HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-23 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa" ..
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• . ' • Be~ch W 011111n !)s Sur(Je~y
.Called Medi~al Milestone . ' -. . '' ' TUESDAY' AFTEINOON; osea.'48ER .23; I
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·DAILY P ILOT Sl•tl l"Mll
FAC ING MURDER CHARGE
·Mri. Dwillia Dean Hvnt
N ew,port Murde r.
Suspect Fac es .
Trial; No Bail
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of !tit Dally ,Pit.I 11111
: A prose<::utor argued Monday thal Mrs.
Dvdllia Dean Hunt should not be set free
on bail to await trial on charges o[
murderi ng her husband because her 12-
year-old daughter fears for her own life.
The .surprising allegation came during
a prelimJ'nary hea"rlng for the 43-ytar-old
Corona del Mar hOusewife who on of:c. It
allegedly fatally stabbed her yacht·
broker husbaild, Willis, 56, wilh a· one:Ioot
long butcberi knift;. .
J\Jdge J. E. T. "Ned'' Rutter denied '
defoose motions for bail and ordered
Mn. Hunt bou~ over to answer first-
degree-murder charges in Orange County
Superior Court Jan. 2.
(JPPOSED MOTION _ The charge came from Deputy Dtslrict
.;Attorney Ji.m Lang, who opposed defense inotlom for ball and sald 12-year-old Dru
ffunt "bas expressed fears for her life."
Beverly mu. lawyer Sydney lrmas
asked that Mrs. Hunt be set free oo bail
to.await the court action, saying that the
81.igh\ brunette was "a loving mother wbo
has never mistreated this child."
He asaailed Uie prosecutor's comments
as "rumor'' ahdi'+'a fiJmetlt of 30me0ne1s
imagination.''
"I see no reason to punish· this woman
with Incarceration for months rluring the
lengthy court· actions," lrmas said.
He then a1ked that the daughter be
brOO.sht into court to give her own feel·
ings on her mother'• bail plea. 1
Tilt daughter is in the custody of l\lrs.
Noel Brown of West Los Angeles, (her
atepsister) wife of a tennis pro and
Claught.u of lhe slain Hunt.
.. "'lbe girl is intentionally being . kept
from seelni m<," the lawyer Said.
• "I am willing either to1brlng the g\rl 9'1 ~ a o;>nferenct in your chamber's 4f
even call her lo stand tcrnorrow," he ad-
ded.
Judge Rutter answered abruptly :
"I \\'ill not do thal, counM?l. i\f oUon
denied."
SAT PASSIVELY
Throughout the entire exchange. f\.1rs.
Hunt, her hair pulled back Into a short
pony tall and wearing a bright pink dras.
~aat passively.
The woman carried the same white.
(Ste-STABBING, Pip II
·rea
Waiting; at Banfkak i
Gifts for POWs
Head-to HanQi
BANGKOK, ThaUand WP!) -A
jetliner loaded w!Ui Christmas ~rs .
aod g111a-ll!r.Ai11e1lct1r~ In NortJt·
.... Yletnam.arrived here today .i lbe tex-
31 Sa_ota Clawi sponsoring ft project
said M: was sure the Communists woula
ilpprove it.
"I am very optimistic that Hanoi will
allow us to lanQ there,'' said H. Ross
Prrot, the 39-year-old Dallas millionaire
who is chairman or UnUed We Stand, the
citizens group behind th~ $600,000 airlift.
Perot said the ehiirtercd Braniff
jetliner, nicknamed "Peace on Earth,"
would remain in Bantkok until Hanoi
answers . his cabled request ror landing
permission.
A:sked what he would do if the project
were vetoed, Perot said: "I prefer not to
talk about that because I am very op-
timistic they will accept it."
Perot said a second chartered plane,
nicknamed "Goodwill on Earth," would
sland by in L05 Angeles until word is
received fro m Hanoi.
•·Peace on ~arth." a four-engine
Boeing 707 painted green. carried 1,400
turkey di nners with all the trimmings;
leters and packages from relatives,
medical supplies and clothing with a total
weight of 15,000 pounds. The aircraft
waiting in Los Angeles carried 18,000
pounds of similar cargo.
Perot said he: put' up $200,000 o(jhe cost
and that other American businessmen
provided $400,000.
"If I can go to Hanoi persona~ly I will
P~pula ti on Morints
\\'ASHINGTON (UPI) -Total U.S.
population reached 204.,006,000 Nov. l. ac·
cording to 'the Census Bureau. This was
an increase of 190.000 from Oct. 1 and 3
million from the same month ol 1968.
mike a proposal lo pennanent!? supply
medical 'and c.lothing ....is and foodB lo<
Ille ..-·or .,....lf•lhe Nortll Vl6-
naa:ae . will ~ 111e." Perot &aid
earlier ~em.y cfuda& 11 Jt9pover in
Hong lti>nl eli roule 10 Bangkok. "I hopt
I don't have lo permanently supply them
-after the prisoners have been releas-
ed."
Asked if be meant that lhe Americarui
v.•ere not getting adequate supplies now,
Perot said maintenance of the men: was a
"great economic burden" for the North
Vietnamese.
"And after all,, the food there suits
Orientals but not the Americans." he .:,
Sil.Id.
Dana Teen Held
In Rape, Beating
Orange County sheriff's deputies said
they expect charges to be filed today
against a Dana Point teenager accused of
kidnaping, and beating and raping a
Dana Point housewife.
Arrested at 4 a.m. Monday as he sat in
a San Clemente ·restaurant with his vlc·
tim was Edwin 4 Sommers, 19, of 24465
CordGva St.
Deputies alle e the young housewife
was accosted on·&he street at about 1Z:30
a.m. by the suspect who beat her• about
the face while.forcing her into his car. He
then drove ·her ·~· an apartment where
the alleged rat>?took · Place, 'deputies
charge.
Sommers was taken into cu.lilody by
San Clemente police who later turned
him O\'er to Orange County sheriff's
deputies for booking at Orange County.
Jail.
""' ... " . " 'IO(.r-. .... *"I l l CTMNfS..,JI f'MIS. . • .. .
• Ir s
Mucky Dn~ky
Uf'l'1' .......
EVERYTHING'S NO,T' DUCKY 'FOii TMIS·DIL•SDAKED VISITO!l
'. Don't T•ll Him 51.ldt Off'. Carplnt•rja .J1 .f'!r th• Bifds
. . Nasser Q:uits ·Summit;,
Arab Meet in Turmoil ·
RABAT, Morocco (UPI) -President
GamaLAbdel Nasser 0f •Egypt walked out
of the Arab sunimlt session today, throw·
ing into turmoil the· 14-nation· meeUng.
called to define new militant str.ate'gy
against Israel.
HJJth cooffrence sources ,. said the w~li:Ourw:6s Mt -a ·tota1·W1th1dz!awal 'ftom
the summit but was staged to dramatize
Nasser's opposition to what he considered
the reluctance of Saudi Arabii and
Kuwait to provide sufficient financial and
mater!A1 ba'ckirrg for ·the iiation& fighting
Israel.
' The sources said hl.s dramatic walkout
riid 1hrow the sutnmit meeting into con-
fusion .
Both ?ifasser and King HuSsein of
Jordan had asked for more aid -·and
men -from the otffer Arib nations
because of the losses eustained · by the
llrontline nalions in 1the conflict that has
'continued since end of the 1967 J une war.
/~yria also was seekln~ mor~ aid ••
'
22 Miles·
Of Beaches
Blackened
~---SANTA BARBARA· -OU from the
latest seepage tn the Santa Barbara
Channel bu spcitted about la miles of
cOutlioe In ,V'<¢uia ...i·s;ita llari>an eowi&e.. . ...... • ...,.-,
DmiiJd J4ia.W <( lhe :v:.s. ~f
SurvOJ uid Oftai autllorili., mode • m· ~-inJpicuon .rughl MoodiY.' t11a1
Still more elude oll lay a few ·hlndred
yards oilsl!Ote. ' ·
Solanat estimated that Uie ·&lick wu
about a 'tenth the stie of the me which
resulted ff.om a 'blowout 11 monU!1 ago
at the same Union Oil Co. offshore dflll·
ing rig.
He said the slick contained about
38,000 gallons of oJli..It,000 of which
spurted out before a ruptured underau
pipeline could -be repaired Jan Saturday.
The rest seeped from the ocean floor,
be said.
Fritz Springman, a Union Oil official
whci made a private survey, said the
cori1piny plans to "wait for a couple of
days ·to see bow bad it gets," before
Starting to clean the oil away.
Yvon Chouinard, who lives: five miles
north or Ventura, said he and a member
of the Audubon Society found 55 blrdl
in one ~yard atretch of beach suffer·
ing from contact wllh oily surf.
Chouinard said five birds were "so
completely covered with oil that they
couldn't fly." They were taken to Santa
Barbara to ·be cleaned .. ·
The Coast Guaid, said what had been
initially a sJngle slick ll•d brok• into
two parts, one a mile Wide and 18 ~lee
Jong, the other a mile wide and elg'ht
miles long. '
A Coaet Guard spokesman said both
appeared lo be 'diwpotlni rapidly
Monday. ' • · . or .. fe •
Transplant a · Milestone
,N~s~r"~. )V~lkpu~ · 9~e befoie King
Has.san II of Morocco1 the ehlinNft.,·brid.
b:ought th'e metirig' m a ·formal end. •At
the . If St: ~Ion I the· ,(l~ielates were
reported 'f3voring mbre he!}>· for Egypt~ Jord~ ~Dd Syria 1 6ut aid s¥rt of wag-
ing war on their side.
Di~Jomatic sources 'said contusion
l#e.pt the UghUY. luarded ·session and
Beacli W Qman,'s S1.1;r:&P y Aids. J)iabetes ' Cur~
Bv TERRY COVILLE
•Of llM EHllr l"llM St.ti
l\-1o·s. Cara Ramey's oper31ion has
bcco1ne another milestone in medical
history.
Doctors at Oraiige County Medical
Center expressed tbe hope Monday that
t.ht rare transplant of a pancreas (1long
with a kidney) into the Huntington Beach
housewife · 11wrlday will prove to be
another step toward eventual cure of cet·
Wn dlabeUc conditions. ·
She was only loth person in the world
to receive the pancrtas of another
per!On.
Mrs. ,Ramey is still listed in critical
condition at the center but doctors say
sht has responded well .
A slx-monU:. critical period Is expected,
during which doctors will be alert to re-
jcctiln of lhe new organs by Mra.
Hamey's body.
The head of the medical team that
tnnsplantod the ~11 ol an Anaheim
moo wllo dlld ol ~ ll\lurles
·t.·
Thursday was identifie{J its Dr. 'John E.
Connolly.
Dr. Connolly is chairman of the UC·
Trvlne Deparitnlnt of surgerf. He was
joined by Dr. Qlioakt C. Mar::tln, chief oJ
urology at UC~ho beaded the kidney
transplant team: Both min are ~ber1
of· the medical cenler atoll. .
. The .beam ol hope for diabetic poUents
iJIVolvea tho pancreaa, according lo Dr.
Martin.
Diabetes II CllUed when the pancrou
fails lo produce 1 chemical which
removes sugar from the blood. In many
cws it can be controlled. by insulin in-
jections.
But In Mrs. Ramey's case. as in many
others. said Dr. Martin, the diabetes Md
also destroyed other orgaru: -the
kidnty.
Mr1. Ramey had spent M!veral mon ths
under medical cart 11 her own kJdney
wu slowly d'8troyed by the diabetes.
The kidney tranopiant ltaeU would onl1
be a t.nlporll)' oolution llnce the lddne1
d.,. DOI c.-Ibo diabetes, Aid Dr.
'li!ariln. . .
"But a transplant of a fresh pancreas
might effect a total change in the con·
ttltion," he "explained. · · · ·
"ll is my. opinion that Mrs. Ramey is
oo h>nger' a diabetic. Al. of today she has
ool required any insulin," said Dr •.
Mortin. 1
·When Mrs. Ramey received the new
poncr.u a new trUIJ)lant technique , . .,..
ed •only three ttmes before,· wu biedi
Wltll Ille pMCl'Oll, dodon transplanted
blood vesaels ml the sectlon ol the ,(n.
testlrie with wllldl ~ connecll, l\llkllli
the ·o.,.,.aUon l<chnkilly easier. ·
Dr. Connolly cautioned that though thi&
was ·• step toward solution of the diabetic
problem. tt 11 not nearly oom~!ete. The
great problem 11 fl'ldlng a (resh pancrea1
and donors are rare.
But for Mrs. Ramey the unfortunate
fate of another proved a good Omen. And
•n extra cheer waa brought lo her hus-
band' Monte, a Huntington BtAch letter
carrier, who wu told the docton bad
douled'lholr tbne.
;. . ' •
· ;. tha~ aflcer ~~r:!° . ~P<!rture King
Hassan gaveled the morrilng session lo an
end.
. "'.Pr~idenf1 N&ssc;r:s departure is a
means or protest aga inst the Saudi and
Ku\Yaill ,posi~lon,J,". 1a. hi&~. COl\ference
source said. "It does not mean he is Ieav-
ing: the~ummlt 11!ltogether." .• r.
; 'nle:w11);out ,waa follQ\lfed •by 1'flWTy•of
backslige .coolao~ '"'°"' '.Ibo'! lirob leoders.who 1\4ve·l!eln:l!!!ro Jifi!:t·,_nday lo;~QJ'l;9'1t'-.Jll~.i ·ml~Wl> strategy qafnsl,IJrttl,r')&!(.WM• beU•ed ' u..re· would • .,.. llepped· up.·ald. IO<rlho '
Files tine guerrilla• ml the four J-
nations r-Syr1a. Leblnonr. ICYpt~ and
Jonlan. · · · ·: · ·v
' • A dlplornlli< SO\l<<t Slid Kine Has.,n·
wm· d<do:..,, Ille• confereace 'l<nj\ln'IOll
!Aler. today 111'4 ... he ·w.lllt re~rt~'tbe
wcrk of the conftttnct at ·• MJ"I brie~
Ing."
The chiefs of ·slate broke Up Ultlr
meeting after 90 minutes •nd agreed to
meet again this evening. ~erence of·
ficlals said It still was not clear whtn the
aumnUl would wind. up and a llDll com-
munlq\le 1"ued.
An ·0rang1r Countian ,who .
heads · Goutmor .Riago.n'• · Cqm.
mi&.sion ,on Ed~o«onol Rt/o,f'ft'
f'tf)OtU' t i1"preuive ;JWOflYf•• ·in
ttte · grw1t1 ji11t ~J.i .. moJUk )PQft~3: : · • : ' • . • · 'r•t ~ . . . . ...
'.! ~..!~ ;;• ,~•
~~. : ~Q.ir,' 2" '.11..i..
_, "f" -'.~-·;··~.:r .• aHUsTMAS I "
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DIJLY flllii
D,t,IL 't PILOT S!tff f'MN Snow Ball Royalty
King and Queen of Costa Mesa Hi$h School Girls' Le:igue Snow Ball
will be crowned at the atroke of lllldnight tonight among four couples
nominated. Boys are (from left) Richard Ferryman, Paul Marchior-
latti Lltrell, Raymond Toelkes and Jody Deeban. Queen candidates
are Mary Brady, Linda Albertson, Janeice Jarek and Sally Hubbard.
"Wonderful by Night," is theme of girl-ask-boy formal at Costa Mesa
Country Club.
From Pqe 1
STABBING CASE
clipped-beaver coat she wore the night of
her arRJst.
Mrs. Hunt teemed calm. AJ she en-
tered the court, she smiled cheerfully to
her family.
During the proceedings she kept nearly
motionless except for changing her grip
on a wrinkled white handkerchief.
She spoke only late ln tbt court action
to dea:ribe her need! for special medica-
tion &lid to ask thal she be allowed to
'*1ng a pencil and paper wii:h her M she
met with her lawyers. Both requests
were U&nted.
The m.ing be1an In Uie court of
Judge Donald Dungan, who granted
Innu' request that another judge con-
duct the hearing because Dunagn was
prejudiced.
The judge agreed.
In Judge Rutter's court. Newport
Beach police patrolman M i t c h e 11
'Ibompaon, who was the second officer to
arrive at the Harbor View Hills home
alter the stabbing, testified fkst.
ENTERED PATIO
Thompson said be entered the paUo of
the houae at 2815 Harbor View Drive to
find fellow offictr Keith Collins bent over
the badly bleeding Hunt. Mrs. Hunt,
'Ibompson aaid, was there, too.
"Before anyone could say anything,
she, the defendant, said, '!·did II. l did It.
I stabbed him.'," the officer testified.
Later in the tesUmony, lrmas asked
the patrolman to repeat the quote.
Thompson said that the fatally injured
Hunt said ncthing as the other officer
held a hand to his· bleeding chest.
"I took the defendant inalde and we
went into a foyer or entryway and I told
her what her constitutional rights were
there," he said.
ThompiOn said Mrs. Hunt then took
him into the kitchen of the home and
poin~ lo a knife with a blade, 10 or 12 in·
chea tong.
W()\IDEN HANDLF;
The !mile, he said, had a wooden han-
dle. It was lying on a drainboard in the
kitchen.
The patrolman rovttect· tt up with paper
towels, he tesW'ied, then led the woman
into another part of the house.
11lompson WA! uked if Mrs. Hunt
agreed to talk to him about the incident
after acknowledging her rights.
"I asked her if she would like to tell me
whal happened."
The · olficer then teslllied. that Mrs.
• • •
points with lhe victim he heard Mrs4
Hunt chime in amicably to joke about
Ke)'.es' Christmas decorations.
Keyes said Mrs. Hunt complained In
joking fashion that some of his Chriltmu
light,, were oot working and she a'sked
him to fix them becall!e Ibey wue li!lble
from the Hunt bouae.
"Was Mr. Hunt a gun collector or a
hunter?" Irmas then uked. ·
"Jle aaid be WU IOIJ>a buntlnr· -II
times. 'Ibat's all I know," Keyes tepUed..
After the witness atepped down lrmu arrued for a rodud!on In tho charpo
against Mn. Hunt. .
He challenged 1he prooecuUoa Jn.
lroducliO!I ol the death certlfieate instead
of calling on coroner's witnesses.
''The most we have here I 1
manslaughter,'' be said.
He added that there was no evidence
showing "mallefj; . aforethought or
premeditation.''
"There Is no evidence of felony murder
here," he said.
Rutter disagreed and quickly ordered
Mrs. Hunt to stand trial on the charges
as filed by the DA.
After the argwnenls on the bail matter
and the medication and stationery issues
Mrs. Hunt, a matron at her side, rose to
leave the C-Ourtroom. 1
She smiled wannly at her cousin in the
front row and waved.
Cat Saves Lives
Of Family, Dies
Shawn the cat ls dead today after sa
ing the lives of his Garden Grove fam ii
Saturday night.
A fire department spokesman said Mr.
and ~trs. Terry W. Mt'Cann were
awakened by the cries of the ir 5-year-old
Siamese cat Shawn and were just able to
fl~ their apartment with their two young
children before the dwelling became
engulfed in names.
The McCanns escaped. But Shawn
didn't. Fimnen said the eat died of
smoke inhalation.
Tbe source of the blaze which caused
an estimated $18,000 damage to the
apartment at 13646 Buaro St. was laid to a smoldering cigarette left on lhe couch,
department spokesmen reported.
President 'Releases-' ·co*gress ,
·' ~ . • ,. . • ·• "f
Scraps Special Session as Money ·Bills .. Pcisset/,i" -
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President
Nixon today gave his b)essing to
COngreu • planned c h r I s t m a s ad· Journm,ent aDd the lawmakers pressed
.toward a windup It Ille 1111 aetalon by
early afternoon.
Nixon had 11181etted earU.r he ml&ht
call the H-and.Senate back Into a
epeclal poat-Christmu session If they
failed to gel all the yur'a ..,.., bUia
pusod before. <i•itlini. Two such bU1s
were 1dt banging, bu! under COlldltiou
that the President approved In a final,
·ormal exchange with a House committee
1pointed to notify him the lawmakers
Lem-y ~ppeals . .
To High Court
On Local Case
By ARTlllJI\ R. VINSEL
Of IM Diiiy .. IJllt Sfftl
Facing court dates around the country,
Dr. Timothy Leary appealed to the
Califomla SUpreme CGurt Monday to sup.
press evidence in bis impending Orange
County' drug trial.
The 1970 psychedelic candidate for the
California governorship, his w i f e
Rosemary, ~.1lnd soo John, 20, are due
in Orange County Superior Court J an. 19
for trial, following a series of eight COD·
t.lnuallons. ,
Th~ family,_iarrested one year ago Fri·
day ll1 Laguna Beach, is charged with
possession of LSD, hashish and mari-
juana, but contends tbeir old station
W-WU llleaall)' aearcbed.
·Appeals filed" In San Francisco by the
Santa Ana law firm of George Chula and
aDlClatea charge that Laguna Beach
police narcotJcs officer Neal Purcell
made an illegal search of the vehicle.
Judge Byron K. McMillan listened to
all sides of lhe matter during a pretrial
bearing on Chula's motion to suppress
-evidence, then ruled on Oct. 31 that lhe
aeardl. by Purcell was justified.
Trial for the Learys has beeo delayed
eight times in recent months, based on
Mrs. Leary's anvalescence following
surgery. Her physician provided a writ~
ten statement that she waa not well
onoug1i to stand trial oo the chargea In
October as scheduled. · 'J1le eaae datmg baclc almost oxactly
«>e yur came to llgil~ according to Of.
fleer Pur<ell, wjlon be checked the ~
family car parted on Woodland Drtve.
-"e llld )'OUlll Jobn Leaey's eyes were
dilatld u tbouP be bad taken drugs and
he wu crawllllg round no his hands and
tr-. In the back of the station wagon,
Joog hair flopping down in his eyes.
A quantity of rontraband material was
confi.9cated as evidence.
Dr. Leary, a pioneer LSD researcher
fired from Harvard College for his
unorthodox pSychological experiments -
chm tardines$ and the like was
Harvard's announced reason -also faces
other court dates.
Authorities in New York were recently
stymied in a case dating back more than
two years at his Millbrook Estate, due to
unwilling witnesses who have since
emigrated to various desert communes.
He was scheduled for trial Dec. I in
Riverside County on a charge of con-
tributing to the delinquency of a Lagun'°
Beach girl who drowned wllile Swimming
nude under the influence or LSD last Ju-
ly.
Charlene R. Almeida , 17, was pull ed
from a d~p pond on a desert commwial
ranch near ldyllwild, where the Learys
were sojourning at the time.
The U.S. Supreme Court also overturn--
ed a conviction for illegal transfer of un·
taxed marijuana earlier this year, which
might have put Dr. Leary behind bars in
Texas for 30 years.
Texas authorities recently announced
they would appeal I.hat action in an at-
tempt to lake lhe con troversial idol of the
psychedelic generation out or circulation.
50 CreWDlen Saved
HONG KONG (UP[) -All SO Chinese
crewmen aboard the Singapore-registered
freighter SS King Bay have been rescued
by a Japanese vessel. the shi p's owners
said today. The 3,000-ton freighter ran
aground near the Tubbalaha Reefs in the
SuJu Sea In the Sootbern Philippines.
were about lo adjourn unUI Jan. lt.
"He said we had all worked very
hard," House GOP Leader Gerald R.
Ford reported .
Ford said the President aceepled the
adjournment notification wilbout any
further. talk ol a spec ial session.
'lbe House 'anct Senate .were quitting
wltbout final ACUon on a f.19.7 billion ap-'
proprlallon for lhe labor' &lid health,
educaUon and welfare departments . -
which the President promised lo veto as
too costly -or on a $1.86 billion ap-
propriation for roreign aid. A temporary
spending aulhorl(l' w .. enacted to keep
the agencies in ope.raUon.
Left to the Pr .. ldellt'I ---
two major measures ......, the ·tal·rlfOfRJ.
tax cut, soclal seourlty Increase bUl Ind
mine sarety, legialaUon -which 11!fM
members· feared President N~oa: ~t
veto. The betting was the, chief ~ve
would sign both. (Tax story, Page C).
Tbe House, in 1ta flnal leg islative ;c.
Uon. approved today new rules to relax
iradlng of non-military goods with Com-
munist C-Ountries.
It p~ by voice vote and seot to the
CAIL Y PILOT ll•ff .. llel1
Christ111as Village Reueated
Robert Marr adjusts beat-producing lamp which turns fan blades
activiting unique German Christmas village which decorates the
family home at 2423 Richmond Way, Costa Mesa. Marr built the en·
tire thing himself, including animal figures riding on turntable ru
base. The unusual decoration is expansion of commercially.sold
items featuring little brass angels which "fly" on candlle heat.
' SDS Appeals 'No Status'
Ruling . by Orange Coast
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of Ille Diiiy 1'11ol 5!1ff
SOS has appealed its non-recognition at
Orange Coast College and now comes the
battle of attorneys.
Trustees of Orange Coast Junior
College District have asked the County
Counsel's office to prepare their defense
of a Students for a Democratic Society
apPeal filed last week in the California
District Court of Appeals.
The appeal oo behalf of SDS was til ed
by Santa Ana aUorney Richard W.
Petherbridge, who is associated with the
American Civil Liberties Union.
The appeal is of an Aug. 5 Superior
Court ruling upholding the college's right
not to recognil.e SDS as a legitimate
campus organiz.ation.
No date has been set for the hearing on
the appe.al and sources close lo the a~
pellate oourt In San Bernardino say lhey
don't expect the date will be before the
middle of March at the earliest.
Counsel for both sides n~ the time to
prepare their briefs.
Attempts by a small group of students
to gain recognition for SDS on the cam·
pus bega n jus about one year ago. The
student senate eventually recognized the
group because senators believed in the
right of free association.
But the dean of student activities and
college president vetoed the student
senate's action and" the board of trustees
a~ ruled against SDS.
The case then went to court and
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman
shot down SDS once again.
Explainjng his ruling, he noted that the
public has charged administrators and
trustees with operat.i'on oC the school and
has given them a certain amount of
discretion in that operation.
"You can't," he said, "take a man and
tell him to run• your school and then
deprive him of the right to exercise judg·
ment."
Representatives for the college said
SDS had been denied recognition because
of goals and aims stated by the naUonal
organization not compatible with college
policies and regulat.ions.
Petherbrldge's argument was that SOS
members had been unlawfully deprived
of status enjoyed by other campus clubs
and organizations.
A SOS faction at Fullerton Junior
College is watching the fate or the occ
group's bid for recognition. Plans to take
the Fullerton issue before Judge Corfman
were scrapped when tbe jurist ruled
against the OCC group.
Uninvited Guest
Arrested on LSD
An uninvited guest at Laguna's Del
Can1ino Hotel was arrested by police Sun-
day nigh t on charges of pos.sessing LSD
t~blets for sale.
Senate a.lompmN1e>meuure extending
tbroo&h J~ne 30: '971 , .... export con-
trols ~ -ieptaco . the . ~-old Export
Control Af1.
BWllclllJ, the moaslUt ~u~ lo
gi•e tbe J>itilcieztt dlacl:tUon to ~bit
and ~ 111pjrts to.~uplat coun-
trl!>s and .*>. bar fade (/ !bi national
S<!l'Uri(y requires; 1 • •
Ho'f"vet't,.the ""' propoul Uberalilot
the olll niJos -wblch ..... 2,1111
items' -rangtng frOm automobtlts tQ.
milk -were put. on a special list preven--
tlng exports.
Rog~rs Defe~ds
• •
U.S. Proposal
For Mideast
WASHINGTON (AP) -Secrelary oi
State William P. Rogers strongly defend:-
ed the rontroversial U.S. proposals for a
Middle East peace today and specifically
rejected an Isratll charp that they
amounted to "appeasement of the
Arabs."
Rogers also said "we have reason to be
cautiously optimistic" about the eventual
success of lhe effort to have South Viet·
nam take over its own defense.
Rogers told a news conference that
North Vietnamese infiltration into the
South is down at least 60 percent thi~
year from last. But he declined to predict
whether a recent upswing in North Viet·
namese troop movements into the South
foreshadowed another enemy offensive.
The secretary of state gave a general
year-end sumrup of the intemaUooal pl~
lure. which he foWld Improved despite
-IOl'lle "disapp,ointmeil.t.s.
"I think on the whole the President can
be proud o{ his leadenblp In the fORlgn
affairs field," Rogers said.
But one Important area where ad-
mi~ly little progress has been made ii
in efforts to settle the Arab-Israeli
dispute-and Washlngton's new JX'Opol&ls
aimed at finding a peaceful soluUoo hive
been nobulled by both sides.
1be IS?1tli cabinet Monday issued a
statement which reflected deteriorating
U.S.·lsraell relations because of the U.S.
effort. T1ie lsraelJJ denounced the
American proposals as "appeasement of
the Arabs" which "seriouslf prejudice
prospects foc peace."
Jn reply, Rogers said the . American
proposals were fair, comprehensive and
consistent with the resolution the U.N.
Security Council voted after the five-day
June 1967 war, calling for a solution to
the problem.
Appeasement is "an u n fortunate
word,'' Rogers continued.
"lt suggests that the Arabs are
enemies of the United States and
somehow we are appeasing them," he
said. "That isn't true."
The U.S. position, Rogers said, is that
it hopes the Mideast rivals can begin
negotiating a seWement under the U.N.
resolution. Al a Security Co u .n c i:l
member, the United States ha3 • right to
work out a solution, he said.
The U.S. proposals for a long term
peace between Israel and her neighbon.
Egypt and Jordan, envision Israeli
withdrawal from Arab lands she took in
the 1967 war, some provision for security
of her frontiers, help in taking care ol
Arab refugees and a partial ln-
temationaliution or Jerusalem.
Laos Plane Crashes
V!ET!ANE, LaOI (AP) -A 1-an
charter p!ane crasbed into a mwntain 16-
day near Luang Probang, killing 14
persons, sources reparted. There were
three survivors.
The plane was going from Vientiane to
Luang Prabang, the royal capital. The
crash was attributed to bad weather.
DAILY PILOT
Ntw,.t &Met. Hwlflltl•• .... ._..... _,...., c-.-
OttAHG~ COAST f'llll1$Hl'MO COM"Mrl'
lol>ett H. w.M """illM -a l'ulblltMr
Hunt told blm there. was an argument
over dlaclpline and r<prlmandlng ol 1he
JJ.Y.ear-<>14 daughter. .
"She aald that the victim wanted to
disclPllne and noprlmand the girl and that
she c:Ouldn't stind It any longer. She si.id,
'f couJiln1( take it, I stabbed him',''
Thonui1011 ~•tlfied.
Mao Hung • ID Vati~a11 Sgt. Dave Brown said Thomas Hall, 27,
a transient , was arrested arter a search
assertcdly turned up 14 orange colored
pill<:.
J1cli: l. C::vrl•! v"' f!ralNoot .... ~ MIMtlW"
'tlto!li11 Ktnll
trtnu 'lU"stioned the policeman at
leqih lbout his observations of Mrs.
Hunt'• appearance and behavior.
Thornpilon said he aensed no Indications
tbat· the woman hid been drinking. lie
.,.. no brul.ses, cuts or scabs on the
-· be told the coorL "When we were tn lhe station and a
man from the crime lab was takinc pie·
tura l hMrd the dlf<ndant say
something about 1 mart oo her wrist.
Sh• sald.'!hat will be black and blUl by
tomorrow," but I couldn't notice any
mark," he said.
ONE OTHER WITNESS
Only one othtt wltnw appeared at the
hearinc, ne1t-door-nelghbor Sam Keyes,
Q, who llves at 2607 llarbor View Drive.
Cllled by the ~rense, Keyes told the
court Hunt called him on a buslne..\.~ mat·
ter at about 7 p.m., a little more thon one
hour before tht fatal stabbing.
Keye! tenned the conversation Jocul3r
and Nld a!W dil<:usa!ng aeveral bw lncs1
I ( ·'
Painting of Youth in Tunic Mistaken for Priest
VATICAN CITY (AP) -The man in
the painting wore a tunlc and looked li~e
a priest and so Vatican officials hung it a
few yards from a portrait of Pope Paul
VJ in the Vatican 11ress room.
But as it turned oot Tuesday t.he man
wasn't • priest at all He wN Mao fie..
lung In his youth.
0 What tan I say?" 1aid ~tsgr. Fausto
Vallainc, the Vatican pres.. spokesman.
'""'6 palnUng wu sent to us as • g1ft..
We hlh'lg It up. Thaf1 all.''
Alt11oolh chagrined. church official•
said the P,.lnting will not be taken down.
The oil painting, show ing• man with a
blurred (ace standing against a reddish
ba:k3founrl, waa; hung last monlh.
Newsmen accre:Uted to the Vatican
no:ed on ?lfonday a striking reremb1ance
between it and a photograph In the
O:tober issue of an Italian Cat.'lollc
ma gazine, "Famlglla Crtstlana.11
The phote>graph, ... iccompanylng an arll·
' •
cle about Red China, was of a Ollnese-
made painting of Mao as a crusading
youth, hls left hand clencbed and his
right holding an umbrella .
Lanfranco Carnevall, a shopowner who
said his 116-yeaM>ld latb<r Luigi pointed
UW: Vatican picturt last March, said : "Of
course it's Mao 'he-tung. My father still
has the sketthts he worked from to make
that Jllctl.lre."
Luigi Carnr:vaU, who was in bed with
lnOueru.a. l~ not a parUcularly well·
know artlst.. How tht: 11alnting came to be
stnt to the Vatican remained • mystery.
Lanfranct1 Camevali !aid he could not
explain how the painting got to the
v,.tic:an. He said h(' loaned it to a friend,
whom he did not IMnttff. "and I have
bc~n tryin1 to reach hun for an ex-
planatioo."
lttsgr. Vallainc said he had no \ntd'l'IUon
of rC!movlng it.
"Every artist ll free to draw i~
spiraUon from » given subject and to
develop this subject," he said.
At one point, he told newsmen in the
J>ress room : "Look, even if it does
~t Mao J wookt say it shows him
as an element of destructk>n, with the
naming ruins of wha( he has wrought in
the background."
Lanfrsnct1 Camevali disputed this. He
said the notaUon "Alba" on the pairlUng,
first taken to mean lhe town in llaly,
really was the title or the work -
'·Da¥o'n."
"The dawn or an tdea," he explained.
Jlc said his fethcr got the idea for the
WQrk last winter fr om a photograph Of
the same painUng •·Famiglia Cristlana''
reproduced.
Asked what his father's reaction \vas
wt1en he learned tha t the palnung was In
the VaUcan, Lanlranco said: "He just
laughed."
•
Brov.·n said holel manager Lysle
Churchfield called pol.ice when he found
Hall in a room that was not rented
because of a broken waler pipe.
Brown said the suspect told the hotel
manager that he he.an:! the room couldn't
be rented so he thought he would move
in. Police moved him to County Jail pen·
ding arraignment in municipal court,
they said.
State Narcotics
C.Oordinator Due
SAN JOSE (AP) -Gov. Reagan plam
In accept a task forct recommcndaUon
and establish a coordinator of narcotics
11nd dangerous drug programs. Santa
Clr.ra County Dist. Alty. Louis P. Berana
SJ.id tod:iy.
The position v.·as asked by the
California Council oo Criminal Justice
task force on druga., which Bc!rgna heads.
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; EDITION
'
LT. LES ROWLAND INSPECTS DO-IT-YOURSELF RANGE
Valley Pistol Facility May Be Open to Public Use
Valley Police Start Work
Qµ N ew.P!stol, ~~~.fl:aµge
In ~ near future lhe crack of pistol
aod small bore rifle fire will echo across
Fountain Valley.
That future dale hasnl yet been
del£oiinined, but the Fountain Vall ey
, Police De~mcnt has alre3dy :;tarted
construction ·on the police firing range
· where it will happen'.
"We don't know when it will be ready,"
says Lt. Mar;in Fortin, "there are t;;o
many ifs involved."
Police officers themselves are building
the range. They hope lo find some expert
but free, help which would speed up con·
slniction . Once completed the firing
range will serve police officers as well as
youth of the city in controlled compcli·
lion.
The range is under c:instruction on the
city·s equipment yard al Talbert Avenue
and Ward Street. It will be enclosed by a
12·foot high solid concrete wall, perhaps
the largest free standing block wall in
Orange County. said U . Fortin. On one
end a 13-foot high, 38-foot Urick dirt berm
will be built to stop bullets.
Members of Fountain v·alJey's police
officers association have collected $3,000
Schools Set Quiz .
On Edison High
'Body Awareness'
for its ·construction. They've already
started the base of the block wall.
A building will house classes, equi~
ment and restrooms. '·Our men now go to
lhe Orangj!: County S~iff's range once a
month for pistol practice," said Fortin.
"Once it's complete, we can do our
practice here and we can allow youth
groups to hold .compeUtivt and team
shooting matches here," he added.
Youth instruction in fireanns saf"'y
and shooting is another part d. the pro-
gram planned for U)e firing range.
Capt. Harbour
Services Set
Funeral services for Seal Beach police
captain Raymond E. Harbour, 61 , who
died Sunday, will be held at 11 a.m.
\Vednesday at Boone-Reno Mortuary,
Long Beach.
Harbour, a member of the Seal Beach
police force for 19 years, was stricken by
a heart attack, Sunday in his home at '1520
Ocean Ave. He .was transported to
Pacific Hospital, Long Beach, where he
died the same afternoon.
He is survived by his widow Alice, and
two sons, Richard, Seal Beach, and Alan,
Los Angeles •
A native of Burlington, Colo_.,' Harbour
moved to Seal Beach Jn 1950. iHe rose to
the rank of sergeant and was appointed
C<Jptain In 1956.
Harbour. who was slated 'for reliremenl
In June, Jt70, after 20 years of service,
has been credited with th,j modernization
or the police department by bis fellow of·
Heers.
ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECeMIElt• 23, It" TEN CENTS
Valley Woman RecOvers
,
Pancreas Transplant Makes Med,ical ~i.story
By TERRY COVILLE
Of' ltl• 0.lty l"llM Stiff
M;-s. Cara Ramey's.. operation has
tiecome another milestone in medical
history.
Doctors at Orange County ~fedical
Center expressed the hope Monday that
the rare transplant· of a pancreas (along
~ith a kidney) into the Huntington Beach
housewife Thursday will prove to be
another step toward eventual cure of ttr·
t..Jn diabetic coodiUons.
She was only 10th person in the world
to receive tbe pancreas of another
:'lerson.
. Mrs. Ramey is still listed in critical
lanoi App1·oval
lwaited for GI
Captives' Gifts
BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI) -A
j~tliner loaded with Christma!! dinners
and gifts for American prisoners in North
Vietnam arrived here today and the.Tex-
as Santa Claus sponsoring the project
said he was sure the Communists would
approve it.
•· 1 am v-ery optimistic that Hanoi will
allow us to land there," said H. Ross
Perot, the 39-year-old Dallas millionaire
~·ho is chainnan of United We Stand, the
citizens group behind the '600,0GO airlift.
Pero!. said the chartered Braniff
jeUiner, nicknamed "Peace on Earth,"
would rtmain in Bangkok: until Hanoi
answers his cabled r.eq11est for ~inl pennlnlon. • ..
A&ked·what'he· """ld do II Ifie prl>ject
were vetoed, Perot nld: "I prefer not to
talk about that becaute I am very op·
tlmistic they will accept it."
Perot said a second chartered plane,
nicknamed "Goodwill on Earth," would
l!tand by in Los Angeles until word is
received from Hanoi.
''Peace on Earth," a four-engine
Boeing 707 painted green, carried 1,400
turkey dinners with all the trimmings,
lete.rs and packages from relatives,
medical supplies and clothing with a total
weight of 15,000 pounds. The aircraft
v,;altlng in Los Angeles carried 18,000
pounds of similar cargo.
Perot said ht put Uj) $i(I0,000 of the cost
and that other American businessmen
provided $400,000.
"If. I can go lo Hanoi personally I will
make a proposal to permanently supply
medical and clothing needs and foods for
the prisoners of war if the North Viet·
namese will allow me," Perot said
earlier Tuesday during a stopover in
Hong Kong en·route to Bangkok. "I hope
I don't have to permanently supply them
-after the prisoners have been releas-
ed."
Asked ii he meant that the Americans
were not ·getting adequate supplies now,
Perot said maintenance of the men was a
"great economic burden" for the North
Vietnamese.
"And after all, the food there suits
Orientals but not the Americans." he
said .
Stock Marketa
NEW YORK (AP )-Oe<:lining issues
continued to mount In f1irly active trad-
ing today, maintaining a near &IO-issue
lead over advances. (See quotations,
Pages 8-9).
Tax-selling w~s chieny responsible for
the dteline, according to analyslJ.
condition at the center but doctors say
she has responded well.
A"six-montt: critical period is expected,
during which doctors will be alert to re·
jecum or the new organs by ~lrs.
RameY'a body.
The head of the medical team that
tr~nsplanted ttie pancreas or an ~nahei.ip
man who ·died of mysterious injuries
Thursday was identified as Dr. John E.
CoqnoUy. .
Dr. Connolly i! chairman o( the UC·
Irvine Departmel!l of . surgery. He was
joined by Dr. Donald C. Martin, chief of
uro logy at UCI, who headed the kidney
transplant team. Both men are members
• 't
I
of the medical center stiff.
T~e beam ol hope for diabetic patient."!
involv~s the pancreas, according lo Pr.
Martin. ·
Diabetes Is caused wbtn the p3ncreas
fail.5 to produce a chemical which
removes sugar from the blood. In many
c~s it can be controlled by insulin in·
jections.
But in Mrs. ,Hamey's case, as ·in' many
others, said Dr. Martin, I.he diabetes had
also destroyed other organs -the
kidiley.
·Mrs. Ramey had spent several months
under medical care as her own kidney
Was slowly destroyed by the diabetes.
Snow White's We4ding Wi.n~ Pri%e
The kidney transplant itself would (Illy
be a temporary solution since the kidney
does not· cause the diabetes, aakl Dr~
Martin. . '
"BUt a transplant of a fresli' pancreas
might effect a total change in the con·
dition." he explained.
"It is my opiliion that Mtr. ·~y·ts
no longer a diabetic. A1 of today sf\e has
not required, any inSulin," llid' Dr.
Martin. '
When f\.1rs. Ramey rectived the new
pancreas a new transplant technique, UF
ed only three limes be!O(e, was1·trted.
With t~ 1pancre.a-s. docton transplanted
(See TRANSPLANT, P11< ZI
Fountain VaJley's first prize for the most unusual
Christmas display w~t to the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Jrufy, I7608 Oak St., for their snowy
scene de]>icting Snow White's wedding with all tbe
seven dwarfs in attendance. Contest was sponsored
by, Fouritain Valley Chamber of Commerce
Women 's ·Division. · .
W estmi11$ter Child l(illed
. . I
In Crossing Busy Street
A five-year old Westminster girl was
fatally Struck bf .an autort1obUe Monday
afternoon 8s she attempted to run across
Golden West street during rush-hour traf·
fie.
Killed was Monica Manelti, 13272
Whitney Circle, as she tried to run from
east to west on Goklen West Street
between Hood and Bissel Avenues around
5:2S p.m., investigators s11ld.
The driver of the car, Lee H. Hunter;
21 , 17300 Keelson Lane, who was south-
bound on Golden West Street at lhe time ot the accident, was not held.
The girl was transported t o
Wes\minster Community Hospital, where
she 11uccumbed 12 minutes later, ac-
cording to Orange County coroner's
deputies.
She was the daughter of Piero L ..
Manetli, Naples, Italy, a · liaison officer
for an Italian aerospace firm at McOon·
nell Douglas Corporation, in Hunlington
Beach .
Funeral arrangements are pending at
Peek's Mortuary, Westminster. ,
Chamber Okays
11 New Members
Eleven new members have been an-
nounced by Ralph Kiser, exeeutive
,nan~g~r of the Hunlll}gton Beach
Chamber of Commerce.
Trash Pickup
Times Changed
There will be no trash, pickups
Christmas or New Year's days -in'Hun·
ting ton Beach or Westminster.·
City Official.! Pid trash pickups Will be
made on .the next regularly scheduled
day. In Westmin.$ter the day Is Monday ,
but in Huntington Beach it var~s by loca-
tion.
tn Fountain Valley trash will be picked
up on the following day, Fri<tay when the
workers will double up gathering trash
normally picked up that day as well as
those missed on Thursday.
Orange
Weadier An inv,stigation into "bod_y awareness"
!essions at Edison High , School is ex·
Peeled to be launched tonight by Matthew
Weyuil;er, president of the Huntfngton
Beac.h Union High School District board
of trustees. which meets at 7:30 o'Clock
at district headquarters, 1902 17th St.
Weyuker said last week that he would
1~k for the probe to find out "exactly
What's going on at Edison, and to find out il there· is any 1nore of it going on
Grand Jury Gets Defense
They are: Big IJra~e Service Center,
16091 Beach Blvd.; John B. DeMarco,
19411 Beach Blvd.: Denny's Restaurant,
Mr. and ~trs. Leonard Sova, 18417 Beach
Blvd.: El Toro Ra:taurant, Stanley
Anderson, 4901 Warner Ave.; Wiiiiam
Gilmore, 1011 Cliff Drive, Newport
Beach:
Indications .are that Santa wlll
find his way to your rooftop to-
morrow night, as fair skies are
predicted over the Orange Coast.
The temperature is still riveted in
the mid-sixties, though.
elsewhere." ·
His remarks were directed at Edison
Uteralure teacher Roger Ahdrews. who
admitted that he he 1 d a sen5itivily
training session in one of his classes Dec.
4. to enable him to teach more effec:Uvely
ibout the process of communication.
Joseph Ferm, a Huntington Beach res\·
dent and detractor of Andrews' teaching
methods , complained to the board two
weeks ago and questioned the need £or
experiments such as this in an English
literature course.
He charged lhal Andre~·s conducted
the sessloc. in total darkness while the
boys and gi rls v.·ere paired according lo
sex.
Andrew!>, ·who cir cuhllcd among local
newspapers after Ferm '~ complaint lo
the board. explained that hi!! students
"'ert 9l'aled 11\rooghout lhc cxpcrin'lt?nt
and llwt the light was only turned olf for
a rew mim.1t.es.
The investigation, W<'yuker said, would
pro bably be conducted by the board
il~lf.
Action. Seeks to Quas.,i Mass Subpoenas
Maneuvers de.signed to prevent a Sant.i
Ana attorney's unprecedented attempt 1
force the Orange County Grand Jury t
testify individually In open court Werl
discloaed today in Stnta Ari•·
A mot.ion to IRlppfel8 111bpoena1 nam-
ing the tt juiwa involve!! in lhe in·
dictment o( Santa Ana policeman for
allegedly assal}ltlng a, black, 17-year~ld
prisoner was to be filed later in the dly. ' Chief Deputy County Coonse! Clayton
Parker confirmed the move durina a
smog hearing In conversation with
ne\\'~men. but could olfcr no further com·
mcnt at the time.
The 1ction which WRS to be Initialed in
Superior Court seck1 to nullify the
historic: attempt by attorney Ron Owen lo
question Ole panel through subpoenas
iS"lued a week ago.
Owen ttpre!tr<U s..lla Ant Police ()[. r.w Richard FAUii, 17, who ha1 pleaded
,,
Innocent to a Grand Jury Indictment
charging him with assault with a deadly
\\'eapon -his nightstick.
Depuly Coorrty Counsel R. 11. NulUnln,
however, offered a commentary on the
!cl>oduled action by Chi<! Deputy COunty
Counael Parker, saying Owen his
ov.,.slepped his authorfly.
"Fie haa 00 power tmder the law lo 1Ub-
poen1 the Grand Jury," aaid Nuttman.
"We are seekln1 to prot~t the tn-
tegrily and lnve'stlgativi ability. or th~
Grand Jury and we conttnd that If any
aUOrney Js allow~ to Issue subpoenas.
then a great parl or. the value or l~e
Crand Jury is desiroyed," he continued;
Nuttman charged· that the attk>n could
be a blow agai~ tbe elf,ectivenw of the
Grand Jury system ttlelf.
"Allowing lhese 1Ubpoen111'> sllnd and
calling the Grand J11r7· u w-In
•tho Fautl cue will only lmplllo ·lhO
powers ot future grand juries," he
warned . .
AMoo'nCtment of, the seCret Jndichnent
namiflg Patrolri'lain Faust -hJUlde<f down
afler UJteoing .1'> holn ~ leatlmony -
Canlle Nov. 13,.the day ht wu ofdi!red to
be· airalgned befe<e Suptrior Court Judae,
Robert Gardntr.
. Judi• . G.,.in.r ~ed llrlJCer Fuuf
lo jilry trlal'Feb.' 11; llut 'set 00c: ll as
\he date for 'lieae·"I a mOt\on by llli ~cfense to · dillftl !IS ehatgU. tiemmlng
from the Uuly I I ldenk ' • :
Qurlng sworn le&tlm<>l)y before the
Grand Jury. black YOU\h O.~'Glimo,.~ now 18, 'clalmtd he w~s lu}qcked lo the
ground and clubbed on dellXlfrl<i Orant1e
Coonly Juverille ·Han. '' · .,
He w ... 17. al the .Omo ollll W~I bein~. idlnftl81 'to !lie foCll!ly '~lone will\ l"!O (loe.JIJlll, Pip ll .
'
Huntington Beach Plun\bing, Inc.,
George Read, 221 Main Sl.: Jeri's
Florists, Robert G. Reines, t8S82 Beach
Blvd .; Patrick Palmer, 3997 Warner
Ave.: Saddleback Development Co .. J . ~t.
Freebalrn, Santa Ana ; S & S Construction
€<>., Bernard McCune, Beverly HiUs;
Spellman Insurance ·Agency, 18582 Beach
Blvd.: Village Real Eafate,· Philip
McNameet'lllC BFookhOrat St. ..
•
Stolen Fro1n JUanna
" ' ' Somebody 11wiped a slx·tOn. yellow-fork
lirt Monday ttom the Ye Oock .MasUlrs
'-1arlna on Paclfk: Coast Hi&hway near.
Huntlngton HarboOr, •
1'bt fork Uft hid betn left in an pen
arta iwlth the key· in llie ignition, did
pallce. The 18,000 fork ' 1111 mlghl have
been hauled oft. in a truck, bYt no one ~.IMlll(ll,Ald 1Jie,po11ouep11r!.
INSmE ~ftAY
Au Orange CoHntian tahO
llead& Governor Reagan's Com-
mission on Educational Reform.
. rtport.! impressive progren in
the oroup's first five monrli..t.
Page 3. r·--.--. I °"" 2 .. ~. ~
l ~"~·~~. ...,....,., ........ m .. ••rilal..,..S
c11tt.ntll (11~1'!9 "' C/ll.,_;ftf
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DAil Y Pll.OT H
DAILY 'ILOT Slaff ,._..
President ·'R~lea.-ses' CQngress
'
· ·~ .,,,:·.S.~rap~ Special Sessio~.as MoJ!ey Bills J>asfd . .
Yi~ (UPlJ -Pltoldenl wm aboul to adjourn unlll Jan. 19. speming authority was enac:tod to keep Senalt a compromise mtaaure eztendlng
NlllOD IOdl)', p ... bil blealna to "lie aald w• had all worked Vtrf the agencies In Of'1'allon. through J"f' 30, li'll, oew export con-
Congress' planned Ch r I 1't mas-ad-hard'" House GOP Leader Gerald R. . Left to the Prestdent's discretion were· trols to replate the m.year-okl Export journment and the lawmakers pressed ' I ' · toward a windup of the 1969 session by Ford reported. two major measures -the tax.-rtlorm, Coatro Acl .
early afternoon. Ford said the President accepted the tax cut, iOCial security increase bill and Bastcally~ t_he me.asure_ COllUDues t_o
Nixon had suggested earlier he might _ adjournment notification without any mine safety legislation -w.hicb some give the President discretion to .Prohibit
call the House and Senate back into a further talk of a special se~ion. members feared PruldML ~lXOll might and regulate eiports to ~mmwlist coun·
special post-Christmas session If they The House and Senate were quitUng veto. The beUing w11 the chief execulive tries .and to . bar trade ~f lbe naUonal
failed to get all the year's money bills without final action on a $19.7 btlll90 ap. would ai&n both. (Tu story, Page f), security requll'es It.
passed before quitting. Two auch bills proprialioa !or the labor and heallh, The Houie, in U&. final legislative ac· Howeter, the new pro~ libetJJlz.es
were left hanging, but under conditions education and wellare departments -Lion, approved today .new ru1ea to relax the old ru1ta _under which_ som~ Z,2:00
that the President approved in a final, which the President promised to veto as trading of non-military good& with Com· Jtems I ran~ from ~utoI!lobiles to
formaJ exchange with a House committee too costly -or on a •t.a& billion ap-munirt countries. milk -we.re put on a special liit preven-
appointed to notify him the Jawmakera propriation for foreign aid. A temporary Jt pasaed by voice vat.e and leDt to tbe tin& ezports.
Beach Lutheran Held Without Bail
MESA P'IREMEN CHECK MANGLED CAR l'OR SIGNS OF BLAZE
Driver, 16, EMdly Hurt In Thr .... C•r lnttrs~tkm Cr1th
· Chm·ches Plan
Yule Services
Woman Due Murder Trial ..
I '
Valrey Woman Injured
In Costa Mesa Car Wreck
A pair ot spectacular auto accidents
that snarled already-heavy Christmas
shopping traffic near South Coast Plaza
Mc>iday nJiht left two Orange County
women with major injuries.
Several other persons were less
serleully hurl, acxording to the California ,
Higbway Patrol.
Mary A. Campbell, !!, ol· 460 Linden
Pace, Anaheim, WU listed in seriCIJI
coodiUon at Costa Mesa Memorial
HoopltAI today, with pooaible lnt.rnal in-
juries.
Mrs. Marglll'1!t Liddell, U, of 10577 La
Fuente St., Fountairi ValJey, was
reported in fair coodlUon at the same
hoepital with bead tnjurles suffered in a
separat, auto craah. ·
Investigaton: for the CHP said several
of tbe 1ix vehicles involved in each three-
car crash were totally demolished.
Miss Campbell was croalng Fairview
Road at SuoOower Avenue about 9:30
p.m., when her car colllded with a aou~
bound auto driven by Pamela Lagent. 17,
of 11m1 Newland St., Huntlnitoo Beach.
Impact of the crash drove the two cars
tnto a third driven by Eleanor Mobley, 20,
ot MU Norse Place, Costa Mesa, whlcb
J'ro• P .. e J
TRANSPLANT ••
blood vessels and the section of the in-
testine with which it connects, making
the operaUon ~bnlcaJly easier.
Dr. Connolly cautioned that though this
was a step toward solution of the diabetic
problem, it is not nearly complete. The
great problem is finding a fresh pancreas
and donors are rare.
But for Mrs. Ramey the unfortunate
fate of another proved a good omen. And
an e:1tra cheer was brought to her hus..
band '9!onte, a Huntington Beach Jetter
carrier, who was told the doctors bad
donated their Ume.
I
Beach Eyes Law
On Truck Parking
Huntington Beach officials are studying
the possibility of enacting a law pro-
hibiting the parking of heavy trucking
equJpment on city streets overnight.
~ayor Jack Green has called at-
tenllon of councilmen and city officials.!<>
the heavy equipment parked on streets
and in abandoned service stations.
The city Traffic Department has been
asked to make a study of legal means to
It.op the overnight parking.
DAILY PILOT
OltANGE COl4T PUll.l~HIN<; COMPANY
~ob•tt N. w,,d Pn11:""' -l"""'llthtr
J•clt R. Cu•l•v
Ylc.t Pruldtnt 1flfl Gtn41•1l MIT\99t'I'
Tho"'•' t('.,,.,;/
ldlltl'
was also southbound on Fairview Road,
lhe CHP said.
Miss Lagent and Miss Mobley suffered
only minor injuries.
Mrs. Liddell was injured earlier when a
C4J' driven by her husband, Samuel, col-
lided with two stopped vehicles oo the
Bristol Su..t offramp from the San
Diego Freeway.
Motorists George M. Hawlhome, of
5361 Overland Drive, Huntington Beach,
Patricia SUrea, Of 14581 Cork SL, Garden
Grove, and Mrs. Uddell's husband an
suffered miner Injuries.
An elderly Costa Mesa driver and a
teenaged passenger In a buddy'a: car also
au s ta in e d minor injuries Monday
afternoon In a sideswipe collision on
Newport Boulevard near Mesa Drive, in-
side city llmlts.
Raymond Hlll, 82, of 411 Hamiton St.,
and Briau.s. Detar, II, ol 154 E. 2Znd St.,
were treated for abrasions and leg pains
at Costa Mela Memorial Hospital and
released.
Police aald Hill was driving north on
the boulevard when a car driven by
Richard Ruvalo, 19, of 410 S. Diamond
St., Santa Ana, hit the side of his car,
uten 1'111 off the road lnlo a chain link fence.
Wren to Head
Y Site Group
' Bill Wren, vice president of the Hun-
tington Beach Co., has been named to
head a. committee to find a HuntingWn
Beach home for the YMCA.
The YMCA hopes to find an office and
meeting room th.is year and build a full
facility within five years. The Huntington
Beach branch currently shares the
facilities of. the Westminster YMCA, said
execuUve director Richard Collato.
The Huntington Beach YMCA now has
a membership of 2,500 and expects lo
double that in 1970, said Col!ato.
Wren and the commJttee on relocation·
building will seek a leased office or a
donation.
Winter Program
Signups Start
Registration is now under way for the
Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation
Department's winter program.
Activities available and the dates they
start are: karate, Jan. 6: swim team
practice, Jan. ~; beginning brlda:e
lessons, Jan. 8; ballet and tap, Jan. 8;
ladi:!s ' slim and trim, Jan. 12; boys '
basketball league, Jan. 17: gymnastici1,
Jan. 27 and tumbling and acrobatics,
Feb. 2.
Interested persons may sign up for
these activities at Fountain Valley City
Hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
Special Christmas services will be
observed by all five Lutheran churches of
Huntington Beach according to the
following schedule:
Redeemer Lutheran: Worship, 7:30
p.m. Christmas Eve; Worship 10 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Resurrection Lutheran: Vlorship, 7:30
p.m. Christmas Eve ; Worship 10 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Resurrection Lutheran: Worship, 730
p.m. Chrlstmaa: Eve; Worship, 10'30 a.m.
and Holy Communion Servlce, 11'30 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Grace Lutheran: Wonhlp, I p.m. and
Candlelight Service, 10 p.m. Christmas
Eve; Holy Communion Sen1ce, 9:-15 a.m.
Cl1riatmas Day.
King ol Glory Lutheran; Candlelight
Family Sen1ce, 7 p.m. Christmas Eve:
Christmas Communlon Service, 10 :45
a.m. Qiristmas Day.
Falth Lutheran: Identical Candlelght
Services, 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.,
Christmas Eve; Worship, 11:40 a.m.
Christmas Day.
On New Year's Eve, services will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at Redeemer Church,
Faith Church and King of Glory Church.
No services will be held that eveninj at
Grace or Resurrection Oturch.
Rotary Forms
Edison Group
Hunllnlton Beach Rotary C I u b
JMmbers have organized an Interact
Club an the Ediron High School campus.
Tb e service--0riented organization
recenUy installed Chris Cross as its
president, with other officers Phil
DuRall, vice-president; David Montano,
secretary; Stan Peterson, treasurer"; and
Scott Lent, Doc! Bateman and John
Fisher, directors.
Interact Club members, in cooperation
"'ilb Wintersburg High School, have
already been building; wooden toys .as a
fund raising project for the chapter.
Under the direction of Winlersburg
High instructor John Pisano, the students
created an assembly line for the toys and
are currently selling them to families.
Any toys not sold by Christmas will be
donated to the children's wards of nearby
hospitals.
From Page 1
JURY ..•
ether youths in custody, by contradictory
testimony indicated Gilmore was caught
and subdued in an escape attempt.
Key wltnesses in the case may be pro-
bation officers who watched the incident
from their offices, but much of the
testimony contained in an 82-page
transcript of the proceeding remains to
he hearo.
Officer Faust's defense attorney cites
insufficient evidence, lack of the right of
c0\lll.5el for the defendant during Grand
Jury proceeding and failure to provide a
speedy trial as grounds for his dismissal
motion.
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward J.
Allen has praised the defendant's job
reeord with the department and he re-
mains on duty pending final oulcorne of
the case again.st him.
By JOUN VALTERZA
Of tt11 Diii'( ,.llet St-"
A prosecutor argued Monday that Mrs.
Dwillia Dean Hunt should not be set free
on bail to awalt trial on charges of
murdering her husband because her U·
year-old daughter fears for her own life.
The surprising allegation came during
a preliminary hearing for the 43-year-old
Corona del Mar housewife who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatally stabbed her yach t-
broker husband, Willis, 56, with a one-foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter denied
defense motions for bail and ordered
Mrs. Hunt bound over to answer first-
degree-murder charges in Orange County
Superior Court Jan. Z.
The clwge came from Deputy District
AltorMy Jim Lang, who oppooed defense
motJ0115 lor ball and sald IZ.yW'Old .Dru
Hunt '1bu upr~ fean for her life."
Beverly Hills lawyer Sydney Innas
asked that Mn. Hunt be Ht free on bail
to await the court action, saying that the
slight brunette was "a loving mother who
has never mistreated this child."
He assailed the prvaecutcr's comments
as "rumor" and "a figment of 10meone's
imagination."
"I see no reason to punish lhls ~oman
with incarceration for months during the
lengthy court actions," Jnnas said.
He then asked that the daughter be
brought into court to give her own feel-
ings on her mother's ball plea.
The daughter is in the custody of Mn.
Noel Brown of West Loo Angel,., (ber
SDS Appeals 'No Status'
Ruling by Orange Coast
By THOMAS FORTUNE
• Of ltM 0.ll't' l"l)lt ,,..,
SOS has appealed its non-recognition at
Orange ~st CoTiege and now comes the
battle of attorneys.
Tru!ltees cl · Orange Coast Junior
College District have asked the County
Counsel's office to prepere their defense
of a Students for a Democratic Soclety
appeal filed last week in the Californla
Dislricl Court of Appeals.
The appeal on behaU of SOS was filed
by Sant.a Ana attorney Richard W.
Petherbridge, who is associated with the
American Civil Liberties Union.
The appeal is of an Aug. 5 Superior
Court ruling upholding Uie college's right
not m recognize SDS as a legitimate
campus organization.
No date has been set for the hearing on
the appeal and sources clooe to the ap-
pellate court in San Bernardino say they
don't expect the date will be before the
middle of March at the earliest.
Coun.5el for both sides need the time to
prepare their briefs.
Attempts by a small group of studenta
to gain recognition for SOS on the cam·
pus began jus about one year ago. The
student senate eventually recognized the
group because senators believed in tbe
Police Jail 3
In Theft Case
Three La Puente men are in Orange
County Jail toda7 following their arrest
Monday morning Jn Fountain Valley on
suspicion of steaJing tools from autos.
Police said about $2.000 in light
machinery was recovered fr om a car
driven by the trio when arrested at 1 :30
a.m., near 8695 La Plaza Ave., Fountain
Valley.
Arrested and booked into county jail on
burglary charges were Walter Patrick
Muller, 22 ; his brother, John Joseph
Muller, 18, and Jerry Waine Heaton, 19.
They had allegedly began a series of
robberies from pickup trucks Sunday that
included five thefts in Fountain Valley
and one each in Norwalk and Whittier,
said police.
right of free association.
But the dean of student activities and
college president vetoed the student
.senate's action and the board m trustees
also ruled against SOS.
The case then went to court and
SupeTior Court Judge Robert Corfman
shot down SDS once again.
Explaining his ruling, he noted that the
public has charged. administrators and
· trusttts with operation of the school and
has given them a certain amount of
dilcretlon in that operation.
"You can't," he said, "take a man and
tell him to nm your school and Uk?n
deprive him of the right to exercise jud11-
ment."
Representatives for the college said
SDS had been denied recogNtlon because
of goals and aims stated by the national
organization not compatible w1th colleg~
policies and regulations.
Petherl>ridge's argument was that SDS
members had been unlawfully deprived
ol status enjoyed by other campus clubs
and organiultions.
A SDS faction at Fullerton Junior
College 1§ watching the fate of the OCC
group's bid for recognition. Plans to take
the Fullerton issue before Judge Corfm<1n
were scrapped when the jurist ruled
against the ace group.
stepsister) wife of a tennis pro and
daugbter or the slain Hunt.
"The girl ls lnlenllonally being kept
from seeing me," the lawyer said.
"I am willing either to bring the girl In
for a conference in your chambers or
even can her to stand tomorrow," be ad·
ded.
Judge Rutter allS\'.·ered abruptly:
''I will not do that, counsel. Motion
denied ."
-Throughout tht:: entire exchange, Mrs.
Hunt, her hair pulled back into a short·
pony tail and wearing a bright pink dress,·
sat passively.
The woman carried the same white,'
clipped-beaver coat she wore the night o(
her arrest.
Mrs. Hunt seemed calm. M. !be en;.
tored the court, she smiled cheerfully to.'
her family. •
During the proceedings she kept nearly.
motionless except for changing her grip.
on a wrinkled white handkerchief.
She spoke only late In the court action
to describe her needs for special medica-
tion and to ask that she be allowed t.O
brlng '\.pencil and paper with her as sh~
met with her lawyers. Both requests
were granted. ·
The hearing began in the court of
Judge Donald Dungan, who granted
Irmas' request that another judge con-
duct the hearing because Du11Jgn was
prejudiced. •
The judge agreed .
Jn Judge Rutter's court, Newport
Beach police patrolman M it c h e 11
Thompson, who was the second officer to
arrive at the Harbor View Hills home
after the stabbing, testified first.
Thompson said he entered the patio of
the house at 26JS Harbor View Drive to
find fellow officer Keith Collins bent over
the badly bleeding Hunt. Mrs. Hunf;
Thompson said, was there, too.
"Before anyone could say anythinL,
she. the defendant, said, 'I did it. I did tt.
l stabbed him.'," the officer testified.
Later in the testimony, Irmas asked
the patrolman to repeat the quote.
Thompson said that the fatally injured'
Hunt said nothing as the other officer'
held a hand to his bleeding chest.
"1 took the defendant inside and we
went into a foyer or entryway and l told
her what her conslitutional rights were
there," he said.
Thompson said Mr6. Hunt then took.
him into the kitchen pf the home and
pointed to a knife with a blade 10 or 12 in-:
ches long.
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Mao Hung in Vati~an
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Painting of Y outli in Tunic Mistake1i for Priest
VATICAN CITY (AP) -The man in cle about Red China. was of a Chinese-
the painting wore~ tunic ~ looked ~le made painting of Mao as a crusading
a priest and so Vatican of!1c1als hung ll a youth, bis lefl hand clenched and his
few yards from a p«tra1t ol Pope PauJ right hold' •-JI VI In the Vatican press room. ing an umut\: a.
But as it turned out Tuesday the man Lanfranco Camevall, a shopowntt who
wasn't a prttst at all. He was Mao Tse· said his 86-year-old father Luigi painted
tung in his youth. the VaUcan picture last. March. said : 1•or
"\\1lat cant say?'' said Msgr. Fausto course it's Mao Tat-tung. My father still
Vallainc, the Vatican press sp:ikesman. hu the sketches he worked from to make
"The palnUng was Sl!nl to us as a gift. that picture."
We hung it up. Thafs all.'' Luigi Carnevall, who was in bed wtth
Althoulh chagrined, church officials influenza, Is not a particularly well·
said the pa.inUng will not be taken down. know artist. How the painting came to be
The oil palntln11, showin& a man with a sen! to the V•tlcan remained a mystery.
blurrtd fare standing against a reddish Lanfranco Carncvall said he could not
background, was hung last month. eiplaln how the palntin11 goc. to the
Newsmen accredited to the Vatlcan Vallcan. He said he I03ned it to• friend,
not~ on Monday a striking rtsemblance whom he did not Identify, "and 1 have
betWttn it and I photograph 6\ the been trying to reach him for an t:l•
October lslue of •n ltalJan Catholic planaUon ."
maguine. "Famta:lil Criatiana." Msgr. Vallalnc saJd bt had no lnt.enUon
'lbe photogroph, l<'<:Ol11J)8Jlyln& ID arU-of r<moving iL
l (
"Every artist is free to draw in-
spiration from a given subject and lo
develop this subject." he said.
Al one p:ilnt. he told newsmen in the
press room : "Look, evt:n H tt does
represent Mao I would YY it shows hlin
as an element of destruetioD. wit.h the
flaming rulna of what he has Wl'Olliht in
the background."
Lanlranco Carnevall di$puttd this. He
said the notation "Alba" on the painting.
first taken to mean the town in llaly,
really was the tlt.le or the \\o'Otk -
"Dawn."
"The dawn of an Idea," he explained.
He said his father 11ot lhe Idea for the.
work last winter from a photograph of
the same pa\nttn& "Famlglia Crlstlana"
reproduced.
Asked what his father 's reactlon w.s
when he leaml'd that the palnUng was In
the VaUcau, Lanfranco sald: "He just
lauaMd-"
. •
\-
•
Not a Joy Ride
Deputy Probation Officer Jane Fritz of Orange County Proba'lion
Department is laken for a ride by Huntinglcn Beach Officer R.iy ·
Anderson. It's all part of a trainin~ p~~~m for probation officer•
and not just iun as some complairung s to city hall suggest, ao-· ·
cording le PoliCt! Chief Earle Robitaille. •
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EVERYTHING'S NOT OUCl(Y FOR THIS OIL-SOAKED VISITOR
Don't Tell Him Slick Off Carpinteria Is far the Birds
Countian Chairnaa1i
Education Unit
Showing Results
By TO~! BARLEY
Of th1 O.lly 1'111! St•O
Ask Robert E. Hanson \\'hat he has in
mind for a New Year 's resolution and
he'll quickly tell you that Gov. Ronald
Reagan settled that 1970 issue \\'hen 1969
still had five months to go.
Reagan named Hanson to chair the
governor's dream child, the 2(}.member
Coinmission on Educational Reform, and
it's a mammoth task that is going to
ensure a busy-1970 for the Santa Ana ac·
count.ant and his 19 colleagues.
The problem doesn't appea r to deter
the fiscal expert He does ruefully·reflect
9n Reagan's promise at the time the
1overnor urged him to head the (act-fin-
~ng group: "Bob. I particularly v.•ant
you to lead this in\·estigation and I can
promise you that it will only occupy, on
an average, about two hours a week."
· That two hours ii. much nearer two
da~s today. But Hanson, visibly buoyed
by what he sayS is the "remarkable pro-
gress of our committee in so short a
time", doe6n't intend to Jet Reagan know
~hat happened to the governor's predic·
ti on.
Hi~ group's first three recom·
mendations are now on the governor'!
desk. And they in themselves. says
Hanson, "are enoagh to make a lot of
CaiifonUans sit up and do Some heavy
thinking about the state of our education
today."
PART.OF MESSAGE ·
It is expected that much of what
Hanson's committee hcu outlined in that
13-page preliminary report will fonn part
of Gov. Reagan's "state of the State"
message in January. C.Ome June, says
Hanson. there will be a lot more to tell
for "we will have six two-day meetings
behind us, one for each of the first six
months of 1970."
Hanson and his 19 colleagues on the
ooique committee were charged by
Reagan with the responsibility or probing
deeply into the heart of California's
educational system. On their agenda are
such topics as campus violence. educa·
tional finance, organization and manage-
ment of :school administrations, teacher
crtdentials, certification p r o c e s :s •
salaries, the possibility of a merit
aystem. classroom pr'ectit"es arld cur·
riculum development.
From a pile or :study material three:
feet thick which includes 1he testimony of
numerous witnesses before the com-
mittee, Hanson's group bas offered its
first recommendations to the governor on
three phases of'thelr overall analysis of
tile state's educational sjstem. They in·
\·olve teacher credentillling, teacher
preparatJon °'nd training and g~vem_a~e.
the overall administration,and integration
of C11ifomia's educational systems from
w'h11t is presenUy, as Gif. Reagan has
described it, a "jurisdict\imal jigsaw."
MORE SWEEPING
'-'hat.ever recommendations the com·
mission might have to off,r Gov. Reagan
in the future it seerm: cd'tain that none
will be more p ·eeplng than the one which
evolved from its study ot the system of
teacheJ' credentials.
"\\fe 1uggested in our report that the 56
1eparat.e credentials that exist today -
yes. I said 56 -shoukl be boiled down to
a ve"ry few and I think myself that they
could be contracted to just one," Hanson
1aid.
"We want to simplify the present
chaotic credential\ing situation and we
have suggested to Gov. Reagan that a
credentialling commiasion be appointed
by the state Board of Education. ''°e
lhould replaCe a systm thlt is complex.
lnconsisterrt in practice, ineffective and
diff\cult to administer and we feel that
cost savings will be: really tremendous l!
wr recommendations are followed."
Hanson's commission feels that "there
should be: one credential •for kaching in
CaUfomia embracing all ex1sting levels ol
credentials necessary for the va rious
elementary and secondary teaching pc5i·
Uons.
"All other posilions." Its report ita~es.
"would be appointive al lhe dlscretkm of
the lotal :school district. subject to broad
guldellnez develope:d by the Teacher
Vevelopment, Qualification and Stan-
danls Cornmiision..~"~~~~~-
That same commission. warrui the
Hanson group, $hou1d he limited to II
members. uven proff'S~ional<: and lour
laymen. AJl ideal &tafllna, Ill< npol'I
st.at.es. ·would be that of a primary
tea cher, an upper elementary teacher,
tl'•o secondary teachers. a teacher from a
state college or unil'ersity, a private col-
lege teacher, a 'school administrator and
the four laymen.
And its certification guidelines, goes
on the report, could well be adopted "on
a three-way basis": six lo seven )'ears
training and/or educational erperiencr.
\'erified and recommended by local
boards; verification and recommendation
by a state college or university;
statev.•ide competency examination for
teachers for verification of qualifications
in content. technology, diagoosihg and
prescribing.
ALSO IMPORTANT
But no les11 important in this teacher
area, says Hanson, "is the topic of
teacher preparalion and training."
His committee ended a study with the
comment that ''leachei's in many cases
are prepared on too broad a spectnim
and this delay~ their acquiring expertise
in the learning process at an ea1·Jy
enoogh stage.
"\Ve believe," the report states, "that
teachers need more training in certain
fundamentals of how the educational
system works in California~""
Local school districts, says Hanson,
c:>U.ld provide some vakiable comments
here and they will be asked to support
formation of the new teacher develop-
ment commission. "We will ask them
how they feel the tc8chers can keep
abreast of the rapidly developing
technological changes that we are seei ng
take place in this state." Hanson said.
Looking into governance, the com·
mission learned pretty quickly that
''there Is no single voice in this state that
represents secondary and elementary
education.·•
And it stresse:d in its report that "there
is little evidence of coordination between
the Governor. the State Board of Educa-
tion, the State Department of Education,
the Legislature and the state superin-
tendent of public instruction.
"The State Board of Education," said
Hanson, "is advisory to the Govunor and
advisory to the state suptintendent. They
cannot tell either of them what should be
bad in the ·way of education.
"AU the way down this mess of alleged·
ly interlocking departments you get con-
flicts," Hanson said. "Recommendations
are made and nothing happens, more
recommendations are made and again
nothing happee-s-"
His· commiS!lion~ has-a few of lts own
to offer Gov. Reagan.
EXPAND BOARD
It wants the State Board or Education
expanded to include the governor. the
speaker of the AsSembly and the presi-
dent pro tern of the Senate -all as
voting members.
"By establishing direct communication
among all agencies of government in·
v.olved in educational decision making, it
provides an opporltJllitY for ttalisUc plan·
ning. budgeting and program dev~lop
ment," Hanson explained.
The c:ommi:Won urges a constitutional ·
amendm ent to make the state superinten-
dent of public instruction appointive by
the State Board of Education and directly
responsible to it as its chief ad-
min.isLratlve officer.
Han.son say11 : "This would clarify
organizational relationships and eliminate
the conflict which has too !requenlly ex-
isted in the past. It eliminates the
necessity of an arduous and costly elec·
lion campaign and opens the door to
selection ol candidates from the nation at
large,"
And the commission urges, among a
series of recommeidatioos. that the State
Board of Edu<aUon "should be assigned
the "'J>Ollslbillty of ISSe!Slng the finan-
cial needs of California secondary and
elementary education and presenting
these· needs in an annual budget to the
Legislature."
"This would permit coordination or
elementary Ind secondary funding pro-
posals whlch has heretofore been lack·
ing," said Ham;on. "Hopefully, a more
unified voict to the governor and
Legislature as to priorities woukl
enhance the planning, a s s e 1 s m e n t ,
monltorln1 and use of state educatkmll
funds."
Those three recommendali<lls with
their 11lttndant sub-recommendations
r~rtstnt U11 "Up ol our iceberg," uid -
T1.11$d.1y, t>egmber 2J, 1969 H DAIL V 1'11.DT 3
Santa Bar hara Slicl{ SpreadS
22 Miles of Coast Hit
By Latest Ooze of Oil
From Wtft Services
SANTA BARBARA -OU from the
latest seepage in the Santa Barbara
ChaMel has spotted about 22 miles of
roastllne in Venfura and Santa Barbara
counties.
Donald Solanas of the U.S. Geological
Survey said after authorities made a six·
Nasser Qiiits
Arab Sum1nit;
Meet Periled
RABAT. J\1orocco (UPI) -President
Carnal Abdel Nasser of Egypt walked out
of the Arab summit session today. throw-
ing into lunnoil !he 14-natlon meeling
called to define new militant strategy
against Isra el.
fiigh conference sources said the
"·;i\kout was not a totaJ withdrawal from
the summit but was staged to dramatize
Nasser's opposition to what he considered
the reluctance of Saudi Arabia and
Ku'A'ait to provide sufficient financia l and
material backing for the nations fighting
Israel.
The sources said his dramatic walkout
liid throw the summit meeling into co n-
fusion.
Both Nasser and King Hussein of
Jordan had asked for more aid -and
men -from the other Arab nations
because of the losses sustained by the
frontline nations in the connict that has
continued since end of the 1967 June war.
Syria also 'A'as seeking more aid.
Nasser's walkout came before King
Hassan If of l\.1orocco, !he chainnan, had
brought the meting to a formal end. At
the last session the delegates v.·ere
reported fa voring more help for Egypt,
Jordan and Syria -but aid short of wag-
ing war on their side.
Diplomatic sources said confusion
swe pt the Ughtly guarded session and
that after Nasser's departure King
Hassan gaveled the morning session to an
end.
·'President Nasser's departure is a
means of protest against the Saudi and
Kuwaiti positions," a high conference
source said. "It does not mean he i:s leav·
ing the summit altogether."
Cat Saves Lives
Of Family, Dies
Shav.'fl the cat is dead today alter sav-
ing the lives of bis Garden Grove family
Saturday night.
A fire department spokesman said ~fr.
and ~1rs. Terry W. ~fcCann were
awakened by the cries of their ~year~ld
Siamese cat Shawn and were just able to
flee their apartment with their two young
children before the dwelling became
engulfed in flames.
The McCanns escaped. But Shawn
didn't. Firemen said the cat died of
smoke inhalation.
The source of the 'blaze which caused.
an estimated $18,000 damage to the
apartment at 12646 Buaro St. was laid to
a smoldering cigarette left on the couch,
department spokesmen reported.
airplane ill!pecUon flight Monday that
st.ill more crude oil lay a few hlndred
yards offshore.
Solanas estimated that the slick wa11
about a tenth the size of the one which
resulted from a blowout 11 months ago
at the same Union Oil Co. offshore drill-
ing rig.
· He said the slick conlained about
38,000 gallons or oll-11,000 of which
spurted out before a ruptured undersea
pipeilne could be repaired last Saturday.
The rest 11eeped from the ocean floor,
he said.
Fritz Springman, a Union Oil official
\\'ho made a private survey, said the
company plans to •·wait for a coUple of
days to see how bad it geU:, '' before
starling to clean the oil away. '
Yvon Chouinard, who lives five miles
north of Ventura, said he and a member
of tPe Audubon Society found 55 bird!
in one 300-yard stretch of beach suffer·
ing from contact with oily surf.
Chouinard said five birds were "so
completely covered with oil that ·they
couldn't fly." They were taken to Santa
Barbara to be cleaned.
The Coast Guard said what had been
Initially a single slick had broken into
two parts, one a mi le •·ide and 10 mile11
long. the other a mile v•ide and eight
miles long.
A Coast Guard spokesm11n said botti
appeared to be dissipating rapidly
Monday.
The hardest hit area was Seacliff, a
small community on the Rincon Shores,
where at low tide much of the sand was
paved with a half-inch layer of tar. Some
pools of oil seven inches deep were
trapped in rocks.
Missing Fishing
Boat Discovered;
All Hands Safe
An IS-foot abalone boat missing three
days on a routine run from Catalina
Island to San Diego ws found Monday by
a Coast Guard helicopter. adrift off Mex-
ico, but v•ith all hands aboard reported
safe.
owners of the Guru, which carried three
persons including an Anaheim girl, blam·
ed Skipper inexperience for t h e
unscheduled voyage which ended off
Todos·Santoe Island near Ensenada.
Btn Sellers, 22, of Bakersfield, John
Lewis. of Avalon. and Patricia John.son,
of Anaheim. had been the object of a {ar-
ranging aerial search since they were
reprted missing Saturday.
The craft. out of fuel, was drifting 14
miles west or the rugged Baja California
coast.al Island .
"Ben didn't have the experience and we
strongly discouraged him from trying to
make the run," said John MacGillivray,
foreman of a San Diego abalone boat
which had leased the craft to his brother.
. MacGillivray said Ben ~llel'll had bee:n
given permission to bring the Guru back
from Avalon to San Diego and pick up his
car to visit his brother John In a Long
Beach hospital.
The older brother was stricken with the
bends while diving for abalone off San
Clemente Island last Thursday and taken
to Avalon aboard the craft, then flown to
Terminal Island In Long Beach Harbor.
He entered a decompression chamber
and was later admitted to a L<rlg Beach
hosp.ital for additional treatment
DAILY 'llOT Sllfl ,,..,.
So11ie Roses Fro11i ltlickey
Pamela Dee Tedesco, (center), 1970 queen of Pasadena's Tourna-
ment of Roses, is presented some roses of her own by ~lickey Mouse
during the tournament delegation's visit Monday to Dlsney1and. Di ..
neyland Ambassador Cathy Birk (left) looks,on during ollicial weJ.
come.
J
u,,., ......
SURFER ENCOUNTERS STICKY WICKET OFF VENTURA COAST
Rlch•rd Wh"ler (right) Rncuecl From Sant• llorlMir• Oil Slick
Backed by Ci\SE
Environment Study Set
At Orange Coast Coll.ege
Thirty persons concerned about the
state of the natural environment today
are beginning tQ lay the groundwork for
formaUon of an Environmental Studies
Center at Orange Coast College.
Lewis A. Follansbee, OCC marine
:science instructor, was elected interim
chairman of the group wfiich ha! taken
the name CASE (Committee Advocating
Studies of the Environment).
Follansbee said students, f o r m e r
students, industry and research people
were present Sunday for the initial
meeting and plan another session early in
January.
A document giving the committee
semi-legal status was signed for filing
with the county recorder.
Follansbee said the purpose of the
center will be to educate the public about
threats to the environment. The cent.er
might employ a 11taff of advilOI')' person.
nel and villitlng scientists and obtain
speakers. The hope is to produce com·
munlty involvement.
The Environmental Studies Center is to
be a non-profit corporation funded .. pan
!0< school tu levies tbrough donaliona.
Follansbee also is trylna: to promote an
environmental studies curricutum 'for the
Panther Late
To Court Due
To Date Mixup
SAN JOSE (AP) -A Black Panther
party official who was two days late-for a
court appearance was allowed to remain
free after he told the judge he got his
dates mixed up.
Donald Lee Cor of New York, Pantfler
field marshal, wa1 due in U.S. District'
Court here last Friday to have a trial
date set on a charge of tmlawful
possession of a firearm by an e1.-convlct.
C.Ox, who ~hawed up Monday after a 21·
hour airplane trip from Algien, saJd he
had been conferring with fugitive
Eldridge Cleaver, Panther minl11ter of in-
formation.
Judge Robert Peckham vacated a
bench warrant he had i11sued Friday for
Cox's arrest that would have requJred
PJ,000 bond.
Peckham granted Coi.11 request to
allow hlm to travel to New York, but only
on coodlllon he lum In his flNIPOrl to
rule out foreign travel.
A trial date of Feb. I was aet on the
""' --charge.
CHRISTMAS THIEF
IN FOR SURPRISE
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A sack of gift
boll'.es was stolen from lhe back seat Qf
P1trlcla Petrle'1 car Monday In PacUlc
Beach.
"J would have loved to have been there
whtn whoever took the hemes openf!d
them," she uld. '"They were absolutely
empty.'" The SX''9enll? Mn. Petrie had
them safely locked tn the car trunk and
had planned lo put lht gWta In the flon•
later. •
I "
college. He said he will make a presen.
talion Jan. S to the college curriculum
committee seeking approval of five.
coursea for next fall.
Colll'ses proposed are an inventory of
the environment, theory or envtroomenLal
me;isurement, use of emiironmental in-
strument!:, iRiection oC man'11 future
resource needs, and work· experieoce in
environmental quality control.
The last course, he &aid, would have
studenl;s working with indu11ries f
n:cogniied as major poUuters. "lt will be
a good public relaUons thing fo1"tlle jn.-
dustrles and a good way for students to
get first hand knowledge of en·
vironrnental problems," be rt.marked.
Foll8llllbee: said because of "an aus&«l·
ty program" he will ask that the pri>
gram be handled by the present colltge st.arr with each ol three instndors
teaching 1/3 time in the field.
Russia Adopts
'Coexistence'
Foreign Policy
M06COW !UPI) -The Kmn1in blay
ruled out war with "modern im·
perialism" and slnssed the advanta(<I
of peaceful coexlsCence for lhe COm·
munist world ln a major policy document
setting the theme for Soviet founder V.I.
Lenin 's tooth birthday celebra11ons.
The 13,000.wonl documm publili>ed by
the Soviet CommlBllst party's central
commltlce emphulzod, 1-evcr, lba{the
struggle agall\lt capitalbm 190Ukl cOD-
tinue and singled out the United Statel
and West G~any as the prtnctpal foes.
"The most •ggnmtve detadwnenls ol
modern impet"lallsm, particularly in lhe
Uni1ed Stales and In -the Federal
Republic of (Welt) Germany, ha;,. l10I
abandOO<d hope cl rellghting lhe
his1Drlcal battles of the :totb C<lllllIJ'," lhe
document said.
It sak! Soviet foreign policy aims. at
establishing peaceful rdatlons wilh Ibo
capitalist wwkt "to ensure peaceful con-
ditions for lhe construction of llOClallsm
and communism.
But, It addod'
"Peaceful coei:istence ~~es
sharp political. economic d kltlOrlOgk:al
struggle between 10CiaJJ1in • n d capl~sm. between the WW'1nc dw and the bourPolsle .•
The~ .... pablllhod ln·lll D\I• Jar Soviet newspopen and' mprloed 111e
guklell"'" ror all dllculllona -w!tlt the Lenin C<lllennlal celebralloii&
next April. It -~party pooilloOI.
"Tbe unattatnaJ>llll!I ol ll>e main pt el.
lmperlali.t i!lralegy -to detlt"'Y -the
Sociall.91 ll)'&lem -his boc«lle -..
ly obvlouo In our tjple," the clocumont
said .
In the Soviet view, the ... IDulple of
peaceful ....-I& more er i.a
limllod to pollol<I ud a<llons deolpod lo
avoid military conlrontatJons betwetn the
Communbt and capilalln COUlllrleo.
nrt& apparently wn meaat u u •· plana~oo lo p•111)1 ranb cl IUCh .Eool.-
West neptallon& as lhe ttr1lellc . mos
llmltalion lolka (SALT) wllh the Ubllod
Stales and talks on lhe r811111dlllaa ol
lhe uae ol farce wllll Wat ~.
'
.. -. . --· ..
4 llAlLV 'llOT
........
A woman rushed breathlessly in·
to \he South Caroline governor's
· office In Columbia and asked .. c.
retarles if a television set wa s
available. She was escorted to a
nearby office and a secretary, who
thought \he woman might be await..
·Ing a big news development, obllg·
inJIY turned on the set. Then \ht
woman admitted she · wpnted. to
watch the latest episode Of a soap
opera. The' secretary switched off
·the set. • "Get out of your car" patrolman
Robert H. Auld Jr. shouted over a
bullhorn after Edn• R. John1on'1
car stalled on the railroad tracks
near Red.wood City. Mrs. Johnson,
62, jumped out quickly and ran
over to give the patrolman a big
hug. For good reason. A Southern
·Pacific Co. commuter train had
been approaching and smashed the
car to pieces seconds after she ·jumped out. •
To Ask Cutback?
Nixon Expected
To Sign Tax Bill
W ASHJNGTON (UPI) -President
Nlnn may ask C()ngJ'eN lo take back
some of lta cenerostty to the American
taxpayer, but he Is considered virtually
certain to aJgn into law the tax rtfonn
bill. Jt ftUld begin cutting everyone'.
tuea 10 days from now.
By margins so swollen they almo!'.
defied a veto, both chambers Monda~
capped a yw'1 effort in an afternoon's
oratory and aent to Nixon one of lta ma-
jor achle-vements of the year - a bill
that eventually cull taxes by $9.1 billkln,
ralJes Soet.J Security benefit. by 15 per-
cent and narrows some tu loopholes that
have been the target of reformers for
Manson Still
Wants to Be
Own Attorney
LOS ANGELES CAP) -Charles M.
Manson insists he wants to defend
himself from charge! of murdering ac·
tl'ells Sharon Tate and s.11 others, declar-
ing he can do it better than any lawyer.
The long-haired, bearded cult leader in
J>U.rple shirt and gold trousers, spent'_30
nunutes Monday trying to convince
Superior Court Judge William B. Keene
he should be pennitted to act as hi:I own
counsel
The judge, apparently unconvinced ,
postponed his decb:lon unUI Wednesday,
MeanWhile, Keene said, he would appoint
a lawyer to advise Manson.
?.1anson, JS, agreed, aaying: "I don't
want to fight with the judge. I belie~e
he's sincere."
The cult leader and four followers are
accused of the Tate killings Aug. 8, and
the same five plus a girl cultist are
charged with killing a Los Angeles
market owner and his wife the following
night.
yurr.
The House, acting Hrst, approved the
bill 381 to 2. The Senate followed that, 71-
6, with the "no" votes coming froi;n
Republicans who considered the bill too
Inflationary and too costly.
If Congress adjourns this week 1s plan·
,ed and returns Jan. 19, Nixon has 10
daya from v;tien the bill actually reaches
hi m to decide tu fate. If he does nothing,
the bill would die, the victim of a pocket
veto.
It 't\.'ould require a t~·o-thirds vote by
each House to enact the bill into law ove r
·a veto. Monday 's voles were big enough
to override a veto, but the President
could convert some Republicans to his
side If he rejects the bill.
In his last news ronference, Nixon said
he would veto the bill if it came to him
the way it first emerged from the l;)enate
-with the 15 pe rcent Social Security
boost and an $800 personal income lax
exemption effective in 1971.
But a House-Senate conference com·
mittee then put more muscle in the bill's
ta1 reforms and toned down the tax cut
so that the exemptkm rises only to $650
starting next July 1 and does not reach
$7fl0 until 1973.
l\othing in the bill affects the taxes the
average individual will pay next Apr11 l5
on income he earned this year.
But taxpayers would start seeing the
bill's effects reflected in their first
paychec ka in January when the income
tax surcharge, now 10 percent, fall& to 5
percent. After six months at that rate, it
cexplres for good.
The surtax would die Jan. 1 if Ninm
does not sign the bill -one factor likely
to influence him to sign the bill. His new
budget is based on the assumption that
the surtax will continue for the first hall
of next year. The surcharge was first
enacted during the J o h n s o n ad·
ministration as a weapon against in-
fla tion.
i\1oreover, the bill ultimately recoups
$3 .3 billion a year for the government hy
killing the investment tax credit -a 7
percent tax subs idy for the expenditures
by businesses and farmers on expansion,
equipment and modernization . The ad·
ministration is eager to end the tax
credit.
Kathy Afay not only got a friendly
bear hug when she visited Gentle Ben
at Hornosassa Springs, Fla., she got
a bear-sited imooch too. TV 's Gen-
tlt Btn i.s prestntly appearing at th is
west coast Ftorida resort • The Betty Jane t1emorial Reha·
bilitation Ce nter at Tiffin is offer·
ing free services to any Ohioans
"planning to become handicapped"
in auto accidents over the Christ-
mas and New Year's holi days.
Jeke Pool, executive director of
the private cen'l:er, sai d prospec-
tive patients co ul d arrange for the
services by filling out application
forms five days in advance of an--
ticipated acciden ts. 1"The general
public doe s not realize that deaths
are not the largest problem from
accidents," said Pool. "If you're
planning to become handicapped,
at least plan to be rehabilitated so
that your family will not suffe:·
from your mistake."
"~fy life is at stake and maybe the
lives of fo ur or five other people,"
P.lanson told the court. "The re is no
lawyer in the world who can represent
me. The news media have already ex-
ecuted and buried me."
Two of Manson's codefendant.s also
made brief appearances before Keene.
Wlie Van Houten, 19, who is accused
of murder in only the knife slayings of
~fr. and Mrs. Leno LaB lanca the night
after the Tate killings, pleaded innocent.
Her trial was set for Feb. 9.
Privately, members of both parties
thought Nixon would sign the bill but
warn he may have to ask Congress lo
tone down the bigger personal exemptlori'·~·
before it fully goes into effect. He could
save considerable money, for example,
by asking that it be kept at $700 in 1972
instead at going to $750' the following
year.
""'""""'"""'".,,.,.~31~·-~<o•~·~.,,~uu~""u"'cr
I
Christma& turkey co&t nince
pence a. pound more in London
this sea&on becaus e an epidemic
of Asian jiu put poultry pLttek-
t r& in bed nnd slowed .tupplie&
of birds to tht shops.
• Pauline Raiche of Manchester.
N.Y. told police someone cut down
and took a fir from her back yard,
leaving this note : "\Ve needed a
Christmas tree tonight. We spot-
ted this one. So \Ve borrowed it,
and we will return the tree after
Christmas. We thank you very
much and wish you a Merry Christ-
mas and a Happy New Year. Sign-
ed: The Christmas Phantoms.
Dodd Won't Be Prosecuted
In Campaign Funds Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Juslice
Department has complet.ed Its in·
vestigation into the financial affaln cf
Sen. Thomas J. Dodd CO.Conn.), anc'
rleclded that no criminal proseeution wa
\\'arranted.
The decision was revealed today In
letter to Edward Bennett Willia m
Dodd's attorney. from Attorney Gene r:
John N. Mitchell.
The letter said "This is to inform )'O
that the United States will institute n:.
criminal prosecution against you r clie nt.
"This decision by the department ls
based upon the re<:ommendaUons of the
staff of the tax division and the assistant
attorney general in charge of the tax
division and the staff of the criminal
division and the assis tant attorney
general in charge of the criminal
division. that no criminal prosecution ls
warranted ."
Williams read the letter lo reporters at
a news conference in the Capitol after
Dodd said the Justice Department
't'Clsion cleared him of any wrongdoing.
Twin investigations by the Internal
Revenue Service and the Justice Depart·
11ent v.·ere Instituted after the Senate
·ensured Dodd for conve rting campaign
'<lntributions to his personal use .
Dodd sid he had "been subjected tc the
lost intensive investigation on every
Jcet of my life" and he was "grateful''
t the outcome. He said he still planned
:o seek rulection next year.
The Connecticut senator, with Williams
at his side, met 'newsmen in the Senate
press gallery and said it was "a lie" tha t
the Justice Department had held the
Internal Revenue investigation over his
head during the vote on Judge Clement
F. Haynsworth's nomination to th e
Supreme Court.
Dodd said there "wasn't a scintilla of
truth" in reports that he would have vot-
ed for Haynsworth If his vote had been
necessary to win him conUnnaUon. As it
turned out, Dodd's vote was not needed
and he opposed the nominal.ion.
Snow Paralyzes Wide Area
Chicago Hard Hit; Warnings Up Over Six States
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NAVY CREWS WORK TO REMOVE CHARRED WRECKAGE OF F-8 CRUSADER
11 Parsons Died Wht n Jet Craahad Into Han91r at Mlram1r Naval Air Station
213 Boys Escaped Death
They Could Have Been in Hangar Whe1i Plane Hit
SAN DIEGO (AP) -A disabled,
pilotless Navy jet fighter "could not have
hit at a worse place" lhe fire chief sajd
mournfully as he surveyed the naval
hangar where 11 men were killed and 14
injured.
