Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-03 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa. -7. : • j( • . ' , ~." r. SA TUllD,4. Y.:JANtl~RY: .3, 1970 VOL 'I. NO. J,, 4 llC'ttOftt, U PAOll " . . . "! •• -• r" Race, J;lrugs :star Doe?· • ;+- ' ' ' ,. , . ; ·, •• • • ' • ··~6 M~y .Join.-·F-ght: t>ver . I. • .-g Dair . • . . ·· .. At Saddl~ha~k ·ic . I I I ' " . ' • . , . ·mi . s·"! ' . . • . ' . an _. • ezz.1n • i .~ ...... ~ :·an . ' ' .. . . . ,·.ce... ,;-... < I \ .. • ; • • • • • h; l ,PUet Logbook • · Addict's Horror A Grim Lesson By AR THUR R. VINSEL Of !flt Deir. "llM Si.ff HEltOIN ·TAKES no holidays; neither does horror. Neither de> some newspapermen. A holiday morning is one of 'those times when a single. ~Y feels he would t'ltt!e around .in the world -'like an extra ball on a pool table \Vith full comer pockets -if he left the house. So he pours . another cup of coffee and thinks how lucky he is not to be !acing 1970 paralyzed from the neck down. Or dead of cancer recently like a friend. He also thinks of a 31-ye&l'Old man he knows and an 11-year-old boy he doesn't. He has Written about both. They have two things in oominon, whatever Other traits they may share. They have used heroin. They hope they won't again. FOUR CHRISTMAS seasons ago, one called, because he bad · a: story to tell, )Vi.th a touch of . . hope to weigh against a ton of ffilS~ryo .That is a delicate balance, but he was holding it and he was proud. Ten years before, you might have JftCOgnized his name on jukebox labels or the marquees of fashionable Sunset Strip night clubs. The singer's ~ name no longer matters. He uses several,-but the oria:inal one appears 15 times on his rap sheet. Once, he spent as much money pe.r day·on a heavy heroin habit as the average fam.Jly recently spent-or owe~n Christmas gifts. Junk isn't sold on credit, however, so you get cash whatever way you can. • HE IS ALSO one of the fw people who ran so bani down that tenif>:ing tunnel of addjctlon that . be found himself back out in the harsh sunlight of · a tough world that was always there to be faced anyway, He kicked it.. ~ Now, he has a song in his 'heart, but no one to sing to. He drives a truck: Truck ·driving is an honorable pr9fession, but .:__3;11Q... ~ poor substitute for squander:ed fame, artis- tic acnrevement and money.-He-m1ght-.rank t hose.._. things in diCferent order. But if you believe hiS' story, don\f. wonder about his name. Just call him Lucky. He is. I wrote Lucky's story three years ago thi s sea- son-he hoped it might help him make a comeback ~but he got only three Christmas cards and a call from a scared kid who said he'd fixed once and wanted advice. He was also invited to sing at a 4-H Club Christmas party, and accepted. He lectured a Ki· wanis Club on the danger of' drugs. hopefully sav .. ing a captain of industry or two from becoming a doper •. He had slipped on the Jadd~r to tpe stars and fallen. He bad 10 start back up somewhere: REPORTERS SHOULD stay out o! their stories, but involvement is an occasional hazard of the profession. Lucky and I are friends. An alr stract painting he did-a perfect expression of his desperate oullook-hangs in my study. One recent midnight, he called again to an- nounce that comeback. ;_ ~ 'vants me to write his Iile story, incorrecUy believing Ulat might assure it, but I know enough about the publishing system to tell him what be doesn't want to hear. I must \vait, to see if it will be the bittersweet biography of a guy who made it back from hell"to his own particular idea of heaven. Or just plain bitter. SO THERE is one man's history -not an editorial saying drugs are a bad scene -but just a holiday tale about a guy called Lucky. "You're an old junkie at 34," he once said. Hooked at 21, he cleaned up as they say, at 26 on his own basic guts, hoping for a new lease on life. He has won that lease on life. I believe, but he still owes a terrible debt of dollars and days. There are losses too that cannot be paid off, such as a wife and litUe girl. I know nothing at all about the 11-year-old boy who admitted using heroin in the juvenile contact report I read recently (juveniles are contacted, not arrested) except for one thing'"l lie has a big bead start on the way to hell - and not the fiery concept outlined in the Bible. 'Vhatever that may be comes later. Ann Landers Whatever You Gi ve, You A lso Receive DAILY 10.10 SUNDAY 10·7 ( INFANTS' COTION · PANTS 56~ Elastic in b.a.Ck. Asst. c6tors and sizes. STRETCH PANTY HOSE Su11. Onl11 9 7 Women'11 Sf'amleu st~tch ~ nylon. Mi1t-tone, Sunto"P., CJnnamon, Brown Mist. Sma1J, medium. medium tall. Ch&r&e It. MEL"AMINE DINNER· WARE SET FOR 8 . ' 797 Complete 4~piece service for 8. Melamine dinnerware p EAR ANN LANDERS: Last night they 'had one of tqelr ceiling-cracking argu. ment.s. They were both shoul· ing In an atten1pl to get a message across. Neither one was listening lo the other. My mother accused my father or thin.king only of hlmseU. 1'.1y father accused my mother of bting cold. He said she didn ·i appreciate aoythlng. ll's a sham'e they weren·t listening to each other because they were both saying the same thfng. Each wanted the oth•r . to ~ more arJection and und•rstondlu1. husband to social gatherings, i.s break-resistant, chip-resistant. Choose from four pal· business functions, c ivic terns. ~ach pattern with different color accessories -meetings and what have you . Eugene never introduces me avocado. blue, gold or orange. Charge It. If I had the nerve t'd say. "Look, Mom and Dad, U you want IOnlethin& good out oC your marriage, you'd better put 10melh11'11 Sood into it . If each ot you would give the ()(her BOrnC real love and ltod<mw, yoo'd g<L 11 back. Try IL" -SALISBURY, MD. to anybody. His excuse is, "Oh, I thought you knew everyone." Recently Eugene was named an executive with a large fi rm. \Ve've been coing to a number of parties where he koo\\'S the people and I don't. It ts the same story. Last nlghl I told him I think he Is ashamed or me. He eccused me oC having an oversized ln- f erlority compler. Set him straJght. will )'OU please? -MRS. \VUT- TZERNAME ' DEAR MRS. W\TITZER: II Eu1eae b11 beta llkiDI 1'0CI &t 10Cl1I g11htrtng1, buJlne11 fnu('OOnl an4 civic metU.11 tor !G yean, be l1a't ubamed of you. Stop dependlnc 011 him. 1 O·ROLL PACKAGE FACIAL TYPE BATH ROOM TISSUE Sun. Only K JHART@ brand. 10 rolls af 1ott, 1-ply taclal-qua11ty tissue. 325 1httts per roll. each &qUArt 4~x4 ;(. White, pink. yellow. l lf'l'lllH 41,19nUty, -aolf It ... 11,.. MEN JUST "DIG" SHORT SLEEVED COTTON SHIRTS Suaday Onl11 or 1.29 e a. 011r R eg. 1 .97 Wide selection of knit~! box, rib istltch and ring WI crew nec k11, more. Solids, stripe JayeM:! looks. s-~1- 1-XL. ·- I i Hot Ch qr . Charcoal Briquets 97~ c I e an er -Hotter. Burns longer for your J Barbecuing pleasure. 1 20 Lbs. "TlfFANY" BOUDOIR LAMPS Your> Choice Sunda11 Onl11 l 8" boudoir l&rIJps with "Tiffany'' cro\vn sh&de, rylindtt column. In 11. choice of de1i.-ns. Ch&rgc It. 21500 Focal Slide Sorter 1,97 A wonderful new accessory for editinJ and viewing your color slides. See them all at one time. "JADE" BATTERY AND ELECTRIC PORTABLE RADIO , Sunday Only 797 • Reg. 9 .97 Solid state A),f portable radio u~ battery or electric hoUlie CUITtnt. Built-In AC llne cord. Black lcatherttte cue. 'COSTA MESA :oNL ~ !SALE! LONG SLEEVE ' . &-RO.LL-UUHIRTS Reg; 2.88 Encl• Sunday 2 11 01aly , Frilly blouses with ruffle treatments plus .novel· ty prints and pattern shirts. Choose cotton or blended fabrics. Collar styles. 32-38. • MICRO CASSETTE TAPES Yo~r Choice Su ... Only As1ortme"t lncludC!: l\lamas & Pa- pag: Vanilla F"udgr : The Cream : 137 Aretha Franklin. Frank Sinatra; Dean Mutin. Charge it at K mart. FRUIT TREES 1.66 . Includes peaches, nectarine, plum and figs. COLEMAN FUEL FOR STOVES, LANTERNS 84~ . LIMIT 2 GAL: Blended for camp •k>Vn. lanltrnl. Trtp· le rntrred, prolonp lift ., generators. Charge It! DSAR SAL: •'From ibe tMath1 of b1bt1. , • " Tbank ,... .. ,.,-. PEAR ANN LANDERS: For 20 years 1 have cone with my Wiien you set an uaramlll•r lice, ut.od your band aod In· lroduce fOUrstlf. No ooe wtll resent It. In , f1ct, lbey will appreclat. u. ADd 10 ""'m Eugtac. 2200 HARBOR BL VD. ~~~:~' 0~1d COST A MESA . Harbor I I. t r • " ~. ' • •• .,,,.. ... ' ~ ' \ Weekend . \ ' • -• -" -ED ITI ON " IX.on·:·-·· "O' ' ' '. ; • •. SATU~l)AY, J;<NUARY 'l, 1970 " .. 1.~ • .. •· 1. • e·a • ., .. " •• } .. ' . President's Pollution ·~ Stand Cited I \'our Homete ...... Dally Paper • -~ TEN :CENTS . oes? ' ' • 4 By RICHARD P. NALL ot Ille Dtl,.,"l'ltel Slfff Ofshore oil foe. Victor· C. Andrews. chairman of President Nixon 's 1968 Orange County campaign , said today the President's voice would be most h"elpful in passing fede'i-al controls of offshore drilling. Andrews, who Is chairman of the Coastal Area Protective League (CAPL). said he expected the Presidential meeting today wit!} Sen. Geofge Murphy (R· Calif.), would touch on the Santa Barbara disaster .~ pending offshore oil lcgisla· tlon. · · Murphy, who was to meet with the President" at 11 a.m., Js co-autff6r with Sen. Alan Cranston. ([).Calif:), of a senate bill now in the Insular Aff.!lirs Committee that would control drilling in federal waters. DAILY ~ILOT Sl•ff f'fltlrt 'wHAT PRICE DRILl HALT? Oilshore Oil Foe Andrews ~ "It (the bill) is the single most ' --JJOl11'1'luL.bilLthaLhas...to-'1•-"ilh....uie..-.c.h-,,.....rno·od-F..,.. .. -r.eet--....j tidelands." said Andrews mho no ted that ~ 1 ~ • "'-'' v • • it is r~iving full CAPL backli1g. ON A CLEAR DAY, yOU CAN.SEE CATALINA ~ IN THIS CASE ,. FROM CLIFF '~AtOOKIN!O .NEWPORT ,IJ'TTY In Av•lon. Oil Globs in the Harbor and, When Santi Al)8 Wind BtoW1/S1"1ot1. P.rom the M1.lnl aricl Andrews indicated that the President"." Ed;tor Fr ee d relative s\lence on the oil leakage thus " far must be construed as support of . . -. Interior Secretary Hickel's position that· Ort Redi•ce d Bai'l the oil leases continue. " DragRace,Drugs .. Count y ClerkA'uJeA · ~mits 2 ui:$ Wives Cite{f . i~ ~'1µty . • ~,, ' •) ' -. ,-· .... ,\ 1 "' . • •. f.'F f:. • 'Or P · s Won't "A greater voice than conservationists is necped "now ." said Andrews., "to i1n- . press tile . administration that there Is widespread• £eelinl 8mong people v.:ho 1~11) WWI~ drilling td Umtirtue. polhrting the beaches and .\Z.PSt;Uing ~ e~gl9g~. ''We need a powerful w;ive· of.~ment. '' T .,.. "£' n :t'--· Emtiezzlement of Fttnlls ra1 1c. ea IR! , .. ., _ Go to. Paris And::eWs said he hftd made his oil views kl'ibwn to the President previously and did not \l)tend to reapproach him on the matter during this trip. He said he would meet with Sen. Mwphy.-and discuss the • Two persons were killed in stparate traffic accidents in Cypress Friday. one a pedestrian struck by a c31r gnven by a teenage girl reported!)', high 'on ·drugs and other the result of an-apparent high speed drag race.~~-, · ·cypress police said Josepli Sustnan, 58, ol Brooklyn, N.Y., was·fa~lly injured and bis five-11tar-old gi:andsOI) Kel'O"ICth Ostrow of 'Cypress hospitalized in ser· tous'1condiUon. ----- They were walking on a sidewalk wlien Pamela Hultman, 16, of Cypress, 1ost control o( 5'r _car and mowed them ,,do~n. Police SJid Miss Hultman, un1n}ut'ed· ~·as charged wHh mansliughter and dfo\v. ing under-the influence of drugs. She was taken. ~juvenile ha11:. Later Jl'riday, Michael Graham, 18. ol r.arden Grove, died \\'hen his car left a roadway at high speed, careened back onto the t(jad, collided with another car and. exploded in flames. \\'itnesses told police Graham. who was marrie<I, •waS drig racing with another car. · Driver of lhe auto Grahanils car struck, Akira Hirata· 49, of Anaheim, was hospiq.ll~ed in'~ritical eonditiOn.alld. his passenger, Stephen 'LyOns, 28, of. Ana-, heim, .was.reported 'in serious condition. ·~ Richard Winters Burke of Mission Vie· . jo pleaded guilty Friday to two counts or grand theft and admitted that he em- btµle.d sums or money during his two years of employment in the Orange Coun- ty-Clerk's. Office. . Superior ICourt Judge Roberl Gardner ordered Burke to return tG bis court ror senieqcing Feb. 5 and the reading ~ 1; probaUOn report that may well determine thf:l~verity of that sentence. Burke, 27, Of:r6372 PapagayO Drive,lacff a possible state prison tenn ol one -to IO yean on each offense. · District attorney's jnvestigators ·claim that Burke trfinsferred niore than $27,000 frOm county coffers to his own bank ac- count during the ~ime he was employed in the financial di vision of County Clerk Wiiliam St JOhl'ls office. HIS manipula· I.ion ·of banking records was discover- ed by an Orange County Grand Jury auditor aft er frequent cheeks by the county auditor's office had failed to bring it to light. Attorney Robert Law said Friday that his client is still making everr effort lO Testore as much of the lllicltly obtained JundS as he can fo the county. '''But Burke has not yet been successful i~ rpising fund1 on hls plush PapagayG ~e· home, valued by JaW at ~,000 .. JI • < ,.. By JOANNE REYNOLDS Of 1111 Dallr P1191 11111 Two Orange County women whose husbands are prisoners of War in North Vietnam said today they doubt ther will take their familles to Paris to talk lo , , members of the Hanoi delegation. ' AWAITS SENTENCING Former County Aide Burke ~ The home Is up for saJe and Whatever personal profit Burke makes wlll be su~ milted to t~e county, Law, said, plus the proceeds from. family· furnishings and other possessions. Mrs. Edison Millet, whose husband, a Marine Corps lieutenant colonel. v.·as sh.ol down over Vietnam, said she is not sure she will go to Patis in light of the arrival of a Christmas card and Jetter from her husband. "It's the first we've heard from him since he was shot down in Oct. of 1967," she said. ''We were 811 very very excited. The chUdreri -11.Ud it was au the Christmas lhey needed. lt was th! best one ever.'' According to Mrs. lfiller the Jetter in- dicatecfller pilot husband was in good health and had received twG of the packages she had sefll. "It was a short six-line form letter. }le said he v.'as fine and in good health ancl had received two packages. tt was · just great to. hear from him·" she explaioe<I. Mrs. Elaine Pyle , whose Ail' Force cap- tain hu,,band was shot down in June,11966, said stit. hi!! not .co11;11ider:e<t , going Ip . Paris, particularly si nce she received a letter from her husband on Christmas oil situalion. Andrews has been asked to help with Murphy 's lempaign. Andrews said he beli eves the oil washing 8sliore at Catalina Island is from the Santa Barbara leak. carried there by wind action. He said the magnitud e and type of the oil seemed to preclude the possibility that it was pumped £rom the bilge of a ship. Andrews said he hopes the Presidential New...Years' announcement of a strong federal push to control environmental pollution in the 1970s is a harbinger. oC ac- tion to eliminate off-shore drilling. Andrews said it would prnbahlv CO"t the government $650 to $900 million to cancel the oil leases off Santa Baruu1 <.1. He said the government has alre.ady received $660 million in bonuses and the oil jnterests have reportedly expanded another $300 millior.. _ "This wou ld have to be reimbursed,'' said And rews, "bul il's not 100 big a price lo pay." He said, in answer to arguments about oil for~national secu rity, that offshore oil could be placed In reserve and reserve oi l in Kern County's Elk Hill couJd be exploited now. ·Andrews, of 169 Emerald Bay, is also lo be th~ U.S. representative to the \Vorld'~ Fair in Osaka, Japan which opens March 15. He will have the rank of ambassador. 