN• STOCK a. •-. ......... twill ..,,.., ,_., .._., w . T• It.II ..... , Te U .IO Vllu•• 99c COX MUSTAN• P--11 e.., .................... .. ~ • ...., .. t'\'I .~::.. $9.76 IOOK TAl'I UOOIDU I'll..::.=,-....::.•- ""' .,, ... °"" $12.97 llMCOTIUI SllCIQ TIUCK NEWl'OaT llACH 644-0911 l0,,11lf9 Iha lrNdw•y) Other -WISTCHllTllt LOI ANOILIS, CANOGA l'AllK . • ni ..... et ... Hetoto, ........... ... ; ........... ,...., ....... ".t-:· ...... '" ..... ~ .... ,....,,, h • lorllli..tly "'''""''ff "S.. ,..,. .. •-" .. ~ ..... r..br --... .... , ..... '1199 Reg. S13.00.................... • SHOW 'N TILL WELLE, SOLDERING SET .... ..., 1•11 ............. ... .................. ....,..., ........ ,., ...... _ KANL'I l'RICI '8.88 UST IAKI -.............................. ....,_...,. ..... ... .... _ ........ .... lolllf ....... .. IALE .. ICE $7.61 TllCIT lllST SCHOOL 1115 ...... ,_....., ........ ... ..... -............. .. ............... -..................... --..... ,,, ... $11.97 1 -······-·····-·· POWUIH 1·1 llCHAIOIAIU ILICTllC CAI ..., ..... _, . ., ... ,.. ........ "'. -.... .........,.Sot ......... ..... ....._ ..... -........ h ~ _, .......................... ,_,.. ' ...... --............. ..:::z.:-• :r::,-,,...'""'Z:' .=.. ~ ..... = .. _.,.. ,_,_~ " ...., .. .. ...... .....,......., "NM-le. TH l,w~~~.ON $19.99 ..., ........ CHRISTMAS HOUU: ~·-..., t1Jt • t :Jt 0,..hHaf , ......... .:;:'! ' l~I '? ;I-* Jo'..J.7~ ~, ..,-g,•....---•••77-"':-~.::''';;'"'1;;;J-;;;::;~--::-::-'."':'"':"~-::'"':'""~-"'.':,'~~~~:-::r!:"~~,,,.,~,.,.m..,..<°T"..,... ... .,..,..,..., ... ,.,_~-------.... ,...-•---..... •• , 1 .... ... '·' .... • •• .. • ~ • ~ •< •'"' ,, •. ,,,. ,,,.,,,,,,f;.,'f,t .-, ,.f§..,i!().,~"t 4 ~(C Cp ,,QlA!JCp fa .e-Ol •P loo;•1 00 r . 21 DAILY Pn.OT Th"'3d.,, llfCfmbor 18, 1'6• 1 ~:_.:Who Really Kn~ws What Eldridge Cleaver Is Dqing? r . ..-; :~· WASRlNGTON (APl -Self· People. told an uiterviewer the The one Willl of the li\'lng ha\'e betn building at major vesUgatlng a burglary. T~·o was walkin& his beat. JG-minute sh ootout when Of· One estimate places their ::. exiled Black Panther Eldridge incidents "take on lhe aspect room visible from the front cities since early 1967 when Panthers were arrested. Sept 30 _ In New York, 1 flce rs responded to a call that nation Ide st~ngth at under ·: Cleiver ·is seeklng to arrange of a vendetta .•. il looks door \\'85 marktd by· a small the Panthers began publicly July 31 _ Five policen'!en Policeman was struck by a fur armed men "·ere in an 1.000. Los Angeles police say '!~is rebJm to I.ht United States suspicious." cluster of bullet holes, No displaying their weapon.1 -and one PantJier were v.•ound4 sholg\Jn blast while attempting abandoned Chicago hotel. n1em~r!ihip there is about ·\mere his i nned revolutionary Chicago police reported the bullet holes could be seen in first 01'1 San Francisco streets ed' in a shootout at Chicago to enter an apartment Two In addition, 14 Panthers in--200. l~'hlcago. total strength pany -rffllng under police J&.mi nule gun battle began the dining room and kitchen. and later even al the Panther he11dquarters. Of. Panthers were seized. dieted for conspiracy to bomb is pie by police at less than pres.sure -is hurtlnfl for ,,·hen they arrived a t ln the front bedroom, three California slate capitol. r1eers said they were fired on Ocl. 1 _ Two teen-agers New YOrk department stores 100. 1 New York. an estimate Jeader!hlp. Hampton's apartment at 4:40 "'alls y.·ere pocked with bullet The fiercest previous battle from the buildinJ's roor. but described as Panthers were and subway facll\tles have ()f 50 cited. In Kansas City, Twenty.four hours after two a.m. last Thursday to search holes. The wall beside the came in April 1968 in Berkeley, Panthers said police started it. ci rrested after a shootout with been in jail for seven months total strength is pegged at J>anthen "-'tl'e slafn in a for \\'Capons. They said a bedtoom door was unmarked. ·Calif. It left Panther Bobby Aug. 17 -In Kansas City, a police til Jamalf!a, Queens. in lleu or bail ranging up to about130. In Denver, it waJ .t>ootout wtth Chica10 police. woman in the apartment open· I\\ the rear bedroom, where Hutton dead; Cleaver and two PoUceman was wounded by a Oct. 4 _ Seven Panthers $100,000 each. • estlmlted at under 20. 80UfCtl said Cleaver cont.acted ed fire with a shotgun. Hampton died. the same ws.s polictmen wounded. girlfriend of a Panther whom were arrested, one v.·aa charg· And in New Ha ven, CoM., ldeOiogica l differences and U.S. diplomatic officials in A later inspection of the true -three waU s were rid-This year there have been " officers were arresti'11g. Police ed with attempted murder more then a dozen PanU'ters the rted to tighten security Al&iefs and asked for a apartment by a reporter died with bullet holes and the number of i n c i d en t a , in· returned the fire, killing the after Lwo policemen said they art held on various charges in have led to purges in some passport to return to America disclosed one small bullet bole \Yall adjoining the bedroom eluding: \Voman. were fired ·upon from the root connection with the May 21 cities, In Seattle, Wash .. for where he is wanted on a in the apartment's front door. door was unmarked. July 16 -Two Chicago Sept. 22 -ln Milwaukee, of the party's Chicago head· murder of a party member. example, only seven Panthers fugiUve warrant. · The door showed no signs of a The ChlcagO and Las policemen and a Panther were three Panthers were arrested quarters. There's little doubl that the are rtported to remain in a Cleaver didn't aet the shotgun blast. It was still on An,ele.s shootin&:s heightened v.·oWlded l,1 a gunbattle that and charged with firing a Nov. 13 -Two police and incidents and arrests have c h apter that boasted .t passport, the P.irces added, Its hinges. police-Panther-tensions which erupted while officers were in-shotgun at a policeman who one Panther were killed in a eroded Panthers membership. membership of 200 a year ago. but m later W!ieuuioM wasi---"'---~~-~-'------~--~~~~~---~----'--~~-'------~-~------~-------~-'---~-~~-~~~ told he could gtt a certificate d. identity that would allow him to travel to the United States. Al Cleaver was making the inquiries in Al~iers. fiigns were mounting m America that the Panthers ·aie revolu· tion.aries m the ropes. On Monday, a police raid on Panther headquarters in Los Anples resulted in a four-hour gun battle that left three polictmen and three Panthers wounded. A score of Panthers were arrested. Two well known Panther leaders -Huey P. Newton and Bobby Seale -already were in jail. S tokele y Carmichael quit the party last aummer. other party leaders are dead . Dave T1Uliard. Panther chiet of staff, faces trial on a charge of threaten- ing the life of President Nixon . If Cleaver returns t o California, he l a c e s im· prisooment as a p a r o I e violator and fot jumping ball on charges of assault with in· tent to kill and assault with a deadly weapon . But I he d e e p e n i n g Panther-police crisis pr?sumably has in· creased pressure on him to givt up his sell-proclaimed ex· ile. Black leaders say the police raids havt. brought an upsurge in pro.Panther sympathy, yet the Panthers are \\'ithout the widely kn<w.11 leaders needed to take full advantage of the 1itu1tion. "No matt.tr ""hat kind of rollowing you've got. if you can't keep a leadership, you can't keep an organization together," said radical lawyer Terence "Kayo" Ha llinan of San Francisco. "It just keeps flying apart ... The Chicago and t o s Angeles raids were the latest in a series of police actjons I.hat the Panthers say have resulted in 28 Panther deaths -a figure the Panthers failed to document and which Justice Department officials say is ex· aggerated. But the frequency and in· lenstty of the clashes are seen by some as having an impact on America's ghettos more profound than a n y t hi n g Panthers could mu5ler with their :fi.farxist ideology a:.1d weapon-wielding ways. "The effect is "ery telling on groups that don't agree \\'ith the Panthers ideologically," Aid Lucius Walker. executive director of the Inlerreligious Foundation for Community Organization -IFCO. ·'It'.!I not an ideological ques- tjon. It's a Question of black w.rvival,." \Valker s aid . .. Black people of a 11 Ideological persuasions have been made to realize that ail blacks art vulnerable." Panther lawyer C h a r 1 e ! Garry ol San Francisco iays the incident added up to a campaign ()f "genocide ()n the Blacl Panther party:• "Poppycock," replied a .Just ice Depar t men t spokesman to charges made by Garry and others that the Nixon administration is 1he concert master for a n elaborate. and planned police crackdown on the Pa:nlhers. But there is little question inteMe hostility exists betll.·een police and Panthers. One high federal officiaJ put it this way: "It seems every time cops and Panthers meet they shoot r.ach other. Fear pla ys a par1. lt's been some years si nce l considered myself a cop, but I know if I were back on the strut. I wouldn't Vi'ant to ha\'e lO 5\op a · black man, or especially two of the1n. The fri"ctlon is so intense, with Panthera you keep• hand on a gun." Dtmands for public hearings. Jnto violence that oft.en erupts when polke and Panthers meet grew louder after the r1id ln Chicago last "-'eek In which two Panthcra, including lllicol:-Chair11::tn F red Hampton , were shot to death. The National Urban League wi~ the attorney general re. qulfUnJ federal grand jury in· qulriel In every jurisdiction where Panthers "have been murdrnd by law enforcement o(ftdals." Tbe Amtrl c •n Ci vil l.Jbertiel Uplo.1 called for the N&Uonll Commls.sion o n Violence to probe lullinp in Chl<qo ~illch ''!eem a pan \ ef a nationwide pattern of 1 potice ldlon 111lnat th•I Panthtn.'" And moder1le Roy Wilkin• of the National ~l.allon (or the Advm:menl of Colorod1 BABY FOOD •.ff"'"........ 9' .,_, ---·---JUNIOR fOOO ,~.:,. "'.'..'. __ 12' HILLS BROS. ~~.., 73' HILLS BROS.~ ... l" HILLS BROS. ~.., 2" . YU BAN COFFEE ~.:_ l" YU BAN COFFEE ~..:.. 77' ,_ ..... BORDEN'S KAVA!;'.:_ l" ,,._..,. OrlH C.ffM TASTERS CHOICE ::'.-93' ... 475.y~-- PRIHCELLA YAMS GOLDEN 37c 40-ounet C1r1 CRANBERRY SAUCE ~ .':."'...__ 25' HARVEST DAY PEARS:.--::...__ 33' SPICED PEACHES ~:". __ 29' o-. FRUIT COCKTAIL :;':. •• _ 22' ELBERTA PEACHES~~:.~ •.. _27' GRAPEFRUIT ~.~~_.... •• __ 31' Clue LOW &eodlY Price! ·EGGNOG FO~lMOST 49' J2.011nct Cart.on CRAN-APPLE JUICE ':>: ~;;: _ 48' REA LEMON :t;'.';;: ::::"' _ '-':.~.::. 17' o-. DEL MONTE PEAS ~:: __ 19" USDA GRAD£ 'A' YOUHG TURKEYS HUNT'S TOMATOES ~:'.'.:.._ 22' TOMATO JUICE~~--34' OYSTERS t::':O..~ ... ___ 37' SHRIMP:;'.::.' t..~ ,...,., _ .. 67' RIPE OLIVES ~"::' t.'"'."" ~.· """ 45' STUFFED OLIVES \;:~!:':t;""~79' ... ".,...s ·'.~41 FISHSTICKS ~ . 39' PERCH FILLET ~ ..... ~ .. _ 61' MORTON PIES ~.'!!:.:. c;;:-55' cc .. .,., .,.~. PET RITZ'l'IES .._ .... --· ___ 33• •• ,,i., .. .,.......,.,, ,..,.., ,_...,...,,. Ml~uil . CREAMED CHICKEN '.".~·::, _ 43' CHILI AND BEANS ::.··~ •. _ 26' ORANGE JUICE:;.:.~ ___ 53' BEAN BURRITOS ~. ____ 37' VEGETABLES ~. 38' rcwt c.t• . .,,_., Y .... -.... •-• .._ • c ....... , BRUSSEL SPROUTS i:~. _ 57' Our LOW Eler)da)< Price! "~.~:.-· ROLLS ~ARVEST DAY 33~ 12-et. "kg. ._ 5 V1rletle1 -~ LOW DISCOUNT PRICES 0'• H, ,SE'llARES 8 BEAuT\ AIDS ITALIAN GLASS BOTILES ALBERTO V0·5 HAIR SPRAY 11 ...... -" lttWltt ,_.,_, fet • .rtN&tlft ....... " ......... ............ , •. -. 1aa Oet LOW ....... '""' 3" x 5' GARLAND • ---'""' ...., t• 86~ .,., . ..,.. ., .... .. .,.,. Y•llf llle1111e. SPRAY SNOW . .., ,,,,,, "28,. 111.H. CfVt , '"'" ,_, .... , •• ltffff, 1050 COUNT ICICLES '"' ie..i 1e1c1., 34C ~ Mill tilt '111kllo. .... rwtll. MIDGET LIGHT SET . ""' '""" ••• ) 46 '""-"' ... ,. ... JO ,. • lfrlltt. STUFFING BREAD::=."' .... ~ 25' BREAD ~t...~~~ ·~~.~~ _ 33' ~ & H SUGAR~-"' -17' C & H SUGAR f~ '!" ...411.-,~-­ PAPER PLATES 90N0WA~E 59' IO·count Pkg. POTATO CHIPS ~-~ . 64' SOUP MIX l\!':: ~!'." . ___ 36' CHOCOLATE CHIPS~·:., _50' DREAM WHIP ::.'O: ~..... 85' S & W MINCEMEAf ~ 59' CRISCO SALAD OIL ~ '2" SNOWDRIFT -·.. 73' ........ ____ ._ mmT 9UALITY-HISH CUT CHRISTMAS TREES l..... .. .... """' "' •0 • .,1, J~wff , ...... W..y ¥ .. 1..t!M • DOU6L.\S ,,. e SCOTCH PINI • WHITI ,,. •• • r\.ANTATION •tOWN Y&11n1n _,..,. "" .... "" ...... ,...,., -........ .. LeUr· DOUGLAS l'llS $118 DIJCO\IMf ..-1c1e ,.o .. -· -··-- BANANAS llll"• C1'4tfUIT.t. 1•4NI .,, tWI 'INll! f V.t.UTY 10~ POTATOES ;: 3fc C..11• u.s. NO. 1 1ussm ... OCIA• Sll.t.T ""..... 3•f CRANBER~IES _ ,.. ... "* NIBLET'S CORN 't: __ SAVE 10°/o 23' DIAL SOAP :::". .. __ 20' CHIFFON l\OUID ::::.• . ---·· 45' FINISH ""''' ...., """ 59' zo..c. Cft _ -··-- BOLD DETERGENT ;:; 82' DASH DETERGENT :. . rr !"ORY LIQUID ..,.":.1 113' PERSONAL IVORY ft ... = 28" SPIC AND SPAN~ :.. __ 31' .• BUYIHG SPIRITS BY THE CASE! C•llllMf'9 n-~ wile• ,., brf • hfl c ... ! ChoM fr-ttlls rirtll fo••rtfft fr-owt 111.,11 "ed. 1 D"!i. Cbco111tt t i.,.. whM '" ef I J flftM, 1 Z ~m . ., 4 1t ·9911•111. lr'Ofllllf. ... 11 ty'"' l'tlCI """ .. 1111"4 M ~. IOn LI fACH '°"" ..... ..... CHIVES REGAL SCOTCH .. .....,_.... ·--'9.50 __ '8.55 SEAGRAM'S VO , ... , ...... ,,. "'"'-·----'6.95 ·--~6.26 J SMIPNOFF VODKA .. ....._,; .. ,..,. ___ '4.89 . _ --~4.40 \. W. HARPER BOURBON .. ,,.....,, .. , .. .__'6.29 -·--'5.66 ClUNY SCOTCH "·' ,M,_,,., , ... _.. '6.29 __ '5.66 LUCKY SCOTCH , ... .......,,. -'5.55 '5.00 BEEFEATER GIN ,. ........,,.. ...,, '6.19 '5.57 EARLY TIMES BOURBON .. ....,_., .. '"'"-'5.59 _'5.03 BACARDI RUM ,. ,._._,,., ..... ____ '4.99 '4.49 TEN HIGH BOURBON .. ,.......,.. ..... _ '4.29 '3.86 LUCKY BOURllON .. ,........,,,. ,..,., __ .. '4.11 ... ___ '3.70 J & B SCOTCH,..........,,........ ___ '7 .. __ '6.84 SOUTHERN COMFORT .. ....,_,,.. ,... -·-'5.~ ___ '5.30 ""119 SEAG~AM 'S 7 CROWN .. ....,_,, .... ~.. _ '5.1 '4.67 GORDON'S GIN .. "'" .... ,..,.,_ '4.5 ___ '4.13 LUCKY GIN ,, --· '3. '3.20 cum SARK SCOTCH • ,, • ----'7. '6.84 OLD FORESTER BOURBON,. ,M, ,,.. """-'6. '5.57 CANADIAN ClUB .., '"" ""' ...,. '6. '6.26 G\LBEY'S GIN ., -..... ..... _ '4. 9 ___ '4.13 JIM BEAM BOURBON .. _,,,. ...,, ___ '5 ___ 14.76 SUNNYBROOK BLEND,,-...-'"'"-'3 9 __ '3.59 OAKMOUNT .BLEND ,. ........... , ,.,,. __ '3 9 __ '2.87 KAMCHATKA VODKA .. h ......... , ..... ~-_ '3 9 .. _'3.50 LUCKY VODKA .. _._. ••• -.,,. ----I '2.69 IAVAILAILE AT MOST LUCKY ST ES ! ' flt. " ..... 1t "' 11111. u fll ... ' "' ----~------------------------·------- • DAIL V PILO!"' 25 , Nixon .Tea111 Feels Year• Su~~ess By A~LD B. SATllBLAlt Rumsfeld, the Office or .,,.,....Uve Ropobllcans and Issues was not a calculated el· not be lul~led and argued loatlt (Oasf ?laz• E<onamlc Opporlunlly dJreo. Southem Democrall behind fort to woo one region or Jhol a number ol steps, such ANTA'S HOME WASHINGTON CUP!) -lor, who op_.i tt. -.i.tnUca poo!Uoos on Jhe 1roop. .. the well are reform and S • • · The men at the White House Tbey clt1-..... I" ----11-voUna .4 .... ta bill MilslJ5ippl The sources Indicated the minority business progrom• view !ID" 1 yeu in which "Soulhern"""Si,;,1ei,.~·~ ochocil •-;.....p.u.., the adminl!JraUon would nOI try had beon pushed wllboul giv· AWAY FROM HOME President Nb.on won all but fable of the new1 media. aod. Hayn1warth nomlnation and to make promises to Negroes lng them a 1pedfic "black" · _.... Af &AM""°,.,..,, cmrA •""' \. =~~teabdh1!1_i:w~~~~Jhe~IPPIHDt~~~nll~)'i>l~~ol~~other~~·~l!v~l~l=rfcb~~t.re~lated~~~or~olh~e~r~llllllOl'~·~u~1e1i1h~•~l~cou~ld~i~den~Ul~ic~a~Uo~n~.::::::::::.....:::::=~~--=~~!!!!!!!!!!!!~~!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~- Whlle H-......... rdlec- ting on the ck>mesUc Issues faced In the first year ot the Nixon presidency, C:tincede the admlnl!traUon toot a drub- blnS' bi l t s effort to place Judge Clement F. Haynswcrtb Jr. oo the U.S. Supreme Court. But, ln their view, Nixon was ampktely succusful In a IO(le1 ol other hard-fought · ~ contests with the DemocraUc- cootrolled CQngrm. Jn addition, the While Hou1e men believe, the Pre!ident aucceeped in inducing the -· '-I 1\6 -in hi& in- .,;riuol -' lo --Its ~ems ;,t,;; calujly. Bui ,dl<y ·~~ tile 1d--.11on w 'l>ffn una111• tO erase. the appearance that it WU ..• either ho.stile to or dlalnterested lo the probl- ol btack Americana. In d)scuui., events o! the put ·year •. ~ White HOl.ile ~ alaoj ' voiced some diaa1POlntme1.~over the pace ol Congreas, blll lhiy allowed that .the While House had to tab put ol llit• blome lcir the len,thy leglslatfve HSSion. mim PRlORitY IJsT k tor the program in 1970, the word was that such un- finist>e4-bu!~ss ·as ·t be welfare reform bill and other proposals offered in the first year wouJd be high on the priority lisL There also wu a clear suggesilon that .. en- vtn:mnent" -l'ODtl'ol of variow: kind of pollution - might be a new item on the Nixon agenda neat year; 'nle-sources loot upon the administration'• ac- compli!hments in th r e e categories -changing the nation'• mood; proposing pro. l"&m and administrative reforma: and reorganizing na- tional prlorllles. Ia the lint category, one ol the White House men noted that there was a noticuble slacUning of hostility lo the admlni1tratlon in the Congress. while another s111- gested Nixon had re!lored public credibility In th e presidency and succeeded in getting Americw to lower their vrdcts. 'l'bO """"'"" licked on a ~ llll ol ,.rorm pi.pooa1s, ln- chidblg Jhe naUoosl tax, ,.1ec: tive service, postal a n d welfare systems. While not all of the administration's pro: poaals were adopted, lbe'. White House men felt they were well atone tht road loword euactmlin~ · · Ol'llER AcrIONS Jn the prioriUes cateaortes, the aource:s stressed Mxon's decision lo bear down on Ill· flatton, and his ' ' N e w Federalism" proposal lo belin lharing federal revenues wilb Jhe states and lo lurD over opefation of certain federal programs, such aa manpnver training. Totalinl up t b e con- gmslonal win-lost column, they listed passage or Jhe Safe111anl antiballlsUc mlssllt l}'ltml, the draft lottery, the surtax eztensl.on and income tu: reform u mapor victor- ies. Approval ti t b e 1d- mlnistraUon's school a i d , voting rights, antipoverty and debt cellin& propCISlls was considered on1y a bit less im- portant. Although confining t h e I r review otherwise to domestic issues, the IOUretS also men- tioned overwhelming HOUlt adopt.Ion of a re80luUcn sup- porting the Presl<leol's el!orll to end the Vietnam wit u a major accomplishment. RELATIONS Bf:M'ER The sources abo aaid Nil'· on'• penonal reiiUonshlps with Democratic congressional leaders had imprvved con- ~erobly during lhe ·yeor ond that the Republicans on C&pltol lllll had begun lo 1 .. m to work in hemes~ wUh a Praldent of their own party and accept the responsibility of discipline. One of the White House men gave lft!lt stress to the slp.lficance of Nixon'• 1'fami- ly ualstahce" plan that would Pn>v!de a lype ol guoninteed amual Income lo bOlh Jobless a.Ml working poor, and Jhe ,.. called. "Philadelphia Plan" that would require conlrldor• an ftden1 construction pro!· edl to h I r e a mtnlmum number cl. blacks and otber minority worken. The I 0 U r C a I fthement1y dtnled that Jhe White H- wu -ed lo occtpl u .... adoption 1ast wtt:k of a eon- servallv• 11ep1bllc""8oUlhem -.UC plu lo mi-COi> ._.,.,.. . ., tho aotlpmrt)' pro- ~ 0 }rW over to tbl atatt ~~\ eramtD\I. But thq con-~' Nlxon wn concerned ~ l naclllnl an. amlcable ·:~'*tueinenl with Hoooe GOP INdera who W<TI aupporttnc the plan at well 11 with t>.ck· ini up Jhe pocltloo or Dooald • m1CL : Wlth thma new certificate aeecaibl, 10l1 earn oar regular 5"M> cutrel1t ' ammal rat.e, eompounded daily ml payable from day-in to day-out_. CJ OOtHl3 ,,a4d Id the end of only m motitlia at 1/490 1imtl«ll rat& After the first six months, you :rei:eive regular int.erest-plus the bonus paid· ,,,,,,,,.qua.rter. l'Bo1 T is tml()Uied CJD~ enQre balance. nus~ Toqaalifrlorthe bonus; simply open your account and maintain a balance of_ $1,000 or :mor.e. )finh11am t.erm of aci»ant is 6 months, •. • Yoar accoan.t ill backed by the $1.6 billion assets of CalifomiaFederal, the nation's largest federal savings association. The aocount you open t.oday, earns today. More than ever, c.alifomia.~ederal is the place for the DioDeJ yiRl can't affoid t.o riak. Naik,. .s lagast Federal . ' ' ngs , .._,, :a 1aei.1.,~·111a11'i..,-ac~11N•••tiT!'llJll!l!,C·g111pilll!t!!!.• •"'-r'r lillilillld up 10 s1~'b1 ~ r.dttil sf'M91&u. Mr~COIC., 111''°.'lllil' 1Mlr'l.1,1a1z.1r1~~~ ~ &aalelll'* ,,., •. ·. .. ,. " •. " •. ., ·. .• es e ••: " - OA!LV PILOT ~.-11.1'69 ... LEGAL NOTICB LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTIC&,, LJ!GA,L NOTICE . *J,£ I " I o ;:e;:e; , ZO:::<O! CJ@! CY!¢ • cos 542*'- LEGAL NOTICE MY Ccmmlnloll EJPlrn Jul~ 11, 1tn •otE•TION, HOWll• ANO 9A•LANO 041 C"em"'1 Drive N..,_rl --~. Ctllferlllt ,.,..,,...,: Publl:hO'd Or1ntt C:N" Dt!,., l"lkrt, D«ember 1, 11, 11. 1.1. t969 :n11,.t LEGAL NOTICE S, Viet ' Civilian Toll Rises WAS!DNGTOM (UPI) -Al· tbou&h tht U.S. ca1ualt1es in Vietnam are considerably be-- low Jut )'ear'a lt"Vtl, tht number or South Vlelname&t. clvJlians killed by the Com- munist& may be increaslnf. Pentagon figures abowed today that as of Dec. g a total of 1,064 South Vietnamese civilians -men, women and cl!lldren-had been "killed by act& of Viet Cong tenorl.!In" in 1969. Thi! compares with S,389 ten-orlst killings of S o u th Vietnamese civilians in tMa, ezcludlng the Tet c1sua1Ue1, and 3,706 in all of 196'7. The Pentagon says the civilian toll 1ince 1957 Is' 27,064. There still 11 no accurate count of the civlllarui killed in the Communists• Tet offensive in early 1968 because report! of sllyings are still coming In. A recent discovery of l)O bodies at Hue increased the civilian toll there to 2.eoo. The Pentagon says the toll could be as high as 10,IXM>. The Pentagon said tt did not have figures on how many civilians have been killed by South Vietnamese and U.S. troops. On Ille military llde, !he United states Jost 2,09l killed and the South Vietnamese 3,120 dead in the Tet offens.- tve, which began at the end Of January and caotinued to Peb. 21. Enemy losses were placed at 43,000. In all o( 11161, about l4ill00 U.S. troops were killed. Thls year's loll ma1 be fewer than 10.000. The terrorist killing• include victims of rocket or artillery shelling directed against clvU· ian communities conta:hrlng no milltary target. The killings also include civilian victimJ of mines and booby traps. The Pentagon, however, con. slders a large percentage of them murder by any defini· tion. In 1969, according lo ftg· ures reported to the Pentagon from Saigon, there have been 10,290 terTOlist "incidents," 15,115 wounded and 6,Jl7 ab- ductions in addition to tbe dead. Because or U.S. troop trto volvement in the aUeged My Lai massacre in which 128 civilians reportedly were slain in Marr.it, 1968, there has been a review of Communi&t atrocities in recent weeks. Some of the slayings have been In larger numbers than are wually reported for the My Lai massacre. On Dec. 5, 1961, 1 300-man Viet Cong force overwhelmed a 56-man Mot1tagnard gml· son at Oak Son and massacred an estimated .200 civilians in- cluding women and children. LEGAL1NOT1CE 42 •• --------~~-----------;---------~---------------..,1111111 ....... ~ !:.. ::.- DAIL V PllOT ·tl Saigon. Safer. Than.Washington at Night? Golfing Book •t¥1 YOUI SICllTAlt. ·: HOLLYWOOD (UP() -A HILPIN• HJ.Nil ·~ ; I Cijar,acter actor.Claude Al<ins, TAB ANtWDt .. '.'.~ cunenUy in .. Nobody Loves IUllAU '_:~.: Flapping Eagle'' Is complete.-835 7777 By KEN!~:~ G~::i~: pu~~u: :~= ~~:~: .~:~~~~: w~Ow~u~~beyV:ee~=ag~~ ~:~i~compeitt •u~IJ.~~~~::00~:_~=-~m~:_~leb~=~t~:~':~~ers~"~-~~~~-~~~--~··.·= limit on the Vitttnajn war," he best troope and leaden in tbe for the South Vietnamese. paclncation." he continued. cesslully with the Communist CH.RI 5 TM A 5 LONDON (AP) -Tbt sa.ld. "But lf the SOuth Viet~ Tet offensive. They aren't led 'NEED POUCE' "ll's something C'OnstrucUve guns." Brit.isb guerrilla fi,ghttt who nim and Americans keep up as well and the North Viet· as oppo.sed to ldlling for the Sir Roberl said the Sur· SPICIAL; .. ·: gave President Nixon good the progress of 1969, in 1970 namese replacemenls -well, "They must build up a re11l aake ol killing. U there's a lire news on the Vietnam war said you will see some startling we're talking about teen·age police force to keep order fight during their pacification. render ratio of Viet Cong l'OTTID . . -Wednesday lhat Saigon, once a changes." He declined to say conscripts not the pro!essional behind the lines, and even y,·ell, they 're protect In g troops and a greater will· • nightmare 'of Viet C.ong terror, what he meant by startling soldier. more important ferret out the something they are creatlng." ingness of SOutb Vietnamese now is saler than WaShington changes. "The South Vietnamese are underground cells which make to sign up for militia duty for a night stroll. ""'-B .1. h d" 1 l t t finding it easier to regain con· the Viet C.ong operation possi~ Mii RIFLE were lipoffs lo the improved IDEAL FOR CHRISTMAS GIVING BO"SAt: 'S • I 't bl Jue: r1 is ip oma wen o ble," he said. "Thal's the real One ol the major factors has Situation. • , ' a1gon sn a pro em any Malaya in 1938, the year after trol alter a battle. It's a sort been equipping South Viet· ! more," said Sir Robert he was graduated from Cam· of bandwagon result, with the thing." namese soldiers with the Ml6 As an old guerrllla·fi&hter, Tbompson, 53, a jun g I e bridge. He stayed in the Fae J>OPUlalion gradually losing ''Much of the reason for the rifle. Sir Robert is ready to go back veteran wbo helped engineer East until after the British confidence in the ability of the weak government and police ,,1 have always said the to Vietnam any Ume Nixon the C.ommunist dereat in victory against Communist in-Viet Cong to win." action lies with their pay. A South Vietnamese soldier was desires. TREE .·:I 51~;· Malaya about 10 years ago. surgents in Malaya. He Sir Robert sees no easy way rookie Malayan policeman and good but before he got the Ml& "l'm still preUy light' on my I In ·an interView at his Lon-returned to England in 1960. out for the United States in a civil servant on tiis pro-he was out-gunned," s 1 r feet at S3 and I keep my bag don club, the .diplomat-soldier Nixon telephoned him at bis Vietnam. He thinks the war bationary year make more Robert said. "He really was. .Packed," he said. said: "Now the police have to Somerset home this fall after could,go on for years, perhaps than the top Vietnamese of·,-r-~=~----=:~~~~:=;;~~~~~~~ extend that control out into reading "No Em From Viol· ~up with the Uri.led licial." II BfBLE THOUGHTS the provincea. I would say nam," in wblch SU-RolJUt Sta ta ,.quired to keep a force SU-Robert was thoroug)lly PRICES START AUTHENTIC MINATURE PLANT .. , ' ' ., . Saigon right now is safer than, outlined bis penonal plan for there, as in .Korea. optimistic. But it was a kind GOD'S PlOYIDINCI: Ovr ""•ktr pro· W sh" gto t allt f 1· · tii h "ed its ¥id•• for 91fttr1I ftttd1 of mtftkirtd. "Ht say, a in n ° w a long-haul, Jow~t strategy "It -cnuld take three to Jive 0 op inusm w c carrt m•~••h hi• •w~ to ,1,, oft tt. .... a en4 around at night." by the United States. He asked be! ..... u-M-i was com own warning signals. • d" !M tt s 451 Th 1 S. Robert I t d r years 0 1" l"MUIV -"The .war 1"sn't won." he· on tn• 900 • . : • I II n1 YEAR-END CLEARANCE SALE .. 1 ; • Lanclscape ga~: 1 IJ' comp e e a our-Sir Robert to go to Vietnam pelled to give up her purpose bl•11 1~. 