The jet, abandoned by its pilot who.
parachuted to safety after reported oil
* * * Navy Releases
Partial List
Of Jet Victims
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The foJlowing is
a partial list of the dead and injured in
~1onday 's jet crash at the Miramar
Naval Alr Slatlon which killed 11 and in·
jured 14.
Dt>ad :
I. Airman Apprentice Christopher L.
1-!unter, Vist a, Calif.
2. Petty Officer 3.C. Donald E. 1fcGee,
San Diego.
3. Petty Officer 3.C. Gerald D. Leask,
San Diego.
4, P.1aster Chief Petty Officer Joe A.
HasUngs, Ramona, Calif.
5. Kenneth A. Hecht, San Diego.
Injured :
I. Petty Officer 3.C. John R. Hunter,
Visla, Calif.
2. Lt. Cmdr. William F. Emery, San
Diego.
3. Chief Warrant Officer 2.C. John R.
Champion, San Diego.
4. Petty Officer 1.C. Sank Thomas, San
Diego.
5. Petty Officer Richard C. Boniella,
Sin Diego.
6. Chief Petty Officer Leroy K. White,
Escondido, Calif.
7. Petty Officer 2.C. Enrico Bunabe,
S.::n Diego.
8. Petty Officer 3.C. Ralph A. Little,
Ne1~; York City.
9. Petty Officer 2.C. Thomas P.
Loughrlge, Escondido, Calif.
10. Airman Timothy F. Weyer, Albu·
querque. N.M.
11 . Petty Off icer 2.C. Forrest R.
Anderson, Riverside.
12. Petty Officer 3.C. Robert L. Moaley,
Madisonvi lle, Tex.
A.rah Rockets
Hit Settlements
Near Lebanon
TEL AVIV (AP) -Rocket. frred by
Arab guerrillas from inside Jordan and
Lebanon streaked aCTOSJ the Jordan
River and hit an Israeli setUement near
the Lebanese border today, the ISraeli
command said.
l.sraeli jets attacked guerrilla targets
near the Jordan River In a 30-mlnute
retaliatory raid, Israeli witnf.s$ff said.
The Israelis said Lebantse-based
rocketJ: crashed Into the settlement or
Klryat Shmona on the LebJnese border,
damaging a school house and a residern.
No t'uualtles were reported.
Thee Palestine ruerrUla command in
Amman said the ~ts from Jordan
took "a heovy toll i>I prop«ty ond lives"
In stltlemenLs north and south of t})t Sea
of Galilee ; the lsr1eUs 11id they fell
h1rmlessly in the water.
The JordMiana: said several lsraell Jets:
raided vlllagCTS In the northern J ordan
Valley and damaged two clv1Uan cars.
The rocket attack hit an tlfea north or
Bethlehem, \\'here an en.imated 10,000
Chrlsllan pilgrims con verged on lhe
U8'ually quiel town, the traditional
birlhplaef! cf Christ.
tsral!JI comma.ndoS struck Into Egypt
again l\tcnday night and fired mortars at
an Egyptian naval hue on the Red Sta
t'oast, the Israeli command said. It was
the sceond raid on en Ej:Yptian m»itary
inslalletlon In five deys.
pressure trouble, slammed into e hangar
full of aircraft and mechanics Mond61y at
Miramar Naval Air Station.
A group of 213 school safety patrol boys
would have been inside the hangar. a
Navy spokesman said today, but a last·
minute change of plans in their tour took
them elsewhere when the plununeting
plane hit.
"Luck is luck." one of the youngsters
frcm nearby Chula Vista said with a
shrug.
The pilot of the single-seat FBJ
Crusader sajd he reported the malfunc·
tion. then ejected at 400 feet altitude
about half a mile east of the runway.
The aircraft "could not have hit at a
v;orse place," said Bill Knight, base fire
chief. "Not only was there a congestion
of personnel, but also there were
numerous aircraft.''
The pilot, Lt. Cyrus :t.f. Riddell, 27, of
San Diego and Bellevue, Wash., was in·
jured. He told ne~·smen he bailed out
when oil pressure "had gone down
dangerously low."
Asked if he could have prev ented the
plane from hitting lhe han gar, he said: "l
can't an swer that," and walked away.
A Navy spokesman said Ri ddell and
persons Inside the hangar could not talk
to newsmen because they would be testi·
lying before an investigaticn board .
Navy Cmdr. J. P. Vinti, the pilot's
squadron leader, said R1dde\I had follow-
ed his training.
"He felt he could not make the runway
and so at 450 feet in the air, he did what
he was trained lo do. He re ached up and
ejected . The rest is history," Vinti said.
About 60 mtn and a dozen aircraft
were inside the 70-square-yard hangar
bay some 1,800 feet north of the runway.
The 45,000-pound Crusader cleared about
50 parked aircraft and cra shed through
the partially open hangar doors at a
speed of about 2.50 miles an hour, the
Navy said.
About 30 mechanics were working on
six F4J Phantom jet fighters parked
along the north sid e of the hangar. The
Crusader plowed under two of them,
struck the wall and exploded in fla mes.
Five of the Phantoms -planes which
survived last January's explosions on the
carrier Enterprise off Hawaii -were
destroyed and one other was damaged.
Navy offi cia ls estimated damage t()
aircraft and the hangar at more than $20
million.
Bombers Hit Supply Trails
As Viet Cong Truce Begins
SAIGON (UPI ) -Eight annadas of
B52 bombers raided infiltration trails
leading toward Saigon today before the
beginning of the Viet Cong 's three~ay
truce for Christmas.
'The bombers dropped a total of 800
Wns of bombs onto the routes north and
northwest of Saigon after allied officials
preciicted the guerrillas would violate
their own truce with attacks around
Saigon.
. . Liberation Radio. the Viet Cong broad-
cast outlet, said the Communist stand-
dov.·n would begin at I a.m. Saigon timce
Wednesday (9 a.m. today PST), v..ith all
attacks suspeoded.
The U.S. and South Vietn amese com-
mands announced their troops would con·
tinue all offensive operation until the 24-
hour allied truti! takes effect 17 hours
later and even then would send out
patrols.
"There will be no long-ran&e type
patrols but we will send out patrols near
positions cf our units so the tmll• can
keep alerted," a U.S. military spokesman
sa id. "\Ile will only stop att.acking the
enemy."
The B52 bombers raided in three pro-
\'inces between the Cambodian border
and Saigon as communiques reported
light combat, with one major battle in·
vclving South Vietnamese troops in the
~tekoog Delta.
The Viet Cong shelled 17 targets during
the night and ahot dov.•n two more U.S.
helicopters, headquarters 1ald. The
copters went down 87 miles northeast and
20 miles southwest or Saigon, killin& two
Americans and wounding four.
Dope for Gls
15,000 Cheer Comedi.an's Visit
Cl! CHI, Vietnam (UPI) -Bob Hope
brought his Chrlstm1s road show to this
25th lnfanlry Division camp today and
told an aud ience of 15,000 Gls they were
1 last year's winners in the draft lottery.
"One guy offered to bet the govern·
ment double or nothing," th e SS.year-old
comedian said. "He's now stationed at
Fort Benning and Fort Dix."
Wearing jungle fa tigues, red Ranger
beret and master sergeant stripes, Hope
staged a two and one-half hour show at
this outpost 20 miles northwest of Saigon
with hls 83-member troupe, lncludlng
astronaut Neil Armstrong.
In the audience were Adm. John S.
McCain, eommande.r of the U.S. Pac.Ifie
Fleet; Lt Gen . Jul!lJI J, Ewell, com-
mancfer of 100.000 American troops In the
provlncts around Sai1on, 25th Divtaion
Commander Maj, Gen. Ha.nil Hollia and
other high-ranking U.S. ofnctrs.
Seattd 20 feet from the VIP delegation
was a Gt In a leg cast with 1 brl1ht red
peace symbol pafnled on Jt
ttope told the Gls the pe11ce lalks Jn
Paris were 1•1oln1 great-then the North
Vielnamese showed up."
He said that "going to Parl1 to talk
about Vietnam Is llkt going to the Vat-
ican to talk about girls."
Arrnatrong, flrst man to walk on the
moon, appeared In fatigue pants and a
yellow T-shirt bearing the v.·ords "Chltu
HoL" The latter is Vie tnamesl! for "Optn
Arm s," the government program under
which Communist deserters are gi'H:n
asylum.
Annstrong's tour with the Hope lrOUJ>f.
was arranged by Vice Presidl!tlt Spiro T.
Angew in his capacity as chief of Qiti
National Space Program. Armstrong was
in Bangkok on a good will mission when
he joined the J!ope tntourage for the ™l
of the trip. .
"Ifs man·s nature to explore the dn-
kno't\.11," the Apollo 11 spaetman t0Id Hope. '
"You don't have lo tell these: guyf,"
Hope said. •·Thf:y eat Jn the mw hill
every day." 1
"You weren't one of the funniut 1rtr~
na.uLs," the comedian said.
"Well, Bob, there are some of us who
:~\~~~elr:l~~d. Idiot (cue) c.ard~,n
Other mtm btrs of the Hope cast thla
ytar Include the Les Brown band. 1lnger-
11ctress Connie Stevtns. 1lngt.r-da n&r
Teresa Craves of the "Laugh·ln'' t~e.
vision show, d1ncer Suza.Me Charny ~
th e 12·§irl dance grou p "Tht Co'h1·
diggers .'
'
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JODEAN HASTINGS, '42"4311
I nia.a.~, Olc•llW U. lfff M , .. ~I ..
New
Santa Claus already has begu n filling Qilj~tmas stockings in
Huntington Jnterconununity Hospital.
Babies born during this week \viii be taken home in bright red
holiday stocking buntings which are being supplied by members of the
Silver Anchor Auxlliary.
?\1rs. Robert Lapgner, project chairman for .the auxiliary, ha!
been conducting monthly \vorkshops for members making the stock·
ings and the terry cloth puppets given to children in the pediatrics
sectio n.
Other touches of Christmas \vhich the auxiliary has brought to
the hospital are the decorations in the main lobby and pediatrics, with
the majority of the decorations either handmade or donated by mem·
hers, and Christmas tray favors for each of the patierrts. ·
These projects for special occasions are carried on throughout
the year under the. chairmanship of Mrs. Fred Nesbitt . • The auxiliary,',vhi ch received its official sanc,.tion from the Na-
tional Ass istance League little n1ore than a year ago, has become an
integral part of the hospital 's nonprofessional staff.
Members serve year-round to staU the informa tion des k. handle
baby photo sales. conduct children's tours of the hospital, operate the
bookmobile and deliver flowers and mail.
Cam P. Fire Gi rls Fill 'Their ' Family's Cupboa rds
...... ..., ...... ~ .. ,..,. .... .._......~, ..
•
STOCKiNG STUFFERS -Providin g their first Christmas s'tock-
ing for ne'v babies born this w~ek in l~untington .1.ntercom~uni!Y
Hospital are: members of the Silver Anchor Auxiliary. Attired 1n
th eir cheery Christmas stoCking bunting are twins April and Crys-
tal and admiring. the new twins are (left to right) Mrs. William
Davi dson . grandmother ; Mrs. Ted Davidson, mother, and Mrs.
Robert Langner, auxiliary member.
Surf Sounds
Charity League . ' Parties
By JODf:AN HASTINGS
01 IN 0 1Hy "H-' 11111
l\.fEJ\.fBERS OF THE. Na-
lional Charity League, South
Coast Chapter, were among
the partygoers who gathered
fo r the ill·f.a~ boat, parade in
Huntington HarbOur. Missing
the parade·bi.it· enjoying a buf-
fet dinner ib the Allen Hughes
home were ·some•80 members
from Seal Beach. Huntington
Beach, Long Beach a n d
Rossmoor. In charge' of plan-
ning the event were the 1'.tmes .
Herald Piper, Ewing T .
Turner. John Paralieu and
Elmer· Bevan .
League member Mary Haug
and husband Chet couldn't at-
tend that Rarty because they
were hosting a tradilional af-
fair of their own, and Mary
reported 'it was a mighty
shaken Chuck George who ar-
rived aHut 10:30 p.m.
Ht..aftd two other ·fathers
had approximately 15 swim-'
ming team youngsters aboard
the ream's entry, lost in the
fog for two or thret hours.
narrate The Nati vity for Foun-bicycle · riding Thanksgiving
taln Valley's first Christmas anrl a fall resulted in a serious
Tree Lighting. She we nt leg fracture and operation.
Blue Birds and Camp Fire Girls from fi ve troops will enjoy their
Christmas more knowing they are sharing with a needy family.
The gir1 s raised $15 to contribute to Operation l\.1erry Christmas
&ponsored by the Assistance League of Huntington Beach and the
Recreation Department. Shopping for a fescive feast are Kelly
Howell (left) and Dawn Christensen. Troop leaders are the Mmes.
Dale Smith, Armando Gonzales, Ronald Christiansen, Jack Howell
and Paul Pulasky.
COJ\.1 MANDEERING
every thing lhat rolls are
members of the Assistance
League z1d volunteers from
the Recreation Department.
Today is delivery day for
Operation Merry Christmas,
and according to Lorene
Penhall, chairman. "65 more
families have been added to
this year's list. The league
still is accepting money con-
tributions t.o help derray some
of the addiUonal expenses.
WHEELCHAIR and all, Did-
dy Lammers still turned out to
WHAT P~RADE? ~ Waiting in vain for the bOat
parade are (left to right) the Mmes. Richard Torrib,
Norman Haney, Allen Hughes and Carl· Atterberry
members of the South Coast Chapter, Natioo8l
Charity League.
Legali.ty Questioned When Judge Forgets to Question Pa .ir
EAR. ANN LANDERS : Recently, in
sponse to qu&y,, you sakl you .knew of
slate in the union where two wome n
ld·.be legally marrii:d. This .1!· to in·
you that two women 1'!'ere married
SiOllx-Falls.,S.D. on Valentine's-O;ay or
ls year, They now are trying to get a
VOl't'e in ~finneapolis.
plaintiff is a 23-fcar-old woman
cla1ms slle was legally marrlt:d to
r U.year-old girlfriend by a Circvit
rt judge in Sioux }:alls. 1'he judge in·
ts he. has no recollt:ctlon of ·Jhe mer-
ge and added. ''The.r.e fT\USt have been
ud and misrtpresenUlfion in obt aini ng
..
comes to htm with a license, ht doesn"t
ask queslions.
"I assume nne i~ a boy and the other is
a girl," he added. I UlOtlghl you'd like to
know the latest. -C.R.
... •
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Sinct you are
part. of the ·problem maybe yoo can help
aolve It. •
smiles. Sometimes he laughs. steps his
knee and yells, "That's a beaut!"
'l'wjce last week he cut out your column
before he returned the J>aper. I was so
mad l got indigesUon.
ls there a tactful way to solve this pro-
blem? -O.U.B.
• DEAR D.U.8 : Type the follow·lng
message on a 11lp of paper •nd clip It to
the front p11ge. "To Whom It t.fay
Concern : Please rr:lum Intact. Tht items
you want to cul out arti I.be ones I buy Ille.
paper to read. nank you. Tbe Owner.''
message lo millions of well-meaning
parents who are damaging their children.
I am referring to the way they deal with
lhe child who stutten.
Most children between the ages of 3
and S stutter somewhat when they rirst
learn lo speak. This Is normal. Parent.~
ort~ ftar the stuttering Is going to be
permanent. so they interrupt and say,
"Stop! Start over! Don't telk so fsllt."
·of spetth. Every time yoo say ''.uh-or
err •• '•you, too..are stuttering, onJrln a
m9re grown up way. So, )'OU see, we all
stutter at some time, in some fashion. -NO ELA .
DEAR NOELA • Tbank you lot 1 ldter
wlUcb lltould be lmmtately ltelpfal it 1
1re1t many reldcr1. Btt•uw , .. wrote,
several thousand kid! are going tO t•
press themselves unlnterrupftd ioa1pt.
and that's a1 It •bould be.
the license." He said when a couple
DEAR C. R.: Someone sboald Inform
, tbe Jt1«t&e that thtse d11y1, lt'1 1omewhat
rh1ky to as1ume ''ont Is • bot ud Ute
othtr 15 • ctrt." Jt'1 bat to ask.
Eyery morning 1 stop at the ne\vsstand
and buj a paper so I can read Y9Ur col·
umn during coffee break. The bosi comes
by regUlarl1 and '1boirdws"ithe paper. I
cM see him from my desk :.:.. 'he goes
alralibL lot )'OW' column. Sometlmeg.be
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I'm a sptteh
lher1pist. Please help me deliver 1
If you are a parent who is guilty o(
thl5, please slop doing it. Simply Ignore
the chi\d'.s stuttering. It \11 a phase he.,,,,ill
probably outgrow. If. by the lime he is 6
years of age he is still stuttering, take
him lo a speech the.rapist. Remember
that 1tutterina ia 1 break 1n the fluency
Ann t..o.nder1 wlll be glad to help.you
with your problems. Send them to,her in
c•rt or the DAILY PILOT, enclosin&.
acU-addrtlled, stamped envelope.
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Teacups Overflowing With Toys for CHOC
,
Santa's sack became even heavier following the December meet-pital of Orange County for Christmas. Shopping for the meeting
ing of the Little 1'.1ermaid Guild of Huntington Beach. Members which took place in the Huntington Harbour home of Mrs. Harry
and friends contri buted to filling it by bri~ging _brig~tly w~apped Okuda are (left to right) Mrs. Max: S. Schreiber, Mrs. James
toys and gifts to be presented the small patients m Children s Hos-Ridenour and Mrs. Ralph Neilsen.
MRS. EVAN WILLIAMS
Honeymoon in Mexico
Twrvl119 l"llelt
Harborites Say Vows
In Santa Ana · Rites
ried a cascade of orchids.
~------------'---------------
Horoscope
Aquarius: Be L·enient
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 24
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-Apr11 19):
The comfort of knowing plans
are f,1 order should prevail.
Otherwise, seek aid from
older. knowledgeable peson.
Key is organization. Then you
can enjoy holidar. spirit.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Y o u may feel put upon by
relative s , neighbors.
Remember, it is actually good
to give-perhaps even better
than to receive. Discomfort is
but temporary. Smile.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Children who appear to act in
eccentric manner are merely
responding to holiday ex·
citement. Be patient. Last-
minute shopping could wreck
budget plans. But it may be
worth it.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Excitement centers around
home base, There are minor
disagreements. nourished by
general confusion. 'This can, in
po sitive manner, be
stimulating. Have fun -chase
gloom.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): you
do best by allowing others to
express opinions freely. No~
easy for you to remain in
background-but, for sake of
harmony, do so.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Friends will be presenting you
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy r.boto-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received following the wedding
\vill not be used .
For engagement announcements it is
imperative th at the S'lory, also accompanied
by a black and \Vhite glos sy picture, be sub-
1nitted six \veeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
ding and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of. the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women 's Section staff members at 6424321
or 494-9466.
with gifts. Check your own
list. Av o Id embarrassing
moments by being thorough.
Some details tend to escape
attention. UJlless you are
persislent.
LIBRA /Sept. 23-0<:t. 22):
Air of excitement is featured.
Your personal magnetism is
electric. You impres s;
prestige rises. Make the most
of what could be a wonderful
evening.
SCORPIO (Oct. 2.J.Nov. 21 ):
Be a good listener, observer.
Keep promise to one who may
be at a distance. Get call
through early. Enter into holi-
day~. spirit in meaningful,
spiritual manner.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 22-
Deci;; 21): Minor dispute con-
ceralng finances should not be
~lofb out of proportion. Many
around you exhibit changes of
mood. Don't compound error.
Adhere to promises, prin-
ciples. ·
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22.Jan.
19): Strengthen ties of af-
fect.ion. Know that one who
may seem indifferent does
have your wellare at heart. Be
mature, analytical. Then this
becomes happy, constructive
evening.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Friend who b life or par-
ty may be covering emotional
~·ound. Be lenient. But also be
finn when you know enough ll·
quld refreshment has been
served.
PISCES (Feb. I9·March 20):
Office party can be fun . But
don't take too seriously things
that are aaid, done. Obtain
hint from Aquarius message.
Degree or moderation is
definilely advised.
Vosburgh-Buck Vow$
Exchanged
MJIJT!td In Our Lady of
~1ount Carmel C a tho 1 I c
Cburch, Newport Beach, were
Carolyn Irene Buck of Balboa
Island and David Wayne
Vosburgh. The Rev. Francis
Kelly officiated.
Parents of the bridal couple
are Led N. Buck of Phoenix
and the late Mrs. Buck and
Mr. and ?\lrs. William
Vosburgh of Laguna Niguel.
The bride wore a floor
length gown of satin wiUt lace
trim. Matching lace fo~
her headpiece and she carried
stephanotis and orchids.
P.tiss Jennifer Buck was her
sister:s maid oC honor, and
another sister, ~liss Theresa
Buck was the bridesmaid.
They wore purple velvet
gowns and carried nosegays of
stephanotis.
Serving as best man was
Samuel Stangl, and ushers
were Dr. Jerry Gardner and
Thomas Tucker.
A reception followed in the
home of the bridegroom's
parents. After a Hawaiian
honeymoon, the newlyv.·cd.s
\Viii reside in Santa Ana.
The bride received her BA
in elementary education from
Arizona State Univer sity
"'here she pledged Chi Omega
and was tapped for Mortar
Board. She teaches iD Orange.
Her husband earned his BS
in business administration at
San Jose State College where
he affiliated with D el t a
Upsilon.
Happiness
Is Doing
For Others
Happiness is doing for
others. This is the belief of
members oi Orange District,
California Federation of
Women's Clubs.
Membei-s ol the 38 clut. are
rememberi(lg children, service
men . hi Vie\iam and at home
and•senior citizens. lndians on
Ariuma reservations a re
receiving more than 1000
pouods of clothing, boxes or
food, toys and blankets: :Money
is being sent to Danny Davey
for transportation of these
articles.
Clubwom-en al5o are
decorating Christmas trees in
the wards at Veterans
Hospilal, Long. Beach. Seven·
teen clubs have donated
almost ,l,~ for the veterans'
use.
Costa Mesa Women's Club' is
furnishing food for Christmas
baskets.
Styles Knotted
The top or the fashion pie·
ture from right now on into
spring is the top-knot
hairstyle.
Make yours with a fall of
real or synthetic hair U your
own isn't Jong enough. ;;=;;;II
• Newport
I i" f' '·
MRS. DAVID W. VOSBURGH
Hawaiian Honeymoon
• -• • • -. . -. -. -.
"How can I look a si1e smaller and
still feel perfectly c.omfortabl•7"
In l ilyette's exciting new '"Com·
fort Wire" bra with positive con•
frol and supr•m• comfort.
Sherita Lynn Lipscomb and
Evan Paul William s ex-
changed vows and rings before
the Rev. Charles Smith in
Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana.
Assisting with the ceremony
w3s Dick Day.
Parents of thE' bridal l'Ouple
are Dr. and P.trs. Joseph K.
Lipscomb of Newport Beach
and Dr. and fl.1rs. Francis
Williams of Corona del P.1ar.
Lavender chiffon over blue.
white and lavender print
gowns and bouquets or white
orchids were selected for Miss
Tori Lipscomb , the bride's
sister and maid of honor, and
for the bridesmaids, P.1iss
Jean \Vi\liam s. the
bridegroom's sister. !\liss Beth
G\iessman and 1-irs. P.tichael
t.1oore.
·ftLilyette
Given in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
· of ivory and gold !'ialin design·
ed empire style with a
cathedral t.raiil. Her veiling
was caught to a headpiece of
matching fabric, and ihe car-
Sign Your
'Footprints'
In Bath room
AUending his brother as
best man was Brl:an \Villiams,
while ushers were the bride's
brother, Chris Lipscomb, Dan
O'Brien and Sieve Toby. P.1rs.
Orvin Barber "'as the
candlelighter and Susan Pyle,
flower girl.
Follo"'ing a reception for 200
In the home of the bride's
parents. the newlyweds left on
a hCJ11cymo0n to Cuernavaca.
P.·lcxico.
The bride. a graduate of
Brethren High School. Para-
1nount. i.!1 a student al Biola
College, La Mirada. Her hus-
band is a studen~ at Orange
Want to give a gift loward,-;:C=Qa=st=Co=ll='eg'=e=. =====.II bathroom safety~ 1.
Tiny new "footprints" ad·
here to the bottom ol the tub
to pr<vent sllpplng ••• by lhe
tidJ •.• a senior clUzen •••
a tired mom.
The print! ar~ like applique,
and ~ self-adhesive. Apply
to a clean, dry tub surface.
They come in n\•e shndes-
pink, green, blue, yellow and
while, 10 to a package.
I Buy The DAILY PILOT
1 'Just for 'Peanuts'
• I
LET'S BE fllENDLY
It you bave MW nol&hbort
or know or anyone moving
to our area. pl~ase tell ua
so that w• may ext.end a
f'Hcndly welcome and help
them to bttome acqua1ntcd
In 1 heir new su.1TOundinp.
So. Coast Visitor
494-4579
494.9368
Harbor Visitor
••
MORALE BUILDERS
Diamond Glycine watches in
14 karat gold with new Baguette look.
Left, brushed finish. $395.
Right, polished finish, $295.
Center. Textured finish. $250.
Enl•rged IO lhow dl1td.
SLAVICK'S
Jew1le1&$1nc111111
18 ' FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT BEACH -b44.J l80
.--1 ~ '~ .'i'..,. ~ I
ALL THE· PLAYMATES AT-PLAYBOY, !
WISH YOU All ~
A I
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THERE'S DOUILE MAGIC IN l!LYETTE'S NEW "COMFORT
WIRE" RONDEAU ••. PERFECT SEPARATION WITH HEAVEN·
LY COMFORT. LILYETTE'S FEATHER-LIGHT FLAT UNDER-WIRE
NOT ONLY CREATES BEAUTIFUL YOUNG UPLIFT AND SEPAR..
ATION, BUT DOES SO WITH THE MOST WONODEttFUL FR.EE·
DOM OF MOTION. iaQSITIVELY CANNOT PINCH, POKE OR
R.UB. THE EXCLUSIVE DESIGN FOR.MS A SOFT CR.ADLE
AROUND THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF THE BUST. NOW FULL
I , C, AND D CUP FIGURES CAN CA,TURE THE YOUNG. SLIM
LOOIC. RONDEAU IS BEAUTIFULLY MADE IN WEH;HTLESS,
EASY.CARE NYLON LAC E DELICATELY SCALLO,ED OVER NY.
LON MARQUISETTE WITH DACRON ELASTIC AND SEMI.
CIRCULAR STITCHED CUPS. AVAILABLE IN NUDE. BLUE, PINK,
YELLOW. WHITl. OR BLACK. B AND C CUP, ,,10. DANO DD
CUP, 1.10.
fashions for ...
F-a,hiOn 1,land, Newport Bea,h
Ston•wood C•nter, Oown•y
o,,~ lfHll'lfl 'HI t ''"''
l1111k•IMf"lc9". Mcnttt Qorfe. a.. h"""9 C ....
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'Fountain l'aHey T..._y'•_...... .
N.Y. StHb •
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• ~OL ~2. N0.,306, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PA~ES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA". .. , TUESDAY, DECEMB ER 23, "69 TEfitCENTS __ ..;;_ _______________________ ·---------------------~----------·-·-.. --------
OAIL't ,ILOT .. ,... bJ Tim Ctlw1ti.
LT. LE S ROWLAND INSP ECTS DO.IT-YOURSELF RANG E
Valley Pistol Facility May Be Open to Public Use
Valle y Police Start Work
Q.µN ew Pistol, Rifl~Range
In the near ~uture t.he crack of pistol
and ,small bore rifle fire will echo across
Fountain V~lley.
Th.at future date hasn't yet been
det.enriined, but the Fountain Valley
Police . Department has already :;tarted
construction on the police firing range
where it will happen.
"We don't know when it will be ready ,"
says· Lt~ Marvin Fortin, "there are t;io
many ifs involved."
Police officers themselves are building
the range. They hope t~ fin~ some expert
mtt.fr~e, Pelp w.hich would spetd up con·
stntction. Once completed the fl~ing
range.will serve police officers as well as
youth of I.he city in controlled competi·
tiC1n.
The range is under construction on the
city 's equipment yard at Talbert Avenue
and Ward Street. It will be enclosed by a
12-foot high solid concrete waft, perhaps
the largest free standing block wal1 ip
0range County, said Lt. Fortin. On one
end a l3·foot high, 38-foot thick dirt berm
will be built lo stop bullets.
Members of FounLain Valley's police
officers association have colle_c;:ted $3,000
Schools Se t Quiz
9n Edison High
' ' f Body Awa reness . . • • An investigation into.J'bocjy awareness''
for its construction. They've already
started Ule base of the block wait.
.!\ bulldi~g will. house classes, eQuip-
ment and restrooms. "Our men now go to
the Orange Coynty .Sher,iff's1range once a
morith.for pistol practice," said ·Fortin.
"Once it's-complete, we 'can do our
practice here and we .can allow youth
groups to hold ·competitive and team
Shooting matches here," he added.
Youth instruction in fil'tanns safety
and shooting is anothe' part of the pr~
gram planned for the firing range.
Capt. Harbo1u·
Services Set
Funeral services for Seal Beach police
captain Raymond E. Harbour, 61, who
died Sunday, will be held at 11 a.m.
\Vednesday at Boone-Reno Mortuary,
Long Beach.
Harbour, a member oC the Seal Beach
police force Cor 19 years, was stricken by
a heart attack, Su,tday in his home at 1520
Ocean Ave. He was transported to
Pacific Hospital,tLons Beach, where he
di'ed \he same alte.r®On.
He ls survived by'hls widow Alice, and
two sons, Richard, Seal Beach, and Alan,
Los Ang-eles.
A naUve of Burlington, Colo., Harbour
moved to Seal Beach in 1950. Ht rose to
the rank of sergeant and was' appointed
~ptain in 1956.
Harbour, who was slaJ.ed lfor reUremenl
1n June, 1970, after 20 years of service,
has been credited with ~ modernization 61 the pplice deparbnent by his fellow of·
ricers.
Valley Woman Recovers
Pancreas Transpl«nt Makes · Medica l His tory
By TERRY COVIlLE
Of tllf 0111)' Plltt Slf"
M;·s. Cara Raniey's cperation has
become another milestone in medical
history.
Doctors at Orange County Medical
Center expressed the hope Monday that
the rare transplant of a pancreas (along
with a kidney) into the Huntington Beach
housewife Thursday will prove to be
anolher step toward eventual cure of cer·
l.iin diabetic conditions.
She was only 10th perscn in the world
to reciive the pancreas of another
pl!rson.
Mrs. Ramey is still listed in critical
Hanoi Approval
Awaited for GI
Captives' Gifts
'
BANGKOK, Thailand (UPI) -A
jetliner loaded with Christmas diMers
and gifts for American prisoners in North
Vietnam arrived here today and the Tex-
as Santa Claus sponsoring the project
said he was sure the Communists would
approve it.
"I am very optimisti c that Hanoi will
allow us to land there," said H-Ross
Perot, the 39·year-old Dallas millionaire
who is chainnan of United We Stand, the
citizens group behind the $600,000 airlift.
Perot said the chartered Braniff
jetliner, nicknamed "Peace iln Earth,"
\\'ould remain in Bangkok until Hanoi
answers his cabled request for landing
permission. ·
Asked what he would do if the project
were vetoed, Perot safd~·""fliftfer not tr
talk about that because I am very op--
Umistic they will accept it."
Perot said a second chartered plane,
nicknamed "Goodwill on Earth," would
stand by in Los Angeles until word is
received from Hanoi.
''Peace on Earth," a four-engine
Boeing 707 painted green, carried 1,400
turkey diriners With all the trimmings,
leters and packages from relatives,
medical supplies and clothing with a toLal
weight of 15,000 pounds. The aircraft
waiting in Los Angeles carried 18,000
pounds of similar cargo.
Perot said he put up'$200,000 of the cost
and that other American businessmen
provided $400,000.
"If I can go to Hanoi personally I will
make a proposal to pennanently supply
medical and clothing needs and foods for
the prisoners of war if the North Viet-
namese will allow me," Perot said
earlier Tuesday· during a stopover in
Hong Kong en' route to Bangkok. "I hope
I don't have to permanently su pply them
-after the prisoners have been releas-
ed ."
Asked if he meant that the Americans
were not · getting adequate supplies now,
Perot said maintenance of the men was a
"great economic burden" for the North
Vietnamese. "And after all. the food there suits
Orientals but not the Americans." he
said.
Stock Ma rkets
NEW YORK (AP )-Oeclh)ing issues
continUed to· mount in fairly acli•e trad-
in'g today, maintaining a ~ear 000-1.ssue
lead oVer advances. (See quotations ,
Pages 8-9) .
Tax-selling was chiefly responsible for
the decline, according· to analysts.
condition at the center but doctors say
she has responded well.
A six-montl: critical period is expected,
during wh.ich doctors will be alert to re-
jecti:in of the new organs ·by Mrs.
Ramey's body.
The head of the medical team lhat
trwplanted the pancreas of an AnaheiJ,n
man wtio died of mysterious injuries
Thursday was identified as Dr." John E. 1
Cormolly. /
Dr. Connolly is chairman of the UC-~r~ine Department of · surgery. He was
JOtned by Dr. Donald C. MBrUn, chief of
urology at UCI, who headed the kidney
transpl!lJlt team. Both men are members
of the medical center staff.
The bejim of hope for diabetic patients
involves the pancreas, pccording to Dr.
Martin. ·
Diabetes'is caused when th~·pancreas
fails to produce a chemical which
removes sugar from the blood. In many
cases it can be controlled by insulin in-
jections.
But in Mrs. Ramey's case, 13 ·in ·many
others, said Dr. Martin, the diabetes had
also destroyed other organs -the
kidney. ·
Mrs. Ramey had spent several months
under medical care as her own kidney
was slowly destroyed by the diabetes.
The kidney transplant itself would only
be a temporary solution since the kktneY;
does .not· cause the diabetes, .. said Di'.
Martin. ' •
"But a transplant or 'a freSb' pancreas
might effect a total change in the con.-.
dition." he e1Cplained.
"It is my cpinion that Mrs. -Ramey ts
no longer a diabetic. As cf today she has
not required any insuUn," said Dr.
Martin. -1
When Mrs. Ramey received the new.
pancreas ·a new transplant technique, us.
ed only three· times before, was· tried.
With the p8ncre3!. doctors transplanted
(See TRANSPLANT, Page I)
Sno~ · Whii.!.':S . We~ing Win~ Pri%e
~ountaln~v.alley•s fi'rst JRnze )Or thevmost unusuaf ': seven dwarfs in atiend3nce, Contest was sponsored
Chfistmas display went· to. the home of Mr. ~nd · · by Fountilin Valley Chamber of Comm~rce
Mrs. Waj.ter '.K'lifY, 11608'1 Oak St.. for~ their snowy Women's ·Divjsion.. · •
scene depictipg Snow Whi.te's wedding with -all the
' . Westminster Child Killed
In ·Crossing Busy Street . . ' A five -year old Westminster girl WM
ratally struck· bf :a'n autom.obile Monday
afternOon as She attempted .to run across
Golden West street during rush-hour traf·
fie .
Kili-:d was Mon~ca Manetli, 13212
Whitney Circlei as she tried to •un from
east t.o west on Golden W~st Street
between Hood and Blssel Avenues around
5:25 p.m., investigatora said.
Ttie'driver of the .car, Lee H. Hunter,
21, l'nOO KeelSiOn Lane, wbc .was south-
bou'rid'on. Gbklen 'West Street at the ti~
of the .aocident,:was not hel$1; ,
The girl was tranaport~ to
WeStmiDSter ·commttnity Hospttal, where
she ,succumbed ·J2 minutes later, ac-
cording to Orange County coroner's
deputies.
She was the daugl)ter of Piero L.
Manetti, Na~s, Italy: a. liaison 'offiCti
for an Italian aerospace firm at McDon-
nell Douglas Corporation, in Huntington
Beach. ·
Funeral arrangements are Pending· at
Pee.k's Mortuary, Wesbninster.
Chamber Okays
' . '
11 New Members
. .. . ' . '"' . · Eleven new members haVe! been an-
nounced by Ralph Kiser, .executive
_manager of th~ Huntington · Beach
Ch~hlber of Commerce.
Trasl1 Pickup
Times Changed .
There .will be no trash pickups
Christmas or New Year's days in Hun·
tington Be8.ch or Westminster.
Cify officials said trash.pickups -will ·be
madt · ori the. next regularly .ached.uleq
day. In •Westminster the day is Motiday
but in Htmtington ~act\ it+vaTies bi J<ica·
lion.
lri Fountain Valley trash will be piCked
up op the following day, Friday \fhtn 'the
workers will ~oljble -u.p , gattlering :trash
normally pic~ed up that,,day. a& well as
those.missed on Thursday.
tollft .,
'
.weat1t_.· Sessions at Edison High School is ex-
j>ected to be lau.nched tonight by M~Ubew
Weyuf:er, president of the Huntington
Beath Union High School District board or trustees. which meets at 7:30 c'C'ldck
at district headqu arters, 1902 17th St.
· Weyuker said last week that he would lsk for the probe to find out •·exactly
what's gcing·on al Edison, and to find out
if there is any more of it going on
elsewhere."
Grand Jury Gets Defense
'r·hey are :· Big ~rake. Seryi~ Cepteri
16091 Beach Blvd.; John B. DeMarco,
19411 Beach Blvd.; Denny's ResLaurant,
Mr.' and Mrs. Leonird'SOvi; 18477 Beach
Blvd.: ~I Tofo RestJiui'.ant, Stanley
Anderson, 4901 Warner· Ave.; WIUlam
Gilmore, 1011 Cliff Drive, Newport
lndicali~s are that s8nta will
find his viay lo yoUJ' rooftop tC>o
morrow ni,ght,. as fair skies are
predicted OV6 Ule Or,atig:e Coast.
The temperature is sUU riveted in
the mid-siXUeo, though.
: J:Us remarks were directed at Edison
literature teacher Roger Andrews, wQo
admitted that he h e I d a sensitivity
training session in one of his classes Dec.
if. to enable him to teach more effectively
Jibout the process of communication.
Joseph Ferm, a Huntington Beach resi-
dent and .detractor of Andrews' teachJng
methods, complaJned to the board two
weeks ago and questioned the need for
experiments such as this in an English
1Uerature course. ·
He ~argcd. that Andrew& conducted
the sessklr, in total darkn ess while the
boya and girls wer1t paired acoordlllg to
llCX, ,
·Andrews, who circulated amOOg local
newspapers after Ferm's complaint to
the board, explained that his students
were seated throughout the eKpcriment
and thal the light \\'3S only turned oU for
a few minutes . The investigalton. \'/eyuker said, U'OUld
probabil be conduclcd by the board
ltsell.
t.
Action See ks to Quas h Mass Su bpoenas
Maneuvers designed to prevent a Santa
Ana attorney's unprecedented attempt to
force the Orange County Grand Jury to
testJfy individually in open court were
dlscloled today In Santa Ana .
A motion to auppresa stibpoenas nam-
ing the 19 jurors involved in the in-
dictment of Santa An• policeman ' for
allegedly assaulting a black, 17-year-old
prisoner was to be filed later'in !he day.
Chier Deputy Co\Jnly Coun,.I Clayton
Parker confirm"' the move during a
smog heiring tn coov,eraation with
newmen,-but CQUld offer"? turlher Com-
01erit at tht time.
The action which wa's to be lnillaled ln
Superior Court see ks to nulllfy the
historic attempt by attorney Ron Owen to
questk>n .. the. panel through subpoenas
issued a week a,:o.
Owen ttpttJenll Santi Ana Polico ,Of·
fleer Richard Faust, 27, who hu pleaded
innocent to a Grand Jury Indictment
charging him with assault with a deadly
weapon -his night.stick.
Deputy County Counsel R. H. Nuttman,
however, offered a commentary on the
scheduled action by Chief Deputy County
Counsel Parker, saying· OWen has
overstepped his authority.
"He bas no power under the law to sub-
poena the Grand Jury," said NuUm1n.
"We are seeking to protect the in·
. tegrity and investigative 1.blllty uf th~
Grand Jury and we contend that if ~ny
at.lemey is. allowed to issue ~bpoenas.
then a great part of the 'value of the
Grand Jury is destroyed," he continued,
Nuttman charged lhat lhe action could
be a blow against the errtctiven8$5 of the
Grand Jury system il6elf.. )
"AJloWlng these aubpbenaJ to stand and
calling the Grand Jurt 11 ·w11ne,..1 IA
the Faust case wlll only hnt*e ' l1'lo
I
..
powers of future grand juries," he
warned .
ArinoUncement or the secret indic'tinent
naming Patrolman Fau&t -handed down
alter listening to hour! oC testimony -
cam~ Nov. 13, the day he waa crderod to
be arraigned before Superior Court Judge
Robert Gardner.
Judge. G11rdner wdef~ Officer Fuast
to jury trial Fib. 11: but 'set DeC: 31 'as
·the date for heartna ·a njotion 'by the
delen11<. tO ~lsrnjis ,charJ~· ltommlng
'from the Juli a incklelit~ ' t '
· obrl1'g ·~sworn testiinonj: i before tbe
'Grand Jury, black youth Jii4t Olltnore.
now 1a. cl;ijme.d be wa.s ltr\ocked to the
·ground and clubbed on dtllvcry to Orange
County Juvenlls Halt ,
He_ was 17 at the· time and wu-00111a
admllled iii tl1e. lllCillt~g with two
(!et .l\lll.Y, I)
Beach; ..
Huntington' Beach Plumbing, Inc.,
George Read, 221 Main ·St.: Jeri's
Florists, Robert G. Reines, 18582 Beach
Blvd.; · Pitrick Plliner,' 3997 Watner
Ave.: Sa~dleback Development Co., J. M.
Free.bairn, Santa Ana:.S &: S Construction
Co., Bernard McCupe, ·Beverly HUis:
Spellman Insurance Agency; 11582 Beach
Blvd.; • Village Real' .Ealale, Phillp
McNamee, t91G .11tooldlur1rs1.. ·
Six-ton Fork Lift
Stolen F.ro1~ Marina . ~· .. ~ -.. . . .
: Som.ebody•wWed a·six-tbn,•yetJQ..,rm-k
.Jilt• Monday from 'the YO'Dock Masteri
Marina on Pactfk: CouL Hlcbway neat
11unUngton Harbour.'~ ', 1
The fork lilt had bttn left ln an· open
area with the" key In the llgnlUon, ,.Id
police. •The 18.000 fork lilt might bav•
lJ:ttn hauled o(f Jn a truck, but ' no tnei
-~ ... 1ttb>i,ft,.l&id, the J\qlic:e ...... . .
~SQtE TODAY . .
1 An Orangt . Countia11 10~1>
htads Governor Re110an's Com,..
mlssioii on Educatio'Ml R1Jorm
~i!poTts imprt&Sipt 'PTO(}Tt.!$ fla
the group's first /iVl!-montfil.
Page 3.
' '
•:_.-.......... .. .~ f ~
Pres.ident 'Relea·ses' Congress
"'
,, Scraps Special Session as M~ney Bills P.ass_~.d ....
' ' ·~ I ~ ,.\ -I!"
WASRIN.GTOJI( (UPJ ) 1 T:, ~ Preskle11t were about to •dJourn until Jan. 19. spending authorl'Y waa enacted to keep senate a compiomlse measure extending
Nixon tod•Y &:ave Ma blessing to ""He .said we had all worked very the agencies tn operllUon. throug h June '30, ·1971, new export con·
Congress• planned C h rt st ma 9 ad-hard," House GOP Leader Gerald R. Left to the Presldent's discretion were trols to replace U.e 20-year-old Export
journment and the lawmake rs pressed Ford reported. two ma1·or measures -the tu:.refonn, • Control Act. toward a windup or the 1969 session by . early afternoon. Ford said the President accepted the tax cut, .social ~ltl'. increase liiU and Basically, the measure continues to
Nixon had suggested earlier he might adjournment notification without any mine sa!ety legislation -which some give the President discretion to prohibit
call the House and Senate back into a further talk of a special session. members feared President Nixon rnikht and regulate exports to Communist COun·
special post-Christmas ~ion if they The House and Senate were quitting veto. The betting was~ chlef e:xecuUve tries and to bar trade If the naUonal
failed to get all the year's money bills without final acUon on a $19.7 billion ap-would sign both. (Tax story, Page 4). security reqUlres it.
passed before quitting. Two such bills propriation for the labor and health, The House, in ita final JegislaUve IC" However, the new proposal liberalizes
were left hanging, but und er conditions education and welfare departments -lion, approved today new rules to relax the old rules under which some 2,200 ,_
that the President approved in a final, which the President promised to veto as trading of non-military goods wUh Com· items -ranging from automobiles to
formal exchange with a House committee too costly -or on a $1.86 billion ap-munist coWltrles. milk -were put on a ~pedal list preven·
appointed to notify him the lawmakers propriation for foreign a.id. A temporary It passed by voice vote and aeot to tbt. ting erporta.
Held Without Bail
DAILY 'ILO'Y 11111 ,,..If •
MESA' l'IREMEN CHECK MANGLED CAR FOR SIGNS OF BLAZE
'Driver, 16,· Badly Hurt In Thr•C•r lnttr1ectlon Crash
Beach Lutheran
Churches Plan
I
Y rile Services
Woman Due Murder Trial:
Valley Woman Injured
lnCostaMesaCar Wreck
A pair of sped.acular auto accidents
thal marled already-heavy Christmas
shopping traffic near South Coast Plaza
Monday night left two Orange Coonty
women with major lnjlDiea. ~ Seoreral other persons were less
serlollsly hurt, accordlng to the Calilomia
Highway PatrnL
Mary A. Campbell, 16, of 460 Linden
Pace, Anaheim, was listed in serious
condiUon at Costa Mesa Memorial
Hospital today, with p068!ble Internal In-
juries.
Mrs. Marprot Liddell, 43,. of 10li77 La
Fuente St., Fountain Valley. was
reported in fair CODdiUon at the ume
hospital with head iDJurJ•• FJffered In a
separate -aldo ·cruh. ln...U.•tors for the CHP said oev..-al
of the aix vebJcles involved in eaclt three-
car crl,lh were totally demolished.
Mia Campbell wu croqlng Falrvtew
Road at Sunflower A venue about 9: SO
p.m., when her car collided with a south-
hoond auto driven by Pamela Lagen~ 17,
of l!IDI Newlsnd st. Huntington Beach.
Impact of the c:raab drove the two cars
Into a thlnl driven by Eleanor Mobley, 20,
of JtQ Norse Place, C'.olta Mesa, which
From P .. e 1
TRANSPLANT ••
blood -11 Ind the oectlon of the In-
testine with which It connect., making
the operaUon technically easier.
Dr. Connolly cautioned t.bat though thi.!
was a step toward solution of the diabetic
problem. it is not nearly complete. The
great problem Ls finding a fresh pancreas
and dononi are rare.
But for Mrs. Ramey the unfortu11ate
fate of another proved a good omen. And
an extra cheer was brought to her hus-
band Monte, a Huntington Beach letter
carrier, who was told the doctors had
donated thelr time.
Beach Eyes Law
On Truck Parking
l!llntln~ Beach offlclab are studying
Uie p<mtbllity of enacting a law pro-
hibiting the parking of helvy trucking
equipment on city streets overnight.
Mayor Jack Green ha! called at·
tention of councilmen and city officials to
the heavy equipment parked on streets
and in abandoned service statiorw.
The city Traffic Department has been
aSked to make a study of legal means to
glop tire overnight parking.
DAILY PILOT
ORA.NOE COAl1' PUILt~klNG COM,Alft
1'ob•rt N. w.,,
Prff:oNfl1 ..,.. '11t111111ar
J•t.l'. a. Cu,ley
Viet Pr•lllffll •!Id G_,.1 M1.-0fr
Tho"''' ktt•il ldlrw
was also southbound on Fairview Road,
the CHP said.
Miss Lagent and lllls! Mobley auffered
only minor injuries.
Mrs. Liddell was injured earlier when a
c8r driven by her husband, Samuel, col·
lided with two stopped vehicles on the
Bristol Street offramp from the San
Diego Freeway: :o..
~torlstl George M. Hawthorne, of
5361 Overland Drive, HWltington Beach,
Patricia SUrU, ff 14.581 Gork·St., Garden
Grove. and ,fr1ts. Liddell's husband all
sufr.red mlnrt tl!juries.
An elderly Costa-Mesa driver and a
teenaled p&uenger in a buddy's car also
au st a 1 n e d minor injuries Monday afternoon. in a !ideswipe collision on
Newport Boulevard near Mesa Drive, in·
aide city limlll. •
Raymond Hill, II, of 4U Hamiton St.,
and Brian S. Detar1 18, Of 154 E. 22nd St.,
.were treated for a1>ras\ons and leg pains
at Costa Mesa Memorial Hospital and
releued. .
Police said Hill wia driving north on
the boulevard wlien a car driven by
Richard Ruvalo, 19, of 410 S. Di,flmond
St., Santa Ana, hit the side of his car,
then ran off the road into a chain link
fence.
Wren to Head
Y Site Group
~I Wren, vlc.e president of the Hun·
tington Beach Co., ha s been named to
head a committee to find a Huntington
Beach home for the YMCA.
The YMCA hopes to find an office and
meeting room this year and build a full
facility within five years. The Huntingto'\
Beach branch currently shares the
facilities Of the Westminster YMCA, said
executive director Richard Collalo.
The Huntington Beach YMCA now has
a membership of 2,500 and expects to
double that in 1970, said Collat().
Wren and the committee on relocation-
building will seek a leased office or a
donation. •
Winter Program
Signups Start
Registration is now under way for the
Fountain Valley Parks and Recreation
Department's winter program.
Activities available and the dates they
start are : karate, Jan. 6: swim teain
practice, Jan. 5; beginning bridge
lessons, Jan. 8; ballet and tap, Jan. 8;
ladi~s· slim and tri1n, Jan. 12 ; boys'
basketball league, Jan. 17: f)'mnastics,
Jan. 27 and tumbling and acrobatics,
Feb. 2.
Interested persons may sign up for
these activities at Fountain Valley City
Hall, 10200 Slater Ave.
Special Christmas services will be
observed by all five Lutheran churches of
Huntington Beach according to the
following schedule:
Redeemer Lutheran: Worship, 7:30
p.m. Chrlstinas Eve; Worship 10 a.m.
Christmas ~y..
Resurrection Lutheran: Worship, 7:30
p.m. Christmas Eve; Worship 10 a.m.
Christmas Day.
Resurrectron Lutheran: Worship, 730
p.m. Christmas Eve ; Worship, 10:30 a.rn.
and Holy Communion Servi~, 11:30 a.rn.
Christmas Day.
Grae~ Lutheran: Worship, 8 p.rn. and
Candlelight Service, 10 p.m. Christmas
Eve: Holy Communion Service, 9:(5 a.m.
Christmas Day.
King of Glory Lutheran; Candlelight
Family Service, 7 p.m. Cluistmas Eve ;
Christmas Communion Service, 10:45
a.m. Christmas Day.
Faith Lutheran: Identical Candleight
Services, 6 p.m. and 7:30 p.m.,
Christmas Eve; Worship, 9:40 a.m.
Christmas ·Day.
On New Year's Eve, services will be
held at 7:30 p.m. at Redeemer Church,
Faith Church and King of Glory Church.
No services will be held that evening at
Grace or Resurrection Church.
Rotary Forms
Edison Group
Hlllltington Beach Rotary c I u b
members have organized an Interact
" Club on the Edison High School campus.
T h e service-oriented organization
recently installed Chris Cross as its
president, with other officers Phil
DuRall, vice-president; David Montano,
secretary; St:e.n Peterson, treasurer; and
Scott Lent, Dod Bateman and John
Fisher, directors.
Interact Club members, in cooperation
with Wintersburg High School, have
already been building wooden toys as a
fund rru sing project for the chapter.
Under the direction of Wintersburg
High instructor J ohn Pisano, the students
created an assembly line for the toys and
are currently selling them to families.
Any toys not sold by Christmas will be
donated to the children's wards of nearby
hospitals.
From Pqe I
JURY •.•
other youths in custody, by contradictory
testimony indica ted Gilmore was caught
and subdued in an escape attempt.
Key witnesses in the case may be pre>-
bation officers who watched the incident
from their offices, but much of the
testimony contained in an B2·page
transcript of the proceeding remains to
be heard.
Officer Faust's defense attorney cites
insufficient evidence, lack of the right of
counsel for the defendant during Grand
Jury proceeding and failure to provide a
speedy trial as grounds for his dismissal
'motion.
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward J.
Allen has praised the defendant's job
record with the department and he re·
mains on duty pending final outcome of
the case against him.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of I~• 0.111 Piiot Sllft
A prosecutor argued Monday that Mn.
Dwillla Dean Hunt 5hould not be set free
on bail to await trial on charges of
murdering her husband because her 12-
year-old daughter rears for her own life.
The surprising allegation came during
a preliminary hearing for the 43·year-old
Corona de! Mar housewife who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatally stabbed her yacht·
broker husband, Willis, 56, with a one-foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter denied
defense motions for bail and ordered
'Mrs. Hunt bound over to answer first·
degree-murder charges in Orang'e Courity
Superior Court Jan. 2.
The charge canie from Deputy District
Attorney Jim ~g, Wl\O oppooed deleo"
moUons for bail and said J2.year~ld Dru
Hunt "has expressed fears for her lUe. ",
Beverly Hilla lawyer Sydney Innas
asked that Mrs. Hunt be set free on bail
to await the court action, saying that the
slight bnmette was "a loving mother who
has never mistreated this child."
He assailed the prosecutor's comment!:
as "rumor" and "a figment of someone's
imagination."
"I see no reason to ptmish this woman
with incarceration for months during the
lengthy court actions," lrmas said.
He then asked .that the daughter be
brought into court· to give her own feel-
ings on her mother's bail plea.
The dalJ8)>ler 15 in the custody of Mrs.
Noel Brown· of West Los Angeles, (her
SDS Appeals 'No Status'
Ruling by Orange Coast
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Ot 1111 0111)' Piiot Sllff
SDS has appealed its non·recognJ1ion at
Orange Coast CoTiege and now comes the
batUe of attorneys.
Trustees of Orange Coast Junior
College District have asked the County
Counsel's office to prepare their defense
of a Students for a Democratic Society
appeal filed last week in the California
District Court of Appeals.
The appeal on behalf of SOS was filed
by Santa Ana attorney Richard W.
Petherbridge, who i. ~d with the
American Civil Liberties tliljon.
The appeal is of an Cug. 5 Superior
Court ruling upholding tbe college"& right
not to recognize SDS as· a legitimate
campus organization.
No date has been set for the bearing on
the appeal and sources clooe to the ap-
pellate court in San Bernardino say they
don't expect the date will be before the
middle of March at the earliest.
Counsel for both sides need the time to
prepare their briefs.
Attempts by a small group Of atudentl
to gain recognition for SDS on the cam·
pus began jus about one year ago. The
student senate eventually recognized the
group because senators believed in lhe
Police Jail 3
In Theft Case
Three La Puente men are in Orange
Coun ty Jail today following their arrest
Monday morning in Fountain Valley on
suspicion of stealing tools from autos.
PoHoe said about $2,000 in Ught
machinery wa! recovered from a car
driven by the trio when arrested at 1:30
a.m .• near 8695 La Plaza Ave., Fountain
Valley.
Arrested and booked into county jail on
burglary charges were Walter Patrick
l\Iuller, 22 ; his brother, John Joseph
Muller, 18, and Jerry Waine Heaton, 19.
They had allegedly began a series of
robberies from pickup trucks Sunday that
included five the!ts in Fountain Valley
and one each in Norwalk and Whittier,
said police.
right of free association.
But the dean of student activities and
college president vetoed the student
senate's act.ion and the board of trustee&
also ruled against SOS.
The case then went to court and
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman
shot down SDS once again.
Explaining hiS ruling, be noted that the
public has charged administrators and
trostees with operation of the school and
has given them a certain amount of
discretion in that operation.
"You can't," he 88.ld, "take a man and
teH him to run your school and then
deptiv.e him of the right to exercise judg·
ment."
Representatives for the College said
SDS had been denied recognition because
of goals and aims stated by the natiooal
organization not compatible with college
policies and regulations.
Petherbridge's argument was that SOS
members had been unlawfully deprived
of S;ta.tus enjoyed by other campus clubS
and organizations.
A SOS faction at Fullerton Junior
College is watching the fate of the OCC
group's bid for recognition. Plans to iake
the Fullerton issue before Judge Corfman
were scrapped when the jurist ruled
against the OCC group.
stepsister) wife of a tennis pro and
daughter of the slain Hunt.
"The girl is intentionally being kept
from seeing me," the lawyer said.
"I am willing either to bring the girl in
for a cO!lference in your chambers cir
even call her to stand tomdrrow," he ad·
ded.
Judge Rutter answered abrupUy :
"I will not do that, counsel. Moti on
denied."
Throughout the entire exchange, Mrs_.
Hunt, her hair pulled back into a short'
pony t.ail and wearing a bright pink dress •.
sat passively.
The woman carried the same White,
clipped·beaver coat she wore the night of
ber arrest.
Mrs. Hunt seemed calm. As she eo-;
tered the court, she smiled cheerfully to
her famil y.
During the proceedings she kept nearly
motionless except for changing her eriP
on a wrinkled white handkerctuef.
She spoke only late in the court action'.
to describe her needs for special medica~
tion and to ask that she be allowed to
brin·g a pencil and paper with her as she
met with her lawyers. Both requests
were granted. •
The hearing began in the court of
Judge Donald Dungan, who granted
lrmas' request that another judge con·
duct the hearing because Dunagn was
prejudiced.
The judge agreed.
In Judge Rutter's court, Newport
Beach police patrolman M i t ch e 11
Thompson, who was the second officer to
arrive at the Harbor View Hills home
~fter the stabbing, testified first.
Thompson said he entered the patio of
the house at 2615 Harbor View Drive i()
find fellow offirer Keith Collins bent over
the badly bleeding Hunt. Mrs. Hunt,
Thompson said. was there, too. ·
"Before anyone could say anything,
she, the defendant, said, 'I did it. I did it.
I stabbed him.'," the officer testified.
Later in the testimony, lrmas asked
the patrolman to repeat the quote.
Thompson said that the fatally injured
Hwtt said nothing as the other officer
held a hand to his bleeding chest.
"I took the defendant inside and we
went into a foyer or entryway and I told
her what her constitutional rights were
there," he said.
Thompson said Mrs. Hunt then took
him into the kitchen of the home and,
pointed to a knife with a blade IO or 12 in-,
ches Jong.
T~al'lel A.. Murplii11e
M-tillll Edll«
Alb1rt W. ltt11
""-l•lf Editor
Mao Hung in Vati~an "---17&75 S.•t.li la11J ... 1uf
M11'iitt A'''''': P.O. fox 7t0, t2641
-°""" OtuM ttKr11 m Ferttt Av"'" Coti. ,,,,_.: JJO Wnt a.r Str .. 1
fMWJlwt •Hell: n n Wiit a.n11t ""''"''''
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"IWl>,,.... lit ,Wlltlltd dlllV .WCffl $""°
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CollWT~I, 1 ... , OI".,,.. l..OIKI '°Vlllloll ....
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...., Coll• M9N. C•lllo"''-• &ulllKrllllo~ Dy \• ,.,,i..--u.11 -lll/y1 ey !NII U.--1fllVI f'l'lllll•ry •r1M1i.... .. 1t.• 1no111111r.
Painting of Youth in Tunic Mistakeri for Priest
VATICAN CITY (AP) -The man In cle about Red China, was of a Chinese.
th~ painting wore a tunic and looked ll~e made painting or Mao as a crusading
1 priest and so Vatican of_flcials hung lt a youth, his teft hand clenched and his few yards from a portrait of Pope Paul . . I VI m the Vatican press room. right bold1ng an umb~e la.
But as It turned out Tuesday the man Lnnfranco Carnevah. a shopowner v.·ho
wasn't a prle&t at all. He was Mao Tse. said his 86-year-old father Luigt painted
tung in his youth. tho Vatican picture last M'arch, Mid : "Of
"What can J say?" said 1\-tsgr. Fausto course it's ?\--tao Tse-tung. My rather still
Valla.inc. the VaUcan press spokesmnn. has the sketches he worked from to make
';1'he painting "'81 S<'nt lo u:i as a gift. ihat piclurt.,''
We hung it up. That's all.'' Luigi Carnevnli. V.'ilo v.·as in bed with
Alt.hough chagrined, chorch officials influema, ili not a parllcularly \\'ell·
&&id the painting will not be taken down. know a,rtist. How the painting came lo be
'nlc oil painting. Showing a man with a sent to the Vatican remained a mystery.
blurred face standing agalnn a reddish Ulnfr8nco Carncvall said he could not
background, wtlS hung last month, ex-plain how the p:linting got to the
Nev.·!tmen acc.rcrtl ted to the Vatican Vniican. l1c sa id he loaned it to a fd~nd,
noied on l\1ondny a striking re~emblnnce v.·hom hr di d not identify, •·and l have
between It and a photoaraph in the betn 1rying to reach him f(1l' an ex·
October l.ssue of tin Italian Catholic plt1nation .. ,
mag:ulne, "FanUgiia Cri$tiana.1' fl1sgr. Vallainc aatd he bad no lntenUon
The photograph, accompanying an arti-of removing lL
''Every artist is free to draw in.
gpiration 'from a given subject and to
develop thls subject," he said.
At ooe point. he told newsmen in the
press room : "Look, even if it does
represent Mao I would say it shows him
tlS an element of destruction. with the
flaming ruins of what he has WTOUght In
the background."
LanCranco Camevall ~puted this. lie
said the notation "Alba" on the painting,
first taken to mean the town ln Italy,
really was the title of t.he work -
"Dawn."'
"The dawn of an idea," he explained.
lie said his father got the idea Car lhe
"·ork last winter from a phntograph of
Ute same painting "Fsmlglla Crlsthtna"
reproduced.
Asked what hi$ falher°s reactkm \Val
when he learned that the PJlnUng was in
the Vatican, Lattfranco said: "He just
laUghtd." ·
:
• " ~
~
·.I ·2 .. Z I
·.
KUNTIN.1;r1 111.1 111 " ,
Not a .Joy Ride
Deputy Probation Oflicer J ane Fritz of Orange County Probation
Department is taken for a ride by 1-luntington Beach Officer Ray
Anderson. it's all part of a training program for probation officers
.and not just run as some c:omplai~~N calls lo cily ball suggest, ao-cording to Police Chief Earle Robt ' e.
l
.,.
1
I
I
17
.. _,
•
Laguna· Beaeh ,
Today's Final
N.Y. Stoeks
.. ~."
VOL 62, NO. 306, 2 SECTIONS, 2r,~6~5 '
. *" t '' ,. '
.'. ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA , TEN CENTS
. •" , 1 -;l~ ..
, '1,
Hippie Supp:~~t·.~:Draws Laguna Planners' Ire
• • •
By BARBARA KllElilCH
. -Of ..... Deity .. HIM St-19
Tiking "strong exception" to the sug-
gesti-On that Laguna Beach's con-
trov.ersial hippies could beco1ne a CQm-
munity asset, planning commissioners
progressed no furlher than page 5 of a 2&-
)1age goals report presented for their con-
sideration MOnday night.
After discussion bogged down on the
"social problems" chapter o! the report,
commissioners decided the matter was of
•
sufficient lmpartance lo warrant a
special atudy 'session and rescheduled the
item for Feb. 12.
One of several major reports belng
prepared by tM firm ol Daniel, Mann .
Jchnson & ?i.tendetlhall .(OMJM ) for the
~en era I plan study, the document com-
bines comment!. of· the planning team
with an earlier, goals 6tiltement prepared
by the Citilerw Adv'lsory Committee
(CAC) baSed on their attitude survey.
Despite the fact lhat 37 percent of
• those responding to the survey lilted
''ilJ.ppie.s" as lhe number one problem In
Laguna, planners suggested that their
•·creative potentlal" should be tap~ in
behalr or preserving Laguna's itnage as a
haven for creative, artistic people.
"I take a great deal or exception to the
idea cf trying to tap the so-called
creii.tive ability of an unproductive ele·
ment of the community," said com·
• nussioner Charles Johnson .
"The most constructive move in my
I rea
Laguna MD
Held Again
fu Abortion
Dr. Robert C. Robb, Laguna Beach
physician, was arrested l\-1ooday night for
1 second time on abortio1,1 charges.
Investigating detectives were not
available to comment on the allegaUons
but poJice officials said Dr. Robb of
34567 .Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was ar.
rested on a warrant alleging two addi·
tional abortion instances.
He was picked up at his SJlacious cliff.
top home, police said, bUt soOO reJeaaed
on his cwn recognizance by Judge John
H."Smith Jr. of Central Orange County
Municipal Court.
'ftle physician wa/ first arrested at his
home on Sept. 4. Police accused him of
inducing miscarriages in two umnarried
»year-old women. One ol them, police
claimed, almost died.
Robb denied the allegations. 1·1 have
never perfonned an oper:ation on a preg.
nant woman," he said at the time, adding
that the arrest was "quite a sti>ck to
m'e."
Robb's attorney, Mooes Berman of San·
ta Ana, is attempting to have the initial
cases thrown out of court on the grounds
that California abortion law i! un·
constitutional.
Berman has filed voluminous briJs at·
tacking the validity of the pertine~f Jaw
Of! numerous grounds.
Dr. Robb has not yet entered a plea to
the initial charges which spokesmen for
the District Attorney 's office believe may
proceed on up the legal ladder to . the
State Supreme Court 1
Judge Paul Mast or Central Orange
County Municipal C<>urt is to rule by Jan.
9 On Bennan1s demurrer, which is the ef·
fort to have the case thrown out on
grounds 1hat the law is unconstitutional.
Stork llfarkets
NEW YORK (APl-Declining issues
continued to mount in fairly active trad-
ing today, maintaining a near SOO.issue
It:ad over advances. (See quotations,
Pages 8'9).
Tax-selling was chiefly responsible for
the decline, according lo analysts.
I\. Y PILCW i t9ff .... FACING MURDER CHARGE
Mrs. Dwllli• 0.•n Hunt
Newport Murder
Suspect Faces
Trial; No Bail
By JOHN VALTERZA.
Of "'9 CNtlly ,.,,.. St-*t
A prosecutor argued Monday that Mrs.
Dwillia Dean Hunt should not be set free
on bail to awa it trial on charges of
murdering her husband because her 12-
year~ld daughter fears for her own life. The surpriSing allefiation came during
a preliminary hearing ror the 43-year~kl
Corona del.Mar housewife who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatally stabbed her yacht-
brokeI'. husband, Willis, 56, with a one-foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T ... Ned" Rutter denied
defense motions for bail and ordered
Mn. Hunt bound over • to answer first-
degree-murder charges in Orange Coun,ty
Superior Court Jan. 2 ..
The charge citme from Deputy District
Attoi:ney Jim.Ling, who opposed ,defense
mot!Ons for bail' 3nd sald 12-year-old Dru
Hurit "has expr~ jear~ for her life."
Bevtrly HUis lawyer Sydney lnnas
asked that Mrs. Hunt be set free on bail
to await the cOurt' actk>O, saying tl'lat the
slight brunette was "8 loving mother Who
(See SfABBING, Piii • 11.
Ballet Breaks Relntions
With Laguna Plnyhouse
By RICHA!U> P. NAL!.
OI tltt De!IY ,lllt SttfF
: Tired oI \having perfonnaoce dates
~hanged on· U>em and receiving what they
feel ls an artistic cold shbulder, ~guna
Beach Civic Ballet Company has given up
oh the new Lagun•MouJton Playhouse.
The ballet people, who helped donate
and colk!ct funds for the new theater
OOllding <>ii the premise they would share
In Jts U!e, plan now to hold future pro-
ductions in Laguna Beach High Schol
atiditorium.
· Frustrated at having scheduled dates of
n1embership performances changed three
Limes by the Llleater group. the ballet
people assert also that they have recclv·
ed a not.able lack ol cooperation Ju uslnc:
the Playhous<. .. •
"They just really do'lll want anybod~
there. They reel it'• better for them to
have the playhouse to themselve~." said
Lila Zali. founder and artistic director of
the ballet company.
"'\\'e really don't wanl to st.iy where
"''t're fll'1l WiDt.ed," t;airl Mi&s Zali. l'The
high I.Choo! ha<! alwayit been very
ho~};it~hla ta us."
I
Most recent ei:ample, said ~ ballet
backers, was the Saturday night benefit
performance of "The Nutcracker" that
the }?allet !company ptrt!Wmed ·to raise
funds far the playhouse.
The ballet company payed for 90Uve.nlr
programs, the dancers and the crew.
which among olher things had to clean
the playhouse ltagfl before il.was used.
The playhouse 1ent only a Person to
man lhe box office in. the evening,
although the benefit was for the
playhou,., No boar.I member of the
playhouse aUended, helped"" or thanked
MJss Zall for the perfonnanee.
"We ha~ .to see Ul1 Zall treated t~is
way, especially alter all she has done tor
the Play-throul!) the years," uld
Douglas Reeve, 1enent directur of the bal~t company.
Ballet members point out that their
president of seven years, Barbara Stuart
Rabinowilsh. donated '6.000 toward
playhouse use bcc1use tt was to bf also a
home for ballet and other communlly
functions. ---
t.llsa ZaU aald'bt.Uet cotnpany worker•
(S.. IJAU.ET, Pop ZI
l
... . . .
Nixo11s Due
fu Oemente
On Friday
President Nixon, his wife and daughter
Tricia will fly to San Clemente Friday for
a fairly long worlt·and-play holiday stay,
White House officials announced today in
Washington.
Air Force One is scheduled to land at
El Toro h1CAS aft.er a 2 p.m. (EST)
departure from Andrews AFB, Maryland,
wi£b a at.By of ib days or more Planned.
A.' state of the union in'essag!: lhe 19'11
federal budget -and of course the Hose
BoWI on Niw Year's Day -is on the
President's holiday agenda.
"Hopefully he will have some time for
relaxation," said Pttsa Secretary Ron
Ziegler, adding that the Nixons will stay
on the Orange Coast until Jan. S or
}onger.
No public appearances are planned, but
the President is not noted for sUckJng to
such a schedule, occasionally to the
distress of the Secret Service.
Ziegler said President Nixon will
choose to see the Rose Bowl in Pasadena
as many Orange Coast holiday celebrants
will -via television in the comfort of the
Western White House.
Just as on his Orange Coast visit.s. last
spring and summer, the President will
bring a circle of key advisors to help out
will) critical questions, Ziegler added.
They will include Dr. Henry A. Ki8S·
inger, chief White House foreign poJlcy
advisor, presidential assistsntl Jolut D.
Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman, Dwight
Ola.pin and a munber fi domestic ad·
visers.
J anisse Family
Wins Laguna's
Yule Contest
Most beautiful outdoor Christmas
decorations in Laguna Beach this year
are at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Havey
Janisse, 147 Crescent Bay Drive in the
judgment of the Jaycees Christmas
decoration jury.
The Janisse home was named grand
prize winne r in the annual contest.
Judges commented on t)le amount of
work involved in their use of .many lights
aniund the home and . garage and oo
trees, along with fcil and wreath decora·
Uona of the garage and front doors.
Close n.nner:up for the top award, and
judged best in the north end of town was
the home of Dr. and Mrs. Z. Taylor
Malaby, 518 tinden St. which displayed a
miniature village with Santa and his rein-
deer alpne with attractive house lighting.
WiM\ng borne in lhe central area waa
that of Mr. and Mrs. Geor1e Pletta. 2931
Alta Laguna Boulevard with la'rge red
ca00"5, choir boys, Wise Meo and a
mobile Sanll Claus at the front door.
EffecUve use of lights gave the award
for the south end I<> Dr. Joseph Bray, t1
La Sf'nda, Three Arch Bay. Judges cited
the color(ul lighting of the houM atid
hedgea 81\d ~ handoome Cllrlstmas Im
fraliitd In a window. -· .
Mr. and Mrs. Rudy Butlop. 897
C&taUna St.J won the good will award
with their Santa holding a large "Noel ..
sign, displayed for , the enjoyment of
hllillde dY•ellers as well as neigbbots.
Croup effort awards for nelghbon who
301 1<>11ether I<> llg~t their ~ ef.
!ectlvefy went to My•Uc \{Ills ;~~
Laguna lllU• Club mobile nome ,.-..
. '
,, ,
view would be to help them on their way
lo another area."
Dr. Robert French heartily agreed. "I
also take exception to these remakrs. l
feel they (DMJM) we re not guided by the
results of the survey ."
Johnson said he felt the planners were
uout of step in advising us to accept an
element of the community that SQlllC of
us will nevf:r accept."
Speaking for the CAC, Mark.Gumbliner
said he . wanted it' understoo<f that lbe
•
remarks in question had been written by
the DMJM team aOO did not represent
the views of the citlzens' group.
"I think Krushkh.ov ( DMJM project
director Abraam Krushkhbvj felt that
since we have the h.ipptes we can learn to
l\\'e with them ," said' Gufnbiner. "The
question really is defining what is a hi~
pie. l..(lts of people who are not hippies
haye long hair -take the ·Sawdust
FestiVal P.eQple for ex'ample •-and we ·
have a situation where klds and others
Ir s
' ' ' "·i. I ' ' '
EVEllYTl'llNG'S NOT DUCKY 'FOR l HIS 01L·SOAK i D •VISITOlt ·
Don'i' Tell Him Slick Off. Cerplntet1 .. 11 for tho Bird> · .
U .. I T.....,.
SURFER ENCOUNTERS STICKY WICKET OFF VENTURA COAST
· Ricli•rd WhMl•r (right) RescuH From S•nt1 Barb•r• Oil Stick
Capo Street Work Asked
Del Obispo Street In San Juan
Caplstrano may bt widened to a four-lane
arterial highway if an appUcation is ap-
proved by· the Orange county Artcriai
Highway FIMnclng. Pr~am.' · . ·
Cltj cbuncilmen 'MOOOay v o t.e d
unanimously kl file •an· appikauon with
the agency for funds to improve ttif:
present two-lane wln<llng rOad from Via
Bel.tdes near lhe Baptist Church, to
)U!l before Camino de! AviQn, where 1he
road l)ri•llY b\>Comes four lao... ·
)'be •ntln. '!}ile-lon1 .PTI>/"'' 'l'o\lld, cost ~-·11 '800,lllO ,_din&·'?: clfy ·--,Jo<:t Kubolll. '!'he ell) Is Wiiiing
to contr~bute only· $75,000 of Its gas tax
funds bul feels it may have a chance
since . the completion ol the ·Dana Point
Harbor will make Del Obi5PO a main
hliitlw'ay., The sfrett COnllnues froln the
cjty llmlts lntO .coorilY 't~r;t\o/l' to1coast
lTighwBy, comint. out near one of the
harbor enltances. tr lhe c~nty agency denies the :tp-
plicatlon for a~sistan'ce In rundlng t.he
project, the city can redur:e Its plans tCI a
two la~ highway wbkh w.oukt cost only lm.ooo.-
Kubota rcj)Oi'tcd that µ{ti county ag,ncy
tr.ea sury It tl\I• u .... 1\8.,fl ml!lion to 'spend. • ' ·r--
'
with long hair are being barwed
because of Qbjections to hippies ."
French said the objection was not lo
long hair. "Perhaps the definition used in
one meeting -bums -would be more
suitable," he suggested.
CAC member Vernon Spitaleri said he
felt the planners had misconstrued the
criginal goal of "creating a good en·
,.·ironment for creativity."
"1 feel this is b:ised on a false 8SllUfflJ>-
(See HIPPIES, P11e I)
22 Miles
Of ·Beaches
Blackened
From Wire Services
SANTA BARBARA -Oil from the
Jatest seepage in the Santa Barbara
ChaMel has spotted about 22 miles of
coastline in Ventura and Santa Barbara
counties. / Donald Solanas of the U.S. Geological
Survey said after authorities made a six·
airplane inspection fl ight Monday that
still more crude oil lay a few hlndred
yards offshore.
Solanas estimated that the slick was
about a tenth the siie of the one which
resulted from a blaWout 11 months' ago
at the same Union Oil Co. offshore drill· Ing Iii·.
He said the slick contained about
311000 ga llons of oil-11,000 of which
spurted ·oot before a ruptured undersea
pipeJJne could be repaired last Saturday.
The· rest seeped from the ocean floor,
he said.
Fritz Springman, a Union Oil official
who ·made a private survey, said the
company plans to "wait for a couple of
days to see how ba'd it gets," before
starting to clean tbe oil away.
Yvon Choulnard, who lives five miles
north or Ventura, said he and a member
of the Audubon Society found 55 bird•
in one 300-yard stretch of beach suffer.
ing from contact with oily surf.
Chouinard $lid five birds were "so
completely covered with cil that they
couldn't fly." They were taken to Santa
Barbara to be cleaned.
The Coast Guard said what had been
lnitially a single slick had broken into
two parts, one a mile wlde and IO miles
Tong, the other a mUe wide and eight
miles long.
A Coast Guard spokesman said both
appeared to be dlislpating · rapidJy
Monday.
The hardest hit area was SeaclHf. a
small community on the Rincon Shores,
where at low tide much of the sand was
paved with a half-inch layer of tar. Some
pools of oil seven inchea: deep were
trapped in rocks.
Motorists driving on U.S. 101 where It
runs adjacent to the ocean near Seaclif(
reported spray from breakers was
splashing oil onto their wlndshlelda.
Weatlter
Indications , are that Santa will
find his way to your rooftop to-
morrow night, as fair sides are
predicted over the Orange Coast.
The temperature is ll1ll riveted in
the mld·&ixUes, though. .
INSWE ~DAY
An Orongtl' Countian who
head1 G0t1trnor Reagan's Com·
mbsion on Educational Rt/orm
reparts fmpressive pTOQrtu in
the uroup'1 fir1t Jive months.
Page I. ---1
Ooly 2 ";{;
C~ll,Jl;MAS
~ . . ' ••MtWW
(tllltnlll
Clillttll!tt II• Clllnlt: .. ...... ---............... •111trt.........., .. ....
::"':::.. .,,_ -
I '
-
' ' . .. , .. • " • .. .. .. .. • "
\
I
I
•
" ..... ,. ' .. , .. "• . .,. -... ._..,. -·
J DAil Y .PILOT L
Dewta the
Mission
Trail
5 Land Parcels
On Double Tax
SAN JUAN CAPIST~O -Five
parcels of land in the Capistrano Beach
Sanitary District lie within the San Juan
Capistrano City limits.
City Adminislrator Emle Thompson ln·
formed City coUncth'b.en Monday that
owners of. these parcels were being taxed
twice for sanitaUon.
The administrator was authorized to
contact tbe property owners J.nd advise
them of the situation. They can then
either reCelve city services by .detaching
thernlelves from the other district or re-
main and continue paying double toes.
e Kids' Part" Pt.aned
MISSION VIEJO -A holiday party !or
children will be hosted by the Recreation
Center Monday.
Children in the second grade and under
will be on hand from 10 to 11 a.m. for
·punch and candy. Thi.rd to ftflh graders
are invited from 11 a.m. to noon for
Cokes. candy and games.
Sixth to eighth grade students will be
welcome from I to 2 p.m. for hot dogs,
soft drinks and games with teens, 9th
through 12th. arriving for games, dancing
and pizza from 3 to 5.
e N ur•erv Needs To11•
EL TORO -Educa.Uonal toys, wheeled
vehicles and assorted playground equip-
ment are still needed by the Saddleback
Valley Community Nursery.
The non-profit facility will be hOU>ed In
the Abiding Saviour Lutheran Church,
23262 El Toro Road and will open after
New Year's.
Three and 4-year~lds will be cared for
on a volunteer and mother-participation
basis with ooe professional teacher on du-
ty at an times.
Information can be obtained by calling
Rudy McHale at 837-1500 and Judy
Bcltanc. at 837.a'.l58.
From Page l
HIPPIES .•.
tion that there is a large measure of
creativity in this area. This may be so,
bul it bas yet to be established."
He referred to the plannen comment
that "the number cl creative and artistic
people in such a group (hippie) must be
as high if oot. higher than would be found
in any other social group.,.
This statement. said oommissioner
Joseph Tomehak, is "an arrogant
assumption." He added, however, that
"some parts of. the report show real
style. . .we should go through it
carefully." ·
Johnson said he felt tbe writer had rail-
ed to distinguish between a creative
artist with king hair and "someone who
lies around on the sidewalk."
"This reads like an Invitation," he said.
"It gives the impression that they (the
l'lippies) will be very welcome here."
Or. F'tench urged a special study
gession to go through the report step by
step before forwarding it to the city coun-
cil. •·This is one cf the most Important
documents we will get," he sa1d.
Johnson agreed. "The final goals state-
ment will reflect the aim5 and desires of
the entire community. It should be
prepared very carefully."
Jn addition to the social problems under
discu ssion, the goals report covers
physical, economic and governmental
aspects of Laguna's planning goals.
Population Mounts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Total U.S.
population reached 204,006,000 Nov. 1, ac·
cording to the Census Bureau. TIUs was
an Increase of 190,000 lrom Oct. 1 and 3
million from the same month ol 1968.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHGt: COMr.l'UallSHING COMPAH'I"
a.1t,rt N. w,~J
,.rftlftnl .,.. l'WI,.,
.I••• I . C•tl•y Viet 1''1'1illml .,..d G-tll MIMOllf'
n. ••• , "•••a ....
Th.M•t A. 14,,,loiitt _ ...
llt: ... ~ '· Nill u..-.... .,,
Clft l!a•IW
"-'-..... OHk•
111 Fo.tll ....... ftW•
liltili"t Utlrt11t P.O. I•• 666, 91652 ---C•Mo ,,.,.,., JJI W.I kY i lf"'
N""'°'I l .. '11; :1211 Wt1I ltltlolo hultWf ... .,..,.lltflf,, hi.du 1111' .. totfl '"""~"•
t
I
' PreJl•lnant Stlldf
Planners Probe
,, , Ne~' Project
Lasuna BeWl plaJll\lng commlsaloners
fonnd .. pl<nty to think about," In the
words of their chairman Fred Briggs, aa
they delved deeper Monday nlgbl Into a
planned community concept prelented by
• developer Mark Gumbiner a'nd architect.
PM Ostrander.
Preparatory to a Jan. 5 public hearing,
the study aesaloa probed new aspects of
the plan to develop 118 hillside acres ad·
jaoent. to Morningside Drive with a com~
binaUoa o! single dwellings, multiple
dwellings and ipartments clustered amid
"green areas."
City Planner Al Autry advised the com-
mission that existing zoning laws permit
a "planned residenCJal development" in
any mile, including R-1 (single residen-
tial) provided density or lhe zone ls not
exceeded.
A conditional use pennlt may be
issued, saJd Autry, '° permit greater
flexibility in density, height and Jot ar-
rangment.
"At this time.'' said Autry, "the plan·
ning staff feels tbis development plan is
not in a state for adoption because it
needs more engineering and geological
data. We recommend approval ol the
planned residential concept, not of any
specific plan ."
While the suggested overall develop-
ment of 715 units would not exceed the R-
1 requirement of 6,000 square feet per
unit, the steep terrain would involve
clusterlng units in some areas while leav-
ing others unbuilt.
The plan has met with vigorous op-
position from neJghborlng property
owners who see It as an attempt to evQde
zoning laws by "people packing" in an
area that 11·part1y unbuildable.
Commlsaloners ex~ doubt in a~
proving the concept with a ''not to escted
R-1 density" provbo,
"Whal Ube (the developer) goa ahead
From Page 1
BALLET •••
abo helped llOCUre pledges of olher
thousands of dollars toward completion of
the tl>eate<.
on the basis of 8,000 square feet per unit
arid we later decide 10,000 square feet
would be a better minimum for this
area?" queried commissioner Joseph
Tomehak .
"Since all the objection h8' bffn. to
deMity," added commissioner Charles
Johnson, ''if we feel 6,000 square feel is
not suitable maybe we would strike th~
.and leave the number of units up to the
discreton or the commission."
Commissioner Carl Johnson sa:id he
leaned toward the idea or a planned
development to allow greater flexibility,
but v.·as not sure the commissioners
should pumjt a developer to transfer
unJts from unbuildable sites lo bUildable
sites to take advantage of density allow-
able in the overall zone.
Ostrander commented that very few
sites a.re actually unbuildable. "Almost
any site can be made into a building site
if you just move enough earth around,''
he sald. "We don't want to do thJs. We
consider design first and density must be
responsive to design."
Many existing zoning laws are an-
tiquated and cannot or should not be a~
plied to hill.side areas, he added.
Aub'y said he had discUased lhe pro-
posal wiUt general plan project director
Abraam Krushkhov who said that
although the planners' land use and
rezon.? recommendaUons are not yet
complete, be feels that "in much of our
hillside areaa this type of development is
the only way to go."
Dr. Robert French wanted to know why
the applicants were aeeking a concept ap-
proval before proceeding with engineer-
ing and geology studies. "Would you go
ahead if it'• not granted?" he asked.
Ostrander said that would be open to
quesUon.
"Wbat you're really asking for Is a
commitment from us to rezcne in some
manner, l!!n't it?" asked Ch a r I es
Johmon.
Ostrander said that was ccrrect.
"'I ~'ilnk everyone is basically in favor
ri. a planned development," concluded
Tomcllak. "The albalrool here Ls the
numbP.r of Wlits and the S,000 square foot
rule."
CAil Y PllOr Sltft httl
Law11aen Brighte11 Christ111cu
Chrislmas is spelled with a CHP this year. California Highway Patrol
Officer Gerry Maxwell examines part of five truckloads of donatet4
toys gathered at headquarters in Santa Ana. They will be delivered
to mentally retarded children at Porterville State Hospital. More
gills will be aaccepted by the Santa Clauses in khaki unifonn at all
CHP stations.
Saddleback Dress Code
Faces Court Challenge
Another legal challenge to Saddleback
College's dress code forbidding long boys'
hair was filed Monday, this one in federaJ
court.
The action asks that Lindahl King or
TusUn be allowed to register and attend
Saddleback College without conforming to
lhe dress code.
It was brought by attorney Patricia
Henog. of Corona del Mar who filed in
U.S. Di!trict Court in Los Angeles a com-
plaint for injunction and declaratory
relief for alleged denial or civil rights.
The college was gi ven unU 1 p.m. Jan.
29 to file a response showing cause why
an injunction should not be granted.
Mrs. Herzog said King, 21, was a stu·
dent at Saddleback College last school
year but was refused admission for the
fall term because he did not comply with
the dress code. He is seeking to be ad-
milled for the w~ter quarter through the
court ordf:r.
In October, another attempt to en)oin
the college on behali ol stud<nt Gary
Bemian, · 19, w11 turned down by
Superior Court' Judie Robert Olrfmlitt
Mrs. Herzog Hid that cue was not
decided on the merlb of the dress code
but on a ~ufal deffft 1" the action.
The plaintiff bad not l"' el<hausted his
adminlllrative remedies at the Ume he
filed the action, she explained.
SJle sa1d she took her case to the
federal court level instead or county
Superior Court because she bellevea it
comes within federal juris«Uclion, in that
eOnstitutional rights of the plaintiff
(King) have been violated.
Saddleback College's dress c o d e
sUpulates that boys' hair shall nol e1tend
over the collar of a dress shirt.
The ballet has since found that it airt
them twice as much to use the playhouse
as it does the school auditorium. Miss
Zall said because of its size two
performances must be given at the
playhouse whlle one is sufficient at the
auditcrl:wn because of more seat!. The
cost is about $700 compared to $300 for
the auditorlwn.
Mao Dung • ID Vati~an
.. We $ply cannot afford to ... the
playhouse we helped to build,'' said
Reeve in a Jetter to the ballet mem·
bership. He said it was understood during
fund raising that the theater would be
available for the four ballet membership
progrlllllll annually at only nominal ex·
peme,
The ballet people don't feel the charges
are nominal.
But they maintain they could over1ook
this and the confuskln surrounding a new
theater building if aomeone at the
playhouse had acted mildly Interested In
wcrking out some friendly solutions.
Dana Teen Held
In Rape, Beating
Orange County 1herttrs depuUts said
they expect charges to be filed today
agaimt a Dana Point teenager accused of
kidnaplng, and beating and raping a
Dana Point housewife.
Arrested at 4 a.m. Monday as he sat in
a San Clemente restaurant with his vie·
Um was Edwin L. Sommers. 19, of 24465
Cordova St.
Deputies allege the young housewife
was accosted on the street al about 12 :30
a.m. by the suspect who beat her about
the face while forcing her into his car. He
then drove her to an apartment where
the alleged rape took place, depuUes
charge.
Sommers was taken into custody by
San Clemente police who later turned
him over to Orange County sheriff's
deputies for booking al Orange County
Jail.
" Painting of Youth in Tunic Mistaken for Prkst
VATICAN CITY (AP) -The man In
the paJnUng wore a tunic and looked lilte
a priest and so Vatican officials hung it a
few yards from a portrait of Pope Paul
VJ in the Vadcan prea room.
But as it turned cut Tuesday the Jnan
wasn't a priest at all. He was Mao Tse·
tung ln his youth.
"What can I say?'' said Msgr. Fausto
Vallainc, the Vatican press spokesman.
''The painting was sent to us as a gift.
We hung It up. That's all."
Although chagrined, church officials
said the painting will not be taken down.
The oil painting, sbcM·ing a man with a
blurred face standing against a reddish
background, was hung last month.
Newsmen accredited to the Vatican
noted on Monday a striking resemblance
between it and a photograph in the
October issue o! an ,Italian Catholic
magaz.ine, "Famiglia Cristiana."
The photograph, aecompanying an arti·
cle aOOut Red China, was of a Chinese-
mad.e painting of Mao as a crusading
youth, his left hand clenched and bis
Calvin Nelson Appointed
Saddlehack Science Chief
Calvin L. Nelson has been chosen scien-
ce, mathematics, engineering a n d
technology dlvislon chainnan, Saddleback
College trustees aMOUnced Monday
night.
Nelson, mathematics instructor at the
college, was elevated to the chairman's
50 CreWlllen Saved
HONG KONG (UPI) -All !O Chinese
crewmen aboard the Singapore-registered
freighter SS King Bay have been rescued
by a Japanese vessel, the alllp's owners
said today. The 3,000.ton freighter ran
aground near the Tubhataha Reel! In the
Sulu Sea In the Southern Philippines.
post to succeed James F. Thorpe, who
stepped down to teach full time.
Nelson Is Sl. He was selected from ap-
plicants within the 14-inslructor division.
Outside candidates for the job were not
sought.
New to the college this year, be came
to Saddleback from Kearny State College
in Nebraska. Previously he w a i!I
mathematics department chairman at
Orange and El Modena high schools.
Nelson hold! a M.A. Degree in
mathematics from Rutgers University in
New Jersey and a M.S. Degree in
mathematics education from Wayne
State in Nebraska .
He and his wife. Karen, have two
children and live in South Laguna.
right holding an umbrella.
Lanfranco Camevali. a shopowner who
said his 86-year-old fat.her Luigi painted
the VaUcan picture last ¥arc!I, aaid ' "Of
course it's Mao Tse-tung. My father still
has the sketches he worked from to make
that picture." •
Luigi Camevall, who was in bed with
influenza, is not a particularly well·
know artist. How the painting came to be
sent to the Vatican remained a mystery.
Lan£ranco Carnevali said he could not
explain how the painting got to the
Vatican. He said he loaned it to a friend,
whom ht did not idenUly, "and I have
been trying &o reach him for an ex-
planation."
Msgr. Vallainc said he had no intention
o( removing it.
"Every artist ls free to draw in·
spiration from a given subject and to
develop this sub ject," he said.
At one point, he told newsmen in the
prms room : "Look, even if it does
represent Mao I would say it shows him
as an element of destruction, with the
naming ruins of what he has wrought in
the background."
Lanfranco Camevall disputed this. He
said the notaUon "Alba" on the painting,
first taken to mean the town Jn Italy,
really was the title of the work -
"Dawn."
"The dawn of an idea,'' he explained.
He said his father got the idea for the
work last winter from a photograph of
the same ·painting "Famiglla Cristiana"
reproduced.
Asked what his father'.s reaction was
when he learned that the painting was in
lhe Vatican, Lanfr1nco said: "Ht just
laughed.''
Change or Give llp
Newport Sets Last Freeway Appeal
By JEROME P. COLLINS
Of "" Diiiy '"""' ,...,
On Jan. ts In S1cramento, Newport
Beach wtll make ils last pitch for
cha.,.. In the adopt«! lll8nm<nt of the
Pactllc Coast Freeway west of the Upper
Bay.
lf the appeal for a n ew study eels
nowhere Wfth the Ca!Uomla Higflway
Commission, the city will 1in up !Ls
seven-year 11.rug&le and accept the
coastline-hugging adopted route.
City councilmen made this clear Mon·
day In respon>e to a mojor West Newport
landowner's strong objecllon a1ainat
further delay In resolving the issue.
Hana><:k "BUI" Banning Ill, whM<
finn. Beeco Ltd., owns 5141 undeveloped
acrt.S behind Newport Shores told coun-
cllmeo a .. truly fine" Inland roui. IJ now
irrtvocab)y blocked because of tht op-
pos:itJoo ol the cllir:s of Costa Meo and
Huntington Belch.
Huntington Buch. be said, alroa<b' has
Incorporated the adopted rout. In 11.s
master plan. And Costa Meusa, despite a
plea for support from the Newport coun·
ell last week. remains firmly opposed to
any reopening ol routa hearlnp h1 the
state.
He said there are two principal reasons
for the Costa Mesa council 's position.
They are:
"-Ettn though Newport lndlcat.s that
any change (new route} would remain
entlrely in Newi>ort. tt ls difficult If not
lmposslble for the staUI to so control a
reopening pro<tedlng as lo ellmlnata all
risk that 1 part of a new route could be in
Cost.a Mess.
"-Even If such a new route were en-
tirely In Newport. it would be sulOclently
close lo the Com Me11 boundaey In
place1 so tl'lat It would afrect Costa Mesa
&trett alignments and 1rterta.I acce.n to
and ff om the freeway system." •
Banning indicated bis vtew1 resulted
from conversaUon1 with Costa Mes•
authorities.
I
He said for years be had supported !he
flghl lo get the fr<eway off lbe coastline,
but now feels It is Ume to recognise. lhat
It ls a "frulUess" quesL
There are problems along flle adopted
allgrunen~ he .. id. hilt they are all 1111>
Ject to toluUon through negotiation,, with
bMslon of Highways engineer~ Among
these problems, he said, Is the ruination
ol the Marlnen MUe buslntSJ dis!Tfd by
the freeway, rtstnction of. aectss to West
Newport and lmpolrment ol Coast
Highway In that area as a major arterial.
Saving Mariners Mile, he said. would
rtqu!re shoving the freeway into the
Newport llelght mldentlal dl.strld.
"Perhaps this ls a de!lrable alttrnaUvt,"
he said, "but it should certainly at l<osl
be cmofully questioned."
The otbtr problems •long the adopled
route, he emphaslud, could well be
"mlnlmJud or eliminate4" by working
with lllata englnttrl. II• said the councll
should dlred tho dl,y stall lo give lop
priority lo IUOh 1 cooperative study.
He said if the city inaisls on a:oing it
alone -as It apparently must -in re-
qUC6ting a new freeway study by the
state, "yw will sUr oppositlon once agatn
in Costa Mesa tn contravenUon to lM
new.found cooperaUve aplrlt. to say
nothing ol the Newport homeownen who
will again be threatened."
Coundlmtn were unsettled by much of
what Banning had lo 1ay. ,But only Paw
J. Grubtl', long a hawk on the reroute
18.!Ue, criUcized the land developer's
view1.
Gruber said Bannlllfl dldn'l know what
he ~as talking about when he asserted 1
new route enUrely within Newport would
stilt create problems ror Clolta Mess. nie
formt1r lw~tenn mayor said that 1J
somethln,! that car be deimnlned only
by tralfic analy,.1 that "'ould be Included
In the new stale study to be sought by ttie
cltr on Jan. II.
"I do1fl see Mr. Bannll\l!'I objections to
this study al all,~ l&idf Grubtt. "Whal
hu~ness 1' It of his?"
~ary Ask s
' •
CourJ Block :
Evidin~e -.,
I ' • By ARTHUR R. VJliSEll
Of "'! o.~r ,., ... stelf •
Facing cowt dates around the country;
Dr. Timothy 01..eaey appealed lo tbO
California Supreme CourtMCIOday lo SU.,:
preM evidence: in his imteodlng Oran&~
Counl,y drag trial. '
The 1970 psychedelic capdidate for lhe
California governorship,.· his w i f ei ' . Rosemary, 3!; and son John, 20, are du(
in Orange Coonty Superior Court Jan. HI
for trial. following a series of tight tOn:
tinuations. ,
The family, arrested one year ago Frf;
day ln Laguna Beach, is charged wit.Ii
possession ,of LSD, hashish and mari:
juana, but contends tbeir old statiori
wagon was illegally searched.
