HomeMy WebLinkAbout1969-12-30 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa... • .. ___ _
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. \ ~.,-.fTa:lley ·Yiiu.th>. Gi.,es Christ..,aas
DIED THINKING OF OTHERS
' ·FV'a Richard C.mpboll
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DAILY PILOT
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TUESDAY AFTERNOON,, DECEMBER. ·lO,. :196t
vro&..a,.-..m.4~•PA9U . •
Nixon Signs
. ,_. ' . . . .... ' ... -.-~-______ : ___ ..
Tax Measure,
.Heads West
LA Police ne.ptte OhJeetlen11 . .
Cliff Slips in Newpqrt Crack Down Nixon Signs Defense,
. -...... :: '.L. '-'· On 'Yellow' Min~ Safety, Tax Bill,s
.
PAILY l'llOT St•ff l'ttetto
·' By JOHN VALTERZA
or t1111 0111, l"lltl Sltff
lf you're wondering where the yellow ' . went, it's gone.
By MERRIMAN SMITII
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nix-
on today signed three major bills into
law -tax reform, mine safety and de-
fense apJiroprlaUons -before leaving
for a holiday !ilay in Southern California.
'The tax reform bill and the. mine safe. LOs Angeles city and county law en-
forcement officers today wound up the
seizure of eight prints or the 11,eamy sex ty bill were signed despile Nixon'• ob-
i I Cu I ,J jectlons to some of lheir features. In each ep c " Am r ous g.euow)' in every
theater where It was playing in Los case, he said the good features of the bills outweighed the bad.
Angeles County. The is9.6 billion budget for military
The big-city raids on the movie took hardware had Deen cut $6 billion by Con·
place alniost a week after Newport gress after a bllter struggle over costs
Beach police seized a print of the film at a~h!P':es~=· and Mrs. Nixon were to the Balboa Theater. Vice Investigators said warrants have fly to the Western White· House in San
been Issued against all the exhibitors of Clemente · in 'mid aftem0on. They will
the filrr1 charging misdemeanor ex· return to Washington the weekend of
hibition of obscene matter. Jan. 11, a week or so before CongreSB convenes again. Theaters in the cities of Hermosa Nixon is expected to ask Congress to
Beach and Inglewood also have lost their pass new taxes. but wUI probably wait
prints of thc·fllm after seizures by their until his State of the Union address Jan.
respective police departments. 22 ·to spell out. what he. has in mind. It
Meanwhile in Newport Beach, where is almost certainly likely however, to in·
one of.the.first police moves against the elude .a "value added" tax. Jn· which a·
sex saga took place last Tuesday night, tax is added at each stage of the: manu.
the print is still under loc~ and key. factoring pn><:us.
\ It wlltlitay tbere. police say, at least Congr&ss ·hupas.sedanunbalancedbill
unlll the court action concludes against that is both good and bad," Nixon said
.the .owner. and manager of .the Balboa in a JtaU:rnent released by. the .White,
Theater. House: '11-nie tax reforms, on the whole,
Manager Eleanor Blackburn or Balboa are HOQd; the e!feel on the budget and on
Private contractors today began removing portion
of; clilf which has been threatening to slide onto
Qi.yside DriVe below exclusive.Jrvine Terrace resi-
~ial area in Ne,yport Beacti._ Wor.k ~~s ord,erl}:d
by the Roliert K. Washbums, owners of expensive
cli!fside horn~ at 411 Avocado Ave., overlooking
Newport Harbor. House, once the home of the late
Myford Irvine, . is not considered in immediate
• ~ dBnger. ~ays.jde_.Drive has beeh_!=losed _by munic ipal
authorit.1es ·in precautionary move.
and owner Willlam Alft>rd of Laguna the cost of Jlvlilg ts bad."
Beach arc fighting the seizure and Nixon said he approved the · measqre
charges against them. because· the improvement& in tax . fair·
Their lawyers will be present Jan. 9 at nes.s thrpugh the reforms outbalance the'
a municipal court hearing on su ppression lnflaUOnary impact from the $9.l bllllon
of evidence. On Jan. 16, the same lawyers tax ctlt· the blll carries.
will tile a demurrer with the C<lurt, a The bill provides.tax relief for &3 mil·
document expected to challenge the lion Americans and Includes a 15 percent
Dyi:ng Boy's · Last Gif.t .
fieizure on constitutional grounds. boost' In ·Soelal . Security benefit.! and
The pair face court action for alleged loophole-clqslng reforms.
<'xhibition or o b sce ne matter and For the ,firit time taxpayers will ate·
furnishing hannful matter to a minor. the effeetl of the bill will be ln their pay·
The latter charge gt.ems from alleged ~eek for the first week of the new year '
discovery of a 17·y~ar-ok1 girl in the when the pment 10 percent tax II.If·
• theater last Tuesda' ' ""··J ·Acciilenff 'l'itttftFGi1~ PP~trm·~~m:.i""'"'......-~:!:~==~~,:'8~:'tr~~",;
altorney's lnvesUgaton on the raid In PILOT FUTURA.MA
87 ARn!UR It. VINSEL
Of !tie Dl+ly l"llft SNtf
He had Oirialmas glfl.s he wouli! never
me and he chose to share them, bee&~
many unrortunales had nothing to look
forward to.
He asked that they go to Fairview State
Hospital patient.<;.
Shortly after, at 8:13 p.m. on
Christmas Eve, he died.
'Richard Campbell, 19, of 9680 Dove Cir·
tie, Fountain Valley, had worked s"s a
I volunteer helper at the facility for the
IDpltally rtlaldeCI in CO.la Mesa: ' '
INSIDE TODAY
jlalboa. "fl.iostly with the lilUe kids," &aid his · up by · a. 1Uperch&rger unit inside a Ass!llt.ant Police Chief Harry Nelson to-
18-year-old sMer-Betb,·who went to the roadway -tunnel ~ ,, day explained the Judae'1 presence with
slate hospital on Christmas · Day to· Young Campbell was lnterested in tha.t the offlcen u a neoesslty because of. the .,.,_ DAILY pn ~ I •
ti time element involved. J.ur;I u..v1. • amua repc>i. on
de ·ver the Hot ~ls moc:lel car set, sort Of thing. "It was the l85t night with movie wu progreaa and growth tn the Orange Cout ·
each component brighUy wrapped.. The 1969 Founlaln Valley High School being ihown and it we wanted to • area '• bua:1ne8I and lnd\lltry community,
The administrator·was orr, so she-gave graduate was ·a freshman majoring 1n challenge the movie on grounds: of combined with a )oak into the economlc
them to a switchboard operator. mathemaUcs at Orange Coast College. obscenity, we needed prior judicial future, appears lmJde today.
"It's the big 1et," aald a ho3pltal ''tie was going tG be a nuclear revle-"·be.forewecouldstepin. The special J!'UTURAMA tectlon
spokesman h-tonday. "It will fill half a ' physicist/' said his sister. . "Since tt was the last nlsht, we brought features articles, photographs and ad1
room. My boy has one." Boys in Ward 34A at the hospital -• th~ judge with us to review the film in· whlcb tell the story of the Orange CJout'a
The nGvet new hobb1 layout reaturr1 Camp1;>ell's ege, but with lesa learning stead ol+waltinJ! f~e a written account thriving commerdal life. Be sure to read
·~~~~A.~~--WIJl·1•4Ylili,~,m.~llll'K -l9< ~"°". FtlTURAMA 11'/0, Inside today. ,, • ,, --l
charge goes down to 5 percent That wtl
diminish the tax withholding slightly. TlW
surcharge is scheduled to e:s:pfre com
pletely June 30, 1970.
The tax nductlon results chiefly fron
a three year increase in the $600 ln
come tax personal exemption. It will ~
to $650 in July to $700 in January and t4
$750 in January 1973. The bill also gr~
special tax relief for 12 million pool
and near-poor taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary David M. KeTlnedJ
told newsmen at the White House aftel,
the Preaident signed the bill that the mea
sure enacted by the Democratic Cort'
gress made Nixon's bulgetary problerrU
even more severe.
~ut Kennedy· sidestepped questkml
abotu whether the President wOl.ild asl
Congress next year to increase tax~
po~sibly through a "value added tax.
This is a form or excise tax on manufao
tured goods.
. Kennedy acknowledged that the treas.,
ury depar~!l1e'fll has been studying Uit
value added tax but he said it was onlj
"one of the areas that is und~r study.,.
Nasser Back in Cairo
CNRO (AP) -President Gama! Abdel
Nasser returned to •Calro today afttt
spending 10 days abroad between Moroo:'
cb Bild Libya .
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Orange
·Weadaer
We'll have some • gusty winds
from the' northeast to help us rfn&
out the old decade Wednetday.
Temperatures are sUll pegged in
the middle to upper sixties.
INSIDE TODAY
In the 19701, CaUfomlo 10111
move pod• the 20 mllUon mark,
cUnching mori Jirmlt1 1'1 fir1&
in popuJoUon •tatui, bvt if• a'
record which hal mUf'ct• bl~»
il\llS. l'Gg• 24.
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Saddlehack Ordered .• , ,_
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~To Admit 'Long Hair·s'
A U.S. District Court judge Monday
issued a preilminary injunction telling
Saddleback College it must not prevent a
long-halred male student from register·
lng for courses.
The way now ii clear ror Lindahl King ,
21, Jong locka Ind all, lo reststec lo begin
attending clU.'les next week.
Judge Harry Pregerson of th e Los
',Angeles court found that the wearing of
long hair is a right of personal liberty
which should not be infringed unless
lhere Is a ahowing of overwhel.tning in-
terest by the junior college distirct.
"l am not surprised," reacted Sad·
.,d\eback Board President Michael Collins.
_.!'People got temporai'y injunctions all the
lime. I would be disapPointed if a
1>trmanent injunction was granted alter a
'•full hearing."
COIJins, an attorney. e1plained that a
temporary injunction is not a decision on
the merits bot rather a rind.Ing that the
plaintiff would uffer irreparable harm if
in fact he is right.
"In this case,'' he u.td. 11the plainUff
claim!: if you don't stop Ule wheels right
now lat.tr it will be too late. All the court
is saying is we are going to preserve his
rights witil we decide v•hal his rights
are."
Collins said the judge's statement
about infringing personal liberty is a well
established constitµtional prlnciple.
''There b no qeuetion any dress code is
an infringement of a persons personal
liberty," he said. "Our ~tion is there is
a good and sufficient reason to set stan-
dan;ls of dress and grooming. That is
what the hearing will determine."
IJl'I TtlePlll!t
PRESIDENT NIXON SIGNS FAR REACHING TAX MEASURE
Will Ask for New Revenue L111i1lation or Cui Spending
Here's Capsule Glance
At Tax Reform Measure
WASHINGTON CAP) -Here are some
Df the things you, as an Individual tax·
payer, will find affecting you in the year :
ahead from the new tax bill signed tock·
by President Nixon.
None of them applies to the taxes r
J969 Income ror which taxpayers will .
filing rtturns by April 15, 1970.
Tu reduction:
The present $600 personal exemption
Increased to $650 from July 1. 1970. 1
Dec. 31, 1971, to flO Oin 1972, and to $7~.
in 1973 and thereafter.
An $1,100 low-income allowanct tn
benefit poorer families i:s added to
penonal e1emptions in 1970.
The present standard deduction, 10 per·
cent of adjusted gross income up to
fl,000. is raised to 13 percent with a
$1 ,500 ceiling in 1971, to 14 percent and
$2,000 in 1972, and to 15 percent and
12.000 In 1973.
Single persons, effective in 1971, will
pay no more than 20 percent above the
lax level for married couple:s.
A maximum rate of 60 percent on earn-
ed inoome, instead of the present 70-per-
cent, is fixed for 1971 and 50 percent
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thereafter.
Persons who work only part of tl1c
·;ea.r. such as students with summer jobs.
re excused from tax withholding if the;
ertity they will have no tax liability fc
'1e year and owe no tax from I'
previous year.
Social Security:
A 15 percent increase in Social Secu.
'! benefits for all recipients becomes 1
~ctive Jan. I, with the fir:st higher p:i.
nc>nt due early in April.
Tax Extensions.
The income tax surcharge. which h~
been 10 per~nt, is cut to five percer
through June 30, 1970, and eliminated er.
tire!y after that.
Present excise taxes of 10 percent on
telephones and seven percent on
automobiles are, exlend ed for one year, ti
Dec. 31, 1970.
Tax reform&: ..
A 10 percent minimum tax is applied
against a broad list of preference items.
including soml!! oil income, capi tal gains
and accelerated real est.ate depreciation .
But the taxpayer can subtract from his
preference income what he pay:s in
normal federal income tax before ap-
plying the JO percent levy.
Personiii moving more than 50 miles are
permitted to dedact moving expenses, in·
eluding such items as the expense of pre•
move house·huting.
Hobby !armers who sell their land will
have the sale price taxed as (lrdinary in·
come rather than the lower capital gain
rate to the exlent of the (lperating losses
previously claimed. This applies only to
those with iso.ooo or nonfann income for
the year and with fann losses ln e1cess
ol $2S,OOO.
Losses on a hobby not carried on for
profit ca nnot be claimed as credit on in·
come.
Exceptionally fast tax write-arts now
available for commercial and industrial
buildings are disallowed. There js a
smaller reduction in the liberal deprecia-
tion now available on used buUdlngs, in·
eluding apartment!.
On capital gai ns income in excesa of
$50,000, the rate becomes half of the
normal Jncome tax rate or 11 maximum
35 ~rcent, Instead of the present 25
percent maximum.
Tot Fatally Injured
By Lid to Toy Chest
LONG BEACH (APl -The com1er'1
oftlce reports t·year~ld Anthony
Villarete was fatally Injured when the lid
of a Christmas toy chest fell on his netk.
Police said the boy was pronounced
dead Monday ot Long Beach Cornm~ly
H0&pitsl after a babysitter found the lid
closed on h.is neck. He waa the son ol. Mr.
and f\frs. Sarafin Vlllartte and also had 11
&win brother.
No date has ¥et been set for the hear·
ing on a permanent injunction wNctl
Collins said follows granting of a tem·
porary injunction aa a rnattrr of course.
Attorney PatrlclaTHenog of Corona del
Mar, who represented King, 1ald, "Here
' lhey aN> lellln& a srown man (King Is 211
how to wear his hair, which ls
ridiculous."
She said there Is no precedent of cases
involving junior college dreu codes
because no junior college has tbem. AU
the cases of record, the sald, involve high
school students.
"""" "'P.. OAILY l"ILOt Sltll l"lltlt
Arguing on behalr of King before the
judge Monday along with · Mrs. Herzog,
were Jt L. Wirin and Fred Okrand, chief
staff counsels for Southern California of
the American Civil Liberties Union •.
John Powell of the County COIP,l~l:s
Olfiee repretenleil the junior colltge
district.
SPINNING THEIR WHEELS -Bored with Chrisl·
,mas V?C~9!!-. lll~se .Ljl lolir'll.• ~&e.rJ p~e~ their bicycles 20 m1!es down the Toad to see what
was happening in Huntington Beach. From left are
Dave Allen, ShcUey Stricklin, Robin Maulfair, Ja11e
.. Vasquez, .Beclty Moses, Lylll) Fam)' a~d ,D9r9ll/Y. Neren. ~
Four wrlttrn affidavits were filed.
One from Corona del Mar High SChool
Principal Leon Meeks told about the
elimination of a dre11 code at h1a school
and how tn hi1 opinion a draa code
diverted attention from the educational
proceu by becoming a source of conflict
betweea adrniniatrators and a students.
Another a!fidavlt from Orange c.out
College Dean ol Student Affairs JO!eph
Kroll said he has observed no relaUonshlp
between hair styles and academic
achievement.
Judge Refuses to Prevent
Testimony by Grru1d JurY,
La Mirada Ki.ds
Bike to Beac h . .
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For 'Adven ture':·
Kroll noted he has attrnded statewide
conferences or deans and he knows of no
other junior college with a code on hair
lengih.
Saddleback Superintendent F r e d
Bremer countered in an affidavit that he
knows of at least one -College of the
Desert.
Saddleback Student Body President
John Both¥:ell, in another written sub·
mittal, claimed that over half the male
students are in violation of the dress
code.
County Counsel Powell said that is not
true.
Bothwell wears hls hair Jong but not so
long it extends over the collar of a dress
5hirt, which the dress cOOe forbids.
Supt. Bremer aald teh board of trustees
doesn't meet again until Jan. 12 but
"quite obv!011Sly" he will be talking in-
dividuall} with board members.
King, who livea in Tustin, was a student
at Saddleback College last achool year
but was refused admission for the fall
term because of his long hair.
From Page 1
LAST WISH. ••
~will spend many happy hours with his
gill. .
Bigger, fastrr wheels led to Campbell's
death.
He was riding with a 15-year~ld
neighbor the last day of his We, when the
lxly lost control of the car on El Toro
Road, ~·est of Trabuco Road in the Irvine
area. _
The vehicle hurtled. sideways into
1 utility pole.
Campbell was taken to Huntington
11tercommunity Hospital with a crushed
·hest, aware he was in very grave con·
iii on.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging, ruptured
·ver, multiple thorascic fractures .• .''
·aid an Orange County coroner's deputy
Jet.ailing the causes of death.
Campbell left his father Richard, his
nother, Mrs. Dolores Topallan, of the
Yountain Valley home address, si:sters
Jeth, Pam and Dawn.
His funeral was Saturday and he is
b;Jried in Westminster Memorial Park.
Q".iestioned about obituary information,
Beth Campbell mentioned that he went to
l{unttngton Beach High School for one
year before finishing up at the Fountain
Valley campus.
Was there anything else that should be
told about the youth who thought of un-
fortunates when he realited there was no
longer much point in thinking of hiimeli?
"No, that's all ," said Beth.
By TOM BARLEY
Of ttlt Dally l'llOI Sltff
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
Monday refused to grant a motion whic h
would have prevented attorneys for a
police officer accused of brutalily from
calling members of the Orange County
Grand Jury as witnesise:s.
$200 Ski Holiday
Added to Prizes
For Sports Show
A $200 ski vacation at Heavenly Valley.
in the Lake Tahoe area, today was added
to the giveaway package the DAILY
PILOT is offering in connection with the
Southern California Sports, Vacation and
Recreational Vehicle Show.
The grand prize package, put together
by Holiday Airlines, _includes transpo:ta·
tion via Holiday's Super Electra 1ets
from Hollywood·Burbank airport directly
to Tahoe and return, p 1 u s ac-
commodations at the Ramada Sands and
other extraS,11 incl udi ng :ski tram
passes and entertainment in Tahoe's
Nevada-side night &pots. .
To be eligible for the grand prize, DA_l·
LY PILOT readers ·need only to gend tn
their names, addresses and phone
numbers to: Show Tickets, Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT, PO Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, Ca. 92626.
First IO persons to send in their names
on postal cards -or drop them off in
person at the Costa Mesa office of the
DAILY PILOT at 330 W. Bay St., Costa
Mesa -each wilt automatically receive
one pair of tickets to the Sports, Vacation
and Recreational Vehicle Show opening
Saturday at the Anaheim Convention
Center.
After the first 10, an additional 10
names daily will be selectt!!d at random.
All ticket winners' names will be publish-
ed In the classified advertising section or
the DAILY PILOT (beginning on New
Year's Day), along with instructions for
picking up show tickets.
Names of all who request tickets -
whether they win ticket!! or not -wi~I be
placed In eligibility for the Hobday
Airlines-Heavenly Valley ski vacation for
two.
Winner of the grand prize will be
selected from among all names sub-
mitted in a drawing to be held onstage
next Wednesday (Jan. 7) at the S p.m.
show at the Anaheim Convention Center.
Winner need not be prtM!nt to win the
trip.
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HEAVY LINES OUTLIN E PRE"SIDENTAL SECURITY ZONE
Fod1 .Ii'!!_ Likely lo Forgive Tr11pt11en 11 Nl••n Estate
Judge Gardner rejected Chier Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's move
for quashing of subpoenas issued to the 19
members of the investigative panel. He
rult!!d that their special privileges do not
include exemption from proceedings in
which attorney Ron Owen seeks their
testimony.
But the judge did indicate that Owen's
demands might be met in some forin
other than in open court next Jan. 7, the
dat.e set for hearing of a motion for
dismisaal of brutality charges against
Santa Ana Patrolman Richard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he will
discuss the issue with the. Grand Jury on
Friday. He will then, he said, be in a
position to "discuss this matter more
fully with Mr. Owen and perhaps arrive
at some arrangement."
Faust, 26, was indicted (10 charges or
assault with a deadly weapon after
wttnesseS to ld the Grand Jury that he
clubbed a 17-year-o!d black youth who
was being committed to Juvenile Hall ..
Owen's associale, Allan SLokke said
members of the Grand Jury ""·~re out to
get a police officer in any way they could
and we want them investigated ."
Stokke said the "Grand Jury's actions
prior to the indictment of Officer Faust
are not the only things we art going to
question."
Jesse Gilmore, now 18, of Santa Ana ,
tOJd the Grand Jury that he was knocked
to the grolltld and clubbed upon delivery
at the Orange County facility.
The panel learned through Gilmore's
sworn testimony lhat the youth was being
committed with two companions when
Faust and other officers allegedly used
night sticks to beat him into su bmission.
Gilmore was allegedly making an
escape attempt at the time, according to
Patrolman Faust, who remains on duty
pending outcome of the case .
Other witnesses to the fracas last July
testified it did appear to be a break for
freedom, but that Faust's partner at the
scene called out that the youth had been
whacked enough before he stopped.
February Draft Call
To Total 19,000
WASKJNGTON (UPI) -::-The draft cal l
for February will total 19.000. 6,500 more
than the January call, according to the
Pentagon.
The number cmnpares with a spread of
22,300 to 33,700 during each of the first
nine months of .1969. The November and
December draft calls were canceled, and
the October call of 29,000 was spread over
the final three months of the year.
Hunlington Beach is a long way from
La ~tirada. About 20 miles.
But if you're a teenage r, bored with
Christn1as vacation, and would rather do
something than sit on your hands, it's.nol.
too far to go to the beach. Even if y'ou
have to cover the distance by bicycle.
And that's exactly what sev~n kid:s
decided to do Monday.
They took off from their La Mir~a
homes at 7:30 a.m. and arrived at th€
Huntington Beach pier three hours Jciler,
only to find out that the weather con~
dilions were a bit too chHly foe a dip~io
the octan.
"The water was too cold to gci swim·
ming, so we just' relaxed, walked around
tcw:n, ate and met people," said Beeky
Moses, 15, leader of the entourage.
Despite chilling and gusty winds that
reached up to 50 miles per hour, they
were pedaling homeward around 2 p.m.
in high spirits when they were spotted by
a no:sy newsman near Talbert A venue
and Beach Boulevard.
"We just wanted to do somethinJ:
adventurous," explained ring I ea d ~ r
Becky. "Nobody believed that we w6tild
do it. It's the first time we did something
like it, and I th ink it will be th e last.'.>
She was accompanied on the trip by
Dave Allen, 16; Shelley Stricklin,· 1s;
Robin Maulfair, 16 : Jane Vasquez, 15;
Lynn Famy, 14, and Dorothy Nerell, lS.
Englisl1 Editor's
Wife Kidnaped;
Many Want Casl1
LONDON (AP) -Police stepped Ufi
their :search today for the missing wife o;"
a prominent newspaper editor and said a
number of ransom demands have beer.
received, including one for a million
polltlds -$2.4 million.
Authorities said they were treating as
an abduction the disappearance of Muriel
McKay, SS-year.old wife of the deputy
chairman or the News of the \Vorld, a
Sunday paper claiming its circulation or
more than six million i:s the world'5
largest.
Mrs . McKay, an attractive, Australian-
born brunette, disappeared f\.1onday.
"I have been up all nigh t waiting for
some news but there hasn't bee.1 a
thing," her husband. Alex McKay, told 1
reporter today. "What could ha ve hai>
pened? 1 ha ve no idea. All I know is that
my wife isn 't here and she has never
been away before."
Nixon Security Intruders
Face Prison, Big Fine
~
Violators of the newly extended seeurl·
ty ione around the Western \Vh\te House
ln San Clemente are exposing themsel\1es
to a prison tenn of up t.o 10 years (Ir a
fine of up to $10,000, but the Coast Guard,
which has just ~ived orders (In the
new boundaries. doesn "t anllcipate roun:
ding up many offenders.
"lt·would be pretty hard for anyone to
Inadvertently wander aboard," said an
officer at the Coast Guard's LORAN sta·
tion, immedia tely adjacent to the
Preslderitial estate. "Both the water and
beach areas are very clearly marked and
all the rest is fenctd off."
"The rest" now includes the LORAN
stailon and Its offshore water~. represen-
ting 1 southerly extension of the mile-
Jong security zone .
The water area, says the ~st Guard,
extends offshore ror about half 1 mile
&nd is clearly mo.rked \\'ith thm white
can buoys marked With "international
orange'' stripes and a diamond de.sign.
ne water security ~ Is barred to alt
boats when a Coast Guard vessel is
present
The be11;ch 11ecurlty area is marKed al
Its northern and southern limits by signs,
set. out by the Secret Service \vhen the
President ls in residence. lt Includes the
~ .
beach oceanward of the estate and the
LORAN station. The beach area is open
to the public "consistent with private
property rights." the Coast Guard states.
Ho\\•ever. the Secret Service has the righl
to bar beachgoers near the estate if thi~
is regarded as necessary for Presidential
security. The fenced-in land area or the
esta te and the Coast Guard StaUon arc
"closed to tmauthorized persons at all
times.''
Regulations for the extended securil y
~ are 8pelled out in the Coasl Guard 's
new "Notice for Mariners," whteh state~
that security within the wat er, beacK ahd
land areas will be enforced by the Coast
Guard. the Secret Service and such Olher
federal. state and municipal agencies
which may be called upon to asii;lst
Despite the possibly formidable punish·
m('nt for violations of the zone, the coast
Guard hasteM to point out that new
"notice" is really just a legal tool to be
used only In emergency. ~
"Nobody's going to slart runnl6g
around arresting people," saJd the
LORAN offiCer. "It's all handled very
nlctly and "'C don·t expect any pro-
bltms."
But just in case any <'areless mariner
sh0trid "~·andcr aboard," ll might be
noted that the regulation applits to "an1
o\\'Mr, agent, nu1sttr, officer or crew
member., aboard the vagrant vessel.
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Huntington. :Qeaeh Tmi.y's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoc!ks
VOL. 62, NO. 312, 4 SECTI ONS, 46 PAGES
Coit rt
Youth"s Last Wish
Valley Bo ys Gifts to Fairvi£w
DIED THINKING OF OTHERS
FV's Richard Campbell
Beacli Building
Slmed to Hit
$100 Million
!uilding permils in Huntington Beach
wtre expected to top the magic $100
million mark today, the highest total ln
lhe city's history by $20 million.
Pennits issued in December to date
total more tha n Sl2 million bringing the
yearly totaJ lo over $98 million, Building
and Safety Department aids reported.
Scheduled to be issued today are
permits for 156 apartment units to the J.
H. Hedrick Co. of San Gabriel. Valuation
oftlle unils is $1.939,000 which will push
Utt° permits for the year over the $100
million mark.
The highest total prev iously was $80
m.i1Uon in 1963. The $100 million figure ra r
exceed!ii totals for the pas t two years of
S64 million for 1968 and $57.5 million in
1967.
Building Director Ollin C. "Jack"
Cleveland aUributed this year's record-
breaking total to an iocrease in apart-
ment building brought on by the tight
money market.
The new figure ls remarkable in·
1smuch as it wss achieved despile the
money situation and a strike during the
year or heavy equipment operators and
11 plumbcrs.
Although apartment units lopped single
family homes by almo~t two to one dur-
ing the year, moneywise the homes ac-
counted for 30 percent more or Ute total.
Building permits climbed consistently
throughout the year with the previous $80
million total being exceeded by the end of
October.
Neal Appointed
To League Unit
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of tlle l>all't l'llM It.tr
He had Christmas girts he would never
use and he chose to share them, because
many unrortunates had nothing to look
forward to.
He asked that they go to·Fairvtew State
HOtipital patients.
Shortly after, et 8:15 p.m. on
Christmas Eve, he died.
Richard Campbell, 19, of 9680 Dove Cir-
cle, Fountain Valley, had ·worked as a·
volunteer helper at the facility for the
mentally retarded in Costa Mesa.
''Mostly with the little kids," uld hia
18-year-old sister Beth, who went to the
state hospital on Christmas Day to
deliver the Hot Wheels model car set,
each component brightly wTapped.
'I'he adm ini strative staff was off, so
ahe gave them to a switchboard operator.
"Ifs the big set," said a hospital
SJXlkesman Monday. "It will fill half a
room. My boy has one."
The novel new hobby layout features
race cars built with spaceage-style nylon
bearings, powered by gravity but souped
up by a supercharger unit inside a
roadway tunnel.
Young Campbell was Interested in that
sort of thing.
The 1969 Fountain Valley High School
graduate was a freshman majoring in
mathematics al Orange Coast College.
"He was going to be a nuclear
physi cist," said his sister.
Boys in Ward 344 at the hospital -
Campbell's age, but wilh Jess learning
capacity to match their similar iriteresl'I
-will spend many happy hours with his
gift. . .
Bigger, laster whe<ls led to Cpnpbell's
death.
He~ wu riding with -.a 18-ye,r~ld
~ the last day o! his Jife, when !be bdj; l6st. CQl'llrol of the car on f:l Toro
Roid,, west of Trabuco Road in the Irvine area. J
The vehicle hurtled tiidewaya: into a utility pole.
Campbel: was taken to Huntington
Jntercommunily HoSpital with a crushed
chest, aware he was in very grave COD·
dition.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging, ruptured
liver, multiple thorascic fractlires .•. "
said an Orange County C1>roner 's deputy
de tai ling the causes of death.
Campbell left bis father Richard, his
mother, l\1rs. Dolores Topalian, of the
Fountain Valley home address, 11isters
Beth, Pam and Dawn.
His funeral was Saturday and he ls
buried in Westminster Memorial Park.
Q'Jestioned about obituary infonnatlon,
Beth Campbell mentioned that he went to
Huntington Beach High School for one
year before fin ishing up at the Fountain
Valley campu s.
Was there anything: else that should be •
told about the youth who thought or un-
fortunates when he realized there was no
longer much JXllnt in thinking or himself?
"No, that's all," said Beth.
Rose Kennedy Visits
Onassises in Greece
ATHENS , Greece (AP)-Rose Kennedy.
wi~ow or Joseph P. Kennedy and mother
or the late president, arrived in Athens
today to spend the new year's holiday
with Mr. and Mrs. Aristotle Onassis. Mrs.
Onassis, widow of president John F. Ken·
nedy, returned to Greece Sunday from
England with he.. .. children, Caroline and
John.
ORANGE COUNTY1 CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 TEN CENTS
• ·-· 't' •
for Edison
DAil V Pl\.OT Sleff ,._,.
Board Nears
Ru1ing on .
Expansion
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of It!• n.111 r111t ,..,.
Southern California Edison Company's.
appeal In the denial of their permit to ex-
pand the Huntington Beach power plant
went irito its third day today in Anaheim.
After Monday's hearing before the
Orat'lge County Air Pollution Control
District (APCD) app<als board, 11 ap-
peared that the denial would be upheld by
the board, sending the case into Superior
~.·
SPINNING THEIR WHEE~S -Bnred with Christ-
mas vacation,. these La Mirada teenagers pedaled
their bicycles 20 miles-down the road to see what
was happening in Huntington Beach. From left are
Dave Allen, SheUey Stricklin. Robin Maulfair, Jane
Vasquez, Becky Moses, Lynn Famy and Dorothy
Nerell.
Oepu!y Coonty Counsel Jam<a Urban
said today the case will £1'1 kt court
regardleu of the board'a ruling. '-rhey'll
appeal in court ff the denial b upheld and
we'll appeal if it's rever3ed."
The county's case, Urban aaJd, ls baaed
on iwo·regulaUons.
"APCD chief William Fltchen did the
correct lhlng fn Nonmber wh<n be
denied the permit. He lded under then
Taxes, Mines, Defense
Nixon Signs Major Bills,
Heads for Smt1Cletttente
BJ~SMITB . '
WASlllNGTOl"CUPI) -Prtoidenl Nix·
on today 1igned lbree majOr billl Into
Jaw -tax refc>nn, mine safety and de.
fense 'appropfiatiqns -before leaving
!or a holiday star in Southern California.
The tax reform bill and the mine safe-
ty bill were signed despite Nixon's ob-
jectlons to some of the.ir f.eatures. Jn each
case, he said the good featurea Of the
bills outw~ighed the bad.
The $69.6 billion budget for military
hardware had been cut $6 billion by Con-
gress after a bitter struggle over costs
cind arms need!.
The President and M~. Nlxcrn were to
fly to the Western White Houae in San
Clemente in mid aft.ernol;ln. They will
return to Washington •the weeMnd of
Jan. 11, a week or so before Congress
convenes again.
Nizon is expected to ask Congress to
pass new ta1es, but will probably wait
until his Sta" of the Union addrellS Jan.
22 to spell out what he has in mind. It
is al most certainly likely however, to in·
el ude a "vah:ie added". tax, in which 1
tax Is added at ·each stage of the manu-
facturing process.
Congress has passed an unbalanced bill
that is both good and bad." Nixon said
in a statement released by the White
•louse. "The tax refonns, on the whole,
are good: the effect on the budget and on
the cost or living is bad."
Nixon said he approved the measure
because the improvements In ta1 fair·
neas through the reforms Outbarant:t the
litflaUonary impact from ihe>lt.L blUton
tax cut the bil( canies. · ·
nie blll PrOvtdts 'tat; ·re Her for 63 ·mil-
lion Americans-and.triclUdes a 15 ~rcent ·
boost in Social Security benefits aDd .
loophole<:losi.D8 re!Orms.
. . .
For the ·firll llmt t.xpayen Will ,..
th• .effects .<ii thi.~1)1 will be !n ~ pa,y•
dlecl:lor !he hnt -k <ii tile "'''" year
Wh,en the. pre1ent 10 · ~t tu sur·
charge goes down to IS percenl.'J'hatwl.ll
dJmiriish' the tax withholding sUghUy. The
surcharge is · scheduled to expire com-
pletely June 30, 1970.
11te tax reducti~n results chiefly from
a three year increase in the $600 in-
come tax per~onal exemption. It will rise
to $650 in July to $700 in January and to
$750 in January 1973, The bill also grants
special tax relief for 12 million poor
and near-poor taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy
told newsmen at Ute· White House after
the President·1lgned the bill that the mea·
sure enacted 'by tbe Democratic Qm.
gresa made Ni1on'1 bulgetary problems
even more severe.
But .Kennedy lidestepped questions
abotu whether the President would ask Con~ next year to increB.se taxes,
J>09Stbly through a "value ad(led tax."
This is a fonn of, excise tax on manufac-t~red goods. ·
Kennedy 31:knowledged that the tree~
ury department has been studying the
value added tax but he said it was only
"one of the areas that is under study."
Stock Markets
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market
nei:ed 'its rather flabby muScle.s late this
afLernoon iri . an ef£ort tc> pull ou.t of a
mild decllll~. (See. quotaH'lns, ·Pages 10.lt)~ ' . '
The margin or deCHnes over advances '
iniohg 'uidJVldual !Uuts 1 tra4ed 'oh the .
NeW York Stock .Exchaf!ged sllmnied to
about 150 from nearly ~-
La Mirada Kids
Bike to Beacli
For 'Adventure'
Himuiiaion lltach ia • io,;i .. AY, llorn
La Mlflda. A-21! mllel ..
But-1f )"OU're .a teemau,:.borfld With
Christmas vacaUon, and woq)d rathtr do
9Clltietlll{l1 than sit on your hapdl, k•a not
too fir ·to ro to the beocb. Ev<n ii you ' . . have to ~er the distaoc:e by. bteycle.
And that '• exac:Uy -what' HYen kidJ
decided lo do Jljonday.,
,They took off froni:1'their La Mirada
homes at 7:30 a.ni. and arrived at the
existing regulation %43 <ii the California
Health and Safety Code," Urban argued.
"We are also arguing that Rule 67, one
of the new air pollution coritrol
ordinances enacted by 'the Bpard of
Superv~rs, would absolutely prohibit the
a~ourit .of emlasions that P'.(ijson pro-
potel to put In tile •Ir from Uttlr pew
facility."
Rule !7, paU'!"'d olter·llmilm'·.ftllt)a•
tionJ fn Los Angalet ... IUYoNlao-
ties, limits permitsable plant ftnlqimll
of IUlpbar compouuds to a mattnnn '(If
leu than two and onHall.tcila P. ciq,
nli!O(en ozldes to one and one-hall """'
per d17 ·and combustion corit.'Dtunli Ce
240 pounds a day.
According to an Edison company or.
ficial; the new ordinance "Is lmpoaib19
to romply with."
Huntington Beach pier three hours later, Jn Monday's hearing, Edison Ccim;.n,
only to find out that the weather con-attorney William Marx called two
ditions were a bit too chilly for a dip in witr.esses who restated the utilitiei' posl0
the ocean . tiori that the construction of two new
"The water was too cold to go twim· 790,~ltllowatt units which woo.Id triple
ming, so we just relaxed, walked around the company's power output, would be
town, ate and met people," said Becky contributing an insignificant amount of
Moses, 15, leader of the entourage. pollution to Southern California's smoea
Despite chilling. and gusty wlnl'fa that sklea.
reached up to SO miles per ·hour, they Foll6wing their testimony, Urban m.ade
were pedaling homeWard around 2 p.m. a motion that th~ case be upheld in light
in high spirits when they were spotted by of Rule 67, "the eff~t of which would re·
a nmy newmian near Talbert Avenue quire that the air pollution control officer
and Beach Boulevard. deny the permit."
"We just wanted to do something Man: objected to the motion on Ult
adventurous," explained r in gl ea de r grounds that the appeal was based on the
Becky. "Nobody believed that we wou ld denial given under Section 24243 of the
do it. It's the fir st time we ·di4 something Health and Safety Code. The objection
like it, and I think it will be the la~." WAS sustained and Fitchen was caUed to
She was ac®mpanied on the trip by th'e stand .
Dave Allen, 16; Shelley Stricklin, 15';, Ir.. three and one:half ~rs ~f di~
Robin Maulrair, 16: Jane Vasquez, 15; \ tcslimony and . cross exam1n~t1on, Ftt·
Lynn Famy, 14, and Dorothy Ner,ell, 15. chen. restated .his case for denying the. ex·
::s1on permit on the grounds that the
rrent plant is already "the single
Tycoon lndi~ted r:::; ~~~t/~un:• 01 ~r pollution in
He testified that despite f.dison's
I Pl Kill. cla · s that the amount of pollutant , Ii . ot to p into the air will decreaa< by 1975,
I • 1 , the mpletion date or the propo8ed
Wif .5 O h plant Edison Company figures indicate
.e,, . . . t ·ers the mount of pollutants will . have in-
ert . The figures ahow the amount or
pollu prod uced at the facility in 1968
were 23. ns ol nitrogen oxides daily . AM, accOrd lo Edison figutts, in 1975
MODESTO (AP) -Mil-roaJ .
City l\1anager James Neal of Fountain
Valley has been named to the finance
committee of the California League of
Cities.
Neal was placed on the 22-member
commHU>e Dec. 12. He is one of only two
city managers on the finance committee.
1'1ost members arc directors of finance
nr city treasurers.
Valley Imbalance Cited
.. estate:tycoon 1Jack Van S1ckJe .waa .Jn·
dieted late Monday night by a Stanislaus
County grand jury on cbarps <i. con-
spiracy to murder his former wile, a
Sacramento 1udge -1nd fCIUr attorneys.
Superior, ~rt Judge "WIQ!ap1 Zeff
Issued a t>ench warrant for Van Sickle's
return to California.
(See N, Pap %)
Orange
Neal recently gpearhe:aded develop-
ment oC Fountain Valley's ten-year plan
..ruch DllllW... budgetary n«ds with
oervtces that must be provld<d for the
next decade.
PILOT FUTURAMA.
INSIDE TODAY
The DArLY 'Pll.oT's a.nnual report cin
prognss and growth in the Orange Coast
Area 's business and Industry community,
combined with a look Into the ~c
future, appears Inside today.
1be 1pecial FUTUR.UtA s e c t l on
features articles, photographs and ads
which teJI the story or the Orange Coast's
thriving commercial We. Be sure to read
FtntJRAM:A 1970, Inside today.
State Edict Won't Affect Most Coast Schoqls Van Sickle, 53, was arrested Dec. 9 In
ReQo, Nev., and jailed there without ball.
Hi hu aald be will fight .. tradiUon.
A State Board of EdueaUon diredlve
that school districts wort on 1chleving
better racial bJlance may cause prob-
lems in Santa Ana and Los Angelea, but
apparenUy will not arrect the predoftlin.
antly Caucasian Orange Coast area.
Only Fountain Valley School District
along the coast received noUficaUon and
it already Is outdated by a chan~ In at-
tendance resulUn1 in les.s imbalaftce th is
school year.
The mate edict is that schools withi n a.. school district be 1Ubstantlall1 balanc-
ed so one school is not most\y i ll black
or brown and another mo.Uy all white. rn Santa Ana and Los Angtlts, acboot
ofrlclfls said, the l'Jnly conceivable way
ol doing this is by busing large numbers
of ltudtnts to more distant schools.
·Fountain Valley Elementaty Sop~
Mlchael Brick aald 111,....tsu, Tamura
Sd!ool has IU percert Spanish sumame
students compared to the "'chool dlotrict
avtrage of 4.t percent Spanish surname.
The difference of 13.7 percent, however.
falls wllhio the pl!Jlllllible variallon of ll_~t the Jlaie will a!]ow. ~Uon 19 the Pountain Valley
DlltrlCt 1'8' Wed on an October, !IA
stat.wide aurvey. A· stUdy m a d e last
Cic!Ober·hasn1 yet been processed.
·Brick aaid a. letter wUI lie written to
the Bureau o! lnl<rlMJp'Relations of the
Stale Board of Edacaitlon stlUn& Tamura
School compllts' wJOi the bolrd11 . otder.
No attendance boundaries were clta"8*11
Brick said, II )all. bappened tbal '!i, '°'
cause of atudent ~, pai1tctatatly
by gradoation. ~ ·
Tamura School ltrVtS tht dty'1 JUrez
cn1nny.
Brick aaid. he sees lt v u advantaee
having many ol the Sjlonflh apeaking
atudenta aroupect1 at me tcbooL The
l!cbooJ ,dlstrld_d federal l\ft*·l1 ohlo'
to employ .-,1 i...,... ~ -lopo me.nt ttacher ~.:~W .u .
side to work .will>Uio.• llllt •
• 1
Tbe indictment said Van Sickle pold a
Dr Willia Dolph · t nd • Modeato man, whole namo b being . m ' supen n e en~ withheld, " CNI to •PP'llri•e the ~ of el~ of lhe Wuimlnsler Ei,m.ntary DI" .,..,_ -·-~ trict, Aid Webber School 11 .more than . hit n4lfe,·~ alleged1y 1*ceuse his
JS percent over Ole odlool district. aver· , dl...Ulfodioa 'with their-dlvnrce Kio
age. It'• Spanish surname percentage Is U•mtbl 28 pe..,..t, Tbe dlslrtct overage is 7.1 One <ii Mn. Van Sick!<'• atlorneys told perc.nt. tho "and' Jur1 the c11..... ldlOn 1n-
111e school board al Its 1~ meetinc vOived communfly · propttty o1 Pl
voted l_o comply w1th the reqitt;st it sign mUUOri.
1 •lateintnt o! Intent the problem wpl be '!'he Indictment tald shu1ff's o!fldals,
stUdled, be aaki. Evidence of ,progrm'ln ltam1a1 of th~ .plan1 plactd Mrs.' Van
plinping to c:Otrttct the llribeW>ce will Sickie 1n ·..c1usion. Uodercover •Jl'Tlla
have to be submltted by next Jane\ 1. weril to van Skkle, gave h1fn her w&Jlet M-and~~~--But •wlth ooly ·U•e perC!i>t'o! stlJdenls Viii Sickle then poid them 1$,IDt'!n a t~move 1t coe llcbdOl n ~ not'pnnt Ni .. ds'nlght·tpol, 1he'lndlctme1t aaid.
a arut problem. •MftttC lchooli Wll~ '1110 lndfdment aald Van' Sickle also
more and Seven.-~ liive only diacusoed arraniJtng the ltiDlngs of
11 percent Sponleh"l11!111me, Or, llotpll s.<raintnto County fliiperldi<Court Jud1a
said. Stanley Recken, Socrlmeftto attorneys
More •dllllcutt 11 tht-ollltallmi ·hi,. Slota Anthnlly Scaler• and Clarenco Ptuo,ani! "*'· -<ii t11e .11:-m·u. • Slil Jl'r111tlsco attomerlflled 'ctai1' 11 district aro lmhall""""' -...~.lbt : "Jdl.,Doe." All ...,. ·lmotnd lo the
1ta!O'-lonmJla. ' • . ; ....... -
"' . ' I
I
w-dler
We'll have some psty wind•
lrom the northeall to belp m rinc
out' the old decide Wednesday.
Temperatures an still ptgged in
the mJddle to upper llrUes. ~
INSIDE TODAY
In the 19701, CaUfOMtia wm '
move ·past the 20 miUkm mariii,
cfmchhtg more firmly fts ffrd
in J>OPUlatlon 1tanu, but it'• a
rtcord· w'hich h4$ mix•d bleu--
ings. PaQe 24., , 1 "
'c.nfffil• • -• . <IMCO!t "" • --.. <Jtuln.. .... ..., ......... " C-in " • ..... c.wr ·--• ==--:u .. Dt>f!I ... tkft " llll;t.NI ..... • Ttll, ... ••r.rt•~ • -I
,~· 1•11 :,. _ _,_ d .. _ " =~ "
__ ..
• --... ---I•
-... --.
! DAILY PILOT H
.LA Police
Crack Down
Oil 'Yellow'
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of .. llMD'f' "''" ., ...
lf you're wondering where the yellow
went, it's gone.
Los Angelea city and county 1'w en·
foreement officers today wound up the
atizuni el eight printa ol the. seamy sex
epic "I Am CUJ'ious CYeUow)" in every
theater where it \\'&11 playing in LOs
Ana<l!,S County.
The '.big-city raids on the movie took
place almost a week after Newport
"Be&Ch police seil.ed a print of the film pt
·the Balboa Theater.
Vice investigators said warrants have
been issued against all the exhibitors of
the fl.Im charging miademeanor ex-
hibition of obscene matter.
Theaters in the cities of Hermoga
Beach and Inglewood also have J05t their
,prints of the film alter seizures by their
respective police departments.
Meanwhile in Newport Beach, where
<lot of the first police moves against the
f!elt saga toot place 1&11t Tuesday flight,
'the print is rtill under lock and key.
It will stay there, police say, at least
.until the court action concludes against
.the owner and manager of the Balboa
'I1leater.
Manager Eleanor Blackburn of Balboa
.and owner William Alford of Laguna
Bea.ch are fi&hting the seizure .and
charges again!t them.
1belr lawyers will be present Jan. I at
a municipal court bearing on suppression
of evidence. On Jan. 18, the aame lawyers
will file a demurrer with the court. a
'document expected to challenge the
'aeirure on constitutional grounds.
' The pair face cow1 action for alleged
'exhibition ol ob s c' e n e matter and
furnishing harmful matter to a minor.
The latter charge stems from alleged
discovery of a 17-ye.ar-old girl in the
theater last Tuesday.
Municipal Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
Rutter acccmpanied police and district
attorney's investigators on the raid in
Balboa.
Ala!stant Police Chief Harry Nelson to-
day explained the judge'• pn•••mce with
the offictrl aa a necessjty because ol the
time element involved.
"It was the last night with mavie was
being Shown and if we wanted to
challenge the movie on grounds of
obecenitY, we needed prior judicial
review before we could step in.
'.'Sin~ it was the last night, we brought
the judge with us to review the film in·
1tead cl waiting to file a written aceount
of the movie, then lfaiting for a search
warrant," be said.
Edison to Give
97-centRefund
The average customer of the Southern
Callfornia Ediaon Company will receive a
97-cent refund In January, the California
Public Utilities Commission has an·
nounced.
The electric utility'1 refunds total
17,900,000 stemming from a 1985 Federal
Power Commission decision made in
January.
1be refunds represent the refunds
made by the Southern Counties Gas Com·
paniea to F.diaon, ii.I largest cwtomer.
Medicar e Deadline
For Payments Set
Social Security officials reminded
Orange County residents today that Dec.
31 is the last day to claim for reim·
barsement of 1967 and 1968 medical bills
payable under the Medicare program.
Beneficiaries should check to make
Eurt all their bills are submitted for pay-
ment before the dead1ine date, the aides
£aid. tnfonnation is available by calling
the Social Security office in Santa Ana at
836-~.
DAILY PILOT
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OAtLY PILOT' Sl•ft Plllfl
Cliff Sli ps in Newport •
Private contractors today began removing portion
of cliff which has been threatening to slide onto
Bayside Drive below exclusive Irvine Terrace resi-
dential area in Newport Beach. Work was ordered
by the Robert K. Washburns, owners of expensive
cliffside home at 411 Avocado Ave .• overlooking
Newport Harbor. House, once the home of the late
Myford Irvine, is not considered in immediate
danger. Bayside Drive has been closed by municipal
authorities in precautionary move.
Lagnnan Not Brainwashed
Captured Yachts man S pends Yule 'at Home
By RJCHARD P. NALL
Of ffl• Diiiy PllOI Sl•lf
AJthough Simeon Baldwin's Chinese
captors foisted propaganda on the
American busl nessn1an, they apparently
decided he wasn't ripe for a full·scaJe
brainwash.
"I was too old ," said Baldwin, ~7. 0 ln
Laguna Beach today. "They figured it
was a lost (ause. I'm just a dyed-in-the·
wool capitalist and r argued with them a
lot."
Baldwin was a prisoner for nearly 10
months in Reel Chinese communes· arter
capture In February aboard his yacht
Hora sum.
. He wilt relurn lo his Hong Kong
arrcraft components business Tuesday
after spending the Christmas holiday
with hls wife.Marjorie, 13S9 Cliff Drive
and their three children. '
After the February capture during a
yachting junket, of Baldwin, American
Bessie Hope Donal~, 47, and 11 others o(
mixed nationality. mention was made of
sophisticated electronic gear aboard
Baldwin's yacht. 1
. "They gave the Impression J was run-
ning one of those surveillance ships "
Yid Baldwin, who added that he was ~t
with the CIA, "just a tropical trader."
Baldwin said I.he Chinese think a11
Americans are CIA. He said the Horasum
was well equipped but not more so than
other ocean going yac hts.
It'll equi pment, from a firm Baldwin
represents in th e Orient, included direc·
lion finders, automatic pilot. radio
transmitters and receivers and other
gear. Baldwin said he makes 1,500 mile
trips from Hong Kong to Manilia and
needs the equipmenl.
Natty in a business suit and bow tie,
Baldwin is about 30 pounds lighter than
his 165 pounds when the Chinese took hlm
in tow, ·
"Ile was \VOrtied about his front veran·
<la (Convex stomach)," smiled ~1r.>.
Baldwin. "Now he's eating like it was
goi ng out of style."
Baldwin who was reaso nably "'ell feel
by his cc:ptors -rice, vegetables and
smal l amounts of meat or fish - used to
love Chinese food.
But 1'1ajorie Baldwin dJdn'l mention it
when they went out to dinner last night.
They tried Mexican food instead at
Laguna's Tortilla Flats.
Initially said Baldwin, who had no
privacy awake, asleep or even in the
bathroom. ·•we had a bad lot of guards."
He "'as permitted only to sit on a chair
for about foµr months. After that, the
guards improved.
GWC Staff T1·ying to Fi11d
Bette1· Usage of Facilities
Orange Coast and Golden West College
instructors are going to be doing some
brainstorming in I.he months ahead to try
to come up with plans for ac-
commodating increasing numbers of
students.
!\tore effective use of the teaching staff
is seen as one way of coming to grips
\1•ilh the problem of escalat ing enrollment
\rithout significant increase in income.
Or:inge Coast Junior College District
Chancellor Norman \Vatso n accordingly
presented to the board a proposal for
FUSE !Faculty Utiliza tion -Staff Ef·
fectiveness).
~-rorc eftective use or instructors wlll
be the topic when 12 faculty members
and administrators go on a 11\ree-day
mountain retreat in February, Dr.
\Vat.son said.
The FUSE team will be led by deans of
IMtruction Dr. James Fitzgerald of OCC
and Dr. William Sha'wl of Golden West
ColleJI".
Dr. Watson said the charge to the
group will be to come up with three to
fiv e ideas for more effective staff use.
He said a similar st udy eight or nine
years ago resulted in the Forums -
mu lti-media lectu re halls on both cam·
puses that permit large group instruction
along with small group seminar.;.
The proposals tha t come ou t of the
1·etreat "'ill be re.fined during !\larch and
Apri l, eva luated in f\1ay, and if approved
\\·orkcd on during the summer for ex·
perimcntation as pilot projects in Ute fall.
Dr. Watson said this process probably
will become an on-going one from year·
lo-year because o( the ••continued
pressure of enrollment and continued
necessity for establishlng prioriti es for
expeTiditure of funds."
When the idea was presented to the
board recently, Trustee George Rodda
commented th at it certainly made more
sense than try ing lo squeeze more
students into a classroom.
Coa.t Guard on W atch
Baldwin read his l,500.page navigation
book and apparently glanced at Red pr<r
paganda left handy. Time hung heavy.
He described it as "JO montM of sitting
and not knowing what's going to happen
the next day and worrying about what 's
happening to your fantily and finances."
Baldwin talked to interpreters who
looked in daily. He said tbe Chinese fear
only the Americans and Russians and
belie ve the two powers are conspiring
against the Chinese Communists.
Baldwin and Mrs. Donald, estranged
wife of tel evision actor Peter Donald who
at first tried to hide their nationality,
"'ere moved frequently during the
months of capti vity .
They were kept first at a location abOut
1n miles from Macao while technicians
dismantled and examined his naviga-
tional equipment
Baldwir, said there are war prepar~
tions .such as mHltia training and
roadblocks, "preparing against American
and Soviet invasions." He said Red
Chinese propaganda keeps the people
under "a war tension".
Baldwir. loves Laguna which he has
visited frequently during 25 years as a
"tropical trader". He plans to live here
after retirement. But that won't be for
awhile. Tomorrow he'JI whisk off to Hong
Kong where international business deals
await.
T ,vo Dis Facing
Military Court
A Camp Pendleton Marine drill in·
structor charged with using a wire coat
hanger to whip rifle range trainees into
line and a second DI accused o! physical
beatings "'ill be court martialed.
S·Sgt Roger D. Osborn, of EI Cajon,
faces a general court martial soon at
Camp Pendleton, according to the an-
nvuncement by military authoritie!>.
A special court martial has been
ordered for the second DJ. charged with
slugging seven boots at the 1ifarine Corps
Recruit Depot in San Diego.
Sgt. Willie \Vinston, of Newport. Ark.,
\VdS relieved from duty early in
December after an investigation ordered
in the wake or compJaints by one alleged
victim.
Sgt. Winston has requested military
counsel for his January court martial
proceedings.
Marine Corps officials did not 1ay when
Sgt. Osborn would be tried by a panel o(
off Jeers.
Nixon Estate Closed Off
Violators of the newly extended securl·
ty zone around the Western White House
in San Clemente are exposlng thcmselvel'I
to ' i prison term of up to lo Years or a
fineol'up to $10,000, but the Coast Guard,
wtilcb l1aJ just received orders on the
new.boundaries, doesn·t anticipate roun· dk\J up many offenders.
.. 'll .,_wOuld be pretty hard for anyo ne to
inadvertently wander abQard," u id an
offiett at th<' Coast Guard's LORAN i;ta·
t.ion. · Immediately adjacent to the
PresidenUal estate. "Both the water and
beach atttlll are \'try clearly marked and
all the rtst ls fenced off ."
"The rest" now Includes the LORAN
~taLion and ii! offshore waters, represf'n-
tina a southerly extension ol the mile·
lllng !!eCW'lty zone.
The wattt area, :oi;ay1 Uie Cosst Guard,
t:1tends offshore for about half a mlle
and ts clearly marked with three white
can buoys marked with "international
orange" stripes a.nd a diamond design.
The water security zone is barred lo all
boats when a Coast Guard \'essel is
present.
The beach security area is marked at
lts northern and &0uthern limits by signs,
:<ct out by the Secret Service v.·htn the
President is in residence. It includes the
brach oeeanward of the est.a te and tht
LORAN station. The be3ch area is open
lo the public "consistent with priva te
property rig hts," the Coast Guard states.
However, the Secret Service has the right
lo bar beachgoers near the estate If thiii
is regarded as necessary ror Presidential
security. T11t fenced·in la nd ~rea or the
esta te and the Ccast Gua rd Station are
"closed to unauthorized persons at all
llmeii.''
lttgula!lons ror !he t".XIC'n0Cd security
...
zone are spelled out In the Coast Guard's
ne w •·Notice for Mariners," wh!ch states
I.hat security within the water, beach and
land areas will be enforced by lhe Coast
Guard. the Stcret Service tnd. auch other
federal, state and munlcipal agencies
which may be called Upoll to wist.
Despite the poMlbly formidable puniAh·
mcnt for vlolal.lons of the zone, the Coast
Guard hastens to point out that new
"noUce" is rel!llly just a legal tool to be
used only in emergency.
''Nobody's going to start running
around arresting people," saJd the
LOitAN office r. ''It's all ha,ndled very
nicely and we don·t expect any pro-
blems.''
But just in case any careless mariner
should •·wander abosrd," it might be
noted that the regulation applies to "any
owner. agent. master, officer or crew
fl1en1ber" aboard the vagrant \•es1ct.
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Beating Cue '
Plea to Ex cuse
Jurors Rejected
By TOM BARLEY
Of ~ 0.111 Pl•t Sltlf
Superipr Court Judge Robert Gardner
li.fonday refused to grant a motion \\'hich
would hive prevented attorneys for a
police officer aceused of brutality from
calling members of the Orange County
Grand Jury as witnesses.
Judge Gardner rejected Chief Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's move
for quashing of subpoenas issued to the 19
members of the h'lvest.igaUve panel. He
ruled .that their special privileges do.not
include exemption from proceedings in
"'hlch attorney Ron Owen !eeks their
testimony.
But the judge did indicate that Owen's
F r on• Page 1
EDISON ...
th~ amount will increase to 26.1 tons a
day.
Edison officials and engineers ha ve
teslified that the pollutants will be shot
into the atmosphere at a high speed and
temperature from a tall stake so they
will not be part of ground level smog.
Fitchen renouqced this claim reading
from a report published in May, 1969 by
the U.S. Department of Health, Educa·
tion and Welfare which said in part, "A
tall stack alone does not reduce in any
manner the total pollutants added to the
atmosphere. Other means must be found
to prevent overburdening the atmosphere
with pollutants."
demands might be met in some form
other than in open court next Jan. 7, the
date set for hearing of a motion for
l}lsmissal or brutality charges against
Santa Ana Patrolman Richard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he wilt
discu ss the issu"e with the Grand Jury on
Friday. He will then, he said. be in a
position to "discuss this matter more
fully with Mr. Owen and perhaps arrive
at some arrangement."
Faust, 26, was indicted on charges of
assault wi th a deadly weapon after
wfr nesses told the Grand Jury that he
clubbed a 17-year-old black youth who
was being committed to Juvenile Hall .
Owen's associate, Allan Stokke :i;aid
members of the Grand Jury "were out to
get a police officer in any way they c9uld
and we want them investigated."
Stokke said the "Gra nd Jury·s actions
prior to the indictment of Officer F~ust
are not the only things we are -goin1 to
question." ·
Jesse Gilmore, now 18, of Santa Ana.
told the Grand Jury that he was knocked
to the ground and clubbed upon delivery
at the Orange County facility.
The panel .learned through Gilmorc·s
sworn testimony that the youth was bei ng
committed with two companions when
Faust and other officers allegedJy used
night sticks to beat him into submission.
Gilmore was allegedly making an
escape attempt at the time, according to
Patrolman Faust, who remains on duty
pending outcome of the case.
Other witnesses to the fracas last J uly
testified it did appear to be a break for
freedom, but that Faust's partner at the
gcene called out that the youth had been
whacked enough before he stopped.
Valley Recreation Offers
Wide Range of Activities
A comprehensive range of leisure-time
activities will be offered by the Fountain
Valley Parks and Recreati"1 Department
during January.
B;eginning Jan. S the department will
offer a concentrated, ten·week course in
swim team conditkming coached by
Manuel .Alareon 4'Jld Peter Hawk. -The
sessions will be held each Mooday,
Wednesday and Friday night from~ p.m.
to 7 p.m. at the Fountain Valle~. 'H.igh
School Pool. Age limits are from 6-1?1 A new sessiQJl of the ~nnin&, ballet
and tap dancing lessons curren~y ottered
by the department begin January ·s·aOO 9.
Humorist .Slates
Oiamher Talk
In Sea l Beach
Humorist Edward A. Wright will be the
speaker-entertainer for the Seal Beach
Chamber of Commerce aMual in·
stallation banquet at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 7.
Wright will present "It's a Laugh" at
the Ranch House Restaurant, 1600 Pacific
Coast Highway.
Wright has performed at U.S. Army in·
stallations in Europe and 42 states. He is
chairman of the Theater Arts Depart-
ment at Denison University.
Installed as president for 1970 will be
Keith E. Houdyshell. Vice presidents are
David R. Berry, John Gera Jr .• Glen A.
Gunderson and Howard D. Hawkins.
New directors are Kenneth E. Harnish,
Glenn 0. Jones. Sam J . Parrott. James
\V. Duun, Frank Ksiazek and William E.
~foon. ,
Reservations for the Jan. 7 banquet
mny be obtained at lhe Chamber office.
0
Classis for three to five year olds arFt
scheduled at 9 a.m., 9:45 a.m. and 10 :30
a.m. Six lo 12 year olds may sign up fo r
classes at 2:30 p.m., 3:15 p.m. and 4 p.m.
Alsa scheduled to begin January 8 is a
beginner's course in bridge, to be taught
by certified bridge instructor Helen
Creed. Classes are scheduled from 7:45
p.m. lo 10 p.m., Thu'rsdays.
Organized practice sessions for the
January.110 All-City Cross Country Meet
have been scheduled for 10 a.m. 00 noon
on Jan. 2 and 3, and from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 5-8. Signups for the big meet may\be
made directly at the practices. Oflly
those aged nine through 15 are eligible.
A speci'al sign.up session has been set
for Jan. 3, from 9 a.m. to noon, in the
Fountain Valley Community Center for
the Junior Basketball League. The league
is open to all boys living in Fountai11
Valley or going to elementary or junior
high schools from which · Uley w!ll
graduate to either Fountain Valley or Los
Amigos High School.
Further information about signup pro-
cedures and payment for the courses 1:<
available by telephoning the department
at 962-2424 or by perSO'l'lall y inquiring at
Fountain Valley City Hall, 10200 Slat!):r
Ave.
Tot Fatally Injured
By Lid to Toy Chest
LONG BEACH (AP) -The coroner's
office reports I-year-old Anthony
Villarete was fatally injured when the lid
of a Christmas toy chest fell on his neck.
Police said the boy was pronounced
dea d ~londay at Long Beach Community
Hospital after a babysitter found the lid
closed on hls neck. He \'.'as the son of f\fr.
and Mrs. Sarafin Villarete and also had 1
twin brother.
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HEAVY LINES OUTLINE PRESIOENTAL SECURITY ZONE
Feds Not Lfk1ly to For9lv1 Tr1sp1111r1 1t Nixon Estate
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DAILY PILOT :J
Severe Storms Hit Mid west, South
Inspection lfrged
·U.S. Asks Hanoi
Name Prisoners
PARIS (AP) -The United States
handed North Vietnam a list today of
U.S. military personnel missing in
Southeast Asia and asked It to identify
those on the list it is holding prisoner.
Ambassador Philip Habib, acting U.S.
Delegation Chief at the Vietnam peace
talks, also called on Hanoi lo allow
neutral inspection or its prisoner or war
County Woman
Burned Saving
Three Children
A Buena Park mother is resting com-
rortably in the bum unit of the Orange
County Medical Center today after saving
the lives of three small children Monday
as a flash lire destroyed her apartment.
Mrs. Patricia Corsage, 22, of 7610
Jackson Way, suffered first and secood
degree burns over 25 percent of her body
while rescuing the children from the in-
ferno.
AJso injured was 2-year-old Yvette
Arsenault, 5491 Lockhaven Drive. A
hospital spokesman said she is improving
after receiving first and second degree
burns over 20 percent of-her body.
Authorities said t.trs. Corsage was car-
ing for her son David, 3, a neighbor child,
Shawn Herrington, 2, and Yvette when an
explosion rocked the apartment. While
the resulting fla mes engulfed the struc·
ture, the woman broke a rear window,
left the apartment and then returned to
get the children. _ .
Four fire department units respondjng
lo the 4:15 p.m. call battled the blaze for
eight minute!. Buena Park fire depart·
ment spokesmen said the apparent cause
was a gas leak. Damage to the apart·
ment was estimated to be in exces.s of
110.000.
•
American Wives
Meet N. Viets ,
Giv~n No Word
PARIS (UPI) -Three American wives
met with North Vietnamese diplomats for
one hour and 25 minutes today but failed
to find out if their husbands were alive or
dead. "I don "l know if what we dkl make11
eny difference but it makes us f~l ~l·
ter," Mrs. Richard Nelson, 26, of Vll'gtn1a
Beach, Va .. said.
The women had come to Paris like
5eores of other persons before them to
Rek infonnation about their husbands
who are missing in Vietnam.
The three women, Mrs. Thomas
Stegman 30, Mrs. Robert Duncan. 23.
and M;s. Nelson, ga ve the Hanoi
diplomats letters for ~ir husba~s in
the hopes if they are ahve they will be
delivered.
The women voere received in the
pennanent diplomatic headquarters of
the North Viet.na.mese.
"We were received very courteously
but received no information about our
husbands," Mrs. Stegman said.
"They gave us no hope of knowing our
busbands' fates until the war is over,''
&he added.
The women said they could not remem·
ber the name of the diplomat who rectiv·
.ed them but said he expressed his
,;y mathy with their feelings and told
tham all American prisoners were beln&
treated 1'humanely."
Citrus Growers
Bemoan Assault
By Tumb'leweeds
Though trtts were toppling in many
towns, South County citrus growers found
their groves had survived the weekend's
gusty winds in fine shape -but oh, those
tumbling tumbleweeds!
One El Toro grower reported "tret-
high" collectioos of the thorny nui11nce:
literally jammed between his rows of
orange trees.
''They blew over from v1eant land
across the road and they're really packed
in ttJtte tight," he lamented, adding that
·the county's new ban on burning spring
v."ttd growth hasn·t helped matter•
much.
· The county agricultural commissioner's
office says tumbleweed troubles are par
for the season. "The plants have. dried
oul all summer." an expert explained.
"and 1111 it takes is a good wind to se.t
llhem rolling. They're all over thf. place.
-that is, everywhere lhey don 't bc!lq.''
I( they eve.r get the tumbleweeds out.
the citrus men expect a good harvest, but
fear pri ces may be effected by &c.arrln1
flf fruit as or.anges were batted around by
the winds.
campa; and the.n to negoUale an exchange
of POWs.
Delivering the list of the missing to Col.
Ha Van · Lau , Hanoi's No. 2 delegate,
Habib said at the 4Mh weekly session of
the talks: '
"My government is taking this action
In the OOpe that yotq" side, even at this
late date, will indicate which men are
prisoners anl:t those whom you know to be
dead, as a matter of humanitarian con-
cern for their families.
"As for the physical treatment of
prisoners, there is· evidence l h a t
prisoners held by your side have been
subjected to solitary confinement, as well
as to other forms of pt)ysical and mental
duress. Your side has made no
systematic effort to repatriate sick and
¥.'ouncled prisoners."
Habib said the North Vietnamese ap-
parently want to use the prisoners as
"pawns in bargaining for an over-all set·
tlement of the war." He said Hanoi's
refusal to negotiate seriously in Paris
delayed such an over-all settlement and
therefore prolonged the "agonizing doubt
about the lives arid welfare" of U.S.
s0Jdiers missing or known lo have been
taken prison~r.
"lf your side hopes to apply political
pressure upon the United States through
a harsh attitude regarding prisoners of
war," Habib continued, "you · reveal a
thorough misunderstanding of American
public opinion.
"No American can condone your handl-
ing of the prisoner question . Your denial
of the ·. most fundame ntal precepts
governing such matters has only resulted
in unanimous public condemnation."
He proposed that the "two sides enter
promptly into discussions on all questions
affecting prisoners of war held on both
sides. including the question of their ear-
ly release."
Dinh Ba Thi, the No. 3 member of the
Viet C.Ong delegation, opened the session
with a charge that the United Stales is
iritensi!ying the war and seeking to
sabotage the peace talks. He accused the
Nixon administraUon of "black schemes''
aimed at military victory.
The Viet Cong spokesman said his
delegation chief, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh.
ha.d a sore throat. North Vietnam's chief
delegate, Xuan Thuy, is boycotting the
talks to protest President Nixon's refusal
to nart)e a blue ribbon successor to Henry
Cabot LOOge.
Habib 's apPeal for pri!Ol1er of war
negotiatlonti went unheeded by Col. Han
Van Lau, who sat in for Thuy.
'
$200 Ski Holiday
Added to Prizes
For Sports Slioiv
A $200 ski vacation at Heavenly Valley,
tn lhe Lake Tahoe area, today was added
to the giveaway package the DAILY
PILOT is offering in conned.ion with the
~m California Sports, Vacation and
Recreational Vehicle Show.
The grand prize package, put together
by Holiday Airlines, includes transporta-
tion vla Holiday's Super Electra jets
from Hollywood-Burbank airport. directly
to Tahoe and return, p I u s ac·
commodations at the Ramada Sands and
other extras," inc I u ding ski tram
passes and entertainment in Tahoe's
Nevada-side night spots.
To be eligible for the grand prize, DAT·
LY PILOT readers need only to send in
their names, addresses and phone
numbers to: Show Tickets, Orange C.Oast
DAILY Pnm, PO Box 1560, Costa
Mesa, Ca. 92626.
First 10 persons to send in their names
on postal cards -or drop them off in
person at the Costa Mua office of the
DAILY PDm at 330 W. Bay SI., Costa
Mesa -each will automatically receive
one pair of tickets to the Sports, Vacation
and Recreational Vehicle Show opening
Saturday at the Anaheim C.Onvention
Center.
Alter the first 10, an additional JO
names daily will be selected at ratldom.
All ticket winners' names will be J>Ublish-
ed in the classified advertising section of
the DAILY PILOT (beginning on New
Year's Day), along with inst.ructions for
picking up show tickets.
Names of all who request tickets -
whether they win tickets or not -will be
placed in eligibility for the Holiday
Airlines-Heavenly Valley ski \l&catJon for
two.
Winner of the grand prize will be
selected from among all names sub--
mitted in a drawing to be held onstage
next Wednesd1y (Jan. 7) at the I p.m.
show at the Anaheim Convention C.enter.
Winner need not be preeent to win the
lrlp.
Tren1or J olts Sicily
TRAPANI, Sklly (AP) -A lllrong
earth tremor jolted western Sk:lly before
ditwn today, sending panicky thc:lo3.1.nds
out Into near-freezing weather. No
damage or casualties wtre re.ported.
Much o( the area was de\lastated by a
quake nearly two years ago, In January,
1961, and thtta have bten more than 150
tremors $inct. Many thousands are still
Uvkig In makeshilt shantytowns.
• -'. -• • , -•
•
• ... •
... _ ...
-·
ISRAELI SAILORS STAND ON F~ENCH-MADE GUNBOAT STEAMING THROUGH MEDITERRANEAN
Ve11el1 Igno re French B.mbargo on Arma ment Sales to l1rael, Sail on Chrl1tma1 Day
Israel Accu sed Here's Capsule Glnnce
Of Stealing At Tax R eform Measure
Boats by Egypt WASHINGTON (AP) -Here are s<mie Persons who work only part or the
By United Press . lnlemalional of I.he th.ing~ you, as. an ind~vidual tax· yeo r. such as students with summer job!!,
payer, '"'Ill find affecting y_ou i.n the years are excused from tax withholding if they E"gypt accused Israel today of stealing ahead from the new tax bill signed today . . . .
ri -.;e gunboats from France and warned by President Nixon. ce rt1fr they will have no tax habillty fo r
nations having dealings with Israel that None of them applies lo the taxes on the year and OYle no tall: from the
1969 income for which taxpayers will be previous year. Israel respects neither sovereignty or filing returns by April 1~. l970.
legality. It was the first official Egyptian
reaction to the incident and it notably did
not blame France.
Th e five gunboats" were moving steadily
toward Israel, keeping well to the north
of the Egyptian shoreline, and were ex-
pected to pass between Crete and Rhodes
before making the open sea run to Israel.
They were expected in Israel late
Wednesday or Thursday.
In Paris the influenUal newspaper Le
Figaro accused the government of Presi-
dent Georges Pompidou of collusion in
letting the &\U'lboats escape the French
embargo on arms shipments to the
Jewish state. The French government
was reported considering forms or
punishment for olficials involved.
In Oslo, one of the directors of Starboat
S.A .. the Official bi.Iyer of the five boaLs,
denied the ships would become part of
the Israeli Navy. t.1ila Brener, who is
also a director of the Israeli Maritime
Fruit Co .• told a news conference the five
boats are registered as commercial
vessels in Panama.
"They are not gunboats, because there
11re no guns aboard," he sa id. "They are
good, fast vessels which ¥.'ill be used in
oil drilling operations off the coast of
Israel, in Indonesia and perhaps in South
America. Starboat is a worldwide en·
terprise."
Israel took the same viewpoint. The
Israeli newspaper Yediot Aharonot said
Foreign Minister Abba Eban told French
Ambassador Francis }lure in Jerusalem
f.tonday that the sale of the fi ve boats to
a Panamanian registered company did
not violate international law or the
French arms embargo.
Egyptian spokesman Dr. E ~ m at
Meguid said in Cairo "lhis method used
by Israel may perhaps alert responsible
officials in countries wi1ich deal with
Israel to the fact that she does not
respect the sovereignty, nor does she
respect the legality of these countries
whenever sovereignty or Jegallty are
against her interests."
Meguld indicated Egypt did not hold
France responsible. He said, "in-
formation we have indicated that the
French government is not happy about
the incident."
English Editor's
Wife Kidnaped;
Man y Want Casl1
LONDON f AP) -'Police stepped up
their ,e,arch today for the missing wife of
a prominent ne¥i·spaper editor and said a
number of ransom demands have been
received, including one for a million
pound• -$2.4 million.
Aulhocllles said they were treating as
an. abduction the disappearance of Muriel
McKay, SS.year-old wile of lhe deputy
chairman Of the New! of the World, a
Sunday pt1per clalmlng It.~ clrtulatlon of
more than six million is the world's
largest.
1'-irs. 1'-1cKay, an atU'acllve, Australian·
born brunette, dls.s.pptared Monday.
Tax reduction:
The present $600 personal exemption is
Increased to $650 from .July t. 1970. to
Dec. 31. 1971. to $70 Oin 1972, and to $750
in 1973 and thereafter.
An $1.100 low-income aHowance lo
benefit poorer families is added to
pt>rsonal exemplions in 1970.
The present standard deduction, JO per-
cent of adjusted gross income up to
$1 ,000, is raised to 13 percent with a
$1,500 ceiling in 1971 . to 14 percent and
$2,000 in 1972, and to 15 percent and
f2.000 in 1973.
Single persons, effective in 1971, will
pay no more than 20 perc:ent above the
tax level for married couples.
A maximum rate of 60 percent on earn·
ed income. instead of the present 70-per-
cent. is fixed for t97l and 50 percent
thereafter.
Mortar Attacks
Break VC Truce;
One GI Killed
SAIGON (AP) -At least one
American soldier was kllled and several
wounded by an enemy mortar attack ear-
ly today in lhe first hours of the Viet
Cong's New Year·s cease-fire, lhe U.S:
Command announced.
Ten South Vietnamese soldiers v.•ere
"'·ounded in four other Viet Cong rocket
and mortar attacks during the first 14
hours of the 72-hour cease-fire, govcrn-
mc.11l headquarters announced.
No major ground fighting was reported,
but more than a score of enemy soldiers
\\'ere reported killed and some Americans
v.ounded in small skinnishes touched off
by allied reconnaissance patrols. ·
A spokesman for lhc U.S. Command
said allied ope.rations would continue as
usua l until 6 p.m. Wedne.sday .-5 a.m.
EST -when a 24-h()\ft. allied ctase--fire is
scheduled to begin.
U.S. B S2s dropped more lhan 1,000 ton~
of bombs during thil\ldl_~oss an area
about 90 miles north Of-Saigon and about
lv;o and a half miles from \he Bu Dop
Special Forces camp. About .half the
raids v.'ere flown arter the Viet Coni::
truce began. U.S. spokesmen said the
raids were a spoiling action to pre vent a
buildup for the offensive wme American
commande rs expect in early February,
coincident with the lunar new year
festival known as Tel.
Forty-five minules after the Viet Cong
cease-fire began, an American and South
Vietnamese reconnaissance team spotted
about 20 enemy soldiers 25 miles from
the Bu Dnp Special Forces camp. About
half the Taids were flown alter the Viet
O>ng truce began. U.S. spok~smen said
the raids were a spoiling action to pre·
vent a buildup for the offensive tome
American commanders expect ln early
February, coincident with the lunar new
year festivai knOWI\ as Tl!t.
A 15 percent increase in Social Securi·
ly benefits for all recipients becomes ef·
fective Jan. 1, with the first higher pay ..
ment due early In April.
'Tax Extensions.
The income tax surcharge, which has
been 10 percent, is cut to five percent
through June 30, 1970, and eliminattd en·
lirely after that.
Present excise laxes of 10 percent on
telephones and seven per cc. n t on
automobiles are extended for one year, to
Dec. 31," 1970.
Tax reforms: .
A 10 percent minimum tax i.cl applied
against a broad list of preference items,
including some oil income, capital gains
and acceleratad real estate depreciation.
But the taxpayer can subtract from hi1
preference income what he .pays in
normaf federal income tax before a~
plyin& the 10 percent levy.
Persons moving more than SO mlles a.re
permitted to deduct moving expenses, in-
cluding such ilems as the expense of pre·
move house-huting.
Hobby farmers who sell their l~nd will
have the sale price taxed as ordinary ln·
come rather than the lower capital ·saJn
rate to the extent of the operating losses
previously claimed. This applies only to
those with $50,000 of nonfann ihcome for
the year and wilh farm losses in excess
of $25,000. .
Losses on a hobby not carried on for
profit cannot be claimed as credit on in·
come. ·
ExceptionaUy fast tax write-offs now
available for commercial and industrial
buildings are disallowed. There is a
~mailer reductiqn in the liberal depreeia·
lion now available on used buildings, in·
eluding apartm«ints.
On ca pita l gains income in excess of
$50,000, the rate becomes half of the
normal income lax rate or a maximum
35 percent, instead of the present 25
percent maximum.
Ice, Snow,
Tornadoes •
PerilEast -
By _United Preis International
A new snow and ice storm hit the
r.tidwest, the South, and the southern
plains today as New Englanders read
more bad weather predictions after a
hea\I)' weekend snowstorm.
Tornadoes and severe thunderstorms
carrying large hail and winds threatened
parts of southeastern Louisiana, southern
and eastern Mississippi and western and
northern Alabama .
The weather bureau forecast light
snow, sleet or freezing rain moving north
and east across New England would af.
feet all the area but northern and ea.stern
f.faine by \Vednesday.
Rain and some thunderslonns rolled
fr om south and east Texas across the
Tennessee Valley to the mid-Atlantic
1s1ates.
Snow. sleet or freezing rain fell north of
the rain area from eastern New f.fexico
to Ohio and Pennsylv3nia. -
The weather cleared in the northeast
but dozens of New England communities
remained in a state of emergency. More
than 13,000 rural homes in Vermont were
still without electricity today.
Power was restored at Gardner, Masl'i.,
but falllng tree limbs threatened to undo
th~ repairs. Five Civil Ai r Patrol planes
planned to comb the western part of the
state today in an effort to locate
n\otorists stranded by the nearly 40-lnc~
snowfall which blocked highways and
p:evented fuel and food deliveries.
Maine officials estimated flood damage
at $1 million. Civil Defense officlala sid
flood danger from the Kennebec and
Androscoggin Rivers was receding.
Deadline Looms
Wednesday for
Disne y Awards
Deadline for Disneyland Community
Service Awards is midnight Wednesday,
Or. Arnold 0. Beekma n, awards COill"
mittee chairman, warned today.
"More than 200 organization.. have IDed
'noUce <'I inttnl' to take part i1 this
year's awards program," Dr. Beckman
said. 1'All must complete their a~
plicatJons and place them in the mall by
Wednesday if they intend to participate."
Cash awards totaling $30,000 are
available -to 24 winning organizitions in
Orange County. Top award of $5,CX» ,will
go to lhe organization that in the opinion
of Uie· awards committee 1;arried out th&
most outstanding community service pro:
gram in the COt1nty during 1969.
In addition, tJ:iere are three $2,500
awards, three $1 ,500 awards, nine $1,000
awards and eight $500 award1. .
Winners of the 1969 Disneyland Com·
munity Service Awards will be IMOIJl'ICed
at a.luncheon in February when they will
be presented.
Representatives of ~ch parUclpaUng
cirganizallon will be invited to attend the
luncheon. The award presentation in
February will be the 13th annuaL
Since the inception of the awards pro-
gram in 1957, more than 1,600 orpnJz.a.
lions have parLicipated and Disneyland
has distributed nearly $200,000 at
organizations in Orange County through..
184 ·awards. "
Banker Jack R. lligley of Huntington
Beach is on this year's awards com·
mittee whlch includes Dr. Beckman,
chairman: Mrs. William S. HOlatein ••
Corona del Mar; Justin M. Kennedy, San..
ta Ana; Mrs. Lawrence K. Reynolds ••
Laguna Beach, and Rabbi Aaron J.
Tofield, Anaheim.
"I have. been up all night waiting for
some MWS but the.re hasn't bttn a
thing,'' her husband , Alex McKay , told 1
r~l!r today. "What could have hap-
pened? 1 have no idea. All 1 know la that
my wile isn't here and she ha.~ ne\le.r
Forty-five minutes after the Viet Cong
1;eHst·flre began. ~n American and South
Vlt:?tnamesc rcconnai~ancc team spotted
about 20 enemy 90ldlers 2S mile"
northwest of Saigon. The alli~ troops
opened Ure with rifles and machine guns,
kllllng seven of lhe enemy and scattering
the other s. No allied casualtie.5 were
rtrorted.
~'That'• ri9ht, big mouthl Tall evtrybody how 9rt1 af the weathet f1
and we'll hive another ID mllllon ~I• moving out h1rel"
been away before.·• ·
"
I •
. ' . ; ~ . . ,· .. ,···
• t·" DAILY PILOT -.-30,1969
IC-llM •'I' .. CMIW' l"fJlf Stam ' . -~Ogden Nall>, the American writ-
ilt and humorist, has problems with
ost office. "Stamps still taste
pat · they-won't ·stick,'~ Nash
in a letter to the New York
Siit -wlllcifbe eomp!aliled that
lij! had to use eellu!O.e tape to keep
"lamps from :falling off,Jtls letters.
'll claim lbat lhe po6\'o!fice should ~pply a roll of Scotch tape wilh
•ery 100 Stamps, but inine won't Ill'•• sell me one. I'd. like. to go ,
l!lck where I C811Je from: 1902." , . t~Millworker Parks Whl11nant of
hnston, S.C. started ·living for a
ear two years ago by d;:i;ing
&pare coins in the gas ol
old car. He emptied .the .. riovel
· the other day, and it' CQlllain. $895. .
l • .• :~ "The hippie may be the van-
, ·:oua:rct of the middle class as totil
~ its offshoot," a Rutgers Uni-
,;versity professor says, and hiP"
:•pie communes may trigger a re-
i versal of the decay of urban· ·~neighborhoods. Dr. George W.
'i(:arey told o session of th«
~mer-ieat&:Association for the Ad-
n.t 'of Sc:ience in Boston
lie 11/e ·stylu ln hippie
itiea attract the .atten-.
· of the ma11 me(Ua. wh.ich m.
drows COl1l)OJ:'IOlitan mem-
of ,the upper classes, who in
~rn ~ttract new shops, housing ~Jopment.1 and profesrional
2ntere~tl.
'I . •
ope P•ul VI has urged Roman
lie:s to help those who live in
conditions. The pontiff, who
a ·Chirstmas visit to a Rome
UPITt ........
THESE ARE THE QUARTERS THAT JAMES EARL RAV PROTl!STEO TO JUDOE
Fiie Photos Show Maximum Securlty'Call block and Ray's Slx0by-nlnt Foot Ctll
Judge Orders Job for Ra.y
King's Assassin Says Solitary 'Cruel, Inhuman'. •
NASllVIILE, Tenn. (AP) -A federal
itklae baa ordered llate prison clflclals lo
find ...,.tblD& to occupy James Earl
Ray'• lime wbile aerving a 99-year
sentenoe for slaying Dr. Marlin Luther
KJng Jr.
After a hearing Monday on Ray's peti-
tion for meue from maximum security
conflnemen4 U.S. Dist. Court Judge
William E. Miller lold prison officials lo
come up with a plan incorporating
.. recreation, work and exercise" for the
'prltooer by Jan. 12.
Ray, who pleaded guilty last March 10
lo lbe sniper slaying of King, testified he
would rather face the possibility of being
killed by another convict than to spend.
"99 years in !()Ii~."
He cootend<d !bat lbe condl!i0111 of
Israelis Deny
Eqyptian Claim
Of Suez Raid
By 'l1IE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The military C9fllln8Ild in Cairo said to-
day Egyptian commandos raided an
lsraell settlement on the eastern shore or
the Gulf of Suez and left it ablaze, but
mlltmum security eon 11 n em en I Ray did not specify any partlcolar job,
amounted to cruel and inhuman treat-however saying "it ls bad to aat for
menl in violaUon of his coootltutional ·-••·; In -•··u~ thal ~~. --·---·· -The st.ate opposed Ray's bid for~ .. you'll never get it." .
penqisslon to mingle wilh other W. S. Nell, the penitentiary warden,
prilonen, contending his life might be suggested that Ray might belp iuard•
endangered and his chances for escaping M.rVe food to other convicta In maximum
would be greater. l'eCurity and lend a hand with janitorial
Ray spent almost two hours on the duties within the mulmum security
witness stand, describing tile in bis six building.
feet by nine feet cell at the peajtentiary Judging by Ray's expression, he was
here. less than aallified with the proposal.
Judge Miller ~sked Ray what kind of "Enforced idleness can be cruel punish-
work he would like to perform. ment, '' Miller said, "particularly when it
"I wouldn't mind doing dishes, digging is only to protect him from bodily harm."
ditches, anything," Ray replied, adding He said he would reserve final judgment
lbat he preferred "to be ouf.5ide as lllllCb until ht· r<Vlewed ·the prison officials'
as I can." plan.
Court Roling Sought
_Manson Will Ask Help
From Lawyers in Trial
'k_ Peter's Square for his Suh!fay
1..,,tytown parish, told thousands ~Peter's Square for his Sunday o~n blessing: "Reflect on the per·
-Israel denied it.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney
says Charles M. Manson now plans to ask
for lawyers to help him represent himself
when be comes to trial in the Sharon Tate
murder case.
quest for folnt coun&el by professionals,
McKinack said, the question will bl
taken to the Calilomia Court of Appeal.
nce1 on the revival of these in-
an conditions in which so many
r people are living • men, wom-<Jren who are our brothers
t.'' ' . .
The 8DDOW1CelDellt ovc;,r Cairo radio
said the Egyptian commandos crossed
the gulf before midnight Mooday and at·
tacked Israeli .military positions at El
Torr.
"This potllion eomprl9es a missile
base, a paratrooper camp and artillery
batteries wbldt ' were ell des~ l!Y
Egyptian rockets," the Cairo command
said. "No enemy· force intercepted the
commando mllilon."
1lls ii M the i9cu>d clalm of a com·
' · ~-rttd wttbln !be pest 48 hours.
Egj'J\ '"'ported an attack Sunday by
naval' commandos destroyed the Israeli
gulf p..ttlon al Itaa Dehlshe.
The Israeli mllit>ry command In Tel
Aviv denied C&iro's claims.
"No lsrJell·unlt, camp or vehicle was
attacked Cf' shelled or ln any way hit or
destroyed ·as ~ Egyptiam claim," a
military spokesman said.
The spokesman did say there ex-
plosions Were i-eported ln a desolate area
north al El Tori on the Gull of Suez on
Mondoy· lllgbt.
"The nature or the explosions was not
yet'kpoWn,"arid It was possible that they
were c:onnected with the Egyptian
claims," tbe 11pOkesman added.
Luke McKissack, a lawyer who
specializes in criminal Jaw, told newsmen
Monday: "Manson neVtt said he wanted
to solely represent himself, but he wants
a •oice,in hil own defense ao the Jury will
get to know blnt."
McKissack said Manson will ask
Superior Court' later this Week or next
Monday to permit McKissack to argue
the merits or joint oouniet.
Judge William B. Keene gave
permission last week for Manson to be
his own attorney. He told the 35-year~ld
defendant that be c:ould seek advice from
professional lawyers but c:ould have no
co-council.
"You're going to call all the shots
yourself," Keene said.
Keene's clerk, Edie Hollenbeck. said as
things now stand Manson would question
prospective jurors pttsonaUy, present his
own opening statement if he wishes to
make one, examine and cross uamine all
witnesses and make hls own closln1
arguments.
If Superior Court turns down the rO.
Manson, bearded and long*haired cult
leader, is charted with murder along
with four of his followers in the gunshot~
J...llifing deaths last Aug. 9 of Miss Tate
and four other persons at the Benedict
Canyon estate' of the actress.
The ume fi.,,., and a mu,. ~efehdant
are charged also With the knife slaylngs
of a wealthy market owner and his wife.
Two of the defendant!, both held in
other states, filed legal notice Monday
that Ibey will continue t<I ~&bi-.,. ·
tradition.
In Austin, Tex., Charles D. Watson's
attoi'ney maintained that his cUent, now
in custody at McKinney, Tex., could not
receive a fair trial In Calilornia.
A hearing on Watson's extradition Is
set for next Monday.
On that same day in Mobile, Ala.,
Circuit Judge Joseph M. Hocklander will
hear arguments on a motion for defen-
dant Patricia Krenwinkel's releaSe from
th"e Mobile County Jail on a writ of
habeas cocpus.
Gov. Albert Brewer earlier had
given his approval for Miss Krenwinkel's
removal to Califcrnia.
~eddy Knie, ··Jr., of Switzerland,
i~s an back of only trained rh.ino-
JC~.! in the world during a perform·
~~of Cirkus Krone' in Munich-, W.
·~any.
Czech Embassy Chief
Asks Swiss Asylum
BERN, Switz.erland (AP) -Radko Fa·
jfr, cwncillor ml. charge d'affaires of
the Czechoslovak Embassy In Bern, has
as ked for asylum in Switzerland, Swiss
authoriti es announced today.
Humphrey Def ends Stand
In Salt Lake City Speech
~.
The announcement said his request was
under study by Swiss police.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)
Fonner Vice President Hubert Hum-
phrey said Monday that after his speech
~M·ost of Nation 'Still Cold
•'. ..
'.\Southland Chilly, But Most Enjoy Sun1iy Weather
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in Salt Lake City, Utah, last September,
the South Vietnamese said they would bl
willing to enter peace negotiations.
•lumphrey, in an interview with UPI,
gaid "I thought I did what I had to do and
what I thought Wu right at Salt Lake Ci·
ty."
In that speech. delivered Sept. 30, he
eaid he would halt the bombing of North
Vietnam if he wt.re elected presidenL
Former President Lyndon B. Johnson,
In a recent national television interview,
:i;aid he believed Humphrey's speech cost
him the "few thousand" votes needed to
put him In the White House.
Johnson contended that South Vi~t·
namese officials had berome "concerned
enough .•. that they decided they would
not go to the peace table until after the
election, or that ttiey would hold back."
When ask~ if he though the speech
caused the South Vietnamese te stay
away from the peace table, Humphrey
replied, "No, I certainly don't."
"In fact. if you'll recall, the SOuth
Vietnamese said after my speech thlt
they would be willing to come to the
conference table," be added.
"I frankly UUn'lt it was dupliclt1 an
!heir part. I lbint Ibey lhougjlt Ibey
would get a better deal from Mr, NI.ton
and so Ibey decided to stay 11roy 1!J1Ul
after the election to see what would bap-
pe11," Aid Humphrey.
''1lley told LyndOn Jolln90n Ibey would
do one lbing and Ibey went al¥f and !lid
another. I tblnt Ibey were just thinking
or themselves," he said.
Nixon Promotes MD
WASHINGTON CUPiJ -Pn!Gdinl
Nixon has promotod bis -al-White
llou!e physician, Alr Foroe Col. Wallet
R. Tkach. $1, ol LlbeOe, Pa .. to the rank
of brigadier (tllml
~ .... ------
VPtn.M.ua I• I .I ... .
Agnew Cheere(l~J
Visits Memorial
MANILA (AP) ~ Vite Prealdent Spiro
T. Agnew wu warmly, applauded today
as he attended lnauguril cefemonies for
Philippine President Ferdinand E •
Marcos and laid a wreath at a monument
to American World War Jl dead.
·The vie< president also ~ what he
termed an ' ' ext r em e 1 y productive"
meeting with South Kcrean Premier
Chung Il·kwon at whiCh he reaffirmed
President Nixon's vow to ntalnlain the
U.S. commitment to that Asian ally.
Agnew's second day In All& .pam;ed
without a renewal of the hoatlle
demonstration Monday night in which an
ei:plosive and a rock were thrown ·at bis
car. Asked about the demoostrallool, the·
vice ~dent aald "I think lllat lbe few
demonatralors that showed up the.re -
rather rambunctious ·ones -didn't reaDy
amount to much.
"We're just going to have to get used to
that as a ,tactic or modern life," he ad-.
ded, saying be didn't think they were
representative of the Philippine people.
In his talks wiUt .the. South Korean
premier, Agnew said he discussed the
Senate-House fight over $50 million in un·
budgeted military aid for Sou\h Korea.
He said he explained the issue was when
such aid should be voted rather than
whether the United States should stand
by South Korea.
Asked whether he told Chung that
Pre.sident Nixon would sign the aid bill
even if it includes the extra aid he didn't
request, Agnew said, 14Yes, I did."
Referring to the Korean force in Viet-
nam, Agnew said "there are no plans, the
prime minister· told me, lo withdraw any
Korean troops at the present lime."
After the meeUng and a 10.mlnute news
conference, Agnew drove to the nearby
American cemetery at Ft. A.. Bonifacio,
Connerly Ft. William McKinley, where
l 7",206 Americans are buried and the
names of SS,?.89 war dead are inscribed
on marble portals.
Walking through the memorial, Agnew
Chrysler Closes
Plants for Week
DETROIT (AP) -One-week layoffs
have been ordered for all Chrysler Corp.
assembly plant workers. About 37,700
employes wW be affected.
Two plants at Detroit will be closed
from Jan. 5 throogh Jan. IO along with
assembly planta in Newark, Del .• Los
Angeles and St. Louis, Mo.1 the an·
nouncement Mooday said.
During the second week in January,
another Detroit assembly plant's opera-
tions will be curtailed along. wilb plants
tn Belvidere, Ill., and Wind~, Ont.
Moose Leader Dies
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. 'AP) -Orville
R. GlOlyoo, 56, world leader ~ supreme
governor of The Loyal Order of Moose
died Monday in an Indianapolis. hospital.
He was elected bead of the Moose last
munmer and was president oC the Indiana
Brass Co. at Frankfort.
llOl>l*f at the seal of Maryland, or which
he WIS f>Ventor as a Navy band played
"Maryland, My Maryland." Several hun·
dred representatives of P h i 11 pp i n 1
veterahs• groups applauded him.
the same friendly reception greeted
him at Ute Marcos inaugural.
POW Gifts
Ready; Will
8uss Agree?
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Texas
billionaire H. R068 Perot still was op-
timistic today as he prepared for the
final leg of his around-the-world race
against time to get belated Christmas
presents to U.S. servicemen held prisoner
in North Vietnam.
Perot arrived here from Bangkok,
Thailand, Monday afternoon to repackage
an assortment Of medical supplies,
clothing and food before continuing to
Copenhagan in Denmark, and hopefully
then to Moscow in a chartered Boeing 707
jet.
Twelve hours later, the 25 tons of cargo
worth about $400,000 was broken down in~
to approximately 1,500 ind iv id u a I
packages. The job was done by more
than 1,000 Anchorage residents, who
answered a call frun the Red Cross.
"The North Vietnamese don't bellevt:
that we care about our men in Vietnam,'"
Perot said. "I only wish that they coold
be here to see how much Anchorage
cares.
The 39-year-old Dallas comp uter
magnate was denied pennission last
week ·to fly the supplies and gifts tC> thl
POWs after spending three days in Vien-
tiane, Laos, calling on North Vietnamese,
Soviet and Pathet Lao officials.
But the Texan, who left Dallas Dec. 21,
was told by representatives of Hanoi that
if he turned over his cargo to Soviet
postal authorities in Moscow by midnight
Qee. 31, it might reach North Vietnam.
"They put the deadline on us thinking
we would not make it," he said. "But we
will."
Perot said his efforts to deliver gifts to
the estimated 1,400 American military
men held either in North Vietnam <ll
Laos began with a small boy in Texas.
"Why, I just happened to meet a 4'h.~
year-0ld boy named Jeffers who had
never setn his father. His father ls a
prisoner," 'Perot said. "Jeffers did not
know If his dad is alive or dea.d. lt
started With that and evolved into this."
Time was running out when Perot'•
chartered plane arrived at the Anchorage
International Airport Monday. So the Red
Cross issued an appeal for volunteers to
wrap Ute cargo into small packages fQr
mailing Moscow.
The appeal brought private citizen~.
military personnell and members of
groups ranging from the Girl Scouts to an
anti-Vietnam war moratorium committee
to an airport hanger to package, weigh
and label the supplies.
Window Cleaner Rescued
A window cleaner on the 473-foot Simpson's Tower in Toronto grabs
of ledge after being hauled up by a rope from a cradle he and an·
other man were standing on. When the cradle became jammed under
a roof overhang, a building maintenance employe lowered himselJ on
a rope , tied the rape around each man's waist and one by one they
were hauled to oalety. , , , _ -
•
(
I
' 1
l
•
'; . . . I •"--n.,, ., • • . • . .,-r.,
·I
Fountain Today's FhiaJ
' ' . N. Y. Stoek.8
; -. • I , •
VOL 62, NO. 312. 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, '1969 TEN CENTS OAANG"E COONT.Y::,~RNll\
~'--~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-:-~~~~~~~~~~~.--~~~~~~~~·~~~-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
• I .
--~~G~;rtain . .. Court Action for .. '
Youth"s Last Wish
Valley Boy's Gifts to Fairview
DIED THINKING OF OTHERS
FV'• Richard Campbell
Beach, Building
Slated to Hit
$100 Million
Building pern1its in Huntington Beach
wrre expected to top the magic $100
million mark today, the highest total in
the city's history by $20 million.
Permits issued in December lo date
total more than $12 n1illion bringing the
yearly total to over $93 mil lion, Building
and Safety Depart1nent aids reported.
Scheduled to be issued today are
permits for 156 apartment units to the J.
JI. Hedrick Co. o( San Gabriel. Valuation
of the units is $1.939,000 which will push
the permits for the year over the $100
million mark .
The highest total previously was $80
rnillion in 1963. The $100 million figure far
e1i:cced s totals for the past two years of
$64 million for 1968 and $57.S millioi"I in
1967.
Build ing Direc tor OUin C. ''Jack"
Cleveland attributed this yea r's record·r
breaking tota.1 to an increase in apart·
ment building brought on by the tight
n1oncy n1arket.
The new fi gure is rema rka ble in-
asmuch as it wss achieved despite the
money situa tion and a strike during the
year of hea vy equipment operators and
plumbers.
Although apartment units topped single
family homes by almost two to one dur·
ing the year. moneywise the homes ac·
counted for 30 percent m.:ire of the total.
Building permits climbed consistently
throughout the year ·with the previous $80
million fotal being exceeded by the end or
October.
Neal Appointed
To league Unit
City Manager James Neal of Fountain
Valley has been named to the finance
rommittee of the California League of
Cities.
Neal was: placed on the 22-member.
committee Dec. 12. lie is one of only two
<'ity managers on the finance committee.
Mos t. members are directors of finan ce
or city treasurers.
NCal recently spearheaded develop-
ment of Fountain Valley's ten.year plan
Ylhich outlines budgetary needs with
$ervlce.s that must be provldtd for the
next decade.
PILOT FUTURAMA
INSIDE TODAY
The DAILY PILOT's armual report on
progress aod growth in the Orange Coast ma's business and industry community,
com bined wllh a look Into the economic
future, appearg Inside today.
The special FUTURAMA s e ct I on
(eatures artJcles, photographs and ads
which tell the story of the Orange Coast's
l.hrlvfng commercial Jife. Be 31.rre to read
FUT1JRAMA 1970, inside today.
f _
By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
ot Ill• o.nv '1"' s1.tt
He had Christmas gifts he would never
use and he chose to share them, beeause
many unfortunates had nothing to look
forward to.
He asked that they go to Fairview State
Hospital patients.
Shortly after. at 8:15 p.m. on
Christmas Eve, he died.
Richard Campbell, 19, of 9680 Dove Cir·
cle. Fountain Valley, had worked as a
volunteer helper at the facility for the
mentally retarded in Costa Mesa.
"Mostly with the little kid11~d hls
18-year-<ild sister Beth, who went to the
state hospital on Christmas Day to
deliver the Hot Wheeb model car set,
each component brightly wrapped.
The administrative staff was off, so
she gave them to a switchboard operator.
"It's the big set," SBJd a hospit.il.l
spokesman Monday. "It ·will fill half a
room. My boy has one."
The novel new hobby layout features
race cars built with spaceage-style nylon
bearings, powered by gravity but souped
up by a supercharger Wlit inside a
roadway tunnel.
Young Campbell was interested in that
sort of thing.
The 1969 Fountain Valley High School
graduate was a freshman majoring in
mathematics at Orange Coast College. .
"He was going to be a nuclear
physicist ." said his sister.
Boys in Ward 344 at the · hospital -
Campbell's age, but with Jess k!arning
capaci!Y to match their similar interests
-will spead many happy hours with hls
iift. . , , •. , , I
~igger, faster wheels led to Campbell'•
death.
He was riding w1~ a 16-year-<ild
neia:hbor the last. day o{ hi& life, whtn the
boy lost control of t.be tar on i:I Toro
Road, west of Trabuco Rold in the Irvine
area.
The vehicle burUed aidewayr; into
·a utility pole. ·
Campbel: was taken to Huntington
Jntercommunity Hospital with a crushed
chest, aware he was in very grave con-
dition.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging, ruptured
liver, multiple thorascic fractures. , . "
said an Orange County coroner's deputy
detailing the causes of death. ·
Campbell left his father Richard, his
mother, Mrs. Dolores Topalian, of the
Fountain Valley home address, sisters
Beth, Pam and Dawn.
His funeral was Saturday · and .he is
buried in Westminster Memorial Park.
Q~estioned about obituary information,
Beth Campbell mentioned that he went to
Huntington Beach High School for one
year before finishing up at the Fountain
Valley campus.
\Vas there anything else that should be
told abou t the youth who thought of Un·
fortunates when he realized there was no
longer much point in thinking of himsell?
"No, that's all," said Beth.
Rose Kennedy Visits
Onassises in Greece
ATHENS, Greecl! fAP)-Rose Kennedy,
widow of Joseph P. Kennedy and mother
of Ule la te president, arrived in Athens
today to spend the new year's holiday .
with Mr. and Mr.;. Aristotle Ona~is. Mrs.
Onassis, widow of president John F. Ken·
n~y, returned to Greece Sunday from
England with he.~ children, Caroline and
John.
SPINNING THEIR WHEELS -Bored with Christ·
mas vacation, these La Mirada teenagers pedaled
their bicycles 20 miles down the road to see what
was h11ppening in Hunt~ngton :Beach; From left are
DAll.Y PILOT IWf "!!019 Dave Allen. Shelley Strickli n, Robin Maulfair;Jane
Vasquez, Becky Moses, Lynn Famy ahd Dorothy
NereU.
Taxes, Mines, Defense
Nixon Signs Major Bills,
. .
Heads fdr ·sm .. ffielnertte
By ME!IRIMAN SMITH
w AsiiiNc1oil (U~IJ :.. ~,.,(dent Nix·
on today signed three major bills into
law -tax reforin, mine safety and de.
fense appropr iations -before leaving
!or a holiday stay·in Southern California.
, The fax reform bill and the mine safe-
ty bill were slgned despite Nixon's ob·
jections to some of their features,1 In each
case, he said the good features of the
bills outweighed the bad. ' ·
The $69.6 billion budge t for military
hardware had been cut $6 billion by Con·
gress after a bitter struggle over costs
and arms. needs.
The President a1.1d Mrs. Ni.xon .were to
fly to the Western Whlte ·Hoose in:San
Clemente in mi~ a£ternoon. 'Ibey will
return to Washington the weekend Of
Jan. If, a week or so before Congi'ess
convenes again.
Nixon is expected to, ask Congress to
pass new taxes, b1,1t wHI pro~u;ibly wait.
until his State of the Unloh address Jan.
22 to SRCll out what he · has in 'mind. It
is almost. certainly likely however, to in-
clude a "value added" tax, in which a
tax is added at each stage of the manu-
facturing process.
Congress has passed an unbalanctd bill
that is both good and bad," Nixon said
in a statement released by the White
I-louse. "The tax reforms, on Ute whole,
are good ; the effect on the budjet· ai:id on
the cost of living is bad."
Nixon said he approved the measure
because the improvements in tax fair .. ·
ness through the reforms outbalance the
inflationary impact from the $9.1 billion
tax cut the bill carries.
The hill ·provides tax relief for 63 mil·
lion Americans and includes a 15 percent
boost in Social Security benefits and
loophole<losing reforms.
.. r.or Ille (lrsl ,tilll4I jupaye~1 wjU aee
·the effecla of the bill.will b6 in thdr, P•Y·
check for the fiht Wttk ot the .ntW year
when the J)retent · 10 percent tax sur·
charge· goes down tO 5 percent That will
diminish the Lax .withholding slightly. The
suri;:h.arge is acheduled t,O expire com ..
pletely June 30, 1970:
· The tax reductio'n results chiefly ftom a tllree year 'tncrease in 'ttie ' f600 in-
come tax personcil exem'ption. Jt Will rise
lo $650 in July to S700 in January and to
$750 in Januaty 1973. The bill also grants
special tax relier · filr '12· nUUion poor
and near.poor taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy
told newsmen at .the White ,HQUSe 4fter
the Presldeflt·e:l(ned lhe bill thafthe'.rhea·
sure enacted by the Democratic Con·
gress made Nixon's bulgelary· problems
even more severe.
But Kennedy side~epped qu~stions
abatu' wtiether the President would , ask
Congress next year to ·iilcrease taxes,
possibly through a "value-added taX.''
This is a form of exci'se tax on manufac·
tured goods. · · ·
Kennedy , acknowledged that' the tree~
ury department hu been studying the
value added tax but he said it was only
"one of the areas that is un~er study.''
.Stock Marke(•
. NEW YORK (APl-.'tbe •tock 111arkel
flexed il.5 r'thet flabby muscles late .this
afternoon in an ~effort W pull 1out of a
mild decilne. <&ee quolaUOJH'i .. Pages
10.11 ). '
The margin· oT declines over ad\l'ances
anwng. individual• issues traded on the
New York Stock Exchanged .Summed to ·
about 100 from nearly 400.
La Mirada Kids
Bike to Beac1i
For 'Adventure'
I ·, if' '
· H•nti ngtoo Bea<:H lj 'l 1q way li'.Plll
La Mire'da. About 20· miles. '
But if you're a teenager,· bored· with
Christmas vacation, and wotild rather do
something jhan •it on your bandt1 K's not
too far to go to the Beach. Evert if yOU
have to cover the distance by bk:ycle.
And that's exactly what seven kids
decided to do· Mondciy.
They took off from their La Mirada
homes at 7:30 a.m. and arrived at the
Hun.tington Beach pier three hOW's later.
only ·ro find out that the weather con..
ditlons wfre a bit too chilly for a dip in
the ocean. ..
.. The water w~to go swim-
ming, So we 'just relaxed, walked ·around
town, ate· and -met people." said Becky
Moses, 15, leader of the entourage.
Despite chilling and gustji winds that
reacbed up to 50 miles per hour, they
weie ped&.ling homeWard around· 2 p.rit.
in high spirit.~ when they were spotted by
a nosy newsman near Talbert Avenue
and Bea~h B:oul~yard, ,
·"We just Wanted to do something
adventurous," explained r i n g l e a d e r
Becky. "NobOdy believed that we would
do it. It's the first Ume·we did sDmethini
like ii, and I tbirik it will be the last."
. She \l.'~s accompani~ pn the trip by ·
Dave Allen, 16; Shelley Stricklin, 15; ~in MaUlfair, 16; Jarie Visque'z, 15;
Lynn Farily,· 14, and Dorothy Neren, 15.
Tycoon Indicted
In Plot .to Kill
'
Wife, 5 'Others
Valley Imbalance Cited
MODESTO (AP) ·-Mllllonaire real
estate ·t'ycoon Jack Van , Slel1e'. w11 in·
dieted late Monday night by a Slaillalaus
County grand jury on charges Of con-
spiracy to · murder his former wife, a
Sacramento judge and four attomeya.
SUperlor Coort Judge WUllom Zoll
Issued a bench warrant for Van Sickle's
return to Californta. van Sickle, 53, was arrested Dec. t 'Jn
n:n;~~~~d ~:'J;11~ h~r=~ bail.
The indictment saiJ·van Sickle p81d a
State .Edict Won't Affect Most Coast Schoou
A State Board of Educ.ation directive
that school districts work' on achieving
better racial balance may cause prob-
lems in Santa Ana and Los Angeles, but
.apparently will not affect the predomin-
anUy Caucasian Orange Coast area.
Only Fountain Valley School Distrid
along the coast received nodfication and
it already is outdated by a change in at.
tendance resulting in lea imbalance thll
achoo1 year.·
The •tat< edict II Utat acltoola within
a achoo! district be subslanUali1 ho.lanc-
ed so One school is not. me1tly· all black
or brown and another 'mostl.1 a11 white.
tn Slnta Ana and Los Angeles, school
offlclals said, the only cancetvable way
or doing thL~ la by busJng large number•
of studen ts to more distant 1ehool&.
FOl!nlain Valley Elementary Supt.
Michael Brick did Hl!amat.sa Tamura
School ha• IU perc"1I Spani!b 111rname
studenta compared to the school district
averagt or 4.1 percent Spanish sumamt.
~~
The diffcrenct ~r 13.7 percent, however,
falls within the permissible variation of
15 pereent the state wbl allow.
Notification to the Fountein Valley Dittrkt was ba!td on an October. ·1968
state!ide 1 surv.ey. A atudy m a d e lalt
October-haan\ yet been . """' Brick • Nill a lett<r ~ w,ri\len to '
the Bureau <I lntet1roop• JlellUons of· the :
Stai. Board of EduCaUon llltinll Tamura
School complies 1flth the bolrd'• order •. No aUenctance ""'•""••"'-wor& changed, ' Bl'lck, sata, it)/,;\"l!T-'..1!'.> $1! way be-.
c·atase· Of alil&e1it•· w:;'~ p&ilk:ularly ,
by graduaUon.
Tamura School serve• Ult clty's Juam
ColO<ly.
Brick said he sees it as an advaot.ap
having many of the Spaniab speaking
lludenla grouped •I· one · ICbool. 1'be ·
ochool' diMct wllll federal lundl Is able
to employ cultural 1111111'1' ucl clevelOf>'
ment teacher Sam Rodriquez and an •
aid< lo work wllll the atudents.
ti ' .
Or. William Dolph, s~perintendent Modesto man, whose name is being el~t or the Weslmlnster Element'ry Dis· withheld, $2,500 to arrange the killing of
tfict. said Webber · School" is ·m(Jfe than his ex-wife; Belh,•allegedly becawie: ol bi's
IS percent ,over the ,school dtstrlct aver.. dissatisfaction with their divorce aet·
;ige. l\'a Spanish surname wcentage l! · tle~:n~ M-. Van Sl.c"e's .~ .. ,__ told
21 percent. The c!Wict average la 7.8 the~ granc1.'iuri• the · ~vorte'T'~:;, lll-~ceDI-. I . .>;. " • I ed ---• ' , -The ochaol board at. Ila last meetmg . vo v ' ~·~~•IY •property ' al · ...
v""....a to ......... pi .. 'rib the lffllt it s'-ll)illjon.. · , 1 • • ""'" ,...., .. ~·· ' .JOIJ• ' ..,, ...... •.l·"c•-. •t -'d o.~•ca Jficlals, · a sla~ of. IJl!<nt'lll•. JtOl>Jan will be" .,,. ""' ·1~•· ... "" -sWdleil;·bo Mid. E;vicr.nce of procrop in , learning of Ille plan, -plaoed· Kr8',0V1n · ol&nnlii.r.\o. C!l'i:ect ·tlie .Jm~ wtll s~ in sec~on; ·U..Wer,....,11 hi~• to-;lie·Mllltl!lll•chby ~J ... ,1, w....l;to-Vansl~~ ga>e ,h!ni-b.,.wallel ·
ht nqted. 1 j •, ' .aiicl ~Jd him.,.s!>e Jfll}~,+ '. I I ,
JM wilh,onlY live ~ of atuilents ,V111 Sickle then pald,tbem,M,o!IO In·•
to move at•...,. llCbooWt ohoWd nol-f111We Nevada night.spot, the \ndlctment "td.
a lfell prol>lem,. Adlacent ICboola Will-The indictment Mid •~au SIQlile ollo
mot'e ' aqit StventetnOt Str~t have ~ly dfscusse<f afranglng th&, k1lllop of
JI percent Bpanlsh· .....,_, Dr, Dotpll Sacramento County .. Sllpefior ~ Jucf&e said. . , . . Slllf•y Reektn. .satr•-'<> Miomejt .
M011' dllllcllh la, !lie ~·lri'SMll A!>!Jloey Scll'fl and Clarence P-. ucl Ana. l'f1""""8 ol> tht .A .~II •In t!J< • a San'l'rahci!cO ltlotnif llsi.d only ia dfllrlcf tlW 'lmbllanet<I, a~ lo Ille "John .J:lot." -All nri lmtved in the m.i. lartt1111L · ' dJVorce case.
~
Board Nears
Ruliitgon
Expansion
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of tlll Deity Pn.t tl•tf
Sout.her:n California Edison Company'3
appeal in the denial of their permit to et·
pand the Huntington Beach power plant
went into its third day today in Anaheim.
After Monday's. hearing before th&
Orange County Air Pollution Control
Dis!rlct (APCD) appeala board, It· ap.
peared lltat Ille denial would be upheld by
the board, sending the cue WO Superio:
Court.
Deputy County Counsel James Urnan
1aid tQday the ca.!le will· go to cour.
regardl~ of the. board's ruling. "They'll
appeal in court Uthe denial Is. upbeld and
we·u · appeal if it's reversec:r:'"
The county'! case, Urban laid; fa .hued
on two regulations.
"APCD chief William Fitdien did th<
correct llling in November ·when he
denied the permit. He acted under then:
existing regulation 24.1 of the CalifQl'llU
Heallll and Safety Code," Urban argued.
"We are also arguin11 that Rule fl, one
of · the new air pollution controt
ordinances enacted by the Board et
Superviso~s; would absolutely proluDit the
amount· of emisSioos .Ulat Edilon· pro..
-• to put in the air 'lrvm .tbelr new
facilJty." ·
Rule 97, patterned alter almllar .-.W..
tiortS in Los Angeles and Riverside coun-
ties. llmlll permtwble planl eml.uloo1
of oulpllur ""!"J!•Undl'to a mu~ ol lw thin· hro iDcl -.bo.11 1aD1 per ct.,.,
nitrogen oxides to orie 'and one-hau~ton.
per day and combustion contaminaatl tt
240 pounds a iiay: • · ,
According to an Edison company or:
ficial, the new ordinance "ia imposdble
to comply with."
In Monday'• hearing, Edison CompanJ
.attorney William Man: called two
Witr.e!.!les who restated the utilitJea• poel·
tion .that the construcLion of tWo new
790,000.kilowatt unil:s ·which '!'ould triple
the company',s power output, woUld bl
contributing an insignificant amount ol_
poliutioo to Southern Califomla'1. lllllCIQl'. sJdes. ·
F~J~ing their testimony, Urban made
a motion that th'! case be 11pheld··in light
of Rule 67, "the effect of which would re-
quire that the air pollution control.officer
deny the permit."
Marx objected to the motion on th6
grounds that the appeal was based on the
denial given under Section 24243 of tht
JJealth .~nd Safety Code. 'llte' oh'jerjiori
\'fas sustained and Flt.chen was called to
the st.D:nd .
In three and one-half hours .of direct
testimony and cross examination, Flt ..
ohen restated his case for denying the .ex·
pa.nsion permit on the grounds that the
c:uITeot· plant is already •\the single
1srg1!.st. static source of air polluliOn iJt
Or&nge County."
He testified that despite Edl90n'1
claims that the-amount of polfutant
pumped into the air will decrease by 1975.
• the completion date of the proposed
plant, Edison Company figures indicate
tbe amount of pollutants will have in ..
creased. The figures 3how the amount of
pollutants produced al the facility in 1968
were 23.8 tons of !Jltrogen oxides daily. Ahct, according to Edi son figures, In l!n'S
(See l!DISON, P•J" I)
Oraage
Wea,.er
We'll have aome gusty wind1
from the riorthW! to hefp 111 ·r1nc
out Ille old decad< 1 W-•Y•
Temperatures are atill pegged in
the middle to upper mUea~ •
INSmB TODA if
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:LA Police·
CracJ.c _Down
011 'Yellow'
By JOHN VALTERZA
ot ""' 0.111 'net tttff
If you're wondering \\'here the yellow
\\·ent. Jfs gone.
Loa Angeles city and county law en-
forcement officers today wound up the
seizure of eight printa ol the 11eamy 9e'X
epic "J Am CUrious (Yellow)" in every
'theater where it was playing in Los
Angeles County.
The big.city raids on the mov,ie took
place almost a week after Newpwt
Beach police seized a print of the film at
the Balboa The ater.
· Vice investigators 11aid warrant:s have
been issued against all the exhlblton of
the film charging misdemeanor ex·
hibition of obscene matter. •
Theaters in the cities of Hermon
Beach and Inglewood also have lost their
prints of the film after &eizures by their
respective police departments.
-Meanwhile in Newport Beach, l\'here
one of the first police moves against the
aex saga took place last Tuesday night,
the: print is still under lock and key.
It will titay there, police say, at least
until the court action concludes agaiMt
the owner and manager of the Balboa
'Theater.
Manager E1eanor Blackbum of Balboa
and owner William Alford of Laguna
:Beach are fighting the seizure and
-charges against. them.
-Their lawyers will be present Jan. I at
a municipal court hearing on suppression
of evidence. On Jan. 16, the satne lawyers
will file a demurrer with the court, a
"document expected to challenge the
'.ae.izure on constitutional grounds.
The pair face court action for alleged
.exhlbition of c b s c en e matter and
furnbhlng hannful matter to a minor.
·The latter charge stems from alleged
discovery of a 17-year-0ld girl in the
theater last Tuesday.
Municipal Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned''
·Rutter accompanied police and district
attorney'• investigators on the raid· in
Balboa.
Ass!stant Police Chief Harry Nellon to-
day explalned the judge·s presence with
the officers & a necessity because of the
time element involved.
"It was the last night with movie was
being shown and U we wanted to
challenge the movie on groonds of
obscenity, we needed prior judicial
review before we could llep in.
