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HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-19 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesarr I I ' , •• ................................................ ~ Tw·o Bandits Flee Ae~used CdM Wife • • ' • · llnntington Poliee Released to Faee ' After Bank Deist Dusband~s Funeral ew or ' C,OOll S ~ .on .S ncovere ' -. . ' . . .... DAILY f'ILOT Sltff I'll ... NEWPORT OFFICERS RllNnV '"""" ,. ~·Fn , KEITH CO LI .INS r.OUNT T'!E KILOS On the Wat1tfront, A Jackpot fo r Polle 1 •• Pot Runners' Plans Go Up In Smoke B>ecord Newport Haul ' $67,000 • Ill Pot Seized Estate Theft Surfaces -· In Europe . . A sizable chunk of $435,000 In bonds allegedly stolen from the estate of a Newport Beach tycoon by a fug itive at- tome,. bas been sold in the Shady in- temalional money market, turning up in Swiberland. Investigatora confirmed today that a~ proximately $75,000 worth of t h e regotiatlle school stocks have been chan- r. ~led into Europe's so-called Gray Market, a clande.!ilne network spanning the cOnUnent. "We have no further infonnatlon other than that," 3aid Deputy San Diego Coun- ty District Attorney M. James Lorenz, who h1 awaiting fonna! conflrmation that serial numbers match the missing loot. An international manhunt, meanwhile, Is centering in Mexico City for Escondido attorney Patrick S. M. Mitton, 47. He is wanted in connection with the disappearance of the bonds belonging to John Salmond, 79, Of 2164 Vista Entrada, de.scribed" .by his heirs as a ,gravely ·UI , tnan. · ' · · T h e mild • mannered bespectacled fawyer Is charged In federal and San pieg~ County warrants with grand theft and attempted extortion, with a jihenomenal $1,062,500 bail figure recom· inended. ··The case came to light when Mitton itllegedly wrote a letter to t.he retired Union Oil Company executive's son, John Salmond Jr., of t69'll Bedford Laoe, Hun- . (See BONDS, Page I) DAILY PILOT * * * 10' * * * FRIDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 19, 1969 VOL. tt. NO, JQ, ' Sl!qlONI, a l"AOl!I Nonstrategic Items Red China Trade 'WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Uniled States an nounced today it la .partially lifting a 19-year-old trade embargo with Red China . The decision, made by President Nixon and announced by the,State Depar1meµt, means that if the Otine9e are agreeable, subsidiaries of American ·companies overseas will be allowed to sell · nonstrategic items to Peking. . The Chinese mlght be able to buy items as large as. true kl of . American design that are ttiade· abrOa'd. . .. Whether Peking will be interested re· mains to be seen. Officials did not expect any ilqmediate react.ion from them. ln hopes of improving relations with the Red Chiilese, ttie State Department said NiJon was, t:ela:l.lng the trafle em· bargo-imposed in 1950 shortly after tbe Communists came to power ln Peking - in these threy ways : -The foreign subsidiaries of U.S. finns will henceforth be allowed to tradl! with Communist China in nonstrategic goods. . -U.S. finns, particularly those with branrj)es . abroad, . will be able to· buy goods ol "preswpptive Qtinese origin" and engage in trade Witli them In: :hJrd.. country markets. However, only good.I wttiCb are cE:rtified,, tp.bave been made outside of Commlinist China will be allowed into the United States·. Murder Suspect ReleQSed For Husband's F~neral Mrs. DwlWa Dean Hun t ten her jail cell Jn Santa Ana for 90 minutes Thursdciy morniog-,to: a~.1uoera,1'!.~~ices .for her bU.j:iancf,~y').ttit). broker •WJUis 'Hunt~·· whom sllt!-allei<clitJl.fabbOcHii,i!<ath last Sunday'li\·~~ d.!iirat ~> .-"~:llnnt'n~m:-''-''1<d·1011 ··~,., _., ,. \ . . """'t'P .. persogo_ '.,at . t!Je" °JOl)g·ll!p~ .:Newport resi&ful~,,funJral~ . ., She i\faM rekased at 10:15 a..m. bi a Supe~r, f1outi' ordtr, IJl!>,kilnlrn ~\lthe, women.1 .. RCUon .at Ora111e dunt)"~ jaa, aaid. " · - The •·oeryict1·1 liegai1,-al , 11 "'""" ·,!, Pacific' View· Memorial· Park chapel. were preparing for P.trs. H u n t ' s• preliminary !Jearing next Mo~ay in· Harbor Munici~l,Court. ' . · • : Aside .from iM'rs .• HUnt's· t>pef Te1i!ase f,rom;.j_!li!;she is rttiDi.beld'jyiPJoqt ~1, .. '. Or~-,:~;· __ .... j,.... ' " ./1~ ~ I '1" -· . j t . C!ealC ; ... L I ' " . \ I ' . . • 'Jt-WOtii ~a'Ciiy ··lk·· a·-W'el!iend1o, B1 JOHN VALTERZA or t11.-O.Uy f'Ult Sl.tff rested Donald Sille, 281 La'Wfldale, a114 his c~Oli. Glen Wayne Johnson, W '&U-i~were·ctiaried With pozesfion of In ,theday as they wandered In·1h.e yard. , • Epstein> said, it w"' -...,· lll«t· .lhe kilo.sized (2.2 pounds each) brtc:ks or marijuana were brought' into Newport Harbor by boai fr«lt Mexico. 2 Robbers Flee :$each Police Iii Ba rik "Heist · Mrs. Hunt was returned to her, cell: 1 ·th.e~ at ,ll·;J5" a.tn.i· • ~ The 43-year-Qld l:truhette allegedly stab--. bed. her fJfth husband in the chest with a butcher knife during a heated argument· in their Corona del Mar home. : ·write home .a.hoot ·-·unless your home is · in the northeast where they're buried in ·11now. Look for ' 1 low clo\lds, fog and ··rnid-00· tem.P"' eratures. Newport Beach and stale n~.of• ficen seized a record haul of ~i.000 worih of marijuana Thursday and ar· tested two men·-who •allegedly ·were trying to move it from a Newport boat yanl. 'Ibt illegal weed, in 11 'IU:MY sacks, was diJcOvered by the builder Of a boat in the yard aloq Padllc Oo.,t Highway at about 3 p.m. It was'the largest haul ever in Newport. Officers said the unidentified dileovUer called police immedi:ittly aft.r ftnding lhe 435 pounds o1 wrapped marijuana hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein and 1gents lrom the State Bureau af Narooticl staked out the boat yard , then \\'atted. • At about 7:30 P-l"-• EP<teln !ale!, ·two., , men, who Were ~attr foun(rto le '1roOt the Redondo BelCh .erea, came up to the cache and began loading the sacks into a car. The . qenll lben , 11tpped In and ..,.. marijuana for sale. • Epstein said the pair were seen•tarller ~ SC HOO LS TURN 100,000 WOSE U almost 100,000 scbotl cblldren · along the Orange Coast were more frolicsome than usual/this after- noon who could blame. them? The two weeks of Christ1'!N ·•icalio(l . had begun. Sd>oof bells won1 ring again 111> Ul Monday, Jan. 5 of the new year. But first a visit from Santa and • turning of th< ·l"ge "'Y ·Falller Tim6.: ' · f"" • ' And then, when the holidays have gooe, back lo claM and remember to write lt'IO instead ()f 1989, He aald the cargo wu dumped under the boat sometime Wednesday night and that no one atfiliated with the marine service and bolt yard was l.nvolveQ:. The brickl, wrapj,ed in bright yellow cellophane, were·" hidden trnder lhe overturned boat to awaJt transfer, be siild. Epstein aaid the arretll took place without incident. The pair of alleged marl Ju Ana longshoremen were .Ull in custody early today, be .. Id. Newpcrl Harbor has been the scene of several ..narcotits .tranafeN going·· wrong this year... ... ,. . ~ .. ~. . Last spring Epoleln and •lllf. agenll s<iized a stale r<eord in hasliloh, llO pound! with a ttreet value ol a ball million dollars. 1bt marijuana aap comptded lnlo (See MAJUJUANA, Page I) STwo~bank 'robbers narrowly escaped pursuing police units after robbing f15Z· fv:im file J;'irat Western Bank· in Hun- tiA«ton.·Beach about 12:30 p.m. Thursday. . One-.lnan entered the bfnk at 1693Z GlfJden;'West Street, handed the t.eller a nOle a1J1 said, "Doii'.tJiit any buttoo!, this ia~i ~up," a~ing to. police reports. ·~-officials said.he .shoved bis right' hand 1'8ide his coat pocket and warned. lie1 had'll pisU>I there. , feas ithln 10 minutes after the man eritered':the bank, ponce units had sur· rounded lhe ..... But lhe handll Oed in a . Stolen car drl'Vtn by en.Other man. The stolen car Was later found aban- doned across Ult street from 15682 Sabot I St., Huntil)&19nt Beo~ .'Wibieste• ·told police t..O men "left' on foot through Ille apa~nt 111111 ~ Pollet today are checking lhe car for flnaerprinU aad sifilng evidence In an at- tempt to find the: two suspects. No onti ""' lnJured during th< n>bbtry, poUct &aid. 1 ·Hunt died a few 'hours after the stab- bing as a team of doctors tried open, heart massage to revive him. Hunt , whose only other survivors were a daughter from Wes\ lA:>a Angeles &Qd hi• adop~ ,alepdaul!iletdMn. JllUll'• daughter by a previous marrl•ge) wu ~ed •t Pacific View Memorial Park. Meanwhile, both prosecution I n d defense attorneys in the murder cue 69 Sentenced in l taly For Part in 2-day Rio t ' ' . .. . , CASERTA, Italy (AP) -A local oourt today aentenced 69 per'!>Jll for the:ir part In the two.day riot last September over the demotion of a soett.r team. Antonio Esposito, 22, got lhe stitresl ae:ntence, thrff. years and four month!. 1bt other sentence• varied lrom (OUJ' months to lwo years. IN~mE 'l'.ODAY Curto:in calls for ti1e 10 btst comm.u.ni iu thegttr productlona of; 1969 art given todott at the Weekender'1 . lnttrmiuio11 colun1n revi ewi tht pa.st 11ear 01l local 1tage1.- . CHRISTMAS __ ,._,_..., _ _,, t t . .. . , • • f DAILY PILOT s Hanoi Mulls Strat·egy; Power Struggle Looms SAIGON (UPI) -U.S. sources said t~ day heavy Communist casualties this year and progress in the American Vlet.- J\amiJ.IUon program have forced Norlh Vietnam to rethink its war strategy . A Power struggle over the question was reported in Hanoi. ' The report came as American and South Vietnamese force9 braced ror possible attacks by North Vietnnmtse i\nd Viet Cong troops over the weekend to mark two important anniver&ariea .in the Communist calendar. .. Friday is the 23rd anniversary of lhe beginning of the French Jndoctlina \Var °'nd Saturday is the 9th annivemry or ~ founding of the National Liberation F;ront (NI.Ji'), the political ann of !he Yi•L Cong. One source reporting Hanoi's problems sakl North Vietnamese leaders are aware they cannot conUnue to absorb casualties al the current rate which has produced more than 153,000 killed this year alone. The source sald North Vietnamese leaders realiie that the United .States wilJ be abl e to continue troop withdrawals, ' reduce American loSses and force 1he Communists to deal directly with the South Vietnamese government. Official sources said a power struggle was under way in Hanoi and that the North Vietnamese leadership was ntit unanimous In Its war thinking . Since the death of President Ho Chi J\1inh last Sept. 3, the north is believed to have fallen under the rule of a four-ma n committee whose members are jockeying for · position to asswne control of war policy. Trung Chinh, chainnan of the Nat ional Assembly, is said t.o favor a protracted CAMERAMAN, PRODUCER, SOUNDMAN CONFER ON TV SCRIP'T Arevalos Students Joe Laning, Lloyd Luck, Tony Jacobi (from left) Valley Students Learn TV Business From Pros The liehts and the camera were there. So were the television personalities. But the action during \Vedncsday's T.V. workshop at Fountain Valley's .A.re\'alos School was all provided by students. The silth-through eighth grade pupils demonstrated what they had learned about television program production to Richard Dunn, producer or NBC's daytime drama "Bright Promise." .f'or several months the NBC show has furnished material and technical advice. to the Arevalos a1nateurs and Tuesda y the professionals came to Fountain Valley to analyze their progress. Some or the lhings they demonstrated \\'ere proper use of light.<5, sound , Lransmission, lenses, videotape machines DAILY PILOT "'''"'''" hfK)I th1n1httloJ1 h•ch L•911" lh«tt Fo1111ht v,11,, c,,,, Mes• OltANC.E C.OAST PUIL1$H fNC. COMl' .. N'I' l.obtrl N. Wt.d "'"'"'" 11111 PIOl>llll'ltr J t t\ l . C11•l1v \lin Prnld"'I 11111 ~II M•~""Re< lho"''' kte~a Eoi•OI" lho"''' A. M11•ohi"t Mt"tGi!lv £0110!" Offfc•• eoi11 Mn•: llO w"' ,,., St•"' ~""'"" 1Nc1'1: 1'11 Wnt ll•lllN llovi.vt•d Laoo\IN lltkll: Oll F°'11t ..... ..,.,. ~ .... '""'°" a .. t11, 1nn '''"'"' 1::.uie .. .-1 ~·l."4'--_. CAIL Y PILOT, wltn -lcll It ~ ltlto NtWt•l'fHI, I\ Pllll'lsl>td deily t•ttPI 5..,, dt'I' Ir! '"""'"' tdltleM for Lt9U"' 911e11, H.-1 le•tll, Cotl• Mnt, H""ll•l0'.111 11 .. tll -l""""llift V•l .. y, •"'"9 wl!ll IW'l' ... foMI l'dlrl!IN. 0•-(Of ll PUOllt~1"9 Get¥1ot,.,. ,.....,.,,. ~!Hiit ... U ttll Wul •111111 91..,., Ht'W'8tl 9'•1cto. tr"id JJI Wbt •• , J.trtM, C.0.11 Mt••· 1.i., ..... 17141 '42·4)21 Cl•Mfid .A4¥t-tthklf 642·1l71 c-r'-1. 1'iJ. ·o.-(out '"°h•llllot ~. "'' -,,.,;.,., U~trttfeo>t. tdl•l" .... tt... ... "~"-" ht-.t.i _., M ,......,...... wolllewl ll'Ki.I I*"• "''Mii~ et C#Yf""I •-· ~ .... ci.t. ,..., ... ,,_Id o! "'"""' at)Cll ..... "''' ~. (1Urw11T1, lllt!oC:•'-'IO!! _., Ctfflfl'll.'l-1111'1'1 "I' "'411SJ...llll-'~IJ1 "'luttrv o:l"tlMININ>.. U 1S -111!'1'. I ' and amplifiers. About S7 students participate in the television ""or ks hop one period a day, three days a \Vcek. It was part of a self- selecctive program to stimulate interest in such activities as tel evision. chemistry, stitchery and needlecraft and pottery. The students not only studied the technical aspects of television work, but ·.rrote their own scripts. commercials and selected appropriate background music fo r scenes and com1nercials. Set designs, costumes and hair!:lylcs "'ere likewise a product of student effort. Teacher Robert Hayes said the workshop has helped the pupils explore a number of career opportunities related to mass media, arl, music and advertising. Mesan's Hearing On Theft Delayed Court action against a Cost.a Y..lesa man accused of the theft of an estimated St,600 from his Leisure 'Vorld Laguna HiUs employers "'as rlelayed Thursday ia Santa Ana Y..funicipal Court. Nick r.t: Schaar, 39, of 1682 Iowa St .. "'as ordered to return to court Jan. 13 to face charges of grand theft. It is alleged that he stole cash and checks during his employment in the of· fices of the retirement community. Schaar is accused of taking an un· determined amount of change from pay ,.,.ashing machines and dryers at Leisure \Vorld. It is alleg!d that he used the pro- ceeds to finance gambling lri~ to lLas Vt'gas. Childlike Cries 'furn Ont to Be Bal>y Seal's Childlike cries for help stnt Laguna police and liftguards scooting to Crescent ll.ay thl5 morning. "It was a baby seal ," e~lained '-!rs. Glenn Vedder. wire of the milyor. She had seen the small creature nippering along the beach toward Crescent Bay. "I ress he was ju~t calling ror hl:i momma.' said l\lrs. Vedder. ) conflict which would exhaust 111licd pa- tience and see the United States pull out of Vietnam completely, He is backed by Communllt China. Today, Radio Hanoi rtporled, Chirh told a rally in the capi4al's Ba Dinh Square that Communist troops sho1.1ki "push forward the resistance against the United States to save the. nation un1il complete victory." Opposing Chinh, it was believed, .are ~ three other committee 'members, in· eluding Gen. Vo Nguyen Glap, lhe architect of the Communist victory over the French IS years ago, They are believ- ed to favor .a military victory in South Vietnam. Backing Giap, the sources reported, are Le Duan, first secretary of the Nt>nh . Vietnamese Communist party, and Premier Pham Van Dong. School Bus ' Struck; Five Students Hurt A disabled school bus was struck bv a trailer truck driven by a Fountain Vailey man Thursday afternoon near the San Diego and San Gabriel Freeway in- terchange. The collision ·caused minor in- jurif:s to five boys and the bus driver. Officers from the South Los Angeles Division of the California Highway Patrol said Paul L. Martin, 38, of 17266 Santa Barbara St., Fountain Valley. smashed Into the bus at 2:3ll p".m. on a transition road linking the two freeways. He 1vas carrying a load of new cars in his vehicle. A tow truck was preparing to haul the bus away 'vhen Martiu's transporter struck it from behind, officers said. The bus driver, employed by the Tor· ranee Unified School District. bad placed "arning reflectors around the scene of the accident. The red warning lights on the rear of the school bus were not operating, officers said. since they are not permitted to be used under those ci rcumstances. Treated at Long _Beach Community hospital and released were the bus driver, Josepr T. Murray Jr., 51: and pupils Gary Garasano. 14 ; Hugll G~rcia, l4 : Lex Istone, 14; Donald Martin, 15: and Edwin Furnee, 15. All are Torrance residents. From P119e 1 BONDS ••• tington Beach, offering to split the money. The junior Salmond, a vice president of Cal State, Los Angeles, and his mother, were appointed conservalors of the estate 8 year ago afli!r the 79-year~ld head of the family"s health began to fail serious- ly. Investigators believe :J\>1itton -who vanished from his exclusive San Diego Counly home, where he left his \Vife and four children -is trying to dispose of tl),e $435,000 in foreign nations. UndP.r procedures of the Gray Market. stocks are usually bought at below- market prices and cached in safety deposit boxes or passed from one un- derworld source to another for years. Generally, they are known to be stolen. Besides the grMd theft and attempted extortion charges awaiting Mitton, the FBI has Issued a warrant accusing him of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. Authorities moving swiftly after the youn&er Salmond's receipt of the Nov. 22 1ypewritten lelter oCfering to split the stocks or get nothing at all traced Mitton tn Ensenada, Baja Calirornia. i\-litton was named attorney for the large Salmond estate last January, 8, ap- parently hired by the family 's other at- torney, while the wife and son became lhe conservators. Federal investigators explained that the missing bonds -at least part of the1n -were sold to a Zurich, Switzerland bank, then purchased by the Geneva office of a U.S. brokerage firm . The specific loot involves $45,000 in Los Angeles Unified School District bonds and $30,000 in Los Angeles Qty School District bonds, but payment was stopped '''hen they arrived back in New York Ci· ty, TI1cy "'ere impounded by FBl agents. fl1·0111 Page 1 MARIJUANA • • • neat. foil-wrapped cakes, was found by a pleasure fisherman as he cast his line off the J\l Street pier on the Balboa Peninsula. The hashish, bearing Arabic-lettered impressions, ~·as the largest hashish find in Californla's history. Thursday~ haul of marijuana was ltlt largest ever selz!d in Neport Buch and "abtlut the second or third large.st in the county," Epstein said. U.~., Lil>ya Agree DAP.IASCUS, Syria (AP) -The United Stalt!s Ind Libya were reported today to have agreed on a timetable for "early" American withdrawal from g I a n t \Yh~lus Alrba.sei.r4ftr the Libyan eapltal of Tr ipoli. .. UPI TeltPhfft MUGGING IT UP -Jerry Rubin (lefl) and Abbie Hoffman (right) wrap anns around Jacques Levy at headquarters of 'Conspiracy ~· after day in court in Chicago Thursday. Levy, director of Broad\vay hit ,;Oh! Galetta!" testified for defense. of Love' Told Timoth y Lea ry Testifies for Chicago Yippies CHICAGO (UPI) -Ti1nolhy Leary. one or the founders or the Yippic n1ove- ment, testified today in the conspiracy trial 0£ the "Chicago Seven"' and told how he tried to promote lhe "politics o( love." Leary's te stimony led to a dialogue between a defense lawyer and the judge about how many persons attended a love- in. Before the Jove-in dialog ue, however, Leary told how he and Abbie Hoffman and Jerry Rubin attended a meeting in New York in January, 1968. to organize the Youth International Party. 'vhich subsequently became kno"·n as the Yip- pies. Hoffn1an and 'Rubin and five others are accused of violating a federal Ja,v by coming to Chicago to surround the Democratic national convention with a riotous atmosphere. Leary, wearing a suede jacket trimmed 'vith a foot-long fringe. told the court he and Hofbnan and Rubin had discussed visiting Chicago \or the convention. Leary said his group wanted to meet in a large park to promote the "politics of love." 1 "Rubin," Leary saf~. "was very CQn· cemed whether this w~ safe. I-le pointed out there could be violence and both Rubin and Hoffman sai<l we shouldn't go to ChicagC> if there wa~ a possibility of violence by the police." Leary, who identified himself a5 an f r~· _../ ,o .. If. ' t J (, f.·~ I I 11 ' 1,( ~ '. l \. ' 71 J . r , " ~ (' author of articles about psychedelic drugs, said he had met Rubin in San Francisco at Golden Gale Park Jn January. 1967, al a love-in. He said there ~\·ere 70,000 to 80,000 persons at the love. 1n. . At this point the prosecution objecled that this was immaterial. There was discussion as to whether the attendance was 7.000 lo 8,000 instead of 70,000 to 80.000 and defense lawyer William Y..1. Kunstler sai d, "I hope there is no im· plication or prejudice in your use of the numbers ." Judge Julius J . lloffn1an said, "Ther:! "·as no implication of my feelings about love-ins. in fact. I don·l knov; Yl'hal they arc. Kunstler asked Leary lo tell lhe court "'hat a love-in is. 'fhe prosecution quickly objected and the objection was sustained. The judge Thursday denied a motion for a Christmas weekend recess and the defense promptly said it \\'ill call Mayor IUcha rd J . Daley to testify the day after Christmas. Navy Causes Turk Riot IZMI R, Turkey (UPI) -A mob screaming "Yankee go home!" attacked and pummeled a U.S. Navy officer ancJ his enlisted companions today as lhC!y al~ tempted to c001e ashore as the first party from visiting U.S. warships. The sailors lied back to their ship. Hundreds of leftisl students strcan1cd through police cordons at Izmir Harbor as soon as they spotted the first two boats heading in from the guided missile cruiser Columbus, flagship of the five visiting 6th Fleet vessels that arrived to- day. Witnesses said they saw one of the at· lackers strike the unidentified officer on a 0 I the head 'vith a l!tlck. Others scuffled with the enlisted sailors and shouted "Go ho1ne, Yankee~" The Americans jumped back into their boats and sped back toward the cruiser. Other protesters ballled about 100 rial police in front (lf local headquarters of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO). Police dispersed them after about 15 minutes of scuffling and reported they had roundt'd up lbout 100 demonstrators. The five U.S. 6th Fleet ships were paying the first American call to Turkey since a visit that sparked vJolent demonstrations la st February. a ome ' HOLIDAY LAMP & ACCESSORY SPECIAL: I 150/o TO 30°/o OFF DON'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE OUR FINE LAMPS AT FANTASTIC SAV INGS. CHOOSE FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUCH NAME BRANDS AS M4RIRO -DESIGN GUILO -ARTISAN -AND MANY MORE! OUR FINE COLLECTION OF ACCESSORIES WILL ALSO IE FEATURED AT A 15•/, SAVINGS! '/ • \: :1111 ti1 \1'111111'. LOCAL DEALH FOR HINHDON-DRlXEL-HERITAGE NEWPORT BEACH 1727 W.,tcllff Dr. 642·2050 °"",., ... .,'Tit. t INTUIOllS Prof9Mion1I Interior Oa1l9ners. Anllabl ......... ID-HSID LAGUNA BEAC 345 North Coad Hwy. 494-6551 OPlH Jllli 'f 1lL t r1111 .. Tell ffft .... el O'"f't C...'9 14 .. 126J , I ~ I I ... " --- ' Uuniington Beaeh Today's Fl•a• N.Y. Stoeks · EDltl•O N :VOL 62, NO. 303, 4 SECTIONS. 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALI FORNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER 19, 01969 TEN CENTS Beach Woman Given Mystery Death Pancreas Organs from a man whose mystery death may never be fully explained were transplanted into an otherwise-doomed Huntington Beach , woman. Thursday, the first paUent in California , to receive a . donated ·pancre8t'i. Authorities at Orange .. County Medical Center , said tQe lengthy sur'gery On Mrs. Cara Ramey, 32, involved only the sixth or seventh pancreas implant attempts known to medical science. Mrs. Ramey was reported in seripus conditi~n, today while her hu~band Monte mainta_ined ·a vigil that has stretched intt'I hundreds of hours during b<>..r several n10nths' hospitalization. She received both .kidneys and the fan· creas of Anaheim barber Robert Ashby, 25, who died mysteriously Thursd8y morning at the Medical Center after a strange accident. Mts. Patiicia Ashby gave pennission for his organs to be used and the long wait against hopelessness by "!he Ram· eys, of 720 \\'illiams Ave., Huntington Beach, drew toward one end or anoqier. CAMERAMAN, PRODUCER, SOUNDMAN cONF.ER ON TV SCR IPT Arevalos Students Joe Laninv, Lloyd Luck, ·Tony Jacobs (from left) Valle y S tudent,s Learn TV Business From Pros The lights and the ccimera were there.' dayti.me dtama "Bright Promise." So were the television personalities. But . .For several months the NBC show has the action during Wedne~ay's T.\.'.. . furnished material and technical advice _ ,workshop at Fount~n Valleys Arevalo.f to the Arevalos amateurs and .Tuesday -c::JSchool '!as all provide~ by students.. . the profe6sionals ·came to FolUllain The' sixth-through eighth grade pupils Valley to analyze their progress. demonstra~d-what they_ had . l~ar.ned Some of the things -they demonstr ated a1?00t lelem1on program production ~o \\'ere proper use of ligh~. sound, Richard Dunn, prod ucer -O( NBC s trans1nission, lenses, videotape machines Charges Dropped Against Parents Over Children Charges of U1egally withMlding their daughters from school were dropped by Orange County School officials Thursday .against Mr. and Mrs. Paul Aleridge or Huntington Beach. 1be Aleridges appeared in West Orange County Municipal Court before Judge Celia Baker, who dismissed the case for ••jack of evidenct." and amplifiers. About 57 students participate in the television workshop one period a day, three days a week. It was part of a self- selecctive program to stimulate interest Jn such activities as television, chemistry, stitchery and needlecraft and pottery. The students not only studied the technical aspect.! of television work, but wrote their own scripts, commercials and selected appropriate back.ground music tor scenes and commercials. Set designs, costumes and hairstyles were likewise a product of student effort. Teacher Robert lfayes said lhe workshop has helped lhe pupils explore a number of career opportunities related to mass media, art, music and advertising. Orange County Medical Ce n t er spokesmen did not speculate on the chances for her full recuvery, but said sbe spent a resUul night after receiving Ashby's organs. Kidney transplants are relatively com· mon, but Ule Pancreas transplant has never been accomplished in California, according to authorities in the Medical Director's office. A team of surge<>ns from the UC Irvine medical faculty perfonned· the operation on Mrs. Ramey, whose system was ravaged by severe diabetes. The unexplain"ed chain of ciraimstances that led to the death of Ashby, of tlT E. Melrose Ave., Anaheim, began early Thursday with a minor auto accident in heavy fog. The mishap occurred in.Garden ·Grove and Police Sgt. Michael Sianez, said A!!hby was given a lift from his di sabled car to a phone booth at Lampson Avenue and ~lonarch Street to call relatives. His mother-in·law. Mrs. Betty Parrott, 12!5 E. Santa Ana St., Anaheim; his wife, and brother Randal1 drove to the klCIUon but found no trace of the youni barber. Not long afterward, .t workman .Jt nearby Monarch Marking Systems, 1272 Lrunpson Ave ., discovered Alhby lyina: unconscious in the rear parking lot. He· had a broken left leg U:ijured foot, and was -in hls stocking feet ...:.. his boots unexplainably found on the roof of the plant -according to the police report. The vicUm was taken to Westminster Community Hospital arid transferred to Orallge 'County 'Medical Center when the gravity of his condition was detennintd. The young father of two infant childrel'i died without regaining consciousness and an investigation is continuing into circumstances of. the fatal accident During months leading up to the unique 11urgery which may assure Mn. Ramey a normal life, the couple's plight baa cap- tured the hearts of fellow U.S. Post Of. fice empl9yes and area citiuns. A total of 11,200 has been deposited in the Ramey Fund, some of it contributed by residents of Huntington Harbour, where the victim's husband deliven mail. Smogless Energy Here? PUC Hears Claim 'No One Willing to Operate Them' The technology for ronstructing smog. free atomic energy power plants is ln ex- istence today, but no one is willing to put it into operation, a Santa Aria real estate broker testified before the Public Utilities Commission Thursday. Paul Randolph addressed his rtmarks to the rommission in Fountain Valley during . a public hearing on a Southern Califomia Edison Company application to double the capacity of the Huntington Beach generating plant. "I am for the expansion or the plant, but am against further fossil fuel plants." said Randolph, one of more than 20 Huntfug ton Bank Robbers Escape Ponce I Two bank · robbers narrowly escaped pursuing_ police units after rotlbing $752 from the First Western Bank in Hun- tington Beach about 12:30 p.m. Thursday. One man entered the bank at 16932 Golden West Street, handed the teller a note and said, "Don'·t bit any buttons, this is a holdup," according to police reports. Bank officials said he shoved his right hand inside his coat pocket and warned he had a pistol there. Less than 10 minutes after the man entered the bank, police units had sur· rounded the area. But the bandit fled in a stolen car driven by another man. The stolen car was later found aban- rloned across· the street from 16582 Sabot St.. Huntington Beach . Witnesses told police two men left on foot through the apartment area. Police today are checking the car for fingerprints and sifting evidence in an at· tempt to find the two suspects. No one was injured during the robbery, police !laid. ~~.,,,,... .... ....,..., ..... .,.,""' .. """i' ~ SCHOOLS TURN ; ~ 100,000 LOOSE ~~ Tf almost 100,000 school children · along the Orange Coast were more [~ frolicsome than usual this after· , noon who could blame them? The t1 two weeks of Chri.5tmas vacation kl had b<gun. . School bells won·t ring again un- til Monday, Jan. 5 of the new year. But first a· visit from Santa and a turning of the page by Father Time. And then, when the holidays have gone, back to class aOO remember to write 1970 instead of 1969. witnesses who testified at the meeting. He suggested. that intended ocean sites be developed for nuclear generating capacities immediately, which would ' elilninate any further pollutants from being discharged into the atmosphere by ' power compantes. Referring to the Atomic Energy C.Om- mission in using too much discretion in not approving what he termed "fail·sale" reactors, Randolph said, "We here in California cannot wait five lo seven years for a group of obscnre specialists, who are appointed and who do not reside in · our geographical area, to decide what we now knoW Is good, Is in their opinion, in the light of extenslv~ operatlng ex- perience, gOQd." · Nearly · all of those who tesUfied in Th Ursday's afternoon session supported the · Edison expansion. They included representatives from . the Cities of Flille"rton, Brea and other Orange County commilnities. F3voritig · tlie plant expansion were John B. Parker, president of the Orange County Building Industries Association ; V. F. Perkins, Newport.Beach; Frank T. Andrews,· Fullerton, chemical ·engineer: Robert·A. Clark, Brea councilman;. Paul 0 . Davis, Newport Beach architect. William Emmens, mayor Santa Fe Springs; John Haddox, Brea councilman; Sam L. Magnus, Brea Couneilmani Harold Mahar, Orange postmaster and Chamber of Commerce president; E. T. McFadden Jr., El Toro rancher; Richard L. Morris, pre sident, Cypress Chamber of Commerce; Wally H. Pulaski, Newport Beach architect. Speaking against the proposed ex· pansion was James D. Somers, vice president of Stamp Dul Smog of Orange .: (S.. EDISON, Pap ZI Violent Storip , , Sends Savage --Surf to · Coast DAILY ·,.Lof,.;.,. ,..... OFFICER STEVE BALLOCH OUSTS· FOR FINGERPRINTS· Stol en, Car Abandoned After H~. Bank Heist Reil ChmaEmhargo Lifted Fo1~ 'Nonstrategic' Items - WASHINGTON . (UPI) -Th• Unll•d States announced today _It Js partially liftirig a 19-ye~r-old trade embargo with Red -China. The decision, made by President Nixon Md announced by the State Department, means that if the Chinese are agreeahle, 1ubsid.iarles of American companies · overseas 1 will be alloWed . to· sell nonstrategic ilelnJ to Peking, The Chinese might be.able to buy l'tema as , large· as trucks of American de&ign th'!t ~made abroad. ' · Wbetber Peking wi,11 be lntere~ rt-- mains to be sam. Officials did not.expect any immediate reaction from them: By ARTHUR R. VINSEL · Of lfM 0-11)' P'li.t St~ Thundering breakers, foiling. In sets ahead of · a violent ocean storm, begaa to pound the Orange Coast today, prolll"' isi:ng to surge over into low-lying area! on six·foot-plus tides Saturday and per· haps Stinday. Not every point along the 44 miles of county coast will be affected by th• waves, whlch are coming in at a we~· erly angle, according to sea-watchin& experts. The storm 200 miles oHshore, however, Is characterlzed as creaUng carbon C'Opy condJtions ol last weekend's wave-and. tide combination which ravaged aecUons of the California coastline. Giant swells up to 14 feet in some ,b~dly exposed sections are expe~ed to strike hard, especially at Oxnard Shores and Mandalay Beach in Ventura County, Where more than $1 million in damage has been caused. Flooding ·and &Orne beach erosJon t1 probable at certain ipots locally, how· ever, the U.S. Weather Bureau wariui. Waves began ri!ing visibly by the half· hour today, shortly after a 5:54 a.m. high tide, while the n~xt will be at 6 :~ a.m. Saturday, reaching 6.2 feet in &0me cGastal areas. Seal Beach lifeguards said waves were a mere three feet this morning at their (See SURF, P11e !) Oranlf e Cout It won't exacUy be a weekend to write home about -unle111 your home la in the . northeast where they're buried in snow. Look for low clouds, fog and mid-80 temp- 1eritures. · The charges wer. lodged against the Aleridgcs for withdrawing Kathleen, 17, and Candace, 15, from Fountain Valley High School. Tn making that decision, tite parents 1;aid they did not want the glrls to be e1. posed Lo what they tem)ed ••rampant dMJi abuse" on that cam.JIUI-' New Fuel Cuts Car Smog Ih hopes of improving reJationt with the Red Chinese, the State· Department said Ni.Ion was relaxing the trade em- bargo -lmpooed In 1950 ahortly after the Communists c1me to power in Pelting - in these three ways : INSm E T ODAY <lurtoi~ calls /Of' ·th• IO btsl community theater productions of 1969 ore givirn todot1 tu th« WeektndtT'• lntirmistion cotumn t'tview1 th• p<Ut 11ettr on locat stages. iJowever. Dr. Paul Berger, Wnclpal or FounWn Valley High, ,aaid the Incident rate for drug abuse on bls campus is among the lowest in Orange.CoWlt)'. Standard Oil Tells of 15 Yea rs of Resea11ch Both daughters were absent from SAN FRANCISCO (UPT) -Standard school for more than a month. State Jaw OH or-California ha~ announced "the rcquJres I.hat chlldren be enrolled in development of a new gasoline com- AChool until they are 18 years of age at ponent which the company say1 will cut graduate from high school. smog-producing hydrocarbon emissions Meanwhile. both girl!! have been.~11~ nearly 1n half. • ' ' .ct at llgba Grand• lllgh Schoo~ in U.. In mekipg tilt ann°"""'mont n.i-y, Garden Grove Unified School ·bistrk:I, SlanJatd 'Said JS years .. of rei;earch~and where ~ parents claim drug abuse is l!evelopmtnt went into Ute ntW" fuel com· •·11egllgibtc." poncnt, whlch Is btlift around a syntbetJc Kane, president of Standard's Chevron ReseATCh Co. The company said tests conducted under typical driving conditions ~icaf;M t.he additive reduces unburned l1ydroc..rboN11ln exhaust from an averase of !i50 parla par million lo 250 parla per mDUon. puffing clouds or black smoke from tts tailpipe and, after a 1ew lal1~uts Ot lhia new gasoline, restore It to proper·workinr order," K'1Je.sald. , , 1 1'bt new addlUve also cull down.carbQn monoxide emlseions aod ·t.ncre.,q · g11 mUtaie by· aliotrt 1iff ·percent 'In ·1ypical urban filiving,-'S1'ndard said: · -The foreign subsidiaries ol U.S. firms will -be 1llowed lo trade wltb Coounwiisi (lUrilo Iii ~ goods. • -U.S. llnns, particularly time with · brancb<S aliti>ad, will be. able to buy good> o1· "pretUlll]ilive Chinele ..... •. and tng1ge in traCte with them in 1ti.trd-- C91J11ll'l', markets. lloWever, only goods ·Which are certified to hav8:heen made oulald• ol : Conimunlal O!ln1 · will • ,)>O • 1lmed 0~to'tbt Unfled Stl~ '. r °"" 6 ~ CHRISTMAS --"!'lie parents have indicated lhat they c h cm I c a I c on c e n t r ate called " would-..11 tlreiT home11t-l~I iw,.J.ane-bydr.carbylamine'----- and move to Garden Grove whtre both "Our product i5 a.n Important step The most important advantage of the new addltive,1however, appeared to be its ability to cl<an up engine dcl>oslla in both old and new cars_eoJbit_smog control devicts will work efficiently. ·. Tho firm aaid Jt,, plant io Richmond, Calif,, Is, .Ow e!'9!!'!in&_I<> begin -'pto, CtucUon of ffie new component, ca'lfea:'F~ SIO. It will be added to thr .. ~ ... or ga,,,oli."le. now on tile market .lJ:gtnptna next ;nonlh In Loi ~gclt1 and Hawall. .. S~Jc M,•r~et~ ,- • mhv__xollK· .!.Y'l -slajo puUtd bs~ from IJvola ieachedJi, .!m:Jier !!lid· inl today, but advances 111111 m1lntalned ·a' cornlortable 70Q.issue , Jead 1over,· de- •lilie1.. (Sea' quotallons, 'J>-JO.U) •. tMr daughttts are now N.ying with fonrard ,in reducln&, a.u, t o~m ol i ve friends in crdtt lo be able lo attend Baba eml&slO!lli but 11 by no m•••• totally Grande-8cbool. ....iv• Ille problem," •llid Entu D. "We can actuaJly take 1 used car In .Uch bad >hape from engine dopooila bulll up from clty drMDI thal-" la 1tallln( IDd ' . • 1 ~ \ l 2 DAILY PILOr H Huge .Dope Haul Netted h1 Newpo1~t By JOHN VALTERZA Of tfl1 Otll'f l"ll•t Stiff NBWJ>Orl Beach and state narcotics of. licers sciied a rerord haul of M1 ,000 worth of marijuana Thursday and ar. teated two men who allegedly were fYing to mo\'e it from a. Newport boat yard. The Ulegal weed, In 11 gunny sacks, ''U discovered by the builder ol a boat in the yard along Pacific Coast Highway at about 3 p.m. It was the largest haul ever ill Newport. Officers said the uni den ti f 1 e d di1COvt.rer callt.d police immedUtely .after' finding the 435 pounds of wrapped •arijuana hiddtn in the boat hull. NarcoOcs Detective Al Epa'tein and ageats from the state Bureau of ?llarcotics staked rut the boat yard, then waited. ·At about 7:"30 p.m., Epstein said, two men, who were later found to be from the Redondo Beach are11., came up to the cache and began loading the sacks intu a car. Tht agents then stepped In ind M· rested Donald Sille, 28, Lawndale, and his companion, Glen Wayne Johnson, 25. Both were charaed with posses1ion of Jfiarijuana for sale. :Eps.ein said lhe pair were seen earlier ffl the day as they wandered in the yard. · Epstein said it was et.rtain that the ldlo-siud (.2.2 pounds each) bricks of rl!.arijuana were brought into Newport ~nbor by boat from Mexico. He said the cargo was dumped undu die boat sometime Weidnt!sday night and tkt no one affiliated with the marine ~.and boat yard was involved. The lrick.s, wrapped in bright y•llow ~. were hidden under the mertumed boat to await transfer, be laid. Epstein said tht arrests took place Without incident. The pair of alleged m1rJju.11na longshoremen wa-e sUII ln custody early today, he said. Newport Harbor has 'bMI the ''"'"' of aeveral narcotics transfers soin& wronz this year. Lut gpring 'Epsttjn and state agent, geized a st.ate rel'Ol'd ln JWh1sh, 150 poonds with a ltreet value of a hall million dollars. The marijuanJ up compacted. into neat, foll-wrapped cakes, wu found by a 1:1\eas.re fi~n as be cast his line off the 1'1 Street pier on the Balboa Peninsula. Th• ha!hi!h, bearing Arabic-l!ltend lmprusiom, was the largest haatmh find in Califmn.ia'a history. 'Jbursday'1 haul of marijuana was I.he largest ever Riled in Nepcn Buch and •·about the second or tllird largest in the county." Ep&tein said. High Aparllnent Okayed in Valley The city's first "high rise" apartment utUt has been a~vcd by the Fountain Valley Planning Commission. Planners approved a conditional uae permit for t .... ·o, three-story units to be built by the Republlc Home.a Corporation i.n the middle of its 2U-unlt apartment romplex 50Uth of Warner Avenue and east of Brookhurst StreeL Fountain Valley currently has a two- rt.ory Jim.it on any corutruct.ion, and buildings t-xceeding tbat require a con· ditional use permit. Beach City Employes Pull Holiday Swi tch ~1emorial Day, ?o.1ay JO, has been ex· rl\.anged for Jan. l as a holiday by Hun· lmgton Beach city employes., The City Council approved the move, allowing employe.s a two-day New \'ear's holiday. DAILY PILOT 01.ANGL CO.UT JtUl\."HINCi COMJtAHY ~.Hrt N. w,,, ,. .... : .......... ......,....., J o e~ •. c ... 1.,, V« Jtr•-1 &nif 6-•I ll'<tMgtr lit'"''' w:...,.;1 IEdilw l~•"'•' A. MutJ11t.i~1 _.... ... l!:l•lclr Albtot W. 11111 M tto;ltt1 IEelttt "'"" ......... Offlil• 17171 ''''"' l•vl'"'''' M11l'!~t "4ld111n P.O. a.1 7'D, •JMI 0..... Offtc" L.tt1111• ~: :m ,., .. , .... ,...,. C.11 M ... : IJO Wt1I ••Y ltrtott HtwpWt aMtft; Ull Wnl It*" IClu ........ d ·- DAILY JtlLOT,"""' ... !di lt _.......,, lltf ,.~" llft)lJflllll """ ~ ._ *T Ill ... , ..... II ... tw L ....... hMll. tl.....-t k1dl, C..•• MIN. .. ........ : ... at.$ .... "-*ill Vellt)r. 1:..., .... tliQ fft*Wll ftltllM. Or..-Cent ~ C.........., .,Mti,,. j11M!1 ••• •' JJU W.t .,,.,_ ,,....._ Ph...,..n .. Kii. Mtl ,111 Wiii • .., ......,, C.,le ~ , ... ,11111 171 4J '41.-4)11 ,,... ......... C:lllt 14 .. lltl d_,,... A""'1hl .. Ml·l61t Clll'tl'1lfll, 1.... Or""' ..:.nt l'Vtl!IMllJ ~11r. ti• -• ,.,..._ lllu1tn1-.. dll«lat "'lltf!" fl' ClVtrfll-11 Mnllt ....., tt ............. 'WI•....... "'""' ,,.,.. ,....,.., ., c"""lfll' ""tr, ~ <'--..... ptld M tilt~ -(•fl Mae. C.lllti'R'-. •-t•lfolltll ..., r '"'-' U 911 _..,I 111 """ U,• -111~1 rnll!..,.r lt:>tlfl•llM .. UOI "*'Ill!)", A NOT-SO-FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY •TO THE BASKETMLL GAME Torrance Bui Stopped on FrMway Rimmed by Auto Carrier Truck in .$111 Beech Murder Suspect Released For Husband's Funeral ~!rs. Dwillia Dean Hunt left her jail cell Jn Santa Ana for 90 minutes Thursday morning to attend funeral services for her husband, yacht broker Willis Hunt, \\'horn she allegedly stabbed to death last Sunday in their Corona de! Mar home. Mrs. Hunt was among an estimated 100 pusom at the long-time Newport resident's funeral. She was released at JO :lS a.m. by a Superior Court order, spokesmen at 1he women·s section of Orange County jail eaid. The services began at 11 a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park chapel. Mrs. Hunt was returned to her cell lhere at 11 :~5 a.m. The 4J.year-old brunette allegedly stab· bed her fifth husband in the chest with a butcher knife during a heated argument in their Corona del Mar home. Hunt died a few hours alter the sta~ bing as a team of doctors tried open heart massage to reviye .him. Hunt, 1vbose only other survivors ·were ll daughter from West Los Angeles and his adopted stepdaughter (Mrs. Hunt's daughter by a previous marriage) was burled at Pacilic View Memorial Park. Meanwhile, both prosecution and defense attorneys in the murder case ~·ere preparing for ti1rs. H u n t • ~ preliminary hearing next Monday in liarbor Municipal Court. Aside from Mrs. Hunt's brief release from jail, she is being held without baH. Hanoi Power Struggle Seen Oyer Strategy of Viet War SAIGON (UPI) -U.S • ......,., said to- day heavy C<mmunist cuualtles this year and prt>IJ"eSI in the American Viet- nanilzation program have forced N<rth Vietnam to n!think ib war ltrateC)'. A power struggle over the qusiion was reported in Hanoi. The report came u Amttican and South Vietnamete forces braced for possible attacks by North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops over the weekend to mark two important anniversaries in the Communist calendar. Friday is the 2Jrd anniversary of the be11Jmin1 ol lhe French Indochllla war and Saturday it the 9th anniversary of the founding of the National LlDeraUon Front (NLF'), the political arm of the Viet Cong. One 1C1Urce reporting Hanoi's problems said N«th Vietnamese leaders are aware they cannot continue to absorb ca!Nalties at the cum:nt rate which hu produced more than 153,000 killed Utls ye.ar alone. The source u.id North Vietnameae leaden reallu that the United States wW be able to continue troop withdrawals, reduce American losses and f<ree the Commuru.ts to d•al direcUy with the South Vietnamese government. Offlcial !Ollrces said a power struggle was under way in Hanoi and that the North Vietnamese leadership was DcA. unanimous in its war thinking. Si.nee the death of President Ho Chi lltinb last Sepl. 3, the north is believed to have fallen under the rule of a four-man committee whose members are jbckeying for J)OS1tjon to assume control of \Var policy. Trung Chinh, chalnnan of the t\atiooal .Assembly, ls !aid to favor a protracted conflict which l'.'ould exhaust l'.liicd pa· tience and aee the United States pull out cif Vietnam completely. lie is backed by Communist OUna. Today. Radio Hanoi reported, Chirh told a rally in the capita.l's Ba Dinh Square that Communist 1...,,. should "pW.h forward the resistance a~ainst the United States to save the nation until comPtete ''ictory." Opposing Otinh, It was believed, are the three other committee members, In· eluding Gen. Vo Nguyen Clap, the architect ol the Communist. victory over the French 15 years ago. They are bellev· tid to favor a military \ict.ory in South Vietnam. Traf fie Signals Okayed in Beach Backing Giap, the sources reported, are Le Duan, first aecretary cf the North Vietnarne:se Communin party, and Premier Pham Van Dong. Property Owners Opposed to Plan On Tax District A· cloud has been cast over the po&ibill- ty flt cruting an assessment district in the northwest section of Huntington Beach. Property owners representing 52 percent o( the area oppose its forma. ti on. City councilmen, however. on the ad- vice of Public Works Director Jim \Vheeler, delayed final action until Jan. 5. 'I1le district proposes lo inct.all curbs, gutters, street.! and sewers on Green Milo, Pearee and Bolsa Chica streets. ' City Clerk Paul Jones said he had received proteats from six property owners representing 52 percent of t b e: assessed valuation of th e proposed tlistrict which would normallv kill lhe ac- tion. · Wheeler said proponenl'I of the district tlad hopes of J>ft"SUading smne of the pro· t~stor~ to v•ilbdraw their opposition. Estimated cos t of the project fa; $131,lllO. Mrs. Gillette Services Slated Rosary will be recited at I tonight in Dilday Brothers Chapel, Huntington Beach, for Mrs. Irene Lillian Gillette, $8, '\rho died \\'ednesday. An executive o{ May Co. stores and a local resident for 12 years, l\lrs. Gillette lived at 18678 Bushard St. She is survived by her husband, Harold A. Gillette of Boston. Mass., and a daugh- ter. Jean Britton of Huntington Beach. Mass will be conducted at 9 p.m. Sal· urday al SS. Simon and Jude Catholic Church. Huntington Beach. Fro111 Pag~ 1 EDISON ... County, who 3aJd a ··tittle bit more is too much .'' Disabled Bus Struck by Car With 6 l11jured A disabled school bus wa s struck by a trailer truck driven by a Fountain Valley man Thursda y afternoon near the Sa n DiC'go and San Gabriel Freeway in- lcrchange. The collision caused minor in· juries to rive boys and the bus driver . Officers from the South Lo.~ Angeleo:: Division of the California High~·ay Patrol said Paul L. Martin. 38. of 17266 Santa Barbara Sl., Fountain Valley, smashed into the bus at 2:30 p.m. on a transition road linking the two freeways. He \Vas carrying a load of new cars in his vehicle. A tow truck was preparing to haul the bus away when Martin's transporter &truck it from behind, olficers said. The bus driver, employed by the Tor· ranee Unified School District, had placed \raming renectors around the scene of lhe accident. The red warning lights on lhe rear or the sChoof bus were not nperating. Dfficers said, since they are not permitted to be used under those circumstances. Cit y Seeks Bo y-s For Cage Action Slgnups !or boys basketball teams have been scheduled from I Lm. to 11 a.m. Saturday by the Huntington Beach Recre- ation and Parks Department. All boys, ranging from first through seventh grade are eligible to play. Fee is $2 for fifth through eighth graders and $1.25 for first through fourth graders. Those interested in participating may call the Recreation and Parks Depart ... ment at 536-2573 for sign-up locations and further information. • State 'l'akf.ttg Look Planes May Yet Use Mile Square By RUDI NIEOZIEUiKI DI "" Kl•U1 l"llDt $1Mf Despite protests by the city of Fountain \"alley and the Fountain Valley School District, construction or a fixed-wing airport at Mile Square Park is still 'A'ithin the realm of possibility. In a letter addressed to f ountain Valley Councilman Edward Just, the State Department of Aeronautics af· fh·med that it is definitely looking at 1.1ile Square as a future airport, if the land should ever be relinquished by the U.S. ~farine Corps. which is using the site as a helicopter lraining facility. The school district has bttn anxious to construct a school near the park, but t:an· not begin with its project until it has assurance that the school will not be lvltbJn the flight pattern of an airport. District officials have been 'told by the tilarine Corps that its helicopters would not fly over the schooi. They had also hoped to prevent the possibility or another airport by pleading \Yith the Department of Aeronautics to abandon its plans. Harold H. Woodward , aviation con- sultant for the Department o f Chamber Elects Seven to Serve 3-year Terms Seven directors were electtd to serve tttnC:year terms by the members or the Huntington Beach Chamber of Com- merce. They are Don Byrnes, vice preside11t, l~untington Harbour Corporation; Jack Feehan, district manager, Southern Counties Gas Company; Dr. Max Forney. .superintendent, Huntington Beach IJnion High School District; Paul Frizeel, manager. Security Pacific National Bank. Jack Groth, owner, Groth. ·Chevrolet: F'red Kalenbom, superintendent, Stan· dard Oil Company of California ; and Allen Klingensmith, attorney. At the Jan. 14 board ot directors meeting, five: additional directors were named. according to Chamber Pl'esident c. E. "Bill" Woods, bringing the board to a full complement of 25 members. Carryover directors include S t a n Botelho, manager, General Telephone: Company; C. William Carlson, attorney; James De:Guelle, glass company owner; Jack Higley, manager, United California Bank; Stephen Holder. insurance brok&: Peter Horton, McDonnell Douglas Astronautics Company. H. C. Matheny, manger, Montgomery '''ard Company: G«lrge McCracken, huilding contractor; Dr. R. M. Morgan: \Villiam Peler&on, manager, Bank of America; Leonard Shane, manager, i\1ercury Savings and Loan : George \Vest. manager, J. C. Penney Company and \\foods. Aeronautics, told Just that "the depart. ment appreciates tm Information" con· tained in a recent City Council resolution to oppose fixed-wing airport at ~1ile Square, but said the site would be stud.led to complete Phase 2 of the Orange Coun· ly Master Afrport Plan . ''In view of th is study and the great need of airport facilities in the Orange County area , 1he Department or Aeronautics would not like to see any school developmen~ in the immediate "icinity of the airport which miaht jeopardize future use of the facility," Woodward wrote. William Crane. a trustee of the Foun· lain Valley School District said Thursday. ·•tn my opinion the Department of Aeronautics is out of jts cottonpicking mind in putting a fixed wing airport at ~file Square. There are so rriany airports already." The board of trustees will now attempt to get its way through the Orang' Coun· ly Board of Supervisors. An earlier appeal by the F'ountain Valley School District to g a I n supervisorial support failed Dec. 9, however, when the board decided to defer action until Phase Z of the County Muter Airport Plan has been completed. The Department of Aeronautics aairl the plan should be: completed within the next year. Fron& Page 1 SURF ..• relatively protected shoreline but the trend was toward a rapid increase down. coast. "It's shaping up fast," llald Hun.tinr· ton Beach Llfeguard Lt. Mark Boden· bender, estimating some storm wave! at eight feel, with a steady increase pre. dieted. Some splashed the underside ot the pier. "lf this is any indication, we shoulrl have: some big surf tomorrow,'' he: added: Surfers were conspicuous by their absence today as the combers mounted. while a discarded surfboard snapptd In half Jay beside Pacific Coast Hlghway at The Bluffs in HLmlington Beach. testimony to the brute power of the seas . "We are getting them upwards of six feet," said Newport Beach Lifeguard Ray Garvu, but the intensity of tM swells varied. hiting hardest from !!0th to 44th streets and the Santa Ana RJver jetty. Moderate 3Urf conditions -but atill building up -were reported frotn El Morro Traller Park south along the rocky coast of Laguna Beach. The most not.able increase appeared tn be in the San Clemente area and life- guards said the pattern "'ould probably indicate higher surr along San Diego County beaches. ome HOl!ID" Y 12AMP, & A'CCESSORY! SP.ECI~~ 1 s•A. TO 300/o OFF DON'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE OUR FINE LAMPS AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS. CHOOSE' FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUCH NAME UANOS AS M•UHO -DISl5N ~UILO -AUISAN -ANO MA NY MOREi OU. -COUICTION Of ACCESSotllS WU ALSO ' R 'PIATUllD AT A 11'1• S.A.YIN.S! ,\;~1·.·11 Traffic 1lgnala on Pacific Coast Highway at Lake Str"t and HunlinJ1«t Strtlet tn Huntington Beach have been aP"" provfrd: for f.lnanclng by the CaWomia HighwlY Oommlaslon. Thur3day morning . Francis A. ~tc<;:rackin . Edison CO's chief plaMing engineer. asserted that a shortage or po~·er could develop as r:arly a.s 1974 tf there is • dr:Jay in eipand.lng the: Hun- tington Beach plant. LOCAL DIALll FO• HINllDO~D•mL41HIU,•r The llgnal! wW improve traffic flow In· to the city's Parking Authority beachslde parkins lol. between t.he municipal pier and Beach Boulevard. A190 included bi' the approval i~ rnodtncaUon ot the preMnl 3liJlals at "fain Slttet. and tventual lnrt.allat~ of iignalJ al newly-widened Golden West SIMI. tblntington Buch wm contract for lhe ...,,k. Total estimal<d coot la 1128,IOO. He was backtd by another Edison 1t1itness, 0 . J. Fogarty, manager or mL'Chanical engJneertna who stre,,sed the tJ!lllty of the Huntington Be~ch plant to scr\•e the (l'O'IVlng Oranae County niarkct. - He said 70 percent of the: power needed In the county would have to be Imported by 1975 If the plant Is not expanded. ( " NIWl'O•T llACH tn7 WOlt.llff Dr. '42·20.IO DflN PlflAT'TlC-r I IN'llllORS ,, ..... ,~. lnttriw o .. ltMr• ~¥tl11bl......,.ID-NSID LAl#UNA llACH l4.S Henh CM1t Hwy. OftM Pitt A 1' '1'1\ t I I ' I 1 ' I I I ·--=-=--~:.---·-.. ------r.:.r-_:_.:.,.;;;:;:::::;:;.;.;::.:io--~----------.-----.--~----------------..:.;::.;-:.-:.-:.-:..;:-..;;:.==::;:;:...;:;;;::::::::::==;::=::::;:::.~.-::;·;::::_:;::=::::::::::·:;-._:;,:::_:::_::::_::::;:::;:::".711 Abernltthy l{el,djnMemphis, · '. •. -< . . . Capitalism Boss Quits Says He'l _l F,ast in Cell ' ... MEMPIUS, Tenn. (AP) - The Rev. Ralph Dav.Id Abernathy, dlalrmaa G( -lbe Southern arlltlan 1'ader'li>lp Confereoce1 went to j a l I Thursday night vowing be would "teach · Meinphls i lesson" by lasting in blJ celL Abernathy, oae of 19 civil rigbla J<adera indlcll!d Dec. I as an outgrowth of the aeve°" week classroom boycott by Negroes, said he would only drink liquidk during bis con- finement. Arriving from Atlanla with six stall members, Abernathy led about 400 persons on a two- columned ' march d own sidewalks on both sides of Main Street and surrendered at the county jail. The chanting marchers on the one-mile trek from a downtown church to the civic center snarled tra.flic at the beJgbt Of a rush boor, Abernathy was e~ to remain in jali at least 1U1til Monday when a U.S. Dbtricl Nixon Plan Increasing Negro Job Ranks Killed WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate has voted to kill the Ni.Ion administraUon's ao-caIJ .. ed Ppbiladelpbia plan aimed at increasing Negro employ- ment oo federally fuumced construction projects. In a 52-37 vote Thursday night the Senate overrode the wi.sh~ of the administration Mine Safety Bill Facing Nixon Veto? WASHINGTON (AP) Despite Republican warnings of a veto, Congress bas sent to the White House a tough safe-o ty bill far the nation's 140,000 coal miners. and a pprov'e d an ap- propriations bill amendment that said no money in that measure could be used to finance "any contract or agreement which the comp. troUer general of. the United States bolds to be in contra· vention of any federal sta· tute." Comptroller General Elmer B. Staats opposes th e Philadelphia plan -a re- quirement that contractors on federal jobs ·make "good ' faith" elfort.s to hire a eerta.ln percentage <>f rillDoritY 'group workers -en grounds it amounts to the ~ of quotas in employment. Quotas, Staats has said, are outlawed in the 196f Civil Rights Act, which bars discriminauon in l!iring on the grounds of. race, rol<>r, religion, sex or national origin. However, both Atty. Gen. • .'r:r• Cowt juclao will "¢ on a suit that -to ..iom. otata, city and police ofllclals from WASllJNGTON cup n -OPEN SUNDAY , fUrtblr prClleCUting I he ,• charges ""8inst. Ille I 9 Pre>ldent Nlxoo's lint bticl< 1 Z • 5 penono. Civil rJ.lbls attorneys nteod-tbe new-ltate -law- maklng It a mildemeanor !or an adult tq .-irage a pupil to atay out of scbool to engage in a protest dem<mtration is capllallmn director ha• quill~~~~~~~~~= lbe piogram, appartDUy be-Ji --1. . Abernathy joined lour local civil riJdJts leaden who have declined on P.Jinciple to post a token $1 hail required before their release. The civil rights drive that resulted la the indlctmenla was designed to pressure tbe . sch9ol board into granting Negroes a greater voice in school affairs and lo force Catholic-operated St. JOHph H06pilal to negotial< with a Negro union local that bu been on aJrlke against the hospital since Oct. 5. There have been no talks in the strike, although the school board has named two Negro board advisers and has pro- mised to push for a change in election procedures: to give Negroes a chance to run for the board. , UJl'l 'Tl .. Mlt XUAN THUY'S MAIL -Sens. Robert Griffin (R-Micb.), le!t, and William Spong (D-Va.) look over some of the 40,000 messages' received in Washington in response to Griffin's appeal for Americans to write to. the head of the Hanoi delegation at Paris peace t!llks , asking for humane treatment of U.S. POWs and release of names. The U.S. Jaycees have taken on project and hope tn deliver the letters to Xuan Thuy m Paris. Hanoi Bromkasts cat11a ol. bulc dlaagreementa with tbo adminlstraUon on bow It should be run. Thofnas F. Roeser, 41, an- nounced his resignation Thurs- day as asalstant to Commerce Secretary Maurice It Slan.5 !or mlrulrity enterprise. He pianl to become public a!!aln director of the Peace Corps. Stans replaced Roeser <>ct. '28 as director of the Com- merce Department's Office ol Minority Business Enterprise (OMBEJ, the agency 8'Slgned t<> Carry out Ni1on's black cai)itallsm efforts. lt was re- ported Roeser considered his new appointment as St.ans' assisUplt a demotion. The friendly letters ex· changed by Roeser and Slan.5 and made public by the Com- merce Department Thursday masked the dispute between the two men. The dispute never became public, but privately the Com- muce Department let it be known that Roeser was taken off the day-to-day operation or OBME because of inability to Enjoy a Happy Family CHRISTMAS DINNER At The Dlstlnct_lve ' °"' ........... ,,.,. ROAST TURKEY SflWll "9111 J P.M. Old Fe1hlo;necl Apple Cider. Molded Royel Ann• Cherry Sel1d. Fr11h Cr•nberry Seuce. Wtiol1 Oren9e Fillecl Wtth Sw1et Pot•- to, Topped with Merd1mallowt Our Own Che1tn.t Dre11in9, Homen1ede P11mpkit1 l1e1d. Hot Mince Pie With lrencly Seu ce, Pull'lpldit Pie, Ice Creem or Sherb1t. TWO LOCATIONS Tbe boycott of Ille school! at um .. kept aboot one-ball of the city's 135,000 puptl! out of classes. Fifty.four percent <>f the enrollment is Negro, POWs Send Yule Messages administer the oft:Jce. Roeser's If ~~~5' supporters, however, said the ll' key issue was his unsuccess-- SAJGON (UPI) -Hanoi present to you." family not to worry about ful effort to get a firm com· Pilots Ask Radio, in programs beamed Mayhew, a pilot, was cap. him. mltment of $500 million for "Tbey Ill mak Chrl bn OMBE from the administra· to the Far East, has begun tured Aug. 17, 1968 after his w e s as very pleasant for us here tion, U broadcasting_Christmas mes-plane was shot down <>Ver with a good Ch'rlstmas din· Roeser also balked at Stans' .N. Help sages from, American war North Vietnam, acoordl.ng to ner, lots of goodies, Christ-order to launch a publicity prisoners to their families in the U.S. military command. mas mu 11 c, decorations, campalgn fer OMBE bef<lre it 0 the United Slares. Tbo -~and said ·~-y It cburcb services, and I'll be had produced any i;ubslantial Hi • ' ks "''Dear mom, dad and faml· ""'-'!;"'· wue achievemenbl. n J ac . ly, I'm sure you'll be glad to was aware of the English looking forward to yoor Chrlst·1;;::;======== hear my v<>ice again," began language Radio Hanoi broad· !Das package again this year," LONDON (UPI) -Tbe one message by a man identi· ca_sts, whlc:b began earlier it 1:.tier broadcast allegedly Worldwide Airline .P 11 o ts fied as Navy Lt. William John Uus week, but had no way of , was made by Air Force lat Union asked the United Na· Mayhew of New Manchester, detennlning their authenticity. Lt. Michael Scott Kerr, a pi· lions t oday to take W. Va. "This will have to do The broadcast allegedly lot shot down over the Nqrth ttsponsibility for punishing this year as my Ouiatmas made by Mayhew tD'ged bis Jan. IS, 1967• Kerr is from airplane hijackers and said it was considering a one-day -f:r * -{:r -{:r -tf -{:r Pori Angeles, Wash. strike to back up its demands. "MetTY Christmas and a A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Ma""'*' If ,....._ .. Mt • IMdl "" ,,.., ,... ....... ....,_ .... ........ 11•"'911. Mt tir Httlt Mv .. f11e1 11111 eccw fNWY dlly. -a.n11"'111 l're1111111 P•l!SENT~D ~ A PUILIC SEllVIC~ EVERY OAY IY: tDS I . TOii.A LINDA ILYD. PLACENTIA PHONE 524-2090 2131 lllSTOL ST. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-3414 COCKTAILS '"'' .......... .......... m~~~g fn tw~:./ri;~~ Nixon Gets petition ~~':?' .N·~~~e to t%00K~:; International Federation of family. "I hope this message LM Roofing Co. Meior Credit C..rds Honor .. I ·' ·' ·, :< .· .. •' ·, ... '. ·' .. :.i: •• Chief targets in the bill are mine explosions and the dreaded "black lung" disease, daily threats in some 140,000 coal mines. Before passage Thursday night, t b e ad· miniolratlon made known ila objection lo one maj<Jr pro- vision of the bill: rederal payments lo miners disabled by black lung. John N. Mitchell and Labor Seerelary George Shultz, in addition to Nixon, have sup. ported the Philadelphia plan. Defenders of the plan say it set.S "goals," rather than "quotas." The comptroller general heads the general ac· counting office -an ann ot Congre!s. Airline P i l o t s Association finds you in good health. My JFALP SANTACLARA,Calir. (AP) 1y that Nixon will ••do he.a l th is okay, so don't 14YMnkll..._ · ._. .... hchltlm .··~ ( A) said the nation con---The wife of the first sOmelhlng to get my manr_;wrny~~~-~· i'"il•••·ii~'~"'~'•~•·~.,~-~·~-~~~~-~,,,,~~======~~~ , cemed with a hijacking "must American pilot captured in home." '~ assume responsibility for the the Vietnam war has sent She married Navy Lt . safety of passengers." President NiJ:oo a 70,000. Everett Alvarez, two month.. "The probltm ill one for the signature pet!Uon asking him before he 1e11 !or Vletnam 511 loutlt a·oast ?lax• United NaUons," a stat«nent to press for the reti.rn of the yean ago. Four months later ' bsued at the end of the est! led 1 380 us · A 15 ·-· ~ ~1 said ma , . . pnsoners -on ug ••• , ---na m= "If ·"We are a body of war. shotclownana caplureddurlng A disabled miner with a wife and two children w o u I d receive $272 a month. '!be ad· ministralion contends this will cost $385 million a year. Democrats put the figure at $60 million. NY's Wagner Separated set up for the protecllon ol Tangee Alvarez. 29, of Santa !he second day of alr """""" SANT A'S HOME • • • crews." ue<' ... '6 Clara said after the signatures over North Vietnam. AWAY CROM HOME Charles Jaci<oon, Secrelary were malled Thursday that She hu received. aboot 30 " of the IFALPA, told the news _1sh~e~d~oes~~not~~ex~pe<~t~any~Jl~et~le~n~!rom=~b:er:..:3:i·yeal'::'°:l:dL_~~~~~~~~~~~··~=~· ~.,~ .... ~~~"'°~~"~' ... ~~·'~· '°"~~·~··~"'~~~~~~- NEW YORK (UPI) -For· mer Mayor Robert F. Wagner and ins wile, Barbara, both acknowledged Thursday that they were living apart. conference the pilot union was miracles from the petitioo1 on-husband. not interested in setttng itael! Payments should be handJed by states, GOP congressmen 1aid. Democrats clrgued that most states have demonstrated they would not pay. "Shabby treatment Indeed for our nation's coal miners," said Sen. Harrbon A. Williams Jr. (D-N.J.J, of the ad· minlstralion position. Wagner, who was an unsuc- cessful candidate in this year's Democratic mayoral primary, told news media that "at this point we are Jiving apart. She (Mrs. Wagner) is under a doctor's care. My primary concern is her restoration to good health." South Against Wall up as a Jaw enforcement body. He said the degree <>f punish· ment was a matter which should be decided by each country. However, he !aid the United NaUons should accept a larger responsiblity for punishing the hijackers and that the group of pilots was considering a 12 or 24 hours stri~ to halt au international air travel to back · up their demands. lntegratWn 'D-Day' Nears JACKSON, 1.1Jss. (UPI) -sayjng to us. 'You IUlTender from the U.S. 51.h Circuit Segregation ends 1n many your children to us <>r we 're Court of Appeals, wwld "do school districts in the South golng to take your money irreparable damage to the today with the letout for the away'." quality of public education 1n Christmas holidays. CI a as Gov. John Bell Williams and our state." reopenlngs in January will be several other Mississippi or. "The effect cl this decree, tn on a desegregated basis under flcials have predicted the most instances, will make the U.S. Supreme Court's orders handed down Oct. 29 by quality education for these "integrate now" ruling. the Supreme Court will cause children an u t t e r im: Mississippi is the state mass withdrawals by whUe po.s&i~_illty," said the governor. hardest hlt immediately by students in heavily black "In aµ cases, it will be dfsrup- the order, with about 35 school areas. Many black parents tive, With educational progress districts oo January or also have expressed ap-broughttoa suddenhalt." February deadlines. North prehension over the impending p;;;_,_,_,_,_,_,_,_,;;;;ol Carolina has three distrN charges. wilh a Ded •. ~1 deadline for in-_ .Some teachers have su~ tegrating.-;: mitted resignations in various Nineteen districts in Ten· districts, but an education nessee must desegregate in -spokesman said most ap. January and three Alabama parently are waiUng to see districts have until Feb. 1. what happens after the first of Elgbty-one districts In Georgia the )<l!ar. have until Sept. 1 to integrate Williams said 1he Supreme or face a cutoff In aid funds. Court declslon, coupled with Other districts M the South the impltmentaUon or d e r have less stringent deadlines. "War bas been declared," said Georgia Gov. Lester Maddox. "The judges are VNITED STATE$ NATIONAi. BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER FHP.QUI Ck lea EJactor Kii ONLY 111" Aw {<U?ar 'Ltttl« 1omathlttg for the home" gift! Parent's Ring A memorable gift for mother or grandmother with a birthstone for each of the children. Mdltionll atonts 3.00 •h. 2500 = """ •.•ii , .... '' .. " ,· ,; .. .; I ::. I NOW OPIM Justfllp the hlf!dl•and you hive Ice cubes Instantly, ... lty, OHtr Includes two 1pec:f1I 20-cubl let Eject« traYfl' 11 Mll IS handy BG<:ube sttWfl SATURDAYS t t. 1 P.M. MON •• TffUIS. 1 .. 1 P.M. FllDAft 1M P.M. 1714) 14 .. IJll. LMllNd I•: s..c..n.....c .... 111 ... ,,.,.,, "'" .. ,...,~ E. H. LEVAN - 411 E. 17th St. Cosl1 Mn.-646-1684 0 'l;Jeis/ields .. l Ji:WELERS SOUTH COAST PLAZA Upper Moll Acnm From Woolworlh'o-Phone 5<40.7117 Aloo In L1kOWQC1d C1nler -Lakowood · Opell 12t.>S Stmdaf.' .. ; I DAD.Y PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Going After lndu·stry Cooperation between city officials ahd private prop. erly owners ls el.!entlal iJ the lndustr!al lahd In Foun- tain Valley, norlb· ol Tatbert Aveniie is to develop. The city took a step last week w Insure such coop- eration with the creation of two committees -one cit- izen, one staff -to &tudy the area, make recommend.a. tions on how to lure industry there and actually work at bringing industrial development to Fountain Valley. A nine-member citizens advisory committee will collect information and give advice to the staff com- mittee from a citizen's point of view. The citizens com· mitee will draw on nine different occupations and in· elude 50!Jle people from the affected industrial area. The staff committee, beaded by City Manager James Neal, will do most of the research work and take the action when. a plan is developed. Two admin-- Jstrative assistants have been authorized to spend about half their time working strictly on the industrial land problem. The city has shmvn iL is not going to wait for in· dustry to drift into town. The allocation of city time and personnel to that one problem shows the city's willingness to work with the l'roperty owners. Estab- lishment of the citizens comnuttee brings in the other side of the picture. People either directly affected by potential industrial development, or who have a prcr fessional view on it, will be helping the city. Much of. the behind-the-scenes work to latmch this Industrial development project was handled b.Y Coun· cilmpn Bernie Svalstad, and be deserves credit for it. The City counciJ, .. a WbOlo al&O deserves credit lot uniting (with on' exception) behind a concer1«! ofion w bring more Industry w tho city. The city la rapidly filling with resldenUAI construc- tton. Any further lag In Industrial development could seriously hurt the area's · tiix base, especially for schoola. Industry will £enerate money, but ff!W sti.r dents, for lbe scbciol districts ahd they ,couldn't be hap- pier. ' The council'a·~on was a good one for the people. Jaycees and Junior Miss Last year Jackie Beningwn carried Huntingwn Beach to national fame as she walked away with top honors at the Junior Miss pageant in Mobile, Ala. The Huntington Beach Jaycees were ecstatic and under· stand"ably proud they had sponsored the local event. This year they couldn't even drum up a contest. One girt entered and she was declared the new Junior Miss of. Huntington Beach. The idea that the J aycees could get but one entry casts a cloud over the whole event. The Jaycees claim no other girls -out of three high schools -wanted to enter. But Fountain Valley, a much smaller city, managed to get seven entrants. It's not a very good 6howing for a city that went all the way to the top last year. H <Avs E ANl> EFfeC.T U.S. Prisons Only Corrupt The Inmates Dear Gloomy Gus: We Choose Our Own Destinies Possibly not one American In 10,000 bu ever ao much ~ looked at a government repOrt called "The Challenge or Qime in a Free Society!'; whlch was tJblished nearly three )'i!ars ago by the President's C.Ommlssion on Law Enforcement and When the Russians sent up their first Sputnik years ago, the critics pounced on the schools, blaming them for failing to educate st.u· dents for the Space Age. But when Americans were the first to walk on lbe moon, few voices we.re heard in praise of what and how we teac:h. -R. L. F. nm futlir• rrillm ......,.., ¥tew.. - -llY .... .t th ·-······ 5"" "'' "' ,...,. tt o.._, •• o.11Y "*· ' Administration of Justice. · are incapacilated from committing In this report. leading e:1perts in the fprtbez: crimes while serving ' their field ol penology recommend vast and sweeping changes in the way we nm our ijetltences, b u t the cmditions in which prison system -changes that would • they liff are the poor~ pomfbfe benefit not only the inmates themselves,. preparation for their .mccessful reentry but that would also reduce the. cost to into society, and often merely reinforce !OCiety of maintaining huge penal struc-in them a pattern of manipulation or tures ·that only intensify the problem of. i:lestruct.iveness." crime. More than hall the men in prison have not completed an elementary school education. Most of them have no skills, and thus no job possibilities when they are released. They return to the same en· vtronment that produced therq, oo.ly more bitter, more expert in the ways cf crime, and more determined to "get even" for their punishment. Penitentiaries don 't make men· "penitent," but vindictive against society. ·THERE ARE ABOUT l'h million of. fenders in our correctional , programs, end each year our correctional fn.. slituUons handle about 2¥1 million ad- mission.a. If we ·could return most of these. men to society as respomible and producti'VJ! ciUzens, oor crime rate would drop conmderably -but most of them beccme repeaters, going on to mo:e serious aime after a prolonged !tay in prison. OUr present lnstJtution. do not correct; ·they comipl Even lhls cautious and cf· ficial report concludes lhat "the ~ , ditions under which many <>ff enders are ·bandied, particularly in institutions, are often a positive detriment to rehabilita- , tion." THE • REPORT GOES on to say bluntly: "Life ln many Institutions Is at best barren and futile, at worst unspeakably brutal and degrading":To be we, the offenders ln such institutions WE MUST BEGIN with the youth of •• fender1, who too often are turned into criminab in the very juvenile detention homes that are supposed to "refonn" them. We must get the commwUties, the schools and colleges to take part in rebabilitaUon programs. We must have work.furloughs and more Oexible pro- baUon and parole policies. We must get better personnel, better trained, better paid, and better motivated than the present political hacks. Otherwise, all we shall get is "better" crime by men whose ooly ambition Ls retallaUon. The Quiet Americans BULLETIN BOARD' Just a century ago a group of tea and siJk fann worken, known as the WakamaUu Colony, arrived ln El Dcndo eounty, the fint Japapese. ' Immigraots to oettle In this c:oontry. (A atranded fi!herman named Manjlro, however, was picked up by a New England whaler in UM3 to ~e the first koown "Issie.I ," or rirst generation Japanese, ti reach thae shores.) , Marldng the c<nlennlal Is a full.dnos Mll<lcy of Japanese-Americans, ''Nl8el ' The Quiet Americana." The au-Is Bill Hosoka.wa, a Denver journalist and hbn&e1l a "Nisei," the Japanete wont· mearunr l«<lM , ..... atloo. HOM>kawa la a \'tteran of the ttlocaUon campe t:l the ""artime 1MOI whfll the American mny, in an atmospbtte « eome hysteri1. rounded up more than 100,000 11Se1 and Nisei a1 potenUal '°"""'Y rlaks. ---B• GN1"9e---, Dur Georlt' -...... ,... ... had ......... meat --ed1"*ilon In the ICllool<T Are J«1 pro or con! WONDERING oe .. w-., I ..t to be pi'etty much ol a pro 1>11 J«I -·w11a1 mama.re ca11 do IO• man. (ll you have gh'"I) up other ad· vice mlumnJllU u bopel,.., why not wrlla If Geor&• and afve him up u hopeless, abo?) • <""'r vw~--:;;'....,'.!!".::.. r·~ ~ ,,~ I'· Jhe-Bookman-. ~ •. 1 J THE EVACUATION period la coveml In considerable detail In tltis boo!<, but never with blUemess. Indeed, the book Is a record cl a great American success story, "'a Hor"atlo Alger tale on an ethnic &c.ale," as the author put ll It ls an el1>- quent contribution to the classic Im· migrant slOI)' that !.,.,,_ on a omall but not Inslgnllicant _.ent of th e American people (Morrow' mus., $10.115). Notes on Ute l\tarsta -The frustraUon of the Vietnam war giveo lreoh urgeocy to I. F. Stone'1 "The Hidden Hi!tory of the Korean War," a classlc analyals lint published ln 11152 and prac:ttully tgi>Or<d when It appeartd In th1t M~ era. A new edition of this Imporionl work, long out ol print, was recent11 published by Monthly Revi ... Prm (l?.58). Slone'• K<Wl11 ol thia earlier Amlrican mlUW, adventurt In Asia .._·111e ""'e kind ol olrldal mtO!aclly and the ...... booby tnlpi ... the rood to peace that have -evident In the Vietnam situotlon. -Ida M. Tar1>cll's famcw "!llJtorJ ol the Standard Oil Comp&l>Y" (!JO\), a boot that allacked Amerl<t'• llrl1 maJ« Industrial . -ly and help<d In- augurate the "muckracker l'J'IOYefMf!l'! appears in a condcn9ed version, tdltt!d by David ?of. Chalmtrs. A Norton Llbrary paperback (11.115 ). Imposed, Self-imposed . Suffering By GEORGE R HOFF, Ph.D. Human suffering takes many forms. Some of it is imposed from external sources: war, pestilence, floods, earfh.. quakes, prejudice, hunger, brutality, murder, rape -all fmns of human misery inflicted from the ootskle. Most of us have not persooally been beaten down by bmtbs, clubs, starvation, guns, madmen, or bigots. We eat well, Jive comfortably, love freely; we have frieOOs, families; most of oor bask and not..so-basiC needs and: desires are met : we're not afraid of the proverbial wolf .;t our door; times are good fOl' us. · Yet, we1 !Uffer too, but from our cwn self-imposed misery. We bring it on ourselves wbE!l -and sometimes because -everything is going our way. THOSE ON WHOM suffering has been imposed can't understand what appears to them to be unreal, unwarranted, and unforgivable travail; it seems illusionary, conceited, seH·tndulgent. They scorn such inexplicable behavicr as suicide at. tf~~7·~;:~~:i~-~~*~'~) r ·"\~'"' ,t. 1PfOi>l~rii~1; 't· ·\; -• I .,. -......... ,.. . •·' t ' • ·~.,tr~ ..._..._, ••• ;;....,;;.:,_: ...Jo~~ •. ~ -" ... .,,/ tempts, de pres g ion sensele'ss rebelliousness, fierce competitiveness, bizarre actiom, suspiociousness, envy, guilt, phobjas, and compulsiveness. Paradoxically, however, IJllposed suf· fering protects agaiJW. these self-imposed kinds·. It's unlikely that · m will pay at- tention to oor emotional problems so long as somebody else ls standing on our foot. CONVERSELY , Uiooe of us who com· pose our own agony are ambivalent toward victims of imposed S!Jffering. Although we sympathize with the pain resulting ·from being beaten, feeling hungry, or having bttn wiped oot, we feel a secret pride that our pain is moce com· plicated, more mystical, of a higher level. The fact ii that impo&ed . and self-im~ posed suffering are equally · bad and in- imical to a gcOO life. A chOice between cod liver oil er castor" cil .. taken' straight, freedom: they also reinforce the illu.slon ·of.emotional imprlsontnent. So long as we live, we h{lve 1the freedom cl deciding ' . how we want' to do it. ., is hardly a choice at all. The. consequence NOTHING OR NOBODY can·guarantee of a bullet in the head , ls tfle same·, our freedom for us: or keep us from regardless ol. who pulled the trigger of .. laying suffering en ourselves. , We may the gun. ·proceed through an entire life without ANOTHER FACT is that the irunnletof' being aware of the alternatives-available German death camps, the blacks· in· the to us, the choices which are there. holds of slave ships, the dt,tst , bowl In every situation for every person. fanners, the citizens o{. San Fr.ancisco · there is a realm of freedom and a realm during the earthQuake; 1 the , vicµp\s of .. of constraint. At any given time, we may murderers, were all lnnocenl ot .. theii .ruf· live in either realm . We must be cog· fering ; they had oo choice. We are guilty · nizant that, indeed, there-. are lrralslible of complicity with oun; we bear forces, stone walls, ·iron ~ fi.sts, but. responsibility for it. ·recognizing them, we can. turn away and Unless overwhelmed by cifcurnstances live i.n the realm of our freedom . completely beyond oor control. we are Only after we have kfentified our self· the result of .what. we do and are free to bnposed suffering, made . t.he com· do what we chOOse. Excuses, rationaliza· mitment to change, and born't! the tions, projections, denials, ()f" Qther fonns responsibility for ·the choices . we make, of psychological def~nses delay' the in~ wit\ we. be in a po6ition .to. pursue our own evitable confrontation (){ · our own destjnies. . ' ' . Too Many Reports With·ou·t Action WASHINGTON -A member ol the National Commission on the Ca~ and Prevention of Violence ha& made a recoounendation which. is bound to find favor in the Nixon Administratk>n. U.S. District Judge A. Leon Higginllotham, a Negro, proposed a national mQratorium m any additioo.al temporary IM!y com· missions to probe the causes of raclsin, er poverty, er crime, or the urban crisis. Taken altogettier the various coin· missions may have served merely to widen oor national divisions by defining them in tenns which, to use the current phrase, polarize opinion on one side' or the other. The most rememt>ered finding of lhe Natrona! Advisory Commission on Civil Disorders u reported early in 1968 was that America "is moving toward two societles, one black, one white - separate and tmeqUal." The so-called Kerner Comml.ssion called !or sweeping ref<rmS, none of which have been im- plemented or are likeJy to be im- plemented. NOW TllE l!ISENROWER Cotnm~~on on Vlo!ence has made a stria: of recom· mendaUons which are not likelf to be lm-- "plemented either, involvlnc as they do the expenditure of $20 billions after Uie end of the Vietnam War. Just what this haa to do with the cauees for the fonnatlon of the Eilenhower Commlssion is not clear. The commission was set up after the murders cf MarUn Luther King and Robert F. Kenntdy by as58ssins v.·ho did not reflect any phase Of our present na· tlooal mood but we.re u senseless in their atms and u devotd of organized political purpose 1s the murdtrer of John F'. Ken-- nedy. The pusage of Umt has certainly taught us tblt the murders of these men wtre mauc or purely criminal act.! and not conspirtcies nor the expression of the wIU ol anYlhinl that could be dignified by belnc ca.lled "I minority." The murders were vicious crimes commftled by 'Jlc- cklus er deranged men, abd not tht ex· pm:sioo ol the mood ol Dall" or Loi Angel'" 0< Memphis. TB E EISENHOWEll Commlsslon, however, hat given us a tre1Use not on wtlJt caused these men to kW and hdw a r.petlllon mllhl be avoided but "' tho •bstr•ct tvbject of when civil disobf. dl<!Det croese1 t.ht line Into violent r~olutlon. Sli ol the 13 mtmbers dissented from • majority rinding that civil disobedience • -{ ' Richard Wilsqn • ! . J . - campaigns lnvtt.e \Plolence, erode the law and cannot be justified Oil grounds of in- divklual belief. The mlnorlly cf siJ: offered a rationale for massive civil protest-a continuation, in .ether words, of precisely what a vast majority of Americans fear and are com- ing to abhor. Thl.s parallels the earlier findings of the Kerner Commission that urban riots In· volving blUning.aod kill.Ing were a fonn ol social proteot IncreaslnilY aceepted by American Negroes as jusil!iable because of condiUon.s in the naUon'1 ghettoS. That was not an ab.maction but the reporting of a purported fact whi ch must have influenced the majorit) on the Eisenhower Commission in expressing their misgivings atx>ut social protest. THE MINORITY ON the Eisenhowi:r Commission wished to live in a world of abstracUons in which the citizen can non- violently express his disobedience of the law as a means of dramatizing his ob- jections and testing the constltuliunal validity of the law. Violence regrettably pursued the non· violent Dr. Kink just as it pursued the non·violent war ~Protesters who came to Washington recently. Violence is a regular attendant of massive civil protest and disobedien ce of jaw. This has been so cflen illustrated that the massive and peaei!.ful civil rights march en Washington a few years ago stands as a lonely exCi!.ptlon. The present mood of the Nixon Admin istration is not receptive to the ra· tionale for civil dlllObedlence as elthtt a first or last resort even if subscribed to by such out.standing personages as Dr. Milton Eisenhower and Terrace Cardinal Cooke of New York. It Ls to be doooted if the 7...fi division of opinion in the vk>lence commission represents anything like the national point of view on this subject. ·THERE IS MORE LIKELY to be agieement with Judge Higginbotham, one of the minority, that "~rveying !he landscape , liUered with the unimplemented recommendations of so many previous commiMions, I am com- pelled to propose a n a t i o n a I •moratorium ... " ,Judge Higginbotham wants action on the recommendations already made. But the outlook is that the Eisenhower Com· mission reports, like the Kerner Com· mission reports, wiU gather dust until some future commission in some other ~inistrati<>n digs them out of the debris or government archives strewn abOut by a civil disobedience group following the rationale of the minorUy. What's the State of Your Marbles? •low normal are you? This ts a question many people are ask· me themsel ves today In a workl whkh seems to get wackiet by the ~. They wonder whether It ls they who are getting daffy or merely the time in which they Jive that is out of kilter. Too much worrying abouC the problem can be dangerous as 'well a11 confUsinC. Aft.er all, a fellow might go off hJs rocker brooding over v.·h<":ther he bas already gone of[ his rocker. Fortunately, it ls ralrly easy through a lltUe self-examination to tell U yw still have all or mom of your marbles. Just ask yourself the following quK- Uons : CAN YOU NAME throe ,;tal dif· ferences betv.•etn your mother·in-law and the Loch Ness Monster? , "'wld you rather Inherit 1 fortune than emi one of your own T When•you study your race ln the mimr In the montins, do you !<el ~ shows more character Im than wrinkles? Do you tomettmes lost ~ head when 1 all about you ,..m to be keeping theirs, sere™ on nlce.ly? In telllns t1 runny story to your hem do )IOU neWrously muff the punchline. about half .lht time? Do you fttl you could quJt smoking lf I • • Hal Boyle you ever really made up your mind to do it? I ~1oat ot the tbne whtn yro get up and yield your seal on the ,bus to a HUit old lady, doesn't it make you fetl good In- side, regardless of the f1ct that you ln-- tended to get oll II the next atop 1nyway? NOW AND THEN y,.w)dn"t )'OU like to I. make a pass at your neighbor's wife -U she were only a little pre.tUer, and he was six inches Wort.er and 40 pounds Ugbtert Do you .Ustruat all pofJUdans, all butd>en, all auto repoirmen. aD doc><~ door salesm81, and lll'l)'bod1 UDdtr 30 wfth 19ng hair, mile« fttr11le! At least five l.1mfl evey Monday don't you wloh you had the rMdy calh lo nee home and job and.&et •1'•Y !r<Jm tt all! ' Thole are the queotlon3. N.,. fo your· box ""*'· 1r yoa answer "no" to inOll! tha'n five querleii, yoo are a· manic menace or 1 chronic liar. au;r, lF YOU GAVE I resoundlng .. yes" to all the queries, yoo are to be congratulated. You are norm a 11 y nwrolic, with just enough touchts of livesaving patanoia to make you able to adjust healthily to the demands of a balmy world. If you were any mort normal , you would be abnormal. • F'rj.day, December 19, 1969 The' tditorial page of the Daily P,Uot 1eek1 to. inform a1ad stim• ulatt readers by Presenting thi1 m:wspaptr'r opinion.t on'1 com· m.cnta.ru en topics of inttrtst and 1ignifico11c~. by proiiidfng o Jorum for tht cxprcufon of Olilt r~oder1' opiniom, and. by prutnting. the divtrsf vie10- points of informtd obstrvtrl al'ld 1pokts'!'tn on toplc1 of the dov. ' Robert N. Weed, Pubji&hor .. ' I I I 1 I I " I , I I •. .. I I I I I . :· ·. " .. .. • . • .. " • • :\ • . , •• ~ . • . . . .. • / J OD EA N HASTINGS, '42-4311 ,.r....,, .,...... 1t, .,. 11 ,_ a . Collection On Display Sharing her b-Obby with the community for Christmas is Mrs. Josf!\'h Giesch, a member. of Fountain Valley Fiieuds of.the Library, whose. prize. winning. doll collection will be on display in the library until. Thurs.day, Jail. 1. . · .. . Mrs. Giesch was awarded ' a third prize ribbon at the 1(168 ~Orange County Fair and out of seven en'J.ri~s in .the Los.Angeles County Fair, ah«? received two thirds and one second prize. . · , · 'she has more than.50 dolls in her collection and has outfitted 14 dolls to be donated to the. Porterville Mental Hospital as Chlistmas gifts !Iii• year. Her interesting avocation began when she deCided' twO: years ago to . restore and dress two dolls for Christmas gifts. Since then she has become s'o fascinate;d with them that ·she has collected books to research their his- tory and peliod clothiilg. · "Dolls have personalities, just like people," she says. Lady dolls are her favorites and she ·also favors costumes from the 1800s through '1910, which she terms "fabulous." The· dolls" are dressed with a~ention to the minutest detail; one of the dolls on display, costwned in an 1890 gown, a1so wears lace mitts fashioned from pieces of L 114 inch lace. An9lher doll is ·dressed in a 1750 costume of green veivet, and ~small d~ll with a china head -seated in a chair -wears a Civil war goWn of pink satin and eeru lace. Most· of their cost\IJlleS -Including their underclothing -are !ash· ioned totally by hand. ''.[ might sew a straight seam on the m8chine; but most of it is. handwbrk, wliich I love to 'do," she explained. · · 'HELLO DOLLY' -Dear to the hearts of girls of• all' ages are dolls . arid now on display in the Foun· lain vaney Librafy is a prized collection assem· bled and dressed by Mrs. Joseph GiesCh, member of the library's Friends group. Admiring the collec- tion are Mandy Ryder (below) and Nancy Albright. Mrs. Giesch collected her dolls from junk yards, GoodWill Indus· , trie.s and Salvation Anny, and second-hand st.ores as •well as being given dolls by friends. She isn't particular: about their condition since if·tbey are beyond. restoring she is able to use parts for other dolls. Anyone wbo would like to contribute an old doll may conlact her at"847•8315' · . I First Tree ., City s :- SANl A'S·SPECIAL -A shiny fire engine will replace his US1Jlll mode of travel' ·When SBJ)ta ·makes. a special .yisi t to Fduntain Valley next Sunday !qr the city's', first ."ChTistmas '.free Lil{bting. Riding. with S. Claus ara .Mrs.-Ricbard Gillum and dail8ble~, Jennifer •. . ' . . . . . . Lighted_ A very special guest will be vlsltlng Fountain Valley Sunday, Dec. 21, when the first annual Christmas Tree Lighting takes place at '1:30 p.m. at the civic center. Under the sponsorship or the Y.'omen's Division of the Fountain Valley Chamber of. Commerce, the ceremony will coincide l'l'ith the presentation of awards for th e ChriStrnas Home and B u s in e s s Decorating Contest. The e~nt will open -with a sing-0ut led by the children's choii or St. Francis of Assisi School and when the city 's ofricial tree becomes a blaze of light, Santa Claus will make an early stop to di stribute candy canes to all the children attending. According lo the latest word from the North Pole, he will be arriving at ap- proximately 8 p.m. and escorting him to the center aboard one of their trucks will be members ·of the Fountain Valley Fire Department. All area families are invited to attend the festive party, and following the presentation of awards, refreshments will be served and the Fountain Valley Wom an's Cl ub drama and chorus sections wi.11 conclude the evening when they present The Nativity featu ring soloist Mrs. Robert Tucker. Twenty needy families have been · adopted by the women's di vision, and the majority of civic organizaUons will be sharing ttirough their contributions of food, clothing, toys or funds. Mrs. Bobby Pilhner has been chainnan . oC the pro- ject. Already planning to be "in the pink" in January, the group wUI welcome pro- spective members during a Pink Cham· pa gne Tea on Saturday, Jan. 17, in the community center. Women who are in- terested in working for the improvement of their community may obtain addition- al information by calling Mrs. William B. Hayes: chairman, 962-4735, or! Mr!. William Pulford, prcsi~ent, 847-:fOOI. • It's the Grooviest Time of the Year ... Whether sports enthusiast or homebody, everyone agrees the holiday season is a Groovy Time of Year, s<,> th,e Hqnµngton Beach Mr's . Jaycees h·ave selected ~ this theme fox; their Christmas· dance tomorraw at B p.m. in the FOO.rain Valley Cdmmtlnity Center. · . ' ~ .. The Jam;,. Inierran\O 'Trio will play. f~r dancing and tickets. al $12.50 ·a couple, will include bullet· dinner and beverages. ):.ookiilg fQrwanl to the-affair are (left to lig~t) tne. Mmes .. Tom Wilkie, ·Jack _Tatham, Tom Livengood and BernaM J, Mahoney. . . - . i ' . . '· ~. ! SWeet Nothings C~n't Be Uttered · 1f .Ljghts Glow To:o -· ~ LoW l>URANll'LANDERS ' lam 28, gain- fuliy em.p~. fairly attracUve and "1>Cle·-but' nol' by cboiC<. I iboulc! tell YioJ AN). !,have a alight hearing J?<?blein but ' rd man~ people are aware ol it. I fate a lot and ain good at lfpt readi~. The man l ain golhg 'With 11t pttsent is attractive. ·inCelligent and 8o!t1 sp6ten. Tha t's my prObJem. H'e is TOO ·soft rpoken. lje · hu l!'rlected the exocu!ive whlsper and I often lose part of what he says. La!f·n\ght at' dinner I THOUGJIT I heard him·ask m'e to maJTY ·him, but T'm not surt. I was too stunned to ask him to repeal Now, of course, I wish I had. What should 1 do about thls cm· b&rrasslng 11tuaUon? -PLEASE PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM ANN LANDERS DEAR FRIEND: If Mr. EaecuUve Whisper •Wlab yot to be 1111 wire, he'll ask agafl -but. by au me1D1 tell him about your problem. And eel your bear· Ing checked. Clrlckeo. Lord knows wbal -ehe you're missing. DEAR ANN LANDERS: Sever a I ·months ago I married a divorced man who had custody of hl! Utree children. (They are all under 9 year!; of age.) Ted's ex.wife has sJnce remarried. She hafln't missed a visiting day in two years. 1'he kids always are thrilled1 to see her. These youngsters are badly spoiled and I can't handle them. I don't reel about them as a mother should. Even tti,ough I'm a great actress, I'm afraid one day I will betray rnyseU and the lntth wlll be known. H0w <an I suggest lo Ted that be let hie ex-wife have the children? They, seem very fond ol her new husband and he seems to enjoy them tremendously. When Ted am! I disMaecf marr!'!l!e he'aiked if '1 could love and ·care .for his ·children. I &aid .yes, but I didn 1t know What '[ WU getting Info. Hurry ~ advice1 AM. The 11ltuaUon grows more teoae.ev,ery day. - THE SUBS.TIT.UTE .. 'DEAR SllB: The prime ....iderallon 1bould be ~ welfare ~·the chlldnn. JDrlglng from yoar ltl\tr, &lley would prt>o btbl1 be betkr ofl wltb lllelr mcillier and 11tepfather. If my 1rlthmdlc 11 correct, you ire facing 1\ leas& a doJea ytan of 11aw1Jlhl1 1ervitude. Chlldrtll Dow wbta " Lbity are Ml loftd.•A· 11tpm1&Mr fto fet:ll • ""'. C..-ct9Ctll It., ... mat.. &er ·bow i:tec1 u 1etrea tbe ii. Level wtlll ,..... kubud ud le1'1 ilope lie ........... ' ,, • ~-...'°" .. ' • I • , , ' " DEAit ANN. LANDERS' l do not.,,.. Willi y00r idV!Ce to "The !My Nut 00or:11' Whit Ol\1 earth Ir a friend for ii i1ot to confide in? Every woman needs a •"9Ulder to cry on -101I1eone wllll whom she can ~ lnUmate problems. f con- cede lhat a penon should uae dlscreUoo and not blab lo Juot anyboey. Bl!! a cl°"' friend can by1 a ;odsend when a woman Is having trOubte wUh her husband and needs lo tell someone. Now and tben you ciwu>se y...-ldvke. " I hope you will do IO this lime. -Pll(). FRJEND6HIP DEAR PRO: Ttv ....,. .... .., .... to dflftpWI ...... ,,,... ud' u aCCf"' .. mre. I ..,_ a frleiml ::. "rt=::-.:.:i '!.!::i'~ ltou, I dnw lie Hoe. fto 11eR ,.._ wttll ....... 6e9la ....... "'·--· b Ille.,._ -....... ,.. ....... ... Ute problem. ne ...... "" eald111t II I l*.fllteloi, dttp "ff~ --... """ ... pnr ....... "''"' ltoe lllld oll<lt · Alu\ I,anders will. be ~ lo help yoa willl your prolilems, ~I~ lo bet ill care of !be DAILY PILOT, enclooin& a aeU-eddr.,1ec!; olamped enve!Gpe. • · • I --.. .,. l t I t ' t ' ' ) .f DAILY PILOT ESTANCIA ' --Geor9l1nn• Dwight . ' CdM HIGH lng rld Rowltnd Decembe r Girls-of-the-month NH HIGH Chrittin• Reb1rd CM'HIGH Carol Custer , .. Horoscope Taurus: Money Is Accented • SATURDAY DECEMBER 20 II)' SYDNEY OMARR OUNHILL CASTELLO COMOYS CHARA TAN SAVINELLI SASIEMI featuring Orange Count¥'$ Largest Selectlo11 of Quallt¥ Pipes AND ACCESS ORIES Jramrenre Zontians Add Coeds to List Teeli' datln1 h!Jltl: Many tJ:- pn11 desire lo participate in special prop-am. If you can Hip hi fulfillin g tbl1 de1ire, yeu are • whlKr. Ge:mlnl .W.n u tvtnlnC progre1ses. ~ara1 11 fast starter, but teDd1 1o fade. Sagittariu1 may be marriage-minded. Aries Is richt In tbe awinf of illlllg:s, taW.n.11 movhli. debatlq. Leo 11 eff"erveteait, while Aqurlu1 coia.ld flnd. romuce. Cecer must ket:p promllet -breU· fa& dtt. ton11ht would be a mistake. Vlr10 get1 morale boost -pretdgt riaes. !\fore travellnc done tonight than is cusioma,.,. All should be ver)' cartful lit traffic, jhoppe Eacll month during lhr: 11chool yea r thr: Nr:wport Harbor Zonta Club honors an outstanding girl in each (If the College al F'ullerton. r·uture plans include entering the field of medicine. CORONA DEL MAR ·~ area h.igh schools. Attending the A m er i c a n lntemational School in Vierma last year was ?-.fiss Ingrid Rowland. daughte r of Dr. and 1i1rs. F. S. Ro1•;Jand of Corona dcl ?-.tar. ' ' , From the ranks of the coeds ~ chosen, an annual award of a .. ..$50 savings bond is presented 1.o the outstand ing girl-of-thc- year in each school. ESTANCIA Serving as president (If -Girls' League at Estancia High School is Miss Georgiao.1· na Dwight. During her three . .r,ears as a league member she •.iiJias been elected secretary. ;~istorian and s ophomore : epresentalive. ~ The daughter of Mrs. Viola ..-bwight of Costa ?-.fesa has been a member oI the class cooncil for four years, secre- tary of the Pep Club, presi- -'-dent of the Spanish Club and vice president of California Scholastic Federation . During her junior year she was awarded the Gold E for service. Outside activities in- clude p3rticipation as an Ex- plorer in Post 209. Following her graduaticrn Miss Dwight plans to enroll at the University of California, Berkeley or California Stale UNnlD NATIONS AUOCIATION Gift SHOP l1t1pert.d Gift-Unit.t f Ct rd1 2104 N. Mti11, S1nt1 An• Me11tl1y thru S1tur4tY-l 1·4 During her senior year she has been student congress secretary and ch a Irma n, p~ident of CSF, and member of the Science Club, American Field Service and Interna- tional Relations Club. While in high school she also has been active in the foreign Language Club and girls' swim team. She was a Na- tional Merit semifinalist and won history and track awards in Vienna. Outside activities include serving as youth group presi- dent in her church and membership in the Archaeology Explorer Post 806 v.