1vil •1 will •1 th1 9ood. II lveek fact-finding tour of South and report back to him. and to negotiate 8 real set-said, ''but we're in the kind of MUST b• t11:1 wiy; olhirwi11, P••P'• Vietnam Nov. 25. He made the Uement," he estimated. position from which we could wo11l.l •e•v• God 1implv for th1 m1t11i1I trip at the request of Nixon FOUR ZONES Sir Robert won l h ~ win. Oh, the North Vietnamese 9ood th i1 11r .. ie1 would bri"9· Je1u• 11id 1h1I 1om1 followed • Sh b Reg . ,., • rus 1.so • and reported personally to 11 1 D'~'nguished Servi·ce Order or the V_ itt Con, can come him to ••' the lo'"'' ind fi1he1, J,,. 5:26. a I GAL. CONTAINERS ! ; ; I • Junip•r Tami ! e Stir Jasmine hi "I covered a our corps .,,,"' b k f h11.... h 811id11 th:1 GENERAL provide"'' low1rd 111 "''"· ih1r1 is • m. 7.0nes and was able to com· and the Military Cross in ac II ..... , per a p S SPECIAL pr0 .,;d1,,,., f1vori"' +ho11 who lov1 •nd 11•v• God. The President mentioned the h nt ·t " tth b t h Id between l:'....bru•"" and May pare. t e prese SJ Uauon W World War II U o S no · , "-c:: -~ . • Th. Biblt 11y1• •·,11 lh inq 1 wor~ to91th1r for 9ood unto them Thompson report when he an· the situation as I found it military rank He did his They II be deftated if they th1t lov• God''. Rom. 8:28. 01vid 11!d, "I h•v• not 11en d,. • Morit•rey Pine e Ruby Glow Tea •·. " noun Ced Monday the when t was there right after fighting as a diplomat turned do.' 1 ' h ll . bomb. f r;9ht•o•11 for11k•n, nor hi1 •eed b199i119 bre,•d .. ,d P1. ld1:25, withdrawal of another 50,000 the Tet offensive in February soldier. T 1e .a in Ing o P•ul 11id, "Th• p.,.,, of God. whic h p•ueth •I "'" •rlt111 in9, U.S. soldiers from Vietnam by and March 1968," said Sir From this double viewpoint, North V1etn~m has not hurt 1h1!1 •••P your h11•h '"d "''nd1 th•ou9h Chri1t J11u1", Phil. next April 15. Robert. Sir Robert sees important jobs U.S. o~alions because the ~:r7,' YOU • Chriitien1 Do you h1vt th•t "p••c• o•f God whi1;h • e Wax L11f Prlv1t I • Boxwood e Gl~denia e and Others ~ . I LAGUNA HILLS NURSERY:• 'RELAXED AIR' "The Viet Cong Biid the which must be done to make North Vietna~ese . ha_ve h~d he in+1nd 1d for All men1 B•li•~• Je1Y•. rep1nt of 1ift, conf•u trouble supplying !heir uruts hii nirn•, b, b"epli•td into Chr:11 -th111 foyr li•p1 tn•k1 -,.ou "The thing that impressed anyway, he said. • Chriili•ft; th•11 bi FAITHFUL u11lo death ind vou will h1v1 me," Sir Robert said of South f c • "A lot of their trouble stem-P••<•, not only he•e. byt heieafler. (Mk. tb:IS,16, Ach 2:JI , Vietnam, "was the relaxed Secun'ty 0 onvictti.? med from the floods," he ad-G.I. ):27, Ach 21 :1 6, I Pel. 3:21. R1¥. 2:101. Thi1 i1 '"' w1-,. air;. You don't have to keep Ir ~ ded. lo profit f1om God"1 TOTAL PROVIDENCE. Phon1 or w1ite Jo0king over your shoulder He found U.S. troop morale for fr•• bookl1t t1Uin9 of God'1 w•y of 11lv•tio". Church of ~ 23002 El Toro Rd. • El Toro ·:::':I W 830-5653 or 830-3037 · . now.. high. Ch1i1t, 237 W. Wihon St., Coil• M., •• c •. ,2621. S4S-4100, 'The b I f the Ok N t s 't. s 541 -2047. ' a ance 0 war ay, 0 ecuri ie "fl'• particularly g 0 0 d there · has changed. They are l 1 mile 111t o~ San Ditto Fwy. -~·· .. u ----------------we~er lactically and ~chologically and we are now stronger. The Viet Cong are no tonger 10 feet tall. They are more like frightened 16- year~lds. "In· their strongest prcr vinces they are now 30-40 per· cent North Vietnamese. In their weaker provinces they are 70-00 percent North Viet- namese. And all of their forces are under strength." Sir Robert did not look like the British security chief in M a 1 a y a ""·ho whipped the Communists in the t950's. or the World War II British guerrilla in China, Burma and Jndia. He talked easily, but cauliously in the urbane manner of the British diplomat. Coming Dec. 20 JOLIET, Ill. (AP) -There isn't much prisoners can do about the problem of security but some at Stateville peniten· tiary are discussiag -with the warden's blessing -pro.- blems of securities. About 110 af the 4,000 Stateville prisoners meet once a week, for two hours, with a l'epresentaUve 'of a Chicago brokerage finn to hear lee· lures, see fllms and talk about stocks and bonds and other forms of Investment. Warden Frank J. Pate said Mond_ay he attributes the in· terest in large part to Ira Distentield, 23, who thought of the course and conducts it. Distenfield, out of college for only three months, i.s with Family ~ekly The Christmas Party I Never Wanted-and Will N•ver Forget By SLOAN WILSON ' This famed author tells a heort warming slory about tiis first Christmas aboard his 54-foot cruiser, fourteen guests, and a memorable niidnight surprise. e 'WILD' CHRISTMAS -City-dwelling Cincinnati family tells about a camper trip to the wilder- ness or Northern Michigan to spend Cbristmu in a 42-inch snow . • TRUTH ABOUT LYING -A quiz designed to h'tfp you undetstand science's modern findings on the ancient practice of prevarication. e TRADITION -Roast stuffed goose is the: main ' course in the traditional Old English Christmas dinner featured in Family Weekly Cookbook. ALL COMING SATURDAY IN THE · 1 DAllY· PILOT I McCormick & Co .. Inc., as a trainee. The £On or a banker. he studied commerce and fina11ce and did graduale work in criminology. Originally he and prison authorities had planned the course for·an enrollment of 30, but nearly four times that many signed up. In an interview in the prison t:hapel. where the cl~ss meets, John Brown, 34, d Chicago said he is taking the course "because I plan to 50 into business myself." Brown had Il years of ex· perience as a computer pro- grammer and said he would like to start a computer pro- cessing service for 1tnall firms. Charles Hernandez, 35, of Chicago said, "1 haVf hopes that some day I will have a business of my own and I will have the fundamentals from this course of how to start." Hernandez said he would like to become a poultry and egg dealer, Oisttnfield discussed l n Monday's lecture the nature of various kinds of partnerships and corporations. A short film on the stock market was shown. Distenfield told the men, "Stock in· vestment is not going to make you millionaires but maybe you can earn a vacation or an extra car or a down payment on a home.'' Distenfield told a n ln· terviewer "a large percen· tage of inmates are sharp," and added that prison training offered them i1 always com· ensurate with their abilities. "A lot of buslneues have taken so much out of society, let's put a little bit back into i~." said Distenfield. Thief's Deed Pays Off HOUSTON, Tex. (AP) - James Russell Landrum got his reward Tuesday for doing a good deed while committing A robbery, Landrum, 24, was given 10 years probation a.ft.er his ~ bery victim testified Landrum came tO:":: his re&cue when a fellow robber held a cocke~ piatol to the victim's neck. 2471-.lway Laotn-..... _., ... ,,74 Houl'I: 11 1.m. t.10 p.m. loatll tmt Jiu• ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST FASHION CENTER - Astro·Sonic Stereo FM/AM : Radio·Phonographs ... with 1 AIR-SUSPENSION SPEAKER SYSTEM New Magnavox air .. suspend(d 1pcakers sivc vastly improved sound J"cproductionl Front-projecting l,000 cycle Expo.nential Treble Horns; and aide-projecting heavy .. duty, high.efficiency Bass Woofers are housed in separate air·tight enclorures at each cabinet end. Now-speakers are completely jsolated from their environment; their cones literally "ftoat'' back andfortb for superb response. No distortion! 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'IOMY TOYAn Fountain Valley ·Downtown Huntington •eacli 962-~456 536-7561 ,. t •• r •. - ..... ,,. " ., .... ' r .. ,.. • a1· ~All.Y ~!LOT ~-­.~- Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. to NQON 1 P.M. to 4 P.M •. 6 P.M. to 8 P.M. Saturday 10 A.M. to NOON 1 P.M. to 5 P.M. Sunday 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. FREE CANDY CANES FOR THE YOUNGSTERS : :c::::;s •• e.:z s l$~ €$-.!'a .-••&•••_ V-09! f.Jf :;..•, o_c:sac t .Pt e • a :=::h ~~~ .- ~· '"' -· 'one-stop' shopping a.t its finest! I • '' . ' OPEN EVENINGS . . . - 'TIL CHRISTMAS . , ·IN TH:E .GIANT ... 30 FOOT GIVE YOUR YOUNGSTERS THE BIGGEST THRILL OFi THE SEASON ., BrinCJ your camera -Take all the pictures you wish - With Santa or the Snow Man. WRAP UP YOVR LAST MI NU TE SHOPPING AT THESE DISTINCTIVE SHOPS '* SaY-tn Drug * llnet Basket * Jean Dahl * Dick Vernon's * Rion Hardware * Paper Unlimited '*' Hickory Farms * Cobblers Bench * Westcliff Shoes * La Galleria ' * Halliday's Men's * Humpty Dumpty Children's * Darrell's Dedrick Tux Shop * Westcliff Plaza Barbers * Montgomery Cleaners * Bank of America * Jlr. Lou Roy Elder * Robert Berkley Men's * Yeta's Intimate Apparel * Charles H. Barr Jewelers * Playboy Hair Stylists . . * Bakif's Westcliff Camera : . ~· } • , ' • • . 'r. w l I .... ... . : . ; ' . ), . . " 'I ' .. ,_, ,. • •• it. 'i I • ,i . ~ I J :.: .. -. ' . . , ... ,, ,,· I .. ' '.. ' . J ------. ------·-. -· ·----------------~~-....,.....------....... -----.... -----.-.. ; DAil V PILOT t9 Gabriel· V f»ted NFL '·s . . NEW YORK (APl -Roman Gabriel, the sturdy Los Angeles Rams' quarterback who reached his peak In 1969, has been voted the Most Valuable Player in ule Na~t Foot· ball League by a 48 • man paJlel of writers and sportscasters ror The Associated Press. The 6-foot-4, 220-poond former North Carolina State pasSer led t~ Rams t() the Coastal Division titJe with room to spare and wils roaring towal')'J an unbeaten seUon until upended by the Minneso.ta V~ings Dec. 7. Gabriel recdved 21 full votes and a portion· of another 'biiit~-tbat was split among Gabriel, CalvlJ! Hill of Dallas and Joe Kapp of Minnesota. Kapp, the man wtio !wiped engineer the Rams'. defeat .at the bands of the Vikings, was Gabriel's ck>sest com- petitor with eight votes. Carl Eller, the Minnesota .~efensiye end who leads the charge of the Pur- ple Gang, was next with seven, an unusually high total for a defensive player. Sonny Jurgensen, • called by Washington coach Vinet Lomb3rdi the greatest quarterback'ilf'the""gam~. and BEST fN· THE NFL Roman Gabriel Shows His Stuff Spor(s ita B·rief Trojans Face Mara vi ch; Diver's Body Discovered An expected highlight or tonight's col· Jegiale basketball battles in v o J·v in g Western teams is the invasion or the USC Trojans at Baton Rouge, La. The score "should be about 210 to 205." laughs the host coach, Press Maravich of Louisiana State University, whose star player happens to be son Pete Maravich. The coach-say s the game point total will be hJgh because "we just yon't have a very good defense." The other half of the picture iS the offense -the coach's 800 hu scored 2,481 potnts in hJs college career, just: behind Elgin Baylor, who's the sixth all-time scorer. • BOLOGNA, Italy -Bruno Amaduzzi, manager of middleweight champion Nino Benvenuti, said Wednesday he and Benvenuti bad oo connection whatsoever with an alleged boxing scandal that resulted io the indictment by a New York Grand Jury ol American bozer Frankie DePaula. · "It is a11 fantasy," Amaduz:zl said •bout the scondaf reports. Laver, Shepherd ace Emerson,. ddison Sunday Rod Laver, the No. 1 ranked teMis layer in the world, will team with aching professional Jimmy Shepherd in doubles match against Roy Emerson No. 9) and Australian Davis Cup star erry Addison Sunday at the "'Newport each Tennis Club. The match1 free of charge to the ncral public. will gel under way at I clock 11nd \Viti bt foUowed by a trophy eM'ntalion to young Steve Millot, 15- ar-old junior star. The trophy1 knOwn as the Rod Laver 8rd. la presented to the H1rbor area ngster selected as most outstanding in net garne each year. Newport Ttnnl1 Club is located off mboree· road tn the Eastbluff area of Irvine Ranch. DePaula, a former light heavyweight cont.ender, was indicted Tuesday by a grand jury looking into reports of under· world fight fixing at Madison Square Garden. • DENTON, Tex. -A body found in ditch 12 miles east of this North Texas c ty Wednesday has been identified as tha. or Edward Collins, 20. star sophomorl' diver on the ' University of TennesSC< swimming team, The sheriff's office positively identified the body after teceiving a photograph from Knoxvllle, .Tenn. to verify suspi. cions that it was the athlete who was hlt.ch-hiking his way to spend Christmas with his family in Las Vegas. The body, shot three times, was clad in a leather • j&cket with the \\'Ords "University of Tennessee, swimming champion, Southeast Conference, 1969." • LOS ANGELES -Tailback Clarence Davis of the Uni versity of Southern California scored two t o u c h d ow n 1 Wednesday in an offensive drill against a simulated Michigan defense as the Tro· jans prepared for the Rose Bowl game with the Wolverines. Davis. the leading ground gainer in the \vest with 1.275 yards. broke thraugh the line repeatedly In the drill. Southern California s t r e s s e d fun- damentals for the remainder of the workout. Coach John McKa.y 51!.id. J:te would ease off on his teem for the next few days following the contact drill. ,• LOS ANC.ELES-There's an old saying in hockey that there's nothing like a win- ning team. New coach Johnny Wilson learned that anew Wednesday night as the Los Angeles Kings won their first game since he took over. 'The Kings were scoreless again.'ll Chicago until the third quarter, down 1.e, when Eddie .Shack tied It up with his eighth goal of the season. Then Jimmy Peters, who hadn't scored a goal Jn 14 games. knocked In his second goal of Ole sea90n, Butch Goring put the game on Ice 1 lltUe later -and the Rings had a S-1 victor}'. perhaps ever, had four votea for hi$ effortl in leading the Redskins to their best record Since ,i95:>. Calvin Hill, the surprising . Dallas rookie rrom Yale, also bad four votes and:a portion ol a flflh. Deacon Jones, veteran Los Angeles defensive end Dick Bulkus, the Chicago Bears' super m I d d I e linebacker, and Alex Karras, Detroit's • fine defensive tackle, each had one. ' The honors were won last year Ly Earl Morrall, who led Baltimore ta the league title as a fill-in for the injured John Unitaa. Morrall, uSed 5paringly • thia year, did not get a vote. Gabriel, an eight-year veteran , got his big <"hance in 19& when Diii · Munson 1ufiered a knee Injury. qabriel refused to give the jOO l;la:ck to ·Munson the followi rig year. EventuaUy, Munson was traded to Detroit, leaving Gabriel in control. Some koowing football people pot Gabriel in the same class with Gre~ Bay's Bart Starr in his mastery o( ball<0nt.ri>I plays. In additiOn to throwing 23 touchdowns 3nd corp· pleling ~ of 375 passes for ?,439 yards, Gabe also can take off with lht ball. He raoka third on :the team as 1 rusher and has c.~rried the b':lll into the end zone for five touchdown.'!. Gabriel was interviiiwed In mkl- season and asked about the im- provement in hb play. ''I think my play-calling and over-all generalship are improving," he said: "I'm more exprienced in getting rid of the ball. "I was taugbt in college that. if all the receivers are c:Overed, il's '*8l to •eat the ball.' Now l'ni usually able to' throw it safely. It hurts my percen· . tage but it saves yardage. "The key to our pass offtnse b that evrry receiver is a primary receiver when the play starts. Each one knowa I may come. to lii.m no matter-~·bat pattern was called·." .Gabriel was a first-round draft i*:k by the J\ams for 1962. A na!Jve 'of North Carolina, be and bis wife and lliite """ now live in Long Beach, Calif.~ · 1 9'fr · of{,.UOO h.e : P.layed a pan1 movie called, "The Vpd;t . ",Until the Vikings came to town. he was able to live up to the title. Amp~tee.,'f Looks • • Back ~ HOUSTON (AP) -Fre<fdie Joe Stein- mak says you never realize what some of the good things in file mean until they are gone. Steinmark hekl back tears as he talked softly about his foOtball career that was halted abruptly just six days after playing in the nationally televised Texas· Arkansas game. Cancer forced amputation of the Texas,.. safety's left leg. "t even enjoyed going out to practice every day," Steinmark said. "You never realize what something means to yw until you don't have it anymore." The Colorado native is making good progress following the surgery last Fri· ' day at the University ol Texas M.D. Anderson Hospital &: Tumor Institute. Steinmark said be coi.tkt not think of .a btgger thrill in 1tus life than his coming to Texas to wear ·the university's orange al'MI white . ·•rm just sorry it had to end," he satd. "But sometimes good things have to come to an end , 1 just thank the Good Lord that he gave me the chance to co,n!f" down here and play.'' He recalle<i that as a youngster he had dreamed about some day. playing Notre Dame, the Jan. 1 Cotton Bowl opponent of Texas. · "I · was looking forward to playing Notre Dame in the Cotton Bowl," he said. ' "I won't get 1 chanc' to play, but .I'm still-h:!PPY mf teammates will play." Doctors have indicated there is a chance Steinmark can be flown to Dallas so · he can be on the 5idellne with his .teammates during the game. Steinmark's room is banked with floral tributes and gilta, many of which he has shared with other patients at Anderson. ·Arkansas, Tezas Tech, Texas A&~. Rice, and Penn State are among the football teams that qave sent gifts and messages. He has heard from strangers from coast to coast. "l can't find the words to thank everybody," he-said. "I'm sufe I'll never be able to Slirouded Operations, La1nonica What Makes Oakland Click NEW YORK (AP) -The theory of operation that bas made the Oakland Raiders one of the most successful organizations in the American Football League is built around shrouding opera· lions in mystery, hopefully creating a psychological edge by instilling doubts in lhe oppOsition. As a member of that organization, quarterback Daryle Lamonica has been schooled in that theory, He also has destroyed it. The Raiders still practice very much in secret and still operate behind a 8emi· blackOl,!t of information, but there is no mystecy about what Lamonica is JOing to d<Hm the field. 'Ibe elements· Of ttie pme plan always dissolve Into a Bombe:~ Awa:, ' attitude. Oakland's system. devised to exploit the pass, is the perfect complement for Lamonica, a persistent performer who speaks in cllches enough to know : -The shortest route between two points is a straight line. -If at first you don't succeed, try, try again, And so Lamonica throws deep, again and again . The results have been startling. Considering that the opposition is not bat· tling the , mystery of questioning what Lamcrllc1 ·is going to do, it is indeed a. wonder that they have not been able l.o cu( him off at the pass. That they haven't ls, of cour_!e, ' •.. Cat19la't in tlae Middle reflected in Lamonica's league·leading 34 touchdown pasaes and the fact that his twa prime targets, Warren Wells and Fred Biletnlkoff, ran 1·2 in touchdow n passes during the regular season. However, the Raiders, and Lamonica, were jolted when Wells suffered a shoulder separation in the season finale agaJost Kansas City. It appears that he will be lost for the playoffs, depriving the club of a talented deep threat who averaged 26.8 yards a catch this season With Wells replaced by either Rod Sherman or Drew Buie, a rookie from Catawba for whom Lamonica has predicted stardom, the Raiders passing attack undoubtedly will surfer. Referees Ron Finn (30) and Willard Norris have a job Oil their hands separating Al Smith (left) of Pittsburgh and Terry Harper of MontreaJ during rough first period of National Hockey Le~gue game Wednesday 'ni«bt . .Harper wits ~alized two min· utes for rougliing and five nunutes for fighting. Montreal won, >2. ' ' -remember everybody who bas been nice to me. The doctors and the people at this hospital have been just great, and I don' want to forget coach Darrell Royal, one ol the greatest men-1 know." Royal, the Texas coach, bu been a fre- quent visitor. Steinmark did not get to shake Prcsl; dent Nixon's hand when the President visited the Texas dressing room after the Arkansas game . But he talked by telephone for IS minutes with the Presi- dent last Sunday. "The President calling me was a big thrill but I've had one big thrill on top ot another-so much tha_t I.don't even wor4 ry about whatever it was that bothered me," he said. Tilden Pick Over Laver . Illogical Would yoo call a Sopworth Camel .a greater fighter plane than a Saber jet? Or say that Jack Dempsey was a better fighter than Rocky Marciano? Or thlt Paavo Nurmi was a greater runner than Emil Zalopek? You might consider those suggestions briefly. But when you rationalize and determine that you are ccmparing two widtspread eras you must conclude that such comparison is not only unfair but unrea!Jstic. , Therefore, the announcement that Bid Tilden. a la 19208, has been named the -greatest tennis player of all Ume must bt -·················· WHITE WASH •................ ," • . . greeted with a great deal of dout:j, perhaps even a bit of ICOl'TI. · Who cookl have 31.dl great insight to tab 111den as a greater player than Rod Laver (actually Laver was third, behind Tilden and Don Budge in the poll)? Laver himself may have the best answer • "I don't believe they can compart. When you make such a comparison you start throwing in a lot or ifs, ands and buts. "But it doesn 't bother me whether t'm No. l or No. JOO because such ranking cannot be oUJcially recognized. lt's tbe era you play in that counts. "When Tilden played they didn't haye the'availability of jet air travel, thus get- t.lng frequent world cla• opposition. And believe me, there's no substitute for com- petition. "Nowadays you,. can get it every week or tht"year because. ol travel availability. ·"ln Tllden1s time they used to gear themselves more, having more time to pl'fU>&re for each tour:nament. Now we work our way up to the big toumamen11 by playiJla:. in·tht smaller ones." Laver bagged .$123,000 thia year wi~ his W,nnis talents and he became the only player in history to record two grand 1lam1 >Mlen he won 1t Wimbledon, Forelt Billi, the French and Auatrallan opem. Saying that Tt}den wu a better player than Laver aounds like a lot of hot air to me. But some may care to believe it. ·' ·-Ellis Comes Home; Title Fight Off. • • NEW YORK (UPI) -Jimmy Ellis' first World Boxing Association heavyweight title defense in more than IS mooths again.st Gregorio Pefalta in Buenos Aires on Saturday appears to have been called olf, it was repOrted to United Press JntemaUonal WedncSday. Ellis and his manager, Angelo Dund~ will leave Argentina for the United States on Friday night, according to Dundet's wife. Dundtt, .wJ1u~porle<fly checked out of hl5 Buenos Aires hotel Wednesday even· jog, had been involved in a month or 1tormy negoUaUons over money and of. ficials for the Ellb·Peralta match. Ellis has made hli only defense of lhf WBA Utle by defeating Floyd Patta-11on irl Sweden in September, I~. The decision was an unpopular one with the crowd and with lhe nationwide tele'v1slon audience in the United States. Ellis had gained WBA recognition by whipping Jerry Quarry in the (inal bout o( a tournament sponsored by the WBA. lie had planned to defend agaJnst Henry Cooper in London earlier thia yeJJ', but that bout was cancelled when Cooper tore a leg m111Cle in training but ne&oti,uons arc under way to reschedule the bout for March. Ironically, the match with Cooper would not be recognized as a tltlt dcfci1se by the British Boling Board of COOtrol, which does not recogniu a n y heavyweight champion since C3S3ius Cb.y was strippe4 of his tJtle for hhi refusal to accept induction into the Army. Th< first Mnt or dl!ICOnl surrounding the Ellis-Peralta fight appeared several weeks ago, wben Ellis ob)ecte<f lo -not having ao Ameritan referee. three judges SC«e flgbtl! In Argentina, and the ~reree does not vOte, but Ellis felt he did not want to rbk a bout without 1n American in the ri1!g with him. A large-portion of the' purse was to be paid to Ellis only two days bclore the bout. The site w1um't even determined until a few wffks ago. "There has been 1 complete 11'Ck ot c:oopentlon In trying I<> arrange lhla bout." said tl>e prunottt. 'Jbe WBA WU not happy that Ellis was defending the tilte ag1inst Peralta inJ ~tead of meeting Joe Frazier; who hol<k anolhtr share of the title. A few yeari ago the New York State Athletic COl!I! mission. declared that Peralta was "not • suitable"' <0ntender [or the 111 \I heRV)'Weight title', wbich Wit held then in' Jose Torres. "lie'• not the best opponent If°'!..~ -l ~mile Bruneau, president of the wMJ said last week, 11but It ls a JOOd 01a~ for South Amori<a. The day alter d1li match we will Issue a statemtnt ·~ Ellis ·meetin( Fraz.16. '' · ...-.. ---·------- • ' ' ' ' I ' • • '· d 'I n ,, • I• I • ·r y '· • • • I• • •• 'I I• • k r e n • ,f n I. g • r I ).D OA1L Y PILOT All ~ood Thing~ Must Come to an End . . . ., By ROGER CAllLSON OI llM o.llY l'lltt Ste" One of the great wtn streaks Jn prep history went down the • 'arain Wednesday ni&'lt as farina Hlgb's Vikings CJ.me througb with the 'effort they had planned since the start ol the 1969 basketball campaign. And that was to beat Compton Ri~'s two-Ume ClF , champion Tarbabes and end ' the 66-game winning string that began in December of 1961. Coach Jim Stephens' Viking f'Tough at 47 ; crew whipped Compton, 74-70, in the winners' gym to move on tp the semifinals ol the 41st annUal Huntington Be a c h In,vltational basketball touma· ment. In other action at Marina in the consolation b r a c k e I , Westminsfer dealt Costa Mesa an exit pass from the tourney, · '1S..43, and Ramona finished off Fullerton, 76-69. It was the flfth straight trh.mph for Marina's five a1l9 upped its record to &-1 for th~ year and the Vik'e:s did it with ' • ~· ' • Minoso Still Plays, -.. . ' Swings Mean Bat > NEW YORK (UPI) -Mln- .:'nie Minoso is still playing ball. ~'· That in itself isn't such .