"Since it was the last night. we brought
the judge with us to review the film ~
11.ead U waiting to file a written account
of the movie, then waitlng for a Rartb
warrant," he said. '
Edison to Give
97-cent Refund
The average customer of the Southern
California Edison Company will receive a
97<ent refund in January, the California
Public Utilities Commi!sion has an-
nounced.
The electric utility's refunds total
fl,900,000 stemming from a 1965 Federal
Power Qnnmissioo decision made in
January.
1be refunds represent the reftmds
made by the Southern Counties Gas Com-
panies to Edison, U.s largest customer.
Mooicare Deadline
For Payments Set
Social Security officials reminded
Orange County residents tOday that Dec.
31 is the last day to claim for reim-
bursement of 1967 and 1968 medical bills
payable under the Medicare program.
Beneficiaries should cheek to make
1ure all their bills are submitted for pay.
ment before the deadline date, the aides
said. Information is available by calling
the Social Security office in Santa Ana at
836-2252.
DAILY PILOT
Cll:ANG£ COAST PUJl1$HIMCt COM,AN't
J:ob•rt N. W11d
f'rn.de.11 .,,. ~lol'M
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Cliff Slips in Newport
Private contractors today began removing portion
of cliff which has been threatening to slide onto
Bayside Drive below exclusive Irvine Terrace resi-
dential area in Newport Beach. Work was ordered
by the Robert K. Washburns. owners of expensive
cliliside home at 411 Avocado Ave., overlooking
Newport Harbor. House, once t.he home of the late
Myford Irvine, is not considered in immediate
danger. Bayside Drive has been closed by municipal
authorities in precautionary move.
Lagunan Not Brainwashed
Captured Yachtsman Spends Yule at Home
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of tfl• O.lly ,llM $!•ff
Although Simeon Baldwln's Chinese
captors fois~ propaganda on the
American busine&sman. they apparently
decided .he wasn't ripe for a full·scale
brainwash.
"I was loo old," said Baldwin, 57. in
Laguna Beach today. "They figured it
lva.s a lost cause. I'm just a dyed.Jn.the·
wool capitalist and I argued with them a
lot."
Baldwin was a prisoner for nearly 10
monl.hs in Red Chinese communes after
capture in February aboard his yacht
Horasum.
He will return to his Hong KOng
aircraft components business Tuesday
after spending the Christmas holiday
with his wife.Marjorie, 1359 Cliff Drive,
and their three children.
After the February capture during a
yachting junket. of Baldwin, American
Bessle Hope Donald, 17, and 11 others of
mixed nationali ty, mention \\'as made of
sophisticated electronic gear aboard
Baldwin's yacht.
"They gave the impression I was run-
ning one of those surveillance ships,"
said Baldwin, who added that he was not
with the CIA, "just a tropical trader.''
Baldwin 1aid the Chinese think all
Americans are CIA. He said the Horasum
was well equipped but not more so than
other ocean going yachts.
It's equipment. from a firm Baldwin
represents in the Orient, included dlrec·
tion finders, automatic pilot. radio
transmitters and reeeiveri; and other
gear. BaldYi'in said he makes 1,500 mile
trips from Jtong Kong to Manilia and
tieeds the equi pment.
Natty in a business suit and bow tie,·
Baldwin is about 30 pounds lighter than
his 165 pounds when the Chinese took him
in tow.
"He was worried about his front veran·
da (convex stomach),'' smiled Mrs.
Baldwin. "Now he's eating like it was
going out of style."
Baldwin who was reasonably well fed
by his co.ptors -rice, vegetables and
&mall amounts of meat or fish -used to
Jove Chinese food.
But Majorie Baldwin didn't mention It
"''hen they went out lo dinner last night. •
They trJ.ed Mexican food Instead at
Laguna's Tortilla Flats.
Initially said Baldwin, who had no
privacy awake, asleep or even in the
bathroom, "we had a bad Jot of guards."
He was pennitted only to sit on a chair
for about four months. After that, the
guards improved.
GWC Staff Trying to Find
Better Usage of Facilities
Orange Coast and Golden West College
Instructors are going to be doing some
brainstorming in the months ahead to try
to come up with plans for ac-
commodating increasing nwnbers of
r;tudents.
More e.£feclive use t1f the teaching starf
Is seen as one way of coming to grips •
"'ilh the problem of escalating enrollment
·111d1.hout signi ficant increase in income.
Ormge Coast Junior Col\ege District
Chancellor Nonnan Watson accordingly
presented to the board a proposal for
FUSE (Faculty Utilization -Staff Ef·
!ectivencss).
t.1 ore effective use of Instructors will
be the lopic when 12 faculty members
and adminlslrators go on a three-day
mountain retre.ai in February, Or.
Watson said.
The FUSE team will be led by deans of
Instruction Dr. James Fitzgerald of OCC
and Dr. William Shawl of Golden We.st
College.
Dr. \\'at.son said the charge to the
group will be to come up With three to
five ideas for more effective staff use.
He said a similar study eight or nine
years ago resulted in the Forums -
multi·media: lecture halls on both cam·
puses that pennit large group instruction
along with small group seminars.
The proposals that come out or the
·retreat will be refined during March and
April, evaluated in May, and if approved
worked on during the summer for ('X:·
perimentation as pilot projects in the fall.
Dr. Watson said this process probably
will become 'an on-going one from year-
J.o.year because of the "continued
pressure· of enrollment and continued
necessity for establishi ng priorities for
expenditure of funds ." 1
When the idea was presented. to the
board recen!ly. Trustee George Rodda
commented that It certainly made more
sense than trying to squeeze more
students into a classroom.
Coast Guard on Watch
Baldwin read his 1,500.page navigation
book and apparently glanced at Red pro-
paganda left handy. Time hung heavy.
He described it as "10 months of sitUng
and not knowing what's going to happen
the next day and worrying about whafs
happening to your famil y and finances."
Baldv.·in talked to interpreters whG
looked in daily. He said the Chinese fear
only the Americans and Russians and
believe the two powers are conspiring
against the Ch inese Communists.
Baldwin and Mrs. Donald, estranged
wife of television actor Peter Donald who
at first tried to hide their nationality,
were moved frequently during the
months of captivity. ' '
They were kept first at a location about
10 miles from /\1acao while technicians
dismantled and examined his naviga.
t.ional ecuiipment.
Baldwir1 .said there are war ptepara ·
tions such as militia training and
roadblocks. "preparing against American
and Soviet invasions," He said Red
Chinese propaganda keeps the people
under "a war tension".
Baldwir.. loves Laguna which he ha!!
visited frequently during 25 years as a
"tropical trader". He plans to live here
after retirement. But that won 't be for
awhile. Tomorrow he'll whisk off to Hong
Kong \\'here international business deals
await.
Two Dis Facing
Military Court
A Camp Pe ndleton t.1arine drill in-
~lructor charged with using a wire coat
hanger to whip rifle range trainees into
line and a second Dr accilsed or physical
beatings will be court martialed.
S-Sgt. Roger D. Osborn, of El Cajon,
h-;ces a general court martial soon at
Camp Pendleton, according to the an·
nouncement by military authorities.
A special court mart ial has ~n
ordered for the seeo!ld DI. charged with
slugging seven boots at the /\1arine Corps
Re cruil Depot in San Diego.
Sgt. Willie Winston, of Newport. Ark.,
was relleved from duty early in
De~mber after an investigation ordered
in the wake of complaints by one alleged
\'ictim.
Sgt. 'Vinston ha ~ requested military
counsel for his January court martial
procteding5.
~tarine Corps officials did not say when
Sgt. Osborn would be tried by a panel or
officers.
Nixon Estate Closed Off
Violators of lhe newly extended securi·
ty zone around the Western Whitt HCllse
in San Clemente are exposing thtmselve5
to a prison term of up to IO years or a
fine of up lo 110,000, but the Coast Guard,
whJch has just received orders on the
new boundaries, doesn't anUclpate roun·
din( up m>ny •ff•nd•r1.
••it would be -pretty bard for ll'IYont 10
Inadvertently wander aboard," 1aid an
o!!lctr at the Coast Ouard's LORAN sta·
fion , immtdla~ly adjactnt to th~
Presidential e1tale. "Both the water and
beach areas are vtry clearly marked and
all the rest fg renctd off."
"The rest" now includes the LORAN
station and its offshore waters, represen-
Un.g a southerly extension of the mllc-
loni 5C'C'W'lty r.one. The wettr ar(':a, say! the Co3st Cuard,
extends offshore far aboul half a mil e
and is cltarly marked with three white
can buoys marked with "international
orange" stripes and a diamond design.
The water security zone is b11.rred to all
boats when a Coast Guard vessel is
present
The beach security 1tta ls marked at
Its northern and southern limits by 11igns,
set out by the Secret Service when the:
President is in residtnet. ll Includes the
beach octanward of the tst8te and the
LORAN station. The beach arta Is open
l() the public "consistent with priva te
property righL~." the <:oast Guard stat es.
However, the Secrtt Strvlce has the right
to bar beschgoers near the estatt if this
is regarded as necessary for Presidflntlal
!ltturlty. The fenced·in land area of the
esUite and the Coast Guard StaUon are
"clo!ed to unauthorized person& al all
lime!i."' _
Regulations for the extended security • '
....
tone are. spelled oot In the Coast Guard 's
new .. Notice for f\.tariners ," which states
• that security within the water, beach and
land areas wlll be. enforced by the Coast
Guard, the Secret Service and such other
federal, state. and municipal 1.gencles
\l'hlch may be called upon to assist.
Despite lbe possibly form idable punish-
me.nt for vlolaUons of the toM, the Coast
Guard hastens to point out thet new
•·notice'' Is really just a lega l tool to be
used only In emergency.
"Nobody 's going to S!lrl ruMlng
arounrl Arresting people," s11:ld t.he
LORAN orticer ... lrs all handled very
nicely and we don·t expect any pr~
blems."
But jus~ In case any cmless m3rlner
should "wander aboard," it might be.
noted that the regula tioo applies to "any
o~·ncr. agent. master, officu or crew
meniber" aboard the vagrant vessel.
,, 'j
,eating· Cue _
Plea to Excuse
Jurors Rejected
By TOM BARLEY
Of lflt · OIUr ,1191 Sllll
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
Monday refused to grant a motion which
would have pre¥ented attorneys for a
police officer accused of brutality from
calling members of the Orange County
Grand Jury as witnesses.
Judge Gardner rejected Chief Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's n1ove
for quashing or subpoenas issued to the 19
members of the investig3tive panel. He
ruled that their special privileges do not
include exemption from proceedings in
which attorney Ron ().\.'en seeks their
testimony.
But the judge did indicate that Owen's
Fron• Page J
EDISON ...
th!! amount will increase lo 26, 1 tons .a
day.
Edison officials and engineers have
testified that the paliutants "'ill be shol
into the atmosphere at a high speed and
temperature from a tall stake so they
will not be part of ground level smog.
Fitchen renounced this claim reading
from a report published in May, 1969 by
the U.S. Department of Health, Educa-
tion and Well are which said in part, .. A
tall stack alone does not red11ce in any
manner the total pollutants added to the
almosphere. Other means must be found
to prevent overburdening the atmosphere
with pollutants."
demands might be met in some form
other than in open court next Jan. 7, the
date set for hearing or a motion ror
dismissal . pf bi:utality charges against
SanLa Ana Patrolman Richard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he will
discuss the issue with the Grand Jury on
Friday. He will then, he said, be in a
position to "discuss this malter more
fully \\'ith tifr. Owen and perhaps arrive
at some arrangement."
Faust, 26, was indicted on charges t1f
assault with a deadly weapon after
witnesses told the Grand Jury that he
clubbed a J7.year-old black youth who
wlis being committed to Juvenile Hall.
Owen's associat e, Allan Stokke said
members of the Grand Jury "were out to
get a police officer in any way they could
and "'e want them investigated."
Stokke said the "Grand Jury's actions
prior to the indictment of Officer ~ust
are not the only things we are goin1 to
question."
Jesse Gilmore, now 18. t1f Santa Ana .
told the Grand Jury that he was knocke1
to the ground and clubbed upon dtlivery
at the Orange County facility.
The panel learned through Gilmore's
sworn testimony that the youth was being
committed with two companions wh e11
Faust and tither officers allegedly used
night sticks to beat him into supmiSsion .
Gilmore was allegedly making aa
escape attempt at the time, according to
Patrolman Faust, who remains on duty
pending outcome of the case.
Other witnesses to the fracas last July
testllied it did appear to be a break for
freedom , but that Faust's partner at the
scene called out that the yooth had been
whacked enough before he stopped.
Valley Recreation Offers
Wide Range of Activities
A comprehensive range of leisure-time
activities will be offered by the Fountain
Valley Parks and Recreation Department
during January.
'Qeginning Jan. 5 the department will
offer a concentrated, ten-Week course in
swim team conditioning coached by
Manuel Alarcon and Peter Hawk. The
sessions will be held each Monday,
Wednesday and Friday night from 6 p.m.
to 7 p.m. at the Fountain Valley" High
School Pool. Age limits are from 6-17.
A new session of the beginning ballet
and tap dancing lessons currently offered
by the department begin January 8 and 9.
Humorist Slates
Chamber Talk
111 Seal Beacl1
Humorist Edward A. Wright \\•i ll be the
~peaker-entertainer for the Seal Beach
Chamber · of Commerce annual in·
stallation banquet at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 7.
\Vright v.'ill present "It's a Laugh" at
the Ranch House Restaurant, 1600 Pacific
Coast Highway.
Wright has performed at U.S. Army i~
stallations in Europe and 42 states. He is
chairman of the Theater Arts Depart-
ment at Denison Unive rsity.
Installed as president for 1970 will be
Ke ith E. Houdyshell. Vice presidents are
David R. Berry. John Gera Jr .• Glen A.
Gunderson and Howard D. Hawkins.
New directors are Kenneth E. Harnish,
Glenn 0 . Jones, Sam J. Parrott. James
\V. Duun, Frank Ksiazek and William E.
Moon.
Reservations for the Jan. 7 banqllet
nl ay be obtained at lhe Chamber office.
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Classes for three to fi ve year olds i re
scheduled at 9 a.m., 9:45 a.m. and 10 :3•J
a.m. Six to 12 year olds may sign up for
classes at 2:30 p.m., 3:JS p.m. and 4 p.m.
Alsa scheduled to begin January 8 is.a
beginner's course in bridge, to be ta.ugh~
by certified brid ge instructor Helen
Creed. Classes are scheduled from 7:45
p.m. to 10 p.tp ., Thursdays.
Organized practice sessions for the
January 10 All.City Cross Country f\.feet
ha\•e been,scheduled for 10 a.m. to noon
on Jan . 2 and 3, and from 4 p.m. to 5 p.m.
Jan. 5-8. Signups for the big meet may be
1nade directly at the practices. Only
those aged nine th rough 15 are eligible.
A special sign·UP session has been set
for Jan. 3, from 9 a.m. to noon, in the
Foont.ain Valley Community Center for
the Junior Basketball League. The league
is open to all boys living in Fountain
Valley oc going to elementary or junior
high schools from which they will
graduate to etther Fountain Valley or Los
Amigos High School.
Furtller information about signup pro-
cedures and payment for the courses is
available by telephoning the department
at 962·2424 or by personally inquiring at.
Fountai n Valley City Hall, 10200 Slater
Ave.
Tot FataUy ·Injured
By Licl lo Toy Chest
LONG BEACH (AP) -The coroner's
office reports !·year-old Anthony
Villarete was fatally injured when the lid
of a Christmas toy chest fell on his ne<:k.
Police said lhe boy ~'as pronounced
dead ?\-!013day at Long Beach Communit y
Hospital after a ba bysitter found the lid
closed on his neck. He was the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Sarafin Villarete and also had a
l\\in brother.
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HEAVY LINES OUTLINE PRESIDENTAL SECURITY ION!
Feds Not Likely t• Forgive Tr1•p•1atr1 •t Nixon Est•t•
I'
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11
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Bea eh Today·s lt'l na l
N.Y. St.oek8 •
YOt;. 62, NO. 31 2, 4 SECTIONS,~ PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, 1969 TEN CENTS
Signs Major Bills, Heads for Coast
' I
.;. 0
'(f>
,.,.. be md the aood ruuu.. of lhe
bills outw.ighed the bad.
. The 1611.6 billion budget for mllli.ry
hardware had been cut $6 billion by Con-
gress after a bitter st{uggle over cor;ts
and arms needs. • ·
The l'l'.aldmt and Mn. Nllon·were to
Dy to the w~ White Houoe in San
Clomente In mid att.rnoon. 'l'lley will
return to Wublngton the weelrald of
f " " 'I " ' \ )
' ,,
HEAVY LINES OUTLINE PRESIDI NTAL SECURITY ZONE
Fods ·Not L1ktty to Forgive Tre1pe11er1 at Nixon J st8te
1 Sea Well Se~nred
Nixon Zone No w Of f Limits
Violators .of the newly extended aecuri-
1 ty 10ne around the Western Whtti House
bl San Clemente are exposing them1elves
to_ a prison term or up to 10 yeara or a
f~ of up to $10,000, but the Coast Guard,
1 Jfhfch has just received order! "on the
~ boundaries, doesn't anticipate roun-
lin( Up many offenders.
: ·0 rt ·would be pretty hard for anyone to
neidvertently wander aboard," said an
"1cer at the Coast Guard's LORAN sta-
bn, immediately adjacent to the
si4enlial f:state. "Both tbe water and
ch areas are very clearly marked and
the rest is fenced off."
The rest" now includes the LORAN
ion and ill! offshore waters, represen-
a sout~rly -extension of the mile-
iecurlty zone.
water area, says the Coast Guard,
~nds offshore for aboul half a mile
1 ' Is Clearly marked with three white
buoys marked with "international
e" stripes and a diamond design.
water security zone is baiTed to all
I when a Coast Guard vessel is
I ~ beach leall'ity :.irea ii marked at
and souUtern limits by ~gns, out by U.. Secret Service when lhe
klent Is In residence. It Includes the ~ h dcelnward of U.. estate and the
'
LORAN station. The beach area is open
to the public "consistent with private
properly rigfit1,11 the Coast Guard glltel.
However, the Secret Service· has the right
to bar beachgoen near the estate if' thi11
is regarded u necessary ror Presidential
security. The fenc.O.in land arta of tbe
estate and the COait Guard Station are
"closed to ,,Wl&Uthorized perlODI at all
times .". r
Regulations for the extended secnrity
zone are spelled out ln the Coa.rt Guard's
new "Notice for ~tarioers/' which states
that security within lhe watei, beach·and
land areas will be enforced by the Coaat
Guard, the Secret Service and such other
federal, state and municipal agencies
which may be called upon to as8ist.
Despite the possibly fonnidable punish-
ment for violations of the zone, the Coast
Guard hastens to point out that new
"notice"~ is really just a legal tool to be
used only in emergency.
"Nobody's going to start runnin:-r
around arresting people," sakJ th.
LORAN orficer. "It's all handled ver '
niCely and we don't eq>ect any prQ.
blems."
But just in case any carelea mariner
should "wander aboard," It might be
noted that the regulation appliea to "any
owner, agent, master, officer or crew
member" aboard lhe vagrant vesseL
•~ounty Woman Rescues 3
Tots From Fire, Burned
A Buena Park -II resttnr c:om-
lortabJ1 In tbe burn anlt of U.. Orange
Caun11 Medical Center todoJ Ill.er savtni
the 11 ... of lhree mall childm M-Onday
as a flub fire dmroye(f her apartment.
1 P1LOT FUTURAMA
11 l NS ID E TODAY .
'1111 DAILY PILOl"1 mmaal report on
....,... ""'~In the Or-c.lOll
-·• --...r hlua11J' community, c:orilblned with • look IDto tho ~
Mlft, -b1lide today. n. tpeeial FUTURAMA section
Berlicles, pbotosrapi>I and ada
the 1ltor7 of the Oranp Coul'I
commtrebl Ille. Bo.,... to read
A 19'lll, lnllde todoy. -
Mrs. Patricia Corsa.re, 22, of '7810
Jack!On Way, sullered liist and oec:oocl
degree bums over 25 percent of her body
while rescuing the children from the lD-ferno.
Also Injured was t-yur-old Yvette
Arsenault, 5491 Lockhaven Drive. A
hospital spokesman saJd she Is improving
after receivlns lint and second degree
burns over 20 percent o( her body.
Authorities said Mf'I. Goraagt wq car·
Ing !or her llO!I David, 3, a nelibbor child,
Shawn Hetrinl!lm, z. and v .. 11.e when an explooion , rocl<ed the 1portmeol. Wblle
!ht rtllU!Unr nama engulled tllo lllntc-
tun. the woman broke a rar window,
left lhe opu1malt ad -....... lo 1et the children. ·
Foor lire department ua11s ..-,,. to the 4: II p.m. call baUled U.. blaze for
elihl minutes, Butna Park fir< depart-
ment spokesmen aald the: apparent cause
wu a gas leak. Dam.aie to the apart..
ment was !stlrnated to be ln t:lctSI ot
110,000.
Jan.· 11, a week Oi'_IO' before Concress
conventS again.
Nixon is expected to ask Congress to
P8$S ,new taxes, but will probably welt
uP"tU his State ol the Vnlon address Jan.
22 to spell out what be ha!! In mind. It
is-almost eertainlyute1y-however, to tn-
clude a . "value adaed" tax ln which a ~~_,!~dee! al each stage ;,i the manu-
fa\..-wcWK ~
Congress has passed an unbalanced bill
that is both goOd and bad," Nixon said
in a statement releeed by the White
House. "lbe tax reforms, on the whole,
are good; the effect on lhe budget and on
the cost of llyjng is bad."
Nixon said he appfoved the measure
because the iinproVeMenls· in tax fair-
ness through the reforms outbalance the
in!lationacy in)pact from lhe 19.1 bllllon
ta1: cut the bill carries.
The bill provides taz relief for 63 mil-
lion Americans and includes a 15 Percent '
boost In Social Security ~nefits and
Joopbole-elo.s.iiig reforms .
For the first time · taxpayers will see
the effects of the blll will be In their pay-
check for tht 'first week Of the new year
when the Present 10 percent tax SW'-
charge goes down to S percent. That will
diminish the tax withholding slightly. The
surcharge is scheduled to expire com-
pletely June 30, 1970.
The tax reduction results chiefly from
a three year increase Jn the $600 In-
come la'I personal exempUon. It will rise
to $650 In July to $700 In January and to
f150 in January 1973. The bill also grants
special tax relief for 12 mUlkm poor'
!See NIXON, Pa1e Zl
Lagunan Held • Ill China
'Too Old for Brainwash'
Longhair Youth
Wins Court Plea
A U.S. District Court judge Monday
Issued a preilmlnary injunction telling
Saddleback College it must not prevent a
long-haired male· student from register-
ing for courses. n:.e· way: now jg-clear ~Lirldahl King,
21,'long lockirand ill,tto register to begin
attending tl&sses nen;' wee~. Judae · Hai-ry 1 J>fegenoh or the Lot
Angeles court found that the wearing of '
lohg h8fr is a right · or personal liberty
which should pol ~ ,infringed unJes,.,
there la a show:ltw of. overwhelming in-
terest. by the jWllor colltge distlrct.
"I am not ~ised," reacted Sad-
dle back Board President Michael Collins.
"Pe(lple got temp>r~ iqjunctlons all the
time, I vlould be disappointed if a
permanent injunction was .canted after a
full hearirig."
'Collitlfl, an attorney, e.Wlalned that •
temporary injunction is ntt a decision on
the merllll bttt rather a finding that the
plaintifr would uffer irreparable harm if
in fact he is rig~t.
"In tills case." he said, "the plalnUU
claims if you don't-mp the wheels rlght
-
.Jui · De•se•·t ·
now· later it will be too late. AU the a:xut
is saying is we are going to prearve his
rights unUI we decide what bis rights
are."
Collins said the judge's . ~tatement
about infringlng,personal li~rlY. I• a well
established constitutions~ principle. ·
"Tlter~.il po .qeUlllOJl.!~Y dftU code I•
an infringement of .: ~ penonal
liberty," he said. "Our position i! there is
a good and suffkdent reason l.o 11et st:an-
rlards or dress and crooming. That i1
what the hearing will dot.ermine,"
No date bu fet bcoD .. t !0r lhO hear·
Ing on a perJnaneiit . ij)Jundlon which
Collins said follows granUng Of a tem-
porary lnjuncUon u a1 matter of course.
Attorney Patricia Herzog ol Ct>rona de!
Mar, wbo represented Kblg, said, .. H.ere
Utey are telling a grown man (King is 21)
how to . wear his hair, which is
rldiculou&." '.
She said there ii no precedent or cues
Involving junior · coUege dress codes
because no junior college has them .. All
the cases Of record, she Sfid, involve high
(SH .SAl)DLEBACK, Poge ZI
You nerer know W!lo mlgbt show up for dinner In Three· Arch .lleY.
Mondb nlgbt, I\ was Victor, a 52$.pound Canadian black bear, wlio.
tenderfy accepted the candy so eraciOO&ly ollered prior to the main
course by hls bostesa, Ml"I. Vera HoudysbeU. Victor then dined Oil
lettuce, apples, grapes ind Kool·Aid iD the garage of the lloudylhlll
residence. 22872 Vista dll $q1 betW• an '1'~ audiea« Ol MIP.
hood children. He ls the ,pot Of friends ol th'e Hqu~1bell1 who 4rop. .
pcd in for dinner. They ale In the bouse. • ,
' HEADS BACK TO HONG 'KONCP
L•1un11'1 Simeon Bald~in
Lag una Beack .
Patriots Parade
Draws l 1iterest
Laguna's Fourth Annual Patriots' Day
p:trade promises to be "a mammoth
event," pa-rad e chairman Gary Zim·
merman reports.
More than 650 lnv1tatloil s to
participate in the parade sched~led for
Saturday: Feb. 21, have been sent ·out
oVer Southern California and entries are
cOming In three times as fast ·as last
yea r-, Zimmennan .said. ' ·
HonorJ~g WashingtQn's birthday and
presented by the Exchange Clu~ and Pa-
tience Wright Chapter of tlle DaUghters
oi the American Revolution, the parade
this year will lake for its thenle, ''My
Country, 'Tis of Thee.''
Zimmer man said local clubs and
organizations are responding well to re·
quests for support of the annual event
and urged ihose who have not _oHei;ed
help to do ~ a's.!Qon as possibl.e becaus!
of the anticipated size of this year's
parade. ·
"We're going to need all the help we
can get," he emphasized.
ContribuUons may be sent to para'de
chairman Zimmerman at P .0., BQ:r 1207,
Laguna Beach. Additional infonnation
and parade enlry blanks may be obtained
by c:onlac:tlng Mn. Fred G. Roll, 414-
047'1. .
A new parade ni.Ie this year, Mn. RQss
said, will require con!onnfty with the
Flag code and members of the American
Legion ml Veterans of Foreign Wars will
be OD hand to check a0 entries to make
liure no violations of the code occur.
Police Puzzled
By Gas Theft
Laguna Beach police are pmllng
over the disappearance of an esUmated ao gallons of guoUne from an un-
d•fll'Cllllld llorqe i.nt at a Soutb OOUI
lllglnrl)' --· • An apportnllJ professionally equipped
lhJel vlsittd the-Gray · WllCOlt Cbovroo muon, 19111 s. ~ Hlgtnfay al ....,
Ume bttween 11 p.m. Friday and 1 a.m.
S.tunlay and 1lphoned out a tlllf'llO
tankload of .....W-1u, valoed II $Ito,
Wilcox told police.
The loU WU reported Monday Ill.et wn..,. dl«:ked' U.. gas-ltvel In the bu1•
lank wllli 1 dip atldc, police said.
'!. • "
Will Return
To Business
On Tuesday
By RJCHARD P. NALL
Of ftM o.Oy '""' tffff Although Simeon Baldwin'• Chinese
captqrs foisted propaganda on the
American businessman, they apparently
deeided he wasn't ripe for a· full-Kale
brainwash.
"I was toe old," said Baldwin, 11, 1n
Laguna Beech today, "They fi...W. II
--..,..-....... l'm Jml"l"C!Ylil:!b'l!lo.' wool caplllllat and I argued with them a
lot."
llaldw!n wu a prisoner lilr neerly 10
months in .lied Cblnue c:ommw\es alltr
caplure .In February aboard bis 7achl
Horasum.
He will return to hb Hong K<llll
aJrcra{t components bul1neu 'fl."9da1
after spending the Chrisjmas holiday
with his wife,Marjorle, J.3$ CUf( Drive,
and their lhree children.
Alter the February captutt during 1
yachllng junke~ of Baldwin, American
Bessie Hope Donald, 47, and Jl otbera of
mixed nationality, menUon was made of
sophisticated electrorllc gear aboard
Baldwin's yacht.
"They gave the impression I was run-
ning one of those IW'V.elllance 1hipi,,.
said Baldwin, who added that he was. rd
with the CIA, "just a tropical trader."
Baldwin said the Chinese think aD
Americans are CIA. He said the Horasmn
was well equipped but not more so than
other ocean golna: yachts.
It's equipment, from a firm Baldwin
represents In the Orient, included direc-
tion finders , automatic pilot, radio
transmitters . and receivers; and other
gear. Baldwin saJd he makes 1,500 mile
trips from Hong· Kong to Manilla and
needs the equipment.
Natty in a business !ult and bow tie,
Baldwin is about 30 pounds lighter than
his 165 pounds when the Chinese took him
in tow.
"He was worried about his front veran-
da (convex stomach)," smiled Mrs.
Baldwin. "Now he's eating like it wu
going out of style."
Baldwin who was reasonably well fed
by his captars -rlc4!i, vegetables and
small amounts Of meat M nth -used to
love Chinese food.
But Majorie BaJctwin didn't mention It
wtien they went out to dinner Jut night.
They tried Mexican food instead at
(See BALDWIN, Page 'Z)
o r .. ge
Weadte r
We'll have IOme sustY winds
from the northeut lo help us ring
out the old decade Wodneeday.
Temperatures an 11011 peged lD
the middle to upper at:rUes,
INSW E TODAY
In th< 1970., California will
move pcuC tlt.t 20 million mark.
clinchtno more-finnl11 it& /irat'
• in POPUl4Uotl 11ot1u, bw.t it11 4' recOnl .,,..,~ 1"" mlud bluo-
inQ1. l'cw~ 24.
• ....: u I .. • I .... .. " •
=-
I
-'
% DAILY PILOT L
;
U,I T1i.tttlt PRESIDENT NIXON SIGNS FAR REACHING TAX MEASURE
Wiii Ask for New Revenue Legislation or Cut Spending
Here's Capsule Glance
At Tax Reform Measure
WASHINGTON (AP) -Here are some
or the things you, as an individual tax-
payer, will find affecting you in the years
ahead from the new tax bill aigned today
by President Nixon.
None of them applies to the taxes ()M
1969 income for which taxpayers will be
[illng returns by April 15, 1970.
Ta:r redact.Ion:
· The present $600 personal exemption Is
Increased to $650 from July 1, 1970, to
Pee. 311 1971, lo $70 Oin 1972, and to f'lSO Vi 1973 and thereafter.
An $1,100 low-Income allowance to
benefit poorer families is added to
rersonal exemptions in 1970,
The present standard deduction, 10 per-
tent of adjusted gross income up to
•1,000, is raised to 13 percent with a
Jl,500 ceiling in 1971, to 14 percent and
~,000 in 1972, and to 15 percent and
J2,000 in 1973.
. Single persons, effective in 1971, wlll
pay no more than 20 percent above the
\ax level for married couples.
A maximum rate of 60 percent on earn·
Id Income, Instead of the present 7fl.per-
~I. ls fixed IOC' 1971 and 60 pen:ent
lle~after.
Penons who work only part of the
t, ear, such as students with summer jobs,
re excused from tax withholding if they
rerUfy they will have no tax liability for
lhe year and owe no tu from the
previous year.
Bocllf Se<Urlly'
A 15 percent increase In Social Securi·
ly beMflt.. for all recipients becomes ef.
fective Jan. 1, with the first higher pay·
ment due early in April.
From Page I
NIXON ...
and near-poor taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy
told newsmen at the White House after
the Pruldent signed the bill that the mea·
sure enacted by the Democratic Con-
gress made Nixon'' bulgelary problems
even more severe.
But Kennedy sidestepped questions
abotu whether the President would ask
Congress next year to increase taxes,
pogslbly through a "value added tax.''
'This is a form or excise tax on manufac-
tured. goods.
Kennedy acknowledged that the treas-
ury department has been studying the
value added t.ax but he said it ~·as only
''one of the areas that is under study."
DAILY PILOT
DllAMGI: COAST ,UILllHING t.OM,ANY
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Tax Extensions.
The income tax surcharge. which has
been 10 percent, is cut to five percent
through June 30, 1970, and eliminated en-
Urely after that.
Present excise taxes or 10 percent on
telephones and seven percent on
automobiles are extended ror one year, to
Dec. 31, 1970.
Tax rerorms:
A 10 percent minimwn lax is applied
against a broad list of preference items,
including some oil income, capital gains
and aceelerated real estate depreciation.
But the taxpayer can subtract from his
preference income what he pays in
normal federal income tax before ap-
plying the 10 percent levy.
Persons moving more than 50 miles are
permitted to dedi.1ct moving expenses, in-
cluding such items as the expense of pre-
move house-huting.
Hobby farmers who sell their land will
have the sale price taxed as ordinary in-
come rather than the lower capital gain
rate lo the extent of the operating losses
previously claimed. This applies only· to
those with $50,000 or nonfarm income for
the year and with f&:rm losses in excess
of $25,000.
Losses on a hobby not carried on for
profit cannot be claimed as credit on in-
come.
• Exceptionally fast tax write-offs now
available for commercial and industrial
buildings are disa lloi,•:ed. There ·is a
smaller reduclion in the liberal deprecia-
tion now available on used buildings, in-
cluding apartments.
On capital gains income in excess of
$50.000, the rate becomes half of the
normal income tax rate or a maximum
35 percent, instead of the present 25
percent maximum.
Fron• Page l
BALDWIN • • •
Laguna's Tortilla Flats.
Initially said Baldwin, \Yho had no
privacy awake, asleep or e\•en in the
bathroom . "we had a .bad lot of guards."
He was permitted only to sit on a chair
for about four months. After that, the
guards improved.
Baldwin read his l,500-pagc navigation
book and apparently glanced at Red pro·
paganda left handy. Time hung heavy.
He described it as "10 moolhs of silting
and not knowing what's going lo happen
the next day and worrying about what's
happening to your family and finances."
Bald'>'•in talked to interpreters who
1ooked in daily. He said the Chinese fear
only the Americans and Russians and
belie\"e the two powers are conspiring
against the Chinese Communists.
Baldy,·in and ti1rs. Donald. estranged
wife of television actor Peter Donald ""ho
at first tried to hide their nationality.
,~·ere moved frequently during the
months ot captivity.
They \l!'ere kept first at a location about
10 miles from Macao while ledlnlclans
itismantled and examined his navlga·
tiot'tal equipment.
Baldwi11 said there are war prepara-
tions such .as militia training and
roadblocks. "preparing against American
;incl Soviet invasions." He said Rc<I
Chinese propaganda keeps the people
urnlcr ·•a \\'Br tension".
Bakhvir. IO\'es Laguna y,•hich he ha s
visited frequently during 25 years as .1
"tropical trader''. He pllUlS to live here
after retirement. But that won't be for
ay,•hlle. Tomorrow he'll whisk off to Hong
Cong where internaUonal buslness deals
await.
Tot Fatally Injured
By Lid to Toy Chest
LONG BEACH (AP) -The «>n>ner'1
ofUce reports: I-year-old Anthony
Vlllarttt w., fatally Injure<! when th• lid
or a Christmas toy chest fell on his neck.
Police said the boy was pronounced
dead Monday at Long Beach CommunJty
HCISpltal after a babysl1ter round the ltd
elosCd on his neck. He was the M)n of l\Ir.
llnd j\tn. Sarafin Vlllarete and also had a
twin brotlier.
' .
Plea to Excuse
Jurors Rejected
By TOM BARLEY ot !ht IM!llt Plltll $1111
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
Monday refused to graat a motion which
would have prevented attorneys for a
police officer accused of brutality rrom
calling members of the Orange County
Grand Jury as witnesses.
Judge Gardner rejected Chief Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's move
for quashing of subpoenas issued to the Ill
members of the investigative panel. He
ruled that their special privile ges do not
include exemption from proceedings In
which attorney Ron Owen seeks their
testimony.
But the judge did indicate that Owen's
demands might be met in some form
oLher than in open court next Jan. 7, the
date set for hearing or a motion for
dismissal of brutality charges against
Santa Ana Patrolman Ri chard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he will
discuss the issue with the Grand Jury on
Friday. He will then, he said, be in a
position to "discuss this matter more
fully with Mr. Owen and perhaps arrive
al some arrange1nent."
Faust, 26, was indicted on charges of
assault with a deadly w-eapon after
wltnt11es told the Grand Jury that h1
clubbed a 17-year-old black youth who
was being committed lo Juvenile Hall.
OW'el's associate, Allan Stokkt aa.id
members of the Grand Jury ''were out to
get a police officer in any way they could
and we want them investigated."
Stokke said the "Grand Jury's actions
prior to the indictment of Officer Faust
are not the only things we are going to
question."
Jesse Gilmore, JlO\V 18, of Santa ftna,
told the Grand Jury that he W!l.S knocked
to the ground and clubbed upon delivery
at the Orange County facility. ·
The panel learned through Gilmore's
sworn testimony that the youth was being
committed with two companions when
Faust and other officers allegedly used
night sticks to beat him into submission.
Gilmore was allegedly making an
escape attempt at the time, according to
Patrolman Faust, who remains on duty
pt'lldlng outcome or the case.
Other witnesses to the fracas last July
testified it did appear to be a break for
freedom, but that Faust's partner at the
scene called out that the youth had been
whacked enough before be stopped.
From Page l
SADDLEBACK RULING • • •
school students.
Arguing on behaU of King before the
judge r..1onday along with Mrs. Herzog,
were A. L. \\'irin and Fred Okrand, chief
sta ff counsels for Southern Cll!i rornia of
the American Civil Liberties Union.
John Pov,,ell of the County Counsel's
Office represented tl1e junior co!lcge
district.
Four written affidavits were filed.
$200 Ski Holiday
Added to Prizes
For Sports Sliow
A $200 ski vacation at Heavenly Valley,
in the Lake Tahoe area, today y,·as added
to the giveaway package the DAILY
PILOT is offering in connection with the
Southern Cillifornia Sports, Vacation and
Recreational Vehicle Show.
The grand prize package, put together
by Holiday Airlines, includes transpo~ta
tion via Holiday's Super Electra Jets
from Hollyy,·ood:Burbank airport directly
to Tahoe and return, p I u s ac-
commodations at the Ramada Sands and
olher extras," including sk i tram
passes and entertainment in Tahoe's
Nevada-side night spots.
To be eligible for the grand prize, DAJ·
LY PILOT readers need only to send in
their names, addresses and phone
numbers to: Show Tickets, Orange Coast
DAILY PILOT, PO Box 1560, Costa
r..1 esa, Ca. 92626.
First 10 persons to send in their names
on postal cards -or drop them off in
person at the Cost.a Mesa office of the
DAILY PILOT at 330 W. Bay St., Costa
fl-tesa -each ~·ill automatically receive
one pair of tickets to the Sports, Vacation
and Recreational Vehicle Show opening
Saturday at the Anaheim ConVJ11tion
Center.
After the first 10, an additional 10
nan1es daily will be selected at random.
All ticket winners' names will be publish-
ed in !he classifi ed advertising section or
lhc DAILY PILOT (beginning on New
Year's Day), along with instructions for
picking up show tickets.
Names of all who request tickets -
\vhether they win tickets or not-will be
placed in eligibility for the lloliday
Airlines-Heavenly Valley ski vacation for
two.
Winne r of the grand prize will be
selected rrom among all names sub-
mitted in a drawing to be held onstage
next Wednesday (Jan. 7) at the 8 p.m.
i;how at the Anaheim Convention Center.
Winner need not be present to win the
trip.
One from Corona dtl Afar High School
Principal Leon Meeks told about the
elimination of a dress code at his school
and how in his opinion a dress code
d;verted attenlion from the educational
process by bectlming a source of conflict
between administrators and a students.
Another afridavi t from Orange Coast
c.ollege .Dean of Student Affairs Joseph
Kroll said he has observed no relationship
betwee n hair styles and academic
achievement.
Kroll noted he has attended statewide
conferences of deans anO he knows of no
other junior college with a code on hair
length.
Saddleback Superintendent F r e d
Bremer countered in an affidavit that he
knows of al least one -College of the
Desert.
Sadd leback Student Body President
John Bothwell, in another written sul>-
mittal, claimed that over hall the male
students are in violation of the dress
code.
County Counsel Powell said that is not true.
Bothwell wears his hair long but not 10
Jong it extends over the collar of a drtD
shirt, which the dress code forbids.
Supi:. Bremer said teh board-of trustees
doesn't meet again until Jan. 12 but
"quite obviously" he will be talking in-
dividualll with board members.
King, who lives in Tustin, was a student
at Sacldleback College last school year
but was relused admission for the fall
term because of his long hair.
Two Dis Facing
Military Court
A Camp Pendleton Marine drill In-
stru ctor charged with using a wire coat
~anger to whip rifle range trainees into
ltne and a second DI accused ot physical
beatings will be court martialed.
S-Sgt. Roger D. Osborn, of El Cajon,
fnces a general court martial soon at
Camp Pendleton, according to the an-
nouncement by military authorities.
A special court martial .has been
ordered for the second DJ, charged with
slugging seven boots at the Marine Corp.1
Recruit Depot In San Diego.
Sgt. Willie Winston, of Newport, Ark.,
w&s relieved from duty early in
~mber after an investigation ordered
I~ the wake or complaints by one alleged
VICtlm.
Sgt. Winston has requested mili tary
counsel for his January court marUal
proceedings.
r..tarine Corps officials dld not say when
Sgt. Osborn would be tried by a panel or
officers.
OAILY .. !LOT Sl11f Phtlt' LAGUNA OFFICER RICK KOTZIN INSPECTS FAMILIAR FACE
Jack Is Back After Tour of Duty With Trio of Jarh1ads
a Head ,
Police Recover Missing Spliere
Ja~k Gets
A grinning plastic Jack-in-the-Box
head, slightly the worse for wear, was
recovered by Laguna Beach police Mon-
day.
The head disappeared Dec. 23 from a
new drive.through restaurant, 1201 S.
Coast Highway. The gaudy decoration.
orange in color, with green hair and a
yellow hat, and equipped y,·ith an internal
speaker lo take customers' orders, was
ripped from its moorings on a stand at
the rear of the restaurant.
Acting on · a telephone lip, officers
finally located Jack on a sun deckbehind
an apartment in Laguna.
quaintan cc.
Jealous because the lady appeared to
favor one of the trio, two of the fo.Iarines
appareritly decided to get even with their
buddy by dismantling the Jack head and
depositing it at his fronl door, where its
grinning face confronted him when he
prepared to leave next morning.
The victim of the practical joke, police
report, decided lo cope with the probll!m
later and departed on an assignme nt,
leaving lonesome Jack on t11e sun deck.
Since the head, valued at $300, is suf-
fering from a bent metal base and teai's
in its plastic face, a damage claim of
some sort probably y,·j[J be forthcoming,
det~tives figu re. ·
It seems. say detectives that thre~
Marine officers Crom Camp Pendleton
were enjoying a pre.Christmas celebra·
lion with a young lady of their ac-
That is, unless Jack's rightful O\.\'ners
decide it was all in the spirit of the eason. t,
Deadline for Disney
Awards New Year's Eve
Deadline for Disneyland Community
Service Awards is midnight Wednesday.
Dr. Arnold 0. Beckman, awards con1·
mittee chairman, ,,...arned today.
"MITTe tha n 200 organizations have filed
'notice of intent' to take part in this
year's awards program," Dr. Beckman
said. "All must complete their <tp-
plications and J)U),i;:e them in the mail by
\llednesday if UJeY intend to participate."
,Cash awards totaling $30,000 are
available to 24 winning organizati :ins in
Orange County. Top award of $5,000 will
gO lo the: organiialion that in the opinion
of the awards committee carrie<I out the most outstanding community service pro-
gram in the county during 1969.
"In addition, there :ire three $2,500
awards, three $1 ,500 awards. nine $1 ,IXXI
award! and eight $500 awards .
Winners of the 1969 Disneyland Com·
munity Service Awards "·ill be announced
Medicare Deadline
For P aynt ents Set
Social Security officials reminded
Orange County residents today that Dec.
31 is the la st day to claim for reim-
bursement oi 1967 and 1968 medical bills
payable under the ?.1edicare program.
Beneficiaries should check lo make
sure all their bills are submitted for pay-
ment before the deadline date, the aides
said. Information is available by calling
the Social Security office in Santa Ana at
836-2251.
at a luncheon in February when they "'ill
be presented, ·
Representatives of each participating
organization ·will be invited to attend the
luneheon. The award presentatioo in
February wi ll be the 13th annual. ·
Since the inception of the awa rds prO.
gram in 1957, more than 1,600 organiza-
llons have participated and Disneyland
has dist ributed nearly $200,IXXI at
organizations in Orange County through
184 awards.
Banker Jack R. Higley of Huntington
Beach is on "this year's awards com-
mittee which includes Dr. Beckman,
chainnan: Mrs. WiUiam S. Holstein.
Corbna del Mar; Justin M. Ken nedy , San-
ta Ana ; Mrs. Lawrence K. Reynolds,
Laguna Beach. and Rabbi Aaron J.
Tofield. Anaheim.
FOG HORN BLARES
OJIERCAST OR NOT
SAN FRANCISCO <UPI) -Engineer!>
hope lo repatch a cable today that \\•ill
silence the Alcatraz Island foghorn wh ic h
has been blaring ai,vay in son1e of th e
clearest "'eather of !he season . ••
Bay area residents ·within earshot or
lhe island complained !ltonday the anoy-
ing blare had been goi ng on for about two
days. The Coast Guard said a cable from
the niainland went out of kilter and
engineers hoped to have it fixed soon.
I:
Dying Boy's Last Gift
DIED THINKING OF OTHERS
FV'o Richard C1mpbtll •
Accident Victi1n Gives Presents to Fairvi.ew
• By ARTRU,R R. VINSEL
Of .. ~ ,, ... '""
He had Christm&s iirts he would never
use and he chose to Share them, becaust
many unfortunates Md nothing to look
forward to.
He as)l;ed that they fO lo Falrvtew State
Hospital patient>.
Shortly after, at 8:15 p.m. on
Chrls~mas Eve, be died.
Richard Clrnpben, It. of 9680 Dove Cir·
clc. Fountain Valley, had wor)l;ed as a
volunlffr helper at the facility ror the
mentally retarded In CostA Mesa.
"M..Uy with the llUle kids," llld hi&
ll-year~kl slster Beth, who went to the
gt.ate hospltll on Chrlst.mu Day lo
dcllvtr the Hot Wheels model car set,
each component brlghUy wr1pped .
The admln lstraUve staff was off, 10
1hc gave th'm to a switchboard operator.
"It's the blg stt," uid a hospital
11;pokcsman Monday. "It will fill half a
room. Pt1y boy has one."
The no,•cl new hobby layout features
race cars built wilh spaceage-style nylon
bearings, powered by gravity but souped
up by 1 supercharger unit inside a
roadway tunnel .
Young Campbell was interested in that
sort of thing.
The 1959 1-~ountaln Valley High School
graduate was a rrtshman majoring in
mathematics at Orange: Coast College.
"He w1s going to be a nuclear
physicist,'' .said hill sister.
Boys in Ward 34A at the hospital -
Campbell's age, but with Jess learning
ca1>3tlty to match lhfllr slmtlar interest.8
-will 5pend many happy hours with his
gift.
Bigger, faster wheels ~to Campbell's
death.
He w1s ridina: with a 15-yea.r~ld
neighbor the last d1y of hi5 life, when lhe
boy IO!rt control of the car on El Toro
Road, west of Trabuco Road In the Irvine
area.
The \•ehlclc hurtled &ldc1,1,•ays Into
11 utilU.y pole.
Campbell was taken lo Huntingt'ln
lntercommunity Hospital \lo'lth a crushed
cbest, aware he v.•as in very grave coa-
dition.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging. rupt.urcrl
li ver, multiple thorascic fractures. , ,"
S$1id nn Orange County coroner's deputy
detailing the causes of death.
CampbeO lert his father Richard , h1~
mother. Mrs. Dolores Topali an, or the
Fountain Valley home address. sla:ters
Beth, Pam and Dawn .
Hi s funeral was Saturday and he is
baried in \Vestminster Memorial Park.
Q:iestioned about obituary in!onnaliO!!..
Beth Campbell 'mentioned that he went tO
Jluntlngton Beach lUgh Scho0l tor one
ye~r before finishing up at the Fount.aln
Valley cJmpus.
\Vas there anything else that should be
lold about the youth who thought of un-
fortunates when he reolited there \\'as no
1onger much point in thinking of hims'clf"
1·No, that'a: all." &aid Beth .
I· •:
I
Wrecked
Jet Probed
For Cau se
Challenge
Brewing
To Unruh?
SACRAMENTO <UPI) -
Assemblyman Jack R. Fenton
Is considering bat t 11 n g -,....-~
Assemblyman Jess Unruh for !£'~::>~
the post or A s s e m b I y ~~::'.:'.~~~~~~ Democratic leader.
Fenton, ()f Montebello, said
1'1()nday he would challenge t--..,,,o=-
• •
· .. 0 .. . . . "
SAN DIEGO (APJ -The FB
Crusader jet lighter that
plunged into a hangar at
fttiramar Naval Air Station
last week causlng 12 deaths is
being dlsssembled at the
Naval Air Rework 1'"'acility at
North Island in an effort to
determine cause of lhe crash.
The Navy said Monday that
parts of two other F8
Crusaders that crashed a
week earlier with no injuries
Food Quiz
Called Off
Unruh if caucus chairman ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: George Zenovi<:h does not seek E
the post. Zenovlch, of Fresno, '-;::::i.C.:::l..~=-~
also are being examined at the SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
facility, A federal court. hearing into
has not indicated any desire to t; ~:=:!=""'~
tackle Unruh.
A three-man board of in· the Stanislaus County ·food
vestigation into the Miramar situation, scheduled for today ,
crash Dec. 22 has been has been cancelled because
meeting dally and has heard $50,000 is being 1made
testimony from about "hair a availaJ>le to help needy dozen people'' so far I r 'II
Fenton said his bid would be
"No reflection on J es and
what he's done. It's just that
he's rwming for governor and
we're in the Assembly."
Unruh is a candidate ror the LJ~~:::l..C.:..d.'...11J
O em o cratic gubernatorial '::::'.====::'.~==~~~~~~===:'.___ authoritiei said. ami es. .
The plane crashed into the ·A.ttorn_ey Marty Glick of the
nomination and is expected to _
be campaigning much of the
season. hangar after its pilot Lt,.,· Calilorn1a Rural L e g a I
Cyrus Riddell, 27. or' Sah Assistance (CRLA) r~ttested
Diego ejected safely. 1'1onday that the hearmg be
Fenton said during the 1970
election year A s s e m b I y
Democrats should have a
leader who will attend session
U.S. FLAG PATCHES ISSUED
The1toll ~to 12 Saturday canctlled beca.u~e ''at th~ rD?"
\vith the death of Petty Orficer ment, no add1t1onal relier is
3C Robert LM :f.1osley of nece.ssary. '.' .
Madisonville, Tex., at the Glick said food provided by
Naval flospital. Of 11 men still the Salvatio~ Army and
under treatment for injuries, $50,000 author1z~ by the C?f-
tv.·o remain critic.al and four fic.e .:if Econonue Opportunity
ha\te been reported in, serious ill Washington wotild mee.t the
condition. area's ''immediate needs."
regularly.
He a I s o said Unruh may
have to take some positions on
issues during the campaign
which would not be acceptable
to other Democratic
Assemblyman.
QUINCY (UPI) -Plumas
('()l.Jnty's 23 uniformed sheriff's
deputies soon will be wearing
American flag s h o u Id e r
patches in an effort to protect
themselves from attack and
in.still patriotism in local
residents.
She riff W. C. AbernaUiy said
J.1onday he ordered t h e
patches after learning that a
survey in Florida showed thal
policemen w e a r i n g the
miniature flag suffered fev.·er
assaults than those who dido"t.
mart savers
study statements
Before putting your money to work, study a financial statement carefully.
Things like "Notes to Statement of Conditions" are as meaningful as
figures.
There will be great peace of mind for those who have invested money at ' Newport Balboa Savings in the forthcoming sixteen-page 1969 Annual
Report. It will reveal that we have enjoyed one of the best of our 34 years
in the rapidly prospering Harbor area,
Our outstanding strength will be well reflected in our position as regards
real estate foreclosures, our cash and Government Bond resources, and
our new affiliation with the $1.2 billion California.based Imperial Cor·
po ration of America.
It is a report worth reading~and comparing with that of any other
association or financial institution,
'
1911•
Xe .. ,...,... D•"-
l!>••'lnp •nd f.oan
...... ..,.,,..:.1-
Ano .. .i fl<oJl<>l't ' 1969 Annual Report Available Jan. 8 --------Newport Bllboa Savl'nrs
illnd loin Association
3366 Yl1 lido
Newport Be.lch, C11ifomla ?2663
P1e1se send the 1969 Annual Report
.L ______ _
''Smart savers save here''
.
. ---~ . . .....
f11tida1, Drttmbv lO, 1969 DAILV PILCT ••
Forgott~1~ .. G_I Wins
Court Order~ Immediate Discharge
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A
federal court ha s ordered im·
mediale return from Vietnam
and a dischar~ for a soldier
serving out 11 months he spent
al ho1ne wailing for orders.
The 9th U.S. Circuit Court of
App'.eals rulL'<i Monday that the
orders retumiug Pfc. Richard
Beaty, 23, of Porterville,
Callf., to duty were un-
constitutional. It ordered the
Army to bring him home and
discharge him.
The d e c I s i o n overturned
Judge \Villiam Sweigert',s rul-
ing in U.S. District Court last
August, 'vhich upheld lhe
Army's claim that Beaty had
a duly ';not to sit at.home and
hope the Anny couldn't find
him.''
Beaty, married and the
father of three. is serving with
the Isl Cavalry Division. He
was inducted Feb. 9, 1967. and
\vas sent 10 Germany. There
he. vo lunteered for Vietnam
11nd was ordered home in
November 1967 for 60 days to
await orders to .Ft. Lewis,
\\lash .,. and ultimately Viel-
nan1.
\Vhen Beaty reC<!ived no
orders. a locul recruiting
sergeant told hin1 to k~ep
\\'<iitin).l. Beaty's mother said
~he called the Pentagon f\Yice
and ~·as told her son should
"keep waiting."
ln March 1961 Beaty was in
an aulo accident. P o I i c e
checked with Ft. Lewis and
learned he was not absent
without leave.
From then until his two-yur
tenn expired in Febl'Ult)'
19!3', Beaty made no fuMber
effort to contact Army or-
ficlals and·. they never corr
lacted hlm .
Army ofrlcials reaHud U,
paperwork foul -up when Bul)o
applied la.st Feb. I rOr
discharge. In July, Beaty wis
ordered to repay the ~l
months ht had rtmained slleit
-from the auto accident unftl
his application ror dlscharp
-and :sent h1m to Vietnam ln
September. :, .. .
Girl's .Body Found,
Death Caus~own
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Ma·
rin County aulhorities awaited
an autopsy ~port today in
hopes of finding out w h a t
caused the death of 16-year·
old Leona Roberts, v.'hose body
was discovered on a beach
near Bolinas.
t.1\ss Roberts, a Napa beau·
ty college student, was b~
lieved to have been abducted
Dec. 11 from her boyfriend's
apartment in Rodeo, north of
Richmond.
She had been preparing din·
ner while her boy friend was
at "'ork. He returned and
fcund evidence of a struggle.
Neighbors sa id they heard a
scream.
The coroner's ofrice 6a.id
f..1onday that dental charts and
fingerprints established the
girl's identity,. and a ring
found on the body was identi·
fled by the girl's parents.
"There were no marks on
the body, no visible means ot
death," a f\1arin County i;her-
iff's inspector said.
The nude body was localed
Sunday by an elderly man
searching for driftwood.
Authorilies said it was Im-
possible the body could h11vl!l
been dumped into the bay 'Ort
the east s i d e and floated
through the Golden Gate.
Dependable Newport Balboa S.~~:!ngs
Main Office: 3366 Via Lido, Newport Beach, California 92663 • Phone 714 /673·3 130
Corona del Mar Office: Financial Plaza , 550 Newport Center Drive • Corona del Mar, California 92625 • Phone 714/644 ·1461
,,
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LEGAL N011CE
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Sl.t.TE OF CAL FOIN .t.
COUNTY OF l05 ANGEtE~
On oe ~mtll' 11 '&' bffo
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OVER THE COUNTER
..
OIYI YOUR SICllTAR.T
A HILPING HAND!
TAB ANSWlllN•
IUllAU
935.7777
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Tuesday's Oosing
•
Prices-Complete New York
Wall Street Ends
In Mixed T1·ading
NEW YORK (UPI) -I he slcok rnarkcl finish
ed mixed today m active turnover
The UPf marketv. ide 1nd1cator sho\ved a gai n
of 0 01 percent in 1 664 Issues traded There we1 e
722 declines and 679 advances
The Dow Jones 1ndustr1al average of 30 select
ed blue chips \Vas up 2 31 at 794 68 A turnover o!
approxunately 15 000 000 shares compared \Vlth
12.SOO 000 shares on Monday
One analyst srud the market absorbed a lot or
tax selling without g1v1ng mu ch ground and 1s like
ly lo continu e along tlus line through \Vednesday
which 1s the final day to take losses for 1969
Another Wall Street tax analyst noted that n1any
investors found 1t desirable to take tax losses this
year rather than wait until the new tax Ja"'' \I, hi ch
is regarded as less hberal takes effect m 1970
lt \vas the usual vear end cross currents \\1 th
tax selling on one hand and bargain hunting on th e
other said Saul Smerhng or Standard & Poor s
Electrorucs traded 1n regular fashion although
most point sized movers \Vere pointing higher
Chenucals showed scattered strength \Vh1Je
copper range attracted de1nand after 1t boo sted its
domestic copper pnce by 4 cents a pound
Steels motors ratls airlines aircrafts and con
glomerates generally traded 1n narrowly mixed
fashion
Prices \Vere weak on the Ame11can Stock Ex
change 1n moderately active trading
L DAIL V llJLOT lf
Stocli Exchange List
l6l 11
Complete Closing Prices -A1nerica11 Stock Exchange List
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• J I DAil y '1LOT
Creativity Award
UCI Program Honored .~Temp.o:· Deliveries Halted t •
I . By TOM BARLEY coolracl'ol January, I.,, lo I
• ., "" Dtltr "*' , .. " · ptt3ent publicatioo lbat ls
,l;.ANTA ANA -Owntrs of allMot' ldenUcal to the Shop-
tbe "Sunday Tempo" were .~ News. And much ol Its
crdered Monday to h a 1 t -content, it was argued, ii ·now
dilttlbutlon of t h e I r ad-aimed at the cllentele and in-
vOrtising-«lefltod publication 1.....ts· built up by · Rlwell
h\ Brea and La Habi'a and ctirlbg · his tenure of the Tri·
t.bret Loe Angeles County CoUnl,Y presidency.
dmmunities. '-''fbe.cOOrt nding-doe& not af·
~Superior Court Judge Robert .ft;!Ct.deµ,veries of lhe All~hn·
Otrtman upheld the argument ~ ~''Tempo" in Other
o t Tri-County Investment °!.•nae ,County commu~tiu: or
Ctt'poration president George nei.ghborlng Los Angeles Coun--
E. Moffat that "Tempo" lY, 8TtaS which do not conflict
JU> Ii sher W. Robert Russell ":If!'. Shopping News ter-
had viola ted the spirit of an ntorltS. Judge Corfman has ·
agrfe!llent reached betw~ ===
the two executives last Janu-
8ry when Russell sold his Tri-
Coonly interests lo Moffatt.
Judge Corfman granted a
temporary res t.raining order
and preliminary injunction
which will prevent door-to-
door deliveries of "Tr.mpo"
pending setting of a trial date
for the action.
Moffatt's attorney suc--
~fuUy argued that Russell 's
present production of "Tem-
po" was not in keeping with
the "modest publication" en·
visaged by both parties at the
time of the agreement. And he
got court support for his con·
tention that a "vital pro-
vision'' of tile agreement -
the undertaking that "Tempo"
W01Jld not compete with Tri·
Coonty's Shopping News -
had been breached on a
number of occastons.
·Judge Corfman was told
that "Tempo" has graduated
from tile small w e e k I y
publication agreed on in lhe
For The
Record
MEETINGS
TUISOAY
C,-QI Mar Klw1"1s Ch.ob, VIU1 ~. l5:M E. Co.al Hlthw1r. c ... -det Mtr, 11:10 1.m. M'f1:11,,.1on B•ftW Klwlllll Club, Hu,.. '3..""' *'" ttr Cou11••r Club. JOOO Pl AYI~ H.ullllnthltl l 1adl, 12:15
N::",,.;..1 H1rtlor Opllmlrt CMI, VIit. Merln1, IMS e•rtkl• Drl..., Ntwf!Orl e1Kt1. n :u 1>.m. C001!1 ,,.,.,,, ~lwll'!ll Clutlb Cost1 Mu. 2:1f I nd ounfrY Clu , 1101 0..14 ::y,ne Or!v1. C"fl:,.~ 1?:15 ~.m. "r. ntton ,,_. ,., "'" ";rr, our Wl""1 illnt.ur , rim (J,Jc1 ROM, Hu1111 ... t:: ltacll, :lS 1.m. Munfl= l1Kl'I Norltl Llcint Ck/ti, m-l1rt C1111nt1 Clvb, 16112 tfl.m, Huntln1non ••ell. 17 -"· l!Xchl= },lub ef lnlM llld1JSlrl1I Corn('. •· 1111 Shlr1 litnt1ur1111, n•1 W. ...II Hllhwl"f', New-I ltl(h, 12 -. ltoll'I' CIUb f//f New-•·&lllxMI, 1rvlne ~cr:~~.~~CZ.""~~:r J!i~ .~-¥J ~~~· CDJt1 MOH•NirwPOr1 Htrbor Lions Club, Mont V....U. Country Club, ~Mesi.,,. p.m. T091 11t1n Club noF-. k l11111 T1ble Jte!1ur1n1, w n tml111ttf, • p.m .
1 1,_ ll1r Llonl Club, VIiii r.••lftlJ 10..S lrt11de Ori~•. N-1 1Kh, p.m.
DEA'l'll NOTICES
CARSEY .
Dl<lzi1 V. C.rwt'. 2COI ,.K lfk COii!
:1r, HermoM llwdl, O.te of
, DK.emblr 20, In Vi.tMm.
S&irlMd by wi,., Nor11 -MkhNI v .. f//f sin oi..1 dlU9fltll'. ,.,~11
C1rMY. 1rvl111i brothl!'. Joe .c1n1r,
of Ml-. Ut6h1 thli.-1, Mr1. l.OY11t1
C1H. <>Arn, Ullhl Mn . ll1rt.lr1
Niel-. 5111 LP.1 City: l11hef", Hlf"·
ber1 G. C.f'WI', 9f M._. Ul1h, Slrv.
k:n. Frklll"f', 1 PM, PKlll< Vllw
c~"1. 1ntvme<1t, Peclflc vi.w M•
"""Ill Perto.. Olrecied b"f' P1<!lk View
MOl"llJ•l'Y.
PILKINTON
Meude L. Pll~lntOl'I. 1916 Court SI ..
N-part tlNch. Ankl*f!I ef 0•.,tft
c""""' for 43 "''"· llelovtd mothl• llf J1ck L. P llklnton; ..,.,,,,.,.i...taw
llf Mrs. Aurto P!lkln!Ol'I: 1111 ... of l..e·
!)'I' Clllde11 Mrs. J nH Moo"; 9r1"6-~ gt Joh" l , Pllkl"IOl'I, Mrt.
C.rol• Sor•llHl"I ..... Miii Miry Edith
PllklnlO". s..-v1ce1, WadMtd1r. ll:JO
/lJJ4, Jn the Churt h ot !he R«111ionlll.
F w111 L_ ... Gleftdllt. Forttl llWll
Mcw!U•r"f'.
ARBUCKLE & SON
• Westcllff Mortuary
CJ E. 17th St., Colla lttes1 -• BALTZ MORTIJARIES
Corou del Mar OR :I-HSI
Coita Men •U ~UC • BELL BROADWAY
MORTIJARY
UI BrNdw1y, Cost.I l\teP
lJ l-3U3 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Hutingtoe Valley
M-IJ')'
17111 Bead! Blvd.
HW1Ungton Betcll ... au.m i • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
.Cemel<ry e Morlury
-Capel
JM Plldlk View t>rfve
Newpm1 11eac•, Callforala .....,..
• . PSl!Z f'AMILY
"col.oNJAL FllNERAL
rt , HOMR m t Bolsa A'*L
·""*•'M'er ...... • • 1111!7FER MORTIJAllY tec-1 Btacti •WI
S-Oemeatt -.1 • • llllTllS' MORTIIARY
U7 Maloll. U.•d•.---
"
not 9e( I trial date fOr he11'._ln£ Of \he prr.ss by interferinl
" the action. :wltil the distribution or ideas.
Russell currently facea a Sunday M a i I exec utive11
court battle ·on his alleged recently appeared before the
ytolation of Fullerton anU.lit.. · Costa Mesa City Council to get
ter laws. A city ordlnance the conflrmatlon of that body
apeclficalJy aimed . at preven-that area distribution o f
ting dlstrlbutJon by Ryssell's "Ttmpo" was Mt Jn connict
Sunday.Mail Inc. oC "Tempo" with city ordinances. They
was temporarlly halted by Los were assured that its delivery
Angeles federal court aclloa. would not be questioned · pro-
But both parties mwt ap-vlded the Russell company
pear Jan. 12 before Judge paid. itS license fees.
The Univer sity of California
Extension, Irvine, h" recelv·
ed the creativity award af the
National University Extension
Assocation for its program,
,;Conference on Downtown
Areas in Orange County."
The award was made at the
NUEA Galaxy Conferen~ on
Adult Educatio n held I n
Wa s h ington, D.C.
"Downtown Areas of Orange
County," produced by UCI·
Project 21, a unique col·
Jaborative endeaV1lr combining
the resources of the University
of California. Irvine, and Pro-
ject 21, ·a private leadership
group concerned with the
future environment of the
area.
Oiarles Carr for a furtlier '1Tempo" executives were
hearing on Rus!ell's argument warned, however, that they
t hat Fullerton's antl·litter must immediately comp I y
measure inf ring.ts on rreedom with the d e m a n d s of
homeowners v.•ho objf'L1 lo
delivery of the unsollcitetJ
publication.
The conference, for which
lhe award was given, was held
on the UC Irvine campus and
v.•as based on a report,
Based on months of work by
a study team con1prlsing
public officials and private
citizens, the report outlined
problems and advanced
SOME IMPORTAN T FACTS
Q:
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' ABOUT TH E
JANUARY 131h ELECTION.
(BALBOA BAY CLUB LEASE EXTENSION)
WHY AN ELECTION IN THE FIRST PLACE? in laxes as a result of !he implementation of th e Club's
Because the City Charter requ ires !hat City leases of 25 master plan. So this election provides the ta xpa yers of
years or more duration be approved by !he voters. The Newport Beach with a unique opportunity to finance many
Balboa Bay Club lease has approx imately 29 years remain· of its capital improvements or new recreational projects
ing. However, the request for extension for an additional without di gging into !heir own pocke ts.
26 years makes the vote mandatory.
' Q: DO THE TERMS REMAIN STATIC UNDER THE EXTENSION
WHO WORKED OUT THE TERMS DF THE LEASE? PROPOSAL?
A City Council committee and !he City staff worked over A: No, and this is a very favorable concession lo the City. The
minimum inc reases every fi ve years with cost·Of·living a year negoti~ng the lease. They also hired a r~pected adjustments. furthermore, the extension provides for a independent research firm, Development Research Asso· complete renegot iation of both !he minimum and !he per-ciates of Los Angeles, lo evaluate the lease proposal and
to adv ise !hem . The full City Cou ncil unan imousl y cen tages during the lease term at numerous times •.
approved the lease document for submission to the voters.
Q: NONE OF THESE PERIODIC ADJUSTMENTS ARE PROVIDED
THEN THOSE WHO HAVE STUDIE~ THE LEASE MOST FOR JN THE PRESENT LEASE?
CLOSELY MUST FEEL THAT THE TERMS ARE FAIR. HOW A: No, and if the extension is not approved, the City will real·
DOES THE BAY CWB FEEL ABOUT THEM? ize very little more from the property than it does today-
While consenting to the City's terms, the Club considers and this conditi on will exist for the next 29 years.
them very stringent, but the Bay Club has accepted them •
out of a desire lo properly finance high quality improve· Q: ISN'T THERE ANOTHER ISSUE JN THE CAMPAIGN-THAT
menls which requ.ire an economic life of more than the OF CREATING A PUBLIC PARK ON THIS LAND WHEN THE
remaining 29 years. CURRENT CLUB LEASE EXPIRES?
A: The answer to that is provided by the City 's own consult·
WHAT ARE THE TERMS OF THE PRESENT LEASE? ants. They conclude: "This alternati ve does not, in our
opinion, represent a reasona ble deve lopment alternati ve. The Club pays the City $45,000 minimum rental and an The magnitude of the curren t level of development (at the overage based on the level of gross sales. Club) -in excess of $7 million in 1968-precludes from
an economic point of view the demoli tion of these build·
SO THE CLUB IS A CHIEF CONTRIBUTOR TO LOCAL AGEN· ings fo r a lower use." Even the opponents to the lease ' CIES. HOW MUCH WILL THE CLUB PAY UNDER THE NEW extension concede that the major new structures will .not
LEASE? be torn down in 29 years.
The minimu m rental will jump from $45,000 to $150,000
annually and the percentage on sales will increase. Q: THEN THE CITY WOULD NOT BE EXPECTED TO DESTROY
/" MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN BUILDINGS AND IMPROVE-
HOW MUCH DID THE CLUB PAY JN TAXES? MENTS-WHICH IT WOULD OWN ATTHAT POINT -AND
Last year $10,000 in City occupancy tax and $137,000 in GIVE UP MILLIONS MORE IN DIRECT REVENUE AND TAXES
property laxes with $68,000 of th e latt er sum going to the FOR A NON-REVENUE USE OF THE LAND?
Newport-Mesa Unified School District. A: Most assuredly not. It cou ld not afford to.
WITH THE INTELLIGENT FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OFTHE Q: THEN THE REAL ISSUE HERE IS WHETHER THE CITY IS
PROPERTY, SALES AND PROPERTY TAXES WILL FURTHER GETTING A FAI R DEAL FROM THE PROPERTY IT OWNS?
INCREASE. WHAT WILL BE THE NET GAIN TO THE CJTJ.
ZENS OF NEWPORT IF THE LEASE IS EXTENDED? A: This is precisely the qu estion and it has been soundly
answered by the City staff, the City's Consultants, the
Economics Research Associ ates ·estimates th at over the Counci l and community leaders. It is an important issue
next 29 years alone (the remaining lease period) the City for every taxpayer in Newpo rt Beac h. The rising cost of
Will enjoy a $7.3 million net gain in revenue and that local gove rn ment demands a YES vote from all of us on the lease
government and schools will receive over a million dollars on January 13 .
THE CITY WORKED OUT THE TERMS
THE CLUB HAS AGREED TO THEM
• EVERYONE BENEFITS FROM A YES VOTE JANUARY 13 -
. I '
--
altemaUve suagestloos:fon._.
mediate and long nzwe •
proaches to solutiom to the
detirioraUon ol urban cOrt:i.'
The conference wa's at-
tended by opproxlmalely tit
public officials and commUJ)lty
leaders and generated . wide-
spread interest in the rePQrt
and the problem. A s~baeq~
Project 21 pub 11 c'a tJ O'ftt,
' • Downtown Oeterioratloo,''
included the original raportras
well as the proceediJ\gs,. ot1tbe
coo!erence. I•
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·saddleha~k
• EOltlON
1i: voi:. 62, NO. 312,:. SECTIONS, 46 PAGES
Nixon
By MERRIMAN 5Ml111
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nix·
on today signed three major bills into
law -tax reform, mine safety and de-
fense appropriations -berore leaving
I for a holiday stay in Sou them CalifornJa.
The tax reform bill and the mine Safe-
ty bill were signed despite Nixon's ob-
jections <o some ol lbeir features. In eocb
•\(
A ,, ,, , . ,,
E i(
\
\
\
Signs
case, ho said the good featlll'eS (I( the
bil~ outweighed the bad.
The .-i.s billion budget for military
harilware had been cut $1 bllllon by Coo·
gres.1 after a bitler struggle over cotSls
and arms needs.
The ~resident and Mn. Nixon were to
Oy to the Western White House in San
Clemeote In mid afternoon. They will
return to Washington tho weekend of
, . .1
d
" 1 " \\ \ ..
< t 0 . .. .,> ,I/
\~ • ,~ S1n M1t10 P
~ o'f~ 0 \~ 0 / B
~ \ /
• \ /
7 \ /
..-J,. ~
\ / /
c "' HEAVY LIN ES OUTLINE PR ESIDENTAL SE CURITY IONE
Feds Not Likely to f orgive Tr11p1111 r1 •t Nixon E1tet1
Sea Well· Serured
Nixon Zo ne Now Off Limits
Violators of the newly extended securi·
IY zone aroond the Western White House
ill San Clemente are exposing themselves
to a prison term of up to 10 years or a
line of up to '10,000, but the Coast Guard,
which has just received orders on the
new boundaries, doesn't anticipate roun-
dlDg up many offenders.
''It would be pretty hard for anyone lo
lnadvertently wander aboard," said an
officer at the Coast Guard's LORAN sta-
tion, immediately adjacent to the
Presidential estate. "Both the water and
beach areas are very clearly marked and
all the rest is fenced off."
"The rest" now includes the LORAN
&talion and i~ offshore waters, represen-
ting a southerly extension of the mile·
long security zone.
The water area, i;ays the Coast Guard,
extends offshore for about half a mile
and is clearly marked with three white
can buoys markl!il wilh "internationa l
orange" stripes and a dialTl(lnd design.
The water security zone is barred to all
boa~ v.·hen a Coast Guard vessel is
present.
The beach ~rity area is marked at
its nor1hern and southern limits by signs,
6et rut by the Secret Service when the
President is in residence. It includes the.
beach oceanward of the estate and the
LORAN station. The beach area ts open
to the public "consistent with private
property rights," the Coast Guard 1tates.
However, the Secret Service has the right
to bar beachgoers near the estate U this
is regarded as necessary for Presidential
security. The fenced-in land area or the
estate and the Coast Guard StaUon are
"closed to unauthorized persons at all
times.''
Regulations for the extended stcurity
zone are spelled out in the Coast Guard 's
new "Notice for Mariners," which states
that securlly within the water, beach and
land areas will be enforced by the Coast
Guard, the Secret Service and r;uch other
federal, state and municipal agencies
which may be calll!il upon lo assist.
Despite the poulbly formidable punish·
n1ent for violations of the zone, the Coasl
Guard hastens to point out that new
"notice" is really just a legal tool to be
used only in emergency.
"Nobody 's going lo start runnin!·
around arresting people," said the
LORAN officer. "It's all handled very
nice ly and we don't expect any pro-
blems."
But just in case any careless mariner
should "wander aboard," it might be
noted thal lhe regulation applies to "any
owner, agent, master, officer or crew
member'' aboard the vagrant vessel
County Woman Re scue s 3
Tots From Fire, Burned
A Buena Park mother ls resting com-
fortably In the bum unit of the Orange
County Medical Center today after saving
the lives of three small children Monday
I! l flash f!re destroyed her apartment
P1LOT FUTURAMA
INSIDE TODAY
The DAILY P!Wl''r annual "1'0r\ on
.....,.... and growth In the Orange C<>o.t
aru,s business and industry community,
combined with a >oot Into the economJc
lulurio, appears Inside loday.
The speclal P'tm1RAMA 1 e ct I o n
fea!Um uticlcr, photographs and ads
which tell the llory of the Orange CO.st'•
Uuiving commercial life. Be sure to read
f'UTURAMA 1979, Inside loday.
l\tn. Patricia Gcrsage, 22, of 7610
Jackson Way, suffered f!rst and RCODd
degree burns over 25 percent of her body
while rescuing lhe children Crom the in-
ferno.
Also Injured was 2-year-old Yvette
Arsenault, 5491 Lockhaven Drtve. A
hospital spokesman said she ii Improving
arter receiving first and second degree
bums over 20 percent of her body.
Authorltiet said Mn. Gorsag_e w11 car-
ing for her son David, a, a neighbor child.
Shawn HerrinKton, 2, and Yvette when an
explosion rocked the apartment While
the resulting names tnguUed the atruc-
ture, the woman broke a nar wlndow.
left the 1partment and then returned to
get the children.
Four. fire .department unltl 'l'UIJ()lldlnf 1
<o the 4:15 p.m. oan liatiled the bl.Z.Tor
eight minutes. Buena Park fire depart..
mut spokesmen &akt the appmmt cau!IC
was 1 gu leak. Damap <o the apart.
ment was estimated to be In excess of
ft0,000.
..... ----
Teday'• Fl•al
•
ORANGE.COUNTY, CALIFORNIA TEN CENTS
•
Bills :._ ...... Heads
' ,, . --for Coast
J.an. 11, a week or 10 befcn Coogrea
convenes again.
Nixon is expected (o 181< Congrea to
pass new taxes, but will probibly wait
unlit his State -or the Union address JSJ1.
22 to spell out what ~ bas In mind. It
is almost certainly likely howeyer, t.o in-
clude a "value added" tax, in which a.
tax l! added at each· .dage of the manu-
facturing process.
.-
Congnoss has Passed an unbatanctd blil
that Ir both good and bad," Nixon sxid
In a statement released by the White
House. "The tax reforms, on the whole,
are gO!)d; the effect on the budget and on
the c~t of livQ!g is bad."
Nixon said he approved the measure
because the improvement& ln tax fajr·
ness through the reforms outbalance the lnflatlonaey Impact from· the $9.1 billion
tax cu( the bill canies.
The 'bill provider ln·nllef·fcr 113 mll·
Uon Americans and Includes a'. 15 percent
-'In Social Security benefiia and
loophole-closing reforms.
For the first Ume ta:1payer1 will see
the effect.s 1of the bill will be In their pay-
check for tbe first week Of the.new year ,
wheii fthe present 10 percent tu sur·
chor"'_goes down <o 5 porcenL '111at will
dlmlnlah the ta:1 withholding sllahfly. The
surcharge is scheduled to uplre com·
pletely June 30, 1970.
The tax reduclion results chiefly from
a three year Increase in the MOO in-
come tax personal e:1emption. It will rise
lo $650 in July lo 1700 in January and <o
f750 in January 1973. The bill also granb special tax relief for 11· mlllioo poot
(See NIXON, Pqo I)
Lagunan Held . in China
'
'Too Old for Brainwash'
Longhair ·Youth
Wins Court Plea
A U.S. District C'.owt judge Monday
f!lued a preliminary in;junctlon telling
Saddleback College it mtlllt not" prevent a
l~ng-haired male. student from. regi!ter·
ing for courses.
The way now is clear for, Lindahl King,
%1, long locks and'all, <o reBister <o begin
attending classes next week. '
Judae. l!al:ey , Pre&<non.·~T .the Los
Ana;elea court found that_.tbe. ,vearintc#,i
long hair is· a right ot 1'ti!Olill !ib<i'lif
which should not be 1nfrlnjed unlem· 1
u.er.~1· a·-ir·(I(· o..,..helltllng in·
terest by the junior-college distirct.
"[.am not ~."""re1cted ~
dlehadt Board President Michie! Coltfus.
"PeOple got temp:rary injunctions all the
time. 1 wouJC! 'be ditappolnt.ed if a
perinanent injunction was granted after a.
full hearing." ·
Collin.so an attorney, explaJned that a
temporary injunction is not a decision on
the merits but rather a findlng that the ·
plainllff would uff'r irreparable harm if
in fact he is right.
"In this 'case," he said, "the plal~tiff
clah:ns lf~you dori't.st.op the wheels right
·1 !
' If" ., ~ .,.,
-•i.r"J·' Ti· t :·::i'.-li,..'
"
Just Dessert
now lat'r it will be too late. All the court
is saying is we are going to pruerve }ti.a
rights unUi we decide what bis rights
are."
Collins said the judge's statement
abouL in{rlnging per80081 libertY ii a.well
established conStituttonal principle.
"Thei:e l! oo ~ustion .MY dress code is
•n lnfririgei:nent o( a ~~,. ·. ·nil libertr\1' 11e,,.a. . . ' -. • .. , a"&ilMrand-~ .. ~ •• _.
danfs of. cm.. ml gl'Ol/llllng. That Is
what 'theibear.Inl wfD determine."
No dale bas yet ~ set for tbO h<ar·
llJi "' a . ~! lnjllncilon which Collliis ~d lollows .~·iif :a tem-wrary injanctio,n· as ,a m:atter qt'·~ne.
Attorney Patricia Herior bf Corona del ~far, wJxrrepielentesi 'King, Hid, "Here they.~rt teping a grow'n man (King is 21)
how to wear his heir, which Is
rldiculous.J•.
She ·said there i.!l no precedent of cases
involving junior college dress ·codes
because no junior co llege has theril. All
the cases of reCord, she s.11.id, invoJYe hljh
(See SADDLEBA'CK, Page I) . • t • '
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J '•I I ' ' . ' . ' .. , '
' '.,. . . ·: . ' . ~ ~ ·-' . . ,
, ..
You never know who might show. UJJ'for .dlnn!'"'llr Three· Arch Bay.
. Monday nigh\; It was Victor, a ~pound eenjujlanl blacl«b-.r;...,..
tenderly accepted the candy so ·graclQUllY oUerid. pl'lor·to tile' miljl
course by his hostess, Mrs. Vera Houdyrbell. Victor then dined on
lettuce, apples, grap"' and Kool·Ald Jn Ille garage of lh8 Houdythe!J'
residence 22l!72 VistadeJ.Sol betore.1111ppr0a1tlv.e alMlfonce of nei&b-
hood chlldnn. He Is· Ille pet of frllllds of.Ille Houdysh"ls wbo .dlllP,',
ped In lor dinner. They 11& Jn the bauH. · , 1 • '
: r ._.I
' . . . , -
Will Return
To Business
On Tuesday
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of .. Oilll., ..... ,....
Allhough Simeon Baldwlll '1 Chioeoe
captors fo.'.sted1 propag,,nda Cit\• Ute
Amerlcxn bualn<sln>an; they ~
decldett be wUn•t' nPe for 'a ~
. br•lnw!"b---'
,, ':f ~,_..t';l~ill ·• ...... 'fl .It >j. ~ ...... i:::r-n;;~~'li
: .. ·.,,. ,.. • • .. .. 1 .. .,,,.
• • : ~ , DAft.TIJlliLof .J_: ......
HEADS JIAC1' TO NONO, KQNG
'L•gUM 't Simeon B_elclwln· '
¥-guna Beach
P·utri~ts . Parade . . . . . '
Draws lnre rest . .
Laguna's "Fourth ' Annual PatriOts'' Day
Jmrade promises to be "a ""1aminoth
event," par a.d ,e chalnpan ;Qar)" Zim·
merman reports.
More than 650 lnv·ftat'to ·na 1o
psrtidpate in ·the parad.e scheduled for
Saturday, Feb.· 21, have been Sent Out
ol'er Southern California and entries are
coming in three times as fast as last
year, Zimmerman .said.
Honoring Washington's birthday and
presented by the Exchange Club and Pa·
tlence Wright Chapter of the Daughters
oi the American Revolution , the parade
this year will take for its theme, "My
Country, 'Tis of Thee."
Zimmerman 11aid local clubs and
organizations are responding well to re-
quests for support of the annual event
and urged those who ha ve not offe red
help to do so as soon as possible becatls!!
of the anticipated size of tJ;is year's
pare.de.
"We're going to need all the help we
can get," he emphulzed.
Contributions may bt sent to· par8!1e
chairman Zhitmennan at P.O. Box 1207,
Laguna Beacb. Additional information
and parade entry blank!! may be obtained
by contacting Mn. Fred G. Ross, 494-
0l77.
A new parade rule this year, Mn. Rou
1ald, will require conronntty with the
Flag code and members or the American
Legion and Veterans of Foreign Wars will
be on hand to check all entries to make
11urt no vJolalions or the code' occur.
P olice P uzzled
By Gas Theft
Laguna Beach police m puzzlina
over the dluppearance of an estimated
680 gaJloot. of gasoline from an, un.
clerground .storage tank at a South Cout
lllgllwaj< -· 111&1!011' -· An apparently )lrofession1lly equipped
Ulf<lf v1rf~•tbo-oi'ay 1\\'l1Cbx ChevroO ll\al!On• llllO s. :co.at !Ugtrwar at some tlnii 'betw~f ll p.m. Friday and 7 a.m.
Satun::lay 1nd siphoned out a ldng-alu 1
tOnklbad of reJUlar 1111. valued at litlll,
Wllco('!olcf poliC<I.
The IOal WU reported Monday alter
Wttcox diecked the au level In the hu1•
-wttll'I dip llllct, pollce uld.
• • • •
Wl8 a lo,! cause. I'm JuB1 a' d)'ld-bMhe-·
wool capitalist and I argued with them 1
Jot" • • I
·Baldwin wu 1 prisoner for nearly' 10
montho,<o Red Chinese OOllUDllhfo alter ~ In Febnwy aboard ~ yacht
H~
. He will return <o his Hong Kong
aln;rift comf>C!iie.nt.s ~iness TUSI~ afler spendllig the Chrl!imas holiday
'with his wlfe ,Marjorle, 1359 CWf Drive,
and their three children.
After the February capture dtuing 1
yachting junkeL, of Baldwin, Amsican
Bes&e Hope Donald, 47, and 11 others rl.
mixed nationality, mention was made of
sophisticated electronic gear aboard
Bakiwin's yacht.
"They gave the'lmpreuton I was run-
ning one of those surveillance ships,"
said Baldwin, who added that he waa not
with the CIA, "just a tropical trader."
Baldwin said the Chinese think aD
Americans are CIA. He sa!d the Horasum
was well equipped but not more so than
other ocean going yachts .
·It's eqWpment, from a firm Baldwin
repre'sents In the Orient, included ~
lion finders, automatic pilot, radio
transmiUers and receivers and other
gear. Baldwin said he makes 1,500 mile
trips from Hong Kong lo Manilia and
needs the equipment.
Natty In a business suit and bow tie,
Baldwin is about 30 pounds lighter than
his 165 pounds when the Chinese took him
in tow.
"He waS worried about his front veran-
da (convex stomach )," smiled Mrs.
Baldwin. "Now he's eating like it was
going out or style."
Baldwin who was rea.90nably well led
by his captors -rice, vegetables and
small amounts or meat or fish -used to
Jove Chinese food .
But Majorie· Baldwin didn't mention It
when they went out to dinner last night.
They tried Mexican food instead at
(See BALDWIN, Page I)
Orange Coast
Weather
We'll have some gusty wlnds
from the northeast to help Ull rlna:
out the old decade Wednellday.
Temperatures are still peggtd in
lhe mlddle to upper &IIUet.
INSIDE TODAY
In the 19701, CoUfornla wflf
moue paat lhe 20 m.UUon mark,
c!inchtna more jfrmlJI ICI jfr1t
in population 1tatiu, but li'1 a
record which ha& mi.ud blt1,..
ln91. Page 24.
.
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f DAil Y PILOT l
Ul'I Tt lffh9N
PRESIDENT NIXON SIGNS FAR REACH ING TAX MEASURE
Wiii Aslc fo r New Revenue Legislation or Cut Sptinding
Here's Capsule Glance
At Tax Reform Mea sure
WASHINGTON (AP} -Here are some
of the things you, 8! an individual tax-
paytt, will find affecting you in the years
ahead from the new tu bill signed today
by Pmklenl Nixon.
None of them applies to the taxes on
1989 income for which tal'payen: will be
filing rel.ams by April 15, 1970.
T11 redaction :
The present $600 personal exemption is
lncreued to $650 from July 1, 1970. to
Dee. 31, 1171. to $70 Oin 1m, and to $750
In 1173 and tllerealter.
An Sl,100 Jow-locome allowance to
benefit poorer families is added to
~rsonal exempUons in 1970.
The present standard deduction, 10 per-
cent ol adjust.eel gross Income up to
Sl,000, ts raised to 13 pereent with a
11.100 ceiling In 1171, to II per...,( and
12.000 In 1972, and to IS percent and
12.000 In 1173.
Single per10ns, effective in 1971, will
pay no more than 20 percent above the
tu level for married couples.
A maxhnwn rate or 60 percent on earn·
td income, ln!tead of the present 70-per·
tent, is filed [or 1971 and 50 percent
lbtreafter.
Pmona who work only part ol the
r ear, such as studenb with summer jobs,
i re excused from tax withholding if they
certify they will have no tax liability for
the year and owe no tu from the
previous year.
8odat llec9rlty:
A 15 percent increase in Social Securi-
ty beneflta for all reciplent.s becomes ef·
ledJve Jan. 1, with the first highertpay-
ment due early in April.
From P .. e l
NIXON ...
and near-poor ta:a:payers.
Trtaaury Secretary David M. K<nn<dy
I.old newsmen at the White House after
the President aigned the bill that the mea·
~ure enacted by the DemocraUc Con-
gress made Nixon's bu lgetary problems
even more severe.
But Kennedy sidestepped questions
abotu whether the President would ask
Congress next year to increase taxes,
po&Sibly throu gh a "value added tax."
This is a form of excise tax on manufac·
tured 1oods.
Kennedy acknowledged that the treas-
ury department has been studying the
value added tax but he said it was only
"'one of the areas that is under study."
DAILY PILOT
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Tax Exten5ioru:.
The income lax surcharge. \lthich has
been 10 per«nt, is cut to five percent
through June 30, 1970, and eliminated en-
tirely after that.
Present excile taxes of 10 percent on
telephones and seven p e r c e n t on
au tomobiles are extended for one year, to
Dec. 31, 1970.
Tax reforms :
A 10 percent minlmwn tax is applied
against a broad list of preference items,
i~cluding some oil income, capital gains
arid accelerated real estate depreciation.
But the taxpayer can subtract from his
preference income what he pays in
normal federal income ta:a: before ap-
plying the 10 percent levy.
Persons moving more than 50 miles are
pennitted to ded"Jct moving expenses, in-
cluding such items as the expense of pre-
rnove house-huting.
Hobby farmers who sell thelr land will
have the sale pr ice taxed as ordinary in -
mme rather th8n the lower capital gain
rate to the extent or the operating let.s!es
previously cla imed. Thia applies only to
those with '50,000 of nonfarm inoome for
lhe year and with fann losses in e1cess
of 125,000.
Losses on a hobby not carried Cf! for
profit cannot be claimed as credit on in-
come.
Excepllonally fast tax write-offs now
available for commercial and Industrial
buildings are disallowed. There is a
smaller reduction In the llbe ral deprecia-
tion now available on used buildings, in·
cluding apartments.
On capital gains income in excess or
$50,()(X), the rate becomes half of the
normal Income ta:.: rale or a maximum
35 percent, instead of the present 25
percent maximun1.
Frona Page l
BALDWI N • • •
Lagun3'.!I Tortilla Flats.
Initially said Baldwin. who had no
pri vacy awake, asleep or even In the
bathroom, "\ve had a bad lot of guards."
He v.·as permitted only to sit on a chair
for about four months. After that, the
guards improved.
Baldwin read his 1.500-page navigation
book and apparenlly glanced at Red pro-
paganda left handy. Time hung heavy.
He described it as "10 months of sitting
and not kno\\'ing what's going to happen
the next day and worrying about what's
happening to your famlly and finances ."
Baldwin talked to interpreters who
looked in daily. He said the Chinese fear
only the Americans and Russians and
believe the two powe rs are conspiring
against the Chinese Communists.
Baldwin and ~1rs. Donald. estranged
wife of televi.!lion actor Peter Donald \\'ho
at first tried to hide their nationality,
\\·ere moved frequently during the
months of capUvity.
Tiley were kept first at a location about
10 miles Crom Macao while tedlniclans
dismantled and examined hls nav iga·
tional equipment.
Baldwir1 said there are war prepara-
tions such .as militia training and
roadblocks. "preparina against American
and Soviet invasions.'\ He said Red
Chinese propaganda k~eps the people
under "a war tension''.
Baldwlr: loves Laguna ~·hich he h11~
visited frequently during 25 years as a
"tropical trader". He plans to live here
after Tetiremenl But that \\'On't be for
awhile. Tomorrow he'll wh.lsk off to Hong
Cong "'here tnt.cmaUonal business deals
a"·ail ..
Tot Fatally Injured
By Lirl to Toy Ch es t
LONG BEACH (AP) -The coroner's
office report! l·ycar-old Anthony
VUlartle was fatally Jnjured when the lid
of a Christmas toy chest fell on his neck.
Police uld lhe boy wu pronounct\'f
' dead Monday at Long Beach CommunlLy
Hospital after a babysilter found tlle lid
clOStd on hl1 neck. He was lhe ton of ~fr.
Md ~lrs. Sarafin Vlllarete and al.to had •
t~·ln brother.
Plea to Excuse
I ·, Jurors -Rejected
By TO~ BARLEY
OI lh• OlllJ ,11111 )l•lf
Suputor Court Judge Robert Gardner
?tlonday refused to grant a moUon which
would have prevented attorneys for a
police officer accused of brutality from
calling members of the Orange County
Grand Jury as witnesses.
Judge Gardner rejected Chief Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's move
for quashing of subpoenas Wued to the 19
members of the invtstlgative panel. He
ruled that their special privileges do not
include exemption from proceedings in
\\'hich attorney Ron Owen seek.s their
testimony.
But the judge did indicale that Owen's
demands might be met in some form
other than in open court next Jan. 7, the
date set for hearing of a moLion for
dismissal of brutality charges against
Santa Ana Patrolman Richard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he will
discuss the issue "'ith the Grand Jury on
Friday. He wil l then, he said, be in a
position to "discuss this matter more
fully with Mr. Owen and perhaps arrive
at some arrangement."
Faust, 26, was indJ"cted on charges of
assault with a deadly wea pcin after,
witnesses told the Grand Jury that he
clubbed a 17-year-old black youth who
was being committed to Juvenile Hall.
O\ft'n'a associate, Allan Stokke said
members of the Grand Jury "were out to
get a police officer in any way they coold
and we want them investigated."
Stokke said the "Grand Jury's actions
prior to the indictment of Officer Faust
are not the only things we are going to
question."
J esse Gi.lQlore, now 18. of Santa Ana.
told the Grand Jury that he was knocked
to 1he ground and clubbed upon delivery
at the Orange County facility.
The panel learned through Gilmore·s
S\\'Om testimony that the youth WllS being
cornmitted with two companions when
Faust and othe r officers allegedly used
night sticks to beat him into submiSslon.
Gilmore was allegedly making an
escape attempt at the time, according to
Patrolman Faust, who remaina on duty
~1ding outcome of the case .
other witnesses to the fraca.,, Jut July
testified it did appear to be a break for
freedom, but that Faust's partner at the
scene called out that the youth had been
whacked enough before he .stopped,
F rom Page l
SA DDLEBACK RULI NG • • •
school students.
Arguing on behaU of King before the
judge Monday along with Mrs. Herzog,
were A. L. \Virin and Fred Okrand, chief
staff counsels fo r Southern California of
lhe American Civil Liberties Union.
John Powell of the County Counsel's
Office represented the junior college
dist rict.
Four written affidavits were filed.
.$200 Ski lloliday
Added to Prizes
For Sports Sliow
A $200 ski vacation at Heavenly Valley,
in the Lake Tahoe area, today was added
to the giveaway package the DAILY
PILOT is offering in connection with the
Southern California Sports, Vacalion and
Rec reational Vehicle Show.
The grand prize packa ge, put together
by Holiday Airlines, includes transpo~ta·
li on via Holiday·s Super Electra Jets
from Hollywood·Burbank airpo rt directly
to Tahoe and return. p I us ac·
commodations at the Ramada Sands and
other extras," inc 1 u ding ski tram
passes and entertainment in Tahoe'li
Nevada-side night spots.
To be eligible for the grand prize, DAI·
LY PILOT readers need only to send in
their names. addresses and phone
numbers to : Show Tickets, Orange Coast
DAILY PILCYf. PO Box 1~. Costa
~tesa , Ca. 92626.
First 10 persons to send in their names
on postal cards -or drop them off in
person at the Costa ~1esa office of the
DAILY PILOT at 330 \'{. Bay St., Costa
t.lesa -each will automatically receive
one pair of tickets to the Sports, Vacation
<1nd Recreational Vehicle Show opening
1-iaturday at the Anaheim Convention
Center.
After the firsl 10. an addiliona1 10
names daily will be selected at random.
All ticket winners' names will be publish-
ed in the classified advertising section of
the DAILY PJLOT (beginning on New
Year's Day). along with instructions for
picking up show tickets.
Names of all who request tickets -
\\'hether they win tickets or not -will be
placed in eligibility for the Holiday
Airlines-Heavenly Valley ski \'acatlon for
l\\'O.
\Vinner of the grand prize will be
selected from among all names sub-
mitted in a drawing to be held onstage
next \Vednesday (Jan. 7) at the 8 p.m.
show at the Anaheim Convention Center.
Winner need not be present to win the
trip.
One from Corona del Mar ffigh School
Principal Leon Meek.s told about the
elimination of a dress code at hi s school
and how in his opinion a dress code
diverted attenUon from the educational
process by becoming a source of conflict
between administrators and a atuderit.s.
Another affidavit from Orange Coast
College Dean of Student Affairs Joseph
Kroll said he has observed no relationship
between hair styles and academic
achievement.
Kroll noted he has attended statewide
conferences of deans and he knO\\'S of no
other junior oollege with a code on hair
length.
Saddleback Superintendent F re d
Bremer countered in an affj davit that he
knows of at least one -Colleee of the Desert. '
Saddleback Student Body President
John Bothl'.·ell, in another written su~
mlltal, claimed that over half the male
students are in violation of the dress
code.
County Counsel Powell !aid that is not
true.
Bothwell wear• his hair long but not so
long it extends over the collar of a dress
shirt, which the dress code forbids.
Supt. Bremer said teh board of trustees
rloesn't meet again unUI Jan. Jl but'
•·quite obviously" he will be talking in·
rllvlduall~ with board members.
King, who lives in Tustin, \l.'as a student
at Saddleback College last school year
but was refused admission for the fall
term because of his long hair.
Two Dis Facing
Military Co ~u·t
A Camp Pendleton f..farine drill In-
structor charged vo'ith using a wire coat
hanger to whip rifle range trainees into
line and a second DI aceused of physical
beatings \\'ill be oourt martialed.
S-Sgt. Roger D. Os born, of El Cajon,
faces a general court martial soon at
Camp Pendleton, acrording to the an-
nouncement by military authoriUes.
A special court martial has been
ordered for the second DI. charged with
slugging seven boots at lhe Marine Corp1
Recruit Depot in San Diego.
Sgt. Willie Winston , of Newport, Ark.,
was relieved from duty early in
December after an investigation ordered
in the wake of complainta by one alleged
\'ictim.
Sgt. l\o"lnston has req uested military
counsel for his January court martial
proceedings. / ~la.rine Corps officials did not uy when
Sgt. Osborn would be tried by a panel of
officers.
··'
OAILY ~ILCT $Ifft ~h1t1
LAGUNA OFFICER RICK KOTZIN INS P ECTS FAMI LIAR FACE
J•ck 11 B•ck Af tt r Tour of Duty With Trio of J •rhe•d1
Ja~k Gets a Head
Police Rec ove r Missing Splwre
A grinning plastic Jack-in·lhe-Box
head, slighUy the worse for \Vear, was
recovered by Laguna Beach police ti-1on..
day .
The head disappeared Dec. 23 from a
ne\V drive-through restaurant, 1201 S.
Coast Highway. The gaudy decoration.
orange in color, wilh green hair and a
yellow ha t, and equipped with an internal
speaker to take customers' orders. was
ripped from it.s moorin gs on a stand at
the rear of the restauranL
Acting on a telephone tip, officers
finally located Jack on a sun deckbehind
an apartment in Laguna.
It seems, say detectives that three
Marine officers Crom Camp Pendleton
were enjoying a pre-Christmas Celebra-
tion with a young lady of their ac-
quaintancc.
Jealous because the lady appeared to
favor one of the trio, two of the Marines
apparently decided to get even with their
buddy by dismantling the Jack head and
depositing it at his front door, where ils
grinning face confronted him when 'he
prepared to leave next morning. ·
The victim of the practical joke, police
report. decided to cope l':ith the problem
later and departed on an assignmtnt,
leaving lonesome Jack on the sun deck.
Since the head , valued at $300. is sut.
fering from a bent metal base and tears
in its plastic face, a damage clalm of
some sort probably will be forthcomin,,
detectives figure.
That is , unless Jack 's rightful owners
decide it v.•as all in the spirit of the eason.
Deadline for Disney
Awards New Year's Eve
Deadline for Disneyland Community
Service Awards is midnight Wednesday,
Dr. Arnold 0. Beckman, awards co1n-
mittee chairman, \\'&med today .
"~fore than 200 organizations have filed
'notice of intent' to take part in this
yea r's awards program." Dr. Beckman
said. "All must complete thei r ap-
plications and place them in the mail by
Wednesday if they intend to participate."
Ca.sti awards totaling $30.0IX1 are
available to 24 winning organizations in
Orange County. Top award of $5,000 "'ill
go to the organltatlon that in the opinion
of the awards committee carried out the
most out.standing community :service pro-
gram in the county during 1969.
In addit.ion, there are three $2,500
awards, three $1 ,500 awards, nine $1,000
awards and eight $500 awards.
Winners of the 1969 Disneyland Com-
munity Servi<:i! Awards will be announced
Medicare Dea dline
For Pay111ents Set
Social Security officials reminded
Orange County residents tOOay that Dec.
31 Is the last day to claim for reim·
bursement of 1967 and 1968 medical bills
payable under the ~fedicare program.
Beneficiaries should check to make
sure all their bills are submitted for pay-
ment before the deadline date, the aides
said. Information is available by calling
the Social Security office in Sant.a Ana at
BU-2252.
at a luncheon in February l'.'hen they 1''flt
be presented.
Representatives of each . participating
organiz!1tion will be invited to attend the
luncheon. The award presentation · ln
February \\'ill be the 13th annua l.
Since the inception of the awarifs pro--
gram in 1957, more than 1.600 organiza-
tions have participated and Disneyland
·has distributed nearly $200,000 at
organizations in Orange County through
18~ awards.
Banker Jack R. tligley of IIuntington
Beach is on this year's awards com-
mitte-e which includes Dr. Beckman,
chairman: Mrs. William S. Holstein,
Corona de! Mar ; Juitin M. Kennedy, San..
ta Ana ; ~frs. Lawrence K. Reynolds,
Laguna Beach. and Rabbi Aaron J .
To£ield, Anaheim.
FOG H ORN BLARES
OVERCA ST OR NOT
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI ) -Enginer.N
hope to repatch a cable today Ulat will
silence the Alcatraz Jsland foghorn which
has been blaring <lway in some of t he
clearest weather of the season.
Bay area residents within earshot · of
Ole island complained r.londay the anoy-
ing blare had bP.en going on for about t\\·o
da}'S. The Coast Guard said a cable from
the mainland went out of kilter and
engineers hoped to have it fixed soon.
Dying Boy's Last Gift
DIED THINKING OF OTHERS
FV'1 Rich1rd C1mpbtll
Accident Victirn Gives Presents to Fairvie~v ... By ARTHUR I\. VINSEL
Of .. .,..,., ~, ... ...,
He had Chrlstm1s ittta he would nevtt
use and he chose to ibare them, because
many unfortunates had nothln& to look
forward to.
He asked that they go to Fairview Statt
llospital patient&
ShorUy after, at I : 1$ p.m. on
Clui&!.mas Eve. he died.
Richard Campbell, II, ol 16!11 Dove Cir·
el~. Fountain Val ley, had worked as a
\'Oluntti!r helptr 1t the facility for the
mentallv retarded in Costa h1esa.
"Mosily with the lltUe klds ." 111d his
18-ycar-old sl.ster Beth, who went to the
state hospital on Chrbtmu Day to
deliver the Hot Whttb model car set,
each compone:nt brl1hUy wrapped.
The admlnlrtrat.lve staff was off, so
ahe gavt them to 1 switchboard ope.rat.or.
"ll's the blJ set," said ·a b::ispltal
spokesman ~fondAy. "Jt will fill half a
room. hty boy bu one."
The novel new hobby layout rtatures
race cars built with spaceage-st}·le nylon
bearings, powered by gravity but souped
up by a supercharger unit inside a
ro!tdway tunnel.
Young campbell \\'SS interested in that
klrt o! thing.
The 1969 Fountain Valley High School
graduate was a freshman majoring in
mathemaUc1 at Orange C.oast College.
"He wa.s going to be a nuclear
physicist," said r.
Boys Jn Ward IA at the hospital -
Campbell's age, ut with less learning
capacity to mate ~Ir similar lntcrtsts
-wW spend many py hours with his
glll
Bigger, raster whctls to Campbell's
de•th.
He "'as rid ing •'I h • IS.year-old
nel&hbor the last day his Ille. v.·hen the
boy lost control of t car on El Toro
Road, wut of Trabu Road in the Irvine
area.
T~ \·rhi le htt , led 1\deways Into
11 utility po e.
Campbell ·was taken to Huntington
lntercommunity Hospital with a crushed
chest. aware be was in very grave con-
dition.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging. ruJtw,en
liver, multiple thorBSCic fractures ••. "
said an Orange County coroner's dellt~
detailing the causes o( death. ~
Campbtll left his father Richard,·~
1nother. Mr1. Dolores Top11lan, of the
Founta in Valley home address, 'liter,;
Beth, Pam and Dawn.
His fun~ral was Saturday and he is
barled in Westminster l\lemorial Park.
Q'.iestioned about obitu11ry \nforrnati~
Beth Campbtll menti oned that he weot t«
Huntin gton Beach High School for ,ml':
year before finishing up at !he Fou ntain
Valley campus.
WAs there anything else that should be
told about the youth who thought of un-
fortunates wh~n he realized there was ne
longt'r much po int In thi nking of him!ielr''
"No. that's all." said Beth
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NeWport Rarhor Today's .Fbial
N.Y . Stocks
VOL. 62, NO. 312, 4 SECTIONS, ~ PAGES •
. ' ORANGE COUNTY; ~LIFORNIA TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, '1969 TEN CENTS
Fathers l(eep Schoo.ls on·Hook Over Drug Us.e ·1
By THO~tAS FORTUNE
Of trle Dilly l'llCll Haff
Two Costa Mesa fathers have claimed
widespread drug traffic at D a v. i s
lntermediate School but· schoolmen have
dC'T\ied it.
Apparently that doesn't end the matter.
The fathers are of a rnind tG continue
airing the charge and they are Puiling
their daughters out of school. So are a
number of other parents.
'I1le schoolmen hope to keep·the 1lid on
a potenUaUy eiplosive situation. They
think of the school tax vote coming up
and worry about the school district's im-
age.
The validity of the fathers' claim that
100 or 200 Davis students have tried
drogs has been called into question.
From talking to the daughters Costa
Mesa police have made six drug UTesls,
including an 11 year old picked up ror·us·
ing heroin. But the &Uc arrests haven 't
proven the claim ()r a pervasive drug.at.
mospbere at school.
The 'question remains unresoJve<l: ls
the drug use widespreali?
~ inother question is to ~
answered: Widespread or· not 11 o
widespi-ead, are the fathers. powirless to
improve tbe situation.
It may 're !be lalheu....s~k with
amplified voice. 'Ibere is some evid~e
school ()fficlats. have heard behind" the
two-man challenge a Jouder nmible.
-. .. _ .. .
Cliff Slips 'i ti NewttO.-t DA/L.,'PILOT l lt ff ,,_,.
Private contractors today began removing port.ion
of cliff which has been threatening to slide onto
Bayside Drive below exclusive Irvine Terrace resi·
dential area in Newport Beach. Work \vas ordered
by the Robert K. Washburns, owners of expensive
clillside borne at 411 Avocado Ave., ovet!ookmg
Newport Harbor. House, once the home o{ the late
Myford Irvine, is not considered in immediate
danger. Bayside Drive has been closed by· Jl)unicipal
authorities in precautionary move.
5 -year-old Makes
Little Headway
Wit1i Banisters
Newport Beacl1 losl lier fasci nation for
bcin.isters Monday afternoon.
She got her head stuck in lhe family
staircase rail at 3707 Inlet Isle Drive.
Firemen were summoned by Erin's
motller at 2:48 p.m. and they found the
girl waiting patiently for help, her head
held by tv.·o melal rails.
Firemen bent the rails, setting Erin
free, to pursue the more classic use of
banisters -sliding.
Nasser Back in Cairo
CAIRO (AP) -President Gamal Abdel
Nasser retu rned to Cairo today after
&pending 10 days abroad between Moroc·
co and Libya.
In Morocco he altended the Rabat sum·
mit conference ·which ended last Wed·
nesday. He was given more than warm
greetings by the Ubyan masses during
Judge Refuses to Prevent
Testimony by Grand Jury
By TOM BARLEY
01 tllt DtUy l"lltl Sttff
Superior Court Judge Robert Gardner
Monday refused to grant a motion which
would have prevented attorneys for a
police officer accused of brutality from
calling members of the Orange . County
Grand Jury as witnesses.
Judge Gardner rejected Chief Deputy
County Counsel Clayton Parker's move
for quashing of subpoenas issued to ttJe 19
members of the i·nvestigative panel. He
ruled that their special privileges do not
include exemPtion from proceedings in
\~1hich attorney Ron Owen seeks their
lestimony,
But the judge did indicate that Owen's
demands might be met in some form
other than in open court next Jan. 7, the
date set for-llearing of a motion for
dismissal of bnrtality charges against
Santa Ana Patrolman Richard E. Faust.
Judge Gardner told Parker that he will
discuss the issue with the Grand Jury on
Friday. He will then, he said, be in a
position to "discuss this matter' more
fully with Mr.'Owen and perhaps arrive
at some arrangement."
. Fau§_t, 26, was indicted on charges of
assault with a deadly weapon after
~·itn8S5e5 told the Grand Jl.U'}' that be.
clubbed a 17·year-old black youth who was being committed to JUvenile Hall.
CN:en's associate,· Allan Stokke said
members of the Grand Jury "were out to
get a police officer In 8ny way they could
and we w~nt them investigated."
Stokke said the "Grand Jury's actions
prior to the indictment or Officer Faust
are not the only Ullngg we are going to
question."
. Jesse Gilinore, now t!, of Santa Ana.
told the Grind Jur'y that he w~ knocked
to the grcimld and clubbed upon delJVery
at .the Orange County facili ty.
An order was ifvtn for NeWportrMesa
J;>istrlct stUdenls ~ clear all personal ef.
fects out of 1heir· school lockers for the
holidays. And iio:w a closed-door meeting
on drug UJe at aChool, inVolving school
board members. city councilmen and
police chiefs from COsta Mesa and
Newport Beach, bas been set for Friday.
Wbether l!dli>oltl!O!l 'have b)oet1 fllsely
accused or whether ·they are. inclined to
whiteWa.sh t.. Oad situaQon, they do not
stem indifferent to the fathen' charge. .
One of the dadJ sald he Is willing (o
give school Officials a chance to come up
with solutions but indicated he isn't going
to let them off the hook.
"'Like with the poUce, a lot of times
they need a little time and secrecy," he
said. "But il the right questions aren't
2.PSWered and it turns out to be a political
gam~ -then 1 think the parents: have a
right to meet,
~I ·feel honesUy a confrontation would
be U1e best way to get some of these
.
things·out in the open," he said.
The two lathers turned their 13-year-old
daughters in to police, persuaded their
<laughters to become informers, and gave
!he girls' names to newspapers. They
confronled other parents with the truth
about their children. They mean to keep
their daughteni out of public school
Clearly, the fathers a're detennined and
they are to be reckoned with.
One said parents of more than 2Q
(See DRUGS, Paie Z)
Nixon Heads West
Signs Major Bills Before Leaving
By MERRIMAN SMITH
WASHINGTON (UPO -Presl<lent Nix-
on today signed three major bills .into
law -tax refonn, mlne safety and de-
feMe i.pPropriaUons -before leaving
for a holiday Blay in· Southern California .
The tax· reform 'bill and the mine safe--
ty bill were signed despite Nixon's ob-
jections to some of their features . In each
case, he said the good features of the
bills outwei~ the bad .
The $69.& billion budget for military
hardware bad been cut $6 billion br Con·
Sand Hauling
Due to End
In Z ·Weekt
w~ NewjlOrl Buch'• month.-long ,
sandl)au1 Js expected to end i~ aJ:tout two
Wffkl afll!r the )\lmberlng rif• clear llul
ao,iloll' ,_tlll!ft oi ·Santa AM lllver
•ii~ thftl mt<& to mop.up oper1Ullb1 on
!be beioh.
City aides predicted a smooth ·finish
for the ofteri lTI·staritd beach-saving ~
ject, and 58.id no further use Of city
streets.would be needed for clearing Out
the riverbed apd building up the ~ach.
CO!ltrattor Chadwick and Buchanan,
Inc., will clean off the beach after all
the material is dumped, then eliminate
the high escarpments of sand presently
lining the high~de mark.
City Tidelands Coordinator George
Dawes said the beach will be graded to
natural contour ware the equipment
leaves.
Dawes added that some of the last
material ~o be brought · ·on the beach
would be of !'a lower quality" than the
rl!Cent sand· taken from the river.
But, he stressed, the poor.quality
sand would . be .dumped at the surfline
where it will be cleaned by the sea .
"Things have moved quite smoothly for
a change in the past few weeks and it
loob like they'll stay· that way," Dawes
said.
The entire sandbaul. when completed.
will result in the moving of a million
cubic yards or flood.Qeposiled sand and
s.ilt from the Santa Ana River.
Stoelc Market•
NEW YORK (APJ-The stock market
flezed Its ra.tber flabby muscres late this
afternoon ln an effort to pull ,out of a
mild· decilnt •. , (See quotations, Pages
HJ.JI),
gress after a bitter struggle over costs
and anns needs.
The President and Mrs. Nixon were to
f!y to the WeStern White House tn San
Clemente in mid afternoon. They will
return to Washington the weekend of
Jan. 11, a week or so before Coogress
conVenes again.
Nixon is expected to ask. Congress to
pass new taxes, but will probably wait
until his State of the Union address Jan.
22 to spell out what he has in mind. It
is almost certainly likely h<Jwever, to in·
elude a ''value added" tax, ln wfllch a 41x is added at each stage of the manu.
facturing process.
Congress. has passed an unbalanced bilJ
that t.. both. good and bad.'' Nixon said
in a statement released by the White
House. "'Ille tax reforms, on the whole.
are good; the effect on the budget and on
the cost of Uvtng is bad."
Nixon said he approved the measure
because the improvements in lax fair·
ness through the reforms outbalance the
(See NIXON, Pago Z)
LA Cracks Down
On 'Yellow' Film ..
By JOHN VALTE~A Of 111e-Dilly P'lllf Sttff
lf .ycai~re wondering where-the-)'t:llo'lf
weht, lt'lrpit,
1"s Ana<!" city and county law . en.
forcement ofrleers today wound up the
seizure of eight prints o{ the seamy sex
epic "I Am Curious <Yellow}" Jn every .;
theater ·where it was playing in Los ~
Angeles County. :
The big<ity raids on the movie took ..
place lilmost a week after Newport
Beach police seized a print of the film at
Uie Balboa Theater.
Viet investigators said warrl!lls have
been Issued against all the exhibitors of
the rurri charging misdemeanor U.•
bibiUon of obscene matter.
Theaters in the cities of Hermosa
BeaCh and Jnglewood also have lost their
prints of th(! film after seizures by their
respective police departments.
Meanwhile in Newport Beach, where
one. of the first police moves against the
sex saga took place last Tuesday night,
the print is still under lock and key.
It will stay there, ·police say, at least
until the court action concludes against
the owner and manage~ of the Balboa
Theater.
Manager Eleanor Blackburn of Balpoa
and owner William Alford of Laguna
Beach are fighting · the seizure and
charges against them.
being shOwn and U we wanted to
challenge the movie on groands. tif
obscenity, we needed prior judicial
review before we could step in.
"Since it was the last night, we brought
the judge with us to review the film in~
stead of waiting to file a written acCOWlt
of the movie, then waiting for a search
warrant.'' he said.
Nev.·port Police Otief James Glavas
last v.·eek supported his department's
se!zure of !he film and ccrreclly predicted
that Stanton and Los Angeles poll~
v.·ould follow suit in the battle against the
:;cxually explicit movie.
Stanto11 police raided a theater in their
city the following day. Christmas Eve,
took a print and filed charges against the
thealer management..
The series of raids In both counties
completely ends ror the moment the
showing of I.he Him in Los Angeles and
Orange Counties.
. .
Dying Boy's Last -Gift
Their lawyers will be present Jan. 9 at
a munlciPal court· hearing on suppression
of evidence. On Jan. 16, the same lawyers
will file a demurrer with the court, a
doti.1m,enl .expected tO challenge the
seizure on c;onstltuUonaJ' grounds.
The pair face court action for alleged
erhlbiUon of ob s c en e matter and
furnishing harmful matter to a minor.
The latter. charge stems from alleged
discovery of a 17-year-old girl in the
theater la.st Tuesday.
Los An'geles sheriff's vice investigators
said if the movle is scheduled in the next
few \veeks iii other theaters· in their
jurisdiction, similar seizures would take
place.
Orange Cout
DIED THINKING OF OTl'IERS
°FV'1 Richard Campbell
-
Accident Victim Gives Presents to Fairview MwiiclPal Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
Rutter aCCQmpanied police and district
attorney's . investigators on the raid 1n
Balboa. By ARTHUR R. VINSEL
Of "'' IM'lly "''" .....
ite had Christmas gifts he would never
use and he chose to share them, became
many unfortunates had nothing to look
forward to.
He asked that they go to Falrvlew Slate
lloopital patlenta.
Shortly after. at 8;t$ p.m. on
ChrlSi;mU Eve, he died.
Richard Campbell, 19, ol 9680 Dove C~·
cle, Fountain Valley, had wcstlfed as a
volunteer helper at the facility for the
mentally rrtarded in Costa Mesa.
"M..Uy wtth th• little kids," said his
lS.year-()ld s~ter Beth, •ho'went tb the
mte hctpital on Chrbtmas Day to
deliver the Hot Wheels model car set,
tach component brightly wrapped.
The administraUve st.aft wu olf, ao
&he gave them to a awitchboard opttator.
"Jl'1 &be bJ& Jet.'" Aid a bospital
lf>Ok.,m:. J Monday. "It wtD flll baU a
room. MY boy bu one."
The novel new hobby layout features
ra<'t cars built with apaceage·style nylon
bearings, powered by gravity but souped
-up by a supercharger unit inside a
roadway tunnel.
Yoong campbell WU intererted In: that
sort of thing.
The t!1611 Fountain Valley lliah School
graduate was a fre1huum majoring in
mathemaUcs at°'"""' Coast Collea•.
"He was going to' be a nUclear
physicist," said hJs sister. .
Boys In .. Ward 344 at the 'hoopital. -
Campbell's age. but with I,.. lea!nlng
capacity to match their •imilar'JnteriN
-will spend ril1117 ha""" t1oun·~iih hi•
gill '""· ' '
Bigger, faster wheels led lo. ~pbe11'1
death. • f
He was riding wtth a .11-~1'1
nei1hbor the last day ol hll Ule, m the
boy lo&t control or the car raft t:tiTm
R<>ld, .... t of Trabllco Road Iii tlllt!li:Ylnl area. .., ·"\
The vehlcle hurlled 11~ ...._
lo .. • ..
' .
a utility pole.
Campbel: was taken to Huntington
tnterwmmun1ty H06pital with a ~rushed
chest, aware he was ln very grave con·
di lion.