•here she was president last year. Miss Rowland plans to al· tend either Pomona College, Stanford or UC, San Diego and major In archaeology and bi· ology. NEWPORT llARBOR Miss Christina Re b a r d , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Rebard of Newport Beach, will enter the Universi· ty of Southern California in the fall as a music major. Selected as Miss Newport AWARD WINNING SHOE SERVICE ~~ COMPLETE SHOE e LUGGAGE e HAND BAG REPAIR SHOES RESTYLED TO THE NEW LOOK! frcM•r.4 Shoe ••• lt•tylecl to 1te111.i T"!) .--s CONVENIENT SHOPS .... -I .Mil L (01.Sf "WY. e 1101 UllVINE AVE. Ctr9llt WI Mar. U...... Wftttllft PIUI e MU VIA LIDO N""'llOI"'! 11•.ao, ..._C53 """"" l eldl. DMUI e11ot1N~N'$ e H ~A.INION ISLAND ll'ft-.., hllrlll llftlllff ·-"' '"''"' .......... llkll JUST WATCH HIM LIGHT UP Who wouldn't right up when it's a Dunhill. From left: In 14 karat gold, $275. Florentjned gold plated model, $45. Gold plated barley com pattern, S40. SLAVIC:K'S 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -6~4 -1 380 Beach for 1969-70. the coed is head varsity cheerleader and member of A Cappella choir, Chantelles and the Pep Club. Her first three )'tars in- volved work with the freshman class council, aqua show, girls' chorus, sophomore class council, AFS Club, Scien. ce Club and student congress representative. She also has been a member of Tri Hi Y Club. Last year she received the most valuable musician award and service award. This summer Miss Rebard has been asked to be a counselor at the Nation al Che edeading Association·s summer clinics. COSTA JHESA Miss Carol Cu5ler is a four year member or the Girls' Athletic Association and the Pep Club, a class officer, Girls' League offi~r and participates in the Madrigals singing group. She has been honored. as outstanding sophom ore typist and received an achievemr:nt award in the GAA. Miss Custer has been a volunteer for two years at Fairview State Hospital and participates in the Christian Service Club. The daughter of !ilr. and Mrs. LeRoy Custer of Costa Mesa hopes to enroll at Cal State Fullerton to obtain her teaching credential. To avoid disappointment, prospective bridj?s are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy P.hoto- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women s De· partment one \veek before the wedding. Pictures received following the \\•edding !>'""ill not be used. For engagement announcements it i!I imperative that the story, aJso accompanied by a black and while glossy picture, be sut>. mitted six weeks or more be!ore the wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill requirement. on both Wed· din~ and engagement stories, forms are available in all m the DAILY PILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642--4321 or 494-11466. Kehnys Select New Yark Home Jo'ollowlng a honeymoon in Athens, Ge rard John Kenny and his bride, the former Christine Ann Cromwell wi ll reside in New York. Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic Olurch was tht set- ting for the vow exchange of the newlyweds. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Cromwell Jr. or Lido Isle and Manila and Mr. and Mrs. William Francis Kenny of New York. Attendants wcrr: Mrs. Harry Thomas Abernathy and Miss Sm.anne Bl1nche Cromwell, sisten ol the bride, John Reynolds o( New York and Dr. William Kenny, the bridegroom's brotherr The bride is a gradualt of Marlborough School. attended 1ifaryknoll College in Manila and UCLA. A fonner Assis- teen of the Los Angeles Assistance Lr:ague ahe was an a"'ard presentr:e al the 1962. M\S. ·KENNY • Medallion Ball. Recites Vows Her husband is a graduate 1 .-.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'iill of Brooklyn College and did lf graduate work al New York ' AUXILIARY POWER University. Sailboats, Din9h ies, • r ... 01tin9, Etc. COMMANDO Outbotrd Motors NOWI -Only 26 Lbs I Hi9h • Thrutt S Hort• Power Air Cooled • tnd • Rtmote Gts T •nk ***IDEAL GIFT*** LOW rRICI '194" Of ONLT 1111("'"' fl; • .,. , •• """· ...... '""* Miii P41 ..i<t fl--11. Boat Island, Inc. 1H W. c ... t Hwy., NI''· 1&•. (7141 642-6630 (Dlillr-~"' Ceiu1. ,,.,.."""" ' .,..., !MrN!tr Y1d11t1I. ARJES (Mareh 21-April 19)'- Do your own thing. lfake up your mind; th~ be decisive. Good lunar aspect coincide! wlth chance for you to sue· cesafully present i de a s _ Relative p a y s meaningful compliment. TAURUS (April 2tl-May 2U): Accent on money and how to get it. Key is versatility. J)cn't be afraid to change your mind . Strive toward creativity. You could make purchase which spells happiness for special in- dividual. " GEMINI (May 21-June 201: Cycle high; moon in your sign highligtit.s personality and ap- pearance. Your sense of tim· ing improves. You meet peo- ple, and they admire you . Take initiati ve. Be direct, forthrig!ll. CANCER (June 21-July 22 ): Much could happen beyond your i mm ed i at c coin· prehension. Key is to look behind the scenes. AvQid superficial judgment. Separale fact from fiction. Enjoy theatrical perform a nee tonight. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You gain access to material which RACITl'S SlJ.oo Y•. PIAll.L & lllTHSTON[ RINGS $6'5 CLASSICAL GUITAR Free Coffee COME EARLY AND .SAYE #5 TOWN I COUNTRY, OU.NGI, CAL IP.OlNIA 542-8752 STOll HOUIS DAILT t TO t SUNDAY IZ TO I CAN ANYONE OFFER YOU ltil.SJANT ASTIC DIAMOND GUARANTEE? DIAMONDS Altl OUlt SPICIALTYI IVlltY DIAMOND AND DIAMOND l!NG YOU IUT IS GUARANTIED TO APPRAISI P.01 AT LI.AST 40~9 TO 10•,e HIGHER THAN THI PRICE YOU PAID 0 1 YOUlt MONET 2 \ol, ,.J Downtown 11H NIWP'ORT.1LVD. (nMr l r .. .iwoy) ltlfUNOED. DIAMOND RINGS If 1111 '"""""' frlor -... mtr1 •1 • (...,Hi.t ·-•IOtl~. Y111r tl tll Wiii ... rlliJM.,., THIS DIAMOND RING P<ln• •• 5220000 You •t W• Guaront• to APP"':: '400000 ty • C•rtlfl td Oemoh~tl•t or your money ltock. Costa Mesa 646-7741 ' ' l Fooniain Valley Tothly's Fbaal N.Y. Stoeks • , YOL. 62, NO. 303, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, C>,LIFORNIA FRIDAY. DECEMBER 19, '1969 TEN CENTS Beach Woman Gi·ven Mystery Death ·Pancreas Organs from a man "'hos~ mystery death ·may never be fully explained were transplanted into an atherwise-doomed · Htintington Besch ·woman Thursday , the first· patient in Cali!otnfa to receive a daQaled pancreas. A'Uthorities at Orange County Medical Ceater said the lengthy surgery on Mrs. Cara Ramey, 32, involved only the sixth' ot ~venth pancreas implant attempts koown to medical science. Mrs. Ramey was reported in serious co)ldltion, today while her bus.band Monte maintained a vigil that tw stretched into hundreds of hours during her several months' hMPitalization. She received both kidneys and the pan- creas of Anaheim barber Robert Ashby, 2's, ~ho died mysteriouslY Thursday morning '!-t lne Medical Center after a strange accident. Mrs. Patricia Ashby ga've permission for his organs to be used and the long wait .against hopelessness by the Ram- eys, of 720 Williams Ave .• Huntington Beach, drew toward one end or another. Orange County lifedlcal Ce n l e r spokesmen did not speculate on the chances for her full recovery, but said she spent a resllul night after rtteiving Ashby 's organs. Kidney transplants are relatively rom· mon, but the pancreas transplant has never been accomplished in California, according to jl.Uthorilies in the Medical Director's office. A team of surgeons from ll1e UC Irvine medical faculty performed the' operation on Mrs. Ramey, whose system was ravaged by severe diabetes. The unexplained chain of circumstances that led lO the death of A!hby, of 417 E. Melrose Ave., Anaheim, began early Thursday with a minor auto accident In heavy fog. The mishap occurred in Garden Gro\'e and Police Sgt. Michael Siane:r. said Ashby was given a lift from his disabled car to a phone booth al Lampson :A:venue and Monarch Street to call relatives. His mother-in-law, A1rs. Betty Parrott, 1215 E. Santa Ana St.1 Anaheim; his wife, and brother Randall drovt: to·the locatJon . but found no trace ol the youa1 barber. Not long afte~ud, a workman at ne.arby Monarch Marking System,,, 7272 Lampson Ave., dJscovt:red Ashby lying unconscious in the rear parking lol He had a .broken left leg· injured foot, and was 1n his stocking feet -his boots unexplainably found on the roof of the plant -acrording to the police report. The victim was taken to W~tmjnster CommUJ1ily Hospita~ and transferred to Orange County Medical Center when the Smogless Energy gravity o[ his condition Wl!I detplned. Tbt young father rX two infant children died without regaining consciousness and an investigation is continuing Into circumstances al the fatal accident. During months leading up to lhe unique surgery which mey assure Mrs. Ramey a normal life, the couple's ,plight has ~ap­ tured the hearts of fellow U.S. Post Of· !ice employea and area citiu:ns. A total of $1,200 has been deposited Jn the Ramey Fund, some of it contributed by residents of Huntington Harbour, \l'here lhe victim's husband delivers mail. Here? " PUC Hears Claim 'No ·One Willing to Operate Them' . . CAMERAMAN, PRODUCER, SOUNOMAN CONFER ON TV SCRIPT Arevalos Students Joe Laning, Lloyd Luck, Tony Jacobs (from left) Valley Students Learn TV Business From Pros The1ights and the camera were there. So we're the television personalities. But the action during Wednesday's ,'i.V. workshop at Foontain Valley's Arevalos School was all provided by students.· The · sixth-through eighth grade pupils demoristrated what they. had .learn~d ;ibout l.elevisioo program produclion to Richard Dunn, producer o{ NBC's Charges Dropped . Against Parents Over Children Charges of illegally withholding their daughters from school were dropped by Orange County School ofliciils Thursday 1gainst Mr. and Mrs. Paul Aleridge ~£ HunUngton Beach. The Aleridges apptared in West Orange County Municipal Court before Judge Celia Baker. who dismissed the case for "lack or evidence.,. da ytime drama "Bright Promi6e .'1 For several months the NBC show has furnished material and technical advice to the Arevalos amateurs and .Tuesday !he professionals cume to Fountain Valley to analy1,e their progress. Some of the things they demonslratcd "'ere proper use or lights, sound, transmission. lenses, videotape machines and ampliliers. About 57 students partici pate in th e television workshop one period a day , three days a week. It was part or a self- selecctive program 'lo stimulate interest In such activities as televi s ion , chemistry, stitchery and needlecraft and pottery. • The studcnlj not only sludied the technical aspects or l.elevision work, but wrote their-own scripts. commercials and selected appropriate background music for scenes and commercials. Set design.s, costumes and hairslyles ·,vere likewise a product of student effort . Teacher Robert Hayes said the workshop has helped the pupils explore 11; number of career opportuniti es related to mass media, art, muslc and ad vertising. The technology for constructing smog- free atomic energy power plants is in ex· istence t.OOay, but no one is willing to put it into opera'tion, a Santa Ana real estate broker testified before the Public Utilities Com~issjon Thursday, Paul Rand6lph addressed his remarks to the co1nmission in Fountain Valley during -a public hearing on a Southern California Edison Company application tn double the capacity or the Huntington Beach generating plant. .. I am for the expansion or the plant. but am against further fossil fuel plants." said Randolph, one of more than 20 Huntingtpn Bank Robbers Escape Police Two bank ·robbers narro"·ly escaped pursuing. police unils after robbing $752 from the First Western Bank in J{un- lington Beach about 12:30 p.m. Thursday. One man entered the bank at 16932 Golden \Vest Street, handed the teller a note and said , "Don't hit any buttons , this Js a holdup," according to police reports. BanJc officials said he shoved his right hand inside his cxiat pocket and warned he had a pistol there. Less than 10 minutes after the man entered the ba.qk, police units had sur- rounded the area. But the bandit fled in a st olen car dri ven by another man. The stolen car was later found aban- doned across the street from 16582 Sabot St.. Huntington Beach. Wilnesse!: told police two men left on foot through th• apartment area. Police today are checking the car for fingerprints and sifting evidence in an at· tempt to find the two suspects. No one was injured during the robbery, police said. ' SCIIOOLS TURN .. 1i 100,000 LOOSE ~ 1r almost 100,000 school children N .1 al ong the drange Coast were more t, frolicsome than usual this after· M noon who could blame them? The. ~. two weeks of Chrislma! vacation ri had begun. . 1 School bells won 't ring again un- til Monday, Jan. 5 of the new year. J But flrst a visit from Santa and 1 a turning of the page by Father Time. And then, when the holidays have ,1 gone, back to class and remember 1 to write 1170 instead of 1969. witnesses who,le.stified al.the meeting. He ~ugges:ted !hat intended .ocean ·sites be developed for nuclear generating capacities immediately, which would eliminate any further pollutant.! from being. discharged into the atmosi)here by power companies. Referring to the Atoi:nic Energy .Com- mission in using too much d,iscrelion in not .approving what he termed "fail-safe" rPac tors, Randolph said. "We here in California cannot wail five lo seven years for a group of obscure specialists, who are appointed and who do not ·reside ·in our geographk:al area, to decide what we now-know Js. gQ9d, ls In their opinion, In· the light of extensive· operating' et· perience, good." Nearly. all or those who testified in Thursday's atternoon session gupported the ·Edison expansion. They · iricluded represe ntatives from the Cities , of Fullc~on: Brea and other Ora~ge County communities. 'Favoring the plant . exp8:fisl.on were John B. Parker, president of the Orange County Building Industries Association; \.'. F. Perkins , Newport1Beach; Frank T. Andrews, ·Fullerton, chemical tniineer; Robert A~ Clark, Brea.coUodlman; Paul DAILY PILOT.ltllJ """ ' OFFICER STEVE BALLOCH OUSTS FOR· FINGERPRINTS ' Stol•n Car Abandoned Afttr HB Bank H1l1t Red China Embargo Lifted For 'Nonstrategic' Items WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Unitid" States announced today it is partially lifting a It-year-old trade embargo wilh Red China . The decision; made by Pres.ident Nl1on and announced by the State Department, m!:ans that if the Chinese are. agreeahle, subsidiaries of Americ~n companies ' overseas -will be allowed to sell nonstrategic items to PKing. 'Mle Cbineae might be .able to buy Jtem.1 as large· as trucks of American design lhat are made abroad. · Whether Peking will be intertsled re- mains to be seen. Officials did not expect any immediate reacUan from them. The charges were lodged against the AlcridJCS for withdrawing Kathleen. t7, and Qlndacc, 15, fr om Fountain Valley High School. In making that decision, the parents said they did not want the girls lo be ex- posed to what they termed "rampant drug abuse" on that campus. New Fuel Cuts Car Smog In hopes of Improving relations with the Red Chinese, the State Depat1ment said Nixon was relaxing the trade em- bargo -imposed In 1950 shortly after the Communists came to power tn Peking - In these-three ways : However, Dr. Paul Berger, principal of Fountain Valley High, said the incident rate fi1r drug abuse on hi1 campm is among the lowest in Orange County. Both daughters were absent from 1ehool for more than a month. State Jaw requires that children be enrolled in s:hool until they are 18 years of age or · gradua~ from high school. l\feanwhlle. both girls have been enmlt. rd al Bols11 Grande High School, in the Garden Grove Unified School Dil;trict, "'here the parents claim drug abust: is "ntgllgible." The porenl! have lndic11ted that they would aell their home lit 16342 Ros.! Lane and move to Carden Grove where both their daughters are now staying with friends In order to be able to attend Bolsa Grand• lllgb School. I Standard Oil Tells of 15 Years of Research SAN FRANCISCO (UPI! -Standard Oil of California hn announced the development of a new gasoline eom- ponent which the company says wlll cut smog-produei~g . hydrocarbon enpssions nearly In hatt. Jn making the annount!ment Thu rsday, Slall\1ard said 15 year:i;; or research and development went Into the new fuel COin· ponent, which ls built around a synthetic c hem l c•I c on c entrate called hydrvcarbylamlne. ·"Our product is an Important step forwaW in rtduclng • u Lo m o t I v e !missions. but It by no means totally rcaolvt.s the problem," 111.d Encas 0. Kane, president of Standard'• Chevron ne~1rch eo. The company said teslJ conducted nnder typical driving conditiom Indicated the additive reduces u n b u r n e d l1ydrocarbons in exhaust from an a.verage of S50 part.I per mllHon to 150 parta per mllllon . The most Important advantage of the new additive, however, appeared to be IU ttbility to clean up engine dcP,>SILS; In both nld and new can M that smot control deviC\!S will work effielently. "We can actually take 1 used car In wuch bad shape from engine depoelts bu11t up from cllY dtlvin& thal " II 1talUn1 aod puffing clouds of black smoke rrom ill tailpipe and, alter a" fe·w tankfuls of this new guoline, re:StOre If to ~r wotkinc .. ' ordct:," Kaoe.. 1ald. The ~: addlUve also cutt: down, carbon monoxide emlssk>ns and lncrtues ... ,as mileage by about five perctnl in typical urban drivlnc, ·Standard said. Th< firm said Ill plant In ~hnio"". Ca)if., Is now preparing to begtn pro• duCUon of thC new componenl, calltd F· 310. ll Will be a<kltd lo three grldu ol 1•10line n<11• ·on Ille marlrtl b<ilnpin& next :nonlh in Los Angeles and Hawaii. -The foreign 1ubeidiarlt1 of u~s. firm• will hencduih be ollowtd lo lnde with Communbl au.a In llOl!SlroteCic goods. -U.S. flnno, panlrularly lhose with broncheo lb.-!, wlD be' oble lo . boy • goods ·or ".pnoumpuve "QUneoe' origin" aod eng•se In lr>de wltb them ·Ill :hlnl· country markoll. \low<vor, only goods which are ctrUfled to have been nmdt ' oulltde or Communlll Chin• will · bt,.~ allowed tnto the United Stites. Stoc-k Market ' . NEW YORK (AP)·-Stocki puUtd , back. from Jevela fUcbed In earlier trad- ing today, but advances .. uu malntaJned · a comfortable 'IQJ.I.... 1 .. <1 ovtr ·de- cllne1., (See quotallopl, Pqu..llHI). 1 0. Davb, Newport Beach arehllect. William Emmeni, mayor Santa Fe Springs; John Haddox, Brea councilman; Sam L. Magnus, Brea Councilman; Harold Mahar, Orange postmaster and Chamber of Commerce president; E. T. McFadden Jr., El Toro rancher; Richard L. Morris, president, Cypress Chamber of Commerce; Wally H. Pulaski, Newport Beach archltect. Speaking against lhe proposed es· pansion was James D. Somers vice president of Stamp Out Smog of ~ang• {Set: EDISON, P•ce 2) Vipl~nt Siorni Sends Savage Surf to Coast By AR111UR R. VINSEL Of 1111 o.uy l'fllt 11111 Thundering breakers, rolling Jn sets ahead of a violent ocean storm, began to pound the Orange Coast loday, prom· Ising to surge oyer into low-lying areas on six-fool-plus tides Saturday and per· haps Sunday. Not every point along the 44 miles of eounty coast will be affected by the. waves, which are coming In at a weft· erly angle, according to sea-watchln& expeN. Ther storm 200 miles offshore, however, ls characteri:r.ed as creating carbon eopy conditions of ~st weekend's wave-aOO.. tide combination which ravaged aectiona ot the California coastline. Giant swells up to 14 feet In same badly expose(! secUons are. expected t& strike hard, especlally at Oxnard Shorea .and Mandalay Beach in Ventura County, where more than $1 million In damage has been caused. Flooding and some beach erosion 11 probable at cerlain spots locally, how- ever, the U.S. Weather Bureau warns. Waves began rising visibly by the half· hour today, shortly aft.er a 5:54 a.m. high tide, while the ne1.t will be at 8:30 a.l'n. Saturday, reaching 6.2 feet in some coastal areas. Seal Beach lifeguards said waves were a mere Ulree feet this morninc at their jSee SURF, Page 21 It won't exactly be a weekend to write home about -unless your home is in the northeast wllf're they're buried in JOOw. Look for low clouds, fog and mid-6'> temp- eratures. .q INSIDE TODAY Curtain coll1 for tht 10 be1t , communit11 theater productfon1 o/ 1969 are giW"n toda11 0$ tilt W tekender't lntermtnion column reuitwt ajte J>C't Sitar on local s-ta"es. • i • • I• -.. -Huge Dope Haul Netted j, in Newport By JOHN VALTERZA Of tlle DtflJ "* ,..., , Newport Beach and st.ate narcotics of· flCef'S aeiud a record haul of '67 ,000 Y,<rth or marijuana Tbundl)' and ar· rested two men who alltpdly were trying to move it from a Newport boat yard. The illegal weed, In 11 gunny sacks, •u. di.5covered by the buiJdu of a boat in the yard along Plcilic c.out HICflway at About 3 p.m. It was the largest haul ever !h Newport. .'Officers said the unidentified discoverer caJled police immediately .-fter finding the 4.1$ pounds cl wrapped marijuana hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein and qents from the State Bureau of l'farcotics staked out the boat yard, then 'ltaited. ~~At about 7:30 p.m., Epstein said, two .men , who were later found to be f.rom the Redondo Beach Mta, came up to the cache and i?fgan loading the sacks into a car. The agents then stepped ln and ar· rested Donald Sille, 28, Lawndale, and hJJ com21Jlion, Glen Wayne Jotmeon, 25. . Both were charged with pcs!eRlon ol tn~ijuana for sale. ~Epstein said the pair were seen earlier lit the day as they wandered in the yard. .Epstein sald it was certain that the JQ,lo-sized (2.2 pounds each) bricks cf !Q.arijuana were brought Jnto Newport Barbor by boat from Mexico. .. He said the cargo was dumped under tP boat sometime Wednesday night and lhal no one affiliated with the marine ltl"Vice and boal yard was involved. The bricks, wrapped in bright yellow ceJJos:Nne, Wfl"ti hidden under the overturned boat to await transfer, he 1aid. Epstein said the arrest.s toot place without .incident. The pair ol alleged m a rijuana JMgsboremen wen still tn cu.stody early today, he u.id. Newport Harbor has been tM scene or several -narcotlcs transfers foing wroni thig year. Last apring Epstein and st.ate agents Aeized a state record in huhi.sti, 150 pounds with a street value of a hair millioD dollars. The marijuana up compacted into neat, foil-wrapped cakes, we found by a pleasure fisheftnan.., he cut his line off the M Street pier on the Balboa Penin.m!a. • The hMhilb, bearing Arabie-lettered Impressions,"" Ille largest hatbish lind in California's ,ru.tory. ibJrsday's haul of marijuana was the largest ever 3eiied in Ne)Xrt Buch and •·a bout the second flt third Iargeat in tM. county," Epgtein said. High Apartment Okayed in Valley The city's first ''high rise" apartment uni t has ·been apoved by tht FountaJn :Valley P~anning Commission. Planners approved a conditional we permit for two, lhreM1ory units to be built by the Republic Homes COrporation in the middle of jt.s 224-unit apartment complex &OUth of Warner Avenue and east of Brookhurst Street. Fountain Valley currently has a twD- llJtory limit on any construction, and buildinrs exceeding that rtquin a COD• ditiona qae permlt. Beach City Employes Pull Holiday Switch Memorial Day, May 30, has been ex· changed for Jan. 2 as a holiday by Hun· lington Beach city e.mpJoye1 .. The City Council approved the movt, 11llowing employes a two-day New Year's holiday. DAILY PILOT Clll-""IG£ COAST l"UIL"~ING COMl"A"fY llolio1rl N. W11• l"m:Ml!I ,,,. l"iellsW J1clr •. Curley V1t• l"rftideril .,.,. C0-11 Mtnl.-r lh ..... , """ii f."!11' Th•"'•' A. Mu•phi"• ...... ,,.."" (tlilfl' Alh1rt W. 11111 AJMtll!I Et1l11' "411.tl .... 11 .... Of!Hc• I 7175 l11t~ l1wl1Ytr' M1ilirr1 AJJr1111 P.O. 1111 7tD, t lMI Ofhlf OHie" (....,.f IHtrt: J:n ,_, ·-Galt M-. r JJ0 WW 9r( $tfwl fol...,.,.l hltrr: Ull Wal ..... .__..,~ A NOT-SO.FUNNY THING HAPPENED ON THE WAY TO THE BASKETBALL GAM E Torr•nce Bus Stop,,.cl on Frffw•y Rimmed by Auto C•rrler True" in $111 811ch Murder Suspect Released . For Husband's Funeral Mrs. Dwillia Dean Hunt left her jail cell In Santa Ana for 90 minu~s Thursday morning to attend funeral services for her husband, yacbt broker Willis Hunt, whom she allegedly stabbed to death last Sunday in their Corona def Mar home. Afrs. Hunt was among an estimated 100 person1 at the long.f.ime Newport resident's funeral. She wa.s released at 10:15 .a.m. by a Superior Court order. spokesmen at the women's section of Orange County jail &aid. The lel'Y.ices began at 11 a.m .. at Pacific View Memorial Park chapel. Mra. Hunt wa.s returned to her cell there al 11:45 a.m. The 43-year~ld brunette allegedly stab· bed her fifth husband in the chest with a butcher knife during a heated argument in their C.Orona del Mar home. Hunt died a few hours alter the slab· bing as a team of doctors tried open heart massage to revive him. Hunt, whose only other survivors were a daughter from West Los Angeles and his adopted stepdaughter (Mrs. Hunt's daughter by a previous marriage) was burled at Pacific View Memorial Park. Meanwhile, both prosecution a n d defense attorneys in the murder case were preparing for Mrs. Hu n t • 1 preliminary hearing next Monday in Harbor Municipal Court. Aside from Mrs. Hunt's brief releue from jail, she is being held without bail. Hanoi Power Struggle Seen O:ver Strategy of Viet ;War. SAIGON (Ul'I) -U.S. aourcN said lo- day1 hM'>' Caaununi•t .,.,.allies lhi• year Ind i:c'<Jll'W in the American Viet· namJiation program have forced North Vietnam to rethink its war strategy. A power atrug&Je over the qaest.ion Wa!!I reported in Hanoi. The report came u American and Soutb Vietnamese forces braced for ~ .ttacks by North Vietnam ... and Viet Cong troopl over the weekend to mart two impcxtaut anniversaries in the COmmUnilt calendar. Friday ts the 23rd anniversary of the begim1ipc of tbe French Jndocblnl WI!" and Sltunlly ia Ille !Ith anniversary ol the foUnclina of the National Liberation Front "(NLF), tbe political arm ol the Viet Cimg. One....,.. nportlq Hanoi's problonu l&id 1'cr1b VleenlmMe1uders are n are they· canncit ccdim.lt to abs«b casualties at the cumm: rate which has prod uced more than 153,000 killed thia year alone. The aource said North Vietnamese leaden realile that Ille United Stata will be able to continue troop withdrawals, reduce Amerlcan. Joues lld force the Cominunists to deal d!..ctly with the South Vietnamflle irovernment. Official sources said a power struggle was under way in Hanoi and that the North Vietnamese leadership was ~ • unanimous in its war thinking. Since the death of President Ho Chi Minh la.st Sept. 3, the north is believed to have fallen under the rule of a four.man committee who5e member5 are jockeying for position to assume contro] of war policy. Trung Chinh, chainnan of the National Assembly, is said to favor a protracted conflict which would exhaust allied pa· Hence and lfJe the United States pull out of Vietnam complttely. He is backed by Communist Ohina. Today, Radio Hanoi reported, Chir.h told a rally in the capital'a Ba Dinh Squart that Gommuniat troops ihoukt "'push forwant·tne resistance against the United States to save the naUon until complete victory." Oppos1n& Olinh, it was believed, are lhe three other committee members, in· eluding Gen. Vo Nguyen Giap, the architect of the Ccmmunist victory over the Frwdi 15 ye.an ago. They are believ· ed to favor a military victory in South Vietnam. .Tr affic Signals Okayed in Beach Trallie olfll\lla on P acillc Coul ll!ghway at Lake Stre<t and HunU11il0!1 Street in Htnrtlngton Boach have been ap- pro...i !0< !lnancin( by the Cllilomia llipay OlnvniSllon. 'Mit signals will Improve traffic now l~ to the city's Partin( Authority beachslde parking Joi bttween the municipal pier and Beach Boulevard. ~kilW Giap, the aoorces r~fd, ar<'te !Juan, !Int ~ cl Ille Nllrtli Vietnamese Communist party, l D d . Prem!;,. Pham Van Dong. Property Owners Opposed to Plan On Tax District A cloud baa been cast over the poasibiJI. ty of creating an assessment di.strict in the northwest sect.Ion of Huntington Beach. Property owners rep1ese.uting 52 percent of the area oppose its fonna. tioo. City councilmen, however. on the ad· vice of Public Works Director Jim WJleeler, delayed final action until Jan. s. The district proposes to lnctaJI curb!, gutters, streets and sewers on Green, MUo, Pearce and Bolsa Chica :streets. City Clerk Paul Jones aa.id he had received protests from six property owners representing S2 percent of t h e assessed valuatlon of the proposed dist rict which would normally kill the ac· ti on. Wheeler said proponents of the district l18d hopes of persuading some of the pro. tcstors to withdraw their opposition. Estimated cost of the project is $131,850. Mrs. Gillette Services Slated Rosary v.111 ~ recited at a tonight in Dilday Brothers Chapel, Huntington Beach, for Mrs. Irene Lillian Giiiette, 58, \\'ho died Wednesday. An executive of fi.1ay Co. stores and a local resident for 12 ytars, !'.ff'!. Giiiette lived at 18676 Bushard St. She is survived by her husband, Harold A. Gillette of Boston, Mass .• and a daugh· ter, Jean Britton of Huntington Beach. f\fa~s will be conducted at 9 p.m. Sat- urday at SS. Simon and Jude Catholic Church, Huntington Beach. From Pnge J EDISO N ... County, who said a ''Utt le bil more is too much." Thursday morning, Francis A . McCrackln, EdJson Co's chief planning t!1ginttr, asserted that 1 shortage of power could develop as early as 1974 ir there l! a delay In erpandJng tht Hun. Lington Stach plant. He was backed by another Edison wltDess, D. J. Fogarty, manager of mt'cllanical engineering who stressed the u!lllty ol' the Huntington Beach plant to serve the growing Orange County niarkel. Disabled Bus Struck by Car With 6 Injured A disabled school bus was struck by a lrailer truck driven by a Fountain Vailey man Thursday afternoon near lhe San Diego and San Gabriel Free~'ay in· tcrchange. The collislon caused minor in· juries to five boys and the bus dril-"tr. Officers from the South Los Angele~ Division of the California Highway Patrol said Paul L. fi.1artin, 38, of 17266 Santa Barbara St.. Fountain Valley, smashed into the bus at 2:30 p.m. on a transition road linking the two freeways. He was carrying a load of new cars in bis vehicle. A tow truck was preparing to haul the bus away when Martin's transJX>rter :struck it from behind, officers said. Th~ bus driver, employed by the Tor· ranee U~ified School District. had placed "•aming reflectors around the scene of the accident. The red warning lights on the rear of the sehool bus were not operating. officers said, since they are not permitted lo bt used under those circums tances. City Seeks Boy s For Cage Action Signups Cor boys basketball teams have been scheduled from 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. Saturday by the Huntington Beach Recre- 3.tion and Parks Department. All boys, ranging from flrst through seventh grade are eligible to play. Fee is S2 tor fifth through eighth graders and $1.25 for first through fourth graders. Those interested in participaUng may call the Recreation and Parks Depart ... ment at 536-2573 for slgn·up locations and further infonnation. 'llWl'Oflt_ H ACH 1717 -clllf Dr ... l-IOSO Of'IM ,.flAf 11L t State Takitag Loo1i Planes May Yet Use Mile Square By RUDI NIEDZ!Eu;KJ Of I'll• IM!lr l"llft 11111 Despite prote sts by the city of Fountaia \'alley and the Fountain Valley School Distriet, construction of a fi:xed·Y.·ing airport at Mile Square Park is still within the realm o{ possibility. In a letter addressed to rountain \'alley Councilman Edward Just, the Slate Department of Aeronautics · af· finned that it is definitely looking at Mile Square as a future airport, if the land should ever be relinquished by the U.S . r>.tarine Corps. which is using the site as a helicopter training facility. The school district has been anxious to construct a school near the park. but can· not begin with jts project until it has assurance that the school will nOt be \Vithin the flight pattern of an airport. District ofHcials have been told by the flfarine Corps that its helicopters would not fly over the school. They had also hoped to pre vent the possibility of another airport by pleading with the Department of Aeronautics to abandon its plans • Harold H. Woodward. aviation con· sultant for the Department 0 r Chamber Elects Seven to Serve 3-year Terms Seven directors were elected to lel'Ve three-ye'ar terms by the members of the Huntington Beach Cl!.amber of Com· merce. They are Don Byrnes, vice president, Huntington Harbour Corporation; Jack Feehan, district manager, Southern Counties Gas Company; Dr. Mu Forney, su perintendent, Huntington Beach TJnion High School District : Paul Frizeel, manager. Security Pacific National Bank. Jack Groth, owner. Groth Chevrolet ~ Fred Kalenborn, superintendent, Stan· dard Oil Company of Califorrtia ; and .o\Jlen Klingensmith, attorney. At the Jan. 14 board of directors meeting, five additional directors were named, according to Clamber President C. E. "Bil!" Wood>, bringing th< boaro lo a hill complement ol 2S members. Carryover directors include S t 1 n Botelho, manager, General Telephone Company; C. William Carlaon, attorney; James DeGue.!Je, glaa:s company owner; Jack Higley, manager, United California Bank; Stephen Holder, insurance broker: Peter Horton. McDonnell Doug I I s Astronaatics Company. H. C. Matheny, manger, Montgomery 'Vard Company; George McCr11cken, building contractor; Dr. R. M. Morgan: William Peterson . manager, Bank or America; Leonard Shane, manager. i1ercury Savings and Loan: George Wes!. manager. J. C. Penney Company and Woods. Acronautlc:s, told Just that ''the depart. ment appreciates th! inlormation" con. lalned in a recent City Council resolution to oppose lixed·wing airport at Milt Square. but said the site would be studied to complete Phase 2 of lhe Orange Coun· ly ~1aster Airport Plan. .. In view o! this study and the great need of airport facilities in the Orange County area, the Department or Aeronautics would nol like to see any school developments in the immediate vicin:ily ol the airport which might jeopardize ruture use or the taality," Woodward wrote. 'Villiam Crane. a trustee 6( the Foun· lain Valley School DistMct said Thursday, ··1n my opinion the Department of Aeronautics is out of Its cottonpicking mind in putting a fixed wing airport al !\file Square. There are so many airports already." The board of trustees will now attempt to get its way through the Orange Coun- ty Board of Supervisors. An earlier appeal by the Fountain Valley School District to gain supervisorial support failed Dec. 9. however, when the board decided to defer action until Phase 2 of the County Master Airport Plan has been completed . The Department of Aeronautics 1airi !he plan should be completed within the next year. From Page 1 SURF •.• relatively protectet'i shoreline but tht trend was toward a rapid increase down· coast. "It'! shaping up fast," said HunUnf• ton Beach Lifeguard Lt. "fark Boden· bender, estimating some storm waves .at eight feet, with a steady increase prt- dicted. Some splashed the underside of the pier. "If this is any indication, we shoulri l1ave some big surf tomorrow," he added. Surfers were conspicuous by their absence today as the combers mounted, while a discarded surfboard snapptd in half lay beside Pacific Coast Highway at The Bluffs in HunUngton Beach, testimony to the brute power of ~ 1ei1s. "We are getting them upwards ol Iii' feet," said Newport Beach Lifeguard Ray Garver, but the intensity of the swells varied, hiting hardest from 30th to «th streets and the Santa Ana River jetty. Moderate surf CQnditions -but atill building up -were reported from El Morro Trailer Park south along the rocky CGa!it of Laguna Beach. The most notable increase appeared to be in the San Clemente area and life.. guards said the pattern would probably indicate higher surf along San Dieio County beaches. ome HOl!ID~ Y LAMP. & MCCESSORYi SP.ECl~C 15 •_,4 TO 30•/o OF!' DON'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PVRCHASE OUR FtNE LA MPS AT FAN TASTIC SAVINGS. CHOOSE · FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUCH NA ME BRANDS AS M>\llllO --CMllLO -AITISAN -ANO MANY, MOREi INTRIOltS · L.GIJNA HACH 14.1 Nortli CoNt Hwy. OPIM "'9A Y "TTL t Alao inc1udfd in the approval ls modlflcaUon of the prest!'nt sl,nals :1t Ai&IP Sltfft Md eventual inN.llaUon of signals at newly·widen<d Go!dtn West Strfft. HunUngton Beach wi'11 contract tar lh e .,..k. rot.I ..umat..i ... 1 !s llll,llOO .. Jft said 70 percent of the power needed In the ~nly would have to be Imported by 1975 U th< pl111t is not eJrpand<d. ............... -. Toi """' Mtlt '1lf Or_,. C..., .... llU ' ( ' •· • • ( . ----~--------..,. - -------""""" --------r .. . ' . ' . ·---· ·- I • \ Laguna Bea~h 'foday's .t'l••I Yet. 62, NO. 303, ~ SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY, DECE"4BER 19, l 969 CENTS Problem Or Community Asset? ) Laguna Hippies ,Draw Some Surpri·se Supp.ort· By BARB~RA KREIBICH OI ... 0.14' PHM Stiff -Although 37 percent of Laguna Beach nsi,dents responding to a recent attitude . survey regard "hippies" as the e«n· rnunity's Number l problem, the general ,Plan study team reels this "problem" could .be tumed into an asset. 'l1lis ii one of the conclusions reached tn "an expanded goals :statement to be present~ to .ti~ Planning Commission MOllday night. One of a series of r~s being prepared by the planning finn of D3niel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall in the pro- cess cf revising Laguna'• general plan, the' goal& report includes the goals state- ment prepared earlier by the Ciliz.ens Advisory CommJttee (CAC), based on an attitude survey C{)nducted by the com· rilittee. To the CAC statement, the planners have added their own observations. Under a section devoted to social pro- ecor Slx•foot. Tides Thundering Surf Pounds Coastline By ARmUR R. VINSEL 09 .. O&lty •Pii.t Stdt TJlunderiog J>reakers1 rolling in sets ahead of a. violent ocean storm, began to pound the Orarige Coast today, prom· laing-to surp over-into lo•lying Meas on six~oot-plus tides Saturday and per· haps Sanday. Not ~very poi.flt along ·the 44 miles of rourity coast will be affected by the waves,. which are· coming in at a west- erly ·angle, according to sea-watching ·"""""· The storm 200 miles offshore, ho~·ever, Is char~cterized as cre·ating ca rbon ropy conditions of last weekend 's wave-and- tide combination which ravaged sections of the California coastline. Giant swells up lo 14 feet 'in some badly exposed sections are expected to strike hard, especially at ·Oxnard Shores and Mandalay Beach in Ventura County, where more than $1 million in damage has been caused. Flooding and some beach erosion is probable at certain spots locally, .how- ever, the U.S. Weather Bureau warns. Waves began rising visibly by the hall- hour today, shortly after a 5:54 a.m. high tide, while the next will be at 6:30 a.m. Saturday, reaching 6.2 feet in some coastaiareas .. 1µards ·uid the pattern would probably indicate hi,gher 1url along San Diego Counfy beaches. · . "It's s,haping up rapidly," said San · Clemente Lifeguard Hank Barnes, who (8« SURF, Page lJ Smog Curbing Gas Additive Developed SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Slandard Oil of California has announced the development of a new gasoline com· ponent which the company says wil l cut smog-producing hydrocarbon emissions nearly in half. In making the announcement Thursday, Standard said 15 years of research and development went into the new fuel com- ponent, which is built around a synthetic chemica l concentrate called hydrocarbylamine. blenu, the report notes that while 37 ptr- cent of adnll respondents to the survey tabbed hippies as Laguna's top problem~ high school studmts ranked them third. The CAC statement placed great un· portance upon maintaining an en· vironment that will sustain persons of "individual identity," say the planners. Therefore, "whatever impression the hip- pies create by their hair styles and man· ner of dress, disdain of existing social in· stitutions and values. Jack of participa· 0 tion fn community affalrs, and their e<in- lributions to the drug culture, they n1ust nonetheless be ·considered as ·persons with strong motivations to maintain their indi vidual identity, 'lo do their own thing,' " ' Because the number cf creative and arti.~tic people in such a group would presumably be very high. the P.lanner~ reason, "it would seem appropriate to enlist the support of these young people in protecting those values in Laguna Btach that attracted them, and which they seem t.o enjay as much, if not more, than anyone else. • "lf the creative potential ts there, It should be tapped and utilized on behalf of preserving Laguna Beach's image as a haven for creative people, intellectuals and artists." Laguna 's major plaMing , issues, as viewed by t e DMJM team, arf:: uture of the Pacific Coast y in downtown Laguna. e Seal Beach lifeguards said waves were 11 mere three feet this morning at their relatively protected shoreline but the trend was toward a rapid increase down· coast. • "Our product is an imporlant step forward in reducing a u t o m o t i v e emissions. but it by no means tolally resolves the problem." said Eneas D. Kane, president of Standard's Chevron Research Co. DAIL'f 'Ph.:DT·-,,.,. .. ~II!~ YOUNG MEMBERS OF SMITH FAMILY FAC E DIFFICU LT CHOICE AT SPCA "It's shaping up fasl." said Hunting· ton Beach Lifeguard Lt. Mark Boden· bender. estimating some storm waves at eight feet, with a steady increase pre- dicted. Some splashed the underside of the pi~·~f this ;s any indicalion, we sh ould have some. big mrf tomorrow," he .added. Surfers were conspicuous by their absence today as the comben mounted, while a discarded !Urlboard snapptd in half lay beside Pacific Coast Highway at The Bl uffs in Huntington Bead!, testimony to the brute pawer of the seas. "We are getting them upwards of six feet." said Newport Beach Lifeguard Ray Garver, but the intensity of · 1he awells varied, biting hardest from 30th to 44th streets and the Santa Ana River jetty. Moderate surf conditions -but still building up -were reporled frotn El Morro Trailer Park south along the rocky coast of Laguna Beach. The most notable increase appeared to be in the · San Clemente aru and life- SCHOOLS TURN ' ' 100,000 LOOSE tr almost 100.000 school children along the Orange Coast were more frolicsome than usual tllis after· noon who could blame them? The two weeks of Christmas vacaUon had begun. School bells won·t ring again un- W Monday, Jan. S of the new year. . But first a visit from Santa tind a tum.Ing of the paie by Father '11me. And then.'W~n the holid&Ys hAve aooe. back to class and remember to .mta 19'10 lntt<Jld of,919. Can Hans, I, and Sisters, Liia, 5, 1nd E rika, 3,. Decide Betw11ri Puppy :and Kltten1 . The company said tests conducted under typical driving conditions indicated the additive reduces u n b u r n e d hydrocarbons in exhaust from an average of 550 parts per million to 250 parts per million. The most important advantage of the new additive, however, appeared to be its ability to clean up engine deposits in both old and new cars so that smog rontrol devices will work efficiently. "We can actually take a used car in such. bad shape from engine deposits built up from city driving that it is stalling and puffing clouds of black smoke from its tailpipe and, after a few tankfuls of this new gasoline, restore it to proper working order," Kane said. The new additive also cuts down carbon monoxide emissions and increases gas mileage by about five percent in typical urban driving, Standard said. The firm said its plant in Richmond, Calif., is now preparing to begin pro· duction of the new component, called F· 310. It will be added to three grades 0£ gasoll'le now on the market begiMing next :nonth in L<ls Angeles and Hawaii. Kane said as the supply increases, the new ingredient will be made available in all Standard marketing areas. He said the nrm wou1d 'iOOn be prepared to Slif>- pty 1he ad<Htive to other· oil comtianies. A spokesman for the California ·Air Resources Board said experts had not yet had time lo evaluate the Slandard developruent. "Their numbers appear to be Im· pressive, and we really hope they have aomethlns," he said. Stwl< M •rl<et Sens. O ansto n, . Murphy Support Oil Drilling Ban SANTA BARBARA (!,!') -Op)>Onenls of offshore drllling in the Santa Barbara Channel ha ve \Vora that both of California's U.S. senators share their views as . a new oil slick floated over about 50 squart miles of the blue Pacific. Democrat Alan Cranston on Thursday asked President Nixon to place the chan- nel oil reserves "in escrow" and that all new drilJing be banned until adequate safeguards are developed against Jurther spills. And Republic'an Geo'('ge Murphy told a WaMington news conference the new leak may be a warning to abandon drilling, adding: "We ouebt to take the hint. Maybe God doesn't want us to do any more poking arowxl in the channel." Cranst.on11 statement added t hat •·Pr~ident Ni.Jon has a unique op- portunity to correct the, er.ror:s of the past an~ at the same time, make a dramatic tum toWard a new and environmentally sane national policy of oil production." The new slick off the picturesque coastline continued to spread -moving slowly south-eastward about six miles off tht coast. Friti Springmann, a Union Oil Co. spokesman, said the faulty pipeline was upecled to be r<plae<d by night. THe Co.alt ·Guard tias estlm11led that NEW YORK (AP) -Sl<leks pulled mott than 10,000 gallons of' crude oil back from levels reached in earlier trad· spurted from a tlght·inoh break in the lng--io;day~ but acw-an-c·e:s: 1Ull maintained und~rsta ptpe at' 1 spot where the- • comfortable 700-i"ue lead over de-. plpctlne .wu welded to the drlllln.g plat· ~lines. (Ste quotaUons, Pases 10-11). 1 fonn. Yule Like Pets. Laguna Shelter Beckom Kids The SPCA shelter in Laguna Canyon Is ready to greet vacationing youngsters with tours of the facility any day or the week after 10 :30 a.m. In addition lo the usual array of pup- pies and kittens and grown-up dogs and cats awailing adoption, the Laguna 1'hellcr has its own barn and farmyard where children can get acquainted with an assortment of sheep, goats, pigs, donkeys. rabbils and pigeons. Individua l visitors and club groups are always welcome, says sheller manager Glen Summers. For large groups he gug· gesl! an advance phone call to 495-IS12. Many of the pre-Christmas visitors are Mieking a new family pet, and in this deparlment the shelter has an appealing assortment of lively pups and cuddly kit- tens, good watchdogs and dignified adult cats. The SPCA, which Catts for 90,000 hofneless pell each.· year. in four area shelters, is ready to solve Christnw shopping problems with a four • footed gift that comes with complete in· struclions for care and feeding, and a guarantee of delight for the recipient. ''Many good qualities we all need these days tend to rub off from respoasivt Mrs. Tyson, 82, Dies MONTGOMERY, Ala.' !UPll -Mrs. Mildred Keller Tyson, younger sister of the latecHelen K~ller.i di.d-'flmn!fay In • MonJgomery Hoopito •lier 1 too1 Uineu. She was 82. ,• ·1 animal friends," aays Summers. Jlut even those who are not seeking a pet will find a visit to thti sheUer a delightful holiday treat for their children, he adds. 1 he shelter is located at 2061~ ~Iona Canyon Road, and visits after tO :!J,: ... m. are suggested because m9ming'\tk>urs must be devoted to feeding and cleaning chores. Obispo Bracing For Rock Fest SAN LUIS OBISPO ,(UPI) -A scheduled rock music festiVal 'is only eight. days away and county iruptrvbors, remembering the massive turnout of 300,000 peraon.! in lJvtrmore-terlier thia month, are making an all-out effort to atop ft. An ordinance was passed Thureday preventing a5&emblles of1 more than $,IXXI persoiu. Bill Sta.me of Atlanta, Ga., coordinator of "Mldwklttr Pop Fe1tiv11l, Inc:." laid ~ ordlntnet was uncori'stituUonlt He con1acted the attornty general's ·olflce today to get a court order enjoinins .the county from tnlorclng the ordinance. "We'n going to go ahead wi!h p)fns •no mau.cr what," Stame said. He aald the ordJnMCe WP hUll)y prepand f(/C OM ,...,.. onl)< -to stop tlll& putlcuill' f..Uval -The future of high rise buildings. -The future of the hillsides, akyline and apen space in the' fact of advancing urbanization. . -Shopping aJ}d the determinalion oI resident and tourist needs. -Relationship to 1rvine Ranch and f\.1oulton Ranch devek>pmenl plans. MORE MORE -Haw to .reconcile old substandard land-subdivisions with. contemporary (See GOALS, P11e ~} TwoNahl)oo In Newport Crackdown By JOHN VALTEllZ.\. Of "'• Delly Pllel Sl.tt • Newport Beach and state narcotics of ... ftcera seized a record haul ef '67,ooit Worth· of marijuan;t Thursday ·and 21r- rested tv.·o men who allegedly were trying ,lo move it from a Newport. boat yard. The Jllegal weed, in 11 gunny sacks, wa1 di!Covered by the builder of a boat in th11: yard along Pacific Coast Highway at about 3 p.m. lt was the largest haul ever In Newport Officers 11aid the unldenllfl td discoverer called police immediately after Dnding the 435 pounds of wrapped marijuana hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein and agent! from the State Bureall of Narcotics staked out the boat yard, then waited. \ . . At about 7:30 p.m., Epstein said, two men, who were later found to be l.rom the Redondo Beach area, came up to ·the cache and began loading the sacks into a car. The agents then stepped i,riitd ar· rested Donald Sille, 28, Lawndale, and his companion, Glen Wayne Johnson, ;?5. Both were charged with ~;on of marijuana for sale. Epstein said the pair were seen earlier In the day as they wandered in the yard. Epstei n said it was certain that the kilo-s.ized (2.2 pounds each) bricks of marijuana were brought into Newport Harbor by boat from Mexico. He said the cargo was dumped under the boat sometime Wednesday night and that no one affiliated with the marine service and boat yard was involved. The brick!, wrapped in bright yellow cellophane, were hidden under the (S.. DRUGS, Page !J Orup Weatli.er lt won't exactly be 1 weekend tr. write home aboUt ...:.. unless your home is in the northeast whert they're buried in snow. Look for IGW clouds, log and mid~ temp- eratures. ' · INSWE TODAY . Curtain caU1 fm-the 10 best community theoter prodUdions of 1969 art givrn todot1 aa tM Wetktnder's Intermiaiion co!umn Ttvitto1 the J)Glt VtOT on load 1toge.s. • Ollly 6 ~· CHRISTMAS I • • f CAlLY PILOT L China: E_mhargo Eased \ U.S. Lifts Ban on Nonstrategic ltenjs ·':!WASHINGTON (UPI) -The United ~tes announced today it is partially :"'tlfting a li-ye1r-old tra~ embargo with Red China. ~ The decision. made by President Nixon ~ind announced by ·the State Depar:ment,. '":means that if the Chinese are agree&hle, °;ubllidiarles of American companies '-overseas will be allowed to sell nonstrategic It.ems to Peking. ··'The Ollnese nti&ht be able to buy items ·/ · 11 Jara• as truck& of American deaip tblt are made •broad. Whether Peking will be Interested re- mains to be seen. Officials did not expect any immediate ~acUon from them. In hopes ol improving relations with the Red Chinese, the State Department said Nixon war relaxing the trade em- bargo -imposed in 1950 shcrtly after thf: Communists came to power in Peking - in these Ulree way5: . ' -1'i. lorelfn au~iel of U.S. flnna-wtU -..th be alh>wed Jo trado with Communist China Jn nonstrii.1esic aoods. · -U.S. firms, particularly those with branches abroad, will be able to buy goods of "presumptive Chinese origin" and engage in trade wilh them in ~hird· country rilarkets . However, ooly goods which are certified to have been mode outside of Communist Chlna wlll be allowed into the United States. , New Year Agenda Viejo to Capo LagunaCouncilStudi.es Sewer Line Due ' •. ' ,. !'· .. Budget,CityOrdinances By Early April · , A~ ll·inch, 3,900-foot sewer pipeline Advance homework on city budget pro- blems-is among New Year plans of Laguna· Beach ccuncilmen. They may also eliminate or revise some mouldy old city ordinances that have become an· t.iaualed. ., Councilman Richard Goldberg called for the early study of city problem~ .\Vednesday so the council "can know and plan in advance rather than having funds .pecked away at through the year." ; · Goldberg said the council, rather than J1ro'l.fting until budget time as in the past, ·'!ll'tould meet with .the city administration ~d department heads early." •. The council could formulate goals and aspiralions in advance. said Goldberg, --"to ·give di recfion to the Cit)' manager on what approaches to take." Gcldberg reminded councilmen of •n Aug. 20 letter from Councilman Chartlon Boyd Urging priority planning of city pro- jects. He jrroposed a February meeting to plan means of payment for projects in th e 19'70-71 fiscal year. Councilman Roy Holm suggested all+c18Y sessions er weekead sessions fqr in .~.epth study. Vice . Mayor J09eph . O'Sullivan won· dered also if the New Year would be a. good time to inventory Jong-standing city ordinaitces "to see if they are outdated or go far enough." "It would be • big ]ob," said Mayor/ Glenn Vedder. George Logan, deputy cit/ attorney, said, "No doobt many of the ordinances .biv~ never been thoroogbly reviewed : jl.'JJOU}d be a formidable.jpb lo 10 throoil'bW code." t O'Sullivan suggested the council should also review resolutioos paS3td over the SURF ••• estimated the waves had risen by at least two fee~ since he came to work 30 min- utes earlier. "The1 are six to eight feet now ..• and here CClmes another nice one,'' he said, adding that 150 far, the waves are running consist.ently higher than they have the last two weeks. Crashing combers last weekend were biting 10 and l l feet with occa!ional Jerger waves at Cotton's Point, below President Nixon't White House We.st at San CJement.e. - The storm-whipped seas ct1sl four Jives during the two-day period in which tides reached seven feet, one of the victims drowned; when a cabin cruiser capsized off Huntington Beach. The Pacific stonn which Is generating the Jal.est serious combination of surf on top of abnormally high tides is the fourth tn a series of weather fronts to hit California in December. Extensive flooding occurred the past hvo weekends in the Seal Beach, Surf. side and _Sunset Beach area11. where resi- dents used sand bags to barricade homes and garages. Some minor flooding occurred today in the same areas, but work crev"s were keeping Pacific Coast Highway clear and bulldoz.ing up sand barricades along Bolsa Chica State Beach. DAILY PILOT OM"1iC (OAST.l'UI LISltLNCO COMl'AM'I"' l•lt••f N. w.~ · 1'1nllt~I .... l''*illlltt' •• J.~ .. •. c,,,,y \1 ~1 -•oaiikt>r ..... ~M #Mtttr llot101•1 Ktt"il E<1l1« Tll1.,.11 A. Mwr11lli~t /rl\l~lllfltl 1<111.,. -;chutl '· Nill t.ogUft• IUlll ,11, Eouor 1.,,11• s..c.-Offkt 111 Fo•••I ""'"u• M1ili111 A4lldrt 11• P.O. It•'''· •16$1 Otti.t Offfu. c.i. ""'"'• n• w"' ,.., "'""' .. ....,.,, INCi" ttU Wftl l 11Mt ltlll-· "llMll'illt.l lllld\1 ,,.,~ klCll ·~ ..... DAIL't -ILDT, wl"' .,.,klt,i" ,_..,. ,.._ ,,........,. ....... " J1119'1111:• •tfty t•<t!Jf ~W~·I 41t1 ill ...,.,, •1tilfw ter L ....... l t 1<ll. ,,.,_,, .. Kil. ~i. ,..,.... 1'¥14~ '""' r: ,._....., v111t~. •ii.. •llfl M ~--"'"'""· 0r..,... c .. Jt 'Wlb~"'4 c.......11.r ,,..,,.,.. _1.,.1, ''' .1 1111 w .. 1 l•IM• l i.4,. ,,.._, lt:c11,, 1f'Oll lit 111'•1 .. , ,,,..., Wit Meu. Tll:1t r11 fn•I 4f .. f4U ~ o.,t. 641-4JZ1 ,..,.,....., t...,, 0rMtt (tHI 1'111111 ... "'9 C.0.""1· ... -,.i... ["'""""""'" .. 11wi.1 ..... ... .... ""-'' rwtlll _,. " ,~. ..;~ '*'-' ... ....... -, .i u.1111H -· &l(W tlaM ... , ... 1Mllf •I Mc-we.,, ··~ --c.... ....... "'~ .6wKfi..:u_., , • .....,. not -~lfll~t .., lfllli W.M """"'i'JI "111/qtr , •Hllrul .... ll ... ,.._:11.r. O'Sullivan suggested Uie council ahculd ,also review resolutions passed over the year setting city policy. Mayor Vedder auggf3ted as a starter that each ct1un- cilman bring in two ordinances he would like to see strengthened. Boyd called for regular status reporls on city programs "such as the progress of our line new recreation director." From Page 1 GOALS .•. planning techniques. -The Ubiquitous Automobile -how to utilize its services while preventing it from destroying everything the ct1m- munity holds dear. Di.scossing.phy1ica1 problems, the plan· ncrs stete, "Great care must be ez- erdJe in permitting urban development into the hills, in terms of geology, road access, rnwllcipal services and residen· tiaJ density." On traffic: "[)Jwntown circul ation should be carefully designed to permit rna1imum pedestrian movement and safety throughout." On expansion of tourist facilities : "tourism is a healthy business ••• the ci- ty must alwa)'!: be ahead or the demand.'' On local gcvenunent: ''The planning and development functions should be elevated to department.al s t a l u s , rtporling dirtctly to tbe: city manager." '"The functkms and duties of the city manager and the city clerk are lun- d~ntally different and should be ~orm<d 1ry different perlOn!. iJC(m!Cleratioo should be' Jiven to tht chaz1eir 'forp\ of city government '' On human and natural reS01.1rces: '·La;una Beach is a small community in terms of Janel area. population numbers and financial capability. It is a large commfmity in temu of its human and nauftl resources and Its aspirations for the r,are. Tbe community carmot afford to pay for, by itself, the many im- provements it needa: to preserve its quali- ty of·llvinl in the face of. growing popula- tion Ud traffic preaaures. "~6iardinslY. a,i •11enslve ti.fort hu to be;"imi,de to crute acUon programs whicft=bring new. money into the ct1m- muni.11: new aources of funding have to be comWitly. ooagbt; and careful at- tentklo paid to priariUes for whlcb ex- istin& hmds are aYlllable:." 'Mini-vacation' For· Saddlehack Attempting to make up for time lost '''hen fall classes were delayed because of the move to their new campus, Sad· dleback College students are making do with a "mini-vacation" for the Christn1as and New Year holidays. While many students begin lheir two- ~·eek break, Saddleback scholars will at· tend classes unti l Dec. 23, returning after a four-d ay Mliday to t.ake final exams Dec. 30-31 and Jan. 2. A one-day holiday will be observed on Jan. 1. Registration for the winter quarter will be bekt Jan. !t-6 with classes beginning Jan. 8. This maneuver will put Saddle- back back in step on the quarter system with state colleges and the University of Califontia. ·'ftle system permits advanced students to accelerate tMir\Studles and makes it pol.Sible for retwlting 5ervlcemen let resume their college studies ~ooner. ihe winter quarter will end t-.tarch 26, with finals to be completed by March 31. Utt Still Healthy, Aide Decla1·es Rumors th1t Con1rasman James B. Utt (ft..TU!llln) has been stricken by a heart attack and hc!pltallud are untrue., but baaed on an illness six weeks ago. "Tbls thing keeps popping up," said Coorad Epley, Orange County field repraenta.Uve for Utt. who will undergo gall bladder surgl'ry early next ye&r. He Aid the veteran Orange County leaislator spent about two weeks in St.. Jude Hospital, Fullerton. after 1 1all bladder auack early last month. - Ult, who did auffer a coronary two years ~ underwent e.xten~lve te!tlng and uamination to satisfy his physidans lha ht wu In good health. Epley said Utt 1're1ted up afterward In the eauromta sun until th& aMuaJ winter fOfl'.5 began oozing into his beloved Orange County, so he went back tt? Washlngt.on." ' from fi.li~lon Viejo to San Juan Capistrano will be compl~ed by early April if no delays are encountered. Carl Kymla, general man ager of the Moulton-Niguel Wa ter District, said, "The pipeline was given final approval by Moulton-Niguel directors Thursday, after ~n independent engineer filed a favorable report on the project." Directors authorized Boyle Engineering to proceed wilh plans and specificatio11s, &ubject to the approval of the city 9f San Juan Capistrano. The line will carry sewage from some 400 new Caronado homes under con· struction in f\.fission Viejo to the San Juan lreatment facility. Under an agreement with tile Santa Margarita Water District, which also serves Mission Viejo, Moulton-Niguel wilt pay the $54,000 co.st of constructing the pipeline, with the-understanding that Sa1r ta Margarita. will repay the full amount and take over the line in Ju1y, 1972. The Santa Margarita District will pay $30,000 a year for use of the pipeline and the San Juan facilities. The interim agreement was made to give the Moulton-Niguel time to carry out it.s planned construction of new faciliti<'s without delaying occupancy cf lhe new Mission Viejo homes. The project has been approved by all parties and only the form ality of signing documents remains, Kymla said. Judge Gardner, ... Appointed to • t Vf.ppellate Cour t'" By TOM BARLEY Of tir. Pllly P'llll $11ff Gov. Ronald Reagan today appointed Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner o( Newport Beach to the post of associate justice or the Fourth District Court of Appeals in San Bernardino. The governor's press secretary said the date of Judge Gardner's transfer from the court to which he was appointed by Gov. Earl Warren in 1947 will depend on the conflnnation of his appointment by the State Commission on Judicial A~ pointments. "That's a formality and I gue6!1 it will come immtdiately after their approval." a spokesman for 'the governor's office aaid. Judge Gardner, who will be 58 on Dec. 27, was not available for comment at press time. He was presiding over the criminal calen<lar court which has been under his direction for many of the 22 years he has spent on the Orange County Superior Court bench. Judge William Speirs of Neu·port Beach, who takes over Jan. I as the Superior Court's presiding judge. reacted \vlth v"hat he described as 0 'deepty mi:o.:ed emotions" at the news of the ap- pointment. "I am very happy for Judge Gardner and my thoughts will be echoed by every member of the legal profession in Orange County," he said. "He has always been a dedlcat.ed and moving force here and this court will not be the same without him, ··But I am going to miss him next year," Judge Speirs said. "He is going to leave a gap In this court Uiat will take a long. long time to fill." A graduate of USC Law School. Judge Gardner served as a part time city judge of Newport Beach and an Orange County deputy district attorney before his aP- pointrnent to the Superior Court bench. ti1arried, with t\vo daughters: he live~ with his n•ife Katharyn at 320 Evening Canyon Road, Corona de\ Mar. A prolific u•riler in law. Judge Gardner Is ackno~·ledged by the legal profession as a nationwide authority in more than one legal issue. He has, perhaps, wrltlen most extensively on criminal and juvenile. law and his views have been expressed and quoted in a wide range or legal and lay publications . An acti ve participant in civic and com- munity affairs. Judge Gardner was nam- ed as man of the year for Newport Beach fn 1968, man of the year by Newport Harbor Kiwanis in 1967 and man of the year by Newport Harbor Spastic League in 1966. His other c:ivic endeavors include mem- bership in the World Affairs Council and the Friend$ or the Library Organi:iations in Newpcrt Beac:h and the University of Califomla Irvine. A drdlcated surfer, he has also played a major role In the af· fa irs or the United States ~urfina AssoC!a Uon. Judge Gardner is no stranger to the San Bernardino appellate coon and se"· ed there lhls last summer on leave of absence from his ccunry bench. The seat he •·Ill flll <'arly ln 1970 "'BS created by the legUlature in the 11169 &e1sion. .. ' "r, ____ _ NEWPORT OFFICERS RANDY HARDY (LE FT), KEITH COLLINS COUNT THE KILOS On tfi• Waterfront, A Jackpot for Police a1 Pat Runners' Plans Go Up in Smoke Nursery School Okayed For Saddleback Valley From Page l DRUGS ••• overturned boat to await transfer, be said. Epstein said the arrests took place wit.haul incidenl. Saddlebac:k Valley Community Nursery School passed its final test this week when the Orange County Planning Com- mission approved a use variance allowing the school to operate in an El To ro church. Mrs. Shenie Wentworth, president of the school said the OK of the variance was the only thing standing in the way of Mesan's Hea1·ing On Theft Delayed Court action against a Costa f\.1esa man •u~ of the theft or an estimated Sl,600 from his Leisure World Laguna Hills employers wa.s delay¢ Thursday in Santa Ana Municipal Codzi. Nick~ Scbaar,.39, of j1682 Iowa SL. was ordered to return to Court Jan. 13 to face charges of grand theft. It is alleged that h~ stole cash and checks during his employment in the of· fices of the retirement community. Sc:haar is accused of taking an un- determined amount of change from pay washing machines and dryers at Leisure World. It is alleged that he used the pro· cteds to finance gambling trip.s to !Las Vegas. the school's proposed opening at Abiding Savior Lutheran Church, 23262 El Toro Rd., in February. According to Mrs . \Venllvorth the school is to be a parent participation, non-profi t institution open to children of all "races, denominations .and cultural backgrounds.'' A trained professlonal teaeher will con· duct classes for 48 students five mornings a week. The school president said classes for three-year-olds will be held 9 a.m. to JI :30 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. and classes for four-year-olds 1vill be held at 1he same time, ti1ondays, \Vcdnesdays and Fridays. Parents of children enrolled in the school will be asked to assist the teacher in the daily program, administer school businsss and maintain school equipment, buildings and grounds, she explained . ··we are trying to get donations of loys <..nd playground equipment," 1.1 r s . \Ventworth said. "We particu larily need a ncord player." Donations to the school can be made by contacting 1.1rs Sandy McClure al 837-6082, she ad· ded. Enrollment in the school is almost co1nplcte, Mrs. Wentworth commented, with only twG or three openings in the class for !our-year-olds. Parents in· terested in enrolling their children should call Mrs. Judy Boitano, she concluded. a a The pair of alleged marijuana longshoremen were still in custody ~ly today, be said. Newport Harbor has been the scene of several narcotics transfers going wrons this year. Last spring Epstein and state \agents sei~ a state record in hashis]°, 150 pounds with a street value of a half million dollars. Board Takes. Aim On Dirty Words A propcsed resolution which would pro- hibit the use or obscene v.·ords in student publications became a discussion ol board policy Thursday during a meetint of Orange County school trustees. Dr. Doris M. Araujo, who prepared tht resolution, asked that her bill '"be con- sidered as a discussion or policy.'' Ther• are other policy matters that are ju.st as important as the lour letter word pro· blem, she added. Board President Clay Mitchell of South Laguna asked members of the board to prepare their ideas on school policy for the January meeting of the board. • ome HOl!ID1' Y. L:~MP, & /iCCESSORY1 SP,ECIAL: 1 s•k TO 30°/o Off DON 'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCH ASE OUR FINE LAMPS AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS. CHOOSE ' FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUC H NAME BRANDS AS MAINO -DISIGN GUJLO -ARTISAN -ANO MAN~ MOREi 0. -CCll.LICllON OI' ACCISSOtllS 'MIL AUO . • l'IATUMD AT A 15% SAYIM•S! tJ.t.!( s M,. NIIWPOIT BEACH 17'27 Wwdlff Dr. 642-20SO OPIM P«llAT 'Ttl t • ( INTlllOIS ''•f.-....J &Mlritr o •• ,.,,.,. AYl•l•bi..-All>-NSID 1.AGUNA HACH :14l Nortll C..t Hwy. t'41151 OfU Hf9A T i'ft. ' I I I I I " ---.. ·--···-------------------- DAILY PILOT 8 Ex-Nurse Real Doll 12,000 Made for County , Children, ,,r, DAit. '( Pit.OT Stiff PMi. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of ,... DlllY Piiot $tiff . SANTA ANA Every Chrlstmu for the past 25 years. children in Fairview State Hospit.aJ, Orange County Medical Center and S t • Joseph's Hospital have been the happy recipients of over 12,000 dolls, all carerully handmade by a retired nu rse. Mrs. Eva J. Check of Santa Ana, says she lirst started making dolls for children when she was 1$ years old and liying in Omaha, Neb. There was a coal shortage that year that kept the children out of school, she ex· plained, so she and another girl friend decided to pass the time making dolls out of scraps of material. 'I NEVER STOPPED MAKING DOLLS' Mrs •. Eva ChKk With Latest Christmas Model "In the first two weeks of the coal shortage we made enough dolls to fill a box so large. two men had to carry it," she said. Those first dolls v.·ere given to the Omaha Child Saving lnstitute. \. New Child Guidance hlrs. Check mentioned that she gave up her doll making enterprise v.1hen s c h o o I reopened, but took it up again tv.·o years later when she was Offices in County ORANGE -Addition of two new satellite offices of Uie ·Orange County Child Guidance Center and plans for a third have been announced by Paul Frederic Marx, center presi· dent. Besides the main bead· quarters al 171 E. 18th St., Costa Mesa, facilities will open soon at. St. Joseph Hospital in Orange and in the Garden Grove-Anaheim area 11.t 9778 Katella Ave. Plans are upcoming !or another office in San Clemente. DEATH NOTICES BLERSCH 1!:1rl 111"1cl'+. .JQM Fer~htatl'I ltnt, Cotti Me~. Ot!t! of Offth, Dec. 17. $1>n<lvfl1 bY Wlft!, M•rlt Eln1; dlU9~· '''" JNn 6 . Gll,on; wn.ln·l1w, P1ul GlllOl'I; sr1ndchlldr1n. Linde. Sltven, k111M!~ 1nc:1 Ow•vne Glli.on. Service•, $etv•d1y, 10 AM, Wesltlilf Chep.el. lntermenl, Wratmln,ter Memorial Pork. W11!cll!I C:~"'el Morl1>1ry, 646· .ue, O!reclors. Gl!LETIE lrtnt l llll1n Giiiette. \Hlf l uMi1rd, Muntln91on !INV.. Oelt of cle1lh, 0•· t:em&er U. SUrvlYed 17" l'lutNnd, Merokl A. Glll1!!1; d~uth!tr, Jffn lrttton. ll:osa..,., tonl hi, Frid1y, I l'M. Oll<'llY flr05. •i>el. ll:HUlf'.'TI .M•U. $llurd1v, 9 • SS Simon .. Jude Ce"1ollc th •c~. Interment, Good S~epherd Ct te•v. The expans ion \\'ill help ac· commodate the I e n g t h y v.·ailing lists for the services or the center' Santa Comes Early for CHOC Kids The staff has been expanded with the addition of two staff psychiatrists and two clinical psychologists, as well as four psychiatric social workers and a medicaJ resident. Four ORANGE -Santa Claus will make a special early visit medical students are assigned Dec . 23 to children in to the Center on a rotating Children's Hospital of Orange basis from UC Irvine. County according to CHOC In 1968-1969 more than 600 &pokesman Verda Mackey. families from throughout "In order to save the Orange County requested the strength of Santa's reindeer, the Marines at El Toro Marine center's services. The center Air Station are providing a handled 2,338 sessions with special jet to bring Santa from parents and \,423 sessi9JU \\o'ith the North Pole ," Mrs. Mackey children. More than 200 group said. session&....were also held. "Trnsportalion from the El Toro airfield will be via jeep Funds for expansion are with a special escort provided being provided ttlrough the by the Calilornia Highway Center's volunteer groups, Patrol," she added. donations from individuals and Several Marines from El corporations, the United Fund Toro have volunteered to help a n d Lanerman·Petris-Short Santa carry his sacks of gifts aid under ii contract with for the young patients, Mrs. Orange Co\Ulty. Mackey said. The Child Guidance Center A Christmll!i p a r l Y , is continuing to request dona· 11ponsored by Marines ffOm El lions from ind i v id u a Is Toro, will precede Santa's 2:30 convalesc i ng from an automobile accident. And she hasn't stopped mak· ing dolls yet. "I grew up and got married and had a daughter. raised two boys Who wertn't. mine, and worked as a registered nurse. And J never stopped making dolls." Nine years ago. the great· grandmother explained, she slipped and fell while on duty at Orange County Medical Center -an accident which broke five bones in her neck and forced her retirement from nursing. Until her accident, she said she made about 600 dolls a year. Since then she has been making an average of 350 of the toys per year. The variety of the dolls &he makes is endless. Her crea· tions include dolls 1 a r g e enough to be dressed in baby clothes and ones small enough 19 be made with pipe cleaners. "I'm always figuring new ways to make dolls," she ex· plained. Last year she made dainty little dolls whose skirts were made over pin cushions. This year she is specializing in baby rattles made oul o! plastic medicine bottles. "I was going to make some playpen toys out of thread spools, but J coulcJn't get enough so J star.led working with the bottles since I have so many around." The finisbed raltle I s covered with crocheted yam and comes out looking like a Frtnch poodle. Mrs. Check doesn't limit herself to her doll making enterprise ·alone. She said she has several projects goinc at ••• lim• such ., c.ramic Happitaess Fro11a Magic Kingdom painting, knitting or oil paint- ing. Disneyland's Employes Club has collected more than 2.000 toys and 1,000 stock~ ··., "I've been working on bibs, ings to make Christmas for kids a bit ha ppier at Fairview State Hospital, Orange - dolls and toys for a projecl County Medical Center and Juvenile Hall. Mesd. ames George Theil and Bea ; that our Santa Ana Senjor ·t Citizens club is doing rorllrJ~o~n~e~s~h~e~lp~P~l~u~to~a~n~d~f~r~ien~d~Ci~·n~d~y~T~h~o~m~a~s~loa~d~to~y~s~. ~~~~~~~~~~ ·l Fairview. It's a competition .f for hours worked on the pro-:1 ject. but 1 don't know how :;:;u: •. "~i~t ·~~: ~~~h·~ ~3 0 F F ~ whenever I have a spare :'; moment," she explained. : ... ,· "You know," she concluded, "there are a lot of memories : : ., connected with the dolls-my ·~ children, and grandchildren ON ALL CHRISTMAS :~ and now 1reat grandchildren ·~ and all the neighborhood :~ childcen. I've ••joyed making :: them.'' :: He Booted Ii DECORATIONS -:; .. ·! Pot Peddler Put Atvay SANTA ANA -Lee Donnell Burress probably holds the doubtlul honor of having pro- voked the Superior Court's Un· derstatement of the year. Burress, 18, of 25232 Staysail Drive, Dana Point, admitted that he stuffed marijuana into his shoe and conveyed it in that unique manner to pot. hungry inmates or the Theo Lacy jaiL Corbin Head Traffic Man Burress was spending his weekends at the minimum security facility following his conviction on cha.rges of being in a place where marijuana was smoked. Court rccordJ indicated that Burress told officers he was pressured into smugglin1 pot by other inmates. He said in· mates persuade p r i s o n e r s serving weekend terms to bring in marijuana. The unhappy Burress got a long astonished look from Judge Robert Gardner plus a raising of the f a m o u s eyebrows. He also got 90 days in jail FAN,TASY LA.ND (Patio Shop) 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. COST A MESA • 642-4103 GARDEN GROVE -Foun· (no weekends) and three years lain Valley traffic officer,.~P;'~o~ba~u~·o~n~.~~=~~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Clark Corbin has been elected Plus this comment: "You're president of the Orange Coun· not very am art." ty '.,l'raffic Officers Associa· lion . Traffic officer 0. L. Akin. of fluntlngton Beach. was elected . treasurer and seal Beach police Sgt. Lee Gatti; sergeant at arms. •• l . . ·: .· .. :~ . ;· HAJ\.I throughout the county. p.m. arrival. Tlicmo1 ltobe Gr1~1m. "'"" ~7. 01 1----'-----'---------------------------/ 0 from OMEGA toao Now d., C0Jt1 Me~. 0111 er dMth, ber 11. Servl~tJ Ind lnltrmenl will held ln Clt v1T1'1d, OMO. 6011 !I IY Mortu1ry, Coill Mnl. forw1rdln cllrK!<>rS. RIV RA Thoma' F. ll.iver1 . .4.;1 n, ef 2235 ,Or11191 Avf., Coslt Mesi . Survived by <51uehl1r. Mart1r1! ll:omo. Rc .. rv, '!.und•Y nlthl, • PM, Wnl,llff Chai>el. 'R111uem MllH, Mond•Y· ' AM. St, Ja.c~im's C1!hollc C~urch. We1lcllff , Ch•IMI Mt>rlu1ry, "'6·ol&U, Dlr1ct<>r1. STRONG .J..nflt !', $1ronD. A!ll! 21, of 2161 F..:!· 'l"•I Ave., Co111 Mtw. Oltt of d11!~. '0..:tmblt' 11. SUrvlvt!ll 111' PltMll, Mr. 1nd M.,. ltobert E. Slfl)f>I; 1lt-I.--~~-------~=~~~~~~~'.::=---~~~~~~~: __ ltf, MU. M•rv Al1x111cler, LaguM 9eedl. 1t111ult1m MtH, Sltvr<Nv. 11 ,AM, SI. Joll" lht llM>lllt C1!ho4lc Cl>Urt.~. lnltrmtnl, Good ShtPl'Hltd Cemeterv. !1111 6r01dwaY Morru1rv, ,Cost1 Mist, Olrt,lors. THOMAS 1-ltrt>erl Thom11. ADI 61, ol llDJ !. ht 51,, 'Tu•tln. O&I• ~I <1111n. Dectm· ,l),r 11. Survived by wile. E1t<;11. &! lht heme; 1l•ter. Mr!. Mvrn1 S1tt11, 111 Newpart B,1cl!; flfP~ew. Tl!omll j1ffl9; ~lece, /\oV•. JNn Werd, Co. •on• !ltl M&r; two gr1ndnlr c11. St•Y· It••· S•tu,;,ay, Dt,emwr 20, 2 PM, Sa!ldltbtck C~a~I. Tu•!ln. l~ltrment, F1lr1!1ven Mo:morlal Port!. Mr. Thom•1 wa1 e member of Ma•onk Ladtt i Ul •• S1nt1 An1; Elkl Lod~• ,,9. of ~1n!1 An•. S1cldleN tk. Cl!t~l Mt>r· ~.,..., Tu1!1n, Olr«tors, ARBUCKLE & SON Weatcllfl Mortuary m E. 17th SI., Costa Me1a -• BALTZ MORTUARIES Corona del Mar OR 3-1458 Costa Mesa flfi 6-1U4 • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY tlO Broadway, Costa Ptfen LI 1·3-433 • DILDAY BROTHERS Huntington Valley Ptlttrtu1ry ti911 Beacb Blvd. Huntington Beach 11%-1171 • PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK Ceme&ery • Mortuary Cbopel 3MIO Pacillc View Drive · Newport Buch, Cllll!oraa 141.r,90 • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7SCl1 BoJsa Ave. WeJtminstC'r 893-3i!S • SHEFFER MORTUARY L1guna Beac!I 4ff.1131 S.a C1emente ftz.elDI • SMITDS' MORTUARY 121 Miila SL HunUngtOft Beacll - • •--·--- A Wonderful Christmas Time Comt I" • , . 'ff this haridlome pushbulto" ,( dial Om1ga Speedrt'\05ter Chronograph. The o"ty wotch wotn by 1h1 $ ) 95 00 men o" the moon. • Ntw S.omo~ter automotic. 1 "K· gOld watch. WaterprtlOI co!•· \ Ha"dsom1 Circ!e.in-o·~vare. 1205 00 Clot1ic styling is on Omega hollmtirk. This hondsom• watch will be fo1hion right for year• IQ tcme. I .CK white or yellow oold.-- Motchfrig ll'lt•h broc1!1t . 1325.00 Omega is proud that it has been chosen as standard issue by NASA for Spoce-wolking and Moon-landing Astronauts. For on important g ift for yourself, no watch is more highly esteemed. Choose from our large collection for men and women pric ed from $65 to over $1000. Wouldn't sli1 PQrlitulQrly lib tr.it d1s1inc1tve!y shaped !AK gold Omtl:lO~ Yellow or white gold. Enviable Omega accurocy. Never be late "'ith 1hlJ automatic wotch by Omego • IA K white o, yellow gold-flll1d. Give her o lifetime of p~ po$session. This IAK gold l»outy with aix fin• diamonds, sollPMtt• facet-edged crystal. '135 .00 '125.00 1225.00 S'-N H•1tr1: M•1t. tflni s.t. 10 'tlJ f p.111. S111Ney l 1 'tH I P·llS. 'tfl CltrlthMI HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER J.JDI H111Mr UM,. CMte M.,e HUNTINGTON CllNTER H•11tlllftM ..... lfZ·ISOI 141·t41S • • J 9 DAILY PILOT LECAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE IU,.lltlOa COUll.T 01' THI' STATf: 01' CAL "011.NIA POil TH I' ('OUNTV 01' Olto\HGI' CASE NUMlllt l•HH SUMMON5 L M STRUCI( •nd M W IMMELL It tr11s~~ of "'' MAil l YN HESTER J ANET HESTElt 1ne1 CHAltl ENE HESTER Trv! s ,. 1 nl h Vs ROGEi D 111eeo TONJA LEE REED DOE I rtorou•h v '" .,, v• Defend•"n PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF C,t,L PORN it. to !ht •bo"" n1med Oelendlnls Yov•tlle ebv d ecTfodtofe1w I +.n iil!•d "" n esoonse. o he "e I ed camoT1'n ot the 1boYe naml!CI 11 nftft w 111 tt1e c e k cl 11e ebcve ent fd courf ff\ he 1DOv• en od 1et on l>rou•hl "'' nll vou n t i d cou w fl n TEN e11vs 1fn "" '"' ct on vcu of 111 s sum l<\MIS se ved w Ill n l>e l bOYt n1med COUflrv 0 w '"" THIRTY dl VS I servfd elsv-:~ •, kt ebv no @<I 111 un '" vw wtle1 w e11 es1on .. oe•d n• s•d 11.ii '1f fh v 1~e \ld1menl fo •flY _.,. c d11t,.••• llt.,..~nded n he .. ., fled comP 1 n 1s • s n• 11«'" o:<>n tret1 o w 1101'1' o h~ cou t lo 1nv ollle e el d'm1n1;1e<1 In 111 11e et1 °""'"'"' YIN ""'~ seek 1he Mlvlct 111 1n •I o 11tv etl a11y m1 ... connK ~ w fl k1 tOIT>" a 1 "' l)r" fl $ •umrnont Sock of!c l'lfl i!Wllld bl to11wl!MI w ff! n tTI• m1 m •'-fed In l!lb summen1 to I "' • w en ,,.. ....... lhl tom• • 11 01~ Sf!!' l '"' W E ST JOHN C t By M• v Leu Hoage1 O<!l>UIY ( e ~ WALJWOlllTM SEIOl!l & (111.t.IL ,, r Wttfc~ff DTIV .. IU •• '" N_,,. •P<C~ c .. n .,._ 1 ""' tnt1 ,..., ''4t ,,. S4f.•01 ·---·..,. .... "' lh .. 1111 Shed 0 I M<I' (0111 01 Ill NClllll!l'llbe 11 i nd Otcffl'll>e $ , .. ' . ., ,, '"' LEGAL NOTICE ,, .... CEITtl' tATE 01' au1 Nf:SI I" tT TIOOI NAM'f Tht unde 1 t ned do Ct tv h1v I f- lMdud "9 • bu ne 1 1 370 N Coasl Hlthwl Y L1•un1 !Stich Ca o "1 uncle tllf !kt ous "' 111me o1 G1'LER £ CEZANNE and 11!1 ~ d l m s t om1>D1td .,, llt t!lllCW no 1>e 'Ont Wl'MMt n1met n tu I 1/ld "1tc1 01 e~ derict • e 1s to lows Sin Ju1n En erio •tt 11( 131:17J C1 le l"trltc o $111 Juan C111 1 111 C• If M1dele lie M P10Uf! e 33f 0 1111 0 01111 Po n (1 I '262' Th s M nn• acceo s no 1b lies of ft'>t GI e e Ctr1nM ll)tlfetl 11 3 U0 Co.11 H •hw•v S0111t! l.•1un1 wh th ..OW CNJf'I lo Cl!~ D1ltcl Noveml>e '' t&t JAME'S E FITH AN P es <ltn S111 Ju1f\ Erote P !!~ M111t e ne M P1•uent STATE OF CAI. FORNIA OllANGE COUNTV o,. Nev '' '6t btJo ' me • I o ory "utl c fl 111(1 o s•<I '$•It "" •on1 v •-• e<1 James E F h en 1nd 1de ! nt M "'""" te known to me o ~ lhe 1erson wllc ~ n1m~s • , !lb..: b d o 1111 w lll t1 11$ umen t nd 1clrnow ~ttd """ execu ~d fhr u me !Off c I .SU M~ry K. M rv No If\/ Pub c C~ o ~ P nc •1 0en o •"!If CouMv f\Y C""""' 011 Exo eJ Nov ~4 l9n Pub! 11!-d Or111111e Co11 0• v f.lovemti.r 21 11'1<11 Oecemot .... LEGAL NOTI CE ••ll ~ ,, NOTICE TO c•'E'O TOI! iu .. •••o• COUllT 0" TH• tTAT'f 01" CAL FOllNlllr. FOil THl COUNTY 0" OIANG• Na A"44tu E1 t t ol W LL Alli M GAGE Oece11 tdNOTICE IS HEltElY G VE N ta "" itr9d lo 1 ol' thtl •bovt fllm eG dK!'d•nl lh11 1 otnio,,. h1v n1 c • ms 111 11:11 1>t •• d 11"c~'"' •r. te&u ed to f e '"""" w lh fht !>ttttllrll ~OllCht S II !hi off Ct ~ lhe c en: of tllt 1bove en tel eour o • -• L LEGAL NCYr!CE LEGAL NOTICE •Al , " NOT Cf 01' l'lllOSTEI! S SAlf .... 161 '' '" o ~ent ,,,..,. w If\ he nec1u.,., o 1 r p o! V<llldle 1 N ,,_ lll'de • '"" 11 ll>t 111 t• nl&-4• ~lier 1!1omtr1 FOlll! A W1 ffl IClll~~~~~~.,~."'"""°"°-~~C I s l nlQf\ A11r 8UM I Pt k C• I '°''o wh c11 1 Tiit ,. •« 111 bu1 n~u el Ille ll!'lllf-r! '"" In I "'''"' I 1'~'111 n "' 0 !II• H 1111! of 111d dtcl'den w 111 n tou ml)l1!1!s 11 e lht f 11 1>vb (I on o n I "'111('1 Oiied Novembt ) 1161 KATHt.EEN A !iAr.E EMO'CU • t i hf_ w q1 h• ~b~ namff dettden l'OMTt & WAltl.llf •11 Sl1111111 Avt •11•lla l'lrll, c. ' "''' T.-f OUJ C•116f AIMl'llW ftf' 1!••111 • 1'1111 ihtd o ""'' Co• D• Y I' o Novitm~ 7' 1na Oetembe J ,,,, LEGAi NOTICE .. .JUll CEltT I' C1'TI 01' COlt .. OllATION l'Oll TIAMSACT ON 01" •Ul lNllS UNO'flt I' CTITIOUS HAMf THE ONOERS GNEO CORP'OllAT ON doe• lie elly ce!"I y II• I I cO!llWcl nt • w • f\O IPO• e ,. e1 bus f\f-11 loelil.c! • No 1 F1111 on IS tl'ld Ntwll'Ort l ••ch C1 o n1 vllde !'1t 1ct1~1 Im n1mt o A.T EASE t lld 11111 lid lrm I com "'tel o lie lo OW 111 CO Ml II DA whO.I (I " DI (I ••• of DUI 111-U b It lo ll)wa A~ fill CAN t.E 5\JRfi TOG5 NC "lo , F1"1 on 11 11\cl N""'°"' 8 HCh C• o n I W TNESS ll•nf 11 1 ,llCltfO Oecem~ 161 (O"'ll 8 ~· ,1MElll(A.N 1.E'ISVl.E TOGS NC J1mt1 A 0 0ttt ftt P '1 dtn 1..ci Tru111 '- STATE OF CALIFO"-N A COUNTY OF ORANG[ -" On fl! 1 f II Cll Y of Orc•""bl A 0 ''' l)f' 0 I l'l'lt 9f'l~IV l W k:H I No l 'Y P~b ( " """ lot •• a (1Nf\IV i nd $ • I ,.... d "' II r. 11 du"' comm p 011tcl 11'1d s-11 .,. ""'' IY 9"Ptel'M J•m'-• A Oout •n t llflwn to "'' flt bl 1111 ,. f:I dtll 11'1d T,..1,11 1• of !lit c~ll on ~1 t• ICV!ff lftt ""'"II 1 ... 1rum ... 1 "" Mii•" D, ~ Cl Pll'I "" 1111 t fl Ml'l'IH 11\d l dc:f\OW "'91d fO -1'1!tl lllC~ t'OflG I Oii l"Klllfd ,~. ·-lft w ,_ Whe et'! I fl1 v• ht tu~te Id l'IY f\I M 111111 tll •td mY Oii t I 011 th dlY '"' ,. .. ~ '" '". (I 111(1 • 11'• •bell• ... "et! "EALI .... !Y l.Wco:t NOll lY P11b c Cl lo fl t Mii Comm 0111111 E~• ti Nov 11 1t1t l"AlllCl.fl 1111.T A 'NILl.-IAMl a'ft MAI.\. tlll. Y f.1•11111 "'"' '"""'"" •• ft. ·~lilt"' .. Nlf1fl #.Iii! ttrHI S..Mt Au C..M'9t111i. '1111 .. II& lri't" Orl .... f (Mt 01 l't I' c Ort"ml:I& U If :t.. lfff tlld JI~"' ~ 1 1m. n•t-•• Your ltloney's Worth Parking: It'll Get Worse , By SYLVIA PORTER In New York Clty dail y parkjng charges at downtown garages aow run u much as $5 to f7 SO For a commuting businessman this means that tht monthly cost or parking his car here can run as high as $165 Even at Jess ex pensive gartiges t y p I c a I monthly parking charges I 1 New York now run from $&Oto 1100 Aboul 100 m 1 l \\o n automobi l e s are no v registered in the U S and this number 1s slated to increase by another 50 percent JUSl w1th1n the next 15 years While you surely think of your car pnmanly as wheel s the fact IS Jt JS PARKED an PARKING garages of the ruture will shift almost en tu-ely to sell service you park your own car take your keys with you -and when you re ready to leave dnve It out yourseU Yoo are making ll clear you prefer self service to leaving your car 10 the hands of the mdoor heU s angf'l s Garages will b e c o m e cleaner belier lighted better decorated -also in response to your disgust at t.o<lay s tp cal d1rl and grime There al:m will be more high speed elevators and close d c1rcu t TV surveillance of the gou1gs- on 1n garages F ree parking downlo\\ n will d sqppear altogether OVER THE COUNTER average or more U1an 95 per '<?:9'<>,,,,,.. cent or the time If you are a 1• -~ "' ..._ ..:.. 1>:U' ..... regular atomobtle commuter NASO Ll shng1 for Thursday, DeJJiJI 18 1969 In a ma1or US city today your yearly parking costs prob- ably run between $300 a n d llllll'tl.m•fl'N lflltf ..... If' •111l1llt1t1 n ·~ rnattly t AM lrttn N.l.lO. l"1lcu H 1111 111civ.1 r1i.11 w 1111r1111., .,..rlldOw. er etm1t1l11lon II 000 IF TODAY S parking costs seem exo rbitant to y o u tomorrow s charges \\ II be even more so The reasons are a cin ch -In virtually every big US city land costs are soaring - along with demand' for space to build offices !ilores apart c1 •• p ment bu1ld111gs hosp tals City ~·roge parking lots are being erased ct; 1 by these more lucrative uses ~~sk~" Of land A1'A Ent -The costs of indoor park :~APco ~ 1ng fac1ht1es are skyrocketing : ... ";l /,.c too The cost to the parking ur •cme E dustry o f adding 3 m1Jhon !tm~~: needed new parking spaces 1n : b 11 d'I:: the next decade at $2 000 to : ~e H $4 000 per space 1s est mated : ~0 i~": at $9 bilhon ! : ::•, PARKING also ha s : 0~ c~: become a maJor burden at Am1oc suburban shopping centers :,,.,e e~!b hot e Is airpor ts hospitals !mGFi n un1vers1t1es \Vhal was once !~. ~'; free park ng s being replaced :,,., M~;: by monthly ch <.Jrges to grow ~ss GG~~ 1ng numbers of students doc ~~11~Js' ~ tors others E~en 1n suburban : k:~. 'N towns street parking 1s being ! ~Pn ~ banned -and 111 some cases " d~n " lhl '-~ A k McP mon y charges arc ue1ng ,. cw H assessed for street parking !.c~1e0 Are our cities then ~~:..,l0 beg1nn1ng to grapple £!0~ 11 reahslically w th the parking ~:keP• n problem ., 1i.11 c Ba w k No lhf'y are not B• n 11 what s more we n th s coun ~!v ~ try seem determined to con ::to~n';" • t1nue lo struggle to work 1n l: k ~~d our cars ~t ~o}'£ WHATS TJtE ANSWER? l dc11Son Perhaps it hes 1n the apparent s~ k H trends 1n the spra\vlmg park l~u~Dte ing mdustry For these says g: "t,,,c 8 ~a SY\ the non profit National Park e kwv c 1ng Association Jn Washington :~~ si • might give us clues to wha t we ~ ... ~i~., 8' should be planning ~"c"f,~~ I n c r c a s ngly parking l!m ~ Sv r 1c hhes \Vtll be provided m or ~:~~M ~ under office and apartment l!~ ~ow bu1Jd1ngs lo redu ce the c... " 11 distances commuters will have ~r'!1 ~ to \Valk from car to work l! .• {/8 The open air parking lot ~~~ ·~,,s (1\h1ch now provides a full E~: ~" tw o-th rds or our parking lnri L~3 spaces) will disappear from l~l!t 8U&1 our densely populated areas c~ : ~' Instead the high rise mulLi c ~ae use building with a parking lit~ 8: lot included will be a big (ac ~ •: 0/;,,,f tor holding down your future c;, 0"c0° parking costs ~g~•"' ct Passenger Load Rises For Air Cal Cc n F O O'l S CO"'tf Co'1'1 C ,_ " rol' Ga • Cam lt Com t'I 11 Com P Y C~r'11<> A Cmp Cm Cmp tld Cmc n emu Mh Cm11 Ttc Com ~• Con lloc:k lo~5 f!' Con "" COl)l>t L Air Ca hro rn1a ca1 r1ed 63 337 ~~;:, s,.~ passc ngf'rs a total of 22 839 400 ~ ~. dlv'h C Ol! Co revenue pa ssenger 1n1les dur c u en q (y~ ~! c 1ng October a passenger 1n g: ~v 0M~ crease of 24 percent over the &: ~ 1" r:: same month a ~ear ago ac B::or M " cording to Dudley F M Iler 8; ~l 1:~ o~ C•nT n1 1rketlng \ICE' president g~,, ~ ()ur1ng the first ten montl s 0;w~A"'E of 1969 Air Cal fornla carr ed 8 :m ,;, 696 931 passengers a 1 g~~ ~er. Do ~ Md c reasf' of 4S pcrcen! O\cr gi;, &8 :;nrnc per od a year ago 8u~': nNl:i Load factor for II e month of ir :~ n October v.as 55 percent ,.,,1th g~ ~~b an average of 65 passengers ~l r•!£ pe r flight e Nut Roberl \V Cl fford ~1< ~ president of opcrauon-i i• «ti~s .. ~ ma int en a nce swd the~ .Mr.u iochf'dule complet on factor for i=Do~ OCtober v.as 99 6 percent with E~~ :• 978 £lights be tween Northern ~~ .. c ,. andS-0uthem Cal 1f orn 1a ~.., T'J) Pu tormance records showed F~': ,.~t 95 percent of A1r Callforn1a s "~ ~0 Oighls departed on 11me or ~: r11!, T within 15 mJnutes of schedul ed ~r'\:' dt"pa;rture. Ground fog 1n F110 1tE "• M. '"" Southern California ctiused ~· 1tyu most of the few departure " ck~~ " dcla)S ~~ ii' F'or the first ten months or~:, o,011 11169 Air Cahfornll'I s sthed\IJe ::,~" co1np ltt1on lactor v;as 98 3 j:r~ sc~ percent with 93 percent of Rll r: ~~I .. E fhght..'> departing exac1ly onl~."~w , time or within fifteen n11nuies~~01~ 10 or :K'hedulcd dcp;irturc t;llf ~ ~I~ 1: lord $1Hd ~:O , Ci MUTUAL FUNDS York Stock List 11 I ~· " .. " '" • .. .. ' ' .. " ,, •• ' " " .u ,. •• ' ' . • • • " " l~t ~· ,. • ' ~ ,. ~ '" • • 1'1arket '" " " • " " " ' ~. • ~-• Sy11abols .~ ' " 11\l ., •• ' ' .. • Friday's Closing • Prices-Complete New York ~~1 .... ~c-..c::''ill .. lllll .. lllll .......... .., .. ..,,.. .. ,.. .... ,....,.,,"'i It .... V'l ·~ -:J: ril =~ !: n..., :, .. " 'F, I 10fi'i -ilot ~' t\ )6't ~ '!i' ,~ ~}! ifl't -c; 4 h *' ~l .. ...,,, 1 Mt 4t\4o ~-\ lO ,,,,,, Mi tOV .:f: ~ r la ~ ~-I ''l~~ (:~1:!.~ I ffv. 110 l!\lo -\\ J • ,.. +'t 'u~, "~'~-Vi 1l'tXIH30 +1 Market Keep s Up Improving Trend 11'1 ~ ''"" ,. 1"' ' 1''• "~ n1. 1, NEW YORK CUPJ) -Stocks closed higher Fri (5 '' ~ 0 l•. :a ll"' 11:t n..! t1~ day as Wall Street continued to savor a sta'l.ement 11 1iv. i3 11"' + ~1 by Arthur F Bums newly appointed Federal Re ~~ lr-: n ... l1 ! t ,: serve Board chairman that he hoped the fed could 11.w ""' ,, 1111. I :d' 1 , 111.\ J 1, + , Tecons1der Its tight money Jfohcy a ter 1t sees the 1~u":J.~si ~ ll~ ~1 -tax reform bill and the new budget .1;g ~\.'! i~ ~i~::..: The UPl market md1cator meas~r o(8U stocks lt ~ ~t : ~tn traded showed a gain of 0 89 perc on l 637 is ': :r~ ~ ~~ .t;,0 s ues traded There were 986 advance and 394 de 10 31 >7u. 31"' clines n ~ 4'~ .50 -14 1:n l t,: ~;z ~ ! "" The Dow Jones industrial average of 30 selected. U l ~ lf~ ll'? + ~ blue chips was up 6 60 to 790 39 near the bell 1}JJ ~ ~:t tl~ :; ~ A turnover of around 15 rrulhon shares ran 1iM U~ tt•• ~ 11~ sltghUy below the preV!ous session s pace ~ 1~" 1;'~ ;i: ! ~ Oils electronics and computer issues showed ~ 1t11i ~o\. 't'• + 11o scattered strength after climbing sharply 1n the pre-! Utt J ~ 4 \ = J: v1ous session ~, It"' ti • ll'·• -\.'I • is"' uio ·~ -~ Motors generally worked higher 10 fractions Y ~~ ffl: fr..Z -1 as did aircraft and most chenucals At the close ''1 3~ lf ~~"'ti"'° General Motors gained 1/2 to 69 Ford wa s up 1114 r. l7V: :?t~ ~.,.. l ~: to 41 3/4 and Chrysler rose 1 to 34-1/2 1lt# i!: lt'! i!~ -\I Steels rails and &1rh.nes traded m both di.rec 5 lot~. 3'11.4 3-t/o -i'I s i l 12 ' lions and J(enerally 1n narro\v ranges ~ ~'· ~,: nl I'~ H H Robertson was a stronR feature 1n heavy 10 711 '° lVI I Stock-Exchange List ss ~·· i1., llltroi " urnover grun1ng 4-5/8 before the close John C " :ltv. 4~• 1~1• -v. Hill vice president ol Robertson said he kne \v of uA~ l!C 1 t! ~i~ ;~~ ~~~,S, no reason to account for the stock s clunb ~~'cllt11~ SI•• •llll U t"" Untto 10 U1 ll 'llo lS'o l l 'llo +. p a] d l n lid "'9 ' ?6\'t 1n. 2s , rices so gai.nc on the American Stock f .. x. un ~v 1 •9~ 1~ ~\· !~\ ~~· _ change un camP 1 71 ••• 1•'11•· e~1~bc:p 1 3• 'l?lt> 1 :n o Un E"" 110 OC Ill ll ll0'1 1 ~ Un El (116 •0 ,; 2~t0 ll: 2!,,. + ''l,•1••• .. ••!LD•m•"'•*IK"'*"'•O!Cftl!!lOIEICW!l<•'~!l1 ..... B:s:l"'"':Cit'."'1"'"'J~~ \ "'~ ~ L DAILYPILDT J;f Complete Closing Price s -American Stock Exchange List (/ • ' ' -~· ! ' • •' II • •. J ! Dl!LV PI LOT . ~~EE~: 6 DAYS ONL COUPONS GOOD THROUGH CHRISTMAS E ' NOTE: ALL ClUAlll 11 llS LIMlnD ••• · HURRY,.llllY WOWT 1"ST AT 'll.llH PRICISI ZODYS COUPON QUANTITIES ON SOME • • • . ·im···~.· . . . . ' . 1 , ' ITEMS IYIRY ZODYS DIPT. on••• DISCOUllTS OP UP TO .. .,. AllD MORI FOR THIS IYlllTI • ' , .... 1 • ~~­;~ • * :::.:~::.i:o.::cc::.::::::. I t;'roU 111 ALL OF SO. CAUPORMIAI ..._~· _._____ SPECIAL STORE HOURS: OPEN EVERY DAY INCLUDING SUNDAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS REMCO "BUNNY IAI'(':', "TUMILlllf TOM : BOY" OR "IAIY ~·OW-IT·ALL'~ DOLL I 112,95.29,95 6'' I values I YOUR I CHOICE ea. I I -.·· I . I ARE LIMITED, AND THEY WON'T . BLOCKBUSTER ~-·~ I ... -..... (-. . \BROTHER PROFESSIONAL : \ ' DELUXE HAIR DRYER I " !~: 14'' ! Extra fine drying with professional hard I top •tylir.ig. five position rotary swit(h for adjustable even heat • .Adjustable hei9ht I control a11ure1 comfort while drying. I LAST AT THESE PRICES! . 1 Ea·> ·$'?1• .. , .. ~~~:.~ ....... •SHOP & SAYE AT JODYS EVERYDAY•;~~.-:~• 9 AM TO MIDNITE •-PUUIRTON:lA HAllA NORTH HOLLYWOOD IM,tllAI. NIGMW~T At MA~IOI •HtlMAH WAT Af (0LDWATI• (,N, NORTH LONO OIACH ANAHllM•IUINA l'AaK ANAHllM•PULLllTON WllT COVINA NOITHllDOI llDONDO llACH .... LIWOOD NOllWALK <•NtUIT It.YO. At CllNSMAW l~tlAl MWT, Af tTU•llA•I• 1. IOUfM lflllf Af CMlltT 11.t.CM llV•. & LINCOLN OtANOlfHOl,I AT LIMON AlUSA AVI. AT •UINTI 11$1DA It.VD. AT DIVONllUlf MAWTMOINf ILVD. At SO. IA! <INlll NMOllA NUllTAlll VALLIY LONO OljlCH HUNTINOTOll OIACH IANTA ANA OAIDIN OIOVI IUllANK CANOOA l'AIK '°90NA VAUIT CtNn• rMAllO• •LVO. Af llHNtl• LOS COYOfll, S•llNO I WOODtUf, eOt.DlN Wiii I IDINllt. N. ttAN• AYf. Al 17TM Sfllll CM.t.•MAN & ltOOIU4U•lt SAN fltHAHOO l lVD. AT IUllANK TO•AHOA CANTON ILYD. AT IOICOI ·--~ • I I I '· I I ' I ' ' . • ~ -·· .. Saddlebaek YOL 62, NO. 303, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES • Today'• ~lnal N.Y. Stocks • ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA FRIDAY. DECEliABER 19, 1969 TEN CENTS Problem Or Community Asset? • Laguna _Hippies Draw Some Surpri·se Support By BARBARA KREIBICH Of tM O.lty l'llM Stiff AlthOOgb 37 percent of Laguna Beach reskte:nts responding to a recent attitude survey regard "hippies" as the com· munity11 Number J problem, the general plan study team feels this "problem" could be turned into an asset. This is one of the conclusions reached tn an expanded goals statement to be pre~ted to the Plalllling Commission ?-.1Qnday nigbt. One or 11 serie.s of reports be.ing prepared by the plaruUog firm of D3niel, Mann, Johnson & Mendenhall in the pro- cess of revising Laguna's general plan, the goab report include! the goals state- ment prepared earlier by the Citizens Advism')' Committee (CAC), based on an attitude survey conducted by the com· mittee. To the CAC statement. the planners have added their own observations. Under a seclion devoted to social pr~ ecor Six·foot Tides Thundering Surf Pounds Coastline By ARTHUR R. VINSEL •Of tfti D•llY Pli.t Slaff ThUndering breakers, rolling in sets ahead ol a violent oce.an storm, began ti) pound the Orange Coast today. prom· istng to surge over into low-lying areaii on !ix.foot.plus tides Saturday and per· hapl) Sunday. Not every point along the 44 miles or county coast will be affected by the waves, which are coming in at a west· erly angle, according to sea-watching guards 'said the pattern;Would probably indicate higher surf alOng San Diego County beaches. "It's shaping up rapidly," said San Clemente Life.guai:d Hank Barnes, who (S.. su•F, P•I• %) Smog Curbi1ig expert•. r Add . . Th( storni 200 miles offshore , however, rvf:'as itive Is chlracterized as creating ca rbon ropy conditions or last weekend's wave-and- tide 1:1>mbination which ravaged section.~ or the California. coastline. . Giarit swells up to 14 feet in some badly exposed sections are expected to strike hard, especially at Oxnard Shores and Mandalay Beach in Ventura County, where more than $1 million in damage has been caused. Flooding and some beach erosion is probable at·. certain spots locally, how· ever, the U.S. Weather Bureau warns. Waves began rising \1isibly by the half. hour today. shortly after a 5:54 a.m. high tide, while the next will be at 6:30 a.m. Saturday, reaching 6.2 feet in some coastal areas. Seal Beach lifeguards said waves were a mere three feet this morning at their relatively ·protected shoreline but the trend was toward a rapid increase down- coast. "It 's shaping up fast." :iaid l~untlng· ton Beach Lifegqard Lt. Mark Boden· bender. estimating some storm waves at eight feet, with a steady increase pre- dicted. Some splashed the underside of the pier. "If this is any indication. we should have some big surf tomorrow," he added. Surfers were conspicuous by their ab!ence today as the combers mounted. ""hlle a discarded surfboard snapptd in hair lay beside Pacific Coast Highway at The Bluffs in Huntington Beach, testimony to the brute power of the seas. •·we are getting them upwards of six feet," said Newport Beach Llfeguard futy Garver, but the intensity of the iwDs . varied. hiting hardest from ?3th to ~th streets and the Sarita Ana ruver. jetty. MOderale surf conditions -but still building up -were reported from El fl.lorro Trailer Park south along the rocky coast of Laguna Beach. · The most notable increase appeared lo ~ in the San Clemente area and life. SCHOOLS T URN 100,000 LOOSE lf almost 100,000 school children along Ole Orange Coast were more frolicsome than usual this after-i noon who could blame them'! The two weeks or Christml! vacation had begun. School bells won'l rtng a.gain un- tll ~fonday, Jan. S of the new year. But firrt a visit (rom Santa and 1 turning of the page by Father Time. ~ And U1tn, when the holidays have gone, back to class and remember IO-write. 