46 M3y-)-0~n-ila-i-P F-igl1ct • • • Eve. "So many ~women h£ve gone and didn 't get ·.!lny information. I just think its 'l.o01n1fh.to ~ Cor...nothing, '' she said. Mrs. 'Pyle said•her husband's letter was very-personal--and contained some in· formation on how tO 'send pa ckages. "The general f:<J ne Of the. ~etter sounded like he was in good health," she said. ·-tr * * Nixon Unhappy . i . Att.Or11ey Seeks Clasi Suit Agaittst .Saddleback 'Colle ge Both womeii, re~dents of Tustin, said l!;ley are ~embers of the NaLiqna~ ~~gue of Fttmilies · ot PrisorlerS · in $(')uthea$t Asia. "Th~ ,girl!i are tryi ng ~ rn11ke tbe public more aware of the difficulties we face," Mrs. Miller commented. •11 think they 're doing a good job." Witl1 Lotter y ? Tl. ldoks as if long·hairecj Llridahl King IS going to have a lot of company when his Los Angeles federal court aclion against Sa~dleback College (OCS to trial. His attorileY ·ts preparing a new petition which will, if the federal court approves it l\f-onday, add 46 more names lo the original acUon and lift it to the status or a "'~liiss -suu:·•·'AJI 46 co-plaiotiffs are • 2 f}u k k' Quakes Jn:t Area Near SF SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Two quiok, disfi·rattling earthquakes jolted a 30-mile area µiuUl oJ here Ji'riday night, causing no reported injuries or damage. The tremors, at 6:52 and 6:5.1 p.m., · regjstered 4.0 and 2.5 on the Richter scale, the Unl\•ersity of California's Berkeley teismoJogy station said. The quakes struck along a line run· ning through Sunnyvale, on the southern lip of San Ftanclsco Bay, to Santacruz; near the coast. ~ ¥enlo Perlt's e•rthquakettsea~ti·ttft­ reported-the-tremor-apparcntly na.un- tcred near San Jose;. · King's fcllo'v students at the Mission Vie· jo junior college campus. ' And all, says Corona del ri.1ar aHGrney Pal Herzog. sport locks at least 'as long, i~noi longer, -than thoese of "the TuBtin youth. Mrs .•. Herwg t?ope~ to have the peition filed and her earlier preliminary in- jWlclioa' against, the college extended lo include the 46 rtudents who predict that they will be barred from .. registraUon Monday. • • Tfte injunction si.gned by Jl.ldge· Har'ry Pregenmn 1.ut \lllll!fk ordered Saddleback tnidtel to allow the 21-year-nld King to i:eglster pMding a fuller airing of the di!pute. ~ Or. l'rt.d Bremer. superlnlendent-presi- clent at Saddleback· College. confirmed Friday that dress codes will be. "very much in force" Monday and .that any 1tu· (lent found to be in violation ct' the 1 regulati~ will be barred' from registra- tion. , -· "We're aware Y!_ fl.frs. llerq's in- t~on..'I and the attitude of the students • 1r, represents," he ,..id. "But we do not !9tftndrto let their. feelings on this subject Jnt·eff:ere witb our application ti acbool1 regu\iUons." Mr1. Herzle pi:edlcll tbat the ~ students who side with King's rejection or the scllool's dress ·eodes 'will' be barred from registering Monday. ''l.ezpcct.to be able to gel them into the C<lurt action and when I do l will immediately notify the Sadd\eback . authfrilies," she said. federal court authorities .were doubtful Friday that any immediate action could be laken'Which would p.Jlow Mrs. Herzog in time to JiaJt what she claims is the.In- tention of Saddleback cOUege authoritie:S to bar a number of Jong-haired students from ,regi stfation. 1 • "She will have to take ·her turn," a clerk romrvented. "Everything we have on the calendar is urgent." ' ·' . ~Y. Lai Spotlight . . . . . Moves 'to Vietnam . ' . . '·' Did President Nixon dra\v a losing ticket in the drart lottery? White Hou se· Press Secretary Ronald Ziegler sidestepped like a veteran bayonet fighter Friday, when que~tioned about whether his boss ~ P,iea~ with the t.'Ollcepl, but said its probl"ems will be· ironed out. Queries at a press confe rence prior to a J-1rlday ni ght dinner in which the Nixon f&mUy planned to host Walter Annenbei:g, U.S. Ambassitdor lo Great. Britain, were touched off bf an earlier story. FT. BENNJ.NG. Ga1 (UPI) -Prosectr· The Amba ssador and his wife spent lion and deleiise attorneys in the lnurder Chrlstmall at their Palm Springs .estate trial of Lt. William L. Calley Jr. pearled and plan to leave for. Loildon Sunday f0t; Vfetnam today for a personal inspec-night, ~hilf the 1President had a1 busy . tionfof ~ aka in which the alleged My wetkend planned himself. · . • .. Lai maaacre occurredi He kicked it off with a round of golf at San Luis DA Dies Capt.Aubreyi.l.Jlaniel,whohead•lhe camp Pendleton,,with pal Bebo Rebozo J , Annf's case: and Maj. Kenneth A. Raby, Friday afternoon. . In Diving 'fragedy , Clllley'• military lawyer, loft Ft. ™'•· He was to meet at ti a.m. today with rUng Friday for Vietnam. Their depart-California Sen, George Murphy, who is en ENSENADA, Me•ico (AP) -;o Jamei:°l'-'U}l c.tme ,!hort1y after •the def~e filed . route to Scripps Clinic and Research w. Powell, dlatrict attome)'-of San Luld a ·~on _asking_ for All c_orrespondenct Ji'oundatlon'in La ,JGJla tor a rooUne an· Obispo County. drowned Friday while deahngiwdh the.My 1.aJ incident to1de-nual medical checkup. s);in divln& Jn Ensenada Bay, police si)ld. t!rtnJne whether proatetJllon could have Sen. Mutphy underwent surgery for ·, Officers said roweh11 oxy1en supplr 'Direi\' polltlcally motlvattd. throat cancer t(ve yeara ago. ' r.an out about 3 p.riJ.' dlp'lng a dive, With 'Raby irk!' that while 1~ South Vietnam F:xact purpoee of. the meeting was not lrjtnda olr !.a Butadora, a• point °" tilt> •lit.Jfouta l!llpoct,recllrds mainlallfed•by dioctoaed, ~ut Zi•gl<r cooc:eded that tho • IOllth elid ol the biy aboU! JI ml~ ·Ko~ F'Wct Baller, Cl]ey'a tld uill~ Presldilnl• had r«:ci>ied .' •~. anxl003 ·,..lb ofllili Bi{a CiHICll')ll.-ctty. -' llld lplilltloC1~1egecLwltneacs..._ •....,.· ~-" (S.. NIXON• P1ge ;~;.. .. . \ .Don ,E!pcr, 23. an alleged editor of. the f!mbolttled Newpoi-t Beach underground rt~i,yspaper "Fr0m Out or $h~OOd Fore~~" was re}ease~ on. re!h'~ bail. frldt1y and won a conHnunce ot his ar- raignment Until next week1• • Elder, whose bail Was cut from $6,250 to $1.875, faces charges of solicitipg to commit grand theft and burglary , and contributing lo the delinquency of a minor. · Elder 11•ill return next Friday to 1.tunicipal Court 1vhere his arraignment on fi ve count s of each or the alleged violation s will resume. Elder, whom police allege is an editor of. the newspaper, was arrestee! New Year's Eve on charges i;temming from pll,blicalion early Jasl December of an article advocating thefl from large com• panies. The newspaper was handed" out to Newport afea high school students. Boating Victims Still Unrecovered' MANHATTAN BEACH (UPI) -.A lit· tie girl's white sweater was snagged on the engine of the boat when it was Pull· ed up onto the beach. but there was "l!ltill no trace t9day of the bodies of six or seven persons whG drowned in a New Year's Day boating tragedy. County lifeguards continued a 1 dr1g· ging operation in heavy su rf throughout the night but di vers who probed off-.. shore holes found only the engine •and parts of the hull ~°-f the CaJ>!ized 26-foot pleasure craft. 1'11e bow of the cabin cruiser washed ash·ore near~the-Herm:~. Beach Pier. __. ..... Albert 'Sextof!, 45, or Los Angeles was at the helm or the borrowd bo'at Thursday when he inadvertently turned it in too close to shore in tough seas. · Lifc"guards rescued seven of the 12 ~·oungsters aboard. A short time later the body Qf Sexton's daughter, ?\farla, 18 ~·as recoVere<l. ·· ' -Or aage Couc ·weather · Sunny? Yes. but not ·necessarily wanne~. That's the oytlOok along the Orange Coast for, weather this ' wee~en~. oVernjglll Jow~ may· dip Into the 3Q1s in some areas. • • • INS ~E TODi\l: .Tudy Con1-e ls "hipu but Un· lu1ppy, And 'slit sous In n prdfiit in today's F'nmil11 Wvekly1 she ii going to .seek her fu11 away fTO!f& La.ugh•ill'S ''sock·it-to-nie" sct1~t. r Ct111r<ll · •·J .A1111 Lfflden t C141nHI" . 0 ·11 L"btcill , I , Ctl'l'lkt U Mttllfl.•t t c""'l"'''°' u MtYlf\ 1 ... 11 .Dull! Hallett 1 .... l1tete IJ ll'll)trllll ..... • • '!"'1• , .. " •111fftalnflltllt U.tl IMll """"'b .. , , •......... I U11tlt Lt'll M -- .~ t ' L --··-··-·-·---~----·-·-~--··~·~-~-~--~·--.... -._ ' . . -Pllot LogbQOk '.Addict's Horror A Grim Le sso ji lly ARTH UR R. VINSEL 01 "'-Calif Plltt ltaH HE RO IN TAKES no holidays; neither does horror. · Neither do some newspapermen. A holiday morning Js one of those times when a single 4uy feels he would ratUe around in the world -like an extra ball on a pool table w ith full comer pockets -if he left the house. So he pours another cup of coffee and thinks how lucky he is not to be facing 1970 paralyzed from the ne<:k dowi.. Or dead of cancer recently like a friend. He also thinks of a 31-year-old man be knows and an 11-year-old boy he doesn't. He has written about bath. 'They have two things in common. whatever other traits they may share. They have used heroin. They hOJ>t they won't again. FOUR CHRISTMAS seasons 110. ooe called, because be had a story to tell, with a touch or . hope to weigh agalnS'l a ton or misery •. Thal is a dt:licat& balance, but he was holding it and he was proud. · Ten years before, you might have recognized his name on jukebox labels or the marquees of fashionable Sunset Strip night clubs. The singer's name no .longer matters. He uses several, but the original one appears 15 times on his rap sheet. . Once, he spent as much money per day on a heavy heroin habit as the average family recently spent-or owes-on Christmas gifts: Junk isn't sold on credit, however, so you get cash whatever way you can. HE IS ALSO one of the few people who ran •O hard down that jerri!ying tunnel of addiction that he found himself back out in the harsh sunlight of a tough world that was always there to be faced anyway. He kicked iL · Now. he bas a song in his heart, but no one to sing to. He drives a truck. Truck driving is an honorable profession, but also a poor substitute for squandered fame, artis- tic achievement and money. He might rank those things-in-different-order;--BuHf-you-believe-·hi-s - story, don't wonder about his name. Just call him Lucky. He is. 1 wrote Lucky's story three years ago Lhis sea· 15011-he hoped it might help him make a comeback -but he got only three ChrisUnas cards and a call from a scared kid who said he'd fixed once and wanted advice. He was also invited to 1Sing at a 4-H Club Cbrislmas party, and accepted. He lectured a Ki- wanis Club on the danger of drugs, hopefully sav· inf a captain of Industry w; two from becoming a doper. He had slipped on the ladder to'tlie stars and fallen. He had lo start back up somewhere. REPORTERS SHOULD stay out or their .rtories, but involvement is an occasional hazard of the profession. Lucky and I are friends. An a~ stract painting he did-a perfect expression .of his desperate outlook-hangs in my study. One recent midnight, he called again to an· nounce that comeback. He wants me to write his life story, incorrecUy believing that might assure it, bu t I know enough about the publishing system to tell him what he doesn't want to hear. I must wait, to see if it will be the bittersweet biography of a guy who made it back from hell to bis own particular idea of heaven. Or just plain bitter. . ~O TH.ERE is one man's history -not an editorial saying drugs are a bad scene -but just a holiday tale about a guy called Lucky. "You're an old junkie at 34," he once said. Hooked at 21, he cleaned up as they say, at 26 on his own basic gu'ls , hoping for a new lease on life. He has won that lease on Ji"fe, I believe, but he still owes a terrible debt of dollars and days. There are losses too that cannot be paid oU such as a wile and little girl. ' I know nothing at all about the II-year-old boy who admitted usmg heroin in the juvenile contact report I read recently (juveniles are contacted not arrested) except for one thing.· • He has a. big head start on the way to he1 1 - and not the fiery concept outlined in the Bible. \Vhatever that may be comes later. Ann Landers Whatever You Give , You A 'CS o Recei ve DAILY 10.10 SUNDAY 10·7 INFANTS' COTTON PANTS 56~ Elastic in back. Asst. colors and sizes. _, . .. ' ........ STRETCH PANTY HOSE Sun. Only 9 7 Women'11 "4e1UT1lcss stretch ~ nylon. Mist-tone, Suntone, Cinnamon. Brown Mist. Small, m!dlum. medium tall. Charge IL MELAMINE DINNER· WARE SET. FOR 8 ;• St11ufay Only 797 Complete 45·piece service for 8. ~ret amine dinnerware DE AR ANN LANDERS : La!:l night they had one of lheir ce11ing-cracking argu- ments. They were both shout· ing in an attempt to get a mf658ge aCl"Ol'ls. Neither one was listening to the other. P.1y mother accused my father or thinking only of hirnselr. My fliher accused my mother of bling cold. He saJd she didn"t 1ppreciate anything. ll"s a ahame they weren 't listening to each other because they 1''tte both ll)'inl' the same thing. EICh wanted the other to shoW more. affection and lll!denotandilli. . husband to 51'.lCial gatherings, is break-resistant, chip.resistant. Choose from four pat· busin_ess functions, civic terns. Each pattern with different color accessories -mettings and what have you. Eugene never introduces me avocado. blue. gold or orange. Charge It. tr I had the nerve I'd say, "Look, Mom and Did, u you want aomethlnc &ood oot of your maniage, you'd bell@r put IOllltlhllli good Into It. Ir ucb ol you """1d live the other aome rt1! Jove and tmdemeu, JOU'd get it back. Trill" -SALISBURY, MD. to anybody. His e1cuse is. • "Oh. l thought you kliew everyone." Recently Eugene was named an executive with a Jaree finn. We've been going to a number of parties where he knows the people and l don't . It is the same story. Last night 1 told him 1 think he Js -ashamed of ,roe. He aceused me of having an oversized Jn. feriority t'Omple1. Set him straight. will you please! -MRS . WUT· TZERNAME DEAR MRS. WUTl'ZER , U E5'1tne lau ben &1ktl1 yoa to aoclil 11tJtertJ(t, bosJHll fauctlons a.ad dvtc meeil•ll for !t yean, be •n•t 11Umed of yoa. Step d<ptod1llJ oo ~Im. . 