"Pulmonary hemorrhaging. ruptured
liver, midtlple 'thora.scic. fractures .•. "
aatd an Orange County conmer's deputy
detaUlng the ·cauaes of death. 1
Catnpbell left Ilia lather Richard, hit
mother, : Mrs. : Dolores Topallan, ·~ the
Fountain Valley home address, sisters
Beth.-Pam ·and Da..n.
Ass!alont Police Chlef Harry NeL!on to-
day <Xplalned the judge's presence with
the officers as a necessity ~ause ·of tbe
time element involved.
"fl w .. the lut night with movie was
PILOT FUT URA M..4.
INSIDE TO DAY
.Hi• !~al wil''.Saturday and he la burled In Weatm!n-. M•-111 Park. ,,,. DAIL)' PILOT'• IMU&! .report Oii ~.aboiltobllua!y lnfonnatlon !>l'OCI"' and growth ln ·tlle Orange Coast
Beth Catn{ibiu mentioned tho! he w<n1 i.; are•'• bullneu and lncfullly comm1D1ity,
HuntmgtOn Beach tfflgh School ·!0< """ combined with · a look tl)lo the econonitc
year before .llnlahlag up al the Fountain Mure, appears lnsld< tocl8y.
Valley. cam,... · · The ..,...rat FUTllllAMA ••ell on
Was there anyt1llng elaa lhal ihould be . featuret 'articles, photOcnopbl and ads
tolll about'itlit )'llillh wlfo thou"1t 0!"1111' which tell the *"'I o1 the ~·Coast'.•
for1unatea ·• he reallied lhlA wu no · 11D1Yln1 C<llllmtr,lal·llle..Jl111ure to 101<1 ...... mueb iio!•~l'R llll'*ina al blnilil! IVl'llRAMA .19'1\i, lnllde'today. \'llol fi.'1'111," llW loll' I •. . ~.'
•
~
I •
\
Weather
We 'll have some gusty wind1
from the northeast to help us rtna
out the old decade Wednesday.
Temperatures are -still pe.gged in
the middle to upper slxUe.s.
INSW E TODA\'
ln th< 19101, Col!/omia · wiU
m0vt · pcut the 20 miUton. mart,
cUnchtno more f'rmi11 it& first
in popttla.cjon 1ta.ttts1 but it's o
record which has mi.ted bit.SS·
inQ$. P.age,24.
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2 DAILY PILOT N
Coast Free
Of School
'Imbalance'
A State Board or Education directive
tha t school districts work on achieving
better racial balance may ca1.1se prob-
lems In Santa Ana and Los Angeles. but
appare nUy will not affect the predomin·
anUy Caucasian Orange Coast area.
Only Fountain Valley School District
along the cOast recelved notification and
. it already is outdated by a change in at·
tendance resuJUng in Jess imbalance this
1chool year.
The state ed ict ls that schools within
·a school district be sujlStantially balanc·
· td so one school iJ not mosUy all black
or brown and another mostly all white.
In Santa. Ana and Los Angeles. school
• officials said, the onJy_ conceivable way
of doing this is by busing large nu mbers
cf stud,ents to more distant schools.
Fountain Valley Elementary Supt.
1'.1ichael Brick said Hlsamatsu Tamura
.School has 18.6 percent Spanish surname
.gtudents compared to the school distritt
_.verage of 4.9 percent Spanish surname.
, The difference of 13.7 percent, however.
falls within the permissible variation or
.15 per cent the state will allow.
Notification to the Fountain Valley
·District was based on an October, 1968
'statewide survey. A study made last
October hasn't yet been processed.
~ Brick said a letter will be written to
the Bureau of Intergroup Rela tions of Qie
State Boa rd of Education stating Tamu rot
.School complies with the board's order.
.No attendance boundaries were changed,
. Brick said, it just happened that way be·
.cause of student turnover, particularly
by graduation.
Tamura School serves IJie city's Juarei
Colony.
· Brick said he sees it as an advantage
having many of the Spanish speaking
t;tudenl.! grouped at one school. The
l!!ichool district with federal funds Is able
to employ cultural language and develop-
ment teacher Sam Rodriquez and an
aide to work with the students.
Or. William DoJph, superintendent
elect of the Westminster Elementary Dis-
trict.. said Webber School is more than
15 percent over the school district aver-
age. It's Spanish surname percentage ill
28 percent. The district average is 7.8
percent.
The school board at its last meeting
voted to comply wi!.h the request it sign
a statement of intent the problem will be
studied, he said. Evidence of progress in
planning to correct the lmbalance will
have to be submi tted by next June J,
be noted~
But with ooly five percent of slude.nl.s
to move at one school it should not prove
a gruJ. problem. -Adjacent schools Will-
more and Seventeenth Street have only
J4 percent Spanish surname, Dr. Dolph
1aid.
More dlfflcult is the aituaUOn In santa
Ana. Ninetetn of the Ji schoo1a in the
dillrlct are bnbalanced, according to the
&tate formula.
Upper Bay Tour
Series to Sta11
The Sierra Clc.b will sponsor another
series of nature-walk tours of Upper
Newport Bay Jan. 10 for persons in-
terested in viewing the estuary's wildlife
population.
The tours will start at 9 a.m. at the
comer of Eastbluff Road and Back Bay
Drive.
The metting place, on the northeast
corner of the bay, is a quarter-mile uphill
from the old salt works site.
The tours will be held continuously
Jrom 9 to lt a.m. with a new group leav·
ing every few minutes, club spokesmen
said.
The public is welcome. There Is no
charge.
Tot F atally Injured
LONG BEACH <AP) -The coroner·s
,,ffice reports J.year-old An l hon y
Villarete \\'as fa tally injured when the lid
of a Christmas toy chest fell on his neck.
DAILY PILOT
OltANc;E ~t l'l.ltLl$HIN!; COM .. .ANY
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HEAVY LINES OUTLINE PRESIDENTAL SECURITY ZON E
Feds Not Likely to Forgive Tre1p1111r1 at Nixon E1t1te
Sea Well Se~ured
Ni xon Zon e Noiv Off Limits
Violators of the newly extended securi-
ty zone around the West.em White House
in San Clemente are expo5ing themselves
to a prison term of up to 10 years or a
fine of up to $10,000, but the Coast Guard,
which has just received orders on t.he
new boundaries, doesn"t anUcipate roun·
ding up many offenders.
"It would be pretty hard for anyone to
inadvertently wander aboard," said an
officer at the Coast Guard 's LORAN sta-
tion. immediately adjacent to the
Presidential estate. "Both the water and
beach areas are very clearly marked and
all the rest is fenced off.··
"The rest" now includes the LORAN
5lation and its offshore waters, represen-
ting a southerly extension of the mile-
long security zone.
The water area, says the Coast Guard,
extends offshore tor about half a mile
and is clearly marked with three white
can buoys marked wlth ''international
orange" stripes aod a diamond design._
The water security zone Js barred to all
boats when a Coast Guard vessel is
present.
The beactt security area is marked at
Its northern and southern limits by signs,
set out by the Secret Service when the
President is in residence. It includes the
beach ocea nward of the estate and the
LORAN st ation. The beach area is open
lo the public "consistent wi1h private
prope rty rights," the Coast Guard states.
~lowever, the Se<:ret Service has the right
lo bar beachgoers near the est.ate if thi5
is regarded as necessary for Presidential
security, The fenced-in land area of the
estate and the Coast Guard Station are
''closed to unauthorized persons at all
times ."
Frorn Page 1
DRUGS IN SCHOOL ...
sf.ut'len t.s have told him their children will
~ held out when school resumes next
week. But they told him this in the heat
nf the moment and haven't actually done
it yet , he pointed out.
The father said it would have been a lol
easier just to forget the whole thing but
"that's not the anS"Wer" and so he has
talked to at least 100 persons ln the last
week and a half.
He said he talked to parent.! of other
children implicated. He told particularly
of one irate mother \\'ho brought her
daughter over to confront his daughter.
"That·s a traumatic experience for 11s
too," he said. "\Ve put the girls in a room
logether and let the1n talk for J.5 or 20
minutes. Then I put my arms around the
girl and told her the only Y:ay she y,·as
going to help he rself was to tell her
mother. She told her; •r ve been taking
cocaine. marijuana, reds for a year.'
"The y,·oman's heart was tom out right
there.
"You can't keep subjecting your fam ily
to that. We had Christmas coming up. We
told eight or nine parents then just turned
it over to police ...
The father admitted that since the gi rls
had infonned they had received ''varying
telephone calls -nothing lhat J \VOUld
consider dangerous. Of course you don't
know, there have been several things
said.
"The thing is we·re livlng in a Ire'
country,'' he arldcd ... We can't live in
rear."
Costa Mesa City Councilman WiU1am
SL Clair said the fathers have performtd
a service to the community ''bringing out 4 in such a strong manner the problem that
is here. I appreeiate what they have done
and the position they put themselves in."
_But he said a private skull session will
he held with the school people instead ()f
meeting \\1th parents "because we felt it
would be better to v.·ork in the area of
problem sol\'lng. oot blame placing."
St. Clair iaid he knoy,·s the fathers are.
trying to get as much ntlt"ntion on the
problem as possible. but this isn't
Mmethlng new -"bel\t"'ve It or oot the
M:hool distri<"t~and the city Police depart·
ment have been working on it ror about
two years.
"What the school~ really wanl 1s to
preM!nt a \'try factual program th11t
really wlll 1•11 kids th• dang.,. of dope.
not tn 11ny "'iY try to con them or work on emotion." St. Cl11ir sakf.
Onie cl U• falhe:rs Hid parenU ht bu
bJked to can't understand ""'1y teachers
aren·t able to detect when student& are
under the influence of drugs.
"The kids ha\'e wflat they call a ptd
on," he aaid. "To prov• how big they are
and smart ln somt respects they takt.
dn1g.s and go up and talk to the teacher."
He told of a girl at Davis School \\'ho
took nine pills of l!Ol11c kind ond "flipped
out" during gym C"la.s.s. Right away a cou·
ple. of 1he girls took her over 10 the Costa
~1aa High campus where she wouldn"t
be detected wandering-around, the father
uid. Anoth~ girl iigned her onto the
nune's register'° she would be excused
from claS&.
Later In th!! day, he said, &he was back
in class and spent a whole hour with her
head in her hands crying without being
delected.
"The kids of course have a code just
like \\'e did "'hen we went to school,'' he
said. "I mean there is social pressure ."'
He said at the intermediate school girls
who date older high school boys are look-
ed up to -"this is a prestige thing in
their atmosphere."'
He said his own daughter took her first
puff on a marijuana cigarette in company
with a girlfrien d and her high school
boyfriend. There were five or them arxl
the cigarette was passed around.
"\Vhen it came your t.urn you either
v.·ent along with it or were put down by
the group.·· the father said.
He said fou r girls who informed told
parents the names of 15 to 20 othe rs they
actually had seen take drugs. "This isn·t
even taking into consideration the ones
!hey ""'re pretty su re they :;aw under the
influence. even if their name came up
several limes."
He said al] bul a couple or the names
are of students who previously attended
Sonora Elementary School. •·J think
really we've only begun to hit in ont
grou p," he said.
He :;aid his daughter denied completely
any drug use by a girl from anothe r
cle1nentary school group y,•ho she has had
close association \li th. The girls have
stayed overnight at each other's house,
The father indicated that he suspectii
!1is daughter doesn't want to implicate
the other group.
The meeting Friday wi ll be of the city·
i;chools liaison committee or school board
n1embers Selim "'Bud'' Franklin and
Donald ~Lrauss, Costa ~1esa city coun·
tllnlen St. Clai r and George Tucker, and
Newport Beach councilmen •loward
Rogers and Donald McGinni s.
"\Ve're inviting the two police chiefs in
;ind myself," said school Sul).erintendent
Dr. \Villlan1 C1L1ningham. •·we meet with
lhem pcriodicatly to talk about coordina·
lion bel\l'efn the schools and lhe fJOlice.
Jn view of the situation at Da,·is School I
\\'as concerned we u·eren·t giving them
lhe cooperation v;e should."
Tht father said from all the students'
names he has he&rd only one or two ot
them ... .-ould he fee.I are unsupervized by
their parents.
"In talking to the school people l,hey
llecp saying. 'There ls 11.lways a bad ele--
ment.' But they're not dealing with a bad
<'lemt'nt. Tht.se art boys that wear
:;quare haircuts and girls with long
skirts.''
lie i1aid he. thinks that is a reasm ~hy
teachers are being fooled . "They've got
!ht.Ir eyes on the kid over there wtlh the-
loog haircut "'hlle ty,·o seall av.•ay ts a kid
that already has taken drugs.··
The two fathers who &poke out have
:1111b!e homes -there have been no
dl,•orces and the mothers don't Work bul
are home with the children.
"\~·e Ui li' lo our children. We al'l\'IYS
ha\'e betn a family that Js together. We
1~ke the children on trips. we·,,e made an
clfo11, but nol everytlung we rould have
done apparently." one father said-
---·~
•, ' ~ ··"'~
'.EdisonGoingto Court
1 :, fJdard ,Likely to Uphold A:PCD Actron
'1 f OANNE REYNOLDS
.. tlMi °'"' l'llol ,.,,.
Southern Clllforoia Edison Company's
appeal in the denial of their permit toe~
pand the Huntington Beaeh p:>wer plant
u·ent in to Its third day today in Anaheim.
After Monday's hearing before the
Orange County Air Pollullon Control
District <APCD) appeals board, it ap.
peartd that the denial would be upheld by
the board, sending the case into Superior
Court.
Deputy County Cou nsel James Urban
said loday the case wilt go to court
regardless of the board's ruling. "They'll
appeal in court if the denial is upheld and
we'll appeal if it's reversed."
The councy 's calC, Urban said, is based
on two regulations.
"APCD chief William Fite hen did the
correct thing · in November when he
denied the pe~it. He acted under the n
existing regu lation 243 of the California
Health and Safety COde," Urban argued.
"We are also arguing that Rule 67;one
or the new air pollution cobtrol
ordinances enacted by the Board of
Supervisors, would absolutely 'Prohibit the
amount of emissions that Edison pro-
poses to put in the air from their new
facility."
Rule 87, patterned after similar regula·
tions in Los Angeles and Riverside coun·
ties, limits pennissable plant emissions
of sulphur compounds to a maximum of
less than two and one-hall' tons per day.
nitrogen oxides to one and one-half tons
per day and combustion contaminants to
240 pounds a day .
According. ,to an Edison company of-nci&l the new ordinance "is impossible
to comi>ly with."
Jn Monday's hearing, F.di.son CQmpany
attorii!y William Marx called two
witr.esses who restated the utilities' posi-
tion that the construction of two new
790,000-kilowatt units which w,ould triple
lhe company's power output, would be
contributing an insignificant amount of
polh.~tion to Southern California's smoggy
skies.
Following their testimony, Urban made
From Pqe I
NIXON ••.
inflationary impact from the $9.1 billio n
tax cut the bill carries.
The bill provides tax relief for 63 mil·
lion Americans and includes a 15 percent
boost lo Social Security benefits and
loophole-closing reforms.
For'the first time taxpayers will see
the effects of the bill will be in their pay-
check for the first week of the new year
when the present 10 percent tax sur-
charge goes down to 5 percent. That will
<liminlsh the tax withh oldh1g slightly. The
surcharge is scheduled to expire com-
pletely June 30, 1970.
The tax reduction resu lts chieny from
&. three year increase in the $600 in·
come tax personal exemption. Tt will rise
to $650 in July to $700 in Janu ary and to
$750 in January 1973. The bill also grants
special tax relier for 12 million poor
and near-poo r taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary David M. Kennedy
told newsmen at the White House a.!ter
the President signed the bill that the mea·
sure enacted by the Democratic Con·
gress made Nixon's bulgetary problems
even more severe.
But Kennedy sidestepped questions
abotu whether the President would ask
Congress nc>:t year to increase taxes,
possibly through a •·value added ta>:."
This is a form of excise tax on manufac-
tured goods .
Kennedy acknowledged that the trea~
ury department has been studying the
value added tax but he said it was only
"one of the areas that is under sb.ldy."
a motion that lb~ case be upheld in Ua:bt
oi Rule 67, "the effect of which would rt·
quire that the air pollution .<:ontrol officer
deny the permit."
Marx objected to the motion on the
grounds that the appeal was based on the
denial given under Section 24243 of the
Health and Safety Code. The objection
was sustained 11.tld Filchen was oalled to
the stand.
Jr. three and one-half hours of direct
testimony and cross examination, F'it·
rhen restated his case for denying the ex·
pa.-;sion permit on the grounds that the
current plant is already "the single
largest static source of air pollution in
Orange County." •tr testified that despite Edison's
claims that the amount of pollutant
pumped into the air will dec rease by 1975 .
the completion dale 'of the proposed
plan t, Edison Company figures indicate
Lhe amount of pollutants will have In·
creased. The figures show the amount or
pollutants produced at the facility in 1968
were-23.8 tons or nitrogen oxides daily .
And, according to Edison figures. in 1975
th' a1nount y,·ill increase to 26.l tons a
day.
Edison officials and . engineers have
te:1tified that the pollutants "''ill be shot
into the atmosphere at a high speed and
temperature from a tall stake so they
will not be pa.rt of ground level smog.
Fitchen renoqnced this claim reading
from a report published in May, 1969 by
!he U.S. Department o! Health, Educa·
tion and Welfare which said in part, "A
tall stack alone does not rl'duce in any
manner the total polluta nl.s added to the
atmos phere. Other means must be found
l'J prevent overburdening the atmosphere
with pollutants."
I
Long Haired Saddlebacl;c
'
Student Wins in Court
A U.S. District Court judge ?o.tonday
issued a preliminary injunct ion telling
Saddleback College it must not prev~nt a
long-haired male student from register-
ing for courses.
The way now is clear for Lindahl King,
21 . long locks and all. to register to begin
attending classes next week.
Judge Harry Pregerson of the Los
Angeles court found that the wear~ng of
Jong hair is a right of personal liberty
which should not be infringed unless
there is a showing of overwhelming in-
terest by the junior college distirct.
"I am not surprised," reacted Sad·
dleback Board President Michael Collins.
•·People got temporary inj unctioni; all the
Lime. 1 would be disappointed if a
permanent injunction was granted after a
full hearing."
Collins, an attorney. explained that a
temporary injunction is not a clecision on
the merits but rather a finding that the
plaintiff would uffer irreparable harm if
in fact he is right.
"In this case," he said, "the plaintiff
claims if you don't stop the wheels right
now later it will be too late. All the court
is saying is we are going to preserve his
rights until we decide what his rights
are." . i Coflins ·said the judge's statement
about infringing personal liberty is a well
established constitutional principle.
"There is no qcustion any dress code i~
1111 infringement of a persons petsonal
liberty," he said. "Our position iS there is
a good and sufficient reason to set stan·
dards ·of dress and grooming. That is
what the hearing \Vi\l determine:."
No date has yet been set for the hear·
ing on a permanent injunction whlch
Collins said follows granting of a tem-
porary injunction as a matter or c-ourse.
Attorney Patricia Herzog of Corona del
11ar. who represen ted King, said, "Here
I.hey are telling a grown man (King is 21 )
how to wear his hair, which is
ridiculous."'
She said there is no precedent of cases
Involving junior college dress codes
because no junior college has them. All
the cases of record, she said, involve high
school students.
Arguing on behalf of King betore the
judge ~1onday along \\'ith titrs. Herzog.
\rere A. L. Wirin and Fred Okrand. chier
staff counsels for Southern California of
the American Civil Liberties Union.
John Powell of the County Counsel's
Office represented the junior college
district .
Four written affidaVits were filed.
One from Corona de\ Mar High School
Principal Leon Meeks told about the
elimination of a dress code at his schOo!
and how in his opinion a dress code>
d:verted attention from the educationa l
process by becoming a source of corifiict
betwee n administrators and a students.
Another affidavit from Orange Coast
College Dean of Student Affairs Joseph
Kroll said he has observed no relationsp.ip
between hair styles and acaderpic
achievement.
Three Newport
Residen ts Hm1
In Road Crashes
A Lido Isle man and two other Ne"·-
port Beach residents were injured Mon·
day in a series of motorcycle and sport~
car collisions in Costa Mesa, police saiC
today.
All victims were treated at Hoag Me-
morial H66pita1 and released.
Norman K. Wallace, 40, of 145 VilVt'-
nezia, underwent surgery for head and
face lacerations after his cycle c<>\Qded
\\·ith a C"af on Place ntia Avenue at t 6th
Street.
~lotorist Gregory A. Preston. 21, flf
IOOJ Fairbrook Lane, Cos ta ~tesa, 'es·
caped injury in the 4:35 p.m. crash..
Lauren B. Cunningham, 18, of 1500
\Varwick La ne, Newport Beach, sustail)ed
a lace rated right ankle, while his pas-
senger, Sue Everson, 17, or 324 E. 19th
St.. Costa J\.·lesa. -6Uffered a broken left
ankle in another motorcycle accideflt.
Police said CuMingham was turning
left off 19th Street into private property
at 3 p.m. when his cycle was involved
in a collision 'vith a westbound auto
dri ven by Audrey St. J. Ortego, 48, of
30031 S. Birch SL. Sant.a Ana Heights.
Erin E. Othmer. 5, of 311 Heliotrope
Ave., Corona del Mar. suffered head lac·
erations when a sports car driven by her
motJier Elizabeth, 33, collided "'ith ¥·
other auto.
Tnvcsligalor!'i said r>.frs. Ot11n1er crash·
ed broadside into a car driven by Allan
\V. Stephens. 50, of 710 Elizabeth Drive,
Orange, at 1 :50 p.m .. in the intersection
of Harbor Boulevard and 19th Street..
Lagunan Not Brainwashed
Captured Yacht sman S pends Yul e u.t Honi e
By RICHARD P. NALL
Of t~t 1>1H~ l'llol Sl•ff
Although Simeon Baldwin's Chinese
captors foisted propaganda on lhe
American businessn1an. they apparently
rlecided he wasn't ripe for a full-sea.le
brainwash.
"I was loo old." said Baldwin. 57. in
Laguna Beach today. "They figured it
·was a loot cause. t'm just a dyed·in-lhe·
\vool capitalist and I argued with them a
lot.''
Baldwin \\'85 11 prisoner for nearly 10
months in Red Chinese communes after
c:apture in February aboard his yacht
Horasum.
He will retUJn In his Hong Kong
aircraft contponents business Tuesday
idler !'lptnding the Chri~t.mas holiday
\\'Ith his y,·ife,Merjorie. 13$9 CUff Dri ve,
11nd their three children.
After the February capturt during a
yachting junket. of Baldwin, American
Bessie Hope Oonalrl, 47. and 11 others of
mixed nationality, mtntlon WR1' made of
5ophisUcattd eletlronic 1:e.ar aboard
Baldwin's yacht.
"They ll\'e the lmprHSlon t was run·
ning one of th05C surveillance 11hlps,"
11ald BaJdwlo~ who added lhat he was not
with the CIA. "just a Lroplcal trader. '1
Baldwin 1aid the Chinese thlnk all
Americans a.rt CIA. l{e said the Horasum
\\'as \\'C!:ll equipped bu\ nol more ao than
other ocean going yacht.s.
H's equipment. rrom a firm Baldwin
represents in the Orient, included dlrec·
tion tlnder11, automatic pilot. rodlo
lraruimllters and receivers and other
gear. Baldwin said he makes 1.500 mile
trips from Honi Kong to f\.1anilla and
needs lhe equipment.
Na1ty tn a busirltM suit and bow tie.
'8ald"''in is aboul 30 pound& lighter than
HEADS BACK TO HONG KONG
L•gu.,.'s Simeon Baldwin
his 16S pounds when tM Chint:;r took him
In tow.
"He was .,'Orried about his front veran-
da (con.,.·ex rtomach)," srnlltd Mrs.
Baldwin. '"Now he's tating like It v.'as
going out of sLyle."
Baldwin who was re8$0nably well fed
by his cl'l)tm'I -rice, vegetables and
small amounts nf meat or fish -used to
Jove Chinese food .
But ll1ajorie Bald\vin didn't men bon iL
?.'he n they y,·ent out to dinner last nlg~l
They tried Mexican food instead at
Laguna·s Tortilla Flats.
initially said Baldwin, who had .fm
privacy aw ake. a:;leep or et•en in I.he
bathroom, "we had a bad lot or guards ."
He was permitted only to sit on a ch11ir
for about four months. After that. the
guards lmproved.
Baldwin read his t ,500-page navigattpn
book and apparently glanced at Red pnr
paganda left ha~. Time hung heavy.
He described it as "10 months of sitUnlt
and not knowing what's going to happen
the next day and worrying about whal'.s
happening to your family and finances.·•
Bahtwln talked to interpreters whn
looked in dally. He sald the Chinese. fear
only tile Americans and Russians and
beUeve the two powers are conspiring
against the Chine&e: Communists.
Baldwin and Mrs. Donald. eitrangcd
wife of television actor Peter Donald who
al first tried to hide their nal.ionalit v.
were moved frequently during the
months of captlvtty. · ·
They were kept first at a location about
10 miles from Macao while tedmlclaris
dismantled and examined his navlgi·
lional equipment.
Baldwir. said there are war prepara.
t.ion5 such as militia training and
roadblocks. hpreparing •galnst America.a
111nd So~et lnv.uJons." He said Rl'!O
Chinese propiganda keeps !ht ~fe
under "a war tension··.
Balclwtr. loves Wguna which he has
\'l<ed rrequently during 25 years 8.5 •
"tropical trader". He plans to live heft?
after rtllrement. But that won·1 be for
awhile. Tomorrow he 'll whl!k off to Hong
Kong whtrt lrlternatlonal busint.ss deal~
ai''lllt.
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fJ ta M · •. --.DS . .,_ ~--. '
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EDITION
•
vq~. 62, NO. 312, 4 SECTIONS, 46 PAGES ORANGE coUNTY, CALIFORNIA · TUESDAY, DECEMBER 30, ·1969 TEN CENTS
Fathers Keep Schools on Hook Over Drug Use
By THOMAS FORTUNE
Of f111 E»lly '"llM Sl•fl
Two Costa ~1esa fathers have claimed
..-idespread drug traffic at D a v i s
lntennediate School but schoolmen have
denied it.
Apparently that doesn't end the matter.
The fathers are of a mind to continue
eir~g the charge and . they are pulling
theU" daughters oul of school. So are a
number of other parents.
·'fhe scboolm.en hope to keep the lid on
•
a potentially explosive situatiol!-· They
think of the school tu vote coming up
and worry about the school.district's im·
age.
The validity of the fathers' claim that
100 or 200 Davis students have tried
drugs has been called into que:stion.
From talking. to the daughters C.Osta
Mesa Police have made six drug arre&l'I,
jncluding an 11 year old picked up for us-
ing heroin. But the six mests haven't
•
. I . '
PRESIDE+IT NIXON SIGNS FAR ,R.~l~G'.T~·Md~U
Will Ask ~r. "f•w Rov•nue L~~liilon or"'Cut S~Ocll!'f -
ltJlsdemeanol," (:ltairg~
LAPoliceSeize'Curious'
Reels From 8 Theaters
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of t111 Dally .. lllt II.rt
lf you're wondering where the yellow
went., it's gone.
Los Angeles ci ty and county law en-
forcement officers today wound up the
seizure o( eight prints of the seamy sex
epic ''I Am Curious (Yellow)" in every
theater where it was playing in Los
Angeles C.Ounty.
The big-city raids on the movie took
place almost a week alter Newport
Beach police seized a print of the film at
the Balboa Theater.
Vice investigator$ said warrants have
been issued against all the exhlbitors of
the filrn charging misdemeanor ex-
hibition of obscene matter.
Theaters in the citie s of llermosa
Beach and Inglewood also have lost their
prints of the film after seizures by their
respective police departments.
Meanwhile in Newport 'Beacb, where
one of the first police moves against the
sex saga took place last Tuesday night,
the print Is still under lock and key.
lt will stay there. police say, at least
until the court action concludes against
the owner and manager of the Balboa
Theater.
Manager ·EleanQr Blackburn or Balboa
and owner William Alford of Laguna
Beach are fighting the seizure and
Orange Coast
Weather
\Ve11 have some fiuslY wind s
from the northeast to help us ring
cut the old decade •ednesday.
Temperatures art still pegged in
the middle. to upper sixties.
INSmE TODAY
I• the 19101, California will
move J>a$f the 20 million mark,
cttnehtn.g more JirmlJ its firat
in f)()pulo.tio n sta ttU. but it'a a
1'ecord which M.s m.U:ed bless·
i11g1. Page 24.
C11!'9fflf1 • ..... • QM<Mlllt u .. ' Mllt¥al ....... " Cl•i.t!llf "" --..
'"'"" .. Or ... c..tf .. c .... ~ • ,,.,,. , .. ,, ..... -.. '""" Mll1lltt 1 .. 11 t:flterlll .. .,. • Ti ..... 1111 ..
a11llr'I•""'*" I -• •lllfiMI 1 .. 11 w.-• .. _ " wr.n. w.-" .t.1111 L_.,. u """"""' ,...., ,,. ..
IMlltilll • --...
-
charges against them.
Their lawyers will be present Jan. 9 at
a munici pal court hearing on suppression
of evidence. On Jan. 16, the same lawyers
will file a demurrer with the court, a
document expected to challenge the
seizure on constituUonal ~s.
1'he pair face cow:t acli.on f~ atleged
exhibition of ob s c en e matter and
furnishing harmful matter to a minor.
The latter charge stems from aJleged
dilC'Overy ()( a 17-year~ld Qrl in the
theater last Tuesday.
Municipal Court Judge J.E.T. "Ned"
(Ste 'YELLOW', Pap Z)
Assault Hearing
Slated Friday
Arraignment for two drifter brotbers
charged with brutally beating a Santa
Ana police sergeant early Christmas
morning Is scheduled Fr!d<y, followlng
iSluance of complaints Monday.
John P. Hickey, 2Z, and William F.
Hickey, 21, are held al Orange Counly
Jan in U.u ol f12,!00 ball eat!\, formally
cbarg.ed with a&o;aulting a police oUicer
with inteit to do great·bodily harm.
Costa Mesa police booke:I, the pair on
an additional charge cf assault with a
deadly weapon -lhe victim's own gun -
but only one count. was upheld by the
Orange O!>lmly District AUom1Y.
Sgt. Norwood \Villiams suffered a frao-
lured skull and severe faclal Injuries
which will require plastic .!lirgtry Jn the
68.vage Christmas Day assault on Harbor
Boulevard, lollowlng a blgh llJ)eed auto
chase.
He is under lrtabnenl at SI. J.,.pll
Hospital· In ·Orange.
proven the claim of a pervasive drug at.-
mospher:e at school.
The question remains unresolved : Is
the drug \J8e widesp,ead?
And anqtber qhestion ls to be
answered: Widespread or not so
widespread, are the fathers powerless to
improve the situation.
It may ·be the fathers speak with
amplified voice. 'I11ere is some evidence
school officials have heard behind the
two-man challenge a louder rumble.
An order waa &iven fllr Newport.Mesa
District students to clear all personal ef-
fects out of their school lockers for the
holidays. And now a closed-door meeting
· on drug use at school, involving school
board members, city C()uncilm.en and
police chiefs fro,n Costa Mesa and
· Newport Beach, has been set for Friday.
Whether achoolmen have been falsely
accused or whether they are Inclined to
whitewash a bad situation, they do not
1eem indifferent to the fathers ' charge.
'
One of the, dads said he I.s Willlng to
give school officials a chance to come up
with solutioru1 but indicated he isn't going
lo let them off the hook.
"Like with the police, a lot cl times
they need a liUle time and secrecy," he
said . "But if the right quesµons aren't
enswered and it turn s out to be a political
game -then I think the parenta have a
right to meet. '
"l feel honestly a confrontation would
be the best way to get some of these
things·cut Jn the open," be said.
The tw'o fitheis turned their 13-year~ld
daughters in to police, pmuaded tbe1r
daughters to become informers, and pve
the girls' names to newspapen. They
confronted other parents with the truth
about their chpdren. T12ey mean to keep
their daughters out of publlc ~
Clearly, the fathers are .detmntned anrl
they are to be reckoned with.
Ooe oald par<nts of more than 20
(Ste DRUGS, Pip I)
Nixon Family Flies West
President Signs Major Bills Before Leaving
By MEl\lllMAN SMITH
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President Nix·
on today signed thtte major bills into
law· -tax refonn, mine safety and de-
fense appropriations -before leaving
for a holiday stay 'in Southern California .
The taX reform bill and the mine safe-
ty bill were signed despite Nixon's ob-
jections to some of their features . In each
case, he said the good features of the
bills outweighed the bad.
The $69.6 billion budget for military
hardware had been cut $6 billion by Coo·
* * * Nixon Security
Violators Face
Pri~on, Fme
Violators cf the newly exttnded aecurl·
l.Y zone around the West.em White House
in San Clerneqte are ej;posing themselves
to a~ term of up to 10 years or a
fineifl •llP fo '10,000, blrt lhe Coast Guard,
which has ·just received orders 1on the
new boundarJes. doesn't anticipate roun-
ding up many offenders.
·"It would be· pretty hard far anyone ·to
Inadvertently wander aboard ," said an
officer at the Coast Guard's LORAN sta·
tion , immediately adJacent to the
Presidential estate. "Both the water and
beach areas are very clearly marked and
all the rest is fenced off."
"The rest" now includes the LORAN
!lation and its ·offshore walers, represen-
ting a southerly extension of the mile·
long security wne.
The water area, says the Coast Guard ,
extends offshore for about half a mile
and is clearly marked with three white
can buoys marked with "international
orange" stripes and a diamond design.
The water security zone is barred to all
boats when a Coast Guard vessel is
present.
The beach security area is marked at
Its northern and southern limits by signs,
!it:t out by the Secret Service when the
President is in residence. It includes the
beach oceanward of t.he estate and the
LORAN station. The ·beach area is open
(See SECURITY, Page Z)
Three Newport
Residents Hurt
In Mesa Crashes
A LidO Isle man and two othtt New·
port Beach residents were injured Mon·
day in a series of motorcycle an~ SflClo/'
car collisions in Costa ~1esa, police said
today.
All vict.iim were treated at Hoag Me·
morial Hospital and released.
Norman K. Wallace, 40, of 145 Via Ve-
nezia. underwent &urgery for head and
faee lacerations after his cyrle collided
wil.h a car on Placentia Avenue at 16th
Street.
Motorist Gregory A. Preston. 21 , of
1003 Fairbrook Lane, Costa Mesa. es·
caped Injury in the 4:33 p.m. cr~sh.
Lauren 8. Cunningham, It, of 1506
Warwick Lane, Newport Beach. sustained
a lllCtrated right ankle, whil e his pas· "'°"'' Sue Evel'100, 17, of 324 E. t91h St., eoSta Mesa,· suffered a broken left
ankle in another motcrcycle accident.
Police said Cunningham was turning
left of[ 19th Street Into privat. property
at 3 p,m. when his cycle wa s involved in a collision With a we.st.bound auto
driven by Audrey St. J. Ortego, 48, of
30031 S, Birch St., Santa Ana Heights.
£tin E. Othmer, S, of 311 Helfotrope
Ave .. Corona del Mar, suffered head Jae·
eratlons When a 1port.s car dri ven by her
mother Elizabeth, S31 collkled with an-
04.ber auto.
lnvesUgaton said Mrs. Othmtr cra.\h-
td broa<bide into a car driven by Allan
W. m.pben1,.IO, of 710 Elizabeth Drive,
Orange. at L:IO p.m. in thtt lnlenecllon
ol Harbor '8"'1evant and 19th 51Ret.
gress after a bitter struggle over costs
and arms needs.
The President and Mrs. Nixon were to
fly ro the Western White House in San
Clemente in mid aftemo0n. They will
return to Washington the weekend of
J an. 11, a Week or so before Congress
convenes again. \
Nixon is expected to ask Congress lo
pass new •taxes, but will probably wait
until his State of the Union address Jan.
22 to spell out what he has in mind .. It
is almost certainly likely however, to in·
elude a "value added" tar, in which •
tax is added al each stage .of the manu-
facturing process.
Congress has passed an unbalanced bill
that is both good and bad," Nixon said
in a statem·ent . released by the White
•louse. "The tax reforms, ·on the . whole,
are good; the effect on the budget and on
the cost of Jiving is bad."
Nixon said he approved the measure
because the improvements in tax fair-
'l'!ess throush the reforms outbalance the
inflation~ impact from the fltl billion
tu cut the bill carries. .
The bill ptoviiles tax reDe! i.r a mil>
lion Americans. ond lnc:!Udes a IS Percenl
boost In Social flecurily •618· and
Joopbol~losing reforms.
For .the fin\ time~ 'lllJI"'"
the effecta ol the bill will be In their P!I>" ~ ror the lint' week ol llie·..W ;Mi! when the present 10 percent· tu ...,
charge goes doWl! to 5 -'lbat:'lllll diminish the tax withholding 1ll(Jlltly, '1be
furcbarge Is scheduled to ~· «111>
(tleo NIXON, Pap I)
Dying ·You1h Sends Gifts·
Accident Victim Gave Christmas ' .Presents to Fairview
By ARTHUR JI. VINSE~
• " "' Jiiiy f'lllt '""
He ~od ChilS!illas iiuts he would never
t1at and he· chose to ahare them, because
many unfortUnates had nothing to look
forward to.
He ~ked ~ tliey m to.Fairview Stall
Hoopil8J Po~nta. •· .
Shortly alter, al 8:15 p.m. on
ChriS+mas EVe, he died.
ijlchard Campbell, !I, or 9680 Dov~ Cir·
cle, Fo~ntain VaUey, had worked as 11
volunteer helper at the facility for the
mentally retarded In Costa Mesa.
"Mostly with the .little kids," said his
18-year-olC: sister' Beth, who went to the
state hospital on Christmas Day to
deliver the Hot Wheels model car set,
each component brightly wrapped.
The administrative starr was cff, so
she gave theftl to a switchboard operator.
"It's the big set," said a hospital
spokesman Monda y. "It will fill haH a
room. My boy has one."
The novel new hobby layout features
race cars built wi th spaceage-style nylon
bearings, JX!Wered by gravity but souped
up by a supercharger unit inside a
roadway tunnel.
Young Campbell was intere5ted in that
&Ort of thing.
'I11e 1969 '.Fountain Valley High School
graduate was a freshman majoring in
mathematics at Orange Coast College.
•
DIEi) THINKING OF. OTHERS
FV'• Richard Campbell ·
"He was going to ·be a n\rclear
physicist." said his sister.
Boys in Ward 344 at the hospital -
Campbell"s age. but wit11 less learning
capacity to match their similar interests
Superior Court Certain
To Consider Edison Case
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Of W.. ENH1 .. li.t $11ff
Soutpern California Edison Company's
ap~al in the denial of their perm it to ex·
pand the Huntington Beach power plant
'''ent into its third day today in Anaheim.
After Monday's bearing before tilt
Orange County Air Polluti on Control
District (APCD) appea ls board, it ap·
pt'ared that the denial would be upheld by
the board, sending the case into Superior
Court.
Deputy County Counsel James Urban
said today the case will go to court
PILOT FUTURA.MA
I NSIDE TODAY
The DAILY PILOT'• awual report on
progrm and growth In tblt 0ran8' Coast
area's ooame.. and lndusily community,
-blntd wilh a look into lbe economic
future, appe~ inside today.
The special J!'U'nTRAMA It ct Ion
features e.rticlt1, ptp.ogrlphl and ads
which tell the atory of the Orange Coast's
thriving commercial life. Be tUre to read
FUTURAMA 1970, lnslde today.
regaidless of the board's ruling. 'i'hey'll
appeal In courl if the denial ts upheld and
we'll appeal if it's revm;ed."
The count)''S case, Urban,.~id, is based
on two regulaUons. Lr
"APCD chief William Filchen did the
correct thing in November when he
de nied tbe permit. He acted under Ulen
e:tlsting regulaUon 243 of the California
Health and Safety Code," Urban argued.
"We are also arguing that Rule 67, one
of the new air Pollution control
ordinances enacted by 1.be Board or
Supervisors, would absclutely prohibit the
amount of emissions that Edison pro-
poses to pul ln the alr f'rom their new
facility." . ·
Rule 67, patterned alter •tmllar regula·
tlons in Los Angeles and Riverside coun.
tics, Um.its permillsabfe plant' emfuioris
of sulphur compounds to a maximum (){
less than two and one-half 'tonl per day,
nitrogen oxides to cne and one-half tons
J)e1' day and Combustion contattUnln~ to
240 pounds a day.
According 'to an Edison company Of·
ficial, the new ordlnance "is· impoaaitile
to comply with."
In Monday's hearing, Edison Compaey
attorney Willi am Man called two
wltr.el&eS who restated the uuuu .. • poa1. uO. thal the construction of two new
(Set IDJBON, hp I)
-wtl) l[!l!nd many happy baur& wlli!·. !lits
~irier, 1 .. ter Wlleell 1~ to~.
death. ·
Ile WU riding with & 1J.lr•:aitJ
nef&blior Ille !all day of bis U!e, -tbit ~ ,Jiov laol ·-,ol @lo ,alt ..
El Tor:o iioOd, -ol 'l'rabaCii Md'ln
tlie JrV:lne area.
'!lie . vehiclt . hurtled · ~ •Into
a uliu1y pole.. • ·
Campbell WU taken to ~
Intercommuntty Hoapltal with •• C:rmhOd
chet:t, aware · he ·Was in very grM· can-
diUon.
· "Pulmonary heinorrliaging, f"*'10d
liver, muklple thoractc fractUNI'·.~ •• "
said an Orange County coroner·,:~
detailing the cause• of dea:th.. ' ·
Campbell left his father Richard.; Ills
mother, Mrs. Dol<fto' ~,Of tbit
Fountain Valley home · , . ._...
Beth, Pam and Dawn. ·
: He Was able, however, to tell-than
that last wish.
His funeral was Saturday and he Is
bJried in Westminster Memorial Part.
. Q'Jestioned about obituary lnformltlan,
Beth ~mpbellmentioned thal be.went to
Huntington Beach High School for cM
year before finishing up at the Fountlln
Valley campus.
Was there anything else that should be
told about the youth who thought of Uo-
forfunates w"hen he re8ll1.ed there wai no
longer much poin't in thinking ofhimaelf?
"No, that's all," said Beth.
Dimes Chairman
Keeps Position
For Fith ·Year
Stockbroker Louis 0. Markel, with four
yean' erperience in the job, will MrVe
again as chairman for the March of
Dimes in Costa Mesa,
The annual cOmrriuhity campaign and
MC1ther's March against birth de.fecta is
held in January.
"The March of Dimes launched Ill at·
tack on birth defecta It years ago," says
Markell, of 2078 Bonaire Way, Newport
Beach, "and there .ba1 been.aignWcant
progress.·· .
He filed two specl[Jo brukthrou(Jllo In
TtStarcb, deVtlopment Of I.be rubtlla vac.
cine to prevent dlmaae to unborn
children who3e motllen contract German
Measles, and a va~ to prevent han-
dicaps due to a C!JDPle'• RH factor blood
cqndiUon.
Markel, fathllr of ""'" cblldrtrt flom l to H'yem old, 'iald !Wid• fi'Oin' t1ie .-pi!p wtU beneftl "'8earcb and !rq~
al the Mlltll of Dlm<a Birth Dtfects
eenter In 0rance Connty.
More thin 100 aucb ct11tm an
throulhoul America.
.
Steele ·llf•rJeea
NEW YORK (AP)-'l'be otoct·lllllt,et.
flexed l!A rather flabby m111clll llll Ibis
aflentoon In an d!ort to pull oOI ti a
mlld .dedJnt. (Ste q1'>talloM, ~
11).11),
l
•
2 DAILY PILOT c Tf.ltSdl:J, Dec-.tmbtr lO, 1 ..... <
Coast ·Free
Of School . . ' . --..,, ,.
'linhalance'
A SI.ate Board of Education directJ\•e
that rehool distr!cl!!: work on achieving
~tter racial balance may cause prob-
lems In Sll!lta Ana fnd L<is Angeles, but
a pparently will not affect the prtdomlo-
nntly Caucasian Orange Cout area.
Only Fountain Valley School District
along the coast received noUflcaUon and
Jt already is <1uldtUed by a change in at-
tendance resulting in Jess imbalance UUs
1ehool year.
The st.ate edict is that schools within
,. school district bt substantially balanc-
ed so one school is not mostly all black
or brown and another moslly all white.
In Santa Ana and Los Angeles, school
nlficials said, the -0nly conceivable way
nf doing this is by busing large numbers
of studeoLs to more dist.ant schools.
FountaJn Valley Elementary SupL
Michael Brick sa id Hlsamalsu Tamura
School has 18.6 percent Spanish surname
Etudents compared to the school di!>trict
.a verage of 4.9 percent Spanish surname.
_, The dirference of 13,7 percent, however.
falls within !lie permissible variation of
J5 percent the state will allow.
• Notification to the Fountain Valley
District was based on an October. 1968
stalewidei survey. A .study made last
October hasn't yet been processed.
Brick said a Jetter will be ••ritten lo
th<-Bureau -0t Intergroup Relations of the
State Board of Education staling Tamura
School complies with the board's order.
No attendance boundaries were changed,
Brick said, it just happened that way be-
cause or student turnover, particularly
by graduation.
Tamura School serves the city's Juarez
~lony ..
Brick said be sees it as an advantage
having many of the Spanish ~aking
students grouped at oce school. The
school district with federal funds is able
fD employ cultural language and develop-
ment teacher Sam Rodriquei and an
aide to work with the students.
Dr. William Dolph, 11uperintendenl
elect of the Westminster Elementary Dis·
frict., said Webber School is mare than
15 percent over the school district aver-
age. Jl's Spanish surname percentage is
28 percent The district average is 7.8
percent.
The scbool boa.rd at lts last meeting
\·oted to comply wl\h the req uest it sign
a statement of intent the problem will be
studied, he said. Evidence of progress in
planning to correct' the imbalance will
have to be submitted by nut June t,
he noted.
But with only fi ve percent or students:
lD move at one school it should not pro"e
a great probltm. Adjacent schooll Will-
more and Seventeenth Street have only
J4 percent Spanish surname, Dr. Dolph
53id.
More difficult is the situation in Santa
Ana. Nineteen of the 32 schools in the
ril.strict are imbala.nced, ~d.ing to the
6tate formula.
Upper Bay Tour
Series to Start
The Sierra Clcl> will sponsor another
Aeries of nature-walk: tours of Upper
Newport Bay Jan. 10 for person:s In·
Lerested in viewing the estuary's wildlife
J>Opulalion.
The tours will start at 9 a.m. at the
f'Orner of Eastbluff Road and Back Bay
Drive.
The meeting place, on the. nort hea$l
corner of lhe bay, i:i1 a quarter-mile uphill
from the old sail works sit e.
The tours wiil be held conUnuously
from 9 to 11 a.m. with a new group Jeav·
Ing every few minutes, club spokesmen
11aid.
The public ls welcome. The.re is no
charge.
Tot Fatally Injured
LONG BEACH (AP) -The coroner·~
l'.lffire reports 1-year-<>ld Ant ho n y
\.jl/arete "·as fala lly injured when the lid
of a Chri&tmas loy chest fell on h.is neck .
DAILY PILOT
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Pr-.kt.-n 1M Jl'llbllol>tl'
' J.dc It. C..11..,
V\A: Prftlclff'I eM C.-•I M•~
1ho"''' K1e"ll
l[dli.r
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c_,,.,_ M ... Offlc1
110 w .11 1 • .,. Sir•••
M1 tli119 ,.t.llclr1u: P.O. lo• 1560, •J•Jl
C»i..r OHie"
Wtwlflt01 ••·~~: nu Wni a.1.,.• •o..At¥•rf
L--...Cll; m 11-1 A-
M"""1'19"'" 9-11: 11'73 .._,. lilU~
°"' 11. V •ILO'I', -"" wll1dl 1' Urlll>lllM' ~ ~·~· lo. ,_..~. ~hll'f .. ,"" .._ 4tY .. _,,,. ..,., .... W L.t ...... 11•<."-
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&tllllJ a M , ..,_, ••Kii. •~4 J9
WD1 k V J1fftl, Cll!t .M-.
,. ... ,. •• (1141 641..Ult
CleulftM A'-'itJ .. t41•t•11
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·-., C.'"'111\1 -· kwld dftl .ollllf M !• •I lrll'll'*" """' •rA Cftlt ,,....... CflJlerlllf. I .,.ttl'(lll• llr c...,._., 10 te -~•~1't llY "lt M &IJ.t -"llrl
#ol!!'-tf ettl!MI""'-l t lt -:.It,
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. ..
'
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,,
HEAVY LINES OUTLINE PRESIDENTAL S~CURITY ZONE
Feds Not Likely to Forgive Tr11pe111r1 et Nixon E1tat1
From Page 1
SECURITY ZONE SET UP • • •
In lhe public ''cunsistent with private
property rights," the Coast Guard states.
However, the Secret Service has the right
to bar beachgoers near the estate if this
is regarded as necessary for Presidential
security. The fenced-in iand area ol the
estate and the Coast Guard Station are:
"'closed to unauthorized pe~ns at all
times."
Regulations for the extended security
zone are spelled -0ut in the Coast Guard 's
new "Notice for Mariners," which states
lhat security within the water. beach and
land areas \\'ill be enforced by the Coast
Guard, the Secret Service and such other
federal, state and municipal agencies
which may be called upon to assist.
Despite the possibly formidable punish·
ment for violations of the zone, the Cca:st
Guard hastens to point -0ut that new
•·notice" is really just a lea: al tool to be
used only in emergency.
"rfDbody's going to start running
around arresting people," said the
LORAN officer. "ll's aJI handled very
nicely and -We don't e:rpect any pro-
blems."
From Pqge l
EDISON .•.
790,000-kilowatt units which would triple
lhe ~m~any's power <1utput, would be
contr1but1ng an insignificant amount of po~lutioo to Southern California's smoggy skies .
FoU?wing their testimony, Urban made
.a _motion th1~t th~ ca.se be upheld in Ught
or RuJe 67, lhe effect of wh.ich would re-
quire that the air poUution control officer
deny the permit."
Marx objected to the motion on the
g.roWl<ls that Uie appeal was based -0n the
denial given under Section 24243 of the
Health and Safety Code. The objection
'~as sustained and Fitchen was called to
the stand.
In three and one-half hours of direct
testimony and cross examination, Fit·
t hen res lated his case for denying the ex·
pansion pennit on !he grounds that the
current plant is already "lhe single
largest static source of air pollution in
Oro.nge County."
He testified that despite Edison's
claiins lhal th e amount <1f pollutan l
pumped into the air "'ill decrease by 19/;),
the con1 pletion date of the proposed
plant. Edison Company figu res indi cate
the amount <>f pollu tants "'ill have in·
creased. The figures show the amo unt or
pollutants produced at the facility in 1968
were 23.8 tons of nitrogen oxides daily.
And, according to Edison figure11, In 1075
the amount wlU increase to 26.l tons a
da y.
Ettison officials ind engineers have
testified that the pollutants will be shot
i~to the atmosphere al a high speed and
temperature from a. tall stake :so they
will not be part of ground level smog.
Yitchen renounced this claim reading
rrom a report published In 1.1ay, 1960 by
lhe U.S. Oepartmtnl of llealth, EdU<'R•
lion and Welfare which said In part. "A
tall stack alone doe1 not reduce In any
nianner the tota l pollutants added lo thP..
atmosphere. Other means must be found
to prevent o .. <ffburdcnlng the atmospbere
·with pollutants."
5·year·old Loses
Banister Battle
Newport Bt1eh loll hl!r rasdnallon for
banlstm Monday afternoon.
She got. h'r head Auck In the ra mlly
1tairca5e raU at 3707 Jnlel ls.le Dri ve.
Firemen were 11utnmOT1cd by Erin's
mot.her at 2:48 pm. and they found the
girl walling patie-ntly for help, her head
held by t ... o met.ii rails.
F'lrtme'11 bent the rails. setting Erin
tree. to purliue the more classic use: l'f
banliters -slidin1.
But just in case any careless mariner
shouJd •·wander aboard," it might be
noted that the regulation applies to "any
owner, agent, master, officer or crew
member" aboard the vagrant vessel.
Fro"° Page 1
'YELLOW' ••.
Rutter accompanied police and district
· attorney's investigators on the raid in
Balboa.
Ass:s tant Police Chier Harry Nelson to-
day explained the judge's presence with
the o(ficer.s as a necessity because of the
time element involved.
"It \Va.5 lhe last night with movie was
being shown and if we wanted to
challenge the movie on grounds of
obscenity, "'e needed prior judicial
revi e·..., before we could step in.
"Since It was Ule last night, we brought
the judge with us lo Teview the film In·
stead ol waiting to file a written accounl
of the movie, then waiting for a search
warrant," he said.
Ne'l'·port Police Chier James Glavas
last week supported his department's
seizure of the film and correctly predicted
that Stanton and Los Angeles police
would follow suit in the battle against. the
sexually explicit movie.
Stantou police raided a theater in their
city the following day, Christmas Eve,
took a print and filed charges against the
theater management..
The series <If raids in both counties
completely ends ror the moment the
showing of the film in L<is Angeles and
Orange Counties,
L<ls Angeles .sheriff's vice investigator5
said if the movie is scheduled in the next
few weeks in -0ther theat«s in their
Jurisdiction, similar seizures would take
place.
Thefts in Mesa
Add Up to $3,000
Loot tot.sling nearly $3.000 was taken in
three burglaries reported to Costa Mesa
police Monday, including a machinist's
~900 pin money cache.
~1anufarturing equipment, plus an
engine and lires stri pped from a &porU
<'ar parked inside Ne1~1port Foam
Products, 1940 Placentia Ave., were
reported stolen by owner Jay Langley.
Of ficer George Sperling said the in-
trucicrs pried open a sliding \\·ooden door
to gai n entry.
\\lilllam H. Nichols, of 1640 Newport
Blvd., told police someone slipped into h.ls
trailer and pocketed $900 hidden under
business papers in a dresser drawer.
Copper lubing worth. $500. stored tn a
carport, was also reported by Harry
Taylor. owner of a plumbing and heating
company at 1672 Placentia Ave., which
bears his name. •
f'ram Page l
NIXON • • •
plettoly June 30. 1970.
The tax reduction results chiefly from
11 three year increase In the $600 In·
come tax personal exemption . 1t will rise
to $650 in July to $700 in January and to
$750 in January 1973. The bill also grants
special tu rt.lief for ll million poor
and near-poor taxpayers.
Treasury Secretary Davld P.t. Kennedy
told newsmen at the White Hoose alter
thf' President si gned the bill lhllt lht me11·
~ure enacted by the Democratic Cop.
~ress made Nixon's bulgetllJ')' problems
e1·cn more S<"vue.
But Kennedy sidesttpped qutstions
11bolu whether the President would Jsk
Congress next year to Increase: taxes.
possibly through 11 "value added tax."
This is a form of excise la.x on manuf1c--
1ured gt'>Ods.
Kennedy aclcnowle!:dged th3t the tre3!-
ury dep(l rtment has been 1.ludylna: the
\ alue added tax but he 11ld It \ltU only
• nne of Uu! areaa that is under study.''
·Long-haired Student
---4
Win·s ·Round in Court
A U.S. District Court judge f\tond ay
Jssued 1 prellmlnary Injunction telling
Saddleback College it must not prevent a
long.haired male student from register·
Ing for courRs.
The w1y now Is C'Jear for Lindahl King,
21 . long locks and all,.to register lo btgln
attending classes next week,
Judge Harry Pregerson or the Los
Angeles court found that the v•earing of
long hair is a right ol personal liberty
which should nol be infringed unless
Lhere ls a showing of ovttWhelming in·
leresl by the junior college distirct.
"l am not surprised," reaeted Sad·
dleback Board President Afichiel Collins.
..People got temporary Injunctions all the
time. t would be disappointed if a
permanent injunction wa.5 granted after a
full hearing."
Collins. an attorney, explained that a
temporary injunction js not a decision on
the meriLs but rather a finding Ulat the
plaintiff \•:ould surfer irreparable harm if
in lacl he is right.
"In this case," he said, "the plaintiff
claims if you don l stop the wheels ri ght
now later it will be too late. All the court
is saying is ""e are going to preserve his
righls until "'e decide ~'hat his rights
are
C-Ollin!'l said the judge's statement.
about infringing personal liberty is a v.·ell
established constituti onal principle.
"There is no question any dress code i~
an infringement of a -persons personal
liberty," he said. "Our position is there is
a good and :sufficient reason Lo set stan-
dards of dress and grooming. That is
what the hearing will determine.''
No date has yet been set for the hear-
ing on a permanent injunctioo which
Collin.<; said follows granting of a tem~
porary injunction as a matter of course.
Atlorney Patricia Herzog of Corona del
1ttar, who re!:presented King, said. "Here
they are telling a grown man (King is 21)
how to wear his hair, which is
ridiculous."
She said there is no precedent of cases
Involving junior college dres!'i codes
because no junior college has them. All
lhe cases of ~cord, she said, involve high
school students.
Arguing on behaU of King before the
judge Monday along with 1.irs. Herzog.
v•ere A. L. Wirin ·and Fred Okrand. chief
staff counsels for Southem California or
the American Civil Liberties Union.
John Powell of the C-Ounty Counsel's
Office represented the junior college
district.
Four written affidavits were filed.
One from C-Orona del Mar High School
Principal Leon 1tfeeks told about the
elimination of a dress code at his school
and how in his opinion a dress code
diverted attention from the educational
process by becoming a source of conflict
between administrators and students.
Another alfida\'it irom Orange Coa:;l
Winter Qua11er
Signup at YMCA
Signups are being conducted for the
\\inter quarter program of aclivities of-
fered by the Orange Coast Yf\.1CA_
Registration, which has resumed afl er
two weeks of closure for remodeling and
reconditioning at the Y, will be held at
the facility located at 2300 University
Dri ve.
Jnfonnalion about act ivities and
registration is available by calling 642· om.
College Dea n of Sludent Affairs J<»eph
Kroll said he has obst>r\'ed no rel11Uonship
between hair styles and acaden1ic
achievement .
Kroll nol.td he has attended statewkle
conferences of d~ans and he knowe; of no
other junior college wilh 1 code an hair
length.
Saddleback Superintendent F r e d
llrem~r countered In an 1ffldavlt lh1t he
!mows of at least one -Collea:e of the
De$erl.
Fro111 Page I
DRUGS IN SCHOOL . • •
students have told him the ir children \\'ill
be held out when school resumes neicl
v.·eek . But they told him this in tke heat
<1f the moment and ha\1en't actually done
it yet, he pointed out.
The fath er said it would ha\'e been a lot
~asier just to forget the whole thing but
''that's not the anS\\'er'' and :so he has
tal ked lo at least 100 persons in the last
week and a half.
!-le said he tal ked to parents or ()!her
children Jmplicated. He t.old particularly
()f <1ne irate mother who brought her
daughter over to confront his daughter.
"That's a traumatic experience for u:s
loo.'' he said . •·\Ve put the girls in a room
together and let !hem ta lk for 15 or 20
minu tes. Then I put my arms around the
girl and told her the only way she was
goi ng lo hel p herself was lo tell her
mother. She told he.r: 'I've been taking
cocaine, marijuana, reds for a year.'
"The woman's heart was torn out right
there.
"You can't keep subjecting your fami ly
to tha t. We had Christmas coming up. We
told eight -0r nine parents then just turned
Jt over to police."
The father admitted that since the girls
had informed they had received "varying
telephone calls -nothing that I would
consider dangerous. Of course you don't
know, there have been several things
said.
"The thing i:ot we're Jiving In a free
country," he added. "We can't live in
fear."
Costa Mesa City Councilman \Villiam
Sl. Clair said the fathers ha11e performed
a service to the community "bringing out
in such a strong manner the problem that
is here. I appreciate what they have done
and the position they put themselves in."
But he said a private skull session will
be held with the school people instead of
1neeting with parents 1'because we fell it
\\'Ollld be better to "'ork in the area of
problem solving, not blame placing."
St. Clair :i::aid he knows the fathers arr
trying to get as much allcntion on the
proh!cm as pos!'lihlr, but this isn"1.
something nC'\V -"believe ii -0r not 1he
11chool di:;1ricl an d the c11y police depart·
mcnt have been wor king on it ror about
tv.•o yea rs.
"\Vhat the schools really \\'ant is lo
prese nt a very factual program that
really "'iii tell kids U1e danger of dope.
not in any v.•ay try to C<>n them <1r work
on emot ion," St. Clair sa id.
One -0£ th e fat hers said parents he has
talked to can 't und erstand why teachers
aren't able to detect when students are
unrier the influence of riru gs.
"The kids h;1ve wha t the y call a put.
nn.'' he said. "To prove how big they are
::ind smart in some respects they take
drugs and go up and talk to the teacher .''
He told.of a girl at Oa\·is School \\'ho
took nine pills of some kind and ''flipped
out" during gy m class. Right away a cou·
pie of the girls took her over to the Costa
\\fesa High campus "'here she wouldn 't
be de tected "'andering around. the fath er
said . Anot her girl signed her onto the
nurse's registe r so she would be excused
from claSli.
Later in the day, he said, she was bl.ck
in class and spenl a ""hole hour with h«!r
head in her hands crying without beinJ;
detected.
"The kids of course have a code jusl
like we did "'hen we went to school," be
said. ''I mean there is social pressure.r
' He said at the intermediate school glrlit
"'ho date older high school boys are look·
ed up to -"this is a prestige lhini in
their atmosphere."
He said his own daughter took her rlrst
puff on a marijuana cigarette. in comMn:v
with a girUriend and her high school
boyfriend. There were rive of. them and
the cigarette was passed around.
"When it came your tum you either
went al ong "'ith it <>r were put down by
the group," the fat.her said .
He said four girls who informed told
parents the names of IS to 20 others they
actually had seen take drugs. "This isn '\
even taking into consideration the ones
they were prelty sure they .saw under the
influence, even if their name came up
several times,"
He said all but a couple of the names
are of students who previow.ly attended
Sonora Elementary School. "I think
really we've only begun to hit In one
group," he said.
He said his daughter denied completely
any drug use by a girl from anot~r
elementary school group who she has had
close association with , The girls have
stayed <1vernight at each other's house.
The father indicated that he suspect~
his daughter doesn't want to implicate
the other group .
The meeting Friday will be of the city·
schools liaison commiUee of .school board
members Selim "Bud" Franklin and
Donald Strauss, Costa Mesa city coun~
cilmen. St. Clair and George Tucker, and
Newport Beach councilmen Howw d
Rogers and Donald McGinnis,
"We're inviting the two police chiefs irt
and mysel f," said school Superintenclenl
Or, William·Cunningham. ··we me.et v.•)th
!hem periodically to talk about coordina·
lion beh .. ·een· the schools amt the police.
In vir\v of the situation at Davis School (
"'as conc!:me<i 1\'c 1veren't giving them
1he cooperalion we should."
The (ather said from all the student!'
na mes he has heard only one -0r two of
1hen1 \\'ould he feel are unsupervi.zed by
their parents.
'·Jn talking to the school people thty
keep saying. 'There is always a bad ele-
me11t.' But they 're not dealing with a bad
element. These are boys that wear
square haircuts and girls with long
skirts.''
He said he th inks that is a reason wby
teachers are being fooled . "They·\·e got
their eyes on the kid over there with lbt>
long haircu t while {\\'O seats away is a kid
tha t already has taken drugs."'
The lwo fathers "'ho spoke out have
stable homes -there have been no
divorces and the mothers don 't "'ork bYt
are home "·ilh the children.
·'We talk to our children. \Ve al\\•ays
have been a family that is together. W-e
lake the children on trips. We've made an
effort, but not everything we could have
done apparently," one father said.
Lagunan Not Brainwashed
Capture<l Y achts1nan S pe1tds Yule at 11 orne
By RICHARD P. "-'LL
01 Ill• °'1•tw PU01 St•fl
Although Simeon Baldwin's Chinese
captors foisted propaganda -0n the
An1erican btisinessman. lhey apparenlly
decided he wasn't ripe for a full·scale
brainwash.
"l was too old," said Baldwin. 57. in
Laguna Beach toda y. "They figured 1l
was a ltm caust. l 'm just a dyed-in-the·
"'ool capitalist and I argued with them a
lot."
Baldwin was a prisoner for nearly 10
months in Red Chinese communes after
capture in February aboarcl his yacht
Horasum .
He will retur n to his •Hong Kong
11ircraft components business Tuesday
~lier spending lhe Chri stma11 holiday
'"'iU1 his wife.Marjorie, 13S9 Cliff Dri\'e,
and the.Ir three children.
After the February c:apturt during a
y11ichtl ng jun~et. of Baldwin, American
Bessie Hope Donald. 4.7 hand 11 others or
mixed national ity. mention was m11:de or
sophisticated electronic gear aboard
Baldwtn·s y1cht.
"They gave the Impression I wa:s TUl'l-
ning one of those surveillance shlps,"
~aid Baldwin, who added that he was nol
v.·ith the CIA. ''just a trop ical trader."
Bald~·ln 1ald 1~ Chinese think all
Ame.rlcans art CIA. •le said the Horasum
wa5 well equi pped but not more 110 than
othe.r ocean goi"i yachts.
It's tquipmenl, from a firm Bald~·in
rtpttstnls In lhe Orient. included dlrec-
lion finders, automal ic pllol, ritdio
lransmJttera and receivers .and other
gear. Baldwin s,aid he malte5 t.500 mile
trips from Hong Kong to ~fanilla i nd
needs the equipment.
Natty m 1 bullness suit and bow tic.
Baldv.·ln Is about 30 pountb li&htcr 1ha n
HEADS BACK TO HONG KONG
lagun•'• Slm90n B•ldwln
hi5 1~ pound:s whrn the Chine~ too k h•m
In IOV.'.
"Ile was worried about hi~ fronl vrran-
cta (con\''" momach l:' smiled r-.trs.
Baldwin. "Now he's eating like 1t was
golnJt ou l of st)'IC."
Baldy,·ln who "'QS reasonably "ell fed
by his c&.ptor11 -Tice, ve1etablcs and
~mall an1ounl5 r1f meal or fish -used to
lo\·c Chinese food,
But i\lajorie Baldwin didn 't mention ll
when they wenl out to dinner last night.
They tried f.fexic an food instead al
Laguna 's Tortilla Flats.
Initially said Baldwin. who had no
privacy awake, asleep or even in u~
bathroom. "we had a bad lot of guards.''
He was permitted only to sit on a ch4it
for abo~t four months. Alttr that, tlte
guards 1mpro\•ed.
Bald?.·in read his t ,500-page navigatien
book and apparently glanced at Red ~
paganda lefl handy. Time hung heavy. I
lie described it as "1 0 n1onths of sillin~
and not knowing what 's goins Lo happen
the. next day and worrying about ~·hat'•
ha ppening to your fami ly and financ,s."'
Bald\\·in tal ked Lo inLerpret~rs \\'hit
looked in daily. l~t said the Chinese fear
only the Americans .and Russi.ans and
believe the two powers are con.spiring
against the Chinese Communis t.,.
Baldwin and ?itrs. Donald. eslrangl!d
wife of television actor Peter Donald who (
at first tried to hide their nationality.
were mo\1ed frequently during lilt
months of captivity.
They were k8pt fJrst at a location about
10 mile$ from 1t1acao while techniciRM
ctlsmantltd and e:ramlned his naviga.
tional equlpmtnt.
Baldwi11 said ll'l('re 8re war preparcT-
tionlt !'illch ;'IS mlliLia training and
rondb!oc:ks. "prepnrlng again:st Art14!rlcaa
8ncl So1·1ct lnva~ions." lie ~aid Rf6
Chine.w propaga.nda keeps the people
under "a war tension".
Baldwir. loves Laguna y,•hlch he has
\'lsUcd rrt?quenlly during 2$ )'ears as a
"troplcal trader". He plans lo live here
after re.Llrement. But that y,·on't bf: ror
1tY.1hile. Tnmorrow ht 'IJ whl~k off to tlon.r
Kong where: interna uonal buslnc" dtal1
ll WAJl.
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II
-------------------------------- - ------------------------~
s DAil V Pilaf 1J
Court Action Certain for Edison
lt~spection llrged
u·.s. Asks Hanoi
Name Prisoners
PARIS (AP) -The United States
:tiantled North Vietnam a list today oI
1.J.S. military personnel missing in
Southeast Asia anQ asked It to idenUfy'
Dowta the
Mission
Trail
Yo ga Classes
Set for Viejo
MISSION VIEJO -1£ you would like to
concentrate on getling those extra holi·
day pounds removed, you are invited to
join a yoga class.
The eight one-hour classes ,.,,ill begin
ri.1onday Jan. 5 and will take place each
following 11onday at the recreation
center.
.Fees for the 8 to 9 p.rn. classes will be
$6 for recreation center members and $10
for nonmembers. For registratiOn in·
fonnation contact the recreation center
at 8374084.
e Y 1UCA Office Souglat
· SADDLEBACK VALLEY -Officials of .the South Orange County YMCA are hop.
ing to open an office in the El Toro-
Mission Viejo area next month.
·A three-man committee has been ap-
pointed by Chuck Benton. president, lo
iind a location for the Saddleback office.
The facility \\'ill serve Y youth pro-
grams in the area which include more
than 40 Gra·Y and Y Indian Guide clubs
irom CapistranG to El Toro.
• Sl1e<e Given Post
, ··LAGUNA NIGUEL - J. D. Shea, as·
sistant vice president and manager of
United California Bank at Monarch Bay
Plaza, wilJ be serving as treasurer for
Laguna Niguel 's March of Dimes cam·
paign against birth defects. The annual
fund raisin drive is held each January.
Shea wc.s graduated from Northeastern
University, Boston, Mass., where he won
a· B.S. degree in administration. He is
currently guest lecturer in real estate
financing at the University of California,
Irvine.
·Labor of Love
those on the list it is holding prisoner.
Ambmidor Philip Habib, acting U.S.
Delegation Chief at the Vietn1µn peace
talks, also called on Hanoi to allow
neutral inspection of its prisoof.r of war
camps and then to negotiate an exchange
ol POWs.
DeliveriM' the list of lhe missing to Cot.
Ha Van Lau, Hanoi's No. · 2 delegate,
Habib said at the 48th weekly session of
lhe talks:
''My government is taking this acUon
In the hope that your side, even at this
late date, will indicate which men are
prisoners and those whom you know to be
dead, as a matter of humanitarian con·
cem for their families.
"As for the physical treatment of
prisoners, there is evidence t h a t
Prisoners held by your side have been
subjected to solitary confinement, as well
as to other fonns of physical and .mental
duress. Your side has made no
systematic effort to repatriate sick and
\\'ounded prisoners."
Habib said the North Vietnamese ap.
parently want to use the prisoners as
"pawns in bargaining for an over-all set·
tlement of the war." He said Hanoi's
refusal to negotiate seriously in Paris
delayed such an over-all settlement and
therefore prolonged the "agoni~ing doubt
about the Jives and welfare" of U.S.
soldiers missing or known to have been
taken prisoner.
"If yoi.ir side hopes to apply political
pressure upon the United States through
a harsh attitude regarding prisoners of
war," ·Habib continued, "you reveal a
thorough misunderstanding of American
public opinion.
"No American can condone your handl·
Ing of the prisoner question. Your denial
of the most fundamental precepts
governing such matters has only resulted
in unanimous public condemnation."
He proposed that the "two sides enter
promptly into discussions on all questions
affecting prisoners of v.·ar held on both
sides, including the question ot lheir ear-
ly release.''
Dinh Ba Thi, the No. 3 member of the
Viet Cong delegation, opened the session
with a charge that the United Stales is
intensifyi ng the war and seeki ng to
sabotage the peace talks. He accused the
Nixon administration of "black schemes"
aimed at military victory.
The Viet Cong spokesman said his
delegation chie r, Mrs. Nguyen Thi Binh.
had a sore throat. North Vietnam's chief
delegate, Xuan Thuy. is boycotting the
talks to protest President Nixon's refusal
to name a blue ribbon successor to Henry
Cabot Lodge.
Habib's appeal for prisoner or war
negotialiorui went unheeded by Col. Han
Van Lau, who sat in for Thuy.
UPI Tt....,_
1'-l iss Iri s c. Love, assistant erofessor at Lonf Island Uni Verslty,
stands next to statue syrnboliztng a priestess o Aphrodite. She told
an archaeologicaJ convention in San Francisco of her expedition last summer to Knidos. Turkey, where long-lost fourth century BC temple
lo Aphrodite was partly unearthed by expedition members.
•• • ., -•• ·-• I
• ' -
1
• ,.. ,, ""'. I ~ • ' . -'
'
. Ul"I T1t.11t11N ISRAELI SAILORS STAND ON FRENCH-MADE GUNBOAT STEAMING THROUGH MEDITERRANEAN
Vessels Ignore French Emba rgo on Armament Sales to Israel, Sail on Christmas Day
Israel Accused
Of Stealing
Boats by Egypt
By Unil.ed Pres' International
Egypt accused Israel today of stealing
five gunboats from France and warned
nations having dealings with Israel that
Israel respects neither sovereignty or
legality. It was the first official Egyptian
reaction to the incident and it notably did
not blame France.
The five gunboats were moving steadily
toward Israel, keeping well to the north
· of the Egyptian shoreline, and were ex-
pected to pass between Crete and Rhodes
before making the open sea run to Israel.
They were expected in Israel late
Wednesday or Thursday.
·In Paris the influential newspaper Le
Figaro accused the govenunent of Presi·
dent Georges Pompidou of collusion in
Jetting the gunboats escape the French
embargo on arms shipments to the
Jewish state. The French government
was reported considering forms of
punishment for officials involved .
In Oslo, one of the directors of Starboat
S.A., the official buyer of the five boats,
denied the ships would become part or
the Israeli Navy. Mila Brener, who is
also a director of the Israeli 1'-taritime
Fruit Co., told a news conference the five
boats are registered as commercial
vessels in Panama.
"They are not gunboats, because there
are no guns aboard ," he said. "They arc
good, fast vessels which will be used in
oil drUling operations off tlle coast of
Israel, in Indonesia and perhaps in South
America. Starboat is a world wide en-
terprise."
Israel took the same viewpoint The
Israeli newspaper Yediot Aharonot said
Foreign Minister Abba Eben told French
Ambassador Francis Hure in Jerusalem
Monday that the sale of the five boats to
a Panamanian registered company did
not violate international law or the
French arms embargo.
Egyptian spokesman Dr. Esma t
Meguid said in Cairo "this method used
by Israel may perhaps alert responsible
officials in countries which deal wilh
Israel to the fact that she does not
respect the sovereignty, nor does she
respect the legality of these countries
whenever sovereignty or legality are
against her interests."
Meguid indicated Egypt did not hold
France responslble. He said, "In-
formation we ha ve indicated that the
French government is not happy alx>ut
tile incident."
Lagunan, 77, Hit
By Tn1ck But OK
A 77-year-old Laguna Beach woman
escaped serious injury when she was
struck by a van while crossing Park
Avenue in downtown Laguna .shortly
before 9 a.m. Monday.
Barbara Kjendf, 1452 Carmelita, was
released after emergency trtatmenl at
South Coast C.Ommunity Hospital, a
hospital spokesman said.
Driver John A. McGuire, 31322 Flying
Cloud Drive, South La guna, told police'
the sun wan shining in his eyes and he did
not sea the woman cr06Sing the street at
Forest Avenue until il was too late to
avoid hilting her.
T re1uor Jolts Sicily
TRAPANf, Sicily (AP) -A >lrong
ean.h trrmor jolted western Sicily before
dawn today, sending panicky thousands
ool into near-freezing weather. No
damage or casuaJUes were reported.
~iucb of the area was devastated by a
quake nearly two years ago, in January,
1968, and there have been more than 150
trtmors since. Many thousands are still
living in makeshift shantytowns.
Works Projects Eyed
Beautification Ahead
' For Laguna Next· Year ·
The New Year should bring to Laguna
Besch public works projects that range
from downtown street resurfacing to
park development and other beautifica·
ti on.
Joseph Swean y, city public works
director, said today that improvement of
existing streets -much of it overdue
because of last February's disastrous
storms -will be get ling a lot of attention
from his department in 1970.
Downtown, said Sweany, resurfacing Is
planned for Forest Avenue, Ocean
Avenue and Beach Street. The old
surface is to be burned off before the new
blacktop is spread.
More than ·a mile or resurfacing plus
nddition of drainage f1'cilitl,es and repai r
of slide failure is schedul'ed for better
than a half mi!e of Summit Dri ve. a
private road that the city acquired las t
year. The resurfacing work will range
from Bluebird Canyon Drive up to Del
Mar at the top.
Much of the street work scheduled.
-Sweany said , will be in the northend of
town on streets running between (a l righ t
angles to ) High Drive and Cypress.
Sweany said Locust and Jasmine are in
the worst shape. He said the resurfac ing
is par( of a much needed long-term pro-
gram. It will include resurfacing -in·
stead of patching -of minor streets such
as Seaview and St. Ann's Drive, Sweany
said.
Laguna's parks -llelsler, Bluebird
and Top of the World -are scheduled for
attention in the New Year as well.
The city plans to unde rground the
overhead utilities alon~ Cliff Drive that
borders Heisler Park . Work is also plan·
ned to replace rusted safety railings and
improve the foot paths through the
popular cliff-top park.
Work will proceed at the othe r two
parks, according to the precise plans that
exist for them.
Sv.·eany said initial \Vork, at least plan-
ning and planting, should get underway
at the small triangular green spot below
the high school athletic field . It was given
the city by the school district.
Beautification is to include assistance
to the chamber's downtown tree planting
project and completion of planting and
Lng111u1gr h 1S
sprinkler system for the divider islands
along Laguna Canyon Road.
Sweany predicted that more of his
departments effort generally will go
toward beautification projects in the
coming year, work ranging from cleanup
to weed abatement.
A major item is the replacement of
traffic signals from Viejo Street to ·Dia-
mond Street along Coast Highway with
new computerized signals, about a
$250,000 project. -
The New Year also is to include con-
struction of a p.iblic restroom on the
Anita Street beach ' and repair of th e
~e""er plan including addition of needed
chlorinators, about a $25,000 item.
Citrus Growers
Bemoan Assault
By Tumbleweeds
Though trees were toppling ln many
towns, South County citrus growers found
their groves had survived the weekend's
gusty winds in fine shape -but oh, those
tumbling tumbleweeds!
One El Toro grower reported "tree·
high" collections of the thorny nuJsance
literally jammed between his raws of
orange trees.
"They blew over from vacant land
across the road and they're really packed
in there tight," he lamented, adding that
the county's new ban on burning spring
weed growth hasn 't helped matters
much.
The county agricultural commissioner's
office says tumbleweed troubles are par
for the season. "The plants ha ve dried
out all summer," an expert explained,
"and all it takes Is a good wind to set
them rolling . They're all over the place
-that is, everywhere they don't belong."
If they ever get the tumbleweeds out,
the citrus men expect a good harvest, but
fear prices may be effected by scarring
of fruit as oranges were batted around by
the winds.
By Phil lnterlandl
"Tf.,.t's right, big mouth I Tell evef'ybody how t r••t the weather 11
•nd we'll have anothtr 80 million people moving out h•rel''
Board Nears
Ruling on
Expansion
By J OANNE REYNOLDS
Of 1111 Dtl~ l"lllt SNff
Southern Callfomia Edison Company's
appeal in the denial of their permit to ex·
pand the Huntington Beach power plant
went inlo its third day today in Anaheim.
After Monday's hearing before the
Orange County Air Pollution Control
District (APCD) appeals board, it ap-
~ared that the denial would be upheld b}'
the board, sending the case into Superior
Court. ' •
Deputy County Counsel James Urban
said today the case will go to court
regardleM of the board's ruling. "They'll
appeal in C1:1urt if the denial is upheld and
we'll appeal if it's reversed."
The county's case, Urban said, is based
on two regulations .
"APCD chief William Fitchen did the
correct thing in November when he
denied the permit. He acted under then
existing regulatloo 243 of the California
Health and Safety Code," Urban argued.
"We are also arguing that Rule 67, one
of the new air pollution control
ordinances enacted by the Board of
Supervisors, woUld absolutely prohibit the
amount of emissions that Edison pro-
poses to p!lt in the air from their new:
facility."
Rule 67, patterned ~ter similar regula-
tions in Los Angeles and. Riverskle coun·
ties, limits pennlsSable plant emissions
of sulphur compounds to a maximum of
less than twe and one-half tons per day.
nitrogen oxides to one and one-half tons
per day and combustion contaminants to
240 pounds a day.
Actording to an Edison company or-
ficial, the new ordinance "is impossible
to comply with."
In Monday's hearing, Edison Company
attorney William Marx called two
witr.esses who restated the utilities' posi-
tion that the construction of two· new
790,000.kllowatt units which would triple
the company's power output, would be
contributing an insignificant amount of
pollutioo to Southern California's smoggy
6kles.
Following their testimony, Urban made
a motion tha t th~ case be upheld in light
of Rule 67, '!the effect of which would re-
quire lh•I the f ir pollulion controlpf!fer
deny,the t>ennlt." .
Man Objected to the motion on the
gruunds that the appeal was based on the
denial given under Section 24243 of the
Health and Safety Code. The objection
was sustained and Fitchen was called to
the"· stand.
In three and one-half hours of direct
testimony and cross examination, Fit-
chen restated his case for denying the ex·
p;insion permit on tile grounds that the
current plant Is already "the single
largest static source of air pollution in
Orange Coun ty."
He testified that despite Edison's
claims that the a~t of pollutant
pumP,e<f into the air will ®crease by 1975.
the completion date of the proposed
plant, Edison Company figures indicate
the amourit of pollutants will have in·
creased. The Cigures show the amount of
poUutants produced at the facility in 1968
were 23.8 tons of nitrogen oxides dally.
And, according to Edison figures, in 1975
the amount will increase to 26.1 ton! a
day.
Edison officials and engineers have
testified that the pollulants will be shot
into the atmosphere at a high speed and
temperature from a tall stake so they
will not be part of ground level smog.
Search Continues
For County Pilot
RENO, Nev. (UPI) -Civil Air Patrol
planes searched the Lake Tahoe Basin
again today for signs of a single engine
airplane which disappeared Saturday
with two persons aboard on a flight to the
lake from Sacramento.
The pilot was identified as Jerry Weiss
of Fullerton. The passenger was uniden-
Ufled .
An intensive search of the 1ncllne
Village area Monday revealed no trace of
the plane. A ground party headed into
Desolation Valley on the west side todaY,
where a search plane reported hearing
squealing noise on the radio. It could
have been a signal from a downed plane.
Laguna Offering!
Tennis Classes
A tour.week series of beginning tenni S:
lessoM for women will be offered by th&
Laguna Beactl Recrealk>n Department
beginning Tuesday, Jan. 13. :
The tight lessons wUl be held oQ
Tuesdays and Thursdays from 12:~ W:
1:30 p.m. at the Irvine Bowl teMl&
courts, with Sandy Betts of the .{tecrea-:
lion Department Slaff as in.!lructor ••.• ~
Leslol'l6 will cover basic fundam enwa;
of lhe game for women beginning to pl11·
leftnt.. I
Enrollment wUI be on a first come, 1
first served basis and there ls a $4 f~ tori
the stries. Further information may be
obtallled by calling 4!H·U21. :
• ,
---;
• • DAILY PILOT I• ..
•
1Ce..-.... llJ *' DllUJ Pli.I Steffi ' ' . ~ Ogden N•&..._, the American writ.-it and humorist, has problems with ilie post office. "Stamps still taste
bad, but they won't. sticlc,". Nash +rote in a letter 1o lhe N.ew York
'limes in . which be complaiJled that 1'e had to use .c•l\lllos.e tape IQ keep
dlamps frorri falling off 'his letters. ·
91 claim that the post office ·should
:jlpply a roll of ·SCotcll tape With.
tiery 100 stamps, but ·mine won't
!'en ~ell me one. I'd· lik~ to go ,
fck where I c .. e fl'O/D : 1,902."
~ Millworker P•rks Whlserqnt of
oohnst<>n, S.C. started savlng1or a ~~ car two years ago by dumping~
lf,S spare toins in the g8s tank o£
ips old car. He· emptied the riove1 ·
lj>nk tlre.·other day, and It contain-1 $895, ... •
"The hippie ma11 be the van-
, guard of the 1niddle c/4ss as well
las its offshoot," a Rutgers Uni-
• v~rsity professor says! and hip-
• pze commune.1 mau tngger a re.
· versal of the decay of urban
. neighborhoodJ. Dr. George W.
,.Carey told a session of the
~American Association for the Ad-~vancemn1t of Scitnce in Boston
~that t xotic life stylts·in hippie
m
·communities at~ract the' -aµen..
tion of the mass media,: which m
;ittu:rn dTaws cosmOpOlitan mtfn.
~bers.of the upper classes, who'" Z turn attract new shops, housing ~developments and professional
:interests.
·; .
:Pope Paul VI has urged Roman ~PtPlics to help those who live in
stbm conditions. 'The pontiff, who
nja.de a Chirstmas visit to a Rdme
l~Sl Peter's Square for .his Sunday
s~tytown. pariSh, told• thousands
"'iSl Peter's Square for his Sunday
~Q ble$sing: "Reflect on the per ..
s~nce, on the revival of these fn.. hf!man conditions in which so many
Pctor people are living -men , wom ..
e\ ~ who are our brothers 14: Chrisl" • < .
llPIT ........
THESE AR E THE QUA RTE RS THAT JAMl!S EARL RAY PROTESTED TO JUDGE
Flit Photos Show M1 xlmum Security Cell block ond Rey's Six-by-nine Foot Cell
.
Judge Orders Joh for Ray
King's· Assassin Say s Soli tary 'Cruel, Inhuman'
NASllVIILE, Tenn. (AP) - A federal
jU<fae bas on!er<d s!Jlte prison officials to
fidd eomet.btng to occupy James Earl
Ray'' time while serving a 99-year
~ntence for alaying Dr. Mart.Ip LuUJ:er
King Jr.
After a bearing Monday on Ray's peti
tlon for releue from maxlmum &eeurity
conflnement, U.S. Dist. Court Judge
William E. Mlller told prison olCicials to
come up with a plan incorporating
"recrtailon, work and exercise" !or the
prisoner by Jan. 12.
Ray. who pleaded guilty last March 10
to the sniper slaying of King, testified he
would rather face the possibility o( being
killed by another convict than t.o spend
"99 years in solitary."
He contended that the conditions <lf
Israelis Deny
Eqyptian Claim
Of Suez Raid
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
The military command in Cairo said to-
day Egyptian commandos raided an
I!raeli aetUement on the eastern shore of
the Gulf. of Suez and left it ablaze, but
Israel denied it.
'The announ<:i!ment over Cairo radio
said the Egyptian commandos crossed
the gulf befcn: midnight Monday and at-
tacked Israeli military positions at El
Torr.
"This po11tion comprises a missile
base, a paratrooper camp and artillery
batteries ·which were all destroyed by
Egyptian rockets," the Cairo command
said. "No enemy force intercepted the
commando mission." •
This Is the aecood claim of a com·
maximum &ecurity conf inement
amounted to cruel and Inhuman treat-
ment in violation of his conaUtutlonal
rights.
The s!Jlte opposed Ray's bid for
;>ennlsalon to mingle with o t h e r
)risoners , contending his life might be .
endangered and his chances !or escaping
would be greater.
Ray spent almost two hours on the
witness stand, describing tile in his six
feet by nine feet cell at the penitentiary
here.
Judge Miller asked Ray what kind of
work he would like to perform. 1
"I wouldn't mind doing dishes, digging
ditches, anything," Ray replied, adding
that he preferred "to be outsJde as mucb
as 1 can."
lllf did aot specify IIlY parllculal' job,
however, saying 11it 11 bad to ask fOl'
anything In a penitentiary, that way
you'll never get it." ~-
w. s. Nell, the penltenUary warden,
auggested that Ray might help guards
serve food to other convicts 1n muimum
ucurily and lend a hand with jln!torial
duties within the maximum security
building.
Judging by Ray's ei:pression, he was
less than satisfied with the proposal.
''Enforced idleness can be cruel punish-
ment," Miller said, ''particularly when it
Is only.to protect him from bodily harm."
He said be would reserve fmal judgment
until be reviewed the prison officials'
plan.
Court Ruling Sought
Manson Will Ask Help
From Lawyers in Trial
LOS ANGELES (AP) -An attorney quest for joint coo.nae! by professionals,
says Charles M. Manson now plans to ask McKiMack said, the question will be
for lawyers to help him-J"epresent himself taken to the California Court of Appeal
when he comes to trial in the Sharon Tate Manson, bearded and long-halred cult
murder case. leader, is chari!:ed with murder along
Luke McKissack, a lawyer who with four of his followers in the gunshot-
specializes in criminal law, told newsmen knifing deaths last Aug. 9 of Miss Tate
l\-1onday: "Manson never said be wanted and four other peraons at the Benedict
to solely represent himself, but be wants' Canyon estate of the actress.
a voice in his own defense so the jury will The same five and a sixth defendant
get to know him." are charged also with the knife alayings
McKissack said Manson will ask of a wealthy market owner and his wlfe.
Superior Court later this week or next Two of the defendant.!, both held in
'?mando raid within the past 48 hours.
Monday to pennit McKissack to argue other sicttei, fi led legal notice Monday
the merit.! of joint counsel. that they will continue to fight U•
Judge William B. Keene gave tradition. Egypt rtporied an attack Sunday by
naval commandos destroyed the Israeli
gulf po&tion at Ras Dehisha.
permission last week for Manson to be Jn AusUn, Tex., Charles D. Watson's
his own attorney. He told the 3S-year~Jd attorney maintained that his client, now
The Israeli military command ln Tel
Aviv denied Cairo's claims.
defendan t that he could see k advice from In custody at McKinney, Tex., could not
professional lawyers but could have no • r~ceive a fair trial in Callfornla.
"No Israeli unit;camp or vehicle was
attacked om: shelled or in.any way hit or
destroyed as the Egyptians claim," a
military IJ>Okesman said.
<'O-COuncil. A hearing on Watson's extradition Is
"You're going lo call all the .ahoU set for next Monday.
yourself," Keene said. On that same day In Mobile, Ala.,
Keene's clerk, F.die Hollenbeck, said as Circuit Judge Joseph M. Hocklander will
things now stand lt1anson would question \ hear arguments on a moUon for defen-
prospective jurors personally, present his dant Patricia Krenwinltel's release from
own opening statement if he wishes to \ the Mobile County Jail on a writ of
The spokeaman did say lhere ex·
plosions were "ported in a desolate area
north of El Torr on the Gulf of Suez on
MOnday night. n1ake one, examine and cross examine .aJJ habew corpus.
~'The·nature of the explosions was not
yel known, aDd it was possible that they
were . connected with the Egyptian
claims," the spokesman added.
witnesses and make his own closlng Gov. Albert Brewer earlier had
arguments. given his approval for Miss Krett'Winkel's
lf Superior Court turns down the re--removal to California.
°Freddy Knie, Jr., of Switzerland,
·i<ks an back of only trained rhino-
:e:fos in the world 'during a perform·
u!Ce of Cirkus Kront -in ·Munich, W.
l ~rmany.
Czech Embassy Chief
Asks Swiss Asylun1
BERN, Switzerland (AP) -Radko Fa-
jfr, councillor and .charge d'affaires of
the Czechoslovak Embassy in Bern. has
asked for asylum in Switzerland, Swiss
authoritie.s announced today.
Humphrey Def ends Stand
In Salt Lake City Speech
MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (UPI)
The announcement said his request was
under study by Swiss police.
Former Vice President Hubert Hum-
pltrey said Monday that after his speech
'.Most of Nation Still Cold
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in Salt Lake City, Utah, la.!lt September,
the South Vfetnamese said they would bt
willing to enter peace negotiations.
llumphrty, in an Interview with UPI,
~aid "I thought I did what I had to do and
y.·hat l thought was right at Salt Lake Ci·
ty ."
In that speech, delivered Sept. 30, he
!aid he would halt the bombing of North
Vlelnam if he wue elected president.
Fonner President Lyndon B. Johnson,
In a recent national television interview,
~aid he believed Humphrey's spet<:h cost
him the "few thousand" votes needed to
put him in the White House.
Johnson contended that South Vlet-
name.se officials had become "concerned
enough .•. that they decided they would
not go to the peace table until after the
election, or that they would hold back."
When asked if he though the speech
caused the South Vietnamese to sta.y
away from the peace table, Humphrey
replied, "No, I certainly don't."
"In fact, if you'll recall, the South
Vietnamese said after my speech that
they would be willing to come to the
conference table," he added.
"I !rankly think It was duplicity Oil
their part. I think Ibey thought they
"·oukl get a better deal from Mr. Nixon
and so they decided to stay away until
efltr the elttUon to see. what wouJd hap-
pen," said Humphrey.
•'They told Lyndon Jol>Non they _,Id
do one thins and they went ahead and did another. I think !hoy ,,_ just thinking·
or themselves,'' he ukl.
Nixon Promotes MD
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Pret1dent
Nixon has promoted his penonal White
lk>ust physician, Air Forte Col. Walter
R. Tkach, 52, ol IAbelle, Pa .. to the rank
of brlgadl<T ~flleral.
•
V~ In Mattila
Agnew Cheered,:
Visits Memorial
MANILA (AP) -Vic<! Prealdenl Spiro
T. Agnew waa warmly applauded today
as he attended Inaugural ceremonies for
Philippine President Ferdinand E •
Marcos and laid a wreath at a monument
to American World War Jl dead.
0 The vlC<! pttSldeat also held what he
tenned an 1 'e z tr em e I y producUve"
metUng with South Korean Premier
Chung 11-kwon at which he. reaffirmed
President Nixon's vow to maintain the'
·U.S. commitment to that Asian ally •
Agnew's second day in Asia paa8ed
wiUni.t a renewal of the hostile
demonstration Monday nJght In whlch an
explosive and a rock were thrown at his
car. Asked about ~ demonstrations, the
vice p!'9ident aaid "I think that the few
demonstrators that showed up there -
rather rambunctious ones -didn't really
amount to much.
"We're just going to have to get used to
that u a tactic of modem life," he ad-
ded, saying he didn't think they were
representative of the PhilipPlne people.
Jn bis talks with the South Korean
premier, Agnew said he discussed the
Senate-House fight over $50 million in un-
budgeted military aid for South Korea.
He said he explained the issue wu when
such aid should be voted rather than
whether the United States should eland
by South Korea. '
Asked whelhei: he told Chung that
Pre.sident Nixon would sign the aid bill
even if It includes the extra aid he didn't
request, Agnew said, "Yes, I did ."
Referring to the Korean force in Viet·
nam, Agnew said "there are no plans, tbe
prime minister told me, to withdraw any
Korean troopl at the present time."
After the meeUng and a IO-minute news
conference, Agnew drove to the nearby
American .cemetery at Fl A. Bonifacio,
formerly FL William McKinley, where
17,205 Americans are burled and the
~ of 36,289 war dead are lnxribed
on marble portals.
Walking through the memorial, Agnew
Chrysler Closes
Plants for Week
DETROIT (AP) -One-week layoffs
have been ordered for all Chrysler Corp.
assembly plant workers. About 37,700
employes will be affected.
Two plants at Detroit will be closed
from Jan. 5 through Jan. 10 along with
assembly plants in Newark, Del., Los
Anrelel and St. Louis, Mo.1 the an·
nouucement Monday said .
During the second week in January,
another Detroit assembly planl'a opera-
tlona wW be curlailed along with planls
in Belvidere, Ill, and Windsor, OnL
Moose Leader Dies
INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) -Orville
R. Gunyoo. 56, world leader • supreme
governor of 1be Loyal Order of Moose
died Monday in an Indianapolis hospital.
He was elected head or the Moose last
summer and was p-esident of the Indiana
Brass Co. at Frankfort.
stopped at the seal of Maryland, of whi ch
he was governor as a Navy band played
"Maryland, My Maryland." Several hun·
drtd representatives of P h i 1 i p p i n •
veterans' groups applauded him.
The same friendly reception greeted
hlm at the Marcos inaugural.
POW Gifts
Ready; Will
Russ Agree ?
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) -Texas
billionaire H. Ross Perot still was op-
timistic today as he prepared for the
final leg of his around-the-world race
againsl time to get belated Christmas
presents to U.S. servicemen held prisoner
in North Vietnam.
Perot arrived here from Bangkok,
Thailand, Monday afternoon to repackage
an assortment of medical supplies,
clothing and food before continuing to
Copenhagan in Denmark, and hopefully
then to l\'Iosrow in a chartered Boeing 707
jet.
Twelve hours later, the 25 tons or cargo
worth about $400,000 was broken down in-
to approximately 1,500 ind iv id u a I
packages. The job was done by more
than 1,000 Anchorage residents, who
answered a call from the Red Cross.
"The North Vietnamese don't believe
that we care about our men in Vietnam,"
Perot said. "I only wish that they could
be here to see bow much Anchorag~
cares.
The 3~year-old Dallas computer
magnate was denied pennission last
week to ny the supplies and gifts to the
POWs after spending three days in Vien·
tiane, Laos, calling on North Vietnamese,
Soviet and Pathet Lao officials.
But the Texan, who left Dallas Dec. 21 ,
was told by representatives of llanoi that
if he turned over his cargo to Soviet
postal authorities in Moscow by midnight
Dec. 31, it might reach North Vietnam.
"They put the deadline on us thinking
we would not make it," he said, "But we
will."
Perot said his efforts to deliver gifts tG
the estimated 1,400 America n military
men held either in North Vietnam OI'
Laos began with a small boy in Texas.
"Why, I just happened to meet a 4*·
year-old boy named Jeffers who had
never seen his father. His father is a
orisoner," Perot said. "Jeffers did not
know if his dad is alive or dead. It
started with that and evolved into this."
Time was running out when Perot'•
chartered plane arrived at the Anchorage
International Airport T\-1onday, So the Red
Cross issued an appeal for volunteers to
wrap the cargo into small packages fl)r
mailing Moscow.
The appeal brought private citizen:-.
military personnell and members of
groups ranging from the Girl Scoots to an
anti-Vietnam Y.'ar moratorium committee
to an airport hanger to package, weigh
and label the supplies.
lill'IT..,...
Window Cleaner .Re scu ekl
A window cleaner on the 473-foot Simpson's Tower in Toronto grabs
for ledge afler being hauled up by a rope from a cradle he and an-
other man were standing on. When the cradle became Jammed utldcr
a roof overhang, a building maintenance employe lowered himstlf ort
a rope, tied the rope around each man's waist and one by one Oley
were hauled to safety.
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Ru ssians
Plan New ... ~
China Talk
MOSCOW (UPf) -Com-
munist infonnanls said today
the Soviet !Jnion will present a
revised formu la for border
peace at the next Sino-Soviet
negotlatians in Peking in an ' . cJforl to get the talks off dead
center.
-1 Israell Court Acts
' .
. Mosque Firebug Ruled Ill
\I: ; I
JERUSAL!_M.. •<Ail ~ ~ tinder lstatli law. take place. Rohan's lawyera
apecial Israeli court ruled to· Rohan, sitting in the bullet-have said prlvately th_?t he
day that Denis Michael Rohan proof glass booth he occupied would rather stay in lsrael
was mentally ill when he set during 21 days of testimony than be returned to Australia,
fire to the Al Aksah Mosque in and argument, blinked his where he spent an unhappy
Jerusalem and ordered him eyes when he heard the childhood.
confined to a hospital for verdict ::.ut remained seated. Rohan admitted setting the
treatment. The three.judge cpurt gave fire, but his attorneys denied
Presiding Jildge Henry Rohan 4~ days to appeal the c rim i n a I re spon.sibllity
Baker said there was no doubt hospitalizalion order. because of his mental con-
that the 28-year.Old A\lstrallan It was assumed that Rohan dition. Psychiatris ts testifying
set Islam's third holiest .shrine would be 'treated in an Israeli fo r the defense .said he was an
The Foreign Ministry an-ablate Aug. 21, but that he mental institution, although acute .schizophrenic w Ith
nounced Monday ·the chief acted on an "irresistible im· the judge did not specify ''paranoid and gra nd iose
Soviet negotiator, First Depu-,_l'U_ls_e_"_•_nd_w_as_oo_t_pun1 __ sha_b_l• __ w_he_r_•_lh_e_ue_a_t_m_e_nt_w_a_s_t_o_d_e_1u_s_io_n_s._" _______ ,
UP'I Ttle11hcli.
ty Foreign Minister Vasily V.
Kuz:nctsov, would return to the
Chinese capital "within the
next few days."
"The conversations will con·
tinue," a ministry .spokesman
said. "We want a positive
solution in Peking." The talks
have been deadlocked since
they began Oct. 20.
TRICIA NIXON, BEAU ARRIVE AT BALL
Edward Cox Escort5 Pre5idenf'$ Daughter
No details of the new Soviet
peace formula were revealed
and Soviet officials reportedly
1vere not overly optimistic il
1vould bring progress in the
Tricia , Beau Upstage
Debzita11tes cit Ball
discussions.
The re had been widespread
speculation in Moscow that
Kuznetsov's re turn to the
Soviet capital on Dec. 14 to al·
tend a session of the Supreme
Soviet actually signaled in-
definite suspension of the NE'V YORK (UPI\ -Tricia viously rented tails and gun-
Nixon and her steady beau, boat sport shoes, shooed away
Edward Finch Cox. tBngocd cut-ins so the couple could
into the early hours today like dance together. They (ox-lrot-
talks.
But the Soviets did not want
to take the initi;itive in break-
ing. off contact with China, the
informants said, and decided
to rewo rk their demands in
hopes of making it easier for
the Chinese to respond.
a couple in love. tcd. waltzed and tangoed.
President Nixon's blonde~ Their appearance at the ball
daughter tur,1cd up at the 15th upstage~ 65 debut.antes from
annual I n t c r n a t ion a I 10 foreign countries and 19
J)cbutanle Bait. of \\'hich she st~lcs.· including European
v•as junior chairtnan. with princesses of the h.ouses of
Cox. 23, a fir st-yc.ir student at ~?urbon-~arma. Pohgna. and
1-lar\'ard Law School. 11gnatelli; Maureen F1n~h .
The Chines~ have continued
to demand a statement from
the Soviets adm itt ing that
about 600,000 square miles of
central Asia and far eastern
territory were taken from
China in the 18th and 19th cen·
Skitch Henderson's band
played ''It Must Be Love" and
the 2.500 socialites who at-
• 1ended the ball saluted Tricia
and Eddie.
"But we're only very good
friends." he protested.
"We agree on many thing~:·
:id1nilted Tricia. ··but we have
\1othing to announce."
Cox was ·rricia's escort
\\·hen she made her debul at
1hc same ball in 1964. Five
years later they "'ere dating
l'ach othe r exclusively and
closing the ball \l'ilh a tango in
<1 b!a?.e of photographers'
llashbu\bs.
It all added up to romance.
But is Cox. a for1ncr Yale
µlamor boy and one of
1-rusading Ralph Nader's in·
· vesligators. ton liberal for the
daughter of Nixon"! l{eporters
·asked him about that point·
blank.
"No." said Cox. "! su pport
President Nixon. There are
1nany problems we must nieet
'ln An1crica that have nothing
to do '''ith politics. \\1e 1nust
all take an active role."'
Tri~ia beamed at her six-
!oot. bl ond, hnndsomc escort
:ts they dined in the \\laldorf·
Astoria box of his parents, ;it-
lorney Ho\\'ard Ellis Cox and
.!\.1 rs. Cox, a co-chairman of
the ball 1rho headed the
receiving line. When they
dci;cended to the dance floor,
a Secret Service man in ob-
SDS Backs
GE Stril{ers
NE\11 HAVEN, Conn. (AP )
The Students for a
Ocn1ocralic Society have ap·
proved a plan to support strik-
ing General El<'c1ric 1\•orkers.
Meeting at Ya!e University
P.·Tonday. several hundred SDS
~el egates voted near
Unaniinous approv;d of a pro-
posal termed a "general
strategy" by its sponsor, the
\l.'orkcr Student A 11 i an c e .
1t1•hich advocates an alliance of
students and working people lo
bring about social change.
The strategy includes rais·
ing strike funds, prevenling
Company rccruilment on cam·
puses, and the manning of GE
pickcl lines.
daughter of }-fcalth. Education
and \Velfare Secretary Robert
ll. Finch. and Robin Lee
Robert E. McNair of South
Carolina. turies.
After 4-inonth Strike,
Met Opens With Bomb
By STEPllEN E. RUBIN
NEW YORK IUPI) -'Tis
still the season lo be merry,
but there was little to rejoice
aboul in the l\1etropolitan
Opera·s 105-day late opening
l\1onday night.
The fact lhe Mel opened at
all is much to its credit. It
battled with 14 unions for four
months and came out only
mildly scarred.
The 85th season will run for
16 instead of 31 weeks. And
1he company, according to its
general manager, Rudolf Bing-,
\viii operate at a deficit of $7
million. This is about double
its normal deficit.
Contracts 1vcre drawn up
Dec. 14. The Met then gave
itself 15 days to open. The
perennial warhorse "Aida"
"·as chosen as the opening
night work because. according
to Bing, the company could
perform it "wilh its eyes clos-
d ., e .
The general manager
n1isca\culated. Claim though
he may that the l\1et's
orchestra players , choristers,
dancers and stagehands are
no1v the best paid employes in
1he opera \1•orld, they didn't,
as the saying goes, sing for
their supper.
The performance \\"as 8S
colorless as the opening night
itself.
Since snow and slush littered
Lincoln Center Pl aza, there
1vas no red carpet to usher
society's finest into the house.
Soviet Tc:;L
WASHINGTON_\ !UPI) -1
The U.S. Atomic.Mhergy Com·
mission says it has detected
seismic signals from the
Soviel Union's nuclear tes t
area for the 12th time this
year.
Instead, the formally attired
ladies and gentlemen were
forced to use side entrances.
The lobby was a sea of
pushing celebrity hounds, but
!here were few celebrities to
be seen.
R11sl{ Takes
Georgia U.
Faculty Joh
ATLANTA (UPI) -Despite
opposition from Gov. Lester
?\1addox and other segrega·
tionist leaders, f o r m e r
Secretary of State Dean Rusk
says he is loo king forward to
"coming home" next Sep-
tember as a member or the
University of Georgia faculty.
The slate board of regents,
in charge or Georgia's state.
supported colleges, voted 9-4
Monday in favor of the
university hiring the 60-year-
old Georgia native as a pro-
fessor of international law in
its la1v school.
Rusk immediately accepted
the invitation, saying it will
"be good to come home again
and continue my work on the
rule of Jaw among nations."
Maddox termed the board
action "regrettable" and said
it will "create a disturbance
for many ):ears to come."
l\1addox called Ru sk a "left-
wing internationalist."
A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
The flllt ltf ll'IV 1111 If, I'll 11'11-111 Mrt-
lneH I "9•Wrt IM PlllMfl 11'11
'""'""'·
PllESENTED ""s A
Pi~k ,Poison
Aud Knoiv Alcoliol Count
PUILlC SERVICE EVEllY DAY IY1
Lee Roofing Co.
14 Yllrl bl 11111 ... H
16U 511perlfr Aw., H.1·7:m:
LEGAL NOTICE
WASHINGTON (UPI\ -Tr
you Rre wondering ho1v long it
\1·111 take you New Year"s Day
to dry out from the events of
New Yea r's Eve. here 's a
timetable.
U takes about one hour ror a
man of average weight -
about 100 pounds -to clear
0.4 of one ounce or ethyl
nlcohol ool or his system, ac-
cording to a U.S. publication.
The follo1ving chart shows
how much ethl'\ ;i lcohol is
found in v;irioi.is drinks By
totaling your alcoholic con·
ttumplion and dividing by 0.4
,you can <'alculate the number
of hours it wllJ take before you
<:311 enjoy 1hc Nrw Yrar's Day
bowl gan1cs ll'ithout that poun·
NOT ICli OP I ULK TltANSl'"l'.lt . h (hCI '111 ... 101 u .c .c .1 cling &ngover. No!l(I II herfilw 11lwtn !O !Ill (rrdllor1
The alcohol contents are· ot B1tD01 1111nc11r R • • 1 • 11 r • "1 •
· Tr111sf1ror, wholt Minni ""''"' 11 SOI -Qne Oll11CC Of 87 proof P1rk Awr., 61!bol l1l1nd. Counl'Y Of
11·hiskey equals o 44 ounces of Or•nv•. s111t oi c111tor1111, '"'' • bulk · tr1.,,l'llr 11 111Dut I'll tie mid• I'll Ylmoltlr alcohol ; M1111'11• ...., Tom ti-•· TN111ftrff1
--On r 87 f ~ 11111111111 IOdreu II 210 D!lfllOllll e ounce o proo rum st., 81111oe r11and. eoun1r o1 0r1.,..,
equals 0.44 oonces of alcohol : s11te Df ee1rtot11 ... r · Tiie -W '9 br tr111tl1r'°" II lfxltrd -One ounce o 90 proof gm 11 .soi ,..,.k Aft .. ••t• 1111no:1, cou111Y oi
equals 0.45 ounces of alcohol · °''""' s11te oi c1utorn11. . ' Slid ~ II don<rlbt!I 111 -••I --3.2 lo five percent beer n : Alt 1lodl In trldl. ll•turn. """""'"I
Is 0 38 to 0 .8 ounce ...... "°" wlll Of 11111 ,...,_,,,, llllllMH equa ' ' s l<-11 II ••llloe l•l•lldW ...... IOCI,.. ,, alcohol: 501 Pert. Aw .. l•fbo.I t111n0. ,_.., ~ .. 1 1 '" al 0 72 0r..,.... s11tto o1 c1111or"1111. -.:iLX percen a e ,.u S . Tl'I• bulli: tr.mJw!' wm be t-tM
ounces alcohol. Oii er '"et' , ... t111 d•" o1 J'""'"'· 1t1t.
Ir d I k. t 9 ., '°' ,..,., ,,,,._, ••tllOI 111.tlld. COll!lty °' you s!art r n 1ng a 0,1""", ~111e "' c111tDm11.
P m New Year's Eve and con-So t•, '' 1<110Wn "° me Tr•mftrt1, 111 • . ~I""' "'""" IMI •dd~un "'" Ill' :itume 20 OUOCC!S Of Scotch Tr..,,lt.fOI' lor 11'!1 If!'" "tt•I ... I NII, II ~(ore calling U a nlfht theil dllf1~1 1r0<n "" .i.ow. ,,,, t•fboc• ' l1lflnd,r, 8tlbol 11111111, 011-Ce11111,., It will IRke 22 hours rom the c1111DN111.
I. •• d · k' Olltd· Oc(embr• 7'. lt+t, 1me )'OU ui.;gan r1n 1ng to Wm. ~. 1trev11, '''"''"'" drv out. You'll be in !inc shape •...0111hld O••"" C01111 011rt P11o1,
by· 7 p.m. New Year's Day. Dtc:-11« JO, "'' Jo!OUf
Anaheim.Savings now offers new 51/4 % certificate sav-
ings accounts paid at the end of six months. The new
certificate accounts earn our regular 5°/o current an-
nual rate, ~mpounded daily and payable from day-in
to day-out; plus a bonus paid at the end of six months
al 1/4 % annual rate. After the first six months you can
earn both the current rate of interest and the bonus
interest payable every quarter. Open your account to-
day with a minimum balance of $1000 to any a'!1ount.
also ••• be informed
know your police department
and how it works •••
ANAHEIM SAVINGS invites you to see lilms and
displays 18aturing the la!esl in law enforcement
equipment. Informative and educational exhibils will
be viewed and discussed wilh a representative of
your local police department.
JANUARY STH THRU 9TH • 11 A.M. to 4 P.M. DAILY
OPERATION
ON GUARD
_,,_ ........ . ... -.......... .... __ .__ .. _
.... -·-· .. .:!~:=:. ---·-----
Pick up your informative booklet
"OPERATION ON GUARD"
Now •.. by Act of Congress
Savings insured to $20,000
ANAHEIM SAVINGS
AN.1..Hf:IM
117 w. Llncoln Aoi•.
PA 2·1SS2
AND LOAN ASSOCIATION
BREA
770 S !1111 Bl•"
.JA0-•911
HUNTINGTON BEACH
1 11 ~11:11 SU•fl
LE 6..0~111
l'l'lll CONVENIENT l'lo!lll.!HCI AT ALL 3 LOCATIONI
•
DAILY 1'11.llr JI
QUALITY DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES
WILL BE
-•••w• ____ ...... _ ......
........... -c-·--JIU ...... _,.. ___ , ......
............ __ ,, __ ----·-
I I •ew ---·--·-·--··--............ --·-
• DARY PU..OT EDITORIAL PA.GE
The Story of . Growth
Jn Futurama 11170, published as part of today's
paper, Ill• DAILY PJLOT once again updates Ill• story
or vigorous lndu•trtnl and commercial growth w!llch
continue to be a strong pattern In the fabric of We
aloog the Orange Coast.
It's Ille story of persOl>alltits as much as of con·
crete and steel, freeways and factories. It prollles the
people in industry, government and commerce whose
foresight fuels the machine of progreos.
Futurama 1970 not only reviews dynamic accom-
pllihments or the past but al so looks into a future lilied
"i th both prosperity and problems. It details, in many Instances, the specific plans of
some of the nation's most exciting corporate "celeb-
rities." the companies which have won starring roles
in the drama of the space age.
The special sectioo takes a closeup look al this
real·llfe drama and at the "thinkers" and "doers" \VhD
are producing its intrtgutng scmes.
The world's future very well may be here today in
the sketches on the drawing boards of these space age
plants featured ln Futurama 11170.
Cigarette Advertising
Banning or curbing dgarellAI advc1istn1 on radio
and TV -controversial because the product is legally
marketed -was before tile CalUornia Legislature this
year. The stale Senate approved Ille bill but it died In
an Assembly committee.
One of the arguments med to bo!Ue il up was that
!he Legislature should wait to see what Cougr,., does.
Now it appears the Congress will preempt the field.
The U.S. Senate passed a strong bill aimed at banning
the tobacco industry's catchy jingles and slogans from
the airwaves -both those grammatical aod ungram·
matical.
The SMiie al1<1 served noUce on the tobacco lndw-
try that l! It almply shilled It& advortts1n1 budgets to
massive eampa!gna in tho print media -newspapers
and mapzjnes -regulaUon In that area would follow.
The leitaJ.Uon Is ln a touchy area of constitution·
allty so Iona as nl• or clgarett .. rem&W 1e1a1. But Jaw·
mali:en from the tobacco atatas have restrained them·
selves In the taco of nationwide public opinion and the
shift In Senate vot,. against them tn response to that op!nlon •.
Alao, and quite tmportanUy, the tobacco state
representatives recognize that a failure to have uniform
federal regulation of the Industry could produce 50 di!·
ferent sets of state reguJatlons.
To smoke or not to 1mote remains the sole deci· s~on of individual Americans. But pennitting solicita·
tion of youn.f people to embrace the habit is something
most Amencalll appear not to want. There is en·
counging evidence that anU..amoldng "conunercials"
on TV and radio, plus ma!Sive reportafe tn the print
media of evidence against 'cigarettes a1 lbe culprit in
the rile of lung diseases as a major cause of death is
causlna million& of smoken to quit and youth noi to start.
. A House-Senate conference is expecte•Mo dispose of
trunor differences on the Senate.passed measure. And
th.e broadcasting and cigarette com~aniu ·apparently
Mil accept without protert the Sena\t s advertising cul· oU date of January 1, 11171.
II it has to come, it is better to have it come at tho ~ederal level, uniformly, and not throu1h a bewilder• 1ng maze of state statutes.
. But at the san:ie time it is bard to escape a gnaw·
mg concern that, m the long runh this double· barreled
clamp down on freedom of speec and freed.om of en·
terprtse has greater J>Ot•ntlal for Wldermintn1 the well
beine of this nation than do the ciprette commercials.
A Visit to
Perspective on the News A Depressed
Tinker Bell By ROSCOE DRUMMOND
WASHINGTON -It will be one or the
chosen functions ol this column to bring
to the fore periodically someth..lng lm·
part.ant that can be fairb' cited under the
title "Whtt's Right with America."
Much ~ lhe medla mirrors ao lar&ely
the UUnc:s that have gone wrong -the
Tate murders. the Black Panther killinp,
~t violenct, riotou1 protests, etc. -
that special attention to lhinp that go
rlsht ls in order.
lam not at all advocating underplaying
or under.n:porting unhealed social pro-
blmls. 'llley should be brooght into the
open and kept there. r am only ad·
vocaflnt perspective, and In tu interest
1111! -of healed ooclal conditloos ooght not ta be .,, often blacked out or "'!'Oried
as an ut.rtsk to hillory.
I hive such a piece o( news.
NOT MANY MONTHS qo a chorus ol
th Ing s ·Can -hardly-get-worse com.
mental.on: on television and in Congress
were wringing their hands in alarm th.It
a too powerful military-industrial com·
plex was becoming a Frankenstein ten-.
ding to lead a IUe of its own.
Prtlide:nt Ei!eMower bad himself
warned of the need to be alert lest the
combined influence of the wapona-~
d..,lng lndlllbies and the weoJ>OOl')Nngry
military become too great, too dlc-
tatorW, too pervulve.
J have news: It isn't.
Tho poleitja)ly overreaehiog power ol
an indullrlal·mllltary lobby is being con-
tained and so far this development his
gone unttporled and appamUy un·
noticed by those wbo were most vocally
anxious about it.
rr Ill Bt:ING CONTAINED by the
l'n!lid«rt, the Secretary of Defense. ai1d
the Congress.
It needod ta be contained althoogh it
seemed to "'e that the mOISt vehement
critics o( the military-industrial comp\e:ic
were eaatt to make It a target for
anyt.N.ne about the Vietnam war and the
d<f..,.. budget Ibey didn't approve ol.
It was a prescient warntn& when
Gtl1tt1l ~.,. Uni sounded It, and
) woll ncal1 how furiooa the President
WU when he UW somt of tJ1e p:"I>
curement indultries with government
contracts taking big advertisement.s
trying to ••Ii tl>t country and the
Congress on certain military spending Utt
Pr.,klent )\ad just vetoed .
BUT WJIAT JS signifkant is that the
warning hlJ been heeded; and at least
for the prtaent, the danger ha.s passed.
The centtaJ troth is th.at today the
military·~ complex is n o t
domlnatinc President Nixon n o r
Secretary or Del"15e Mel vin Laird nor
CQngrea.
Hero is the tvkilr<:•' The Proaid«lt ~ removing gound com·
bat troapg from Vietnam fa ster than the
military would w1sb.. The military may be
right and Mr. NiJon wrong, but It is the
President who la making the decision.
THE PRESIDENT and Congrel5 are lo!nin& to cut cumnt mll!Ury spending
and nttl year's def-budget ...,..
thin the joint chftfa recommended. The
House Appropriations Committee bu ju.st
approved a reduction of $6.3 billion in the
1970 budget, the largest cut In IS years. It
is SS.3 billion below the Nixon request and
S7.I bUlk.i below the budget submitted by
President Johnlon last Dectmber which
Nixon slashed before he aent it to
Congress.
Secretary Laird is maintai!1lng civilian
domin11.nce in the Defense Department as
decisively as Secretary Ro b e r t
:fi.1cNamara. He has been aided in doin&:
., by the. fact thal NlJ:on, now that our
role Jn Vietnam Is being -· Is leas responsive to the mUK.vy than was Jmn.oo.
PRESIDENT NIXON "ent further In
his unilateral action in destroying germ
warfare .stockpiles than the military
wanted.
The Presid<rlt carried W.U(h his
refonn or the draft faster than many in
the military liked.
Some United Statts tn.stallaUonl in
foreign countries are being foldtd and
total m.ll.it.ary manpower is in JrOCtSS ot
being cut back, and it ill here that most
savings can be made.
The United Stata needs a mWtary-in-
dustrial compte:r but Ua n>le: nMda to be
kept ill balance. The vlewa of d>e military
deJerVe to be btard and need to be heard
at evrr.v level of 1overnment. Its first
and foremost concern must be the
de.tense and security of tht nation. But Its
''oice should be subordinate, n o t
dominan t -and that is what the new ad-
ministration is bringing about.
Cbrl1tiu Science l\lonJlor
Economic Guessing Game
A common plight ol the P
government and business < J
iathtttng Jn New York City ls .1
sUtt fiJ on the U.S. economy 1.. _;o.
&looomJc forecasters the.le days prefer
to talk generally ·-00.i-In the 1970s hilt not about blWne& during t970.