Appeals filed in San Francisco by the
Santa Ana law firm of George Chula and,
associates charge that Laguna Beach
police narcotics officer Neal Purcell
made an illegal search of the vehicle.
Judge Byron K. McMillan lislened to
all sides of lhe maller during a pretrial
hearing on Chula's motion to supprfss
evidence, then ruled on Oct. 31 that the
search by Purcell was justified.
Trial for the Learys has been delayed
eight times in recent months, based On
Mrs. Leary 's convalescence following
surgery. Her physician provided a writ-
ten statement that she was nol \l:ejl
enough to stand trial on the charges in
October as scheduled.
The case dating back almost exactly
one year came to Ught, according to Of.
ficer PurceU, when he checked the Lear;y
family car parked <1n Woodland Drive. ·
He said young John Leary's eyes were
dilated as though he had taken drugs and
he was crawling round on his hands and
knees in the back cf the station wagon,
long hair flopping ·down in his eyes. ·
A quantity of contraband material wa~
confiscated as evidence. .
Dr. Leary, a pioneer LSD researcher
fired from Harvard College for his
unorthodox psycbological experiments ...:..
class tardiness and the like was
Harvard's announced reason -also !acte
other court dales.
Authorities in New York were recently
stymied in a case dating back more than
two years at his Millbrook Estate, due to
unwilling wiblesses who have since
emigrated to various desert communes.
He was scheduled for trial Dec. l in
Riverside County on a charge of con.
tributing to the delinquency or a Laguna
Beach girl who drowned while swimming
nude under the influence of LSD last Jic
ly.
Charlene R. Almeida, 17, was pulled
from a deep pond on a desert commlDlal
ranch nea r ldyllwild, where the Learys
were sojourning at the lime.
The U.S. Supreme Court also overturn-
ed a conviction for illegal transfer of un-
taxed marijuana earlier this year, which
might have put Dr. Leary behind bars in
Texas for 30 years.
Texas authorities recently announced
they would appeal that action in an at-
tempt to take the controversial idol of the
psychedelic generation. out of circulation.
From Page 1
STABBING •••
bas never mistreated trus child ."
He assailed the prosecutor's comments
as "rumor" and "a figment of someone '.9
imagination."
''l see no reason to punish th.is woman
with incarceraUon for months during the
lengthy court actions," Irmas said.
He then asked that the daughter be
brought into court to give her own feet:.
ings on her mother's bail plea.
The daughter Is in the custody ol :~trs.
Noel Brown of West Los Angeles, (her
s\epsister) wife of a tennis pro and
daughter of the s:ain Hunt.
"The girl is intentionally being kept
from seeing me ,'' the lawyer said.
"I am willing either to bring the girl In
for a conference in ·your chambers or
even call her to st.and tomorrow," he •4·
ded .
Judge Rutter answered abruptly:
"I will not do that, counsel. Motion
denied ."
Throu.ghout the entire exchange, Mrs.
Hunt. htr hair pulled back into a short
pony ta11 and wearing a bright pink dress,
sat passively .
The wonlan carried the same white,
clipped-beaver coat she wore. tbe night of
her arrest.
Mrs. Hunt seemed calm. As she en·
tered the court, she smiled cheerfully to
her family.
During the proceedillQs she kept nearly
motionless except for changing her. grip
on a wrinkled white handkerchieJ.
Sha spoke only late in tM court act.Ian
t<l desaibe ber needs for rpecial medica-
tion and to ask that she be allowed to
bring a pencil and paper with illlr as ahe
met with her lawyers. Both requeslt were granted.
The hearing began in the court or
Judge Donald Dungan, who rr•nltd
lrmas' request that another Judge con-
duct the hearing because Dunagn was
prejudiced.
The judge agreed.
In Judge Rutter'a court. Newport
Beach pollce patrolman M i t c h e 11
Thomp&en, who Was the second officer tn
atTtve at the llarbor Vlo.w ltllls home
alter th< st•hblng, lesUfied first.
Thompson sold be enlered the patio of
the house at 2515 Harbor View Olive to
find fellow officer Keith Collins ~nt over
the badly bleeding llllnt. Mn. Hun~
ThompiOO sald , was there, too.
"&fore ll'lfOnc could say anything.
•he, the defendant. 511d, 'I did It. I did IL
1 stabbed hlm.',t' the officer le.still«!.
•
I
I
I
I
I • • "
I
I
I
• • -__ .._..... __ ·-~-~-----··~·-·-· .. ·-· ........ ·-··--· _., ... _,,.,_,_,.,_,,., ___ ,._,_, ___ , .. , __ .. ,_, _____ , _,..., ................... _ ..... _ ......... e:;'::'<~!:!"::!"":"'!-=-;;:;;,-:.-:,
'.CHECLQNG
• UPt ••
'Smogless'
Fuel for
State Cars
THI lTUHOt WOllD ..
MR.MUM
Strangled
Girl Cases
Linked?
Men, W oiuen Wash SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Gov. Ron•ld ~an. ucalat· t==~~>-.-' ing the w.ar on aJr ,,OUution,
BURBANK (AP) -A young
fonner beauty queen's death
is remarkably similar to that
of another pretty girl, police
say, but officers are wtsure if
lhe murderer was the aame
person.
I .
bas announced rthai st.Ste gov-
trnmtnt's ma.asive fleet of
I
Hands f}iff erently·
I I
· carS and irucks will stan
convertQlg to . nearly smog.
Jess nafural ps.
By L. M. BOYD '1
LOVE AND lf AR -' ~le it
claimed by a 111.11.trtrOOnial
counselor that a man iJiM1 50s
who mlrrie! I gir~ in Net 11'5
Is a jackm~ Janguige is too slrtlng. Love and War
man .agrees I ' greater \the
age gap, the efs likely a Suc-
cessful marri g,. Nonetheless,
numerous diPifi,ed gentlemen
aged SO-p!WI M<hprtghtly girts
aged · ~plus ' }\ave f o u tf d -e\hing sufft<pent to stay
wed .. For ln!tani:e\ take u,~.
President JOhn"Tyler, 54, and
·Mrs. Tyler, 24. No other Presi.
dent and First Lady, in·
cidentally', havetbgtn so wide-
ly separated by )iars.
white-knuckled minutes, and
ambition, the unblinking
hours, and even love, the
numb grinning days. But it
has not been enough. Nothing
in tqls experience tells me
why so many of tbe young
men now Choose to let their
hair grow long and shaggy and
dirty. I .think they must be
nuts.
He ordered ~at 175 vehicles
in the atate'1 neet of 28,500
be e~ulpped immediately with
both a. fuel system for con-
v,eoUooal gasoline and a sep.
arate, system for natural gas,
the same type housewives
have cooked with for years.
The governor also called
for a tax cut on natural gas
as an incentive for other
government and private fleet
operators to also switch.
The Republican governor 1µ
I /
'-...
j;
" •I
7,Y,, announced the '.smog fighting ._ _________________ _.
plan in a televised "Report---------------------to th~ people''. Monday eve-
The latest victim w a s
Margie Schuit of West
Hollywood, a sec~tary for
Columbia Pictures Corp. and
"Miss San Fernando Valley"
of 1965.
She wu 22 y'8rs old and
had parked her car in a lot
outside a· West Los Angeles
drug store. She was going
shopping. She apparently was
kidnaped in the. parking lot.
Four IllOllths ago the same
scene had been enacted by
Wendy HaUson, an art stu·
dent at San Fernando Valley
State College. She was also 22
and was last seen alive at the
same drug store lot.
CUSTOMER SERVICE: Q_
','How many college students
are· payiDg'their own way, en-
tirely?" A. About one in
seven ••.. Q.''BOWl.JNG IS the
most · p o p u J a r participant
sport, ·hf it not?" A.'.Bowting
ranks No. 3, it's now·said. No.
1 is swimmirig. FishJng 11nd
daricing are tied tpr No.
-·1r·s HARD tG rorget a 2 .•. Q. i•uow MANY SONGS
girl," says Flip Wilson, "When ~ has." Johnny Cash written?" A.
you buy her a present on Maybe 600, so far.
time." .. , THE FOOTBALL
nlng. , Production of tbe al-
most · twt>mlnute long tape
was: paid by a group called
"Ca lifornians for ·a Creative
Soci ety," which has financed
preiflous filmed appearances.
Starting· immediately, Rea-
gan said, 175 Slate Division of
Highways automobiles will be
fitted with a dual system for
both cooventional and natural
gas . But · other ca r s and
trucks \\'ill be similarly equip.
ped on a "programmed, con-
.4lleged Alioto Fee
Sharing Probed
Miss Halison 's strangled
body was found several blocks
from the drug store in the
t rank of her abandoned car.
Miss Schuit's body was found
late Sunday night in a
Burbank alley. She was also
strangled, police said. SE~N ·is too Jong. Now BEER-Theory ~o. l :_Beer
wait nobody likes to watch should be poured bnskly mto a
football more than I do. Still glass lo ~e-gas it with the big-
say the season is t 0 0 gest possible head. Theory No.
Jong .•. THAT PART of your 2: Beer should be drunk
body ~t, ca9 stand: the most di~y r:om its container t,o
heat is your tongue ... WHEN avoid losing ilavor. I don t
A WOMAN washes her hands know which of these theories ' · correct Do '
tinuing basis."
The conversion cost totals
about $400 per automobile, a
spoke!man for Reagan Mid.
Under the dual system, con.
ventional gasoline will be
used for country·driving while
nafuril gas will· be switched
to in smoggy urban areas.
SEATI'LE (UPI) -Stale
Atty. Gen. Slade Gorton plans
to investigate fee ar-
rangements made between
former Atty. Gen. John O'Con-
nell and Joseph Alioto before
the latter became mayor of
San Francisco.
Gorton announced his in-
tentions Monday after O'Con-
nell said the matter was none
of Gorton's busineM.
The San Francisco mayor,
the Democrat. whom many
predict will challenge
Republican Gov. Ro~, a Id
Reagan in 1970, says he
believes It . is "absolutely
~ary to set the record
straight and avoid any in-
volvement in any dispute in
Washington."
Police said that ry:ibbery
\\'asn't a motive in eithei' case
and that neither seemed to
have been molested sexually.
A third strangling case that
occurred this year two blocks
from the drug store parking
lot is .also umolved, but is
regarded as less similar. ln
that, the body of Pauline
Silver, 81, was found Jan. 3.
·She also had been strangled.
her palms make a rotary mo-is · you.
lion against each olber. When
a maµ washes his hfnds, his
pabm -make a shutUe motion
against each other .•. ONLY
ONE BRIDE in seven was
.e,ng.~ed more than a year.
HAIR -A client with a flat-
iering faith in this depf.rlment
inquires, "Why do so many of
Ute yowng men now choose to
.Jet their hair grow Jong and
shaggy and dirty?" Regret to
admlt I do not know why.
'lbought at first it w~ the ·
high cost of haircuts. Too
shallow an interpretation,
that. I have v.'orked alone in
the cruel extreme and alsO in
the company of faJr men, and
I have thought out some things
about war aqd peace, both
personal and public, and 1 I
remember rebe1lion, t h-e
YOU CAN · GET chewing
gum out of a youngster's hair,
reports an expe'rt, if you rub
the mess with milk chocolate,
let it set, then wash it all
away.·, .WITHOUT A
DOUBT, says a bellman of
considerable experience,· the
best tippers in the country are
the Alaskans .•. FACT THAT
Mr. Graves is the caretaker at
tbe Carlsbad, N.M., c It y
cemetery does indeed qualify
him for membership in lhe
Proper Job Club.
Your questions and com·
n1e11ts are welcomed and
toill be used whenever pos·
sible i 11 "Checking Up."
Please address your mail to
L.M. Boyd in care of Dailu
Pilot, Bo:r 1875, Newport
Beach, Calif. 92663.
Marine Brig
Chief Oear
After Probe
O'Connell declined to com-
ment on reports be received
over $700,000 or the $2.3
million fee to Alioto when he
was attorney for 15 public
utility districts. He won some
,
Pop Fe$tival
Appeals Ban
$16 million in damages in the · LOS ANGELES (AP) -
cases between 1961 and 1967 Promoters of the Mid Winter
and received 15 percent. Pop Festival have asked the
"I'm going to say something State Court of Appeal to ban
about it, but I can't say ex· enrorcement or an emergency
actly when,·• O'Connell said. ordinance aimed"at heading off
"But even assuming the whole a · mammoth rock m u s i c
CAfl.1P PENDLETON (AP) thing is true, there's nothing festival in San Luis Obispo
-The Marine Corps' formal wrong Yi'ith it." County.
board of investigation into "There is no prohibition in The County Board o f
alleged mistreatment of brig this state on private practice Supervisors p a s s e d an
inmates at this Southern for the attorney general ," emergency ordinance I as t
California base apparently has O'Connell added . Thursday which bans gather.
cleared Maj. Wilson A, Voigt, He said he had writlen .ings of more . than 5,000
former brig commander. Gorton a Jetter saying the persons i n unincorporated
Indians Call
'Pow Wow'
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -
The 200 American Indians Oc·
cupying Alcatraz Island have
called a meeting of represen-
tatives from 200 tribes from
across the country to plan a
Confederation of Arner~can In-
dian Nations.
Ruling Against Ban
On Reds T ,hrown Ozit
A spokesman al the San
Francisco Indian Center said
Mondaf that 2.700 invitations
to the convention on the San
FranclScu Bay island over: the
Chrisbnas holiday.S we re mail·
ed to tribes, bands, reserva-
ti9ns and Indian offices in
urban centers.
Brig. Gen. Frank E. Gar. matter of fees paid in the an-areas foc a 90-day period.
retson, head of the in-titrust suit against electrical Mid Winter Pop Festival,
vestigalion said Monday that equipment firms who supplied Inc., plans to stage the event
the board "has withdrawn its public utilities is none of for ll.P to 200,000 fans on the
designation of Voigt as a party Gorton's business. old Indian 'Creek Ranch south
to the investigation." Gorton disagreed, saying he of Atascadero Friday through
Voigt, officer in charge of believed O'Connell had no Sunday. lr;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;j
the base brig from June 1968 right to aceept mooey while In The corporation's petition, •IYI YOUI s1c1n.t.1Y
to October 1969, was named office. filed Monday, cll'iims the A HILPIN• HAND!
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
state Court of Appeal, acting
on a technicality, has thrown
out Superior Court Judge Jer·
ry Pacht's decision 1 as t
October that a University or
California ban on hiring Com-
munists was unconstitutional.
The appeal court held Mon--
day that Pacht erred in refus.
ing a nioUon by counsel for
the university's Board of
Regents that the case be
transferred to Alameda Coun·
ty. corporate home af the
university for more than a
century.
Pacht, after refusing the
change of Vef!Ue motion. ruled
Oct. 20 that Angela Davis, 25,
an assilrtent philosophy pro-
fessor at the uni versity's Los
Angeles campus, had been im-
pfoperly dismissed by the
regents solely on the !{round
she was an acknowledged
mimber of the Communist
party.
itiss Davis, a Negro, later
Nov. 24 as a party to the in-Alioto has promised to open ordinance· violated the rights
was reinstated and has been vestigation and advised to re-his legal files Wednesday to of music lovers to freedom of
teaching ~ cour~ enti_tled tain counsel _tell his side of the story. .assembly, freedom of speech
'·'Recurring Philosophical The board, convened Oct. 10 and fredom to "worship"
TAB ANIWlllNS
IUllAU
835-7777 Themes in Black Literature." after national m a g a z i n e perfonnances.
Pacht's niliitg ·will remain in articles alleged thaL prisoners 3 .Men Pra ised L,•••••••MMJllBMJ1Wi•J1111•MMJ1U11•J111J11:J were brutally treated, is Ii ;.'~~~-forappe6-0 adlaysacufo""pe".'_'.~ meeting in executive session For Rescue ! ST. JOHN THE DIVINE EPISCOPAL •
'" 1.1= """' to review testimony. No Jt iR
Charles H. Phillips, attorney further hearings, which were SAN DIEGO (AP) _ Eigtlt i 2043 Or•ng•, Cott• Mesa IJ
loi the plaintiffs in the original . closed to the public, were crewmen of the guided missile I
suit, said he will take the mat-planned and the date of cont· destroyer Parsons have been CHRISTM AS EVE.-7:00 P.M. S. S. program pletion wa.s undetermined . ._ .... b ,. · ki f • tel" to the California Supreme pratOKV. Y 1.uerr s pper or I i nd pegeent •
Collrt. rescuing all 18 men from a I
The initial suit, a taxpayer's W p h d Wna boat that sank after col-I I 0:30 P.M. C.rol singing
actipn, was filed by three on1an . us e tiding with the Parsons. . I 11 :00 HOL y EUCHARIST
UCLA professors and two The 128-foot vessel Orient I ·
students. Miss Davis also 10· in· By Pup, D1'e" sank about 20 minut" after • CHRIST"AS DAY I 0·00 F 'I E h · t I -the collision 140 miles off the a m -• a.m. am1 Y uc arts J ed as a plaintift •
Pacht said the firing of Miss VENICE (AP) -Police say .:;:S=o=u=the=rn=C=a=lif=o=rn=i=a=c=o=a='='=·=!r.=•=· ='"'=-==·=·=·=-==-='"'='"'='"'=""=""'=,_=,.:;;;'"';;;;;;""~'"'~;;;[ DavLi because of party af. a ~year-old boy told them hislr
filiatlon was a violatJon or the grandmother was pushed to
Jst apd 14th Amendments to her death into the backyard
the U.S. Constitution. swimming pool by the family 's
ShoUld her supporters fail to St. Bernard puppy, which
win 't.heir appeal in the welghS 125 pounds-and is con-
California SIJllreme Court, the side red friendly.
case presumably will be tried The drowned . grandmothei',
again in Alameda County Amelia Piettie, M, of nearby
Superi6r Court. El Segundo, was babysitting
Observers noted mearitirne. with her grandson, Pau1, on
thaL delays in setting a trial Monday. Authbrities said she
G · R b date in Alameda County cooJd was found fa(,'e down in the 11nme n O allow the regents to again pool and was dead on arrival
move against Miss Davis. at a hospital.
•••y·c:•r• 1c:tiv1 w••r
fOr
m•n •nd boyi
last minute 9i ft ideas:
•utom•tic umbrellts, group ther•py
gomes, lejon wallets, unique
w1tchb1nd1.
l vt$day, Dfctmbtr ?l , 196? D>ILY PILOT 1
+ +·
~U A llTY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES
FOR YOUR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE '
ALLDAY· . . ·** * ' ''* Wednesday
December24 ·:
CHRISTMAS
' EVE.=4 •.
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,, CLOSED THURSDAY * CHRISTMAS DAY *
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICB • Complete-New York Stock List
, I
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" .... -.-._...-,,...-~-o.-•••~o.-o.-oo~~··,_,., .. ,,,., .. spoO"•O .. O•O•O"'"°''B""GG"•< .. O"'O>>>>•>>< .... O .. $•>•<>~ ... ,> .. O-oOoOoO'"'"'""l?f"''""""'""'"'-~"""'"r•< ... S,..,Sl'"'OPoO>Ooo .. P''6"'0';"ii""f\t\•\<O<C>>'":"",..,.-,,.,-,,,__, _ _,:-O-O--,T
Tuesday's Closing Prices-Complete New York
Year-end Selling
Hits Wall Street
NEW YORK (UPI) -The stock market Tues
day gave way to normal year--end selling pressures
in the absence of motivating news Trading was
frurl y active
Shortly before the fin al bell the UPI market
wide indicator showed a loss of 0 82 percent while
the Dow Jones industrial average of 30 selected
blue chips lost 3 83 at 782 14
Turnover exceeded 13 000 000 shares about a
million shares ahead of J\1onday s pace
Of the l 639 issues crossing the tape
cl1ned and 416 advanced
956 de-
Electrorncs encountered considerable pressure
although there \Vere a number of point sized loser ..
in other maJor groups
Among the most active stocks were Household
Finance Gulf 011 Great Western F1nanc1al City
Investing Amencan Telephone OcC1denta1 Petrol
eu1n and Magnavox Magnavox traded an early
bloclc o{ 93 900 shares at 34 off 5/8
IbM off 6 Monday continued to Jose ground
while General Dynan11cs was among the softest
aerospace issues Gen~ral Dynan11cs is the pr net
pal contractor for the F 111 swing \Vlng 1et which
the Air Force grounded follow1ng a era-sh this week
Cherrucal s ranged to mo1'e than a po1nt lo\ver
1n a fe\v 1ns~ances with steels motors and rads
generally traded m narro\v ranges
Prices softened on the American
change m moderate turnover
AQ•>!t&
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Final Stocks
In All Home
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• .~ .....
Tutsd1y, Oeceniber 2), l9b9
SA Cou11cllnaan Declares · Judge Voids Paper Ban '
Humru1 Relatio11 s Not a Review Boar d FULLERTON -A Fullerton
city ordinance aimed at so-cal~
led throw.away newspapers -
forbidding their distribution
v.•ithout homeowner pcr1nls--
sion -has been temporarily
nulllfied by federal
authorities.
-which heavily mixes low Tue. oftlclal also 11 l d • i"
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
OI tM Ottltf l"li.t 11111
SANTA ANA -City Coun-
cilman Jerry. Patterson says
he believes he has a workable
1'<>lution to the problems whlch
are Plaguing t11e fonnalion of
Santa Ana's proposed Human
Relations Commission.
In an interview Patterson
said the ordlnance creating
the commission could be
defeated when it comes up for
, a final vote early next year
because t h re e councilmen
have voiced their opposition to
the commission having the
Power to subpoena witnesses.
"The basic concern with
subpoena power is the fact
that, if the commission has
the power, it might beeome a
police review board o r
disciplinary board for city
employ es," he explained.
"The best solution for this
problem is to state in the
ordinance that the commission
shall nOt be a police or city
Marriage
Licetises
DEATH NOTICES
BUCHANAN
Rnbet'f 9U<~81'\e", 11111 lmo1Ta L1.,_,
Hun11,,..1or1 8NCll. Strvlct1 1>9f'dint 1! Smltht Mor1u1ry.
HIJLSTON l"re<lerick Chrlo Huhton. Ate 61.\, or ~ 81vv lew, St11ta A~•. P•lt o'
det!h, P1tetm1"• 22. Survive;! bV son,
JtkMrd W. Mulston, (II Irv ine; moth.
W•i11·!1w, Mt1. W. 0. C1ruer. CorOl'll
d~ Mir; brotMrs 1nd 1lster1.1r,.1aw.
Mr, i nd Mrs. Dtl• Cartier; Mr. 1nd Mrs. W. C•rlTw, Wet! Covin&; Mr.
Ind Mrt. Oont!d C1rt!er, TenMl>ffl
two M91!-s 11'1d -l'llKt. services, W..:ll'lnday, 10 AM. 811!1 ChtPel, 1570 E. Coon! Hlohw1y, CMOl\I de! Mir. 1"'9rmenl, P1d lk vi.ow Mtmor111
"•""· F1mllr suooes~ 111os1 wl1hlr10 !o m 1 k • m-1•1 <ontrlbU!lor.,,
olNMI conttlbUM to ma 9ulldl11t Fund
t;JI St. John the Pivin• Eplsco<>•I Chu~!"! or Costa M111. · &1111 Modu· 1rv. or.._tol'I.
STUART
J11!' S!111rf. l.U lrd Avt.. Lt~un1 Beacll. Ol!I t;JI dNth, CtcemDer 21. SurvlvW bv ion, Robert H. Sllltrt,
ot Costa MHll d1111h1'r, Mrs. ll•r· b1r• J . Kinyon, Colla M~I 1ht 11r11'1(1C!'llldrtll. Servlcr1, WedflesdtY. l PM, Shtflei-L•tun1 BteCh MOrflllrv Ch11>el. Prlve!e ient~bmen1 to IOI·
!ow 11 Mtlrose Abbey. Ft mllv sug-111111 thos1 wl"1l!IO to me~e memori•I c;onTrlbu!lona. PIM!I contrlllljlt to 1~1 Al'rl..-k1n C1ncer Soc:!cll', Sl!t!fl•r L1oun1 8"10ch Mcwtu1rv, Plrttklrs.
WARDELL
M•nnle W1r<Hll, R:t1 lden1 of Pnoeni1, Arlron1. S.rvl(et, Wed!'>tldav, 10 AM, Smiths CheHI, lnltrl'rlent, GOOd Shff·
1>91'!1 Cemettrv, Smlth1 Morn.i1rv, 01· rKIOU.
WILLETI
£11he<' J. w111111. .ii~ Cliff Prive, ltliJM B..,tll. Otlt of c!Hlh, Otc. 11. 5urvlv9d bv $0tll. Albert V. Wlllell
Jr •• ot PtnnsvJv1nl11 dW9f\ltr. Mr" 1!:1T1'11r J. Gordon, Okl1~m1; flvt er•ndCl!llOrtn 1no nven 9rt•!·Or1r'ld-cl!lldrtn. Strvico1 Wt•t lltld Mor'ldtv.
7 PM. $htffer L•ount Be1tl! MC>f!~1rv
Cl!e"1. lnltrm!nl, M•lroH Ablley,
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westcliff l\1ortuary
U7 E. 17th St .. Costa ti.1esa
lf&-4111 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del ti.far OR 3·tt50
Cotta Mesa All 5-%.U • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
110 Broadway, Costa P.fe11
u 8-3133 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huatingt011 VaUey
P.tortuary
Jitll Beach Blvd.
Jlu11Ungtoft Beacb
IC-7771 • PACIFIC \'JEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemd<ry e M-1')'
CUpel
35M PldOe View l>ri"e
Newport Btoc., Cllilonola
'"·!':llO • PEEK F~ULY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
';'Ht Btlu Ave.
Wutmlut>r 113-3.IZI • SHEFFER ~IORTUARY La.... ....... 4ff.llH
&ua.mtata ...... • SMITHS' MOR'IVAllY
ltl Malo SL
0..dn,..._ -Sany is Top Bananas
On Any Comio1 Page
emptoye review board. That'$
what we have the persoruM:l
review board for."
Formation of the eom-
mlsslon has been dogged by
controversy since Nov. 25
when the Human Relations
Fonnarton Commilltt sub-
mitted their rtPort to the city
council.
In it, the committee said
there is definitely a need for a
human relations commission
in santa Ana "to provide an
outlet for grievances'~ or
minorities in the areas of
housing, employment. educa.
lion, transportation, city pro-
grams, and communic~tlOns.
dissenter!:!. Vice 1'-1ayor Wade
llerrin and Councilmen J .
Ogden J\1arkel and Vernon S,
Evans, voted "no" largely
becau&e, 06 the problen1 in·
volving subpoena power.
According to the attorney .
the city charter provides "all
appointive boards and com·
missions shall have the power
to compe-1 the attendance of
witnesses" in hearlngs or in·
vestigations conducted by that
commission.
"They {the councilmen op..
posed) didn·t want the com-
mission to tum into a police
review board." Mock said.
'·But you can 't abrogate the
pcl\\'er of the_ charter by
ordinance."
\Vlth Brooks gone 'from the
council, Patterson said, the
vote to approve the ordinance
would be a three -three
deadlock ,
Patterson said he has
other alternatlvos for
council to consider.
two
the
"The first alternative is to
convince the opposition that
su bpcena power isn't that bad.
It has nothing to do with en·
forcement ," he commented.
"Or, \\'e could say in the
ordinance that the commission
was not to use the su bpoena .
And il may be after a year or
so the council may v.·ant to
remove the restraint," said
Patterson .
Supervisor
Assistant
Judge Charles Carr ordered
a ban on enforcement of the
city's anti·litter law Friday in
U.S. District Court ln Los
Angeles, pending a Jan. 12 sult
challenging it.
The suit was filed by Sunday
Mail Inc., ishtrs of the Tempo
Sunday Magaiine, which i3
widely di stributed throughout
Orange County.
Judge Carr was presiding in
cost advertising in with its delivery employes are told to
free Ideas -began last stop leaving cop I ea. im-November,..and the Fullerton ordlnance would have become mediately at home11 where
e!fective last Friday. residents complain that they are un1vanted.
The publi.Shers bypass most,===========; city litter laws by hanging the!r
Tempo magazine on doors of
homes.
Executives of Sunday ?i1ail
Jnc . appeared recently before
the C-06ta Mesa City Council to
spell out their operation and
make sure they were com·
plying with all city laws .
City Attorney Roy June said at the time that the city had
no authority to prohibit the
distribution, as long M 'the
company paid its proper
license fees .
A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
Tlt•J ctn CllltlUtr, WM "tltYI tMy c1n. -'· v.,..
l'Jl!:SENll!O AS A
l'U&L IC Sl!RVICE EVERY DA.'( I Y:
L" Roofing Co.
1t Yttrl llt lllllntH us1 su..,11r A••· IQ·nz:t
City attorney William Moc.k
was ordered last Monday night
to draw up the 9rdinance &Iter
a four·hour council hearing.
The council approved the
fonnation or the commission
"In prlnciphf ' in a four to
three vote.
Councilman Patterson said a
compromise plan was
necessary because councilman
Walter Brooks who voted for
the commission is resignin g
his ~at in order to move out
of hi s district.
The councilman said he was
convincetl the subpoena pro-
blem won't be as bad as the
opposition members think it
will.
Quits Post the abS<nce of Judge Fr>•cis BIBLE THO UG HTS .·
Mock said the t h r e e
Coiinty Sets Policy
Of.,Fair Employ1nent
By TOM BARLEY
01 1111 Dtl1J l'llOf Sii "
SANTA ANA -Orange Coun-
ty has gone on record as being
what its board of supervisors
says it always has been -an
equal opportunity employer.
They put no obstacles in the
wey of Personnel Director
William Hart and voted 5 to 0
for adoption of a written
policy that will, Hart claims,
aJlow his personnel office to
spearhead a drive aimed at
"convertt11g much of the raw
manpower that we h a v e
around into competent county
workers rather than restrict
ourselves to the fully trained
and near fully trained."
Backed by the board was
Hart's argument that "our
ro l e as a m ajo r
employer .•• needs to be clear-
ly defined in terms of our soc-
ial responsibility to the entire
community.
"\Ye beiieve," Hart .said,
"that development and better
use of available m8'.flpower
can improve government ef-
New Judge
Welcomed
To Court
SANTA ANA Judge
Robert A. Banyard Thursday ,.,.as formally welcomed to the
Orange County Superior Court
bench in colorful ceremorUes
'"itnessed by fellow judges,
members of the Orange Coun·
ty Bar Association and the in-
ductee's family and friends .
Presiding Judge Samu e I
Dreizen took the bench in the
cro\vded maste r c a I e n d a r
court.room for the swearirrg in
and enrobi.ng of the court's
21st judge. Tributes were paid
to Judge Banyard by fellow
jurists and members of the
bar.
Judge Banyard, 55, Santa
Ana, takes over the $31 ,816
post vacated with the retire-
ment this year of Judge Karl
Lynn Davis of Ne\vport Beach.
A Republican. he \\'BS ap-
pointed two \\·eeks ago by Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
ficien cy, enhance mer i t
employment and provide an
avenue of opportunity to
the . _ • disenJranchised mem·
be rs of our community."
Hart dismisses objections
that implementation of the
policy could lead to heavier
county costs in traini11g of
unskilled workers and the time
it cost by diverting trained
workers for instruction of the
new employes.
Many trained workers hired
by the county use much of
their time . he said, to look
around for better prospects.
And he stressed that the Un·
trained hand who becomes a
skilled county worker brings a
sense of dedication a n d
re sponsibility to his duties and
the employer who has placed
him in the post.
Hart's program included ex-
pansion of the WIN (Work
Incentive Program) for
1velfare recipients in \\•hich
eligible workers on lhe welfare
payroll are trained ror jobs
that \Viii eventually take them
orr the rolls.
Youth Corps, high school
dropout programs and sun1-
mer work training programs
\\'ill also be expanded in a bid
lo draft future county man·
power from efforts that are.
Hart claims, already highly
productive.
Hart said his first duty
U'11der the progra1n authorized
by the board to place his aims
and objectives before all cou11 -
ty department heads and en-
courage each to look beyond
"traditional aims and goals"
in hiring county personnel.
At the heart of all future
hiring and training programs
will be, he said, the newly
'v r it ten county policy of
equal op portunity for every
racial. ethnic and cultural
group.·•
:~ Therapists
Join Center
ORANGE -Three ne1v
th-.'rapists have been added to
lhe sl<!ff of the Easter Seal
P.chabilitation Center for Crip-
pled Children and Adults.
"After all," he concluded,
"why throw the baby out with
I.he bath water'~"
Jail Escape
Brings T erm
For Convict
Wha1en, Ylho will hear the Jan. CHOOSIN• TO o'l lYI R•g1rding Chri1f,
12 case after he returns from th• lllLE ••v1, "Thoeqh H• w1r1 • Son,
SANTA ANA -Bernard F. vacation. Y•* LEARNED H• ob•di1nc-•nd-H•
Tieman, e:teC1.lth1e assistant to Robert Lawton, attoi-ney for bec1rn1 th• •utho r of et1r~•r s1IY 1tiofl'
unto •ll ti""' thet OIEY Him", Htb." 5:1· Orange Co unt Y Supen>isor Sunday Mail Inc,, charges in 9. Although Je1u1, LEARNED ob1di1nc1,
\Villiam Hirslein announced the suit that Fullerton's newly H. n•~•' enc• DISOBEY ED. A1 He 9r•w enacted antl·litter law in· H 1 , t b th th t J;'riday he was leaving county ""· • 11'"'" 0 o ey '' ,, •" • fringes on freedom of the SIN. H, COULD HAVE rebelled, but He didn't. He 11id lo God,
service. press by interfering with free "-not 11 I will but., Thou wilt", Mitt. 26:J'i.
A Tustin resident, Tiernan distribution ol ideas. JHlt11• 11id te hi1 p1opl1, "-choo11 you thi1 d1'1' whom v• will
1vill become director 0 ( Publication of the magazine •erv-·· for me ind "'Y hou11, WI will •• ,..e the Lord ", Jo1h.
24:15 S.'"HI 11!d, "Bit.old, to obtv i1 b1tltr then 1ecrific1-", marketing with Voorheis, Tri· 1 s.m. r 5;22. J"" ~·ld, "-hv c1U ye M •. Lord, Lo1d i nd
dle and Nelson, Inc., of H d H • J DO NOT th1 thinq1 which I 11y ?". A!10 "If v• lov1 Mt, k11 p Newport Beach when hi9 ea S Oeptl3 My colfttn1ndm,nh". Ilk. 6:46, J". 14d5l. H1r1, H1 in11"1r1bly
connecltd LOVE end OBEDIENCE . Love j, dtmon1tr1t1d by
resignation becomes effective ORANGE _ Santa Ana cb1dienc1.
SANTA ANA_ A Doy,·ney Jan. I, 1970. anesthesiologist Dr. Charles Do YOU obey Chrid, 11 you liv e ffom div tobd1y1 H1vh• yo11
man who bolted to lreedom Tieman has been with the Ziegler has won el.ection as LEARNED th;,7 H1 11id, "-t11ch ell n1tion1, 1pti1ing t •'?-te1ching th1m to observe 111 th;n91 wh1ho1ve• I h1v1 commtnd· when friendly v i s itor s board of supervisors £or three staff president of St. Joseph's ed you-", Mi tt. 21:18-1 9.
unscrev.·ed the bolts or the years £ollowing his retirement Hospital in Orange, it was an-VISIT ui, study the BIBLE with us. Church of Chri1t, 217 W. Wil.
plate glass divider in the after 24 years service in the nounced today. Dr. Ziegler ion St., Co1t1 Mes•, Celif. '92627. Ph. 541-571 1, 545-2441, Orange County Jail visitors' 646.576J.
lounge has been found guilty , __ N_av=y~. ::-:::-::-::-::-::-::--::-~==w~il~I ~ta~k~e~o~ff~ice~. J~a=n~. =I.===:::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=::==::::===~~;:== of felony escape. I
Charles Eugene Kell. 22, 111
1 • • ~ • • • • • mi • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 8 • • • • • • • • 8 • -
drew that ruling r r o •
Superior Court Judge William 1•1 CLIP. & SAVE \ '~-, Speirs following a non-jury ,
trial. Judge Speirs ordered ;1
Kell to return to court Jan. 12 I K MAC PHARMACY I fo' sentencing and a jai l term . ': • .. Q 1
1 Ke ll was waiting shipment
lo state p1·ison last Aug. 30 ~~!~~i~~:~!~~~:ii~;/,;;,'~~: : 3333 NEWPORT BLVD., NEWPORT BEACH \ ........._ .......... :
total abS<nce of guacds in the 1 (Acron From City Hall) "" •
jail's visiting room. Downey •
police restored Kell to the jail I 8 nine days later. 11
Kell \\1ill not know uni.ii Jan.
12 'if Judge Speirs v,.·ilJ allow
hin1 to serve the ne1v jail term
cunct.yenlly with the one-to-
five -years spell he drew \\'ilh
his conviction on anned rob·
bery charges.
Lagunan
Fa ce s Trial
In Fraud
• I • ••
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AN INTRODUCTORY OFFER TO OUR
NEW PHOTO FINISHING SERVICE.
ANY 12 EXPOSURES
KODACOLOR ROLL WILL BE DEVELOP·
ED & PRINTED FREE!
\'.>'ITH THIS COUPON
DECEMBER 26 & 27, 1969 ONLY
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LOS ANGELES -Curtis
\Vayue Lint of Laguna Beach
must face trial Jan. 28 in Los
Angeles Superior Court on
charges that he detrauded an Ii;\•"":;;;. r.:;;o;;;ii.'i;a;;;:c~"°"""~;;r;:.,.,,;:.;~,,,.;;;:. ~-~,,,_,;;,:. ~"'"~·u· ~~_,,,.,.,,~iii~~:e:;m;;;;.;;;;;!;;i,..,,,.iiQiii:i""'!iii'~1·~"'~"'~\'i·•~':;;.e;:. ,:;;:;~~·;·~lii!mi~.~ .. ~. ;;::,: .• :y.....,o;;;:_;Q!!i;i>;;Oiiiiij;·
elderly 'Y+'idow of_ more than , ' ~·
$137.000 by selling her a , J
:~~~;~ss~~~urancepolicyand · DAIL y PILOT CARRIERS ··i
Judge \Villillm Keene
granted bail for Lint, 40, of 60
Blue Lagoon, in setting the "
1970 trial date. \
Lint was arrested at his ~
Beverly Hills office last Sept.
25 following a"tl lnvestigation
which allegedly established
that he prepared the worth:ess ~
documents for Mrs. Bertie
l\1ae Frederick, Officers said •
the 66-year-old widow. in fail·
ing health. was persuaded by
Lint to provide for her tv.10
older sisters in the event of
her deatll.
HONOR ROLL
Tht DAILY PILOT i.! proud of its corps of young salesmen who deliver the newspaper to your door. These
young nien are tlie cream of the community. Each month, the best of them will be selected for listing on the
HO'nor Rolt. Each carrier listed l1ere has obtained at least four new ctutomers during the past month, had no
nwre than one customer complaint for the month and must have paid his bill for the newspapers he bought
;'wholesale" on time. Nume-ral iii front of star ($) preceding his name indicates ~iumber of consecutive months
tl1at carrier has been on !lie llonor Roll. ' ..
..
Judge D a v i s . 68, retired,
Sept.. 30 after serving 12 years
on the Superior Court bench.
Tnt>y are f\.1rs. Cecily Long
or Orange, an occupational
therapist, Mrs. P at r i c i a
il'lartin of Laguna Beach, also
an occupational therapist, and
"1iss Nancy Herman of
Newport Beach, a speech
pathologist.
Prosecution evidence In·
c!icates that Linl accepted ~
nearly $97,000 from Mrs.
Frederick last April for the
worthless policy. He later sold
her an equally worthless bond
for $40.000, it is alleged.
... ..
OC Cities
Plant Trees
In Tribute
SANTA ANA -A project to
e n c o u r a g e tree-plantings
throughout Orange County to
honor California's Bicentennial
is meeting with entbusJastlc
response, according to Mrs.
\Veston \\Talker. chairmwil of
the beautification committee
of the Orange County
Bicentennial Committee.
Almost all the incorporated
cities in the county already
have planted the i r com·
memoral.ive trt:es. M r 1 .
\Valker reports. many ac-
complishing the task even
berore the Bicentennial Year
officially opened 1n July.
Tree-plantMgs along t he
Orange Coast have included
Star Pines. planted by Laguna
Beach at the Canyon entnnce.
to the city; an Acac ia
Balleyana planted by S.n
Clemente at the Conununlty
Center Playhouse ; an
Evergreen Pear at S'1'I Jua-11
Capistrano: a Pine ttte at
Ne\\'port Beach City 11111 : 1
Canary IslaOO Pine Jn Murdy
Park at Huntington Btacb; a
Ccdrus deodara at Foun!Jin
Valley's civic center: 1 Wil!IOn
l rh19 Ttih All fet •
FREE
CAR WASH
WITH Pill-UP OP UNION GASOLIHI II 6•11•• Ml11,)
EAST 17TH STREET --a-
WESTCllFF
SHOPPING
CENTER
Lido Car Wash
.al WT 1711 (AT 111'111() COSTA llW • 64'·!1141
PACIFIC COAST HIGHWAY
ALL MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
OPEN DAILY. SUNDAYS AND HOLIDAYS
.,
I I
I.
St1f1n llelich
Re ndv Fo.t1r
Ttd l<•dwtll
Jerry Cli1+on1y
St1v1 Smith
Edwi~ Stodd1rd
Gr1"t l1M1d1r
Jiff Th•rl•n
Bri•n Sh1rq1r
J1rry Smith
Ro91r H•11+1
Etle Ron
D1n"is heli
St1"• Crilly
Ji~ W1rd
o.~id Sm11h
Jim Sh i"~'
I HI Barritt
Ste•1 L1Ru•
Tor'll Swift
Dinny lurle11
Skip Fr•ti1r
M<•e Wh1el1r
John l1rtholol'rl1 u
Rick Wh.1ler
Tom Sc;h111i•r
M1t Tt1k1
Joh" Mi11•r
P1! Cr•ln
Sieve l1k•r
Ed Lop•t
SI•"• P1yne
l illy loytl
G1ry lrid911lo(k
Allen Fro•mmling
Sl•v1 Pili•
D1,.itl P111!1011
Danny Saylor
D•ryl Oslt•nd•r
Mike Henthorn
Mtrk P1q111I
Line Johnson
Ricky H1rfo•d
1°Nick Hod91t
1~R1ndy Con1t1nt
1°W1rren Ecc1e1
21J1y C•rhon
2'Gut Voql
2"Mik• Johnton
2•Jo1 Guy
2•Br•d D1wf81on
2°Li•~ G1ll•9h1r
2"Crai9 F1Jtm1n
2°Phrl Weit
2•Jolin G1r1'11hu1en
2"L•nord Bright
l 'K111 How•r
Carrier of The Month
5* DAVID COLLINS, NEWPORT BEACH
~ P:i9h 1 from hii rrrit rrionlh o~ tht job -•nd th•+ Wll fl vt 111011ih1 19• -01Yid Collini, 11,
to11 of Mr. tl ~d Mri, Or .. 11 Collini cf lt42 Porl W11tbo11r11e Pl1<1, Ntwport letch, his mid•
l~t DAILY PILOT C111i1r1 Honor Roll. A p~1~111! fri11\d of Scott Terrell's, l11t 111onth'1 Cir·
I 1 ".•r of fh t Mo11tlo, O,vid 1111 only followed hit fr itnd Into flit "wl11net'1 cltcl1," but also 901
h,1 t.1rr1t r iob bec•u1e fllf Scotf1 t•(Oll'l"'•ftd1!lt1n 111d 1110 1h•r11 Scott'1 lnl•l•Sf i11 tropic•I
fi1h (both boy1 110 1 c1ni•r route profitt fo bu'( fl1h i nd equlp111111I for their home 1qw1rlu1111l.
01,.Jd •"•11d1 Lincol ~ Junior Hi9h Selio~ •here h• 11 tcli•t h1 SOS ISt1mp 0 11t St\lpidityh
• olub which ~ighti drug 1b1111 1111011t yo11n9 p11pl1,
]•W1yn1 B1 rlf1h
1~Robe1 I Holl1nd
l "Andv Wh1•lon
]«Otnnis Lu1che11
J~lruc• Odr1nd1r
•P P•irv Moody
4~John C1ldw1ll
4°Mik• L11ci1
'4~l1rney Snydtr
4~Htclor Go11t•l11
s'•D1 .. id Ccllln1
S"Oa .. e R11~111r;,
6~M ike Ru k1t1!i1
7~Phil l u1111
l "Seott Terrill
8 'Robi11 Tvll1n111
1•Wevn• f11g111
10'0011 Jo/11110111
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Holly at Westminster and a Offet ""!"" Jt1111. tl, tf11
Carob Im al Stal Beach. ,_ ______________ _,/ ... '==·--="·======Silc=IClm:-==-=..,,=====--===-llll'l
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EOITIOl'I
Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoelu
• . .
VO~. 6~. NO. 306, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES ORANGE COUNlY, CALIFORNIA , TUESOA Y, DECEMBER 23, 1969 TE!'I CE~S
Hippie Support Draws Laguna Planners' Ire
By BARBARA KREIBICH
Of ..... o.u, l"lloM lt.h
Taking "strong excepUon" to the sug-
geslion that Laguna Beach's con-
troversial hippies could become a com-
mwilly asset, planning commissioners
P(Ogressecl no further than page 5 of a 23-
page goals report presented for their con·
sideration Monday nlghl. .
After discussion bogged down on the
"social problems" chapter of the report,
Commissioners decided the matter was of
•
sufliclent importance to warrant a
special study session and rescheduled the
item for Feb; 1%.
One of several major reports being
prepared by the firm of Daniel, Mann,
J<;hnson & Mendenhall (DMJM) .for the
general plan study, the document Com·.
bines comments of the planning . team
with an earlier goals statement' prepared
by the Citizens Advisory ~mmltlee
(CAC) based on their attitude Survey.
Despite the (act that 37 percent of
those responding to the survey listed
"hippies" as the number one problem in
Laguna, planners suggested that their
"creative potential" should be tapped in
behalf of preserving Laguna's image as a
baven for creative, artistic people.
"I take a great deal of exception to the
idra of trying tO ~p the so..called
creative ability of an unprociuctive ~le·
ment of the community," said com-
nnssioner Charles Johnson.
''The most construcUve move in my
I rea
Laguna MD
Held Again
In Abortion
OT. Robert C. Robb, Laguna Beach
physici3n:-Was arrested Monday night for
a second time on abortion charges.
Investigating detectives were not
available to comment on the allegations
but police officials said Dr. Robb of
34567 Scenic Drive, Dana Point, was ar-
rested on a warrant alleging two addi-
tional abortion instances.
He was picked up at his spacious cliff·
top home, police said, but soon released
on his own recognb.ance by Judge John
H. Smith Jr. or Central Orange County
Municipal Court. ,
The physician was first arrested at his
home on Sept. 4. Police accused him <1f
inducing ntiscarriages in tw3 unmarrierl
20-year-old women . One of them, police
claimed, almost died .
Robb denied the allegations. "I have
never· performed an operation on a preg.
nant woman," he said at the time, adding
that the arrest was "quite a shock to
me."
Robb's attorney, Moses Bennan of San-
ta Ana , is attempling to have the initial
cases thrown out of court on the grounds
that Callfornla abortion law is un-'
constitutional.
Berman has filed voluminous briefs at-
tacking the validity or the pertinent law
on numerous grounds.
. Dr. Robb has nol yet entered a plea to
#le initial charges which spokesmen for
the District Attorney's office believe may
proceed on up the legal ladder to the
State Supreme Court.
Judge Paul Mast of Central Orange
Coupty Municipal Court is to rule by Jan.
I on Berman 's demurrer, which is the ef·
fort to have the case thrown out on
grounds that the la\v is unconstitutional.
Sl,ocl' /llarkets
NEW YORK !AP)-Decliniag issues
continued to mount in fairly active trad·
Ing today, maintaining a near 500-issue
lead over advances. (See quolatiom,
Pages S.9).
Tax.selling was chiefly responsible for
the decline, according to analysts.
--FACING MURD R CHARGJ!
Mrs. Dwilli•·Dnn "Hunt
Newport Murder
Suspect Faces
Trial; No Bail
By JOHN VAL TERZA
Of Ille CMltr Mitt Sttff
A prosecutor argued Monday that Mrs.
Dwlllia Dean Hunt should not be set free
on bail to await ttjaJ on charges of
murdering her hUsband be<:ause her 12·
year-o ld daughter fears for her own life.
The surprising allegation came during
a preliminary hearing for the 43-year-old
Corona del Mar housewife who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatally slabbed her yacht·
broker husband, Willis, 56, with a one·foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter denied
defense motions for bail and ordered
Mrs. Hunt bound over to answer first-
degree.murder charges in 0r1'nge County
Superior Court Jan. 2.
The charge came from Deputy Dislrict
Attorney Jim Lang, who opposed defense
motiom for bail and slid 12·year-old Dru
Hunt "has expressed fears for her life.'.'
Beverly Hills lawyer Sydney lnnas
asked that Mrs. Hunt be set free on ball
to await the court action, saying that the
slight brunette was "a loving mother who
(S.. STABBING, Page Z)
.Ballet Breaks Relations
With Laguna Plnyhouse
By RICHARD P. NAL~
Of lft'I O.lty Pli.t Iliff
Tired of havtng perfonnance dates
changed on them and receiving what they
feel is an artistic cold shoulder, Laguna
Beach Civic Ballet Company has given up
on the new Laguna-l\.1oulton Playhouse.
The ballet people, who helped donate
and collect funds for the new theater
building oo lhe premise they would shart
in its use, plan now to hold future pro-
duction& in Laguna Be.ach High Schol
auditoriun1.
Frustrated al having acheduled dates or
membership performances changed three
IJmes by the theater group, the ballet
peopJe .._ lllo that they have recelv·
ed • notable lack of cooperation 1:1 using
lht Playhou!it .
''They Just really don 't v.•nnt anybody
thtrt". ?My feel it's belier for them to
have 'he playhouse to themsel ves." said
Ula Zali, founder and artistlr director of
lhc ballet Company.
·•we really don't "'tnl to stay where
we're not wanted," said MISI Zali. "The
high school has always betn very
hospitable to ua."
"
Most recent ezample, said ballet
backers, was the Saturday night benefit
performance of '"Ibe Nutcr~cker" that
the ballet 'comr,any performed to raise
funds for the p 11yhouse.
The ballet company payed lor souvenir
programs, the dancers and the crew.
which among other things had to. clean
the playhouse stage before it was used.
The playbouu sent only a person to
man the •box office in the evening ,
although the beOefil WU for the
playMust. No board member of the
playhou.oe attended, helped or Ui1nked
MiSI Zall for the performance.
"We hate to ,.. Lila ZaU truted thia
way, especlafly aflu all she hai cme for
the PlayhoUJe U>roop the years," 'sail!
Douglas Reeve, general director of the
ballet cohtpany.
'&lllet membert PoinL out that t.ileir
president of seven years, Barbar• Stuart
RablnowllSb, donated $5,000 toward
playhouse use because It was to be also a
home for balltl and othtr community
functions.
Miss Zall said ballet company workers
(Set •AU.ET, Pap t)
v
Nixons Due
In Clemente
On Friday
President Nixon, his wife and daughter
Tricia will fly to San Clemente Friday for
a fairly long work-and·play holiday stay,
White House officials announced today in
Washington.
Air Force One is scheduled to land at
El Toro MCAS after a 2 p.m. (EST)
departure from.Andrews AFB, Maryland,
with a stay ol IO days or more planned.
A state of the union ritfssage, the '1971
federal budget -and of counie ttrttose
Bowl on New Year's Day -L!i on the
President's holiday agenda.
"Hopefully he will have some time for
relaxation,'' said Press Secretary Ron
Ziegler, adding that the Nhtons will stay
on the 'Orange Coast until Jan. 5 or
longer.
No public appearances are plaMed, but
Uie President is not noted for sticking to
such a schedule, occasionally to the
distress of the Secret Service.
Ziegler said President Nixon will
choose to see the Rose Bowl in Pasadena
as many Orange Coast holiday celebrants
wlU -via television in the comfort of the
Western White House .
Just as on his Orange Coast visits •last
spring and summer, the President will
bring a circle of key advisors to help out
with critical questions. Zieg ler added.
They will include Dr. Henry A. Kiss-
inger. chief White House foreign policy
advisor, presidential assistants John D.
Ehrlichman, H. R. Haldeman, Dwight
Chapin and a number of domestic ad·
vise rs.
Janisse Family
Wins Laglllla's
Yule Contest
Most beautiful outdoor Christmas
decorations in Laguna Beach this year
are at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Havey
Janisse, 147 Crescent Bay Drive in the
judgment of the Jaycees Christmas
decoration jury.
The Janisse home was named grand
prize winner in the annual contest.
Judge!: commented on the amount or
work involved in their use of many lights
around the home and garage and on
trees, along with foil and wreath decora·
liom or the garage and front doors.
Close n.nnen.ip for the top awan:!, and
judged be.st in the north end of town was
the home of Or. and Mn. Z. Taylor
Malaby, 516 Linden St. wtuch displayed a
miniaturt village wit.ti Santa and tus rein·
deer along with attractive house Jlghting.
Winning home in th& central area was
that of Mr. and Mrs . George PleUs, 2936
Alta Laguna Boulevard with large red
candies, choir boys, Wise Men and A
moblle Santa Claua 1t the. front door.
.Effective use of lig:bta g•ve the award
for lhe llOUlh e!ld to llr. Ji>oe9h l!t11.l7
La S.n<la, Three.,Arcb Bay. Judg<1 <11/'d
lht c:olorllil liahll"41 ol.' lh< hciuae and
hedges and a handsome Cbrit:tmu tree:
framed In a window. .
Mr, and Mrs. Rudy Burton, fl97
Catalina SL, won the aoOd will award
wltb thco:lr Santa hokUitg • larp "NOtll"
1ign, displayed for the enjormenl of
hlll.!lde dwr:llers as wen •• uelgh~a.
Group effort awardJ fbr he~ "ho
got together to Ugl)t Uletr bori1<1 ef.
fe<~vely wenl lo M1,~• · l!lllo ..a lbi LacUna llilll Club lilOlille lliirill poit.
view would be to help 1them on their way
to another area."
Dr. Robert Freoch heart!ly agreed. "!
also take excepllon to these rem,akrs. I
feel they (DMJM) were not guided by the
results of th_e survey ."
Johnson said he felt the planners were
"out of step in advising us to accept an
element of the community that some of
us will never accept."~
Speaking for the CAC. Mark Gumbliner
said he wanted it understood that the
•
remarks In question had been written by
the D~1JM 'team and did not represent
the vJews of the citizens' group. '
"I think Krushkhov (DMJM project
director Abraam Krmbkhov) felt ·that
since we hav~ the hippies we can learn tp
live with them,'!' said Gumbiner. ';The
question really is defining wh8t 15 a hip-
pie. Lots or people who are not hippies
have long hair -take. t.he Sawdust
Feslival people for example -and we
hilve a sit'Jatlon where kids and others
Ir s
... . · ... ~ -. ·~"'JI t l • .; t , .•. ./ : ... ~"-· ·"
· • , .,. , .. JI~:..:..: o1 :tr
~-' j '' .-:> i.,; .,,, ~
!V,RY,THING'S NOT OUCl<:Y FOR THIS OIL.SOAKED VISITOR
Dtin'I Tell Him Slick !0,11 . Cetallnhlrla I~ for !lie Birdo ~
I ,;~AA .i"lt:t' \t f;.'1/ "I•· ,. l<-
J •._"""~'~~ "" 7 ~ ·1 :r~ ~· ·.: " •"'1 ! ,.1 ·~ t,•· . ·~I •. ·' ~-' . . .
SURFER ENCOUNTERS STICKY WICKET OFF VENTURA COAST
Rlcheril WhHler. (right) RescUtd From Senta Blirber• 011 Slick
Capo St·reet Work Asked
Del Obispo Strtet In $an Juan
Ca.piatrano maf·be wide'~, to a fout·l~
ar1et1al-1Ugtrway. if ah a:ppUcatfon ·11 •Po
proved &y ~e~ 91'ange ~tY. Arterial
Highway Fma\ic:lng'Pro1ra1n.
City cOuncilmen MOilday v o t e d
unanimously to·flle an apptlcatkm with
the agency for funds to bnprove the
pruent t~lane winding l"Olld from Via
8elarde1 near the 8'ptlst Cburch, to
just before Camino del Avion, where the
road .brlefly boComes four l1n<1.
. The~ mlle·!Oni proJ•d would oost
aPll!i>limilely ' MOb,OllO acdirdln& to c11y eiiilr-Jaa Kubo<L Th< clW II willin&
•
to c:ootrlbute only lf!,OIJ!l ol lta gas tax
fin<l,l .but ·£ec1.•.11 .may, have a chance
slnee .lbO mpl<llon ot Jbe Dano Poln~
Harbor will mite> Ool .'Obbpo • m•bl 1i1&f,;.ay. Tlit 'slTeet c0nllitue1 from lh•
city limits Info coon\)' lm;tory to Coast
llighway, coming out near one ol the
harbot entrances.
It the coonty agen,cy dtnies the a~
pUcation for assistance 1n rundlng the
project, the city can red~ ill pllna to a·
lwo lane hl&hway wblch would cost only ~m.ooo. ·
Kubota reported tMt the: county acency
treasury at Uiia time bu 11 million lo
.,,.i.
with long hair are being harassed
because of objections to hippies."
French said ·the objection was not to
long hair. "Perhaps·the definition used in
one meeting -bums -would. be more
suitable," he suggested.
CAC member Vernon Spitaleri sald he
felt the planners had misconstrued the
orig.inal goal or "creating a good en:
\o·ironment for creativity."
"l feel this is based on a false as.sump-
ISee WPPIES, Pase l)
22 Miles
Of Beaches
Blackened
From Wire Service•
SANT A BARBARA -Oil from the
latest seepage in the Santa Barbara
Channel has spotted about 22 miles of
coaslline in Ventura and Santa Barbara
counties.
Donald Solanas of the U.S. Geological
Survey said after authorities made a six-
airplane inspection flight Monday that
still more crude oil lay a few hlndfed
yards offshore.
Solanas estimated that the slick was
about a tenth the site of the one whlcft
MUiled hofn a bkf.Nout 11 mlntha ago
at the same Union Oil Co. offshore drill-
inl rig.
He said the sllck contained about
38.000 gallons or oil-11,000 of which
spurted out before a ruptured undersea
pipeline' c6uld be repaired last Saturday.
The rest seeped rrom the ocean ·floor,
he said.
Fritz Springma'n, a .Union Oil ~I
who made a private survey, ukt dte
company plans to "wait for a coupll! Of
days to see how bad it gets," befofe
starting to clean the oil away.
Yvon Chouinard, who lives five miles
north of Ventura, said he and a member
or thi! Audubon Society found. SS birdi
In one 300-yard stretch of beach suffer·
ing from contact with oily surf.
Chouinard said fi ve birds were "so
completely covered with oil that they
couldn't fly." They were taken to Santa
Barbara to be cleaned.
The Coast Guard said what had been
initially a single slick had broken into
two parts, one a mile wide and 10 mlleS
lone,. the other a mile wide and el&ht
miles long.
A Coast Guard spokesman said both
appeared to be diMipating rapldlf
Monday .
The hardest hit · area was Seacllff, i.
small communily on the Rincon Shores,
where at low tide much oC the sand was
paved with a half-inch layer of tar. Some
pools of oil seven inches deep were
trapped_ in rocks. •
Motorists driving on U.S. lOl wh~ It
runs adjacent to the ocean near Seacliff
reported 1pray from breakers was
splashing. oil onto their windshields.
Weather
Indications are that Santa will
find his way to your rooftop to.
morrow night, as fair skies are
predicted over the Orange CouL
The temperaturt ls still riveted in
the mid·sixties, though.
INSWE TODt\ l'
Ati Orange Countian who
heads Governor Reagan's Com-
mission on EducotK>nal Reform
reports impressive progrt11 in
the groiip's first fiut month$.
Page 3. --------
Owly 2. ~
· CHRISTMAS I . ·---------"'
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...... · .. . _ ... "".'_\..(.,;.' ............ -. . ~ . .., .. . ' , .. .. ' ' • . ' . ' \ I • t ' I • + I • ' '• o • ' f
I DAil y PILOT l TlltSdQ', Dtutnbtr :U, 19~
Down the
Mission
Trail
5 Land Parcels
On Double Tax
SAN ,JUAN CAPISTRANO -Five
parcels of land ln the Capistrano Beach
Sanitary District lie within the San Juan
Capistrat'lo City limits.
City AdminlslrAtor Emle Thoq'lpson in·
formed city councilmen Monday that
owners of. these parcels were being tued
twice for sanitalion.
The administrator was authorized to
cmtact the property ownl!I'& and advbe
them of the situation. They can then
either receive city services by ctttaching
themselves from the other district or r&-
mai.p and conlinue paying double taxes.
• Kid•' Part11 PlaRKed
MISSION VIEJO - A holiday party for
children will be hosled by tbe Recreation
Center M,ooday.
Children in the second grade and under
will be on hand fro1n 10 to 11 a.m. for
punch and candy. Third to ftith graders
are invited from 11 a.m. to noon for
Cokes. candy and games.
Sixth ID eighth grade sllldent. will be
welcome from 1 to 2 p.m. fer hot dogs,
soft drinks and games with teens, 9th
through 12th, arriving for games, dancing
and pizza from 3 to 5.
e N ur1er11 Neea Tog•
EL TORO -Educational toys, wheeled
\'ehicles and assorted playground equip-
meot are still needed by the Saddleback
V.alley Community Nursery.
The non-profit facility will be housed in
the Abiding Saviour Lutheran Church,
23262 El Toro Road and will open after
New Year's.
Three and 4-year~lds w111 be cared for
cn a volunteer and motber-parttcipatk>n
basis with one profusionaJ teacher on du·
ty at all times.
Infannation can be obtained by calling
Rudy McHaJe at 837-1500 and Judy
Boitano. at 837-8058.
From Page J
HIPPIES •••
tion that there ls a large measure of
creativity in this area. This may be ao,
but it has yet \0 be established.''
.He referred to the planners comment
that "the number of ~tive and artilUc
people in such a group (hippie) must be
as h.igh if not higher than would be fOUlld
ill any other IOC!al lfOUP·"
This . statement, .said commissioner
Joseph Tomehak, is "an arrogant
assumption." He added, however, that
"some parts of the report Show real
slyle. . .. we should go through it
carefully."
Johnson said he fell the writer bad fail·
ed to distinguish between a creative
arWt with long hair and "someone who
lie:i: around on the sidewalk."
"This reads lik e an invitation," be said.
''It gives the impre:i:sion that they (the
l'llppies) will be very welcome here.''
Dr. French urged a special study
gession to go through the report step by
step belore forwarding it to the city coun-
cil. 1'This is one of the. most important
documents we wlll get ,'' he said.
Johnson agrttd. "The final goals state-
ment will reflect the aims and desires of
the entire conununity. It should be
prepared very carefully."
In addition to the social problems under
discussion, the goals report cover!!!
phvsical , economic and governmental
asPects of Laguna's planning goals.
Population Motmts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Total U.S.
population reached 204,006,000 Nov. 1, ac-
cording lo the CenSUs Bureau. This was
an increase of 190,000 from Oct. t and 3
million from the same month of 1968.
DAILY PILQT
ORANGE COAST"~ILl~HING COM,.ANV
Rolitrt N. WeM
PrnliHftl n Plilblblltit"
Jeslr It C,,.rlev
Vic' P'rftldf<ll lrAI G-•I Mtntliltr
'""'"''' 1e .... 11 l•Jtw
Tt.0 ... 11 A. Mo,1rphi111
M~t:l110f
R11h•1d P. Noll
L•tuM IMCll
City fllllltr
Let ....... OM.
22'1 For11t AY1n111
M1!ll111 A4J'"'' r.O.. 1 .. 6M, '16'2
""'"' -C..ra Mtie•~ »II We.I 11¥ Str.,,
H1.--t fltac~: nu Wint ltl&IM lwl..-11' to""'lo!t"" IM~~; 1111$ 0.t<fl 10,,. .. ,..,111
, .. ..,... .. 17141 4•4-MU
CJrcial.tJn hpt, Hl-4111
C_....,.t. f11.t, °''"" CIHI l'.,blltll""
eo...'f>y. Ht -,.,..i., lllVl"•I .... •llerlel 1Nner " ,,,....,,_,, .,.....,.
-y " ~ wilMoll "9<191 _..
lfl!Mlt• l t -'l'f•I -. I«-(l&M -II .. ,.till •I ~ '4adl
-Cllll MtN. CllJl<O ...... t.IDK•"°':..0 "" C'ftltr 1)., .... ~W11"¥1 by !'Ill! p .. ,,..,,lll'rl
•11111.., "'"'"'-' ...... ., .. -111:1.
. Prellmiur1 Stu1
Planners Probe
Laguaa Beach Plannlna commlhlontn
fouJid "plenty ID think about," In the
words of t.heir chalnnan Fred Briggs, u
they delved deeper Monday night Into a
planned community concept presented by
developer Mark Gumbine< and archltect
P<ler o.tnnder.
Preparatory to a Jan. 5 public hearing,
tbe study session probed new aspecta: of
the plan to develop 118 hillside acres ad·
jacent to Morningside Drive with a com-
binatioo of. single dwellings, multiple
dwellinp and apartment. clustered amid
''green are.as."
CilJ Planner Al Au\ry adviled the com-
milslon U\&I esisting zoning laws permit
a "planned residential development" in ~y zooe, including R-1 (single residen-
tial) provided denJity of I.he zont is not
exceeded.
A coOOitional use permit may be
issued, sajd Autry, to permit greater
flexibility in den&ily, height and lot ar-
rangment.
"At this time," sald Autry, "the plan-
ning staff feels this development plan ·1s
not in a state for adoption because it
needs more engineering and geological
data. We recommend approval of the
planned residential concept, not of any
specific plan."
While the suggested overall develop-
ment of 715 units would not exceed lhe R· 1
1 requirement of 6,000 square feet per
unit, lhe steep terrain would involve
clustering units in some areas while leav-
ing others unbuill
'The plan has met with vigorous op-
position from neighboring p r o p e r t y
owners who see it ,. an attempt to evade
roning laws by "people packing" in an
area that Is partly unbulldable.
Commissioners •llJ!l'eaoed doubt In ap-
proving the concept with. "nnt .. meed
R·I d<mity" provlao,
"Whal If he (the develnper) -ahead
From Pagel
BALLET •••
abo helped secure pledges of other
thouaandl of dollan towaro completion of
the !heal«.
The ll8IJtt bu alnce found that II -
them tw!ce u mud! to use the playbouoo
as it does tbe achool audltarimn. Mlsl
zaii said because of Its lllze lwo
performances mll!t be g1..,, al the
playhouse while one ts sufficient at the
atJditorium because ol more seats. The
cost is about $700 compared to '300 for
the auilttoriwn.
•"We simply cannot llford to uae the
playOO.. we helped to balld,'' aid
Reeve in a letter to the baUet mem·
bership. He said it was understood during
fund raising that the theater would be
available for the four ballet membership
programs annually at only nominal f:X·
pense.
The ballet people don't feel the charges
are nominal.
But they maintain Uley could overlook
this and the confusion surrounding a new
theater building If 80rtleone at the
playhooae had ac1ed mildly Interested In
w.rking oot ...,. friendly aolutlons. ,
Dana Teen Held
In Rape, Beating
Oraqe County aberU!'a deputies said
they expect charge. \0 be filed today
against a Dana Point teenager accused of
kidnaping, and beating and raping •
Dana Point housewife.
Arrested at 4 a.m. Monday a's he sat In
a San Clemente restaurant with his vic-
tim was Edwin L. Sommers, 19, of 24465
Cordova St.
Deputies allege the young housewife
was acC<>ated on the street at about U :30
a.m. by lhe suspect who beat her about
the face while forcini her into his car. He
then drove ber to an apartment where
the alleged rape took place, depuUeii:
charge.
Sommen was taken into custody by
San Clem!nte Police who later turned
him over to Orange County sheriff's
deputies for book.ing at Orange County
Jail.
on the baais of 6,000 square feet per unit
and we later detlde 10,000 square feet
would be a betler minimum for lhls
area?'' queried commissioner Joseph
Tomcl!ak.
"Since all the objectloo has beeo to
del\slty," added commissioner Charles
Johnson, "if we feeJ 6,000 square feet iJ
not .suitable maybe we would .strike this
and leave the number or units up to the
dlscrtton of the commission."
Commissioner Carl Johnson sald he
leaned toward the idea of a plaMed
development to allow great.er flexibility,
but was not sure the commissioners
should permit a developer to transfer
units from unbuUdable sites to buildable
sites to take advantage of density allow·
ab~ in the overall zone.
Ostrander commented that very few
sit.et are actuaJly unbuildable. "Almost
any site can be made into a building site
if you just move enough earth around,"
he said. "We don't want to do this. We
COll$ider design first and density must be
respomive to design."
Many existing zoning laws are .an.
Uquated and cannot or should not be ·~
plied to hillside areas, he added,
Autry said he had di3CUSSed the pm-
posal with generaJ plan project director
Abraam Krushkhov who said that
although the planners' land use and
rezon.? recommendations are oot yet
complete, he feels that "in much of our
hillside areas this type. ol development is
the only way to go."
Dr. Robert French wanted to know why
the applicants were seeking a coocept aJ>
proval before proceeding with engineer-
ing and geology sludlu. "Woold you go
•bead if it's not granted?,. be uked.
Oslrander said U\&I would be open to
question.
"What you're really asking for ta a
commitment from w: to rezone in aome
manner, isn't it?" asked Ch a r I es
Johnson.
Ostrander aaid that wa.s correct.
"I ~'1.ink everyone b bas.lcaJJy in favor
of a planned development," concluded
Tomehak. "The albatross here b the
numl:M>r of units and the 6,000 square foot rule.,,
OAIL'I' l'ILD1 SI•" P"""
Lawmen Brighten Christmas
Christmas is spelled with a CHP this year. California Highway Patrol
Officer Gerry Maxwell examines part of five truckloads of donateu
toys gathered at headcli'tlrters in Santa Ana. They will be delivered
to mentally retarded · dren at Porterville State Hospilal. More
gifts will be aaccepted by the Santa Clauses in khaki uniform C\~ all
CHP stations. ·
Saddleback Dress Code
Faces Court Challenge
Another legal challenge to Saddleback
College's dress code forbidding long boys'
hair was riled ~1ooday, this one in federal
court.
The acUon asks that Lindahl King cf
Tustin be allowed to register and attend
Saddleback College withoul conforming to
the: dress code.
lt was brought by attorney Patricia
Heriog o( Corona del Mar who filed in
U.S. District CoW't in Los Angeles a com·
plaint for injunction and declaratory
relief for alleged denial of civil rights.
The college was given unti J p.m. Jan.
29 to file a response showing cause why
an injunction should not be granted.
Mrs. Herzog said King, 21, was a slu·
dent at Saddleback College last school
year but was refused admission for the
fall lerm because he did not comply with
the dress code. He is seeking .to be ad·
mitled for the winter quarter through the
court order.
In October. anoth er attempt to enjoin
the college on . behall ol student Gary
Berrigan, 19, WU lumed down by
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman.
Mrs. Hen.og aaJd that cue wai not
decided on the merits oC the dress code
but on 1 procedural defect in the action.
The plaintilf had oot yet exhami.d his
administrative remedies •t the time he
filed the actioh, she explained.
She said she took her case to the
federal· court level instead of -county
Superior Court because she believes it
comes within federal jurisdiction. in that
constitutional rights of the plaintiff
(King ) have been violated.
Saddleback College's dress code
stipulates that boys' hair shall not extend
over the collar ol a dress shirt.
Mao Hung in Vati~an
Painting of Youth in Tunic Mistaken for Priest
VATICAN CITY (AP) -'!'he man In
dle palnttng wore a tunlc Md looked Jil(e
a priest and so Vatican officials hung it a
few yards from a portrait of Pope Paul
VI in the Vatican press room.
But as it turned out Tuesday the man
wasn't a priest at all. He was Mao Tse-
tung in his youth.
"What can I say?'' said Msgr. Fausto
Vallainc, the Vatican press spokesman.
•"Jbe painting was sent to us a1 a gift.
We hung it up. That's all."
Although chagrined, church officials
!raid the painting will Mt be taken down.
The oil painting, showing a man with a
bl~ face standing agaipst a red4ish back~. was hung last month.
Newsmen accredited to the Vatican
noted on Monday a striking resemblance
between it and a photograph in the
October issue of an ltalian Catholic
magazine, "Famiglia Cristiana."
The photograph, accompanying an arli·
cle about Red China, was of a Chinese.
made painting of Mao as a cl'Uliading
youth, his Jell hand clenched aod his
right holdJng in ilrnbrella.
Lanfranco Carnevali, a shopowner who
said his 86-year~ld father Luigi painted
the Vatican picture last. March, said: "Of
course it's Mao Tse-tung. My father still
has the sketches he worked from to make
that picture." ~
Luigi Carneva\I, who was In bed with
tnfluenza, is not a particularly well·
know artist. How Ole painting came to be
sent to the VaUcan remained a mystery.
Calvin Nelson Appointed
Saddlehack Science Chief
Lanfranco Carnevali said he could not
explain bow the painting got lo the
Vatican. He said he loaned it to a friend,
whom he did not identify, "and l have
been trying to reach him for an ex-
planation.."
Migl'. Vallainc said he had no intention
of removing it.
"Every artist is free lo draw in·
epiration from a given subject and to
devek>p this subject," he said.
Calvin L. Nelson has been chosen Iden.
ce, mathematics, engineering 1 n d
technology division chairman, Saddl~back
College trustees announced Monday
night.
Nelson, mathematics Instructor at the
coUege, was elevat~ to the chairman's
50 Crewmen Saved
HONG KONG (UP!) -All SO Chinese
crtWtnen aboard the Singapcre-registered
freighter SS King Bay have been rescued
by a Japanese vessel, the ship's owners
said today. The S,000.ton freighter ran
aground near the Tubbat.aha Reefs in the
Sulu Sea In the Soulhern Philippines.
post to succeed James F. Thorpe.. who
stepped down to teach full time.
~elson Js 31. He was selected from ap.
phcants within the If.instructor division .
Outside candidates for the job were not
sought.
New to the college this year, he came
to Saddleback from Kearny State College
in Nebraska. Previously he w a s
mathematics department chairman at
Orange and El Modena high schools.
Nelsen holds a M.A. Degree in
mathematics from Rutgers University in
New Jersey and a M.S. Degree in
mathematie5 education from Wayne
St.ate in Nebraska.
He and his wife. Karen, have two
children and live in SOuth Laguna.
At one point. he told newsmen in the
press room ; "Look, even if It does
represent Mao I would say tt shows him
as an element of destruction, with the
flaming ruins of what he has wrought in
the background.''
. Lanfranco Carnevali dlsputed this. He
said the notati<ln "Alba" on the painting,
tirst taken to mean the town in 11.aly,
really was the tiUe of the work -
"Dawn."
"The dawn of an idea," he explained.
lie said his father got the Idea for the
work last winter from a photograph of
the same paintlQi ''Famiglla Cristiana"
reproduced.
Asked what his father's reaction was
when he learned that the painting v.·as in
the Vatican, Lanfranco said : "He just
laughed."
Change or Give Vp
Newport Sets Last Freeway Appeal
By JEROME F. COWNS
01 Ille P-tll'J 1'1111 Sr.ti
On Jan. 16 Jn Sacramento, Newport
Beach will make its last pitch for
changes tn the adopted alignment of the
Paclf!c Coest Freeway west of the Upper
Bay.
U tbe aPDUl ror a n ew study &ets
oowbeft With !he California Highway
Commlufon. the city will give up It.
fleY9t-)'Hl' atrual• and acctpt the
coulll~llQilll! 1dopltd routt.
Ctt)' councilmen made this clear P.fon·
day In rupoose to• mll)or West Newporl
Jandowner'11 strong objtction against
further delay tn rtsolving the Issue.
Hancock ''Blll" Banning 111, whoee
Urm. Betto Ltd., owns 560 undeveloped
acres bahlnd Newport Shores told coon·
cllmen a •'truty fine " Inland route b oow
irrevoc::ably blocked because cf the OJ>
posiUon of the cities af Cos:t.a ~tesa and
HunUngton D<ach. lllmUngton Beach, he said, alreacty bas
I
incorporated the adopted route tn Its
master plan. And Costa. Meusa, despile a
plea for support from the Newport coun·
ell last week, remains firmly opposed to
any reopening cf route hearings by the
state.
He 58id there are t\\'O principal reasons
for the C09ta Mesa council's poslUon.
They are:
"-Even though NeW))Ort tndicat.ts thal
any change (new route) would remain
e.ntlre\y ln Newport, it is difficult U not
impossible fer the at.ate to so mnltol a
r<openi11J proceeding u ID eliminate 11!
rl$k that a part of a new. route could be in
C~ta f\.1esa.
''-Even If such a new route. we.re e.n·
tirely in Newport, It would be sulOciently
clogl! to lhe Costa Mesa boLUldary tn
pince!!. so that ll would affect ~ta P.1tsa
slrl!<!t nllgnm~nts and arttrlaJ access to
and from the freeway S)'Stem."
Banning lndlCttted his view1 resulted
from r.onversatiQnl with Costa MesH
authorities.
He aald tor years he had supported the
fight to get the freeway otr the coasUJne,
but now feels it is Ume to recognize that
It is a "fru!Uess" quest.
There are problems along the adopted
alignment, he sald, but they are all sub-
ject to 80lutlon through negotiations with
Division of Highways engln<ers. Among
these probleJn.', he said, is the ruination
of the Martnen Mile basioess dl!!ltlict by
the frHWa.y, restriction of access to West
Newport and impairment of Co8gt
Highway ln that area es 1 major arterial.
Savin,! Marlnen Mlle, be said, woold
require eho\rtng lhfl freewl)' into lhe
Newport Height ttsidential di.mlct.
"Perhaps Otis is 11 dcslr1blc altcrnatlvt."
he £aid, "but it should certainly at 1'ast
b<! carefully questioned."
The other problems along the a.dopted
route, he emphasized. could well be
"minimlr.ed or ellmlnoted" by working
with stat~ engineer~. lie sitid the council
should dlrecl th~ city staff to give top
prlortty to such a cooperaUve s\udy.
,
He said if lhe city insists on going It
alone -as It apparently mu.st -in re-
questing a new freew11y study by the
state, "you wlll Stir oppos!Uon once again
in Costa Mesa In contraveoUon to the
new-found coopuatlvt splrlt, to say
nothing of the Newport homeowners who
will ag1in be threatened."
Ccundlmen were u~tltd by mucb of
what Banning had to say. But only Paul
J. Gruber, long 1 hawk on the ren:iqte
issue, crtticized the land developer's
views.
Grubtr tiald Banning didn 't know what
he was talking aboul when he awrted a
new route entirely within Newport would
still crtote problems for Costa i\ftsa. Tbe
former lwo-ttnn mayor 1ald that ts
S<lmething that car be determined only
by trarfic analy,es Ulat would be included
In the new state study lo be soughl by tht
city on Jan. II.
"I don't sl!t ~1r. Bannlng's objections to
this study J1l a11," 58id Gruber. ''What
bus.lness ts it o( his!''
Leary ~sks
Com1 Block:
Evidence
By ABTllUR R. VINSEL'
Of fht 0.lfy PllOI &Jiff
Facing court dates around the country,
Dr. Timothy Leary appeaJed t.p th~
California Supreme Court Monday to sup.
press evidence fn bis impending Oranat
County drug !rial.
The 1970 psychedelic candidate for the
California governorship, his w l f e
Rosemary, 33, and son JohD, 20, are du!!
in Orange County Superior Court Jan. 19
for bial1 following a aeries ol eight con·
tinuations.
The fam ily, arrested one year ago Frf.
day in Laguna Beach, Is tharged with
possession of I.SD, hashish and mari·
juana, but contends their old station
wagon was illegally !fearched.
Appeals filed in San Francisco by the
Santa Ana law firm of George Chula an4
associates charge that Laguna Beach
police narcotics officer Neal Purcell
made an illegal search of the vehicle.
Judge Byron K. McMillan listened to
all sides of the matter during a pretrial
hearing on Chula 's motion to suppress
evldet!ce, then ruled en Oct. 3t tbat the
search by Purcell was ·Justified.
Trial for the Learys has been delayed
eight times in recent months, based on
Mrs. Leary's convalescence following
surgery. lier physician provided a writ·
ten statement that she was not v.1ell
enough to stand trial on the charges in
October as scheduled.
The case dating back almost exaclly
·one year came to light, accordirig to Of-
ficer Purcell, when he checked Ute Le8Il'.
family car parked on Woodland Drive.
He said young John Leary's eyes were
dilated as though he had taken drugs and
he was crawling round oo his hands and
knees in the back of the sta.Uon wqo0,
long hair flopping down in his eyes. ,
A quantity of contraband material waS
confiscated as evidence. ·
Dr. Leary, a pioneer LSD researcher
fired from Harvard College for hi!;
unorthodox psychological experiments .:..
class tardiness and the like was
Harvard·s announced rea son -also faceS
other court dates.
Authorities in New York were recenUy
strmied in a case dating back more than
tv"o years at his Millbrook Estate, due to
unwilling witnesses who have since
e.migrat.ed to various desert. commUDeS.
He was scheduled for trial Dec. 1 bl
Riverside County on a charge of con-.
lribaling to the delinquency cl a [,qw]a
Beach girl who drowned while. swimmioj:
nude under the influence of LSD last JI).
ly.
Charlene R. Almeida, 17, was pulled
from a deep pond on a desert communal
ranch near ldyllw:ild, where the Learys
were sojourning at the time.
The tJ.s: Supreme Court also overturn·
ed a conviction for illegal transfer ol un-
taxed marijuana earlier this year, which
might have put Dr. Leary behind bal'3 iii.
Texas for 30 years.
Texas authorities recenUy aMOunced
they would appeal that action in an at·
tempt to take the controversial idol of the
psychedelic generation out of circulation.
From Page l
STABBING ••• •
bas never mistreated this chUd."
He as.sailed the prosecutor's comment.\
as "rumor" and "a figment of someone's
imagination ." .
"I see no reason to punish this woman
with incarteration for months during the
length;t court actions," Innas said.
He then asked that the daughter be
brought into court to give her own feel·
ings on her mother's bail plea.
The daughter is in the custody or '-1rs .
Noel Brown ot West Los Angeles, Chm-
stepsister) wife of a tennls pro and
daughter of the slain Hunt .
"The girl is intentionally being kept
from seeing me," the lawyer .said.
"I am willing either to bring the girl in
for a conference in your chambers or
even call her to stand tomorrow," he ad-
ded.
Judge Rutter anS¥.·ered abrupUy :
"I will not do that, counsel. MoUon
denied ."
Throughout the entire exchange, Mrs.
Hunt, her hair pulled back into a short
pony lail and wearing a bright pink drus,
~t passi\•ely.
The woman carried the same while.
clipped-beaver coat she wore the night of
her arrest.
Mrs. Hunt !teemed calm. A!!I she tn·
tered the court, she smiled cheerfully to
her family.
During the proceedings fihe ltept nearl:<1
motionless except for changing her grip
on a wrinkled white handkerctuef. ·
She spoke only late in the court act.ion
to describe her needs for special medica-
tion and to ask that she be allowed to
bring a pencil and paper wtth her as she
mtt with her lawyers. Both requests
were granted.
Tbe bearing began In the court of
Judge Donald Dungan. who granted
Innes' request that another .fudge con·
duct the hearing because Dunagn was
prejudl«d.
The judp •gtted. . In udgre Rutter's court. Newport
Btach polb patrolman M I t c h e ll
'M>ompson, who wa1 the Sl'COod ofHctr tb
al'Tive al the Harbor View Hill1 homl
aflt>r the stabbing. ltslifled first.
11'1omp90n said he ·entered the patio of
the house at 261S Harbor View Drive to
find ft'llcw ofnetr Ke.Uh Col:liru: btnt ovec-
the badly bleeding Hunt. Mrs. Hunt,
Thompson said, was there, too.
"Befort aeyone could say anything,
ohe. the defendant, "Id, 'I did It. I did tt.
I stabbed him.'." the om.,.,. t"tmed.
-
7
7
... -----~--.._ -#-. . -...... --~-·
Newport Barbor
EDITION N.Y. • Steeb '
..
VO~. ~2. ~O. 306, 2 SECTIONS, 2~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY. CALIF.ORNIA TUESD.t,~. DECEMBER 21, 19'9 •
Newport Makes Last Freeway Plea
'
By JEROME F. COWNS
or ~ O.ltr f'IWI Still
·On Jan. 16 in Sacramento, Newport
Beach will make its last pitch for
cilanges in the adopted alignment or the
Pacific Coast Free,vay west of the Upper
Bay ...
·U the appeal for a n ew study gets
nowhere with lhe California Highway
Commisiion, the city. will give up its
seven.year struggle and accept the
Q9Utllne-huggtng adopted route.
Bail Bid Fails
City cooncilmen made this clear Mon-
day In response to a major West Newport
landowner 's strong objecUon against
further· delay in resolving th~ issue.
Hancock "Bill" Banning 111, whose
firm, Beeco Ltd., owns 560 undeveloped
acres behind Newport Shores told coun·
cihnen a "truly fine" inland route is now
irrevocably blocked because of the ·op-
position of the cities of Costa Mesa and
Htmtington Beach.
Hunt.ington Beach, he said, ·a1ready has
(
Manslaughter
Out; Mrs. Hunt
Faces 'Murder'
DA ILY l"ILOT Slaff ..... i.
FACING MURDER CHARGE
Mr1. Dwllli• Dean Hunt
Tustin Student
Plans to Fight
Saddleback Code
Another legal challenge to Saddleback
College's dress code for bidding Jong boys '
hair v.·as filed Monday, this one in federal
court.
The action asks that Lindahl King o(
Tustin be allowed to register and attend
Saddleback College withourconformlng to
lbe dress code.
It was brought by attorney Patricia
Herzog of Corona del ·fl.far who filed in
U.S. t>lstrM:t Court in·Los Angeles a qnn·
plaint for injunction and declaratory
relief for alleged denial of civil rights.
The college was given unli 1 p.m. Jan. 29 to file a response showing cause why
an injunction should not be granted.
Mrs. Herzog said King. 21, was a slu·
dent at Saddleback College last school
year but was refused admission for the
fall term because he did not comply with
the dress code. He is seeking to be ad-
mitted for the winter quarter throogh the
<..'OUrt On:l:?r.
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of ""-Dally '11•1 Staff
A prosecutor argued Monday that Mrs.
Dwillia Dean Hunt shoukl not be set free
on bail to await trial on charges of
murdering her husband because her 12·
year-old daughter fears for her own life.
The surprising allegation came during
a preliminary "hearing for llie 43-year-okl
Corona del Mar housewife who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatally stabbed her Yfehl-
broker husband, Wl,llis, 61, with a one-foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Rutter derUed
defense motions for .bail and ordered
Mrs. Hunt bound over &o answer first·
degree.murder charges in Oranie County
Superior Court Jan. Z.
The Charge came from Deputy District
Allorney Jlni Lang; wl1o opjloetd-defenst
motions for bail and-said lZ..year-old Dru
Hunt "has expressed fears f.or Q.er life."
Beverly Hills lawyer Sydney Innas
asked that ~frs. HUnl be set Cree on bail
to await the court action, sayin& that the
slight brunette was "a loving mother who
has never mistreated thJs cbHd."
He assailed the prosecutor's comments
as "rumor" and ••a figment or someone's
imagination."
"I see no reason to punish this woman
with incarceration for months during the
lengthy court actions," Irmas said.
He llien asked that the daughter IJ.I!
brought into court to give her own feel-
ings on her mother's bail plea.
The daughter is in the custody of ;\lrs.
Noel Brown of West Los Angeles, (her
stepsister) wife of a tennis pro and
daughter of the slain Hunt.
"The girl is intentionally being kept
from seeing me," the lawyer said.
"I am willing either to bring the girl in
for a conference in ~your chambers or
even call her to stand tomorrow,'' he ad·
ded.
Judge Rutter answered abruptly:
"I will not do that, counsel. ~fotion
denied." ...
Throughout the entire exchange. Mrs.
Hunt, her hair pulled back into a short
pony tall and wearinc a bright pink dress,
sat passively.
The woman carried the same white,
clipped-beaver coat she wore the nJghl of
her arrest.
Mrs. Hunt 11eemed calm. As she en-
tered the court, she smiled cheerfully t.O
her family.
During the proceedings she kept nearly
motionless except for changing her grip
on a wrinkled while handkerchief.
inC1>rporated the adopted rou~ In Its
master plan. And Costa Meusa, despite a
plea !or support from the NewporL coon-
cn last mek., remains firmly opposed to
any reopening of route hearings by the
state.
He said there are two principal reasOQs
for the Costa Mesa council's position.
They are:
"'-Even though Newport indicates that
any change (new route) would remain
en ti rely in ·Newport, it· is difficult if t10t
impossible for the slate to so control a
reopening proceeding as to eliminate all
risk that a part of a new route could be in
Costa Mesa. •
"-Evei-i if such a new route were en-
tirely in.Newport, it would .be sufficiently.
close. to the Costa Mesa boundary in
places so that it would affect Cost.a l\1esa
street alignments and arterial ac:cess lo
and from the freeway system."
Banning· i.odicaled his views resulted
from conversations wtth Costa Mesa
authorities.
He said for years he had supported ~
fight lo gel the freeway off the: coastline,
but now feels it is'tiin&to recosnize that·
it Is a "fruiUess" Quest.
Then! ·art problems alont the adopted
alignment, be said, but they are all sub-
ject lo solution throu&b negbtlatlOns with
Divlslon of Highways eaglneera. Arnone
these proJ!lems, he sai~·il 'the rulnatiop
of the Mariners Mile buslneu distrid by
the freeway, restriction ol, aCc:eiaoto West
Newport and impairment , ti Coast
Jlighway in that area as a majof-CtertaJ.
Saving Marinen Mile, hei saW, WOUid
r.qulre shoving the !Mway liito the
Newport Height · ,.sldenUal dbtrict.
"Perhaps thi1 Ls a desirable altemalive,"
he taid, "but It lhould ootalnly at leaat -
be .care!uUy queaUoned." ·
The olher prob1-along °'" ldopled
roule, he emphUU.ed, could ...U lie
(SM il'JUIEWAV, PoP II
DAILY P'ILOT •tttte '1 llkWC K•lw
Harbor Ch1•istnias Parade in Finale Tmiight
Time exposure camera captures streaks of Yule tights as Newport
Beach's 14th Annual Christmas Tree Boat Parade wends its way
around the harbor. Final tour starts tonight at 6:30 o'clock from Bal-
boa Island ferry landing, tours the bay westerly and returns to landing
at· 9: 15 o'clock. Parade is : sponSored by City Employes Association
and .Newport· Harbor Chamber of Commerce.
Council to Send i'hieil Affirms Vietn~mese Nixons to Fly
To West Coast
Home Olf. Friday
Group's Freeway
Protest to State
More than . 1,000 petitioners against
Freeway access plans in Corona del Mar
gol the: Newport Beach CJty Council to
move in their direction Monday night.
Councilmen, on Robert Shelton's me>
lion, unanimously agreed to:
-Forward the four.page, single-spaced,
carefully documented petition to the Cali·
!ornla Division of Highways.
-Invil.ed representatives of homeown-
ers affected by Coast Freeway plans in
the Corona del Mar area to participate
in freeway design discussions with state
engineers.
-Instruct the city staff lo prepare a
point-by.point response to the petition.
-Arrange another public meeting on
the issue after reviewing the staff's
response.
Princi pal concern of the petitioners,
some 50 of whom showed up in the coun-
cil chambers, is that the state's present
plans to use residential streets as a
means of g~tting motorists to and from
the proposed Fifth Avenue freeway
feeder road would ruin the character of·
the neighborhood.'
They want plans to widen Fifth Ave-
rrue for ·the purpbse abandoned. and they
want Buck Gully used as a connector to
Paci fic Coast Hi8:hway instead.
Paul 'Ashenfel ter, presJdent of the
Corona del Mar Civic Association, cited
several reasons for lhe request.I, among
them the . loss of too: many homes
through widening of :Ftrth Avenue and
presumed lower acquisition costs for
Buck Gully right-<if·Way:
Other ,speakers cOmptained of noise:
and safety hSzards that would result
from freeway traffic using the residen·
Ual streets.
"Your concern is well and • logically
ticpressed." fl.fayor Doreen Marshall told
the petitioners ..
-.
Will Assume War Burden
SAIGON (UPI) -In .an optimistic
message to American and other Allied
tl-oopS, President Ngufe:n Van '"1ieu said
today South Vietnamese forces will even-
tually replace them and assume the en.-
lire burden of fighting the war.
''There ar.e fewer Allied soldiers spen·
ding this holy season in Vietnam than at
this time last year," Thieu said . "Next
year, there will be even fewer of you "on
these battle fronts because we: will pro-
gressively take over all the combat
burden wh.ich you have nobly taken at our
sides in recent years. ·
"You are the soldiers or peace because
you are fighting and making sacrifit"eS to
stem aggression and to defend freedom
toward the establishment of a just peace,
not a temporary one for our time, but a
genuine and lasting peace for many
generations to come ."
. There were more than S 3 0. O O 0
American troops in Vietnam last
Christmas. The total Is now down to les.s
than 472.000 men and President Nii:on has
announced plans to withdraw 50,000 more
by April 15.
Thieu addreMed a separate message to
families or Allied troops.
"Thanks to the efforts. and sacrifices of,
the8e valiant soldiers. wslained in their
ideals by the Jove, devoUon and mbral
~pport of their courageous families, tbe
brunt. or the Communist brul.al q ·
gress\ m has been thwarted i.nd the Viet-.
rtaffitse armed 'rorces have become able
to begin gradua lly ·replacing the Allied ·
troops now fighting side by side with us
· on this border of ·the fret world," Thieu
said: r '
He said he WIS ~rt~ly 1ddressin,
families with men· in Nor\)l ' Vietnamese
and/or· Viet Cong prison ea.nips".. ' ,
"We pray that your brava loved ones
will ,5000 return ·'4 you In joyful. family
reunioiis aflf,!r having d~ sp much for
the defense or freedom , tow~rd tbe
establishment of a just at>d durable
peace." Thieu said.
Christmas is a major holiday In South
Vietnam , although the naUon is
Predominantly Buddhist. Thieu, like
many Vietnamese, is a Roman Catholic.
Bid to Suppress
Grand Jury
Subpoenas Told
Maneuvers designed to prevent a Santa
Ana attorney's unprecedented attempt to
force the Orange ·eouiity Grind Jury to
testify individually in· open court were
disclosed today in Santa Ana.
· A motion to suppress subpoenas na.Jtt.
Ing the 19 jun::n involved in the in-
dictment or Santa An• policeman for
allegedly· assaulting a t'llack,. 17-year-ald
prltoner was to be filed later in~ ~ay.
· Cltlt! Deputy County ·CouM<I-CU.ytorr
Parker coofimied the move during aJ smog·· hearing ih conversatlbn with
newsmen, but coukl offer no:furtber.com~
ment at the time.
The action which was to be initiated in
Sqptrior Court sefks, to nullify !he
historic attem·pt by attorney IRon Owen to
que!tk>n 'the panel through subpoenas
issued a week ago.
President,Nixon, hi.I wife and daughter
Tricia will Oy to San Clem.ente Friday for
a fairly loni wor~-and·Plal' hoildaf 11\ay,
White House officials announced .today in
Washington.
Air Force One ls scheduled to llnd at
El Toro MCAS after a 2. p.m. CF.ST)
departure from Andrews AF15, tdaJJland,
with a stay of 10 days or more planned.
A state of the union message, tbe 1971
federal budget -and or course the Rose
Bowl on New Year's Day -is on the
President's holiday agenda.
"Hopefully he will have some time fot
relaxaUon," said Pre11 Secretary Ron
Ziegler, adding that the Nixons will stay
on the Orange Coast until Jan. I or
longer.
No public appearances are plaMed, but ,
the President is not noted for sticking to
such a schedule, occasionally to the
distress of the Secret Service.
Ziegler said President Nixon will
choose to see the Rose Bowl in Pasadena
as many Orange Coast holiday. celebrants
will -via television in the comfort of the
Western White Hoose ..
Just u m his Orange Coast visits last
spring and summer. the Pre&klent will
bring .. circle or key advisors to help out
with critical question&, Ziegler. added.