~mind-bending news n o t • ~particularly, is the fact he will ~:be 48 his next birthday. ~ Anybody familiar with Min- :':nie at all won't even be overly ); shocked by the disclosure he's ··tearing it up ror the Cu Ii a can ;Tomato Pickers in Mexico's ~·Sonora-Sinaloa Winter League ·or that he ripped a pair of line :drive base hits in his last two . times at bat against Mazatlan :.the other night. : ':He loves bueb.811 so much, ;-he once told me he thought the '.'mos~ perfect way to die was : on the field with his unifonn ;.on," says Ed Froelich, the ; fonner trainer for the Chicago •1 White Sox and five other clubs ·'llow manufacturing a back ''.rest lor automobile drivers. :·. "Minnie is in a class by ;:himself," says Froelich, who ":has 35 years experience as a ~Jrainer with the Yankees, Red ('.Sox, .Dodgers, Ch\cago ~lack !;-Jlaw,b: and Chicago Cardinal• -as well as the White Sox. "He has the greatest tolerance for pain of any man I've ever ... ,. "Everytime he'd get hurt, he'd: see a doctor, listen carefully to what the doctor had to say, and then go right out and play ball anyway. I remember one day Frank Lary-hit him in the face with a fast ball, loosening his teeth and cutting him up so bad he had to have 11 stitches later. "He lay on tbe ground a lit- tle while, then got up,•took his base and finished out the half iMing as a base runner. When the side wu out; he started going to the outfield but I ad- vised the manager to take him out and ~t him to a hospital, otherwise his fact would've been a mess forever. "You'd never believe some ol tbe things Minoso did. He had a broken )>one in his foot on~ and the· doctor said it would be at least 10 days before he cou1d play again but he pinch hit that night, won the game and never missed any days ~t all. "Then there was the time he was hit on the head by Bob Grim of the Yankees. He had a fractured skull but the first X-ray didn 't show it. He played the following day, skull fracture and all, and a few days later he Was examined again in Chicago and they found th e fracture. Minnie made a big conCession. He didn 't play for three days." lii.ke all ballplayer s, however; Minoso did have OC· caslonal trouble-with his back. "There art three ·kinds of people," Froelich s a y s. "'Ibose who have a bad back: those who have had a bad back, and those l'!'hG will get a bad back. You don't have to be an athlete. If you .live long enough you 'll have a bad back." Froelich clatms 80 percent of the 93 million drivers of the road have a back problem of one type or another. He feels so strongly about it that he abandoned his job as trainer three years ago and devoted his fu11 attentioo to designing a special a n d patented back support for .au to s. and trucks. Froelieh sine;e has set up Bai:port Products In 'Chfcago. Meanwhile, Minoso, who put in 16 years in the ,majors with the Indians, White So x , rolling along despite all the assorted aches and pains. One of his old friends from the U.S. phoned him Jong distance in Mexico not long ago and wanted to know how M:1was getting along. · • You know me, buddy," Minnie's voice bubbled over the wire, "I'm werra hoppy so Jong they let.me play." Rancho Advances Oilers Trip CdM; Chargers Ousted By HOWARD L. HANDY Of 1119 D•ltr l"llol 11111 An amazing thing happened &f the way to the Huntington Beach basketball tournament semifinals. Tilree or the four teams are based in the Orange Coast area and two fl. the squads ex- pected to vie for the Coast League championship were eliminated in quarter.final ac· Uoo. Elmer C..Ombs' Huntington Beach Oilers, host.! for the 41st renewal or prepdon,.! senior tourney, spotted Tandy GiWs' Cm'ona de! Mar quintet the first basket then moved ahead to stay with three suc· cessiVe field goals to win a 58- 45 decision in action Wed· nesday at Huntington Beach High School. The Oilers wjll tangle with Newport Harbor tligh tonight at 7 after the Tars won over Warren. Rancho Alamitos stormed to an 83-88 victory over VJJta Part to gain a spot opposite "fifarina in the semis. Jim Anderson of Rancho hit 37 points for hiih hoDOrs for the day at HuntingtOn. In consolation round achon. Tustin defeated Santa r,, 65- 59 and the Edison Charge.rs ran afwl of a cold streak in !he fourth quarter a rte r leading moist oC the day to drop a $1·56 decision lo Atagnolia. With Tony Cate and Let \\'alters cootrollin1 b o 1 I\ backboards, Huntington Beach moved to a commanding 16-8 advantage at conclusion of the flrst stanu and lqr.reatcd tht m1reJn io J.4.Jt at~lfume. ' -Cate and Garth Wise each had J2 points in ltie first half to pace the scoring as the Oilers hi\ on 13 of 29 attempts fro m the.Ooor while holding the Sea Klrigs to six for 22. In the matter of shootiog, Huntington Beach hit 45 per- cent from the floor and Corona de! Mar 32 percent. The Oilers had 53 attempt! and capitalized on 24 while the Sea Kings hit 15 of 49. After the ha lft ime In-. lennlss\on, Gillis sent hls squad into a full court press· ing defense but it was unable to move up on the host team with any degree or con· sistency. Huntington Beach turned to a ball control game in the fourth stanza and the losers were never able to get closer than eight points. Dave Mohs' Edison quintet moved to a comfortable 20-10 Jead alter one quarter or play and held a 36-30 edge at the in· termission. Magnolia was able to pick up one point to narrow the gap to five points after three periods. In the fourth stanza, fl.1ohs' team tried ball control but railed to toMect on the necessary number or shots and the Stntinels grabbed the decision In tM closing seconds. Several streaks we~ kept Intact and two others were ended In the action 1t Hun• lint;ton Beach. Rancho Alamito!! remains , u!ldefeated in stven ouLin,q~ this season wh1le Villa Park dropped lts first decL,lon al1er five straight victories. a flourish, beaUng t h e Tarbabes at their own game -running and shooting, along wlth good defense. Stephens said afterwards that it was his greatest-ever basketball victory as a coach and coach Bill Armstrong or the fallen Tarbabes admitted that he didn 't think' Marina would be able to handle his quintet as well as it did. The key to the triumph wa s Marina's underrated 5-9, IM- pound senior guard Bob Beal. Beal was Mr. Clutch ror Stephens with superb leader~ ship, repeat.ea s eals a n d subsequent pattern I a y u p s through a stunned Compton zone defense. In all, he accollnted for 18 points oo nine fiel<t goals. Another key performer for Marina was Rick Mosier, the Vikes' sharpshooting senior forward. Mosier was held In check in the first half without a point but came back in the vital third period with J2 counters and finished the nlght with 17. And Kipp Baird added 12 before JQUlina out late in the fourth period. · .. Compton's contingent, made up of one senior and four juniors, was hurt midway through the third period wben senior Albert Nero fouled out during a Viking hot streak that saw Marina up ll1 33-32 halftime lead to 49-36 wllb 4:28 to go in the stanza. What's more, the Vikes held that 13-point margin until 1:48 remained in the game when a belated lull court press by DAILY ,ILOT , ...... h' l"•I O'Derrnttl AGONY OF DEFEAT -Compton High's CIF record setting 66-game basket- bal1 win streak \Vas snapped Wednesday night by Marina , 74-70, and the emo- tion after the ga1ne of Tarbabe Richard Davis (kneeling) reflects his team's di sappointment. The Vikings move on to the semifinals tonight at Huntington Beach 'lo do battle with Rancho Alamitos at 8"30. WORDS OF ENCOURAGEMENT -Marina coach .Jim Stephens bellows ad· vice to his. Viking cagers during stn1 ggle \Vith Compton Wednesday rught. '!'.he Vikings broke Co1nrton's 6f>-gamc winning streak, 74-70, tn the quarter- !tnals of the 41st· annua J~unlington Beach Jnvita·UonaJ basketbal1 tournament. Compton turned· the final OU~ come into a four ·poJnt d'!"lalon. at a 49.1 perttnt rate on 38 of 17 shots. Wesbnlnster'• easy wln was tr!lf'lld by Dan Bn>derlet's "We didn't play well on .corbic and reboundlnc anilca defense and &l\le up too many as U>e lJonl dominated play layup1 to them. But I don't lrom atart to finish. wllnt. to take anything away Broderick scored 22 but ·frOPl M a r 'i' n a , • • said more important, pulled down Armstrong. ''They ootplayecl '5 rebounds and blocked 13 and outbu.stled ua. 11 Mesa shots to throttle the -r,larlna's shootlnl w11 its Mwrtangs. hottest of the year Al the Coach Don Leavy's Lions Vlkes coonected on so ol 50 piled up a quick 21.S lead at shots for eo percent while the end of one quarter and eompton waa ripp(Qa the net.I . were never threatened. . 82-80. llpset Warren Stunned· By Sailor Press By RON EVANS • Of ""' oaltr Ptltf Jtdl Niwport Harborl1 Sailors are ht the aemlflnala "-the 41st amwal Huntington Beach Invilat.ional basketbaD tourna- ment tonlght alter pullina off a stumlDg 82-80 upeet win tlVf!r Warren Wednesday night at Marina High. , The Salkn, under coach Dave Waiman, turned in a tmneftdous fourth period. d · fort capped by the last - shot of Dave Eccles to break an BG.all tie with the blg Beart of Warren. Newport appeared dead and buried In the fourth quaner, trailing the C:Oast League power, 0.$5, with 6:38 to go. But Waxman'a ~tfit turned · to a full court pfess turning WarTen's offense ' into shambles. · The BluejackeU turned tlle game Inside out wlthln 2:20 ol playing lime to tie it up at 19-all. · From there they went to the wire -.trading ba!kets until the final shot by Eccles, who wu all alone under the bucket ind on the rece!Vlng end of Lee Haven's brilliant assist. Haven, held to 14 for the night, was the key to "IW't'OltT HAatoll 1a1 . Newport's win as he con-'~ 'T2"~ "; slstenUy set up his mates with 11 1 ' " easy shots under and around 1: : ~ : the buket. ~ ; : J Eccles finished the night's is 12 '' n work with 28 points and Taras WAatttM I•~ l'T pp TP Young 'added 23 to lead the !~.k::,_,. 1~ : ~ ~: Tan in tbe scorlpg column but Kint " , . , 10 Waxman held most of the ~~11::' ~ : ; : praise aft.erwards for the Tcrt•r• :n ,, 12 • workhor8e -Haven. NtwPOl't ':,".,!r ~ 1, 1f.-n The Sa11ors' second half W•rr•n 1s u :ii 11_.. ICOl'ing punch was near· ll1lnt -·· Str•ffonl 8tal McGl.llr• E••lt ""'~ C~rlt. Tota It · Dnlt '""'"'" N«• -. Wom•dl l urr..i1 -TM•h; MAtt1HA oo Wlbelievabie as they sank 20 of ,. "'',. 31 in Uw: final two pen"ods, 13 ' 0 J 12 J 1 1 11 of 17 in the tut el~ minutes ~ : ~ ,: and hit their last nine shots iri 1 e o • a row to pull it out of the fire. I 2 0 '-2 1 o s _ln..all they hit 36 of 65 from ,: 1~ 1~ ,: the floor for 55.4 percent. COMl"TOM 1m Wltl'en's impressive si7.e '~ ~ '"~ 1:; was brutal underneath for the ' ' 2 ': . most part unW the Newport ~ ; : 1 Presl turned everything 6 t t IS around 1 e I 1 . 'Zt 14 If 1'0 ,_..., °"'9rt.n Mtirlna It U 24 17-7• Compton 1S n 16 tt-10 MUHTtHOTON IEAC.M U•l ' ... PT l"P Tl" W11!u"S SC2U C1le 7 3 1 17 C•rllon J 0 '-' Wltl 1011, OtBrlttor! ~ 1 1 5 M«O 0010 To!llt 25 t 1! 51 COlONA 011. MAtl 1111 GO<"ll11 Grl••bt kllllffl (OflfO'f' Holl•ndef' ..... .... •M< Toi•!• PO PT ,,. Tl" 2 1 , 5 1 • , , ' ' .t 1! 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Ollar1tft W11l'"J"'i.~ 11 " '' 14-75 Cclllt M1t• s 16 n 111--43 PrQ Hockey Standings HfW YIWll ·~ ... ""'""' ..... ""'" '""'" HtYl-1 L .. _ IHI OlwltM!o WLTl"l$.•ll'OA 1161 41I0111' IJ ' I • ttll 7' IJ • I • 106 71 lt111,a:IU71 U12AN76 .. M144241t" W•I IDtThlM St. l.ciult II t S Ji •I .. Mll'IMticrt• •111 2'Ml1 '"'~ tl4JS'Jj.111 l"ltlllOtlllhlt J II 11 ti M tJ ORlll'ld t 1• 4 JO 11 M Lot _.._... ' 1• 1 '' sr 111 .......... , .. 11:....,. Montr1tl J. l"lfttllurtlt t l"ttllfft!Mlti 2. H-YWll l. tit l.IMI Anottu l. Cllk ... 1 OlkltlMI S. M1"nttclf• 1 ,...., .. .._. lotlOA •! $1. \Ault ·--'lllUM •I Olkltfld • -Area Fives Matched . • In Semis TJir<e prime cootendero:f~ Swiset Le a g u e baa.lethal honors are in champlOnshiJ contention lonlJht in' lht semifinals of the 4lst IMu;i HunUngton Beach lnvlt~oni basket ball tournament. . Newpcrt Harbo.r and . .hos1 Huntington Beach meet lri tht first half of the semis atfT inC Marina's ·giant·kHllng Vtkingi must contend wilh Raoch< Alamitos at 8:30, also afHun-tlngton. .. ., .. Other tests at Huntinit,On in the battle for fifth place·:havt Warren and Corona del f.1 a1 meel.ing at 3 and Compton and Villa Park at 4:30 . Semifinal acUon ln the con· solaUon bracket •t Marina h~ West.m.il&te.r ~ Magnolia vying at 1:1> following the Tustin-Ramona atruole at 7. . N. e w port's codfont.ati011 with Huntington Beacb i! rated a tossup after the Sailors nipped Warren .• ~.Y. a bucket in the final secolllt ol play Wednesday nlghl. '"· Coach Elmer Combs' Oller~ had.a relatively easy lim&.ft ii with Corona. de! Mar, ~{tin~ it away with a 13-int margin. 1mprovemeht ln. un- tlngton's play since th e Westminster·Marina toarna· ment is remarkable. ! ' The Sailors and Huntil¥jt.O!I Beach are stmilar in sty~ o! attack with both teams Uµtii. ini the l1llllllng game. ·" .. • An individual confron~crq tS set up between Newpbrt ·• Lee Haven, a 6-4 aenlor, and Huntington's Ltt Walten fa..3J ·and Tony Cate (6-S). ·;·.., Marina, meanwhile. aiust fight off the possibility of a letdown after its record-sbat· tering 74-70 win over Compton Wednesday night. The Yikes were primed· for Complon for seve ral da~·anc are now up against a fo«ltbat ripped Villa Park, 83-66, afte( the laUer had been most. iJn.. pressive in hand l·i.P g Westminster. • 1 •· Corona del Mar draw!. lh~ unenviable task of meetina Warren for the secood time tJ)is ~asOD. The Sea Kings nipped War· ren, 54-53, in the rettot Lakewood Tournament and must now rebound from ita loss to Huntington Beach. Westminster is hea·vlly favored to turn back Magnolia at Marina and go on to meet the winner of the Tustin. Ramona struggle • !~· 1,iln- solation honors Friday riigbl • ! ·• j I ,, ~ •: ,. ·. ' .. -" Thr ·'-colle! 'JuU Ir •' ..... • The to th< . top t• -p .1111• bolttl . cir ph time I Till undet has a Wh scout Undo Tu' only ,Geori s. Th ".10. Tiu .;team . an°' ·.f"batllt ' ... Of "°' to think ·~ta1le1 An ·'11hc "W . four 1 ....... .playE ' .. w '41pent Jllayl: l!llici _. SI c " ... " " .. "' D~ .. . ,, . ., " ... .. ·n Cl ... " ·" " 1t Or .. •• .. ... " Co .... " .. ·.n G1 ... " : t Fr ,, tll " .. ' ,. ,. ' ,, "' " .. .... 11 SI ... ... n " " "' " " 1( St 1• Ct " M ,, :it ' .. .... !! I £ 'il!' ~ ... ... .. ... ... ... j, • • '""''' -c ... "" .... Mii"' ----~--------·---------..-....-..-.,.,...,...,.-..-,__,,--.... .......,..............,.... ............. ..----------'0 ............ -... ---~ ........ ~-.... ~-----~-~---------.,.. .. ~. !.'ff ift· Scouts JC Quint;ets; lnt;ent Lett;er Isn't New Tim Tift, coach or lhe winleu UC 'Jrvlnt --!hall team , Is .earnestly llCOUlfng junior college bukethall players W. week during a ,'luD In the Anteater seuon set aside for final . •urns. Yt•r and have a new coach wbo 11 dolnl a fllle job." * * * .... The tcOUting misslOM that have taken him to the Chaffey loumament where most of th• ·top two-year teams In Soul.hem Califomla are C'J!lpeUDg, could be for one pJtpQSe only. Wltl Ille lootl>all ,._ IMWool lllem, )olMw c:ollqe pld......,.,. .,....., - ...... lalltlll1 wttl ~ tcllool ,i.,.n _.., to ceavbtce &Item tt attnd tltetr ttltNrls. OnoJw Cout .... GoNeo .... """" Ill Ille pme llktrtd ... Dder Ute Amt M. mlolotnlloo, -_.iq qalMt O It k other .. •111aaUJ C""1 .... ,... .abe Anteater mentor ii looldng for llelght to bobter the 1971>711rvine team. But the player · dt playera with such height will have a tough ~me making b~ squad. 1a....,....,.... __ •. _., l1te1t "" bbldl • lbldeet act it Is ltped. la th partlat.lar tclllftrnee t. wldclli tlM letter Tift has • varsity team composed lar1ety of h tipff, &Ul ... • "We've trie4 ·tll set -~ a lt:tttr ltttwee• the twe ldtoolt he"' tor seweral yean," CNdl. by Shaekldord " Golde• Wnt A)'I. uwe even W OM qulmt.teveral ynrs ap ud at .the lut mbMltie, district .. mlal1traten: told a1 It would ltOt be pat late effecL" HOWARD HANDY * * * underclusmen and assistant Jerry Hulbert has an outstanding freshman squad. Shack1eford and coach George Hartman of Saddleback were ftCllH'.'Onlmltal when asked if they preferred the state j'tlnior college plaYoff system now in vogue u compared to tht bowl eames of several yean ago. "JI a coach llgures to win hll league, the playoffs are the thing. If not, then I would say the bowl eames should take precedence. There are merits to both systems," Shackleford ays. · . Why does tile Anteater mentor feet he must scout junior college teams so thoroughly? UndoubtedJy it's a question of height. Two starting sophomores glve the team Us only edge in this department. Center Bill .George stands g.7 and forward Bill Moore Is 6- 8. The three starting seniors are 6-4, &-2 and 5- .~ lO. '. Thttt of the top stars on the freshman '·team are 6-3, 6-4 and 6.S which doesn't pose ."'an ominous problem to the opposition in the : battle of taUer players. "Bowl 1ames are great if they W'OIJ!d guarantee every champion a 1ame. But they take second place teams too often and we wouldn't have been considered this lut year even though we won our conference," Hartman says. :;, . Of course. one checkillg lhe Anteater ~rd "°' four straight defeab would question the Pointing to Fresno's conquest of Fullerton in the large school c:hamplonshlp game, Hartman was asked how he felt about such 1 situation with a team that had a 5-3 regular season record. Under the bowl game system the Rams would not have been COll!idered yet they proved to be the best team in the state. thinking behind THt's trips to Chaffey for ~.:.ta11er players. •. An analysis of the situation by Hulbtrt isn't · ill hopele~ as the record would indicate. ••we figured it was possible to lose the first . foor games with the caliber of competition we . yrere facing. Three of the four games were ,played on the road against strong teams. • "''Nhen we play Tahoe College in the "If we hid betn trying to get a bowl bld, we would have had to run up scores in some of our games. 1 don't think this Is fair lo the op- posing team and it certainly isn't fair to the kids sitting on our bench who would otherwise get a chance to play Jn onHided games as many of them did thls year." • tiptner ol the UCI tournament, we will .be playing a much stronger team than antidpated. They are twice .., strong u Jut Coach Dick Tucker at Orange Coast College, 1 veteran of both l}'ltems, wu not available for comment. ·, Jaycee Grid Log BOVTB COAST CONl!ERENCE CWRRITO$ 'ZI ~ IM<h ..,, llo Hondo 4' Ml. SAC i! S.n DI-Mts• • Dr1111e c .,.,1 S.nf1 ,.,,... e irul1ert.1 .,, .. 1..-ct 1' S.n D'-9e l'"ULLlllTON ·n Cv•r"* M "ler~ ..311 El C1M!,. 1t Or•nn cont "'1 t:,~ Fl!" ff Cen-ITOS u , ..... ,,,.. ,. Sin Dl"o Mtu -4' Gro1tmoril ;ff ••t.nfltld • ' Frtlno MT. SAC , " " " .. " " » ' • , " " ,l • • " " ,. " 1S 1111/'trtldt If ,tt Golcleft Wnt d I L-Beld'I 0 ·14 Ctrrlloo U. lt l'ulltrlOll u. 14 °''"" Co.11 17 'l2 s.tn Dltot<t lS 11 S•n 01-.o Miit 71 . a S1nl1 Ant 32 O•AHel COAIT )I Golden Wnt J11 fl Cvt~H 7 21 H•r.bor ll 20 Fullerton "lt U Stnl-,,,.. 11 14 Ct rrll'DI 23 17 Mt. Sl\C '' ,, i tn Ol'" ~ 11 , Sift Dlt9o , UN DI!!~ 1, Greamont tl /t """'" '' I kll'lfldll 911 '"i:E 'l ,. Ill nDevtMtH t4 ,.)Ji!, SAC '""Or•-CO.it ~Cem11>1 SAii 111190 Ml'SA . \a v.u .... .,.._ ~ Stuthwnt.t'll ,, ""' "'"°' 11,Dllll'I :Ori"" COis! .. . "'' uli.rton n ' • , • • " " " n " • " " • • • ' SANTA AHA • "~ " " Rlv.nldt " • GO!dtll Wnt " 14 t'" OIT. M-" '\ ~wig,-... 1 " ' 1, itrrl!OI .. • Fu!Jer'IM ~ S3 Mt. SAC • SOVTBERN CAL. CONl!ERENCE C'l' .. ltltS • l'~llffloft ~ • OrenN CGHI " • Jllru' " , .,, ""f;dl!IO • • Los Anoe ' ~ • ··-" u lf11t LOI Anlet• n • •• -" • Goldlo'I Wftl " lfAIT LOI AN•ILIS " ··-., " c~~ ' " S.11!• Monltl " .. MoorP•rk r, " Golden Wnt " LOI All811H " .. (l'Pftll " " """" " " ··-.. .OLOIN WIST .. Ortl!Of COIH .. .. Ml. SAC n " S.11to Ant • 11 i•nl1 ll•ri:r• n '''Loa -lei " ·-" ~ ....... • • LOJ A,.._IM " ~ c ... ,..,, • MAltlOtt ,. t ... , •eotdl " " S.rr 01 ... Mnt. " " Or111t1 CCl91t " » ..,...,twr• " " RIP HOl'!Oo " " CyprflS • • Golder\ Wtal w " Etlt LOI A""I" " .. LK Ar,Gltln " " ,, .. .,. " . LOS AMeaLIS ' Ventvr1 " " 5111 Dltte • " S.n lltrftlrdl,. " .. ComPIOll ' ~ cv,...,q • " E111 lot A"'tl"' " " lll:lo HondO " " Goldtn W11t • " ··-• IUO HOllltO » Glerld1lt " 17 Clfnls " 'If Cerrltot " ,. ~·H<lt"' .. "= l\ lt Wnt 21 LOI """'-• '' ,,,,... • b 1111 Lt. ... ,,..., .. » DESERT CONl!ERENCE . i ~Jl:r:ITOW ff nYING rui! by WAYNE CHASE H1•t ye11 ..,,, -""··-' why t "yo11• Wtllh fto fly1 A1k a 111111 wh• fl i11 Nr r'••111tt. H1 w!ll !.1 111r• f• 1•1 Y•ll it't •• ,., lh•11 '"'-•11t• ...... ·' •II• hi9hwty1, Th. tit••"' •f •••rv ,,;v•t• pllot 11 tii1t cr•t••c.01111fl"f h lft. ""· "••11•~· •f fhlt tvp• ,, flyillf •t• tOo 1t11ll'l•r•111 I• iltl, C.11flt1.:"1. 111 ., • .,, ,1.ft. C.Of'l•t w tit fh1t flr1t •ftc•u11I· ... witii N4 •••tl1••· Confi· I• ti-• 111 yo11r 1olf !.091111 f• tl'flW •• ye11 ritl1 •111 v•11r flr11 ... "". ... '''" tho it11fn1· .... ,.h rith• .,, .... pl.11• •kyt yo11r t•11trol. Aflt• "'"'' •' c.lowtlt •114 t~, tit. '""''' I-ptl11ft l'••• wl119fip1. '1"011 , •• 11,, 111111 yo11 "'••• ,11,,11 tht ~'"'' ... .,... ~ How••••, f111•tl•111 ft llftto VICToa VALLn '! lull• Ut llt • ·--• C&l'w, II IM btWt ll Ml" In Jtdnt. v "' V«* • 1~ v.n.,, " ..... • Ml,.. C•1 • " " " " • " ' n n .. " " " A " • ~ • ' tt ,j • • • " " • fl " • ' " " • • ' j , ':1 " .. • ll ~ " .. " • " • CAMf'INe I MOlllTAlllmu• I THI ..... -... ,• II MOUNTAIN ~==2 ~TRAIL =-~l!':E 9 11%1t1tc.w•r cw .... i wml TMM A9 .... • ~ -·-............ • llOllllTAlll-......... Buy The DAILY PILOT Just for 1Petnuts1 .. "· TI!, •r111 c•11"try ,Uot Utl tll hit •1kltl,, flff l•lltt, a~ • teM •irPl•n• t•. flM th lt ft•M•111 •f th• 1•111. D• ••• htv1 th1t fll•llt•r 1plrlt1 Trv flylftf! Al MA•tott AYIATIOlll wt lflW ,.,. '""" c.• ,.... .. !"': <-..tr .......... ""' ....... <-,.~ ............ <'""'*• t• """' twlll -tlM A..,..-UI Ml Mw, W. ~ ............ llf'<nfl ................... r11-tt MAlltolt AYIATtofll, "" W1nior A .... , M6>11 .. 0,.. ~ WllftM .......... .., .... ~ -,..._ ...... ""' 1• t for • ..,....... • WATCH NEXT WIEK ,OR "BUSJNISS ,LYING" DAil Y l'llllf SJ Monarchs . In 75-60 Cee Basketball 'Seagren E.nds Retire~ent ' Sears Prices Effective thro Sat., Dec. 20th Alt.tale P•1111en1er -__ Di::s:.J;.Jl•.rai.l!U~- Tr.:.d I.ire Gaennl« G•.,_....,d Ma;,..,1: All f1ilurn ul th.r lirt ttWlfiflll (ronl r•DntllJ l"09d ti....b or dtftttt i11 in.tn••lt or -k· rr1111Jhip, ··o.-tt-....... : fe>r * "'• f/l 1hl orifi•al tf'lt..J. Wh11 S.im •·111 O..; R'1>1ir "'"I pull(• tul'l't •no char~. !111M <lltf clflihttt, IA 'lf<ltllll'lp fQr 1M •itt, otpllll:t-11. cl'lu,ii111 ,.,..r1 •he proportion ol c..rrt111 rt11tl• lldli111 IM"i<t ,1111 Ftdn~lh ciM T.cr ll'IM ttpr\"KlllS 1rt.d u ... d Tre1d1"e1,..0.1 Ga•ninl"' C•.nntoe<>d A~h1o1: T~.d ""'""""'" fw H-1.oN1 The munbnrl tmn<k lp«ifiPd. •h.e S."" Wiii 0.1 111 n<M..,.. '°' fM II"", f'l!Jllo,rf lt.Chqi"'& !he Cllll'Clll ,..,.1. M'llifll pt'KC pl ... f(lkrtJ f», cite Ta ln1 tM. lotklw:'lf tl\Q.flllCt: MMl:M C.•t-A.11-- 11., l~ llXlll 27 111 l9 1015 NlllQwtkl 141 Ntlll flll L!if'lt f'I A\/>fwe ~ti f'hlll\nMP (il ' ' c G G 121 l lro.llell!I fl)) (ell!'lel fj ) ._ UI lltdrteuu (Ill "*" CONDOMINIUM ACCOMOOATIONS STILL AVAILABLE FOR THE FIRST WEEK OF CHRISTMAS CALL I 209 I 753°2220 BEAR VALLEY llllnl PAii, HIGHWAY 4, CALIF. STORE HOURS : Santa An .. Fullerton 9:30 e.m. -9:00 p.m. Fashion ltlancl 10:0 a.m. -9:30 p.m. Mon. thru Sat. Fridar 1130 AM .. IOilO PM; . Sat.dsrlt30 AM tie 10130 PM15-da1J2No.•IPM; M-la79'30AM "'110130PM; T .... t1JOAM to JO:JOPM; w.-,,.&7 1130 AM .. 1130 PM Full 4 Ply NYLON 21MONTH GUARANTEE 95 6.50xl3 Tube(.,.. Blackwall• Plu• 1.79 F.E.T . And Old Tire e 4 octual pli .. of nylon for extra •trength e Greater: resistance to impacts, moisture, flexing and heat e Patented contour safety shoulden ror bet .. ter cornering control, fast recovery from pavement drop-offs e Excel)ent high 1peed performance. Sa fely in reserve when you. need it SIZE l11ADE.I f.E.T. SIZE 11t•~ .. ,A PRICE PRICEiF.E. T. Tabelett Blackwall Tabeletia Whilew•ll 6.50xl3 9.95 1.19 6.50xl3 12.95 1.79 7.35xl4 12.95 2.07 7.3Sxl4 15.95 2.07 1.75x14 14.95 2.20 7.75x14 17.95 uo '2.36-.. ' 8.25.14 1'6.95 8.25Xl4 19.95 2.36 7.75xJS· 14.95 .. 2.21 S.5Sx14 21.95 . 2.57 . . 7.75•'5 17.95 2.21 • • '· . , ' ~ Alk About Sean C~n•enienr ·credit P111W ;; • ,----------------------------------~---~----------~· _.,..,A...,.,m .......... Ol,.,,11 '°""'~.-Mitt JICOwtMM1 ,! """"-•1.JUt ~,,.1.1s1.1 '• :;-'i. I ~ -,....., ..... ot J.1°".', 0 Mtll Cll-.C.. tol'O AH w:nt ~ tD ,.11u. .. t.'1•1,"' Mtll WITA ...... 'U·IDl1 .,,,. """" I I _.Ml .. Jttt,Nl2" .. I llrxl'IWOOltl:>f41141 ...,...,7.2100 "fl'l..O...C.04"111 ••tt'lfOl, ... l , .... l'nt t A" CICMM. ..... 11 ..,_OI 1W111 .....,_ •tt.Jt11. lSl-'1'11 "'11"'(.QJIQ PW.A J4Jlll -P\ f.lfll t ,________________________ -----~--------------- \ . ,. ......... ....., ....... f;MA//411NDP.a.hltltilrlJ.._ .. JPA. .__... "l..W• .. 9'101• .... 1~•YlwM111)la... ~ ... " • I ' i I , ~ • '· t • r y " • • I " • • •I ,. I k t • ' • ,, n I. g • ~#PCClllC&Sl!!§SS@l!llll!&~J"Paz .. 1111;•0 .. z151•4•a .. aaaa .. a,.~Q•4+-.. •t,.."",f""'+••"'l!'t•P~•ee•ewee ... s;p••A2"4t•1 ... ~sz,.. ...... ,~,~'*"~"""''~'~'"""r~•~·~~~•,...•~•,...•~••**~~-···••P••··-+~-~~~~--~~~-··~--- . ~ Oo\11.'Y 'llOT _...,, -18, lM CIF Slnted to Sanction Girls Athletic Events '· 'rbt dlltafC slde of 1thleUc competition ln hi&h school circles mty like on added luster this year with the revelaUon that • CJF swim t.. · championship meet may be held In May or t June of 1970. A ~nt survey by the CJF discloses tbat of 145 returns, llf favor a girls' inter~holastlc .· athletic program and that Jto or the 145 ,.. responw indicate J>rO&rams involving girls , • athletics are already ln progress. ~· tt's possible swimming and tennis may ht tn the offing in the near future for girls' ClF •' rompetilion. ' .·: * * * ~. Foutain Vallty wre1tler Bob Walker was -•·· buy ii &M: recat qudruplar bolted by the •· ·--.. --·· r Re plued Ml rtvak from Edison (1:31), El ... .. ,. •• ,. .. ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, ROGER CARI.SON .*""****"**"*""" M11lca over SU Dkp (U.ll) la IM7. * * * Looking back on the '69 footba11 campaign. here's how Cal-Prep football maguine listed the top 10 CIF Southern Section teams prior to the start of the campaign: I. Anaheim 2. El Rancho 3, Lakewood 4. St. Pau l 5. West Covina I. Santa. Barbara 7. Redlands 8. Blair t. Mater Del tb. Lbara. All IO were listed in the publicaUon's listing of its Top 20 for the state. * * * Ben Cummlq1 of Su Clemute JUik la ttlll •t It in bis attmlpt to COGVlntt the CIF powers that tbe 1,• yard frte1tyje " t,at meter freestyle bekta& Iii prep 1whn metta • T b e Trltoa coac• put bU sWor RudJ. Smither throu&h an eqterlmel:tal l,llt nt~ . jog recently and bis pro&qe Id a ICllool record for t.lte en:nt ID ll:Jt.t . * * * Coach George CaMy tias three brothers on the varsity swim team at L•guna Beach. Charlie (a senior), Don (a jtm.lor) and Amory (a sophomore) Ware fonn the bulk of the Artists' scoring punch . ' . • •' Mtclna (ii ltCOlldl) ud Wn tminster fzt ~· aecond1) In coevlncin1 fashion. •'· * * * Tbe sophomore is bUled as an excellent candidate for league honors in the future. * * * The Crestview Leque mlgbt very well be t.be tou1best baaketb11l clreall iJI Orange County. SCRAMBLING FOR BALL -Orange Coasl College's Paul Holmes (right) and Gahick ·BaJT of the UC Irvine frosh team scramble for loose ball in rect:nt action. OCC and Golden West dropped games in the first round of the Chaffey Invi tational basketball tourney 'Wednesday. The Pirates fell rt.o LA Harbor and Golden West succumbed. to Fullerton. :: flunlington Beach High'• basketb a l l : iacilities took another tum fur the better with With Foothill an d VIiia Park po1tln1 lm· preulve w I n 1 backed ap by the Uke1 of Orange &a d Saa Clemente, It'• bard to fl.ad f1ult wttll the loop'• basketball ahOIUe1. the ncent purchase of a .eeond clock and :: tc0reboard for the other end of the gym. •' Oller Boosten received donations totaling : •• $1,000 for the item. Hopefully it will be in , ... good working order shortly. .... ·Suruet and Garden Grove Le.ague fans might argue the matter, however . ),• * * * * * * 1• Blafr'I one-point mar)tn of victory f!l-%7) . GVft' Bldtop Ami l I• U.e CIF AAAA football ~ cllamplonllllps la1t week was tbe first time ' anyoe hu WOii tbe larce sc~l1' title by that Afarina draws no easy assignment in the upcoming 32·team basketball extravag8JU8 at Covina High at the end of the year. 'Mle Vikes must open with San Gabriel and if succeuful, meet the winner or the Pim X· Cathedral test the following day. mlrJID in ZZ yean. ~ lllt team to win by ooe wa1 Santa ,Flag Grid . Playoffs AtOCC ~ret arta ltams will rtpruent Orange County in the SCMAF nag football -champion1hip playoffs this weekend at Orange Coast College. 