Lack of consemus on the near-term
eut.look is most anbarrasstng to those
pracUtionen o( the dismal 11eience who
nly U1 econometric models and fancy
computer techniques. But llle note of
uncert.alnly and cauUon in pttdlct.ing 1t'10
Is well advbed.
The yeir ju.t ending aaw the death of
te:rtbook econom ics. Or rathu, the
demi.le of aome wldely·beld ilitortes in
some important textbooka. Jn any cue,
lruatrated economists could not be blam·
td (or reverona: to the reading of lea
leaver aft.er the miscalcuJattons of 1118'.
A YEAR AGO, a lar1t body of experts
!tit that the double medicine of U1~t
-~--
Tuetd-_y, December 30, 1969
Tiie rciltmol l"'Q• o/ t/14 DoUv
Pilot 1teb to b\/Oft'A ond 1Um-
"'4C.. reodn• br prt11nti110 thU
"""""'""'' opinloni ond """' mntorr °" topb of intcre1C and lllgnl,_, bv providing a
fonml fM Ill< •'P'•uioo o/ .. , ,~ opinlolu, oPI(( bv
prc1nting the ditlfr1e ~
pofntl of l nfomatd ob.tttVt r1
and ipo'"'1ntn oo wpla o/ th•
dop.
Robert N. Weed, Publlsber
" Ealtorial
J;leseiµ-cb .
-.
moht)' and tu,her taxes would stem in·
fla\IM and 11Jow down bu.iiness activity
no lat.tr than n·Jd•l969. Alas, inflation ac-
tually picked up momentum during the
year despite the hi&hest interest rales in
modem times.
Only now -on tht tve of the new year
-la there. some evidence of a sign ificant
cooling off In 10me sectors of the
economy. once burned, the &00thsayers
are loath to predict a dramatic lowertna
of business acUvtty for 1170.
1'There ain't pma be no reces.sion in
1970." That's the view of Pierre Rinfret,
a voluble and lconoc:lastlc tconomist who
m.lrrors this seuon's fasl\lon in predic-
tion. He's joined by Eliot Janeway, who
says nat out: "The Inflation ls stronger
than ever and cttUng more 50 by lhe.
df,y, and the great recession bugaboo re-
mains a falre alann ..• "
BUSINESS INDICATORS sren't giving
much help lo the fortcasters. Indus·
trial prottud.Jon ls definitely d o w n
and l'Miltmu salel are: disappointi ng -
an "EbeDCW' Scrooge's Chrlstmu," .says
one letter. But ont can aJ wayJ point to ooms11 e>p1i.1 aptnc11~ p1 ... onct ......i
1tetl production for re olnders.
SUlf, 80me tnnuentl economist.I ha''t
iona on r«Ord with predictions of 11
leut a minor rtctssJon ln 1970. Milton
Friedman, whose money supply lhtori's
art In \"ogut, state.a: 1'A minor rtCtS&lon
on the l~l scale Is ju5l about
unavoidable (In 1970). A mare sevtrt
tecdllon on I.he 19$1-68 we-ale ls po.ulble,
even likely, tr the Fed tonllnues Its
present unduly restrictive pollcy."
AND DR. WILFll&D LEWIS, Jr. cllld
ttonomlst of lht National Pl•Mlnc
Aasociatlon, Stta the U.S. economy
"flirlin.g wtt.h recuslon" lh.is winter.
Then , he say.s, it will show renewed
growth, slightly less -but sUll too much
-inllation, and higher unemployment
during 1970. Tbm: is virtual unanimity
among ltading economists thllt a major
contraction on the 1929-33 G r e a t
Depression scale is just about impossible.
V.'hat the economic mandarins 9eem to
be suggesting is thal there wi ll be a !imoll
bu t short recession -\Vha t has betn call ·
ed a "mlcro-minl·reces.11ion" -but tllat
no one will rtally notice it. With such
clrtwnspecUon, the economisll don't
stand to lose too muth face. And the
leuon is that forec:t1Ung the volalllt,
paradoxloaJ Americltl economy rtmaln!
mort an art than a science:.
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
Y"" •ppeal to my prurient lntemt
and have no recleemin& 50Cial
value. Better ~·•tch out !
"'" ....._,,.. """""' ,.....,. ...... .... """'1•'1tr hM ff ,,.. ....,......,, ...,.
""" "' ... .,. ............. l*lr ''"""
\
I went to vl9:it my sick friend, the stock
martet, in the hospital and t fear for the
\\·orst. The poor dear's never looked so
·wan.
~fost people, of course, think ot the
stock market as an awe10me, un·
controllabl• beul -holf bull, half bear.
That's ~ true a wh!t. Actually, she's a
frail, ethereal, cooperative sprite and her
name's Tinker Bell:
The chart at the loot of her bed told !ht
sid tale: a black line in ominous descent
interspersed with only a few Jack.luster
rallies.
HWell, well," I said heartily in my best
sick room manner, "and how do we feel
today?"
'"Terribly depressed," said Tinker B!IU
In a voice so faint I had to Jean forward
to heat. "When I fell through the mysU c
figure of 800, l lhought the end was near.
J doubt I shall ever see 850 again.''
"NONSENSE. I SAID. "You must soar
altyward ooce more t.o enrich the millions
of widows and orphans who have fallh in
you."
"ln the old day~ I might have," said
T1nker Bell. shaking her head. "But now
I cannot." She &lanced this way and that
nervously. "You see," she whispered,
"the Administration is out to get me!"
"Oh. come no1r." I said, "no decent
American Administration would ever
wlsh you Ul Jifter all you've done for your
country."
"Alas, it's true," she said, wringing btr
hand!. "Each timt I 1ather my 1trtngth
for 1 rally, they say mean things. 'The
economy i1 in trouble,' they say. Or, '9.'e
are looklng forward to a blah flnan dat
ye.ar.' The)' want everyone to think I'm
.at dtalh's door."
"There. the re, what do you care what
people think?"
TINKER BELL was shocked. ''But
don't you know the magical spell I'm
undtr! l can do only y.·hat people think
J'll do. If most people think I'll recover.
thtey 'JI bid mt up and I'll recover. If most
people think I'll decline, they'll stll me
short and I'll decline. r invariably do
precisely what n1ost people think I'll do."
"Walt, then, J ha ve a cure!" l critd.
"We 'll appeal to all those who believe ln
Tinker Btll to cla p. Their united fa ith will
send you soaring above 1000 and ~·e'll all
be on Easy street."
"You'll all be In the poor house," said
Tlnktr Bell &k>omlly. "As the Presidtri l
himself his pointed out. the more money
you have. the higher prices wtll rise. And
thus the ri cher you are, the poort r you'll
be."
"'I RAD TO ADMIT to my1tlf that this
eertalnly made itnse. No wonder the
Pruldent wlflts higher tues. lower
SOclaJ ·Security paymenL~ and more
unemployment. Then prosperity will be
Just araund the corner.
'1How can I ever hope to dance In lhe
t00'111aln," said Tinker Be.11, sobblnc ln·
to htr plllow as I tl~t.otd quietly out, "-inf !hot l'Q onl1 lmpovmah u....
widoWI and orphaM "'1o truJt in me?"
Now that I undtrsland tht economy, I
h1vt a new cure. WUI all lho9e who
believe hi tho AdmillbtroUon'a pl an ~
drl~ Uie llock marUt down. please:
clap?
It may tetm heart.less. But U •e. c~n
Ju.st show our united lick of ralth In
'nnku Bf.II, her bottom will fall out and
•·•'II •II be rollinl In money.
Better to Treat
Addicts
There are only three things lo do with
"hard" narcotics addjct.s. You can lock
them up pennanently. You can legalize
the habit. Or you can treat the m like sick
people - which they are -and not like
criminals. Right now, we are doing
nothing effectively.
New York City, of course, is the great
center of the narcotics habit. Somewhere
between 50,000 and 100,000 known addicts
live there -and are respons ible for at
least half of the city's crime .
In a "position paper" drawn up for the
ncent mayoralty campaign in New York,
Peter Manso offered some frightenin g,
but accurate, facts about the rise ln
crime in that city, and its direct con.
nection with the drug habit.
ADDICTS IN NEW YORK steal abou t
two billion worth of property a year. fif-
ly percent of the cases coming before the
courts involve addicts, and more than 40
percent of the prison inmales have
narcotics records. "A quarter of our
police budget, ha lf our court and jail
costs, and a considerable perei!ntage of
our health and welfare e:icpenses are at·
tributable to addicts,'' Manso points out
in this paper.
Even lhou1h New York has added S,000
new policemen in the past year. and
doubled its police budaet by $300 million
in the last six years, addict crimes con·
tinue to mount alarmingly.
DUIUNG THE LAST fuli·recorded
year, for instance, robberies v.·ere up
more than 50 percent, burglaries abou t 2~
f
as Sick
·-,. ~ Syd~ey J. ·Ha~a. ~.
' ,. '
percent, and vehicles thefts by 30
percent. Prosti tut ion. of course, increases
alonjl "'ith the rest, for mast of the pro-
ttitutes hustle lo get funds for the habit.
Obviously, you can't lock them all up.
There would be no room in the prisons.
And as soon as you Jet them out, they
return to their forme r milieu , for punish-
ment is merely a postpon ement, nol a
deterrent, to the confi rmed addict.
LEGALIZING THE hard drugs would
be a form or cu ltural suic ide. especially
in the slums, v.·here hopelessness and
despair make opiates the religion of the
people, who have little else to look
forward to. Addiction is a deep
psychosocial illnc5s, and cannot be
prevented so long as the living and ·work·
ing environment is appalling.
Xrcating addicts like palients is the on-
ly reasonable approach . It would cost a
great deal, but not nearly as much as our
present criminal approach to the prOO.
!em. 'The "methadone-ma intenance''
program, started by two doctors in ·1964,
has had .some hopeful results -but
because or shortage of funds, there ia
now a one-to tlvo-year waiting list for
methadone treatment. As long as people
v.•ould rather hire more cops than
establish more clinics, they prove
themselves as addicted to futile punis h·
ment as the addicts are to dope.
The Lightweight Teams
To the Editor:
Thia is to say thanks for your sports
covu age or local lt!gh school events
including "lichtweight football, basket-
ball and other llght1veight sPorts" as well
as tije varsity and junior va rslty_games.
Although we read !he entire DAILY
PILOT, the sports section secnls to be
the most vlt.a.1 part of the paper in our
home.
To tho.!lt of us w11o have boys partici-
pating on the lightweight teams, this
Jillie bit of ex tra effort and space devoted
to th'ir efforts means a great deal.
TOO On'EN we: who are subscribers
(eight years for us) fall to let you kno\V
how much we appreciate your extra
efforts in reporting the scores and play·
era on the lightweight level as ·well as
the other more important sports news.
Again \\'e say thanks and please keep
up the good work and include the light·
wel&ht results as well as all others.
MRS. MARIAN GARLAND
Freedo111 to Decide
To the tdltor:
The feudlnt between chiropractors and
1tl.D.s has 1one on now long enough.
~lllliOll! o f Am'ricans t:an hontstly
testify that both chiropractors and
medical doc:tor1 have at different limn
and for different rtasons been benfflclal to lhtlr health and ~ell being.
J hope tbal Amtrica.ns wlll •lw ays have
the fretdom to dtcldt betwee n which
htallh strvke1 they feel can be!l satisfy
their he alth needs; if Mt, Ole American
people and the.Ir frtedom1 and health will
be th• !Men.
PETER A. ROBINSON
B•rle11'1 l'leics
To tht Editor'
Thl1 Is our e1Jft!S.lon of tipprr:clatlon
(
•,
Mailbox
; •
Letters f rom readers are welcomt .
Norm.atty wri!ers should convey tht ir
messages iii 300 1vords or Itss. Thi
rig/It to co11de11se letters to fit spac e
or elimiualc libel fs reserved. AIL let-
ters musl incflidc .,ig11at11re arid mail-
;11g addresa. but t1ames may be with ..
held oii reque st if sufficient reason
is apparent. Poetry will no t be p11b·
lisl1ed.
to lhe DAlLY PILOT for Tom Barley's
good column in the Dec. 16 issue on the
su bject of Vietnam and the Los Ange.Jes
Philharmo nic Orchestra.
E\•en though no major nation supports
our U.S. Vietnam policy, even thou;h a
m11jorlly of U.S. citizenit now see th e
military intervention of the U.S. as ·a
mistake. it still requires courage for 'a
columnlsl to write. and a newspaper to
print. lhe viel'-'5 outlinrd by Tom In his
column.
C. fl. RICHARDSON
.---B11 George --..,
Otar Geroge:
\Vhat I! the name nf the popuh1r
Christmas song about the reindeer
named Rudolph who h;s Ille r!d
nose?
IV. 'f .
0...r IV, T.:
"I'm Dreaming or .1 \\'hltt ·
Proboscis."
l\Vh)" c•n'l I pet ~ery rrobtm1
like the lady 11rhice coh1mnlst1~
Why, \\'hy, WHY ~)
'·
' •
!
y
!
e
k
p
e
,.
I•
a
r
I• ..
I, ,,
• r • II
e
I•
'· r
t • • I-
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)•
's
e
"
• ,.
a • • L<
.. -~-~~~-..... .,..--~---~ ....... -----.~-~---·---.·---~..---.----. -·,,... .----------"' --
QUIENI! Phll lnterlancll
C K-•·-~lo..1-. 17.-30 ............ _..,,,,, -..... o... ...e....'
"How's a penon aupJl(JOed to eoncentrate With "'11
people running lll'OuM in thooe bluted tipt pan tar
CHECKING •UP•
Looking£ or Hubby?
Go Sell a Toupee
By L. M. BOYD
ONCE YOU mT the age or
64, tha~ state wherein you're
most a~ to live the longest is
Florida · ... WRITES an un-
married feminine client: "Ask
your Love and War man to
recommend the b e s t oc-
cupation I can go into to find a
husband." All right, he says,
"Get a job selling toupetS."
. • • NO HAIRY lllPPIE
should forget the words beard
and barbarian come from the
same root. .. .IT HAS BEEN
PROVED more women than
n1en can slee~in the next
morning .•. ONLY ONE OUT
OF FIVE life i nsurance
salesmen lasts in that businds
more than three years.
DESTINY -what Or. H.
Strughold wanted to find oot
was whether any pilot ever
really does fly by the seat of
his pants. Literally, So he in-
jected several sizeable shot!!:
of Novocain into his own
backside, and fairly well numb
in Lhat whereabouts, climbed
aboard a private plane and
directed the pilot to do a few
acrobatics. Unlike his ex-
perience on numerous
previous flights, he got sick,
scared and all shook up. Yes,
pilots do indeed sit on their
equilibrium, Dr. Stcughold is
now convinced. It's not all in
the ears. The Destiny that
shapes our ends shape! them
as well to Dy by.
CUSTOMER SERVICE' Q.
"How Jong is the average
human umbilical cord?" A.
About %2 inches, but let's talk
about something else .•. Q. 111
PUT A HOT DISH down on a
c:lffee table and it left a light
ring on the finish . Any idea
how to fix it?" A. Understand
a J~ttle &alt mixed with salad
oil will wipe it clear .•.. Q.
"WHATS Connie Stevens' real
name?" A. Used to be Con·
cetta Jngalia .
MR. HOOVER -Greetings.
?>.1r. J. Edga r lioover. and
kindest regards. lifaybe a
subscriber or two would like to
kno\v what I'm doing here.
Merely making certain Mr.
Hoover gets the message,
that ·s all. Nothing with his
narr1e in it appears in print
that he does not s e t ,
personally.
OPEN QUESTIONS -I. Is
it t.nie no former Boy Scout
has ever been executed for a
capital offense? 2. How do you
account for the fact that North
Dakotans live longer than
South Dakolans? 3. Why does
such a disproportionately
large nurriber oC doctors'
wives take to secretive drink·
ing?
ARM WRESTLER -You
know that shaving cream girl
on TV who says, "Take if off,
take it all off"? That's rieht,
Gunilla Knutnon, the 1961
Miss Sweden in the Miss
Universe contest. Note she is
billed here aod there in print
as a champion arm wrestler,
Do you buy that pretty piece
of press agentry? I do.
Beautiful girl. If she wants
people to think she is a cham-
pion ann wrestler, why not?
' Your questions and com-
ments are welcamtd and
will bt used whenever pos·
sible i·1i "Checking Up."
Please address vour mail
to L. M. Bo¢, in cart of
Doilv Pilot, Newport Beach,
Calif., 92663.
Girl's Plea
OnYuleTree
Gets Answer
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) -
When Les GUlisple picked out
a Christmas tree at a shopping
center, he found attached to it
a rolled up pitce (If tinfoil .
Inside wu this message :
"Dear Christmas Tr e e
Buyer. I am a 12<-year-old gi rl
a little handicapped with
wriUng due to cerebral palsy.
My sister writes: for me.
Should I be lucky enoogh to
&et a sweater for Christmas,
site 14 . Thank you."
The girl, who included her
address, was Adele Pf!rry, one
of tiaht children of Mr. and
Mrs. Henry Perry, of
Merigomish, Pictou County,
Nova ScoUa.
A phone call to the Canadian
province conflnned t h a t
Adele, the daughter of a
lumberjack, had the note writ·
ten Nov. 20 and tied to a tree
destined for the United States.
On Swxlay, Gillispie, a
foreman a t Westinghouse
Corp., and his wife bought a
smater and scarf sel and sent
it to Adle,
"I'm glad Les picked that
trtt, Mrs. Gillispie said .
''Somehow, this must ha ve
been intended for us."
~frs. Gllilspie had a son and
a daughter by a previous mar-
riage but both died of multiple
sclerosis, the daughter last
April.
Bible Thoughts
llPINnNClt J11111 ,,;4, ··--·t•i't v•
,.,,11t v• 1h11t •II Uk1wl1• ,,,;,h," L~.
IJ,J. ll:EPENTiNCE ;, ft•t•111ry for •• 1 ....
fi111! Re111 . J;2l •f•t••· "-All 11 .... •i•-
1114 tftd com• th•tf ef tli1 tlory •f G14."
H111t1, All 11'1•11 1114 w•111111 "''"' tt ,,.
''"t, Tlli1 i1111u4•t YOU.
AEPIENTIENCE ;, NOT m1r1ly SORJ.OW
for 1i11; it ;, • DEflERMINATION t• tutn f,0111 1i11. P11ul •t1t11,
"Godly ton ow WORKlTH rti11'•11t1nc1-." 2 Cor. 7110. It AIDS
r•p1nt1"c•, !tut SORROW 11 NOT r1,•11f1"c•. Th• P1ftftc•tfi111t
w•r• SORRY: th1y wit• "-f,,tt••4 ltt th1l, h••r.,_" th1 l lt.le
••v•. Ach 2:)7. lut 1.-111 ht th;, 1•n••f11I ••l'ttlltl111, fh1y wor•
t!iU told lty ,,,,, to, "Jt!PIENT 1IMI fit• fit•ill'tlttd-fo r r1111l11i•11
of ti11,-," Ach 2:11. Tk1y Wl l• t•l4 te tur11 fro ll'! t ill .lru•
r•P•"''"'' r1qulr1t hoth 11110• fir 1i11 olllll •TURNING-AWAY
FROM ti". With th• h•lill' of Chritf. YOU ''" t1ir11 ft1111 1itt. r1 1o1I
11 id, "I t 1ft do All THINQS thr•uth Ch rl1t whl1h 1tr1111th1111t)o
111•," Phil. 4:1). lut v•u ,,.,., 11•t It• 1ltlo t• ••••• • 1111 •t
vout ow11 1lr111tth, withottf Chri1t'1 h1I,.
VISIT Ut 1114 1!110'( tlt1 111111 with UI , Tlt1 l tlLE wlll f 1¥1 Y•U o ''"'* f1ilh •11d 1111bl1 ..,,,. I• 1v1rt11110 1i111 which h1u1 lt•111
p•r1ltl•11t ;,. vour lif1. Chu1ch 1f Ch,ht, 217 W. WU1111 St.,
Coit• M111, C1!lf. 9261:7, Plto111 141·5711, 141·144t, 646·5761.
S111d fer 1ut FREE l lltl1 c•u11,•11tlo"c• c1ur11.
DAILY "lllf 'l
Here · Are Some Predictions to 'Discuss
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
One of the naUonal magazines
IMU&Uy picks Its a l 1 •
Ameriacn football team before
the season atam.
Using the same logic, this is
naturally the proper time to
select the 10 biggest news
stories of 1970.
• So, here they are:
I
1n
f<tf'%
\ j
t, Peace in· Vietnam. When
Nixon's strategy of massive
withdrawal 'fallS to bring
Hanoi to her knees, he
threatens to unleash Spiro
Agnew . ·
Communists are warned
that unless they cease fire .
Agnew will gi\•e them the
same kind of tongue-lashing ti e
administered t o television
newscasters.
Communists quail, and lay
down arms. At peace con-
ference in Paris, Nortl'l and
South Vietnamese delegates
agree to return both countries
to France.
2. Peace in Middle East.
United States and Soviet Union
f, ,,.-.·
fi nally agree on plan for peace
between Israel and Arab
states. Plan provides for en-
tire area to rejoin Roman
Empire.
3, Peace In Northeast Asia,
Israel and Arab states agree
on plan for peace between
Soviet Union and Chin a. Under
terms of. agreement, China
stops work on nuclear
mlaslles. In exchaa1e.
Ru.utans drop clalm tha t
they invented the fortune
cookie.
4. Peace in Africa. Soviet
Union and China agree on plan
for puce between "N11erta and
Bi&fra. Plan calls tor both to
I
apply for Amerlcan statehood.
$. Peace in Far Ealt.
Protestantl and CathoUca llf'il
on plan tor peace betw111
Hindus and Moslem1. Umkr
tenru ol li'ffiltenl, ln<ll• 111
PakJstan are reunited aH
once •lain become part ti
Briti.h Empire.
mer1ca
5% Investors Passbook
Account:The conditions are
quite reasonable. A minimum of
$500 opens an account. Addi·
tional deposits are made in ·
$100 amounts or more. Interest
is paid every calendar quarter.
You can withdraw interest
during the first ten days of any
calendar quarter .The same goes
for withdrawal of principal.
Provi ding, of course, it's been
on deposit a full calendar
quarter. A 90-day written
notice from you will also
release funds, should you wish ,
to withdraw them.
Personal Choice Savings also
offers other ways to earn high
interest.
5% Time Certificate of
Deposit Bank of America
time certificates also earn 5o/o
annual interest. They mature
every six months and are
issued for $1,000 or more.
5% Five-year Guaranteed
Certificate of Deposit.
Certificates are issued for a
minimum of $1,000 and in
multiples of $100 above the
$1,000 minimum . Five-year
guaranteed interest at 5% per
year paid or credited quarterly.
4% Regular Savings.
Interest is computed daily,
compounded or paid quarterly.
Deposits made by the tenth of
each quarter earn interest from
the first. Put your money in .
Any amount. Take it out
anytime. A very flexible plan .
Save at Bank of America. We
have your best interest in mind .
BANK OF AMERICA
for the business c:l livins
GAil Y PILOT
Symphony Survival: a $40,000 Question
Movie Ji'are
' Ed\vard Mulhare becomes romantically involved
By T0'1 BARLEY
ot 111t o.in ~'"' Sltff
Someone, or a group or so-
meones, coold give t h e
Symphony Association o f
Orange County a very happy
New Year.
ed ~the~·: th::~g;:~ ~-
··::::·--•
DmRTAINMENT
J
Orange County Sympho n y 1
Orchestra into the concert hall 1 for the balance of the 1969-70
season dOesn't seem. oo the l
face of it, to be a particularly
prohibitive figure . Not wlle.1
you take into account the
gushings or those who have l
constanUy assured musicians
and music lovers (and music
critics) that there will alwa ys the strength of a little money
and a lot of hope - a familiar
format in circles musical, to
be sure.
be solid financial support for
any organization seeking to fill
what is still a musical void in
this county.
Association preskient Duf·
fern Helsing will tell you that
they just haven't beeD around
lately. He's had "'some
response" to recent appeals
for the help that can only
\vi th Karen Valentine, above, in the motion picture,
"'Gidget Gro"'S Up ," aired tonight on Channel 7 at
8:30. Gidget gives up her surfing life to work as a
U.N. guide.
·•Caligula' Ba~k
Jay Robi1ison Finds Work
a.come from a check book but
it's not been enough to make
him lower his sights from the
$40,000 that was needed a
month ago.
"We could have borrowed
and gone on with the present
season," Helsing said. ..But
that would have been tan-
tamount to ignoring the advice
of a highly competent com-
mittee and, Jet's face it. it was
good advice."
It seems fantastic that this
orchestra, so vastly improved
jn recent seasons lmder the
dl reotion of the dedicated
Lewis, should be able to
operate on a very modest
$90,000 budget. But that is all
it takes fo put on their season
of concerts or, to be more ac·
curate, that is all it took prior
to their presen t crisis. By VERNON SCO'il'
HOIJ..YWOOD (UPI) -One
of the happier stories of 1969
in Hollywood is that of Jay
Robinson who is making a
comeback after imprisonment
on narcotic charges.
A decade ago Robin son was
a rising young star. but his
ronviction virtually wiped out
his career.
Almost two )•ears ago he
t11as released from the slam·
mer, a bewildered man.
unsure whether to return to
show business. If so, should he
fake it? Pretend he was vaca·
lioning in Europe in the hope
that producers would forget?
~fake a clean breast of it and
be.gin anew ?
Last yea r he made his
decision , and in an interview
told his story and his hopes for
the future.
In the past 13 mont hs his
hopes ha ve been fulfilled .
He has appeared as a guest
in 15 television shows and
!!lands to become a regular
member of the ''Bewitched "
cast next season.
The year has restored most
d Jay's confidence in himself.
1'le apprehension in his face
has lessened. He's optimistic.
"'Bill Asher, who runs the
-aewitched' series. called me
and said he thought the show
could ha~ some fun with the
role o{ Caligula as I played
tum in 'The Robe.'
"So v.·e did a comic version
nr the character. It was well
received last October. Then
BUI came up with a com·
binatioo of Mr. Chips and Mr.
Belvedere (the character Clif-
ton Webb played) and made it
a recurring character in the
series.
"I've done four so far this
year. Next season I may be in
every other episode."
After our interview more
than a year ago, Robinson a~
peared on an Art Llnkletler
show. The combinalion'
brought him thousands of Jet·
ters of encouragement.
Because of bis experience
with drugs and having lost
everything worthwhile in his
life because of them, Robin90n
feels qualified to speak out
with authority in opposition to
so-ailed experts who advance
theories without nitty.gritty
knowledge or marijuana and
harder stuff.
''As a graduate from pol to
stronger drugs, my feelings
are very strong about anybody
experimenting with any form
of pot or pills," he said.
"Look what Utey did to me.
T lost everything I'd built up
over the years just for a brief
fiing with drugs in 1958.
''lt's been my experience
that too often individuals with
problems soon begin looking
for somethig that will gjve
them a greater high than
marijuana. One thing leads to
a stronger thing.
"I was forttmale in a way.
That's all behind me. l'd like
to help prevent the same thing
happening to other people."
Crossword Puzzle
A.Caoss 40 P1ay alon g
the seaslw:we
l te.se 47 NOl'lh
SA•ospherit A111erita.
condition kldiiln
'Exhibit 48 Sham
n11usual 4't Made •~~y
h~av101: 53 Al lu si on
2 words 57 Kind c l
14 length li ly
tlflil 58 Uptight:
15 Po1ltnl 2 woid s
I' Of p;ut 59 Clothts:
of'furopt Slan g
17 Oicla!or !.l Attaclt
11 Kind of !.2 Subdiwidt
c01M1U11icatton 111inutelr
19 Household 63 Neighbor
appliance or Idaho
10 Claw 1,4 Prepos ition
2Z Bull· !.5 Sa id lighters fllflhtr
24 Tourist LI. Si 111plt
altract•on 07 Pitcts ou! 21. Co111111t1C•ill
vthic!ts ~7 lls Ci1p 1tal
in PilnJ 1"'
28 SJ1ed
l' Nick"at11t 32 Loolr i" ii
Ctftai« .. ~}' JS PwtHng in·
'lo ,..ord~
37 l!elori91nci
\oo •s: D1•L
JI Etist
.3' R.ss1a•
ci ty
.tO lo1lr1t•\ <13 Strit~ 01
prayers ~5 Ctast to exist
•
DOI N
1 British
Abor1gioes
2 "Do•n
Ut1dtr•
:r.old it'I'
3 Bulc!,....'s
lltCtSSily
.. "SS t'llllbh ng
M larg r
'"'•btfS 5 ~ldiait
91'1!1!lWl9 ~ Friendsbi-p
7 C iph~
a Wn k"'' 9 l osical
dir« ti on
12/30/1,'J
,i) U111ts o[ 3' Frftl ~git!
'll OOd opera:
}l l(ind or 2 'lll'OldS (
M Sical JI Thing'" co111positiofl t.e added' ]( Adchct .tl Bestowed
13 Per si ift: 42 Gardt11er's
~bbr. nt ct ssily
21 Gas ~3 Robot t '
23 Oittctio11 dra111• ·
2' -iil·lill •4 Of tht ~ ..
28 Prolan t 4& Thiel,'s I
oath CVSIO-tr.
2'J Co in of Sliill'lg
[Ul'Op<" ., Tiet
JO U1u1 suoil SO Pi Mt ol
per.s~: wood •
Sl;ing Sl Ty pt
lI Nol al .•" J. 5Z CrOO<Pe'S ~
atlr;Kf!Tf' ·, <:ArperilrJ
)Z Rei.I es.tilt~ 53 Cl ty °" k ~oli:er's Tevtrt
sign 5~ Gt r1 inl 's 33 Paris' wilt
-· d' 55 Kttp off
J' Om! Sr. AUrac.l\v t
llllpu se 00 Pronoun
It very much looks as if the
association will have to ring
down a premature curtain on
what had seemed to be a very
promising season. Helsing, un·
derstandably. doe~•>'t wanl to
say so just yet but it's going to
take an Id of unprecedented
generosity to prevent the
cancellation of the orchestra~s
12 remaining concerts.
It seems certain at the ti1ne
or writing that we will not see
conductor Daniel Lewis raise
his baton for the six adul t con·
certs, six youth concerts and
the annual youth auditions
that were originally scheduled
by the association.
Helsing bravely insist.s that
this must not be taken to
mean that the association
itselr is oo its last legs. "It on-
ly means that we can't fulfill
the balance of the season and
I want everyone to know that
we'll be back after the sum·
mer with a full 1970-71 pro-
gratn," he said.
It could be argued that the
association itself provoked the
present crisis 'by it.s insistence
that it operate on a "pay as
you go" basi!. Th.at was the
recommendation of a research
committee which probed the
association's financial affairs
and advised the board of
direct.en that it should heed
the cold. bard facts of 1ife
found in the balance sheet
rather than launch a season on
SHIRLEY Moc.LAINE
JOHN McMARTiN
SAMMY DAVIS, JR.
.(!]~.,~~
Al•• -P••I N .....
J.-.W..n-4
"WINNING"
ENDS TONIGHT
JOHN WAYNI
IOCl HUDSON ,,
"TH E UNDEFEATED"
ALSO
"THE BRIDGE AT
REMAGEN"
E
IE
DICK YAN DYW I ,,
"THE COMIC"
Continuous Show
O.ify from 2 p.m.
1be fault woul appear to lie
with the failure of private
donors to meet the level of
contributions o f f e r e d in
previous seasons and the
amount anticipated by the
association board. Ticket sales
lo the well attended concerts
have been up on previous
years but revenue from this
sou rce o n I y represents one
third of the annual take.
A look at the balance sheet
indicates overall debts of
$26,000, a situation that would
not appear to bear out Hels·
ing's argument Utat the
association is in "good flnan·
cial standing." But it has to be
remembered that those debts
BALIOAl
673-4048
Open
6:45
7tt.l ... ntM
..... PftllM91•
r .. . ••
Continuou5 D•ilY
Box Office Opens
9:30 A.M.
Fir5t Show 10 A.M.
represent loans made to the
association on the easiest' of
terms -the "pay us back
when you can" type of loan so
prevalent in the financial af.
fairs of the nation's orchestras
and so very welcome for all
their comtaot presence oo the
balance sheet.
It seems that Orange County
Is quite prepared to sit back
and watch what would have
been a pleasing u11d ambitious
series of concerts founder for
the want o( a mere $«1,000 -
the proverbial drop in the
bu cket for this aftluenl county.
difficulty stems from the con·
certs staged by the
Philhannonic and that the
county just isn't big enough
for both of them.
Jt's very Aard for this writer
to accept that theory. Many of
the OCSO concertgoers also
attend the Philharmonic con·
certs·and vice versa and it's
Ml easy to believe that either
has hurt the other to the ex-
tent that's rerlected by t h e
association's present crisis.
Where each has hurl. the
other, mark you, is in permit·
ting the frequent clash of con-
cert dates established by the
two organizations and by con-
tinuing the practice even in
the face of bitter complaints
by conce rtgoers who have
tor the petty snobbery and
clannishness that so mark
more a(fluent c u I t u r a I
organizations. ·
Mind you, it wouldn't hurt
{or the powers that be in the
Philhannonic to make what
would be a magnificent
gesture of support for the long
su!ferlng association whettier
it be In tM form of a
handsome donation or
participation in the effort.~
currently being launched by
the harried Helsing and his
hard working board.
Things like that win people
''Euterpe" awards, you know.
That's the DAILY PILOT
award given for those who
serve the cause of music and
anyone Yi'ho works for the
OCSO to the point that th(I
association 's 1969-ro program
can be salvagt.>d Is worthy of
just about any honor that's
golng around. ,
There are those read ing thi s
article tod ay to whom $40,000
v:ould mean nothing more
U1an the writing of a check,
the scrawling of a signature
ttlat woold just about add up
to nothing when lhe tln1c came
to ·Jook ba ck on a boo111ing
yew's profit.s.
That same $40,000 v.•uuhl
ensure an immense amount of
pleasure fo r an illCreas1ng
number or roncertge>ers. It
would be a tremendous blow
for the cause of good music in
Orange County.
It's a great pity, as Helsing
says, and an eve n greater one
when you realize that it is an
Orange County orchestra in
the truest sense of its title. Its
performers are c o u n t y
residents, hired by t h e
association for the annual
series and paid exclusively
from association funds:
been compelled to miss one or•-===
"This is in marked contrast
to the Orange County
~hilharmonic Society, which
impor:ts its orchestras. both
American and European "
Helsing added. "They are, ~f
course, excellent programs
but they are dependent on the
importation of music whereas
we are tryMg to improve and
extend our own home grown
ensemble."
Then there is the argument
that much of the association's
Exdusic:t Engagmentl
Steve McQueen
"The Reivers"
COLO R l!iD-
A CirMmt C.nt•r Film• Pr1untttlon -A Nttlon•I
G1n•r•I Plcturn Reletl4
orwtnlmt Show 11mtl
CONTINUOUS
PERFORMANCES
OAILY
211d II~ HIT e
~ ~ ~ ' 9'-"C "' 9 LVD. ,.,. •LLIS • O
•&T, CDl"ll ......... 6 .... IUIOD -..
-...7 •9 900 • HUNTINGTON ••AC:l't
two attractive concerts.
1'hat was t o t a 11 y tr.1-
necessary and a particular
piece of idiocy. for those
responsible in each organiza·
tion. It could have been avoid·
ed and. it is hard to esca pe the
conclusion that it must have
contributed to the present
crisis.
If there hos been any spirit
of riva lry it hasn't been detec·
table from this critic's van·
tage point. If il had Deen it
would have given us the
greatest pleasure to write
about it for there is no room in
this struggling v.•orfd of music
E:zrt/wli~r Rru"'rd Sat En'ldltmtntl
TONIGHT AT
--.·~:.00 P.M.
2001
EX CLUSIVE
AREA SHOWING
SHOW TIMES
7:00 • 9:3 0
MAllrjEt' SUrt. 2
Now l AT r<>PULAI CONTINUOUS DAILY
• PllCll
10>1 ""' • """"'· bu1 most au is .,..
'°'1 COif\JRY.fCU. PRtSl:frllS
PAUl. NEWMAN
ROBERT R£DFORD MntARINE RO§.
BUTCHCASSIOVANO
THE SUNDANCE KIO
"WHY IS IVllYTHIHG wr·11 GOOD AT
1Lll:GAL1
HARBOR at ADAMS. COSTA MESA, PH ONE 546·31 02
ON HAllOI ILVD, ·ONE MILE SOUTH OF SAN DI EGO FWY.
WORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT
Weeli NJJ. 7:JI" f:JO Co11tthow1 Mati11tt1 Sat. Sw11. & Hob.
\
·'' ::' ..
·.--:\'
' · ... ., . ·: .j . .
..
.•
...... .--------------------~-----·-----------------
·wrecked
Jet Probed
For Cause
SAN DIEGO (AP) -The FS
Crusader jet flghter that
plunged Into a hangar at
Miramar Naval Air Station
last week causing 12 deaths is
being disssembled at the
Naval Air Rework Facility at
North Island in an eff~rt to
determine cause of the crash.
Challenge
Brewing
To Unruh? -
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Assemblyman Jack R. Fent-on
b considering baltlin(
Assemblyman Jess Unruh for
the po5t or As sem bly
Democratic leader. ~~~~'.::~~ Fenton, of Montebello, said 1-
Monday he would challenge
Unruh jf caucus chainnan
The Navy said Monday that
parts of two other FS
Crusaders that crashed a
week earlier with no Injuries
also are being examined at the
facility.
Food Quiz
Called Off
George 1.enovich does not seet ~~~~~~~::~
the pool. Zenovlch, of Fresno, t;:i.::=~<:;;~%~~~ ~ has not irkUcated any desire to TI
A three-man board of in-
vestigation .into the Miramar
crash Dec. 22 has been
meeting daily and has heard
testimony from about "half a
doze~ peopJe" so f a r ,
authorities said.
.
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) -
A federal court hearing into
the Stanislaus County food
situation, scheduled for today,
has been cancelled because
$50,000 is being mad c
available to help n e e d y
lamlllel.
tackle 1.Jnruh. J
Fentoo said his bid would be l:::i..c:.:=~~~~~~
1'N1> refiection on Jes and i"
what he's done. lt's just that
he's running for governor and
we're in the Assembly."
Unruh ls a candidate ror the ~~~~~~f~~~~~~~~~g~~~-D e m D cratic gubernatorial
nomination and is -expected 1<>
be campaigning much ol. the
season. '1'1e plane crashed into the
hangar after it.. pilot, U.
Cyrus Riddell, 27, of San
Diego, ejected safely.
Attorney Marty1 Click of the
California Rural Leg a I
Assistance ·(CRLA) requested
Monday that the hearing be
cancelled because ''at the ·mo-
ment, no addiUonal relief is
necessary.''
Fenton said during the 1970
election year A s s e m b I y
Democrats should have a
leader wbC> will attend 5e&Sion
regularly.
U.S. FLAG PATCHE S ISSU ED
The toll rose to 12 Saturday
with the death of Petty Officer
3C Robert LM Mosley of
Madisonville, Tex., at the
Naval Hospital. Of 11 men sUll
Wider treatment for injuries,
two remain critical and four
have been reported jn serious
condition.
Glick said food provided by
the Salvation Army a n d
$50,000 authorized by the Of.
fice of Economic O'pportunity
tn Washington would meet the
area's "immedlat.e needs."
fJe a I s o said Unruh may
have to take some positions on
issues during the campaign
which would not be acceptable
tQ other Democratic
Assemblyman.
QUINCY (UPI) -Plumas
county's 23 uniformed sheriffs
deputies soon will be wearing
American fiag s h o u ld e r
patches in an eUort to protttt
themselves from attack and
instill patriotism in local
residents.
Sheriff W. C. Abernathy said
Monday he ordered t h e
patches after learning that a
survey in Florida showed that
police:men w e a r i n g the
miniature nag suffered fewer
assaults than those who didn't.
mart savers
study statements
Before putting your money to work, study a financial statement carefully.
Things like "Notes to Statement of Conditions" are. as meaningfu! as
figures.
There will be great peace of mind for those who have invested money at
Newport Balboa Savings in the forthcoming sixteen·page 1969 Annual
Report. It will reveal that we have en joyed one of the best of our 34 years
in the rapidly prospering Harbor area.
Our outstanding strength will be wet f reflected in our pos ition as regards
real estate foreclosure s, our cash and Government Bond resources, and
our new affiliation with the $1.2 billion California-based Imperial Cor·
po ration of America .
It is a report worth reading-and comparing with that of any oth er
association or financial institution.
•
1969 Annual Report AV:iRable Jan. 8 --------Newport &lllCll lntnp
•nd loin Allodltlon
lJISYlaUdo """""'t a..ch, Col-• 92663
Pl use send the 1969 Anaual Report
.L ______ _
''Smart savers save here''
Tw5dl}', DKtmbtr 30, 1%' DAllV PllCT '~
Forgo.tt~~_GI Wins ~,;
' .
Court Orders":J.mmediiii'e Discharge .. ..
SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -A
federal court has Ordered lm·
mediate return from Vietnam
and a discharge for a aoldler
serving out 11 months he spent
at h1>me waiting for orders.
The 9th U.S. Clrcult Court Df
Appeals ruled Monday that the
orders returning Pfc. Richard
Beaty, 23, of Porterville,
Calif., to duty were un-.
coostltuUonal. It ordered the
Army t1> bring him home and
discharge him.
Thede c is ion overturned
Judge Wllliam Sweigert's rul-
ing in U.S. District Court last
August, which upheld the
Anny's claim that Beaty had
a duty "not tC> sit at home and
Mpe the Army couldn't find
him."
Beaty, married and the
father of three, is serving with
the Isl Cavalry Division. He
was inducted Feb. 9, 1967. and
was sent to Gennany. There
he v1>lunteered for Vietnam
and was ordered home in
Noven1ber 1967 for 60 days tQ
await orders to Ft. Lewis,
\Vash., and ultimately Viet-
nam.
\Vhen Beaty received no
orders, a local recruiting
sergeant told him to keep
waiting. Beaty's mother said
she called the Pentagoo twice
and was told her son shoold
"Jeff waitinf." .
In ttarcb .itU Beaty wu ln
an auto aecldent. P o 11 c e
checked with Ft. Lewis and
learned be was not abffnt
without leave.
From then until his .Lw<>-yta(
tmn expired in Febru.,-y•
ljl69, aeaty made po {urther
effort t1> contact /!..,rmy + or-
fldals • ml \h•Y never con-.
'
lacted blm .
Anny Offlclab realiud tbji
paperwork fouJ·up when Bea
applied last Feb. a
dlSchatge. Tn July, Beaty
ordered to reply · 'tbe ""
months he had remained sil
-fr1>m tlie auto accident
his applictU.an for d!schar'
-and sent him to Vietnal'll·
September. \;
. I
Girl's Body Foilnd,
Death Cause Unknown.
SAN RAFAEL (AP) -Ma·
· rln County authorities awaited
an autopsy report today in
hopes Q[ finding out w h a t
caused the death ol 16-year·
old Leona Roberu, wh05e body
was discovered on a beach
near Bolinas.
Miss Roberts, a Napa beau-
ty college student, was be-
lieved to have been abducted
Dec. 11 from her boyfriend's
apartment in Rodeo, north of
Richmond.
She had been preparing din -
ner while her boy friend v.•as
at work. He returned and
found evidence of a struggle.
Neighbors said they heard a
scream.
The coroner's office ea.id
Y..tonday that dental charts ·and
fingerprints established the
girl's identity, and a ring
found oo the body was identi·
fied by the girl's parents. ' ''There were no marks On
the body. no visible means bf
death," a Marin County sher~
iff's inspector said.
The nude body was located
Sunday by an elderly . man
searching for driftwood.
Authorities said it was im·
possible the body could hfV9
been dumped into the bay l_'()f1
the east s i d e and noaf~
through the Golden Gate.
.. .. ..
...
' '•
•
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-·
Dependable Newport Balboa S.~~jngs
Main Office: 3366 Via Lido, Newport Beach, Californ ia 92663 . • Phone 714/673 -3130
Corona del Mar Office: Financial Pla za. 550 Newport Center Drive • Corona del Mar, C'•liforoia 92625 • Phone 714/644 -1461
'
I
I
:~ .... F 0 ..... , .. ..,,
OAIL.V PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
, ,
...................
5
LEGAL NOTICE
••• wm• W TNESS f"V ktnd 1"'4;! off t I WI
CFFIC AL SEAL)
Ju -S v•
NC l'V Pub c-Ct 0"'
P "'"' OI U'" l<» ,\not le' Cou" Y
Mv C""'"' uloto Eu> f' F ~b UI y 7' lfn
STATE OF ILL NO ~
(0\JNTV OF" COOIC ..,, O" 0..cembe 2 1H9 be o t mt lht
unOt s 11ne<I 1 No ~ Pub c ~ 1nd or ~ d s ." Pe """ty •1>1>ea NI 1'>l0MAS
F Fl l NE JR ~flOWl'I lo m t 10 bf I
pa n o l>f p~ n sl> p lh• t •tculNI
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-.a;; TNE~S mY hand and ctt t. SPll
L •n ! G II ~T"T E OF LL NOS
COUNT Y OF COOK si
On Oecrmbl' ?Ill 96• b!fc e mr 11\t
uroae ,111nt11 • No • y Pub c " and ..,.. 1kl Sf ~ 1>• ..,,,. V IDOt'I e<I W LL AM
F .lcCUltOY kroawn Ill me o W I
Pl "" o "'' P• "'~ P 11111 P~tCtl fd he w h " n1 um•n 1nd 1cll;naw"'°9NI
na """ PJrl""~" P P•ecu e<I
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• "
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Monday's Closing
I
Prices-Complete New York
Stocks Dip Again
In Active Trading
NEW YORK (UPI) -~locks lirushed lower li>-
day after carryover demand from last \Veek evapor--
ated dunng the first hour Trade was moderately
active
Shortly before the clo5e the UPI markelw1de
indicator measurmg all stocks traded showed a
loss of O 72 percent while the Dow Jones 1ndustnal
average of 30 selected blue chips was o(f S 15 at
79'150
Of the 1 637 issues crossing the Lape 908 retreat
ed, and 498 ga ined
Vol ume approximated 12 250 000 shares
sell1n~ EleC'lrorucs were under .considerable
pressu re near the close IBM closed at 358-114 off
2-3/4 Xerox was down I 7/8 lo 1013/8
Oils also ranged to n1ore than a point lo\ver
as did ralls airlines and aircrafts Southern Pacific
closed at 32-1/2 off I 1/4 Texaco was up 114 to 30-318
but Standard Oil of New Jersey closed at 61 1/2 off
5/8 Motors chemicals conglomerates and steels
generally traded narrowly and 1n both d1rect1ons
Gold rrurung stocks however pom'led higher tn most
instances Du Pont closed at 104-3/8 off t 718 US
Steel was 33-314 off 3/4
Pnces softened on the
change Jn moderate trading
American Stock
Dccembtr
Stocli Exchange List
OA!LV PILOT
\lld """ Ill'* J HIP LIW C•t:~•
Complete Closing Prices -A1nerican Stock Exchange Li~t
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...
JI DAILY PILOT luHdlJ', Oettm_, 30, 1%9
~Tempo·' Deliverie·s Halted Crei.at,ylty J\WIJl"d
UCI Program Honored · '
l
By TOM BARLEY cOntrac:t of January, 1918, to a not aet. a trial date for hearina: of the press by Interfering
... • .,.. DlllY ,..,. '"" present publication that la of the action. with the diltrlbutlon or ideas. . . t ·~A ANA -Owners of almost identical to the Shop-RUJSell currentJy faces a Sunday Ma 11 executives ' 'Ille University of C.allforp~a "Downtown Areas or Orange alternaUve suggestions for l"'9 tne "SUnday Tempo" wert ping News. And much ol Its court battle on his alleged recently appeared be lore the Ei t.ension, Irvine, has recei]· County," produced by UCI-mediate and long range a~
ortltrfd Monday to ha 1 t cont.ent, it was argued, 11 now Yiolatlon ol Fullerton anti-lit-Costa Mesa City Council to get ed lhe creativity award oLJfle Project 21, a unique col-proaches to solutions .t,o the
dqtribution ot their ad-,aJirnfd at the clifnlele and ~ ter laws. A city ordinance the coOnrmation of that body NaUQnal University Extension laboraUve endeavor combining deterioration of u'.fban cores. :
vertising«iented publication tcrtsis built up by flussell specifically aimed at preven-that area distribution •o r Assocation for its program, lhe resources of the University The conference was at.-
In Brea and L.a }labra and 4lJri,ng · his tenure of t.hf: Tri-ting diattlbution by Russell's "Tempo" was not 1n confiict "Canference on· Downtown or California, Irvine, and Pro-tended by approximately 250 tbree Los Angeles County County _presidency. Sunday Mail Inc. of , "Tempo" w1Ui cJty ordinances. They Areas In Orange CoUnty." · ject 21 , a private leadership public officials and community
communities. · The court ruling doe s noL ar-was temporarily hatted by Los, were assured that Its deLivery The award was made at the croup concerned with lhe leaders and generated wide--
Superior Court Judge Robert feet' ddlveries of the Anaheim-Angele) federal court adion. woold not be questioned pro-NUEA Galaxy Conference on future environment of the spread interest in the report
Corfman upheld the argument hued •-rempo" in othtr But both parties must ap-vk!t:d, the Russell company Adult Education held in area. and the problem. A subsequtnt
e f Tri-Coonty Investment OrilAge'County communities or pear Jan. ti before Judge pakl Ila license fees. \V as hi n gt o n , D.C. Based on months or work by Project 21 pub Ii cat Ion,
Corporation president George neighboring Los Angeles Cou~ Qw-les Carr for a further "Tempo" .e1ecutiye1 were The conference, for which a study team comprising ''Downtown Deterioration,11
·
E: ~foffat that '"Tempo" ty areas·whicb do not conflict hearing on RusseU's argument warned, however, that they homeowners who object · lo the award was given, was held public officials and private included the original report a!
publisher 'V· Robert Rusttll with Shoppin& News t,er.. that Fullerton's anti-Jitter must immediately comp I y delivery of the uns:ilicited oa the UC Irviae campus and ciLizena, lhe report outlined well as the proceedings or Ute
had violated the spirit of an • -'~il!'_ri_es_. _Jud_g,,_e_C-Orf=m::..•'1•,.h:;i'a'i;s .,m~eai,sui;ir•;;;l;;;nl ri;iilni"g'='...:°"::..=.rre-.i="'--'w..Cllh;:_:;cthe:.,_d::.•:.:m=-=.• ::.." d:..•:_•:.:.r _:_pu"b"'lic.,at;;;i<>m.n.===;;;-:--"::.:' •:::.• _::ba:::.sc:'.'.d......,::O•:_;•~•.::o•po:'.'.r:,:,1,c.....::P.:..:'•.:..:bl.:..:•m.:..:•_::••~d .. •::_d~v,,,;•,,=•~c;;,• ;d ~-;;="..::'".:..:"::.· ____ ' _
agreement reached between,,11. ___ _
the two execulives last Janu·
ary when Russell sold his Tri·
Counly interests to Moffatt.
Judge Corfman granted a
temporary restraining order
J,Dd preliminary injunction
wticb wiJJ prevent door~
door deliveries of "Tempo"
pending setting or • trial dale
for 1he action.
Moffatt's attorney aue-
cessfully argued that Russell's
present production or "Tern·
po" was not in keeping whh
the "modest publication" en-
visaged by both parties at ttie
time of the agreement. And qe
got court support for his con-
tention that a "vital pr<r.
vision" ol the agreement -
the undertaking that "Tempo"
would not compete with Tri·
County's Shopping News Jrr
had been breached on •a
number of occasions.
Jooge Corfman was told
that "Tempo" has graduated
from the small weekly
publication agreed on in the
For The
Record
DEATH NOTICES
CARSEY
o..a:n Y, C1•MY. 2COl Ptcllle C~ll
HIVf'w1V, HHmOll 8ffdl, O.tt of
dNfll. ~-20. In v1111111m.
SUrylvell b'r wl,., No.-11 -. Mlchffl v., of S.n °"""': ""u1111..-. Pt1rlcl1 c.,...,.. l..vtn.; bro!,,.,., J .. C1roiy, .t M.HN, Vt-111 1!11en. Mr•. Lowlle
c1n, °"""' Ul1h1 Mn. B1rber1
Nlt!Mll, $tit L..k1 City; t1tMr, Mer-
ti.d G. c..-sev. o1 M111n.1. u1111. serv.
lcn . Frldev. 1 PM, P1cll!t V\irw C'tl•""'· Interment, P1clllc Y!tw M ..
morl1I P1rif;. Ol,...;!ed bY P1tlllt View
MOrf\lll"f.
Pll.KL"IITON
/Nlldl l. Pilldnton. lt16 Courl St ••
Mew-' !!11th. Rnlde<'lt of 0.-11\ff
c CJUtttv lo.-a vr1r1. 1111........t mother of J..,lr. L. Piikinton; mo1111r-11t-i.w
el Mr1. Rulh Pllk!nlooi; 1111..,-Ill Le-
roY Ctd<ltl1 M-.. JtUI Mcort; 9r1nd·
mo.t!Nr of JOlln L. Pll kl11ton, Mr1.
C.rol• Scnnfef'I I O'ICI Mlo Miry Ed!tll
Pllklnlon. ~ktl, WedneidlY• ll:lO
AM. 111 Ille C:h\lrd'I ol Ille R..:1ulonal.
Forni 1..-,,...c;lef'llllf. FORSt UWTI
Mortu1rv.
ARBUCKLE & SON
"1eatc:liU Mortuary m E. litll St., COlta Mesa
IMMlll • 'BALTZ MORTUAlllES
Ccnn• dd Mar OR utSI
Co1b Mesa Ml I-Uh • BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
111 Broadway, Costa ateu
us.uu • DILDAY BROTHERS
H .. lin""" Valley Monaary
11111 Beac• B!Yd.
H1111u.,tel BtK~
IC-7121 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PA.lilt
Cel"eterr e M-17 • CUpel
-Paclllc View Drive _,... -. Callfonla
~ • pEEJ[ FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNE11AL
DOlllE
':Ill Belu AYe.
·-]-• 11111 • llll!Jln-pn£R"' MOBTUAllY I
~-... ... -. • IMJTllS' MORTUARY rn Mm SI.
B_,...Budl ma•
•
f.
SOME IMPORTANT FACTS
ABOUTTff.E
JANUARY 13th ELECTION.
(BALBOA BAY CLUB LEASE EXTENSION)
Q: WHY AN ELECTION IN THE FIRST PLACE?
A: Because the City Charter requires that City leases of 25
years or more duration be approved by the voters. The
Balboa Bay Club lease has approximately 29 years remain-
ing. However, the request for extension for an additional
26 years makes !he vote mandatory.
Q: WHO WORKED OUT THE TERMS OF THE LEASE?
A: A City Council committee and the City staff worked over
a year negoli1tillg the lease. They-also hired a respected
independent research firm, Development. Research Asso-
ciates of Los Angeles, to evaluate the l~ase proposal and
to advise them. The full City CJl,unc.il. unanimously
approved the lease document for submission to the voters.
Q: THEN THOSE WHO HAVE STUDIED THE LEASE MOST
CLOSELY MUST FEEL THAT THE TERMS ARE FAIR. HOW
DOES THE BAY CLUB FEEL ABOUT THEM?
A: While consenting to !he City's terms, the Club considers
!hem very stringent, but the Bay Club has accepted them
out of a desire to properly finance high quality improve·
ments which require an economic life of more than the
remaining 29 yea rs .
Q: WHAT ARE THE TERMS OF THE PRESENT LEASE?
A: The Club pays the City $45,000 minimum rental and an
overage based on the level of gross sales.
Q: SO THE CLUB IS A CHIEF CONTRIBUTOR TO LOCAL AGtN-
CIES. HOW MUCH Will THE CLUB PAY UNDER THE NEW
LEASE?
A: The minimum rental will jump from $45,000 to $150,000
annually and the percentage on sales will increase.
Q: HOW .MUCH DID THE CLUB PAY IN TAXES?
A: Last year $10,000 in City occupancy tax and $137,000 in
property taxes with $68,000 of the latter sum going to the
Newport·Mesa Unified School District.
Q: WITH THE INTELLIGENT FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF THE
PROPERTY, SALES AND PROPERTY TAXES WILL FURTHER
INCREASE. WHAT WILL BE THE NET GAIN TO THE CITf·
ZENS OF NEWPORT IF THE LEASE IS EXTENDED?
A: Economics Research Associates estimates that over the
next 29 years alone (the remaining lease period) the City
Will enjoy a $7.3 million net gain in revenue and that local ·
government and schools will receive over a million dollars
•
in taxes as a result of the implementation of the Club's
maste r plan. So this election provides the taxpayers of
Newport Beach with a unique opportunity to finance many
of its capital improvements or new recreational projects
without digging into their own pockets.
Q: DO THE TERMS REMAIN STATIC UNDER THE EXTENSION
PROPOSAL?
A: No, and this is a very favorable concession to the City. The
minimum increases ' every five years with cost·of-living
adjustments. Furthermore , the extension· provides for a
complete renegotiation of both the minimum and t~e per·
centages during the lease term at numerous times ..
Q: NDNE OF THESE PERIODIC ADJUSTMENTS ARE PROVIDED
FOR IN THE PRESENT LEASE?
A: No, and if the extension is not approved, the City will reai-
ize very little more from the property than it does today-
and thi s condition will exist for the next 29 years.
Q: ISN'T THERE ANOTHER ISSUE IN THE CAMPAIGN -THAT
OF CREATING A PUBLIC PARK ON THIS LAND WHEN THE
CURRENT CLUB LEASE EXPIRES? .
A: The answer to that is provided by the City's own consult-
ants. They conclude: "This alternative does not, in our
opinion, represent a reasonable development alternative.
The magnitude of the current level of development (at the
Club)-in excess of $7 million in 1968-precludes from
an economic point of view the demolition of these build·
ings tor a lower use." Even the opponents to the lease
extension concede that the major new structures will .not
be torn down in 29 yea rs.
Q: THEN THE CITY WOULD NOT BE EXPECTED TO DESTROY
MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN BUILDINGS AND IMPROVE-
MENTS-WHICH IT WOULD OWN AT THAT POINT -AND
GIVE UP MILLIONS MORE IN DIRECT REVENUE AND TAXES
FOR A NON·REVENUE USE OF THE LAND?
A: Most assuredly not. ll could not afford to.
Q: THEN THE REAL ISSUE HERE IS WHETHER THE CITY IS
GITTING A FAIR DEAL FROM THE PROPERTY IT OWNS?
A: th is is precisely the question and it has been soundly
answered by the City staff, the City's Consultants, the
Council and community leaders. It is an important issue
for every taxpayer in Newport Beach. The rising cost of
government demands a YES vote from all of us on the lease
on January 13 .
THE CITY WORKED OUT THE TERMS . .,
THE CL.UB HAS AGREED TO THEM
EVERYONE BENEFITS FROM A YES VOTE JANUARY 13 -.
I
13 •
1
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• ..... ,.
•
13 •
17
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Jf OA!t.V PILOT Tutsd&f, Dfct:mbtr 30, 1969
·Energy of White Tornado Uncorked When Friend Visits
DEAR ANN LANDERS: Your column
wbkh reported the marriage bctwetn two
bomosenals in Rotterdam m1de a friend
ol a\l.oe ""l'Y an1ry. Ile says he altendtd
the wl!ddtng and it wasn't Rotterdam, it
war Amsterdam. Furthermore, he lnsist.s
tbe priest didn't actU&Uy marry lM two
gay boys -lbty were gums at the wtd-
dlng. While the priest wu performing the
w-vice uniting the legitimate couple, tho
boys sort of married each other.
pea...i la IM&dll ........ -· through my _..in.., ilvowl out the
ones ahe considers old, moves my lamps
•round t.o ault hertelt, changes the water
in the goldtlah bowl, combs the fringes on
my rugs with a meat fort and polishes
everylhtnc In 1l1bt. Y.mrday the helped
he:rtelf t.o a plecfl of candy from my cut
gl.ul bon bon box. After one bite, she an-
nounced, ''1bil candy is oW !" Then she
dumped all lhe c>ndy Into lhe garbage
can.
You dairn you &ot the lnfonnallon
from a Loodon paper. Which one? 1 have
a hunch your congratulations are
Pfem&lure. -nIE FLYING DUT·
q!MAN
·DEAR Dl!TCH: Tiit 1-,,...._
,W I did.111t eoegralalate anybody, t n!<ttl>' ........ alaog .... -u k .,.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : May I com·
mt:nt on Irked Ida'• letter! She is the
lady who didn't approve ol her friend's
dirty "'°''' draped over the spigot. I coukl hive kissed you when you told her
to keep bu peo.plcktn' hands ·1011er .. u.
l have a friend who practically rear·
ranges my furniture every time 1 h e
comes over for a cup ol coffee. She 1oes
Horoscope
To avoid disappointment, prospective
brides are reminded to have their wedding
stories with black and white glossy P.hotcr
graphs to the DAILY PILOT Womens ~
partment one week before the wedding.
Aries: Rekindle
Flames of Love
' •
Pictures received following the wedding
will not be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story. also accompanied
by a black and white glossy picture, be sub-
mitted six "A'eeks 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 tbe DAILY PlLOT offices.
Further questions will be answered by
Women's Section stall members at 642-4321
or 194-9466.
Debs Introduced
At Gala Ball
Yearning for the warm days
of spring to come, sponsors of
the 1969 debutantc ball decided
lo rush the season just a little.
?ttembers of the Newport
Harbor Auxiliary oI Children's
Home Society, who present the
fund-raising ball, ordered
tuUps and olher s p r i n g
blossoms to be flown in from
Holland which decorated the
Balboa Bay Club Saturday
evening for the oceasion.
Entrance or the ballroom
was lined on each side by
cypress trees festooned with
tiny blinking white lights, and
lining the aisle were large
baskets o( flowers in·
terspersed with multicolored
tulips. Flanking the stage
were sim ilar bouquets and the
stage backdrop featured more
cypress trees with lights.
Centering tables were crystal
epergnes arranged w i t h
candles and tulips.
Wearing white ball go~ns,
debut.ant.es carried nosegays
of tulips and spring blossoms,
and their only je~·elry was a
gold medallion, suspended on
white velvet ribbon. which was
presented al a pre ball party.
Edgar R. Hill, host in·
troduced ?.1 rs . \Yi\son V.
Woodman. auxiliary president
who wi:_lcomed guesti and then
introdu~ hfrs. Royal D.
Tucker. ball chairman and
John F. Porter, master of
ceremonies.
Porter in turn introduced
each debutante as she step.
ped forward on the arm of her
father and proceeded down the
aisle to the accompaniment of
Joe Moshay's orchestra.
Officials
Invited
To Party
Debutantes, their parents
and escorts are Miss Elizabeth
Hanson Carver, Mr. and Mrs.
Leroy Langh~nry Carver Jr.,
James Mazet Hawki:tls; Miss
ltfarianne Emison Cox, Mr.
and Mrs. Alvin Stewart Cox,
Ronald Hotmes Miller; Miss
Terry ruin Ellis. Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Victor Newman Ellis,
Michel William Ogden; Miss
Laurie Ellen Fruer, Mr. and
Mrs. David Ladson Fraser,
Stuart Hamilton Aldrich, and
MiS! Virglnla Claire Howell.
Richard Deane Howell and
Mrs. Robert Yardley, Bruce
Fullerton Stuart.
Othe rs are Miss Karen
Kuemmel Jackson, Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Evans Jackson,
Bradford Hamilton Reimers;
Mi ss Jessica Morford Jones,
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Lincoln
Jones, Jeffry Leroy Mather;
Miss Lauren Ann Kalmbach,
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Warren
Kalmbach. Jeffrey A 11 en
Wilson; Miss Linda Leslee Lil·
tlejohn, Dr. and Mrs. Vernon
Lester Littlejohn, Timothy
Alan Lynch, and Miss Kathryn
Leona Lynch, Mr. and Mrs.
Frank Will iam Lynch, Ken~
neth David Cu~am.
Completing the list are Miss
Pamela Jean Meserve. Mr.
and Mrs. John Robert
Meserve. Jeffrey Robert
h-1eric kel : Miss M a r g a r e t
Lenore Parker, ~1r. and hlrs.
John Bernard Parker. John
Charles Petry; Miss Deanna
Kay Peyton, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Ragan Peyton,
Stephen 'Yalter Schwind; ~liss
Diane Plumb, Dr. and Mrs.
Hugh Julius Plumb Jr . ,
1-lichael Warren Glassey, and
Miss Sharon Thompson, Dr.
and Mrs. Arthur Farrand
Thomp&On, Ronald B r u c e
Thompson.
Serving as stags w e r e
Christopher Burnham
Woodward, Thom3ll H u g h
Purcell, Richard D e a n e
Jiowell, Stephen Rowe Bowie
and Scott Edmand Woodw11rd .
WEDNESDAY
DECEMBER 31
By SYDNEY OMARR
Many act and react la ac-
ckleati maDDer. More traffic
accident& add &o aad 1tltllt1cs
ol New Ye1r11 ~e. Key 11 to
strive for fu combined with
moderadoo. Startltq Dews de-
velopmeat affectiq war ud
peace coakl llftak Udo genenl
bollday revelry.
ARIES (March 21-Aprll 19):
You could break up important
relationship by acting in
stupid manner torught. On
positive side, you could make
amends, keep promises and
rekindle riames of love.
TAURUS (Aprll 2J).M1y 20):
You can make this a
marvelous time if you avoid
excess. Realize that too much
of even the best can produce a
hangover effect. Word to wise
PROGRAM STAR
George Stu•rt
History
To Unfold
For Ebe/ls
A dramatic, three-part prcr
gram dealing 'l''ilh historical
figures. will unfold for mem-
bers of Newport Ebell Club
during a luncheon Thursday,
Jan. 8, at noon in the club-
house.
Artist-sculptor George Stu-
art will atte11l that history ln
the making is very often
stranger than fiction. Before
the clubwomen he will discuss
Teapot Tyrants, the Dragon
Awakes and Lincoln Clostup.
here should be sufDcient.
GEMINI (May 21.June ]'
Romance is emphasized. A
young person may feel le t
out. Realize you do not gain
happiness at expense o f
others. Welcome New Year
with clean con.science.
CANCER (June 2l·July 22):
Some guests who are, in a
sense, uninvited could create
disturbance. Maintain sense of
balance -and humor. Your
own constructive attitude cao
make this a glorious evening.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22):
Good lunar aspect tonight
coincides with short journey,
special dea lings with
neighbors, nlaUves. A new
contact proves e.xclUng, io.·
vigor a ting.
VIRGO (Aug, ~pt. 22):
A void eccentric a c t i o n s
associated with money, valued
posse&Sions. Your intuitive iD-
tellect is on the beam. Follow
through oo inner feelings. Be
alert -and awllN!.
LIBRA (Sepl 23-0cl. 22):
Tonight is fun Ume socially.
But you could act in somewhat
of a puzzling manner -even
to yourself. Member of o~
pmlte sex responds favorably.
But do not commit yourself.
SCORPIO (Oct.. 23-Nov. 21):
Do not neglect individual who
is not free to get around.
Special visit co u J d work
wooders as morale builder.
You may have lo attend to
last-minute details.
SAGl'ITARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21): Friends prove
stimulating. Appreciate
desires of others. Th.is could
be romantic evening, punctu-
ated by genuine communica~
lion wlth one import.ant to you.
CAPRICORN (Ile<:, 22.Jan.
19): Prestige rises: you are
given credit for brilliant plan.
Best resul18 come from en·
tertainlng al home. Seek
harmony with family
members. Don't argue.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Take special care tr
travellna:. There is tendency
toward conluslon about direc·
Lions, t r a f f i c regulations.
Travel only with one who is
moderate and sober.
PISCES (Feb. 19-March 1n):
Money transactions should be
delayed. Promises m a d e
under the influence prove
worthless. Deal only with
responsible individual. Get
commitments Jn writing.
IF TODAY IS YOUR
BIRTHDAY you are stubborn
but willing to change your
mind when confronted with
fact!. You figh t for underdog.
A recent relationshlp coul d
blossom into something mean·
lngful.
Bridal Season :
Fall Like June
Fall. llke June, also Is a
,
The woman has a heart ol 1old and
would do a0)1hlna ln tbe world for me,
but I cu't stand much more of her
takeover ways. What can 1 do! -
SHREVEPORT
1 DEAR SHREVE: 1'tre'1 only o • e
ny lo dtlll wt:Oi W. rev.-.4 •P· npuoc>
lulcy-
ment when he gets annoyed wilh htt. She
slkl he. blows up O\tr small lhinss like if
1he forgets lo put the cap back on the
tube of tootbpNte. When she ran out of
~r be got IO mad be clammed up for
three days.
something. -WELL NOW
DEAR WELL: Your letter preves .U
talk Is cbe1p -or at least *8per tlau
p1ydl.J•try. It ~Ito proves Uaat SO•
womni prefer crlllflsm &o slkDCt. U ..
evldt:.nce thl lbe .PY IL I e • 1 t
ackoow ltdgu IM:r pre5encr..
ne DMCDat die makes a move. re·
mlDd W tat sbe11 1 gant In yow-bome
aad &l&at )'OCI bal.e to set. your 1~11
wort. Tell Mt It make1 JCMl feel like a
poor ltotWll. Jt's 1cN.ac to be a ~and
toeaall batue betwtea lier Deuro&ll ana
you 1A1bbormleu. Lot& of .lack.
My husband used to act like thllt, too.
lt madt .me IO nervowi: l developed rtd
blotches au over my body and my hair
began to fall out. My doctor said I needed
poycblairlc help •.
\Vhen my husband saw the bills from
the psychiatrist he suddenly began to talk
.a lot, like for an hour at a time. Finally I
had to tell him to shut up. Then J noticed
something llrange. As soon as he began
to taik, my blotches cleared up and my
hair stopped falling out.
If you have trouble getting along wtlh
your parents ... If you can 't get them to
let you live your own life. send for Ann
Landers.' booklet, "Bugged by Pare:nta:?
!low to Get More Freedom." Send SO
cents in coin with your request and 1
long, stamped, self-addressed envelope,
DEAR ANN LANDERS : l think I can
help the woman who tomplaJned about
her husband gMna her the 1Uent tr .. ~ Please print this, Ann. It may prove
Ann Lander• will be glad to help you
with your pri>blems. Send them to her m
care of the DAILY PIL0'1', tnelosi.n& •
seU-addressed, stamped envelope.
, •
\. '"'
MRS. ROBERT W. JACOBEL
Skiing Honeymoon
Nuptials Solemnized
In Wayfarers' Chapel
I
Wayfarers' Chapel was the
setting for the double ring
ceremony linking in marriage
Pamala Diane Wood and
Robert William Jacobel.
Parenl8 of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. Ralph John
Wood Jr. of Huntington
Beach and Mr, and Mrs.
Herbert Jacobel Jr. of Ana·
heim.
Given In marriage by her
rather. the bride wore a g01\'Tl
of satin peau de soie with
Spanish lace inserts which she
designed. F re s h chrysan·
themums and blue daisies
formed her bouquet and were
used as a headpiece which
held her illusion veil.
Miss Linda Schindler. maid
of honor, wore a pale blue
sat.m gown and carried white
chrysanthemums and blue tip-
ped carnations.
Attending as best man was
Jeff Pierose. Assuming usher
duties were John LondeUus,
Richard Jacobel, the
bridegroom's brother, Da.n
Sanf9rd, Robert Grant and
Joseph Richards.
Following a reception in the
home of the bride's parent!,
the newlyweds left on a skiing
honeymoon trip lo Jackson
Hole, Wyo. They will reside in
Ames, Iowa.
The bride is a charter
graduate of UCI where she
majore d in biological sciences
and now is working towards
her PhD in neuroendocrinology
at lo"·a State University.
Her husband is a graduate
of UC, Berkeley where he ma·
jored ln physics and now is
working toward a PhD ln high
energy particle physics at the
Institute of Atomic Research,
ISU. He affiliated with Delta
Tau Delta.
Panel Studies Campus
Dr. Ernest G. Lake, pro--
lessor of school administration
at California State College at
Fullerton, will moderate a
panel discuss ion on the new
look on campus for Laguna
Beach Branch of th e
American As.sociatiot1 o {
College, and Mrs. Dorman
Commons, chairman of the
advisory council of CSCF.
Dinner reservations may be
made with Mrs. M a r v i n
Niisen, 24152 Laulhere Place,
El Toro, 92630.
Beethoven Program
Salutes Composer
Zubin Mehta will be on the podium when
the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra pre-
sents a concert in Costa Mesa Saturday, Jan.
3, commemorating the 200th anniversary of
Beethoven's birth.
Mehta returns to the orchestra after a
sabbatical year and will direct a program in·
eluding Beethoven's Overture to "Egmonl''
and Symphony No. 7 in A Major, Op. 92.
Also chosen for the 8:30 p.m. concert,
which celebrates the orchestra's 50th anni-
versary and its eighth season of coming to
Orange County, is Haydn's Sinfonia Concer-
tante in B Flat Major, Op. 84,
Members of the orchestra in solo parts
wi.ll be Varoujan Kodj ian, assistant concert·
master, violin; Nino Russo, cello; Barbara
Winters, oboe, and David Breidenthal, bas--
soon.
The concert will be gi ven in Orange
Coast College auditorium. Tickets now are on
sale at the Orange County Philharmonic Of-
fice, 201 W. Coast High,vay, Newport Beach,
phone -II. at $4 and $1 . 75 for studerrts.
Double Ring Rites
Couple Repeat Vows
Vases of flowers in soft
shades of green and aqua and
green tapers in gold-leaf
stands decorated St. Pul's
Lutheran Church in Orange
for the marriage of Kathy
Hubb and Denn is Cole.
The bride, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Ewald G. Hubb of
Laguna Beach, wore a silk
organza gown in A. I i n e
silhouette with a chantilly laeti
bodice embroidered in pearls
and sequins. Her headpiece of
matching lace held a silk ii·
Juslon veil. The bridal bouquet
was of white roses and carna·
Uons.
Attendants, dressed in em·
pire gowns or ivory lace with
moss green skirts and aqua
sashes, were Mrs. Robert
Flandermeyer. matron of
honor, Mrs. Keith Jesson and
Moths Th rive
During Winter
Time was, cloU1es were safe
from moths in winter.
But today, with houses as
well heated as lhey are, moths
thrive during \\-"inter months.
Take precautions year-round.
VFV{ Au xiliary
Coastline Auxiliary t o
li.1iss Diana Cole, th e
bridegroom's sister.
The benedict, son of htr. and
Mrs. Lloyd Cole of Orange,
chose Ernest Suggs as best
man with ushers Michael Kah·
Jen, Stewart Gerken, Philli p
lfeim and Steven Short, his
cousin.
Assisting at the reception in
the Assistance League building
"'ere the bride's sisters, Mrs.
Victor Kue.rschner of New
Holstein, Wis .. and Mrs. Ed·
win Monke, West Lafayette,
Ind. .
The new Mrs. Cole was
graduated rrom Laguna Beach
High School, Califomia Con·
cordia College in Oakland and
Concordia Teachers College in
River Forest. Ill. Her husband
is a graduate of Orange High
School and Fullerton Junior
College. He served with the
U.S. Army.
Following a ·wedding trip,
the couple will reside in
Orange.
LET'S BE FRIENDLY
U you have new nelghbon
or know of anyone moving
to our area. please tell us
so that \\-"e may extend •
friendly \Velcome and help
them to become acquainted
ln their new 1urroundinp.
So. Coast Visffor
49~579 494-93'1
University Women on Tues-
day, Jan. 6.
Speakers at the a p.n1.
meeling in Royal Hawaiian
res.taurant will be Michael
Krisman , advisor or student
affairs, UC!: Dr. R, Dudley
Boyce, president of Golden
We$t College : Michael Collins.
president of the board of
trustees of Saddleback
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Post 3536 gathers the first and
third Fridays at 8 p.m. Costa HB Auxil iary Mesa's American Legion Hall
is the raeeting scene.
American Legion Awti!lary11";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; of Huntington Beach gathers/I
Harbor Visitor
646-0114
in the American Legion Hall
at I :30 p.m. the first Thursday
o( each month. On the fourth
Thursday members may call
Mrs. Arne Jensen, 536-2777, for
location information. Costa Mesa 1'1ayor Alvin
Pinkley was among guests at
the annual Chrlslrnas dinner
of the Sen1or Ciliz.em Club of
Costa ~tesa, along with Vice
Mayor Robert M. Wilson,
Councilman W. T. Jordan aod
Keith Van Holt, recre.atlon
director.
Assisting on P.1rs. Tucker 's
ball committee were the
P.Imes William C. Adams,
Robert Hodson, Terrell L.
Root, William F. Harpe.r, Ren-
fro C. Newcomb, Ira W.
Smith, Wallace Gerrie. John
Killefer. Robert 0 I e m e r ,
Frank H. Trane, Richard Hess
and W. Phelps hlertckel.
He reecived his education in
Washington, D.C., where he
trained for the Foreign Serv·
ice. At American University
he studitd history and torelgn
relations.
bridal season. 'Oi;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; Last year, there were r.:
YEAR
END
Wtlcomlng g u eat s -was
Mr1 . Wanda Wright,
coordinator or senior citizens
activities.
Otcoratiot\$ for the buffet
dinner were provided by 1t1rs.
Winonn h1onshower, decora-
tion committee chairman, ind
her committee membe.rs, the
Mmts . A.df.lalde S c h r a d e ,
Alice Willis Mid N •la 11 e
Brown.
F ollowlng dlnner M • 'I o r
Pinkley addrwed th• group
and commented on the ~b'1
arowt.h &ld progtt!I.
Andy's Fun
As1r: lit)' kid. "Ast Andy" Ii fllft.
Stt It Saturdt~ I" the 0"1L. V
PILOT,
While in Washington he was
on the suiff OC the Smithson-
ian lnstltutlon.
Couple Married
Fo~lng a wedding trip lo
San Fr1nc111CO Paul Arthur
~1cCra.nels and his brkle, Nin·
cy Theresa Tepper will make
their home ln Newport. Beach.
The brld.al couple were mar-
ried by the Rev. Franc.ls Kelly
Jn Our Lady of Mount Carmel
Catholic Church. Parents of
the newlyweds are Mr. and
tifn. Bernard F. Tepper Jr. of
Balboa and h1r. and Mrs John
A1cQ-aoels · ot Lake Worth,
Fla.
t•or the double r I n g
rt.rr.mon,y the bride selected a
white velvet emplrc gown with
old lact trtmmlng and carried
white roses.
Gowned In rreen \'tlvtt
princess style gowns and
holding red carnations were
Mn. Clayton Lyon, \he bride's
alster and matron of honor,
and bridesmaids, the Mlssts
Kathy Tupy and M a r y
Sampson.
Ptte McCrancls was l\ls
brother)• best man. UWrs
were Dr. John McQ-ancls and
Steve Tepper, tM newlyweds'
brothen. .Kimbttly McKown
•
514,000 September, October
and November brides.
A dtclde earlier there were
only '68,000 in the sam~
period.
• NB In
and Matthew Lyon, the bride's
COU!ln and nephew wtre
flower 1lrl and rln1 bearer.
A reception for I SO cuerts
took place tn the bride's
parent.I' homes.
Tht new Mn. bfc.O'anel.s
waa a stucleta :.at Newport ·
Harbor Hllh :Jchool I n d
Oranae Col.st Collegt. Htt.
husband attended hl1h school
and colleae ln Florida and now
ii wllh the US Cout Guard,
ICaUonod In Loog Beach.
I SEE BY TODAY'S
WANT ADS
• A musical Oirlstma•:
romplere aet of dnims for
the:> llt11e or oldc.r drum·
1ner. Ambassador 1nim·
pt'l., or 1 Gibson guitar for
lhc 11.·ande11ni mlnstnol.
• Put a sparklt In hia or her
l"ye&: ruby le diamond rtoa: for drecs, or l-dia..
mond rlrc for him.
• F'rom make believe to rtAl,
give the "ExcaUbe r", !hor-
ouahbred ~yeu old Ches t·
nut if:ldina.
l
COSMETIC
GIFT ITEMS
ELEGANT COLOGNES e DUSTING POWDERS
SOAPS e TRAVEL CASES
• ... $3.
.. $.15. 1/3 OFF
GIFTS FOR HIM, TOO
....... .., .,.. .,..... tl~ .......... .,.., .. ....U.J
THI DEMOKSTRATION
46 Fashion !Mand -Newport Center
Opp. 11...,.dway -644-2611
;
'
DAILY PILOT 15
TUMILIWEEDS ly Tom K. Ryan SALLY BANANAS By Charles Barsotti ,
TUE ~DAY
DECEMBQt JO
D lllJffialMC Mw ~ IM
WMk: (Cl "'Cldpl lrowt Up" (ro·
mance) '69-Klren V•lentint, Ed·
ward Mulhtre, Peuf Petelltll. Gldaet
gives up htr 111rfin1 lifa to btcomt
a United N1tion1 &Uldt. H,r life is
complitated by • love •ff•lr 1nd th•
probl9n'll of llvina In • bi1 city. m Ht ........ S.W (C) (30) m__.,...,,60>
. '
PLAIN. JANE
I
PERKINS
ED i l!IC!Al Dlcld1 " frlllh· .----,-----,"""",,--.., ---------~ --Uo• (C) (80) "Multiply and Subdue i"':n..........-J.Cl>:JM 11.·h
1:30 0 .... _,.. (C) (!O)
0 TM lllH a.. (C) (30) m lllJ fnofftt M1rtiln (30)
IE ot1a tf tfM Pretldlnt (lO)
@ (!) ............. (C) (30)
fD frtlldl CW (30) (R) "Mous-
akl and Ratttoullle."
amn. •-1301
el ........ 14 (t) (!O)
m .. ,. -IC> 130>
7:DO II CIS &Mir Jttte (t) (30)
0 Wllat'1 My Unt? (C) (30)
m I IPICIAt I Hallday Cl1ulc Its·
tetblll T1111rn1ment (C) (2 hr} From
N.. Yon: City's Madison Squ111
Garde11, teems Include Boston Col-
•• Cincinnati Univenlty, M1n-
llatb111 Colltre. New von Unlvtr·
tity, PtnnsyJvanl1, st. Boneventure,
st 1o1tph.'1 1nd top.rankina Purdue
Untvnty.
m ...... Clo4 (C) (30~
the &rth." A report on how _.n;i.oo __ ..
, Am•ica111 ,,. tvmlnf ttielr onOll·
""
florious Mtur1t tn\llronmtnt W!to
poi.,,.. wt1tel1nds.
IJ GOVERNOR AND J,J. * HIT OF THE SEASON
IJ i:!ll Cll "' -.. 11 (C) (lO) Gov. Drinkwater becomu
the 11,1bject of 1n ullllqround
lllllll Interview tnd his 1dYisers 1r1
!earful thal lhl 11oiy wm suuat 1
scandal In hit administration.
CJ Ntwl (C) (30) Baxtw W1td. m .... .,..,", m.....,......., IC> (30)
9:50 m • Y'''"'' Decadl " rrvsb tiol ( ) (55) "Tht Slow Guillotine."
Th• P!'Oble111 of air po!ILJtlon end
Its tffedl Oii '"'" Is wmiftjd. Jack Lemmon 1t1rrateL
MOON MULLINS
Ill ......... ,.~ .. ,""' (30) l~lllll!Jlffl (IJ Cll --(t) (60).,.,.,,. 81ttlt ot Eat!: St Louis."
ID @lfllldld (C) (30) An ex.plotation of bow 1 9111SitivltJ
f1D Allttal (30) tralnl111 msloil 1rnon1 18 of th.t tnirint cilizt!IS of Elst st Louia,
111. helPld mtl 1 raci1I c.rlsis.
U ll7l@a!M.,.-, M.D. (C) (i}) "Di1l!IOllt: r .. r." A 10'.llll
basketball pl"9f ps ta 1 filth
h111lw Instead. of bninc tlll Mlded
kn .. surpry.
Cf! (I) Tnrtlt or Coftllqlltllt:ll {C)
Ill ,._ lo IM $m (C) (30)
aJ not "" (C) (30)
o "''"' "1
lWl '"" """""· STEVE ROPER Don Sherman, The Anll.I Ktrr Sin1·
t PONT kNOW A&OUT THAT! ME
c.EmlNLY MUST ROUll= TMAr NO
ONE Y«ll!LP SHOOT IF ME lAME
OUT WlTM HIS M,\ij"5 OP! TELL
Hill. THAT, Ji\l<j;S JASPER:,. ••
7:J08Qlr111.Har (C) (60) Wilen
.an old frr..d diet, Murdoch find!
himaelf r8*POflllbt1 for hia 9·year·
old d•u1hter 1nd htr b!IU'.!ming
cel'lef 11 1 linger in the m!nin1
eem119 of North.em tallfornlL Bayn
...
m-••-llo> r;:==::::ic=~:::--~
JohnlOll 1nd Clorb l.NChmen llJl$l. llt.311 D ,._ (C) (60) Tom Reddin. -a ~ ~ m I Drnlll ef .JNn11le IE trt611 lllDlllD {30) I (t) (JO) 'Ne<1eor PLJt 1 Genii on a
Bud1et." Junni1 turns mi• whlfl 10:'5 m .... (C) (60) Gtori• Putnlnt. I
Tony puts her on 1 budget In fl} Cl!Em) ~ If frultn-
ordtf to 1'l'Oid her (.Ollfusion aboul tioll -(C)-· (lO) "Troutiled Wat1rL •
Cftdtt. A report Olt the CIU$1 •nd effect& '
g *" W..t a.ow (C) (25) of the undllt1e8 oil !Mk that h1s
6u.st1 '"' Jack Kent Cooke and killed mertne life ind rulntd mllu
Wiiiia Rll!d, of beachla lit th.t Yidnttr of Sanft
utmrnm•"""" ltl !"'> ••~M" '1Jh1Debl"lht r1tt1&r of• )'0Un1 lJ:GDIJDDhn (C)
K'I COMl'ANY•M•UH•5AJIGARO
CORPORATION-IS MOVING ITS H
QUARTERS. FROM LOUISVILLE.
WE HAVE ABOUT A
HUNDRED CARD•
SOARO CASES OF
RECOllDS, ~EE~
-ANO WU SOYS
lltl611T AS WELL
IW<E 'l!iE ~300 AS SOME
TRUCKING
OUTFIT.I NII Qo helped Pete wfllfl he Wll fJ Morie: (C) llf..tllt ltftlf
1ttacktd ~ boodl11ms Is • llomiclde AllVI" (.ftrtem.mu:Ncal) •67-RoY l~:::::::::~-JI
suspeet.. Orbison, Joan freem1n. Sammy
Cl llllHIM $ Movlr. ~ J1ckson. [:__~""'""'~!::1j eo. .. ftd• (dn11M) '61-Howard 1 @m!DCIJ9Cl)lhn (t)
11•1. Jack tal'JOll, Tint Louisa. Girt q) m EE """ (C) Gerrn.an S11J II ltft wounded by
"azit lo lam AmMictn pllnL 11:30 fJ QI CIJ Mtrf lritftll (C)
MUTT AND JEFF
m--<60> D@C!l itlloh•OJ '""'!Cl f.B Tedlnk:ll eor.. (30) 0 KIIii• .. (C) Guest• tre Ed I
fl.I CJ!m!D k1tcM of fmtra· Breeher, Jeffrey SL John, Herb Kia.
'SOCK!
?OW!BJFf;I tlCla {C)(60)-"Poltoni1t1 tht Planet''' 111, Marth• R1y1 ind Pat Paulsen.
11 ton!ctirs tubject for 1n evaning
of l!>fci1ls on the past deaide, be·
lfnnint with '1'ht Silent Sprin1 ol
Rachel caraon." The fllr11 II •
dr1matlt k>ok et how man's tcOIOCY
is chanatn1 f10l!I the lndiStriminatel
-of pesticldM.
a> ,_ • """ (30)
u ua m""' -ltl (!I)> B1rt111 liln ind rock croup $l1Nief.
Wfl'lf IM.
aom m11111 ,,, 110>
'1tmP« Also ru11ts."' Juli• end
H1nnah thmt.n to strike rll1r Df.
Chl(I" demands too much.
WEDNE ~O A Y
DAYTIME MOVIES
N> U (t) -(ldwolo~) ~•11rct11 aHtt•. VlnctfC Prict.
... 11 (Q "Clrtllldlalt ,., ... <11111·
liU!) '49 -Bini Crmbr. Rllol!d•
n11nlna.
CJ (C) "Mtrtll'" (rOfTlllK)l•comedy)
'4&--JM11111 Crt!n, Ai111 Youna.
U Tonight. Test Watch * The 1970 Cavett -
For the fun of ttl
The Dick Cavett Show
D IHJCIJ (BTll1 Dlc:k C1,1tt
-(C)
%:3011-(t)
2:4S U) AJl."llM Shir. "Trio,~ ''Trtek
of U11 V1mpir•."
m "P'rlnfA ., , .... (•d~entur1)
'49-l~roM Pawu, OflOn WtlllL
lZ:OO D '1111 l llCllt CIWr" (dr11111·
jll'ltnlll) '40 -l illy t ... Cordell
Hlctrrie-.
I :30 m "1'llo llto LlolJ" (••''"" '11 -011t lloprde., Jmmy H1111'J,
1:00 D IC> .,.._, " htMld" (f111-
t1J)') '81 -StM R1r1ea, GIOflll
"'HL
ID "Ctr1t If tttt ftctlN Mtn"
(t!orror) '51-Ric:Ntd Mderaon.
4:00t)"SMll .. o..• '°1UW!•
eoroedy) '27-Frtd "1t1lra. Cl-
R•1tra. tdlll.rd Cwrtllt HolUln. •
!' * •'-'_._·~~-·x~t~.;1~.··..r.·==~=:::~~=~~~==--=··~·----~·~=~:=:·~··=·:.._~·~~·2·,_::,J
GORDO
By Jahn Miles
WHEl1f'5 JOE 51lLAWTNIK?
HE'S 5Ulf05EO 10 1!E :iilllNG
AT OOR WLE-
TELEVISION VIEWS
Dick Cavett
II ..
Carries Ball · 1 --~~~~~~~--"'~ -·
By Ferd Johnson --.... FO!<T"NAT5~Y"
IT1S lCOSE'-~E'AF ...
lly 'Saunders and Overgard
Goor:>! ('All TM!S UUMBE~-AMY ~·
TIME 'TOMORROW/ IF A M.4J.J AU~RS',
DON'T HANG UP/ .. ·JT.LL 8£MY .. OH~
FATHER/
By Al Smith
~ERE! 'MJD SAID
I COULDN'T PUNCf\ t.r-
MY WAY OUT OF
A PAPER BAG?
By Gus Arriola
TMA"f .
Sll.!NT MAJORIT'l '1111~"
WA' A GReA"f '""" WHll.£ lT LASTfP ••
By CYNTHIA LOWRY
NEW YORK (AP) -Dick Cavett returned Mon-
day night for his 1.hird go-around on ABC and seems,
finally, to be the right man in the right time spot.
The format of his late evening show diffeTs
from that of his rivals in that he works alone -no
sturdy man Friday to help bridge the a\vkward
moments. He has a series of chairs in a simple set
to accommodate the guests.
THE MAIN difference is Cave1t's qui et and ef-
fective way of stimulating bright and vital discus-
sion. In his premiere sho\V there was some stand·
ard bad image in the Carson style with comedian-
writer \Voody Allen. The interesting portion crune ,
with the introduction of Metropolitan opera soprano
Beverly Sills, who spoke of her family and the f8mi· '
liar generation gap. Miss Sills said she did not par-
ticularly want to comunicate and that she liked the '
gap. "I hope it stays. What I don't need is a 20-year-:
old buddy."
Then c;ame Jacqueline Grennan Wexler. fonner
nun, former president of Webster College and now
the new head of New York's lfunter College.
MRS. WEXLER defended the young, spoke of '.
their need for involvement. It was a spirited and
lively conversation among intelligent people that
shed some light on an over-discussed subject.
The commercial interruptions often broke up
good, rolling conversations. But the tone of the 90
minutes h·as great spontaneity, and if Cavett's mix
magic with people holds, the progr am may produce
more insomniacs than anything since before Jack
Parr quit the late night battlefield,
NBC LAUNCHED a pai r of fragile barks on its
~hannels Monday in another revision of its troublea
some day-1.ime schedule. The first was the ''Who.
What and Where Show," which after 25 minutes had
stiIJ not answered the question.
The second, and not to be underestimated, Is
"Ufe with Linkletter," in which Art and son Jack
have pulled to,gether a potpourri of interviews. oddi·
ties and show biz gimmicks in a deliberate effort to
woo both the older and younger day-time viewers.
The ,game show is so distressingly. so indistin·
~.ui.shl~ similar to a clutch of earlier audience par·
t1c1pat1on programs that one 'vo ndered just what
there was a·bout it that persuaded· the network to
give it air time. Three members of the audience
\vere seated at the usual consoles, given $150 to bet
and pennitted to put their monev on their ability
to answer fi n flssortment of questions.
THE PROGRAM also has Art J ames who has
been hostin.-z around game shows for yea rs. The
players griml:v. concentrated on answering questions
about Frank Sinatra. Apollo 12, the Cuban invasion
and the Whiffenpoof song and had little time for
anythin~ else.
"Life with Linkletter" oromises to be at best. sc~izoid f_un. Art works with . his gu~sts On stage:
using a big screen for rear v1e\v pro1ection of mo-
tion picture and taoe. J ack will make show se~·
m en.ts on location. The guest 'vas Buddy Hackett
talking about his intrest in medicine. '
. DP.nrtis thP lff Pnace
I
'
"
J f DAil v mar
Wolverine Quarterhaek Shows His Stuff Bo Worries,
McKay Ready
PASADENA -Michigan's football
team snowi>alled it.s way to the Ro6e:
-I thU season bu! coach Bo Schem·
bechler is worried that the five-week
layoff and the Pasadena sun may have
melted away that important momentum.
••vou know v.·hat this reminds me ol?'"
he asked .. "Spring practice.''
The Wolverines are finishing up their
practice sessions this week before
meeting Southern Cal in the 56th Rose
Bowl New Year's Day.
"~tomcntum is something you do from
week to week," Schembechler said. ''But
there's DO way you can tell In a game like
this.
"There's a mystery aboul it, you'd bet-
ter believe it."
He said the Wolverines seem nearly
ready to play the Trojans but 6ince they
haven't played since the 24-12 upset of
Ohio state Nov. 22 there is no clear way
to judge how ready they are.
Michigan dkln't pick up it.s momentwn
until the second half of its Minnesota
game. To that point the learn. with a 3·2
record, trailed the (iQphers, 9-7.
51..8 triumph over Iowa be!ore the Jtun.
ning OSU upset.
use coach John P..1cKay, meanwhile,
doesn't think momentum Is very im-
portant.
"In a bowl game, in my opinion, con-
ditioning U the important thing," McKay
sakt. "If yru have that when the gamea
comes you won'l have to worry about
momentum."
The Trojan.! finished the season with a
9-0-1 record but won at least half their
games v.·ith fourth qu ar t er come-
backs. Both coaches attended a Ro5e
Bowl luncheon Monday, but Bo left early
saying he had to go, to ~· Only ~
terior line coach Larry Smith was with
him, v!'h1le the olhers were already at
practice.
"All my coaches are here," said P..1~Kay. "We're ready and don't have to
,worry about practice any more."
The Wolverin~ were to have their final
full workout at East Los Angeles College
today , then a brief drill Wedne9day at
Brookside Parle next to the Roi8e Bowl
stadium. On New Year's Eve &ht tea m
will spend the night at a nearby
monastery.
MICHIGAN QUARTERBACK DON MOORHEAD ROLLS OUT BEHIND BLOCKER •••
The \\'olves came back to win, 35-9,
then rolled to a 35-7 victory ove.r
Wisconsin, a S7--0 win over Illioois, and a Bruins Survive
Scare, 7 6-7 5,
With Ti ge rs
Memorable Events
Sentimental Journey
<
Through Sports of 60s
ll'1 time lo< a nostalgic aporill journey
through the 1960s, plcking out a few
memorable blghlighU!: that may have
become hidden by the cobwebs.
Here are a few of the noteworthy hap-
penlnp:
I. Colla Mesa High had an ob!cure pole
\'militt named Eric Berge who In 19S2
wu an average 13--foot vault.er. But he
wmt 14-5¥• in the CIF final!. upaetting
the field. And he tied for lint in the enru-
lnc tlale meet.
i. Orange Coast College won the na·
tiona1 Jaycee football tiUe in 19153 with an
UJlbe.alen ....... Including. 21.0 rout ol
Northeastern otlab:lma A&M in the now
-t!unct Jr. RoM Bowl A lllll o
0&.IMM WHITI
·---------WHITE
WASH . ---------
quarterback named Billy While WU the
OCC sparkplug.
3. Newport Harbor High u p 1 e t
Anaheim, the top rated prep football
team in Southern California. 7--0 in 1963.
Coach Wayne Hughe$' Tars held l1lo
Colonists to 14 yards rushing.
4. Weslminster loat the Sunset League
grid title and then was robbed of a posst.
hie CIF crown tn 1965 when Orange Courl"
ty (lffici.als twice grabbed their throatl.
Once. the Llons fell to Santa Ana, 1~13, in
the Sunset showdown, the latter acoring
on a ftfth down play when o!ficia!s lost
count of the downs.
Then Westminster wa. denied a
t.ouchdown agaiMl Mater Dei in the enau·
Ing ClF playoffs when an official 106t
track of the ball and blew the play dead
when in fact Dave Penhall (now at Cal)
was running for a touchdown. Mater Del
won, 17-1(. then went on to whip cen-
knni!l, 21--0, for the CIF championship.
5. Oc IM>w about the Orange Coast·
IUverside basketball playoff game of
19'7? The latter's Teddy Palmer took a
51).fool &hot at the buzz.er-and hit-to
win it for Riverside, 88-86.
5. And there were the controvenlal
OCX:: fO(lf.balJ wins over Golden Wert, 14-
13 aDd 11).7. A two-point convenlon try by
GWC in JJM was ruled no good by ref1,
but coach Ray Shackleford says his boy.
Steve Ca!hdollaT did inde<d get Into tho
end zone bef.,. being knocked down.
And in the 1967 game, a minute sud-
denly and myaleriously d!lappeared from
the acoreboard clock in the ciolling 1:47 of
the game u OCC drove for a touchdown
in a 7.7 tiff.
Coach Dick Tucker noted the sudden
loa of a minute, went for a fie.Id goal,
and won anyhow.
7. Too, there were the three great Hun-
lingtaa Beach High buketball teams
(1987-lflH) with.Greg Snyder, Roy Miller
and Mike Cootreraa the lop """'· 'l'booe teams had a 71-11 c.ombloed record and
kilt only ooe of 42 league gamea:, that a
fOlU' overtime verdict to Estancia, 'll-70.
I. Or the time George Selfridge went
wild and assessed five technical fouls on
Newport basketball coach Emil Neeme.
One ol the tecbnlcal:I was called when
Neeme tried to talk to a gporta writer.
t. Speaking of technicals, there wa11
Bob Wetzel'• great show last year at OCC
when be and bis team got rapped with 10
technicals for uaorted causes.
10. How could you forget the 1962
Oranre County Open goU tournament at
Mesa Verde Country Club, when a young
chap named Tony Le.ma promised a
champagne celebration if he won, then
fulfilled that promise after victory, earn-
ing the nickllame, "Champagne Tony."
He later wu to die in a plane crash.
11. Cert.a1nly you can't forget Toni
HewiU, the litUe Udo Isle swimmer who
blossomed from a JG-year-old age group
star to a world record holder and 19'8
Olympian.
12. Tennis became bigger than ever
wtth Newport Harbor ending Santa
Monica 's five-year reign over Southland
preps, then a couple of Australians nam·
ed. Rod Laver and Roy Emerson moved
into the area · to draw world wide at·
t.ention to Newport Beach.
13. Bowling's blg moment came In 1968
when Kona Lanes manager Dick Stoeffler
rolled back to back 300 ga!lles (on his
alleys but someone el.!le reportedly was
keeping score).
14. Dan Gumey'1 move to Coma Mesa
early In the decade brought auto racing
prominence to the area.
Those are but a few (If the memorable
event& of the lMOs. Jn Wednesday's DAI·
LY PILOT will be lb< leading .,.. sporu
!foriel ol 111'9.
Funseth Right at Home
On Mission Viejo Links
87 HOWARD L. HANDY
Of ""' .,..,, f'llet ''•"
Rod P'uMet.h may lake up residency at
MJsrion Viejo 1f he continues to play as
well u he did on Swtday and Monday of
this week In the pro-am and fint round
competition ol Ille Sootllem Calilomla
PGA Open.
P'uruteth wu the only player to break
i.J In Ille wind Sunday. On Monday, he
c1 me in with • two-under-par 69 to tie
w1tb Oil.Id: Courtney for the flnt round
lud tn the 54-hote event at concluskln of.
the flnt ol thmo .,,.nlng round dates . Playlnc out ol Almodeo CwnUy Club
tn Sin JOH: where be mNea h1a home,
P\moethedmhled:
"I WU aolng to quit alter nine bollo on
flunclay but the rut ol our group wonted
tO cor&lrl.ae."
·Talking about the""'"'" Funoeth '8ld: •l'Jbe only bad thing I find ti that there 11
tpo mudi olopo on the gr,.ns. '!be rough
JJ a little easll!' to play since Friday
llecoute ol the ,,..,. Frld•y nlghl.
'"Jbe tbrte-pU1 with wtter have to be
the bltdest holm on the COW'•.'' ~e wu
rtlerrinC to Ille fOW'ih and 12th holeo
where water hlzlrdl hive been placed in
fmll ol the grems.
Courtney concurnd In moot o I
-·· thinking. By way ol contrast, Courtney bad tis birdies and four bog!••
while Funseth had bogies on four and
nine, birds on 8eVtn and eight and an
eagle on the per..S ttrth hole. He pured
every hole en ~ back sJde.
First niund competition ln the tourna·
ment t'Clttinues today and Fridiy with the
field nllTOWfd to lht low 70 p\aytts and
lle9 Saturday and down to 50 Sunday,
Practice rounds ore scheduled Wed·
netday and New Year's Day.
Moot ol tod1y'1 enlnJJls are Sootllml
caJllarnla .,.. club prolelllonoll with
only a 1!1<1nkling ol touring pros com·
pellng. Tho big lnllur ti "nome" pro.
feulonals will take place Friday.
Willie Jef!enon out of Lo.\ Angelfs hlt
• four Iron to the right 1kfe <i the eighth
grten and watched as the ball rolled into
the cup for • hole-.ln<ODC. Jefferson Is a
daubUul qualUler !or Saturday play,
however, ofter lhootlni an ,o.
LOS ANGELES (AP) -Sidney Wlek''
12-foot jump shot in the last three
i;econds gave No, 2 ranked UCLA a hard·
bumping 76-75 victory over the Princeton
Tigers ~1onday in the chaplpionship game
of the Bruin Basketball Classic.
In the consolation contest. the Indiann
Hoosiers dcreated Georgia Tech, 87-65.
Wicks' jump shot culirninated an uphill
struggle for the Bruins whose fast break
was bottled up by the aggressive Tigers.
Henry Bibby led the Bruin scorers with
19 points \vhile Curtis RoYte and John
Valiely contributed 18 each. Scoring
honors for the game went to Geoffrey
Petrie who slammed through 28 points
for the Tigers, John Hummer scored ZS.
Petrie put the Tigers in front 53-47
alter six minutes of play in the second
half with some blistering out.side jum-
pers.
Bibby gunned in some bombs of his
own as the game turned into a personal
scoring duel.
••• THEN HE STOPS AND LOOK S FOR AN OPEN RECEIVER •..
Brujn Kenny Booker came into the
game midway through the final period
and throttled Petrie the re.st or the way.
Meanwhile, Vallely an d Rowe got the
Bruins to within a point, 75-74, before
Wicks dropped in his winnlng jumper.
Don't Bet on SA Opening;
Rams Reactivate Bass
ARCADIA -The chief neogtiator for
the Federation of California Racing
Associations says track operators are
ready to up lbeir ante to setUe a strike at
Santa Anita.
Attorney Sidney Korshak said Monday
that "while we are now ready to make
some movement in our offer, what we
have in mind is nowhere what Local 280
of the pari.mutuel clerks have in mind
for a settlement."
Callfornla Horse Racing B o a r d
chairman Bob Flour said the state board
will force .a meeting if the parties do not
come to terms by Saturday.
Although entries were taken Frida{
and Saturday at Santa Anita, track
General Manager Fred H. Ryan said
there would be no further carda until a
gettlemenl.
"Santa Anita can open within 24 hours
after we accept entries again," Ryan
aald.
Offldal1 u y, however, there would be
about 48 hours' delay form the time any
agreement ls reached until the horses run
again. • LOS ANGELES -Running back Dick
Bass, the Loa Angeles Rams' all-lime
lead.Ing rusher who missed the entire Na·
tloul Football League season with a leg
tnjwy, wu react\vated Monday as the
team flew to Miami for the Playoff Game
ogllnat Dallu Saturday.
Baas replaces another veteran, Tommy
Mason. who suffered a shoulder aepara·
tion in the 23·20 Joss to the Minnesota
Vikings Saturday in the NFL Western
Conference lltle game.
Bass pulled a leg muscle in the pre.
6ea50D drills. • PORTI.ANO, Ore. -Oregon, trailing
by 10 points with 7:29 to play, rall ied to
overcome \Vashington State 66-57 Monday
night and gain the final s of the Far West
Basketball Classic.
Oregon, the defending tourna ment
champion, will meet Washington in th@
finals . The tenth-ranked Huskies downed
Oregon Slate, 85-65, earlier be:Core a
crowd of 13,3»-the largest slngle night
audience since the Classic began 14 years
ago.
Earlitr, Soolhem Caliiomla stopped
Temple, 58-53, and Il linois whlpped Mich-
igan Stale, ~77, In consolation. • LAS VEGAS -Santa Clara shocked
previously unbeaten Houston, 85-63. and
host University of Nevada Las Vegas
rolled up a 100.90 victory over UC Santa
Barbara Monday night in the opening
round of the HoU day Classic basketball
tournament.
11le team• meet In the tournament
linalJ tonight.
AAU Climbs on
SAN FRANCISCO CAP) -Bill Toomey
has set a world decathlon record and
owns lhe 1968 Olympic gold medal In 11111
event.
1'hOM two facts, he says. appear to
have made him fair game in the
quicksand debate. over what an amateur
ath1ete may and may not do.
The only answer to the persistent pro-
blem, Toomey thinks, is a complete re-
evaluatlon ol the rules gover,ning
amateurism.
Here to publicize his competition In a
new ~ent, the Indoor penthathlon, at the
All·Amerlcu Ga~ indoor lra<k and
fitld met\ at Ute COw Palace. Jan. S.
Toomey told ol his lotest bureoucraHc
nJrl"in witb national officil.b.
Toomey, who Ml his ...,.Id d<cathlon
........i early this month, was .,ked by a
telev!Jlon nel1nrl to llO to New Yort to
participate in a year-end sports show.
He was not J>8.id, « eoune -amateur
rule.!I forbid this.
Alt.hough the network paid for his plane
trip. hotel room and mea.l.s, Toomey ac-
tu11lly lost money on the trip, since, he
had lo drive to the airpOrt and pay ror
cab f3re5 and other Incidentals.
"I had just llOll<n married the day
••• SPOITING A MAN HE COCKS ANO FIR,ES.
Toomey's Back
before,'' he said. "and ll "'IS a heck of a
way to spend the clay after a wedding,
but I thought the exposure fJ"ack vtould
1et w<>uld be good ...
Officials of the Amateur Alhletk Union
felt otherwise.
"I got In big trouble wllh lhe AAU,"
Toomey &aid. "\Vhen 1 got bflck home T
goLr phone call. When you r.et a world
record you never gel a phone c11!1 or even
a letter.
"T.Qey wantt!d to know why T had p:one
on the 6how. why I hadn 't cleared It "'ilh
them and !old me 1 11ad to clca.r
eve~ with them. 1 don"\ know
\\.'hether it's over yet."
Toomey declared ru1et governing
Amateurism need modification, 5a)'log. "l
believe that amateur rules today pmh too
many people out of competition when we
ought to he trying to find ways to pt
people into ll.
"The re-evaluatJon could bC started on
how can we keep from tKcludlng peopte.
Too many guys quil too soon, but not
because they want to.'"
Tr:on1ey ~id the burdrn of rahdng n
ram1ly often force.1; athlelf5 inte> oc·
cupations that destroy lhcir a1nakur
stjnding.
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OUl OF REACH -Newport Harbor Hil!h's Nels
TahU (22) tries to outjump Monte Viste's Jim Bris-
tol during semifinals play in the Newport Optimist
DAILY 'II.OT stiff..,_.
tournament. Bristol won the duel, however, and so
did Monte Vista.
Tourney Finals Tonight Vikings Trip
Newport Harbor Upset; La Salle; Face
Costa Mesa TriumphS
By ROGER CAIU.§ON
Of tlM: Dtlly ,.ii.I Stiff
Monte Vista H1gh upset the dope sheet
Monday night In the eighth annual New-
port Harbor Optimist InvitaLional bas-
ketball tournament with a 73-65 win over
Newport Harbor to earn a berth in the
finals tonight with Antelope Valley.
'I1te two will pair off at 8:30 after the
tatter did in La Jolla, 81-58, in the other
aemifmal game at Costa Mesa High.
Newport will meet La Jolla at 7 for
third place honors.
Costa Mesa battled back with a 63-56
decision over Kofa High and will meet
Victor Valley at 5:30 for the consolation
title.
Kofa and Yuma meet at 4 after Yuma
fell. to Victor Valley, 5.1-50.
The Newport-Monte Vista affair was
a tension·packed thriller and in the end
it was the Monarchs' ability to keep their
poise along with a steady procession of
sharpshooting from the field that tWTied
the tide. Despite trailing almost the entire game,
Newport grabbed a 63-{ll lead with 2:35
to go on Dave Eccles' shot from under.
neath. That, however, was the last of the
goodies for Newport as the Invaders
from San Diego came back with two
quick baskets off a Newport turnover
and an offensive foul.
That gave the winner 11. 65-63 lead and
then the Sailors threw away what chance
they had with a foul and two technical
fouls with 51 seconds lefL
The Monarchs capitalized on those
mistakes and scored again on the ensuing
Inbounds play to win going away.
Newport was hurt in the first half by
1 plaguing 2-2-1 tone press and trailed
by as much as 12 in the second period.
Chuck Bridges and Scott NevUle cmt·
bined to wreak havoc on the Kofa offense
to give coach Emil Neeme's outfit a
commanding 27-17 lead with 6:43 to go
in the half after holding a narrow 12-11
lead in the first period.
And the Mesans needed all of the cush-
ion they could get, as Kofa made a run
at them late in the game to pull to within
two points (58-56).
Haw-ever, the crisp free throw shooting
of Austin (who had 22 for the afternoon)
and Bridges put it out of reach in the
final 69 seconds.
Mesa was cold from the floor again
(23 of 71 for 3Z.3 percent) but Kofa didn't
burn the. nets either (21 of 54 for 38.8
percent).
Neville finished with 16 points (includ·
ing the only three Mesa field goals of the
fourth period) while mates Tim Salios
and Alan Moore netted eight each.
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West Covina
COVINA -Marina High bargod inta
the consolation &emifinals of the 16th an-
nuaJ Covina C hr I s t m a s invitation.al
basketball tournament after tripping up a
toug!l La Salle oo1fil, '13-73, Monday.
Thus c:oadl Jim Stephens' Vikings met
West Covina at the Covina gym this
afternoon at 3.
Offldals raked Marina and La Salle
with 52 pe1'30Ml fouls in Monday's play
and It was nearly fatal for the Sunset
League representatives In the classy 32-
t.eam affair.
But the steady play of Ray StraUord
and Mark Crookrite settled the issue.
Center Kipp Baird ran into foul trouble
at the OtUet, picking up rour f(IJls In the
first slz minutes of the first period.
He wasn't used again until midway
through the final quarter and he saw only
limited action before fouling out with
seven points,
Stratford load his second good effort in
a row, rattling the nets for 18 points
while Rick Mosier was high for Marina
with 21 before fouling out in the third
period.
Cronkrite led the Vikes In rebounding
with 18 and hlt sil: ol slz vital free throws
in lhe final period ta seal the verdict
M1r1M <nJ UI 19119 IFJl
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Tuesday, Ottembfr !O, 1969 DAILY PILOT Jil
UCI Blows ·13-point Lead;
Falls in 3 Overtimes, 86-8~
I
By BOWARD I. BANDY
Of Jflt De~y _ '''-' St.ff 11toy blew the Ud off lbe j!ressure
cooker that wu the UC Irvine gymna.
slum M~ night and when the pot
bolled ovtt, Northern Arizona's Lumber·
Jacki hid stewed the host Anteaters Jn
triple overtime, fl6.M.
The end result left a near capacity
Cl'9wd llmD and gasping as the Anteaters stag~ a furious 1ast'1'iltch scoring effort
under the Arizona basket.
When time ran out, at least three
attempted shots had been thwarted and
the winoen were uonerated of any
personal fouls-much to the dismay of
partlsan UCI fans, players and coaches.
Four of the siJ: points scored by Ari-
zona in the final overUme period came
at the free throw line as the visitors hit
rive of nine attempts at the line in this
five-minute stanza.
Bob Lucid knocked tbe Ud off the
cooker with siJ: seconds remaJ.ning. He
attemped a sbot from 10 fe,t' out with
the ;;core knotted at 84-84, but was fooled.
Hittiq botb ~ttemp~1 he erased a val·
iant Anteater effort tnat saw UCI lead-
ing moot of ·the night.
UC Irvine took command early in the
acUon with Jeff Cun{tngham hitting 21
poinla 1n the first half: The lead mounted
to 39-ZS with three minutes remain.Ing
Jn the baU and at intermissjon Jt waa
~-The Anteatera used .a fulkou.rt pres,.
ing defense and connected on 50 percent
of lbeir field goal .auempta wilb a driving
offense.
When the teams returned ff'I" second
half play, UCl turned to a ball control
type of offense, holding the ball near
m.ldcourt, walUng for the Lumberjacks
to come out and leave a man open under
Lhe basket.
Instead, Ariz.ona closed the 11p slowly
as UCI cooled off. The taller vlsltor1
foret!d turnovers and bad passes without
shots and pulled even at 69-69 with 2:42
remaining.
~~11 Moore SC<lred a layup with 2:10
left and Walter Mannon hit a IS.foot
jump shot with 1 :02 to play to end the
regulation time scoring at 71-71.
Jn the first overtime period, each team
missed a pair of free throw attempts and
the Anteaters missed the only shot from
the floor with five seconds remaining.
.UCI controlled the tip in lhe second
overtime · and Steve Sabina hlt a 12·
footer on the baseline. Mannon came
right back to knot th& count at 73-73.
CunniDgbam then load four allempts al
the free throw line. hit only two, and µ+
wiMers came on to pull ahead, '77-7~~
Sabina again knotted the count at 71,.
Tl and CuMlngbam scored on a 21>-f"'ll
jump shot with 1: 11 remabting to give
UC! a ~Tl edgt.
Wllb 45 tee0nd1 left, Lucid hll a pair
of free throws to force the action into a third overtime session.
Mike Williams of Northern Arfiona
was named most valuable player in tht
tourney. Team mate Don Rather was on
the all·tourney team along with Cunning-
ham and Sabins of UCI ; EmetS!)n CMr
ol San Fernando State; and Doug DUJlo
tap of Occidental.
San Fernando defeated Cal state
(Fullerton) for third place, 81-79; OcCi·
dental handed Chapman a 102-89 defe&t
for fifth ; and Cal Poly (Pomona) defe&
ed Tahoe, 128-104 for seventh place. ·'.
UC lrwlnt (U) Mlrtlllni ArlAlll IU>J. ''""',, """ ... c-~•m 11 10 2 J2 WUlllm• 1 J • W'
MoOr• J 5 4 IS A:;a!Pi¥ I I • 17 81Wllf'IOhlrT1 I I 3 2 Ol!lllrdtllden 0 I 3 ., s.111~, 1s •nM1,_ tastr
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Encl llrsl o......,Jme: UC lr•lne '1, No. ArllOlll 11l
Eftd ~ awrllme: UC 1 ..... 1ne 1', .Na. Ari-i'!
GRRRRRRR -Jeff CUnningham (41) of UC! seems
to be growling as he charges a loose ball during the
championship clash of the annual UCI tournament.
Jn the background is mate Bill Moore. Seen for
DAILY PILOT ,,_It llJ Ue ,,,_ ·•
Northern Arizona, which overcame a 13--point de-....
licit to win in three overtimes, are Ted Russell (44) ~
and Don Ralber (32). "
. ..
• .
Estancia Routs Friars, 60-43~
By CRAIG SHEFF
01 tt1t DaJIJ l'Ult Stiff
What a dillerence a couple of days
make. •
Beotcn by Servtt. Salurday nighl.
Estancia High'• basketball team turned
rlgbl ara:md and walloped the same club,
6-0-43, Monday night in the f;rsl round ol
the Brea tournament.
The Eagles now meet Brea Friday
night at 6:30 In the &emifinals. Brea
defeated Neff, 81-62.
In games tonight, Laguna Qeach
tangles with El Dorado at 6:30 and
Mission Viejo tests Soncl'a at 8. •
Coach BJ.JI Wetzel's Estancia fit
generally lacked consisteocy in the S>
loss to Servite in. the Troy tourney Satur;
day, but the Eagles put it au together
Monday.
F.ccles led coach Dave Waxman's aaiJ.
ors in scoring with 18 followed by Lee
Haven (15) and Nels Tahti (12).
Mesa's move into the consolation cham·
piooship game came on the heels of 10me
fine shooting by forward Bob Austin
along with a pair of guards who demor·
.i1lzed the Kings late In the rirst quart.er.
and Into. the second stanza with key
steals and subsequent layups.
Saddlehack, Golden West Cagers Fall
E9tanc1a parlayed some good boartl
work by S.S center Skip Wiiliams ail
forward Steve BuUer with good floor
games by Gary Orgill and Mike Hays into
the victory,
Down lH In the waning moments of
the first quarter, Estancia got its fut
brealt going and spurted ta a 25-~
baUUme lead . ··
BARONS, SANTIAGO
VIE IN TOURNEY
Action 1et.t under way today and
tonlghl rn the fir;;! rooncl of the fourth an-
nual 5antlago High Holiday lwkeU>all
toumam<nl wUll Fountain V a 11 • y
n:~ the host C&valiers at 8:30 In the
fealure un.
The pair1np' Tod.1;y
3:30 -Foothill vs Lynwood
5 -Westmin:J ter vs Bolsa Grande
7 -Buena Park vs Tu!tln
8:80 -Santiago vs Fountain Valley
'
Toomemmt baskelbaU play for lbe
1969--70 season concludes today for Sad·
dlebacl< and Golden West Colleges all«
both clubs were dealt de.feats Monday.
Saddleback fell lo Laney of Oal<land.
70-67, in the lernifinal! of the College <i
the De>ert Joorney and will foce Bulle Jo.
day at 4:35 ln a third place battle.
Gokten West was upended by Palomar,
84-TI, In an afternoon COMOlaUon contest
In lbe Rlvenlde Clly College toorney.
'!be RlOS!len were ;;cheduled ta med nM·
perlal Valley loday al I.
'The Gauchol and Laney balUed on
even tenn1 throughout the game with the
Oakland squad maintaining a three to
ftve-point lead. Laney led at the half, 45-
41. I
Randy La'""""' pacod Saddleback
~·ith 22 point!. Cam Smith chlr In 17
and Eric OrtsteNen had 14.
Only 28 penonaJ foub were called fn
the game with coach Roy Stevena' club
cited JO times.
Golden West led tlnugh most of the
flnt baU, bul Paloo!or jumped ta a 3WtJ
PIRATES HOST
EAST LA TONIGHT
<nni• Coast College'• bukelball twn
bas thrft more chino« lo get on the
winning track, prior ta lbe ;;tart of the
Soolb Colst Conference season Jan. 7.
Coach Herb Uvsey'1 club, now 3-8,
host.a East LA tonight, travel to Riverside
Frld11.1 and are at home Saturday against
Chaffey. The openina: leagu6 clash ii
agaln!t Fullerton on the Hornets' <'OUrt.
halfllme advanlslf" wtUo a pair of quick
basl<.,t;1.