' .
In October. another attempt to enjoin
the college on behalf of student. Gary
Berrigan, 19. was turned down by
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman.
Mrs. Herrog said that case was not
decided on the merits or the dress code
but on a procedural defect in the action.
Tfte plaintiff had not fe.l exhausted his
11.dmlnistrative remedies at the time he
flied the acUon. she e1plained.
She spoke only tale In the court act.ion
(Ste STABBING, /t I)
s~ App_e.&ls.· oCC'~··.·a~u..
' • • • I
Owen represents Santa Ma Police Of.
fic;er Richard "FaltSt, 2'J: whO ·has pleaded
innocent to a Grand Jury ind ictment
charging him with assault with a deadly
weapon ·~ hi! nlghbliti: ' : " ''
r LDeputy Coontf'Col.thseJ R.H. Nuttman;·
'however, offered ·a commentery, on the 1
scHedul ed ICtlon t>y'Chit! Deputy Ooimty
Counsel Parker, saylng Owtn bu
Indlcationr are. that Santa will
find hb WI)' lo .J-.rooftop l<>
fTlQITOw night, as fair skies are
predicted r0Ver'1 the · Orange Coast.
1be tempe:rat9re Js a.till riveted io
the mid;•l~t;, ... thqu~h. •
, .ri.s1DE npD~,'I' .
An Oronp~ .. Couutian who 1
heodt GoVtt11or . lttQQdn~s ·Com.-
milriml on llducO&ionol Re:for.m
rtport.r impret.five progrr3s in
the group'1 ffr•' fiVf: »&0nthl.
Pag• J. She said sbe took her case to the:
federal court le.vel instead of county
Superior Court because she believes I&
cornea within !ederal jurisdiction, in that
COMUtutional righUI of tht plaintiff'
(King) have been violated. _ /
Saddleback College's dress c;..o d e
sJ ip.llates that boys' ha ir shlilll noltixtend
over the. CQ\lar ol a dress shirt.
Stock ~larkels
NEW YORK (APl--Declining ilisues
conlinued to mount in fa irly ac!lve trad·
log today, mainlainlng 1 near 500-issue
lelld over advances. CSU quouitlons,
,,.,., a.9).
T•x-selllng was chieOy responsible for
the decline, according to analy1ts.
"
Tru.St.ees Instruct Counsel to Prepare Defense.
/ By TROMAI FOllTVNE
Of .. .,..,. ...... ""'
SOS hu apptaltd its llDl><....,mion al
Orange Coast College and now comes the
baltle or attorneys.
Trustees or Orange Coast Junior
College District have asked the County
Counsel's offict to prepare ttftir defense
of a Students for a Democratic Society
appeal rlltd last week in the California
Dislrtct Coun of Appeals.
The appeal on behalf of SOS was filed
by Santll Ana attorney Richard W.
Petherbrldge. who is associated with the
Amttlcan Civil Liberties Union.
The 1ppe11 is of ""~Aug. 5 $uperior
Court ruling upholding the college'• right
not. to recognize SOS as a leglllmate
)·
campus organization.
No date has been set for I.be bearing on
the appeal and sources close to the ap-
pellate court in San Bernardino say they
don't txpect the date will be before the
middle of March at the earliest.
Counsel for both sides need the lime to
prepare their briefs.
Att.empts by a small group of students
to gain recognition for SOS on the cam-
pus began jus about One year a.go. The
lludent senate eventually recognized the
group because senators believed In the
righ t of free assoclaUon.
But the dean of atudent activities and
college president vet()fd the student
1enate'1 acUon and the board oI trustees
"' •
also rultd 1gainsl sos.
'!lie cue then went to Court"'"! and
Superior Court Judge Robert Corfman
shot di>wn SOS once again.
Eliplalning hla ruling, he nottd that the
pubUc has charged administrators and
tnatees wl~ operation of the school and
has given them a certain amount of
discretion in that opr.raUon .
''You can't,'' he said, "take a man and
tell him 10 run your school and t~n
• deprive hlm ol the rJght to aerctse Jud&-•
mt>.nt."
Reprt.sentalives for the college said
SOS had been denied recognition becau$e
fi roata and 1lms 111,ltd by lht n1llonal
or1Janlt1Uon not compatible 'with college
poud .. and rqul1lioM. ,
.,,.,,.ipped hla 1.-117. '
-"He'has no power'Undtt the law to sub-~na the Grand J~,'1 iald'Nuttman ..
"We are seeking, to pro~ the in-
tegrity and investigallve ability' or the ,
Grand Jury and we oonlend that H any
attorney Is allowed to isstie 81,lbpoenaJ,
the.n a grc.it part of Ult value or the .
Grand Jury is destroyed ," he continued.
Nuttman charged that the adion could
be a blow agalnst tbe e~IttUveness ol the ,
Grand Jury syslern jtKU.
"Allowing lhese subpotnas lo stand and
(a\linR the Grand Jury as wltntsaea ln
the Faust C&ft: will on,ly impede the
power• of future erand juries." he
warned. Announ«mtnt of the 90Ctt! IMlcbnenl
(Ste JURY, Pip I)•
I
"' I '
'
.CilR.IST .. -·-----
•
I
,,
L
......
! DAILY PllOI· N
•
Christnau l'ili.e Recreated
Rober\ Marr adjusts heat-producing· lamp which tul'lll fan blades
aclivitlng unique Gennan Chrisfm.ts village which decorates the
family home af2423 Richmond W.Y,' Costa Mesa. Marr built the en-
tire thing hlinseij Including animal figures riding on turntable ot
base. The unusuai decoration is expansion of commercially-sold items featurtng litUe brass angels wbicli "fly" on candlle heat.
,._Page 1
STABBING CASE ..•
to de8Cribe ""° .-!1 loc lpecial medlca-Uon and to aak that she be allowed to
bring a pencll and paper with her u Ibo
met with her lawyers. Both requesta
were eranted.
The hearing began In the court of
Judge Donald Dungan, who granted
Innas' nliuett that another judge COD·
dud t11e· hearing becauae Dunagn wu
prejudiced.
The Judie qletd.
In Judge 11utter'1 court, Newport
Beach police patro1man M i t c h e l I
Thompson, who was the second officer to
arrive at the Harbor View Hills home
a.ftt!r the stabbing, testified first.
Thompeon said be tntued the pal.io of
the house at 2fl5 Harbor View Drive to
find fellow officer Keith Coll ins bent over
the badly bleedioe HunL Mn. Hunt,
Thompson said, was there, too.
"Before anyone cou1d say anytbina,
she, the delenclan( Aid, 'I did It. I did it.
I stabbed him.'," the officer testified.'
Later in the testimohy, .lnnas ·asked
!be patrolman to repeat !be quote.
Thornpoon said that the fatally injured
Hunt sa,id ~1'8 as the other officer
held • band to his bleeding cbesl
0 1 took the defendMt ili!tde and we
went into a foyer or entryway and I told
tier what her comtltutionat ·rlghts were
there," he aald.
Thompson said Mn. Hunt then took
hhn into the kitchen of the home and
pointed to a knife with a blade 10 or 12 in·
ches long.
WOODEN HANDLE
The knife, he said, had a wooden ha
die. It waa lying on a drainboard in tJ kitchen.
The patrolman oo'ltftd it up with pap..
towels, he testified, then led the woma
into another part of tbe bouse.
Tbompeon wu aa:ked if Mrs. Hunt
agreed to talk to him 4bout the incident
after acknowledging her rights.
"I asked her if she would like to tell me
50 Crewmen Saved
HONG KONG (UPI) -All 50 Chinese
crewmen aboard the Singapore-registered
freighter SS Ktng Bay have been rescued
by a Japanese vessel, the ship's owners
said today. The 3,00().ton frtigliter ran
aground near the Tubbalaba Reef& in the
SuJu Sea tn the Southern Phllippines.
DAILY PILOT
OllANGE C.O~T PUeL15HING C.OMP ... NV
R.oberf H. W11d
Ptft!ftfll •NS •u11u111er
J,,._ ft . C11rl1v
Vb Prnldorlt tf.4 Got'nWtl H.•ro6gtr
Tllom•t t(,,,,;f
lllltor
wi.t bappened,H
The omeer then testlfted that Mn.
·Hunt told him there was an argument
over diacipline ~ reprimanding of the
12-ytar .. ld daugbler.
''She said thitt the victim wanted to
dlsclpllne and reprimand the girl" and that
she couldn't 1tand it any longer. She said,
'I couldn't ·i.ii:e it. I stabbed him'," 'l'honlpoon teatilitd.
Irmu 'lUeiti~ the policeman at
length about hfs observations of Mrs.
}{unt's appearance and behavior.
Thompson said he Rosed no indications
that the wopian. had been drinking. He
saw no bruises, cuts or scabs on the
woman, he told the court.
"When we were in the station aod a
man from the crime lab was taking pie·
tures I heard the defendant say
something about a mark on her wrist.
Sbe said 'that Will be black and blue by
tomorrow," but I couldn't notice any
mllf~".he·aa~. _ 1
ONE OTHER WITNESS
Only oqe otJier witness appeared at the
hearing, next-door-peighbor Sam Keyes;
62, whb !Ives at *7 Harbor View Drive.
Called by the d!rense, Keyes told the
court Hunt called him on a business mat-
ter at aQout 7 p.m., a little more than one
hour before the fatal :stabbing.
Keyes termed the conversation jocular
and said after discussing Si!Veral business
points with the victim he heard Mrs.
Hunt chime in amicably to joke about
Keyes' Christmas decorations.
Keyes said Mrs. Hunt complained in
joking lash.ion that some or his Christmas
lights were not working and she asked
'.iim to fix them because they were visible
'rom the Hunt house.
"Was Mr. Hunt a gun collector or a
.tinter?" lnnas then asked.
"He said he wu going hunting several
times. That's all I know," Keyes replied.
Alter the witness stepped down trmas
argued for a reduction in the charges
against Mrs. Hunt.
He challenged the prose<:ution in-
troduction of the death certificate instead.
of calling on coroner's witnesses.
"The most we have here i s
manslaughter.'' he said.
He added that there was no evidence
showing "malice aforethought o r
premeditation."
'11iere ls no evidence of felony murder
he.re," he said.
Rutter disagreed and quickly ordered
Mrs. Hunt to stand trial on the charges
as filed by the DA.
After the arguments on the bail matter
and lhe medication and stationery issues
MrE. Runt, a matron at her sidt, rose to
leave the courtroom.
She smiled warmly al her cousll'I , in lhe
front row and waved .
·~1~esident '~eleases' c .ongress
Scraps Special Session as Money ~ills Passed . . '
..
"w~·. (\lPll oi . Prealdeot ..,. about to adjourn unlD Jan. 19. spending authorUy was ·enactecl to keep Senate a compl'<ll1llse measu"' extending
Nboia '"tixlij ·Cave hla Dlllllna to . ••ffe 1aid we bad aJI worked very the agencies in operation. through June· 30, 1971. new export con-
eoncre-" planned ~b r l 1 t m •a * hard,'" Hou11e GOP Leader Gerald ft. Left to the P.resident'.s dilSCt'etion were. trols to replace tbe 21J.year-0ld Export
journment ~ the lawmakers pressed Ford reported. lwo major measures -the lax·reform, Control Act. ' toward a windup of lhe 1969 session by "al ·t in bill hd B 1 JI th ·,. t early afternoon. Ford said the President acctpted the tax cut, soc1 secur1 y crease a as ca y, e measure con mues o
NitOJ} had suggested. earlier be might adjournment notiflcaUon without any mine safety leglslatlo.n -w_h!Ch ~m·e give the President dl"scretion 1o prohibit
call the House and Senate back into a further talk of a special session. members feared President Ntxon might and regulate exports to Communist coun-
spedal post.chri.stmas session if lhey The House and Senate were quitting veto. The betting was the ,chief executive tries and lo bar trade if. the· national
failed to get all the yttr's money bills wilhout final action on a $19.7 billion ap-. woul~ sign b(lth. (_Tax _story, ~age 4). security requires it. ' i
passed before quitting. Two such bills propriation for lhe labor and health, Thi ~ouse, ln its fi""l leg1slattve ~ However. the •new proposal liberalizes
were left hanging, but Under conditions education and welfare departments -tlon, approved today new rules to relax the old rules under which some 2,200
that the President approved in a final. v.•blch the Preddent promised to Veto aa trading of non·milltary .gOods with COm-items -ranging ,from a1.1tomobiles to
foi'mal excllange with a House committee too costly -or on a $1.86 billion ap-munlst countties. · " mUk -were p\Jt an a special list preven·
appointed to notify him the lawmakers propriatlon for foreign aid. A temporary It passed by voice vote and sent to the ting exports.
From Page 1
FREEWAY •. o;
"'minirniud or elimlnated'' by worklng
with state engineers. He said the council
l!hould direct the city staff ·to gtve top
priority to such a cooperative study.
He said 1£ the city insi~-on going tt
alone -as it apparenUy mutt -in re·
questing a new freeway study by the
rtate, "you will stir opposition once again
in Qlsta Mesa in contravention to the
new.found cooperaf:ive spirit, to say
nothing of the Newport homeowners who
will qain be threatened."
Councilmen were uMetUed by much of
w~t Banning had to say. But only Paul
J. Grubtr, J«ig a hawk on the reroute
issue, criticized the land developer's
views.
Gruber Wd Banning didn't know what
he was talking about when be asae.rted a
new route entirefy Within Newport would
sUU create problems for Costa Mesa. The
former tw~tenn mayor said that is
llOlllethin( that car be determined only
by traffic analyaea that would be incliided in the new state lludy to be ooogilt by the
dty on Jan. II.
"I don't see Mr. Bannlng's objections to
thls study at ill," said Gruber. "What
bu&Jneas la it of his!"
"Well, that's interesting," Banning muttered.
Other councilmen, however, conceded
th.•t many of Banning's pointa were weli· taken.
Robert Sbeiton c a II e d them
"reaJOnable." Donald A. Melnnls agreed ,
11ddlng that It may be possible to have
the adopted route without having to build
a 30-foot high "Chinese Wall" in West
Newport as proposed in -present freeway
designs.
Shelton said. in any event, the final
decision may be made on Jan. 16. "If the
Highway CommJssion says no, it is not
interested in another study, then our only
option is to resolve our problems at the
district level ." In other wcrds, work with
Division of Highways engineers in finding
soluUons. to the problems along the
adopted niirte.
"Next month's meeting seems to be oUr
last hope," said Vice Mayor, Lindsley
Parsons. "U we get turned down flatly,
there ls not much else we can do but
work with the adopted route."
"Ir that happens," said Councilman
Howard Rogers, «then we 'll try to get the
best design we can and get the thing out
or the way."
"~at's the right way to proceed," said
Councilman Ed Hirth. "It's not going to
t.lke much longer."
Geo.-gia Regents
Meet to Discuss
'Rusk Matter'
ATLANTA (UPI) -A specia l meeting
of the Board of Regents was called today
to discuss the proposed appointment of
fonner Secretary of St.ate Dean Rusk as
professor of international law at the
Univer.sity of Georgia.
Regents Chairman H. G. Pattillo said
be called the meeUng for Dec. 29 "in
view of the continulng and increasing
widespread publicity and debate on the
matter."
The proposed appOintment of Rusk has
touched off criticism by both Gov. Lester
Maddox and Roy Harris. a member of
the regents, who also Is one. of the South's
most outspoken segregationists.
"All he (Rusk} knows Is politics,'' Har·
ris declared, "and we don't need any
broken down politicians t e a ch i n g
politics in Jaw school."
V al'ley Woman Injured
In Costa Mesa Car Wreck
A palr of spectacular auto accidents
that snarled already·heavy Christmas
shopping traffic near South Coast Plaza
Monday night left two Orange County
women with major injuries.
Several other persons were less
1eriously hurt, actMdlng to the California
Highway Patrol.
Mary A. Campbell, 16, of 460 Linden
Pace, Anaheim, was listed in serious
concUUon at COila Mesa Memorial
Hospital today, with possible internal in-
juries. \
Mro. Margaret Uddtll, 43, of 10577 La
Fuente St.. Fountain Valley. was
reported in fair conditlon at the same
hospital with head injuries suflered in a
separate auto crash.
InveJtigators for the CHP sa\d aeveral
of the six vehlcles involved in each three-
car crash were totally demolished.
Transplant Case
Of Be.ach Woman
Said Milestone
By TERRY COVILLE
bf .., CMU"f Plllt Sltff
Mrs. Cara Ramey's operation has
become another milestone in medical
history.
Doctors at Orange County Medical
Center expressed the hope Monday that
the rare transplant of a pancreas (along
with a kidney) into the ·Huntington Bea.Ch
housewife Thursday will prove to be
another step toward eventual cure of Cet·
l .. in diabetic conditions.
She was only 10th person in the world
to receive the pancreas or another
person.
Mrs. Ramey is still listed in critical
oondltkm at the center but doctors say
she has responded well.
A six-montt critlcal period is expected.
duri06 which doctors will be alert to r~
jecti'n of the new organs by Mrs.
Ramey's body.
The head of the medical team that
transplanted the pancreaa of an Anaheim
man who died of mysterious injuries
Thursday was identified as Dr. John E.
Connolly.
Dr. Connolly ls chainnan of the UC·
Irvine Department of surgery. He was
joined by Or. Donald C. Martin, chief of
urology at UCI, who headed the kidney
transplant team. Both men are members
cf the medical center staff.
The beam of hope for diabetic patients
involves the pancreas, according to Dr.
Martin.
Diabetes is caused wl1en the pancreas
fails to produce a chemical which
removes sugar from the blood. In many
cases il can be controlled by insulin in·
jections.
But in Mrs. Ramey's case, as in many
others, said Dr. Martin, the diabetes had
also destroyed other organs -the
kidney.
Mrs. Ramey hJd speat several months
under medical care 11 be.r own kidney
was slowly destroyed by the di abetu.
The kidney transplant itself would only
be 1 temporary solution since the kidney
does not cau.se the diabetes, said Dr.
Martin.
"But a transplant of t' fresh pancrea1
mlght effect a total change in the con-
dition." be erpla1ned.
Miss Campbell was crossing Fairview,
Read at Sunflower Avenue about 9:30
p.m .. when her car collided with a south-
bound auto driven by Pamela Lagent, 17,
of 18021 Newland St.. lfuntington Beach.
Impact of the crash drove the two cars
into a third driven by Eleanor Mobley, 20,
of 2463 No rse P1ace. Costa Mesa, \\•hich
was alsc southbound on Fairview Road,
the CHP said.
Miss Lagent and Mi ss Mobley suUered
only minor injuries,
Mrs. Liddell was injured earlier when a
car driven by her husband, Samuel, col-
lided with two stopped vehicles on the
Bristol Street offramp from the San
Diti:o Freeway ...
Motorists George M. Hawthorne, of
5361 Overland Drive, Huntington Beach,
Patricia Stires, of 14581 Cork St.. Garden
Grove, and Mrs. Liddell's husband all
sulfered miil<'r injuries.
An elderly Costa Mesa driver and a
teenaged passenger in a buddy's car also
s u s t a i n e d minor injuries Monday
afternoon in a sideswipe collision on
Newport Boulevard near Mesa Drive, in-
side city limits.
,Raymond Hill, 82, of 411 Hamiton St.,
and Brian S. Detar, 18, of 154 E. 22nd St.,
were treated for abrasions and leg pains
at Cosla Mesa Memorial Hospital and
released.
Police said Hill was driving north on
the boulevard when a car driven by
Richard RuvalO, 19, of 410 S. Diamond
Sl, Santa Ana, hit the side of his car,
then ran off the road into a chain link
fence.
Trees to Burn
Around N eivport
When that sparkling Christmas tree
looes its magic on Dec. 26 or~o. Newport
Beach's firemen suggest th.it retidents
bring the fading ornament to any of sev-
eral sites set aside for the annual Christ·
mas Tree Bum Jan. 3.
Children bringing trtes to burn will be
etl~ble for prizes again this yesr, Deputy
Chief Leo Love said today.
The trees can be brought and stacked
at the following locations :
Newport Pier, 16th Street and Dover
Drive, and Eastbluff Drive near the
tennis club,
Firemen will touch lhe piles of trees
off Jan. 3 at 7 p.m. at each of the sites.
Drawings for prizes will take place
that night, to6, Love said.
From Page 1
JURY •.•
naming Palrolman Faust -handed down
after listening to hours of testimony -:
came Nov. 13. the day he was ordered to·.
be arraigned before Superior Court Judge
Robert Gardner.
Judge Gardner ordered Officer Fuast
to jury trial Feb. 18, but set Dec. 31 as
the date for hearing a motion by the
defense t(l dismiss charges stemming
from the July 8 incident.
Durlng sY1orn testimony before the
Grand Jury, black youth Jesse Gil"more,
now 18. claimed he v.·as knocked !o the
ground and clubbed on delivery to Orange
County Juvenile Hall.
He was 17 at the time and wa s being
admitted to the facility along with two
other youths in custody, by contradictory
testimony indicated Gilmore was caught
and sulxlued in an escape attempt.
Key witnesses in the case may be pro--
bation officers who watched the incidenb
frOni their offices , but much of the'
testimony contained in an 82·page'
transcript of the proceeding remainl to
be heard.
Officer Faust's defense attorney cites
insufficient evidence, Jack of the right o{
counsel for the defendant during Grand ·
Jury proceeding and failure to provide a
speedy trial as grounds for his dismissal
motion .
Santa Ana Police Chief Edward J.
Allen has praised the defendant's job
record with the department and he re~
mains on duty pending final outcome ot
the case against him. .
Secret Session
Held on Trade .
Mum waS"•the word after Newport·
Beach city councilmen and Cit}' Attotney .
Tully Seymour met behind· closed door&·
Monday . to diM:us.s the controversial UP:-
per Bay tidelands exchange between Or·
ange Ccunty government and the Irvine·
Company. "
"Legal aspects of the transaction were
discussed," is all that Seymour would.
say later. There was no public announce-
ment from the council after the execu·
tive session, either.
It is expected that the council will re-
ceive further information from the staff
concerning the Back Bay swap at the
Jan. 12 study session. That information
will be disclosed publicly.
Population Monnts
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Total U.S ..
pcpulation rea ched 204,000,000 Nov. 1, ac-,
t'ording to the Census Bureau. This was .
an increase of 190,000 from Oct. I and J
ntillion from the same month of 1968.
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Th•m•• A. Mu1phift1 M.tNglflf Ed;,.,
J•rom• F. C.lli111 NfWllOl'f IMCh
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•
Painting of Youtlt in Tunic Mistaken for Priest
VATICAN err~ (AP) -The man in
the painting wore a tunic and looked Uke
a priest and so Vatican o{flclals hMS it a
few yards from 1 portrait of Pope Paul
VI in the Vatican priss roOrn .
But as it !limed out. 'l)losday tlle llWI
wasn't a prltst at all He was Mao Tse--
tung In his youth.
"What can I say?" said h.fqr. Fausto
Vallalnc, the Vatlcan press spokesman.
••'Jbe painting was tent to us as a gift.
We huna It up. Tbat's all."
Although chagrined, church olflclals
s:.!d the palntlng will not be taken down.
The oil palnUng, showing a man with a
h!-.trr~ race standina against a reddish
background, W.33 bung last month. ~
Newsmen accredited to the: VaUean
noted on Monday a striking wiemblance
between It and 1 photogrt!ph in the
OdOber Issue of AA Italian Ctltholic
ma_gulne. "Famtglia Cr1stlana."
1be pholograph. accompanying an atli-
cle about Red China. was of a Chinese..
made painting of Mao as a crusading
youth, his left hand clenched and his
ri~t holding an urcbrella.
Lanfranco Carnevall. 1 shcpowner who
r>aid his 86-year~ld father Luigi painted
the Vat.ican picture last March, said: "0£
course l\'s Mao Tse-tung. ?tty rather sl\11
has lhe sketches he worked from to make
that picture.''
Luigi Carnevall, who was In btd with
influenza, is not a particularly well-
know artist. Jtow the painting can1t to be
sent to the Vntlcan remained a mystery.
Lanfranco ca.rnevall said he could not
explain how the painting got lo the
Vatican . lit. said he loaned It to a friend,
v.·hom he ~Id not idtnUfy, "and 1 have
been trying to reach him for an ex-
pl:i.nalion."
?tfsgr. Vallainc said be had no lntentioa
or removing IL
(
''Every artist. is rree to draw in-
fi"J)iraUon from a given subject and to
develop this subject," he said.
At one point. he to1d newsmen in the
press room; •itook. even if it does
represent Mao I would say it show's him
as an e.Jement of destruction, with the
fla1nin& ruins of what he has wrought tn
I.be backgr<Mmd ...
Lanfranco Carnevali disputed thls. He
said t.ht nollUon "Alba" on the painting.
first ta!:en to mean the town in Italy,
really was the title of the work -
"Dawn."
"The dawn of an Idea," he txplalned.
}fe said his father got the idea for the
work last winter from a pbotograpll of
the sarne patntlng ''Famlglla Cristlana"
reproduced.
Asked .what his father·s reaction wss
when be 'learned that the palnUng was in
the V1tlcan, Lanfranco said: 11He Just
lauil>td."
•
Re's a Drea111er
lt doesn't take much to iigure out "'hat th is guy is dreaming about.
considering he's shoveling hls \\'BY through eight inches of Chicago n ·•
snow with another four inches hnmedJately on the way. ~· ..
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Parti-e.s·
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B.EA ANOE RSON, Edftor
TvtM11, Dlctrllbw U. 1Nt Iii Pftt U
FEASTING BEFORE REHEARSING ~ Prior to al·
tending a rehearsal next Fri'day 'debutantes will be
entertained witll a luncheon in the ho'me o{ Mr. and
J\'lrs. David Ladson Fraser._Co-hostess i ~ M;rs . Hen·
• • •
Punctuate Debs' Calendars
HOLIDAY MOOD -Ad·
111i ri11g decor use4 al a
p::<rty given in their hon-
or are 1969 ChiJdren's
Home Society debutantes
(left to right). the Misses
Margaret Lenore Parker
and Virginia Claire Hov.•·
ell.
ry Lincoln Jones who is ready to serve honored deb-
utantes, her daughter Miss Jessica Morford Jones
(center) and Miss Laurie Ellen Fraser, daughter of
the FraS'ers.
. ·'
Home from variou s colleges £or Christmas vacation and reunited
Once more are 15 young women whose holiday festivities will be climaxed
with their presen·tation to society.
The annual debutante ball will be given Saturday, Dec. 27. in the
Balboa Bay Club by the Newport Harbor Auxiliary, Children 's Home So-
c;iety as a fu nding event for the oldest statewide adoption agency.
Prior to the big mo1nent when they make their bow, the· debutantes
are caught up in the hustle and bustle of parties which traditionally pre-
face the ball.
Starting last Saturday, they and their escorts \Vere entertained with
a dinner: dance in the Dover Shores home of Mr. and Mrs . John Bernard
·Parker with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Yardley co-hosting . Honored debutantes
were the Parkers' dau~hter, Miss Margaret Lenore Parker and Mrs. Yard·
Jey's daughter, l\1iss Virginia Clai·re Howell .
Miss Howell .was in the limelight again the next evening when Mrs.
Howard Daum hosted a dess~rt party. Culminating the evening was the
viewing of the Parade of Lights from Mrs. Dawn's bayfront home.
Mrs. John Killefer opened her Shorecliffs home yeste~ay to honor
Miss Jessica Morford Jones, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lincoln
Jones, .. at a luncheon. Mrs. Jones and the other 14 debutantes attended.
The party whirl continued into the evening. for a progressive dinner
was staged by parents of four debutanles.
Mul led cider punch and appetizers were served in the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Charles Ragan Peyton and then debutantes and their escorts
boarded an English double decker bus to journey on to the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Herbert Warren Kalmbach for the salad course.
The entree was served in the ho1ne of Dr . and Mrs. Vern on Lester
Littlejohn , and the evening concluded ~·ith dessert and dancing to a combo
in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Victor Ne"'man Ellis.
Their debutante daughters are the l\1isses Deanna Kay Peyton,
Lauren Ann Kalmbach, Linda Leslee Littlejohn and Terry Ann Elli s.
Prior to attending -a presentation rehearsal next Friday, the debu·
tantes will be entertained with a luncheon in the home of 1\1r. and Mrs.
David Ladson Fraser with Mrs. Jones assisting with hostess duties.
Other debutantes are the Misses Laurie Ellen Fraser. Elizabeth
Hanson Carver. Marianne Emison Cox. Karen Kuemmel Jackson. KatJiryn
Leona Lynch, Pamela Jean l\1eserve, Diane Plumb and Sharon Thompson.
DINNER PROGRESSES -Honored .debutantes during a progressive diMer
party given last night by their parents are fleft to right) the Mi sses Lauren
Ann Kalmbach, Linda Leslee Littlejohn. Terry Ann Ellis and Deanna Kay
Peyton.
egality Q·uestioned .Wh~o Judge Fo.rgets to Question Pair
ANN LANDEllS: ·lllec:<nlty, In
e ta query, you sUf 1"11 .._ ol.
le 1n tbe,. union, where two . women
be legally mamed. 'Ns i. i,· tn-
. you Ulat ·two women were 'JTianied
x Falls, S.D. on Valentine's Day of
ear1 They now are trying to get a
. in MIMeapolia. ·
. . '
ANN LANDERS ~
comes to him with a license, ht dotm't
ask question!!.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : Sjnce you are
part of the problem ma..v be you can he lp
solve it.
smiles. Someumes he laughs, slaps his
knee and yells, "'Illat'a a beaiJ.t !"
Twice last week he cut oUt your column
befDre he returned the paper. I was so
mad I got Indigestion.
h; there a tac:trul way lo solve this pro.
ble1n? -O.U.8.
message to millions of well.meaning
parents who are damaging their children.
I am referring to the way Ibey deal witb
lhe child who stutters.
~fost children between J.he ages of 3
and 5 stutter somewhat when they first
learn to speak. This Is normal. Parents
often fear the stuttering is going to be
p:.o.rm anenl. so they interrupt and say,
"Stop! Start over ! Don't talk so fast."
or speech. Every lime you aay "uh-or
en .. '• you, loo, are stuttering, only In a
more grown up way. So, you see. n aU
stu tter at some time. in some rasruon. -
NOEi.A
DEAR NOELA : Tbanlt yo.a fw a lentt
which should be Immensely ~pfll tt 1
great ma11y readers. Bec:nte )'ta Wf"ltt,
several thousand Ilda ire goh:I& M 11·
press tbemstlvet unlnternpled teatpt.
and that's as It should be.
plainliff Is 11 23-year·ofcl won1nn
laim11 she w8s lc:•alls marrl"d lo
·year-old g1rlldend by . n G;rC''I I
judge In Siou x· F~ls. 'fhe judzr in. h~ll nb t c!c:ol1Cc:ti9n· ot lh~ tn<:r· ·
and added, "There must have' bee n
fra ud and misrepresentation in obtaining
the license." He said when a couple
"I pss1tme one is a bo.\' and the o!ber is
11: g;r1." he 11dr'ed. I U:ous111 you'd like to
khov.• lhc l:\t:-t. -C.R.
. DEAR C. Jl .; Sonar.one should in !onn
ttt. J1.:t::e that these day/. U11 lomcWhal
risky It 1s511me "one 11 1 boy 1nd IM
other is 1 girl ." Jt'1 be11l tci ask.
Every morning I stop at the newsstand
and bu>: a paper so I ca~ .rcod your col·
umn.durinr: coffee.break. ~ w~ eqrries
by regularly and "'borrows"' the Pfl:per. 1
can see him from my desk -he goes
straight for your column. Sometimes he
DEAR. O.U.B: Type lM ~ followlng
n1ea:s11gc on 1 1llp of paPer and c:lip It lo
the front p1ge. "To Whom It l\.1ay
Conctrn : Plca1e return Intact. fhe ltemi
you wani. to tul out are the one• I !M4y the
pa~r to read. Thank you. The Owner." .,
' DBAR ANN LANDERS: 1'm 11 speech
therapist. Pleue tK,tp me deliver a
U you are a parent v.·ho is gullly or
this, pleDsc stop doing lt. Simply ignore
the chll<l's slutterlng. It is a phase he will
probably outgrow. If. by the time he ls 6
years of nge he Is still stuttering. take
hin1 lo 11 speech therapist. Reme1nber
Iba~ stuttering J.s a break in the fluency
At1n Landers \l lll be glad lo help JOO
with your problems. Send iliem to1 her in
c:ere or the DAILY PILOT. enclosina ·,.
sctr..addressed, st.amped envelope.
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DAil Y I'll OT f\lt'dlY, DectmbtP 2J, 1•6•
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Teacups Overflowing With Toys for CHOC
Santa's sack beca1ne even heavier follo\\1ing the December meet-pital of Orange County fo r Christmas. Shopping for the meeting
ing of the Little l\1ermaid {;uil d of Huntington Beach. Members which look place in the Huntington Harbour home of Mrs. Harry
and friends contributed to filling it by bringing brightly \Vrapped Okuda are (left to right) Mrs. Max S. Schreiber, Mrs. J ames
r toys and gift s 10 be presented the small patients in Chi _ld_r_e_n_'s_H_o_s· __ R_id_e_n_ou_r_a_n_d_M_rs_._IW_..oP_h_N_eil_· _se_n_. ____________ _
MRS. EVAN WILLIAMS
Hon.ymoon in Mexico
Harborites Say Vows
In Santa Ana Rites
Sherita Lynn Lips<:omb and
Evan Paul W i 111 ams ex·
changed vows and rings before
the Rev. Charles Smi1h in
Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana.
Assisting with the · ceremony
was Diclc Day.
Parenls of the bridal couple
are Dr. 'ind Mrs. Joseph K.
Lipscomb or Newport Beach
and Dr . .and A1rs. Francis
Williams of Corona del Mar.
Gi ven in marriage by her
father, the bride wore a gown
of ivory mxl gold satin design·
ed empire style with a
cathedral trai;i. Her \'eiling
\\'I S caught to a hrOOpiecc of
matching fabric, and she car·
Sign Your
'footprints'
In Bathroom
•
Horoscope
Aquarius: Be Lenient
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 24
By SY DNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
The comfort of knowing plans
are i"n order should prevail.
Otherwise, seek aid from
older. knowledgeable peson.
Key is organization. Then you
can enjoy bolidar. spirit.
TAURUS (Aprll 20-May 20):
Yo u may feel put upoo by
re l ative s , neighbors.
Remember, it is actually good
to give--perhaps even better
than to receive. Discomfort is
but temporary. Smile.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Children who appear to act in
eccentric manner are merely
responding to holiday ex-
cilemcnt. Be patiei1t. Last·
minute shopping could wreck
budget plans. But it may be
worth it.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Excitement centers around
home base. There are minor
disagreements. nourished by
general confusion. Th.is can. in
positive manner. be
stimulating. Have fun -chase
gloom .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): you
do best by allo\\'ing others to
express opinions freel y. Not
easy for you to remain in
background-but, for sake of
harmony, do so.
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22):
Friends will be presenting you
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are r effiinded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the \vedding.
Pictures received follov.•ing the \vedding
\Vill not be used.
l
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the s1ory, also accompanied
by a black and white gl6ssy picture, be suiJ..
milted six weeks or more before the 'vedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story 'viii
be used.
To help fi ll requirements 011 both wed·
ding and engagement stories. forms are
available in aU of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be ans,vered by
Women's Section staff members at 642--4321
or 494-9466.
wilh gifts. Check your own
list. Avoid embarrassing
moments by being thorough.
Some dela.ils tend to escape
attention, unless y are
persistent.
LIBRA (Sept. 22):
Alr of excitement i featured.
Your personal ma nelism is
electric. You impress:
prestige rises. Make the most
or what could be a wonderful
evening.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Be a good listener, observer.
Keep promise to one who may
be at a distance. Get ca ll
through early. Enter into holi·
day spirit in meaningfu l,
spiritual manner.
SAGJ'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Minor dispute con-
Cf;ming finances should not be
blown out of proportion. Many
around you exhlblt changes of m0G4. Don't compound error.
Adhere to promises. prin-
ciples.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 2i.Jan.
19): Strengthen ties of af-
fect.ion , Know that one who
may seem indifferent does
have your welfare at heart. Be
mature, analytical. Then th.is
be<:omes happy, constructive
evening.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Friend who is life of par·
ty may be covering emotional
wound. Be lenient. But also be
firrruwJren you know enough li-
quid refreshment has been
served.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Office party can be fun . But
don't take too seriously things
that are aaid, done. Obtain
hint from Aquarius message.
Degree of moderation is
deOnltely adv.i.!ed.
===
Manioc! In OUr Lady of
Mount Carmel Catholic
Church, Newport.Beach, wen
Carolyn Jrene Buek oC Balboa
Island and David Wayne
Vosburgh. The Rev. Francit
. Kelly o(ficiated.
Parents of the bridal couple
are. Leo N. Buck of Phoenix
and the late Mrs. Buck and
Mr. and Mrs. Wi lliam
Vosburgh of Laguna Niguel.
'lbe bride wore a floor
length gown of satin with lace
trim. Matching lace formed
her headpiece and she carried
stephanotis and orchids.
Miss Jenruter Buck was her
sister's ' maid of honor, and
another sister, Miss Theresa
Buck was t.be bridesmaid.
They wore purple velvet
gowns and carried nosegays of
stephanotis.
Serving as best man was
Samuel Stangl, and ushers
were Dr. Jerry Gardner and
Thomas Tucker.
A reception followed in the
home of the bridegroom 's
parents. After a Hawaiian
honeymoon, the newlyweds
will reside in Santa Ana.
The bride received her BA
in eletnentary education from
Arizona State Univer si ty
where she pledged Chi Omega
and was tapped for Mortar
Board. She teaches in Orange.
Her husband earned his BS
in business administration at
San Jose State College where
he affiliated with De 1 ta
Upsilon.
Happiness
Is Doing
For Others
Happiness Is doing for
others. This is the belief of
members of Orange District,
California Federation o f
Women's Clubs.
Afembers of the 36 clubs ate
remembering children, service
men in Vietnam and at home
and senior citizens. Indians on
Arizona reservations a r e
receiving more than 1000
pounds al clothing, bo""' al
rood, toys and blankets. Money
is being sent to Danny Davey
for transportation ·of these
articles.
Clu-bwomen also are
decorating Christmas trees In
the wards at V e terans
Hospital, Long Beach. Seven·
teen clubs have d o n ate d
almost $1,500 for the veterans'
Us<.
Costa Mesa Women's Club is
furnishing food fur Christmas
baskets.
Styles Knotted
The top of the fashion pic-
ture from right now on into
spring is the top·knot
hairstyle.
Make yours with a fall o(
real or synthetic balr U your
own isn't long enough.
.,
• Newport
MRS. DAVID W. VOSBURGH
Hawaiian Honeymoon
Question.:
r . • . --.
"How c-an I look • size smeller e nd
still feel perfectly comfortable7"
In l ilyette's exciting new "Com-
fort W ire" bra with positive con-
trol •nd supreme comfort.
·~Lilyette
THERE'S DOU1LE MAGIC IN LILYmFS NEW "COMFOAT
WIRE" RONDEAU ••• PERFECT SEPARATION WITH HEAVEN.
LY C6MFORT. LILYETTE'S FEATHER-LIGHT FLAT UNDER.WIRE
NOT ONLY CREATES 8EAUTIFUL YOUNG UPLIFT AND SEPAR·
ATION, IUT DOES SO WITH THE MOST WONDDERFUL FREE-
DOM Of MOTION. POSITIVELY CANNOT PINCH, POKE OR
RUI. THE EXCLUSIVE DESIGN FORMS A SOFT CRAOLE
AROUND THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF THE BUST. NOW FULL
I , C, AND D CUP FIGURES CAN CAPTURE THE YOUNG, SL1M
LOOK. RONDEAU IS BEAUTIFULLY MADE-IN WEIGHTLESS,
EASY.CARE NYLON LACE DELICATELY SCALLOPED OVER NY.
LON MARQUISETTE WITH DACRO~ ELASTIC AND SEMI.
CIRCULAR STITCHED CUPS. AVAILABLE IN NUDE. ILUE, PINK,
YELLOW, WHITE, Olt BLACK. I AND C CUP, 6.10. D AND DO '
CUP, 7.JO.
fashions for ••.
Fashion ls1end, Newport 8t•eh
Ston•wood C•nt•r, Downey
~ . ,,. "
Op.. fWHlllfl 'f" f ,.M .
..,.kOlllerlcw4, ~.,. c•.,.•· L• ,."' .. c111.,..
I
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'
t:!osia Mesa 1 Ted•y'• ~
N.~. Ster.kt
VOl. 62, NO. 306, 2 SECTIONS, 22 PAGES
DAIL 'I' f"ILOT Mltl ~
Clirist11aas Village Rttreated
Robert Marr adjusts heat-producing lamp which tui;ns fan blades
acliviting ,luUque German Christmas village which decorales the
·family home at 2423 Richmond Way , Costa Mesa. Marr built the en-
tire thing himself, including animal figures riding on turntable ~'
base. The unusUal decoration is expansion of commercially-sold
items featuring little brass angels \vhic h "fly" on candlle heat.
M~nsl~ughter Plea Fails;
Mom' Faces Murder Trial
{ . . . . ' .
1· '1 ' ' ' -
·~ . , I' 1'4:~· I· " 't
~ "" "l.f '. ~~--;:~~ '• ..
...:: 1 D~ILY l"ILOT Sl•ll ,;Mii
FACING MURDER CHARGE
Mrs. Dw illi.a De.an Hunt
Nixons. to Fly
To West Coast
llo1ne on Friday
President Nixon , his wife and daug hler
Tricia will fl y to San Clemenle Friday for
• fairly long Work-and-play holiday stay,·
White House officials announced today In
Washinglon...-'
Air Force One is scheduled to land at
El Tpro MCAS after a 2 p.m. (ES'I')
rlepar1.ure from Andrews AFB, Maryland,
with,_ stay of 10 days or more planned.
A state of the union message, the· 1971
federal biidget -and of c.4>urse the kc:1e
Bowl on New Year's Day - is on the
Preslt't'ent~ holiday" agenda.
"Hopefully he will have aome time for
relaxation." said Press Secretary Ron
Ziegler, adding that the Nixons will stay
on the Oran1e Coast until Jan. ~ or
lonqef.
No public appearances are planned. but
the J:limident Is not noted for sticking to
such 1 a Schedule. occasionally to the
distress ol lhe Secret Service.
Ziegler said President Nixon will
choose to see the Rose Bowl In Pasadena
as mahy Orange Coast holiday celebrants
will .J.. via television in the comfort of the
Weslem Whit. !louse.
Just as oo his Orange"Coast visits lwst
spring and swnmer. the President will
bring a circle of ke7 advisors to help out
wlLh cMUcal questions. Ziegler added.
Sl.o"k Markets
NEW YORK iAP)-Decl!nlng ~suts
coflti nued to mount in fairly acilve trad·
Ing today. mainta ining a near $(l0.lssut
lead over advances. (See quotatlo~.
Pages g..9 ).
Br JOHN VAL TERZA
Of 1111 QlllJ' ~111t· St.ff
A pros:ec4tOr argued Monday that Mrs.
Dwillia Dean Hunt !lhould not be set free
on ·bail to await trial .o~ charges -0f
murdering her husband becau~ her 12-
year..old daughter fears for her own life.
The surprising allegation came during
a prfliminary hearing for "the 43-year-old
Corona del Mar housewife ·who on Dec. 14
allegedly fatall y stabbed her yacht·
broker hu sband, \\'illis, 56, wilh a one.foot
long butcher knife.
Judge J. E. T. "Ned" Ruller denied
defense molions for bail and ordered
Mrs. Hunt bound over to an swer first·
degree-murder charges in Orange County
Superior Court Jan. 2.
The cha rge c11me from Deputy District
Attorney Jim Lang, who opposed defense
mot ions for bail and said 12-year-old Dru
Hunt "has expressed fears for her life."
Beverly Hills lawyer Sydney lrmas
asked that Mrs. Hunt be set free on bail
to awail the court action, saying that the
slight brunette was "a loving mother who
has never mistreated this child."
He assailed the prosecutor 's coinments
as "rumor" and "a figment of someone's
in1aginat~on.''
"I sec oo reason to punish this woman
with iticarceration for mon ths during the
lengthy court actions." tnnas said .
He then asked that the daughter ~
brought into coort to give her own feel-
ingR on her mother's bail plea.
The daughter is in the custody of ~trs.
Noel Brown of West Los An11eles, (her
stepsisti:!r) wife of a teMis pro and
daughter of tbe slain Hunt:
"The girl is intentionally being kept
from seeing me," the lawyer said.
"l am willing either to bring the girl in
for a conference in fOW' chambers or
even ~all her to sland.tomom>w," he ad-
ded.
Judge Rutter answered abruptly:
"I will rKK do that, counsel. Motion
. denied.''
Throughout .the entire exchange, ~1r1.
Hunt, her hair pulled back into a short
pony tall and wearing a bright pink dreu,
sat paaalvely.
The woman carried the same White,
clipped·beaver coat she wore the night of
her arrest.
Mrs. Hunt , seemed calm. As !he: en-
tered Ille court, ohe smiled cheerfully .,
her family.
During the proceedings she kept nearly
mot.i0nle11 except for changing her grip
on 11 wrinkled white twndkerchief.
She sf>9kt only late in tbe court, action
to descrl_be her needs for special medica·
tiOn and to ask that she be allowed to
bring a pencil and pa'per with her as she
mel with her lawyers. Both requests
were granted.
The hearing began in the court ot
Judge Donald Dungan." who granted
lrmas' requeSt that another judge eon·
duct the hearing because Dunagn was
prejud iced .
The judge agreed.
In Jud ge Rutter's_court. Nc'A·port
Beach police ~olJnarr M i t c h e 11
Thompson, wbo..,wlll the second ofJlcer to
arrive •l the Harbor View Hiils home
!See STA~BING, Pogo !I
·'
ORANGE COUNTY, CA[IFORNIA TUESDAY, ,D~EMBER 23 , 1969 TEN <:;ENTS
S. Viets to 'Take Burden'
Thieu Optimistic in Message to GI$, PO~s; KLn ·
SAIGON (UPI) -In an optimistic
message to Americin and other Allied
troops, President Ngtiyen Van Thieu said
today South Vietnamese forces will even-
tuiiny replace them ahd assbiTie the iri-
tire burden of fighting the war.
"There are fe"".er Allied soldiers spen-
ding this holy season In Vietnam than at
this time last year," Thieu said. ''Next
year, there will be even fewer or you on
these battle fronts because v.·e will pro-
grersively take over all the combitt
burr1en which you ·ha\"e nobly taken at our
SDS Appeals
Ban at Orange
Coast College
By THOMAS FORTUNE
01 ""° ~Hy ,11.t Sllff
SDS has appealed its non-recognition at
Orange Coast College and now comes the
battle of attorneys.
Trustees of Orange C<>a.st Junior
College District have asked the County
COunsel's office to prepare their defense
of & Students for a Democratic Society
appeal filed last week in the Callloinia
District Court of Appe,ls.
The appeal on behalf of SOS was filed
by Santa Ana attorney Richard· W.
Pelherbridge, who is associated wllh the
American Civil Liberties Union.
The appeal is of an Aug. S Superior
Court ruling upholding the college's right
not b recognh:e SOS as a legitimate
campus organization,
No date has been set 1or U1e heai-ing on
the appMI and sources close t.6 the--ap-
pellate court in San Bernardino say they
don't expect the date will be before lht
mickUe ol March at the earliest.
Counsel for both skits need tbfl ·Ume to
prepare their brjefs. .
AUempt.s by a small group ol !Jtudents
to gain r,ecognitiqn for SOS on the cam·
pus began jus about one year ago. The
student , senate eventually reco"gnlzed the
group btcause senators believed in the
right· of free association.
But the dean of student activities and
college president vetoed the .student
senate's action and the board O{ truStee.s
also ruled against SOS.
The case then went to court and
Superi or Court Judge Robert Corfman
shot down SOS once again.
Explaining his ruling, he noted that the!
(See SDS APPEAL, Po&t !J
Yule Tree Stub
Used for Ooh
Hearing the agonized yowling of cats in
pain, a Costa Mesa man intervenf!d Mon·
da y. when he found a hulking teenager
beating them and was clubbed to the
ground h.im self with a broken Christmas
tree stand.
Ronald L. Phillips, 37, of 2206 College
Ave., apparently escaped seripus injury
in the assau lt with a dpadly weapon case
near his home ,·pollce said.
The attacker , described as about 16, six
.feet tall and weighing about 180 pou~.
escaped, according to invesUgator&.
Patrolman Randy Nutt 1aid Phillips
was watching te}evlsion shortly before 9
p.m. when ht heard the cats crying, went
to investigate and confronted the club-
awinginc youth.
sides In tecent years.
"You ar'° ~.soldiers 9f peac~ ~a.us.e
you are fighting and maklng sacrifices to
stem · aggreSsion and tO defend freedorh
tov.·ard ll'le estibiistune.n[ of a j:ust peace;
nol ,a temporary.one for-our time; but a
genuine and lasting . peace · for many
generatiOns to · come."
T~re were more than S 3 0 , 0 0 0
American troops in Vietnam lsst
Christmas. The total is now down to less
than 472,000 men and President Nixon has
announced plans to withdraw 50,000 more
by Ar·-u 1s.
•
•
Thieu addr,ued a .sePi.rate messaa• to
families of Allied troops.
"Thanks i;, the efforts and sacriftce& of . . . . .
these valia,tt solii,rs,,~a~ in their
Ideals by the Jove, devotion and moral
supp.:>rt o! their courigeous families, the
brunt ·of the Communist brut.81 ag-
gress; l;. hu been thwarted and the.\tie:t-
namese armed forces have betome a~le
to begin gradually replacing the Allied
troops now fighting side. by side with us
on this border of the free world," Thieu
said.
DAILY ''Lot's~'"-
Str~ Ball Roy41lty
• ". t , f • ~ • I ,
•Kftlg aod.'Queen-of,ClC~ta 'Mesa High·Sc~oOI Girls' !Aagi;~~ow Ball ·
will: be crowned at th0e,s.trok"e.of'rn.idni ght tonight among fOti.r couples
nominated. Boys are"(from left) Richard Ferryrrian, Paul Marchior-
lalti ·Litrell, Raymond Toelkes anJ. Jody Deehan. Queen candidates
are Mary Brady." Linda Albertson. Janeice Jarek ·and Sally Hubbard.
"\Vonderful by Night,".is theme of girl·ask-boy formal at <;osta Mesa
country Club .
Newport Council in Finale
o~er Change in Freew~y
By JEROME F.'CQUJNS
. • • , OI · 1111 O.ily ,1191 l.ltff ••
On Jan. 16 in Sacramento, Ne.wport
Beach will make U.11 last. pitch for
cha-nges in the adop:led alignme nt of the
Pacific Coa st Freeway west of the Upper
Bay.
If lMJ. •ppeal for a n-ew study gets
nowhCr'.-with the -California Highway
commission, the city . wlll giVe up· ils
se ven-year struggle -·and accept the
co3stllne-huggfng adopted route.1 ·
City councilmen made this clear Mon-
day in response to a major West.Newport
landowner 's stroog objection against
further delay in resolving the issue.
Grand Jury Subpoena
Suppression Requested
Hancock "Biil" Banning Ill, wh08e
firm , Beeco Ltd., own.a: 560 undeveloped
acres behind Newpcrt Shorts told coun·
cilmen a "truly fine" inland route is now
irrevocably blocked because of lht op-
position of the ctlles of·Costa ·Mesa and
Huntlngtqn Beach.
Hunllnit.On Beach, he sa'id , al~C!ldy has
iflcorpOrated the adopted route in it&
(Set FREE\!AY, Pagel)
M1neuvm designed to prevent a Santa
Ana attorney's unprecedented atttrnpt to
force the Orange County Grand Jury to
testify individually In open court were
disclosed today in santa Anl.
A motJon to suppress subpoenas na.m·
Ing the ll jurors involved ln the In·
dictment of Santa Ana policeman. for
allegedly assaulting a black, 17-year-okl
srisoner·"nl to be fllfid later in !be day.
Chit! Doputy COunty Countel Clayton
Parktt confirmed the move durlog 1
smog hearing in conversation with
newsm en. but couki offer no further com·
ment at the time.
The 1cti0n which was to be Initiated in
Superior Court !ittkl to nullify the
historic attempt by attorney Ron Owen to
que5lion the panel through subpot:nas
issued 1 week qo.
Owen nprestnts Santa Ana POUct Of·
' ficer Richard Faust. 27, who bu pleaded
innocent to a ·Grand Jury indictment
charging him with· a111Utt "Ith a. deadl y
weapon -hla'nightstlctc:
Dtputy County C..-1 R. H. Nuttmon.
however, offttfld a commentary on the
tcheduled acl(Dn by Chief Deputy COunty
~eounse1 Parker. oytnc ·0wen has
ovtntepped hi.I authority.
0 He bU no,power under the law to sub-
poenl the Grand Jury." aald Nuttman.
"We are seekinC to protect the 1n·
tegrlty and lnv.U.atlve abJIJty or the
Grand Jury and we contend that If any
aUorney is allowed to ls.~e :lUbpoena~.
then a great part Of the value Qf lhe
Grand Jun 11 destroyed," he-cqntlnu!d.
Nuttmin charged that the action could
be a bk>w against the effccUven css O:,tht
Grand Jury, system i~lf.
"Allowing these subpbenaa to stand and
IS.. JUl\Y, Page ll
J
That Kid Fun·
Not So "Funny
A pair of C..ta Meq boy1 ~Hered a
fire alarm Mondliy night, but whit rolled
up wasn't a big red engine -·and. Santa
Claus was definitely not abolrd.
The 14·year-olds were out W•lkina their
dogs when il hlppeneti . ' ,
They Quickly eot a ~lft frOm • cltln·
9haven young gent ih a dark blue outfi(.
They also got black· marks beside their
n11mts In a bi& ledger.
'"liiriiini 'in 11 false alarm and Jack or
p.irental control.'' is wh•t th~ black
marks spelled out.
Police releaMd them to lhtJT f1mllk!s
1)PJ'ldiJI( juvenile court Actloin~
~.L.~----
He said he W08 Pll!lculariy adc!'°"1oi
families with men in North Vltlnamtse
and/or \Viet Cong prilOll camps.
;:'!"~ .P~~Y-that_your t>rave .19\'ed ooes
will soon return to you in joyful family
reunions after having done so much for
Uie defel\&C o( · freedom, toward the
establbhment of a just and durable
peace," Thie\I said.
Christmas is a major holiday in South
Vietnam. although tbe nation i s
predominantly Buddhist. Thieu, like
many Vietnamese, is a Roman Catholic.
Hanoi Approval
Awaited for GI
Captives' Gifts
BANGKOK. Thailand (UPI) -A
Jetliner loaded with Christmu dinner•
and gilts for American prisoners in Nortl
Vietnam arrived here today and the Ta·
as Santa Claus sponsoring the project
said he was sur.:! the CommunistS would
approve it.
"i am very optimistic that Hanoi will
allow us to land lhere." said lf. Ross
Perot, the 39-year-old Dallas millionaire
who Is chalnnan of United We Stand, the
citizens group behind tile $600,000 airlift .
Perot said the chartered Braniff
Jetline.r, n'cknamed "Peace on Earth,"
"''ou ld remain in Bangkok · until Hanoi
1n1wen his cabled request for landinJ
pen?Ueslon. · ·
1 A~JtCd what he w~jd d6 ~f the project
Were vetoed , Perot said: "I prefer not t6'
t_alk about that. becall.9e . r am very oP-
linilstlc they will •=i>t' tt." ,rernt said a aecoTid ·chartered plane,
Ji.ickriamed 0 <1oodwtll °"' Earth," would
Stand by in ·Los Angeles until word 11
received from Hanoi.
''Peace ·on Earth," a four-engine
Boein' 707 , painted ""'"· carried 1.400
turi<iy dinners wlttt all Ille tr1lninings,
leters •nd packages from relatives.
medical supplies and clothing with a total
weight of IS,000 pounds. The aircraft
waiting in Los Angeles carried 18,000
pounds of !lmilar cargo.
PerOt said he put up $200,000 of the cost
and tllat other American businessmen
provided $400,000.
"If I can go to Hanoi personally T win
make a proposal to permanently supplJ
medical and clothing needs and food.I for
the prisoners of war if the North Vie~
n11mese will allow me," Perot said
earlier Tuesday during a stopover in
Hong Kong en route to Bangkok. "t hope
I don't have to pennanently supply them
-after the prisoners have been releas•
e:d." -'
Asked if he meant that the Americans
were not getting adequate supplies now,
Perot said maintenance of the men was a
"great economic burden" for the Nortii
Vietnaml!ae.
"And after all, the food there .mitl
Orientals but not the Americans." be
said. ~
Weadter
Indications are that Santa will
find hi! war to your rooftop to-
morrow nijj:ht, as fair skies art
predicted over the Orange Cout.
The temperature is still riveted in
the mid-sixties, though.
INSWE TODAY
An Oranot Countilm who
head& Governor .Reagan's Com-
m.i11ion on Educational Reform
reporl.t tm.pressive progresa in
tlie group's jir&C fioe months.
Page 3, r:·-2 ~ I CHltlSTMAS
........... ,111! ........ .,
Ctll""•I• I C'"ICJl:I"' U~ t ci..i'l" 1•11 ,<-Ill 11 ,,.,,..,,. .
Dwlfl Netlut It
•111...,i.1 ''" ' •fllWttlfllNM ,, ,l'I_• ... --" """........,. lJ ....... . --.
. .
MtTlll 11 ,.,..,.., ..... . ... , ......... ...
Or-C-'Y 11 ,....... 11-11
SMICt~ M , ..... '.tftll 11 -,. ·-. ...... ..... 11 ............. , .. 1. ..........
•
L
' , ~ILY ,ILOT Si.ft ...... MESA FllU!MEN CHECK MANGLED CAR FOR SIGNS OF BLAZE
· Driver, 1,, aedly Huri ln ThrW:C•r JnterMCtkwt Crath
Valley W oma~ Injured
In Costa Mesa Car Wreck
A pair of spectacular auto accidents
that snarled already-heavy Olristmas
shopping traffic near South Coasl Plaza
Mmday ni&ht left two Orange County
women with major injuries.
Several other persons were less
seriou.sly hurt. according to ~ Califomia
Highway Patrol'.
Mary A. Campbell, 16, of 460 Linden
Pace, Anaheim, was listed ln serious
cmcUUm at Costa Mesa Memorial
HOspUa.1 today, w"· ·· ·• • .. ·~-,,ai in-
jurlea.
From Page 1
JURY ••.
calling the Grand Jury u witnesses in
the 1 Falllt case will only impl'de the
powers of future grand juries." be
wamod.
Announcement of U)(! secret indicttnent
naming Patrohnan Faust-handed down
after listening to hours (){ testimony -
came Nov. ll, the day be wu ordered to
be arraigned befcn Superior Court Judie
Roi><rtGardner.
Judge Gardner ordered Ollioer Fuut
IA> jury trial Feb. 18, but set Dec. 31 ts
the date for hearing a motion by the
defeme IA> dismiS& charges stemming
from lhe July 8 inc.idenl
Dwing rwom testimony before the
Grand Jury, black youth Jesse Gilmore.
now 18, claimed he wp knocked to the
ground and clubbed on delivery IA> Orange
County Juvenile Hall.
He was 17 at the time and was beln&
admitted to the facility along with two
other yooLhs in cwtody, by contradictory
testimony indicated Gilmore was caught
and subdued in an escape attempt
Key witnesses in the case may be pro-
bation officers who watched the incident
from their offices, but much of the
te.sUmony contained in an 82-page
transcript or the proceeding remains to
be heanl.
Officer Faum's defense attorney cites
imufficient evidence. lack of the right of
counsel for the defendant during Grand
Jury proceeding and failure to provkre a
apeedy trial u grounds for his dismissal
motioa. ';• Santa Ana Police Chief Edward J.
Allen bas praised the defendant's job
record with the department and he re·
mains on duty pending final outcome or
the ca.. against him.
DAILY PILOT
O~ANGE COIUT PUILISHING COMl'ANY
Robtrf N. w.,J
PrMINtlT ...S l"llOI~
J•clc R. Curl•'f
Viet p,_ldtfll -Glrwr•I M•,..11r
l1tom11 IC11Yil ••w
Tlio111•1 J.. MottplilM
.,_....,. Ulllr
c.te M ... Offic•
310 w.,, •• ., s •••• ,
M1ili119 AdclN••: ,,O. lo..: IS40, 92626
°""' ....... H...,., •.wri: nn w.it ll•RI09 ,..,....,~
i..,..w kit~: m F0t•t _._
M~lllllO'\ 9Ml~: 11115 11""11 9 ;i.ulll'tl1nl
OAILY ~ILOT, wlltl ""'kll Is C"°*IMd .... 1111w1.J>nlf, ll 11111tf llll1d lftUr •~c• ...,.,.
•iv i.. 1-••!t tdil!Oftl tor Lt ....... ··~· .,.,.,..., ."'°" c.-$f ~ H""!I"': ... I Nell .,,.. ,._MIO'I v111ry, • .., wt111 ._
•If-I ''"IOft. o....-COf1t f'v&!Wllll:t
C......tftf .,1r111.,. -~ftll ••••• ''" Wt•t
··""· ,,.,.,_ ,._. .. """ ..... Ut Wt\I .. ., itr"t, Gfotll Mn1,
T...,._. f7141 641-4121
c1-·w ""*',.,. , 6•t·t611
Cffot•IQM. IM, Or... C.HI l'""ltlllnll c.,....11\', ,.. -•Mor.~ ~lhodr•t..,.. ••l•i.I ..... ,... ... ,...,i-.,. l\tl'till
........ ,~ "'"""" .-111 .....
,...~ .. -.. .,.....,, -· Mc.•,.. ci.. •'-NM•' "''"""" ••~ .,.. c.l• ,.._, c11u .... M1. tv'!IK.WIM ..,
U,.,_. a.• -"'1'1'1 .,-1111U l),JO ~IYI
mn11,ry ~twlill'ltro UM '""':.tr.
Mn. Margaret Liddell, 43, of 10577 La
Fuente St., Fountain Valley, was
reported in fair coodlUoo at the wne
hospital With head injwies suffered in a
separate auto crash.
Investigators for the CHP said several
of the aiJ: vehicles involved in each thre&-
car crash were totally demoliabed.
Miss Campbell waa crossiDg Fairview
Road at Sunfioftr Avenue about 1:30
p.m.. when be.r car coWded with a south.
bound auto drl ... by Pamela Lagen~ 17,
oMlllll NewlandJll.. Hunllnlton Beech.
lmpad of the craah dnwe lhe two cars
Into• lhlrd drlvm by Eleanor Mobley, 20,
of 1483 No.,. P1-Coela Meaa, which
was alao southbound OCl Fairview Road,
the CHP said. •
Miss I.agent Md Misi Mobley su!fered CIDlY mJnor lnjurla .........
' Mn. Liddell WU lojured earlier wben I
Cir drl ... by ber bulband. Samuel, col·
lided with ... lllopped vdllcles Oil the
Bristol St(eet olfnmp from the San
Diego Freeway.
Motoristl Geofle M. H1wthome, of
1>161 Overland Drt>e. Hun~ Beech,
Patricia Stires, of l,4611 Cork SL, Garden
Grove, 1?41 ~ liddell's husband .U silffel'ed inl>W ~ ·
~~~r=lll~ ~:'car"":i.: 6Usfalaed1•inlaor Injuries Moodq
atttmooo, ln a llldmrlpe a>l&loo oo
Newport.BouleYanl near Meaa Drive, Jn.
side cllj ~la.
Ra"""6il HUI, IS, of fll llamitAln SL,
and Brian S. Detar, 1~ of 1$4 E. 22nd SL,
were treated for abrasion,, and leg painJ
at Cool& ll!eaa Memorial Hoepllal and
released. ..
Police said Hill wa driving nor1h on
lhe boulevard when a car driven by
Richard Rilvalo, II, ol f!O S. Diamond
St, Santo Ana. hit lhe side of his car,
then ran off the road into a chain lint
fence.
'Tis the Season
-For Vandals
Senseless holiday vandalism f s
dampening the Christm as spirit. of many
Costa Mesa homeowners and causing
I.rouble for many families whose children
are caught by police.
One officer alone has arrested six
youngsters allegedly committing acts ()f
malicious mischief and petty theft in
volving yuletide decorations put up b:
cl!lieos.
Lawmen have come to expect the ar
nua1 problem, but belleve It can be reduf
ed through cooperation of busy parents i
counseling and controlling children id.lee
by Christmas vacation.
Law is law :..... 1X> matter what the
season -police explain, and juveniles in·
\'Ol\•ed in theft and malicious mischief
may face the consequences long after the
holidays.
"I'm not replacing those that art
broken -1 don't think I should -my
decorations are out for the enjoyment of
the public," said one woman whose ligbt.s
were broken by lhrown rocks today.
From Page 1
SDS AP,PEAL ••
public has charged sdmlnlstrators and
trustees with operation of the school and
has given them a certain amount of
discretioo in that operation. "You can't," he said, "take a man and
tell him lo "'" your ocbool and then
depriv• him of the r1J11t lo eurdst Jodi·
ment." R<p<....,tou ... tor the c:oll<ge said
505 llad been denied -snitlon becauso
of goala and aim• stal«I by I.he national
orpnlzallon nol compaUble with coll•ge
pollcl .. and ,...W.llonl.
Petherbridge'1 ugument wN tha.t SOS
member• had beert unlaffully deprived
of status eejoyed by other campus clubs
and organliollons.
A SD5 faction •t Fullerlon Junior
College ;, w11<:hir« lhe falf of the OCC
gioup'a bkt for recocn ltJon. Plans to take
'the Fullerton is..,ue before Judae Cotlman
wmi l!Cl'lppecl whtn the jurist niled
against the OCC IJ1lUP.
I
•
P~.esiden·t 'Relea·ses' Congress
Scraps Special S.ession as Mon~y Bills Passed
. . I li'~ !l1Pll ~ l'rllldenl were~ lo adjourn U.m J111. It. spendln.1 authori13' WIS enacted lo kefp
NlJOD • todl.y pvt hil b*•lac to "Kt. said "' hid all worked very the agencies in oper1Uon. ~ plllmed ·Ch r l 1tma1 ad-hard,'' House GOP Leader Gtrald R. Left to the Pruic;lent's discretion wn ]ou.rnmtnt and the lawmakers pre59td toward a windup of the 1969 sesaion by Ford rtporled. two major measures -the tu-relorm,
early aft.e.rnooo... Ford said the President accepted the tax cut , social security increase blli and
Nixon had su.ggest.ed earlier he mlghL adjoununent noUficeition without aOy mine sarety legislilUon ·-which some
call the House and Senate back into a rurther talk of a special session. members feared President Nlxon might
special podt-Christmas session If they Tbe HOUie and Senate were quittiag veto. The betting was the chief eiecutive
failed to pt all the ye~s money bills wilhout final act.ion on a $19.7 billion ap-Y<ould sign both. (Tax story, Page 4).
passed be.tore quitting. Two such bills proprlal:ion for the labor and health, The House, in its final lea:lslaUve ac-
were left hanging. but under conditions education and welfart departments -lion, approved today new rules lo rtlu
that the President approved in a final , which the President promised to veto as trading ol non-military aoods with Com-
formal exchange with a House commi ttee= too C'OSlly -or on a $1 .86 billion ap-munist colttltries.
appointed to notlfy him the lawmakers propriaUon for foreign aid. A temporary It passed bJ voice vote and sent to the
seoate 1 compromise menure ntend"UJ
through June ~ 1971, now export COii·
trols to rcplact tQe 20-year-old Export
Control Act. .
Basically, the measure continues i1'
give the President discretion lo prohibit
and regulate expart.s to Communist coun·
tries and to bar trade li lhe national
seeurlty requires it.
However. the new propou.1 liberalizes
the old rules under which aome %,200
Jte:ms -ranging from automobiles to
milk -were put on a special list prevtn· tine exports.
l!roa Page J
STABBING •••
• ID V-ati~an Mao Hung
altu lhe stabbing, testified first.
Thompgoa said be enter.cl the polio of
the house at 21115 Harbor View Drive. to
find fellow o£fictr Keith Collins bent over
the bodly bleeding Hunt Mn. Hun~
Thomp&on said, was there, too.
"Before anyone could say anything,
she, the defendant, said, 'I did it. T did It.
I stabbed him.'," the officer testified.
Later in the testimony, Jrmas asked
the patrolman to repeat the quote.
Thompson said t.hat the fatally injur!d
Hunt said nothing as the other officer
held a hand to his bleeding chest.
"I took the defendant inside and we
went Into a foyer or entryway and I told
her what her constitutional rights were
there,". he said.
Thompaon said Mrs. Hunl then look
him tnte the klf<hen of lhe home and
pobtted to a knife witb a blade 10 or 12 Jn. cbes loll(.
'Ibe tnile, he said, bad a wooden ban·
die. It waa lying on a drainboard in the kUchen .
The patrolman covered it up with paper
towels, he testified, then led the woman tnlo .. other part of lhe house.
Painting of Youth in Tunic Mistaken for Priest :·
VATieAN CITY (AP) -The man In
the painlina wore a tunic and looked like
a priest and so Vatican officials hung it a
few yards from a portrait of Pope Paul
VI in. the Vat.lean press room.
But as it turned out Tuesday the ma n
wasn't a priest at all. He was Mao Tse.
tung in his youth.
"What can I say?" said ~1sgr. Fau.slo
Vallainc, the Vatican press spokesman.
"The painting was sent to us as a gift.
We hung it up. That's all."
Although chagrined , church officials
said the painting will not be taken down.
The oil painting, showing a man with a
blurred face standing against a reddish
background, was hung last month.
Newsmen accredited to the Vatican
noted on Monday a striking resemblance
between i! and a photograph in the
October issue of an Italian Catholic
magazine, "FanUglia Cristiana."
The photograph, aceompanying an arti·
cle about Red China., was of a Cblnese-
made patnUng of Milo as a crusading
youth, his left hand clenched and his
right holding an wnbrella.
LanfraQCO Camevali, a shopowner who
sa id his 86-year-old father Luigi painted
the Vatican picture last March, said : "Of
course it's Mao Tse-tung. My father still
has the sketches he worked from to make
that picture."
Luigi Carnevali. who was in bed with
innuenza, is not a particularly weU·
know artist. How the painUng came to be
sent to the Va"Ucan remained a mystery.
Lanfranco Carnevali said be could not
explain how the painting got to the
VaUcan. He said he loaned it to a friend,
whom he did not identify, "and I have
been trylng to reach him for an ex·
planatlon."
Msgr. Vallainc said he bad no lntentioo
of removing il
From Page 1
"Every artist i.. free IA> draw In-
spiration from a given subject and to
develop this subject," he said.
At one point. he told newsmen tn the
press room: ''Look, even if it does
represent Mao I would say it shows him
as an element or destruction, with the
flam ing ruins of whal he has wrougbt in
the background ."
Lanfranco Carnevali disputed this. He
said the notation "Alba" on the painting.
first taken to mean the town in Italy.
really was the title of t.lhe wori: -
"Oav•n."
.. The dawn of an idea," he expl'1ined.
He said his father got the idea for: the
vt'ork last winter from a photograph of
the same painting "Fam.igUa Cristi&na'"
reproduced. •
Asked what his father's reactkn was
when he learned that the painting was in.
the Vatican, Lanfranco said : "Ht just
laughed."
Thompson was asked if Mrs. Hunt
agreed to talk to him about the Jncident
alter acknowledging her rights. FREEWAY .ROUTE APPEAL BY NEWPORT • • •
"I asked her U she would like IA> tell me
what happened."
The olflce< then tesUllod that Mrs.
Hunt told him there was an argument
over discipline and reprimanding of the
lJ.year-old daughter.
"She said that the victim WIDlfd f<>
di1elpllne and reprimand lhe girl and that
she couldn' sland It any longer. She said,
'I couldn't . take it. I stabbed him',"
'l'hompgoa testllled.
Innu questioned the policeman at
tehgth about his obsenations of Mrs.
Hunt'• appearance and behavior.
'nlomJ>90D Said he sensed no indicaUonS
that 1he WOID8l1 .had been drinking. He
AW no bru1ses, cub""or sea.hi Orf the
woman, he tllld the courL
"When we were in tbe staUon and a
man from the aime lab was takin& pic-
tures I beard the defendant say
something about a mart on her wrist.
She said 'thal will be black and blue by
tomorrow," but I couldn't notice any
mark," be sal.d.
Only one other witness appeared at the
hearing, ne:rt~oor-neighbor Sam Keyes,
6%, who lives at 'Jll1I Harbor View Drive.
Called by the d-Jense, Keyea told the
court Hunt called him on a business mat·
ter at about 1 p.m., a little more than one
bour before the fatal slabbing.
Keyes tenned the CODversation i~lar
and said after discussing several business
points with the victim he beard Mrs.
Hunt chime In amicably to joke about
Keyes' Christmas decorations.
Keyes said Mr!. Hunt complained in
joking fa~ion that some of his Christmas
lights were not working and she ~s~ed
him to fix them because they were VLS1ble
from the Hunt house.
"Was Mr. Hunt a gun collector or a
hu nter?" Irmas then asked.
"He said he was going hunting sevtral
imes. That's all I know.'' Keyes replied.
Afler the witness stepped down Irmas
rgued for a reduction in the charges
~ainst Mrs. Hunt.
He challenged the prooeculion in·
·odud.ion of the death cert.iilcate instead
· calling on coroner'5 witnesses.
'"I\e most we have here 1 s
1nnslaughter." he nid.
He added that there was no evidence
showing "malice aforethought or
premeditation."
master plan. And Cost.a Meusa, despite 1
plea ~r support from the Newport coon.
al last week, rtmains: firmly opposed to
any reopeiting of route hearings by the
state.
He said there are two principal reasons
for the Costa Mesa council's position.
They are:
.. _Even though Newport indicates that
any change (new route) would remain
entirely in Newport., it is difficult if not
impossible for the st.at.e to so control a
reopening proceeding as to eliminate all
risk that a part of 1 new route could be in
Costa Mesa.
"-Even if such a new route were en·
Urely in Newport, it would be suUiclently
close. to the Costa Mesa boundary in
places so that ft would affect Costa Mesa
street aJignments and arterial access to
and from the freeway system."
Banning indicated his views resulted
from conversations with Costa Mesa
authorities.
He said for years he bad .supporu;d the
fight lo gel lhe freeway olf lhe coostline,
but now feels It Is time to recognize that
it is a "fruitless" quest.
There are problems along the adopted
alignment, he said, but they are all su~
ject to solution through negotiations ¥.'ith
Division of Highways engineers. Among
these problems, he said, Is the ruination
of the ?\1ariners Mil e business district by
the freeway, restriction of access to We.£t
Newport and impainnent of Coast
Highway In that area as a major arterial.
Saving f\.1ariners f\.1ile, he said, would
require shoving the freeway into the
Newport He ight residential disttict.
"Perhaps this is a desirable allemative,"
he said, "but it should certainly at least
be carefully quesUoned."
The other problems along the adopted
route, he emphasized, could well be
"minimized or eliminated" by working
with sta.te engineers. He said the council
should direct the city staff to give top
priority to such a cooperative study.
He said if the city insists: on going it
alone -as it apparently must -in re-
questing a new freeway study by the
!late, "you will stir opposition once again
in COtita Mesa In contravention to the
new·found cooperative spirit. to say
nolhin.g of the Newport )lomeowners who
will again be threatened."
Councilrnefl were unsettled by much of
what Banning had to say. But only Paul
J. Gruber, long a hawk on the reroute
issue, criticized the land developer 's
views.
Gruber said Banning didn't know what
he was talking about when he asserted a
new route entirely within Newport would
still create problems for Costa ~fesa. The
former two-term mayor said that is
something that car. be determined only
by traffic 8nalyses that would be included
in the new state study to be sought by the
city on Jan. It.
•·1 don't see Mr. Ban.ning's objections to
this study at all," said Gruber. "What
business is it or his?"
"We!J, that's interesting," Banning
muttered.
South Lagunan's
Last Rites Set
Funeral services will be held at 3 p.m.
Wednesday for Mrs. Joy Stuart, 355 3rd
Ave , South Laguna. who died Sund2y at
South Coast Community Hospital. She
was 73.
A native of Oklahoma, Mrs. Stuart had
lived in Orange County for 41 years. She
is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Barbara
K1ngon of Costa 11esa.
Following the service in Sheffer
Laguna Beach Mortuary Chapel, in·
terment will be at Melrose Abbey.
Federal Workers Get
4-day Yule Holiday
WASHINGTON CAP) -With Congr<ss
leaving town , President Nixon announced
Tuesday that all federal workers will gel
a four-day Christmas holiday weekend.
Nlxon signed an executive ordtr ex-
cusing workers from their jobs on Fri-
day. He had withheld action until he was
certain there would be no rtCOllvening of
Congress on that day.
Other councilmen, however, conceded
that many of Banning's points were well·
taken.
Robert Shelton c a 11 e d therri
"reasonable." Donald A. Mcinnis aereed.~
adding that il may be possible to ·have
the adopted route without having to build
a 36-foot high "Chinese Wall" in West
Newport as proposed in present freeway
designs. . '
Shelton said, in any even!., the final
decisioo may be made on Jan. IS. "U the
Highway Commission says no, it is no~
interested in another study, then our only
opUon is to resolve our problem.t at the
district level." In other worda. wort with
Division of Highways engineert in finding
&llluUons to lhe problems• aJong 'the
adopted route.
"Next month's meeUng seems to be oar
la.at hope." said Vice Mayor Lindsley
Parsons. "If we get turned dawn flatlj,
there is not much else we can do but
work with the adopted route." J •
"lf that happens," said Councilman
Howard Rogers, "then we'll try to get the
best design we can and get the thing out
ol the way."
"That's the right way to proceed," &aid
Councilman Ed Hirth. "!l's not goq lo
take much longer." '
Holiday Candles
Cause Home Fire
Christmas candles left lighted on the
mantel or a Newport Beach home caused·
a $2.500 blaze Monday night which
destroyed paneling and part o( a wall,
firemen reported.
Jeff Schmutz, occupying the house at
2021 Deborah Lane. told firemen he
lighted the candles and put them on the·
ledge above the firepla ce , then one of the·
burning tapers fell over.
Firemen said the fire caused $2,000 in-
damage to the stru cture. lts contents had
$500 damage. ·
The house ls owned by Harry J.
Delaney. •
The alarm v.·as phoned in by Schmutz
at 10:10 p.m. Three trucks responded to
lhe call, firemen said.
Barbor Christmas Parade ita Fi1aale Totaiplat
OAILY .. ILOT ..__ W lkMftl ~
1
Time exposure camera captures streaks of Yule lights as Newport
Beach's 14th Annual Christmas Tree Boat Parad e wends ils way
around the harbor. Final tour starts loni&hl at 6:30 o'clock from Bal·
boa Island ferry landing, tours the bay v,·esterly and returns lo landing
al 9: 15 o'clock . Parade is sponsored by City Employes Association
a nd Newport Harbor Chamber of Conunerce.
...._,.,.l1flrl11s • By Phil lntorl1ndl
''Wh•I Say, Laguna? Let's Light Up Like This during the Fertlval
and Show the World What Kind of Town We Havel"
San Clemente ·students •
'Replanting' Ocean Floor
Student.. of San Clemente Hlgh School
5clen'ce instructor Philip Grignon are
participating in a unique "reforestation"
project -to take place on the ocean floor
in the Dana Poiat marine preserve.
Purpof!ie of the project is to restore the
Tanisbing coastal kelp bed and in so
doing revitalize the deteriorating fish
population.
"The fishermen are screaming that
fish are virtually disappearing off our
ahores," Grignon explains. "The reason
for this is the disappearance of the kelp
and the reason for the disapperance of
\he kelp Is the incredible proliferation or
sea urchins which feed on kelp, but are
also sustained by their ability to filter
feed on the sewage "'e pour into the
ocean."
The one billion gallons of sewa,&e being
pumped into the sea each day 1ietween
Santa Barbara and San Diego has in·
terrupted the natural balan~ of undersea
life and virtually destroyed much of the
plant life upon which the fish depend.
The sewage itself does not destroy the
k'elp, Grignon explains, but it has brought
about a huge increase in the number of
sea urchins which, in turn, demolish the
kelp beds.
An experiment in the San Diego are3
has revealed that by destroying the .ur·
chins and replanting the kelp, it is
possible to restore the natural rhythm
of ocean life. Dr. \\'heeler North, marlne
life authority from Cal Tech, now is
preparing a similar project for lhe
Orange oCast at Cal Tech's Kierkoff
Ex-Y Dh·ector
Takes New Post
• Roger Carter, who re~nUy announcfd
llis resignation as .director of the South
Orange County Yl\!CA. has left Laguna
~ach to accept a position at the new
Hollywood YMCA.
carter. who headed the local y opera·
tion for three years, said last month .he
probably would remain in the area and
enter another line of work afler leaving
the Y post at the end of the year.
However, according to friends, he was
asked to go immediately to Hollywood to
serve as assistant to the executive direc--
tor of the new, million-dollar Y facility
recently completed there. It has a staff of
42 and 50 guest room s.
Laboratory in Corona del Mar. Working
with him Is a group ol Grlgnon's students
from San Clemente.
With a . special permit from the Fish
and Game Department, teams will
remove sea urchins from the floor o! the
new marine preserve area (in San Diego
this was done by putting quicklime into
the water), then replant the area with
two species o! kelp.
One type will be a hardy, wann water
variety of kelp from ·Baja California. This
variety now can. be grown here, Grignon
says. beeause the water has been getting
slightly warmer as a result of se"•age, in·
dustrial waste and hot waler effluent
from the atomic plant being poured into
it.
The second type of kelp to be planted
"'iii be the normal California cold water
variety. known as giant bladder kelp.
Transplants of this variety now being
grown in a SO-gallon aquarium at the
school's science lab.
Mission Viejo
Honors Six
As Citizens
t\.fission Viejo 's leading citizens v.·ere
placed in the spotlight at the first presen-
tation of the community's Emvee
Awards.
Six residents were selected f o r
outstandng service to the community.
They are Jim Toepfer, eanne McGowen,
Kerry Beichtel, Ladonna Rukstalis, Vince
Esposito and Helga Ricker.
Every 1'1ission Viejo resident was sen t
a ballot Iv be filled out and mailed to the
United California Bank in the community
or to be deposited in a special ballot box
outside the bank.
Computations were done by bank of·
ficials and the announcement of the win-
ners v.·as made by · Harvey Stern, public
relations director of the Mission Viejo
Company at the Snow Ball on Friday.
Each of the winners has actively taken
part in community functions, according
to Stern. Most have served on the Mission
Viejo Activities Committee and have
been active in such groups as the swim
le a m , parent-teacher organizations,
women's clubs and commWllty holiday
activities. •
(:orita Kent Serigraphs
.
Pn Display in Laguna
\ A display of 100 silk screen serigraphs
by Corita Kent will be presented in the
Laguna Beach Art Gallery, 307 Cliff
.
EXHIBITS IN 1.AGUNA -
Ex-Nun Corit• Ktnt
• I
Drive, from Jan. 3 to Jan. 25.
First winning recognition as Sister
J\1ary Carita, a teacher of art at Im·
maculate Heart College, Miss Kenl went
on to become an internaUonal figure in
the art WOC'ld after k!aving the religious
order. She had been credited with res·
cuing silk screen serigraphy from obli·
vion and giving Ule medium a new
artistic significance.
CreaUng "Pop· art with a meaning,''
she U9eS such subjects as apples, lemons
and yellow submarines, mixes tbtm with
advertJsing slogans and quotatklns from
such sources as the Bible, Gertrude Stein
and the Be.<Ue1 ind pcoduces brUllanlly
colorful blendinga o1.i..;811 1n<1 text.
The Laguna exhibit will trace Miss
Kent's career from lt$7, wl1h represtn-
tative works from each period of her
development. A venaU~ lrWt, she has
ranged from 1 large serigraph exhibit fo:r
the Vatican pavilion at tM New York
World's Fair to advertlsementa for
Westinghouse and gift y,Tapplna:s for
Nieman Marcus.
A film of her work will be shown, once
only, at 9 p.m. on the opening night of the
local' exhibit. Gallery hours thereafttr
will be from l to 6 p.m. dally, with docent
tours conducted each Sunday at .I p.m.
€ountian (;hairuaan
Education Unit
Showil;ig Results
dy TOM BARLEY Of !ht 0.llY Plitt lltff
Ask Robert E. Hanson what he has in
mind for a New Year's resolution and
he'll quJckly tell you that Gov. Ronald
Reagan settled that 1970 is&ue when 1969
sun bad flve months lo go.
Reagan named Hanson to chair the
governor's dream .child, the 2().member
Commission on Educational Refonn , and
it's a mammoth task that is going to
ensure a busy 1970 for the Santa Ana ac·
counwt and his 19 rolleagues. ·
,The problem doesn 't appear to deter
the fiscal expert. He does ruefully reflect
on Reagan's promise at the time tilt.
governor urged him to head the fact-fin·
ding group: "Bob, I particularly want
you to lead this investigation and I can
prcml!t: you that it will only occupy, on
an avera,e, about two hours a week .. ,
That two hours is much nearer two
days today. Bllt Hanson, visibly booyed
by what he says is lhe "remarkable pro.
gress' or our committee in so short a
time", doesn't intend to let Reagan know
what happened to the governor's predic·
tion .
His group's first three recom ...
mendations are now on the governor's
desk. And they in themselves, says
Hanson , "are enough to make a lot of
Californians sit up and do some heavy
thinking. about the state of our education
today ...
PART OF r.fESSAGE
It is expected that much of what
Hanson's committee has outlined in that
13-page preliminary report will form part
of Gov. Reagan's "State of the State·•
message in January. Come June, says
Hanson, there will be a lot more to tell
for "we will have six two-day meetin$s
behind us, one for each of the· first six
months of 1970."
Hanson and his 19 colleagues on the
unique committee were charged by
Reagan with the responsibility of probing
d~eply into the heart of California's
educational system. On their agenda are
such topics as campus violenc~. educa·
tional finance, organiz.ation and manage·
ment of school administrations , teacher
credentials. certification process,
salaries, the possibility of a merit
system, classroom practices and cur·
riculum develoJ)menL
From a pile of study material three
feet thick which includes the testimony of
numerous witnesses before the com·
nlittee, Hanson's group has offered its
first recommendations to the governor on
three phases of their O\'erall analysis of
the state's educational system. They in·
,·olve teacher credenlialling. teacher
preparation and training and governance,
the overall administration and integration
nf California's educational systems from
what is presently, as Gov. Reagan has
described it, a ·~jurisdictional jigsaw."
l'llORE S\\'EEPING
Whatever recommendalions the com·
mission might have to offer Gov . Reagan
in the future it seems certain that none
will be more sweeping than the one which
evolved from its study of the system of
teacher credentials.
"We suggested in our report that the 56
separate credentials that exist today -
yes, I said 56 -should be boiled down to
a very few and I think myself that they
could be contracted lo just one," Hanson
153jd-.
"We want to simplify the present
chaotic credentialling situation and we
have suggested to Gov. Reagan that a
credentialling commission be appointed
by the State Board of Education. \'i'e
should replace a system that is complex,
incOAsistent in prsctice, ineffective and
difficult to administer and we feel that
cost savings will be really tremendous if
our recommendations are followed ."
Hanson's commission feels that "there
should be one credential for teaching in
California embracing all existing levels of
credentials necessary for the various
elementary and secondary teaching pc.Si·
lions.
"All other positions," il.s report states,
"would be appointive at the discretion cf
Lhe local school district, subject to broad
guidelines developed by the Teacher
Development1 Qualification and Stan·
dards Commission."
That same commission, warns I.he
Hanson group, should be limited to 11
members, seven professionals and four
laymen. An Ideal staffing, the report
states, would be that of a primary
teacher, an upper elementary teacher,
two secondary teachers. a teacher from a
state college or university, a private ool·
lege teacher. a school administrator and
the four laymen.
Aod Its certiUcaUon guidelines, goes
on the report. could well be adopted "on
a thret-way basis": six to seven years
training and/or educational experience,
verified and recanmended by local
boards; verification and recommendation
by a state college or uni versily ;
statewide competency examination for
teachers for verification of qualifications
in content, technology, diagnosing and
prescribing.
ALSO IMPORT ANT
But no less i;nportant in this teacher
area, says Hanson, "is the topic of
teacher preparation and training."
His committee ended a study v.•ith the
comment that "teachers in many cases
are prepared on too broad a spectrum
and this delays their acquiring expertise
in the learning process at an early
enough stage. ..-
•·we believe," the report states, "ltiat
teachers need more training in certain
fundamentals of how the educational
system works in California:."
Local school districts, 'says Hanson,
could provide some valuable commenl.s
here and they will be asked to support
formation of the new teacher develop·
ment commission. "\Ve will ask them
how they feel the teachers can keep
abreast or the rapidly devel oping
technological changes that we are seeing
take place in this state," Hanson said.
Looking into governance, the com-
mission· learned pretty quickly that
"there is ro single V-Oice in this State that
represents secondary and elementary
education."
And it stressed in Its report that "there
is little evidence of coordination bt:>"tween
the Gilveriior, the State Board of Educa·
tion , the State Department of Education,
the Legislatu[e and the state superin·
tendent of public instruction.
';The Slate Board of Education,'' said
Hanson, "is advisory to the Governor and
advisory lo the state suprintendent. They
can not tell either of them what should be
bad In tbe v.·ay of education.
"All the way down this mess of alleged·
ly interlocking departments you get con-
flicts," Hanson said. "Recommendations
are made and nothing happens, more
recommendations are made and again
nothing happens."
His commission has a few of its own
to offer Gov. Reagan.
EXPAND BOARD
It wants the State Board of EducaliQn
expanded . to include the gO\'emor, the
speaker df the Assembly and the presi·
dent pro tern or the Senate -all as
voting members.
''By establishing direct communication
among all agencies of government in·
volved in educational decision making, it
provides an opportunity for realistic plan·
ning. budgeting and program develop-
ment," Hanson explained.
The commission urges a ronstit.utiona\
amendment to make the state superinten·
dent of public instruction appointive by
the State Board of Education and directly
responsible to it as its chief ad-
ministrative ofricer.
Han90n says: "This would clarify
orgamzational relationships and eliminate
the conflict which has too frequently ex·
isled in the past. It eliminates the
necessity of an arduous and costly elec·
lion campaign and opens the door ID
selection of candidates from the nation at
large."
And the commission urges, among a
series of recommendations, that the State
Board of Education "should be assigned
the res~sibility of assessing the finan·
cial needs of California secondary and
elementary education and presenting
these needs In an annual budget to the
Legislature."
•
Backed by CASE
Environment Study Set
At Orange Coast College
Thirty persons concerned about the
state ol the natural environment today
are beginning to lay the groundwork !or
formation of an Environmental Studies
Center at · Orange Coast Co!Jege.
Lewis A. Follansbee, OCC marine
science iMtructor, was elected interim
chairman of the group which has taken
the m1me CASE (Committee Advocating
Studlt! of the Environment ).
Follansbee aakl studtnt.s. f o r m e r
s!udmll. lnduotry and -=h p<01>le
were present Sunday for the Initial
meeting and plan another session early In
January.
A docummt giving the committee
seml·legal status waa signed for flUng
with the county recorder.
Follansbee said the purpose of the
ooiter will be to educate the public about
threats to the tnvtronmcnt. The center
might employ a miff of advisory person·
nel ind visiting scientists and obUlln
speakers. 1be hope is to pnxh1ce com·
munlty lnvolvetMnt.
The EnYll'onm<l!tal Studies Center Is to
be a non.profit corporation funded Apart
for school tax levies through donations.
Follansbee also is trying to promote an
environmental studies curriculum for the
college. lie said he will make a presen-
tation Jan. 5 to the college curriculum
committee seeking approval of five
counes for next ran.
Courses proposed are an lnventary of
the envlronment, theory of en•lronmental
measurement, use of environmental I~
stnrments, projection of man's future
resource needs, and work experience in
environmental qusllty control.
The last course, he said. would have
studenl5 working with i n d u s t r i e 1
recognized •~major polluters. "It will be
a good public relations thing for the in-
dustries and a ll:ood way for studtnts to
get first hand knowledge of en·
vlronmental problems,'' he remarked.
Follnnsbee sAid because of "an austerl·
ty program" he will a~k that the pro.
gram be handled by the present college
staff with each o( three instructors
teaching 1/3 Ume in the field.
r
s DAILY PILOT
HOPING FOR A HOME·LIKE CHRISTMAS
'Wrong Lot' Homeown•r Mf'I. Alice CaH
No Home for Yule
\ '
W'l'ong Lot Case Still U11settled
By PA!\.IELA HALLAN
01 !ht Dt•ly Pllvl Sltll
~1rs. Alice Case of Dana Point.hopes to
ha\'e some good 11e"·s In her Christmas
stocking this year.
And though 'Us the season for miracles,
that's exaclly what one public o!Iicial
says she'll need.
ti.1rs. Case has an unusual problem. Her
retirement home, a one bedroom garage
apartmenl, was built on a Jot she doesn't
own, one that is adjacent to her property
at 34582 Via Verde in Capistrano Beach.
Laguna Civitans'
To Aid Repah·s
Of Y Camp Lodge
The old wooden lodge at the YMCA 's
Camp Elizabeth Dolph in Aliso Canyon
v.·ill be getting a facelifting early in 1970,
according lo Y program director Ste ve
Crummett.
The Laguna Beach Civitan Club has ex·
prtPed interest in helping to Improve U'le
camp, -0riglnally created for the Girl
Scouts and now owned by the Y, and will
center its efforts on helping to repair the
lodge.
The build ing. now usable only for
storage, is in need or a new roof and ex.
tensive interior cleaning and remodeling,
Crummet t said.
There are "a million things to fix up"
on the three-acre camp site, he added. A
basketball court is needed "to go with the
posts that are already in," a volleyball
court would be useful. as would a fence to
separate the camp from the adjacent golC
course maintenance shop.
Another desirable projacl1 said the Y
direct.or. would be the removal o(
unsightly weeds and planting of some
durable type of turf that coold be kept
mo .... ·ed to fonn a picnic area.
Also on the ''hoped for" list is an out.
door chapel for services and meditation.
"There o.re many spots with beautiful
views of the hills where a small chapel
area coula be developed simply with log
seats or wooden benches," Curmmett
said.
The owner of the "wrong lot,11 Mrs·.
Stella Randall of La Habra, is unwlllin'
to merely trade with Mrs. Case. Sh(
believes a bonus of approximately $5,000
would be a fair settlement for her In·
convenience in conducting the transac-
tion.
"f don't see how this thing is· going to
be settled by Chrislm,.," &aid Vernon
Stanley, supervising deputy of the Con·
tractor State Ucense Board.
"If Mrs. Randall believed It's more
blessed to give than to receive aJI this
would be settledjp a week," said Stanley.
"All she'd have to do is trade even and
she'd still be gettlrig the better deal. Mrs.
case's lot ls hJgher than hers." ~
But Mrs. Randall is sUclkng to her of.
fer and Charles Larraway, tbe Newport
Beach contractor who is charged wiUt th~1 construction mixup is assuming the
financial burden and attempting to setUe1
v.•ith Mrs. Randall. r.
In the meantime. Mrs. case slts In her
rented apartment in Dana Point while the ·
home she dreamed about remains empty,
lacki ng only about 10 days work before
completion.
"When this thing is settled I plan to
give Mr. Larraway 20 days to finish the
job," said MMI. Case. '-'Put. I'll penalize
him ror every day over 20 it takes."
But nothing can be touched until fut;
legal dilemma is untangled and according,
to Stanley, the knots appear tighter. .
If the contractor and Mrs. Randall
reach a stalemate Mrs. Case would have'
to go to court and try to get back the
$8,34tl she has so far paid for her home.
On the other hand, if she could prov~
that Mrs. Randall knew about the con.o
struction, she might be able to legally
force her lo trade. according to Stanley .
He quoted a liimilar case in Compton im
1953 where a woman sat across the street
while a building was constructed on her
lot. rocking in her rocking chair each day
until it was completed. She then tried to
claim the house, but was legally'
prevented From doing so. ·
J\.1rs. Case is hopeful that her lat.est
tragedy will have a happy ending.~
Althoiigh the deaths of her husband and'
only chil d have left their scars, she canl
still find joy in the Christmas season.
"[ even sent Mr. Lanaway a1 Christmas card," said a smiling Mrs1 Case. "The only thing I added to the
printed message was 'it's been a Ione 16,
months.' "
DAAl.:y PIL.OT t..n .......