'I'hC·playofls begin Saturday mormr. at 9 a.m. with games being played all day. The first or thrte division title games will be settled at noon Sunday \'lith tht other two cham· pion&hip games to follow at two-hour lntervall. Two teams from Huntington Beach bAve games scheduled at 9 a.m. Saturday. A third ;11;nd fourth arade team, e~ tered in the C division, meets Long Beach, as does the A team which ls made up of seventh and eighth graders. A team from Fountain Valley , composed of fifth add sixth graders, has drawn a rirst round bye and will ~ in the second round at 1 p.m. Saturday. All three teams won In the Orange COunty playofls held last weekend in,Garde n Grove. The nag football playoffs are spon80red by various recn:ation departments in the Southland. The Cost.a Mesa Recre.atioo Dept. is hosting this weekend's playoffs. Prep Cagers In Holida y Tolµ'lle ys Thrff Orange Coast area prep balketball teams -Hun- ti.natan Beach, Mater Dei and San Clemente -are entered in the Rancho Alamitos lnvlta· lional buketball tournament be&inning Monday and Tues- day and llnWllni up Friday and Saturday. Meier Del m..U Rolling Hilla in the lldllfter Monday ~vtninc w b 11 e Huntlncton -. "'4 .Sen Cledlelll• ~ all ,,._,ttr" ,In tJ>,o.1 T ,..m. eocoun • ' ... ~ ... 1t:.,1 •i::u1~ reatC; er& ~ed N!' I uil ~ UCI Takes Break Until Tourney Opens After a rough start thal sa\Y lhem lose th eir first four games, coach Tim Tift and the UC Irvine basketball i e' a m hope to get a fresh start following a two-week layoff by hosting seven top teams in the UCI Invitational tournament starting Dec. 26. The Anteaters will face an improving Tahoe C o 11 e g e quintet (9 p.m.) on Friday with Chapman and Cal Stat~ (Fullerton) meeting in the other half of the upper bracket at 4 o'clock that aftemeon. Northern Arizona Ind Cal Poly (Pomona) will P,t1he af· fair under way a~.2 with Oc· cidental and San · Fernando Valley State meeting in the night preliminary It 7. "We have bad a rough start but I think ~ can begin to put everything together in our tournament." Tift says. In the ·ftrst four games, senior guard Steve Sabins is leading the scoring with a 20.0 average followed closely by seruor forward Jeff Cun· bingham with a 19.0 mark. euMhiaham lead.!J the team in rebounds with an l .i average agalrut major com- petition. The tournament Is sponsortd by the Kiwanis clubs ol.·. Corona del Mar and Newport. Center. lt runs three days -Friday, Saturday and Monday. JV Basketball M~llll ... M ... cit UU Ht) llllSM Cl•rtUI !71 f C11 llllrth•m 0..0W8l 111) F" 117> ll•lt~ W•!kff 1111 c UI C••hon Whitt 111) G U l Cu1frall Wl!IUlt kl 1111 C. (11) T'--'" Scere ~, 0wai1 .. li""U1>91on 10 1' ' l:J-.a l::'.dlton II I( It $-49 SCO<lnt 1ubllo: Hur1t1n;toll -WINW 1; l:d!son -Graham '- . . . SPECIALS FOR CHRISTMAS iftOCUlars ~~~ :.~-: srrCIAL $21.88 Stadium Seat ~: ..... .,.c••• $4.89 WIATHl l CHECK -RAINFALL -TIMPIU.TUll $1 99 WIND 5PllD & Dll lCTION • .Puttil'!g Partner ";;;1 "i,:~.. $5. 99 LF90 Football ::-;, .,.c,., $5. 95 Swim Mask ~:~. "·" snc: .. S4.99 Door Bar Gvm .... 11·'~ •• c,., $4.88 Kuf -Pak Ice Free Chest Sqorter Chill Master Turner Propane Camp Lantern 3.2~ 4.89 • 11.99 Poker Chip Rack With Chips 3.99 Lectra -So~ Reg. 9.95 Spec. 7.69 llandwarrner & Jone Fluid '4.69 Daiwa Sjiniiing Reef 5.99 .. iapafa Klife 3.99 -Slit Teanis lk'esses, 80 Dresses at Cost or less . Theri11f ~11 Kit 9.99 I •, 'I ~-* ... ·* '< M_, a.a -.a s;..;w.....,S 1/2 & 5/8 f..1. -'4!tii"];-.~lf«.DeiYIROll· --INWllllNIU llWI ii p.m. -·Im AJam!IOo VI wm.11eot Masonite 12,95 & 14,95 111 Chaffey Tourney Ori"" (M lt (6-11 llOJQh 1Clnd11or1 • s11c•1lmtl1r JOl"OI~ liolmtl Ollflt <M Pl•n Toltll .. " ,, 111 l 1 l ~ t O I H • 5 ' ll 10 1 • 21 I o o 2 0 0 2 0 2 0 1 2 I 0 0 ) 1t 1 1l6~ Antonio tripped Citrus, 75-72. Phil J ordan paced the scor-P.:t1~711n Ing attack for U1e Pirates with ~:"~';'!' 21 points while Jim Kindelon M1•u11c11 hit 18 and Rick Stickelmaier.· ~i;l· LA H•rllot UJl " • II •I I• • ' 10 J l 11 followed with 13. · -~:.linev Harbor jumped out to an c.i:a'1:11 early lead and was never " ' ' ' . " ' . 1 0 1 1 ' 0 0 B 1 0 1 , J 1 0 I Q o I a 0 0 1 0 l6 II 1' ll .;'• ,. •, ,, Slazenger Xtra Duty Tennis Bans-· • Can of 3/1.75 Oaz. 6.95 Pennsylvania Xtra Duty Tennis Balls- ' • 3/1.89 Doz. 750 Dunlop Fort Tennis Racket Frame Only 14.95 Strung Nylon 18.95 Kramer Autograim Frames 16.95 Davis & Bancroft Rackets 14.95 .to 40.00 Men's Tennis Shorts 4.95 to 12.95 Boys' Tennis Shorts 4.95 Men's Tennis Shirts . 5.00 · 6.00 -7.00 Sleeveless Tennis Sweaters . 9.95 Men's Tennis Shoes Converse Jack Purcells .. Leather Tennis Shoes 7.75 8.95 12.95 • Lad"ies Tennis Shoes . 7.25 & 7.95 Speed& Swim Suits & Trunks Table Tennis Sets & Paddles Horse Shae Sets & Croquet Sets Handball Gloves & Balls ---· ~ , Sat. till 6 p.m. if 1tte t1 • problem •.. DON'T WORRY ..• we heve 1hoe sites of some 25,000 women on file . , . end will be happy to clue you. if perchance her sit• is not on file , you cen pley house detecti ... e in her closet. you 'll find the site inside he r right shoe. either wey, you can't mi11. but if there should b1 e sit e verient due to styling, we'd insist on making it righ t through ••c:h enga. want to make hit? a Give Her ... • genuine by dominic Romano : store high wi th bi'Own ' macthing handbags. .t.NAHZIM _,_ NEWPORT llACH tfcst 1 • _p.,,..m."-~ .. -··--< BISletmll Goal & Net • • 3.95 & 5.95 OPEN MOn. titru Fri. till 9 p.m. Sen CJ.-e · ' BaShllallS · • , , 5.95 to 1195 till Christmas ''" •• ,.;,,, "~ c'"''""' f ~ ... Rlncho.,/\llDIJ\OS ................................. ICllCllCllliilCllCllCllCllCl .................................. 1~ DAT CH.t.1t•tl l .. VlflD, I AMKAM•1t1CAllD Oil M•Sfllt t.ia1tol· · . • • . ' s1 ti\ be! de VE .. g• tu ch th lh • 1~ I 11' Oii nc \VO de F1 67 sp CE 84 b, to or G; ~h . ;~i: '" l it fi! pi In fi! µ pl lo 11• .. al In fr C; oh le de Si 01 SE R. do w h1 w th st th is c. al sl· fl Ji ti: h; w bi \'I OI II ,, 1·• ., \ • --------····-·-· ·······-· ··--···-··-· ,, . .---... ----------·· ---~-------·----~--~ Thursday, Otcttnbfr 11!, 1969 DAILY PltOT 3:J . WHAT'S liNoN - O"'"°Rs? .., ..... ~ : , Art's Landing, Davey's Locker and San Clemente Sportflshing report that fishing is up and down. All of the landings are running surface fishing and rock cod boats, but best eatchq.Jll'f.._ coming off the boats fishing deep witter. The action for bonito, barracuda and bass has been very·s1ow on some days and hot again on others. A few large white sea bass are also being brought to ·gaff on the ~ day boats to round out the deep sea pie· ture.· Small boat fishermen fishing in Newport Harbor are chee:kin .. in a fair riumber of bay bass and croaker at the Pavtlion and at Art's' Landing, but for the most part the acUon can be rated spotty. · 'f,_' Thf best bite is On the incoming and outgoing tides, ~d anglers trolling:deep Tanning plugs and feathers are out-pro:ducing still flshenpen using live bait. Phil Tozer, at the wheel at Davey's Locker, an-' nounced that the annual \Vhale hunt trips will begin this weekend. The large' boat "Island Holiday" J.vill be departing from the Balboa Pavilion every day at l p.m. For more information and advance reservatiOns phone 673-5245 VAIL LAKE PODUCES BASS & CRAPPIE Last· weekend's bass fishing tournament and clinic sponsored by the Southern California Bass Masters, was called a success. The Bass Masters fished for two days and picked up 84 bass \Vhose weight averaged out at more than 21h pounds each. The group of 16 fishermen did not keep any bass under 12 inches. Bill Young of Sun Valley took top honors in the tournament, weighing in 19 pounds-4 oz. of bass. ' Most of the fi sh were taken in about 30 feet of water :On rubber worms, Purple Bandits and Smithwick Water· Gators. The bronzebacks are hiding in the trees and off ~he rock ledges. ,. Other fishermen on the lake found excellent crappie :fishing anchoring in about 20 feet of water. Dave Rave!l· .i:roft and Elmer Goodwin of Los Angeles weighed in limits of crappie which totaled more than 48 pounds of fish. Yello\v and white jigs fished slowly off the bottom produced the best results. Lake Hensha\v, in San Diego county, has been giv· ing up fair numbers of crappie to 2 pounds but bass MEAT ON THE TABLE -This 1·s the result of a f C l f . hi h b 1 o os a Mesa hold up a snow goose while Rossi is ng as een 5 ow. morn1·n5's hunt at ••e Roper -Ranger's Hunt Club h h" h d f U ·th 1· "l f d k d h dd. to I k · ·u 1 as 1s an s u w1 a 1mi o uc s an a p ea-Casitas, Cachuma, Piru and Pu ings ne a es in in San . acinto. Lou Csenar (l~ft) of Balboa Island sant. Ro ssi's dog sits in front after having a field .Los Angeles county all report fair trout action on , and general man-ager of the club helps Ray Rossi day retrieving the downed game. planted fish , with bass fishing being on the slow side. ----"-------"--------'---'-'--'....:..:..::__..:.:..:._...:....::..c:::e....:...:::...:::...:::::::...:e.:::::.::_ _____ _ · Big Bear Lake is slow with only a few trout runnin~ 'f.o 2'h pounds being taken by shore fishermen on TNT ~o'lting cheese bait and salmon eggs. ·1,.J DUCK HUNTING PROSPECTS GOOD " ·. There should be good duck huntin g this weekend in Dave Hill Laguna Nips Diahlos An ArnayBrat , Montana Woman Becomes Deadeye BOZEMAN. Mont-Antonia Rhein. a !t-3~ black haired beauty at Montana State University. U literally gunning tor a berth on the next U.S. Olympic team. Miss Rhein, who prefers Toni to Antonia and lives in Stevensville, Mont .. when not attending school, said she has been aiming for the Olympic r~fle team position for the past six years,. "This is just 8b0ut all I've been thin.king of." the female sharpshooter said. "Up until now. they· ve never allowed a woman to be a member of the team. In 1968 competition women could shoot with t ea m members, b_ut ·nqt compete." Toni utilizes a n un- c on ve nt io n a 1 Anschutz German-Austrian . target rifle in her pursuit. · "It weights 18 pounds and has to be braced while I'm fir- ing," Toni said in a telephone interview. The rifle doesn't look like a weapon . Someone described it as a home-made bass fiddle without the washtub. How does a pretty woman student become attracted to the deadly art of shooting in this age of mini-skirts and gun control? ''I'm an Army brat," she said matter-of-factly. "My father is an officer in the Army and I just picked it up while he was stationed at Ft. Hnachuca, Ariz. \Vhen the Army transferred him to Ft. Harrison. Ind .. t signed up the Pion~r Jr. Rifle Club of Indianapolis." the-first rifie ·marksmanship class for milllar)'> dependent1 under a sponsored summer program. Toni currently claims 11 na· Uonal shooting records, the biggest of which is the 20-shot. offhand reeord in the standinC posltion.· In capturing it. Toni had 1o pick orr 19$ bull's-eyes out of a possible 200. She got it in 1968, At MSU, Toni is a certified NRA inStructOr and has taught physical education classes in marksmanship for the past three years. This year she it the priplary marksmanship in• structor: The 197l Olympics a t ~1unich, Germany, is not the only thillg Toni is setting her sights on, She plans to marry an Anny officer Jan. JO. No, she said, he doesn't shoot. Toni is a member of the Women's Army Corps and is on a scholarship from tht Anny and she'll be com· missioned an officer in June. She has won dozens of state and regional championships and recently took the Sectional Indoor championship touma· ment sponsored by t h t Missoula Rifie Club. Toni's.coach , Sgt. Maj. Jack Greenway, (Ret.), rates her as a "very strong candidate for this year's All-American rifie team." He also said sher has a distinct possibility of becoming the first woman on the U.S. Olympic rille team . "'I love shootlng.'"Toni said. "l think it is the greatest thing in the world." She not only signed up. but Collegi"ate at the age or 15 was a member of the Pioneer Maids who placed rourth in the nation in <:::age Scores 1963. In 1966 she was the high Junior champion in the Na· ••11 · l f'rlnc••on 67, Htvv 611 t1ona Rifle A s1s o c i a t i 0 n co1umbl1 to. l'0telh•m "· er \Vomen's Posta Matchen. corntll '1, Roch11t1r st Her father, Lt. Col. Leo A. No•th C1ro11n1~1~ "· Auburn ff fihein , (ret.), wa s transferred l<Y. Wnl•Y•n IO, Ev1n1v111e 74 . . . p Clemson 10•, Alab.lm• ts again, this time to uerto W••• F,,..s, s1. e111 c1rot1n1 n Rico. M1ew111 11 M1110Url •1. Colo. Sl. V. 5S "I was rea y disappo inted O.P1u1 ·tJ, st. M••v'• c1t1f. " all parts of Southern California. A storm front is wor~· ing its way down and pushing down .d~cks ~nd geese in front of it, so reports game off1c1als in Northern California. Latest Pro To Enter \•:hen I discovered there was Ohio v. M, No. 111. n Laguna Beach High cap-the 50 free and Slowsky 'von for ~1isslon Viejo as the no rifle team," the MSU ~~:;r ~11~h.M~~h.";;_°" e'1 • The buildup of honkers at the Salton Sea is pro- ducing a few birds for Christmas, but hunters who in- tend to bag a big honker on the \Vister Retuge had better do it this weekend as the season closes on the refuge .. Sunday. _ · The remaining part of the lmperial Valley \\1ill be open to goose hunters throughout the general du ck season. Lou Csenar, general manager of the Roper· Ranger's Hunt Club in San Jacinto called to report good duck hunting and that snow geese and bonkers are Working over the ponds. The club has memberships available for duck and rheasanl hunters and is only 9:0 minutes from Oran)?e County. For more information on the club phone (714) 673-2378 or 675-2818, both are local numbers. Low fog in the San Joaquin Valley made for poor hunting over the past \Veekend. But officials at the Kern Wildlife Refuge and the Gilbreath Bros. Duck Cl ub say that the poor shooting last \veekend will make for great shooting this weekend. The pigt.on season got off to a very slo\v start and the prospects for this \Veekend are not any better. There Is _iust not the normal population of birds in Southern California even thou gh the acorn and pinion crops are above average. The most nrocluctive areas were on the \Vestern slopes of the Sierras from Fresno south. The usually ,JZood areas of Paso Robles, Frasier Mountain and San Jacinto produced very few birds, even though the bun· ting pressure was heavy. Quail are widely scattered in the foothills and very hard to worX. Hunting the hills of San Diego last "'eekend this writer managed only to bag a handful of ·birds. Our small party spotted a lot of coveys but before we could get into a working position the birds flushed out many yards ahead of shotgun range. This has been the story told by most scatter gunners this year, and can probably be blamed on the excellent feed and water conditions throughout the state. SOFT SELL SAM By Marvin Myen " ... 'O ---,, .... -.... 1.-...... ~ \ 11fM ON Tile ~ DOU.•• AAVE you C£>T I '' A GFA~M1 CRACKE!O !-NJ> MILK Fl)GlfT 2 - Dave Hill, a slender touring professional from Jackson, ~1ich.igan, is the latest eitrsnt in the $52,000 Southern California Open Golf Tourna- ment at Mission Viejo Golf Club according to tournament director Jack Fleck. Hill was recently named winner of the Vardon Trophy for the best scoring average on the pro golf tour for 1969. He is also the No. 2 money l\'in.ler with $155,849. In 90 rounds of tournament competition. Hill had a n average of 70.3-44 strokes. He won three tournaments during the year. Other touring pros set to play lhe tricky course include Billy Maxwell, Bobby Nichols. Bob Rosburg, Al Geiberger and Dave Douglas. Former pro great Lawson Little will be represented in the event. His · son, Lawson, Jr .. now living at Pebble Beach, has C011t.acted Fleck for a spot in the tournament. Play in the M-hole open gets under way Dec. 26 .with a practice round followed by the pro.am on Dec. 27-28. First round play will be held on the following Monday, Tuesday and Friday with time off for practice and New Year's celebrating in between. Final two rounds are :;et for Saturday, Ja11. 3 and Sunday, Jan. 4. Eakin Wins Fun Sl1oot Eldon Eakin of Torrance took first place Sunday in the Coto de Caza Classic, a five- event tu,i shoot for 25 of Southern California's top all- around shotgunners. Eakin shot 77 out or a possi· ble 104 birds, according to Hugh Roberts, rangemaster at Colo de Cata, the 5,000-acre recr~o!_tional club that has just opened in southeastera Orante C-y. A! high gun, Eakin received a silver and gold belt buckl e containing a $20 gold piece. Coming in • close second was Or. Aklo Mitamura of Ha- cienda Heights, who hit 74 birds and received the run- nerup pur6f. Winners of the indi vidual events were: Quall \Valk, Roger Kerl~y. t out of 12; Duck Tower, Bill Lamb, 18 out of 25 : CO'ntlntntal. Pete Ocam-po, 2$ out of 25; Crazy Quail, Chuck Farnum, 7 out of 12; Doubles, Brent Turner, 24 out of 30. Each received an IC· ce.ssory award. lured its first swim meet of the 100 back 1vith a I: 11.8. Diablos began their swimm ing history major said. swtti-•t It th f. t t h" I ~..1 HoullOOI tl. 5•"'• Cit•• " the 1969-70 campaign Wed· ___ w_os __ •_•_rs_e_,_•_r_m_ee ___ ,,_ory.;__Tu_•_M_••..:Y_· _______ s_h_•_•_:rg:_an_i_ze_d_a_n_d_ta_u.;:gh_t_~•·::"::~='..;':;'-..;~:;·_';;'::"::.'..:":_ __ nesday afternoon with a 50-36 decision over invading Missio n Viejo in a. non-lejlgue meet. The Artists were overturned in the lower classes with the Cees dropping a 61-16 verdict to the Diablo.s and the Bees forfei ting due to a lack of swimmers. Mission Viejo ca p tu r e d every event in the Cee com- petition. Amory Ware led the Artists in varsity action. winning the 200 and 400 freestyles in 2:06.4 and 4:34.3. Coach George ~arey's outfit also picked up first place ef- forts from Scott Sumner and John Slowsky. Sumner turned in a 24.3 In * * * I ! • ' I " • ' • • i lMll"t ltlCll rs:r~) Ml1•i.ti Vifll i 100 M""l•v Aeltv-1. Ml11lon Vlelo. • Tim.: 2:00.1 5: 100 Free--1. A. Wire tLlll f. Prock I LEI) 3. 811ck1!-(MVL Tims: 2:1111.~. •' 50 Fr--1. !tvmner IL8! ?. Slowskv ILB) 3, Lonaley !MV). Time: ?~.•. 1; 200 t111!1vldu•I MtdleY-1. T11n1e tMVl 2. McCltn•h111 !LBJ >. F.ir!v /MVl. Tlmt: 1:47 t. 100 FJY-1. LelO\lt !MVI 2. 0. W•re ILBJ l. Wl!kf!ISOl'I !MVJ. Tlmt: 1:02.l. 100 F.-..-1. Lt•oue (MV) 2. Sumner IL!ll 3. VanOeusen (LBJ. Tlmt: U.t . 100 8ack-1. Slow1kv !L81 l. Lond"" IMV) 3. McC11111h1n !LIU. Time: :11.t ~00 Free--1. A. W1rr !L!ll ~­Wel+1fr>I ILllJ 3. li.ckst-/MVl. Tlnw: ~::J.1.3. 100 8•UH1-I. Kosl4!Chk11 \MVl 1. G11!i.11oe (Liil 3. Tvllle !MV . Tlmf: l :lt.t . ~00 Fr~ RellY-1. Laovn• Ilea,~ !fi~~{:s?i.W1tt. ~lowskY. A. WtreL .... M11tion Vlelo wen b'I" l!lrft-lt, c .. , t.•1u"" •uch IUI Ull Ml1tl9n v1111 <'00 Mtdln ilt•l•v-1. Minion Vltlo. llmt: ,:04.3. 200 Free-I. K•k•l'Kln.a IMVI 1. S!owskv CLl!l1 l . Buntlna tl8). Tim~: 7:tll.I. 50 F•M-1. Anltr~ fMVl '· •m111en IL8l l. ft'dwlll !LSl. Tl"1e: 211.1. 100 lndlv!du1I Medln-1. •!tm•n IMVl 2 Jtedwflt (LIU ). Kek-'wn• '(MVI, Time: 1:11.1. 5~ 1"1v-l . I.vie !MV1 t. c~1T1fltlotll fMVl 3. B•ll~Y (tl!I). Tlll'M': 31.t. 100 Fl'f!e--1. Allm'ln !MV! ,_ l vlo !MVJ l. Br.,ther•n~ (Liil. Tim~: 1 ·~2.~ SO Btek-1. PhllllPS IMVJ 1. ElllO!t {MV) 3. 81y!e11 tMVI Tl-: JO.I. SO l!lr•111-I. Ellloll !MVI 1. Kr•u (LBI 3. C11n1>bl!l1 tMVl. Time: ).1.4. 1!IO Fnie Rel1y-l. M!Hlon Vltlo. Tim.: 1:$t.O. Trophy Bull Elk Bagged Hunters bagged a minimum o( eight elk, including one large trophy bull, in the st.ate.:s first hunt ror rocky molMtain elk in the rugged Squaw Creek area of Shasta and Siskiyou counties, the Department or Fish and Game reports. A total or 100 permits was awarded for the special rocky mountain· elk hunt, so the hunter SUcctS.'i was eight percent, about what the DFG had predicted il'l view or the steep, brushy terrain. Five bolls. two cows and one female calf were taken in tht hunt, the first ever held for the herd of 700-900 rocky mountain elk In the area eut and uorth ol Shasta Lake. I •"lll!l•llllll ..... l'!'!l"!ill'!'"!'"!ll~~ .. -·l'!l••"'!'!'·"!"~•-.i!•P'!'"l"!!~O'!"'!•~S~,,!!'~!f~jP!"Z"""'~t~O·t~O~O .. t-"'!',4,;-,~,-'!"-"!'$,~1•\~.~\~i~i•>•l,$!i!"li?>~,·irP?•,r.,•.~S("'>-•-•TtP>_,l.l•O•t_, .•. ;pp;;•<•>•<"""'''~'--~~--·-~---.... --. ..... • "\.;-, •;·.'.·.,-~• .,;--"'\<~ ;.-·' '• ;', Y,·"'l '•'•1 ,_ -.-~ • • ~.' 3f DAIU PILOT S T-. °""'bot 111, '"'' Your Money's Worth Are You · Homo Urbanus? By SYLVIA PORTER Y oiir spirit, 11 an American consumer, lo the 1950s aod ca&ty 1960s was "homo ac· quimls," the aequl.Jltive. ln tbl!: early post-World War II yean, yoo loaded up first with gtiods to satlsfy your basic physical needs and then wltb po_,9eSSloos of useful and beautiful things ranging from . automobiles to TV stl.s, radios and r«Ord.s. . Your spirit.-as an American consumer, ln the late t960's, became "homo ludens," with time to kUI . In these r~ years. you've been buying ever more goods and servict1 t'D occupy your leisure hours. Now, as yoo enter the IB'TOs, will your spirit, as a o American consumer, turn to "homo urbanus,'' the cultivated, sociable fellow who is trying to make something of hl:mself? THIS IS the absorbing ques· tion raised by Harlow Osborne of the U.S. Dept. Of Commerce in a paper presented before the National Industrial Conference Board and sum- marized in the NICB's Decem· ber "Record." What Osborne is pondering is the life-style our yoonger people appear to be em· bracing. What he is trying to project are the patterns sug- gested by Harold Leavltt's hierachy of human needs: physical needs fir!l; social needs second; self-realizing achievement third. That we are moving into an era of vastly expanded con- sumer buying s e e m 1 in- disputable. Even if the Nixon Administration, this Congress imd thJs 1'~ederal Reserve Soard of Governors make all ule economic errors they can think of, I doubt if they can choke off our economy's powerful long-tenn uptrend. IT'SGENE RALLY an- tic:ipated that the growth in your income and spending as a oon.sumer will be close to S l,lercent a year during the next eight to 10 years (good and i>ad years averaged). To put thls in perspective, t h e ·1verage annual growth In the \?ntire 20th Century to date ha1 i>een 3 percent; 1ince World War II, 31h: percent; since Korea, 4 percent; since 1959, moce than 4 pereerlt. Even if the figure is closer to 4 than 5 oercent, this is a mighty lrn· rftsslve expanston indeed. But where will your spen- ding grow the fastest? How "'ill you make your choice l>etween personal possessions -3Jld personal development? During the 1960s, lhe most rapid gains came in durable :.!oodS. Our buying of durable joods !Oared 90 percent, with virtually none of the rise due to price inflation. This type of spending, aays OSbome, "was an obvious ind HNlble thing to do with the extra •150 a month of real purchasing J>O'W· er added to the .average fam - ily budget ..... the period." BUT EVEN in Ille durable goocb "" bought -hobby goOOs and boob, speclalb.ed healtb products, howehoid ap- pliances, telephooet, auto ac· cessories, toys -Olbome &emes "1 1rowln1 un- dercurrent of__Jatertst bt se1f· development. a desire lo be healthier, handsomer, better. informed and more IOclable people." What is so clearly Implied is an UN'elenllng and uplo.tjve demand by all of ua for services. Probably being overstated are our demands lot such old- SACRAMENTO -S t a I e Controller Houston I. Flournoy today aMounced the distribu· tion or '64,951,~ among the state. cities and counties as the November apportionment of highway-usen tu es. Orange County'1 share was $865 ,SS!I. Shares for cities on the Orange Coat were as follows : Costa Meaa, $51,581: Newport Beach, $32,063; Huntington Beach, fn,347; Laguna Beach, $9,948: San Clemente, $12,370: San Juan Capistrano, $2,769; Fountain Valley, 12 l, 3 2 I : Westminster, '4-1,D>, and Seal Beach $17,039. A total of $14,317,691 went directly to the count ies ; $10,725,132 to cities; and '39,907,973 for expenditures on State highways. The total was derived Irom the following IOUl'ces: gasoline Datatron to Buy Bouse for Stock Datatron Inc. of Santa Ana has taken the first step to ac- quire Bouse Manufacturing Co., Santa Ana, for an un.. disclosed amount of ·common stock. The acquisition of Bouse is subject to approval of the boards of directors of each company and regulatory agen- cies. Bouse recently contracted for a new 20,000 sq. ft. buildln« in the Irvine Industrial Complex. The !inn w I J I operate as a Datatron subsidiary, with Thom a 1 Bouse remalnlng as president. Makes 10% Payroll Cut Crossword Puzzle ,iiuo ss 52 Females: Slang l lmrfact S4 Ind ian Ptclng a s lructurts gJKll!t of lht 10 Sound of Southwest disapproval 58 Mus It· lC Actor .I.I. mik in g Richard-·· IP dtvlc t lS Puerto Rico 59 -run po1l 60 Chica go 16 Opposed ltalu1 t 17 Sisters 62 H ight~ lB Kind of f11 mmabl t 9ovt rnmrnt m1tt1i1I l• Br itish pok~ liS Game Mdlng 20 Otrlvt as il 1-1,2-2, tic.: conc lusion 2. words 22 Winds up &7 Grttk 24 Parctl of ph!losopher land &9 Numeric al 25 Golf clubs prtfl• 27 Complt \tly 70 San 29 Thin g to Francisco b.-add t d or Toronlo 3?: Bathroom 71 Made ltss ittm onr1ous 33 Outl awed 72 Ra inbow: lrou p In Comb. forrt1 rtland: Abbr . 73 Otherwise .34 USSR coin 14 Non-wotk tr Jli Sing, In a 7S Naval cra ll: w1y Abbr. 40 School subjec t: Informa l 42 Showed fHm again .t4 "Encore !" 45 High fn prict 47 Comt lo lul l bloom ••Hard liquor 50 Gr1vtslonr abbrt:vlation DOWN 1 Parry 2 Kind of ltvtr 3 Ont asl)iting to olllct 4 Madt Ctr\ I in 5 Grandtur 6 Erctssivt l)' 7 H t Vff • 0 12/18/68 8 Nol J9 Camera 1bund1nt part • Not very 41 Man's ofttn nickname 10 Cron• 43 Roundwor111 11 All tog!lher: 46 Tht -: 2 words ii. Controvmlal 12 Mllkm1 ld's • mt dlclnt ICCtSsory 41 Gotbbtls 13 Full of or Go1rlnt s tdlmtnt 51 Erh1ust1d: 21 Blow on Slang tht ht1d: 53 Mass or Slang lymphoid 23 "-·put!" l!ssut 2& Above: 54 Rlvtr Comb, fon1 ol B.C. 28 N11tl1ar and Atbfftl corn p1t r 55 Up to tht 29 ObJtclivts tlmt when 30 Word of 56 fllut-ptneUS <1nnoy1nce .51 -syslt1t 31 Exctlltnc1 61 -Roble1, 35 J<1v<1 cotton C1IU. 37 Wtll· 63 Giv1 off meaning 64 Frtts Ptoplt •6 Alttntlve .3 8 N. A111erlcan look lak t 61 KO count FINGERNAIL BITING CAN BE EMOTIONAL lly TIDY ORA.NT, Jl.P'h fl11ttr11•ilt Lltt•11 ~ew11 to the "''Y eo:lte1 a re 11el e11ly Ull• tlthllv, b11t ce11hl ••rv well be Cw• to 11me Cid11rb i11t •mo· tit11el 1tl11etit11. Thit it pettlb!t net e11ly 111 eo:lult, but •¥•11 l11 ,,_+-t--t-1 11 ••ry u,,111 chllCr111. 111 the l ete •f chlldrtll wktre it It !utt a bi d hellit, we tl1'Y 1ewt r.tl proC11ch th1t m••a f1111ar111il l-iti119 1111· pl1a1a11t t ftll t.tll help llr1ak I~• h•llit. OVER THE COUNTER Vice PrealdeJet \Valloce D. Sil ver has Market ·-----------------------~--~-~ ..... -~-... -~.,.... .;. DMlin\1Mf .... l~ \V ednesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stocli Exchange List . ~· .111".,.,...,,_ _ _,,.,,....,,..,,,.,..,..,.--_...,._...., ____________ ~-~,-~..,.....---,,..-~,.-..---~~·-•-•-r..,......_.,... ______ ~---...,..--... ,..,...,..,....-.-·~-·---..... . • • H DAl~Y PILOT lUMILEWEEDS AHAH! l'D~IN6- 1"\lE EIANK A6AIN1 EH, SNAKE-EYE?! ly Tom K. Ryan f..OPE ! .. 'TllEtMNK t10N'T HAVE'NO, 'r.r..";;": .. ':". •. :'. -:;~·":!:"::-:-....,..:.....,,_,1 MONEY IN IT1HIS AFTERNOON --I ~KNOw." 'CAUSE·ITWAS Rlll0El11HISMalNIN'! I AIN'Tc:oum:v IT YE't! l PEANl,ITS By Charles M. Schull 7EVEIM><f--l5-...,, !if1ll5ED 10 moo 10 1HE Ski HUT, CIWLf 6roa< TELEVISION VIEWS Will Barnyard Humor Cha1·m? • I I, fl • 1 By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP} -HHee Haw" returned to CBS \Vednesday night \vi th all the characters a~d jokes that made the program a summer-season hi.t. The question, \vhich only time can ans\v er, 1s whether .the barnyard humor that charmed the hot· weather audience bored by reruns will exert the same fascination at another season. MOST attractive aspect of the sho\Y is its music. The beat was infectious and the tunes attractiv~. There was even a song wi1h off-beat lyrics, "Okie From Muskogee," sung by Merle Haggard - a pre· Establishment song that condemned pot and ad- vocated respect for the flag. .. The viewer must react to the sho\v's jokes in one of three ways. Take a sample one-liner: "People in the roofing business tend to get shingles." The Viewer must find this (A) novel and funny, <B) ..: corny and square, or (C) so corny and square that . lt is funny. 