The Rustlers regained the Jead early In
lbe secood baU and held on •lghl-poln\
advantage with nine minutes to go. At
this juncture top rebounder Dave
Harding commltled his fourth foul and
·~a:: ou~ecl ' to cat.ch the
Rustler• with five minutes ltft. The lead
then changed httnds seven tJmes before
lbe wlruKn ])dilled DUI lo their final
mar:iin-Gold .. Wetl WU hurt by the lOSJ of
three regulars via foals tn the final 41,)
m\mrtes. HatdlOI bod his fifth personal
called just alter getting back into the
game while tap KOttt Chris 'Thompson
went to &be bench with four minutes re-
malnlna. Jeff Power• wu cited for hls
fifth foul a minute later.
Thompson Jed both teams In scoring
'
with 30 points. Powers bad 1J and
Harding followed with 10. PalomDI had
four players in double figures,
s.M-.cti 11n "'"" 11., fltlJlf" t111"' ,, ·-... l.IWI'-• Chrlll-
l-1'1111
Smltfl
Liller
IOt 1~ )J I 1
14112D11"-r 11•1t 5,th l(,,...,i., ,,,,
4111Lotltl 'Oii 1Jll1A;ll'!OI 01 1 1
too•T¥1er 1111
Wa!k'r • o • n WIUll,,,. 1 0 t If
ToUI• ,. II 10 17 Tol•t1 n • II l'O
H1Hllll'l9 Kl>nt u....., .&s. kddltOKll 41.
Ollfftl WMt f711 ,,-..,. flO
fl II " fp fl fl llf r, 81ITlft l J ISl!mtny lt12
C.Ombl IJtfMty tSJU
Nl<CllflO I I J 10 A,.I'\ t f I I
,Dwtrt • 0 5 U F1~11!11tr ' I ( U TJlclmt1W11 10 10 J .J:) IOfar~t I S J 11 G,...," t004Hlefl9 J f )U
Wedt 11t J C.rf '''' ... ~111 1•1•(••11tf" ,,,,
DrHtl 1 0 I t Ouwrrl.rl 6 S I ~
Tot•ll fl JS 24 11 Toi.ti l't 1' JI 14
H•lllln"lt KOfll Peion-& GolM!I w .. 1 #,
Servile tallied the first two polnts~the second half, but the Eagles then put '
lock on the game with 12 s~raJght po r '
and a commanding 37-2Q lead mldwa
through the third quarter.
. IIolll clubs shot pocrly. Estancia coa~
nected on 23 ol 72 attempt.a: few 31.9 pet4 •
cent. A hot lhlrd quarter ( e1&bt for !fi:
wM the dlffe:rence. Servile could only ~ on 11ofea1hoU (25 percei1). i
Orgill topped all scartts with 18 polnll ,
including eight of nine froin the ;;;;:JI
throw line. Willlams hit H. • • ..,
111-11 UOI hrrltt ft.:J
Of'tl!I , ~ ~ 'r. Mlt\9f ' ~ ': ~ 1 111i.i' I I 1 I 1-r,i., 4 I I 11>
Willi.IN ' J 4 1• G~f'911 • O t 12
H·r. • I • I Ll.W I • 1 I
'""'• 30• 4 0vrln IOt f ~ Het!tr J11t krrnovr Giil. ~n.wQll~•ur 1 I I J C.mpen•r• O o 1 l ei
Ktr•lf,, I 0 J 6 O'C"~llH111t O 1 O J
"Tl"lnlJt; ' • , Tot•!\ n t• ,, .. 101"' 11 , ,, k•rt 'Y ovattln . n ,, "
II I IS It -• "-r ~
'
I
18 lloULY PllDT
It's Still
Bad Time G~in~. to Bo_se P~rade
:€J For Italy
•
•
Now
Earn %
lnte,... Pllld Qu•rterly-No Long-Tenn Requirement•
You-.... 11m11o-. hlGl>er rate Of S% ~ ... MOll'la Plan $5,000 Int •m stt c.ttncatM.. funds pt1eed by January 15th wtn Mm rrom
......., 1• el llt tllfl 8!(, Ille. fnttllll 11 paid by checlc II Vie ond Of
.... 02'1 fr quarter.
-., 1918, Monti Plan todoy lllo -oxOMdlno 1145 ""'11on
ond 7•-lllnlughout Co/lfomlL
Morris Plan
Newport BHeh -3700 Newport Boulevard -673-3700
NOnea e" ..,. • .,.. 'TO ,,.,...,
1• TM IA&AI Ofll ALoCOMOA.K
al'YtltAitlS r
-----------------' ----_,
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL Nt9riCE LEGAL NOTICE •
•
• •• • • .Ewry-HM
~thing n..t
•-a..w.m
• • HOUSES FOR SALE' HOUSES FOR SALf; ' HOUSES FOll'SALE HOU~e:S l'OR 54L! HOUS.lS l'OR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE · HOUSES FOR SALE
General '1000 General fieo Generel 1000General 1000 Huntl,.it'" ~ch 1400 Huntington Beech 1400 Fountlln Valley 1410 i-----~S~A;--;L~E;;;S;;A~~~·E;;;N:;------i;jijiiiiimiiliiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii 81~1~~~~: ;~:!~s2 r:i ASSUME '
LOW INTEREST
FOR LEASE
Sharp l + family roo1n In
1runtin11on Beach, \\"esl Qt
Newland north oJ Hanlilto11.
$220/mo.
•· NEW HOME & ""· Compl•to ly
Jl,fE.SA DEL ?YIA'R YOUR
BEDROOt.IS, lal'gt" li\'in&:
roon1, ramily roo1n and built.
in kilch<'n . JI.las ter bedroom
off lo i1self \\'ilh Its own
private bath. R.eN>nUy pro.
fessiolllllly repainted ins1de
al'ld out, Fully carpeted and
drapt.'\I, Covered patio and
fenced ylll'd, Priced to scU
at only $28,SOO . Tenns.
Would you like to
1n 1970 with less
and an xiety?
IMMEQIA TE MOYE IN ··•modolw. $2.i,500. , .... 210 day~. ~5-~ ews,
Eve~s Call S.Jj..SJCS
Lease at S3j() with option
lo buy. l.:..vely Newport
Bcacl\.4 + family room +
dining room with view of
Back Bay. Vacant now.
V;il'a nt clean 4 bclrn1 .
$265/nio.
earn more
frustration
THE REAL ESTATERS
offer• you •••
4 BDRMS 11/2 BATHS
1/4 MILE FROM BEACH
S20,990
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Ccill Now 962-1353
•Generaus Commissians
Proflt-sharinCJ bonus
•Activity CJ•nerated by
Plus ---Newpor~~h 1200 Lido lsle _____ l3_51
NEED 240 C-2 Feet? BAYFRONT
Have 8-30' lots v.•/ varyil•g HOMES
impl'ovments a nd ttnts. Nr1v or older, 1vith piers
U~ ·a., i.!i' or build Jge & slips, 3 BR. to 6 BR.
development. S22,500 ea . f rom $149,500 "' consistent advertisinCJ
and pramotfan R. C. GREER, Realty W•lker Riiy. 675-5200
CAMEO SHORES ,......................... "" Via Lido 673.9300 '366 v;, Udo. NB °"'" Soo.
$650 DOWN *PrestiC)e and inltCJrity KIDS RUN DellL'<e View t ronir ADUL~ WALK You G.l. Buyers, here is an • ~ Lo~~,:i~e:1~nd ur1po1·1uniry. Use your bcnC'-*Contiriuous TraininCJ pro9ram.10 thr ocean &. live in •hi~
fits on tlus sha1"' 3 bedroo111 :I Udrn1. 2 1 ~ bath spacious 2 Bedrooms, conv. c1r11 Y Ciliforn1a RaochO. 2 lu.-.:ur· honlC', SJl,g:,()
Bca"';ru1 P•~1"'• ;""' ~""'· 11m<1wood noo•·•. Phone RANDY 1McCARDLE Greham Riiy. 646-24;4 :.! Fireplace~ Uscrl brick Jircplacl'. Separ· N"ral' Ne11·porl Post OHke Large dining 10001 S 4 6 2 3 1 3 189,:.00 "• lBx22 tamilnoom. Goo;-• GLORIOUS SPOT
Lis ted E .... chisively With eous modern kitdlen. Seller Bay. View abounds. J Br. 2
ha!! transferred. House is Right Now ba., BI, kit, Condom. Vie1v
vacanl and he will pay all For canfidenti1I interview Terr., Pool. Gd. terms poo-
your costs. We'll see if sible. $65:0M. Incl. vicv.'!
!:~-ep~:l.i1ied on a $2~.500 Gener1I 1000·1 Gener1I 1000 R. C. ORE.ER Realty
WE SELL A HOME I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;:;.J .;;;;;:;:;;;;;;:;:;:;;;;;!;""~'·~,,~v~;a~L~!do~=,.;'"~~~9300:<JC
EVERY 31 MINUTES FOREST E. ASSUME GI LOAN REDUCED TO SELL 3 br.
Walker & Lee 0 L S 0 N ~;~m~'S,,~'~w:.";;,._~~ 1-:::::::=::::=:::z::t l bdnns 1~~ bath. lmml'di-
~ngton Beach 1400
TOTAL PAYMENT
$133 PER MONTH
Beautiful :l bedroom, :l bath
hon1r. freshly painted. Gt
loan or $16,COO. Evrrypne
qualities to assuine al 5~~ ':"a
annual rate. Service Area.
Double Garage, Forced air
hf'al. Con1pletely fenced.
Ne111 deep pile carpets
lluoughOUl. FULL PRICE
$l3,900.
WE SELL A HOME
EVERY 31 MINUTES
Walker & Lee
Apt1. For Sele 19'0
6 ~-4-6-12 or 24 units.
\Valk IO beaC:h. Apprec.
!atil~ an!a. By Owou/
-B.ldr. Undbori Co.
-53&-2579
l(cNrALS
_ Hou1•1 Furnished
Rentals to Shire ·2005
SHARE ba~helor he aven
111ith 3 con~rnia l pro-
fessional n1en. S l r a i g h t .
Send refet'Cl\CC!I to Bo.'< 4Zli,
lrvil"ll' 92664
$50 each, 3 or 4 men to
share lg. home in bee.ch
area. Blue Beacon, 64:>--0lll,
C.:0.1.
1·2 ~~Er-.IALE roon1-malcs
!X"edcd to shatt 3 &inn 2
Bath housr Bal. Isle $56 1110.
673-7711
4 Br. 2-story hou~ to share
11·ith 2 or 3 guys. Laguna
Beach, Ol.'('a.nview, sunde<:k
$:JO nio. 494--8773
Costa Mesi 2100
EXECUTIVE hon1e -2800 sq.
H. ~ BR. fam rm, frplc.
Jjx~O pool; 11•ater-pool
nu1in!. & gardener. 6 mos
plu,; ll·asr. 54~241J
Newport Bt1ch 2200
DAILY 'ILOT
HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE
IOOOGonerel 1000 "< iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii!iiii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil );;I
WHAT'S IN A NAME
Well. it's a tunny name, but an elegant
home. Orellano is the name •.. and the
home ••. 4 Bdrm., 3 bath, lam. rm., formal
dining room. The O\Vners oC this $39,800 home
have b een lranst"erred. Hurry and name your
terms.
MARKET FIRST
Hall of fan1e lamll y home. Sparkling pool,
and \Varm \valnut panelling adds to the
charn1 of this r-o-o-m·y 5 ~rm. home. Own·
er says "sell.'" Priced in midwthirties. Call
now fo r your inspection appointment.
REAL AMOR
Is yours \Yi th this 4 Bdrm., 2 bath home with
private master bedroom suite. Gigantic lot
'"ith a see forever vie\v, Fireplace, electric
bu ilt-ins and covered patio. $33.000 on your
terms. \'our New Year's retreat.
SAIL AWAY TO VALHALLA
But don 't leave Newport until you have seen
th is beachy cu tie. 2 Bdrm., den, l* bath.
$26,500 and th e owner wants enough down
only to cover his costs o{ sale. Move in as
you like, but don't delay.
2629 Harbor Blvd., Casta Mesa
546-8640
HouJM Unfurnished HouMI Unfurnished
' ··~ -·-·~
·. ,,
' '
'\
,,.
' '" ''·
,,
. '
:r
•
. '
. ....
1• -----2790 llarbor Blvd. at Adanis ate possession. Good strccL Newport Heights 1210 LINDA ISLE fH5..9-19l Op<'n 'ti\ 9 Pl\! Gl loan with lo1Y payrQent . -' w•
''"· Roaltor> '"' '°''' '°"'"· SPANISH HACIENDA
76S2 J::tlinger
11-12-1-05 0JX'n 'til 9 pr-,1
CONDOMINIUM
r!REPLACE. Pool, 7 bdr., 2
Ila.. patio, adults. Bayside
K•NTALS I RENTALS
Gener.11 3000 Me11 Verde 3110 .:ti f,'
john macnab
1714 I 642-8235
University Perk · 1217
BAYFRONT $23,500 Ete<'"' • but 0<"0oom;<0I.
One of a kind: !ht' only JK'IV 3 UNIT'S TRIPLEX Call loday to St>e lhi.'l 3 BR .
v.·atcrfront: hon1c in this ·· · home In Prime Area,
price range, 11lth 52 tl. ol EAST SIDE Ntwport . Only ~.000
ooytro"'· o ""~' b<droom,, $29,950 EARNS $5.800 at Greh•m Rlty •. 646-2414 ~tep-down Ji1·i ng room v.'ith Eastslde Costa l\lesa, Span-Near Newpoit .Post"Office
firrplarr. 1-lasrcr bath com· iSil tile roof, 1'('ntals on largt' Tl'Cmcndous valut'! ! :~ large Victoria
pletr 1vi1 h ~auna . Pirr & slip, 77xl50' lot, lncoinc $J8j . units. 2 bedroom and 2 ba!hs rach. Deluxe kitchen 11"ilh 646-8811 ,\sking SlQj.()1)1)_ 0J)C'n daily: month. Our best income 1-e.
!C6 Linda Isl<· Dri1·!'. turn in area. bu ilt-i ns. Only S9,CIOI) down Anytime
'"d i·u.\it 7 ''"' i oun". Lu.x. l :::;;====~~==I FRESH AS A DAISY E xclusive With " -•t h · lll'Y carpeting an{I drapes An appe11,.1 ng young nrne 111
Newport thJ"oughoul . r-.·Tan t t:urf"d DOW·NTO'WN . pe1·lect taste; unbeatable
grounds. Enclosed garagl'S. valul' -perfect location. 3
Village. Until July 1st. S200. VACANT 5 BR, 3 BA, !iv rm,
Call {213) 222-4309 Or 673-din rm, fam nn. l.s&option 3 bdrn1s 2 baths, 2 years r1-119. $325. 546-1713
new. $29,700 ·has assumable ~-------~ '=~~~-~~-VA loan 6o/v interest, $191 7101 Seashore J?r. Large 4 $250. 3 BR !'Nice. ~j acre
per month including taxes. BR, 2 BA. Avail J~11 l·July horse ranch. Children &, Pet
1350 sq ft, large living ,mm l.? ~ nlO. famll! only, OK. Bkr. 5.14-ti980
l\'llh fireplace, built · in ~--•671 • 1213) 524-9557 $60, 1 BR. UHi pd. Baby OK.
111n.c", o" c n. dishwasher. Broke?' 534-5980 18.'\23' pa tio, iilr 1-oot. block Corona del Mir 2250
ll"all, l:.i11<lscapc<.I, 1\l:'";t 1o a ~ Bit, 3 BA $-IOO. tmmcd. Cost• Mes• 3100
:!l acrr pad;, s1l'imming avail. Lsc or i\lu. or unfun1. ---------
pools. 11'c1-cation bl~. Your fi07 Begonia. 67::i-002J
best bet ! 67.-1-4186. DESIRABLE
HOM!:: \){ll Dover Drivr. Suite 120
l\pwport Beach
THE MOST
FOR VERY LITTLE
at
Victoria
646-8811
(anytime)
Pl"icl'd no11· at S36,9jO. Se<: C.r.t. Oose to City firk & br, 2'"' ba I-fan1 1·n1.
today. Dial s~;,.ooro. ~~~~l~~in:h:!a~~~s2. ~; ~~~5:ii!'..'.May l show you gf~-
. 645 0303 frnced lot, hard1,·ood floors, • .. d h•11 -235$
$375 1no/yrly. Avail J an .
3rd. 2 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, 2
pa1ios, dock. Adultis only,
673-7880.
2 Br .. 2 ba. cptd, drps, foN.'ed
air heat, Garb-disp, bi t-ins,
lrplc, patio, gara~r. 1vater
Cum. Adult.s only no pets.
jive bcdroon1s _ a giant n1as-I!!!!!!~~~~~"'."!!!!
tc1· brdroon1. Lai~<' family NEWPORT
l'OOfll 11i1h a 11•ct ll<ir ·for·
n1;ll dining roon1. Cardrn HEIGHTS
kilc!K>n. v.f'~Y l"l;.>an. A cor-Owner Will Finance
ncr Jot · 2'.('0 sq. fl. Pndr 2 Bedroom home on a 101 anti
or o\1"nC'rsh1p a1va, 11alk .to 1h • JOO ll from fashionable
schools. $.1.300 rlown -S.12,950. Clitr Dr. Double garag<' -r-
546-2313 double carport. 6 JI. brick
' • Ht atilator lireplacc. fl'llll •. . r .•. ' .. ·1 PRIDE at Harbor C~nlcr lJ'CCS Cle. Priced right at ,,., """°' s1'd., ·.c.,L ·s22,7·.50
RATE REASONABLE
Across from Country O ub
275 f.fl!sa Dr. • Ph. 548-6706 1969 Volume
$145.S Million
4 Units-Balboa
-$62,500
REALTY
Un iv. Park Cenll'I', 'lrvinf'
Call A.nytiin{' 833..(1820
1238
A lliily deligh)ful home. 3
largC' bdrn1s., 2 full balhs, Lo1guno1 Be1ch 2 BR. l \li BA, lrg !iv rm. w/
fani. • din. t'1Tl. Sit.<Jown for-!rplc, ideaJ for entertaining.
270$
n1ica bar. Fully cp\'d. Rear BCautiful 2 BR for lease Jan. Lrg~ lot. Sl!KI m,o. furniture
.t: sidr yd. con1pl, cnclos:'.'d t 10 June Jj, $22:i mo. 3."i7 avail. No pets. 2 chi1d1-en
by 6 f!. block 1\·aJI fence. t.IO!\S,' Phon" r-.·Jcl Curland, ok. 67:>-1573
TRANSrERED: must !!ell Enjoy !his 1Z'x30' covered 49~-7;)(1..1 bus. hrs. LARGE, clean, 3 Br, fan1ily
!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!..,;!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! our beaucll·· hon1e in Uni· p11tio rm· outdoor Jiving, Fu!l ---. ~ rm, bit-ins, clirpeting. Walk
$25.960 r p1ice $23,000. FHA or VA ,Y.1cation Rent1l1 2900 to store11 & school~.1230 mo.
3 Br. 2 BA, lge tam nn. $3JS
month.
.. S46-4593 * ,..,,.-,----..,...,..~, .,. 4 Bedroom home, 2 bath, · ~·_,._
hfesa Verde. Vacant. $300.
mo. "-nt. 540-4141 '! • ---~"--------· .. :-!:
Newport Beach 3200 J •~
. ADULTS ONLY .r 3 Bdrn1s 2 batM, split level,
2 car garage. Avail, Jan. 15
or Feb. l. $275/mo.
Bay " Beach Realty, Inc.
901 Dover Drive, Suite 126 NB · n1
66-DIO Ew:1. 548-6966
' 2 BR. 2 ba., den, din, l'09ftJ,
In Cliffhavf'n. $300 1.n
Gf'orge WilliammJi, Realtor ".ht
613-4350 67l-1564 Evft : -.;-,,
LOVELY tt11vnhse 2 BR, 2
BA. Frplc, new cpts..' Jm-
med. poi;s, i200. Act . 101
646-0732 !' i
\VATERF RONT-3 Bdrm. 2 •
Bath. Slip, Sandy Beach. •);1
$.350 JI.Jo. up. (1) 774-1241
\\"till 11•i th aJIC'y entrance.
Room for boat & trailer. pool
or add-on. 01\'ner v.ill caIT)'
l st TD .• @ 7.Z5o/o • or 11ill
carry :!nd • Top value plus
1\ rC'al money. n1aker, in e:>:·
cellenl condi1ion and fully
fumished. Vf!ry close to ~s1
bay & ocean beaches. Good
financing available.
vcn:ity Park. 1ile roo , 4 o .. . avail. Cal l 545-8424 ( pen 546--9222 or 545-4354
5 BEDRM . ._ ~·~~~ B~ar:~.=m~;: r\/Cs.J South Coast Real Es· o~7~xEDe~n~~w!fs'i,:, 3 BR, 2 BA, Jg tam rm, pool Newport Shor• 3 TRI.LEVEL . late. privatepool,ongoUcoune, &: malntena t.Cf'. New --
'.;.,j
Just A Little Paint top tocat~o. Only '32.000.
\Valtcr Haase J baths. Plush ca11>E'ting. Corona del Mlir 1250 Priced to Sell 111~1 34&-8320 or 646-0TI9 cpts/drps, bllm, rrplc. Avail 3 BR, 2 BA. Ye arly leue,
'
·,·-,1•-. Park like p1'"'fn· ---·· no1v $275 642·2TI8 S2'5o mo. Neiv ctptl 'drpt,
~6-7171 ·~ ~~ " 3 bd1·ms 2 baths, 1500 sq n, · 541}-2001 or 642-7519 and yard 11·ork ncrtlt'tl lo sional landscaping! ~o-rno THE BEST l'Pt! 'drps, bll·ins, boar dOOr Duplexes Furn. 2975 1 Yr lease. Cute 2 Br unlum. .:~
make 1his &-year-old house TARBELL 2955 Harbor Of THi: BLUFFS in double garage ·10 fenced -~-------housf' E-side C.1\f. A1•ail U I i p k 3237 '.."'•
into a hear1-wa1111i11g hon1C'. Coldwell, Bi!nker & Co. . back yunJ. 60xl'.ID" lo!. Be· Sl4 J. 2 BR, utll pd. Nr ocean. rcb. t, 1970. Couple prefer· n vers ty er .,1 Excellent J-b<'dl"ooni, J~ 550 New~rt Center Dr. A spacious 2 BR hon1e 1v1ch 1 k 126 500 s b · Child & pct OK. Broker red. 646-6268 3 BR f 2 ,__ s-" lmlh plan: fireplace and _ ,..-Costa Mesa 1100 1·ustic bean1 ceiling. Custom oiv ryiai· cl . ' · u "111 ~3~-6.'lSO .. am. rm. -.. -..
buill·ins. \\"alking dislnncr " Newport Beach, Calif. ----·-----decorating. A p:.inora niic on tern1s .c·'~~~~-~---1HOUSE In eOOrt. Crpts, 3 BR., ra m. rm. 2 ba. $309 • " •i•·:r.-n 833-0700 644-2430 ASSUME Paul Jones Realty $125. l BR. util pd. Nr ocean. drps , carport 976'-B West 3 BR. 2 ba new tnhse. $325 .::11. lo shopping ;11\d schools; .1 '$' • ;ra• . view fron1 the living room 847-126(; E:\'r 536-&358 Oiild & pct ivclcome. Bkr. 17th St. COlta P.fesa 2 BR. 2 ba. 9 mos 1ae $290
blocks lo free1.1·ay. $26.000 II~ ..... 6010 LOAN and BR's and a private 50' "'~·• "'980 l,C.,:C.~..:.C=~~"--~ 2 BR l •-h I'~ ' " 51;. OI LOAN .......-v UNF. 3 br. 2622 D Santa Ana, · -.t I.JU 11·i1h bo1h V,\ and FllA terms 0 D "I 1 5 deck overlooking !be bay. 4 10 e ~Hill Ru.lty 333.(gJO :-'1
',·ail·•blr. POOL pen GI y • G.I . RESALE All !his plus s1.1·in1n1i11.• poal RENTALS c .r-.1. Avail Dec. 28. $145. -C:=========::.1 ··' " • . , __ .. lo ASSUr.lC, Pymnts $167/mo, Call 96" U.::A .r C I th & C Newport HeiCJhts Rustic used bnck ra.......... and .tennis club. Call us r<».N. 0 8SW0r y 0. BC'sl pool buy! l Wrm, heaJ Ch r J 3 I C' I 3 BR, lg fam rm, lg. kit. Hou1e1 Unfurnished ~~'--~~~=~ 81ck Bly 3240 ""'l deep shag carpets & cute SOI KINGS PLACE . . ircp ace • aill' about this outstanding va ue. Priced below market Sub-3 BR horne, l}j BA. $175. lst ---"------;:~ bedrooms . fam ily room and 67' "50 G I ~ & last mo + df'.....,.lt. Day• "Agent" •·r or A \\"iS<' Bu)'"
ti12-77i7
rlrco1-. Largc-pool 11"ilh 4 bdrms 2 baths. bit -ins, ~ n1it down -:lnd TD avail. enera oNVV ....,.. 2 Story Colonial 4 BR. 2% ,:
"l'ncrou:r; an1oun1 ol deck· t · J N dining rooni ·pl us scparale * BRASl'L~AR RLTY * 521-3871 OT eves 827-7694 BA Mk mo. Ref &t de.....,1t . '' ., frplc, iv1ng & am nn. cw 1\·oi·kshop • co1·e1'('d patio · ~r-I d' ! p , • ., ~
1ng. Lo1v interest loan paint job inside & out, con1pl north of back bay • cheapel' 160Ci2 Beach Blvd., 116 mme (3 e QSS. J BR, l~i Ba, nr schools. 2~05 Bonnie Pl. 758-0328
H
11v1ul. $34,:-,00. Seller anx· rptd. Ohle "al'agr,. Shake Slj.S;j(l7 Eves. 968-lli8 Children OK 660 Beach SI ,.,,....,,.,....,TIVE Hom• 5 BR, 3 •> Ten ouses ... lhan l'l'n t, Sl86. mon th in· . . ~u "' ious. roof + heated p(,ol. I I PIT! $26900 I' '00 ' ..;::::~'C=~'ii:~"7;o-WOWI. I111n1nculatc 3 bdrn1 & den. C.r-.1. Ba. Cpts, d ..... ,, elec bitnl. "!..l.' Ct . E ,., , \"I' CUll!I\ -.. "'•~ '1w VIEW THE BEST !========= •• 101ee as ii1cc oca lun e us • 5 BEOROOMS family 1wn1. all bu.ilt-ins, ---1300. "'° "740 , h down, ca.sh to loan. I "-310S ~ lo 8hops. Each onic Sl'par-64,7171 The finest in Cdi\l with 3 Br.. cus!oo1 cpts/d1·ps. Ne11-·ly re. Mtse de m.r -=========
d '
I r u-Love!.)' lg honic • VC'ry de~lr· -a!e liy g1u-agr · pat o or den, formal din, & 2.11 Ila. decorated. 1270 ""r month. · Coron• del "·r -50 able area. Bl'autiful rock .,.... LARGE 3 bdrni honie -m11 "' privacy. Lo111 interes1 · as-Ha! evl'L'Ylhing. An ocean · 557-7648, 51(),.1151.
cllannin ... 3 BR, 2 BA, W/W • '.o bl I N 1..,iiiiiiliiiiiiiii ... iiiiiiiiiiii frpk . Cheaprr Chan nc1v! family room, 2 baths fully suma c nan. 1 0 vacanC'y, i· 1860 Ne1vport. Blvd., Of view froni kit., din. rtll, &: HAFFDAL REAL TY S165. 2 Br stud)o type triplex~ carpeted,.._ all buillwim &
Lachenmyer NEEDS PAINT CAU.. ~9'18 Eves. 6~6-229(1" mstr. Br. Plush cpts I: drp:ri;. 842-4405 Bltns, 11•/1v, gar. Blue ideal location. Heavy shake
\Veil built 2 bdrm homo,,,. ==========l"""====o====1 Beaut. lndscpg. Lanai for "' 64, "lll C ,1
Rea ltor G 't R l k ·n aeon . .,..., • ·1 • roof & Immediate Ira. large double garagl', ac· ov epo ~shure. H~1'' a doo ' you $2j(), 2 Br + den on 12 acre possession. $230/month. ccsi; to rrar Yard . R-2 zone Owner Oe$perate • • '""' appy 1 you <>. HuntlnntOn . e BILL HAVEN Rlt • lot. Childre~ " pets OK. Call 545-M24 Copen rveaJ -room to bui!J. $19,750. r-.rust scll by ht or )'('ar. $219 month pays all. Spacious • r. Harbour 1405 Blue Beacon, 6·15-0111 C.i\t. South Coast Real Estate 1860 New1x1rt 8!1·d .. C:\-1
CALL 6·16-39'13 Eves. 6·16-2290 1 -::::::::::::::::::-:-:C-~·12 bdrms each side, 2 garages
DUPLEX C ZONE Trarisfl'JTed out of slate. 3 bdi'm :l batn Imme, large 2111 E. ~st, CdM · ~7?..3211 -----Take over 5~f.'ft, G.f. loan. Janiily rooin, buill-in clcc· 1018 s. i\1a1n, S.A. ~41.6613 LIQUIDATION!! Ne1v tri· $1SO. 2 BR. New 1v/w &: BUSlFSl' marketplace In
Ne11t 4 & fam. rm. w/ fully trie kitchen, firep la"cc, ci us· VIEW . THE BEST level ho111es. Prices ~lashed drps. Pl'r 8 K. town. The D~Y PILOT I• S!l<J.750 1vi1h terms.
Golfers-T•ke Note! Wells-Mccardle, Rltrs.
\\'r hav~ nrw lis1in~s of sev. 1810 Newport Blvcl., C.r-.t.
l"ral la,-gr Cus!on1 • Bui!1 548. 7729 644-0684 f'vrs.
hon\rs alon,i: th{' ra1n1·Rys _ ~ _ _ ___ _
of bcau11ful ~lesa Verdc
Coun11;· Club. lip to ~.6.10 ~q Westcliff Viii•
It &. 6 bdrm&. Call now for RarC' I 1tory 1 bdnn 2 balh
fUrlhC'l' dcla1ls. '\lining room homt. Elt·
ganl, spacious & immacu· !1~6-SBBO l;-i !e. Privatr patios • pool. fneir cintm' lht.1l1t) s4s 500 OLLEGEREALTV . .
o]SOOl•l•ttnlH• ..... Cll llaRell Really ~
CLEAN AIR ;;o; W'5tclitt Or., NB
Immac, 4 Bdrm. 2 barhs, v.1/ ~
f'lectroni c filt('ring k11tin~ 642-5200
k cooling system. Bt'aut. il-::::::;:::::::;;==== I
1011,r mailll. yard, Lge, lam.
r1n. ·eov. p&Tio, X1m cond.
lhruoot. 2 Car gar. v.·/auto.
•loor ope""r. rife.om North
&l,"ee, UJ,y rlo1flt, 1uper lln-
a~lng. $30.500.
R ;ddle & Ross 67S-7225
~COAT$
~WAL~ACt
'EALTOIU
--:S4i46-4 I 41-
(0pen Eveni,,..J LIDO SANDS
5 &EDROOMS
%11&\hs. 4r8< -1. $24, 950
$2f,f$0 FAMILY RM+ DEN ~e 'Wllli1maon 25 IL W.-'t':ml patio, Kllig
-·. REALTOR bl'droom1, 2 baths, Rt d
67J.41SO 67S.1564 Evu. blkk tlttpl.,.. Dream b111J1.
Ntw VIEW Homes !" kitchen. 23 ft . Uvl~ mi.
Do1'f'r Shores Ivan \\'(Ills' S ·1»1120
hrnnd llf'lv hon1cs; 4 bdnns. TARBEt.l 29SS Harbor
:: hn, JK1Wdcr rrn. ft1111, nn 3 BR, 2 BA, tornlly room,
1\ !rplc. (.'OUl'tyard po o Is. prof df'mr. 2 lT nldw:-:.lnt
rrorn SIC6.000. rtoy J. \l'llnt cond. $32,:;(IO. 2tl82 f'lf'Ct
Co, 1 l30 Galaxy Dr. 6*1.StiO· Lane. l·IB. f>"·~t 646--432!
rqpd, Anthony pool_ $191. tom carpeting, well land· The finest in Cdi\1 \vlth 3 Br., unbelievably to $ 3 8, 7 ::io .1 ___ B_•_~_''-'-"'-~-"°---Classified section. · S ave
incl"s. taxes & ins, 'Vide $Caped, ready to move lnto. den, formal din. &. 21,Si ba. mdrs/l\gt. 846-0609, <'Yes money, time ' ettort. Look
open for offer on Ii.sting ol Full price $25,750 1vith ex· An ocean view from klt.,l.;"';'~-<~1;:5l:,====~~===CH=A=R~G=E=IT=!===="""=="='=====:-
$J.1,9j(). ct!.llent tcnns. Heritage Rral din. rm. le mstr. Br. Plush ------2000
546.5810 Estl\Je ~ll51 foiwon eve~I cpts &, drps. Beaut. lndsep.; Gtner1I 2000General 2000c;.nerel
(lll!'Wdnema \Wt!!) OLD style Span. 3 Br, 1 Ba lanai.
UEGEREALTV hoe o• dbl lot . Rod"'"' to e BILL HAVEN, Rllr. C.flQ'O ,i\'t..( _ f)'f1 ~.Q.9
. m:IAdmMMltlfber,tll stt.ooo ror quick sale by 1111 E. Coast, CdM 673-3211 p\!;;) 1.'Q?J ~J. ~ IJ((•-;:::>
NEED MONEY?
To buy a new home! Investl-
eate our guaranteed t rade
tn plan. Let us answer your
<rnestlons with no obligation.
Fair enough!
ORANGE COUNTY'S
LARGEST
262f HARBOll .ILVD.
-54616'40
OPEN EVES TILL l :JG
Ta Buy or Sell
REAL ESTATE
67S-1662
CORBIN-MARTIN
REALTORS
3036 E. Co&.!it HIY)' .. Cdi\f
DE SPERA TE OWNER
J\f u&t mO\'t'. l bdrms 114
baths C,l\t. BetulUul back
yord. N dOl\'!1 to vt'le.rans.
DAVIOSON Rulty
~ Ew11. 549"1~
O~'nf:r. 546-.)767 lOIB S. r-.tain, ~.A. 5~1-6613 --·----·
No!'.f'!rl Bee~;-,ltoll Linda Isle 1306
for fease· "< 'or Sale so L;nd• 111. Drive
Nearing complt>tlon • 6 Br.,
. 5 Ba .. Fam Rm. le Rumpuj
Charmine:. lA.r;e 2 bdrm 2 Rm, 3 frpiC.., deck & alip,
bath hOme on channel. '1$& 250 ·
Bi!amf'<t ceilings, huge lire-L'nd' 1· ~ D 1 place, buill·ln BBQ + pier I • • • eve opment l fJORI,. BUI Grundy, 87r>3710
JEAN SMl'Oi
REALTOR
Lido Isle
UDO ISLE
1351
' f46.325j ===~===~.-Out!1!11nding CUS'rOti.t home Nf;M>ORT Jtf.::IGHTS Large v.·ith ot lll'MCK>us bedroorn~. :1
4 .bdrm 2 bath homt -dining bathl 11.·ith exceUent noor ~,! ni~=-f900mot •11
2 pllln. Oe•ia"ned "fol' privacy
... ,.. 1' · tq v.. and e&IY to exptnd, b:CEt,
ing are&-needs !?me pt.Int· l..ENT VALUE and terms at
priced lor '"1mf'd1ate We.-t f1'$ 500 $!2.500. FJIAI VA•NO WE SE\.L A HOME DOWN AVAIL. Call
......,,. topon ,,..I South EVERY 31 MINUTES .
t=~."'~"·',...1 ,., Walker :& Lee
Chr11tma~. Dix 2 BR, 2 BA ~ \Vt11 •llff Or.
lownh.te. S2Ji~:..... Xlnl 6-l&-7711
lt'tm.t. Ai::ent ~;11
DAILY Pit.Or \VANT ADS!
i-~ar Daily Piloi \Vant Ads
Dial 6'2-56'1l
The Puule with the Built-In Chuckle
four acro111bl.d W(ltds h.-
low to forfl'I four i.lmple Wbrdt.
15l1El 1
LI' I I I·''-... "'
ISOTIF I j .......... l' ........ I -.-I 'T"""1 i
IL I XE E 11 ihe mother mou•• 10>0 10 ,_.,,,.....T, ....,,......,,4.--l • her daughter, "Go ahead oml
'---'·'-""· -''--'--'-marry that rot if you wont to
I live -a -the rest of yc:iur
IHIOZAN . Iii•." 11->0 ~··==i=:·i==i==:i·==i=: ~f!:tt::.~1=· 8 PRINT NUM8El(D lfltERS IN
lHtS~ SQUAIES
., UNSCIAM&lE lfTJERS lO I
YET ANSWER
I' I' I' i! I' r I
I IA I I I I I
SCRAM·Lm ANSWERS IN "CLASSIFICATION 8100
• -
.. )•• cpta, frplc, patio, 2 car 1ar.
~ail Jan 26. ns Poinsett.a.
Open house Sat Jan 3. • ..
675-4442
2 BR, 2 BA, crpts, drpt,
[rp)C', bltns, view. 4 0 I
Acacia. (1) 712 ~0367 , ' 53il-45.'19 1-
2 BR, 1 ;~ BA dplx. Pri bch. ~
_v1,,"',,·.,,frpl,,...'..,· '"A"dut=t.,-::no'"'7po=t&-I l ~225 mo. 64&-2290 11 DUPLEX • 22QO sq. ft. f BR, ~
2~J BA, bltns. Irplc. Gar.
$32j 1110/l!K!. 540-7573 t ;::;========I • l Huntington Beech :MOO
) 3 B0 Rl\1S, famUy room, bit·
ins, fenced yard, w/w ~
cpts/drps. Clean le 1harp. ·;
Firsl &: Jut + SlCO. •
Tradewinds Realty 147-1511 I
f LARGE BR, 2 BA, lrplc, •
nrw cpt. .l drps, dbl pr,
~ 1*k yd. $250 . '.J
3 BR, 2 BA Homt-. $190.
mo. All :"'l!ferences ~. ,,.....,
Fountain V•llrr 3410 --..,-
' ecru.1. 2 BA, W/W crtrtJ.
p.t5 mo. 60-4210 ~
~ .....
WMtmln1ter
38R2M ...... -
lm, hid pool. Ptlt OK--
to .chi. 5J&..953l
Santi Ana Holthf> N30
\~ ACRE horK ranch eM/ II~ doc tenne:J. Oun. 3
Br houM. 3 children ek.
. Qwn!r ~-
J
I
-
•
-----------~· ··--·--------·-·-......-----_........,..._......, ....... -. ~--_,,,..--.-............... __,..,._,,,_.....,. __ _
0 DAILV PILOT Tuesday, Dtttmbtt 30, 196t
i'eNTALS RENTALS RENfALS l•--111!1--11!9-91!--lll!l--... llUllNISI -
Hou•os Unlurnlihod Apt•. Furnldtod Apia. Unlurnllhod ;r :'k * * '* PINANCIAL
L~uno Beoch l. ms Bolboa 4300 Cotto MHo 5100 .... °""""""* ·-
Z BR, 114 bl, den, 2 trpls, PENINSUl..A • Ocean View. BRAND NEW fam rm, across St. Croin Lri 2 BR upper. 100 )'di
beach, ocean ''iew. 499-3693 fro1n beach. 150 yds from 1.:.="-------I bay. Year round lease. $185
RENTALS '"'"··mo untum. 61>-1573 $150 & $170
Apt1. Fumfsh.d CLEAN Bachelor Apt&.
All util incl $85 up . UTILITIES PAID
General 4000 315 E. Balboa Blvd. l & 2 Bdnn, 2 swim poola.
THE NE\V VILLAGE INN, BALBOA 673-9945 AdUl~ onl,y, no pet.a. FUm
Janner Saddle back I nn' DELUXE Bayh'Onl, private it d301esired. 642-lm CM
t fro $28 k beach, 3 BR, 2. BA. $ZiO I: Avocado St. . , ~[;· ap::. AiJ a :~s: $350 mo. 675-3671 See Mar on premises
lln.,.., maid, pool, laundzy fairway Villa Apts
rn1 .. steps to bca.ch, now ac-Huntington Be1ch 4400
cepbng applications. 696 S. -Near Orange Co. Airport &
Coost Hwy.,~ Beach. HUNtlNGTON CAPRI UC!. Adul~ only. 2(1j22
<l!»-9-ll6 For Single Adults Santa Ana A~. ~Z7'96
HOLIDAY PLAZA NE\V 1·2·3 BEDROOMS
DELUXE, spacious l Bdrm From $140. Furn & Unf
Furn apt $135 plus util, Tennis, Gyms, Saunas
•leated pool, ample parking. 6200 Edinger Ave., HB ORLEA.NS APTS.
Whoddyo Wontt Wlooddy1 Gott
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Spoclol Ro,.
S LI--S ""'" -5 bum auLfl -II» MUIT IHci.UDe
1-WIWll '911 NIV. le tr••· l-W'llll .,..., Wllfll 11'1 tr ...
a-YOUR P"Ont •ntltr lfdrftt,, .... ll"'9 IJI Mlllttlelne.
1-HOTHIHO fO• &ALI-ff.ADU ONLVI PHONE 642-$67t
To PJoco Your Troder'1 P'orodl11 Ad
Alllllato
CANDY SUP'P'L Y
ROUTI
1No-ID¥olwd)
Exc.llent Income tor few
houn ~ wort. (Day1
and Ewnlnp). Re!lllinr and
coUect1nc -from coin apen.te« dilpeneM in Or.
No children • no pets. Phone 846-0619
l-::::':965=Po=m=o=oa,=C=.M=. =~l~':ilj~E5jf'i~i"il:ii"'i::i;,'l 2 & 3 BR avail, Adul ts only. Trade 2'1" TV low colllfOle,
mahogany cabinet, X In t
condition. for Pnrtable TV
with UHF.
.... Co. and ............
area. we establilb route.
<Handles name brand candy
and snacks), $1$15.00 cub
required. For penional lnkr-
view 1n On.nae Co. area,
tend name, addreu and
phone number to MULTI·
STATE DIST., INC., 1681 W.
Broadway, Anaheim, Cali-
fornia mm. <n4) 118-5060.
LIQUOR lic'1. LOW PRICES!
ON SALE tor ORANGE and
SAN DIEGO OOUNTIES.
Will Trade M·l Property Call collect far beat Price!
616 x 165 with hoUle &: 3 (213) 272-4249 (. BACHELOR & 1 BR fum. 1741 Tustin Costa Meaa
Costa Mesa 4100 $14£1 up. Adults, no pets, Mgr Mrs. Carson 642-4641 : prep for R-l Dwell--SHOE repair shop. Excellent
-----1 17301 Kee.Ison Ln. 842-7848 ' ' 536-1131 . 646-2l'n E. l'i'tb SIJ'fft. Costa Mesa
* *
SUNNY
ACRES * * * Motel-A pts *
l signal So. or O.C.
Fairgrounds
Shfeflo & 1 ledrooms
$30 WK. & UP
Day, WHk, M .. tlt
• Kuchens & TV's incl.
• Phone serv., htd pool
• Ma.id !t"rvice avail.
2376 NEWPORT BLVD.
54a-97SS
(West ot Beach nr Slater).
FURN. l & 2 Sr apls 2 BEDROOMS. · Eastside.
H B N hildre New shag carpet $14 5 downtown · · 0 c n monthly. Ra~. oven and
or pets. 53& 7396 rebigerator included. No
pets. References req. Call
Orange County 4600 Rod. BKR. 646-0555
12' Cruiser, 1200 mi range,
$40,00I) val., will consider
TD or smaller boat. Immed
demand for charter by lo-
cal serv)ce. TI4: 729-3400.
locaUon. To 1ee CAU.
-10_%_In-t-:IO-%-D-lle-.-la-t-Se--I GLEN QUEEN 54()..ll51
cured by land A rup aigner Herita.ge Real Estate
Qrt!y pymta le final Apr n .
$2000 multiplet $34000 total
Trd all/part car or boat
im.10<1
Monor to l.oM
2nd TD ioan SINGLE Adults, Lu xury VILLA MES.A A.PTS Station wagon camper, like
_M t w/full -o-a 2 BR Wlfurn, pn patios, hid new, stove, ice box, com-TRADE 5 Attn, apprai.led Prompt, confidential •-"'"-"'"'"'en ap s, , .. '" . I 2 cl'I ..... a .,,,11 FOR Sil ··-t· 1 ilities & complete poo. car en gar .... , .... plete. Tradf! equity for car ........... per a.ere. P 642--2171 545-0611 10.n a ac South Bay Club dren welcome, no pe t• or .11 for 25' boat Servin& Harbor area 2'0 Yl'I.
pnv cy. please! $160. Also furn $185. Call 83()..2825 962-4911 Sattler Mo...._ ... ~-Apts. 2T? So. Brookhurst, 719 W Wil ~1251 • •w ""'°
A"'h•im fn<l m.4500 • ""'· • _. * * * * ..a.; , __ 336_E_._1_11h_s_u.._1_ TOWNHOUSE " • '
1---------1 N•w 2 BR, 111 BA & 1 & 2 ""'!!!!!!l"""~!!!l!!!!!l!!!!!!i!!!l!!!!!!!!!!!!!\IJ!!!!i!!!~!!!!!!!l!!!!!l!!!l ! ANNOUNCEMENTS Gar.ten Grova 4610 BR. o,>ts, drps, ,.u clog RENTALS REAL ESTATE ond NOTICES
SINGLE Adults Lux ur y oven. 645-21~. 317 W. Wilson Apts. Unfurnished ~!!leral Found (f,.. A•> 6400 garden apts with country 1558 CORIANDER Dr .: Huntington Beach 5400 Office Rental 6070 1---"'-~'-'=.;...;;.:.:;;: $25. Per Wk. & Up club atmosphere and com· Deluxe 2 BR. 2 BA. garage, Small BEIGE dol, lone tail,
plete privacy. SOUTH BAY S155 mo. Adults, no pets. 2 BDRMS, 2 BA. pvt. patio, HUNTINGTON BEACH red coJJ&r Shep, mix, female
Bachelor & 1 BR. hid pool, CLUB APl'S 13100 Chapman ~2644 heated po o I, washer & Air Conditioned alirht build, blk. hllhlite.,
maid service. Ki tchens & Ave., Garden Grove (714l 1'Q=u=1ET=-,-.~,~B-,-.-anl-,n-a-pt. dryer hook up. 962-8994 ON IEACH ILVD. MS.7445 ext. 33 TV avail. 450 Victoria (Nr ,,.,,, ~-11 "~~ .. ~~g>::.~,,.,---,.._,,-ll:-==-==:==;:===;:::;! Bltns, patio, htd pool, MEDlUM ~-•-mate ~. ..... ...,.,,. Deak space available tn --= u: .,.... adults, no pets. """" mo, W I I I S612 n•wnt offl-building at black with -~"--·~-2 BDRM, 2 BA, aunken liv. La .. un• &each 4705 """ "163 es m n1 •r '"" ~''"'""' ..... -.., •. 3'" .rw-v prime location in Hunting· Comer of Wllaon & Rutaen,
"'°•m, Nlrpkl. <P1"'· <l'P'G • Cf""'MING 2 bdrm uru·t 2 BR, 11,J BA, Studio. New LG 2 BR, cpts, drpl, bltns, ton Beach. Air conditioned, C.M. 548-56'18 pa o. Jct' Y urn. ar ~ · · •~ & ,_ }' 11 beautiful entrance. Front· ==,-~-~~-~ avail Adults only $175 f.fo. Newly redec., w/w carpet... cp... ...11s. am y r:i ~~i!d::n~d~~ age on Beach Blv~ .. rear FOUND: Free ntaht eJ.lder.
1255 Baker, 54Q...-08oo eves. ing & drapes, Complete ly welcome. 637 2943 leads to private _parking Orance, green le Ire)'
MERRIMAC WOODS furn. 1.«e. tree !>haded pa-• lol $50 per month for w/.049 engine. 5'8-ClSS
Fu .1 il ...... t io. 120 yrls, from Woods 2 BR, $145, 11,i BA. Elec Laguna Buch 5705 apace. Degk ano cbalrs IRISH setter, male • vie. rn uni s: ava · >7"~ lld u~ Cove Beach $175 mo. bltns, cpts, drps. 2 children _...;.,.:o....;____ available for $5. Buaineas
dcr class 5100. ~ Merri· Mission Really 4M-073l <lk. No pets. 548-8882 API'S LEASE OR RENT hours answering service Avocado & Fairview Cap. mac Way. 545-6300 available for $10. All utlll· prox. 10 moa). 6'2-3845
Bachelor _apl frplc, small seaside studio bungalow, drps. Kids ok. 1998 Maple th sundeck, w/w crpta. Shores area. Owner kleD-OIARMING Partly f urn LGE. 2 BR. Pool. Oi>ts & @ New 1 or 2 BR, prl tie1 pa.id except telephone. FOUND: Kitten, D 0 v er
y~, qwet ~a, cl_ose to garden setting. Lease $170 Apt 3, 548-28al, Ocean view, kit. DAILY PILOT tify, 6C--9880
busuiess $130 me. util, 548--inc gar, all u t 11 it t e s • 2 BR studio $165 Crpta drps furn . Underground H1~:1::~~= =~~H ;:;c==-=,----
5750 Tele-dear. Refs. 494-2775 bl~. Pvt patt~ encl gar~ pk'g, close to beach. 494-9633, BLONDE m'..a1e puppy
1 BR, newly dee, bltns, SEE NEW VILLAGE INN Adults. 549-0433 Mr. Bra.ck. 642...U21 w/beaded collar. Pac Cit Sd~}!whr, ... :Cntral ht, gar. Steps to beach. $35. wk 2 Br unfutn apt Adults no REAL ESTATI SMALLHwy, NB_:T~CK ~. .. ... ture Adults. Sl4> • •GUNA 494-TZOJ. • • FINE STORE/OFFICE ~ cat, lhart ~956 mo. !JI' pets, 11wimmlng poool. 2267 Gentrll For Lease halt, w/Oea collar, Harbor
$145 & up. ATTRACTIVE, l RENTAL~ Canyon Dr .• 646-7984 On Via Lido View Ho!llff, 6f4...41.5t
bdr., pool, util paid, garden Apts. t.;nfurnl1hed _ NEW Privat• Home Rentals W1nted 5990 Approx. 1500 Sq. Ft. CALICO gold ~. black.
living, adults, no pel3. 1800 Gen•ral 5000 l.n a 4-plex. Lg 3 BR w/ DAILY PILOT Statf Writer. 50c Per Ft. white Ir. Oran&~. 49C-S631 or
Wallace Ave., C.M. everything. Nr Fwy, 546-4l1.1S wife, two young children & LIDO REALTY INC. 49M6Cll.
NICE bachelor, full kitchen, VEN DOME NEWLY Cptd, drpd, elec kit. family dog wish to lease or 33n Via Lido 67~7300 I ;JQ;;;:;l;;'I"E"'N-, """vi'",-"'A7dama=-.,.•
full bath, furn, for responlli· Children OK. Call after S rent 2 .or 3 bedroom unlum 21() _ 1000 SQ, Fl'. Newport Bu.shard. ~1293
ble adults. $100 mo. w/util. PM. 646-8153 home in Newport Beach or Buch Civic Ctr, &reL CHRISJ'MAS Wtapped book
220 Monte Vista. 642.()618 IMMACULATE APl'S! near~y Costa Mesa area Secretarial servtca:. 3345 found on Poppy Aw., CrM.
BEAUTIFULLY FURN ADULT & FAMILY Newport Bueh 5200 anytime after Jan lit. Our Newpnrt Wvd., N.B. 673-{Q)S
2 BR. Pool. Adults, no pets. SECTIONS AVAILABLE I-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ I children & Pet all mU.'lt stay ~l60l. ='""'='~-~---. $150 + util. zm Maple st. Close to shopping, Park1• with us. All art well behav· BLACK/white male cet, w/
548-0157 * Spacious 3 Br's, 2 Ba ed. $180 mo limit. Willing to SMALL Ottlce on 'buly cot'--flea collar, vii: E. Balboa
NASS U P LMS * 2 Bedrooms SPACIOUS new 2 bdrm clean-up and/or paint next ner Costa Mesa. $55/montb mvd, ~163.l * 1 & : BR A Pool * *Swim Pool, Put/green 2 bath. Nr. shopping. home. John L. Valtena. utllltiei included. 642-«ll> l ·BROWN==;;-~&-blk=-P°'"PPY=-,-vt=o.
177 E. 22nd st. ' '342-3G4S * ~ ~:= i~~~ $240 per mo. _64.>-_26_29 ______ ~~· :;!~ 1 ~n~~ ~Irvine & Walnut Pl, 548-
SlOO. l & 2 BR COSTA MESA 642-282-4 Mariner Square Apti. Orange Co. Airport. s«l-88141---------
Very nice trailers. 13.l E. 1244 I • A NB
16th C.M. 642-1265 • RENT • rv1ne v1., . . RENTAL FINDERS AIRPORT CENTER Lo I 6401
"" l• L•••• New l , 2 A: 3 room deluxe -'--------· II J BR, clean,""(ftfiet. Garage-,
Adult. $125. 2039 Wallace. 3RoomsFurnlture -••·'""-c.t•_.. suit es. Adj . new LOSI':GermanSbortHaittd
$19,95 & Up BEAtJTIF1.JL ~ '41-1111 MacArthur Blvd. Fro m Pointer, 6 mos, brown 1:
548-1885 NEWPORT TOWERS ~11ui.i111•m-KS11l $125. Call 546-78f3. whlt.e, AM "Jf!.sae". Vic
l I 2 BR •BA A--& ~ •1-11 uns11 * Cottage, 1 Bdrm, all :onth·TO-Ml'mth Rentals Love Y , ., . v .. ..:-an LAGUNA BEACH Irvine Ave I: l'i'th SL
util ities paid, yardt no pets. WIDE SELECTION Bay view. Suble1Tanean Air Condltlontd Reward. 548-'7618
$115 ""' Eld CM NO DEPOSIT 0 AC pk·g, elevators, i·acuzzi pool. \\'ANTED TO LEASE: Vcl;y · """'"' en, · · · · · 0.C.C. 3-4 Br unfurn house. ON FORESl' AVENUE SMALL Female dog, brown BACHELOR. $125. Nr OCC. HFRC Furnllure Rentals Boni slips avail for tenants. Occupy Jan 20, pvt pty. Box Deak apace available tn to blk colorin&: A white
Util pd. Mature adult only. 517 W. 19th, CM 548·348l ~""-·"-"'-------111 877 Daily Pilot. newfft tlffice bulldlnr at m.arltina1. Hoq Hospital No p<!U. 54S-8882 $135. 2 Br apt o/garage.1_________ prime location 1n downtown area. Ana to "f1owtr".
Stove & refrig, Cpt,, drps. Back Bay 5240 ~~~ :.OO~~is~ ~: 1.quna. Beach, Air condt-64~1
N 8 --h--4-2-00·1 Nice cond. Blue Beacon, 1 8 Non smoker Gd tloned, carpe~. beauWUI w·~sr~,-Bol~boa~-. lalo~-nd--
ewport eac .... 645--0lll, C.M. VIE\V, 2 BR. cpl.!, drps, ~~e::r:73.ssoo • ' entrances: Frontqe on Silhouettes of boy A litl in
Newport Beach $125. 2 BR Jo~r. Garage, bltns. Pool. $165 mo. Fott1t Ave .. rear Jead1 to black frame v1c of Ba.Ibo&
GRAND OPENING RIO. v.•/\v. Child welcome. * ti73-3690 * e LANDLORDS e ~unclm:~~=~ Ave It. ~. REW .
IMMEDIATE Broker~ FREE RENTAL SERVICE aM chain available for $5. ,._673-~7736=~-~---I ~~~~~~===l;:::-;;;::1;;----;5;;2~42 Broker 534-ti982 SKAN --•·-OCCUPANCY SlDO East Blu f BU1iMu hours answe:rf.nl ALA niaMUnute dog, Luxury garden apartments Costa Mesa $3J • DOUBLE garage for aervice available fer $10. maJe, 4 mos., blk w/wh A:
ottering comple!e privacy, LARGE 3 BR .. 2 BA. C_ust. storage. Close in, Costa AU utilltiel p&1d except tan wh paws "Ace" nr
beautiful Jandsc::iping & UIJ.. MERRIMAC WOODS decorate-cl: Spht·levcl. View-Mesa. 5411.5227 telephone. Em,erald Bay; Las Bct,,
paralleled recreational facU· Just completed, l or 2 BR. 2 pool. Avail Jan 4th. $3l5 mo. DAILY PILOT 494-8604
ities in a country club at· BA furn or unfurn with ail'1=64= .. ='°'='====== Rooms for Rent 5995 222 FOREST AVENUE s"2So-.R"EW="A"RD,,-. .,,..,,,.-b"'ro-wn-,
mosphere. Now leasing in cond, compl soundfllroofed,I' 2 D 1----·------LAGUNA BEAOI long haired, itriped cat,
Ne,,_'porl Beach. self cleaning ovens, wood l;C~o~ro~n~aii;;d~oiiliiM~oiiriiiiiii5iiiiiSiii lFURN. Prlv. sleeping rm. 494-9t66 altered male, Newport
Furnished or unfuntlshed ceilings d!\Vhr!i lush land· Util pd. $65 mo. 67J.-3315 ========= Shores uea. 6U-J541
'Models open JO am to 8 pm sCapiog' with strCams & wa.ov ·:.:':.:'·:.,Cd=M.:_ ___ ~~ _ln_d_.,._fr_l.ccal Rtntal 6090 -LOST male cal, llic Magnolia
Roo" from $155 to 131~ torfalli, •l•v•ton, BBQ•. rf!;I,_~.~ LARGE room, private bath, NEW BUILDING a: F.cllnger. White ihort hair OAKWOOD clubhouse, saunas, jacuzzi & &111 lovely home. Kitchen prlv, w/grey markings. AlllWml
GA N swim pools, p:'iv gar. w/ sep refrig. 646-0439 1260 Logan Ave., Costa Mesa to "Ming." 842-5858 RDE storage. Every1hing new. ON TEN ACRES ROOM for rent, kiL privp. Each unit 1725 IQ ft, 2 off· APARTMENTS Starting at $140. Adults 1 & 2 BR. Furn Ai: Unturn Man only. $50 mo, 803 ices, 2 rest rooms, ll0/220 ~Gld·mixedh .~~/~-Sletmp. please Just East of 2600 electric Ample ~ tttc en 11n1. ... .un:o as 17~ 16!h S!reet · Fireplacts ! priv patlc:s I Governor St, C.M. 646-5289 C. Ro~rt Nattreu ~tor eve vie. a.,y St. NB 6G.st03 714: 642·SliO lfarbor Blvd, next kl N~lx-rs Pool!!, Tennil-Conint'l Bkfst, $15 WK & up w/ kitchen $30. ~=~,..,..c.,..~~--1 Cadillac at 42:1 Memmac 900 Sea Lane, CdM w .2611 ... , •"·'lo apt. 2376 N,_.,.,...rt Costa Mesa 60-148$ GERMAN Shepherd, female, SINGLE Adults Luxury Way 54~ IM·-•-• ~--H ) .. ""'" -··..-tan,Smoeold,VlcNe-• llVU-.. ,,ur nr . .......-\ wy n1·-. rn9~• L -~ .. garden apU with country 1 ==·=·=~==·-=====i=°"::::~--,---!6~1~DO~ 1111. Friendly. REW, 673-6483 dub atmo•phot< and rom· HARBOR GREENS J.IDO t . l SOUTH B Y CORO APTS. 2 Br. Motels. Trlr. CrtL 5997 P e1e privacy. A Lower levels, studios, pent-
CLN ~ ~~· lhivinc at lGth, BACHELOR unturn from house, Frplca., pool, dbl. WEEKLY rn.tes Sea Lark
e\\po11 =<IC . rt tio "80 s~ 230 N BJ··· (714) G§.(550 SllO, Also avail 1 • 2 & 3 carpo s, pa s. ,... • -.,. Motel, 1 ewport vu.,
DBL lot w/ old Span. 1tyle
hse, 3 Br, 1 &. Reduced to
$17,000 for quick We by
owner. S4&-376T -~~~=-==-• Bclnn. Heated pools, chlld 673·3378 Costa Mesa
BA YCLIFF MOTEL care center, adj to ahoppifl&:, 2 BR. 2 BA, den, crpts, drpii, ======== Acreage 6200
• LO\V \VEEKLY RATES* No pets. bltns. view. ll) 712-0367, Income Property 6000 --"'-----"""''-'"
Kitchen, TV',s, maid service. 2700 Peterson Way 53()..-4599 ASSUME 70/• LOAN CABIN + 5 11.ctt1 with. View,
1-leared Pool. Costa l\fesa 546-0370 2·~B~R-.. ~.-,~u~,-y-. _l _b_l!t_!rn_m 2 BR house + 4 -1 BR apts !!;orn!~Y w.:;.cto;"~
646·3265 LUXURIOUS NEW bcaoh. n1s ""'"'h. + 100 x 63 addttioMI lot. Nott Rlty. 64:1-004<
l & 2 BR furn & unfurn. $150 * 642-'7898 * $61,500. Prin, only. 642·8579 ---------
• $175, Cpts, drps. bltns, 1 & 2 BDRJ\f beautiful swtrn ======== DUPLEX COM. 2 houses. R. E. Wanted 6240
pool, patio. 1525 PlacenllR pools. A·dul~. no -ts. Lido Isl• 5351 $55 000 $8 000 d 1 ..--, , , own. neome SMALL Hom~ Or Oupl~,
\VATERFRONT .,... I boa t ALL UTILJTIES PAlD LARGE 2 BR, study. 1% BA, S-05 J\fo. 675--6044 Corona dd Mar. By ~
dock, Love.ly 2 BR, patio, 307 Avocado S!, C.M. See cpls, drps, adults. 00 p<!ls. clple, Call ~11.
Yrly lse. 673-!IOOJ or 697-.';918 Mgr .. Apt No. a Lea.<it, OR 3-7502 Buslneu Rental 6060 NOW'S THE
MARTINIQUE STORE or ollioc apace oo B~~~A~~IA'i,"
Corona dol Mor 4250 GARDEN APTS Hun tington Baoch 5400 Balboa Ptnlosula, w, I-----'-'---
HANDSOM>: 2 BR, "1>k. ""'ll'"t ""'k·llkt •=und· 2 BORMS •• 2 BATH B!Uboa B1'd at 15th St Ap. Bus. OppommlllH 6300 TIME FOR
balcony. ;\,·ail til July lst. !nit:'§" w/hcated pools, Extra Jlmx. 450 sq. ft. 'I'enns open. Assoclate
f'or ~nllcman. $205. 322 parking, 'Near sl'IOpplng. $150/~fo. ICEATED POOL QUICK CASH Helk>lmfll'. 613-4114 or c:all J\duh.1 only. tncd, c:pt/drps,. Kidll OK OOlttMERCJAL building a~ MANUFAcnm.m
evil. r-.tr:s, Benton (21..,) 2 & 3 BR APl'S DELAWARE STUDIO Apts prox. 1800 aq. ft. 4TI .N. New• S17,500 lnvtrtment lnto the
6~1573
87s-.5065 1m santA Ana Ave., CM. 2620 Dtlawart, lf.D. , port, no. 1 Business of the dt;y. 25 GH A
2 BR. 1 llA, blk/OCt'an A: ~fgr.~p~ ll3 646-55C2 642-2221 anytime %1816 ==.,,.,,..6U-55S!,.,..._,__,.,_,-)T. history of ~ DOW THROU
bay. Vic.,.,·. Pr1 pat to . LO\'E.LY New 2 BR. 2 BA. WATER.FRONT APT. Lux· ROOr.1 Suitable ror gift shop, expandln&' opctn.dona to So.
Adult.s, no pets. $200 yrly. AIJ bltns, :!d\6g cpts, gar. Nr ur\ous 2 BR, 2 BA upper. men·~ shop or ladies shop. ~~ c::m~~ ~ad1:1ryp. ~ DAILY PILOT
673-7629 So. ~! Plnq k frvlne tnd. Adulls, no pef.s. Doek. Uase Call Jim Berkshire. 673-9405 train Prtncl;J ot Mfmt.
SlNGLE fum apt. w/balb Pk. ;i;la-2"...21 or 540-1973 $300 mo. Hunt In I 1 on f tiblli tte111. Cont.aet lmmtd.
for snitl. Yl'Oricln~ !arty. $Sj NE\\' 3 BR, 2 BA. Shn.g Mariro. Owner (213) ~!!!_Rental 6070 Once In a Ulelime oppor. to WANT AD
mo inc. an utll'll. 6ia.2955 ('1'pts. drp~. Immed occupy. 7S6-96i8 aft 6. l\LARINER'S CENTER make that hll?h Income most
ah, ?I P~f. $225. 5* 1911 CHEZ ORO APTS. 8234 Offlct in Store Bid;. &nt or pt"Ople· dream of. Starting
JOIN THE
'SELLERS CIRCLE'
WE'RE
SAVING
SPACE
·FOR
YOU •••
~
~
~
.~
~
r-;;-J
~
~
If you sell a service end don't advertise in
the DAILY PILOT Service Directory, you're
doing business the h 11 r d way-The Service
Directory (classifications 6500. 7000 in the
classified ad section daily) g iv e s you an
advantage you get through no other edver·
tising medium. It reaches customers who ere
reedy to buy. Be there when your prospects
come into the market looking for the services
you heve to sell. If your service isn't listed,
we'll atert a category just for you.
Pick up the phone rig ht now en'd reserve
your space in the "Seller$ Circle" • • •
Your Direct Line to
Directory Results
642-5678
'
DAILY PILOT
CLASSIRED AD DEPARTMENT
C0~1FORtABLE pr Iv at ,, 2 BR. tmmac. Bltn11, dsbwhr, Atlanta, H.8. Nu. 1, 2. 3 IB. $15-$125. Beauty ahop, u lary $12,«IO + substantial 642-5678
,baehelor room. So. of b,,_'f, ctnlftl bt. rar. paUO. $140. bt'a. f'rlv. car, pool. UW K·me ~Ip, 149 Rlwnidt prolitl. Call Kt.a Ollford
'100. 673-4i9CH ~56 rm.~ or 5.16-2'727. A\'f! .. N.B. 64&--241'. (TI4l n4-l050 ·---------····------'!"'--------------------...:·
-~--· ----.....------· ... _........"""" ·--··· .... .--··---·-· ·--~--·-~~---
111sdaJ, Dtctmbtt 30. 1969
.. ----------JDIS I EMPLOYMENT JOBS I EMPLOYMENT JOBS I EMPLOYMENl
DAILY PILOT 2J
JOBS & f MPLOYMENT -----j DAILY PILOT Joff-Mon, Wom. 7100
AMBITIOUS WOMEN
$600. pe:r month
Jobs-Men, Worn. 7100Job.-Mon. Wom. 7 100 Jo-Mon. Wom. 7100
1 . CLASSIFIED INDEX
,., Fut Atl'\'lc• enll ....,.,, ~·
DIAL DIRECT 842-5878
( , I } (
·!'-~~~~~~~~~~ .....
~ HOUSES FOR SALE '{,,~~~,A~~~!~, = • o•N•UL .................... ! .. INCOMe PttOP••n-J ......... ... ' COSTlll MILi ................ HM llUllNE$1 l'l~El •T .. ,.
' MIU. DIL MAa ............... 1"5 TJI 11,;£,_ PA"ICS •I
MISA VlllDI ............. ~101 IUllNISS ltl.NTAL ........... ....
• COLLllOI PAlllf .;,, •••••••••• 1111 Ol'l'ICI lll"ltTAL ., ........ _, ... H • MIWll'OllT l=M f,.,. .. ,,..,1 .. IHOUITtlAL •llO•laTY .... .... -: NIWl>OllT Ml HTf ••••·•••·•1:111 tOMMlllCIAL •.•• , ........ .-S IAL.OA cov•1 .............. 121t INDUSTalAL alNTAL •. · ...... .... MIWPOllT IMOall ........... Int LOTI ......................... .i• &AYCllllT .................... IU, llANCHll ···•····-···-· .. -... IN IAYSHOllll .................. ltts CITllUI OllOYIS ............. •1n DOYl!ll IHO-es ............... IHI •Clll!AOI ...... , ................ SERVICE DIRECTORY WllTCL1111' .............. llll UICI aLSIHO,_I .............. dn
When You
Want it done
ri ght •••
Call one.of
the experts
listed below!!
I
• lt•ve yoou evf'r applied for 11
f&les position in the .all's
flekl 1.nd been rduaed !or
the lack or uperlence '!' It
)'OU are 11.n&le, under 30 And
\11.lll.ni; to stlrt immedialely,
thla may be your opparlW1-
ily.
Assem bl ers
Burroughs Corp.
New
Commercial Computer
Plant '
Temporory
Proud to be an
A . ??? merican ...
•
Glad you're a
H•-•o,_ HIOHt.ANOI ........ 1m 1t1101tT •110 .. e11TY ........ ..-B by 1 1 SS lllOYlllllTY ..... Ill( ........... nu OllAH•e co ... llO .. lllTY' ..... m1 a • tt ng 6 0 .,• tltYINI ...................... 1UI OUT OJI ITAT,1! JOllOI' ......... .-
.,,CIC IAY ..................... l1* ..ouHtAIN a oesellT ........ 0 11 CHILD care my honlf' ror , IAITILUF• ................... 1)41 IUIOIYISIOH UNO ., .• -'In ' • • •
C1rpet Cle1nlng
CARPET & F11rn cleaning:
lor 1 day aezvice & quality
'~tlrk, C&ll SterllOE to.a·
brightncl!S! 642-8520
SERVICE DIRECTDllY
L1nd1c1plng 6110 -TAKATA NURSERY
\Ve have an opening In 0111·
dlvi•lonal headquartert i11
Long Beach. We do not "·nn1
an llXPf'lienced salesperson.
Tht nature of out v.·ork rP·
quires a person who can In.
tervie1v clien1s witbout usi°"
any preu\lrt' •
It you can converse lntclll-
1enlly, are neat in appear.
a.nee and are "'illing to
lea111. we \\'ill teach you
from the bo11om up, \Ve will
MISSION VIEJO
No \v taking applications for 1 GIRL???
••• T.,, 114"1 tUL 'l lTATlf ...... tc, ..... Ull nf'I' Santa Ana 1\11~ &
: lllYINI TlllltACI ··•·•·····"lt: '·I. IXCHANOI ............. •tit f"IO\llU St CJ ·\get 2' ~I COllONA DEL MA.II . .......... t, 1 . WANT'!O , . , ... , .. U4I .. • • • ~ •
; IALIOA l'!NtN111u. ......... 1M1 BUSINESS ind Ha\-e playmate. $20 \1k. Incl t llfACOfil I AY ................. 1HI J , aAY ISLANDS ................. 1,,. FINANCIAL ,mea~o;. Resp., ov111?. ho111c,
• LIDO 11Le ................ 1u1 '"''"''' •••••Tu••Y•••· ,,.. For interview cull 6--12-IZ'il • IALIOA Ill.AND .............. IW " ' MUMTIHOTON ll!ACM ...•••. ,, ... IUSINlll WANTED , ........ ILNS BABYSl'ITING TJlY hoinc HUNTINGTON Hit.lllOUll , •• ,.141S IHYllTMEHT o..,.rtu11ltlft .. U10 . ' ' ' Llf!IPA ISLE , .. INY•ITMINT Wit.HTl!D ...... •111 : Cotta M~·. NE\V YEAR'S • l'OUNTAtN VALLIY .......... 1411 MONIT TO LOAN ............. .nt I EVE ' llAL l llo C11 ., ..• i .. ·····"·'· •EllOHSAL LOAN S ............ ua . IUNSIT I EAC H ............... 1W JliW•LllY LOA"S ........... '"41 • QAllDEM Grtov• .............. 14'1 COLLATlltAL LOANS ......... ,w LONQ 8EACM ................. IJ .. ll:IAL ISTATI LOANS ...... ,•Mt '-"KEWOOO , ................ 11H MOllT ... elS, T,_,I 0..-... 4Mi BABYSITI'ING, my hon1e
1veckl>J d a t I y, ~ves.
Dlnn1ond Carpc't Cleaners
187 2llt St, Costa P.1csa
llome & Apt Cleanin&;
&1~1317 Frtt estimateii
CARPET & upholstery stcanl
cleaned, also carpet ln-
slallation. Results guar. For
free ei;t. Call 646-59TI , )llAHOJ COUNTY ............. 1 .. MONlrY WAHTl!D , 4lSI OUT Of COUNTY ............ 1'°5 ANNOUNCEMENTS OU1'M $TATI ................ 1.. nd. NOTICES ITANTO. ....... , .......... 1111 a Wl lTMIHITE-................ un lfOU MO ('(" ""' ..... : ..... .....
Rrai>ona ble, reliable.
."-~'"""'=~'=~·~~--·I Carpet L1yln1 &
BABYS!TTl.i\'(;, n1y holll(' 01' Rep1ir 61126 MIOWA Y llTY , ............... U" LOST ............................ !
, SANTA ANA .. , ............. UH l'lllSONALS ·"••·•··•··••·····"" SANTA AHA MOTS. .......... ,IUI ANHOUNCl!MENT1 ............ 6411 • OllANOli ..•...... , .•........•. U!J llllTMJ , ...................... ,.1411 • TUSTIN ................ 1t.4t 'UNlltALS .................. MU • NOllTH TUSTIN ............... UIJ l"A ID OllTUAllY ., ......... MIJ , ANAHEIM ........... lUt ,llHl!ll:AL DllllCTOllS ....... 641'
yours.' Need ll'flilsporta.tion. _F_O_R_c_ARPETING
Reference~ .. -Hs-7802 art 6. OR CARPET LAYING
8ABYSITI1NG, Illy horne C. A. Page 6-12-2070
i\1csa <le.I l\lar, any agr. \.\'Cl·
COlllC :>16-3(){13 SILYERADO C4NYON ......... IUJ FLOR1'TI . . ........... IHI~ LAOUHA HILLS ............ , .•. IJ'Oll CARO OF THANKS ............ 6416 ' U.QUNA Sl!ACH .•...•........ 110I IN MEMOlll,I... . ............. 6411 PRC• ~uoo·· U.OUNA MIQUEL ............ lll7 CIMITl!llY LOT' .......... '411 "-''UO.on u 8.gf', In Y MISSION vu:JO ............ llOt CIMITER Y CllYl'TS ......... '41' homr, !\l on-F1·i . $'l:i. SAN CLEMENTe .. .. ..... 1111 CIMl.TEllY CllYl'TS ••....... MU 4!Y.HJ82!1 La N " J SAM JUAN CAPl5TllANO ...... UH ~llEMATORIES ............... ,. . • guua ·1gue . caPISTllANO O&ACH ......... nu 1,tEM0•1•L .. ARKS .......... 1W21 LICENSED cbild 1.at'I'. ag" OAHA l'OIHT ... . ........ 1111 1.UCTIONS ........... •1M CAllLSIAD .............. 110 AVIATION SEllYICE ....... 60) J.;;, P.lon-F'ri. (Harbo r-
Electrlc1I 6640
ELECTRICAL Servi~ &
TI'pair. 24 hrs. 7 days. No
job loo small. Re-model &
<1ddilions. U it's electrical,
11·c fix ll! M!M772
Best Design
Sprinklen Installed
Drain Pipe Jn:stalled
Tree trim &. Oean-up
ASSEMBLERS
546-0724 _ pay all tl'ainlng expens~ if
Paperhennlna c1uallllt'd. $10.~. per year
at the temporary offce 18651 Von Karman. Ir·
vine, California . Son1e experience preferred.
J.,bs open in January \\'ill be at our !()cation
in Irvine.
• • including salary & bonuses.
Paintint-.. _____ 61S0 __ 1 \Ve are a nalion\\·ide chain
Apply 8 am-4:30 pm
A-1onday through Friday
JNT./EXT. J\\'er. Ex t .
$1Z1.50 labor only. 8 yr.
gUat. painting avail. AUG.
Apts &: Comm'l. 5"18·15-16
EX-PAINTER, now &c hi
teacher \viii paint e\'Pll &
\vkhds. XJnt workmanship,
Fm est. 646-4519, 540--0062
HOLIDAY Sl'EClAL, lnL Ot
Ext. painting. Lie & insurd.
1''rro est1. Local refs. 30 yrs
cxpcr. "Chuck" 6-15--0809 * PAINTING -l nt./Ext.
Loca.! references. lnimed.
service. 64&-5242. 646-3&57
YOU Supply The Paint. 1 br.
\\•ltli 11ixty oltitts In Ilic
United States &:. Canada,
f'or personal intezview, caU
r.1r. l\fann. (213) 437·356i
2 AUTO SALESMEN
• -$800·1200
EMPLYOMENT OFFICE
18651 VON KARMAN
IRVINE, CALIFORNIA 92664
PHONE: 833-1080
18urroughs Corp.
Potl!:nlial earnings pt/'r mQnth
No experience necessary.
Paid vaca tions, paid holi· an equel opportunity employor
da.ys, guaranteed minimun11"'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
commission~. r.rany other r--
Iring" benefit.a. Applicatiorui Joba-Men, Wom. 7100
now being accepted. Ask rorl------'-----
1.fr. Rabern.
-' Job7Me:~:._Wom. 7100 \
OCIANllDI .................. 11M rllAYEL ..... «ll Baker) !>45-1112 U.N DIEGO .... . ............ un At• TllANSl'OltTArlOll «II RIY&llSIDI! COllNTY ., .•.... \IOI AUTO T,_AHSl'OllTATIOH .. WI =========·I apt painted $30. 2 br $'10. 3 Foreign Car Mechanics
Guod cu. bencfl1s • .incl paid
Join up with us!!I
AMERICAN
GIRL
ALL NEW
Red, Whi le &
Blue
temporary service
I Marching along with 1
Floort 6665 HOU51fS TO •• MOVED ..•... uoo LEGAL NOTICES " "'° BABYSITTING, l';fy home, CONDOMINIUM .............•. 1tH Ollllo\AN. TUTORINQ UM tm. Prefer ages 2-:i. :~:~~::!ls0~0~At:'LE .. -:·::l:P. SERVICE DIRECTORY · -* Call 536-l ~J * CARPETING
RENTALS ACCOUNTING ................. uot }·rr.11 estimate U c. contr.
hr ~-540-7046.
* * Re asonable rates. 10
Ycan In area. Licensed &
insured. 642--0427
Atla1 Otryslrr Plyn1outh
2929 Harbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
BABYSIITER Wanted, ~!011.
thru Fri. 7:30 to S::'IO. J\ly
home or yours. Prefer Nwpt
or Balboa Pen, 673~ alt 6
-COOK-
TRAINEE
Pem1Bnr111, rull lime joh.
Over 111. Neat appcnrancr.
vacation, ~1'uup Ins, uni. TOP RATES furn1s rurn1shrd r~ Good !
<'onun, schedule. Ask lor1 ,. AHSWllllNO SlllVICI .......... ·EXP'D Babysittel' n1y home 7262 546-44
,, Houses Furnished APl"LIAMCI •ll"AIAs, '""''· ·"11 by the "'eek \'[ctoria & 1===54-0-==='=·==="=== APPLY IN PERSON ,., '"' ASl'HA LT, 0111 ................. IUI • ,. OINl:llAL . .. .......... AUTO ll &PAlll l ............ •SJ• Harbol' area, Cil1. ft.15-1473 Gardening 66ID
EXTERIOR-INTERIOR
&: J\1AINTENANCE ,. RINTALS TO SHAit& ........ ,10H AU'fO, SHI ...... T.,1, lie. IJ<ll ,, COSTA MISA ............... 11111 IAIYSITTIMO .. .. ....... 1151 • 646-3185 • Bob's Big Boy BABYSrITING & It hsekpg ! J"H t' 1-I
r MUA DEL MA.It .............. J\tS •OAT MA lf"TENANCI ........ IHJ Brick, M1sonry, etc. ,. MISA VlllDE , ........•..•.•• ',',:: 1,_ICIC, MAIOMllY, •le. ••.... IHI · 6560 AL 'S Garoenlng & Lawn I =========
J\laintena.~. Commercial, Pla1tering. Rep1ir 6880
Industrial &. residential.
hr dally, l\fon-Fri, 2 pm-31---· -·-·-"-'-· _c_·'-'·--
p111. Nr. Huntington center. • COOK t l\1/F. A p fl J y ;
8·17-109 1 lluntingron V 11 11 r y Con·
BADYSITIER _ needed \'alesccnt llo~p1t11l, 8382
teaell<'r, my home. 2 boys 5 NC'1\r.n:ir1 1\1·r. 11.C.
,t COLLEQI. l'AllK .............. IUSI NESS SIRYICES ....... I.SU NIWP'ORT ll!ACH ............ t'lDI IUILD•llS ..•.•••...•••... u.tl HEWl"OllT HOTI ..........•.... 2211 CAfE lll NO 151J HEWl'ORT SHOlll.S .......... mt CAllNl!TMAKINe ............ UH
;1 BAYSHOAES ................ t21J CA-l'l:NTllllNO .............. 15'1 OOYER SHORES ............... 2211 CEMENT, COiier.it ............ ""
BUILD, nrmodC'l, t't'pair
Bl'Lek. block, conc rete,
C8.l'pcntry, no job loo s.rr.alL
Lie. Conn·. 962-6!}.lj
* 646-362'.I * e f ATCH PLASfERING All lypes. free ('stiniatei> EXPERT Ja p11nesf' Call 540-682J Wl!STCLll'F ............. tUG CHILD CAllE, Uuo1M41 '"""""II &. 7, hn; 12-4. 962-b'28.1 tllag~1r f'l:1,,~ifir1! UHIVl!llSITY ,. ... ,_ .............. t2ll COHTllACrORS . ' ........... '41t ,, lllYlNI ........................ nu CARl'aT CLl!ANIHG , ., llU
G;irtlener Right pricP, nitf'
joh, & clean up. Frec e11L Plum bing 6890 BABYSITTER days, In COOi-,:, 11i1.zA, da,\/lli;;.:ht. IAC K IAY """'""""'""••1'111 CARPIT LAYING I ll El'Alll llJi EAST I LUfl" .................. 1241 ORAPEIJES ................. UH C1rpentering El tore 22~ DEMOLITION ......... ,,. •. , ... lill l,_YINI! Tl-RACE ........... = OllAFTINO SlllVICI .......... 607 CORONA CIEL MA il ........... l!LICT-ICAL ...... , ....••••.•. "4t
6S90 I ~"~8-~>~3:}~! =-c~'"7'---~--~~----JAPANESE Gardener, PLUl\fBING RAPA!n.
Cdi\f. Ho.rho~ V1e1v !it::hl !'.:xp"d. ~losed t-.ton & Tu<'.~.
Dis!. 67~2769 or ffi:i-1101 App. 16!H7 Bushard, F.V.
962-IMOI
'' IALSOit. ., ..................... UM EQUIPMlNT lll:NTALS •••..•. 1150 CARPENTRY exp'd, comp. yard service.
MINOR REPAIRS. No J ob Free estimate. 968-2303
No job too .small
• 642-3128 • BANI\ Personnel Exp : •
S<"crctarial, clel'ical. NCR * COOK *--Apply " LIDO Jill ............ , ........ JU1 l'l!NCtNQ ...................... .... IAY IS LANDS ...•........•... llM l'LOOllS , ....... ········-····....S TO<' Small. Cabinet in gar-LA\\"N & GARDENING SER-
ages Ii: 0 1 h 'r cabi~t.. VICE Free estimates -fl.ca-
IALIOA ISi.ANO ........... tlSJ FU-NACE REl>AlllS, l!tc.. _ ... 1110 HUNTIMOT ON leACH ........ ,, ... FUllNITUll l ,_ISTOlllNe FOUNTAIN VALLEY .......••. J411 & 111 .. INISHINO UH
SIA L 11.ACH ......•. · .... "• .Jut 04ROl:HINQ ....... -LONO IEAC H · .............. 'IJtCI OINlllAL Sl!-YICIS .••...... 6'411 OllANGE COUNTY ............. Hfl.~-_!!.tiDIN~Dll(:ING ........•.. Ullt SANTA .. NA ................. tilt' ia:;{fr, ., ......... , ... ··"" Wl!ITMINSTl:ll ............... 1'1t GAl!l!N THI/Ml ............. ,.41111 MIOWAY CITY ......... ,.H11 GUN SHOI" .... , .. , ........ l llt SANTA ANA Hl!IGHTS ........ 1Uf HEALTH CLUIS .............. '"' COASTAL ...............••.. J1M HAULING .................. 1111 LAGUNA 81EACH .............. tJOS HOUSl:CLl!ANINO .... , •.. UU
545-8175, U no answer leave &0nable 673_8268 msg: at 646-237:?. JI. O.
Andcr&On
~----~~ GEN. Repair. Add. Cab.
Jlt<.I'S Careening &
n1a!ntenal\Cf'. Re!! k
niercial. * 540-\lS.17
lav.11
con1-
Roofing 69SO
ALL TYPES; rock, wood &
asphalt ~hingles. LEAKS
REPAIRED. wo1·k &'liar.
8~7-1 136 f'"orn1ica Paneling. i\h;rlitc.
Anything! Call Di c k ,
673-4-l:i9 H1uling 6730 Sewing 6960
4;i0 proo t machine opera1or. Thc ! ly1ni:: .Butler
496-575.1: 34061 Doheny Park 67 .. ..ron N.B.
Dr, Capistrano Bch. COOK \\'anlrd, r:xJ>Cr. Apply
BARl\IAID-Nl!e ~hifl, $2.li Odir'11 Rel'taul'anr 21.2 E
ro start. No bikini no clan-J7lh SI., C.t<.1.
-~c~-----~-~ <·ing. ,\pfJ]y in pe1"Mn 11-2. • COOi\ •. t;:-.1)Crienced.
1.iUle John'" Inn, 20072 N. Apply Su1·f J:.· Sirloin, 5930
Sanla Ana, Santa Anl\ H&"ts, P11ci!11: Cst. llwy .• N.B. U.OUNA NIOUl:L ............. 1JeJ IHTlll lOll 01.COtlATIHO ..... llll :,·': MISSION VllJO .............. 11DI INCOME TAX , ,. , ........... 1111 IAN CLEMENTE , .......... ,1111 ltlON, Or111"""t1t, llC. ..... , .. l lJO SAN JUAN CA1'1STll .. NO ...... ins IAONINO ..................... l lJS
REPAIR, Partition.~, S1nall
rcn1o<lcl, etc. Nill' or day
Rea~! ca11 l<EN 5!0-4679
HEPA.IRS * ALTERATIONS * CABINETS. Any size job
"---="--~---'--'
YARD/Gar. Cleanup. Rc·
nH1ve tre e!!. ivy, trai;h.
Grade. backhof'. 962-8745
e Hauling. H11.ve ,._. Ion
pickup, licensed &; insw'Cd.
494-1003
I DRES5MAKING I
E:~pericnced-Reasonablf'.
&12-4446
ICol'ner Red l lill & COOi\. llOUSEl\EEPER
P11li5adcs.) EXpcl''d. Live-in $2'".JO.
'• CAl'ISTRAHO IEACH ···-•···21JO INSULA TING .................. 1111 . , OANA l"OINT ............. 1111 INSUllANCE ................... 1111 6T.)..JS79 BA!tl\1AID
\\"anlr<l tor 11ire bar. 111Yl!llSIOI COUNTY ........ 21ot INVESTIGATING, Dt1Klt¥t ... UIO
1• VACATION RENTALS ......... ntt JANITOIUAL ,,, .: ........ ,l ltt SUMMEll lll.NTAU ......... "11 Jl!W&LRY 1111"1.lll, II(, ...... ....
e Drel\Smaking -Alteralions
Special on coat helllll Call 6;12-4882
COUNT l·:r:. (J 1 ll L for
r·leall<'I'~. E~1•. 1101 nee. Ovrr
2:i. E"JM'rl Cleaners 333 J::; .
17th SL, C.1\1. 2:1 yrs cxpcr. 548-6713 COHOOM1N1UM ..... , .••.•..... 2"1 U.HDSCA .. INO ....•. ,, .. , ..... 1111 ,. OUl'LEXEI 'FUllN. •..•••• ,.,.,D7' '.OCICSMITH ................... 1111 RENTALS MASOHllY, llllCK ...••.•..•• ,..,.
• 646-6446 * BARBF.R. V~ry pmgttliSive:
:r;hofl in hi>Buliful Laguna
&111·h. 4~-'1054 " u I • h-..J MOVlNO & STOllAC• ............. c c 6600 Houses n urn11 SQ 1>A1HT1Hci, .. •-M11tl11t ....•. 415• ement, oncrete OINl!llAL .................... HOO .. AINTI HQ, Stint .............. 6UI
Clean Up and Haul
$10 a load. 640-2528 TILE, Cer1mlc 6974 OENT1\fJ 1\!'\.S'T • ChaiNlidf'.
Prf'v1ous rxp rr1111irrrl.
CEMENT WORK, no job too COSTA MIS-' ................ 1100 :~~~°i:ca .. AioHY ................. l&H
MESA 01.L MAR •·· ........... ll r l'LASTE-ING, .. 11(la; 'it"i.1ii .... :::: MESA YI.ROI ................ Jl I l"LUMI HO COLI.IOI!: Po\RK ............. Jlll l"I T O~OOM"O ............. "',,.' Hl:Wl'OllT IEACH ............ JtOll HIWl"ORT HOHTS ............. 311' l"DOL llllYICI ....•....•.••. •'21 HEW .. OllT IHOlllS •......... Jno l'OWlll SWl!ll'INO .............. ,.
Hou1ecleanln9 6735
• Verne, The Tile J\tan•
Cu~t. work. Install & rrpa.i~ .
No job too small. Plal'>ler
patch. Leaking s hower
repair. 847-J9j7/846-0206.
BE1\UTY Operator. female. Cosli:i i\lf'sa arra. Call
prt>ler \1•/cl iente le:. 6~.;...106'1 for in\f'IVU!IV.
ProgJ'f'ssJve nc1v :r; a I on . ~---------<194--5051 Dl'nft~n1An Jr .. 11·f/\rch1tr-1·1
IAYJMOlllS ................. l?U l'UMI" SI-VICI. ............... Int .' DOVlll SHORES .............. ,ml ROOl'ING ······ .............. ltH Wl!STCLIFI' . . ............. mt RAOIO, 11•,.lrJ. l lt ........... ltll
. ~mall, rcronable. Fee
"'stini. H. Stu£1ick 518-8615 * CONCRI:.IE fo"LOORS,
patios, <'IC. Reasonable, Call
Don, 642-8514
+ A.Pl' CLEANING *
Fallt & lhorough &12-8164
Williama aeaning Serv •
JACK"S HOUSEKEEPING 6910
AR C H ITECTURAJ,
BROILER a~is1ant. \Viii Drartsn1iin .Ji· .. 1\'/Architec·1
train. Apply in person. & Land Planrn'r. Ca I I
·:
"
' ,.
" •
"
•
..
.
UHIYl!RSIT Y PAllK ........... JUI REMODELING .. llEPAlll "I'
6620 llYINE 211& REMOOel.ING, KITCHENS ... 6NJ c &ACIC •• v···:::::::::::::::::;·2t4t IC:ISSOlll IHAll .. IN ...... : ... 4951 ontrectort ~~s;0,:Lu"" .............. ·-··::: ~::::i MAi:."iM'i:'iii:·;1.:1ttS: ;;m' -R-00-,-,-,-,-,-,00-. -,-,-_-p-.---·
IRY1NI TIRllACI! ..•.••••.... J141 lli!l'TIC TANKS, S.W.O'S, lilt. .. IHS COll:ONA DEL MA.It JUI TAILORING ............... ,,. Block Fences-01;veways-
IALIOA ....... :::::::::::u. TEllMITI: C~NTllOL ........ ,.lttJ Planter.<. 642-9852 IAY ISi.ANOS :UH TILE", Ctr•m•c: ........... ,.ltU
LIOO tSLE , ::::::::::::::::·%ISi ~~"-:'.! ~1;;~~E& Mtirtllt ·"···::~ IALIOA Ill.ANO ............ ,.:U.U T!LEYlllOH, ReioA1n,."e'1(.".'. IHI Nl!Wl'OllT WEST .............. lllJ U•" y t!UNTIHOTON ll!"ACK ....... J41lf nOLITEll ................ 6ttf
Additions * Ren1odeling
f'red H. Gerv•lck, Lie.
613.f.O.U * 5-1~·2170
Cmr\Jllele Jlousecleaning
543-7243 642-8931
BAY & Beach Janitorial
Carpetll, wlndo"·"· floon. etc.
Res & Commc'l. 61&-140l
e \\"INOO\VS DIRT'{?
~·r..,c est. 15 years eXp.
Johnny Dunn 642-2364
Trn Service
TREES Pruned, t opped,
n>movcd. 26 yrs exper.
Ae rial IO\\'er eqp'J.
494-4305 and 63S-7234
TREE SERVJCE. gen"1 y11rt1
cleanup. S PRI NKLER
REPAIRS 64&-5848
Jack'11 Rrstauran1. 18121 837-{)7]1
a.ooh Bl•d., H.B. alt J PMI --*-D~R-IV_E_R~S~*--
BOYS 10 • 14
Carrier Routes Open
ror
La;una Beacb, So. Laguna
DAILY PILOT
"'"""
No Experience
Necessary!
HUNTINGTON HARIOUll ••. ,.J.115 WIELOINQ ......... , l ffJ l'OUNTAIH VALLEY .......... )411 WINOOW CLEANING.... lt'1 EXPERIENCED ~~'o::Ai:ove ·::::::::::::::~:; JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Carpet Cle•nlng~_66_l_S lfousecleaning. hav" own Upholstery 6990
1\lusl have clean C3Ji lomla
dl'i\lini; record . A!Jp\y
YELLOW CAB CO.
186 I!:. 16th Sl.
C'lSta Me~a
LONO IEACH ................ JJl)f JOA WAHTIO, MIA ............ Jtll tran~ri .• day \\'Ork. 541-9357 011AN01 co11MTY ............. "60 JOI WANTl!D, w-........ me A-OK shamJl()O thr\.~tn111.~ CZYKOSKI'S CUl5tm. Uphol.
BUILDING
INSPECTOR DRIVER \V11n1rrl for Laguna
Be.ach an.a. flfusl he 18 yn:
& h11ve car or mQ\or bik,.:
TA ANA N ll JOB WANTEO, ~~~TMINsTEir ·::::::::::::::::,.11 MIN A WOMIN .............. 1ne special $7.50 rm-less for DL\L direct 642-5678. Chara@ D.lropean Craftsmanstilp
MIDWAY CITY ................ ,,,.,, SCHOOLS . THlnUCTIDM .... 76111 halls ele Alro com p vour ad, lhcn sit back and 1009'0 fin! 642-1454 $754. lo $916. per monlh
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
... NT ••
"
• "••••T• KM Jo1 '"l"A11.t.T10 N .......... 1111 1 , ·-3•82 ·1. 1 ho . , i•·n N 1 Bt c11 .. " ......... THl!ATrtlCAL .. . ........ ,,.. hou~ec n g OM•-1 1s!en tot 1c p ne nng. o. ewpor v, .. COASTAL ............... lllf
1
_ To thro1v It ('flllf't'I approx.
17.') J18peri1 rach dt1y rxcept
Sund11y. Contact Joe Noblcs
1t! Thr J)aily Pilot offitr .
612· 1321
U.GUN .. 11! .. CK .............. IHI MERCHANDISE FOR --
LAGUNA MIGUEL ............. JJll SALE AND TRADE MllUON Vie JO .............. UM IAH CLl!MEHTE ........... ,,,JJU FUllHITUtt& .. ., ..... llOOI
Cit.PUTRANO ........... J11S Ol'l'ICE l'UllNITURE ........ H lt ANNOUNCEMENTS ANNOUNCtMENTS ANNOUNCEMENTS CAl"tlTAo\NO IEACH ......... :JJH OFl'ICI IO•ll'Ml!NT ........... 11 Jncl'f'ased building activ·
ily n~s11itates creation
of an additional position
i11 the Building Depart·
mcnt. RNJUired h I g h.
~chool diploma, journey·
min sratus in onc of thP.
bul!dlng trades, t\.\'O yean
journeyman level exper-
ience.
DANA .. 01HT ................ 1141 sT011• •outl"M&HT .......... eon and NOTICES ind NOTICES and NOTICES CONOOMINlllM .......... ffH C:AFe, ,_llTAUllANT ........ IO!I ------Elcct1"0r1i•· Pa1•1i:; Co11nt<'t111i1n
ror \Va!lick'11 f.fusic City, Ci\1
Parr tin1r, to sell phono-
xraph needles. c11r!ridg.
es, s lcrl'O llca<lpho11es
And oll1e1· accessoric!!.
\Vages plus <·omm. C111l
P..fr. Dunc 11n. 1213)
32(l.ll~.
DUl'llXl!I UNFUllH ....... ,.,:tfll IAll •OUl .. MIHT ............ 1011 p SUMMl.ll RlNTALS ......... ..sm HOUllHOLO GOOOI .......... IOU Lost 6401 e roon1l1 t405 Announcements 6410 RENTAL!> GA-AOI IALE .............. 8012 ---------
F I h-~ FU•NITUtt l. AUCTION ........ IOU LOST' f I F T · Apt•. urns SQ Al'l"LIAHCl!S ............•.... llH em81!: 0)1' err1f'r
OINlRAL ...................... -HTIOUl!S . ·············'"' puppy. \Vhite w/broWn COIT& MlflA .................. 4111 llWINO MACHINI ........... 1121 head & blk 11pot11. Bal Isle, Ml.A VlllDl ............... ,4111 lro!UllCAL INIT-U Ml.HT ...... t11J
NIWPOllT llACH ............ 4211 ...... NOS. o••AMI ···••·••••• •u• Sun afternoon. Rt'\\-ard for
NIW .. OllT HllOHTS .......... 4111 ~=~~~1siOii ·::·:::::::::::::::::: info leading to ~COVP1"'\I. NIWl'ORT tHORES ..••... ,. •. 4lH ·-·~ WllTCL11'1' ............ UJI Hl·FllSTl-lO .............. 111• 6?5-3563orOR>l063 UH IYEtt51TT PAll lC ........... 6lSJ fA•I •CCOllDtillS ......... ant IACI( IA y ............. ,.4t41 CAMlllAS I f.OlllFMlfN1' .• ,.Ulll l!AIT ILU"I' . .. ......•.... 4141 MOll'f IUl"l'LIES .. , ......•. MM COllONA 011. MAii .,. ........ ollH SPORTING OOOOS ......... hlf IALIOA .................. 4:1H l lNOc;ULAttS, SCOPU ..•.•... wt IAY ISLANOS ,, ............... 4JH MIJC:ELLANIOUS ,,. .......... 1 ... LIDO ISLI ............... 4111 MllC. WAHTIO ................ lt IALIOA !!ILANO .......... 4Jll MACHINl,_Y, El< ••. , ......... tltl HUNTINGTON llACH ........ ,'4411 LUMll!ll ..... ···••··••"'"'"'1151 l'OUNT .. IN YAL~IY .......... 4411 ITOllAOI! ................ ,1111 llAL 1Eo\C14 . . ............. 4-IH IUILOIHO MATl!ll:IALI ....... 11" ~ONO l l!ACH ............. ,UH IWAl"S . .,. 11'1 ~ANO• couNTY ................. PETS and LIVESTOCK OAllDlll OllOYI ............. ,4111 WllTMINnlll ••·••••••••••• .. 4'11 lt\IOW"Y CITY ••·••·•••••·•••·4'11 'ANT• .. ,.. ....................... ... IANTA ANA HllOMTS •••.••• , .... TU.TIN ........................ ....
l'•TS ,OINllll:AL .............. ....
CATI .................... -.•••• ..,. CIOOoS ........................... au
HO•lll ................... , ••• llM
LIVllTOCIC ••• ,,. .••••• ,,, ..... ...
COASTAL ................... 41'1 CALIFORNIA LIVING t.AOUNA &IACH .............. .-iu LAGUNA NIOlll!L ............. 4111 MISSION YllEJO ., . ., •..• ,.. 41'1 I.AN CLIMl.NTt •.•••..•..•... 41H OANit. l'OINT .................. 41 .. Tlll•LfX, lie. , ............. otot r.ONDOMIH IUM ................ 4'H
RENTALS
Aptt. Unfurnished
OlNl-AL ......... ~•••·•··· .. .... COSTit. MlSA ., ................ 1111 MISA VIROI ................. 1111 NIWl"O,_T l l ACH ............ ntt NIWPORT Hl!OHTI .......... 1211 Nl•l>OllT SMOllll ......... ,.ltll •llTCLl .. P . . .............. IJJI UNIY•ttlll'Y PAlllt .......... ,JU' IACWIAY •..•...•............ 1141 IAfT tLVPll . , .............. 1141 CHON• OIL MAii ........... nu
NUIUllUll ................. 1911 SWIMNllf\10 l'OOLS ." .......... "" Jlt•TIOI ........... ,,,,,,_,,,,nu
.. WNINGI ..................... 1t1t
'IAC.ATIOHS ................... llU
TRANSPORTATION
&OATl a YACHTS ............. .... IAILfOATI , ................. Mii 11ow1• CllUltlRl ............ "2t Sl>•ICJ-.SKI I OAT , ... , ...... ... IOA'f TllAILUI ............. tm
IOAT jlAAINTaNANCI -···• .. .... IOAT l.AUNCMIHO ,. ........ ,tt)4 MAltl"I IQUtl", ......••••. tm IOAT ILi ... MOOllll'llG ........ '9M IOAT 11-YIC ll .............. ta1 IOAT alNTALI ............... 9tJI &OAT C"'-'ATfll , ................ .,
RE\\' ARO! Please return our
Irish ~tter, 1'0 em a I e .
"Ramie'', l yr. Lost 1212.1
vie Avocado & F'ai1,•1ew.
Child b r oken h e art e d .
6·12-3&15
MALE kitten, blk/wht .
Charlie Cllaplin mu11tach,.,
Loat Ott. 22nd. 1300 Galaxy
Dr, Dovu Shores, N .B.
6~2-246'.J
UlST From Albatro55 Dr,
1-IB area; Sable & "'hlte
Collle, Lassie-type, a1111 10
5hPJlple:. RE\VARD!
962-Tiflt
CHRISTMAS EVF: • WhllP
~rtie:. vie \Varner & Beach
Blvd. HB. RC\V! 5.16-4634,
968-1257
J,QST -dog, vie Mesa VeNif'.
7 mos old CrelUTly bl"Q\\·n Toy
Poodle/Pomcrentan. It
found ple:ue all ~97
6405 tOA ................... .... ftSL,AHDS •••••.•....•••.•. NH -!ILi ............ : ••. Siil
'llNlflfO toATS ..... , ......... ....
IOAT MOVINO .................... Peroonel1 IOAT JTOllAOI ...... , .. , .... ....
t OA 1•1.ANO ·='"'"""'"hU "JINOTON llA.;" , ........ 1 ... "'°'*TAIN YALLaY .......... NU llAL l lAC H .................. f*H LONG llACH , , .............. NM OttANOI COUNTY ............. "91 O .. llDlN e11ov1 .............. Nit WUTMINITIR. •••••····•·•· .. NII llHOWAY CITY ................. Ull .....,.,. ............................. ... MNTA AllA NlllMfl ......... JIM "''"" ........................ .. c•aiT AL ....... ••••• ......... fM UlilltNA •I-CM ............. .JJtl WVNA NICU.L ............ ~
.... CLIMlllT9i ··••.t..-..:""''.JTll -.NAN CAJitfflta-...... Im OANi .. OIN"f •. .. ........ 11•
llEAL ESTATE,
Gtner1I
flUl'l.111, tic. ............ , , ,,.. COHOOMIHtlJM .... ,. ,.,., JtH
IOATS •aNTlfO .............. . AlllCllAl>T .............. ,flll FLYING LlllJONS ...... , ..••• t!Sf MOltLI HOMll ............... ttll MOTOR. HOMll ............... t'IU
* LICF.NSED •
.:Spiritual Rr11rllna:, advice
on oil m1111lcn. Lo\'r, l tCVCLll ................ ms ILICTlllC u.111 .............. nse J\lnrrilll{t', Bu1incs~. 312 S. Mt NI l llClS ................. ft11 El Camino Real San MOTOllCYCLh ,, ............ hit o
MOTOll:ICOOTe•• 'li"·:.t.:·····mt Clu1en1e. ~9136, 492.-0076 AUTO ll llYICll a. AITI •.•. NII 10 AM 10 PM it.UTO TOOLS. 1ou1• .......... ,. -I tltAl&.1 .. n.AYIL ........... "21 TllAILlllt. ~ ............. ..... CAMPe1t1 , ..................... ... TllUCKI ....................... tM ~~71tf ''11i#TA(s"'" ....... ·;:::
oVNt auoo11s tus IMPOllTIO AUTOI ........... NM1
ll"OtT CARI .... ••••···"'" l.NTIQVll, CLAl$1CS ........ ,.IJ •aCI CAii, R00 5 , •..• ,. •.. , N.2S lUTO 1Yli!NT1 ............... ttU
GENTLEMAN '8 would like:
10 m.et lady 40 to 55 with
mf'an1 inte:realed In
m,_trl.mony. phone 536--0tM
AH£ YOU \\'ORR1ED about
dnijtl in I.he AChOo!J ? Con-
tn ct &41.o.112
ACTING
Do you want to be a full time
\VOrku1g p1t1fc1sional? J.)o
you have the sell dl11elpline
In sub,ictt yourself to a ria:-
irl British !raining course &
!he 111·t1s1ic humilily to ac-
er-pl nilnor roles unt il I hr
traln1ni.: fll"J'tOd 1s ('Omplete'!
tr ~ TllF: LONDON LA·
GUN1\ i\ CT 0 R 6 \VOR1'-
S110P niight he abl" 10 hrlp
you. No previous experil'nce
necessary. no aa;e barrier.
Mf'mbcrs of lhls exclusive
group "'ill only be a~pCed
upon a i1atisfactory pen10nal
t"P.E.E basic boating course:
offered to publlc by Bnlboa
Pov.·er Squadron i>very P.Ion.
n!1ht for 13 v.·eeks beginning
7 pin r.ton. Jan. 12 at
Nr wporr Harbor Yach I
Cl11b, 720 W. Bay l\\'t' .•
Newport B<'ach. No ;sdvancr.
r e21111r11 t io11 neerled.
Rrg1!l\rr at cla1111. Rrin11
11otcbook fir~t nleht. Qucs·
1lon11: Call 673-185;)
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job Wanted,
Women 7020
lniervlcW v.1th the dil'f!Ctor. BAR't'f:IT-tnfant o .k.,
Dill 494-4404 for appl. vicinity Cl! Tulberl and ----'-"-~-'---I Ne\\'lflnd, 84:l-36;'•7
FANTASTIC DAV WORKER
VOYAGE Hnt.c81. 1IPpcnd.abl,.
Call anytin1e 541·7772
l'or applicaHon and in-
rorn1allon cantac:t t h e
PerilOnnrl Of!icr. 3300
Nrwj'IOrl Bl\·d., NeWpOrl
6~:,~~. Calif. 92660, (TI~J
'·•·<>O.,J... 1
CEMETERY
COUNSELING
T"·o m11turc men needed.
Prefer 30 to 60 yean of a1e.
F.xperienced In Riling in
the home. Jnte1'f'1tina: work
and lop comn1iaslon. A
btautl!ul 1\-lemortal Park
t°l\'rrlooklng the Pa c i I i c
Oct'an. PlellSe call !or an
lnlcrvicw. Dan""tll Ward.
Gi4--0212
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7IOO COASTAL AGENCY
Adwrtlt\ng Agency Profe11ion1I
Sh1rp S.Cmery f o r Employment
f11t -p•ced Newport A1•l•t•nc• Be•ch Afency. Type A member of
E:ng1net:r
PLAN CHECKING
-E NGINEER -
$939. to $1141.
per month
-CITY OF -
NEWPORT BEACH
N~ po5ition In rht Build·
ing Oep111·1ment requtr-
ing drgrcc in civil, archi·
!('(;lu ra.1 or ~1ructut'11I en-
gl1]('rrini; and on~ )"Car
of f'\l>el'le nt:t chccktni;:
bulldlni:'. plan.~.
Apply to lhr Personnel
0 I I Ice, 3300 Ntv.•port
Blvd.. Newpo11 Beach.
Cl.lit. 92660. (714) 67J.6633
immroiatcl.v.
The '''l"1t·ll1~ nml'1 . betuUIUI
llhl p thr 1~· Cltflper Barque
f\f 0 NT E CRISTO ltavlr!JJ
1100n for •round thfl world.
~n ltft for rlvt mnlribut.
inJ'. men oc women c r t w
member'I, Alao needed: Doc.
tor, Cook, Sbip'1 caf1)f'nttt.
MARINA CORTU, Son DI· ''°· (714) 291.&259.
U.70. Shorthend 100, Sntlllng &. Snelllna" lne.
or9enl1e & f o 11 ow 2790 llarbor Bl, CM~ * EXPERIENCED. Spec:iaJ t'h r U , U n d e r 35. llarbor Blvd. at Adama Ma chine 0Pf'l'l!. Top pay,
*Al " Phone: 642-3910. 42.5 COM\\fUNTCATIONS TECHS 11tcady • ~pnrtswear. One r N . Newport Blvd. \\'ork Ovtnc!l.!I. Contn.ct Tom 642~?2 N.I)..
• • 1 -~,=,R~CRA~~,..~~,=!EC!=i~s-. -Gasper, 714-774-2610 1:":x<'·i;;;,E'°':.r"'u"r,"·NO:c·">:"o".-.-.-.-. -. -
YES IT'S YOUR Work ovcniea11. Contact Toln 00\\fPUTER MECHS · • · • • • COUNi'ER:'-IAN
FAULT Oupe:r. 714-774-2610 \Vork ownieu. ContAct Toni Cily Aulo Part~
For rf!corded mt_..ce that ~..,,.,'"',..-'.-C~l~v=ll~E-"'".,.-1~--,-I GuJ>f'r. Tl4-TI4-26to 2012 Placentia. c.~t.
will chanre your Ure can $lQ15. to $l296 per mo: Cal~ CX>SMtTIC l&leslady Io r f' E ~f ALE A•• Is tan 1
ORANGE CO. $4?.fi667 fritndly dnia atOtt. Laa Bch. 1-lanngcr, Cashier It. Sale1 2~ hour recordll'll 1ornla. ,..Utratlon required. Some buytne exp. prtr .• lull 'A-Omen. }'\ill lime positions.
--'-='""'"=;;..;::....._11'lleappUC3!ionl'b)'J1.11, 23rd. rtmc 1vaU. Apply, 1tatfng AwllAble lmmedJ1teJy. Alrl!:
Announcement• 6410 For fonna ana. details, con-Qt. Box p.112 Daily Pilot. 21-45. flee Mrs. T, Chris'. · -----tact P.l'!IOnne.I ~pl. Sot1lh Coast Plaza. SENsrrrvn"Y TRAINING C I TY OF • . · COOK nH<led for ne"'"
WORK SHOP COSTA MESA ,.iccltlnr rtstaurant, Apply rnv Cook , E:oeper.
A 1irosram or tnterpel'90nlll 7? Fair Dr. nWJ4.SJj() llft~r J PM. In pr:rson • 3J3 rtl'nveyartl & rt'IJ,.r shill,
ex1:rel1e1 tor 1mall ielt-d i· Baywlde Dr. N.8 . ~2.:i.o hr . 5G2 \\'. 19th St ..
Jor. fl1oorc Ph. 5-10.1764.
FULL l'hurge bookkeeper, fe·
n1alc, vai·t tunr. Possible
ruiure lull tin1e ·Prefer {'.'I·
pf'l'i<'11Ct• in con~1nu·1io11 111·
duslry fo1· 1·ap1dly gro1ring'
n1anufal·lunng t'On1pany .
BALANCE-FLO INC.
n I: til.!·:.;uo
G IRL FRIDAY
Apply in ricrs.in
KINGS FOR MEN
2300 Harbor Blvd.
Cost• Mtsa
i"iOUSt;1.;:1-.:Ei'ER & child
care, 51-l da. \\'k. Sj() v.•k +I
rn1 & brd. Pel. vac. ~G-921 2
LIQUOR Clrrk ... •XJ>'rl. u\·cr
·10. li<lt:xl ,,far1\ng salary.I
Cosla i\[rsa area. :HR-3883
Ll\NDSCAPI:: f'oren1an or
lnbot• \\'/foren1an potcntial
lo 1111rk fur ex!ablishcd
c:un1p1u1y \1'/11ew branch of-
fice in El Toro area.
837-()926 or 83()..{:@IO eves .
i\IAIDS 11•anlcd for morel
work 1'"or appt. c all
6-IG-326:J. BayclilJ t.tolel 4jj
N. Newport
~Jald, O\'Cr 30. full lin1r,
in Lagu11H &aeh *. ·191-8.1:11 *.
l\li\LI:: COOK -Pi\f. Hosp.
exp. 111-ef'd. Contact Pt'r:o;on-
ncl Director. So. Coal!I
Cu111n1. 1-10~11. 31872 Cs!.
lh1·y. So. i..a&'Una, 499-1311
Ext. 3j6
i\IECl!i\Nrc nrcdr.d lo fL'I
niy Rumblrr & fo"aJeon sta·'
~.~i::'~-~~agons. Pr\'l party.I
........ .;.JJ.J
J\tECll ANICS & SALI::S:'-IEN
Lorin'~ P.ichfirld Sa n [)[ego
J'1"11y. nl Harbor Gi?.-3.144 '
J\otEDlCAJJ Sccrrtary-
Receptionist
Pf'r~onahle Kiri for very busy
fron1 office, age 25-40. Must
have f'XP with aJI medical
insuranC'C's &. bookkeeping.
Hours fl-6 daily, \Ved !}...J,
Sal 9-1. Salary 10 stai1 S-150
1110., l•ut fu1·lhe r allo\\·ancesl
\\ill be n1adc for an ex•
t:cption111ly '!killed fll'l"t!On.
Hefs requircd. p ho 11 c
64&-3962
1\-lEDJC/IL Stenographer •
Bookkeeper, Radiology of.
fl~. Refercn~!'. Phone tor.
ln!crvie1v. Gll-177:>
Mcn W11:n!cd for e11rly n1orn·
ing delivl!:ty of nev.·~papen
10 home. Goo<l sup. income.
P.1ust live \V. ol Harbor
Blvrl . 847-$19
cM"E"N".-c"c"c,.ck-oc,c,c,c.,c,c,-. c,c1c0-"' '
.)obs lhan people. Con111cl
Tom Gasper, 714-714-2610
* MOTEL 1\-IAID *
l\fu11t be cxp"d & ovf'r 30.
App: 2205 Harbor Blvd ..
Costa MCM, Calif,
* MCYrEL 1\-IAID *
Part Time Over 301 4M-~I~ !
NEED CLEANING LA DY
Apt. South Lgun;i. for
"working couplr. 642-3472 i
NUHSF:S Registerecl -f'\'f'll·r
ing & night shifts. Ex.
l>enelU~. Apply Personnel
Director, So. Cl\811! Com·
munlty Hosp., :um Cnast
llwy., So. Laguna. 499-13U,
ext. 356
O!ke
Secretery Dict•phone -
fn relmb.
PBX ecept. ·fee reimb.
1425. I
Typr1t R1copt. • G .G .
1 area. fie re1mb.
Shipping Clork Typltl •
G.G. 1 re1. fu reimb.
ABILtTfES
UNLU,1TED AGENCY
483 E, 17th SI:., S\lltf' 221
ColtA Mesa st2·1•70
TO 1450 r.e.x. ()p(!nitor -Rtcption.
lit. Emrilo~r P11id • C111111 Ann, \Vcttellll 1'r1w nnel.
N,B. 1HJ.2no •
MAJOR
ASSIGNMENTS
TOP BRASS
COMPANIES
We're recruiting
NOW for:
Newport 81ach
Office
& •II Orange County
& Be1ch Cities.
''Master" Stenos
'First C lass" TypisfJ
"Priv ate " Sectys.
'R•nk & Filo" Clerks
''Typist'1 with
creotive writi ng
.bilit y.
"Lega l" Secys.
"NCR" Oper.
# 482
''.Medical" Secys.
"Keypunch " Opers .
"Bookkeeper-Secy"
''Convention 11
Hostesse s
"St•tistic•I" Typists
AMERICAN
GIRL
needs YOU
C1ll o.I; NEW
Newport Beach No.
for •ppolntment
il73·4176
REGISTER NOW!
AMERICAN
GIRL ' ' ltlNTALI WANTIO .,,,,., ••. "" 11.00MI f'Olll: lltHT ,., ••••• ,., ttU
ltOOM lllo I OAllO , JtH '-'Dfl!LL 'l'llAILIJI (OIJllTt !nl
l.UTOS WAtrlflQ •.•••.••••••• ,tllt HIW C-•I ................. ... IUTO LIAllMG .,,,,., ..... .,.tltl UllO CAJll .................... " ..
'
ALCOJIUUCS Anonymous
Ptton. SU.ttl? o.· write to
P.O. Bo:r 1%23 Costa Me1a.
'
n!C~f'fl INllP'· Mlnlmal Olt\t. dlrttt 642-5673, Cha.rtt COOK. [xptT. F'or Pre· C.1\I. DON'T al\'f JI <tWI)', i;:et
chaJ"se call 612-i'rlO. 10 Ml· yoor 'ltd, then alt !'lack and ScllOol. $ d~1. LI.inch only.1 'P"lo<l,..,-g•-;>:..,-oo'"'a"'h-·.,G"i"v-,--I _•.;.ul.;;c<:....;..;.e&.;;•_h...;;..l.;."_w;..l_th~•J .,,,.!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!ll!!f. ~s_m.;,.;.;;;.... ______ , 1 l11h!n to the phone rin11 Call 846--0671 Your "Fair Shan!°' Dally Plk>! v.·3nt Ari. .. . ·~ , " . . ...
•
... --------,.-------~ ~-·-· ---· -~ -· -------·----·----~--------·-~--.... ----------·-~------~-
Tuesday, Dttrmhfr 30, 19"
TRANSPORTATION ~~~~~~~~B~S:_!&~E~M~P~LO~Y!!M~N~TJM~E~CHANDISI POR MlllCHANDlll fOll TRANSPORTATION TUHSPOln'ATION TRANSPORTATION TRA.14SPORTATION I~ S<hools-lnstructlon 7600 SALE AND TRADE SALi AND TllADI ~ & Yechtt fOOO 1~1'!'.'9" --lmporlM ,,,__ -lmporl!d A-HOO .:;u,;..,i;,;;_c.="'---9900--1 \ JDb1 Mttt, Wom. 7100
REAL ESTATF. CAREER!
Be&lnnil\Jil in 3 Y.ffkll Paul·
Y.'hlte-CarnahAn v:UI be
1tartlng a con1plt'le MIC!!
training program. Oesignl'd
pi-hmuily Jar ~w pl!Ople &
incl\KIH all tht! practical
upect!I ot Jiliting, fu111nclng.
appnJsltlK &. selling ol
relridl'ntlal l'f'al e s I a I e.
lne lude11 complete
audiO\'lsual color 1 i I m ~
i;ho\Ylng es-acUy how to sell
real eslalt' 11uccr:ssfully.