1 D·RDLL PACKAGE FACIAL TYPE BATH ROOM TISSUE Sun. Only 64~ K .P.lART® br•nd. 10 rollt of soft, 2·ply facitl·quallly U~sue, 325 sheets J)tr roll, each aqua.re 4\t.x4 !,. Whit<?, pink, yellow. l lnlltecl qwnUty, _... told .. d111eft MEN JUST "DIG" SHORT SLEEVED COTTON SHIRTS S und11y Only 4/500 or J.29 ea. 011r Reg. 1.97 \Yide selection of knits! box, rib stitch and ring taH crew neek1. more. Solids, 11trlpe layered looks. S·1'1· 1-XL. • I i Hot Char. [ /. Charcoal Briquets .. 97-~ "TIFFANY" BOUDOIR LAMPS Your Choice Sunda11 Only 18" boudoir lamps with ''Tiffany" crown shad,., cylinder column. In 111 choice o! designs. Charge It. 21500 Focal Slide Sorter 1.97 A wonderful new accessory for editins: and viewing your color slides. See them all at one t1n1e. "JADE" BlTTERY AND ELECTRIC PO~fABLE RADIO '/'' S1111day Only 797 Reg. 8.97 Solid 1t1.te AM portl.ble ndlo .-ue11; battery or elect.rlc t=ouae current. Built-in AC line cord Black leatherttte case. COSTA MESA QNLi Each Sunday S'ALE! LONG SLEEVE R..O..LLU.P,_SlilRt.S.. ' Seg. 2.88 211 I' Only Frilly blouses with ruroe treatments plus noveJ.. ty prints and pattern shirts. Choose cotton or blended fabrics. Collar styles. 32-38. MICRO CASSETIE TAPES Your Choice S nn. 011ly Assortment lnclud~: J'..1amu & Pa· pa.o;; Vanilla Fudge: The Cream: 137 Aretha Franklin. Frank Sinatra; Dean Martin. Charge It at K mart. • ~~~ "" •• ·~ ...... Al~!! .. ------~ FRUIT TREES 1.66 Includes peaches, nectarine, plum and figs. COLEMAN FUEL FOR STOVES, LANTERNS 84~ LDtrr 2 GAL: Bltndtd for c1UT1p stovn, lantenu. 'I'rlp: le nlten!d, prolonp 11~ ti generators. Char&e it! DEAR SAL: "f'nm tbe m11tla of babtl ••• " Thaa.11: JOtl wry raucll. ··-DEAR ANN LANDERS: For 20 yurs l bave 1one with my WHa JOU see u unt1mlU1r f1u, uitod yoat bud aid I•· troduce yountlf. No ooe wlll re1ntt tt. lo I.ct, ~1 wfll ~pprt,elatt it. Aid tt •1ll Eua:eae. 2200 HARBOR BLVD. ~~~:~·0~~COSTA MESA Harbor ... ) ' ' • • ' • • • By THOMAS FQRTUNE ot ... Df'llY PllM ll•lf ~ ~ tn prom and Jos..,.. ~Ing l"'"'9d b7 "iii lcenagen. tnost ol 11=> (roln th~ lfM>ort Harbor arta, who.,. involved \li.Jwiklr Ad>l<..,...t lttJdent..l'Wl b\llln~s, LwM11 '~boot ~"' by being a businessman became possible for JS to 18 year olds when a Jun.lot AChleVemoot center oi>ened last mOQlh in Costa Mesa. · Now 14 student firril11 are 1nanufac- turing products there and the budding en.. trepre:neurs are out selling their products Civilians Too dOCll'.io.door and throo&h retail ootlell "iltn they can lind them. ~anct lheet.a will be made up 1t UM eJ)d ot the . 6Chol)l. year and profit. or looses di>!®<! amop1 ·~ey who Invested to ·1>a<~ the Sludtn< ""'""'!· The idea of J'unlor Achievement Is to ~~!n °f:~·~~s~tath:zea~~: ' says · manager ol ttie Colla Mesa center Sam Ashley. It ls bU61.nes3 f<Jt fun 11nd profit. • About hA1f the student& in eacl\ com- Israel Captures Lebanese Troops .Israell troops captured ant:! brought to Israel 10 Lebanese troops and I I civil· lans in a raid on a Lebanese village Fri· day, an Israeli spokesman said today. The raid was in retaliation for an Arab guerrilla raid on Israel. An Army spo kesman said lhe raid was .. due to increased acts of aggression" by Arab guerrillas from southern Lebanon . The raid was carried out again!t the village of Qala, a mile west of the north- ern Israel town of Metulla where Arab guerrillas abducted an Israeli night watchman. "Israeli raiders entered the village durifi& the night," searched it for 'the abducted Israeli night watchman, cap- tured several petSOnS and withdrew after blowing up the village's guard post, the Israeli spoke15man· said. The strike into Lebaanon came after four Israeli wamings to Lebanon Friday to curb Arab guerrilla activity ag<tinst Israeli. The warnings were m,ade by Israeli Defense Minister Moshe Daya0t'lnforma. tion Mlnisteri Ylsrael Galili and Chief of Starr Halm Bar-lev. Yooef Tekoah, Israeli ambassador to the .United S~, said Israel bolds Le- Top of World .Acres Eyed for Athletic Fields banon responsible for ,.lh kldnaping of the nightwatchman, Shmuel Rosenwas- ser. In Cairo, Al Falah guerrilla sources said .a delegation representing the guer- rilla group will visit Mosco1v y,·ithin the next few days for talks with Soviet government and Communist party offi· cUi.ls. It would be the first meeting between Palestinian guerrillas and .Soviet orfi· cial1 ~ At Falah began raids against Israel at the end ol 1964. Al Fatah sources said several hundred guerrillas marked the firth anniversary of Al Fatah Dec. 31 with 12·hour man- euvers in Jordan. They said scores of tanks, heavy artillery and roc ket launcli· ers took part in the war games over a %2omile area. * * * Israel 'Silent' On Press Report Of Radar Seizure TEL AVIV CUPJ) -An Israeli Anny spokesman today r~Jused to confirm or deny foreign p{ess reports Israeli com~ mandos seized a seven-ton radar station 1n a raid on Egypt and hauled it away in hell copters. Israeli chiet' of &laft lt1aj. Gen. Haim Bar·lev said, however, the raid v.·as "in-- -~ , . . a-edible and seemed lifted 11traight ·La~~ Un1hed Scboot.Disb1ct .. from the movies." Is eyein£1.f acres of ,Top .of the ~o~ld · foreign press reports said Israeli raid-- property fo~ ~a:iie ex\erisi~ ol district ers last Friday seized the Soviet·made athletic tacillt1es. , . radar installation in a raid on an Egyp- 11ie land,.accon:hng to Supermtendent tian Army base al Ras Gharib 125 miles Willi.am l'.11om would accomJnO:<iate. two south of the entrance to the Su~z Canal. tennis cw:rts.· two football practice fields . and twO RJ!.Seball fields . Bar·lev was _quoted by lsr~_el1 news· "It is on the market," Ullom said Fri· )>!lpers ~. teJlin~ the. returning com· day. "and we probably have enough m~: Your incredible feat was so money to develOI? it if the boiro air ~m~licated, so CQ_mJlOWl:ded a~ yet, U out hoods pass there?also is despite all those d1fhcul~es which YO!' ::V~ibilily or acquiring'adjaceht level ~nter.ed, went off ~'Ith _such p~ec1· !and to bring the area up to about 20 s1on, that 1t seems as thou~~ 1t w~s liftt'd -..: , .-.h<>bly about the last 1itra1ght from the movies, acres. J111S IS .,....... ·d ••-1 1· t-' Jevel J.aod or its type tn Laguna and we " The reports sa1 ui:i: srae !S car i:u think it'• a pretty exciting opportunity ror away the r.a~ ~u1pment in large. the district." freight-carrying hehCOJ>l:E" a~ross th~ Ullom said he could not at this time Gu lf of Suez Into Israeli-OCCUpled tema pinpoint the land or reveal the amount of torY · money involved. The adjacent land, he IS&id, is part of, a parcel intended for a housing developnent which encountered financial prob~-. Ullom said that diagrams and detailed Information on the land are being prepared fOr presentation at the Tuesday night meeting of the school board. Preparation and development of the 6.7 t1:cre:1 would include moving some soil. he said, and estimates on thJs operation also will be presented. In addition to expanding school athletic facilitW:s, the land could be available fttr recreational use by the entire com· munity, the _superintendent suggested. DAILY PILOT • ..,...._... H• ....... lffdi a.,... ..... ,..... ,...,. c ......... l oll••• N. w •• .f ,fhlOtonl tf'ld '""ll•M r · J.c~ R. Cvtl•y \l>tt ''""'"''•NI r;.,,.._, M111ftt t T~oll'l•t l(,,.,;1 lidUw Tiit "''' A. Mvrp1'1ift1 M• ... llnl lidl"' --(OJI• M ... : UI Wftl l•Y Sll'9rl H..._, '"'ft' 1'11 WtU a.-. _t...,.,. ~.-lfllcfll JJJ "-' ·-.... , ....... a.K.111 IJl1S la«A •.lU....,,..d \ t.n,1ri ... 17141 64l·4JJI Cl.Wflri A'""' .... 641°1671 • Agneivs Arrive In Bangkok BANGKOK (AP ) -Vice President Spiro T. Agnt\v and his wife arrived Jn Bangkok today lo a 21-gun salute but otherwise quiet official welcome. Agnew, who arrived from Taipei' will spend two days in Bangkok before fly· ing to Nepal and Afghanistan on th e oext leg of his Asian and Pacific tour. Agnew and !Us wife, were met at the plane side by U.S. Ambassador Leonard Unger, who introduced them to Thal Prime Minister Thanom Kittikachom. The American vice lnUidentlal couple were given tropical flower garlands . Agnew and Thanom then inspected a guard of honor before leaving for a dcw.•n- town hoteJ where the Agnews will stay during their visit. Later in the evening the Agnews will have an audience y,~th Thai King Bbum.ibol and Queen Sirikil. Skiers Rescued . From Aerial Car SQUAW VALLEY, Calif. (UPI) -A liolldaf party or 121 skiers hovered for ..almost three hours Friday in a stranded 11er1al tnm 200 feet over a snowy Sierra .llope before all .. ·ere rescued. • Ham Von Nolde, public relalions di· red.Or at Squaw Valley• said no oiie was hljurtd ln the'mis~ap, caused by an area· widt power rauwie. The stranded skiers at riNt were low· eTed from the .tram one at a tlrne by a straitjacket device. Then. 1 cage-type Work cAr W"as put Into operallon, carry. Ing a dozen per~s at once. 1 "We tcnt cof£ct, doughnuts and a litUe wine to the people trapped in the car," Von Nolde said. "The wtathf:r was f\rt(', ~e was no wtnd and the remJe went wllhollt a hitch. • "One man had a harmMlca and en· tertalned the people, who were sumned at first but made the i>e>t ol IL I think OOIM ..._ ___ ...., ______ , ~the younaaters ovan enjoyed IL" -• ]lfny .,. girll and a number ol lhtin offke hu opened a number o1 n"' were elected presicltnts. "'It is one of our centf!hi for Jwikr Achit:wmenl 1nrJuding oelllng po!JM," says Gerald Allen, the ooe at 1240 Logan Ave. In C- .1.anaier lot the district that takes In 'Meil. Oran&o Copaty,. ..,... 'tbe-lludent firms each meeLweco.:dy. at· ' Ashley -"Company-ol the Month",: nlR!Jl with a.-.1 coml""les turnlnr o<it compeiltlon as stimulating interest· and' piQducf,a: ori the workshop equipment miking bulines:s ~aUon exciting to the 'most tiVf6'y nlght. The cent.er ii equipped ~1ths. abOut Ute a high &chool vocatlonal pf'Oo. 1'ttte was no competjtion urrtll this gram with rilore involved Wk having to ochool year with only Philco-Ford ·be coo>lr$ctod out "'dooe by the 6j>Ol1SO!'- Aeronutrontcs sponsoring an area Jllfl!or ing r1nn. .~ Achievement company. But the naUmal The business community is glad to su~ " ·- I . I· port Junior Achievement and pnwkte ada vbon, llld Allen, becaUJe JA In tffecl II "actini tite a press 1gmt promoUna: businesl careers." _a 1Ckn9wledg<d. that coll ea• llud<nll '"' ,.i1ng m<n and more they do not Plan.lo JO 1nto busineu u a career. More Jdea11fUc than ever they say they are in-- terested In helping people, no! In sel!lni people. But many such students end up In bwJ:lnese aa a matter ol survival, not choice, noted Allen. DAILY PILOT , I.. He said then turned flUI to IHI -~ ~ local demand , .. Junior ~ • .,,,. curiosity fader ol what mu.ii business tlck entice.s many of them. .. 19 sakf, "lncJudina: even tome ol the dYlldr ting, lnil-busioesa llUdent&. .. He said natlooally about four out ol !hot Junior Achievement flnM .OOW a praftt at the 'I'd of the year and that Ill southern California the rallo II ~ higher because of the affluence. Followtng are the Junlat' Achlevemtdl companies, .sponsoring firms, Ruderlt presidents, and the products they art manufacturing : Dloarsls -ttyland Labs, Estanc1' High lielllor Pat Godwin prelldent, l barbecue meat turner rod. • l'rtnl• Enterprises -Northrop Cori>< Newport Harbor High junior Ankel- Magnun president, a commemonttv• Apollo fiijbts key chain. / Summitt lndutrle1 -Volt RUbbei Corp., Colla -. High eophomore &It Van Atta president, a closet belt ha!lrer· - Soulll Coad Coooollclated -P~e Telephone and Telegraph Co .. Newporl Harber High junior Dlarme Glenn, a ·ca\ scratching post. Tie.Co -Alli.sate Imurance Co., Mat.U Dei CathoHc High ...u,.. Hobin llverl president, a tie rack. ' Pulsar II -Dana Labs, Coron• del Mar High junior Tom Edson presideot. ~ caddte to hang a wall telephone receivet on while holding the line and leaving to get something. • Mesa AlllOdates and Ce. -Haskin all\ Sell!, Santa Ana Valley Hlgjl jun!"' T«TY ~ Kelly president, a decorative match bol. ~ 111'1 T•ltltfMll'I 1fi11ter Sports Fan Na,oJ.Tet -Wells Fargo Bank,~ eta High senior Rlcbanl Wood president; a key rack with thermometer. rttodayer ~ Hughes Aircraft Q)J Estancia High senior Dave Cox presidentj. cuff links and tie tack. • "Bruno." a two-yiar-old English bulldog who lives in Kalamazoo, Mich., dragged a neighbor's snow saucer to a nearby hill one day jumped on and slid down. The seU·taught sled dog enjoys sllding so much his owners gave him his C?Wn saucer for Christmas. He's been going down hill ever since. Lave -Phlk:<>Fonl Aaon-= Corona del Mar High !enlor Molly president. a towel holder to hong ov« .C lhower door . a PVC to Probe Future Edi.so1i Expa1ision Plans The Public Utilities Commission hear· lngs into Southern California Edison Company's request. to expand their Hun· tingtoo Beach facility will include an in- vestigation into future expaMlon plans for the Southern Caliromia service area supplied by the power company, it wa,s indicated Friday by a PUC spokesman. "FM public hearing purposes, ~n-­ vestigation will be consolidated with Edison'' application to construct two ada dition~ &team electric generat.ing units at Huntii1gton Beach," thesp&kesman ex· plained. , Hearings will be oontinued Tuesday, -·Wednesday and Thursday in the PUC's Los Angeles courtroom. state ofrice building, 107 S. Broad\vay. •·Jn essence, the commiss ion 's in· vestigation broadens the scope d the Huntington Beach proceeding and is designed to insure tilat the commission will have sufficient information before it to balance future electricity needs with environment.al considerations," the ·spokesman added. Police Say Oaklancl Boniher Riskecl Death OAKLAND (AP) -Police say a sato- leur risked death Friday by bl owing up three transformers, darkening 3.600 homes and businesses .. The exploeioo v.