Some Roses Frona Jffi~key
Pamela Dee Tedesco, (center), 1970 queen of Pasadena's Touma·
ment of Roses, is presented some roses or her own by Mickey Mouse
during the tournament delegation's visit Monday to Dlsne)"land. Di ..
neyland Ambassador Cathy Birk (left) looks on during official ~
come.
•
-------------------
Ill
I '
-
I
I OAJLY PILOT TUtSdl)', Otctmbef 2J, lt&-9
A woman ru1hed breathleuly in·
to the South Caroline governor's
office In Colwnbla and asked sec-
retaries II a televi&lon set was
available. She was ·escorted to a
nearby office and a secretary, who
thought the woman might be await·
Ing a big news development, oblig-
ingly turned on the set. Then the
woman admitted she wanted to
tvatch the latest episode of a soap
opera. The secretary switched oU
the set. • "Get out of your car" patrolman
To Ask Cutback?
Nixon Expected
To Sign Tax Bill
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Presidmt
Nil<ln may Nit Coasr-to take back
some of tt.s generosity to ute-:Amerlcan
ta%J)ayer, but he is considered virtually
certain to sign into law the tax ref0fn1
bill. It ~ begin cutting everyone's
taxes 10 days from now.
By margins so swollen they abnost
defied a veto, both chambers Monday
capped a year's effort in an afternoon 's
oratory and sent to Nixon one of Its ma·
jor achJevements of the year -a blll
that eventually cull taxes b)' $9.1 billion
ralsea ilo<tal Security bene!H.< by u per'.
cent and narrows S<lme tax loopholes that
have be.en the target of reformers for
yean.
'Ibe House, acting first, approved lhe
bill 381 to 2. The Senate followed tbat, 71-
6, with the "po" votes coming from
Republicans ~ho considered the bill too
inflationary and too co.stly.
If Congress ldjOUI'n! this week as plan-
ned and ret1r1U1 Jan. 19, Nixon has JO
days from when the bill actually reac~s
him to decide it.s fate. If he does notlllng,
the bill would die, the victim of a pocket
veto.
Jt would require a two-thirds vote by
each Hoose to enact the bill into Jaw over
a veto. Monday's votes were big enough
to override a veto, but the President
could · convert some Republicans to his
&ide U he rejects the blll.
Ul"I Ttlll',_,.
Robert H. Auld Jr. shouted over a
bullhorn after Edna R. Johnson'•
car stalled on the railroad tracks
near Redwood City. Mrs. Johnson,
62, jumped out qulckly and ran
over to give the patrolman a big
hug. For good reason. A Southern
Pacific Co. commuter train had
been approaching and smashed the
car to pieces seconds after she
Manson Still
Wants to Be
Own Attorney
ln his last news conference, NiJ:on said
be would veto the bill if it came to him
the way it first emerged from the ~ate
-wlth the 15 percent Social Security
boost and an $800 pemnal income tax
exemption effective in 1971.
But a House-Senate conference com-
mittee then put more muscle in the bill's
tu reforms and toned down the tax cut
so that the exemption rises only to $650
starting next July 1 and does not reach
$750 until 1973.
NAVY CREWS WORK TO REMOVE CHARRED WRECKAGE OF F-1 CRUSADER
Tl Per1on1 Died When Jet Cralhtd Into Hangar •t Miramar Naval Air Station
jumped out. •
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Charles M.
Manson insists he wants to defend
himself from charges of murdering ac·
tress Sharon Tate and six others declar-
ing he can do it better than any J~wyer.
TM long-haired, bearded cult leader in
purple shirt and gold trousers, spent' 30
minutes Monday trying to CQnvlnce
Superior Court Judge William B. Keene
he should be pennitted to act as his own
counseJ.
Nothing in the bill atfect.s the taxes the
average individual will pay next Apr:il 15
on income he earned this year.
But taxpayel's would start seeing the
bill's effects reflected in their first
paychecks in January when the income
tax surcharge, now 10 percent, falls to 5
percent. After six months at U!:at rate, it
explres for good.
213 Boys Escaped Death
They CouM Have Been in Hangar When Plane Hit
Kathy May not only got a: frWtdLJI
bear hug when she vi&ited Ctn~ Ben
at Homosa.sst:l Springs, Fla., she got
a: bear-sized .tmeoch too. TV's Gtn.-
tlt Ben is presently appearing at this
Wl&t COO$t Florida resort. • The Betty Jane Memorial Reha·
bilitation Center at Tiffin is offer·
ing free services to any Ohioans
"planning to become handicapped"
tn auto accidents over the Christ·
mas and New Year's holi days.
Jake Pool, executive -director of
the private center, said prospec-
tive patients could arrange for the
services by filling out appli.cation
forms five days in advance of an-
tictpated accidents. H'l'he general
public does not realize that deaths
are not the largest problem from
accident.a," said Pool. "If you're
planning to become handicapped,
at least plan to be rehabilitated so
that your family will not suffer
from your mistake." -Chriatma.s turkey co.st nine '
pence a pound more in London
thi& sta.son because on epidemic
of Asian flv. put poultty pluck-
er1 in bed and slowed supplies
, of bird! to the 1hoJJ3.
• Pauline Raiche of Manchester,
N.Y. told poli ce someone cut do\\'n
a·ad took a fir from her back yard,
leaving this note: "We needed a
Christmas tree tonight. We spot-
ted this one. So we borrowed it,
and we will return the tree after
Christmas. We thank you very
much and wish you a Merry Christ·
mas and a Happy New Year. Sign·
ed: The Christmas Phantoms.
The judge, apparenUy unconvinced,
postponed his decision until Wednesday.
Meanwhile, Keene said, he would appoint
a lawyer to advise Manson.
Manson, 35, agreed, saying: "J don't
want to fight with the judge. I believe
he's sincere."
The cult leader and four followers are
11ccused of the Tate killings Aug. 8, and
the same five plus a girl cultist are
charged with killing a Los Angeles
market owner and his wife the following
night. '
"My life is at stake and maybe the
Jives of four or five other people,"
Manson told the court. "There is no
lawyer in the world who can represent
me. The news media have already ex·
ecuted and buried me.''
Two of Manson's codefendants also
made brief appearances before Keene.
Le:;lie Van Houten, 19, who is accused
of murder in only the knife slayings of
Mr. itnd Mrs. Leno LaBianca the night
after the Tate killlngs, pleaded innocent.
Her trial was set for Feb. 9.
The surtax would die Jan, 1 if Nixon
does not sign the bill -one factOr likely
to influence him to sign the bill. His new
budget is based. on the assumptJon that
the surtax will continue for the first half
of next year. The surcharge was first
enacted during the J oh n s o n ad-
min istration as a weapon against in-
flation .
Moreover, the bill ultimately recoups
$3.3 bllllon a year for the government by
killing the investment tax credit -a 7
percent tax subsidy for the expenditures
by businesses and fanners on expansion,
equipment and modernization. The ad·
minlstraUon 1.s eager to end the tax
credit.
Privately, members of both parties
thought Nixon would sign U!:e bill but
warn he may have to ask Congress to
tone down the bigger personal exemption
before it fully goes into effect. He could
save considerable money, for example,
by asking that it be kept at $700 in 1972
instead of going to $750 the following
year.
Dodd W on'tBe Prosecuted
In Campaign Funds Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Justice
Department has completed its in-
vestigation into the financial affairs of
Sen. Thomas J. Dodd (D-Conn.), and
decided that no criminal prosecution wa·
warranted .
The decision was revealed today In ·
letter to Edward Bennett William·
Dodd's attorney. from Attorney Gener:
John N. Mitchell.
The letter said "This is to Inform yoi
that the United Stat.es will institute no
criminal prosecution against your client.
"This decision by the department is
based upon the recommendations of the
staff of the tax division and the assistant
attorney general in charge of the tax
division and the staff of the criminal
division and the assistant attorney
general in charge of the criminal
division , lhat no crlmin'al proseaiUon is
warranted."
Williams read the letter to reporters at
a news conference in the Capitol after
Dodd said the Justice Department
decision cleared hlm or any wrongdoing.
Twin investigations by the Internal
Revenue Service and the Justice Depart-
:ltent were instituted after the Senate
-:ensured Dodd for converting campajgn
:ontributions to his personal use.
Dodd sid he had "been subjected to the
1ost intensive investigation on every
'acet of my life" and he was "grateful"
1t the outcome. He said he still planned
to seek re-election next year.
The Connecticut senator, with Williams
at his side, met newsmen in the Senate
press gallery and said It was "a lie" that
the Justice Department had held the
Internal Revenue investigation over his
head during the vote on Judge Clement
F. Haynsworth's nomination to the
Supreme Court.
Oodd saJd there "wun't a scintilla of
truth" In reports that he would have vot.
ed for Haynsworth if his vote had been
necessary to win him confinnatJon. As it
turned out, Dodd's vote was not needed
and he opposed the nomination.
SAN DIEGO (AP) - A diubled,
pilotless Navy jet lighter "could not have
hit at a worse place" the fire chief said
mournfully as he surveyed the naval
hangar where 11 men were killed and 14
injured.
The jet, abandoned by its pilot who
parachuted to safety after reported oil
* * * Navy Releases
Partial List
Of Jet Victims
SAN DIEGO (UPI) -The following is
a partial list of the dead and injured in
Monday's · jet crash at the Miramar
Naval Air Station which killed 11 and in·
jured 14.
Dead :
1. Airman Apprentice Christopher L.
Hunte r, Vista, Calif.
2. Petty Officer 3.C. Donald E. McGee,
San Diego.
3. Petty Orflcer 3.C. Ge,rald D. Leask,
San Diego.
4. Master Chief Petty Officer Joe A.
Hastings, Ramona, Calif.
5. Kenneth A. Hecht, San Diego.
Injured :
I. Petty Officer 3.C. John R. Hunter,
Vista, Calif.
2. Lt. Cmdr. William F. Emery, San
Diego.
3. Chief Warrant Officer 2.C. John R.
Champion, San Diego.
4. Petty Officer l.C .. Sank Thomas, San
Diego.
S. Petty Officer Richard C. Boniella,
San Diego.
6. Chief Petty Officer Leroy K. White,
Escondido, Calif.
7. Petty Officer 2.C. Enrico Bernabe,
Snn Diego.
8. Petty Officer 3.C. Ralph A. Little,
New York City.
9. Petty Officer 2.C. Thomas P.
Loughrige, Escondido, Calif.
10. Airman Timothy F. Weyer, Albu·
querque, N.M.
11. Petty Officer 2.C. Forrest R.
Anderson, Riverside.
12. Petty Officer 3.C. Robert L. Mosley,
Madisonville, Tex:.
Snow Paralyzes Wide Area
Arab Rockets
Hit Settlements
Near Lebanon Chicago Hard Hit; Warnings Up Over Six States TEL AVIV (AP) -Ro<kets fired by
Arab guerrillas fr om inside Jordan and
Lebanon streaked across the Jordan
River and hlt an Israeli setUement near
the Lebanese border today, the Israeli
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11 command said. .. " " l 7 ,. Israeli jeti attacked guerrilla targets
" '1 near the Jordan River in a 30-mlnute ~ ;: :l: retaliatory raid, lsraeU witnesses sald.
: : ,.,., The Israelis said Lebane•based
)II '' .St rockets crashed Into the settlement of !; n !! Kiryat Shmona on the Lebanese border,
ti » .n damaging a school house and a rtsidence. l: .:: .u No casualties were reported.
" • The PalesUne guerrilla command in
; :.' Amman said the rockets from Jordan
" •1 took ''a heavy toll of property and lives" : !; .es in settlements north and south of the Sea rs 11 a( Galilee ; th e Israelis aald they fell
11 ~ .11 harm.ie§ly 1n Uie ...-ater.
~ ~ The Jordanians said several Israell jets " '° 1
·
01 raided villages in the northern Jordan
" :; .>4 Vsl~y and damaged two civilian ears. ~ J4 The rocket attack hlt an ma north of
:: :; Bethlehem, wMre an estimated 10,000
a • Christla.n pilgrims converged on the
~ ~ .•s usually quiet town, the tradlUonal
u ,, :~: birthplace of Christ.
~ !~ Jsr.11.:o:U commandos struck into Egypt
u u 8gain ?.fonday night and fired mortars at tl ~ ~s an Egyptian naval base on the Red Sea
,. a M coast, the Israeli command said. Jt wu
:; ~ ·" the second raid on an EgypUan m!Jllary
,, 2' .ft inst.allation in five da ya.
I
pressure trouble, slammed Into a hangar
full of aircralt and mechanica Monday at
Miramar Naval Air Station.
A group or 213 school safety patrol boYs
would h•ve been inside the hangar, a
Navy spokesman said' today, but a last·
minute change of plans Jn their tour took
them elsewhere when the plummeting
plane hlt.
"Luck is luck," one of the youngsters
from nearby Chula Vista said with a
shn.ig.
, The pilot of the single-seat F8J
Crusader said he reported the malfunc.
tion, then ejected at 400 feet altitude
about half a mile east of the runway.
The aircraft "could not have hit at a
worse place," said Bill Knight, base fire
chief. "Not only was there a congestion
of personnel, but also there were
nwnerous aircraft."
The pilot, Lt. Cyrus M. Riddell, 27, oE
San Diego and Bellevue, Wash., was in·
jured. He told newsmen he balled out
when oil pressure "had gone down
dangerously low."
Asked if he could hafel,revented the
plane from hitling ~an.~~~.· he said: "I
can't answei: that, and walked away.
A Navy spokes!llan said Riddell and
persons inside the hangar could not tallt
to newsmen because they would be testi·
lying before an investigation board.
Navy Cmdr. J. P. Vinti, the pilot's
gquadron leader, sald Riddell had follow·
ed his training.
"He felt he could not make the runway
and so at 450 reet in the air, he did whit
he was trained to do. He reached up and
ejected. The rest Is history," Vinti said.
About 80 men and a dozen aircraft
were inside the 70.square.yard hangar
bay some 1,800 feet north of the runway.
The 45,000-pound Crusader cleared abQut
50 parked aircraft and crashed through
the partially open hangar doors at a
speed of about 250 miles an hour, the
Navy said.
About 30 mechanics were working on
six F4J Phantom jet fighters parktd
along the north side of the hangar. '"1e
Crusader plowed under two of them.
struck the wall and exploded in flames.
Five of the Phantoms -planes which
survived last January's explosions on the
carrier Enterprise off Hawaii -were
destroyed and one other was damaged.
Navy officials estimated damage to
aircraft and the hangar at more than '20
million.
Bombers Hit Supply Trails
As Viet Cong Truce Begins
SAIGON (UPI) -Eight armadas of
B52 bombers raided infiltration trails
Je&ding toward Saigon today before the
beginning <Jt the Viet Cong'a three-day
truce for Christmas.
The bombers dropped a total of llO
tons of bombs onto the routes north and
northwest of Saigon after allied officials
predicted the guerrillas would violate
their own truce with attacks around
Saigon.
Liberation Radio, the Viet Cong broad-
cast outlet, said the Communist stAnd·
down would begin at 1 a.m. Saigon tlme
Wednesday (9 a.m. today PST), with aJI
attacks suspended.
The U.S. and South Vietnamese com-
mands announced their troops woukl con·
tinue all offensive operation until the 24--
bour allied truce takes effect 17 hours
later and even then would send out
patrols.
"There will be no long-range type
patrols but we will send out patrols near
positions of our un!ll so the uni.ti can
keep alerted," a U.S. military spokesman
aaid. "We will only stop attacking the
enemy.''
The B52 bombers raided in three pro-
vinces between the Cambodian border
and Saigon as communiques reported
light combat, with one major battle in-
volving South Vietnamese troops in the
Mekong Delta.
The Viet Cong sh~lled 17 targets during
the nigh t and shot down two more U.S.
helicopters, headquarters :said. The
copters went down 87 mlles northeast tnd
20 miles southwest of Saigon, killln& two
Americans and wounding four.
Dope for Gls
15,000 Cheer Comedian's Visit
cu cm, Vietnam (UPI) -Bob Hope
brought his: Christmas road show to this
25th Infantry Dlvlslcm camp today af'ld
told an audience of 15,000 Gls they were
last year's winners Jn the draft l<ltttry •
"One guy offered to bet the govern·
ment double or nothinc," the •ye&Mld
comedian said. "He't now alatloned at
Fort Benning and Fort Di1. ''
Wearinc jungle laU,Uu, red Rancer
beret and master eergeant stripes, Hope
staged a two •nd one-halt hour show at
this outpost 20 miles ncrthwtst al SaiJOn
with his SS.member troupe, lacludint
astronaut Nell Arm.strong.
In the audienct were Adm. John S.
McCain, commander of !ht U.S. Pocillc
Fleet; LL Gan. Jullan J. Ewell, <Om·
mander of I00,000 Amer! ... troopa in !ht
provln<es around SallOll, 1$1h Division
Commander Maj. Gen. Harri• Ro!U. lod
other high·ranklng U.S. o!Ocers.
Seated 20 feet from the VIP delegation
was a Gl in a leg cast with a bright red
puc< symbol painted on tt.
Hope told tbe GJ1 the peace talkt in
Paris wt:re "IOlnt grut-then the North
Vietnamese showed up."
Ho said that "going to Parla to Wk
about Vietnam is like eoinl to thr. Vat·
ic)n to talk about gitb."
Armsµ-ong. lirst m•n to waJk m the
moon, appeared In latl«uo pants and a
yellow T·Sh.111 bearin1 the words "Cbleu
Hot." The latter is VJetnamese fer "Open
Arms," the governmtnt proeram 'Uudtr
which Communist detertera art alvtn
asylum.
Armslrons:'• tour with the Hope trcupe
WU arranged by Vice Pmldmt Spiro T.
Angn in hls capacity as chJl!f of the
N1Uonal Space Program. ~ was
in Bantkol< on a good will mlasion wh<n
ht joined the Hope entoura1e for the rtst
of !ht trip .
"Jt'1 man's nature to np1ore the un-
known," the ApoUo 11 spaceman told Hope. .
"Yau don't have to tell tllooe l'IJ'I,"
Hope Mid. "They eal in !ht ,_. hall
every day ...
"You ...,....t one of !ht funnleat utro-
naut.a ," the eomldlan. &aid. '
"Well, Bob, there are some of 111 who
don't trav•I with !dlot (<ut) ......, •
Armtsron& replied.
Other memben of the Hope cut this
year include the Les Brown band, alnpr-.
1ctre.u Connie Stevens, slnler-dancer
Teresa Graves of lhe "Laugh-In" tele-
vision ahow, dancer SuzaMe Chamy and
the 12·.rirl dance group "The Gold·
dlgierL"
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DAllY PILOT !;
:: Negroes
• • :·Admitted
'
To Israel
TEL AVIV (UPI)
Twenty-eight Ch.lcago blacks,
• having. successfully con vinced
: . the government to admit ijle:m .
· · · lo Israel as Jews, se.ttled 'Into
a Negev Desert develoPfent
south of Tel Aviv today .
The group of 13 adultsJ and
lS children flew into lfrael
early Monday ff.om Liberia
and spent an anxious day at
Tel Aviv's Lydda Airpoi1
v.·hile authOlities d e c I.ti e d
whether to admit Uiem U im-
migrants.
The blacks . were •Hf! ol
several hundred black Jj ws -
U.S. Negroes who cooverted anl>.~ir o~ to Judalism -
wllo •left Olilcqq thref;, years
agO to, set~ in' I!tbefta, the
West African natiop founded .
by freed American slives in
' the ~Sith .. ce-ntury:. •• 1 ·
. ~ lrOllj Ii~ over
: the 'y<ars lndl<.a~, !tie black
Je_ws were running ~to troi.r
• bie witll their neighbors and
the Uberian governmenl.
• t UPI Te..,.,,.te
TOAST TO SALT -Gerard C. S~Ut, chief U.S. negotiator (left), Finnish
Foreign Mini5'ler Ahti Karjalainen and Soviet chief de'legate V1adirnir Semenov
drink toast at end of preliminary arms limitation talks in Helsinki. Full negot·
iations will begin April 16 in Vienna.
Details Kept Secret
Senate Reverses Vote
PIJ,iladelphia
Pinn Approved
WASHlNGTON (UPI) -Jn
a major victory for President
Ni1on, Congress has given its
approval to a plan designed to
force more Negroes into the
building trades unio ns.
The triwnph involved an
about-face by the senate -
which repudiated a stand it
had affirmed four tlmes just
last week -and a healthy
House vote, despite the op-
position of organized labor.
which would, Jn effect, have
killed the Philadelphia Plan.
B1.1t the llouse on Monday,
after a veto threat from Nixon
and intense lobbying from the
adm inistration, voted to klll
the Senate action on a vote of
208 to 156.
On tm eve of the vote AFlr
CIO President George Meany
had urged the House to go
along with the Senate in op-
posing the plan. Meany said he
opposed quota systems and
described such systems as ii·
legal.
The House then sent the
measure back to the Senate on
a take-it or leave·it bas.is. The
QUEENIE By Phil lnterlandi
r::=:--, l t l>°i .
~ '· .
I
At issue wa s the
"Philadelphia Plan," a prcr
totype system t b e ad-
ministration is imposing on
the e<instruction industry in
Philadelphia. It requires that
government contractors make
efforts to hire more blacks for
construction work , until the
Negroes comprise 20 percent
of the work force.
Senate decided to undo its " ••• Very cordially yours, C. W. Phipps. P .S. Don't
previous action by voting 39 to forget your bluted coffee cup !"
29 to go along with the House. --------------------Also working behind the
British Officer Held
On Plot to Bomb Jet
"We left America Co r
Liberia jn hopes 'of ~iving in
freedom without diScrlmina·
lion," one of the group's
leaders said. "But in Liberi a,
it was not easy to be Jewish.
And we want to be iJewish.
Jnel is the place '. to be
Jewish ."
The plan was seen as a
model for use in other places
in the nation where blacks
have been demanding building
trades jobs. The effect of the
plan would be to force the
unions to bring more Negroes
into their ranks.
The Senate, in four separate
votes last week, had attaehed
scenes In the voting was a
vtlo threat from the Presi·
dent. Nixon .hinted he might
not accept the act.ion, and
such a step would have forced
Congress to C<1me back after
Christmas to revive the money
bill ~volved since without it
some parts of the government
would have been without funds
after Jan. 1.
BRACKNELL, E n g l a n d the pl ane,'' prosecutor Peter
SALT: How Fruitful? a rider to a fill-in money bill ----------
(UPI)1 -The government Barnes said. ·
charged a retired British •·rhe charge he faces I~ '
army captain today with plot· very serious and carries a THIS MISS ting to blow up an American maximunt penalty of 14 years
Jet Attack
Costs Arabs
12 Years
WASHI NGTON (UPI ) -
The j us l-c o nc lude d
preliminary slage of the
Strj!iegic Arms Limitation
·-Talks ·1s considered here to be
the most successful and con·
structive disarmament ex·
change yet between the United
States and the Soviet Un.ion.
discussions on Monday.
They agreed to meet again
in four moths after digesting
details of the exchanges which
took place in secret.
by both sides for possible Flll Pla .. ne built jet airliner for a $72,000 in jail," Barnes said, in argu·
areas of disarmament agree· WAS A MR. fee. ~~11 .a~ainst granting Williams
meot. A magistrates court ordered i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;'i
The course of the Helsinki 'G1•0tlllded' LONDON (UPI ) -Miss former Ca pl. Treyor O .
AMMAN (UPI) -Ar{Arab
, . guerrilla organization wamed
today that Switzerland will
"pay the price" for convicting
three of its member.s of
murder in an attack on an
Despite evident optimism at
the White House, S t a t e
Department and Arms Control
and Disarmament Agency,
there is little or no prospect of
an e a r I y Soviet-American
agreement nn curbing the
strategic arms race.
The next meeting will be
April 16. 1970 in Vienna,
Austria. The two sides said in
their final communique that
"an understanding was reach·
ed on the general range of
questions which will be subject
of further U.S . ..SOviet ex-
changes."
Eileen Hussey, secretary, had Williams, 40, held for a week talks, even though foretelling "one or the most attractive without bail pending further
no quick future agre:ements, WASHINGTON (AP) -11The faces in the British Broad-hearings. ,
seemed to justify the "soft ;:p-controversial Flll mi tary caating Corp. (BBC)," said a Williams also was charged
preach" which the NiXon ad-airplane . has . beei:t grounded judge who accepted her wittl possessing ll1h ounces of
ministration adopted from the for the fifth. tm1e m less than photograph for a contest to plastic gelignite explosive and at tha Orange County
beginning. The administration, two years !n. the wake of a find Miss BBC, 1970. a timing device for an Airport is takin g
WOULD YOU BELIE¥~
REUBEN'S
disregarding past practice, did N.evada tra1.rung-crash which " "Eileen" is a man with unlawful purpose. RESERVATIONS
not come to the negotiating killed tw~ pilots. three children, however. "I "Williams got this device
table with detailed proposals The Ai_r Force announ~d did it purely as a gag," said from abroad and intended to for New Year's Eve Patfy7
for arms agreement. Monday it ha.s gi:iunded its Alex Hussey Monday. "I got destroy a Boeing plane belong-DON':f MISS OUT
In the early 1960's the Soviet fleet of 223 swingwing jets un-one of the BBC's make--up ing to a foreign country. He '• · Israeli airliner in Zurich Feb.
18.
A court in Winterthur,
Switz.erland, Monday sen·
tenced the two men and one
woman to 12 years at hard
labor for killing an Israeli
trainee pilot in their sub·
machine gun and grenade at-
tack. Their lawyer said he
would appeal the verdict.
Both U.S. and Soviet
negotiators are keepin g secret
the details of their exchanges
in Helsinki where they wound
up five weeks of preliminary
The -wording suggested that
the two sides did not draw up
a precise agenda for the se-
cP,nd stage of substantive
rtigoliatlons. There were also
indications in Washinglon that
the second stage w o u I d
resume with continued probing
and Americ8'0 practice in til it determines what caused girls to help me." hoped to get 30,000 pounds Call 540-2475
various sets of disarmament the crash that killed Lt. Co!. _::H~e:_:w::a~s::dl~s~qu~a~lifi~'e'.:'.d'.:.. ___ .'..:ll'.'.12~,000~):,:!~or:.,:th~e:..'.'.de~s'.'.tru~c:tl'.'.'.>n~of~~~~~~~~~~ attempts was to put forward Thomas J. Mack and MaJ. ,.
U.S. Judge Clears Way
For Negro?s Burial
detailed plans for general and James L. Anthony.
complete disarmament as well Mack, 38. of Viola, 111., and
as more limit.ed suggestions. Anthony, 35, of Big Spring.
The result of such con-Tex., went down with tl'le $8
frontations was frequently a million plane Monday during a
deadlock. training mission at the bom-
By adopting the "soft ap-bing and gunnery range at
preach" the United States ap-Nellis Air Force Base, about
pears to have avoided an in-4~ miles northwest of Las
itial deadlock over agenda and Vegas, Nev.
An Israeli security .agent
who jumped out ()( the plane
and returned the fire, killing a
fourth Arab attacker, was ac-
quitted on manslaughter
charges and returned lo a
hero's welcome Jn Israel.
BIRMINGHAM, Ala. (UPI)
- A federal judge has cleared
the way for a Negro Vietnam
war veteran to be buried in a
local all-white cemetery.
procedure. The res u It in g The -plane was the 15th Fill
general agreement has had lost so far by the Air Force.
cemetery was limited to use the 'benefit of producing the The most recent grounding
by members of the Caucasian favora ble atmosphere between was last month and affected
chief U.S. negotiator Gerard 89 of the planes. The Popular Front for the
Liberation of Pale s tine
(PFLP) issued a communique
saying the verdicts were bias-
ed and that the PFLP
race, relatives claimed in a C, Smith and his Soviet ;;::=========;;:;!
suit against Elmwood. counterpart, Vladimir S. Se·
In a 17-page ruling handed myonov. Who Car .. ?.
~·· "emphasii.es that the Swiss
government will pay the -prite
of its action and should &
prepared for th e con-
sequences.
The soldier, Pfc. Bill H. Ter-
ry Jr., had · made a last re-
quest in a letter home from
the war zone that he be buried
in Elmwood Cemetery because
it was located near his
boyhood home. He was killed
in action July 3.
No othtr ntwtpaptt In lht world
cares abollt your community llkt
your community dally newspaper
does. It's the DAILY PILOT.
down Monday, U.S. District The remainlng problem is
Court Judge Seyboum H. Lyn-that when the two delegations
ne Ordered Elmwood to sell get down to the hard issues
Jots to anyone who applied, they may find themselves fac-
regardless of race. Jili~ng~a~sta~l~em~at~e~o~nce~m·o·r·e····;;:::::ii Lynne's ruling, based on an
,· "The · PFLP -is capable ~
answering the Swiss govern-
ment •.• and safeguarding the
pride of the Palestinian pe~
pie."
1866 law, said cemetery rules,
regulations and deeds restric·
ting use or the facility to
whites were "void and or no
.• .
,•,
When his family attempted
to buy a burial plot at
Elmwood they were told the legal effect."
Miami Turns Poet Off
Music Drowns Profane Protest
MIAMI (UPI) -Poet Allen reciting. address system, ''Th Is
Ginsberg was turned off and Po I i c e Sgt. \V. F. performance is over."
tuned out by the Miami McLaughlin phoned his com-Ginsberg kept on reciting. The audience of about 1,500 establishment Monday night. mantling office r f o r in· applauded.
; '. -The 45-year-old bearded and st ructions. Costa then started piping
,. beaded hero of the hippies had "The captain says that if the loud dinner music into the
launched into a poem critical audience doesn't object and no open air arena to drown out
~· <1f the police and the military one wants to get a warrant, the poet.
... ' dur~· g a scheduled appear-we can't arrest h i m . ' · Ginsberg got to_ his feet,
•
'• .,
'
;,.
•
•·
anc at Miami Marine Stadi-McLa ughlin reported to Cosla. looked at the audience , and
um officials dtcided he Costa called Assistant City was m~bbed by fan s as . he
was spouting too many "four ?\.tanager Paul Anderson. Then mad e his way to the dressing
letter words.'' \ he anq9unced over th e public room.
Stadium IQanager Man I .._.,._ ... ,.,.,.._..._,..MMMJHM,
Costa switched <1n tHe house I
lil!11)s and shut of[ the poet's SEASON'S GREETINGS m1cropbone, but he kept 1 A Delight •
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1 DARY PH.OT EDITOBIAJ, PAGE
Drug Help
Panic has gripped parent.I acro&1 Ille nation u
!ht use and abuie of drugs by their children continues
apece.
No """ol the '1allon bas escaped. ,
Here on the ·orange Coo.it, an ll·year-<>ld boy was
arrested last Friday as a uJer of heroin.
Unles. medical adence can cun the lad, his lilo
ls ruined belor. It ts even well started.
A IS.year-old c:..sta Mesa High ·School student
wu arrested on · tbe aame dl!ly fof posaessi~n of dane
cerous drugs. 'nley wera barbiturate pills. . ·
These. unfortunately, are not fsolitedi examples
from one day's police log. They llf" all .tai>'.li'Jlical.
U ever there w.ere a need for intensive educa·
lion -not -panic -that need is -• Pretl4ent Nixon
at !Int thought pie answer to the drug proqlem "was
1imply to enforce the law." He now a:ees the· solution
as resli!lg In the bands of local groups.of. p~fe9U and
educators. . ,
But such groups ere in many instances confused
-and understandably so. Some of them •rt ,13klng a
hanMlne approach including wholesale expulsions
from school and co;,,pulsory blood and urlnetesis to
sj)ot use of bariturates, amphetamines or mi:lrphine
derivatives such as heroin. .
Others are lnDuenced by·the Increasingly lenient
view of marijuana use being taken by a nUmber of
national health officials and narcotics experts. One of
these, Dr. Stanley F. Yolles, director ol the~National
Institute of Mental Health and assocjete a'lm!nistrator
of t1le Department of Health, Education and Welfare,
!Did a Senate subcommittee hearing In September:
"A youngster who smoke_s-one marijuana cigaret
Isn't a dope fiend . It is extremely ~ortunate that by
the continued exaggerated emphasis .on the supposed
dire evils of marijuana smoking, we make i~ extremely
• IS Available
dlflicult to tell people what the real risks ol use of spe-
cific kind s of drugs are." ,
What should a parent who suddenly discovers his
child ls caught up In the drog traffic do! The first move
rhould be to talk with the narcotics officers of the local
police d"P.'!rtment. Public attitud~s have changed, so
that. a child arrested on drug charges isn't permanen~
ly stigmatized, ., W8$ formerly the case.
He is recognized as a victim of a vicious traffic
who needs help, not condemnation. And· it Is possible,
too, that he can help police get at the real villains .-
the manufacturers and pushers, who deserve. tO baVe
the 1Weight of the law thrqwn at them.
Also,. for parent.. but especially for .a yooth·who
realizes his or her need for help, there are various
"hoUines." One is the Melodyland Drug Prevention
Center of Anaheim Christian Ch.urch. operating 24 hours
a day on 77l'r1000. It is efiiliated with Teel) Challenge
drug abuse treatment' center and Cross-and-Switchblade
Clubs for ex-addicts.
· Oldest and most comprehensive holline (633-9393)
is the Crisis Intervention and Suicide Prevention Center
at Orange County Medical Center. It takes crisis phone
calls as well as wa1k-ins and has the support. of the
emergency ward at the hospitaJ .
A citjzens' group including professional ' people
ls also available in Huntington Beach (894-4242) and
8944343 ID help young people with drug and other prob-
lems.
These can be of great help -but they themselves
need ·help, especially manpower willing to be trained in
crisis-interviewing.
The drug problem -unbeiievable as it is to the
older generation -calls for total community commit ..
men't to education and to mutual aid for parents as well
as their children.
II Wheelus Bue Abandoned •••• Cooki1ig Came
As a Bonus
Fro1n College
Two Dange·rous 'Possibles'
-~-·-. -.. . .
. . . ~ . .
. .
Murder Rate Is
Lower Than '33
' '
' '
i .
WASIUNGTON -The $t00, mllllOn
Wheelus Air Force Base in l.Jbya. llhould
be completely dismantled and all Its
facilities, including the nmways, made
totally unlit for use if it has to be.aban-
doned.
(II Of the 38 foreign oil companies
operating in Libya, 24 are AmeMcan--own-
ed w:lth a total invesbnent of around $1
billion. (%) Ubya is openly and ad·
mitY!dlY financing the Arab guerrillas cf
the "Eritrean Liberation Front" which is
trying to topple Emperor Haile Selassie 's
government ; Libyan anny officers ap-
pear regularly at the headquarters of the
Palestinian guerrillas in Syria ; and
Nasser is trying to persuade Sudanese
and Libyan leaders to wUte the three
countries lnta a single "super st.ate."
I -, '" · \ Tboogltts Al urp:
Further, the right to do the same th~g
should be r~ed tn all other countries
where the U.S. has military bases.
'11lese admittedly drastic measures are
being urged by Rep. William Bray. Ind .•
a ranking Republican member of the
House Armed Services Committee, u the
U.S. and the lkvolutionarY Command
Council now ruling Libya ""80tia~ "' the
future of tho huge stratqic alrl>are.
In letlen ID Sec. ol sta~ Rogen and
Delense Sec. Laird. .Bray, a Silver Star-
deconted World War II veteran.
vipously """9ed the dang" ol
Wheelus !ailing Into Russian bands il
rellnqui!l1ed without adequato precau-
Uoos.
'+niERE ARE MANY difficult ques-
tions to be aetUed," wrcte Bray, "but
there is ooe t believe supersedes all
others and which, to the best of m1
knawiedge, we have never faced berore.
ThiJ key question is: What will the IJb-
yan government do with the facilities at
Wheelus when we leave?
"Wheelus can handle long-range jet
bombers. If the Soviet-equipped Egyptian
air force moved in, we can be certain
Russian technicians would not be far
behind. This, in tum, would mean
Russian moves to flt Wheelus aa 1
mndby f1<lcl for Soviet bombers.
1'1lul8, in regard to Wheelus,, we are
faced with two very d a n g e r u u 1
'pcuibles.' 'nMI Ont Is that Nasser's
forces might be given access to and use
ot a major military facili\y within
relatively easy air strike diatance of
"
lsrael. The aecond, and worse, 15 that the
Soviets would in effect be handed .t bli!:
with e%traordlnarily high strategic value,
due to its l«:ation on the North • .\frican
shore of the Mediterranean."
rr IS UNDERSTOOQ that llny's
ouUpoten viewa ore supported by olh<r
leaden «. the powerful Armed Services
Committee --Democratic as well as
R<publlcan. ' .
Pri-11. lhey·11tt'Widnl!· grave eon·
cem about the fate of the Wheelus base.
They art partkularly disturbed over the
point made by Bray that this higllly
a1nteglc Installation -which cost
American lupay•• $100 mlllion -wW
be taken ovef· by RuMia.
There la a speda1 significance to Rep.
~ay's letters to Secretaries Rogers and
Lair<!.
In addition ID fOl'celully spelling out
possible courses of action regarding
Wheelus, they also serve notice on the
administration that the negotiations with
the Libyan revolutionary rovemment are
being clolely watched.
Any ai'rangemert reached ls ctrt.aln to
be inltaUy ·• ICfU!Wzed and blunUy
weighed.
111AT'S THE CIZAR bnplication tn
Bray's carelullJ ttmed letters. He un·
derllnes that by pointedly relltng them. ··1
would greatly a ppr ec late your
depertmeflt'a comments.''
In detalling three p:Miblt courses that
might be pursued, Bray acknowledges the
existence. OC several maj« C001plk:atini;
lacton:
"ln view of all this," pointed out Bray,
"and the general tendency of the Soviet
Union to muscle in wherever possible, Ole
eventual use o( WheeJus becomes of
prime, critJcal Importance.'.'
AS POSSmLE SOLUTIONS, be sug-
gests the following:
-"Simply refuse to leave until our
treaty obligations expire on Dec~ber 24,
1971. There would be the chance, .id·
mittedly small, that by then the world
situation might have changed."
-"Ironclad assurances from lhe Li-
byan govenunent that Wheelus would not
be utilized fur military purposes. This
would of cour.se be difficult and there
Vf!!tY likely would be no lever the U.S.
could app,ly to get such a guarantee,
unless it would be an offer to give Up any
compensaUon the Libyans might offer it1
return for the base."
-"Since collection of any type of com-
pensation, in any amoUnt, simply cannot
be counted on, either, we announet!:' \\'e
are seeking oo compensation of any type,
but Iii.stead wUl completely dismantle
Wheelus and render its facilities, in·
eluding it.! runways, totally unfit for use
when we do leave. 0
By Robert S. Allen
ud Jofla A. Goldllnilll
Army Is in a Tight Spot
One would ·not know wh<r• military
lawyers gel their law: Almool Invariably
comrn.illimed officers and usually West
Point &radWdes, they presumably had a
1'erK for law while in tchooL It mUBt be
..-med they atudled the Oonatitutlon
and the history ol American In,
particularly relating to military law.
It must be ~ that a member or the
armed forces dOel not In all cues have
the woe right.I before the law as has a
ctvlllan ID civil court. Article V of the Bill
o1 Rig!lll ll)'I: ••No -llhalt be htld
to answer for a capital ar other infamous
crime unless on PfaeDbnent or in----1-
dictment ol 1 GranCI Jury, e:rc:ept tn
ca9e1 ari&lni in tbt: land or naval forces,
or in tbt militia, when in~ac:Uve service,
ln Ume ol war or public danger ••. "
'11111 leaves cfvlllans tree ID um:il<
--~
'!'Uesd81, December 2S; 1~
TM dlloriol pagt of Ille Dallr
Pilot "'"' Co Inf°"" dil<I lllM-tdat. r...i.rt bu pruttttlng lid•
-newspapitr'• optnimu and cont-
_,.ro.,, on lopl<i of lffl<rc.rl
cmd 1ignlfiarnct, bu J)l'011fdlnfl a
forum /or Ille upreuion o/ ••r rtod«J' opln.,.., and bu
prtarntlftf th• diver.st uitw-
pofnU of fnJormftt· ob•tn::itr•
cmd 1pokt,,..,. °" IOpiCI o/ th< <1ou.
Robeit N. Weed, Publisher
th<lr l'llil ri«bU " tree speech and pr ...
under Article I, even wl>en they on deal-
ing w1U1 c:a1e1 lnooivlng military law.
YOU WOULD 'l1IOOl military lawyers
would 1ll1denWld thi9 simple oeparatlon,
but apparinily -do not. uorii def"""
and' ~ ID tho cue of
Ueutenon~Caller. ·-·of mlrder In
the . V~ · -~· · peUtioned a three-judge civilian Coorl ol Military Ap.
peals for an lnjunctJon focbidd lng new•
media '°· pu~ .. ~ta ,and ·pk:tures
by witnelles tn the c-.e.
The court -lmmedial<ly that there ii "no ,,.. ~ the utraordJni1')'
relief'' by 1111P01ins "j>fei)Ubllcatlon
limits br lnjuncUon .•• Delenninlng the
pnlllrie!.f alid ; ociur8c:r of,·...... lllOrlH
they .u.mJnale la the .ftlPON!blllty of
lbepabllmn."
'DIO ""11\ added tbat ID a c:ouMnartlal
tho court may rMrk:t Ila own people lo
,,...... • I* trial.for Ille aCClllOd, bot no m«e. Had Ille ~ Court not IO htlcl,
any Unlled 6t.eles 0btl1ctc.urt "'"lei be
-lo ~ tho F1nt Am<l)dment and nulllf7 .. loJunctlao,
1'llE ARMY II IN a ti"1t spell II<!,..
beeaUH man1 wttneisea hav1 betd
dllchar&td aDCI are no longer subject lo
the mlliW, Jurlldi<tlon. On Ille olhrr
hind, a few "1tneSH:B art ltlll In service.
and could-• be g•ggect. But any ,.,,...1 aagglng would not be wtae, u the peopjo· are not In a mood for
a llar-c!>amber oolutloo of Song ldy. They
are already disturbed by an apparent ~
month coverup of the abhorrent affair.
It should be clear to the people that had
the news media in the past few weeks
been legally unable to publish news and
pidures provkjed by witnesses, the
ma.ssaa-. woukl never have been
revealed. Certainly the P e n t a g o n
wouktn 't reveal it until hell rroie over.
'Ibl! wu the state of "justice" ad·
ministered by Hitler, Stalin a n d
Mu.ssolini. The first two eould and did
order m.. atroch.ies, and neither
newspapers nor the general citizenry
eolJJd breathe a word oC it , lest they land
In .the dung<onl. .
~ fordatbon had enough knowledge
~ the tyranny of the European monarchs
and their lackeys to devise the First
Amendment, an indispensable pillar of a
free llOcfety.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Justice William 0. Douglas, has
been away from his cute bride get·
ling his heart· pacer batteries re-
chargtd, UPI reports. Ne\W race
an anUque against a s-porty, slrlp-
pod.down model.
-V. L. H.
,_.. ........ "'"""' ,....,.. """"" ""' _,.,, .._ .., .. . .. ·-· ..... ,_ .. -... ...., ..... °"" ''"'·
.• -r
I· '
By JOY STILLEY
Associated Press
When we sent our daughter off to cot.
lege to be educated we got a bonus. For
the same money, G8y Is learning to cook.
Always thoroughly undomesticated, she
donned her chef's hat out of necessity.
Her culinary career started last year
when she was going to IChool in Paris
and had a small budget and a large ap-
petite.
At this lime hei' entire equipment con·
slsted of a coffee pot, in which she and
her enterpMsing roommate prepared all
sorts of semigounnet items like soup, hot
dogs and hard-boiled eggs.
ONE OF THEIR more memorable
dishes was beef ste·w a la coffee pot, a
concoction that still hasn't found its way
into any French cookbooks. The two
bought a piece of meat, carrots and
rteen beans. all of which they cut up with
the scalpel from the roommate's dissec-
ting kit. For the final touch they added' a
tiouillon cube and threw Jt all In the cof.
fee pot to simmer.
This year Gay Is back to American
~lsi~, and she has at her dispcsal such
niceties as a stove and small refrigerator
in the campus apartment sbe shares with
two friends. One of them is talented in
the homemaking departinent and Gay is
hoping some of the expertise will rub off
'!11 her. Me~nwhile she is engaged largely
1n such fnnge actJv!Ues u washing a}>'
pies and opening cans.
ONE RECENT weekend G<rrl. the
nutritionist, was away and Gay and
Miriam decided they were tired of
wholesome, balanced meals so they
bou ght a couple of TV dinners.
Then Gay invited a friend to join lhem
and 9.'ent out to purchase a third 1V din·
ner.
''On the way back 1 had an impulse lo
·buy a ·bottle of wine," she related. "The
man who waited on me was very suave
and elegant. When he asked me what I
had In mind I said just some lnexpemive
wine."
The dedicated shopkeeper then . set
about e:rtolllng the vi rtues of various vln·
tages, 'holding each bottle tenderly and.
conducting what he thought. was a con-
noisseur-to-connoisseur talk.
"I SAID I REAU. Y didn't know what
to get," Gay continued. "Then he asked
'May I inquire .yhat you are servjn,?:
The absurdity of the whole thing hit me
and 1 burst out laughing and muttered
something incoherent. l just didn't think
the poor man could lake It ii 1 told him
the wine he $poke of so lovingly was to
accompany frozen beans and frankl. ''
Quotes
WOiiam Blanks, Loi Aap)Q -"F'or
one to say Uiat blacks eannot identJfy
wlth the magnificent s~ce achievement
ot Apollo 11, simply because Lhoat who
m•de the landi ng were not black ta to
sell lhort all their Umt and effort ' in the
behlnd-the-SOO>e jobs, without which the
land.llig would never have been made."
Baall Gh11dltu1, Pacldca -"The last
figures t h:ive sttn show that the FBI hn.~ ar:hlcved 96 pt:rctnt convictions. and
throt1gh savings, recovulu, ,nd fines,
has returned $1.46 for every dollar ap-
propriated to thrm by Congress.
Leia fttay, San Francisco -"It i!
amusing that Eldridge Cleaver. after he
Seti that other countries aren't as
wonderful as the Uni~ Statrs, now
...... ta to-retur-.-? ;;:
In all the furor about "crimes of violen-
ce" today, we ought to remind ourselves
that while crimes against the person have
risen in recent years, the ultilnate
violence is murder -and the U.S.
murder rate is lower in 1969 than tt was
in 1933.
• • • Japan, which "lost" the last war, Is
~ing four . Umes as muci. oo educa-
tion as on militaJ')' services; while the
U.S .. which "won" it, has an educational
budget (even ini;luding pMvate schools)
less than two-thirds the size oC the
military budget.
• • • • If we could set up "special p:ine1s·•
to hear divorce cases, which would be
taken out of the whole cui:rent judiclill
and 11dversary system, then the in-
suff erable delays in the Ameri<:an court.!
could be more than cut in half -and a
great unnecessary burden removed from
tbe judges. . . ' . CA divon:e should not be considered a
"breach of contract," but a socio-nsycho-
medlcal pro~lem. dealt with by the ap.
propriate specialists Jn community and
family life, not by lawyen and judges.)
• • • Most shipwncks occur near the
shore, and most airplane crashes near
take-off or landing; likewise, any ven-
turesome enterprise is in greate5t danger
of failing not orily at the start, but near•
ing Its aoa1.
• • • Adolescence isn't over-and maturity
hasn't begun UflW we are ready to ac·
cept, and live by, Chamlort's r<cognltlon
that "Pretensions are a source of pain.
and the happy time of life. begtna: as soon
as· we give them up."
. . . . . ·u .a percent" the -1c1·, popu1a11on
commsnds eo percent of tllo world'i
resOurces -which is the pr'llent pellitkln
of the U.S. -ft -·t tab a Karl•Mll'l
IO predict !hat tho oli1er M peroent Yill
try IO· -the lrolance• b7 WV °' revolution S m peliceflld: alterDitlva are
presented. (In tlQ eomeetion, let m•
praise 1 recent corporate ad·tw the Olin
Corp., whlch comes. to gripo hones!IJ'ind
boldly wit6 lllfs delicate matter.) ...
• • •
About lilt 'ooly ancient Egyptian we
could nsm+ ia Cfeopatro -·ind Ille
wasn't an Egyptian, but a Macedonian of
the ruling Ptolemaic family that con·
quered Egypt undt!' Alexander the Great
and intermarried to maintain the. royal
boule over U>e· native EBYPtiam. :
• • •
What we. call "'dest:nactiveoes" cUrie.
fnrn a ~ Jove of life ;. we .can
see this clearly with dO!dm wbo a..
givm no creative outiei for ~ theit
ener~es--enddeatructivenesaina~uni
mvininment k always in mverse rati? ~
the number of outlets provided for thei't
agressive tf.ndencies to bi drained cl(
pleasurably and harmlessly. .
• • •
The PoJIOl,ition uplooion will not be
r.duied by tecfmical means, but Cli!ly by
a radical sblft in the climate ol. cultural
ophUoft -that .b. wben we finally
recognize. and act oa, the faot that man)i
perD'IS should not marry. and that IDIJIY
who many .sbould not ha .. children. Ao
Jong'as1Jt is coQldered socially dem'able
for an to mate and procreate, effective
blrtli controhrill.mnaio a ilistait pl.
The Two-thirds 'Rul.e
To tbe Ed;itor :
Many school bonds don' get pwed
because a two-thirds majority is reqWred
to pass a boni:l. Because of thla the
minority can influence the. decision, even
though the majority of the people are for
it. For example, next ye.ar schools may
bt put Into doublt sesatons because there
are not enough classrooms to ac-
commod•~ 'the "¥'"11.
l think UJat In Uli<omJnl -i-•• St ~~.ma~ lbouJd be sufficient
to p~ss lt..> , '
. ' SUE· HAMMERSLAG
t.ioer V•tl"9 .49e I
. earn this pr!vl~ -everylhfnr ...,,,i
T.ol 1:an~~~ the ~ IP -ID ..,,,. Ill IO mllcfl loday. .
u. It ts unrul!Jtlc le, 1iaVe > 1111·-. SALLY 8~
apent •wllho!il my contelll. l~dlllur!!' m• 1 llfah Sd>ool lludta!;
lll"'•Uy when they -on a,<mtloo -~ _
voMna-.·coUei!Jo, bul liley cloll't-Bir fil•"l'e ~
th• majority " tho .......... ~ Takln& mea oil, to w.--a -of . Door Cleof1t:
consent !llUli make • -·pnrud he-ls• Won' )'Oii If•• 1IM ~ to
clllun ol the United -· -"' they <J ' i'emember )'Oii by! Whtn l am r... have many 1..-... • """1 from you! Some lllU•
... rr' IS TOO BAD the only thing ...
can do Is to speak out and rebel. t would
Uke to carry a pttltlon arouTJ:I to lower
the Volill8 agt. Oi:!ly a rtgL~i Yf't"'f I
mo.ir do thl• and only a rqlstered """' may sign It. 'l1le CallfornlR Ltgfslature•
has made il vuy hard for rnt to do wha}
I lhlnk is best.
It makes it Impossible for the eon-
ctrned group to h84o'e any say at all. We
must ttmaln silent for thrtt years \o
tomethlng to rtmemt>a )11U bv? c. v.
Otar C. V.:
How about a IAlll IDr copyrlgllt 11'-
frlngtmcnt !
CONFIDENTIAi. 'ro "C>;N Tms
Mf.RRTAGE bE S·A v E D ! • I
DEPARTMENT; Do ).-~1 buy
artk't• on "Cln This DiVO( .. t 'Je
Saved"? '------------•
I
I
i
I
' I
I
t
I
I
. , .
i
' , • ' ,
1
\ ,
• .
' • ., •
r
0
b •
" '
..
C!!EB,~G
,, , , . .
• • ' ! -I t
. .
. '.~~J>gless'
Fuel foi·
State .cars
. I . .
1Hl STlAHGI WOll1.D • MR.MUM
M~n, Women,Wash • ~\ \ I ,.
CRAMENTO 1 (UPI) -
(lov. ·Ronald · R•~.'"<;ajat• t::'.~>>-"_. '1i' the war on · elf· Pollution, hia .ann0unced tha( state •l(!V·
lornnient•i mwJte 'fleet of
,•cal'I ~ · true" Will · stlrt
I. coiiv'ei:Ung to ft<&rly smDg'
-, I t less natural gaij.
,, L M. BOYD
1
1' wtUte-lmuckled minutes, and , .. •Ie ordered, lhBit
0
l7S ve'.hlcl" !Ji ambllioo, the u n b 11 n kl n g 1n the state f beet of 281500
cl=;":: qla~~r bourJ, and even lovt, tile be eqµlpi:: irntntc!iately with ~t • Jftllll in hls sot numb grinning days. But itl both a el syFtem for corr
a "'.· l ld btr;~ hu not hem enoup. Nothing ventlooal_ gasollM and a sep-
• ..:!.1._._ •" in this e-rperienee tells me arate system for natural gas, la a~· 1be lanswige·i why 50, mariy or the young the . same type housewives
too ~Our Love. af'd-W men now choose to let their have cooked with for years.
J?J.&n ~ ·the greater haii-groW ·long and shaggy and Tl\e governor also called
age.pp; the_ las likely, a su dirty, 1 thiok they must be for ·a ~ cut ~n natural g~ cesahil ~ia~. Nonetheless, nuts -as an 1ncentiye · for otfier ninnei'aµ'dlgnttled'g~nU'emen · governnient a~ private fleet
aged »phls and 11prlgbtly gifls CUSTOMER. SERVICE: i Q. operators t6 alko switch.
Hands !D~fereiltly
I
H ~i ..
aged , ifftua ·bav~I f o u 1 d "How many college students' The 'Republican governor l f,;Y.r l!Ome~-suf~ to1 staY are payiug theii-own way, en-armounced the smog fighting '===================='.__ wed. . .f'ar·insta~!ttaf:e U.S. titely?" A. About one in plan .in a televised "Report -
Pr!Slaeftt.John IJ'yW!'1'~ •oo· seven ... Q. "BOWLING IS the . t() the Peopl e" Monday eve-
Mrs. fy}tf, ~4. No*" Pzilsl: most pop u I a r ,participant nlng. Ptoducpon of the al-
dent aiid First Ud)i. I in-!port, ls it not?" A. Bowling mo.st two-mil'IUte lung tape A lle d A z · F
cldentaJly; ·have ~ IO·"lcJe. . rapks No .. 3, Ws now said. No. was paid . by a group called ge wto ee
Jy HP&l'I'~ by ye s. I t· is swimming .. Fishing and "Californians· for a Creative
· J_. ~ • daDclng are tied for No. Society," whlch haS' financed
••JT'S fl'AJU) to ' forg a 2, •. Q. "HOW MANY SONGS prevJous filmed appearances. s L -r;ng Prob d gir~" Sl)'IFUp Wiison, "li!im has Ji>lmny Cash written?" A. Starting il)Ulledlately, Rea· ff,(J, I< e
you buy ~r a pre!ent 'on Maybe 600, so·lar. gan said, 175 State DlVisJon ol
time." .. , THE FOOnlA.LL Jilghways afuomobiles will be SEA~~ (UPI) S SEASON ia too tong_ •Now BEER-Theory No. l : Beef" fitted>wlth a dual system for •il4.< -tale
wait, nobody likes to watch should be poured briskly into a both conventional and natural Atty. Gei1. Slade Gorton plans
football more than I do, Still gl ass to de-gas it with the big-gas. But othei: c a r s and to in vestigate· f e e ar-
say -the season is t 0 0 gesf possible head. Theory No. trucks will be similarly equip. rangements made between
2 "--•-··id be dr k ped " ed former Ally. Gen. John O'Con-long ... THAT PART or; yOur : ocer "'""' Wl on a pregramm , cnn-
tvvt.t thtt t d th ost directly from its cuntainer to tinulng basis." ' nell and Jaseph Alioto before ....,, Is can s an ' m .d I fl I The -n•ersi·on -st totals _the laUer became mayor of "''t y· our to. ·~·'-• avo1 osing avor. -don't .. v ...... ~ ngue .. ·"nr.1'11 .. A .. 1 ·~ b'J San Francisco. A WOMAN washes her hands. know which of ~ theories auvu 'rTI"' per automo 1 e, a
her palms make a rotary mo-is correct. Do you'! spokeSl'lan for Reagan said. Gorton announced his in-
. .. .... 1 ... _. 1h..... , Under the dual system, con-teutions Monday alter O'Con-
tion ......,~ each ~ther. •1·~ Y~ CAN GF.T chewing ventional gasoline will be nell said the matter waa none
a m1tn waehes his -hands, his gum out of a youngster's hair, used for ·country driving while of Gorton's business.
palmi·mHe a &hutUe mot.lob rt'potts an expert, ll yOu rub tur 1· · ·11 be · bed against eacb other ... ONI. y na a gas w1 switc O'Connell declined to com·
ONE BRIDE in seven v;as the mess with m.Hk chocolate, to in smoggy urban areas. ment 00 reports be l'l!ffived
let it set, then wasb it all o eT 1100·000 f the 12 ! engaged mere than a year. 'WITHOUT A v , o . , . ~ aw a Y -• ".. , million fee to Alioto when he
Tbe San Francisco mayor,
the Democrat whom many pre~ict 'will challenge
Republican Gov. R o n a I d
Reagan in 1970, says he
believes it is "absolutely
neceuary--to -set the record
straight and avoid any in-
volvement in any dispute in
Washington.''
Pop Festival
Appeals Ban HAIR -A client with a ~t-DOUBT, says a bellman of · M · • B • was atto.mey for 15 public
terlnl ~ajih in 'this depaftntnt consider&:ble experience, t~ ~Ille ng utility districts. He won some
inquires, "Why do 50 many of best tippers ht the country are $16 tnilliori in· damages in the LOS. ANGELES (AP) -
the young men now choose to the Alaskans. · .FACT THAT £'IL! f a cases between 1961 and 1967 Promciters of the Mid Winter
Jet the.ir hair grow long aud Mr. Graves is the caretaker at UUe ea1• and received 15 percent. Pop Festival have asked the
•
Strangled
Girl Cases
Linked?
BURBANK (AP ) -A )'O'!ng
former tieauly queen's death
is rem~rkably similar to that
of another pretty girl , police
say, but officers are unsute if tJ.le mur.derer was the same
person.
Th~ latest victim w a s
Margie Schuit or w e s t
Hollywood, a secretary for
Columbia Pict~s Corp. and
"Miss San Fernando Valley"
of 1965 •
She was 21 years old · and
had parked her car in a lot
ootside a West Los Angeles
drug store. She was going
shopping. She apparently was .
k.idnaped in the parking lot.
Four months ago the same
scene had been enacted by
Wendy l:lalison, an art ·Stu·
dent at San Fernando Valley
State College. She was also 22
and was last seen alive at the
same drug store lol.
Miss Halison's strangled
body wa s foun·d several blocks
from ttie drug store in the
trunk of her abandoned car.
Miss Schuit's body was found
late Sunday night in a
Burbank· ~lley. She was also
strangled, police said.
Police said that robbe ry
wasn't a motive in either case
and that neither seemed to
have been molested sexually.
A third strangling case that
occurred this year two blocks
from the drug store pa rking
lot is also unsolved, bul is
regarded as less similar. In
that, the body or Pauline
Silver, 81, was found J an. 3.
She also had been strangled.
Indians Call
'Pow Wow'
!ihaggy and dirty?" Regret :1b ttie Carlsbad, N.i\1., c i l Y "I'm going to say something State: Court 9£ Appeal to ban
admit I do not know why.. cemetery does indeed qualify Af p b abcx,it i4 but I ca.1't say ex-enforeement or an emergency SAN FRANCISCO <AP ) -
Thought at first it was· UM him for membership in the let• 1•0 e acUy when," O'Connell said. ordlnanceaimedat·ileadingoff The 200 American Indians oc-
high cost of haircut.!. ' Tod Proper Job Club. ' "But even assuming tile whole a mammoth rock m u s i e -cupylng, Al~atraz Island have
shallow an interpretation~ Your questions and com-CAMP PENDLETON (AP) thing is true, there's nothing festival in ~n Luis Obispo called a meeting of represe n-
that I have worked alone in: ments are ,welcomed and -The Marine Corps• fonnal wrong with it." County. tatives -from 200 tribes from
the cruel utreme and also inl 1wiU be wed whenever pos-board of investigation into "There 'is oo prohibition in 1be County Board of ·across the CQl.lntry to plan a
the company of fair men, and tible tn. ''Checking Up." alleged mistreatment of brig this state on private practi~ Supervisors passed an Confederation of American In·
I bite thought out some things P~ addrass your matl to inmates at this Southern for the .attorney general," emergency ordinance I as~ dian Nations.
about -war and peaee., botl L.M. Boyd in care of Dailll California base apparently has O'Connell added. Thursday which bans &ather· A spokesman at the San
penonat and public. and l Pilot, Box 1875, Ne10p01t ; ctea,red Maj. Wilson A. Voigt, He aaid he had written ings of more than 5,00> Francisco Indian Center saia
remember rebellion, t b 1 Beach, Calif, f1266J. • former brig commander. Gorton \.a letter saying the persons 1 n unln:corpora.~ · Mondaj 'that 2,100· invitaljonS
• ' 1 -,· ---•· ~ -. Brig: Gen.· 'Frank E. Gar· mat14' of fm paid M the a.,. areas for a,,90-day·.peflOd. to the ~nyention on the San
'1 • • ·'-• .. ntson, ·head af the in-· tlll'lls& ~t· qainst electrfeal MJd Winter 'P.op Festiv$.I, Frantjsc;o Bay island over \he
R·u" l;ng A · ;JI.St Ban: vestigation said Monday that equipment finns who supplied Inc., plans to stage the event Christmas holidays Were mail-
" 11 the board "has withdrawn its public utilities is none of for up to 200,000 fans on the ed .to tribes. bands, reserva-
deslgnation of Voigt as a party Gorton's buslneu. old Ihdian Creek Ranch soufh tions and Indian oflices in
1· to the investigation." Gorton disagreed. saying he of Atascadero Friday through urb:an centers.
O·n· R ds rfih .. O t Voigt, officer in charge of. believed O'CoMell had no Sunday. · -e .f"' rown lt the base brig from June 1968 right to accept money While in The corporation's petition, ~IYI YOU• SICIETA•Y
· · " to October 1969, was named office. filed Monday, elaims the A HELPING HAftOI
LOS ANGELES, (A~) -The · was .reinstated and has_ been
state. Coort of Appeal, acting teaching a course· erltitled
on a technitallty, has throwil ·' 'It e curring PhilosoPhical
oot Superior Court Judge Jer-Themes in Black Literafure." ·
1"f , Pacht!s decision 1 Is t , Pacht's ruling wiil reinain in
October that a UniverSitj of ·.effect ·ror 60 days to permit
~Orrµa ·bari on hiring C9fn-ru~ appeal a~ and
:rnurdsts was. uhconstituUonill. ~Charles .H. Phillips ••. ~ttorney ·
The appeal .court held Mon-Jar· the P,!nintiffs in the original
day that Pacht erred ID; ref us-su.lt, ,said be Will take the mat~·
Nov. 24 as a party to the in· Alioto has promised to open ordinance violated the rights
vesUgatlon and advised to re-his legal file! Wednesday to oC music lovers to freedont of TAB ANSWlll.IN•
IUllAU taln counsel. tell his side of the story. assembly, freedom of speech
The board, con•ened Oct. 10 and fredom to "worship" 935.7777
after national m a g a z i n e :;;~pe~r~fonn~~an~ces~·;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;J=:;=:;=:;=:;:.=~~~~~j
articles alleged that prisoners 3 J\len Praised·~-,_,..,,.,.,._ .. ,._ .. ,.. .... -.. ,.. ..
were brutally treated, is 11
meeting in executive session For Rescue . •• ST. JOHN THE DIVINE EPISCOPAL ~ to review testimony. N o
further hearings, which were SAN DI~ (AP) _ Eight I 204l Ora"fl:, Costa Mesa
1
.
Ing a moUon by. ~nseJ , for
the university's Board or
Regents that the case be
transferred to Alameda Coun-
ty, corporate home . or the
unJvenity for mare than a
century. ·
Pacht. · after refusing the
chanie Of venue motion, ruled
Oct. 20 that· Angela Davis, 25,
an a5sist.3nt phllosoj>hy pro-
~ssor at the University's Los
AngeJts·cainpus, had been Im-
. propetly dismissed by the
regents solely on the ground
she was an acknowledged
member of the Communist
party.
Miss Davis, a Negro, later
Gunmen Rob
' Toll Bridge
closed to the public, were crewmen of the guided missile
planned and the dale ol com-destroyer Parsons ha,. been CH,RISTMAS EVE.-7:00 P.M. S. S. program
pletion was undetermined. I ed ' tu to· tlle Callfomia Supreme pra s . by their skipper for I and pageant '
Court. rescum& all 11 men from a I !
The initial suit,.i taxpay.er's ''"' p h d tuha boat thai sank after coi-10:30 P.M. Carol singing I
action, was filed by three "OlllaD U S e lidlng with the Parsons. I 11 :00 HOL y. EUCHARIST
UCLA professors and two The !ZS.foot vessel Ortent I
slodents. Miss Dav~ also join· By Pup, J)ies , ~k-•0bout.,. Ion ~IO m~~':,"01111~ I CHRISTMAS DAY-10:00 a.m. Fomily Euchorist ! ed as a plaintiff. ..v ""J'I,': If ~
Padlt s'aid the firing of Miss VENICE (AP) -Police say Southern California c o a s t . ~--•••---••WllWWllJ1tl(WMl'.-.!td!
Davis ~ause of party af-a 3-year-old boy told them bisli"';;;;======;::;=;;;;:;;;;:;;::;;;::;;;:;;;==========::;:::::;:::::;:::~~;'.I
filiation 11as a vlo11i.Uon or the grand,mother was puShed to
IS\ and 14th Aniendments to her death ·into the· backyard
lhe U.S. Constitution. swiminlng pool by the family's
Should l;ler supporters fail to St. Bernard puppy, which
win their appeal tn the weighs 125 pounds and is 'con-
California Supreme Court, the sidered friendly.
case pr~amably will be tried The drowned grandmother,
again i11' Alameda County A.melii Pleltie, 54, of nearby
SUperipr 1<10urt. ~ El Segundo, was babysitting
Obsirvtk n0ted meantime, with her grandson, Paul, cm
that dela)"S in setting a trial Monday. Authorities said she
date m Alameda County could ~·as found face down in the
allow tht regents to again pool and was dead on arrival
move against Miss Davis. _af a hospital.
I .
Dr. Lov•Roy Elder
OPTOMETRIST ·
i WESTCLIFf PLAZA
. Jrvlno, N-rt llHch 642.0720 ----------
I J
•••y·c•r• ectiv•~w•er
for
men end boys
1 .. t minute gift ldeos:
eulom1tic umbreH011 group therapy
91mis1 ~jon w1Uet11 uniqut
watchbands.
1 fe1hl•A iflt"', ,_,.~ ~esh * 644°1070
lte11ll:e111eri•er4 '* "'''''' cht 'f•
!)'IL 'f PILOT j
.. +
QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES
I
FOR YOlJR SHOPPING CONVENIENCE
ALLDAY .
* ** * ·t. -
Wednesday
Decembe ~24
CHRISTM AS
EVE
. .
CLOSED THURSDAY * CHRISTMAS DAY *
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LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
OVER THE COUNTER
•'
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Complete.-New Yorli Stock List
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DAii. Y l'ILOT
Monday's Closing
•
Prices-Complete New York Stock Exchange List
Stocks in Decline 1
As Trading Slight
1
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. - --... -. --.. -------------------------------~------------.... ----.... --... --.... ---..... -----·-----------~
f 0 DAILY PILOT Tucsda)', De«mbtr 1J, 1969
SA Council.11aa1a Declares Judge V oUl,s Paper Ban
Humru1 Relatio11s Not a Review Board FULLERTON -A Fullerlon -wtilch heavily mlxu low The oUicial also I a I d...
city ordinance aimed at IH:ll• _.can advutislng In with Its delivery employes ar! told to "'1
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of Ille DallY P'tltl lllH
SANTA ANA -City Coun-
cilman Jerry Patterson says
he believes he has a wor,kable
Solution to the problen\S which
art plaguing the fonnallon or
Santa Ana's proposed Human
Relalion s CommJssion .
Jn an interview PaUerson
said the ordinance creating
the commission could be
defeated v.•hen it comes up for
a final vote early next year
because , t h re e councilmen
' have Voiced their opposition to
the commission having the
power to subpoena witnesses.
"The basic ctincem u•ith
subpoena power is the fact
that, if the commission has
Ille pov.'er, it might bee-0me a
police review board ? r
disciplinary board for city
employes," he e:itplained .
''The best solution for this
problem is to state in the
ordinance that the commission
shall not be a poHce or city
Marriage
Licenses
DEATH NOTICl':.'i
BUCHAN AS
• •obtort 8ucrr1n.an. 21111 IMNl• L•"•·
t-lurotlntlon StlOC~. S!<vlC"O• Dtndin• 11 SMI"" Mor!utry.
HUlSTON
l'reOerldt crrrl1 >tul1toti, "'' '6. er ~ &.YVi.-,.., Sat1!1 Af\I. Oflf ol
rfat;l'h, DKe...t>rr tt. SurvivM b"r ton,
•khlrd W. Hulston. ol lnrl""' moll\· er·!rr-l1w, Mr1. W. G. CerTlt r. Co.-
,,.. Mllr; trnolhe<l •"" si1l-ln·l1w.
Mr. •"" Mn. O.lr Ct~: Mr. •I'd Mrt. W. C1rtter. WHl Cevln1; Mr.
'"" Mrs. DoNld C1r!i.r, Ten...,•stt; IWft M<>tl...,. ""' -nit"tt. Sr~ltts. wean...,..,.. 10 m . s1tt: trr1~1. l5l'll e. c""'' Hlorrw~y. Coron. dr! M1•. Interment, Pacilk Vltw Mtm0r111
Ptrll. Ft l'!'lilv suott1•1 1rro1r wlsrrlnt
to m 1 ~ e memori.1 corurll>l/Tlon•,
Jl!ff•t COtltrlbu!t lo ll•t 8ul10ln• Fund oA SI. Jorrn 1rrr Olvlne Eplsc&oel Church OI t0111 Mrse. 81111 Morlu· arv, Oitt"tlors.
STUART
Jaf Stuerf. 3SS lrrl J.ve., L1vun1
S•etrr. 011>e ol r1r11rr, De<em~r 11.
$1.lrvivM bY .on, llOOtrt H. Stuflrl,
oA cosr. M11e; dt utM1r. M,., 81•·
~rt J. kinvon. test1 M11e: 11~
•randch!ldren. Servlcef. Wednt1d1y, l PM. Shelftr L111un1 Btech Mortutrv
th~I. Pr!v1te enlombmenl to IOI·
low I! M1lro1e Abbey. F1ml!v IU!I•
o n l1 "'°" within• lo makt mt"Tl<lritl conlrlbullor>s, 1 ie11t contrll>ult to 1rr1
Amerlc1n tine.,. Socittv. Sl>eller
L1ouna llt1err Morlu•rv, Oirtcttirs. . ' WARDELL 11\innlt Wtrdtll. Ru idt<il of Ph~nb,
Arlron1. St nr1tfl, Wl!'dM!dav. 10 J.M.
Sml!Pls Chfli>el. ln!trmen1. Good Sl'leP·
herd temtterv. Smlth• Morlllarv, 0 1-
rt"tlors,
WILLETT
Es!her J. Wlllt tt. 41• Clllf Orivt,
L1tun1 Beien. Otte of oeeth, Otc. It, $UrvlvHI by IOl'll, Albert V. Wllltl!
Jr., ot P..,n1y1V1nl1; dluvrrter. Mrs.
Etll'ler J. Gordon, Ollt11'1om11 flv1
vra!>dch!!dren •nrl ''"'" 11re1l·Ort!>d· Ch!ldt1n. !>ervitts ......... ~Id MOnd1Y,
1 PM. S~fftr Laount 8t1crr Morfutrv crr11•el. tnTrrmen1, Melrou Ab~y.
ARBUCKLE & SON
Westeliff l\1ortuary
'27 E. 17th St.. Costa l\lesa
616-4811 • BALTZ MORTUARIES
Corona del !\far OR i-9451
Costa rt1esa All S-UU • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
lit Broadw1y, Costa MtSI
LI W33• • Oil.DAY BROTHERS
Hu.atlngton Velley
l\1orluary1
17911 Beach Blvd.
Hunlington Beacb
IU-7771 • PACIFIC VJE\V
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery e l\tortuary
Chapel
SIOO Paclffc View Drive
Newport Btach, California
111.r.oo • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
HOME
1911 8GlA Ave.
Wtstmlu&n 113-35!5 • SBEnER MORTUARY
Lopmallacb 414-ISH
&ua.-1< OUlll • SMrJU!' MORTUARY
C7 Wat1 St.
Hudmrtmo Bue--S..ly is Top Bananas
On Any Comics Page
•
employe review board. That's
'\\•bat we have the personnel
review board for,"
Formation of the com·
mission has been dogged by
controversy $ince Nov. 25
when the Human Relations
Formation Committee sub-
mitted their report to the city
council. .
In it. the committee said
there is definitely a need for a
human relations commission
in Santa Ana "to prov,ide an
outlet for grievances" of
minorities In the areas of
housing. emp loyment. educa-
tion, transportation, city pr~
.grams, and communications.
City attorneY \Vllliam Mock
"'as ordered last Monday night
to draw up the ordinance after
a four-hour council hearing.
The council approved the
formation of the commission
"in principle" in a four to
three vote,
Mock said the t h r e e
dissenters, Vice !\fayor Wade
Herrin and Couocllmeo J.
Ogden ?.1arkel and Vernon S.
Evans. voted "no" largely
because of U1e problem in-
volv ing subPQena power.
According lo the attorney,
the city charter provides ''all
appointive boards and . com·
missions shall have the power
to compel the attendance o(
\Vitnesses" in hearings of in·
vestigations conducted by lh at
commission.
"They {the councilmen op-
posed) didn't \\.'ant the com-
missi'on to tum into a police
revie\v board," Mock said.
"But you can't abrogate the
power of the cha rter by
ordinance ."
Cowicilman Patterson said a
compromi se plan was
necessary because councilman
\Vatter Brooks who voted for
the. commission is resigni ng
his seat in order to move out
o! his district.
Wllh Brooks gone from the
council, f'atterson said, the
vote to approve the ordinance
\VOuld be a th r ee -thr ee
deadlock.
Patterson said he has tWo
other alternaUvts for the
council to consider.
"The lirst alternative is to
convince the opposition that
subpoena power isn't that bad.
lt has nothJng to do with en.
forcement ," he commented.
' "Or. we could say in the
ordinance that the commission
was not lo use the subpoena.
And it may be after a year or
so the COWlcit may want to
remove the restraint," said
Patterson.
The councilman said he was
convinced the subpoena pro-
blem won't be as bad as the
opposition members think it
will.
"After all," he concluded,
"'vhy thro w the baby out with
the bath water?"
Superviso1·
Assistant
Quits Post
led 1h tree ideas -began last 1 · I In t e lm ~ row--.1.way newspapers -N embtr and the Fulltrton s op eav g c o P 1 • . ;
forbidding their distribution or&n.nce would have become' medlat.el~ at. homes where •\
without homeowner pmn1,.. erfed.lve last Friday. residc1lt1 complain that they ·1
are unwanted. •; alon -has been temporarily 'l'he publisber:s bypass most , -==========,
nullified by federal cityUtterlawa byhangingthelr ,f',
authorities, Tempo magaz.ine on doors of A THOUGHT
Judge Charles Carr ordered homes. . >,
Executives of Sunday Mat! FOR TODAY 1 •. b~n on. enforcement of the Inc. appeared re~ntly before ,..
c11y s 1nt1·llller law Friday in the Cool.i Mesa City Council to f
U.S. Disb1ct Court in Loi spell out their operation and iThtt c•~ nrMI•'''" wtlt Mtl-... ., • , .. ~. .
Angeles , pending a Jan, 12 suit make sure they were com· -"· v.,., t·
challenging it. · ply}ug with all city laws. . . City A'ltorney Roy June satd The 1u1t ~as filed by SUnday at the time that the c.ity had
Mall Inc., 1shers of the Tempo TIO authority to prohibit the1
l'•ES!NTEO ,.., A
l'UBLJC SEltVICE EVEll:'I' OA'I' IV: I
' LH Roofing Co. t:r
( Sunday Maga.tine, which is distribution. as long as the u "'"" 111 t11•Mtn
widely distributed throughout company paid IU proper 111, s~wtor av.. ta-I'm ~
Orange County. 1.,;'~ice~11S<;:;~1~ee~·';·==========:=::=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:~r
yudge earr was presiding in BIBLE THOUGHTS r the absence of Judge Framls •
\Vhalen, who will hear the Jan. CHOOSIM• TO Oll'fl Rt9•rdi"9 Chri1t, ~-
12 case after he returns from th• 118LE ••¥•· "Tho1o19h Ht w•r• 1 So~, SANTA ANA -Bernard F. vacation. v•t LE~RNED H• eb1cll•nc-•nd-H•
Tieman, executiv.e assistant to Robert Lawton, attorney for bt(•m• th• •1.1thor of •l•rn•I ,,1v,tiol'I
0 C t S · Sunday Mail Inc., ·•arges 111· 1.111to 111 th•m thal OIEY Him", H•b. !l;I· range OU n Y uperv1sor "'' 9. Although J1 1u1, LEARNED ob.dion ct,
\Villiam Hirstein announced the Suit that Fullerton's newly H• n•~•r on(t DISOBEYED. As H• 9rew
F 'd h I · ~nacted anti-litter law ln-1.1p, H, lt•rn•d to ob•y rtth1r th•l'I t•
Coiinty Sets Policy
Of Fair Employment
J·ail Escape
Brings Term
For Convict
r1 ay e was eavmg county 1 · I r1nges on reedom of the SIN. H• COULD HAVE r1belltd, b1.1t Ho cliii"'t, H• 11id to God,
service. press by interfering with free "-not '' I will but 11 Thou wilt", M•tf. 26;lf.
A Tustin resident, Tiernan distribution of ideas. Jelh• ~11111 t• hii ptopl1, "-choo1• you thi1 ele v whom yt will
will become director of Publication of the magazine 11rv-•1 form• •nd my hou1•. w• will 11tvt th1 Lord", Jo1h,
24;15 S.111-' 11icl, "l1hold, to obey i1 b•tl•r thin 11(rific1-'', marketing with Voorheis, Tri· I $,m, 15:22 .... Ill 11;cl, "-why ,,fl ,YI Mo, Lor d. lo1cl i nd
die and Nelson, Inc., ot H d H • ] 00 NOT th• th l"'1• whi(h I 1•y?". Al10 "lf v• lovo M1, kt•P Newport Beach when his ea S 08pll8 My comm•ndm1"h", Ilk. 6:46, Jl'I. 14;15 1. H1 r1, Ho in1•p•r1bly
•
By T0!\1 BARLEY
01 IM 0•11, ,lie! Sltff
SANT A ANA -Orange Coun·
ty has gone on record as being
what its board of supervisors
savs it always has been -an
eqUat opportunity employer.
They put no obstacles in the
way of Personnel Director
William Hart and voled 5 to 0
for adGption of a written
policy that will, Hart claims,
allow his personnel office to
spearhead a drive aimed at
"converti:.1g much of the raw
manpower that \\'e h.a v e
around into competent cougty
\.\'Orkers rather than restrict
ourselves to the fully trained
and near fully trained."
Backed by the board \Vas
Hart"s argument that "our
role a s <1 majo r
employer. , .needs to be cleat·
Jy defined in terms of our soc·
ia l responsibility to the entire
community.
"\Ve beiltve," Hart said,
''that development and better
use of available manpower
ca n improve go~·ernment ef.
Ne'v Judge
Welcomed
To Court
SANTA ANA Judge
Robert A. Banyard Thursday
was fonnally welcomed to the
Orange County Superior Court
bench in colorful ceremonies
witnessed by fell(}\V judges,
members of the Orange Coun· '
ty Bar Association and the in-
ductee 's family and friends.
Presiding Judge Samu e I
Dreizen took the bench in the
crowded master c a I e n d a r
co urtroom for the swearh1g in
and enrobing of the court's
21st jud ge. Tributes \\.'ere paid
to Judge Ban yard .by fello\v
jurislS and members of the
bar.
Judge Banyard, 55, Santa
Ana. takes over the $31.816
post vacated with the retire-
ment this year of Judge Karl
Lynn Davis of Newport Beacli.
A Republican, he ""'as ap-
pointed l\\.'O weeks ago by Gov.
Ronald Reagan.
Judge Da v is , 68, retired.
Sept . 30 after serving 12 years
on the Superior Court bench.
OC Cities
Plant Trees
In Trihi1te
SANT A ANA - A project to!
e n c o u r a g e tree-plantings I
throughout Orange Count y to I
honor Califon1ia's Bicentennial
is meeting with enthusiastic
response. according to t-.1rs.
\\leston \\1alker, chairma',1 of
the beautification committee
of the Orange Cou nty
Bicentennial Committee.
Almost all the incorporated
cities in the county already
have planted th ei r com·
memorative trees. t.1 rs .
\Valker reports, many ac·
complishing tht task even
be.fort the Bicentennial Year
officially ope.ned in July.
ficiency, en hance m e r i t
employment and provide an
avenue of opportunity to
the ... disenfranchised mem·
bers of our community.'"
Hart dismisses objections
that implementation of the
policy could lead lo heavier
county costs in training of
unskilled \VOrkers and the time
it cost by diverting trained
workers for instruction of the
new employes.
A1any trained workers hired
by the county use much of
their lime, he said, to look
around for better prospects.
And he stressed that the un·
trained ha nd who becomes a
skilled county worker brings a
se,1se of dedication a n d
responsibility to his duties and
the employer who has placed
him in the post.
Ha rt's program included ex·
pansion of the \VIN (Work
Incentive Program) fo r
welfare recipients in l''hich
eligible workers on lhe welfare
payroll are trained for jobs
that will eventually take them
Qff the rolls.
Youth Corps, high school
dropout programs and sum-
mer \\·ork training programs
\vill also be expanded in a bid
to draft futu re county man·
power from efforts that are.
I-fart claims, already highly
produclive.
1-lart said his first duty
under the program authorized
by the board to place his ai1ns
and objectives before all coun-
ly department heads and en·
courage each to look beyond
''traditional aims and goals"
in hiring county personnel.
At the heart of all future
hiring and training progra1ns
\1'ill be, he said, the ne,vly
w r i t t e n county policy of
equal opportunity for every
racial, et hnic and cultural
group .''
:~ Therapi8ts
Join Center
ORANGE -Three new
lht'ropists have been added to
the ~tc:ff of the Easter Seal
P.chab1lilation Center for Crip·
pied Children and Adults.
TnPy are Mrs. Cecily Long
or Orange. an occupational
1herapisl. Mrs. Patric i a
i\lar tin of Laguna Be ach, also
an ccc11pational therapist, and
~1iss Nancy Herman o l
Ne.vpt't l Beach .. a speech
pathoio~ist.
1 conntcttd LOVE •ncl OB EDIENCE. lov• i1 d.m .. n1lr1t•cl by resignation becomes effective ORANGE _ Santa Ana eb•clitnct.
..:·SANTA ANA _ A Downey Jan. I, l9'lO. anesthesiologist Dr. Charles Do YOU o~•Y Chri1t, •• you li¥1 ''"'" cl1y *•·cl1y? H, .. , vo•
man who bolted to freedom Tiernan has been with the Ziegler has won .election as LEARNED th;,7 H• 11id, "-t••~h .11 "''ions, b•pli1i"' tl!1m-1,,cl!in9 thel!'I to ftb1trv• 111 thirr111 wh•hoev1r I h1v• eomm•nd• \vhen friendly visitors board of su pervisors for three staff president of St. Joseph's ,4 vo-", M.n. 21;11.1 v.
tlnscre\\'ed the bolts of the years following his retirement H 't I · Or ·t ospl a m ange, t was an· VISIT u•, 1tud., th• lllLE with ut. Chur•h of Chri1t, .211 w. W•I·
plate glass di vider in the after 24 years service in the ed •·• Dr z· I ton St., Co1l1 M1t1, C,lif. 92627. Ph . 541·5711, 54S.1441, Orange County J ail vi~ors' nounc wuay. · ieg e.r 646.5761,
lounge has been fou nd guilty ,_N_a-:v:y-:. =-::--=:-::-:-:-:-:--~~wi~l~I ~ta~k~eio~ff~ice~J~a~n~. ~l.;::='::::~::=:::=:=:::::::=:;=:;=:::=:=:==~~~~~=§~=='; of felony escape. J ~
Charles ~ugene Kell, 22, 1
1
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I ~ dre\V that ruling f r o m • · ~
Superior Court Judge William 1•: .CLID .& SAVE \. 1~ 'I ~ Speirs following a non.jury · I: ~;~1/~~~~~rc~r1~:~,~~ 1 K MAC PHARMACY ~ for sentencing and a jail term. :•. • •• . • KeU was \Vaitlng shipment
to state prison last Aug. 30 I
when he was freed by friends
who quickly capitalized on the
tota l absence of guards in the
jail's visiting room. Downey
police restored Kell to the jail
nine days later.
Kell will nol know until J an.
12 if Judge Speirs will allow
him to serve the new jail term
con currently vdth the one·to-
five·years spell he drew with
his conviction on armed rob·
bery charges.
'Lagunan
Fac es Trial
In Fraud .
• • • • •• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
3333 NEWPORT ILVD., NEWPORT BEACH
I Across From City Hall I
AN INTRODUCTORY OFFER TO OUR
NEW PHOTO RNISHING SERVICE.
•
ANY 12 EXPOSURES
KODACOLOR ROLL WILL BE DEVELOP·
ED & PRINTED FREE!
WITH THIS COUPON
DECEMBER 26 & 27, 1969 ONLY
• • •
•1 • ~ • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • I • •••••••••••••••• * ••••••• i'ii" ........ -.-.-•••••••••• 1.
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LOS ANGELES -Curtis
\Va y11e Lint of Laguna Beach
1nust face trial Jan. 28 in Los
Angeles Superior Court on
charges !hat he deVauded an ~~[;,,.,m;iii .. ~'~'~'*"~~~.'ii~~u~1~wliii•~-~ .. ~·~m;.;.,;;,;;u~ .... ~-iiim;;;; .. ~iiiiiiiiiii'iiiiMiMiiiiiiimii<Rii>?ie;;;>;;;r;;;;;;;;<,;iiiiiii~mrn~~. ~iiii;i:~=~i>i:~ii:i;;;J;ij, .. 1 elderly wido\v of more than ~· ~'. :~~l~~::~~~~1rc~."~:· DAILY PILOT CARRIERS ~
Judge William Keene
granted bail for Lint. 40, of 60 -:Y
Blue Lagoon, in setting the p.
1970 trial da te. ~
Lint was arrested at his 1 Beverly Hiils office last Sept. ~
25 following an investigation 1
y,•hich allegedly establisl'led I~
that he prepared the worthless '
documents for Mrs. Bertie ~
f\1ae Frederick. Officers said ~
the 66·year-old lVidow, in fa il· ~·
ing health. wa s persuaded by ~
Lint to provide for her two
older sisters in the event or
her death.
Prosecution {'vidence in·
dicates that Lint accepted
nearly $97.000 from fl.1rs.
Frederick last April for the
\vorthless policy. He later sold
her an equally \.\'orthless bond
for $40,000, it is alleged.
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HONOR ROLL
Tiit: DAILY PILOT is .proud of its corps Qf young salesmen who deliver the newspaper to uour door. These
young 111en are the cream of the community. Each month, the best of them will be selected for listing on tht
lf ouor Roll. Each carrier !isted here has obtained at least four new customers during the past month, had no
mol"e than one customer complaint for the montT~ and must have paid his bitt for the 11ewspapers he bou ght
"wholesale'' on time. Nunieral iii front of star (*) preceding his Mme indicates ·11umber of consecutive month,y
tliat carrier has been on the Honor Roll.
'""' Swift o.nnv l1o1rl en
Sklp F111i•r Milft Whool1r
John 81rtholomt1o1 Ri,k w11,,r,,
To"' Schu1i•r M•t T,1k1
D1 rvl Oitr1'lldtr
Mllf1 He"thor'll M1rk P1qu1t
L•n• Joh"1011 Ric•y Herford
"
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l ri111 Tlllt Ad for •
Si•ftn lltlich
R1ndy Fo1t••
T1cl lr1clwell
J•rr r c11.1on1y
St1vt Smith
Edwin Stodcl•rd Gr1nt L.M,,1,,
Jiff Th,,;,"
lri111 Sh1r91r J•rrv Smith
Ro91r H1rri1
Etlc R .. 11
o.n"ii lieli
John Mh11r
''' Cr1ir1
2•Nicl-Hod9tt ?•R•ncly Con1t1nl
2•W1rr•n Ecclt1
2•J•v C1rl101'1
2'Gui Vo9I
11'Mik• J,h"1t1n
2•Jo1 G11v
l•W1v"• l1rltf,lt l'Roit•rl Holt•nd ]•Andy Wh11ton
l ~D,P111i1 L111ch•n
J•l ruc• Ottrand1r
4~Ptny Moody
4'Jok11 C•ldw 1U
41Ml•• Luci• ' 4°81rn•y Snydtr
4•H,ctor Gon1•f11
s•o1~id Collin•
S'DAv• R11•1'•llt
6'"Mik• R11kdtli1
7"'Phil lun11
a~scott T '"'II
a~Robi" Tul!1n•rt
11W•vn• ~nt•n
FREE
CAR WASH
WITH •ILL·UP' 0, UNION G-•soLINI II G•llo~ Mi~.)
EAST 1111< STREIT -i}'"
WESTCllFF
SHOPPING
CENTER
Lido Car Wash
Ill WT 11111 (IT lll'IHIO com ~ • 146-lllf
t
PACIFtC COAST HIGHW~Y
Al.L MAJOR CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
OPEN DMLY, SUNDAYS AND HOLID AYS
OffH lrpJ,. Je11, 1 S, 1970
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••
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s1, .. , Crill y
Jim w.rcl
D•vicl Smith
Jim Sh,~k1
llill Ba rritt
St•v• L• R11•
Stev• l1 k•1
Ed lop•1 Sl1v1 Pe vno l illy loyd
G1ry l ricl1••i•ck Allon Fro•ll'lml!n9
S1, ... , 1'11!•
D•vid P1ulto11
D&n111 S•1lor
,.
i••r•d o.v1cl1011 i•u .11 e.11,,1i,,
2•Cr&i9 ftltm•11 ?•Phil Wit!
2•John G11mah11it~
2'L1nord lri9ht
29Ktft Hower
Carrier of The Month
5* DAVID COLLINS, NEWPORT BEACH
P.1l,lhf from hit fln t MOflih Oft tho l•lt -and th.t ..... fi¥t ll'IOfltht ,,. -o ... ;c1 Coll!"'· I 2, ion of Mr. anti Mn. Ot.•I Collins of 1141 "'°'t-W11tbovni• P'l•t•, Ntw,ort lt•t.h, he1 mtilo
ihe DAILY PILOT C•rrl o1t Honor ~oll. A per1•1'11l'<frion,f of Scott ft1toll'1, 1111 monlh't Cor·
ri•r of Tht Month, D,••icl ntl •nl1 fo llowed hit fri•11tl, 111 .. th• "wi11n•r't t ire.I•," itvt •Ito 901 hli t~t1i1r jolt b1c1u .. of Scott"• rtctmmen4•tle11 •fld •Ire th•re• Scoff'• i11le111t 1111 troplc•I
fi1h (both boyt 11t• t•rrftt rtul• profih I• ltuy fitl1 •n4 ·~11lpll'l•fll lot lhtir homo 'l"'';1tnu),
01v:rl •ff•nd• Li11u l11 J1111ler Hith ,Stlrtool "'htre ht 11 ••ti.,.. I" SOS fSl•Mp Ou! h1pitlityl, 1 clu b which ft9hft clrvt obu10 '"'e"t ""ftf P.•P'•·
I o~Don John1011
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Tree-planthtgs along t h e
Orange Coast have included
Siar Pines. planl<d by Laguna
Beach at the Canyon entrance
to the city: an ACa cla
B11leyana , planted by San
Clemente at the Community
Center Pl ayhouse : an
Evergreen Pear at san Juan
Capistrano: a Pine tree at
Newport Beach City Hall; a
Ca.Mry island Pint Jn Murdy
Paric at lluntington Beach: a
Cedrua deodara al Fountaili
Valley's elvlc cenltr: 1 W11.90n
ff()IJf at WHtmbmer ,oo a Carob 1roe al Seal Beach. 11..------------------~ •
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TuclOly, Otc.t mtMr 23, 19~9 DAILY PILOT JJ
40 1 Me.n ·f.or 60 Minutes-That's the Vikings '
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Toomey·
Atblete'
i Of Year
I .
I By GLENN WIUTE
I ' Of tM Otltr NII a.llff
.. NEW YO~ (,\P) -If tlle weather
outside Is atormy, the Minnesota Vildngs
appear better equipped to let It snow
.SalW'day tban . lhe Los Anll~les. Rams.
Bud Gran.l's Vikings are a bJll control
i.am wlJll a Purple Gang t<ady !o·d~mp
Roman Gabriel In the nearest snowbank.
Joe Kapp voiced the motto of the Vik·
in.gs as "Forty for Sixty", a symbol that
translates to 40 men for eo minutes of ac-
tion.
The Vikings are ckep in running backs
with 'Dave Osbom and Bill Brown up
front, capably backed by Clint Jones and·
Oscar Reed.
Jn fact, Grant bas been going to Reed
more and more in recent days because he .
club in rushing lnSwvlay's loss at AUan-
la.
Minnesota built up tremendous momen~
tum durilfg the-•.season alter Jo.sing · the
opener in New York in the closing
&eeonds.
They rolled up 12 in a row, including a
20-13 victory over Los ,Angeles on Lhe
West Coas t Dec. 1, before they wert stop-
ped by the Falcons, 10-3. They come into
their biggest game after a loss but the
Rains have dropped three in a row.
triumph in the Central Division hinted of
more to come.
They went down &Winging in the mud at
Baltimore last Dec., 24-14, but they are
back for another shot and the Colts are
outside looking in.
Some experts have poked fu n at Kapp's
\VOb bly passes and discounted the Vik·
ings' air game but they had to eat their
\\'ords when the battle-scarred Kapp
ruined Baltimore in September wilb
seven touchdown passes.
When he goes to the Iona ball It usually
is to Gene Washington, tbe fleet third·
year man from Michigan State or John
Henderson, a former Detroit Lion. Kapp
also likes to throw to John Beuley, a 6-3,
235-pound tight end.
The Vikings can rumble on the ground.
Osborn has come back all the way from
knee surgery and has gained 200 yards
more than Brown who his been sharing
the job with Reed in recent weeks.
Jones, behind Osborn, remains a decep-
tive breakaway threat.
Grady Alderman, laat holdover frorq
the orJginal expansion team, and Jl~
Vellone man the left side ol the ollen.slvq
line, an area both Osborn and Brown like
to hll.
Mick Tingelboff, the All-League center,
and Milt Sunde and Ron Yary, the N.:i. 1
draft pick of ltea, are the others.
The Purple Gang is the driving force on
the ball club, an aggressive front foul'
that destroys quarterbacks. Carl Eller,
the left end, and Jim Marshall, the right
tnd, usually lead the charge but Alan
!>age, the right tackle comes strong. .
I BlU Toomey, decathlon great and
1 farmer Laguna Beach resident, bu
I beeri named Soulhem Calllonda
I alhle!A! of the year by Helms
-AthleUC AsSociaUon, it wp an-
\ ll<IWlCed today .
· •tarts quieter than 'Brown. Beed led the '
The Vikings, as an expansion club,
never have won a conference title, Jet
alone a league championship or a Super
Bowl. It has been a long haul since they
entered the league in 1961 but last year's
Brcause Kapp, 6-foot-3, 215 pounds, is
not quick of foot and is a Jillie slow gel·
ting back to set up, he often is a target of
an enemy blitz. Consequently, many of
his passes are dumped off to the running
backs -Osborn, Brown, Reed and Jones.
Grant has not hesitated to take Kapp
out ol a game when he is gaing bad and
replace him with Gary Cuozzo. He did 'it
against both Green Bay and Pittaburgb in
November games.
Gary Larsen, the left tackle, is the
policeman to k,.p thingo honest on the
run.
J The 31-year-old Santa Birbai'a
~ 1 educa~. ;oms such formerly
• honored S<>ulhland athletes .a• o. J.
: Simpson, Deacon Jones, Mike Gar· ' I rett, Johnny 'Lonfldoll, S a rid y , I Koufax. Jim ~atty, ,Rafe r ,, Johnson, Duke Snlder, Mel Patton,
I Glenn Davis Jack Kramer and
James J. Jeffries, ilmong others.