P lea.51! uk for Doug \\rhir1ng
~40
JOIN TI!E FIELD "fell••-llOO Ml ... roo1'"-L TA-~· MOO ·--Jc_!!~-~ ~USTIN A~lllCA MG VOLVO IUICK j;
WITH A l'UTURE! SCRAM LETS ~ --·~-.... -.. ·'"'"""'"°"no ""-'1i<r1 ' • Secanl Pool to pobllc b1 Bal* AUSTIN AMERICA + ''7 MCiB RDSTR +VOLVO VALUE I '67 RMERA
l.t"I u1 help you qUal\fy. ANSWERS BRUNSWJ(.'K..AMF' Squadron CYn)' Mon. nilbt w l ffIYrOp + CONVERT. 'tS'vOLVO t..S 4 DR. SPT, r\lJI power, tncludlna: air. INNl<ELPERS INSTITUTE Cu5tom Slate Table for 13 wteka ~ 1' &In, Slnb, Pvfl TOP + T 0 N N EAU. SEO. w/ tact air ccndldon. ttra1D ~ «>.OOO aetuaJ
INTERNATIONAL From $289 pm on Mon., Jan 12'ttt at ~~ "'adc." local. l-owner. irw:. auto. nnc, Rill. etc. miles. Mot~Jlotcl/Apt Mgmt Sehl ~ub _ F'otrt _ Exile _ lom Finandnr Newport Hlrb:lr Yacht Sold new 6 ltt'Vlced by us. 1~. ~ Adobe $2895 A OlVISlON OF llu!ng _ IN a HOLE * SfX:ARD POOLS * Cub. 710 W. Bl.1 Avt., ffew. Mft wb1a w/rtcent PirtJU t&n w/ plu,b llddJe Inter.
Af..'TIIONY SOI00.1~ ~ mother mouse sa.ld to ~1992 port BMcb. No ~ ndl.aJ tirtL Spuk11ns q , Reorxd lutbw 4Ul)hy Ir ~
1n1 S, BROO~'T her daUgh.ter, "Go a.head and 323 S. Ma.In St. ~ rrsittraUon needed. Rep. Br1tie l"ldJls p-etn. Show-«OXIOl1\J'1 A ptfn for the ft
ANAHEIM. CAlJFORNIA many tfwt ,.1 u ""1 want * AUCTION * '" at daa, br1nr --,_ """"1doo! o.q Slll961 know1q .. ble ,,.,.,. ONLY ~~ • •
0Mse1 form every week 10 ilvc fN a HOLE ~ rtat . first nldJ,t. Questbls: Call MARQUIS MTRS: IOO So. $1995. MARQUIS MTI\S; ' :
PHONE FOR APPT, of your Jlfe._'' U YtllU will .ell or bey 613-1.!M. 3100 W. Cout Jbr;y., N.B. est Hwy., Lq\lna ~h, 900 So. 01f Hwy., Laguna ,. :
Ask for Betty 776-5800 A .~ ~~ a1 !!( J7' F1ber&Jau, all electric, 40 &G-Ml5A ··~~ MG n..~714 t!M-7503, M0..1100. Beach, $.7503. 540-3100. f,. ~· f
LOOKING for a s:ilid fu ture * COLOR TY SAL£ * uc ......... a ~· ,.....,. :...., p.m. hp Evllvude eogine, Perfect u .... ~ ..--'67 MG M~t. Good con. '57 VOLVO. Neech brakes. ..,,~ •~ff" I
but i;:ettlng , W indy's Auction S.rn condition! 6C-OU1 Teachu lttuat Sacritloe! dt&n. Only u,cm mil8. $225. Good conclltio.n. Call ..JJl I
NO\VHERE! 1910, 73'" Color TV, hand· 20~a Newport. CM &J6.8686 ---1969 Austin Arnerlt-a. Auto White wl blk". $UD. a-..ig, ~ 549-'Jf/Jlf!:. 66 or rr Restaurant
*NIGHT
DISHWASHER
Look into a ('BJ"t>er as a llOffit' y,•aJnut cabinet, ~·hile Behi.nd Tony'& Bldg. M.at1. hilboth H10 trans. n.dk>, extra&! Sl"'50. ~67>=>TS3,=="= .. =1131====~ ll.967 VOLVO S..18. ms. Xlnt 1970 HARBOR BLVD. r
·RADIO ANNOUNCER the'Ynt !:' ~ .. · Firs~ ~Y· BEA.UTlFUL hand p&inted * ~2 -ciond. l-owber. $1630. Day C'OSTA MESA
J8 Years or olde r
REUBEN E. LEE
151 E. Coast Hw.
Newport Beach
Restaurant
HELP "'a.nted, ff'male, over
21, S2 hour. a.15-9863
Sc!e Betty Bruce at
mijj l xec
Agency for Career Girls
410 \V Coast Hwy., N.S.
By appoint. 646-3939
me a.re at e r-oil portrait o1 you or your CAL 25 OPEL 544)..1745, Eve1 S46-19BS
71'!·3800 .. ,.,, 1877 Harbor ru .. :. <hUdreo from. pbot......... . .A~US~~TI~N~!'.H~EJ~A~!:LEY~-1~;;;;;--;-;;;;;-::;-;;::--;::. '64 ELECTRA • dr
tnsti!ute of C.~f .. 548-~ A ·wonderful idea for that 1-960 A·-~ H-'-· ':Bug OPEL 1968 •u•• Sport Anti. llUM= (11-'a 9615 Broua:ham, beige wlblk 1-• c•"-tm · 1 LOADED ""'' u1 ~-.-, r=:: vifl)'l top, many custom •<> Broadcast Aris RCA Qmsole Color TV , ;14ll spec "' .. ,.,. u I I t • Coupe, fully equj~ $1300. 1 al lull 'd
l"l N a 1 I , A R 1 · ,_ 1 .. 111 646-3629 * With Slip • Eye" Sprite. New tire. a. top, Prlv ..... -._ 968-3867 '57 MORGAN + 4 ces .. ac r, P\l'l' eqp • '" . J"ls o , ~-· e r1gera.wrs • • . • rom .,.,o ndo .-.. •:1 prem. titt8. xlnt cond. * DOG TRAINING * Fro1t Free 2 dr refrig • $148 3 ROOMS of !Um; incl 18' in Newport ton n 41 all cover-wi wa, '65 Opel pod condition New Thp, new brakn, Ex-Sl390. 6'4-4585
a .ASSES STAR TI NG : Ret'Ond. \!lasher• & Dryers retrig.,ZenithMedltcon110le 64S-Ol10 $650. 536-8062 !>'lust aell. new tires $700 celltnt c ondltlon.$1500.
No\"\ce obrdien(.'t'. Jan 5, DUNLAP'S stereo, all 1 mo. old. 1'5 Sprite convert. nerot. &7M2'12 eveL 642-1724 after 5 PM. '60 2 DR. Hardtop Buick,
7:30 pr.f: Kinde.,,arten riup. 1815 Newport Blvd., C.M. 646-7981 Jr O'DAY Daysailer Lo miles, reu. 642;-1~7 CISmlJA 50 T)pe 202 Sport Pl•. plb, auto trans, Oemo $1593 U&ed.$.1195 "'--'-•n...-... .....icood radiolhtr. good cond. PY training Jan 1, 7:00 Pr.1; 541-7781 Carpet layer .bu HI Lo 1-'' O'OAY, uRd $495 TO. YOTA ~ ........ I'"', very•'" • 642-3706
Conflm1ation Jan 7, 8:00 NORGE A I w he nylons $1.9!1 yd. Shags run Zone Boat Co. Ba.Jbor IMW $2100/trade. 536-3912 P!\l u o as r, cop-from l.50 up + my labor, '55 BUICK, xlnt trans. Mwit
r.1AnTtNCREST -KENNELS pertoM, late model, xJnt 90c per )'ant 847-1519 9035 e BMW e TQYQJA ltece Cen, Roch 9620 Rll by Tues nite. ~-or
• 540-0989 • cond. $65. 54&8672 or Ml __ rl_n_o_E<j~utp.~---All Models in Stock best offer. 548-1290
847-8115 BEAlJTIFUL King bed.quilt-l ~li ~ MODIFIED M;.i-t racer,!---------MERCHANDISE FOR ed mattrl!ll, Complete·un. 60 H.P. Ford y.g set up for for ~ atfl vc very -.c. I: DRIVE 'nfE l!nG "'&"
SALE AND TRADE KENl\10RE Dryer. 1 year ... marine use. $30. Call SALES-SERVICE-PARTS ALL REMAINJNG 69'5 new eng., tires, tach. Xtn.
old. Excellent condition. $85. ~l~~s.w or th $250. anytime. 540-2681 T&M MOTORS, INC. MUST BE SOLD NOW! flres, I: enc paru:, Aaldng
Furniture 8000 ." .. 3-4=' .. "'======= .:::::::=777"7"---l-====-=====I 8081 Garden Grove mvd. PRICED FROM $1780.60 $1200, will conalder reas. of·
20 * * * * S,.t Sllp Moor!nt1 9036 534-Z!S4 Open Sunday 892-5551 Sn-. # 1450 feT. Mwt aee to apprec. 1961 Sewing Machlnn 11 FAfl.lILY Membership t n :z::.:..::.::._:.;.:;;::.:;:.,;;~_;_,;:::..;;f ;=="'·'"· -=·=====fYour Bftt Deals Are Still At Harbor. C.M. crcall 60-0080
SINGER Automatic zig zag, ~Z:ie~t~ ~~~tub FLOAT avail. 14'xlS', perf DATSUN DEAN LEWIS
6 mos old. No attach needed cond. See-at 222 Udo Nord, ---------II986 Harbor, C.M,
10 do designs, mooogram&. ~tOVlNG ·make oilers. Pool N.'B. Make ofter. 494-Ml5 NEW!
bl ind hems etc.: auto bobbin tbl, bed•. lamps. delk, BILL MAXEY
guitan; drum .. c ao-Mobllo -· 9200 '70 PICKUP
9700
WE PJ.Y ..•
CADILLAC
CADILLAC Brougham, 1967.
Black top, grey bottom. Blk
leather interior. Fully equip.
ped, Like new. 644-267'7
1958 CAD, family car. Rllns
& looks beautiful. 1st $295
cuh takes. 673-425.1
•
SECTY. -SALES
Career position 1n expanding
sales depl, i\lod. tills. plant
Joe. in hvine lncl ust. Com·
pff'x. 1\11151 be sharp, person-
able & e.'lperienced. Divr-rse
dutle11 include telephone ron-
tact 1~·l lh cu s!omers, short..
hand and typing.
20 PC. "MADRID"
3 Room Group
FROi\f MODEL HO~IES
Includes: Quilted sofa and
chair -3 end tables & eof·
fee table -2 lamps -dress-
er -mittor -headboard -
cniilted box apring It matt-
ress -S pc, dining room;
table &: 4 hi-back chairs.
winder. 5 Year g u a r . oordion. lots mo?1!. 646-IS4l
Assume pymts of $5.27 or YEAR END W/camper, 96 hp overhead ITIOIYIOITIAI $42.00 C8lllh. 52&-6616 CARPET Installer to.as one cam, 4 apd, dlr, 5 ply tires, ~ CASH -------11
CHEVROLET 1
Salary open. All fn nge benl'·
lllB incl. profi t sharing.
Calif. Injection Molding
COMPARE AT $749.95
$399
WELK'S WARDIOUSE
200 Briggs Avl',, C.~l. 5-16-4460 No down-f'mts only ns mo.
Nea r Orange County Airport 600 \\.'. 41h St., Santa Ana
1endant-Sall'sman, part time
SERVICE S T AT I 0 N Al· Open.Daily 9-9
Sat, 9-G Sun 11-6
Mu1lc1I ln1t. 112S
PIAN~Walnut gpinet Story
& Clark. ACCORDJAN ,
Child'• Titan, almost new,.
make oiler.
OR.GAN-Gulbransen, f u 11
fool pedals. Take O\~r
payments. Call aft 6,
962-7661
roll. avocado nylon carpel, CLEARANCE SALE back up li1hta. You name --
Double jute-backed. Will Rll ALL SIZES it! Serial # PI..5212C&73. 1•1 BEACH BLVD.
all or part $3/yan:I. 540-7245 NOW ON DISPLAY Full price $2D'J9. Take small Hunt. Beech 847-ISJS ... -.... ·-· can • *" trM esttmate.
GROlH OIEVROlft 8' POOL table, wht wfgold BAY HARBOR dn or trade. Call Phil, lmtN,ofCbutRWy.anBcll
fell. Brand new. $200 cash. Moblle Home S•le1 494-91'13 or Ms..a634. '68 TOYOTA Corona brdtop J.ilt. for S.S. Manapr
Call 642-3217 1425 Baker St., Cooa Mesa * THRIFTY SPORTI coupe. auto., fact air, lady llll.1 Be&r.h Blvd. c•°"IRL"°''S"'"'""""'=.,--,ja~c°'k-et:-wc;i"tb. I ~block East at Harbor Blvd. '67 DATSUN "1600'' CON· awner. 644-2951 Hunthwflaa s.cb
tringf!. Siu-med. $15. Coeta Mesa tTI4J &40-9410 VERT. SJ>arltlln&" ori&. Mi·I-=====:==== KI "'31.
546-15.18 MODEL SALEJ <Ado Cream w/ .,... white PORSCHE 1111: PAY Wlf • vinyl top, plush black vinyll----------"'
Ml1c. W1nted 1610
--------1 • •• l
1963 CHEVROLET jl
NOVA STA. WACiON -.
9 pu~nger. Automatic, ta· )
dio aDd heater. (1JG49'.01 ·
$699
eves. Expcr. only. Apply at USED upholstered chain,
2590 Ne\\'J)Orl Blvd .. C.J\1, assorted colors, $19 l!'a. Us-
SERVICE Statio n Attendant. ed occasional ch a Ir s,
Full tim". Union Oil, 1645 assorted colors, $10 ea. Us-
Adams, cr.t. 54~1206 cd assorted end-tbla $4 ea.
Pianos & Org1n1 1130 1---------
-Y_EA_R EN~D-SA-LE-! $ WE BUY $
ONE MILE FROM OCEAN inter. Rflttnt pm-nium tires. '68 PORSCHE 911S. Fae.
COS"l'A MESA t in 10,00)! ONLY $1795. prepared eng. Cllst. paint. FOR YOUR W
GREENLEAF MARQUIS MTRS: ""' So. All '"""· lo mu.,, (213) • UNIVERSITY •
Thl' Factory, 1885 Harbor, Use your X-ma.s money tor
SERV Sta Attendant, ex p. 540-6842 one of these HAMMOND
nee. 4618 Campus Dr .. N.a B"E"A"UT=iru=~,-. -.-,--=I BARGAINS! M·3, $675; S-112, Airport Texaco· see l'otikt'! L King bed· quilt-$675; T-200, $1595; E·lOO or
t'd mattre&.11, Complete, un. A·lOO $18$; RT 2 w/PR 40
WATTR.ESS. pxpcrienced uS('(! $105. '"'or t h $250, n~<·. -•-BAWWIN Or-Colta;;e Coffl!' Shop. 81? ~ .. ,, J<N ..... ...,
562 \V. 19!h St, c r.1 =-,,~,,,_-•_v_•~•·--~--1 ga"Jnie $-195; GULBRAN·
I ;,,===--.-----,,-,-c I USED complete w a I nu I SEN w/rythm $895; AU.EN
\VAITR ESS. need an attrac-bedroom set, consists of -9 dlx theater $2650.
fh'I' onl', for food, cocktails. drav.-cr dresser w/mirror. HAMMOND
Apply In person, El 1foro dbl headboard. 2 n i 11' ln CORONA DEL MAit
16655 Pac, Coast Hiway Sun. stands, 2 bedroom lamps, 1 28&1 E. Coast Hwy, 613-8930
set Bch after 5: 30 set dbl box springs & mat· Open Eves & sun afternoons
\VE have an opening for a tress \\'/frames, $85. Same
txoginncr in ci r c ulation st!l "'/twin beds $110. The
ma nagemenl Pl'rmanent Factory, 1885 Harbor,
situation for hig h school ~2.
graduale \\'ho hM completl'd FORCED 10 sell 8' f.1edit.
his military obligation and l)()fa, 7 pc Basset din rm set,
ia looking for a businr.ss 5 pc Basset BR set. coffee &
"'\th a bright fu!ure. Con· end tble. 11 ) 821)....()98)
IF you a.re buying a Pia.no
or Organ tlili. YEAR &:
are interested in some real-
ly great deals, µlease shop
\VARD"S BALDWIN STUDIO
tact Benton \Vllliams at the ~=~~-~---1 1819 Newport, C.l'o!. 642-8484
$ FURNITURE $
APPLIANCES
Colar TV-Pi111as-Sttrta1
1 Pltc•., " .... hll
CASH IN )0 MINUTIS
• 541-4531 •
FREE TO YOU
MOBILE HOME c:.i Hwy., Laguna &ad<. 266-6226 or 67S-0021 CONNnL OLDSMOBILE
SALES 1-494-~:';!500~.i54~o.3~1~00~.----l~~:;:;'';';;~~~:;::~1 2850 Harbor Blvd.
111: "'"350 e ROLLS ROYCE CHMOLE'f c:..ta Mo.. ..-n
-2821 Harber Blvd. 1t FLEET SALE * RARE 0 PP or tun it Y. wm MISVll _... ROU..S '39, side mounta, new a.ta Mea 5f6.120!I (SJ 1968 Otevy Im pa] as
l\fOBILE LIVING on the pamt, new "'IW tires, $4850. 1--,,w;;;E""°'P"A=v'""T"'O"'P,--1 2 Door ............... $1700
BEACH Limited •pa.eta. in Prlv. prty IW6-50fl, 6f4.41 t5l 1968 " ..... lzn"·' new addition to Dtifh\'OOd "Leader in The Beach Cities" DOLLAR ......... ;:, !'<"as
..... Club M•M• 00 ZIMMERMAN VOLKSWAGEN "" ...... cl•an -""" (~)";;;·;:.;;;·.;;,;,;;;,:;-11630
display aoon. _21462 Pae 2145 HARBOR BLVD. all makea. See George~ tedan station wag .•.• $l1m
Hwy, H.B. ~7a13 ~lO Th!odore Robins Ford (1) 1968 Ford Galaxie
PUPPY. Cockapoo. 5* moa. 1956 TRAILERM.1A 8' ex-YW BUGS 2060 Harbor Wvd. 4 Door ••••••••••••••• $1600
pando x 3f>'. Tra.ilertown, ORANGE COUNTY'S C.M. "2-0010 ;J3.4.""""' Male. Black & furry. Very NO 1 ..... .,.,
<u". All'"°"· About I fl. 321 w. wu .. o, space 34• • ' ' FROM Will Buy *POPULAR CHOICE I
high. Friendly, likes J>l'!OPle, C.M. 642-5583 DATSUN DEALER $399 '00 CHEVY JI V-8 "NOVA"
Bod & doi ho'"' indudod. Mo I 9300 DOT DATSUN Tour V.UUW,.tn or .Pl>rM:he IIDTOP A/T, P/S. RIH.
833.-2949 111 torcyc " um Beach Blvd. GOOD SELECTION A pay top dollan, Paid for W/wall.s etc. spa rk Ii n g
FREE Dog to a good home w ANTED: WW ~ owr Hu.n~ Beach ar DDt. Call Ralph orig. Glenn Green. Hardly
with children. Fuzzy pup. 6 payments on 1969 SOOCXY SC.T1!1 or 54l).('IH2 · ~ 673-0900 Jook1 sat in! Yr. end special
mos old & hou~ trained. more. Triwnph, BSA. BMW, '67 DATSUN RDSTR ft ~l--IMPO==R:::n;::-·-w=ANTE0=="-1 $1575. MARQtnS MTRS. 900
Beagle and half Poodle. FOR Sale: Yamaha l2S tic; $1400! SmalJ down, will , DU1.A.c..1, v~• MUST SELL ' • DAI.LY PILOT for an Jn-2 USED 5 pc dinette sets,
terviC\\'. :<lnt cond. $29.95 ea. 2 new
30" ga11 ranges, full sizl'
\V0~1EN j 6~. ncl.'df,'d for oven w/glass look-thru
Y.'Ork at the telephOne order door. $109 ea. The Factory,
dci.k, part lime. 9 am lo l .1885 Harbor. 54()....6842
Open Every Nile
& SUnday Afternoon
6~:~· ~~=ale, ~~ ~i~ ~~~~~· oNy. ~~ :~ ~ cl~':i 4s_~: ~b,.,~~ BTl~1!811~ ... _-$ ~:dv'"l,_.., ~ac~:~. !.f.;m, =
loves childrt'n, To good Endoro. Xlnt. &hape $400. nnc prvt prty. TYl\1412. Call
home. 831-4239 548-5391 after 5. Roy 494-91'13 or 545--0634. H. Beach. Pa. &n-15$ 1969 Concour Estate Station ~
FREE Ger . Shep/Collie mix '66 HONDA 175 dirt bike. Wagon. 15.CXXI miles. radio-J
pm or 4 pm to 8 pm. $2.00 USED 1'-fagnavox AM/F~I
per hr lo start. Openings in radio & 11\creo, Chinese
Costa P.1esa ornce. No "XP1 black cabinet, $50. Used
nee. Call for infor. 642-1;,.12 porrable blk/\\·ht TV &els
\V0!\1AN 10 assist in ca.re of $59 ea. u~ credenzas ~"
tlderly lady l\\•ice \1·eckty. long, I gold, I aYOCado, $29
491-9881 ea. The Factory, 1885
Schools-lnstr\lction 7600
MEN & WOMEN!
cor.tPUTER PROGP..Al'ot·
1.IJNG IS THE KEY TO
YOUR PROFIT ABLE
FUTURE!
Classes start soon.
Pilot program offering the
finest equipmenl and faci l·
itJes a vailable! Real-time
compute.r programming.
ThcAcadcmy ciCoiaPc•·m 'ICdiiialogy
Union lank Square
5outh Tower
S11lte 4D
?ran1•. Calif .. 92666
Call 547-9471
*AIRLINE &
TllA VEL CAREERS *
St.anon A;t"nt
T\cket Sa.le£
Rl!'!14'1"Vatlon"
Air f'r"Pii;;ht • Cir:,,
Cnmmun1c111ltm.s
Tr11vtl A,;t-nl
Jlarbor, 540-6812
23·• TV/stereo/radio, excl'I
rond, little-oVtt 1 yr. old,
Paid ovrr $1000 1\t"\ll MC $300
or besl. offer, Also old ant'q
upright piano. Offer. 540-3:i69
~tOVING must st'll at once -
81 ~' divan, din nn M!I. pr
<'nd Ibis, lamps. See.make
orter. Call 811-2234 for appt.
PRICES SLASHED!
up ro 80% Savings
R' Sofa & love seat $159.95
a Pc Span game .set Sl&.1.93
l\ing Sz quiltl.'d mattttss &
box sprinJ:S ........ $99.95
S Pc BR King, Span $179.~
Approved Furniture
2l59 Harbor, CM 5'S-9fi60
USED complete 8 pc
!'I'd/gold Spanish liv. nn
group. Consists of -&>fa,
Jovese.at, hi-back chair, 2
r nd. I cocktRil !bl, 2 lamps.
$199.9fi. Used 2 pc 8' gold
r.ofa & chair $69.95. Used
modern 7' ehampa1?ne sofa.
xlnt cone\. $59.9f>. The Fnc-
tory, 1885 Harbor, ~4:l.
COUCH & Chair $35. Book·
case $10. Bed $10. Qul'f'n
m11lll"f'N> $20, Drapes $211.
673.Q7-1
BLOND dining room !;((, 4
uphl'd l"'hrs. rihl buff~ t
\\'/~lllM lop, SlOO. &14--0496
0111<0 Equlpmont 1011
n·PE\\rRITER. Add ing
milChint', calculator. \'ery
J'f'!lll., xlnt cond. 892-2423.
~·r•g• Sile " I022
AM' SAl..E Dinette, Stove,
Rf'I, \Vasht:'r, Bdrm It llv.
rm. flllTI, ~f.a hklf!.t·bl'rl.
l~rllra Golf clubs. \95-1
Pa r.!tim. Apt 8 . C, l\I.
616-217S Sal Ir: Sun lOM.1·
3P~I
SINGLE beda. S25 ea. f\falt.,
box 1princ A frame. Cir\'1
hike $S. Boy'1 bike $2.
Chaise lounp $10. Mbc.
l1em1 $1 up. b40-00ll afr. 5
AIRLINE
SCHOOLS
PACIFIC
lnouin Today
5l3'ii96
&10 !:.. J7tJ\ SL. Santa AN 1-:-Cpm.o.-c:-=,,,.-,==-;:::;, l \Veek endinl Jan 3rd. Gold
AUCTfONE:EfUNG
REGULAR 2 uiE•'l\ Tt:Rl\I
Be in hu5iTIM& tor your1.1eu:
~tim fft bf! •n auctio~r.
\\'EST·BF .. ~ Srhool of Aor-
HonN-rtna. 2l'lfi \\" ·llh, ~n111
,.,.. ~ '7
eu!ltorn JdlcMI\ boolh. 40'
~Ulna: to nr d.raperln-«Old,
~t11y111g ··uhf':r " dn-er.
m1~ hou~hollf. IWJ..500'.l
rrs Bt•cb hou• ti1ne Btc·
~ !Crlr"Mtfln l'Yerl Stt thr
I\' ti" l)f!JIT \\',\,''T ,\'11' ..
puppie11, 5 femaJe, 3 male. Rehl!. tc!ngine, new battery, ENGLISH FORD 549_ :mt Ext, 66 or 67 Auto L_e11lng 9810 heater. di9C. brakes, luggage
!!!'!'!~'!"~'!"~~!!!'I 54~7134 be1"'>een fl & 4 new clutch. $225. 968--6726 1970 HARBOR BLVD. LEASE ANY MAKE rack, 2 way tail gate, pow. i
PIANOS & ORGANS days. l /l GILERA 98 cc, runs ORANGE COUNTY'S COSTA MESA OR MODEL er !leering, SlOO under high l
NEW & USED 2 PC. divan set, also new good, $75. Call alter VOLUME ENGLISH • • Ltt our Jea.1e experts llllOW book. Ll ~or 6.17-3155. j
•Yamaha Pianos Oriana ttnler se,ction. circular, of 3 6 pm. • 67s.U25 FORD DEALER YoU the best plan for your '61 CAPRICE. 2 dr., 327 eng, 1 •Thomas Organs pc. sectional. 847-2939 1/1 NEW Yamaha l2S Erx!.uro. SALES. SERVICE penonal need& without ob!J. factory aJr, 6 way J)O\\-er j
• Kimball Pianos 1WO frtt couche~ in back Only 190 miles. Illness fore· OVER 60 IN srOCK a:ation. seat. radio. h yd r o ma t 1 c )
• KohiOT & Campb<II yanl. 2451% Eldeo Aw. "..i •. 1425 . ..,...,,, • 2 & 4 Or. Model• 1963 VOLKSWAGEN UNIVERSITY "'"'· ovo";" w.w. """· \ COAST MUSIC C.l\I. e 2 & <t Dr. Oelwces OLDSMOBILE good cond. priced for quick ~:~~ &11 HA63~~~ GREY \Veimaraner, female, Auto Services e 2 .l 4 Dr. GT Modela 2 Door aedan, 4 speed tranJ., 2850 Harbor Blvd. sale. 5"12-3377 ·
4 mos, shots, ranch home & P1rt1 9400 • Station Wagon& mt.ton. (GNZ074). C:ie:fa Mesa ./ '68 IMPALA SUPER l
Open lO-G F ri l0-9 Sun 11.S pref. Aft 5, 646-37n 111 ljj~iiii~iijiiiiiiiiimlMany with fully automatic $599 540-9640 SPORT Custon1. Bu c ke t ~
TERRIER • Dachshund. 61 1 BEAOI trans .. a.Ir, radial llrt!1i, n -I iiliOliOliO..,iiiiiiiiiiiiiiii• I .seats, alr, p/b, p/1, lo miles,
HAMMOND Steinway, Yam· mo!!., free to good home. s 1 dlo, vinyl roof, \\'SW tires. LEASE• RENT new tires, Very clean, $1995.
aha. New" used pianos of 494-3520 1/1 Auto upp y BR.AND NEW SID. 2 DR. • UNIVERSITY • Immediate delivery 6~54!H
most makes. Best buys in $1185 FULL PRICE OLDSMOBILE 1170 onFOoRllDS '& '64 CHEV Nova w,.00 '83 So. Calil. at Schmid! Music 5 Little roly poly black & \.1..lt.-f f ORDER NOW 2850 Harbor Blvd. white puppies free to good .,., nv tsa • Theodore ('U, in .• 4 s.pd, new rear end Co. 1907 N. 1-fain, Santa Ana homP1, 548-5636 12/30 Pticea to All Coista ~fesa 540-3881 FORD TRUCKS and tran1., brakes and tires.
--~~==~--IFREE Baby smooth-hair Complete ?ifachine Shop ROBINS FORD SO VW's All popular makes. Fotd Very clPan. $925 or best of· ~ HAPPY SPEED EQUIPMENT ~" H-~ Bl d authorized lea.sine !yatem. fer. S44-3248. Guint'a pigs. 546-9965 1/1 ~ .._....,, v · 1960 Thni 1968 G REBUILT ENGINES Costa J\tesa. 642..oolO et OUr Ccmpetitive Rates 1965 Chevy, Impala SS 396, HOLIDAYS! FE!\1ALE Pet rabbit 1125 Victoria, CM 543-6$0 From Theodore air, new brks, immac. Pri
..... ,.,, 12/>I 18J6IB<achBlvd,HB841-00911---------1 $495 ROBINS FORD p'1y. 531-7636
GOULD MUSIC PF.rs •nd uvEsTocK • oPEN 10•Ys • FERRARI Harbour V.W. """Harbor ruvd. . .. MAuau. ''"' '''"d· .,.. 2CH.5 N. J\1a1n, SA ~7-0081 Costa Mesa 642-0010 tires, 1 o"·ner $850 finn.
VERY rare player piano, Dogs 8125 Tr1ller1 Tr1vel 9425 FERRARI AtmtORIZED 673-3663 or 548-6203
baby -nd, with Ampiro --------Newport Im"°"' Ltd. °" SALES l SERVICE .~ LEASE •~ '64 CHEVROLET I --• .,.~ BEAUTJFUL black & tan 1968 NORTH\VEST Coach, 1111• CounV's anb' author-I"""" .....-m~ll.
ex Press 1 0 n · Hea r Dobermllll, male, gentle, 15 19' self c:onl.Ained, u~ l x. lied dealer. lml BEAOI BL., 8C2-M.15 1969 MurtanK Hardtop, V-1, Orig. Owner. 43.ooo mi Like
RachmanlnoU play h Is mos old. 1"lak• offer. Aft Immac. S2600. S3l-8505 SALES·SERVIC!'-PARTS '-;:"'HUNTI==N=-G°"TO"'"N_B~E~A~CH~ air, pwr diac brakea, rwr New Cond. $99.i. Call
niiisic his \\'3)', Ask ques-it:30. 5"18-2'l59 3100 w. Coast Hwy. 'WRECKED VW, aultable for strg, f7'9. per mo. 24 mo 540--0107 lions! 49-1-6261 N .......... .+ Be h J ---------GEM-1AN Sheph•nl. male, Trucks 9500 e ... A""'. ae dune buggy. Lesa than 1000 ea1e. '53 Otevy, eng. runs rood.
----------1642·9405 54~1764 ml. on newly overhaul-"" SOUTH COAST f!X'C'l'I int Good t • pa .......... 5 years, needs .....,... A thorl-• F _ _. n..-• eu . . ra .. sp. ('at
Hl ·FI & Storoo 1210 iov\ng~ home A ap:;:_ CAMPER TRUCK u ~ e.,.,, vc;utr eng. 12"75/best ouer. Kathy CAR LEASING S200/00st offer. 847-6397
S44-4646. 1970 G.M.C. 14 H.D. equip., .~·=73-c-27=49'""'=-"'-.,=,--,,--~ W. Dlt Hwy, NB 645-2182 '63/64 J\fONZ A Spyder, 4 r..tARANTZ SL T 'T'urntable
w/Shure cartridge. Cost
$29;): r-.rusr SELL $170.
642-8584 or 642-1461
V8, Ser. # :l'L'>0031. FIAT 1970 VW a. ... 4,000 miles, -•pd """ 2...v. -•1 ' pm BASENJJ Barklec-puppies '"'"4 U od C -· """" ~;>I.I, 11.1 .... $29'5 private party. ~ oner. I ar1 7~ 5.16-@91
BOGEN 10 W 1tereo, am·fm,
2 Un!veraity l2" trl-axial
!'il'f'&ken: \l'alnut cabinets.
xln t cone!. S2J5. 61~
from Africa. Champ. stOC'k, UNIVERSITY * ''7 FIAT U HN• Hdtp 536-1643 xlnt mk'gs, terms. 645--0533. 0 SMO -l:=:-=,,--:---=-,-..,.--LD BILE 2 DR, -4 PASS, SMART & '62 VW, xlnt con, 6l int«tor. SCHNAUZER pu-, rar e "":11 Ha~ Bl·~ .. --,....,r ..... !\'111...[SH "Penny Pincher". PoncM whlf.xtru! f15.3581,
black: A-ult '-pepper. C't>sta l'ofK& e... ... kli,_ Ermine white w/ &M--4439 * 213f330..6595 • 540-9640 .,,_. ·~ I ~==,....,==,...,,==-. ?lush red vinyl bucket_ ~.t 162 vw. GOOD COND.
Schipperke puppies, AKC. '&I CTIEV Pick Up 1,1 Ton 1nttt. Show room condibon. S600 * ~l
6 moa., 2 males, all shots. long bed, A·T, P/B, V-8. ONLY $319j, MARQUISc~~· -.,=-~~~~
Sporting Good1 1500 ~==*~54"&-<'-=-928"'--*-~~ 1 radio. $200 + assume, ~tTRS; 900 So. Cit Hwy., VW '62 (food Cond4
SAMOYED Puppy, AKC ~712 Laruna Beach. 494-7503 * $600. 675-#12 * 6·10·• f\IOSS SURFBOARD
Blul' pign1ent on bottom And regl&lered $60. FOR S&le '69 Doc11e Van or M0-3100. SURFER SpttJal, '82 VW
Call f)f5.. 8075 ~\~s •-d• lo• vw. p h 0 • • Cam-r, e"""'ne xlnt cond. blue on 1·aJls. Excellent con-'"" • " .-~ '"''
dltlon $75. Call JAY M~l514 5 l'otONTH old male. hall S57~720 a.ftPr 6 MERCEDES IENZ New clutch . .$600. &0-1223
AUSTRIAN red 1kil, with Beagle"' hall Poolet. Lo\.~I '67 EL CAMINO: top 1hape,' 1958 Vclkswartn Karmann
bindlnp. good condition $50 I _,•_••~"'~"~"~· ~-~~· =8l=T-I=""==-•pd., a till undn-warrant)'. Ghia, Jl.50. &W-238-' LABRADOR RETRIEVER $1750. ~ e'"°"· ./ Call M6"'1'l7
FUPS, O\amp 111ock. L.A.RGE '68 CHEVY WJN. '64 VW Bug, YI!!')' rood cond.
$75. + 846-9446 00\V VAN. Big 6, auto, xlnt 1 DW'nt.r. JUdy Ktmpt
_M_l_1e_o_l_l•_n_oou __ , ___ ll600_ l-T\~n-'te"',.'-T~o-y~Poodle,.:...~.-A~K~C~. cond .. ~nter Kat. 6421574 M5-933L 8 A?if • 4 PM
./ FAMlLY loftmber!!hip for
Nf'wport B~ch Tenma Oub,
""""" Ol9-""6.
2 Johnl90!1 CB Seta
reuona.hle
5f9.lfn
black, male, 6 ,.,.1c5. sho111.
$75 + 64~709 aft S •
AKC lrlsh Se tter pt1ps. 6 wks
old. Olamp, stQck. 3 ma.le1.
4 F~ Terms. Call for
appt. 4!J7-1071./49C-6632
Stereo taps ret"Ot'der w/JO tt..... ll30 t.pea • •cc~ $.10. :.;.o;.::.;;.:__ _____ _
&a1board $50. 49M.1SS 5 \'EAR old. chocOlate, roM
• CARPET e mar@. Good show fl">
Ntw I: Ul'd 25c A up. New 1peetsl ! Hunt & Jump
""" ..., p a 541)4336 s.cr1°'" '""· 546-6255
C1mper1
'63 FURD, 223 cu in 6 cyl.
ln1Ulated wlpam ca.mper,
butane 1tove. add-on room.1---------
i~ box. etc. sm. AJ0..6324
SMALL I' Caluper %
Cabowr. Be:autlful •'ood In.
~-SleeP1 S adulta. $%75.
"3-99113
lmpor1o4 Aul• 9600
MG
VOLVO
VOLVO
SEE A t>RJVE TiiE 1910
ALL Jt.DtAINll'IG e ·s wsr BE SOLD NOW!
PRICED FROM $lm.lU
Ser. # 7860
Your Stat De.is Att Sdll Al
DEAN LEWIS
YEAR END
CLOSE OUT SALE
V (])eyy wqoo, medwrie's
'68 SS 396 CAMARO.
All Extnu! $2325 . """"" .
apecial ................ S69 ./ 1964 CTIEV Impala, Kood
~ Ok11, 4-dr. aedan •••• $79 transportation.
'59 T·Bird, han:ltup •••• $9!1 Phone ~
'$7 Metropolitan coupe l"M-'67 CHEV Capri~ 2 Dr., 321
chanic's apecial ...... S9!I e-,,·r p/b pl• ~ ·~· . . . """" '62 Olevy Mon1a, COUPe $199 care b)' J ~·ner. 833-2443
'Q hlcon, 2-dr •'' .. · ·' $2'J '65 CHEV. • 327 Motor • 4 '63 Plymouth Club Cpt, s.m '64 Ponti& r..w1n spd. Bueltflt seats., &d. paint. e -a. 4-dr ChNp, 642-1532 Rdan ................ $399
BLUE OflP AUTO SALES 1967 EL CAMJNO. white,
2145 Harbor Blvd .. C.)t auto, R· A H. k) ml. S1750.
~ CaU 64>-1691, e'"u 54~
RAMBLER Ii: f'&lcon sta
wagona . T~tion
can. Nttd 10me 1mrk. Best
oiftr tak!a. 536-S
IUICK
1964 ButCK LeSabtt, p/b,
pis. al.N'oM. Mull sell by
Jan lat. Mab tint otter.
6'1>-2115
1962 Bulclc Soc<!al Convt.
Vef1 clnn • bul n••da
mechanic.al •wk. S 11 s.
644-2806
CHRYSLER
For Sate F-wd. TRANSPORTATIQ¥
°"""""~C:'YP111' Boats " YKhts 9000
ALFA ROMEO J:rtupoll
~I 111 p Ll l l ~·
1966 Jlarbor, C.lol. 646-930.1 ./ 1962 BU l CK CON· VE!tTIBLE, l<lO
21" TV, new picture
"nl'k~ OK. u;,
11 f)'G~,·~·, •
tube., %1' O\\'ENS "61 w/rnoorlnc I ln Nr"'tJQrt Bay, '39"".il_ tncl••
I !' N'r.rljJ. Call -3~ ..
~ ALPHA Rtlfnl'O, new rnE SUN NEVER SETS on Call..642-6129 al1 4 pm,
pain!, lirea .l parts. R/lt. 3100 W. COUt l:fwJ'. N.B. Cluaifted'a aclioll flOW':f. n"S Beach house time. Big-~!hlmt. &"'(!. 00 or 67
Good eondltion. St 5 0. $0.9lCD *l™ Ft'll' an ad te •U around tht &'t'SI 1electlon f'\'l!!l"I See the 1910 HARBOR BLVD,
Mll·l703 Aut.horiud ?tfG Dealer clock. dJ&I 64UQI. DAILY PIL01' WANT ADS! t'OS"?'A ME.liA !---~---•--'-'---~~-~---...;..;.;;;:.;...~
---- ----·---·--·-·----------
TRANSPORTATION
DUNTON
FORD
2240 S. Main
546-7076
"'1 PLTM. $14'5
Fury II ,, •• ""'•ton. v.1,
•ulom•tie, f•ctory •ir, IM'WI'·
•' 1+••rl119, r6'to, li••f•r,
Lie. TRK 4,0.
'65 OLDS 88 $995
4 Or. V-1, •ufom1tic, f•c·
fory •ir, pow•• ll1•ri/\g,
pow•• br1k•1, r•dio, h11I•
•'· Lie. WJO l lS.
'68 FORD $1995
G.I. 500 4 dr. H.T. V-1,
.utom•lie, f•clory • i r,
power 1l•11ing, r1Gi1, h1•I·
•r. lie. WTE 516.
'66 vw $995
4 1pd ., r1dio, h•1l1r, 1un·
roof. l ie, TIS 711.
'63 CORVAIR $395
TRANSPORTATION
CORVAIR
'64 ~10NZA, xlnt phy'ltt.at .t
tneChlir\l<;al cond. $600.
~'1528
"62 COlvair f.torua, bucket
seats, 4 gpd, xlnt cood. Prlv
party. $450. W -7519
5-19-3031 Ext. 66 01' 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD,
CT}STA MESA • Cp•. 6 cyl., •Ytom 1tic. r•-•
dto, h111l•r. U,, HNR 575,
'65 CADILLAC $1895
S1d1n Ot\lill 1, \1-B, •u•o·
m1lic, f1cfory •ir, r•dio,
he1!1r, fylj power, lie. ATB
S2 I.
'66 PONTIAC $1395
!onn•vil!1. -4 dr. t-r.T. V-1,
•ulom•lic, f1 ciory •i•. pow·
1r 1le•rin9, pow1• br••••·
r1dio, h••l•1. Lic. ZAC 804
'66 FORD $1296
1966 DODGE
Coron1t 4 Dr. Sedan
Au!omatic, power steering,
radio & Healer. This i11 a
real &ood buy! (511 AGB) $899 '
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Cosla Afesa 54fl..888!
196-i OODGE Dart 170.
G11e:ri• 500 XL. R•dio,
h1•l1r, •utom11ic tr1;1mi1·
1ion, pow•• 1l•1rin9, •ir
conditioning, vinyl roof.
Le. RPM 851. A u to malic transmission.
Alake offer. '69 CAMARO $2476 ~~sell.
Htrdlop. V-1. •ulo. lr•n1., lie==========
powtr ll11rin9, r•dio, h•tl-
1r, 1-4.000 mil11. l i•1 n1w!
l ie. YCL 176
'67 COUGAR $1987
v.1, •ulo. lr1n1 .. f1clory
~i r conditioning, power
1t•1rin9 , pow•• br••••, rt·
dio, h11!1r, .,j11yl roof. l ie.
TYT 716
FALCON
'61 FALCON WAGON
Standard transn1ission. radio.
heater dlr, real clean! $299
or \vill take trade. POU686.
Call Ken:
494-9'n3 or S.1:J.OOM
'67 OLDS $199711'""""'"'"'"'""'"""""""""'
01lmonl 1 dr. ~trcltop, \18 , '64 FALCON Sprint, lo\V
1ulom1tic lr•n1., pow1r mileage, Xlnt cone!. $800.
1!1ering, power br1~11, l•c· 645-2311).
lo1y 1ir, vinyl top. lie. ll ·---,60~">''A'LC~O'N~--
l57. nP1v bal!ery & star ter
'68 OLDS $2194 xlnt lircs, $150. 675-3784
Cull•1• Cpt. \111 •ulom•-llo,64~7Fca7k-oo"""""Fc"c'"-,..-4~dc,-, c1~1<1.
tic lrtni., r1dio, h11!1t,
I . Clean. $500. powtr J 11r1n9, power
br1k•t, •it condilioni119, * 6:16-1463 *
FORD
vinyl top. VSY 094.
'66 PONTIAC $1366
!onn•vill1. R1dio, h•1l1r,
•ulom11ic lr1n1., po .. •r '66 Falcon Futura
1le1rin9, t ir conditioning. Fully factory l!quipped, Dir.
l ie. ZAC 10-4. $695.
'66 FORD $1464 Phone &12-6023
F1 irl1n1 SOO 2 Or. H11dlop, '39 1-"0RD \\'agon, good
Y-1, •ulom1tie, r1dio. h••t· transportation. $150 or best
er, pow1r 1f11ring, f1ctor., oller. 64&-2~76.
1ir conclil ionin9, whit• w•ll llo-'c=-=-~~~-~ tirtt, tint•d gliu. STY 805. '61 FALOJN Stn \Vgn . 4-dt',
-good motor, bod y & i·ubbel'.
'63 MERCURY $488 $250 au;h. 962-221l5
Monl•••Y 2 d r, h•rdlop.11 '"""""========o Aulorn1tic tr1n1miu io n,
pow•r 1t•ering. 1ir condi-LINCOLN
tio ninq, pow1r br1k11, ,,.11-------------
dio, h11t1r. 1958 LJNCQLN, n e \V tires,
•69 FALCON $1987 l'eblt trans .. runs xlnt. $125.
2 dr. r1dio, h•1+1r. •11!0· caII 675-lJ39
m1tic tr1n1 .• pow1r 1le1r-
in9, 1conornic•I 6 cyl. Lie.
YXU 103
'69 FAIRLANE $2271
-4 Or. v.a, •ufo. tr1n1., fee·
lory •i• conditioning , pow-
'' 1l~•ri n9, power br1•11.
he1!1r. l ie. YCU 101.
'69 Mus•AN!i $2789
"302", \I -I , pow1r 1!1erfng,
OLDSMOBILE • BRAND NEW
1970 OLDS
power di1c br•k11. 1uloin1· SPORT COUPE
tic lr•n1., AM-FM 1!11eo r•dio. liniid 9r.u. Lie. Fully factory equipped in-
YRW 094 eluding head rests, scat ='""'== .. =---I I belts, back-up lights, "·ind·
'68 MUSTANG sh ield 1vashers, outside mir-R.dio, ~11t1r, •ulom1tic
lr1n1., pow1r il1•rin9, fi t• ror, carpets. etc.
lory •ir, vinyl roof, \1-1 in-$2498
gin•. l ie. Vil 0 I 0.
'67 CHEVY $1896
lmptle St1tion W.9on. R1-
dio, h•1!1r, power tll•t· '"'l · \1-1. f1ctory 1ir. l ie.
U9G 106
'68 FAIRLANE $2268
Torino 2 dr. H1rdtop. R•-
dio, h11l1r, •Ylom•fic
lr1n1., pow•r 1!11rin9, v.1.
winyl roof. Brough•m lnl11t·
ior. Lie, VV.. 981
''6 MERCURY $917
Com•! \loy191r 9·pt11. Aw-
lom tlie, pow•r 1t11rin9, r•-
dio, he•ltr. RPP 9511.
'67 roNTIAC $1676
GTO 1·0r. H1rdtop. \I.I ,
1utom1tic lr1n1., f1 clory
1ir conditioning, pow•r
1!11ring, powtr br••••· l ie,
TYS 001
'67 GALAXIE $1797
500. 1 dr, h1rdtop. R•dio,
h11 ter, 1ulom1fic t r•n1.,
pow1r 1i•1ri ng, \1-8. •ir
cortditionlng . l ie. TUU 271
'H MUSTANG $2467
Mich I 421 V-1, 4 ''""' pow1r tl1•ring, pow1r
br1k11, rtdio, h•1l1r, YXll
607
'66 CHEV. $1642
C1pri c1. 1 Dr. H•rdlop.
Auto. fr1n1., f•clory •ir,
pow1r 1t11rin9, 'ow1r
br•lc11. r1dio, h1•l1r, •inyl
roof. RYI 41•
'68 MUSTANG $1117
CO'!t1rtibl•. v.1. 4 ,,,,d
h•nl~ ••dio, l.11t1r.
1227,11.
DUNTON
·FORD
2240 S, Main
546-7076
Order Yours TG-Day e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa l'.1esa . 540-9640) • •1
1963 OLDS 98
4 DOOR HARDTOP
V-8. automatlc, factory a.ir,
full PQ'A'er, power steering-
.,1.-1ndows-seats, R&H, white
~·alls, tinted glas.~.
(F'XN890)
$799
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
28.'iO Harbor Blvd.
Costa Afe&& .5-to-8881 • • 1965 OLDSMOBILE
CUTLASS
2-Dr. Sedan. V-8.
heater, automatic.
wall•, tintl!d gla.~.
IPCS922J
$895
e UNIVERSITY e
OLDSMOBILE
2850 Harbor Blvd.
Costa ?ttesa 541).$81
TIME FOR
Cj)UICK CASH
THROUGH A
DAILY PILOT
WANT AD
--------------------------------~--------·---.--.--. ·-------------------... ·--·---~---~--------·----------.....
Tutscfay, Ctctmbtr 30, 196'1
TRANSPOR'f ATION TRANSPORTATION T A N
Used Ctrs 9900
OLDSMOBILE PLYMOUTH
DAIL V PILOT 2
rRANSt>Oltl A JION
?<BIRD
"66 T-BIRD
Tu11n Sedan, full p1vr & air.
aqua blue Vo"ilh matchinK
int., dh·, sn1aJI dn, low
pynlf!!. TAS1•19, Call Roy:
ol9-i-9m or S.la-0634
'57 T-Bird, fair cond. $650.
'58 T-Bird, exCC"pt. clean.
nf'w poly. tires, scats.
headliner, ballery, etc. $295.
83().6324
TEMPEST
'6:l ·rEi\IPEST g;ta \Vag.
Clt"an in .t-out, n1cch,
sound. $250. 12·P:i 6th St.,
Hunt. &h
VALIANT
,!J)q~ I ~'I .START THE NEW YEAR IN STYLE •••• ~;"~),: 1: with a STYLE LEADER from Johnson & Son!!
~\ CYCLONE HARDTOP 1970 MARQUIS
1970 CONTINENTAL MARK Ill
Express
Yourself
Elegant:y
With a
CONTINENTAL
MARK Ill
-
A w
CO NTINENTAL
'68 CONTINENTAL 4·DR. SED.
A1tr1r!lve 1111h1 chrome Vt I low wilh bl~Cll
le~lhtr lntulor and 11nd111 rOOI. Full ~~· fQYIOped. l•ctorv •Ir. etc. WXF ll5
$4395
'
1964 CONTINENTAL
4 door •""In. Yel~et b!1ck tlnisn wHh black
IN IM• Interior. Fully IY•11ry el;IU•P~ lf>Cl..,Olng
lull POWtr .. llttory •Ir, Lit. OY~ 515
$1795
'67 CONTINENTAL 4-DR SED.
!IN11!1h1! Iron blW m1t1111c llnl•h w!tl'I m•!cl>-
Inv 101111tr Interior. fl l•c-l1nclau roof, !Ylly hi~ury irqulpped •nd r1c1orv 1lr condot.onlnq,
/>,M·FM ••d•o, •l•f.O llPI deck , Ont-0-~r e1r.
D••Ytolultv ITlfinla lr>(!(I. TIN020.
$3395
'67 CONTINENTAL
C<mverllttle beau11tul Ottiln lurqUOI.,. llnl11'1 wlll'I m"cl'llM !n!erlor and ...:i111 IOI>. Com1111111y lu~-ury eo:tYlPPt'd, lull p0w1r. AM-FM rld!o, tltlOry
111. tilt wnttl, etc. 4 111w tl•rn. UOAll~.
$2795
1965 CONTINENTAL
1 dOlll'. ~er! Btlot llnt11'1 w1111 blond llttntt Interior. FullV luKurv eqylpllt'd lnc!udlnt lutl p0wtr t. l1cto•y •"· Unu1u•llY clnn. Lle. OllW tSJ.
$2195
ORANGE COUNTY'S FINEST USED CARS
Jolm•on & Son llos T/1e R e putation of Offerh1g
'l 'l1e f'i11c11t Sel ccti••t& of llsed Cu1•s i11. ll1c C o1111fy!
MERCURY OTHER MAKES
67 COUGAR 2·DOOR '67 PONTIAC GTO 2·DR. H.T.
C."'d m i1t m~tallir !<n••" wun ftl~'k b1.ckel Ume lro>! w;lh mA!ChlnQ ~lnvl buckels, 11110. seet>, ilYIO. !rln>., r~dlo t. h11ler, 11Qwer 11t•r-1S9 o~girni, P.S., R&H, new cir !rade In. Ont '"~· !&ctorv air. ee~u•l!ul co..,111on. ll!JJ.03 o~·.1C• .nc ~crvlcrd bV oyr com~ny. VOR1lJ. $2295 $21 75
1967 BUICK RIVIERA
'67 Mercede1 230 S 4 Or, Sd. 8e•ulllul mt!l!liC llnlsh with bllck Interior,
~qulOQed with •II the 111,u•v llOW'Or ICClll. EK·
.411!0. Irani .. '°'"!' ~l•Q .. R IJ.. rte. On1 owner ceptlon.::lly clean. LI<. U\IU 011
-D•1u111ully m1unl1lned. lrtOed on new (.on-$3095 hnv:· VOi( SlS
$3195 1967 MUSTANG 2 OR . H.T.
Brillsn r•clng !l•Hn llnl1n w/bl•ck bucket itlll,
)ilt YI engine. tOMOle, rad., ntr., p0wer •lrg.,
'67 MERCURY MARQUIS 2·DR . PW•. "'""'·· IUIO. tr•ni., etc. TW•ttD
Hord ••• &Nullful "" ...~ !ollllh wfll'I $1795 m1tcnln4) iM•rlor, tvllv pOWft equu>P..:t. l•C·
IOrv "''• 11..,<Tu roof. -GIWltr. Orl~•n only J0.000 mllfl uz~tu. '69 TOYOTA COROLLA $2495 1 OSP 4 •l>d. Irani .. rtdio I. he110r. wnne wf
DI•<~ •nterior. 11,l))f) 1c1u1l mlln. 6••v111ul
(0..,. xoc 571
'69 MERCURY COLON Y PARK $1495
' P•$•tn<;~r S11tlon We90". F11!1y lu~ury ~Uil>' pea, lull no·,.er, lnciory tlr, •le. llHu 11>11 1968 FORD FIDO 8 ' PICKUP DOWllCr blue W1I~ malchlng 1ri1111or. C1r1r1111y 11wt1nt1lnff1 . VWR lll Radio, """'· 1111rctwt1eo 1>tw tty Jollouon fo Son. f~Cllltnl ettndlllOn. L!C. QVIHI $4,195 $1895
'69 V.W. Westphalia Camper '68 CADILLAC SED. DE VILLE M•r«ln llnl11'1 wllft bl•Ck lln<llV rCIOI •nd Dllt ll: lladlO. l'leoittr. 0011 !Oil, etc. LI-• new tl'lrougl>-lfa!l'ler lnltrlDr. LU~Y•Y irqulpped. Fyll 1111w.r, 0\11 -One owner drlvtn 001ly ..00 mlJf1. $!-. I f1c10rr 11r tondltlontng. AM-FM •ttrto, tel~ ll9!E. Ill! 1t11erl~ whttl. Un• o-•r. bt•ullt~lly m•lt1o
$3395 l•ln.td, 2', ml'91. YZTJ2t
$4595
~,
Price .Cer with
The Most
DRAMATIC STYLING
SINCE THE
CONTINENTAL MARK Ill
•
BARGAIN
CORNER
In Our Bargain Corntr, Wt
hav• numerous used cars.
Som• clten, s om t not 10
clean. Somt that er1 du:rllca~
tion1, some we've he too
long-in any event these cars
er• reel bargains. LOOK 'EM
OVER! '65 MUITANG Lie. NIH 112 165 MlillCUlt't' 2·0oer Mlnlclllr M.T. 1'0DSIJ
'65 I UICK lt1V llllA SRI )II 166 "OltD GAU.JUE SM.
~Or. H•""" IV"tl2. '66 IUICK ILICTll:A Lie, V,ll Mt
$975
$1275
$1375
$1575
$1675 '68 CMlt't'SLElt NEW,Oltt $2275 Lk . VYU 4H '85 CADILLAC CPE, 01\llLLI Lk, 1'DAU4 '88 T·&lltD ........ ltTll14.
'69 POflD TORINO Clllvl'rlllll XSlt Jtl
$1875
$2075
$2275
JohnSOD•SOD
2626 HARBOR BOULEVARD, COSTA MESA
i.ia:w t"RS
540-5630 642-0981
'M Mlle South of the
San Diego Freeway
USID CARS
540-5635
•
I·
I
~------------................ --------..--. -... ---------~-------------------· --~------------
fl DAILY PILOT Tutsd11, Dectmbtt XI, 196'
California Biggest State • Ill I .970s, But Is .It Good?
SACRAMENTO tUPI) -
Populatloo experts predict
California will widen its lead
as the nation's most populous
state during the 1970s.
Bu~ Califonllans r e 1n a i n
divided over w e t h e r I.he
population boom is a blessin1
or a curse.
As the ne\\' decade dawn.s,
one out o( every 10 Americans
lives in Califonlia. The state's
Population has reached 20
niillion and is expected to
balloon to 26 million in the
next 10 years.
When the glitter of the
Golden State will begin to
tarnish is uncertah1. But there
are lbose who will gueS£.
"California will stop grow·
ing one day because it wlll
have become just as repulsive
as the rest ot the country."
says geog·rapher Daniel B.
Luten .
"It's a truism. Ifs in·
escapable," adds Luten. who
leetures at the University of
California at Berkeley.
Ecologist Kenneth E. F.
\Vatt believes tbe population
expansion must subside soon
or Californians v.•ill face
"most serious implicaticrns"
concerning their food supply.
"1£ the rate of people to
agriculturaJ land continues to
rise at the current rapid rate,
then a time will come whe'n
lhe state is no longer capable
of providing sufficient food
products for C<lnsumption by
Californians, not to mention
exportable surpluses," says
Watt, who teaches at the
University's Davis campus.
Both statements renect the
increased awareness or many
residents about the burgeoning
population, which public of·
ficials crowed about when
California surpassed N e v.·
York in 1962 as the most
populous state.
In the 1960s the state income
tax jumped markedly, the
number of cars nearly doubl·
ed, the miles or concrete
freeways more than tripled
While drivers kil led
themselves and others at a
faster clip than ever before.
Each man, woman and child
paid an avtragt of Jl7.t4 In aaaume milltaey populaUon re-aerospace and related in· produced b y Callfomla'a AOO Ute the reit of the na· "We're nOt saying 1 t ' s California ha.a 29 million
state Income taxea for the mainl about stable, even dustriea such 11 electronics, defenses-pace lodustries. Uon, California's median age becomlnc Jess attractive," she residents whUe Japan ha& t!Mt
yqr 1960, when there were thou&b theN b much trans.fer-~usseo says the Vietnam Rasmussen forecasts a for residents haa steadily say1. "But problems do go mllUon inhabitants.
rs. 7 million Californians from ring ln and ou~ of the itate by war bu not s t i m u J ate d possible decline o f lm· dropped. It was 32.t years old with it as yoU grow." "It would take a drastic
whom the state Franchise Tax armed forces personntJ. California's economy. mlgration into c.llfomia, but in 1950, slipped to 30.3 years Mrs. Hambright polnta to change in the Ure ol Callfor-
Board collected $269.1 million. Although most new im· "The Vietnam war was an says "in the next decaclt old in ltlO and is now pegged Japan as an example for nian.s to live like t b •
The income tax blll pald by migrants settle in the Los eqµ.allzer.'' he says. ''The births will tie up" throughout at 28.1 years old. Callfoniiana lo compare lbelr Japaaese,'' she observes ln ol>-
California's 20 mi J ti on Angeles Basin, Rasmuuen federal government opened up the state. Mrs. Isabel Hambright, who state to and decide a level of vioua understatement.
residents in 1968 was $950 says they a1&o leave the area a lot of old ordinance plants This is the result, he says, ol also work! as a demographer tolerance for p o p u I a t I o n Geographer Luten ~ a y s
million, or a hike to $42.50 at a quicker frequency and and arsenals in other states." the post World War 11 baby in the population re!earch squeeze and environmental "growing forces" with i n
each for the typical man, move. to Other sections of the Rasmussen abo points out boom ballyhooed so frequently unit, agrees that someday the problems.. California are emerging which
woman a"d child. state. the war bas called for small the past 20 years. Those state may lose Its allure, but Japan is about the same recognize that u n b r J d l e d
Califomimls have Jong prid· Despite the populaUon in· arms and munitions , not children have reached child-adds It's up to CallfornlaM to physical size aa CaJirornia growth In the future would not
ed themselves on being first m1_c_r_ease __ th_a_1_is_ll_ed __ 1o_th_• __ s_upe_r_-sophi __ ·,_u_·c_aled __ .,_••_flOIU'Y ___ be_a_r_1n_g_a_g~e-. _______ do_so_me_thln_·_g'-a-boo_1_it_._· ___ w_I_th_almllv __ ..;J_•_o_1'-r-•..:P_h_y_. _be_to_th_•_•_l•_te_.,_•_d_v_an_ta--"g•_._
a number of endeavors,
although some or the honors
appear dubious.
The state registered 1.6
million motor vehicles in 1960.
There are now more than 13
million registered automobiles
and trucks using the state's
enlarged highway network.
There were 850 miles of
freeways threading their way
through California in 1960.
That distance has sioce tripled
to more than 2,700 freeway
miles.
C a I i ,fomia's phenomenal
past population growth -a
steady doubling every 20 years
-will continue but Ure rate
will slacken slightly.
The state Department of
Finance's population research
unit projects there will be 2G
million Californians by 1980, 32
million by 1990 and nearly 39
million by the beginning of the
21 st Century.
W. Nelson Rasmussen, a
demographer for the research
unit. says the peak im·
migration period this past
decade probably came in 1962·
63, when an estimated 360,000
persons annually flooded into
California from other states.
He says about one-third of
the newcomers during those
peak years set up housekeep-
ing in the Los Angeles area.
No one knows for sure,
though, where they all came
from , since there has been no
official census in nearly 10
years. Jn the previous decade
Illinois led all other states in
net immigration to California.
Foreign immigration
amount! to betwee-11 50,000 and
70,000 annually. Rasmussen
e s f i mates. Demographers '
For the money
you can't afford to risk,
a California Federal
Savings Account.
Tax Ref orrrt Congress
Major A ction of 1969
WASHINGTON_ (UPI) -
The two big actions of the first
aession of the 91St Congress
were : the biggest tax reform
bill in modern history. and a
v.·arning to the mHitary that
never again will its spending
reques1s go without severe
scrutiny.
The tax reform bill ex-
f.mpted millions of poor people
frl/n1 paying taxes. made cer·
tain all wealthy people '4'ill
ha\'e to pay at least some tax.
and cut taxes for the great
mass of peuple in between.
The 25 million Social Security
reci pients \11ill get a 25 percent
increase in benefits.
T·he bill represented the
climax ci months or hearings
in both the Senate and the
House. and although it was
essentially a nonpartisan
issue, there v.·as sparring
between Congress and Presi-
dent Nixon before f i n al
passage.
But the longesl debate ol the
session came in the Senate on
the Safeguard Antiballistic
missile system. Eventually the
Senate decided -on the nar·
rowest of margins -t() go
ahead with the ABM . But in
the. process, Congress, and
especiaUly a growing number
o£ senators, put the Defense
Department on notice that no
longer woold automatic, un·
questioning approval be given
t() building new planes and
tanks and guns.
There were these other ac-
tions:
-Draft Lottery was put in·
lo effect, and the stage v.·as
sel for a review and possible
overhaul of the entire draft
system next year. Some con·
grea.smen want to eliminate
all defennents, contending the
present Jaw i!l weighted in
favor of those young men who
are bright enough and have
prosperous enough parents to
be able to go to college.
-The. most comprehensive
Coal Mine health and safety
bill in modem history \.\'BS
passed. in the wake of 1968
disasters at l1ominy Falls and
Mannington, W. Va.
-The War on Poverly was
continued for another tv.·o
years with little change. Ef.
rort.~ to gut these essentially
urban programs by turning
Ovtll' their control . 10 largely
rural and small to w n
dominated state governments
were de(eated.
-The Food Stamp progran1
was greatly expanded from
S210 million a year last flsei.1
year to $610 million this fiscal
year. with the administra tion
aiming "t tvent11<1\ly spendinl
fl billion a year to comblt hunger. .-
-Pa1 lbiitS of 100 percent
'"r Nlxon. 41 ~rter,t for con·
gressn1en themsel ves and ap-
propriate. though s ma 11 er,
raises for the rest of the
government.
Endorsed I h e ad·
ministration's "Ph iladelphia
Plan" to start forcing con·
struction firms to hire blacks
and members of other minori·
ty groups.
-Freer Trade with Oun·
munist nations was opened up.
-The. Senate asserted i~
right to be consulted before
lhe nation makes any further
commi t ments abroad.
Congress passed an amend·
ment saying that no defense
appropriation could be used to
support U.S. ground combat
troops in Laos and Thai·land.
-The Hoose expressed lb
support of Nixon's handling of
the Vietnam war. It \Vas the
first congressional resolutio:1
on Lhe war since the 1964 GuH or Tonkin resolution. ,,·hich
President Lyndon 8. Johnso n
said gave him authority to use
American combat troops.
-T h e Senate rejected
Nixon's nomination of Clement
F. Haynsworth Jr. to the
Supreme Court. Coming after
the Johnson's 1968 nomination
and subsequent \vithdrawal of
fonner JllStice Abe Fort.as to
be chief justice, it probably
meant the Senate will give
closer -scrutiny to Supreme
Court. nominati-ons in the
futur e.
There were plenty or un·
finished issues. In fact. House
GOP leader Gerald R. Ford
said Congress failed to act on
32 ot 46 adminislratio" pro-
posals.
Some or the unfinished
business included :
-Extension of the 1964
Voting RJghb Act. The House
has passed an ex1ensioo ex·
tending ils: provisions to all
states, but weakening its ef·
feet by making aggrieved
perso"s file often long, drawn·
out court cases.
-The Cr I m t Packa1e.
included provisions that v.'Olild
permit police to jail persons
who have been arre s ted
several times ,vfiile \Vaiting
trial.
-Po1lal Reform ol wine
sort. The adminl stratJon in one of it.II first acts this year
took the IPJ>Ointment o f
postmasters out ol politics.
-Numerous Tr11111pOrt.1Uon
bllla. incJOOtng mass transit in
ciUts, airport overhaul anti
raUroad saltly.
-Ovtrlaul of the Ele<tonl
Procell. 1be House has voted
for a con.slitutional amend-
ment for the direct election ot
the president.
-eo.1amtr BlU1. fnctucHna
regulation o ( advertising
pmeis and crMit cards.
\ l
~ i ~ •• '· t ..
,. • , •
Ba'ring moneJ in atocks is fine.
Bat, to be.lllll<e your investments
properly, you need savings -too.
Because there are two things stock
ca.n't do fOI' you.
They can't guarantee growth .
They can't insure safety.
California Federal's Guaran leed
Growth Ac:eount can and does
do both .
So. when market prices go dow n.
yo u'll breathe easier if you have
a Growth Account going for you.
Your dollars can't shrink or
fluctuate. They never stop earning.
And accounts. are insured.
The guaranteed interest rate on
a Growth Account is 5.25% annually
for 5 years. Plus guaranteed daily
compounding. Yield i.~ 5.39'; a year.
····~
You'll find that's considerably
bett.er than the dividend rate an
llKl8t blue chips.
You can open a Guarant.eed
GroWth AOCl()unt With $1,000 OI' mcire.
And it's just one type of-iDsured
savings plan available at your
nearest California Federal office.
They're all great investmenta
for the money you can't afford to risk.
California Federal Savings
anc:floan Association• Assets over $1.6 Billion
NaliOI i\ Largest Federal
'
• I
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.• I ..
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'.
I
Tmesday, Dee11n1ber 30, 1969
'
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-·· .· ·-'-· ... , .....:_ ,•·
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,.·
' J ' .
· Oronge·eo..iff rid,. 1-roMI lnto,the flilur•·•• fun··of·pl'Oftlise ts• new fnoow1y. Q,.nge Co.st 1re1
spoce l<Jt Industries reacli ovt' toward what onco were cold ind ohtn worlds. Pflnntrs put on P"F*'
tod1y'1 dre1m1 which wiD be tomorrow 's rear.ties. And pest performance becomes fu~e promise.
lnsidt this, 1nolhtr annu1l edition of Futurama, we offer you the opportunity lo ·gel bolter •cqu•inl·
ed with lht companlt1, communities and leaders within them who h1vt mede 1969 an imporltnl yt1r
ind will strire lo moflt 1970 'tven·mort mHnin9ful. . ,
-r.n---am ..... !'91_.·.-__..n~~·~·-~~~-"·-~..-.~------------------.,,.
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I
, Al-FUTURAM4 Tue1d1y, December 30, 196'
at C.M. Hospital Prompts ::,Acceptance
·:.Plans to Expand Present Facilities
During Ju firs t year ol
0peration, the Costa Mesa
• Memorial Hospital. located at
,'JOI Victoria Street in Costa
' '1'.1esa, has become an integral
• part of the communities in
ttils section of Orange County.
lti fact, the patient acce ptance '
f:s so great the hospital' is plan·
ning expansion , of present
{aCilities.
"The suctess of our fir st
Y.ear is the result of the fine
.Support we have received
from the mayor, the city coun·
cil and the residents. all of
whom have welcomed us to
tfie area and made us feel that
our modem 99-bed hospital
was Oiling a need." said Alden
o . Sage, ho s pital ad-
ministrator.
"An important factor in im·
proving the community. -.
hospital relationship has been ',~'
thr volunteer program of the
Ladies Guild," said Sage.
"They enrich the lives of pa-
tients through. their unique
contributions in terms of time,
talent and sini::ere interest in
being of service. We find that
the volunteers help fill the
psychological need 4f'Patients
and complement the nursing •
program by gi ving the special
attentions which are s o
necessary in the recovery pro-
cess."
Since opening in September,
1968. the hospital has served
hundreds of patients in in-
tensive care. pediatric and
general medical-surgical. To
accommodate increased de-
mand for surgery, existing
surgical facilities will almost
be doubled with an addition
scheduled for completion in
January. Two modern
opera ting rooms plus
cys to sc opic room and
workroom will supplement the
present three surgery rooms.
Included · in the expansion
plans is the enlargement <lf
the existing recovery room.
Dr. Johnnie R. Betson Jr.,
chief of the hospital's medical
staff, said that Bever I y
Enterprises, owner-operator of
the hospital. is most fortunate
to have a man of Sage's
calibe r to handle the im-
p o rt a n t administrative
responsibilities of the hospital.
•·Mr. Sage·s extensive ex-
perience in this field and his
understanding of paLient needs
NEW ADVANCED EQUIPMENT recently added at
Costa Mesa hospital is inspected here by Aid.en
Sage, administrator, and Mrs. Dorothy Thompson,
director of nurs ing. Top photo shows Zei ss nticro-
scope for ear, eye and brain surgery and below
they te st hypo-hyperthennic blanket and ·~ontrol
which lowers or elevates temperature or patient as
needed. '
and the medical requirements
of this area are key factors in
making Costa ?\-1esa Memorial
Hospita l one of the b ~s t
operated medical facilities in
Orange County ."
According to Administrator
Sage, the new additions will
make ~he Costa Mesa Hospital
the best equipped hospital in
the area. "We are growing
wi th the community -the ci-
ty and area population is ex-
pected to double during the
next 14 years. It is our goal to
keep pace with the demands
on medical servi l!f!s in the
area ."
Beverly Enterprises, na·
tional owne r/operator. of 12
general hospitals, places great
importance on administration
or general hospital operations.
This fact is emphasized, for
example, by Dr. Alltn Blair
Caldwell , physician and expert
in the field of holpital ad·
ministration, who la vice
president in charge of general
hospital operatloM.
Or. Caldwell is one of the
foremost auth<lrities on
general hospital ad·
ministration and served as
director of Ute Bureau of
Professional Services for the
Am~ican Hospital AssociaUon
before joining Beverly. He is
currently writing a textbook on
hospital administration, which
will be used in colleges
throughout the United States.
• Commenting <ln the h<lspltal,
Dr. c a1dwell said : "The ex-
cellence of Costa M e s a
Hospital is due not only to the
modern facilities but also .to
the outstanding medical stafi,
trained in intensive care,
pediatric and general medical-
surgical. The staff is trained
Jn specialized areas such as
oper~µoo .of the Telelherapy
Cobalt urut, for use in deep
. radiation therapy for various
•tyj>es Of cancer, -a unit
unique irt the part of Orange
County."
Dr. Caldwell has been
associate direct<lr of the pro-
gram in ho s pital ad-
miniWation at UCLA. as well
as lecturer in hospital ad-
ministration courses at the
UCLA Extension Division, and
has served as advisor to the
Southern California Nursing
Home Association.
A graduate of Ule School <lf
Medicine of Stanford Universi-
ty, he has a master'' degree
in h o s p i t a l administration
from Columbia University. He
also 1,.. holds degrees i n
psychology from Marysville
College and nursing sciences
from New York University.
Costa Mesa Hospital con-
talns the most advanced
facilities for complete ho!pital
care whether it be surgery.
physical therapy, or
pediatrics. Included is a fully
e quipped pathology
laboratory, plus a complete X·
ray department for both
diagnosis 811d therapy, in-
cluding Cobalt therapy.
The hospital recently has
acquired a ZeiSIS microscope
for ear eye and brain surgery
and se'veral s u r g i c a 1 in-
struments for neurology and
eye operations, according to
PUBLIC
GOLF
COURSE
WITH
Social and
Pro Shop
Accommodations
' e DINNERS e LUNCHEONS e BAN OUETS e COCKTAILS e DANCING
'·
ACCOMM ODATIONS FOR UP TO 400
AT BANQUETS. PIANO BAR FEATURED
IN .COCKTAIL LOUNGE.
LUNCHEONS AN D DINNERS SERVED
DAIL Y ... BREAKFASTS ON WEEKENDS.
OPEN TO THE PUBLIC
2 18-HOLE GOLF COURSES •. COMPLETE GOLF PRO SHOP
72-par, 6700.yard course with water hdI·
erds end uneYen terrain: 70·par 5400-yard
course that's favorite of the higher handi-
cap golfers. Oriv.ing rtinge and putting prac-
, • tict greens. Lar9 est pro shop in Southern
Califo rnia ... featurin g clubs, balls i nd ac -
cessor jes with the most fam ous brand names.
REASONABLE GREENS FEES
COSTA MESA PUBLIC GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB
1701 )~OLF COURSE DRIVE 540-7200
I
OPl'lCAL SYSTEMS FOR AER,OSPACE,
ATOMIC RESEARCH SPECIALTY OF OPTEK
Westminster
Convalescent
Dtllp and ploduc&n of OP' uo ,,.. down when In flight. computer system In optical Hospital
Ucal ~yai.m1 for aeroapace, ln addition Optek bu 11d1 design, belng perhapg the only
aircraft, atomic research and a system ad1ptable to aircraft company of their size which Westrnlnsttr Convalescent
other tndUltrtal applications is Henri Temianka, al 8:00 p.m.. does both desian and fabrica· Hoapital provides 1 19-bed e.t·
the speclalluUon of Optek, or aenispace comm an d yon of critical system optics. tended care facility whlch of.
lnc.. of Colt.a Mesa, and modules for navigation aids. The company is a v,1holly-
they're developing a full line Another specialty are thei r owned subsidiary of SEACO fen a complete Jl'OSl'&m or
of integrated circuit projeeUon cathode ray tube relay Jens Computer Display, In c., of therapy and a well-balanced
equipment. sysit.ema which wve in com· Garland, Tex. This company schedule of divetll<mary acti-'Op~k hu nearly three putera on microfilm systems. has another Ca 1 i f o r n i a vities for ~ guesb.
years' history, although its Still other systems contribute subsidiary which builds power The hospita1 is located ad·
president, Richard K. Steele, to :semiconductor production amplifiers in electronics-IER 24·hour daily nursing supervl·
counts up many years as an for generation of integrated amplifiers in electronics -&ion, dining room or tray
optical design engineer with and printed circuits. (Industrial Engineering Re-service, electric-operated beds
such companies as Perkin In fact, adaptation of the search Association ol Red· in private and semi-private
Elmer, Aeronutroruc and cathode ray Jenaes places wood City). rooms and central patio, TV
Xerox. Steele is • graduate of them in an important function Steele is a member of tht So-rooms and garden roouu.
the University of Rochester, in the atomic era because ciety of Optjcal Designers and Jt bas an open medir.al staff,
the mecca of optical design their cathode ray lemes are the Society of Photo Scientists and Dr. 'Charles Heisttll is
optical engineers. used In the Poly JI series at and Engineers. Carlson is a medical advisor.
The company. has grown Arizona, Iowa , State College graduate of Illinois l1U1titute of A ataff of 40 people servts
from an originai three-man and Cal Tech whi ch Technology, holding a meeh· the hospital, '11th John Hl')'H
team to today's 23 personnel automatiCally analyze pictures aaical engineering degree, and being hospital cOordlnator ;
and they are utili:i:lng a 13,000 taken in the bubble chambers has a background with Bell & Goldie Krupp, administrat«:
square foot, expandable facili-of cyclotrons and bevatrons Howell, Chicago A e r i a I Lola Soenen, direc~ of nu~s·
ty-on an acre and a half or (atom smashers). Industries and Xerox, He also ing, and Bonnie-Lorig, super·
land at %90 Fischer. They have They utilize an XDS Sigma S is a member of the SPSE. visor of kitchen.
enough acreage to double the1,::;=::=======~==========='='f:=='========"I present building.
Key people al the plant are
Dick Steele, Herb Carlson, ex·
ecutive vice president; Antho-
ny Lau, vice president -
systems engineer , and
Anthony Seely, vice president ·
treasurer • chief mechanical
engineer.
Their integrated circuit pro-
jection equipment puts various
circuit patterns on the face of
1 silicon disc, reducing the
need (or precision mask.s in
the production of large scale
integrated circuits and metal
oxide semiconductors.
One of their most interesting
application Includes equip..
ment which enables a pilot
to observe whether the land-ing gear on the aircraft is
Sage.
Other new pieces of equip-
ment include a gravity suit,
used to wrap patients to con-
trol internal bleeding, an
autoclave or sterilizer and a
hypo-hyper tlrermic unit, a
blanket which either elevates
a low temperature or Jowers a
high temperature.
There are cystoscopic and
fracture rooms, the latter in-
cluding a new ,vac u um
cleaner-equipped power saw
for cutting plaster casts. Also
included are an isolation ward
and an intensive care unit with
television monitors to alert
supplemental supervisors to
the sliihtest change in the
cr!Uc1lfy ill patient's con-
dition .
BRA NCH OFFICE
Tutt.in6'Colhnt
J32·'l.S4t
Or-11i•
BRAi'JCH OFFICJ::
Chipman L PtNpect
~l:\·tliOO
O••nJ•
BRANCH OFFICE
Mi·60il
Sa11l1 I-"'
BRANCH OFFICE
MruV«deDr,
t tAd11'1'11
&48-t2'10
The ultimate in a
Senior Citizens Home
*Six to 1ev•n fyp•s ef
Apartments
* Effici•nci•s, one 0' +we
b1droom1
I
-, No d i1cri rnin1fio11 11 +• ttc1,
l color or r1ligiou1 b1ckground.
rri¢ .. frel'll
$14 ,. 5123 ,., fl'I•""'·
BETHEL TOWERS
Costa Mesa
666 W. 19th (714) 642-9941
The Bank. that knows
Orange County
At 63years of age, the First National Bank of
Orange County is the oldest independent bank in the nation's
fastes t growing county -and we're both still growing.
O ur experience in foll service banl<ing, and our knowledge
o[ Orange County, can mean a great difference to you when
you arc thinking abou t locating, buying, investing or saving h~.
Want-to receive our quarterly Orange
County Economic Report? Just send us
a request on your letterhead and you'll
be on our valuable mai ling list
WRITE: Development Department, .First ~ational B.ank
of Orange County, Plaza Square, Orange, California
F First National ~ ~.~.!1-:k.: ~~ o.~~N.~.E.~!.~~!.~
Tue1d1y, December 30, 1969 FUTURAMA
C.M. Growth Continues Narmco Launching 3-Year Expansion terlor materials for use lln
future aircraft.
Tln·lr boron prcimprcgnated
tape ls being ulillzct.I in \he
prim:iry structure of the fo'-14
and ~·-1 11 fixhtcr ph.1ncs _
(joron fiber reMlorccd con1-
spac:e·age materials, Narm~
has continued to cojoy gr<1W)l1
by producing <i n impressi\r
array or products for in·
Uus:ri::il ancl commercial ap-
plit;.iuon Besides mater1nlli
tlt:signctl µ r 1 1n n r i I y (or
aerospact vt~hiclcs. Narrnco ls
a!so Involved In the produCU011
of Mexpt!ns1ve, easy-to-use
adhesives for curtain wall
panel s finding upplicaUons in
building <:onstn1ction; lt~tk,
traller and auto bodies; cargo
pallets; and shelters.
Narmco Materials Division fiber in lh c Costa ~1csa fatili · mllilory application by the ~~~tc~1~f~~~. n~~~r,1:ds~~~~~r~~
of \Vhlttaker Corporation is ty major aircraft builders. comparable \Yith t I la n i u m
launching a major three-year The graphite product can be Narfhco-Whittaker's h I g h . 1\'hilc significantly lighter than
Despite '69 Economy Program in Anaheim to Augment C.M.
Althou gh the financial
·climate and stock market in-
stability have been economic
factors on the nation as a
whole, the dynan1ic growth
patter11 of C0sta Mesa and im-
mediate enWrons for 1969
hardly recognized it becau se
th e city proper has added al
!east 47 new industrial 11rm
names to its census in the pasl
)'Car,
Th.is is the signific<1nt story
or Costa fl.1esa 's I 9 7 0
i.~uturama as a new decade
turns.
The largest n e \V c o· in e r ,
although crediled to last year.
actually will be 1nore or an en-
tity for the current story,
because construction delays
c:aused Hyland Division of
Travenol .La~~eries, Inc., to
postpone JtS of0e1al '·move-in"
until mid-December. They had
first expected to bring their
impo rtant medical resc<1rc h
and developm ent facility here
about the n1iddle of the year.
Incidentally, Hyland start s
nut as a Cost<1 ft1csa neighbor
\.l•ilh some 500 personnel. and
executives estimate l h c y
ultimately will employ i.lbout
900.
But, this overall industrial
grov.1b. situaOon is just a
small chapter in the total
story because the city now is
looking forward to such pro-
jected developments as a
marina-type apart1ncnt c:om-
p!ex. eommerciai expansion
highlighted by an n o.u n c e d
plans to construct a 1najor
motel-hotel complex Jn the
vicinity of the South Coast
Plaza. This is in addition 10
some long-range projections
by the Segerstrom F'amily to
.add close lo 11 half·mill ion
square feet to the South Coast
Plaza and bring in al least one
n1orc n1ajor department store
amo.1g some 30 or 40 ad-
ditional shops 10 the already-
cstablishcd &1-slore complex .
One of the mu st favorable
n1otivating ractors w h i ch
serves as an important in-
fluence on Costa Mesa's con-
tinuing gro\vth is the con1-
munity's flexible n1astcr plan-
ning which adjusts as needed
lo me<!t current economic con-
ditions.
This specific JJhilosophy.
plus a \1•ann and enthu siastic
response tO interested queries
on City and Cha1nber of Com-
1nerce level. has been a
significant. part .or. the com·
1nunity's industrial and com-
n1crcial gro"·th over the past
six or seven years.
The continuing gro\vlh. even
9in the face of ''competition"
I r o 1n attractive industrial
developments in nearby com-
munities, indicates respected
ackno\vledgement of the city's
unique programn1ing for self.
cllsclipline to e n c o u r a g e
growth .
1'his includes pre-planning
for supporting functions to ac-
e om pan y industrial. coin·
n1crcia l and residentia l ad-
\'ancement so the city ad-
1nlnist ration ancl c I o s e I y -
coordinating utilities coin·
panics stay three lo five years
ahead of the date of "arrival"
of an ult imate.
Costa ft.1e s<1 has a "'ell-
balanced program through
operations or its scparately-
idenlified Sanitary District.
and interlocki ng advance plan·
nt11g of lhe Costa ~1esa
Forging Die Specialists
Robert B. YoMnCJ, President
fitunicipal Water District, the
city planning services involved
in surface streets "'hich are
designed I o acco1nmodate
Freeway commuter flow as
\\'ell as serve peak loads as
needed, plus school systems
i "'hich include two local col-
leges ) and cooperatio n of such
firrns as Pacific Tele phone,
Southe rn California Edison Co.
and Southern Counties Gas Co.
I
expansion program which en-I · 11 t d tails construction of a new. used interchangeably "'iU1 the strength structural adhesives t us l\'C -accep c ex o I 1 c
I f ·1·1 · A h · 1 boron materials, and has have made it tV"l"Siblc to sun.. inetol. Now being evaluatrd arger ac1 1 Y in na c1m o ,..,.., ,. ilre the graphite fiber rein· augment its Costa Mesa plant. outstanding potential because plant rivets and o l he r forced cOmposites. v.·hich pro-
Expans ion is needed lo sup-of its apparent greater ease in mechanical fasteners in the misc to be more readily
port Narmco's c 0 n t in u e d handling. h igher strength· construction or aircraft as well available and less expensive
growth as a supplier of ad· v.•eight ratio. and other ad-as in bonding electronic in-than boron.
vanced, high modulus. high vantages. It consists of strumentation · into rocket Among Narn\co·s 1n or e
strength structural materials. graphite ~iber treated vdth packagh1~. Narmco has an an-dramatic achievement s is the
The division headquarters resins which are lamina ted us-nua l contract to prov id e de velopment of therinal i11-
and plant have been situated ing a number of plies to pro-materials for Boeing Aircraft ; sulation n1aterials used tor
in Costa f\.1esa for 21 years, duce an end product used for their all-g las.'i prein1pregnated shielding <ind pro I e ct i n g
and the present 60,000 square high-strength structural com-exterior structural materials me tals rrom the charring hc;.1t
root plant will soon begin pro-ponents for high-performance are much in evidence on the generated by the blast of jct
duclion of high mod u I us aircraft. These include the nC\V jumbo 747 , as well as on flames through c:<it nO'Z'Lles
graphite riber currently beh1g super jets or the 7D's bch1g the 737, 727 and 707 models. and re.entry shields of rockets
manufactured in England. Al developed for comn1erciat and Narrnco is also developing ln-and n1issiles. IXveloping ne'v
The ne"' manager , ·of
Narn1co, I Jarry Schmidt. i,s an
aero n a ulicul cnglneerini:
graduate from Georgia Tr.ch
and has bee n in ~1arkcling and
Produc:t Sales for over 15
ye ars. He wa s with Bcckmilll
Instruments in 1~ullerton at
the outset of his marketin!l'
ea ree r, and "'as f\1arkeling
~1anagcr with W hi l taker
btfore assun1ing his new posi-
tion <is head of Narmco. ~. City Manager Arl ft.t cKaizie
poinls out there is availability
of close to 1000 acres of prime
industrial land, and he notes
that the city enjoys an ap-
preciated rapport "·ilh the
Segcrstrom Family w h i ch
figu res in much of tbe pro-
jected growth news of this
year.
the Anaheim facility . Narmco !;===========================================,
will manufacture boron preim-1 pregnatcd tape and other ad-
vanced structural prepregs. I
On the industrial level,
about 750 acres of the' com-
munity's industrially-oriented
land is in the Segerstron1
Industrial District, and the
fa1nily recently sold some 40
acres which will be part of the
a·,1nou1'1Ced Vi sta tlel Lago
de velopment which includes I~
acres of man-made lake ad-
jacent lo the city-014•ned 36-
hole public golf course and
!llcsa Verde Country Clu b.
Harry A. Schmidt, who
reeently advanced r r om:
~1arketing Ma nag er tol
General Manager of Narmco,
repo rts that the first in·
crement of the new fa cility i.1
Anaheim \viii be a 22,000
square foot plant located al
1440 North Kraemer. Further!
incremenls will expand thc1
fac ility into a 130,000 square
foot complex on acreage y:hi ch
will accommodate even more
1
1
growth, i[ necessary. Th is
plant will feature th e most
modem high-speed ho rizontal
coating equipment.
The Costa Mesa facility has
The latter project is being grown 12-fold from an original 1
planned by Jnte rland Develop-5000 square foot plant. but a
mel\t Co. of Santa Clara and \le\v facility became necessary
"·ill feature some 1200 apart-\\'hen Narmco arrived at the
n1cnt units of which about 90 limit of expansion potential on l
per cent arc to face the Jake. the present 7 1~ acre plot in
The motel-hotel complex will Costa Mesa. In spite or space !
be developed as one of the limitations, Narmco is cur-1 J\1arriotl Irr.1 groop, known na-renlly the "'orld's largest I
tionwidc, and will be most manufacturer of high·modulusl
convenient to both South Coast structuro l prepregs and
Plaza and the north Costa adhesives.
~1esa industrial community. Narmco has grown to a st<iff i
Home of COMMERCIAL INTERIOR DECOR Coordin ated
with ORIGINAL ARCHITECTURAL PLANNING
Designers •nd m•nuf•cturers of custom in teriors
l'l nd decorl'l for-l'lccuentuated l'l rtif.,cts.
We plan .,n surf.,ce color s and m"tori,,t\, custom
lightin g fi:idures, demensi onl'll gr.,phics "nd 1.culpturin7:;,
Working in 111 medi•
woods, pl•stic rei.ins, melah "nd P"inls.
* UTECO, INC.
Incidentally. the City of of 160 personnel, and key pco-
Costa Mesa prides itseJr in its pie aiding Schmidt include:
program of aggressively Sam Storer. 0 per at ions
soliciting industrial and com-~1 anager; t.1ickey r.1asdco,
1 me rcial expansion, and it does Co.itroller; Harry K in g ,
follow a broad policy or Manager or Resea rch and !
organizing a'lld maintaining Develop1nent ; Dale Black,1
co1nprehensive statistical in· r.1anager of Qua lity Control : [
form a t ion , about city Jim Kuna, Ge11Cral Sales
businesses and services. traf-~tanager : and Leonard P. Suf·[ Milllll•••••••• M·lt·• 1 fie surveys, etc ., 111aking it fredini, President of the new
readily available for eva!ua-\Vhittaker subsi diary v;hich
lion by potential ne\\'comers lo. =~·~·i~tl~m~a~n;u;fa;c~t~ur~e~g~r~adp~h~i ~t~e~I :=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=o:=:==::==:=:=:=:=:==:=:=:=::==:=::=:=:=:=:=:=:==:: the community. j; ---
UNITED TOOL AND DIE COMPANY
1714) 642·6552 • 540-8862
City officials also endeavor
to inake personal contact.
through an intermediary if
possible. Y>'ith any major com-
pany manifesting an interest
in the area.
770 w. 17th Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627
The
inside world
of Duncan
Inside these laboratories i11nd offices are the minCfs that
created devices to help transmi t pictures from the moon
in the Surveyor pro9ram. Dunca n Electronics, Inc., is one
of the nation 's leadi n9 manufacturers of precision linear
and non-linear pot enti ometers, miniature turns-counting
dia!s and commutator switche s. We serve the free world
through offices in 17 countries, with international head ..
quarters in Costa Mesa, California . It's a world in itself.
DUNCAN ELECTRONICS
SUtllDIA•T
SYSTRON $ J+ DDNNER
216S f-•l"lew ••• ~ • C•tl• "••-. C•Hf. 'z'''
Pll•"•: 17141 141 .. 261 e TWJ: tlO-lfl·l l ZI
"IF YOU CAN SCREW IN
A LIGHT BULB YOU CAN
BUILD YOUR OWN .•. "
Transistor
THEATRE ORGAN
and Band Box
Deluxe Heatlikit
Model T0-67
H•s 19 organ vOic•s, 200W peek power,
chimes, rotating L•slie speek•r ... In·
stentpley color-910 lighted k•ys. A trul y
soph isticated organ with a wide array
of delu)I'• features for profession•I play-
ing versatility. Do it yourself for f•r be-
low factory built cost. Special •ss ambly
•nd 1lignment tools includ•d.
for the TREASURE HUNTER
/I 1(
I
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NIW HEATH ICIT GD·41
SOLID STA.Tl
Metal
Locator
O•l•e'' '""'' ,;,, ,,,,,,, ,,
6" cl1pth or ~·· pi•c• of ,1.
""''n"'"' 11 ?0" cleptk , , ,
bi• it1m1 11 dttp '' 4 f11 tl
B11el"o"'ber1. Hobbvi1t1 •..
$68.95
MANY OTHER
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THE HEATHKIT WAY • • •
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Assembly manual guides you th e rest
ol the way. You can't miss. Your choice of installation : moun t in w•ll, your own custom cabin•+ or
Heath fa ctory-assembled a nd finished cabinet .
. . . and Now . HEATHKIT'S First Expansion Beyond Electronics
MARINE RADIO
Solid state direction finde r,
tunes AM, CW & SSB slo·
lion s. (MR-18).
HEATHKIT'S COMPllHINSIYI SlltYICI DEPAltT•
MINT IS AYAILAILI TO ASSIST IN TIOUILE·
SHOOTING 01 ACTUAL llPAll wo•• WHlltf
CUSTOMllS DO NOT HA.YI TIST 19UIPMINT
JO PllFOll:M THiii OWN MAINTINANCE.
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5 hp .. 4-cycle Briggs & Stret.;
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wheel in tra il bikes. Ass•m·\
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Col!'lpl1l1 kih i" M1ri"1 Elie·
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m111t, 011krt>ol'fl Aldi, T•pt R1 -
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"ONI llOCI( IAST Of
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'
·~FUTUltAMA
~~ ,
Vard Newpart Has Expanded Facility Resales of .Earlier .Baycr~st Hom,es. Prov ing to Be Biggest Competitors of \'if ell s
Brothers,· Developers ·of Last Pr es ti ge Horn e Sires iri .Newport Beach . Sevenrh Time-Inro Helicopter · Wor~
•• >(.
The lasl remaining prestige a\.mQsl an u~erald6d reature co1nment that tht'y havt sor'r'le Bay development lJ cc au s e Jeasl lhe·last 10 years .
anl ho~buil~g !lites In in ?van 1 Well~ 1'on1c1. too, buyers \l'ho have ,c v en Ivan \Yells built an origln&l 250 The \Veils brothers, who
"'~·i ... When Vard Ne"•porl ex. as well as beiilg the largest
•, ... 111 panded its Costa Mesa facility seller in the domatic field.
• .... ~ltJ4'Mo aircraft subasstmblies V1l{'d Newport now features
gperations it marked the the double ipdex plate wbicll,·
• ~:Y!~~eve.nth step in d.ivf:nified similar in principal tO the
" J.m:rowth 01. a company which wheels ol tbt jet turbine, will
1.li; .~as intended lo be a lock 24. places or minute BC•
1 ~ J .. ii team lined specialists ,i n curacy instead cf baviJlg an
• .f\J .. ~uminun1 casting and inde1 plate and one Hnger.
, ....... ~41Ssembly for lhe famous Vard Vard Newport has advanced
o; .. -ffrafli1J8 machines. from a small aluminum foun·
""'" il.n fact, Vard Wallact seems dry to a plant which now has
, ~;· t:la.able to keep his operations 4:i,OOO square feet of. floor
•,.~•:.'•'s mall '' si n ce hi.!t spa.er:. In Cact,·il's on the
•..!• "retirement" wh ich followed verge of ·getting almost a 50
• "'··his selling a complex. 800-percent increase ill 'Space "'ith
· ·.i•:ernploye indu s try in still another addition on !he
·~ 1, •>Pasadena to Royal Industries , compan)''s I>aere tract at
~"! , Joe. ,, 2300 Fairview Road. ·
.,, Vard Newport started out as i'he company 'is advancing
... ::::-.;.. small ahim1num foundry more and tnore· info ' aircraft.
;!.. cstabhabe.d as a 20-man opera. produclioo operations by ad·
1~00!.for tt\e.~urpose .pl.COO·: Q,ipg c fa.bri~UOf\ of driVe
tinuJng exclus1vely ·With pre-·. !lhafts' aqd· ~mblies into
ch.lctlon of the world-famou s· 'their 'scl{~le .. They recently
Vard drafting 'machine. also· h81:1 the signal horlflr of being
recognized under .the br and awarded Goldtn ~tO{~ award
names of Brurung and from Bell Helicopter or Fort
Bruning-Wallace because of Worth, being ohe o( only sev-
longtime connections with the en in the nation and two ilf"
Charles Bruning Co.. Inc. California to receive the ·
They had been distributors of desijnation for q u a 11 t y
these on a -large scale almost workmanship and meetinj'
C\•er since Wallace first hand· stringent delivery date sche-
f'ashioned the mahcine. dules on·or in .advance of stip-
This ·drafting machine still ulated dates. ·
Is accepted as the finest of its The company has ISecome
type in the world, and it ha!! most diversified in its 12 years
extensive foreign acceptaqct of existence. \Vallace kept ad-
BAY VIEW
).--
CONVALESCENT HOSPITAL
COSTA MESA
Special Diets ••• Therapy -. , • Modern Facilities
• 2055 Thurin 642-3505
.filHuntington Harbour
-An iJTand communfty of finfl homts
\Vi"rftanl holM'J' lrom sn..500/ Nnr-tn1.tt hDmH frMtt S«.W
\Vil•tf1qnl hDnJCJi!t >' from SJJ.DOO fet1J} 591-1361
'' 'fllrcrc: milts from the crulhlnt c1owds ol downt!M'n lM
M~•ltr ot juii ~ix m'1ts .wwth <JI lo1111: lltM:h .i1 fKific (OiJf
/11gh ... ·1f ar>d Wir~r ~•rnut
ding one phase or oper1liOA Newport Beach ,are being y,·h~ch are commonly noted for purchased •their third Ba)'Cresl Baycrest home s, plus some 70 first funclioned as a fathe!'
and ·then another to 1~ev• develoPed .by . Ivan Wrils & th~I~ ~8.!Jl)!..~Uallty.,. c;eativl-liome, conveniencod by their in the West Bluff and nearby and son cperalion in 1947.
the stringent stand~ 13' SOns, 1nc. , ~· 1Y a~ P'..acpc~lny;~ spiraling values. view areas. Ba y<.·rest hon'les specializing in hoffi6 up to
quality be--desires !ordr.atling Thi& is a f;tel which in Usdf . _ T~e:~ .1s ~ at!oWt whi ch For that matler. nine other are to be found on Linda Isle $150,000 in Beverly Hills and
lends sfflliflcance to sq.Q'le 20 . mater1ahzes m:~ reality-! with 'builders have. boug1it &ycrest and many other e q u a 11 y Belair, and moving to the
machine product¥m wtrk. Dover 'Shorts hom which these bohte!l .• .Perso ns·•\l'ho homas-flvcinthepvstycar. prestigious places. Orange County area to build
Then, a.s he ·added manpowet • wilfblend ihto ttie s$ctacuJa?-'CBfl ali.ord ·~he-vecy ~t·insist Don . poin.~ed· out· t~at two had And Gene and Don place a close to 1000 homes in
and equipment, it' just came . 3 et t tn g · ,.,,.; w h i ch .·qn ~ Wells home, ts. au a~-'. Q>n.lidenttally ad vised he . a!i a lot of the credit for thei r con· Anaheim before coming to the
.naturaU,V for him to put them d Lscriminating homebuyers .. vei:f,i;;f<:f slo~~ ... ~. f.ruly, marchanl·type tract builder~ tiouing successful operation on Ilarbor area in 1958 lo launch
lo ·work ~ other contract!!, mar! .. ,wl!olllni!Jo hpaldy •t~,ooo11or . ~ra'ti·irn:~~ n~::,4ed : the~ ~d0n'~"lt-h ·111·1b0iyqu"°eit>.lyupaii'd. the dedicated interest and ef· the pre!ient outstanding pro-~ ..,. r ~as 0 proper es· _ · . . , · , 1111u1 ., forts of such key personnel as gra m of presllge home
too. . • intQ: wh,ich Dop {lnd' Gene, -;,'Wb);, 1 pakl J40,000 for ~ · design of a Baycrcst home Kenneth Smith, vice presidenl building.
For production o! their draf-\Velis, prinCipals ·of Orange hOrne, that sold lat.er (<1f bec3:1Jse of ~Qe m~ss pro-in tharge or purchasing and They also have participated
ting machines they make their County's ' larflest. llm!ty·lypil ·$6~,000 when I purchased a -· ~uction to "'hlch llle1r opera· eoordinati on. and O ave in hon?e developnicnt pr~
units hich ha'ndl line "'custom home btilldlng com· larger heme on the ·. West t1ons were geared. 1'o1cA1 1 is t e r , g e n e r a I cran1s In ruve.rsidc and
own , w ... e tr pany, des.ign . maxl-mum .B!y.ff/'one.adft)i\~ed .. I?on<:1nd . Baycrest is a na 1n e superintendent. They have Tustin, in addition to com·
and circular dividing opera-utilization of spacioushess and Gene rurt}\er .. !Pis ~ w.1th the · synonymoas wi th the Back operated as a team fo r at mercial cenlers in Redlands.
lions in ' every sense-.s-pttial opierufe.ss desired w hi J e lr;;:::=;:;:::;:::;:::;:2:;:::';::;:::;:::;:::===~;:::;:::;:::;:::;::::::;;::::::;;:::~;:::;::::=:::;:::;:::::::;:::::::;:::;;::::::::::;:::;:::;:::;;;:::;:::;:::;::;;:;
scales, protractors aild ~;:.reserving~ privacy deman-·~). . . · , · • · .
verniers, and dO machine ,ded by homeowners · in this .JQ$.l. SA!,ICEQO, ,yo11r t.ou; pro1t1KM •••
. Th. catego'ry, • engraving. ey can make . ., 1 1,;. '--· ·· f · van Wei;, uomes a re s~at~ u.p t~ ·JS eet lo~g and 'j)opulartY i d'e n ti fr e d' as
six feet 1n d1ametec wh•ch can Baycrest Homes, Which has
be accurately m a c h i n e -become an unmatched idenlifJ'
divided QI gracious living. Baycrest
They.have Sips, jig bortrs, was the,natne gh·en to Ivan Wells homes in earlier Upper ~e of the finest prciduced, Bay development and the
housed in a temperature and brothers' fusSy emphasis on
humidity c«itrolled r o om • quality and innovations in
'Ibese have wotking ranges up funcUonal utility has p~9vidsd
to SSzfO"inches and boring ·such' outstanding acceptanC~
capacity · up · to · 10 inches. thfl· Baycrtµ;t hO.me 're-sales
·These ·hold tolerances of .0002 are proving j.o Pe Ivao \Yells I\:
inci;I, "both· on bore siie and Sens' biggest co.mpelitorS!
hole -~oc3.tiorl. But, the matter of corn·
fn ge'ar makin&, ·vanfhas a petJrig against themselves is,P.
complete department enµrely challtnge of whicfi Don anti
devoted tc production o! most Gene are most prOl,ld .. Into thi:;
types of gears, fe3turing most situation they are api)lying moderh ~ manufa~u;\ng tools. conUn.u'ed inncvation.s ~ r or Hig~ly akilled gear cultfrig and which they .ha'v'e .. been .not · , through the years . . flQishing , special~ts piovlde The!e _i:.rolhe" were·.· tra1·1 the output. needed. by marty u
m.echa)\ical ·and elec-' blazers in making _ a com-
troineCha.niC<ll . peVicts. fortable -and spacious family
. Their machine shop' has a· room as· an integral part of a fine home, and also were iri· full . co.mplement or lathes, ncvators in including an
mill!; drills, gr.inders and bor· a i·c hitecturally-complimenta·
ing machines. Their pettern ry garage in frant of the home
shop features most modern to achieve within ' a coni-
woodworking ·machinery a& paraliveJy small area of
well · as a;, three-dimensional ' precious cb!m.' area land the
pantogr:aph. for1 metal patterns effect of a 'iemi-circular
for most aceurate models aod driveway rerilin1scel)t of a
mockups; gtaceful e.state'<ir plantation.
·vard ·does grttfl. sand, shell lmd 'the' 'Wells' ar~ · equal!V
mold and penlianerit ·mold pleasing nO'lf with · 0ofjginal~'
castings of the f i n e s l credits they g'!ined tlirougb
· alumir'lum alloys, produced to utilizing a walled-in front yai'i:I
military specificalions iµid for more area of. Il.{~ate
customer standards. ~' living-in-the-sun·..as'th~~
Quality control, of course, is homes to inatlmutn utiflzati
for the BEST
MEX ICAN FOODS
is in the
, PEOPLE!
T~Ht •r•
1Dme ot Dllf
l}ll~lll Oft I ,
lypfcal tarlv
t~tftlng Cf0'"'' In etlt larg•
lllnl~g l•ti,
r
/. ~· .. • • IU:!ilNE!'SMlN'S
. LUNCHEONS ::!. Charb•ool•d food lo qo,
Beer & Wine
· )1 :00 a.m. lo 11:00 a ..... -1 D•y•
547 W. 19th COST A MESA
"We're here to sert'it you well!"
Rora1111e-FraRki-Mory-Kelly-Kristl--.Stella
ii prime pre-requisite.for'~\:ai:d of th e ,~irri!n'oi: -~~!. ,
products. Their ins~ type oi,P._!arµailfj~~~ ..
facility, housed ill temperj'iUre closed~atri ·;itllec1iireca ·
and humidity controlle4 -en· t~rt~S91Pft. ~. . .. _(art of
vironment, has optical ~.. fine 110ffi te..
parators, electrolimit s\iiJ!.t1, · Ivan c ·r~nJrthiCh OO l~=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:i::==:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=::::;=:=:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ micrometers electronic nr• tbe·IUlagii:i -of q~he: W.-llslf
dicators, g~e blocks, •. dial ror ··-~'4 ,. , '.. ~ ... Wlil bore indicators and air g~iing wor~~ lt· on , :
equipment. «~1· ~ . ~. ·
Corporate officials h~-. ~ ·• l'tw:' 1 \ '
up the 118 employes.cur. · .• '~ ~·
HOME OF THE NEW~ Y O/!GANIZEO MASTER
team include Wallact hi !fr. po.1n~ as.conv " g· . ·~ recei ve con ~. whc d~votes fuU lime ... ~~·normally eipe ~ ·
operation as president: .:'l'om.:.~ tlj£se pl"if>e br Gt' 1~ , • .: ..
rently on the Vard Ne~' ... ·s~e-lline 1· ~· .tW::
O~bom. vice president an4 . , : ..11 1· • 1 • .. , • : gen~ral manager, who · :b811,~ ;:;,To pre:oen1 tne'lyJSc. o(~ft
Ytiee11 with Wallace for 29'." .llll!!Y·, insist on ~arry1n~ the
· yeS·rs· and Paul Berglord •. ,trade~rk, tyl!'1 \Yel s dj.
llU WHITTIER
, .
•
'·
1 •• co~tr~ller, sec;retary. ' .f:~~~~~ f;J~~
_ tIWo of Yards.sons are fune. .. ·~t/~f,i)l~JJally rc-
ti6n\l In the business. Beecher stibdWidld,:·ter .. · e of the ~,wanace is l!'anager of aircraft large!t ~Qtt'.lli!FeWport Beach .
. ~.?n~ufactunng, and Malcolz:n The reomj~ lots now range
WaUace, who fo~erly had h.1s up to 1oa,:eet.in fron~ge while
own n1anufactur1ng plant 1n having,ffd'epth 1>[ ZOO· feet.
Duarte, is production control Tod¥yi3 1]van ...weus homes
manager. need tblS ~~ch'.Sp~ce~t,o make
Key staffers In cl 11 de full use of·the brothel'}' think·
Herman Walch, direclor of ing in protiding spaciousness
quality aSSU(anc~ Lew \Yhit· and ul,ilit/ to suil their strict
taker .• ~tof ,9]. ,l}laterial; requir~IJ\enls. They have
arfd· Fofem<fn' Albe'rt 'De'Bock,, destgn'ed homes up to 5500
. drafter machine shop : Al square feet, carrying out their
J Daniels-. dfafter · aasembfy ; determination t h i · t ·all ...
Robert Weber, foundr y Baycrest homes have plenty <1f
department,' ·Md 1'im ''Osborn; 1 ·"elbow l'.bQm."
HEADQ UA RTERS FOR
Drafting & GraP.h.!c Arts Suppl ies
pattern shcp. Value and sav:in1s ar·e
' . ~ '
---·
I , ' '
, • ' I
;. ... ) "" ' ' ... ....
I
. .
~ •
·.'
~ ( . ' ' . . . . \ . ' . F.ff Tt./J!IN~ . ,
. · e ICP COPIER ( . e-. MANSFIELD
'\\ ..... .' \ .,. -~,;; •• QRAFTERS e DIAZIT PRINTERS •
Developers & Accessories QRAFTtfl .SCAlES
I.
'
f roln11ion<1I rn9in1•.,n9 dr,win91 qul c~lv •"d 11cc11r•l1ly, Th • Drtfler
I fl en td"•nc1cl •nqin•t•ed tn1 prr,;••on m~nuftclu r•d i n•I•~"''"' J1.
I\ :1«;rnf'd lo q+vt • I ftl,..,t el dtptndtblt '''"'''·
CONYfNIENTLT ORIENTED TO ORANGE
COUNTY AIRPOR T
ALSO ••• Blueprinting, Photo Shop Ser·
.vices, Short Run Offset Printing and Dup-
lic'ating Equipment ·a~d Supplies .
DiAZi'F DEALERSHIP
fully outo11101ic ff,., l "(j)(] ,,,.,,;,, ~"1'"'
(t'llMr,~
.
I R1 11on1b!v ptic•d. )!;q)! tpeed ~2" widt Whit• Print1r
c•p•b:• o;f 21-leel·p~r-minul., 1Hin9 low coil U1101t1cenl
lempt <1nd the DIAllT Sl'ACf SAYEft.
, , , MEASURING SCA L[S by MANSFIELD l ot ti>• .. :1 .... ,11 '" ptf't•••on
. • •
' "
l7L4l 64b.l01
•
I
.! •• , • m11p 1c1l11 ol 91o lo~tc1I qut10ty , G111rtnit•d lo• !h, !ift "' tl.11
'eri9in11! ownt1,
i MASTER ::biJlrilulir1'1 c..
234 FISCHER AVEN UE
COSTA MESA
I 7141 540-9373
Sr mi-111tomt lic
buil l I.,,
FlATURES FOUND 0Nt.1' IN MACHINIS SILLING FOR
Sl\lllAL llMH MORI.
rlCKUI" & DELIVERY SIERVIC[ lO
COMMER.Cl.AL & INDUSTRIAL CUSTOM[RS
OF
J/,ISTf.'(f
BLUEPRINT & SUPPLIER COMPANY
Oivi1ion ~f 1'1A.'j1ff;R Blueprint & Supply Company, Fis cher Ave., Costa Mesa, Calif. 92627 I lo• ('---------------------------------------------------------'c...,.~>~·-~_.,... ...... ._____,~--------~-------~~~___J .. ,
···~~~·-
Master
T""'4•Y· Dtumloot ., '"' l'UTUllAMA ..AS .. o.c .-First~ .:Naiipfial ro Mlt~A $XICAN Rl!sT,\URANt.coNnNUES Distributing Is Key ".· ,. ·H ·. ·N · ···,.r·· · · .... B" _ . h; To PACK ·cAPA,CITY' HousEs IN c .M. . ave . ew usr1n . -lane . . . . · . . · · · ·' : ' 'MWa-Meneu ~raGt. In k:1n fare •-maftY MCl•im It luncheons, charbroiled New
. aiaco<Ollent,ioo .r. 111o • .m'11 1 ·1jaf( Gl•ll ',.,...na 1t tile C..C,0 ~~J~ M u ll)e , bell Soulh .al the York ud T-l>ooe 11<1ks, hot Ellis' Growth '· Operation • 1n
Fred ElliJ nas just in-company serves: I ll c f
troduced Muter Distributing SouUtcm CllifonUa aod is ex·
Company u a key operation p&"ldin& into s t 1 t e w i d e
within the framework ol his magnitude.
fut.-growing crganiution at Since Ellis' basic ora:aniia-
%34 Fischer Ave. ?.1 Costa lion is more oceupied with the
ti1esa, part ol expar.sion pro-... distributing operation, they
gramming to accommodate have been placing less em·
increasing vollime at their phasis on duplicator Jines,
~ew, larger headquarters. although P.1aster Blueprint's
Ellis notes the distributing retail facility . still carries ·
company is a division of the nonnal s~ks m these and
Original Master Blueprlnt and other graphic arts ~pplies.
Supply Co.. and a no t h e r Master does a big job as
division called M&Mfield-West dealers for the Diazit white
has been set up to ac-printer1 and developers. Th1.s
commodate MaSer's handlt1g line features office-type. llf>.
of Mansfield's Pffi:ision draf· volt white and blue printl1g
ting and measuring equipment machines featuring u n i t s
on the West Coast. These are which range from occasionally
partJcularly noted for their o r i n t e r m i t t cntly-used
utillty as map scales of m~chines to the Diazit Cen-
aeological quality. fury 21 , which produces 21 feet
Master Distributing features of. reproduc~ons "2 inches in
the ICP copier and com-width per mtnute.
prchensive lines: of drafting Diazits do mylars. acetate,
supplies and graphic arts. The brownline and o v e r I a y
• 1o medium-.., tftdatr1albt · ~ 11.U al!ICt bd hlS c~ty ·'*"" ...,.1ct11y Bonier food tn o....,. County. r ... h 1iome biked d!ml 1oar -o...u ~· ho ·~·•.._. ond:-.i bu ·~·; ~·-Sdl...,··u lh .cblef · u Pl>lll'~A::t·&Nr • ~~ . In ld,ci!tloA .Ibey lilve wines bttad ind tortillas wllh spicy re.,..---. ons &.l t fl--·,, . . . . . . . I "". empbd• ~ ue ..... and Imported beets. sauce.
n«dtd.wbllt uUJUtnc low con· Mlcb'-of.U.111&'!11k~F'"!" ~:'! ~ oe11,..111Ch. ,,..a~~ .pd .. '11'4 lt'I> J-'s-.nthUsiastlc tW!I or ,,,.Y provide food lo 10"
fluoresceat .lllnfll. ·· ·. ot'111e 1'int Natloliiflai!k Gi ''tiili!ne IJ ·o! .. a~vt,C&lllqr-q...U,. ·-.. op with wall..-turned out in col· well 15 servict In their
Muter Blueprint' ""11"""· Or1qe· County,.-,... UI•'• , "'*who-ls• prtduet ti. 8i'lJI ~·~~-•vettlcns, for .bis • r 1 u I. ml'.zii-minisltirted spacious dlninl roam . 'They
from '. ... <>rlct!><l ' 111\,111! ~"ot>oull bl·-lloolca Clly .. eouelt ud ' ..,esi.., . . . uniforms Jil'l rtcently, Ind ho .,. open from u :00 ,,m, till
blueprint IUYlce sbo!> In.IA>°""' •I · · · 'plana .ol ~btnli l,oyO)J ..., •hlli :~eh many ' They lt,wr. Ill mtpmal•• now th&t ·ill ~1, including 11:00 p.m. seven days a·,.eek.
which now.often bluopr1111tni, tO oiieJI tJM!r· lllth· broiicll o)I:. 'opOIW ~1111 . .,.n., . d-·mtnu which· ·oftel:I· •Htlltolt llO>anne' Henderson, iibo is Saucedo has just celebrated
•·photo shotr,~Cked up by GM eratlon.in 1171 at JtecrHW:and "'c M 1 . ~~°""'.a authentk Mfl.· .~.s: and , 1t'°. helps in hls, ~cond year in buslnes.s.
ol ~e larftll v.acuum karnet Walriut ·ln 'fu4lin ;tteD«i•'nWd' Y~¢. educe!lonal1 work. ~e · ' stnice · u c;rowds demand, throwing a champagne party
toccopywotklnOraqeCoun· to the,·lrvlna Indultrial Cont-11 · 1 -Klwama~, ,active Jft • • are contributin&' to the for the occasion. He has been
ty, plus 1 complet•, '"J!I• ·of p1u: · · · ' ·. cblldren'• .,..P ""'k. and,.,, Wlllker.--P~1nt JJ011ularity .r ,lht place with in caterln& business •ll his
electrostatic equl~ t , This ilritution Oritinattd·I• actlve~lns·merpbei' ·ti the · · . thtlr .friendly and efficient li!e, aild has been ln thb ' area
The. company .. h'I' ap-or;n,e tftd ha~ its Mesa· erde Country Clu~,. . F'actO.:V ~~:.'--·c . sefvice: Kri!tine ADM, Stella · Jor. the past 10 yearr. H.e
pr<Wmately .ID-" It or.<:.JtkvlolAltJ1'!cosmJ\>Oli~ ,'Ille ·~roll _..llAlll of · . -1~ ' K..u.nbill,. Frinkle Lcero, worked with Mexlc1n
the new, ~ lt,OOI ~·ani a ·~ ~·!ti P:· ~U'St Na,tioiMJ.•~ ol Ora.nae • I • Wary Saucedo aQd Kelly Sud-restaurant.s in Garden Grove
llC!Ulte loot !lldlllJ locatf;d ia . ltieoiO<, ~ ..... ree·~·try Coullly,," ftlcb iho ti1.•. Siles -Growing'' ' ·brilk. and Anaheim ~ ... electlng
the v1clnltr ' or. lhe. Onnp opreidlnr liill to ~ "'""' br~ncli!o Iii Orne• .at -E.. ' . I: . . ' BeoidM hill Mealcao fatt, ·"' open his own laclllty In
COWl\Y afrJ>Oll. · ' Ind Smta -INln Its ftrit ~Cb· irpr E , i:orun.n .. d . Walker Paw """' JiH Mllla ft1tures buJinelsmeft'• cost. Me ... Ellis U..U "-.,,,..,.,i;... •-· I tnn IOI •. apm1n, " we as . ,,,_. · _ . :"""""~' ..... -T_--. : -n 1e. • ·. '. • ' one at-17th and Tultiri. in Sabta -rtinluicm!"""'"I :.I •. ~:~ ,in-I service cleparlinent peopl~ as . 'l)lllllnk.hai_ol...,. Ml. e.ys-a~tely ,,.~In '°liliOe:in the poll Jerry Dotson, photo cfePlrt-tli.IJ!'$l!I mim~ . ...i 1e11ure1'1 ns peqpl> Ind li>t!' the rollOw-c;e1r ~ ~ dlrect , ... u .r ln-
ment ~· . ~ Ron recendy-4k\'elop;ed, ff I er v}t in:c ofiicel's" ,111(1 directors: C. · ·~titul.Ull a f~~Y1i!recf.. .-Je1
Kruetz, rep~oductio!' d~~rt-. N.l~ ~t propn ,m !:: Sdiroede~, presidint; oo~let for bijbest ,quality
ment supervisor. He f~ Tt'hicli ·it in.wta depos!ton .to Doaald c Caskt'y 'sf:niof Vice , pa1nt.s. . . , .
a;i ~ales ma.iager . fo~ t1it "Be ·1ocir . own. loo. C!fO~-~··· Wtsid"°'t~ aii.d tfusi officer; , . J. Q. (~~) 1'•~ heaU ·~e , ~tr1butinc opera ti o ·~ 'fhl:! p,.....,, ~Wis a plan to , Clerio'AI!en, P.a1JI Cleaty,Sim... Iour-year_..olcl., W~~ ~nt
hunself. pe~. ~1~. to , ~t•··. uel.Horwlir; Donley Boltnrert Wor1'J.a~ Ill W. ~lt.h ."SL ~
'SHEET MET AL WORK ~
e ln.luslri1I
• Gllvani11d
• Coppor
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Exotic Materials Is World Leader
choCU JiOY<l\d tlitil' cb'!'~· Al1riA Dierlcer ·Gffnn Mllltf$ 1~"3 CMMo,l b\:lnd palnto accOunt··~ance to i·~n~.'v:ernon V~tenUn~.,J .. '.n'. ~fti~ ~ff,'~ed at the ._lins litUIUons. . , . '· Etoi¢i" Tlilllim· l!tliJS!ets ·'' pl1nl to u.e rffl"/JI U. ntlll
·Terry !ltU!n•, ma1111or ·-· mt !!Obert weicti: . 11tore. front 'Ille~ 1111 _In·
. ,,.,,
• St1inleu StHI
In Many Dome and Lens Syste~
et p.e ·.eo.ta ·Mea. kndl at• 'the iftstitution• isvesp~t•u1 · 1tltutiona1·11'}1 ind u •tr I. al
JISO "Adamlt wu,iutrumen.tal ·. _h(,qorea; thi. year to'•.N.ve · ~~ .~ i:nd
in duicninc t!M ·reaer~;:. J;mfr.is ~m; .. ila Vite~-··;. . ;1 ·1 • .u
A~L llNIS OP IHl•N. PIOIUCTION & INSTALLATION
balance acc:ount ptOJr•~···~\ .. dint· m 'dttrie of\nwtetjrt; '9'eU.. h cfo.1-younelf ~-........ .