·as the latest in a series of mys terious bombings and attacks aaginst Pacific Gas & Electric facilities since March 1968. Police said whoever was responsible for the Friday explosion left dynamite fragments and a battery-operated detona. tor at the scene. "risking death In even setting foot inside the power station." Fre~qe I Tritmgle Producta -Royal Induatr1e1; Estancia High junior. William Karllfl president, a game in which the object ir to eliTJ\inate pegs by jumping them. 1 NIXON WRAPUP •• ·• telegram from Get Oif Out (G.Po>. a San· ta Barbara area citizen~ group. The anti-oil ~lution organization·1 pleas were-expectOO to lie discussed" by Sen, Murphy and the President. Experts headed by Dr. Lee DuBridge. presid~ial science adviser. a n d geologist Dr. John Whitaker have un· dertaken a study of the problem at the administration's request. The President signed four 'final bills from the 1969 Congresskinal session Fri· day and expected Budget Director Robert Mayo to fly in during h evening for final decisions today on the 1971 U.S. fiscal budget. Informed S(!l,ltCea..said .Abe> fte1¥•budp:t will top tfle ~ll&tt mark for the first time in hi5tory, Bigger cuts in defell!le spending were expected to make up for revenue Jost in lhe new tax relier liw. Pr~ident Nixon is committed to, what he calls a bala!lced budget. •• Ziegler also said be is cutting short his California stay and will return to Wash· ington Jan. 8. Nixon celebrates bis. 57th birthday on Jan. 9 and it's. reported friends are planning to give him a party there. - EARLIER Friday, Ziegler discussed the new draft 1ottt:n system with newsmen, after a Los Angeles newspaper story raised doubts about the way the system is workinl and confusion it bas caused. _,.,... The major thru>! ox the dralt;lottery, said Ziegler. is to IJm it a yOung man's uncertainty about the draft to a one year period while he is in Ule 19 to ~year-old draft pool. After the first year the Jottery is limltect lo 19 y_ear olds. Most vulnerable, said Ziegler, are men In I.he first third of the lottery numbers. l..eest. vulnerable are those in the last third. The story quoted one Selective Service attorney as saying a person with the lot· tery number one had no greater chance of being inducted than he ha<\ six months ago and a person with the number 365 was not a great deal safer. All men whose birth was between Jan. J, 1944 and Dec. 31, 1950 received lottery PosslblUUe1 Unlimited -Peat;. . Marwick, Mltchell._and Co., CO!'OllA de\ numbeni In, the Dec. 1 drawing. Mar High junior Randy Holtman presi-" '.'.Ther:e w.ill__bc some· adjustments..:!-. <lent, made.a Santa Claus candy dish, will. said Ziegler, "but I reel it wiI be worked have a new product. ! out to everyone's sallsfaction." Apollo -Standard Pressed steelf One of the bills Nixon eig eel Frid y Estancia High junior Carl St.evem pres~ , n a dent, made a Christmas wreath out ~ gave him al\ extra 13 days to su)>mit his IBM cards, will have a new product. . annual economic report. to Congrth. Mesa Legan Bank -Security' Pacifi& Congress returm Jan. 19 and the new law National Bank, Marywood CathoUc Hlgti changed the date ror the report from Jan. senior R?ziland Fisher ~t, a bank.: 11 to Feb. 2. Ing &er\'1Ce to. lhe other" Juruor Achievt".:. ment companies. 1 The other bills dealt with civil service and personnel ma~. · A flu rry of preskfe al paper work also 11!"1\'Ff.'l .-F"l'm 1oli 1f"'111ng tarlll• on most tfnported · Wllton and velvet carpet! M4 rugs. They go down from 40 percent ot the 21 pereeni that waa in efa [eel before the late President Kennedy raised them in 1962. Most of the imports. ate fTom Belgium, Zltgler said. The White House noted that when the duties were in(rea,sed , other countries retaliated by raising their tariffs on some U.S. ex· port.I. The administration hopes there will be reciprocal reductions the President also granted an extra $50,000 to lllinol1 and Jl'lS,000 to Mlnnewta.. to help overcome damage from floods last spring. Today's Deadline For Slww Names Today is the last day for gelling names Into consideration for free tickets for the Southern Ca!Horn!a Sport!, Vacation and RecreaUonal Vehicle Show at Anaheim Convention Center and the $200 ski vaca· lion the DAILY PILOT, Holiday Alrlines, Ramada Sands and Heavenly Valley are gi ving as a grand prize. Names must be rece ived by mall or in person at the Costa Mesa DAILY PILOT office by noon. The producla range In price from about ·l! to 15. Allen oald. l !' ........ wishing .. boy -k In -o(i thG Jtn\klr AChitwmtnt eon.,_..,• or • product mly telephone the Colta M•a"' ce111er at ~7 and a 11ut1e111 w!U call back,' Allen said. • • ' Anahe~·Orange 1 Area Freeway Junction Closed ' Beginning Monday, the connt<:lor rood '. from the northhound Newport l"reewa7 to .' the eastbound RJverslde Freeway In the·. Anaheim-Orsnge area wllt'be cklled, el· fecUve approximately one year. · Motorists in:;tead will uae the elistinc IOI.Ith front.age road. Through traffic for the Interim will be .' routed via alternate roadways aroi.nl the · Newport-Rivers.ide !reeways Interchange,: 5ince it will be undergoing modllicaUons ) during the 12·month period. The interchange proj~t Is a portion ot -.. a $7.7 million project involving an eight ~ la ne freeway east from the Newport t Freeway to Eucalyptus Drive in the same: area, .. Drivers us.ing this thorou.ghfare should ~. be . alert for changed land marking& and ; direclional signs, plus flagman control. - according to the State Division of ~ High"ays. Jury Makes 'People-P8:trolman' Plea By TO~! BARLEY 01 1t1t DallY ,P'lllt Sltff Santa Ana police and minoMty groups people with wlUch they have come into conflicl during recent yeare today are ."1udying an Or~nge County Grand Jury report which urges that their differences be resolved al the level of "people and patrolmen" rather than ''the heirarchy or the police department, Grand Jury Itself, or community leaders." The plea i5 contained in a special report which provides one of the highlights ol the 1969 Grand Jury'1 final report on ·Its deliberations . rt repeals the warning· that fint Im· ptlled the panel to look into lhe !wring racial situatlon in the county seat. "Tbert exist,, •• , a r.erious and definite comniunicaUon gap between black and brown persons who reside In the ghettoes of the city and the Santa Ana Pollet Department." the report ~es. 1ll1AG~ CITED "The mutual hostiliUes of some ~tlzens and poUce toward each other are based prim•rlly on the stereotypes lhat pollc. and black and brown citilens have or each other,'' il adds. The report-claims thal "gbttto citizens lhlnk that the poHce dcparlment oecs the • bltick and brown communlUea as lfOUPI' .who have little or no Rspect ror tbe law and_the lndividu~~ceman-Al!'l,&l\the othu hand, the report goea on, "the theory that Daniel Michael Lynem did police department asmmes that its com-the killing. munlty and public relations effort -Tticy were wrong and charges· against tours. lectures and working with young the 2l ·ye.ar-old Lyriem -also a·· Negro people -has created an image of un· nd l'k ' -Bl k p ••-derstanding and respeCt among the Jawa a ' 1 e ~ague, 8 ac an.uca - abiding black and brown citizens." were d~ped. But that did not 11Une a "Some citizens have contend~ •• y,e howl of protest from residents who repott-•coes .. On (and ~those cont~ntions -·'claimed that they were abused in the were niade right in the Graind Jury couue of the search and ;their rights rbom), "that rerta.in Sant.a Ana pa· repeatedly violated by uncaring police of· trolmen take every opp or~ u n It y , ficers. regardless. of circumstance or suspected · olfense, to physically abuse them or TRAGEDY FEARED •rough them up', apreadeagle them The (;rand Jury mates it clear that It across cars for lUegal frisking and mate only became Involved In the racial frlltat unneceMarY requests for, and review of, beeauae "It could not lgnor@ a situation lmmlgraUon •green cards'." presenU111 such W'klely opposing points of view. U no attempt iJ made to l'tllOIVt SHOOTING INCJDE.~ these differences," the report sternly One auch request, many ghetto Wan'll, "the poteollaJ danger can have ""ldenll · 1 .. 1. led to the l!hooting la.rt tragic reperc"'1ons for au of Oranae June 4 of Patrolman Nelson Saascer and County." t/'le spotlighting of ponce-minority group Wilh lhat in mind , the Grand Juey split relations In the: Grand Jury room. a 1peclat commlttet Into two sub- Anhur DeWIUe League, 20, ol Santa commtttea and began c re a t I n a Ana, ls today awaJting trial on charges or machinery that would shift the burden ol slaying of orncer Saucer, a shooting lnveJUa:ation and corttellon of the prompted , the pl"OHCuUon clalml, by the dispute from IU own top level to a olflcer'1 d~ that Leque produet citizen-officer confrontation at pend' ldrnUflcatlon. di1C:U&aklns. U!ague, by hl.t own account, came lrom Thole dilCllnions are going On today, the ghctlO and that 11 Where police ol-"l""""' by Grand Jury bacltlni and lhe flcera went !or their search of evti!tnce apparent rtalliaUon of many participants that woul~ support their liril "lmmeouo· • thlt"acll ddli had almost roached tho •• ..i_ ... . ' I ' potnt of no return In a Iona linunlrtna dispute. vourn TALK NEEDED But they must -goon be able to go on without Grand Jury partlcipallon and the elimination of fienior police officers in fa vor of pa!rolmen, thi! report states. It urges the select.Ion ot dlscusllon participants based on citizen rerernl aiid the involvement of « younger segment of the city area -15 to 20 year1 '' a sq&• gested age group. "The Santa Ana police department and the Grand Jury realize that this ii a beginning and Will not r<!Olve all the pro- blems," the report states. "But It will provlde a two-way communication than. net between the clUztM and Jhe patrolman on the street." Human relaUons commJsslona mt.ir:ht abo play their part In the solution of: a long Slandlng problem, the 1"tpOlt adds, and U polnta to another of lta r<oom· mendations to the <"'111\y board of supervlson: the 1uggesUon that It 1t1p. port the cn!8Uon of an Oranl• Coomta Human RelaUons CouncO. Only one city can boast of auch an organitiUon, the report note&. It more w"" to follow lull and, particularly, U a countywlde 11ency were to be cruted, IUCb llouc1 as thooe which lace the police and the people In the ghettoeo of Sant& AM znlaht be dwlpated at the dobatlnl I.Ible. "" - I I I Putp·it and p.;w • ~ 'ftt -V-Ullto« l·.JCzO lat a...m. 1701 BUu Y..st., Calta Me11, "1D. have ~m<inlilf-on 5uDdaJ at a I and JO:IO a.m. "For 1be ·•' """""of-,_ 0.,." wtU be J<the """'1llllJlf m<dltalion ~,.....iecl by the Rev. Paul C. \ .. Bie:Mmeyer. t' ~ At I a.m. the church ~t ., :,.m.,,,.. wtth .1 ..... 1or all ~~...... and at IO:IO a.m. _,, thnJuih sixib grade • clasoa m<el. LOOKING FOR MEANING & RELEVANCE? ,m ~ FAIRVIEW BAPTIST CHURCH ,.._ ~ c.1 k Fa1rv1ew Rd. At Fair Dr., Cott• M••• ~; 9'A.M.~urcfi Sehool ID A.M.-Worahlp ~ Drw-lauftltflf -.,.,,. llW. Shidf .,..,. ·~ ... ,..,c...n.. 141-4611 ~ HAUOR TRINITY BAPTIST CHURCH ~ tuo .... St ... ,,..,...,c.,.M .. :· In. C.-. ....... '-tor 'Sand11 SCbooJ 1:'5 a.m. Morning Worablp 11 :00 a.m. I Baptlll Trainln( Union I p.m. Evening Service 7 p.m. j Wedneoda, Blbfe Study It Pr1yer .............. 7;00 p.m. -FIRSl-SOUTHERN.BAl'TIST..Cf,!URCH 611 HAMILTON, COSTA MISA • a1v. J, D. W.t.LU.CI 1 Su1111fey Schoel •••••••• t :45Tr1lnln9 U11iot1 ••••• ••• !:00 ~ M1r11lllf W1t1hlp •••• , 11 :OOfv111!119 Wor1hipi , , ••• , •:DO i WMfttfftY ''•Y•r Me1lln9 for 111 1911 • ,, . , • , ,, ••••, 7:10 I );::::::: ..... :::::::":':·'~':"::::~~··:':.....,:::::::~A~•·:"':':A~..i:1: .... ::::::j ·~ UNIVERSITY BAPTIST CHURCH { 2211 S. L PALISADH ROAD " SANTA ANA HllGHTS '\ SUNOAT ICHOOL ··-········•••·•·•"•'''"'-''''" A.M. 1.: MO•NINe WOllSMtl" ..................... _ ••••.•. :.11 A.M. I l ,r.g~"'19.c ~~t~~ ·w~DHi°iDATi.. .... -•...... ;;,: ~::: ? ...... /It L ~ rn"' 1 ,Qlllrdl '"'" f't-»17 , FIRST ' I FIRST CHRISTIAN • IAPTIST CHURCH ... .. ......... ..,., I CHURCH '.!° CA-I«• a1pt111) · Victoria & Placentla Ave. ·Costa Mesa • 17411 MefMfle, f.Y. ' a... hM ....... Ml1bfllf ~•rttlflf Wenhl, 1130 I 11:00 i j~,,J1y School •••••• , , • 9:JO ;w'o¥th M"Hftt ••• •••••• 4:00 fr1y1r St rvlc• ••,., •••, 6:]0 l'"'11i1t9 SefYi ce , •• •• •• • 7:00 I ~ N.,_,. ARI .... It et llr'VtM • 142-2421 ' .1._ L Piercy Mlnl'lltr D•ql• HHflt Yowtll MltllWw •• ,..., Wtir'tlllp ............ 11• ·-~ Ir.Ill SdlMI ................ t i• 1.M. Memlftt Wlnl'llp ,,., ...... U14t t .M. YCIUTll Cl1'911pa , •••••••••••• , •• ,.6 """ ..,...,.. ........................ 1 '·"" Nursery Care Provided 141-4171 1414141 '. FIRST CHRISTIAN ' Cllurch ef tht Daily WoN NEWPORT UNITY \ . CHURCH M1ln & Adams Streets I Huntington BNch M•tt1i,._ w.,.111, -••• ••••. 8110 I I f!DO AM.. l 11Ho Sclloel •••••••• 1:41 AM Yo11tt. 6ror.rp• • ••••. 6:00 'M J .,.11i11t Wor1hi1" •••• 7:00 PM t"" ,,..., ...... _w ... -r ""'" UtMrY Ca,. P'nl'Yllflll t i tll 1trVlclft Offlul llf.,2SIJ Dllol Dtwt~ CHURCll I L-D. PllcUllW Mlnll.., lltll & li'fi11t, Ntwpo•f ltt1h ($tr11or Clllrtm Bulld'"'l •:415 A.M. Surwlay Sch••I 10:00 A.M. o • .,otio11al St n ic• Ol'P'tCr: *' w. Coert Hlll'r'ftY, N.t. Pl!OM: '*'1111 DIAL-A·PU.m-'4M6Jt - CllURCH OF RELIGIOUS SCIENCE .. """"" hKll M...-Qllfdl " U111tt11 CIMtlrdl Rtlllltw ldl!K .. LM Alltti. &UN D-'V sr~vu:r ... n AM 1•'1"1iW • , , Alblrt B11rkt, ~.l.c.I'". 1111 lllLL ClUI 01' NfWl'OllT B1-'C14 tit NtMa •rvc~ t•lllN PLIASE DON'T COME • TO CALVARY CHAPEL .J./a,.f,or . Ckri6lian Ckurcfi 0, NIWPOIT llACH -CDlttlpNsl ......... ....... ., H.-per ll•IWll•ry kJI••' • 421L1Mlt.,C...M .. Church School -9:30 A.M. Worship -10:45 A.M. N..,, C.. Ptetllllo4 Phone1 675-3915 Mi1111ter: J5r. D. W. McElroy CHURCH OF CHRIST 281 W. WILSON ST• COSTA MESA trTWllN HAltOl ... PAIUllW ·, SUNOAY MOlllllN• lllLE STUDY ••••••••••• , •• t :d A.M, SUNOAY MOININQ WORSHIP I COMMUNION ,, IO:•lA.M. SUNDAY lVfHIN9 WOASHIP • • • •• ••••••••••••• 6:00 ,.M. WtONlSDAY MNINe lllU STUDY •••••• , ••• , , ]!JO P.M. NU-Y CAU PIOYIDll 0... O, .. .,.,., D. a. Hint Mt.htw .....,_ au ... ,.,. ,. I I I' Beoeb !lunda,. Dr. Cbatles H. Dtererilleld will preach a com- munion medltaUon enUUed "Home for the New Year.•• Wonblp aervlees are held at I, l :!O and II a.m. At (:111.pJD., lflli« blih and collep •1e YoUna people will Join for an "lmpact!" f'o-aram. Guest speakers ,.n be champion wsight lifters from tho Cbrislilll Athlete1 in Ac- tion. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE CHURCHES IU.NCHU OP THI MOTKll CHUlllCM THI PlllT CHURCH OP CHlllllT, SCllNTllT IN toSTON, MAH.lCHUlms , ' "GOD" Sunday, January 4th Cost1 MeM-Flrst Churc" of Chrltf, Sclentlat mo,.._.,.,. Dr .. c.... 111 .. 541114_, ScMol ..... 9:11 A.M, C.BJCh le""--11 A.M. hodlat kfflll, JISO M .. Yarde Dr, Hunllngtonl111c~lr1'l CliVrch Of Christ, Sel•ntisl 110 011.,. • ...,_., khffl -t :lO • 11 100 Clttrfch-11 ....... s.m .. llleMl11t .... -110 01/w L19un1 INc:h-Fint Church of Chrl1t, Scientist 6JI Hlth Df, Chrcll • S11.tty Sclrlffl -9:Jt l 11 :to kMdl111 ....... 214 .. , .. N1wporl Beach-First Church of Christ, Sclentlsl JlOl VI• Uff Cltercll & Sn411sy ka...i -t :l 11-11 :DI R.-1 .. k~, JJll Vie Uh Newport lloa<h-Socond Church of Christ, Sclontist J1 .. hdfl• .... Dr .. c.,..."' .. . Qilrdi'. s-., kllffl-10 .... . hffl111 a ... -JW L c..t Hwy. All are cordially Invited to attend the church services and enjoy the privileges of the Reading Rooma Clll14 C.... Pre'ffdatl AT ALL SllVICU ST. MATTHEW LUTHERAN CHURCti C Ml11ouri Synod) wo~hipi119 tf th• UNIVERSITY PARK SCHOOL S111clbur9 11Mtllh•w•111 Uni.,•nlty Park WORSHIP: 10:10 A.M. Riv. H. Nlor1111"11 ,P11for 13l·l21t aNTRAl BIBIE CHURCH l'nlpheldng The Pkn of God The Person of Christ Tho l'awtr of tM Holy 5plrit Son&y School 9 AM Morn1t11 Wonhip I Ind io:lQ AM l11tliJ"I SrMol 7 rM w..,,...., •lbll t t11111 and~71'M . NWMrY durin, llMC!S AldY-- Crn. of Oiuge and 23rd. Sr. COftl MUI PGtor tL I!. Jones; IFQ M!ir, U•1"'41 Ch111'Clrl •f RELIGIOUS SCIENCE FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH !Ml T._, .t. ... CTl'IMn a M•'IHU•I, FOUNTAIN YALUT UN IJIEO SERVICE• Surtd•v Scllool 9:30 -WOR SHI~. IO:JO Wonllip I Youth Gr•upt -•:JO p.M. ""'"""' '""11dtd tf tH _...ir:. A CMll!IUl'll'Y CPtv!'cll -Vllll'Ot"I Art -''11111)'1 W.lco!T!I EVANGELICAL FREE CHURCH efH"9ftlltMIMtli ,,,, "°""' .... ,, .. ,". • ..,. All"ttl L.. Mllltr, ,., ..... t i• 4.M. -..,..,., kMlf -An ,, ... 