1 AT lEAST, "Hee H·aw" is honest. \Vhen the 'jokes are old and pretty bad, the jokesters are like- ly to be standing in the middle of a cornfield when they tell them. · Roy Clark. 'vho is more interesting \Vhen he is playing the guitar than "'hen clo,vning, and Buck Owens, who has an interesting singing style. are , Uie stars of the show. They are surr.ounded by a large assortment of country-style conuc and excel- ' lent country-western singers. including Haggard l arid Tammy Wynette. The program has been called. ilnprecisely. a c;ountry-style "Laugh-In" -but it had what sound- ed like an enthusiastic studio audience laughing at its old old jokes. TINY TIM and his Miss Vicki 'vere married. between two commercial breaks. during the last half hour of the "Tonight Sho\v.'' It is doubtful that the ceri;mony will start a new fad or even stiinulate a llturil of "Bride and Groom." , "I'he ceremony itself, in spite of 1he advance . exploitation and publicity, had a certain amount oC 'dignity. But once 'it was over. the couple 'valked briskly a few feet to one side. into Johnny C<1rson·s ,. desk-and-sofa set. The bridegroom made a beeline for the 'seat of honor and m·ixed himself and fiis ,i. bride·a glass of milk and honey. Then he read off a ; Jong-list of plugs and credits covering everything 1 from hairdos to honeymoon facilities. ' ' THE WHOLE proceeding seemed a\\'k\vard and . 1 more like a stunt than a ''"eddini;:. Carson's usual appreciative audience seemed subdued through the whole show and th e hour of preliminary co1nedy on : stage was not as fast-moving as usual. i Most puzzlin~aspect of the ceremony came as the couple repeal'ed after the minister some un-i familiar vows, including a pled,l!e "not to be pulled 1 ·ttp." Carson explained la•ter that the bride and I bridegroom themselves had done a little re\vriting : of the ceremony. . Dennis tire 1'le11ace 6REATSCDTrl ~ MUCH WAS 'll\KEN!'! PLAIN JANE PERKINS MUn AND JEFF SUR£.l 'M R.OUNDANO a 'FAT, BUT l'MHA?PY! GORDO SOMf. INITIATION 1N10 T~INJ? 1"HA1( WAS. ··y'M l Pl(.J(EP llP .. FEW-"E<'..ES .ts 1r OF SClllPfliE: rowe &¥'A. ANYTHING FllEN" OF MINE TMA.T 'I.'U. ·.I'P BE- TRY TO !ifLL FOR. MUA ! llTE2E5TS" WE TRIED TO STOP J.tlr.1 , BUT HE 700MED RIGij'T OVER: THE WALL.' 9UTl £!ROUGHT YOU TO 'THIS DANCE! IN ? • YES_. Ydu DID,,RING MSTO THE DANCE ... - ••• -· ! l. i . ~ r • . l By John Miles By Harold Le Doux Ngf" REA.UY.. THA,T WOllT &E NEC~! BUT I 'LL SHOW ev THE WAY, I SENT "ISS ir 1o )!Qlj'jj:: lAsP.El INTO~ .0Jt.5at\E 'IOU WISH ! E~A,NPS~ SHE SHOUu:> SE &AC.t::: JM IJl HOUR: OR TWO! By Mell '""'~I/ ---~ · ..... THi.;~·~r:.• DlCOlll!lll 1:00 8111 ~ (C) (60) Jtrry Dunphy • Dll\lHu...,·l-1<1 <301 ly-C~Jies la1i0ttl 8Stwt .......... (C) (90) Ml· .• hall.I 'Jtcboft, ttlndt4 111d Ullltt, t:ll 8 ..... fCJ (IO) W"illl1m M111cklter, 1~ Al&it thl 8ti!(J)11 lol1ooi:UOl4Wol (C) (30) SM[ JUISl '"S.flb co.ail Te 1'jllf. alllll Shyt D lb: O'ti.d: Wt: (C) -n •Piii StljL" SaNlltl'll ~ntlf Pam It .._ ltNlt" (mylhry) has S.1111 Cli111, llil IMs ""' rtin- '56 -Vin Jolll!IM, Vtt1 Mlln , dMr n . lllrial1111s 11111b. hlald Cecil PafMr. A bliM lll•r-rilhl Lon1·pl1rs S.ntl. ov1rht1rs I kidntppilll. 111.lnlel Ind m DtlMI fMl (C) (90) e.tortioft plOt, 1rMI colllbotttes with Q) n. lie ,..., (C) (80) SeoUtnd Y1rd to track down 1n fB.....,.... '11i..ui (60) und~d p111. . fD wri ,..,.._ (go) ''Tf'l'lllfltr D Dia Via DJt;i (30) Without LUIPP.'' GerdGn Pirittllt m ,.,.., l'!ICI (30) Jllrs ill .llln Mollith"• llr11n• ~ m., r.-re> (60) 1 ,,.., w11o u1rt0t ,,,..,..., ~ @ (j) llllh ...... (C) (90) p1al ,., idlr!dty. , "~· m-·..., <lOI •-''*"" ic1'<30> a (I) ... -CCI <30l Ill ,.., lltanl (30) aJ Ntn (C) (60) J1c• While, 1:30 Cl MIC N1WHl'Yit1 (C) (30) D TIM Cute C.•1 (C) (30) IDT• Jeff tlMi Tr.tti (C) (30) fJ) OffU " .. Prllidlftt (30) ~ 00 -(C) (30) m , ..... ,...,.,.., (30) "roun· tain House:• A reli1b!litltlo11 etn· ter for rntnt1llr HI adults, in tlte Hell's Kitchen teetlon of HIW YO/t City, is explored. ~ (!) Tht M111ll:ws (30) g;) Noticilrl 34 (C) (60) mJ llMlll: NeWt (C) (30) 7:• IJ US Evening Nin (C) (30) "Wiiii's Mr Li11t? (C) (30) t.Oll88(1)CH TlltndlY Mlwic: .,.. A111ricl11izlti111 el [111jfft (dr1m1) '64-Julie Andrews, James G1m1r. Mt!Yyn Oou1l1s, Jamet c.. burn. A loft afflir bloasoms durir11 w1rti1111 i11 London. D BOb Hope Special wit h * Andy Williams • Anthooy Newley • Elke Sommer &: look All America Team n~oo m11p1cw1 ... ...,. Sllew' (C) (60) Andy Wiiii•'"' Alt- tflofly. NIWllJ. £Hte Solftf!ltr '°' 1"11 1111 ...... All-Americl foot· bill ttlm 111est. Music br Lii !"""' 111d His l111d 'of ll:111GW11. D IHJ CII Erl "" -CCI CIO! Lill Minnelll, ht to.per, Fr1nkJ1 V1u1h1n IJllll. Sb~ (SO) m I LM ltcJ (30) l :JO Cl ... (C) (30) 1uf« W.rl. m~~-CC1 • m~~~~CCI• fJ)C.•1.,/M.W.I f•ll (lO) fBlllfll .,.._ (60) llllOO-WMI CCI <30> !II-~ <!Ol m-. <,., , ·, · .,,,.a till oo m -, v-tc1 fl (I) Trd • C.:Nqlllfltll (C) (10) "GIOl'p Qob1I, Giu lolllllftt- ID Trll ..,.,...,. (C) (lOl id1, 01IOll Wtlles, Chlrt11 flltllll R9illJ 1111! The Solddiaen li't Qe111'• fl,ieds. m n" cw1 <t> (301 fl Tedtnful C.Jllll' (lO) ·-"" (C) (30) .... critic Hll M•rlfnth•t IOoks ti ..,,. lfll **• troni 1111 lot An1tles Clt7 Collep PfOduction of ''A Qap In 691Mntioll& • IE ~IM If htl (30) D Mfft Mrs. Hollincer * on "THAT GIRL toniaht MARLO THOMAS 1t1n. FRIDAY lli'mME MOVIES am-CCI c•o1 DQ2! (]) 19·8 TM• I T1dlf fC) (10) "Tt L11n1 I M1n." Te Nn ttil lift of 1111 dltt, Al Mqndy aar111 to kiri tM SlA't Mr, J1cl tt I mlttflll with I 11:111 JP)' dllli', .... l9Ph Cott1t1, Wilfrid H)'tlt·Whit1 ... ChrilllN Sinrira 1u~st. 0111111 (C) (60) Tom P1tt1tlOll, Leith frtneh IU~I. m""' •-<60> fl) Tit Mwalll (C) (60) (R) D IHJ CII m TIM "" --(C) ~~W'~d;::; .~,.:: Peet. Jetwliltr .l&MI, f,.clric llllfdl, Min.· l'iwn, lit J. «;:obll. ,m_...,. __ {dr1m1) '47 -Mit111M Rld.,..e. lnll ll:llfford. ''"m" _ _,.,.,,..,,._ pufw," "lldll111,.. ''IVll Ulde llllftd,.. '.i .. ..,,..., ............. n• "( .. mo '4&-JMt Flntlln( Loui1 .llordl11, 'I uo DCC> """ -" """I ..... (4r11111) '156-J.tnt ....... •kllm [pft, .IOtll. luN1. 4:JO B ~ (411m•} '54-fftlf ~ .. ~-.... """l 1 • ·--· -~·--• -,,., • ••'="'•,....... .... _.... ,,..---~ -·--~--.,,.,---------..._..,..--,1 ow -."t •·V~.,..--.......-.,-,-----·------... ..,....---.,._,....,.,-,.--...,.,-:-:-:-":".-,.,..,_~,~ ... M11,1l~~~~ Stri°fu' Emk Met Heari,ng Sound of Music NEW YORK (UPI) -The llgbl& will come up Dec. 21 at the Metropolitan "Opera's Lin- coln Center home· after set- tlement of a three-month labor dispute which threatened to · ·cancel its 85th season. • • ./( 1u1 h Coa:;! Re1 1c rto1~r -·' . ~ "ARRAl:AL" "" ...... .,....., ,... c ............. , '""'""" . TWO wnu ONLY '""'' "'"' ..,.. • ., -11» ''"'' -IW N-119n, Cftl• Mffa -644-lit.1 JCl CHILDllN'I THIATU -"WINNll THI POOH" s.i..n -1 .,,, i,,. PINAi. P••l'OllMANC:• OIC:. !l •• • .,. ' T .. EXCLUSll(E AREA SHOWING SHOW TIMIS 7:00' • t :lO MATINEE SUN. J 'Ibe criai1 wal l'flOlved wben the American Guild ol Musical Artists -represtn- ting choristen Ind ballet dancer• -"ipproved a thl'ff- year contract. It was the last of l4 urUons to come to terma with the compooy. Rehearsals began ·Sunday anemoon for the aeaaoo premiere of VerdJ's "Aida," featuring LeOntyne P r i c e • Moil-of the performen wm happy "to be back ai wot~ - they have two weeks to prepare for the opening others were Jess enthusiastic about the overall settlement. The opera ortginaJly was .scheduled to open Sept. 15 klr a -JI-week season, but the Met noW wiU conduct · a abortentd 16,week season e~ April 13, followed by a lll·week 'Generation' Dad Sought 1'!ie San Clemente Com- munity Theater is looking for somebody who'd lite to be a father. Specifically, a midle-aged actor is needed to play the l eading role of the grandfather-~be in the com- edy "Generation," which is scheduled to open late in January. P r o s p ective candidates should get Jn touch with direc- tor Tony Brandt at 846-<11166. Joor. 'Ihm -• llOlllbllll)' rour--icibeadclod dlaln& tbe IUllllber. "! feel. very happy that peace II utabllabed Ind that the Met will. open qaln," General Mana§!< RlldoK Bing said Sunday.• l look forward toa·hap~ oeaaon llld a happy conlra¢.' lie and board qiem!Ml1 dranlt champagne ·r 1lie dlaputo .... rtiol ... '.1110 unions approved a thfee.yeor contnct•afler re-Jed!n1 the flQal year of 'I pro- posed foor-year pact. Bing Slid the new contract -which increases all salaries -v.·01.dd raise the Mel's I! n.n u a I operaUng deficit from '3.S to '6.5m l IJ l on. TradiUonally, contrtbutlon.s mate up the deficit. 1be ntgot1ationt1 w h I c h began In ·Junt left their scars. 'The Met woold not begin reheanals until ICCOl"ds were settled with each u n i o n • Though most.per (or mer s seemed happy to return Sun- day, some appeared bitter at tbe loss of bact pay and negotiation tactlcs. "The .morale in this com- pany just i!n't ~ same anymore,'' said percussionist Dick Horowitz, a 23-year veteran. The new contract approved Saturday provides for a top pay o( $250 a week for choristers and $215 ( o r dancers. 111e number of years required. to gain seniority was acaJtid down for bcih groups. • •• *' • • • ·"""·--• . . . * Gala Premiere'Saturday, December 20 at 9:00 PM • with regular performances EVERY DIY trom December 21-Januarr 4 Bl 411 Id Ill PM (4 PM only on Dftembel 24. 25, 31:J•nu1ry l •nd4) c:lwxt.i. r11untJy, floats, ind Bond• leadln1 this hippy proceuion will 11-300 Dlinei. chlrldal of filll and fairytale f~me. More than 500 participants in all. Md, of course. San!J Claus. Trad-I Candltlifhl l'rocession. On Saturd1y, December 20 and Sunday. Dicember 21, Dis""""' wm ptaeot 9'1Jninp of joyous Christmas carols, perfo1med by a choir ol more than 1000 sin,ers. These' insplrin1 cenmonla ·will "'IOI! 6 PM. SIPl"allll Sounds of Iha SO-Amori1 lllt ·~•~ti""I Yultlido trimmin1s will be slrolliftf caroltr~ f1slln window and outdoor decorations, a brilli1nt Christmas star hiah atop Mttterhorn Mountain, and Holiday music.11G'jWhlrt. ' . -1"o!O-.... and AltrKliam. Included h Disneyland"l ""IOSI and rnoSt spirittd lltr1ctlon. lht brutllbkin1 Halllllad M1n$1on. - • • Godard Film series Set At Irvine "The Godard RevoluUon," a series of films by Jean·Louc Godard, will be presented by the UC Irvine Committee for l\rts and Lectures in the Science Lecture Hall four Saturday nJghts in January. The French £Um maker Is considered one of the most controversial of contemporary cinema creators. Kubrick Feted HOLLYWOOD (UP[) -Tbe London T\mes named fibn director Stanley K u b r i c k among the "1,000 makers of the 20th Century.'' -cun WORLD OF LA.UHL & HARDY l'LOI W. C. fllLDS l'LUI flACTUIED fLICKIRS c ... 1 .... 111. a swi. 1,,. ,.m. INDS TONIGHT ''ALFRED THE GREAT" ............ "A PLACE FOR . LOVERS" SHIRLEY M1cLAINE JOHN McMARTIN SAMMY DAVIS, JR . ttpW PLAYING • The One, Only And Original! ' --· r-=-------~ WILLWI lllLllBI YIRNllLISI IMIURYIL ·--"TllB CllRIS'l1l1IS · m1· ---·~-----· l 'Advocate' Cast Set In Laguna STANLEY KUBRICK PRODUCTION 2001 Gipa~-,...9)' CINIMA SCREIN METROCOLOR A HAL llOACH'S NIW B''THE CRAZY -.011 f):• --:.~~=·~=--== -· .. ··--w. C. Fletdl r,, •The S•rber Shop : ~ r.t'.':G: of 8"' ("l"alnl a 111 night oUt •.• 1 ....-i.ci t>J Ra,_,.i """-- _ .., __ _ tlln fllllrllll "fUCTUl(D RJ:KEll- NOW SHOWING 1t TheH Two Coun~y The1tre1 GROVE ffll O.rd.n Grove llvd. 5274600 CONTINUOUS SHOW Sohirflloy I S•ltftr fro11t 2:00 BALBOA 6~3-4048 OPIN 6:41 7" I. ••tltM .. ,. hftlfttul• NOW SHOWING EXCtUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENT 'Lena's inYestiga- tion of foreign polkies,IOfto Yioltnt mlstnce, distrihtloa of wtahh,women's rights, fl!llly problem, lie. Ii~ 111111•wlth 1111'"'51 fora 9oiih11 llft." J01i1Si.. Thu~day, Doctmbft 18, 1969 ALSO-Dick v.. DP• I• "THE COMIC'' Starts Wednesd1y DAILY PilOT S7 ""'111 WIYINI •edt H ... "TM Ulldt!M ..... C•I o...,.,., l'Mlr ''Tlta C~•lrlMll" IMI 0.... ~r111t ''Tlltl ANulfNn.• ''T~• ri=-. .. HARBOR al ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546•3102 ON HAllOl ILVO. • ONE MILE SOUTH Of SAM DIEGO FWY• World Premiere En1JC19ement "One of lhe smashing box office 1ucce1M1 of 19701" -L.A. Times DUSTIN ' HOFFMAN1 • IS John -· .. ,_i., ....... .....,... • ...w ... --Ch•tl•1 Ch•mpfht L.A. y;,..,, .. y~ I tle .... ty, It It ._ ef ... ..,n .. ..., ... -.. ..,.,., ... ,_r--L.A. <&;.Ml11•r e CONVENIENT SHOW TIMIS e w.4-"""'-"''*'• DK. l7·1._1,_71H _.tr.JI -~ ....... .._.....,hw~lti&.H ._ 1 tJ.......,1Jo--ltJO-ftJt-t:Jt , ... -. llll'll"P.l!!!.!!l-·:'1""'!'1'!· --· ------.... _ ........ ----------~---~ ......... __............---------· --- ------- 3 LINES 2 TIMES 2 DOLLARS (Any Item Priced $50 Or Less) Pin~h Yourself A Pile Of Pennies (Or Eve11 Dollars) Dial Direct for Details Penny Pinchers . 642-5678 Pile Up Profits North County, 540-1220, Toll Free DAILY PILOT · PENNY PINCHER WANT ADS -.----·-·-. ~ -··-·---....-· _.,., __ _ DAI. ~-· HOUSES FOR SALi HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE ' HOU~ES FQR SALE HOUSES ,OR SALE RENTALS ·•' ~ RENTALS l·°"=""-'-"-'-----•-000_' Gener•I Houses Furnl1hed_ Hou14!1_ ~!'fu!!!!!,~ Aptt. Furnished Gonoral 2000 MoH d1l /Nr 310S Goner~! 4000 1000 General 1000 Costa Mes• 1100 Huntington 8•1ch 1400Huntlngton Buch 1400 FOR LEASE Sharp 3 + family room in Huntington Beach, west of Newland north of llamilttin. $220ln10. Lease at $350 with option to buy. Lovely Newport Beach 4 + family room + dihing room with view ot Back~. Vacant now. Quick possession. 2 bdrms completely furnished Con· dominiwn $175/mo. 54&·1110 (-cinlmlthatre) ,;;;;;;~:;;:;;;:;; WHERE ELSE? Can )'OU find 4 bdrms. 1amily rooin, dishwash· er, qui.et cul -de • sac street, huge covered & screened patio & ti. Dougbboy pO()L all for o n l y $25,990. Prime North Costa Mesa lo- cation near schools & shopping. Terms to suit. • ~-OATS & WALLACE REALTORS --S4f>.4141- f0pen Evenin91) OlLEGE REALTY 1,..~~~~~"' ""°°-11"'""·t11 '· YEAR END OCEAN (TWOJ VIEWS Exciting view from Clifi Drive in Newport Hei(hts, 3 bedrooms, dining roon1, deluxe built-in kitchen plus trem!-ndOUS basement run1· pUs room -$4.~ down. $39,900. Panoramic v i e w Jrom Macco Hilands, de· lightful 4 bedroom and form- al dining room, tastefully decorated-terms-$37,950. 646-7171 lo ' THE REAL \'.'._ ESTATERS ' •! .... ,., • 11 ' , .. ,. COLLEGE PARK 3 bdnns 2 baths. corner lot with storage area for carnp- !'r etc. Vacant & ready to move into. $26,950 Newport al Victoria ~11 {anytime) Barrett Realty 1605 Westcliff Dr., NB 642-5200 Irvine Terr., CdM custom built 3 king size ~nns, 2 baths, huge living room, formal dining room, family roon1 + breakfa.st area. in 2600 sq ft of living. Room for boat or trailer. Lochenmyer Rea ltor 1860 Newport Blvd., C.M. CALL 646-3928 Eves. 644-165.'i PAUL•Wfill'E CARNAHAN •sALTT CO. 1093 Baker, C.M. 54&-54-10 Vacant and Ready You can be settled in your own home for Olristmas. 3 bedroom, 1% baths, buil!· tn kitchen. Fenced yard, 2 car garag!'. A snug home or a sharp rental. $17,900 and let's talk terms, Colesworthy & Co. Divorce Forces Sale Lovely view home • Back Bay area. 4 lg, bedrooms, 1a.m le din. rms. Vacant. Im. med. poss. See iC -Make )'Our ~er • Buy a bargain. 546·1180 , ___ , OlLEGE REALTY lSCll,.... It tWW,CM. Well built 2 bdrm home, eX· tra luJ• dollbl!' pn.ge, ac- cetJll to l'Ml' )'8.l'd. ~ ione: -room to bulld. sia.m Wtll...McC•rdle, Rltr1. 1810 Newpon Blvd., C.M. MB-'lm ~ eves. 2 Bl'., 2"' ba., :-,WI Loa Loma• Sl:reet, Park £.stall's wttlon of Long Beach., (213} 007-6322 ... BARGAIN Large two bedroom w i t h Spacious living l"OOm, cozy kitcht1n and dining area. At. tached garage • extra large lot. ExcC'l\cnt neighborhood lot. Excellent neighborhood· beauti!ul tree Hncd street. Owner MUsr SELL -ltlay consider as low as $:20,COO wmr 10% DOWN. Evenings Call 64&-2259 ,· - FOREST E. 0 LS 0 N Inc. 1kaltor11 $17,500? MUST BE YESTERDAY 'S PRICE ANYONE CAN Assume this £'l % Cov'I 1cia.n. Lovely 3 bdim 2 bath ho1nc \villi all extras lll- clucllng intercom & covered pa1 io. $171/mo. pays ALL. f'ull price only $23,500, for a :real val uc, CALL 5~0.1131 Hel'itagc Real E state (open eves.) "LARGEST A real doll house. lm-PROPERTY IN n1aculate throughout. Wall MESA DEL MAR NEW HOME IMMEDIATE MOVE IN 4 BDRMS 1112 BATHS 1/4 MILE FROM BEACH $20.990 HUNTINGTON BEACH Call Now 962-1353 to \\'all carpeting, Freshly By Owner 4 BR, 2 BA. dbll J~!!!!'! painted. Beautiful paneling. gar. enclo!>C(I main patio + . . Lid I I Huge 20 fl living roo1n. 2 open patios. Drastically re-Un1vers1ty Park 1237 O I• Shake roof Jound only in duced 10 $31,00> for quickl ;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;:;; niore experulve homCs. Sub-sale. Call 546-3767. I• BAYFRONT HOMES 1351 1nit your down payment. BY O\VNER 4 Br. 2 Ba DO YOU REBEL.? Call oow! 645-0303 Ra h N t & d \Vhen )'OU see the ordinary nc · u crp ~s, tiouse -then see thls littJe sha~e t'f, eovered patio, ('UtiC. "It looks like a giant New. or older, with pief'!ll & slips. 3 BR. to 6 BR. TRIPLEX EAST SIDE sprink!C'rs, dshv.•sbl'r, v.·ater Doll H " v 1 · sortcnC'r. S3000 do.,.,·n & . ouse. ery c ean in· 6 ~,, VA 1 Call side and out. 4 br. 21,1; ba. 2 From $149,500 Walker Riiy. 675-5200 33ti6 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. $225. 3 Br, pr, patio, w/w, drps. Near ocean. Bia. 534-69!0 Rentals to Share 'lOOJ ROOMMATE Wanted: Girl 4 BR-mA.. Newly painted. Vac. Ltue $265. lit &: tut + 1100 depool~ IM3 st. Qair 548-1505 dayfl. HOLIDAY PLAZA DELUXE. IPl-doua 1 8ttrm F\Im apt $135 plus ut.U. Heated pool, ample parldnc. . No children -no petl. Newport llHch 3200 1965 Pomona, C.M. to share 2 bdr apt, CdM. ---------SEE NEW VILLAGE INN ADULTS ONL y Stepe to beach, $.15. wk. Call 673-1182 aft $ &: wkends. ROOM Mate Wanted to share 2 BR furn beach apt. 2Cfi~ 28th St. NB (rear) t.1AL.E Roommate Wanted to Share 3 Br house, l blk from beach. 642--1897 Room mate \vallted, 2 BR turn apt CdM, utll pd. ISO. Arnly 673-<29< 2 bdrm, 2 bathl. New paint. $145 mo. LAGUNA M7201 new cpts. new drapes -$120. Util pd, Batchelor over Available Jan. lal $225. gangea. W/w, drps. avail now.Bia.~ 3 bdnn, 2 batN. ap111.1e..i. ========I F.P., Blt·lns -2 car garage, Cotti Meal 4100 far.cs pool. Avail Jan. 15th. ---------1 127~ 3 BDRM, 2 baths, apllt·levtl. Available Dec. 20. $265. Bay &: Beach Realt)', Inc. Newport Bt•ch 2200 901 Dover Drive, SUite 126 NB :..:.:c:.!::.:.:..c:.:::.:::.:c....._:;= 645-2000 -Eves. 5'8-6966 * SUNNY * * ACRES * * Motel-Apts * FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2 ba., patio. adults. Bayside Village. Until July 1st. $200. Call (21.JJ 222-4.309 or fl73. 2 BR. 2 ba. 2 Car garag!-. Vacant. Comp. redecorated. Exceptionally nice. S 2 5 O Lo>. 1 -I So. ol O.C. EARNS $5,800 ;:~7~el · 10 oan. fireplaces, Vacant. 1'.1ove in by Christmas. S34,750. Tremendous value!! 3 large 1tUsr Sell I yr olcf ::i Br, 3 units 2 bedroom and 2 baths bath, custom home \vith each: Deluxe kitchen with pool. l\Iesa Verde. Asking built ins Only $6500 down $72,500 -make offer. O\VllCr and just· 7 years young, Lux. agt. 540-83Sl or 546-4141 •red hill Huntington Beach .1400 I ~'":.''.:'.9:..· -------Bay & Beach RHy. 67>l'.XlO Faloirounds Stvdlo&l I.._ LOW RATES REALTY w-y carpeting and drapes 2 BR Hse & gar. r-.1odern, on Univ. Park Center, Irvine throughout. Manicured M-1 lot. 60x140', Closing Call Anylin1c 833-0020 grounds. Enclosed garages. Esta!C', bargain. 922 Sunset[!!!!!!!!!!!!!!;..,,.!!!!!!!!"""'!!!!'" Priced ~" at S3G,950. See Dr. 531-909-1 or 646-4788. c;;a-d~l--M;;_--1250 today. Dial 645-0303. OLDER 2 BR house, 2 carl ----- 645-0303 at Harbor Center 2299 H;irbol· Blvd ., C.i\1. 3 UNIT~ $29,950 gar. Lrg lot -suitable for building. 545-6001 Mes.a del Mar 1105 VACANT MOVE IN FOR CHRISTMAS BA YFRONT 3 & den, pier & NEARL y NEW noat. Furn or unturn. $GOO Must sacrifice 3 BR 2 bath. n10. No. 2 Balboa Coves High FHA $26,600 loan pay· [ ~·1>-4~~33~1====== LOVELY Baycreat 4 bdrm family room home. Many extras. Prestige area. $400 per mo. Jean Smith Rltr. 646-3255 Doy,W..i.,MOlltlt e KHchens &. TV's incl. able $243 per month includ· ing laxes. Green Valley As· sociation includes 2 swim· ming pools, n)ain!enance, recreation center, 2J. acre park, 6 n10nths new. Owner translera'ed. Your money will move you in. Call now. '· Corona dtl Mar 2250 e Phone .erv ., htd pool • Maid aetvice avail. 2376 NEWPORT ILYD. EXEC. Home. 3 Br. 2 Ba. 548-9755 Den. drps, crpt, dbl rar. -$-2-5--P--Wk~--&-U_ , 2 BR. comp. furn. Conv. Joe, pool & Ocean Vw. $600 mo. • er • p So. of hwy. $225 mo. I ~C::.U~83>-0050=o~::·,..,,,.,.==~ Bachelor & 1 BR. htd pool. DonV. FranklinRltr.673-222 4 BR, 3 Ba, BLUFFS maid service. K1lcben& A Townhouse. 0etx:" 2 story TV avail 450 Victoria (Nr overlooks pool $400. Owner _H_ari>o __ ,_i.=~~=~-I Balboa Island 2355 $375 mo/yrly, Avail Jan. Jrd. 2 BR. 2 BA. Frplc, 2 patios, dock. Adults only. 615-7880: 644-2019 * NASSAU PALMS * 2 BR. 2 ba., den, din, room. lTI E. ~2 5~ Pool fi42.3845 In Cllttha.ven. $300 George Williamson, Realtor MERRIMAC WOODS ...._ 673-4350 673-15&1 Ews Furn units avail. Set! act.~ LOVELY tuwnhse 2 BR. 2 der cl&&I 5100. 425 Merrl- Laguna Beach 2705 BA. Frplc, new cpta. Im-mac Way. 545-&00 --------med. poss. $250. Agt .1.1"145"'°'&,...,..up~-A°"rnu==CTIVE.==1 FROM Jan 1 to June 30, 860 64&--0732 bdr., pool, util paid, guden Wendt Terr., 2 BR, view, =.;:;::::~====== living, adulta, no pet&. 1.800 $240 mo. 21.J: 697-3862 or see Newport Shor• 3220 Wallace Ave., C.M. Sat, 20th after 10 a.m. BEAUTIFULLY F1JRN K~NTALS 11..ii ELKS to beach, 3 Br, 2 2 BR. Pool. Adults. no pets. Houses Unfurtdshtd Ba, 2 story A-frame, lovely $145 + utU. 2272 Maple St. General 3000 residential home $ 2 8 5 543--0157 w/lease. 675--0307 ..,kdays; l~B-R.~N-o_c_h_ll_""'_n._N_o_po_IL_, anytime wkends $125 mo. Gu a. water pd. k 2528 Orange. 213: OX 6-42". University Par 3237 213: ox 6-1930 4300 BAY VIEW 2 BR. IUOl. Ulll pd. l!eact>. P~'• ~. Adulll. llJ3 E; Edlewala'. 1114)11W81111 ..... -".""-------.---------------------------------------------·-------~--~--~-------..-----.-------·-·----···- 4 -OAllY PILOT Tftund11, Dl<fmbtf 18, 1%9 i ••NIAU T L RENTALS ! . Aptt. Funlllhod Apts. Unfumlshtd Apts. Unfurnished -4300 Cost• -5100 Lido Isle 5351 ==----=:.:; REAL ESTATI Gent rel Butlnen lt•nt•I 6060 a.EAN Bad>elor Apt&. , 1 BR lower front. Employed RETAIL SJ:IOP 1620 aq ft. MERRIMAC WOODS adult. Util tum. 107 Via Tcrrlflc Location. Alt All util ind $8S up n; E. Balboa Bl"11. J'uat eompleted, 1 or 2 Bit. .2 J11cnnoe. 61$-1892 Cond., carpel.I. Beaul.lful BA rum or untum wlth 8.ll''I"'""""""===== Store Fronl Jdtal for Men's BALBOA !n-9915 BAO:IELOR APT • Util pa.kl. $9:1 per mo. 310 E. Balboa B1"11., Balboa cond, compi soondftlroaftd, Huntlngton Beach 5400 Wear. Gifts, Specialty ShOp, seU clean1na: ovens, wood11---~-----etc. Hll.lgren Square. 270 E. <ellln" dswhn, lush land-2 BORMS. 2 BATH 17fh St., C.M. acaplng with streanl$ &: wa-.. Cl.Ill 64&-9707 terfall!, elevators, BBQs, SJ.SO/Mo. HEATED POOL I========== $120 MO/)'liy, Bachler apt. . Viii incl. Call 637--5342 or 536-3101 clubhause, saunas, jac112.2:i & Office Rental 6070 S'A'im pools, p:iv gar. w/ fncd, ctiVdrps, Kida OK sto1-age. Everythifla: new. DELAWARE STUDIO Apt.L l ido Isle 4351 Starting at $140. Adults 2620 De1a~are, H.B. 1--------plea!I!'. Just East cf 2600 642-2'121 anytime 536-1816 NEWLY ·f\.lm. bayaidt 1-Br. Harbor Blvd, next to Nabers NICE 2 &: 3 lxlrs. Crpted A apt. 320 Nord. $200, Incl. Cadillac al 42::i Merrimac drped. N\vly decor. 3 hlks util. Jo.I.ts.. Aleck 838--0228 or Way, S4S.63()() from bch. 3 bdr w/dbl at- STh-1225 tacbed gar&: fl'Platt. SJ&.1711 u~~'~F'~!~ch 4400 BRAND NEW ~~ra~ar~Z!i. t:i 'HUNTINGTON CAPRI .. $150 & $170 "'" 536-ll038" 5.16-272?. For Singl• Adults 2 BR duplex, cpls, drps, NE'\V 1-2·3 BEDROOMS UTILITIES PAID yard, $140. mo. flst & last From $140, Furn & Unf l & 2 Bdmt, 2 rwim pools. mo rent & cleaning dep) na Tennis, Gyms, Saunas Adult& cnly, no pets, Furn Children. 842-7913 ft'OO Edinger Ave., HB if desired, &12.3m ATTRACT. 2 Bdr All Xtras. Phone 84&-Cfil9 301 Avocado St, C.J\.f. $135. 17442 Queens Lane, SACHELOR & 1 BR furn. $140 up. Adults.' no pels. -17301 Kee.Ison Ln. S•tt-7848 (\Vest ol Beach nr Slater). Bil.· newly decoratt'd, all utit.' $125 mo. No children or pets. · Agt, 213 :P.fain · St. 536-"87 BACH. apt, newly decorated, all util SOO mo. No pets. Agent, 213 Main St. 5J6...8887 5i'ONEHENGE APTS. 2 BR, 2 BA. 2320 Florida. nr Beach & Adams 536-7730 Stt Mgr on premises J-1.8. 968-7510 or 841-1594. HARBOR GREENS $155. 2 bedrocnn, aarpets, drapes, built-Ins. 830-1548 BACHELOR unfum trom,1~--~"'-""-=---~ $110. Also avail 1 • 2 & J 2 BDRMS, 2 BA. pvt. patio, Bdrm. Heated pools, child heated pool, \\·a,sher & care center, adj to ahoppin&:. dryer hook up. 962-8994 No pets. 2700 Peterson Way lagun• Be•ch S705 Costa Mesa 54fi.D:!i0 LUXURIOUS NEW API'S LEASE ~ RENT New 1 or 2 bedroom, private sundeck, wall to wa ll 1 & 2 BDRJ\t, beaU 1 S\Vi carpet. ocean view, kitchen pools. Adults. no pet furn. Underground parking, ALL UTILITIES PAID close to beach, 494-7447. l\11'. LAGUNA BEACH Air Conditioned ON FOREST /I.VENUE Desk space available In newett oUlce bWldlng at prime location ln downtown Laguna Beach. Air condi· tioned, carpeted, .beautiful entrances: '.Front.age on Forest Ave., 1-ear leads ta l\funci paJ parking lats. $50 per month for 1pace, Desk and C'ha!rs available for $5. Business hoW'S answering service available tor $10. All util,ities pald except telephone. DAILY PILOT 222 FOREST A VENUE LAG UNA BEACH .. ~ .... FINE STORE/OFFICE For Lea•• On Via lido Approx. 1500 Sq. Ft. 50c Per Ft. LIDO REALTY INC. 3377 Via Lido 673-7300 MODERN 3 room suite, cpts., air cond, janitor ser- vice, ample parking. So. Calif. 1st Nat. Bk Bldg. 230 E. 17th Street Cosla Mesa &12-148.5 * * * * * """ Wh•ddya W•nt? Whoddy• Got? SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS Spocl•I !tote 5 Lin" -.S tim" -5 bucks ltULES -"° MUST INCLUD! l-Wlltt \'Oii IWlw to ft•Ot-ll-W1'11I you -111 trHlt,. >-'l'OVlt ..,_ •no10r0 '44l"fls.. •...S 11 ... , of Perti.ltW- t-NOTHING FOR lALe -TF.ADE• ONL'l'I PHONE 642·S671 To Pl1ce Your Tr1d1r'1 Par1dlse Ad 11.6 Acres ioned 1'-1·1 North N/\V cornel' Sunllo\.\·er & Fairvie1v Trade $249,00o eq. uity for income prope11.y. Ed Riddle RIU-. 646-81!11 Shorecliffs 3 Br on fee land. $25M eqty + clear S15M Glendora lot w/oakli. \Vant inc prop, trlr park or nwch nr coast. 01vnet· 673-0176 712 St. James Pl, N.B. 3 Br, 2 Ba, ocean view. Own- er says 1>ubmlt income or land for $30.\l equity. Mark Les, Rltr. 548-7TU J\f-1 Or Commen::laJ, Va- cant. Clear. Near Bl'istol, C.!\1. Trade for house 01· du- plex in this area. Call • 675-5i81. '53 CAD. OeVllle. Red lea.th. UphOlst. P. R&H. \Vire \V, Gd. eond. One own1'. Exchange for gd. gentle riding n11U't!. 714- 51:>-1289. Neat cottage 1't!ar ot R-2 lot Cdr..f, Equity SSSOO. Take clear late n1odel air cond. car part cq1y, balanCi" $135 per mo, 6\~ %. 67l-01TJ 5 units in 2 older homes, So. Laguna, combined equ- ity $19.000. Trade for in- rome property or clear lot (S) So. 0 .C. Bkr, 49'3-1397 1963 Cadillac Convertible, good condition, for part equ. ily in 3 or 4 BR, GI or FHA hon1e to $25.000. J\.lr. iteyer 5,16-5880, ;,49-1366. FURN. 1 & 2 Br apts downtown H.B. No children or pets. ~7396 Or1nge County 4600 307 Avocado St, C.M. See'l~B~'~'~'·~·~==~=~= J\1gr .. Apt No. 5 OCEAN FRONT 2 BR. 2 BA. SPACIOUS CLEAN l BR Yrly $2511 or $185 furn, \\'lN· w/111 cpts,' drps, elec bll.11s. TER only! Newly dee. Quiet al't'a. Nr fwys & Adults, no pets. 538-2095 MARINER'S CENTER OU ice in Store Bldg. Rent or I -E--,-id-,-,-,,-. -h-m-. -.