;artiaiPated lin the pla.nnlhf et' 15 the· 1t7q· pre· s i·d e-n·i-oi '.• thuawls1 at .~ ~ . ~r ......... ... NEW
REMODEL The world's largest silicon
and germanium w i n d ow s ,
domes and lenses for the most
advanced infrared op t i c a I
systems art producerl in Costa
Mesa by E1otic Materials,
Inc.
and commercial fields.
They make the lower done
of U1c dcuble·nosed
McDonnell-Douglas Phantom·
aircraft and the nose dome on
the Falcon missile. They are
present in systems figuring on
Jocking onto targets and firing
missiles.
A recent development usina:
Exotic's infrared windows is
the i n f r a r c d surveillance
system which-helps nighl
observation from aircraft to
ground targets now utilized in
Vietnam. The same system is
applicable to satellitt3 in
aerospace. .
dustries. Some of the more re-titli "MW ·..vic9, while..he'.WIJ'-~· Oi'anfe 'Count)' Chai!ibfr -:~Oft·~~ ~'"· . • c:: 1 cent applications. iilcJoo~· ~e .un :Jou.nviw officer at tbe ei :ComraetCe .. He moves Up • Wilie~ P,a~ prodpces non· . ., ..
use of these devices in the fire' rri.ain ~ at l_n.. E. · CblP.-from treasurer and direltr '!l~AtJe,, ~~tet:fias• Yinyl e ·M ...
detection syst~s oJ. U1e riew mu bt.Orllile)ll'W'to ~ and,;-.!Jtbf.inft.llltd'l.t tht Or-,and &er)' ic .~ I!' .~dcijtjon • M..W..
generation ol aircra:fL in&. bnndl-ltllllqa; ht!n lut, anti CGunty'. Bill' to: ht htld at · {o tome custom. P'.'':Plf'atl~s.
The u ti 1 ta a t i 6 n Ol aprtn1. the Anaheim Convention ·ctn~ manuftc~ both ~or .... ~ ....... ··-calorimeter& and r:adlometen ';.J~ty. :Enkille he.Ids ·et~."2S.· ::\titu~:-~:~-1~n ~d~
to detect the amtA.ini ol ~t ==============::;::;::==== di ti on ·the itore 1dotl color • , ....
REPAIR
PAlllCATtON -4
INSTALLATION
transmitted throu&h aircraft ·· · -matchinJ fqir bulk us'ers.
sturctutt..S Ind bulkhel~ is· a ta. Ana.· 1 .co-IOUl'lC:ler,. &ervea. m,ittriall , and comC1Gnentf, 11le company ~ a special
design tool to optirilize the. as 'ei:ecuitve vie' 'pl'ffidel\l pJui.',thln)f11m ~tlnJ-.'C&rl ·h.ospital ~int; Jn ac'rylic
safety of ~s .ind lt and· · treUU:rer.' N oi-in'I n Oealtelchtr.· Jh-11\e. is· sl19 enamel ~thout ·customary
the same time ket, . the JlhOalls, eo.ca· MIA, ;, vice mu1f!r . , r -or ~tries odor . probletns. -.
P'owtr Shearln1 -14 ga. • 10 fHt
aircraft weigbt to a mhUmwb. · ~ · -ma.nufaotw:in1,' Diviaitll's .. aer.os;ace ~ii · Walker is ,eneral" manaier
Quality Work \\1ith Personal Supervision
C~IL I , STIYINS IAYll I . CHAMllll
COAST SHEET METAL
COSTA MUA
7Jf w. 17th 646-6122 .
Besides such advanced in-
frared optical systems· as
"Focward Looking lnfra-
Red," "Clear Air Tubulence
Systems" and "Apollo Moon
Project" Exotic Materials'
1killed employees also produce
1 top quality line of thermal
instrumentation a n d com·
ponents for aerospace ap-
plications, chemical plants,
petroleum refineries, power
plants, metal ."and alloy pro-
ducers and all process in-
dustries.
Most appreciated their Jittle-
heralded component para in
clear air turbuJencc indicaters
now used on jet airliners to in·
dicate the varying c"Xtent of
turbulence up to 48 miles, thus
£iving the pilot a chance to fly
the plane tbrough the least
point of resistance.
These instruments aJso. art and Gary IL Qaffin, Santa· inattumeribtion W' i l·h .Jli.. 'as, ;well u ~· m1naier,
most valuable ,in~ dulin ol Ana,' is 'vice. prtli<!ent. -tiOnWiff·11les res)r.mau;~ •. 1fhiJe he ha!Dlilme ):lothnln;
heat shields for . r .e .e n cry eniiMeri~: . .Cu'dt. ·i.1 rei:p:ll\ilb\e ·If-, and Eileen "-~rSlll\ ta ch1rse
vehicleo ·1nd in !he deafin Iii DOo'SloCkui1lt,-'Oo11a·-· ·lllel .Gl)Mjnd.,irill~al '<(.counter sllel ond ,ivtn1
the varfOUll components · 'fl.. Js matketm, lftl!lllW' anl. ~,•od .it.aph)Ui i decor1tor _c'.o.un~eft.n1 :m
rocket eneint1.: ~h~~~.d~. s~A~Jys~:~·!•''.;.·.:, ·~·P~.t~l~.e::.a~. J~,;:11\11~, ~yt;~cll~pi'llll~~uc::u~. _ _:_· :_·· ;:.;:.:·_:·.W~ll~IHJIU'.!!'.~·~~"~·.:.· _;,.· _:..· ~·..'.!==================== Following its·ezpansion pro-,1· . _ _ 1 •• • • • -
For the boating industry,
Exotic Materials makes a
diesel engine thermocouple
and pyrometer kit. "
Beginning w i I h pure bulk
silicon or germanium and
utilizing unique techniques of
rowing or casting, company
technicians p r o d u c e com·
ponents ranging up to 24 in-
che.5 in diameter, a flatness of
l·20th ol a wavelength, and
angles to one secood oC arc, as
11t·ell as working to standard
commercial tolerances.
They have compiled an ex·
OOlent record o! acceptanc'c in
today's military, aerospace
MARK C
Preci1ion Rotary
• ,d
SWITCHES
F. H. Cole E11t1rpri111
On innovations of tomorrow,
they already arc supplying the
laser field with windows and
lenses, and they are engaged
in research and development
on energy conversion ·with tiny
t h c r moelectric generatqrs
designed to muJtiply energy.
Cal orimeters and
radiometers perform very im·
portant functions in bolb tht
aircraft and aerospace in-
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2014 Pl•c111ti1 Awe., Co1t1 M111, C•lifor"i'
Pllo"1: 171'41 642·1010
,,.11
gram, Thennttrics DiVision of:
Exotic Mattriab,Inc., has in-
creased its operatii>ns to cover.·
the industrial and c:omml!:rdal,
fields in t· b ·e f' m a I' in ..
slrumentalion. This: division
m a nufactures thennowefls;
thermoeooples and tbermocou·
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pie assemblies as tmall as 11fo 11 . .,.,,.
inches and 1s lon1 is 100 feel
and more. .
For t h e I r ~ufacture,
Thermetrics ,.,.. !tip•...WO
machine· and ii the ·~
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the .,,:tt_ to UJe I Q ti·l'I
machinery tO ·muuficfufe
thermoe-:ouplf:·• · a'n-d .'; · ·
thermowelh. · ReU1bilily liid
rugedneit 1is •.an. jniportftt
" .
. ' •• feature of T·Jter'metflf.1
thennal i.Dstruntenti" tit.ended '· to the kJt produced· fir ticllt .. '
owner1 .. This kit measures and " . " indicates the critical · ~Ust
temperature of marlne dieeel 1 ..
engines. Kit options .inCWd,& · • • ·•1·,,
aw.fib~ ot vUuaL .al a r:Jti 1 •
signals. :
Now in· its· Mith year 1o£
operation, E1otic'ls facility at
2961 Randolph Ave.·-~II
manufacturing operations: as
well as the corporate •offim.
W. L. Louchs, ·a Balbom rasJ.:
dent and one ol the .founders:,
ls president and chainnan of
the board. J. F. Czach ol San·
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,· Our growing paj.ns
: . . · · ate rece1v1ng .
···intensive ·care.!
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· Coi!l Mesa M'moml Hospital i~ !'nly a little b~er
-• . .l. -' • \i •
· iq.tfle~ery real need ·for expiimon. Consequently,
"· . :~11·:w,11l liegi!' on' two new sursetr rooms .and thfj
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a year old, yet it is already feel·
within tr,e n~x.t sixty d~y~, con·
, extr;a doctors~ facilities which ' ' . '
\illder consideration.
PRECISION
MINATURE
ELECTRO-
MECHANICAL
SWITCHES
' ' NOW INCLUDING FOUR LAMP INDICATOR MATRIX SWlfCHES ••• ,
a1 well •• rot1ry 1in9lt 1elector and power ••l•ctor switch•• and 1na,.
action push-button switch••·
G R 0 WT H : STACO personnel ere trained' •:S
teemworking specialists who cont~ibute to all
areas of the company. They ere stete-of·th•·•,rt·
• end success-oriented. That is why STACO is •an
outstanding career company.
I An Equal Opportunity Empelyer l
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· they;~i;e;Addltional.plans lodu~re powt~ art now
::W~~·a1t.ever·aware•.our hospit~I. w~s cfeated .10.1. the.
·complete health c;ue . cente~ fcir 'he eiltir~ ·c1111imllnjty.
, , .~111,(;mtin~e to be ~quipped with'1heo.mc>stadvan~ed1
. . vide equally .ad.va11ceci standards io.r its· p;atitllts' care,'·
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sole purpose of providins a ' .
'< ·we 'reaffirm our pledge it ! . ' -
techninl facilitiM·and to pro·
' ' ' .andconfidence.vyecanonlyex·
to the complete healih care of
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Our~ing pains areoph~! proof of y~r supj,ort
. :pr'ft, ~p~deby pmmising t~ devote ourselves
thedil1nidnity. now, and in the future. · ·
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' ' . -' . ·Ccnta Mesa Memo;ial . Hospit•l ·is owned and operated 'liy 'Beverly
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·fnte!J!r!•.s-a-leader in the health care Jj~t4, Beve.rly EnterP,rJses .is na•
, . \i~ly:r'ecognized for it~ high proJesslo.nal,standards, innovations
. -. m'~t·q~and advanced ~~""h.===-' ceptfin hospital construction. . . . . . ~
C-·Mel&-rial llotflii,J. is pro~ Of:iil . ..,6nsulshed m<di•
eil and piofesslbnal staff. Chief
I Of 5Wf'is,0t •. JOhnnie a,\lef50ri , '
Jr.;,affb~.bV ·Dr. C. H.~me_ip V.a ·=and Dr, Lionel B. DI Si · ,".secretifY,-Treills~rer. ·
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11Mr011\'tn.,,.,... chiefs a": Or. Shedrick· Moore, med( ..
cine; Dr. Frankl. DiJiore, su*ry; Dr. Chartes s. Stevens, sen·
era I practice; Or. °"rles A; Del"aney, radlolo&ist .. nd Dr. Shirtey
M.•Schneider, palhofogist Servi!'I •" 1he exacutive Coun1nlttN:
i S directors at la(le,are, Or: Wallace A. Gerrie and Dr.,Relnhtrd
. Marthen. Hospital itdlhlnislratDr is Alden 0. Sage, ... 11,.,-Maftaa-is). J1mes Wilson arMt Dorothy H. Thompson, ,R.N., ii
· Dif'lldet el'Nuna.
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• . -• , , • ~ • • • ~ • .. ,• -~ ,• • -') . NEWEST-lN~,t.lgsT MODERN HE>.J.TH CARE t.ENnR IN ORANGE CQUNTY j
. · . ·1~::·: .. CC>staMe)a~ri~.Hospital ~. ' '
: Ml Vlctiria SINc • C-1~ Cllllfo"'fl.'2W" .. (714)11;~°'.';;........... • "-Dlscrlllllnatoty • Opea Ad111""°" '!'
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• Tutsclay. December 30, 1t6t
OUTSTANDING
AV AlLABLE AT
BATHROOM FfXTURE SHO\'q
H.B.'S GEERS PL UMBIN G
11enlor Joumeyman and tort-
1nan. whJlc BiU Jones la s1lea:-
n1an. Hunringron Harbour Continues as
Presrige Develop1nenr of Area.
Orange: Coast
Freeway
Progress Story
c:ccrs p1..::nb1ng c arr ie s
such best-known brand names
<.:huc k Geers provides the boutlque the second noor of the ne w novelly, decorator-ac-as American s ta n d a rd,
Here is the current Freeway
Story !or the Orange Coast for
1the start or 1970.
Orange Coast .. ·Ith the op-hl.s store. C<'ntua ted departn1ent. He ex-Kohler. Cr:tne and Universal
ConJtrucllon of d t 1 u x e
11p1rtme n t s near the
Boardwalk Shopping Center
and comple!iori1 of develop.
M t o< Humboldt lsland
hi1hlight the current progress
story at lfunlington Harbour .
Utt Iabulous marina·residen-
Ual community of Huntington
Buch.
bri.!!k sales as residents flock
In lo take advantage of their
yacht. fishing and tennis clubs
and private beach and tennis
t•lub as well as its prestige
location .
pin& cent.tr. the Board1Ya\k,
whlch now includes 22 dif-
ferent &hops with services and
selecllorui In foods , trave l
assistance, financial. drugs,
gifts , beauty care, cleaning.
office supplies, books, yard
goods, barbering, n1 arine sup·
plies and clothin g.
portunlty to set a c I u a I His wife. !\Iarie, v.·ho has pett.s to be able to n1akl.' f<lr-Hunde t.
displays of nearly all the col-been ofriee manager for ~&rs. n\a l lnrodtuc1ion 01 these se· The shop has been In er·
ors available for ba th room fl :t-will double as manager of lhl'i tectioru by mid-year. ~Chuck istence for the past 10 yearli.
lures at Geers Plumbing's nt•w department and she 11!-has a staff of nine people an<l and Geers has ~n in the: ne\V
spacious new headquarters at., ji;;rt;;a;;d~y-lj;;a;;c;;q~u;;ir;;in;g;s;;loc;i;;ksi;;;lo;;r;;;;;;i;;nd~';;"';;I;;';;' ;;P;;c~li;e;;L;;';;'~';;'";;;;i;;s ;;h;;i;;s ;;;;l;;oc;;a;;l;;ion;;;;s;;·i n;;c;;e;;F;;'c;;b;;r;;ua;;r;;y;;, ;;1968-...
222 E. Adams ln lluntingtonll
these marl.: continuation ol
one of the few baylront
l'etiidentlal areas be f n g
dtveloped °" an ·'own-your-
own·land" basis 1o1·here lht'
properties alone will represent
close to a quarter of a billion
dollars \\•Orth when it is com-
pleted. Spiraling values cf the
man-made waterways are in-
estimable.
Huntington Harbour is being
designed for some 2 4 o O
families. encompassing 1p-
pto1imately aso acres o( la nd
1,•:hlch have been largely
reclaimed from marshla nd
which was subjected t o
Uooding regularly at hlgh tides
before the development was
launched almost a decade ago .
There are a total of 2a8 acres
or ~·aterways v;ifh in l ht'
development now .
Ray Logan. sales director,
poinls Olll that Hunti ngton
Harbour is continuing to enjoy
There Is a broad range of
se leclions 11vailable amon g
Huntington Harbou r home s
which arc both water-Oriented
and non--waterfront, basically
three and four bedroom units
with one or two-story or split
level plans.
Scores of architects have
participated in a spectacular
aw ard-winning home design
program and more than 80
home designs are featured in
the marina commw.ity with
themes ranging from tradi·
1ional charm to contemporary
elegance .
Evidence of the popularity
of the developn1ent can be
noted in its outst.anding record
of re-sales in recent years. It
is recording a multi-million-
dollar re-sales record each
year -•mute evidence of the
demand for these homes as
residents gel tra11sfers or elect
to move into larger or more
luxurious quarters.
Huntington Harbour's well·
balanced development pro-
gram includes its own shop·
Cadill ac Con trol s Is
M u n ti n g l o n Harbou r
Corporation is 1 wholly-owned
subsidiary or Chrisliana Oil
Corp., which now has another
community development plan·
ned at San Diego.
Incidentally, the chairma n
of the board at Christiana is
Jules Berman, who has won
national recognition for his
land development Ideas. He
also directtd operations of the
Lake Arrowh e ad Land
Development Corp before sell-
ing to Boise Casc ade Co.
The people behind this
develGpment story i n c I u d e
Mart in Fenton, Jr., president:
Donald L. Byrnes, Jr., vice'
president and g e n e r a I
manager; Joseph P. Antonow,
secretary, and Elmer Tague,
treasurer.
Byrnes is an enthusiastic
participant in community af-
fairs , being a former member
of the Huntington Beach
School Board and presently
active with the Hwtingtcn
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
He aUended both USC and
llCLA and is a business ad-
ministration major.
Newport complete (ron1
Riverside F' r e e w a y 10
Palisades Road and Bristol
"nd widening projei:t. lo In·
Crease it to three lanes ex-
1ends front termination al
Co'Sta Mesa to the juncture
w}th the Garden G r o v e
F)-eeway. Routing lo Coasi
Fl-eeway considered b e I n )l
changed Lo vicinity of Superior
SL
San Dle10 open all the way
of the Santa Ana Freeway
thus providing one continuous
freeway from San Diego to the
top of the San Fernando
Valley.
Orange sou therly leg fron1
Santa Ana Freeway to the
coast still in study 11tages.
So me interests expected 10
8uggest consideration u f
realigning the or igi na l ly
discussed path in the vicin ily
of the Santa Aan Freeway
basin to the future Coast
Freeway to afford a termina·
lion that is aligned with the
future Coreo1 del Mar
r~reeway where it terminates
in Costa Mesa. This would re-
quire realignment a Ion g
Fairview. but this mu st go
through all the study stag es
prior to route adoption.
Coast Freeway, still in li1n·
bo.
Lllpn1 Freeway, adopted
but not yet bud1ettd.
Beach.
In fact, lhe talk ol the
decorating enthusiasts is the
six-foot gold bathtub around !
which he has built one of lhe
mo.st complete displays in the
entire county.
Geers Plumbing was
featured in a !our-page picture
in the Ree ves Journal, western
plumbing, heating and air con-
diti oning trade journal ~n
tilled, '·G eers: Wher e
Customer Is King." 1be arli·
cle credited his policy of pro.
riding consultancy services
for do-it-yourselfers and his
most complete line of repair
parts for 1nos t all plumbing
fixtures and excellent selec-
tion in displayed stocks for his
outstanding growth ex-
perience. Many times, notes
the article, a customer who
comes in for a small part has
reacted to suggestive selling
of Gee rs' display and ends up
"'ith remodeling Ideas.
Geers is utili:l.ing a 7200
square foot facility -nearly
five times as big as his
downtown shop was -and the
highlights ol his future plan-
ning will be installation of a
Impo rranr to Apoll o Urcco Does Cu stom Forging Impressions
Cadillac Controls provide1i
Costa Mesa with aoother
distinctive link wilh t h e
fabulous Apollo program -
while the command cap&..1le is
in flight, it's Cadillac Cootrols'
vector control actuator for the
SPS engine that corrects its
attitude.
was known as Cadillac Gage, Custoni production or im·
an autonomous subsidiary of pressions for forgings from
Ex-Cell-O, and has been on the die blocks for a multituC:-. Jf
local scene for t.l years, aircraft applications by eod-
starting out a_s a 14.man team product manufacturers is the
in a 12,000 square foot leased specialty of Uteco. Inc., of
plant. They built a 24.000 Costa Mesa, a company now
square foot facility al 1866 approaching its fifth year of
Whittier in 1958 and doubled iL cperaUon which has grown up
in size about a year later. from a one-machine plant to
Other key people serving today's e.xpan~in~.. six-~il/
with Swanson are Prank Cran-shop. They are s1gn1f1cantly in·
dall, contracts m a n a g e r ; _-____ _
Va ughn Redding. personnel
volved on parts for the big busi ness early ln 196S at San
airbuses of the 70s. Jose and moved here Se\'eral
Robert B. Young heads the months later upon the persua-
company and his wire, Nin<i , sion of Alcoa that he locate
is secrelary-treasurer who just In the Southern California
recenUy retired as bookkeeper area. Since he had worked for
1s growt!? enabled tpe com-Tapmatlc, he elected to open
pany to expand staff. Ted shop in Costa Mesa.
Schmitt is vice president in Part o( the company's a!!:
charge of production. tlcipated expansion program
• • . o plctur ... story of
• Perfectio n lit Drape ry Clea ning
I Y THI WORLD'S LAIUiEST
IO!h llry Ind w1P cl11"lnt 1..:1,_
nlt1HI I Y•li.tti. ' . ' lh•n llryln' ~¥ lllnflnt lo ll •V•nt •oem ..•
s....,1.1 11tvlc1 conrr111 ltntll• •I e•<h ore1t, 1nc1 nitll•n•
llont 11 1>1rltdltn w!lh llvt tlli m 1nll lult ltntlll prtnln,,
Fh11M PYoofi .. e l e1110•• Woret D•1t1 .. •
.... w1H..S l!1M1 , .• Nt 1hrinktt• .•• Ev.., l!trn• ...
'«fOKI ll1<11r1h>r pl .. 11119 ..• Pr1ltHitn1I r1rnov•I •Ml
l'l•l•llUlon . ' . ,,, •• IDln •••PU.
Colt" ·--'
DRAPER Y
CLEANERS
1702 Newport ll•d., COSTA MESA
SERYING ALL ORANGE COUNTY
This company is a direct
division of Ex.eell-0 Corpora-
tion and just rece ntly Art
S w a n son , administrative
manager, has been elevated to
\•ice president of the division.
aucceeding Or . \V illia rn C.
Leone in lhe position \Vith the
local facllity.
manager: J. R. lleich, opera-
tions man ager. and Arc h
Dyke~. purchasing manager.
Young now has an eight-man ii; reflected in the fact that
team. and has just installed Kai ser is iurveying its busi-
ad v a nc ed office procedure n es s w i th v i e w to p I a ci n g a I ~iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:~ proceeds th rough production through retaining Anton Mat-2&-inch Hy<lrolel in its lineupli
The: company 1n » k I'!
hydraulic servo valves. flighl
control.s for a i r c rafl .
aerospace actuating units and
a variety of assemblies f<lr
aircraft f u e I and oi l
regulators.
They are closely linked with
National Dettnse through
making the pressure bleed
controls for the TF30 engine
oo the Fl I I fighter pl ane, and
they also work with \ht>
domestic jet aircraft industr y
by making engine control
valves used in the JT 3 which
powers lhe Boeing 707.
Cidillac Controls previously
The. company n1 a k e s
anyth ing in the actuation field
and does original design wor k
on about 80 percent of the
items turned out.
S1vanson has been n1anager
of Cadillac ContrGLs for the
past year. having come here
from about 16 years' service
with the parent corporation.
He is an industrial engineering
graduate of Lawrence.
Institute of Technology in
Detroit. and has become quite
ac tive in \ocal civic affa irs,
serYing as a director of the
Unitod Fund and is a member
of the Balboa Bay Cllilf and
the Elk,s 'Lodge.
'
COL E 'G' SWITCH DOES
GREATEST RELIABILITY
line5. ics as office manager. Mailes of equipment.
Cole I n st r u men l has set up Ute~o's oUict 1ystem as
recently de veloped a 10 pole a sideline while se'rving 15 a Young has about 30 years'
per clec:k swilch. 2'1• inches lieutenant in fhe Marihe! at bac kground ln die sinking. He
square. The standa rd on this, Camp Pendleton and recently sta rted out y;•ith r..1oore Drop
to d<ile, has only been 8 poles has retired after I3 years in Forge in Springfield, !\-lass.,
in this; no other manufacturer the service lo divott full time in 1940 as an apprentice, later
produces over 8. to Young's needs. working with Alcoa and W.
f'red H. Cole heaC:o this firm Pat Crowe Industries in thi s
which has operated in Costa The shop is on the verae of specialization before settling in
Mesa ror the past four yean. expanding bey~ Its 1900 I California.
II · 11 · d · square foot plan~ havln1 sub-1s a se -susta1ne , engineer 1 d ••~ tr· Young 1·5 active in local af-. d · ease area acr s un:: 1 eet onente company w l th . fairs, serving as trustee of the
l r · I · · I from 770 17th, B\iild1ng I, for separa e a c 1 1 t 1 e s or Lacra1na Elks Club, and he is1 · · d d I · construction of slipple mentary o~ engineering an r a l 1 n g . a member of the choir of the
'rheir assembl y lines are in space. ' SL John the Di vine Episcopal
separate arcfi s fron1 the Young actually launched his church.
machine shop and fabrication•.r===='==='::::================,11 departments to pro vide com-
plete clean roo1n facilities.
Cole has spent most of his
career in desi gning precision
switching equipment for new
and different applications and l
adaptations to environmental
conditions. lie is a life'
n1 ember of the A1nerican
Paint WHOLESALE TO THE PUBLIC
e t-i•tf•I • C•111-cl•I e C•11tN11Ct•r1
WI CAN AffOID TO GIYI YOU LOW PllCIS ON
9UALITY PAINTS llCAUSI WI MANUFACTUll.
Cole Instrument. a Costa
~1esa based s~itch manufac-
turing firm , has recenll~
deve.}Oped an Inertia or •'(;"
Institute of E le c tro nic quality Precision lnslrumcn Engineers. the Society of P.1o..
Rotary Switch line. They ha\· lion Picture Eng ineers and the
JIU . 1r7¥1 \1,111 our P ll nl/S!O<r 1nd •llO.. u•
ro ~r.a.>1lly ~11n vour painrlno
nttd•. W1 1!•0 c1rry n1rion1lly _,,.,,..., ll••n<l• 1n0 • cornplllt 11~-
1-of 1>1lnlifl0 •UPPllM •nd Wiii·
Switch that produces
received national recogn ition \ · 0 s as the switch hou se thal · mer1can rdnonce ociety. a re gistered electrical engineer. 1nanu faclures Rotary Switches in the state of California and uf the lowest resistance com· WALKER PAINT WORKS reliabilit y 0( funct ion far 11·
e.i:cess of an ything on th
market pre\•iously.
hined with the highest quality. is • consultation specialist on
Located at %034 Placentia all phases cf swttching pro-816 W. 16th St. Cost• Mesi M2-5776 1
..\\•enue in Costa Mesa, Cole -,;b;le~m~';·========:::!::=:=:=::::;:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:=:o;;~-1 This new Inertia Switd1 in
eludes-magnetic retention.
frictionless seisn1ic ma ~ s
positive snap action switth
contact systen1s and \Vil! bi.•
ullimately used in 3 missil<'
Similar fype switc hes ha ve
also been de veloped for use as
controls of various functions
within torpedos and ordnanc<'
devices and in the aerospace,
aiircraft and c o mm ere i a I
fields.
Cole Instrument. R research
and development o r i e n t e d
manufacturing facility, i 1i
primarily known fct lheir high
Instrument serves a wide lF
l'ariety of customers by
designing unieye switches to
fit exacting applications. Their
switches include rotary selec-
tnr uniLc;, which serve clec-
1rooic or electromechanical \
needs. and they also produce
re motely controlled motor
driven switches for a wide
variety of systems. These
s~·itches are generally used by
large electronic and electrical
rnanufacturers for I e s t in I
their own products or for
check-out of their product a! it
GIANT COST A ME'SA
AND VICINITY
MAP
W•ll Si1• ... • must
i11t •ny •r•• booster's office
54" High -48" Wide . s10
HAS 302 ADDI TIONAL STREETS
WITH STREET INDE X AND MAN Y
OT HER FE ATUR ES.
Also 22 " x «" folded m•p• •v1i11bl1 for
$15.00 per I 00, including up-to-d•t • fr ...
w•y m•p-4x4 space for business to stamp
its firm n•m• •nd message. '
COSTA MESA CHAMBER
OF COMM ERC E
St3 W 19th ST.
COSTA MESA, CALIF.
1n•1 64U536
•
Al10 ••1y•to-u11 •d·
h•1iv e1 for p•nel1
in building con1truc-
tion, the1ter1 • n d
c•rgo p•llet1 .
NARMCO
•
LEADERS IN DEVELOPING
AND MANUFACTURING
High-Strength Structural
Adhesives
HIGH MODULUS
STRUCTURAL
MAlERIALS
for Aircra ft . . Roc kets
... Missiles ... and
Aerospa ce Vehicles
E•ceU1nt C•r••r Opportuniti es
i~v•I 011p•rl~11i .., E,.,11loy1fl
MATERIALS ·~IVISION
~00 VICTORIA COSTA MESA
•
the sign of
Quality and Diversity
In
JIG BOR ING .•• GEAR CUTTING , .•
DIVIDING & ENGRAVI NG • , , MACHIN·
ING .•. PATTERN MAKI NG , .• FOU N·
DRY OPERATI ONS . • DRAFTING MA·
CHINE PRODUCTION ••• AIRC RA FT
SUB-ASSEMBL IES
11111Mllnlll -.¥the GOLDIN IOTOR .AWA.ID fro111 lell Hetlceptff ef Fort Wo11h fT•111 0 1lt•r11,
VeNI t•111rel lllOll•ttr, It thow11 r•colvlitt nr•N f10111 T•11y Rocco, l tll 11uolfr, co11tr•I "'•11·
eterl
VARO NEWPORT, 2300 Fairview Rd., Costa Mi.sf , Calif. l4S.7ll4
I
I ··Y I ; ' .. ' .. ' . I .
" ' • • .. ..
Her• 011• 1.11mmuni!y
9t+t icl1ntity with m•d·
;,,I rt lflr,h, bt,11111
it'• th e n 1w h11dqu1r·
lt •l of Hvl 1nd Oi¥i11on
t1f "Tt1•111ol l1bo••·
to•ie1. t111c ., 111d 111 ••• ;.,1. ~, .... .. •.
111rcJ1 111111 01v1lep-
rrt1..t ori1nt1d illil111·
tri11. Hvl1MI i1 one t1f
lh1 wo,1111'1 for1mo1!
hlo•ll ••111rch com ·
p1111l1t .
' .
..
' •
..
Tuoaday, Dacambar 30, lMt FUTURAMA -141 -'-====='--'-"'-'=--"'-'==;,:,__--'-;.·f•
• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
• • •
DYNAMIC INDUSTRIAL GROWTH
SIGNIFICANT COMMERCIAL STATUS
A TALENTED POPULACE
EXCELLENT EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES
CONVENIENT TRANSPORTATION
•
DELIGHTFUL RECREATION
Stimulated by a Dedicated and Action-
Oriented City Administration and Staff •
Whose G11ideposts are
FLEXIBILITY TO
ACCOMMODATE HEAL THY GROWTH
EXERCISING CONTINUING COMMUNITY SELF-DISCIPLINE TO PRODUCE BEST POSSIBLE UTILITY OF ARIA
THROUGH PRE-PLANNING TO MAKE AVAILABLE SUPPORTING FUNCTIONS TO SERVE INDUSTRY,
COMMERCE AND RESIDENTIAL GROWTH ••• MAINTAINING MOMENTUM THAT'S THREE TO FIVE
YEARS AHEAD OF THE DATE OF "ARRIVAL."
To the left art pictures of Cost•
Mesa's o u t st a n d I n g highlights
in growth experience: Top photo is
South Coast Plata, one of the nation's
mo st outstanding shopping cent.rs
· which now has some future planning
that might increase it by clon to •
half million square feet of area and
at least one more major department
store. Next is architect's concept of •
proposed new marina-like ap1rtment
complex, Vista del Lago, which is pro-
posed for 1200 units built around •
15-acre man-made lake. Then is Or·
ange Coast College's new library, and
just below is the clubhouse of the
two-course Costa Mesa public golf
course. At the bottom one left is the
new look on Arlington, just recently
converted from a veritable rural lane
to today's four-lane thoroughfare
frcm Fairview to the high school.
• • •
•
COSTA MESA CIVIC CENTER, dramatically framed betw~n the palms. It the hub of our continuing
progres1 story. This was a part of • $5.6 million civic development program built without 1ff1ctin9
the local property tax rate through 11loc1tin9 • portion of the 11le1 tax,
'
CITY OF COSTA MESA
ALVIN I:. PINKLEY
MAYOR
'
Robert M. Wiison
Vlca-Moyor
Geo1'98 A. Tucker Wiiiiard T. Jordan Wllltlrn L St. Clalr
Councllmen Councilmen Councllm1n
. -··· ..... ) -
Arthur R. McKenzie
City Menager r . .
'
I
I
•
'.
•
--· - -----,..------·----------~ -
iLFUTURAMA
•
Sunlite Medical Is Centers
California
Newport National Bank
Growrh Is Fabu lous
CORVONICS HAS SIX PROPRIETARY
PRODUCTS IN FIRST YEAR OF BUSINESS
;largest of Type • 1n
In just six years Newport
National Bank has developed
into a bank with nine offices in
Orange County, and one other
apProved but not yet open.
Originally capitalized a t ft ,soo,poo with 6 41
slockholders, it now has assets
in excess of $67,000,000.
Six proprietary, patcnt-ap-Corvonlcs is their medic:i l formation system used lo
plied-for product innovatlons electronics equipment which measure vehicle performance:,
and one acquisition in the elec· makes a cast for broken bones Electronically measuring vehi·
Unique Bank In The ,Vorld." tronics field mark the first in a matter of three Or-four cle perform~ in time, '·' ... SunJit.e ~tedical Centers, "JDC., is contlnul'oig a fabulous
•,growth experience a I r e a d y
't.stablishing it as the largest
-"'tonvalescent hospital a n d
,. medical c a r e corporation
... operating in the state of
"CalifonJa with its present
r·count of 34 units projected to ?·~3 by late 1970.
f·~ Including their Sunlite Con·
; &1elesc:enl Hospital -Newpo rt
~:flarbor at 1555 Superior A \'e,
"ip Newport Beach, there
.i already are sevt.."ll units In
1:6range County -counting
· ·ieparately the Sunlite Con·
valescent HOl5pitat and Sunlite ;·~~~e;U~~ov~an;~ri::~or~~
··tine more unit in lhe county
·• «111 be in operation by next
•Summer afte r present con-
; ~ruction progra!Jls are com-
.~,Pleted.
: • The newest of the group is ~'goon-0pening Sunlite Hills Con-
.. talescent Hospital at 330 W.
· .l3astanchury Rd .. in Fullerton,
: :which has a sister unit at 2800 ;·'N. Harbor in Fu llerton,
~.Sun l ile-Park Convalescent
~Hospital. t, Others are at 138 S. Flower
~ tn Orange. I.he mentioned
• Garden Grove facilities al ~ J3392 s. Taft, and Sunlite-C-Olo-
: .niaJ COQvalescent Hospital at
• 9842 W. 13th in Santa Ana.
•. Administrators of t h e s e.
r Orange C~ty units are Mrs.
, Betty Neidigh.Newport Beach ;
1 .Mrs, Bette Mi ller, Orange;
> Mrs. Yvonne Simmonds, in ~'.charge of both units in Garden
-Grove.: Tim Halloran at
. .sunlite·Park and Mrs.
Kathleen Lester at Sunlite
i-Jills. Fullerton.
To be ready for opening next
summer are a new SO.bed
Sunlite Residential ~1anor in
Orange and a 50-bed addition
to the residenlial ma:.1or in
Garden Grove.
Sunlile fa cilities now have a
total of 2362 beds being
operated or managed, and
with the immediately pro-
jested additions and n e w
rehabilitation hospitals, acute
C. of C. Has'
Important Ma p
Proj ects
Two important map printing
projecls have be e n suc-
cessfully completed by the
Costa Mesa Chamber or Com·
merce a n d approximately
15,000 ne.w street maps of the
city and vicinity will be
distributed in the near future.
Many business and pro-
bional places will have
.,,ese 22x3f..inch folded maps
available for distribution, and
another program to provide
larger wall-sized maps for
J>OSling in offices and stores is
under way.
The larger maps are f>4 in-
ches high. and 48 inches wlde
and have 302 additional city
~ and street index as
well&s many other features.
Meanwhih? the second an·
nual Costa Mesa Yellow Book.
.a classified directory of every
business from A to Z in the
Cost.a Mesa-Newporl Harbor
area, is being prepared in co-
liponsorshi p of the Chamber.
The publication has been ex·
panded from 64 pages to 144
pages for 1970 to include
alphabetical white pages in
addition to the classified
yellow pages and listing s will
include non-members as well
as Chamber of Commerce
in embers. However, o n I y
Chamber members may be
permitted to advertise in the
publication.
The listinga include all
business, professional men, in-
dustrial and service finn s who
possess business licenses in
the Harbor .area.
hospitals, co n va.1 e sc en t
hospitals and residential man.
ors there will be 1439 .addlllon-
al licensed beds lor a total of
3801 beds.
and paramedical consuhalion
and service in addlllo.1 to jn.
corporatlng a new . concept o!
management franchising. WU·
Ham F. Pelis is president.
year of business for a new minutes. This cast is one-speed, and acceleration pro·
He called it, "attitude", and Costa Mesa-based growth eighth the weight of plaster of vklcs design and contest data
applit..'d it to bringing ballking company. paria (which require s to the auto1noblle racing com·
to a level of tru ly warm rela· Starting with four people overnight curing), ls porous munlty and to designers in·
tion.shlps with the depositors. from .. scratch" a little more enough to breathe, and may be terested in drag or ac.
As he explained it, "We than a year ago, the Corvonics x-rayed. The latter enables ·an celeralion data . The s~
detennined at the outset to Corporation now e m p I o y s atteoding physician to note systems are used throughout
The Sun!ite operation i~
nearing the end of its second
decade of existence. having
been founded in 1951 by
Richard J. Foot11er. aod grow-
ing lo five units in its first 17
years. Jn July, 1968, it became
the Medical Care and.Services
Div~i;ion or National Environ·
meht Corporation (NATE CJ,
now occupying well over one
half of the nort h tower of the
Union Bank Square in Orange.
Through its advisory
services arm, Sunlite has
developed a superior manage-
men t team whose
responsibilities include open-
ing of new facilities and sup.
port of existing health care
facilities \l.'ith operational
problen1s by developing and
improving management and
providing adequate patient
services.
Today, out of approximately
l4,U5 banks in the United
States, Newport National Bank
ranks among the top 6 percent
in the entire country.
more than 80 people. \VJlhln periodic progress of the bone·s th e free world.
create an entlre.ly new altitude the r..ext year, they expect to mending without having to Corvonics' intrusion a n,d
in lhe business of dealing with increase their manpol'i·er by remove the cast. security systems utilize pulsi-
The obvious question is.
'·How did a small, independent
b8nk, located in a relatlvely
sniall co1nmu.1ity, manage to
achieve such a fantastic
gro .... 'th record?" One could
credi t this growth with "luck",
but that wouldn't tell the
story. One could say that con1·
nn1nity growth and · other
economic factors were largely
inst r umental for the
achievement, bul neither is
this the real story.
people and lheir money, and to more than four times. This basically entails use of coded mini-lasers "'hich pro.
develop a very personal rela-This "non-conventional" ar lmpregnaled glass fibre vide perimeter protection fo"r
tionship with our customers, company represents a team of mesn patented by So I ai mllitary and industrial in~
in an atmosphere or elegance tedutically oriented managers Laboratories of G a r d e n a , sLallations. They are adapted
and "'armth". whose favorite technique is Calif., which hardens in four to sound alarms or make
the measurement and com-minutes when exposOO to lhe automatic calls to guard Sta·
Su nlite has literally
mushroomed in g r ow t h
recently, diversifying into four
major subsidiary divisions
that offer a n1uHHude of
related servicea which seem
destined to encoura ge limitless
additional expansion in fields
of management a:i1d advisory
services, supply, and architec-
tura l, engineering and con·
sullancy in buildings.
Sunlite now has a manpower
pool which supplles facilities
under its direction with needed
personnel, regardless of skill
requirements. They have ad·
ministrators:-managers, book·
keepers, registered nurses,
LVN's, therapists. dieticians,
cooks and maintenance aild
custodial workers.
Jn ordt<r lo make this "al· par Is.on of d ecisio n electronic r re q u enc i es lions or the police. They also
titude" work succesSfully, alternatives. Their sales have discovered by the Corvonics make motion delectors for in·
handpicked new employes increased rapidly even without Corporation. door/outdoor use .
are hired on the basis of their the benefit or marketing peo-Over 200 of these systems Among their s e c u r it -y
\\'annth, friendliness, and pie, literature, ur advertising. have been delivered to the systetns, Corvonlcs also hae
Indeed tbe ad in "Futurama" medical profession in the developed te~ephor.e diale('· ability, in that order .. There is is a "first" and was orte only United Slates over the last systems which are capable or
an exceptionally low turnover in the interest of ·'community three months. In order to calling any one of ten pre-set
in personnel and, for many spirit". satisfy needs already · in· numbers with a pre-recordeii
reasons, among which is the Some key people of the dicated for hospital an d message. This offers a perso11
progr 3 m for female Corvon.ics Corporation are J. clinical utility in the nex t I2 a more reliable method Cf In addition to their human
know.how. Hospital Advisory
Services offers utility of their
computers to speed . book-
keeping and accounting
services with budget controls,
utilizing central purchasing
sys tem s for food,
pharamaceutical, supply and
equipn1ent needs at dramatic
savings.
Actually, one must dig more
deeply, and look back to the
fir st dreams of 10 men who
visualized the founding ot the
bank, and peered into its
potential future.
I h d l.k A. Corvi, president: W. G, months, Corvonics is pro-calling emergency numbers
emp oyes w 0 ress a 1 e, Lawrence and O. V: .Riley, jecting construction of 6,000 l\'ith calm and c-o r re C't
These divisions are:
SUN-CAL Corporation, phar-
maceutical division w h j c h
already operates two con-
sumer pharmacies in Orange;
George Collie, president.
and thus feel that they are vice presidents ; Ann Hen· sys tems. emergency messages in lisi
truly a part of a team. Their nington, directress of ad· Another unique product of time. thereby improving safe:
clothes are created by top m i n i s t r a t i o n , and L. this firm is the digital in-ty and security.
designers, and are in the best Friedrichsmeyer, director oflr=======~==='====_._====~,
Sun-Tee Architects &
Engineers, Inc .. providing site
improvement., buiding design,
planning and consulting on a
nationwide basis: Richa rd E.
O'Rear. p reside nt and
engineer, and Fleix A. Munoz,
architect.
Medilite Services. lnc., of-
fering hospital equipment and
supply p I u s maintenance
serl'ices (including equlpmenl
re,1tal ), 1n addition Io
decorating services a n d
Typical of these origi·,1al 10
men is George L. \\roodford,
president of Newport Nationa l
Bank. Young, dynamic, an d
aggressive, George spearhead·
ed a new concept in banking •
a philosophy that would make
the new bank "The Most
of taste. manufacturing.
Another asset in the story of Their products rang~ from
the bank's success is the proprietary digital electronics
board of directors, made up of systems, timers and speed
top busin essmen and coin-computers through mini-lasers
muni ty leaders. Woodford is and motion detectors, for the
lavish in his praise for this secu rity business. to an e.\ec.
fine bOdy of men and for their tronic system that r{!p!aces
support. He says, "They func· the plaster of paris technique
lion as a board, set policies, for body and limb casts for
and do not try to run the bank the medical orthopedic pro-
from an operating standpoint. fession.
They Jet professionals operate w ·1 1· · th the 'bank, and \l.'e benefit from " e are capi a izing on e fact that technology is grow-the strength they give us." ing 'ever faster', that more
0. C. SUPPLIERS, INC.
e loltl
• Rubber Gooch
• Yolvn e M.._ri ..
Holldll119 e ErMr9e111;-,
(q11ip111ettt e Keystone
G-reGH
e Ho1e & Ceuplhttt e lepe, Wire
e Pipe & T11bl1tt e Ro,., Me•ll• e Pipe FirtlllfS e H-,dro111llt: HoM & e Teol1
Fittht91-Gem • Steo111 Sp.c:loltl•
• Hyde111ft: Yolves • Polit & lrlltMI
.. lq11lp-t •••• ,., ...... 8 A11drow lrew• e Peckl119 I-Go1k.._ lrollr.
Kl 9-2481
1980 Lake St.
• LE 6-6583
Huntington Beach
furnishings for professional
suites, hotels and colleges as
well as hospitals, under the
di rection of its founder, Fred
Footner is president of
Sunlite Medical Centers. the
parent organization heading
the subsidiaries, and he is
noted as one or Ca lifornia's
most progressive leade rs in
the development of total
centers. He is past president
of !he California State Nursing
Home Assn., advisor to the
California Department of
Public Health.1 and serves on
the Co1nprehensive Health
Planning Commission and the
California Hospital Advisory
Board by appointment of the
governor. He is a fellow of the
American College of Nursing
llome Administrators.
Follis Special
Is Versat ility
In Mouldings
Jn ad~t!?n to the unique at. than 90 percent or all elec-
titude ~~ ~e bank and of its tronic engineers Y:ho ever Jiv-
employes, Ne,vport National ed, Ii ve today. that more than j;,,""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"'i
Mouldings which vary from has brought' many innovations 90 percent of all electronic ad-
A. Martin, president.
Hospital Advisory Services,
Jae., providing management
TANIS, VERIAL'S PARLAY
INTO HOME DECORATION
1 . 1 . d . 1 into the banking business. For vances will ~··· 1·• the ne•t urntture rim an pie ure 1 1 h d b ki "'"'-LU " ... frames to custom trim on examp e, engt ene an ·ng JO years. and that people are
marine vessels are th e hours (to S:OO p.m. Monday more important than anything
·a1· ed od c1· 1 through Thursday, and to 6:00 else" says Corvi·. spec1 1z pr u ion o F -d ) 1· ff Follis Custom Millworking or p.in. ri ay • 1rst to 0 er Corvonics prel>fnl\y occupies customers a complete travel Costa Mesa. This company department, Saturday banking two faciliti es, the corporate
has bee,1 serving lumber through it's TV drive.in headquarters at 3027
yards, E.O.M, manufacturers facilities. first to offer dri ve-in Enterprise in Costa Mesa and
and wholesale suppliers for TV banking, fir st to offer "sit· a manufacturing and testing1 the past eight years. do .... ·n" banking at individual facility at 3002 Hallad y in San-j
Ernest James Follis and desks for every customer, ta Ana. They are looking for a Verial and J, t f. (Red) Tanis Furniture features ex-Jim Durnil and sons ·who first 10 give a living room at-common fa cility in \Vhlch to,
Greene are parlaying an pert services in furniture assist the ~er, Ernie Follis. mosphere to the safe deposit consolidate their operations.I
criginal furniture refinishing refinishing and anliquing. and in directing operations of vaull. and first to make cof-figuring on up to a 40,000
shop into a diversified t\-1'~ the company does a Jot of seven people. as they do mill-fee. tea. and cookies available square foot expandable prop. I
-. . ing on larger lumber, con-all day Jong. erty on four lo five acres of j operation service in customiz-repai r work. service on in· verling it into strips of land
Cd home decoration con-surance claims, ca r r i e r 1 Other innovations have been p · h 1
e. CUSTOM MILLING
MOULDING
STICKER WORK • •
RIPPING RE-SAWING
lr11ie Follis. Prop. ,•
FOLLIS CUSTOM MILLWORK .·
COSTA MESA
moulding o many CCJ\l· made part o[ the friendly er aps the most exciting , lOll NEWPORT 54,.3511
sultancy in the short space of claims. touch-ups. The Y figu rations ranging from IA to services of this unique bank,[[Jp~r~od~";';' ;';"r;r~en~t~ly~fe;a;t"~re~d~a~tl;:::::::::::::::;""'.~~=1 a year. emphasize they can match any 1.~·inch stock. I all designed to make the
Tanis Furniture Refinishing color. They also 1 re-size large customer fee l 'wanted and "all
at 1719 Pomona in Costa Mesa The company uses a \) pieces of lum¥r for lumber home".
was the first step in the alcohol-resistant fini shes, and yards. I And so, Newport National!
Greene confides they have The firm is at 3033 Newport Bank keeps growing, as it ap-Gre.ene family operation, and Blvd.. and they have four proaches it's 7th year, thanks
just last August the distaff quadn1pled !heir volume in his slickers (moulding machines), to tbe loya l depositors. and
side of the family opened first year of business. Tania a gang rip. two:Ce--saws and a through the efforts of the
Riverside in Newport Beach to now is exceeding its momen-joiner. Their knlfe-like equip-outst&nding men and \-\'Omen
capitalize on Some 20 years of tum during the peak of the ment slices lhir;k pieces of who make up its staff. It is a . lumber into shaP,es and sizes Jivh1g testimonial to the suc-experience ·veri al has had in boom years "'hen Orange needed for custoffi and special f " tt •t d " d t I ccsso an a 1u e an oa
this work. County was expe riencing its mouldings. philosophy that pr 0 j e ct s,
Verial is utilizing two units great population explosion. Follis has more than 20 wannth, friendliness, and a•
In her new shop near the Tanis has been advancing years f,1 th is specialized work. sincere desire to be of help to I
increasingly into upholstering Incidentally, Follis has a all or its customers. Newport Beach postoffice and -d r -· backs up her work with a long work and figures to go into hobbyist s1 e 1ne in restoring Quite a record of ac·
background in drapery work in cabinet and kitchen refinishing classic cars. He has ac-compllshmenls for an in-• DESIGN
. t as soon as it is feasible. cumulated more than a dozen dependent bank that opened
Atlanta before conung eas · Red has two key aides in old automobiles. including nine its doors in a temporary I e FA-BRICA TION
She. had worked ll'ilh a Fuller-N f' d B models of the Pierce Arrow. ood b ·1d· h ton drapery shop until re.sign-orman 1eyne an ruce \-\' en ut 1ng w ose op. • TEST Liby. Jieync is a Jong-Lime Hr is restoring a 1926 roadstrr tin1istic investors we are l f•ll'l'l'I~ .. lng to help Red "''ith Ole books specialist in wood finishing, nO\\'. lie also has two hopeful of its grO\\'ing into a r ~ .._ Covering the full spectrum in system optic~
..
" .,
..,
whenheboughtthe Tanisshop. while Liby is a hobbyist \-\'ho Franklins, a Hupn1obilc and a respellab!e sized financial OPTEK, INC. '290 FISCHE R. AVE., COSTA MESA, CALIF. (714)540-9291
When his volun1e got so great b 1. · th h Cadillac. · 1· ·bl l''°"'""""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""=""'"'""'""'""""'""'=l thev needed lo retain fu1l· ecame so pro 1c1ent at e const1tu ion ... more poss1 .v ~r-__
fl d. d 1. · elected to transition into lhe Follis stlll is seeking cars in envisioning whal a ··giant'' I
e ge accoun ing servi ces, crafl after a career as an the classic field for adding to this child was going lo de~·e!o~'
she elected to open her own aircraft planl's foren1an. his colleclion. Into. But they had faith .
drapery shop. -:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ They are addition a 11 y ll
dive rsified through periodic
collaboration with B arr y
Loughlin, who once O\vned
Newport Furniture bu t now is I
conducting interior decorator '
consultancy services.
Tanis actually is a 12-year-
old company and Red has
been its third owner, having
bought the fir1n after having
w-orked for a year for the suc-
cessor to Casey Tanis, the
founder , wl10 went to Oregon
after retiring.
Engineered Metal Cutting
e (:IRCUIT BOARD
PUNCHING
e SWIMMING POOL
GASKETS
Gxolic
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA
2968 RANDOLPH 1714) 545·9425
announces
•
FINEST DRAPERIES
e AUTOMOTIVE
GASKETS unique
capabilities
from residentiil decorator delight to installa.
tion5 in Southern California's most dramatic
high rise commercial and reseidence struc·
tures.
• A/I F•bric' 1!'ld Woven
Wood•
• Outstending Selections
in Orepery H1rdw1re
• Expert ln1tell1tion
COAST
DRAPE iiV
SERVICE
COSTA MESA
21165 Charle 646-4401
e INDUSTRIAL
MACHINE' GASKETS
e STEEL RULE DIES
We feature en9ineered c.uttin9 of
sheet metal to afford simpler, less
eJ(pensiv e ways of stamping out
panels and electronic: ch a$sis, as
well as embossing and die cutting
operations for the graphic arts in-
d u>try.
DIST~llUTOIS Of HATIONALLT
l'NOWN STAND~D
GAS.Kn MATlllAil
I
, I· XI It .
R. H. STREVER MFG. CO.
CPSTA MESA, CALIF.
3032 ~NTERPRISE --'"545-1155
OPTICS
• 1n
* INFRARED MATERIALS * PRECISION COMPONENTS * COATINGS
THERMAL INSTRUMENTATION * CALORIMETERS * RADIOMETERS
* THERMOCOUPLES * THERMOWELLS
NATIONAL SPECTOGRAPHIC ELECTRODES
by Un ion C1rbide
We Offer Chall eng ing Career Opportunities
In These Fields
AN EQUAl OPPOP.TUNITY EMPLOYER
I ,
_________________________ _.
I.
Tuelday, O.ctmber 30, lfff
•'·
Segerstrom District
.~s 'Corporate HQ~
Duncan Fits Strongly
In Successful Moon Shots
ELECTRONIC-VOTING-FAMOUS COLEMAN
DIVERSIFIED THROUGH ACQUISITION
falDOWI for some time ror Anahftm, a precllloa machil> II\( and -.omJca ..,_
its electronic vote tally system lng manufacturer a D d from Cal Tedi ad aft.tr
and automatic photography 1pecialWng In develoPtnent Jaunchins his buli.neaa eer.r
Significance of today's ''man Ouncaa bu participated also e q u l p me n t an d I n-and productloo o f in-_._.-6.. __ , ...., ....... stntmentatlon, Co J em an 1tnunent1Uon parts and com-u • ~~WI• encu-" ... on the moon" story 111 the Jn potenUometer appllcaUon:i became vtce -.Went aod
pol ... ~ '·"'· f··--• o/ Enginttring CO., Inc., Of Santa ponents for aero 1 pace , .... A lo program con....uues "'dh Jn 1tra~ um;1ioos com-Ana bu recently diversified defen1e, pemmenl * in-aales manager for a ~
'rhe stratel!lcally localed
Sqerstrom lndwstr1al District
rs· now recognized a s
"Corporate Headquarters" in
Orange County as leading
CQmpantes conUnue to &elect
t}le area for their home offices
ud corporate headquarters.
-Outstanding dlversity of the
irea Is symbollzed by the re..
ctnt opening of Hy I and.
Division of Travenol
Laboratories, Inc., one of the
world's leaders in develop-
1hent and production o f
~lochemlcal tests and
Uierapeutic product! derived
!<om blood.
, Atlantic Research's Missile
Sfstems Division and
Ji;.a t er Ii n e Corporation's
sµbsidiary, Babcock Elec-
tronics, establish the com·
rwtnity as an impo r tant
research a n d development
area related lo national
~efense ; Voit Rubber (AMF)
gives the community a signifi·
cant link with manufacture
ind world-wide safes or sports
liquipment and S t a n d a rd
Pres.9ed Steel-Western com·
J)letes a well-rounded in-
dustrial complex located near
ttie intersection of Harbor
5oulevard and the · San Diego
freeway.
: This ind~rrat district is
represented m important ~hases o ( communications
~irough the presence of the
Orange C o u n t y publishing
6eadqua,rters of the Lo s
An geles Times. The recently
diVersified Coleman Engineer·
ing, recreation-oriented
Enterprise Yachts, Division of
Elgin Na l ion a I Industries;
tear Siegler, Inc.,
commercial lhopplnr c:enWI
In the nation. South Coast
Plaza, an 88-store:, cllmate-
controlled shopping eenler,
conslrts of two and three
levels, js already anchored by
two major department stores
-the May C«npany and
·Sears, Roebuck -plus a
J.,.pb Magnln operallon -
and totals 1,200,000 square
feet. Plans are now unde.r way
to expand the Center by ap-
proximately 460,000 square
feet a.s programming ol. lhe
next two or three years will
add about 40 more shops and
at least one more major quali-
ty department store. Their
1970.71 building program is ex-
pected to add three new movie
theatres and a blgb-rlse office
building.
The SOuth Coast Town
Center complex also will be
enhanced by construction of a
nationally-known hotel to pro-
vide the nearby commercial
and . industrial concentration
with services offered ln quali-
ty hotel and restaurant ac-
commoda.Uon.s.
The family, coincident.ally,
ts developing "Segerstrom
Center" as part of th• nearby
Santa Ana downtown area
development program. This
will include an 11-atory
Southern California First Na-
tionll Bank Regional Head-
quarteni and orfice building
which will dominate the finan-
cial center and bu s lnei;s
district with the I a r g es t
'
prlvltely........i Park Ing 6ignal 1UCCes1 reflects a lot putera, Ore control ln>lru· through acquloltlon of four dustry. 'fYPlcal ol Ill com-An,eles In-b a 11.k
of the Importance of the 1111>-menll, mJsalle suJdan<e and Southern Callfomla lndU&trial merdal aervicet Include much whero be bel-' .........
garqe In the a<a. conlrl<:lon who ploneered bomb cllrecllnna1 llYJlema. companla with a broad spec-of the equlim-uted to ,.... .,_
The Segerst.roms h av t tntm of capabWUes. operate 0 11 at y I a n d ' 1 'Northrop, becomla1 •le• pnllmlnary space pM~m The firm 11 pn>Jedin& a I•· d ~~ --• •-''-t -~ ~~-""'-rettnlly negollaltd a torig-. .._... Coleman now bec ome • automate ,..,... ~ ..-"'-u.i:i1 4llal ~. ··~
term le;tSe for a proposed pre.paraUons. cllitles apaD8ion program at parent oorporaUon Of a small m e c h a n I ca 11 y-anltoated to or11niz.atloa of the ONtmift
marina-•"pe a""rlmtnt com~ Ooe of these· companies la 2185 Fairview Rd. 1n the near conglomerate ol four firnu: characters requlrln1 ·intricate compuy in ltlO, be opera&ld.
.., ~ Costa Mua'• Duncan Elec-fulure, upedll\( to double the -orfr'I Col parts built by Knuclltn to bl 1 all -•-firm ~ pleawhlcb isbelng plannedby iue eman com-pttclse toltn.ncr:a for lona-J011nartt --Ill
Interland D<ve~melll Com-tronlcl whleh manulactured size ol . their )ll't""t :J0,000 pany wl Jill professional Jenn dutablllty. Brull and for i... ,..,. -the potenUoiliet<n used In the IQllltt foot faclllty. Since they pilotographlc equipment, and _, " ~~. P3JlY Of Santa C ara. This is m 1 n u f a c t u r ~ rs ot ru apanded eompany bu ~nant treaaurer -the 40-acre Vilt.a deJ Laso non-manned Surveyor moon are on a four acre tract they photograpbJng aystems for annual saJet approaching $$ ard ou of callfomla. Ha 11·a
development at Mesa Verde ~~e=~c~~ch f::! have plenty of r oom for many med.lea!, osclllogriphy, millionandwltbltabroadened member of the V.U.,.'IMrt
Drive and Adams Avenue in growth. ·oil well ~· d a 1 a base of operailona now jts Club and the An1Dd4le Golf. Co~. Mesa hi-• will "· the moon's surface in landings wth .... ~ ;,wo. • w tal us in 967 The eompany employs a to-recording, tr studies and gro ~tenwai aeems &UW• and Country Club.
built around • 15-acre man-~e~ A~llo 11 landed close ta! d. 175 people and oUlclals computer graphic 1 ·~ remarlu.ble. Vachon ll a product IJl
made lake adjacent to 1olf to the Surveyor wbJch aent t:nljslota another 20 percent plications; plus machine tool The overall operation now Boston Un I• er 1It7 .liDd
courses of Mesa Verde °"1n-all these iaearched pictures growth in personnel u cooduc-products contributing to h11 a total of 250 employees, N artheut Uniffl'llty, ma-~b~~u&,~nd~~. ~I~ back to earth, Its remarkable tlve plastlcs production con-precision automatlbn. a.s compared with IOme 1111 Jcr1.n& In bydrtulics. He "'"1•
'"'3 condttlon told much of the ~continue to eipand their Industrial Hydraulics of Los they had ln the fall t:I. 1981 sales engineer wttb Moon
Tbese apartments will be reliability which enabled the fie1d ol applicatioo. Angeles, the largest operator when the preterit lf'OUP ol Mach~ for Une ye.-..·•
one to three-bedroom units planning which !Ull IS being Key executives at Duncan in job honing and boring In the rirms was put togeter. partner at Empire MachlnerJ
and 90 percent of them will applied ln future moon land-Include Donald C. Duncan, West, serving ground support The praent facility at !121 for two years md until the
face some Portion ol • ing programming. Duncan pro-prealdent; H. H. (Jack) Hou-equipment for aerospace and W. Central Ave. In Santa Ana mer,er "u prnldent .of.
meandering lake. A total of duced the .six po~nUometera dyshell, vice presldent~i· industry, plus oil tool equip-has been central beadquarten Kuco lndultrlal Hyd;rauBcs., a
1200 unit.I are pls,..otd and ado which figured in the camera neering ; William B. Dean. ment manufacturers and as well as the Coleman partner in B. V. Im~
dinmos. lphteroetheill wbe. al'fr...,on~ • .!.~ coo~ls. secretary-treasurer and con-operators, along wi~1_pro-manufacturing fathecillty, but1 Cod. ·~~A~" w IUlai TJie big story at Duncan trailer; and department man-duction of cylinder bar1~ us-they now are on verge o an .._.. ... -..z--1-g ~root schooner which will be EleCtronics, now a division of agers Lyle Swafford, manu-ed in assembly of tractors,. lift eoi.uolidtUng Ore operations Knudlen Enc;ineertPI tblce
docked in tht lake to be used Eystron-Donner Corporation, facturing ; R. E. (Red) Dar-trucks. hydraulic cran es, Into a larger facility wblch 11 1981. He wu chairman of the
for entertainment purposes. today is use of conductive plas~ ringer, marketing; Howard truck bodies, etc. being planned for construction PlaMlnl Commllllon of
Roundlnf: out rtcre.atlonal tics io manufacturing "pot!." Clary. administrative, and Kasco Abrasives, with a In the Irvine Industrial Arcadia tn 1957and1111. and
allure. wtU be tennis, handball ThiJ technlque of uUlizing Dick Miller, quality control. complete line of resinold Complex. on the :\rcldla Water Boerd
.and volleyball court! and put-an electrical field of epoay Duncan headed the Wescon abrasive wheels and discs, us-Key people 1o lhe newly-con-from 1951 t.111 1M1: prelidtnt
ting greens, plus a blend of as a step in manufactW'e en-Show in 1952, and currently ed in the fabrication and solidated corporation are T. C. and director of tba Upper San
parks, lanai-parks and pueos. ables Duncan to produce an is on the show's board of direc-building trades for weld grin-Coleman, chairman ; Frank E. Garbriel V 111 e Y Mumetplt
This is just a part of the even more competitive pre-tors. He Ii; a member o! the ding, cement sawing, metal Vachon, presiden t; LY I e water Diltrlct, and dlNd.oror
continuing impact of the cision potentiometer, opening IEEE and held key positions cutting and si milar projects. Knudsen, vice prestdmt -the Metropolita Walt r
Segerstrom Family Is making countless new avenues of com· with other noted west coast They also are Jn lhe wholesale development; D. F. Craig, D I a t r i c t of 8 o U t II tr n
on Orange Coast community mercial applications in a field JnstrumentaUon operation op-hardware market with metal vice president -marketing and C a 11 for n la • He ii an
life. As a family spokesman which heretofore was largely erations before founding his and masonry blades designed sales: R. P. Carroll, tecre:tary M~c "~.!~ ... of-~
points out, there are several restricted to government-1ub-own company-first based In for building contractors and -legal counsel : and B. M. .-u -.--J1.11&a
other equally important proj-aidized spa.ct research pro-Sanla Ana aOO moving here in household do-it-yourseUer1. Ganoe, controller. Lodge. He ii a nee& ltlldlut
eds planned but not suf. grammi.Qg. 1961. Knudsen Engineering of cmtman poueaea: enctneer· of Newport Beacb. ficiently developed fordetalled 1--'"-=:;::.._.::: _____________________ _:: __ ::_ _____ .;_ ___ o_ ____ '--------
information to be releued.
ENGINEERED METAL. CUTS ( IS STREVER SPECIALTY
'J' r a n s p o r talion Support Techniques tn engineering
:Vivision; Collins Radio and methods or cutting metal! in a
.Raytheon Computer are also manner similar to those in
(ocated here. . non-metallic die cutting are
· The Segerstrom lndustnal advancing R. H. Strever Man-
District has more than J,400 ufacturing Co .• of Costa Mesa
acres Of land z.oncd for eJec-lO new heights o( growth ~
ironies, research· and develop-tential.
bossing and die cutting opera-
tions for the graphic arts
trade, and more frequenUy
are being called upon to de-
sign easier and more effi-
cient methods of· s e r v in g
fields where die cutting oper-
ations or tech niques had not
been applied previously.
one or
Glendale Federal's
umpteen ways to save
is a Guaranteed
inent and light manufacturing While the plant started out
t nd is accessible to nationwide nearly five years ago as a
transportation. Not only is it one-of-a-kind gasket manufac-
$erved by the Southe rn Pacific turer dealing only in rubber
~ailroad, but it is conveniently and asbestos fibrous mater·
'djacent to Orange County's ials, emphasizing services to
(>resent and fub..lre freeway repair and main~nanct: of
Betwork, which includes \he large Jndustrial engines, they
ti-Hting San Diego and have progressed into applica-
Newport Freeways plus the tlons for.swimming pool sup.
future «Xange Freeway. , ply houses, automotive parts
Particularly a pp e a 11 n g distributors and also punching
~haract:vistics of this in-circuit boards for the elec-
austriaf'area are ,the presence tronic industry.
Dick Strever notes they
bave been able to provide
production techniques for com-
panies which can use their die
cutting techniques in metals
as a savings of as much as
one-eighth previous m a k e-
ready costs.
The family-owned company
has Dick'• father and a broth·
er in functional roles. H. G.
Strever gives them consul-
tancy assistance, while Gary
heads their production depart-
ment. Dick doubles as sales
manager and in charge or ad -
ministration.
Of scientific am management The firm's versatility can ('alib~-e-personnel aM a bro~d, be noted, in the fact that they
stable labor market because have enjoyed a definite link
of the.1'leasing residential en-in the modem aerospace era
yironment. as well as serving National
· The Segerstrom Famib''s Defense through the major
carefiJlly controlk,!1 industrial contractors they have served
•tm~here is a major factor ~cally, The company
fn dects:Kins of Site selection alii doe! a cutiiln ainoont of
Jeams:.and prompts individuals volume production for utility
~ookinK· for c a. r·e e r op-of the O.E.M. manufacturer.
portunittes to settle here. The company ·has perfected
In addition to this ootstand-capabilities ·m engl.neering the
Ing industrial district, the cutting of sheet metal to
Segerstroms also are owner-achieve simpler and less ex-
developers of South Coast pensive ways of stamping
Plaza, one of the finest and out panels and chassis for
most comprehensive regional electronics applications, em-
The company has grown to
eight employes and since they
already are crowded in their
present 5000 !Q.uare foot facil-
itY" at 3ll32 -Enterpriie, it Is
conceivable that they will be
acquiring more space and
enlarging the staff in the fore-
seeable future.
Both Gary an"d Dick grew
up and were educated in the
Bakersfield area, having ma-
jored in drafting and engineer-
ing in college.
:Atlantic Research Diversifies Into
.Additional Fields of Acceptance
'
Atlantic. Research Corpora-
tion of Costa Mesa has been
tuccessful in its bid for new
marketing areas as evidenced
lhrough sale of a 24-foot boat
perfected from its ex·
rerimental "Seablazer" and
development of a low cost
target rocket designed for use
with the Redeye missile.
This facility Is an advanced
lcchnology organization which
~mploys some 650 personnel
Jllld enjoys great growth
potential because they bave a
three-year contract to produce 0 large Athena vehJcle a,s, well
lis gravitating intq other fields or activity.
· The company ls a division of
Susquehanna Corporation of
j\Jexandria, Va. -noted for
Sis activity in mining and proc-
essing or m1nerals , p I u s
, mAnufactureofco mpuier
perhlpheral (!(lulpment and
building materials.
Atlantic Research tngages
primarily in research and
~evelopment. followed 4P by
production o( missile systems,
rocket propulsion units:, elec-
tronic and communication! ~qulpment, mechanJcal ~
ducts pyrotechnics a n d
Onina'nee 1n which they fre..
(iuently par tlclpaie tn
lechnlcal prellmin1ries to their
):lcvelopmcnt.
: The company dates back to
1!M9 when it was rounded u a
two-man team with total
c:apitaliiallon of $1000. Jt"1
now a rive-division oraanlia·
tion with more than 4000
employes ·and ultnl!ve plant
fadiJUes thot spread all over It.he United Stales.
~ • The local plant, situated at
3333 Harbor Blvd ., in the low draft operations. Jts stem
Segerstrorn Jn du s t r i a I driven out-drive can be tilted
District, is prime contractor up [or beaching and backing off again, and it has high foc the Air Forct's highly sue-speed capabilities. A dual
cessf\ll four-stage aolid pr~ drive permits it to make turns
pellant rocket, Athena. It will at full speed. It has proved
be primarily occupied for the just as effeetive in high speed
next couple of years with pro-operations fully loaded as it
duct.Ion on almost a $32 million has been while empty,
contract for development work This craft has an qnusual In--
on the Athena H. 'Ibis ii a \'erted V shaped hull of
larger vehicle, having four aluminum, and is deQgmd for
tJmes the payload than t h e river as well as amphlbtous
original, and being functional "warfare.
in launching some J'.I of theae: The conpiiy ha.s entered
vehicles starting In 1970. the vltaUf important field of
Another product In which poUutfun research, and is COn-
they have advanced ~st . 4l)ctlng t1perimental work for
preliminary stages ls the Gurr' tw& states --Callfomla and
Runntt, a low COil iarget New Jer!f':'/. They have
trainer. They have had orders developed an opacity met.e.r
from both the U.S. Navy and which may be attached to '
the/l/.S, Matlne Corps for this truclts al ,..1ghlng stations to
rocket. . analyze their exhaust and a.nti ·
lt is dea.igned to be used in smog e m 11 s ion efficiency.
testi ng the Redeye missile, the frellrnlniry lnformaUon In·
heat.seeking wUt wbJch Is us-dlcat.es both stat.ea are ..iull-
ed in defense acainst. tadical pleued with lta performance.
jet aircraft. Il rues at speeds They abo are working on
of more than 400 kncit& at a· testing dtvl~ under con·
rtlaUvely low trajectory, Im-1fderatlon by the J)Ol'lt o{flcc
it.atlng Lactfcal planet fiYinC for tesUng lheir vehicles for
ovtt de/ended ground )lO<i· pnlluUon.
tlons. It ls a 16-foot solld-fue.t Allantlc Research b headed
rocket pt'OJ>elled unit which iocJlly by Robert G. Vande
mounts on a thrff.unil metal Vrede, vice prestdtnt and
!"""' laW!Cher. g""'al manqer, and other
"nl<ir partldpotlon Jn the key -i. Include Billy F.
deve'°pment of the 3&-foot Auve.Tishlne, uslstant general
Seablaur ~eeded In at-manager • operations; Tom
tracing orders from the U.S. Albley, ualltattt genera I
NaV)' for I dozen 24.foot crart manqer .. programs; Perry
of si milar dtsiRO. Navy e.x-Stevens, conlroUer; William
perlmtnll with this boat have Mayhall, director o f ad·
c:alllld the Cout Guard also to mlnbtraUon; Davt 'l'h<lupsoo,
manliest .. 1n1mo1. director o1 .,.i-inc. anc1
This Is • della type boal Bruoe Green, dlrtdOI' of
that"s particularly effective In purc:b11.1m,.
Cl.fNllAlf rEDBIAL
SAVINGS-~-
I'd
like
tlUU!
Growth
Account.
Ask about our 5·)'1Wg-
growth account Or our ~OU•• 1111
Income accounls. We also have flexlble
savings accounls and high earning
Investment 1avlng1 accoun!L T""9.,. no
higher rateo on lnounld 11vlnga·anywhere.
So sare,., eecure. Um~ . ..,. to
save mak11 you fHl 1 o feet tan.
lllJDOrl Beach 2n1 e .. 1 c ... , H19hw•y COiia Miii 1933 New1'0lt"""
NATION'I llCOND LAAOEST FEDERAL WITH ASBETI OVER ONE llLLION DOLLARI. n omen
l!fl •-ACC<XINTI, 5.25%>YIA• 5 21i!fl'-11.Zfi!fl>.VWOOMRddlW gl(t-flf,4A'("4JTINfll!UT BONUS ACOOUHTt 1 a°'QN)WTMAOCO(Mfl flOOMl.AOCOl;flR
..
. ·. .
. ..
. • . • . • • • • • . . • • . •
••
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I
I
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Al~FUTURAMA Tue1day, December 30, 1969
AMF-Voit Look s for New Highs 1n Production,
Sales in Sporting Goods and Tire Materials
New Hyland Facility Pegs Costa Mesa
AMF-Volt continues to enjoy
unusual 6UcteSS and the Santa
.Ana-based firm looks forward
to new highs bolh in pro-
:'®cUon and sales again this
)Ur-in sporting goods as
well as tire materials.
As Imp ortant Medical Research Address
Some evidences ol the suc-
1...-ess and growth of this
dy namic co mpany are shown
by r e c e n l occupa ncy of a
37,000 equa re foot expa11Sion of
Hs Harbor B o u l e v ard
facilit ies. This houses an
en larged R & D and ofrice,
plus production <1reas for the
parent com pany ·s AMF' Tire
Equipment Division.
Further. with increasing pr~
duction and enlarged product
lines. Voit outgre1v l t s
warehouse and leased 60,000
square fe~t of additional
warehousing in nearby Carden
Grove.
Looking to the future. Voi t
has jus.t announced plans to
build a new plant in Kentucky,
200.000 square (eet to start bul
designed for eventual ex·
. · pansion to 500,000 square feet
The facility will produce
athletic balls, employ 200. with
plant, labor force and product
inix expansion to be deter-
, mined by broadening ma rket
demands.
Jn making I he ~11-
nouncement. George D. (Bud)
Godfrey. Voit pr es id e n ~.
emphasi:ied thal the Ke ntucky
plant is an expansion and will
not effect present Santa Ana
operations. "This does n o t
mean thal there will be any
lessening of production at San·
I.a Ana. Santa Ana, as a mar-
trr of fact. 1vill continue tn
i::ro~·. 'The Kentucky facllity is
an addition to keep pace \\"\th
!he growing business.'' God·
frey said.
Other Voit sporting goods
plants are located al Tam pa,
Fla., and Maywood, N.J.
Voit's Tire J\.laterials Division
make s tread rubber in Santa
Ana, Porlland, Ore., and
Tucker, Ga.
This is the essence of an ex-
citing story which actually
can be tabbed as much a part
of the Orange Coast's expcri·
ence as anyo ne's because a
~ignificant percentage of the
company's 1000 personnel call
i;uch communities as Newpo rt
Beach, C-Osla !\1 esa, Hun-
tington Beach, F o u n ta in
Valley, etc. '"home .''
Voit has compiled i l 1'1
phenomenal g r ow t h rx·
·:pe-rience largely due to the
tact that the company has the
largest research and develop·
..rnent organization in the
-iports equipment field. Mosl
recent R & D contributions
Mve been in Voirs newesL
p°ioduct lines-golf clubs and snow skis.
STORY BEHI NO DU RA BILITY of
Vol t's snO\V skis ... they arc fiber-
glass 'vo u!d on a "figure 8" in a pat-
tern programmed by computers.
1-lere's a vie\v of a core as it is being
"\vrapped" in fiberglass .
skis. 111arketed for the first
time: last season. They feceiv-
cd scQSallonal acclaim for
perfo rmance when used on the
~lopes.
This yea r Voit ls adding a.
second model of siniilar con·
sln1ction bu t with higher
performance characteristics
for better skiers.
Because of litnited initial
production, last yea r Voit skis
were 1narketed only on the
west coast and in Ne \Y
England, but this year they
arc being marketed nationally.
The \V. J. Voit Rubber Corp.
is a subsi dia ry or Ame rican
fl-lachine and Foundry Co. of
New York, and Voit has long
b('{'n recognized as a pioneer
. and now the wc;r\d's largest
su pplier or inflated athletic
balls.
marketing AMF bowling balls,
bags, shoes and accessories to
the retail trade.
Sports equipment represents
about 60 percent r their
business, which the rest is in
tread rubber, tire repair
materials and manufa cture of
bov.,li ng balls for A MF' ;
famous for its extensive li ne
of bowling equipment, in·
eluding automatic plnspotters.
lane equipment and supplies
and bowlers' equipment.
Ai\1F, rounded in 1900,
started as a tobac c o
machinery n1anufacturer with
one pla nt in Pennsylvania. To·
day they are one of the na-
tion's giant companies with a
wide mix of products for con-
sumers, for industry and for
defense. and they ha ve more
than 60 plants and labs all
over the U.S. and overseas.
became sole owner in 1924.
The company entered the
sports equipment field in 1928,
first with a beachball, and
soon after with footballs,
basketballs a n d softballs.
These were the first rubber
an d ru bber-covered athlet.i c
balls, starting new phase of
the sporting goods industry.
Today more than 90 percent of
all basketballs produced are of
the Voit-originated rubber con-
struction concept.
The company was headed by
\Villard D. Voit after the death
of his father. the founder. Voi t
hecame a subsidiary of AMF
Jan. I. 19~7.
Hyland Division ot Travenol
Lab0rator1es, Inc., has just
established Costa Mesa as an
important iuidress in medical
research, havirui: moved Into
its attracUve and commodious
16.6 milllon complex U. Harbor
Blvd. and the San Diego
Freeway in mid-December.
.Hyland rants among th e
world's leaders in development
and production of biochemical
tests and therapeutic
p~ucts derived from blood.
Not only are they pioneers in
producing immune serums
and human plasma, but lhey
were the first U.S. company to
market human plasma.
They are credited with
sever a 1 "firsts" in blood
research breakthroughs. in ad·
dition to the acclalm they won
a couple of years ago for
developing anti -hemophilic
factor, one of 12 completely
new entities in the drug
field that year, which brings
new hope to hemophiliacs.
Afore recently they
developed and produced a
breakthrough in the properties
of antihemophilic factor con·
centrate which permits syr-
inge injection of the important
clotting factor. This is an im·
provement over the slower
drip infusion method required
earlier.
Blood fractionation is an im-
portant part of the Hyland
operation. Theirs p e c i a 11 y
designed Fractionation
Department e-0ntains comple te
technical equipm e"n t to
separate normal blood plasma
into its several components
with such resultant products
as antihemophilic factor, gam·
n1a globulin, fibrinogen and
normal serum albumin.
Before a human b I o o d
transfusion Is made, a series
of laboratory tests must be
performed on the blood or both
the donor and recipient .
Hyland pioneered in the fiel d
"Voit also is a leadi ng na1ne
in ::ieveral other li nes -home
exercisers and a wide variety
of \1•ater sports equipmen t,
such as \1'ater skis. \vater
sporls\1'car (ski jackets, su rf-
ing suits and jackels. s1vi m·
ming accessories ~. ·and a com·
plete line of equipm ent for
skin diving and scuba diving.
Rodney C. Gott is president,
chairman of the board and
chief executive officer or the
parent company.
Key people at the local
AM F-Voit headquarters in·
el ude Voit, chairman of the
board and 11;ell known local
area civic leader ~ Godfrey,
president; Bruce Henderson,
vic e president·research and
engineering: Bart K. Brown.
vice presid~nt-direclor o ! ===========
Voit is responsible {o r
LSI-HOKANSON
Voit's history dates back to
1922 when William J. Voit
formed a partnership t o
inanufacture tread rubber and
cement for the then infant tire
retreading industry, and he
sporting goods manufacturing :
Lein Finley, vice president-na·
tional sales manager : and
Alvin S. DeWeese, v i c e
president -general manager,
tire materiaJs division.
CHANGES IDENTITY TO
TRANSPORTATION SUPPORT DIVISION
The Segerslrom Indu strial L S I ·Hokan s on h a s LSI-Hokanson is credited
District is the home of the diversified into more complex with many innovations in heat
world 's foremost maker of sheet metal production exchange systems, having
special ground support air throUgh its status as a custom developed and produced the
conditioning systems -Le ar des igner and producer for first high pressure air con-
Siegler. Inc .• Transportation aircraft interior" systems for dit ioning unit ever made-for
Support Division. Since the commercial aircraft, including th e Douglas 866 Bomber. This
nam e pre viously was the Hok-the entire galley. system, for the first time,
anson Division and the name It just recently has entered cooled the air from 125
chage occurred past deadli ne the field of mass seating area degrees desert conditions to 45
other references in this article cleaning se rvices by producing degrees in one pass, even
will be as "LSl -Hokanson.'' the Omnivac -a giant though the air was pressurized
they could continuously supply
dry air.
This company has been a
division of Lear Siegler for the
past three years, and has been
experiencing a healthy growth
rate. The small Hokanson
Company had reached a
plateau of between $3 and $4
million in annual s a I es
previously and now as part of
Lear Siegler, Inc., this
momentum is increasing ai:r
preciably.
They employ an average of
175 persons and reach employ-
ment of as many as 225 people
at peaks, whereas they had a
basic staff of some 100 before
1966.
Key people in the organiza-
tion at present are Orrin T.
Bowland, president: William
of reagenta for blood crouping
and blood typing work, and
produces a complete line of
reagenta for this purpose as
we:U as an exteruive list of
other reagents for diagnostic
work.
In the past few months
Hyland has introduced a new
technical approach to tissue
compatibility lor o r g a n
transplant research. too, and
an accompanying story p~
vides complete details.
The Costa Mesa facility
brings about 500 employes
here at the outset and they are
projecting 900 people even-
tually.
Key people in the organiza-
tion include Norman \V •
Achen, president, who recently
succeeded Fred \V. Mar-
quart, now chairman, as
chief executive officer. Vice
presiden t s and their
speclaliiations include Roger
Phillips, finance ; William E .
Oliva, marketing: J. N .
Ashworth, manufacturing ; Dr.
Edward Shanbrom, medical
and scientific affairs, and Dr.
John W. Palmer, director of
laboratories.
Their new headquarters is
a three -story rectangular
building with a large enclosed
courtyard and entranceway
plaza. The concepl, .. designed
by Albert C. Martin and
Associates, architects a n d
engineers, and constructed by
Swinerton and Walberg Co.,
general contractors, allows
maximum flexibility for future
changes and additions.
The 400x200 foot structure
presently has 162,000 square
feet of occupiable space now
with expansion pOtential at
their l>acre location .or an-
other 50,000 square feet. There
is parking area for some 750
cars.
It is a 24-hour ~ilding with
fully-illuminated window walls
dominates the darkentd indus·
trial area of the Segerstrom In-
dustrial District.
Hyland Laboratories started
In 1935 as a Convalescent
Serum Center when Dr. C. N.
Hyland was directc:ir of clinical
laboratories and pathologist at
Los Angeles Children 's
Hospital.
The center grew into' Hyland
Laboratories in 1940 and open-
ed with fa cilities on Sunset
Blvd., later growing so much
that they had to scatter to
other locations to ac-
commodate certain phases of
their work.
In 19al they became a part
of Baxter La.boratorlt!, ?nc.,
or Morton Grove, Illinois,
whose manufacturing and mar·
keting operalions for the ho>
pital and health fields are lo-
cated throughout the wor ld.
Hyland now fun ctions as a di·
vision of Travenol La boralor·
ies, Baxter's domestic operal·
ing subsidiary.
Hyland's large • scale prl).
duction continues at its block·
long plant on Colorado Soult·
vard , Los Angeles. The new
Costa Mesa facility will handle
the company's administrative
and research requirements for
now and the immediate future.
Bay View Hospital Figures
To Nearly Double Its Size
An expansion p r o g r a m
which will enlarge Bay View
Convalescent Hospital to near·
ly dooble its present size
highlights the progress story
at a facility which is
gravitati.1g toward m o r e
service of neurirpsychiatric
needs.
The hospital at 2055 Thurin
in Costa Mesa had in recent
months ba!n in the process of
increasing from its original 70-
bed capacity to 80, and the
projected 24,000 square foot
addition of a board and care
unit on an adjacent Jot will
bri.1g it up to a 152-bed unit,
the completiOn e x p e c I e d
sometime in 1970.
L. R. Wright, administrator
of the facility, points out they
are a part of the Neuro-
Psychiatric and H e a I t h
Services, Inc., system which
includes seven extended care
units in Brea, the San Fernan-
do Valley. San Diego and
Portland, Ore.
The hospital presently is
staffed by 32 people, but
Wright expects to the group to
increase to perhaps 45 whe.1
the new addition is completed.
Key people, all of whom arc
Io ng-experienced personnel.
are Dorothy Henkle. director
of nursing ; Imogene Ellis,
assistant administrator and
office manager: Jeanett e
Brady, chief dietician, and
Mrs. PauHne Campbell, eve:.1-
ing charge nurse.
The hospital is being ad·
vanced more and more towartl
rehabilitation and as the ex·
pansion progra1n progresses,
facilities also will provi de
more help for group therapy
for alcoholics as well as for
patients who will be transfer·
red in from extensive
psychiatric treatment.
The facility first was con·
structed in 1964 as Mardine
Convalesce.it Home, a 25,400
square foot plant which was
one of the first in the area to
offer comprehensive services
in pre-planned recreation and
diversion along with physiir
therapy facilities to assist
hospital care patients in the
transition to extended care
needs.
Lear Sieg fe r, Inc.
(7 1 <lj 546-3060
Te lex 678454 Transportation Support Division
3333 WEST WARNER AVENUE• SANTA ANA, CALI FORNIA 92704
Equal Opportunity Employers
·'!i\'oit has a revolutionary ad-
vance in constru ction or \1•ood
clubs for golfers. It features a
mach ined wood core molded
into a virtually ind estructible
cJubhead, assuring live llesl
performance for years under
rhe toughest playing con-
clitions.
This company has-a 100 .000 vacuum cleaner used to clean up to three pounds -a con-
squa re root plant at 3333 auditoriums. c n n v en ti on dit ion 'vhich in itself increases
\Varner Avenue in Santa Ana. centers. athletic stadiums. temperatures to 200 degrees
It built the equipment used by sports arenas, etc. The most before the colling begins.
DeKoning, v i c e president-
finance; Rex Kelly. vice !'=================================
president-marketing; Ra Ip h
all four maJor ICBi\1 sys tems. appealing features of the They also developed a unit
and for ground suppor t of the Omnivac is that is is 'a achieving an ultra-dry con-
1argest jet airliners, including bonafied air suction system, dilion of air which \vas pro-
1he i47. 11"hile lhey stand at assuring greater cleanliness duced for Martin in support of
the airpor t gate for loading or and' more positive cleaning aC· the Titan program. They
unloading . The.y are cm· lion as contrasted \\'ilh equip -pr rfected equipment which
barking on production of the ment 1vhich just st irs up the dried the air to six grains
cooling s~'~t.ems for trains dirt. In addition . the unit ( practically zero-n1oisture-
such as the Rapid Transil shreds or pulverizes paper,
Hilmer, vice president -
diversification planning; Dick
Van Guilder. director of
operations: Frank Ramsey.
director or engineering, and
Ron Rov.·lin, perso nn el
manager.
Their aggressiveness, as
well as foresight i n t o
aerospace advances, and the
jel era of aviation, steered
them into their roles as in·
novators.
Voit is in its third season in
f he golf market. now fir mly
en trenched in club sa les, and
1his year has added golf ball s.
There are two models, one a
professional quality I j qu i d
tenter b a 11 available in .'.l
choice or compressions to fit
the golfer's skill, and the othe r
;:in especially durable, solid
construct.ion ball.
In skis, Voit has unique con·
:;tniction . The fiberglass skis
start \1;ith a s pec 'i;i!
lightweight urethane c o r c
\\·hich is dipped in liquid cpax~
::ind then fiberglass-\vOund on
a .. fi gure 8'' in a pattern pro·
grammcd by computers. The
result is unusually durab le
System s and the monorail plastic containers, bottles and content) by cooling air lo zero
1ypc trains similar to the ones cans, then com pacts them int o degrees and maintaining a
seen at Disneyland. rt small volume. tricky defrosting system so
LS I-Hokanson ha s b u i I t i;=.============='====='===============;;,!
literally hundreds of different1
types, of air condilioning
sy.o.tems usually designing and
building sma ll quantities in its
ro!t> as a small production1
1ype of a shop. Bu1 they have
also handled large quantity
contr;icls ~·hen required. I
You don't have
IOf!OfAf'
io f!eiawa y
f romiiall
4 H~~.!!~~e~,,~!~bo ur
\V•lt•fftl"' ~rJ '"'"" jn ":.:rl / '-'W -Wlfer hefn1tr (fYirr. jU ,S()O
•1v,tm10l'll l!omc.•1t' ''",.,, SJl ,«IO I (1UJ ff1.11~1
~ lnl1r luJfoon mll~ '"'"' J A. '"'~'''"'""~/ /.imort '" fu1t f•t "'lltJ
t GUllo Qf '"°"" k ff-h •I PK".-; Coh!_H•gllwq 1111/ \\111/lf!' /.•·~flu.
JABSCO® PUMPS
for
•
MARIN E
CHEM ICA L -INDUSTRIA L
FOOD -BEVERAG E -DAIRY
ITT Jtbico1 Fluid H1ridl ing Division
ln fer nationel Tel ephone •rid T el1greph Corporetion
1 '485 D•I• W•y, Cos te Mtse, Celiforni 1 92626
JAesco PUMPsITT
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'.• • TO THE MAN
WHO THINKS SY STEMS
A few special questions fro m Atla nt ic Researc h
Corporation 's Missi le Syst ems Divi sion.
Do you enjoy the challenge of erigineering in the total systems
concept ••• do you want the opportun ity to work with a smal l
group of your peers -so that your work will be recognized
and utilized ••• would you appreciate t he ad vantages of an
all new facility in beautiful Costa Mesa, Californ ia.
tf you're a creative, degreed engineer. can answer yes to the
above questions. and have an intere;;t or experience in
RF Circuit Design • Marine Systems
Guidance & Control Systems
we want lo talk with you.
Submit your resume fo: Mr. l ee Kelley. (71 4) 546-8030
3333 Harbor Btvd., Costa Mesa, Ca/if. 92626
Miuile Systems Division,
ATLANTI C RESEARCH CORPO RATION
MISSILE SYSTEMS DIVISION
A Divition of The SusquehannJ Co rp.
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Tuesd•l• Decombor 30, 1169
Kimstb.~k
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Production
Ji'ollowing up their giant step
in expansion just consolidated
in the Segee lbun JndustriaJ
District vicinity, Kimstock,
tnc., now a subsidlary of
1'ridalr Industries, Inc., b em-'
, . barking on production ~
gramming earmarked for
completing I o o fiberglass
lhower and tub units each
day.
'Kimstock is the largest
manufacturer of monolithic
bath units Jn the nation, has a
nine years background ln the
business and has manufac.
tu red men than 1 5 .0 , 00 O
fiberglass tubs and showers,
They produce under their own
brand name and also do
private label production for
some of j.he larg e st
. distribulon In the country.
· Their new 90,000 square foot
'· plant at 220 Yale St. in Santa
Ana repr~ls a six-lime ex-
pansion from their Cost.a ~1esa
plant at 1343 Logan, and since
they are utilizing about a third
of their eight-acre complex for
blacktop, paticMype storage of
unlts they accumulate for
future delivery, the latest step
in their growth story ls even
more tremendous.
FUTURAMA -All
Has · Big
Program
,, .
. RAY HANDY·, president a.r:id general manager,
shown above. Other operations photos are shown
in center below new 90,000 square foot facility at
top. Electrical control panel that's heart or opera·
tion co1nes next, and just below are two phases of
operation -first is glass application area and next
is foaming operation.
YA R D STORAGE (to
right) shows a literal •••
of shower·tub combin&.
tions. Kimstock has near·
ly three acres of blacktop
storage area.
SERVING
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Kimstock made its move
last June, but wa11 handicai>"
. ped concurrently by l11t'o phas-
,. ,e11 of the building trades strike.
,First the 90-day plumbing
. strike prooipted st<1ppage In
deliveries or their products,
,·.and then the heavy duty equiJ>"
. ment people had a 93-day work
' . .'stoppage w h i c h prevented
Kimstock 's own organizalion
cou nt I approximately 100
personnel, and Ray Handy,
general manager, indicates
the staff would g r o w
dramatically as they get Into
fu ll production to meet the in·
creasing now of orders for
their products.
Key people aiding Handy at
Kim.stock are Ted Fitzgerald,
manufacturing manager; Ben
De.Loa, production manager;
Tommy Thompson, s a I es
manager, and Chuck Luzadt!r,
controller.
NATIONAL and INTERNATIONAL MARKETS
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completi<1n of Kimstock's
large blacktopped yard, and
, integral part or th eir new
&ystem, until early this fall.
The company has jusl com-
pleted transition in i ts
ownership status. After having
· •"been a part of the Radix:
C<rpocation family for less
.than a year, Kimstock
recently has become a part of
the Tridair Industries, Jnc.,
family. This group shows a
grand total of more than 1000
employes, gross volume that
exceeds $25 million a year and
is prominent in production o[
fasteners, fiberglass products.
brownline services and is a
research and developmcnt-
oriented company with an
nutstandi~ growth record.
The '
They have the bright outlook
of being pioneers a n d
"largest" in an industry which
Js furnishing bathroosn styling
for more than 35 percent of
the new construction starts in
Los Angeles and Orange Coun-
ties, and the trend nalionw ide
is growing in a si milar
fa shion .
Kimstoc k's units are being
increasingly accepted in 11.:w
construction projects inv olving i
apartments, motel comp!exes
and residences, mobile homes,
and modular low cost housing.
Handy notes enthusiastically
that the fiberglass concept of
Corvonics Corpora tion
Asks
11 t~is e new information formule 1
where M 9quels Miss C equ1ls speed cf light
area for yard storage of 6500
completed units on blacktop,
in addition to a 10,000 square
foot warehouse where units
which are packed in cor-
rugated shipping containers
mpst await shipment.
from
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ORANGE COUNTY
icoLEMANi
ENGINEERING COMPANY, INC.
9 121 West Central Avenue. Santi An1, C11ifoml102702
Telepho1'18: {7 14) 5-48-1500
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monolithic tub and s:1ower
un.ils has been increasing at a
10 to 12 percent rate in sales
each year although. they have
just b.arely become knO\vn.
Actually, this conctpt was
ronsidered at development
stages until about three years
ago.
Kim stock 's ne~ f~~ility is
laid out most efficiently, with
Lhrce different , major pro-
duction areas set up on
assembly line basis to keep
production flowing to their
huge storage complex from
wh.ich they ship by almost
unending truck fleet loads.
1i~~~c~l :E~~?:: Orange County is the ball capital o~ the world.
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l 2 J ~o
t:htl'llll' • £ • y,c2 l ll tLl:.C':/1011 VOLT:
They have more than a 111ile
of fully automated conveyor
system spread over the cntlre
plant, plus a 120-horsePQwer
compressor which feeds into a
cenlral eight-inch pipeline lhat
provides sufficient power to
operate 40 fibergl ass spray
units at 125 pound ps i
simultaneously.
tor loading products from the
vast 11 o" ge a re". We just thought you'd like to know. You see, we make the ba lls.
Kimstock's rn units or rolling Voit is also big in water and snow skis, golf clu bs, ski n diving
stock make up a fleet which . . . •
not only rovers the 11 western equipment, tread rubber and tire repa ir materials .
slates and are commonplace W. J. Voit Rubber 0>r11 .. A subsidilryof Arn1ric•11, M•thioe t. Foundry C:OfTlll~"''
from San Francisco to lhe 'W
Mexican border, but \\'hich ~ ~l'IT•
n1ay be seen as far east as 1JI ..aJmJ
New ~tcxico. Nation wide ship.
ments, of rourse, go via c:>m-
mercial carriers.
different styles in st.andard
product ion. and they em· ""'
II you h•"• ot~er tlt1rn1li•11, you m1y bt int1r1si1d i~; In addi tion , they have a
research and development
laboratory, parts 0 r f ice '
spacious lunch room and rest
room fa cilities as part of I.heir
massive complex. They have
The company features 4£1 ~ -".: ... · phasize packaging quality, _
strength, economy and con·
venience with their beautiful
one-piece seamless shower
stalls and tub-shower com-
THE CORVONICS CORPORATION
SOJ7 l1t1rprlM St, C""9 M.,., Callf. '2626
(714) 54G-4644 binations.
a
fer Hyland to become a part of the Costa Mt•• community and we •r•
looking forward to t1king 1n 1ctiv1 part In this area's 1pect1cul1r growth.
•
We IM¥ff l11N ttlls. tit"""'"" c111...,.,.,.,., .. 1ildl11t 11 D9QMNf,
h It lecatftl •• 11 .,.. (Ji "9 $etentn1111 lltd111trl .. Dl•frlct, • few
h11•4'911 .,_n _, et t1111 11tenKti .. .t Harbclr 11111'-rtil -4 the
So• DI .. • ftff••Y· WllH operatl•t at 11111 c.optKlty. tltl• Mw "-eel•
11111crftff'I wlll lto11M ..,._ too 1Mfmi11btr11tl\'9 ofHI Ki9fltlflc ,.t1e11M1.
01r COWllH"IY 11 '; dl-tltio11 of TttrYffOI Lebor.taries, tM iwerk.,l11t en11
af lat~ Laltoretorles. IH" MortN Gr41ff , lllh1ais. Hylnd protl-
9114 -r11ett ltlOte tt.c11t 100 IAofetery Ollll therojM11tlc pratfac.h llN4
I• ....,INlt alld clh1lc .. laltotetor'-tllta•th••t the wetl4.
CO~ATE N~60
LB22
~·-/ • m ·HYLAND
CMS ION Tl'IA.VDIOL-U. IOllA TOlttl,;INC.
J300Hytond Ave., C,,1t1 Meu. Cal if. 92625 •
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Alt-l'UTURAMA
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Tu.sd•y, December 30, 1M9
• .. ' .. -. • ~-·&-; .... ·• ·. ., '" .. • • • •
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Babcock Electronic• J . I
Corporate Headquarters
SAITA .
U.C.I.
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w;J. Voit Rubbrr·Corp •.
Site selection of a company headquarters is
an important decision.
Why has the Segerstrom Industrial District
attracted the home offices of some of
America's leading corporations?
They like the carefully controlled industrial
atmosphere. They recognize the living
conditibns here that attract "hard-to-get"
scientific and mana~nient personnel. They
are pleased' with the ·area1-environment
and the broad; stabl~ labor market.
Send your site selection team to look over . .
the Segerstrom Industrial District:
We know you will get enthusiastic welcomes
and sound advice from your future
corporate headguarter neighbors -W. J.
Voit Rubber Corp. (AMF)-National
I-Ieadquarters; Hyland, Division Travenot
Laboratories, Inc.; Atlantic Research
Corporation/ Missile Systems Division, a
Division of The Susquehanna Corporation;
Babcock Electr.onics, a Subsidiary of
Esterline Corporation; Standard Pressed
Steel-Western; U.S. Divers Co. Also The
Times Mirror Company; Collins Radio
Company; Raytheon Company-Raytheon
Computer Operation and Transport
Dynamics, Inc., a Division of Lear
Siegler, etc.
..
Segerstrom Industrl~I District
Electronics Research and Development •
Light Manufacturing •3315 Fairview Road,
Costa 'Mesa. California 92526 • 714 S46-0110
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,.. .. ____________________________ ,....,.,.._..,._.,.., ......................... ,,... ...... ~ ....... --~·~·~·-·---·-·-··~-' ................ ~~~·---... I""~ r-""' ,,-• .-......... --.---.. ..... _... ........ ,_ ---, .......... -....-
I
Ora11ge (;oast
1970
Tuesday, DeCember ~o. 1969 -Bl ...
Hyland Has New Teichnical _Approach
To Organ Transplant Tissue Checks
A neW t~hnical approach to
tissue e<>mpatibility lor organ
transplant research was in-
troduced by the H y I a n d
Division of Travenol
Laboratories. lnc., al the
Am erican Association or Blood
Banks meeting in liouston,
Texas in Nove1nbcr.
The Trans-Type I T M )
systetn supplies the reagents
necessary for matching white
blood cells of the potential
donor and recipient . Clinical
evidence suggests that the less
incompatibility between \\'hite
(:'elf types the more l.ikE!iy it is
transplant 'fill "take" Y,'ilh·
out rejection, according to Dr.
Edward Shanborm, vice presi·
dent of medical and scientific
affairs for the Costa Mesa·
based Hyland Division.
Serums for SLJch tesls were
not com1nercially available on
a large scale before in·
troduction of the Trans-Type
systen1. Hyland plans to soon
introduce additional serum s
so that tesls can be made f o r
additional groups.
The entire procedures takes
Sm1th lnternatio'rtal Joins · 'Family'· of ·Harbor
Area 's Famous Worldwide Industrial · Companies ...
By BRICE WORTHINGTON of tunnelinl and mulU·purpose operatioruJ include m o r e lustrate some or the reasons projected to rise to about $2.00
drllllng equipment. Th i s diversity in severa1 fields . behind their rapid growth en-per sl\are. They anticipate
Newport Beach now I! home division . has tailored equl~ Since \Villiams Diamond Bit tails collaboration or Llyna-. capital expenditures of about
of one ol. the most dynamic in-ment which has been func-Co. has joined the "famtly," Drill and Drilserv systems $12 million, which will more dustrjal companies in the nnel h th h h r r r I United States with the advent Uonal in tu Ing t rough e only last August, the cor· w ic a ter 2MI eet o deep than double their expans on
of headquarters of Smith mountain in the Newhall area poration now can provide a hole drilling. they achieved $2-4 pace in 1969. In fact, tbe com·
lntemiitianal, Inc., from Whlt-where the Feather River · drill bit which cuts through per foot savings over con-pany envisions $150 milllon in
water distribution will eome to the hardest fonn at.ions and is \'entional rotary lype drilling grss volume in a steady in-
tier last spring. Southem California, as well as an important supplement to and an overall savings of more ternal growth program they .This company has just reached its third or a century doing similar work for Rapid the long-established rock bits. than $63,000 in operation costs. are forecasting through 1974.
milestone in ellsteoce, but its Transit systems in San Fran-Newcomers to the fold in Recently , utilizina: the same Key individuals corporate
growth in the last nine years clsco and Munich, Germany; 1961 include Servco, em· coolllaborali~ .. ~ com1libination officers ol the company are :
has been most astrooomical. plus sewer systems in phasizing a line of subsurface compute.~ dri 'ng and Donald E. Graham, president ;
Candidly, it took them 25 Milwaukee, Clticago and cutting and milling tools, hole down-hole motor operations i.s Robert L. Flynne, chairman of
years to reach $9 million in Coventry and Portsmouth, enlargers and stabiltiers: providing similarly promising the board: Stanely C. Moore,
gross volume and anoil1er five England. Drilserv, which has developed advantages on such expensive senior vice president (and
years to double that. But just Then, they have two other .a system which utilizes a locations as the Alaskan North president of Drilco): Kenneth
ttµ-ee years later now. Smith Important, efficency • enhan-portable analog computer Slope, where the cost of a H. swart, senior vice presi· tn~ational seems destined clng operattoos for the automatically controlling the drilling rig operation is dent; Standard R. Fun.sten,
to multiply that volume eight. petroleum industry in their weight ol the drill string and ::!1"1thatedndat bechtween $20 and vice president (and president
fold. In less than a decade, Drilco and Dyna· Dr i 11 · its rotational speed during ,...., ousa ea ,day. of Calweld); A.M. Birnie, vice--
Smith has expanded from a divisions. Drilco is the in· drilling operations; Winter· Smith International is pro-president marketing; Patrick
one-division company to a dustry leader in drill string \Veiss, specializing in truck-ject.ing sales in ex~ss of $90 E. Cory, secretary; Gary I.
fil"ql which now has nine romponents -units in the mouried drilling rigs and sup-million in 1970 with earnings Peacock. controller.
divisions, 20 manufacturing drill string above lhe drill bit port vehicles for drilling or p;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~iii;;;;;;;~i;iiiiii;oi;i;i;;;;;~i;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
plants and service. cei:iters, -such as drill collars, water and geo-thermal wells,
and more than 2400 employes reamers, stabilizers, vibration seismic and mining blast
on five conllnents. dampeners, bit guiding tolls. holes; MC1bile T e s t i n g
Smith's new home is the en· etc. Dyna·Drill is the major Laboratories, Inc., featuring
tire 4th floor of a new modem supplier of down hole mud non-destructive testing, and
building at 4667 1'tacArthur driUing motors used primarily Native Solids Cootrollers. Ltd.,
Blvd., adjacent to the Orange for directional drilling, but has a Canadian supplier of de.
County Airport. advantages which may be silters, de-sanders and de-
Smith International is wide-adapted to avoid drill string gassers to improve drilling
Jy known as a strong group of rotation in drilling very deep conditions in unfavorable
technically oriented companies straight hole penetrations. ground strata.
Complete Printing Service
Top Quality -Fast Service
PILOT PRINTING
642-4321
2211 Wut B1lbo1 Blvd.
Tanis ~rniture Refinishing
three hoUrs or less. Dr. Shan-
brom notes. Whole blood is
drawn. into a bottle containing
small glass beads for defibri·
nation, a proces! to prevent
blood clotting. After recoval
<lf the fibrin, red cells are sed-
imented and the supernatant
plasma with white cells is fil·
tered into a transfer bottle,
leaving the cells in a tran.s-
porUstorage medium. The
sterile, separated white cells
can be typed, shipped, or stor·
ed for up to 14 days at room
temperature.
Testing of the white cells
presently jnvolves five typing
serums, used to identify Vt'hat
are known as the HL-A
groups.
"'hose interrelated products Smith lntemationl's latest A typical combination of N.wport Buch
and technology are blended to:l-~acq~u~is~iu~·ons~-m~· '..,'.'~o~m~p'.:''.;"'.'._Y~_:Sm~i~th~serv~1~·c=es~w~hi~·c~h_:w~e:'.ll~il-:_!!!!!~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
solve earth-cut.ting • problems
17lt Pomon COSTA MESA 548°7951 e 646·5200
featuri ~a ll Alcohol-Resistant Finishes
e ANTIQUE RESTORATION e TOUCH-UPS e CARRIER & INSURANCE CLAIMS e REPAIRS
We match any color
NOW • • • Complete Decorating Consultancy
Vltl'iol Grffne
Dropories
lorry Lou9llll•
111...,ior DH.or.tar
CUSTOM MADE DRAPERIES
e VALANCES e SWAGS •CASCADES
Complehl w•kroom MrYic.-.Curtahl & dra,..-,. herdware
20 YEAR$ OF KNOW·HOWI
VERIAL'S DRAPERY SHOP
177 Rl•onlde NEWPORT IEACH 642-6'15
To do lhe tests, typing ser·
urns .are put onto a test slide
and separated while cells are
atlded, leading to either a
positive or negative reaction.
A positive reaction, occuring
when the cell has a specific
group reacting with the typing
serum, is shown by cells that
take on a blue dye : negative
reaction is shown by cells that
remain clear.
Dual sets or materials are
provided so that cells from
both the donor and recipient
can be tested at the same
time.
Dr. Shanbrom believes that
the availability of a relatively
simple. quick test for cell
compatibility "'i ll provide the
additional date needed to
rapidly determine the true
usefulness of this approach in
tcansptantation an d b 1 o o d
banking.
Hyland's system also may
h a v e application in blood
bank operation. because it
permits matching 0 r in·
dJviduals f or transfusions of
specific types of white cells or
greater precision in the use or
blood component therapy.
related to petroleum, mining,
water resources, transporta-
tion, tunneling and construe·
lion.
The company has made five
impottant acquisitions in the
last 12 months to broaden ils
base of diversified services
still more.
Spiraling costs o! operations
in exploration and well servic-
ing operations in the oil field .
plus steadily mounting costs in
all phases o( construction have
produced a most favorable
climate for . Smith Interna·
tional's growth . This company
has emphasized developing
products which can be packag.
ed together in programming to
reduce expensive, non-pro-
ductive work time.
The company originally was
oil field or ien ted and their
oldest division, Smith Tool Co.,
has become one of tht: v.·orld's
leading rock bit manufac-
turers. They make a~
proxiinately 850 trpe! of rock
drilling bits ranging in size
from 3 inches to 140 inches in
diameter -utilized not only in
the petrolewn industry, but
also serving a large and grow.
ing industrial market.
Their Calweld division Is the
world's leading manufacturer
A LEADING ACCREDITED EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION
National Systems Corporation and its subs.idi1ry co mpani.es • • •
North American Correspondence School..-Anthony Schools-Atlanttc
Schools-Patricia St-evens CarHr Colleges and Finishing Schools
• . • offer home study and res~i~!'nce courses in:
Advertising Fashidn' Merchandising
Airline Carffrs lnsur,ance
Cons.rvation Legal and Executive
Contracting S.cretarial Work
Drafting
Motel-Hotel
Management
Professional Modeling
Public Relations
Real Estate
Recreation
Stock Brokerage
Surveying
Systems & Proceduru
Travel •••
, , , to ••IJI" JJ,000 'r.ffm ttw..,llMt file •iffW.
"FOUNDED TO FULFILL THE URGE TO IMPROVE ••• ANO THE NEED TO KNOW"
NATIONAL SYSTEMS CORPORATION
4361 Birch Street
....
Newport Beach, California 92660
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c511NNOUNCIN{} ...
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NE ·WPrestigeHonzes in DOVER SHORES
Ivan Wells &. Sons proudlr invites you to Stt 1heir ne"·cst ''foreo.'er·view" home
deilgns, the Ba)-crest 400 Series. These elegant view homes and DOVER SHORF.S
with ill private beaches, boating facilities, and playgrounds, are for individuals who
ri.se above th~ ordinuy and can afford the bt!st for them1tl\•ts and 1hclr families.
See thc400 Series ••• ri&e above the ordinary! . . ·
iayrrrst $90,ooo to $190,000
Afoclels al 1430 Cataxie·Dri11e. NewporJ Beach. Phone646 ·1550
n,..;..,,4 -~ 1-raJ.I"' "r I. H. •1u.•. s.~,. l ••
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82-FUTURAMA Tuesday, December 30, 1969
Simpl e Back ya rd Swimming Pool Technology Used by Purex Royce Transitions co
Fiberglass Boat Prototypes
On Oran ge Coast Makes Big Inroads in Archaeology Woody Royce has been so
busy buildlof prototypes for
fibreglass boat manufacturers
that the major forte of Royce
Boat Shop ol building masts
for fibre1lass boats h a s
become aecondary.
Royce ls collaborating on
boat designs for se~ral area
marine architects, but his pro-
duction has been J*'llcularly
in service of creatk>n.. by Bill
Crealock, a marine architect
whose ideas and designs are
assisting new lndustrl~l
fibreglass boat makers 1n
establishing busi'.1esses to ~n
troduce new concepts 1 n
sailboat lines.
SouU1ern Cahfornia swim·
ming pool ov.'flers probably
take for granted such rouline
functioos as fHLralion. healing
..• or bask in lh e coinforting
realitatlon that researched
c h e m i c a I application pro-
gramming IS doing an un-
failing job for them.
In fncl, ifs posslb\e they
might ha ve a slight concept or
the fact that the same
technology for the Orange
Coast's s .... ·unming pools is
part. or a significant ('()fl+
tributioo the pool industry
i!l. making to the ApoUo moon
landing program.
Hov.·ever, they might be
completely astonished to know
that this same know-how is
appUed -indeed. achieves
further research in a com-
prehensive testing program
ca rried out constantly. by
Pure1 Pool Products -In
some of thl' v.•orld's most
fascinating archaeological ex-
peditions. finally maturing to-
da y after Ci!nturies 0 r
frustrating and un successful
pursuit.
Inci den tally, this division o[
P• .. rex Corporation is head·
quarters in neighboring City of
Industry , at 18400 ,\1ohr.
JI is a combination of
Sf'\'eral of the ~ firms in the
Swimming pool servi« in-
dustry, launched in 1958 and
brought together in an ac-
quisition program started by
Purex in 1967,
Purex Pool Products is an
:butgrowth o{ East S i d e
i1anufacturing Co., Fleetwood
•}feater Co. and CHO Pool
:i-:qu.ipmenl Co., blended in
;l\'ith operations of Guarde.x
Che micals, and the company
l1as a facility which recently
was more than doubled lo
reach its pre!ient 100,00()..
jquare-foot size. It is on the
)'erge of another 100,00().. ~uare-foot addition wlUl com-~letk>ll sought by 1970.
1 Candidly, Purex has optKm ;n nine more acres of land to
tiugment the present four-acre
b-ack, as well as possibilities br expanding the land located i!t the present terminus of the
t='omona Freeway by an ad·
~onal 10 acres by the time
y achieve all their an·
pated growth.
Some of the amazing story
Ind this story is the fact
t the Purex Pool Products
llivision has irown iO pe-rcent
~ince the consolidations began 'n 1967. and they are pro-
~cting between 2S and 30 per-
cent continued annual growth
in an industry which, itself, is
growing oply 11 percent per
year!
Part of this growth potential
lies in the fact that Purex is
gearing for entry into the in·
dustrial field, too. ~,ost of
their present lines in sy,'im·
n1ing pool products can be
adapted to such items as in·
duslrial heaters, p u m p s ,
fillers, irrigation c o n t r o I
valves, electroguards, etc.
DIVERS sEE valuable
gold and je\veled arti·
facts for easy recovery in
what once ,was "thick,"
murky water.
wide, as much as 115 feet deep ; J and conla.ining water as deep
l.f a9 ts feet in spots, and it con-
has turned up mllliom ol do).
Jars worOt of gold from the
edges. Their grapplin& hooks
also have brought In emeralds
the size of one's flat.
While Royce bad b e e n
fashioning wood masts for
sailboats for years and even
had e.xp1r.1ded into stocking
sail battens for his customers
about a year ago, he has found
demand for plugs used . by
newcomers in the boat-making
Industry bas taken up most of
h1s time ln recent months.
.FOUR SIMPLE FILTERS for home swimming pool
by Purex converts impossible sacrificial well proj-
ect into archaeological find of century, This is
vie\v of project 'at Chichen Ilia in Yucatan where it
took just eight d'ays to clea r up the waters.
tains nine million gallons of
water -so black with the
. debris of 3,000 years that sldlJ.
· ed divers couldn't work ef·
fedlvely because visibility
was zero -they couldn't see
their anns in front o( them.
All attempts to drain the
water and to suction out the
artifacts had failed.
Purex set up four standard
Purex-CHI> swimming pool
filters and pumped the water
of the sacred well at a rate of
100,000 gallons an hour, Jn the
same maMer that they would
filter a borne swhnming pool.
After eight days of ap-
plication of Purex chemicals
and the filtration operation the
nearly black water began to
cleat up . It became the clear
blue of a family S\vlmming
pool -giving s t ymied
archaeologists the opportunity
of seeing exactly what was on
the bottom of the pool for the
first time.
Still pending are plllM for
starting the Purex filtration
process on the 714 mUlion gal-
lons of water in Gutavita in
hopes of accomplishing 1imi·
Jar archaeological findings to
lhose at ~chen ltza.
*** • Pure1 has applied its re-
capabililies to space age tech-
nology, too. They have been
in operation {or two years in
collaboration with NASA test-ers to assure safety of the
astronauts as t h e y reach
splash-down in Uieir returning
capsule.
They did the filtering for
tests where movies at six
frames per second could be
taken at Downey's researeh
facility with impact being
made at all attitudes.
Woody admits he will mak.e
periodic production runs on
masts, but the custom jobs for
which he was most famous
with the sailing enthusiasts
have been crov;ded out by de-
mand for ca.1struction of the
plugs from whiclt the fem.ale
mold for fibreglass boat pre>
ductions are made.
Royce notes that Peter Bar·
rett, well-known sailmaker
now also is designing boats,
typifing the condition which
has transitioned his business
into a.1 entirely new field.
Royce utilizes 1400 square
feet of facility on a big comer
lot at 891 W. 171h SL in Coeta
?>.iesa, and operates much as a
.. one man gang" ercept for
getting ptriodic help from his
son. Frank, and Bill Schwartz
(retired), and college lads
during their inactive summer
vacation pertod.1.
Coast D raperies Active in
New Home Pre-Sale Decor
They also provide the means Coast Dra~ry Service is pr 0 m p 1 i n g gr e ate r
by which parts are washed In diversification. This includes absolutely clean water, clear contributing to an important of all contaminants, in assem-trend In complete interior establishing a separate com·
Researchers right now are bly of ultra-critical compo-decorating services at newly· pany which has built up an ex·
just as excited about a new nents, or for stages of micro-constructed homes In this area cellent following as jobber in · · h. h Pure · ·ust · hlch · drapery hardware and ae.
* * *
pro1ect m w Jc x 1s J miniaturizaUon w reqwre by collaborating with outstan· cessories _ Southern Counties becoming involved, too. This is super clean conditions. ding builders in including
the search for the fabulous El But in their major opera. draperies in the original Distributing Co., Inc.
Dorado, the object of the tion of researching, perfectjng purchase "package." Coast Drapery has grown
hi t · •-· of Cort from an original "two-gal· s or1c u-1p ez. and producing for everyday. Some of the developments in Archaeologt!ts···~e pin. neghborbood life, Purex Pool which the Costa Mesa com-gang'' to 8 prtsent group of
pointed a Jake thft' ii 10,000 Products division enjoys the pany at 2065 Charle St. has about 15 people, remaining at
feet up on the peak of moun-status of being the largest sin· been participating are Green peak production throughout
tains outside Bogota, Colum-gle manufacturer of swim-Valley in Fountain Valley, The th~~:; Esther and John,
bia. 'Mley say Lake Guatavlta ming pool equipment and sup-Bluffs In Newport Beach and rr · I d ,_ I Ls the actual location of the plies in the world. Bonnie Rae Homes in Irvine, the key st.a ers UlC u e var
famous El Forado, where, William Tincher is preiildent Th b.rd H Allen, manager.
n . as well as under 1 omes Allen has advanced through history relates a am1ng of the parent Purex: Corpora-in Palm Springs. 1 th rod · meteor struck the peak and tlon, and Lyle Lofdahl ls cor-all phases 0 e P uction
created a glant crater which porate vice president serving The company was founded department to the manage-
becamt a lake as it filled up the division of which Wade ia nine years ago as a veritable ment post, assuming more and
by mountain springs. · vice president. backyard operation w h i c h more responsibility as civic
started out as a family affairs and i n c re a s in g Prlests of the day and Key people at the facility in sideline 1esigned to enable the busi ness demllnd more of
through ensuing centuries Industry, besides Wade, are John Leonhardls to provide John's time. Le 0 n hard t
buill up a spectacular ritual Wayne Vonderlow, naUonal wife Esther with diversion as recently was appointed to the
around the event. Each yea r sales manager, who is in ber family. grew up. City of Costa Mesa's Planning
they simulated the failing charge of marketing and ad-H 't ot b. lh t Commission, and he has been CHD ls credited w l th their most precious property meteor· in a ceremony. Gold vertislng; Lou Martin, special owtver, 1 g . so ig ad an official in the Costa Mesa
originating the vertical grid -jade and gold jewelry, pot· covered and anointed. they accounts sa1es manager, a John eft an engineering an Chamber of Commerce for
filter which is a revolutionary tery, etc. would dive into the lake and veteran of many years in construction career to help · h · ta Id k · · I •-· 1· out, an d now his presence is several years. impr'ovement 1n ome swim· Some of the long-sought awed spec tors wou ma e sw1mm1ng poo cons .... c ion; -------'--------------
ming pools through its pro-secrets of the ancient Mayan tributes to the particular god William Aurther. plant mana·
viding so many· square feet of culture, hidden for centuries in by hurling gold dust, ger; Herman Denton, distribu·
filtration within a small area. the depths of this murky-black jewels and artifacts into the tion manager: Bob Winfield,
This y,·as perfected by Charles sacrificial pool, have been wake of the simulated, gold· Industrial division manager;
\Vade, vice president in charge unlocked through fileration tailed meteor. Jim Brett, engineering man-
of the swimming pool products operations of Purex. Early searching and dredg-ager.
tion In Atlanta, Ga., which
handles east coast operations,
and although about a 10th the
local size, produces some of
the same items made here, as
well as doing assemblies and
sub-assemblies. Don Vershurt
is manager of this facility. divis ion, who also had Cenote Segrado is 180 feet Ing at Lake Guatavita already The plant also has an opera·
developed the famous spin!.=;;~=~======="'=========""'========='=======================; filter earlier, but sold his
design when he developed the
vertical unil.