1910 instead ot 1969, Developecl SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -Standard Oil of California has announced the development of a new gasoline com- ponent which the company says will cut smog-producing hydrocarbon emissions nearly in hall. In making the announcement Thursday, Standard said 15 years of research and development went into the new fuel com- ponent, which is built around a synthetic chemical concentrate called hydrocarbylaminc. 1 "Our product is an important step forward in reducing a u t o m o t i v e emissions. but it by no means totally resolves the problem." said Enea s D. Kane, president of Standard's Chevron Research Co. The company said tests conducted under typical driving conditions indicated the additive reduces u n burned hydrocarbons In exhaust from an average of 550 parts per million to 250 pal'Ui per million. The most important advantage or the new additive, however, appeared to be il! ability to clean·up engine deposits in both old and new cars so that smog control devices will work efficiently. "We can actually take a used car in such bad shape from engine deposits built up from city driving that it is stalling and puffing clouds or bla ck smoke from its tailpipe and, after a few tankfuls of this new gasoline, restore. it to proper working order." Kane said . The nevi addiUve also cuts down carbon monoxide emissions and increases ga:ii mileage by about five percent in typical urban driving, Standard said. The firm said ils plant in Richmond , Calif., is now preparing to begin pro- duction of the new component, called F- 310. It will be added to three grades of gasoll'lf: now on the market begiMing next :nonlh In Los Angeles and Hawaii. Kane said as the supply increases, the new ingredient will be made available in all Standard marketing areas. He sakl I.be firm would aoon be prepared to su~ ply the additive to other oil companies. A spokesman for the CaJifornla Air Resources Boerd said experts had not yet had time to evaluate the Standard developnH!nt. , "Their numbers appear to be im· pressive. and we really hope they have &0melhing," he said. S t...,h M•rket NEW YORK ,(AP) -Sll>Cb punod back from levels reached Jn earllcr trad· Ing today, but advances sOll maintained a comlortJble 700..isiue lead ovcr de-c.lln,s. (Sc~ quotaUons, Page& 10-11). blems, the report noUs that while 37 per- cent of adult respondents to the survey tabbed hippies as Lag\ma's tpp problem, high school students ranked them third. The CAC statement placed great un- portaoce upon maintaining an en· vironment that will sustain persons of "individual identity~· say lhe planners. Therefore, "whatever impression the-hip- pies create by .their halt styles and man· ner of dress, disdain of"existing social in- stitutions an<1 values, lack of participa- lion In community affairs, and their 1:1>n- tributions to the drq culture, they must nonetheless be · considered as persons with stroag motlvatk>ns to maintain their individual JdenUty, 'to do theTr ' own l.b.ing.' ". Because the number or creative and artistic people in such a group would presumably be very h!gh, the planne rs reason. "it would seem appropriate to enlist the support of theSe young people in protecting those values in Laguna Beach that attracted them , and which they seem to enjoy as much, U DOt more, than anyone else. · "If the creative potenUal Is there, it should be tapped and utilized on behall or p~serving Laguna Beach's image as a .haven for creative people, intellectuals and artists." Laguna's major planni ng Issues, as viewed by the DMJM teani, are : -The future of the .Pacific Coast Highway in downtown Laguna. -The future o( high rise building!. -The future of the hillsides, sky line and open space in the face of advancin& urbanization. -Shopping and the determination or resident and tourist needs. -Relationship to Irvine Ranch ant' Moulton Ranch development plans. ~IORE MORE -How lo reconcile old substandard land subdivisions with contemporary (Set GOALS, Page Z) • ac. e e1ze . ' " ' ; ' YOUNG MEMBERS OF SMITH FAMILY FACE DIFFICULT Cl101CE A.T. SPCA . Cen Hens, 8, •nd Sisters, Liza, 5, end E rlka , 3, Dec ide Between PupPy and 'Kitten? Sens. Cranston, Mmphy Support Oil Dri11ing Ban SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Opponents or offshore drilling in the Santa Barbara Channel have word that both of Californi;i'a U.S. senators share their views as a new oil slick floated over about 50 square miles of the blue Pacific. Democrat Alan Cranston on Thursday asked President Nixon to place the chan- nel oil reserve "in escrow" and that all new driMlng be banned until adequate .safeguard,, are developed ag~lnst further sp111.s. And· Republican George fl.1urphy told a Washington news conference the new leak may be a warning IO abandon drllllng, adding: ••we ought to tatt the hint. Maybe God doean't want us to do any more poking around in the channel." Cranston'• statement added th 11 t "President Ni.ion has a unique ~ portunlty to correct the errors of the past and , at the same time, mike a dramatic turn toward a new and envirqnmtntally sane national policy <if oil production." The new slick ~r lhe picturesque coastline continued to spread -moving • slowly south-ea stward about six mileii off U.. coast. Frill Springm1nt1, a Union 011 Co. iq>okesman, said the faulty pipeline waJ expected to be replaced by nlghf . The Ccast Guard Has estlm1ted that more tl:ian 10,000 gal]OM ol crude oil !purled from a eight·J;ebre~k in the und ersea pipe al a s wJtere the pipeline was welded lo drifting plat.. form. Yule Like Pets Laguna Shelter Beckons Kith- The SPCA shelter In Laguna Canyon Is ready to greet vacationint youngster!! with tours or the facility any day of the week after 10:30 a.m. tn addition to the ·usual e.rray of pup- pies and kittens and grcwn-up dogs and cats awaiting adoption, the Laguna shelter haii Its own bam and farmyard where children can get acquainted with an assortment of sheep, goats, pigs, donkeys, rabbits and pigeons. Individual visitors and club groups are always welcome, say! shelter manager Glen Summers. For large groups he sug· gests an•advance phone call to 49S-1512. Many of the pre-Christmas visitors art seeking a new family pet, and Jn this department the shelter ba11 an appealing assortment of lively pups and cuddly kit.. tens, good watchdogs and dignified adult. cats. The SPCA, which ems for 90,000 homeless pets each year in four area 11h~ters, ls ready to solve Chrl!lmas 11hopping problems wtth a four • footed gift !hat comes with complete ln· iitructions for care and feeding, and a_ guarantee of delight for the recipient. "Many good quaUUes we all need lht!e days tend to rub ofJ from rtSpOnSlve Mrs. Tyson, 82, Dies MONTGOMERY, Ali . (UPI) -Mn. Mildred Keller Tyaon, younger lister o( the lite Helen Keller, Wed Thursday In a Montgomery Hoopltal alter 1 long Uln<Sa. She WIS 82, i ' animal friends," says Summen:. But even those who are not seeking a pet will find a visit to the shelter 1 delightful holiday treat for their children, be adds. 1 he sheller is located at 2Q61Z Lflguna1 Canyon Road, and .visits arte.r 10:30'a..m. are suggested because morning hours must be devoted ·lo feeding and cleaning chores. Obispo Bracing For Rock Fest SAN LUIS OBISPO (UPI) -A schedWed rock mu.le restive! ls only eight daya away and coonty ruperli110ra ., remerribering the massive turnout of 300,000 penons in Uvmnore earlier this month, are making an all-out effort to 1top it. . . An ordinance was passed Thursday pnivenllng assembllea of more than 5,000 persoll!. Blll Starne of Atlanta, Ga., coordinator of "Midwinter Pop Fe.sQvaJ, Inc.," said the ordinance. wu W'KXlnsUtuUonal. He contacted the attorney general's olflet today 10 aet a court order enjoining lhe county from enforcina: the ordinance. "We're golnr to 10 ahead wllh plana no. matter what," Sta.me Mid. He 11id the onllnanct "" hasUly prepar<d for one r.-oaJy -lo 11op lhla partlculat fea.tlvaL TwoNahnett In Newport Crackdown By JOHN VALTERZA Of ttl• D•ll~' ,llet st•lf Newport. Beach and state narcotics of. ficers seized a tecord haul ~f ~67 ,000 worttt of marijuana Thursday and t r· rested lwo men who allegedly were trying-to move it from a Newport boa'. yard. The illegal weed, in ii guMy sacks, was discovered by the builder of a boat in the yard along Pacific Coast HJghway at about 3 p.m. ll was·tltt largest haul ever In Newport. Officers said the u n i d e n t i .(J_e d discoverer called police immedi3lely aflcr rinding the 435 pounds of wrapped marijuana hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein aod agents from lhc State Bureau c{ Narcotics staked out the boat yard, then waited. At abciut 7:30 p.m .. Epstein said, two men, who were later found to be from the Redondo Beach area, came up to the cache and began loading the sacks into a car. The agents then stepped in and ar- rested Donald Sillc, 28, Lawndale, and his companion, Glen Wayne Johnson, 25. Both were charged with posses.;ion o( marijuana for sale. Epstein said the pair were seen earl ier In the day as they wandered in the yard. Epstein said it was certain thal the kilo-sized '(2.2 pounds each) bricks of marijuana were brought into Newport Harbor by boat from fl.fexico. He said the cargo was dumped undtr the boat sometime Wednesday night and that no one affiliated with the marine service and boat yard wa~ involved. The bricks, wrapped' In bright yellow cellophane, were hidden under Ole !See DRUGS, Page %1 Oraace Weadler It won't exactly be a weekend to write home about -Wlless your home is in the nortl'iea.st where they 're buried in snow. Look for low clouds, fog and mid-60 temp- eratures. INSmE TODAY Curtain cal/1 for tltt! 10 be,,t community theater production& of 1969 are giuen today aa the Wtekender'r lntermirtio" column revit wr t/1e pa.st year on Local i toge1. .-----1 i °"~ 6 o;r; I I CHRISTMAS ·--....,OSJ111---' ' • I • I/ % DAil Y l'll~T L China> Embargo Ea~.ed . • .. • . •. U.S. Lifts Ban on Nonstr.ategic Items , •· -WASJllNGTOl'I !UPI) -The Uniled ~$lites lilnnounccd today it is partially :lifting a.19·year-old trade embargo with Red China . : The decision. made by President Ni1on ·and announced ey·the State Department, ~eans that if the Chinese are agreeahle. ~bsidiaries of American companies ·=overseas will be allowed to sell ponstrategic Items to Peking. "· 'rte Chinese mJght be able to buy items ·. u larp u lrucl:s ol Amerlct!l Aijlp . • ~ l!)iillll ..... al U.S. that are made abroad. ' nrms will Mnc.d-orUt·bie allowed to trade Whether Peking wlll be interested re· wltb Communist Cnina in nonstra1egic malns to be seen. OfficJals dld not expect &~1U.s. firms, particularly Liose with any immedia~ react.ion from them. branches abroad, will be able to buy In hopes of improving relations wit h good& of "presumptive Chlnese origin" the Red Chinese, the Stat~ Deparlmeni and engage in trade with them in ~hlrd· said Nixon was relaxing the trade em-country markets. However, only &ood.s bargo -imposed in 1950 shortly after lhe w:~h are certified to have been made Communists came to power in Peking -cu~ide of Communist China will be in these three ways; allowed lnto the United States. ;New Year Agenda Vjejo to Capo LagunaCouncilS tudws Sewer Line Due ' ' ,,_ .. .. Budget,CityOrdinances By Early April · A 12-ineh, 3,90().foot sewer pipeline Advance homework on city budget pro- blems is among New Year plans of La(UJ1a Beach councilmen. They may al!IO eliminate or revise some mouldy old city ordinances that have become an· tiOuated. .. Cooncilman Richard Goldberg called ·~lot the early study or city problem!I ;i.\Vednesday so the coo.ncil "can know and .plan in advance rather than having funds ·Pecked away at through the year." ,, Goldberg said the council, ~ather than ..,waiting until budget time as m the past, itbOUld meet with the city administration ~and department hea<b early." ~ The council could formulate goals and aspirations ln advance, said Goldberg, "'"'to-give direction to the city manager on what approaches to take." Goldberg reminded councilmen or an Aug. 31 Jetter from Councilman CharUon Boyd Urging priority planning or city pro- jects. He proposed a February meeting to plan means of payment for projects in the 1970..71 fiscal year. Councilman Roy Holm suggested all-day sessions or weekend sessions rot in depth study. Vice Mayor Jo,,eph O'Sullivan won- dered also if the New Year would be a good Ume to inventory long-standing city ordinances "to see if they are outdated or go far enough ." "lt would be ·a big job," uid Mayor Glenn Vedder. George Logan, deputy city attorney, said, '!No doubt many of the ordinances have never been thoroughly rtvlewed: it f!ould be a ft>rmidable.Job to go through the code.'' •· O'Sullivan suggest.ed the coondl should also review reaolulions passed..:..over the From Page l SURF .•. estimated the waves had rl&en by at lust two feet since he came to work 30 min· utes earlier. "They are 11ix to eight feet now .. , and here comes another nice one," he said, adding that so far. the waves are running consistenlly higher than they have the last two weeks. Crashing combers last weekend were biting 10 and ll feet with occasional larger waves at Cotton's Point, below President Nixon·!: Whlte House West at San Clemente. The storm-whipped seas cost four lives during the two.day period in which tidts reached seven fee t, one of the victims drowned when a cabin cruiser ca'J)5izcd off Huntington Beach. The P.aclfic slonn which is generating the lat.tit serious combination of surf on top of abnonnally high tides is the fourth in a series of weather fronts to hit Cllifornia in December. Extensive flooding occurred the past two weekends in the Seal Beach, Surf- ~ide and Sunset Beach areas, where resi- dents used sand bags to barricade homes and garages. Some minor flooding oe<:urred today in the same areas, but work crev.•s were. keeping Pacific Coast Highway clear and bulldozing up sand barricades along Bolsa Chica State Beach. DAILY PILOT ' OU.,<i( C041T ,Ull1$HUtG COM,ANY ~•i•1t N. w •• , _ ''""""' Mii l'r,ill!Qlw J•<ii'" 11. c.,1.y 'V<t '"nldtnt •rA "-.i ~1a1r 1lo•"'•' t(',,, .. if ldlltr T~ ..... , A, M11rplrii~1 .......... , .... l dllol<" ~1th ••' P. Nell Ltl-l•ll l\ Cl!y Ed!IOI' L .. •111• hecll OHIM 112 F••11! '*'"•11~• M1iliftf Atltlr111· r.o. ••• '''· •1•sz Otti.1 Offl,11 C•lt ..... , HO W•I 1•¥ $""9t tj-1 INCll: "11 Wnt ltlMt it.ufftt,.. "y11l11 .. 1t.1 IKCI>; 11111 lttCll lllU .. 'lfll O'Sullivan suggested the council should also review resoluUona passed over the year setting city policy. Mayor Vedder suggested as a starter that each coun- cilman bring in two ordinances he would like to see strengthened. Boyd called for regular status reports on city programs •·such as the progress of our fine new recreation director." From Page l GOALS ... planning techniques. -The Ubiquitous Automobile -how to utilize its services while prtvenUng it from destroying everything the com- munity holds dear. Diacusaing physical prohiems, the pJ;m. ners state, .. Great care must be e1- ercl9€'ln permitting urban development into the hills, in terms of geology, road access, municipal servicr.s and reaiden- tial density." On traffic: "Downtown circulation should be carefully deaiined to permit n1a:rimum pedestrian movement and safety throughout~~· On expansion of tourist facilities : "~ b a healthy business •.• the ci- ty must always be ahead of the demand ." On local government: "Tbe planning and development functions should be elevated to .departmental a l a tu s • ~ectly lo the city mm111er." ·~ fUDCtions and dulid of the city manager and the city clerk are fun- dpm&lly 'different and should bl J>!rfonnod by dillerent perlOnl. ~COnsldhailon should Ile ·11ven lo !he chlrter form of city govennnent." On ~an and naturil ~ces: "La,gurla Beach is• rmall community in terms of land arta, populaUon numbers and financial capability. It is a large co~ty in terms of Jts human and natural resources and lt3 upirl.Uons for the future. The community cannot afford to pq for. by Jbelf, the many im- prov....m. It needl lo pre>erve lta quali- ty ol livtng in the fa"' ol growing popuhl· tion llld traffic prusures. "A~ly, n e:rtensiVf! effort has to ~-J'Dlde ·to create action programs which, bfinc n~ . money into the com- muni'7; new toUl"Cf!S or funding have to be Cblantly IOQlbt: and careful at- tenUon paid to prlorllies ror which ei- istiq: fw:ldl are available." 'Mini-vacation' For Saddlehack Altemptin& to make up for time lost when fall classes were delayed because of the move to their new campus, Sad- dleback College students are making do \\"ith a "mini -vacation" for the Christmas and New Year ht>Udays. \\'bile many students begin lheir twv- \\"eek break. Saddleback sch:>lars will at· tend classes until Dee. 23. returning after a four-Oay holiday to take final exams Dec. 30-31 and Jan. 2. A one-day holida y ~'i ll be observed on Jan. 1. Registration fer the winter quarter will be held Jan. ~ with classes beginning Jan. 8. This maneuver will put Saddle-- back back in step on the quarter system v..;th state colleges and the Unlvenlty ot. Callfurnia. 1be system permits advanced students to accelirate their studies and makes it poaible ~or returning servicemen to THUme their college studies sooner. The winter quarter will end f\1arch 26, with finals to be completed by r-.farch 31. Utt Still Healthy, Aide Declares Rwnora that Congtt.Wnan James B. Utt (&-Tustin) has been stricken by a heat! attack and hospitallzed art unt.rut, but bated on an 111..ntsa gl.J weeks ago. "This thing keeps popping up," 11aid COnrad Epley, Orange County field repmentative for Utt, •·ho will under10 gall bladder 6Urgery early next year. He said the vettran Orange County legislator spent a~l two wttks ln St. Jude Hosplt.11, Fullerton, afler a gall bl1dder attack urly last month. UU, who did suffer a coronary t•·o years ago, underwent extensive testing and o:amfnatton to satisfy hls physicians that he wu in good health. Epley .,,1d Utt "rtsted up afterward In the California $.In until the annual winter roea btgan oozing Into his beloved Orange Qunty, so be went back to WashinCf,On.'' from Mlssioh Viejo to Sin Ju&n Capistrano will be completed by early April if no delays are encountered. DAILY '!LOT Iliff'" ... Carl Kym.la , general manager of the Moulton-Niguel Water Diatrict, said, "The pipeline was given final approval by Moulton-Niguel directm Thursday, after an independent engineer filed a favorable report on the project." NEWPORT OFFICERS RANDY HARDY (LEFT), KEITH COLLINS COUNT THE KILOS On the Waterfront, A Jackpot for Police as Pot Runners' Plans Go Up in Smoke Directors authorized Boyle Engineering t:> proceed with plans and specificatio11s. &Ubject to the approval of the city of San Juan Capistrano. The line will carry sewage from some -400 new Coronado homes under con• struct.ion in Mission Viejo to the San Juan treatment facility. Under an agreement with the Santa Margarita Water District, which also serves Mission Viejo. Moulton-Niguel will pay the $54.000 coot of constructing Ule pipeli~. with the understanding that San- ta Ittarprita will repay the full amount and take over the line in July, 1972. The Santa Margarita District will pay $30,000 a year for use of the pipeline and the San Juan facilities. The interim agreement was made to give the Moulton-Niguel time to carry out its planned construction of new facilities without delaying occupancy of the new ltfiaion Viejo homes. The project has been .approved by all parties and only the formality of signing documents remains, Kym.la aaid. Nursery School Okayed For Saddleback Valley Saddleback Valley Community Nursery School pa§ed it.s final test this week whm the Orange County Planning Com. mission approved a use variance allowing the school to operate in an El Toro church. Mrs. Sherrie \Ventworth, president or the school said the OK of the variance was the only thing standing in the way of the school's proposed opening at Abiding Savior Lutheran Church, 23262 El Toro Rd., in February. According to Mr!!. Wentworth the school is to be a parent participation, non-profit institution open to children of all "races, denominations and cultural b:i rkgrounds.'' A tra ined proressional teacher \vill con· duct classes for 48 students five mornings a week. The school president said classes Mesan's Hearm· g for three-year-olds will be held 9 a.m. 10 11:30 a.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. and classes for four·year-olds will be held at On Theft Delayed ~~~ ~~~Y!~e, Mondays, \Vednesdays · Parents of children enrolled In the Judge Gardner Court action against a Costa Mesa man school will be asked to assist the teacher "IOCUsed ol the thelt of an estimated io lhe daily program. administer schoo l A • d Sl.800 from his Leisure World Laguna businsss and maintain school equipment, gpointe to Hills emplpyers wa.s delayed Thursday in bu ildings and grounds, she explained. ~ · nta An&Municipal Court. "\\'e are trying to get donations of toys ;j ·"' ·~ llate C 't~~;• ~ Nick M"i1 Schaar. 39, ,cf 1582 Iowa St.. ~nd playground equipment," Mrs. Appe . our was orde2'd to return to court Jan. 13 to \\lcnt \li'Ort.h said. "\Ve particularily n~d a · · face charges of grand t.beft. record player." DonaUons to the schoo l By TOM BARLEY It is alleged that he stole cash and can be made by contacting Mrs Sandy 01 1111 D9ll1 ,111t S•lff checks during bls employment in the of-1t1cClure al 837-6082, s he ad- Gov. Ronald Reagan today appointed fices of the retirement community. ded. Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner Cl( Schaar is acciaed of taking an un-Enrollment in the school Is almost Newpcrt Beach to the post of associate determined amount of change from pay complete. Mrs. Wentworth commented. justice of the Fourth District Court of washing machines and dryers at Leisure \1•ith only two or three openings in the Appeals Jn San Bernardino. World. It is alleged that be used the pro-class for four-year-olds. Parents in· The governor's press secretary said the ceeds to finance gambling trips to lLas terested in enrolling their children should l'ro11a Page 1 DRUGS ••• overturned boat lo await transfer, be said. Epstein said the arrests took place without incident. The pair of alleged marijuana longShoremen were still in custody early today, he said. Newport Harbor has bee:n the ~ene er several narcotics transfers going wrong th is year. Last spring Epstein and state agents seized a state record in hashish, 150 pounds ~·ilh a street value or a half million dollars. Board Takes Aim Dirty Words .o\ proposed resolution which would pr~ hibit the use of obsef:ne words in studenl publications became a discussion ol board policy Thursday during a meetin1 or Orange County school trustees. Dr. Doris M. Araujo, who prepared th• resolution, asked that her bill "be con- sidered as a discussion of policy." Thert are other policy matters that are just as important as the four er "'ord pr0> blem, she added. Board Preside Clay Mitchell of South Laguna asked embers of the board to prepare their ideas on school pollcy for the January meeting of the board. date of Judge Gardner's transfer trom Vegas. call Mrs. Judy Boltano, she concluded. the court to which he was appointed by _:.::::::~:;;!jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiii;;iiiiii;ijjliiiiliiiiiiiiiiljjiiiii;;;;;;;;;11••••~;;;;;;1:----Gov. Earl Warren in 1947 will depend on ll £ --......... !he confirmation ol his appointment by ' · • -' the State Commission on Judicial Ap- pointments. "That's a fonn.ality and I guess it will come bnmediately after their approval," !aiTkesman ror the governor's office on __ 1.e Judge Gardner, who will be 58 on Dec. 27, was not available for comment at press time. He was presiding over the criminal calendar court which has been under his direction for many of the 22 HO[IDA Y, !.:~MP..· years he has spent on the Orange County sur.~~C~~l~a~nc~P.irs of Newport ~ MC.CESS()RYj SRECIJ(C Beach, who takes over Jan. 1 as the Superior Court's presiding judge. reacted I 5 •/O TO 309/"0 OFf with what he described as "deeply mixed l. •• t th f lh OON"T MISS THIS RARE Of'PORTUNITY TO PURCHASE emo ions a e news o e ap-OUR. FINE LAMPS AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS. c~SE 1 poinbnent. n"""" "I am very happy for Judge Gardr,er FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUCH NAME BRANDS and my thoughts will be echoed by every AS MAA•O -DISIGN GUILO -ARTISAN -.AND member of the legal profession in Orange MANY MOREi County," he said. "He has always been a ~AMI COUICTION OF ACCISSOlllS WM.L ALSO • dedicated and moving force here and this •. ,..TUllD AT A 15•/• SAVtM•S! court will not be the same without him . · "But I am going to miss him next • ~&A· ~ ~1 liJ'.,,... year," Judge Speirs said. "He is going to leave a gap in this coo.rt that v;ill take a long, long Ume to fill.·• A graduate of USC Law School, Judge Gardner served as a part time city judge of Newport Beach and an Orange County deputy district attorney before his ap. polntment to the Superior Court bench. lt1arried, with two daughters. he lives with his wife Katharyn at 320 Evening Canyon Road, Corona del 1w1ar. A prolific wri ter in law, Judge Gardner ts ackno~1ledged by the legal profession as a nationwide authority in more than one legal issue. He has. perhaps, \\'rlttcn most extensively on criminal and juvenile law and his vie\\'s tuiv e been expre!sfld and quoted in a wide range of legal and Jay publications. An active participant in civic and com- munity affairs. Judge Gardner was nam- ed as min of the year for Newport Beach in 1968, man of the year by Newport Jlarbor Kiwanis in 1967 and man of the year by Newport Harbor Spastic League ill 1966. His othtr civic endeavors include mem- bership in the World Affairs Council and the Friends of the Library Organizations in Nev.·port Beactr and the University of California ln•ine. A dedicated surfer, he has also pla yed a major role in the af- fairs of the United States Surfing AssoclaUon. Judge Gardner is no stranger to lht San Bernardino appellate court find sen.·· ed there this last summer on leave of t1bsence from his count y bench. 11\e seat he will fill eerly in 1970 was crtated by the legislature in the 1969 session. ' .,_ -'\ ..... NEWPORT BEACH 1727 Wootdllf Dr., 641.2050 °"" l'tll'Al 'TtL f \ \ INTIAIOlS Pro,...loMI lnterier DooltM .. Av•ifat.1..-...1D-HSID l LAGUNA llACH JO Na~ C.... Hwy. Of'llf PllllAY "m. t • ' ~ll , I, • I, ' . -. ~. -. . . Newport ~ Barho.- , . N.Y. Sto&s VOL. 62, NO. 303, ~ SECTIONS, 38 PAGES ORANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA ' ' .-FRIDAY, DECEMIER 19, 19'9 TEN CENTS .. ecor 0 Two Nabbed In Newport Stakeout By JOHN VALTERZA Of fflt ~Hy l'llet Staff Newport Beach and state narcotics o!- licers seized a record haul of $67,000 y.·orth of marijuana Thursday and ar- rested two men who allegedly were trying to .move it from a Newport boat yard. The Ulegal '"eed, tn 11 gunny sacks, was discovered by the builder of a boat in the yard along Pacific Coast Highway at &bout 3 p.m. It was the largest haul C\'Cr In Newport. Officers said the unidentified dlSOf'Q'erer called police immedi.1tely aftu finding the 435 pounds of \VTapped marijuana hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein and agents from the State Bureau nf Narcotics staked out the boat yard, then u·aited. At about 7:30 p.m., Epstein said, ty,·o men, y,•ho v.'ere later found to be fr.:im the Redondo Beach area. came up lo the carhe and began loaqlng the sacks into a car. Tht agents then stepped In and ar· rr>sted Donald Sille. %8, Lawndale, and his companion. Glen Wayne Johnson, 25. Both were charged with possesi\on of marijuana fQT sale. F.pstein said the pair w~re-seen earlier in lhe clay as they wandered in the yard . Epstein said it v.·as certain !hat the kilo-sized (2.% po1,1nds ·each) bricks of marijuana were brought into Newport Harbor by boat from Mei:ico. lie said the cargo was dumped under the boat &0metime Wednesday night and that no one affiliated with the marine service and boat yard was involved. ' The bricks, wrapped in bright yellow cellophane, were hidden under the t1verturned boat to await transfer, he ea id. Epstein said the arrests took place ""ithout incidenl The pair of alleged marijuana longshoremen were .still in custody early toda y, he said. Newport Harhor hai:; heen the !cene of ~('\'era! narcotics transfers going wrong thii; year. Lai;l spring Epstein and slate agen111 ~eizcd a state record in hashish. ISO pounds with a street value of a hair mill ion dollari-. The marijuana sap compacted into neat, foil-wrapped cakes, v.·as found by a pleasure fisherman as he cast his lint off the J\1 Slreet pier on the Balboa Peninsula. The hashish, bearing Arabic-lettered impressions, was the largest hashish find in Calif«nia's history. Thursday's haul of marijuana was the largest ever seized in Newport Beach and "about the second or third largest in the county," Epgein said. Viet Cong Announces Release of S. Viets TOKYO (UPl) -The Viet Cong have released nine South Vietnamese prisoners ca ptured in November. the National Lib2ralion front's Gia Phong Press Agen cy said Thursday in it broadca~t monitored in Tokyo. The broadcast said thr prisoners. were freed Dec. 3. bAILY 1'1\.bT lltll 1'~111 NEWPORT OFFICERS RANOY HARDY (L~FTI, KEITH COLL!NS 'COUNT THI' KILOS , , On the Waterfront,. A J.a,ckpot for Poli'' as Pot Runners' Plans Go Up in Smoke Murder Suspect Released. S~ns. Cra~st~~'. Mnrphy Support For Husband's Funeral Oil Drilling Ban Mrs. Dwillia Dean Hunt left her jail cell in Santa Ana for 90 minutes Thursday morning to attend funer3l ·,services for her hush.a~. yacht broker Willis Hunt, "'horn she aUea:edly slabbed to death last Sunday In their Corona del Mar home. Mrs. Hunt was among an estimated 100 persons al the long-time Newport resident's funeral. She was released at 10: 15 a.m. hy a Superior CoUrt order. spokesmen at the women's section ·of Orange County jail said. The services began at l l a.m. at Pacific View Memorial Park chapel. p.ta-i;e ~.,. ...... ~.:.-_7L:=:_~1 1 SCHOOLS TURN ~ 100,000 LOOSE ~ If almost · 100,000. school children along the Orange Coast were more ' fi'olicsome than usual this after· no6n who could blame them? The tWo weeks of Christ.mas vacation had be~n. . tl! School bells won't ring again un- i til·Monday, Jan. 5 of. the new year. ~ But first A visit from Santa and ·a turning of the page by Father " , Timt. And then, wh en the holidays have ,\ gone. back t.o class and remember · ·\o write 1970 instead of 1969. Mrs. , Hunt was returned to her cell thert at 11 :45 a.m, The 43-year~ld brunette allegedly stab- bed her fifth husband in tbe chest with a butcher k'nife ·during a heated argument in their Corona del Mar borne. Hunt died a few hours after the stab· bing as a team of doctors tried open heart massage In revive him. Hunt, \\1hose only other sur vivor~ were a daughter. trom \Vest Los Angeles and his adopted slcpdaughlrr (Mrs. Hunf11 rtaughlt'r by a previous marriage l was buried at Pacific View Memorial Park. f\feanwhile, both prosecution a n d defense attorneys in the murder case \\"ere preparing for Mrs. H u n t ' s preliminary hearing next P.1onday in Harbor Municipal Court. Aside from Mrs. Hunt'• brief release from jail, ahe ls being held without bail. Drivers Licenses' List Sales R~ped SAN DIEGO (AP) -Sale of In- formation on drivers licenses and vehicle registration "forms should be banned as a ,;gross invasion of personal privacy," I.be Assembly statewide information policy comm ittee has been told . "The potential for abui5e by buyer:11 <1f lhis information concerns me greatly," Assemblyman William Campbell , R-Ha· f'ienda Heighl'3, told the. committee Thursday. SANTA BARBARA (AP) -Opponents of of/shore drilling in the Santa Barbara Channel have word that boUJ . or California's U.S. senators share their vie\\'S as a new oil sliCk fl6at¢ over about SO square miles of the bltte Pacific. lJemocrat Alan Cranston on '.J1lursdl!Y asked P~esident Ni:ton to place tJie chan- nel oil re~crves "in escrow" 11nd th3t all new drilling be banned until ,a~equate safegultl'ds are developed agalnst further spills. And Republican George ri1urphy told a \Vashington news conference the new leak may. be a warning to abandon drilling, adding: "We ought to lake the hint. Maybe God doesn't want us to do an)' more poking aiound in the channel." Cranston's statement added that ''President Nixon has a unique, op. portunity to correct the errors of the·past and, at the same time, make a dramatic turn toward a new and environmentally sane national policy of oil production." The new slick of£ the picturesque coastline conUnued to ·spread -moving i;lowly south-eastward about si1 miles of! the coast. Fritz SpringmaM, a Union• Oil Co. spoke!IDan. said the f•ulty pipeline·was expected to be replaced by night.. , The Coast Guard ha.~ estimated that more than 10.000 gallon!! or cnide · oll sPurted from a ~ight-lnch 'bfeak in the undersea pipe at a i;pot where the pipeline was welded to the drilling plat· rorm. Al Forgit· to ~un Again United Fund Gets Ford Donatio..n The I:ord Motor, Company rFµnd · ~as donated $.131780 · lo Newpodl ~Beach'• United Fund, the largest.1lngle•donation thu:t far in this year's . c~r:ripalgn . for Ex-councilman w Ftgltt Coasta,J ·Freeway Route By .JEROME F. c:oLUNS Of lflll OlllJ , •• ,..., AJ Forgit, who Jost a bid for re.election to the Newport Beach City . Council lesa than two years ago, said Thursday he will run again. This time, said the eolorful. tough-talk# Ing hardware n1erchanl~ hC! will seek the seal of Jloward Rogers in councllmanic District I. The district encompnsses the peninsula south ol 32nd Street. Rogers has not yet made up his mind "·hether he will seek rt-elecllon in April. "11 '1 too early to decide,'' he aaJd. In April. 11168. aerospact uecutive Donald .A. Mcinnis defeated Forglt by a 2·1 marlin in the District 2 race. 1..ast spring, the""clty council realigned itistrirt boundaries. Forgit'1 home, above his hardware store~at 2205 W. Balboa g1vd .. was rrmoved from Dlsrlct 2 and Included in District l. Jl made him ell· ·' i J fihle to~ as 1,candKtat.e·from.DiS\iict .ih next AprU'1 municipal election. _ Focgit said the reaSOrt" ~ wants to get beck on the council is to "fight that· d&mDed free.way." . He referred to the adopted alignment of the PaclOc Coi.sl Frteway west ol the · Upper Bar. The council ~1onday asked Costa Mesa to aid Newport's ,effort& to shove tile route-farther inland, though slil1 within Newport'• boundariet. The- . Costa Mesa council roplled Tuesday wllll ·a polite "No." · Forgtt Slid he me\ wilh several sup- porters Thursday and told them to start plannlq 1 wnpal&n, he would run. "We're a:oing to revive the Freeway Flgbt..-1," he declared. Forgll helped start-the iroup-tbout five years ago. It ralstd lunch to_pa1 far Mudlts aimed at cha4ln& the all,pUnenL "We've still cot plcnfy of money left," said Forgit. "l don't undentand Coata Mesa 's ' :-... position," he· aakl. ···he roulfl we want ~wm't touch Cofta Mesa. It'll 1tay in Newport. And wt've.got . to move the thine from Where they've got It now. It wfpea -out halt of our a.sseued ~aluaUon, wreck& M•riners Mile and we'll end up with a wall 40 feet high In West New- port." $205.258. ' : • The check w.as elven on behalf or the auto maker thrO!.igh ita Oi'an·ge: County Community RelaliOM· eomrnmee: It' WU ooe of several donalioM made by Ford In American citiel wher• it'. · h a s subsidiaries. · tord opt!rate1! Philco.Ford Aeronu- troruc In NtWpOrt Beach. ; The funds will be augmef'lted by personal donations made by Philco-Ford employes, fund 1pokesmen saw . Sco..k Market Forgit said bis decision to run ls par· tlally baaed on word earlier this week from Councilman Paul J. Gruber that he won't seek reelection In April. The former two-time mayor was elected from District 4 in 1962. Gruber reports that he be.Uevcs two terms lo office Ire NEW YORK (AP) .-Stocki p,iOed. enough for any man. back .[rom levela reached In earlier trad- Gruber and Forglt hJve thou&hl 1Uke ing today, but advances sUIJ maintained on the freeway issue for yun. !:orgit...-.a -comlortable 700-IMue lead ' over ~ Indicated Illa! their empbotic_ ttand cll,,... (See quollUO<I!, Pages 1!>11). 1galnst 1 c••.,llille-hugglng lllpment Aoalyot.• •llrlbul<d me -0r llJ•. pull· should continue to be represented on the back to pforJt taking and a rcnewal of councU. · tax·JOll &elling. • e ·e1ze San Bernardino Post ·Gardner Named .i\ppellate J·udg~ -. By TO~l BARLEY Of "" o.ur P'li.t IHeff Gov. Ronald Reagan today appoiftted Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner o( Newport Beach to the post of aSIOciate justice of the Fourth District Court 0£ Appeals in San Bernardino. The governor's prw secrei:.ry said the date of Judge Gardner's transfer fiom the court to which he was appointed by Gov. Earl Warren in 1947 will depend oo the confirmation of his appiointment by the State Commission on Judicial A~ pointmenb. "That's a formality and J gueu it will come immediately after their approval.'' a spokesman for the governor's office said. Judge Gardner, who will be 58 on Dec. 27, was not available for comment at press time. He was presiding over the criminal calendar court which has been under his di~ction fot" many or the 22 ytars he has ·spent on the: Orange County Superior Court bench. Judge William Speirs 0£ Newport Beach, wbo .takes_ over Jan . 1 as Qle Superior Court's presiding judge, reacled With wha"l he dcsCrfbed as "deej>ly mixed cmotiOns" at the news of the · ap- pollllmenL • '. l "l am very happy for J~e Gardner and my thoughts will be eehoed.by every member ol the legol p.ol;..toii lp,~e COdnty," lfo said. "He hai a&rllfl bieil 1 dedkoted aod mariotr -----Ibis court will not be the ume without hJm. "But I am going to miss him next year," Judge Speirs said. "He Is going to leave a fap in this court that will take a long, long tJme to fill." . A graduate of USC Law School, Judge Gardner served as a part time city judge of Newport Beach and an Orange Coonty deputy district attorriey before his ap. pointment tO the Superior Court bench. Married, With two daughters, he lives with his wile: Katharyn at 320 Evening Canyon Road, Corona del Mar. . ./ A prolific writer in law,.Judge Gardner Is acknowledged by the' legal pro£es&ion as .a nationwide authority ht more than one lega l issue. He has, perhaps, written most e.xtenslvely on 'criminal and juvenile law and his views have' been expressed NAMED TO APPl!ALS (OURT Newport'• Judge c;1rner :-- ' ' and quoted In a wide ranee. of lea;al and lay l"Jblica.llons. An aclive participant in civic and com- munity arfairs, Judp Gardner was namo ed is man of Ille -/eGlilr NtirP«t Bead! tn .1961, man or Ille ,..r bf-JiM>-Orl Harbor Kiwanis In 1967-.d mmjof N° year by Newport Harbor sputic llealut" in Jfl66. I, / His other civic endeavors inclifffe fuem. bership in the World Affairs Cou~il .1.nd the Friends of the Library Organiu"1out in Newport Beach and the Uq.iveJ1ity ~ California Irvine. A dedicated surfer, :he has also played a major role in the 'lif. fairs of the United States Surftrls Association. Judge Gardner Is no stranger to tht San Jlemardino appellate court and lefV• ed there this last summer on leave of ebse11ce from his county bench. The 111t he will fill early in li70 was cruted by the legislature In the 1969 tession. Thundering Su~f Starts ToPoundCoa8tBeaches By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of fllf Oaffy Plltf SI.if Thundering breakers, rolling 1n sets ahead of a ·violent ocean storm, began to pound the ctr&11ge Coast today, prom· ising to surge over into low-lying areas on si:t·foot-plus lides Saturday and per· haps Sunday. Not every point along the 44 mites of rounty coast will be affected by the waves, which are coming in at 1 west· crly angle, according to sea0w11tchlng experts. The storm 200 miles offshore, however, Is characterized as creating carbon copy conditions of lasl weekend's wave-and-- tide combination which ravaged section.. of Ille CIJUornla e<>aslline. Giant swells up to 14 feet In some badly exposed sections ·ate ei:pected to strike-hard, especially at Oxnard Shorn ar:wf Mandalay nea.ch Jn Ventura County, where more than $1 million In damage has· been caused. Flooding and .some beac;h . erosion , Is pn>1>'6le at certain spi>ta ·1oea1fy, hciw· eVa, the U.S. Weather Burtao warns. Waves began rising vis1bly by.the ha.If· hour today, shortly llltt· I 5:$1 1.m. high tide, while Ille nut win .be al f::IO a.m. Saturday, reathing S.J: feet. In aorric coastal areas. Seal Bt:ach lifeguards said waves were a mere three feet this mornina ,at \belt relatively protected 1horellne but the trend was toward a rapid increa~ down· coast. "It'• 11hapl.ng up rut," aald HuntJng· ton Beach Lifeguard Lt. Mark Bodm- bendflr, tatlmalinl some atofm waves at eilht fee~ wllll· a 11<1<1Y in.:r.-in- dlcted. Some • lashed the. Wldet~de ol th< pier. , ... "ff 'this Is any lnG.1caUon, we ahoold have aome blg 1urf tomotrOW," ht 1dded. - Surfera were conspJctioUs by their ' ab!ence toe!i:Y as the combers. ri\ou~. while a d.isc~rded surfboard snl,PPf4 in half lay beside Pacific Coast;..lllgbway at The BlulrS in HtmUJ11ll1n llUch, (Seo SURF. P1ge II ·Weatller -ll"won't elactly be a 'Weekend to write home about -unless your home is 'Jn the northeast where they're buried "in 1now. Look for low cloods, fog llld ,iiild,lfl. temp- eratures. INSmE TO.DAY. ·curtain calf.t" for th~ 10 best comml'nitv thcoter pTtldMc;fon.t of . 1969 · are , glv.m today o.t the' W etk'end~!"r's' tntermiftion column review• the part ueor on local 1toge1. l . -' ............. _,., --·· = ..... _.., -. :-:::-"'""... . .• jJI I ~llJ It ,. , .w:-:::;n...--U~ ... f • .,_., ... ~r.;======·===·==::::=·====;::·=:;;=::;;;;;;;;;:;·:::::;;;:;::::-:: .. ::;;;;;;;:;:::;;:;;::::;:;::;:::~:.:;,;:;.:::::.;:;.~.;;.,,.;;:,~.;;.;;.£;.;;:.;.,,:-;;::;:=::;;-..~ .. ~ .. :~::::::. ------;... -, .,...,_ .. .,. • N Judge.Hal~. Lease £01· -~ . Rival Firms A ;eue q:reemen t that would have pul rlvaJ savtnp and 1o:an Companies tn ad· ,ioining sections of a Newport Center of· ·flee building "'85 halted Thursday by a . sUpn1or eourt judge. Judge Samuel Dreizen accepted the .'1rg11rnenta ol Newport Balboa Savings and Loan AssociaUon and clamped a ,tenporary reattaining wder on defen- dants Glendale Federal Savings and Loan lAssociation and the Irvine Company. i He will hear argumenl! for both $ides !lee. 21. At isaue is the complaint cf Newport ,:Balboa thal Irvine and Glendale Federal 11egotiated a lease for the valuab~e Newport Center property that was 1n vtolation of a lease already drawn up ~between the Newport firm and the Irvine <:ompany. : The Irvine-Newport Belboa S1vings contract allegedly called for occupancy o{ the premises at 5Ml Newport Center Drive with the granting of an "exclusive:• thal would bar competition at I.east until Jan. 20. The complalnl allf:ge1 lhal Glendale Federti with the full knowledge and agreement of the Irvine Campany, plan· Tied to opm its doors at 500 Newport <:enter Drive on Dec. 27. .-Glendalo'• entry Into the savinp and -li>sn operation at that time ....,Id, Newport Balboa cont.nds, hit them lwd ii the "retnvutment ........ -the end iii the ,.ar perjod when !IWll' substontlll ~ .,. mode and major bullne.., f!rms.nplu their porUoliol. · And Newport Balboa contenda that part o( tht le-•l""ment with Irvine called for them to have at leut four rtln· vutmmt period• before any competiUon wu allowed ln the prime Newport Center 1ocaUon. Tbey have, they state, been !imlfod, to three -April, July and October of this year. The complaint asks the court to recosniile that the Irvine Company violated the tenna. ot its. aareement and that G!ftldale Fsdoral sboald be bUTed from qpen!ng it~ the Newport Center bclan fan. so. u -that..tht Glendale 11rm almdy hu an ou1let In llowport Beach-at lW Eaal ceut HJatnray. 'FHtn P .. e 1 sullF :';. lestimony to the brute power of the r;e11. "We are getting them upwards pf &ls feet " Hid Newport Bacb Lifeguard Kay' Garver. but the intenalty of the swells Tari ed. biUm hardest" from 30th lo 44th ;treets ~ the Santa Ana Jtjver jetty. Moderate surf conditions -but 1till buildin!J: up -wtre reported from El Morro "Jfailer Park IOUth alon1 the rocky coast o~ Laguna Beach. The moat notable increase appeared to be in the San Clemente area and lif~ JU•n:ls aaid the pattern would probably 1ndie1te hi1her surf along San Diqo county beaches. "It's shaping up Tapidly," said Sal\ Clemente Lifeguard Hank Barnu, whit estlmated the wavu had TiffJ'I by at Jeut tVIO feet since he came lO work 30 min· utu earlier. "They are six to eight feet now' ••• and here comes another nice one," he 'aid, adding that so far . the waves are running consistently higher than they ha ve the last tv.•o weeks. Craahirli combers last weekend wtte hi ting 10 and 1 t feet with occaalonal larger waves at Cotton's Point. below President Nixon ':'. \Yhite House \Ve.st at San Clemente. The storm-whipped seas cost four lives duril'li the two.day period in which tides reached seven feet, one er the victims drowned when a cabin cruiser cap:;lzed off H:.mtinJ.f:<>n Beach. 'Ibe Pacific 1torm which ia 1enerating the lateJt serious combinaUon of surf en top ot abnormally hlgh tides is the fourth in a series of weather front! to hit California in December. DAILY PILOT O•ANGC COA$T PUtl!l1jllll(; COM•A,.,. 11.~,rt N. w •• 1 "'"'"""' .... ,. ....... ~,~ J 1t~ R. C~rlty V Cl PrUuS"'' n e.-.i M.IM,.r T~'"''' 1e,,..,u (.,,, ... T~'"''' A. Mur•hJ"' Mt~lflll lfilel' J,,.,,., F. Celli•1 ........... Clly lf•ltl' N...,,..,.._.o..... 1111 W11t a11"' h.f ........ '4tllillf All••ti: P.O. l•s 1a11. ti,,, .,_......, • °""' ·-; i. W.,t .. ., "'"' ~a.a.: m ,._, ,........,. """'' ....... 9-Cl'I: ''!'' hKfl • ..,_..., \ . DAIL 'f •ILOT •lttlt .... •~11111 S~t,.,,.M The Gingerbread Gong Some o1 the building materials di sappeared during construction but members of Lido lsle'a Den s; Cub Scout Pack 37 managed to complete their gin- gerbread house on schedule. Walter Wiebacb, Steven Richley and Soot Williams I !rom left) help- ed deliver the hou1e, complete with icing, cook.1:es and candy to pediatrics ward at Hoag Memonal Hospital. Old Oceanfront . Building OK'd For Restaurant Pennission for operation of an new re~laurant ind cocktail lounge In a long· \'&cant McFadden Square store building was grant"ed by Ne\vport Beach planning commiss16ntrs Thursday. The commission approval of a con- ditional use permit will allow George L. Racer of Newport Beach to convert the near-blighted variety store building at 2116 W. ocean Front into a prestige-style rtstaurant Orilinal plans to use existing city park· Ing areas as parking spats for patrons had been discarded by the applicant. 'J\&llf"tbld commissioners Th~ he would ProVlde his own lot for parking. ~s!Pners agreed. b.• ~g:, formerly the Newport Bet,~ Vrrief$ Store, has been Nacant for mcmths and has fallen prey lo v111dals. Rager proposes lo convert the building Into a 'po.sh restaurant wllh entertain· inent, Among lhe standard conditions for ap- proval set by the commission, Rqtr will have to~ ritum for renewal of his en: iertalnmeot pctmlt in a year. Police ~ City statffuembers would furnlah rouQn1 repxta:.on the pennit when renewal it aouah~ - -The. +r or the bull ding Is • Santa Ana woman. . · Rqrr would be l~g and lmprovln( th;e prerruses. he said. . 1'.he approval of the restaurant permit \\'ll one ·action in ·many on the com- mission's hea viest agenda in months. In oth~r action, commissionua ap- proved: · ~Several technical application& by the Holllein Company of Costa Mesa for il:ri large Northbluff planned residential development in the Blurts area. Com· missioner in past meetings already bad apJrOVed 1be project in g e o e r a 1 . ThursdaY"s 8Ctlons were for specific creation of lots for the subdivision. -A car wash and .1is station -project for the automotive area of Fashion Island in Newport Center. Commissioners ap- proved of the automatic car wuh near Coco's Res:~urant . provided the lrvlne Company : t:0mplies with stiff desi&n criteria to screen 'the project and make it compatible with lurrounding use!. -An application to opera te a take.out. drive·in restaurant opposite the. Bayshore community on 600 to 630 Pacific Coast Hiahway. The owner of the land is Jofinson and Son Lincoln fitercury. The ~ppllca.nt is T JM Enterprises of Phoenix . Ari%. City Wins Court Suit Over Illegal Rentals A Superior Court judge has ruled in and hot plates. De Baun's attorneys con· favor of the city or Newport Beach in a terided unsuccessfully that the independ· suit charging a Corona de! Mar man with ent bachelor units were accessory uses authorized by zoning regulations. the rental af lllegal apartments. Judge McMillan. in his memorandum City Attorney Tully Seymour said today of decision released earlier this week, the declalon by SUperior JUdge Byron K. discounted the De Baun argument by Millan "repretents a milestone in the noting: . "For there to be an accessory unit. city's efforts to preserve the integrity there must be a primary unit, and where of its reaid'2"Jtial zoning." the so-called acceuory unit is a complete Judge McMillan granted the city's re· and sufficient unit, there is no primary quest for an injunction against Peter unit. Where . it is a .~~ontained unit De B ~-· · th ............ complete with kitchen facilities and bath aun,_re~."'auung e pr~·~-cwner and private entrance, al in this ca~. it from renting illegal apartment uruts. Th• can not be construed as accessory." WJi\s are located in an R·2 zone at 40~-;I'he findjng means De Baun may rent '* ~em,IUf .• 208-~IB F.ern~eaf and .~,.~ daly two aj)artrIJents on each pr~perty, 23041.-.i Pacific Drive, all m Corona· d1r S~ymour sa ys. Mar. "This case," he said, "est.ablishes i The .city, in its suit fil.ed in July,~ •. p clear legal predecent whk:h will eliff!in· cP4Jpd Ui-_t ~Baun e~ceeded th(..~11a.te any UIJ:ertainty t?at ~y h~ve exist· -ed t\ff!,µn.ita at all of the addrfatt~ ed as to Uie correct interpretation of the and on som e of the properties had as regulations applicable .to R·2 zones. It many as fi ve un its. \viii serve as a basil for prosecuting The evidence disclosed that the bach-property owners and real estate ar.ents elor unlb were Tented with refrigerators who are discovered to be in violation of our zoning laws." Prison Ordered For LA Broker l n Lot Racket A Lo& Angeles broker whose operation nl a bitilding lot racket was unmasked by a Newport Beach woman was sen- tenced Thursday to one to 10 years in state prison. Robert Beitlt-r, 45, dre\\' that term (rom Superior Court Judge Robert Gard· ncr with a plea of guilty to one count of grand theft. Identical charges against BelUer, known to many of his victims as Ted Gregory, were dismissed . Beitler was arrested last July 24 alter 11 Jong Investigation of charges that he falsely acquired title to undeveloped lots through the forging or grant deeds and sold them to Orange County victims through newspaper adVertisements. · Investigators said the charges against Beitler covered an eight month period up to la.5t J~ly and the deals checked ranged from t4.000 to $15.500. More than a doten such transactions were process ed thrOugh Orange County title companit!, the1 said. BeiUer's lot scheme W33 uncovered when lttrs . Robert F. Anderson of New. port Beach offered a lot for sale. She left for Hawaii and later di sco\·ered. through i friend on the mainland. that her Nl!Y>· p0rt Shores property had been sold under lalse signatures. Seymour added that the major share nf credit for the city'& winning the law- suit should go· to Tom Woodruff, his for- mer assistant. Woodruff recently entered private practice in Santa Ana. ' Jet Noise Foe Disturbed At PSA Deal :With Air Cal Oran1e Coonty Airport exparufon foe Dan Emory isn't happy .11bout Paclllc Scuthwest Airlines' purchase of Air California. now," he said. Alr Cal flies 737's . "Tile 127'1/'·aaid Emery. "are heavier and noisitr than Air Cal's Jets. They welfh 140,000 pounds and its been proven they can Uy out of the airport her!." Fully loaded. the 737 's weigh 9S,OOO pounds. 'l'ycoon'• Bonds Coast Loot . Sold • In Europe Deals A :iizable chunk oI $436,000 in bonds •llegedly stolen from the eatate of a Newport Beach tycoon by a fugitive at- torney has been JOld In the shady in- ternational money market. lurnlng up in Switzerla:n"d. Investigators confirmed today that ap- proximately $75,(KlO worth of t h • nego!iable school-stocks ha ve been chan· neled into Europe's so-called Gray f.1arket. a clandestine network spanning the continent. "We have no further information other than that," said Deputy San Diego Coun- ty District Attorney M. James 1.Drenz. who Is awaiting forma! confirmation that serial numbers match the ml!llln& loot. An international manhunt, meanwhile. ls centerinc in Me'lico City {or Eacondid<> attorney Patrick S. M. Mitton, 47. He is wanted in connection with the disappearance Or the bonds belongiug to John Salmond, 79, of 2164 Vista Entrada , described by his heirs as a gravely ill man . T h e mild -mannered bespectacled lawyer is .c;har~ In federal and San Diego Coun{y wuranta with annd lheft and attempted extortion, with a phenomenal $1,052,500 bail fliure reaim- mended. The cue came to lilbt when Mitton allegedly wrote a letter to the retired Union OU Company e:zecutive'110n; John Salmond Jr., ol 19931 Bedlonl Lone, Hun- tington Beach, offeriilc to split th< mcney. Girls Still Out While Schools Check on Drugs Two Coata Mesa. fathers kept. U)tir daughters home from school again to- day as pollce and achoo! principals ccn- tinued to Investigate allegations of wide- spread drug traffic on campw. '·The police and I are beth busily at work; we're not leaving any stone un· turned," said DaviS Intermediate School Principal Werner Ca rlson. Co.st.a Mesa Police Captain Robert Green said, "We are investigating every single name turned over to us.·• He said police had been given a list of about 15 names Carlson obtained from one of the 1irls withdrawn from school. Four arreats have been made so far . Three of the four arrested ~·ere stu· dents from nearby Costa Mesa J{igh School. Mesa High Principal Frank Lopes said it is the collective fee.ling of his school's administrators that the drug problem is decreasing at the school. "I think the older kids have wised up," he said. "If tbere is any problem It is with the younger kids -the fresh- men and those in junior high." a Si • The junior Salmond, a vice president Bl Cal State, Los Angeles, and his mother, "'ere appointed conservators of the e;tatf a year ago after the 79-year-<>ld head ol the family's health began to fall serlous· ly. Investigator s believe Mitton -whft vanished from his eicluslve San Oleg~ Coun~y home, \\·here he left his wife and four childrtn -is trying to dispose of th• $435,doo in foreign nations. Und!<!r procedures of the Gray Markel. stocks are usually bought at be.Jow, market prices and cached in safety deposit hexes or passed from me uni derworld SOW'Ce lo another for years. Generally, they are known to t>e stolen. Besides the grand the!t and a.ttemptec extortion charges awaiting Mitton, the FBI has issued a warrant accusing hlJT, of unlawful flight to avoid prosecution. , Authorities mo ving swiftl y after the younser Salmond's receipt of the Nov. ZI typewritten letter offering to split the stocks or get nothing at all traced Mitton to Ensenada, Baja California. Milton was named attorney for the large Salmond estate last January, 8, ap· parently hired by the family's other at· torney. Yihile the wife and son became the conservators. Federal investigators explained that the missing bends -at least part ot them -were sold to a Zurich, Switzerland bank, then purchued by tht Geneva offk:t of a U.S. brokerage firm. i The specific loot involvu $45,000 in Loi Angel.., Uoilied School District bonds and $30,000 in Los Angele.s City School District hoods, but payment was stopped when they arrived back In New York Ci· ly. They were impounded by FBI agents. Mitton, a native Caodadlan who became a U.S. ciUzen Jn 1954, cashed a $5,000 check in Ensenada Nov. 25 and lJ known to have hidden out in a hCll.l.M trailer parked in a remote area elghl miles a\vay. ''\\'e understand that he is no strancer to Mexie-0," said Ensenada Police Sgt. Jesus Suenor afterward. adding that authcrities in four provinces were hun· Ung the. fugitive attorney. San Diego County District Attorney'• 1nvestigator Dick Bradford called the let· ler mailed to the Salmond famil y an ex· ample of the height of unmiligated gall. "Do not panic," one section allegedly read, "l have a market for the bonds and safe refuge ... I do not want you lo BUffet any mote loss than absolutely necesar:I . ,. . Tht amount of the I01Ss will be cor• robcrated by my 1969 income tax return. I am aware of the rules here." The original $500,000 worth of Union OU Campany bonds v.·ere c6nverted into the negotiable school bonds and Mitton 50Jd his own law practice for $10,000 before vanishing. He left the day after they wert delivered to his office, authcritiea ••Y, and the letter sent to John Salmond, Jr. explained a rendezvous in Europe would be arranged through ads in the PW edl· Uon fl{ the New York Times. - 'ome HOLIDAY LAMP & ~C_CESSORY! SP.ECt~L · 15% TO 30o/o: OfF DOIC'T MISS lHIS ~RE OPPORTUNITY. TO l'URCH.llSE OOR . FIHE LAM1'S AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS. CHOOSE fROM Ii WIDE SR.ECTION Of SUCH NAME IRANOS ·As MA •no --N 6UILO -ARTISAN -AHO': MAN'li MOttEI 091 -·COUIC1'10N·Of ACCISsottlS-c-,uso •;1111-AT A 11'1• SAWl6SI I •~' ~ 1.'rli 't iJ~ lOCAl _pl.f.Lll POI HINHDON-DlmL-HIRITA61 Tlte re1son, sald Emory, chairman of tM: Harbor Area's Noise Abatement Commluee. Is that Air Clll from the ... outset bas been responsl\'C to community concerns. "It"s been a good neighbor," he said. "I'm not so sure about PSA." Emory. appointed th is week by Gov. Reaaan to an aircraft noise study c:om- mitt.ee, noted that PSA recently caused an UprOlr in the Hollywood·Burt>nk Airport area by bringing in I»pastentV· Boeing 727 jet11 after firs t proml$i nJ,l;t would stick to Ute smaller, 110.passc.nge~ T.17'!. The n7's have three engines, tht 737'1 two. Emory also foresees an Increase ln traffic es a result cf PSA 's ac:qu isltion of Air Cal . "I'm sure they'll try to do1leg more flights into their whole flight syste.m," he sa id. "We'll probably be get- 1lni flights to San Diego. for instance." He said he regretted Air Cal's departure from the. local air tr!\nsporta· lion scene. as an independent airline. 7a1,.., "I lhinlr we c1n expect 'PSA to attempt to move their i2i's to Oranae County ., "In the two rears we 've dea lt with lhtm, We've found them to be 1 very rc!ponslble. communi~·mlnded airline. They agreed to flight patterns that ll.'ould dim inish noise. and lhe:y recently "&rttd to retrofit their en.£incs, to lesatn the pollullon. '' NIWl'ORT llACl4 1111 w ... dtff 0r. 642.:ioso OPDI NllA T 'nL t \ INllRIOlS P--.11-· o .. ,...,. A¥0illw.-Al0-HSID '· LAGUNA llACl4 JolS -c:-t Hwy. omt ...... .,. "m. • I I I . . . • • • DAILY PILOT Abernathy HeldinMen:ip~is,r~~~~~~~ 1st Black Capitalism Boss Quits ' ' I I .. Says He'~l Fast in C~ll MEMP!i1S. T-(AP) - Tho Re\., Ralph David. Aheraalhy, dlalmwl ol tho Southeru <histJan Leadenlllp Conference, 1'mt · to J a 11 Thuradly nlllht vowblg be would "teacli Mt.mpllll 1 lessoo" by 18'1Jng In his coll. Abernathy, one of It dvD right. leaders lndlcO!d Dec. t as an outgrowth of the seveG- weell classroom boycott by Negroe&, said he would only drink liqukla during his con- finement. Arriving lrom AUanta with six sll:ff members, Abernathy Jed about 400 penons on a two- columned march d o w n s.idewalb on both sides of Main Sl...t IDd IUITelldered at Ibo OO<dy jail. Tho chanti!!I mar<herl m tho .....Uo trek lrom a -dwrch to tho dvlc center enarled traffic at the be11J!1 ol a rulh boor. Abeniatby was expectod to ,,..,.m In jail at leut ..m Mmday when a U.S,. Dlalricl co.t'.'""'° .,al Id • a llllt __ to.,,._, city ..i poilOI cllldolo from -~the ~ 0.-till I I -· CM! rill* alllrDeya coallend the mw .,.. Jaw mating .It a ml"9ll1111U1• ror an adul to aao•wce a pupil to Illy GUI ol edlioi to engage ill a pro&eR. ..,,,,,P..ratlon is -ti-I Abemalhy joined lour local chll Tlgbts leodon who have declined a irbidPle to post a -II bait reqUi,..d belore 1beir release. ~ U'IT .......... WASHINGTON (UPI) -OPEN SUNDAY Pruldenl .N!xoo'1 llnt black 1 i • 5 eapltalttm dlroclot bu qu!tf~~~~~~~~~ tho procram. apparenU, ~Ii ca..,.olbulc~ with . tho admlnialraUCOt Oii bow It lhould ho nm. "Thomas F. Roeser, 41, an- nowiced bll realgnaUon 'iburf. day as assistant to Commerce 6ecretary Maurice H. Stam f<>< minority enterprise. He plam to become public alfalrs ~ ol lho Peace Corps. Slalll replaced Roaer Oct. :IS u director of tho Com- -nee:·~ COMBE), tho ._, aulllJled to carry wt Nlson'• blact capJtall!m efforts. lt was re- ported -C!ltlidered bll new appointment u Stans' assistant a demotion. Enjoy • Ham Family CHRISTMAS DINNER At The DlatJnctlve ___ .... ROAST TURKEY s.n.I,,_ J P.M. " Nixon Plan Increasing Negro Job Ranks Killed 'lbe civil rigbb: drive that readied in die Indictment. WU del!gned to pre5lln the scbool board ... IJ'ODtlog Ne-a greater "'1oo Iii'. ocbool alfalrs IDd to looce Calbolle><>perated SI, ~ llolpltal to negotiate wllb a Negro union local tMt bas beon !It SUike agallllt tho boopital since Oct. '· ~ have bffa no ta:Jks In the alrlloo, although tho school board has named two Negro "board advisers and has pro- mised lo push far a change in elecUm procedures to give Nqroes a chance to nm for th•bolnl .. XUAN THUY'S MAIL -Sens. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.), left, and William Spong (J>.Va.) look over oome of the 40,000 messages received tn Washington in response to Griffin's appeal for Americana to write to the head of the Hanoi delegation at Paris peace talks, asking for hwnane treatment of U.S. POWs and release of names. The U.S •. Jaycees have taken on project and hope to deliver the letters to Xuan Thuy m· Paris. Hanoi Broadcuts The friendly letters u- changed by Romr and Stans and made pubUc .by the Com· m·erce Department Thunday masked the diipute between the two men. The dl!pute never became public, but privately the Com- merce Department let Jt be known that RoeSfl' was taken off the day·tt>day operation of OBME bocaUle ol Inability to admlnjlftt the office. Roeser'• supporters, howev~-. said the key issue wu his unsuccess- ful effort to get a fmn com- mibnent or $500 million fer OMBE lrom tho administra· !Wn. Old F,1hle11M .Appl• Cld•r. Mold.d l•v•I A1u1e Ch.try S.tled. Fr.a. Cr111Mrrv Set ct. Whol• Or•"9• filled Wltlt Sw.at Pot•· to, lopped with M1r•h111•ilo'W'I Our Ow11 Cha1tiwt Dtff•l•t• Ho"'•"'•de Pvr.ip .. l1t lread. Hot Mi11c• Pie With lr.1114y Sa1ca, P1Mplda ""' Ir.a c,.,11\ or Sltarbet. WASHINGTON (AP) -The Senate hu voted to kill the Ni.ton administration's so-call- ed Pplilladelphla plan alm<d at tncreasm, Negro employ- ment m lederally financed coostructioo projeW. la a 52-37 vote 'Ibunday nl&hl tho Senate overmde tho wisbH ol tho admlnistralion Mine Safety Bill Facing Nixon. Veto? WASHING TON '(AP) - Despite Republican warnings oC a veto, Congress bu sent to the Whtte HOUR a totJih safe- ty bUl for the naUoo's 140,000 "'81 miners. O!lel ta'1"11 In tile bill art mine exploolcoa IDd t h • dreaded "black lung" dileue, dally threats In oome 140,000 coal mines. Before passage Tlmnday night, t b 1 ad-mloiJtratlan midi known lit objocUon to mo major """ vision ol the bill: fedmil payments to miners disabled by black lung. A disabled miner with a wife and two chUdttn w o u Id rece.ive $272 a month. The ad- ministration contends this will cost $385 million a year. Democril.ts put the figure at $60 million. Payment. should be handled by states, GOP congressmen said. Democrat,, argued that most states ha ve demonstrated they would not pay. "Shabby tnatment Indeed for our nadoo's coal mfnen:, .. aid Sen. Harrl.>ori A. Williama Jr. (0.N.J.), of tho ad- mlnlstnltton po&ltloll. and approved an ap.. propriatioos bDI amendment that said no money in that mearure could be .used to finance "any cootract or -"'1lch tho c:«np-tl1lller --1 o1 tho Umted States bolds to be In contra- ventioo of any lecleral <ta- Wte." Comptroller G-.1 Elmer B. Staal> oppooes th e Philadelphia plan -a re- quirement that contractors on leder'al jobs make "good lalth" ellxirts to hin a certain percentage of minority group workers -on grounds it amounts to the use of quotas in employment. Quotas. Staats has said, are outlawed in 'tbe 1964 Civil Rigtils Act, which bars discriminatioo in hiring on the grounds or raoe, color, religicxi, sez: -or nati0'18l origin. However, both. A.Jty. Gen. Jolin N. Mitehell and Labor lieoretary George · Shultz, in addttion to Nilan, hJve 8UP- ported the Pbtladelpbia plan. Defaiders of tho plan say tt seti "goals," rather than "quotas." 'lbe comptroller gmerat heed!: the general ac- counting cifice -mi a:m " eoo,r.ss. .. NY's Wagner Separated NEW YORK (UPI) -For· mer Mayor Robert F. Wagner and his wife, Barbara, both acknowledged Thursday that they were living apart Wagner, who was an \DISUC- ce..WuJ candidate in this year's Democratic mayoral primary, told news media that "at this point we are living apart. She (Mrs. Wagner) is under a doctor's care. My primary concern Is her restoration to good health." The~ ol tho acboob at times kept about onollall of tho city'• 115,000 JIUplls out ol clas..eo. Fllty-loor pelWll of the enrollment is Negro. POWs Send Yule Messages SAIGON (UPI) -Hanoi ~ to you.• lamfly not lo worry abool Pilots Ask Radio, In programs beamed Mayhew, a pilot, was cap. bi~Th.y will make Cbrlatmas to tho Far East, bu begun lured Aug. 17, 1968 alter his very pl'8111llt for us here broadcasting Ou1stmas mes-plana wu shot down over TWO LOCATIONS U N H I sages from American war North Vietnam, according to with a good Christnw: dfn. • • e p prisoners t.o their families in Der, lots of goodies, Christo 'the United States. the U.S. military command. mas mus Jc, decoraUon!, Roeoer ailo balked at Stans' order to launch a publicity campolgn for OMBE belore lt had jll'Oduced &llj' aubslantlat tu L TODA UNDA II.YD. "" On Hi • ks "Dear mom, dad Md fami· The cclnmand a id today It church services, and I'll be J8C I I'm 'II be 1·• to was '"""' of Ille ......,,,, looking forward toyourChrliit-,-==========.11 Y. .sure you g iru ""'""&'""'' mas package again this year/'1" hear my voice again," began language "R .. 11;.1 Hanoi broad- achievement& LONDON (UPI) -The b Id ·-~-it said. one message y a man enti-casts, which began earlier \Vorldwide Airline PI Jots fied as Navy Lt William John this week, but had no way of Another broadcast allegedly Union asked the United Na~ Mayhew of New Manchester, determi ning their authenticity. was made by Air Force lat tions to d a Y to take W. Va. "This will have to do The broadcast allegedly Lt. Michael Scott Kerr, a pl· responsibility for punishing this year as my Christmas made by Mayhew mged bis Jot shot down over the North airplane hijackers and said it Jan. 16, 1,967. Kerr ii from was considering a one-day i:I; 1' i:I; * * * p~~~eleo~ and a :strike to back up its demands. ~· · J Ending a tw<><lay jrivate Ni"xon Gets Peti.tw· n happy New Year to you all," meet;.... In ' --•--b said a message to Kerr's A THOUGHT FOR TODAY "',,.,... . ~--..... .., ~ ,.... ............ ... ......,. ... ..., ... ..,,m .. ... .......,_wwy..,., . _, . ...., .. , ...... Pltl!"5ENTl!D AS A l'U81.1C liERVICE EVEll:Y 0.t.Y IYI -.. ~~• I e lamily. "I '-!hi> ---Ioternational FederaUon ol '"'I"" ••• .._. L Roof! Co Airline Pilots A-.Um finds you In good health. My 11 "9 • PLACENTIA PHONE 524-2090 21J1 llllTOL ST. COSTA MESA PHONE 546 3414 COCKTAILS ...,, ...... IMI I #ti (lFALPA)saidtbenationmn--SANTACLARA,Calil. (AP) ly that Nllon will '1do health is okay, ao don't MY.n•..._ cerned wlth a hijacking "must -'The wife of the first aomethingbome.'; to ¢ my manr-=""'~"~Y~·~·~.'jjj' iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii'~"'~'"~'~""~~·~··~~~-~=:i:::::::~!!! assume -.a.ility !or ""--American pilot captured in ·-...,........ MJ1:1 the Vietnam war bas sent She married Navv Lt satety of pasaengers." 'J • "The problem is one for ""--President Nixoo a 70,000-Everett Alvarez, two montm Malet CrMit C.N1 11.t ... ..... ...... "IC' signature petition asking him before be left tor Vietnam sin f: ufb ~ ast ,. United Nailont," a statement to press for the relWTI of the years ago. Fb?'l:t tater CJ,0 ·' 0 UI "~me '.t ... ~wend of.~~ estimated 1,380 U.S. pn.onen -.., Aug. 1.1,JIM _..., waa T<J ~. e are• 000Y of war. shot do -""' .,.,_, "'""•• I · ' " .. " • r -• " set up for lhe protection ~f wn~., ........ ___ SANTA s HOME crews.,, Tangee Alvarez, 29, of Santa the secmd day ol air llgbtJDi • • • t• Clara said alter the slgnalures over North Vietnam. AWAY FROM HOME ~ Charles Jaelson, Secretary were mailed Thursday that She bu received about 30 . ~. 1 1 of the JFALPA, told the news .i'~ho~d~oe~s~not~~expec~~t~any~Jle~tten~~l'rom=~b:er:..:3:l·y:oar:.:oJdJ_...::~~~~~~~~~~"~"'°~·~·~·~-~"~'°°~nnw~•~··~""'~•~•~•~·~~~~~0-' conference the pUot union was miracles from the petition, on-husband. not interested in setting ibetf up as a Jaw enforcement body. He said the degree of punjlh- ment wa1 a matter which should be decided by each country. However, he said the United N atlons should accept a Jarger responslblity !or punishing the hijackers and that tho group of pilots was considering a 12 or 24 hours sbikie to halt all intematkmal air travel to back up their demands; '• ,.\ '· •. .. I ' , • ~~ South Against Wall Integration 'D-Day' Nears I JACKSON, MIH. (UPI) - Segregation ends ln many school districts in the South tooay with the letrut for the Christmas holidays. C I a s a reopenings in January will be on a de8egregated buis under the U.S. Supreme Court's "integrate now" ruling. MllsWlppl Is lbe .Ute hanl,.. hit lmmedl.Wy by the order, with about 35 ICbool districta m January o r February doadllnel. North Carolina bu three districll wilh a Dec. 31 deadline for ln-tegraUng. Nineteen districts In Ten· nessee must desegrep.le in January and U..ee Alabama districb: have WlW Feb. J. Elgbtj...,. dlstrlctt In Georgis have untll Sept. 1 to integrate or face a cutoff In aid funds. Othe!' districts in tho South have less stringent deadlines. "War has been declared," , said Georgia Gov. Lester Maddos. "Tho judges are VNl'J'ED S'l'A'J'ES NA'l'lONAJ. BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA !RANCH NOW OPIN SATURDAYS ,,.,, .... MON ... THIJIL 1t.I P.M, •ltDATJ 1M P.lil. f71 41 '4f.l:llf ......... , St. c.-rs-. c.-.. ... Atlt. VJfl Prllol'Mll.,.. E, H. LEVAN . saying to us, 'You surrender from the U.S. 5th Circuit your children to us or we're Court of Appeals, would "do going to take your money Irreparable damage to the away'," quality of public education in Gov. John Bell WllliBms and our ... te." several other Mi!Sislilppi of-"'Jbe effect <l this decree, In flcia1s have predicted the mo.st instances, will make orders handed down Oct. 251 by quality educaUon for Ule6e the Supreme Court will cause chiJdren an u t t e r im· mass withdrawals ·by white possibility," said the governor. students in heavily black .. In all cases, It will be di!rup-arw. Many black parents live, with educational progresa; also have ex pres 1 e d ap-brought to a sudden halt." prebeosion over tho lmpending ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;if charges. Some teachers have sub- mitted resignations in various districts, but an education spokesman said most ap- parently are v.·aJting lo see what happens after lhe first of the year. Williams sajd the Supreme Court decision, coupled wilh the implementation or d e r SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER FllP·OUICk lea Elacror KR '11" ONLY An ldfor 'Little IOmtWng for tht home" gift! Just flip the hondlt ond )OU tlave let cubes IMttntly, us- lty. Offtr Includes two speclaJ 20<:ube Ice E}tdor trlYlt • Mil n ·handy 80<ubo .......t T•~YIAION•APPLIAHOU 411 E. 17111 St. Costa Mou -646-1614 Parent's Ring A momorabll &ill for molhet or pndmother with a birthstone fO< each of the children. Addftlonll ltonn 3.00 etth. 2500 ~ ..... 0 weisfields Jl:WBLZRS SOUTH COAST PLAZA Upper Miii Ac,,,.. '""" .Wiiiwerth'..._,_ 540-7Jt7 Alto In t..kewOod Cantor -t..lcewood . l. . -· " . ~ •. ·-• ' , o,... ,:,~. 12tol •. _; S•ib;.' : .. .. ' " • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Jobs for Ne,vspapers frequently like to -prove or dhiprove points to the reading · public and ~e like to think we proved three points i'I just one •tor)'. 1ast week: -Newspapen do report worlhwliJ!e matters, not' solely crime, violence and kooky beh;\Ylor. -They an printed on Page One, not necessarily back i>ctween the astrological forecast and the reciP.U for eggnog and leftover twi<~y. • -A lot of teen-agen are neilher lazy nor unwlillng to work. Some hop-skip.and· jump readers may have .missed ft, but right there on PaRe One was a story about an Important local organizatioo, the Harbor Area Youth Employment SOrvice.-Llke many other front page stor- ies, bowever1 the report involved trouble -trou~le finding enough jobs for teen-egen and !\Inds on wh1ci0 to c.ontinue the employment Sei"vice. A lot of people·wlth worli for willing hands •aw Iha! story, judg\lll: from' the response. They came up wllb a varlet}· of 1obs for the scores of 'youngsters register-- ed at the YES office. , "We've just been swamped," said Mrs. Jean Riss, director of the Bhoestrin~·budget operation, which is staggering along' for the first time from a swnmer into a year·a.round function. The organization still has a need for -and the per• gonnel on record to. fill -steady part.time positions. as well as ·holiday odd jobs. But the most cri~ical and immediate requirement now is aid !rom service clubs and organizations which take pride in lending a help- ing band. This ·is a volunteer program, unassisted by tu money, unaided by fees such as professional agencies CbarJ?e. YES Chairman Jim Wood has even been making the rounds of the luncheon club circuit to outline the sag· Teen-agers ging linand&l post.,,.., try1ng to keep the p~Jm on a lull year operating basls. The investr6ent m YES will be more than aJ'ubllo- spirited act for those in a position to help. It wi be an investment in the people we bear so much about being ignored these days, conscientious, hardworking com- munity youngsters. By the way, did you miss that Page One story? Bay Ouh Argume~ts . , -It i• too early in the 281ll• to hazard aey gueH about lhe outcome of the Jan. 13 election on the. pro-.• posed new Balboa Bay Club lease. One thing, however, is certain: w~re ln for some energetic campaigning, by both sides. This was indicated last week by lhe sl.rQ!lg argu- ments -pro and con -advl'hced,ori the issue by Bay Club Vice President Richard Stev'ens and former New• port Beach Vice Mayor Hans Lorenz. The two found only one area Of agreement in theii' debate, the first confrontation of presumably many. Th ey said it would be. impractical to tear down t b e recently built apartment structures occupying the site in 1998, should the pre<ent idea be allowed to terminate -then. It is Stevens' contention that this is one of the rea- sons why the club's occupancy of the land should con· tinue beyond 1998. Lorenz feel! that the need for public use of the land should override any questions about what to do with what is there 29 years from now. At tltis stage, opting comfortably for eilher man's viewpoin\.'is difficult indeed. More arguments are yet to be heard. • 1 • ' IN) <AvSE AN!> EFFECT V .S. Prisons Only Corrupt The Inmates Dear Gloomy Gns: La.ml Exchange Opponents "Not Selfish' P91Y not one American in 10,000 has !Veri~ch as looked at a government report called "The Challenge of,Crime in , Fret:'8oclety"; which was published 1earlJ ....,~ago by the President's ;ommlulon ~w Enforcement and ~dministratlon Of\lusUce. • tn this report, leading experts in the ield of penology recommend vl$t •and 1weeping changes in the way we i\m our ,rison &ystem -changes that would_ )CJ)e{it not only thl inmates themsefvet, }lit' that.:cwould also redUc! the. cOst to :ociety4 maintaining huge penal struc- ure.s tblt only intensity the problem ol :rime. ~1 • TH&RE ARE ABOUT l ,, million of. end.era in OlD' correctional programs, ind each year our correctional in- 1Utution& handle about 21Ji million ad· nisslOni. lf we could return most of hese men to society· as responsible and M'oductlve dtizena, our crime rate would lrop cpnsiderably -bot most of them iecome repeaters, gotng on to more ieri9u' crime aft.er a prolonged stay in 1rison. Our present institutkms do not correct; lley corrupt. Even this cauUou.s and of· icial rtport concludes that "the con- )itions under which many offenders are '1andled. particularly in ln.stltutions, are ~ten a positive detriment to rehabilita- 'ion." THE REPORT GOES on to say 1lunlly: "Life in many institutions is at ~t barren and futile, at worst mspeakably brutal and degrading. To be w-e. the offenders in &ucb lnstltutionli 'When the Russian1 sent up their first Sputnlk years ago, the criUcs pounced on the schools, blartilng them for failing to educate stu- dents for the Space Age. But when Americans were the first to walk on the moon, few voices were heard Jn priise O( what and how we leach. -R.L.F. t hll ll1lur1 Nfllm r.-n" ,,..... 19' 111n1 ... r11Y tllnt 11 tll9 _."'· ...,. \I-1'tt ...-w ,. OIMll!r 0.,.. DlllY "llltf. are incapacitated from committing further crimes while serving their ~~. b u t the condillons in ·which ~ Jive .,,, the poorest poailb1' preparation 'for their successful .reentr)' irito society, and often mere If relnforc«. in them a pattern of manipu lation or destructiveness ." More th.an half the men in prison have not completed an elementary school education. Most Of \hem have no skills, and Uws no job possibilities when lhey are released. They return to \be same en- vironment that prod~ them,.only 111Qre bitter, more expert in the waya of crime, and more detennined to "get even" for their -punishment Penitentiaries don't make men "penitent," but vindictive against society. WE MUST BEGIN with the youth of- fenders , who too often are turned into criminals in the very juvenile detention homes that are supposed to "refonn" them. We must get the communiUes, the schools and colleges to take part in rehabilitation programs. We must have work-furloughs and more flexible pr~ bat.ion and parole policies. We must get better personnel, better trained, better paid, and better motivated than the present political hacks. otherwise, all we shall get is "better" crime by men whose only ambition is retaliaUon. The Quiet Americans B1)t;LETIN BOARD: Just a century tgo a group or tea and silk farm workers. ;gown as the Wakamatsu Colony, arrived 1 El Dorado county, the first Japanese ~migrants to settle In this country. {A 1tranded fisherman named Manjiro, 1owever, v.·as plcked up by a New l.ngland whaler In 1843 to become the irst tknown 11Issei,'' or first generaUon lapanese, to reach th.,. shores.) -Martina the centennial is a full-dre<s li.<to<y ol Ja-Amertcans. "Nisei: M>e Quiet Americans." The auth« is Bill ;{osok•n, a Dtnver journalist and 1imself 8 °Nisel," the Japanese. word ne.aninC second generation. HCllOkawa la 1 veteran « the rtlocation camps of tbt eartimf: J"°' when the American army, n an at.qogpbere ol some hysteria, -ounded up more Uian 100,000 !"el ano 'fJSel as pottnUal !OCUrity riskJ. --... B11 George-~-, Dear Geofgt: Row/come you've. h8d 'no com- md -'" educaUon In tl>o acboolll Are you pro or con! WONDEl\ING Dear Woodering: I UIOd to be !ftltY much ol O•P"> but you !mow wbat muria(e CID do to. man. (U ,....-p.n up other ad- vice co-u ,hope!...,, why net wrlle to Georlt .00 &I~ him upu~a!IOI) THE EVACUATION period 1s covered In considerable detail in this book, but never with btttezones.,. Indeed, the boOk is a record of a great American success story, ... _. Horatio Alger i,Ie on an tlhni.c; scale." as lhe author put ll It I• 11' elQo queiit --to Ille ow..JC im-migrant story that focuses on a 1mall but not IM!gnifloant aegment of t h • Amaican people (Morrow: Illus., 110.1111). Notea OD die M1r&U -The frustration of the Vietnam ••r gives fresh urgency' to I. F. Stone'• '"111e Hlddm HJ~ of the Korean War," a cluslc analySll first published In lllliZ and prac:CJc:aUy lgnOred when il appeared tn that McCarthy era.. A new edttlon of this tmparlant work, long oul of· prlnl, wu recmtl;' Jlllbllshed by Monthly Revl<w Pma (17-M). Stone's •coounl o1 ~ llUS earlier American milttaty adYtntl.ll'e In Alia upoaes the ..,,,, kind of olllcial mendacity and the aame. booby traf)e on the roed to pe1ce that have been evident In lhe Vietnam slluaUon. -Ida M. Tarbell'• famou "RIJ!o!y ol the Si.ndard OU Company" (1101), • boolt lhal ati.cked America"s f1nt major lnduslrlal monopoi, and helped &.- augurate the "muckrac:ktt movement .. appeari ill a -version, edlled by David M. Chabnttl. A NirlOn Library paperback (!US). Oppose Dumping To the Editor: Your editorial of Dec. 12 concerning the restoration o! the water skiing course in the Upper Newport Bay seems lo represent all opponents of the land ex- change a·s: narrow and selfish people, which they are not. As perhaps t b e staunchest of the opponents of the land exchange, interveners in the court litiga· ,lion, we h.tve no objections to this dredg· ing which must be done with Army Engineer Corps approval. ~ Although we hold no membership in any conservation group, most ol tht op+ ponenll of the trade with wh<fl1' we work In an attempt to keep the Upper Bay in the public trust are members of at least one active conservation organization. It is not the approved dredging which they are protesting. It i.s the location of the dredg- ed materials which are removed and placed somewhere else. ON FRIDAY WE had sever;tl calls from conservationist frlends who ex- plained th.at a dredge had been working since 6 a.m., and the tailings apparently were being placed on the patent lands .. .\s interveners, this t'Oncerns us, because the patent lands are. involved in the Jawsuit. It isn't generally known that., whereas the county holds an easemenkto dredge this 2~e area al any time for purposes « fi!hing, navigation and ct>m· merce if the county puts lhe dredged materials at the shoreline within the pa· tent periphery, the filled property created goes to th e Irvine Company. It seems unwise for the county to fill this patent shoreline until and unless the trade L!'rul· ed consUtuttonal. Surely it is possible for the Harbor District to find a location for the dredged tailings ether than in the tidelands of the Upper Boy. MR. AND MRS. FRANK ROBINSON Sarrltlclng Q11aflt11 To the Editor : It does not take a mental giant to reallu that there is a direct relationship Enough Laws ' ,,. • ·Pr . ' -·' s Comin'enu· ri • • -' Afton, Wyo., lodept:qdtllt: ''We've read some comments decrying the fact that no algntflcant laws have yet been passed cturlng the Nixon Admlnlstration. There are some who feel this might be qulJe an accomplishment in itatU. Gbvernments have been trylng to ·legislate away I.he.Ir problems for yem. withou,t succes..'\. Maybe instead of passmg myriads of ne.w 11.wa wt should put more energy into en· forcing the ones we. l\ilve. The problem being lalked about lhe most -poverty - can· best be solved. not.._by passing laws, but by people rolling up their slee,·e.s -.net , gotna: to work." Wetl Point, Mt••·· Tlme1 Lt1der: • .. Alaska couldn't miss hltllng the jackpot. Tht machinery was well oiled. The world'• giant petroleum.firms have. put up more than $900 mUUon ln bids for leun on Alaska's North Slope. oil lleld!:. The money has atreedy been invested,'" and I• producing almost $45,000 dally In· iemt for Ille si.i.. It all l!larted wlUI the dl_.,-y or the biggest oil field on the North American cootlntnl • . • Alaska leased 150,158 ..... , cl stal ... wnod l•nd. And · now the newt bonanza will ~gin when lue1 on the oil JUelf at.art now~ lng." . ' Mailbox. ' ' 4~ 'Ji.:'·-..... ~ Letters from readers are welcome, Normally writers should convey their messages in 300 words or less. The right to condense letters to fit space or eliminate libel is reserved. All let· ters must include signatUre and mail· ing address, but names may be with· held on request tJ JUfficient r easo n is apparent. Poetry will not be pub- lished. between density of population and pollu· Uon of the environment. Recently I read. as regards. Orange. County, that "air pollution re-';l'lalns unchecked'' and "deaths · from em- physema are rising 65 percent a year.'' Nevertheless, I learn that some people still advocate "development" of the Up. per Bay. "Development" means tidelands filled and used as sites for high~ensity housing. NOW, DO W REALLY want to cram more cars our streets, more boats into our bay and more piers along our shores? Besi es man-made amenitie&, what makes e Newport Bay area a quality environm nt? It is climate, pure water in the bay fairly clean air and op+ portunities for a ariety of water-0riented recreation: boa · ng, fishing, skiing, en· joyment of pub c beaches and the small remaining natural areas. How will these delights be affected by Increased popula- tion density? They will all be affected adversely. Will the quality of We here be beUered by "development?" Or are we sacrificing quality for quantity? . _ ALICE BROWNFIElfD Could Be Better To the Editor : I am a senior at Corona del Mar High School, and as I look back, I realize. all the time J have wasted taking classes T will never use. "Required" courses took teachers, classrooms, administration and materials to make it pos&ible for me to attend many classes necessary for graduation I didn't want or feel I rieeded. Statistics show that a filudent going to college hu forg!)tl.en about 80 percent of the things he learned in high school. ·Il'1 easy to see why when a saident attends classes he has no Interest Jn and will never use.. He is simply there ror a grade, not really to learn. Grades are what really Jll3tter after alL That is all that people look at anyway. IT'S SAD, BIJT TRUE, Uiat grades play such an Important part,_ of a person's life, especially today. Cci!Jegf' qualifica- Uons, draft status, and job possibilities all hinge on them . 1 feel that grades cannot and do not realisUcally measure a person, which they are doing today. A crade shows what one does in a claM. according to the ln!itructor. nothing more. A person d~s not have to receive a good grade to get a lot out or 111 class. How you are able to use 1 what you have learned la more im· portanL HIGH SCHOOL is geared for the slu• dent going to c:olJege. but there are mM y high school atuden\8 who cannot or will not attend college, and must lmmcdlately look for a job to support themselves. Can they comprehend what they read, use figurea, nn out an lpplication, write a lttttt to a prospective employer, fill out an income ta1 return? Have they bet1t coun.,elcd -toward any goal? In many cases, I doobl It! rm nol aaylng lhe school system is all ( • Ill the Tidelands that bad. I'm saying it could be that much belter. RICK POPOVITS Sl1ametul Thltlfl& To the Editor : The latest ratio of barter bet\\·een the soft free nations and the hard captive na· tions is shown in the pr-isoner exchange of 58 Egyptians for two Israelis. Now, pre· judiced people like me could say that it was an even swap, that , two Israelis are • worth 58 Egyptians. but that would not . excuse the shamefuJ ratio oC 58:2. Should have been 2:2. OTHER ·snAMEFUL things the free world is surfering are : The Pueblo in· cident, the ·no-win war, the stubbornness of Hanoi at lhe conference table and in withholding POW infonnalion, the My Lai conspira<;y to blackmail "repara· lions" from the U.S., the infiltration of anarchists, the corruption of youth by drugs, and ·many other alien attempts designed by foreign aid recipients to bite the hand that feeds them and, come hell or highwater, to plunge the world into a slate of chaos in which the masses would eat up the available food, use up the ex· isting prixlucts, and care nary a damn about the immediate nei<I for replacing them by hard work and lionest indu"sti-y. I · rest my case. MILT BASHAM 'Aluoh1tel.y Ret1oltln11' To the Editor : As a property owner \n Corona del Mar and having previously owned at least six dog!: in my lifetime. 1 reel free to make the following suggestions : Dog licenses_ or permits -to keep-dogs should not be .hsued to anyone who does not or cannot provide some sort or a "dog latrine" on his or her property. During the. past mOflth, l have walked along most or the waterfront of Newport Beach and Corona de! Mlir. Some of tbe areas are absolutely filthy and one of the "·orst places is Balboa Island. Th~ island Is too small and too crowded for people and dogs. t DO NOT OBJECT to people ex· ercising a dog. but to take a dog out to use our sidewalks as toilets is absolutely revolting . Our own dogs used our yard and .,Q- children had regular days to clean up and bury all droppings. l.4's keep our beaches clean for children, bathers and walkers. ALLEN H. BROWNFIELD Beael• Utter To the f..djtor : Your editorial on the proposed threo-• Quo.tes Jolin Hirt. S.F,, Alcatr3J caretaker - "At night, my wife and 1 can take a stroll ·' and know we're not going to be tut over the ht.ad .•. I guess you coukf say Jt'a the. safest place around," Samuel Rudtrder, Daly City -111 am humbly proud ol my puent., and btcause o( their advice and ,wctance t can look forward to becominl a co,,. alZUdive mortal I-ad of just i.klng up a needed apace on thb earth." Clalno B!Gom, --thlU .. ~a.t,-.. Jtag• oadlty -"If a !Crlpt call! !or flt· Ing your clothes oft and you N.ve • lovely body. take Ultm ol!. If yoti doll,, for God'• uke keep tbe.m oa." . .. tier parking lots for '\Vest Newport was indeed timely. The Governor's conference last week on pollution and CQnservation found many voices rising in protest to haPpenings aloilg our coast. The general feeling was that be.fore :-'o'e ruin our natural vacation spots. by building. roads, groins, etc., klo hurriedly, we had better call a moratorium and study the situation first. \\'est Newport (and probably central and east Newport, too) are not so "up light'• as the vernacular goes these days, at.out more people enjoying lhe beaches. Jt is "what goes wilh more parking : trash and beer cans dumped into our £ront yards lo name one thing . Last summer our West Newport beaches didn't get regular use of the beach cleaner because it was in greater demand to get at the lit- ter problem in Corona de! P.1!ll'. How can we handle MORE TRASH when we can't lake care or what we've got? PARKING LOTS make an area gradually get pretty tacky looking. If you doubt this, look at the apartments near tl1e Newport pier parking with the writing all over the back walls, etc .. and the trash dumped all over the streets and alleys. Then take a look at the area sur· rounding the parking area in Balboa. Jt is the sort of area you don't wanl your youngslers to do anything but bike through in a hurry. The Master Plan for Newport calls for Inland parking with public transportation to the beaches. This would keep the merchants and residents both happy, pro- viding money would be allocated for litler-can clean up. It would also cut down on the imposs ible traflic snarl on I.he Peninsula and Seasho re Drive tha t has the fire department and lifeguards so worried. MR. AND MRS. BRUCE L. NORDLUND 56 1\'ew Slftp Signs To lhe Editor: Having read in lhe DA ILY Pl.LOT ol the 'recent decision to install 56 new st"p signs in Corona del Mar, I can say that it is one of the. most important decisions that the Cily Council has mad \?. Every time l drive through the 8rta where the signs are In be installed. t never know who I will meet. coming throogh lhe intersection on the right or left of myself. Just to be cautious, I stop and look to see whq Is coming. \\'hy weren 't sig11s put lhere in the first place; or do we wait to see how many com· plaints and accidents there are before we go ahead aDd spend Ole money? I can on- ly say that I am in complete ravor of the decision. ( .. . WRliNEY COLBURN , ------ Frl~ay, Oecembe:r 19, 1969 The edito riat pGQt oJ the Daily Pilot seeks to info rm a nd stim· ulate readers bu prest1tting this MU).tpaper'1 opinions and com- me-nt.art1 on topics of int1rts& ond significance. by provfdi'11Q a forum for the t xpre1sion of our read~rs' opinion$,. and bu prutnting the diverse vitw- points o/ #11/ormtd ob1ervt11 ond-.lp0ke""t11-on topics· of;he day. Robert N. Weed, Publisher \ 1 I I: I I '' ' ! I I I l ; 3 . -. --------------· ,..-·---------------------------...-------~.~~-~-~~~·-----~-. •. • ----·------ ~men ' '• r BE.r ANDERSON, Editor ,tlclty, °""""' ,,, lflft N• ''" If I .,, Halls Ref l.ect Holid.ay C1heer : ' With miles of hall~ .. and many rooms to decorate, m~~rS~of. ~e Auxiliary of Hoag Memorial Hospital, Presbyterian, pthen!<t many knlCls of balls, tinsel, garlandscand· greenery and went to work•on lh.elr·king-sjze "home." · · · The hospital now Is decorated in its best finery for ·the;•bolidays qnd the pat.ients• who will not be able to go home for Christmas will ~t be l~ft out of1he spirit of the season. · ' ·· ' According to tradition,. the Nightingales Chapt_~r·acl$'as.overall f!O- ordinator for the project; Snd this year the responsibility wa~ assumed by .. chapter members Mrs. S.terling Wolfe and Mrs. Mel Morrison. . . Selecting red and gold for the second Door, members. of the Affiliant Ohapter, uhder the direc.tioo of Mrs. -Carl Kymla draped gold: garlands oo , the walls and centered the ceilings. of the balls with :gold ~ells, red balls and ribbons. · The Hunter Chapter, under the guidance ol Mrs. Charies·E. Hollist'I!". · brough pink and blue garlands for the third floor maternity. win.II" aild placed wr11Bths of the same colors in the rooms. Tbe"rest of the lhW"floor was decorated in gold garlands and colored ~alls. · · ". The children's·ward has a ·,special tree and 11D1'8U8:1 ¢illdrent,~.decQ~ aLions, thanks to the effi>rts of Mrs. Robert IC Walker and '.lhe,t.>y corp- ' mittee and Mrs. T. A. Andrew. , · . Mrs. Andi;ew, winner of the Popcorn and·Peppermin,t ·Cand)"lree at the Christmas !1'i'ee Lane ·and .Gift. Box on Pafa4e evenitl)>OnsOred 'by the auxiliai'y. donal6d the tree and it now has been placed· at the nurses' sta~ tion to greet all small newcomers. The Candystripers, led by Mrs. George Cox and \\(rs. C. Roger John. son, decorated two trees for the conference center. an'd a.twfukling. tree for outside of Pediatrics. . · ' . ~INISHING TOUCHES -.Putting the final touches on one of thA Christmas trees gracing·.Hoag Memorial HospitaJ , Presbyterian are (lelt to .right) lhe M~s. -Mel· MocriSOll,. Sterling Wolfe and · Donald Li~gle. The hospital, thanks to the efforts of auxiliary members, IS decked and d'ecorated in the holiday tradition. with boughs of· holly, garlands, balls, Santas and bows. · Boughs of holly and suspended omament(grace the ¢ain ff<ior· halls, arranged by .the Nightingales, ·who decorated the large tree· in the lobby with red bows.and "colored balls. Supplying the.tree was the ~wanis Club. • " •. J. ,. " -- .• Bahia Corjnthian Ball · .. Yachtsmen Come Ashore There were plenty of reasons to cele- brate wit.~ members of the Bahia Corinthian Yacht Cfub gathered in the red and green be- decked Newporter Inn. - In addition to the festive mood set by the holiday season, the eve!'ling was brtgbtened by the·installation of. officers and the presen· tation of awards. The event. the annual Winter Awards Ball, began with a cocktail hour ~eaturing ~~ dance music of the Old Smoothies. A !Midi· tional prime rib dinner followed., arranged by Mrs. Marcia Holyoake, ball chairman. Receiving the gavel from Commodore Patrick Dougan was the new commodore, Dave .Domanski, who reported that the club has a· 55-year lease on prime channel front property, plans implemented for a ne'v. clu~ house, a marina set to reach completion 1n 1970 ahd a·full treasury. "' Seated at the ·head table were the ,n e w Dag officers and their wives. In addition ,to Commodore and Mrs. Domanski. there were ViCe Commodore an4 Mrs. John Hooten ; Rear Commodore and Mrs. Brian Carter; Vince Gurley, secretary, and Mrs. Gurley. Gurley received a special award from the Flag"and' Board 1of Directors for his ex· cellent execution of the job of fleet captain duriog the pest year. · Other awards were given to Jack\ Wilson for outstanding service to •the club, Steve Bradford, firs{ .to finish in the Ensenada Race, and Mrs: Jim Beasley, Woman-of·the- year. Gold covered tables for 10 were center· ed with red candles nestled in pine and holly and the club's prized sterling candelatira, band sculptured in Germany in the form of man and woman, graced the head table, The decorations were planned and ex~ .. ' . cuted by the Mmes. Carol Sage, Rice Camp and . Wayne Bandy. Hosting tables for the .~vehing were the Messes. and Mmes. William Bulfd, William O'Bryon (Mrs: O'Bryon Sr. was .their guest), Joieph Konopka, John Howell, Bjarne E. Ur- si\J, Bud Otto, Staff Commodore ;uid Mrs. Howanl Clarke Langley, Mrs. Sandy Garra and Mrs. Angela White. The Ottos gave a preball champagne party in' their home and invited the Messr~. and Mmes. Charles Rockwell, Parker Chris- topher, Ted Wentworth, Maurice· Jackson, Miss Betty Fletcher and Dr. Dorothy Ray. Lagunans ·mingling on the dance floor " were Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hart Jr. and Mr. and Mrs. Wllson. They were joined by the Bob Willitses of Huntington Beach, the Nor- man Katzes of Riverside and the Dick Well- mans of Tustin. Miss Sue Ficker was escort· ed by James Leddy of Laguna Beach. Table hopping were the Jerry Devi.rians, Roger Fryers, Rod Weichleins, Dick Rig- neys, Dick Lees, Laurence Dunmires, Dr. and Mrs. Dudley Bumpus of Los Angeles. Mrs. Edward F. Kenned}', Fred Aldous and Laurence Dunmire. Also , enjoying the festivities were Mr. and Mrs. Larry Foggs, club director Brad- ford and his wife, Mrs. Angela White who was escorted. by David. Gill Evan of L o s Angeles, the R<>y Halls and . Gordon Cum- ming, whose wife was home with the twins recovering from tr flu shot Circufatin'g were the Car1 Noeckers, Jorn· Locassos, Tom Koetzes, Del Kahans, Jim Kerri8ans, AJex McLeods, Robert Pen- dletons, Dick Plavans, .Dean Ourgans, Kam Gleasons, Beasleys, Lorin Weisses, Tom Carneys, William Chichesters, Jack Earlys and Dr. and Mrs. Carl Klafs. Christmas 'Parade Viewed at Close Range -~ Getting a close.up view of the Floating Christmas Tree Parade tomorrow. will b e m e m b e r s and guests or the Florence Crittenton Sea Cjrcle Junior Auxiliary. They will board the Showboat where .popcorn and wassail will be served while ' cruising tlte harbor and afteiwafd..the 'group will travel to the Cape Huntington Clubhouse, Hunting- ton Beach for dinner. Ready for the party to begm are (left to right) the -Mmes. Randolpli arker Robert Curci and. RObert Ewing. ' . .. ' .,._ _ _, Sweet No.th.in.gs Ca:n't Be Uttere.d.