-,-,.-,-, Lse. $75-$125. Beauty shop, ap!s $29,950 val. or 'J hrns sr-me equip. 149 Riverside w/5 1\'!ll' apts, mo inc $788, Ave., N.B. 646-2414. 359,50() val. Trd $33 J\I eq for J\.fOUNTAIN Ham e Big l Bear (moonridge) 2 Br. furnished, $19 Full, Equity $10. For units. sm resi- dence, lot or TO's. 639-3-150, Mr. King. 5990 SINGLE Adults, l u x ury shops. Adults. no pets. REAL ESTATE "garden apts, \\.'/full recrea-549--0412 General tion facilitie1 It complete ,-,;;,,,,--;;-o.:--:=;:--:;::-:-1--=:::::.:::_ ____ _ th n... Cl b LARGE 2 BR. crpts, drps, privacy. Sou UGJ · u carport & pool. Kids ok. Rentals Wanted Apts. 277 So. Brookhurst, 2214 College, Apt No. 2. Anaheim (qJ4) 172-4500 646-?095 200 -1000 SQ. IT. Newport S.Cal hm. O\\•nr/bkr 646-3750 Beach Civic Ctr. area. Secretarial services. 3345 Have: \Vhirlpool gas dryer, Newport Blvd., N . B. $50 value. Trade for fre~zer 675-1601. OI' ? ?of equal value. call AIRPORT CENTER Vena, 6~5-14~3. QUIET l & 2 Br garden apt; hll·ins, patio, hid pool; aduHs, no pet.s; $160 mo. Garden Grove ~10 Ne1v 1. 2 & 3 roo1n deluxe 40 ACRES rec: Jail(! "'ith suites. Adj. ne \\I trees near 1}('1v lake NE 54&-Sl£3 SINGLE Adults L uxury '' A h Bl d F _tJ11w.1m.c..t•M'" ac it ur \'. rom Utah. Value $100 ""r acre. gartlen apts wilb country 1125 Call ""7843 ~ ·-645·01 11 · ..... u-• Trade all or part for car, club atmosphere and com-2885 ~lENDOZA DRIVE ~.,111•t~a •1u11u1ut 1--=~~=--oc~~-plek privacy. SOUTH BAY --==::::::::: .. ,_111.a 1u11cu BAY LIDO BLDG diamonds, boat or ? 64.f--11~ ./XJ.iAS AT LK ARRO\V· HEAD. Dl'amatlc 4 BR on golf course & lake. $125,000 clear. Low dn. Trade In- come or '! (7141 459-3103 \Vhat do you have to tra:de? List it here -in Orange County's la~st read bad- lng post -aro1 make a deal CLUB AP'I'S lllOO ChaPman 1 & 2 BR apts. 2 split-level. --......,___ 3700 Newport, N.B. Ave .. Garden Grove CTI4) C/0, bltns, No p ets. e LANDLORDS e Offices available. Rm 301 1\ * * * * 'Ir ~3D30 545-5421-See J\.Igr, Apt A FREE RENTAL SERVICE 675-2464 or ~1-50321 !!!!l!!!!!!!l!!!!'J!!!!!l!l!!!!!!!!!!!~!!!!!!'l!!!!l!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!ll l~~~~=====:li2iBBDDRR. l2lBa...-.lPoo"'li;",lb;lttt::i-inru,<..I Broker 534-6982 SHARE ll'g deluxe · cffice REAL ESTATE BUSINESS and 4705 crpts & drps. $195 a mo. suite. J\Jurual Savings bldg General FINANCIAL 1 CHARMING 2 bdrm. uniL .Newly redec ., v.:Jw carpeting & d_r apes. Comple1ely furn. Lge. tree shaded patio. 120 yds. from Woods Cove Beach $175 mo. Mlsg!on Realty 4S-t--0731 CHARi'\UNG Partly furn seaside studio bungalow, garden seU.ing. Lease $170 inc gar, all uti li ti e s , Tel~lear. Refs. 494-m5 SEE NE\V VILLAGE INN Steps to beach. $35. \l'k $145 mo. LAGUNA 4!M-7'201 2 BR. Studio's, Nr OCC. $140 mo. Avail how & Jan 1st. Family welcome. 637-2943 RENTALS Call • 646-9683, Agent. Rooms for_R_en_i __ 5_99_5_ 1 Corona de! ~lar. ca 11 -.:__ ____ _ 2 BR, $liJ. ~ts. drps, LARGE Room, private bath, 6Ta--6171 anytinte :L::•_;k:,•_;E::l::;s~in:.:o::r:.• __ 6:;2:;0:.:2 ~~~~~ bltns. Pvt patio, encl gar. working girl. Sr..IALL Office on busy cor- Adulls. 5494133 675-1977 ner Costa i\lesa. $5.i/month . NEW Private Home SIS \VK &: up "''/ kifchen $30. utilities incJuded. 6·12~560 1n a 4-~le....:. I..& 3 BR ,..,; \vk studio ap1. 2376 Ne\.\•porl everything. Nr Fwy, ~4016 Blvd. 548-9755 3 BR, 2 BA, upslrs. New FURN. 'room. Private horne. shag cpl. Bl!_ns. Xln_t North Near shopping. Nr. Baker & C.r.t. loc. $19a ~-557-6151 Fairview. 54!;-3298 eves. 2 BR apt, i;eparate garage, - ceramic tile kit & bath, Motels, Trlr. Crts. 5997 gar bage disp. Aft 4, 540-9030 -~-~-=~---!SANDY 'S TRAILER COURT LGE. 2 &: .~ BR. Pool Crpts Spaces avail now. l\tax 26'. & drps. Kids & sml pets ok. Call 646-9681 1998 il1aple Apt 3, 548-2808 \VI!:EKLY rates Sea Lark N I B •-h 5200 1..totel, 2301 Newport Blvd., eW])Or e c Costa J\fesa J Commercial 6085 LEASED Stores For Sale. ]9th St. Nr. Bethel TO\\'ers. 54.i-1768 or 646-7414, Agent. Industrial Rental 6090 ------··------ NEW BUILDING l2ti0 Losan Ave .. Costa l\Icsa Each unit 1725 sq ll, 2 off- ices, 2 rest rooms, 110/220 electric. An1ple parking. C. Robert Nattress Realtor Costa J\1esa 6<12-1485 3 ADJOINING hil l s ide lak('viC\V lots, near casino $3,000. 536-2449 3 ACRES 40 miles llOrth ol Reno neal' Honey Lake at foot of Sierras. Level, clear, $3,{KM}. J36-2449 CABIN \v/a acres $~.230. Low lo1v dO\\ln & easy lerms. Breck Nott Rlty. 642-904~ 2 LOTS, Country Cl ub J-lght.s. $79~ each. lQf/r dO\l'n, •642-2657• -------R. E. Wanted 6240 Famous Brand Name CANOY ROUTES No1v available in Costa l'vlesa and many other to1\·ns in this area. All locations are l.'On1n1ercial or factory. Very high earnings. No selling in- volved. To qualify you 1nusl be reliable and have one Wiour a day spare tin1e (day1 OI' evei>!. $16i5 TOTAL Aots. Unfurnished SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm Gu .. t Homes 5998 Lots 6100 2 bath. Nr. shopping. PRIVATE--;t;m & bath for --------'-~ CASH REQUIRED Irn1ulre about our "free bon· us route plan". 1.fake YoUt future secure \~'ilh us, a Dunn & Bradstreet rated na. lional con1pany. For more Information, send nan1e, ad. NEED MONEY? '""' m t phooe # too Gener el 5000 VEN DOME JJi.IMACULATE .\PTSJ ADULT & FAMILY SECTIONS AVAILABLE Close to shopping, Perk * Spacious 3 Br's. 2 Ba * 2 Bedroomi * Swim Pool, Put/green * Frpl, Indlvllndry fac·i. 1845 Aneheim Ave. COSTA MESA 642-2824 • RENT • 3 Rooms Furniture S19.95 & UP !:Onth-TG-M1'nth Rentala \VIDE SELECTION NO DEPOSIT 0 .A.C. HFRC Furniture Rentals 517 W, 19th. CM ~34KJ $70. 1 Br 4-plex. Ga.s, water pd. Avail now. Broker '14-0980 "'"" $240 per mo. ainbulatory person. Lovely 180 DEGREE VIE\V home, nice surroundings, of ocean .~ coastline, sn1a11 Mariner Square Apts. good nutritious meals. Costa but bldable lot, Laguna Bch. 1244 Irvine Ave., N.B. MeS!l. 548-4153 Pavi ng & util in aft. l~t of yr. Lo\v dn \\'/low nlo. pyt. 494--8100 or 494-J 137 GRACIOUS ADULT LIVING Misc. Rentals 5999 2 ~.r. 2 Ba, hi-rise bldg .. Ex-SINGLE Garage For Rent _C __ i_tr_u_s_G_ro_v_•_• ___ 6_1_7S citing bay & ocean view. Costa MeM Area. Con- Jacuzzi pool, ele.vators, venient Loe. Call (213) l!Ubterranean pkg, b oat 371-3965 111\ps avail tor tenants.;==°"~-~-=---=--642-2202 SINGLE Car Garage, Corona The Bluffs rent or buy, dlx 3 del Mar. $20 a mo. Call · BR 2 BA split lnt, eust dec.;_6_75-6771 ________ _ pool. Jan 3, s:m. 644-2039 6000 Income Property Eu! Bluff 5242 1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; e NEW DELUXE e Pre-Paid Interest TAX SSS SAVED Quick escrow before 'iO on this 10 acre grove 1.,,.irh avG- cado and citrus trees. Price $85.000. CALL (7141 722-1306 Ask for Bruce Alexander or Bette Carpt'nter. 1\1.ILTON J. WERSHOW 3 Br, 2 Ba apt. tor lease Acceptable on one of sev-Realty Company Incl. spac. mastr. 5Uite, din era.I tine leased industriaJ 1012 s. Hill, OcC'anside rm. & dbl, garage, auto. buildings, door cpener avail. Pool & Deluxe 500 sq. It., $.X),500 ORANGE Grove, Riversirle, rec. area.. Nr. Catholic New 18,0CIO sq. It .. $16.i.OOO 12 acres, 5 yr. navals. Pre ~ h r· 700 f 179 000 paid interest 70( loan. $68j(), .... uurc . U'St user s~. I., , • ONLY S24S • Ex~llent no cost loan. For _ ... _,_._,_,.,_-_.,.~-~--13_73 ___ _ 86.j Amlg~ Way, N.B. details eall K. W. Small. $1;x>. Util pd. 2 Br, bltns. Children OK. Bkr Corona Eckoff & A•soc., Inc. del Mar 5250 1818 \V. Oiap1nan Ave. Acreage 6200 To buy a new Mme? tnvesti-.. ROUTE DEPART:ifEPiT gate our guaranteed trade #23 .. , P.O. Box ~. in plan. Let us answer your -=P~o~m~o~"'~·-CaJ=~H·:..:::"~'=":__ jj questions with no obligation. UNLIMITED EARNINGS Fair enoUgh ~ Yes ils true, for only $195 • ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 LARGE house w/zoning tor rest home \\'anted in N.B., CDill. Laguna Bch or Dana PL 642--0905 or 642-544!) BUSINE!t~ •no FINANCIAL Bus. Opportunities 6300 Associate you can be your 01vn boss - new product. Apply at 488 E. lith St., Suire 232. C.~J. Money to loin 6320 2nd TD Loan Prompt, confidential service 642·2171 545.()611 Serving Harbor area 20 yrs. Sattler Mortgage Co. 336 E. 17th Slreet Travel 6435 ~EASONED 4 -1st TD's; $5,237 Approx. bal. each;, 8<;~. all rlue lSI mos. 10 % Disc. 494-1138 MANUFACTURER ANNOUNCEMENTS $17,500 Jnvestn1ent into the and NOTICES no. J Business of the day. 25 yr. history of success, n0,1 Found (free Ads) 6400 -Orange, Calif, ~-26Zl, Eve11-wknds 5JS.59TI expanding opera.lions lo So. IRISH Setter. !!'male, young. Callf. Comple!e factory in-Vic. old Ne1vport Blvd. 40 Acres. So. Calif. $2:i. s1!1lled & ready to go. \Viii 96S-6l IO 00\VN, $25. PER J\IONTH, train Principal of i'ITgn1t, Costa Mesi 5100 ._.... $2,495. FULL PRICE. L. abilities. Contact inlnied. FOUND Vicinity of Victor\11 MARnNlt'\UE ~ 32 UNITS Shell.·felt, 326 \V. Third SL, Onct> In a lifetime oppor. to and Can:,.'On, Costa :ilesa. ,.. •N• On 2~) acres nr. Santa Ana L.A. Phone: (213)623-5101 make thal high inconie niost One Himalayan cat 548-7218 GARDEN Am Country Oub, Lge pool. 4 EXCELLE~T opportunity 10 people dN'11n1 of. Starting DIAL dit'Cct 642-5678. Charge Excellent p&rk·like aUfTOU11d. ON TEN ACRES yrs. old. E-Z care. Xlnt in-11.cres P.eno a1\'a. Large salary $12,COO + substantial your arl. then sit back and /h ed _, Ex 1 l.: 2 BR. Fum &. Unturn corne -low down -low lake. $25 ""r nio. handles. profits. Cl\11 Ken Clillord listen ta the phone rin<>! ings w eat .....,....s, tra Fireplacts I priv. p.atlc:s /· inter-est! $450.000. 89+-4743 t'~ 1114 ) 77·1--70j(I No1\'! • .., parking. Near shopping. Pools. Tennlt: .Contnt'l Bkfst. Riddle & Ro•s 675--7225 I =========~========..:=========-11 Adults only. 9(X> Sea Lane, 001 644-2611 .-- 2 & 3 BR APJ'S <MacArthur nr Caul Hwyl 4 UNITS Balboa P eninsula. tm Santa Ana Ave., C.J\f. I !!!!!!!!l!!l'l!!l'l!~-~!!!!J!""!!i!! \Vlnter rentals $500/mo. Mgr, Apt llJ 646-~2 I UNIT LEFT! Potential aunlnlet" rentllla 2 B d NEW DUPLEX S500 per \\'ttk. 0\\11er leav· e rooms 2 BR 2 Ba (•25Q) P" ;og area. p,;"' $45.000. Ceil . · " · ,.v. pa. ?>tartln Rlt.r 548-6.132 * 1~ bath.'! * C8.rpeU./Drapes *Gas Bu\11.ins * $160 per l\fonth Sf6..546(1. 54!).lroB Fairway iilfa Apts Near Orange Co. Airport t._ ucr. Adults only. 20122 &u:ita Ana A\."t. ~ VILLA MESA APTS 2 BR untum, prl pe.tios.,htd pool. 2 ~ end'I ear. OiiJ.. dlftl welcome, no p e t a pleue! SlliO. A18D furn $185. 11J w. Wbin. 646-12$1. STUDIO •J>t, 2 BR, 1 \J BA-. Patio, clo.wd ~te. nr &bopping. Adult.I, w-.1 pet&, ms. &<i-mi. 2 BR. """· dJi><, t.DCL pr It private patio. S15!, 673-3691) tio, cov. garage, cptd., drap-· ' ~. Comp. bltns. Best Joe. EASTS10~ 11 Units V.'/$1110 707~ ORCt-!JD monthJy income. on 50,400 fl. or land. $82.()0() -No a « &75-'0~0 0 points, owner \\'ill carry •. • wf\O\\' low down. Broker -1'75 I L& 64&-J7;x). COROUOO AP:S. 2 Br. D1:fPLEX COM. 2 hou!!Cs. Lower levela, •tudk:IK, pent-S53.:.000, $8,000 do\\'n. Income house, Frples.. pool, dbl . $41-l ~lo. 67$--6044 cari>orta, pat>oa. $180 • $220. Business Property 6050 673-~n .:.::::;;;;;:;;;,;,,;c;,:;:--'--'_.;..;.;..; NICE tp 2 BH. UpJ)er. New 2 ACRES, Costa l\tega -lfi. cpta. drps. l'ftfrig, re"'e. gar. rise area. Long lenn lea!IC. New decor. Adults. Lae, $170 Pf!arl Dfovtnt., P. O. Box Owner 70( N~rdUu!I. 1940. l!unUnitton B e ach, il95 mo., utt!ltJes paid j .;mi:,;6;====== 2 BR .• garage. Yearly. B I R I I ~ Mt. Forney, Bkr. 54().3862 us neu en I __, LUXURIOUS 3 BR apt, yrly ROO~I Suitnble. for gift ghop. be. $325 ~ mo. Inquire mtn'• shop or ladl~s &hop. Q% lrls or call ~nm CAii Jim Berk!lhltt. ~ $150 mo. 1 BR. 1 blk to STORES or OFFICES martec. avail Jan 1. Adults.~ to S150 util incl. St. ex- only, oo pe.ta. m-m I poe1.1re_ 569 w. 19th. o.t JOIN THE 'SELLERS CIRCLE' WE'RE SAVING SPACE FOR YOU ••• ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ If you sell a service and don't advertise in the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're doing business the ha rd way· The Service Directory (classifications 6500 -7000 in the classified ad section daily) g 1 v e s you an advantage you get through no other adver· tising medium. It reaches customers who are ready to buy. Be there when your prospects come into the market looking for the iervices you have to sell. If your service isn 't listed, we'll start a category just for you, Pick up the phone r i 9 ht now and reserve ' your space in the "Sellers Circle" • • • Your Direct Line to Directory Results ., 642-5678 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED AD DEPARTMENT , . l'llmdiy, n-"" IS, 1969 DAILY l'ILOl' n ANNOUNCl!MlilTS I JOIS ·a EMl'LOYMINT JOIS a IM,LOYMINT JOIS a l'MPLOY-Nf Juls a 1 ..... L Jo-a. . !Jiff end NOTIC&S ' -· ·• ·-- Jollo Men, Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 J~ LI ' w . 7llO Jobe Men, w.m. 7100 Schooho1Mtructlon-74GI Announcemen~ 6410 · · ~•n, om. - ___ ·;.__· ~ -,. When "fp11 Want·H·done right ••• ~c ......... ...,.. COLI.EGE ...... nt need• * HEAVY EQUIP. MEQIS. R<sta..ant TRUCK-· P.lil"' Jr. * AJRLllfl A 'i otlmed to: pobilc:" by Balbol 1\llQI' tn. PcMW\lltlp and Ovt:r9eu lnfDrmaUon For l"!:ataurant po4 l tton1 , Tri9p Eltes.::~oe. TRAVIL CARI~ -/t. Powu SqU4d:rof! evtrY Mon. Phonies. ln my home. Call tTI4) '774-2610 pleast contact our · 1 nl&httor13 wee1"bo&lnnlng 67>-ml o.,.. s1s-.0946 HSKPa . 24 hr car.,"""' *HEW* TURRO LATHE 8'*tlai>'.......,t • 7 poi Mon. Jan. 12 at Evenllltl hllkp'g A meals. Terms to 11cket 6&Jf. . 1 Newll'rl Harbor Yacht cou•ANION be nogotlaled. Call '-R<uben'a. O>co'a --Ol'&ATOR-• a.-""" . Calf one of the experts listed below!! Cit.lb, 720 W. 81.y" AYe., ....-Beach Community Hoe:pital, Restaurants Alt Fre.l&bt ·Carco NewPQrt Bet.ch. No advance A vtryl lighl , bOuaekeepina: Hattleld teet1on, ?OOm 107. Riverside, 'Calli. DAY SHIFT C.Ommunleatiocta I I I. -~ed ::t::==: 3640 Central Ave. ........,1 •-• res. • ra ton ''=" • for healthy mature lady. HO~EPER & clilld ~"' .v .. Register at cla.u. Bring Livi! In • salary. cau be· .e 5~ eta Wk. S50 wk + $500. SALARY ~tinlmum five yttn txPtti· ~ • . } ( nolebook first night. Ques-tween 6 & 8 PM . 673-7365 rm & brd Pd vac ••• 9212 Just out of MUitary Servi~. en~ on Wamr.r Swue:)' tur-AIRLINE ' tions: Call 813-1855 · · · .J"Ar train aa service Manaa:er ret la.the$ setup & cperate SCHOOLS-1" I * COOK * MIF. Apply; HOUSEKEEPER/Cook, 6 small parts Mfg. Firm, t~ 00 dole iolerance 'A"Ork. Cemetery Lolt 6411 Hunttngtan Valley Con-hrs daily, i hrs Sat. Negotiable, call Ann, Weit PACIFIC SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE OIRECTORY ---vate,..nt llc<pltal, 8lS2 no-1c-ff.B. 536-3017 cllU Penonn"1 A&e••>'. 200 Excollont .,..wlh oPPOrtuni· .:..:;;.:.;.:..:;::...;::;;.:;;.:;.;..::;;~ FOR Sale by ownet. 6 Newman Ave. H.B. JANrroRS. Waxen. Put & Wettclltf Dr., N.B. 645-mO ties, overt!me, , ......... bene-Inquire TCJdl¥ Babysitting 6550 El.ctrical 6640 P1-rh1nnin111 Paclllc View ce-et•-Jo•·. COOK · 'd CLO... ..u ......... c..o .. ...,... r-• • '" ·# .. • PIZU, exp • ,,,.. r~ time. Experienced only. SALES: ATI'ENTION MobUe fits, ...,._,,,,.,. f\.IOTHER' or 2 little glrll, ELECI'RJCAL gery.lce 6 Painting 6l50 cau mornlnp 642-1!23 ED Mon & Tues. Apply Good pay & workini con. hm. owners. Ladie's that · 610 E. Jltb St., Set.a Am desires babysitting. my repair. )I hra. 1 ~s. No INT i~ E Auto T 16947 Buahard, F.V. 962-6404 dltlons. 54~9393. want to supplement your m. · APPLY IN PERSON home, &lboa Waod. A&e 2 job too 11nall. Re-model &: , ..... "''' Aver(y. xt. r1n1port 6445 COOK. Exp'd, Apply SUrf & • JANITOR • come. No phone mllcltlng, AUCOONEEIUNC l ' up. ~1644 additions, 1r it's electrical $121.50 ~?M;>t on · 8 yr: Sirloin, 5930 Pac. Cit. Hwy. Do not haw to leave-YoW' SHUR-LOK CORP. REGULAR 2 WEEK ~ l'w"1"LL~bal>ys!t~~~,,.,_~-.. -,-,-,..-.1 we. fu: it ' 646-4172 ' guar. pamting avail. Also. WANTED: Ride L.A. around N.8. hm. P/Ume wrk. For info, Be In btislness for ~· · Apts & Comm'l. ~1546 JO a.m. from vie Costa SWING SHIFT call D..,. ~··1. 1.. ,,_ E N ---• Pl Ueam to be an auctioned. fetleed yard. Costa J\tesa ELECTRICIAN, licensed, CUSTOMER RELATIONS ~ r..wuu '. o,~, .... ..,y " WESI'·BEST School of Aue.- area. 6'1&-95il b 0 n de d • Small jobs, EX·.PAINTER, now s c h I f\.1esa, back aruund 10 p.m. TRA VE·L SALES: $300 week In w!g Santa Ana 1. rt -w· <th San BABYSIT my honle weekly, ~laintenanc:e 6 r e pair, teacher will. paint eves & Call coll. (7131 225-0410 Some heavy lifting fashion field. Need 5 (l blk N. ol McFadden, ionee ng. -. ' tJ dally, eves. Reasonable, 543-5203 =s~st.Xl~~.k~=· 1 ·J~O"IS=~ .. ~E~M~P~L=O;;.,;:Yc;M;,El<_1 • ~=~;. salespersons, potent I a I % blk \V. of Cr and) A';:='{ ~ ••=• reliable. 642-6037 MONEY THE HARTLEY CO. unlimited . Call Mn. TYPIST -60-70 wptn. Book-........ ,...... ~. Floors 6665 HOLIDAY Sl'ECIAL, Int. & Job W•n~, NO\V HlRlNG SINGLE Robinson M2-44l9 keepiflg exper. helprul. Call 5ewlng. Help wtth Ouil~ Bride} MltOftrf, etc. -1--...;.CAR--P-ETI--N-G_;:.::.;;: I Ext. painting. Lie & lnsurd. Women 7020 GIRLS 18-21. 1981 Plaeflltia SALES: Attention Beaut!-Mr. Andrews 675-3551. Ideas. 66-1400 '"' 6560 •""'x-·". ,!'Cb: ~ck" 64~fs~~ Yrs ---------Pel'90lllle'I director of major ,.,.,,,.,._,eo.=,,ta_,,M.,,.,._--,.. cians and X·Beauticlans Utilities Min Mt:RC.'HANOISI POiit ~ --------""::.: Free estimate Lie. contr. ..-• .. ......_... Home Care avail. 54&-4510 re tall tinn will be inter-LEGAL Secretary, must be that want to supple~ent Preferably a re 11 red SALi ANO TRADI ~ · BUILD, Rimodel, repair 541).7'262, 546-4418 PAINTING. paperhanging, ·• Allied Nurses & Aides • vie1ving applicants lor a new e."<p'd, good &kilbi, aal.ary your tnc:ome ·to style & sell serviceman who hu had ex.- Brick, block, con c re t e, 25 yra exper. Old entry Of 0.C. Nurses Registry Long Beaeb branch ottlce:, _0_ .. ..,•..,· ;;;C;<dM=6"75-""2617'°"=,.--I our fabulous Tr6s-Chlc wig. ,,.r. wl mecbanJ··' •10• Pumltv-IOOI ' •-"'-·, 00 ~b.too ,--•i. G1rdeninn · 6680 -'--H·hl •-~ -29 w Li • ---S.A . \.-al • l" ·• -,,-·~z #" """' ----""-------'A'01ru1 .... .,, p. •=BS. ""'"'" <lt • ngan .......,"'"· . Sun., Dec. 21sL Company LINOLEUM LAYER F.>r lntervw. call 836-5"1 elect. equipment. No _ - Lie. Contr. ' 962-6945 est. 64Z..1322 EXP ~ u CALL • • OSCAR4:TONY'Sg'1'denlng , ..., .... pery worker, o eni: Sales pressure. Hrs,,.-i:30. 20 PC "MADRID" Bu1IM11 Servlc. 6562 serv. Ttee. & h~ trim· * PAINTING • Jnt./Ext. steady respons. Can assume 1. Excellent salary 5 to 7 PJ\t 673-5028 New Product MISS EXEC AGENCY • • ming, hauling &: clean up. Loca! refere~s. lmmed. full charge. Can meas. 2. Good benefits -~L~V~N~--M~at~.-,-,..-.,-a1-.-·'Apply In person, 488 E. 11th 410 W. Coast Hwy. J Room Group · TYPrN9 1;?r Pror. secretary. GeneraJ &. £!!gr'g, Student rates. 962-9824 Con1plete gardening serv. service, 646-5242, 646-3657 :~~i~.,a91,;. expedite & mtg. 3, Opportunity for travel 3 to 11 PM shift. St., suite 232, 01. Newport Beach 646-3939 !'ROM MODEL HOMES ~ 0F.:""~-"es"t.00'4;,93-4302:..:::::.---·I For Better Painting, Inter.. 1 ,.,~==,,----~-~ 4· Possible overseas -~--54c.!h1061:...:.c.:,-~-·ISECRETARY * WAITRESS* lncludes: Quilled .:>ta and' GARDENING & landscaping. lor &: exterior, aCOllfllic ceil-MATURE woman seeks poai. S. ;~~:nt Man•gement Trainee . Apply • Flyin& Butler chatr -2 end tahlea 11 ·cot. 14. yrs exp. c 1 ea n _up , ~ in.gs. 646-40T1' tion as driver/companion. Military complete. $4SO to Leadmg be.arlng manufac-673-0077 fte ~e -2 Lam~ -dral.' FAST eU!cient .-bookkeeping service, posting, bi 11 in g P&L's, & collection. 962-05?1 sprinkl ers inst'd & repaired, PAINTlNG-E t 1 t 18 Live out. Own car. Box p. adv~ment star•. Fee pd ~. ,-ploy••. tuxer has 1mmed. opening WAITRESS ·a . hi er -mlrrO:r-beadboud ~ G73-llfi6 x -n · yrs, 6.'1'2, Daily Pilot. fnitial training will be In • "T "' • for a Stt. P..1urt have Xlhl • exp ·• nig s. quilted box IPrlna A tt- "'-=-"'=-------1 Exp. Ins. Lie., Free est. m11rketing, sales promotion H.S. grad, Call Ann, \Vest· typing & SH' skills w/3 yrs lci..ed6947 B.Moh~..!' FTuVes~~~ .. ly ress -5 pe. dininr ::a, AL'S Garoenlng & Lawn Acoust. Ceiling. 548-5325 DAY \VORKER & Cll!lomer relations. dill Personnel A a: ency. gen'l oUlce exper. Bkgmd us 11.1u, • • ...,.....,.. table 6 t hi·back chaln. .. I'lfaintenante. Commercial, E.'CTERIOR·lNTERIOR llonest. dependable Must be high school gradu-~645-='=rro~=~~~~-· I in finance or acentg would WE have an opening for a COMPARE AT $10.95 ' C1rpentering 6590 CARPENTRY J\llNOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Small Cabinet tn Pz-. ages Ir o t h e r ubloeta. 545-8115, U no answer leave msg at 646-2372. H. O. Andenon industrial I: re&identlal. &: r-.1AlNTENANCE Call anytime 541-2'n2 ate, neat in appearance & A1ALE COOK -PM . Hosp. be helpful. Xlnt benef\15 incl beginner in circulation $399 ~ * 646-3629 * '-===·'-'646-=3=185=·==== J bs.-Me · W aggressive. exp. pref'd. Contact Pe~n-profit sharing. Apply Per-management. Permanent Ulr1 ltt . OllS( JAPANESE Gardener, I· 0 n, om. 7100 Desire to earn above $8000 nel Director. So. Coast sonnet Dept: altuatton for high AChool nu.n $ WAR£11 1 exp'd, romp. Yard service. Plastering. R~ir 6880 Adverfulng Agency first year more important Comm. Hosp. 31872 Cst. Transport Dynamics graduate who has completed _ Free estimat!. 968-2303 Sharp Secretary f 0 r than experience. Hwy. So. Laruna. ~1311 A Div. ot Lear Siegler his miUtary obligation and No down-Pmts opJy $19 mO. J~IM='S~GMdo,,.;._.,.-ru;..·ng=.::&=1a~--I • PATCH PLASTERING lo•t • ~c·" Newport For consideration, apply ln Ext. 356 313I w. c> ...... ntrom, S.A. is looking for a bllllness 600 W. 4th St .. Santa Azll All types. Free e!tlmates r--Hiil """6~ _ .. ,,.. b..1-"t fu~Co O maintenance. Res & com· Call 540.Q!25 Beach Agency. Type person to Mr. s; SUn., Manicurist Just ott Harbor & Warner "''"'-a '161' lun:". n· pen Dally 9-9 4 merciaJ. *: 54G-4837 65-JO. Shorthind lOO, Dee, 21st, 2 p.m.: 5S5 E. Position open for experienced Equal Opportunity Employer tact Benton Williama at the Sal U SUn 11.. ~ GEN. Repair. Add. Cab. Formica Paneling. Marlite. Anything! Call Dick . 673-4459 . CLEAN·UP SPECTALlst Pl b' 6890 orn1nize & f o 11 ow Ocean Blvd., Long Beach, MANICURIST. MUAt be ex-SECRETARY $$00 DAI~Y Pll..QT tor an in-PRICES SLASHEDI . ~m 1ng • Fidell"' Federal Pia"'" com. -rienced In P .. 1-·-• aloo -tervtew. up to so~ sa·•-a · r.1owing, edging, odd jobs. th r u U n d o r 35 1-~ I ...., ,.,,.. ""'''" · """ ... ,. Reasonable. 548-6955 PLU~1BING REPAIR • • mun 'J room entrance thru For interview call £73-696l Younr co. needs a sec. for WOMAN to clean house l 8' Sofa &. love aeat $1.59.• No job too small Phone: '42""3910. 425 lobby) MEAT Cutter, full 0 r the controller with g 0 0 d day per week. References 5 Pc Span a:ame set $169~ CARPENTRY, Gabinets Remod. No job too sm~ qual work. Call 646-2576 6682 e 642-3128 e N. Newport Blvd. DELICATESSEN MAN pltime. Also, Apprentice akills and will pay % the required 645--2438 Kins Sz quilted mattress i ACCOUNTS 4~ E. l?:'>th St., CM. meat cutter. Call • 548-3632. fee, call Loraine, Westcliff box springs •••••••• $98.S Roofing 6950 RECEIVABLE See Ten')'. Nol'T'is Meatl, 205 61.st St., Personnel Agency, 2043 School•lnttrvctlan7600S Pc BR King, Span $179.S ASST. BILLING DELIVERY Men wanted Newport Shores Center, NB. WestcHU I>r., N.8. 645-2770 Approved Fumltvre i CLERK v.ith truck. L. A. Times, * MOTEL MAJD * SERVICE Station Attend : 2159 Harbor, CM early AM. wknds It or Part Time Over 30 Full or p/tlme empt . 1 DON'T GIVE UPI REPAIR, Partitions. SznaU Remodel, etc. Nite or day. ALL TYPES; rock, wood & Reas! Call KEN 54()..4679 asphalt shingles. LEAKS u. 11 6730 REPAIRED. Work ruar. REPAIRS.ALTERATIONS f"M'·.:;•;,;n~g'c-;:;,---;CJ;~~l ~M~~~ll~~~====== Acx:uRATE TYPIST Ask for Dave Llftclt.?y wkdys. 540-6201 t94-9436 7AM-4PM & llPM-7AM You may find It at Amerlea'i shifts •open, Sal a r y + largest. moat unusual ~ CABINET. Any !!ize job, , YARD/Car, Cleanup. 25 yrs. exper . 548-ET13 $10/load. Salvageables free. Sewing 6960 DENTAL Assistant -Recepl for HUill. Bcb. practice. Send inq. lo: 2502a Green. bay Dr. El Toro, Cal. Remove ivy; &rade . E.~Iorer Motor Homes -(714) 546-3300 Cement, Concrete 6600 962-8745. • Dreumalcing • Alterations .=:..::;.:::._~----Special on coat hems * AIR.CRAFT MECH * CEAIENT \VORK. no job too sn1all, resonable. Fee estim. H. Stullick 548-8615 * CONCRETE FLOORS, patios, etc. Reasonable, Call Don, 642-8514: Contr1cton 6620 •Hauling. Have ~ ton * &16-0446 * Overseas Informatio~ pickup, licensed & insured. I-..==;.:::::;;;;;,;;==~ I Call 1714) 174-2610 494-1003 TILE, Ceramic 6974 -7'=-=---"-'c;::.-A /P Construction Experienced. Must be familiar w/conll"act billing and lien releues. Typing, pressure. Housec:lunlng 673S BAY & Bea eh J anitorial. Carpets. windows, .Qoor:s, etc. Res & Commc'l. 646-1401 * Verne, The Tile Man* Cust. work. Install & repairs. No job too small. Plaster patch, Leaking g h ow er repair. ~7-1957/846--0206. MISS EXEC AGENCY DENTAL ASSISTANT wanted in Newpt Beh, Start Jan 2. Intv. now, 548-5602 Dept. Store J. W. ROBINSON HAS OPENlNG FOR SALESPERSON * APT CLEANING * ROOi\\ Additions -Patklft · ·.,Yam: il:.~ti:ilfgll"'642-8164 Block Fences-Driveways--Williams '(:leaning Serv. TrH Service 6910 410 W. Cout Hwy. Newport Beach 64&39.19 TREES Pruned, topp~d. ASSISTANTS A WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES Planters. 642-:9852 ' CARPETS, Windows, firs, Additions * Remodelini; etc. Rea or Come'), Xlnt removed. 26 yrs exper. RECEPTIONIST Aerial tower eqp'd. Prepared returne m111t baw Top commissions, t u 11 time. Excellent benet:lt1. Frt'd H. Gerwick, Lie, '~'Ork Reas! Refs. 543-4.lll 4~505 and 631J...1'234 ty,.·o yrs. dental experftn~. 673..fi041 * 549-2170 e WINDOWS DIRTY! rn=E~EC:..,,SER::,:C,CV:CICE~, "•'-•n"·"1 '-,.-rd-I Eve. hn. All union benefits cleanup. SPR I NKLER Salary $3.44 per hr. Call lo; REPAIRS 645-5848 app( for inttn'iew. 6J3.T:i31 Apply Penormel 10.5 pm. Mon. thru Fri:. Carpet Cleaning CARPET &: upholstery steam cleaned, also carpet in. stallalion. Results guar. For free est, call 646-5971 A-OK shampoo Christmas special $7.50 nn-lcss for halls etc. Also comp housecln'g 877-3182 Free est. 15 years exp. Johnny Dunn 642-2364 Ironing 6755 IRONING in my home. 15c a piece. l day servige. Ca11 """"'°' IRONING In my home, $1 hr. A l leratlon1 . Also babysitting. Call 545-7641 GENE'S m=E·E~~S~E~R~v-. - Trees, 11hrubbery trimmed, &/or removed.' 549-1359 Televl,ion, Repa1r 6985 COLOR TV &. SI'EREO 828 W. 19th St.. COIJla A-!esa 64&.6778 or 557..0733 Assembly. EXP'D. ELECTRONIC ASSEMBJ..ERS Wiring & P.C. Board fabrica· tion. App. in person TRANSJOOM CORP. 851 W. 18th St., C.M. FASHION ISLAND NEY/PORT BEACH Equal opportunity employer DESK CLERK. Expe r 'd. NCR 4:200. Apply: Ben Brown's Molor Hotel, 3ll06 S. Cit Hwy, So Laguna ARCHITElCT'URAL Drafts. Dishwasher -P~ -time man. Crowing firm needs nights. See Terry. 49j exp'd, dra.ft&man. Diverai. E. 17th, Co11la Mesa 6990 tied practice, Newpt, Bcll. -00-'M::ESTI...:..:::C~H=,,::p...:::wan=-ted-.1 CZYKOSKl'S CUstrn. Uphol. =""=·~·-'-71='-l ___ .;;·_·~~-Starting Dec. 26th in C.M. CARPET & Furn cleaning: J1nltori1I 6790 for 1 day service & quality I :..::.;;:;.:.;.;.:.;. ___ ....;;.;.,;..; Upholstery work. Call Sterling for brightness! 642-852o SPARKLE 'Janitorial & Win- dov.· cleaning Serv. Win· dows, resid., coml, consl Cleanup. Free est. 968-2691 European Craftsmanship BANK Personnel Exp : 834-7780. ask for Mr. Hoey 100% tin! 642--1454 ~eretarial, clerical, NCR -1831 Newport Blv, CM. 450 proof machine operator. 