Toomey competed on a rigid
tcbtdule ol competition this ye·ar, ·
I performing his grinding ·event ·10
times. inclurung his filth ·~ I lriumpli In the NaUonal AAU meet.
He also l<flllled worlcl recwd
bolder: ·Kurt Btndl.b1 during a meet
I Staged in Germany, then set his
sigjlts .on erasing Bendlin's roark -1 a Cinal goal before Toomey bung up
his spikes pennanently.
Twice he vied in special meets at
UCLA and each time came close.
'The first meet was early' in October
: · and he obliterated the American
. record wi1lt !,2'11 points .
But he was still 43 poil\f,r shy of
becoming the new bolder of the
world standard.
T\ro. weeks later be returned to
Westwood. Again be feU short, this
time with 8,270.'
Then be decided to give l!libody
a chance 'to recover him the
demanding tell l!IO he avoidi!d cdm-
petitlon for siJ: weeKs, although he
went, through a demanding con·
ditioning pe!i.od. .
Finally, on Dec. 11).11 at UCLA,
, William Anthony Toomey reached
bis Objective.
Performing flawleosll'.-R\)\ bav-
tng • weak event among .lhei~ ~
Toomey cbalked 111?·8,417 poinls·to
leave ~ndlln'a marl<, In the dust.
"Not bad for a~foqner 168-pound
college athlete," be quipped shortly
aft<r be leorned be .bad smuhed
Ille-Id record. Toomey also Woq:the Olympic
gold medal, defeaiUJi 'the world's
best at Mexico aiy·~ montbs(ago;
His parents still ~de in Laguna
Beach.
Bruins Hope
'l'o Hold Pete
To Average
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Louisiana
.State's Tiger basketball team has· been
called a one.man show since Pete
Maravich ts leading the nation )n scorlng,
popping in nearly 50 points per game.
But tile only coacll to hold a victory
over the Tigers this season says Pete is
not a ball hog who shoots because he
wants the headlines.
"Basketball is a team game and
Maravich is a team thinker," said Bob
Boyd, whose University of Southern
Califoi-rua team stopped LSU 101·93 last
week in Baton Rouge •
Maravich and friends come to Los
Angeles tonight for a game with the
second-t:anked UCLA BruiDs, whose
coach John Wooden says he'll use no
special defenses.
·"We'll try to hold him .to 'his average
and not let the rest Of h. score vety
muCh. I personaliy don't care if one
player scores a lot of points against us,
just as long as the other team has fewer
poi1!ts than UCLA at tbe end," Wooden
said recently.
Wooden once remarked that Pete
Maravich was "the fine&t. ball·handler
I've· seen," and tonight hii Bruins have a
chahc• lo ,.. ·c1osp up what Wooden and
Boyd mean.
"Pete wants LSU. to win and he ii doing
everythmg. he be can to win. Believe me,
I think that ISU would not win as much
if he didn't dO what he's doing. This is
their :way cl, winning and he's doing as
bis coodl·tellli him. ...'. •
"l 1hink they're winning more games
tJris way than they would have any other
way. This year he has. a bit more help on
the boiirds and they 've only Jost one
game.''
"·
In Sports World
. {., . ~, -··'
Time Agaiii to Play Santa
. With, Approp~ate Gifts
With Ch~tmas ol\ly )iours· aw~ 'It's
tifPe to divulge this co!Jimn's ~ua~'! Iii\ which has approprfately been d · up, for. Orange Coast area sch?ols P,l .•'a
r.1V m1sctllaneous teciplenta. ·
·uc IRVINE -Permanent restraint
from ever fielding a football team and a
mosaic likeness of Dan Aldrich on each or
the campus' buildings, plus a Picture· o'
hbn at center court in the gynr.
'ORANGE COAST COLLEGE-A
cbristmas party With Gclden We!.
C9ilege's coaching staff.
9QLDEN WEST COLLEGE - A spor'
pOblicist.
,'SADDLEBACK COLLEGE-A 4 0 0
D\lfter hurdle race between football coat . '
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WHITE
WASH
.. ¥LUU I ¥bbUUUJIU41 ,,
~e Hartman and basketball cotch
Ipoy Stevens.
MIKE SGOBBA. olficlal -A m .. sized
pkture of hlmseU .to carry in· his .wallet.
. 'HAL SH ERB ECK'. Fullertoll JC grtd
c:Nch-A federal investigation for losing
a)'ootball game with all the talent he had
~~ the wide area from which he draws
U!fl talent.
DAN GURNEY-Completing a race. Joo LAVEii-American c:ltilenlhip.
~y EMERllON'-A plcturt' of ltod ........ ' '
: ~OllN ~ IN ]!* In tho ~.-.,I . ',IOllN MtKAY-c.lwertion to the
Jlwilh f~ ' ~
T01'4 PllOTR.RQ.-A npla<tm00t !or o;,ni. Dainmlt ~ yur.
jjEORGE A!J&N'-A nice job afllr
Ram• i... at 111-.. ~ACK KENT coOK!>-parldng pon '
' the Spo<ta Arenl. • I
LUTY PlllWPS-A •de io pt rid
Jim......,., Y
QOSTA . MESA HIGH-Tllo -
they Ill' is ~ to mal!e crippled
wrelt!er ·.JuaUn Ogata completely normal
a1aln ~ a flrat aid kit lor Maz Miller.
Al90 a Jjsuule for Emil Neeme.
CORONA DEL MAR HIGH-A bette·
memory fori principal Leon Meeks, who
conveniently forgets• to announce things
like his school forfeiUng a basketbal l
game to NeWport Harbor. Also, a heate·
for the gym.
EDlsbN HIGH-Recovery for footb<'
.,Jayet Sam Fuga, who suffered a broke·
neck. And, a megaphone for Bill va·.
when he talks on the telephone.
ESTANCIA HIGH-Whatever is neede.
to give the school its fint-ever winnin•
football team. And, a red velvet carpt'
for Tom Fisher to cover his sacred trac'"
an(I prottct it from unwelcome intruder:
FOUNTAIN VALLEY HIGH-A ne·
ni~.to replace Barons.
HUNTINGTON BEACH HIGH-Enoo1h
courage fat Ebner. Combs to meet me in a
one-otHJnt buteiball rematch. And hair
dye fkireytng Ken Moats.
LAGUNA BEACH HIGH-An op-
portunity to compete with IChooll of
equal enrottme,,t.
MARINA HIGH-Jim Coon to get his
old job bid< as ·athletic director.
MATER ·DEi HIGH-A new gym !or
basketball .•. a diet for Bob Woods.
MISSION VIEJO HIGH-More Ume for
.Ray Dodge so ht won't have the distinc-
Uon of being the only Orange County !oot-
ball coach not participating in voling for
•ll·leacue playen.
NEWPORT HARBOR HIGH-An oil
portrait of Lu 1-lor Wade Witts
and someone who can run 100 yarda in
lwtlwllOaeconcts.
f:,SAN ~~HIGH-Novinf !hf ,..,,_ llUJ'F.~u.,..
wmMlNsTER HIGH.:_A ll]>ldol ~IV•
1111 exhibition !or !ootl>oll <Oath BIU ll<iiWen. •thleUe director Ed Godd1ro
and traclt coach Jack fledgts.
GORDON. MORROW • .a·Estancia goU
CO.ch Ind lllllUectlsfUI polltlclaO -a
polillcol pool Iii Tunbt4, wlJ!i ..,ldence
thel'e, 100, of courwt,
JOHN (THE ~CTORl McDONOUGH,
head of Oraoce Counll' dllclali>-A -
DWI lnlnlinl lrfp wttb G!tan Wlllte.
• ~'~~~--• ···---" • .l._.._"
TIGER ROAD SHOW -Before the first half was
over, the Oteg_on State University Beavers and the
LSU Tigers· engaged in a fight in whic h almost
every mem~r of each team participated. Includ-
ed in the a~ve tunnoil are Tim Perkins, Gary
Freeman (10), Freddie Boyd, Paul Valenti, head
OSU coach direcUy behind the referee, and 1.SU's
Jeff Tribbett (33). Pete Maravicn hit 46 points to
lead the Tigers to a 76-68 viC'!ory.
Sports in Brief
Boyd: Officials
Not Calling
Goaltending
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Two Soulhem
C8.lifornia basketball coaches said Mon-
day that officials around the coontry -
and especially in Hooston -are not call-
ing vtolati~ of goaltending as Much as
they should.
Bob Boyd of the University of Southern
California and Dick Baker of Loyola
University commented that their teams
might have won at Houston last week had
officials called the illegal goalt.endlng of
center Dwight Davis.
Southern Cal Jost to the Cougars 77.73
after Loyola was dumped 116-91.
"Eigtit goaltending calls that we ahould
have gotten we did not get," said Baker.
5'xne schools do that by dealgn. And
Davit did it to us.
"He's the baclt man in a zone defense
and if a man comes in bis area. he
doesn't even play the man. He just turns
his back and waits for the ball Ind when
it-gets near the rim he swats it away and
takes his chances. And ir. Houston the
chances are good."
"Davis atlempts to block every shot
that's close to him, regardless or tl)e
flight of the ball," Boyd said. "And if he
does this a dozen or so times a game and
if the two referees call even ooe goelten-
ding, thty are due for the great abuse of
that large crowd ."
"And then being human, U they called
it every time, I'm sure after a while
they'd feel 'I just can't c.all it agai11
because they CUM at me so loud.• So I'ir.
.ure the crowd affect& the reterees. ..
Oeveland Gets a Lift,
l\.elly, Scott Okay to Play
CLEVELAND-The Cleveland Browns
got a morale boost Monday when Injuries
suffered Sunday by running backs Leroy
Kelly and Robert "Bo" Scott proved to be
minor.
The Browns. who travel lo Dallas this
Sunday to meet the Cowboys in the Na·
tional Football League's Eastern Con-
ference champion ship game, pulled Kelly
out of Sunday's 21-14 loss in New York
when he suffered a slight sprain of his
right ankle.
"It's a little sore but feeJs okay," Kelly
said Monday. "I'm sure it will be just
fine for Sunday."
Kelly, who won the NFL's rushing titles
in 1967 and 1968, didn't even bother to
keep an appointment Monday with a
team physician for x-rays and a routine
checkup of his ankle. • PITISBURGH Penn . St a te
quarterblick Chuck Burkhart claims an
alleged exchange of punches between him
and a criUc of college football was a one
sided affair.
The altercation took place last Friday
while the Nittany Lions were In Fort
Lauderdale, Fla., practicing far th eir
Orange BoYll game on New Year's Day
wi!Jt Missouri.
Police said Burkhart and Andrew
Morse, 19, of J amaica, N,Y., were in-
volved in the incident. Both were charged
wl!Jl disorderly conduct and fighting and
released on $52 bond.
Burkhart, at home for the holiday, said
he had received a bloody lip in the fight.
but never swung back. • GREEN BAY. Wis. -Cornerback Herb
Adderley, extremely disappointed over
being passed over for the Pro Bowl foot·
ball game, left town Sunday night,
saying, "I have Jost my desire to play for
Green Bay."
"I don't want to come back," Adderley
said. "I can't come back and perform 100
percent and then get a slap in the face at
the end of the year."
"This year, wthout a doubt, has been
my best year," the nine-year Packer
veteran said.
"HowevEr, playing my heart out didn't
get me any acknowledgement from my
own coaching staff." • MADI SON, Wis. -John Jardine, N~.
assistant coach at UCLA, was nam
Monday as Wisconsin's new head foot
coach. ·
Jardine, a former Purdue lineman, suO.
ceeds John Coatta who waa fired recentlt
after three losing seasons. :
Jardine· received a three-year contrac~
effective Jan. I, 1970 at $20,000 a year. . • . . '
BRUNSWICK, Ga. -A Gl)'1)l1 Countr
jury found baseball executive Charles P'~
"Phil" Howser innocent Monday of
charges that he murdered a 46-year-014
divorcee. :
The stocky Howser, sitting between hif
wife and son, bowed his head and placed
his face in his hands as the verdict wai
announced. Hb wife, Flocence, and so;
both put their arms around his shoulders.
The ~year-old Howser, president ancl
general manager cl the Charlotte, N.c.;
Hornets of the Class AA Southert
League, was charged wllh slaying Mr~
Carolyn Fraley Hogan at • Jekyll bland
motel last A~ 11. : • .
Mic4igan, Trojans Tour Disneylan~
• • •
The M1chlgJR Wolverinel met tftelr main street. The contingent stopped In front or the smaller group&. U·M players liuc~
-. Bowl <>i>Pon<ii>(,USC '!'rWan& Mon· A gayly dressed band played "The Vic-Fantasyland castle long enough for togeJller, as did Trojans. I
day -not on ttie,·tootball fiCld, but et tors.'' ~tichigan's fight ·song, then photographers to snap pictures or the ""-ntaslic .• Jt's hard to believe," e"° Disneyland. satisfied Sou thern Cal with a round of Rose queen and her court and football ' The t't"O team1' took official tours "Californ ia Here I Come:' players standing next to people wearing ch!ilmed one Wolverine as he rode on P
through jl\e fantastic .amusement park in Hund reds of spectators lined the e:irly costumes of Disney characters $UCh as special boat through the pirate's cave,
Anaheim as parl of the standard i American·tYJ)(' street as the players Pluto. Goofy, Snow White and the Seven replete with animated plrate1. i
itinerarY of Rose Bowl e-0nteslant! each wa lked curiously but proudly by. Dwarfs. and Alice Jn Wonderland. "la fnust have cost a fGl'tune to bullit
year. "Who are they, mommy'!" a little hoy Bo Schembechler, U·M's stern but af· this place," said anot.hcr, before U1s
It was as. U they had entered anoUler ask('Jti(tUgglng on his mothor ·~ miniskirt. fable coach, looked 90mewhat out of group headed toward the haunt«! tiou•
world, &l)d •ct.1.1ally they tiad. Michigan "'"1ose7are foo~ball ·ploy~rs from place as he smiled while shaking hands ol the unbeliewble park. 1 _ players, 1portJng gold blaitra, paraded Mtcht1:nn and Southern California," she with Mickey Mouse. Michigan scheduled double practice.
aide by fjde with USC'• blue coated ·answered . "They are going to play in \he Then several Dilneyland &Uides, all for today and USC coa<:h John McKaJ
pla)I.,. !or a lrlp down Disneyland'• Rose Bowl gam•." )'OUJll women, divided the pl~en up lilto schedulad two workollll lor !bl Troj ....
I , .
I
'
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•
JZ DAILY 'PllOT Tut~d!Y. Dte-tl"'b!r "'· 1~~
Jn Tou'"1te11
•• Oilers, SC Clash; . .
Monarchs 'Romp
HunUngton Beach's Oilers Oei had its ninth win in 11
and San Clemcntq_'s Tritons oulings.
collicte at 7 tonight In the )ltalph Ch@ndos Jed the
lidlifter of the second day of Monarchs in scodng with 16
, (irst rourl~ at tion in the thi«I Poinl.S rollowed closely by
annual ·Rancho A I am it o s Wemer Raes (15).
Interact basketball tourna-Chandos led as usual in re--
ment. ~. bounding for Mater Dei •·ith
ijost Rancho A I a rrt iJ o s '14. .
rtieets"Leutlnger at 9 in thr 'Ehe ~toparchs htl 23 of 52
nightca p before r e s um i n g... trlwi .front . the floor for +4.2
•arfare Friday night. ~rcenl wjtile the losers were
Mater Dei qualified Iur·the JS'Qf 51 (37·3 pereent).
se,rDitina.ts Mon<!ay night \\•ith ~ · 60-49 victory over Rolling H S / Hijls of !he Sky League. , Otlte-S' 1>u.g it
Coach Jerry T ardie ' s
Monarchs· will m e e I un·
defeated Los Alamitos (9.0 1.
ffl&.44) v.•inner over \\1estern in
.Monday's companion feature .
Mater Dei had little trouble
with the now 3-3 Tit3.ns, taking
advantage of a particularly
cold second period by Rolling
Hills to grab a 14-point ad·
vantage and held on for the
win.
Rolling Hills managed to
score only one point in the
final 5:11 o( the second period
v.·hen the Titans went into ia
stall trying to upset the
~fonarchs' offensive tempo.
Mater Dei Jed at the outset
of the s~all by a 27-16 count.
Tt.e stall only helped the
Monarchs push the margin to
31;17 at the half.
In all, Rolling Hills was able
fo can only two free throws for
its eight minutes of work in
the crucial second stanza.
· Fo,. C<Lgers
The eighth a.1nual Newport
Harbor Optimist In vitational
basketball tournament is near·
ing with cipeNng round action
slated for Satqrday and a plea
for help has been solicited for
incoming teams from Victor
Valley, Antelope Valley, Yuma
and Kofa high schools.
Lodging in Orange Coast
area homes is slill required
for about half of the 60 prep
-players makjng the journ:eY·
The need comes about after
the tourney invited another
pair of teams IViclor Valley
and AntelOpe Valley) to be its
guests for the v.·eekend alfair.
Pla)'ers will arrive noon
Saturday and lodging is need· .
eel lhrougb Monday night.
Interested parties should
contact Newport Harbor High
athletic directOr Jules Gage al
~5692.
Rolling Hills pa,red the----------
margin somewh~t in the se·
cond hall, cuttirlg it to 46-41
with 5:25 to go before Tardie's
forces gathered steam and put
the game otit of reach.
Tom PifcMenamin tipped one
in ~·ith 4:55 to go, then added
another with the aid o( Dave
Kiley's nifty assist and Mater '
88-game
Loss S~-iiig
Finally Ends
BROADHEADSVILLE. Pa.
-Pleasant Valley High
School, where losing basket·
ball had become a way of life.
finally discovered the joy of
winning.
After 88 consecutive defeats.
Pleasantville v.•on 1ls first
game since the school began
basketball competilion four
years ago. Pleasant Valley
defeated Notre Dame of East
Stroud sburg last night, 6J..40.
The victory may require an
asterisk. since Notre Dame is
in its first year of basketball
and won't have a senior class
tmUI next year. Its team is
made up of sophomores and
juniors.
Asterisk or oo asterisk,
Pleasant Valley will tBke the
victory. There i~ joy in
Broadheadsvil le today.
O:CC Hosts
Rio .Hondo
Tonight
Orange Coast Co 11 e g e ' s
basketball team. hoping to im·
prove a,\ a dism al J.-7 record,
tangles with Rio Hondo tonight
on the OCC court. Game time
is 8.
The Pirates have lost seven
oC ·their J1115t eight pmes, in....-
cluding h1•0 in lasf week's
Chaffey tou rnament.
In that tourney OCC '"as
dumped by LA Harbor, 83-64,
bounced back to play one of its
finest games of the season in
trippi ng Riverside, 91·90, then
went flat i·,1 losing to Citrus,
86-56.
Rio Hondd, under new coach
Bob Bland, has compiled a 5-7
record this season. T h e
Roadrunners won two or three
games last week in the El
Camino toumament to earn a
third place berth.
Guard Dave Walters and
center Bill Farwyke placed
th e Roardrunners offensively.
Walters, 5-lO, is averaging 22.3
po i'ats per game.
Against LA Valley Saturday
night, \Valters, a sophonlore.
hit on 17 of 29 shots from the
field 138 points) to lead Rio
Hondo to a 91-71 victory.
Farwy ke has a 20.1 average_
At 6-5. he is the tallest player
in Rio Hondo's starting lineup.
Orange Coast ha s four
players averaging in double
figures. Jim Kindelon tops the
club with a 24.9 per game clip,
followed by Phil Jordan (21.2),
Troy Rolph ( 13.6) and Ri ck
Sticke\maier (10.6).
After ton ighl'J<; game, coach
Herb Livsey's club will be idle
until a week from tonight
Yt'hen it hosts East LA.
Prep Wrestling
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Breath~r Only )rip~ S~p.e.i: Bowl
!\'lay Not Be · 1
, J b
For UCl :. May Sal11age A.liens, o
Other fans are wonderlng at the Pros~ kits dlree stratait aRer}bda& 11111..-el •
•
' ' ' ' {)
I
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' ' I
Most golfers make a big thing about keeping
their head aown wh il e swinging. There is nothing
wrong with this, so long as they not only keep the
head down, but also "behind" the ball. .
You should resist the· normal tendericv to slide yo~r head and shoulders forward'to the 18ft as yOu
sw1n·g down and through th·e hitting a rea. Such
swaying will reduce your clubhead speed and mis·
direct your club,head path. 1
I have devel,ope~ the habit of focusing my atten.
tion on the ball's original position tJntil it is well
along _Its way to th• hol~ ('illu~trations #-1 and #2).
By doing so, I automatically insure myself against
any lateral head movement to the left.
I.OW SCORES! HIGH POWER! Get plenty ol 11;olfi11g help in Arno ld
Palmer's booklet. "Ttt Shots 111d fairway Woods,'· written ex·
c!usovely for readers of this column . A topy is you1s lor 20t and
a stamped. self.addre,sed envelope sent to Arnold Palmer, c./o
thrs newsp1per .
SoCal Practice Rounds
0Pe~ Friday at MVCC
By HOWARD L. lfiNDV
Of tilt °"'1 PW Slaff ,
\Vhen the palrlnJS for the
third annual UCI 1nvitaUonal
basketball ·tournament were
made early in the fall,
partic ipating wus not fully
known and the host Anttaters
drew v.·hat plany felt wo.s a
real breather for first round
compeUtiou.
That breather lll-.Y have
turned into a• lion for · coach
Tim Tift. and his UC Irvine
quintet when they meet Fri-
day nigllt at 9. to conclude first
round activity.
Tahoe College, short.,ied
from its orlginar name of
Tahoe Paradise. w.ent to the
finals •of the San Diego State
tournament before lgsing to
the .host schoOL Sw}daY. '<light
It won victor'.' 1'16. ·,.,·~ainst
two defeats ai)d:-,c~ be a
tough foe for ·the Ante1'ters.
Sam Robin.son, a ~4 !taping
guard, is le~ ~~scOring
with a 23.1) .poljl~~~game
average, while ;guard mate
Herbye White is next )~th 19
per game and·forwaril .Jerry
Stevenson i' averagln1.J 8. "Tbey have. the bestiperson-
nel in the tournament and they
beat the University of Hawaii
Sunday night in the islands,
which is a hard thing to do ."
Tift says. •
The Anteater coach is con·
cerned about his own team
being • 'bit 'sl uggish after a
two-week layoff for final ex·
ams.
"We are going to activate
Lester Mingo in time for him
to play in tihe toUmame11t,"
Tift says.
Min·go is a &-a·tran.sfer from
Los Angeles City·iCOJlete. He
has been working with. the
team all seasan t>ut ·~ to 1
sit this one OOt earlier in th~ wir~ race, ht felt the pressure year. He has changed bis ·mind
had been lifted from his after the Irvine -,squad lost
shoulders. tour-in a row.
of another front-Offict coiirrontation with cbampkdsblp, c11 tome back.
Allen should the Rams lose, All en isn't the Georo Allen SJld it best wbtn he stated:
most popuiar man and tils penchant for \Vin· •;Jf we hud 'll'Oft\~At game 1D l.os·~gtJes
ninS-as tl~·on)y Uting, often doe.sn'~ stand hin1 with the Vlkl;:lgs, 1'!: would bave goue-oo to an
in good stead with those around him. u11 .. clc..,ted 5tBsois."
Following the loss to Minnesota 011 occ. 1. The Vlkes won b7 a zo.1a margia lD a came
Allen called a praCttCe stssion on Monday, that co11d ,bove gone either way. Alier tbat
something the tearil ·ha1 rarelY. done inireccnt time, the Ra.ibs s~d .t toucbdowa ll two
years. One playe r wils beaid. to qUlp: "l same$ •.J MVP ROtnan Oabritl Ud of,. days
wonder how many players would ,give him a ia Detroit and again in Los Aaa:eles Sunday
ot I nfid tod ?" again.st Baltimore. v e o co ence ay . Football f111 are·Pf'O'e to for&et tbt good
It will be recalled that owoer Dan Beeves Olat wu· accomplished ta the early glDlea ud
HOWARD
HANDY
MOW.utD MA.MDV ' t •
fire'd Allen last Dectmber only to re-hirt him
after many of the players took up the cudgel
in Allen's favor.
Little things around the Ram camp would
indicate that Allen is~ in the best or graces
wilh the c!Ub and al)Jthing short of a Su~r .
Bowl appeara't\ce IT\aY , mean his dismiss~!
once again-a final act that will not be con·
test~I by too many of the players this time
•• 'ft -'
* * * 'rhe Rams have reached the point of no
~tum and Saturday's g~me in rttlonesota is
one in which the winner will go onto greater
heights and the loser will look to next season .
Strangely, this corner tabs the Rams to win
although the oddsm1kers are picldnt the Vlk·
ings on their home. Ile.Id . iD cold, snowy
weatber ..
A team that win& 1~.iJI • row and sa~denJy
thiAk oaly of &be last tllree ouUn11.
They also forget tllat ~am• llke Detroit.and
Baltimore, als\)-fanl in their res~lve
divisions. would be playing alM)ut fGOtball
against the Rams while the Loi Angeles team
would be bo1ing ti> keep injuries at a
minimum for the playoffs.
Another plus In the. Rams' favor is Roma_n
G'lbriel .' If .Gabe returns to bis former ef·
fieiency. b{ could be ~ big differenct at
Piflnn~a. '\
* * * 0. J. Simpson, the likeable halfback from
USC who played with the Buffalo Bills in the
AFL this pa.st season, was a visitor t.o· the
Ram dressing room Sunday.
While he didn't' Come ou~ with a flat prediC·
lion On the ~per Bowl, he eautiooed:
"Oakland is awfully tough."
0. J. was th.en asked about the Rose Bov.·1
g<>n1e between his alma mater and the
University of Michigan. ,
"I can't see why Michi ~an is favored. T s:iw
t'1em olay three times this reafi and I don't
lhink they are that tough. I think USC will win
the game.''
Is 0 . J. also attending Trojan practice
sessions imparting any knowledge he might
have gained concerning tbe Wolverines?
* * * Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year!
cwc·io .Test Pasadena . .
One gOlfer wtio is taklng the
upcoming Southern California
Open at Mission Viejo Goll
·Course seriously is touring pro
Chi rlie Sifford .
· Action· in the event gets
under ·way with a practice
round for all competitors on
Frid8y. The pro-am portion
will take place Saturday and
Sunday with first round action
in the 54-hole tournament
scheduled on Monday, Tues-
day antl Friday of New Year's
week. The final two rounds
will be played Saturday and
Sunday, Jan. 3-4.
"From now on 1 expect to "He is big and will help us a
be play,ing better all the time . great deal in some areas," Tift With a 1·!1 record. Golden over Harbor. it will meet the Fullerton·
The pressure is of{ me now.'' analyzes. West College's ba sketball The Lancers are led by .Palomar victon ·~'Ionday at
When Sifford won the 1969
Los A:ngetes·Qpen·m a wire.to-
Long Beach
Turns Back
Rangers, 6-0
The Coast Rangers lost
further ground in their almost
impossible chore of catching
league-leading Temple City as
they were lashed by Long
Beach. IHl. Sunday :it Newport
Beach\; Mariners Park.
So now the 1968·69 Pacific
Soccer League ch amp ion
Rangers find themselves five
points behind Tenlple City in
the drive for first plac!!.
As coach Brian l\lcCaughey
said afterward, "v.·e we re
humiliated -we played poor-
ly in every aspect of the
game. \Ve were terrible. The
only chance we have now is to
beat Temple City twice ."
The Rangers have a bye this
week then return to action
Jan. 4 to meet Temple City at
f\1ariners Park.
McCa ughey 's bunch had
held Long Beach scoreless for
a half before be ing n1anhandl·
ed the last 45 minutes.
Ranger rese rves wer e
so1Tiev.•hat more for t.unate as
they blistered Avanti, 6--0. with
Jim Morrison and John Ford
each scoring a pair. Dave
l\1orley and Tom Morrison ad·
ded the other tallies.
College
Cage Scores
\/
£•" Armv U, J.la•nt o Am~ti(•n U. ~. svr•(ult 19 ....
D•v•d"m It, G~rol• 11 D~io St 17, lu!aflf r1
LO"• ••la"" IJ. 69, r .... Cl!t<HI •! Ct~T~flll'J' n. &1vl0t 7.t, Of
No, C1r. SI. 16, Vtl\OtrbUI 111
Geortla TK~ 91. !lmlDI'' 76
Ftorldt St. 1t, LOUllJYlll• .. 0.rlrncut~ 11, M•m-~I• SI. 14 f?
OT1J • '
Miii .. " No. lllllnoli IS. $&11 o ... , SI. as
Pf'CIYl..-.Ct 1'. O.P111I 11
TUIN 101, tlrtdltY 71
•-• IOI. Df'•~t 1t Mfrq<,ot!!t ,,, MlMtSOI• SI
8Ulltr 1', Ml,ll'PIY St. 6t
Nf0f1i•1 1•. ,<111\ltlfl In ~(I~ fl
\eulllw•"
HCU\10'! 1$. l-fv.1C11 11. •t
Ho C'1rorl.,e fO, 1111• II
C'<l~Nlm& t), """''""'·~ 19 No. I t •. $1 n, l'I Vetts fl ,.,, 'l'/nt
Otnver 1J. 8rit~~f'n 'l'e<,IMI Sl C;To, St&11 fl. SI~ JOl• SI ti
U!•l'I 111, Mkl\110" IG1
LSIJ 1't, 0.-t-St ... si Joto~·•· N.Y. '3. s1~111oro Jt
(ti, U. Ntw M .. lce 1'
Slnl• Cle•• 101. ,,..,no $1111 ti
l lilll 1-1 C1r11!w1I 'lt1f ._.
'-'!1t11,1o'I n, "tt1111 Al.M Pf
tt111t•EI lt1M to. Clemtorl 11
Si;fford wa s lht1 first Negro The big Negro center is not team has no 1vhere to go but fonvard Eric McWilliams, a 6· 6:50. If the Rustlers are
lo join the PGA louring pros 1··· d · th tarti. 1· f up -except that the Rustlers 5 sophomore who was the defeated by Pasadena they
and 11.ke Jacki·e nobi'nson ,·,~ 1;oo.e 1n es ·,1g meup or n " Friday night, howev'er. face one of the hottes t junior Chaffey toumamenrs most , will play at 1 on Monday. Win
baseball, was a pioneer in his Jeff Cunningham 'and Ilill college clubs in Southern valuable player. Guard James or lose, Golden West will play
field . • Moore will open at the California Friday night. Harris was also named to the thttt games in the tourna-
He doesn't attribute his forward posts with Wayne Coach Dick Stricklin's team all-tourney team . ment.
prediction to a new found af· Sabins and Mike Barnes at the encounters Pasadena in the One other game is scheduled Tilt 1t1versioe pa1r11111i:
fluency. He was referring to guard posiUons. Bill George fiist round of tbe .. Riv.ersjde Friday night (Fullerlon vs. -1.,..!rM.::Cuo
• the influx of more Negro may be replaced at center by College tournament at 8:30. Palomar at 6:50) 1vith two FuHtrion v1. P11om1r. ,,so I . th Goldtn We.ii YS. P111w ... , 1:'9 Payers in e game. senior John Glavinovich in Pasadena won the 29th an.-other first round games set s11urdl"
"Now that there are quite a order to get more e•perie .......... llWllC ..... n .... ' .. o UUUI. JD c.n.L .. Satu.rday,,UghL, . lll'W•r llnditt) f ood bl k I "' •&"' ~ LOnv 8ttdl vs. lmptr11t V1llti, 4i:50 ew g ac P a Yer S · in the lineup. Satur •. ~ day with an 86-79 victOrY, U GolQe~ West~wins Friday,: s..n 01_. w. 1t1~rs1M, 1:JO there's an awful lot 0£1_:::..::::..::::..:c::. __ __,~..,.,.._....__w._..,._,..._,_;..,.._~"=;.,..~,._-=,,_,;.;;.,_,,.~ . .,.--,,_,,,,,, .. -,--._:;-:: .. c:.-..,.--
pressure taken off me They
don 't expect me to do ii. all
now."
Another thing in the back of
Sifford's mi".1d is a repeat win
in the Los Angeles Open the
week following at Rancho Golf
Course.
Sifford's first tournament
win came in 1967 when he won
the Hartford Open after losing
the Dallas Open on the final
day. He came from behind
with a 64, seven under par, to
win at Hartford . It was his
first major PGA victory.
Charlie ai.1d his wife, Rose ,
are parents of two sons,
Charlie; Jr., a member of the
Long Beach State College golf
team and Craig.
Bob Lunn is defending
champion in the Southern
Califorhia Open and is one of
almost 80 percent of the tour·
ing pros expected to play in
the Mission Viejo event.
Tour,1ament director is Jack
Fleck, a "former U.S. Open
cMmplon himself.
Ne,vport
Pairings
Defending champion
Ne\.\•port Harbor High assumes
the role of favorite for the
eighih annual Ne\vport Harbor
Optimist basketball touma·
ment and will meet Victor
Valley in the opening round
Saturday evening.
Host Costa Mesa battles
Antelope Valley at 7 following
8: pair or games in the al·
ternoon.
The pairings:
Saturday
~ -Kofa vs La Jolla
7 - Costa Mesa vs Antelope I Vnlley
5;30 -Monte Vista vs
Yun1a I
8:30 -Victor V3J\ey vs
Newport Harbor
Collegiate
Hoop Poll
'· ~•nluclv .... "' , UC::L.A (1.(11 "' '· South C•rollftl !6·0 "' ' t.J~·!ll (l tGlln• (j.t\ "' ' O~lo U, , .. , "' • l• -~· "I! !•·Ol "' , "!. •1 Me•it o Sl"t ( .. 11 '" I ~·c11r100. U~l '" • CltY:l;ffCft ! i.11 "' ' V"-1'1fte.•on U~l '" ". NO:tt D•rnt U.tl 1ot1 "· "'' {f·11 "I ·~· J~Q.t<llYf!I' ,,., " "· l,.oy!1vlllt (J.lt " " lnlnGll ('.01 " ... Kan~1 U·ll ~ '" P-1Y'IYtnl1 , .. , .. ... ·~ .. U·U .. "· "· 90flt~IW .. 11-01 .. •• Vl!llllOVt ll•O a
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,BARBARA DUARTE, 494-MU
TWeMJ, .....-u. 1• ""'I r• u ·
As Midnight Strikes
----
Revelers Ro~p
Into 'New :Year
' . . .. ...... .... .
.,,.
The new year is just around the corner and Revelers are ready for il
The active club, a couP.les group which supporli the Child Guidance
Center ol Orange County. \viii have no better opportunity to live up to its
name th ~n 'lo stage a gala to \\'elcome in 1970 while usherin_g out 1969. ,,
'
Loo1:ing back on a year of parties, theater outings and fund-raisin"
events. Revelers \\'ill don party clothes \Vednesday ·night, Dec.· 31, and
prepare a toast to '70.
A 1nidnight buffet served from a table decorated \Vith new year trim-
n1ings \viii cap the evening's activities. '. . ·
Guiding the Revelers for the coming year in their s~cial fund-raising
events will be Dr. and Mrs. George H.K. Bryant, ere,!!idents; Dr. and Mrs.
Louis W. Haslwanter, first vice presidents in charge of publicity; Mr. and
Mrs. James Coen, second vice presidents in charge of memQership; Mr.
~nd Mrs. James Delaney, treasurers, and Mr· and Mrs. Robert E. Lawson,
secretaries~ . · · · ·
· · Child Guidance ·Center of Orange County is a nonprofit, countfivide
supported psychiatric clinic for emotionally disturbed children and ado-
lescents from preschool years to 17. ' ·
The cen ter treats children and their families throughout Orange
Countv -children of all races. creeds and •econon1ic levets. ,Fees are
charr,€d on a sl iding sci'le of partial po.y1nent. In all cases, fe es as levied
are far·Jcss .than the actn~I cost to U1e center. , . · ·
In all cases, parents are involved in 1reatment of the~chi ld, and the
center \vorks \vith all family ser vice and child oriented agencies.
The majority of patients are referred by their schOoJ or famil y phys·
lcia n. Others are sent by ministers, courts, police, probation departments
and other service agencies.
The center is located ·31 171 East 18th St. in Costa Mesa.
. HATS .OFF· TO NEW YEAR -Little Melissa Bryant .gives a
hearty toot to signal the onset of 1970 as Mrs. Philip Rutkawski
adds the final touch to her costwne. Members of the Revelers, Ur
eluding Mrs. George H. K. Bryant (right), are planning a New
Year's Eve party and midnight buffet as one of their events which
•upport the activities of the Orange-County Child Guidance Center.
"
· Walls Echo of Past
Old Chu·rch Rectory
Awaits New 1Tenants
One o! La~una Beach's historic buildings, dating back 43 years,
will be pressed into service soon, eight years after its last tenant d•
parted.
The old St. Mary's rectory, standing on a hillside overlooking
th e Art Colony behind St. Mary's Episcopal Church, will yield its for·
mer status as a home for church ministers and their families to a
meeting place for small church and community groups .
Now known as 1-Iarris I-lou se in honor of the laie Rev. H. Vernon
Ha rris, who served the parish fro1n 1953 to 1965, the rectory was orig ..
inally construcled in 1926 as part of a plan presented by church found ..
er and builder, the Rev. Percy Wise Clarkson.
The Rev. Clarkson came to Laguna in 1921 from Trinity Church
in Orange and held first services i.n 1922. He began construction of th.9
old chapel, now condemned, soon thereafter. .
Following completion of the first stage of the rectory in 1926.
ministers and their families occupied. the four-bedroom dwelling. In
1950, a lower-level living room was added, making the building a
three.level structure with bedrooms-and.a bath on the highest level.
In 1961, the home's last family, the Rev. John Hauser, his wife
i!nd children departed, leaving the building to the use of church
gatherings and, more recently, use by civic or8anizations.
Churchwomen have undertaken refurbish1ng of Harris House,
carpeting the living room in shades of green and blue and painting
the walls of the living room and second level dining room an off-white.
The kitchen, remodeled in the early '60s \vas adequate.
At the present, parishioners are gathering nearly-new furniture
and accessories to once again make Harris House a vJtaJ part of the
church. .J
Working on the committee under the direction of Mrs. Donald
Arvold are the Mmes. Charles De Keyser, C.R. Beck, Gordon Forbes,
Robert Schnitzer, William tnlom and the Rev. Robert Cornelison,
Newly elected officers of the Service League who officially will
take office in January are Mrs. Arvold, president ; Mrs. Beck., vice
ptesi dent ; Mrs. F. R. Collen, treasurer;. Mrs. Thomas ·Maddock He-··
A WEIGHTY DECISION -'Members of the Service League of St.
Ma ry's Episcopal Church (left to · right) Mrs. Charles De Keyser
and Mrs. C. R. Beck try to decide where to place a lamp-in ·llie
nearly empty living room Or Harris H•use. The league , after prunt·
Jng and carpeting, is attempting to furni sh the former rectory for
use .by small church and civic groups as a meeting place.
retary, and Mrs . Hester Moore, corresponding secretary: ' ,
During the past.year, Harris House has been the major project .
of the league and will occupy the majqrity of service hours next year.
The league also assists other church guilds in rummage &ales ~
zaais, coffee hours and church dinners. . ·'
' .
Legality .Q.uestioneCJ· W-~~n Ju .dge Forgets to Questio~ Pa -.fr ·
.\' • '. I ••• ' •••••• I .•
AR ·~ ~ERS: fteeq'1• fni-~to qu..,,,<10G~~ot,
state,.,..tlle ..... ....._,\,..,~ •
Id 't.. llliplly"1ftar:tt.i!. 'llll11lr\le · in-
' -,
.·
· ' ' ! · , ·' smiles. Sometimes he laughs. slaps his menage to millions ·of weu.mtaning ' Or si>eech. EVery ·time ~ 11Y,.-4•Wi-er
knee and' yells, "That's a l:icaul! '' ' pi~ent.s who are damagtnfi their Children. ' eN . ·• 11 f.OP,. tpo; afe stuttering, ~yin •
Twice last week he cut Out your columh ' I am referring lo the way Uley'deal with more' grown up way. So, you see, we all
before he returned the paper. I was so · U>e 'child '!ho stutters. ' · ~'utter at aome Urne,,in·IQme fllMOa. -'
. ,.. I~ ' . .. . . y~ "" .......... married
' I P'all!!,'S:D.'on •alentine's 0sY ot \
,· mad J got indi&estlon. • Most children betwtren the 'lge1 •or J · NO.ELA
Js lhere a tactful way 10 solve this pro-. aod 5 stutter somewhat When they first DEAR NOELA : ·~ , .. rtr ~·ietlor
whldl ailotld he tmmeudy llelPtll to a
ire•t aany n:ldtn. B«•ute yw wrtk,
several Ulousand .W1 art 1•1 tt ti·
prtss tbtmJtlve1 1nhttemp&etl "'iP*.
and ibal't as It t~ be.
· year. They now are trying lo aet a orce ii Minneapoll•. . . .
pttlnlill la a ~year-old woniaj\
claims 1hc w11s legall y m't.l'rr.td to
U.year-old girlfriend by ,.a C re-1 t
rt Judge In Sioux Falla. Thi judge. iii·
he Jw no ,recOlleetlon o the 1ni r·
rlage and added, "There must have been
fraud and m.isrepresentatJon 6 obt.a.ining
the license." He said when~ouple < I
.,
. .
comes to him with a lletn1t. ht doesn't
ask.questions. . ' ·
· "I a!!lumc one iN i boy and the other 11
n 1(rl," he cd~cd. I t 10Ught you'd like to
know U1e latest. -C.R.
DEAR 'c . ..R.: Soml!Re ••O&lld lilfend
the · Judae that tbtse days, It's 1omtwJ.at
risky to UIU'Jne ••oee I• I boy .....
other 11 a lfrl. '' lt'1 best UI uk. ,
t. .. f
• , • ...... I ,l
.DEAR ANN.LANOEisf inre ;'tM.1 nre 1"1rl ol the Pi<>l>1'!1\ 1Nybe,you con help
IC!lye il! 1
j I
· Every morning 1 &{op Bl the newsstand
end ISuy a pajfer JO ·1 can read your col-
umn durl.ng C1>,!(ee break: The boss comes .
by regularly and "borrow&'; I.he paper. I
can aee him frofll my desk -he goes
straight for your column. Sometimes he
b D U B learn to speak. Thls i1 nonnal. Parents lcm? -. . . r r the tt . . . be o ten ear stu el'ing 1s going ·to
DEAR 0.U.8: Type 'the follo"'ID.# p~nnnnenl. SO they lnlCrl'\lpt 11nd ~)',
message on 11 slip or Pliler and clip It to ''Stop! 'start o\·er! Don't talk sa fast.''
r1c front p1;e. "To \Vho111 It ~lay If you are a parent who is gullty of
Concern: Please return in~mct. The Items this. please stop doing it. Simply Ignore
you wanl to cut out are the ones I buy the the chlld's stuttering. It is a phaSe: he will
paptr to read. Thank you. The 0\.\'Dcr." probably outgrow. If, by the llrne he is S
years or age he Is still stuttering, like
tiim to a speech therapiSt. RememMr
thal stuUerilll 11 l break In the nuency
DEAR ANN LAND~llS : I'm a speech
therapist. Please Jtelp me deliver •
•
,..
Ann Landers will be alld to help you
with your problom1. Send them" lo lier la
care ol the DAILY PILOT, ......... . .. u..-. Ramped ..... -,,
I
• .. ' --. . ' . . -. ..... ~ .... -. ·-,,,..--.........-. ----.-......... ~~---~--.....,-,-.. ------.. ,--··::-:------.-.. ~-~.-.---·-.-.-----~~ -~ --. ·-. ·-.-; -:. .-. ;. -. -. ·-. ·.--. -. :. ;, -. . ' ....... :.. ... •
J4 DAILY PILOT Tursday, Dtetmber 2J, 1969
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1 · Teacups Overflewing With Toys for CHOC
j Santa's Sack became even heavier following the December meet· pital of Orange County for Christmas. Shopping for the meeting
.. ing of the Little ~1ern1aid q.u!ld ~ Hunti~gt?n Be~ch . Members which took place in ~he Huntington Harbour h~me of Mrs. Harry
and friends contributed to filbng it by bnnging brightly wrapped Okuda are (left to nght) Mrs. Max S. Schreiber, Mrs. James
toys and gifts to be presented the small patients in Children's Hos· Ridenour and Mrs. Ralph Neilsen.
l j ,
'i.
MRS. EVAN WILLIAMS
Honeymoon in Mexico
Turvlll• l"hol•
Harborites Say Vows
In Santa Ana Rites
ried a cascade of orchids.
Lavender chiffon over blue,
white and lavender print
Horoscope
Aquarius: Be Lenient
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 24
By SYDNEY OMARR
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
The comfort of knowing plans
are h1 order should prevail.
Otherwise, seek aid from
older, knowledgeable peson.
Key is organiz.ation. Then you
can enjoy holiday spirit.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
You may feel put upon by
re l atives, neighbors.
Remember, it is actually good
te> give-perhaps: even better
than te> receive. Discomfort is
but temporary. Smile.
GEMINI (May 21-J une 20):
Children who appear to act in
eccentric maMer are merely
responding to holiday ex·
citement. Be patient. Last.
minute shopping could wreck
budget plans. But it may be
worth it.
CANCER (June 21.July 22):
Excitement centers around
home base. There are minor
disagreements, nourished by
general confusion. This can. in
positive manner, be
stimulating. Have run -chase
gloom .
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22 ): ·you
do best by allowing others to
express opinions freely. Not
easy for you to remain in
background-but, for sake of
harmony, do so.
VIRGO .(Aug. 23-Sepl. 22):
Friends will be presenting you
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy photo-
graphs to the DA ILY PILOT Women's De-
partment one week before the wedding.
Pictures received following the wedding
will not be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a black and \Vhite glossy picture, be sulr
milted six weeks or more before the wedding
date. If deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed-
ding and engagement stories, fortms are
available in all of t he DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions wiU be answered by
Women's Section staff m embers at 642-4321
or 494-9466.
with gilts. Check your own
list. A v o i d embarrassing
moments by being thorough.
Some details tend to escape
<iitte11tion, unless you are
persistent.
UBRA (Sept. 23-0ct. 22):
Air of excitement is featured .
Your personal magnetism is
electric. You imp r ess ;
prestige rises. Make the most
of what could be a wonderful
evening.
SCORPIO (Ocl. 23-Nov. 21):
Be a good listener, observer.
Keep promise to one who may
be at a distance. Get call
through early. Enter into holi·
day spirit in meaningful,
spiritual maMer.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21): Minor dispute con-
cerning finances should not be
blown out of proportion. Many
around you exhibit changes of
mood. Don'l compound error.
Adhere to promises, prin-
ciples.
CAPRICORN (Dec. 22..Jan.
19): Strengthen ties of af·
fection. Know that one who
may seem indifferent does
have your welfare at heart. Be
mature, analytical. Tben this
becomes happy, constructive
evening.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Friend who is life of par·
ty may be covering emotional
wound. Be lenient. But also be
firm when you know enoullh li-
quid refreshment has been
served.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20):
Office party can be fun. Hut
don't take too seriously thingl
that are said, done. Obtain
hint from Aquarius message.
Degree of moderation is
de finitely advised. Sherita Lynn Lipscomb and
Evan Paul W i 11 i ams ex-
changed vows and rings before
the Rev. Charles Smith in
Calvary Chapel, Santa Ana.
Assisting with the cercn1ony
"'as Dick Day.
go"'nS and bouquets of white ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ orchi ds \Vere selected for r.1issr;
Parents of the bridal couple
arc Dr . and .l\:1rs. Joseph K.
Lipscomb of Newport Beach
and Dr . and ~1rs. Francis
\Vi!llams of Corona de! ~lar.
Given in marriage by her
fatl1er. the bride "'Ore a go\vn
of ivory and gold satin design·
ed empire style with a
cathedral trat.1. Her veiling
wa s caught to a headpiece o[
matching fabric, aod she car-
Sign Your
'Footprints'
In Bathroom
Want to give a gill to"·ard
bathroom safety ?
Tiny new .. footprints" ad-
here to the OOtto1n of the tub to prevent silpJ>!ng .... by the
kids ..• a seruor citizen .•.
a tired mom ..
The prints are like applique.
and are self-adhesive . Appl y
to a clean, dry .tub surface.
They come in five shades-
pink, green, blue, yellow and
white, 10 to a package.
~~~~~I
r e.y The DAIL y PILOT I I Ju si for 'Peenuis' j
•
Tori Lipscomb, the bride's
sister and maid of honor, and
for the bridesmaids, Miss
J ean \Vil'Jia 1ns, th e
bridegroom ·s sister. IMisS Beth
Gliessman and J\1rs. Michael
f\1oore.
Alten<.ling his brother as
best man was Brym1 \\lilliams,
"'bile ushers v;ere the bride's
bro_ther, Chris Lipscomb, Dan
O'Brien and Steve Toby. Mrs.
Orvin Barber was th e
candlelighter and Susan Pyle,
flower girl.
Following a reception for 200
in the home of the bride's
parents, the newlyweds left on
a hQ11eymoon to Cuernavaca,
J\lexico.
The bride. a graduate o[
BreU1ren 11igh St hool. Para-
mount, is a student at Biola
CoJlege, La J\otirada . Her hus-
band is a student at Orange
Coast College.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
' JI you f\4ve new nelghbol'I
or know ol n.vooe movln1
to our area. please! tell U!I
ao that we may utend •
trl~ndly welcome and help
thom to become acqualntcd
tn t.heir new tUtTOUndlngs.
So. Coast Visilor
494.-0579
494.9368
Harbor Visitor
MORALE BUILDERS
Diamond Glycine watches in
14 karat gold with new Baguette look.
Left, brushed finish. $395.
Right. polished finish, $295,
Center. Textured finish, $250.
Enlarged to show detail.
SLAVICK'S
Jew•l•rs Sinc• 1917
18 FASHION ISLAND
NEWPORT 8EACH -644-1380
o,.. Mo11lcty thrv Sotvrd.y .. tn f :JO
Vosburgh-Buck Vow,s
•)
Exchanged • Newport
\
Married In Our Lady of
MOWll Carmel C a t ho J·i c
Church, Newport Beach, were
Carolyn Irene Buck of Balboa
Island and David Wayne
Vosburgh. The Rev. Francis
Kelly officiated.
Parents of the bridal couple
are Leo N. Buck of Phoenix
and' the late Mrs. Buck and
Mr. and Mrs. William
Vosburgh of Laguna Niguel.
The bride wore a floor
length gown of satin with lace
trim. Matching lace fanned
her headpiece and she carried
stephanotis and orchids.
Miss Jennifer Buck was her
sister's maid of hon~. and
another sister, Miss: Theresa
Buck was the bride,smaid.
'T·hey wore pttrple velvet
gowns and carried nosegays of
stephanotis.
Serving as best man was
Samuel Stangl, and ushers
were Dr. Jerry Gardner and
Thomas Tucker.
A reception followed in the
home or the bridegroom's
parents. After a Hawaiian
honeymoon, the newlyweds
will reside in Santa Ana.
The bride received her BA
in elementary edui:ation from
Arizona State Uni ve rsi ty
\vhere she pledged Chi Omega
and was tapped for Mortar
Board. She teaches in Orange.
Her husband earned his BS
in business administration at
San Jose State College where
he affiliated with De 1 t a
Upsilon.
Happiness
Is Doing
For Others
Happiness is doing for
others. This is 'the belief of
members ol Orange District,
CaWornia Federation o I
Women 's Clubs.
Members of the 36 clubs are
remembering children, service
men in Vietnam and at home
and senior citizens. Indians on
Arizona ttservations are
receiving more than 1000
pounds of clothing, boxes of
food, toys and blankets. Money
is being sent to Dariny Daviey
for transportation of the.Se
articles.
Clubwomen also are
decorating Christmas trees in
the wards at Veterans
Hospital, Long. Beach. Seven-
teen clubs have do n a ted
almost $1,500 for the veterans'
use.
Co6ta Mesa Women's Club is
furnishing food for Christmas
basket5.
Styles Knotted
The top of the fashion pic-
ture from right now on into
spring is the top ~k not
hairstyle.
Make yours with a fall of
real or synthetic hair il your
own isn't long enough.
MRS. DAVID W. VOSBURGH
Hawaiian Honeymoon ·
Question ;
r . . . . . . • . . .
"How can 1 lo ok e size smaller and
still fe el perfec:tly c:omfortable?"
In lilyette's exciting new "'Com-
fort Wire" bra with positive con•
trol and $Upreme comfort.
..
THERE'S DOUBLE MAGIC; 1N lllYETTE'S NEW "COMFORJ
WIRE" RONDEAU •.. PERFECT SEPARATION WITH HEAVEN-
LY COMFORT. LILYETIE'S FEATHER·LIGHT FLAT UNDER.WIRE
NOT ONLY CREATES BEAUTIFUL YOUNG UPLIFT AND SEPAR·
ATION, BUT DOES SO WITH THE MOST WONDDERFUL FREE·
DOM OF MOTION, POSITIVELY CANNOT PINCH, POKE OR
RUB. THE EXCLUSIVE DESIGN FORMS A SOFT CRADLE.
AROUND THE CIRCUMFERENCE OF THE BUST. NOW FULL
B, C, AND D CUP FIGURES CAN CAPTURE THE YOUNG, SLIM
LOOK. RONDEAU rs BEAUTIFULLY MADE IN WEIGHTLESS,
EASY.CARE NYLON LACE DELICATELY SCALLO'PED OVER NY.
LON MARQUISETTE WITH DACRON ELASTIC AND SEMI·
CIRCULAR STITCHED CUPS . AVAILABLE IN NUDE. BLUE, PINK,
YELLOW, WHITE , OR BLACK. 8 AND c CUP, •.so. 0 ANO OQ
CUi>, 7.50.
fashions for ...
'
,I I Fa1hion Island, Newport Beach
Stonewood Center, Downey
'
Opell ITHhtp ''" ' , .•
hllt11"*1catd. Menter Ch•'I•• lo ....... C-..
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TUMBLEWEEDS
TU E SDAY
DECEMBER 2l
1:Gd 1J Ila filnl (C) (60) Jtrry Dunphy.
1
0 m HunU.,·lrinkl., (C) (30)
0 .,_ Alln s-. (C) (90)
Gullb 1r110Lln1 Tr1sk. Pit Henrr
Georp JllHI, Ben 01kl1nd. /
fJ Sir O'Clock Mwir. ('C) '"Kint ti llnp" 1'1rt 1 (llibticll dra1111)1
1
'62 -JeffrtY Hunti!T, Siobhan Mc· C K!nfll, Hurd H1tf111d, Rit1 Gtm,
....R6btrt Ry111. TM s!ory 1111 the birth.
lift 1nd dtalh of Christ set 111inst
th• p1111n splendor ol Rom1.
Q Dldl Y111 Dykt (30) m Tiit flint11or111 (C) (30)
l!J Stir Trtl: (C) (60)
IHI Cil ... "'""' iCl 190! fll) WMt'a Nn? (30)
9 ()) CIS NIWI (C) (30)
tJ) Palitn Cib111 (30)
G!J Ntn (C) (60) .Mck White.
EXCELi.ENT IDEA! MIGHT I St.r.GE5T WE ~ISE HER WITH A l?EEP
10 A CHOICE BURIA~ PLITT!
~H. .. wi:. SOR1l\
HADA POU ..
IN MINPJ ...
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(t) "nlit Cllrldtlu• (n11.t1lt1I) ·~inc ero111,, Olftny K1y1.
R0Mm1rr Cloonty, \ltn..Elltn. Thi
1nnu1I Pf••nl1tlo11 of tflls Yult·
tidt mus!ea1 collltdy f11tvre• 15
sonp b1 1rvln1 '8arttn.
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l tiih. Roauno ~rial, c. .. re Dan·
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PLAIN JANE
· ly Tom K. Ryan
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PERKINS By John Miles
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Ill ........ """" 160) EJll l1"'11ct (C) {30) "Gtottltfm1I
PoMr.M Dr. Albert Hibbs makes 1
studr flf lllt only ~rttloMI 1eo.
the1m1I poweJ statlo11 In the United · 1---~~-/l)r---l St1tel-tht GeYJerl of Ncrthern I
Calilornia-wlle11 electricity Is ctn·
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pets of ttlt lofd," is 111111-Nqro ~--------~ ----~ •--------~•~~-~~· musical combinlnr r1H(iou1 poems B H Id L D witll tttcli1ion1! Amrrican apiril1111la. JUDGE PARKER y aro e oux I
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DOILY PILOT I -~
By Charles Barsotti ,.-------,
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By Charles M. Schulz
10 MEET "'°"'"'"NIB, <
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TELEVISION VIEWS
3 Net,vorks
Disjointed
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l :JO D Ult triltnen"iot (Cl (60)
0 ..... '''"' , .. (t) (30) , m MJ ftwrite M1rtin (30)
1 wA1r" M1wure! t AwAv: n1e "6ENT5 MAYE oF Me .. ~ f
l'MOU6MT I HEARP fllE 6AR'A.GE AREA
!1:30 G 'XIRR'OUNOEP! ·-------------------"' ID GOVERNOR. AND J.J. 50METl<IN ... * HIT OF THE SEASON ' By CYNTHIA LOWRY
IDll!(J]llo -"' U. NEW YORK (AP) -Network television _ ~ro-i flJ Olticl •f tlll l"mldtllt (30)
@ (j) ••• .,. .... .., (C) (30)
fm NEJ Cllildrlfl'I Sptellf (C) (60)
''Th• Snow M1idtn." The Salrburr1
M1rionett1 The1trt periorm! lht
Jtory DI Ill 1'111 kine: Who plots to
put out th• sun.
(C) (30) Fr1n'l Cofwotr• 1uuts •• gramming may have seeme~ a little disappointing ::Sr~~.:~1• ioi:O: :: and disconcerting Monday n1.ghl.
pect when top.lml lnl11tmrtion it CBS pre-emp'led its most popular program,
ltaked 10 newsp1per columnl~ts. "Gunsmoke" to rerun a children's hour originally
6 NfWI (C) (30) Bixler Ward. broadcast in the daytiine less than 10 days ago, and m H• St~. SM saw It) (30) followed it )ater \vi th a repeat of a "Carol Burnett IS (f) Tiit MtMttn (30)
ail Jtotidm 34 ('C) (60)
m llMIR Nns (C} (JO)
fEH1tt1 Optri {60) Sho\v ." NBC fepeated a year.old "Laugh-In" whose
III Cluett Avt11111tt <C> (:01 topical .gags showed its age.
1:001J CIS EW1nhl1 "'1n (CJ (30)
0 W1111'1 Mr UM? (C) (30)
ID I .... "" (30)
Cit .. , ~· Clock (C) (30)
IE Cc111t!Mdity/Mllhll1 Flfttl (lO)
9 CJ.) I IBCfAl!Seap tM S0111d1
ff Cllristwl• ( ) (30) Mo rmon
Tabtrn1cl1 Choir,
al (I) Tnith tr' Con~UlllCll (C)
Cl Wnds In !IN Sun (C) (30)
Q) nat liirl (C) (30)
IO:flO 81 ipiC!Al I KNXf lltll'Offs (C)
(30) "Goodb)"I, Gr1y Flannel." A
colorful eJ1mln1tlon ol tilt fMIU·
tion117 cha nsu underwey in men's
ap111rt1 1nd ttttir IOCiololiclt im·
Plicltiona. J«ry Dunphy ltrvtS u
11P0111t aM 11ktl vilWWI to P1lm
Sprinp tor tilt 1nnutl tPrtnl and
S'Jmmer tr•dt show of !lit Men's Apperel Guild of C.lilo1ni1.
1:30GQICIJ llflCIALI "lilt Nit·
0 (itl (J) a> Mlf'tWI Wtlbr, M.I.
(C) (60) "N1ilh1r Pl.inch Nor Jud~."
Earl Hotlim111 Cuesta 1s Dr, W1I·
by'a friend, •f1th« Hup Riofden,
who llffftn: ll'llrt asthmatic 11·
tacks btr.au• ht !tels in1dtqult1
in d11lin1 with the per10111I prob·
lems of l!il ptrishiottefa. a-ICJ (60!
llD-(C) 160)
at""' M-(60) QI! (JJ ..... s,.cltl (30)
111 ............ 13~
,, • cr.U.w" (t) (60) The pr11nnl1I
Tch1illo¥sky belle! is perjorm1d bJ
1n lntam1tlon1I cast al Wldely 1e-
d1lmed d1ncers.. Tht sto17 i• b1ud
on lTA Hoff1111nn's f1iiy tlll
1bout 1 child's dream world at
Cllrilfm1s. Edw1rd Villena st111 ''110:15 0 "'" ft> (45)
tht Prince, Mtliua Hayden is the
S~11r Plum r1i17, P1trici1 Mc81ldt1o:JOIJ9 (1) Wiie, Wbt, ......
11 Kllr1. Eddlt Alb1rt 11rn1 ''I --""' (C) (!0) "A Conm· host ind n1rr1tor. 3etion With Wllll1m Rop11." Ntwt-
D @ (]J m I Drtt• tf lNllnlt man Eric S1¥11tld lnttrvinn R0tt11.
(t) (JO) "Junnit and !ht Buuty ~ cl1»1. friend, tl!d potiticll. 1cfvisor
c111m." Junni• uses her m11'ic to 10 l'r111dtlll: N12on. Rorer• 11 ask.i
crtlt• , akin cr11m, r.a~ns h1¥0c ~bout his . job, tM Prtaident. and
l; fof' Tony 11'1d NASA when it dlln1es hew ht 'tllWs the modem rolt el
lld1te Atn111d1 Bello•• Into • UV· a Seur.117 1111 Stitt.
int blttdJ. Emmaline Hen17 suats. fm H1•••I (C) (60)
! : (R) Cl Criltillt lma111 (30) l: 11 l'"1 Wat .... (C) Guests 111 i. Wiii Chtmberll!n 11'1d Rick ftoll. lt:OO 8 DD m ,.._ (C)
trtan. g UCLA .... Ill (C) Tht UCLA t u al) CII m MM ~ (C) (60) Brui• 111..t tllt Til'B of louisi1111 f , "Ntvtr lllYe tnt Fun •n E'll n Stitt at UCLA. Game tlllff •r1ier. !'. Bruk." M111rlct [WIM ltlfl IS IJ ........ (C) SonflJ FOL
> "'M!Rir1f" Nit JohMOll. ont flf lhe1 GI °""" U.ftl s: CIM!'nt con ll'llft in th• busl"tfS.
C: Wh111 Pitt, LlllC 1nd Julit lrl 11.. @(J)@J (l)ft (l)Nm (C)
•. sl1ntd llHi ltlk of pinins his oon· e m G hn (C)
.,. tldence, ttltf poa 11 bunoo 1rtlsts. a•-•-= ici ._ L-.: IAp" (mLlllctl) '55-frtd A&· ll:lOGQfi (I)...,.. Wfill (C
hirt. l111i1 Caron, Thtlmt Rm1t. Cl 9 (I) ID__, Carlt1 (C) m TMll ., c.-..•• (t) (30) SUb 1io1t: Or10n Bein.
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ti2:001111191fr. ~-· (tdVM-•D 9Ciltehbbl• 1111•1•1 f\lft) '64-Sl..,rt Grtnpr, Dor1t•
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mtl'!y ol I/It New Yort CitY Bt!ld . ~ loin lltd '°' hit sptt111 Ch1btm11 z:oe m M-NiPt ••: "SGrnbra, "" } Meow. l SpiOtr WorNft,' "Q11tr11l M
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12:00 ................. (•rt111•)
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• DAYTIME MOVIES head, c.,, Gruit. ctitrtn Llulhto11.
' I :lO CD (C) "'1111 Lnt .......... ~ D '1M Sona If llfNdettt" P1rt (111t1tern) '51 -Ra AIMt, M•'1
• 1 (d11m1) '44 -Jennit« .!Gnu, Cllln Kl;yc, ?· Chlf\n l kldord. Willi tlfl Eytllt, 2:JO 0 "Mlrtc11 .. J4tlt Str...-(~rt· i.:Ja 11 "11111111"1 tttlid.lf (dr1m1) '•7 IM) '47 -MILlftlfl O'Klft, Jofll
t' _ R•ndOlph Scott, Join S!ondc 1 P~yne, t dn111nd G'll'tllll. llltatit
t Cto11• Riff. Y.ood.
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MUTT AND JEFF
GORDO
MISS PEACH
•
°KeLL'( XH001...
f'~1E~t>s..i·1p
c;; E\2-VICE'
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ARTr.<Ult, "IOU
5AV YOU PONT
WANT AN~ONE
Wr.<O IS
SMART!
. '
By Ferd Johnson
I'M <iil'TTING TO T~AT, SANTA, sur FOR GOODN!'SS S,Ai<ES--
7H/S Yl'AR P~l'ASE l"Ai<o NofES !
By Al Smith
,.
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J .---------.. dULL.! .. A rot1CJl 91~
.JU5f WMAT
HAVE YOU
AGAINST
CLEVE.It
PEOPLE;
~ ~
PLENTY •
I
SOtltE MSM .
...._' 1 I
'' I '"-.. -~ ·.-
TONIGHT there will be a Red Skelton rerun on
('BS and NBC's "Julia" \\•ill have a night off so that
the of'len-repeated 1954 £iln1 "White Christmas0
can run it s full 21h hours. On \Vednesday, NBC's
''Virgini an," CBS' "l\'lcdical Center" and ABC's
''Flyi ng Nun" will be twice-told tales.
On Christmas night. ABC's "Bewitched '! and
NBC's "Dragnet" and "Dean Martin Show" will all
be reruns. On Friday, NB C's "The Np.me of the
Gani~." \Viii be a repeat.
T1'e cause of thi s epidemic of reruns is that the
people \vho vie'v the vie,vers are taking lhe week
oU. Monday -through ne xl Sunday is what the indus.
try call s a '·dark \veek " -one of U1e two during
the year in which the A. C. Nielsen research organ-
ization skips those rating services which are J.>~
jections of audience size s based on program choices
by a sample.
THE NIELSENS, tclevision's most important
tape-measure, are used by networks, advertising
agencies and sponsors in evaluating programs.
-When Nielsen isn't cou nting noses. the networks get
a little extra economic mileage out of slightly used
properties.
But even when Nielsen is taking a week off, the
networks' year-round game of one-upmanship is
played as fiercely as ever. NBC called a news con-
ference Monday so that its vice president for aud-
ince measurement, Paul Klein , could stake the net-
work's claim of winning what he called "the first
season."
Klein asserted that NBC, bet,veen the Septem-
ber start anJ Dec. 14, before the networks started
midseason replacements and reshuffling schedules.
had won a narrow victory -less than one percent
-over CBS in the average rating. A spokesman for
CBS, which plays the nu mbers game just as hard,
insisted there is no such thing as a first season and
predicted that the network would win the full 2&-
week race as it claimed to have done last year •
BEYOND claiming the narrow victory, how-
ever, Klein sought to use audience studies to set up
NBC as a net.work with strong apoea1 to "young
adults" -viewers between 18 and 49.
"The heaviest buyers are people between 25
and 45. '' Klei n said. ''And the 18-t~9 group is worth
twice the 50-plus vie\\•ers."
Using Nielsen statistics and projections. Klajn
said that on any \Vinter's night the television audi-
ence consists of 75 percent of the population of the
continental United States -about 70 million people,
of whom 60 million are tuned to one of the three
major networks.
Dentais the Menace
~-··· t 11·15
I
i
'
J f DAILY PILOT '
Radi o D1~ama Show
Rec1·eated Tonight
2001
NOW PLAYING '
The One, Only
And Original I
Abo Ploy in9
........ -....... .__
WILLI/IN HOLDEN
VIRNll LISI
BOURVIL
"THK CHRISTMllS
TREE" ... IOlllUI .,.. C...11r1..
l\CET joins With \Yrlte r·
director Norman Corvdn for a
nostalgic loo k at lhe great
days of radio drama on the
l-lonie...,·ood series tonight at
10:30 on Channel 28.
During li'l1s one-hour pro-
gram in colo r, the TV seric'
intimately follow d Ire c I o r
Corwin's recreation of his
classic radio play. "The Pl ot
t o Overthrow Christmas,"
which was first produced for
radio on Christmas Day, 1938.
\'ie...,·ers will see the prepara-
tion and presentation from the
first reading of lhe script to
the complete performance of
the drama as it \\'as done .in
the days of the "radio
lheater."
The program e 1nphasizes
the relation.ship be tween the
direc tor. music, sound effects
BALBOA
673-4048
Opon
6:45
7ot !. a.1i.o.
hll•••~lnnl•
e NOW SHOWI NG e
EXCLUSIVE AREA
ENGAGEMENT
TM( [V[llGJl(EN r 1uo1 PJl[S(NTEO BY
GROV( PRtS5 STARS LENA NY~Atf.
A SANOl![WS Pl!OOVCT>ON O•~{CltO av VllGOr SJO~'l•l
A0"11S$10/f l!l$Ul•CTtO TO ADULTS,
NOTE : We will be closed
Wed. & Thurs., Dec. 24
& 25 for employees
Christmas.
,---;:;::; I
BEST
Th, DAILY PILOT offers tune
of the be1f fe1lure1, by •c•u•I
1urv1v of re •ders, •••ii.Lie in •"'f "ew1111per in th1 n1lion.
EXC LUSI VE ENGAGEMENT!
STA RTS CHRISTMAS DAY
THE REIVER is a SCOUNDREL, an OPERATOR
and a DRAWLER ...•
William Faul kners Pulit ze'i'
Pri ze Winning Novel.
"The Reivers:
is now a film!
~~~~---.., ,...---.,,,,...,..-~--, A
' . . ,
Steve McQueen plays Boon
in "The Reivers"
Shaffin Farrell,\\1ill Geer. tv1ichael Constantine.
o.-nbi' Mlrt.
0
"r*A ~-1iol"&~olOCA~ Ccno.f! llns f'lnnllllo(Jll
A Nt!"""'Gfflf'!ll PICt\Jln 11.rltN' l!I =~.....---...
Co•we11fe111 .'>ho"' Ti111eJ
and cast throughout t he
prcscntatio.1, re v ea 1 in g
remarkable shn.llarlty to a
symphony conductor and his
orchestra in terms of in-
terpretation and control of the
dramatic material.
A group of noted actor1
gathered together for lhls ex·
cursion back into the golden
days of radio drama -.. the
theater or the mind" -which
required a unique imaginative
participation by each member
of 1he audience.
Featured in the cast are
John lifclntire. Ed Platt, Karl
Swenson. Alan Reed Sr., Pa ul
and Judy Condylis, Jeanette
Nola n, Steve FraJl ken, Henry
CordC'1l, Parley Baer, Jerry
llau sner and Byron Kane.
Cor\1•in's mock heroic play
revea ls an attempt to destroy
Christmas by the devil and a
band of his arch [iends.
Among them are Ne r o,
Lucrezia Borg i a , Caligula,
Ivan the Terrible, Haman and
Simon Legree.
The program \viii be
repeated on Channel 28 Sun-
day. Dee. 28, at 9 p.m.
.s r
CHARiTJ'
SHI RLEY MacLAINE
JOHN McMARTIN
SAMMY DAVIS, JR.
l!l ~ flAN~VISIOH•
Ex-Glea son
Girl Wed
To Sin ger
RENO (UPI) -Singer Dick
Roman has married showgirl
Honey ti.ferrill, former com-
panion of entertainer Jacki e
Gle ason.
Roman, 31, and his bri de, 33,
exchanged vows Sunday at an
alt ar on stage at Harold's Club
Casino y:here Roman is ap-
pearing.
Miss Merrill wore a mink
minidress valued at $7,000
which she designed. She wore
holly sprigs in her hair and
y,·ore a wedding ring of gold
mesh, crested with diamonds
and emeralds.
The couple became ac-
quainted when the singer ap-
peared on lhe Gleason show in
1967. but did not become
romantically involved until
late August. Roman was
singing at a Miami Beach
night club at the time.
"I heard that Jackie and
Honey had split and I just
knew somehow we . would get
together," Roman said.
Dina Stars
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Dina Merrill will star in "The
Wa1king 1t1ajor," a Japanese
production in which the ac·
tress portrays the wife of a
U.S. Army major who an·
nually walked 900 miles across
Japan raising money for
orphw,1s.
Laguna Playhouse m\'I •
'Nutcracker' Fine 'V ~P.l~· EXCLUSIVE
AREA SHOWING
SHOW Tlltl.f.S
7:00 ' t :lt
MATINEE SUN. 2
Children's Ballet
By TOM BARLEY
01 illt 01Hr Pllol Sl1ff
Tschaikovsky'a ''Nut-
cracker" ballet is magninceot
Christmas enertailunent and
the attractions of this ageless
two hours of tinselly magic ex-
tend far bthood the limits of
the discipline for which it was
first created.
delightful duties imposd by
this enchanting fairy tale and au come through with nying
colors : happy little
partygoers, soowflakes, glnger
snaps and the scurrying mi ce
who were such a big hit tn this
cri tic's candy-laden comer of
the theater.
Impossible to give credits to
all and bardJy fair at that but
\\'e do have to place in print
~ Jft' E.UT to•\1 -·~ ~l .. OMIOfL ..... t.ll•U ..
Every member of t b e
dtlighted capacity audience
which viewed Friday night the
Laguna Beach Civic Ballet
Company's staging of this
time honored crowd puller will
readlly endorse the happy
George Bernard Shaw's !ong
ago assessment of the "Nut-
cracker": "pantomime with
footwork but, by Jove, what a
pantomime!"
Kristi Moorhead's Sugar Plwnl--:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;::;;::;;::;;;;; fairy, Hope Sogawa's Snow
Queen, HaJ O'Neal's Snow
King and Gene Wilkes' Nut·
cracker Prince. Cynthia Tosh
was a demute and charming
Clara and s he wa s, in-
cidentally, a very patient little
girl throughout a last act in
\\'hich she is nothing more
than a spectator. Like good wine and the
Laguna Beach company it.'lflf,
Tsch&ikovsky's dream cttild
gets better v.'llh age. It came
across the rooUights of the
splended Laguna M o u 11 on
Playhouse as fresh as paint
and as much in tune with the
festive season as it was when
it brought down the house at
its first memorable
performance.
This struggling Laguna com-
p<iny de serves and gets from
thi s rolumn a fe\v extra
plaudits for its courage in put-
ting on a full length ballet that
is, appearances at times to the
contrary, an extremely
demanding v•ork. Happy and
carefree iL may be, but it still
has to be danced ana it calls
for the costuming and drilling
of a large number o f
partici pants.
It takes some doing when
you're working on the pro-
verbial shoestring and it is lo
the great credit of director
Lila Zali that she is able to put
on this pleasing show and still
find time fo r t he
choreography.
She has mustered a
marvelous array of small fry
for the many and varied
Josef Von
Sternberg
Dies at 75
HOLLYWOOD (UPI)
Director Josef Von Sternberg,
discoverer of M a r 1 en e
Dietrich, died of heart failure
at Midway H~pltal Monday.
He \Vas 75.
A film director ror more
than half a century, Von
Sternberg was born in Vienna
?\fay 29, 1894, and after coming
to Hollywood directed scores
of silent and talking pictures.
Still, if we enjoyed it so
much, perhaps Cynthia shared
our enthusiasm.
Suffering as she !las from
the loss of key dancers to the
bigger people of the ballet and
dance world we must imagine
that the presence of a ballet
scout in the house wou ld
assuredly give ti.fadamc Zali
the shivers.
If there was one Friday
night we can think of at least
one name that might have
gone in. his li\tle black book;
that of young Gregory
Osborne who 'Was nothing less
lhan' splendid in his portrayal
of the dancing doll and no less
eye-catching as one of Mothe r
Ginger's little snaps.
A talented young man, this
Gregory, and we're quite sure
that his abilities are being
carefully nurtured by Madame
Zali.
He is not the only jewel in
the Zali bo:r, to be sure, and It
is good to see so many young I
~!g bcua~~~fly b:~~~d a;:~~~ i
to fruition. Even if they are
sna,pped up by th<m: who can
wave a checkbook and a con-
tract that will take the
bedazzled artist to !i\,.e co1l·1
tineots .
A merry Ch ri s tm as,
r.iadame Zali, to you and your
young company. You "Nut-
cracker" was a significant
contribution to ours.
INDS TONllJHT
"THE CRAZY WORLD
OF
LAUREL AND HARDY" ••• "THE BEST OF
W. C. FIELDS"
STARTS WEDNESDAY
, ' . ,._ .. '
lCJ . 0
~~. " •
Starts Wedn•sday
11.1LT u1s~r.rs IOI ~.u '-l•TOOllOl~M
DllMAllllS
HARBOR a l ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·31 021
ON HAR IOl BLVD. -ONE MILE SOU TH OF SAN DIEGO fWY•
World Premiere En9C19ement
"One of the smashing box offic:•
success•s of 19701" -L.A. Times
But he was best known for
finding Miss Dietrich in a
Bertin theater and starring the
actress in her first movie,
"The Blue Angel" He went on
to direct her in six other films. the Undefeated
JOit Wllvne ~Hudson
DUSTIN'
I HOFFMA.N,
~ -"' .... ,. ~
ALSO
GEORGE SEGAL
"THE BRIDGE AT
REMAGEN"
. ------ttrf MERCHANTS' FREE
TIJITH CHRISTMAS SHOW
~nt c ... , Hlfll-Y DEC. 23 & 24 1t 1:30
Co,... _. M•,.._,•. 671.6261 IMMM---MJlaM:ll
SHOWING
"MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN"
A w•na. ••ci'*t eM1 ..... ...,.w • .......,,.,.
i11 ttt. tt.tlft of Hh,.l
A SHOW FOR ADULTS AND CHILDREN TOOi
IS
John
t 1t1M a
,.,....1or
,lee• of
ent1rtah1'"1nt."
-Ch1r!11 Clt1mplin
L.A. Titn11
.......... . .. ,,,,.. ~.......... .. ............. ..
101 UDISll Pf:Tll YATIS XHI lll)RTIWR W:Kffll llri£~
"U11~-..tl••lr. It 11 ... of fl>• 111,..,. occo1nplilh-111••" " fll111 of the 1fftl" -L.A. E1 1rT1in1r
-
e CONVENIENT SHOW TIMES e
WM-Tlri•ts,-frld..,, De<. 17-l l ·lf-7:l0 nd t :JO
Contln110111 Show Ev•ry D#y Startl nt O.C. 20
I :l 0-l:l0-S:J0-7:l0-t :l0 p.111.
C stereo103FM
the sounds of the harbor
~d.~~7 youve never heard it so good
•
•
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' 1 1 ;
)
> ~
$ < t
> 1
' ~ I
I
... '• 1
Tut51b1, Dtttmbtr 1J, 1969 DAILY I'll.OT J7
LEGAL NonCE LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NOTICE
Walls Are Tumbling Down
Religious
Books Go
NOTICI OP a uuc TltAJftP .. lt c1.eu '1M,.MJ u.c.c.1
MOTIC• TO ClllOtTOltl
I U,•11.IOtl co~·· ~ TH• ITATI Of' CALll'OIUlllo itOt.
THI COUNTY 01' OtlANOI. catTl,.ICATI o• •1111111$1
,tCTITKIU5 •ll M UM• .... ...... ,.
Etl•" Ill t;VlLVN I(, STICH Dtcui.ed. The II~""' ..... ,_...., ~ ,r,.19 111111• ,,_,.,.,., wl'ION lluilfw• NOTICE 11 HEllt:BY GIVEN " tlM !Mt ni., .,., ~J,. ' UN ~ IOdtea. .. ,.,,.. COlll... Hllll ltffll, _, t.u.1-•I un N~ ...... ciw1 .... ,_,... ., l• ...,,.. ..... Sitt• .. c~lton ., TIM Hovi Nlmed doK9'Hftt (W• ,,,...... Or••,.....,..,.,_.. • ._ .....
C11ifroml1 ttlel 1 1111111 lf111•!w 11 1bout t9 "'9t .it --lll¥ll'\f ctflll'N , .. lnlf "'9 COullty C Ill 111 ""*I 111f flcttttws
tie "'"-•,. Mr, Ludnl'I of Nt~ .... 11Kllllf>I N'I IMlllr9d le 1111 !Mm, Hrm ~,,,:.,~~·IVll.W INVIEITMI N:T
IHdl, Ill(" TrtMtft .. , wi.,. _,.,_ W1lfl IM llllCftletV ¥0Uche<1, ifl IM olllC• COMPANY, t llmlftd "'"""""'"' tllllll N r IOdrftl h " Jld; L4lnCloll S.UIN, II lht Clisft: 11 IM lbcrvl Wtllli.d tOUrl, DI llld II,... lt ~ of ~ fqtMW-
O.•l111d, Coo.ir11Y II Al1med1, St1l1 Cl! .'!_-~: .. ~:.....~'•" l!'lr 1 ;:'11~~rv 11 rtllcllncl 1r1 It lollllws. It Wit:
Notkt fl lllttlW 11¥1n '9 Ille CrMl!en
al' .l,lt11tndt11 8 ..... ,.. encl z ....... ~.
rtulblnd tfld •llt, 1.W Pllflrw MnltN, I
1
·-
_ ....
·-.. ;
INSTANT DESTRUCTION -It took jus t 17 seconds
for Kansas City's Hotel Plaza to go from nine
stories to rubb le when 110 pounds or dynamite . e x-
ploded from a series of 17 charges laid in t he ba se~
' •
• • • • ••
• . • • '' •
• '\.
' . • •
'
'
..
I •
'>
UPI Ttfltt.to
ment and first floor . The 4~year.old building was
razed to make way for a new hotel in the new Crown
Center building project.
Slowly
C1lll«r1ll. ~~rs, 1 --· ""° 1 o « --• w,_ '""" .. 111 tull 11'11 ,,IMtJ The ·•-rll' Ill be lrlnlllfM II loc•IM of lltr AltorMY 11.oberl M. FIU:, fl $oultl """;.,, l11 G9o'llr•I ,.,.. .. , 15'1 NEW YORK (AP} -The 11 ta w111 Coe11 Hl11hw1.,, N._. l1k1 "-· P1Ydlfl1, Ct1ltD111I• •1101, N-oort 81.:ci CM•• M&I u ufornll.
B . . I BNCll. Counll' ol or1nee. 1t1l• of wlllcll 11 ""' 11llc1 of bu1lne11 ol IM 1.lmltH Plrt~· '
Holy Ible lS selh.n.g poor y C1lllornl1. u..-1111Md In t it "''"'" H rl11fll"" lo Roblrt w .... Phl'Hll H. " .... -. '°
this Ch I t t ti.A $.lkl ,,_...., "' deM:rlt.11 lfl •-r•I !he """' "' Jlfd clK~fll, wl!f\\n four Bollvir Lldll ,..r11 N_.._1 aH<ll. (••
r s mas season a 1n:: 1i: All •lock 1,. '••d•, f1•hlr•t. Mulimenl m1111•~11 ''"'' '"' !Int 1ut1nc111on o1 11111 t:z'60; Juli• E. A.Y. QJ N•r.:IMllo , •• ~
b · book t · 'd th Pen lr1el1 "'~ Ind 0000 •Ill ol "111 noll<t. c111 M1r Cell! '26U1 AlfrM encl K•ltll".Yn usy s ore 1ns1 e e • Ru11ur•nt buJ!nts1 Juiown •• P!t1r11'1 D•red D«tmlll!r 22, '"' E. Btr•~t, ,.,S1 vm1 Pk111c, H\IMll'lll'iii
tagon but there and all ltttlen Culslnt IM loclttd et HOO W11I :velwn ~· Mll~r I e..cll. Cttl,. '7W; H. Wl rd encl ,Of"MI
• Coul Hhlf,..l'I, N-1 Bl4Clo, (OYnlY ol .,,·~·~ ol lll4 -:,1 tel I 81....,.ntttt 1001 s.omttMI llflf N ......
a r ound Washington gift.shop-Ot•nte. s1111 "' C•llfDI"'•· 1toa•1tT M Pis:' "'"' 0« @n ee1c11. c11i1. "*01 D•vld c . ~nc1 L"1!• Tiit bulk lr1n1ler Wiii bl c11111ummllecl ' P. lhldl!Y, 1165 Vi.ti Otl VII ... , A~,
pers can't gel enough of a 1111 DI •l!•r 1111 nu• d•w o1 J,....,.,.,, int, ~,:::;: L-t•11~:;-y, • c1111. tlOot.; w. D. 1nc1 J1ntt l. Bw-. II 811 E1c•ow Co., Inc:~ 1"1 H••bor • I. • • 1 I 11r11 M.111111, Irv\ ... C1tll ,,...., ~Vlf 111
devotional book CaJled "J'Ve a,,l'ld .• _,Cc"',',._~' County ol O•lfllle, !~l~~J~ "'.!::ulrl• (1rr, J2t l lrMlntl!M. 1t.i~ ..... bin!!; C11ff: ITt "' I ...,,,,.. '15D<1 · Tt.om.1 W (In' 2141 Movn"ln
Got To Talk to Somebody, $o '" •• knowfl " ttM Tr1n111r-. 111 o!WNllMd °.i:'flll• Co.it J D•llY f1~j· PIM.' L• crtK.,.t~ ce111'. t1012; Jtd ..,er
11 busl<>tt1 ntme1 Incl IOCltllill w.eci trr 19.,.""""r n, ' lfff etld 1"111"' :13j.s-M Motwi C'*'>lr1, JU F1<11ll1I, c--•1 God. fr1!"l-1 for tr\I lhrH VHrl i.1t lftl, Mer Ctllf ... 2J· •-.. , ..., .. •-, 11 11.n.....,.1 trom 1111 1bo'ff. ,,..: LEG NOTICE ' . ' ~-' 1 ..... Sales ha\'e been inspiring in 1C1r1m•s. J01 *" s1 •• Nt-1 8ut11, AL 111111111, 20 N. 11-1 •!Yd~ s.n co-. C1lltornl1 . ..._rktn Cvlll11t oi. Co.. MOTKIE IW Pll9LK Nl!Altlii'G r!lll, Ctll~. f01711 Dr. Raber! J. W NllllCT
the Dallas area for "Bless Inc .. ~ Tt"9•1111 ltoH, LOI ........... •t POltfi TH .. CITY COUNCIL 0,. ~..::!. "'t=r:l: .a:.:io,..,'::'!":'i'.":. ~~
This Mess and 0 I her l?,:;:,1=~-1t ltff . TN .. CITY o,. 'ouwTAuo1 VA LLIY Erk__,, H• vi. LklD Nord • ..._... Mii LUCI('!"$ OF NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN !flt! Ofl ... Kii. Clllf . .,...1 Esflll el Kfl'll It.
Prayers." Several d 0 z e n NEWPORT 8EACI( INC Tllftdtw, J•nw•rv '· !'70, 11 l :DO p .M. Jn Fledlft' lde<Mi.edl JIM II.. 'IM1tr. (•·
I B, J I Mt Cid o a' tt h. IM CDUll(ll Chembers. Cltf lit!~ 1!»00 tc11lrlx, 1115 Armfft Or~ Pe...-.lt. nterpreter.i' lb es have also P~ ~· 1 n · 1 ,. 1 1i.tw Avtl'lw. Four1t1111 v • 11 ~ v , c111t. •nOJ; Pewi. P. Fledler, o s. F11r
been snapped Up l'n the bi'g T fl 1 n Ce llfonl!t, IM CllY Couocll will hold I O.b Av1 .• lt11.1d1111. Ctlll. tnot1 DIA J. r1n1 "" llJbllC hur!llf Oii fl'le tollowl"I: 11111 JHMl!t P:owi.r. tu1 S. Llfldtntt OP,, Texas city at $89.50 per 12· Bw Llovd s. Eni.tt 1. z-Ch111u No, 2u A11P'llQH1111 w111n1itr', c.111. "*31 or. 1toti.rt GentN.
Sectv. ...,....,(lf9d by G-H. Brlll'lNll, 11 65 N. MICUlO!I, t111dt1111, CIUI, f'll!lll1
volume set. P b!f ~111'c;;H c,,,, 0,1 ... ,1., •11•lletnt, ,,,q~1lj11t cht"9t of 1:1111 on 1<1111 E. Hqw1rd, llOt M&l111, P. o. lox
Anyone l·n New Y k c1·ty u •·-= ll!tlt " ~-rtv loc:lltd 1111 '~ e111 1~ of u., B11dwl11 P1r11. c1111. tl~1 11:1hhtr""' Or Oec~r 2J, Ult 731+tf M11noll1 Slfftl. bf!-11 ttie S..n Dleto FIMllv Tr u 1 I, J.t"""'l C. ICehl1trom looking for a fast·moving book Freew•w •ncl •~ 0ce1n v;-flood tru1lff> t06S Nllll~lt 11.d •. ,.,.,cltN,
with a religious message LEGAL NOTICE control cnann.1 ''°"' A1 Gener11 c1111. t1 111111 Geo••• 1"" Je•n L1r11.it Atrlcultur•I Ol1trlct to Cl Gelll!r1! 217.1 Fr.,>ell L t 11 1• COlll M .. 1 (11 •
would do "'ell to s lop first at SAit 1n. 8u11""' 0111r1c1. tH:lt; Ch1rie1 , ,, 11 N1ncv Lt11cr..,,
lhe COOki"n• s-ti'on Of hi's HOTIC• Tt'I C•IOITOlll Tlll1Mttlet11 bellll 1roctsxd IKl'lulnl le-try Dr., Sludlo ,City, Ci!U, flMlt, ~,
I> "" SUl"l .. IO• COU llT OP TH.. to !llt Pll11n!1111 l1•1 of Ille .Slate of M1rk 1nd Frlll<tl A. l11. 163] Ill
bookstore for "The Supper of STATI! 0' CALl,OltJflA FOlt Cllllo•nf• !Gov'!. Cad' U,llOO ,, i tto.) Ind St .. C111t1 Ml••· C1\lt. m261 Aablrt •
THI COUNT Y o~ o••MO• '"-Fovnt1l11 \lellew ZClfl!llll On11n1nct. Ind llt!llV lov Lollock. "" Etsltl •
the Lamb," an Episcopal "'· ... .,..,. Tiie Zllflll\9 on11nanc1, ZOlllllf M~1>1. •nd Covin•, c.111. t1m; or. wi lftllif
cleric's blend of reci ..... s and E1t•t• of FRANK e. MAN"llNG a1'° E~111b1tt 1" an 11~ In '~ Pt1nn1,.. M1cl1rtn, isu ltklt.,..•f ltd.. s.., ,.... kflO"'n 11 FRANK EDWARD MANNING D111rtmlnt •llCI 11'1 l~llllblt for pUbl1c M•rlnd, Ct!lf. I~; LMncl,_ Ind "[ joy--of·llving witticisms b illed Dtculld. lnii>tC!I°" enci ·~•"'l11e!lon. M111u1, 1w F11rv...,., Arc1c111, c11 •
h · k NOTICE IS HE!lEllV Gl\IEN to !ht T...., dH!rlnt lo lffllrv In ftvor Of' In llOOI; Edwt rCI Btktr M-'1.._1, Ill, 70 • On t e JaC el aS "a CUiinary cr.dlton el 1111 tb:IVI lllmtd CllCldlnl -lllOll lo lttls ..-.CUI will bl t !ven LIPffr Dr., 8tvlrl'f HUit, C1llf. '°21
entertainment." tl\tt 10 "'Ulf'• h1v1n. c1t!m1 "''"''~in _.iun1rv ta Clo '°· n fvrll\er 1 ..... E~trttl ind J, n, v. MCCIUftt. 1:i
Such Were the l·ndi'cali'o•• lo-Jtkl lltclelent ire rttoul•M to Iii. tfltm, kri:Ntiofl i. dlilNd, 'rOU ..,." conl1cl In. Cl'ltdbOurrw, Sin!• A111. CelH. t1711fh • '"' •1111 Ille ntc111.1rw llOUChe", (n 1111 offkt Plt1111lno Dt<>lr1....,,I •I t62·,•1~ -Don Ptlll Netllker. !:OS ()ellVIVad 0
day from a s pot check o f the o1111e cltrk o1 1111 •bo,,. "'1111..i court, or r.,., '°"" •bove "'"'· E Ar.:1e111. c1111. 110061 D•. Kent A. •191 lo 1r1Mnl It""'" wltll "" tltCl!llltY CITY COUNCIL OF TH H•llft w. NIKN!kt•, n.:i OtkW9tll o.r.
book markel to assess t he YCM.ld'le"· to the wnclt"ltllld •I ""Olflce CITY 0, FOUNTAIN \IAllEY ArCAClll , C•llf. t1006; ••rt J. l
Preference! of ,.,.Opie Who buy ol lltr Atforn1v1, WITTMAN I. SCHMIDT MttY E. Cale PtullM N I c o \ I 1 .,,, Tl.Ira S ,.... 1501 W11ktllf D•I~. Sullt 110, N .... 111... CllY Cltrlt . Woadlend HUii, cell!. tlJ6oll ,..,.. religious books lot ho\jday fNd'I, c1111am1e ""'°· wtokll 11"" lll•c• •ub11111td 0.1ntt c .. ,, 01011 P11a1. o~tr. no Anill or .. '•lldlfl•, C• •
gifl·giving. ol bvslnt11 al' Ill• un<1er1\on"' 1~ •II m1t-Dtc...,bl, 13. lftt 'Jn..t f1!11C11 Ptul E. i ncl Jtlfl A. '"'1e1 • ,~, 1er11lnl"' ta !he ••Ille of ••Id OKI> LI Lome, Fuli.•11111. Ctlll. '246; II.el~
Salesmen, store managers otnt, w11111n t..i• 111011tr.. 1fttr ,.,. ""' LEGAL NOTICE A, ,,..,It•, ltll ICllldMr Cir-cl•, ti
d i>Ubllcttlo<I al 111i. nol!cf. Mi!Jt, C1lll, f.1611: .. oblrt G. Incl l!ltt an publishing spokesmen in D••td "loY_.bt, 1. 1ttt $UPl!1tio11. co uaT o1< THE e. Pott. ru1 N. 11:ntn th' .• LOI """ ,
New York w ash In gt 0 n CLAIRE F. MANNING tT•T• 0, C:it.L1•o•w1A f'Olt C1111. fOUI; °'· E ..... t •nd l tl l•lc• I'll-. ' ' E~tc11!rl• ol IM Etl•!t THI! COUNTY OF ORANG• 11.-. 2llO-' 5. P'"uel. P1il'cllne. Ct[ • Chicago, Los Angeles, Kansas a• '"' •tiev• """'"' e1tcflden1 .., A_..111 "Ito: 0on11d 1. anc1 Lolt ,,,. 11u-• City Atlanta and Dallas agree WITTMAN .1,NO K NMIOT NOTIC .. 0, MIEAR INIJ OP PlTIT!OJf 2«01 Hltltl•""•r Rd .• Cl-Ptr11," •
" All•rl'll'I 11 u-. POii f'll OIATE O' WILi. AND FO• t1:XW: J.cob i ncl Frtna1 J, Schroll, 1
generally that: ~~'i1~~ .. ~~i::.1!:.3:;ut LIEnlEltS Tl!STAMINTAllY w. C~rl!Oil, Allellelm. c1n1. mlMI i -Book sales in general are Tth 1110 ,..._n11 E1tt 11 o1 M1r11 T11tw T'-tllft, R. 1nc1 Annttte sne111mt~1t•, mi P•I •
Alf9.rMy ter IE -ltl OllCH Hd. le1 A119ele1, C.111. t'OIKS, Gto,_t liM ,
booming this holiday season ' ''' .... 0. ,· -• '' ,,.. NOTICE IS HEllEISY GIVEN Th.II lorlt L. T11bol, nJI 0.-chkl Hiii Or .. Ufi..
over t e I t I s t m a s ~· 1.,, :lO, Utt •nd J1n111rv '· 11. 11on tor •r-..-crf •Ill lf>d tor ru.u111<' of Producb Lid., '"'' Tr"""", '••kl1nf, •· h 968 Ch • u I • ,.,,.. °'"'' • .., ' Oon•ld Tl>on!e!On ~·1 flied hf~ln • HI(· •• ""'· c1111. tUOt1 Qt.lldt.+~
performance yet t hose which 1'10 2l7Wf Lett.r1 Tuta....,1114,y to P1111'°""'· o. B01< 211, MOrVov11. c.111. '""' It
. I . . ,..,.,tllC, ,, wlllet> Is Midi kif' IUrl!'lfr tnd Lou! .. G. Werd. 1•1 s. Altlti
can strictly be defined as LEGAL NOTICE 11rt1cu11 ... •nd 11111 tt. 11me 11\d ciltct Bl'ld., ""'· m M°"tw"' •1r11, c1 •
religion books are laggin g far o1 11ur1,,. 1111 ume h ... betl" Mt tor tl7U; w11ttr E. 1nc1 """ M. Whit., J;
b h . -9Alt n16 J .. 1111rv f, 1170, II t ;)O 1.m.. In l~' IMlfrlll A~e .. Vlnlllra. C1111. nDCll/ I. • e Ind. NOTIC l TO CltlEOITO!l l courll'l)()m of Del>lrtfftlnl No. J o1 11ld t nd Flor&nct Wiibur, 1214' V1lll't'lle
-The books most in demand :¥:~:1g: c~':.1t:~:r. ~=: =~·1.!' 0:0:.~::1c,.;.~11~1;11~~:. wm. 111 ~sii ::~~~. c~'.1'c:r~~~~r1 Win~ In the r eFgious field d eal with TN .. co uHtv Ofl DI.it.NO• O•ted Oectmlll!r 11, Ifft D1tec1 Novtm~r 15. lNf ·• •
. Ml. A"'4ut W. E. ST JOHN Ltklv~ lltV9$h'ntnt (omHll'I ;
personal meaning and self· E1111e o1 HELEN ELIZABETH QUlHH Ccun•w c1er1e M•r11 Ln I
search'•g 1·0 one wa or Dtc.Nltd NA•11v 11.. CAltLTON Ge111r11 P1r!llt!f" • u i y NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN lo Ille Ml JfWN11 C•nl .. Drive STATE OF CAltFOltNl4 l H
anolher, crHlllOt"• ol '"• lbOYt nlMecl deUd111t N--' •••di, C1llltrnll COUNTY OF ORANGE I SS i l t t · l I l 11111 111 1erwns h1vlnt cltlm1 •t1!n1! 1ne Ttl 1114) •44·•UU On "lovembtr 25, IHr, btfor1 ml,
-n eres ls me eor C n »Id ~•nt .,, r1<1ulrtd '° !Ht "'""'' A"-rM" ltr "'"""".., undera11n1<1, • Na11rv Pwbllc In 1nc1 aslrology, dreams, zen and with "" nK''""' VotK11tr1, 111 the ottke Pwb111nld O••n<>• Cot1t D•llY Pt1o1. wld CaunlY .ncr 51111, ""°"'11v •-.it•
a th. bo t ti" ;~ ol Ille cltrk cf !he 1bov1 enl!lttd <OV•I, or Ot(!lftblr !l, 7~, ?t, lttt 2J7M9 Id M1rk ln. •no-to ""' lo ,,., ;
ny 1ng a u mys c~m. " '""Hi' '"""· w1111 '"" nec••••rv ,..,..,,, -· ... -11 1ubtcrlt.11 '° Young people are the biggest voud>efs, to"'' unc1.,1'9ntd 11 1M OHi« LEGAL NOTICE wilhln 11111ni..-.n1. •nd .ckl'IDWltdtitd
b . . of his Altarnev. ALAN MEllLIN REEOY mt. lh11 ht t Ktcwl<td !111 .,..,._ I
uyers, especially 1n the nao Norlh M11n Strttl. S•"'• ""' W1TNEss ..,,. ll•nd ,,.., oNlclel MIL
P•perback bracket C1lllornl•. wlllch h 1111 t llCt "' bu1l11H1 P·JU# !OFFICIAL SEAL) " • •. al' lht Undffllf l\l!d In Ill m•lterl .. r ClRTlfltCATE OF 8U51NIESS 11.lclllrd J. Morlort •
-Bibles and B1ble--related 111fli"' to n.e 111111 cf 111(1 cllO;*lent, ,,CTITtous NAMI! i'lol•rv ,ublk.Celiforn.11 j
books are movino: as nicely as willlln four ,,_,,h• •fie• the 11"1 pUbllci The un11er1r1Md clot• cer111v "' t1 con· Prlnda.I Offlc• In " "°" ef 11111 noflct. dwct!111 1 bulln.tt1 11 ll1l w. W1rMr, °'"'" COUflf'r ever excepl in the Northeast • O.tell N"""m"" "· 1"" senrt Ant. ci mornl•, wncle• "" tlctlllovi Mw corn.rn1111on Eulr111 , • FA"rl!Ell. DESMO"ID QUINN N.....ernbtr tt, 1tN
and h.1iddle Atlantic reg1on_s, E•ewtor al' ""' E•••tt ~~LD;:"S1 •nct"' "'•:----••kl"·~~ :~ •ut.111M11 or1n111 c°''' 01lt'f ,11ot,
where they have long been d1f. AUN :~~1~~.'0'V""' dll:edent -..i 111 "" lo!lowini ....--, '"""" Oec:emlllf '" n. JID. lM •Ml J~J;
ficult sellers. Attw,,.... ,, u.w 111m1 i_n 1un 1nc1 II•<•"' rnkltn<t i. 11•1c"c":... _________ __.;;...c
"Th • · llot North ~ft SlrHI !allows. LEGAL NOTICE e rang~ this year 1s very slftt1 .u1, ceHflmt Jor .. " Stnfard 8111m, "' Pru~ St.
broad" sa·d lg Kropotki Ttr: 1n•t IU-Mll Cail• Me11, Clllfornlt . 1--------------
, I or n. 1.nw,,.... for •••nrt.-0.Ctmblr I, lfff. NOTIC• TO CRIOITOlll
manager Of the big Scribner 's Publllllld O•tllft Cot1I 01ltv P1101 Jardin S•nlonl Blum 1Uf' ... IOll COURT °' TM•
book lo F 'fth A · Decfll'lblr 1), JO, ''"end Jtinu.,.., •· n: Slit• "' C1lllornl1, Or1111t Countw: S re OP I venue Jn 1110 ?lt,'4t On Drcrmlll!r I, lfft, beferr mr, 1 I TAT .. 0' CALIPOllNIA POii TNl New York as crowds of Nol•rv Public rn llld ter 11ld s11H COUHT'I' opt oltANO .. ' · LEGAL NOTICE _.1ori1Uw I PPH•td J.,relln Senlord Blum customers swanned around k-n 111 "" 1a bl '"' .. ,.Cf! ""'°'' "'· A...uJ
the Counters below h·is gl ed-''' ,,,. n•rnt 11 subtcrlbff ta the wllllln 1..... E1!11e ol Wllll tm Ale•.,,..,. c-°"· ass 1t•wm1nl Ind 1cknqw1e<19td Ill t•KUll!d Dtc.uHd. in balcony office overlooking HOTICI! TO Cll .. OITOllS rllt ..... t . NOT ICE IS Hl! .. E8Y GIVIN • "-SU•llllOll COURT 0' TH E «OFFICIAL JEAL I crldltar• of lttt 1111¥1 Mm.Id dtet0t11t
the stor e. STATI! Oii CALll'"OllNl.I, POil M•tY K. Hfltrl' "''' '" PfflOl'll h•Vllll cltlrM ... 1n11 lh9
"They're buyt1'-books lo THI COUNTY OP OIANOI Nollrv Pubtlt.Clllfornlt i•ld o.eadtnl 1rt r1<1wlrM lo lllt 1lltm,, • ':'' NI. A..-:1' Prlncl11I ON!ct lfl will! !he n«tlJltY vouchers. In 1111 otfk• read, as oppos to coffee-E1l•lr cf MARGARET MENtHAN Or111te COU!l!V ol ""cll•k of"" l bovt tnt1tlM court.°'
table books or 'furniture ~~C:~~~:go~:...~· MAltGAll.ET ~:~.c:!'.''l'~;;ion E~111rn ~~~&n~ ::""..;.~~'i:,lllCl~t =-::;i:
books . at we call them NOTICE IS HEAE8 V GIVEN la ,... PubllJ""' Ot11111e C011! Ot llY Pllol, ol ,,.,. Alhlmlv Jerntl c. B .. -... 301
' • crellltor1 ol ll'tt 1bove ne!Md dl!Cecltnf Dlclmblr t, 16, 2l, lCI. Ifft 221'l'4t Ee1t Color•do IOC1ltv1rd. P111de111.