· 1f. ·tights GI.ow Too~ Low DEAR.ANf(~E~: .1;81'128, gain- fUlly ·employed, fairly attracUve and ~ngfe -'but not by !'hOlce· I ehould tell you, Aaj have.a s~ hyaripg ~~lem but not iman:r ~e 111!: •f,•re. of 1t. I fake ·a lot a~. am · gOOd ·at lip _reading. The mah I am going "Wtth 'Bt present' Js attractive, infetllgtnt and solt• spoken. That's my problem. He i5 TOO sort ipoken. He has perfected lhe executive W.hlsper and 1 often lose part of wtlat· he says. Last night •t diriOOr I THOUGtrr J heard rum· ask niC to ma>,rry him, but I'm not sUR. I was too stunned to ask him tO repeat. Now, of coune, I wish I had. Wllal-ehollld L do about-tlila em· batrassiog altu•tion7 -PLEASE PLAY IT AGAlll, SAM ANN LANDER S ~ DEAR TRIEND: ff Mr. ElecaU"' (They are all under 9 years or age.) Whlsptr ftnts you to bt bis wife, he'll · Ted's ex·wife has since remarr ied. She a~k qal1 -bll by Ill '!'t*u ·ttll lllm ha$n'l misaed a visiting day in two years. •boat )'Glr problem. Aid get ,...r llear· 'Mle klda always are thrilled to see her. hll cbetllM, Cltckt1. L9nf bows what TheSe youngsters are badly spoiled and I e1te ,... .... _,. can' hondle them. I don'I feel aboul • , DEAR ANN LANDERS: Se v e,ro I 11100lha qo I married a dlvon:ed man • who hod custody <J( hla thm children. them u • molh<r should. Even thol!gh I'm a grt:at actttss, I'm afraid one day I wlll belrly myseU and tbe truth will be known. ,-r-_ Hciw can J.BUgges( to Ted,lhitt be let hla tx·wlle have the .chlldreil? They seem very fond or her new husband and he 'seems to enjoy them tremendously. When Ted and I dlseu!Sed marriage he asked if I could love and care for his <:hlldren. I ~~ yes, but I didn't know what I wu gttting into. Hurry your advice., Ann. The s\tuatjou grqws more tenser.very day. -TllE suns:nTu~E DEAR SUB: •The prtme con1Jderatloa should bt lite welfare of lbe dlUdru. J1dgln1'~m Jou.r l~lter, tbey 1"11\d pr~ beb\Y be. belltr off.with .lflelr molber pd 1tepfolfler. II m1 •rl1P11Uc II -~ yw are toeing 11 IHsl • ci-,..n of wnrtlllD& Kr>llade. --•• llley are . ~.fovecl. A ••• her wfio feels u !"Cl do OUJl!ll ...W It, no ml~ !tr bow good on odre11 ... ·ts. Level with your busbaad aid ltt11 bope he -ads. I mpe yau·1ifll do IP. tilf. tf&. -I'll().; FR!ENoomP . ,~~ . DEAR PRO: T .. •"'1 !ii+. are UOlble to dfttlnptell behJ:• a :Jrlead ud, an a•llDtlDCe. I .-,.ai friend caa lie ''!"(IPorliv(ln.-jil....-...•bit DEAR ANN LANDE"ftS ; l do no\, agree -11-.. to""''""'"'·~~ Wipi your advice to "~ Ladf Nm 1eins, I ilmr die Hae. nit ..St ~naa Door." What on e•rth is a friend fQf' tf 1'hb wit• ct clllCUI mll'hl& pro1Hf'9· " not to confide in? Every woman needs a is the perlOI with 1f1t91D 1" 1re·1&aft•1' shoulder to cry on -50meone with whom tbe problem. Tile ltceDd bttt e•Hida&e · M'e can dllCli.Ss inUmate probleml. l con--I•· l '«liMln1etor: dflrl1lbMl or pityddae-.. cede Iha\ a penon shook! 111e d!screlion -wlM "'' bt ,-11, abjtc-'. and not bla& to jusf.anybodf. But a cl.,. dvt ... slteoL · h'ltnd cin by 1 godsend When• Woman Is Arin Landers win be. glad to help you:" hovlllg trvuble with her lw!band and • with ~ ~""· 6eod lhlm lb her Iii -·needs to iell someone. ' cm· oflM D"AlliY Plto'I', encli>obic a... Now and then you chaugt 1our advlct. ..u.odcfresoed, •lllmpOd envelope. :· -------·------------ --------~-...:.. ________________________ ..;,._,1, • i ' • : ' • • • • • ~ • • . .. -.- i ( : . ; ESTANCIA :; Georgiann• Dwight , , GdM HIGH Ingrid Rowland ' , December Girls-of-the-mont h • • • • -NH HIGH Christina Rtbard . . CM HIGH Carol Custer ; ' ' ' Zontia ·ns Add Coeds to List Each month during the school year the Newport ~ Harbor Zonta CJub honors an College at Fullerton. Future plans include entering the field of medicine. • ~ outstanding girl in each of the. CQRONA DEf,, MAB J area high schaols, Attending the A m e r i ~a n ' From the ranks of the coeds International School in Vienna ~ chosen, an annual award or a last yea r ,1.a3 Miss lngrid • '50 savings bond ls presented Rowland , daughter of Dr. and :··to the outstanding girl-of-lhe-Mrs. F. S. Rowland of Corona year in each school. de! Mar. ~T ANCIA During her senior year she Serving as president ot has been student congress ·Girls' League at Estancia sec~tary r~~h~rma~, High ~ is ~iss Georgian· ~m:~~ti:nce Cl~b. A::~c~ na Dwight. During her three -..jield Service and lntema· Ers as a league member she tional Relation! Club. been elected aecretary, While in high school she also l rian a~d 'o P h 0 m 0 r e has been aclive in the foreign i~epresentative. . Language . Club and girls' ,~ 'f!1e daughter of Mrs. Viola swim team. She was a Na· ;[>wigbt of Costa Mesa has tiorial 1'-fe rit Seinifinalist and ~ .a member of the class won history and track awards coonciJ. for four years, sec~ in Vienna. tary of the· Pep. Club, preSJ· Outside · 8ctlvities hlclude d~t -of tlJe Sparush Cl~b a~d serving as youth gioup presi· vice p~s1dent of. California dent in her church and Schol~tic Fed~ra~1on. members h Ip in the Durilll her JUruor yep ahe Archaeology Explorer Post'806 was _ awarded. the G~l~. E ~or where she was president last aerv1~. ~~ actiVItits 1n· year. · elude ~c1patlon as an Ex· Miss Rowland plans to at· plorer in. Post 209. . tend either Pomona College, follow~ng her graduaron Stanford or UC, San Diego and Miss ~ght. plans to enrol _at major in archaeology and bi· the Umvers1ty of California, 1 gy Berkeley or California Slate 0 0 • NEWPORT HARBOR UNITID NATIONS ASSOCIATION GIFT $HOpo f\.1iss Christina R e b a r d , daughter of Mr. and f\.frs . Aubrey Hebard of Newporl Beach, will enter the Universi· ty of Southern California in the fall as a music major. 2204 N. Mai11, Sa11ta A11a Mo11d1y thru S1h1r1'1v-I 1·4 Selected as Miss Newport I . • AWARD WINNING. SHOE SERVICE . ~~ COMPLETE SHOE e LUGGAGE .e HAND BAG REPAIR SHOES RESTYLED TO THE NEW LOOK! IPoln.d "--• • o In~ te ll••IHI T•!) .--s CONVENIENT SHOPS --.,.., •• COAlt HWY. e not lltVINIE AV!. C...... U M•r. '1MMt WMldtff Pi.n 9JCU VIA LIDO Newport &Nell, 14-M 111 ..... rt hl(ll, m.-... 0.LNSON'S e H P.UNION ISi.AND Fl~ llorl l!lfnd ............ ell. ""'"1111 ti....,..,., IN<ll JUST WATCH HIM LIGHT UP Who wouldn't light up w~en It's a Dunhill. From left: In 14 karat gold. $275. Florentined gold plated model. $45. Gold plated barley com pattern, $40. SI.A.VICK'S 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644·1380 Beach for 1969·70, the coed is head varsity cheerleader and member of A Cappella choir, Chantelles and the Pep Club . Her lirsi. thr~ years in· vo lved v.·ork with the freshman class council, aqua show, girls' choru!. sophomore class council, AFS Club, Scien· ce Club and student congress representative. She also ha~ been ;J member of Tri Hi Y Club. Last year she received the most valuable musician award and service award. · This summer Miss Rebard has been asked to be a counselor at the National C h e erleading Association's &ummcr clinics. COSTA MESA Miss Carol Custer is a four year member of the Girl s' Athletic Association and the Pep Club. a class officer, Girls' League officer and participates in the Madrigals singing group. She has been honored . as outstanding sophomore typist and received an achievement award in the GAA. Miss Custer has been a volunteer for two )'ears at Fairview State Hospital and participates in the Christian Service Club. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. LeRey Custer of Costa M~ hopes to enroll at Cat State Fullerton to obtain her teaching credential. D~ Pilot Dm.d · IX.<l/ ,c:k.-' ··~-~;---· .!!,\ ~ To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded to have their wedding stories with black and white glossy photo- graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De· partment one week before the wedding. Pictures received following the wedding ~·i ll not be used . For engagement announcements it i~ in1perative that the story, also accompanied by a black and white glossy picture, be sub· mitted six weeks or more before Ute wedding date. If deadline is not met, only a story \Vill be used. To help fill requirements on both wed· ding and engagement stories. fonns are available in all of the DAILY P ILOT offices. Further questions will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642-4321 or 494-9466. Kennys Select New York Home Following a honeymoon in Athens, Gerard John Kenny and his bride, the fonner Christine Ann Cromwell will reside in New York. OUr Lady cf Mount Cannel Catholic Clurch was the set· ting for the vow exchang2 of the newlyweds. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Cromwell Jr. of Lido Isle and Manila and Mr. and Mrs. William Francis Kenny of New York. Attendants were Mrs. Harry tbomas Abernathy and Miss Suzanne Blanche Cromwell , sisters of the bride, John Reynolds of New York and Dr. \V i lliam Kenny, the bridegroom's bro~her. The bride is a graduate cr .1'-·larlborough School. altended Maryknoll College in ~fanila and UCLA. A former Assis- teen <lf the Los Angeles Assistance League she was an award presentee at the 1962 MRS. KENN Y Medallion Ball. Recites Vows Her husband is a graduate 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;ll -'¥-c111~ A!<ou"t v.•11«1m. -ll1n~.t.m..-1c1rd, ~•hi• t~•rte. '06. of Brooklyn ·college and did AUXILIARY POWER • graduate work at New York t• · o,... Mo11My ""'' S.i1trdoy ulltll •:10 University. Sailboats, Dinghies, r!"'••••••--••••••--•--.....,. ..... ,.....,. ••• , ;~~:A~~O I • . SEE MONDAY, D~CE.MBER 22 i Ng~~~~n~y·~7~bsl I EDITION OF THE DAIL y PILOT • SH~~~ .. eTP~~~~ I ! ~c~~-~- lll For Special Buys & Special Hours ! Remote G .. T•nk . c R * * * IDEAL in the Complete Shopping enter •ow •11•• GIFT t19*4t If Oil ONlT • I llltdUdtt Jh til l ••• llllk, ...... ,nlMI" ""' ... t•ltk •1Kt1111«1), --------------. r "l""'l..,.r"'r-trT"f"'; • , /'.Tl 1• T 1"'1~..,_rl.""!". ~.~. -~~~ ' Ho roscope '. ·-• • < . Ac cented 1 Taurus : Money Is . . . . . . SATURDAY ".-DECEMBER 20 By SYDNEY OMARR Tem d&Un1 b.iats: t.1any ex· pi'eu desire to participate In 1peclal program. If you can lleJp In fulfilling this de1ire, yoo are a winner. Gemini 1bloe1 as evening pregreins. Tturut is fast starter, but teadt to fade. Sagittarius may be marriage-minded. Aries is right la. the 1wln1 cf tblngs, talking, moving, debating. Leo 11 effervescent, while Aquarius could flnd romance. Cancer must keep promises -break- lag date ton.lgbt would be a mistake. Virgo gets morale boost -prestige riaes. More traveling done tonight than is customary. ·AU 1bould be very carth1I Jn traffic. ARIES «Marc~ 21·Ap~il 191 : Do yaur own thing. Make up your mind; then be decisive. Good lunar aspect coincides with chance for you to sue· cessfully present i d e a s . Relatlve pa ys mean ingful compliment. 'TAURUS (April 20-May 2U): Accent on money and how to get it. Key is versatility. non't be afraid to change your mind . Strive toward creativity. You could make purchase v.•hich .spells happiness for special in· dividual. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Cycle high; moon in your sign highlights personality and ap- pearance. Your sense of tim· ing improves. You meet peo- ple, and they admire you. Take initiative. Be direct, forthright. CANCER (June 21..July 22): Much could happen beyond your immediate com· prehension. Key is lo look behind the scenes. Avoid superficial judgment. Separate fact from fiction. Enjoy theatrical perform;:in c e tonight. LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): You gain access to material which RACITl'S Pf..&ltL & llltTHSTONf. CLASSICAL GUITAR . . . money, 1'll you aloo enjoy dent In blldget. But· YO!' alH 1pending tt. Social whirl of rt ,l"ade yalµable c~.\a<tl Whl., c~ times m•y have madt-ere d4t to ~Y d1VIdJIPdl:. , : DUNHILL CASTELLO COMOYS CHARATAN SAVI NELLI SASIEMI featur ing Or•nge Count11'f Largest Selection ·of quallt11- Plpu ANO ACCESSORIES 11!amrenre jhoppt #S TO WN Ir COU NTltY, ORANGE, CALIP:OltNIA 542-8752 STOltl HOUltS DAILY f TO f SUNDAY 12 TO I South Coast ?Iaza OPEN SUNDAYS ... 12-5 . THROUGH CHRISTMAS CAN ANYONE Off.ER YOU THIS FANTASTIC DIAMOND GUARANTEE? DIAMONDS Altl OUI J poECIALTY! n'llT DIAMOND AND DIA MOND llNCi YOU IU Y rs GUA l.&NTIED TO AppoLf.ISI FOi AT LU.ST 40~· TO 1o•A HIGHll THAN THE po11;1CE YOU PAID Olt TOUI MONET """==$!>.'(· oiA'Mo'ilo RINGS II "'' '"r•!'" hr -"" ""'' 'Y 1 C.,lltltd 0.lfto '"'"'· Your CllJ'I Wiii IN '"~· THIS DIAMOND Rl~'ll '' 1 '"' •• '220000 .'\II You at ~ W• G1.1•r•ntff to Approl:, 54000°' ly • terfltled 0.1Mlogl1t or your money Nck. . . i I 7 , • ~ • ~ J • -.. ,,.. Cost.a . Mesa ' r ' VOL 62, NO. 303, 4 SECTIONS, 38 PAGES .I ORANGE COUNTY, CAllF6RNIA FRIDAY, DECEMBER I!, ... 69 • 7 / ecor Ma11or Makes Bid Fair Court Site .. Talks Stepped Up . By JANICE BERMAN Of t111 Dl ll'f l'llot itlff The Orange County Fair Board ls step. ping up discussions with the City of Costa Mesa on plarui for using a portion of fairgrounds land for a new county municipal court.site. The eastern portion of the fairgrounds, across from the Costa Mesa PoHce FaclL~y, ls now under consideration for aaJe to the city for that purpose. Mayor . Alvin L. Pinkley and City Manager Ar l h·u r R. McKenzie a~ pUred befpre the Fair Board Thursday nJgtt in the wake of a morning statement 1'y Supervisor Alton Allen that he .. is keeping an open mind" on courtsite aelection. They mayor told the board that a letter U.S. Relaxes from Orange County Real Property Services Director Stanley Krau.:;e, in- dicated that the Fairgrounds site had been excluded from further con&ideration because Cost.a fi.fesa and the )i"'air Board had made no definite offer -in contract to an offu by the city of Newpor t Bearh of a site adjoining Newport Center. The letter said the county .Board of Supervisors was entering into final negot.iations on selection of the court site. the City of Newport Beach closed a deal in September with the Irvine Com· pany to buy 19 acres of. land for !LI million. Ten acres of the pa ckage \vas reserved for related civic center use5, in· eluding a court site. U the acreage is not purchased by the county. it will be returned to the Irvine Company. ·'A .: '31 ' .. • e '°;':--- DAILY PILOT llltff 9'lt9f9 Trade Ban With Chinese Price of the Newport Beach land would be about $98,000 per acre, but Newport officials pointed out that sharing of such facilities as maintenance and parking with Newport Beach would lower the cost to the county. Fairgrounds Manager· Alfred JAJljeans said today the fairgrounds property W!Mld COit-.. from $40,000 an acre to a high at h0.000 per Acrr.~• He added that. as·in the case of NcwpQit; shared parking wi~b the Falrgl'OUl)di° could reduCe the cost of the land. NEWPORT OFF l~ERS RANDY HARDY ·(LEFT ), KEITH COLLINS COUNT THE KILOS On the Wate"!ront, A Jackpet for Police as Pot Runners' Plans Ga .Up In S"'"!ke WASHmGTON (UPI) -The United States annouocrrl today it is partially lifting a 19-year-old trade embafao with Red China. The 4eclaJon, made by Pre:lldent Nixon aD!I annoanced by the State Department, means that if the Chine5e are agreeable, stibsidiarles of American companie~ ovmeas -will be allowed to sell .:... --nonstrategic it.ems to Peking. The Chinest might be able to buy item! as large as trucks of American design that are made abroad. \Vhether Peking will be interested re- mains to be aeen. Officials did not .expect any immediate reaction from them . In hope! of improving relations with the Red Chinese, the St.ate Department aaid Nixon was relax..ing the tr;~e em· bargo-impooed in 1950. ohorify.alltt the Communist.I came to power in Peklng - In these three ways : ' -'nle foreign subsidiaries of U.S. firms will henceforth be allowed to trade with Communist China in oonstrategic eoods. -U.S. firms, particularly tho!e lv1lh branches abroad, will be able to buy goods of "presumpti\'e Chinese origin'? and engage in trade with them in !hird- country markets. However, only goods which are certified to have been made outside of Coml)'l.unist China will be allow~ into the United'States. .:...... American citizens will be ptnnittcd to buy an unlimited amount of Chinese Communist goods for their private use. The Nixon adminl!lration relaxed restric· lions la!t July on such purchas!!I but placed a $100 ceiling on them. Stork Market NEW YORK (AP) -Stocks pulled back·from levels reached in earlier trad· tng today, but advances 1Ull maintained a comfortable 700.issue lead over de- clines. (See quotations, Pages 10-11). Analysts attributed some of the pull- back to profit takin& aod a rtnewal of ta_x·IOIS aellina:. As its Thursday mtttii'lg, the F'air Boa.rd instructed Lutje&.n1 to send a let- ter to the _Bomi' : of Supervlsors reiterating that ·neither the City of Costa Mesa nor the FaJr Boei'd has closed the door on OOMideration of "any port.ion of the Fairgrounds" fOl' the site. Pinkley and MacKenzie favored the eastern portion of the Fairgrounds because Of its proximity to the police department, with ease of transporting prisonel'3. The group di=-<! tile possibility of building an overpass or tunnel between the police facility and the proposed courthouse site. Prison Order ed For LA Broker In Lot Racket A Los Angeles broker whMe operation ol' a building lot racket ~·a., unmasked by a Newport Beach woman was sen- tenced T.hursday to one lo 10 years in state prison. Robert Beitler, 45, drew that term from Superior Court Judge Robert Gard· ner ""ilh a plea of guilty to one coont or grand theft. Identical charges again.st Beitler, known to many of his victims as Ted Gregory. were dismissed. ·Beitler was arrested last July 24 arter ll long investigation or charges that he falsely 'acquired title to undeveloped Jots through the forging or grant deeds and l'!Old them to Orange County victims through newspapet' adverti!ementl. Investigators said the charges against Beitler covered an eight monlh period up to last .July and the deals checked ranged from f-4,000 to SIS,500. More lhan a dozen such transact.ions were processed through Orange County Litle companies, they said. " . Mesa Mont Ge.ts Probation For Abducting Kids Sane, but not· mentally steady, a Coota Mesa mother who pleaded guilty to ab- ducting two neighbor children for an odd trip to San Diego was placed on three years ' formaJ probation Thursday. Mrs. Patricia Stegner, 30, must un- Oergo continuing psychothera py dur ing the probationary period , or as long as her doctor insists, under the judge's ruling. Authorities in Alhambra, wher~ she will mdke her home. wt.re assignf<l the case 6y Jud ge Don8ld Dungan in Orange County Harbor Judicial Dis trict Court. A team of psychia tris1s examined her for three weeks and earlier this mooth Orange County Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner declared Mrs. Stegner sane and able to face municipal court. proceedings. She wa s pK:ked up by authorities in San Diego with her own three youngsters and two liUle brothers who lived !n lhe same apartment units at 773 W. Wilson St The arrest took place three months ago after l\1rs. Stegner and the children had been reported missing for several days. All were well cared·for at the motel \.,.here they were staying, according lo police, and Mrs. Stegner subsequently ad· mit!ed guilt on the child·sleaUng charge. L umber Stack Stolen Thieves raided a Costa Mesa con· slruotion site and loaded up stacks of lwn.ber valued at more than '300, spokesmen for a St. Louis building firm tol~ police Thursday. Ronald B. Mitre, of R.J .&.A. Jooe!I Inc., uld the 500 studs missing from 1400 Palisades Road would have had to be hauled away·by-truck. Mesa School Drugs Probed Fathers Kee p Girls Hom e Again i 1i Protest By THOMAS FORTUNE ot Ille l»lly ~11•1 ltlft Tiro Cot:ta Men fathers kept thtir dauJhtBI home from school q:ain t~ day u police and school princlp1l1 con-o.Jed to lnvesUg~te allegations of wkfe. l drug traffic on campus. - pollct ancf I are both buaily at we're not leaving any stone uo- sakl Davis tnlermediate School I Werner Carison. Mt11 Police CaplaJn Robert Gteen 11.id, "We are invutig1Unc every alna:le name turned over to us." He said police bid been &)v~ , liot oC about 11 names Carlson obtained from ooe ol Ille llrls wllhdrawn lrom achoo!. Four amstl have been made so far. • Thrte of · the four arrested were stu .. dtnta from nearby Cost.a 'Mesa High School. l\leaa lliah PrinC!pal Frank Lopeo uid It ii the coUecUve feeling of hit: school'1 admlnlstraton that the drug problem Is decruslng at the achoo!.· "I thJnk the okler kid& have wi~ up ... he oald. "U thert 11 any problem it is with the younger kids -the frelh-meo •nd those In Junior hlah." Davis Principal Carl&on &al~ "ft seems obvious to me this lhln1 11 not aome-- thtne 11>1n1 to be isolat~ to one school Another oi:Mol-C.Eilinclo High) ""de new1 a couple of weeks ago. The fact lhe notoriety Is ·now ·Jn MaUtfe "Davis ls hard on u11 l>ut we're immune to the Ills of society." One father, who turned his daughter In to pol.jet said he believed there may be "100, if· not 200'' studeni., at Davia: involved ln drug use. "Al far as number! we don'f know,'' ~aid Capi. Green. chief of Costa Mesa police's investlgalion division. "We have 10 or IS names we are working on ri ght now. Some kid might u 7 'All the kidl are doing It,' and what ahe me1111 JI 'My frltnd1 -three or tour• people.' • .Capt. Cretn ~Id, ''W! havtn't got e large acale J!l'Ol:ilem heft" as-a lot fl ' (Ike DRUG PROBE, Pege %) ' ' • . ., ,, ... I '·"' fl•1,t '\f1 ' • o; ·\ 4 A \\ •"'\:' \ . .. ' .. Reagan Appolntni,nt . . ' Judge Gardner Named· :• . Appellate Court JuriSt By TOM BARLEY Of "'' Otltf 1'11.t it.ff Gov. Ronald Reagan today apPointed Superio~ (:oort Judge Robe.rt Gardner of Newport Beach to the post ·of as!IOCiate justice of the Fourth District Court of Appeal! in San Bernardino. · The. govenio~'s 'press secretary said the date of Judg~ Gardner's transfer from the court to ~·hich he was appointed by GoV. Eafl ·warren In 1947 will depend on tht confinnaUon or his appointment by the St.ate Commission on Judicial A~ poinlments. 1''lllal'a a fonnal\ly and I guess it will come immediately alter their approval," a spokesman for the governor's office said. Judge Gardner, who·will be 58 on Dec. 27. was not available for comment at press lime. He was presiding over the criminaJ calendar court which has been under bl! direction for many of the 22 yea rs he has spent on the Orange County Superior Court bench. · Judge Will iam Speirs of Newport Beach, who takes over Jan. 1 as the SuJ)\:rior Court's presiding judge, reacted with what be described as "deeply mixed emotloos" at the news of the a~ pointment. "I am very happy for Judge .Gardner and my _jbought.s will be echoed by every member of the legal profession in Orange County,'' he said. 04He has always been a · dedicated and moving force here and this court will not be the same without him. "But I am going to miss him nest year," Judge Speirs said. ''He is golng to leave a gap In this court that will take a · long. long time to fill." A graduate of USC Law School, Judge SC HOO LS TVRN 100,000 l;OOSE ' II almost 100,000 school child..., alon1 the Orange Cols& were more frolicsome than usual this a!ter- noon who could bltme them? The two wetka of Chriatmas vataUon hod be1111n. School belb won't ring again un- Ul Monday. Jan. 5 of the new year. But fint a vtslt from Saiita and a turning of the pap by Fat.her Time. And tMn, whtn the holidays have 1one. b.tck to cl•• and rtmember to write 1171 IMteod ol lilt. . r NAMED TO APPEALS COU~{ .Newport's Jude• Garnet :; -,"I > Gardpe~.served as 1 pa!f,·-time cily'jWge ol Newport Beach and an Otange. ~y clepulf district attorney before· his· ap- poin~~nt to the Supetjor c;wrt. be~. Married, with . two daughters, he -lives with .hi• wife Kalh.aryn lt 320, Evefting Canyon Road, .Coron1 del·Mar .. · _ A prollfic writer fn law, Judge Gardner Ls acknowledged' by' tilt' legal ptof~sslon as a nationwtde aulhoritr in uwre than one JegaJ Issue. He has, perhaps, lfritten most e1tensively on criminal and juvenile Jaw and Ills views ha ve been e1pressed and quoted tn a wide range of legal' and Jay publicaUons. ' An active partidpantin civic and com. munity•afialrs, Judge Gardner was nam- ed u man of the Y'"r for Newport lllofll . In .1968, man .of tile .. "'r by Newport Harbor Kiwanis In 198T"lnd man of the year by Newport' Harbor spisuc ·i.eque : in 1166. . . . . • His other civic endeavon 1nclade mem-benl!lt> in ' Ill< Work! Allain Couacll" ond lb< Friends of the IJbrary 0.,.U..tlono , In Newpon Beach and ·the tJnivml'Y or <;aWoraia Irvine. A dedicated IUl'fer, be hu also played 1 m•Jor role· In ·the af- fairs ol the United States SUrfina Association. Jud(e Gardner 11 no stranger to the Son Be""'rdlno appellate court ud """ · ed there. th.is last summer oa te'" of sbserict from his county bench. The aeat he w1u·nu early In mo-.,. mated 111 the leglsl1tllre In the llllt auiloa1 -· Two Nabbed In Newport Stakeout By JOHN VALTERZA· ot "" .... .., l'lllf ..... Newport ll<ach ond state nar<Otlca of. ficers seized a record haul of '81',00t worth of marijuana Thursday and ar- rested two men who allegedly we.re trying to move it from a Newpdrt bNt yard. · The illegal weed, in 11 gunny Nets, waa discovered by the builder ol. a boet ·in the yard along'Pacillc Coast Highway It about 3 p.m. It was ~ 1argf!t hauJ ever In Newport. Officers sakf the u n i dent I rt-t"d discoveref" called police lmmedlately after fmding the 4.'35 pounds or wrappeil marijuan·a hidden in the boat hull. Narcotics Detective Al Epstein and agents from the state Bure111 of Narcotics staked out the boat yard, theo waited. Al about 7:30 p.m., Epstein nK!, twti .men, who were later found to be from the Redondo Beach area. came up to the cache and began loading the sack! Into • car. The agenU Ulen stepped in and ·ar· rested DooJid Sille, 28. Lawndile, ood hia companion, Glen Wayne Johnnt, 15. Both were chaTge.d with paues.!lioa of marijuana for sale. Epete.in said the pair were seen tClier In the day at they wandered fn the yari:I. Epotein aaJd lt WU cettain fhot tile kiJl>.llled (LI podncls .. ch) bricks ol mariju1na wen brought fnto Newport Ilarbor by boat from Mexko. He saJd the carg0 was dumped under the boat 10metbne Wednesday night and that no one affiliated with the marine 1ervice and boat yard was Involved. The brlcka , wrapped in bright yellow rellophane, were hidden undlJr Ult overturned boat. to await transfer, he said: Epstein said the artests toot place without incldenl The pair of alleged marijuan a 1ong!!1oremeii' Were still in custody Ur!Y today, he sakl. N ewJKri Hatbor has been the "teene .Gt several narcotica transfers loin& wTonl Otis y.ear. . - Last spring Epstein and state agents seized a state ·record in h1sl\isb, · 150 pounds with a 1treet value of a half million dollars. The marijuana sa.p Compacted Into neat, foil -}fl'apped cakes, waa found by a pleasure fisherman as he cast his line oil the M . Stred pier . on the Balboa PenlnMlla. The hashish, bearing ·Arablc..J!ltered lmpresslom, was the largest hallhtab find in California'• history. 'lbursday's haul of marijuana was tbe largest etrtr seized in _Newport Beach and ''about the second or tblrd largest in lhe county,'' Epstein said. Weatlter Jt won't u1cUy bi: 1 weekendJ.o write home ab!>ut -unless your home ls .in the .northeast where they 're buried ln snow. Look: for low clouda, fot and ml;cRO temJ>o eratures. INSIDE 'l'OB-'Y C·urtain calti Jor tht JO ~st cornm.unttu thecttr producttom - of 1989 ar1 give-n. toda11 °' the: W 1tkcndtr'1 1Nt.t"""1icm column rruftto1 th.t pa.at vear on locot 1tagt1. ~6 ~ CHRIOMAS I I . .f. 041lY PllOT c Judge Halts Lease for " ·Rival Firms A ;ease aireement that woold hive put ·nval sav1ngs and tom companies tn ad· joining sections of 1 Newport Center of. ~ building was haJted Thuradl)' by 1 ~1 iot Court judge. Judge Samuel Di'•i ..... a«tplod tht •arguments ol Newport Balboa S.vinp .and Loan AssociaUon and clamped a ,.temporll') rutralniog order on dtfen- C:anta Glendale Federal Savings and Loan ·AMoclation and the Irvine Company. ' He will hear argument! for both sides Dec. 24. ~ At illu' ls the complaint of Newport ~alboa that Irvine and Glendale Federal flll!IO!:i.ated a lease for the valuable ')lfewport Center property that waa in • viollUon of a lease already drawn up hetween the Newport firm and the Irvine Company. The lnrine-Newport BaJb98 SaviJ\is contract aUegedly called for occupancy or the premiies tt 550 Newport Center Drive with the granUng of an "exclusive" that would bar compeULion at least until Jan. 20. The complaint alleges I.hat Glendale "federal wltp the full knowledge and AIJ"ffment of the Irvine Company, plan· lied t.o <lpen its dooni at 500 Newport 'Center Drive on Det. 27. • Glendale's entry into the aavinp and Joan operation at th1t time wouJd, .Newport Balboa contends, hit them hard II~ the "reinvestment season'' -the tnd jil the year period when many substantial deposjt.r are made and major bw:ineM firms replan their portfolios: And Newport Balboa contends that part t1f the lease agreement with Irvine called for them tG have at least four re~ vestment periods befcire any competition wu allowed In the prime Newport Center location. They have, they slate, been limited to three -April, July and OctGbcr af this year. The complaint asks 'the court to recognize that the · Irvine Company violated the terms of ita: agreement and that Glendale Federal .should be barred from opening at the Newport -Center before Jan. 20. It not.es that the Glendale firm .already has an outlet in NewpJrt. Beach--•l2333 Eul Coast IDgbway, Motorist Hurt In Mesa Wreck A Garden Grove motorist w .a 1 hospitalized early tpday after.his car ran off Harbor Boulevard' 'Dortb "of the San Diego Freeway in Costa Men and crash· ed into a power pole. · Alan M. Carrick, 38, of 5%11 W. Ballast Ave ., was listed in fairly good condJtion at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital, with head. chest and abdominal injuries. Investigators said Carrick was driving north on the boulevard when his car left the road at 12: 15 a.m .• adding th.at he would makt no statement about what cau!l!d the crash. Golden Triangle Hearing Slated A bearing on a rezone petition for a 187 unit apartmtnt complex in the so-called Golden Triangle area of Costa Mesa has been set for Jan. g before the city council. AcUon on a zone elception p.rmit rt- qu.ired for the S.V. Hunsaker Jr. project ~'as postponed Tuesday, slnce it can't be processed prior to the initial rezonin1. The Cffy Planning Commission has r ecommended apprGval of the application for construction of the project on Bristol Street between Baker Street 1 n d Paularino Avenue. DAILY PILOT ll:ollerf t-1'. w,,, '"'"....,' .... ,., .. .,..,. J ·~~ ... Cwrl11 Vitt,,......,,,,,. ~11 ~ 7ll111r1•• x,, .. ;1 Tl.orri11 A. Mu1,lli111 ,_.,,..tloof lt!IV C•t• Me11 OffKt JJO Wt1I •• ., su .. + ~tili11t Ail'""~ P.O. lo,. 1560, •2•1l Ottt., O"k" H._I l .. ell. HI! W111 ••IMI lllllll~tr• lt911M lt~ll: l'H ,,_, Av- 1-1""'!""11'1 •tttll. l'llJ •ucll ·~It~•'• s=•c , -•. a:: e;ss : DAILY PILOT Stefl ,Mii Traditio11ol Tree a Curiosity . ' ' Costa Mesa six·year-0lds Lonnie Shepard, Lisa Garlich an.d Margaret Dale (from left) found Christmas tree decorated in old·fashioned manner a fascinating item when they visited city's historic Estancia Adob& this week. Tree was deckea with popcorn1 gingerbread men and candy balls by mem· bers of Costa Mesa Historical Society. City Cl1anges Its Mind On Red Curb Parking Ba11 A de~gation of Costa Mesa residents who saw red when they came home one evening -along the curb -has fought City Hall and won a partial, at least tern· JXl'!llY vjdory, 'the new ban an parking aJong the 100 block of Ea.rt ·18th St, was imposed by Trlftlc Engineer J im Eldridge, pending a rcrmal recommendatlori by ·the Traffic Commission ne~ month. City Councilmen voted to remove the no-parking order except between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m., when the group of petition· sicnen and letter-writers protested fl.1on- d1y night. Leland Stevens. of 179 E. 18th St., and Drew Renner, of li8 E. \11th SL, ipokesmtn for the group, said the red curbing W<l! a needless nuisance. especially with holiday visitors dropping Jn, Eldridge told the City Council a woman employe of an adjacent dental office had called aJleg-ed traffic hazards resulting from parked cars to hls attention and an inspection led support to her claims. The council appeared about to order a complete repainting of the curb until the parl·tbne prohibition compromise wall' reached pending discussion by the Traffic Comm.i.ssion. A general lack or adequate p~rking which led to complaints of poor visibility for motorists leaving area driveways will be somewhat alleviated SOGn by ex- pansion <1f the South Coast Child Guidance Clinic lot, city officials noted. Murder Suspect Released ' Ror Husband's Funeral Mrs. Dwillia Dean Hunt left her jail cell in S.-nta Ana fGr 90 inutes Thursday morning to attend eral services for her 'hua.band. yach broker WIOis Hunt. whom she alleged! stabbed to death las\ Sundafin their ona del Mar Mme. there at 11 :45 a.m. The 43-year-0ld brunette allegedly stab· btd her fifth husband in the chest with a butcher knife during a heated argument In their Corona del Mar home. Oil Firm Bares Gas oline Additive To Cu t Smo g SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Standard Oil of California has announced the developmenL of a new gasoline com- ponent which the cGmpany says will cut smoa-producing hydrocarbon emissions nearly in half. In making the announcement Thursday, Standard said 15 years of research and development went into the new fuel cGm· pc1iient, which is built around a synthetic c hemical concen tr ate called hydrt:carbylamine. "Our product is an important step forward in reducing aut o mo l i v e emissions. but it by oo means totally resolves lhe problem." said Eneas D. Kane, president of Standard's Chevron flese.uch Co. The CGmpany said tests conducted under typical driving conditions indicated the additive reduces u n bu r n e d hydrocarbons in exhaust from an average nf 550 parts per million lo %50 parts per million. The most important adv1ntage of the new additive, however, ap~ared to be its ability tG clean up engine deposits in both n!d and new cars ~ tJjat smog control devictts will work etflclenUy . "We can ac.tually take a used car in such bad shape from engine deposils built up from city driving Uiat it is stalling and puffing clouds of black smoke from its tailpiJ>'! and, after a few tankfuls of this new gasoline, re1tore it to proper working order." Kane .said. ...... -.. ~ '"' __ ..._. __ Tycoo1a'• BoJlU Coast Loot Sold ' ' ' ' , ' In ·Europe Deals A sizable chunk of 5435,000 In bGnds allegeJly stolen from the estate or a Newport Beach tycoon by a fugitive at· torney has been sold in the shady in· ternational money market, turning up in Switzerland. Investigators confirmed today that •P- proximately $75,000 worth of th t nego'.iable school stocks have betn chan· neltd into Europe 's so-ca lled Gray Market. a clandestine network spanning !ht continent . ''\Ve have no further intormation other lhan thal," said Deputy San Diego Coun- ty District Attorney Jo.f. James Lorenz. v.•ho is awaiting forma~ confinnation thal serial numbers match the missing lool . An international manhunt, meanwhile, is cenleringin ~texico City for Escondido attorney Patrick S. M. ~titton, 47. He is wanted in connection with lht disappearance of the. bonds belonging to .John Salrnond. 79, of 2164 Vista Entrada . described by his heirs as a gravely ill man. T h e mild • mannered bespectacled lawyer is char~ in federal and San Diego County warrants with grand theft and attempted extortiGn, with a phenomenal $1,062,500 bail figure recom· mendtd. The case came to light when Jo.fit\()n ::illegedly \\Tote a letter to the retired Union Oil Company executive's son, John Salmond Jr., of 16921 Bedfocd Lane. Hun- ling\.On Beach, offering tG split the n1oncy. The junior Salmond . a vice president or Cal State. Los Angeles, apd his-mother. v.'ere appointed conservators of tht estate a year ago after the 79-year-0ld head of the family 's health began to fail serious· ly. Investigators believe Mitton -who vanished from his exclusive San Diego Counl:y home, where he left his wile and four children -ls trying to dispose of the $4.15,000 in foreign nations. Und<?r procedures of the Gray Market, stocks are usually bought at below· ma rket prices and cached in safety deposit boxes or passed from one un- dtrv.·orld source to another for years. Generally, they are koown to be stolen. Besides the grand thefL and attempted extortion charges awailing Mitton, the FBI has issued a warrant accusing him of unlawful flight tG avoid prosecution. Authorities moving swiftly after the younser Salmond 's receipt of the Nov. 22 typewritten letter offering tG split the stocks Gr get nothing at all tractd Mitton tG En:;enada, Baja California. r.Utton was named attorney fGr,the large Salmond estate last January, 8, ap- parently hired by the.family's olher at· tomey, while the wift and son became the conservatGrs. Federal investigators explained that the missing bonds -at least part of them -were sold to a Zurich, Switzerland bank, then purchased by the Geneva office of a U.S. brokerage firm . Tut specific loot involves $45,000 in Los Angeles Unified School District bonds and ' $30,000 In Los Angeles City School District bonds, but payment was stopped '~:hen they arrived back in New York. Ci· ly. They w'ere impounded by FBI agents. ~1jlton, a native Can~i•n who becl!!1e a U.S. citizen. in 1964, cashed a $5,000 check in Ensen,.:ia Nov. 25 and i~ known to have hidden out in a house trailer parked in 1 remote area eigb1 rniles a\•."ay . Violent Storm Send s Savage Surf to Coast By ARTHUR R. VINSEL Of lh• lllllf f'llol Sl1ll Thundering breakers, rolling . In sets ahead or a violtnt ocean storm, began to pound the Orange Coast today, prom· lsing tG surge over into low.lying area s- on six-foot-plus tides Saturday and pct· haps Sunday. Not every point along the 44 miles or · cGunty cGasl will be affected by th• waves. which are coming in at 1 WtSt· er!y angle. according to sea-watching, experts. The storm 200 miles Gffshore, twwever. is characterized as creating carbon copy c:ondilions or last weekend 's wave-and- tide combination which ravaged seetions of the California coastline. Giant swells up to 14 feet ln aomr. badly exposed sections are expected trt strike hard, especially at Oxnard Shoo-es and Mandalay Beach in Ventura County. where more than $1 million in dama1e has betn caused. Flooding and 'some beacli erGSion Is probable at certain spots locally, how· c\·er. the U.S. Weather Bureau warns. \Vaves began rising visibly by the hall· hour today. shortly after a 5:54 a.m. high tide. while the next will be at 6:l! a.m. Saturday, reaching 6.2 feet in some coastal areas. . Seal Beach lifeguards said waves were 11 mere three feet this mGrning at lhtir relatively prolected shoreline but the trend v.·as tow ard a rapid increase down· coast. "It's shaping up fa st," said Hunting· ton Beach Weguard LL f\1ark Boden· bender. estimating some storm wave ... at eight feet . with a steady increase pre. dieted. Some splashed the underside of the pier . "If this is any indication. we .should have some big surf tomorrGW," ll• added. Surfers were conspicuous by their absence today as the combers mounted, lvhile a discarded surfboard snapptd In half lay beside Pacific Coasl HJghway· at The Bluffs in Huntington Beach, testimony tG the brute power of the seas. Jo.frs. Hunt was a ong an estimated 100 peraon5 at the long-time Newport re~}'s funeral. She..7as released at 10:15 a.m. by a SUperlDr Court order. gpokesmen at the womd's section of Orange County jail 1aid. Hunt died a few hours after the slab- bing as a team or doctors tried Gpcn heart mas~age to revive hi1n. Hunt, ,,·ho se only other survivors \Vere a daughter fro01 \Vest Los Angeles and his adopted stepdaughter (l\1rs. Hunt's dau1hter by a previous marriage) was buried at Pacific View Memorial Park. ~ ................................ , ... --~ .• _ ... - ' Tbe.0 services began at 11 a.m. at Pacific Vitw Memorial Park chapel. !.lrs. Hunt was returned to her cell F rom Page 1 DRUG PROBE • • people ar.e trying to profess. I'm not tryJnc to mlnimlz:e the use of narco- tics, but it doesn't exceed any other school district or .schools in our own area." , He said the reason for what seems like a lot of arrests is "the school administra- lors here from the top on down want tG do something about narcotics." The girlt turned in to pollce by their parents both used LSD and other drugs. their fathers sa>d. One girl's lr>-year-old sister. a freshman at Costa Mesa lUgh. also allegedly used I.he drugs. All art being held out of school this week. along with a 16-year-old Costa Mesa boy or the same family as the girls, who reportedly has nc>t taken dnl&S. The girls were released by polic:e to the CUltbdy of their parents as wtre a 13· yur.old glrl . • 1$--year-0ld boy and a 16-year-old boy arrested Wednesday nigh!. Mark Schreiber. 18. or 236 Wake FGr· est Road, a student at Cos1a Mesa High, was booked intG jail on suspicion of pos· aesslng dangerous drugs and bailed out. Lopes said the school had not officlally heard from police on the case yet He said there ha!i been only one suspenlion for drugs al ~1esti High this ytar '\'hilt there wert several la.at year and that i! Ollf indication the school's dru gproblem is lessening. Re1ardin1 the non·attend11nct or the students, Lopes polntttl out lhey are be- ing he.kl out of .school. but have not been withdrawn. He ..-;n meet vt'ith tht father, wbo called hlm. It i• against tht law fGr school are children to be held out or 3Chool. but lopts rmtlritd, "I'm sure tht whole problem can be worked out am/ably. Jnvokini Jaws dots not alw1ys settlt1 problems. VOi.i have 10 treat prople in a reasonable manner." He 11ld the f11her has orrtred to help in tettinl student& lO handle the drug probltm-themse.lves. Lopu said he agrtes, ''The most tf· fec:dve way of worklnjl'. Y.rith 1ecnagtts 11 lhn>ugh their pttr group." Pi-1ean\\·hilc, both prosecution a n d defense attorneys in the murder case \\'ere preparing for f.lrs. Hunt 'll preliminary hearing next f..1onday in Harbor Municipal Court. Aside Crom Mrs. Hunt's brief releast from jail, she is being held without bail. Mesan's Hearing On Theft Delayed Court action aga inst a Costa l\les3 man accused of 1he theft or an estimatetl Sl.600 from his Leisure \Vorld Laguna Hills employers \\1as delayed Thursday in Santa Ana Municipal Court. Nick ~t . Schaar. 39. of 1682 IOv!'a St.. v.·as ordered to return to court Jan. 13 lo face charges or grand theft . It :s alleged that he stole cash and checks during his employment in the of- fices or the retirement community. Schaar is accused or taking an un· determined amount of change from pay washing machines and dryers at Leisure World. It ls alleged that he used the pro- ceeds to finance gambling trlp.s tG lLas Vtgas. Durante Head s Wate r Dist rict :'>lariG Durante ha s b~n elected chair- ma n or the C06ta J\1esa County \Vater District Board of Dlreetors Durante , of 1833 Pomona Arc .• jolncd lhr Cl\1C\VO when it was organized lo tn· compass fh·e other v.•atcr agencies. one ol whk:h he had served as an official. Warren Booth, or 1390 Garlingford St •• will back up Durante as vice chairman o( the five-member panel. Eagle Baud Picked Estancia High School's Eagle ~farchlnc Sand will perform In Dlsneylai1d'1 "fan- tasy on Parade" S:iturday at-J pm. The Eagle band ~·as chGstn fro1n pholos and tapt recordings of f,''t perform11nces. IL." dt.bul ~t Dlsney and 'Ytll n1ark the end of the band'~ first year or paradt cxptr1cnct. HOL!IDA Yi l:'AMP. & l(CCESSORYi SP.ECl/iC 15°.k TO 30°/o OFF DON 'T MISS THIS RARE OPPORTUNITY TO PURCHASE OU R FINE LAM PS AT FANTASTIC SAVINGS. CHOOSE FROM A WIDE SELECTION OF SUCH NAME !RANDS AS MAlllO -DftlGN GUILO -AITISAN -AND MANY MOREi OU11 l'INI COUICTION Of' ACCISSOlllS ~ .AUO 11 · HATUllO AT A U "/o SAVIN6SI ·~ lOCAL DIAUI l'OI HINUOOH--IHXIL-HlllTAGI "' ... ~ NIWP'ORT llACH 1727 WMttllff Dr., M2·2010 O"N PlllAY TIL t INTlllORS l'reft .. 19"•1 Inte rior Dt1ll"tr• A¥1il1 .. l~lo.:.-NSID • ' LAGUNA H ACH HJ Nonli c .... ""1· °"" ,...., ~ ' , 4M-4SS1 J I Abernathy HeldinMemphis, -- Says He'll Fast in Cell l'St Black · Capitalism Boss Quits MEMPHIS, TeM. (AP) - The n.v. Ralph David Abernathy. cbalnnan ol the Soulhom artatlan ~P Conference, went to j a l 1 Thunday-llllht .... ing be woold "teach Memphis a lesson" by lasting In bli cell. Court judge will act oo a suit- that -. to eojoln stale, clly and police cificiala u.m fUnl1er prooecutiog I h e charges aialmt the t I per>cN. Civil rtgiu. lltonJeys contend the new state law making It a m1sdemea.nor for an adult to encourage a pupil ~o stay out of, school to engage m a protest demonstratlon Is uoconsUtulional WASHINGTON (UP I) - PreaJdeol Nixoo'1 11n1 black capltalllm director bu q11u:J~~~~~~~~~~ lbe program, apparently be-jj Abematby, ooe ol II civil rtgiu. l<aders indict..! Dec. t u an outgrowth of the seven- week classroom boycott by Negroes, said he would only drink liquids during his con- finement. Arriving from Atlanta "'ilh 11i1 staff members, Abemalhy led about 400 persons on a two- columned march d o w n sidewalks on both sides of lo.fain Street and surrendered al the C<lllll)I jail The cbanq marchers on the one-mile trek from a downtown church to the civic center marled traffic at the heldlt of a rush hour. A"'bematby was expected to remain in jail at least until Monday when a U.S. Dist.ri<:t Nixon Plan Increasing Negro Job Ranks Killed WASlllNGTON (AP) -The Senate has voted to iil1 th8 NiJ:on administrailoo's so-call- ed Pphiladelphia plan aimed at increa.!lng Negro employ- ment on federall y financed construction projects. In a 52-37 vote Thursday night the Senate overrode the v.-ishes of the adJninistration Mine Safety Bill Facing Nixo1t Veto? WASHINGTON (AP) Despite Republican wantings o( a veto, Congre5s has sent to the White House a tough safe- ty . bill for the nation's 14-0,000 coal miners. and approv ed an ap- propriations bill amendment that said no money in that measure could be used to finance "any contract or agreement which the comp- troller general of the United St.ates bolds to be in contra- vention of any federal sta- tute." Co-.ptroller General Elmer B. St.a.ats opposes th e Philadelphia plan -a re- quirement that contractors on federal jobs make "good laiih" efforts to hire a oerlain percentage of minority group workers -on grounds it amounts to the use of quotas in employment. Quotas. Staats has said. are ootlawed Jn the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars di scrimination in hiring on the grounds of race, color, religion , sex or national origin. However. both Atty. Gen . Abernathy joined four local civil rights leaders who have declined on principle to post a token $l bail required before their release. The clvil rights drive that resulted in the indictment.. was designed to pressure the school board into grantq Negroes a greater voice in ochool affairo and to lon:o C1thollooperated St. Jmiepb Hospital to negotiate with a Negro union local that has been on strike aga.iJ'8, the ho<pllal •Ince Oct. 5. There have been no talks In the strike, although the school board has named two Negro board advisers and has pr<>- mised to push for a change in elecUan procedures to give Negroes a cha.ta to nm for the board. The boycott of the schools al times kept about me-balf or the city's 135,000 pupils oot or classes. Fifty.four percent of the enrollment is Negro. Ul'IT ....... XUAN THUY'S MAIL -Sens. Robert Griffin (R·Mich.), lei~ and William Spong (D-Va.) look over some of the 40,000 messages received in Washington in response to Griffin's appeal for Americans to write to the head of the Hanoi delegation a t Paris.peace talks, asking for humane treatment of U.S. POWs and release of name.s. The U.S. Jaycees have taken on project and hope lo deliver the letters to Xuan Thuy IQ Paris. Hanoi Br~asts POWs Send Yule Messages cauae ci basic dlaagreem<nts with the admlnlatratJon on bow It lho\>ld be run. Thomas F. Roeaer, f~ an- nounc.ed bis resignation nw,. day as asslslant to Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stans for minority enterprise. He plans to become public affairs dirtctor of the Peace Corp11. Stans replaced Roeser Oct. 28 as director of the Com- merce Deplrlmenl's Office ol Minority Business Ent.rpri!e (OMBE), the agency assigned to carry out Ntlon's black capitalism efforts. lt wu re- pon.d Roeser considered bi! new appointment as Stans' assistant a demotion. The friendly letters U· changed by Roeser and Stans and made publJc by the Com- meroe Departme'llt ~ay masked the disp.ite between the two men. 'I1le dia]:llte never became public, but privaJely the Com- mer'Ce Department let it be mo.. that Roeser ..... taken oil the day-lo<lay operation ol OBME because ol inability to administer the office. Roeser's supporters, however, said the key issue was his unsuccess- SAIGON (UPI) -Ha'nol present to you.'" fam ily not to "'·orry about ful effort to get a fjrm co~ Pil t Ask Radio, in programs beamed 1t1ayhew, a pilot. was cap-him. mitment of $500 million for 0 S "They will make Chrisimas OMBE from the administra-to the Far East, bas l>egun tured Aug. 17, 1968 after his U broadcasting Christmas mes-plane was shot down over very pleasant for us here ~ also balked at Stans' U N H I sages from American war North Vietnam, according to witb a · good Christmas dtn. order to launch a publicity ' ' e p prisoners to their families in nmeur' lomlsu o,r1 cgooddl::._C?!1°~ cam-'-for OMBE before it the U.S. military command. --·~• ...,.., the United Slat.s. charcl1 aervi..; and I'll ~ bad P""luced aey substaDllal On Hi1' acks "Dear mom , dad and iarn1-The .,..mand Aid today it looting rorwan1 i.i Y"'' awt.-. -- 11. I'm sure you'll be glad to was aware ol, the Engllah mas package again thi!5 year/'1;:::=========111 hear.my voice again," began language Radio Hanol ·broad- LONDON (UPI) -The one message by a man ldenti-castr, which began earlier it said. \Vorldwide Airline P J to ts fied as Navy Lt. William John this week, but had no way of Another broadcast allegedly Union asked the United Na· Mayhew of New Mane.bester, det.en:nining their authenUcity. was made by Air Foroe 1st A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Uon.s to d a Y to take W. Va. "This will have to do The broadcast allegedly LL Michael Soott Kerr, a pi· ·~ ~~-~the~ respons1 ity for punishing this 1ear as my Christmas made by Mayhew urged b1s Jan. 18• 1967• Kerr is from M•..,._. 1m ~ .., .. w.c11 airplane hijackers and said it "° tf'9lf ,._.. -' '"' ''"'" ..,.. was coasidering a ore-day "1:r tf {r 1;( "(:( 1;( Port Angeles, Wash. ::"tt11o":=-=.;' .. '::'" ..._ slrike to back up its demands. "Merry Chrisbnas and 8 -••1•1'11111 .. ,..... ----ROAST TURKEY S......"9• J P.K. Old f15hlo11ed App11 Cld1r. Molded koy 1I Anne 0.1rry s.1..t. Ff'Mll Cr111b1rry S.uc.1. Wftol• Or111q1 fill1d With Sw11t Pot•· to, Topped with M•rtlitnellow1 011r Own Ch .. ~1111t Dr1•'91t9. H..n11t1Me P•mpki•' lr114. Hot Mi~ Pie "Mtlt l r•Mv S1uc.1, P-pU. '11, 1c1 Ct11rn or Shetbtt. TWO LOCATIONS HS I. YO-' LINDA ILYD. PLACEN11A PHONE 524-2090 21J1 UtsrOL IT. COSTA MESA PHONE 546 3414 COCKTAILS ..., '• ....... IKM ··••• Ending a two-day private N • G t p t •i • happy New Year to1·YOOKall~" l'llE'SENTED AS ,. meeting in London l he ixon e s e i wn Said a mes,,age 0 erT S l'UllLIC SERVICE EVEllY DAY IY: IntemaUonal Federation of family. "l hope this message U. Roofing Co. M1J°" CrMit C1rh Ho,..... Airline P 11 o ts Association finds you in good health. My " ' ' ·.': . ., ,., Chief targeta in the bill are mine UJ!losl.oos and t h e dreaded "black hmg" disease, daily threats tn IOl'09 140,000 coal mJnes. Before passage Thursday nigh~ t b e ad- ministration made known its objecilon to ooe major pro- vision of th~ bill: federal payments to miners disabled by black lung. John N. ?\-fitcbell and Labor Secretary George Shultz, in addition to Nixon, have .:sup- ported the Philadelphia plan. Defenders of the plan say it sets ••goals," rather than "quotas." Tbe comptroller general heads the general ac- counting office -an arm of Congress. SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) ly lhat N"llOll will ''do health is okay, so don't HY_. • ....., .._..., ~ (IFALPA) said the nation con--The wife of the first something to get my maor~-~~,:V~·~· ~-"iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiili~1~w~s·~· .. ~..,~-~·~"~-~~~-~~:i:::::::~!!!!!!!'! cemed with a hijacking "must American pilot captured in borne." assume responsibility for the the Vietnam war ha! sent She married Navy Lt • •· •afety ol pass-ers." -President Nixoo a 70,000. Everett Alvarez, two mootm "The problem is one for the signature petition asking blm before he left for Vietnam ~ United Nations," a statement to press for the return of the years ago. Four months later issued at lbe end of the estimated 1,380 U.S. prisoners -oo Aug. 15, 1964. -he was meeting said. "We are a body or war. shot down and captured during .set up for the protection of . Tangee Alvarez, 29, of Santa the .second day of air fi'""tlng crews." -•" Clara said after the signatures over North Vietnam. South (oast ?lua SANTA'S HOME ••• • AWAY FROM HOME Charles Jackson, Secretary were mailed Thursday that She has received about 31 of the !FALPA, told the n"''s she does not expect any letters from her 31·year-old lllSlO AfwtD!fGOPHIWAY,COlffAMllA ' A disabled miner with a wife and two children w o u 1 d receive $272 a month. The ad- ministration contends this will cost $385 million a year. Democrats put the figure at '60 million. NY's Wagner Separated NEW YORK (UPI) -For- mer Mayor Robert F. Wagner and his wife, Barbara, both ac knowledged Thursday that lhey were living apart conference the pilot union was _Jnu~·~ra~c~le~s}lrom~~th~e~pe~U@u~oo~,~on~-:__h~u~s~band~:. =~=--=::1 _ __::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~=---not interested in .setting 'itself ::. Payments should be handled by states, GOP congres.micn said. Democrats argued that most states have demonstrated they would not pay. "Shabby treatment indeed (or our nation's coal minen;,i• said Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr, (D-N.J.). of the ad- ministration pasition. Wagner, w)lo was an unsuc- cessful candidate in this year's Democratic mayoral primary, told news media that "at this point we are living apart. She (lt1rs. Wagner} is under a doctor's care. My primary concern is her restoration to good health." up as a law enforcement body. He said the degree ot punish- ment was a matter which should be decided by each count.ry. However, he said the United Nations should accept a larger responsibllty for punishing lhe hijackers and that the group of pilots was considering a 12 or 24 hours strike to halt all international air travel to back up their demands. South Against Wall ' lntegratwn 'D-Day' Nears JACKSON, Miss. <UPI) - Segregation ends in many school distrlct.s in the SouLh today with the letout for _the Christmas holidays. C I a s s reopenings In January will be on a desegregated basis under the U.S. Supreme Court's "integrate now" ruling. ?\-tississippi Is the state hardest hit immediately by the order, with about 35 !Choo! districtr m January or February deadlines. North Carolina has three districts with a Dec. 31 deadline for in~ le grating. Nineteen districts in Ten· nessee must desegregate in January and· ttv"ee Alabama districts have unUI Feb. I. Eighty-one districts in Georgia have until Sept. 1 to integrate or race a cut.oU in aid funds:. Other districts In the South have less stringent.deadlines. "War has been declared," .said Georgia Gov. Lester 1 f\faddox. ''The judges are IJNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW C>rlN SATURDAYS ... ,,,,., MOM.-tHURI. 10.l,P.M. PllDAT$ 104 P.M. 1714) 14f.SJI 1 ......... I•: S.. c.-"-. CM'9 M .. AHi, \'Kl Pl"lt. l'MMl"f E. H. LEVAN -. saying to us, 'You surrender from the U.S. Sth Circuit your children to us or \\'e're Court of Appeals, 'A'OUld "do going to take your money irreparable damage to the away'." quality or public education in Gov. John Bell Williams and our st.ate." several other ltfississlppi of-"The effect of this decree, in ficials have predicted the most instances, will make orders handed down Ocl 29 by quality education for these the Supreme Court will cause children an utter im· mas.s withdrawals by 'A'hHe possibility,'' said the governor. students in heavily black "In all cases, it will be disrup- areall. Many black parents tive, with ed ucaUonal progress also have e :r p r e s s e d ap-brought to a sudden haJt." prehension over the impending ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! charges. Some teachers have sub- mitted resignatiom in various districts, but an education spokesman said most ap- parently are waiUng to see what happens after the first of the year. Williams said the Supreme Court decision, coupled with lhe implementation o r d e r SPECIAL CHRISTMAS OFFER FllD·OUICk lea EJac1or Kii '11" ONLY An fdtal' 'Little llomethingi for tht home•• gift! Just flip th• handle ond you haw let tuba inst1ntly, us- fly. Offer Includes two ll)lcfal 20<uti. Ice Ejector tra)'\ as well as tiancly SCKube sermt T•L•YI a10N •Af'f'LIAHca:a 411 E. 17th St. Co1t1 Mo11 -646-t6" Parent's Ring A memorable gift for mother or rrandmother with • birthstone for eech cf the children. WillONI .... 3.00 ~h. ~ weis/ields -JEWELERS SOUTH COAST PUZA U-Mall -F""" Woolwwth'--"-540-71'7 Aloo lft Lakewood C"1ftt'-Loknood ' Open ze.s Sndllf . " ' ' ' ' ' •' ' -~ '. • ' • • DARY PROT EDITORIAL PAGE • Politics and Children Christmas Is a time !or giving and sharing -U y<>u want to -and many groups are collecUng again, especially for those who can't reach out. ~ The American Friends Service Committee is trying to help some who can't reach out.-Tbey have lost arms. Or legs. Some are multiple amputo;es. All are children. They are victims of the Vietn3J}'l War. Because a Quaker pacifist group once tried to sup- Pll'. medicine ID Norlh Vietnam, Vice· Mayor Robert M. Wilson questioned Monday just whose children the com .. mittee seeks to help. He said some are friends and some are enemies. They are indeed South Vietnamese, Jt was explain· ed. But the overwhelming consideration should simply be that they are children. ls parental or national allegiance important in de- ciding whether a child's misery should be alleviated by a handful of Christmas shopping change? At wbat age does politics pollute innocence? Is it even. a councilman's proper concern, when much .of the world P.auses to remember all children in the name of the child whose birth we celebrate th i s season? Mesa's Bright Girls If Roberta "Bobbie" Furness of Costa Mesa isn't the smartest high school girl in Orange County. it will take a heap of proving by any contender. Miss Furness. a senior at Mater Dei Catholic High School iri Santa Ana. convincingly outscored all other girl students in recent Academic DecathJon competi- tion. Third-place flnl,sher among girl• from thro!l&hollt the county Wiii Sandra Genis 0( Esiancla Hi~g~ Scbooi, another Costa Mesa resident. The Academic Decathlon, in its 1econd year "' an annual event oponsored by the Orange County Depart- ment of Education, is as rigorous a test of mental abll· ity .. the Olympic decathlon is qi all-around physical ability. The students can't be narrow specialists or non .. verbal or withdrawn. They are judged on speaking •bil· ity, both prepared and extem~raneous, and on t b e school activities they haye participated in. The decathlon measures mental acuity as the students take tests in science, mathematics, social sciences, English, literature, aesthetics and practical arts. When the scores were posted "Bobbie" Furness had scored 7,240 out of a possible lo,ooo points. Sandra Genis had sc<>red 6,831. Miss Furness, 17, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J~n Furness of 340 AJva Lane. Miss Genis, 16, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Genis o! 296.1 Baker Slreet. State Supt. of Public lnS'lruCtion Max Rafferty was on hand to present the awards at a banquet. He said he will try to ~et the State Board o! Education to make the academic decathlon a statewide event. Students compete between schools individually and by teams in athletics, in cbeerleading and in deba•te. Why not these matches of mental ability? That is what school is al1 about. · And who knows? If there were statewide academic decathlon competition, maybe our hom~own girl would prove to be one of the smartest in high school in the state as well as tops in the county,_ • (Cl <Av~ E: ANI> EFFEC.T V.S. Prisons Only Corrupt The Inmates Dear Gloomy Land Exchange Opponents 'Not Selfish' Possibly not one American in 10,000 has ever so -much as looked at· a government report called "The Challenge of Crime in l Free Society"; which was published riearly three years ago by the President's :Ommiasion on Law Enforcement and A.dministratkm ol Justice. In tbls report. leading experts in the Deld of penology recommend vast and sweeping changes in the way we run our prison !)'stem -changes that would beaefit not only the inmates themselves, out that woutd also reduce the cost to iOCiety cl maintaining huge penaJ struc· tures that only intensify the problem of ~ime. THERE ARE ABOUT l lh million of4 ~enders in our correctional programs, tnd each year our correctional in- &tituUons handle about ~1h million ad· :nissions. If we could return most or lhese men to society as responsible and ?roductive citizens, our crime rate would irop considerably -but most of them ~come repeaters, going on to more H:rious crime after a prolonged stay in ?rison. Our present institutions do not correct; ~ey corrupt. Even this cautious and of- licial report concludes that "the con· iitions under which many offenders are widled, particularly in institutions, l!re )ft.en a positive detriment lo rehabillta· lion." THE REPORT GOES on to say bluntly: "Life in many insti tutions is at best barren and futile, at worst unspeakably brutal and degrading. To be aure. the offenders in such institutions Gus: If Cleaver and his three hijacking henchmen finally do return to the U.S. and stay out of jail, will our tax.supported UC, Irvine welcome him with open arms again to teach his devastating "thing'' to our clill- dren? -A.S. t~r. ft•1111• relle<'I• ,,..,rT" .,,... ,.. --rlly ~ If the Mllnll"'· t• 't'Ollr "°' _.,.. f9 Gloomy Gu .. 011~ Pllltl. are incapacitated from committing further crimes while serving their ~~ces. b u t the conditions in which they live are the poorest possible preparation for their successful reentry into society, and often merely reinforce in them a pattern of manipulation or destructiveness." More than half the men in prison have not completed an elemeqtary school education. Most Of them hate no skills, and thus no job possibilities when they are released. They return to the same en- vironment lb.at produced them, only more bitter, more expert in the, ways of crime, and more determined to "get even" for their punishment. Penitentiaries don 't make men ''penitent," but vindictive against society. WE l\IUST BEGIN with the youth 0£4 fenders, who too often are turned into criminals in the very juvenile detention homes that are supposed to "refonn" them. We must get the communities, the schools and colleges to take part in rehabilitation programs. We must have work-rurioughs and more flexible pr1>- bation and parole policies. We must get better personnel, better trained, better paid, and better motivated than the present poliJical hacks. Otherwise, all we shall get is "better" crime by men whose only ambition is retaliation. The Quiet Americans Oppose Dumping To the Editor : Your editorial of Dec. 12 concerning the restoration of the water skiing course in the Upper Newport Bay seems to represent aJl Opponents Of the Jand ' t.X· change as narrow and selfish people, which they are not. As perhaps t h e staunchest of the opponents of the land exchange, interveners in the court litiga. tion, we have no objections to this dredg· . ing which must be done with Army Engineer Corps approval. Altbougb we hold no membership in any conservation group, most of the op· ponents of the trade with whom we work in an attempt to keep the Upper Bay in the public trust are members of at least one active Conservation cirganization. It is not the approved dredging which they are protesting. It is the location of the dredg4 ed materials which are removed and placed somewhere else. ON FRIDAY WE had several calls from conservationist friends who ex· plained that a dredge had been working since 6 a.m .• and the tailings apparently were being placed on the patent lands, .6.s interveners, this concerns us, because the patent lands are .involved in the lawsuit. Jt isn't generally known that. whereas the county holds an easement to dredge this 243-acre area at any time for purposes of fishing, navigation and com- merce, if the county puts the dredged materials at the shoreline within the pa4 tent periphery. the filled property created goes to t h e Irvine Company. It &eems unwise for the county to fill lbls patent shoreline until and unless the trade is ruJ. ed constitutional. Surely it is possible for the Harbor District to fmd a location for the dredged tailings other than in the tidelands of the Upper Bay. MR. AliD MRS. FRANK ROBINSON All Races, AU Crttds To the Editor' Regarding Gus on Dec. IO: I question . ~, , . . . . Mailb'Ox · '.. Lttltri from re1ders 1rt we!~. Norm1lly writers shOuld convtY 1n11r messeoe1 In JOO word1 or ltss. Tnt right TO condenst tetltrs l'O flt SP41Ct or ollmi· nett libel Is reservt'd. All letters mu\I 1ndl.>de 1111· n11Urt end m111in9 l<ldnru, bu! n1m11 m11y ~ wlrllheld on re<1u11I ll 1ulflelent re••on 11 111111ren1. Poe1rv wm not bl 11ubll1Md. the accuracy of A.D:s comments, except ror the: statement that Mesa Verde ts are progressive and dynamic. ide ourselves on the high percen· of our people, including members of races and creeds, who take an active part in their city's activities, whether it be PTA, local government, service cl:ubs, or numerous other civic Organizations and causes. We intend to' continue our efforts to foster that pride. I'm not certain just what the anonymous A.O. is trying to promote. but our interest is in promoting <good gp.ve mment, good schools, and good neighbors. DONAW E. SMALLWOOD Mesa Verde Homeowner's Association President The contributor to Gloomy Gus Dec. JO said white buyerJ: of hornes in Mesa Verde are told, when they ask. that no Negroes will eve r li ve i1t the area. A second contributor Dec. 12 denied tl~e existence o/ bigotry and discrimination in Me sa Ve rde, saying the area is already racially hv tegrated. Editor Sacrificing fl1tallty To the Editor : It does not take a mental giant to realize that there is a direct relationship between density of population, and pollu- tion of the environment. Recently I read, as regards Orange County, that "air pollutiOI) remains unchecked" and "deaths from em- • Ill the Tidelands physema are rising 65 percent a year.'' Nevertheless, I learn that some people still advocate "development" of the Up- per Bay. "Development" means tidelands filled and used as sites for high..clensity housing. NO\V, DO WE REALLY want to cram more cars onto our streets, more boats into our bay and more piers along our shores? Besides man-made amenities, what makes the Newport Bay area a quality environment? It is .climate, pure "'ater in the bay, fairly clean air and op- portunities for a variety of water-oriented recreation: boating, fishing, skiing, en- joyment of public beaches and the small remaining natural areas. How will these delights be affected by increased popula- tion density? They will all be affected ad versely. \Viii the quality of lile here be bettered by "development?" Or are we sacrificing quality for quantity? ALICE BROWNFIELD Shameful Thlug1 · To the Editor: The ·1atest ratio of barter between the sort free nations and the hard c3ptlve na· tions is shown in the prisoner·exchange of 58 Egyptians for two lsi:aelis. NOw. pre- judiced people like me could .say that it was an even swap, that two Israelis are worth 58 Egyptians, bllt that would not excuse the·shameful ratio of ~:2. Should have been 2:2. OTHER SHAMEFUL things the ftee ' world is suffering are: The Pueblo in· cident, the n1>-win war, the stubboi'nness cif Hanoi at the conference table and in withholding PO\V information. th~ My Lai conspiracy to blackmail ·"repara· lions" from the u.~ .. the infiltration of anarchists, the corruption of youth by drugs, and many other alien attempts designed by foreign aid recipients to bite the hand that feeds them and , come hell or highwater, to plunge the· world into a state of chaos in "'"hich the masses would eat up the available food, use up the ex- isting products, and care nary a damn about the immediate need for replacing them by hard work and honest industry. t rest my case. MILT BASHMI Could Be Belter To the Editor:· I a1n a senior at Corona de! Ma r High School. and as I look back, I realize all the time I have v.•asted taking· classes t will never use. "Required" courses look teachers. classrooms. administration and malerials .to make it possible for me tG attend many classes necessary for graduation I didn't wa nt or feel I needed. Statistics sllow thal a student .going to college has forgotten t1boul 80 percent of the things he learn~d in high school. It's easy to see why when a student attends classes he has no interest in and will never use .. I1e is simply there for a grade, not really to learn. Grades are what , really matter after all. That is all that people look at anyway. IT'S SAD,_ BUT TRUE. that grade~ play such an important part of a person's life. especially today. College qualifica· tions, draft status, and job possibilities all hinge on them. l reel that gr ades cannot and do not realistically measure a pi!rson, which they are doing today. A grade shO\\'S v:hat one does in a class, according to the 'instructor. nothing more. A person does not have to receive a good grade t.o get a lot out of a class. J10'W you are able to use what you have learned is more im· PQrtarit. 'HIGH SCHOOL is geared for the sin· di!nt going to college. but there are manv hi gh school stud ents "'ho cannot or wiil not attend college, and must immediately look for a job lo support themselves. Can they con1prehcnd what they read. usP. figures. fill out an application , "Tile a letter to a prospective employer, fill out an income Lax return? liavc they been counseled toward any goal? Jn n1any cases, I doubt it! I'm not saying the-school system iff all that bad , l'n1 saying it could be that much better. RI CK POPOVIT S BULLETIN BOARO: Just a eentury ago a group of tea and silk farm workers, ~nown as the Wa'kamatsu Colony , arrived 1n El Dorado county, the first Japanese mmigrants to settle In this country. JA fl.randed fisherman named Manjiro, :iowever, was picked up by a New England whaler in 1843 to become the !irst known "lssel." or first generation Japanese, to reach these shores.) ., ., ..... •1"'.'+:...-·'"<--:~.,.,..1.,,­•. ' -The Bookman ,£,·.' Imposed, Self-imposed Suffering ~1arkir1' the centennial ls a fuUodress nistory of Japafiese.Americans. "Nisei: 1'he Quiet Americans." 'Ole author is Bill Hosokawa~ a Denvtt journalist and 1imself a "Nisei," the Japanese word meaning seoood generation. Hosokawa is t veteran of the relocation camps of the Nartimt 1940s wti«i the American anny, 1n an atmosphere of some hysteria, rounded up more than 100,000 lssei and Sisef aa potential &eCUrity risks. 811 George---• ' Deor Georl•: ...,.. -you> .. had no com' meni tboot eex education in the Khooll! Are yOU pro or con? WONDERING O.ar Wondering: I uaod to be preUy much of • pro bul )'OU know wtW marriage can do &o 1 man. (II )'OU have given up othtr ad· vice columnists as bopeleu, why nonmtAi-to Georg• and cN"'"hlm up u bopele81, also?) THE EVACUATION period is covered in considerable detail in this book, bul never wlth bitterness. Jndeed, the book is a record of a great American success story, "a Roratlo Alger tale on an ethnic1 8Cale," u the author put it. It is an el~ quent contribution to the classic lm4 migrant story that focuses on a small but not Insignificant segment or th e American people (Morrow: illus .. $10.95). Notes on the l\largln -The frustraUon of the Vietnam war glves fresh urgency to I. F. Stone's "The Hidden History of the Korean War," a classk: analysis first published in 1952 and practically ignored when it appeared in· that McCarthy era. A new edition of !his Imporlanl work, long out of print, was recently published by Monthly Review Prtss ($7.50). Stone'a account or tflls earlier Ameri~a.n mlllt\ilry •dventure in Asia txposes the same kind of offlclal mendacity and the w:ne booby traps on the. road to peace that have bten evident In IM Vietnam situation. By GEORGE R. HOFF, Pb.D .. ·Human suffering takes many form s, Some of it is impased from external sourcE-S : war, pestilence, floods, ~arth­ quakes, prejudice, hunger, brutality, murderJ rape -all forms of human misery inAicted from tfle outside. Most of us have not personally been beaten down by bombs, clubs, starvation, guns, madmen, or bigots. We eat "'ell. live comfortably, love rreely: we have friends, families; most of our basic and not.so-ba sic needs and desires are met; we're 'not afraid of the proverbia l wolf Jil our door; times are good for us. · Yet, we suffer too, but from our O'.\'fl sell-imposed misery. We bring it on ourselves when -and sometim~ because -everything Is going our way. THOSE ON WH<»t suffering has been ' ' Quotes ~ Claire Bloom, ldl'tu vlsJtlag S.F .• OD II' "HI of •tag• nudity -"If a script calls lor lak· -Jda M. Ta~ ' famous story ing.your clothes off and ou have a lovely the Standsrd 011 Company'' fltKMJ. a. . ff' 111 d • r book lhat atUJcked America's nrst major ~· take lhtm 0 • · ,you on t, or industrial monopOly and helped it>-~ s sake kr:ep them~on. augurate the "muckracker nlOvernent" Gav. R.e!lga11 -"f don't know whether ~1'1 In a condenJl!:d version.-edittd~by -actort make good polltlcians, .. iw1 l know Davkl M. Chalmer . A Norton Library some pcJllicians who make \'ery good ac-. paperback (l!.9.1). tors." ,. r "" '" ~! ' ' ' ' ' imposed can't understand what appears to them to be uhreal, unwarranted, and unforgivable travail ; it seems illusionary, conceited. self-indulgent. They scorn such inexplicable behavior as suicide at~ tempts, depres s ion senseless rebelliousness. fierce competitiveness. bitarre actions, suspicioumess, envy. guilt. pbob~s. and compulsiveness. Paradoxically, bw·ever, imposed su(. fering protect.$ against these self-imposed kinds. It's unlikely that we will pay at. tention to our emotional probl ems so long as somebody tlse is standing on our foot. CONVERSELY, those of us who com- pose our own agony are ambivalent toward victims of imposed suffering. Although we sympathize with the pain resulting from being beaten. feelin~ hungry, or having been wiped out, we feel 11 secrel pride that our pain is more com4 p!icatcd, more mystical, of a higher level. -The l'acl ls that imposed aOd seif·ill\4 posed ~uffering are equally bad and in· imlcal to a good JHt. A choice briween I ------ codliver oil or castor oil, taken straight, Is hardly a choice al all . The consequence of a bullet in lhe head is the same, regardless of who pulled tho trigger of the gun. ANOTHER FACT ls that the inmates or Gerinan death camps, the blacks in the holds of slave ships. the dust bowl fanners, the citizens or San Francisco during the earthquake. the victims or , .. ,1,rderers, were all ffinocent of their suf4 \ ferlng: lhey had no choice. We are guilty of complicity vdlh ourn; we bur responsibility for it. · Unless o~·helmed by c\reumstances completely beyond our control, we are the result « What we do and are fret to do what u'e choose. Excuses. rationaliia- tfoils, project.ions, denials, or qther forms of psychological defentt.s delay the tn!- evitatile confrontaUon of our own rreedom; they also reinrorce the illusion of emotional imprisonment. So Jong as we Jive, we have the freedom of deciding ho\I.' v.·c want lo do it. NOTHJNG OR NOBODY can guar11nt~ our freedom for us; or keep us from laying sutlerlng on ourselvs.~. We may procetd through an enUre life without being aware of the· altemaUves available to ·us, the choiee5 which art U1ere. In every situaUon lar every person, there Is a rtalm « frt'edom and a reatm or consl.rg)nt. Al any given tln1e. \Ve mav live in either realm. We tnust be C<lS· nizant that, indeed. there are irresistible forces, stone walls, iron fists, but . recognizing them, v.·e can turn away and live in t.he realm of our freedom. On ly after \Ve have idcntifled our st-lf· Imposed suffering, made the coin· mitmeot to change, and borne the responsibil ity for lhe choice! we make. will l\'e be in a pusit lon to pursue our O\VO destinies. ---- Friday, December 19. 1969 Tht edftoriol pn9e of the Datt11 Pilot see~·s to inform. 1111d stim· ttlate readt rs by prcstnting this 11ew&paper'& cipinioJtS and com- ment\}ry 01t topics Cl/ interest ond sJgnlficanee, by pro171ding a jon'm for lite r.tpres3ici n of ottr readers' opinions. and by presmtino th e divettt l1iew- points of informed obscrvf.r~ and S-Pokci;n1eu 011 topic! of the dtJJI, Robert N. \\reed, Publisher I ' I I I --------- Piiot Logbook Never Use Simple Word H Exotic One Will Do By RICHARD P. NALL Ot I~ D41ll1 l"li.t Sl.tt PARA~1ETERS are very large in Laguna Beach jwt now. It's all Peter Ostrander's fault. I hadn't heard any bod y say "parameter" for months, maybe years. Then Ostrander threw it in as the thing Laguna councilmen should prepare for the Main Beach. It means a quantity to which arbitrary values may be assigned. Ostrander could have .said, "hatch up a plan boys", or "figure out what ,-~ J1 you want on the beach, lads,'' but instead it came out: ., "PARAMETERS should be prepared suff~ently de-~ fining the end results desired, taking special care not to introduce unnecessary design restraints." Now parameters doesn't have a particularly lip smackJng sound, not like say "diaphanous" or "cacophony" or "callipygian". But you w~uld have thought Ostrander springled sugar and cinnamon on it the way councilmen lapped it up. EverybOOy kept finding a reason to say parameters at Wednesday's interminable council session. All but Mari: Gumbiner. He didn't succumb to the temptation. INSTEAD, HE KEPT lacing his comments with "vis-a-vi.!l" which means f~ce I~ fa~e (especially in dancing). If things run true to form, Gumbiner'1 v1s-a-v1s will probably dance forth from oUter lips in future council sessions. That's the way it is with words. They generate their own cycles like little tyrants. Several ye~rs ago Gov. Edmund G. "Pat" Brown was unalterably op- posed to something or other. After that nobody In public or quasi-public life could simply say, "I'd never go for that" or "I would always be agairist it." They had to be unalterably opposed. CONFRONTATION and escalate were both very large in public vocabu. laries for a time. They probably helped heat up the war. I knew an editor who handled political writing plums as he chose them. He was always escalating situations into a confrontation. Had he covered a Dower show, I'm sure a confrontation or two could have been found among the daffodils for confrontations were the heady stuff. VIETNAM WAR talk was peppered for a lime with "enclave" and "domino" theories. President Kennedy was sprinkled with charisma. So was Bobby. Teddy lost his at a bridge. President Nixon admits he never had any. That's the way it is with words. You start with aonice gentlemanly parameter and some smart alecky writer escalates you in"to a vis·a-vis con. frontation. - Whale Roll Call . Clemente Students Take Cou11t By BARBARA KREIB!CH 01 lh• O•Uy Piiot Slllf A four-month "whale census" will be Jaunched the first Monday in January in Dana Point, under the guidance of San Clemente High School science instructor Philip Grignon. Purpose of the count will be f<l determine just how many of the rare l?nd ancient California Gray Whales are left to participate in the great annual migra· tion from the Bering Sea to Itaja California and back. Northbound and southbound whale population counts have been made, says Grignon, but the two-way trek never has been counted from a single point along the route. An educated guess, he says, ls that the giant beasts number about 6,000. The whale census will be undertaken in cooperation with the Sherman Foundation and 'lile San Diego Museum of Natural History. as part of their continuing con· servation work. Initial counling will be d o n e by-Grignon 's students who hace com- pleted a coorse in whale identification. They will be aided by interested adults in the community who also will be given the necessary training. The whale-counters will man a station al the top of Dana Point from dawn to dusk from the first week of January until May I, counting the travelers and al· tempting to identify species and family groups. Some of the whales travel seaward of the Channel Islands, Grignon said, but most stay close enough to the coast to be readily identified. Their destination is Scammons Lagoon ln Baja California, about 800 miles south of Dana Point. Here the females enter the quiet lagoon to bear their calves, re- maining from four to six w~ks before starting north again to the waters of the Bering Sea. Here they will spend four to fi re months, feasting 24 hours a day on shrimp. During this period, says Grignon, the whales may gain up to 10 pOunds an hour in weight. 'Ille feast must last them far a long time, since they do very little eating during the migration period. Grignon noted that whales, like humans, sometimes miscalculate delivery dates and every year a few calves are born before their mothers reach Scammons Lagoon. W h e n overtaken by the stork, the mother whale will head for the nearest sheltered cove to bear her calf. "'Ille Laguna coast-Jin' is a likely spot to watch for this," says Grignon. The science instructor and his students have prepared an infoi-malive program on whales and their hablts which they will be glad to present, as a contribution to conservation, to any interested group he said. The lecture Is followed by a whale-watching trip by boat, if desired, with the club paying the cost o£ lhe vessel. Wa11t to Talk to Vietnam? Better Plait Sall Ahead Orange Countians should plan ahe.lld if they \Vish to talk during the holidays to relatives or friends stationed in Vietnam. Pacific Telephone says it is generally easier for a serviceman to call home than for his family lo try to reach him in Viel· nam. To avoid disappointments, soldiers are being asked to notify their families in ad· vance if they expect to telephone home. More than 42,000 calls were completed between the U.S. and Vietnam la.st yrar. l\1ost of the calls were made from Viet- nam rather than the U.S. because of the difficulty in locating servicemen when calls come lb from the States. Travel restrictions and Saigon curfews complicate the task of I o c a t i n g servicemen. Callers to Vietnam should have the serviceman's unlt. hls APO number and. U possible, a telephone number. Calls can now be placed from hospitals and bases in Tan Stln Nhut, Long Binh, Cam Ranh Bay. Nha Trang, Qui Nhon And Da Nang, as well as from Saigon. But U.S. callers can reach only telephones in Saigon al'll.I the immediate vicinity. Calls originating in Vietnam are handl· ed on a .. first come, first served'' at various 1clephone centers operated for 1crv1ccmcn. Sal@OO is 16 hours :ihead of Paciric Standard Time. In other words, wh~ ii is 7 a.m. in Orange County, it is 11 p.m. the 5ame day Jn Vietnam. Tht first three minutes of a llation·l~ ) station call to Vietnam is $9. A person-to- person call costs $12 for the first three minutes. Additional minute rale.5 for both station and pef'SOl1 calls is $3. Golf er Given Prison Term For Forgery GoUing personality Ralph Eldon· Miller has betn sentenced to one to 14 years in state prison after pleading guilty to one count of_ forgery while employed N a bookkeeper for a Tustin firm. Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner's sentencing of Miller, 42. automatically nullifies 1 number of slmllar charges against the popular amateur golfer. They fncludcd a forgery charge filed by a Costa Mesa firm for whom he worked a.s a bookkeeper. .. Miiier was arrested at the lath hole nt the El Cimino Country Club at Oecanslde la.st week followin& a Southland.wide circulation of hls J>OCMaraph and crime dossier. Officers descrlbed the golfer as ''a one handicappu with a smooth Une". Club employes recognized Miller from the posters and alerted sheriff's officers. Miller wu returned that day to face cbarges in Orange County. Miller ha.s competed on several oc. c:u:loni 1n lournamenta 11 lhe Codi Mesa li9!I an<{ Coll!Jlly Club. Friday, Dr,ernber 19, 1969 • DAILY PILOT 3 Chur~h Goes Arty OCC T eaclier Fashions Mosaics ARTIST AN.D MOSAIC -Art !nstrucior Victor Casados of Orange Coast College stands with one of two mosaics he just completed for St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church in Los Angeles. This scene depicts St. Francis receiving the stigmata. Mosaic is so large Casados had to place it on ground , then view it from roof of his house in order to get perspective. ' 1t's @hristinas. 1sn~ it time you gave an (9mega? More than likely, it la. A fine watch is a marvelous gift-for him or for her. And when It'• an Omega, H's one Of the most Jae ting gins you can bestow. Cert~nJy, 1he most frequenlly used. -... . • i '~- ... ~ HJs name was Father T I mo t h y O'Sulllvan and the years In this country hadn't .eroded away the Irish lilt in his speech. He was talking' with artist Vlc Casados about how poorly prepared the average priest is In judging what art should go Into his church. Casados, an art instructor at Orange Coast College, had just completed two giant mosaics for Father O'Sullivan's church, St. Francis of Assisi, in Los Angeles. "We have no formal trainiiig in art." he said. "We realize the need for art Jn the church, but choosing it is such a great responsibility. There should be courses taught in the seminary to give us background." Father O'Sullivan gave Casados great freedom in the fashioning of the mosaics. The cruciform, hanging In th(' vestibule. is abou t eight feet tall. It is made of Byzantine tile, and the golden sections are actually gold laid over ·the tile. It depicts the coming of the early padres to California, with several of the missions th ey established symbolically pictured. The design was Casados' masters thesis In college, The work itself is C1'.1lorful and provides a striking, powerful introduction to the church, according to Father O'Sullivan. The mosaic which Casados did for the rectory is larger. occupying one ·whole wall on the landing of a stairway. The scene represents St. Francis receiving the stigmata from the six.wing- ed angel. It, too, is a many colored piece of work. "It took five months to do," Casados said. "J used the direct method, which means that when a mistake is made, you have lo chip the tile out and start over." Once the Mosaic was erected in the rectory and bolted to the wall, Casados said he made "C1'.lunt!css changes" to get the effect he wanted. One or the hard parts about doing such a large work, he said. is being able to get fa r enough away Now. If It is time for you to give an Omega, you couldn't have picked a better one. A-Vtllow top, 111lnl••• 1111! b•ck '"'·, .$8S a-Y•llCl'lll' to11, 11a1n11u 1i..1 baGIC e.M ... 195 c-toc 'fltll1• or Y•!to" IOHd GOid brtoel1t w1tc!I ••••• •••• •••••• •••••• , •• , ••••• \ ... $230 from It to reaDy set ft. "I finally put It on the ground and got up on the roof or my house," he 11Jld. ''That way I could get perspective." Casados said the 5ize of the mosaic makes auachlng lt with bolts a necessity. "J used 60 pounds of cement ju.st to grout it to the wall," he said. ''Wllhln the limitations," he said. "I tried to make it as exciting as l coul~ through color, and through St. Francil being levitated during this supreme mc:>- ment, to increase the tension. J wanted It to be dramatic and exciting, not quiet." Casados' theory is that a mosaic should not look like a painting. "I intended this to be a lactlle thing;• he said. "You can feel that some tiles are deeper, somt: higher. It is perfectly ac· ceptable for the viewer to. run his fingers over it. I think that a mosaic should be a mosaic. If it could have been a painting, it should have been a painting." Casados, a \Vestminster resident, said he has worked with oUter priests and churches to help them with art matters. Jn Steerman, Tex., he was asked to dO a mosaic behind the altar, and before he was throu gh, he was asked to select the carpet and wall covering for the whole church to match the mosaic. 23, Dies After Fall Young Santa Anan, A young Santa Ana resident, Janet deVines Guenther, 23, of 1465 S. E. Syca· more St., died Thursday morning in a fall in the bathroom of her apartment. according to the Orange County _coroner. The coroner's autopsy showed the young woman suffocated after a collapse of her windpipe. InvesUgators said Me apparently slipped on the fioor coming out of the shower and struck her Detk . on the edge of the bathtub. For th fa Christmas we hav11 magnificent colleollQn of these precision tlmepleceL For him, choose from atrlklr1g Omega ca18ndar Watches. aelf-wlndlhg Seamaaters, wrist atop chronographs and many, many · other-. ~or l)er, a danllng nlectlol'I of Omegas, lncludlng dlamond·studded ones and bracelet watches. Omega watches-, from $&5 to over $1000. 0-111( IOlld gold ov1l-llnJt ·bf'lcel.t 11¥•1d'l .• $12S E-141( Hlld ~Id brtct11t watiifi.,., .••.. $310 '-S.lf.wlnd1ng ltll'llltltr D• VIII• W!lll H lf• ch•nolllO ctl~•r. 141( gold-ollll..:I cu., M1!Cll• 1ng ld)wl1b11 brt.C.111 ., •• , , , , • , , , , , •• , .1180 0 -S.11·'1rindlno coMt11J.ilot1 chrOllOfllfl• willi ••lf<!IMOlll(I dl)'-dlt. cll1I. Ill< eolld c:tOld Cll • 1"'1111 m"chl~ll b,.C.ltl ••••• , ••••••••••• 11050 Same wat!Oh 111 141( 1olld 1101~ •• •»••••· .$1$0 0 OMEGA CONVENIENT TERMS BANKAMERICARD MASTER CHARGE J.C. .J/umpkrie ~ Jewefer6 1823 NEWPORT AVENUE COSTA MESA I 23 YEARS SAME LOCATION· PHONE 548-3'101 • DAILY PILOT Tax Bill Boosts .Exeµiption to $7 50 -~ ...... °"" .... 111111 A state legislator's private plane did a poor job of llying without him at Put-inllfly, Ohlo, Wednes- day. Rep. Howard A. Knight, was hand cranµng the plane's engine at a Small airport because the bat· tery was dead. Suddenly, the air· craft broke its restraining lines and taxied down the runway, rose 80 feet into the air and crashed. • Pop iinger Bobbie Gentry, 27, and gambling king William Harrah, 58, pose for photographers after their wedding at Reno, Nev. Thursday. A ctress Amandha Peppar was maid of honor and Harrah executive Rob- ert Ring was best man at priva te ceremony at St. John's Presbyterian Church. • The Internal Revenue Service Senate, Ho~~ Reach Compromise WASIUNGTON (AP) -Senate-Hou.. lax reform conferees have reached ten. taUve agreement on a relief package that includes a boo.st in the personal income tax exemption from $600 .to $7!)9. The conferees worked 16 \h hours until 3 o'clock this morning but still didn't quite finish their work on the entire tax refoon bill. but conference chairman Rep. Wilbur D. Mills (0.Ark.), said there was no doubt ad.ion would be completed. to- day. It was understood the relief packag~ decided on as the last major compromi~e Mavor, Mafia ~ Figure Plead Not Guilty NEWARK, N.J .-Mayor Hugh J. Addo- .'izio and 1'1afia lieutenant Anthony .. Tony Boy" Boiardo pleaded innocent in federal court today lo charges of extor tion, tax evasion and conspiracy. The two-term Democratic mayor and Boiardo were among 15 persons indicted \Vednesday in con1bined federal, state and county investigation of organized crime and official corruption in the state. "Not guilty" Addonizio said as he stood before Judge James S. Coolahan in the jammed, third floo r courtroom. Boiardo stood silent and let his attorney enter the innocent plea for him. Boiardo had been hunted by federal agents from Las Vegas to Florida for more than a week to serve him with a subpoena tG appear before one of three federal grand juries involved in the mass- ive investigation and crackdown on organized crime. Boiardo reportedly slipped back inlo the state rccenlly to appear in federal court today and fa ce the charges linking him, Addonizio and 10 present and for· mer city officials with extorting $253,000 from an engineering firm that did mil- lions of dollars worth of business with the city. betweeo the widely di!Jerlng House and Senate Versiom provided: -An increase in the exemptkm to ~ !tarting next July. Thia would be coupled wJth a $1,100 low income allowance to help poor families and an increase in lhe standard deduction from the present 10 percent with a $1,000 ceiling to 13 percent with a 11,400. celling. -A $650 personal exemption for all of 1971, Wilh a $1,050 low-income allowance, and a standard deduction of 14 pereent and a $1,700 ceiling. -For 1972 and lha-eafter, 11. S750 personal exemption, with a $1,000 low in- come allowance and a standard deduction or 15 pe,_ with a '2.000 ceiling. The conf«ees alao were reported to have agreed to accept the aeroas-the· board IS percent increase in Social Security benefits of the Senate bill. But they did not go along wll)l tho $100 minimum monthly payment for an ' Jn· diviclual whk:h that meaaure also ·m~ eluded. . . • '"' Pre<ldent NU.oo had obieded to the 15 percent boost. JM the Hoose voted for it unanimously Monday in a separate bill. The low income aHowance, which may be deducted fmn tncorne iD figuring ta:r· • lit Marat1wn Session es, \Vil t remove about five million poor families from the tu rolls entirely. 1'he e-0nferees rejected entirely the cuts in alt tax bracket rates voted by the llousc in fn.-or of giving general relief through an increase in the personal ex· ' emption. the form favor ed by the Senate. However, the Senate had voted for an $800 exemplion by 1971, a figure which along .,.,.ith the Social Security benefit boo51, had brought on threats of a veto by President Nixon. , Thus the conferees moved to meet his objections in part by holding the ex· emption to $750 and delaying the final ef- fective date to 1972. The reYenue loss in 1970 and 1971 resulting from the co1npromise will not be nearly so great as the Senate proposal. Nixon had said he was particularly con· cerned about his budgets in those years. However, it was reported that Sen. Albert Gore (D·Tenn.), author of the tax relief package in the Senate bill, y,·as highly pleased with the agreement. He was understood to feel that a $750 exemption, combined with the new low- income allowance and increased standard deduction, v:ould giye relief equivalent to an $800 exemption. * * * Se11ate Demos Challenge HEW Budget Veto WASHINGTON (UPI) -Sen ate Democrats challenged a presidential veto threat today and VO\\'ed to stand behind a $1.5 billion increase in spending for education and health programs. The Democratic senators caucused for 40 minutes and majority leader Mike fl1an.sfield emerged with the slatement to reporters that the Democratic.controlfed Congress has cut President Nixon's own total budget by $6 billion, even counting controversial increase.!! which Nixon threatened to veto as inl1ationary. ''The Congress has been very con· structi\•e and has shov.'n f i ! c a I responsibility," f\.1ansUeld said. "It is a quest ion of priorities and as far as we are concerned the needs of the people should have lop priority." 1\1ore fh an $5 billion of the overall cut:i; claimed by 1\-1ansfield \Vere in thC defense bud gel. has filed a civil sui t demanding re- turn of $1,91 1 from Brent M. Sum· mer1, a Fresno contruction work- er who apparently appeals to com .. puters. The IRS said in 1966 Sum- mers received a refund of $956 \vhen he was supposed to get $10; in 1967 he got $611 wben he should have gotten only $86, and in 1968, when he had no refund coming, he got $551. Assistant U.S. Attorney Richard Nichols said the "comput· er just r an amuck" when it came to Summers' checks. Cost of Living Increase Led JORDAN'S KING HUSSEIN ANO UAR 'S NASSER TO LE AD ARAB SUMM IT CONFE RENCE Talks Will Open in Rabat Saturday; Photo Was Made al 1964 Arab Summit Meeting in Cairo The appropriations bill for lhe Depart- ment of lJ ealth. Education and \\'e!fare and related agencie s is second only to th e defense budget as the largest spending bill of the yea r, an d Nixon threatened a veto because he said it is too expensive. Sen. \\'arren G. Magnuson (D-Wash.l, chairman of an appropriations sub-- committee which handled the money bill. ~aid $528 million of all increases put in the measure were voted on the Senate floor. with 62 percent of the added fund! in amendments proposed by Republican senators. ' llnity Agaitast Israel? • Leslie Mil11 and Gree• Wh ite were sweethearts in East Jordan, Mich., in 1916, when both were 21. They lost track of each oth er dur .. ing World \Va r I when White \vas sent to France as a soldier. In the intervening years, each married t\vice. each outlived both ·spouses. This fall they met again in Gaines. ~fich. and romance flamed anew. Now, at 74, they have married. By Food, Oothes Arabs Gather for Summit \VASHlNGTON (UPI) -The cost 1Jf living jumped one hair of one percent in November, led by such basic items as food, clothing and hon1e o·wnership, the Labor Department reported today. RABAT, r.J orocco (AP ) -Arab leaders headed for Morocco today for their firs t summit meeting in two yea rs. Th eir go;il was a ne\y unified \Yar ~lrat cgy agains~ Israel. The meeting, called by Presirlcnt Gamal Abdel Nasser of Egypt, ls in- tended to lead lhe Arabs out ol the present in1passe in \vhich · lhey serin neither able to go forward and conquer Jsrael nor wilting to retreat into a peace agreemer.t which they see <is a sur- • The Consumer Price Index advanced to 130.5 of the 1957-59 base period, an in- crease of 5.8 percent over November. 19611. The index means It cost $13.05 to purchase goods worth $10 abou t IO years ago. The November • to • November in· crease between 1967 and 19611 was 4.8 per· cent. * * * * * ) \Vllen !t!rs. Rita Clinch spot-Israel Commandos Stri ke 1 ted two men trying to enter a neighbor's home in Lakew90d, Colo., she grabbed a gun a. n d held them at bay until law of- ficers arrived. A deputy sheriff asked her fo lower I.he weapqn w lie n he approached, but the The cost of living usually drops slightly in November so the monlh's in crerue, computed on an an nual basis and in- cluding a seasonal adjstment ~·as 7 .2 per- cent. the biggest rise since June. The Nixon administration's inflation watchers have pointed to a slowdown in the rate of cost of living increases since mid-year as evidence that its policies to cool the ecoDomy were beginning to work. 30 Miles Inside Egypt •. hoU!ewife assured him lie noth.