111• A.M. -Mlrlllfll Wlnllri.t I r.M.-Y"'91.,..... 11• r.M. -"""'"" """" .. 1 P.M. •• .. 11 ... ,..,.,, A.M-"A ,._ M latfMte C."""Af•,. f..01111 2S What~s Ah~•d? New Currents iii Religwn THE EP~e~?!.~~ou~HURCH IXI I L~~~:~~ ~~~~~~ LUTHERAN CHUR.CH OF THE MASTER ST. JAMIS. JZOt Yle Ud .. N..-,.rt hoclil ~ 2501 Cliff Dr. LI S.4293 7l!O -....-Hety l11t:r..ht l/ n. a... J.,,,.. a. 111111, fl•ter 2900 Pacific View Dr. Corona del Mar t :DO ... ~MOfBl"f l'Nyer lst & Jrd Sw11, \ I n. k..-. 1: ... 1111 WhlM, H.a, IH9terist 2114 • •rti S.1. Aaaiatut hater t :OI •.in-C:Uf'Cll Scheol I 11 :00 •.--Nofy IKa..rtlt lit & JN S11. Pt mlly W0tPll' f:OO ID 10:30 1.111, Menthlt h9yw JM. 4 .. s1111, SUr'IHy sCr-1 t :JO 1o 10:30 1.m. 1 CWhl c.. .. t 1ot .... WOf"Mlfo Sinko 11:00 ta U:OO I DR. WILLIAM R. ELLER Mn.w.i .. ctie-.rl.i .. hrhll W.,t;or Phone 644-7664 •11' A.M. ,..1.,wona1, Thi a ... .1.u P. AsMv II, kKor Nursery care available The .... Dmd A. c,.,..,. AuM:lote lector at ~11 aervic~l., I 0:00 ,t,,M, Snillcry Ctri1rcll SchHI lliOOA..M. r..11 .. w.nM, N...,.,rr..1M ST. MICHAEL 4 ALL ANGELS "' WELCOME '-.. I ,_,,.. Yi.w OW,. et liihtrt-'to, c.,... ff! Mir S.!Hfoy: 1:00, t 1JO altd 11 :OD-Ctrlkl coro at t :JO H•tr hrs • A•MKHI A.II 1-w .. c.,.. .....,. Tiie kn. J.tt. ...... .,.... _no.. '44·046J ST. JOHN THE DIVINE, 2043 Orange Ave., C.M. .....,. 71JO • t :JO CINrch k"-1 -till _,.....,., ... :tt-•·10"••t thfr:hys-..-111M111Cff' Vic., n.. kft. J.hi w. Datte1-.-...... u1.aJ2• ST. WILFRID'S EPISCOPAL CHURCH 1111 II, d C:llalllf l.tfll -.llllt Nit If r1•1 l'llllb l411nllfttlN hKll. Ctlltt!'ni. Tkl It••· .ltlMI C. c.i.y, 1'11"" Sund1y S.rvlcea 1:11 A.M. Mttr Clflllllf!I... t r• A.M. r1111t1Y' S-1CI & Cftllrdl 1:ot ~.M ....... _, lcltlli. 1:JI P'.M •• ,,_,_. UtM A.M. M1r11int WtrMI' YIVfll C"'rdl-"'•l"llll' Cert ,.,.Wllfll FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD CHURCH 14' E. 22nd St., Cotta M111 54-37'1 M. C. CNolc, - kay Nltlloho11, Mlnl1t1r of Youlll SUNDAY SERVICES SUNDAY SCHOOL -9:30 A.M. CLASSD POI A.LL AGll Family Worship-10:50 A.M. -7 P.M. CHURCH CHOIR Sheri! Paulsen, Director Worship Service-8:30 AM Pastor Golln ick, 1pe1kfn9 Yl1lt.n W•lc•--N11r1try A"Hlll"' I..,. Uc....i rr..klieel -Mr1 • .loh11 Wolt"ick, Direttor Phoff: 64S·Zl 2l GLAD TIDINGS ASSEMBLY OF GOD 1 ITH I MONiiOVIA, NEWl"OIT llACH 64&.66JG IVI Biid! Wast II H••• H11,111n Th0Pr1 11 l1"•t11ufl, Pa1fer , S1"' Mill1r, Mu1it al Oi,1cfor 1:41 SnM19Y Sclrlffl-Nrrt"Y Atto1td•M 10:$0 A.M, "A H•w p,.,... •or~ New y .. , .. "Mitt tfte M1111 Wlrl• Came leek" 7:00 P.M. loilt S1r111on1 &., P1ttor "SINGSrlRATION lVIRY SUNDAY NIGHT HARBOR ASSEMBLY OF GOD 740 W. Wll1on, Costa Mesa Y. L HlkTWICI, Pmt., 14f.47M •Ot•llT •· SISTIB Mt1111tw " IMttlel CAllL O•HTllY Ml11llMr tr M¥1 ... SUNDAY SERVICES 9:41 A.M.-SUNDAY IC:HOOL 10:11 A.M.-0... C.r\111 Mlulontry f•orn S•n•t•I 1:11 ,,M. -"THI LAND OP: IMIN NIN• A•AIN" ll:llMOH IY l'ASTOll: COSTA MESA CHRISTIAN SCHOOL '°""'SdMt -K1Mfr91,,_ -•"""""'9ry -CfttN C- TEMPLE SHARON . fte Cllll ,.,,, • ..,,..... .. f9f tfle elttfre H-... A'" •11 w .. " ........ c .. , ...... CHRIST LUTHERAN CHURCH Mi11ourl Sv~ocl 760 VJcttirie It.; Con M11• _.....,_,,_.,....,,,....,_ . 541•5404 W0t111lp Slf'fktt: l;l.J I. 11 A.M. Sund•Y S~Mol; t :JI A.M. Adull •lbll C1•11 : t :• AM. CHllmAN ILIMINTAkY SCHOOL 141·'''' PRINCE OF PEACE LUTHERAN CHURCH M•• YanM Dfln a. laker Straet, c .. ,, M .. , Coli,, AHOllE'"V C. ANDl!llSO/'f. Plllllt" SlllKN• S<.i-1: 1:00. t :lll 1tld 11 :00--.Momll!O Wonfllp: 1:00, t ::IO 1"41 ll:ot Pri11c1 of l'tlt• lutll1r a11 School -Mi•• E1tll1r 0 11011, p,i ncip1I Offict Phont : 549-052 1 Sthool Pllo"'' 149-0162 IT. PAUL'S LUTHlkAN 1tti1sourt Synod 429 Cypre1s Dr. L19un1 S..c:h Phone: Church '\_94°7998 Pananage: 494-8110 Worship Service• -10:00 A.M. Sunday School and Bible Class -8:45 A.M. Advent Services Dec. 4, 11, 18-7:30 P.M. ll·~iiiiiiii;C~hNiiiitmaaiiiiiiiiEv~•iiiiS.;"";;;;:. o~e-iiii0.C.iiii~24-iiii?~'30iiiiP~.Miiii. ;::;::;~ A Cordial Welcome from 1 THE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH I I ' I I ' . ' 1 • •' ,I I ' lalbo1 hl1"d THI UMITID COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH 675·0950 9:10 lr1dition1I Wor1hi ,. .t Su"day Schoel Co1t1 M11• FIRST UNITED METHODIST CHURCH 19t+i St. I H•riror 111..-cl. Church Worthip -9:30 I-I/ Church Scllool -9:JO 5•1·7727 Colla M111 North MESA VERDE METHODIST CHURCH M111v,,c1,1: l•k•r St. 549-27 19 Worthlp I Church Schoel 9:00110:10 A.M. Hunlin9!011 l1ach-North COMMUNITY METHODIST CHURCH 6662 H1il ;..,,, 142·4••1. Wor1hi p & Ch11rch Scllool ' & 10:30 A.M. lnine -E•1t l lu ff UNIVERSITY METllODIST CllURCH l l3·12ll 1 l •Z2 Culv1r Re•d ti U"iv1nily Dri'ft Wo r1hi p I Church Scllool 9 I I 0:30 A.M. l19v"1 Bt•ch LAGUNA BEACH METHODIST CHURCH 21632 W1sl1y Ori"• in So. l1111n1 Wer1hip I I A.M. Churcll Sd. .. I 91JO A.M. 499-1011 Hunti119te11 l11cll N•wport lttch: .-; flRST UNITED CHRIST CHURCH MITHODIST CHURCH BY THE SEA 2721 17th St. 116-1517 l•OoW. B1lbo1 I J..4. S1,.,ic1t -t :JO 111 A.M. 67J.JI05 Nun1ry tll ru 2ntl 9rtcl1 • 11 Wonhip l Chu,th School Church $(.hool-9:30 A.M. 9:10 I; 11 A.M, ~~~= PRESBYTERIAN CHURCHES of the Coastal Areas Christ Church Pres6yterian 20112 Mat!Mll• (NMr A4o-.J H11lttl .. ro1 le11elrl I••· Do11ahl L "ohm, r•ter hltHy Worsltlft: •:ll A.M. Ctr1tr(.h kltool: IO:•S l .M. Offk•: 10112 M99ft9floS,, rhoH: ••l-4t4G Church of th• Covenant tlll h lmew ·~· c .. ,. M ... lruc1 A. Kurrl t, P11to• ~Wenlllpi t 1JI& 11-ctiltff.)I kllMI: t :lO -· ~: 141""4lN St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church '""·A __ .......,._, ·CHAILD HlkllRT DllklM,.ILDt PAITOI Wenlllp • Chrcll ldtMl1 t. ttJO I I I A.M. &Uo7147 St. Matt Presbyterian Church c.,.., ......... & lntMllff D"'9, c.,.IMI 1191 Mw ,,...,.. .,..... .,,.., ,.,., Witnllfp l C.1Nli klrlotl -fa tO:JO A.M. • 644·1141 !~~~~.~~~~~ I.II w, l1li•"• 111 Yeu ••• UNITARIAN All J1wi1h f1 ,,.ilf1t ,,.. l11•1f-4 to 1•111 1n 111 f111I., '"''"'11,1111 UNIVERSALIST lAllUTH IYININ• lllllY1Cl1 HIDAY ft ltll ,,Ii!, , CHURCH Phone< 545711 D•y or Night · S,irltl .. L.eder -111~1 Oert•ll Ooodl'fl•I I I 2l • VJctorf1 SJ., Cetf1 M111 Attend the church of ycur choice on Sundey . I P.M-M'-'•ery • ..., ,,..._. •••-1ss 2 r,,,.pl• Sha•o11 q,)r -01111 Sh1bat 541.14)1 6-46-4652 11'::'~'1.. ·-~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-"·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'"-~~~~~~....;:.~~~~~~~--''l~~~~~~~J•>1--~~~~~~-· ~I ' ' I • Pulpit and "1'ew ' (C..Uand fr.m P11e I) .st. Wlllrtd'o Cb"1U S.llool wUI l>rtsent Its. a n n u a I Eplph&iy Pageant Su'nday. ChUdrtn will be in eo&tume •nd ·Will 1lng ravorlte hymns. other aervlces on Sunday In· elude Commut1lon at 8 a.m., morning prayer at JI o'clock and the 7 p.m. evensong. Temple Sharon, 617 \V, Hamilton, Costa Mesa. will celebrate ~ special family service oa Friday night at 8 o'clOck. Childrtn of the religiour sch~I will .participate in UIO SUV\Ces with Rabbi GarSOn Goodman officiating. The Rab- bi will dedicate his sermon, which is titted "Feathers and Worms; Torah and Plea.sure," ID the chUdren. 8CMol cl...., wlll follow 1t 9:30 a.m. with family worship at 10:50 a.m. Evening services are held at 5:30 and 7 o'clock. C b Qr c b ol lbe Nuareae, d>mmunion servicta are slattid at 8 and ti a.m. for SI. Oeor1e'1 Ep1Jcop1l Cburcb, El Tpro, Sunday. Family worship will be held at'9: 15 a.m. tm Anaheim St .. Corta:~Mep, "ReU&icius-SCience : What It will hold wonhlp services at Is" ls Ute sermon to bo · f0:45 a.m. and 7 p.m. Sunday. delivered by Ute · Rev. Henry Church school is held at 9:30 Gerhard as part of a January and youth meetings a r e se ries on the elements of the scheduled for 5:45 p.m. teachings of Science o( Mind Special revlval services are al , Cburcb of Re 11 g Io us planned for Jan. 5 to 11 •• begtn-~ Scleace, Laguna· Beach, 20061 nlng at 7:30 p.m. Nursery care Laguna Canyon Ro ad , is provided for all services. Services are held at 9 and 11 a.m. nie Rev. Donald E. Roberts Junior church and the high will be in' the pulpit for the school group meet at 9 a.m. 9:30 a.m. service at Christ only. Babysitting service is United Prelbyterian Cllrudl, .also provided at this time. 20UJ Magnolia Sl,. H®tington Classes in Science of Mind Beach. Church school is at 11 begin Jan. 13. Information is a.m. with both a feedback avallable by calling 64-0490. class and a Bible study class --~­,a.MUM -· S.llrilt, Jaouary '· 1970 D.lllY Pilaf I -1 ~ j CURRENTS IN RELIGION • • • ((lGotlned lrom Pqe l) ooclal luu.._ School, nolhli lbe lhlll 11"8 a loaolallo, poripoycholoJIY, Althou&h~! · ent of the ftxed rollllfouo lloeo .0 la yogi, drup and astrolon, tbt nll1011'1 · lion -Jiil broad, amorphouo moven1 new "nrtnctni llylett 0 f million peop · -sUIJ occupy Theolo~cally, too, there worship, the blurrltig 0 t the pews on an averaga Sun-bten a lurrta1 ol tM donOmllllUOnal lines, both in day, 1enerllly adherin( ID sharp demarcatlont -I rtgUlar worabtp forms, the sacred· and profane, natural cqncepts Ille( • activity. overall llllUsUCll yardsUcb and supem1l11tll, with rullty Amon, ltudenta, "even a1 of iastJtut1orlll atrtngth are sttn iDcrtulasJy u all ti. one the instttuUOPal rt I l 1 l o u a ien•ally d~. piece-. forms and ,practices dllln-Avtrli• llteoclance ha 1 CUrTent-,.....r<h ai-1 • lelJ'll•, rellflous oenalblllty declined fldull~ !or a ~adox, llYI Dr. Earl D. C. seema to be lppeflrlng, almost M h d 1 in inverse proportion," says decade., en finan al 1upport rewtr, a et o •t the Rev. Robert o. Dewey, and membership~ row th aociologlJt.theologlan -that d r th h I t recently has NI' , and in religion ts modem man'• ean o e c ape a some cues. reversed in&o a •!deepest conctm," y~ ht't Kalamaioo C o 11 e g e in decline. little interuted Jn the orct, Michigan. ch rch •--But In Contrast ID the ed u and -min& • The r, generation hu ~· so jected the "god o! acleoco" or1anl11tlonal slwnpo and the · and raUonallsm •lone a1 sharp coolr<lnt.atlom w J th The cumulatiu data, he ~·-··•ng ultlmale answe-· denominational leaders at say1, suapata thlrt's a much ~-•• h h larger "reu...i ...... quest" that to personal meanlng and c urc ®nVtntions, m a n y • & ....... ethical progress, many diuffecled believers b ave that of tlie pulpit or pew, and acholan malntaln. developed new ways 0 f It may be a "precursor of a rellg!Olll upresaion aL., the reUglous revolution." a a They clte a tum to the In-ed&e of the churches, hide sweeping as past rtVoluttcu tuitive, e c 1 t • t 1 c , lm-and outs1de. In industry, agriculture and preasionistic &enslblllties of edic1ne man, strtssing the myiterles SI mu 1taneou11 y, the,/m::;:;::;;;;.::;::;:;;;::;:;;;::;;; of life and celebration of It. ecumenical movement f o r1 Olrlstlan unlly, long carried The Tf!"ple •Sharon Youth Croup ..lfill SPoDSOr the Oneg Shabbatb hoUr following the servl<ff, for adults. Senior high youth ''The Remedy the World meet at 6 p.m. SUndayJ in N~" will be the su'bject homes fot atttdy and fellowship. of a Fireside talk by Marc --------------------They will bold a car wa.ab next Towers Monday evening, a Saturday at the church. o'clock, at the Baha'i Center, Modem youth has become on ~efly by denomlnalional 0 obsessed wtth the sacred,'' officials, has loll much of Its and is ''well on the way to leadershJp to a kind of rebel becoming supersUUous," says ecumenism among grass-roots Communion will be oblierved at both services o( Christ Cllllr<b by Ille Sea, 1400 w. Balboa Blvd., Newport Beach. The communion meditation will be delivered by The Rev. David DIProfio. Early worship and church school are at 9:30 a.m. with regular worship at 11 a.m. The Church Women United 985. · Victoria, Costa. Mesa. annual meeting will be held Towen is an auxiliary bOard Friday at 10 a.m. at thl member of the Baba 'i Faith Corona del Mar Community: who has travelled and lectured Church. i·~ through many of the Pacific Many Focus Yule On Peace on Earth the Rev. Andrew Greeley, a Jaymen. C a thollcis prlelWodologist "Denominational differences and bead of the UNveralfy of. have almost no meaning for Chicago's National Rt.starch them," observes the Rev. Or. Center. But he add1 that t.tartln E. Marty, or the "positive signti far outweigh Unlveralty of Clllcaco Divinity Nursery care is provided at bolh services. Pastor Ronald Whitt has cbo.wn as hi! sennon UUe for both the 9 and tt a.m. worship services "A Silent Minority?" based on the Epistle Lesaon, Acts 4:23-31. Communion will be celebrated at botb services for· Ntwport Harbor Lailteru Clmn:b, 2.501 Cliff Drive, Newporl B .. ch. Sunday communion will be "The Land of Beginning" will be the sermon topic glvea by the Rev. Wlllis J. Loar, pastor of . the Fint BapU1& Church of Huatington Beach, at both services: 9:30 a."'.\ at Peeks Chapel, 7801 Bolsa Ave., Westminster and 11 am. at the HuAtington Beach Chapel,· 8th and Orange. Church school is at 9:30 a.m. at the downtown church only. B.Y.F.s' meeting is held at 6 p.m. each Sunday evening followed by services. At the evening service. Pastor Loar will preach "Patching Old GarmenU." celebratedatboththe7:30and Meeting at 'the Senior 9:30 a.m. strvices for SL J.oh'll Citizens Bulldinf, 15th and the Dlvble Episcopal CU..Ch, Jrvi~. Newport Beach. the 2043 Orange Ave., Costa ~fesa .~congreg.ation of Newport Unity Chur~h school classe& ror·a11 Cliurcb will convene·at 10 a.m . _!ges !Ill ~ h.ellli_9:30 _!:m~ 1or.....Surufay_worship_ser.vices. Nunery care .1s prpV10ed. The Rev. Loren Dale Flick. The EYC will meet at 7 p.m. inger will preach "More·Than Cpnquerors." ~ Wednesday services will not be held during January. Islands. He will give a slide presentation at the meeting of the Spiritul Assembly of the Baha'ls. Beginning the new year, .members of Christ Lutheran Cburcb~ 760 Victoria, Costa Mesa, will celebrate com· mun ion at the 8: 15and11 a.m. services Sunday. The Rev, Lothar Tornow will preach, "New Thing Declared" at both services. Sunday school and Bible cla!ises will meet at &:30 a,m. Tuesday a special Epiphany service will be held at 7 p.m. Tht sermon topic will be "Ari se -Shine." ''Do \Ve Have a Ghost of a Chance?" is the sermon sub- ject at Harbor Christian Church, Disciples of CbrisL by Dr. D. W._McElray~-1he can., gregatio n meets each Sunday at Harper Elementary School, 425 E. 18th St .. Costa Mesa. Sunday· school 1neets at 9:30 a.m. wilh worship at 10:45 a .m. Nursery care is provided. By GEORGE W. CORNELL representatives or 33 Prote~ ,,, 11tttl11H wrutr tant and Orthodox denomlna- NE\V YORK (AP) _ Some Uoos of the National Cooncil of people didn't Celebrate Churches, suggested that in-stead of the . usual shopping Christmas as usual this year, splurge, woi:_shlp services be but they are concentrating on held across Ute country focur a basic theme of I t s ed on the need for peace in origin-peace ·on earth. Vietnam. "Glory lo God in the IL also urged that no war highest, and on eartll peace toys be fiven as Christmas among men .