''People are trying to figure 11111 111 Hr111n1 t.e vlnt c111.,,. M•l111I ""' LEGAL NOTICE c1111arnl• t11D1 , wllld'I i. "" •-11<1 llf
lh I u "d 1.1111 --l<I r""'IP«i to 1111 Iller!\. bllllnlll of !M uncltr1l<ll'IN 1n ell rMftottl
emse ves out more, sa1 w1111 ""' ntcn11rv ~ .. 111 "" of'f1c:• ""1•lr1l11t ta 1111 "'''' o1 .-111 dtcldtnt, M iss Linda M yers who directs o1 ""clerlr al'""' •bovt 1nllt1M court, •r T""'7t w11111n tour 111011llll ""'IM ttm Mlic..
• . ' lo lflttrll llltm, wttll "" M'CflJlrv "'OT•C• TO Cl<D TOI• lion of lhl1 noffc1. Public re lations for t h e V011C11et1. ta ""' 11N1trs1<1fltd ,, 1111 or11c1 " 1 0,,.. ·----'· '"'· 1UP•lll0ft C:OUllT O~ TH• ~
c.1J]tUre-minded Brentane Chain rso~!•u:~::-r,;_ ~~!~. :iie°?~.T~ ST.1,TI O• CALl .. OltJfl.I, •Olt MllE•~!~rfx '::"l:.."~-rM TH .. COUNTY OP OltAHGI """' of.~~tor1eslonauonwi~.1 :i~~ !1~ ~·i::· .~;:n::·~r=~ . ... .... ...,. JAM••~.";,.=:...~~' i•n::Y wan escape 1n 0 Ille undff1lvlll!d 111 111 Mll141rl Plrlllnlllf E1t1re "' cu.•ENCE I . DAECH. Ill l•f , ............ ....,.,..,
other ~orlds It partly ac· to"'' ""'' o1 .. 1(1 d4lcldtnt, wi1111n i...r OKNll!d. ,........_ c1•flnll• t11t1
f i.:.'. and """'"'' 1fllr Ille llt11 publlcelklfl ol 11111 NOTICE IS HEll EIY GIVEH hi 1111 Tth f!IJ) J'N.Wt count,, or tin: great dem nollcf. crtdltoro .i 1t1e 111crv1 nerntd de«Otn• ""'""' .., a uc\1111•
for all these oil beat books and D1ted st11ern1:11r 21. 1ttt th11 111 111•-Mvlnll c.J11m1 "•Im' ""' ,.,Dnlhed or-CN rt 011tl' P11o1 • -ROll!ltT D. WOODW.1,111) I .rd dlc:tcllnt ..... l'l'lllltlld to Ifft""""· DKttlllll!r '· 1,, 1J. JI, IHf m 1 ...
gimmicks that touch on belief E•tc111or of "" l!1t111 w1111 "" tWc111.1rv -.clltrs, In 1111 office LEGAL NOTICE
nd h . . ., al' "" tboWt nlHfttd dtc<tde111 ot ti. tltrlr al' 11111 1bovt ewTlttlld tour!, or 8 t e s pirit. MIU.If M. DOIT.I,~ •so . •11 "~'"" """'· witj\ "'' tlf'l:f$1.,..,1-------.-.--------
---.,-,,.,.,.,,....,.,,,,,.,=----1 unlloi hllk l ••rt, l!lllt •M VOUd'llrs, to IM undtr1l1ned 11 Ille ollfce
LEGAL NOTICE M 5111111 M1l11 t lrMI of F. MACKENZIE 8•DWN, Atlor,,...., ~ CEltflptl(AT .. Ofl IUllNIESS 0""91. C1lll9Mll1 H"8 lovlll 5'rlllf Strfff, LOI A11teln PICTITIOUt Ml.Ml -----:::::::::=-:::;-----1T .. I.; (1141 n5·tn4 C•l"""" H01(, """lch "' "" Pltce ol T~. 11ndtnlefltd do Clrflf'Y ""'" •••
JfOTICI! OP """""' ,. ••teulW busllWll al , ... ~nelertlfl'lld In I ll mtlil!'t'I ('Gncluctl"' • blnlntll ,, 11651 VOii INTINDIO SliiCU AITV INTl lllST Publl111td O•tfllt Caest Oe!lw Pllol, ..i11n1,.. lo "'' O!ll•'• ol Jtkl ClttldMI. 11:1rrn1n SlrMI, t 111t1 A111. C1llfonll1. (l u1k Tren1l1r) Oecemblr 23, JO, !Hf i ncl J1n1Ntrv I. 13, W11!11fl lour m11111hi l fftr Ille fl•tl pUbllcl· under lflt tk:Hllou1 llmi ,....,. llf NOTICE IS HERl!IY GIVEN TO THE 1t1D ,,,Mt lion ol lhls not!c1. ENGINEER ING s E It v I ces EN-
CltE DITOlt5 01'" ROGeR A. JOHNlO"I, Otlfel Otcember 11, lf6t, TER l'Rt5EI I nd !1111 yl(I tlrrn It com-
81!1''°"'''' 11111 8orr_.,, who11 bu1lnec1 L EGAL NOTICE FI or t 11 c e M D 1 f ch , '°'"' crf "'-lo!lowl,.. --. .,._ .od'rt11 11 17'5 N_..,., l auln1rd, In .Adnllnl11r1lrl• ' 111mt1 In lull '"" 1>lec" ol ru1dlnu ere
lt1o City ol COiii Mtll, Counl"I' of L .. OAL NOTIC.. or lttt '"•'' ol lllf IS IO!laM: Or•"'•· 511!1 ol C1ll!Ot"nle, i ncl Ill ol JflWftOltT-Ml"IA UNIPllD SCHOOL tbtov• IWfttd Oteeotnt H1l111 L. Cl\l11rn1n, 16' !11t lltlt •111111 bulllll!il ntm .. IM 1dllrt11ft u1M DtST•ICT ,., MACklNJll l•OWN 51N!ll, Oilll Mft.1, Celllornle,
•!lllln lllrll l'Mrt 1111 1111! ID l•r 11 HOTIC• tNVITIJfO 1101 ut 1111111 lltlflt II. Cll1rlll Y. Glblon. 1tf E•I lftfl k-ID 1111 Secv•flY Ptrtv ... NOTICE IS Hl!ll.l!I V GIVEN lflll 1111 l ............ C1lff. •u s1 ... r. C0£11 Miii, C111f11nl1
"'""' Autom111c Tr1Mml111-, 174' 8otnl ct Educ.tllon o1 lflt NrwtOrt·MIH Ttl: l2UI lf1-41tl D11ed ~bfl" lJ, IMf
N-""' BouleYI• d. Ca1l1 MeN, Cell-Unified kl\001 Dl1trl~ of Or111M CWl!l'f', A"'""' Mr A .... hlll~WI• Cl'lerlH Glblllfl
IDrflll Ctlilornll, wllt rKtll'i! Mtlod bl4h U1 to , ... ll111ed Ortn9t Cot$! D•llV 1"11111, STATIE ,OFH~~l~Oi~::n-n
h iboul to m•e 1 bull< tr1n11er bv 11:1111 .l,.M. on 1111 7!fl Ml' al' J1nwory, llN 0.:tmb9r 16. :11 JO, IHt •lld Jl lMll fV ,, ORANGE COUNTY·
1r111tfft1 t 1ecwrl1"1' lnte•t$1 lo JI.MIES ti lr't! olfltt al' .. kl SCl!ool Dl1lrkt, ltll n U-61 On Ol«mbt u: 1.., ~ fN I
TWEOOELL, $tcurtd Ptrl'f, w"'11 bu•· loclltd ti llJ7 l'll('lfllle A-. Col.II "lottry .. ublk r In Incl '1or llld St~tt,
lnn1 tdd•t•t I• (/D A"""r J. l !11v1, Mne. Cilllornl1, •t Wflld'I II"" JI"! Mlll LEGAL NOTICE ltf"llllltl" •-ir<td Htltn l . 0-..11
un Wnt K1t1111 In Ille \111' of AIM· will be ....,Mlctv lllltntd end reld fO•. '' H Y •-kllO-to !flt to be ' C I t<AltM TllACTOll. tncl t r I • htlrn , COCllll'f crf Ortn9f, 5 111 ol II· Aft bkll lff te .,.. In ICCot'dlllCt wllll NOTIC• TO (11.I OITO .. S 1111 ""r'°"' wt1o1<, ntmtl •rt ltAlterlllN
lor1111, 1n tht IDl-11111 dtl(~lbtd "'"""' CendlllOOIJ. ln1tructlant •nd s.tcmt11l111t SUPIElt lOlt cou•T Opt THl to IM •llttln lntlrumtnl '"" IC~ .,._,1y al' Borrower. 10-wU.;. wllld'I 1,, -°" fllt In IM offln ell 1111! STATI 0' CAL l'OllllllA 'Oii td ,,,.,. t•twlocll 1111 """· All fl•turn -111111pmt11t al' I Ctr· Puro::hlilnt Aienl of s.111 kf'ool Ololrlcl, Tltl COUNTY 01'" OltANGl 101',ICl.1,l SEAL!
!"'In l lltomt!lc lrlMfl'lllllonl 11111i.-s 1W ,ltcenlll A,,,_, COlll Mtil, If .. Aoffm J•tllt IE. 01vl1
t._n el A1mco A11"""'tk Tr1M· Cetlforhll IE1!11l! al' 10.1, C. BAtlEV, Oea11"1. NOllrv P'*llc • C1llfll'11 ..
Ml111ml Etcll ~ mutt 11111,.,ti 1 bid dt"51t NOTICE IS Hl!RIEI V GIVEN to !111 PrlndNI otlko In
loc:eltd ,, l1~S NfWIOtl &OYltttrd. Ill rn ..... lorm of I 1;9rtll!M or cti.111••'1 cr.dllor1 al' Ifie it.we fllfl'll'd Ota-drnl Of-CM!n"
lllt Cl" crf C111!1 """'' '°""" ol Or· d'lldl. ,,,. • blCI '°"" .. 1111 to 11 ...... raom ""' ell --lll Vl"ll ct11 ....... 1Mt '"' M" Comn'llHltfl E•'4rw lflll!, 51111 ol Colltornl1, 1nd 11111 "'' U"'-1 f1f IM ernovnl o1 ,,_ bld, "'tell 1.1kl ~I ire ,.._lfld to fli. 11111'1'1, Jul'll 11, ,,.,. ID1..oino bu lk tri 111f,.. will ~ COl!IVl'n-fN'Vl blt le Ille 1rcltr o1 1111 N...-f·Mlle Wllll "" -V ~ In "" offk9 P\lbllthtil Of-c...f 0.1\Y l'llttt
MllW "" or 11ter 1111 '"" ..., of o. Unflled ktall 0 111rid. A hrtormll'O al IM cltr1l 11 1M ,..,.. tnllllttl court. " ~ 1&. ». JD. lftt t111111 ~'i "'
t9mbw. 1t•• " 1111 L-"Id! 8rt nc:ll eeni1 l'lll't' -rftlulrtd 11 1111 dltcl'l'tlon of " ,..,,...,,, """" •1111 "" _,.,.,. 1m n Hf
crf tho s•cu111TY PACIFIC NATIONAL 1111 D11tr1ct. Is IM l'Yfttt .i t111uro "' VOllCl'lfrs, to"" ""*"19"'" •1 "" otlkes LEGAL NDnCE 81.NIC 11 102 Pine,.,,_, In 1111 CllV l'ftfW tl'llo llld'I ttntrlCI, 1111 ptotffOl f/I el HAllWOOD, SOOE "I AMO M>KIHSON,, ___ .::::.;::.;=....;...;.'"-"'----
ol L-9MCll COii""' of Loe -'""In. "'-ct\tck •Ill bl fortellH . or ifl tlH el • UI N1wp0r1 Centtr Drlw, 5Ulf'I OA,1•
s "" c 11,.'.n.1 btftti, llHt 1un Wnl IMraol wm bt N"""'°" 8Mdl, c1111on111. l*l, w111c11 I• l'.-n
':ttd 0:.:1m~:· It 1,... forfeited lo H id SCllOal Dl11t'ld ol Orl nt>I tht ciltct of btnlnlls of 1119 vndtrllgntd ClltTl,.ICAT• 01' COlllJOllATIOll 'Oii
' . (OllnlY. lft •!I .... Hfl"I ""'''""" to ""' tlltlo llf TRANSACTION 0 .. au•1Mlll UND•• ~ ltott!I" A. JoMtan, No blddtr "'" wlllldr1w hll 111(1 far 1 1114 dteed9flt, wl!lllfl lo\lr tnOflll\1 1lltt" ,.KTITIOUt MAMI
• '1-1 ' T -· lft1ad el lori'l'..flvt 1451 d1y1 ltfltr 1119 IM II"! ""bllclllon el tnls ftal'lct. TH!' UNDlllSIGNl!D COll.fl'OltATIOft v 1 Jlmft w ' dllt If! tor 1M -I"' lhtrtof. DllM Novtmbtr 21, lNt doe1 .......... clrtltl' ltlll tt It C9lldl.od11141 • Stcur<td ,lrll' Tlte eoent of Ed~Han ell IM N-rt· s... 81lllV GOll\frd bulfntll roe"" II Gif2 C•-Or., ""'' 11/ Foti"' TwtctMH Me11 lrnool 0 !1trlcl f't1ervts 1111 rllht to IE•tcwlrl• 0 , Hft'POrf 8tecfl. C1lltarnllt IHllttl' 1111
Publl'll>lid Or'""' C011I D1llY Piiot. l"fltcl 1ny" •II blCll, ..... llftl MCtJllrltv al' "" """ of '"" l!cftliolt• firm llll'nl Ill MOl tLa HOMI! oec .... ber 73. ,,., 13111"'9 •«HI 1111 lownl -Id, Ind to Wt lvt •~¥ •IMNt "'"'" dtf:l!denl PA•I( OlllGNlll.I. IMC. D .... Youths Take o~e1· Poli~e Room
ST . LOUIS !AP)-The din
blasting out of the building in
the northwest sect ion of the
city sounded like hard·rock
music.
Hard rock from the 6th Dis-
trict police station~
Yes, man, and inside all 36.5
members of the northwest
High School Senior class were
gyrating to the strains of Bob
f(uban and The Jn-Men.
i The cops were dancinll;, too,
, ll all began In October when
40 district policemen were
,11ssi1ned to the hi.ah sch~I
area ti) cool a serfes ol dis·
&urbance1. t The policemen found them·
,.1vu .becoming frlcndt with
et;e kid$. One d1y .a group of
aeniort e.ven went out and
• bought fried chicken for the
patrolmen.
Daniel r~1egenblat1, a social
studies teacher and senior
class teacher. said one day:
'·The police inv aded our high
~·hool So y,e"re going tn in.
vade the police station."
What ht' had in m ind was
nolhing Jess than a blast al
d istrict headquarters. School
officials and p o Ii c e both
Cig arette Use Drops
\\.ASl~INGTON (AP)
Americans on the a\·e r agc
smoked IS2 cigarettes less this
year than they did in 1968.
The Agriculture Department
rtJ)Orted Monday that per
capJU'I consumptlol) for 100~
"'"' 'Csthnated <1t 4 • o 3 4
ciprett.es -ct fcwtr tlian 202 pac:U. '111ls was •bmrt aeven
p3cls less than In Hl68.
The Aruirolture Department
reported 1'-tonday that prr
cap!la consumption for 1969
was estimated at 4 , o 3 4
cigarettes -or fewer than 202
packs. Thl11 was about seven
p11c~ less then in 1968.
l''Cflk p e r capl t i:a COTI·
111mpllon wa' 4.345 in 196~
before UJe impac t of the v.s.
surgenn 1Reh'er at·1 report OI\
smoking 11nd health .
lnformtHIY er lrfffu1erfty In '"" bid HA I WOOO, IODI N .1,JfO AOJCINSOH WAL TEii.i ANO SON, INC. Incl fl'ltl M1'
rtctlvecl, JH N"""" (lfltff Ori.,. llrrn 11 ~ II IM ftt~ Cto'
thought lt was A good idea -----.,-.,.,c.,•.'-•·------1 011 .. 0•<-b~r i•. 11H ,. .. ,., llMCtl, c:.ut tlUl 111ri11on. wt1ot.1 •11nc11o11 11tc1 t1
d h d NOTt<:l TO CltlOITO•J NEWPORT-Ml!SA Tt l1 cn•I M+lSlJ bull-• 11 11 fOl""1: an I e ate WllS set. SUPIE.IOlt COURT OP THI: UNIFIED SCHOOL DIST .. ICT 11.11.._, IW ••ecvtrl• Mollllt ....... Ptrk °""""" inc ..
l)arL of the poUce patrolling ST.l,Tl Ofl CALl,OltHIA ,o. 0-lllv Htrvn pt""'' •11ttllllltd Qr.»1'191 COl•I o.1r,. ,11.1, ""' C•-Or .• SvlJI D, N--'
'". C ... Ty ., ....... '1lt1;1!11I"" /'ten! Otc.M'lbfl" f f 14. U, I... 21'tMlf 9ff(ll, Ct lll.
job y,·as to check s ludent iden-wt .... .,1,11 " us.110t ' ' WITNESS 1i,. MM' 11111 111 ..,, " •-u 1'"'4t11111td Oflllf• C .. JI 011" Piiot, LEGAL NOTICE 0.C...,,blf, IHf. tification cards before admit. E1t11t " LA FllAN(ll M-PETE• ..... ~ 73, •• 1... nn-49 (CDlt.l"O•ATE SEAL)
ti th schoo DKtllld, Mlbllt Mef!w, ,l r1l
ng em to r. NOTICE IS HIREIV GIVEN to "" ltOTtC• o• SAlll 0es1.,., .. Inc:,
The kids got even al the ~,:"=r•.:_:-111~'::'c:~-~~ ~~"::'• ::C~~:!."' "',,..,.
party. The policemen had to .. " et<Mlnt 1r1 rwulrtd to lllt """" NOTICE IS HE1tE•v OIVIEH THAT, STATE OI' CAL.tptOll.NIA I
flash their own identJfJCaUOl'I Wllfl "" _..,., YaUCflff'S. '" ... llfftt f'Ul"llHlnl ta "" IOW --.... -kltd. COUNTY D' OllAlfGI ' • el 9"' Cllo'k of lhl ·~ fO'ftlled cwrf, II lfll vrlllilr$"""""' Wiii till ol IW!k .... et CM lflh 111 Ml' al'~. A.0, lW.
before they could Cel into the 19 .,_, "'""· Wftrl 1111 fltCIMll"I' 11W1 eftJqt of Tenet Alro-91'1 lotlltd 11 1111-. mt """ ~ e Niten-l"llMlc 11t
station assembly hall Mond1y1 l:":'t.'° ... i::......,~"l'•t:~E~O~ ATTEND JH[ CHURCH ~~:' .~ "~::'· tn*::...,::; ~ :': = .. ::.:11~ n:.;::
for the hot dogs, candy, IOft 1114 Not9t ,_.,no AWflClt, L• A111t111 J_., s. 1m. "" 1o11ooW11w *"'"*' .. .-.tw _... ••Irk'-"-...,....,.
d · k d d · C1 tl!eml1 tao2J, wlllCh h !hf 'Ila ef ~. N wll: '1-.'I to -to 11111 1111 a.crtttf'f' 11 th9
r1n s an anc1ng. 1Mt1111• ot 1111 """''"Md 1n •11 ll'lltar• TIM llfllll~ ""''"' ""*' "" _...,.,loft "'" t11tCY1W "" •"""" !ft.
Capt. Edmund Moran, the Hf'tllnlt11 1o ~ ''"" o1 .. Id ~,, Of YOUR CHOICE tMflll 1nn111ntn1, tnc. In 11111 cff'l1lll 11~ on 11111111t 11 "" CWllll'ltlM
district commander, looked .~1,.' ~ •• ..,-."" •. 1t11r "" ""' M!Ju. "'"'"" dtN:'1"" 11 ""1""' 1111r1m "'"""' er11111 ~ " "" ""' '" Ofll UI '"'tour f4J •lo<• CM-I" lflll WC11 ~1Mln IJtcYllcl ... _....
on dubiously aa: a whiteJiairtd 0tttc1 l>twntlt•·S. ,.., 1t1t111rt111oi: Numbtf M·r•s M, w re1 111 w1111tn wt11..,, 1 ""' ""..,.... 111
I. · oovv HOCINAM tAN JHIS SUNDAY N\ll!IWr 11Wlr.f.t ~ ti!. , Hfft 111, 1111nc11 ,,.. tfflQf ""'""'191 -• Ille pO ice officer puffed through l!•ecv1r1~ "" e.11.te .,.1,1.,. t.ll'ldlf' c111,.,n11 Lr-fror .., •nd ,,_. 111 11111 Clftf~'-""' ...,..
the pacts of a modern dance -' ""' •tiavt llfl'Md dtc9dtnt .. ,..._, "" .... lftl to 1'WMI AfrtFett. wtt'""· . , C C Ll•ll TON Inc, CO,.P'ICl .. I. tl!All
w ith a t~en·age 5irl. •"""'" o1 Ltw S.ld .,1111 tor 1N lllf'MM o1 ~tfl1'¥1flt 1A1'l' it. H"""'
"1'he "'arty is a fine i'dea," "" ""'"' "'''" AYMIM• 1111'1 .i 111t Vlllltnltlltd tontner wtllil """ Hcit•r• ~llllC.C•ll~ t' LM A-Ill, Cl lfft"'ll fttt1 of ..... rtl1ir. •lld t•......., C1f &Ill, •r'lnclHI Olllct Ill he remar ked, "but I( lhty TiM1 ftlU tt1"'11' ., OATIEP· O.tl"""' IJ. lNt °'-C-1'1' " d . hi A"-lw ••tcllM• t61t1e .l,llt(ltAFT. lNC Mt c-111• r.1,. 11.etp my me.n anc1ng •l t t 11uan.,,,_ 0r1,., c-.~""' Pl\of, ~ _.*'""" or"* c-t o111Y 1'1ta1. ....,, 14, 1tn •
pace 111 have most of my Otclflllltf n. • ,,.. ,,,._. ...... •. 1a. ~ 11. 1r. 111 ,,, u . 1•; •·,,,"ii l'llMIV\td OrWllt c..,+ ••lt•
squad in the ho~pital." "" mi'4f ' '"' '"' ,.:1 Pt-. ,........., "t, u. n. *' nn--.
LEGAL NOTICE
•
1
\. \ '\~' ,. ' \ t \ \ ' ' \ ' . ,. ~ ... '[" ": • ' -,-c-:,-.~1-•r, -:~~~·-·r' -;~·~~-• • • . .· .. ,. ,• . ,' . .. " ... ' ' ' -------' '•I ;.;-=; .. -:; ·-:: ·-;· ';'""";-..... --':' ~-(-.~.-......... --;-:-·:--~ ·: ·: -~ -~-... Ii :::---:--:;::--;-·:--:-:r--:·-: :---: : .... -. '• ...... ~.,,., .. ,• ....... . . '
JI DAILY PILOT Tursday, Oectmbef 21, 1969
•
~t-J-1u '
Sa ....... 1 n.t Sc.Ii•• Else w ..tr
FOREST E.
OLSON
Inc, Realtors 1
TRI PLEX
EAST SIDE
EARNS $5,800
TremC'ndcus value~~ 3 large
units. 2 becl roon1 and 2 ba1hs
each. DclUXC' ki!chen 1\'il h
built·ins, Only $9,00Q UO\vn
·and just 7 years young. Lux-
• . '
FOR LEASE
Sharp '.I ..L fan1ily t'OOn1 ill
Hun!lng!On Beach, \l'C~I of
Nf'1rlancJ 1iur1h oi H:i.1nilton.
SZ2Ul mo.
Lt'asc at s:rio witli option
to buy. Lovely l\1r l\'f>Ol'l
Beach ·I + fan1ily roon1 .,.
di ning room wi th vi1•w ol
Back Bay. Vacanl no11"
Quick pOsSC'ss1on. ~ bdrms
C'On1plctrly furulsht'<l Cun·
don1iniwn $lij/n1u.
.
AIR WAFTED
, , .By i;Ctltle sea breezes in
fhls one of a kind drea1n
hon1c. Spacious lSCo SQ. f1.
3 bdr., 3 balh hon1e designed
for carefree gracious living.
Easy walking d1s1ance 10
heach, schools, and shop.
ping. $35,000 and )'OU can as.
sumt' the existing t'HA loa n
on fhis pracfically ne1\'. im.
01acularc hon1e.
ury carpeting and drapes · Va<·;;nr elcan 4 hclrn1 .
lhroui;::hoUt. ill a n i cu 1• c d $26511110.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
;::-1'0t11llls. t:nrlosed J!ll rai;cs.
Priced now ill $::G,9j0. Sec
loday. Dial G-lJ-ruc::.
645-0303
at llal'bol' Center
!l!)(J !-!arbor Bl\'d., C.~I.
1969 Volume
$145 .5 Million
FIRESIDE SUN
\\'ill be ~·out".'! in fl'o nt of 1his
Palos Vf'rdes raisC'd hearth
fireplace_ :l b«lrooms and
paneled study or fourth bc-d-
1oom, 11·iih 2\~ baths for con·
venientt. Bui]! in buffet ln j
lo\'ely dh1ini,; room, wilh a
Lurstins 11•irh s lorage space
kitchen. S35,9CO and on cX·
t.'t'!lent buy in Fountain VaJ.
lt'y,
ORANGE COUNTY'S
.LARGEST
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
OPEN EVES TILL 8 :30
OVERBOARD
"Bul ire thought \\'C 1vould
be here for al lcas1 10
years.'' It's all been done,
Custo1nized throughout. 4
l>C"droom, 3 baths, forn1al
di ning room. ~ fireplaces.
paneled oversized family
roon1 with friendly \\'t'I bar.
Lush carpels, drapt's and
the finest 11·all coverings.
Fantaslic rock work and !ht'
last \\ord u1 a pool, $62,00'l
SAIL AWAY
TO VALHALLA
OPEN EVES TILL-8:30
WITHIN
WALKING
Distance To Beach
This 3 bdrn1. ~ bath home
J'C<.'C'ntly painted, plus new
drapes & cal"J>('!S. Plans for
, . , . , ~n . & l'lll1y avail. B~I don l !ca\c Nei\pott un-2nd Story t'Ould be added
111 you have scc:i ti..~;i chy f . . f . , Bd 1 11 b ti or panoramic VIC'W o ocean. r.util'. :. . <I'll, · 1 a 1. ss.-000 S26.jCQ and 1h~ owner 11·ants K 'h· · Ra 1 I . al 1yn u slon enough do\1'11 on y lo cover
his C'OSlS, Nan1t:' yo ur 1crn1s IL•-•..a....,
and nlOVC' in. ~
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
OPEN EVES TILL 8:30
3 UNITS
$29,950
Coldwell, Banker & Co.
550 NeWport Center Dr;
Newport Beach, Calif.
833-0700 644-2430
$650 DOWN
You G.I. Buyers, here is an
opportunity, Use your ben·
efi ts on this sharp 3 bed·
1'00111 Ciili fornia Rancho. 2
lux1u;ous balhs. Hard11•ood
Floors. L'scd brick fireplace.
Separate 18 x 22 farn ijy
1· o o n1. Gol'geous 1nodern
i:a.sts.1de Cos1a 1\lt'sa, Span· k.itchcLJ. Scllt'r has 1n1nsfCI'·
1s•1 t!lc roof. rcnl als on lilrgc reel. House is vacant & hC'
77x150' lot. !nc~n1c $38.l, 11·iJI pay you1• eos1s, \\'c'JI
mont l_i . Our ht'st u1comc r·c.I see if you'i't' qua1ificd on a
turn u1 area . S2-l.500 salt's price.
Exclusive With WE SELL A HOME
Newport EVERY JI MINUTES
at
Victoria
646-8811
(anytime)
Walker & Lee
2i90 lfarbor Blvd. at Adams
5~5-9491 ~n 'til 9 P~f
DOWNTOWN
in\'l'Sted. Sal·rific pr i cc "'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! C.r.r. Close !o City Park &
$57,500. LEISURE shopping. Thi.~ eu!c 2 bdrm
Colesworthy & Co. WORLD " '" home '"'""' · '"'"
"Agent" "F'or A \Vlsc Bu~·"
6~2· 7i77
HARBOR ISLAND RD.
Lovely Bay front Home
11·ith pirr & slip
2 Bcdroon1s + apartment
Spacious b.1vside pa tio
quiet loc.atiou
cont!ortablr tradi tional ho1nC'
:Sl.tj,OOI)
U.Cd exclusively \V\\h
fenced lo!, hardwood lloo1-s. QY.'NER Heatila!o1· fil 'l'placc, frui!
trees e1c. Pricl'd ri'ght a t
$22,750
HOUSES FOR SALE
Gen1fa1 1000
TOTAL PAYMENT
$134 PER MONTH
Real Sharp 3 bedroom, 2 bath
IW>ine, Freshly painted. Cl
loan of Sl5.80Q at 5,. '% an·
11ual interest, You can't beat
ii! Service porch. Doub.le
Garagt'. Forced air heat.
Completely fenced. Spl'ink·
lers. Carp e t s & Drapes
lhroughouf. Family Room .
Lt>t us sho\v it to you ! GI
or FllA 1crn1s available,
Call now.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
2790 Harbor Blvrl. at Adanis
515-0465 Open 'lit 9.PM
KAMEHAMEHA
\\'ould be dt'!lg hted \Vith this
luscious 3 Bd, 2 bath home
on the rin1 of 1he world in
Laguna Beat'h. Tl"ce shaded.
11'\rni pro!ccted, and covered
p a t i o. Lovely, exciting,
c!<'an. Single 11·01nan 1nust
sell, S39,.JOO and you can
1nove in 1\•ilh very lo1v clown.
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
2629 HARBOR BLVD.
546-8640
OPF.N EVES TILL 8:30
LEASE · OPTION
CONDOMl~IUM
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES ..oit sALI!
Hunll;,,to., Jluch 1400 Huntington llMch 1400
General
NEW HOME 1•
IMMEDIATE MOVE ',IN . ,
4 BDRMS 1112 BATJ-IS
1/4 MILE· FROM BEACH
520.990 . -~
HUNTINGTON BEACH
<;all Naw 962· 1353
' ·--1000 Linda Isle -------1306
COLLEGE PARK 80 Li'nd• 1111 Drive
4 BR. • 2 B1th1 Nearing completion _ 6 Br.,
Assume 5¥4°/o Loan 5 Ba., Fam. Rm. & Rumpus
P l'iCc $29,t:l -$.3500 Down Rm. 3 frplcs., deck & slip.
George Williamson $159,250.
REALTOR Linda Isle D1velopm1nt
673-4350 673-1564 Ev1s. i ==B=lll=G:-onmd=;:iy=, ='"=~=371=0=
BY Owner -lrg assumable
GI Joan 3 Br, 2% ba, din Lido Isle -··-__ 1_3_51
HOUSES FOR SALE
Huntington Beech 1400
FORECLOSURE
J bdmlS 2 baU\.'I, electric
built·in range, ovi::n, f'A
heat, 60 x 100' fenced lot.
Double g a rag e. Carpets.
Needs paint. $17,500, Vacant,
' RENTALS I RENTALS
Hou111 Unfurnlah~ HO\I••• Unfurf'ith.d
General 3()00 Fountain Volley UlO
$135. 2 Br duplex, gar. fenced 4 BR, 2 Ba, crph1, drpil, rlr
yd, Avail now. Children OK. schools & Ehop'g. ~ mo.
Bkr ~ 846-4256 or 842-7926
Costa Mesa 3100 Laguna Niguel ==:::::..-_.;_..;..; 3707
.
'
;._41 ~~s l!M'PC IMMAOUhATE 1 BR duplex FOR Le12. $250. C.ood view, -~ ---• _ w/ gar. Apt B. lll E. 21£1 ·fa"!ily room, 3 _BR. 2 large
St CM 548-8584 palioe. garcif.nin& &ervice -=5~1~~4 70/o"'""L~O~A~N~-I CH~L. Cloan ' Br. m 1 c':::ncl::·-e•::95-4870_c:::_ __ ~I
to assume. Pymnls $167/mo, W. Wilaon. No pets, 1 child. RENTALS
3 BR., lg tam rm, lg, JoL $1l5 per mo. Cal,I 548-280'1: Apta. Furnlahed
Priced below market, Sub-4 BR. 2 BA, cpts, drps, $D1
mit down • 2nd TD ava.u. mo. Quiet dead end street. General 4(IOQ * BRASHEAR RLTY * 787 Joann St., C.M. 675-748.1 THE NEW Vll.J..AGE tNN' l~l Beach Blvd., HS 2 BR. Fenced yard. 2 CIU' former Saddlcback l nit\!
847""8507 Eves. 968-1178 garage. 2 children OK. No Laguna, trom $28.•a week'.
Pool F.OR Christmas pets. Sl65 mo. 642-7939 Lovely apts. All ulil'a;
HAVE 2. 1harp l bdrm UNF. 3 br. 2622 D Santa Ana, linens. maid, p6ol, laundry
AND 1. 1h1rp 4 bdrm C.~t. Avail Dec. 28. $145. rm: Steps to'bcach. now aC.-
B1st buys! GI or FHA Call 962-5050. ccpting applications. 696 S.
HAFFDAL RLTY 3 Bdrm hou"' 11'0 mo. O>ast Hwy., Laauoa Beocti.
842-4405 Carpets, drapes, fenced 494-9(36
yard. 546-5421 --ii'o'_LI_D_A_Y~. P-LAZA---I
WOW! DELUXE, spacious 1 Bdrm
rm, fam rm, walk to sch1s,
bch, princ. on 1 y, $33,500.
5 BEDROOMS Mesa V1rd1 3110 Furn apt $135 plus util. UDO ISLE Lovely lg home -very de sir-4 Bed ho 2 bath. Heated pool, ample parkini:.
able area. Beautiful rock room me. • NQ Children. -no ]>els. Outstanding CUSTOM home f 1 ,..... l\Iesa Verde. Vacant. $300. ,.1·= ~o·na c M l'P c ....... eaper th.an nc'\V! ...... &"UIU \Vith 4 spacious bedrooms, 3 mo. Agent'. 546-41~1 ' · ·
baths with excellent floor 'HAFFDAL REAL TY $70. Bachelor type apt for l
plan. Designed for privacy "===~14=2=-44=0=5=== Newport Beach 3200 person. Conv. Joe. Blue ,
and rasy to expand, Er.IC· ".' :.;.;;.;cc..:_.;._;:.c.:..cc;____ Beacon &lj..()111, C.~r.
CELLENT v AL u E and Huntington 12 BR. 2 ba .. cten, din. room. Sl2S. Lgc 1 Br. over gar ..
Terms 81 $76,500. Harbour 1405 In Cl~U~aven. $JOO Clean & sharp!
WE SELL A HOME ---~ George \VW1amson. Realtor B k 5.34-6980
Large 3 bdrtn 2 bath & ran1-EVERY 31 MINUTES BUILDERS close out!! Tri· 673-4350 673-1564 Evesi===ro=c=r=====i
ily t'OOfll ln ~tesa Vertie. l7vcJ ~ & 4 BR homes. Xlnt ~~,=~---~=c-c
Clean & \\'Cll landscaped Walker & Lee f1nanc1ng. J\.1ake reasonable W \ELY lvWnhse 2 BR, 2 .cost1 Mes• 4100
\l'ith cut-pile carpeting & oiler. Orig price $44,500. BA. Frplc, l'IC'W _ cpts. Im-1 -----.·-----1
eJeetric built-ins. FUii pritt 203 Weitclill Dr. Bu.ilders Agent. 846--0609 ~732poss. $250. Agt . * SUNNY *
$25,i50, $2,j(J() dO\Vfl $219/ 646-ml
mo P'Y' all. vo1, or noo-1 -~y"o"u;;-;A"S'"K'"E'"D.--Apts. For s.1. 1980 * ACRES *
V0 t• a•yo•· ca• buy V• I ~------Newport Shorn 3220.
96S-TI09
Gov't Foreclosure
Costa Mesa lHKI
Heritage Real Estate (open . . 1l 0 / 1% BI.KS to beach, 3 Br, 2 c;n; .• &e ",~a;: 54~1151 A Tri-:i~R ol~'Sexeellent 6 ~~~o :ac;_4A~%~ * Ma!el·Ap!S *
Cv••l · rentaJs -2 BR each, aJw tating area. y wner ~" Ba_, 2 story A-frame, lovely $835 n1oves you in. Single ''"''"''"'!':'!!''"'~!!!!!!!!~I sep sleeping rm ·&:: bath. -. Bldr. Llndborg Co. 'd tial ho •235 _ res1 en me ., 1 signal So, cf O.C. :;!ory 111·0 bedroom, built-in BIG 4 $1~.000. "!!it telil!s._ _ __ 536-_2_51'______ w/lease. 675--0307 ,vkda.ys: Falrgroundi
kitchen, car ..... tcd and drap. R. C. GRE. ER, Realty ,. ~ -• " RENTALS any ime \\·,.euus Studio & 1 ltd-• C'd. Enclosed pri\'a!e palio, 4 Big bcdrcoms, master bed. 33.'i.'l Via Lido 673-9300 · --r·-
garagr . swimn1ing pool and 1·oon1 is separate. Large cov· BAY FRONT Houses Furni1hed BAYFRONT $30 WK. & UP
1:lubhousc facilities. A BAR-ered patio. Just repainted HOMES 3 Bdrm, 2 bat~, family home. Day, WHk, Moetlt
GAIN AT $18 "'nn 11•1·111 1,· y•a•· pain!. N•,.. R1nt•l1 to Shira 2005 Sandy beach, Private com-e Kitchens & TV's incl. ,.......,, ,_ ,_. ·• Nc\V or older, 1vith pit:'r! disl1\\'asher. Sprinklers front RESPONSIBLE ma-w<·lh munity, $5CO mo, yr!~. _ • Phone serv., ht~ pool
I & slips. 3 BR. to 6 BR. " 675-l(Xfj 527-6567 • Maid service avail. and l't'a!'. Large iving roon1 F $149500 recommendations, shar e
1virh stonf! fireplace. ~29,950, I rom ' house or private room 3 BR, 2 BA, Yearly lease, 2376 NEWPORT 8'.VD. 546-2313 W• ker Riiy. 675-5200 $250 mo. 541-9755
\·i:,. THE REAL
\"\.. ESTAT ERS ''" '
3366 Via Lido, NB Open Sun. w/bath. 536-630(1. ~2991 or 642-7519 $25. Per' Wk. .. u'p 4 Br, 2-story house to share
Huntington Beach 1400 'vith 2 or J guys. Laguna Univtrsity_Park 3237 Bachclor & l BR, htd pool,
Beach, ocea.nview, sundeck '-'--~-maid service. Kitchens &
iliiiEii"'-"•'"~g~' .. °',..11•'•'~,..22.,59,..il j 2 BR Hse & gar. Modern. on
il1-l Jot. 60xl40'. Closing
Esta!<'. bargain. 922 sunset
Dr. 531·909~ or 646-4788,
OLD style Span. 3 Br, 1 Ba
hsc on dbl lot. Reduced to
$17,000 for 11uick sale by
01vncr. 546-3767
$300 TOTAL DOWN '$50 mo. 4!M-8773 4 BR home, Turtle Rock, $350 TV avail, 450 Victoria <Nr
TO G.I. 's mo. incl gardner ~). •
Here's a real steal on a Newport lfHeh 2200 J. BR Uni, Park T/H $335 2 BDRM, 2 BA. sunk.en 'uv. Christmas Special
This l>l'auty \1·ill be a
happy present for sonic
fan1ily. 3 bdrm Glen
r-.1ar. Vrry sharp 1vith
liand . rubbed ki1chen
l'<ibinrls. VA ·no do1vn
or f'llA . only $26,950.
,/O;,,,,.. COATS
~ WAL~ACE
REALTORS
-546-4141-
(0pen Eveningsl
A REAL buy! 3 BR, l ~2 BA.
hon1e. 2 units, 2 BR .c~ch.
521-3871 or 827-7694 r •
College Park: 1115
sharp, clean 3 bedroom ----------incl W&D. re:c. room, frplc, cpbl, drps,
home. Added family room FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr.,~2 3 BR new Unt, Pk. T/J-r $300 path>. Nicely furn. Gar
with beautiful red brick ~ ba., patio, adults. Bayside mo. Mo. to mo.. avail. Adults only $l7S Mo
place and B.B.Q. Home lea· Village. Until July 1st. $~. 3 BR Village Ill hon1e $400 l25.1 Baker. 540-0896 eves: ·
twoes· modern buil t-ins, car. Call (213) 222-4309 or 673-Brand new! 1
pe!s & drapes. Double Gar· 5419. 2 BR Village Ill Brand NeW. MER~IMA~ WOODS
age. Separate laundry room Just $275 nio. Furn units avail. See ad un.
and F 0 RM AL DINING Corona del Mar· 2250 3 BR home, Univ. Park $300 der class 5100. 425 Merri·
RoQM. \Viii sell Cf.I. and 1110, mac Way. 545-6300
low $wn F.H.A. at apprais-4 BR, 3 BA $400. Immed. e Red Hill Realty 833-0820 $145 &. up. ATTRACTIVE. 1
I · r so' 000 avail. Lse or ?Ito. or unfum. a pnl'e o .w, • bdr., pool, util paid, garden
WE SELL A HOME 607 Begonia. 67 5-0023 Back Bay 3240 Jiving, adults, no pets. 1800
EVER:Y 31 MINUTES 675-4486· \Vallace Ave., C.M.
Give The Car Away? w lk & L 2 BR. comp. furn. Conv. Joe. E}."ECUTIVE Honie 5 BR·, 311:-B~R=--~,=--~A ____ ,I
'iou won't nc&d it here! Near a er ee So. of h\vy, $2'l5 mo. Ba. Cpts, drps, elec bltns. . urn: pl. Heated
everything: schools, shop-Don v. Franklin Rlll' 673-2222 $300 546-6740 pool. util patd, n30. No pets
7682 Ed' · or children. ~S-5376 ping, wo1·ship etc. Save the inger 2 Story Colonial 4 BR, 21h
c ?ar expc~ & look what 842-4455 ()pen 'ti! 9 PM Balboa Island 2355 BA $32.5 mo. Rct &: deposit. BACH. apt. older. male $80
else you'll get: Early oc:eu· PRIDE ----------2405 Bonnie PL 758-0328 mo., comp. turnished call pancy ol big 4 bdrm 2 bath ' $375 mo/yrly, Avail Jan. after 5. 278 E. 23rd St., C.M.
hon1c in excellent area, lo1v ll'd'. ·2 BR. 2 BA. Frplc. 2 Coron• dtl Mar 3250 * NASSAU PALMS *
3 bdrn1s J :i.~· bath. Tmmedi-interest loan, no points to A truly delightful homf'. 3 patios, dock. Adults only. 1 & 2 BR. Pool
atf' possession. Good street. pay. Ca 11 Pemin Realty large bdrms., 2 full baths, 675-7880. HUGE 2 BR. Din. rm., bltns, 177 E. 22nd S!. 642-3645
COMPANY Stuffed with Extras & Pop-ca lo;;i n ...,·ith lo1v payn1ent. 642-1771 eves. 5-10-3984. fanl. ·din. l'ni. SH-down for-RENTALS 11,~ ba., trplc. New cpts.1========== I
Bright as a Cranberry ular plan has 3 baths, try 10',, dO\Vfl, mica bar. :rully cpt'd. Rear Hou111 Unfurnished Fantastic patio: 2 car Newport B1•ch 4200 :
REAL TORS 3 bd1·01 s. :; ht1lhs. forn1&J convt'nicn! b r l' a k fa st $23,500 Newport Beach 1200 & sidf' yd. comp!, enclosed garage. $275 !\lonth , 673-4400 dining. huge living rooni. 1·ountcr. huge gan1e 1'00111 KIDS RUN by 6 ft. block '\\'all fence. G•neral 3000 Scenic Properties 61~5726 Ne'WJ)Ort Beach
1,,!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!•I breakfast roo n1 PLUS Sf'I}-iv!lh fireplact'. Across Enjoy this l2'x30' COVl'red -----·-----2 BR, l Ba, w/w c:rpt,·drps, GRAND OPENING
i: ararc 12x2a' den or pool ta· lron1 golf cout'St'. Just Newporl -.. ADULTS WALK patio for outdoor living, Full $250. 3 Br, gar, patio, frpJc. stove & refrig, forced air IMMEDIATE SANTA'S blc roo ni. Nl'ar all st'hools listed al $4t950. to the ocean & live i11 this price i23,0CO. F'HA Ol' VA R/0. 1~ blk to beach &. heat $250 on lsc. Util pd. No OCCUP;ANCY _
EARLY includin" Pa,-.1,.,,1. Sl<op at 3 bdrm. 2•2 balh spacious avail. Call 5-fil-8424 !Open Bay, Children 0.K. Bkr ,.ts. 501 Marigold 646-1449. LUl[ury garden a""..tments 1 • --h .,. 9""" eves.I Soi.ii'h Coast Real Es· 534-6980 _..' I ping & rec. ar('as . .Ju s 1 Victoria omc. +>"· ~ 1,1•. 2 BR, 1,,L BA dplx. Pri heh. offeri~g complete_ privacy, _1 You 'll kno11• ii \\'hen .vou see · Graham Riiy '"11'" 2414 .. ~.,"' 2 B ho G • ~-"M I -• & painted . Ready 10 niovr into. 46-8811 · _.,. .,......,, r sep use, arage, View frplc Adult DO pets . ....,..u... anuscap111g un-:
this e.>;l'Cllent buy on Costa Too nia ny e.>;tt'3S 10 list ----------6 Near Newpo1i Post O!:Uce Priced to Sell lge yd for children &. pets. ~'mo ,;.2290 S. paralleled recreational facl 1
1\1csa·s c hoi C"c castside. An • Bl 0 -6'""111 c~· .,......, .U't<P"' 'ti · cl b ' I La 1 . hcr'C'. Ask.in:; $39,5/IO. NEED MONEY, yt1me FIREPLACE & pool for 3 txirms 2 bath.o;, 1500 sq ft, ue °"aeon .ru , ""· 1 ~ rn a "'<:()untry u a ....
01v .'!. ~ -and you can '"' ..... ,.., ... ., gate our guarantet'd tra~ FORCED SALE. terms. Agent G46-0732 " ,.,_ • .... ... "'"' "' •· ..,..., mo . J'N"",.,,,, F'Urnisbed or untumlsbed
rgc yard \l.'J!h fruit and ~ • 1:::=========:1 Christmas. Dlx 2 BR, 2 BA cpts/drps, blt-ins, boat door $165. 2 Br Condo. Patio, J D~~1Ji: ·b= 1;;,~ 4~!" ~osphereBeNo~ lea.sin& in
,I. \'0Ca1,d",~,,.,Priccd right az a 1 •• ,,s,<.,.6·:!8t~-~l To buy a nc1v hon1c ? lnvesti-11 1 !ownhse. $27,SOO. X lnt ,·. doublo ""'"' to fc""cd R/O -Ir•·· ,,,.•-r/d~·e'" ~:!. ·,~ "'~" .....,..· · . ewport ac.
mo\'e in 1omorro1v \vith crcd-LLEGE REALTY in plan. Let us ans1ver your GOOD INVESTMENT I back yard. 60xl20' lot. Be-Rec. hall & pool. Children & _ Mod ls 10 8 it ;ipprnval. 1500Adlms atHarborCM. qu sf "th br r low market $26,500, Submit petO.K,.Bkr534-6980 Huntington Beach 3400 n.1;.1,~~mo 1,:;"10'0131~m ,, • e ions \1·1 no o iga ion. Dea!h 1n family causes sale University Park 1237 n.c.. ....., ~ .,. 64~7171 1-:::::::::::::;:::===i\ Fair enough': of !.his con1111ercial morwyl ,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, on terms. $275. Sharp 4 Br, 2 Ba. Din 1 OAKWOOD I• -~---· Paul Jones Realty •-1 d bl 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA. ftp c,
C d I M inakcr. ~ s!ot'ics • laundra-rm, u p c, cpts, rp!\, tns, dbl orona e ar Looking 847-1266 t.'vc. 536-63~ BI D-.,,._nm c r..1 ne1v cpts & drps. gar, GARDEN inal , bN'r tavt:'rn & TV l'f'· For An Assumable ue °"aeon, v-o.ru , .1. fenced back yd. $250.
pa·ir sho1>, Everything gOt's •M I Br yd "" •love APARTMENTS 101v inlct'C'st rare loan. \Ve BUSIEST markc!place ln ..,... • • • • 962-8994 1\'ilh laundran1u1, other 'l ........ DAILY PILOT \v/w. Child 01\.
lC',; l'.>Ql\'ll 011 thl!; \':JCiHlt
hon1(' 1\·ill 1110\'r you in for ORANGE COUNTY'S
:;;tol"C':;; leased. !>riced at only have hvo. Both arc 5 br, 2 ~1 tO\Vn. ''"' NE\V J BR, all bltns, cpts, 1700 16th street
S'ij,cro. ba. 2'300 sq. ft priced at Classified section. Save Broker ~ Jge yd. 1valk to beach. $205. TI4: 642-8170 ~
$36,000. and S37.9;;Q, Call for money, time & eUort. Look $145. 2 Br, y<f. gar, W/\V, 544-0CiOG SINGLE Adults Luxur y
Christn1as. LaJ'gt:', vie1v Jiv. LARGEST
SANTA'S RUBY i11i.: 1·oon1. r1rt'plaer; dining 2629 HARBOR BLVD.
Q1w-JJcr of 3 Bit. & tam. Ml\, 100111: 4 bedroon1s: 211.: 546-8640
homl' on Ruby, Balboa ls-haths; on a ~01 40:1;235: ;: OPEN EVES TILL 8:30
land hai; lhr Chris1mas 5pir· blks. fro1 11 L1t U1' Corona.1iiiOii0iiOiiOii0iiOii0ii0iiim PAUL•Wffil'E
CARNAHAN
1KAt.TY CO,
details. now!!! Children welcome. -IT'S Beach house tbne. Big-garden apts with country ' • d h•11 THE SUN NEVER SETS on Broker 534-6980 gest R lcction ever! See the club atmosphere and com· it, \\•ill lake a Jo1v do1vn & 01\•ner n1ighl COlJSider lc11sc/I'
give good lerms: to sell fo1; 011tion. A 1nus1 sell. $47.900. NEEDS PAINT
onl)I $56,00>, 1•ohn m' acnab \Vcll built :.I: bdrm home, C'X· l[)!K; Baker, C.!\l. 546-~0 re I l .,:D,;A:;IL:Y=P=Il=.G'r=W=A"r<T""A"D'=S=l~==CH=A=R=GO:E=:IT;;!===.!.;D=A=l=L=Y,;Pil;LOT:==W=Aiir<T=:':A~DS! plete privacy. SOunt BAY CLUB APTS. Irvine at 16th,
G1n1r1 I 2000 General 2000G1n1r1I 2000 Newport Baach.
Riddle & Rou '7>7225 tra '"~'doubt, '"ago, oc· 1'm::=:::::::==::::=z
$21 9so l (714) 642-8235 '"' >o "'" """· R-2 '°°'I'
1 • 901 Dover Drive, Suite 120 • room to build. $19.T::iO. HITCH YOUR
Lovely a1 rlum en!l'Y home. Ne\\'port Beach DUPLEX C ZONE WAGON TO A STAR
BcaJneci ceilings, Brll'k BBQ, ==~:::::==~=~=~! <jj()(l sq I! of ctherial IXl'auty bubb rl It ----2 bdrn1s Pach !:idr, 2 gal'll<'l'S ling "'fHC <' , llttgl' .. on c.-.;1ra large-\'fe1v lot ov-
p:itlo. 30 r1. \\'O•·kilhop. E:l!!t'" Open Daily 1.5 ~~r~.;;\~1(~;.d;~· Rltr s <'l'lookini:: 11ir ()('('an &:. CH>··
1rif' kil<;:hcn, l bl'<lrooms. 1220 D I h. T CdM ' • The re'll ,1 bdnlls. d l n in~ "0-I~, 0 o P in err, 1810 Newpor1 Blvd .. C.!\I. .,... "' F 1 JI · 3 BR roo1n. hH"gc l'\Hnpus roon1,
TARBELL 2955 Harbor orrna ~ n 1ni:; l'OOlllt s Sl!l-77'29 6l·l·OO.-:I ('\'I'S. 2, 1 R 1 jo
2 bu th.~. hu~e livi ng room':~..,..,,.._.,.,...,...,..,, I 2 1<1H1s. e nx & en y SEASON -1l'ilf1 fJreplaC"C + family! 5-25-960 lhe ittunnlni:: pool. fo"or )'UUr
roon1 (l\'erlooking large 11a. ' , plcasul"(" & en1er111.inn1cnt GREETINGS tio, :1500 sq fl iil'ing area. 5 BEORM.-!his is Ille co1nplc1e answer,
SOUTH COAST TRI-LEVEL
REAL ESTATE
l :iotl Ad;un,:, Costa Mesa
~·
5CMS80
(llfar ~inemai thmrtl l baths. Plush <~iu1K"1ing. LLEGE REALTY
.Jo'h'l'placc. Pa11t like profcs-1500Adlrm1tHtl'bot,tM.
i;ional landscaplnG! !'>40-liZO l:::=z:=======i
1860 Ncwporj Bl""·· CM TARBELL 2955 Harbor I'
CALL ~921 Ev•~ 644-1655 OCEAN V IEW LIDO SANDS ""'"''"''"''!'!'~~~!!!""IBttathtaking Vil'\\'[ Jl lgh on Quirt !ill'('('!, 3 block,: lo
Lochenmyer
R ... 1ho1
REALTY
'Univ, Park Center, Trvine
Call Anytime 8l3-0820
Corona def Mar 11$0 ---YOU MUST SEE
This iJninaculalr 2 bed1·oon1
1'0nvcr!ible den hon1c in 1.h.!.
Bluffs. 2 bK!hroon1!, out.
s!anr!in:; carpet~. cus1on1
drapes, llh·i(l ba t• in dl'n.
Sho\vs pride of 01\•nershlp
1hruou1. R!'lax and enjQy
J!vlng the can.•Jree life. Only
$41,500,
673-1550
1-o THEREAL
'"-F:STATCRS . ' .
New VIEW Homes
Dover Shon!ii Jvan \Velis' 3
brand ne1T homes: 4 txlnns,
3 ba, powder nn, Jam. rm
wJfrplc. courtyard pools.
Frorn SI OG,(O). Roy ,J, \V;1rd
Co. 1-00 Galaxy Dr. 646-J:\l(),
MOYE IN a hill. 1 nn .. b\l·ins. "Only beach. :1 bdrm,:, Opt'I\ beam.
2, l<t $36 ;xx:i crl <'tilinirs. \111cnnt -1vcll -,v=IE"W"°"·--;oT"'H"E=-"B"E:-S"T,.--lt hll.V('! hon9" warming par-'1 yrs 0 • ' prict·d a! $26,COO.
BEACH LOT
ti'x!tl'. S1cpi tron1 OCt'ti n. m..tm. )llllJ'l nui.y be :o;uhnr-
dinatt'd. S ub m I t o!f<'rs.
tm-56!3
'
i.yJ 'Tli; re;,dy 10 r njoy! 3 CORBIN·MART!!"' The Unest in Qt~t "'llh 3 Br.,
bdrm r•1 bath ""wtsh ''" REALTOR< 6',>1662 Barrell Really ~ "'"· rmnrnl ••"· • m ba. l)('flri \\'l)n't 10-'111 at S2-l.i.i0. 3036 •:. Coa.~t Jh,~ .. Cdr.I llB11 C'~rything, An (K'.:>an
CAUDELL REAL TY $24, 950! I Hit1J \\"c~ichll Or., Nil ~:;;. ~~~~l~i~h' c~~:· t:rp:.
Slfi.5-HiO £\'r. Si5-JJlO 4 BEORM + DEN 642-5200 ~.... Beaut. lnd~Jlil:. U.nai for
3 DR, 2 BA, lu1n1ly f'Ol}lll. ~!"Sil Vt'1'dc! 2 bulhs. Bu111.1n lr.isurt . 1111,·c a look, you'll
flr'OI decor. 2 yr old-xlnt k1tdW'n r~rcd patio Q\V r}-~ NICE-housr11 on 2-101s be happy 11 you ti(>.
1Dnd, $32,!"iOO. 2t!m F.'h.'Ct rr hl'lp~ 1vllh the rin3nelng . Cdlol. 11·rll kl'pt. Frp1cs. e BILL HAVEN, Rltr.
l.Anc. llB. OwMt 646-4323 &JO.li20 Trees. 1\ly lo1v pncc Jfil,000. 2111 E. CQa.sl, CdJ\t 673-JZll
DAJLY PILOT WANT ADS! TARBELt:l 2955 H•rbor I _,_::_»_<_87_. _.---......:·f'----1018 .S. M1in, S.A. :..tt-6613
The Puu/e wilh lhe Bui/l./n Chuclde
Ol!oarro11go letrers of th11
tour tcrambld ward5 be· C"
low lo form fovr 1imple wo,ds \ i. ~ 1~1Yi,AI I I I ~ . ._.,,/..._,.
IBELER I' I I r I i . J..
~S_A,...Y...,MrE..-T-11 ? 1 I I' ) _ Ever heor about the com·
- -pv1er tkot went crooked? II'•
1 ~r.,-N,-A°", -:C:-::T-:A-V---....,,nowc 'lot machine in "';.z:'i.i:
I I II O (omo1e.~ lh~ ct11.1e1lle ~1,01•d 1• ' _ __ .. , b·1 loll<ng tf'I tho 1111~tina "'ordt
. . . . . VO'I develop lio111 Ueo ':-lo. 3 b11¢w,
w .rt. P~INT NLJkl&fREO
Q' llil(RS IN SQl)ARt S
I •
_D_;_~_i~_ .. '_t,_"_"_'_'_o~RJ_.i _·J_. • • • •
I I. I I I
SCRAM·LlTS ANSWEll. '" CLASSIFICATION.,
lTI4) 645-Q.)j()
MESA MOTEL * LO\V WEEh1.Y RATES +
Kitchen, TV'~. n1a.id ser·
vice. Heated Pool,
6.J6.S6S l
1 & 2 BR f1u·n &-unfurn. Slj()
• $1i.i. Cpl&. drps, bltns,
pool, pa,bo. 1525 Placentia
\VATERFRONT 'v Ibo ll t
dock. Lovely 2 BR, patio,
Yrly lse. 673-9000 or 697-5818
Coron• d•I Mir 4250
2 BR, 1 BA, blk/ocean & 1
bl\)'. VM!w. Pri patio,
Adults, no Pt'li. $2(XI )'l'lf. ~
673-7629
T SR. blk to ocean & bay,
Adults. no pets. $155 yrly.
673-1619
Balboa 4300
CLEAN Bachelor Apls.
All utll incl $8$ up
l1S E. Balboa Blvd.
' I
BALBOA &13--9Ml
BACHELOR API' • Util p&\cl.
l80 "' mo. 310 E. Balboa
Blvd,, Balboa. ' OAILf PJLOT WANT ADS! ,
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RENTALS 1•-------------•IBUSINISS llfld
AplL Unfu~ fr * * * * * F INANCIAi. -
RENTAL'
Apia. F umlahtcl --RENTALS
Apia. Unf,vr nlr.htd
Huntlf191on ...... 4400 ~C~":''::;:M~ ... ~~~~51~00~1 1c.....·iiii~'do~l~Mo~r;;i5~l50~;j Bus. Opportunities 6300
HUNTINGTON CAPRI -MERRIMAC WOOOS WOOD Finilh a.mo.;"I &
For Slnvl• Adults JU1t completed, l or 2 BR. 2 ~-Wood Bl.ta.chin& Routt for
Wh en You
Wo nt it done
right .••
NEW 1·2-3 BEDROOMS BA turn or unfUrft with atir ~ Sale. RelTI0\.'1111 old finl&h
From $140. •'um &: Unl cond, compl aound~roofcd, from modem I: antique
Ttnnls, Cyms Saunas selr clcanina: ovens, wood fumlture. All work done on
6200 €dinKer Ave., llS ceilings, dswhrs tush land-ON TEN AOU:S cuitomers' preml&t"a. Also l
Phone 846-0619 11Caplng with s~ama le wa-1F lo 2 BR. Furn • Unfum all Y.'O.rk done by hand u1ing
lf'rfalls, elevators, B9Q1, lreplacts I p1iv. pa.ties I paint & varnish remw<lrs .... Call one of
the experts
listed ~/9w!!
BACHELOR & B Pools. Tennls . Contnt'l Bkf1t. N tltio Cu · l R fum. clubhouse, saunas, jacum & 900 Sea Lllne, CdM &4f..2GU o com.pe n. stomet'!I
$140 up. Adul!s, no pttll. swim poob. p:-iv ga1'. w/ IM do 011.'fl refinlshini,;. $800
IT.IOI c· I acArtf)ur nr. O>llt H""') n ee 80n Ln. 842.1848 ~torage. Everything new. ~.r ~ ca.sh for route. I will teach
IWl!st of Beach nr Slaltt). Swting at $140. Adulla 0 you. ca.II 17141 1)89..2000,
STONEll.Ei.'IGE APTS. 2 BR, please. Just East or 2ti1X1 C ROLlDO AP':'S. 2 Br. Whaddyi W•nt? Whechtt• Got? Ext. 48 "Leave Ml!ssage"
2 BA. 23:11 ~1oridlf., nr Harbo1· Blvd, next to NI.beta Lower levels, atudlos, pent. SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTOIY
Paperh1nsflng
P•lntlnt"'-~-~-68~JO;..;
Beach & Adams"'~" -n Cadillac at ·~ Merrim•... house, Frplcs., pool, dbl. NATURAL IORN SWAPPERS Investment O ppor . 6310 "''l\>""'1""' '"';J ...... carports, patios_ Sl80 . $220'. 5 rURN. 1 & 2 Br aplJ Way. 56-6300 613.3318 ~ pecl•I Rite TAX SHELTER Bt byslttlng 6.SSO tarpet L1ylng i.
do t HB 5 Llnoa-5 times -5 IMlck1 R I "26 v.·n O\vn ' • No children $195 mo .. utilities paid AULl!S -AD MUlf IMCLUOI! FOR SALE: Real Estate BABYsnTING, my homo:! ------•Pl r ~
-
o_' _"'_Ls._S>;-__ '"" _____ ·BRAND NEW 2 BR., garage. Yearly:. ~, .. ,.,.. twv. 1111 ""'· .._..., '" -"' "' ,,.., O:lrp. w/$250,000 tax loss weekly, daily, ewe. Reuon· FOR CARPET ING' INT /EXT • E t M• F Bkr "~" .. --.....,. •"'4l• ...... •~ '"" et ..,..,arti.1"" 5 80 _ .. , _, · • ... ~r. x . · orney, · ~ t-MOTHING '"°" "'*-' -. ,,,AOU OMLYI next yrs. % lnlettst or .... c, ·~lablr. 642-6037 OR CARPET LAYING $127.~ labor only. 8 yr_
$150 mo. J BR. 1 blk to PHONE '642-5671 more. Box .Ji 876 Daily Pilot B c . A, Page &rl-2070 guar. painting avalJ. Allo.
market, avail Jan 1. Adull11 To Place Your Tr•der'• P•r•cllM Ad ~ rick, Masonry, etc.. -·--· Apts &: Comm 'l 54.S-lMG
only. no pets. m-3936 Monq to L01n 6320 6560 El•ctrlcal 6640 EX
Orange County ~ 4600 $150 & $170 SINGLE Adults. I u x u r y
garden apta, w/tull recrca-UTILITIES PAID "'=========1&6id1! 3 br hm. A 2 l"'ar /~IAS AT LK ARRO\V. 2 ;;.;,;-"'.;.:;:;_ ___ ..:;:.cc; -PAINTER, row acbl
-apls $29,950 val. or 2 hn'ls HEAD. DramaUc 4 BR on nd TD Loan BUILD, Rl'modcl, repair ELECTRICAL Scrvitl' & teacher will paint non •
Balboe 5300 w/5-rear a pis, mo inc $788, golf roune & lake. Sl.25,000 Brick, block, concrete , repair. u hrs. 7 days. No wknds. X1nl \\'Ol'tananahip. tian tacllltics ~ complete• 1 & 2 Bdrm, 2 '"'int pools.
privacy. South Bay Club Adults only, no peta. Furn
Apts. m So. Brookhunt, it desired. &12..1722 $59,50o val. Trd S33 M t'q for clear. Low dn. Trade in-Prompt, confidenUal servlee c;arPl!ntry, no job too S!!lall. job loo smaU . Re-n\Odel &; ~ est. 646-45!9, 540-«>62
DELUXE upper l BR, 2 BA, S.Cal hm. Ownr/bkr 6*3T::iO come or ? cno1) .t<;.Q...1103 642-2171 . 545-06. 11 Lie. Contr. 962-696 additions. 11 it's eleetrlcal, PAINTING, paperharwlnc, Anahein1 1714.1 m-4500 301 Avocado St, C.t.t. crpts, dl'})I!, bltrui, ¥., blk -,..... 2' Otd rroni bay & bch. Adults. 1967 32' Chris t'ralt, twin MTN. Home Big Bear Serving 1-larbor area 20 yrs, B I ~'!: fix itt 646-olm a yn exper. entry
Garden Grove 4610
SINGLE Adullll Lu"ury
gal'den apt.II \vith counll')'
club atmosphl?l'C and com-
plt'te. privacy. SOUTH. BAY
CLUB APTS 13100 Chapman
Ave., Garden G1'0w \714J
G3G-J030
Lagun• eeach 4705
$190 mo. 545-7099 eng, fully equipped, very (mooni;dge) 2 Br. furn. S•tt ltr Mortgage Co. ~eu.~trvlc1 6562 """°"===='=== =~~k~~~· Reu. Flu
==::==::;;==;r=lclean. Will trade eqty for $19M. Full, Eq, $Hlf\f. 1',or 336 E, 17lb Street INCOr-.tE Tax _ Personal & FIDors 6665 ===~'-==~--
Huntington a.ach 5400 home or car or anything. unlls, 1m residence, Jot or -Corporate Returns: Avia-CARPETING HOLIDAY SPECIAL, lnL &
BACHELOR unfurn f rom 54S-24.l4. alt 6, 642-4141 aft 6 TD'S. 639-3450_ , JI.fr. King. Mort"•-s, T.D.'1 6345 tlon, Medi••! & ,,,., .• , 8 Ext. pa[ntlng: Lie &: lnsurd.
Ill' Al
·1 l ' 3 2 • iii• ...... " • fl'f"C estimate Lie. contr. ...___ 1 1 " 30
. so ava1 • -& BDRMS •. 2 BATH Scuba ~uJpm•nt, ~· -· B s-;·lty p b I . A z: n...., es s. Loci:. re , yn Bdrm, Heated pools, child -.. ·-• 4 r home Tustin. Trade fol' SEASONED ..---· 11 1 c C· s.ID-7262, 546-4478 expcr. "Chuck'' G4s.-0809
care center, adj to shopping. ulator, H.P. gauge, ile & lot or acre in Redlands. 1\1· 4 _ 1.st TD's: $5,237 Approx. countant. 67!>-1196 For Ap-
No pet& $150/Mo, HEATED POOL sheaf, e tc., value $200, \Vilt '° have Tahoe lot for Red· bal. eat:h; 8%, alf due :i8 polntment. Gar dening 6680 * PAJNTlNG • lnt./Ext.
2700 Peterson Way fncd, cpl/drps, Kids OK trade ior 5mal1 transpor· lands property or v I c. mos. JOC/c Diac. 4.97-1210 1,'·".sr=-,"u"1o~;,-o"'t"'boo,-kk~,.-,~;ng-,Loca1 references. Imm~
Costa ~le.'la 546-0070 DEL.A \VARE SI1JDIO Apts. t&tion car. 49f.89-l6 8J8.J284 or 962--00'17 $5400 1st TD 8t::". 6 mos service, postlng, bi 11 i n g GARDENING & landscaping. &ervlce. 646-5242, 646-3651
MARTINl
"'UE 2620 Delaware, J.l.B. I $1.f0.000 1st T.D. 3 acres near Reno, Seasoned. ~e 2;~·yrs. l2% P&L·r, & colleetion. 952.0527 l• yrs ex p .Clean-up, for Better Painting, lnter-
T 6.J2..2'!Zl anytime 536-1816 Trade for Income, Beach· value $3,(XX). Will trade Disc. 494-8100 497_1021 eve. C sprinklers inst'd & repaired. lor & e~lerlor, aCQUstic cell.
See Z..fgr on premises
HARBOR GREENS
GARDEN APTS NICE 2 & 3 bdrs. Czpted & Ranch home, stock, or ? ? for late model Dodge --arpent1rlng 6590
673-1166
1ngs. 646-4077
CHARl\11f\.'G 2 bdnu. unit ExceUent park-like sutfuund-drped. N"·ly dcror. 3 blks Owner Van Camper. ANNOUNCEMENTS CARPENTRY AL'S Ga.ro.enln,j{ &: Lawn YOU Supply The Paint. 1 br.
N1!"1Y rcdcc ., w/w lngs w/heated pools. Extra from bch. 3 bdr '''/dbl al· Cn4) 459-3103 sali-2449 and NOTICES MINOR REPAIRS. No Job ~~~~~·re~:n~' apt painled $.10. 2 br $40. 3 ~~ingl
1
& d r a Pe s : parkin~. N car shopping. tached &;ar & frplace. 53&-1711 \Vhat do you have to trade! Have: \Yhirlpool gas d~r. F TO<I Small. Cablnel ln gar-* 646-3629 * br $50. 540-
7
0t6. sha~~cl~io.u~a) ~·
1
:::: AdullJ only. CHEZ ORO APTS. ml List ii here -in Orange $;;o 11alue. Trade for freeier ound (FrH Ads) ~00 agt'I It 0 1 be r cabinets .,,-=~,:;;:...:;::.-=,.--E..h'TERIOR-JNT!:RIOR
\Voods Co\'e Beach $17S nto. 2 & 3 BR APTS Atlanta, HA Nu, 1. 2. 3 County's ~t read trad· or ? !of. equal vaJUc. Call LARGE \Vhite loiale 1.lbced 568175, U no answer ll!i~ JAPANESE Ga rd e ne r • & ti.IAINTENANCE
f\1lss!on Realty 494-0731 li77 Santa Ana Ave., C.i\1. br's. Pi:iv. gar, pool.. Util ingpoat-aM make adeal. Vena, 601443. Breed Dog. Dark head msg: at ~2372. H. O. exp'd, comp. yard service. • ~ e
l\lgr, Apt 113 646-5542 rm. 536-8038 or 536-2727. marks. No collar, Believed Anderson Free l'5timatc. 963-2303 ~~::1'"1/~tud~artl~uni~:w~ HACIENDA HARBOR 2 BDRJ\1S, 2 BA. pvt. patio, 1'. * * * * * to be from the Laguna area. am-Repair. Add. Cab. J!!;~le~l~s ~ ~= Pl1sterin~. Repair 6880
garden setting. Lease $110 heated po o I, y,•asher It 673-0461 Formica Paneling. J\'farlite. e PATCH PLASI'ERING
inc G:at. all utilities, NEW Adult living units. dryer hook up. 962-8994 . REAL ES.TATE REAL ESTAH FOUND, Black&; white kit· Anyth~ng! Call Dic k . mercial. * 540-4837 . All types. Freeestimatet
Tela-clear. Ref!. 494-Z715 Gener1I Gen1r1I ten w/-•t~~ ....... ~.........., block _673-4=~'"=------CLEAN-UP SPECIALIST Call 5f0.6S25 1 & 2 Bedrooms, Bllns & L•aun• n---h 5705 ...,. -......... uw RE~ Mowing, ed"'n"', odd io· "'·
SEE AE\V VILLAGE INN dshy,·hr. Pool, Garages. ~ lusineu Property 6050 Industrial Rental 6090 of PlaCfntia Ave. SU,2.;59 PAIRS * ALTERATIONS Reasonabi~~ ~
Steps lo beach. $35. wk $1S0.$170'. All util pd. OCEAN FRONT 2 BR, 2 BA, .••• , ··--· --·-·--or 642-3643 * CABINETS. Any size job
~mblng 6l90
f145 mo. LAGUNA 494-7291 No pets. Ul Avocado St. Yrly $250 or $185 furn, \VJN. RESIDENCE, garage, on NEW BUILDING YOUNG fem al c pup, 25 yrs exper. 548--6713
Of. &l.2-2925, 642-5401 TER only! Newly dee. large 1t-l lol. S21.IXXl. 92'J 1260 Logan Ave., Costa Mesa blk/gry, terrier or poodle CARPENTRY, Cabinets
General S.rvlcw 6682
Experienced BARTENDERS
servln& all Orange County.
PLUP.IBING REPAIR
No job too amall
Dan• Point 4740 F · Villa Apt Adults. no pets. 538-2005 Sunset Dr. CM 531·9094 Ir. Each unit 1'125 sq ft 2 oft· ntix, vie, l\1esa del Mar. RcnlOd. No job too 11mall,
LARGE. t.1oden1 1 'BR apt. anay I s CLEAN. spacious' 1 BR, on 646-4783· ices, 2 resr rooms, ito1zzo 545-4208 qual work. ('.aJJ 646-2576
Pool, it.is. mo. 4!)9..2055 or secluded street, So, Laguna. electric. Ample parking. YELLOW & ,vhile kitten . · ,:""-:=:""=::==:========-R~oo"""fi~n~; ___ __;6~9.::50
• G4Wl28 .
4
00-2409 N"e:ai· Orange Co . .\irport & $155. 499-111:) 8u1ine11 Rental 6060 C. Robert Nattresa Realtor long haired, vie. College & Cement, Concrete 6600 UCI. Adull.S only. 20122 Costa Z..fe 642-1485 \V'I ALL TYPES; rock, wood &
RENTALS Santa ~\na Ave. 540-2796 RETAIL SHOP J""" sa 1 son Sis. 548-3965 CEMENT \VORK, no job too asphalt shlnaJes. LEAKS
6730
Dani Point 5740 uw &II fl, -FOUN i all YARD/G 0 R .,. Apts. Unfurnished _ 1 --"--'~C----'~ Terrific Location. A i r Lots 6100 D Pood e vie Bushard sn1 • re1JOnable. F'ec ar. eanup. e-REPAIRED. Work guar.
---------2 BR & den, S15:i. mo. Cond., carpets. Beautiful & Ellis, e!ltim. H. Stuflick 54S.8615 move trees. ivy, trash. 8-17-1136
Gtner•I 5000 . VILLA MESA APTS J.leated pool, ocean view. Store Front Ideal for~ten's 180 DEGREE VIEW Call 962-27'26 BLOCK Fences-Driveways Grade, backhoe. 962-8745 ========= 1,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; 12 BR unJurn. pri palios, hid 499--3)55 or 496-2409 \Vear. GillS, Specialty Shop, lof ocean & coastline, small !RISH Setter. Tustin & Del Patio s-Planters-Remodcl-••tauling. Have " ton Sewing 6960
VEN DOME pool. 2 car encl'! gar. Chil~ REAL ESTATE etc. Hillgren Square, 210 E. but bldable lot, Laguna Bch. Z..far, CM. 548-3M7 ing Lie. 642-9852 pickup. littnsed & insured. • Dressmakifls ~ AlteratioNi
Special on coat hems .........
IMMACULATE .U7TS!
ADULT Ir: FAMILY
SECTIONS AVADABLE
c1o .. to shOflPint. P.•rk * Spack>us 3 ar·a, 2 s. * 2 Bedrooms * SWim Pool, PuUgreen * Frpl, Indiv/lndry fac'ls
1145 Anaheim Ave.
COSL\ ·MESA 642-2824
dren \\'elcome, no p e ts '"-norol 17th St .. C.Z..I. Paving A: util in aft. 1st of * CONCRETE FLOORS. 494-1003
pl.ease! Slfi(J. Also furn $185. vw """7 yr Lo •· /low pyt L ::----:--:::--:--:--=::l'Calo:""lcc!M&-~:"."""'.'.,--~~-. w WI w mo. . ost 6401 patio., etc. n-• .. "·bl·, Call Clean Up And Haul n9 w. \Vilson. 646-1251. 4M-8100 494-1137 ... ....., ·-"
2 BR, l 1A BA, Studio. New Rant•ls W•nttd 5990 ROOM SUitable for ~ift ahop, BEAC°'H LOT _LOsr SIAMESE CAT Don, ~14. SIO a load. 646-2528
cpts & rlrps. Fam i I Y men's shop or ladie!I shop. ~:·...11~· St I Prized pet lost near Hoag C I to ====:-:=====·I TILE, C1r1mlc 6974 Call Jim Berkshire. 673-9405 ""' TW.> • eps rom ocean. H . 1 1 S d on r•c rt 6620 Housecl,.ntng 6n5 -----welcome. $22,000. part may be aubor· 0 8 P 1 a at u r ay • _______ c:..:;;;,; * Verne, The Tile h1an1r
637-2Ml RENTAL FINDERS ~EN~rt ~!t. 5~:: dinated. submit oilers. December 20th. Four yean ROOM AddiHon11 -Pa~ BAY & Beach Janitmial Cust. work. Install&: repalrs.
2 BR, $1::.5. Crpts. ..1-s, T ,_. '* 67J..6693 old, dark color, male. Had Block Fcnce5-Driveways-Carpets, windo~·s. floors, No job too small Plaster
....... "" •• $50. mo. s.f8:.0588 =~..,.---~---! collar with name "Cognac" Planters. 642--9852 t bltns. Pvt patio, encl gar. _a1 W.lftl.Cllhl._ DBL lot w/ old Span, style and name of owner. Horst!---'-=-=-===---ec. patch. Leaking shower
Adults. 54" "'33 -.. Mii i Add'llo * ·-~ 1 Res &: Commc'l. ~1401 -pal• 847 1~H« -
J"V't ·~1runt1•T1 ••tml'Ulll Office Rental 6070 hse, 3 Br, 1 Ba. Reduced lo Chiesi, 114~1 E. Bay AV1?.. 1 ns '"'""""e ing '" •· • :JJu~.
LGE. 2 BR. Pool. Crpts & -=:::::::; •io-"' 1u1Ku $11.000 for quick sale by Balboa. 675-2325 or 675-:>133 1'~red ll. (i(?rwick, Lie. * APT CLEANING *
drps. Kids ok. 19!)8 fflaple LAGUNA BEACH O\vner. 546-3767 613-6041 * 549-2170 Fasl &: thorough 642-8164
Apt 3. 548-~ or 646-1Wj. e LANDLORDS e Air Conditioned ===='=====ILOsr: 5 yr old Male Altered Williams Cleaning Serv.
Trn Service • 6910
3 BR, 2 BA, urn:trs. Neiv FREE RENTAL SERVICE ON FORESf AVENUE Laka Elsinore 6202 Sealpoi~t ,Sianlesc .. Declaw· Carpet Cleaning 6625 CARPETS,l \Vindows. Ors, 3 Rooms Furniture .. ~ Desk ,..,. available In =~.:::::;:.:::.;;....._.::::: ed. Vic. Hunti ngton ,___;;;:::;: "
shag cpl. Bltns. XJnt North ·===B='ro~k°'or~5.14='-G982'=--I newest office building at 3 ADJOIN'ING h 11 111 i d e ~arbour. ~\llard! (213J CARPET & upholstecy steam :~~k 1i::as~rRe~~.m~·~1~nt RENT • • TREES Pruned, topped ,
re1noved. 26 yrs exper.
Aerial tower eqp'd.
494-4505 and 638-7234 $19.95 & UP C.M. loc. $195 mo. 557"'6151 \VANTED TO LEASE: Vcty prime location l.tt downtown lakeView 10111, near casino 2--5886 cleaned, also carpet ln-
1:onth-To-rt11mth Rentals LOVELY Lge 1 Br. crpts, 0 .C.C. 3-4 Br unfum house. Laguna Beath. Air cohdl· $3,~. 536-244.9 CAMEO Blond part Persian 11tallatlon. Re1111lls guar. For e WINDOWS DffiTY'!' TREE SERVICE, gen'! yard , '
\VIDE SELECTION 1 drps, bllins, gar. Adults, no Ocrupy Jan 20, pvt pty. Box Uoned, carpeted, bee.uWul female cat, 1 yr old. Needr free e1I, call 646-5971 Free est. 15 years exp. cleanup. SP R J N KL ER
NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. pets. $135 mo. 646-1762 M 877 Daily Pilot. entrances: Frontage on 3 ACRES 40 miles norlh ol medication. Lost on Avon A--OK shampoo Chlistmu Johnny Dunn 642-23&1 REPAIRS 646-5848:.:,,=~-I
HFRC Furniture Rentals
2
BR ndecl{. I 'N"E=E=D~2~B"D"'R-AP=AR~T=MEN==r l Forest Ave., rear leads "to Reno near Honey Lake at St., N.B. 847-2765 special· $7..50 rm-less for -G-EN-E'S 'r'RFV SERV j17 \Y 19th O.f 548-3481 ' su garage, M · kin lot $50 I t Is; • • t cl h-'I t l_ronlng 67S5 ......._,, -•ru'°b_,..._ -,·mm'ed, · ' &side. Adults. SlSO. for under $100 )I.to. Call Ul1ClpaJ par g s. 00 0 ern.s . .....,ve, ear,LOsrorstolen "Duke"Male ... s ec. Al90 comp ''"" ..,, u
$160. 2 Br townhse, l !Ai Ba. 540-4431 or 546--3776 842~ after 5 Pl\t. per month for space. Desk $3,000. 536-2449 Irish Setter, 5 mo. U/211. housecln'g 827-3182 ffiONING In my home, $1 &/or removed. 54~1359
New cpts, pool, Teen &: am! 2 & 3 BR. Adults only, no ===========I and chairs available for $5. 2 Im'S. Country Club lights. Vic Redlandll I: Sant.a habel CARPET & Furn cleaning: hr. A 11 er at ions , Also
pet OK. Blue Be a con 998 Rooms for Rent 5995 Business hours answering $795 each. 10% down. C.1.1, 645-13C5 for 1 day 11ervice & .... •lily babysitting. Call 54~764.1
pel!i. E l C.amino Dr, '----·-----~! service available for $10. *"' ~''* "· Cal •-645--0lll, c.ar. C.Ut 546-0451 I. I .====-=~~===:!GREEN Parakeet W/ -Uow wo.-.... I Sterling Jor
Upholstary 6990
115\VK & up w/ k"·"' $30 All utilities paid ~'"''' ,. b · ~-• L--• • 681 $16.5. 3 Br, 2 Ba, R/0, \V/\Y =====-====I · 1"'""'n · t"•pb·-. patch on head, friendly, vie ng11u..:ss. 6fz...8520 ---" •• '.P•_ng_·'---·-0 wk studio apt. 2376 Newport ~ """ -
& drps. Children 0 K .N ·;;ewpo;;;;;;;;";;;;;B;;u;;;;;ch;;;;;;;;;;5;;200;;;;;, J -'Bl='c:":· ::"::"":::':;.,,.,.:====:::=J DAILY PIT.OT R. E. Wanted 6240 Mesa Verde. Re-.v. &f.>-3833 Diamond Carpet Cleaners TAKATA NURSERY
CZVKOSKl'S Odrtm. Uphol. •
European Craftsmanship :
100% fin! 6'2-1454
Broker 534.6980 • _ 222 FOREST A VENUE 187 21st St. Costa P.f1!11a
I=========-Motels. Trlr, CrtL 5997 LAGUNA BEACH Anx' T Seu? Person•l1 ~5 Home &: Apt Cleaning
Best Design
Sprinklers Installed
Drain Pipe Installed
F'ree trim &: Clean-up
1831 Newport Div, Of. .
Cost1 Mna SlOO SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm 494-$466 IOUS 0 H --64:>-1317 Free esUma!e!I
2 bath. Nr. shopping. 'VEEKLY rates Sea Lark FINE STORE/OFFICE O>mmercial properties want. ACTING
IT'S Beach house time. Big· '
gest selection ever! See the
DAILY PILCYI' \VANT AOSI LUXURIOUS NEW $240 per mo. Motel, 2301 Newport Blvd., For Leaff ed for strong buyer. Prefel' Do YoU want to be a full time Dial 64.2-5678 for RESULTS 546-0124
.Cos ta Jl.11!118 On Via Lido good Orange Co. locaUon. working prolessional? Do
1 & 2 BDRM, beautiful swim Mariner Square Apts. SANDY 'S TRAILER COURT Approx. lSOO'Sq. Ft. Should have 110me financing )'OU have the sell di&elplint'
pools. Adults. no pets. 1244 1 • A • N 8 Spaces a\'ail now. Max 26'. 50c Per F t. or SE'ller willing to carry lo subject yourself to a rig-A NOU -
ALL UTILITIES PAID rvint v '' · • Call 64&9681 LIDO REALTY INC. T.D. If YoU want to sell, id British training course & N NCEMENTS JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
307 Avocado St, C.Jl.t. See please call K. W. Small the artistic humility to ac-and NOTICES
Mgr., Apt No. 5 i'G~RA~C~!O~u~s"AD~UL'.!·'!!T!"!"Lf~VJN~G~ I Misc. Rent•I• 5999 3377 Vii Lido f73-7l00 Eckhoff & Assoc., Inc. cept minor roles until the A Join-Min. Wom. 7100 Job~n, Wom, 7100
TOWNHOUSE
MODERN 3 room suite, 1818 W. Olapman Ave. training period Is complete? .• "!~~1ment1 6410 2 Br, 2 Ba, hi-rise bldg. Ex-SINGLE Ca G ,.~ * AJRCRAFI' MECll. * BEAUTY Operator. female, New 2 BR, l ~ BA &. l & 2 citing bay & ocean view. r arage, ....... vna cpts., air cond, janitor ser. ~ Orange, Calif. If so THE LO NOON LA· FREE basic boating course Overseas Information P re fer w I c It en t e I e .
BR. Cl"pl!, drps, self clng Jacuzzi pool, e Je.v a tors' dG,;! ~· $211 a mo. Call • vlceCa, •,mple parking, 5-11·26Zl, Evcs-wknds SJS.5.971 GUNA A CT 0 RS WORK-of/erect to public by Balboa --.,.;:C•:;:i~l ;l;:11~41~77~4-::2Gl::,::O;__ I Progreuive new sat on. , ............ ,, So. it 1111 Nat. Bk Bldg. SHOP might _be able to_help Power Squadron eve'"" Mon. • 4~ =« oven. 6:45-21~. ln W. Wilson subteITanean pk'g, boat 230 E l71h s•-·t SMA" Hom• Or Dupl•·, N ., ASSISTANTS & ~
1
ail · u"" ......, ~ you. o preV1011s expene~e night for 13 wcekll beginning -'--"~=~~~--I
QUIET I & 2 Br garden apt. ~kcnav·. for tenants. Income Property 6000 Costa Mesa 642-1485 Corona del Mar. By Prin-necessary, no age barrier. 7 pm Mon • .lan. 12 at RECEPTIONIST BOYS 10· 14
Bllns, palio, htd poo I. C-l BARGAIN MARINER'S CENTER clple. Call ~ll. Members of this exclusive Newport }{arbor y 8 ch 1 Prepat'ed resume must havt C&nia' Routes Open ;:~~~63 no pets. Slfi(J mo. E•tt Bluff 5242 Pomona at l9th St., CM. Du· Office in Store Bldg. Rent or group will only be accepted Club, 720 \V, Bay Ave.. h\'o yrs. dental experit!nce. tor ---------1 plcx on C-l lot. 63, x 270'. ls!. $T~. Beaut~ s~. BUSINE5~ •no upon a satia!aclory personal Newport Beach. No advantt Eve, hrs. AU union beriel.its, Laguna Beach, So. Lqum
1558 CORIANDER Dr .: e NEW DELUXE e t.!ake offer S4l-666l 547_23.'.U scme equip. 149 R1veriidc FINANCIAL interview with 1he dire<:tor. reg is t rat 1 on needed. Sa.lacy $3.44 per hr. Call for OAU.Y PILOT
Deluxe 2 BR. 2 BA. garage, 3 Br, 2 Ba apt. Jor tease · · Ave., N.8. 646-2414. 8 Oppo C.all 49M404 for appt. Register at clllSI!. Bring appt. for interview, 633-T:i.11 6i2-432I
ms mo. Adults, no pels. fncl. spac. mastr. suite. din D~~$8.~Mcb~. =XII_ 1000 .59· FT. Newport UI, rtvnlties '300 FANTASTIC notebook lirsl night. Ques-BABYSITTER for teacher, BookkMper F /C
546-2614 . rm. & dbl. garage, auto.