· i11g to worry about. The QUn .l was just a toy pistol she had l f ound lying around the house. ~nv'=-"'":.."=""m!l • In happy mood after a party, John Brunt, 29, ate his car regis- tration card when Folkestone. Eng· land police asked to see it. "I be- came momentarily flustered," Brunt explained to the court, plea· ding guilty to various traffic cbarg· es. ~he fine \vas $57.60. The cost of food increased 0.7 percent last month , pushed up by salad bowl items like lettuce, up 33.5 percent: tomatoes. up 23.3 percent, and green beans up 33.6 percent. Eggs increased 6.8 percent. The cost of clothing increased 0.7 per- cent while home ownership services such as interest rales, property taxes and in- surance increased 0.6 perceDt. By United Pres5 International Israeli commandos crossed the S11ei Canal today for the first time in lhrcc months and drove 30 n1iles into Egypt \Vhere they shelled an arn1y camp. Israeli Defense ?vlinistcr ~toshc Dayan threaten- ed more of the same, if necc~sa rv. While Dayan explained Israeli inili lary strategy in Tel A\·iv, Israeli Foreign Ministe r Abba Ebtin !old a news con- ference in Lond on the United States and Israel were at odds on !\1id11-'est peacc plans, There \\'as little of his usua l wit Snow Falls in New England Six or More Inches Ex pected During W eckend Calllo,.,,la Te1r1perat1tr~• SOUtHEillN C:J.llFOillNtA -l- t l-1 wflfl Iott! fot fnlfll tet9' 11'1· !11'111 fo <CMllll llOPtl fl/t 11'19 moul'!- 111111 marri!"' "°"'"· OllltrwlM Yt•· l1b1t hi•/! ctoud• Fr\d11' 11'111 S.11,tr-1111'. Not mueh tem~r1l11r1 ch1,,.1. ,lolbv<!ut•'l_,. A11cfl(!raga HI., Lt .. l'r1c. ' " LOS ANGELES ANO VICINITY- l.ow clOlld1 rnor111,,. houn 11'111 "'" 1111111111!1 w!lt! Yt rlabl• 1!!1/1 clOud• 111 ll'feo"l'IODl'll Frldl"f ll'ld .~IUrdlY. N11t mud! 11m-1tur1 d'llMt . Low l'"rl- 1111' "ftht n . 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F•lrbfn~, FM'f Wor11> F•bne Ht!ent HDf'IDl u•u K1ns•s C•''" l~I Vt<>8• to1 Angt lt1 M lt"'I Ml11n1•relf1 Ntw OrlMnl Mt"' YOfll: 01~1911!'1 ()lo l~l'wn• c ,., """'" .... ,., '-"~'" PHO lt~IU Pllaenll< • 1'1tllbl.r'9"' '°Ot!l31'(! l.&O>d C•'Y R"d lllufl ·~ S..ftf ...... 10 ~.,, l•~~ C•IY ~~n Olt<>o s1~ ~rtncluo ~·1111~ Sri:oo ••• '"""""''! ........ v..,.,, ..... " .. " " .. " .. ,. • .. " " " n ~ " .. .. .. ,,, "' ,, .. ,. ~ .. " " " M p • " ~ .. .. " " ~ " •• .. ' " " 4 ,, " " •• .. " "' " ... " " " ·" " " " " ... e " " .. " " " " " ·" " ... " ,, • ~ " n ,, " ... .. " •• " " " " .. .. " " • ,, .. " p ancl banter ancl he sounded pe5simi~tic about chances for pcllcc. Dayan, intervie1\'cd on Israeli Arm<'d Forces Rad io. said today's rocket st ri ke at an Egyptian cam p across Lie Sia~;: Canal <lovetailed \\'ilh Israeli 1nilit,1ry policy on the Suez cease.fi re line, both fro1n a standpoint or ideology nnd from operations. "This is a stalic line and Israel docs not pla n lo mo\'e from it," he said. "IC the Egyptians declare their 1n lcnlion to breach the cease-fire -ancl even do so -Isra el reserves 1to; rights to Initiate counteractions in such place, tin1e and manner as \vi!l best se rve !ls purpose." Dayan said he Sil\V no end in the 11cl'lr future to Egyptian n1ilitary actions alon~ the Suez frontier, accused Egypt of trying to cover up raUure by announcing victories wh ich never occurred. J.nd said some Egyptians were beginning to e~­ pres.5 alarm at Ole high death toll in the Suez Canal fighting . He said the repeated Israeli ai r s!rikco; \\"ere the principal tcason for the Egyp- lian discouragement. SEC Files Su.i t On Vegas Hotel LAS VEGAS, Nev. fljPIJ -The Securities and Exchange Con1mis.~ion fi l· eel suit Thursday against Continenta l Connector Co., the parent corporation of the Dunes Hotel on the Las Vegas strip, and suspended trading ol lls stock on the American Exchange . The suiL asked for an injunction to pre- vent Continentr1l from acquiring the Golden Nugget casino in "owntov.·n Las Vegos. The su.i t In U.S. tl islrict courl in New York alleged the firm ii;sued false proxy stat cmen~ In connection \\'ilh the acqui.~ition or lhe Oune:s and the proposed acq uisition of the Golden Nugget. ConUnental is an electronic componC'nts firm headquartered In \Voorisiclc. NY ., ~nrl head d hy t As Vega~ hank~r £. Par· ry Thomni;. The firm arquJrNt lhc Dl.1nc:1 as a "'holly 0"11cd sub!idiary lost sprlng. rende r. The first session \viii be held Saturday. The sun1mit conference is the first :-.inc:e the l<hartoum meeting of August 1%7, two n1onlhs after the disastrous Arab dC'feat. The re the leaderi; agreed lhey \VOuld accept a political settlement \1•ilh their adversary only on the basis of three no "s -no recognition of Israel, no negotiaticns \\'ilh Israel, and no peace 11·Hh Israel. These still stand, and the ro-callcd "ease.fire lines roar daily with gunfire. The United Nati oTl! and tl1e Big Four l)(\\\"Crs have been unable lo find a peace fonn11la. 1\lililarily, the Arahs and parlicularly Eh'YP1. are be lieved to be up to their prcv.·a: strength and to have improved lhci;-qui.!Lily as n1odern figh ters. But it is J:C'nerally concede<! that they i;till lack the force and unity lo v.•in another war. Nasser said last n1onU1 that political ef- rorl.s h!ld fail ed and the Arabs have no fPcourse but 11•ar to r<'gain thei r rights :111d conqurrcd 1crritorics. I-Jc said it v.·a~ 1n1pcrallvc for Arab states far from the front line to thro\v their "'eight into the ha1 !le. The :;t'n1ioffiC'ial Cairo nc11'sp.1per Al Ahram :;;aid loday that Egypl 11·ould ca ll nn Ar<ib countriei; not irnmcdiat ely cnoagcd in hostilities ll'ith Israel to pro-- \"!tl c ~~nund ancl air force units , as well <is 11 rapons and <'quip1ncnt. to the "con- frontation linr stati:s" -.Egypt, Jordan, Syria and lraq. Al Ahra1n also i;aid Esypt v.·ou\d pro· pose lhe re-establishmenl of the joint Arah 111ilitriry con1mand, a casualty of thr 1!167 11•ar. Since that 11·ar, the bttrden of the Ar11 b fiJ!hl has been carried by Egypt and the Pa tt?~tini an guerrillas, with Jordan. rraq and Syria making lesser contributions in lhti t ord{'r. The oil st.ates of Kuwait, :o;a udi Arabi:i and Libya have been jelplng Eg~·pt and .Jordan \l'ith an annual subsidy of $32~ million. Chilean Plane With 98 Aboard Hijacked to C11ha SANTlAGO, Chile (UPI) -A Chilean LAN Airlines jet y,·ith 98 persons aboard 11•as· hijacked today by an unidentified armed man and ordered to fly lo Cuba. l t •wast.he year's 6I st hijacking and the 30th of a Latin America n ai rcraft. LAN said the jet, a Boeing 727, would have to make severa l refueling stops en route to Havana. At the fir st of these. Arica . the hijacker permitted 15 women and children passengers to disembark. In a<ldition lo Arica, the plane win refuel at Lima, Peru ; Guayaquil, Ecuador. and Panama City, Panama. A LAN spokesman said the hijacking occurred shortly after takeoff from San. tiago on the flight to Arica and a refuel· ing stop. 'fl Hawaii Br acing For H ea vy Surf HONOLULU (UPl l -For the second time this month. the \Veather Bureau to-- day issued a high stui watch for the northern and \Vestcm coasts of &II islands in l{av.•aii. In a spec ial \Yenther bulletin, the bureau sai d a stonn far north of the islands had produced open ocean swells 1;, to 18 reet high which will cause surfs 20 to 30 feel hlgh. The high open ocean s11"elts arr.. ex- pected to begin to reach the island of Kaua i this erening, Oahu near midnight or early Saturday, ltfa ui later Saturd:iy. and the big island of Hawaii Saturday afternoon. Street Battle Ga ngs Sta ge G1.t1i Fight in Chicago C~llCAGO (AP) -T\\'O street gangs ~!aged a gun battle on ChicAgo's North Side Thursday ni ght and six persons were 1\'l)undl!d. police. said . The fight. v.·hich police said involved 1nore 1han 50 youths, was In the same i;:eneral neighborhood where o 16-ycaro()Jd boy was killed and four other young p{'rsons \Vere wounded Wednesday night. Nine yo11ths \\'ere arrt!led in the. lale.!rt outbreak. Fi\'C v.·ert-cha rged with mob ~cuon and dlsordtrly conduct. Four \vtre JIJ\l~nllt8 and were released to custody o( their parents. Two or the \V0t1nrled were tn 'erious C'f\ndlUon. both hit by a singlP 11hntgun hl~"'· ?C<.'flrrling to police. Th& othtrs 1rf'rc lrcatcd and released. J Officers st1id more than 30 policemen converged on the scene. Shots were fired at police, officers said, but none was wounded in the brier but intense battle. Police said they did not have to return fire . Detectives said U1c fi ght in\'<llved membeNJ of lhe Cobra Stones. primarily a South Side gan,, and The Blacks, v.·bo l'lominatc the North Side erca where file batt!c occurre<l . Rick Netty, 16, wl!s tihot to death in the Wedner.day night incident r.fost seriously hurt Thursday night \~·ere Jerome 1tloorc. 14. ~·ho suffered ,;r.vere wounds to hi~ right arm, an4 \Vlllle !!ill, 13, under treatment ror head ~ound.<I . < ' ..-----------------------------------------~~--~-~=~~~~~~,,, 'i .t 1•f1 .·~-·""·.-----··---.-.--~ ' ~· Abernathy HeldinMemphis, Says He'll Fast i11: Cell • 1st Black Capitalism ' Boss Quits lllEMPIDS, TeM. (AP) - Tho Rev. Ralph David Abernathy. chalrman ol the Southern ChrlsUan Leaderoiilp Conference, went to J a J J Thursday night vowing ho would '"teach Memphis a lmon" by !aslmg In bb cell Abernathy, one of 19 (:ivll rights leaders lndicb!d Dec. 9 as an outgrowth of the seven. week clusroom boycott by Negroes, aid he would only drink llqulda during his con- finement. Arriving from Atlanta with six staU members. Abernathy Jed about '600 person.. on a two- columned march d ow n sidewalks on both sides of Main Street and surreodered at Ule comty jail. 'Ibe chanUng marchers on the one-mile trek from a dowiitown church to the civic center snarled traffic at the height or a rush hour. Abernathy was expected to remain in jail at lea.rt until Monday when a U.S. Dl5trict COUrl judge will act on a l!uit that tetka to eojoln state, city and police officials from !Urther prooecuUng th e charges , agalmt the I 9 persons.' Civil rights attorneys contend the new state law making It a misdemeanor for -«n adult to encourage a pupil to atay out of school to engage in a protest demonstration is WlCOllOtllutional Abernathy joined four local civil rights leaders who have declined on P.rinclple to post a token $1 bail required before their release. WASlllNGTON (Up I) -OPEN SUNDAY President Nil:on's first blackll~~~~1~2~·~S~~~~ capit.aUam director bas quit the program, apparently be- cause of basic disagreementa wilh the adminlstra,ti90 on how It should be run. Thomas F. Roeser, 41, an- nounced hill resignation Thurs- day as assistant to Commerce Secretary Maurice H. Stam for minority enterprige. He plan.! to become public affairs director of the Peace Corps. Enjoy a Jfappy Family CHRISTMAS DINNER At The DlsUnctlve Stans replaced Roeser Oct. 28 as director of the Com- merce Department's Office of;1r.~e~~~ 0. 1.,.1wM ... Pl'.111 ROAST TURKEY 5"Md Fr... J P.M. Nixon Plan Increasing Negro Joh Ranks Killed The civil right& drive that resulted in the indictments was designed to pres.sure the school board Into granUng Negroes a greater voice in school affairs and to force , Catholic-operated St. Jooeph Hospital to negoUate with a Negro Wlion local that has been on strike agaimt the hospital since Oct. 5. There have been no talks in the strilre, although the school board has named two Negro board advisers and has pro- mised to push for a change in electim procedures to give Negroes a chance to run for the board. UPITt ....... ft XUAN THUY'S MAIL -Sens. Robert Griffin (R-Mich.), left, and William Spong -(D-Va.) look over some oi the 40,000 n1essages received in \Vashington in response to Griffin's appeal for American s to '\'rite to the head oi the Hanoi delegation at Paris peace talks, asking for humane treatment of U.S. POWs and release of names. The ·U.§. Jaycees have taken on project and hope to deliver U1e letters to Xuan Thuy in Paris. Minority Business Enterpri~ll {OMBE), the agency assigned to carry out Niton's black capitalism efforts. It was re- ported Roeser considered his new appointment as Stans' assistant a demotion. The friendly letters ex- changed by Roeser and Stans and made public by the Com- merce Department Thursday masked the dispute between the twG men. The dispute never became public, but privately the Com- merce Department let It be known that Roeser was taken Old F•thlonH Applo Cidor. Mo ld.cl Roy1l Ann• Chtrry s.1.d. Froth Crenbtrrv Souct. W>iol1 Ortnqt Fillocl With Sw11f Poto. to, Topped with Mtrshmollow1 Our Own Cho1tnut Drtuin9. Homt m•do1 Pumpkin l rt1d. Hot Minct Pio With lrtMy Souct, Pumpkin Pio, /co CrtlM or Sh1rbot. WASllINGTO!'I (AP) -The Senate has voted to kill the Nixon administration's so-ca.11- ed Pphiladelphia plan aimed at increa.slng Negro employ. ment on federally financed construction project!. In a 52-37 vote Thursday night the Senate overrode the wishes of the administration Mine Safety Bill Facing Nixon Veto? 'WASHINGTON (AP) Despite Republlcan warnings of a veto, Congress has sent to the White HOWie a tough safe- ty bill for the nation's 140,000 coal miners. Chief targets in the bill are mine explosions and th e dreaded "black lung" disease, daily threats in some 140,000 coal mines. Before passage Thursday night, t b e ad· minlstration made known its objection to one major pro- viakm ol the bill: federal payments to miners disabled by black lung. A disabled miner wUh a wife and tWo children w o u I d receive $272 a month. 'The ad- ministration contends this will coet $385 million a year. Democrats put the figure at $60 million. Payments should be handled by &tates, GOP congressmen said. Democrats argued that most s tates have demonstrated they would not pay. "Shabby treatment Indeed for our nation's coal miners," taid Sen. Harrison A. Williams Jr. (J).N.J.), ol the ad- ministration position. and appro ved Rn. ap- propriations bill amendment that said no money in that measure could be used to finance "any contract or agreement which the comp- trol.ler gtneral oi the United States bolds to be in contra- vention of any federal .sta· tute." Comptroller General Elmer B. Staats opposes t h e Philadelphia plan -a re- quirement that contractors on federal jobs make "good faith" efforts U> hire a certain percent.age of mloority group workers -on grounds it amounts to the use of quotas in employment. Quotas, Staab has said, are outlawed in the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which bars discrimination In hiring on the grounds of race, color, religion, sex or national origin. However, both Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell and Labor Secretary George Shultz, in addition to Nixon, have sup- ported the Philadelphia plan. Defenders or the plan say it .sets "goals," rather than "quotas." The comptroller general heads the general ac- counting office -an arm of Congress. NY's Wagner Separated NEW YORK (UPI) -For- mer Mayor Robert F. Wagner and his Wife, Barbara, both acknowledged Thursday that they were living apart. Wagner, who was an unsuc- cessful candidate in this year's Democratic mayoral primary, told news media that "at this point we are living apart. She (Mrs. Wagner) is under a doctor's care. My primary concern is her restoration to good health." Hntaoi Broalkasts The boycott of. the schools at time.! kept about one-half of the city's 135,000 pupils out of classes. Fifty-four percent 0£ the enrollment is Negro. POWs Send Yule Messages off the day-to-day operation of OBME becaUSe of inability to administer the office. Roeser's supporters, however, said the ·· TWO LOCATIONS Pilots Ask U.N. Help On Hijacks LOl'IDON (UPI) -The Worldwide Airline P i I o ta: Union asked the United Na~ tklns t o d a y to take responsibility ror punishing airplane hijackers and gaJd it was considering a one.day strike to back up its demands. Ending a two-day private meeting in London t h e Intern ational Federation or SAIGON (UPI) -Hanoi Radio, in programs beamed to lhe Far East, has begun broadcasting Christmas mes- sages from American \\ ar prisoners to their families in the United States. "Dear mom, dad nnt' fami- ly, I'm sure you'll -be glad to hear my voice again.'' ht'gan one message by a man kfenti- fied as Navy Lt. William John Mayhew or New Manchester, W. Va "This wi ll liave to dG this year as my Christmas present to you ." l\1ayhew , a pilot, Y1as cap- tured Aug. 17. 1968 after his plan e was sho t dov.'n over North Vietna m, according to the U.S. n1ilitary comm and. The ~mmand said today it was aware of the English language Radio Hanoi broad- casLo;, which began earlier this week, but had no \\'ay of detcnninlng their authenticity. The broadcast allegedly made by Mayhew urged his * * * * * * Nixon Gets Petitiori family not to worry about him . key issue was his unsuccess- ful effort to get a finn com- mitment of $500 million for !lo OMBE from the administra· ti on. Roeser also balked at Stans' order to launch a publicity campaign for OPtffiE before it had produced any substantial achlevements. ··r hey \Yill make Christmas very pleasant for us here 1rith a good Christmas din- ner, lots of goodies, Christ· mas mu 5 I c, decorations, church services, and I'll be looking forward to your Christ- ma s package again this year," 1;::========= it said. Another broadcast allegedly was made by Air F:orce 1st Lt. Michael Scott Kerr, a pi- lot shot down over the North Jan. 16, 1967. Kerr is from Port Angeles, Wash. "Merry Christmas and a happy New Year to you all,'~ said a message to Kerr's family. •·1 hope this message A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Htppl11111 11 ,,_!Kiii Mt M l'llOdl lly ,,.,, ,.. .. tt ..... I~ IMt 1tht0m ll•llPlll, 11111 try Jltllt .....,,., • .... tlltl KCUr l'/'lfJ ... y. -111111mln •r1n1111n PRESENTED AJ A PUBLIC SERVICE EVERY D.l.Y &YI '05 I. YOllA LINDA ILVD. PLACENTIA PHONE 524-2090 2tl1 lllSTOL ST. COSTA MESA PHONE 546-3484 , COCKTAILS h!fy 1111¥"""9 loco1a1M1adalll M1 jor Cr1clit C1rcl1 Honore4 Airline P 11 o ts Association SANTA CLARA, Calif. (AP) (IFALPA) &aid the nation con-_ The wife of the first cerned with a hijacki ng "must American pilot captured in assume responsibility for the the Vietnam war has sent safety of passensers." President t\b[on a 70,000- finds you in good health. My LH Roofing Co. ly that Nixon will ••do h e a 1th Is okay, 50 don't 2' Y11r1 i. 1111111a1 a.tiMt PHR"'- somcthing to get my man r_:w~o~rr~y~. ~-~.'~'liiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiilii~m:':':'~"'":':':":·~~~"':":""~~~====::~~~ ".The pro~Jem11Ls one for the signature petition asking him Uruted Nations, a statement to press for the return or the issued at ~ end of the estimated J,380 U.S. prisoners meet.lo& said. We are a body • oi war set ~' for the protection of Tang~ Alvarez, 29, of Santa aews. Clara said after the signatures Charles Jackson, ~etary were malled Thursday that of~ IFJµ>A, told th.e neY.'.s she does not expect any conference the pilot uruon was miracles from the petition on-not interested in setUng itself ' up as a Jaw enforcement body. He said the degree of punish - ment was a matter which should be decided by each country. However, he said the United Nations should accept a larger respoMibllty for punjshlng the hijackers and that the group or pilots was coMidering a 12 or 24 hours strike to halt all internaUonat air travel to back up their demands. home." She married Navy L l. Everett Alvarez, t\VO months before he left for Vietnam 51h years ago. Four months later -on Aug. 15, 1964 -he \Vas shot down and captured during the second day of air lighting over North Vietnam. She has received about 30 letters from her 31-year-old husband. 5oath 1oJst 71aza SANTA'S HOME •• - AWAY FROM HOME 111n o AT &AH DIEGO r1ErwA1'. COfrA MlSA. South Against Wall lntegratwn 'D-Day' Nears JA CKSON, Miss. (UPI) - SegrefaUon ends in many schoo districts in the South today with the let.out for the Christmas holidays. C I a ' s reopenlngs In January will be -on a desegregated basis under the U.S. Supreme Court's "Integrate now" ruling. Mississippi i.s the state hardest hlt immediately by the order, With about 35 school districts m January or February dead.lines. North Carolina has three districts with a Dec. 31 deadline for in- tegrating. . . . Nineteen districts tn Ten- nessee must desegregate in January and three Alabama districts have until Feb. 1. Eighty-one di!trlcts in Georgia have until Sept. J to Integrate or face a cutoff in aid funds. Other districts In the South have less stringent deadlines. "War has been declared," said Georgia Gov. Lester , fi.faddox. "The judges are VNITED STATES NATIONAL BANK SOUTH COAST PLAZA BRANCH NOW ONN SATURDAYS ' ta 1 '·"'· MON .. TKUU. 1 .. 1 P.M. PIUDATI lM P.M. ITI4t 140-1211 , L.c~ hir S.. CH1t ,,... C .. hl MeM ..... Vtct .. ,...-Mffl..., E. H. LEVAN I saying to us, 'You surrender from the U.S. 5th Circuit your children to us or we 're Court or Appeals, would "do going to take your money irreparable damage to !he away'." quality or public education in Gov. J~ Bell Williams and our state." several other Mississippi of-"The effect of this decree, In flcl als have predicted the most Instances, will make orders handed down Oct. 29 by quality education for these the Supreme Court will cause children an u t t e r im- mass withdrawals by white possibility," said the goternor. .students in heavily black "In all cases, It will btdlsrup- areas. Many black parents tive, with educational frOgress also have e x p r e s & e d ap-brought to a sudden tell." prehension over the impendmg: p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;"'il charges. Some teachers have sut>- mitted resignations In various districts, but an education spokesman said most ap- parently are waiting to see what happens after the first of the year. Williams said the Supreme Court decision, coupled with the implementation o r d e r ) SPECIAl CHRISTMAS OFF FllD·QUICk lea EJacror Kit ONlY '11" An tlkd.1 'LitUt 1om.ething for tht home" gift! J ust flip the handle ind )'OU hew lee cubes lnst1ntry, ea .. lly. Offtr Includes two spec/al 20-wbl Ice Ejector tr1>1r1 es wen as h1ndy 80-cube servwt TaLaY1t10N•APP'LI ANC•8 411 E. 17th St. N -644-1684 Paren t's Ring A memorable gift for mother or grandmother with a birth:r.tone for each of the child ren. Addotk>nal •lonts 3.00 etch. 25 00 ::::-.,,,,. e weisfields • JEWELERS ~' SOUTH COAST PLAZA Upper Mall Acro11 From Woolworth 's-Pho,,. 5~7187 AJao In L1k1wood C1nt1r-L1k1wood Open 12to,. ' Sullday • • ,• -- • DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE Impact of Tourism Calllomla'1 free time ls very mucb Laguna's bUAI· ness, Ill bread and butter. The Impact of tourism -past, presell'l and future -on Art Colony afiluence ts undencored in a 11)6.pege economic anaiysl•· by the city general plan consultant., Daniel, Mann, Johnson a. Mendemuill. It makes the point that California's incnasing lei· sure time can very well be prime lime tor Laguna. The amount of leisure hours In California Is ••peel- ed to Increase 84 percent by 1980. Mobility of the popu· lace will also Increase. This Is clearly a business opportunity for Laguna. "A substantial amount of tbla time wUI be spent in lrav· eltng about the state, and visiting those communities wruch specialize In and are capable of attracting tour· lsts on an all-year basis, such as Laguna Beach/' the report states. Proposed freeway improvements will imt>rove ae- ceSs to Laguna and "with vigorous revitalization" give it a fair shot at a slice of the burgeoning California leisure hours. It Is apparent from the report that La!(Una will need tD increase both the quantity and quality of Its available hotel-motel rooms to lodJ!'e the travelers. No new tacilities have been added since 1960 and an increase of 150 units since 1965 has been due to re-- modeling or expansion of existing facilities. Laguna needs 1o add an average of 50 tourist units annually. In .20 years that would dooble Its tourist capacity. The importance of tourism is underscored in var· lous categories of the analysis. Laguna has already leaked general merchandise sales heavily tD Fashion Island but It more than holds iU own by t]>alancing· this leakage with sales to vi si- tors who frequent the specialty shops and Laguna-flav· ored smaller stores. As tho city's job opportunltles double in the next 20 years, the largest numerical and percentage gain1 will be in trade &¥ service industries supported by visitors. Retail trade currently provid.. S9 percent of city ernpl~ent. Leguna s future economic vilallty Is very definite- ly linked to visitors and the money they bring. <Jalifor- nia's leisure time can be important business for the art colony U the Jure of Laguna keeps pace. Good News ·.for the Valley Completion of the handsome new BWTOUghs plant on Jeronimo Road in the Mission Viejo industrial com· pie• is good new> for the bllfgeonlng Saddleback Valley. Sixteen hundred people wUl be working at the plant by the time it& production of, Olec!Toolc computer parts moves into high gear. This is just the sort of solid economic base t h a t ts needed to support the resJdentiaJ, educational and commercial dev"elopments in the valley. A Fine Appointment Appointment of San Clemente attorney Frank Do- menicbint to t h e bench In the South County Judicial District was called "a fine appointment," by presiding Judge Richard Hamilton. • Fe11ow members of lhe bar cle.ly have a high op.- Inion of the new judge, whose 17 years of local law practice have qua1ified him well for his asignment. Our congratulations to Judge Domenichini -and to Governor Reagan for his selection. .. • ~-· .. :~~·~ \1l '. ' • ' . s <Aus~ ANt> EFFECT U.S. Prisons Only Corrupt The Inmates Dear Gloomy Gus: We Choose Our Own Destinies Pcwlbly not ooe American In 10,000 bas e:ver so much as looked at a government report called "The Challenge of Crime in a Free Society"· which was published nearly three year~ ago by the President's Conunisslon on Law Enforcement and Admlnlltratlon of Justice. In th!i report, leading experts In the field of penology recommend vat. Pd. sweeping changes Jn tbe way 'we run our priJon l)"Slem -cbanses that would beneCrt not only the inmata tbemstlve&, but that would al!o reduce the coot to society of mai ntaining huge penal struc- tures that only intensify the problem of. crime. THEU AU ABOUT 11> million of. fenders in our cmnctional programa, and each year our correcUona1 ~ stitutions handle about 21h million ad.- missions. If wt could return most of these men to society as ,..._tble and productive ciUzens, .our crime rate would drop comide.rably -but most of them become rtpealen, going on to more &erious crime after a prolonged stay ln prison. Our present institutions do not correct: they corrupt Even this cauUous and of- ficial report concludu that ,.the con- ditions under which many offendel"I are handled, particularly In lnstlluttons, are oflen a posIUve detriment to rehabilita- Uon." THE REPORT GOES on to aay blunUy: "Life in many institutions lJ at best barren and futile, at worst unspealcably brutal and degrading. To be '""" the offenders In lllCb llllltltuUons To the Editor: By way of introduction, my husband Is • news photographer and I have been an art crltk: f~ the last 12 years. My "PerspeeUve on Art" appears each week tn the magazine section, Outloot West, of the Evening Outloolc, Slnta Monica. We have discovtred an escape hatch - and at least once a month stay at Laguna Shom _,site !lie part. The moot fascinating ol all the wonderful areaa (to us) are the cliffs wbttt the nw1retOU1 ~ 9qulrreil llv•. This last week, tmmedlltelJ after - arrival, I wtnt directly to the cliffs. There were no llCll.drrels to be teen, all!\ollf!)I """"""" bad left ,_ lettuce and Ulllbelled peanut. .., the ground. Later J uw only ttwee -and they Wert tn IJolated """" -and so tenlli<d that ""°" IOdoC me (many It« 1W11J) dlsap- pwod. ON ONE OF OIJll J!ftvlOUI vtslla lo the part tbe .-aid that In l)ectmber the aquimll -. to be given polaoned sraln. At •-time bll ....,.... aid the)> _.. to be caUlht and tati!a llllo the ~--•• Ge erre ---. o..r Georp: I saw you .., the lllreet the other day and )'Cl'l 're taller than you are in ••• .,....,. LOYAL PAN Doal' Loyal ran: fl'"'1b0d7 loob taller the other day. CONf!D!NTIAL TO G 0 V • CLAUl>l! IURK OF FLORIDA : Qull •omtol -Iola ol people doll' ra111 Woe alUp1«1. When tbe Russians aent up their first Sputnik years ago, the critics pounced on the school:!, blaming them for failing to educate stu- dents for the Space Age. But when Americans were the fir:!t to wa1k on the moon, few voices were heard In praise of what and how we teach. -R.L.F. ,,.,. fttfllN ttlllom ,....,,. ........ .., _,,rt ..... Ille -..-. '" """ "' """' ........ , .... 0.llJ Plln. ~ incapacitated from committing . further crimes while serving their -:"aentencea. b u t the coodHJON in which they. live an the poorest poosibTe preparaUon for their .succeuful reentry into society, and often merely reinforce in them a pattern of manipulation. or destructiveness.'' More than half the men in prison have oot completed an elementary school educaUon. Most of them have no skills, and thus no job possibilities when they an released. They return to the same en- vironment that produced them, only more bitter, more e1pert in the ways of crime, and more determined to "get even" for their punishment. Penltentlarles don't make men "penitent," but vindictive against society. WE MUST BEGIN with the youth of. fenders, who too often are turned into criminals in the very juvenile detention homes that are supposed to "refonn" them. We must get the communities, the schools and colleges to take part in rehabilitation programs. We must have work-furloughs and more flexible pro- bation and parole policies. We must get better personnel, better trained, better paid, and better moUvated than the present political hacks. Otherwise, all we abaU get ls "better" crime by men whose only 1JDbltlon ii retallaUon. l"""'* i,.m Nad9rl •n <ll'timlM. Nom!tlht Wrttll"I ...._. CO!l¥W tf'ltlr ""''"'"' hi :iot wonft or IH1. n. , .. M 1e «W'ldmw 11tt.rt M flt "'ti ar tllml-,..,. lltlel II l'fterved. All lttttorl f'llllll lntl\ldl ti .. MNl't '"" -!ti.... ...,...,,, but lltlMI ll'WIY be WIMll!tld 1111 ,_, ti 9Uffl<l«tf '"'°" II IPHrt'llt. l'Mll"I' Wiii net 1111 ll!Jbll.,,.., hills. Both acUons could only mean a Ion'& and potn!ul desth. I am writing to ask, ii this true? I can· not hnagtne why such tame creatures are .. terribly lriglltened. Will' '"' there oo few when before the cllffs were covered wtth them? J realize that their tunnelin1 does affect the clifts, but so does the natural erosion that ocan when it rains. We In Santa Monica have long been a~ customed to our cUffs falling, yet_ we have no smznd squirrels to blame I\ on. I met m1ny peop&e who were allo vtrf dlstur1>ed by the "llliml•' 1boeoce - and later I discovered many of their ~ .. 1e1 Jeadlna under the walkways wert blocked. IS TllB LAGUNA 8-b CHJ c.uncll ••are ol ttd1? 1bere m ID In placea in this diminishing world that wild life ol any oort ti .. fe. Lqunll Beach sUll haa thlJ ma:rvelow: little park. Before lht · hlgllrbe or bousq ""'j<cla move In, I hope the city hllhen wlli do 1111 In tbclr power to allow tbae lml1I creaturt1 their brief unctuary. My husband thought the DAILY PILOT would be Interested Jn doing a It.Of')' on the squirrels and their f1te, after having a reporter tract down ~ facts. Henct lblll l<Uu. 'lllank you f., your Jnt<mt. MRS. E. !?RUGS HOWELL I , lmpos.ed, Self-imposed Suffering By GEORGE R. HOFF, Ph.D. Human suffering takes many forms . Some ol it is imposed from external sources: war, pestilence, floods, earth- quakes, prejudice, hunger, brutaUty, murder, rape -all forms of human misery Inflicted from the outside. Most of us have not personally been beaten down by bombs, clubs, starvation, guns, madmen, or bigots. We eat well, live comfortably, love freely; we have friends, families: most of our basic and not-so-basic needs and desires are met; we're not afraid of the proverbial wOlf at our~; times are good for us. Yet, we suffer too, but from our own self-im~ misery. We bring it on ourselves when -and sometimes becawe -everything Is going our way. THOSE ON WHOM suffering bas been Imposed can't understand what appears to them to be unreal, unwarranted, and unforgivable travail; it seems illusionary, conceited, self-indulgent. They scorn such inexplicable behavior as suicide at- :,:,,~/;.. t "'. ~· . ' (. "':l'.J.I '11""' """=· ·.~li'j'l'l'i" .... ~ ·'."<"'""\ : .. ~ Evei:ylfay · · : l .. -Y:': : ~~~::s .~ J tempts, d e p re s s Io n senseless rebelliousness, fierce competitiveness, bizarre actions, :suspiciousness, envy, guilt, phobias, and compulsiveness. Paradoxically, however, impo6ed suf· fering protects against these self-i mposed kinds. It's unJikely that we wiU pay at- tention to our emotional problems so Jong as somebody else is standing on our foot. CONVERSELY, those of us who com- poae our own agony are ambivalent toward victims of imposed suffering. Although we sympathize with the pain resulting from being beaten, feeling hungry , or having been wiped out, we feel a secret pride that OW' pain is more con1- plicated, more mystical, of a higher level. The fact Is that imposed and self-im- posed suffering are equally bad and in- imical to a good life. A choice between codliver oil or castor oil, taken straight, is hardly a choice at all. The consequence or a bullet in the head is the same, regardless or who pulled the trigger or the gun. ANOTHER FACT is that the inmates of Gennan death camps, the blacks in the holds or slave ships, the dust bowl farmers. the citizens of San Francisco during the ea rthquake, the victi1ns of r.iurderers, were all innocent of their suf. fering ; they had no choice. We are guilty of complicity with ours; we bear responsi bility for ii. Unless overwhelmed by circumstances completely beyond our control, we are the result of what we do and are free to do what we choose. Excuses, rationaliza- tions, projections, denials, or other forms of psychological defenses delay the in- evitable confrontation of our own freedom; they also reinforce the muslon of emotional imprioonment. So long as \~:e live, we have the freedom of deciding how we \Vant to do it. NOTlnNG OR NOBODY can guarantee o:.ir freedom for us; or keep us from laying suffering on ourselves. We may proceed throu gh an entire life without being aware of the alternatives available to us, the chokes which are there. In every situation for every person, there is a realm of freedom and a realm of"'constraint. At any given time, we may Jive in either realm. \Ve must be cog• niuint that, indeed, there are Irresistible forces, stone walhl, iron fist!, but, recognizing them, we can turn away and live in the realm of our freedom . Only after we have identified our self- Imposed suffering, made the com- mitment to change, and borne the responsibility for the choices we make, will we be in a position to pursue our own destinies. Too M~ny Reports Without Action WASiDNGTON - A member of the National Commission on the Cau.ses and Prevention of Violence has made a recommendation which ls bound to find favor in Uie Nixon Administration. U.S. District Judge A. Leon Higginbotham, a Negro, proposed a national moratorium on any additional temporary study com· missions to probe the causes of racism, or poverty, or crime, or the urban eris.is. Taken altogether tile variou:t co1n- mls.slons may have served merely to widen our national divisions by defining them in tenns which, to use the current phrase, polarize opinion on one side or the other. The most remembered finding of the National Advisory Commission on Civil Disorden as reported early In 1968 was that, America "is moving lo\vard two societies, one black, one while - separate and unequal." The »eillled Kerner Commission called for sweeping reform:!, none of which have been im- plemented or are lil<ely to be: lm· plemented. NOW THE EISENHOWER Commissl°" on Violence has made 1 series of recom- mendations which are not likely to be im- plemented either, involving as they do the eipen<!Kure of $20 billions after the end of the Vietnam War. Just what th1s has to do with the causes tor the formation of the Eisenhower Commlsslon is not clea r. The commission waa set up after the murders of MarUn Luther King and Robert F. KeMedy by assassins who did not refiec:t any phase of our present na- Uonal mood bul wert 11 senseless in their alms and as devoid or organized political ~a:! the murderer ol John F. Ken- nedy. The passage of time has certainly taught us that the murders of these men vm-e erratic or purely criminal acl.1 and not conspiracies nor thn1pression o( lhe will ol anything that eould be dignified by btlng called "a minority." The murders wtrt vickw crimei C1>mmitted by vie· cloos or deranged men, and not the ex· preaslon ot the mood of Dallas or Los Angeles or Memph~. T H E EISENHOWER CommlS!lon, however, has given us a treatise nol, on what caused these men to kill and bow a rtpelitlon might be e.voided but on the abstr&cl subject of wtien civil i!lsobe- dlcnct crosses Lhe line 1nto violent revolution. Six of tht 13 members dissented from a majority findinl that civil disobedleoct • Richard W1i~qn l _ . ~ campaigns invite violence, er«le lhe law and cannot be justUied on gro11nds of in- dividual belief. The minority of six offered a rationale for massive civil protest-a contlflualion, in other wwds, of precisely wha\ a vast majority of Americans fear and a1e com· ing to abhor. • This parallels the earlier findings of the Kerner Commission that urban rids in- volving burning and killing were a fonn of sociaJ protest increasingly accept~ by American Negroes as justifiable becltlse of conditions in the nation's ghettos. That was not an abstraction but ~e reporting ol a purported fact which musl have influenced the majority on I~ Eisenhower Commission in expressina their misgiv ings about soc ial protest. THE MINORITY ON the Ei senhower Commission wished.to live in a world of abstractions in which the citizen ca n non· violently express his disobedience of the law as a means of dramatizing hi~ ob- jections and testing the constitutiQTial validity of the law. Violence regrettably pursued the non-violent Dr. King just as it pursued the non·violent war protesters who came to Washington recently. Violence is a regu lar attendant of massive civil protest and disobedience of law. ', This has been so ofte n nlustral"ed that the massive and peaceful civil rights march on Washington a few years ago stands as a lonely exception. The present mood o( the Nixon Administration is not receptive to the ra· tionale for civil diso bedience as either a first or last resort. even if subscribed to. by such aul.!tanding personages as -Dr. Milton Eisenhower and Terrace Cardinal Cooke or New York. It is to be doubted if the 7-6 division of opinion in the violence commission represents anything like the na ti?nal point of view on Utis subject. THERE IS fl.JORE L J K E L Y to be agreement with Judge Higginboth.am , one of the minority, that "surveying the landscape , littered with the unimplemented reeommendatlons of so many previous commissions, I am com· pellcd to propose a nation a I moratorium ... " Judge Higginbotham wants action on the recommendations already made. But the outlook is that the Eisenhower Com- mission reports, like the Kerner Com· mission reports, will gather dust until ·some future commission in some other administration digs them out or the debris of government ·archives strewn about by a civil disobedience group following the rationale of the minority. What's th~ State of Y our Marbles? How normal are you! This is a question many people are ask- ing themselves today In a world which seems to get wackier by the hour. They wonder whether it is they who are getting daffy or merely the time In which they live that is out ol kilter. Too much worrying about' the problem ean be dangerous as well as confusing. After all, a fellow might·go off his rocker brooding over whether he has already gone off his rocker. Fortunately, it Is falrly easy through a tittle seU-e1amlnaUon to tell If you still have all (Jl most of your marbles. Just ask yourself the following ques- tions : CAN YOU NAME three vital dlf· ferences between )'OUr mother·ln-law and the Loch Ness Monster? Would you rather inherit a fortune than earn one of your own! W'htn you study your face In the mirror tn the morning, do you feel it shows more character lines than wrinkles? Do you sometimes lose }'Ollr head when all about yoU seem to be keepin1 their:s screwtd on nicely? In telling a funny story to your boss do you ne\lttOUsly muff the punchline about half t.he time! Do you feel you could quit smoking U Jlal Boyle i -- you•ever really made up .your mind to do ·1• I I . l\1oct of the time when you get up and yield ~our seat on the bus to a little old la\ty, doesn't it milke you feel good in- side, rtgardless of the fact that you ln- tt>nde<I to get off at Ule n~xt 111op anyway? NOW AND TH.EN wouldn't you like to make a pass al yoor neighbor's wife -i1 stie were on ly a little prettJer, and he was SIJ inches shorter and 40 pounds llghter! Do you dislrust all politicians, alt butchers, an auto repairmen, all door-to- door salesmen, and ainybody under 30 with long hair, male or fem ale? Al least ~ve trmes every Monday don't you wish you had the ready cash to nee home and [ob nnd get away from It all? Those a/e the questions. Now to your bo:c score. lf you 1nswer •·no" to more than flve qu('l'ics. iou arc a manle menace or a chronic lbr. BUT F YOU GAVE I r""'"'1dinf ( "yes'' to all the queries, you are to be congratulated. You are no rm a I I y neurotic, with just enough touches of livesaVing paranoia to make you able to adjust healthily to lhe demands of a balmy world. If you were any more normal, you would be abnormal. ----- Friday, December 19. 1969 Th• editorial page of the Daau PUOt iee~ to inform 01id ttim- ul4te readers by prtstnUng t11i1 ntw1poper'1 opinion.s and com- mentary on topics of lntereJt and .slgnlficanct, bu providhlg n fOT1lm for the e:pression of our readers' opinions, and by pre11nttno the diverse view- points of informed obstrtitTI and tpoktsmtn on topic• of tht dau. Robert N. Weed, Publisher ·- ...................................................................................................................... ~ ...... ~ ............ ...., ... ..,..,...,,...,-,.,~~~~~~~~~~-~----... ~· . . . " . n e g ~ n •Y Jt II "· ITT •Y g· lo ''· 1d lf- n· ,. '· In al ii " he be ne ho h• .. TI• ' I on ;ut n• m· tit :er ho '" up be ly ol to • OU • QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandl ; "Canool my appointment with Morley, make an appointment with Baker, bring in the file on Wilkens, and remind me to flirt with you." DAil Y Pltl!f f fi'i9111·es Cotafusi1ag • .. ' . - U.S. Mi-sjudged Strength o~. Red Force By FRED S. HOFFMAN AP ~nta:ry Wi'lter W~SHINGTON (AP) -U.S. Intelligence misjudged enemy strength in South Vietnam l.ast ye'ar by at least 68,000 men. This conclusion is inescap. able after comparing a new orUcial estimate :with an ear- lier caJculatJon o( North Viet- namese and VJet Cong man- power for the fall of 1968. The Pentagon said Wednes.. day night "revised best esti- mates of enemy strength in South Vietnam during the fall nf 1968 now indicate an enemy force of at least 290,000." Checking back a rundo"''ll issued in early September es- timated enemy manpower in South Vietnam as of Oct. 2~. 1968 ranged between 207,000 and 222,000. Pentagon's new ''best esti· on estim~tes of thJ number of heavier ln October than In the enUre pipeline into SOutb South are diverted into central n 1ale" that there weM'a-s least-enemy wno have entered-south November and is still increas---Vietnam because-some. North and northern Laos-for opera· 240,000 of the enemy in South Vietnam, as distinguished ing. Vietnamese sokti,ers moving lions_ there. Vietnam thls fall. Trucks ckrry arnmunitionlr=========-"'=~~========. The Pentagon put ·out the fr~ th0t$~ whq are in the in· and supplies with most inf.II· new figures for au1un1n 1968 filtration pipelilie, tratOrs walking to South Viet· and autumn 1009 after Laird, . But obviously. based on U. nam in a journey that takes under questioning by news-dramaticaliy ,changed e s t i -some ihree month~ according men said TueSday: "I would mates of enemy manpower in to expert opinioil. · estimate that the range of en-South ·•1etnam as of a year Experienced officers ac- emy pn!sence in Vietnam is in ago, even ~e statislics on knowledged it ts very difficult the neighborhood or at lea"st "order of ba!tle" appear, sus-to gauge the number of_roen 40,000 be I Ow last yea r." . pect. , 11l0l{ing on foot in small par- Tn trying lo avoid citing spe-F..STU1;1ATES MADE ties along marly ditfer~t . cific figures, Laird said "it's routes. not an easy task" to estimate Estimates made of the ex-Especially questionable a~ enemy troop strength. tent of the enemy's preseoce estimates oC the· nwnber of No :w«1ikh11{ a "Jlle .•• · tlcetn "'altlttg awhile •.. ' Ou_r · Giit ·wrap b fast •.•. ~1tf. clerks ~l11su,.pa11ed. .The Book.suit · 333 E. 17th St., Coiita · ittesa 548-4811 He has preferred to talk in . in South V1Ptnam are made in men who may pass through generalities about North Viet· large part following questions 0....'.:::'.'....'.:::'....'.'.:::..2:::...:::.:::c~====================:=: namese infiltration of the of t>nemy prisoners, identifica- South, saying there has been lion of enemy units in the bat· an increase within t)'le past tie area and analysis of cap- few ~·eeks. lured documents, as well as However, his apparen t lack frcnl such sources as agents. -of confidt::nce in figures raises Also recoruiaissance planes questions about the validity of aM certain types of sensers claims that infiltration has sdattered along the llo Chi gone up or down in any given · f\finh Trail in Laos gives a period. 1 reasonable picture of truck CHECKING There was· no imn1edi at.e of- ficial explanation for the wide v<1riance in the estimates. But i~ tends to underscore Secre· 'Jary of Defense Melvin R. Laird's reluctance to dea l pub- lic.ly in numbers. Wo1:king level orficers long movements. have indicated in .private con-( Sources in Sai&on reported versations they have little Wednesday North Vietnamese faith in infiltration figures . truck activity along the Ho •UP• - Wl1e1·e Suito1·s Bite Ladies' Eyelasl1es lly L. l\f, BOYD THIN FOLK do not get 6easick as readily as fat folk , , , TROBRIAND ISLAND is northeast of New Guinea . There, our Love and War man reports, it's custo1nary for an amorous young man to ex- press his affection for hls ladyfriend by biling off her eyelashes . • . ON THE OUTSKIRTS of J\1assillon, Ohio, stands a hostelry called ''The No-Tel f.fotel." ... WllEN A FRENCHMAN sur- fers from that thing called a hango\'er, he says something roughly translatable as, "My eyes aren't Opposite the holes." ... SEVEN out of 10 "·omen v•ho go to prize fighls are blonde. CHAl\IPIONS -Am chaJlenged lo name t h e youngest boxer ever to win a world heavyweight title. Floyd Patterson is the man. At the age of 21 years 331 days, he did that. What should be noted here is that Mr. Patterson won it by whipping Archie Moor e, who went on to become the a\ltime olde st li gh t heavyYlejght champion. WRITES Wayne Chapman : "The real Kt,1g Kong is presently owned by a friend of the bride or tothe groom?" A. To the bride, ordinarily. Or so say the ni anners experts. ''LOVE~' rtinkS No. 5 on the list of the 16 topics women ta lk about most . • • IN PITTSBURGB~~ IT'S against the law to sleep in the refrigerator. remem~r that . , . ''OU CAN CHANGE a dollar 293 different ways ... HARDEST FISH of all to hook when surf casting is the st riped bass, contends one authority • . . SPEC IALISTS An y Chinese laundries left in your town? Possibly not. They·re dying out fast. Thousands survive in Ne\V York City. however. Their sig ns are red and white. They look pretty much alike, those s i g n s . Because alpi ost a!! of them are paintecfby one or another of half a doze n oriental specialists who do lit!le-=_else to earn their keep. That's it, they go ·around touching up Chinese laLMdry signs. Your questions and com- ments are \Velcoined and will be used Y.'herever possible in "Checking Up.·• Please ad- dress your mail to L. M. Boyd, in care of DAILY PILOT, Box 1$75, Newport Beach, CaJif., 92663. mine, Clark Wilkerson of1co========== I Baraboo, Wis., an ·J is kept under a glass dome . That King " Kong is 16 inches tall, and his skin is crack.Ing of old age." • . . BEEN SOME TALK of late !, about freezing wages and . prices again. What an ancient economic remedy that is! In old Rome there was even decreed by government edit a 1imit on the earnings of after- dinner speakers. CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q .. "You mention teenage girls 1 whose fathers still spank them. How I sympathize! My ~ father still spanks me and I'm 20 years old. What's your opi-. nion?" A. Sad situation. Opi- nion is you can dabble with the ' psychiatrists on his behalf if · you like. but if I were you I'd just move ·out .,. Q. "lN GJV. ING MONEY to newlyweds, do v•e make out the check to Nearly Ever:rone Listens to Landers , \, - I SEE BY TODAY'S WANT ADS e CHRISTMAS CHEER PACKAGES: .. Ito HO HO ' train lll)oul, 3 sets, 4x8 table .. , ........ , Reindeer r u g, genuine hide, 3:'<5 ................. . l1npor!ed woo 1 Spanish gold & while spN'ad ...... 8"1.inging cry11taJ 6 • light chandelier ... , , .... , , .... Tourmaline stoic, Autu1nn haze coat ......... ,., ... .. ~fn.ttress/sflrings in white satin, double •.••••••..••.. Aquarium, 20 gal, has all aeceSS01ies ............. .. Suzuki, SOCC. excellent condition ............... . . ) It also casls doubt on the TI1ey place greater reliance · Chi Minh Trail was four times, R"'' f ./ • ' ,I ' _; . ' . , : ) ,.-': . ' . .. '" ~-resent, fHUI or f1iture-ne\•er a more welcome \ ·" II !"--" "f I h . ~ ~-~ a • wuuy g1 t l um l c exc1te1nent ·/'Y. -f ~ and magnificence or an RCA Color J'clcvisiun set. (onipuler t'rafted ~o bring you important advanccn1cnts in color "television -features even the pioneering cngin~N or RCA couldo). ha\ c brought yo u as soon :1s they did "i1houl <.'Omputcri!. Better color! ~lore solid stnlc depcodability! Afore home entertaihn1cnt! RC.-1. prouclf)· prc:u.>11lt1 ••• ., • ,------------, I (JMPUTER! CRAFTEi l CILIA TV! I , ____________ , **Independent Research proves : ~RCAhasthe brightest big ·screen color TV picture youcanbuy on every Hl·LITE '70 TRANS VISTA• MOOEL see why now \ Here's a big picture console with big features. · Transistorized New Vista• VHF tllner is the most poWerlul in the TV industry! 25,000·v, color chassis with Super Bright H•·l•le Color picture tube. A very special.price! ,, 01' ' •' .. Mod'I CIM~21 20~01~a: .• 22t sq, in, p!c1ure ' ·"' . . . -- ; ..... , .. ~: ; . ~.j~,.. • ! •• --+'> '-"· .. :.~ • . •• see you,. dealer • ~ I • " I OAJLY PILOT Murphy Will Run H Health Okay WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen. George Murphy says he feels "very well" but will 'take a complete physical examination next month anyway, lo determine if there is any reason he shooldn 't run for reelection. The California Republican told a news conference Thurs. day he is already campaigning and may announce his can- didacy formally at a fund rais- r1•£o;s•11 lng dinner In San Francl.sco .Jan. 9. ii he gets a clean bill of heallh. f.turphy, 67, sald he \\'ould enter Scripps Clinic at La Jolla , on Jan. 4 for a checkup that 1nay take three or four d11ys. The sena!.Or und e rw en t surgery for throat cancer three years ago, He said there has been no recurrence o( can- cer and that "my th roat doc· lors tell me I have no pro- blem." f.1 urphy told the conference he expects no opposition in the June Republican primary. He appraised pro spective Democratic opponents in the general election this way: THf STlANGI WOllD .. MR.MUM 2-year Legislative Sesswn Proposed SACRAMENTO (UPI) -two years beg!Mlng !be first Its houses and commlUW. loejam ol leablaUon al tho Assembly Speaker Robert T. t.ionday in December allt:r Now, the legislature U: not. re-end of each annual seulon and A-fonagan proposed today thet each general election. Now, quired to meet iD pubUc but dead bills often art rem. California become ~the first the leglalature coovencs an· normally does._ _ _ &.roduced ill January, resulti!la state to aopt a modified con-nually in January. gresslonal system with con--The legislature w 0 u I d -Billi could remain alive in e1tra prloUng cost I Unuous two-year legislative 1...::ena::::cl::..:an::..:ope::....::•..:m::.eet!Dg:........::..cl•:.w_r_or:......_r_ar_tw_o_;y:..ean:......_·_N_o~w;..' lh_ere_Is_• __ .,_Uma __ ted_1_1_1_~....;.'llllO_. __ _ sessicns. He also suggested th e legislature subject lt5elf to the same open meeting re- quirements It voted years ago for city councllil, c o u n t y supervisors and school boards. ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST FASHION CENTER 14 ITOUl-AU JJ• • -4 ... ......, tll ftM $oath Coast '1ua These and other sweeping reforms were drafted by a three-man Ass em b 1 y com- mittee which s!.aled 1 t sl=~~~:::::::::w: .... ::"'=-==-===·=··=-=·=·=-=·==~~:=::; purpose JI to brink the California legislature "hito the Twentieth Century." The overhaul ls one of the most comprehensive ever pro- posed for the legislature and ranks in scope with a 1966 con- stitutionaJ amendment which for the first lime aut.borlud annual sessions. I HOBBY I I AND g Rep. Phillip Burton, "a con-----------------------cerned man, so concerned he Like the 1966 rtfonn, this also requires amendment of the state coostituUon and thus approval by the voters. sometimes worries me ." a RACEWAY 1 I H•O...,NG•uor I I TRAIN KITS ! I HO ACCISSOltllS ! Rep. George Brown, a voting Tte(lrd almost identical to Burton's. Rep. John V. Tunney, run- ning hard and even doing scuba diving at S a n t a Barbara. Man Biiys Gu1i, Then Goes After 'Dudes' The three members of a select committee which wrote the plan under Mooagan's guidance are Republican fl oor leader W. Craig Biddle of Riverside; Ray E. Jobnooo e11y.c1r1 active w11r ,., m•n end boy• W I MODEL I • ROCKETS AND ACCESSOIUES ~ ! : SLOT CAR TRACK n If. OPEN HITES ill ti TILL CHRISTMAS m • RACES ANYTIME w I 11 WINNllS A MONTH ill I I i SPECIAL lltOlr:fN LINE I I n.t.THIRS 1/2 PRIC! M I l'U.STIC MODEL I. • CONTEST STARTING I i 1871 HARBOR BLVD. J i coSTA MESA 548-3041 1 c.--------•Bi. Tunney Awaits P oll on Chances SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Rep. John V. Tw!n<y (I). Calif.), says be will not run for reelection next year, but he may try to win Republican George Murphy's Senate seat. Tunney, son of former heavyweight boxing champion Gene Tunney, said his decision will be made after be gets the results of a survey now being made of his chances for vic- to')'. ;wao f:il has the thoughtful , . ·. ~ thought-provoking gift ? . ~ I B. Dalton, Book•eller & F11hion l1l1nd, N1wport B11ch '2660 !71 "1 64,..fO~I 171 4 ) 811-2200 SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - 0 1'm aolng to get me three or four dudes and I don 't care what happens to me ."' \Vith that, wilnesses said, a Negro man about 30 left a pawnshop where he h a d l11dians Get Murphy Aid SAN FRANCISCO (UP I) - The Indians on Alcatraz Island found their 28th day of oc· cupation an eventful one Thursday as they gained the support of a U.S. senator, ad- ded daily newspaper service, established a "Radio Free Alcalraz" -and lost their telephone. Gen. George Murphy (R· Calif.), urged in Washington that the Indians be allowed to develop the islal'ld as a cultural center, He also suggested It be in· eluded in the National Park Syslen1 in honor of all Amer ican Indians. ( FREE Model trucks for the kids whtheen you bw AGFACOLOR ..• oonest color print film. Now you get more than the wo1ld's tine1t color print1 when you buy Agf1color print film. You gel a free model truck -pe,fect 1locking·1luffer for every kid on your Ch1isl· ma1 li1t. TheNI 11e t i• different all·1teel truck model• In the "fleet." Collect 111 1ix and mike 1ome youngster e1peci1Uy hippy ihis Chri1tma1. Then pr11erve the happy mcmor)d1 on Agf1color film. Yo1/ll get pr int• that are riche1, mo1e na~ura1, more beauliful than any color pictures you've ever :shot before. Visit your Agfa·Gevaerl dealer and 1tock up on Agracolor ... and get your free model trucks, 1oday. Free model truck with every SSmm roll or 126 in1~ant:load1n9 cartridge (includ ing processing 1n Agfa-Gcvaert's own labs). Free model truck with every two-roll pack- age of ~mm or 126 Agfacolor (excluding proce111n9). GET YOUR FREE MODEL TRUCKS AT YOUR NEAREST AGFA·GEVAERT DEAi ER! COSTA MESA Cal't C1mtr11 1780 Newport Bou(1Y1rd I NEWPORT BEACH Baker's Westcllff C•mtr11 I 132 lrvlne Avenue Westcliff Pl111 bou1ht a rine for $90 and started •hooting at passen by Thursday. A pedestrian, R i c h a r d Vargas, 21, of San Francisco, was wounded fatally. Another shot pierced a car and shat- tered both knees of the driver, Jules Jobin, 42, of San Rafael. Then, police said, the man fired at least four shots into a sho p Window before taking his own life with a shot in the he ad. There "'as no identification OI) the body of the gunman, \'Ibo gave his name at the pawnshop as "'John Price." He had $4.26 and a book of matches in his pocket. Don ald Zebrak, manager of the pawn.shop, said the man selected an 8mm Mauser rifle, paid for it, and as he left made the remark about "get- ting three or four dudes." "As far as we can tell, he didn't know the victims," a police inspector said, (R-Ohlcol, ud Joo W. o....iva (!).La Mirada). The major featur!s as outllned by Monagan are these: -The legislature would re. main in continuous session for Three Made Com1Wa1·ds LOS ANGELES (UPll - Three children of Mrs. Betty Lansdown Fouquet, accused of abandoning h e r 5-year-old daughter next to a busy freeway, were made wards of the court Thursday during a closed hearing. The bearing, however, failed to reveal the whereabouts of the woman 'a missing ft.year-old son. Mrs. Fouquet, 26, was ar· rested with her common.Jaw husband, Ronald, 31, after the woman's daughter by a previous marriage, Jody, was nannel flares from cactus casual mach ine wosh and dry novy ond grey 1 f11hiori i1l111d, newporl b11ch * 644.5070 b1nk1m1ric1rd * rn11t1r f.h1r91 S d A·a found clinging to a freeway tu ent I e Ienco near' BakerSfield, Oct. Pa; Halted 1,.; 25 ;;.;· ===~~~~~~ At SF State IN HARBOR CENTER SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - Pay for st udent aides in the controversial Black Studies Department at San Francisco State College has been cut off a.ncl President S. t. Hayakawa say1 faculty 11larles are "under review." Hayai1w1, who has aaid a "rtl&n of terror" exillts in the department, and Dean Urban Whitiker made t h e an- nouncement 1t a news con· forenc1 in H1yakawa's office. Whitaker 11ld the 10 teacher 1111!1tantl were paid "about 1130" each for November "but no future expenditures of public funds are authorized." Whltn.ker'a act.ion, endorsed by Hayakawa, came after publicaUon Wedne1iday In the student ne wspaper ' • B I a c II: Fire" of a confid e ntial Whitaker memo w h i c h threatened to cut off faculty and student teacher aides' pay if the Black Studies Faculty failed to meet with him to <tis cuss departmentaJ pro- blems. 2300 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA 540-7131 : • DAILY 9 'Iii 9 SAT. 9 'Iii 6 SUN. 12 'Iii S • TERMS OF COURSE • e NIW ADMI ltAL AUTOMATIC DOOlt CLOSlltS e CANTILEVER SHELVING e GIANT l'OOD STORAGE CAl'ACITY e NO Dll'ltOST ltlPltlGlltATOR FRllZilt GIANT 22 CU. FT. CAPACITY ONLY s377oo COMPARE AT 499.95 let Maker Optianal MODEi: NOi i94 Adn1lraL )MrtRIAl DUPlEX9 . I+ S~RIES -~,llOtiM0ptluill4PltffMTM ( ' OAILY PILOT 51111 Ph<Ol1 'I NEVER STOPPED MAKING DOLLS' Mrs. Ev• Check With Latest Chri1tmas Model New Child Guida1ice Offices in Cou1ity ORANGE -Add ition of two new satellite offices of I.he Orange County Child Guidance Center and plans for a third have been announced by Paul Frederic Marx, ce nter presi- dent. Besides the main head- quarters at 171 E. 18th St ., Costa Mesa, facilities 1,1,·ill open soon at St. Jcmph Hospital in Orange and in the Garden Grove-Anaheim area at 9778 Katella Ave. Plans are upcoming for another office in San Clemente. DEATH NOTICES BLERSCH f::1r1 llltn.ch. 3016 Ftr"l>ellh l1nr. COiii Me ... 01!• of llH!h. OK. 1,. .SurYlYld bY wl11. M1rit Eln1; d1vv1'· l1r, JH" B. GlflOfOI JO".l,..11w, P1ul GlllOl\1 vr.ndthlldren, Lindi, S!t'll!'I'. 1(111""h Ind Dw•vne GiTlOn. Strvlce1, ' ~h.r1d1y, 10 AM, Wt•Tcllll C~IJ>f:I. l lnllrmenl. WHlmlnster Memorlel P1r-. Westt!!ff Ch1~1I tllortu1rY, 6"15· olUI. DlrKtor1. GILLETTE 1,..,. lllll1n Gll l1M1. 1167' 8u1h1 rd, Munttrielcn 811th. 0111 of de1th, De- c1mbf.r 17. SurYfvt'Cf bY h11sbll"d. M.,-old A. Gltll'lll; d1u11h•1r, JHn B .. 11'11n. Rowry. lllflltM, Frld1y, I PM, Olld1Y llros. Ch1pel. R1<1u~ Miu, $11\1rd1Y, f AM, $5 llmon &. J ucjt C11hollc Cllurch. ln!ermtnl, Good Shepherd Cll<T'l•ltrY. GRAHAM The expansion v.·ill help ac· commodate the 1 e n g l h y v.·ailing lists for Uie se rvices of the center. The staff has been expanded with the addition of tv.·o staff psychiatrists and two clinical psychologists, as \\'ell as four psychiatric social workers and a medical resident. Four medical students are assigned to the Center on a rotating basis from UC Irvine. In 1968-1969 more than 600 families fr 0 ITI throughout Orange County requested the center·s services. The center handled 2,338 sessions with parent.sand 1,423 sessions with children. More than 200 group sessions were also held. Funds for expansion are being provided through the Center's volunteer groups, donations from individuals and corporalions, the United Fund a n d · Lanerman·Petris-Short aid under a contract v.•ith Orange County. ~ J Fri day, December l,, 1'16? DAIL V PILOT 9 ? Ex-Nurs.e Real Doll 12,000 ll1ade fo r County Children .. Dy JOANNE RE''NOLDS Of 1111 O•llY Piiot ll1tt SANTA ANA Every Christmas (or the past 25 years, children in Fairview Stale llospltal, Orange County Medical Center and S t . Joseph's Hospital have been the happy recipientJ of over 12,000 dolls, all carefully handmade by a retired nurse. Mrs. Eva J. Gh eck o( Santa Ana, says she first started making dolls for children when she was 15 years old-ana living in Omaha, Neb. There waS a coal shortage that year that kept the children out of school, she ex- pla ined, so she and another girl fri end decided to pass the time making dolls out of scraps or material. "In the first two weeks of the coal shortag e we made enough dolls to fill a box so large, two men had to carry it," she said. Those first dolls were given to the Omaha Child Saving Institute. Mrs. Check mentioned that she gave up her doll n1aking enterprise when s c h o o I reopened, but took il up again t1\'0 years later when she v.·as Santa Conies Early for CHOC .Kids ORANGE -Santa Clau~ v.·i ll make a special ea rly visit Ott. 23 to children i n Children "s Hospital of Orange County accord ing lo CHOC spokesman Verda r-.tackey. "In order to save the strength of Santa's reindeer, lhe i\tarincs at El Toro P.1arine Air Station are providing a :;;peciaJ jet to bring Santa from the North Pole," Mrs. Mackey said. convalescing {rum an aulomobile accident. And she hasn't stopped mak- ing dolls yet. "I grew up and got married and had a daughter , raised two boys who weren't mine. and worked as a registered nurse. And 1 never stopped making dollii." Nine years ago, the great. grandmother explained, she slipped and fell while on duty at Orange County Medical Center -an accident which broke five bones in her neck and forced her retirement fro1n nursing. Until her accident, she said she made about 600 dolls a year. SinCt? then she has been rn aking an · avcrngc of 3~ of lhe toys per year. The varie ty of the dolls she n1akcs is endless. lier crea- tions include do!ls" I a r g e enough lo be dressed in baby clothes and ones small enough to be made with pipe cleaners. '"I'm always figuring new \Vays to make dolls," she ex- plained. Lasl year she made dainty little dolls \vhose skirts were made over pin cushions. This year she is specializing in baby rattl es made out of plastic medicine bottles . ''I was going to make some playpen toys out of thread spools, but I couldn't get enough so I started working with the bottles hlnct I have so many around .'' Thi! finished rattle I s covered with crocheted yarn and comes out looking like a French poodle. Mrs. Check doesn't limit herself to her doll making ent.erprise al~. She said she has several projects going at • /t. • K • d .,. time such as ceramic Bappataess Frotta fngtc tng 0111 painting, knitting or oil paint- ing. Disneyland's Employes Cl ub has collected more than 2,000 toys and 1,000 stock- ··rve been working on bibs, ings to make Christmas for kids a bit happier at Fairvie\v State Clospital, Orange dol ls and toys (or a projecl County ~ledical Center and Juvenile HalJ. l\·tesdames George Theil and Be a that our Snnta Ana Senior Citizens club is doing rv.-llrJ~o~n~e~s~h~e~l~p~P~l~u~to~a~n~d~fr~ie~1~1d~C~in~d~y~T~h~o~m~a~s~loa~d~to~y~s~. ~~~~~~~~~~ Fairview. Irs a competition for hours worked on the pro- ject, but I don 't know how much time I spetid on lhese things, I just pick them up whenever I huve a spare moment," she explained. "You know," she C<lncluded , "there are a lot of memories connected with the dolls-my children, and grandchildren and now great grandchildren and-all the neighborhood children. I've enjoyed making them." lie Booted It ON ALL CHRISTMAS DECORATIONS Pot Peddler Put Away· S1\NTA ANA -L ee Donnell Burress probably holds lhe doubtful honor o( having pro-- l"Oked th e Superior Court 's un- derstatement of the year. Burress, 18, of 25232 Staysail Dril'e , Dana Point, admillcd that he stuffed marijuana inlo hi s shoe and conveyed it in that un ique rnanner to pot. hungry inmates of the Theo Lacy jail. Corbi11 Head Traf fie Man Burress \Yas spending his "'eekends at the minimum secu ri1 y facility follo,ving his" co nviction on charges of being in a place where marijuana "'as smoketl . Court records indicated that Burress told officers he '•:as pressured into smugglin g pot by other inmates. He said in- males persuade pri son c r s servi ng y,·eekend terms lo bring in mari juana. The unhappy Burress gol a Jong astonished look from Judge Robert Gardner plus a raising of the famou s eyebrov.'s. FANTASY LAND (Patio Shop) 2123 NEWPORT BLVD. COSTA MESA 642-4-103 ... . :. .• ' 'i l ' ., .; ' :• ·t .. ' .• • . . . . . . . . • I . • . ' . . --· ' .. • • • ~ ~· ,. • • "Tmsportalion (ron1 the El 1·oro airfield \\'ill be via jeep 1\'ith a speci al escort provided by the California •lighway Patrol,'' she added . Several Marines from El Toro have volunteered lo help Santa ca rry his sAcks of gifts for the young patients , l\1rs. i\1ackcy said . He also gol 00 days in jail GARDEN GROVE _ Foun-(no weekends) and three yea rs lain Valley traffic officer•-~p;rJo~ba~l~io~n~.~~=:~::~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ Clark Corbin has been elected Plus this comment: '"Y ou're not very smart." president of the Orange Coun- ty Traffic,. O!licers Associa- A Christmas ·fl a r t y • l!tponsored by Marines from El Toro, v.·ill precede Santa 's 2:30 p.m. arrival. tlon. Traffic pffi~r 0 . L. Akin, of Huntington Beach. was elected treasurer and Seal Beach police Sit. Lee Gatti, sergeant at arms. The Child Guidance Center is continuing to request dona· lions from ind iv idu a I s throughou t the county. Tl'iom•• Robert Gr1h1m. A•• •1. o!l----'--------------------------------1 0 209) NewP0'1 lllvd., (11111 MIH. 0111 11! d•ll'>. Decemblr 11. Servltes 11><1 !"!1rm111t will be htld i" .Clev1l1nd. Ololo. llell Br"llfldWIV MorlvlrY, C11Jl8 MHI, fllrw1rdlflt dlrec!ors. RIVERA TllM'ltt F. Rlv1r1. Ag1 0 , al '13S o,.,.., Art.. Cos!I Mtst. Survlwld hr deughllr, M1rg1rel Romo. R1111ry. Sund1y nltht, I PM, We•!Clllf Ch11>1!I. RIQU .... MIH, MondtY, 9 AM, $! . .lollthl""''' CetlllllfC Church. We1tclllf Chaptl Morlul rY· """"58. DlrKlon. STRONG Anit. !. STronl . A?I 21. Ill n 61 ~ed· .,-11 AYf., C1111t Mt11. 0.Tt ol d1111'1, OKtm~ 11. Survived bY Plrl!'l'ts, Mr. i nd M,.. Robert E. Sh1H'I•; 11 .. •w. """· M•rY Alt••ndtr, L1tvn• )ll)WPORT CCXTta. P1tlflc CG.st Hi1hway betwHn J1mbore1111d M1tArthur. f"rttway minutes 1w11y, 8Mth. A1<1ulem Mi u . Slh1rda\I, 111-------------~---------------------l AM . St. Jol'I" "'' ll1Pll1t Catnollc C~urth. lnterm111r. Good S1'1ol>erd Cfl'lli.llt"Y. 8tll ll,..,.dWIY MllMUl•Y, COlll MHt, Oln<:tort. TIIOMAS Herbert Tt.nm1s. ,6.gf 61. 111 1101 !. ht St .• Tustin. Dllf cl lleath. DK1m· ~r 11. SurYIYld bY .. 1,... Ele<:ll. "' '"' ~; t llllr, Mn. M11rn1 S1fll9, of NewpOl"l B•th: Mllhew, Tllom11 Sl "lg; "lec1, Mn.. JH" W1rd. Co. rona di'! Mat; '-t r1ndnlK11. Se•Y· lcn. S1lv•d8Y, °"'ember 20. 2 PM, S1ddleback cn-1, Tus!I". l"ltrment, FtlrhlVf'I' Memorl1I P1r!o;. Mr, ThllrT\11 Wll I mtlnber of Ml lOfOIC Llld'I ~1CI el' 51"!1 A1111; El~s l.odt• #1'4 of S1nt1 .-.ne. Siddltblclt Ch111tl Mor· l'u•rY• Tu1!1"' DlrtelOrs. ARBUCKLE & SON Westelilf l\fortuary U'1 E. 17th St., Costa J\te11 6l""88 • BALTZ MOR TVA RIES Corona del !\tar OR 3-t451 coa:ta tiles.a ~u s.zm • BELL BROADWAY . l\IORTVARY 110 Broadway, Costa J\fesa LI "1433 • DILDAY BROTHERS Hundngton Valley Mortuary 17911 Beach Blvd. Uunllngton Beach IU-7771 • PACIFIC VIEW lllElllORIAL PARK Cemetery e l\torhlary Chapel SMt PacUlc View Drive Newport Beach. Calllornla MU711f • PEEK FAMILY COLONIAL FUNERAL HOME 7"1 Bolsa Ave. Weltmiaster lt3-a5U • SHEFFER lllORTVARY Llguna Betcb fff.IUI Su Clemente 41Ultl I • S~UnlS' l\10RTUARV U7 Mala SL UuntJniton Beacb ll&-Wt fro1n OMEGA A Wonderful Christmas Time Comt in ••. WI thi\ ho"dJO"'I pushbutton I dial Omt go Speedmoster Chron~roph. The a"l'f' wotch wain by the S l 95 00 men o" the moon. • New X om ouer oulomo!1c. 1.4K • QOld wolch. Woterp1oof case. Ha~some Circle-l"·a-square. ' '205.00 C!ou1c u vling Ii on Omega hollmark, This ha"d~om. wotch will be loshi~ right tor vfor' •o cam_e. 1-4K white o• ve!low oa!d. s325 00 Ma1ch1"111 mesh brac1le1. . Omego is proud thot it hos been chosen as standa rd issue by NASA for Spoce-wolking and Moon-landing A~tronouts. For on important gift for yourse lf, no wa tch is more highly esteemed. Choose from our large collect ion for men and women priced from $65 to over i 1000. Would"'t she port1culor!y Hke th1 1 distinctively shoped l-4K gold Omego ~ Yellow or while gold. En~ioble Omtgo otcurocy. Never be tote wi th th<i oulomotic wotch by Omega. l-4K white or ye!:ow gold·filled. C.•ve her o l!fet1me ot proud possess!~. This 1-4 K gold beauty with &IK fine c'iomonds, sopphette facet.edged cry~tol. '135.00 '125.00 1225.00 -.._... d:1·--"' The Store Thal Confidence Built JEWtLERS FOR Cl YEMS, HARBOR SHOPPING CENTER 2JOO Herlter ll•d .. C..t• Mtie . 545·9415 Stere Hoe": Mell."'• s.t. 1D 'tfl' '""' S•H•r 11 'tll S P·•· 'tll Chrl•""• HUNTINGTON CENTER Hw111h1tN11 hecll tt2°5501 ... • J 0 DAILY PILOT LEGAL NOTICE . ....,, c;raTU•IC.ATll 01' IUllNllll l'tCTITIOUI 111,\MI. s • LEGAL NOTICE .. .,.n C:lltTl,K.t.T• °' •Ut1H1tl l'ICTITtOUI """'' Tlle Ullllle~MMtl c1ot1 etr'lltf WM LI <-TM 11_,,ltPltd clots MAilw «<111"1 ""'"""' • "''lroou ,, ma MM"'-Yotl• ""'' 1t ii "'-GotM • ,.,,,,., cJ • 0 tw CNN l'oltil C. fDrr1 L vMtf ft'IOI lll!111 .. fl1r'ffltf1lli.o UINtllclt"" llut l'IH.t 1\Cf tlc•O fl"" ........ ef GltAVAllt IN ~u':,!.i!"~~~ ~twftc:,::m ..... :.~ 'TElllOltl &1'111 n..1 Miki flrni '-ed f1......,..0ltUl'F AJ'All:TMIENll el !he t.llD'lll "' pt'""' ...,.,.. -"' ....... 11111 Pd ~ ol tWotoa ll u tel o.... C9Ml>ANY JUHl MAlt E ORA V xn u Me 11,. Ind file! thlt u~,....., ,_ btefl .,. V Ill Orlvt. DIM l'Vltll Cl torn I Pfl'ltlhlcl lfla bfiOW I 1IM Llfl\/'I .. l'1rtr1er1 011111 NoVtmbtt 20. ,,.. true •1'111 \a\llful itttor111r fOI' lhe' -•• JUHEMAR I! Olt.t.Y ol tlKlll rw Klr.r'IOW!eclt"" 1111 r.wrd M ••• ol Cl '°'". Ot•"'ll• c-ttl Ill. C:1rtHIU l1 ef I ll& ntn l'kl !low Oii Mov1mbrr 70. ltllf bl1o t mt • N•Mf' f.loft r ,\lb c 111 tnd to •1 cl 51119 Alld turthtt !till 11111 Limit .. ........,..1 'f ·--... J~Ml'l'll i. 6 IY "'""' "'. I com-eel (If "'' '--'°""'"' k-11 fO ml 0 lie M ""°" w"°" Pt•-Ind ..,u,'" wllotl lllrnft -'14 namt 11 IUbKI' bid 11> tilt w th n .,. t i den(tl I • •• ~low• ,11'\im•nl ll'ICI l dCllOW..0.ed 1h1 ·-"111.i G.,....11 ... rtne l h• ..me. UNITV llEAL £S T AT £ (Oft CSf.AL) "Oll;ATION I C• loml1 ~Ol'Hrll 1111 Dtboflfl " Lind l• 1 W1dt ti D VI H"°'"rl l .. Cll NO ery ,.llb t Cl !Olnl1 Ml' Comm ulon Ei1! r L m '" "•rtl'Mln Mii' ., "" Euo-c: 1ov t1"thtu1.1 -v • n 1 N•INLV. l!DDINI A &oul Ml>Ollll Joint T1<11nll w lh Anll'Mn 11 LI# llloh of W "'lvor•h I 11t llldtHlcN en C ... IC. c .... ,,. Of'IVI Wnl D VI; ~ WI• C•I Pornl• 91011 D1vkl Sloftll Allll C• I '1"2 W l u IOctl !6SO Aubul"ll D Iv• Sin •r N.,•W I Mt nlY D f'!la C1l IOl'l'lll f2lM Johll G l u llllll 'f ~HM & ROSI $ flu ...... l~J E1tl LI ,.llml P ub tn@od o 111111 (<>11' D• II' 1 tot A~ '"'e!le ""-ca ntornll t2IOJ ' O""'"btt n lllCI D~emDe 5. 1: lt ,. ... y s De ~r 30 1 Otl RIY Str"t Ifft '100-6f Sin MatfO Ct llforn • t+I03 J1rnes T LEGAL ~OTICE .... "" llOT C.I! TD CllEDITOltS '111'1!11 01; COUll'f 0" THI STATE 0" CAL FOIN A "011 THI. COUNTY 01' OllANGI NI. A'4.4Mt Et 111 tJA ELS E S HASTllF TEii Dect1u<1 ND1 CE IS HEREIY Cl\IEH o Ille ( ed 1or1 ol lllt 1bovt nfmed dt @odtfll "" • "' SOl'll II.IV "" c D ml Il l nst "'' uld dtceden 1 t r1QU ed lo I 1 !lltm w " iM nt tHH y yqucht J " !ht off Cl of I"" ct kc 11e 1boveenl ed cou t ..,. 10 o tsen hem w 11 lllt nece~~•nr VCl!jcht I 0 Ille unde I tnftd •I n1 of Cl nt M I lo ""' Du Ytt Ctl'Ptnle .. 111rne1 9(11 Oo\'e D S 1 701 Newport 1111tll c1 I when , thr P 1t t al bul nei.s of tilt wn01rs on@od " • ma e s pl'rll n!!lf to lllr est1 e of 1.1 Cl llfctdenl w " n 1ou months 1 e Ille I 5 11wb ,., t;o11 of Ill I not Cf DI !'Cl Noveml>t ' •6t C1rvl R Gr.him Jr.dm n 11 1 1 ot !""-' eslllr at he 1bov1 n1mt d CIM:td..,t l>UllYEA C.llll'l!HTE:R A •Jr.RHES •1 I nel J Sch" J .. D<lwtr D~ 5 t ?II NIWHrl l1Mll Ct II 'ftl 11 •I •u tl'OI A~t ... Allm111! I c Pub shed O •Mt Coe~ DI 1 P lol I ovembe 'I tnd Oe<:emlle 1 lt '"' 22~ LEGAL NOTICE SU .. ElllDJI: COUJl:T O~ THI! SJJr.TE 01' CAl.1,.0Jl:HIA FOil TNI! COUNTY D" OJl:Jr.HGI CASE NUMllJI: o:nt SUMMONS l M STllUCIC 1nd M W MMELL II l us """' c lht MAR LYN HESTER J AN ET HESTER 1nd CHARLENE HESTER T us I p I Is Vs ROGEll D REED TONJA LEE REED DOE I Ill OUQll \/ nc Ill YI De "ldln ! P EOPLE OF THE ST.11E DF CALI FORN A to Int 1bov1 n•rned Of'fffldlnh YOU •re hrell"I d r tl@od ll:i fll I w I ltn P~ld n9 n 111100 t G lllt Vt @'(! ~omo • n of he .1bov• n1med o I n fll w Ill tilt c e ~ a the above "'' I t<1 courl I" lllt tbovt ft" I ~d tel 011 br-M 11g1 nsl .,ou n sa d <Cllj w th n TEN clr!'s l e lie ewcronvouotlll1 sum mon1 '' "' w n n ht 1bove n1mff covn y a w II n TH RTV lllVI II llrYf'll f ,.whf • You ta "" •by no II ti! hll un 1'1 you 1ollt ~ w ltn e1p0ns ve pe1d n1 s1d p 1 nl ffs w I l~f ludgmenl for 1n' moM¥ o d~m111es deml ndKI n Ille ,.tried CO"llll n It I s ng ucon ton- 1 tel o w I 1111111' to ht COii I or 1nv otlltr e ti aem .11111N In he ve f ed c.nm11 • nl You m1v ,Of!k Ille 1dwlct a tn 1!10 ~ en 111y rn1 ....-t-t t<I w 11 the co,... ~ 1 nt o lh • sum1N>n1 $\Kii •"o ~¥ ~dbl<on,ulftll wlll n II• mt m l •e ed .. 111 1 111mrnorn; o lln1 1 w ll tn ""d "I lo !ht com111 n DI N S.,, I l W.f W E $T JOMN C ~<lo; fly '-~a y Lau Hoclte\ D~u Y Crrk ll'llJr.LSWOltTH 511! Ol!L A CIA l t , Wfflc If 0 1¥1 SMllt 20t Nl-rl IUH:~ Ct 110"' I f'JUI f7J() f'! N•I I ltMOI ... ttlflMYI lff I' I Ill ft1 P ub lllf'll 0 ll>llf Cctsl D• IV P ot Gtlv n lllOf 119'kr ck lil:ooll LOI A119elH C•I lorn 1 tlll»l Ltlfl Gt ** t 01 A tndl P IQ fltv«IY H "' Ct 1f0<nl1 90210 MildrM Gt •ooll 2110 Ctt11\1rv ... k £111 No 1'01 l.H A1111tlH Cl lforn I 'IONJ CM !in G otr1mon l l )( m-.A.....,1111 L- flttdl C1 !t«nll 90804 E nhl ! HI L 1n1 De Anll lil:oad SHU J-t, S.n o "'° C1 torn1t '210f J~n G H1ur1 & Ml 11rt V Hluf! 7to Cthll!N Wty E Ct loll Ct IO n t t2G20 C '"' !!:U11eftl Helmtn & A Ct Mt t He l'nltl, 2 lJ G11\'e-iton S ff Stn D 1111 Ct lfotn 1 '1110 Mt rlN L H.s1 5100 Altl1r!011 S reef No I 2 l.Ol'll Beach C111forn 1 tOI J D F rtM n 0 JCIM'!I 711 e oekhu ~t s HI An11>e"' C11 forn • J H1n l.~on no No It! C ffo II Ave<1ue ~os Jinoe "' Cl lorn• fllOlt J!ol>HI w Mldtefl "°' Glwnf on Av•nu• S~n D 1110 C1 lorn I f1111 E •en M McClln t l'11 Los Fl I Bou •v• d Lot An1etu C1 fern 1 ~7 Wts ev l.e1 McCo leuoh .. !!Olln • Rulli MCCO OU!Jh un He m"' Ltne lmPt 11 Bead1. Cl !o n • non WtYn~ o o."'111111 on 111 N~ th t. r.c:otn Street 0 tnge Cl fO "I •2U7 Eml Johll Pan!kY o01 J~ "' D Vt H sbo ouvh Ct lorn 1 t 4010 f t I IC "' ~11 19d Ty -Avenue Sht min Oa~! Ct la<n a t lOl Edw1rd Jt ome p ou 10 M B• b& 1 l.Jnt Cuoert no Ct f()rn 1 tSO ' H11 old 0 JI d\t di .. l.o I J R ch• d 731 "~n5t ~ t AYtnll, Cllu 1 v Ill Cl lorn 1 tlO 0 ICtnnelll G Rob Yt tt6 E11 1m1dR !~nt1 An1 Ct fofl! I •ll'M F l>d J So:l\UI> I. N11d1 J •~ $chu 1 t777 Alto 0 Ive L~ M•tl C• fo n 1 "°'' Thoml• J Sm t~ 3'1S Jul. Court P110 A 0 Cll "' n I flW \/endett• V1n De"'' ~ 2510 D• !!Y AYMIH' l.OM BHCh Cl fofl! I tol 0 Curl I s Vi num .. Anni s VAl"llU!TI fl7 TU • S H l.omlt1 <".a f<>rn I '°111 Ho m•n Y Wed\1 e I I North DDht nY Dr ve l.M An;t e C1 lorn I f006' l.o ' Ji Y•!m•n ~ Ar1M Avenue Los AnlN!lt! Cl fo n I llOC'J JO!toh D Wo le .. M11e1 M Wo !tr Jo ni Ten1n~ w h R t lll of Su ~ 'l'l!f'!lh o losot Meld• Avenue Oren•• Ct lo n • t1U1 DATED 111 ~•Ill lllV of 0 toi.. IHt I NITED REAL ESTATE CORPOJ!Jr.T ON 1C•f<ln11col'Plll O~ Ply w I em A McDon• ,. t1 dent Bv Jo 'pll Clle ry S"-C e l ,.Y ~T,..T~ OF CAL FOR A COUNTV 01' OltANGI" ~t On 111 s I h dav of Otl~t>er lf6t !><!to • me ltl• und.._ 1 1nl'tl 1 Not1rv ,.ub c " 1NI fo SI ~ f""ll"fY t nd ~hi"-P•rlOl'll Y IOHlted W om A McDone known to ml lo bl Ille P "'S dM ~<Ill Jostoh Che ,.y know" to mt lo bf' '"• Sec •l•rv "' 1111 con>o 11 on 11111 ~11eculed fht VI "n n1 l'llf'llenl ind -nown ta "" '" be Ille Pf<'SOA, who "'""'"'"' !ht VI II n n st um•nl on ben1 I .,0 the t<>l'PO 11 on tllf e n ,,.,.,"' t nd 1ckna edgod lo me lhll such (Ol'PO • Ian e~ecuted n• •me I'~ 1u1n lo I-fl y t.1w1 o • l!!IO ul on of h ~ ... dM D •C C I W THFSS "'y ll1nd 1nd offlc I 1e1I C1 o vn J Stlumak.._r Nll'l1rw Pub < n •!'Id or 111d Co nt"!' •rid S •ft Jr.M•llOSI!: & MAl.AT aw 0t11 V ""'brn 1 1".,,,.,, ti l •w 1'111 "'""'" If tllt Stln 5wltt tll Ln A1191"-Cl ;.! ~11 T-ltHI ' l'Ub ~)led 0 1n<1t Col~ 01 IY " o Novembt 7t 1nd De<embe S ' lt "'' """'' November 11 11111 Dtttmbl J U ' LEGAL NOTICE "" '""'1--------------1 LEGAL NOTICE SAi;~ N NOTIC• O• Tl;USTEE I So\l.I --- Your Money's Worth Parking: It'll Get Worse By SYLVI~ PORTER In New York City dally parking charges 1t dowolown garages no\v ruo 1s much as $5 to ft 50 For 1 commuting businessman this means lhat the monthly cost of parkmg hi$ car here can run as high as $165 Even at Jess ex pensive garagu t y pt ca I moblhly parking charges ln New York now run (rom $60 to 1100 Abo ut 100 m1Illon nD\Y and thlS PARKING ;llrlgts or the future wUJ shift almost en. tlrely to se1f servlee you park your own car take your keys with you -and when you rt> ready to lea\'e dnve 1l out yourself You are making 11 clear you prefer self service to leaving your car 1n the hat1ds or the lndoor hell s angels Garages will b e c nm e rleaner better lighted better decorated -also 1n response to your disgusl at today s tp1cal dirt and grime There also will be more high spttd elevators and rlosed-c1rcu1t TV surveillance or the goings on 10 garages Free ' parking dO\Ynlown will disappear altc8ether - OVER THE COUNTER ' Oecemb•t 18, 1969 •etll'Ul'llllfiv. ni ...... ttfl' lllMI I ilnl II '"'"I m•lllY f "M lrem HASO. ~r ca " ...i 111CIW1 reltll Ir nn kM" nNlrk•oW!I If" c1mmltillMl. AAA. En -The costs of indoor park :~,.,,.co ~ ing fac1ht1es are skyrocketing :vr.J ,r;; too The cost to the parking 1n Aernr E1 I.cm .. VII: dustry o f adding 3 million 11.1 Ho.o needed ne\v parking spaces 10 ~ r w~"F 1he next decade at $2 000 to ! !::' H $4 000 per space 1s estimated : ~0 i."! at $9 b11lion ~I~ ::0 0 PARKING also h a s ! 0'(:1 G~~ become a ma1or burd en at ~me11<11.,b suburban shopping centers Am E~Of Am F11 ~ hot e Is airports hosp11.als ,. c ee1 un1vers1t1es What \Vas once ~%& ~si free parking 1s being replaced ~m M'p'1 ;: by monthly charges to gto\v !55 'tGoDb 1ng numbers o! students doc !ri~~us' It lors others E\ en 1n suburban !~:111 ~ loy, ns st reel parking is be ng :~e" •i;:! banned -and in some cases A. den D Ari< lf.oP monthly charges are bemg .. ow i.i assessed for street parking :,t~·110 Are our c1t1es then ~~~5; be g1nn 1n g to grapple::~ At reahstically with the parking R:k•,.1 " problem' f:nw~k c No they art nol -and 81 n P naum "hat s mart v. e 1n this coun BaY e55 e...,d,m try seem delenn1ned to con-e~ e s p hnue to s1111ggle to work m :: k' ~~" our cars ~' t11 L&J:, WHATS T ff E ANSWER" 8 d Soft I I th t g,"!t',., Perhaps 1l 1es n e apparen 800';;"e E• trends 1n the sprawling park 801 eoe mg industry For these says :: hC'A~c 8 td S~• the non profit Nation al Park e kwv c 8 ks Sc1 1ng Assoc1allon 10 Washington s "'" " m1ghl give us clues lo what \Ve Ru'rt~Y 81 should be planlJllJg ~UCl\tOeA! J n c re a s 1 ngly parking ~:m~ sv facihlies v.dl be provided m or l:~"... ~ under office and apartment ~:: •fow bu1Jd1ngs -to reduce the ~!:le~ A distances commuters \VIII have c • e to \\ alk from car to \\erk l":1c ~t h kin l t Cen e~ T e open air par g c cen vPs (v.h1ch now provides a full ~!, ~11. ty, 1>-tlurcls of our parking Chm Le• f ... ~·.· ... 'J' spaces) will disappear rem <..h 8va.1 our densely populated areas c~r s ~1 Jnslead the high rise mulb ~ ':'u ... use building with a parking c 1 u e I ·-f CoYOh lot included wil uc a big ac l " Me tor holding down your future c;,,0"ccl' park1na: cosl! ~~e"m Y Passenger Load Rises For Air Cal r o n F o on 5 Comtt '~ c Com 11 I c~ r.os om Te Com H h Con P ¥ Co 1111 A CnD (" Cm11 "" cmo n C"'o M " Cm11 1~c Corn PS Con RC(!( c s • g c~ ' Con 1n ,_ ' Atr Cal ifornla earned 63 337 ~:~ 5vr passengers a total of 22 839 400 ~r:'! 11M11 Cros1 Co revenue pil.ssenger miles tlur c,ru c11 R" YPl.;s c Ing October a passenger m B:"~ 0 ~ crease. of 24 percent o\er the &:v•,n F~ same month • year ago ac-gg°'/"1n o.n AP cording to Dudley F Miller o.1u. en Ot C nT marketin g \Ice president &:~ lfm During the f1rst ten months 6:.e~'1 of 1969 Air California carried &r:cm ;, 696 931 passengers an in g;~ e CM Dolly Md crease of 45 percent over the ~ e Jf tame pe:rlod a year ago &u~ n !> Load (actor for the month of 1°~ t: n October was 55 percent with :~ ~b llUC 5~1 an a\ erage of 65 passengers E1 P11E- prr flight !k ~o~ Robert W Clifford vice ~1 rom president or operation.-; and El 'b15:1 ma I nt e nan ce sald 1he ~~M;~ schedule completion factor for 1~ ~ October was 99 6 percent with ~r:' :• 9~1 01ghts between Northern E;,.wc~. and Southern C a 11 for n I a ~nu ,0 1 Performance records showed Ei : ,, e' 9S pereenl of Air Callfornla s ~~ "r":: fUgbl.!I dcparled on lime or ~:lrt111 T wllh1n 15 minutes of scheduled ~:fNe":' departure. Ground fog 1n ~:'~ ~new Southern Callfonua caused ~st ~71'1: most of the few departurt "~(t"'I ' delays ~= Fi' For the r1rsl ten months of ~:;;'r.0n• 1969 Air California s srhedulc ~= complelJon fact.or was 98 3 ~~~I ~: percent with 93 pere'11t of all : .. ~ n r fll ghlll departJng exactly on ,~~~~wll thne or wlUun nrteen m1nult1s i~LJ~ '° of K:heduled dtparturc Cllf (. R ~II: fordaald &;'0 1E11 I ' • - MUTUAL FUNDS " " ,-• Complete-Ne,v -A-u lt\ • n, n ~· • " .. "' rr~ .. .. •• ' • " '" • • "' .. " 1r• ' " "" "' ~ " " " '" ~~~ • '" ' ... "' ~-.. '" " "~ . ''" l J ·~ ff ·~ ~ ' " "' • .. " .1 ... ' .. ' " ,. J1 ' ' •• " "' ••• ~ ' . . " 160 3 • . ~ ~ '" " ' . " • '" Ill ... " • .. 4f ~I ' " " " • • •• , ~· 'J lt" 1, • " ~ o; ~\t 1L Y"' ., l'Ol-T ~ ll~ " •• .. J~~ ;r• "" " " .. '" ~ " '" "' • .. '" n· '" ~~ "'' .. i~ " ,,. .. " "' " '" •• " ' " ~· ~ " "' " '" " " ... .. " ,j • .. .. " "' " , .. ' " .. .. " " j ,. ,. 1d • "' " 'i6 ll .. ' " " .~ " " • • • .. ,f " • , Yori{ Stock List '1 ' .. ' ~ _, .. • 0 " '" " ' '" . ' • . ' ' _, ., • I .. -~·-71 -.i,, " . ' .. , ' . • • '" ... " . 'I ' , ' ' " llh ; I · 1'1arl~et SyHtbofs '11r1t~ 011. •r-r• l'!lht. .,._w flll\lt --w "" • -----~----· ~ .• lM DAILY "L01' Thursday's Closing Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List ..• ....r------------1 ldl.J .. I .. Uw C'-tat ~.:. ........ , .. ,o:r1m1 ..................................... , I Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange Li!i!t > .. ' J % DAtLV PILOT Q U A LI TY DI SCOUNT DEPA RTME NT ST O RES ~~:~: 6 DAYS ONL COUPONS GOOD THROUGH CHRISTMAS EYE NOTI: AU OUANllTIES UMITED • •. HURRY, TlllY WON'T LAST AT TlllSE PRICESI . ZODYSCOUPON . . . . ... IYIRY ZODYS DIPT. OfflRS DISCOUllTS Of UP TO 40'9 .AllD MORI fOR TlllS 1¥111111 zlt•Y• sav1s: MORI cusTOMas I TllAif AllY 01'11111 •ISCOUllT DIPT. ·SIOlll .. .ALL OP SO. C.ALlfOUIAI '--~~~-,--.~~~--~~~~~~---' L-~~~~~~~~~~~~· ' SPECIAL STORE HOURS: OPEN EVERY DAY 'TIL CHRISTMAS .,. . * • '"f;i' . . ~ I ' '" • • BLOCKBUSTER IEMCO "IUllllY IAIY", "TUMILllll TOM 1 .~ I IOY" 01 "IAIY KllOW·IT·ALL" DOLL : /~~:. \BROTHER PROFESSIONAL I C 12.95-29.95 69J I \ ';... ) DELUXE HAIR DRYER : ~,..>. , . y~ui : ·"".· .. :, ~=i:! 14•' : 1 CHOICE ••· I • _ p ~ : . ' lxtr• fine dryin9 with profe11ional hord I . F\ top otylin9. f ive position rotary switch for I I ·. -•.' .. •diu•t•blo •••• heat. Adjustablo hoi9ht I -• ---MMel Jsoo control a11ura1 comfort whilo dryin9. • . QUANTITIES ON SOME ITEMS ARE LIMITED, AND THEY WON'T LAST AT THESE PRICES! •SHOP & SAYE AT JODYS MIYDAY '::~• 9 AM TO MIDNITE • '!~~~!'!!!~~~!:~ NORTH HOLLYWOOD SMllMAN WAT At COlDWAfll CfN, LYNWOOD ........ \. NW't. Af C:OIMISM NORTH LON• RIACH ANAHllM•RUIHA PARIC ANAllllM•fULURTDIC t. IOUtM &11111 AT CMlllT' ttACll ta.YD. & llNCOa.N ot:Aft01tM01r1 At a.IMON WllT COVINA .UUIA AVI. Al P\llNtl NORTHRIDOI llQDA llVe. Al MVOPtlMlll RIDONDO llACH NAWINOINI ILVO.AT IO.tAT CINTll INOLIWDOD CINf\llT 1a.ye. Af CllNINAW NllHIW MWf. ,If ITUlfUllll POMONA POUllTAIN VALUY LON• RIACH llUNTlll•TDIC RIACH •*"" VAlllT (IN111 MAllOI ILY9. Al IDIHOll LOI COTOflt,t•ttNO .. woo.•u•• fflOfN' WHY .. lttN•t• IANTA ANA •ARDIN •ROYI IURDAlllC CANO•A PARIC N. OIANO AVt.. Al 111N 1111'1 C-MA•MAN & llOOICNVlll JAN PllNANDO ILV .. Af IUl lANi tO•ANllA CANTON ILVD. Al IOSCOI I • ( • ----~- 11 ' -I I I 3 ' ·------------------ ______ _.C' BA'RBARA DUARTE, 4'4-9il66 ""' l'lt1Qy~_D«tmlltr It, Ifft ' ..... 11 Relax, It's Easy .Yiejans Learn Art ' Of . Wea .riless Wo.rk ' I""' Mission Viejo \Vomen will be able to work more and relax' besides i1 they attend the Tuesday, J an. 13 meeting of Mission Viejo Women's Club. Mrs. G. J. \Venck, home adVisor for the Universit.Y of California, Ag• ricultural EXtension Service will spe8.k on How to Work Smarter, Not Harder, at the 8 p.m .. meeting in Mission Viejo Swim and Racquet Club. Mrs. John Kezele, president, invites all women members of the J"'8Coo quet club as well as her own members to attend. While anticipating the new year, club members recently sampled some joy ane goodwill as they enjoyed a Christmas banquet in the Towers. A cocktail hour preceded seating in the banquet room at three tables '\\•hich were adorned \Vith a snowman centerpiece surrounding an elegant main table with centerpiece made by hfrs. Richard Johnson. The dinner was topped with an ice cream snowball rolled in coconut and served with a candle in the center of holl y. Following t he meal, Mrs. Thomas R. Murphy, program ch'ainnan, introduced .Mrs. Jim McBMde who sang Several selections of Christmas carols and hfrs. Don Fassel, accompanist. Not to .be outdone, clubwomen joined in for a variety of songs appro- priate 1,o the festive occasion. The active clu b was spearheaded by fvlrs. Norm Erich in November, 1966; at which time 25 women were present. Today the membership has risen to 75 with projects gro\ving with the number of women ready to de- vote time to philaIJUtropic endeavcir;. Meeting are the second Tuesday of eaCh montll with the exception of July and August. Meetings feature speakers, demonstrations, fashion shows ---and community players. Through club efforts, crosswalks and stop signs in problem areas· have been installed, equipment purchased for playgrounds, aid given to Jast year's flood victims in Silverado Canyoll and San Juan Capistrano and contributions made to the Drug Abuse Council, Saddlebaclt.Little·League,. and Mission Viejo Swim Team. Studen ts Booked for Hol idays Laguna Beach youn gsters who find Ume on their hands dllring the Christmas holidays he1ve a treat in store for them. As fourth grader Randy Dietz and freshm an Gary Fields illustrate. a vacation film show sponsored by Laguna Beach Library and Friends of the Llbrary, will be presented on Monday, Dec. 22, at 10 a:m. in the South Coas t Theater. · . Lagilria Beach Women's GoU Club Installed Its new ' board at a Chri stmas party in the clubhouse this . ! week. Among officers are (left to right) Mrs. Cor- The Laguna Line nelius Toomey, tourney chairman; Miss Gracia Johnson, president, and Mrs. Ida.May Schomaker, treasurer. Velvet Santa Nods 'Com·e-in' By. BARBARA D)JARJ e Of 1111 o.llJ' Plltt Stiff YULE DECOR was.elegant as w>11°the cocktail buffet offered by Mr. and ·Mrs. Alan Slnith in their Irvine Cove horne-Fri'day·evening •. More than 200 guests-were greeted by a 6-!oot Sa.Ota dressed in red and white velvet, nodding ••come on in." .Qn through the entry, guests vi".Wed a 6-foot Victorian candelabra with apricot candles entwined with holly, heather and gold ornaments. The lavish buflel table-was laid.with an assoi't-· ment to delight the gourmet -an·antlpas!p·spread, conliinental cheeses, cantonese appetizers,· seafood and many more bot and cold borsod'oeuvres, backed by a dark red authentic Swedish puilCh flowing from the mouth of a Santa Claus. Desctjption of the·decor could go on and on .•• but not to be overlooked was a twinkling 6-loot =nee behind the bar with four candelabra decked in colors of gold and green, and a II-loot flocked J>o. nanza .Pitle hung ·with cwitdm' oniamen ts'; NINE AIRLINES and almost as many coun- tries were on the itinerary for Mrs. Robert Petitt's recent Orient tour. Departing from Honolulu with · her daughter, Mrs. David Sterrett, Mrs. Pettit found Japan a delight with ideal weather and coun- tryside in autumnal splendor. Service at Hot Springs resort Beppo was ,.ete-- gant" (fresh kimonos laid out every day, two wait. ers per table), and a 10-<lay boat tour of the inland sea was one of the most pleasurable.in her expert .. ence. Other stops, T a I w a n , Saigon, Singapore and ,Manila were equally delighUul with the only dark cloud falling on a trip to Cambodia. After sit- ting all day in an airport, Mrs. Pettit and fellow passengers fuund there was no plane ·service to the resort ol .Ankorwat, though they held tickets. The same was ·true of the return trip, making a. bus trip necessary, By and large, the six·week tour was 1'fabulous'' and just enough to whet the traveler's appetite for an anticipated sojourn in Greece this spring. Sweet Nothings Can'f .. ·Be -LJ,ttered: If :l ights .Glow Too Low DEAR ANN LANDERS: I am 28, gain- fully employed, fairly 'attractive and single -but not by choice. I should tell you AM, I have a slight hearing problem but' not many people are aware of il l fake a1 lot and am good at lip reading. The man I am going with at present is attractive, intelligent and. soft spoien. That's my problem. ·He is TOO soft spoken. He has perfected the executive whisper and 1 often lose part of what he 11ays. Last night at dinner t THOUGHT 1 heard him ask me to marry him, but I'm not sure. I was too stunned to ask him lo repeal. Now; of course, J wish I had. \\that should I do about this em- barr3ssing situation? -PLEASE PLAY IT AGAIN, SAM ANN LANDERS ~ " , . ~· DEAR FRIEND: U Mr. Ezecadve Whisper wants yoa to be _., wile, he'll ask again -but by all meam teU him about yoor problem. Aad get )'1111' bur- ln1 cbecktd, t'blcken. LClnl Dows wblt else you'rt m.iuhtg. DEAR ANN LANDERS: S e v t ra t months ago I married a divorced man who had cu.5tody of his three cbildren. (They are aD unc!er I yell! of -.it.) Ted's ex-wife bu since remarried. She bun't missed 1 'fidtlng daJ in two yeart, The kids alway1 .are thrilled lo see her. '111ise' youngiters ore badly ll(JOIJed-and I can't 'handle them. I don't feel IJ>oot them as a mother abould •. Even. though I 'm a great tetras, I'm afraid one day I .will belra1 ID)'ltll and Ille 1nltll will bt !mown. How can 1-azkiest to Ted that he let his ex-WUe have . the children! They uem· very fond of her .. oew husband and be aeems lo enjoy them tremendoully •. When Ted and'l discuaed marriage be •sked if 1 could love and)cart!for his cldldren.'I aid yes, but ,I.didn'.t know ~m.t I was getting Into. HI'"')' your advice, Aim. Tile situation grows more tense every~. - THE SUBSTITUTE DEAR SUB : Tbt prime conslderaUon oboald be Ille W.lfire ol Ille "'11dr.,. JDdglng from your letter, they woald pro- blblf be 6etttr ti fritll tltilr motber and It.pf.a.... ll "'1 rtftnnetfe 11 eorr<e~ JOU are• fteln1 It kfft.. 1 doz.en .Jt•rt •f Mwllllu& IH'Vltade. ChUdrta kntw wbe1 Ibey· -DOI lowd, A slePll!Olher wllo feel• u yoa do cannot conceal It. no mat· ter ltow goof aa ac:trtu 1he 'Is. Level with your htband 1ud· ltt't bope be mtdcrstuds. ' ~ . ' l>EAR ANN LANDERS (! do'iiot sgr.e with your advice to· ''The Lady Next Door.'! What on earth Is a.friend for 1f • not lo confide In? Every woman needs a shoulder lo cry on -someone with whom she can discuss intimate problems. I con- cede lhat 1 pmon should use discretion and not blab to just anyblidy. But a close , friend can by a sodsend when a woman is,.. having trouble with her husband and needs to lell someone. Now and then you change your .advice. { I bol'!! you~ll do so this Ume. -PJIO. FRIENDSHIP , DEAR PRO: Too maay women art anable to dJsttapla-ltetwea • friend · and an acqaain~ I •sree. a. frieH, can be 1appertive. Im tiline ti. trtUle be&' wbeo If com,. to •111-.,...., prob. lent•, I draw the Ute; 'lie belt:)tn. w1U. wtaom &o discuss marttll prOblemi ts Uae penon with whoa' )'Oii are ltavtaC the problem. 'lbe aecead bell tandkt• Is a counselor, clergyman or pll)'llda...,. someone Wht caa be pnftllloul. tbJ-· tfVe Pd slleaL , AnA.Lander(-wJJi .bo (lad lo betp,.. •Uh yoor Jm'tifcms. Send them to her in cano-<11-U.. DAILY PIWI', tnclosin& a ~lf-add.ressed, stamped envelope. " I "!--"'!-~-~-----------------------------------------~-·------ •• . f ' ' r ' . DAILY PILOT ESTANCIA Goorglonna Dwight CdM HIGH !1111rld R-l•nd De cember Girls-of-the-month NH HIGH Christin• R1bar4 CM HIGH Coro! Cutler Zontians Add Coeds to List : Each month during the College at Fullerton. Future plans lhclude enteriQg the field ot medicine. Beach !or llllt-70, Ille coed Is COSTA MESA head vanity cheerleader and MW Carol Cuater 11 a four member Of A C1ppella cboJr, year member ot the Girls' Chant.tiles and tbe Pep Club. AthletJc AuodaUon and the • IChool year the Newport Harbor Zonta Club honors an outstanding girl in each of the area high schools. From the ranks of the coeds chosen, a.a annual award of a ..: $50 savings bond is presenl.ed to the outstanding girJ-Of.tbe- year in eacb school. ESTANCIA Serving as president of Girls' • League al Estancia High School is Miss Georg:lm- na Dwight. During her three years a.s a league member she .. bas been elected secretary, : historian and s ophomore ::representative. ~ The daughter « Mrs. Viola Dwight of Costa Mesa has been a member of the claS. council for four yean, secre- tary of the Pep Club, presi- dent of the Spanish Club and vice president of Cllifornla Scholastic Federation. During her jt.lnlor year the was awarded the Gold E for service. Outside activiUea: in- clude participation aa an Ex· plorer in Post 209. Following her graduaUoo MW Dwight plans to enroll at ~ University « California, Berkeley or California State UNmD NATIONS ASSOCIATION •lf'r SHOP lrnpe rtM Gifh-Unic•f C•"'• 2204 N. M•i11, S•n+• A11• Moncf•y thru S•turtl•y--11-4 COl\ONA DEL MAR Attending the Am er I c an International School in Viemla last year was Miss Ingrid Rowland, daughter of Dr. and Mn. F. S. Rowland of Corona del Mar. During her senior year ahe has been student congresa secretary and cbalrman, pmident ol CSF, and member of the Sclenct Club, American Field Service and Interna- tional RdaUons Club • While in high school she also has been acllve in the foreign Language Club and girls' swtm team. She was a Na- tional , Merit aemifinalist and won blltory and track awards in Vienna. OuUlde act.ivities iriMude serving u youth group preai· dent in her church and memberahip in the ArcbaeoJoiiy Explorer Po•U06 where the wa.s president last year. MW Rowland plans to at- tend either Pomona College, Stanford or UC, San Diego and major in archaeology and bi- ology. NEWPORT BARBOR Miss Christina R e b a r d , daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Aubrey Rebard of Newport Beach, will enter the Universi- ty of Southern California in the fall as a musjc major. Selpcted as Miss Newport '4WARD WINNING SHOE SERVICE ~~ COMPLETE SHOE e LUGGAGE .e HANO BAG REPAIR SHOIS RESnLED TO THI NIW LOOK! IP•! .... Sliff •. , hlry~ .. JI•••• TM!J l CONVENIENT SHOPS --. .:14411 I . COAIT "WT, e u111 llt\llNE AlllE. c-. Mt M•r. ~ w .. i.:rn1 ,11i. eMU VIA LIOO N....-porf 1""'-....., N..,.,, ...... m.. eao11"'°"''' en ,ASMION HU.ND F ... ""' lfllfl'I • ...,... --.. •nn 111_,.,, 11o1<11 JUST WATCH HIM LIGHT UP Whowouldn'tlightupwhen lrs 1 Dunhil!. From left: In 14klnltgold, $275. Florentlned gold plated model. $45. Gold ploted barley com pottem. $40. SLAVICK'S 18 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT BEACH -644-1 380 o,_ M•'"'-Y tflr• htuMf •lttll t :JI Her flnt three yeara in-Pep Club, a class offictr. volved work with t he Glrla' League officer and freshman clau councU, aqua participates in the Madrigala •how, g~ll' chorus , oophomore lingl111 group. clw cwncn, AFS Club, Sclen-She bas been honored, as ce Club and lludent congreas outstanding sophomore typist rerresentallve. She also bu and ~elved an achievement been a member of Tri Hi Y award in the GAA. Miss Club. Custer has been a volunteer La.st year lhe received the for two years at Fairview most valuable musician award State Hospital and parllcipe.tes and servk:e award. 