4~755; 34061 Doheny Park Driver PIZZA MAN Diamond Carpet Cleaners 187 21st St, COsta Mesa Home & Apt Cl~anlng ~1317 Free e11timates L1ndsc•pln9 6810 Dr, Capistrano Bch ---'-"-----Window Cle1ning 6997 BUSIEST markelplace in TAKATA NURSERY .BARBER, to manage new town. The DAIL y PILOT Best Design HAVE YOUR "'.lNDOWS &i:bershop, Sheraton Beach 1s coming to HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VALLEY DRIVERS WANTED Classified section. save Sprinklers Installed CLEANED FOR THE Inn. for details. call Lou Beach Blvd &: Yorktown RB money, time &: ettort. Look Drain Pipe Installed HOLIDAYS. CALL 64&-8610. Evans 536-1421 now!!! Free trim&: Oean-up TIIE QUICKER 'fOU CAU., BABYSI'ITER Needed· Live * DRIVERS * 546-a724 nm QUICKER YOU SELL tntout. Grandmother type. No E--len•e 2 children. Refer. 642-4386 ..,.,.... • ... BABYSIITER for occuiona! Neceuary! da"". Mesa del Mar area. MUlt have Clean Calllornla ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS Call 0 546-0!06 cirMng nocord. ApJ>b' and NOTICES and NOTICES and NOTICES BA=RB~ER:...:..:V:..:ory--p...,.--,.-,-,, YELLOW CAB CO. Found (Frff Adt) 6400 Lost shop in beautiful l..agutLa 186 E. 16th SL :;;~)i~;;;(;.~J;;: I ~~~=7,;~:;:':::640~~11 I :P~•:•ao:n~e~la'._ ___ ~640~~$ Beach. 494-0054 Costa Me11a ~UNO In CdM small stuf· BEAUTY Operator. female, Drug Clerk. • fed Snoopy dog LOsr-yngblkmalemlnFr EX- Lido poodl · *Al 7 prefer w/cliente:l t . PERIENCED -Park w/rhlnestone no~c. gold e, (Cosmo.) \Vh! goatee one e I ....., _, ProgTessive new 1a lon . Pharmacy, 642-1580 necklace & brattle1, blue w u • ..,er Mung jaw. Mr. niteaowri: band aid og Robertson, Contact Nwpt Po-,<:.94-c.5054=,:_-~----I * ELECTRONIC TECHS. * ehefk. 29&5'1» Terry Ra, Uee Dept. or CZlll 877-3014 YES IT'S YOUR •BOOKKEEPER• wanted Overseas Infonnation Lagwt&._Bch ______ , ,co;:l:::L _______ 1 FAULT Call 50-3943 Call !TI4) 77f-2610 APPROX 1 Yl\ .. c:>ld, Black Ir LOST: Brov.11 &. \\'hite For recorded measaa;e thal 3 10 5 PM only. ENGINEERS tan Cerman . She~, vie Btagle &. Terrier. Near will cbange your lile call BOOKKEEPING, part lime, The exceptional response to H~bor it Mams;, Od. C&U. .. Golden \Yest &: Edinger. <lRANCE co. 547-6667 knowledge of taxe• helpful our product at the Fall Joint 549-1926 Wearing dog tags. Family 24 hour recording but not ntceB181'y. 891--0443 O>mputer Conference is Jt111t GIRL'S BikC, identify. t'l o~ 7 ::m Small Reward.1--.:;.::.;:L;;!C;;EN~SED:;;;;::*::!_-, one indication of our gt'081 Vic. 17th &: Tustin, C.M, ag o. ' 891-8468 .Spiritual Reading, advice BOAT polential. We are P~ .. ~ LOST On Admiralty ts., Sal on all m!lllen. Love, slve, rapidly expanding le 1-~LG~E=-=W!tlc=te-R"°a"'b'°'tii"t.-I nit• O.C. 13. lad~• wri" Mamag•, Bu•'"""· 312 N. CARPENTERS nc,. EngUiton I< Do&!,.. watch engraved "Dorothea El Caniino Real, SM 1nen interttttd in non~e-9129 Ponean Ave., Fountain Valle.y , BL.ACK & \VHITE RABBIT. vie. Falrvit>w &: Paularlno, CM.~ .. Beal«". reward phone Clemente. 492-9136, 492-0076 E X p E R I E N C E 0 fense commerctal industries. SJ5.85°19. 10 AM _ 10 PM , U )'OU a~ qUallfied In lotlc, l mechanical, or ctrcult de· CAMEO BJond part Persian SECURITY Avail. Bach App Y sign, calI fn4) 673-1640. Im. fem~e cat. l yr old. Needs Collete Degree will live in O'DAY YACHTS media~ openliigs include a mtd1C8tlon. Lotlt on Avon )'OUr hOrne, if unoccupied, 3090 PULLMAN limited number cf hfrh ltv- MO'N:L assistant mgra or tra1Ptta: & maids wanted. 2376.~t~rt Blvd .. 548-9755 e e NEEDED Comm. Atust be local resl· finished furniture store COii dent. Apply Richfield, 200 RedhW 4 Santa Ana ''l'rirf'. w. Coast Hwy., N.B. ; i l! : I : i l: Tu.attn. 1 ml So. of Ne~ SERVICE STA. MAN. !! \ \ ii;;'. · Fwy. o,,.n 362 d.,.. P'f )'t, Experienced. Full time. l i i: ! i l i; · 544-5410 1 Two (>Hice Girls Top wagea & commission. 6 PC KING SIZE Must be 25 and able to drive "''" s "·t A • -Bch ......, • .....,, wy., ~g . BEDROOM ~. 2 -• -. APPLY -<>w1 ........ tS6 E. lGth 5_t., C.M. SERVICE Station Attendant, lamps, (velvet, deep tufted) _ _=:::..:;;..::=_;i;::..=.c...-exp. ~. 4678 Campus Dr., headboard, spread, boudol:r ilnewp '-ort . N.B. Airport Texac..'O -see chalr & bench, Your choice Miko MEN I WOMENI or colon ..... $440, NaW Personnel SERVICE STATION. Day COMPUTER PROGRAM· $299. man &: Part time eve man. MING IS THE KEY TO SIESTA SLEEP SHOI' 8Q&nCY Exper. Neat &. have haircut. YOUR PROJilT ABLE l9'l'l Harbor Blvd, Qlata Meai; 833 DOVER DRIVE NEWPORT BEAOl 642..1870 Wi1hing you obundonce in 1970! <See us for "prosperity lrmurance,") *********** newport . personnel agency Profe11lonal Service for the employer and the 1ppltcant 83l Dover Dr., N.B. 642-3870 549-2743 NURSES Registered • even- ing & night shifts. Ex.. benefits. Apply Penon.nel Director, So. Coast Com- munity Hosp.. 31872 Caul Hwy., So. J.aiuna. 4$-1311. ext. 356 ** NURSES AIDES ** Experienced 549-3061 490 E. 17th St., C.M. FUTURE! 645-1160 SERVICE STA ATI. Full Cluaet start 1oon. MOYJNG , Mutt tell. W~ time eve1. Exp'd. Neat ill Pilot program' oftettng the dining table 48" extend.I ft, appearaoce. See Jltn, al ftnelt equipment and facil seat 10. 4 contemp. c:aota.tDs Newport Blvd., C.r.f. 1t!n av8.ilablel Reel·tlme chn. Brus I: &lul Ill"\. SITIER For our family only, computer programm.lns'. Bl~ velwt bedroom chr t- avallable when needed : The Academy ottoman. 2 occ. chn. 1IY some aays, some evenings, TV. 642<-0514 • occasional WEEKENDS. USED 5 pc. antique wtdf:J Six children (age 10 and d ~ m dinette aet $29.95. Ullfd 5 "° underJ, light cooklnr. own 'Rduiology Antique white dinette lift. trana:portation. Call for fn. $39.95. Used 1 pc andquj lcrview G'B-lilOO (Lido tslel . -white dine~ eet $49.95. Tbil 5l'OCK Clerk: Shi pping, Union lank lq111ra ~~· ~ Harbor!, Ri!ceiving, Filling orders, leuth Tower ~ deliv. No Exper neceas. $500 Sult• 4D PRJV. Pt;y Forced to St~ "lran,., Calif., ""' l per mo to start. 5 dly wk. O' Sofa, 0Jppenc1ai. - Chance to advallef!. Write C•ll 547-9471 'hoe. bdr 11et, console 1e• Qua.lifleationa. weight I: 1~ macb, etc. 846-0819 aft height to P. O. Box 145. !r 6 wkdays or anytime wk~ Costa Mesa. The FJRsr ends. ~ TEEN Director to plan & I: ONLY USED 9 pc corner group. direct daily &r special eventll $69.95. Asaorted ~ waJmat for girls 7th thru 12th grade. franchised end A c:oclrtaU tbla, $4.95 et. 35 hrs wk . Prev. youth work Allotted used bedroom: desirable. Over 21. Call 5-T·R·E·T·C·H lamPll $4.95 ea. The FaGl MISJ1 Rustenbach ~7181 tory, 1885 HarbOr, 540-6842 :; TEST TECH A SEW (T.M.I USED almost new SP811111!1 $5 hr. Unusually good oppor.. Store or Orange County secdonal w/matchins di( tuni ty w/stable establ. Co. CHRISTM'AS SHOP &: lamp $199,9'j. Used 2 pc) Irvine area. Advancement SPf,nh1h IOfa 6: cba.ir $19.95: potential. Top benefits. Call THE EASY WAY!! The F1.etory, 1885 KarborJ John, 546-5410 54().684Z. :1 JASON BEST Leri~ loM~~~ 0,t': • .',',knlh t .. !!l>ts USED 36" walnut desk i Part Time DOORMAN. A~ Employmenl Agency . '"' · """" . '""' .-.• cha'-$19 95 3 ..... wal ply PORT THEATRE, CdM, tn l hr a bathing suit for ... · · W11:U nu 6 '1201 So, Main, Santa An11 SS 00 • 1~, 1 student desks ff 95 ea 2 UI eves. p.m. · . -even a g ,UJ.e! m-ed {ta • • PHONE WORK TEXAS OIL COMPANY agtne _ T·ahirts for th!? ra n swiwl bar 1too1i has opening in wbo'.e famll.v. $7 ea. The Factory, Women At Glrla. Pleasant Beach Cities area. Harbor, 540-6M2 telephone work from our ot-No . experience necessary. LESSONS: Morn, attemoon, CHRISTMAS Gilt tor thli, flee. No ll!'XP nee. Full & Age oot Important. Good &: eves. special man. Almo!t new part time. $2 • $5 per hr. character m L We train t Apply 230 W. Warner SUite a us , 724 E. Katella, Oran<>e ealher lounging chatr le ot• Air mail: .,. toman .lo match $?5; ~. S.A. D. P. Olckenion, Pres., 633-2142 00-1644: PLASTICS Southwtstern Petrolelf'm =,..-,=,.,-~----.11 ,.._ LOOKING FOR A SOWD TS" SQFA. dark bl"OW11, lnlectlon Molding ~· •· mnd al ~ ndl"-~r. OR trainets (female) Ft. Worth, Texas FUTtlJlE BUT CE'ITlNG ern. re •"""-' oo uun~ -·~ NOWHERE' mt worn or llOiled. $40: for doy or gn.veyem "'"t. TillE MAN. "'""""ced on-, 54&-'°66 O\lt'r 18. App. M pm, Mon-ty, for changing tlres. in- Fri. stalling 11hoc}cg, etc. Good Oranp Cout Plutlcs working condltiont. Paid in- 800 W. Uth St., C.M. 11ura.nce, binge benefits. Ap-•PUNCH PRESS ply In ,,.,.,.n: * 01y Shift * Mlntmum 3 m. eXptri- ence. Do own aetupa. Have own tool.1. A. H. SH'fPKEY TIRE SERVICE 420 W. L\ncoln, Anahflim DO YO~ WANT TO GO USED ""°""' °"""Iona! SOMEWHERE??? :.,"';., ~~ • ~ ut!!i~ THEN LOOK INTO A boards, S5 ea. The Factory; CAREER · 188S u.-, -. ,: AS A BEAtmFUL Kl"' bed • qull~ RADIO ANNOUNCER ed mattttsg. Comph!lt, ~ CLA.SS!:S F'OftMtNG NOW uled '105, w o '!' t b ~ LEARN: 842-6536 evt1. PE'l' Ma~ke. St.. N.B. 847-2165 for yoor prot•c t io n, COSTA MESA el pofition tor PHD's in · x~ Tl._~ ' REWARDr Violet 20" Girls Rdeancca. Reply Box 51M, I ---:B°'O"'Y;;;;SC:li,9::;• :,.14:,:.:.:= Electttcal Enginee:ring, Com· Excellent 1rowlh -- ;r8Ih »'·· C.M. -zm suna "···. ~··•n --p.11,y Piiot. -~-"-"-~ Sci • -"ttd •••- TOOL &.DIE MAKERS in a radio atation on protea-SOTA 4 chair, never uetd slonal equipment from, work. Sl(X). Lamps &: coffee tabM.' inC D.J '•· (1) -CALL =-TW!N"'=~Bed"""wt~lh-bo>t-aprl-,!Wli-.I , •-wv ........ .....," ,;,,,,;,.::C:""--~---1 ......-~ nuu ..... ..,-..,.u puter eoce • ....... itits, ovatime, frlnae bl& WHn'E 1\-f~ ~le. porch. Can i d·e n t l ! )', GENTI..EA1AN lS yr nisi· for fields. eflta. *Day Shift* ll'IStltote d. Broad<?ut Arb spread A bolsters, t"XOtltent Vic. Fountain VaUey. heart~rken. 5'~2153 dent. !inesl refs, ?tt~t 1-.1.. • .,_,_ Beach, So. '--··· 89'l_IKIM ......_. -----Foreign Car Mechanic• ._.,., Sl\tALL Male Abbysinian 2f>.4.2 oo child .. w/laste fDr DAILY Pll.OT APPLY lN PERSON' Mlnln::IWll 5 :yn, txptrience, pqrnsive &Dd form dltt. 1601 N. Bristol, S.A. condtUon t&O. "4--l'l9t art f ' Student Loans GREEN Tweed Ult-bade. bid 1'ree PlaCement Semat divan $50. 2 piiect lfCtional \VH.rri Female o.~ 1'hrfllte ~loml cat, v I c. life's fincst. Send photo to &e.a2l. Good c:o. benefltJ. tncl pakl rhirieStoM Mllsr•' Vlc . Wlndsor PL. LquM. Beach. Box P..1·915 Daily Pilot CASHIER and c:ounter work. 'n,.Cltlon, Sf'OUP ins. um. SHUR·LOK CORP. Dqvtr Di-, &f6..5191 REWARD. •!'1'7-'131.f ALCOHOLICS Ananymous Male or fctn11le over 18. Ap-forms furnished tre.. Good JOlN THE FIELD $50. Both llke MW lf2..hn~ • Wl'lll A FUTUREI , ' Excellent .......,, ..- FOUND R,al'O!MI, •Ith col· SILVER pood.lt, femaJe, no Phone Ml-'1211 o..· write to ply tn penon The Burger, comm.. schedule-. Aak tor Ja...rnust ide!!.~I.~. C•ll ~ child'a pet. vie. P.O.Boxl223Cbl:taMesa. 4S01W.Coe.slH"l,N.B.No Joe·MooniPb.5'0-1164. ~4 1111<r 'l'oml ' illoanotia I< 11eub Blvd, pbono calll * FULLER BRUSH * L .. ;-, MOI F.V. 962oS404 Announcemenfl 64JO COASTAL AGENCY ~14tll •• LADY'S -wall<L Im-SENSITMTY TRAINING Profesal .... I llAUt SrYUsr GEIL'dAN shOtl·haittd lost porf.a!tl Cards. i'kU1"'ntaam WORK SHOP Employment W/FOllowUll. Ex c I 111 Ive Vic. <>ranp Co. Airport. A-pt F. 4'4 N. Coast Wvd., A pr'Olfam of intt.fJ)lll'IOl'l•I Assistance Shop, • 1 Atay havt 1naveled. 54a-2600 Wg, Sch. Good reward nerclte:s f.or smaU 8tif-di· A member of Call -~ ' LOST: SungllWCs. black MINIATURE flJaJC' Wack nocted lf'OUPI. f.llnimal Snelli"g la 5nellina Inc. nu. frame~, J;M'Y Stlaa Dllchshund. T mo otd. Vic. ch•r;:e W I 6t2-B'730. 10 AM.· 2190 Harb>r B1,1CM ~ .1.Vif. Cmta Mim. !iQ...SJl? B"lm', C.M. CAii -5f'-'l880 5 PM. H11rbar Blvd. at Ad11m1 I -------- **HELP WANTED** Garmtnt ap., 6ll pbuel. CALL 642-3472 1300 E, Normandy J>I., Santa Ano (l blk. N. of MeJ'aclden, II b!J<. W, o1 Grand.) RENT cpsoe avaU tn buq salon. xtnt tocation. Male prttL- ltif:1, ovtttimt-. 1rinle bet> <lits. .~p/educa6on DO bfl,rrlvl ·' Ld •• belp .... qualify. om .. fumltvre '°" INl\-'R!:El'El!S INSl'l'l'UT!: 1---,----cf APPLY Ill PERSON INTµt!IA110NAL U NU Foldl,,. an, pedoW. f.lc..vllctel/ Apt Mgmt lcttl 1$ ... 1 NV 30''ll72 .. Joi~ SHUR·~OK CORP. A U•VISl.01'!.0F tbl W/nt'1amlnt!..,. la. I AN11fONY SCHOtl'..S Office arm ehn A 1-utc. 1300 £. Normandf Pl., 1m $. BROOKllUR>'T m .. 1 """ IS0.1 """ $15. 5antA AM ANAllE:IM, CALIFORillA All Gd, Cond. J\ur, - RETIR.ED ProJ. Encr. CPM Cl blk, N, Ol McFtddtn. Cl.dses ronn ~wee• bell'. IO&lptured wool lllb contr: Stnd rUwne c/o ~ blk. W. ot Grand.} PHONE 101\ APPi'. U~xl3'. Xlnt CIOlld, $411. caJi Box 4384, Irvhw, Calif. mc_.1 ______ _;-;:__rAlk;:,,:for~O.=""~--~:.:::=:i.:.-.:'::"::'8'02=;_--~-!I' • .. ------------------------~-~~---------·--------- 4 • DAIL 'I "LOT ,......,, -18, 19'>t Mill AllDI fDll Miil HAHDISI fOlt MlltCHANDISI fOll MlltCHANOISI POil FREE TO YOU TRAHSPORTATION TllANUOltTATION TllANSl'ORTATION , ~11 9010 Moto~cloo 9300 ,..._,.., A-ffOO SALi AND TRADI SALi AND TllAOE SALi AND TllAOI SALi AND TRADI SALi ANO TllAOI '""'"'" -u,,.J hlro IOOO Tol•Yitlert l20.S Ml-·n·-MOO~ W•nhd 1610 BOXER f: Beq.le Com-b!Mt~n puppioo. 3 ""'"old. *********** .,. HONDA "'° Scnmbi.. COOP'ER PUBLIC NOTICE DKOUTOR Gm CAHQUATIOH OF 11 WXUIY APAITMOOS Spanisll & MtclltwrWM Fw oilao All BRAND NEW 9·pc. Mediterr•n••n B•d room Suit• In P•c•n I Ro9. '!49.00 I -····-"··----·---NOW $161.00 6or9eou1 Spani1h Cu1tom Bujlt S<1f• with . m•tching Love Seet-Cho1c• of beeuhful l•br;cs, IRa9. 1419.951 ---··--·NOW $225.00 Sp•nish Dining S.t1 -·· .. ----·--· .. _ .. ________ ... _ .. $75.00 Solid Oak End labl•1 and C<1ff.,. Tabl•s . .$19.50 Ta ll D1 cor1tor Tab/• lemps IR09. $49.951 ---·-··----·-NOW $11.00 Spanish Han9in9 Swag ;_•"!Pl IR09. $49.951 ·--------··-·-·-···-·NOW $22.10 A decorator dream house on display - 3 rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was reg. $1295. ZENrm 2:1" color TV with irnaraved m..q. cabinet. Bought tn July, must sell· drafted $400. Colt $150. 54S-SIOS ~ Color TV or Black & White. Option to bey. Fm 1trvl«. No depo11t A-Actlve TV Rental Co. 0) 522--ll53 lt" GENERAL E lect r ic penonal partable, like new, l .)'l'laJ' old. Vl!F &: UHF ~ """"' Hf.fl & Storoo 1210 * AUCTION * WD..L P-.y Pl for Gd Apt Good w/childrm. ~ ··Ch r istmas e:ii:ct'I cond. Mua:t ad!. BtRt ---------1 ~--."!':!'~• ~" ~ PETS .,,.. UYUTOCK SAIOT ott" 0 "" im. ~ .it '6' M1Nl eoopor 997. "'bit ............. ............... ... -' 6. tfl&. im. °" trade ~183 FRIDAY -DEC. 12th BIU . Pett Gent I UGO wu ~ .................. SUZUKI Bea:. AU iw.w owr. aft S 7:30 P .M. USED ZIG-ZAG SEWINGl'-.;;..;Lt..;..;..;.;;'-";c..---'= ···~·~.~:=ele Muled EnginP, ttpa.nslon;1;;;;=======,_J NEW TOYS A Tnnslltor ra· MAOflNE ~20!6 bctort 9 W:!!'S NU! ""'&'dri"";e cham~r. etc. Xlnc t;and, &: DATSUN dk», lowly Bf'droom Ria. AM or after 1 PM ::Ota '--WI Specl.a1, at 29U W, Co&sl Hwy Beautiful, $175. cat1 IG-3159 ----.-----1 Dlnin& ll'll, M&pk ...... 1 .... I-:======== "TJS TROPICAL nsH '64 Hot.DA -... • • .... _,. 9080 Ediniu <at M--11-) Ne\\>port Beach • ~10 6JJ tabl" • •""'"· Captain'• FREE TO YOU F.v. * * ~ woo 14 #"' s~ GOOD* rn* NDrr!~.-chaln, Divaru, 0cc chain, ---------o ~ ~· Hut~-. N-" • ---~·., T ~ '"' I -~ .~ ~-1 • w~ p~ '"' Nn, try ......... ·····~"'-------=-=c ' ......,... ..... L.o<U.., ....,,.. 0 • ...,me "'' e .... ~ ''"' U'I: "'' ~· WOO 1<1 New Trailer 1968 TRIMPH Bo~ville, chests, O\e1U ol drawen. low. honry colored ahelt~ Christmas. Rand's Tropical · 650oc 1 · rb Xlnt nd M11ittret1es, Lampg, PictuJT1, r l :ii , 3$ Jbi 1payect ~ all Fish, 5901 Westmll\5ter, a i11 1:ry •••••••••••••• St095 l•.'ln ca • co · TV'1, Appliantta " MUOI •hots, also blk/gry mottll'd 1W~·~·~tm~l~n~··~"~"'~--0~lll~== l~SC>~IOCK~· 5;~BO~AiTS~i.6~7J.;:tt«l~:1~M~"f.'li' 'a~=.'.;"5'~-84~"'jy,coo;;;; MORE! l ! ! mt'd 1lted dog 9 ll)OI old, ...: MINTO JO' beaut. f1bcrglau SUZUKI 55CX:. Only l.<n> mi. WINDY 'S AUCTION b" Children. 8'1·7450 & o ..... _____ l:c;l;:;:25 .,,,, enliquo >aHhttat. Xlnt Xln't Condition. '"'-Call 19'1 OATSUN C DOOR SEOAN 4 Speed transmiaion. CVZU400) $1199 346.3818 -for dinghy &r. &ailing. u~ lc1.:".::S-083:.::::::'c.· ------ HARMON A Kardon , * HAPPY SOUTnON TO mmer Ori ---t "'~SO· '68 HARLEY D Id AM/FM amp. dual tum-COME BROWSE AROUND GOOD Chrlabnu &ilt, free DOG ENJOYM'ENT!! au . g .. "" '" ' av son e UNIVERSITY e table w/1pkrs & head-~'ii Newport B.tvd. Cenn. abort baited ltmale, Training &ift nrtificatn. will seU for $260. 847-20tl !~·~.::=Lots or OLDSMOBILE Pho~. Comp. atereo fur Behind Toey'a Bldg lotat'b 1"' )Tl. <1ld. Needa room to Puppy cla1154!:1 $15. Novice 5 d Ski loab 9030 3850 Harbor Blvd MOO. 548-5405 Chsta. Mesa * M&-8686 run, loves c b 11 d re n. obedience, $20. 54&0989 P•• _ '68 HONDA CL 90 Scram_b1er Costa Mesa Mo.mt OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 968-405J 12/18 P.1ARTINCREST KENNEL..'S GULF STREAM straight pipe. knobby tirea.,1.;_::;:;-:-,;;;=:,;=-==~~=I G~l;y:te~.,~~.mrik~1 ~ .......................... GIVE A living, lovtni a:ifl -LOVE FOR OiRISTMAS! xlnt rond. 6#-1141 '67 DATSUN S100. 673-4035 ROCK Q a 7-"'-·k black&. while puppy * Great Dane Puppies PICKUP SH P r-frtt to good home •• 31M4 * Miniature Schnauzers 17 Ft. Ski Boat Tr1f11r, Trav11 9425 At'tual mileage 31,000. Xlnt C hristmas Specials Virginia Way, South • Terrru Ava.liable • 120 H.P. Mire. Crul11r · oond dlr LQuna. 11/18 loiARTINCREST KENNELS lnbo•rd _ Ovtboird '69 HOUDAY Travil Trlr. ~ttl• ,_,_ G··-.~~buby' 6'' trim saw $17.95 Com 11 ndt v V>e '"'3 ""''"'" ... WEBCOR Cassette. Almost 6 .. comb . .aw It &'rinding 6 FR EE n.. good hOme 54&-0989 Ready for the 11.•ater right P· se -cont, ta m driver. Will fine. prvL prty. New, Watnnty, SJ). Call • polishinc units from $49.95 w/fenced yard, small mixed -POO--D-LE-S---T-,-.-'"-p_&_T_o_y, now. All the equip, incl. "'-'hll, llPfi 6, all xtraa. uor.1 895. Call Phil 04-9773, SACRIFICE ••• ••• S398 T 11pe Recorders 1220 CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY OOWN ht PAYMENT NOT DUE 'TIL 197C mm FURNITURE -"-""'--'°-------I 3 lb. tumbler $216 breed terrier, 1D lbs. smart AKC, all colon. Beautiful cornpus lite preservef'9 Owner sac; must ld1 $3700. 545-0634. 6 lb. tumbltt $29.60 .It cute, 9 mos. old, lows qual lty. Very Reaa. & fuU ~-\~64~4'::-'~1~97~------1 ·'-=.:::C:...;cN;;EW;;;;;;-;l---I Sporting Gooda 1500 12 lb. tumbler $35.90 ohlldre.n. 846-381.B 96&-8336. PRIVATE PARTY • • ~-~------IAlf!ICthaveeomeusedequip. VARIOUS Adult cata &: CHRISJ'MAS Pups, AKC 673-3144 543-9311 Auto S.rvlcn '70 PICKUP 1844 Newport Blvd.H.rbo<:'a1vd.> Costa Mesa Only 6'10" MOSS SURFBOARD FREE load o1 material with medium 11ized kittem, rlf!ed Doberman11. Good Homes, 14' Ski Boat. Men: 450 motor & P1rt1 9400 \V/camper, 96 hp overhead Blue pigment on bottom and each 11aw pennanent homes in tlme Prime Cons ide ration . &. lrlr, new wind5hield, uni-1 ·~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~I 4 pd dJr 6 I "-blue on nils. Excellent con-t Ch II cam, 1 • • PY UR"I, Supplies, rough material, or rlstma.!i. 546-7202 642-8961 . que helm~~·heel. Leaving . back up lights. You name dition $75. Call JAY 549-1574 coconuts {ea.wed trtt after 2 pm 12/19G .::,VE:.:=.--8-A~SS~E~.1~.1-. -,,-r arta $-150 CJ1' best otr. BEACH it! Serial # PL5212a!87J. 2 NEW Scuba Diving Outfits. '1r/purchase) TO SAME HOME, 2 c H R JS TM AS! 6 wk, 673-M A t s I Full price $21$9. Take small Back pac, tank, single stage Big di.srounla <In comp. line beautilul long ha.ired grey purebred, .$3S. 675-1865, U 0 upp y dn or ~e. Call Phil, Ev1ry Night 'Tll 9 -Wed., Set. & Sun. 'Til' regu1at.or, $75 a set. 673-1066 of lapidary machinery 'til striped Abyssinian kittens, 673-9904 Ma I E 1 9035 494-9113 or 545-0034. SKIS-Rossignol Slrato 207. Jan. lat. male. 673-5l6J d a Y 11 · CHIHUAHUA Puppies for ___!_!!• qu p. Wholesale Office Equlprn1nt IOI I Pianos & Org1na $75. Boots, 9%M s10 Nordica STONECRAFT 675--0856 alter 6 pm 12119 your Christmas stocking. SHIPWRECK SALEI e ·, 1130 boot!!, 91,1 S3l. 548-3652 179'll Altamirano Lane (at PICK your kitty now • can AKC. Hold 'ti! Christmas. all gear from wreeked P.C.C, Prices to All Mm DATSUN ..... -. • ELECTRIC typewriter 1t•n- da.rd RoyaJ desk model S75. Stand S7.SO. 67 3-6 76D •'eekdays !!: :Kl lo 12 & 1 lo 4:30. TYPE\\'RJTER. Addi na: 111.achine, calculator, very t'euonable. Xlnt con d , 1192-1423 HERMES Ambusador office elec. typewriter. Reblt & ~finished. Ellie type. Sl25. 962-5187 .I.ft s Gn•ge Sale 1022 s_UR_F_BC_A~R-D-.-Co-rky-Carro--11 I my hornet H. B. Open 9-9, slay here 'til Chri11lmas. 547-3874 sloop "Kitten", Mast. 7 bq:s Complete Machine Shop ,. Our Chrishnas model, 9'6" excellent con-also Christmlll! eve. 847-1320 Cute ~~ SiameR, 10 wks old. CH R 1 ST !\I AS p u P PY, of sails. winches, full cover SPEED EQUIPMENT dition. no dings $-15. 494-7422 l 7 215 Pa Im, F . V . h ·-• T & all hardware. Priced for REBUILT ENGINES "Leader-in The Beach Cltie1" Present To You 347.7974 12120 regi~tered wire ah-.:u er· quick We. MiMcy's Shlp 1l25 Victoria, CM ~ ZIMMERMAN 7'2" ROUN DTAIL 11urlboard POOL rier, male. $50. Last ol li t· C.Ome in, wnfr your name on $6.J or make offer. 675-4298 4 ADORABLE Christmas kit-I 642--0863 Chandl.ery, 2537 \V. (bast l&J61 Beach Blvd, HB 847-0991 2US HARBOR BLVD. a Jlip of peper, put it in an after 4 ter111, need permane nt ,,.c'_:"~~c.-· -~~~-I Hiway, N.B. 548419'2 * OPEN 7 DAYS * 54G-6410 ornament & hang it on our ,c:;.,:.;..-'.,-~-~---1 TABLES •-8 SILKY Terriers, AKC. shots KONEL H' :"!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!l<Oi~~i";Eijffi;rr;;;;s;I FOR Sale: &\Iba gear. tluvml'5,l w"'·h2 be~g~l & dewormed. Ready for 1 Seu Radio w/lOI! ORANGE COUNTY'S Christmas tree. Drawing to Brand new. N~er used. ger, r;ryJw 1 stnp~. Christn1a1. 839-7165 channels. Cost S3000, 1 yr ---------1 NO 1 hf' held Ott. 2'1 at 8:30 PM. ....,,. .. ~70 btfol"e 3 pm . Ottistma1 Special S215 up, ghort haired. 543-4079 12119 old. $1500. Jnsta.lled com· T •1 T I ATS • EA PT'ikll include: Dinner tor =~~==-~-',.--CHUCK'S BEAUTJnn. Alaskan Husky plete. Call _ 642-9311 r11 er, rav1 9425 D UN D LER twu at the Stuff Shin. <M::'r-GIRL'S Bicyde. Near new. DAVENPORT, soiled but Pu., to pull Santa's Sleigh.. DOT DATSUN 2750 Harbor at Adam• CM ~ -ndi'""'" TV ~, X-f\.1AS S peci al, now loolrirq; beautiful Newport Schwinn Fair Lady. $35. "" 6 ......... "" ""'" ' ·~ Love ki~. 642-7721. Boat-Yacht 8'y: Dis"'""land tickets: Call : 67l)..-02..l3 POOL TABLES repair, also old carpel. Sherwood Camper/trailer, 18835 Beach Blvd. ,_, "---~ Pool 54S-8207 11/19 PUT This pup in your Xma1 Chart1rs 9039 slp1 6, dinette, ve"' light. HunH....+ ..... B•ach bras.s Piano or ro--. .. lamp·, ~uwu • ., ..... '6..,u .... ,6"·" NEW twin 51 U.S. Diven ae-BRUNSWICK-AMF stocking! 7-'A'k male black 847-9873 S42-Tl81 or 540-{l442 upholstered Organ or Piano qu&-lungs. WIU accept bes! DOG • Lg. mini poodle, poodle $50. 494-6459 CHARTER A BOAT bmoh --(No bli ti J Custom Slate Table male. 31,2 yrs old, likes c::::::::..:::::.,::;.~::,..~-od , ......... ,_ o ga on t11fer. 839-1649 a ft 6 .,..__ 1289 AKC Dachshund Pups A see. GOULD Music r 1um older children. Lovable and Newpor1 Christmas Parade Trucks 9500 ENGLISH FORD ~ CAROB St .. NB. Ma-100% Financing gd . walch dog. 962-M&& 12/18 ___ • __ ,._~_532_7_•__ Parlies of 6 -120 ""r hr ~0~Qii<V"-;.;;y;a~~1;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~1 jority new, vinyl lounge ......... N Ma' SA "'7 -1 * SECARD POOLS ~ cha.Ir $l2.50, ituHed rocker "''"" · in. ' · "' """'° Binoculars, Scopa 1550 * PERM. homes needed for 2 6 1\10NTH old male, hall Inc boat. skipper, mixer.1 * '63 CHEV V-8 PICKUP $28.50, twin bed $14.50, PRE UQLIOAY SALE MICROSCOPES ·. z.,·,,, 323 S M.,-~811992 n-~ love.bit Christmaa kittens, 8 Beagle & half Poolee. Loves Reservation call 640-900) 8LoaFldFll"'',ide whoc/R<kdio/Htr, ORANGE COUNTY'S couch $6. Leather chair "fl . " · ""'"'6" wk!. One blk., <Int gray. children. Free. 837--4239 CHA R TER ,beaut 45' eve er 11 s. New VOLUME ENGLISH $98.50. lampt S15 tn $30. ~i=arOptl!ai le~::.:w~j SERRA Error-Limited (50) whlte. 897-1618 12/18 BASSET PUPS, AKC Schooner, Npt X ma 1 ~ldutch, ~ent vaWJve job,1 big FORD DEALER Glasswear A books. 3 to 7, PIANOS & ORGANS lenses $250. Both with cue. supply or these Mexican air MIXED Terrier, champagne, 847-8204 eves & wknds parade. 12/19 thru 12/23. si e mirroI'll, /wa 11 • SALES. SERVICE Tues thnl Fri. mails. LA dealers are ask· 1 mot, female. Love • ====~c--_,~..,-Low rates. 548-2.592, eves H.D. Rearwrap bumper, OVER 60 IN srOCK .~P.:.c;..·=-~:;..;:.--.:.'.~"'~fit.-w--,-•-,u-t I Some 1ot the moat popular cC::all=.cP;..•.:.";...;;....,...:....:.:.;.;;1 ___ 1 ing Sl ea. S"4 per block. We children. Free to -....i BEAUTIFUL Dane female, 494-2671 bed never used, 00wner u~ 8 2 & 4 Dr. Models .-D'C\,.""'"" ....-. .... modes inc:luding: Hammond ask 80 cent!i ea. $l per .......... good home important. AKC. for lowing a boat. Sparkling 8 2 &: 4 D Del cab-. paintinp. trusc. Sun X77, H-100, E-100, B-3. T·200 l600 block. ~8-6+19 home. 646-0434 a1t 4 p.m. 641-5885 or 54~3 * SHOW BOAT * Turf green. ONE in 10,000! r. wce!i Dec 21. 17775 Acacia Tree etc. FREE 3 DAY LAS cltl.;;l.;.-=ll;..1_n.:.oo.:.u_:1;.____ Lovable young small long PARTY POODLE, AKC reg, Chrislma$ Lighl!i Cruise ONLY S1005! l'ttARQUIS a 2 le~ Dr. GT Models Ln.Irvine ~aft6 VEGASHOLIDAYw:ithptn" SHIPWRECK SALEI haired blk mi.~ed breed, 7-wk female, 20 ounces of 673-6240 for reservations 1\TTRS. 900 s. Coast H\\'Y· e siatio~ Wagons . cl.ue!!! * CHRISTMAS all gear from wrecked P.C.C. lG-l2 lbs, spayed"-hsbrkn, Laguna Beach PH· Many 9.'llh fully automatic Appflanc• 1100 NEW 2 dr. GE retrig., ftom model home .•• , -. • • .. S17!1 2 dr-Refri.gerator, 1Mst-trtt. bottom freezer •• , ••••• $168 R.drigttaton ··--from S 38 CoM'.lle Cc»or TV. CJOlltemp eah., new p~ tube • $248 Whirlpool autti wa*r •• S 50 GE Washer/Dryer ••• , $100 DUNLAP'S 1!15 N~:vd-. C.M. SMALL F"lttzer Chest. Older crou-top refrig. Both Good Cone!. 536-4634. Tnde-ins attepted & terms, sloop-"Kitten". Mast, 7 bags !vs child s.Mi-38l8 ~lo::v::•::.· :::1511=:_-':;944.:...:286=---1 Mobll1 Hornet 9200 494-7503 540-JIOO ' • trans., air. radial Ii~. ra- ILUCMOND SPECIAL or sails, winch~ tull cover ' SAl'wlOYED FemAle, l year ' dio, vinyl roof, wsw tire:i1. in CORONA DEL :r.tAR & all hardware.' Priced for WHITE female Pekapoo old, papers. Pel or show. IUT J•lm NIW CAMPER TRUCK BRA.i"ffi NEW sro. 2 DR. 28S4 E . Cout Hwy 673-3930 quick sale, 1'.finney'i Ship spayed -1 yr_ old. Black S50. &l5-0156. SILL USID 1970 G.M.C. \I. H.D, equip., $1785 F1JLL PRICE Open Eves "Sun. ai_ temoon 25•;. DISCOUNT Oiandlery 2537 w Cout Cockapoo female, a mo old. ::::.o...::::.:POO:;:::_ _____ ' Cooper va. Ser. # 225C6.Jl. ORDER NOW H' N 'e 54S4J.9'j 644-1300 COCK-A-puppies $2995 TL--...1-,. iway, · · weeks old ready to pick-up TRAILER SALES UNIVERSITY n- IF yoo are buyirw a Piano (Ir Organ lhia Christmas & are intemted in &0me real- ly great deals, please shop WARD'S BALDWIN srl!DJO 1819 Nirwpon, C.M. 642-8484 Open Every Nite & SUnda,y Aftrrooon on all made up jt'\1.•elry!ndl GE mobil maid dishwasher, FREE to responsible adults, 21.::Ch::::.:"::"""=.::;..::..::.::ll:;S;... 968-:=..:1<::9.5::,,." "Buy from • mon OLOSMOBILE ROBINS FORD Some eXcellent rinp. pe -2 yrs old SlOO. Emeraon air miniature dachshunds, 2 8.11t9 It ear ririp I. many cooled air conditioner $45. 3 years old . Affectionate, 2 BLACK toy pedigree male who liv11 In onel" 2850 lfarbor Blvd. 2060 Harbor Bl\.-d. others. gold & wht bar stools $50. good watch' dogs. 494-8960 poodles, 1 year old S50 eaqt.. WE SERVICE Costa Mesa Costa Mesa 6t2-00l.O Lapidary aupplies, cuti'l& 644-4211 aft 6. f\.tlNNIE And !\fickle need a 1.:•.::75-;..7::;302=,.or::,.:521::::,-84=16_C,...