1415
l\to ~ ,.,
4
.Bel\Ch Civic Ctr. area. SOMETHING NEW: tioM: Call 673-1855 responsible, to take care of A top-notch nat'l Co. 11!.ablt'
STUDIO apt, 2 BR. I \~ BA. door opener avail. Pel ok. · u,.,._,. Secretarial services. 3345 ·VOYAGE Jo-B-5,.--4-E=-M-P-LO_Y_M_E_N_T·I 6 yr old girl, ~2 yr old boy, & reliable. Beaut. NB otf-
J>atio, cle&ed g:arage, nr Pool & rec. area. Nr. Calh-Business Property 6050 Ntwport Blvd., N .B. In this day when frw.nchisifW The .,.'Orlds me&t beautlf\11 --'-'---'--'-"' alt schl from 2:4S to S:30 ices. Top benellts. can Shir-
,hopping. Adults, ll"J pets. olic Church. . 61>1601. ill reachinf the ,good repu-ship the 138' Olpper Barque Job W•nted, ~·Jan. 5. Call 830-6484 for ley, ~O
$145. 642-2389. e ONLY $245 e 2 ACRES, Coat& 11.tesa -Hi-ArRPORT CENTER talion It enjoy11 -it'11 creat M 0 NT E CRISTO leaving __ W;.;.;;°'"='c.":....--..;.7.:02::.;0 Interview. Reh de 1 ired. JASON BEST.
2885 P.1ENOOZA DRIVE 86a Amigos Way, N.B. rise area. Long term leue. New 1. 2 1 3 room deluxe to find a tney good invest-soon for around lht" world. Lake forest area. Emplayment Aii;en(;)t
l• 4: 2 BR aptJ. 2 split-level. \\lhite elephants! Dime-a· Pearl Dev\nt, P. o. Box s u 1te 11 . Adj . new ment. One that offers him Room let't ior five contribut. DAY WORKER BABYSIT-Need ma l u r ~ 2107" So. Main, Santa. Ana
C/D, bltns. No pets. line DAILY Pilm WANT 1940. Huntuwton Beach, MacArthu.r Blvd. From a very high and fut return 1ng men ·or women ctew Hone&t, dependable woman to sit w/3 Yn& COASTAL AGENCY
645-5421. See Jl,.fg:r, Apt A ADS! 92646 $125. 'Ca11 546-1843. on hi• inw&tment dollar, memben, A1llO needed: Doc. Call anytime 541-2772 children, 2 days wk. Begin. Pl"Dfetslonil
••
,,
O•
" 1~
-,
9X) SQ. FT. l offiCl!I "
reccption area; adjacent to
On.~ County a irport.
54l>-ll81'
S~tA·LL OUice on busy cor-
ner emit.a Mesa. $5.S/month
utililie11 Included. 6U-6560
without tytrg up the l!ll'IOf'-tor, Cook, Ship'11 carpenter. Jan. My home. Own trans. E 1oy t mous capttaJ that most tran-MARINA CORTEZ, San Di· Job W•nted, $100 mo. Refs. reg. 54>-4191. mp men
chlses do. This we have un-ego, tn4l 291-8259. Men A Women 7030 BABYSITTER wanted: 2 As s lstince
questionably the befit oppor. *Al ' ---· ' ---Boy" 2 & 5. Start Jan 5th. 5 Sn lltA m:~~ll'~: 1 tunlty for fhr. 11mall.lnve1tor JAPANESE Schoot,lrl. Live day wk 8-5. My home. t.1ust e ng 911
.,.,., .. ,. ne.
in " long time. You citn one e In mother's helper. Ph: have own trans. 6'15-l405 27'90 ltarbor Bl, CM 54().6()j5
work tither p1u1 or rull time · !l62-2'm !·Tarbor Blvd. al Adami BABYSITTER, full ! I'm e * COOK * 1'.f/F A and earn exetpUona.Uy high YES IT'S YOUR Jobt-Mtn, Wom. 7100 6 30-=4 'fhru. l '' . pply: ~amings. You do nead at FAULT : · p.m. Mon. Huntington V1lley Con.
HUNTINGTON BEACH least U.495.IJO ca&h to start. FM" recorded mr••• .. , thal ACCOUNTANT chlltt Will prod. tra.n&. Aft vale.'\Ctnt-lioepttal, !382
A ir Conditioned For !Urthe lnf Uon -4:30 p.m., &t&-824l Newm1.n Ave. H.B. OH llACH ILVD. r onna will chAnu )'OQr Jlle call to $HXlO. SUpervlse COil Dept. BARB write includlrc 1e1cphone to ORANGE ro. M7.ai67 Stable, non-defcn.e Co. send * ER * to manqe COOK ftnled, Ex.per. Apply
Desk 1pa~ available fn North American, 445 Eut 24 hollt iepcrdizw resume or call Bob, ~Ml.O new Barbenhop, Sbtrat(l9 Odie's Restaqn.nt 212 E
newel't office butldlng at 2nd South, SUlle 33, Salt * UCENSED * JASON BEST Bet1ch Inn: for l!<!tail&. caD 11th st. C.M.
pJ11'M' loc&Uon tn llun\IRJI:• Lake Qty, Utfb &till, ~irlb.aal Jteadl-ad· .. -Employment AgtnC)' I.OU Evins. 53&-1f21 I ·*'"'ax>K=°'~*,.-· ~-~~n-<ed~.
ton Beach. Air.condJt.ioned. .... _...... -r .. ., v.... -So Mal ~·-BAA'K Pcr90flrW'l E p beauUful entrance. Front-~te on·.n matters. Love. uvi · n., _..,ta Ana · x : Apply Sm1 A Strloln. 59ll ~ Bl·~ "·-·--··• 312 N Ad·-... 1 .. 1-.a--.. r;ecret.arial, derictal, NCR Padfic Cit. H-., N.8. age on ee._.,... vu.. ~ · ..... • _.,, i:Mialnets. • .... -• .,. .. , ... 7 450 t chlbl 1 -,, leads ~ private parkJnr I''? ~ANUFXCI'URER El C&rdlno Rel.I, SAn Sh•rp S.Cntt•ry f o r proo ma opet11. «. DEUCATESSEN MAN
loL $50 pr:r month for "-.-
1
B~~nt Into the Cll"~tt. m..8136, 492-0016 f•1t .. peced Newport :,-S~~= ~ny Park «f5 E. 115th St., at.
si-tt. Dtsk a.no •en.airs no. ua•l'IHS of the day. 25 10 AM -10 PM ll•ch .a.--. TYi See ~ avaHablto for $5. Bu81nna yr hlllor)' of succeu now ...._.. .... ,. ype BARMAID-Nile Milt. $2.25 rry.
hours M&'Afflnt senrtce ~xP.ndlng ope:raltoM j0 So. ALCOHC)LJCS AnonYmOUI 6J.70. Shorthand 100, 10 st.art. No bikini no da.n-DENTAL ASS18TANT
avallabh! for 110. All utlll· Calli. Complete fllclory 1~ Phom 542-121'1 0t· writ• 10 ot9•nl11 & f • 11 o w dfliit. Apply ln penon u-i. wanted In N"Pt ti, Start
Ues paid eJCttpt tl'Jtphone. stal1ed A ready to Co· Wiii P.O. ~ l2n c.ta Mea t h r u , U n de r JS. Uttle JOhn·s lM, 200T2 N. Ja111 lntv. nlW', ....
DAILY 'ILOT tniln Prlnclpol ol l\lamt. Phone; 642~3910. 425 Sant.a Ana, San~ Ana lfatg. * l!LEC'l'RONIC tECHS. *,
1m1 llACH I LVD. abllltkla. Contacl lmmcd. ~~ 64l0 N. Newport Bl'ld. (Corner &cl KIU ,4 ~l"IN.I lnfonna.tlon •
HUNTINGTON l lACH Once in a llfcUmc oppor. to SENSITIVITY .TRAtNlNG ~rnbly. PallSAdctJ Call (71fl im..:.to
'42-<Q21 makt' that blih lncoma moat WORK SHOP EXP'O. ELECTRONIC BARBER. Very progressi\JC
people dream of. Starting A pl'Olfll-m oC lnterpct10nal ASSEMBLERS 1hop in bcau1Jful L8.lunli
trS WONDER.rut. the ulttry $121,000 + 1ubttantlal exerclsu for 11mall N:lf-dlo Wlr1'18 A. P.C. Board fabrica· Dench. 49+lit'l54
m.tl\Y buys In ~nces protltx. CilU Ktn OIHard rected i poupa. Mlnlm&J Uon. Appl. In pe~n
JOU ftnd In flit omH!ed I (?141 '74-Ul ohal'&•l,.n 642-8730. 10 AM· TRANS!COM l'ORP.
Ad&. ail!ck therD nowr "'1 OJARGE IT! 5 PM. !St W. 181h St.\ C.M.
.EXPERIENCED ••••.•• , •••
• • • • • •• •• •• • t'OUN'TERMAN .
City Au.to Parts
l012 ...... ntlo, C.111.
.. ~ .... ' -·.~, ..... ,~, ,,., •.' '( .. \~~,,..,.,-,.,-.~ .. ~.,~~-~,~ .. ,...,~, ..... ,~.-·~.~1-·-,-· . .. • • • • • ' . • • • • • • • • • • • • • p •• • , •• ., . . ' . ' . . . " . .. . . ' • ·~ ... , • •1 • • • . -. : :! ..... ... . ... . . . . . .
~~[!~~~~~~~&!:!,!~L~O~Y~M~NT!"fJ~!!& EMl'LOYMINT JOIS & IMPLO NT MOCMANDISI l'Oll MIRCHANDISI POil
T"""1. Otctrnbtr 2J, 1969 ~·
: • ·-SALE AND TRADE SALE AND TRADI
r.IERCHANOISI l'Olt
SALE ·AND TRADE
). ·,
,,.~~~~~~~~~~~~~9j,! .
DAILY PILOT r..-'' ~ol"'::~ltlllo•"'"' Worn. 7100 lo,l>oboo-ilMollon. Wom. 7100 J• 11\on, w.m. 7100 Jobi Mon, W 7100
-·· .• SEflVJCE STA Al· furnltvr• ·IOOO Fum.ltvre 1000 Pl•not &. Or9•n1 1130
;_'I
*DRIVERS*
No Experi•ce
Neceaary!
?ifrut t.'9 dean ~
drtrinr......t.Affly
YELLOW CAB CO,
m; E. 1'tb st.
°"''*-AlollLY WANTED to board
boy, • u. ilt n.u,er
&hool area. Salar)' open.
PLeue .end pboinie 00. •
lamilY ~pttoll to Ben
?ilfS!., ?»Uy PUoL
rRY Cook, E:a:p tr.!
Graveywd Ir: re&t W1t.
52.l'.I br. !Q w. 00 St..
C.?i.f.
PlNANCJAL Pla nni nc.
t..aance. RNI Estate,
(tN!StmeDl Cou~lor .
c..ianR-ed Uada. Betta
tbn $25.tm/Jr. lna:mt.
9tlll" 1M3. NA
SAYE
~&IHI
c
L
A
5
5
I
F
I
E
D
6
4
2
•
5
6
7
8
•
IRST
lllS?
INDEX
Ofllco
F.,.i,n Cor -hanks tendont..saiwna., tUll time I iiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiijiiiijii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~ I GRAND P'I 'NOS ,__ Good _co. bm!Ot.t. ~ ~ rvet. Exper. onJ,y. Apply al ""
r--' ~. iurr::::: ,__ Good 2590 Nrwpart Bhd., C.M. All New. 10 ¥tar WarranlY
CLASSlflED
P• Put ~k• atMI I•_.. Altimlrtn
Proud ti lie a
Am . rn er1can ...
Glad yaa're a
GIRL???
Join up with usll I
AMERICAN
GIRL
All NEW
Red, Whito &
Bluo
temporary 1ervic•
M.,chl"f 11""9 with
TOP RATES
MAJOR
ASSIGNMENTS
TOP BRASS
COMPANIES
We're recruiting
NOW for:
Newport S.ach
Office
& oll OroOfo County
& Booch Clt111.
"NCR" Oper.
'#. 482
11Medic1I" Secys.
"Keypunch" Opers.
''Bookkeeper.Secy''
"Mester" Stenos
'Finl Closs" Typi11>
"Priv•te" Sectys .
'Rank & File" Clerk.
''Conversion11
Hostesses
"Stotidicol" Typi1h
AMERICAN
GIRL
needs YOU
Coll our NEW
Newport INch No.
for appointment
&73-417&
REGISTER NOW!
AMERICAN
GIRL
.... ._ .. ~. SERVICE sr Prices IOOd unw Otc 31Jl comm. ICbed\lle. AU lot A ATJ'. Fu1J Knabe 5'1" $2710 r.:iw $2150 DIAL DIRECT 6.f:l.S67B .. ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-1 ~~. Joe ~ Ph.. ~l?&t. time t!'Yel.. Exp'd. Neat In Knabe 5'8" $319(1 now S2700
----------1 appearance:, See JJm. 2590 Knabe S'4'' • .,,...._,. now .--... HOUSES FOR SALE ~V:C~T-~~!~s = ., •GARMmr FACTORY * Nnport Blvd., C.M. DECORATOR ,. __ , • ..,.... "TIQN ~ ..,u.vy OINltu.L ,. ,.... ... I VE'.I~ ~..... Fischer fT' $1195 now Sl.500 COSTA Mu.\''"'.::::::::::::::11. ~NUCS~~:J;~~~~RTY "" ...... M»t ,:·.~ rxperience. All phases. Call SERVICE Station Attendant. Of 11 WX:UIY APARTMENTS Yamaha 5''8" $2445 now $1B50 MIU. DfL MAI .............. 11u t •••lE R P•1tot.s .o!; ~.
60-.1412 N.B. Full time. Unioo ou. 164.S WurlltJ:er s· $2245 11890 MEU. YEllO• ··-········ .. 1111 &UllH:llS •INTAL ................. , J ""'--· CM ~ •-5,._t..1. & U-•"--Mllft r.,_:..,_ l'lCtW COLL.IOI PAii.iC ......... ~ ... 111J O"Jltel ltlllllTAL ........... JI . HAIR 'srYUsr _,..., . -..-.-..-nlla "'9UllWJJ ........ ""' Thete are legitimate reduc-MIWPOaT lllACH •••••....•.• ltill INOUiiTRIAL PltOl'llTY ..... ...
\V/FollowiJlc. Exclusive SI'lTERJ'orour famUyonly, All BUND NEW 00111 and are exf.ttmdy ::~.": ... "~o~~•:MT~.:::::;::::~:lt f3~~:f.ttLllENTAL··::::::::::: --; ;
Shop. available When needed : 9 ·pc. Medit.,,anoan 89droom Suitt in Poco11n KOQd.valu~ at the¥e pricu. NIW">•T IMOllllS ........... 1i-LOn ....................... 11• '"'
,._,, ~-N<:'9 some"'-·-.. ,_ IR $ 90 0 .. vca1:1T .................... 1m •ANCJIU, .. ·····-.. ·-···-··•1M , • .......... -.._.._.. ~ .. ~eve .... _ •9· 3'49.001 _NOW $161.00 ays cash, low in1erest IAYSHOll•S ................ 1m cn•US OaOYES ............. •In * trEAVY EQUIP. MEO!S. occuionaJ WEEKENDS. Gorgeous Spar1i1h Custom Built Sofa with en installment ~s. X·ma.s =~~:i.t.wr•• ::::::::::::::·~= ti::":~siMo•~"··::::::::::::: : •• ;
()veneas Jn1onnaticn Six cltlldttn (ag., 10 and m•tchin9 love S••f-Choice of b••ufifuf de.l lve"ry guat'. ~111011 HIOHLAMOS ••••••.. 1m alSOtT •110,11tv ...:1 ...... 4211 Call tn•i n4-2GlO under), Ught cooking, own f b I GOULD MUSIC N1v11111TT •a•ic ........... 1w otANOI co. PllOPlllTY ••••. 11211
-
_.;__:_c_ ____ I ·-~-11on. Call ,_ ,.... • rics. R•9. "419.951 ···-·-·-·NOW $225.00 lf'llNI ...................... 1Ut OUT OF STATI PllOP ............ I ...... .....,...... "' ,.,. S • h 0' • S t $75 00 204· N M I $ U.CIC tAY ........ -........... 1141 MCUMTAIN a OESlllf ..... .,.Ult HOSTESS tenriew ~1900 {Udo Isle). p1n11 1n1ng •• --··-··-··-····· • ;) . an, .A. 547.()681 IAST•lUP, ..•.••.•...•••••••. 11tt 1uao1v1s10N LANO ·······•• .Ull :
:II ~-~ 12 50 ... _ Solil4 01k End T1bl11 and Coffee Tables •• $1t.SO PIANOS • ORGANS 11 , ... , 1244 'llAL 1stAT1 s1:1tv1c1 ..... •tu or ever . ..,...., · per'""· SPRAY M F R 1 T II .,. 11tYIMI TllllU.CI ............ IMS ,il.E. EXCHANOS: .............. .m Don J~' Re11aurant an or oo • Decorator Tablo lamps NEW & USED COllOMA 01L MAI ........... l tM t. 1, WANTl'iO ................ .-~ -·19ll eo..~. One who will lake IR •A9 9•1 NO IALIOA •11NINSULA ......... 1• BUSINESS d __.. --. h" work. A I I eg • .,.,. • ~ --·-··---w $11.00 • Yamaha P1anoc Oront •EACON IAY ............ -. ··'* an -i'
H Ou SE[< EE PING • .,..,,,_ in 11 WY n Sponish Honging Swag i..amps •Thomas Organs •AY ISV.NOI ................. lUI FINANCIAL • penon, 83T w 17th st. c M IR LIDO ltLI ,. . ............... 1Ul Manq:emenl ol 2 )'OWIC • ' • • •CJ· $49.951 -·············-···-.. -NOW $22.SO • Kimball Pianos. ••L•O,t. 11UMO .............. l>H au11N11s1 o,•oaTUM"1u .. :
bo"' Aile--. 3PM "•30 TEEN DI-tor to ···-• A d lo cir h d ' la • Kohl•r • Camp'·It HUNTIHOTOM ll!ACM .... -... U• IUSIM•s• WAMTIO ....... .. ............ -... ....... ..... ... ecora r eam ouse on !Sp y -3 "'"' HUNTINGTON KAAICV• ..... 1405 JNV•ITMl!NT O~Jll• ... &>It
PM •1 .,...... "·" ~ ........ direct dl.11-.l ---i~1 eventa rooms of S · h 1 ·i ( COAST MUSIC uHDA 11L.1 '* Nve1TMENT w•NT•D ...... 6>11 1
i
' ,. on-...... Ulll ~ ..., ·~... gorgeous parus urru ure was POUNTAIM VALLl.'r .......... ltlt MOMl"'r TO L.OAM .............. .m ~.,~t=•~P_M_·~------i ~rt!'~7th:. :U. ~ SrAegC. •Rt295. NEWPORT & ~IAReoR t~:t.;·:~:,,. ·:::::::::::::::i'::: !::~~~~LL~~1i~s :::::::::::::: -~;
HhSK\R • 2' hr care, liibt deslnable. Over 21. Call I fl CE $398 Costa Mesa * 632-~I o••o1:11 011ov1 .............. 141' coLU."TEllAL Lo.1.Ns ......... .m .
skp g .i rnNls. Terms to Miss Rultenbach 646-7181 a • • • • • Open 10-6 Fri 10-9 SUn 12-5 ~:::w•c:toCM.:::::::;::::::::::::: =~~~::~.:1~"'J...·::::5 .. , ~
be rqoliatl!d. Call 1.(ing • CREDIT AVAIL. NO MONEY DOWN 'llANOI COUNTI' ................. I WAM 0 . ..••. •
Beach Ccmmunity Hospit&I, ~IyREf~:.~~~ ~~ lat PAYMENT NOT DUE 'TIL 1'7C Televialon 8205 ~~~ :; ~~~~r..:·:::.:·:::.::-..:::: ANNOUNCEMENTS -} Hatfield section, room 107. • .... -........... .,.., •r STAMTON .............. , ... t•ll and NOTICES l =====~---~. _, stalling ahockl. etc. Good II m FURNITU Le~ Color T\I er Black WESfMINITl!:lt ................ 1•12 FOUHO IFrM .... , ........... .... HOUSE1;CEEPER &-child v.·orking ciondltions. Paid in-RE ~~~~t~"C,:T" ................. :m L.osT .......................... , l
care, SA da. 11.·k, $50 wk + aurance. fringe benefita. Ap-&-White. Option to buy. U.HTA ANA Ho·Ts:·::::::::::::1 .. :::&~~~~&HTS'·::::::::::::!:.
rm I.: btd. Pd. vac. 540-92U pl• m penon. Free service. No deposit OR.ANGE ...................... 1tu •t•THS ...................... Mn ,
LEGAL Secretary, must be ~ A. H. SHIPKEY 1844 Newport Bl d (at A-Active TV Rental Co. ~g~~·= T'U1T11•··::::::::::::::::: ~ro·~~~;UART ''.:::::::::::::::a I
exp'd, good aldlls, salary TIRE SERVICE V •Harbor Blvd.) (1) 5Zl--l153 ~:t"t~~foc CAHVOM ':::::::::l!: FUNE1t•L o1a1eto•s ......... ,.
CdM ~ -•-W L' I A-·•-· ll" GENERAL Et t . '"' FLORISTS ................ MU l open, .,, __ ,, 'Moll • incon, 11&.1 ... 1m c ec ri c LAGUNA HILLS ................ CAtD OF THAMICI ............ 1416
LANDSCAPE Foreman or WAITRESS, need 'an attn<> osta Mesa Only petscnal Portable, like new. t::~:: :r:uc:L .............. :: IN Ml!MClllANI ............... Mn .... ,
, ....... w/f-·· potent•-• to··-. ~ ~. -Ida"· AP. 1 year old. VHF &-UHF $2.5. MISSIOft VllJO :::::::::~·: 110I ~==:~:=~ ~~1m":::::::::~:: i:'l~J ~· .,......... ""' ... •VI· ,......., ........... ,,..... E N ' h 'Tll 9 ... -04 SAM CLIMllHT• ............ 1111 cs:Ml!TllllY c11Yn1 Mu • to -rk tor t bl'·"-• 1 · El M very '! t -Wed., Sat. & Sun. 'Til 6 J"to-o• saN JUAN c.1.P1sT1tAHO ...... 1111 ....... .. ..... ex a _..,.,. p y tn person. oro -CA,JITRANO aucH ......... 1ru ~••M.ATOIUES ................ 2 • com ........ W/rtew branch cf· 1~· P••, ,. ___ , Hiwav SUn-2 GOOD cond. 21" TV's, $15 •••••••• , 1111 MEMORIAL rAlllCS ........... 60:1 r-·" ~ .... ~ ~ JOBS .. EMP E .. .. .................. "IJCTIONS .... ~ in El Tero area. set Bch after 5:30 LOYM NT A & S25, CA•LS•Ao ..................... ,, .. AVIATION sliiVici'".'.'.".'.".'.'.".".-..., I 837 ,_,,., ..,,.,..,0 . pplfanc• 1100 642-658!1 OCl!:ANllOI! ................... 1151 TllAVEL 4'at ......,._or~ eVH. * WAITRESS * School1-ln1trud1'on 7600 u.N o1Eoo .................... 1m A11t TtAHS,011TAT10N ''.'.:::::'"* tA.1
M··-COOK 21" Ccn-'e ""lor TV, will lt!Vl!llllDI COUMTY ......... 1 ... AUTOTUNS,CltTATlON '4ft •• IUJ:. -PM. Hosp. Apply flying Butler ~ ...... HOUSl!:I TO •• MOVEO ...... Ifft Ll!OAL NOTICIS .... :::::.._ ... } exp. pttfd. Contact Persor; 61l-0077 LOOKING for a solid ruture NE\V 2 dr. CE refrig., from demo in Your home, year CONOOMIN IUM .......... ltst Gl!tMAN I TUTOlllNO .... "'·
•---------mod•l horn• •118 guar. w-. "'"2010 DU,Ll!Xl!S FOii SALE ........ itis SERVICE DIRECTO·R· Y .. , nel Dirtctcr. So. Coasti· but getting " "" .......... ., .,~ ....,_ A,AltTMINTS FO• u.LI! .... 1H1
Comm . HO!!p. 31872 C.t. WE have an opening for a NO\VHERE ~ Retrig<'rators .... from S38 !-->.:;.-n-==,,.,,,--RENTALS •CtOUMTINO ............. '
II So 1 .......... ...,, • •• Console Color TV, contemp 19" PORTABLE .1.Nsw111NG sl!11v1c1 ....... '* I wy. • ._. ........ •~1311 beginner in ci r cu I at Ion LA1Uk into a career as a Excellent condition. Houses Furnished APPLIANCE •E•A1ts, ,.,h .. .su
Ext. 356 ma nagcment. Permanent RADIO ANNOUNCER \~:ipoo1nC\'I picture tube · $248 $25. 548-8704 01N111tAL ................ mt :~~~"~1,~111:5•••·••••••·· ·····:: * MOTEL MAID * slluation for high school m -3800 aulo washer •• sso llEHTAlS TO SKA.IE ......... toM AUTO. 9"' ••11'1. Tln."ttl::'M DUNLAP'S COSTA MS:SA ............... 21to •A•VSITTlfllG '"'
)
I
I Part Tim~ Over 30 graduate ''"bo has completed Institute of HI.Fi & Stereo 1210 MESA DEL MAit .............. 11UJ io.t.T MAl~TENA.NcE··::::::::uu
Mu .... ...,. his military obligaticn and Broadcast Aris 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. ----'-""-""--"""' MESA YEllOE ................ 1110 a1t 1c1C, M•,"OHltY, tic. ....... UN -~ u•naa . COlLEGI! ,Alt lC .............. 1IU IUSIMESS SEllVIC•S ........ M&J :"'==---,-,----! is looking for a business 1601 N Bristol s A ~ BEAUTIFUL Bm.ak loud HllWPOllT •t:ACM ............ 220I IUILOS:.llS .WI ~:!!'!;. a,:m~~'::t. m:nt~~ with a briaht future. Co~ AUCTIONE.rnING ' • · speakers, model 3 o 2. ::m:~ ~~J:-Es .. ::::::::::·rri: ~:~~~::_:?,:~ .............. .,.. -1
tact Benton Williams at the REGULAR 2 ""'""K TERM * COLOR JV SALE * walnut. $385. 642-8584 IAYIHOREI ................ mJ CARPl!HTltrMG .:::::::::::::,m A•i 2376 Newpcrt Blvd., 548-9755 DAILY PILOT l '" ,·..__ n .r:..c. o<>v111t SHOllEI ............... m1 CIMENT C111Crtte • "" -11 or ..... Be in busines's for yourself! WESTCLIFF ................ mo CNILO ci.111! Lk ................ 11 NEWSPAPER dellvecy-early terv:iew. T _ t be 1970 ....,., ,..._1 UN1v1111:11rr PAllK •...••••••. 2211 coNTllAetoris ...• ::::::::..,. I l.,C""'.C,.~-~-~--, .....,.am 0 an auctioneer. • ...., '-A.I or 1V, hand-s rtl Good 8500 lllVIH• ........................ llUI CAR,IT CLEANING .......... '4U AM route in Irvine area. WOP.IAN to clean house 1 WESf-BEST School of Aue-some walnut cabinet, while ""po,,,.....,,n~g=_,='===o •ACIC •AV ................... n.t tA••ET U.'rlMG a 1tl•AIR "u Xlnt No "a:et:oots''. $200 per •• , -r week. Relettnces tionee,.;",,. ....., w 4lh Sanla th I ......... 6'10" MOSS SURFBOARD ..... , ", llUPP .................. 1,,1!! 011.f.Pl!RIES .................. ...
mo .i growing Approx 16 ,.... -~ .... £'Q • ' ey ast ~;;~. Perfect for IRV1NT T•••ACE ........... 22tl Ol!MOLITION ... ········••••••· hn. week. ~ required 66-2438 Ana, 83S-8147 airiatma.s. First payment Blue pigment en bottom ard co•oo"" OEL MAit ........... ~ :~::;~~~ ... ~••v~c~_::::::::::,.. -, I ~·~y CLASSES 11-farch 1970 at Henderson'• blue en rails. Excellent con-IALI A ............................. EQUt,Ml!MT llENTAU USll
newpolt.
personnel
~agency
&33 DOVER DRIVE
NE\VPORT BEAa-t
612.3870
Wi•hin9 you
abundanco in 1970!
IStt us for
"prosperity insurance.")
*********•• NURSES R@c1steted • evl!n-
ing It night ahltts. Ex.
benelits. Apply Personnel
Director, So. Coast Com-
munity Hosp., 31872 Coa.st
Schoola-lnstructlon 7600
MEN & WOMEN!
COMP~ PROGRAM-
MING IS 'IliE KEY TO
YOUR PROFIT ABLE
FUTURE!
Hwy., So. l..t.(una. 49S-13ll, Classes start soon.
ex1. 356 Pilat program offering the
PUNCH PRESS fines t equipment and facil-
SETUP OPRRATOR !ties av•ilable! Real-time
c: computer pro&ramrnlng. $3.00 per hr. Min 1 yr exper.
Xlnt. be~rit1. App. in per.
son. Z.O. PRODUCTS, 3190
Pullman, Cooeta Mesa.
The Academy
cl('.mpi .. m ThDiology
ou.-~ 1877 u.~ Bl d CM diU·o, •75 Call JAY "' .. 1574 Lio<> ISLE ................... 2"1 •••<••• ....... _ -, Sewing. Help with quistmas .... 07808• ....... ·uvr v ·• · · FOR •Sal. Scuba~ •,~r,0is .. u,•,.•,• .................. ~,, l'Loo1ts .. ·:::::·::::::::::::::."'5 , 1 'd <« 1400 J'tO-e: gear. .... .. .. ............. PUltNACI llE,&1111 lift. wt r 1 cas. V'W"" 8 d N d HUNTINGTON 1s:..1.cH ......... too •V1tHITU1tl! lll!SToit•H• ..... : I KENP..IORE Auto washer. 8 ran neiv. ever use . FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......... 2411 a ltllFINISHlHG ""
MERCHANDISE Fo• c ,,, I I od I I 968-6470 before 3 pm. Si!Al Ill.I.CH ................. 200 OAllOl!NIHG -' .. y s, a e m e. "nt LOMO l liACM ................ 1.IOI OEHl!ltAL SEltVICts" ........ "" _:
SALE AND TRADE cond. $65. 546-8672 o r NE\V twin 52 U.S. Divers ac-Oii.i.NOi! COUNTY ............. U.OI GRADIJtCi. OliCING .. :::;;::::, .. 1 -1
. SANTA AM& ................. t•ll GlASS "" j
Furn,tur• 8000
20 P'C. "MADRID"
3 Room Group
FROM MODEL 1-IOMES
Includes: Quilted sofa and
chair -2 end tables & cof·
fee table -2 lamps~ dreu..
er -mirror -headboard -
quilted box spring k matt·
ress -5 pc, dining room;
tabll! & 4 hi·back ch.airs.
COMPARE AT $749.§
$399
WELK'S WAREHOUSE
847-8115 qua-lungs. Will accept best WESTMIHSTEt ................ S.11 OREllJll TH"ut.i1"""""••••· .. ·,,... I ff 839-1649 II 6 MIOWAT CIT'r ................. tiU ............... "" ! HOTPOlNT Elcc dryer, late 0 er. a SANTA ANA HEIGHTS ........ UH OUN SHOP ................. 1111 ~ TWIN 38 ba k COASTAL t 70G HEALTH CLUIS .............. •nt · model, xlnt cond $65. Also scu tan ·s, com-, .... ,. ,,.,, ................ ,,.. HAULING .................. 61:11
I b -..t ~ " " " .............. HOUSECLEANIMG •m . Hamilton gas dryer $45. p ete. rauu rx"W, never us-LAGUNA NIGUEL ............. 2111 INTS:ltlOll DEC01tATIN0 '"0··,1J, . = o~ or 847 ous ... Call "'5-3767 "•" ""'"~ MISSION VIEJO .............. 17'11 ,,, ... , ,., ..... ,, ..............,,_. -o ' ...., ' ,....,...;;....,.. 'AH CLl!Ml!NTE 1111 "' " ... .. ......... •o t ;AN JUAN CAPl$T1t.AN 0"_'.".'.".".2n1 IRON, Otlll!Mnlll, Elc. ......... IJI CA,15Tlt.-.NC aS:ACH ... -.... 21JO lltOHIMO ................ .,.,.41$5 t
8600
ROCK SHOP
Sewing Machinft 8120 Mlacellaneou1 ---'--'
lllVEltSIOE CCUNTY llltO tNSUtANCE ··········· ... ,,,,,'171
DAHA POIHT '. . ........... 17'1 INIUL.ATtHO .................. ''" I
V•C•T•ON OEN••'S ........ _ INVESTIGATtNG, o.tKTl\'tl ... 17"
SINGER Automatic zig zag,
6 mos old. No attach needed
to do designs, monograrru,
blind hel?lll etc.: auto bobbin
winder. S Year g u a r .
Atsume pymts of $5.27 or
$42.00 cash. 526--6616
~lcol Jnst. 1125
" " .. • ........ ,,_ J"NITOlllAL Int SUMME11 a1NTAU ......... mt .tEWELAV •11•A111. e:tC:.'"''".... ! g~;~~~~l~in.ff.:·::::::::::::::: !--'NOSCA'll~G .......... ::::::,11 ~
-OCICSMITH ... ···············'°' I RENTALS MASONllV, 1111(1( ........... ...
6" tn'm aaw 117 = H U f . L-.1 MOV1NO 1 STOllAG• ............. I ·"" ou1es n urn1sneu '"I NTING, '•HfMNI ........ .w 6'" comb, ~w I grinding&: GINEllAL .................. :Ifft PAINTING, Si1u ............... ..u !
polishing units: from $49.95 COSTA Ml!IA . ' ................ JIOI :~~~°o5Gt'A,OHV ........ ......... f
Jib, tumbler •26 MESA DEL MAIR .............. JUS Pl..ASTEltlMG, ,,fiii:·•w•·:.::D j , ., MESA VEROI ................ Siii 6 lb. tumbler $29.60 COllEGI! P.t.llJC ............. )111 PlUMllNG ................ utl NEW,OltT Ill.I.CH ............ S20lll PET GltOOMIHG ... .12 lb. tumbler $35.90 HEWPOltT HOHTI ............. ttlt Poot. llltVICE ............ ··''"
AllO have some used equip. Hl!WPOllT IHOllES .......... »H ,owr:a SWEIEP'IHO ........... lt \I IAVSHOtl!S ................ ms P'UM, SEtVICI. ................ m
ChridmH Special•
C···co· ·-·--t. a beauty•. FREE load of material with DOVER SHOltlS ............... mJ llOOFINO ..................... .. IY'1 ...... ~ each tumbler Wl!:STCLIFF .............. :n» 11.1.010, .... in. l!tt ... ········'' No do\vn-Pmts only S16 me. l yr old, natrl v.'OOd. Bass. UHIVl!llSITY PAltJC ........... nn :::&gitl~~ 'in~i~:~~ . 600 w. 4th St., Santa Aol I & to 2 FREE cutting material with ltVINIE ................... -•. ttlll ' ••• ' • 0 D il snare, g Sm m. • each saw IACIC ••V .................... :n4t :~~~~:s SHAll,EH .......... •tU • pen a Y 9-9 matched 14" & lwo 21" 1:,•,s,T,_!LU~P .................. ??•,•, SEWING M.1.C:i.11\jj".o'i:';A:ii:s· ;.. •. ( Sat 9-6 SUn 116 Z'ld' bal n Supplies, rough material, •v ~· .,... • • I .ien cym s W/ oor !llVINS: Tl!ltltACE •••• -...... nu ll!PTIC TAMICS. s...,. ltc. .. "6 PRICES SLASHED I stand5. $550. 833-1(}4{1 coconuts (sawed free CCJIONA DIL MAit ........... mt TAILORING .............. .,,,,.. w/purchase) IALIOA ................... UM Tl!llMITI! CONTllOL ....•.•••.• ,7f
up to 80% SaVlfliS UPRIGHT Practice Piano, Big discounts on romp, lint IAY ISLANDS ................. JlH i:t:· t.tn:c &'M&"Nt"-·•·~~ _. 8" Sofa Ir love seal $159.95 t' bl Gd d $150 LIDO ISLli . . ............... »Sl Tit!:~ stiv1~E , ....... I
5 Pc Span game !!el $Hi9.95 ~:~· gu~~~ & co~p. i,~ of lapidary r.::iachinery 'lil ~~~~ • .;.s~AENs~ ::::::::;::::::tt TEL11:v1s10N, ••ililfi."i:'1C."." .. :;: I u,_ 5, quUtod mat•-··· • Cal Jan. ls!. HUHTIMGTON IEACH ...••..•. MOt UPHCLSTIEltY .................. ~, n.i.... u1; prlcc. Like new. S6S. I STONECRAFT HUNT INOTOH HAa1ou1 _ .. ,t•H WELOtMo ........... ....
PHONE WORK
\Vomen & Girls. Pltuant
telephone work from cur of·
fice. No e"p nee. Full &
part time. S2 • $5 per hr.
Apply 230 W. Warner SUite
205, S.A.
box springs •••••••• $99.95 540-1647 FOUNTAIN VALLl'r .......... MU WINOOW ClEAHIJ(G ........... •H1 ,
Union l•nk Squirt 5 Pc BR King, $••• 1179.95 1.....,. Altamirano ' ---fat Sl!AL ..... cw ............... M.M JOBS & EMPLOYMEN ·I
• !h T ,,.... GIBSON Gi.litar. Les Paul ·~~ µQJ "" GAllDIN oaov1 .............. ios ou ower Approved Furniture my horn!!) H. e . n......n 9-9, LONG 11ACH .............. ssot .tc• WAN"Teo, ~ ............ · lult• 40 Custom. Ul!Cd 2 rno's, Cost "'!"'= ORANGI COUNT'r ............. )Hf .to• WAMTED. Wt!Mll ........ ,..
")rant• (lllf., f26" 2159 Harbor, CM 54$.9660 $550 W/'"" c•••. ••·-, 'C'.·-• a1ao Christmas eve. 847-1320 SANTA ANA ....... .,., ......... M11 JOI! W.\NTEO, • "" *"""' ...,.. . ......,,.., "",,._ WllTMINSTEll ...... , ..•••• , .. Mlt MIN I WOMEN ............ l c.11 5'7·9471 USED 5 pc. antique white tone & Wahwah pedal. * AUCTION * MIOWAY CITY ................. Jill SCHDOU • IMITllUCTIOM .... 1 t'!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!d dinett• •• , $29.95. u·-, 5 pc. Sa rl" all ,,~ -"8t6 SANTA ANA HlllHTI ......... :UJO JO• PllE,AllATIOJ( ........... f 1: ... ..... 8':1.1 c uce ..-WU• O;n-t II you will sell or buy COASTAL ............... SJOI THl!ATIUCAL ............. ,,. I
Antique white dinelll! set BARlTD= Uke (Favilla) LAGUNA 11ACH .............. 111S MERCHANDISE FOR
Re&taurant
*NIGHT
DISHWASHER
18 Years or older
lEUIEN E. LEE
The FIRSf
& ONLY
franchised
5-T·R·E·T·C·H
ll1 E. c .. 11 Hw. & SEW (T.M.1
Newport Btiach S::ore cf Orange Coun!J.
Restaurant CHRISTMAS SHOP
F c r restaurant posiUons.
please com.act cur THE EASY WAY!!
* NE\V * Learn to sew on "knit fab-
Reuben'1 & Coco's rics". Make stretch pants
Resta1tt&nt1 In 1 hr, • bathing .suit for
Riverside, Calif. ~.DJ -even a girdle! Im·
1 illilii""iiio&oCe•"•t•raliliAii'ii'ii· iiiiiil aglne -T·shlrtJ for th.!
I ' wbie famll.v. See Betty Bruce •t
• 6: eves. m 6 LESSONS: Morn, afte-moon,
t6~ .J(l!C 721 E, Ka..U.. 0rsnao
Agency tor Career Girls 6~2Mi
410 W Coast Hwy., N.8. '=~-~===~= Dy appoint. 646-39391-
*AIRLINE &
TRAVEL CAREERS * $7.IOO
S&Jary plus car plus expe_n&-
''· Excellent bentfila. Pte-ftr Orange Counly resident.
?i.tust have a des;l"ff and C•·
rctt ruturr, C.11 Ann. \Vest.
cllU Ptrlonntl, 2043 \Vest-
cUH Driv'. N.B, 645-2770
Station A1tt1t
'Mcket Sales
Re&erValJon1
Air F're\ibt. Cargo
Communlcaticns
T'rRVCI A.gen!
s.1 ... softw•r•
to $800 plu. <0mm, Rare •PIY AIRLINE
to join top-notch tinn, P1>-SCHOOLS ""tlal uNlmhnd. E x p or
EDP. c.u John ......io PACIFIC
JASON BEST 1nqu1tt Today
Employment A,ency 543-6666
2'l07 So. P.faln, Santa Ana 610 E . 17th St., Santa Ana
SECRETARY Wanftd., p&rt
time. Yadlt BJa. ott. l da., JOlN THE rIELD
wk, lofarlner Yadrta 11'3-1393 \\rrnt A Ft.TI'UJ\E!
SERVICE St "--A nd F .l,,f!'/educaUon no bflrrlerr
• &uun lff' : l.et tlj help )'O!.I qualify.
or p/time empl. TAM-fPM ll\'l\f\"EEPERS tNST1TVT£
I 11PM-7A~I •hlfts optn. lNTERNATroNAL
s.IAI')' + Cbmm, J\-Jus t be P.fcttl/Ho!el/Apt Marni Sehl
local reslMnt. App I)' A UtVISlON or
Richfield, 200 W. Cout If"}' AN1'UONY SCllOO' .. ~
N.8. lni S, DROOKHUR.:.'T
St:ftV)CE SI'A. P.fAN. ANAlfEI~t. CA~FORi'llA
&prrienc«l. 1\111 time. Clas~• lorTn evJ:ry v.·~k
Top Wlllt'I I ccirnml~mn. PllONE FOR APPT.
604 S. C.:I H\''Y·· Lag BC'h. A.tk for Bclty TT6-S300
S39.9S. Used 1 pc antique nc. gtve Windy a try LAGUNA NIGUl!L ............. 1111 SALE AND TRAD• · for sala. Excellent condition Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m. MISSION v111Jo .............. s10111 i;;;~, .• white dinette se t $49.95. The SAN CLIMINTI .............. 3111 PUllNITUllE ............... ., F.cl.~ 1885 H rbo $50: &12-1842 Windy's Auction Barn c.1.,1sT1tANo ........... ,111 o•F1c1 Fu11N1Tu•e-........ "1• . • ,,. a r I CA,ISTRANO •EACH ......... 11>11 OF,IClii IOlllPMl!MT ......... lfl 540-6842 2Q75l,~ Newport, CM 646-86&6 OANA POINT ......... ., ....... 3140 ITCllE EOUtPMl!NT ........... 11
30 CONDOMINIUM ........... :tt• CAFE, llESTAUllANT ......... lllt USED 9 pc corner group, Plano• & Organs 11 Behind Tony's Bldg. Mat'I. ou,L•J11t:s UMitU1tM .......... >tH ••• sou1PMl!NT .... -....... ...
$69.95. Auorled used walnut HO Ir: N-GAGE TRAIN SUMMl!ll ••NTAU .......... JPn HOUIEHOlO oooos ..•••.•.•. llM
YEAR ENO SALE' RENTAL::. GAltAOI SALE ............ Wl1 end & cocktail tb\1, S-i.95 ea. • BOARD, New. I ncl, 2 A 1 F • h-..1 FU1tN1TIJ1t1: AUCTION ........ .... Assorted used bed r oom train&, bldg's, lanclsca ........ , p •· urn11 wu &PPLIANCl!S ................. 1
I 14 95 T"-F .. -~ Olllf.lt.t.L .................... 400I .. HTIQUl!S ' ............ -•..• ,,. amps . ea. "" BC· Use your X-mas money for etc. SlOO. 642-5663 er COSTA MESA .................. 41• SEWI NG MACHlfll. ............ 11'1 I
lory. l885 Harbor, ~2 one of theS<' HAMMOND _545-_1_544 ________ ::~~oV.'T"~~aC+t ·::::;:::::::!: :~s~g~L• i;:~:~~~~~ .. ::::::1111 .)
USED almost new Spanish BARGAINS! M·3,S67S: S.1.12, • * * * Hl!W,OllT Ml!IGHTS .......... 4111 lt.f.010 ,,, ....•..• , •.•.••.••••. DOI
I NEW,OllT SHORES , .. , ... , ... 4Uf Tf.LllVIS!OH ................... ... sectional y,• matchina: tbl S675: T-200, Sl.595; E-lO(I or FAMILY Membership In WEITCLll'"I'" . • ........... •U• Hl•l'"I . STlllll!O ............... ltll
& lamp $199.95, Used 2 pc. A·lOIJ Sl895; RT 2 w/PR 40 Irvine Coast Ccuntry Club UN1v1.11s1tv •A•tC -......... an tAPE ••co1to1as .......... eut a.1.CJC aA Y .............. , •. ,,,(241 CAMEllAS I EOUl,MINT ... dOt Spani.sh sofa & chair Si9.95. S1 995: al90 BALD\VIN Or-for sale. Pvt. pty. 673-9131 I.AST ILUFF . .. ........... n.42 HO•IY SUP PLllS ............ . The Factory. lSBa Harbor, gasonic: $49Zi: GULBRAN· coaONA OliL M< ........... •HI SPOllTIHO 00001 ........... . GO-Karts, xlnt cond. with IAlaOA .........••••••••.. 4MO llNOCUU.•S. SCO,lt:S ....... . 540-6842. SEN w/rythm $895; AU.EN J\lcCull k . I IAY ISi.AMOS ................. •UI MISCELl..AHS:OUS ........... .. dlx theater S2650. oc eng1rx"s w spare l.100 ISLE ................ 4UI MISC. W&HTl!D ............... • LIV. nn $25. Beau. mR.rble eng $~ New Mac 100 IALaoa ISL.ANO .............. J.SJ MACMINEltY, lik ............. P9 coUee & tnd tbl S2J. dinelte HAJ\.!MONO never run 175. ~ •335 MUNTINOTCN ll!ACM ......... 44. LUM••• ....................... lnll in CORONA DEL MAR. .,,,,..... FOUNTAIN VAl.LIY .......... 4411 ITOltAOe .. ... • ........... m.
M'I S25. mod rcfrig 125, Nu lJDO 14 w/cover & trlr. SIAL l l &CM .................. 44Jt IUILOIMG MATlll!ALS .... .. bxRprings &: matt $25. 2fcyl E. Coasl HW)". &m930 ~OHG •E&CH ............... UOlll IW"'' .. . .. 548-0593. Open Eves & sun afternoons Rl!gUlation sz-pool tbl. OU MANGI COUNTY ................. PETS and LIVESTOC :,c:;;;::.:O:::=::;--::=:::c::::;I •""""""""""'"'"""""""I whl naug. o:>uch, like new. GAllDEN o1ov1 ................ 11 PITS ,Ol!Nl!ltAL fiSED assorted occasional 675-7316 :~J~~iN~~~: ................ :11i CATS ............. ::::::::.::::::
chairs, Sl2 ea. used U,NTA ANA ..... :::::::::::::::: ... =:i.s··· ...................... .
8.S!Otted dbl & twin head· GORGEOUS Furs; Tourma· SAN"TA AHA HllOKTS -.......... l lVl!IToCK··:::::::::::::::::: .... ' IF you •re buying a Plano line Stole. Autumn Hau TUSTIN ............................. • t
boards, SS ea. The Factory, or Organ this Christnu.s A C.O.t. Priv. Pty. \Vkencls or E::t~"aL a1Ai:H";::::::::::::::: CALIFORNIA LIVING__ > _1~885,,,.H_Rr~bor-,_"',_Q.'8<~-'-=~ 1 a-lnte-ted in ...... , -al· afl 6 PM, call .,A2_u-,.. LAOUMA Nrou11.L ........ -... •Jot Nu11s1a111s ..................... I ;; "" ,.... """' "'' VI ,,....... MllSICN VllJO __ , ••.. ., •• 470lll IWIMMlNO rOOLS ........... ,Ifft ~ BOX i;prings/maltress $14, Jy great deals, plea.~f! shop DRESS rill& 5 rubies 18 SAN CLl!MliNT I .............. •n• ••T•os ......... -..... -..... mJ 1 Maple trundle-bed $49. Kt>n. \VARD'S BALDWIN Sl'UDIO ' ' DANA ,OINT ............... ., .• , .. AWNIHltS ..................... ,,,. ~ -... 30" ••••• 1'9. diamonds ~ttin1: In 18K TA1•L1t:X, lie. .............. """' VACATtoNS .................... ...
'Ol':hmaster Sl9. 8.l().6()37~ 11119 N;~\.eC,'.yMNi~ gold Va\u{. S900. Sell for $6SO RENTA"l.SM .................. TRANSPORTATION
FORCED to ~II 8' Medi!. & 51.lnday Afternoon cash. 962-3372 Apts. Unfurnished IOATS a YACHTS ............ ,.. I
9018• 7 pe Bas.~et d!n nn set. Carpet laytr hu: Hi Lo Ol!NIEltAL .................. ,... ~~1~;~A~~utsr1ts ............ ,;;g I
5 ...... BaSS<'t BR "'· -llee • nylons Sl.99 yd. Shag" ~°.S:.•v~~S: ................... :~: SPEl!o-11C1 IOAT ·::::::::::.ttM •-'" fo"m .".50 up + my labor, ••••••• ,,,., ................. ,,., 10.1.T TtA ILl!ltS ,.,. d tbl (1) ~ v " ........... 10.f.T M.AINTEMANCs:"'""'"'• I en e. 90c r ·~-' 8471519 HIWPOJIT HllOHfS ........... JJll 10,f,T LAUNCHIMG ........ tQI .
USED _.. I d k pt' ,, .... .,. • NIWPOltT SHORES •.•• ., ..... SUI MAll lNI: l:OUIP ' ...... ,.,= I
· · "~ wa nu! r! &· o B""U'l'IFUL KJ-~~uno wE•TC~1'' •• ·•·····•·• ·1"' •oAT 1Lt, Mo0•1Mo '""·· • I chair $l9.9S. 3 u1;«'.I \VRlnut HAMM NO Strinway, Y•m· ...,, . .,,. "'""., • uH rv•11s1TY PAiiie ........... su1 IOAT sEtYics:s ........ 1 rtudrnt desks ".95 , .. 2 11$-aha. Nrow & U5ed plMOs of ed mattte5l. Complrtt-.un-•ACICl&T .................. S:Ut IOAT lllNTALI .............. ' •• ak ••• bu • ·-· 11-b I"~" IAIT ILUl'P ........... sm IOAT CHAltTllt ............... I td rattan swh't'.I bar stool~ n10St n1 es. .ga,l )'II 1n u,....... w. wort -... co1toN.1. DIEL MAit ........... SUI ,llHINO aoAn .............. I S1 ea. Tht Factory, lSSS So. Ca.hf. at Schnudt ?ttuslc Sl2.o536 eves. U.LaOA ................. '* •o•T MOVIMG .•..••.•.•••••
Co 1907 N M . .,__ .... & IAV ISUNDI .............. ,,.I* IOAT ITOllA•E ............... :!. I Harbor, ~2 • • All\, ....... 1 .. ""-~-OUR ROSE BOWL BOX LIOO ISLI ............... nJl •OATS WAHTIO ............ .
SEA-BEST 0 .... ~IOA ISLAND ........... ms &lltCllAFT ............ ,, I ) BEAUTIFVL Kina bed. quu1.l "'"iiiiili;;;ot'"""";;;ot•iii• • .,. FFER! ! wuNTtNoToM •••cM ......... Mii l'LYIN• L~iso1ts ............. 1 .. mall-... Compl•••. u· '=;t~S-O=t=9=7="'~'=73-80!6-~---•,0","'"'"',vALLIY -.......... If M0•1L1 flOMll ............ ; ·~ ... """ OPEN EVENINGS I • I I!& ...................... ,. MOTCll HOMES .............. ;m I usad SJOS, worth $250. FIR"IVOOD 0 -Sal ~. LOl'IO t e.&cH ............... SHI a1cvcLss .............. . AND SUNDAYS '"M """' e ..... .1 OU.HO• couNTT , ................ aLECTa1c oai '""""""" · 1
842-65.16 eves. U II Ch 1 Eucalyptus,. OtllverTCI It 1tA1tDllN 011ov1 .............. wu MINI l lKIS ............ ~.,,.. •
1 TWIN ••• •·llh box •prl•~. nt r stm•• Jil.8.Cked. Call 540--9887. WISTMINSTlllt .............. '411 lil.OTO•C 'rCLVi"'"'""'"••"• ~ ·~-GOULD MUSIC MIOWAV CI TY ................. '4i. MOTOllU:OCTllS ............ J i;pttad & bolsters. ""cellent HONEY 1. 2 A $ )bs-E_,(. '"""• AMA ................. ua Auto s11v1c111 •i an···5l1 1 2().I" N ~I • fu\ S 7~ SANTA ANA HllOlfTI ........ Mii AUTO TOOU A lfO UI• .... . condition S60. S.U.2086 ah 7 ., . . a111, I I lractcd, cut. comb-1 lb. TUSTIM -· .............. JIM rltA ILlll. TltAVIL ...... '\.= I Qlmb & creamed. ~?Oll3 COASTAL ............ J1tf ftAILI•&. UIUllT .......... , I 3 pc, Beige neur . !lee!. couch VERY --pl"''' piano. l.AOUMA l l'&CN ............. 11115 CAMPEii$ ............ '
b ,_,. ...,, LA•UH& NIOUllL ............ Jl11 tllVCIC.I ... , ............. rl!' no um1. !rars. ~t. Good bnby erand, with Ampko 21 " COLOR TV. 111.tr model ,,,,. cLIMINT& ...... Jnl JlllPS ......... .,., ,
10 tX«I. 5hapt. $65. 673-.1CYJ4 1 11 $229. B"V ,port. TV s.is. IAN JUAN CA"llT••No .. tn1 CA.M P•ll lllNTALS .......... 1 ' f'x prf!sA on . e a r OANA ''CUNT JHa 0 ... ,1 .. 00,1, . I \\'ork xlnt. &4&-1~ REAL ESTATE • •
Office Equlpmont 8011
n 'Pl':\VR..ITER, A d d In R
machine, calculator. very
l't'Atonable. Xlnt con d ..
'92-2423 '-=""-====-·
Rachrn"niooU play h I$ , ~&:~T~:.:u•os , ......... -:= ;
n1usk hill v;a,y. Ask que&-8' POOi~ table., wht \\'/gold Gen1r1I &"T•OU•s. CLAlllC.S ........ ttU J
Uolt!ll ~94·6261 felt. Bnuxl new. $.200 U$h. r11Pl.1a, nc. ........ Jtfl •AC• CAI&. •oo. ....... . Call &12.-3%31 CON DOMI NIUM b .......... Hit IUTO l'IU'tl ...... .ftl'S SACRJrrci::. \\1ur111 ze r :=L:o;•.11;:, .......... :; :~r:· wa_.,,.10 ·:::::::::::~.,,.
•Dll'ICt piano. be11u1. cond. i=IREWOOD tOOM I 1o.a10 ..... ·:::·::···mi 1uTo't:!siNe ··· .. ···"'··.... · rtfa.kl' ortf'r. 6il-364G 6.11.Q.l!I lo\OltLS. tt&fLIN COU•TI '"' UllD UIS ...... . .....
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... --------------------·~----------~----------------......,--
MERCHANDISE FOR
SALE AND TRADE
PETS ond LIVESTOCK TRANSPORTATION
Dogs 182$ Matorcycltt_ 9300
TRANSPORTATION
DATSUH -·-·-* HAPPY SOLUTION TO SUZUKl 80CC All new cwer.1 ---------
00G ENJOYMENT!! h&uled 'Engine, ex~ fmport~ A~!O• 9600
Miscellaneous 1600
*Christmas Special Trat~ cl.ft ttrti!lCatH. chamber, etc, Xlnt cond. & 161 DATSUN
Puppy.. classea t15. Novice Beautiful. $1TS. Call 842-3159 4 door radio beater auto-
obedience. $20. 546-0089 NEW '69 Kawuo.ld 250 cc matte.' Excellent co~ltion. MARTINCREST KENNELS
25% OISCOUNT
on all tr.ado up jewt:lryl! Sldev.i nck'r, under $600 . Low ml, (V\YJ 107)
Some exlX!llent rings. pend. AKC Red " white male 841-7611 or 847-2987 $1295
• Cocker Spaniel puppy • .............., ~u ... End ff b · v w anli .• ear rlna:• I: many Bea ut i ful Chri 1tma1 ~ ... YAM"Oll ural, ar our • • ott'.ers. present Xl t di JUo like nu. Call after 6 PM or
Lapidary supplies, casting ha.I had sho:. 4.9'1-= aft~ weekends. 837-.3969.
::iupplics & ~P· J ewel.ty PM, wk. days. tooli & supplies. Rough cut gt:m s!Qnes,. rock cuttine LOVE FOR CHRISTMAS! Auto S.l""licti1
machinecy, Some ~XC1lllent * Great Dane Pupplep iiii&~P~o~rls~i!ijiiiiiii9~400~1 rocks ready lo tumble in 1 * Minlahft Schnauzers ---
lb. packages. • Tenns Available • SE!@
FIVE M GEM~ MARTINCREST KENNELS Auto Supply LAPIDARY SUPPLIES 54&-0989
Atm!OlllZED
SALES & SERVICE
187U BEACH BL., 84Z-4435
HUNTINGTON BEACH
NEW!
'70 PICKUP
Tuesd.l)', 01c1mbtr 2), llf61J DAILY PILOT
TRANSPORTATION TRANSPORTATION l~SPORTATI
!mpQ r••d Autoe 9600 Autos W1ntecf 9700 Used Can
N rRAN PORTATION f~ANSPORTA l ION -99f'r Us ed Cen
VOLKSW.1'.GFN
YW BUGS
FROM
$399
GOOD SELECTION
Git,@~ '~""'
--Yllll Buy CHEVROLET FOl:ID
Your voJUwaaen or ..,,.,... lllUST SELL '6S Falcon Futur• I. pay top dollan, Paid tor RI Fully factory equlpptd, Dlr,
or not. can RNpb 1969 O>ncour Ea~tt S1atloD ~2.m:n
673-0900 Wagon. 15,0CO miles. radio-========~II
--------·I heater, di9c: b:&ket, luggage
DUNTON
FORD MUSTANG Au_to L.H_tlni 9810 rack, 2 way tall sate, pow. -~----1 er stee:m., $700 under high LEASE ANY MAKE book. LI MOii ot 637-3~. 2240 $, Main 1965 MUSTANG CONV.
Yellow w/black top, 2B9 w/
J.speed mama! trana.. ""
well, $1025. 613-4493.
OR MODEL __ .. __ _
1.e1 ""' 1noe -•• CHRYSLER 546-7076 you the best plan for your -------
pe...W "'""".,;tbout obi> '67 Chrysler 300 '65 Mua-. rellow wiblack '61 OLDS $1''7 aation. lnt. Radio/ht!', p/a, auto DelMOftt 2 dr. h•rdtop, VI , UNIVERSITY 2 Dr Hardtop. factory alt, tra.nt, VS. xlnt mecb cond. •vtom•tic tr•u., po-
OLDSMOBILE power steerlnJ,, power brak· $1250 or be•t otr. ~2352 •h•rll'lf, poww br•l ••• f••·
'" vmrl root_'A ,.eai B&r-,,.., ,;,, ''"" •••· u._
Costa Mesa. Located at FOR Christmu • Sllk;y Ter-
the back of cOueae Center rler puppiea, cute and Wholesale
W/camper, 96 hp overhead
cam, 4 spd, dlr, 6 pl,y tires,
back up lights., You name 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
it! Serial # PI..521208873. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
285o Harbor Blvd. &ain. Lie. YOK-476 '86 MUSI'ANG, blue, bard· UDU lit
Costa Mesa $2099 top, 8 cyl. auto. trana. ExoeJll ;,68;:;:..;0;L;,DS~--,,..,,,1.,M"' Ill
541).9641) cond, $1500. 83J.3281 ..., 549-2009 lovable. Male $150, Female Price's to All
Mon, thro Sat. 9-5:30 $210. Phone 962-7057 Complete Machine Shop Full price $2099. Take small COSTA MESA
dn or trade. cau Phil. I --_:;=:.o..;=;;:..--,. ,. Cuti••• C,.. VI, euhtnl•· .,.....-LEASE ""' '65 MUSTANG, auto lhlft, tic tr•11•.. rMll.. h••t.r,
Friday 9 to 9 BLUE Merle Collie 'PUPPie, SPEED EQUIP~fENT
10 wk male, champion REBUll.T ENGINES POOL
TABL£S
stock. to show home only. 1125 Victoria. CM 548-6550
RAVEN COUJES, 642-4424 18381 Beach Blvd, HB 847..00Sl
4!M.-9773 or 545-063i,. •
'67 DATSUN RDSTR • alr, pwr disc brakes, pwr ~ $950. Call 673-aM> ~r•lf .. , •Ir c.Mitlotri19, 1969 Mustang Hardtop, V.S, c -radnl gl'ftft. lo-down. wW ,-w•r .tMrillf, ,.. .. ,
¥i11YI top. VSU 494
p , ~ •
papers, 5 years, needs g::iod
Chrtstmas Special $273
CHUCK 'S
GERMAN She herd male l'~~·~oP~E~N~7~D~A~Y~·~·~
up loving home Ir 1pace. · &W-4646. Tr•iler, Tr•vtl 9425
2T:JD .Harbor at Adams, CM
POOL TABLES
Seem! Poof
BRUNSWICK·AMF
CUstom slate Table
From $289
100% Financing * SECARD POOLS * 532-1992
323 S. Main St.
BASENJI BarkleSs puppies
from Africa, Qwnp, atock,
xlnt mk'gs, terms. 6(5.-0533.
BASSET PUPS, AKC
847..s'lCM eves &: wknds
'69 HOLIDAY Travel Trlr.
19' sell-cont, tandem whls,
sli>s 6, all xtras. Owner sac;
must sell $3800.· 644-6197
TRANSPORTATION Trucb '500
a..io & Yochls 9000 CAMPER TRUCK ·,.;;;_;_;=;;:..-.;..;_;.; .1970 G.M.C. % H.D. equip.
FREE vs. Ser. # 225<631, '
For Sale Firewood. Basic Boating Course offered $2995
0ranae ~~tua to pUblic by Balboa PoWt?r UNIVERSITY
1---""------1 Squadron every Mon. night OLDSMOBILE
for 13 weeks beginning 7 2850 Harbor Blvd.
Misc. Wanted 1610 pm on Mon., Jan 12th at Costa Mesa
l'-"'=...;c.·-----'--1 Newport Harbor Yacht 540-9640
SWEBUYS Oub, 720 W. Bay Ave., New-'61 Corvair ~ ton Pickup,
port Beach. No advance side ramp, great for loading
registration needed. Regis-appliance11,' w/auto trans,
ter at claag, bring notebook radio/htr. $495. ~7
first night. Questions: Call
I TV S 673-•=. '51 CHEVY P. V, Big ~or 1-Pi•1101-ter•o• """"" 1 ,..... ., Hoae ,.II Engioe. Dual Carb. Gd
$ FURNIJURE $
APPLIANCES
C.UH IN 30 MINUTIS l8' THOMPSON Lapstrake. Tires. $225. Call aft 6 Johnson 50, Fath, bow rail, kdayl 548-4459 • 541-4531 • elect anchor winch. Nu c ... I ,;;we:;::~· ;:;=0,,..--1-========= I Tilt traile $1795 '63 FORD Econoline panel. I vas cov. r. • Good cond. $595. Call after G
Mo __ chlnery, etc. 8700 Conaway, S48-55fil. 112 w. PM. 673-6214 ;.;...;.;.;...,_._.;.;..;_-'~01 Coast Hwy, NB
FORKLIFT SALEI CHRISrMAS Idea! 12 tt FOR Sale '69 Dodge Van or
Dec, 20 thru 31st fiberglass, outbrd hull, Fwd trade for VW. Phon e
$200 oft regular price ~'":!""~•~con~tro~L~673-65~~18c.__ l ;'i53"'7,:~;;,-;:,;af:;,t::;":=:6-;;-;;'7= 6 Lift trUCks, must sell! 25• OWENS •61 w/mooring 1951 GMC -% ton P.U. Asking
714: 642-8393 or 897-2433 in Newport Bay, $39511 Ind's $245. Call 645-1691. Eves.
AIR COMPRESSOR mooring. Call -531-0500. Slti-53411
New top, new clutch, 4 spd,
dlr, blue book $1800. 8acri·
tle.e $1400! Small d()Wll, will
fine prvt prty, TYM412. Call
Roy 494-9m or 545-0634.
ENGLISH FORD
ORANGE COUNTY'S
VOLUME ENGLISH
FORO OEALER
SALES • SERVICE
OVER 60 IN Sl'OCK
• 2 & 4 Dr. Models
• 2 & 4 Dr. Deluxes e 2 & 4 Dr. GT Modela e Station Wagons
Many with fully automatic
trans., alr, nldial tires, ra-
dio, vinyl root, wsw !ires.
BRAND NEW sro. 2 DR.
$1785 FULL PRICE
ORDER NOW
Theodore
ROBINS FORD
2000 HarOOr Blvd .
Costa Mesa 642.ootO
FERRARI
FERRARI
Newport lmporta Ltd. 0.-
anat Count)''• onlY author-
ized dealer.
SALES-SERVICE-PART&
3100 W. Coast Hwy.
Newport Beach
642-9405 540-1764
Authorized Femui Dealer
KARMANN GHIA 10 H.P. Call Dorsa Motors,
186'll Beach Blvd., Hunting·
ton Beach, 842-8340.
LARGE '68 CHEVY \\!IN·
DOW VAN. Big 6, auto, xlnt
S.llboet1 9010 cond., center seal 642-6574 '65 KARMANN Ghia, xlnt
* * * * .J. ****** cond. Like new, 1 lady FREE TO YOU Ch~istmos -C =:.:am=pe:.:.'.;• ___ _;:95:.:::20 o..,,.,.. M"'t .,u $1050 or -best olr. 548-9823
OWNER ILL m"'t port with SABOT &300 SUPERVAN, 6' Fon! ========
belowd. pot, med. breed WU 12'6 .................. V-8, Stlcl<, Lim .Up, rool KARMANN GHIA
young spayed fem a I e, •••••••••• now $365 complete rack, dbl bed. carpel Best
tiousepet. good hunter-type, als::i psychedelic colon =~~Christmas . 1965 Karmann Ghia
loves children, free to perm, & del\l?'e ;,:cc,:::;;__-~---2-door Coupe, Xlnt Cond.
or temp. home. 846-3818 2912 W. c.oaat Hwy SMALL 8" Camper % Immaculale inside and out!
12123 Newport Beach * 645-allO Cabover. BeautiM wood in. One owner. $1295. See at 480 ,,,,,,,_~-,---=,.--"""-'-' LIDO 14 #SO ter. Sleeps 3 adults. $215. Broadway, c .M.
AKC Beagle -Male. Older. 673-9993 '-========::: Full trai~ cold nose Oean, try .............. $&6 1,,.:.:.,::::.=~----'·
bunter. Must be country . LIDO 14, New Trailer 10' CAMPER Butane refrig.
&ome. Loves children _ sails, by .............. $1095 $400. 2-430 W. Coast Hwy,
96z..s745 12/23 lll'OCK BOATS 673-2000 NB. 548-3432 or 673-4643.
LABRADOR Retriewr-free Xlnt LIDOnd s."u Sll95h ._._ Dune Buggies to gd home, 8 mos oJd, co · s, wy uu.
.trong & healthy. Lots of See at 901 Lido Nord. MEYRS MANX
character. Call 557~10 Sat * 675--0188 * Fordham Ave.
or Sun. 12/23. 17' O'DAY Daysailrr MS-2129
VERY friendly daisy·type Dmlo $1595 Used Sll95 f-::=====::::::::==
1963 VOLKSWAGEN
2 Door sedan. 4 speed trans-
miuion. CGNZ074)
$599
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Cl>ata ?t1'esa M0-8881
SO VW's
1960 Thru 1968
From
5495
Harbour V.W.
LEASE· RENT
lmmedl•t• delivery
on •II
1970 FORDS &
FORD TRUCKS CORVAIR
All popular makes. Ford 1961 authorized lea.sin/' SYttem CORVAIR Station
Get Our Competiilve Rat~ Wagon. Original Owner,
' Theodore $24S. Call 5'8-6728
ROBINS FORD '62 C<>Nili Mo=, bucket seats, 4 spd, xlnt cond. Prtv
.UO Harbor Blvd. party. 642--7519
Costa Mesa 642-0010
CORVETIE
196! OLDS 98
4 DOOR HARDTOP
V-8. automatic, Jaetory air,
tull power, power ateerlna"·
window&-aeats. RAH. wblte
walls, tinted glul.
CFXN890)
$799
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor mw.
<blta Mesa 540-8881
'6' .. 12:1•
VI, •uto111•tic tr ...... ,_.,,
•fw•tint, •ir con41flolli11fo
1•0io, hotter. Uc. SlW 010 1
'66 J'ONTIAC iUiil
a.1111•"111,, Rodlo. i.e ... ..,
•1i1to111•tlc tro111.. ,.....,
•f•erlnt, •Ir Hlldltlotllllfl-
Uc. lHC 104
'69 FALCON $1 ii;
Z 4r. r•dio. h••t.r, •ut-.
m•tic tr•ri.., powet 1t1""'
i119, •Conomic•I 6 cyl, UL
YXU JOJ
''8 MUSTANG>
ht"•·• power 1h1rl11t1 f• .. ;;U;;Md;:;;;;C;;•;;'";:;;;:;;;:;;;;9900;;;·;;1coRVETI'E 1968 4 Spd, ''427" • • R•dio, fleeter, •vt•••
Tri·pwr f:stbck w/removable tory"9ir, •inyl roof, v.1 _.
pane~-Silver wlbllc inter. 1,·,. '6.l RAMBLER Amer, hdtp, ~"'· ===~= '68 BUG, auto. stick, radio, dlr, nw good full price $299. Am/Fm ster. Nu polyglu 1965 OLDSMOBILE '6t MUSTAN6 $Z'7ii
plus extras, under WlUTa11ty DOI.920, call Ken, 494-9173 tim:. 2J,OOJ mt. Under warr. CUTLASS "J02", v.1, poww tturlllf,
AUTHORlZED
SALES & SERVICE
18111 BEACH BL., 8424435
HUNTINGTON BEA0-1
and 91'.00 mi. Same as new Jmmac. Compl eerv records. power dlK iw•k••• •ute••·
$1700. Bill. 645-1992 Res. •'!""-------11:~=-~-~6'/S-~7304~~-~=· == J 2i!\er,~':~t!: :i~ tic tf•M., AM°FM ih.-~1898 t•dio, tint.ti tl•u. Ua.
'62 VW GOOD COND '63 SPORT """· hdtp, · COUGAR wan., tin:~· :6•,w .°'A'llLANI ~.,. $600 ' • dlr, good runner, fUll prloe'i--------9 • --. * 6'6-8191 $199. MDRnT Call Phil •68 C XR7 $8 5 ,.,1 .. 2 ''· H.r4!o,_ a.. 1970 vw Bug 4,00J miles. 545-0634 • ougar die, h •••• ,, ellf9trMHc
private party, Best offer. Automatic, air, power steer-e UNIVERSITY e ti'•1t1 .. ,ow•r m.riftll, Y.a, ~7848 * '67 Dodge Sportawagon inc, vinYl roof, etc. OLDSMOBILE vinyl '"*· lrouth•• ,...,..
'68 * '66 VW $2399 ior. Uc. YDC t i t VW, am/fm, other ex-2850 Harbor Blvd,
tras. BEST OFFER. Make oiler. 673-0Ca '67 GALAX:IE $1197
494-2208 or 675-5937 eves. :=.=;:.-;=;:._--=C::=il 100. 2 dr. hoNtop. R•dio.
'63 VW, runs good, mu.st sell BUICK ~:!,~;· .:.u,~~tlcv.t-"!1;
$650. 2S9 \V. Wilson, Apt. C, co11dlfio11i1111. Uc. TUU 271
C.M. '67 RIVIERA '66 FORD SAVE
BEST Offer -Illness. '68 V\V u power. 1nc u mg air, 1970 OLDS G•l••i• 500 XL Rodio,
Bug. Call -642-8099. 431 st~to buckets, 40,COO actual L .J h•1t1r, •utorn•tic t1•M•
Riverslde, Newport Bch, miles. ''' ml11io11, pow•r ·,1 .. ri"t'.
'61 vw Bug. tan EXCEL. $2995 Sl!h103t Ext. 66 or 61 SPORT COUPE '66 MERCUIY 1fii
COND. EMPI-extractors, ~ 1970 HARBOR BLVD, Fully factory equipped In-Voy•pr 9-P•••· •vt~ ..
$1195 644-lSffi D COSTA MESA duding head rests, 1eat power 1t11rl111, rffi9' ......
'69 W Bug, diamond blue, ~ belt&, back-up li&btl, wind·11;"'::;·,:":;'•;.,· ::;•',,:,'.;':;:'=,'~==
2,000 mi, perloct $1995. M"'t . oJI DODGE thleld wuhen, outllde ID1r-'6' MUSTANGo $2467
sell immed. 642-8584. ,. ?Or, carpets, etc. M•ch I <421 Vol, 4 1pffd, ~~c~.L~~~~~;:. 'O ,, '69 Dodge $2498 t~:.:' •. ,;..i:,'i:~ •• ,:.m
suso. 847-1623 aoytime ~/f/J C1Hir9er Order Youn T<>Doy ~:; CAMAIO $Z4?i
'61 V'IV Van. New tires, new S49-303l Ext. t.6 or 67 2 ~r Hardtop. V8, ~r e UNIVERSITY e Hirdtop. V-I , out.. tr•111.o
brakes, needs eng. work. S250 1970 HARBOR BLVD steenng, p ower brakes, OLDSMOBILE pow•r it.erlt19, tadli, Met.
Call after 5, 646-5768 COSTA MESA • automatic trans, bucket 2850 Harbor Blvd. ,,, 14,000 ,..111._ Uko llt'WI
'62 vw Sun Roof. Completely I ~~==~----t aeats, vynl root. Absolutel,y Coeta Mesa Sf0.9640 Uc. YCL 276
re-blt, like nu, $850. Day 1961 BUICK Special Station like new. Lie. YWS-2'19 Orlg Miles 2800 ;,66;:,...;M,;;:l;.IC;;,,U=ly~~$f~l~n=
.. "'391 642-"""" \\'agon. Clean, good cond. $2699 ·~ Old ~·--,,.... , Eves ,;1 0::. $200. 644-2866. ""' s '-UUllH $1700. Im-Com•t. Voy•f•r t·'••'* •••
51~-PLYMOUTH '69 FAIRLANI $U7i mechanically. $100J. Phone CADILLAC c -r•dio, h11ter. Uc. RPP tU
'64 vw. Mint cond., bodily & l:::::::::::::::====:::-1 ~ mac cond. Pvt pty. 615-6657 tom•H1:, poww lfffrl-.,
'62 CADILLAC ~ 0 __ ;;..::;.:,.;,;;..;:..:,:.;..:__114·0r. v.1, •uto. tr•111·• f...,
'
S tory •ir con4'lfl•11lf1t, ,_,. VOLVO White, rebuilt eng., dlr, xlnt ~ • • •r •••erlllf, power br•i...
S M.B. '68, 250 SE secl. Every 1----c___:___ ninning cond. Car well tak· A. h••hir. Uc. YCU 201
dog. 11 mos old, very 14' O'DAY, used $495 Imported Autos
playful Family w/children fun 1.one Boat Co. Ball:oo'
only. 518-6452. 12/23.
KrrrENS. I> Abyuinian • SpHd Sk!_ lloofl 9030
domestic. U mos. old. 14' Sid Boat. Mere 450 motor
897-5480 or 8.1fi...449J. 12/23 & trlr, new windshield, uni·
rl:!<RLING black &-white kit· que: helms-wheel. Leaving
tl!n&. male, trained, good area $450 or best otr .
\v/children. 646-4241 12/23 673-3646
CRAM-LETS xtra inc radial W/W, leather VOLVO en care of · Need foreign car wa. ~ '66 FOID . $14'4
int. stick. 10.000 mi. 1970 HERE NOW in trade. WiU fine prvt prty, 'J • Folrl•11• 100. t Dr. H_,•
ANSWERS SpoUeu. Priced f.o sell, Pvt LOW PRICES ON NPV821. CAll Phil 494-9713 or 54i9-3an Ext, 66 or 61 1966 PLYMOUTH top, v.1, •lltotn•tlc. r9'Jo.
pty. 714: &f6-5375 or REMAINING '69's 545--0634. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 2 DOOR SEDAN '-
Sugary _ Rebel _ Seamy -:543-="'='====== Your Best Deals AN! Still At '65 CAD Eldorado Convt. A OOSI'A MESA Automatic tranmnlaaklft.
he•ter, power l'tffrl!tf,
to:Ti .1r .oM1t1 ... r .. ,, _.it•
SMALL Christmas puppies, ,o reliable homes.
f>4&-9439 12/23
,.:_:_;cc,==---~ 15' ANTHONY ski boat, fa)
Vacant_ LAS VEGAS DEAN LEWIS Reru Beautiful Ca,. JI.-~-==-==---(R'!T!03)
Eve' beu abo"1 the rom· MG 9303 Qwno,, Priv. Pty. Full pwr, • $899 1966 Harbor. C.M. 646-lnct air, vibrasonic, onld
puter that went crooked? It's --------•-now a slot machine in LAS MG '57 Volvo. Rebuilt engine. color, beige vinyl Inter.
VEGA_S; Sales, Servic.!, Parts Nttns work. 646-2803 • 1966 DODGE
Immediate Delivery, G73-0m or 536-!203 '69 Cdv, 15000 mi. Sllwr w/ Coronet 4 Dr. Sed1n
bp mere, lrg. whl. tr. $950.
~1181.
CHRtsrMAS Kittens, Duffy i;t>y, hav• nioe mannen & a..t Slip Mooring 9036 AUSTIN AMERICA
well trained. 545-1878 12/23 EXCALIBUR 26' SLOOP.
All Model& blk lthr & l~au fop FM Automatic, power steering, ~nti«]U91, ~l111IC1 9615 ster eo. $5000. 673-8282/ radio &: heater, This ii a
l!l;ITENS, 12 wks. old, I> Top C<Jnd. Newport Slip. A AUSTIN AMERICA
'Siamese, B,,urmes e. S~al at $6100. Owner
~76 12/23 1..:c*=-=·~----
FREE To good home spayed SLIP WANTED
,female Collie/Shepherd. for 26' SAILBOAT
Sales, Service, Part&
Immediate Delivery
All Modela
J1rtuµort
1l111port s
a100 W. Coast Hwy. N.8.
642-9400 MO. l 76t
Authorized MG Dealer
4 Pupple11 ~ poodle . BMt·Y•cht MCB '67 Conv/W!re whls,,
,Adorable 847-9847 12/23 Chamra 9039 lO'W mile, neJ batterll!$ &
t5'6-6387 12123 644-2363 or 6f4..139C J2 rtupo 11
311111 01 (~,
'i>I.,YWOOD and ma.......,.... -------'= tires, Xlnt co nd $2100. i • ..,.......,, CHARTER A BOAT 3100 W. Cout Hwy., N.B. 548-6968 Aft 3 PM.
;paps, 646-2377. 12!2J. and see! &U-94C6 540-1764 -·-~·
2 O>ck·a·poo half grown, 1 Newport Christmas Parade 1::::::•:;u;:th:;o;:ril;ed=:M:;G:;De::;al;•;r:::;-f OPEL
silver. 1 brmvn 5J&.812l Parties of 6 -$20 per hr ----------iji'EE half Siamese kittens 7 Inc boat, skipper, mbM! BMW
'llo'ttks old. 646-9238 12/25 Reservation call 646-00IXl <" e BMW e .pµ;E PUPPIES. 7 wka old. DAY &: EVE OlARTERS All Model.a in Stock ,~ anrr 5 pm 12/25 Chri1tmas Parade. $.15 hr. up
P VESTOC
inc, iklpper. 12 people 40• for Immediate Delivery
'65 Opel, good condltion.
Must &ell, ·new tires $700
negot. 673-4272 eves.
PORSCHE ITS end LI K houseboat. Holiday Marine SALES· SERVICE· PARTS
p._og,o ______ l.;;.12;..;S 642-5221 TAM MOTORS, INC. PORSCHE •68 91IL, 1
_ IQll Garden GJVVe Blvd. OWNER. XI.NT C 0 ND.
'57 MORGAN + ~ 61~7829 reol IJood b"1'! (511 AGBl
New T:'lp, new brak:e11. Ex. '67 EL DORADO. Full pwr &: $899
cellent c o n d j t i o n, $1500. air + S1200 xtras, pert cond,
642-lT.!4 after 6 PM. ~~ MUST S ELL! e UNIVERSITY e
Race C1r1, Rods 9620
MODIFIED Midget racer,
new eng., tires, t.ach. Xtra
tires, &: eng parts, A11king
$1200, wUI consider reu. of·
fer. Must see to apprec. 1961
Harbor, C.M. or call 642-0080
A_.Wontod 9700
WE P}Y . CASH
tor -can A truells lUll c.D UI for free etttmale.
,65 DE VILLE C<Jnvt All OLDSMOBILE · 2850 Hui>or Blvd pwr, extras, am/fm. $1750. Costa Mesa sfo.3881
$550 dn & T.O.P. m.-5620
'65 Coupe DeVllle.
$1ll00.
54&8943/4!»-5189 eve11.
CHEVROLET
1964 DODGE Dart 170.
Auto ma tic tranamlsslon.
Must sell. Make otter,
54G-8886
FALCON • •
'64 FALCON Sprlnl. low
mileage. Xlnt cond. $800.
645-230/.
1963 CHEVROLET FORD
NOVA STA. WAGON
9 passenger. Automatic, ra-.1----
dio and bet.fer, tllG490} '67 FORD
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
2
w
la,
O:lsta Meta 54o.88B1
'65 . PLYMOU111 Vali&iit
dr, 3 11pd, '225' alx, ne
tlre11, paint, chrome whee
$750 or be11t offer. ~4 -· PONTIAC
dr
' t
'66 BONNEVILLE, 4
hardtop, PS/PB, pwr wfn.
doWI, fact air, new tires
good pa: mileap. SlTIS. af
5 PM. 543-8206
T0 BIRD
nv LADIES Manicured '60 Co
T·Bird. All Pwr. Nu Tim
Pert. cond. $500. 844-6538 ' 642-6235.
'
or
'61 Lendau, 30,IXXJ mt. Air
fu]J power, new radial tires
Immac. Fae. warr. 2 yr
~.000 ml. &U-0574
~AUZER pups. rare ::Mo=:b:.:ll;:o;_H::o:,:IT1;:IO;:l _ _;9200= 5M-22840penSUnday892-5551 $5800. CALL675-t030 GROTH OIEVRDlfT $699 CORTINA GT
:·~ & :,'~;. YEAR END COOPER Hard Top Cpe. vs, 4 -TORONADO
TOYOTA trans. R""' ,.,., new and 1 -;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;
11EACUP s.. Purebred Toy CLEARANCE SALE ~e. Btk female. 8 wits. No:'JN ~LAY g~med. shots. 6fC..OBCI BAY HARBOR
TINY Toy Pwdlcs Mobile Homo S.loo
' ,• Sale ·~ Piieel 1425 Baker St., Colt&1Meaa
646-3365 ~i ~k Eut o1 Harbor Blvd,
'62 MINI Cooper 997. Reblt
eng. $1200. or trade 673-9183
alt 5
DATSUN
,1, White Poodle Cotta Me11. (n4) 540-9470 e
I _yr, lemole. All •bots MODEL <'IL£! Jt~ERs S25. Ph. 646-<680 ~ uut DATSUM •. -
NEED HOMES. AKC poodle l~u .. ·•·-ONE l\llLE FROM OCEAN vtr u-••nr cOsTA MESA "Leader In Tbe Buch Odea" ' . ''"°"'· -ZIMME"'MAN SIU<Y Tmimo, AKC. thoto OltEENLIAI' ,. ir -...i. -tcr MOBILE HOMI 2145 HARBOit ILVD.
•CJtNtmu. m.7185 SALES --II
' TH'ee.ulll ;SCll!PP1rte pupplts. AKC. 1=====;;=='1 '67 DATSUN ~ 'fnoc., 2 ,,,.,.,, all thoto. llcycl" 9225 PICKUP
i..-* 54M92S * 4 gpd, dlr, xlnt cond in &
1JtlY TOY poodle. fCll'll\li!, 10 Speed Raclnc B l k e. cul Local. Will Jinc prvt
Alli tor Sala....... e UNIVERSITY e '-area u Uc. VTY 521. t,;;-------
B.ILL MAXEY U2ll llftrb Blvd. OLDSMOBILE $1299 ffmrtirwton Bead! 2850 Efarbor Blvd.
Kl t-3331 O:>sta Mesa 540-8881
!TlnlYJOITUU WE PAY WH . "" Holldoy Specia l 0 r.;;,!_ Q . FOily equipped 1965 Chov
11181 BEACH BLVD. FOR YOIJR (AR CaprlC<, l Dr. Sedan.-Lo
Hunt. BHch 147-ISSS
3 nU N of,__ ... u-'° Bch Drove out from Ill. Nted to A · T~;;: CQNNELL 111 back. wm ..U tac Blue W .. ,,J
1970 HER& NOW CHEVROLrl ' Book reWI value. 642-1563 "\J•
LOW PRICES ON -nan. 81Yd. '55 Cbrvy, Munsie .fi apd 54N031 Ext. ea or 11
R.EMAINING '69'• Olll't Me. MS-1200 trtna., 283 bored 292. New l970 HARBOR BLVD
Your Bett lleala..,. 6llll At w· E PAY TOP wide ovals .l "'-Outch COSTA MESA •
DEAN · LEWIS out. " .. belt otter.I=-.,,=;:;::.:,.:;=::.,,~~ OOLLAll -'61 Fool Falrlane 000, 6
UGS Harbor, CM. 64&-93a.1 fci -aood. dean 1*d carw, '&I CHEV Nova W•-283 Cyllndm. NEW; Starter, all tnakta. SM Georae fla.Y _w.. SOllnold S w I t e h Qlrb, TltlUMPH '1'hOodoft Robins Fon! ""· ln., 4 opd, new,.,, end Ma • t • r C)<llndtt, rue!
2060 Harbor Blvd. and trans., brakes and tires. PU.mp, Rt built t r an 1
C.M. 642-0010 Very clea n. $925 DI' best ot· PrT:mire plate, C l utc h
th
L
1968 TORONADO, whlio wt
bi.ck vbl)OI top, Top c:ood
11on, 1ow mlleace. ~
with f!\'tJ')' factor')' optional
ava.U&ble. lncludU. 8 tracJI
.......... F1l'lt -... lt!l m.m
·4CK 6 wks. old $75. 540-7126 French Jaubert. Like ~ Pflrt)'. Take small down. '59 TM, Br. gm, wire
,Wht!nda or aft 6:30 pm New, $t0. C.ll stO-t!:!5 __ ~~·Call Ken 494-9773 or whl!elt, nu ""'bit e ng, ~, dutcb, r:idlntor It brakes.
!AtPORTs WANl'W fer. ~G. Bearings, and U-Jolnls. Will I !!!!!'l!~~~"l":!!!!!!
()ra -~-"-196(1 OfEVY trade for VW. $te It 25(1(11----WWW ro:;"s ~wrn * Gre<nbrl3l' vnn • Ncwoart BIYd. No. s. eom VALIANT I ••·A-IONnJ old male, hall Mo, _ '!>".!Y_C::I!_•· __ _;9:.;:300 · . all 1~11 than 500 miles . .$850 B!Acle A half Pool~. Lo\-a: -----ORANGE COUNTY'S or trade + cash for late
1dilldren. f'tt:e. 837...(239 '69 KA\VASAKI. 30cc 1'.llNI· NO. l mode) domestic sedan or
i!lfuu sn Bull, a wlcs, AJ<C Sll<E Xlnt cond ""°" din DATSUN DEALER wagon. P,,t Pfy. 833--0185
i!IO"!P a!Ock. bllo! mull acU.. ~7517 DOT DATSUN MUST Ml( 16 Trluniph Spit·
'1• • SS14SO'l •r. TtUUMPH 500. So mllea, 18&3 Beach BIYd. tire MJr U, rAh, tonnuu, ad
'tOOBERMAN PUPS und" $700. 6n.1111 Ap<-Hon-Boach tt,... Or!r °"""'• ooJy 13,000 4icC * * &$U961 No. 5btfont 11 •m. RC.Tm or 5fO.N42 mi. 528-878.1 '---'----'--------
BU.I AIAXEY TOYatA litllke oUer ~'D aft 5 Mesa __ ;.... __ ,..-.:.;...._
tm Broch 81\Td 1S37 El Crunlno., Whitt, auto, '65 Font Van..Bu1. n.dlo WllAT A OZAL
R . .Brarb Pb Ml~ RkH, lo ml, $1750. C.O & big engine. Ptrlect '6o VAllant t:.. Wq. $200
r S y OU R AD JN 64$-1691. Ewa: ."546-5.141 condition, $1400. 546-634.1 &U-5493 or '75--0131
a.ASSlFIED? Someone w1lJ '64 MAlJBU, xlnt cond, new '59 FORD v.·qon, &ood '60 VALIANT, Good cond
be looklnc l<r It. Dial 64J. ttr.., 1 ownor l8SO llrnl-tr.wpol'tatl01>. Sl!i> Ir -$85. -~ -er -0::«"::.·:.:64&-Z76::::::.::·c._-'l~'1-1--'---""~·.:5'8-::.:18<8=---
I .
I .
tJ
• -· ---------------------------. -·--------·· .. --· ··---·----
wt I tlr•-. tlMM tl•n. STt
IOI '· '6t FAllLANI I $227f
"·Dr. V-1, •ut•. tr•111., fe•~
tory •Ir colMlitl•11!111, ,.......
'' ••••rl111, -1c•w•r br•b-. h••t•r. Lie. CU 201
·10 vw · $2111
Fo1tb•ck. ••ht111•tic. lew.
low mile1. IZ..tlll
'6Z IMPIRIAL $461
Crow11. 2 Dr. H.T, v .. , •
to. tr111i., fo1f•rt ... ,..,
ditie11i11:, pow•r 1.._t,..,
pow•r r••••• pow• .._
dow1. po••r •••h, rt4lo.
ft••••r. Lie, AWW 100
'66 CHIV. $1642
c.pric•. 2 Dr. H.r4t.ia-
Auto. tr•111., focfwy •Ir,
co••r ••••rlllf, ,...,.,.
r••••· r•dio, hetfw, Yliwf
roof. llYI "''
''7 COUGoAI $1tl7
V·I, •ute, fr•111., fectory
•ir collClltie11l"t ,--r
1t11ri119,'pow•r M-1., , ..
llio, h••f•r, .Jrryt ,..f. Ua. m 11•
'64 GoALAXll $119
100. 2 DI-. H•r..lt.,. v.1,
r•~ll•, h••hir, •uto. trNt.,
power ''"""'· Lia. V$Y tlO
'H MUSTAN• $107)'
H•r4top. V-1, "11,-...
t in•, todle, k•t.r, 1t••·
., .. tr1111. u •• XfH otJ
'61 TORINO $2U1
F•ttl>•~k. 390 v.1, .....
tr•111., f•ct.ry •Ir --'f~
tl111l119, t:'"' .... ,, ....
pow•r br• ••· r•41e, .......
•r. Uc, ZOX 116
'67 CHIV. $19"
1111.p•I• Sl•tl•• w • .-. Ra· 41•. h •••• ,. ,........ """'
I~ v.1. f•dwf ofr. Uc. u 106
'67 PONTIAC $1676
•TO 2.f>I.. H11r4top. v .. ,
•u ... •ff• fr•M,. f1ct.y
•Ir •0Nfff111!11ft ,._.r
tk•tfllf, pow'' IN-••••· Uc. TYS 001
DUNTON
FO RD
2240 s. Mail
546-7076
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!! DAILY PILOT
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A group ot Green Berets pauses wearily al the pa
quarters.
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A child is lost. On!~· a fe.w 'niulule5 '-tte·r lie ~:andu~ f.~•f.fro~ bi,., parent~, he has disappe"ared into.the w'Ud and my't~ious depth1"oJ
the hi\uriantly beautiful' Great Smoky. Mouiit.•in '.oO.inti,-; Teilnei.tt.
"Ihe photo"grapht on tbHi ·page were taken doting lhe coune of &o.. '
actual• search. On this occasion, the 19boi" of tbe ...... wli um.-
warded. Tragically,'tha dlild wQ Dot:(~
A call for It.Ip gou out. AmJ it·il anfwend promplf1. with m~d l'Ompa~ion, genei:cMit~· And efllciencyi Tho Gre&t Smoky Mou.nfaiaJ
i\"ational Pa'rk personntl i1nmedi1b!:ly respond,to 'begbi .. Marth with
re~ourttS organiZrd 11nd .kept ready for such.continpnciu u this; rang-
ers '"orking along \\·itlt u1ai1ilenance RrYicemea. •ad~ ~snlt"a
ti1 PS from other national parls.
R1it that is onl~-thr hrginning:. ""ithin a fev.·day1 the total of 1earchers
in the .iirca h11s n1u!1'11li1 d n1any times, with a& roan~ ai l ,300 at wttk·
t'ncls 11nd "ith ln11uin;fl1 still out during the week, Some of them come
fro1n a ) t.1r 11~ ."11111 u1ilt s :.1,•·11y to gi .. e·their h•Jp.
Tl1r .'•1111ok-~·· ~lou11tai11$ rai'e !heir curving rangts ln • sequence of
"'"1''' "hic h rise and fall undrr ~ sky "·hose clouds lie low and lcwingly
rn rr 1hr m-hence the 1111111e "Srnok~·:· for the mbt1 which drift and cling
r 1 C'rr 11·here. Their solt "eepiug nourishes a thick growth of every form
of plant life, from ·foweri11:; fore5t lo groupd ml'tssu, as 'lfell a1 a "Wulth
o( "'alcrn·ays, _ri .. ers an.cl 11 1.ier(,.lls. Over such ~. tbr tad: g!
fin ding one small, IOJt child is powerid by hop'.e b'Ut huriteifl)fliiart-
brcak.lt is a rnatter ol pa tie.nee and J)ersili:ence; and .nth the heft will in
the world, rain and fog fit:qUenlly bJirnptt ~tu.It the ...,m.,
The i»tie.nt aod'the per1Utirnt fndude, beaider parlc service Penonnel,
'"·ariom militar.y unitl ..... Nat~\ Gtiarilsmen_ . .tir NatiOnal Cu~damen.
jungle-trained Green Berets .and tlie ·in'"·aluable Anny ,n·d Air~Force
hel~copters wlikih.11r:ipl aud dip over teri'ain too ~gged for the jffps land .-·
lrnclfs ( 'vhich in him 'gh•e .\\·a~· to l\asit:,,har~ ~nd Weary foot-.1Togging
until th.at, too. can io no furthtr ), ..\gent~ ol tht U.S. Al(~hoi ahd Tob~c~ Tu: l)'.;\·isi0n ha,·e come, too,
pr11.cliced in nuWig out illicit stills hiddt"n ~way in the wilaeintsi, aba,a
L".S, Coa~t Guard unit" out of Knox•ille to check la~e and rhe~.
,.ol unteers offer l IATige or'skilh bet.,.,.ef'n.lhem: all offer goodWill and
t nerg)'• Rei;cue squadn1tn are joined by bear hLnters. experienced out·
doors1n('11 and experJ "'oodstnen. Theri •lhefe ar'e the '\"est 'Side dads of
Knox,·ille \'~lCA Indian Gulde program, and a bunch of 1hldenls from
a conser\'ation group progiam. Ai1ri rriOre iDdiVidUals, hiktts,nei&hlMirrs,
tourists, the anon)·mous, un«iunted and un1md"·n. ·
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Catering for the. hungry i~ the Re.d Cross \Yotntn'• Auxiliary, and
the Ladies' Auxiliary of. a firemen's local Of the Af'LCJ.O; They ,c9!1Je 1 •• I
out t'ach day to set 1111 their field kitc_Mns ai:ad to OfS~ni:ie the.distribu·
lion of food gi\·en hy the Re'd Crm!:, ehUl'&·ar'ld civic IJ'0'4'1. local·m-
tauranl.s, stores and f116 ividUaf dollOl'5.
A child is 1011. But-the anguished.conoem of.the p.11~ts M 1hared,'and
• great arn1y of mercy ind ·faith dog.dly, 'fOl'kJ on V\"ef' the dmi:e.
)tcre li1 e beauty of •.ne r?Ovnhins·1nd valle)'t .
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r~u,·u·~el'i P1t TURE SIJOW i1 AP plroto;tt"nttfi~r Robtrt~llHfJ, •
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