1D the Oui.stian Service Club. nu. lllllIIJ1l<I' Min Reblrd The daughter ol Mr. and has been aaftd to be a Mrs. LeRoy CUster of Costa counselor at the National Mesa hopes to enroll at Cal ch eerludinf A.uoc11tloll'1 Si.le Fullerton lo obtain her summer clinics. . ~ credential. To avoid disappointment, prospective brides are reminded U> have their wedding stories with black and whlte glossy P.hoto- graphs U> the DAILY PILOT Womens D• parlment one week before the wedding. Pictures received following the weddin& will not be used. For engagement announcements it is imperative that the ttory, also accompanied by a black and whi te glossy picture, be su~ rnitted six weeks or more before the wedding date. It deadline Is not met, only a story will be used. To help fill nquireoient. on both wed-dinC" and engagement atorj.es, forms are available in all of the DAILY PILOT o!f!ces. Further queations will be answered by Women's Section staff members at 642--4321 or 494-94U. Kennys Select New York Home Following a hontymoon in Athens, Gerard John Kenny and his bride, the fonner Christine Ann Cromwell will reside in New York. Our Lady of Mount Carmel Catholic ChW"Ch wu the set. Ung for the vow exchange nf the newlyweds. Their parent! are :t.tr. and Mrs. Robert H. Cromwell Jr. of Lido Isle and Manila and Mr. and Mrs. William Fr1ncis Kenny of New York. Attendant! were Mrs. Harry Thomas Abernathy and Allis Suianne Blanche Cromwell, aistert of the bride, John Reynolds of New York and Dr. William K e nny, the bridegroom '• brother. 'Itle bride Js a graduate or Marlboroolh School, attended Marytnoll College in Manila and UCLA. A fonner Assis- teen of the Los Angeles A.saistance League &he ••• an award presentee at the 1962 MRS. KENNY Medallion Ball. R1clt11 Vows Her husband Is a gr.iduate r;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; of Brooklyn College and did AUXlllAR. Y POWER graduate work •l New York Univenity. S1llboat1, D1nghl11, r---------~~-------:··-----, I SEE MONDAY, DECEMBER 22 I Trelllne, Etc. COMMANDO 1 EDITION OF ·THE DAILY PllctT I For Special Buys & Special Hours in· the -Complete Shopping Center Outboard Molort HOWi -Only 26 Lbsl High .. Thrust 5 Hor .. Pewer Air Cooled • ond • R1mot.Ga1 Tank ***IDEAL O"T **'* LOW PllCI s194 .. Of ONLY It.le._.. Ni .. l ... ,.., ...... I "'_ ....... .,......._.,,. Horoscope Taurus: Money Is Accented SATURDAY DECEMBER 20 87 IYDN!Y O~IARR ,.. -1 llln11: Muy es· ,... -.. portlclpole 11 .,.... ,.,..ram. u )'09 cu ... la 1111W1a1 llolt detl ... )"Ill· .,.. • wtuer. Genalal ....._ u evealnt propn"'· ,.._ .. fa1t l&arler, .. , -lo lode. Sastlllrlu moy .... -. .. -. Arlet 11 r1.-la .. twta1 ., Wap, ~ -·· uboltq. IM h tfftn'll~!•t, Wiii.ie "4wfM ctolf ,.. --Cuter ... ...,,.... .. __ _ Ill a1o too!PI w"ld bo • nllnUt. Vire• 1et1 morale ~ -,m:tlp rht1. Pttore tnwllaC 4ene to.l1ht than ts ..-.ry. All ... ould be very cM't!hd )I traffic • ARIES (Much 21-AprU 11): Dp Y$M oWn thing. Make up yV mind ; then be decisive. Good lunar aspect coincides wt~ chlnce for you to 1uc- Cflllfully present i d e a 11 • RelaUve p a y s meaningful compllmenl. TAURUS (April 20-May 2<l): Accent oo money and how to 1et il Key 111 versatility. Don't be afraid to change your mind. strive toward creativity. Yoo could make purchase which apella bappbless !or spteial in- dividual GEMINI (May 21..June 20): Cycle hl&h: moon in your sign bi&hlfal>ll p<n011ality and ap- ~·Your sense of tim- inC improves. You meet peo- ple, and they admire you. Take iniU.Uve. Be direct, f<rlhr18111. CANCER (June 21.July 22): Much could happen beyond your Immediate com- prehemion. Key is to look behind the scenes. Avoid aiperflclal judgment. Separate fad from fiction. E n j o y theatrical p erformance lalfllll. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You 1ain access to mat«ial which RACITl'S rU.IL I. lllTHITONI CLASSICAL GUITAR DUNHILL CASTE~LO COMOYS CHARA TAN SAVINELLI SAS I EM I featuring Orange Couut11'• Large•t Seleciion · of fl11aHt11 Pipes ANO ACCESSORIES Jramrenre Jipe ~hoppe #I TOWN & COUNTIT, OIANGI. CALIPOllNIA 542-8752 STOii HOUIS DAILY ' TO t SUNDAY 12 TO I CAN ANYONE OFFER YOU THIS FANTASTIC DIAMOND GUARANTEE? DIAMON'5 All OUlt_ SPICIALTTI IYlllT DIAMOND AND DIAMOND llN6 YOU IUY IS GUAIANTllD TO APrU.111 POI AT WST 409i'e TO 10~'• HIO.Hlll THAN THI PllCI YOU PAID Oil YOUR MONIT V llFUNDID. " DIAMOND RINGS " .... ,,.,..1 ... "" ~ -'' • C"11tie. ._ ........ Y-c•lflwrlll ~ , .......... --------------------------------------- Sf. Andrew's Selfing Janet Coontz Marries . . Janet Augusta c o o n t 1 became the bride of Micllael Frederk:k Kuhn durin1 double rina' ceremonies performed by the Rev. Dr. Charles Dleren- fiefd Jn St. Andrew 's Presbyterian Church. Parenta of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mn. John B. Coontz: of Newport Beach and Dr. and Mn. Rkhard Kuhn of Groue Ile, Mich. GiveD in marriaa:e by her father, the bride wore an Ivory satin gown trimmed with em- broidery and featured a long traln. She carrled white and pink roses wtth baby's breath. Christmas at Sea Burgundy colored velveteen gowns and bouquets of pink roses and baby's breath were selected for her entourage. Pjctured just prior to departure on the SS Mariposa are Mr. and Mrs. Lows C. Underwood of South Afiss Sondra Scott was the Laguna. Ports of call will include Bora Bora, Auck- maJd of honor: bridesmaids land, Sydney, Tin-can 1sland, Pago Pago and Hono-were Miss Patrice Kuhn, Mn. Jul R•••~ D--· Q, ""-=~n.cu~om,MissPamela~--------------------- Frederlck and Miss Susan Vernon, and junior bridesmaid was Miss Ann Kuhn. In Italy the Manger Stands for Christmas --•-..,--·------ DAILY PILOT J 5 oc Alumni tr-==s=T=I L=L=T=l=M=E==. See Parade FOR CHRISTMAS DELIVERY Moving their seasonal party to the beach tomorrow to take advantage of the FloaUn1 Chrlslmas Tree Parade are members or the Stanford Club of Orange County. Festivities will be con· centrated on Balboa Island. Parties are planned from 5 to 7 p.m. in the homes of Mr. and t,.1rs. Robert D. Childs li'l"ld Carl Green"'ood. Helping with arrangements are Mrs. John Carlson or Corona de! htar, htr. and Mrs. James W. Ray of Cos ta Mesa. f.1rs. Eugene Tutt and Mrs. Gerard Fane. New office.rs are Gordon B. . Jones of Laguna ~ach, presi- dent; ·~1rs. Robert C. Sayres. vice president : tt1rs. ~tlchael \V. Kilgore. secretary, and Stan C. Th r o neb c rry , 1reasurcr. Troops Gather Girl Scou ts and Brownies from Lark View School. Hun- tinglon Beach are plannlng a joint Christmas party 11.1ond ay, Dec. 22, from 1 to 3 p.m. ORGANS BRAND NEW ::~~ ssoo PIANOS BRAND NEW SAVE UP TO s175 GRAND PIANOS SAVE ~6 50% Credit Terms -Christmas Delivery Gu •ranteed The JOO gi rls will gather in th e Community 11.-1ethodist ~ 11-11! L,... '~1sl·c C"i:or7 Church. llunLmgto n Beach for YYi::IJ.llC!~ J.YLl&! iJ: . I._, entertainmcnl and a gift ex· ch~nfi:·g ceremony by Junior SOUTH COAST PLAZA 1'roop 1272 will conclude lhe 1~"""""""""""""C"o"1"t1"""Me""" .. """"""P"h"o"n"o"""5"4"9·.,,3.,,1"6S""""""""""""~ festivities. 1: Attending as best man was Bill Redding, while usherS were Dick, Christopher and David Kuhn, Ramon Ricardo, Steve Reece and John Coontz. CTaig Dennis, the bride's cousin was the soloist. Following a honeymoon in Cannel, the bridal couple will reside in Grosse Ile. The bride is a graduate or Newport Harbor High School and at· tended Orange Coast College. Her husband received his education in Grosse Ile and also attended OCC. Troops parti cipating, In ad· dilion to 1272, will be Junior ROME (UPI) T h e some relu ctance to acc.1!pl it. Troop IO'lG and B r 0 w n i e Christmas tree has found its The Vatican City newspaper Troops 136 1, 1724 and 55. Dime-A-Lines Mean $$$ place but it is still the mange r L'Osser vatore Romano ex-1_:.:::~~~iiii~iiil~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiij-~ that stands most f o r pressed the feelings of s o m e I Christmas in Italy. Italians several years ago Small wooden ·mangel'! with when it called lhe Christmas figures of the Christ Child, U1e tree "fascina ting but empty" Virgin and the Wise ~fen are of meaning and urged Italians put out in just about every nol to abandon the custom ol Italian home each Christmas. setting up mangers. It has been that way in Italy Each city tries to outdo the ORANGE COUNTY'S LARGEST FASHION CENTER 1.f STOllS -All 12• off .,.. 1ltlltfy 1111 t :JO South Coast 'Plaza Patients Feted At Yule Party and other Mediterranean other with manger displays. countries since the 12th Cen·,l•'~~Th~e~C~h~ri~st~C~h~il~d~is~pl~ac~e~d~i:n.1--~~~~~~~~~~~~·~-~·~~~·T~ ... ~~~-~~-~-~T~, ~~~,.~-~~~~~~--tury, when St. Francis of the crib on Christmas Day. Assisi started the. Christmas tradition of mangers and MRS. MICHAEL F. KUHN Homa in Michigan Chapter Partying A campus-wide t f f o r t brought 300.g, laughter and a lift to children's spirits during a Christmas party for young paUenb Jn Fairview State Hospital last Monday, .ac· cording to F.d itendel, party chairman. Spearheading the third an- nual party was the GWC VeteraM Club headed by Dar- ryl Hob,.,,, pr"ldent, and Peering Around 1'.lr. and f\irs. Ben ?\-1ell lnger responding to the appeal to aid cribs. T h e Christmas tree, a northern custom, has come in to use in Italy since the end of World War II. But there is still Sororities Host Dinner will open their home for a lrith the traditional evmt were Lambda Zeta Chapter of .i cocklail and dinner party many groups and individuals Newport Beach, Kappa Nu of on campus. Anaheim and Iota Upsilon , .. 1llE JiOl\IE o( J\tr. and r.trs. Roy Anderson of Corona de! 1\.1ar will be filled v•ith guests ove r the holidays. 'fhcir daugh ter and son-in. J3:w, Dr. and J\'lrs. G. L. Thomas of Ne w York aT)d their three children are fly- ing in and will be joined by J\1 r. an~ Mrs. Jim Anderson of 1-lappy Camp, and Jl,.Jr. and Mrs. David And erson of Salt Lake, the Andersons' sons and their wives. FRIENDS of ~Ir. and l\!rs. Rona ld K. Arnold of Costa l\-fesa y,'jJJ be entertained dur· 1ilg a post~hristmas open hou se. Cocktails and a variety df hors d'oe uvres "'ill 1e111pt party.goers. llOSTING a cocktail party during the holiday season for aOOut 50 couples wi ll be 1\.l r. and Mrs. James JUncs of Corona de! J\1ar. DANICA PAS !RY SHOP 514 W. BALBOA ILVO. '1J·l'lJ 1011 the l'c11i11111la) time •oi t s tor no Chr i stmas shopper ! •• ~ make t he laa t. minutes COWlto •• ~hop .at ••• tomorrow for members cf the Student nurses b at e d Chapter, Sigma Phi Gamma Mu Upsilon Chapter, Beta cookies and Stewart Rogers, aorority are hosting a Sigma Phi. Mrs. Mellinger is club adViaor and faculty in-Christmas dinner and dance chapter president. structor, donned whit• tomorrow in the Holiday IM, l-iig' hlighting the an nu 1 1 whiskers and a red suit. Stu-Fullerton. dent entertainers kept the Cocktails wi.11 be served at Christmas event will be an ex-children laughing 8nd sl.,gtng, 7:30 p.m. w1th newly pledged change of gifts, according to and others bootht an d members honored as special Mrs. Richard Cooper, social decorated a tree for the guests. chai rman. auditorium. Toys, col~d by Iota Upsilon gathered last The first meeting of the new the Veterans Club, were night for a chapter party and year will take place Monday, donated by area businesses. revealed secret pals. Jan. 12, in the home of Mrs.-======================.![ Kenneth Kristhardt, Garden .r Grove. 11.1rs. Don Parker, service chairman, will arrange for delivery of felt balls and pu~ pet.s made by Mu Upsilon members in time for the young patients at Orange County Children·s Hospital to enjoy at Christmas. Students See Yule Lights UCl's graduate students in art "·ill be honored by the University Gallery Assoc iates during a Chrisbnas lights cruise of Newport Bay Mon· day, Dec. 22. Coordinal.ing plans are Mrs. John 0 . Fisher. and UCI fa culty member Tony De Lap, and assisting is ~frs. Theodore J-loffn1an. Re freshments v>'ill be served aboard ship by Mrs Helen Blurock and Mrs. Thomas \Yilder. ·e I ' f ~ \ . . ·1' -.'. ·, ": : ( ·'i•) T ~rl."' A, } .:'};! : PICK THE PERFECT PENDANT .. --' Diamond pendants from left: $1 .500. $32.50 $495. $75. $950. $65. SLAVICK'S Jewtlen Sinc.1 1'17 11 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT IEACH -644-1 llO YM Cl'itr.-A«wnl ~ -l•"-AIMlrk:trd, M••ltr Cll••Ot, tw. o,_ MH4., ftt• h t1'4ey Httl t :ft P·"'- et ep out of your c-.r and i nto Pe1 rlo!a'1 The New KitchenAid Dishwasher with exclusive SOAK CYCLE does your soaking automatically.!. P11crs STAJtt AT Costa Mesa The meuiest kitchen cleen- up job ha1 1lwey1 been removing crusted-on food1 from pote p11n., and CftMC· role.. And IOmetimem fn.,~• diliheti. Until now. Now, t he KitchenAid Superbe model hu 1 new iucluaive Soak Cyclf! that eutomaticall y aoak1 a nd loo1en1 encru1ted rood1. Then it wu.,:., rilUMlll and driel everythi ng. 1>u/d.a.f> SALES -SERVICE 1115 Newport Blvd. Downtown FRIDAY AND SA TU RDA Y I 8u1n1 Park Wtstmln1t1r LIMllfl ti \'11"" \'J1w l ell. 11, at Mt,Mldln HU l lMiln ...... 1$+11 IMCll IM. . . I Or1ngt H. T1>1!111 .. Tilt IW H. T111tl11 Exciting, Full Fn11ilonil' SLIP-ONS · OR CARDIGANS Our Rei. 3.44 . 276 . 2 Day1 Only Keep cozy! Attractive acryllc "link" and saddle' shoulder shelty pullovers or button-up cardigans in 'V' or crmv neck styling: Winter colors. 34-40. .cost• Mt11 S1nt1 An1 Mt..W 11, ti Wit-It!"'' ii. t i lrttlll IHI 'MltW I t¥«. ,_ I f l"""' ' .• • ' JI b4!LV PILOT Frldiy, Dtt:tmhu 19, l tt!J Congreu <:up LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE Newport Harbor Site of Sailoff Old Sailing Craft Given Star Role The search was on in musty corners of boat houses all along the West C<last today for old-time racers and excursion craft eligib le to compete Feb. 7-8 in a novel Classic Boats Grand Prix from Long Beach Ha rbor to Catalina Island and back. Plans ror the race were an· nounccd by afflcials or the sponsoring Pacific Offshore Pov.•er Boat Racing Assn., which will conduct the event simultaneously with i t s previously announced second annual Catalina· Island Cruise-. Race tor four classes of con- temPorary boats. . Any lize pov.·cr boat built prior to 1945, suitable for safe racing in the ocean wilh at least two people aboard and capablt of carrying. sufficient fuel for 10 to 80 miles of run- nln1 will be eligible. Full det1lls. rules and safety equi~ m~nl reqult'ements can be o~ talned by wrlllng Sandy Kemp at 585.5 Naples Plaza, Suite 20!. Long B<ach, Calif. llOll03. The Classic boats will start simultaneously ·with the regular P.O.P.B.R.A. Oeel of O!fr;/lore, Pacific. Sport alljf Cruiser Class entrants at 10 1.m. Saturday morning. Feb. 7, off Belmont Shore Pier. I CANl"IM•• MotllfTA9"1111,.. I THI ...... ,'" ..... I fi MOUNTAIN~ ;.":; 2 c TRAJL =-~~ J '"'•"'""'" CA.Iii ..... i """ nm .t.• .. ..,,. • -w.,_. .._... Vt"" I I .IOOllllTAlll-1 I .lflllNe The London Foc 0 Golf for where the action is Th_e Tndisperrsabl! jacket -the Golf -a free-swinging winner on the fairway -and off. Slays in t11p form. Playing nine or nineteen the ex-clusive .~on rog wash-wear Calibre~ Clctn (65% Dacron polyester -35% cotton} 1mp1oves your form ••• even 11 it do~sn't eliminate sl~kes flOm your game. 122 .50 ~nann MEAGERS I I ' 8 FASHION ISLAND NEWPORT CENT ER -NEW?O~<B<A-cH- 644-0264 LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE L!!GAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE -~--J,::J:-=:;------ \1 ~. ·~· I -· -· -· -~ _ ... __ _ ·~ .. __ .. _ ~ _,_ .. _.. .. _ .. ...-.... -.... , ...... . " ''''" _,. .. -....... _. .. __ ..... _ _., __ ,_ ..... _ ....... - ~!!... --.. " -~ -'!!- " - L(GE!tO ·------· .. --... --· ~ ...... -. ... _ .. _ ....... :.:..~:.-=------... - .. a. - -· • " "' .. " " _ ... .2'.!.- ·-- Watch for the full week's T.V. listings Satw·day's edition of the DAILY PILOT. • ! 0 M 0 • • I I .. " -817 • m DAILY PILOT J7,., ' Grid lronmen Melted by Cr .ippled l(ids SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -With lean tn hia .eyes, Un.iventty ol lndi&na running back John J11tt1barger leaned over the bedside of 11-year-old Fotula and offered her l(l'Jle Chrmroas toys and candy. The dark-haired Greek girl, flat on her hick with a dtslocated right hip, turned away 'ihyly from her 6-fooW, 205-pound "Santa Claus" in a blue blazer. In anc#ler room, Stanford linebacker Doo Pariih made small talk with 14-year- old :r;orman, a brown-haired youth who · was suspended in a bicycle wheel brace, recuperalln& from an. operatk>n for curv&tdre of the spine. From football fjekis actoss Lhe nation, members of the 45th annual Shrine East- West teams came Thunday to the San Francisco Shriners Hospki.l for Crippled Chlldttn to vblt the youngs_ters who wouldn't be able to make the Qec. 27th clasalc at stanl<rd Stadlwn. "It adds a Jot to the 1ame, that's for surt," said Army's star running back. LYM Mocre, as he wound up chatting with l~yeAr.okl Pam, bedridden wilh a Ex-Ram Works .With Delinquents RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -. The pro- feasional athlete can do more for delin- quent children than sociologists or pey- cholog1!l!, according to John Baker. And Baker packs more ll)an a M, 220- pound frame behind his philosophy. The 12-year veteran of the National Footba11 League, who retired this year, spent each off-season working with youthful prison inmates and school dropouts -taJking to them, "man to man.'' w1•ve always said that pro athletes can do more than sociologists a n d psychologists to help these boys," Baker said. "As a pro athlete I could go in to in· mates and talk sports and get to them. "They know these guys got a theory, but the only reason they listened was because they had to," Baker said. Baker, 34, retlred in September after the Detroit Lions put him on Waivers. The defensive end who had started every exhibition game for the Lions this year admitted he was surprised with the ac- tion, but takes satisfaction that he passed by two his goal of 10 years in the NFL. He played four years with the Los Angeles Rams and seven years with the Pittsburgh Steelers where he was an all- pro de(ens.ive lineman. He had a half- year stlnt with Philadelphia and was jusf beginning with Detroit lvhen the Lions put him in limbo. North Carolina's Department or Conservation and Development snatched Baker up and s\vitched him to offense in their commerce and industry depart· Sports i1a Brie f ment. He travels In the state lo en- courage industrial expansion and outside to attract new firms. Baker, who admits to w e e k e n d depression watching football games on television. says he 's "going through a learning period here" in his position as industry development representative. Football and his work with youth excite him, though. Leaning back in his chair and holding a pencil against the bridge of his nose , Baker said, "I a!Ways make a com- parison betwttn football and real life. Football and the game or life are about the same. 'There are rules and regu la- tions . That's the same thing I would teJI the inmates and the school dropouts ." During his first eight seasons he spent the offlime working with the North Carolina prison department. "The most frustrating th ing was to see so many young kids -13, 14 and 15-year· olds -come in. This rtally got to me. I said this is not the kids' problem, maybe I should get out tcJ the streets. It's almost too late when they get to prison." So, Baker went to the streets and into the homes as a rehabilitation worker \Vith the Raleigh Police Department whe re he felt he could accomplish the most. . "The whole. thing is the environment . T l\'OUld talk to school principals and they would tell me how they had problems with the parents ... "Sometimes one little ~·ord, just a little Interest In a kid and the tide might change." Wolverines in Soutltland, Plan Clo sed Practices PASADENA -11'11 be closed practice !eS.'dons for Ute Michigan football team prior to its New Year's Day meeting with Scuthem Cal, but that doesn't mean H'll be cloak and dagger. Coach Bo Schembeclller,. whose Wolverines arrived in Pasadena Thurs.. day, said at a news conference later that: "I played with closed pracUce sellrions •ll fall and I can't see any rea90n to change things now just because we've come out here ." But he explained that any newsmen "'ho make appointments could view the workouts, which will be held at E8st Los Angeles College. Double practice sessions are planned' through Wednesd ay, except for a single drill Sunday. "It hurts my players if I have to chew them out in practice and somebody from Coach Mar ches Team Off Floor, Forfeits Ga111e JACKSONVllLE, Fla. (AP) -A fight brokt up a basketball game bet\\·een JacksonviUe and Georgetown universities Thursday night, and Jacksonville emerg- ed "" winner by forfeil ~ coach Jack Magee pull<d his team oot when the battle became a r....ior..n near the end of the lint ball, witb the Florida team leading, 11-28. 1be fiCht be1an when Arthur White of Georgetown knocked down Mike-Blevins ~ J acbonville under the Georgetown ba..ic.t. After calm was restored, Blevirui followed White dwn court, apparently lcylng In lllulke hands. Then It started •Pin· .iSomeooe said aomething to· me and I tut tbe fllY," Blevins said alt« the game. ·Sdldenta poured frun· the standa and lolned In !he fracas. Mape e:rplaJned his decision: "I'm responsible for 11 people. I cart't rl.Jk b.vtnl them hurt. When they come at VtX1 out o( the stands, it's time to 1et out." Macee added: What Arthur Whl~ did W&I wrona, but I really don' tknow If the other boy (Ble•· IM) didn't anrav•to ll sun, qulclc . ng111a Ila tll•t hoppon In any contact apart. 1be second go.around w11 inex~ :u11ble. Thert was no reuon for lhlt." Jtck«mvllle Cotch Joe Williams 1ak!: "Tht\'1 the last Ume you 'll &ee • lockJonville Unlvonlty loam """1e oil Ille bond!. R>gardl.., ol whal happtned, ill.l1' teirn should not have come onto the floor." • The forl!lt. with I :2.! ldt In the first a&H, gave 18th ranked J11:ck&onvt1le rta llfth victory wlthoui a defeat. oot.side is \vatching,'1 added the firSl-ycar lJM coach. • LOS ANGELES -The last time Jerry 'Vest'and Bob Cousy met on a basketball court the latter was leading Bostori Celtics past \Vest. and the Los Angeles Lakers to the National Basketball Associatim crown. But that was seven seasons ago. West was a flashy 24-year--0kl guard with the Lakers' second-best scoring average and the NBA·s fifth best at 26.6 a game. And Cousy 'vas the epilome of the artistic backcourt field general. They'll renc\v their rivalry tonight at the Forum as CinciMati duels the Lakers. • DETROIT -Oetroit Lions football coach Joe Schn1idt ls scheduled to appear in Southfield District Court Jan. 8 on a charge of driving under the influence of alcohol. Schmidt was arrested at 3:05 a.m. Monday. On Sunday, the Lions cmipletcrl their home season by defeating the Los Anli!e.les Ra nts, 28.(l, Jn a National Foot- balf League ga1nc. The Detroit Free Press quoted Schmidt as saying, "I have no explanation. Just call my laY.'yer and he'll give you an ex· pJanaUon." 'Ibe st«y said when Schmidt was asked if there had been too much post-victory celebration, he replied, "Yup." • • Cq\Unuation of the freeway feud between the Dodgen and Angela will highlight a 27.pme spring "hlbltton schedule announced today by the American League club. . __ . The Dodgers and•Anfeh will meet In Dodger stadium on Fnmy, April 3 and will move to the Big A on Saturday and Sw\day, April 4 and 5, jUBt prior to open· Ing of the regular seuon. The Friday and Saturday games are night affairs with the Sunday 1ame atart.fng at I. Tbe Angels wUl meet all sir Arizona baoed clubs, beginning Salunlay, March 7 wltll the C21icag• OJtlS at Pabn Springs. Also booked for Palm Springs ap- pearances are Seattle, Cleveland, Sin DI,.., OU!and, San Fnncl!co and HJ wall. • HOUSTON-l'r<d Stelnmarl<, Unlv"'1- ly of Te.a1 loolboll ployer who had a cancerous lti amputated lut week. h11 beturt hla rthebllltallon, a hoepllal oC- fi<:!al said Tbunday. Stelnmart, 11, now la 1ble to get ool ol btd IDCI w111t '""""' on cni1ehes. The left )fg wa1 removed at the hip lees than a wttk afler the No. I ranked 1A:Jng1nns ended the rtf\Jlar 111tason. Stelnmark hid been a ttarUng 1aft:ly lhe past two year1 on the learn. kn .. problem. ''I really admire these kids." be lilid. .,ll makes you wonder about )'Our5cJL They've been in the hospital so long and they're Jn gre41( spirits and \\'e·re out in I.he world ruMin g around and cont· plalnlng." ' As ht sat on the edge of 9-year-old ~11ke's bed, h~lping hir.t figure out a ne1v game, UCLA running back Greg Joocs echoed Moore's sentiments. Noting that all proceeds from the game go to the hospital, :Jones said: "It's such a big honor really to be able to help these kids by dolng romething we can do well. They 're just great." 1'~or Parish, the visit was a ''double honor .. , I-le was no the high school Shrine team and had visited the hospital belcre. AS a veteran, he divided his tbne between Norman and 2\.1t·year-old Terry. dressed In a Stanfofd red sweater and red and white beanle. Carrying Terry in his arms. ·Puish wandered through the ward, taking oc- casional Ucka from tbi little boy's lollipop A GIFT FOR LANNA -East player Dan P ierce o{ Nlemphis State 'vatches as Lanna. 2, plays \vith a gift presented to her during the annual vi sit of Shrine East-\Vest football teams to the Shrine Hospital -- stlck and crowing: 11Show them huw we share our food.'' Nearby, Unlversily or Oregon end· tackle Andy M11urer and his wife sat on chain In 1-1 of 9'year-01d Rudy, 1tu1>- pod lo • llandJng bGard. Halfway through a •klinl came. ~1urer, realized' thlt Rudy's green• and gold Oregon IWeM« with two Slrlpeo on the sJeeve made h1rri a aecood·year let· teinan. "He'• l'Ol more letterrtban I've aot." quipped Maurer. Each younpter had a pretenl for h1s tootbe:ll "Santa Claus" -a picture o( himseU and a picture or the hospital m • hand-made leather picture frame. University of Oklahoma tight end Steve Zabel, ob~ly touched by the girt, asK- ed 10-year.-OW., Danny if tic would autholraph the picture. With great concentration, Ule bedridden youth hahlngly printed hls signature in bla cfooked letters and handed it back tO' • a tmiling Zabel. . ... for Crippled Children in San Francisco. 'Il\e 45th edition o[ the football classic will be played at Stanford University on Saturday, Dec. 27. Color Bina Green Beai·d Prefe1·s Money To Major Golf Titles NEW YORK (AP) -.Frlnl< Beard doesn't get hi1 dander up when they call him Mr. Colorless In golf and says M"d rather win money than a major cham· pionshlp. "1 mu.st be a strange anim1l -I just don't burn," says the mild-speaking journeyman pro from Louisville, Ky. Colorless? Color him green. Beard won $175,213 on lhe tour last ~aaon and topped the money Ii.st, upstag- ing 91.lch links capitalists as Jack Nicklaus, Arnold Palmer and Bill Casper. He also had the second best scoring average in the country -70.52 compared with 70.37 for leader Dave Hlll. On Thursday, the 30-year-old Ken· tuckian received a coople ol handsome trophies as Golfer of the Year for 1969 - an a\\'ard decided by election of his con· temporary pros. wilecracking good humor and carrying on with the gallery. But it's his busi~s. Maybe il makes him a lot ol money." Beard was asked did he not ha ve a desire to win a major championshi p. "Certainly, I want to win. 1 "'ant to win a major championship, which is aoout the only thing left for me. But some people - like Arnold Palmer -burn to win. "Not I. Not everytxxly burns the same candle. I don 't burn at all." Go for Broke In This One, Says Stram Presenting the trophies, , A r n o I d Abramson, publisher of Golf Maiazine, NEW YORK (AP) -Kansas City \s set refered to Beal]i 11 "the colorlns one." to open it! ornate offensive-packa1e at "I get that' all the time," Betrd 1aid Shea Stadium Saturday, but the New PISTO L PETE -Pete J\Jaravich (23), the nation's leading coUegi~te afterward, lndulgtng in a hearty laugh. York Jets figure they can handle M~~:~ict~r~~dtsh~s g~:~dt~~~hp~i~=i ~g~fin~~Cd~~~:J!yt~i~~~rf~ "~t lt'!.~e~Itrylnprefer ~ thhanat way.1 h~ve any special deliveries Hank Stram sends a 101-98 iosing cause. Defending for Troy are Ron Ritey (31 ) and no inteuuuu ..,.. g w c ge my mr their way. Dana Pagett (2 1). ·~~You know I've been on the tour seven The battle lines were dra1m today for years and Ue Trevino has been on it the Amehcan Football League playoff • two.· Since he's been on it, I've beaten clash, wiUt Chiefs' coach Stram pro- 0 · t ta ...LrJJ h " bem_every year in money wblnl.np and _mllinl-!, "&o fOI' broke_"'Jame plan -tn u s ggereu .I ~scoring averO(O. The only dlfft<ence is C.'iiillilll lolilsCl<iie'~Yesl lac!iea al ,._.. • • ~ he has vron the open and 1 haven't, Otkland last Sunday -and the Jets ' "But If he walked down the street working themselves up for a super effort W e everybody would know him. They to rebuff the favored invaders. wouldn't know me frOm Adam." K!nsas City. runner up to Oakland In Beard wears apectaclU and II culUvat-the Wtstern Division, ts a 2~-polnt choice Ing a slight paunch. He appeared fl.Ir his to OOll the Eastern Division champs Jn award party In a conserVatlve sray plaJd the fitlt game of. the unprecedented jacket., dark pants, black. tie ind w-hlte aemiflnlJ playoffs. shirt. Ills hair was short and 1licked· ~. second ln the East-during the down. ncular HUXI, \akn on the Raiden at He could have passed for a bank clerk Oaklaod Sunclly, wUh the survivors at the Dekalb County NaUonal. m~ in the Jan. 4 AFL champlonthip On the golf course, hf: Is equally pme. unspectacular. He ha! no wl9eCZ'acks for '1We'U go f« broke In WI ont.'' StrlJl\ the gallery. He atldom tmllea. He walks said TburJd.ay alter admlttlne: he kept frtim shot to shot In a btlst, bullnest-llke lbe Chlels' attlck under wraps In their f11hlon. 'Ill• moll unJque quality obout IH looi In Otkland that decided the ~~~ :e ~:e~ bill with the.con-~~~r~ :=~1!:: ~:.:.a: "I'm no big joke and joviality man," he Kansas City rtn lrffit ~Raklcrs frn gid. "I'm In thll business to mike atatt to finish. money -like a man who 1oes to the of. "You've got to I\> with balance In one flee rrom nine io ""' eviry day. Ille thl.s," Stram continued, "This Is ~; "I'm not Inclined to be a chlracter on tomplt~Jy dlf1erent frotn the Olkland the course. 1 hive no glmmlcki and Waii1 aame. We wanted to win It, ol course, but none. 1 try not to da an)'lhlna thlt affteta after all is said and . done, It was a my concentration. nothln1 &Rme. "I've even told Trevino to hJ1 face that "Our objecll\'e Is to win the chem· I llllnk ht 1 .... llCHllethlftl with oil of hi! pion!hlp -oothlng er ... " Sa ys Bo yd of US C Win ' . BATON ROUGE. La. (AP)-To pul it In a two and one-half minute period In three words. ''we outstaggercd them,'' late in the game . Mara vlch hit for eight uld Soulhem California basketball coach points. Bob Boyd of his ·Trojans· 101-98 victory And his alm06t incredible twisting over Louisiana State. :i:coop shol trimmed Southern Cal's ad-It WIS anything but close. al lf!ast, up vantage to one Point at 97·96. Chris unUI the fln al five minutes 711ur!lday Schrobllgen missed a free throw for the night. The fast spinni ng wheel offense us-Trojans but leaping Ron Rilry canned the ed by Southern Cal and a scrappy defense bou t" 3 od l r ..,. th t shot the Trojans into a 23-nnint lead with re nd w 1..11 1 seco a e t a,"t 1 was ,~ the story. the game less than 12 minutes old. •·J gue s!ll ~·e Just wanted to win tbl3 one The TroJan4 ran up a 9-1 margin In lhf' too badly,·• s41d t:ooch Prt!! Mara vlch of first three mlnules, moved nut to a 32.9 I.SU, rPnked 1$th in this week's lead at 11:~9 or the first hAlf and held a A.ssoclated Ptcss poll. "We were too ~7-43 advantage at the ha lf. 1 ight You can't let :. team with the talent Natlon&.1 scoring chtlrnpton r ".-''"''~~U~S,,-C has get that f11r in front.'' f\.lar1vlch, who h11d 2$ points ror LSU ln Royd, wl1o&e TroJal\.'l held the No. 13 the first hair. cooled oU considerably el'lr· i::pot in this week's rankings. sHid LSU ly In the se<:ond b\1t the final fi ve minute" i::taggertd in U1e flrat half and SOUthem had the hon1c crowd of 10,600 raising the Cal was off (be mark In J.he second. "We roof. simply outlestcd them." , • • ;18 OAIL'f PILOT rr!day, o,ctn1bfr l•, t•t.• Marina, Newport Harh~r Collide CdM Swimmers .. For HB Tourney Crown Tonight Topple Newport Vikes Post 67-65 Triumph lly ROGER CARl.'>ON Of .... l>WIY Pli.t Sl•ft Marina High Scbool ad: vanced to the finals of the -list annual Huntington B e 1 c h Invitational basketball tourna- ment tonight with a 87.fS con- quest of Rancho Alamitos Thursday night in th e semifinals at Huntington Beach. , lt meets Newport Harbor at 8:30 for the title. f\ The Vikings of coaeh Jim '< Stephens.pulled it out after the lall, quick Rancho club had Pulled to within one point with l ; 50 to 10, 59-58. From lflere the Vikes turned it on at the: frtt throw line to collect the harrowing win. It was a nip and tuck affair from start to fintsh witp the score tied or changing hands II times through t h :r e e quartet'!. From there tht Vikes never lost the lead, but were threatened continually by the talented Vaqueros. Perhaps the key to the issue came in the waning moments of the third period when the Vaqs were conslmling the final seconds for a last shot and a possible 43-4:3 tie. But 1 turnover and Bob BeaJ's 26-footer with two , .. ,_ l'VE GOT IT -Corona del Mar's Don Killian (35) grabs a rebound during ac· second! to IO gave the Via.ings tion with Huntington Beach in tile Oiler tourney. Huntington Beach players in a somewhat comrortable margin. the phato include Tony Cale (52) and Garth Wise (30). Both clubs were de- From there they boosted Ule feated Thursday. The Sea Kin·gs fell to Warren, 49-47 and the Oilers were de~ bulge to 58-48 with 3:42 to go _:_fea=t=ed:...:b::cy...:N:.:..:.•WJlO::.'.:.::rt.:_:H.::•::r.:bo=r:.:•...:80-:.:...:6:::8:_. -----------------before Randto made another move to cut lead. Leading tht Vikings to their seventh win in eight starts and the ir sixth in a row were Beal and Rick Mosier with 15 poini., apiece while Rancho 's Jim, Anderson netted 27. Marina's scoring balance ;~ highlighted with three other players in double figures. Bill McGuire (11), Ra y Stratford (10) and Klpp Baird (10) added to the Vikes' totals. Beal' s two shots on a one- 1nd-one situation with 16 seconds to go se aled the verdlct, giving the Vikes a four-point lead. MAIUNA 011 FGPfPPT, BNI •3 1 U ,Aotlt!< ' 3 5 IJ Mcttulrl' 1 J J l1 Strerford l 4 1 111 (;ronkrl!I l 0 I 4 811..0 l l ll~ E•rle 0101 Tol1l\ )4 If 11 61 Arldt<lOtl ,._ AANCNO Al.AMI~ fU) POPT,PT" 101 4 )1 l 1 5 7 5 I 3 l! ' ' • s 4 J J ll ~" MV, Eagles-~ .. San Clemente Advance in Triton Tourney By CRAIG SHEFF Of ll1t D1!1Y 1"1191 lllff There were no surprises in the first round of the San Clemente Kiwanis basketball lournament Thursday night as aU four pre-tourney favorites posted victories. Mission Viejo opened the Utird annual event with a 68-54 victory over Saddl eback and Estancia had an easy time v.·H.h Laguna Beach, 69-40. fast break attack. The Eagles ou l sc ored Laguna 22-4 in the opening quart·er and never looked back. Coach Bill Wetzel's club held a commanding JS.ll halftime lead. Laguna . was very c o l d shooting 1n the g a m e • especially in the first half when the Artists, could only connec t on four of 20 shots from the field for 15.4 percent. They hit on 10 of JO during the second half of play to finish ·with a more respectable 2.5 percent. Gary Orgill led the Eagles sooring attack with 19 point& while guard Mike Hays, who geared the Estancia fasl break attack hi t 12. Skip Williams, a &-a center with a lot of poise, controlled both backboards and also pushed in 11 points. Denny Schmitz had 17 for the Artists. Estancia scored most of its points from close i n . Throughout the evening the Eagles would have two-on-one and three-0n-0ne fast break situations after grabbing. a re- bound. Tars Whip HB,80-68;- ln Se1nis Traffic Jam • K 200 ,,__.1. unt IWJ! '' Cook (,}, Corona del Mar Sea ings i. TllOnn tP ). 11,.,.; ': ,•·, , --,,, · .; ••eJr · · so Fr..-1. Tl\qrnltlll .•1 • ...., continu""4 1u wmrung ways '"fi!b l.1~i'v~'dJ.'1l· ,!:~..:,~1·~· ,111111M and Westminster dropped its ~w), i . Lv•iw tPJ, l. F11ll•r 1P1, second .straight dtcl.'i~ oC Tl~: ~f::!1• OM camo11•1or,.:c11'- the young swimming. season 11u:Ji11rr-1. c-. cP1, 1. rhorM.,. Thur· ... ~ .... afternoon. ,, •. l. Grubbs cwl. Time: 1;04,0. -.J lc.l IK k-1 PhlMl1>$ CW\, 2. Fr- T¥ Sea Kings toppled Ne.w-'"loo';~ei:•r~·,.:17'~\.1i.~i~·1~k cp1, -Har'--~ 7S~·19% win-l No 1Mrd lime: ~:SJ.I. _,,, ,,.,.~ uur, • ·100 Brtail-1, LV,IUD (PJ. 7. s,, ... ning every event t=xcept the 1w1. s. Tt1om1• CPl. 11me: 1:10.~. ·,· :M-" fOO Fr"1 Rtliv-1. Wt51mln•.,. diving where Newport ga"n:u 1owe"'' Phllllo~ GrvDb•• L•ncl. T11M1 all three placu on a forfeit. '' 19A· c- ly RON EVANS Derm·ls MD_ It was CdM's second straight ,1tllk1 14'11 tul· Wt11tft.l11$1t~ o( .... hlb' PIJft $"" 100 Mt<lltV Rtlfv-1, PICllJCI ~ bor1 • win. 1vlsl, MYl>r,, Clflltroo. Pelc• lo Newport Har s unpres-VARSITY l!~;f~~i. II•\! IP). 2. Ovnc:1n·~. s.ive Sailors gunned their way · l'lcllka tUI \"I WKlmlftll•r J, PhUllos 1w1 Tim.: 2::1o1.1. • to the finals of the 41st annual 200 Mt<11tv 11:1 •Y-1. p 1c1t1c 1 so Fret-1. M-...rs !Pl, 1. Oo•rotv A trailer accl'dent in '"e ···~1-. • ........ , IC I t k I a II G. (W). 3. A-I-Ins IWI. Time: n.1. i ' Huntinm"n n-1ch Invitational "'' •· ·~ 100 l!ld!vlau11 M•dlev-1. B•rw , •-= k d 0111t1 •kl Time: 1:5 .J. , 1,1, '· Gibl w ·ll"J, J. Gurld ... 11n.~ll). b k lb II •-l TJru Sanla Ana Canyon wrec e 200 Ft-1 Henro1~.., cwi. . as e a wurnamen rs-M1rr111 tPJ, '1. H•llllr cw1. Tlmt: T1w:· ~i~i C•marc~ (Pl. t day night with a convincing Mater Dei's attempt to derail l :~·\!reot-1. Havel \'>· 2. ltk• ,,J, 3. Hirtoln 1w1, i. Gibler cPJ. T!me:,31,l -.. win over .... Hunting h"" Co Hi h -sd lt~Di. tP I 11""· 14 100 Free-1. Pt1t•rclk CPI, 2. 0111Keo ...,.....,. 1~~ • ~~ rona g 111ur ay 100 1nc1/v1d1111· Meci1tv-1. M1mue1d 1,.1 3 0ow""v cw!.. Time: 1:0J.o .• _ ton · fp\, 2. Devit (W), 3. E•trl'dm !Pl. 51i 81ck-l. ller<iulll (Pl, 1 .... iv · , night in the Corona Inv1ta~ Tln'MI ' 2:14.t tPI. 3. eeu tWL 11me: 11.1. Thus coach Dave Waxman s 01vl..-1 ,..,.,ne (W), 2 H1101...-cw1, ilo 8"as1-1. Mrer• 1P1. 1. $......,., tll S l tional basketball tournament. a li•11S011 IPJ. PQt .. 11: 7t 1w, 3 Gundtrscn P) Time: JS.I • Newport ou t meets unse 1o; F1v-1.1ark1w1 ,.1. 1. Kl•k!1NS 'F•t« Reliv-1. P•c1 1Fc • League riyal Marlll, a ;. the The host club C.a!led for a CPl. 3. BurCIOlnt IWl. Time: l;I0.1. > IC1fll.lroo, G1b!tr. D~nc:1n. Pek1r~lk t. ,., 100 Fr--1 HBM!nciMft CW), · Tfmt• 1 ·~ ~ ' finals tonight at Huntington forfeit after coach Jerry p~-:,:1!.~l"~iJrd~avH I Pi .. ThM: S2~ • · · · VA1ts1TY ~: Be.ch for '"e · coveted title. h M "R ioo ~-1. oivii 1w1. 2. B•rkltv c .... -*4 M•r 11sv.1 tHV.J H•"~"' "'' Tardie and is onarc11.:) CPI 3 cun1t111 IP) Time: 1:oso. N1rMr ,•, T''poff Is at 8•30 ..m ·Fr_..1. etYwcro lPJ. 2. H.oor 200 Mtdln> Rtl1v-1. ((ll'OM Oel.:Mat" · · show-• up 45 m111' utes late for IWj; 1 M1rtln C'J. Time: ,:..-.o.. ll•roelOfl, J1cbo"· lerNrd. slidll. •-" ~ the 8 p.m. Contest ' in the fP,) l. Ptftnt IWJ. Tim•; 1:12.0. 200 Free--L KrumP:llDIL fCdM /.,!, Huntinm-0 ·ach will battl e cu -1 ·1i,11tt-L M1111t1etd 1Pl. 1. 1t1e1 Time : 1:.&o1.2. ~·, Rancho Alamitos at 7 p.m. for ..io Frfl 1tetaY-l. w111mi""te' Hli<lftH ccdMJ, 1 Loilt cCdMl. . ••· d I h quarterfinals. . c1ur011ln1. 1.11111. Devil. li irnnfl'\QHn). 1:'9.l. 11 !CdMl 2 Gr:.0.. udr pace onors. But the fate of MateT Dei iS Tfn'MI: 3:a.2. •"' u1~i~~·'Hi~h1~~"f~dM> 11me: 23.2~ The Bluejackets had l rela-W••'"""""' c.u1 l'4l ,MHl1:1 200 1;,.,1v1du11 Mt<1ltv-1. aerOtsOll tiyely easy time Of l'l wUh lhe cloudy since the Monarchs are 700 Ml'dl•Y Re11v-1 eo1111 .. ms·1111. ICdM>. 2. Ntwcomo ccdM >. ~ I. h f rf · CIF •u•!lf!tcl. W••nicke INH) . Tln:it: 2:12.s. Oilers after barely surviving appea mg t e o e1t to 01v -'· No dlv1t111. CNtWPC<t en in the quarterfinals against commissioner Ken Fagans. A '"'il:,1r>F1v-1 s1e~111n.m 1c11M1 '· verdict was due late this Lo111 1cdM1; J. 0110 1c<1M ). T(me: Warren (82-80). T. Le d sai~ F•t+-J 111ck ccdMl ?. Hug~" Aside from the extremt morning. ars a (CdM), 3 H i1m1n !CdM L flmt: 50.1,. I · N rt A calculated guess •'eta•-100 11c<.-l awoeson fCclM!, · ear y going, ewpo never w ~"' wirren (Nii); l. '"" bellwnn one trailed:, although the Oilers the Monarchs: will play Aqui· \CllMJ •nd W1 lkfl" fCdM l. Tlrne : did. manage to pull even at nas at 4:45 this afternoon in All =~·· Fr-1. Krumpt>o!r 1caM1. t. I ' •'-consolation. spo11s Newcomb tCdMJ. 3. F•rrtr CNHl. 3()..30 and 32-32 ate 1n 1-11e • Tl\'M: l~l~~,,-1. HlH,,.1,, 1c,,...,1• aecond quarter. Aquinas dropped a 62-60 J ackicn cCdMl, 3. Whit• 1NHl. Time' But for the. most part it wail decision to Notre Dame or l:~~i"FcM lt&llv-1. Corort• del Mar a case of too much fire power Riverside In overtime Thurs-Newport Harbor High' s llCl"n.rd, s1 ... 11-"-· Krvmp~11, f h•-'-U g Taras day domineering ways in the water t1iadr.l Time: J :1.:~1 rorn s ... Yi>'""' n • ,.....,. .~ Mir on 11,, INewwrt Yoong from the outside and The Monarchs left Santa sports have catapulted the N1rber •• A t 6 f '" '"" 200 Mldlev Ael•v-1. Corort• dt'I IA•r Dave Eccles underneau1 on na a p.m. or u1e .w-Sailors into first place in the fRe!mers. MIHch, 1Crumo11o11, 0110>. feeds from Lee Haven. minute trip to Corona only to T1;,r F~;!3.:!i. Lo<ti rcaMi. '· 1~...-... Y~•ng 1;.;sh-' h;•h po'inl be sta g gered by the Sunset League's annual race fCdMl 3 wianer (CdMJ. Time: 1: .s . ..,... .._.. cu '"6 AJJ-S d so Ff~!. Oll~er fCdM). 1. SehtlDer I .. '•h) ··• 21 monumental traffic · 1·am on for the loop's ports awar IC<i.Y.l 3 snvG•• (NH >. 11me: ''·'· man or 1>11e nt6'' Wlu1 100 '1..(!Jvldv1I Medlev-1. Por!tou• While Eccl.' (20). uAven (15) the Riverside Freeway five for 1969-70. JNH I. 2. Mlllch 1cdM1. l w1aner ~ ··-f .. Co 1u--'f CdM), Tlmt: 1 :a~.1. and Jeff Malinoil (15) con-mires rom "''e rona i1iw . 1be Sailors were crowned N~~11 FJ~H\; ~.'u~:~~1r1~COtf-tilMl: trlbuted: heavily to the Hunt· champions in varsky. Bee and T'~' 1~~l: Lcllr fCdM>. 2. 0 110 inat"n demise. Cee water pOlo 8\xl added se-IC<IMl. l:'Scr..-otter CCdMJ. Time: S2.7. •-b ' ' p H k · h · 'l 100 B1ck-L Rt\me's !CdMl. 2, Coach Elmer Com s qum-ro oc ey cond place fifl;!S es in vars1 y Oliver (CclMl. 3 Snvllt!' (NHJ. llr'lll: let made a move to overhaul and junior varsity cross coon· 1'~9• Fr-1. flooche~ 1c<1.Y.i. 2. the Newport express midway try to pile up 46¥.i points -Vltraever CCdMI, 3. s11nsburv !NH). lhrN•gh ''"& final period, clo&-s d• eight more than second place 11\'M; ~~al,:1-1. Mme~ fCdMl, !. -•~ tan mgs Weaner !CdM1, J. Holvoe~e CCdM). ing a 13-polnt gap to five, at Westminster. '1;;&'F'i~·4Rel•v-I. Coren• del Mir 67-62, wlth 3:24 to go. The Lions' second place el· IKr umo11011. floognev, Ho 1 v o •It •• But Eccles quickly removed fort was triggered by thtir an-1te1m•1sl. rim.: l~·o. •I. C1r1n1 HI ~r tU) UJI H..-1t1rt any doubts wi1-11 a reverse nual sweep of c-ss -·•lry H•rkr •• bu k I a d '"' '-"'60' 700 Mt<!ln Re!•v-1 Ceron• dtl M~t layup, ano1-11er c e n honors. 1Sall•burv. Jord•"' M1 r1e"11111, mates Haven and Young com· Marina ts close behind with MW,1~7e'i:.[1~'.Z~".:.·~, 1cdM1 .. '· Pleted the ]•Ob to SWeJI the F•rmer !NHI, l. Gl11lu (Nii). l •tfle: 38 points and A't1aheim trails 2·os 1 margin to 78-62 with 1:03 re· ·so· Fr-1. 01v1" ccdMl, 2. W•ll in fourth with 37. !NHL J. Ll~llcoth INlil. Time: 25-'. m,;.1·ng Others are H LI n t ,· n g 1 on lGn 1nd!vldu11 Medlev-1, P11m.,. ..... , • ICdML 2. Klln<>en•ml!h (NH l. 3. 11111· Wtll DiVlliO!I Newport had another good Beach (30Yi), Santa Ana (23) 1nu 1f1~2:1~1'&~'11 1 'r0~~·>. 1. s11;,b.,,..,. rrighl in the shooting depart· and Western (18~!). (CdMJ, l. Ma rlefltl1•• ICdM), Tim" ment, clicking on 30 of 56 The results are the com· 29i'bo Fr-1. 01vie• !CdM J. 1. SI. L...,;, " • • " .. " Mini'le1at1 • " • " M .. PllT1bur11\ • " ' ,, .. " Sh~-from ·~ f•'eld for 53.6 f ·1y n. d l'•nner CNHl. I. Gl•1ler INHJ. Tlmt: ....... uR:: pilation o vars1 , o.;:t an 3 P ercent while Huntington Cee lool"-11, varsity, Bee and sJSe. 11ack-T. P11mer 1coMJ• '· Phll16flphl1 ' " " " H ., 0.kl•ncl • " • ~ .. .. and "3 IHI O'Ellsew (NH), 3. Quinn tNHl. jme; Beach was 25 for 5f =· ,,,~,.,•-."• ltKulh Cee water polo arid varsity 31J. llrei •l-l. eimnit INHl. 1. LOI A"9t ln • " ' " 51 101 percent. a1111t111 l, s1. Lours 3, 1i1 and junior varsity cross coun-M11c11111 INH), 3, c1s1 CCdMl. T1me1 Jim Harrell led the Oilers try placing in the league for 3'~ Frte Retav-L Coran• ,,.1 M~r In scoring with 21 points with Chic-.:"C:'1 1 1!1m• each Sunset school. b5:~r~ ..... tim~:·1~tf.6. Mc N •m m e' Lee Walters right behind with,-..'.:'.::'.::~.:'.:::::_ ___ .::.=::....:=:.:...:.:::..::. ____ ==="-'='---- lS. H~Wl"Ct•T "A.IOlt (If) PO P'T Pl' T, T111t1 3 03 ' Younw 114 1' Euln t 'l':l'O Haven S 5 ! IS 11ekel o o 5 o ,.,.,.llnoff 5 J ~ 15 Tota l• JO ?O 21 10 HUNTINGTON BIACM 01) W1 llart (•lt H1 rrtll C1rlS011 wo w Otflrl!'torl McCord Cllurchwtll Tota ls PG P'T l'P ,,. 1 4 J 11 l ' 3 10 7 1 J 21 • ? 2 2 • l l lJ 0 • 3 d I D 0 ' l 0 0 1 IS 1111W s.:.,.. '' Ou1rttn N-POf't Hu'bor 19 17 ff 21-M Hunllnt"°" llHd l 11 1' lf ..,_... Itk an Old Forester kind of season. lll lt bV G1'1111&11t Mc01nl•I ZKkenclonski T011ls ' 0 l 1 o o ' D 2S15 ),,5 kitrl •r QUlr1fl"I Merln• 1t1nerio Al111J1lloo u-11 n ,,_,., 1113" 2~ Gaucho Ace In the two evening games. tourney favorite Los Alamitos routed Fontana, 59-4 1 and host Sa n Clemente got a scare from Servite before winning, 60-58 .. In semirinal games tonight Estancia's Eagles fa ce Mission Viejo at 6:30 while San Clen1ente and undefeated Los Alamitos (7--0) due l at 8. Jn the consolation bracket , Laguna and Saddleback were scheduled to meet at 3:30 with Servite and Fontana pla ying at 5. In contrast. Es tanci a \Vas hot during the first half of play. connecting nn 16 of 34 from the field for 47.3 percent. The Eagles fin ished the night \\·ith a 40.S percent mark. • • • SA,N CLEMENTE UO) F~ FT ,, T ~ Lions Rout Magnolia; CdM Ousted by Warren Tops Nation In Offense Quarterback Rod Graves of Saddleback College to d a y holch a di s t i ngu i shed honor-he is the nation's total offense winner for the 1969 junior college football season. Based on regular $eason games, Graves tot a led 2,265 yards this past seasoo to out· distance second place Dave Affieck of Snow, Utah by 267 yards. Graves completed 116 of 212 passes for l ,624 yards and 16 touchdowns. He added another 641 yards on the ground . He finished fourth among the junior collegt passing leaders. Todd Sparks o f Foothill won the throwing crown with 173 completions in 318 attempt& for 2,099 yard.!i and 10 touchdowns. Saddlebact 's Toby Whipple finished &ecoild in the nation in rushing, gaining 1,333 Y•rds in 2%7 carries. The leader wa s Yuba 's Fred Riley who totaled l,53S ya.rm in 233 carries. Gaucho Marc Hardy caught 37 passes during the regula r ~ to place 20th. He total· ed 50'1 yards, with el~bl of tile rece pt io n s aoina: for touchdo"'11s. Whipple and C h ar l ie Buckland were amoni a selC!ct group ol 20 running back.< tll•t gained more than 200 yards in a single game. \Vhipple had a one·a•me output of 234 yard." and BuckJ1nd '1 besl outing ,.., 2211 yards. In the only close game or the night, San Clemente and Servite battled on even terms throughout the evening's play with the deciding. blow not coming until just 33 seconds left. 1 Th at was a short jump shot by reserve center T o 111 Gaulden and it gave the Tritons a 60-56 lead. Servile added a pair of free throws after the final bur.zer. Guard Sal Lombardi. \\'ith sorne nice outside shooting, and forward Brad McCas lin paced the Tritons with 15 points each, Craig Anderson. in a reserve role, added 12. Mission Viejo got a balanced scoring attack to rack up its fi ft h wi n of tht season against three reversals. The Diablos were paced by senior guard Rick Wadsley, who had 20 polnts, Doug Citro followed wilh 15 and Rudy Holmes had 13. In a g11mc minus of loul~. the Oia blos jumped out to a 30-2., halftime advantage after the score was tJed 14-1 4 at the end of the first quarter. It \vas one ot the quic kest games play~ in the roun1y this :;eason. The contest y,•as concluded just one hour and ID minutes after ft beg.an. One rta~n for that ''lls the fact that only 12 fou ls were calle.d, "''Ith each team com· miffing six. Es tancll'I h:td nn trouble at &IJ v.:ith t.aguna , jumping out lo a J().O lead behind • good Lomba rill M1!on Oom..,kllinl McCaJlin Mltc11e11 G~ulden .O.nde,.on ll•llovg To!ah ,,. S•vmoor GW01'1 C&mP•nar~ Ftvnn MM>1'r l••klw Ounn Tot1l1 5 \ 0 IS 1 0 • 1 0 1 1 1 I 1 l IS :1 l ' • l 0 1 ~ 4 e o n a o 1 o 1S !O 10 60 ll;lllVITE 151) FCl FT ., 1" 0 , ' . , ' ' , ' 0 ' ' , )l 11 • • 0 .. " , " ' , , ' ' , ' ' 11 SI 1c•rt •v Ow••l•rt SM> C~mtn1t I 1~ U Servi!~ t ll lJ MISSION VI EJO ('II I'~ FT . ' .. 0 • 0 0 ' ' " , $,.OOLllACK CJ" PG FT , ' llolme• WI O!ltY Krltl M••ler.on Citro Tol11! &u!le• l101•• (Uller Krunm1n .... ,,_. , .. l~•l(ll' Tol1t1 0 ' , , 0 , 0 , 0 " .. $C.tt ., Ou• rtw1 Mi,sio" Vltkt u 16 10 S1<1a1~1(k 14 t 16 llTANCIA IH ) "~ 11-SI ,, T~ , " 0 ~ ' " 0 • , " • • ,, T' 0 • 0 • , " , .. 0 • 0 • ' . . " l'C l'T ,, ''° flullt t I I ? J 0.11111 ) It Wllll1m1 l II V1llett 1 t 11111 ''" Sft1ugftn111• ! O l I f /\Oml \ 0 II I 0 HK!fll' $0 1 10 fl>omPMln 1 I n J Toll!s )) t It It 1.AG\IHA II.I.CM (olO) "'Ow~" Scl\mUt ,._ FG l'T ,, 1" 0 ' , I I 11 ' . ' . ' . 0 ) l , n ~ I 0 • ' ' 1 . , ~ ) 111rtio!d M~ur.-.v INC~ Scnw1r11 ~.1, .. ..-0 ... 10111• H lf U ~ f<itrl ., OuertwM E l!IMll » 11 '91 L.&gynf •N <ft • 1 I) ' \Veslminster High barged into the consolation finals of the 41st annual Himtington Beach Invitational basketball tournamerit on the strength of an 84-55 rout of Magnolia at Marina High Thursday night. The Lions will meet Ram ona at 5:30 today after the Rams nicked Tusti n in the other half of the consolation semis, 64·59. Corona del Mar wasn't quite so fortunate as the Sea Ki ngs lost out in the final seconds to \\'arren, 49-47, to drop out of the tourney. Compton nicked Villa .Park with a come from behind er. fort in the fi nal seconds, 66-64. to earn the right to meet War- ren ( 4 p.m.) for fi ft h place honors. Westminster made It look easy ag11insl Magnolia, slap- ping the Sentinels with a 2&-13 lead at the end of lhe quarter and \.\'SS never headed. Dan Broderick led coach Don Leavy's Lions with 26 ooints and had ample ·help fron1 forward Steve ?.fcLen· do1\'s 21 counters. T h e wi n p u s h e d \\1estminster's overall mark to 5-4. \Varren's B i I I Alexander grabbed an errant shot by 111 teammate with three second s rcn1ainlng and .!iCOred on a one-handed Ju1np shot from 10 feet down the ba seline to break a-itcadtoc·1t An'd gl\1e Ule- Bcars lhe ~·In over Coroua dcl Ml'lr in an arternoon gamt. Alc>;11nder's shot ruined a \·aliant comeback attempt by the Sea Kings, who ltlliod by six points with less than three minutes remaining. The CdM team hit a cold spot for almost three minutes in the final stania but manag- ed to pull even on a pair of baskets by Mike Sevier with 35 seconds to play. The Bears elected lo run down the clock and controlled the ball at midcourt untll nine seconds remained. After a timeout. they moved in for the kill. The first shot mis.9ed but Alexander 's follow connected for the margin of victory. ltr~Ult w ... si.w1r1 O~OL lt1ClllH'l0k "~ O•r"'ll Bcll1n1" l!!'M~ltll l Oll ll ' 86 proof. lit li6 or 100 p•oof. "There is nothing better in the market." $6 19' fifth Dcwiter and C1ft Wnp ;at no cxua cost, • .... 1 ..-1111 r ~ I • . ' • , ·. •. ~ .. : • '· • • • ' .- • OCC ~ips Riverside Five,91-90 Orange Coast Co l 1 e ge' s basketball team streaked into ll\e eon.solation semifinals or the Chaffey Inv ita t lo n a I tournament with a 91·90 vie· tory over Riverside Thursday. Coach Herb Llvsey's team was scheduled lo meet Citrus today at 3:30. Golden West dropped a 100.. 83 verdict.to San Diego Af and lhwi was eliminated fr the tournament. The wm by occ "'as <:iled as a lOtal team effort by Livsey. "If it hadn 't been for the play of Gary Redmond , Ron Love, Duane Dillie and .John Plass we wouldn't have won that game," he said. Down four points wlth -2:40 to go, Diffie and Love each made a steal that Jed to Orange Coast scores and an 8U8 tie. Forward Phll Jordan then iced the game with four 1..'0n· secutive free throws. Guard Troy Rolph played an outstanding noor game and led the team in scoring with 24. Kjndelon and Jordan had 18 and Rich Stickelmaier hit 10 before fouling out \Vith 17 minutes to go in the second half. In the Golden West game. Chris Th-Ompson pumped in 22 points to lead the Rustlers. San Diego CIF player of the year Wilbur Strong paced hfesa witli 28 points. The loss r!ln Golden West's record ti> 1·9. O<tnt1 C111t 01) Kh'lll<lom ltolpl! 51/C~llmllt' Jordtn ·~­lo~t Dl!lit Pl•~ Tclll1 r:o PT PP TP I 1 J II "'''' ' 1 J 10 1 • 1 II t G 0 • I ' 2 1 j l 4 11 1 I ' l 4111122•1 111,1r1111 CHI PGPfPPT,. ""'""'"'' j ' l 10 l urp tlS ?l Cltrt. !O • • ' ?l Jlllvl'ICn l J l ' 81ll!lor1 I J S 1• Poetry in Motion H111U 1 11 1 P~lt l 0 l J-1 01 G Tot1l1 37 l6 1' t(I As Compton lligh's i1elvin -McLaurin hugs ba1l, Marina's Ray Stratford ap- pears to be doing the Highland fling in action in the Huntington Beach tourna· ment. The Vikings advanced into the tourney finals 'vith a 67-65 victory over Rancho Alamitos Thursday night after dropping Compton Wednesday. They face Newport Harbor tonight al ~:30. Mtittimt ICGft· OCC olL ltl .... flldt ~. GOLDl:N WEST ll JI Gr!~;, lhrroa r:cmln lhQm~n "°"""" f'tfll~ "'0 "'T Pr: TJ' l a o , . ' ' . . ' 11 1 311 ' 1 1 ,. l 1 J I J I t 1 I G I ti I -Saddleback Gauchos Place 14th Upended In Final JC Ratings W~d~ 8~•!! Ore111 M••~tll Tott11 "" De-i1 Clllk>rd Gtlltlhfl'" Slrt1t11 , .... ~ McCormick l(r1mtn ,_ ' ' ' ' 0 l • l1 ' 11 IJ OllGCI MI SA flMI "'Cl "'T P'P lP s 1 • n ' I I It l 1 • • lJ 1 • 28 J 1 ' j 1 1 0 • HAYWARD--:_ A last ditch rree throw "by Ron Leek with lwo seconds remaining ru ined a valiant Saddleback College IU>hill struggle and gave FQbuuu CoJlege a 64-63 vlctory Jn.. '.first round competition in lhe Chabot Christmas Classic here Thursday afternoon. The Gauchos battled all day rrom behind the eventual win- ners but with one minute re- maining, Ben Mahar hit four successive free thro"·s to tie lhe count at 63-63. Neither team was able lo ~ore and U!e Gauchos gained possession of the ball with 15 seconds left. A bad pass was stolen by Foothill and Leek drove for the basket but was fouled in an attempt to score 11nd made good on the first of l~'o tries from the line. So\DDLElo\CK fill " " ,, ,, lawre11ce • ' • ' Sml!h " ' ' " Mill tr 0 • ' • Htlm ' ' ' " Chrl1lt111111 • ' ' " F.dw1r1h 0 0 ' 0 AllPn ' 0 ' ' eir,n ' 0 0 ' elt l1 '00THli..L f.i: " " " " • ,, .. '"" ' • ' • Vl~t' • 0 0 • ... .,,,,.., ' • ' " Otvl1 • ' • ' Dtllrf ' ' • .. My1r1 ' ' ' " '"r.-' • f, ' oltll " " • Htlflfmt icon: Foom111 ,,_ .... fllltlilck 11. TW. SIB BLOWS! Whale Watch Cruises . la;lnnlnq Dec. 311 Lerilq Fmm the IWalllft PMllLllll Dally All pm Adult. SS, Children Sz CALL 673·5245 Saddleback College has been ranked 14th in the nation in the.final junior colleg! football Pro Cage Standings ... l.11lern D!Vi1i•11 WOii !All Pr!. fOlo Ntw Yori! l1lllmort Mllw1uk .. · Pl!lledtle>Mt C!ncln1111i 801!1>11 Dtlroil 11 ' .111 - ?r 11 .6!6 5''7 '7G ll ·'°' 1 11 15 .$31 ,, , 1' It .'7' 1l 11 11 .l1T l• 11 '7G .315 "'. W111...., Dl•l1l111 AlllMI M " c~:c1eo " " ''" Fr.no;l•to " " '" A11t1t!ft .. " Plloenhr .. " "" DiaH " M $et!!lt " n ThvndtJ'I ltn11lh Chlctto IU. At11nt• 111 TMtf'I Ollntl D•lroll 11 '5•lllmor1 8<>1!on tt Mllw•ul<H Ntw Yoric ti C~IClff ... ... ... ••• .~l4 .111 ·"' Sart Fr1rn:l1co 11 Stn Oll90 Cl11dnnt1tl t! LOI Alllltltl 1Pllllldtlp/\lt 11 5111111 S1tv1'111v'1 G1- P11Mn!• 11 Ottroll e11tlmor1 1! New Yllf'll l<>al<ln ti At11n!1 CiMlllMtl ti 5111 011111 - '" ,. ' ' • ,, . ' Mrs.Santa using the~(/ ratings . released today by J.C. Grid-Wire. Orange Coast fini shed In a three--way tie for 29th place. Northeastern 0 k I a b o m • (A&M) was selected as the top team in the nation. Fullerton, a 28-9 loser to Fresno in the large schools championship game Sunday, placed sixth in the final ratings. Fresno, on the basis or its 9-3 season record, was ranked 11th. "'" Total, Hl llOifl'll WNI O. ' ' J n J 1 1 • 1 • J ' ., '1 ,, 100 1aire: Mel• ,., GGICltQ Cage Scores .. ., Scvlh CtroUnt ''· LIU St Hlttrt n, RUfDerl 61 8~11 ... PrOll!dlffKI '6 ..... USC 101, L!U ti J1ckllll'lvlll1 U. '1. Georwro....,, o.c .. H. forftl!. 1:7:J len 111 htir TUlllM' St, Mlt ml COtllo) JI Mltl....-tt Pun:llJf' 65, K111! 51. t-1 Clrn:lnnt1lt 114, 1-1 10$ l ht fol> 30: NtV.Rll'O 17, CrtlDhlon Mi I. Norlllwestern Oklt A&M (10-0)711 S111111-11 l. Tvltr. Tt t 00-1) 1J7 l r19111m Youl'I! II. Te.t. ltc~ 11 l. Plwelfl\ll (1-0-11 no No. Tt.t. St."· ArilOllt IP '· PHrl ltJ..,.r, M111. Ct-Ol "' ''' w"t S. Arilllnl Wnl•'fl !J-lJ 111 Ptciric t :J. Portltl'ld IS I. Fullerton 110-1) 1.'.16 P11-Collt• ta, lt9dlt nd1 U 1. l.A Htrbor ft-11 13l[------------I I. ltk ... stltld ff.11 111 t. Etlt MIJ>lUIPOI 1 .. 11 7J'i Hvl'Clll....on, Ktn. C.,11 7ll 11, Fras1111 (t-l"), 130; 11. YVba (1~11, nt; ll. Of Alllt f .. ll. nt1 l'. 1-d· dlebKk lf·11, nt; U, Clltbol Ct-2), 71t; u . lltd-.id' ( .. 1), 717; 17. l!1st l..A C1· 11. 711: 11, llffdl9'1' Cf.I), 1101 lt. V111-1ur1 17·2), 191; 20. WllSI Vtllty 11•2), ·~· 21. Gr111 Herller, W•1ll. {l-'Jl. 10ll )1. S..11 Oi'1!o MfH 47·21, 1031 1). Cltru1 C .. lJ 1r!d Bll"n, Tex. (1·l). 7011 l$, Met!e.11 ltlv1r (7·1) Incl JO!lt.l. Miu . 11·21. 100; 21. C1rrH1;11 0 ·11, lff: ti. El Ctmll'IO (W), 19~: 2', Or11111t CDllf f .. 1·1J, Fort kott. Ktll. (l·I) Mid •-• Centrtl C .. J.I), ll'O. ---.J - Greatpttto trim a tree with. 8•7 M1tt7 Cbrlaimu with. a McCaJJoeb Power M1oe e . $h• world.'• J11rbMst c:hlo.ln •••·The onlT •aw In th• •l•·PO•lld. cla••' Zip• lhroucb aa. •lnoh 1oc 1D. J••\ 8 ••cond.1. Cuti a 1 wtnMr'• W9.rth of ftrs•ood qu.lc:k and •MJ. Pl1n$7 of po"•"· Plen\J of feNur1L B•t sil\ 1U1d•r _, v... $179.95 FREE Where doe& that leave you? o.a Ut.il UahhHISM e#on'J'IDltr •-(r•l'l•.-et•.•• n-lue)tr.. wU. Jo&.,._, Po-•• I w P•wer Ifie e A•l•111111. S•ppt.r UaH.ef. home wtltl your Ford Rete--A-Car Dea lM. that's ::ORent a,,.., FOfd, Mustang, or Torino for • day, wMk Ol month. Low f'ltH • , • Insurance included . ~FORD RENT-A.CAR SYSTEM I - THIODOll IOllNS FORD 20H H1rht llw•. Cnt1 M .... C1lff. 642-0010 WILSON FORD 1120 lht:h llw•. H.mtlntten ... t:h. C1!1f. 142·'611 ....... S1lt1 -Senl<• len'1 Mlnl.Cyt:le City 17216 INth llw•. 1714) 142·2111 --------·--·· ---.--·---- Now in Costa Mesa f ' (We use Qendix·\he bes\ \ininus ~nu can bu~.) u hall at any d lining \nstallalion cost yo Now. Drake \in\ngs an uarantee our bra'l<e I center. And we g Big era~ Sale Y i\es or 3 years. -· · for 30,000 m \.. ·c1 linings in writing than our mec11an1 . I< relining Detter Nobody 1<.nows era e d' -the best brake . we use Ben uc. That's our specialty. 1actory standards bUY -better than linings you can . t 11 ttiem in 90 minutes-: !or new cars. And we ins a I re lree for the life . d·usimen s a -·1 s ra\<.e a I while you wa1 . ol your car' too. . d Master Charge, most o\I 1l n1<Amencar • use your a r own financing. redit cards, or ou company c d sa~e half. k snow-an -Reline you r bra e COSTA .MESA 3181 HARBOR BlVD. (at San Diego frwy.} (114) 549-4022 M ., tttRU FRI. TILi. 1:00 p, • HOURS: MOn. M SAT. TILL e;OO PTl~L s:OO p,M •• suN. 10:00 A.M- DAILY PICOT Jf • • • • t our 1111 111\ stake. ~166 TIA£1 1111 e 1; erake .•. when y e"i>.NC!!IG/SllOCt<I/ VIHEE~ "UGNMENT/VIHEE~ , • ___ .. __ . ·-· I I I t L • 1·11aa1 SK•i.T m 697 • WEL JlllEB 297 ...... ~tW.1. lapll-.Utbnoad . ............... loo .,.. L -pd<>.) 3V211CB BEICB mE 2'' 71/tlRCB SDLSIW BYI ELECTRIC SPBIYGUH 717 COLOR BU CWET CLUllER .. _. Will do a lQ tsor 11 .... .-(Clf2tift• ..,......, laqUcktilD•· ---...... r- 157 ~VI•• • n-D-BOL _ ....... _ .-.11_ ....... l . ct.. ' rloalty. ·9e'I. ,_.ec -- ' ' • I AR E WE II TIME TO WISH YOU MERR Y CHRISTMAS As my grandmother·said, just before they caught her at the lni; "Never too·early; but sometimes too late.'' And we don't want to be too late t9 tell you we appreciate you. You made our year so we won,.t have to eat snc;>Wballs ctMtfMd for Christmas. We .1>incerely hope your holidays will be abundant f1uu~::' in joy. Shalom, Salaam.. Peace. s P.M. <cmd. a.err. th•re ne1lt . iaa."&muio~U..hiftbthlfhl'l) IF YOU DON'T READ THIS UNTIL .DEC. 26TH THEN ••• HAPPY HEW YEAR! SAllTA'S LOMG )OHMS S6appy it1m lbcrt co:ndo\l])lt as Chri1tmo:1 stocking or 'mall bog.of~right r~ Jlo:unel. 1s7 McGRAW-EDISON F.!~ JIEDGE TRIMMER ShM]to !cictory blade does neai job. J.t'sapowerhou1e • MERRY CHRISTMAS AUCE WE LOVE YOU 26 PIECE PUJICB BOWL BOWL • Ho• can we nll thU so ch-ap? Siinple. we'Y• bff!l drinking th. puncb. Got the cup., lUhoob. larg• howLando:JrindlJ' ladle, 1'7 .BLICK&: DECKER 318 lllCB DRILL 110.7100 Double J.dudloc gtcirlng mad d!.aek hcmdl•• liiSJSl•f• tougher }obs .iclal•r. MW low price, 10 PIECE PET CIJPPER ··SET Electric dipper ua4 all tU · ,,cce1sod .. you.'ll SPRAY .SNOW 11ffd loh.pJ'QUfpcuck •ell groomed. It'• 9ClSJ' cit fun, complete Fu11weylodKorat1.1u1t 27C ,wboo11t It on O••r a ateneil or llllik• up your own p1;1ltem. 12 INCH CANDLES Chrl1tmo:1ju1t isn't without 1talely topetiA!J candleSlo add te1ti•1 air.choice of red or gteeii.. STRETCH GARLAND '1•ry d11eoralive, 1tretcbes out like al\ accordion ldoes it play Come Bock to .Soreento?) Choice ol colors. D BATTERIES Factory lre1h "'I>" holleries, stack up now and then you won't ha.•• lo go out Chri1tmC1s J1ight ao gol t l!trap lortb• kids. ATER LOG SET 11 ss NO. 300 Set 11 JI.GA ~pf'O'Nd ("hich means American Ga1 As11Kla!lon. Now aren'l ycu g\ad you ...ad thi1 odmid hem: thot lnlarmalian '11 JI inch ntgl•esnlce beat and Joo ks good too. I ' TOY· TABLE Some nifties you wouldn't e xpect for tliis price Got some greo.t ones left, choose from trucks. battery operated toys. games. some wor1h up to SS.00. Look lb& table over. you '11 find something for every kid on your list. Something new. i;omelh1ng ditlerent. softiething • t1n1que (can you tell I haven I seen t he.111. ytl.) 0 1 metal. you get lhe poir.1l 1ow them. and I m still Ina state ol sha.::k.) ' . aa7 PAIR "·"! DECORAnVE ~ 1 BURLAP 179Yo. Wonderlul adhe1l•e bock prcducl in color• that run the gamut from bright lo light. Ute loro myriad al hobby and d11eoraling project .. ,. . . ~ ~ . j '. i • CARSON \ in1trucUou iocllidea. ' •; ,,, $'' ~ DAISY LIMP J..ttrai:tfft. loob Uk• cm upsld• dowii Oower {.o watch out tor hMs.l Chcb of colon. chain and switch lncluditd. Far bWbl. -.....A.\ -HappyNa.lltbo:t'a • !1la mun-. r.ally J -.;~~; ~"ZJj DOOR · 9'' EXCAIJBER COJICOURS WAX n.lu"JC•~mwaxfordolng o 1uperdeluxewaxjob on your car. Makes CUI. cld onelookalmostn•• lr•membe? we sold olmoat) ond a n•W one stCy that way longer. Fine1t wox i.D the "'orld. . 500 FIYE IUCIS! WOW! MIRROR 1 14" x48" ' -----------··-----·----~~---·----·· -.. _.. ...... .~ ··-~-~--~--• !·,. .•4• 'AILV.,1111' :::: 6.:;. -. I D E-R . -' ' 'Where to go ••• What to tlo f > l• . ••• -.. • I -. Disneyland's 'Fantasy on Parade' Launched . . ·. ' • Big Parade Colorful, Exciting Holiday Season 1969 officially a1Tives at a gaily decorated Disneyland this Satur· day as herald trumpeters fanfare the premiere performances of "Fantasy on Parade" and the Candlelight Caroling ceremonies. More than 500 fa vorite Disney characters and musicians comb i n e talents to make Otis year's parade more colorful and exciting than any of its 15 predecessors. With 26 presentations during the 16 days between this Saturday and its fmal perfonnance on Sunday, January 4, "Fantasy oo Parade" will be offered more frequently over a k>nger period than ever before. Actor Cary Grant will narrate tho? In· spi rational story or the First Christmas during the two pcrfonnances o f DI s neyland's traditional Candlelight Caroling ceremonies. This event will be presented at 6 p.m. this Saturday and Sunday only. One thousand choiristers from severi~I California cities will join with the Disneyland orchestra organ and carillon to illustrate the narrative with some of the w0rld's p.eatest-Ciir-fstmas itiusic. Conductor will be Dr. Charles Hirt, direc· tor ol choral music at the University of Southern California. Town Square wUl serve as the m:issive stage far this,hour long program, which features a "living Christmas tree!' form· ed by choir members. The Candlelight program provides a meditative, deeply moving prelude to the exciting pageantry of "Fantasy on Parade," debuting at 9 p.m. Saturday. From this Sunday until the conclusion of its run, the parade will be offered al 4 and 9 p.m. daily, ex cert for afternoon-on· ly parades on December 24, 25. 31. January 1 and 4. Paraders include all I.be heroes, A TI-IO USAND voices take part iit t11e candlelight caroli11 g ceremony, above. this Sat. and Stn!, at 6 p.111, The singers fornt a living Christ.· mas tree ilt front of Disneyland·s Matii Street Station. heroines, villains and vixens brought to life by Walt Disney. Old timers on hand are Mickey Mouse (beating the wor\tl's largest bass drum), Donald Duck, Pluto and the always-confused Goofy. Beauty will be provided by "Cin- derella ," "Sleeping Beauty," and "Alice in Wonderland." each accompanied by her fanciful friends and roes. And ''Snow White" will bring her seven admirers 11Jong. ~ 11uge twirling teapots, d an c Ing Christmas Trees and the Casey Junior Circus Train are but a rew of the i;pecial Holiday visitors who will ply the parade route through Disneyland. TINY TE.'rr1PEST In bia teapo t front Alice 111 \Vonder/unct, at left, is part of tlie make believe and fun of f antasy on Parade which 1vilt be presented each ctau through Jan. 4. Dragons, butterflies, a "Bug Band." marching playing cards, a corps of toy soldiers -all will entertain before the arrival of the star of any Holiday ~'low - St. Nick Himself. Provid ing a perfect setting for "Fan· tasy on Parade" are the old-fashioned Yulelime decorations dressing much cf Disneyland. Park operating hours for the coming week are 9 a.m. to midnight from Satur· day, December 20 through Tuesday, ( December 23 ; 9 a.m. tG 6 p.m. \Ved· nesday, December 24 ; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Christmas Day, and 8 a.m. to midni~ht Friday and Saturday, December 26·27, ' . Weekend Highlights BOAT PARADE -The annual Floallng Christmas Tree a nd Decorated Boat Parade starts its five -nightly trek tonight at 6:30 p.m . The parade tour of the bay starts from the Balboa Ferry Landing and may be viewed from any spot where the bay is vi sible. A tour boat which joins the parade and gives passengers a look at the decorated waterfront homes leaves Crom the Pavilion nightly. J UNIOR TEE N CLUB -The Westminster Junior Teen Club holds a dress.up dance tonight at the \Vestminster Com- munity Center, 8200 Westminster Ave. No jeans for the ga1s and no cords for the.guys for tonight's dance. Bring one can of f<iod to be put Into a gt!t package fur needY. families for Christ· mas. BOBBY SHERMAN -Bobby Sherman may be heard in concert-this' Saturday in the Arena of the Anaheim Conven· Uon Center. 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anaheim at 7:30 p.m. ' Sff Oulde to Fun, Page 22 MICKEY GREETS SANTA AND GOES ALONG IN PARADE,'~'; • ,4 • Band s WelcQme New Ye~ ,,:: ·In Big Disneyland Bash The Everly Brothers, the Ventures and Terry Gibbs and his Band will help Disneyland guests welcome 1970 during a special New Year's Eve Party December 31, beginning at 8:30 p.m. Adding to the anticipation or the New. Year's arrival ls the world's largest Mickey Mouse watch, being readied to tick off the Una! minute s of 1969 from atop Sleeping, Beauty Castle. At the stroke of midnight, accompanied by trumpet fanfare, 10,000 colorful balloons will be released from the Cas tle, heralding the new year. Leading off the e v e n i n g ' s en· tert.alnment lineup, the Everly Brothers will perform at 10, and 11 :30 p.m. and at I a.m., on tht Tomorrowland Stage, ac- companied by Disneyland's 'Sound GasUe. The VMures will entertain, 9 p.m. u~ til 2 a.m. at the Tomorrowland Terrace, while Terry Gibbs and his Band will hold fourth iilt Plaza Gardens from 9 p.m. to 2 a.m. Tickets ror the special party, priced at $9, are available at Walllchs Music City Smith Keeps Fit Lifting Weights As It might be imagined from his powerful ptiyslque, William Smith, who guest-stars in 20th Century · F ox Television's "Daniel Boone" episode. "Hannah Comes Home," over Channel 4 on Chrtstnias Day. works out regularly - lifting ":eights. While Smlth was spendlng his four . years In the service, he held the light. hcavyweJgb t 1 w~ighlifting champtoilship. for Uie Air F4'ct. AddlUonally. the youi\g man who plafs an lndlan 'chlef In "Ran-· nah Comes Home'' With · stl!lr Fen Parker. can be classed aa an · all·•round upert. 8.thlete whole speclalt.Y ls skllna. " stores and an SOuthem · Californla branches of Bank of America. Tic'ets will be· $10 at Disneyland tlle liight of I.be '•party, ii available. . · Disney.18nd will o{ien to the public· #t a a.m. on D·ecember,31 , clos ing at·7 p.m. to prepare for the New Year's Eve Party, The Park will re-open it 8 ~30 ·p.m. for ·~e special party. · · · Ticket& to lhe special party entitle guests to unlimited use oC all rides Od adventures, excluding the shooting .iill· Jeries . In addition to the special 'entertainment lineup, Disneyland's Kids of. =· Kingdom, The Young Tahitians, T Buckner and lht Firehotw: Five ~ · Two, will perform at various locatlofts lhrougbooi the Park. .• '. WEEKENDER INSmE FEATUBES· The Laguna Civic . Ballet . ~ pe.ny is presenting the. !iellgh children's story ballet;• "The Nuii 3 · cracker/' over this weekend. TM : • Saturday night show Jt, a 1pecla1 ·~ beoeflt performance 191' th< u; . ; -MouHon PloyhoWie. See pie, luH and 11p<y. oo Pqe22. : " Trlnl • • Pap It ~ ~te J ia Pqell ~ JatenUult1 Pqe Jl "' Uve ftntt1 · Pare a : WUle Watdk'n , Pap II "-'• • Pl'" IZ, I( '. Oil 'N' Abomt Pap.· zS.d "' · . Vlil<y HIP .. TV hp • .. lalhGllleries > -p ... Ct ..... Tllt•I« . Pap Movt. Golde Pap Aabnol W...W P• CtM1w•d PllaJe Pap -le -P ... n ~ .r,..n 'TV VleWI Pop -,..~ Lee Pap • .. - ........ -~ ·------,------~-· ----~----------·-~ .--·------------- f. In=te~111ission--' " • ., ;. TITIJI ' ..... ...,, .. ...., Jt Wu, looking back on Jt, qutt,e a year for community theater in Orange County. )t \\'I! tbt yea r the Laguna Playhouse fi1111ly we nt big time, moving into a half mi1Uon-dollar theater, bidding fareweU to the ghosla ol 4:> years of production In the okt homestead. 1t wu the year two actors received 1tanding ovations at the Costa Mesa Civic Playhouse--One for going on stage, script in hand, on just three days' n~i«. Jt \\'a! the year the Westminster Com· nwnity 'lltieater IOllt its playhouse, but aaioed a plot of ground on which to con- struct a new one. And the Santa Ana Community Players made their big mo\•e into a comfortable new theater. .j:be.e were a few of the highlights dur· tng a year in which 43 productions were mounted by nine amateur theater groopa. The ae.mi-Prof~onal houses, South c.aat Repertory and the Open End Tbuter, accounted for a doun more. ; Gtlide to Futa • f\IUSICALS PROVED mo~ popular than ever in 1969. Orange County au- diences were lreated to Iii number ol une ones, including "The Sound of Music." "Once Upon a Mattress," "Stop the \Vorld-1 Want to Gtt Off," "The Threepenny Oper~,'' "A FuMy Thing Happened on the Way to tht Forum." ·"Sooth Pacific." "The Mot.1 Happy Fella" and "The Roar of the Grease- paint, tht Smell of the Crowd ." Collegiate theater thriv~. U C I ' s repertory company mounteji five shows early in the year and Orange Coast College opened the year with a well received doubleheader. Community theaters took on a ros y· <:heeked glow fl ushed by box office suc· ce~. The Cost.a Mesa Civic Playhouse added an extra week to its production runs, something the Huntlneton Beach Playhouse had· done t.be. year belore. The "held ovu." sJgn went up outside t11eaters in Laguna, Wtsbnillster and San Clemente. Floating Parade In Debut Tonight · DEC. It JUNIOR TEEN DANCE -The Westminsler Junior Teen Club will hold a dance every other Fri. night in the 'Community Center 8200 Westminster Ave., from 7:30 to 9:30. • "lbt Teen Club is: open to all 7th and Ith erade students tiring or &olng to school in Westminster. Ad}nis&joo 50 ·cents with Teen Card; 75 cents without a card. Dress up dance, ·nee. lt (no levi s for girls, or cords for guys). Bring one can of food which will be donated to needy famillu for ChriJt.ma!, Playing for dancing -two band! -"Illusions" and ''Collaborated Faith." Playing at Jan. 2 dance, "Col- laborated Faith.·· DEC. lt -D BOAT PARADE -Newport Beach's traditional Floating Chriltmal Tree and Boat Parade will tour the bay e a ch k evtning from Dec. 19 through Z3 starting at 8:30 p.m. from ·7: 1ht Balboa ferry landing. About SO boats are expected to par- :: ticlpate oo week nights with more joining in on the wetk· • '~· ends. It can be viewed from any spot where one can see the ' ~ bay. :; DEC. IJ.%3 :~ BOAT TOUR -A special sightseeing boat will depart from •• ~ Balboa Pavilion, 400 Main SL, Balboa, each evenina at ·:~·'1:30, Dec. 19 -23 to cruise the harbor durinl the boat par_~e. ~ · A view "-the decorated homes on the waterfront and 101n· • tn& the decocated boat parade is all part of the fare: $2 for adults; $1 for children 12 years and under. Restfvations: l!U145. DEC. IJ.ZI CHILDREN'S TREATER -Golden West College Drama Deputmmt will present "Alice in Wonderland" Dec. 19- 20 at 7:30 p.m. and Dec. 20 at 1:30 p.m. in the Actor's Play- boJ:. Tickets 25 cents from the coJlege bookstore. DEC. !Ml And how did they all fare in the final reckoninc? AJ might be c~. 111e l...aguna PlayhOLQe again dominated the list, but the C.0.Sta Mesa Civic Playhouse followed in close pursuit. Between these two theat.ers, they captured six po!itions on this column's top IO hit parade. Most improve<! of the local playbouses was the San Clemente Community Theater, \l.'hich placed one show in the top 10 and two others in the "honorable mention" category. \VllAT WERE THE best of the bunch for l9fl9? The jury is back in and, ha vi ng subtracted a trio of shows in which your11 truly was involved, renders the rouowing verdict: I. "Stop the World-I Want to Get Off." Costa M~sa Civ ic Playhouse, directed Uy. Thor Neilsen. 2. "I Never Sang for My Father." l.aguna tfoullon Playhouse, directed by J-Ohn ferzacca . 3. "PhiJade]phia, Here I Cl)me.'' Laguna Playhouse, directed by Bertram Tanswtll. 4. "Once, Upon a f\lattress," ~bo Community Players, directed by Tony liraudl. 5. "Dylan," Laguna P 1 a y house, directed by Doug Rowe. 6. "Goodbye Charlie,'' Coata Mtu. Civic Playhouse, directed by 'Pali 'fambellini. 7. "Wail Until _Dark," La guna Playhouse, directed by Kent Johnson. 8. •·t,uv,'' San Clemente Community Theater, directed by Richard Andersen. 9. "Picnic," Fullerton Footlighters, dirl'C'led by Lee Hollenbeclc. 10. "Barefoot in the Park," Huntington Beach Playhouse, directed by David Maiville. MAKING UP THE honorable mention II.st are "Generation" (Costa Mesa), "Night of January 16th" (Westminster), "A Thousand Clowns" and "'Ibe Tender ,, .. ,, . in ,.1969 ! ' f ' Trap" (San Clemen"') and "Ladies Night ' IT WAI A lluiy year oll 'ltQ\ll\d, bUt n< In• Turkish Bit!!" (Laguna!. _., .. tl!Ybuotor th .. 0Al'!i l!m, wh• "Stop tile World", under Nielsen's firm -gukllng hand on and off staae, stood head l*'f«mtd Jn Iii sboW3 during 1169. Th• and ahouldera above any other com-dlrtctorial work of Pati Tambelliai in munity theater product.ion in Orang• c.osta Mesa and Richard Andersen in San County durins 1968, wiUt only La1ima's CJtmente wu of p.ttticular high quality, "Father" offering a m61S\lre of com-ea<:h ti.aning in a trio ot fine productions. petition for the DAtL Y P IL 0 T ' 1 At SooUt Coast Repertory, ''Death of a _Pistinguished Production award. Salesman" was far and above tbe "Philadelphia," a moving <~medy-highlight of 11169 at the Third S"'p drama expertly if.aged , was a strong Theater, followed by a pair of comedies, third while Rancbo'1 "Mattress" lii<e "A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to ''stop the World" proved a suecess:ful tbe Forum" and "Room Service." reprise oC an impre.tve earlier musical. Another memorable part ol the theatrical "Dylan" was a tour de forte for Ftttac-year was Maraaret Cowlts' one-woman ca, an accompHshed-actor~or. show, "Just Between Us," 1~ the Open "Goodbye Charlie" proved to be the End Theater. year's best out and out comedy, while Nest week in this space, 1he DAILY "Walt UnW Dark" acorad highly despite a· P I L 0 T 'a Distinguished Performance lUWninute cast change. "Luv''' was a awards will be announced, with four hi&h water mark for the San Clemer,te more Orana:e County actors aad 1c- tbeat«-, .while FulJertoii•s' ''Picnic"' aild ~ earmarked for tr op ht e s HunUn,tcn's "Bardoot" 1p.arktd,. thoec emNematic. ol hiah achievement in th8 theaters' reapectjve 1eaaons. ranb ot community theater. Travel Live Theater Julnho Jet Feels ODt Act Play1 An evening of Spanlsb play" is on stage at Sooth Coast Re- pertDey, 1827 Newport Blvd,, Costa ?t1esa. '1be one-act plays by Arrabal will run Fri, through Sun. 11 1:30 thruogh Ile<. 21. lnvitaUoe to a M1rder' A murder mystery ia the fare being staged at the Hun- tington Beach Playhouae, 2110 Main st .. Huntiniton e .. ch. Fri. and Sat., through De<. 20 at 8:30 p.m. Resenatiorui, ~ 1861. Just Like Theater. ly STAN DELAPLANE NEW YORK CITY - I came back on the new Boeing 7f7. The Big Mama of all the jet. will pack up to 4llO paople if you stack thein right. Most air- lines will move the seats to !It 375-400. It's broken into compartments. Serving kitchens behind bulk· heads at the cutoff points. The feeling -(Two aisles and three, four, two seating) -is lll<e being in a very sman·theater. * \ T~eoff and landing feel like any jet. Except It's ;bmnpy. (Maybe they need new shock absorb- ers:) No feeling of great size in the a.ir. Because Ghost Town there's nothing to co"'l>'re it to. They saY. the wing is the slu of a bOBketball court. But they'd have to pi!! Wilt and SWt on it to make me see it. F r o m WT lbe window vlow, it feels just like any jet wing. n-interized * The Bit Tewnl It's Christmas in New York. vo1· Holida I windows full of gleaming and expensive gifts -The .I' ' Y Man Who Has E"verything is going to get something more. Inside Gho& Town "Frosty" the ever-popular storybook The New York chop house is a warm, ma!fCU· snowman waits to gr e e t line atmosphere I find no place else but in the B i r v is i t 0 rs. Frozen with Town. Dark, paneled wood walls. Jrish bartenders. "' r:elrigeration, coils this "real" A bar poli!hed. with aged bourbon and new miracle Snowman is as authentic to the fiber sleeve!. Snow outside and a cheery glow m.. t.oucll as he is to the eye, side. There are several dozen aroilnd town. There is a pictu~sque aei.. Mine ls P. J . Moriarty's -P.J. has four but BAUZI' -The Laguna Beach Civic Ballet Company i!! ICheduled far a aeries of "The Nutcracker" ballets in Or- .nee County this month with a program in the Laguna Moul- . ton Playhouse, 1:30 p.m.; Dec. 19 and at 2:30 p.m. Dec. 20, .;i ~ membership programs. At 8:30 p.m. Dec. 20 the com- • pany will perform a btnelit show for the Laguna Moulton ~ Playhouse; Orange Cout Colle1e auditorium, 2:30 p.m. Dec. :: 11, sponsored by Services for the Blind. Ticket.II at the door. GENE WILKES AND KRISTI MOORHEAD DANCE IN NUTCRACKER L•ad Dancers in Benefit for Lagun• Pl1yhou1t ting at Dr. Walker's Cabin the lunch place is on 54th off Madison. Lynnhaven· featuring a 150-year~ld horse oysters on the half shell. Watney's draft.beer. A fare drawn sleigh dashing through that will sharpen your wits. the snow. Everything is amaz-* ingily authentic includina the idcles spark.Jing from the roof· ''Weuld yw •UltMt whit we need to w1o1r on top and the treshly fallm anow • crul11 ship fOlnt te the CarlblM•n with steps •t ·DEC. 11 -JAN. 10 Ballet for Children covering the ground. 1ev1ro1I l1lo1ncl1?'' Llfe size figures Clf the The Caribbean social run is a little ritzy. Slack• Three Wimnen show lht way and shorts for daytime. But dres~ stuff. From the 10 the scene of the first UJ Christmas. Located beside the b&st shops. Three ot four men will be in dinner jack· Chu rch of Renections is a ets in the evening. And. half of these \Vill be the spor· ~verently beautiful Nativity ty Madras or colored Jackets rather than tradition .. scene. a1 black. All women \vill \Vear cocktail dresses. CHJUSTMAS PLAY -The Padua Hills Theater is staglng a Christmas Play through Jan. 10 at the theater in the hill!! above Claremont. "Las Posadas," a colorful folk play about Christmas in Mexico, is an annual production which also includes the traditional Christmas fiesta and the breaking of the plnata. Show limes are 8:311 p.m. Wed. through Sal. with matinees at 2:30 p.m., on Wed. and Sat. The Padua dining room, serving Mexican and American food, is open for lunch and dinner daily except f\1on. Phone 1-626-1288. Helping to spread holiday It's dressy ashore in the evenings, too. Partic .. cheer over the Christmas ularly in the British background islands. Men will story bal let ··The Nutcracker" the gift or a wooden nul· season is a full schedule of be expected to wear jackets and ties in the big hotel is the ballet c 0 mp an y · !' t:racker carved to resemble a carolers performing in the dining rooms. Lngunu Progra1n Benefits Playhouse Ea ch Christ mas season the Laguna Beach Civic Dallel Company delight s hundreds of children "'ith its performances of ballets for children and this year is no exception. Three performances have b een scheduled al the La gun a f.loulton Playhouse fo r th is \veekend v.·lth the flrsl one tonight a! 8:30 and the matinee at 2: 30 tomorrow. membership progr~ms v.•ith the public invited . Christmas present to the 1nan. To her delighl the nut· Covered Wagon Camp and The Pacific cruises are more relaxed. On the DEC. 20 'rEEN CLUB DANCE -The Westminster Recrea tion and Parks Department \\'ill hold a Teen Club Dance in the com· munity Center, 8200 \Vestminster Ave .. (fo r \\'estminster t eens) each Sat. from 8 p.m. to midnight. Admission, $1. for members, $1.50 for non-members. The "Collaborattd Faith" group \\'ill play for dancing Dec. 20. '.• DEC. 20 ·JAN. 4 : • J>ISNEYLAND -More than 500 favorite Disneyland char-:~:ar.cters and musicians will combine talents in "Fantasy on . ~: Parade" which will be offered at 4 and 9 p.m. daily, Dec. •, 20 -Jan. 4, with aftemoon parades only on Dec. 2t, 25. ll '· and Jan. 1 and 4. A Candlelight Caroling ceremony will be held at 6 p.m. Sat. and Sun. Dec. 20-2t with Cary Grant narrating the inspirational story of the First Christmas. : Hours: Dec. 20 -23, t a.m. 4 midnight: 9 a.m. • 5 p.m. Dec. 24 ; 10 a.m. • 7 p.m. Christmas Day, and 8 a.m. • midnight ~ Dec. 26-27. DEC. !O-FEB. II ~ WHALE WATCHING -The gentle art of whale watching will be resumed off the Orange County Coast when the cruiser "Island Holiday" starta its daily trips from the Bal · boa Pavilion, 400 Main St., Balboa, on Dec. 20 to conUnue through Dec. 31 at 1 p.m. daily except Christmas. On Jan. 2. through the month of Feb. the boat will leave at 9 a.m. and 1 p.m. Adults $.l and children under 12 years, $2. Phont : 573·'245. • DEC. 20 -801BY SllERA1AN -The Aren11c. of the Anahehn Conveo· lion Cent.er, 800 W. Katella Ave .. Anahe hn, wlll stage Bobby • Sherman in concert, Sat., De<:. 20 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets. $3.SO ':" are availablt at tht box office and mo~t tirkel agencie.,. DEC. 21 - 1 _PUPPET SDOW -The Harbor Center. 2300 Harbor lil\'U .. Costa Mesa, is presenting "Barbi's Puppet Show '' in the mall Sun., Dec. 21al1 :30, 2:30, 3:30 and 4:30 p.m. Life size rnarionetta of people and animals will be performing. DEC. %t CHILDREN'S THEATRE -"\ViMie lh~ Pooh" by South C o 11 t RepertQrY Children's Theatre, 1827 Newport Blvd .. Colt• Mesa. Admission : children, 75 centa; 1dults. $1.00. The A. A. Milne childrtn'r classic will be presented Sunday. O!c. 21, at 1 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. Reservations : 64&-1365. i DllC. 20JAN. 7 IN01T'S COUNTRV0 WISTERN -Knotl.1 Berry Farm. to3t Beach Blvd., Buena Part, bas 1eheduled ten days of tounb'1•Wtrtern entertalnment. starting Dec. 21 with the: Oia.pparal Brothers and the F'ronUenmen and Joan.le on ~t.. Dec. 27; Jimmy W1ke)y, Dec. 21 : Be1verhHI String Band, Dec. 29 -Jan. 1: Lucille Surr and Bob Recan. the canadian S~·eelhurt.s, Fri .• Jan. ~: j\folly Bee, Jan. 3, and Billy Mlze will clost.oul the holiday patkage -Jan. S • 71 aJJ of \\'hich i5 staged In the COvertd \V11gon Camp t·ra cker lurns into a handsome wandering the streeta. Lurline to Hawaii, hall the men wore dark sui'l.1 childreo this year. The pro· pr ince \vho takes her through Children ol all ages will en-in 't&e evening. I wore a dinner i·acket only twice. duction features a rasl of 80 the Land of s,10\v into the · th h ndJn (0 all hi d • u·ith 100 lavish costumes. JOY ese appy surrou &3 n • s ps you on .t dress up the first night out, Lead d.ncer•, are Odile d•. Kingdomh 's~ CandPyl \vheFre . s~e of an old-fashioned holiday and last rugbt before making port.) -,, •-meets l e ugar um airy. all the trimntlnp. Located in * \Ville, Kristi t.1oorhead, Hope A pcrfonnance certain to Buena Park on Be a ch and Joy Sogawa, Hal O'Neal delight the heart of any child Boulevard just two miles Daytime dress afloat and ashore is not as dressy and Gene \\>'ilkcs. Others in and a very special treat al south of the Santa Ana on the Pacific ships. I mean. you can go barefoot. the cast are actor Charles Christmas time. Freeway. Not "" I t th t th C "bb Coga n. Barbara By r n c s , ----------'f;iiUi;>;;iiiiiiiiO;;;;;iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiie~yiiioiisiieiieiiiiiiaiiioin;;i;;i";;i;"ii;n;;;i;i;ea;;;i;n~ru;;;i;n~.iiiiiiiiiiiii Cynthia Tosh, Mary Catherine I I! Kaminski, Billy Sircello, Molly Lynch, and Chris Kirby. The Saturda y 8.30 IJ_rn presentation is sc heduled as a benefit performanre for the Playhouse. Tickets for all performances are avt1i lable al the Playhouse box office: $2.50 for adults and $1.50 for children under 12 years. The charming ('hildren's Olher dancers inc I u de Robert Petel. Kathy Jo Kahn, t.1elinda Cheno\l.'eth. 8on11ic Thompson and Damara Ben· nett. Danced lo the n1usic of 'Tchaikovsky the story con· ('ems a litlle girl \vho receives Now Wliale Hu1iters ' -~.:~.~~h~~ch':: ~l~~e~ ~~ IJ~~~,.,~~11 bccom lng an increash1gly \1•a1ch and take pict ures. popu\e_r l!ntcrtalnment and Southern California·,1s once ' t-ducalional pastin1e as an ngain have an opportunity for ri;timated 6,000 gray v.•h1tlcs a closeup look at these mam· pass close lo the, Orange Cou1J· mals whk:h attain a length ol ty coasl on their yearly trek 55 feet and weigh around 30 .from . Arctic ·waters to the tons. Dectmber 20 to 31 breeding grounds In Baja oa"ey's Locker v.·UI run the California. 140.passenger cru iser Island ''cars ago a~ many as Holiday on u·hale hunts every :'\00,000 wh1tlts migr;1ttd. But day, except Christma,, from hunters slaughtered lhern in the Balboa Pavi lion. 400 fl.1aln droves for their oil. f'Mall y, as SI., Balboa . DESERT HOT SPRINGS CALIFOR'NIA ltit au 1•ar 11111il1 ll1a1t11 rrwt We have •nough blue sky, c!ean air. 1nc1tdible views. ancl brilliant stars !or every· <ln• .•• phis doi::ens of hot m!ne1al pools. mode1n mo- tels, and excel!ent mobi!• home laeililles, o Come to our heelthlul c11y, Dnert Hoc Sprlnga-lor e wuk, tor e UfeUme -overlooking P1lm Springs, the goll c1pi4 lal of the wo1ld (only 10 minute$ away), )'l'lllf lor lllfOr111•11011 & 11,.o11.,. ·i.lo CMmber of COfl'UMtce, • 'If D•pL ON 0.Mrt Hot lprlft19, CMtl'. 01 .. ., ..... , °" !fltf ... lflf 10. " .. ' '•tm lkl"ngt, oo nortti on ,,.. of !~111 l~/fl •Ollt ~· Ce1lr\ Ht\ $O•lflO•· the mammals neared ex· Ot.parturc t\me i~ 1 p.m. 1inction, kllling v.·as halted by u'ilh adult rares $3.00 and l':========== international a1reement and chlldren 12 years nf age :r,1dl· the herd is slowly building under $2.00. Beg Inn \ n g back up. January 3 through the month Today tht former \\'hale of February whale trips u•ill l\unter "'ith his harpoon ha~ be on weekends \V i t h bttn rtplaced by people Rrm· departures ~t 9 a.nl. and J cd "'Uh blnocularis <1 n d p.1n. Phone 613-524$. -. I . For Advertising In WEEKENDER • . • Phone 6424321 11 EVERYBODY'S BROKE, RESTAURANT BUSINESS IS SLOW, THINGS ARE HIGH! There is only one thing +• do ••• Give th•m 1p1cial1 thet will m••• up fer these tempor1ry .alt~o1tiH1. Here they ere, •n«I just i1t time for Chrbtmes pre1ent1 • , • c1rton1 of fresh citrws. CLIP THiii COliPONJ & SAVI! •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • J~lN~ • ~IN~ • ~IN~ • ,Oil CHRllTMAI a POR CHlllTMAI • POI CHlllTMAI 8 • SWllT-JUICY • l)t,vllt ..... Dtfklwt a OIANT 1111 8 • TANGERINU • APPW •Navel ORANGU. : 1 o:: f9c : 7 LIS.' 1" : 10 LIS. 79c : 8 GIVI A ~RTON-42.2' • OIVI A UITOlll-ft.fl • erVI A CARTO........,.tl a -WITH THll COUl'ON • WITH THll COUPON • WITH T~fll COUPON • • •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• COUPONS DPlll DIC. 24111 t. The Lobs~r 1t1edallion at llRKIHIRl'I 'ON THI IAY'. 2. The Stutftd Mushroom• 'Nlth Crab at THI ARCHll. 3. The Prime RJb at DI LLMAN'I. -4. The Abalone at THI IU IHANTY. ~ 'lbt' Rack of Lamb at CHAILll •llTlb. "ORANGE: COUNTY'S PASTE:ST GROWING PRODUCE: ORGANIZATION" EWPORT PRODUCE PNONI '714711 67U711 "32 YtarJ of Prod-Mee .<"nOtl H010" "Where Qv4lfl!I Is Th• OrdtT o/ the Houte" I I il"_, .. ..,,.,, ....................................... · .. -.-.-................... -.. -.-•• -.. -.... ·•· .. · .. ·.-.-............. -.--.-.--.. -.-.·B·m·.·.-......... ...,.;;'"~'~"~·~""~'m~~~';;;'·~·~'~''~';;;;;;;:-;;;:;;;:;~D~Al~LY~P;IL;llT~J:-:J:~ OUT 'N' ABOUT By NORH STANLEY ORANGE COUNTY'S RESTAURANT, NIGHT CLUB AND ENTERTAINMENT SCENE Yule Reflections During these last few days leading up to De- cember 25, footsore shoppers and 1alesgirls prob- ably take heart in the words. written 400 years.··~ by Thomas Tusser in "The Farmer's Dally Diet • "At Christmas play and make good cheer, For Christmas comes but once a year." Even so, weariness eventually takes a back seat in anticipation of the food, fun and festivity associated with the year's biggest holiday. Espec· ially the opportunities i1 offers for getting tog~er with family and friends while relishing a multitude of yuletide delicacies. FEASTING And if this annual binge of feasting and gifl- giving usually puts everyone in the red, it's taken in the uncomplaining spirit that it was all well worth it. Above all, the reigning mood of Christmas ~s hospitality. With a liveliness marked by a certain sparkle and dash known only this time of year, we jump into the act of ell'lertaining and treating oth· ers. A TIME TO HOST \\le host loved ones, as well as friends old and new. and take special delight in sharing good fel- lowship. In all likelihood this finds its wannest ex· pression in a festive holiday tradition -the abun· dart table. But such a table isn't limited lo the one we ga· ther around for the big meal on Christmas day. It can be the focal point of many related occasions during the days immediately preceding or follow- ing. Like a before or after caroling party or a trim- the-iree supper. Not to mention all the other events that present a logical time for imbibing or dining, \Vhatever the hour, \vhoever the guests. Considering the myriad holiday t ask s she NOW OPEN CHO.W BELL: A .... COIKOl't, coMM•l11t 1111..tlty h-'t , .. t ..nu &r coll!fortt1Mo ,..,.•••INllft. ....... ALL FOOD TAKl·OUT TOO Beefburgers ••• 3Sc •nd 65c Chicken Snack 69c; lunch Box ltc; Dinner $1.29; Thrift Box (9 pcs.) $2.4t; Bucket (15 pcs.) $3.89; Barrel (21 pcs.) $5.39 Fish and Chips 69c; Dinner $1.25 And try our gre•t Chili and Cl•m Chowder Hor.1~: 11 o,,,. •• , P·"'· Su. th,. Thur., Ml••ltllt Prl. & S.. 2576 NEWPORT BLVO. COSTA MESA 541-3172 I Dle19011ollr Across fr•"' Or•11to Co•11ty P.frtl'ffHt) BEAUTIFUL Restaurant .. CHRISTMAS DINNER $4.95 Served from 1 p.m. on The Naturals ----~ ' TH MONTH GALA NEW YEAR'S EVE CELEBRATION 31106 COAST HIGHWAY. SOUTH LAGUNA Re servations 499°2663 l ba!: to perform, the good woman ot the house is certainly up to preparlng no more than one or tw o repasts at home. So the remainder have to be en~ joyed in-some favorite restaurant whe?e the food, comfort and conviviality will be on a par. HARD TO CHOOSE Fortunately there are many su·ch establish- ments in the area. So many, in fact, the--<mly diffi· culty comes in settling on the final choices. Be thankful that too many rather than too fe\v create the dilemma. The reverse• problem wouJd dampen any enthusiasm for going out in the first place. While checking out a number of spots in recent days we found them all brighUy bedecked in holi- day ornament!' and brimming with good cheer. The happy revelers in any group you will be enter- tainin& should inc...,ase the glad tidings all around. Newporter Inn Six speciaJ entrees will highlight the Christmas day menu at the Newporter Inn, 1107 Jamboree Road, Newport Beach. These range from roast Ap- ple Valley tom turkey, $4.95 and roast Long Island duckling, $5.75 to broiled New York sirloin steak. $6.95. All dinners include a relish tray, choice of cream chicken reine rnargot, tossed green salad or \valdorf salad, fresh string beans, baked banana iQUash, whipped potatoes, candied yams, dessert and beYerage. A special children's dinner for $2.95 will include an entree choi.ce of turkey or baked sugar cured ham. Petite Auberge Traditional Chritmas dinner with all the trim- mings will be featured in t'he cozy French country inn atmosphere of the Petite Auberge, 758 St. Clair, corner o,l Randolph and Bristol, Costa Mesa. All entrees on the regular menu will also be a vailable. Serving hours for the December 25 re· past will be 4 lo 9 p.m. Supr•m •lv l •euliful lrliiN1.,.J I, a. SAT. 19'1 ADAMI AVL '°' M .. •ollol 968 5050 HUNTIN•ION llACH • DON JOSE' Back by Popul•r Dem•nd VIC GARCIA LTD with vocals by GERMAINE IN THE FIESTA ROOM FROM 8:30 P.M. to I :30 A.M. FINISJ MDICAN FOOD AT UASONAILI PRI CIS e COCKTAILS e 9093 E. Ad1m1 (11 Ma9noli•l Hunt. leach 962·7911 MAKE YOUR RESERVATION NOW FOR OUR Gala New Year's Eve Party CONTINUOUS ENTERTAINMENT PARTY FAVORS, SPECIA L MENU Fun For Everyone FROM 7:00 P.M. ON NO COYER NO MINIMUM I 37 FASHION ISL.ANO NEWPORT C£HTE1t _ ~ .. •llffWM ......... A•,.. l"o'id"I tllt_..,•"-• 144-20H • Children's Party ~ The good ship Reuben E. Lee \\1ill st/ge its an- nual Children's Christmas Party. again this Sunday , December 21, with the festivities getting under way at 2 p.m. This rollicking event seems to get bigger each year -but ,little wonder. Where other than Ne,vport Beach can the youngsters be treated to the specta· cle of Santa arriving by boat? Once aboard the Reuben E. Lee, the nice jolly man from the North Pole will also be dispensing Joads of fun. favors and goodies for the kiddies. Then he will join the fabulous Skiles and Henderson in presenting a big Christmas sho \v. Ben Brown's There will be a selection of six entrees on the special Christmas menu at Ben Brown's, 31106 Coast Highway, South Laguna. These include such items as roast young tom turkey, $4.95; glazed Vir· ginia baked ham, $4.95; roast prime rib of beer, $6.50. Entrees include rrcsh fruit cu p·, salad or soup. beverage and dessert. Dinner \Vi ii be served Iron1 noon on . Sheraton Beach Inn An unusual restaurant touch Is being offered by \Vay of U1e family style Christmas dinner the.v are serving at the Sheraton-Beach Inn. 21112 Ocean Ave. (Coast Highway), Huntington Beach. ~ For $15 and a 1nini1num ol four persons, each table \Vill receive a complete dinner that includes a full turkey, ham or roast prime rib of beef. Al l of the entree that remains uneaten can be taken home afterwards. The tab for each additional person is set at $3.75. Orante Co.anty's New Intimate ond D•llthtfMI FRENCH RESTAURANT (formf"rly Gerard's\ O,.IN DICIMlllt 2'5 CHRISTMAS OAY DINNER 4 to ' P.M. Cornor of llt•nclolph •nll lrl•tof Coit• Mao S40·l6~l Authentic Cantonese Cuisine L.,11c11 .... Dl11...,-11 :10 •·"'·"' 0 P·"'· S111dor thru Tllul'ld•r 11 :JO •• ,,.,.1 J P·"'· l'ridor ""411 Smrd•y ~mily Dinnen from $1 .89 O riontol Specialties • A Lo Carte Oishe~ OPININQ. SOON: RI KISHA LOUNGI Te111ple Gorde11s CJ1l11ese Relta11ra111 1500 A•olllS fAt Horborl Coit• M"• h'"l119t a. Moetl•t Cstoti"! F10• to G• Ptt..540·1f37 ...., Now At THE CASPIAN TONY SIRIMARCO PorMrtr •f Dn• Mortl11'1, Ylllo Co111ri •fl• Dlpo1,,..·s Special Fri., Sat., Sun., Dec. 19, 20, 21 AU Dl11IWfl Ce11tpl•t• Wltll Shrl111p Coclltoll OPEN SUNDAYS FOR DINNER 2 to 9 NEW YEAR 'S EVE FESTIVITIES 91.,Mlor Mo11w No Ad•oM• 111 r rlc" Mollo R*"".tl•• Now THE CASPIAN 1670 Newpart Blvd. -Costa Mesa -642-8293 No......... ,...,., ltc. IRIAOAST AT 1 A.M. S11 por uoplo INTllTAINMINT-THI aoUNDIRS ,.... ""' s .... * SERVING LUNCH ANO DINNER DAILY MEADOWLARK count r y club GOMEA SIMS, CECIL HOLLINGSWORTH, Co·Ow111rt 1'712 GRAHAM snm HUNTINGTON HACH For llleHrv•tlons Call 146-1116 or 146.1416 --.. .... , """"'""" ___ . The Towc1·s In addition to their regular menu. the Tower.s in Laguna Beach will offer patrons a special Chrb~ mas bill of fare with all the favorite holiday enlree3. Service will be from noon on. ·, The restaurant is located atop the Towers wing . on the Surf and Sand Hotel. 1555 S. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. · More Refle ctions Since Christmas is generally given to remem--· brBn:ce rather than looking ahead, we would like ~ rummate for a moment on some of the things which inevitably creep back into the memory this time of year. Recall a few particulars about holiday Iood that seem to have been around for ages as well as a few that seem to have dropped by the wayside.: • In this last category. for instance, where doe! one go today to find roast goose on the Christmas bill of fare? Not that king turkey doesn't make a savory substitute on contemporary holiday tables \Vh~re he reigns sup reme, but one can't help won- dering ho\v and \vhy goos~ \Vas displaced altogether. As in Dick en~ To the ~est of our kno\vledge it's been quite a f~,~ years. s1.nce anyone even suggested. the possi- b1hty of s1ttLng down to enjoy roast goose at the yul~ ta~le. Yet everyone's childhood must surely be 1ndelibly stamped by recollection of such a treat. . A goose like that so lusciously described in what 1s perhaps the most famous dinner scene in all of I<:nglish literature -the Cratchit's holiday feast in Charles Dickens' "A Christmas Carol". . If it's been some time since you've reread that immortal passage, perhaps a few of the highlights wiJI be in order here. WE OUOTE "Such a bustle ensued that you 1night have thought a goose the rarest of all bi rds; a feathered Continued on Page 24 Old Brussels Rt>.