=~ \VHAT WE SELL! 540-9640 llU.ppHes &: equip. Jewelry . home for Chri!tmas. We are AKC CHRISTMAS PUG 324 So. Harbor, Santa Ana CHEVY p u -1 Cab FERRARI 6 PC ?>1PLE bed set refrtg · 4 k I Bl k So I Bo'--531·1""-" · ' · ....., uxe ·•---------·I tools A: aupplie1. Rough cut ' ' beautiful black k I 111 t ll . puppiei -wee 11 c · 0 ...,.. ._, V-8 aulo trans. shell. See to • cem gtones, rock cutttni mple chest 8 drs, ~pt, .stove, 494-l::&i 12/19 MAKE OFFER! 847-131:'> BAY HARBOR appreciale. 2908 Tu 11 tin, N FERRARI ~~_?'d· Sol0ml•um•b't"ll 1 .;n1t ~l~l~. ~k:, :;~ 1 d:~~ SIAMESE m8.le & fem. 2 Christmas Puppies Moblle Home S•lel N.B. ...rwport Coun~i.~ ~ 'V\..""" ''"" Y e " ~3--0436 yrs, Shots. fixed to a a:d. Chihuahuas 9 wks old, AKC Cua Loma RoU • Away • '51 CHEVY p u a · a v 1 """"' •UWW" lb. p&ckag". ' horn•. ~--cht'ld I• -'l•"'"c. Reg. 54t'Hl746. Sheraton Manor Hamett E gt nu-• 'c ' tg Jzed. dealer. FIVE M GEM & ANC'J-IOR vw Ill •o· . • e. n ne. .... arb. Gd SALES·SERVIC'E·PARTS LAPIDARY SUPPLIES l TON. Comp! w/age & 837-2097 12/18 ENGLISH Bull, 8 wk!!, AKC Klt • Prestige -Sahara Tirea. S225. Call alt 6 3100 W. Coast Hwy. O Costa Mei;a_ located at chRracler. Ideal decoration. KITTENS: 4 house cats, yng. champ stock. AU. SIZES wkdays, 548-44.19 Newport Beach RGAN SALEll M.-"--k II C 1100 c -•1 67"!4~ -•1 6 1 •moko, ti·-r. • c•ll,.., 557-9102 NOW ON DISPLAY '63 FOi\!) ~-0011· I 642.9405 540.176t KENMORE Auto wuher, ""~~~~~~~!!!!!! Xlnt cond, 6 cycle!i, $40. 5t6-tl672 or 847-8115 NORGE Auto wuher, cop- Pertone, 2 Y1"I old. like new ~ 546--8672 or 847-3115 •KENMORE. multi-cycled WASHER AND DRYER Like new. $150. 644-1300 1110 TREMENOOUS SAVINGS! .,,.,. ....... of Co ege enter · ., ,,.. "".... · 0~ " "" 1425 Baker St., Costa Mesa · ~" ne pane · Authorized FeITarl Dealer J..arie selP.Cllon ol pre-oWMd M9-n!9 * * * * females. Speeia.l homes. ENGLISH toy York ll h it e in. block Eut of Harbor Blvd. Good cond. S595. Call after 6'\ ~========'=! organs. Special discount on lofon. thni Sat. 9-5:30 FAf\.flLY :r.fembership 1 n 54S-35fi6 or 549-1846 12/18 Terrier for sale. Ready for Co!ta 1'.fesa (n4J 540-9470 PM. 673--6714 JAGUAR ne\\' modela. f'riclay 9 to 9 Jn'ine Coast Country Club READY FOR CHRISTMAS: atud :service. 536--8496 24 x 60 1954 INTERNATIONAL Pick ------'--"---I FREE * FREE BEAUTIFUL hand painted for 118le. Pvt. pty. 673-9131 cutt I. cuddly LabtGir. TRANSPORTATION A · ·sec:1 h tull up, gd, cond. Pvt. pty, Call '64 XKE J . "---•-U I Shep. mix pup p; • R • .:..;.;;.:.;.:.;.;.....;_.____ ~ur_igs, ra1 pore • 646-6819 alt 5 P!\I ~guar, new engine. ......,,&elte p ... yer w/purchase o port:ra t of you t1r your CARPET I111taller has one lo.h & Yachh 9000 &lrirting, shag crpts thruout, · Needs paint, upholster)' I. of any Organ. children from a photograph. roll, avocado nylon carpet, ~1192 12120 1~="--------blt·ins. Set in 5 Star Pa.rk, LARGE '68 CHEVY WTN·.i:":=':·,;:"2-:1;;53i;:,,=====-I COAST MUSIC A wonderfuJ idea for th1.t double jute-backed. \VUJ sell f'REE female dog, to px:I FREE one mile from oet'IJ\ in 00\V VAN, Big 6, auto, xlnt1 NE\VPORT & HARBOR .11peeial Christ.mu gift. all or part $3fyard. 540-7245 home, excellent \\-1th chll-Ba.sic Boa.ling Course offered Costa Mesa. Sll.900. cond., ttnter &eat. 642-0574 KAR: MANN GHIA Cost11 ~ll'Sa * 642-2851 646-J6'29. WOULD You like u11 to hang dren, housebroken, 3 Dk to pu blic by Balboa Pow~r • 642-1352 e Bf~~O~~R Day110..9 Sat 11).6 Sun 12-6 For yonr Christmas your outdoor Chri stmas old. 83().5738 12 Squadron e\'er)' Z..1on. night Rate opportunity. MOBILE JMpt 9S10 1964 KAR:r.fANN GHIA 2 dr Art & Antiques l< Gifts PIANO SALEI G.E. port. dishwshr, immae. lights? Licensed Contractor. "SNOOPY"&. "PEANtrrS", for 13 wttk1 beginning 7 LIVING on the BEACH . '69 JEEP CJS. \V lnch Coupe. Sharp & Clean, Gd. Open Mon-Fri eves 'til 8 PM WE ARE StlO. Chow 1bl $6, f'ran11'd 543-2861 male &: female hamp!ilen , pm on l\fon., Jan 12th at Limited spaces, in new ad-overdrive, Plc. $800. cash & Meehan. cond. Nu tires, Gd 1896 Harbor Blvd, CM 642-7576 OVERSTOCKED! oil painting $.'i. 9xl2 on. I ~Lc,t00'-"'"1'-4-w-/ro-.,-,-&-h'~lr. "''/cages. 644-1726 12/20 Ne11.•port Harbor Yacli.t ditlon lo Drift\\.wd Beach T.O.P. 64Z-8.'ir.:I eves. buy at $850. 968-2777 ewn-Mu~1 make room for new enlal rug. $25. 675-5408 eves. Regulation 111 pool tbl. Off PILABRADOR, male, 9-11 Oub, 720 \V, Bay Ave., New-Club -Z..fodels on display ings. TITTANY lamp shi\de, 2 fl !ihipme nts arriving daily. • R 0 YA L St and a rd wh1 n11ng. couch, like new. mo., all shots. Loves po'"!-Be_ach. No advan~ &00n. 11462 Pac Hwy, H.B. Camper 1 9520 1965 Karmann Ghia llidl'! Rose , be.ia:e. pep-Price!I slashed on .......... type"'-'riler, ex~llen! con-67~7316 children. 540-1346 12/20 reg1sb'ation nee-ded. Reg1s-~7513 2~oor Coupe Xlnt C.Ond :z;;i;~ green. S400. Spinets, C.Onsoles. Grands dition. Recent modr,I, S75. l =G=o=R=G=E=o~u=s~F=,-,n-,-r=o-u-rm-11.· DARUNG furry puppies. 6 1~r at ~lass, brin~ notebook MOBILE Home For Sale LEAN, CLE~N. ready to roll Immaculate in~icie and ~t! Oirlstmas delivery guar. 642-9784 line Stole, Autumn Haze \\·ks, males, free to good firs! ?~ght. QuestJons; Call 1968. Slightly UM'd, like new. ?n your Chnstma..<1 ~acatlon. One ov.·ncr. S1295. See at 480 Sewing Machlnu 1120 COAST MUSIC Carpet layer hAs Ht La Coat. Priv, Pty. \Vkend, or honie. 544-2192 12/20 673•1855• J2'x40'. Forced air heat, air 68 Dodge Van Vista Top Broadway, C.M. NEWPORT k HARBOR nylons Sl.99 yd. Shag!i 11.rt 6 PM, call 642·5612 SCRAM-LETS cond. Adult Park, Nwpt. !.pebrmbbal~nt J l bergndla sa ,65 KARMANN G"a -1-Col!ta Mesa * 642-2001 ~m 3 ~ up + m l•hor PICOCKER female 1 yr t1ld Bc h A Beauty for l5300 u e -you can ala up od . '" • ... "' SJNGER Automatic zig zag, "" uv • . ...., Y • NE\V. white FO!'C stole S525. dog. ideal for Christmas! c-•i 6400752 ' tnslrlel Range, auto oven co · Like flf'W. 1 lady & JnOI old. No 11.llACh needed Days JQ..9 Sat 11).6 Sun .12-6 ==90c='-""-'.:;Y_onl~-7847_·"-".:.'~ \'aJue, sac. ror S 2 SO, &tS-0127 12/20 ANSWERS .... . ,,.., bottled gas, stainless steei O"'-'ner. ti.tust sell $1050 or ta do designs, monogran1s, BRAND new Heltirm m11.n'1 Enc)"Clopedia Americanas BEAUT. k i ltens for '63 NEW Moon, 10>.:55'. Ex-sink, "'-'atcr lank, ice Pox, best ofr. 548-9823 blind hems etc.; aut.o bobbin CHRTSTf\1AS gifts -Ham-watch, never "'-'Ol'n, S85 val.· nt'\Tr u~ S14~. 54&-35(i6 Chri.~tmas. Call evening!'. pando liv. nn. 14"!(18'. d 0 u b I e h Id 6 _a-bed , '64 KARMANN GHIA winder. 5 Year g u a r . mond, Steinway, Yamaha.. $60. Life . time gu a r n , STENO-T\'PE f\111.C'hine, like 1--'675-4:::_::™:::._ _____ 1:;2:.;:/l!I !\fullsh • Macaw . Facet . Ac-Screened rm 8..~24'. Nu Crpt. wardrobe cupboard, lots of Radio. Gd. Cond. 646-3031. ~~m~:~~l6$.'i.27 or ~:~! u~pi= o:nn~t ='=?>-~, ~""'==~~--~ nu, S70. Elec. Chord Org&n, LOVELY brown tabby. 6 :~07l~h~~~~~:sc!11~:: ~· 638--0697 olther storage pl\15 outsidel::::::::::::::::::::::_I ' · BEAUTlnJL King bed-quill· offer. Call • 962-9892 llfl 5 ....,..,, , -k l•'k• -Joi•. _.. Lu ... "UR10US 3.5' mob t I e uggage rack. ,Sleeps 5. lJse1 FOR Sale: Console Sl~r Cali!. al Schmidt 1\tusie. c.o. '"" ......... "'"' Ion a."' !In 11.rrow pops up ho "lh L---Ll t r ..... MERCEDES BENZ l~ N •t·• _._ ed m11ttrtAS, Com p\et«>-un-P!\I. Evenin"". 675-4.738 12119 and points to tht" nearest me \\"1 CA11a.11a, do 8!i s a 10n wagon '-"""tv.'ffn Sewing Machine. Xlnt Cond. '''" • " iun, ~nta Ana. used. S1ffi, w 0 r I h S250. ===~~----,-"a Park. Newport Be a ch trip1. Low mileage, V-8 ----------1 Call -M:>7B14 342 ..... ~~ I've•. ELECTR.IC 'l"tain. C'Clmplete, AKC pekingese, male. I ~ )'T. guy ~ho hM a !\IATCH. 67~4 or 642--0185 aulomatir:. Only $3005. Pvt. I========= ·:;:;:;:;:;:;:;:;: .,,.,.,., \Yorth seVtttll hundred $65, Ad It ho • old. 1hots. etc. u me CORP. D.:eculi\'f! buying '62 SKYLINE lOMSO w/added Party. 968-1891 alt 5:30, Mutic11 lnlt. 112.S O WESTERN SADDLE. all Martian Thrift Shop, 1877 preferred, 646-3662 delm1ir cabin cruiser, J0-35 7 14 1 -• 13 500 , c:'""-"-'t"I"".::.,.~•'":;;:';:"="'"---------..,. PEN EVENINGS desired featutts. For 5ho"'-'11 _P_arlt_._c_,_1 ______ C"-=:::.:=_;.;;:..:.:'=---ft. Frtt usa .. in t;'ll:r:hange x room, x nl cor.... , ·re C.UtCO drum set. a be11.uty! AND SUNDAYS or pleas"-. New c:ond. 216 AKC male Silky Terrltt 10 adulta. 5.16-2081 E-300 SUPERVAN, 69 Ford I )'r old. natrt wood. 8aM. Until Christm•s ...... SKIS. Head 205'11 Cables, $50. f" Ider I Y adults only. terr priv. !!.lip &.. upkeep, {ex-b===='"==== V-8. Slick, Lim slip, root IJMN', lg l: ll'm lorn. 2 O .Jasmine, CdM 67J....,74S lD Speed Bike, $30. Snare S3l-4895 12!19 c\usi\T of repairs), Bicyclft 9225 l"8ck, dbl bed, carpel. Best m•lched lf' 6r l"'-'O 21" GO LD MUSIC GIRL'S Sch"'-'inn bikes 2-2~". drum S7. &73-4!1'Z3 AFTECTIONATE 6 monlhs ~M":'-:...""~"k~•oJ'.1•"'w'--~'~TtC:·70ll'i~'l~:.:.:':.;:;c:::,. ____ :..:::_:I t1fler before Chrls'tma1 , ZUdjen c-ymbAlll ,,/Door 204~ N. J\!11.in, SA 547-0631 1-20" gd cond, g mm &11-FIRE\\'000 f or ~e-Dry n\d kltlen, female!, tiger 24' CHRIS Craft Laplltrake. 2 Several l>'N!nch Peugeot 645-1458 stands. ia,;o. R.1.l-l040 Howell proj. Argus ed\101'-Eucalyptus. Dl'li\'l!'ttd & itrip('(I. Adult&. 54s--0452 bunks k hC!ad, Xlnt cond. bicycles, 10 11peed, &11 1 c939c__G.:.M:.C-8--Cam---81- VERY ratt player piano, 11plit'l'r-lighl 673-8601 slAckl'd . Call 540-9887. Call 673--8512 ACCf!l!I., used only S wka. • us per. ps UPRIGHT PracliC'f' Pii1no, baby grand, with Ampico CEOAROIESJ'S. rei;tored, BEAUTIFULLY marked ---------1 Sia each. n 4: 540-88l4 2 or morir. Jee box, c1~111 11.ntiq. bltw.. Gd confl, $150. ,.xpresilo n . Hear LOVELY, Chelllnul, human Calico kitten, lemale, 7 Z'i" OWENS '61 'f.•fmooringl ~=:=;.==:==o:= & 1torage space. Engine Basa guitar Ir. Amp, 1,, Rachmaninoff play h ; 11 Shep':i7~;;':; $50. hair "'la: fttllhly cleaned & Jt'IOfll, all &hot•. 540--09CM In Newport Bay. $3950 incl 's Mini Biku 9275 ninit good. $450. 646-.'il.!!6 price, Like ""~" $65. Call mu!iic hl11 WI'!,)'. Ask qUl'f-.M't. S2..'i. !'148-4213 FREE to good home, 13 mo mooring. CRll -5.1l--O:'iOO. -----'68 OIEVY V-8 VAN, 4 Irk· --------- S«).-1647 tlon!rl 4M-626J S~l lTH Corona port elec ROLLER Rink Skates. Girl's old femalt mini. poodle. ?>IINt-Bl'KE 3 hp, new tll'f:!i, ~tereo, 4 spcl, camper equip-MG .L:ro <--w/,.ase:. Ttnar typewriter S90. 111ze· li~I S15. Boy's 11lze 7h Indoor dog. 96&-3025 S1llboat1 9010 runs well S!Y.I or best offer. ....... "'/w crpt. szzoo . .-... " LESTER Spintl Piano Ir * 64" "156 * 120 Llk N "" -::::::::..::.:'.-"'.::::.::;::.__ 4~ • ,~.. 1---------"·" w/c•,. • nlckle -.. ,, ,-v . e ew. ,,.,,,....,,,.., -* LICO 1., * ~;J""lll4, 498-1988 67f>..fi'777 .-... .. ...,. bench Xlnt cond. Just tun. 2 FEMALE "'·hlte rabbita 4 * " I * * MGB RO S Both u.. ~. $!iHl50. ed. S400 or best oUer. Eves \VANTED: Old utilil)' trailer FOUR Rose Bowl box ffats. rno. old. Cap lncluded. Christmas Special f'.11Nt ·BIKE, good condition SMALL I.I' Camper \~ \V / HDTOP + AE,NTVEERRT ~ 64&-5971 rheap, Old botlt b'ailer for Be!!t afftr! ! 300 fbr TMMEDlATE DELIVERY S7S. Cabover. Beautiful wood in. ...vl · 1,;.;;,..,,,:..~~-~XI~--__,.~ 11' boAI. 347-2042 673-SMG 644-l . C•ll 644-&189 te.r. Sleepo 3 Adults. $27;). TOP + T 0 N NE A U, ELECr. Guitar. nt ._..,..,,., PLAYER Piann -Eltcttic FREE Slamele!: cat Vm _SCH~~oo;~·~ec'.:'.A~TS~~i:'.:73'.::·~~~l=:;;-;""i;-=-=:._,~,--1 "Choice" local, 1 -awrw:r. Sl!IO. value tor only $56. Call Dti!-1/Art. Nr Nu, S995. Call TOYS, Stran.ire Change S3. TACO 44 Mini bike SlSO. frtendl.,y. 9 mo'•. S'l!t-4893. 12' Gt.ASS Sloop. Dae Sailll, !\fl Nl-BlKE. new 5 hp 6'/'3.-!1993 Sn'd new & serviced by ui. 6Th-nCIO _ 548-3743. Blocks Sl. Small bike SlO. F'rench trumpl!I recon-12 118 S250. JHP Evinrude St~. rnR'.fne, ms.keofer. 9600 \\'ire v.•hls w/re<'f!nt Pirelll NEW St. Gf!orp Eler . Newcan5c.968-3105 dlUonf"d 565. 67S--3271alt5. 6 MONnt old ma.le, hAlf Daya 642-4391 . E\'f!!I Call liT;>-1872 lmportld Autot rsdial tires. Sparld\f1il: orig. •Guitar A rue. 19J, Ci.11 2 Awnlni::• For Sale. Sett at EXCEPTONAL HO M®cl Beagle. a, h8.1f Pooltt. Lo\•n -"-'~-=""'~~~-~-9300 AUSTIN AMERICA British racing V'l'~n. Show-Evn. M1-73C11 T1tlvhfon 8205 2010 ~for"l'l'\W\a Avt, C.M. Railroad E<Juip. Comrl. child~n. 837~239 ll/ll JT O'UAY Oaysa.Uer ~ycf" room condition! Only .SlRil ELIX:TRJC Guitar A: 18" JWmote C!Ofltrol Ztnith C.ll 64.~ Like Nu. $Ui(I, C.1ll 613-3349. PEr black biiby bunny Dfmo SIS~ Ulle'd $1195 '63 YAi"fAHA 350, In Sel'\ice AUSTIN AMERICA MARQUIS :P.ITRS: 900 So. Arn;untt. Xlnt Oind. Sl'50 por1abl~ w/lltand. Good MOD'DtN Blonde c tl l na M-l,c.W-1-:_..._.... •.1.lO femalt 2 monlhl ol d . 14' O'DAY. ulf'd $49S 1\fust Sell. MOO. Call • <:st II\\")'., Laguna Buch, Valoet S.. Cati ri>:n.56 f!Oftd, s;,o. 5'12..(f,74. eabinet Sa'l. SUr1bo&rd 9'5" i .:.:::.:'-'::::m=-"-----'-= 546-3073 12/18 run Zone Boat CG.. Balbal' 6*-'ffi83. Sales. Se.rvice. Parts 49-l-7503. ~31M. $1\ M7-7i43 1..:..:..:.:.....------HO C Immediate Dl'.'.ltvt:rl' "!GB '67 Co-·. IY1·-•"'· "._ao.,. .. 11io SAaunCE. wurl t latf .!!piDd . pl~ baut. cond. Wit •oner. tTJ.3M5 IS YOUR. AO IN CLA.SSU1EDT lboMnt win be ............ Dial 642- 5611 TV'S FOR SALE. $Z I UndeT. Blad 6: White. CaJI ---19" PORTABLE Ext"ellf:nt candldon. S2S.!llM704 ADMJ'RAL TV. 211: partable W/slandt l(IOd ~nd. IQ Ms-8154 -;;;~:.,..:,,.;.~==--1 $ WE BUY $ BIE at-14'. likt new, NEW '69 Kawuald 250 cc AU M__,_, " .... ,.., _ -{2) GO KARTS ='it yt:llow k lttW~i bm/yellow. many xfnl!, Sl~inder, under $600 . uun• k1\v mile, ne.w be.lttrlfll I sso em 141-6.11! ;;.;;:..:.;c.... _____ c... l U95. 1134"3922 d•YI· S4W365 "-,'~·,,;7611;..:,;:°'-"::..'-"""'=~--I r~. :\1nt cond s2100 DEWALT Cut Off S.w $ FURNITURE $ rREE -Tn.lltt fAm• on CJfRISTMAS Sail: Kite Ntl. i.occ YAMAHA Endural, ~Aft 3 Pi\!. $17$. • APPLIANCES wheelt. B-7297 ~ !n pxt conctlt1on ~ith like nu. Call arrrr 6 PZ..f or C.11 ~7\ll1 Cll•t TV•-"'•110-St .. •o• WltITE 83by pot mlct for hand tr11Uer $61'.0. 673--3077 weekendll. 337-396!1. BUSIEST mArkf!tplltt In 1 PIM.-., H ... M Chrlslmu MW228 1Vl9 town. TM DAILY Pnm F'or Sale f"1rewood. CASH IN JI MINUTU UDO 14, New July '69. Re.c-1969 Bultiico El 1'igrt' 20CI oc. :noo w. Cout HWJ ... N.B. Ch1.ulfif'd ll«lion. save On.n1e_!~,ralyptu1 e 64 l--iSll • BASSET lfound. 2 yrs old ln1t GeRr. Cowr. H"''Y Btr/Stt. L.ike fl!'w-only 300 642-9~ 541).1764 money, tune 1. dklrt. Look ...,.,.....,.,,u w/p111pe n1, 6i!Mm7 tr11ilf'r, $14~. 54S-.1743. mi. Evn 642-1 315 Authorl'tf!d fl.IG Delller r'IQW! ! I 'L _ ----· ---_ _._ -----------~~-----------~-------------!'!'1'!"'!"'91111111m " T!Mwtdey, \,...,.bot 18, l'l69 , DAILY PILOT 4:f.!' TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATIOli TRANSPORTATION "I TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION • ' TRANSPORTATION ' 1_m,.par!od ___ A_u1 • .,.__9600_, 1 lmportod Autoo HM Autoo Wonted 9700 Uood c.,. · -Uood'.C.ri -Uood,c.... -Uood ea.. !!!! Uood Ciro -Uood c... ,, MG VOLKSWAGEN WE PAT ... CADlLLAC YW. BUGS CASH DODGE .. MG flORD MllST Seti '66 M- 1utback. Xtrai. xlnt,cond. OLDSMOllLE j I PON11AC Salet. Servlc•, Parts llllmedlat. Dellwty, All _..,. ' n\OM tor-.... & _,... call U1 for fr'eli estimate. '65 CAD ~o Q>nvt. A ' od '67 FQRD $350 "''h & T.O.P. ol liil.:14. • e 'U P:IR!'BIRI>, tab 11..i BeauUtul cu. 1 69 D ge , .. CORTINA GT 54~ ott ~ ,..,,.. .... 4)pd, Owner. Prlv. Pty. Full""'" Ch Hard Teo <:Pt. V8, 4 •l*d 'GS MUSTANG. auto lhlit, -/ fact air, vibnsonic. gold Cll'fJ" tn.,ns. Runt super new and racing IJ'M'rl, ·Jo.down. will -========:J · _f~ClLIP Lll l .!l111po1 t ~' $399 GROIH CHEVROLET oolor, belg• vinyl lnter.•2 Door llardlop, V8, power ._ .,..u 'Lie. 1(TY 521. financ<O !900. Call 613-4300 1965 OLDSMOBILE TEMPUT i .. 64&-2803 steerto&, powu »·aim, $1299 CUTLASS 3100 W. c.o&it HW, , N .8. ~ M0-1'16t Authortied :P.IG DeMer • 52 MG-TO. Rebuilt engine, excellent condition $895. Call 545-58'11 GOOD SELECTION c~~.sofl ,,~,.. '69 OJ.v, tsc»:> mi. Silver w/ automadc iri.nt, bu c k • I -, 1·Dr. Sedan. V-3, radio, All<1&2111or ~oh Manaav81vd • bll< llhr • l<Pdau top FM ;i:"~:"'iw~uteb ~ OLDSMOBILE ::,ter, automatic, white -~,t~mlis ~ ~iic"t = t Qe<l ate re o, ~. 673-82821 • _...._ ft id s, tinted rfa•. 962--.302' :, -,,.H,,,-..,KI,...,...9-3331.,...· ---::=:--1 673-: Coupe DeVlll•. ..... .. I' • • '$895) T ·BIRD ; : ~:RC: ~1!;;~"'· c~ ~5,j ~,;a '1'9!ietm' • ~~ll! • E.::::?.;!; i OPR 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 61 1910 HARBOR BLVD. '69 OPEL GT. Red. Blat'k -::::-_co_sr_•_MEM __ =- Int. 4 spd. 9,000 ml. Im· • • maculate. Make offer or trd. "1•, ~ · · · · O:>sta Mesa 5t0-88l1 ~.000 ml. ~14 : CONNELL '68 CA?<ARO, 32! V-" ...... • " 5403031 Ext 00 or 67 SPORT COUPE 1 --• "-' WO u.o•~R BLVD • OLDS '68 """"" Sedan l!J57 T-BDUl, port bola. , CHEYRO' .,.. , 00•-•· new =•• -'lent ' ·~~ ' 1"U1ly facmry oqulpped In-Landau .... Air cond, .U Mutt ,.. to appnciatal • ~I shape. 496-2339 aft S OOSTA MESA cludiJW head rests. 1e1t Xtraa Xlnt c:ond. $2!IOO $1.BOO. ~7815. : 2121 -Blvd CHC EYELLE 549-3001 Ext ... or 67 '61 Ford Faidane 500. 6 belt.. bacll·UP lights. wind· ~ 673-3812 '57 T·BDUl -CLASSIC -Oxta Mega 516:-12)(1 1970 HARBOR BLVD. Cylinders. NEW; Starter, shield wubtn, outrrtde m1r-' Looks 30 400 llel ' WE PAY TOP , COSTA MESA SOlinold Switc h C&rb., ror, carpets, etc. p Y OUT ~aft' 7 i: ~ 613-6800 -PORSCHE PORSCHE '68 91.lL. 1 OWNER. XLNT C 0 ND. $5800._ CA1L 6'15-41l!O 1963 VOLKSWAGEN 2 Dool· sedan. 4 1peed trans- mission. (GNZ074), DOLLAR 6? MAL1BU Olovolle, 1 cwn. TEACHER m\IBI ,.u cat M" t er Cylinder, Fucl $2498 L M H ' er, air cond. power equlp, now '63"""'-330'td Id Pump. Rebuilt trana * '60T·BIRD 'Convt. White, tor pod, cleaa Wied can. excel oond Muat sell $1600 ' ......_,. r • D, Presaure -in C 1 • • all Sleek A: Pampered • all ma.lies. See George Ra,y S33.o83o · · auto trans, r&h,. a/c, rec .-te. u t ch Order Yours To-Da pwr, · ., . Theodore Robina Ford tuntup, clean rel. transp Bearings, and U-jointa. WW e UNIVERSITY Ye $500. &W-6538 or &IW23S. ; 2060 Harbor Blvd. 1966 CHEVELLE SS39G. Air $200. 548-'l619 trade for VW. See at 2500 --4 C.M. 64l-0010 cond, aulD, clean, 1 owner, Newport Blvd. No. 5, C:O.ta OLDSMOBILE; TORONADO · $1550. Call. 847~. r.1esa 2850 Harbor BJvd. 1966 PLYMOUTH I ;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;1 • FALCON eo.ta M•.. 540-9640 2 DOOR SEDAN 1• • Auto Lt11ing 9810 CHEVROLET 'GS FAJRLANE w18. & 'GS Automallc . ....,,.;b,;,,,,. ; $599 RENAULT e UNIVERSITY e l;;;;;:;:,~~~~~;;;1-~~~~~~~--1 ,61 FALt'ON, 2 dr Stick. Re-Fairlane Sedan. Sta. Wag. * "QU.u.rrY COMPACT!" tR'M'803J 4 LIKE N.,.1909 R-IO Renawt OLDSMOBILE I' LEASE -RENT • • bit ongine. $195. eau · • h"-' :189 V-8. Sodan bas6 cyl. '63 OLDS F-85 "CUTLASS" $899 .Must Sell Below Book. Call ~Harbor Blvd. Immediate delivery 847-4084 Both air cond, w/a/w, HDTOP SPI'. CPE. Arr, 545-5165. Costa .Mesa 54o.8881 on all srA. W•-'61 F I R&H. $650 ea. 968--1326 IPldyS. ~~t WG/l~rutls e~. 1 e UNIVERSITY e '-====;;====I 1970 FORDS & ,..,n. aeon. a Owucu. l S t;hlng I' '6S BUG, auto .. ,iirttt, radio, R ood "--•--OLDSMOBILE • . • ' . • . ROLLS ROYCE pl"'""""· unclor warranty FORD TRUCKS 1963 CHEVROLET u"' g ! ~ good! Ermine White W/Plus red f---------I and 9000 mi. Same as new All popular makes. Ford NOVA STA. WAGON Reasonable. ~5392. LINCOLN Vinyl bucket seat Inter. 2850 Harbor BJvd. 1968 TORONAOO, white wtth ~ 54 ROLLS ROYCE $1790. Bus. 645-1992 Res. authorized leasinl; system. 9 passenger. ,Automatit', ra· FOR Sale: 1?64 Falcon Sta. Smooth Power and winning Costa Mesa M<J.888l black vinyl top, Top condL ' SILVER DAWN 675-1898 Get Our Competitive Rates dio and heater. £llG400) W~on. White· 4 dr. $650. 1965 LINCOLN Continental. looks! ONLY $895. '67 PLYMOUTH GTX, air !}on, low mileage, equipped, ~ Th.odor. $699 Priv. Pfy, 644--0410, 541)...9974 Silver 4 dr, fully equip. MARQUIS M1'RS., 900 So. corid. Buck &tii, Auto. Near with every factory op : · SUN ROOP' . '62 vw Bus. Nu Re-Blt t'1""" ...... -A. 5 eo-~ H Lagu ···-" -"-bl ··-'-·••-' .. ROBINS FORD ~="· ••~•w• ~t · ~· wy. na ~• Nu fues. Yellow w/blk av~ '• ~~-~ tnoc. , • Concourse condition, This engine. Headers, 1-whls. • -Ph •~ -540-3100 ta d •· T'I--. -.~cnn '"-'-• · • .. 5 • : ..,...,.N.l, vinyl tp. \Vkenda On1y, pt ec ... "' .... ~ .....,.,., _.. ~ beautiful auto will be sacri· $950. Best Offer or trade for 2000 Harbor Blvd. e UNIVERSITY e FORD 54>59ll it!! 673-2252 ., ~ »ilie<d lor quick salo. VW. Call· ~69 Com Me"' 642-00IO OLDSMOBILE MUSTANG • • ========I ~ 541-6609 1966 vw camper, retrig, 2850 H.-Blvd '66 Folcon Futur1 PO.-AC ,! ROLLS '39, side mounts. ne" stove; dbl bed, comptly in-LEASE ANY MAKE Costa Mesa s.ID.888t Fully 1actory equipped. Olr, '67 MUSTANG hd:tp, cham· n'' ~ pa.int, new wsw tires,· $4950. sulated, & pan'ld. OFFER. OR MODEL * POPULAR OIOJCE1 $695. pagru! beige, saddle Int. 289 1963 OLDS 91 * FUN • N· • SUNI ;;. I .:Prl;;v·::;•;rty;;,:64&-5041:;:;;:;;· ;;644--0507:;,;;::1 Vc49<-iLK7406SW:Wi;:N'1iii;;;;j;m'. Let our tease experts show '66 CHEVY JI v.s "NOVA" Phone 642-6023 c.i., auto tram, console air 4 DOOR HARDTOP '69 FONT v.g "Le Mana" .' j -VOLKSWAGEN '£6 Sedan you the best llian far your cond, radio/htr, tint ed TOYOTA Radio. BeautifUI car. Orig. personal needa without oblJ. HDTOP A/T, PIS. R/H, <4,l 1?68 FORD Country glaaa, nr new w/w tires V.S, automatic, factory air, CONVERTIBLE AIT, PIS. .. _ W/walls etc. Spar'kling sedan wagona. Loaded. u _._. · "Premium" F!be-•••• +,.,. ... .., ... .,....,..,,..91 1---------1 owner. ;1500, Had regular gauun $1800. 61J...5167 tu power, J>OWt!f' al.C\O"Mrll· •.-1, ~ S73-4648 UNIVERSITY orig. Glenn Green. Hardly $2100 * ~-5290 windows-seats, RAH. white Nylon W/walla etc. Spark. i' BILL MAXEY care. OLDSMOBILE leeks sat In! ONLY $1695. '57 Randoero 1967 MUsrANG Hrdtp. walls, tinted glul. ''"" ortr. Mlkado er.aml----U-NT----1·• . '62 VW. GOOD COND. .,.,...., u-~bo 81.... MARQUIS MTRS. 000 S. Needa paint U75 AM/FM, air, intB A: exter (F'XN890) Xlnt, Black Vinyl top, Im-VA A ~ I $600. * 646-8191 -.iv £.... t ...... Coast Hwy. Laguna Beach ~2897 gro\J.p, disc brakes, green $799 mac. saddle inter. Local ·; , TIOfYIOJTIAI Co~~~esa Ph. 494-~. 540-3100 l-,=~~c-"=----1 exter. Black inter. $1995. teachen car stnoe newf Pay WHAT A DEAL . ,1 '65 vw $850 or best offer. -.-~~~~S~-.~~-1 .;;;68;-;;CHEVY;;;::u;'';El;;-;Cam~:;;lno:.-;;,,,~I '65&~~~~;:-rf:~lo ~613-='18(11~~·~"~'~·=~==1 you t.o tnveatiaate thla true '60 Valiant Sta. Wac. $200. •J " 18111 BEACH BLVD. Hun). BHch 147-8555 3 m1 N, cf Cout Hwy. on Deb Good cc~~iJo ,...-LEA E ,...-hp, 396 cu eng. ''"' condition. $14llll. ,.._5343 1965 MUSfANG CONY. e 0ULNDIVSME0RSBllTYLE e "·""' wloter ''BARGAIN" 642-5493 ar 6'l>Ol31 ';• ---------11-0 M H ~ V-8 ! · Yellow w/black top, 289 wl FOR ONLY $995! MARQUIS '70J ustang a.utop,_ , po s traction . !\lags, 2850 H bo Blvd MTRS. 000 S. O>ut Hwy., BUSIEST marketplace . TO.YOTA air, pwr disc brakes, pwr Goodyear. 548-7883 or BUSIEST marltetplact in 3-speed manual trans., runs Costa: MP.Sa..ar r s4o.8881 Lagunii. Beach. Pb: 494-1503, town.. The DAILY p 19'10 HERE NOW - 1970 VW Bug 4,000 miles, private party. Best ofter . "'6-7848 LOW PRICES ON 1964 V\V, 1 cwner. Must aell, strg, $79. per mo. 24 mo 642-42.52 town. The DAlLY PILOT well, $lOOS. 613-4493. 540Jl00. Qusified aectlon. s av lease. '64 El Camino Auto v.s 4 Clasaified section. Save '65 ?i.fustang hdtp, p/s, aut.o '64 OLDS 88 convt., pwrt=~==~=-=-money, time A effort. Loolr ~ SOUTH COAST good tlrea. J~t twied! $r5o. money, time & effort. Look trana, lo ml, orig pri pty brake•, steering, c lean. 111E QUICKER YOU CALL. nnw_J!! . ~. CAR LEASING 545-8801 now!!!· $1275. 646-19'10, Sf6.180'J $675. Days 64&-5639 THE QUICKER YOU SELL ,1 3lXJ W. eat-Hwy, NB 645-2182 '64 MALIBU, xl11t cond, new New Cars 9IOO New Cert 9800New Cert 9800 New Cara 9800 New Carl 9llO ~ REMAINING '69's make oiler. Your Best Deals Are Still At 675-1328 DEAN LEWIS -GREAT BUY! '66 VW, good cOnd. $1000. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 TOY OT A 1967, 4 dr, R&H, stick, gd tires, Xln't cond. Must &ell. 644-1456. ud c _,. tiries. 1 ~r $850 firm. --------'-'~-'"""'-----'-"""'·"""~-'-"'----'-_ ~-·'-----""--------1 ·• , 18 •rs 7'""' 613-3663 or 548-6203 1 ' : '&i IMPALA. fact air, pWr. '66 VW, sunrf, very good •63 SPORT Fury hdtp steer., R&H. New ~s. cond. Lo ml, new eng. $1150. • • >ant's -~ 1995 ••• ""'0 * 962-1538 * 40• ~·· dlr ood lull . ...,,.,...,==-=~·='"'·...,~,__~-· J'r~ , g runner, pnce1 ~ 1965 TOYOTA Landcruiser ===-::=-,;:==;:: $499. MDRTI7 Call Phil (5) 1968 ~EVY Impalu, New nylon top. Low mile-'62 VW Sun Roof. Completel,y 545--0634 loaded! Priced for quick ' w1--c' d · ro.<t' ""'A re·blt, like nu, $850. Day --• • $1775 ""5-agi:. ~ ..,.... rive . ......,..,,.....,. ....,e, . .....,.... ~ 642-4391, Eves. ~ , '59 CHEVY l door hardtop, TRIUMPH '68 VW, am/fin, other ex-63 RAMBLER Ame~, hdtp, 283 standard shift $150. tras. BEST OFFER. dlr,runsgoodfullpnce$299. 548-1862 MUSf sell '6G Triumph Spit· 494-2208 er 615-593:7 eves. 001920, call Ken, 494-9713 tCH--EVY--,GS--Mal-,-00-.,.-.-.-,to-.' fire Mk It, r&h, ·tonneau, f;d '69 VW Panel, many xtras. !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•! Pl~ ~ A-1, Copd. Prtv. , m-, .. 5• !'i£63mvnet, only 13,@_ Stereo ~ tape • .,~~~ tires. Party: tf46:.1076. 543--74111 _, 1.:Call.;;;;..ofl:.;_e_r _s.~~~-'ff--'61 CHEVY ll Nova; new .'. BUICK ""~ brakes: .int ccn<1. VOLVO ---·---I 644-llu VOLKSWAGEN ,___ _ __ . '67 RMERA '64 CHEVY ~-n. Bel·Alr. '63 VW, runs good, must 11&1) 1 -··--tt~ -W W"---VOLVO Full power, including air, RMI, PIS •. Pitt Cean. .,......, • ..,_, • .......,,, Apl Cl; trato b k ta 40000 tual C.M. • 19'10 HERE NO\V smil UC e • , ac $595. 548-8198. LOW PRICES ON es. '67 VW, Xlnt orig REMAINING 'G9's $2995 .'SJ ~EV. llnpal~ Conv. cond. Beige radio, . PIS -P/B -R/H. $600 or New tires su?S. 613-56'20.· .Your Best Deals Are Still At ~ Best Ofttr! ~. BEsr Ottor -IllneH. '68 VW DEAN LEWIS ft~ l!J57 Chovrolet Bur. Call -642-8099. 431 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ... " N-work. Rlverslde, Newport Bch. LIKE to save $300 on a 1968 I. · 642-4!M9 1966 V\V BLUE COUPE. Volvo 144S? Auto. trans., air ,,. •• 19!60 CHEVY Very Clean. Radio. ll050. cond .. w/w, .R/~. Nicely \,l., ~~!'ii *Greenbriar Van * Call LI &-5982 broken in. Split Hi-Lo book. ,,,,,,P' Make offer 642-5112 aft S '60 VW Convt., new .t?P· can 657..o530 549·3031 Exl 66 or 67 '65 CHEVY Station Wagon, reblt eng., ~jCOndition ·A. ntfqu", _Clnslcs 961S 1970 HARBOR BLVD AM./~ radio, air conct $650 • 6'75-7200 cosrA MESA • $1300. 548-1481 '00 VW BUS. New brakes. '57 MORGAN + 4 Tape deck. Gd tires. $700. New T':lp, new brakes. Ex.. Call '5.11-3453, aft 6. cellent con d i t i o n, $1500. '64 Bug, reliable condition 642-1714 after 6 PM. $825. Autos Wented 9700 '67 ELECTRA, 4--door, 1700 CHRYSLER ml. one owner, full power,------- factory air, all exlraa. '67 Chry. "300" 2 Dr Landau, 833-2245 an pwr-air, new tirel. MUsr SELL! 644-4265 ~I0-3031 Ext. 66 or. ST mo HARBOR BLVD. OOSTA MESA JOHN CONNW "NO GIMMICKS NO GIVEAWAYS" 1st Place Blue Ribbon ·JUST 21 YEARS OF HONEST DEALING SELLING CHEVROLET$ CONNILL CHIYllOLIT BLUE RIBBON PRICES vt, •ulo., P.$., ,.win- d°""'• ffCIOry llr, R•H. '""$999 '65 RAMBLER · 770 Cl111lc Cpo. Air Cond., AT\ Ri.H, CXYXtOO $599 '61 DODGE P'Ot•r• ' dr. H.T. vt. A\IJO,, lttcf. 1lr, P,Sw at.H, tWTE1'olJ $1999 . ----···----· -------~-- Choose Fro111 h• 300 In CheYJolals, Used Can & Tnick1 + The Largest Selection of New Corvettu In Orange County BigBM MoM)" Smil"I E""n1 In sx-·-- •1299 -. < . . 1 . l :j -• ., ,_ l ' • ' J : j ·"· • ' . ' . ': ·. l i: . ' . ' . •' ' . . . ' ' •• • ' . ' . ' ' ., .. -' :;: ' -' . 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