East Side was a pioneer in
developtnent of s w i m m i n g
pool pumps and now is big in
pool and i1,dustrial pumps,
while Fleetwood is tops in
S\li'imming pool heater
systen1s.
The fasl·growing division is
looking for more acquisitions
related to pools, leisure and
backyard living.
Typifying a part of Purex
Pool Products' research ,
which is backed up by a $3
million testing facility -
largest of its type in the in·
dustry, were the results they
achieved at the f a m e d
sacrificial pool, Ce note
Sagrado. near the ruins of the
city of Chichen ltza on the
Yucatan Peninsu la in Mexico.
Years ago the ~1ayan In·
dians made offerings lo their
rnin god. Chae Moot, when
drought struck. They 1nade
hun1an sacrifices, thrO\Ving
victiins wtJ.om they purported·
ly instructed . in \vhat to tell
Chae about their plight. The
vicllms were thrown 80 feet
down vertical cliffs into the
dark, deep waler of Ceno\e
Sagrado. To further appease
the "angry" god. they later
\You}d shower the pool with
,,Service by those who care'~
•
Thal'• our motto in aTI 35 of Sunlile Medical .Centers' facilities t~rougli
out California. And we mean it! That's why Sunlite's convalescent hospi·
t1ls, residential manors and residential care center for trainable retarded
children are ~nown and respected for their high standards of personalized
service and modern nursing care.
Seven Orange County facilities are conveniently located to serve your
needs. Please feel free to visit any of our locations at your convenience.
Or telephone, or write, for one of our informative brochures.
ADDITIONAL HEALTH CARE
You'll find that Sunlltl has extensive social, recreational, rehabilitative
and religious activities programs designed to meet the needs and desires
of every guest. Comprehensive registered nursi~g care is available to all
24 hours of every day. And occupational , physical and speech therapists
wort with our guests regularly. Controlled diets are planned anil Prepared
by our skillfully trained dietician and kitciien staffs to meet the medical
requirements set forth by the physician in accordance with his program
of treatment and care.
.
' i • l
f
' for We5tminster, Fountain Valley, Garden Grove, Midway City ••.
'
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t Thi• 135-bed general ho•pital soon will have an ••pan•ion program under
< way to provide for 50 more bed5, plus additional surgery, x-ray, labora·
C tory and ancillary facilities. Featuring complete medical, surgical , out.
patient laboratory, x·ra y, phy5ical thertipy . inhalation therepy, 2~·hour I emergency services.
I Westmins;~;"(;;~;;fy Hospita l
200 Hotpit•I Circle WESTMINSTER, CALIF, 17 141893·4541
I
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And remember, all 5even Sunlit• facilities in Orange County exist +o
c1ringly serve your needs .
NIWPOIT llACH
S11nlHt C0fl"•1t1c1"f Ho1pil•l-N1wporl H••bor
1555 Sup1rior -'"'"'"' 1714) l4•-17lS
SANTA ANA
Su"li+1.Coloni1! ConY1lt1c111! Ho1pif1!
9142 W11t ll+h Str11! (1141 119-0440
OIANGI
S1111lit1 Co11Y1lt1ct11t Ho1pit1l-Or111t1
lll Solrit! ~low11 \11 41 SJl·2J75 fUllllTON
eAtDEN •IOYI
S11nlilt Ce11w1lt1tt11f Ho1pit1l-61N•11 GroYI
tJJt2 St;ilh Tilt 171 41 517·057 4
Su"lilt ll11;d111ti1I M111or-G1rd111 •••Y•
11191 South Tift 17141 117°4192
S11111!tt•P11k Ce11w1l11c111t Ho1pit1I
2110 Ntr+k H11bor I I .... !71 4) 111 -9202
Sunlit• HUit Co11w1lt1Ctflf Ho1pltel
))0 W. l•1lench11ry llcl . 17141 170·1170
IS1111l ift Hilla will opt ft in Jtn111ry, 1'101
SUNLITE MEDICAL CENTERS, INC~
• division of Nol ionol Environment Corporotion •
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•
-...,.,.-----"-·-·~·~·-·000.,.. ___ ,,, .. __ ,,.,.,,_,,, ..... .,w,..•oaoo,..&-•"·=-••os ... :-aoss-•"!fS--"'--''"'"'"'5506'i90,..,,.,.~,-·...,•,.·•••'"'~'"'.~"'"''""'""""''"""'""''"'"'s,...,..-..,,.,"",,.'"•"'-,,"·'"'~·'"'>-·~.~-:-t .. -f'.,.,..,.._,..-tr.........-,,, .... : ~·
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7
FUTURAMA -83
Coit-Cleaned Draperies Of ten Fit
Better After Job Done Than Before
T raµtweins
' Jn Best Marina
Devclqpment
Star-D Links Orange Coast With Major Growth
Programming Throughout Southern California
Draperies frequently' fit and
hang better after having had
the meticulous care and atten·
lion of Coit Drapery Cleaners
ol Costa Mesa than before.
This Is just one "plus.bonus''
a homemaker or indust.rial. in·
11titutional or commercial
facility's housekeeper ca1 ex-
pect when resorting to the
services of the world's largest
drapery cleaners for preserv-
ing the beauty and extending
the life of tbe fabrics.
Dick and Ruby Routley have
fashioned an enviable growth
e1puience at Coit's during
their five-year stand at 1702
Newpcrt Blvd, They opened
shop with just two employes
and one truck in the sprbg or
1964. Now their "team'' has
Increased to 16 and they have
a fleet of five trucks which
can bring their services to the
door of every home and com-
mercial business f'Slablish-
ment in Orange Counly.
The Costa Mesa facility Is
one of 137 Coit drapery Clean-
ing plants In the V.1ited State~
and Canada, and they all
utilize t.he company's own cen·
trally-located l ab oratory
\\'here every new product and
fabric that comes to market is
carefully tested for b cs I
methods of cleaning and care
to prolong the life and beauty
of draperies. Jn fact. any ~1ew
techniques or products for
cleaning drapes which are in-
troduced receive exhaustive
checkups and testing so Coit
can have it to oUer to their
customers if it's feasible to
use efficiently.
They utilize bolh dry and
wet techniques in cleaning
fabrics. and .have elaborate
and proven equipme-.it to
assure that the fabrics are
properly fin ished, sized at
uniform and c onsistent
lengths.
11nd the ultimate condition of
the fabric.
These are restored to cor-
rect lengths as the Coit clean-
ing and fini shing process pro-
vidt>s perfect le.1gths at every
pleat. The drapes are pre·
measured for exact 1ength, as
v•ell as being marked where
the pins are placed in the
heading when they first come
into the plant.
The plant has a versatile ar-
rangement of pressing and
finishing equipment. T h e
drapes are sized by placing
each heading i'.1 its proper
perspective at one end of a
loom-like machine and at each
pleat the hem is securely at-
tached to a device v•hich will
control lengthening operations
<is the material is drawn taut
betY•Cen the heading and the
hen1, Y"ith the material being
treated with live stea m to
become set in the desired
drapery length .
Coil minimizes the possibili-
ty of the fabrics drawi~1g up
beyon.d a minimum or uneven-
ly through having drying
operations in which the drapes
are hung in a drying room.
Tumbler action is avoided
because it tends lo cause the
fibres to draw together and
shrink as ,,.·ell as lo dry in
uneven le,1gths.
Sizing solutions are applied
to 1nalerials which ha\·e a ten-
dency to stretch during clean-
ing or fini shing operations.
Some fabrics have a natural
tendency to do this.
Coit guarantees its work,
because the company \\'ill not
acCt'pt draperies for clea 1ing
u n 1 es s they w111 \\'ithstand
these operations.
The company provide 11
pickup and delivery, complete
service from drapery removal
lo reinst allation. In fact, lhey
will hang Joan drapes at no
cost, in a home in which.
drapes are being cleaned lf the Some. or the finest marina
homemaker desires. development In S o u th err n
Since draperies are second California is credited t o
to carpets as the most ex-Newport Beach•, Trautwein
pensi\'e i \1. v e s t m e n t in Brothers, marine cootracton
beautiful home or office decor, who are aboiJt to-embark ·~
Routley offers a list of an outstanding re-development
drapery c a re 1uggestlons program on East Misilon
designed to assist wjth getting Beach in San Diego IOI' PSA
!he most in service from the Airlines. '
fabrics: The Trautweins not only lrt-
Choose wisely ; buy the best stalled chlfie to a mile and a
fabric the budget "111 allow half Df seawa1l ·on Unda Isle,
from a reputable drapery but also cmstructed t b e ~
company or i n t e r i o r seawall fOf" Dover Shores and ~
decorator: insist on the best special work ·of the same type
grade hardware and have pro-for Balboa Pavilion., Collini
fessional installaUon. Island just aff Balboa l1land.
Linings or liners will double Newport Dunea, etc. Jn the im·
or even triple the life of mediate area.
drapes expotied to direct These marine contra.cton
sunlight -protect.t.1g the present a most veru.Ule
fabric. operation, offering services in The10 photo. tYJ)ify Slar·D"1 Impact m Southem CaJllomia: above, tho Con-
valr plant remO<lofing project jn San·Dlego°"'Wbere they had ID put a 20x2&-foot
CA!walk through a 19x24-foot qpening-by t.wt~ting and straightening methods
-<md the Disneyland Hotel where they used a 240-foot boom, tallest wed up to
that Ume in the county.
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Give the drapes • good dredging, bu I k head coa-
vacuum cleaning every other struction, piers, float!, pile
monlh, and, if possible, rotate driving and towing. In fact,
their pMition from one side of they laid the telephone cable
the ~indow Lo the · other, or across Newport ·Harbor.
from one room to, the other to Some of their iarem 'pto-High School In Santa Ana, as b~lance the exposure to sun jects include idred&inl . and FPUntain Valley h~s been .Star·D b . • f,.mrty~ JCey cnployes here lnclui!e well as remodeling work at
and light. . seawall construction at. the .. ideotlfitd with major in-corporatlon beadckl ...bY . ~~r F r e d P' u n k • I en e r a I Newport Harbor and Costa
"lovable parts of · the King Harbor Marina and a dustri.a1, commercial and i~ M H1·gh Schools I a r ods ·h Id b ,, .. Dalebou. t .• Jr., -•!dent,, w.ho su ..... rintendetl.t·,.Gary Griffin, esa · r ve se r s OU e half mile seawall and 'launch stitutlonat conrtruetion ·for ,..--The senior l'>alebout, a
lubricated periodically with ramp at the ·State AquaUc almost.its enl!rt existence. as is Carryinc an ·wt~ i. brother clUef estimator, and James native of Holland, came t.o t.he
dry wax or i;ilicone to prevent Park at Dana Point. a city' because of the presence •ncftwo sister& at ·u.e helm in Haydon, field superintendent. states with his wife, Anna. in
undue strain on cords and he k the absence of ~ir father, Star-D does fabrication and material. The Trautweins empk>ys re of Star D Iron Wor s. Peter Dalebout. Sr., chairman steel im:l.tllalions all over J929. He rounts up close to a
Never attempt to w~h anywhere\ andfrom __ ~11 toh 50 _Thls COmJ>!lllthY is one of the ofthebOard,wh1>'JsinH0Uand Southern California, and has ~ir~~aage~:r~:~~~!u~
drapes by ha.1d or in a home personne . ·= y avet pioneers Jnl •, J'OOn~~~~trs on leaff of. ~nee. ltrving participated in many large this field of endea~~. He wa1
machine. Ordinary washing mtheany proJ~ wN<>I way 8 dp r.!..:1.~n 1 Y a~v~ ... 06 11!" as president of • Dutch ·commercial and industrial v:·-president of Union Steel
machine action causes same time. , 'i.. aeuloal ~ed wuthrty uo;\;ausil it mlasion for thie MOMD<l\ 'ltnlctW'es u well u many :·n"t.os Angeles for .,;...., years
abrasions In the fibres of The Sah Diego pro~ tin-.. as occupi • ee-acre 1 te personnel, star-D Iron , Works 1ehook and churches. ........
synthetic materlall, malting tail! a modernizing ·program .al 11851 Harbor Boulevard for .has two others kl ·the famUy The1r first p·roject. back In before establishin& bia own
the heading limp and causing at ·the ol.d Islander H~l. JS yeats 'of "'~ntain Valley'• w'ho are functtoilal with 'lbis · 1,., coincided with U,Clr open--::::co::::m=pan=y::::. ==::::::::==~
as much as four' or five inches w11iCh will·bf!·reconstntcted tn-lS.>:eir tDStence. btBiness. · 'Ibey are Omnia ' inc· shop in Carta Mesa u they ;:
of shrinkage with uneven to a 12-story building. Th\.s Stai--D Iron Works is uUliz-Delebout, .vioe prNi~ent. and ·erected the LOS Momion
hemlines resulting. Further, ptoject is so·complex that the lng1clOM: to 15,000·aquare feet Joan ,Dalfbout. Lin I I e y,, · Qlurch in San Fernando.
colors or prt1ted fabrics in Trautwein.I have established ii af coVUtd space, representiQI sec~etary-fttastirtr. .Another Some of the most im-
mo.<1t cases will fade or run . branch office on Coronado growth fr:om about ~llOO square sister, Sandra Dalebout Welch, press.Lvt recent jobs in which
ON THE TUBE
Far th• b•1f 1uid• f• wh•t'1
h•pp•nint on TV, t••d T\I
WEEK -cli1tribut•d with th•
Saturd•y edition of tha DAILY
PILOT.
Routley recommends .,ro-Island, and they will bf! put~ ·feet or bUllding and no yard in is in charge of a 'dlsrelated they have ~rticipl\lted have
fessional dry cleaning at feast ting in a 40-boat marina 'and · tti:elr original facility in COsta subsidiary I n : Techachapi, ·included rem«lellng opera-
every two years to avoid ox-private docks for 200 homes Mesa for the'flrst two yean of where ~y are ri,i~ina cattle tlons at Coi1vair in San Diego.
ydization, which, if not remov·h;;a~l~or:~g~Co~ron~ado~~Ca~ys~·--~~·the~. ~<:O~m~pa~-~n~y~'a~·oper~~a~U~on~. --~°"~•~·~300-~a~.cr~,e~r~an:ch~.i;' ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.:•~lt~tl~ .. ~l~-~~k~a~t~S~a~d~dl~e~ba~c~k~~~~~~~~~~~ cd in time, will become
pennanent stain in the fabric. .. Mrs. Routley observes that
rnany draperies which hang in
windows intermittently open.
5Ubjectlng the materials to
variations in weather, may
tia";lg unevenly be ca u i; e
humidity or spray from rain
or OJndensation :;uch as dew
affects the materials. causin1t
1;hrinking or gtretching which
affects both lhe appearance
Victor Berry Makes Custom
Ya cht Fuel, Water Tanks
•••• ••
\1ictor L. Berry Sheel t.1et ;il
Specialtie~ of Ne"''J)Ort Beach
emph;isizes custom manufac-
ture of yacht fuel and water
99-BED EXTENDED CARE FACILITY
flnat care at rtason1ble pricts, short or
prolonged eonvalescenct, post-operative or In·
tensive nursing care •.• complete therapy
11rvic1s.
Medicare, Medical and Private Patients
Westminster Convalescent Hospital
206 Hospital Circle Westminster, Calif. 892-5527
tan ks and lee boJ:es and has
been serving s a i 1 i n g en-
thusiasts in the area for 23
years.
Vic Berry founded h Is
business at 2527 A West Coast
Hwy. shortly alt.er be returned
from the Navy duty ln World
Wat II, and hi.I cri.ftsmanship
adorns some of the best-known
geacraft in the area.
They also make built.Jn
galleys, and slove liners for
installation on 11ailboat.1 and
power boats made by major
boat manufacturen as well
for the Individual owners.
The tanks range from IS to
250 gallons capacity and the
fuel tanks are treated on the
interior with a .special rust
preventive ooaUng.
ll'rl • • 111•11
51 DAILY Ill 81 FRIDAYS
Our COIMllient blnkln1 hou~ ""' estJblOhed to
bt of servica lo yod. llon'I rush at 3:00 ...
rein ••• ind blnk 1t 1 more leisurely pace. You
un uv1 time ind iet mort done, whtlher
bliftlSI or plusurai wh111 rou elimin1tt Mhin&
to the bank in tht middle of tho aften:OOft.
1111' llllPI.,.. ll!jU>I as kiend~ and helpful at
5:00 or 6:00 P JI, oar UlraGntin.iry unique
smices will make btn~n1 at
Nowport Nationil 8'nk 1 pleasure.
at•
' CONVINllNT O FllCIS 51.RVING OlANGl COUNTY
A~ct C.11'111111 It MacArthur 540·21I1 • hysldt Office Bmld• •t Ja1"bortt 6'2-1141
C.llep p llkt Nutwood •t Commc11wttllh 871·2900 • SllnllJ Hill• Ollfct H1rbor tt Bru 171-7290
S.ptrllt Ot~ct pt1lor •I Pl1cenli1 642·9SI l • U111ftrtity Ollitt t asl Cll1pm1n tt Stitt Colltit 17MMO
W11ldllf Olfi« Weslciilf It Dovtr 642·31 I I •
kl! heth Offic1 l1ls11rt World, Seal Beith 596·271 1 • U1un1 Mills Olflct ltitur-1 Wcrld, l1run1 H1Hta30-l200
SMITH INTERNATIONAL, INt
NOWIN
NEWPORT . BEACH
. .• and still making More and More
important contributions .to the
. . ' ' Exponding U.S. Economy!
WITH ITS STRONG GROUP OF TECHNICALLY
ORIENTED COMPANIES SERVING EARTH-CUTTING
PROBLE!-AS RELATED TO PETROLEUM, MINING,
WATER RESOURCES, TUNNELING, TRANSPORTA·
TION AND CONSTRUCTION.
Alter requiring 25 years to Nech $9 mimon gross, Smith International h11
grown eight-fold in volume in loss than o decode, expanding from a one-
divisK>n comp•ny to bne with 16 divisions •nd subsidi•ries 20 manuf•c .. •
luring plants and service unters, and more then 2400 employos on five • continents. We ore projecting solos of $90.$100 million volums-inter-
nel gr<>wtf>-in 1970 Olld hove forecast $150 mit:on volume through 1974
through 9r<>win9 acceptance of our development of products and serv-
ices which red,,.. expensive non-productive work time.
",.. ............ ,. ......... ............................ ............... ~ ......
SMITH INTERNA TIOIW, INC.
4667 MocArthur lllvd,
Newport lleoch, Coltf.
·--.. -• Ortk-9., MWlaM. T••••
e OrtlMrY, H.vsMn. T••••
a Dyne-Drlll, • ..,. -~
e Meltlttlt, tt.wtClft, T•ut
............. -1
e ~ T ... c ... c.., ...
eWl .... w ..... ...._ . """-' ............... , , ...
' .,
• • r
~ ' t I
f
f. ~
l ' l ' • • ' ~-
l •
•'
84-~UTURAMA
·.
..... ----~~~~~------------------------------"T" ..
Glen.dale Savings. Now Past Billion Dollars,
Has Two of Three O.C. Units on Orange Coast
Glendale Federal Savings
and Loan Association has two
of Its three Orange County lo-
cations on lhe Orange Coast
and this year they're ceJe-
braUng their 35th anniversary
by having attained their bll·
Uon-dollar milestone.
The association first came to
the area when they opened the
unit at 2333 East Coast Hwy.
in Corona del Mar two and a
haU years ago. Russell Lil.ch.
assistant vice president, is
branch manager of this office.
The Newport Beach office
hail become the finn'!i second
branch in Orange County, but
a significant merger during
the year brought a third local
area branch into the group,
one at llW Newport Blvd. in
Costa lo:1esa. This coincided
with Glendale F e d e r a I ' s already had invested more
merger of \Yilshire Federal than SIO million in loans in the
Savings into the Glendale Newport and Irvine area
group. This action gave the through the Fullerton Office
association four new branches while Litcb ·wa s manager
and provided an important there, and the association's
statistical boost to h e I P program of financing de~lop
elevate it into the select billion-dollar circle. menu 1n this area is con-
tinuing at a significant
Along With Cosla fl.fesa, momentum.
Glendale Federal also gained
Ne"·port Center office to
bee<Jme the nucleus of a larger
organization as it advances in·
to growth projections they en-
vision.
The overall organiution,
which has its home cffice tn
Glendale, employs a tot.a.I ol
almost 500 people, a n d
presiding officers are J. E.
Hoeft, chairman of the board,
and Raymond D. Edwards,
president. new offices in Chatsworth, Litch expecLs his present
~fonrovla and Wilshire Center staff of eight people at the
when the merger occurred lastlr=====================;;;
spring.
The count of branches for
the association will increase to
23 early next spring when they
open a new office in East Los
Angeles as part of their in-
tercity expansion program.
Glendale Federal Savings·
was organized in 1934 and re-
Custom Yacht Tanks
•Fuel • Water
•Ice Boxes'
Outstanding Soil NATIONAL SYSTEMS ENROLLMENT UP TO
33,000 WITH NEW SCHOOL EXPANSIONS
mained a one-Office operation
for nearly two decades, open-
ing Studio City as their first
branch In 1953. Their ex.
pansion has been rapid in re-
cent years, and they made
Also hl~·I• Galleys and Sta¥• Ll•en
Speti1l i1in1J in Qu1lity Cr1ftsm1nshiP,
for Seiling Enthusi1st1 Engineers Her e \Vilh recent acquisition of
!he Patricia Stevens Franchise
Corporation, National Systems
Corporation, parent company
of leading nation\l'ide schools,
has increased J!J student
enrollments to more than
33.CKXI, advancing its status as
the largest education in-
stitution in Orange County.
also offer· resident training.
Based at 4401 Birch, New·
port Beach, the institution en·
ables students to lake accredit-
ed courses in their spare lime.
Students work individually and
as rapidly as they wish,
avoiding coogested freeways.
proved by lhe U.S. OCfice cf their debut In Orange County
Education as a nationally through opening the Fullerton
ree<Jgnized accrediting agency. office at 320 N. Harbor in 1961.
for 21 years
Complc!r. cons u 1 t in .i:::
5ervices in the oil , geological
and foundation engineering
and related earth science
fields are pro,vided by W. A.
Wahler and Assoc i a I es
formally also known as Soil
~1echanics and Foundation
Engineers. Both of these Orms
founded and managed by
\Vil!iam A. \Vahler were merg-
ed this pasl year for operating
efficiency.
This firm maintain!':
i!"! pcnnanent offices in Newport e; Beach and Palo Al lo, although
they perform their specialized
services throughout the world.
The firm operates as a single
•1 entity through the tvoo offices
in order to be able to provide
its full range of services to
• clients in both southern and
• norlhcrn California.
• The firm Is regarded one of
!he foremost earthwork, foun-
<iat ion and enginee ri ng
· i::eology firms in the nation.
-1\mong the 50 specialists on
their staff, \V. A. Wahl er and
;-Associates has six full·time
·~persomel In their Newport
Beach office, located at 2007
Quail Street. Gerald A. Nicoll
• .,represenlS the company as
t>ngineering geologist in the
', local office.
,. Thcir approach of combining ""'~oil mechanics. engineering:
geology and pract ical cx-
pE'rience lo site in\'estigations
has resulted in solutions to site
.A problems that are both com·
~ plet.e and at lhe sam~ time
· l practical. As an example of
an important local project. W,
A. \\'ahle r and Associates has
hren retained lo dCsign and
rontrol the reconstruction of a
iO foot high slope subject to
i;hallO\V mud sliding. The
reconstruction ~·ork, locatert
adjacent to Ba yside Dri\Te in
Newport Beach. is nearly
completed at the present time
:is suggested by the ac-
companying photograph of the
\VQrk in progress.
The company is well ct1uip-
pcd lo handl e conventional soil
tests on a routine basis in the
Ne"'port Beach office, and
Palo Alto has the most up-to-
• rlate equ ipment neres.~arv to
: 11and le most sophistic.ated
foundation materials teslin~
incl uding dynamic triaxial
shear te sting .
The firm ha s recentl v com-
pleted the !':ite geo!og.ic and
foundation invesligal.lon for a
~µill\\·ay repair project on the
San1iago ·Dam. Other fields 0£
ilcti\·ity ha1·e included being'
rf'tained by the city of Laguna
Beach to investigate a number
of landslides.
The rlrm has completed
many site investigations for
pr i v a t e resi~nces, com-
mercial and industrial
developments. A soil and
geologic recoMaissance in-
vestigation has rece!ltly been
completed to assist The Irvine
Company in plaMing for
future developn1ent of 12.000
acres of their property.
An1ong their mosl signifi-
cant projects in U1e local area
was the San Joaquin Dam and
Reservoir, localed in the San
Joaquin Hills near UCI. which
stores 3000 acre-feet of water
behind a 210 foot high em-
bankment. This finn provided
the mapping, geology, drilling
and testing lo evaluate the
foundation materials and also
inspected the constn1ction of
the dam embankment.
\V. A.\Vahler and Associate"
The Patricia Steve ns
Corporation, now one of four
sc:hools in !he group is
represented in 33 major cities
throughout the U.S., offering
courses in fashion merchan-
dising, executive secretarial,
public relations and pro-
fessional modeling Instruction.
''The world Is education·
hungry," says John J.
r.1 c Naughton , National
Systems pre.~ident, \\'ho points
out "people from 17 to 70 are
Joining the education ex-
plosion. and they like studying
at home." Some of the schools
vis presently in the process of -=--=-=====-==:
comp le ting plan s and
specifications for lhe
$17,000,IKX> Auld Valley Dan1
near Riverside for l he
'.1.fetropoiitan Water District of
Southern Callfomia. 'Mlis proj-
ect will, along with Lake 1-tat-
thews, provide regulatory and
emergency s tor age of
Colorado River \\'ater for the
San Diego area.
The company ha ~ ex-
perienced a significant growlh
experience since it \\'3S found-
I'd in 1960, and its success is
credited to a continuing policy
of providing sound, mature ad-
\'icc and recommendations
based on comprehensive and
u p-t<Klate knowledge, ex-
pcrience and re search in the
state of the art in their
specific fields of com~tence.
\Vil\iam A. Wahler is presl·
dent and founder of the com·
pany and is a former soil
cngillt'er \\'ith B e c h t e I
Corporaton as well as wilh tho
lJ.S. Bureau of Reclamation .
}le received his schooling in
ciril engineering and geology
at the Uni\'ersity of Colorado.
1-larvard. ~11T. and George
\Vashington University. l-1r.
Nicoll received his education
at the University of Redlands.
University of Wyoming, and
UCLA.
The firm, which already
owned the North American
Correspondence Schools, grew
to three units in 1968 as it ac-
quired the Anthony Schools
and the Atlantic Schools.
North American schools of-
fer detailed courses r.1 .ad-
vertising. pub Ii c relations,
conservation, drafting, mGl.el·
hotel management, recreation,
surveying and m a pp i n g ,
sys tems, travel and
gunsmit.hing. Special student
attractions include a n nu a l
scholarship awards which in.
elude summer "classrooms"
at the canservation schools'
\\'}'oming dude r anc h •
seminars in Hawaii and
worldwide group tours.
The Anthony schools, with 27
unit s in major California
cities, offer training in courses
leading to licenses in in·
surance, real estate and con·
t.racting, as well as legal
secretarial work.
With AUantic Schools ot Los
Angtles:. KaMBs C i t y •
Hartford, CoM., and Windsor,
Ontario, the education
"menu" a d d e d accredited
home study and resident
training for airline personnel.
Accreditation has become
!he seal of quality for home
study schools. North American
and Atlantic Schools hav e met
the high standards of the Na-
lional Home Study Council's
accrediting commission, ap-
A home study school mu st Candidly, Litch was on the
have c o m p e t e n t faculties, staff that opened the Fullerton
sound and up-to..date courses, office, first serving as loan of-
careful student screening, ficer and becoming manager!
good services. student success the next year, the post he held
and satisfaction, reasonable until he was chosen to open
charges, truthful advertising the Newport Beach branch in
and financial SOWJdness to July, 1966. His successor and
become accredited. 'They are still manager at Fullerton is
re-examined every five years, Don Hopkins, while .et Costa
~1any courses offered by Mesa the manager is Rod
National Systems Co rp . Lewis.
Victor L. Berrj
SHEET METAL SPECIALTIES
NEWPORT BEACH, CALlf.
2527 A West Coast H"'f. 548.J61J
schools are approved under r=U;;ni~q~ue;l~y~, ~G~l;•~nd~a;l•::::;F~ed;;•;ra~I~=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;=:;~ the GI Bill and Veterans
training, and the schools are 1
authorized by the St.ale or.
California superintendent of
public instruction to grant
diplomas.
One of the outstanding fac-
tors in the great growth and
prestige of the schools has
been the combination of
capable administrative staffs,
high caliber instructors and
enthusiastic business leaders.
The firm's faculty list leads
like Who's \Vho . Typical is
Tom Harmon, noted sports
figure who is in the school of
recreation.
Harold G. Rider, vice presi-
dent treasurer a n d
PROTOTYPES for FIBERGLASS BOATS
A NEW SPECIALIZATION By
ROYCE BOAT SHOP
891 w. 17th
WE CAltltY IN STOCk
MASTS
S•boh, S"ewbirch. l i9ht-
nin91, M1libu1, P,n9uin1
ind ofl.1 ...
COSTA MESA
:secretary, reports the 11ales We h1nd·tool ell fype1 of
and earnings for nine months 11111h for fib1r9l111 11!1-
ended Sept. 30, 1969, were bo1h ••• Al10 wood 1c· Woodr a!td fni,.
S7,692,325 -up 131 percent •111orie1 i nd 11il bitten•. aoyu won: •11
from the ~ame period last plug for.,... 11'°".~~~~~~~~~~~i ... ~·~~~-~, ... ~~~ ... ~·~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~:;;;~~ year.
Net income rose 40 percent
to $743,064, and earnings -per ,. ¥.':~ :--. ....,
sha re for the publicly-held ~-~~
company were 59 cents, a 31 ~~~~TZ~.~
percent increase over the
preceding year's same period. #Z ~-r"\
This includes results from ~
Anthony Schools and six ~~~:,.,or Atlantic Schools Handy, Compact, Precision Tools for Nicopress Sleeves
Other key officials a'lld ad· Nlcaprus SlttVes; Zinc Pl1t1d: .
minislratorsincludeJ.Russcll X2", 20 for $1: ~", 15 for $1 ;
Calvert, corporate vice presi-}{,", 15 .for $1; ~2", 12 for $1 ;
"SWAGE -IT" tools
\'V'esrm in src r Hospita l Plans 50-Bed Grow th dent -director of Marketing ~ 1/1 ", 8 for $1; ;.)2, 6 for $1 ;
tal so executi\'e director. North ~" ., 38 l/" ., 55 • 716 , .,, ea .; ,, , .,, ea .:
:: I for '"" & 3,;· cable $8 .5 0
~ 2 for 116 ··, 331 " & ', ·· cable $8.50
An expansion pr::igram to Valley, Garden Gr::ire and
provide 50 more beds plus ad-:O.fidway City.
ditional surgery, x. ray. Key people on Albrighr's ad-
ministrative staff are H. \V, laboratory and an c i 11 a r Y ~.Joe) Kern. bus j n e s s
fa cilitiei; highlights the outlook manage r: nose Rh•ard. dire<:-
al \Vestminster Communit y tor of nursing: ~1rs. Ella ~lay
Hospital. Oay, executive housekeeper :
Gene Sare, chief enginee r;
According to Ronald U. Helen Kuzma. !ood servic~
Albright , adn1inistrator, the n'anager: l\lrs. Belly Kibbee,
new construction program purchasing agent : h1rs. Jim·
h Id he d . . Olie Leach. me1tical records s ou 11n er "·ay Jn ~1x librarian: .James So 1n er s , months l::i increaS!' the present 12i-bcd hos pita l to a l77-bed pharmacist : Tom Lace \\·ell.
unit. chief x-ra~· technician: Dennis
Bholon. chief I a b oratory
The hospital presently has technici an: and ~1ike Sulsona,
three operating rooms. out-pa-physical therapist.
American School of Travel, S/ /1 ., 90 31 ,, .,1 35
Th h r o( rr I Dd and ·d p n• . .,. ea.; 11 , ., _ ea. e c ie sta !I , pres1 ent. at r i c i a11---,,,-,..,--=-,.,,...,-.,,------
Hichard Benedix, and other of. Stevens School): Maurice Stainless Steel Thimbles:
ficers are Dr. Paul Lepore, Shennan, president. North 9·x,11, 10 for $1; Mi"· 8 for $1 .
vice chief ol staff, and Dr. America n Correspondence Stain, Steel Thimbles HNvy Duty:
La"'rcnce Kom, secretary. Sch0ols and veteran of 18 l/a". Mi'', or Ji;,',, 4 for $1; 114",
\\'estminster Com mun ity years of home study school 3 $l v • $ " $1 20
Hospital is in a strategically· management : Dr. Eugene 1-1--T.-/"i'-;;,:,n::''-;:' .f-'1.,.•.;.•,..,:.:.,.';:"c."-'•o;:..;.·;;;.;,,,. ......
3 f I " \ " J •• =-or s , 31 , 11.
& ', ·· cable
4 I \ .. & J .. bl :: or 16 ti ca e
$19.50
$29.50
Tightening bolts appli es swa r.1ng pre<,
sure. Wtll hold fu ll rated strengtli of
table !r..t i 1·rr1 .ir~
located four-acre e om p 1 ex Auerbach, vice president -tllnltu lttl Cllbll, Type 302:
which is part o1 a com-director 01 education; 7x7;',f,", lie ft.:·~,". 11c ft.: · 8thYearAdvertisedinYachlin&
prehensive medical and clini-Margaret Evenson, vice presl-I xl9, .~i". 12c ft .;. l/a ". I 9c ft .; s and F TOOL co
eal facility. It has an adjacent dent, student services; James 7 x 19, 1/1". 34c ft; ~2'1 , 37c ft, • • •
convalescent hospital which Strahan, director of Other sizes Mt" thru :y1 .'1 in stock • .#P-8011546 Costa MDI, C1llf. 92626
now i~ under separate marketing. and Leonard O\vnership and management. Valore, associate director or Orders postp1id in U.S.A. Check or M.O. with order. Foreign Orders Add 10%.
The institution Is situated inli~ed~u~c~au~·o~n~·=======~~;;;;;:;;;:;;;:;;;:;;:;::;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;:;;~;;::;;:;::;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;:;::;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;;;::;;~;:;;;:;:;::,, J-tospita l Circle between the
San Diego and Garden Grove
Free"•ays, just off Beach
Boulevard.
ticnt antl emergency ser\'ice-----------------------
il.nd has a total of 300 person·
nel in addition to a staff of 325
affiliated physicians ;:i n rl
surgeons and whose practice5
range fron1 \Vestminster to
Huntington Beach , Fountain
HUNTINGTON BEACH
TRAVEL SERVICE
Getoui oflhe
urban
.·.a?"ncle
•
\
222 MAIN ST REET
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIF .
I 714) 536-65~8
~
..J!, Huntington Harbour··
-/In ;11,nd «>mmun!ty ol fine hOmt'l
\\'f~rftOl"I ~111t1 It"""' Slf,MJO ( NNr<"''lt' l!Ofn'\'J ,,_.SI' ;CQ
, I' 1tt-tlll)lll .li'Wnf"l•lt• ll'Ol'll 'JJ.000 I Ill JI 5'1• fJ6 f
;J ~ti~J M1lt1 l•Ofll (,1,,,1111 ''"It loo O• /m l JI" mOr1 HNlr" of lo ni
lf'~I! ~ fK•I•< COi" /fll ""''f 1fld Wll..,t .AW"ff
'
~ -----·--
o PIUS o !'I.OATS o DIVING o DREDGING o TOWING o PILI DRIVING IULKHIADS
We invite your inquiriel ind will 9l1dly 1ct •• con1ult1nt1 ind 1ubmif recomm end1tion1 fo 111ist you
in your W1terfront pl1nnin9 .
2410 NfWl'ORT ILVD.
NEWPORr l!ACH, CALIF. TRAUTWEIN BROS. 673-1960
--,,c-..,.-~ ..... ~.,--~•;e s 401 czc s ee: azsc;:esor-~a•scs<S@N s a e a 2£$$2 • .e,.s,¥¢ i S\f'S' \ Ji **iS :c K 1> u:: --r-..... -. : f""f'i'"' --• • l • • • • • .... ~ .. . ..
•
•
Tuudov, December 30, 19'9 FUTURAMA
Huntington
Hospital to
Intercommunity
Double Its Size
Coast Sheet Metal Also
In Manufacturing Lines
Pazzulla Has Imminent Expansion Program
Pazzulla Enterprises, Inc., which he attends Orange Coast work on movie sets for 20th
continues it.s significant pro-College. Century Fox before World
gress experience with an im-Key people on the staff of JO \Var n, and after working in
minent expanslon program Include James Curtis, con-similar capacity in Air Force
C<>Mt Sheet Metal has ad-the best equipped shops in the which will stretch facilities at troller and designer, and Roy recruiting films under the
Huntington Interco~unity
Hospital should double its
present size in the second step
or • five-year growth plan
which ultimately will bring the
institution to a 4~bed facility.
The projected construction
program, scheduled to start
imminently as the institution
enters its third ytar o( ex-
jstence, will add 145 beds, in-
creasing the hospital to a total
of 286 beds and providing ad-
d i ti o n a I supplementary
technical and ancillary
services.
credlt manager; H. W. (Joe)
Kern, office manager; Mar-
jorie Byrnes, director of nurs-
ing, Christine Casteel, ex·
ecutive housekeeper; Fred
Williams, chief engineer; Mrs.
Dorothy Sieman, food services
manager; Sid "TeUey, chief
pharmacist; Weston Dick ,
chief x-ray technician; Dennis
Rhoton, c h i e f laboratory
technician, and Mike Sulsona,
physical therapist.
Heading the staff of approx-
imately 370 atfiliated pbysi·
cians and surgeons is
Or. Leo Stock, chief of staff;
Dr. Richard Stafford, vice
duel ol staff, and Dr. Wendell
Witte, secretary.
Huntington Intercommunity
Hospital has four operating
rooms and 70 percent of the
patients rooms are individual-
care units, designed to allow
the ubnost in privacy and con·
venience.
Part of the !ix-acre complex
in which the hospital ls located
oo Beach Boulevard (just off
Talbert) is a multi-care health
complex which has nearby
medical offices and clinical
facilities.
vanced into procedures in area 11;-Gotha d to ~ Sc'-b d rf fl I command of now Gov. Ronald manufacturing lines in ad· · "" r -square 11C"1·er, ar su ace oor ng
di ti on to custom work in shett The two represent a com-feet. the slab already ls manager. Reagan, Larry got I n to
metal where the company has posite total of close to 40 poured for a 1200 warehouse Pazzulla is pioneer In laminating work upon his
compiled an outstanding ac-years' background 1n their addition. plastic laminating, b a v I n g return to the Montebello area.
ceptance over the past decade. specialized field, having work· This company completed its worked in the fie 1 d for 15 His shop first was at Santa
Carl Stevens and Dave ed together with two other lncorporalion early in 1969 and years as an employe before Ana, but he moved to Hun·
Chambers, partners in the sheet metal operations prior to as it enters ils ninth year in electing to start his own coin-tington Beach to acquire more
flnn, report a large increase . th . ho . 1960 b in h pany. He was in construct.ion space.
involumeoverthepastyear, opening arowns pin . us ess, te companyl,============'==========.
actually being on the verge -Of The f i r m employs a total broadens Its diversification by
exceeding their momentum of seven people. augmenting its production of
before the area's building Stevens is chairman of the laminated counter tops with
boom leveled off a few years board of directors of the Costa services in hard surface floor
Banquets
ago. Mesa County Water District, · .: d -·Ir entry m' to manufac-· · covering, carpe1o1ng a n '•IC" and is most active m youth dr ·
luring bas been m. ~1. . aper1es . ... ,, work, being functional with p 11 E t · laboration with tr"iler and azzu a. n er pr' s es ..... the YMCA and also the Band. previously was known as
up to 500 • Dining -Dancing Robert C. McLean, ad-
ministrator, points out the in·
stitutioo already provides · for
intenfilve care for cardiac,
medical and surgical patients,
in-patient and oot-palient
services in laboratory and x-
ray facilities a n d com-
prehensive physical therapy
programming.
Goldwcst Fertilizer Adds.
To Area's Green Belt 'Look'
motor homes builders. They Booster's Club (his son, Carl, Pazzulla Plastics and the
have been doing veribatle Jr., is drwn ·major for the name change occurred to ac-
have been doing veritable Costa Mesa High Schoo I commodate the broader range
assembly line production of Band.). Stevens is a.. member ol services offered.
component parts for heating of the Masons, the Scottish Heading the company are
systems, such as ducts, fit· Rite, EI k Lodge and Jerry Pazzulla, president:
in our C3ribe Room
150 Tastefully
Decorated,
Comfortable Rooms Technical services Include
electre>-encepbalograph, elec-
tro-canllagraph, inhalation, in-
travenous therapy and special
supplies and equ.ipment.
The hospital has a complete
medical records department
to maintain complete current
charts and files for future
reference as needed.
The hospital is air con-
ditiorled throughout the five-
story facility, and patients'
rooms feature extra-long
seven-foot beds, continuous in·
tercom contat't with the nurs-
ing station which provides for
voice calls or signal light, and
rooms have diversion o f
television and FM radio plus
the availability or private
phones.
A total o{ 318 personnel are
on McLean's staff, and key
-people include Tony Roesch,
Goldenwest Fertilizer Com·
pany of Huntington Beach is
making an outstanding contri-
bution to the greenbelt "look"
for which Southern California's
industrial conununity is fa-
mous through its specializa·
tion in compounding plant
food tailored to exact needs
for these facilities as well as
recreational attract.ions.
This is a company which has
be'l".1 in operation for nearly a
decade, and Paul Cooper,
president, has the participa-
tion of several in his family in ..
the highly specialized art of
mixing soil conditioners in
bulk to meet the requirements
suggested by soil analysis.
His wife, BeUy, is secretary,
and he has the help of three
sons, Gordon, Bill and Randy,
during periods when they are
out of college classes.
The compa.iy features many
different types of fertilizers
and soil cond,\tioners, ranging tings, mountings for in· American Lefion. Pazzlula, secretary-treasurer,
from mushroom compost, strument panels, wheel pans Chambers, a native Costa and their $00, Sam, who is
humus, mu1ches · and golf and covers for motor holes. Mesan, is active in Scouting vice president and Is learning
course top dr~ing to planter The company at 733 W. 17th and a member of the Moose the business by doing all
mix. had streamlined its o~rat.ion Lodge. phases during off-school hours
They provide specialized and a u g m e n t e d acUvities 1;==========='========:::;11
services for 19.l)dscaping con-which were curtailed by the
tractors all over Orange Coun-shari:i slow-down in residential
ty. The company furnishes the housing starts by transitioning
needs of many golf courses, into prototype work for in-
some of the most !:loted dustries. However, their entry
tourism centers and m~· · into the manufacturing field
dustrial acreages. has coincided with an ap-
Cooper was raised in preciable gain in gutter and
ranching country of M a downspout production a n d
and was in civil servic with repair for industrial, com-
the Army Engineers for eight mercial and residential area
years before becoming a ship-demand.
Hobbyists' Headquarters
e CERAMICS e GLAZES e GLASS
e STAINS e SILK SCREENS
e TILE e PORCELAIN e STONEWARE
e RESINS e GOLD LEAFINGS
Custom Firing
A'TOS Arts & Crafts
HUNTINGTON BEACH
201 Frankfort 536-1177
Ocean or
Goll Course Views
24-Hour Coffee Shop
JUST MINUTES FROM THE FINEST SHOPPING
CENTERS IN SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
IDEAL for the vacationist or the industrialist
visiting the Orange Coast on business.
SHERA TON BEACH INN
HUNTINGTON BEACH, CALIFORNIA
21112 Poclfic CoHI Hwy. 1714) 536-1421
master in the sportfisbing Coast Sheet Metal has car·
fleet of the Orange Coast for ried out a continµous updating
about 10 years. When the program on its equipment, and
rapid development of the area Stevem and Chambers proud-
occurred in the late 50's, he ly not they now have one of
transitioned <lver to the plant I ri~iii~~iiii~~~~~=;==~~~~~;::;~~;==~;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;';;;;:;;;';~:;====:;;=:;;:;;~=,:';:;=:;;-':;:;;:;;;~;;;';;:';;;;;:;;;;;;=;: ~ti~~~~:~!o~~auo~~:i~~= _, ~($'.~,,::~~ .,~:t141J'.rm::¥~---·~ t ~ ~~.~···~
Beach. ··} ' . ;. ~~ < 1 • '*·· '
·Ocean View Mushrooms Peg HB. TOTAL ASSm
No¥1mbur, 1969
J1.1nu 30, 1969
Dec . 31, 19bl
Dec. ll, 1967
01c. l l, 1966
Due. 31, 19bS
Due. 31, 19b4
$23.soo,ooo• 20,75 1,100
16,960,414
12,740,619
9,446,703
l,4]9,440
4,110,041
Area for Low Calorie Gourmet Food
Oceanview Mushroom
Growers' presence adds to the
diversity of Huntington Beach
as it becomes one of Southern
California's most important
sources of the popular high-
protein, low calorie gourmet
vegetable.
: Victor di Stefano heads the
. corporation which utilizes a 2Q..
·acre plot at 18196 Goldenwest
in Huntington Beach, a:.id car·
ries out a year-around pr~
gram of growing mushrooms
to just the right state of
_aevelopment before hand pick-
·ing them for distribution to
:the markets.
-'The farm here has 24 in-
:cfividual 6336-square foot air-
conditioned buildings which
are sterilized and h o us e
various ••field s'' of
111usbrooms. There are three
(fOWing seasons during the
year, 1r:1d every cycle requires
$lart.ing all over again with
:11ew soil and substances.
The operation entails the
meticulous process of com-
posting, filling beds, spawning,
nurturing by carefully-con-
trolled climate during a grow.
ing season and the.1 picking
the treasured little buttons by
hand when they reach the
"just right'' stage of develop-
ment.
Cleanliness is the essence of
the modern mushroom grow·
ing program. While
mushroom -g rowing is
classified as. agricultural by
the feder~l government, it
comes closest of all farm pro-
ducts to being an industrial
opf!raticr.t because of necessity
of maintaining a constanUy-
controlled climate and pr<r
tection against d i s e a s e
through indoor growing opera-
tions.
Oceanview produces a total
of 1,300,000 pounds o f
mushrooms per year, and di
Stelano estimates about 100
percent of this is sold fresh in
west coast markets. This is
!~~ Industrial Space Available
c: 1000 sq. ff. and up
HUNTINGTON BEACH
Between Spear and Liberty
a block off s .. ch near new hospital
LIBERTY INDUSTRIAL PARK
Phon'I' 847·1826 e 53U655
remarkable for the fact that
~1ational figures indicate ap-
proximately 70 percent of ail
mushrooms produced in the
U.S. either are canned or
frozen.
Mushrooms are taking on in-
creasing importance OD the na·
tion's diMer tables because of
their gourmet natur. and l()'llV
calories. Msuhrooms cOl.Dt up
to only 66 calories per pound.
yet they are the highest in
protein of any vegetable
known.
Dieticians plan more and
more main dishes where
mushrooms are an excellent,
tasty substitute for hi g h
calorie, fatty main dishes. Di
Stefano points out t h e
Southern California Mushroom
Growers AsS':l. has a Fresh
Mushroom Cookbook con·
tainiog m any outstanding
ideas for meals and hors
d'oevres available at the super
markets 1 and 1 from the
publisher1 , Henderson
Publications, Inc., 6 0 5 7
Melrose A v e . , Hollywood,
90038, at a cost of <lnly 35
cents.
Corporate principals at
Oceanview are di Stefano,
president; Morri!: P~.i.delton,
vice president, and Evelyn
Endrake, secretary-treasurer.
The company employs up to
55 personnel and is a factor in
a secondary phase of the local
OPEN YOUR
ACCOUNT TODAY!
economy through being source .
of soil conditioning operations Ch o o s e whichever high·
()f many laidscape arthitects. in terest Mercury Savings •C·
Their one-tirne-0nly •'soil' ' count fits your own personal
contributes a b~g ~rce of program best. Funds earn
supply to a ne1ghbonllJ. In-interest from de+e of receipt
dustry, Goldenwest Fertihzer. interest compounded deily.
at Merc.ury Sevings with ~
' GEO. C. M.C CHICKEN
funds received by the tenth
earn intere1t from the first.
There's a Mercury Savings
plan to fit your 1pecific
need1. , ~
r GENERAL CONTRACTOR
842-2525
LAND ••• CONSTRUCTION ••• FINANCING
• INDUSTRIAL
• COMMERCIAL
BUILD-TO-SUIT ••• LEASE ••• PURCHASE
ALL IN ONE PACKAGE
.'
OPEN
SATURDAY
We1re open from I 0 a.m. to
4 p.m. EVE RY Saturday.
Tllat'1 t he M•rcury Savings w•r. -extend ing every po1-
1ib • convenience, •very pos~
sible ••rvic• to our custom·
en.Stop by 1oonl t
.. Co111olidl•cd w•th Hu1rnu1 Fi.
111nci1I Corpor1tion, u wholl.,
own1d "l1r¥ic1 corpo11tion"
·::;;~::: :: .. ~:::.~: 5,.;t
Max-Int • Super Max • Super·Six • Super·
Growth • Super-Int • Bonus Accounts •
Mini-Participations • Interest Compounded
Daily • Fm Safe Deposit Boxes •
Free Loan Collection Service • and
The Mercury Sevings Build ing, Huntington Beech The Mercury Sevings Building, Buen• Perk
..
"THE ME~CURY STYLE"
' • Mercury Savings ' and Loan Association has built its reputation on
a foundation of service to our customers. You sit down and relax
in comfortably upholstered chair,s· whenever you transact business
at Mercury Savings. Yoo enjoy a , fri endly cup of c o ff~ e durin g
every visit. Your valuable wallet ·docume nts are permanently lam·
inated in plastic for you -free, You get a free safe deposit b,ox
(with min imum balance). And if you can't come in, we're as near
as your mail box -Mercury Savings provides postage-paid envel-
opes for additions or withdrawals, new accounts of similar trans·
actions. That's the Me rcury Style!
,
OICUTtYI OFFICIS: Thi Me1c.11rv St•l1191 l11lldi"9, Ed111osr •f tuu,h, H11fttl~9to11 lt•c.lt
HOMI OfP:ICI: Thu M1rcur., S1•i1191 1111141•9, V•ll•y View cl Ll11c.ol11, l11t"• l'•t~
MERCURY SAVINGS
and loan association
t
17931 Beach Blvd. 'tSulte Pl Hunt!~ leach " Open Mo n,. Thurs. 9 5'1n.-o4 p.m.; fri!lay 9 a.iK •• 6 p.m.; Saturday I 0 a'.m.·'4 p .m.
,
I
ii
-.... -.. .. ............ -. -. . ..
~FUTURAMA Tuesday, December 30, 1969
Mercury S&L Posts Growth
• Records In All Operations •
Mert'llry Savings aOO Loan
AssociaUon, Orange County-
based financial inslitt1Uon, has
po:;ted growth records for 1969
In savings, lending a n d
general operations.
From ib ei:ecutive offices in
the Mercury Savings building
in Huntington Beach, the
association has had a
dramatic impact on both the
savings and lending markets
· in the area.
The landmark Mercury Sav-
ings Building, and its smaller
twin building completed in
Buena Park in late 1969, have
provided standards of com·
fort, beauty and convenience
for customers that are being
studied throughout the United
States.
"We have received inquiries
and visiU from savings and
loan executives from all parts
of the nation as the reputation
of the Mercury facilities has
become a major subject for
discussion in our industry,"
said Leonard Shane, Mercury
Savings president.
"Recently. a financial in-
stitution in Georgia spent over
an hour on a staff conference
call with US, while i group of
executiv~ from Northern
Galifomia was jnspect:ing our
facilities, all seeking the key
to Mercury 's facilities and
successful operations."
Not only is the Mercury Sav-
ings building a landmark. but
its 'sit-down' complex to in·
sure customer comfort in
transactions is a unique ap.
proach. Bdth Mercury Savings
building9 bave exacl1y iden-
tical lobby facilities .
Mercury Savings is the only
Federally insured final'l('ial in·
stitution to maintain its ex-
e cu t iv e operational head-
quarters ln•Huntington Beach,
headquartered in the building
completed in. early 1969. Dur-
ing the year, a strong savings
flow has enabled Mercury to
plow back into the com-
munities it serves Several
mill ion dollars worth of loans,
thus bolstering the I o c a I
economy as well.
"While the physical comfort
of our customers is an im-
portant factor, including the
ever-available cup of good cof·
fee. lamination of valuable
wallet documents. free trust
deed collection service. safe
deposit boxes at no costs to
savers. and similar services,
we believe our 'Ma x-Int' high-
inle rest savings policy has
really been the key to our
r e c ord-smashing success,"
Shane said.
Mercury Savings a I s o
pioneered Saturday services,
with both offices open from
10:00 a.m. to 4:00 p.m. every
Saturday for customer con·
venieoce.
Shane extended an invitation
lo area residents and visitors
lo visit the unusual building to
see for themselves what
future trends in financial in-
:..iitutional facilities look like.
Groups and organizations also
are invited to reserve the use
of the 'Mercury Room' for
meetings and events a s
another community service by
MerCury Savings.
"We are extremely proud
and appreciative of the role
the community has assigned
to us," Shane said. "The un-
precedented growth during a
tight money period has given
testimony to the time-tested
adage that public service is a
key to business success."
Mercury Savings' Hunting-
ton Beach office in the Mer-
cury Savings Building is local~
ed on Edinger, west or Beach
Boulevard. Mercury Savings'
Buena Park facilities are
located on Valley View Street
north of Lincoln.
McCracken Has Long Background in
Successful Commercial Construction
Continuing development for
commercial, inudstrial and in-
vestors properties is the
1pecial contribution b e i n g
made currently to the Hun~
tington Beach area by George
C. McCracken, general con-
tractor.
McCracken emphasizes
tailoring a development to fit
the needs of the customer.
buying land and buildhi.g to
suit, or adapting his property
to its greatest potential.
Ml'Cracken has a long
background of s u cce ss f ul
building programming which
also includes the financing
\\•hen it is requi red.
Some of his most recent
development credits include
the new Liberty Industrial
Park which has been expanded
in the past year with develop--
ment of some 35,000 square
feet of supplementary pro-
perty on a two and a half acre
plot.
George is planning to launch
construction soon on a motel
and he has several other com-
mercial developmejlts on the
drawing boards.
He also participated in more
industrial development at
Gothard and Slater and credit5
of recent years include the
Jim Piano Pl ymo u th
dealership in Norwalk.
McCracken started out as a
plum.bing contractor before
going into the field of general
contractor. He is pest presi-
dent of the Master Plumbers
Association ol Oamge County,
is a member of the Huntington
Beach City Council, director or
the Chamber of Commerce
and has been act ive with the
Lions Club a11d the Rotary
Club. He is a licensed pilot and
has instruments and multi-
engine ratings, having served
with the Air Force during
World War JI.
S&F Tool Broaden s Lines of Specialized
Rigging Tool s for Do·lr-Yourself Sailor s
S & F Tool Company has
broadened its proprietary lines
of specialized rigging tools to
acrommodate s a 11 i n g en-
thusiasts who build or repair
their ow.1 craft.
, Frank Shaffer ha s advanced
the operation from a comer of
the garage and the linen closet
at home to a 7SO square foot
facility at 1245 E. Logan in
Co5ta Mesa in the firm's
eight-year growth experience.
The original sideline opera-
tion is coming to be a mainline
with Frank as S & F Tool is
diversifyt1g into role o r
manufacturers representative
for other related rigging sup-
plies, and Shaffer admits he's
approaching c a l a 1 o g pro-
portions as he offers a
multitude of products on a na·
tionwide basis.
S & Fis just introducing two
new swadging tools which pro-
I
F~ESH
vide a complete line or units
capable of handling sizes from
1/32 to ~ inch cables. In ad·
dition, the company also
makes a stop sleeve tool for
applications wherever wanted
fo:-adjusting the height of a
sail.
The company Is producing
10 times its original pro·
duction volume each year, and
does periodic productiou to
stockpile its products which
are shipped within 24 hours.
This speedy handling of
orders has received a unique
compliment from the postof-
fice department because a
New York customer wrote to
the Postma ster G e ~1 e r a 1 •
praising thG department for
the fact that he received
delivery on an order he 'd sent
three days previously. The
department indicated t h e
manufacturer's promptness
had most to do \Vith it.
S & F also sells the same
tools to experimental aircraft
people and they are used for
rigging special aircraft. The
company also receives orders
regularly from Army and
Navy material and also indus·
trial users tA•ho find a conven-
ient application for S & 1',
tools.
Most company sales are
generated through advertising
in nationally distributed sail-
ing magazines, and the ex-
pansion into aircraft and in-
dustrial fields has b e e n
stimulated by o cc a s i 0 '.1 a 1
advertising in aircraft publica-
tions.
. Shaffer entered this field
because of his own ex-
periences during fou r years he
was a Lido racer all over the
coast.
EAT MORE
Mushrooms • • •
•
THE YEAR
ONLY 66 CAL:ORIES
PER POUND
AROUND
LOOK FOR THEM IN THE PRODUCE DEPARTMENT AT YOUR
FAVORITE FOOD. STO.RE!
OCEAN VIEW MUSHROOM GROWERS, INC.
11196 GOLDENWEST HUNTINGTON BEACH 147·1820
Plant Food Tailored To Exact Needs
Of Green Belt Industries ... Pa1·ks ...
Goll Com·scs And ln81ilutious
• ,..........,. Cemposr
........ Soll
• &.W•wttt Hu"'us
FERTILIZER
,11191 .aLDINWlST ST.
• llack P.ot Hum111
• Multl-Purpo•• Mulch
• Golf Coune
Top Dreulot
COMPANY
7:30 ....... 4:30 , .... •• HUNTlNCHON HACH C7141 147·204J
I
. '
•
Coastline Cruises Draw
1v1ore Vacarioners 1n '70
Ruth Loughrey reJ>Orts a
continuing enthusiasm f o r
coastline cruises along the
western seaboard of the U.S .•
and Huntington Beach Travel
Service is said busier at this
type service in vacation
scheduling than any other at
the moment.
The company is in its eighth
year of existence, while Mrs.
Loughrey counts up a total of
13 years in her specialized
field. She worked with com-
panies Jn Los Angeles, Tor-
rance, Lakewood and Long
Beach before establishing her
own comany here in 1961. For
many years her company was
the only one of its type on the
local scene.
The firm has a staff of five
and provides functional and
professional services f o r
travelers both on personal
vacations · a n d in ac-
commodating business people
endeavoring to •·get there" to
keep appointments or make
routine sales calls, inspection
tri ps, etc.
Their main emphasis is to
accomplish better service in
travel accommodations for
their clientele. They do a bet-
ter job. they point out,
because they are impartial -
fa voring no carrier.
They pride themselves in
disentangling the best, most
convenient and more economi-
cal routing for the traveler
O.C. Ceramics
Has Art Center
On Frankfort
I
during busy season '·traffic l
jams" in their reservation de-1 partment. 1
These consultancy services
are free. because they derive
their commissions from the
carriers.
Close to 200 Qualify for Radio, TV
Mrs. Loughrey notes a
growing trend lo w a r d
coastline cruises to points
from Alaska to Mexico due to
demand accented by the fact
that the Matson line, famous
tor luxury voyages to Hawaii, Technical Careers Yearl y at Ogden School
now is scheduling trips to Many future radio and television and re 1 ate d
Alaska. television technicians are mathematics, plus FCC rules
Increasing ·travel, which iS qualified. for their careers in and regulations.
prompting almost capacity Completion or the course is loads t of th heduled c o m m e rcial broadcasting
retention capabilities can com-
plete the exhaustive studies in
six weeks, Ogden reeQmlJlend.'I
U1at the average enrollee plan
to devote at least 10 weeks at on mos e sc intended to qualify a student flight! of the big jets, un-fields each year as Wm. B. for a first class Radio
doubledJy will prompt similar Ogden Ra d i 0 Operational Telephone Operator License the outset so .there will be no
0 d.t. h th b' School of Huntin gton Beach c p 1 ions w en e 1gger approved by FCC. disappointment. r · •· ft · t graduates approximately 200 supe Jelo{t 0 omorrow go tn o d The school of(ers f r e e Students come here from all service. stu cnts annually.
The institution. conducted lif~time placement servic_es, over the United States, and Huntington Beach Travel d Ith gl they do not Service notes wi·th pri·de ,·is for the past 21 years by Bill an ' a ou . 1 . . · current enrollment shows ~
0 d ff d · b 1 guarantee a Job. off1c1als note staff's abilities at planning g en. a or s P 0 s s 1 e job openings have proved suf-pl~ from many . esastem and
vacations and tours abroad employment or advancement ficient and usu•llY their m1dwestern states as well as
bee f th · in these fields of electronics. ause o etr own personal students have had a v.ariety of many from all the western pe · · t I · l t provides the equivalent of ex r1ences 1n r a v e 1 n g th 1 r positlons fro1n which t o states. They frequently have abroad themselves. They have more an wo years o con-boo centrated junior college ex-c se. enrollees from d i s t a n t first h a n d, authoritative A "lafr of r1·ve personnel k led I pl h posure to the ~ame subjects in " ~~· II Al ka now ge 0 aces w ere its six-t~I2-we'ek courses. l1andles all details of the in-posse...,ions, as we as as
tourists might want to go. stitution whieh furnishes all and Hawaii.
Every member of the staff, 1'he facility for three years needed mat.erials for instruc-Enrollment is limited to 45
from here mother and.r,rtner has been on the l~unlinglon tion in courses where no books in each class. A total of four •1 A d G Beach scene at 5075 Warner in "rs. n rew row, to er son are required. Classes are con-classes ar.e conducted through and his wife. Jim and : Mary a specially constructed, IO,OOO ducted seven days a week. a year; and students usually
L h d th square foot b uilding oug rey, an an o er with daily sessions from 9:00 must reserve for classes
associate, Frances Schuler, (illustrated), tailored 1 0 ;::i.m. till S:OO p.m. and then several months ahead. Classes
h ded t ·gnil· t ·greatest convenience of its as roun ou a Sl 1can again from 7:00 p.m. till mjd.. start in January, April, Jul1 bed I f th · 1 students. sc u e o e1r own trave s nig ht. · and October. The first class in
retently. In fact, the school at present While a student with 1970 has been closed to enroll-
Mast of their bookings are ·utilizes only about half of a greatest concentration and ment since early in October.
for immediate transportation two-acre plot and may be ex. I,======================; needs of buyers for depart-panded for future needs.
ment stores and shops and in-There are classrooms and ad-
dustria l off j c i a Is and mlnistrativc quarters on lhe 1 employes, u s u a 11 y on main floor and dormitories
airliners. Huntington Beach upstairs in the !w()-story
Travel Service also conducts building.
Automated Sandblasting
ANY SIZE JOI -LARGE OR SMALL
Orange County Ceram i c and supervises complete tours Most of the students live
Tile. manufacturers of "That as the occasion arises. '·in" because of the Jong hours
e SHOT PEENING
for met11I str•ngthenint
"Most
Automat•d
Shop Beautiful Sunset Tile" have ~~~~~~~~~~;. they concentrate on their moved their o r l i c e s , 'i-courses. They take a t:>lal of
showrooms and art depart· 620 hours of instruction in such
e METALLIZING
e Metco e Wlr• in
Or•ng• Couhty11
ment from the plant location FAIR subjects as OC and AC elec·
on Slater Street to 201 f••t, f•ir, f•ctu•L Thoie tricity, magnetism, vacuum
·• Powder
Frankfort in Hunting t 0 D three worch 1u111 ui:i fecfors in tubes and tr an s i St Ors,
Beach. ope11fion on th1 DAILY l'ILOT amplifiers and receivers. rec· Sandblast & . Metallizing Co.
C 0 ordinated silk-screened 1dltori•I p191 •~•rv div. tifier power supplies, AM and P.O. lo.r 441 , Hu•thtttoll hoch, C•llf.
designs and decorative copper 1~~~~~~~~~~~L1F~~~l ~r~ad~i~o~o~pe~riat~io:n~s~, ~V~H~a~n~dl:=~16~7~1 ~l~dt~·~~t~R~-~o~f~l~dl~"~"~'~''~"~'l~~~~~5~,.~-2~S~f~7 :=J enameled inserts have been UH fr equency equipn1ent
popular sales items for many
years.
··we have decided to let the
public in on the fun ," states
Mrs. C. B. Sturgeon, manager.
•·\Ve are expanding the
dcpartme11t to include studio
facilities for artists requiring
space and equipment for a
nominal fee. Also, a hobby and
crafts ce nter."
Lessons and supplies in
ccran1ics. porcelain, c I a y ,
glass, silk-screening. copper
enameling and wheel-throwing
will be avallable. Custom fir-
ing to Cone IO also is available.
The studio includii1g indoor
parking facilities occupies ap-
proximately one-fou rth of the
building. The remainder tA•ill
be rented lo artists and
cra/1s111en requiring private
~tudios.
Di Sref ano Has
Liberty Park
Indu str ials
I
Headquarters for the Do·lt·Yourself Bathroom Remodeler
GEERS
PLUMBING
222 ADAMS
HUNTINGTON BEACH
FEATURING EXPERT CONSULTANCY, BEST AND MOST COMPLnE SELECTIONS
OR WE DD THE JOB FOR YOU
Actuel d is pl•ys.of near.
ly all the colors aveil-
.,ble for bathroom fix-
tures. Outstanding se-
lection1 in a ccessories.
011r Ports Deport111e11t
b Moit
C:omplete
P'LUMllNG e HEATING
AIR C:ONDITIONING
Victor di Stefano is Htr.i-
lington Beach's newest in-
dustrial landlord, having suc-
ceeded Tom Tully in this
capacity at Libe rty lndu st rial
Park at Spear and Liberty -AMERICAN STANDARD-KOHLER-CRANE-UNIVERSAL· RUNDLE ~~s't.~1 ~~~~~~~n°'rn~~;~;:;v GEERS PLUMBING ..• 222 Adams ..• Hunt. Beach -536-1499
n1unity Iiospital. I~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Llberty Park provides ac· 11
commodations for small to
medium, service-orie.tted in·
dustria l outlets and • offers
space from 1000 square feet
and up .
The industrial center
already has added some 125
employes to the local field
while accommodating -arqnd
JS different companies.
Manufactvrinq
Contractor
Sptciali1ing In
-{;( Remodelinq
-{;( Decorati nc;i
Pl•slic Laminated Topi
C1rp•ting
Vinyl Flooring
Drapes
Jerry Pazzula
PAZZULA
{
ENTERPRISES
INC.
17.592 Goth i.rd
Huntington Beach
841-2541
I
ADDITIONAL HEALTH CARE . , . for Huntington Beach,
S.11 Beach, Costa Mesa,
Newport 8e1ch, Fountain
Valley •••
Soon ta embark Ott
the second step of
our planned five-
year qrowth proqram
for an ultimate 490.
·bed facility. Next
addition to inr;lude
145 beds to clpuble
present COflCICity.
Presently a 141-bed G eneral .Hospita1 with complete Medi.
col -Surgical services, including intensive care fo r cardiac,
med ical and surgical patients. Also ou t-patient laboratory,
x·ray, physical therapy, inha lation therapy, 24-hour emer·
gency serivce.
ACCREDITED BY JOINT COMMISSION .
HUNTINGTON INTERCOMMUNITY HOSPITAL
17772 Beach ' Huntinqlon Beach, California
' 17141 842-1473
·~
•
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•
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1 • •• -r~----~ ~-. , ""' ............. ,-.. ,..
FU TU RAMA -117
University Olds Jumps to New
Heights With GMC Dealership
CHEMICAL PUMP IS NEWEST
INNOVATION AT JABSCO
MT Jabsco, originator of the Jabsco bilge pumps have
C.M Has Only Public 36-Hole Golf
Course With ·Social Conveniences
flexible impelltt principle in recenUy done a dramatic
pumping, CWTenUy ls in~ service ln savln' a 50-foot Costa Mesa has the only management c:oolract p~ condition for normal ploy
troducing an lnnovaUOn Jn in-yacht of an individual whose public 36-hole golf course Jn vi ding direction of the food already, and he predlcta by
duJttial che.mlcnl pump . craft was subjected to van· Orenge County with complete services, cocktail loungt and summer -the facility's
They have a new pump with dallsm durln~ labor troubles clubhouse facilities Inviting to fourth year -the course will
no metal that contacts the cor-when Jt was m dry dock for banquets, dirurer d a n c I n g , golf shop on a year-around be up to !trlngent tournament
rosive materials being con. recondllionlng, About a dozen cocktails or simply coffee shop basis. Earl E . AtkiRSM is .standards.
With their new status as fac-
tory-dlrlcl OMC t r u c k
deal-!1nl"""lty Olcbmobile
of Costa Mesa Is vau!Ung to
new hei&hta in 11les and
~rvk:e momentum at their
local.Ion tn the heart ol Orange
COunty'a "Automotive Strip"
at 2850 Harbor Boulevard.
Lou Beruiy, president and
general manager of the com-
pany which actually started
things on Harbor five yea~
ago, said a 3*1 increase in
\'Olume is be:lrur: z o o m e d
further u the 1irm attracts
more Ind more attention from
truck operators.
Statistical evidence of tbls Is
confirmed in the fact that
University Olcb has compiled
more truck sales in its first
year as GMC dea1er than their
predecessor did In the past
three yem.
Benny credita his customer-
conscioos slogan, "We are
never satisfied until you are,"
with the experience they are
enjoying of "selling 'em and
keeping 'em sold," both in
passenger cars and·trucb.
University Olds has a tot.al
or 32,000 square feet under
cover on its four-acre plot,
featuring 44 service stalls, 24
hoista, 15 body shop stalls and
• double paint booth.
Actually, the se rvice
departm<nt's lfOWlh outsteps
the sales volume by about ~
perc<nt thnlu&h Ibis satisfac-
tion . axiom.
Pacing the puaenger car
sales momentus is the exciting
acceptance ol the 1970 Cutlap
Supreme, a brand niew car
from the tires up. Of course,
the entire Oldsmobile line of-
fers a range ol seleotion to fit
any concept of motorlng
pleasure.
They have the original
among the modem version of
the froot-wbeel~ve cars in
their Toronado, in addition to
the lull lines of rocke~inspind
Delta 18's, luxurious 98's and
economical F-85'•. 'Ibey have
models of varying size and ap-
pointments to satisfy the
whims of the lumry-con.scious
or the family-sized car for
those who are most budget·
conscious.
University Olds canies a to-
tal invenkw'y of more than 200
new and used cars in regular
stock oow.
ComplemeX!iig !heh' GMC
truck U-. wbith includes
selections from pickups to
heavy duty custom built rigs,
is their franchise for Holiday
campers.
The company has grown to
65 personnel and departm"1t
heads flatting Benny include
Bob Gallqber, bu a Ines 1
manager; Don Mac Innes,
general sales manager; Jay
Toler, new car sales manager;
Everett Lawson, used car
sales manager; Bill Applebee,
GMC truck sales manager;
Fred Seitz, fleet and leasing
manager; Gene Lachenmyer,
i;ervice manqer: Don Plat·
foot. parts manager; and
Wally Stovall, body llbop
manager.
I
' They have a normal com-
plement of 10 salesmen. and
on tbiJ team 1«: Bob Ax·
elson. Bill Leslie:, Doug Terry,
Bill Kenhaw, Ovie Wlntgen,
Vance Hakes, l)lll huke, Bllt
Reeves, Bill Drtnmock and
Larry Crowdl!r.
Benny baa a 30-year
background 1n the automoblve
field, and the matter of
building up car merchandising
momentum is "old hat" with
him. He waa selling close to
12,000 units per year in a Ford
dealership in the East before
he came to Costa Mesa, and
since spearheading the ttodus
of Harbor Area auto dealen
from the C06t to Harbor
Boulevard be also has el·
paneled to rejoin the Ford
"family" u ~\II-Mercury
dealer ln Santa Aoa, and
alreldy has been acclaimed by
the factory as the seconct-
fastest-growing L I n c o I n •
Mercury dealer In the United
States.
Benny's busy dvic activiUes
Jncludes partlclpaUon a 1
director for tbe Big Brothers,
as well as membership In Ille
Orange County Chamber of
Commerce. He long has been
a leader in local Chamber of
Commerce groups, as well as
being active in the Exchange
Club, Elks Lodge, and a
member or the Knight! of
Columbus.
veyed whlch has proveCfmost holes had been drilled Jn the luncheoos. gRenerUal
1
m
1
anegher Ket
1
tythl The 5400-yard 7o-par coursa
successful over a long period hull and then covered up to ·i· •-h •--t osa • s n c arge O e ls relalively7nat but features or t.e!Ung. prevent detection, and when This fact ity ~ t e '-'W a food, beverage and banquet 11 1 d b k d
the boat was floated the water Mesa Public Golf and Country faclllti~ and Mike Evinger is we ~pace un er an &and
l'M' Jabsco • unit of be t h 1 to .i..A da Club at 1701 Golf Course the pro In charge of the golf traps, while the other course International Telephone &: gan ° rus n u-.: mag· Drive, adjacent to t h e h . ls a challenging 8700-yard, n.
Telegraph Corp., has • n ed areas. Two large bilge Fairview Hospltal and It ls shop and andles golf In· par facility with its uneve"
outstanding line of pumpa with pump.s went to work and kept 1'ust entering its third year of strucUons and tournament terrain, val')'ing wind currents
a variety of appllcaUoM or the craft afloat until the existenre. play. and liberal pattern Of water
service to a broad range of ifl.. damage could be repaired. The twi>story clubhouse has haiards is more exciting for ~-owner __ .. u_d •'--Jabsco It is a city-owned facility b 1 I ·uu t duslrial activttJes. They •11c '-'1~ i.irc anque ac:1 es o ac-the low handicap players. The
emphasize s i m p I i c i t y in pumps with saving his boat. v.·hich is operated under a commodate luncheon c l u b large grass greens and tricky
design, having only one mov. meeUngs or capable of ac-sand traps demand real sportr.
ing part, plus quiet, gearless, 1 commodating parties o( as concentration.
self-priming, de p e D d. b I. Commercial Interiors s many ... 400 persons on the... The 2000 square foot go!(
operations. co~ fl~· Lunch~ is served shop, largest or its type in
The chemical pump is being daily ~th a vaned .. menu .. Southern California, has clec.
Bethel Towers Fine Area
oflered to the chemical In-Alfred Gordon Spec1' alty Cocktails are also available. tric carts available and pr0o dustry after having been sub-Near future plans pr.o~de for vides sales and service on best
jected to a long period of a. piano bar ~nd fac1bt1es ~or known brand names in golf
testing, during which no parts dinner dancing and dally clubs, bells and accessories -
had to be replaced because of Commerical Interior decor Key people in the organiza· breakfasts. Wilson, Walter Hagen. Arnold
Senior Citizens' Home
cyrrosion. This marks a that's cordinated with original tion include his wife, Gwen, The golfing activities are Palmer, PGA and Titlist. Golf
distinct departure from usual architectural planning is the secretary·treasurer and office most complete -including lessons are available through
experiences in this particular specialty of Alfred M. Gordon manager; Dan Go~on. vice open play on two 18-hole the Pro Shop. St.art.Ing times
application. Designs, Inc., of Costa Mesa, president-general hlanager; courses with dlsthlctly dif~ for either of Ille two excellent
Bet:hel Towers oot on1y pro-
vides Costa Mesa with a
landmark which i.s Orange
County'• tallest building but is
the ~er to the pressing
needs or senior citizens who
desire sensibJy.priced · rental
accommoda.tions as well as a
convenient location in balmy
southern California.
lt is a senior citl%ens home
sponeored by Assemblies of
God, IDc., and bas experienced
a significant acceptance in its
two years on the local scene.
Located at Pomona and
19th, the 270-apartment struc-
tt1re provides accommodations
for guest.a who range upward
from 62 yean of age for prices
which vary from $74 to $123
monthly. Ptesents guests in-
clude an average of 70-ti> 75-
year-olcb, and Ol)e gu<st is ap-
proacblng the century mark!
While a majority of their
residents come from within a
20 mile radJus of CO!ta Mesa,
Rev. L. E. Halvonon, the ad·
ministrator, says they also
have penom who moved here
SheratonBeach
Inn Serves 500
At Banquets
Sheraton Beach Inn in Hun-
tington Beach provides 145
deUghtlully furnished gum
rooms and aocommodaUons
for parties and banquets set'V·
ing up to 500 people.
Lou Evans is general
manager of the facility which
is located at 21112 Pacific
Coast Highway and features a
nine hole par-3 golf course,
beach for surfing and a heated
swimming pool among its ac·
commodaUons. -
Tbe Caribe Room features
tableside f I am in g dish
p1"e91nbon and dinnertime
dancing to the tines! music on
the COM!.
IYll'IOn
And, while their standard and this eight.year-Old firm Toby Nipple, design d.ireccor, ferent personality, plus a driv· golr courses are available with
from the midwest and east line of pumps nonnally can has nationwide representation and Dan Paul and Robert Har· ing range with 25 tee spaces, little or no delay experienced.
after retirement. supply most requirements, of its craft. rlson, foremen. two large putting greens and a Atkinson is 8 native of Oak
It is an interdenominational l'IT Jab.sco's has the capabili· Ai Gordon heads the com-Alfred M. Gordon De-short-approach practice area. Park, 111., served in the Army
plan -Rev. Ha Ivor so n ty ol developing special . prcr pany which gravitated from signs is design er and The pultinrg and ''":hippbinlig tank corps in the Pacific
emphasizes only about 20 per. ducta when••-need an·ses. d . 11 man u I act u re r or custom areas are ree to urc pu c theatre. is past commander of ul'Cl an art and es11!;n consu ancy d th If h -nt or the tenan•· are . . furnishings and dccorator·ac-an e go courses c arge a Phoenix VFW post and has a " ~ The u111t 1s near1·ng 1·1s 12th serv1·ce 1'nto a manufacturer to bl 1 members or the Assemblies of • centuated artifacts for com· reasona e green ees. background of many years i"
God -~·iu year· in Orange County and its back up the planning. Gordon mercial establishments. They Evinger reports the con· marketino as weU as manage· ",,,.-1 ency. 30th ·year or existence, having confides he simply could not ol nd ·-o The structure is an 18-story moved to the facility at 1485 find suppliers who could meet plan all surface c ors a tinuously improving fairways ment of cocktail and dining
facility !ltuated on a three· Dale ·Way in Costa Mesa in the quality standards on which ~~r. ia:i~~1:a~ighgt!~gp~~,1 __ •nd_..:t!l'c.ee_ns_a_r_e_i_n_ex_ce_Uen_t_lo_u_ng::.e_s_. -------
acre tract, fireproof and 1=•. It became a part of he UIS. 1'sted at the demanding
;o.io and sculpturings. They design engineered to withstand an l'!T's FJuid Han.-111 .... Division de di ' ~u1red of hun· by
Ull.1'6 a mes • ~..,, the booths and tables for 1 r--,,,.--------------""';::---, earthquake up to 12 point.5 on in 1968 two years after joining some of the fast-growing chain restauranta and the counters 1 the Richter scale. the ITT nistem · ti he represented Bethel Towers features a The ~t now has 160 o'l'hrgaruz.a 0115 hroo . • and display shelves for food
ho -•-· t•..A.•-ey were mus rrung so markets, but provide for their rse31WC' P i.uw1g court, an employees. and is headed by f t 'th · t llatio' s and ""-I · h I as wi new lllS a n construct1·on by specializing lO"UV e putting range, s u • O. L. Eriksen, genera I · ·t· th t the
fleboard (soon to be installed) manager He succeeds E. c. ahcqduisibecions a comr lpany fixture companies.
nd the · d a to ome a manu ac urer The Gordon fac1·11·1y works in a o r games tn an near Stork, recently transferred to f ·t · t t lh I. I h It Th 0 1 ! own requiremen s 0 all med1·a -woods, p!as11·c e recrea 1ona a . e asseme general managership
complex has a limited recrea. at I'M'-Bell & Gossett in keep pace. resins. metals and paints, and
tional and social program for Illinois, a pump manufac-Alfred M. Gordon Designs does all the art and design
residents, which i.s expanded luring facility which produces does all the interiors for Den-work for their customers,
to fit response. large capacity units. ny's Restaurants, which soon whether it be multiple plan·
Typical· events include local Key people at the Costa wUI have 500 establishments ning for chain organizations or
tours ,sometimes two and Mesa facility are Chris Rose, across the nation and already individual arrangements for
three days in duration, as well sales manager; LI 0 yd Is projecting new franchises in single insta:Jations.
u sponsored programs to seek Mcintyre,. purchasing agent; Canada. They creatl! for new
to develop participatlonal in-Gordon Scott, comptroller, Bill And the company has a facilities os \Veil as adapl to
terests among the guests. Rosenburg, m a n a g r 0£ similar g r o \V t h experience the styling and design ln a
As part of the diversion of-man u fact u ring : Bob progressing with two more company's master plan 1rre·
fered lo guests, Re v· Knepshield, manager o £ food specialty groups -Taco quently previously designed by
Halvorson conducts weekly engineering; Ken Wells, pro-Bell and Sir Ge o r g e ' s Gordon) as they remodel older
services on a community duot line manager ; Art Smorgasboards. They also are fa cilities which may have been
church basis in the recreation Norman, personnel manager, well represented i n in-acquired by the chain organ·
ha!L An audience of up to 125 and Bill Oldham, advertising stallations of such noted ization.
can be seated ror the Thurs-and public relations manager. western super markets as Gordan hails from Montana.
day evening worship services. Eriksen comes here from Hughes, Cole's and Alex-Jle is a member of the board
Rev. Halvorson has a 31· I'M'-Marlow, another pump-anders'. organized Exchange Club
yeu background as I pastor making division unit of the The company has a 12.000 of directors or the newly
and a district officer of the Flw'd Handline diVlS' Jon wh1'ch · th 1rv· tndustr1'al '---square fool shop and office on serving e tne .-.uemblies of God Church, manufactures large unita !or Complex · an expandable plot of one and ·
having had congregations in swimming pools COMtruction ;§§§§§§§§§§rn Santa Maria and. Kingsburg sites and other commercial a half acres at 250 Fischer
and later being at the distrit't applications. Ave., and Gordon reports
office, first as a.ecuUve Other 0 u ts tan d Ing ap-they're figuring on doubling
sec r e·tary-treasurer, then plications featured by ITT this facility and operation in
assistant district superin-Jabsco are the new sub-about six months to a year.
tendert and tor 10 years 11 mersible bilge pwnp for At present their staff of 30
district superintendm. pleasure boats, featuring seals personnel rerpesents about 150
Only Ono
Final. stocks In all home td'ltlons.
That's a blq deal? It is Jn OranlJI!
County. Tht OAILY PILOT Is the
only dally n!Mpaper that dell~4
ers the package.
For &he JJoaiine-crowd
.....
~H~~!i,?,,~!,?~,,!f~,~bour
\Vllr•ltont homef lrom $71.SOO I Nr1r·1v1!1r homu from S.U,SOO
1v,terlfon1 homeJ!/ri from SJJ.000 /(21JJ S'l·1J61
26 111il•J due eu1 of C•l•lin• l!/111!1 or ju11 sJi mi/11 wur/i of LD11J &!ltft
•' ,~l(.c Cout Hlghwq illld W11ner llvenu~ The president of l he to prevent corrosion and a percent growth in the past two
Southern California College s trainer impeller to keep years, -1nd Al expects t ... is
now is Dr. 0 . Cope Budge, damaging particles away from group to increase to more tb~n
while the chairman of the e<11·1 .Jt~hegpju~m~p~. ~l~t~i~s~ca~p~a;bl~e2of~J'°;;~w;he:n~th~e~!:ac:il~it~y~is~e=•·~·~~~~~~~~~~~------------------~--lege board who succeeded about 1000 gallons per hour. panded. Rev. HaJvorson, is R e v .
William H. Robertson of
Pasadena, also the district
superin tendent of the
Asoemblies of God o! Soulh<rn
California.
111111 onlY man
In llWllOl'I Beach
WhOhllbUDI
In hll new no1111 •••
Ind IOYllRI
4«5 E. COAS'PHIGHWAV fw:r,,.sk# Dr#llfl :J/iant . e N£ T BEACH ~ 6!3.otOO ,, ' •
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HELPING US ATTAIN AN AMAZINq , GROWTH EXPERIENCE
Wt'vt •lr11dy o ... tg1own 1p1c1 of 1 proj1ct1d IO·ye1r t rowth pr09r1l'fl ind flO"" •rt 1ddi"' 11fflc1
d1 ptrl11'1111t 1p1ct lo 1ccorn!'flod1!1 111otloier 44 11r¥lc1 b1y1 .
Groll 11111 of $7·1/2 "'illio11 ht our 11co11d v••• fflo11 tlt111 ~111drupl11 our orlgi11 1l 1lfp1ct11!e111, 1ftd
hi t 1oe11d u1 to lht 111tu1 of f11t1il 11ow!119 C.clill1c d11l1r1hip i11 So11t+itr11 Ctlifor11i1.
Stop in 111d ''' l'l'l lllY otktr '''''"' why 011r four .. c11, 111odt111 l1cil:ti11 t+i1t w1r1 d11i9nff "4tttt
to 1,11 111d 1ir.4 c1 ntw 1nd ,,..., Ctllill•c 111tomobil11 ht"• contti buttd to thit 9r1tifylruJ ••1Mrit nc:t
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2600 ---~-
Stl1t deptrtment open 1:30 a.m. ttll 9i00 p.m. Mond1y through Frfdiy-
-9:00 1.m.•ill 6:00 p.m. Saturd1y an·d Sunday' •
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T""sday, Deumbor 30, 1919
Monte Carlo, Blazer are New
Momentum at Connell Chevy
Connell Chevrolet or Costa
~fesa reports two ei:citing new
names are further stimulating
sa1es momentum for 1970 -
the Monte Carlo and the
Blaier.
'lllese are not all of "what's
new" in Chevy-land this year,
confides John Connell, bul he
says thty are doing their
share in keeping Connell
Chevrolet in favorable position
Jn momentum this year as
Chevrolet continuing Its "No.
I" image in the nation's sales.
The Monte Carlo gets a
variety of fond indenities from
the "name-givers," ranging
from ''gentleman's car" from
the ones with the lordly in-
fluence of Britain W "cool
cat" from the ent'husiastie
teen-ager who sees only the
Monte carlo SS.
The Montf> Carlo Is an un·
pretentious car-complete, at·
tractive and comfort.able while
extremely safety-conscious as
well as budget-conscious.
On the other hand, the
Blazer is Chevrolet's answer
to the 4-wheel drive fleet
which they've adapted to se-
cond car utility, pick u p
workhorse serviceability and
an adventurer's go-anywhere
runabout. Candidly, the Blazer
out.distances it companions in
the nl.llabout class with the
widest track design in its
field-actually the same tread
width as the Chevrolet pickup.
Connell notes wryly that this
Ls his truck department's new
momentum for continuing its
solid growth since t h e
dealership moved to 2828
Harbor from a long-time head-
quarters on the coast back
when the company spearhead-
ed the establishment c f
Harbor Boulevard as "Auto
Row" for mid-Orange County,
Connell Chevrolet carries a
normal complement of 200
new ears, 75 trucks and 75 us-
ed cars on thef r five-acre
automotive complex which has
one of the most efficient
service departmeat systems in
the area.
Bob Cherry Is general sales
manager and ls capably aided
by Roger Miller, new car sales
manager, Ron Kranz, used car
sales manager, and Will IA!
Blanc and Diclt Garcia. truck
sales managers, who direct ef-
forts of their team of IS
salesmen: Richard Miller, Al
Bohar, Al Bernal, Ed Clark,
Pere Fuller, Frank F;atward,
James G i 11 a rd, Ward
Hanrahan, Mel Mayberry, Hal
Morash, Don Roberts, Charles
''Bud" Scott, Bill Smith,
Frank Vangsness, Ken
Waymire, and Steven "Pat''
Connell.
Eddie Goodmans directs
operations of the service
department with the able
assistance of John Hauser as
parts manager and Cliff Craig
as body shop manager, plus
Bernie Levendecker, in charge
of the efficient troubleshooting
of customers' problem!I as
they perform as s e r v i c e
writers. Jn addition, Bill Dunn
and Leo Jansen are in charge
of dispatching any ailing
vehicles efficiently through
various corrective steps.
Paul Doddridge is long-time
business manager, and they
list Mike Wells a.~ office
manager, Jean Cowling, in-
surange manager, and Ed
Clark, lease manager.
Connell Chevrolet carries on
the tradition of one of the
Harbor area's oldest auto
agencies and John Connell has
been a principal for the past
decade. Firm names in history
a r e Culbertson Chevrolet,
Miller Chevrolet and Miller-
Connell before the dealership
altained its present identity as
they moved to Harbor.
Connell, is the son of J. L.
{Ted) Co nnell, retired General
Motors executive now living in
lrvine Terrace. C o n n e 11
himself also has a long
background in the auto in-
dustry. ·He was in the
wholesale d l v i s I o n for
Chevrolet before entering the
local dealership, and his wife,
Joyce. has a comparably
significant background in lhe
same field . Her father was a
Chrysler Corporation deale!'
and a brother still is a General
Motors dealer in the midwest.
John is current vice presi-
dent of the Orange County
Automobile Dealen1 Associa-
tion, sponsors of the famous
Convention Center Auto Show
whelf the new m~els come
out, and he will ~ave the
responsibility of the next pro-
duction. He has been on this
board for several years.
Connell has been a member
of the Costa Mesa Traffic
Commission for more th;:in a
year, is past president of the
United Fund and is a
lieutenant in the Balboa Power
Squadron. He recently was
elec:ted to the board of the
Dovers Shores Home Owners
Association.
Humboldt lsland, Delu xe Apartments
Mark Huntington Harbour Progress
Construction or d e l u :1 e
apartments near the
Boardwalk Shopping Center
and completion of develop-
ment of Humboldt Island
highlight the current progress
story at HIDllingtop Harl>our,
the fabulous marina-residen-
tial cmununlty of Huntington
Beach.
These man: continuation of
one of the few bayfront
residential areas b e I n g
developed on an "own-your-
own-lancl" basis where the
properties alone will represent
close to a quarter of a bi.llicn
dollars 190r.th when tt ts com-
pleted. Spiraling values of the
man-made waterways are in-
estimable.
Huntington Harbour is being
designed for some 2 4 O O
families, encompassing ap-
proximatey 880 acres of land
which have been 1 largely
reclaimed from marshland
which was subjected to
Oooding regularly at hlgh tkles
before the development was
launched almost a decade ago.
'Illere are a total o( 258 acres
of waterways within the
development now.
Ray Logan, sales direcWr.
point.. out th at Huntington
Harbour is continuing to enjoy
brisk sales as residents flock
In to take advantage of their
yacht, fishing and tennis clubs
and private beach and tennis
club as well as its prestige
location.
Ttiere is a broad :ange of
selections available among
Huntington Harbour homes
which are both water~riented
and non-watmront, basically
lhl'ee and four bedroom unlts
with one or two-story or split
level pl.ans.
Scores of architects have
participated in a spectacular
award-winning home desi gn
program and more than 80
home designs are featured in
the marina community with
themes ranging from tradi·
tional chann to contemporary
elegance.
Evidence of the popularil.\
of the development can be
noted in its outstanding record
of re-sales in recent years. ll
is recording a multi-million-
dollar re-sales record each
year -mute evidence of the
demand for these homes a:;
residents get transfers or elect
to move into larger or more
luxu rious quarters,
Huntington Harbour's well·
balanced development rro·
gram includes its own shop-
ping center, The Boarchvalk.
which now includes 22 dif-
ferent shops with services and
selections in foods, travel
assistance, fin ancial, drugs,
gifts. beauty care, cleaning,
office supplies, books, yard
goods, barbering, marine sup-
plies and clothing.
Huntington Harbor Corpora-
tion is a wholly-owned
subsidiary of Christiana Oil
Corp., which now has another
community de velopment plan-
ned at San Diego.
Incidentally, the chainnan
of the board at Christiana is
Jules Berman, who has w(ln
national recognition for his
land development ideas. lie
also directed ope.rations of the
Lake Arrowhead Land
Development Corp. b e f o r t
selling to Boise Cascade Co.
The people beind l h i ~
development story i n c I u d t'
Martin Fenton Jr., president.
Donald L. Byrnes Jr., vice
µres ident and g e n e r a I
1nanage!'; J oseph P. Antono\\',
secretary, and Elmer Tagur .
treasurer.
Byrnes is an enthusiastic
participant in community al-
rairs, being a former member
of the Huntingtoo Beach
School Board and presently
active with the Huntington
Beach Chamber of Commerce.
He! :ittended both USC snd
UCLA and is a buslneM ad-
ministration major.
SERVICE TELLS THE STORY be-
hind Heathkit's outstanding accept-
ance by Orange Coast "do-it..-yourself-
l
ers.'' store Manager Grant Malloy is
shown with technician in well-equipp-
ed electronics service area.
to Trail Bike Kits Add Versatility
Fine Lines at Heathkit Electronic3
Newport Imports Has
Growing Sales Record
Newport Import., Ltd., Is
enj0ying a continuously-grow-
ing record of sales ill its sec-
ond year as a dynamic part
.at the Harbor Area's status as
a slgnlfican1 automotive cen-
ter for Southern cali!ornia:
Glerm Coffey now has retu~
ed to his post u general sales
manager after a lengthy air
aence due to illness.
Steve Todd backs this up
STEVE
TODD
Pr11id1nt
wit b introduction of Tex ager, and Emily Coffey, tn Holmes as aales manager beading an aggressive sales charge of registrations.
organ.iz.ailon ill both new and Holmes has a six-man sales
wed imports. staff. Salesmen Include Roy
Newport Imports Is Orange Doidge, Darrell Byron, Kirk
County's onJy authori"ed Fer-Given, John Jay, Jerry Sunar
rari dealer, and also features and Ron Kemp.
h Newport Imports has more five Drills -made cars-the than an acre or area at its MGB, the MGB-GT and MG Midget, plus Aus Un Healey-complex at 3100 W. Coast
Sprite and Austin America in. Hwy., home oC Theo Robins Ford for many years. addition to the Italian-made Todd, a native Californian
sports car. who was reared Jn the West
Ron Lorton is the new parts Los Angeles area, has had six
manager, while Joe Moore years' background in manage-
co ntinues as the company's ment capacity at Chevrolet
service maflager, directing dealershipsi.. majored in bus-
one of the most outstanding iness administration at UCLA,
import car service depart-and is active in civic affairs.
meats in the area. They uti-He is a member of the New-
Long noted as headquarters It ts described as more treasure hunter. It detects lize a total of 27 service stalls. port Harbor Chamber of Com-
for do-it-yourself enthusiasts versatile than other trail bikes metal the size of a dime at a Other department heads in-merce, the Hoag Hos pital ;si
who have tackled color TV and at twice the price. It has the depth of six inches, and can elude Ann Baron, office man· Club and1the City of Hope.
complicated stereo "music tu I · d '"-;J,iiiiiiiii:iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiilmiiiiioliiiiiii.i!iii.~~;ii~i;,;iii;i;iiu; widest wheel in trail bikes. rn up arger items at epl.WI wa lls" with amazing succel!ii,. f 1 · f 1 Heathkit Electronics Centers There has been sc much 0 up 0 m ee ·
of Anaheim now has added enthusiasm shown for the This modern divining rod
trail bikes to its Jo"" list of produces a loud, piercing
''6 Boonie Bike that Heathkit oow sound on locating metal. This kits available to the hobbyist. is reported working on another heightens in intensity as the
Grant Maloy, reg Jo n a I fun vehicle which would be an searcher moves closer to the
manager of the facility at 330 advance over the popular dune object. It is proving most
E. Ball Rd. notes with amaze-buggy -a six-wheel vehicle adept 'in hunts through cld
ment the resourceful family designed especially for desert ghost towns, or old battlefields
garage-<Juartered craftsmen driving. for souvenirs. It proves most
aren't stopping with simple There's an innovation In efHcient in search for lost
transistor radios or record kits offered by Heathkit this jewelry or coinJ on beaches,
players. year which may be especially or efforts to locate buried
"They're putting together appealing to Uie adventurous. pipes and conduits.
such a d v a n c e d items They have a metal locator ;;;;;;=========::;!
as organs, marine radios with which possesses most ac-j
direction finder capabilities. curate metal dete c t Jn g Buy The DAILY PILOT
IN COSTA MESA }
CITY AUTO PARTS
COMPUTt AUTO PARTS & ACassGRIES
I!!!!!!!!!!!! WI AISO ST1ICI YW lllHliE PAITS • liiii WHOLESALE -RETAIL
O:CMAHOll
• CTUllMI IUIS .. U.\llUllfll
•lltllT lllCll •CAM 11urn • IJltlllt ltlllUltlll .,.
~"'rU"C:i.";il ._I 64_.z..a_13_1_,I
COirill"'-m MACHtHI IHOP lt1'YI" "ftlVI 111111111 • IH:ll •1lUlll . ,. .......
• ll l l llAltJtll
PllSSID • MAll.UlP' • IU.111.W.1#
\Vhy, they're even making fea tures for the weekend hob-Just for 'Peanuts'
their own automotive tuneup~j~by~;~,,~~or~~lh~e~~pro~fe~s~si~on~al~i:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iiii:iii~:~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ testing equipment so they can "' ! " ;w• ft W llW1
do a more thorough job on the
family jitney," he asserts.
f.1aloy noteS casually that
"anybody who can screw in a
light bulb is capable of
building his own color TV
set," through l h e un-
d e r s t andable instructions
Heathkit provides with its kits.
t.faloy says his customers
are now taking on the most I
advanced color television units
-those \Yith built-in
automatic fine tunlng and
power channel selecti on
features, so deft and adap-
table th ey have been to
Heathkit instructions.
Continuted d r a m a t I c In-
creases in sales volume at the
Anaheim store are proving
just how adept Orange Coun-
tians are at Heathkit's
surprisingly versatile range of
selections in kits which help a
customer gain possession of a
coveted item at a savings or
riny\\·here from half to a thh·d
of v•hat the un it would cost in
;1 retail store.
Heathkit's main momentum
1n merchandising is in pro-
\ iding complete kits in an the
component parts of a
1nultilude of electronic equip-
1nent -hi-fi, marine and A~l'I
or FM radio, te I e v i s i on ,
guitars, amplifiers and test
equipment
Their new trail bike, called
the Boonie Bike -Heathkit's
j irst venture into the non-elec-
'fronic fi eld, has a five horse-
power engine and is equipped 1 with options for all-seasonl
trail and snow bike functions.
Serving All of Orange County
With Complete Sales & Service for
OLDSMOBILE for '70 and GMC TRUCKS
Wt Invite your special
to th•
attention
'70 Cutlass Supreme
· .1ncl our entire "f11mlly" of Old1mobll1 from
the front-whMl-drlv• Toron1do to th• ludg•t
Con1clou1 FIS llnt.
Coming_ Soon • • •
the New DATSUN
,
UNIVERSITY OLDS IS TRUCK HEADQUARTERS
••• Factory Authorized Sales and Service Center for the
' 240% GT Sports Car
ASK FOR DOAILS AT
Home of the No. 1
Imported Pickup Truck ....
Ont of f'ht Mltl•'s ltodi"t Imported potstft9er
con wf" optlcMtol •fometic or fovr ~ speff
frOMftllssioa st • price Jot 1Urprl1ht9ly cJost
to S200D. ~
ASK US TO SHOW YOU WHY DATSUN'S
SO WELL ACCEPTED
DOT DATSUN
Authorized Dealer .
Sales• Service• Parts
Dot
Datsun
lll'S l1.1ch l lvd.
HUNTINGTON llACH
-.
GMC TRUCK
Serving you fram
SINGLE UNITS TO LARGE FLEETS WITH
SELECTIONS RANGING FROM PICKUPS TO
CUSTOM 'HEAVY DU TY UNIT.
Bring Your Truck Problems To Our GMC ExpertJ!
Remember •••
We Are Never Satisfied
until you Are!
university aldsmabile TRUCKS
2850 HirbOI' Boulevard D Co&ta Mesa, Cal<f01"<Q 926260 Tela. (71 •) 540-964 0
~ --~. --. --~ ------------~ ---, ----~-·~,,--..,,----.
' •
Tuud.y, O.c1mber JO, 1969 FU TU RAMA
Chick
New
Iverson Area's
Porsche-Audi
Newest
Agency 1n •
Auto Dealer With
Newport Beach
JACK KELLY
General Manager
states, they recommended ex-
isting d~alershlps put up
separate facilities to prevent
confusion and to enhance ef·
ficiency ol operaUons.
manager; Helen Marr, office
manager; Sonny Williams,
se.avice mana,er, and Gary
Emory, parts manager.
Chick Iverson has t h l!
disUnction of being one of the
Harbor area's veteran auto
dealers as well as be ing the
area's newest. This is because
he formally opened the Chick
Jvt!rson Por sc he-Audi
dealerahlp at 900 West Coast
Hwy. in Newport Beach in
November .
ED ENOCHS
Sales Manager
The new Porsche.Audi deal-
ership has a complete
service department, featuring
10 stalls and 10 hoists, with
Aul~an tuneup equipment
and complete front e n d
serviwi. All the ad.vanres in
technical aids for imported
auto service technicians that
are available at their most
modern VW dealership are at
the new facility, too.
Enochs says he has two on
his sales slaff at present but
expects to expand this to a
team or six la the near future.
Steve Hurst and Len Jones,
Jr., are the salesmen and they
handJe both new and used
cars, already having compiled
sales at a momentum of 15
new unlta per monlh as com-
pared with a total of 55
Porsches sold throughout 1968.
Iverson has introduced Jack
Kelly as general manager of
the operation and already is
selling cars a.t a pace lhal pro-
mises lo triple the momentum
that Porsche experienced as a
part 0( the Volkswa~ opera-
tion.
The oew dealership features
the Porsche as a h i g h
performance rear engine vehi·
cle and the Audi as a front-
mounted water-cooled engine
unit with front-wheel drive.
The Porsche features options
of fuel ihjection or solex
carburetor units.
The price ranges f o r
Porsche are from $3600 to
$11 ,000 while the Audi com·
*** 1<** IVERSON GETS NATIONWIDE
pares with the medium priced-
domesUc car lines:
Of course, the Por3che is no
stranger to Harbor area
motorists because Iverson has
had lhe franchise for its sales
and service for many years.
When the manufacturer ex·
panded to pennit retail sales
of the Audi in the United
Kelly has announced depart-
ment beads al Porsche Audi to
be Ed Enochs, general sales
* *·* * * A TIENTION, PLUS SALES
Kelly bas a four.year
background in Imported cars,
having most recently been
sales manager at C i r c I e
Volkswagen ln Long Beach. ... .... _. ...
INCREASE IN LARGE NEW VOLKSWAGEN HEADQUARTERS
He has had" 20 years' ex-
perience in the auto business,
having been in all phases of
work in domestic lines at
Glendale previously. He is the
son of the old-time Packard
dealer ln Glendale, literally
growing up at that facility. He
entered other domestic fields
in about 1952, and continued
The new Chick Jverscm
Volkswagen facility at 445
East Coast Highway 1 i n
Newport Beach not only has
attracted nationwide recogni·
tion but has stimulated amaz-
ing momentum in sales and
service at an already-ag·
gressive dealership.
Iverson had been practically
bursting at the seams in a
headquarters on B a I b o a
Peninsula near Newport Pier
for years when his new loca-
tion just off Bayside Drive
was completed last March.
And, already the dealership is
selling cars at an average rate
of 125 new units per month
and 70 used cars-actually
multiplying six-fold w h a t
Chick had been doing at the
old location just a few years
back.
Meantime, more expansion
within the fa cility has been
achieved through separatMg
the Porsche dealership to a
different location -just
recently Chick I v e r s o n
Porsche dealership to a dif·
fercnt location -just recently
Chick Iverson Porsche-Audi
opened shop at 900 \Vest Coast
•I wy. as a completely detach-
ed agency.
The Volkswagen fa c i Ii t y
add to chick iverson posche
employs a total of 110 people
no\v, actually doubling the
team Iverson had only a year
ago at the old sit.e.
Chick Iverson VW provides
31 service lifts and 40 stalls,
plus a foUr-lane electronic
Creative
Capabilities
Serve
Many
Applications
W~••l·<h1ir·ridd1n p1ti•nt1 1r1 mobili 1ed
by lift d•vi<t 1d1pl1d to Ji9htw1i9ht v111,
l\1orc than a
Quarter of a
Century of
Experience
e MElAL SPINNING e PROTOTYPES
(
e PRODU.CTION e MACHINING e STAMPING e FABRICATION e WELDING
Supreme Engineering
COSTA MESA
1930 Placenti• 646-6036
diagnosti c service c e n t c r
whi ch was opened last Sep-
tember. Backing up this
departinent is a team oC 75 r a c tory-trained technicians
who now are doing service
work on more imported cars
than Iverson ever dreamed he
would be handling in the com·
parativcly sho rt time of the
expansion step.
The buildings at the V\V
facility feature d e f in i t e
Spanish architectural motif.
There arc hand-stained woods
and hand-made floor tile, and
Iverson has a commodious and
beautiful customer lounge for
the convenience of customers
who wish to wait while work is
being completed on their cars.
Iverson li sts key people in
his organization as Kent Allen,
Electronic controlled
tuning equipment, re.
cently installed, serves
four bays at Chick Iver·
son Volkswagen.
O.C. Supplies of
H.B. Complete in
Industrial Needs
general sales manger; Peter
Pederson, new car sales
manager; RaJph Gordon, used
car sales manager; Lloyd
Otey, office manager: Arnie
Brammer, credit manage r:
Kenny \Veins, s c r vi c c
manager; Bill Walters. parts
manager, and Neil Emory,
body shop manager.
until he Joines Circle VW in :J:..ii
1964. '.-..
Enochs has been w it h •
Iverson since 1960, .and had
been specializing in sales of t
Porsche cars when the VW ""'> ft ,
dealership was doubling up. l • •
He a~ .. is from the Burbank· I Alien lists a team of 10
sa lesmen with Sal
Bernardine, Frank Oosting, Al
Smith, Alan Magna, Woody
Wood and Bryan Newhouse
(who doubles as their paper
work specialist who arranges
for personal pick up of new
cars at the plant in Germany .
The new car sales specialists.
Those who do lhe honors in the
used car department are Dick
Kunce, Les Golfos, T o m
Glendale area. having grown l • , • up in Burbank and taking his Photo •bov• show Interior dl1play room of new dealership. Below 11 VllW of
college training in Glendale. patio-type service department.
Coming 240Z Sports Car Big News at Dot
Datsun, Now In Second Year In H.B.
Kirkland, Bill Patscl, Ed Lake The big news at Dot Datsun ular half ton pickup truck The Datsun passenger car
and Geo. Boudreau. ed line is noted as ton ""rformers The dealership u n d er in HunUngton Beach right which is No. 1 among import t' ,,..
h . . in gasoline economy, too, and Iverson's management dates now revolves around impend-trucks in t e entire nation. the sedans have auch stand-
back to 1960, and had been in ing broadening of their lines: The pickup is praised as a ard features as disc brakes,
operation for several years Datsun is on the verge of in-tr o u b 1 e-free unit featuring 96 horsepower overhead cam
previously under another troducing the 240z sports car, six-ply whitewall tires, four-engine, individual rear wheel
ownership. speed transmissJon, all·steel suspension, fresh air systems
Chlck had been a used car 8 GT-type unit, to ita line. body and heater as standard and option of four·speed or
operator in the Burbank area Ken Robinson expects this equipment, and it sells for automatic transmission _ with
from an original three-anr:
key people Include Dugan Yea·
kel, general sales manager~
Beverly Hardesty, office man-
ager doubling In credlt and Jn·
surance responsibilities; Nor·
man Kirk, service manager.
and Dick Gingrich, part;
manager.
Sales staffers who sell both
new and used vehicles arc
Larry Hayden, Ed Country·
man, Dave Epps and Roger
Jordan.
Robinson has a seven-year
background in ules and man·
agement Jn the imported car
business. He is a native of
Southern CallfornJa.
for several years when he to create more excitement several hundred dollars less a price tag of close to $20Cl0.
elected to come here for the than that which already has than comparable pickups. Dot Dalsun is in its second
opportunity to be a new car brought hls imported cars to ·Robinson notes that the year of operation at 18835
dealer. His Balboa location ac· the status of being one of the pickup is gaining significant Beach and has grown dramat.-
tually was transitioned from best sellers among foreign acceptance as more and more Jcally in volume, now doing
an old bike shop, which he ex-cars throughout the nation. customers learn its workhorse twice the sales momentum as
panded to the corner and Datsun has the familiar capabiliUes in addition to its well u doubling its volume in
paved, renting a hangar in the two.door and four-door as ~mUes-per-g:allon and better service and parts. Ken has a
rear to accumulate close to well as the increasingly pop-gasoline performance. staff of personnel now-up
two acres he utilized. Thcli==============='============''======'==========::::; present new facility is five
acres in size.
Kent Allen has'been with the
company since the year after
Jverson became the local VW
dealer, having started out in
Glendale and his history in the
automotive field going back
practically to boyhOod. He had
been a lot boy and car wash
boy at the outset a n d
gravitated to senrice writer
Parts mgr. and later manager
0 C S I. I H · of a used car operation. He · · upp ies 0 untingta.l had been affiliated w Ith
Beach has advanced from an several domes t I c car
oil field supply house to a full-dealerships.
fledged industrial suppl y firm ------------11
in its 11 years of service to -----------11
this area.
The company ts located at
1980 Lake St.. and carrl-?s such
items as hardware, pipe
valves, fittings, Proto hand
tools, l\'irt. and manila rope,
paints, mechanical r u b b e r
goods, hydraulic hose, Black &
Decker tools, Rustoleum paint,
belts and threaded products.
The company ha s ex-
perienced a ca.1stant volume
growth, ranging upward from
IO percent each year. A. C.
'-1arion ls president of the cor-
poration, and Bob Tarzian is
general manager.
0. C. Supplies serves all of
Orange County and Laguna
Beach, employing a total of IO
people.
Salesmen on 0 . C. Supplies'
staff are Cliff Ke-.1drick and
\Vebb Kitchen.
They are going through a
complete and thorough
modernization program, put·
ting in all new steel bins and
fixtures, streamlining their
operation to by-pass the need
to occupy larger quarters.
However, they are projecting
need of more space in about a
couple of years.
Is the Place to <io
• •• ivhether y ou're shopping
for a 1970 model car
or truck . .'. or
usedo11es!
t
'
•
• • •
THI MONR CARLO, now for
'70, is the unpretentious one
, .. complete, ettrlilctive , com-
fort•ble •nd reel 11fety con-
scious. •
THI ILAZllt, is Chevy's •nswer
for the 4-whe•I drive fle•t.
S•cond cer utility and ed•pf•
able to pickup st!'rdine1s 11 e
"workhorse" end• go·•nywhere ·
runabout.
Stop in and see for yourself
tt's at 2828 HARBOR BOULEVARD
WHAT'S NEW FOR '70?
THE MONR CAILO
THE ILAZIR
l' 4 '. ,.. .. ' -----·-·-------~---~-~~-~~-~~~----------~-----~~--~-~----
I
-
--------------
116-FUTURAMA Tuesd•y, Dec:ombor 30, Ifft
Nabers Cadillac Must Expand
Years Ahead of Schedule 8
Supreme Engineering Adapts Life to Help Wheel-C-hair-Bound Cripples
Into Motor Vehicles, Contributing to Bread winning Capabi\ites
S u pre me Engineering's Rieck'• experience Jn design-or Rieck's most appreciated Now that the space program opening in a plpt to match a
creative c119abllities ha ve Ing such a rig h~s stimulated knacks is ~!s specialty in con-has reached a climax \\'hich fitting as small as 'one inch in
prompted a new applicalion of enthusiasm for possibilities or verling theory into final pro-has resulted in a slow-down on diameter. He also has lt1-
Wben Nabers Cadillac made coming year. nick, Bud Swanson and Pete th e aptitude of Don Rieck, pro-mobilizing Others who are du cts with valuable shortcuts the backlog of orders , stalled a 20.root cu toff radiac
Us debut oo the Ora.nae Coast Key personnel in th e Wood. probie~ol~t' wthicht~~~isesf. t~..iadtd '1 imilarly afflicted! -di~r?ken in tlrne and cost in production Supreme Englneerlng h a s with a grinder type blade, as
a couple of year ago. Dick """'anization, besides Nabers, m 1 l Y o •iv.= con illcY 0 eg or a permanen con Uon. or the end product. begun to tum its attention to well as a hydraulic metal ·spln·
hen b II , ___ ........,...._ ;ol de B 111 •t cCr ck Nabers is acUve in civic af. v.•heel chairs. Wt.th th· t of •~ d 1· ·1s ti Na u t an aunv;i., ....... ~~ toe u "a a en, is ype assl3~ance, Wh'ile the company has been omes 1c pursu1 , recen Y ner.
a c c e nluated headquarters general sales manager; Chuck fairs although a comparatively Rieck has just recently a ~ndicappcd person can go building protot ypes or thru st producing a low profile wheel Supreme Engineering has up
desianed to accommodate 10 Trapp, used car s a 1-e s recent arrival from a adapted a retractable lift to work or even do ln·and-out nozzles for testing programs of new design for racing to 4 5(1..inch ca~clty turfl!ng
years o( expected growth. manager; Stan Mashlta, bWii· dealership in Glendale. He is designed much like those used duties of a traveling salesman linked in new rocket 'clcVelop· vehicles. la'the in hiS lineu'p of a dozen
Now, at the tum of the year ness manager ; Bob Rogalski, on the Board or Governors at jn loading delivery vans to lift or consultant in a lightweight ment, it ,ti~ bas been con-The company. located al lathes to accommodate· the
and just..past his second a~ service manager; Maurie l)o. the Balboa Bay Club, is active a wheel chair and man, van with double side doo rs. tributing lllnificanl savings to 1930 Placentia. has just ex· broad range of work they are
niversary the per 1 on ab I e nohue, parts n\Snager, and In several local Chambers or engi neered to pivot the plat-This advantage will spare aerospace and defense in· paneled into a neighboring called upon to do.
young dealer bas compiled Chuck Donnell, body shop Commerce, is participating in form and lock In the drivc r·s them of the expense of re-· du s-trle11 through· u t 11 i z i q g . building to accommodate ad· It is a versatile job shop
such an amazing growth ex· manager. the fund.raising project for position. taining a chauffeur or at· Rieck's technique or turning . dillonal machinery acq uired \vhich also does engine lathe
perience-that he is about to Salesmen include Max Hoag Hospital expansion, and Tbe first unit he made has tendanl. blast · nou.les on spinning by Rieck. He ha s recently ad· 1\·ork, milling and various
embark ~on a significant U· Anderson, Dick Beebe, Knox was Cadillac Line Chairman in perfected a means whereby an Rleck's operation lo~g has lathes. by-passing old methods ded an eight·inch pipe bender forms of welding. Rieck has a
pansion program, plaMing a Converse, Harold Cox, Art the 1969 Orange County Auto arthritis-ridd en veteran now is been noted for .its inventive of machining the units out <1f and a swedger of eighl·inch n<1rmal complement of t ighl
20,000 square root addition to.,....Do_w_s_kl"-, _Do_n_M_on_t-'l,_B_i_ll_R_en_·_De_a_Ie_rs_sh_o_w_. -----~pu_r_su_in~g'-a_re_a_l _es_ta_t_e._ca_r_ee_r_. _m_a_ch_in_e_shop-:_c_a,_pa_b_ill_h_·.,_._On_e _soli_.d_e_x_ot_ic_m_eta_I_. _____ ca_pa,_o-'·ty,_w_hi.ch._w_1_·u_r_ed_u_ce_th_e-:per_son_n_el_. _____ _
his paUo-type service depart·
ment to add another ff service
bays.
Nabers Cadillac will lose
none of it.s outstanding
aesthetics in the expansion
program at 2600 Harbor in
Costa Mesa. He had tdsisted
on capturing the ultimate in
atmosphere in the first place
-to provide just the right
seting to sell and lease new
Cadillacs in this area.
Behind this growth ex·
perience is an amazi ng
statistical story. Gross sales
of $7"2 million dollar$ in his
second year more th a n
quadrupled his original, am-
bitious projections. T h i s
tremendous growth has soared
Nabers Cadillac to the en·
viable position of being the
fastest growing C a d i 11 a c
dealership in southern
California.
The entire Nabers Cadillac
complex reflects the same
dignity and precision that goes
into the making of the
automobile which the million·
dollar, aJl-<:oncrete structure
was built to sell.
There 's a country clu b at-
mosphere amid fresh potted
flowers, a fully-carpeted
showroom surrounded by lux-
urious customer conference
offices. Indeed, if at times
things seem a bit cr-0wded on
the main showorom floor,
NalJers' sales staff can treat
one to an impressive private
showing in a subterranean
showroom where no less than
24 new Cadillacs may be
viewed!
Nabers' four and a half acxe
facility will be coming up to a
total of 75,000 square feet
under roof including the patio-
type service department. He
already had the area for the
service department expansion
blacktopped for new and used
car storage, plus customer
parking.
Incidentally, the se r v ice
they offer is just what you"d
expect amid such prestige: an
adequate mechanical depart·
ment backed up by a definitive
inventory of Cadillac parts.
Now there will be close to 80
individual bays featuring tbe
most sophisticated equipment.
With all this comes to-and·
from chauffeur service, con.
venlent car rental ar·
rangements and aviliability of
a s pa c i o u sly comfortable
cust<lmer waiting lounge and
courtesy library!
In addition, Nabers' well-ap-
pointed body shop will have IS
bays and two paint booths.
manned by out s tanding
cra£tsmen.
Nabers Cadillac not only is
noted for its outstanding im·
pact on the new car market in
this area, but it also !wls gain-
ed the reputation or being the
most aggressive C a d i I I a c
dealership in used car sales in
th e southland.
The deaJership also is head-
quarters f<1r Vogue Tyres, as
w,cll and having a complete
car leasing service.
The company bas advanced
from an original 18-man staff
to today's SS, and . Nabers
already is projecting growth
to 75 personnel within the
Advanced Arr
In Sandblast
The most advanced tech--
niques In sandblasting, shot
peen~nd metallizing opera-
tion,t in C1tange County are of.
fered at Sandblast a n
Metallizing at 8671 Edison St.
ln Huntington Beach.
The company features a
Pangborn table which 'does
both blasting and peening, and
one of the most frequent jobs
they are called upon to do Is
metal ~ "Strenglrtening v.·ork on
gears, crankshafts and other
parts in racing cars.
The company can rtstore
old parts to original state
thrOl;lgh application of plasma
spray in their metallizing
operation as they build up
worn arts. This ,technique
also is used for corrosion and
nist prevention.
The c o m p a n y provides
pickup and de.lh1try services
on commercial and industrial
lfOrk, and gets rrequent calls
for ocean Y.'eather prOO!ctlon
services on metal railings and
plates, p I u 1 deck·mounted
metal pAl1I aboard boata and
yochta.
Appllcltkm ol a z.inc coating
In metaJJW.ng o_peratlons gives
tbt lonr<lt lire known In
galvanitfng. because metals so
m1'd actually •re de-
"'•" fl't'r b!t(Ore. ''
one
•
Porsche, ontihe world's mos! exciting cars
and last year's winner of the Monte Carlo rally,
has a new home right here in Newport B e~ch.
Chick Iverson is an authorized Porsch e I Audi
dealer for Orange County. The new showroom
and service headquarters will also house an'
other great car ... the AUDI ... Spectacular
in design and function, the new 1970 Audi will
add a new dimension to road travel in 1970.
Visit lverson's new Porsche I Audi showroom
and see the exciting new features on all of
the Porsche competition models. A car that
has earned this year's coveted World Manu-
• facturers Championship.
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l q
' ' •
•• \ •• ~ $ .. ':~t> ! •
i • , -...
I
CHICK IVERSON
PORSC:HE I AUDI
900 West Coast Highway I Newport Beach
646-9391
ORANGE COUNTY'S AUTHORIZED DEALER
PORSCHE I AUDI JOIN US!
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