~tu.u.rnnt WINTER SPECIAL -EARLY DINNERS $2.95 SPECIAL EVERT DAT SUN , TH91U THUlt. RESEA'IATIONS 494.7447 : 2007 SOUTH COAST HIWAY -LAGUNA HACH 1------------- t'raneois' CONTINENTAL CUISINE Famoul For FLAMING DUCK Open I I :00 A.M. -Closed Mond•y HUNTINGTON BEA CH, CALIFORNIA 18151 BEACH BLVD. 842·1919 JOSEF'S-----. Proudly Presents T /1e Jol111ny Slaadrael~ Duo Nightly Mond11y thru S11turd•y From 1:30 p.m. 2121 E. COAST HIGHWAY At The JAMAICA INN 673-lllD GAl,A CELEBlt.4.TIO.N NEW YEAR'S EVE NO ADVANCE IN PltlCfS Dinner From Our Regular Menu Sel"fl'd 1111tll 11 P·"'· roov Fowo~. Hott, Nolse111•ken, frc. ENTERTAINMENT DANCINCi WITH JESS PARKER AND DOUG MESSICK SJl·JSIS Jl 7 P.ciflc. c .. 1 Hwy. H6;11tl11ttH lffclri The flying But ler Welcomes You To Th• WONDERFUL WORLD OF OMELETS CH OICE OF 30 OMELETS Otily Entrees lunch or Dinner Served with Reli1h Tray or Hors 'do•uvre• Featuring Pint of Michelob on l•p Hou\ewines By The Gltss 8etf T •• I An Authentic Old-English Orin~ I r ... th,. S.t.-UllC.1111 t• l : Diii!* I-It S111.-L1.cll> ,.J; Df1111er S·f -ClOSID MONDAYS ' 3101 HIWPO~T llVD., HlWPORT HACH l11ter ft•111 portll~ l•t .tlft et t"-Sit• of THI Ue ANI ALI, edlecettt t• Flyl119 l•tlor. I I I I' ,. l l . --..... ------------------~-----------..r-------------- ~~D:~:L:Y:P:l:LO:T::::::::::::::':":'':':·:"':'':":':'':':':': ''=~~,1._Cle:::""'""'""""'""'""'""'""'""'""' ....................................................... ..,.., .... .,..., .. .., ...... .,.,::::1..,r;;:""""'""'""""_,"" ..... '11 18782 BEACH BLVD. HUNTINGTON BEACH 968-2 601 flHE FOOD SERVED tilt A F&Mllf ATMOS,HER• AU You C•n Eat Smorg•sborcl , 12 SALADS-HOT ENTREES-VEGETABLES OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. 10 8:30 P.M. LUNCHEON & DINNER BANQUET FACILITIES WEEKENDER . 'r Continued from Ptt~ 27 pheno1nenon, to which a _blac'k swan ":as a mal.ter of course -and in truth it '"as son1ething very like iL in that house. ·', ... the two young Cratchits set chairs for everybody, not forgetting themselves, and mo~nt· ing guard upon their posts, crammed spoons 1nlo their mou1.hs, lest they should shriek for goose be- fore their turn came to be helped. " .•.. l\lrs. Cratchit, looking slowly all along the carving knife, prepared to plunge it in t h e breast ; but when she did, and 'vhen the long expect- ed gush of stuffing issued forth, one murmur of delight arose all round t h e board, and even Tiny Tim, excited by the two young Cratchils, beat on thl! table with the handle of his knife and· feebly cried 1-turrah ! "There never \vas s uch a gOose. Bob said he didn't believe there ever was such a goose cooked. It's tenderness and flavour, size and cheapness, \Vere the themes of universal admiration. Eked out by apple-sauce and mashed potatoes, it \Vas a suf- ficient dinner for the whole family", MOR E ELABORATE FARE And \1•hile \Ve are on the subj ect of the Crat- chit's Christmas dinner, it might be interesting to compare their simple menu \vith the much more elaborate fare \Ve enjoy nowadays. Test your mem- ory. Do you recall the few dishes that actually comprised that seemingly sumptuous but really quite meager meal? Other than the roast goose, there was sage and onion stuffing, gravy, applesauce and plum pud- ding. That's all. The Party Bar » CHILDREN 'S CHR!57M AS PARTY SUNDAY, DEC f::f'iBE R 21 SIS S. MAIN SANTA ANA "Buon niangiare, roman z.e 1.,."'fj.~ dolce vita." Hey, ~ids! The Reuben E. Lee Chri~tm,i s party is here ag,,in! At 7. p.m. Santa will zoom into the ha rbcr on his speci,,I speedboal, He will then go aboard the Reuben E. lrc lo help Skiles & Hen. derson with their e xciting C hri~lmd\ ·how. Don't miss it. Fun- Fevors-Goodiet.! Gnln NEW YEAR'S EVE DJNN ER 'N' DANCE PAR TY Complete "Full Course" Dinner C hoice of Soup or Salad • NEW YO RK TOP SIRLOIN e ROAST CORNISH OR FILET MIGNON STEAK wilh Mu$hroom cup, Baked pol.tic &-G 11rden Vogelable OR GA.ME H£N, with 6c.e, fresh vegetables MEXIC AN FIESTA DINN ER With All The Tr imm ings, Plu s A Glass of Sparkl ing Champ•gne. $950 Bevera9e PERSON Onstrt J UAN 7.ANl!DO ~~ Hl.'i 1"A ,\l 0 US 8-Plt;CE ilfARJAClll BAND DANCING • ENTERTAINMENT e PRIZES • HATS • NOISEMAKIRS 3201 E . Coatl Hwy. Coron• d•I M•r 675-0470 • f&C"""''711 4) 642·9711 :~oo Parilic CotUt u..,. .. Ne,..port 11~,,h ENTE~TAINMENT BY THE PHIL DE SANTO TRIO RIVIERA ft£15'fAUftANT Continental Cul1in• Cocktails Serving Luncl~eon and Dinner 3londay through Saturda11. Closed Sundays We art loctttd ne){t to tht Mty Co. in South Coast Pla1a. 'Wiim Ezciting 'lJ"ings ~~ Happening! f'Aef-.r' "TAre''• COlll,..;" ;,, IA~ Seollle lAM,t nu,1"' '" tAc k1ulfifld ,llt1taior R .. m B11lt:I f,1111tli«M GRAND HOTEL 7 FREtoMAf'i \\'AY A NA 1rr1M , CALtr , '112-7777 • OUT 'N ABOUT So1ne Goodies Remain Encountering roast goose on the spread of Christmas goodies may not be easy now but there are many items that have stayed with us from times Jong past. And all are readily available in our homes or favorite restaurants during the holi- day season. There are also regional differences, to be sure, \Vhere a dish considered an essential part of t h e feast might be unknown in some other part of the country. As an example, shrimp bisque goes right along wi'th the mistletoe and holly in parls of t h e South but isn't very likely to turn up in New Eng- l and or on the west coast. No boundaries exist, however, \Vhen it ~omes to certain standards. To whet your appetite and start you thinking about partaking of a few during the n~xt week or so, it might be fun to examine sev- e~. J Eggnog Christmas without eggnog? Many is the per- son who would say, "never". A nourishing beverage resembling a liquid cus- tard, eggnog is made of milk, beaten eggs and sug- ar. The common flavorings added are vanilla, nut- meg, brandy, rum or whiskey. Ii: In its association \Yilh the holiday, ft bespeaks relaxation and celebrates the pleasures of friend- ship. Far and away the favorite seasonal drink, its closest rival in popularity is probably the Tom·and- J erry. ARCADIA tpBBY -AIRPoa"r '" FHturhtt StHk • Chlcktn • Italian Cult1nt Se"lng Late Dinners M9fl.•T~11r. U A.M.·1>• A.M. 12f2 PALIUOfS JIO. COSTA ME•A ...... ... ··, "Why don't wt do this ,,,o,, oft1n?'' , ... f ..... t-~ ~f .. :r,,::.· ., . . . .. ·~ l'r!. a Sal. tl: ... 1,. A.M.' 2ll E. HUNTINGTON Olt. AltCAOIA H1 ... 11l • Wt think you should. But tli en, hilv ing offered Laguna's best view of the Pacific- beautiful French Gardens-a wid e choice of good food and drink-con- siderate service- and, enjoying !his unique atmosphere our5elves (or over 25 years, we may be ,_little prejudiced. V1aOR Hu'° Inn Cliff Drive •t Cout Highwdy Laguna Bedch- -494-9477 Open O;iily l uncheon-Dinner- Cocktail~ Sunday Champ!Jne Brunch Banq uel facilitits ;ivai!ab!e CD ~ subsidiary of /IMFAC, INC. • TOP SIRLOIN .................... $1.49 In cludes Belted Potato o r Frenc.h Fries 11nd Speci1I Si11le r Toast. NEW YORK STEAK ........ $1.59 lncludet Belted Potato or French Fri•s and Sptcial Si11ltr TOe1f. EVE RY MONDAY NI GH T IS FAMILY NI GHT TOP SIRLOIN SPECIAL .. $1.29 lncludt1 l•••d Poteto or French fTit1 and Sptcial Si11ltr Toast. All SllllE~ STF .\KS ARf U.S. GOVT. INSl'ECTEO Otr ¥1h11,11 .. .,.,1111 •llow, 1n fe IHl••I t~t tiutllty 111ywh1r1 tf 9rt•lly rtdvctd 11ri c11. HUNTINGTON BEACH r COSTA MESA Ml\.l.Oltf:H !OUAllll TOIJffll I COUllfTAT llHIMO TIJCACO ITATIDll 11JU •Mt~ 1"'6. tll ... U I . !Tri! 4 S.ll!a AM '67fPI CHILD'S flOll:TIOH HALI P'llCI IC•ll.tNfl •'"'-' 12> PHONI IN, •• AU ITIMS AVAii.Aili TO T.t.•I OU'T , • • M ince1neal Of the n1any traditions, prin1arily English, brought to the United States by the early colonists, some of the longest lasting are centered in what is considered proper edibles for Christmas. ~ligh on this list is mincemeat. • A cooked mixture of minced foods and spices, it was originally developed as an alternative to s1noking or drying as a method of preserving meat. Over the years, a number of meatless versions de· veloped. WHAT'S IN IT A typical mincemeat always con tains raisins, a mixture of spices, and a fruit such as apples or pears. It m a y also contain another combination of ingredients such as tomatoes, meat. cur rants, candied fruits, and rum, brandy or other liquor. We are more familiar \vith eating n1ince pie as dessert, bU'L. the actual "minced" pie and it folio\\'· up, mincemeat pie, began in the sixteenth century as a main·course dish. The first pies were more meat than fruit, with just enough sweetness and spice to give them their unusuaJ flavor. The alternative to mincemeat pie 1his time of year is, of course, pumpkin but sharpened holiday appetites can probably account for a piece ol eacn. Jla ppy Holidays to All YOU'LL ENJOY OUR MIDDAY FAER .SUNDAY CHRISTMAS ... DINNER $4.75 Cltll.trn SJ.75 12 P.M.TO 4 PM. CHRISTMAS lflIW ~ I BOA!"P~~ADE I M•k• Now Year'1 Rn. Now f u1c Dirri11!I SoKt 1965 '--------_J 3&11 Lr.~T CuAST 111GHl\'AY D :r. Co•o"' oi<r. ;i,,, Cw'°'"" : S11.U0f0:f'•"$•~•NIR[' PllON E: (711) 675-1374 ~&'\J..~~ 11tl WflrCO.UI HIOHWAT -~(,,!I T '-J ~-NlWPDll HACH CJI~) U6""1 Ted Owens LITILE ·BIG "O" Together Agai n DARREL and EVERm CANCE TO THE COUNTRY ·SIDEMEN 1943 Pl acentia Food & Cocktail s Costa Me11 642-8361 Real Canlonese food e1t htrt or take home. STAG CHINESE CASINO 11 1 21st pl., Ne wport Beach ORiole 3·9560 Ope•,_. Rfoun.t Doltr 12·1Z -f rl. •1111 Sot. 'tll l 1.111. .Appt1r/fll ntw 11 •• , '@if: C£1ao C£ounge 1he 11erb & Joe Trio, \vi!h their own spec1dl blend of mu si< and laughter ,,. lislen and dance every even ins: trorn 6:30 1112 :00. Also, he.i r Bi!I tvlcCl ure ;it the cocktail piano \Villi rune s oi today and yesterday ••• e\·enings from 5:30 ti! 8:00. Enjoy the Herb & Joe Trio, and Bi11 ~ McClure, tonight ;ii the co•~l's fineit hotel .•. I·~ RtMrvt tlona: 494-6574 I Open Daily Di 1 wers : ~~::::·· • l llTAUI ANT AND e SUNDAY 81tUNCH • COCKTA IL LOUHGI e LAlE SUPl'Elt • OINJN<O SPECIAL CHRISTMAS DAY MENU Served from 12 Noon ENJOY A fESTIVE NEW YEAR'S EVE DINNER -DANCING IHTllTAINMINT -IA\'OU Sl!.00 Per Coupl• C1ll For Ra1arv1tlons Oc .. llf,.,t 0!1111>0 ,lolt>ll To....,,., Wf"f of !ourl tnG S1nd H~ltl 1SJI IOUlN (OAll HIOHW"T l"OUHA e EI CH. t l l!,OlllJfll I .. '~"FLING INftlTAINMINT • 7 NIGHlS A WO K DANCING * HAP HALL DUO wttll .... 11...., ....... "'""..,. .... MON,·TUIS,•WID. * Lorry L1kt Singer Guitarut Rur-#Mta Th1•t1r 1~J' ... ':e Costa Mete 141 I. 1 M It. J111t off Nnport llwd. • .----.-------------. ·--..-. y • Frid~. Dtumber 19, 19b9 DAIL V PILOT f!t_ C&W Air at Knott's A country.ftatem hoJlday t~ng over the stage by \he writing field . package will be enjoyed by campfire; She t r a v e I e d Knott'• Berry Farm 15 visltors to Knott's Berry througti EuroJ>e with the Bob located at 8039 Beach Blvd., Farm's covered Wagon Camp Hope Show and In the U.S. has just two miles south of the tor ten straight days through toured almost every State Saota Ana Freeway in Buena Chrlltmaa and New Year's Falr throughout the country. Park. weekends. She is papular on televlslon1-:;;;::;:::;;;;::;:::;;:;:;:;:;;~ Starting an Fr l d a y , shows, with such stars as Ten-I . December 26, a handsdme set nesaee Ernie Ford, E d of twins known as the"Chap-Sullivan, Roy Rogers, Jackie para! Brothers" will d o Gleason, Jack Benny and Jim· several shows featuring their my Dean. recorded song hits. This fast Bringing to a close these two rising paJr have a unique great weekends Is a male countfy folk sound along with vocalist Crom Gene Autry's fine guitar accompanlml!'nt. MelOdy Ranch, Billy Mize, He TROPICAL FISH SOUTH SEAS Largest Selection of Tropical Fish & Supplles 1n the area. Now lloccrtt.at 111 '#.WU.SON, COSTA M•SA loft Pe!rvltw Rd., S.1H'I 171.0, IUvtnld1 Or. -N~ BUd! (Dflllnd fll4I "°'' Offttt) ~ The following e v e n Jn $ • has crossed the lines or popu- Saturday, December 27, will tar music with his renderings feature a versatile grouf, or of songs. Not only does he take western entertainers, ' The the spotlight with his singing Frontiersmen and Joanie." talents but he has also Credited wit.h such record hits established himseU in the song'"'--------~· aa "l Dreamed of A Hlllbilly1;;:;:=================::;, Heaven" and "Rodeo USA," t his group has p l ayed numerous rodeos and state fairs throughout the nation. Their popularity comes from their instrumental talent as well as vocal ability. '1(·• J'outh Coas t Repertory ,,.. "ARR-ABAL" ' An •vllll!lf " s-·· MDII Contn1W...i.1 P"1W!'ltl'll ENDS SATURDAY P'1d1y & 1•111rcl1y~:>O ,,,,,,-llf7 N•wf!Off, Ctti. Mnt--441-13•! 11 SCR CHILDREN'S THEATRE -"WINNIE THI POOH sunda.,, -1 1nd t:H FINAL Ptiltl'ORMAHCE Dec. u On Sunday, December 28, a veteran of the country field, J immy Wakely, will introduce his son ahll da u gh t er, newcomers to the stage, to lhe;\~~P7.=~=~==~::~======~~~ Knott's audience. Wakely, who ! OPtN D>.IL'l 6pm-CLOS£D MONOA'1S 81\EAKFAST MIDNIGHTt..4.,,. (rn;m &UN.) 333 BAYSIDE, NtWPORT BEACH 673-2733 • 673-2680 Valley Higli on Television started his rise to fame on the Gene Autry Melody Ranch Show, bas a long history of mllllcm sellers l n c I u d I n g ; · ·"Heartaches," ' ' S I i p p i n Around" and 1'0ne Has My Name." Appearing with him will be his son, John and daughter, Kathie. Fountain Valley High School will h~ve a team on television, Sat., Dec . 21, \\'hen "Jt's Academlc'' is aired over Channel 4 at 12:30 p.m. The team mem- bers are :ri'Iichael fVlix, Captain Bill Lancaster and Bari.Jara Ackley, The show · was taped in October for showing on this date. For four days, December 29 through January 1, "The GRAND OPENING BUBBLY COLD CHAMPAGNE INCLUDED WITH EVERY ADULT PRIME RIB DINNER Sue Signed In TV Rol e In the Galleries Beaverhill String Band" willl.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ be performing in the Covered Wagon C a m p. This young group OD guitars, banjo and bass present a fresh, riew bluegrass sound that has recently become so popular. Roast PRIME RIBS-OF BEEF C.-mm GIANT Rll ROASTS. Served with fr•h $385 ......-1.., fluffy wh lppMI poratoes, ''"'" C191M9ll homradllh "''"• 101p or Mlocl, dreul119 DIAMOND JIM BRADY CUT ...... 4.BS CHILD'S PORTION ................. 1.so UltLY PRIMI Rll DINNER SPECIAL SJ.ti MOND.t.Y THRU FRIDAY ONLY! 4·6 P.M, LUNCHEON FROM 11 A.M. Sat. & Sun. Open 4 p.m. OPEN SOON COCKTAIL LOUNGE KING-SIZE COCKTAILS WE WILL IE OPEN CHRISTMAS DAY Serving From 1 P:m. COMPLETE TURKEY DINNER $3.25 Child's Pl•te (Under 10) $1.75 Also Our Regular Menu OPEN 7 DAYS Reservations Acc epted 428 EAST 17th STREET COSTA MESA 645-0990 Sue Ann Langdon has been set by producer-creator David Swift to star as Herschel Bernardi's wife in "Arnie," a 20th Century-Fox Television projected half-hour comedy series. Swift also has\set Stephanie Steele and Del Russell to play the couple's teen-age children in the pilot he is directing, from his O\.l.'n teleplay. ro'R[M£LY t•Rcr STOCK • r~eninp 'tll 1~ !~~2.~~~~!J~ f ~0-219_1 __ 1743 Hollywood Blvd. llol]J'woad (213) HO UJ91 THE MOTION PICTURE CODE AND RATING PROGRAM The Motio11 Piclur• Cod• a nd Ratin9 Admini1lro1tio11 1pplie1 th• following ratings lo film1 di,lribuled in th• U.S.A. Pic- furots rated G, M or R qualify for th• Cod• S1al. .. Pictur11 rel1d X do not r•c•iv1 a Seal. Th i r1!in91 1pply to piclure1 1e!1a11d 1ft1r Novam- ber 1, 1768. Pictures refe11ed befor• ih81 d1ie •U• de1crib 0 1d 11 previou1ly ( end/or SMA), <I& @-Su99e1ted for GENERAL 1udi1ncet. IMJ-Su991d1d for MATU RI oudi1nc11 (Perentel dii- cretion advitedl. ®-llSTRICTED -P1r10111 under 16 not 1dmift1d, 11nl1s1 accomp1ni1d hy p1r111f or edult 9u1rd- ien. ©-P'eno111 •Her 16 11or ' edmltted. This 191 r•· 1lriction mey b1 h19h1 r in certain 1r111, C~1ck PIZZA HOME DELIVERIES HAVE CHANGED A LOT SINCE THE OLD DAYS •••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• • • : @)~~~-1-~..J&'<d.__ Caribe Room • 97~-~ ~ ' PRESENTS . ' • ENTERTAI NMENT -DA NCING -Mond•y thru S•turd•y • • • • • • • • • Featuring WALTER WANDERLY & HIS 9UINTET FAMILY STYLE CHRISTMAS TURKEY, HAM or PRIME RIBS ol BEEF (T1kt Hom• Whit You Don't E•t) llffCMd.. let0Mt11eellt d -$11 fet taftiMUM of 4 ,.,...M MAKE NEW Y EARS' RESERVATION NOW • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 21112 OCEAN AYE. fC-t Hwy.I -HUNTINGTOH BEACH -536·1421 • ~-·······························~ I. - I , Mesa Library Offers China Painters' Art CHALLIS GALLERY -1390 So. Coast Highway, Laguna Beach. Hours : 11 a.m. • 5 p.m. daily. Currently on exhlbit through Dec., paintings and drawings of Virginia Dan and watercolors by Frank Hamilton. ,.. SADDLEBACK GALLERY -Saddleback I n n, Santa Ana Freeway at 1st St., Santa Ana. Hours: Tues. -Fri. • 11:30 a.m .• 10 p.m.; Sat. 3 to 11 p.m.: Sun. 5 to9 p.m.; Mon. 11:30 a.m. -2:30 p.m. Paintings by western artist Olaf Wieghor1t, through Dec. 31. Rolling in on F r i d ay, January 2, art Lucille Starr and Bob Regan, "The Cana- dian Sweethearts." Featuring pop, country-western a n d rock-a-billy music, t h 1 s vers11tlle duo was featured on ABC TV's "Country America" Show for two years. Lucille St!rr's hit records include "Yours and Jolie Jacqueline" and '"Ibe French Song." The latest release of Bob Regan , the world's fastest guitar player, i11 a great instrumental rendlUon of "Tarantula" and "Highland Lanie.'' On Saturday, January 3, lovely Mollie Bee, who has • OCC ART GALLERY -2701 Fairview R o ad, Costa Mesa. Hours: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Mon. -Fri.; Wed. 7 • 10 p.m. On exhibit through Dec. 20, photography by VlauaJ Dia- logue Foundation of San Francisco. DOWERS MUSEUM -2002 N. Main St., Santa Ana. Hours: 10 a.m. -4:30 p.m. Tues. -Sat.; I tO S p.m. Sun.; Wed. and Thurs. eve. 7.9 p.m. No charge. On exhibit through Dec., antique toys from Museum's collection; oll palnUngs by Evelyna Nunn 1t1iller. already become a legend inl-::=:=:=:=:;: ;;;J::: HUNTINGTON BEACH LIBRARY -.525• _MaJn SL, HW1t- ington Beach. On exh.ibJt during regular U!>rarY, hours aJ!CI Sundays 1-5 p.m. through Dec., oil painUpss .. by Sylvia· Paalus. · COSTA ~1ESA COUNTRY CLUB -1701 Country Club Drive, Costa Mesa. Oil, acrylic and pastel palnUngs by Helen Pat- zer will be on exhibit on the cl ub 's second floor during the month of Dec. MUTUAL SAVINGS AND LOAN -2861 E .. Coa3l 111(0. way, Corona de! Mar. On exhJbit during regular b~eu hours through Dec .. waterco lors by Joyce Edwardl. 1\fESA ART LEAGUE -513 Center St., Costa Mesa. Hours: Sat. and Sun. 1 to 5 p.m. Continuous exhibit of art work in various media by Art League members. No admission charge. CJVIC CENTER GALLERY -3300 West Newport Blvd., Newport Beach. Hours : 8:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Mon. -Fri. On exhibit through Dec., oil and watercolor paintings by Ha 1 Akins. SO. CALIF. FIRST NAT'L, BANK -17122 Beach BI v d., Huntington Beach. On exhibit during regular business hours, through Jan. 9. oil paintings by Peggy Russell. COST A MESA LfflRARY -566 C e n t e r St., Costa Mesa, On exhibit during regular library hours through Dec. Calif. China Painters Association exhibit with work py local art- ists, Grace Knowlton, Frances Morrill altd Felic ia Horvath : Dolls of all nations by Emmeline Hejomer and oU and acrylic acrylic painting by Francis Ryder. 1\IESA VERDE LIBRARY -2968 .Mesa Verde Drive E 1 1 t, Costa Mesa. On exhibit during regular library hours through the month or Dec., oil paintings by Marian and Burrell Ries. CORONA DEL MA R LIBRARY -420 Marigold, Corona rlel Mar. On exhibit through Dec., during regular library hours, an exchange exhibit of art from the children of Japan. CAMERA WORK GALLERY -2400 W. Coas t lfighway, Newport Beach. Hours: Thurs. and Fri. 5 to 9 p.m.; Sat. 12 to 9 p.m.; Sun. 11 a.m. lo 9 p.m. Galleiry limited to photo- graphy, with work of Al Weber on elthlblt throucfl'Dec. MARINER'S ,LIBRARY -2005 Dov.er Drive, Newport Beach. During regular library _hours, the Jr. Ebell Artist of the' Month exhibit featuring oils, wa tercolors and acrylics bv Audrey Hill, through Dec. NEWPORT HARBOR ART MUSEUM -400 Main St, Bal· boa. Hours: I to S p.m. Wed. through Sun.; 8 to 9 p.m. Mon. Closed Tues. On exhibit through Jan. 18, more than 30 paint- ings in black and white by Robert Rauschenberg, New York painter, done in the years 1962-63. WEINERT-CLARK -32 Fashion Island,' Newport Beach. On exhibit during regular bwllnesa: hours throuah Dec., paintings by Ron Roesch. GIVE TRAVEL FOR CHRISTMAS CHA1to1' 1T AT Cut Rates For Youths For the first time, Center Theatre Group will offer dis- count subscrlpUons a n d reaerved seat Jocationa to high school and fllll4ime college students for p r e v I e w performances and matinees of the entire urro season of five new plays scheduled for the Mark Taper Forum at Music Center in Los Angeles. Included in the $10 subscrip- tion package will be the world premlere productions of Conor Cruise O'Brien's "Murderous Angels," Harvey Per r • s "Rosebloom," and Derek Walcott's "The Dream on Monkey Mountain" and the American premieres of Brian Friel's "Crystal and Fox," and Howard Sackler's new pla), "The Pastime of Monsieur Robert." The season opens February 5. Student auNcrlben also will be afforded the opportwtly lo participate in ttie lnno'iatlve New Theatre For Now series at the Mark Taper Forum, wlllch has always been offered to Forum subscribers on an u:clualve priority basis. The Mark Taper Forum earlier e.atabliahed a student "R.uab Hout" Polley of selling remaining e ats to a J I performances one-hall hour before curtain at a discount price, a policy which also will remain in effect during the coming seuon. Ask Mr. Foster TRA VIL Sl!RVICI ROBINSON'S NEWPORT CENTIR 644-1661 ' \ Second Great PiX I E=.= ' .,,.__, --' HARBOR at AOAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102 ON HARBOR BLVD •• ONE MILE SOUTH o~ SAN DI EGO rwr. World Premiere Engaqement "One of t he 1m11hln9 box office t uccts .. • of 19701" -L.A. Times DUSTIN' HOFFMAN 'MIA FARROW • IS John "'JOHN & MAIY" ft 11 _, ·' -· ...... M pfffe of tlttertolnmHI." ·-Charl11 Ch1P11plin L.A. Tim1l "U•q1•tfe11obly, It h •lie of tllll 111pnlt 9CCM1plllft • ...., 011 111111 of th yeerl"' -LA. Er1P11i~1 r -....- e CONVENIENT SHOW TIMES e Wtcl.-Tll.........,,.,.,, D.c. 1 7·ta.1f-7~30 _, f :JI Co•ri ..... •• 1..., hy s-tf11t Del. II 1 :lt-11»-l:lo-7tJO-t~• , ... ~ • . -' • ' . - • • , • I • l . ' J I ,f L ·--. ---·-· -.-·----------------------·· -------------------------------·-·--- • DAILY PILOT 'Joh1i and Mary' at Mesa Mia Farrow and Dustin Hoffman star in the con- temporary love story, "John a nd Mary,''' current- ly screening at local theaters. The "R" rated motion picture concerns the "now" life of a you ng couple who meet, have a sudden affair, and decide they are in Jove -all within 24 hours. Studio Gives Backing For Collegiate Films An unusual alliance between a majo r university and a leading motion picture com· pany in a film·making pro- gram has been announced by Davidson Taylor. dean of the Columbia University School of the Arts, and Fred Weintraub, vice-president for creative services of Warner Bros. \Varner Bros. '"ill finance and distribute a series of short films produced entirely by students in the Film Division of Columbia's School of the Arts. The students will receive course credit towards their master of fine arts degrees. Calling the Warner Bros. ac- tion "a bold cultural in- itiative," Prof. Arthur Barron, chairman of the School's Film Division, said that "Hollywood is now opening the door to young talent and we at Colum- b:ia University are enthusiastic about it." NOW FOR THE PRE-HOLIDAY- THIS DOUBLE FUNNY REVIVAL NOW AT REGULAR PRICES Agent 007 Back in Ne.w One Editor'• Note: Th l• movie auidt is prtpared by tlie films committee of Harbor Council PT A. Mrs. John Ctark ts president and 1'frs. Hart Sweeney is committee chairman. It is intended as q rtfertnce in determining suitable fUms for certqiu a g e groups and will appear weekly. Your 'Views are .'lblicited. Mail them to Mo- vie Guide, care of the DAILY PILOT. * * * ADULTS The Ambusben: Spy spoor -third in Matt Helm Series starring Dean Martin. John aail.~tary tR): Dustin Hoffman and Mia Farrow star in this contemporary love story about the "now" life or a young couple who become deeply involved in a 24·hour period. Lady in Cement: Private eye Tony Rome (Frank Sinatra), finds blonde encased in cement. His girlfriend also is murdered in this tale of violence and crime. Raquel \Velch. The Silencen: Satire of super-sleuth Matt Helm. Dean t-.1artin stars. THE Sterile Cuckoo !R): Liza Minnelli gives a sensitive performance in this story or two lonely college kids who find love for the £irst time. \Vendell Burton also stars. MATURE TEENS AND ADULTS The Chainnan (M): Gregory Peck is a Nobel Prize winning scientist who is sent on a spy mission to Red China. Anne Heywood co-stars. The Comic (M): T h e triumphs and failures or a corned)'. star who was an early flollywOod • ' K i n g ' ' is portrayed by Dick van Dyke. On Her Majesty's Secret Service (M): Ne1v James Bond film starring George Lazenby, Diana Rigg, Telly Savalas. TEENS AND ADllLTS Tk cutllmu nte (GI: SenU-tal story ab!>ut a father and IOh relatlonahlp which overthadowt the background GI &nti-nuclur protest. William Holden, Virna Lisi, Brook Fuller. Don't DrW: die Waler (GI : Screen adaptation of Woody Allen'a play about the trials and tribulaUona of the American family 1 b road • Jackie Gleason and Estelle Parsons itar. Rome. and J11llet: ~hakespeare's clmic becomes vividly new with 1plepdor and excitement undfr Zeffirelli's freah casting and direction. Leonard Whiting and Olivia Hussey. . Sweet Charity (GI : Charity is a sw.eet dance-hall hostess who searches £or Jove and under! tan ding . Shirley MacLaine stars in tbe tlUe role of this musical. ZOO!: A Spoce ()deqey (GI : Fascinating film about the history of formation of earth through the development of man to travel in apace. Speoo tacular visual effects. Kier Dullea, Gary Lockwood. The Undefeated (G): Post Civil War story 0£ a friendship New Lewis Film Begins "Which Way to the Front?" Jerry Lewis' first. motion pic- ture for Warner Bros., has begun filming at the Warner Studios in Burbank, Calif., with Lewis producing, direc- ting and starring as one of America's richest young men. Appearing with Lewis are Jan Murray, Willie Davis, John Wood, Steve Franken, Sidney Miller and Oak Rambo. Joe E . Stabile is Lewis' associate producer; Russ Saunders, production manager; John Beekman, art director : Ralph Hurst, set decorator, and Al Overton Sr., SOU'1Himan. Exclvslve Eng111mentl that blolsome between two Colonell. Jolla Wayno.Unloa and Rock Hudson-Confederate, Mio meet m route.to Mexico. WOlt Side Slor)-r Modem cloy mual<:al lbt"1ftlatl<>o ol 'Romeo and Juliet. Stan Natalie Wood and Richard Beymer. FAMILY Croy World ti I.art! I< llordJ: w. c. Fields: Frae- turtd Flickers: Enlertalnlng escerpts from old rum.. JOWMy t. *lie Far Side of Ille Sa (G): 21st Century astronauts explore unknown planet which appean to be a mirror m the ~arth. Roy Thin- nes, Lynn Loring. KnbCoa, E11t If J•Ya (G)1 Awesome, volcanic eruptlm of Krakatoa and the ·monstrous tidtJ wave that follow•. furnish the framework and cllibu of th1I tale of a sunken trealtll'e. Spectacular special effects. Maxmllllan Sdldl, * * * Brian Keith and Diane Baker. The letter immediately Oliver ( G ) : Spectacular aj~r the title indicates the musical version of Dickens's , rating given the picture by classic about an orphaned wall the Motion Picture Code. cast Into the teeming squalor The Moti<nl Picture Code of the lower class. He finally And Ratmg Program may SHOW TIMES 7:00 & 9:10 MATINEE SUN . 2 escapes to the elepnce of the be found on the motionj·~~~;;;!:p;9p;;~P1;;;,ri~r~~r.i~;:,~:i upper class. Mark Lester, picture page. _4 nimal World Opens At Springs Tramway Animal World, a large new There are two lion cubs, zoo featuring many kinds of a jaguar cub and a Jeopard wild and dome:stic animals, cub living together in a cage irlcluding a television star, has in comparative peace. TwG of opened at the Palm Springa the largest species of African Aerial Tramway. wltures, known as Griffin Animals from around the vultures, are on display in a world have b e en arriving natural setting. There is a steadily and are established cage full of baboons and one in their new homea in the 10 featuring four leopards, two acrt site alongside the Tram~ African and two Asian. way's Valley StatiGn. Animal World is the newest Gray said one especially in· of a series ()f animal parks tcresting exhibit will feature operated nationwide by Inter-Bcmnie and Clyde, two African national An i ma I Exchange, Cheetahs, a male and a female world's largest importer of he has raised together in lhe wild animals. hope that the Palm Springs George Gray, internationally. environment will bring about a birth aMouncement. a rare know"n trainer ~ho has trained occurrence for cheetahs in many of the animals appear- LATE SHOW TONIGHT' -AL)-THEATRES SEE 80TH FEATURES AS LATE AS IO:JO P.M. 001 DH• II A91in "On Ner M•l•••v's Sterel S1rvlce" (Ml Pl1" "Tt l(itl A Or1,on" IMI Jthn Wavnt lltock HullHft "Tll• llndlftaled" !Gl Gr~v Pt<t "Th• Clltlr1111n" (Ml M!lti G•vnor "Soutlt P•c!llcl' 0 •11111• Revnold• •'Tnt Un1ln~•lll1 Molly llr<iwn" ~· Oein M•rlln "The Ambu•h1r•" plu• "Thi SlltnCl'l'I" THE SKINNY ONE and THE FAT ONE and .. I STA RU CHRISTMAS DAY I THE REIY!R: il.•SCOUNDfllEL, •OPIRATO" •nl•.IRAWLIR •••• ing on sUch nationwide tele-captivity. vision shows as Daktari, Cow-The large pelting areas I ~~~~~~~~!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ boy in Africa and Gentle Ben, where children may lrander is in charge of the new zoo.~ amid tame animals of many IN ~~1'JHIJE. ~­CIAZT WORLD 0' LAURE'l & HARDY PLUS W. C. FIELDS PLUS PllACTURID fUCKIH CGnllnuo~1 Stl ... s ...... l:H p.111. GREA1' ~ONIE. W. C. Fields 1~:=19:.,Jeeves} 11~=======::::::::::;1 Jr. or.a hour of clauic Irreverence BALBOA •The Barber Shop 673 A048 •Tho Ph.rmac;,1 -r • The Fatal Glass of Beer OPEN "We have brought in many species features deer. llamas. outstanding animals and will alpacas, goats from many continue to brin& in more as countries and tortoises so they become available," said large children can ride on Gray. "One of our outstanding them and have their picture animals is a beautl!ul, big taken. tiger named ·Serang who \\'as Animal World is lmmediate- the star of the Enco Tiger ly adjacent tG the Aerial television commercials," Gray Tramway Valley station and said. riders on the Tramway will Also included in the animal have an excellent view of the ("T'aint a fit night out ..• ") 4:41 "THE CRAZY WORLD OF ~~ 1.~~-1. dis p I a y are two baby ele-animal park. The zoo will be NATIONAt.CE,.11tAL.COlt"O•A110N phants, a baby camel and a open from 10 a.m. to dusk. F C09Ta...., iebra so tame he will allow a seven days a week. There is ox !.1[115 11 __ c_hi_m_;pa_nz_e_e_t_o_r_Id_e_o_n_hi_m_. __ •n_a_dm_iss_i_on_ch_ar_g_•_. ---I LAUREL AND HARDY and W. C. FIELDS" NOW AT TWO THEATRES Co11rh1110•1 Daily ''°"' 2 GROVE 9611 O.rd•n Grov• llvd. 537-6600 Acr•s of Frn Parklnt Co11tf1n1011J Soturdcty •nd S111tdoy fN111 2 HOLIDAY MATINEES DAILY AT 1:30 ONLY FOUR MEN HAVE WALKED ON THE MOON. FOR THE REST OF US, "200 i" IS AS CLOSE AS WE'RE LIKELY TO GET. MGM,_.,.' STAHL.IT IU.11111«. l'll:OO\lt'TIOJI 20Q!:.._, a space._.,_.,, CINERAMA ,,.,,.......,....,,,.. 11-..01~ 11! IR DUll(A • G~ LOCKWOOD ttlf511U>vl ••STANLEY KU8111Cl-AllTHUll C.Cl.A~l SUl'111: f'ANAVIS10tr-111rr1toeou>R Tlclt•• 9'to IOI! ot;k, i ... .ir,1)1• tt ~1~:121~1 1~ NOW SHOWING EXCLUSIVE AREA ENGAGEMENT 'lena's investiga- tion of foreign policies, non- violent resistance, distribution of wealth, women's rights, family problems, etc. is npple- mented with her quest for a good sex life." John Si- SlttOitp1,....,1111·1iMt91• ,....,,11 NOW PLAYING The One, Only And Original I ~· .... ~----· -MUI 0 • ISlllA M ~'!!'.4 Alse P1oyl1t1 r-------.. ---! WILLIJIN HOLDEN VIRNll LISI llOORYIL "THECHRI~ TREE" ........... ~ .• ' 1,. Sii•• St9rrl 7 , . .._ C.llff1t•••l Sll9w s ..... , "'"' 2 , .... EXCLUSIVE Now •t regul•r prices BROAOWAY"S SMASH MUStCAL NOW THE MOST EXCITING ~IE IN YEARS! _j_ I Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Perforated: Abbr. 5 Er.gage in literary pursults 10 -···gir l 14 Rep ute 15 C1vil ies 16 Bui lding sign 17 Airline public<1tions 19 Place of lodging 20 Having a d\vldlng Jf'lembrane 21 Rel ic 23 Solt parts of the body 25 Ntgatlvt word 26 Mar~ Twa in, lo h!s mother 21J ---· t111le 34 Adored on e )5 Herr.ando De •••• 37 Iron ore: Var. 38 \Veiqht un it 3'1 Piece of ea rth 41 Card 42 Discomfit 44 Webs 45 Ceased to e~isl l • " 40 Won bac'- ·4a·Scottish VI Ps 50 tlumtrital prtfll 51 Wood en s!iclc 53 Ltast adamant 57 Former bl Ri vt r of t:ie Sovltl Union b2 Chauffeur: 2 words &4 Female an Im al bS Abstnce from one'J cour.try &Et Bastba lt team: 1nrormal 67 Trudgt &8 Sacr<1mtnto or SI. Lawrence &If Ir.stet DOWN l Uten5ils 2 "·-Was A Lady" 3 Play • Restlt SS 5 "Ctrtalnlyl": 2 word s Et Garmtr.IS 7 Not wtl,I I Abound ' h.-f-+-f-II 20 Yesterday's Puzz le Solved: I' I S S A N t I 12/19 /&9 • Je.vish 39 A! !hat ascetic plac e 10 Evo!ullonary 40·Hawaiian 11 Bov ines 43 Un!lktly 12 Ma in poir.1 to ch an9I!' 1) Gtrm1n 45 Reqimentlr.g emperor food Intake 18 Story 47 Titl e 22 One with a •If ASSl!'r! low IQ S2 Klr.d of 24 Fetllngs of fabric enmity 53 Cisltrr. 26 Hindu 11ullar 54 01 lht mouth 27 Soll 55 G1mbllng 28 Minute qame or91nie unit S& Vehlclt )0 C1stlt 58 Russiar. dl!'ler.st mar.'s nam e j l Sedan 59 After ; J 2 Movtd on a Comb. form curvtd path 60 Formerly 33 Rtqulremer.ts 63 XII plus 36 Fttneh rlvtr II . ' ,,-,,,.,..,,.,, ...... ,.., • " F~'oDl.IC!D 11 fll•ECTfD IY $C~lENPl~Y ~1 t'-SIOO~ 1~c JIOl'tL I" BEN KADISH PETER YATES JOHN MORTIMER MERVYN JONES .,_ MUSIC B'I' I • ~ QUINCY JONES Panavision• C.I~ by DelU>e ···--' 21td FIATUJ! 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' luillrm 1~ 88 CIJ W s-t (t) (JO) Bill 10:00 11(1) ........ f'itAlp (C) Dini fUllb 11 1 CIA 11tnl whtl CI) ED St:y KnU (C) tries to fbld 1 prof•aot who Ns : (C) "CM111 at ft11Mr lrtllll IR or North Arntricl, tnp· R'!Vll"' (wuttrn) '53-Guy ·~•dison. pln1 Mu ind tht Olief. frank Loftjor, Ver1 Milu. II ID I ptCW I Mlrt (t) (60) ID Mn: "CilJ If Millin1 &iris" TH llCOlld fl ttlt G. E. Monorr1m (mystll')') '41-.lohn Alche r, llriel. llftlduced by Lou Hazim, ID - wt1 fikMd °"' tti1 ruutd t9IT1in I~ Qlu-..,·Doe CC) of thl Slh&tl dntrt. . ' OJ 6 Aft fOlllulf Difi. 8..., 1111 st.rs (Cl (30) Jot ~ iionlf iC) G1me htld 11 C.lllPlftllll, Dtvid H1rtm1n, Ve1"1 lhe homt ,.n of tilt Usltrn Di· Millt IUfll. ~is~ winftlf-..ithrr Nt111 York Jell ·- PLAIN JANE PERKINS !lff,n.o.......-l:Z.·!f ... r.-.,,. ... J.<");16- JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS ANt>GWCE A6'AJN ... B(ff)CIJEl)Uit'1 ..... I DMI or Hou$10fl OIPtra. lame tlmt lub· (C) (JO) Monty Hall botts.. jett to d11n11. r-------------;:--, fM? SA~KA100N, SA~TCHEW.AN? . G ..... $ lllowit: "'"'" Drire g Mwil: "Al Act ol Mwd.-(dr•· ® You MEH-1 z W!NT AN[) , i., llaM" (drl1111) '4e>-11umphr1y m1) '48-F1tdric Mudl. \.l,ARTBU~N ~ CONNe:CTS:DYOUTffe'R'E? lollrt. Mn SlwNSan, Gtor1e Rift D t111CIJ•11111ver <C> coNr-LOMc~•rcs ·• ITNlll w C11••-(C) 130) G Mowil: ·~ O•Utr" (wttl:· ~ ~l"f" ~ ... WJ;L.l.., Slt.L.Y M" ! ....... "'DlllllNI (C) (60) ·•rn) 'l5--llrblr1 St1nwyct. ~'? o~, IT'S You, 1'le fltlldl CW f30) ll:0118tBJ(J) llflC!ILI TM S.11 Mii'· 1-l.A~T8URN .H°""?MY,. l fl!. ~ tf .,. (JO) Q1 lowl (C) Nebrasb ~s. t eorr ia 11 'fOU A~f: A & 1"91111 (1)1"' llM ,.,,, (C) (30) ~-El Pa.,; leJ1s. (e>OSSP.·\TC~ lf ~.~ o,~~·'. • W ... ., (30) y (I) GE> f1ntl&tic Voritt (C) r-!" "" ft.(l)Q)Tlll lrNr lllltdl ll:JD (l)(D. ••J:un Bind· J ODP,Y... i~ ) " (la) "'fh• Yoiol of Dlritl:mas." (C) Kathr Gtrvtr and Boyce '9<;,.,ro;;;::~ ',•i ~7~ CINI COMil ~ wi!tt llfJnlHlt' 1 &, Hirt lunl. I , ~ • .,, ..._ cindm1s •Win · GI llltlt:: iCJ "TM .. .., Ha111t· '" Mt ..... " liq • "" dlDir. il' (Wiiiem) '54--ft1tldolpll Scott. 1-"'•"'ICI<"'> m_.,.,. • ._.._. .... ._../feltln (JO) (Mem) 'S7 -Jirn Dwis, 1...-(C) ~) (R) '; "'i' -(C) (30) !I '"'••m•• ,., -IC> c"' ' . -~ -...... ... turntOlt-hln· u.111e11ao1r. .,.. ..., " °'· ... ,.,!Qr .. INNdcllt 1111 Pf'IPI· lllllf" (4"11111) '44 -G1ry Coojllf, 11 \!'~ .......... , th.II, in reelitJ, is l1r.llw Der. Sip H•*· II. 1 eode 4"ilMd lo . INd 1llied • Tllh f ...... · !F YOU CAH 8RJN6 BACK THE 6RoUMD-off SERIAL f.IUMSERS OM ROD'S -cAr; I t.AY 0005. YOlllL FIMD IT~ ,.-...,. to 111 1nemr w1r pf1nt. . IDS.. Iii USA (C) "Altroworld. .. ,.. 8 U (I)., M••• of Ille , ... lZ:JD 8 llltM: '11M lllht Toech" (111- CI) (Iii) "ll11rie M11 ie." Jell Dillon m1na:) '51-stewtrt Cri nger. {T'Oftf FllM:iou) and fem MU· m Mowil: ''TllM1' Hilflwlf" (drl· .n (Slllfll Siint Jamts) disco~er m1) '49 -Richard Conte, \Mt rlflRftl money, offertd lor t~e. ,. m °'" ...... (CJ rttvrn of a lost child, can 111111 , G .,._ (() t' • IMl'l1t a Wiii 1s induslfi1I "'!,j --1.• G lltft: ._,for 191 look" ,w... Mut Rich1111n, c.r11 Borel!1, '(comedy) '47-Rt111ld rr-.,1111. AntDillltl:• lower, ~h K1rr i nd • ·~tll In~ Tfldtrs / Pllblk £tnrd tj, MiMOn.llllsl, ~ filll.'(C), ·• . • ..,_ .. s.1111 Seu (CJ (3!})1 I c.rai 4t Mtljlrts (JOJ1 •'§w. Spttlldors of Persia.H J1ck , s,orts Wottd (C) "1963 Dir· ~ "°311. tinrton Southern 500."' B!J!(l)GMr. D_. Con ti l·J11Hiclt School lnkelball fiiM (C) (30) '111t Rmll of tht ' Cllrisbll• SO«fal (C) ltlCbt 'ri1adt." Lonafellow joiM ,..,._. (C) th• ja11iftlr .. R'ice to lt11n mon fNbn (C) •!lout runnln1 his"" com1>1111. z:aa3a oo n.. Arcllil.,. (C) I ..... ft'Mt (C) (90)60 Movlr. (C) ''Wltusl'' (1dvtn· 1'l Ill '""' (C) ( I . t111e) '59 -Ceor11 Mol!ttotiitiy JM. • .,.. Wntw11 fMM fllt1-- . ' • (IO) "D1wn Rider," 1935. :::.· El(. DIYld F1rr1r, Ru Int· -~ lllllW 0.. (XI) stir· V1Tr1"I the W1dd fC) ~The ff.t Jolfll'll dt Kt)"Mlr 11rts1s. Mount1ins Ara Smokin1." •"""" T.,.U.• (30) 1:lD I Wapn Tt11ft (C) .. •II([} CU frtd1J MO: (C) Cllllllr I ....... llWll: fer SeWI lfltllln" . Tllo A..., (CJ ' • (ldnfttUrt) 'SC--Howlrd ·~1, lint l :• II a (j) Tllo Monktt1 (Cl ,_.11, Rus T1mblyn, Jtff R1ch11'ds. 8 Mfwll: (C) "T1q11t" (wasltrn e,..,.., Alllf Dirt (~) (60) drtm1) '65-Tonr Younr Din Our· Gunll are Siiiy Mirr, M1n1n Worth, )It ' Pitt l1rlluttt, Pat H1nrr. T~e Com· a·nr. Kiklt1• JIMll. The ids and M1f'11n Ga~e. Q) Mlril: "Sllld ,.0 Turi'' {dra· IJft{I) Mtrt CtMI ~.lie\ ma) ''48 -J~ne V1nttrrt. W•!l•ct lifWii (C}" ) '1.!M'lllzo Bush. Ford I lftWI s..tillCI (C) (Z hr) tm ~ &Itani II•• CAI Mnical (30) all 811 Picture (Cl YOUR 1ESTIMONVCOMES AS , NO SURPRISE, J.41l. NOMAD! WE'VE SUSPECTED f~ Wf'EKS 7HAT 'THESE TWO WERE STEALIN6 CARS 70 ORDE~ MUTT AND JEFF l'MWORRJED ~APPY W IL.L SOL.VE YoUR fRDM™TCAll~lA ~OTEL LOT.1 A SOOT GJVING MY WIFE A NICE- CtlR.ISTMAS G!t=T. MY FUNDS AR.E 'SO LOW! 'PROBLEM! I'LL 'Fl)( IT! I 'LL.GO 5PEAKTO MR.S.MOTT '"'IJlln (C) (30) Baiter Ward. l:JO.~Kly R1et1 ICJ I ' Ill Slid, Slit Slid (C) (30) PU Mtw1ii111 fll'l'l· '---"--'-'--'-'=====--' Jeltl w.,111 -..it fllM f.U· UHMti 1111 To11t111111tnt (C) ftl (60) "Ovt11111d St11e R1lde1.s," m Willp tt w-ture (C) "Win11 1!31. ' lo tllt Cuibbetn." • ,_,.,1•1 (30) 4:001 hlpl le L1S11in1 (t) 111118 !D @ tD lrtdlell'1 Wtrltl (C) CMllpiHlllip .... Inf (Cl (li'J) "Stop Drt1." Knln Gr1nt I S,, (C) fPthr Kltlltl1) Is p111ud with Ma1 hfl l.lffCl[ (C) ,...,.., •lid studlo prob1wnt 11 bllp D'T~ llit lllCn'il deldlln• •P•ro•dlts. •:JO I""""" KMns •!'Ml CltJ (C) I ID...., (C) (30) T..ni lfld tlle Pollce (C) "~ (D) I]) GD JI.., .., ... Pr• Qf1r11 Undtrttandinr:· 11i11t11 Tiii L"""' SIAn (C) (60) 8 lflllf Pm 5 (C) "Tht R1cer'1 Lorne Gr""° fl,ltlls. A notbl1it £dp." A l11tur1 •l>Ollt th• "lndJ tritlu1• to 1n oid·f1$1llontd:Chrirl· 500" race. 11111 is· pr111nttd. ~ s. ... (C) I I .... I (IO) Georlt Kirb1 1u1Sb. hllfl WIJIMI W•11 fllM ftdf. ""7 ..... (60) ~ : , '"Fronlitr Horii on," with .ltnnl· C.... • Mlfitr• (30) !11 Jofles. 1!38. · m-11:•. Qtlllu ·-(JO~ S:IO' ~ (C) hft Witter hotlJ. 11"91·1·-(C) WI -(C) • ...... nit .... "' Prt , ... " (t) •..t•: .,.. , ...... .,.. ~Cll !*'• Wldt w.rw 1111.) ••t-CielJ Cooper, Patndt • ti«i Wtf'ld Cup Alptnt "'111111. Sklin1 Clltmp 11'11lp; DuN 111111· I Olllf' U.1111 namoku Surf Clt$1ic, _ .... (RI ""'""',... (C) ...... (C). !:, .. ~ (C) "R•tt I; 11:•11~ ..... lrfffifl (C) lhttt °''' • JeflflllJ CMllt (Cl ., ,.. CV..11 II ttit ~11•" (mu'J. 1 1 ... ca.. c.b (C) "Rit1 1111 • <tlllldJ) ,_. -C1n1t1 11011'1'\ N." (R) . ..... ' ., ... :.2~il!ICflii1'11 JeeJ ..... ... ... ,F .. l lllFF ~ ~) s,•1= ... (C) Cl) .---1 ... (od· ff I ob (C) 1'!l'f ........ vtfthlnl) '19 -ltll11U l•, An• _.. w.,_ w.m~ ri• f..O. CtJIOJ, lllldlHI tr.It. nt.: "'Wyotnlf!I Ollt11w," 1i3t. 121• GI Mt111t: -r .. ~ WttMI" m..,.. kl ,.....,...,. cc, <~ (dtema) ''4-flot• !Wlao11. C lci'bltn UIA (C) MISS PEACH - By Frank Baginski \ By John Miles , > '" '1 ~· ~,, /. t ,, t By Harold Le Qoux By Al Smith I !!OUGHT '>CU 1"~15 PRE1"TY POTHOLDER! ., .... I ,\ ' ., ,._-_, · . .-,-.... -, ·, -.. '-.. , .. . •, DAll V 1'11.0T 27 By Charles lanottf ,. ..-~~~~~~--. ~ ,.._.J.. ""' ~· . . . ' • t ' PEANUTS ly Charles M. Schu!Z TELEVISION VIEWS Bing Brings Festive Yule By CYNTHIA LOWRY NEW YORK (AP) -A Christmas, alter all 'these years, wouldn't seem like C~ristmas wi~~t Bing Crosby smging about that white one. He did 11 Thursday night. · The singer was host on an NBC special and presented an interesting new singing group-Carol Burnett, Juljet .Prowse, Roy Clark of "Hee Haw" and, of course, Bin g. WITH NETWORK special s arriving almoot nightly and mos t variety specials looking and sound· 1ng pretty much like weekly variety series, about the only novelty left is IJ).atching up new sets of guest stars. The combination in the Crosby show was new- ~ TV and proved a smooth and haP{'Y one. Carol Burnett and Crosby worked very rucely to.. gether ,_.and one of the most imaginative numbers had them romping arol!lld a dese rted department store. Miss Prowse's and Clark's big number was Spanish in decor and music, and Cl~rk's perform- ance on 'the guitar was mJtched by Juliet's dancing. THE WHOLE production was as rich and glit- tery as a Christmas tree. Yet, the most ef;fective number came at the end when Bing and his guests ran through a medley of top tunes of the past de- cade -followed , of coune, by Bing and "White Christmas." Bob Hope followed his old road companion with_ his monthly comedy show, starting as usual with his monologue, notable for a complete absence of Spiro Agnew jokes. There was the usual quota of Washington cracks, followed by some sh·arp notes on the Indian occuption of Alcatraz and Tiny Tim's nuptials which he described as the biggest social event since "Monty Rock Ill had his ears pierced.11 . HOPE HAD two major sketches. One was a "Satire on the movie "Midnight Co""".boy," which may have been fuhny but was incomprehensible if one' had not seen the film. The s~ond was loosely writ-· ten and sketchily rehearsed," ihvolving Hollywood · competition for guest stars. · Hope's guests were Anthony Newley, Andy Wil- liams and Elke Sommer. It was not a particularly bright hour. Hi:IPe did, however, tum serious in the closing momenta, asking the JIU!.>lic oot td l!!#""I "the bad , to obscure the good" m Vietnam. '· He mentioned orphanages and rehabilitation cen-. ters for civilians he had seen there as well as tn-: dividual acts of mercy. and pleaded thaat we not: condemn all for what he called one "unfortunate ; i_Qcident" which he did 11Qt identify, : ' ' NBC STILL plans to go ahead next Thursday'. 'vith a rebroadcast of Dean Martin's 1967 Christmas · show. in which Mrs. Martin appears. It is pretty· a'Y~a~d . since M:ts., ¥~t1il) an~unc~,).ast week '. that she and her, huollaiKI have• ijroken up. I I ,. L . .; .. -· -.. ··-~·.··,·.--~ --~-------·--~ ~~. ~-----.-.--~----~--------------------------------------- fS DAIL V PILOT " ' CHR'fSLER PL'fWIOVTH/ llt'IPER(AL ~M $ S1rl1I # VL29BOl 11777J DISCOUNT NEW 1970 DUSTER ACT NOW! For Something Extra Special Far The Holidays, At Extra Special Savings!. .. NEW 1970 P.S. l Ve Will Quietly Deliver on Christnuu Eve. Ph11 tor ond llcHM NEW 1969 s1 ·23 ".,. tn ond llcense BELVEDERE COUPE .~==""" TOWNE AND COUNTRY STATION WAGON 1964 DODGE Dart GT 2 Or, H,T, Redio, h11t1r, 111!01T111lic htnt., nice ,tr -PAW 131 1967 CHRYSLER Town and Country 3 S.at Wgn. V-1, redio, he1let, power tl1eri119, power br1ke1, 111lom1tic tren1mi11ion, duel f1clory t ir, 1plit b111ch r1tli11ing 1111, Lo$.L CE'46H76149562 23,95 t 1965 PLYMOUTH Barracuda A11tom1 tic h1n1mi11ion, ttdio, h11ler, b11ek1t teth. A terrific b1r91in. OSL· ". 1967 CHRYSLER Newport Sedan v.1, rtdio, he•ltr, 111lom1tit t rlllf• mis1io11, pow1r 1le1ri11t. power br1ket, uhomoly$'1"59 's • ' 1965 CHRYSLER 4 Or, Sid. V.B, tedio, he1ter. 1ulom11· l ie ir1~1mi 11ion, powtr 1l1ering, pow- t r brel.~1. t ic. PCS 940 1967 PONTIAC Grind Prix 2·Dr. H1rdtop v.1, ttd10, h11!1 r, power 1!1eri119, power br1k11, fectory t ir, electric w!11dow1, ltpe deck, lo1d1cl. TSA 640 $1695 ' ,I 1964 T·BIRD Red io, hteler, 1utom1lic lr1n1., pow• tr tlt1ri1u~, power br•ke1, pow1r wln- dow1, 1tt. NMY 625 1968 PLYMOUTH Sport Satellite 2 Dr. H1rdtop v.a. 1utomttic tr1111mi11io11, r1dio, httler, power 1te11i119, 1ir to11d., but- l.11 11eh, t ic. REAL SAVINGS VTP ll 7 1967 PLYMOUTH Valiant Sedan Rndio, h11le1, low miltt. VCJ 590 1967 TOYOTA Corona Sedan R1dio, h11t1r. Cl1111. UJG 541. ,,Id tal' off 1iC1tt1M Atlas Service Department where pride makes the differ· ence. Depend able and eco- nomical repair and maint., nance work. For your conven- ience, we honor: Carte Blanche, Diners Club, Ameri- can Express, Master Charge, BankAmericard, Gasoline cre- dit cards. All prkts el't pin t1i 1!!0!! lk•-· All 111t"""ills H'otr11....i lrt '"lttl 19 Prllr ..... ~tkfl trt v1lld 1111111 IO:• ,.m .• SllllHy, Dlnfnbel' 11, lNt. .,, .! ···'i.·' ,, ' . ,. CHRYSLER .. PLYMOIJTH IMPERIAL • • " • • ---------~-~--------~~ -~-----·--;:,..-.,..--., BRAND NEW 1970 .f4Y§JAftUPG Fully fdttory equipped includi ng vinyl hi-back buc- ket seats, color keyed carpeting, fl oor mounted shif~4 le.ver, instrument gages, belted tires. Serial OROILll/082 . , BRAND NEW 1 ' M VERl.CKS TEST DRIVE BRAND NEW 1970 %·T. FORD TRUCK & EL DORADO CAMPER FULL PRICE '70 F-250 STYLESIOE BRAND ·NEW 1970 TORINO G.T~ 2-DOOR HARDTOP Spor tsroof, 8 cyl., color·keyed racing mirrors, hoodscoope, courtesy lights, color keyed nylon carpeting, foam padded seals, wide oval belted whi teside wall ti res. Serial No. OR35F l l4721. IMMEDIATE DELIVERY TO. DA y IMMEDIATE DE LIVE RY BRAND NEW 51 VlllllDllllllllllllllllllllllll~VlllllllllllllllllllllDllDIUllllllll~.a..--------.. ~ C ~llIPMENT § BRAND NEW . 1969 . I JUST IN TIME iOR THE HOLIDAYS I 0 THUNDERBIRD I AL~ NEW _ FORD CORTINA 2 DR. ~-197 . . "'""" '""'~ .,.9 -8... I S\J~ .~~~~E .g~~~ol~fL:: fu~~M~i~ A~~Ns I SAVE $ 8 00 powec_seal, powec w;ndows,@ wheel, r;n ted glass, S '"SPEED TRANS AVAIL e ALL COLORS § FROM SUGGESTED FACT. LIST PRICE \l/Sw fires. Loaded with extras. Fl<rthru vent system. R 91-• • S •w. "' '"'""'" ~ rilllllllllllllllHlll~ Vlllllllllllllllllllllll llllllllllJTllllJTlllllll4 s: '" "° ~"'""" . ~ from the NEW 1969 . NEW 1969 NEW 1969 ...,, ..... S!4 . MANAGEM rENY co RA GALA XIE 500 MUSTANG ·I':"~ ~"~ Af4D ST Aff SAVE SA.V E • SAVE .. ' of WIL SON FORD SAL ES 51 . $10 00 . $900 . From Suggested Factory List From Sugge1t11d F1ctory li1 t From Suggested facrory List 1 FORD 6 6 COUNTRY SEDAN Sta. Wagon, V-8, auromaf- ic, P. slfiering, fact. air · c~nd., rcidio, heal. SIK 316. '67 MUSTANG HARDTOP · V8 engine, Rad,io, Healer, . Bucket seats: VAA 470. ~er. No. 9R4lQ1'3608 Ser No fG~i-11,49111 . ',~ No. 'ROZJU&loiOI 98 81--iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii-....i-.....;....,iiiioiiii-..-...,_.oiiiiiiiiiiliiii.._-l,6 THUNDERBIRD 78. 8 $ * TRA rsPORTA 11011_ DEPT. ,SPECIALS . '* 4 i~~/0;:~;;:f~1d~:1~~ ~;'. $ '58 C.HEV. ST A. WGN ;~;; g~~~~m~~{ · •128 •--~0"=w = 860 =· ~------- s 1188 '61 MONZA cpe.~~'l1~'''· Aulom";" Radio. "''· s1 a8 '6 7 i~r~~~:~ ~;J~h~~~ . ~88 8 '68 ~8°E~:;~!~-R.~-:.T: ... er, $1588 '61 FALCON Dlx.Ra d;o,Heater,G00<halue IG0 814 ' $188 '66 ~:~~~~:~WH $988 Don'f miss this value. ·62 FORD St w Country Sedan,. V-8, $188 steering, radio, healer. Stk: __ No_. 2_423_36_. -'·------a a. gn. Automat ;c, P-l lee c., 1 --~No~. ~120~~29.;;0. =;..--'-----168 FORD "500" Aor cood. MMC 697. f THUNDERBIRD 1188 ~!: ,!;~0~~·~~n~. :;d:~: $1588 '64 MERC. Montclair ~;;;:~~'.'~tF;'.~;:i s399 65 ::~/'~:Rr~~p~:;~~~~ $· hear. WHG 346. ~.,,--,,~c-=-==-:~:--::=-------:Hd V 8 price No. NBY 431. -, -P-LYM~F-ury-111-.---• '62 PONTIAC Bonn. p '~1';";;9, ·.~~.0~~:d: · s. 388· , MUSTA NG 88 68 88 All ong1nal. lFl 785. 66 ll ~i:;ri~;~',;~~~i;·air ~~~J.: $16 '65 FORD LTD ~ulomatic, radio. hea ter. power steer-s4· 88 v.a: au~~~~~i~~l~E slee!· · $ _ Yiny( 1ntenor. license WTG ong PEV 109 Rf>l546 · · • · · ;og, bucket seats. ·-,6-8-~~-~,!o-A~-~s.-rac-lory_$_1 _7_8_8_. '61 CONTINENT AL t~~~~~ ~i.Pt.fs'~6r.wec. 548-•-,6-8__,1'--'2-~-;~o~-rl~~~~~~Dls-x.,-2-8_8_ "' condotoonong, powec '64 FORD G I 500 Hacdto p V-8 engine Power s4aa·~ •·-· __ ,_ :_,_c;".'..c.'1 _;n_te.c_rior_. ----''-=~~ steering, plus extrai. l icense XDC 078. a • ~teer.ing~ Yellow fin i;h, black No. WTE 596. ------------11 1nlenor. OM J 120. '69 ~8u~!~~~1·~·!;,h $1988 •-*-TR-Ui-rK_&_CA-M-Pii_l _D_lfP-T.-SP.-'EG-1A_L_s _· *-.• !68~~~~.~~~:~~ s .. t,433 sports appearance package 232 engine. License VRf· :I, 1ncl.hoodscoop. l68~ss. '63 CHEV lV: TON s599 ·----=22c.c'·~~------• 2 ~~-k 1~~9:~ue f;n ;sh Ucense . •. '6 7 ~:'~'IYR!~~:~d~;on ;ng, $218 8 w Pas~~ng" seats'. & w;ndows, $1288 I 69 ~~~k~~;,r~:w ro;ief '18 88 IOilded w11h equ1pmenl. '65 CLUB VAN . automaflC·1'1ewpa1nt.ROV643. . Fact. equip!. Y~H m . . .. I 9 ~AnLAi;i065oo '66 CHEV. 3/4 TON ~:~~e~:.~~is:~;ol~;~"'b,;ad~'.:$1488~ '68 PONT~~~T~EMANS . 6 :;~·,~~;~;o~~:~'.·P~,~~~$2 488 168 FORD 31 T p 'uense~-~.2:~~:!~tic, ra .d _io,$2~ 188 ~!di:.~'~:~-!~~·~~~e~ii~~$20·88 steering, radio, heater;fat· 74 on heater, dlx. lutone f1n1slt oval ltres. to r warran t avail. license XST 373. . · Like new. No. 112380. · , . • · No. VVB 746. . ' . Use ?ne of ·our man9 ways to finince your new or used car or trvcJ< including Bank of America, United.Calif. Bank, or Ford Motor Credit Corp. With your A~proved ((edit. • . ---~- • I ,, I ~ -·-·----. --·------....----·-----~ -- HOUSIS F.DR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE FINER HOMES LINDA ISLE BAYFRONT ,, One of a kind: the only new waterfront home in this price range. With 52 ft. of bayUont. 3 Large bedrooms, step dO\\'n Jiving ~oom with fireplace. Master bath complete with sauna. Pier & slip. Asking $105,000. Open daily; 106 Linda Isle Drive. DOVER SHORES Benutiful 3 bedroom home on corner lol wi th panoramic view fr~1 3 sides. Large Jiving room & family roon1 : et bari fireplace, waf.. nut paneling & cabi ts. Spaciousness thru-·• out. $62,950. Call for app't. DOVER SHORES BA YFRONT I~arge 2-story home on 60 ft. lot with pier & slip. Spiral staircase leads from spacious en- try to tremendous master suite. 4 Bedrooms, .Jarge formal Ji ving room. family roon1, mar- .. ble fireplace; for1naJ dining room. 4200 Sq . ft. Open Sat. & Sun.; 333 Morning Star Lane .. DOVER SHORES VIEW Original owners transfer of business location necessitates sale of thi s beautifully landscap- ed home \Vith courtyard entry leading to pan- oramic vie\V. Bri ght. sunny Jiving room with . view of the entire back bay; den; 4 lar¥e : bedrooms: 4 spacious baths: a ll electric kit- . chen ; dining roon1 : marble fireplace. Over · 3,000 sq. ft . ~9.500. Open Sat. & Sun ; 1130 · Santiago Or. CORONA DEL MAR 10'/c; DO\\'ll on this vacant ho1ne wilJ move ;·you in for Christn1as. Large, vievv lfving roon1 . fireplace; dining room; 4 bedrooms; 2112 baths; on a lot 40 x235 ; 3 blks. from Little ~Corona. Owner n1ight consider lease/option. .I\ must sell. S47.900. ' I,. " john macnab REAL TY COMPANY 901 Dover Or., Suite 120 642-8235 ,. General 1000 I General 1000 -------· ASSUME I NO DOWN VETS '·, COSTA MESA 6l/4 °/o LOAN j whh 3 0Cdroon1~ on def'p lot ~eat t hr I' e brdroon\ orl · 1\'1lh s!.'par.1tf' \VORKSHOP! '.ffi\RD\VOOD FLOORS, car· Chuck full or frr~h carpets petcd and draped. Lcirge &. drnpes! This adult ~?U- 1<ilchen wi!h brrakfas! Ql'('<t pied hon<t• 1n ~ (·ondition ... ~""C' inclurlcd Het·rnily. \VOn'! !"st ;d ON LY ~22.000 ,.--.. . FULL PRICE dccora1N.I lhru out. Nt'a r WE SELL.A HOME '8Chools. playground. » n rl shopping. r u LL PRICE EVERY 31 MINUTES ?NLY s:io,;oo Walker & Lee '. :!700 Harbor Blvd. al Adan1s :14.>-9·191 Open 'til 9 PM NEEDS PAINT \\'ell bltilt 2 bdrm homr, rx- lr;i largE' double garage, al'.- Evenings ean 673-6116 !'PSS to rear yard. n.2 zone $28 500 1 • room to build. $19,7;'",()_ · • • Wells-McCardle, Rltrs, 4 Bdrm + Family Rm. lS IO Nc1vpo11 Blvd .. C.l\1. ~rNlige -convenient area. :HS-7729 64,J-06S4 eves. 2 baths plu~ tlen + famlly ,....,..,,......,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! •wm. A!I electric kitchen 2 Br., 21~ Ila.. 5401 Los with ne1r dish\\·ashcr. Ele· Lomas Sln.'C'l, Park Estatt>s 'ge.nt lirf'plaCT'. :>~O-li20 section ol Long Beach, (2131 TARBELL 29SS Harbor !i97-5322 General 1000 General Coldwell, Banker OFFERS: WITHIN WALKING DISTANCE TO BEACH This 3 bdrm. 2 bath home recently painted, plus new drapes & carpets. Plans for fa1n- il y rn1 . & entry avail. 2nd story could be added for panoramic vie'v of ocean. $G5.000 · • Kathryn Raulston IRVINE TERRACE Spacious 3 BR. home on lrge. corner lot. Fam. Rm. Pool. Proxin1ity to UCI. beach- es & shopping. $64 .500 Cathryn Tennille VIEW OF HARBOR & OCEAN From th is 4 Bil. 2 Ba. Lu sk ''sparkling" clean ho1ne, 1v/3 car gar. Beautiful land- scap ~ng in both yards. $59,000 Al Fink SPEND A HAPPY NEW YEAR lo this delightful home \\' / your secluded poOt & patio. lfi~h bean1 ceiling in living rm. $51,500 Mrs. Harvey ·" GREAT BEACH AREA HOME J( you need a nice beHch home \vith 2 OR. &: a den, that is close to tennis courts & on . quiet street. call today for app't. $43.500 •· Joe Clarkson CORONA DEL MAR'S BEST This gorgeous 5 BR . home has everything -huge pool, 7 baths: p.ueled study, ram . -·rm., billiard rocun & a v ie\v from Laguna ll> Palos l(erdes. Walter Haase COLDWELL:. BANKER & CO. 5.IO NIWPORT CENTER OR,. NEWPORT &EACH a».4100 644-2430 l " HOUSES l'Olt SALi FIRESIDE SUM Will be yours in front of this Palos Verdes raised hearth fireplace. 3 bedrooms and pan- neled study or fourth bedroom, with 2\11 baths for convenience. Build in buffet in love- ly dining room, with a buutlna with storaae space kitchen. $35,900 and an txctllent buy in Fountain Valley. AIR WAFTED ... By gentle sea breezes in this one of a kind dream home. Spacious 1800 sq. ft. 3 bdr., 3 bath ho1ne designed for carefz:ee gracious living. Easy walking distance to beach. schools, and shot>ping. $35,000 and you can assume the existing FHA loan Qn this prac· tically new, immaculate ho~e. KAMEHAMEHA Would be delighted with th.is luscious 3 Bd. 2 bath home on the rim of the world in Laguna Beach. Tree s haded, wind protected, and covered patio. Lovely, exciting, clean. Single ,voman n1ust sell. $39,500 and you can move in \Vith very low down. SAIL AWAY TO VALHALLA But don't leave Newport until you ha ve seen beachy cutie. 2 Bd. den, 1% bath. $26,500 and the owner wants enough dOwn only to cover his costs. Name yolll' terms and move in. 2629 Harbor llwd., Costa MelCI 546-8640 ~-------------·· Gener ii 1000 C)onoral 1000 DOVER SHOREs NEw ·VIEW! Ivan \Veil~-&_ Sons have jusl completed 3 brand ne1v homes, ready !or immedi· ate occupancy. 4 bdrms, 3 b3.lhs plu.~ powder room. Panelled (an1ily roon1 \I'/ lit'C'pJacr-. F'ornial dining rOOm-kitchen breakfast area. Luxuriously carpeted. Land- scaped courtyard pool s. From $100,0CO. Ivan Wells & Sons CUSTOM • $34,900 Beautifully appoillted home in a prime Back Bay location with 3 tiuae bdrms &. large family room. Exterior enhanced by exception- al landscaping. Large patio with Jara:e outside built -in table &, a SHAJ.."E ROOF. Loads o! storage spaces le built -in cabinets. Tt 'Ji our excl11,11ive so call for d•t.ails. HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSl!S FOR SALE HOUSIS FOR SALE 1000 Gener•I 1000 Costa Mon FOREST E. OLSON Jnc. ~altors $17 ,500? MUST BE YESTERDAY 'S PRICE A real doll hol18e, maculale throughout. HARBOR ISLAND RO, Lovely Bayfront Home w1th pier & slip 2 Bedrooms + apartment Spacious bavside patio : quiet location comfortable trt.ditiooal hotrle llti,000 Gov't R1posM11ion I...atre-3 bdmt 2 bath &: fam- Uy room in Mtta Verde. au & well landtcaPtd "'1th CUt""Pile carpeting & el!Ctrlc bu.llt-inl. Full pricto $2S, 1'50, $2,500 down $~19/ mo payii all, No discrimina- tion • anyone can buy, Va- cant. Set' today, Sf0.ll51 Herttage. Real Ettate (open eveo) BY OWNER 4 Br. 2 .Ba Ranch. Nu crpt & drps, shake rf, covered patio, liprlnkien:, dSh\vsher, water HOUSES l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR ~LE NEW HOME IMMIDIATE MOVE IN 4 BDRMS 11/1 BA 'flo!S 1/4 MILE FROM BEACH $20,990 HUNTINGTON IEACH Call Now 962-1353 --------·---- ---· --to 1,·all carpeting. i Freshly paint'1:1. BeautHul paneling. Huee 20 tt living room. Shake roof found only in REALTORS ,73-4400 110ltener. $3000 down . & -----·-"--- 1150 .jluntln1ton loach ~ C11rl1t1110S Gi~ LARGE 4 llodroomt l-0\V interest loan. Lovely home ln very desirable area, Hurry! -=== more vi:pensive hOmes. Sub-We've IHn Too Mod11t mit your down payment. So YoU have m.isstd our mod. Call now! 645-0300 ern clutlc on Warwick Lane, 2600 &ti ft ol spacious well arransed house in top condition. Central hall & rear Jiving area opening to garden patio. 4 bd tms :.!~I assume 6* % VA loan. Call 54.6-7841 2 BR Hse '& gar. Modem, on M-1 lot. 60xl40'. Closing Eltate, ba.rrain. 922 Spnset Dr. 531-BQM or 646-4788_ Me .. del Mir TRIPLEX EAST SIDE EARNS $5 .800 baths. $56,500. \Vill lease op-BEST BUY each. Deluxe kitchen \Vith rre ea Rede<:orated &: landscaped, ~~l~~~~~~u~ ~ ~: Bation. fl R llJ ' BY OWNER built-in5. Only $6500 down • . . 4 Br, lge din rm, \\'Jk to all and just 7 years young. Lux. l6(l;i \\,esft•liff Dr., NB ~hools $3l,9i>O. $5,000 do\vn ury carpeting a~ drapes1 l :=zE64~2=.5~2;00~~~;;1ti~'°~"';um~•~· ~545-a:Jf-;;75~~~ thJvughout. M an icured - &rounds. Enclosed rarages. Coll11e P1rk 1115 Priced now at $36,950. See today. Dial 645-0003. ,45°0303 al Harbor Center 119!1 tlarbor Blvd., C.l\l. Open Sund•y from 1 3~ ('()ST A MESA ST, 3 bdmt! + oversited den with detached lun/work!llop, Here's a real tl'Ue family property -one ol Costa Mesa's best. Don't leave Me Alone ON NE\V YEARS EVE, t.1y owners are moving, My big living room, 4 bdnn & fam- ily room will be !O Jonely. I'm only $29,500 -low inter- f'!l Joan -no points to pay_ B/I 3 OUTSTANDING EXECUTIVE HOMES lSO Degrtt labulom ocean HAFFDAL REAL TY vie1"! J BR .. sep. din. nn. 1 ... iiiiiiiiii84il2ii-440iiiiii5iiiiiiiiiiii Sho1vs better than n r \I'. Cameo I-lighla.nd.s. Jti.9.JOO. BETTER 'N NEW OPEN SAT/SUN 1-5 524 OeAnza, Corona Highlands 3 BR., lre. pool, lovely fam- ily homro. All wanted featur- es. Reduced to $56,000. 46'5 Go1'ham, Cameo Shores Near water. 3 Spac. BR., din. rm., !iv. rm. (liO huge yuu ba\•e to see ii); expensively detailfld thruout. $74,500 mun,, 111 .1111 Ill Ill\ ., .. F '•" ~ • • J ' 1 6442 JERSEY CIRCLE Beautitul 4 txhm., family : 2•; baths; 2 frplcs. Top quaL ity. Assumable 5l/i% loan. University Realty 673-6510 Huntington H•rbour 1405 ---~ BUILDERS close out!! Tri· level 3 ·& 4 BR homes. Xlnt financing. t.lake reasonable otter. Orig price $44,500. Bullders Agent. 846--0WJ Mi11ion Viejo 1708 3 UNITS can Perron Realty 642-Im VIEW • THE BEST Eve. 541).3984. C:Ome &: 8ee ELDORADO HOME Alandra model, 3 Br, lam rm, 2 Ba, vie\v lot, carpeted thruout. Immcd, occupancy, Tenns, VA no money dn m FHA fin. avail. Call & ·uk for Ne! Shukes a1 Mission Viejo Rlty Co. 8..17-9500 or 83~281)1. $29,950 Eastaide Costa Me..a, Span- ish tile root. rentals on larte 77x150' lot. Income $385 month, Our best income re- EASTSIDE COSTA MESA tw·n in area. Assunie VA loan on 3 bdrm Exclusive With home, Ja.rge lat! For appoint. Newport meht at Victor(• JEAN SMITH Realtor 644-3255 ·rue. The finest in CdM with 3 Br., ""'========I den, fonna.I din. A 2\2 ba. New,...t leech 1200 HARBOR HIGHLA N DS. Believe us, these homes are h8.l'd to find. Bright, clean, 3 bdnn 2 bath home with cozy fireplace, patio & nicely landscaped. Walking distance to Marinen School. Price $28,500. Call 54:i-8424 (open eves) South Coast Real Estate. Haa everything. An ocean view from kit., din. rrn. & wtr. Br. Plush cpta & drps. Beaut. lndscpg. Lanai fol' leisure. Have a look, you'll be happy if you do. Apts. For Sale 1980 l::::m==::::::====: 13 LARGE Bdrm, 2~2 BA. (anytime) 52' L1'do Bayfront !•m rm, 2 ""•1""' I e BILL HAVEN, Rltr. 2111 E. C:Oast, Cdb-1 673-32ll 1018 S. J\.fain, S.A. 5-H-6613 NICE Duplex on 60' lot so. or hwy. $57,500. principles only 673-4169 ~ 'Z-.,.6-12 or 24 units. Walk to beach. Apprec.. ·iating ai-ea, By Own~r/ Bldr. Llndborg Co. 536-2579 -=-=--=~ brick & 1 Palos Verdes rock Lind• Isle 1306 RENTALS ---------Hou111 Furnished 58 Lind• 1111 Drive Roy J_ W•rd Co. l::XCLUSIVE AGENTS 14.10 Galaxy Drive 64&1550 (0Pf'n Dailyl Slate hall entry. Heavy TIP TOP HILL TOP Large older home. Sandy !hake rt. comp tncd yard. Home first in value· first Beach, Pier l Slip. Best Jo. Profess. Landscpd , in view: llrst in beauty. ~~tion. Vacant & wido7 anx-Sprinklers. Exec Hm on Cul • COAn Take yuur choice irs all 1ous. r>1ake a deal now. de sac St. l blk to Back & · he!'e in one or Newport Roy J. W•rd_ Co. Bay. $45,COO. ~17 WALLA.Cl Hei&ht'1 finest 2 bdnn, & IBaycrest OUiceJ • BY O\\ner -$.55,000. 4 Br. 3 llALTOl.J coeivertillle den. This home 1430 Galaxy 64fi-1550 Ba. 3 yn old. Custom bit Just corapleted-5 Bedruom,. General 2000 41;.-; Bath. home. Water viewi --------':0.:C"I from master Bedroom, !iv-$225. 3 Br, gar, patio, w/w, drps. Near ocean. Bkr. ing rm, dining rm, family 534--698{1 rm &: kitchen. 2 frplc-s. Car- pt'd. \Vallpapei" $l55.00>. Rent•ls to Shere 200! Linda Isle Development Bill Grundy, 615-3210 S4• 4141-reeks ol quality, all built-home. \Viii trade 363 Vista topen hlftinllJ ins included, This home "·ith SUPERLATIVES Baya er., NB~ R00Mf\1ATE \Vanted; Girl view ot channel is for the Are needed to describe thJ.s to share 2 btlr apt, Cd.i.'1. Unbellev•bl1 V•lue Only $24,950 in the heart. of Costa Mesa. Immaculate a.II nrwly painted in &-out. High quality w/w carpets thrU- out. 3 bclnn• 2 baths, fam- ily room, all built-i111. Beau- ti!ul lava rock fireplace in L/R. \Valk to schools. 4 NICE houses OI\ 2 lots lido Isle 1351_ Call 673--llBl aft 5 & -IP -discriminate buyer at only !gr-. 2 yr, old luxury duplex, CdM, well kept. Frplcs. ,vkentfs. M; •• ._ S47,950. ovel'looking Laguna" Beach Trel!s. f\fy low price $61,000. BAYFRONT ,........ -1111~ 675-5787. HOMES J\.f ALE Roommate \Vanted to lights, beaches & sunsets. Share 3 Br house. 1 blk PAUL-WW Ji Bo . . FIREPLACE It, pool for Ne'v or older, with piers from beach. 642-1897· Finest Present CARNAHAN th units house size &. ex. Otristmas. Dix 2 BR. 2 BA & slips. 3 BR. to 6 BR. \Vhat L'OUld be a nicer pm-•s.t.LT!' co. quisite in evcl'Y delall, with townhse. SZ7,SOO. X lnt Fi'Qm $149,500 Room mate wanted, 2 BR ent than the finest home in extras beyond belief. Out-tenns. Agent~ Walker Rlty. 675-5200 furn apt Cd~I. util pd, Mesa Verde'! Thi1 is it! 1093 Baker, C.t.t. 546-5440 standing value for the di&-~;::::;::==:=::='=:=o I 3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. S80. Andy 673-8294 Hugp game room, la.rgp 1iv-crimlnating buyer. SI15,000 Newport Heights 1210 Outstanding Terms ~========I ins room v.·ith "suspendl'd -• Newport Beech 2200 convtraation pi!" bu i 1 t DOWNTOWN Riddle &. Ross 675-7225 SPANISH HAClENDA Sho,vplace on BIG corner.1 ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;:;;;:;;;;.1 PAUL• W:atl'I CAllNABAN around a fireplact, qulllity C.M. Close to City Park & , Elegant -but economical. Gorgeous garuen. 3 Bel . -1~ WATERFRONT appointment., beautiluI pool. 1hopping. This cute 2 bdnn D1vor~1 Forces Sile Call today to ~e th~ 3 BR. playnn., din. rnl., 4~~ bn~. 3 BEDROOM_ $375 ••.ALTY C•• Perf!ct. for enlt11ainill£. Ov-& den home feature~ -large Lovely v1e\v ho1ne: -Back homp in Prime area. Only Extremely good loan avail. Slip for ial'ie boat -3 baths, •"-k• the lakei; l f•lrways renced lot, hardwood noors, Bay area. 4 lg. bedrooms, $49,!XXJ. R. C. GREER Realty •--d v 3355 v · L.d 673 9300 J car gal'age; sandy beach of tbt Mtsa Verde Countij' Heatilator fireplace, fruit lam&. In. mis. acant. Im-Orah•m Rlty. 646--2414 ia 1 0 -• close to Lido shopping • BY Owner -lrg assumable GI loan 3 Br, 2~) ba, din nn. lam rm, walk to tchls. heh, princ. on J y, $33,500. 968-noo Oub. Otftred at $150,000. trees etc. Priced rlght at med. pop. See it • Make Near Newport ~I Office NE\V 5 Bdr1n 4~~ Ba Nord now available, Private, quiet owner ii ptting anxiOUs. $22,750 your otter· Buy a baraain. Bay Front -pier and slip. community. '1 ' I . . ' '>·16 -~?1fJ Open Houses THIS WEEKEND ll"' tlrill llnlly 41NC:t"Y wlft Y•• rllh wwk9'HI • y•1 t• '"911M•llllllti ... A8 tH IMftl• .. lllf'N Millw •'• 49Krltt.4 hi ,,...... ffteH •Y -0.m.l"t •h .. wll.,. 111 Mfciy't DAILY PILOT WANT ADI. P9tt•M .11 •• 1 .. ., .. 11 ............ 9f .. ,... .. •ttff ,. lilt t•c• itf•r11teftff 111 tllh. ,., ........ 11 frhl•Y· (3 Bedroom) **106 Linda Isle Drive, Newport Beach 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) (3 Bedroom & Family or Den) 4231 Branford, Huntington Harbour d46--0609 (Sat & Sun 12-5) (4 Bedroom & Family or Den) 1130 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB t;42-8235 (Sat & Sun) **513 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) **333 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shor- as) NB, 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores J NB 646-1550 (Open Dally) (5 Badroom) **14 Linda Ille Drive, Newport Beach 642-8235 (Sal & Sun) APARTMENTS FOR SALE (I , 1 & 3 Bedroom•) 726 Main St., Huntington Beach 538-2579 (Sat & Sun 1·5) * .... * * w...,,,. .. * * * .... -• ...,.., ... \ ~ 546•5110 l1ycNlt 1223 Area's best buy. lmmed. oo-"'aJter Haase o(LEG"Eii~~ BAYCREST '"Panoy Ownec, ,_,115. • ... _ .. _,a_. -----PERRON J!Gil_ot_ BARGAIN! Huntington Buch 400 -._, .. ....~ ... ~· * 642-1111 Anyt1ma * 4 VACANT LOTS FREE 4 CLEAR . SUBMIT $5~ DOWN \\'ill trade $13,<XX> equity tor 1ncludes everything to you \\•hat ha\•e you? Vet• •ith poym•n" Ilk• DAVIDSON R alty rrnt! 3 big bedroom& on dl'ep • lot l\'ith roon1 Jor boat, .)46-5460 Eves. 54.,.1833 camper or trailer! Nier car-OCEAN VIEW pets &: d_ra~s. This Cosla BreathtakinliJ view! High on Mesa CUlle is ONL~ $:.ll,&00. a hill . 4 BR .. blt•ins, Only Don't \Va.it. 2~l yrs old. $36,500 WE SELL A HOME CORBIN-MARTIN EVER~ JI MINUTES REALTORS 675-11162 Oot ol Jown ownec "'"" TOTAL PRICE $18,950 Coldwell, Banker & Co. "SUbmit ALL olfe~"! Huge FIXER · UPPER 550 Newport Center Dr. 1 5 bedroom. 3 bath home \vlth Great 3 bedroo1n with aS!um-N B ewport 11ch, Calif •. iparkling ENCLOSED POOL able G.I. loan at 5~ 'iO an. 833.0700 644-2430) (72 X 36). Beauti!ully land-nual interest with total pa.y- scaped grounde includes ment or $1-tj per month. F·IREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2· Badtninton and Shufflp board \Vhy pay rent il tfia.t pay- cour1s and PRIVACY. You ment! Submit your do1vn ba., patio, adults. Bayside Village. Until July Isl. $200. 0\VN 1he land. Te!Ti.fic val-payment and a little spic Call (213) 22:2-4309 or 67J. 1Je at $61.j()() but submit your aod r;pan \vill repeat your 5419_ o!lt'r and terms! profits. ""'"===~~--~I WE SELL A HOME WE SELL A HOME BAY FRONT 3 & dtn. pier & EVERY 31 MINUTES EVERY 31 MINUTES float. F'urn or unturn. $600 Walker & Lee Walker & Lee ~;~1;," ' Bnlbo• eo-Walker & Lee '°" E c""" H"~ .. CdM Mela Verde • 20>l3 WestcliU Dr. 7682 Edinger 27ro Harbor Blvd. at Adams 54~ Open 'ti! 9 P~I $24,950 '"6-7711 8'ZM50 o.,n 'til 9 PM Coron• del Mar 2250 Irvine Terr., CdM BELOW MARKET 4 Bedrm + Den Univarslty Park· 1237 4 bdrm• 2 "'""· 11uoo run :! baths, bUilt-in kitchen, CO\'-,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;! price. 60:<105' fenced lot, ered patio. Garage + ear-Luxury At Lew Cost ele<:tric built-in range, oven, C\lstom built 3 king size porL Ov.•ner helpg with fin-Des\a:ned and built for mod-FA heat. carpets, drapes. 6 bdrms. 2 baths, buge_ living anci.ng. 54().1720 em living; decorat9d in eX• years: old. Double garugc. room. Iorma.l dining room, TARBELL 2955 H1rber ctllent taste. Tomorrow may Landflcaped. Vacant. 4 BR fm n11. compt turn. Avail Jan. thru June ivhile ownen tra,·el. Fenced yd. 3 bUtll from beach. Childr!:n il petr; welcome. Price reduc- ed to $325. 673--0'.l68. 2 BR. comp. furn. Conv. Joe. So. of hwy. $225 mo. family_ rooin + btt~~ast COLLEGE PARK bt too late for ,you ' to be ana.. an 2600 sq: ft of hvina;. the g1owing owner of thia Room for boat or trallt"r. 4 BR. • 1; Baths one. 4 br, 2' ba. fully air Assume S:Y4 -;. LNn Lachenmyer J.l<>1lt n• Pri<e '"·'" • moo Down "'•""ltlonrede. S3dl,000h. ·111 Oeorge Wllllamson MAL TOR 173-4UO 67J.1164 Ives. 1860 Nev.·Port Blvd .. C.~1. ;; 2 n 0 I n REALTY CA.LL 646-39l8 Eves &H-1655 3 Bn., ..._ tin Y room, ,.,..,,..,....,.,..,.·,..111!•1 prof d~r. 2 yr old--xlnt Univ:. Park O!nter, Irvine $26,950 ~'!.if.'.·::.:~"' ~!!!Call!i_!'!Myt~!!lm!!•!!!83a-082tl!!!!'!!! 5 Beclrm • 3 lath Bia Fiesta pool. Fun dinioa room. Rlch paneling, hand- tome bar. Be11t buy on to- day'~ market! Prtme area. .... ,T:IO TIME FOR lack lay 1240 llEDUCED !O aell. Let· Spanish Cua on 1~~ actts Jor honts. $120,000 tenn•. -· l·~-Don V. Franklin Rltr 673-2'112 B1lboa Island 23JS Priced to Sell-$37.i 1no/yrly, Avail Jan. 3 bdnns 2 bathl, l&OO $1 rt, Jrd. 2 BR, 2 BA. F'rplc, .2 CPl8/dfll$, blt·lrtB, boat door palioll. dock. Adults only. tn double i&rai~ to fe.nccd ~G"Th-="80=. ===== be.ck yard. toxt.20' tot. &-L •-h 270" low market $26,500, Submit ~~~ec ~ on te11ns. FRO!lf Jan l to June 30, 880 P1ul Jon11 Realty Wendt Terr., 2 BR. view 147-1266 ~ Evto. 336.Q.58 $2-40 mo. 2U: 697-3862 or see 51/4 o;0 LOAN Sat, 20th Ailor IO o.m. to a$Mlmt. Pyrnnts $l87/mo, KltttA&.I _ 3 BR. Ja fam rm, Jc. tot. Hou1e1 U""'rnlsli .. TARBELL 2955 Harbor 9UICK CASH THROUliH A Prleed below mark8L Sub. Gineril Coron• •I Mir 1250 mlt down • 2nd TD IS\'all. ·----·-"''"-'1 , , . ' * BRASHEAR. Rt.TY ii! $22S. 4 Br, gar. frplc, RIO, DUPLEX C ZONE SHOPPING! ) 16!1;2 Beach Btw., HB w/w, drps. ~hUdrtn & peu 2bd""'••ch"'1<,2..,...... DAILY PILOT s.. !hi• Beal a.,.~lldtm•, 1<1-8501 Ev<t. 968-Ull O.K. A""U l/L Bkr. m ,7SO with u.rm1. Pool, Vlew~um \Vhlte S..Ua 3 BR. 1*1 Ba. tam nn, ~.-«JSO W1ll .. McCerdl1, Rltrs. \V,v, Harbor View HW1. formal din, CUJJl01n crpled, l..ARGE l story 3 or 4 8Rs 1Sl0Ne\\'J)Ott8lvd.,C.t.1. WANT AD Open 1-':30 l'J\.1, Tut1 dra~.\la n d1cape.d . 13xZl'rumpusroom.blt-ins, 548-7729' 644-00W eves_ lh l'ouah S111 . Vo;:et A1111m~ "'OT by OWT!tf. ~-1~T dccoratt'd. $270/mo. --ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~f. ________ ,1 ~c~ .. ::!R~o~al!!!10~--~:!;:l-~:IO:IO~--..:9!84.:::.;:,:"2=:._. -----$57-7618 540--1151 • -----------------------~-~-------·-------·--·-----~-·---------~ !JJ Frldi.y, !ltctmber 1t, ]q,6-'1 RENTALS Hou1•1 Unfurnl1hed Senera l 3000 $130 2 Br l°"-er-trl~plex. Bltn6, patio, v.·/w, drps, eblld OK. Bkr:, ~ VACANT S BR, 3 BA, mednllion. Liv. din, fam rm. Lse $300. Mfr.1713 e\•e. $96. 1 Br, gar, yd, ii:love, w/w, child OK. Bk l', 534-6980 ~F"'TALS RENTALS RENTAL~ RENTALS RENTALS Houtff Unful'fllshed Hou1e1 Unfurni1htd Apts. Fumfshed Apts. Unfurnished Apt1. linfurnlahtd UnlvenifY __ Park 3237 Condominium 3950 Newport Beach 4200 Newport Beach 5200Nowport B~•ch 5200 Avalleble Leasfs 3 BR, 2 Ba. \V/W crpt, 2 cnr NN•~-i~rt~Bc~•~ch[::::-1jiiji,.jiiiijijiiiijjiiijjijj;ijiiijiijijjii-jjiiiiiiij;ijiiijiijiji All have lr(llcs & b!t-ins iV-Pool '-elbhie 11.vull. GRANO,QPENING $210 nw. Avail. Jan . IMMEDIATE ' 'J bdnn 2 bath Townhow;e. @ S'l'.10/n\O. lrumcd, oet."Upancy. 540-6339. OCCUPANCY SPACIOUS AND CONVENIENT RENTALS Luxury go.rdtn apartments Ne\v 2 and 3 bedri:-o m, 2 baths. Shag carpets, Apts. Furnllhed ottering t.-omplele. privacy, linen drapes, tile kite.hens \Vith built · ins. bcautt rul landscaping A W}-Generous storage space plus deck or paUo. 4000 paralle11..'Cl recreational tacll· Pool, recreation bldg .. next to shopping. $240 ---------ltic11 In a country t!lub at· per month. Adults \Vho like privacv_ l<'urn· * * * * • • * GtMr•I "'-----1 R. E. Wontod 6240 NEED MONEY? :'. To buy a new hOme '.' lnvtstt. ,rate. our WJarantttd trade. in plan. Lei us anawer your questlon1 with no obllptlon. Fair t'no\\ah ! 3 Bdnn & f11.m , rm. 110nie i11 TurUe Rock. BRANO NE\11. Avail. @ $.100/1110 or Pl.lrlly HOLJDAY PL.\ZA mospbere. Now leasing in " DELUXE, spaeious 1 Bdrm Newport Beach. ishcd model by Beals. ORANGE COUNTY'S $175. 3 Br, gar, yard, W/W, Family well."UJlle Broker .,...,,., furn. (ii) $3\5/mo. ltnnied. occup • 3 Bdnns & l IUGE J'('C, rooin, MallY t"Xlril.$, VTJ'l.:\V, Avail Ja.n , 6 @ $350/mo. Furn apt $135 p.lus utU. Furnished or unfurnished M R N R SQ U T ENTS ~ LARGEST lleatecl pool, antple parking. Models <lpen 10 a1n to s pm A· I E ARE APAR M Wh•ddy1 W•nt? Wh•ddy• Got? 262' HARBOR BLVD.• No ':hllciren ·no pets. Ren1s !rom nss to $310. 1244 Irvine Ave., Ne\vport Beach-645·0252 SPECIAL C_LASSIFICATION FOR 5'6 1640 Costa Mou 3100 l%5 Pomooa, C.M. OAKWOOD Just north of WeslclHC _Drive NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS OPEN EVES TILL I : SEE NEW VILLAGE INN GARDEN Spedol Re.. BUSINESS and DESIRABLE St<p• to bench. $35. wk. 5 Lin" -5 times -S buck& FINANCIAL NEW HOME WE HAVE OTHERS I $145 mo. LAG UNA 494-7201 , APARTMENTS JIULES _ .,0 MUST INCluoe 2 Br .. 2 ba, cptd, drps, foreed Bob Pettit & Assoc. $120. Ulil pct Batchelor over 171Xl lGth Street Cotta Mn• S100 E1st Bluff S242 ::~~'it v:"~v:n.'Jer "!:;..,, ~.!; X:. ~'":ov~rt~:: Bus. Opportunities '300 air heat, Garb-disp, blt·ills, -====&'l.1=·=01=0=1==== garages. \l//w, di;p,\, avail n 4; 642.8170 1 ;;:;;:;;:;;:;;;;:;;:;;;= "-HOTH!NG FOR :SALe-TP: .. DE:S ONLYI trplc, patio, garage. watez -l~no~w~-~B~lrr~,~-~~~=' ,;:liiLli';Tfi;~'°aiif:avaG l• e NEW DELUXE e PHONE 642·5671 Famou1 Brand N•m• fum. Adults only no pets, Back Bay 3240 BLUF'~ furn, apt av~il. 2 MERRIMAC WOODS 3 Br, ~ Ba npr. ror lensc To Pl1ce Your Trader's Par•diM A4 CANDY ROUTES RATE REASONABLE Costa Mesa 4100 inos. -BR. 2 ba • ..-sty. 2 Incl. ~paf'. n1nstr. i;uite, d!n No1v available in Costa Meu A"-s 1_ Cou·t-Qub EXECUTIVE Home 5 BR, J ------------I Owner a\\·ay 'tll March $250 JU!l't eompleted, l or 2 BR. rn1 . ,t dill. garage, auro. Shorccliffs J Br on fre land. •;13 C.AD. DcVllle. Red and maoy othe< 10 ...... ;11 --M•• '0""' * P"h·,,,67116 Ba. Cpts, drps, clec bltn.s. Mo. Broker 646-7414 ' BA film or unfurn wl(h air doo r oJ)C'ncr ava[I. Pool & $2'.;il\I cqty -l· clrar $15~1 Jenth. upholst. P. R&H . th '· a-•. All locati,:~~ ·-''" esa r. · .no-$300. ,,.,, "140 * SUNNY * . cond, eompl sowidr;:iroofed. C 0 '-" ,., v ........ ~ ""\l'""Q :.? BR Bal"~-Apt $160 rt't'. area,_ Nr. Catholic lendora lot iv/oaks. \Vant \\'ire \V, Cd. <:ond, ne -m">"-·o·• 0 • '"'••-. V•-Vel'y CLEAN 3 bdrm 2 bath. """ • · seU cleaning evens, wO<ld ~., "~ ..... w • ""' ., ., fi.repla~, built-ins, large 2 Story ColoniaJ rl BR, 21 j AC ES Adults. Yrly ISl'. ~iling.!I dswhrs Iusb l'uKJ-Churrh, inc prop, trlr park or ran.;h 01vnr, Exchange for gd. high earnings. No selling in· BA. $32; mo. Ref & deposit. * R * • 675-1070 • ' • ' • ONLY S245 • nr l.'OOSf, 0wnl'r 673-tll7G gentlf' riding mare, TI4-volvcd, To qualify you must ~~~NTytu'd&in ~~eEIYA"'o'y", 2405 Bonnie Pl. 758-032& \VATERFRONT iv I boat sc,·e:/:uU::, w~l~v~~~-1s in~:-. ~=sw=·=A=n~1ig~"='='~"~'·=N=.8=·= 52$-1289. bf-relia.blt! and have one ,, ~ ~ 712 SL J aine'$ Pt, N.B. 3 1 d Cd $210/mo. Rltr. S.16-1141 Corona del Mar 3250 * MoteJ·AptS * dock. Lovely 2 BR, patio, clubhouse, saunas, jacu:t.ci & Br, :! Ba, ocean ,·iew. Own· trt:'D~s 0~.:ni!':c :Rs~: ~;U::Cs)~ spare time aya $135, 3 BR older, nenr 19th & Yrly lse. 673-9C60 or 697-5918 s,,.,·int pools, p:iv gar. iv/ Corona del Mar 5250 er snys subntit ineonie or A .,.. ( · HUCE 2 BR o · bit storage Everything new land for $30i'l'f equity, ~lark gotr 1.-ourse & lake. $I2a.OOO $1675 TOTAL n..,l'C:1m: Range & re rig, · in. rm., ns, 1 signal So. of O.C, C d I M 4250 ' · iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii clear. Low dn. Trade in· CASH REQUIRED furn. Children OK. Lease. l',i ba., lrplc, Nc1v cpts. Fair<>round, oron• I ar Starting at $140. Adults Les, Rltr. 543-mJ Inqu,·-about our .. ~, bo•· 0 I J t E t I "600 1---------eomr or ? (714) 459-3103 '"' '"' .. Call 3 to 9 PM only. 642-4698 :Fantastic patio: 2 car Studio & 1 BedrO:Oms Pease. us as o ~ garage. $275 J\1onth LO •TES 2 BR, -1 BA, blk/ocean & Harbor Blvd, next to Nabers ~ 'l: ~; r-,-1.1 Or Commercial. Va-~·CTN. Haine Big Bt'ar us route plan". Make YOW' LRG Clean 2 Bdr. Crpts, ""~-. 675 ,726 W RA bay. View. Pri patio. Cadillac at 42,~ Merrimac 6 cant. dear. Near Bristol, 1 ., 1 B f Iuture secure-with us, a drps, gar. No pets. $125 .• -...-.:nic Properties :.>-:> Day, Week, Month Adults, no pets. $200 yrly, ~ ort• C.1\1. Tradr for house or du.. moonl't ge :.! r. urn. Dunn & Bradstl'eet rated na. Priv. Patio. 1945 Pomona. CHAR~flNG 3 BR, 2 BA, ww e Kitchens & TV 's incl . 673-76Z9 \\lay, 545-5300 • $19M. Full, Eq, .SlO..\l. For tional eomn..,ny, For more I b · k · 2 plex in this area. call • units, sm residencr. lot or .--· 2 Bedroom $120 epts, trp c, 11e patio, •Phone serv., hid pool ON ·rEN ACRES 6Ta-;)787. information, send name, ad. 165 A 21st st. C.J\f. car gar. TIS Poinsettia. •Maid srrvice avail. Balbo• 4300 BRAND NEW 1 &. 2 BR. Furn & Unturn1~~-~~~-~--TD'S. 6.19-3-150, a1r. Killf;. dr't'ss and phone# to: 758--0328 Avail January. s7;r.i442 2376 NEWPORT BLVD. Fireplaces I prlv, paticll I E·side 3 br lun. & 2 rear 4 Br homt! Tustin. Trade for "ROtrl'E DEPARTMENT 2 BR l Ba / v crpt d~ 548-9755 CLEAN Baehelor Apts. Pools, Tennis_ Contnt'I Bkfst. apts $29,950 val. or 2 hms Jot or acre in Rt'dlaods. Al· #'!J" po Box-s,s 2 BR' "t~t·, de-, w~~her/ ' • -w 1 ' .,.s, .. o~ 1· · 1788 t R-·' ' · · ' ... " "' .. ~ ....., I & •-· f .... · All util incl .,,;:, up $ $l 7 900 Sea Lane, Cdt.1 64•J-26ll \V a rear apts, mo 1nc , so have Tahoe lot or =· Pomona, Calif. 91769 d""er. Refs rerr. 169 Mesa s ove reu·1g, ore"" air $25 p Wk & U . 150 & 0 1 ,-~---'--''--'-'-'--I 'J heat $250 on Jsc. Ucil pcl. No • er • p :U5 E. Balboa Blvd. (~farArthur nr Co11st Hwy) S59.51Xl val. 1'rU $33 J\t cq for lands property or vi c, Associate Dr. $l45. 6424868• pc.ts. 5Cll l\Iai'igold 646-1449. Bac~clor &. .1 BR:. htd pool, BALBOA 6:73-~5 UTILITIES PAID S.Cal hn1. Q\\·nr/bkr 646-3750 83S.3284 or 962.Q027 IMMACULATE l BR duplex n1a1d servti.'<!. Kilchen.s & BACHELOR APT -Ulil paid, . COROLIOO AP:'S. 2 Br. I-lave : \Vhirlpool gas dryer. J acl'C'S near Reno, MA~'UF'AC11JRER w/ gar. Apl B. 131 E. 21sl 2 BR, So 01 hivy, FBc,~almc, TV avail. 450 Victoria (Nr $80 per mo. 310 E. BaJboa 1 & 2 Bdi·m, :I swun pools. Lo\i·cr JC"vcb, studios. pent-S50 valur. Trade for Ircezer v;ilue $3,ooo. \VIII trade St. CM. 548·8SS.1 crpts, drps, bltns. l-fa.rbo1'). Blvd .. Balboa Adults only, ru.> pets, Furn house, t'rplcs.. pool, dbl. or ? ?or equal value. Cail !or late model no.-i..... $17,500 l r1vestmen t lnlo the I ='~'"~•='~· ~"~'~-<_904~~-.,,---~-,,_'-;..::==-~~---! ii desired. 6-12·37?2 CaJ'porls, patios. $180 • ;220. --.,... no. 1 Business of the day. 25 4 BR,Q2 .s,A.,c1i,ts. thd'Ps:,_:s200, CHARMING 3 Br House. 2F BIR, s,unken Liv, Rm. $120 MO/yl'ly, &ch!or apt. 301 Avocado St, C.'.\J. 673-3378 I coV~c~ot•~·=.,='~14_<1~.-,----,---.,,c Van Carnpcr, yr. historv <lf success, now mo, u1e ea en suee · rp c, 1.,4 ba. _gar avail. Util incl. Call 637-5342 or 40 ACRES rec: )a.f'ld with 536-2449 ~ 787 J SI C '1 Frplc. bit-ins, crpts, drps, ,.,-~ .., Ca See ti1gr on pren1ises NICE \gr• 2 Bl• upMc. Nei" expanding operations to So. • ~'=~oa-"="-"-"·~· -"~'·~~-I $295 nio. Call 675--49().1, .U;;ia cakrr. II 54~1 :>;536-JJ<;;'~l~Ol~~~~=~~·l-l:iiiiiiiliiliiiiiffUC:C-~ .. ~ • trl't's near ne1v Jake NE \Vhal do you bave to trade? " & k d J, HARBOR GREENS t•pts, dr1,., refrtg, range, gar. 0 Calif. Complete laetory jl). 2 BR. Fenced yard. 2 car 2 BR, 11, BA dpl• .. p,,· '·h. eves -w en s. BAY VIE\V 2 BR. $18J. Util Utah, Value $100 per acre. List it here -in range all d , d Will • ·' '""' Nc1v dctor. 1\<lulls. L.sc, $170 Co d st e "" rea Y to go. garagt>. 2 children OK. Ne 1 1 BACH. apt. older male ~m pd, Beach, pier, '"'rking. Tt'8.de all or rmrt for car, unty's lD.tJ::est read tra • ._. Pr' . •• 1 '!gmt 07 View, fl'P c. Adu ts, no pets. """ ,.... 0\l'nf'r 70-l Narcissw;. . , ,,,. g-In.... A_ ... __ , __ d -• u ... 1n lllClPcu o ~· . pets. $165 mo. 64-93!1 2290 mo., eon1p, furnished Call Adults. 303 E. Edgewater. BACHELOR unfurn tr om d1a1non<ls, boaLor · vo~-41 a ""'post-.....,.~ uUU\C a e..., abilities. Contact immed $225 mo. 646--,,,-I ti · ·d 4 BR, 2 BA. room for boaL. after 5, 278 E. 23rd St., C,ti1. lTI4) STI-2866 $UO. Also avail 1 • 2 & 3 " ino., u 1 tics pai * * * *. Once in a lifetime oppor. to -Call 6 "'° 5964 DUPLEX • 2200 sq, ft. 4 BR. Bd H t d I I ild 2 Bft .• !::Ltl'a''C. Yearly, .. * ~ .. vv. a(t pm. v=-· C l BR. No children, No pcL'i. RENTALS rm_ ea e . poo s, c.1 "' ~!!!!'!!!!!!!'!i!~!!J!!!!ll!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'~'!!!!!J!!!!'~!!J!!!!!ll!!!!ll!!!!!!!t 1 make that high income mo.,t 2'~ BA. hltns, frplc. ar. 11 ,. G & care center adj to shopp~ l\1r. Vurn(•y, Bkr. 549-3862 ....... pie dream of. Starting $325 nio/lse. !"~1-0-7573 ~·) nlo. as water pd. Apls. Furni1hed • · r-v Mesa Verde 3110 1~ Orange, 213; OX 6-4244, No pets. . LUXUP~IOUS 3 BR apt, yrly REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE salary $12,<XXJ +substantial 211: OX 6-1930 Huntington Beach 4400 2700 Peterson Way_ '~"-S~25 per mu. Inquire Gener•I General profits. Call Ken Clifford · NE\V D.cec. l-Iome w/pool Huntington Beach 3400 :->r;AS&wP,iLiiiS*-1.;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;.,1--':c~o~"~'~M~"~a;{';"~"-0~3~•0>_-1 ~61ll~·~,~l~n~'~"~"~'~'~ll~6~1'~-780~7-(n4) 774-70j{J * NASSAU PALl\1S * Off' R I 60701-===========I rm, 4 br, 3 ba, 3 ear gar & ---------l & 2 BR. Pool HUNTINGTON CAPRI MARTINIQUE LGE 1 BR ga1·age apt. Cpts, ice enta boat i;pace. Avail J an 1st. \VALK To beach. 2 BR/den. 177 E. 22nti St 642-3645 For Single Adults GARDEN APTS •lrp~. stove, rcfrig & gar. Income Property 6000 ----------Money fa Loan 6320 Lsc. $360. aft 6. 545-3528.d N.~~ hu, ni~~~c~~t~ ~~~: MERRIMAC WOODS NE\V 1-2-3 BEDROOJ\1S $1:>(1 n1n. 67~."H ~7~y /\,';!~port~~~ 2 d TD L ,.,, Excellent pal'k-llk(' sutmuncl-11.,, 1 B n oan Newport Beach 3200 Le<1df.'rsh i11 Jt. E . 842-1-166, Fu111 units avail. Sre 141 un. }~ro1n $140. Furn & Unt in .... ~ iv/hl'iitl'd pools. Extra ,,., 1110. R. l I.ilk !o p p "d I Offices available. Rm 301 '""' l".An "477 d I "100 ,,. •j . Trnnis Gy1ns Saunas n1ark1•1, av:i1I Ja11 1. AUulls re-O! nterest 6-r.;._»•I'.• n·· "'11 ---"3' ~ ''-.,.,......., Ct' <·ass J • -J '' erri· · · · ... · parking. Near shoppin;;. ,.,..~....,... u " ...., -Prompt. conl.idential set"Viet 2 bdrmAD~LbaTSlh ONNLY . I 4 LARGE BR, 2 BA, frplc, mac \Vay. 545-6300 6:!00PEdhoingc8""A06ocl;; ~lB Adults only. only, lllJ !X'ls. tl7:1-i\93G Aecep1able on one o! scv-DESK SPACE 642·2171 545-061.l; ' .. s. ew pain' nc\v cpls & drps, dbl ~ar, $145 & up -ATTRACTIVE, l ne "" " 2 & 3 BR APTS Lo'do l•le 5351 C"ra l line leased industrial for rent. 3CO N. Newport Serving Harbor area 20 yrs_ new '""ls, ne1v drapes ~ bd 1 hu•'lolo'tt" S C ·• fen'"'' back yd. S2JD. r pool ut1 pmd garden 1m Santa Ana Ave CM .,s. Blvd, suite A, NB. '.>47-1641 ottler Mort•a·-.... ,, Available Jan. 1st. $225. ''-" ' ' BACI-lELOH. & 1 BR furn ., . ' Del $ 9 • •-- !!62-SW4 living-, adulls, 110 pets. 1800 $l<lO up. Adults, no pets'. ~gr, Apt lJl 616·5542 I BR loll'l'r front. l::n111loycd N Ul(e 5000 sq. fl., 5 ,:;oo satALL Office on busy eor-~=336="=E=·=l~7=th=S=t""=''==I 3 bdrm. 2 baths, splil-l~\'el. f T 1 \Vallaef' Ave., C.J\-1. 77 •. , .. 1 '-'nnJ""" , •. ,1•7848 fa'irway Villa AplS adu!1. u1n turn. J07 via civ is.ooo sq. rt .. $165.000 c M .. "1 1 • 2 BR Sul' sldc ow n iousc. ., "'"" ,,.,., ...... , ..,. J-'ii'l<L user 70('0 sq. rt., 579,000 n('r osta esa . .,..... niont 1 F.P., Bit-ins -2 car garugc, Pool. bltns, cpts. clrps, BEAUTl1'llLLY f'URN (ii/est of Beach nr Slater), l·'lot'!'nt·r•, G'i":-1-IR:l~ utilities included. 642-6560 Mortg•ges, T.0.'1 6345 I ail J l 'th .l::X'cellent no cost loan. Fut faees poo. Av a.11. J · patio. 2 car i;ar. $1611 mo. 2 BR, Pool. Adults, no pets. 1 BR 1 de-1_, II 0,,1,,-,1• ··all •·. IV. <onall. ·~~ Cl I ! j'.'6-3387 $145 + util, Zln Maple St . ' .nc1v y ._ur~ "'--'• a Nf'ar Ora11c;e Co. AiJ-po1·1 & Huntingtcn Beach 5400 " ._ " ., C I I 6085 SEASONED >f<'' ng c er reqr ·' ' · s.1/!--0157 · ut1l. $115 mo. No ch1l~ren or ucr. Adults only. 20122 Eckoff & Assoc., Inc. ommerc • 4 -lst TD's; $5,237 Appl'n'(. 3 BDRl\1', 2 bath!=:, splil·lcvcL RENT 01' lease 3 BR, 2 BA, pets. At;!, 2ll flla1n St. Santa Ana Ave. 540-Z796 NJCEi 2 .i:: 3 bdr11. Crpted & 1818 \V, Chapman Ave. LEASED Slore~ 1'"or Sale. bal. each; 8?0, all due lS Available Dec. 20. s2G;,, f<tm rn1 , nr schls, bllns. l BTt apt, lot~ of s1oragc. 536-8887 di·pM. Nwly decor. :; blks Orangr, CaJir. 19111 St. Nr. Beth~! Towerg, mos. lO'Y ... Disc. 497-UlO Bay & Beach Real!J', Inc, $250. 962-0672 Pool, gar, Util pd. $150. 188-1LB~A~0""<=.-,...--1:-d-:c---,-71-:d 17=~~~=~~=~ lrorn bch .. 1 bdr \V/dbl al-;,.11.:lG'.?l, Eves-wknds 538-5971 S4d-l76S or 6'16-7414, Agent. "'" 00 l TO S"ii 6 901 Dover Drive, Suite 126 NB I cN=EclV::..:3.::cB~R~.~a~ll~b7ll-n<-,-,-.-,,c:, ~lonrovia, 548-03:\G JI ·r~P~·~ew ~ ~~ra els, VILLA MESA APTS 1ached gar & frp!acP. :.~6-1711 . _ ~~ .,:'4 st • c, mott. &15-2000 Eves. 548-6966 1 BR ruttt apl 1120 0,0 in ,1 aA "'213 ~ ':'1 •5 ,.0 ~ •• 7· 2 BR unfurn. pri palios, hid E Seasoned. Due 2~; yrs •. U % lge yd. \\'aik to bench. $2Q5. c · gent, "1au1, t. •lo>U-000 poo l l , ·J'J . Chil Cl-lE7. OllO APTS. S21~ ASTSIUE J I Unils iv/$1110 lndu1trial Rent•I 6090 Disc, 494--8100 497-1021 eve; 2 BR 2 b 2 C 544 9506 tJIH No children ur pets -<'al enc gar, • Al l 1 11 R N J " ' n1onthly income, "" 50.~00 ---· ---. a. ar garage. Ii:=-=========~ 64;;1848 . STONEHENGE APT~. 2 BR, dren welcome, no pr 1 s iui 1;1. • • u, • ... " ANNOUNCEMENTS Vacant. Comp. redecorated. "°'"'°'=-,--~,-.,-:-;--= z BA. 2320 Florida, nr please! SISO. Also ruril SlSii. bl"s. P1'1v. gar. pool, Util It, or land. S82,000 -No NEW BUILDING •nd NOTICES Exceptionally nice, $ 250 Fountain Valley 3410 2 BR, bltns, hca!ed_pool, 2265 Beach & Adams 536-27.'30 ng w. Wil""n. 646.1251_ r1n. -'13fJ-8038 or 5.J&-.2m . points, owner ivill carry 1260 r -an Ave., Costa 1\fesa L: ""' "'/lo1v low down, Brokt!r '"""l> se. Be h R!ty 675-3000 Canyon Dri'H!I Sl4.i. FURN. l & 2 Br apts U U S NEW ATTRACT. 2 Bdr All Xl!'as. 6-!6-37:-io. Ea.ch unit 1725 sq ft, 2 or!-Found (frM Adi} ~ Bay & ac · , · 3 BR, 1~~ BA, lge bonus rm. ./ 6~6-7984 ./ downtown H.B. No children l X RIOU $1:~~. 17442 QuC'e/l~ Lane, ~========= ices, 2 rest rooms, 110/220 FOUND In C:IM . •mall stuf. LOVELY Baycrest -4 bdrm Child's playhOU$C in rear. 2 BR, \\'/w cpts, pool. No or pets. 536--7396 1-1.B. UGS-7510 or 8•17-1.'ill-I. Business Property 6050 clectrie. Ample parking, family roo1n home. 1\1any Side yard for bont nr? \Veil children 01' pets. ~140 mo. I & 2 BDRl\1, beautiful swim $l:i~i. :I beilrooni, carf)C\S, c. Robert Nattress Realtor fed S no o p y do& e."(tras, Prestige area. $400 landseapcd. 968--7100 afl 5. 642--84[)9. Orange County 4600 pools. AdulL~. no pets, drapes, buJH-ins. '.? ACRES, Cosla Mesa_ Hi-Costa ~f~a 642-1485 ,,.,./rhinestone nose, gold per mo. Jean Smith Rltr. 4 BR 2 Ba c •pl• dr .. nr f ' ALL UTILITIES Pi\10 ""0-l."S . 1 neeklace & bracelet, blue &16-3255 , ·, '"" p~. E·SIDE lgl.' l BR, rplc,srNGLE Adults, l uxu ry 307 A d S 'cl\t . "" Y_• ____ r1scarea.Long lcrm case. Lota 6100 nitcgown, band aid on l'Chools & shop'g:. $250 mo. paneling Pri patio. 1 adult, g_arden ~~t~, w/lull rccrea-J\-1gr., v~~ ~o. ~· · ' !Sec '2 BORats, :.? BA. pvt.. patio, Pearl Devine, P. 0. Box cheek. 29G.5~S Terry Rd, 2 BR. 2 ba .• den, din. room. 846-4256 or 842-7926 no pt'ts. $155 yrly. 673-7629 tion facibues & complete . llt!aied po 0 I, ,1,asher & 19<10, Huntlngton B ca c h, 180 DEGREE VIE\V Laguna Bch Jn Cliffhavcn, $300 l========'==i"=========ol privacy. South Bay Club 2 BDRi\o1S. ln~mac. Quiet, dryer hook up. 9G2-8.t)M 92646 of ocean & (.'Oastline, small George \Villiamson, Realtor Lagun• Beach 370S Newport Beach 4200 Apts. 277 So. Brookhursl, cp!s/dl'ps, bll·Jn~, bf'a1ncd but bldable lot, Laguna Bch. COAL-BLACK kitten W/. fi t!:a 673-43~)() 673-l5&I Eves Sf LE A ult L Anaheim 171~) 772-4500 t'l'lL Adults. No p r t~ · Laguna Beach 5705 Bu1iness Rent•I 6060 Paving & util in aft. 1st or ~ar.C~ro~. 4 ~0«.Co~, EXEC. HoJT1e, 3 Br. 2 Ba. APTS LEASE OR RENT NG . d s I u Xu r y S140/mo. Heritage Rea l yr. Low dn w/low mo. pyt. es on • , , ~n. dcp,, emf, dhl gac, N•w 1 nr 2 t"'droom. privalr garden apts \Vll l country G rd G 4610 Eslatc Ask fol' Mr. Nelson. OCEAN FRONT 2 BR. 2 BA. Rl:."TAJL SHOP 1620 sq fl. 94-8 94 1131 bet. 9-3 • ....., ·,. ... _,,_ t lull atn1ospherc and com-a en rove "''n ll'l 4 JOO or 4 -1A_P_P_R_O_X_l--ld--B-1 -k-& pool & Oecan Viv, $600 mo. sundcck, 1vall to \1•all carprl, "'',,.... " Yrly $'./j(J or $18.-, furn, \\'IN-Tf'ITific Location. Air yr o • ac Call 8J:)-5050. ocean vieiv. kitchen furn. plcte privacy. SOUTH BAY SINGLE Adults Lux u r Y SPACIOUS, CLEAN J BR TER 011ly! Newly dee, Cond., earpets.· Beautiful Citrua Grovea 617S Ian German Shepherd, vie Und d k" J CLUB APTS. Irvine at 16th, garden apts with country iv/w cpl•, .. ,.1,,., elC'i' hltn,·. Adults, no pe!s. !"13&-2095 S!ore Front, ldeal for J\;Jen's Harbor & Adams. CM. Call 4 BR, 3 Ba, BL U Fi· S crgroun par in-c;, c osc Nc1vport Baach. I b t h re nd co l " '"' 549-1926 ' Townhouse. Tle!x 2 story lo beach. •194--9633, l\lr. 171~1 G4~.-0:i$0 cu a 111osp c a n -QLtlel area. Nr flvyF; & REAL ESTATE \Vear, Giel:;, Spcc,ially Shop, TAX SSS SAYED overlooks pool $~00. Owner Brack liiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil pletc privacy. SOUTl f BAY shops. Adults, no pets. General l'tc. Hillgrcn Square. 270 E. Quick escro1v bcrore '70 on PET Mallard Drake. d 1 B CLUB APTS 13100 Chapn1an 549--04]? 17th St., C.a1. Ve,.., Tame. 644-2079 LARGJ:;, ne1vly re e<.. -r. NEED an Apt. for the AvC' .. Ga rden Grove (714)1,C'=~·'=~~~~--Rentals Wanted 5990 Call 6'(6-9707 this 10 acre grove wilh avo-l Sth St "CM 646-252? LOVELY tvwnhse 2 BR. 2 duple."(. Ocean vic1v. Adults, holidays? Bayfront 2 BR ti-,.,,. ~"30 NE\V 2 BR, I EA. shag •Tpl. -===-~0~,~-,~-,~c"E~"-cado ruld citrus trees. Pricer ----~··-·-' _. ____ 1 1175 I · C ~ D d. h I 1· I STORES or ,-"' oodl BA. Frplc. nc1v cpts. Im· no pets. · nio. year Y· J(ing sz., l-l11.·1n) on1p. rps, is 1v isr, pa 10, man1 $85,000. WHITE Male p e, mC'd. poss. $2j(), Agt. PLACE P.EALTY 494-970-1 furn. \Vlli?ens, l'tc. $:i50 nio, Laguna Beach 4705 ceiling frp~c. gar, Adulls, no $33 to $150 util incl. St. ex· CALL (714 ) 722·1306 Vic, Fountain Valley, 646--0732 4 BR, 2 BA. fa1nlly roon1, (\Vlll consider a lease). Call pets. SlG.i. 2650 Eide,,, posurc. rl!i!I \V. Lqtli, cat A.sY. ror Bruce Alexandet· or 892-8900 !="========='I ocean vic,v. Lrasc op!lon. 5-16-7602 or &12-4641 CHARi\1lNG 2 bdrm, unit. 537--0062 aftl'r 7 pin ,r,. Sun, ROOr-.1 Suitable for gift §hop, Bette Carpenter. FOUND Vicinity of Victoria Newport Shores 3220 $295. 4!17-1642 """""'"'"'""""~~""""I Ne\\•ly r c rJ e c., ·w/w QUIET J & 2 Br gard('n apt, n1cn'ii shop or ladies shop. J\1ILTON J. and Canyon, Costa ~tesa. l~ BLKS to beach. 3 Br, 2 Ba, 2 story A·lramc, lnvely residential hon1e $ 2 8 5 "-·/lease. 67.'r-0307 \Vkdays; anytime "-'kends I~========= MESA MOTEL carpetlng & d r apes , Bltns, patio, hid 11001, -·•is w.,1~;:0~·;• M"' Call .Jini Bcrkshin.'. 673-9405 WE RS HOW One llimalayan eat 548-7218 Laguna Niguel 3707 * LO\V \\'EEl~LY RATES* Completely_ furn. Lgc. ll'Ct! adul!s, no pets. $160 nio. -~ •• 1111~r.,1 ••u•1ru•1l BLACK Lab puppy wearing , . . .d shadecl patio. 120 yds. from ~6-!"116:1 -:.. ---.._---::. ••G~-.:_11 11 .. "r' Office Rental 6070 FOR Lease. $250. Good vie\V, (an1ily room, l BR. 2 large patios, i;ar~lening liC'rvieC incl. 1!15-4870 K1_1chcns, TVs, ma1 scr-\\foods Cove Beach $17:i mo. ., _ . Realty Company black stud oollar found vice. l-leated Pool. M. . R 11 4.!H-0731 LARGE -llR. crpt~, dr11s, e LANDLORDS e LAGUNA BEACH 1012 S. Hill, Oceanside Newport Pier. 673-8507 &16-96.lll C :~~~ yp 1l ( earport & pool. Kuls ok. FR.EE RENTAL Sl::RVJCE Air Conditioned ORANGE Grove, Riverside, f'OUND Racoon \Vith eot-, OCE \NFRONT Ap!s -2 I . l . ar y urn 2214 College, Apt No :I. Broker 534·6fl82 ON FORESf AVENUE 12 5 J Pre J·,•·-moosl o·dentt'fy. Call , University P•rk 3237 •1 • seaside i;tud10 bungalow, 646-7095 acres, · yr. naves. • ~ Brl1·n1, ndul t couple only. No rdcn setting Lease $17011 ...:....:-=~~==~~-Desk space avail<1hle In paid inlcresl 7% loan. $6850. 53&-9414 after 5 pm. Mission Viejo 3708 pels. $250 per nio, 67:>-2221 ?a 11 'u t l Ii 1 i es 15."JS CORIANDEr. 0 r .: Rooms for Rent 5995 newel!! office building at per acre. 644--1373 Brand new 2 Bdrm. 2 bath nr 547-1641. Tincl S'f1'· 8 R fs 494_2775 • Delu.'Cr. 2 BR, 2 BA, i;arai;e, prime location in do\YOtownJ ========== Loat 6401 Ulhousc sm. Avail. no1v 4 Br homf'. 2 Ba! h .1 7-=-cc-=~,---,---.,..-,--= e e-e ear. c · $155 mo. AduHs, no pels, LARC1'~ llnon1, pnvale balh, Laguna Beach, Air eondi.' Acreage 6200 ;:.;;;:.;. ________ , z BR. 2 Ba. Avail 1/15 $290 earpeti11g, palio, nvailablc 1 & 2 BR ful'n & unfurn. Sl;J() SEE NE\V VILLAGE INN 546-2()44, ,_.,.c;rkin:; girl. tlonecl, carpe~ed. bcautltul LOST. yng blk male min Fr, 3 & Den townhou.~c $310 immediately. $2611 Per • S1l75. 1~Pl15:.,~11p'~1'· ',1.lns, Slcps 10 beach. $35. \\lk l ·~""~.0~1~0-,-,,~2-B=R~l7' -.,B~A. G7~rlD77 entrances: Frontagt on 40 Acres, So. Calif. $25. poocU~. (Cosmo.I \Vht eoatee J In"· S32' m""lh on l•n,c. Call ~nd pno' pa io. :i ... 1 accn ia $14' LAGUNA 494-TiOJ "'''"' ' ' :i F A I d t DOWN $2" PER M~·-1 I •· ··' . M 3 1/J atn rm 1ruuse a .,,. '-" lliC>'Ui<Nrr-;;;;;b;J,:"h;;;;;o:l ~~':_;;m~o~._,:;~:...:::::.....:::...:::::1 Patio, closed gm·agc, nr $l:i \VK &. up w/ kll eticn $30. Ol'est ve .. rear ea s o , ,), v.'1 1r, w un1l'C:r ~ung Jaw. r. 3 BR. 2 Ba. house $300 ask !or Net Shukrs at $85 .. FURN 31' mobile hon1e, RENTALS shoppin /Ailulls, n·, pets. ivk l'ilurlin apL 2:176 Newport r.1unclpaI parking lots. $50 $2,495. FULL PRICE. L. Robertson, Contact Nwpt P(). 3 BR. 2 Ba. houSI'! $100 l\lission Viejo Realty Co. nice adult park. be;lch &l'C'a. U f --Led Bh·d. 5-18-97:..3 per month for space. Deak Shewfelt, l2G \V. Third Sl.. lice Dept. or (2131 STI-3Cll4 , • Red Hill Realty 1133-0820 8.17-9:i00 or 8.10-2808 Xlnt for one. 646-4910 l-!A~p~l~•~·_::::_:::nu~r~n~<=Mc:::•'-::::l ol~l~45~-;,-::;;;;:2-2389::;;~· -;;:c-:;o::;:= and chairs available for $5. L.A. Phone : (213)6~101 coll . I~~=~==-"==="-==========·-=-======="°'= Gener•I 5000 2 BR, l~i Ba, dishivhr. Motel1, Trlr. Crts. 5997 Business houni answeiing · REWARD! Violet al" G.irl! General 3000 General 3000General 3000 cpts, drps, upstl'!!. $1:'i0. 766 service available for $10. EXCELLENT opportunity lO t ~:::::..:::c...----.:.:;.:..o.;=c.;;;_ ____ --'-"------------• W. Wilson, &12-7958 Sc~ SANDY'S TRAILER COURT All utilities paid except acres ReTl() art'a. Large Sting Ray. Taken from . VEN DOME t L 1 lake. $25 per mo. handles. porch. Can identity. Unin-, $©ttdtl1A-LG£.?fS® The Punle with the Builf-ln Chuckle 0 l!eorronge letter~ of th• i'/>-"'(r:::::-..._./--.., four lCrombled words be. f t :~r ·~,~m;~ ~·d·I i.:..;I H_..j .;..,L j-c~I -..1'.-il { • j FE:;_;L PrlT--R -,--,rll l I' ~:.. _ _..,,. __ ...-; 1 4 j j j5 )t,,. Naw creotion: A hor d09 i:=-=~·;:·==·==-, twenty feet long. It tokes core , I oi o - -In o movie theolre. IROKREW t>·•1 '· .--,.,....,.-r..,--'11"-1 O Comcil4rt• th• chvd:le c;uotc<i "• I' I I I I' h I d by l1tlin11 in t o m!u nlJ wor t. " _ _ " you dwelop lrom 51cp No. 3 below, :e ;~~~JR~~:~~P.£s 11 11 !1 f c j> I' I' 1· I -~~~~~i~~~r._·~~f0~'l_.l_..l~l_l~ll I I I • SCRAM-LEiS ANSWERS IN CLASSIFICATION 9000 ' I - mgr, ap · Space.<: avail now. Max 26'. te rphone, go• •743 "',_.. surt!d , Child heartbrOkcn. 2885 ~fENDOZA DRIVE Call G46-ffi81 DAILY PILOT 56-21.53 lMJ',1ACULATE APTS! 1 & 2 BR apts. 2 Split-ICvPJ. \VEEKLY rales Sea. Lark 222 FOREST AVENUE L•k• Elainore 6202 ----------1 ADULT & FA?.IlLY C/D, bltns. No pct s . l\1orcl. 2301 Nrwport Blvd.. LAGUNA BEACll ----------LOsr: 5 yr old l\1ale Altered SECTIONS AVAILABLE 54~5-f!l. See Mgr, Apt A Co.<:ra l\1csa -49<1·9466 3 ADJOlNING h lll11 ide Sealpoint Siamese. Declaw- Close to shopping, P•rk z BR, $155. """ts, drps, FINE STORE/OFFICE lllkeview lots, near casino ed. Vic. Huntingto n "'' "000 w ou9 Harbour. Reward! (2131 * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba bltns. Pvt patio, enc:! gar. Gue1t Homes 5998 Fer Lease ...,, · ._....., 592-5886 * 2 .Bedrooms Adults. 549--0433 -----On Via Lido *Swim Pool, Put/gl"N'n EW p • I H PRIVATE Room & bnth for App 0 1500 Sq Ft 3 ACR.E:s -10 ml!~ norlh ol CA.i'\fEO Blond pa.rt Persi11n ,' * Frpl, lndlv/lndry fac'll . N riva • cme am1Jul11rory pcn!On. Lovely r x . • ' Reno near Honey Lake at female cat. l yr old. NN!ds 1845 Anaheim Ave. in 11. 4-~lcx. Lg J ~".-w/ ho111c. nice i;urroundlng~. SOc Per Ft. fool or Siems. Level, clear, medieation. Lost on Avon COSfA MBSA 642-2824 everytlung, Nr Fwy, .,.-1&-i016 good nutritious meal.<:. Costa 3~17D~ RL~:L T!1t~~Oo $3,000. S36-Ul9 St., N.B. 347--2765 3 Bfl, 2 BA. upstrs. Ne1v J\lcsa. ~~7~i3 •• 1 ° CABIN w/5 acres $4.250. 2 \'R. ~'hlle Shep Samoyed , ,hag ept. Bltns. Xlnt Not1h MODERN 3 room suite, Low luiv down & easy Female colll!.l' tags Vic. • C.M. loc. $195 mo. 5571L;I Mi1c. Rentals 5999 CPts., air eoni;J, janitor aer. terms. Breek Nott Rlt.y, Bench &: vorkiown, ·N ' 3 Room1 Fumiture LCE. 2 & 3 eri~POOl. Crpts ---------vice. ample pn.rktng:, 64, ~.4 V'1. R<wanl. -$19 95 & Up SINGl..E G11N1gc For Jtt>nt • So C U! l t N Bk BJd -~ • d~,. Ki•· & sml ""h1 ok. · a . s: at. ~-• ... ""' ''~ °'Sitt i\-ft"i>a A.n"8.. Cnn-"'"' E 17th ............ 2 LOTS, Country Club J--lghlS. SILVER poodle, fenia.le, no • l • h-M th R t·'-1!m l\1aplo Apt 3. 54_8--2808 M1N • ~on~t , .ont • •.,.. t'ln en ..,... vcnit>nt Loe. Call (2l3J CO!Jla ri1c51l G42-l48S $79;. each, 10% rlo"'"-lag, child's pet. v I e. • \VIDE SELECTION J BR apt, single adults. Stove 371-3965. ..642--~7* f\fagnolia &: Beach Blvd,: NO DEPOSIT 0:-A.C. & re.rrig. No pef!J. 545--0876 SINGLt-: Car Garage, Corona l\JARtNER'S CENTER F .V. 962--5404 • l£FRC Furniture Rcntal11 del 1lt11r. $20 a n10. Qill • ~~:" i! s,'? .. '; Bldg. Rent or TIME FOR LADY 'R black wallet, Im-: 517 \V, 19tli, CM 548·3481 h e= ,27 1 ....,;o;. ;.;i.. u... Beauty lhOp, • Newport Beac 5200 ,.,..,, sc-mc fQuip. 149 Riverside portant cards. Pleai1e return , $70. 1 Br 4--plex. Gas. water Ave N 8. 6.1(1...2414 K ASH Apt. r~. 474 N. Cout Blvd., ' pd. Avail now. Broker Income Property 6000 " · · Cj)UIC C Lag, ll<h. Good ttw&N ~ GRACIOUS ADULT LlVTNG 200 .. 