•. " gifts ID chlldrin. That was the hallowed POPE PAUL VI in recent message proclaimed at the .. exhortations for Peact also blrth of Jesus, bu( wilh war has condemned "scandatoUs still blighting the w o r I d • spendlnl . . . for luxuriea," particularly in Vietnam, many and for war. in a world of so church leaders sought to focus much distreu and poverty. the season on peace rather From Geneva, Switzerland. than heaps of presents. the Rev. Dr. Eugene Carson r.1.EMB~RS were as.~ed . to Blake, general secretary of a~oid their ~~stomary lavish the world ,Cou n cil of expendltures:.'Jor....~Uls~and to ehurchet;-s-a i d Christma , ~.empe~ commerc1a.llsm by from the ltart, has been "a re~ucmg our ~ h r 1 s t m a. s ce.lebratlon of peace in the buym~ .and givmg our money midst of conflict." to rehgious and peace causes" .. appropriat.e tD the day. He said the ttspons1b1llty The 2 ......... 1 Issued by regt.s on ChrisUans to declare the negative ones." 1---....:..---=_.;._;,;....:..:..== I ' _.J "The 70's will be marked by movements within the church to develop a power base for the visionaries,·~ saya the Rev. ,_ _______ .,,..,,..,.....,,,.._,.-...,._.-._-~ Dr. Gabriel Fackre, o! Lan· DAILY 10 TO 10--SUN, 10 TO 7 caster, Pa., Theologlca·J Seminary. It will bring a drawing tqgether of rebellious but beUeving ideatm.s tor "mutual encouragement, insight and ltlpport and to take action ol which a more timid establish- ment is incapable," he writes in a United Church monthly, Social Action . "A new·timoe nliglon ts breakin1 out, and with It con- gregaticrns are breaking up." the Rev. Robert Raines, a Philldelphia Methodls~ oaya of the &ometlmes jarrlnt new worship forms -tncludina "rock", drama and dancing. While:l.t dlsturbo manyc"the new4ime relicJon Is tapplna: and releasing emotional power after decades of de a d worship." he writes in the Ladles Home Journal, aloa1 with a pan!l or scholars analyzing religion's future. ua'I WltAT WI D01 i..Jli--... ,.. ........ u. • •wwe...&CJt'-1•'1 .... ,.... ,. • l"1'1 •II ,,_ llf ,.. • .,, •• '"'•r. . • Mut•t «;JI a4tt ••• _t.,_ ..,,._ ..... : ='=r.n=. ~ ···-l .................... ·-..... ••..ii. -........... ...,.-Morning worship is scheduJ. ed. for J0:30 a.m. at Re1ur~ rectlon Lalheran Cburcb:, 9812 Hamilton, HunUngton Beach. The Rev. Arthur R. 1\ngley will speak on "Evidences of Permanence. in Times. of Change." Your Horoscope ttt-"'• "Jesus' story of recon· ciliatioo" between men and God, and with one another. "God is the first to reconcile, the first to forgive, the first to The Rev. Dr. Sam Keen, a philosopher-theologian of La Jolla.. says .. we are now lll tranaltion from a rtllglous situation dominated by tht church and rellpou1 pro- f tss~ Jo ·a new rellgtou1 community campoeed of mW1 groups and spiritual ad- _,. IUIUI ... ....... u w. ·-------... _i.....w I I l l Church school meet. in two sessions: grades three and above. at t a. m. and nurRJry -"l:ate &hroogb MCOOd gct:IR at 10:30 am. Cancer: Avoid Alarm &Ive new strength. , • "With such a JRessa:ge en- trusted to ua, what can -we do but rejoice and-beetlme recon-· cilers ourselves." ... ... t nfW ............. ,. ••tr.ff ...-!"-If ................ . ...,..,_ ... Maggie -Pulpit "The Blare of the Trumpet" Is the sermon topic for 10 a.m. Sunday servicts at Corona del Mar Commanlly C b a r c '1 • Coqrt1aUoaal, 611 Heliotrope Ave. The :f\ev. Philip G. Mur· ray will be in the pulpit. Child care and church school are available at the . same hour. Beginning this wtek. the Flnt A1sembly of G o d Church. 146 E. 2%nd St., Costa Mesa, will hold at 8:30 a.m. service each Sunday. Sunday SUNDAY . JANUARY 4 By SYDNEY OMARR Lunar position favorable for f11bto1, e1pecially during early morulng boar1. Cycle hlgb for Scorpio and S1gittarlu1, wblle G e m I n I ahoulil coaceatrate on waJttng game. ARIES (March 21-April 19): Your philotiophical thoughL~ take fonn . You ate able to act on principles. What previously Huntington Beach ORTHODOX* PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH ·~ lecfMft.. l11114htt 9Jtl 1 .. htt sr .. HllWtf1t1tot1 hecll N11r1try for tm1ll chilclr•1t MDllNINti WORSH IP -IT :OO A.M. S11114•y S.heol-9:45 A.M. lln .... ,.. W. M•nto1 t6Z·7J6J et 524·2914 •Conferrru te tho•• belitf1 •nd pr1ctic11 h•ld hi1toric•lly by Pr•1loytt1i1n1. ~~ t Oirliovm J'lemorial park The Soillhltttuls Most Btoiiti/ul Mnnori4Js ~ • cot1M+t!U6' • ClMfTBT . ~~'TREES"" ?!!:~_!OµD .__S....U.-4~. YOU MAY START OUR CLASS STUDY THE WAY TO MASTER THE TE,t&HING OF RELIGIOUS SCllNCE IS THROUGH • SYSTEMATIC CLASS STUDY. SCIENCE OF MIND Ro9 i1lor Now For Isl Y.ur Accroditod Course Clossos Resume Wednosd•y Evening, Jen. 14th, •I 7:30 P.M. Nol Limited To Ago.Creed or B•ckground 'or lnf•rJTMtl1n, Writ• or Cell UNmD CHURC:H OF REUGIOUS SCllNCE of Newport 811ch l•NIST HOLMU. fOUfrfDll '4AILIN• ••••ns: T1l1phon1: 1112 0.1"'10•1•• 17141 s4a.6sao Newport lle1eh tlUO was covered, hidden ()r kept 1Secret now is revealed. This acts in your favor. Be con· fident . TAURUS (April 21).!\fay 20): pe diplomatic. But don·t permit others tC? play games ~·ilh your money. Gain spir'itual insight by opening heart to one who conveys significant message. Study Aries individual. GEMINI (May 21.June 20): Decisions in legal areas might best be put off for another day. Your feelings are not complete))' delineated. Wh ile this doubt exists, bide your Ume. There is no need to rush. CANCER (June 21.July 22): What appears lo be a problem could be psychosomatic in origin. Gel expert aUentia11. But avoid becoming unduly alarmed. Work associate displays tendency to panic. . LEO (July 23-Aug. 22), Decision regarding special relationship might best be delayed . Obtain hint from Gemini message. Many praise you; bul only loyal individual will back Words with act.ions. VIRGO f Aug. 23&pt. 22): Ch005e new directions. Old paths could lack excitement today. Know this, and pioneer a route . A short journey could provide needed slimulatlon. L'BRA !Sept . 23-0ct. 22 ), Join force s with Virgo in- dividual. Plan itinerary that unfolds n e w experiences. Follow through on hunch. Share knowledge; learn by teaching. SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):. Forces may · be scattered where collections. purchases, financial decisions enter pie-As Jesus. in his ministry, ture. Yowg person who seems often put It, "Peace be with you." And he uid, "Blessed intent on certain course may are the peacemaken, for they quickly have change of heart . shall be called sons of God " SAGmARIUs (Nov. ~· Once, when an apol!ltle drew Dec. 21): Yoo face dilemma or his 1word, Jesus admonished being practical or changing hlm : venturen;." C1thollc layt h eo lo &I an Michael Novak foreaee1 a widespread resurgence o f meditative disciplines, as well aa continued increase I n theologically blsed pol!Ucal action involving p e a c e , economic justice and other routine completely. St r Ik e "PVT YOUR sword back In. balance. ~take some revisions to it5 place; for all who take without going completely off :i::,:d~~rd will perish by the BUSINESS AND course. Some red l<lpe con· Varlou ch11tch ant I war P~OFESSIONAL tinues to restrict. groups are hOldlng &pecial CAPRICORN !Dec. 22-Jan observances during the GUIDE 19): Spiritual enlightenment is season, including a month °'i';:::::::::::::=:::::::::::::::~j attainable. Chance for areater "fasUng'1 each Thur ad .-Yll Jmowledge. vision Is closer throuah Christmas, as urged AUTOMOBILE than might be imagined. Open by the interfaith Clergy and WAXING & POLtSHINO mind _and heart. Someone i5 Laymen Concerned a b o u t laterl~Eqloeo strirjng to provide you with Vietnam. · eaned truth. A Roman Catholic 5 AQUARIUS (Jan. 20.Feb. theologian, the Rev. Jooeph J. ROY'S AU 0 DITAIL 18): F r i e n d 1 y atrnot5Jlhere . Fahey of Manhattan C~llege, IOSt Newpor1, Colla Meaa could prevail at home -says the churches, which in Free Pickup & Dellven depends on willingnes.s to let the past elaborated various ••MAmuk•nl 1M1t• cfi•~ bygones be bygones. ·Don't doctrines of war, now are e MAnRESSIS e haggle. Respect rlght or Cami· working harder than ever for1.-------------.I Iy member to dlsaiJ'te. Tben neace. He adds: "An emerg-MA nRESSIS air clears. lng theology of peace is eallln1 BO&TS . HOMES . TllAILEU PISCES (Feb. 19-March 20 ): aLoenUon to the essenUal role bnoJar hJel You have opportunity to know of the Chrla:Uan in ~ v.:ar·torn eo.ta Mee. HaHreN o.. what you want. Be true 10 ~" o r I d : reconciliation of lllO Newport m.,., yoursell. Avoid saying one enemies." • Ubel'.fY 8-1303 thing, mean l n g something An ecumenical communlty1~-..,.,.,,,"'='~:::=-""""I eloe. Frank approoch could In Manhattan coiled Emm1111 • , UPHOLSTIRY • work wonders. House. planned a aeries o!lr-_..__. .... -..-...-._-.1 IF TODAY IS youd "atrtet happentna:s'' to B I RT B D A Y you are celebrate "Chriltmas tn a dlf. forthright. often detemlned to ferent way thll year," strese- point of being stubborn. But ing the urgency of peace and you &ympathize with underdog help for the poor. Mesa Upholstery Uberty 8-4781 iJu NIW>OIT ILYO. and _offer more than mere Up THE tv°EN1'S, beclnnina ~l'Vlct. You are on your way last Saturday with a trumpet.l!jiijiiji to more solid ground. blowing "Jericho March• •JI 1'e rlrod oul "'°'' 1lleul veurMll efld •1lrolclllv, order 5v«itV om1rr'• • PH• tioo1t1e1. 1'PM r,u111 A"'1t Atlroleev. s.lld blrtMll• 1rod JO 'cetoll to O!Nrr boolllel, llw O"'ILY ,lLOT. em: :n•O. Grlftd (Jftlr•I St1t!on. Ntw Yorll. N.Y. 10017 seven times aro\Dld S t . Patrick'1 Cathedral. also in- cluded a silent meditation there this Thuraday to point up "the church'• frequent 1ltence in the race of the evil of war." A Delight FOR DINGHllS, SAILBOATS ind FISHERMEN The group, led by the Rev. David W. Kirk, a CathoJlc priest, also is pulhin& a drive BIBLE THOUGHTS Bible study: Know your Bible BETTER! "Study to show thy .. lf approved unto God". 12 Tim . 2: 15) EnroU NOW for '• dH1 In Bible fundamonl•~· aa:alnst the "comffierclal e1· ploltatlon of Chrtstma1" to cut down extravqant buying so as to "thare With your brotbtrt"....tbe poor and op. :=,. prtOffd. , NI.I~ At lnterrelltlous Hl""t'icet fn Booton. Detro]~ llulfa)o, N.Y., and Selttle, Wllb,, colledlonl were ttktn for carryln1 ... .'Ttl ..... -c.,, c~ """".Self. Hl--.4M .... ·~--wllM•........ 1 --I ............ ,,,__M.,.....t ........ 1 ... 1 ... I 11 ... ..-.. ui...,... ............ ,_. .. ..... u .. A1L WOllt I PllfOIMI• IT rACJOIY• • \ Ta.\1~10. ' 1' IPICIAUlfl ' WHY WAIT!CHARGE ITI · Fl K PREMIER BATTERY I .36_ ·MONTH .~.~.~!!~TEE I 95 r K m~•rt .•• YOUR AlJTO A CCESSORIFS HEAD Q U A nTF.R<;~ SEAUD~AMS ! . • . ' ' ·-- • ' ' I ,,c .... J'or chzal hldli-ta: .... .._., ... f• fM'I -10 lnotall. ....1001 -- m. I • I . -Tlldit Speclah Good at Tilese Locatl-. Owly · ~ ICfOOI the Candtan bonier ID • •Id wor re1ltlero there. Tbe AllnlCAN MADI WllTMINSTU IUINA PAIK IUINA PAii( ~ .i:,.~ :,a,:;_11... COMMANDO MOTORS 11111:::,,. .... i ... ,~ .. i 1111 =:c-.. t f'iO CHARGE-. NO COLLECTIONS-NO OBLIGATIONS Regi1lralion now open! CLASS EACH FRJDAY EVENING, •· . < Beginning Januuy 9, 1970. Phone 549.5)' 11, 646-5763 ,,, Clefll' ind Laymen Con-#...._, 'H.r-4IM.I• ffJ.Zoet 12 .. SIOO HJ.1040 I corned, Nld !hit lllhoulh the #710-7V. H.P.-4241.11 l HUOll ordinarily II • feltlve ...., ;. ..... -.. ..,. I one, mlllloos o! Amer!Cllll COSTA MISA SANTA NIA ! this year found It hon! ID re. Boat Island, Inc. llOl l!"Or lo. • 1411 1111• • I jolce beclu'!'.-_the war 11111 nt w. c-if., ..... hL ... :.rotz .... -71U l sots on, but ui.t neyertheleu 7 ,. " lher• b ca.""' for hoJ><. .._ __ <.•.,4.) ..... 2 _____ ., ____ ~--------....,..----., ' < • \ i l ' . • 8 D.\JLY PllOT .. The Motiop Picture Rating Program G M R. . ' x Thi Motion Pic:ture Code end R1~ln9 Admlnlstretlon •pplies the following r1tin91 to filM• distributed in the U.S.A Pictures rited G, M or R qualify f.or ··the Code s .. 1.~ Pldures feted X do not receive • Seel. The ratings •P• . ' ply to pictures relffsed 1fter No¥1mb1r I, 1968. Sugg·11f1d for GIMEUL 1udienc11, • RISTRICTID. Persons under 16 not admitted unf111 ac• comP,tlnad by parent or adult guardian. ,.,.... ........ 16 .., adrnltf.d. In Californie, th• mi~ rnum •9• u1u1fly I!_ 11. . -• • • l;omment ~-Page .. ' An 'X' Doesn't-Necessarily Mean a Smash By JACK, VALENTI . Ptetl<tea~ Motion PJcture A11octatlon of America Almost • year ago. a critic of me, and of the fresh winds blowing through the motion picture inchistry. made this observation: "The mbvle-rating systeQ"' has as much chance or work.Ing a! we have of landing a man on the moon!" Jn ,a scant 20 word!, he-managed to be wrong oa both counts: In November of 1968 the American motion ~ieture · in· dustry adopted a film-rating method, the success of which, has thus far, been above expectations, tmd In July of this year our nation triumphantly placed not "a man" but two astronauts on th~ moon. When r became head of the motion Pie· ture Association of America in mld-1966, a new fabric of community mores in entertainment was being woven. Strong forces of Change were at work, primarily generated by our younger ciUiens who 'were (and are) a more in!ormed. sophisticated and demanding generation than our ·nation has ever known. One of their demands, and the one· which most Importantly confronted me in my new ·post, was for· honesty, realism and maturity in screen entertairunenL The film industry's attempts to heed Utis call had brought it jnto. conlir.t with con- cerned groups across the nation. On the m•kers and movie execuUves are true profes.sJonala, creative men and women, who are earnest wor~. Bui there are a minority who are nOt. The producer or diredor who inserts senseless violence and useless so: into his film "° that be C8J\. Jure more restless youngsters (and grow1H1ps) into the boz office is •faker and a fraud, and he ought to be so labt!:l-ed. ' . The criUc who pillages every crevice of his integrity so that be may be accounted inteUectually "with it" -and who describel·trash as art-is surely 1 'part of the genetal contagion. To "do one's thing" publicly sometimes Is to be coarsely rude to one's neighbor, for the line where your liberty stops ls where your neighbor's righta begin. Blood and brutality, entwined nudity, foul language -these are the last, gasping cries of . the inept film -maker as he drowns, talentless, 111 a sea of mediocrity. The great majorily of movies and the men who make them are not of this temper. We must not confuse the ma- jority of motion picture executiyes who are responsible with the few who are not. JACK VALENTI ata"'°, even c\ty to city, between 11 and JI. In New Yoc:k, for eu.mple; it's 17 . 