1000 SQ. IT. Newport I~;:,;.=;;:,,.-,-.,,..-,,,-,...,-2 Br, 2 Ba, hl·rlse blc.1.i, Eit· 4 \JNITS &lboo. Peninsula. lleaeh Civic Cir. artl\. ~DNIATURE Ala.It Black $150, Ulil pd. 2 Br, gar, clllttg b:.i.y & oce~1 ,\'le•·· \\Tlnll't rrntal11 $300/mo, Secretarial MTVJ.ccs. 3345 THROUGH A Daeltshund. 7 mo old. Vtc. bl!M. Cbildttn OK. Bkr JllCUzti pool. o 1ey1\1 or•, Potential .i;ummer rental!! Newport Blvd., N :B. Baktr, C.~f. Call -549-0880 1;:534-<960;;:=::::===== subterranean pk'g, boat V-.iOO pt>r week. OwT1CT lcav-6r~1001 . GEruilAN ahort--halttd lo!it , ''caata M•a• 5100 slips avaU for tena.nl.s. ini; area. Price $<15.000. Ceil --A"r"'R"'PO=RT"""cr=Nr"E'"R:--DAILY PILOT vie. Orange CG. AlrpotL ; .;,;.;;,;;_;;;;;;;..._____ 612.-22>2 ?>fartln Rltr, S.1S.63.12, New 1, 2 & 3 nxini dchL~f' ~lay ha\.'C 1?1'WI~, 545-31D) : RENT • • 2flit,crp!s.dryJS, ThC"BluffsN'ntorbuy,dlJC3 DUPLEX CD~t. 2 hm1~. 11u \tes. Adj . new WANT AD LJlS'I': SUnglaasu. blac , r:ncL j!ar le prlvale patlo. SR 2 BA 11pUt Jcv, cust dee. $~i.\OOO, S8JXX> dl'JWO. ln(.'Omc ~btcArthur f~lvf1 , f'rom fle'<. fnunes. l:ttJ' g~ 1 Sl!i5. 6'1:1·3690 pool, Jan 3, $300. 644-20.'\9 $415 t.fit. 67;;...GCM-I $1z.-,. C11ll :.46-i!l.U. \II:'.'. Cb'°IA ti!eso,. S~ '---'-"-'--'--'---'-'----"-'----~ -' \ < L ------... -· -------~---------------·----~.---------~------------------------. ' ' . . ' ' -=------------------- JOIS lo EMPLOYMINT JOIS lo EMPLOYMINT Jobe Mon. Wom. 7100 Jobe Mon, Wom. 7100 Joes" IMPLOYMINT I Joas a ~~PLOYMENT Jobe Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobe-Mon, Wom. 7100 MERCHANDISE FOR MERCHANDISE fOll SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADli Furnltu,. IOOOFurnllure 1000 When You Want it done right ••. Cati one of the experts listed below/I * AlRCR.Af'T MECJ.J, * Overseaa lnfOrnui.tlon Call (n~ I 17~2610 Assembly. EXP'D. ELECTRONIC ASSEMBLERS \V~rina & P.C. Board fabrie11.· Uon, i\ppl. in person TRANSICO~l CORP. 851 W. 18th St., C.?>1 . ASSISTANTS lo Oepl. store J. W. ROBINSON JIAS OPENING FOR SALESPERSON WOMEN'S CASUAL SHOES Top (..'()IUfltisaionir. f u I I tlmt. Excelknt bene.filll. RECEPTIONIST Apply "'"'""'" ** NURSES AIDES .Ex'pe.rlenceii -** Part Time DOORMAN. Ap- ply PORT THEATRE, CdM, !!!:Yell. 6 p.m. PHONE WORK \Vomen l-Girls. Pleasant telephone ~"Ofk trom our of· lice. No exp nee. Full &: pa.rt tlm". $l -S5 per hr. Apply 230 w. \Varner SUit.e 205, S.A. SERVICE DIRECTORY ~pared ~sume must haw 10-S pm, Mon. thru Fri. two yra. dent.a.I v.:perknce. t~ASHJON ISLAND SERVICE DIRICTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY S.by1lltlnt 6550 Carpet Cl .. nlng 662S P•perhen glng Eve. hrs. All uruon benefits. NEWPORT BEACJ{ l\10THER of 2 little ttrls, Diamond Carpet Clea~ P __ •i_n_ll_n.:g~----61-50 Salary $3.44 per hr. C.all lot Equal opportunity emplayu PLASTICS (njectlon l\foldlng Expcr. OR trainees {female) toe. day or craveyard shill ~r 1!. App. M pm, Mon- Fri. desitts babybitting, my 187 21st St, Costa ti1esa -appt. for interview, 633-1531 OOMESI1C Help wanted. hOme, Balboa Island. N:e 2 Home & Apt Oeaning JNT1ti/~· Ava-. Ex 1 • Starting Dec. :16th in C.M. Orange Coast Pla.sti<'! 850 W. 18th St., C.1.1. 11p. 67>1644 G'if>..1-317 Free e:stimatca · 1~~ only'. S yr, ARCHITECI'URAL Dra!U-834-2180, uk for Mr. Hoey guat. pa.intmg avail. Also, 1na.n. Growing tinn needs CIBLD Care ?.1y Home. Hot CARPET &. Fw-n cleaning: AptB & .Conun'I, 548·1546 exp'd, dra1u1man. Diversi. * DRIVERS * lunches. Near V it'lo rl a for 1 day S!'rvice & quality EX-PAINTER, no\v s chl fied practice, Ne_wpt. Bch. N .: ........ • RENT sp,ice avail in bu!y lalon, xlnt location. 1.fale -pref. 673"'5342 School. Call 646-9800. ...,·ork, Call Sterling for teacher will paint eves & area. ITI<li 5.\6-03.>4, 0 _,......llftCI \\'ILL babysit boys age11 2-4, b!'ightnf'ss! 64 2-3520 \vknds. Xlnt workmanship, BABYSITTER, \Oo'alkln&: di11t NKHIClry! RETIRED Proj. Engr. CP!\f sub contr. Send ttsume c/o Box 4384. Jrvinr, Calif. 92664 fr:nced yard.· Costa ttleJ>a Electric•! 6640 Free est. 646-4519, 540-0062 Jrom F'.V. elem schl .• refs Must hl.ve cJea.n Calltornil atta. 646--9541 ;;;.;..;.;.;.;.o;;;,.. ___ ...:= HO LIDA y SPECIAL, Int. .ir req. Call 968-6700 alt 5: 30 drlvtnc record. A?PIY BABYSITI1NG, my hOm.! ELECTRICAL service & Ext. painting. Lie&. insurd. p.m, YELLOW CAB CO. weekcy. daily, eves. RC'il.!Dn· repair. 24 hrs •. 7 days. No Free ests. Loccl ref.s. 30 )TS BABYSJ'ITER full 1 i me 186 E. 16th St. P /T Gener•I Office Local firm needs pl 1vith office exp. to work 4 hrs a day, call Loraine, \\'eslcliU Pel'90llnel Agency, 2043 \Vestcliff Drive, N.B, 645-mO Restaurant ablf', reliable. 641-6037 job too small. Re-model & expcr. "O:iuck" 64~ 6:30-4 p.m. 'Thni-!\1on 1 Costa Mesa addi~. II it's electrical, PAINTING paperh'"""ing child. \Ylll prod. trans .. Aft D Cl k EX· • • k Ma ot ,1·e fix 11 • 6'16-4772 • ..... '6 • .... rug er , r1c , sonry, C. · 2:-; yrs exper. Old entry 4:30 p.n1., 646-3vtJ PERIENCED -Park Lido --------'6;.:5;.:6;.:0 E L E CTRlClAN, lit..-ensed, v.'Orkmanship. Reas. Free BANK Per110nnel Ex p : Pharmacy, GU-1580 b o n d e d . Sn1all jobs, est. 642-1322 .secretarial, clerical, NCR Engineer BUILD, Remodel. repair Brick. block. c o n c r e t e , carp!!ntry, no job too smell. Lie. Contr. 962-0945 8u1lneu S1rvic1 6562 SMILEY'S Business Services Ta.'<es, C.P.A. bookkerping, I n.11uran«. Mutual Jund11 & RA!al Estate investments. Notary. 646-9666, 642·2221 FOR CARPETING OR CARPET LAYING C. A. Page &t?-2070 FASI' efficient bookkeeping servi~, posting, b i 11 i n g P.t-L's, &. collectioo. 962-lli27 i',.la111tcnance & repair. -. PAINTING • lnt./Ext. 450 proof machine opera.tor. 54$-520.1 3 06 t.ocu• t'Cferences. lmmed. 400-5755~ 4 1 Doheny Park PLAN CHECKING Floors 6665 service. 646-5242, 646-3657 Dr. Capistrano Bch -ENGINEER - ;_;:.;:..,:_ _____ :;.:.:;: .For Detter Painting, Inter· * BARBER * to ma.na&:e ior & exterior, acoustic ceil-ne1v Barbershop. Sheraton CARP1'..IING f?'f'e cstima1e Lie. rontr. ~0-1262. ~78 6680 ings. 646-4077 Beach Inn ; lor details, call Lllu Evans. 536-1421 EXTERIOR-INTERIOR & MAINTENANCE BARBER. Very progressi\'e G•rdening e £4&-3185 e shop in beautiful Laguna GARDENING & landscapillg. PAINTING-Ext-Int. 18 yrs, Beach. 4M-505t l" yrs ~xp.ctean-u p , Exp. Ins. Lie., Frtt est. BEAUTY Operato;. female, sprlnklcrsinst'd &repaired. Acou~t. Ceiling. &18-5325 prefer 1v/c l1cntele, 673-U66 ===='=-"'=-'-==ol Progressive new salo n . A_L_'_S_C_aro-,-...,.--.-La-w-n 1 Plastering, Rep.1ir 6880 .'"-='°~'"====-c---I l\laintenance. Commercial, •'BOOKKEEPER* wanted e P ATCH PLASTERING Call 543-3943 industrial & residential. All · typrs. Free estunates 3 lo 5 p~f only. * &l&-3629 * Call ~l'J0.6825 JAPANESE Gardener, =============!BOOKKEEPING, part time, roxp'd, romp. yard service. P_lumbing 6190 knowledge ot la.'Ces helpful Jo'rcc rstimatc. 968-2303 but not nr.cessary. 897--0443 $939. lo $1141. per month -CITY OF- NEWPORT BEACH Nrw J>051tioo in the Build- ing: Department requir- ing deirtte in civil, archi· tectura.I or structural en- g ineerl"i' and one year or experience checkini: building plans. For re11taur11.nt po s 11. lo n s , pleue contact our * NE\V *' Reuben's & Coco's Restauran~ Riverside. Calif. 3640 Central A""· See Betty Bruce at Agency for Career Girls 410 \V Coast H\vy., N.B. By appoint. 646-3939 Builders 6570 JIM'S Gardening & lawn "-"-"'.;.:..'-----'-"'...:I maintenance. Res & <.'Om· PLU~mrNG REPAIR No job too sma.li • 642-3128 • BOAT CARPENTERS Apply to the Pel"90nne1 0 r t i c r, 3300 Newport Blvd., Newport Beach, Calif. ~. (Il4) 673-66ll immediately. SALES: A1TENTION Mobile hn1. OWnen. Ladies that want to supplement your in- come. No phone &0liciting. Do not have to leave your brn. P/time: wrk. For info, call 836-5441, lD-6 BUILDERS n1ercial. * 540-4837 CONSI'RUC'J'ION SALES: $3(.(1 week in wig: Roofing 6950 Clean-up servite, bonded CLEAN·UP SPECIALIST • 64~ * fllo1l'ing, edging. odd jobs. * ELECTRONIC TEQ-IS, * fashion field. Need 5 Overseas Intonnalion salespersons, potent I a I EXPERIENCED Reasonablr. 548-6955 Call (TI4l 774-2610 u n Ii m i te d . call l\Irs. Carpentering 6590 Gener•I Services 6682 ALL TYPES: rock, \Vood & asphalt shingles. LEA.KS REPAlRED. \Vork guar. Apply 847-1136 EXPERIENCED •. , .•• , •• , • Robinson 842-4449 O'DAV YACHTS ••· •· ·· ·• · .. COUNTERMAN SALES; Attention Beauti-3090 PULLMAN Clly Auto Parts cians and X-Beauticia.ns CARPENTRY· hlINOR REPAIRS. No Job Too Small. Cabinet in p.r- •ie1 It o t he r cabinets. Experienced BARTENDERS servin& all Orange County. "'-""' COSTA MESA 207'l Placentia, c.~r. that \Oo'&nt to supplement S~•:.w;c:.:i n"g'-----6:.9;.;;;60 1---=-=~~--,.,~-Foreign Car Mechanict your income -to style. & ~II BOYS 10 -14 Good eo benefit incl aid our fabulous Tress-Chic \Vig. MS-8175, U no answer leave H I" 6730 mag at 646-2372. H. 0. :..::1;;;";.;1:.;n,,_( _____ -".;.;; DRESS~tAKING !';ATISFACTION GUARANTEED CALL 962-1060 Carrier Routes ~n vacatio~. groups, ins, Punt. Fllr Intervw, call 836-5441 tor forms furni!hed fr~ Good SECRETARY Anderson REPAIRS • ALTERA- TIONS * CABINETS. Any siz~ job 25 )n exper. 54S-6713 GEN. Repair. Add. Cab, .f'onnica Paneling, Marlite. Anything! Call Dick. 673-4459 CARPENTRY, Cabinets Remod. No job too small. qual work. Call &16-2576 REPAIR, Partitions, Small Remodel, etc. Nile or dRy, Reas! can KEN 540-4679 Cement, Concrn 6600 CEltfENT \VORK, no job too YARD/Car. Cleanup. l..aiUM Beach, So. l.8£UM. comm. schedule ASk tor Leading bearing manufac- DAILY PILOT Joe 11oore Ph 540-1764 turl!r has immed. o""ning Dl'cssrna.k.lng. Alterations 642-4321 · · ..-~ Special on coal hems HAIR STYLIST for a Sec. !\lust have Alnl ~10/load. SaJvagcables free. • Rrmovr ivy; grad e. 962-8745. •Hauling. llave pickup. licensed & 494-100:1 * 646-6446 * CASHIER and counter 111Jrk. \V/f"ollowiJli. Excluliive typina: & SH 1ikill1 v.·/3 yrs -===='='=====! J\ilale or female over 18. Ap. Shop. gen'I office exper, Bkgrnd 6974 ply in person The Buri:er, Call _ 6U-G857 in Unance or accnlg "'ould 4501 W. Coa.sl Hwy, N.B. No **HELP \VANTED** be helpful. Xlnt benefits incl * Vrmc, The Tile r.1an* phone call.~ protit sharing, Apply Per- e k I ,_,, & . '-------~---1Garment exp.. all phasff. · I n. 1 ust. \i·or · nsiau repairs. COAST~L AGENCY CALL 641-3472 .soMc ...... p : ~4 ton insured. TILE. Ceramic 6735 Nn job too small. Plaster Profetsion•I Transport Dyn•mic1 BAY & B<'ach Janitorial. patch. Leaking sho wer Employment *HEAVY EQUIP. l\fEOlS, A D!v. ol Lear Siegler C.,._,,, 1vindows, fl-"· m. -p ,·r 0 •7 19571"'" """" Overseas Information 3131 W o-,,.-S A Rt·,.'& Commc'J, ~1401 '" a • "" -&IQ-V"-'Q. Assistance Call 1714) 774-2610 Just oti ~bor"&_°!,y~;r Tr •• S.rvl·ce 6980 A niember oJ HSKPR .,. E I 0 I ... , E I • APr CLEANING * '-'=""-'"'-=-'------Sncllillg & Snelling Tnc. -M'I hr care, light qua ppor uni..,. mp oyer 'Fast &: 1horough 642-8.1&1 TREES Pru ·" 1 d :!790 Har......_ Bl, CM ~.,, "=s:. hskp'g & meals. Terms to SERVICE Station Allene!: '' ·11· Cl · .. _ nL-...., 0 PP e • uw-;J'N"'VJoN be negotiated. Call Long F 11 11· 1 i ian1i'I ean1ni; ,.,,.,rv. removed. 26 yrs exper. Harbor Blvd. at Adams u or p ime em P . CARPETS, \Vindows. firs. 1~=~=-~~------1 Beach Community HospiW, 7Al\l-4Pl\I & llPi\l-7A1t Ae~i.~ !~~erandeqp~~ .,,,~A COLLEGE Student needs HatJield section, room 107. -"Uts open. s a I a r y + etc. Res or Come'!. Xlnt <' . .-..,,.,., ......-•Mn "'' ...,'Ork Reas! Refs. S4s-t..lll =~~~~~=--.:.;;:.:.,~ Tuto~ in Penmanship and HOUSEKEEPER & child C.omm. r.tust be local resi-TREE SERVICE, gcn'I ya.rd Ph0n1cs. In my home. care S1ii d k $50 k + dent. Apply Richfield, 200 e \VINDO\VS DIRTY'! cleanup. SPR INKLER 67~77_60 Days, 545-0946 rm&' b~.•P.dwv, 1:.A'::.,,.. .. \V C H NB 1''"rr't' est. 15 years exp. REPAIRS 646-5848 Evenings •u · ac. -nlr";/ .. ...,. • oast wy., · ' Johnny Dunn 642-2364 -GENE'S TRE°E SERV---* COO!< -. ~l/1''. Apply· llOUSEK~EPER/Cook, 6 SERVICE STA. ?o.fAN. TOOL & DIE . MAKERS *Doy Shift* ?.flnlmum S Yl'S. e.xperienct, Pt'Oil'euive and form dies. Excellent i;rowlh opportun. it!e1, overtime, fringe ben- efibi. APPLY IN PERSON SHUR·LOK CORP. 1300 E. Normandy Pl., Santa Ana 11 blk, N. ol ttfcFadden, }ii blk, \V, oJ Grand.) TURRET LATHE -OPERATOR- DAY SHIFT 1'1inin1um five years experi- encr on Warner Swasey tur· ret lathr.1, setup & oper;i.te on close: tolerancr: \vork. Excc.llent gro1vth opportuni- 1ies, overtime, fringe bene- fits. APPLY rN PER!:iON SHUR.LOK CORP. !JOO E, Normandy Pl., Santa Ana PUBLIC NOTICE DECORATOR GITT CANCELLATION OF 18 LUXURY APARTMENTS Sp1nish & Mediternn11n Fumituro All BRAND NEW 9-pc. Mtditerr•n•1n Bedroom Suitt in Pec11n !Rog. $H9.00I .................... ___ NOW $161.00 Gorgeous Sp•nish Custom Built Sofa with m•tching love Seet-Choice of b:eautiful lobrics. I Rog. $419.951 ---·-·····NOW $225.00 ;:~di'~.~in~~3 ~=~~e;~-~d--c~;f·~-~--T~bi;;~~~r::~~ Tell Decorator T•ble limps !Rog. ~9.9!1 -·-········-·---·--·· ... _NOW $11.00 Sp•nish H•ngin9 Swag ;.1mp1 !Rog. $~9.951 ···········-················NOW $22.50 t A decorator drean: house on display -3 , rooms of gorgeous Spanish furniture (was : SAC$Ri5FICE • • . • • • S398i CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN h t PAYMENT NOT DUE 'TIL 197C mm FURNITURE 1844 Newport Blvd.H .. b•~'e1vd.1 Costa Mesa Only Every Night 'Tilt -Wed., Set. & Sun. 'Til 6 JOBS lo EMPLOYMENT Schools-Instruction 7600 furn~ture 1000 11 blk N. of McFadde n, AUCTIONEERlNG ~---------SP AN I SI I tilt back chair, 31 J1ii blk \V. of Grand) REGULAR 2 WEE!\ TERJ\-1 plastic n1a1·ble end tbt's, ~panish pic!~rc, baby dress- ing lb/, crib, misc baby Hems. Color l'V. needs n1inor repair. 720 Driftwood, S.B. (2131 :J96--0(M7 airer G P .r.f. \VE have an opening 1or a Be in business for yourself! beginner in c irc u l ation Learn to be an auctioneer. managcmr:nt. Permanent \VEST-BEST School of Aue· situation. tor high school tioncertng, 206 \V, 4th, Santa graduatr: who ha.s completed 1 ~A~""==· ~835-='~'~"==~=~ his military obligation am MERCHANDISE FOR is looking tor a business SALE AND TRADE with a bright future. Con-7'8" SO.fo'A. dark bro"'"· n1odcrn, real ,good condition, not 1\·orn or soiled. S-10. 54g...2065 tact Benton Williams at the Furniture 8000 DAILY PILOT for 11.n in-'"""''w· 17 Pc. King Size USED assorted occasional chairs. $12 ea. Usr:d <issorted dbl & !win head- boards, S:i ra. The Factory, 1885 llathor, ~()...@!:.! WOJ\olAN to clean house 1 Bedroom day per 1vcek. R.c.ferences Large 9 drawer dresser, mir- required 645-2438 ror, 2 bedside stands, king Schools-Instruction 7600 MEN lo WOMENI COMPUTER PROGRAl\f- .l\lING IS THE KEY TO YOUR PROFITABLE FUTURE! Classes start soon. Pilot program offering the finest equipment and facil- ities available! Real-time computer proaramming. size headboard, frame, quilt.. ed matu-css. sheets, blank- r:!s, etc. Choice. of Sparush or 1.fodern Slylc All For $249 No down Pn1ts. only $9 mo. WELK'S WAREHOUSE 600 \V. 4th St, Santa.A~ Open Daily !1·9 Sat, 9-6 Sun. ·11-6 PRICES SLASHEDI BEAUTIFUL King bed . quilt- ed mallrcss, Com plete, un. used $105, w or l h $2.JO. . 8·12·6536 f'\'CS. T\VIN Bed 11•i!h boi.: springs, spn>ad & bols!C'N!, excellent condition S60. &~3-WSG aJ t 7 3 PIECE SECTIONAL sso. j 18.:;.s02 Office Equipment 8011 up to 80'70 Savings ELECTRIC typc1\Tit"r sian- 8' Sofa & love scat $159.95 dard Royal desk model $75. 5 Pc Span game 21et $169.9;'; Stand $7.50. 67.1 -6760 Kine; Sz quilted matU-css & v.·eckdays 8:JO 10 J2 & 1 to box spring!'; ........ S99.9:i 4:30. 5 Pc BR King, Span $179.951---,-,,-------- Approved Furniture * ROY AL S 1 and a r d 2159 Harbor, CM ~8-!!660 typcwritrr, f'XC<'llent con- dition. Recent mod('l, $75. DON'T GIVE UPI 6~-9784 You may fi nd it at An1erica's IT~Y=P~~~w=Rr~TE;'~R~.--A"d~d 7;n-g largest, mo5t unusual un-ntachinc, calculator. very finished turnitlll'e store. Cor. reasonable. XJnt cond . Redhill & Santa Ana Fwy, 892-2423 Tustin. 1 mi So. ol Newport Fwy. Open 362 days per yr. l1ERl\1ES Ambassador oUice 544-5470 elcC". typc11Titer. Reblt & refinished. Elite type. $125. 6 PC KING SIZE !16U1187 aft 5 small, resonable. Fee estim. H. Stuflick 548-861~ B L 0 C K Fr:nces-Driveways P at Io a-Planters-Remodel- ing Lie. 642-9852 lronlng,.._~----•1_s_s . · . · ' hrs daily, 2 hrs Sat. Experienced, F'ull time. Trees, shrubbery tnmmcd, Huntington Va LI e.y Con-Downtown H B 53&-3017 Top 1vages & <.'Ommission. &for ren1oved. 549-1359 valescent Hospital, 1382 ' ' rnA s c 1 11 '· B h Newman Ave. H.B. JANITORS, \Vaxers. Part &: .....,.. • s · wy .. ..,..g c · BEDROOM SET, 2 S\\'ag 15 ,cc,--ooe7.'°'"-:oo-~~~-­ lamps. tvelvet, deep tufted) BLACK ~sk, 3 dra1.1't'rs, left, typc...,T1tcr space r1gbt. headboard, spread, boudoir $50. Call 673-78~. * CONCRETE: fo"LOORS, patios, <'le. Reasonable. Call Don. 642r8514 C1Mtr1ctor1 6620 IRONlNG in my homr. 1;,c a ··' SERVICE STA A~ Full · d Televition, Repair 698.S coo1,·. piz~a. "P'd. CLO"" fwl time. Experienced only, ~ •. piece. 1 ay scrvki!. Call .. .,. Good pay & i·-r'·'-• -n lime eves. Exp'd. Ntat in J36...7602 ED r.1on & Tues, Apply •u ..... , .. v • Union l•nk Squ•r• COLOR TV & STEREO 16!W7 Bushard. r~.v. 962-6404 d\tlons. 543-9393. appearance. See Jim, 2590 South Tow..- IRONING In my home. $1 828 \V. 19th St., Costa ~tesa • . LEGAL Secretary. must be NeWpOrt Blvd .. C.1\1. Suite 4D hr. A I l r r at i ons. Also 646-6218 or 557-6733 COOK. ~pd. Apply Surf I 'd good kill! sa1 SIITER Fol' our family only, '>r•nt•. C•llf •• t2"6 cha.ir .~ bench. Your choire of colors, Reg. S410 Now $299. • SIESTA SLEEP SHOP Garage Sale 8022 1927 Harbor Blvd, Costa l\1esa NEARLY riew table saw 645.2760 11•/extr-c1s, butane place & ROOt.l Additions -Patios- Bloc.k r ences-Drive .... ,.ys- Planters. 642-9852 Additions * Remodeling Fred H. Gerwick, Lie. 673$41 * 5-19-2170 babysitting. Call ~5-7641 -==h=,====== 6 = 990 =1 ~~~~in, ~930 Pac. C&t. Hiiy. ~~n.' Cdr.t 67;_2677• ary available v.•hc!n n e e.d ed : Cell 547-9471 6790 U::,::P:.:.;.•·;.;•;cl•:.:'Y,__ ___ ;;..;..;I LINOLEU?>t LAYER some days. some eve:nings, 1,. ... ~~""'"""'"'""""~ CZYKOSKl'S Custm. Up_hol. CUST0l\1TERRARVEELALTIONS occ asional WEEKENDS. LOOKING FOR A SOLID CALL Six children (a.,<>e 10 and FUTURE Btrr GETIING European Craftsmanship ADVENTURE 5 1o 7 P1\1 673-5028 under/, light cooking, own NOWHERE? 1oos:. fin! 642-1454 LVN a1 EXCITEMENT • Male /Fem e. trall.6portation. Call for in- Janitorial CLEANING Service Jn i'our Home For Exchange Of AH Useable Hschold items. Call 6i.\.-6rol. _l;.;&;_'1;.N_';.""°~-"-"-'-v,;.Clt_!_. -I MONEY 3 to 11 Pttl shift. tervll!w 673-1900 (Lido lsleJ. r.tOVING, l\fusl sell. \\'alnul lank, metal sash, many dining fable 48" extends to otber arc i c I es. JOOG iseal 10. 4 contemp. captains K!llybrooke Lane, c. ?it.I chn. Brass & glass cart. 54~18:).l Blue velvet bedroom chr &:. BOOKS. Prin1s, Brit ls h DO YOU \VANT TO GO ottoman. 2 occ. chrs. 18" Sivord, OoaT hdiv r ""·I Carpet Cleaning 6625 SPARJG.E Janitorial & \Vin· CARPET & upholstery steam cleaned, also carpet in- stallation. Results guar. For tree est. Call &16-59n A--OK shampoo Chrislmas Sp@Cial $7.50 rm-leS!! lnr halls etc. Also c om p housecln'g 8Z1-3182 DIAL din!et 642.56'18, Chuge your ad, then sit back and l!sten to tt!P phone ring! dO\\' cleaning Serv. \Vin- do1111, resld., coml, coni.I. Cleanup. Jo'rt>t' C!I. 963-2691 Landscaping 6810 TAKATA NURSERY Brst Design ~prinklers Installed flrN in Pipr ln~tal!c•I Ft"f"C lrim & Cl!'an·up 516-072•1 Window Cleaning 6997 NO\V HI.RING SlNGLE 549-:!06l GIRLS lS.27 L\tALE COOK -P~t Hoap. llAVE • YOUR \\'L~DO\VS Personnel dh't'ctor ~r major exp. preJ'd. Contact Ptrson- CLEANED fOR THE ft' tail firm \\•ill be inter-ncl Director. So. Cout i.101.IDA YS. CALL 646-8670. vil"lving applicants for a new Comm. Hosp. :':1812 Cst. IT'S \VONOEID"'UL the Lona: Beach br11.nch office, H11y. So. Lagune., 4.~1311 many buy~ in applianct:s sun, [)('c.0 :?lsl. Compa.ny1_E_"_-_356_· ______ _ you find in the Classified offer'.s: r.tanicurist Aris. Check them t'I01>•! I. Exe1!1lt'nl .!!alary Position open for experie~ IT'S Bea.ch hOu~ time. Big-'.!. Good b<!nefil ~ ~fANlCURISf. f.tust ht flX· J::f'Sl selection ever! See lhe :t Oppo1·1unity for travel pericnced in Pedicures also. DAILY Pt.LOT Classified 4. Possible ovel'scas ~'or intervif'w call 673-6961 section NO\\'! l'rlocation * l\10'fEL MAID -. 5. tt1ana.gcmtnl Part Time Ove.r 30 advancement 4!)4.9436 --=~~----=~-=====~ Initial training will be ln,1-=~--C-.-"'"---- ANNOUNCEMENTS J ANNOUNCEMENTS JOBS & EMPLOYMENl marketing, sales promotion l\IOTEL auu;t~l mars or and NOTICES and NOTICES ----------·! & custoiner relations tralntts I maid• \\Uled. ------1 l\1usl he h1gh school in.du-2376 Newport Blvd .. 548-~ Pertonals 6405 1 A~~n_c~ 6410 Job W1nted, aff'. neat in appcarancl! t.: NE\VSPAPER dellvtry~Arly Women 7020 aggres.s1ve., Al\! rwte in IIViM 11.tta. *Don't! Catt UI II you sliU believe In cave l§tyle datlni;:. 24 llr te.ronilni;: ORANGE CO. 517-666S * UCENSffi * Spiritual Re.ading, ad\it~ on 1'11 mattera. U'>\·c, M•rriqt, Buslneii:a. 312 N. El Camino Rt81, San Oemente. 492--9136, 492-0076 10 At.I -10 Pflt SJOCURITY A va..il. B a c h ())II~ Df!pft will live Jn YoW' home.. if unoccuplNI, for your prnl t C"1ion . Rdtt"enc.u. Reply Box Sl1'1, DJUy Pilot. FRE:E b11.!!il." botiting co11nc Oe1lre to rarn above $8000 Xlnt No "get-outs". S200 per 0Ue1'('(j 10 puhlic by Balboa "IATURE k . fint year more important mo. &: growing. Approx l& Po11·f'r Situ11rlron every .i\olon. ,, . wo.n1an sec Jot ri:os1. than experience. hrs \\.'ffk. 962-4633 night l\1r 1.~ 11·eck.o; bl'glnn!n:; lion R' dr1vcr/compan1on, For rnnsideration •PPI In 7 pn1 ~Ion. Jan. 12 at LJ\'e ou!. 0"'" car, Box P· person 10 ~Ir lfilla· :un Nc11'1Klrl 11.11rbor Yt1c ht ti.~.?. Dally Pilot. Ike. ?hr!, 2 'p.m.; '555 F.'. Club. 7~ \\'. Bay /l.ve.. DAY \VORKEJ{ Ocran Blvd., Long Beach, N1!11'por1 lkach. No advaru .. ..-1.Joncsr. dc.pendablro Fidelity Ff'dcral Plau, com. rr i; 1Jot1r;a 1 Ion nt"Cded. Call "nytime ~-2772 rnunity room fcntrancC" thro ltt'i;:i~trr 111 cla:;...<1, Bring I=========: lobbyl notebook fil"ll nlghl, QuC'&--=",,.,,======-I llOn!IC: Ca.II 673-185.i Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100 DEUCA'rESSEN f\1AN SENSITIVITY TRAINING <l!fi E. lr'31h St., 01. \VOR}( SHOP AdvtrtiiiAA "6.'t':t!C)' See: Teny. $harp Secretary I o r DELIVERY •1 A Pl'OJ:'f1111n al intrrpe~nnt f d N . t "en ""'ntt'd cxcrciles for 11n1all setr-dl-ast -pact ew/:.r with truck. L. A. 'Nmes, rrci<'d iti"Oups. J\ti nlmlll Beach Ag•ncy. ype ~Arly .;.r.t, 1vknds &: or t·hni'llj" c:.tl 642-8730. lO AM· 6S.70. Shortha nd 100, ~·kdy1, ~o-tal7 ~' P.\1. o rg1n i1e & f 0' I 0 w DENTAL Aulstant. Re~pt. th r u • U n d e r JS. tor llunt, Bch. praclict. newport . personnel agency &.13 DOVER DRJVF. NE\VPORT BEA.Cl 6'2~0 Wishing you abundonc• in 1970! 1Scr lL' ror "prosper! ty ln&Ul'anct.") Auto Tran1po::;.rt;__...::644c.;;.S Phone: 642.3910. 415 L'E"'~""~;""1·~'E"~2502'~~c .... : .. :l~*~*~•~·~•s•~·~*p*~*~* N. Newport Blvd. ba.y Or. El Toro. Cal. ....... -""'n.x...11 ~ . eveD-G!;NTLEMAN lS yr rt!~­ dnlt, finest ttfl. ?\fttl lady 2>4,2 m child., w/tutt. for ,,rANTED: Rlclt L.A. a.roof1d ,~ .... finest. Sr.nd phnto ID 10 II m. lrom \'\(' C05ta Bax" &J-!15 Dally Pilot /.frosa, blc.k around 10 p.m. (All coll. f21.11 22>-0<00 j ACCOUNTS DEJ\'TAl. ASSISTANT i,. 6 Dlcht shifts, Ex. RECEIVABLE ,,.,.ntf:d In Nn.'pt Bch. Start benefilJ. AwtY Penonnrl ASST. BILLING Jan 2· lntv. now. 54S-5602 Director, So. Cout Com- CLERK DF ... <iK CLERK. t x per'd , munlty l-10$.p .. 31.f12 Cout NCR 4200. Apply: ~n H")' .. So. t...11.1na. 499-Ull, A.La>HOIJCS Al'IOnymOUI o\C(..1JRATE TYPIST 1\•k for DA\',. Lln<l~y PNm' so.mt or write to BUSJ&S7 tl'Llll'Mtplacr In P.O.Boxll230:ilta?.tna. lown. TllC DAILY Jl lLOT r.i'O malttt wtlat It i& you Oas11Uled S<'C:lion. S" v e ran .r1 ft ••lttl a OAJl .. Y mrmry, lime & e:Uorl. l..onk I };.\pl'lt"'r ?lfolor llon1cJ .!!!f'T WAA'T AD!! ~2.56'i'8 , _:""'!:;:~'!~!----------'~;~"~'~··~··~~~3300;;:. __ - Brown'll !\1o!M' llolel, 31106.1...:"'='-...:3511=·;:_ _____ _ S. Jll llwy, So L&Jntn&i NUR.C)ER\' school tr,acher. Dl~h~11sht'r -Pl\rt llme Exp'd, part Ume aftcmooM. ,,lght$. ~ Trrry, 495 Al~ on r11ll for rt1orninp. 1' li!h, f'~~l:i :0.lr~ ~)ll!/~ii6 f'\'tS SOMEWHERE??? 'l'V. 842--0374 Snowblrfl Sail. Antique doll. STOCK Clerk: Sh ippi ng, Rec.clving, Filling order.;, dellv. No Exper necess. $500 pPr mo to slarl. 5 day 11•k. Chance 10 adval'ICf!. Write Qualillcation:o;, '~-eii;hl & height to P. 0 . Box 145, 'niEN LOOK INTO A USED 5 pc. antique 11·hile 2207 Rul~Cr!!, C.~t , Sat. alt CAREER dinette set $29.95. U:;ed 5 pr.. JO 1\.~I . Antique ~·hilc dinc11e set I 'SA"°"T~/~S~U~,~,~,~.,-. -,-,~.,~Sa-n-la AS A $39.95. Used 7 pc antlriuc Ana Avr., C.J\I. Household RADIO ANNOUNCER ~·bite dinette set $~9.95. Tiic goods. EvcryU1h1g i o e II CLA~S F'ORi\tlNG NO\V fo"actory. 1885 Harbor, 548-9806 TEEN Di~tor lo plan &: LEARN : 1~540-684"";:.:~2_,....,,_--,-.,.--,.~ Costa i 1esa. · d" -· I 2 Pc stx"lion11l. Hi-Ii, "·aJnut dirttt daily & 1 .... cial e:wnt15 In • ra t0 s, .. oon on pro e11o-PRN. Pty fo"orced to Sell; ,.. . I · 1 f k c11.b., pai11!in,s, ·misc. sun for gtrl11 7th lhru 12th -adr:. !lOOR equipmen rom l\'Or • 10' Sola, Otippendale J\ta-•· · o J' !Xe 21. 1777J At·acia "!'ref' 3j hr!! v.•k. Prev. youth Y.'Ork 11li · $. hog-, bdr sel, con.o:.ole se ll'· CALL 772 ... _ Ln. lrv111c Sll-?.G-18 aft fi dr.sirablf'. Over 21. Call --ing mach, etc . 846·t:el9 art I~=~=~~=:..:=~ ~lii'li'I Rus1enbach 646-TI!J. Institute of Broa.dc11sl Arts 6 \\•kdays or anytime wk-LIDO ISL!:: -Sa1 & Sun , 104 TEST TECH 1601 N. Bristol, S.A. ends. Via Vella, Edger. cr ib, high Student Loani; c.hr, IRn1ps, hall 1·unncr, SS hr. Unusually rood oppor. Fret-Placcmf'n1 Senricf' USED 9 pc con1er group. toy11, n1any mol'c. 1unity w/1table establ. Co.1 ~========= $69.95. As80rled u!ied walnut Irvine area. Advall('('mt'nt * AIRLINE & end&: cocktail tbls. $4.9.1 ea. potentll.I. TOP bene:ii~. Call All.sorted used bed r o o 1n John, 516-54lO TRAVEL CAREERS * lamps $4.95 ea. The Fac- JA.SON IEST tory, 11185 Harbor , 5'10-6842 Employment Agency ::;1"t1011 A1;mt 22()7 So. ~taln, Sant• Ana Th:kot Sale1 Rf'srrv1llous TEXAS OlL COMPANY ,\ir Freight • C11~0 has opening in Cnn1n1 unlc31ion11 Beach Cities &tta, Tnivcl i\irnt Nn f:':Xpe.rlentt nttessary, Aie not import.ant. Good char11cter a musL \\.'e. traill. Alr mail: D. P. Dicke.non. Prf'~ .. South~·catcrn Pe I role u m Coq>. ft. \Vorth. Tf'xas Al RUNE SCHOOLS PACIFIC Inquire Today ,.,__ 610 E . 17th St., SaDta Alla TTRE l\IAN, eJtpertencf'd on- ly, for ch1nalng lires. in- atalline; shock.I;, etc. Good JOIN TllE FJELD work1fli condllions. P1k1 In-\VITH A FUTURE! li'Urance, frin(a benefits. Ap-. .\gf'/educaHon no bo!Tler! ply ln penon. Le-I us help )'Otl quallfy. A. 11. SlllPl\"EY INNKEEl'ERS INSTITUTE TIRE SERVICE INTERNATIONAL .C:ZO \V. Lii1coin. Antt.hcim ~1etC'VHotel/ Apt Mrmt Sehl A lJIVISlON or TYPIST • 00-iO wpm. Book-ANTIIONY 50100~...S kttplni ex~. helpful. Call lTIT s. BROOKHUR:..""1' ?i1'r. Andrn•s 6Ta--355t. ANAHElr-.f, CALIFORNIA • \VAITRESS * Oiwe1 form t\'tl"Y week Apply t1}"1.nc BuUf'r J'HONE FOR APPT. &n-oon A~k rar Bttty 77Sii300 'VATTRES& t'll:p'd., nlchts.1 STITCHERY CLASSF...S O m:M ?iton k Tuts, Apply I Sl!-1\•lng. Help 11-itll Otristmu 169-17 Ru~hr.rd, F ,V, 962-64().t kll'lf. ~~\400 \\'HITE satin box spring & mnttress, dbl. Ui;ed 1 wk .. Xtra beavy frame $-10. 6 lite cry~tal chandt'llt'r $4 O. Small t.T)'Slal celling lit<' S20. 53I~m USED 11llnosl ne1v SJ»u1ish iq>etionaJ 11·/matchin{: tbl It lllmp $199.95, liK>d 2 pc, Sparrl91 M>fa & chair $'19 S,:,, The Factory, 1885 Harbor, ~"2. FORCED lo .sell 8' ~ledil. 110fa, 7 pc &stet din nn 8(1, 5 pc Basset BR set. ('Oilcc I: end tbl('. Ill 826--09._~ HlDE-1.-BED, Canopy bet!, dbl bed, drcuer, chtsl. cof- fr.t< &: end Ibis. 11ereo, desk. studio couch. 548-86U USED 36" "''"lnut dt'sk i. chair Sl9.9j. 3 uscd v.'8.lnut student dclk11 $7.9;) ca. 2 u.."" ed rattan swivel bar stools ST c111. The FactOf)', ~ I hu·bnr, !>IO-Q.12 CHRim lAS Gift for thri l •~laJ m•n. Alnw~t 111i~· lt1ther lounalilq rf\;tlr I.· Ill· 1on111n lo n1t11ch S 7 ~, 642-1644 • f • Appll1nc1s 1100 NE\V 2 dr. Lil~ n::"!ni;., fron1 modt'I ho111e .......... Sli'S Refrigerators .... l1'flm $:1.~ Console Color 1'V, L'Oll1l"rnri cab .. new [lh'\U11' lllhc . ~tlS \Vhirl{'IOOI auto 11·11shPr , , Jj() DUNLAP'S lSlJ :0.'l'll'!>Orl Uhd., C.:O.T, 548-7788 ==~ KENJ\.fORE au lom3tl c. 11·a.sher & lari:te ,::-11~ r11.n:::c, both t:<C'tlJf'nl. $.°tt. ('ach. 613-.!221 fRIGIDAlRE 6 1..'u rt v.·1tn11 fl"('('z<>f, pert l'Ond, SOO. 642--063.1 $11\Ll. }'reci:rr Chcs1. Older ctOl!ls-top rt>trli;. Both Good Cond. 5..~I. DEL.'\:. TaupRn ~ngt. \"t>ry J:OO(f rond. $11. 51s-3176/5.'l!l lhlmll1on, c.~I. l<EN?o10RE ALl1ti '''a.Aht>r, >:Int rontl. fi i;·yrlcs. S•IO f l&-s67'l or 81i-81 l:j NORGE Auto 11•ashrr, co pt't'lonc. 2 Yl"i nlrl. lik, new S75. $16--86TI. nr 847-81 tj, +KF.N'l\IORE. mul!l"""rlrd \\'/I.SHER Ai\'1> DRYrn. Lil( .. Of'\\'. $1Yt 611-l "IY\ 4 DAILY PILOT CLASSIFllD INDIX . FW f91t 8antc'9 ...ii &-xpwt A•I l&IClt DIAi. DIRECI' 8""5178 MIRCHANDISI POR SALE AND TU.DI MIRCHAHDISI POI SALi AND TltADI "'T --- Friday, Dt«mbtf l•, l•~ DAILY 'ILOf S' ~f~:~':rf~~""~D1~·Rfl""FFiREieEtli~oiYvro~ui1·~~~~~·~~:i "'--'---"""' ,- _ 1o1tt a v .. hh t000 A=••:::lq!:-=----•::;1~10 Pl•-a Drt-"'°. Ml1COll•--Mlocoll•--~ch""'T, -1700 i;: = ~ ~ -FRll! I~ * COLOR TY SALE * PIAWNEO ~AREL El ROCK SHOP POOL FORKLIFT SALE I C.te"' -· 10 ..... old. Butc lloatu.r 0.-- MllQtANDlll POI MIRCHANDlll POil ._IA._,L._l._..AN;.;.D;;...;T.;.ltA""-D.;;.1_1 IALI! AND TRADI ~ Ch't S 'Is Dfc.20UinJ3lst 1'12:1& Palm, F.V. &opubllebyBa.lbo&Po"r 19'10 23" ~•-TV -· OVERSTOCKED! rts mis pKll 12110 al! -price UT·'l97< 12120 -"'"' Mon. night ~ waJn';;binef. wb1le Must make fOCltn ktt new 6" trtm aaw $11.95 J ABLES 6 U.tt tzucb, mu.st •ll! ~ )'OU1' cbll4'a hoUdayl tor l3 wetb becfnnln& 7 thty Jut $29!1 Perfect tor lht~nts arrivifla: daily. 6" comb. aaw I: arlndinJ Ir 714: 5G&J$S or 8t7·3Ul bqpMr wtan adafable w.. pm on Mon., Jan 12th • HOUSES FOR SALE Zi~tc'.'a;<l#H1 = Ouiatnw: rim payment P~ sWhcd on.......... polhtilnc units from Sd.95 <llrlttmu SPICil.? $215 u,i>. AIR (i5MPRISS0R riot" P'lPi frff io cood bome. Newport Harbor Yadlt lllNIUI. .................... ,. INCOMI NON~ ... 'Ua->. mo &t Hmienon'I Splneta:, Conaole1. Gruda 3 Jb, tumbler OS CHUCK s ' 10 H.P. A. .. ......._ ••••• ~ WU! .... ~ ~-. ..~... Cub. no W, 8e.y Av• •• N ... COITA MltlA ................ n• •UllNIU PttOPeliTY'''"'''"• 1':::'" Jll·" c . ~"-·· doll-~~·. 6 Jb. tumbJtt -.60 -u • ....__ . ...... U\M ..... -.. ... ~ ftW. Mlt.A oaL MAI .............. 11• ,.,.,LE• ,,..Ill ,., ..,,\ .......... ~ vu M ........ w... ·-3 ·--.,...,, -........ at Adim.t. CM ~-.. _ ................ , H·-•-~~... ~..,,... port Sta.ch. No advance MES11 v••0• ............. ··'"' au11•1u •••t.u. .... CA~ ~.......-·• • • COAST MUSIC 12 lb, tumbler $35.90 ---==,...,,==";;;;;;.,.::.: _,, ~ uavu -.... -_....... "61-~Uon CDLL••• l'AlllC .............. nu Ol'l'ICa •••TAL ·::::::;·:;,.,. ....,..18()8 NEWPORT • u•••nn Aho have __ ....... _ .. p. POOL TABLES '· ton 8elcla. SCU3tJ f ADORABLE antmu.... nttded. RtP-Nl'#t'OlT llACM .,. ... ,. ... ,lllt lfeDUSTatAI,. l'aoPDTT ,,_ • nnn.ov ....,,.,. ~ '5'fU--' Secud ~ • . ...~ ltr &I clui bl'tqi notebook ::~.':·~:VWfMT~.::::::::::~ri: f::r.~:fl~La..n.u:-::::::::: BA1MCPKODOORTSR Costa Mn.a * 642-23M FREE load of material wtlh . ..es:R.UNSWICK-AMF FREE TO YOU = need permanent ftl'lt nl&hL 'QueaUom· Call :rvi.·:.•s1;. SMOlt•t ........... ~ ... "' I.Oft ,. ....................... •1• Daya lo.9 88.t 11).S SUn J2..(j taCh tumbler CU.tom Slate Table es, I wtl. 3 btill, 1 f73.18$. • .................... ltAflCMU ............ -........ •u• Art Ir. Antiques le Gifts FREE cutttne material with Urer. l O'Y/wht ltripped,j---'-------•11YJllOlllS .................. Im CITt:UJ •nvu ............. itn Ope M Fri 8 • From $289 To home wtth fenced yrd. abort Mlhd. 5'1-«m 1211J'"."'C'.' ______ _ :rJfL~r:•IS ............... 1nr t.Cll•MI .................. ail n On• evH 'liJ PM CHJUSTMAS &l.ftl _ Jlam.. ~ a&W 100% J'inanclor '•·ll~-ltl.lllOll MllMUiiDi":::::::.~= LAKI au1tt0•• ............... 189BH.arbormvct,CM6G-7576 mond ~1 ......... y __ ..__ Supplies. rol.llh material. * C'.,.,. .. .,. .... POOLS klw. bonty colored ahdtie DAVENPORT IOiled but -__ ,..;•-----.:.'°=10 _ •••• •••o•T l'ttol'•*"' ............. • .,_.., .. ..,,, a......... -10 ( ed •--......-* Mix S5 lbl .-... ed A-all ___. _ _., ... :_ TV -u1uvau .. • ........... 1m O•AM•I co. l'IOl'l•TY ..... ..., DOLL. Bebe Juneau -N~ I Uled planol of moet ... -.u taw ~,.,.. 532-1992 • __. • ._. ~~ needs OOMPLETE cu.to 1av1•• ...................... 1ue OUTOl'JTAHPaOPt ........... Colltttor's Item •250 .... 1 ~., "' ... ,_ C'A w/pun:llNe) -s.••·•-st ,.,_ ___ llhOta, aim blk/cry mottled repair aleo cld ·--t build M SABOT • UCK IAY ..................... ,. ~UMTAIM. on•• ........ 611f • • • m1uni • .Eft!ll .....,s UI J.J. Bl .... _ .... _ ,,_ .u.J -· ......... med sized "'-9 okl ' -..... ' or YoUl' own trom out • ...-flLU,, ................... lid SUIOIYllM* LAMO I"""' .all Candelab,nt. w--u$h. Hea.-CalU .•• ···-'dt M .. J . Co. " -..........-.... on comp, w1e -mos . ~ 12/U ••"--!.-hull ·-" "'• '"' •e&• asTATI ••••Cl "'' _, ~••• -I la Id * AUCTION * •--chlld"n. UT•T~ • "-·•-"' lime '°' .. ..... .. . vy •••ie. ~t nM •·" $15 ·-N u.1-C'·-.. _. 0 P ary' machine..., 'til IVY"' ._ • MllCED T~-C • 11tv1Na TlllltACI ............ IM u. llXCMAM•I .............. = -....,.. ..-_.... . """"'' . _..., ~uta ou.... J 1 t • ., hlJ.all ....... , cbampqnf!, hrlatmaa . SA BOT COllONA OlL Mt.II ........... Int t. I . WAMTl!O ................ ~ &n. I • U YoU will aeJl or~.. 1 -j-·•-L I -~-lt.LIOA •aM1MSULA ......... 1• BUSIN••s nd STONECRAFT • -SMOKY .. _ .,.,_, ove1 repa r ........ ~ ..... e. Sabot 1e11coN lllY .......... :._ •.. IMll ..,.... I TIFFANY Jamp shade, 2 ft ctve Windy a try · Shepe:ramer. Pure childttn. Free to aood hardware -new Sabot •AV llLANDS ................. INI FINANCIAL Id n--•·<· Radl 1200 !...,.... ........ _ Auctions Frid•v 1:SO p.m. b1'ffd parenta Wetneraner, • borne. MMl4U aft 4 p.m. --.· mut, boo-·. lae LtOO ISL• ................... IJU w e: .. ........,, ""'•e· ptt> 0 •;i.<• .fUl&U1!rano Lane (at -., --.. .. 1AL1oa isu.No ............ ,.1u1 1u•1M111 o....oaTui.n111. ·• pennlnt areen $ 4 0 0 my l;lome) H. B. ~ ~9• Wincly's Auction B•m German Shepbml. s mo•· DARLING "'·-· ..,., .. 1.. 8 boards. rudden & tlllen HUNTINGTON ••ACM ......... 1 ... IUllNQS WllNTID ............... ., •• """"' . • ZENITH transoceanic .......... Pref room to roam like. ......, .. -P-· Fl ~ NUNTtNOTO" ttARIOUl ..... t ... INVISTMlflT ·-"*"'-... t11• o;m-v,l;I.. alto Chrl1tmaa evt. 847.ll?O ~ Newport, CM f48.3686 • ' wkl. malts. tree to sood nla • .__ .. well .. u~ LINDA llLa IJM l"VISTMaflT W.t.llTIO ...... 6JlJ portable -all bands. Like +; farm (nf) M1-5185 aft 5:30 .....__ ., •• --•-1-"-~ Open wee••••• 'Ou T • '. "IT '''' "ON•T TO • ••o -BLUE o··'e•-,t epe-Ch Be•'-• T•••'1 •••·. lolat'l. 11U&PE • .,.......,u 12/., u.11•11~u. -.r• N Al .... '"'""" .... .....,._ ........ -.. _. ~ .,. .. -, Qe'IV, $91), 548-5185 aft 5:30 * ' bna Spe ial ...,<u .,._.., "'""'6 p.m. 12/22 5:-• .. ~. WH .. ~-•• • ilt.L IEACM ................. 14 .. l'llONlAL LOANS .............. perfect $125; country rocker ns s Csrn """RA""'""'='='""',.-';"-,~ OIW"O ~ ....... -1u1rts•T 11.AcM ................. , .. w•L•Y LOA•• .............. .,. ·~ Error-IJmited cso> FREE '° .._.... home Pm -~ LIVESTOCK PM oa•oaN 1•ov• .............. t•H coLu.raiua. LOt.•• ....... ,.6US _...; walnut dresser $75. Ttltvlsfon · 8205 1u,pply.of thtee Meldean air f;""" ..--• LOfl• atACM ................... 1• air.al asr11r1 LOAMI ........ • 536-0071 • 2J% DISCOUNT malls. LA deale-ue ··•. w/fenced )'&I'd, 1maU mixed 8'15 W. 17th s~. CM ..AKIWOOO ................ 11• MORTOA••s. T,. ~.,..tad ~· ... brted terrier 10 lbl amart Pett Gener•I 1-Mi-9151 646-m9 >RllNOI COUNTY ............. !• MONl'f WAltTIO ......... AM BOWL. Hand cut Crystal ZENITH 21" color TV with in& $1 ea. S4 per block. We ' . ( -,1'**~~· ~~~hi;I our 01' COUNTY ............. '"' ANNOUNCEMENTS Colt -=:. Sell ·~" ' engraved mahog. cabinet. on all made Up-Jewelry!! uk 80 cents ea •. n per • cute, 9 D\OI, old. Jove. Get a WET ~ •·r·l ** • ** • * * * * * OUT Off STAT& ................ t• Q IC of'" .....,. Bough 1n Jul Som ,... cbllclren. tts.3Sl1 ro:.~ w 1TllMTON .................. 1111 and N T ES 833-0379 t y, must sell· e excellellt f'irw•, pend-block. 548-6449 Chrfstmu. Rand'• noplcal Chrl1tme1 wasTMIMITlll: ........... ,,. .. 1'11 POUNO CPrw ,.., .... drafted $400. Cost fr.j(I, anta .l tar rinp &i ni.nu GARAGE Item1 Lumbtr -... .._ 590 I SABOT ~~:;'A"lN<lT" ::::::::::::::::::::: Lott .......... ::::::::::: .. Mt1 54~ oti".ers. "~v SHIPWRECK SALEI lawn ctWra IO be repaired: W:bntnirter 891~· , 11.NTt. t.MA Mon. ............ Im ::=~~~iicTi":::::::::::::f: Sewing Mlchlnt1 1120 , _ Color TV Lapidary supplier cuti.,. all gear from wreckf'd P.C.C. broken brick %. pea tn alley wa1 $29) •••••• ........... . 0RAN0• ...................... 1U1•1•TI11 ,,, ............. -........ 11 ~ase orBlack ... ..., aloop"Kitten",Ma..a•?t.·-216 ""by SI., Balboo ....... , •• flO'W•-complote • TUSTIN .. ' ' .................. 1 ... l'UfllRALI '411 SINGER Automatic zig zag, &: White. Option to buy. suppUts 4 equip. Jewelry .. -· ...... -.. NOITM TUSTIN ............... uu l'AIO OliTu.AliY'::'.'.'.'.::::::::'411 6 mos old. No,--• -•ed tool& & IOppliea;, Ro•-.._ cut o[ &ails, winches, full cover Is!. 12/22 &... U2$ aJ.M) psycbll!ddtc eoJors AMAMllM . ., ............... Wt l'UllllllAL DlllCTOU ....... "'1• \ ......... ~ Free tervlce. No depoal~ ..... le-all hardwatt. Priced for =c • deluxe ULYIRADO c:.t.MYON ......... IW l'LORllT1 ......... =:;).l ...... 11 to do desi&ns, moDOgnUNI, A-Active TV Rental Co. pm stones, rock cutting quick sal•. ·11noey'1 ~ •• VARIOUS Adult call " * HAPPY SOLUTION TO -· , ... ~ •• , H-LAeUlllA MILU ................ 11tt CARO Of TMt.fll(J ........... I• b"-• ~·-·· So ll "' ~· A'U ,y ._,.,.. ~., LAeUMA •lACM •••.••.•••••.. 1ns IN Ml!MOltlllM tttr u.uuhem1etc.; auto bobbin (1) 522-1153 ma ............ ~. me exee ent Olandle.-v 2537 W ~-·t medium ailed ldtteM, need DOG ENJOYMENT!f N__.. .... Beach " ·--o L.AOUNA NIGUl!L ........ -.• 17u CIMITl!R't Lm·:::: •• : ..... :'411 winder. 5 Year guar. rock! ~ady to tumble ln l ·~. . ......... ---·net ho in tlmt ~ .. t"'4. V'W'W! ' MISllON VIEJO ............ 11DI CEMITl!ll't Cll'tl"TS ........... Ir 11" GENERAL Electric lb Hiway, N.B. 548-419'1 ,~,,-,...,.-.... ~---melS<S-7202 Tra1nina: lift eertifleates. LIDO 1• #50 SAfl cL&MENTI ............ 1nt •••••••Y cav-..,. Aasume pymU of $5.27 or .... _.. .... 1 -bl•,""• -w. ·packages. ~ .... uuaa. Pu -•·--· n• N-" ' sAM JuaN , .... 11T•A"o ...... 1ne ..... -....... t"'-'---~-....... .... FIVE c ANTIQUE · PPY Q&MCll -VY•ce a -· CAPISTRANO •IACM ......... nu c••MATORlll .................. ~.00 cash. S26-fJ616 l _.,,.old. VHF" UHF -M EM & U'Ol1 bed, long after 2 pm 12119 obecile ....... .,'u -ean, .. ~ ·••·•·· ...•... $585 T 1n• lr!IEMORIAL l'AllKI ........... '*II ~--.....,. LAPIDARY SUPPUES solld oak cocktail t bl nee. -· ~ LIOO lf New Trail Ot.flA •0•N .................. t.UCTIOflS .................... .ut FOR Sale: Col\IOle Singer 548-8704 a e TO SAME HOME 2 MARTINCREST KENNELS • · tr ~; tARUBAO ............ -....... 11 .. t.Vlt.Tlotf llUICI ... ,., .... .W 0 ,1,.,. Costa Mf!sa, located at (ready for antiqueinc), ..__ .,..._.,~' u.lls, try ......... , .... $1095 OCl!ANSIOI ................... 1151 TIUVIL ..... Se .. .,.. Machine. )Qnt Cond. 18" Re t trol Zenith Ii hti flx .,.,.aUU1W. ....... ~ lft)' AKC Red A: bite ma1 ..,...,.,..,.,.,. ll.M 011eo ................ -.. ins AIR TIANti"Ol:T.t.TNiM'"::::::.-Call· S4S.18lf" mo e con the back of College Center g ng tures, am all tripod -Jdttem w e ........-n.n.n BOATS 673-2(J;O 1uve•s101 CO\IMn' ........ ,,. AUTO TUMJl'ORTATION '"' portable wist.and. Good 549-2m9 Chest, rocker and many I • Cocker Spaniel puppy. MINTO 10"· Houses TO•• MOVIO ...... 1,.. &.••AL fl01'1c••· ...... :;:::,_ cond •i:n &f2.(fj74 other item1 '4" -~" ......, male. 673-5183 day•. Beautiful Cbrlstma1 ..... aut. flberglaa COMDOMIMIUM " ............ Int •••MAN • TUTOlllM• ..,. . ...,.,. . Mon. thru Sat. g..5:30 • ~ ~ ...... ~ al 6 12""-and antiqu sailboat. X1 oul'LEXEJ FOR II.La ...... ,.1,11 SERVICE DIRECTO. ·a· y Mu1le1f Inst. 8125 TV 'S FOR SALE. $25 • ~"ay 9 to 9 North star Lane NB "'""'"""" ter pm ,.,.,, present. XJnt dlsposltkln e nt Al'ARTMIMTS •o• &AL.a .... 1t11 • ........ • Lo~able fOWlli: ernall lorw hu had ihots. 491-1088 aft i Jor dlna:i1¥ Au.Ulna. Uted 1 RENTALS AtC0'"'1'1N• . . ............ .,.. CAMCO drum set, a beauty! Under. mack&: WhHe. Call TRA. INS HO -mpl•t•, "x8' 6 PC MPLE bed set, retrle. "-'-~ ..___..__... PM k .a--summer. Orig cost $450· ANs•••••• •••Vic• ......• .,.. 646-0020 ..... " I h t. d nail~ bllc mixed ~ w • ....,. ill ··'I • Houses Furnished Al'l'LIANCI •11'A1•1o l'.m .. u11 1 yr old, natrl wood. Bass, • table lay-out, 3 aeta ""'"ip, mp e c eg rs, apt stove. lG-l2 1..__ --·--' ._ ha-· ' · " Itel for $260 847-200 OIME AL -.... MALT. 0111 .................... snare, lg &: sm tom. 2 19" PORTABLE ~ .. ~ Bolton Roeker, rlrl's sml ..... -.,-..... • ' LOVE FOR CHRISI'MAS! • RINT:L, TO sM.t.11il ·:::::::::-. ~~~t ::,11::.,·;.-.;·stc:·~ mstched 14" & two 21" xlnt oond, value $450; Ideal bicycle, 6 dr wht desk. Iva child, 846-3811 * Great Dane Pupple1 Xlnt UDO lf $119S tolTA Ml!St. .................. ii• IA11'SITTINO • Excellent condition. Chrl!tmu gift-$200. 1 Con. 543--0436 WHITE female P•kapoo * Minlaluft Schnauzers cond. Salls, hwy trtr. Mllll DEL MAI .............. 1115 •OAT MAl~1'llllt.MC:•·::::::::m1 Zildjen cymbals w/Door $25. 548-8704 cord tape recorder, xlnt ""'""'"'-.,,,-.-.,...--·--·~ -1 ~. old. Black • To--Available • See •t 901 Lido Nord. MISA VEllOE ................ 1111 ••ICI( MASONRY .re. .... stands $550 833-1040 "' ·-MOVING M ~-,. .,,_ COLLEOE PA RK .............. 2115 BUllMlsJ JlllVlc'IS .• .'.",',',',''""2 ' ' CO • .........,. Cail aft 5 pm, " .~t give Up C··•· I old MAR--•-KENNELS * 675--0188 * '•'iww•'•"••' ,•,•:,'" ............ :: •U1Lo••• ................. w• UPRIGHT Practice Piano, HI-Fl & Sttreo 1210 00·7875 small llll!l!S'ed dog, male .,,,.....poo feniaa, mo · ...... ,~~ . · .............. t1.11•1No ws altered .... M k tt 644-1300 5*-0989 * * LIDO 14'• * * " wl'oRT SMOllEI .......... me c11a1Nl!TMAK1Me ................ antiq. blue . Gd cond, $150. BEAUTIFUL .... _..... ""'-•· & e 0 er on .,OCC,,:0.:.:------~b===c..,="--~-1 Ch I I S I I SAYJMORES ................ nu u•••MTl!ll,.. .............. utt Bass guitar & amp, ~ HARMON & Ka rd on ....... ....., Head 360 le std. akia. Can. FREE to ~1ponalblt adults, 2 POODLES -Teacup &: Toy, r • met PK I DOVI!• stto••s ............... am CIMUT ~ "" AM/FM d al ... _ oll portrait of you or )'OUt ,_,_ hu-·· 2 AKC all -··-Bea ....... ~IMMEDIATE DELIVERY w•1TCLll'P .. .. ............ ttJI cMILO «•• ~ ........... 11 price. Like new. $65. Call amp. u .... ,.. • .. a .. __ non camera, etc. 494-7&16 mu ..... ture dachl ,,..., , ~"· UU1u.o SCH ulll1veRStT't ,ARIC ........... n11 cONTIACTols ..... :::::::;..,. ~l647 table w/1plas & bead· ....... w~• from a pbotoeraph. years old. A!l'ectionalt, quality. Very Reu. OCK BOATS 673-2m0 I IRVIMI! ........................ UM CA'l,IT CLl.UUNO .......... MU phones. C.Omp. rtereo tar A Y,'Ondertul i~ for that ANOIOR .......a watch .a-. 4M-89llO 968-8336. 17' O'DAY ~·-"-' lAiK lt.Y ................... n. CA .... , U.YIM•. 11,Alll: ~ DRUJ\t set, complete bass, $400 5'8-5405 special Chrlltmu &lit. 1 TON'. C.ompl W/age & Iii"""' ..... --.,-,-...... j it~ ILUF' .................. ::: o•A,IRltJ ................ """ stand, 2 toms, hi-hat, 2 · .,.,, """"'. character. Ideal deCOl'lltion. MINNIE And Mlclde need• CHIHUAHUA Puppies For Demo Sl595 Used $1195 "'•i IP:"' uce: nu nrMoL1T10lll .................. ..u EMERliON t tt -~-s lf' O'DAY Uled ...... ' t•v I! TER ........... t11UFT1•• s11v1c1 .......... ...u cymbals &: accesa. Red au oma c stereo, $100. Call 67~2450 aft fl. home for Chrt.tmu. We are your uan.1unu tocklnl. • ...-.i • CORONA CEL MAR ........... tHI ILICTRlc:.t.L ...................... tn""kJO, ~ -·•, ~. walnut CONO]e, uo.. ~ ........ black kltfles. •uc. Hold 'tll ,...__, __ •• fUn Z0ne Boat Co. Dalbo' aALIOA ....................... tM 10U1l'M•MT IDTllLI ....... "" a,,... ,..,.,.,. """ ... ...-UAC new, REMINGTON' typewriter * * * * ""' .. Ulw. """ ..,, .. ..,,.,,,_. LIDO llLI .................... mi nNCIN• .......................... o .... '""1 $50. Call ~1941 __ .. • ';f9<.;:::;15!6::;::.,,.,~===f2;' "n~•1,;;5':;.T.Jll::::::'=,..,.-=--=---IEX CALIBER 26' SLOOP '"" llLAMDI ................. 2151 JILOORI .................. -.... "'5 ~ gt.., ... ard, Binoculars 1.5 FAMILY Membership In I~ aALIOA ISLAND ............ ms PUl"Ace11,A1as.1tt.-... "1t NEW St. Ceorp EJec. BEAUTIFUL Bozak loud P"T w/leather case. Irvine Cout Country Club READY FtJR CHRISTMAS: CHRISTMAS Puppy, Top Cond Neqx>rt Slip. A 14UNTIMOTON 1eACH ......... , ... J1URMITU1t•••no11Me ..,· aken, mod·' •02 Le th •·-Ro 1 gaJ Pvt -·lo • -~•-•-•1~-. -"" ... _ .. _ .. _ .. _.__ .. Ter-steal at $6100. Own . l'OUlllTlllN VALLl'f ............ 11 a ••PlflllHIN9 "" Guitar &: case. $60. Call "-' ,.. , a er navy ._, mon or e, , ply. 613-9131 '"' • .. ........., L<oaU Ul'~ ...... 111.al:U .,.'"' 1.un:u SIAL ll.lCM ,. ................ wt OAROIMIM• .... Eve•. 548--1301 walmtt $385. 60-8584 bot&: cold blender, new. 242 Shep. mix pupplea . ner, male. $50. Lut of lit-54S-1991 . ,, LONo •11.cM .................. IMI 01111111t.t.1. 111viCU' ........... Fl c •• CARPn ET lnllalldo "i has one .. A., -u1-t-. "" -. LIDO 14 No. -uttl• .. ~ OAANGI couNTI" ............. ltll ••1101MG.-DllCIH .. :::::::::...s ELECTRIC G .. ,· 1 a r ,._ G. E. Stereo, cabinet, record __ ,_w_•_•~· -'-"""~·'-----.....,..,...,. ""' ''" ........,.. ...,.,... .._., SAflTA ANA ................... Mii •••• , --"" .. -ro • avoca rzy on carpet. ..... t .. w .... -.. . wa&TMINITI!• ................ M11 .._ ·· ......................... Amplifier, Xlnt Cond. e'Ji;n player, AM/FM. lJke new d-·ble •• , ..... ~ •. Will oell FREE female doc. to SoOd BLUE Merle Collie puppie, iun C'O • o e1•111 family I MIDWAY CITY ... , ............. tfll ...... THUM• ........ _ ..... l7'1 .......... -•n"" For your Cllrlstmu "" ,.. !,;A~ Chriltrnas t. 1'14 St.MTll AMA Ml!l•lfTI ........ UM GUM IMOP .,. ' ................. '11• Value, $200. Call 675--2155 $100 .... ~. all or put $3/yard. ~726 home, exeellent with chll-10 wk male. champion presen : t COASTAL .................... 21'1 =:~ti .. "oCLUll .............. :: G.E. port. dilhwshr, immac. dren, OOuRbroken, I yn. atoc:k, to lhow hom«t only. 4M-4.1l3 or 646-4455 ; LAGUNA IEACl4 .............. v• MOUllfCLlllMliiG'""'""""'•m NEW Bundy flute. Never C1moru a Equip. 8300 $110, OlOw tbl $6, Framed GO-Karts, xlnt cond. wlth old, 33().5738 12~ RAVEN COLLIES. 642-+IZ HOBIE Cat-14', Ilk• new. ' LAOUMA MIGUEL ............. 27Clf lfrtTIRIO• 01coaATiM9°:::::.,,, used. $100 or Make Offer! oil painti $5 9xl2 Ori-McCull k lne i ;~~ssi~=,Xi_M~·;·:::::::::::.::. IMC:OMa TAX ...... : ...... , .. ,,. 646-4621 !al ':zs 6~ oc eng 1 w/spare "SNOOPY" Ii: "PEANUTS", STOCKING Sttitfer'1. bmtyellow. many xtras, \ !~N,,,•,•,•.•.•o•',!!!!,••.o .. -... ·.·.·.·!!! :::';"~~.~.:::::::::: MMOVIlkE Clmpera 116 mm 7.elal en rug, · evea. eng $225.~e!., ~~ .. c 100 male &: lemale hampsters, Precioul Poodle Puppies, Jl195. 834-3922 days.~ .' o;,,.. l'OIMT 0 ~ ........... :: :::~~~.· ·::::::::::::::::: .. := Plinos & Org1ns 1130 ft~~: 1~0 :o= n !: ~ ~ ~ ~.~ An~n ·~"';;;"'Hand w/ctaff. &44-1726 12/20 !~!t ~ for Chriltmu. CHRISI'MAS Sall: Kite No. ~ R1v1•stoE c u ........ INYISTl•ATlllle, DtttCt1W1 ... .,.. ..nd• angl• ,_ '·l-bOto. A-L ~""m "'a.so .. · +3 ".;..:-,,.,,,·,, Loom .. 0 __ • Skills" .. ,._ P/LABRADOR. male, 9-11 ........ ~-~ntrallgood l600condl~n ..!!th \ Vt.CATION RIMTALI ......... 1"' IANITO•IAL .................... ,.,. IANOS ... .. .. ... u: .. .,. L<V .. .., n&I... ... ......... .,,,,....,..,,, ' sUMME• ••NTALS ......... ltlt JIWILttY ll&l'AI., aic. ... GRAND p $150. 90c ·-""' 8471519 38 .. wide 4 harne 175 mo., all shots. Love a SILKY Terri.en. AKC, shat.I er · • '0u•,~x•'"'u,~, .................. ,.,-, UMOSCAl"IN• .......... ::::::..,. All N-· •. l•Y-· W·-~· LEICA 111 F LS •·--·Jt. l!flr 3...... • Call .,,1221• as, · children. 540-1348 12120 le dewonned. Ready Jor LIDO 14. New July '69. Rac-o .. a 5 "' ............ LOCKJMITM ....... ,............... .... ~ .._ ...,,..,.._, <3l&Ul-IUa.n ....-RENTAL$ MAIOfilRV,111:.c.: ............ ,..,. PrtcesgooduntilDec31st F-2.8 wide ancJ.e. f 2.8 BRAND new Hdbrol man'a SMALL Puppiei for Chrlatmu. 83S-T155 tng Gear. Cover. Hwy HouMI Unfuml1htcl ~r:.i: r.::::..·::::::: Knabe 5'1'' $2710 now $2150 telephoto 85 mm, le F 4 llS watch.. Ter worn. $85 val.-LIDO 14 w/cover a: trlr. ONtmu -Spaniel/Poodle AKC Dachlhund Pupa trailer. Slf95. 548-3743. OIN•IAL .................... -l'AllfTlN• ......................... Knabe 5'8 .. $3190""" $2700 mm. A·l $235. $60. Lola time IU&rD . Reeulatlon •r pool tbl. OU mix. 5f()..Jl29 12/22 * 806121' * (OITA M•U. .................. 11• PllTtol .................... -...... ,_,_ .. _ •.••• •'tlll<f\ -....-. SlJDE • TO le ct 0 r •-615-12KI wht naug. couch, like new. MISll oaL MA• .............. 11• l'MOTOtlA•HY ............. .,. n.illP.Jllll .......,.,,.., ....... .,......., • 675--1316 P/COCKER female 1 yr..oldlKAMOYED Femal• 1 )'Ur Snt1d Sid loafs 9030 -M'l!SA Vl!ROS ................. Jiii PLAITPtM•. , ........... Fiscber 4'1'' $1795 MW $1500 Magazitm. 35 mm. A·l $2). JEWEll:lY F.quJpment lor .t...., ideal for Cuiatmul old, --Ptt ~ ----.. ,;,;,GULF -COLL••• ,. ... IC ............. 1111 l'LUM•IM• ...................... y---~5'8"$2'--1"""" 548-S185att5:~PM -·t.-1-loft.._ .. _ _. • GORGEOUS Fur1: Toumta· ~--4 .. -ftl't.•=;; ~ STREAM •r:l'Oll:T ••ACM ............. ,.., tltOOMIH .... ..,, ... _ ....... ...,... J.()iJU' H........... .._ ...... . ~· J.MIN -· _. ...... M W,OIT 119KTI ............. 211• l'OOL•llRVKI , ... -............ Wurlitzer 5' ..,..,,,.:;: now $1890 hand ~ jewelry ~. line Sb::llt. Autumn Hue NWl'ORTSMORll ............ l'OWlasws•l'IH ............ ,,. _...... .,A ... -,,_, Pri Pty Wk"' BEAUT kittens for& MONTII old male half &ATJMOllll ................. im l'UMI' •••VICI .................. These are legitimate rtduc-s ~· LU8 • v. • e • or . . ' OOVIR JMORll ............... JIU .00,llllO ......................... ~ and ·-.. ,,.. __ ,., porting Goods 1500 BEA·-· Kin ~-·"t aft 6 PM, call 642-5612 Christmas. Call avenfnp. Beqla. hall Pooltt. Loves 17 Ft. "'LI Boat W!ISTCLll'I' ..... ,,,.,.,,.,,,nail aAOIO, It ...... lie. ,, ..• .,.,,Int .....,.aa '" ~w.-..uKaJ VJUVM &' ........... ...., • 675-4731 12/19 hild Fret &17-4239 .. UNIVIRJITV '""" ............ REMODELING .. •EPAlll .... good values at these prices. 6'10''. MOSS SURFBOARD ed mattrue:. ~-UJI.. 8" TABLE aaw, roclcwell c r.n. . 120 H.P. Mere. Crulnr •v1N1 ....................... na ••MooruMe. icYTcN•i.• ........ 90 0 •••• 1 rn·----__ .. · -· tab! d 1 h b 1 LOVELY brown ta""· & BASSET PUPS AKC at.CK aAY ................... '241 1c11so•• uu.uai. .............. ay1 .......... ow .., • .,..,. Blue pigment on bottom and UM:U. $1<6, worth $250. _ .... r e, e ac a t "'"~· ' lnboiird -Outboltrcl ~tS.:0,!LUl'I' .................. = ~::~:~ MACMiNli' iiiii"Aili:i Jr on installment t.ales. X-mu blue on rai.11. Excellent con-842-6536 eves, stand, complete. $ 50. mos. Look like ocelots. 8f7-8204 ~ • wlmd• Ready for the water right lltVINE Tl!RRAC• ............ llU SEPTIC TllNIU, ...... ltc. .. 1949 delivery guar. dltion $'75. Call JAY 549-1574 WESTERN SADDLE all 962-7633 Evenings. fl15..4731 12119 BEAlfI'IFUL Dane female, now. All the equip. 1ncl.. •• co•oNA DEL MAR ........... IHI TAIL0•1t1• .............. .,,. GOULD MUSIC · NEW hit ~ •-•-• .,..., AKC P'lri-ae maI 114 _. ___. ho 1m...-.... AKC Ille BALBOA ................... ,.. TERNUTI COICTIOL ........... m SKI boots -Worn once! 10'.11 desired featin'es. For •hows • w e £'OX ·~ ........... ....... • e, .#"' ......... nM _...... . compus, ~ &AV nLAMOJ .................. ant TILi!. C-lllk ............ -.,.n1• 200 N. Mafo, S.A. S4?--0681 Kastingcr, cost $70, yoon ..... plau"-New cond 216 value. Sac. for $250. old, shot•, etc. Adult home S0-611555641993 •full cover. Lt DO ISL a , . , ............... D51 TILL LIMllWll & ..,.._ ,,,,,,,11f .,. -,,-E .. --i.--11 Am Jl!l'ftd ~ -PRlV aALIOt. 11LAND .............. • T••• s1•v1c• ....... ""'" ,,.. for $35. Not a mark on Jaimtne cdM 673-S74&, ..... , ......... ....,.a ll!Ticanu pre • PARTY POODLE Al(C ttr • ATE PARTY Mlwl'O•T wirsr .............. nn TllLIVlllOfll, ••In. •tc. ... ,,. PR£ HOLIDAY SALE th 642-7261. • · never used $145 546-3566 AKC --•· C'ln ... T---'-tu ' ' 673-3144 R.ll• -11 MUNTINOTOM ll!ACM ............ Ul'MOUTIRY ................. 1,,. • em. POOL TAB LE 4, 8, · .,..,.. .,......,,. ~iu•1:i-1'-wk female, 2) ounee1 o1 _..7• ~ HUflTIM•TON MARIOU• .... ,:MM weLDtM• -............ "'5 LAD. IES ~-ur lk:I booU, (F'·-~) with--~ •• • •••• 2 LUXURIOUS FURS: Ptn. elderl'J edu1tl only. low, $50. 494-4281 14' Sid BoaL Mere fit motor FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......... Mii WINOOW CLeANIN ............ 6"7 •• _.,.. .-;ur:i· nuuu ~ 531-4195 ""'na1,;;;;;_:;::;;,;;;...:::::_-.--,I SIAL llA(M ................. MH JOBS a EMPLOYMENT PIANOS a ORGANS Size 51il, ullld once. Pd $85. like new conct $550. Coat lamb c.ape stole S'l5 • full U>(UI COCK-A-POO puppin I I: trlr, MW windabield, unl-e::g~NE~':i0"~.::::::::::::·:= Jo• WAMTIO, Mell ............ Ml Some of the most popular Sell for $65. 6f 5-1260, $800. 673.-3122 length $65. Flt any size, AFFECI'JONATE 6 months weeka oild, rud)r to pick-up qll( helm.wheel. Leavfne , oaANGE COUNTY ............... ~g: :::~:g: .__ ........ mt models including: Hammond 675-5535 perfect. 54&-74TI old kitten, female, ti.pr' Qri&tml eye $15. 968-1495 art& $450 or beat olr. st.MTA ANA .................... Mlf ••N 0 WOMIN "" Xl7 H 0 , T 200 GIRL'S Schw!M blJcet 2-24" tripod Adulb ••• •-• -~ .. w1srM1NsT1• ................ M11 ... ....... . , ·100, E-100, U"\1t • SURFBOARD, eo..1... CalToll 1_-.. gd ""'· 8 mm een.' SURFBOARD for aate. Good • • · ~ 2 BLACK ..... pod1-male "'~ MIDWAY CITY ................. »1' SCHOOLS & rNSTRUCTIDfl .... H• I FREE 3 DAY LAS I ' '"¥ .., cond "-"!: If lntere ·-~call UTIFULL d _, ~·-__________ , st.MTA ANA MllGHTI ......... MM 1011 l'•l!l'llllATIOM ........... ,.. e c. mode, '6'" excellent con-Howell proj. Argus editor-· ....,... I.cu BEA Y marke poodle1, l year old $50 each.1---------- co1.sTt.L ................. 11'f M'"E"R'c"H"A'NDIS'E" ··F·O ... R .. n1t VEGAS HOLIDAY with pur-dltion, no ding! $45. 494-1422 splicer-light 673-8601 54>1987 Calico ldtt!:n. frmale, 'I' 615-1302 or S21-3418 u-rlne Equip LAGUNA al!ACM .............. 1791 ct.ase"f all_ ..... _ ..... -· .... • uouNA NIGUl!L ............. 1711' SALE AND TRADE .. 7'2" ROUNDTAIL aurlboatd FB'i:K " hit 1 _, m~. ... ....... ....,,....,,_. AKC CJ:JRIS'I'MAS PUG s':~'~t~~~~JTOI-.~·::.::·:.:·: .. = •URNITU•a ...................... Ttade.tns~~~01 terms. $65 or make oUtr. 675-4298 CUrtl•Mathes ";.., ~<:'°~~ Ml1c. W1ntecl 1610 FREE to &'cod home, 13 mo pupplea-fweekl SHIPWRECK SALEI Clll'ISTRllNO ................. J•ru• OFl'IC• l'URMITURI ........ •11 I• CORONA DEL,.,.,,.. after 4 ntw golf t.a ... t An. 548-5128 old female mint. poodle, MAKE OFFER! 147-1315 .U ltW••J(I~ W?<Cked,, P.C.C, CAl'ISTllAMO IE.AC .... -... Ol'l"IC• lffll'MtMT ......... 1111 " ·~ ..,.... ~ $ WE BUY $ Y-~ ......... --tl....... ,..,,. Mast 1 ""-0ANA l'OIMT .................. J?4' 1ro•111ou1PMlMT .......... •1t 2854 E. Coan Hwy S73-8930 FOR Salt: Sc\l ba gear. ROBERTS 1800 SD. Rtel ..,........,.r ..... a. -.w Otrlltmu PUpple1 _,":'::n. w1n"..:.s 1u11' ~ COfrtDOMIMIUM ,,,, ........... 1991 U.l'L ••STAURAlllT ........... 14 B ·-· N ..... 2 FEMALE~. bblb • ~ ol .... -..... l.:nl' ........ . DUl't.t:XEI UNl'URM. ......... ms 11.• •ou1,Ml!MT .... -....... uu 0pe11 Eves & Sun. afternoon rcu"' new. ever uacu. cartrlda'e comb. Blk walnut wn t8 n "' Chihuahuu 9 w-d. AKC I: all bardwatt 'Priced for RuENTAL~"Tt.LI .......... ms :~~1~:~:._=~~.~.::::::::::: 963-&170 before 3 JJm. cab. Beautiful. 673-3056. $ FURNITURE $ ::~d. Ca.re lnclllded. Reg. 54M7-48. quick .ale. ~·. Ship A I hod l'U1tM1tua1 AUCTION ........ lnfl NEW twin 52 U.S. Diven ac-POODLE. Toy Silver male. APPLIANCES · ENGLISH Boll, I wkl:, AKC Cbandl-• ..,,.7 W n.. •• , pts. furn 1 Al'l'L11.Mc11 ................. 11• 1 Will FREE Trail ---~·3• -.J,J • ....,... ... GIMERAL .................... -::~~,.~l!~CtiiJiil ........ -... ::: qua. UngB. accept best Christmas 1;e<:lal $35. Color TV-'la110•-Stereili -, er " .. .,.,1on champ stock. Hlway, N.B. 54MJ.9'l cosrA MESA .................. 410I 'i!U.SICAL JNITRUM•'n ·:::::'.ilu IF you are b\l)'in& a Plano otftr. ~1649 alt 6 96Ui059 1 P1•• at H ... M wbetil. $1297 , 557-9102 KONEL H1 Ml!Sll VEllOI! ................ •n• l'IANOS .. Oll:IMJ llJll or Organ this Quist:mas &: CAIH IN JI MINllTll WHM'E mice tor Seu Radio w/10 • :::==~ ::t~:n ·::::::::::!;: RAOIO ............ ::::::::::::._ are interested in IOl'l\e real-6 HP lawn&. garden tractor. • 541 •531 e Baby pet ENGLISH toy York1hire channels. Cort $.1000 l yr , Ntw•o•r stto•1s ........... •m Tl!LIV111°" ...................... 1y -al de·•·. pleue obop Blnocul1n, ScopOI 8550 w/mtary mower &: lawn ..., Cbrlrtmu 145-2221 12119 Terrier tor ~!; .~ady for old. $19)0, Jn1talltti com· WIJTCLIPI' fU1 Ml•'I I JTl•IO .......... .,, .. dlf .,,.~ IWI roll •'Kii '"~ ,.._ .,. • .,....,... 2 old stud 9IJ'Vlet ~ pl Cali ••• -u•1v1•s1n ·;:...;c .. ,:·:::::: •• :CJ1 ~"~:f.C~•:::i~M'iiiT··· ·:: wARO·s BALDWIN srtJDIO er, -. ~ \Vll.L Pay $30 for Gd Apt ~· Hound, Yf'I · ete. • vu-;:r.wl &A(I( IA Y ..................... 4141 MO:.,. IUl'l'Lll!J ......... :::: ... 181' N-....... --. C.M. 642-8484 Mb,1!:.!:,?_sc,opleE .... s : 1:!:!·. CEDAR OIESrS. rellcftd, size refrlg. $25 for Gd w/papert, ~1 WllITE German Shepherd, JOHNSON 5.5 HP. Uted EAST ILUPI' .................. an Jl'ORTIM9 OOODJ -., .. ,....., '"""......... .,....... -·•· / pen 1~ CORONA CIL .Miii ........... GM llMOCUL.Aas .. acoPu·::::::::-Open Every Nlte Amer. Optical binocular 3 Shepherd caatm. $50. couch. 6f&..6289 • Uk fer BOXER " Beqle ('.om. ,......,, w pa • .,. yra. ~ water only. Xll'lt r.~~s'u.N·ci ·:::::::::::::::::: ::~~~"t:r1i'r. .. ::::;:::::;::=: & SUnda,y Afternoon JeMes $250. Both with cue. * &47~ * Bill. blnaUon puppies. 3 mo'1 old. All ahota $50. ~1483 evn. lhape. $110. 54W185 alt 5:30 · ~l~o'll~1LAND".'.'.'::::::::: .. : MACMIMIRY, ltc. ............ 1111 Call Pete 49H04l SMl'11I Corona port elee USED ZIG-ZAG SEWING Good w/ehlldml. 5f.4..8319. BOSTON Bull Puppies. Jult EVENRUDE 3 HP run 5 hn. ttUMTINeTON aiactt ............ LUMll• ....................... •nt typewriter $90. MACHINE $t0-2tli5 bdors t otRlSTMAS puppy mate, In time tor Oviltmu. $35 Cost =. JeO. / &CGl. FOUNT AIM VALLIE'f ............ ,. JTO•A•• ...................... int • 645--0156 * AM or aJ•--1 pu blonde p1--·-~·~ •• _._ 5om-11121' ., .... -' llAL IEACM ....................... :.':l""..~IM• MATl•IALI ....... = u II ·-~~.,,,;:...:=.=:..:::____ """ ~·~ ~-IU ..... -·-~OM• 1E11c11 ..................... $ ... nd. LI EST·OC· K ORGAN SALEll mltct lntOUI -WANTED: Old utility traUer WANTED: Used hide-a-bed old. ~6. SMlU. PUREBRED MALE ORllfrtOI COUNTY ................. PET I v TREMENDOUS SAVINGS! POODLE ~ Ad'" ... ~ y ht OAROIM ••OVI ................. 11 l'ETS ,GlfrtlAAL ............ .,. FOt' Sale l'lrewood. cheap. Old boat trailer for u nder $100. PreJer SML black punbred ftmal• . r.--r ... ta. .,. IC WllTMINSTIR ................ 4'1! CATI .................... -....... Large llllectlon or p~ n.... .. -& Euc•'·-tua: 11' boat. MT-3:>42 naup,hydf!. BC-3772 Dachlhund. "°"" ~ 2 ~ $2). ~ _c. h•rtert 9039 ~: 'AlbWAY CITY ................... " ooos .............................. orrans. Special dilcount 00 ,,....... °'Yi' ..... U.lnA llMA ..................... 4'21 NORSIS ...................... ·-838-6670 2 Awnll'CI For Sale. See at BEDS WANTED. Several U!to yn:. 646-M:l> 12122 GERMAN Sbepherd PUppln CHARTER A OOAT • : IANTA ANA Mll•MTI ............. LIVISTOCIC ...................... new models. ___ _::::_;;;.::____ -~ 0 t1ta di . • • Tusr1lll ........................ ...-FREE * FREE LADY'S H-B goll clubs. :mo Monrovil Ave, C.M. ed toldlnr or rou ... way, 30 AVIARY wtth 2 tmportlid -u n n1 and 1191 • ·~, f..~t":.,L iUCM':::::::::::::::: CALIFORNIA LIVING Cataotte player tv/purebale Irona $50, Woods $45. Whlte Call 645-(q• or 33" site. C&ll SM'--9459 dovH. 642-00ll 12-.;. ~penm~ $.15. S«>-t'C'lt Newport O:ir1.mnu Pwade ,. ; LAGUNA Nl.t.11!1. ............. cm frtURIBRl'l!I , .................. inti of ·-~... borgana coa. t $25. 548-5044 -AFGHANS. Q U a. It t 'J. Good ~of 8 -_., per hr ,,,• MISSION VllJO .......... -•nt IWIMMtMe l'OOU ............... -·1 "''ll " --sAM cL•ME•T• .............. •111 l'ATIOI ......................... int• COAST MUSIC GENUINE Reindeer Hide temp. AKC. OFA Cert. Inc boat. aklpper, mtnn · DANA POINT ................. Attt t.WNrM•• ......................... NEWPORT , HARBOR il T G ,.. "'E"JO"'M ¥.-, Parenti M AF 002-9989 Retervatlon call 64&-9000 r•il'&.llC, ttc. ................ "" v1.uT10N1 .................... -• Rur, $85. Apprcrx slz.e 3'xS', r.l ~ ~R. .t:S.IU ~"' '1' I ~ii;ffij~'fiaif.i' fji;;jj~-1=;:;;:;;;;;;;:;..=::;::=;;;:;;:1 R,0iNr'Al.$M ................. ,. TRANSPORTATION o.'::i~~';:11~ ~~.g Call &e-1.221 ••in -• ~1-.IU.LAN IMA ~··~ p~ MeblleHOlllll 9200 Aots. Unfurnl1htd :f1t~~tlACMT•.:::::::::::::=: SPANISH Kinpiu Spread. A'I HM.JJ Jf Yow.-11AdfwflYO.U. J:1. WT.uJ"h :u ATI opiiuL , ....................... ro••• c•u1s1a1 ............ ,.,. ,,,,, OPEN EVE'NINGS imported \\'OOI, gold 4 :e:-.,.»i n A(ce1Jt111 1e tJi•.St.,.. od.ii~ TltANIPORT ON YEAR END COITll MRSll. .................. n• Sl'l•O-SKI •OAT .............. white, $50. 64)..2&U w·-:::;.-,·. •o ~--1--.... fotSc--i~, ~.t ·1 ' CLEA8 "NCI! S"LI! MIJA va•DI ................. 111• BOAT TR.llLIRI . ' .......... mt AND SUNDAYS 11 _.,....,, .. -~ ~_,.,, ... s. ... ~a v--LA---"' •• M'l!Wl'ORT •PCM ............... IOAT MAIMTBNAMCI ........... XI GALLON aquarium + J.Jf.11 TeQCfwordloomspCindlngto,..,..,. 7. :-~ "' ........ """" .ALL SlZES Naw,01, "''."" .......... 111• aoaT u.uMCM1"9 ........... ..,. Until Christmas --n tank + all i/>'11uain of)'Ol.l!'ZolklcblrthliQl'I. • ...,,. SCRAM LETS NOW ON n•-•r ·-" '"°'0 .............. "'"'" "°'"· · ........ ·"" GOULD MUSIC ~·-,.,. 1 • '' " •1 ,,,,... . ~~ •U"''"' ..................... SOAT ""• _., .......... -COhOMCS, $45. 64&-3319 ,,,... ' ,,., JJ • llAY HARBOR UIUVl•ltn l'A•lr ........... atr IOt.r SIRYICll .............. Mr k.>i!I ~, tfAf lf 23 :---n ~-:J ~ ,,J. 11 •t.<Klt.T' ..................... nee IOAT •••TAU ............... ,.. :zoti N. Main, SA 5«7-0681 POWER ~r $35. Mlnl·Blke i. 1 21.:13-.,. 1 !'."' ",, T~ "., '".., 1 ' ANSWERS 1~!!!,-9t,, ~~-Et.ST &LU,~ ................. na IOAT CMARTlll: ................... ••irt J19tL Menill pt~-, .., -· ..., u.ou: ,,,,__ ... ' • ' • CORONA O•L MA• ........... lllf I'll_. IOI.Tl .......... ., ... ,... VER ...,. .,. """"' 36 e:.. .. T BALIGA oi'''' ................. '°"" MO'l'I,.. ................... y rare pl.ayer piano, Colta ~na 646-5206 ..... 1 ~ 37 L .., -SMnT.WUS \i ~~(I( Hait.or BJvd. aa.Y 11ui. .................... MAT nou•• .... _...... ...... baby _ _. with Am...too , 21 1 _, ,. " ~ ~ --a-•-. ft--'"' O.ta M-. 1n<> ·--• LIDO Illa .................. ,All •OATS WAJITO ............. ,..... .. ...... , • l"' T Pool fable, $50. 3 (;lrl't ~ l'fA ~. f:ij "'1f, d "'' -11t"1rl -rWll -.,...._,v • IA&AOA ISUMO ................. AlllCLVT ................. n. exprea• on. Hear bllcH, $25 acb. c II '"(",;,. 1:=--:to':!' .. , t:........ ..C.11 Worker-WHOLE ROW MOBlLE Home For Sala • .; =~~~:o:.J~:~lll ..::::::::::= :o~~ ~~.::::::::::::::: Ractunaninon PllY ht• 53&-:mll • ~ II u, "I 11.ls#lf 71 l#~ tt-11-~ New e:reaUOn. A hot dOI 1981. Sllatttbt utd, mr. new. . JIAL ••ACM .................... MOTOll MOMU .... _ ......... mJ muJlic his wt;)', Aak qUJtl.. . • • 12....., .. 2 ,., n -....ii. ~tt ....... 1-lt ·-~ u·-~ air ht al • LDM• aucM m ···"""'""'-11eyua1 .......... -••.... tm tionst C9'.Q61 CB radfo 1 .,.tenn& $35. 1 1t.. "4) 'fo 7> &:"• , ... ,..,.,,. ~ ...... -s ...... ill ... ",..,. at, r ottt.M ... •• c0o,•ov• ................ ": 1L1cn.1 .~,,CAQ ................. .., •--_.,_ ~ $10 .,R~ ~"''" ,'," ~ .,"" ~~· ?!-..... ~ .. -~ CU9 ot"a WHOLE ROW in a cond. Adult Putt. Nwpt, ..... ,. ............. . MIMI , .................. LESTER s·•-• Pl·-• .. •.• _ ....,.. ..... ..... ~· ~ .... ._ -,...~ _..., ••• A .,_ ............ ..__ WlSTMIMnlR ........ -..... NII MOTOttCYCLft .............. ,_ ---M)..7.fU ,_1,, J: 1• ~ M Wolk 1•........... • .,. • ~ _,au.., JI.II; _.... 11111owAY c1TT .················:=: MOTOJtKoon:as , .............. bench. Xlnt eond. Just tuq. .~~..._ 11 o. n ~ 71C:,,..... ""'·" II' THOMPSON ~. Call~ $f8-0752 ::::: A~Mi°i9tm':':'.:::::.-::g: ~~.\ur..~.:::::: ed. $11) or belt oner. E\11!1 'FIREWOOD !?.. 8iJt_ Dr)' .~~ l: \t :: == ~ ~ t 17 .Jehnlloa .. raa... bow rail, LUXURIOUS 35' m'oltile -IUSTIN .......................... rUILla.TIIAV& ...... ., ... fllll M8--69T1 EucalyptUI • ....,.l\'l'l'td A _.,,,_ 20WIJI 50,,,._ IOOri 4'-' barwlndl.N bom with cabUL Lido COASTAL , ,, ................. TllAILl•a."""" ...... ,. ..... Mii tt&cked: Cad 540..aMT U. 21 Vt'-SI ........ 11 Wed '4ilAIM ', ~·'lftC U can-8 1..t.•UMA 11ACM .............. ..,.. <AMl'IU ...................... ,,. PLAYER Pia.no -Electrlc: • (t "'..<'' v .!! ~. "., ... ,,,~ "u .. _ 1N1.• .U Cov. TUt tnftjr, Sl'M. Park. Newport B•••• 1 LMIUMt. M!OVIL .......... ··= nvcu ........................ Dttal/Art Nr Nu. $915. Call LOVELY, CIM!ltrlut.. human u...... ... ,..• ,. Cona 5Cl-5!l51 1U W f7l..M>I or &a-OlJ5 ~= fj::m~·::::::rm ~'l.i"itQT..U" .......... = .. 54S-3'1'4i. • Mir 'Ma: fttibl.r cleaned A ' IX' . .u !! l.utl rs~, t ~--o..t w:t.:... NB • . I CAJIA l'Olln ........... .17« ou•e•U .. let -,.1 -&.-....,. J.J..!-1 _,. ,.!"'_.... ~,, MOWLE Hom9, 10'11:t2 • REAL ESTAT~ IMl'Ot.TIOAVTM ............... SACRIFICE. Wurlltaer ·-~ ,-.~ ~=llffll ~=:;.' ~~ih' '4'CHRlSChftlAJlltn.llt.2 dean,nlct~llMtnpool. ~ I .,...,. (AU :::.:.:"•''" ..... Mii ........ t ...i.-beaut-oont. TACO 44 Mlnl blklR suo.--.,... -~ 'iT• llSldit -~.. bunb a -.s. X1nt ~ -·Cub. 1'13 =I ---.•r• t.MTntv1.1, ct.All-_ ...... •u• • ......., ..,.....,, ---b t 1 ~ ,, 1'o'(' " ""~ " ~ ~ • u.u. ,,_ 1'11,LIX.llt. .................... IACIU.•l.INOI ,_ .......... $515(1oro0er.f1)..3646 .... ~ rumpe ftC'Ol1-·-'°no. '°'""""•·-"''• CaDm-t512 Blvd_,Sp.46,C.M. COfllCIOMl11!1UM , ............... ,.\ITO IYtll(TJ ., ........ ,.,., .. ,.. ' a-...i 'M-• didonrd $85. 175-'32T1 aft 5. ,.._ .,_ aaflTALS WAMnD ...... 1 .... '"9 t.VTCll WA.WT•D ............... ,,.. BALDWIN ""'~c p....... · . JOI.Good @.Ymwo .r"\Nratal 14-2'-37 2$' OWENS 'SI w/moor1.,..-''2 SKYL1NE 1(bdO •lidded ' :gg:•::o•,.::lllT ::::·::::·::= :m ct:: ...... ·::::::::::::::=: l800 like new. {2) GO KARTS ~ .,; ;~1~-~ In Nnpor1 Bl.1. $S950 Ind's T.tl• room, xlnt concl. SS.I*. ; ~OTILs. TaAILI• C01J•n ,,,, vuo c.u1 ....................... M&-1121 $50 tadl W-6319 moortns. Call -sn..-. tdultJ. -.n1 • ' ' r • , . -. • . I ' ·· ' -•· · ·"' .''4·,;;-~,--; -:-;:.~~ • -----;··-,---,:~r:·. •· -1 -r-·-;~-7 .;--~-r ' 3.f OAIL V PILOT rRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION TRANSPOl!TATION -TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION ·--~··' TRANSPORTATION 1RANSPORTATION T,RANSPORTATION -- 9200 Trv<ka ¥500 lmP9rlod Autva -Imported Autos Ml'O Imported Autos 9600 TRANSPOtTATION VOLl(SWAGEN Imported Autoa 9600 Autos Wanted 9700 Autos Wanted 9700 JN S.'\!OG FREE Costa Mesa Newport Harbor ' ~ from 20 Models ready to move in today! BMW SUZUKI SSCC. Only 1,00> mi. -------- Xln't Ccindltion. $125.. Call e BMW e 54>5837. THE FOLLOWING NE\V '64 HONDA 230 Scrambler. B!\1\V'S IN STOCK FOR Built to 305. $200. Call IMMEDIATE Dfil.lVERY 642-3518 anytime. e 16 . 2002'1 All colOrs '68 HONDA CL~ Scrambler • 4. 1600's straight pipe, knobby tires, e 4 • 2500's x1nt cond. 644-1141 e 2. 2000's 1966 HONDA S90, 1300 miles, LOW FINANCING AVAIL. exttllent condition. Phone SALEs-sERV1CE-PARTS "4&-<634 T & M MOTORS, INC. '68 Y M1AHA 350. Jn Service 8Cfil Garden Grove Blvd. Must Sell. $400. Call -534·2'284 Open SUnday 892·5551 64&-7983. CORTINA NE\V '69 Kawasaki 250 cc Sidewinder, under $600. 847-76TI or 847-2987 '67 Ford Cortina, radkl/htr. l==~==c---:-.,.--, I 4 brand ne"' titts $1000 or ~c YAMAHA Endural, best ofr. 646-2574 hke nu. Call alter 6 PM orl========= wcekerxls. 837-3969. l"' sw1aco El T;,... 200 cc. __ c_o_o_P_ER __ str/scr. Like new-only 300 '62 !\lINI Cooper 9'J7. Rebll ml. Eve1 642-1316 eng. $1200. or trade 673-9183 Auto S.rvicn & Porta 9400 alt 5 DATSUN - DATSUN MG MG Salta, Servkot, Parll lJnmedlate Dellwry, All """"' J1rtuµo rt .Jl1nµorts '&1 XKE Jaguar, new· engine. 1966 Harbor, C.M. 646-9303 ~eed~2~~· upholstery & TOYOTA 1967, 4 dr, R&H, p. stick, gel tires, Xln't cond. KARMANN GHIA M"'' "11· &1<-l4'i6. 1965 TOYOTA Landcruiser New nylon top. Lo\v mile. age. 4 y,'f'leel drive. 541H!214 TRIUMPH 1964 KARMANN GHIA 2 dr Coupe, Sharp & Clean. Gd. !\lechan. oond. Nu tires. Gd buy at $850. 968-ZiTI even· ing.!I. -..;""'"'~---=~· -!\JUST sell '66 Triumph Spit· 1965 Karma~n Ghia lire !\1k u. r&h. ton~au. gd 2-door Coupe Xlnt Cond. "-· -1 13 000 I I . · .• _.. , tJ..L t!S, orrg owner, 01uy , mmacu ate IIlSl e auu ou1 . mi 528-8783 One O\vner. $1295. See at 480 I o-==·~,___-,-,=-=-.,,-Broadv.·ay c.ri.f 1960 Triumph TR-J New ' · paint, reblt, eng. XLNT '65 KARMANN Ghia, xlnt oond. S650. or best offer. oond. Lik" ne\\•, 1 lady 5'18-30i2 owner. !\tusl S<'!I $1050 or ======== best olr. 548-9823 VOLKSWAGEN '64 KARMANN GHIA Radio. Gd. Cond. 646-3031. '69 VW Camper Van, e x· MERCEDES BENZ ct'llent cond., like ne1v, P.Take offer. 645-1239. --------'61 V\V Van. Brand new tires Q,.an9t? Coun!y's L.1rgl.'sf Select ion NPw & Used Mf:>1cede~ Benz J im Si emon; Imp s. W,uner & Main St Sanl.l Ana 546·4114 $500. Call afler 5. 64tr-5768 '6!) VW Bug, diamond blue, 2,000 mi, perfect $1995. Mu si &'II immcd. 642-8584. '65 V\V CONVT. blue. 29,000 mi. Good Condition. $102.;. Call 675.2400. '69 DATSUN 2000, Radia1 '67 200-D -$2100 '67 V\V Bus. 1 <nlX'r. Lo mi. BEAOI tirrs, 1o mi, perfect cond. AIR CONDmONING Like New. $1650, Ca 11 Auto Supply 1,;M:;;;:";;,' ;;0';:'·~~-";;::2-3219;;;;·==.:...:=='9'-3863==="='-===~962-=-'=693"'. ===== lm~rted ~~tos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmportK Autos 9600 Wholesale Prices to All Complete 1'-tachine Shop SPEED EQUIPME.VI' REBUILT ENGINES U2S Vlcloria. CM ~ l83lil Beach Blvd, HB 847-0991 * OPEN 7 DAYS * Triller, Tr1vel 9425 X·!\1AS Special, ~w Sherwood Caroper/tn.Uer, slpa ti, dinetle, very li&ht. M7-987S '69 HOUDAY Travel Trlr. 19' self-cont. tandem Yt'hls. sips ti, all xtru. Owner sac; must sell $3800. 64U197 1969 1~' .Aljo, tully RH con.. tal~. canopy, ultd only 3 time1. Sac $3000. 8!0-;l650. BRAND NEW BU·GS ·-1970's ON OISPlA Y & READY TO 60 TWO LOCATIONS TO l l l'fl YOU 441 EAST COAST HWY. ot BAYSIOE ORIVE , NEWPORT BEACH & 1970 HARBOR BLVO .. COSTA MESA '7J·Ofot HOME OF T>iE LOVE BUG SPECIALS I I 549.JOJI ' \ • VOLKSWAGEN YW BUGS FROM $399 Imported -'ut. 9600 eYW CAMPERS & BUSES SUNDIAL MOOELS IMMEDIATE DELIVERY 1 s . ·69:, WITH NO MILES TO·CH90SE FROM T & M MOTORS, INC. 8081 Gnr<Efe"n Grove Blvd. At Beai:b Blvd. R92·5551 Open SUnday 5.34-2284 VW Fasthlack 1966. xlnt cond . 28.0IXl mL $1300 TRR 795 • 540-26.12 '62 VW GOOO COND. $51;,. 1t ti75-4442 • • 1963 VOLKSWAGEN 2 Door. sedan. 4 5peed trana- nrfssion. tGNZOT41 $599 ------~ ~~-~---VQLKSW~GEN ' '67 VW Sq/Bk. PerfM't • new tires • one owner. $1750. • 54S.74n • '&t VW'1 (2) to choose !rom .$49S. DCL7f.i0 I: TAX141. dlr. !19'J...5551 or 534-2284 YOLVO WE PAY •• , • CASH for UM!d' can 4 trucks 1Ust call UI bl hft estlmall!. GROJH CHIVROLET Ask !or Sales Manaau 1!21.l Bearb Blvd. HWtllnaton Beach Kl 9-3331 WE PAY CASH " FOR YOUR CAR CONNELL CHEVROL£1' 2828 Harbor B.lvd. O>sta Mesa MG-1200 --Auto Leasing 9810 ----1 VOLVO WE PAY TOP LEASE ANY MAKE 1970 1-IERE NOW DOLLAR LO\V PRICES ON for rood, clean used can, OR MODEL RE!\fAINL'lG '69's all makes. See George Ray Your Best Deals Are Still At Theodore Robins Ford Let our )ease expert.s sllolf you the besl plan for your pecsonal needs without obJi. ~ation. DEAN LEWIS 2000 Harloor ruv•. UNIVERSITY OLDSMOBILE 2850 lln.rbor Blvd. 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-9303 C.M. 6GOOIO LIKE .to !lave $300 on a 1968 Volvo 1448? Auto. trans., air oond.. w/w, R/H. Nicely broken in. Split Hi·to book. Call 6.57-0530 Antiqu•, Claulcs · 9615 '57 MORG-AN + 4 New T:>p, new brakes. Ex. cellent c o n d i t i on. $1500. ~1724 after 6 PM. Will Buy Costa Mesa Your Volkswagen or Porsche 5'1()..9640 & pay top dollan, Paid for • ~ LEASE • ~ or not. Call R:l,\ph .,.... r 673-0900 1969 ?>1usti ng llan;itop. V.S, --lMPO~~R~Ts-.~W-ANTED=~-1 ai1·, pwr dist• brakes, pwr Oran&:e C'.ounties Strg, $79. per mo, 24 n10 TOP $ BUYER lease. BlLL MAXEY ,TOYO'?A SOUTH COAST J8S81 S.acb Blw. CAR LEASING H. Beach. Ph. 847-SSSS ~ W. Cst llwy. NB ~2182 Imported ~utos 9600 Imported Autos 9600 lmparied Autos 9600 OPEL· & JAGUAR SALES · & SERVICE BRAND NEW No. 9 152753 s1777 Bl G BIG SELECTION JAGUAR SAVINGS One Of The Largest Select ions In Sout1iern California FINAL DEMONSTRATOR CLEARANCE Thett -wtte our executives and salesmen's penonal cars. All are tow mileage and In top notch condition. BETTER HURRY they won't knt lon9 at these REDUCED PRICES. BIGGEST SAVINGS OF THE YEAR POOLE'S BETTER USED CAR VALUES WE ARE COMPLETELY SWAMPED WITH TRADE-INS '! '67 BUICK LE SABRE • door, pow•• 1l••1ing I br•ke1. F•clorv 1lr condition. 1mm1c11l1te. VZT s•• '66 MUSTANG Co11p1. Auto. 1••111., radio, h11t1r. ! SYC 001 I '67 JAGUAR •20G 11d111, f1clo1v 1ir cond., full "ow1r, 16,000 mil11. One ow ner VCK 51) tr , Aulo L111lng 9810 :/I LEASE • RENT Immediate delivery on all 1970 FORDS & FORD TRUCKS "TRANSPORTATION 1RANSPORTATION TllANSl'ORTATION ~Sl'ORTATION UMd Cori 99011 Ulld Co,; 9'0o UMd Cort '' -IJMtl Cors ' 9900 CADILLAC FORD OIJ)SMOlllL • • • <.-\ Friday, Ctctmber t•. 1709 OAJLV PILOT 35 TR:ANSPORTAT,ION tRANSl'ORTATION fRANSPORTATION' ' JRANSPORTATIOH Uatcf C•r• 9900 Ulled C1rs 9900 Uaed C1... 9900 Ustd Cart -r-9900 ,......._ __ ' ' PLYMOUTH -· PONTIAC PONTIAC T·BIRD *FUN. N,· SUNI 196'1 BONNEVU.LE, air· LADIES ~tanlcured '60 Conv '6.'> PONT y.g "Le Mans" concl, & full power, $89S. T·Blrd. Al.I Pwr. Nu Tire •. CONVERTIBLE Al"l', PIS. ;833-=~'UQ=. ===== Pert cond. ~-644-6538,. "Premium" FiberglaM + 642.-8235. ' Nylon W/walls etc. Spark-RAMBLER '67 LarXia.u, 00,000 mi. Air, All popular makes. Ford '61 PS.YMOt.rrn: GTX, air cond. Quck atll, Auto, Netir Nu • Uni. Yellow w/blk \ihyl tp. \Vkends Only, ~11 ling Orig, .Mikado Crean1 full ww__rr, n~ radial ilt'\l_ •. _ Xlnt. Black Vinyl top, Jm. 1962 Ran1b!er Americ an . Immac. Fae. warr. 2 :yr or mac. saddle inter. Local Runs good. New tire!! and 20,000 mi. 642--0574 . '' authorized leasin{; system. t =========\ Cet Our Competitive Rates I Theodore ROBINS FORD teachers car since new? Pny 'P"'~'n"t. "...._..,"=='==== ,==='==-===! you lo investigate this true ' ' VALIANT ·;:po~c· > yr, end winter "BARGAIN" T •BIRD 2060 Harbor Blvd. Costa Mesa 64Ul010 'f,G BONNEVILLE, 4 dr hardtop, PS/PB, pwr win- dows, fact air, new tires, good gas l\)ilea.ge, llTI::i. aU 5 PP..t . 548--8206 FOR ONLY $995! MARQUIS -~--------~· -•'-----1 Used C1r1 CHEVROLET e UNIVERSITY e OLDSMOBILE 2850 'Harbor Blvd. 1;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; I • M0'1(l!1 Ext. " "' n a... ... ,....,1 '"SPORT Fury, hdtp, • __ c_.H_R_Y_S,,_LER.,.---l'611197;;;;oco<d'HARSO"'isrf'aAirl~ai;BL;::,VDiii.:sl-!.P!LY!:""..:=o:.:UT~H~ dlr. good n1nner, full price I' , '61 FOid Flllrlane 500. 6 $499. Monm call Phil ... 1963 CHEVROLET '67. Chryshtr 30Q C>llnd•n. NEW: Starter. • 54S--0634 •NOVA STA:. WAG.ON 2 0r· Hardtop,· tactory1"alr, SaUooid Switc h ~· l•--------19 passenger. Automatic, ra· power ateerin;; J)9Wer braJt. Ma1,ter Cy!illder, Fiie1 • '63 RA.\lBLER Amer, hdtp, dlr, runs good full price $299. 001.920, call Ken, 494-9773 BUICK dio and beater. (llG490) es, vinyl rap/,' A. real ~ Pump, Jtebullt tr&Qt $699 aain Lie YOK..f]6 Preaure plate; C·Jutcb ' ' $2099• Bearinp, and U·Jolnts, WW trade tor vw. See at ~ e UNIVERSITY e N""'°" Blvd. No. 5.· O.lli OLDSMOBILE ,1,_,M;.,..::,:.:..==~---I 1M6 '.PLYMOUTH 2 DOOR SEDAN Automa!lc tra.nsmasion, • (RTl'8C13) . $899 2850 Harbor Blvd 0 '65 FAIRLANE Wq. 1: '6S , Co.sta Mesa 540-8881 ~ Fabiano Sodsn .. Sta. w... e UNIVERSITY e '62 CHEVY II. R/H, 6 cyl: ' 1 has 289 V-8. ~ibu I cyl. OLDSMOBILE ne\v auto trans, paint, lires. A Both air cond, w/l/w, 2850 Hartiior Blvd. '67 RIVIERA $400. '61 Cm-vall', '"'"· ~... JWl. l650 ... 9-mtl Cl>&ts .M•sa 5""'881 Full po'ver, including air, !:r~te;2oo~d54~~1 new bat-' '66 Font LTD,· owner '65 PLYMOUTH Valiant 2 strato buckets, 40,000 actual =-'='=.cc:....::::_ ___ , 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 desperafe..loaded w/alr, dr, 3 apd, '225' a~. new miles. '64 CHEV Nova Wagon 283 1970 HARBOR BLVD. p.s., P.b., iterto $1095. tires, pA.tnt, chrome wheels, $2995 cu. in., 4 spd, new re~ end C'OSI'A J\.!ESA &H-4917 $150 or .best'affer, 544-3014, and trans., brakes and tires. '6' F•lcon J'utur• -- D Vocy doan. $925 oc best of. '64 lMPERlAL 4 Dr. Good Nly W:lm'> •PP'd. Dir -TO.RONADO fer. 544-3246. -oond .: lot.s of extras. Leather , · .$695. ' ~ ~ '64 MALlBU, .xlnt cond, new upbol. $l,o75. 6/a-303l Phane 642-60'23 J.;;;;;:,;;;;,;;;;,;;;;;,;;;;;;:;,;;;;;; ·~ 0 tires, 1 owner $850 firm. '67 Chry. :·31Xl" 2 J?r Landan, ,59 FORD. See-to appreciate. "' ,tJ" '73-3663 " 548-6203 all """""· new "'"· MUsr c.rn.r of BrookhUnt A \).IJ~p'fl '64 IMPALA. fact. air, pv..T. SELL! 644-4265 Warner (hlobil Station ) '\ JJll steer., R&H. New tires. '62 CHRYSLER 300. Clean. H.B. Xlnl's cond. $995. 646-3530. Has everything. $600. Call .-c1~,1,..,1968="ro=R'°'D'°'.Country,_.,...-I 5-19-3031 Ext, 66 or 67 1970 HARBOR BLVD. COSTA MESA CADILLAC '62 CADILLAC (5) 1968 CHEVY Impalas, 1213) 592-5396. aedan waa;ons. Loaded. loaded! Priced for quick . UftN AL $2100 * 534-9290 1968 TORONAOO, white with ,.,., $1775. 5.14-5200 COn 11 ENT . , ~65 Ford, Van--Bus, radio black vinyl top, Top condi.. CHEVY '65 Malibu SS. AU~O--.-D-OO_R_MA_N_S_A_L_U_T_E_ll ' b~ engine. Perfect ' tlon, low mileage, eqUipped P/S, R&H, A·l Cond. Priv. condition. $1400. 546-534! ,wltb every factory optional Pa11y. fi-4&.7076, S<tS-7460 1964 C'ONTINENTAL 4-~J' -&vailable, includlflg 8 track · .:..:cc.:;.c::.::.,;.:-"'-=.:..::.:....._1 CONVERTIBLE, Beautiful LINCOLN '62 CHEVY II Nova; new Orig. Teal mue w/"BraOO tape deck. First $3500 takes tires, brakes; xlnt cond, N , " v · 1 ••-k --------·I it!! 673-2252 White, rebuilt eng., dlr, xltt ew ' W1ule LDy top, oa.e 1965 IJNCOLN Continental. running cond. Car well tak· ~1141 "Natural" }eat.her inter. Air Silver 4 dt, fully eqvjp. en care oI. Need foreign car '64 CHEVY wagon, Bel-Air. Conditioned with all apace $1395. 673---7807 aft 5. in trade. Will fine prvt prty. R&H, Pl~. P/B. Oean. age Pwr. assists, Premium\;:=;;:=::::;;;;:===I NPVS'Jl. Call Phil <194-9773 or $59'5. ~. W /walls etc ''A collectors MERCURY 545-0634. '63 CHEV. Impala Conv. Item!" GoeS 'to the firs tl---------1 '69 Cdv, 15000 mi. Silver w/ •P/S • P/B • R/H. $600 or $1S9S1! MARQUIS ?i.ITRS. '66 Men: Colony Park Sta .blk ltht & Ja.ndau top FM 1 Best Offer! 833-0849. 90Q ·s . Coast Hwy., Laguna Wgn . A/C + full pwr, $1f151~~~~~~~~~ MTRS, 900 S. Coast Jfwy.1 LagUna Beach. Ph: 494-7503, 54().3100. '57 T-BIRD . CLASSIC Looks new! 30,400 ~es 548-0736 aft. 7 PM. \VHAT A DEAL '60 V@Uant Sta. Wag. $200. 642-5493 or 675--0437 ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST AMERICAN MOTORS DEALER I 9900 Used Cars 990D Dorsa Motor& is ready to serv• you with 6 acres of Sales •l)d Servic. facilities. And I comolete line of new 1970 models. Check oUr wide selection of A-1 U1ed Cari . FACTO~Y DEMO'S DISCOUNTED ... • • I 69 AMX , $1000 NEW '69 l.Ef.TOVERS· UP TO. $600 OFf. . ' '63 CORVETTE ~:. ,,, '64 T ·BIRD ~:V· .~\' '1299 J '63 YOLKS. ~~~· .. ~00• • '65 BUICK GRAND SPORT '"'"" •~c "' '1299 J '66 MUSTANG !i~: :~=-. .. '1299 BORSA MOTORS ' Orange Co11nly's Newest Atnet"l!'f'H /llolors Dealer 11621 BEACH BLV D., HUNTINGTON l!ACH MAIN AT BEAC~ s I e r e o. $5500. 673-8282/ 1960 CHEVY Beach. Ph. 494-7503, 540-3100 Wkend only ~1356 1~ 673-782'J * Greenbriar Van * '82 CONTINENTAL. Factory ¥ake olll"r 642-5172 aft 5 Air. ,Full power. MUSTANG ~-=;...;;Cc;o;.ch;._ __ _;,98=00--'N'-'e'-'w;_:C.:.••:..:• ____ 9:.;:800 New Ce rs 9800 New Car.• 9800 New Cars 9800 '67 EL DORADO. Full pwr & air + $1200 .xtras, perf cond, lo mi; !11UST SEL L ! 64•1-426.<, * 673-7076 * 'f.5 CHEVY Sl\tion Wagon'; , AM/FM radio, air cond. 68 MUSTANG Hrdtp, GT~ inoo. 548-1481 CORVAIR ""'· Dolux• '"'"' w/radlo, _ ~ pwr steer, pwr d l1c1 . '65 DE VILLE Convt. All 'Qi ~ST El Camino, _27;) hp, 1963 CORVAIR~o -1--a.;. ·Limited sllp ditf, ta~ I pwr, extras, am/fm. $1750. :J!7 CL, nu 1:ans & paint. chr turbo-charged' 19&1 yder auto trana. Still llDder 24 $550 dn & T.0.P. 892-5620 rlms, rh, ps, $1700. 5$-1235 eng., 4 spd, M t , sell! mo, 24,000 mi warran. '65 Coupe DeVille. '56 CHEVY 283 Auto Must $575. 968-2290, , 846--1988. $1900. see to apprec. S~ or best 1961 CORVAffi Station '67 MUSTANG hdtp, cham· ' 5-\6-8943/494-5189 eves. otter. Call 5<1~24a4. Wagon. Original Owntr. pq:ne beJ.ae, aaddle mt. 218 '6? _ COUPE de Ville, very 1961 CHEVY Van, converted $245. Call 543-6728 c.i., auto trans, coM:>le air clean, like ne1v, very low sertti camper, 6-1,000 miles. cond, radio/btr, tinted mil es $3600. 673--0281. ~-67:µj213. COUGAR glass, nr new w/w tlna $00'.>. 673-5167 ' • " what has your old car done for you lately! Cough? Smoke? Stall and stutter? If that's a~I, the n it's time Y°"' traded for a VW that wdl give you top performance every day. It'• th1 VW th1t wo1'• 9iv1 you 1nythin9 lo "'orry 1boul, W1 m1k1 1ur1 of tl"t, W1 9iv1 it lh1 VW 16·poinl 11f1fy ind perform1nc:1 l1tl. It h11 to p1u. So WI 9iv1 if our 100 % 9u1r1nt11 th1I w1'll r1pl1'1 ell m1jor m1• che11ic1I p1rh* for 30 d1y1 or I 000 mil11, "'hich1v1r com11 firtl, hn't that whi t 1 n1w c1r·own1r n11d11 A b119 th1t wof't d'rlv1 you nuts. '6S YW SEDAN Engine ov1rh1ul1d by u1. Sp1ci1I p1int. Gold with cl1rk brow11 •h1din9. YPS •79S $1299 '63 VW SEDAN S.1utiful Rid, wilti con· tr11ti119 in+1r. This i1 th• th1rp11I '6] to b1 found 1nywh1r1. l ie. OHZ·7tl $1099 '66 VW Square Back Origin1I p1i11t. Economieil unill w'1gon. RPS 790 $1699 '611 vw S1d1n, lit1 blu1 origin1I fini1h. D1lu•• model, full f1ctory 1quipp1d including radio . !'lo. 7D·2~27t $1699 '66 GHIA COUPE Thi Pink l 1dv R.1d io ind h11l1r. SI)( 739 $1699 '66 SUNROOF SED. !1ig1 originil eolor. Sold n1w by u1. Hurry. SYZ 977 $1499 445 EAST CO~T HWY. 1oi 11oysldo Dr,l•or NEWPORT BEACH 673-0900 549-3001 Ext. 66 or 67 '65 MUSTANG, auto lhift. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. racing~green,, lo-dawn, will C'OSI' A MESA finance $950. Call 673--f.:m DODGE '69 Dodge Charger MUSfANG '68, vinyl top, air, 21,000 ml. aee to apptte. Pvt 'pty. 646-1914 OLDSMOllLE 2 Door llardtop. V8, powc • steering, po we r brakes, automatic trans, bucket • seats, vynl roof. Absolutely like now. Lk YWS-219 1965 OLDSMOll'L• $2699 CUTLASS 2.0,, s.dan. v~. radio, heater, automatic, white "L. al wan., '"'!~ .. ., s0" $895 . 'o'"::t.i: e UNIVE~SfTY e J'' OLDSMOBILE 2850 Harbor mw. 549-3001 Ext. a; or 67 ~ OOsta MeM. · 5f0.3881 1970~~~VD·~· • .• • • ' altAliD NEW 1966 DODGE 1918 OLDS Coro~ot 4 Dr. Sedan SPORT COUP• Aut~mattc, power steenna;, F'Ully factory. equipped in- radio It heater. Th1a ii • dud:ll'l& head · rnts, 1eat real-good IJuy! (511 AGS) belll, back-up lichts. wind· $899 "'""' ..-... -- e UNIVERSITY e OLDSMOBILE l'tlr, carpeU. etc. $2491 2850 Harbor m"'. Onler Youn 'l\>°"l' Cool& M•sa 540&81 e UNIVERSITY e TEAO!ER must .. u "' OLDSMOllLI now. 'Gl ~ 330 4 dr .tdn, 2850 HUtior 'Blvd: . auto trans, r&h. ale, rec Costa Meta. ~ tuneup, clean rtl. tr&nap * "QUALITY COMPACI't" J200, ~7619 '63 OLOS 'F-&5 "Cltn.ASS" 1964 OODCE Dart rro. HIYl'OP . SPT. CPE. A/T, Automatic transmlsakm. PIS. Reeent Wlwallt etc. 1 M•t tiell. Make otter, lady owned. Gll1tenln1 546-8886 Erml,. WhJOo W/Pluoll red '64 DODGE Dart• Good tireat Vlnyl budriet Int Inter. ~w battery l radiator. Smooth Po"1' and winrtltw $.i25. 67J...5122 looks! ONLY $895.. MARQUIS MTRS., ICIO lo. Coast Hwy. 1.op,. Beacb Ph: 49f.'15Q.l. 563100 • FALCON STA. Wacon. ''1 Falcon. '64 OLDS II oomt.. pwr Runs good! Looks good! btlkes, 1tterlnc, tl•a1i. Rcat0nable. M6-5392. '615. Daya 6t8--M39 FOR Sale: 1964 Falcon Sta. Orla Miles 2IKKI Wapn, White 4 dr, $650. '8' Old.I· Cutlau $1'JOIL ~ Priv. Ply. _,,, $40-99!l mac "'""· Pvt. n . -t .IQHll CONNEU "NO GIMMICKS NO GIVfAWAYS" 1st Place Blue Ribbon JUST 21 YEARS OF HONE.ST DEALING SELLING CHEVROLETS CONNIU CHIYROLIT BLUE RIBBON PRICES VI, 1uto., P.ti.1 P-w~ ctow1, t1ctorv • r, R&H. '"'°$999 Jl'ol1r1 • dr, H.T. YI, AUii., F1ct. 1lr, P,S .• ll•H. (WTE7a.) $)g99 , Choose From Over 300 New Chevrolels, Used Cars & Trucks ti/ + The L~rgest Selection of New Corvettes ' In Orange County Biggeu llloney Saving Event In ( . sA '~··. ' SJ299 BRAN D NEW 1970 CHEVELLE CPL '65 FALCON 1<ut1H1~2 fH. Au!OtMll(, radio. llNter. /USOJ.111 $999 I • I • • . • • , • • , ' . ' •• . : . . . • . . , . • • L .. Fr\dty, Dtnmbtr 19, tt•9 Yourself The Medium Price Car with The Most DRMIATIC ST~NG SINCE THE CONTINENT AL MARK III WE OFFER YOU SOME EXCELLENT CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS A brand new 1970 Lincoln Continental, Mark Ill, Mercury or Montego, would make an excellent Christmas gift for the whole family -Set yours up for delivery on Christmas Eve. CONTINENTAL MARK III See One of Santa's Little Helpers To Gift Wrap the New or Vsed Car , of Your Choice For Mark Ill & Lincoln Continentals FOR SAFE BUY USED CARS llAO WAnl NIW CARS 140-5630 642-0911 1970 ,LINCOLN CONTINENT AL A NEW DIMENSION IN LUXURY AND SPACIOUSNESS , •• AMERICA'S MOST DISTINGUISHED MOTOR CAR: IOI MANGAN WAYNI S9Ullll FOR YOUR FAVORITE MERCURY PRODUCT MORE CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIONS ' We have some beautiful used cars that would make wonderful Christmas presents-our prices are right tao you don't ha¥e to wait for January clearance 5Gle prices-we haff them now. •IL "FRINCHY'" LIUSILLI IUSS LAY TOMMY THOMf'SON FUNK HAYDEN Continental '68 CONTINENTAL 4·DR. SED. Attr1clil't litht chrome y1llow with bl1df le1th1r in· l1rior i nd l1ndt11 foof. Fvll p ower 1q11ipped, f1tlory 1ir, 1tc. WXF 331 $4395 '68 CONTINENTAL COUPE Rov1I M1 rOOl'I rnet1llte fini1h with metehing Interior, beek l1nde11 roof. Luxury eq11 ipped. Completely tilt 1'11ri n9 wheel, fec.tory eir, power door lock1, etc. VTP 741 $4195 '67 CONTINENTAL 4-DR. SED. leeutiful Iron bl111 melellic fini1h wilt. matc.llin9 leelh· er interior. Blick l1nde 11 roof, fully luwury equipped •nil feclory •Ir conditlonlnq . AM.FM r1dio, 1!1reo l•P• d1c.k. One-own1r ci r. leeutifully m•h1t1 ined, TIN 020 $3395 '67 CONTINENTAL Con.,ertible, beautiful Ot••n Tu rquoite fi ni1h with 191elchi119 i11lerior end whlt• top. Completely lu1ury eq11ipped, full pow1r, AM.FM r1dio, f1clory elr, tilt wheel, etc. 4 l'lew t;re1. UOA 114 $2795 '65 CONTINENTAL '64 CONTINENTAL 4 door 1eden. 011erf Bei9• finllh wlth blo11d f11ther interior. Fully lu•ury equipped lnc.ludin9 full power I f1c.tory air. Li~ RAU 325 $1895 Mercury '67 COUGAR 2·DR. Ume fro1t with rnatc.hi119 "inyl buck1h, euto,, 289 en• 9in1, P.S., R&H, new c.1r trede·in, one own1r i nd 1ttr¥· iced by 011r c.omp1ny. VOR 23) $2195 '68 COUGAR XR7 P~l•r wlllte wilt. bl1ck l111d1u roof I b11tk but.kit 1e1h1 •11 lom1tic fr1n1., power 1leerln91 pow1r br1•e1, radio, ll11 !1r, etc . l ie. WCP )ll $2395 "67 MERCURY MAR9UIS 2-DR. Hird Top. Be111tiful 9old b1iCJ• f i n I 1 h with 11'11tc.hi119 ;nterior, fully power ~1o1ippitd, fac.-tory 1it, l111da1o1 roof, ona owner. Drl'l't ll only J0,000 mil11. UZN 914 ' $2495 '69 MERCUR¥ COLONY PARK 4 deof, Deter! Belt • r,,.;,h wltii -.lol'td leethtr !111ttlor. ' Pe111n9•' St1tio11 W19011. Fully 11.n111ry equip~, f11ll hlly l111vry ·~11lppM lncl11dint fwll pow•r I fec.tory pow•,, fectory e ir, etc. lee11lif11I powd•r blue with oir. U11111u•llY c.l1e11. Uc. OUW f5J meh;hlttt i11ferior. C•r•fuUy M•l11t•l11td. 'r'WI\ 14J $2195 $4195 .John.son Other Makes '67 PONTIAC GTO 2·DR. H.T. Gold rni1I mt l•llic fin i1h with bl•clt bucket •••h, •uto, tr•n1.1 r1dio & h11t1r, pow1r 1!11rin9, f1clory •ir. B11utiful condition. TRJ 503 $2295 '67 BUICK RIVIERA Beautiful metallic fini1h with bl1ck interior, equi pp1d with all the lux11ry pow1r ecceu. E1c.option1lly c.l1on. l ie.. uvu 011 $3095 '67 MUSTANG 2·DR. H.T. Briti 1h r1c.i n9 tte•n fini1h w/bl1ck b11ck1t 11•h, 219 VI e ngine, c.on1ole, red,, lltr., pow•r 1tr9., pwr. brk1., 1ulo. tr1n1., •It. TWY 910 $1795 '68 FORD Fl 00 $' PICKUP R1dio, heeler, purc.h•ted new by John1011 I Son. El• t11tenl tondilion, lie.. 091917 $1895 '68 CADILLAC SED. DE VILLE Bargain Corner In Our lcR'IJCll• Comer, we have •umerous used can. Some clean, some not so clean. Some that •• dupflcatloas. some we,.e had too Jon9'-1n any eYent thne cars are real barqoln1. LOOK 'EM OYER! '65 MUSTANG $975 l ie. NBH 712 '65 MERCURY $1275 2·Door Mo11tcl1lr H.T. POD 501 '65 BUICK ~375 RIVIERA SR B l40 '66 FORD $1575 GALA.XIE 500 2·Dr. H1 rdlop SVF 052 '66 BUICK $1675 ELECTRA Lit. YPU 649 '67 CHRYSLER $1875 300 2 Dr. H.T. m '66 CONTIN. $1975 4 DR. SEDAN Lie, RHV 592 '66 T-BIRD M•roon fini1h wilti bleck l111dau roof et'ld bletk l1elh· 1r Interior. Lu1ury eq11ippe<I. Full power, f1ctory •Ir conditio11lnCJ, AM-FM tfereo. tel1·tilt tt••ri119 whe•I. Ont OWllt r, bee11lif11lly f111 l11t1l11ed. 20,000 rnl1e1. m ·LANDAU $2075 "' $4595 •SOD RTI 72 4 '69 FORD $2275 TO RINO Co11v1rlibl1 XSI\ 211 USED CARS 540-5635 ll.OOO©®ll.00 ©®OO'ii'DOO[gOO'ii'&ll • l&tm~ Ill[ a ~[g!fil©MOOW a ©®M@£[ffi 1 Mlle South of the San Diego Freeway I 2626 HARIOR IOULIYARl!t, COSTA MESA-I ( I •• ' 'f • -. c;· .. • . ' . ' ' " • . ' ·I· ': " ' ' l .. " . : . , . , . . ' •,• " . ·: .. --------------------~-------------------~--------------~-., --- -~-- BRANA) NEW 1970 GRAND fRIJC Fully equippOd. witfi'iturbc»hyd~'· I • J ' ' matic tranimiision,-' P4~lr ~d1 c: . ' -',(;;, .... brakes, power steering, · buc~et seats, push button radio, hidden wind shield antenna, custom seat belts, soft rey windshield. Serie! number 276570Zl21169 f ·• 1 1--f w11011. Turbo ~ydr•m1lic, pu1h button r•dio, r•mol• mirro1, pow•r lit•ri"9 & d i1c br•ket, tinttd 9l•u, pow•r window, power 1111, 1ir co11ditioning, white w1fl1, etc. 12i6l69C12ll291 NEW '69 CATALINA 2 11•1 w•9on. Turbo hvclr1m1tic, pu1h button t~dio, dtlu•• b1lh. powe r 1lt1fin9 l disc br1ke1, li11ted 91111, pow1r !iii 91!1 window, t it conditioning, wh ite w1!h. !252l69Cr2ll>l61 NEW '69 BONNEVILLE H.T, Cp1. Cordovi top, turbo hydr1m1lic, pu1h button 11dio, r11t10+1 1'1irror, pow!• 1191iin9, po•1r br1•11, tint1d 91111, pow1r window1, 1ir tonditioning, front .1r re•r m1tt,I whit1 w1ll1. du1I 1xh1u1h, (262J79CI 16345) NEW '69 BONNEVILLE .. of Dr. H.T. Cordo¥1 top, tu1bo hydr1m1lic, puih button r1dio, clw1I eJ1h1u1h , power winclow1, h11d r11h, 1it conditionln9, ,w~ile .,..,11,, f262399Ct06575l ll1dio, h•1ler, 1ulom•tic, power 1t1erin9 A br1ke1, f1ctory 1ir. IJJ&J75Ml77597J '66 GRAND PRIX l\1dio, h1•ier, •11tom1tic, pow1r 1i1•rin9, vinyl ;lop. 15804721 '67 LE MANS . 2 Door h1rdlop. lt1lllio, h11t1r, 1uf1rn11ic, f•ctory •ir, CWXGI061 '67 CAT ALINA 6 p1u. w19on. lttclio, h1•i1r, •ulom1lic, sl11ring, f•cfory •ir. ITEYll•) '67 PONTIAC E•1cutiv1 w19en. Rtlllie, ,h11ltr, 1ut...,11i c, 1!11rin9, f1cl'ory <1ir. fYil(Oltl '67 BONNEVILLE 4 Dr. H.T. lt1dio, "••fer, fufomtlic, full po'fft r, f1cfory 1ir •• 1Ui.1Cl4]} ,' . . ' . '67 BONNEVILLE • 4 .Or. H.T. •lt1dio, h11l1r, 1ut1m11ic, po•tr 1t11r., pwr, windows., f1cl. 1ir. !TltH600l '68 FIREllRD ' 150. Rtdio, h11ler, tufem1fic, power 1te1r• inf, ¥inyl roof, f1clory 1ir. IWIC678l J $2677 J • • • IN ANY LEAGUE! TIIAT'S GRAND PRIX, OUR ALL.OUT DR IVING WINNER! ~Dr. H.T, Cotdo~• lop, lurbo hydr•mttic, remote m;rror, du11 t'lh1111h, pu1h bul- fo" r1diD, power tlttring, power br1ke1, linltd 9l1u, powtr window1, power 111t, 1ir conditioning, freon! I •••r "1•h, white w1llt. 121>1399CIOS3651 NEW '69 GTO 2 Door H.T. Turbo hv1lr1m•lit, push button r1dio, rtrnof• rnirro•, d~!u11 bt!h, w;r1 wht1I di1t, ton1ol•, pow1r 1!11rin9 & br1k11, tinted 91111, 1ir t onditionin9. 124237 9Zl26301 ) DEMO. '69 CATALINA 2 Or. H.T, Viny l fd1'1, decor 9roup, turbo hyd r1rn1tic, d1l u1• b1lh, pow1r 1111•· in9, br<1ke1, tint1d 91111, 1ir conditionin9, wliite w11!1; f252]79Cll0287l DEMO. '69 BONNEVILLE H.T. Cpe, Cordov• lop, turbo liydra1t11fic, power <1 nl1nn1, pu1li butto n r1cl<o, ti• mol1 mirror, cl1lux1 belli, pow1r 1!<11rin9, power br,.~ei, tinted 1Jl1u, 1ir condi· tionin9, while w1ll1, lil t whe1I, du1l e.h1w1h. ~262J79C l 2474 JJ R•dio. h1al1r. tulorn •lic, pow•r 1!11rin9, cu1lom trim. !VHA6JSJ '68 LE MANS Cp•. r•dio, h11t1r, 1uto, pw1. 1l1er., vinyl top, f1 ct. •ir. Oth1ri lo choo11 from . XEW439 le U 11 lllkl 1•11 me ll&&m DECEMBEI 11 our HlmlY ! We're o'ut to set 1 r1l11 reeo1d end to wiad llP the y11r with 1 mfn. imurn inv1nlory, To do lh1t w1 have to tr<1d1 your w1y, ind wo in· t1nd to do just !hit. Oo yo11r11ll 1 f1wot by 1hoppin1J 11 C1rv1r'1 ~ npw while. 1loek it high 1nd prict1 i re low. " • '68 GTO R1dio, h11t1r. t ulomelie, pow1r 1!11rin9, vi nyl lop, f41clo ry t it, !WXEJ75 ) '68 CATALINA 4 Or. SH1n. Rtdio, htel1r, 1 ulom1tic, pow~ tr 1!1erin1J, f1clory 1h. IWFE920 ) 2 11<1t w19on. Otcor group, tur bo hydr1m1fie, r11t1ole mirror, d1 lu~1 belh, pow1r 1l11ring, power dii c br1ke1, tinted 1Jl111, pow1r ftil g1l1 window, 1ir conditioning, while w1llt, t ic. (252369Cl233J4) DEMO. '69 GRAND PRIX Cordovi top, 428 1n9 .• turbo hyclr1m1tic, .ter•o r1cl io, r1mol1 minor, d 1lux1 belts, powtr il11rin9, pow1r d i1c br1•e1, till wh1il diic1. (276579P269,411 DEMO . '69 CATALINA A Dr. H.T. \linyl !rim, d1cor 1Jroup, turbo hvdr"m•lic, pu1h button r1dio , r1rnott mirror, deluxe bt!h, power il11rinf, •ir conditioning, tinted wind1hield, whiM w•ll1. 1252399Cl2074ll DEMO. '69 BONNEVILLE H.T, Cp1, Turbo hydr•m1tic, pu1h button r•dio, d1lux1 b•lh , pow•r 1l11rin9, power br••11, linlt d 9f•1 1, power windows. 1ir conditioning, front .1r re•r mth, wh it• w<11/1, du1I 1xht111h. 1262379CI 161391 ' '67 CHEVELLE WGN. M1lib11, \18, n11torn1tic, power 1!1e1i ng, r1dfO, h11!1r. !VCLllSI '69 GTO 2 Or. H:T. lt1d io, h1el1r, eutorn1tic, power 1t•1ring, f1ctory 1ir. IYWFlS I ) '69 PONTIAC Ex1cutiv1 6 p•ll. w19on. lt1dio, h1el1r, •ulo· 1'1'11fic, pow1r 1t11ring, f~lo1y 1lr, fXSSl76) '67 COU_GAR 'II, of 1p11d, po••• 1le1ri"9· whi11 w1!11. ITRH592 l '68 FORD TORINO ' 1 dr. H.T., VI. 1ulorn11ic, pow1r 1i11rin9, f1clory air, wha1 w1!11. IXOE2021 '68 BARRACUDA Convert;bl1. Red ic, h1al1r, 1ulom1 tic, pow1r 1t•1ri"g, \II. IWICOl7) '68 MUSTANG VI , •uiOrf"lic, po•tr .t11rin9, redio, h11!1r, l•cfory 1ir conclitiontng, l\IHA234l • • '68 VOLKSWAGEN Automtlic l••n1rniu ion, redio i nd he1t1r. l1i91. IWIE9241 .. ~I $_2.6_11--'--' []] ROY CARVER PONTIAC 2925 HARBOR · BLVD/ COST" MESA _ .. , ........ • Kl•64444 • • t ·--'-----~ -..!-~----------~-- r-1 I I ( \' ' L ' I • . ·' look fot TM Dl .. -.sric C.... SHI •• rti. WllHblleld. FREE 100°/o PARTS AND LABOR WARRANTY 4000 MILES OR 90 DAYS Cown oll 11tKhonlc:ol ports h1cludi119 ettllliM, troM"'hslo• drift lh1e, reor •nd, l'LUS ilrlllll-. 11.rtffy 011d 01ha111t 1y1tofll, All ropoir won: do" h1 our ow11 service dopartme11t. • ' '67 Chevrolet IMPALA 2 Dll. H.T. '6.8 DATSUN 4 Dr. S1d111. lt•dio, hetltt, whitt w1IJ1. App ... I 8,000 mil 11. 111 t•c1ll111t co11j). tio11. IVZV6'431 '69 COBRA Sperl RCC1f, P.S.. Po.w11 di1c b•1•1•, c;r11i1om1!ic, 421 VI, poly9l11 wide o.,,M tir11. IZLH 81 3) $2790 '67 FORD GAU.JUE 500 4 Or. Sed•"· 390 VI , •ufo· malic., FACTORY AIR, pow- •• 1taarin9 & brt~a1, r1dio, haatar. IZVE 7121 90 day or 4,000 mi. warr1niy. '66 FORD FAlllLANI 500 2 Or. H.T, 326 'r'.1, •ulom•· tic, P.S., R., H., 41 ,241 mile1. Burgundy witfl bl~c~ vinyl intt rior. (YWS 049 ) $1790 '64 CORVEm HARDTOP Rtmoveb!e top. <t 1p11d, r1dio, h11ter, powt r will· dow1, AM -FM r1dio. ! RHC ,01) '65 CORVAIR Autom atic, radio, haaler, mtdium 9r1a11. ! PGH9 IS l $590 '64 DODGE 1/1 TON WAGON SticJ 1hilf -low "'ile191, tTWV 0791 $1190 '68 DODGE COIONET 4-DOOR SEDAN v.1, pow1r 1lt1ri119, pow11 br1k11, h11ltr, Newport D1t1cli•1 Cer. 1115171) '68 Continental •65 PLYMOUTH 4 Dr. Sud. Full power, fie· lory 1ir, AM-FM, Vinyl roof, ,561 $3990 SATELLITE A11lon'.1lic, powtr tl11ri119, FACTORY AIR. buc•et 11111, ¥i11vl •oof. I RGV5l5)· $990 t ' • ·''Ha.ve A Nice THEO~ORE ROBINS, SR. THEODOR! iOllNS. JR. UNBEATABLE VOLUME SAVIN ,GS I · AT THE HOME ~~ OF THE I "Sharpe· st-Pencil ~~ I ~~~~..;;.;..~~~..;_:o-""--~~~~~~~I1_i_T~h-e~W'-e_s~t-" ....... fe FOR SUPER ECONOMY i:RY . A •. ~ • ~ MAVERICK -·I OR ENGL:iSH FORD ~ ~ ~~ SAVINGS! SAVINGS! $.790 2 Or. H.T. Aulom1lic, ra- dio, he aler, AIR CONDI- TIONlNG, power sl•1ri119. ISVY~12l $1090 '64 Volkswogen 2 Door 11d111 .. IPCU03'1 $990 '68 FORD CUSTOM l'O VI 1n9i11 •, powtr 1!1e1· i119, crui1om1fit lr1111mi1· 1io11, r 1 d i o 1..d h11!1r, Police Ctr. 11 4917 $1190 ·~ -' VIRTUALLY EVERY COLOR AND MODEL MADE, NOW IN STOCK AT ROBINS VOLUME SAVINGS! NEW 1970 OVER'60 IN STOCK J ~ I ~~ STANDARDS -DELUXES -GT's STATION WAGONS . MANY With FULLY AUTOMATIC TRANS., AIR·COND., RADIAL TIRES, RADIO, Etc. B~AND NEW STANDARD 2·DR. ~EDAN • iNCLIJDING ALL THIS ! • • fotr at"I· ttfHll., ltold dlsC br~ podclff or111 r.sts, hit. lltllt, ,lteftt ~•fy ~ff,. lefoflo ••11tilatio11, """' d ... ty !Ifft«, J ,,_4 wl!MfS, wh1 lold -"rs. self odf, braA ... podcNtl ftlrt .ets iii kad ro1tr.l11ts, perc.el •kif. NIW 10'1• FT. NEW 1969 ELDORADO I ~~ a ~ F· I 00 PICKUP CAMPER BRONCO -,~ FULL PRICE ORDER TODAT LIST '2014 ,, POICI $2882 11 <> • ... ~~~ '1395 ;; .• ~~'.·,_~ DISCOUNT FULL PRICE ~ $61 t SI!•. t U1Jf<Lf<f1"M ~ NO. "" LAST CALL! • $ ~--~--t-------+-------i'' JOIN SAVINGS! SAVINGS! '65 MERCURY MONTCLAIR 4 DR. H.T. FACTORY AIR , A11tom•ti:, power 1 l11r;~9. pow•r win· dow1, redio, ~11 l1r. IRRY 060) '69 CHEV. WAGON "" Ki1191wood. l,6 VB, 111!0 ., f1clo•y 1i1. P.S.. P-d:,c br1k11, 11199191 11ck. ell wi""I i11!11. App1. 16,900 miltt1. !027434 ) istk. # P84l I J $3290 ' ' ~. . SAVINGS! SAVINGS! SAVINGS! OUR DRAG CLUB I • JIOR A SAFE HOLIDAY 130 •lt•I tnt ht s •. C~l­ for•la't first Far4 diotnos- tic CNte'I' talift jutt JO Mil•• vtn! FULL '9" PRICE ALL REMAINING 1969'• NOW AT FINAL CLOSE OUT DISCOUNTS LEASE A NEW 1970 A[L POkJLAlt MA f.ES· "AND MODELS AUTHOR IZED FORD LEASING SYST EM Sli£LBJ AMtRICAN 'CLOSE' OUT! Now, c.ollecto1'1 pl~H i.e .... tHy .,. tM Int of • ton9 li11e of clou ic ptrfor111Ace coiJ! l -QNLY - 3 • IRANO NIW 1'flf't DISCOUNTED TO CLEA.It THIS Wllti:INDI f11H Tredo for Y••r """' Cerl I 7