18 THE SYllTD\ warJtin&! Statistics 'provide a rahter heartening alllrmative. since November I, 19'8, our aeven- momber fWIH'allng board bas ,.viewed almo6t ~ motion plcWres. Of all tJXl6e ratings,. only four have been terioosly criticized publicly. ·Most theaters across the nation have 111pported the raUngs, publtolling the oymbolt in --adv.rtlsing aOO ell· forcing the Tarioos rutricilons-At the pre.sent tlme1 we estimate 80 percent to 115 pm:ent oMhe theaten "!'~ 90 percent to 95 percerit' of. total attendance are cooperaUog. Some' feartd the ratings would "open floodgates for a torrtnt of X-type films." Let's cbeci: the staUstics. To date (as or August It, 1969), 347 films have been rated ' 117 (33.7 pen:ent) G: 133131.9 per- cent) M; Ill) (23.0 percent) R; IS (1.4 per· oent) S. Nearly three-quarters of cutmlt acreen tiroduct falls int.o the G or M categories: Moreover, ~e is..no_great ruoll to tile boxolltce ol X films. Indeed bo:r:office grosaes show that the greal majority ol hit. films are G or M, with a sprinkling ol R .00 X. one hand, there were judicial decisions from the highest court Of th!; land widen- ing borders of permissiveness for the Add• 4 • T 4 content of ~ks, plays and motion pie· .. . 11-1ve . esas ~r.;~~~.:.1':1f.:t~:~1~~~ AND SO, with this background we worked hard for many months to create the new film-rating system. The idea itself was not new. For years, It had-been the subject o{ bitter deba~. both within and without the motion picture industry. But now we had reached a crossroad.!!. Either the screen would rate it.s product and thu.!I restrict admission to some of its fare, aim it.s movies at the traditional "12-year~ld mentality," or explore the new freedoms granted it and risk inviting federal government regulation. Or worse, create-local..-'.!watobdoe:''-groups..__each with its own criteria of censorship. fOf"' himself. We ~ rating _[Qr. the con- cerned parC¥\l. ~ provide him an im· mediate (and hopefully accurate) guide as to what screen fare is ·or is not auitable for his youngster. I feel that any )'OUllptel' comes Into more cont.ad with "life" in the ocboolyml. clasaroom, and neighborhood thJn he doe.sin the moVie theater. Youn g people Whose parents have given them hooest, ~ value!! area~ likely to be emu~ by anytlling. I REALIZE that our film rating aystem,, thou"'1 it 'strains to be u ac- curate anct rta30flable as mortals can make it, -cinnot-pleale-everyone.-'Iber.c are eome film-makers who are vigorously OfJpooecl because they . !hint ii restricts their freedom (it does not). 'Ibere is a poH.ion ol I.be public which is ~g""""1y opposed bee&""' they lilint it sancUlles liceme (it 'does not). In any enterprise that attemptg . t.o "rate" wbat creative ~le construct,· there is bound t.o be disagreement and criticism. We in. the mot.ion pictirt industty e1pect this, for any "cultural judgment" passed for bne's peers is sure to be Oawed. But 1 always aak a critic, what would yOu si.lggest? were calling for some kind of censorship. -110~· FoollsGet on-:theeRAS-cist~~11~fs11fv BASIC plulosophy fut Americans UM:d to lake it for granted ~ ~Uiat their f6od was the safest on earth. They are not so sure today. Products Joni on the market have been called into ques- tloo, particularly food additive&. Broadly defined, these are substances added lo foods, intentionally or not, in the count of growth or processing. A few addlt.ives recently , have beea banned, resrricted· or voltmtarily diacon. tinUed under the Wtight·of medical IUIPi· clqn -if not proof -that they are poten- tially hann(ul to the human consumer. The &rtifJcial sweetener cyclamate, for extmple, disappeared from IOft drlnks Jail. 1 under government orders. The chemical pesUcide DOT, the so-called unlnvlted additive, wlll be restricted to ••essential uses" from 1970 011ward. THE FOOD AND DRUG ! . ' ; I • censorship and classification. by-law are wrong. The screen shou.Jd be as free a medium as books, newspapers. ·magazines, music, painting arid sculpture. However, freedom without discipline is license •.• aAd that's wrong. too. With these thoughts in mind , we began to seek some kind of workable, practical solution. What resulted was a new national, volun- tary film-rating system.. All of us realized that we must never make motion picture for jusl one audience. If we seek, or are forced to seek, •lhfl lowest common denominator, we will lind'ourselves mak· 1ng movies that would . be, as one Supreme Court justice put it, inane. We cannot allow children to set the boundaries fi>r motion picture creativity, any more than we would allow children to organize our moral apparatus or our na· tional priorities. But we can and ought to be concerned for our children and what they read and see. That's what Lhe film-raUng system is all abouL THE GREAT l\lAJORITY OF film- T h e second mentioned alternative already was destroying the motion pic· ture as a vital force in our society; it wu repellent to the bulk or the great movie- going audienct, those 20 and and under. The third alternative was equally self· destroying. For example. one Latin American government can ban any film ''that Jacks artiStic ·merit"; one Euro- pe.an nation bars any movie whlch Ct'.ln· ta ins an unfavorable depiction of the military; another country forbids any screenplay which suggests that whiles and blacks may be egual. ln the final analysis, there was only one choi~, a voluntary rating system to alert parents to thoge motion pictures they may or may not want their children to ee; and lo restrict attendance of young people at certain films, e v e. n without parental guidance. TlilS IS THE HEAR and soul of the rating system, and it cannot be stressed enough. We are not rating artistic content or the rheril of any film. We are not rating for the adult taste; high court decision,, have ruled the adult can fend Rating categories. which have been II> plied to alllYfotlon pictures released sir1ce November t, 1968-:-fhat ar----estzbriiHiedto the Code and Rating Administration. are as follows: Taking the ratings one. by one, a G m. dicates a motion picture is suitaPle for · general audiences, but this does NOT mean the film is primarlly for children. lt means a parent, in our judgment, won't be embarrassed by what's ~hown on screen if he's in the company of hia child. Sucb sophisticated prod\Jd.ions as ''Oliver!", "FUMy Girl" and "A Man For All Seasons" were G fl)Jru: •.• as wu Walt Disney's. "The Love Bug." M ~is also 8n unrestricted raUng. Youngsters can attend by themselves, but what we are doing here is saying: "Mr. and Mrs.. Parent, there may or may not be something in this particular movie you, as a parent, may object to. Please gel some more W~tion and then talk jt over Witb your family." R is out first restricted rating, re- quiring that a parent or adult guardian accompany a.young patron; and with an X, there is no option al all: no children are admitted ••. period. The cutoff age for R and X film! vary, from state to What we finally ev_plve<I Is what I believe to be a aenaible, logical ~ that i.s the best· that can be put togetbet in a democratic society. That means it is not perfect, but it wtds; that is, if.the great zTiajority of thoughtful AmericaM help make it work. Today, the molion picture industry hi providing consumer }JlformaUon. It i.'11 helping to block tht impoBlijon of censorsrup by outsiders, includjng th• -.ite. We art an industry driermined to continue to carry.out or responsibility to tM public on our own. And that is the way it ought to be. Admlnis1raUon has ordered a review of addiUves on tu "generally regarded as eafe" -GRAS -list. Agency officials acknowledge, hawev.er. ·that they Jack fwxls to revU the entire list of more than 600 additives. The job might take yeaN even U su!ricient funds were available. The performance of federal agencie• responsible for the safely of what people eat aod drink offers them little reassurance. Within the past year, critica ranging from Ralph f'!ader to cor\4 gressionaJ committees to the American Bar A$sociation have accused one or amther of Ul08e agenclea of ineptitude, conflicts of interest or dertlicUon of duty. • A confidential report made by a panel of f .D.A. officials in mld·1989 estimated lhal two million to ten million Americana become ill every year from eating om- taminated food. The panel concluded that the agency was o>1not equipped to cope with the challenge" of protect.Ing the public from bad load, bad drugs aod bad C06meliC$. years. Those already in use when the licensing requirement became law, Jan. 1, 19$8, form the GRAS lisL The list In· eludes nit and spices known to peoples of' all civilizations since the dawn of history. It also included, until recenUy, tht iweetener cyclamate. A ~IUVATE TESTING laboratory under contract to F.D.A. reported on Oct. I that rats fed heavy doses or cyclaniate revealed' a b te b incidence of bladder tumors. Twelve days lat.er the Secretary of HeaU.h, EducaUon and Welfare, Robert H. Finch, invoked the rarely tued Delaney Clause to order the sweetener removed from &Oft drinks by Jan. 1. The clause states that "No additive shall be deemed safe if it is found to induce 'cancer when ingested by man or animal." 'We Try to Report the Other Side' MUCH OF THE crltlc!A!n ol regula~ry agencies is of long standing. The Federal Trade Commission baa been found wan· tiQg by outside analysts almost .since ill founding in 1914. What'a new now is public col\Ci!rn. In Congress this concern .sw'faces as "consumerism" - a wave of protest stimulated fnpart by Nader and a ftl'f ccilleagues who~bear re semblance to tht muckrakers who were active around the tum ofJhe century. The ne•·found concern also ref\ects rapid advances in food technblogy. Ad- ditives to increase the flavor of food, to color it. or to lengthen its sheJ(.Jlfe are used 50 percent more today than • dei-ade ago. Department of Agriculture studies indicate that 1 the a v e r a g e American eat.a three pound& of additives every year, about onf,ofourtb of one per· cent of his totAl lood Intake. Some 2.000 additives have been tested for aafety and 'licensed for use Jn apecilled amowita during the past 12 Saturday, Jal!uary 3, 1970 The 'eomment Page of the Daily Pilot seeks to inform and stimulate readers by presenting ti variety of com· mentary on topics of inter· est and slgnllicance . from lnfonned ob!:ervers 1a n d opok8'lllen. Robert H. Weed, Publlohor The Finch order also applied to foods. Al first those alntaining cyclamate were to be removed from grocery shelves by Feb. 1. Then the deadline was extended to Sept. 1 to conlorm with a similar order in Canada. However. a way was left open for diet foods and non.prescription .medlcmt·s containing cyclamatt to re· main on the market indefinitely. They can be sold after Sept 1, 1970, U "drug- labeled." 11IE STATED INTENT of this ex- ception ls to provide for needs of dieters. ,An F .D.A. spokesman told Editorial Research Reports that presumably a range of cyclamate products could reap- pear on grocery shelves when relabeled aild .be purcha.sed by any shopper. The rules for relabeling have not yet been issued. llow rigidly the government enforces cyclaffiate and DDT restrictions is seen as a test of whether the Nixon AdmWstraUon is ~rious about consumer protectioo. -Editorial Reteartb Quotes ~tort R. Lewil, L.A. -"I am nrmty convinced thlt II our interMUonal pre5Llge deptnded on our beating Ruuia to diM:Ovtrlng the cause and cure for canctr, we'd Invest $24 bllUon In research and with our competitive spirit hotly aroused, win h1nd1 down!" Shlrley J. Pk kJeJ, Colusa -"l ha,•e been lrrllated by thole who blame our polh11ion (only} on Industry and uUHtiea. Collectively we art all pat polluters aJld actnery defacers, and ~ publte now bears great expense to clean our sttee.ls, hishway5, rtcre&tional areas. and othrr public: areas. '1 • Abridged from. remarks made be· fore the Orange County forum of · Totmi flaJt-a di3cu.ssion of "Criteria for Re3ponsiblt: News Reporting." By ROBERT N. WEED Publisher, The DAILY PILOT What is news? News ls any new ln- fonnation that is significant or of Interest to a large number of readers. Obviously. not everything is news. What priorities govern our selection of nev.·s items? First, the news closest to home is usually the most interesting and significant to the average person. Our first priority for news is that which af· fects the reader's role 8$ a decision-mak- ing citizen. As a general rule, then, the news of local governmental agencies, in- cluding law enforcement, gets first priority bn our newspaper. The second priority for news selection ls that 'which affecb the reac1er •5 personal welfare-bis well-being as an in- dividual. a parent. a wage earner, and a consumer. In this area, the slrong emphasis ls on education, health. finance. personal development, recreation, and culture. A third priority is human interest ntws that tells the reader what is happening to other individuals. Jt is important because it give.~ the reader a perspective or his own life. THE QUESTION IS, who decklea which news storie1 wif' gel into print'! t.1ost papers have a publishing philosophy-a credo lo guide the way they handle news. At the Daily Pilot. we strive to report the news fUlly and lmparUally. AJt~h we are po11Llcally independent, opinlOn la exprtssed on Ole edltorlaJ page. We strive to publish all t.ldea of slgnili· cant controversial issue&. ()Jr objective b to gh-e readers an objective, lntertsting, Jnd rea.o;onabty balances! overview of the new l11formatlon that i11 available each day. "" We always try to report the "other side" of an l~ue. but often it Is difficult to achi eve a balance each day. If a reader objects lo our ~tyle of news rt";M>rtlng or our edilorl!1! opinions. there Is always open rtcourse through our leUen-to-~itor.-eolumn. THE JOB OF ~lecting the news lo . print C001bine1 the skill and judgment o~ seve ral people. Tile processing of local news, for example: involves 4 peojile-a city editor. news editor, chief copy editor, and an assistant copy editor. They all ez. amine stories for accuracy, com- pleteness. and fairness. \Vire service news already hu gone through 2 to & wire service editors. The managing editor, chief copy editor. and I or 2 other editors consult and decide on what page a story will appear. On a I a r g e metropolitan newspaper, twice as many people may be involved in this decision. The best assurance that you will get fair, accurate neW3 is the fact -that these newsmen are trained, experienced pro- fessionals. Most editors serve a 1oog ai> prenUcesbip in judging and handling the news. 1bey Jive with the news and get the fee! of how a story fits Into the whole pat- tern of world news on a given day~ !\UNY PEOPLE SAY we present the bad news and play down the good news. But, the way things are going today, good news of any consequence is scarce. If we hid the »eaUed "bad news" and puffed up the "good news," either the public would soon gd, wise to us or they would be .in· blissful ignorance about .a Jot of problems that need solutions. Wt can make Wise decisions on today's problerM <111.f if we know the stark, often unpala· table facts. A newspaper Is a mirror renectlng Joeiety. Tt ts unfair ~o blame t.be mirror for the image it reflects, or hang the messenger who brings bad news. Newspapers, try not to lie. The trouble is, they are stuck with reporting what i5 being palmed «I u the truth by a lot or liars. r-----------Our Jllan in San Francisco-----------, ' The Friendly Spies of United ByBERBCAEN SAN FRANCISCO -The staSOI\ pro- duces pleasant sillinneues. , .United 127 from Detroit was approaching S.F. the other night, and Capl Mark Ro~ erts flicktd on the public address sys- tem: ''This is your Captain speaking. Directly below is Moffett Field and to lhe left is the quaint village of Lo! Altos, home of the fabulous Mac's Room, last ol the world's great steak And chop houses. T'm telling you this because Bob Whiteacre, the · owner, promised me a free meal if I did." The fint flying commercial.J. •. Now here we are aboard an American Alrllqes. filght to N.Y.' •s a stewardcs!I slage-whispe.rs outside a lavatory door: "And don't lorget to zipper your pants,!' Jay .Pl)nson.by, overhearing this while squetzlng past, beamed• to htr, ''Wow, tJtia airline really givts 5ervice!" -lit whicl\ potnt oul march· l!d a four-ytaN:lld boy, Zipped. AND IT'S SO 5Clrte, too : Sgt, ?>.1e1 Nelm of the Pacifica Police Dept. will blow a litUe pot at the lat B3plist Church there toA10rrow and-Sat. night Part of A marljuan11 seminar -the Sarge wantJ the parents to know wh•t grass smells llkt. Among other things. it smells like a year In Jail. ~rhich could be haurdous to your health. ' MEMORABLH SCENE aboard ' a Munl 38 bus Sunday nigbL At Geary and 19th, the driver applied lhe brakes and arost to announce to lhf: passengers: "I'm gonna propost: to my girl right here and I'm not starting this bus till she says yes!" For 7D minutes. he pleaded with the ~girl, first-named Betty, as the passenger~ chimed In with "Come on. !lay yes, t gotta get home!" -but Betty wss adamant. At last she debarked to loud cries of "Awwww" .. from the passengers, and the sad driver drove Muniserably Into the night .•. Love on a bus, but Betty chO!e a transfer. AlllONG THE .. 1 .... uca: A sip In SauSaUto's Valhalla reads "Anf<m' purcha.,..tng liquor under 21 years old will be proseculed.1r After staring at It fnr a while. Ralph Barnes confessed that the Jack Dankls he was drj,nking 1''3S only seven yea~ld md tPlrew himself on the me~ or 5311'.Y Stan. ford ... At Perry's, the New Ynrklsh new boron Union. B11rtender Michael PtfcCourt told about the customer wM 1vA!'I '° obno~lous lhtit his ldrl friend finally upped hrm with • beer bottle. At which Glenn Dorenbush. tn his customAry position at the neutral end or~ bAr. announced mildly: 0 Put that beer on my tab." __ CARROLL SOO 1100, ihe S.F. Zoo's chfflf patroo, Dashes from Ngorongoni Crater, Tamania, E. Africa: "Oo a one-way road we met a large ,bull elephant approaching our Land Rover from the op~lte direction. We had to g,o rapidly in reverse Ull the elephant finally branched orr. sin« the signs here read 'Elepha,pts Have Right of \Vay.' " Naw there's the unnecessary traffic sign of all lime. SPEAKING OF THE wit of womt:n (ah?), Leslie Frewin'11 new book titled exactly that recount& the time Beatrlct' ~lllie wi.,.. dining with the Royal Fami· ly at Bucktngham Palace. where a nervous waiter ~pined ·!IOI.Ip on her ctrea. Thundered Bea: "Aever darke.n my Dior again!" ' - WEU., IT was a lowly evening in ington Square, and here was this · ~rur pranclng around. doing Usthenlts· and genenlly enjoying tlmself. ·P~y either laughed at r ltnored him -you know how it is n San P'rancitc0 -~,.hlle Frank Matianetti, owner of Fio d'ltalia, :Watched from lcroslt the street. After about 30 minutes. Frank reluctutlv caned Ctntral Station, •-here an of- ficer asked "ts he bothtrlng anybody?" "No." aa1d Frank. "but the !lun'1 golnf: down and 1 wnold.n't want hlm to catch cold." Is this the la.at civillttd city in the country? You betcha. ' < ' • ' • • /. S•turd1y, J.tnu•tY '· 1970 DAtlV PILOT £ Meetings Along the OranJJe Coast Area Beall• Notices -------r-1·. " · ~~ASTER · • ·La..c.ftf ~ G:.•1i;J C_,. /Wf., C..11 Mn. SWV!YN bY IOllt. Wh11tm A •• ltotlltt, Jftrle M. ~ Hei'Wn L, Dauetl""-Loll 01yler, Efl'llNI ... ~xfleld. M9re1rl't Y(1r11lcke •1'111 Ellr1llelll •-· k<"'llc:n 11 .k$11rto Mo. h'lll F1l'tllty Colonltl F-•I 1111191, lwwt rdl"' dlrKtora. STF;ELE StMlt. LkrY H .. Jr .• ~'· U» f/vt11M11tr ,.I., 'Colhl M-... SUrvlwd bf 'll'lft', V1r- ol1111, -Gu'f, dt\lll'lfl', Killflr. Molt!-,' . ''•.Mn., JoAlll\ DeiWlll of ......... tl'Olllt!'. l dw•rd toms ef Wut'Cw l1>1, ~( MrVIUs w\lf bs !Mid 11 1•11 IFllMWl'I .Momo•rv CMHI MOM•r :r:• '11.m. 1..it-' 11m.l9. T1lott w\J.tll"', IN!' corttributto "' 11'1 Clilld,..,.. Ho!oll1I Ill Orll!ff C-1v, 11ot W. l 1\ltl1, Orl rl9L lkll ll"lllfwl'f Mortul/'Y, Dlr.ctorL WATHEN Lftltl9 W•Then, o1 21 7' Fl lr'\119'N ltOld. C111t1 Melt. krvlc" pendlnt 11 ltll fteiMWI Y 1'Ja'IU1f1', ; ROE Frl'd ltoe. or 111 ,,.,._,-,. st., CO.It ~-servktt "1\dlnt 11 1111 llRIH• WI-11'.ofMN, HENRY fir. P:rtdlf'!rtl H. Han<V," If, of 1W Monrovl• SI., Coll• Mell. surrv1Ylll:I by wlft', Fl11,.nu11 dtuj!Mt~. Mn. -01111 M. Cl'll!TI ef Cot.It Mt~ end Mn. T..i llttkHtldl of TtQll 3 brolMr• •111111 ~ •1•"1'1 of ,_., ' Cll'lrokftlldrw111 ' ..,.,,.,..,ndefl llf...,.. Or. H t11ry -• • rn.mbfr <Jf pn,rlm Co,..rn•lllo!ltl CllurCll of l'omoi'I•, PomoN ,.._k loCI.. No. i'6 Fa.AM, ll:OVll Al'Cft (,,_If"' U , PHI Ptf'N)n Cf Et11f•11 $t1r, Cl\.IPlt• 110. S.rvio:n 11 •·""· Molld•Y• ToCld M!ll'IGl"ltl Cl'1'Ptl, .... -· hlttrme"' P&moN Ma!.1111111111'1. Rl"I. J11:1'{mllllld W•str, ol'llcJ1tl11f.. Wt1t- cun c111"t Mortwrv. dlrtrtars. ARBUCKLE 6 SON . WeltcWf Mortuary -tn--E.-i 7dli St.,-4M~ ..... -• BALTZ MORTVAIUEll· Corolla del. Mar OR I.MM Cotti Mesa AU 1-tcU • BELL BROADWAY MORTUARY 11' B ... dwlf, Costa &!eta u &.3llJ • DILDAY BROTHERS HuaUng1on VllleJ · Momwy 17911 Be1di Blvd. Huatfngton Beach 142-7771 •• PACIFIC VIEW MEMORIAL PARK CemtltrJ.M"""'7 :llOI p.Ji':~ ... Drt .. Newport Beacb, catUorala llU:te • PEElt FAMILY COWNIAL FUNl!RAL HOME 1801 Botaa Aft, w..-... ,.,_ • SHEFFER MORTUARY Llpn• ll<1cb IN-1111 Su aemeote 4.IUI• • S~UTRS' MORTUARY U7 MllA SL Uuadopia a..dl ~ " ' ' ' T1tm11t. tH Mt(il Slrttl, H11~tf11tton ltd'!, • •·"'· l .0.0.M, MoOlt Ne. IUI, ~H I!". ITtll 'Ir"'' C:o•" Mu1._1:u o.m Soc •IY for 11\t ~r•Jt,..ltlon 1""9 ~"""'"l"'l!lf Cf ••r~• .,_ 1rtt1 111'11,_ .._Ill """''' 1, C•lr.• i.a Qll.,1r ... olJet• P1 ld'>oe.·: n10 '4tlrw Dtmt. Cotlt /HM,·1:~ . . "" . Cli~tomli" ~ ef 1'1vcflltlliC ''Ttdlllld.,..;-~jti!,..lr# C11 111 l1r, Ftlmtw 111 ' Ho1,it1I IUdllwkllft. ""{~' . So\ltll I Actt\11 30 C ""-Hit IMo J:'Mtrl""' f.°1t1o1 111,J 7:')0 '·""· WIOfllllDAY l lu• ~t1m1 To1tt'l'l'111itl"t C I \I II , DRUG STORES I · TUSSY PENmAY "Std6hddy" Hi-Intensity esk, Lamp 10" flttible I fill with swivel shade ftllt!d for ~e lle'at ••I· 5JI .~yaar -ski1 ·lo a ' . ''Wlll!r .VacaliOI" -Compatl 31!" bast wltfl "-o!Hlff' switr.h.11.tacbed 6 tt. Mite .cord ml plug. 10 watt. 12 valt ~lh iocluded. Colors. 4.98 1oo1nuF :J.,Ring Binder wltkCUP Wind & Weather Bhle tntlDll anm .it~ 11!" ri•a• u.t ,.;n i.1d ~orty of paper. lloi!lo ~er. strna1 clip llotds SKIN CAR~ SALE ii r.;\ t::i Let the wnts blow -the tem- -Oop. It """"' little •ben ,... ... is pamjllfed •• : from finiertiP to toe ••• wittl 1...rs Wl>d & wea~•I Hdldmeol!t!d In 11 most waited sbad~ -it 6: Spar• llilg --col« uses. ~"''""'" 77c 111-Ho -Typing Paper "§ "Kloooomo• ~ STUl!T ::.-A IW.L ••• s~xll ShtetSof • msahle whilt bond p~per. kl Lets you erase neatly. Rer:-nc-111 tf It Theme Book wfl Saj1tt lli"ftr ••• 3 ~ole panched, side spiral to.md, wide Dr narrow rult. ltt. lie Sb1 Steno Books 7gc BLUE ,BLUE!BLUE CllIP CHIP Clf!P !SIA MPS. STAMPS lslA MF_S. Bl.UE Bf.Uf:i BLUI:: CHIP CHIP CHIP ' STAMPs .. ;r AM PS S!eMPS_ Construction Paper If STUAIT 11111 -!Ix 12" pol 6t with 60 Sllellb of paper hi as- torted solid colors. •11. Jtc Sheet Protectors ~It purtlled tie« plastic for looseleaf ao!thooks. Keeps ,paper, J*itos, etc. c.ltar of 27c sm.rda:es. dirt Rti 33c P1k If 5 carbon Paper-· WIEl'S "Hort" ... ~acl, mecti11111 weithl cnin kr type-2gc writers ard ball (l!fl!. ltt-37c Pat .it 15 *tits "Pledge-" " SPRAY WAX JOHNSON A£RosoL "Crew" Batln_ Cl_r Pmr Cl11u 1 llid1IKts STYIOfOAM Wig Block ffi" SRti•• tap a1sr-ly TIP TOP ••• foll ~d allows }'OI to set ywr w11 t_JSi1y ill art slyle you wisll. ggc 0 25 Ft. Drain Cleaner "Mister Tli1t1r" -Avoid toilet mrllow, sink stGppai;e, plunger mess! Easy to use •• ·2 29 wtl(U°W!lere p!Un,m and chem- 1c1ls lait! • . Enr Bl11mi1& HYBRID TEA • Crrtltld Callf1rli1 Inn. 2Ynn111-flllf M1t1rri • Matm• • Mllmriz11f-Jtatll'll1d Pack!•&: Ecoqomy Selection 2 or mOre canes-Cboosefromman1 favorites! Oariotte kmStnln£ Clim· ~on Glory, Mirandy, Nocturne, Red .Mlancli Mew Vcntr, Pink Rad~. £clip.Se, 1.owen Tltomis.. Climbillg mm. Clinting TJ1i5111311 and marrr ethtrs. · UCH 59c 60 Ft Ganlen Hose UCH • . "SllllmJIF' \ri111 II" lort - : • Rllg!d f•• vi<gio vinyl -• plastic witb full flow bmy brr..s coup1i1gs. Won't ' h114e1. kink ar c.rack: tara.e ~·11 1'1<11"""''1•~ ~o°'~t t."htr• 2 98 10 Viar C11ra1tt1lei,3AI • ua11s· Garden Gloves "LH!fillot" ... I! USS - C>oesom""'1ed-ggc 1tyles made Willi tieyt plntic cc1tini. Pl. w11r Garden Gloves •t.11y111111n" I! 1011 - -"'"' 2 ,1y1es, "" witb pLntlc: dot palm, Pl. Spray Nozzle M!LNOI -"Aq" G'"" - a S4l*Z8 of Ae ~.-11 ciwes 93c '" '""' -._ lotls 1 47 Into 1 JOsili0t yo~~ • ..... . . ... '· t I Patented') #1 CWE • Ameficana • C""""1 • Di~llllNt -•[I t.,itan • Pink Peace and 111111)' others UCl 1.98 ''Vi&n" Ro$e Food -·IUT' ·1111· ·-- Rich iii flUfrients need· !d I« stro•ll'< IJOW1h ••• better blooms and slllrdy unes. Cltan, 'r.1lii 1. 29 Peat Moss 'AMEllwr -All -... blips 1" ke1p uoatf 111Gist .....i all ,. pll!IS, us'IQ.caltimt. 2C..~ 1.59 •" Pruning Shears ,\ T ' Mr. Faucet Fixer T~is little tool will smooth out roua.h seats in ycur flUCel !flat r~• leaks. Washers inclulled to replace okl ones. mcUTIVE Shower Head IJ MEW"-Fits all sllow· ers, easy ta instaU. Giw:s 1 66 ygur sllowtr J!I inYia:«lfllla: 1111lti-slte.tm spray. , Force Cups ,,, "*'-"' Kltch•-~~\i cap la assorted p11ttl 5gc ..... Holl'$ to olurlp Ooi· &td#JiftS. .,.,.,., Stopper Tait Ball fl1111edlofit1n "Ali11·llt1~ ~iz1s •.• htavv Fit all popular dvty witll ibia· size v1lv1s, less post. \. he~s stoplta~J 77c· ~~St 8" Skillet .., __ _ ~==259 "11<elU<flcolllln1Jlm heat. • ~~~~f.2.~ ~~th spran b111Sh will ill'ligoralt yoor 79c sulp when yoo sbJ!npoo fOllf ~ir. Ass'! colors. Century Heating Pad . iy NORTHERN lllCTllC 8t1itle-type cootrol with 3 itive liub-low, ml'Jlifl\ ~~. lb:l5" 1emo¥al!le,. washable cotlall flannel COYS. 100% ~!proof. tu!l l rear g11ar1n!ee. UL approved. 1 1111 Towel Rfnf 0 CtYSTlL Cbrol'lle · 1inished77c ,,.,nt ' 2.98 IUCTllC Com Popper COMll -Ho sbalinl Cf stln1nr needed. J qt. slz1 wl~ ~11M ~ll!Md flollh. ffeat.proof lep •1111 handla. Ul ""'"'' ' 3.98 I MITAL Personal File "fllt·&.•11'" letter sin wiUI alpllJbelial iMir. ldul tor llome1 clllee ltld sctlool. Cbooit rrcm Al'OCldo tnd Wal1111tcoklts. ~~t 1.88 AO PllCE Pl!'lllU S1Htf,J&4dl ~-7111 DRUG STORES 9 AM to TD Pll -l DAYSAWUK ~-NEWPORT l!l~H ..... -4 ... '' • HUNTINGTON-BEACH .,.._ ........ HUNTINGTON llACH 10to 1"9-. I• W ..... ,._ ,,, . •. t I I I I • O&Jl y I'll.OT S•turPr J111Uary :s, lt70 • 'r ' '.LoW CLOSE ' I I • • ,1, , Satu.....,, .loo...,. J, 1970 DAIL v "LOT D ' ' •• I • ' --.... .L ' ' \ I 11 I i J• OAll.Y PllO'I • ' • • Did Officials Blow 12th J·nJrietion? .. ' "· • DAU.AS (AP) -Did another blwn 1111> .... ..,m1e rob Notte Dame ct a P'*ll>ll vlciary In Ille COiion -l! '!be Tuai L<>ngb<inla and ,.... ct- !iclala Aid "'no,"' the piqued lr1Jh ln5!111<d "maybe" wblle day-a/I« quarterbacks bwad Friday ov« the 1tnnee, eon-- lroftnlal play wbidt wun1 a play In r .. u· 21-17 triumph. "'It'• h!-, -and lh<n'• nothing we can do about it," aclmow~ coach · Ara Paroeshlan ct N-Dame, "and I llope a big 1usa l&n't made about it. ''But It wu one cl those cruy, unusual plays and, on the face ct 14 I don1 know how In the name ct H,.•en they (T""'J oould help fl'IXD beln& penali>ed." 'l1lll .. wbat happened ' Leading IG-7 Ill tho clo&Jni mDltee ct the first half, was driving fur the Texas goal-~ when the march waa stDppod by a pasa Jntaoeptloo on the Tnu 11. A< the team& lined up for tho -play, Ille Liiogbcrn& In poueosion.-a ~ Tau guard named Randy Stout w~s seen racing out onto the fteJd, wav;lng bis anns wildly. Before he reached the line ct ocrlm· mage, the ball wu snapped. James Street, the Texas quarterback, was smothered by a mass of Notre Darnen. He fumbled. Notre DI.me recovered on the Texas si.1-yard line. • 1be Ume remaining in the half was 1'57-plenty ct tlme k>r the lr1Jh 1o ocore again. Irish fans went wild. 1ben followed a moment ol confusion. Offlclal5 Jn thelr striped oblrts moved in for confereocea. 'Then the ball wu placed back on the Jf with Texa.3 in possesakln, fln;t down as before. PrUest.s came I.run the Notre Dam• I' bench. But the docioloo mict. Stout indeed was a 12th man on the field. But-he Insisted he had Cilled lime out before the ball was snapped. , Theron P. 'lbomlen, i Big Ten field judge who was on the Texas aide or the field flanked wide, backed Stout's atat&- menl "He slgnalled for a time out 'and'l blew the wh15tle before the ball was snapped," Thomsen said. >ftie referee, Cliff Domingue of the Southwest CoMenoco, oai<l, "'I thought I heard a whl&tle, but I wasn't sure." He said when Thomsen advised him ot the tlnte-<JUI call. he negaled the play. 'Ille fact that Thomoen 15 from the Big Ten; which provide& offlcia1s for all Notre Dame games, removed any protest that the 1riah might have been 1he victim of SUPER CHIEF -Kansaa City's Len Dawson (16) will be showing bis stuff against the Oakland Raid· ers Sunday In tho AFL championship decider. Here Dawson is seen passing in the Chiefs' 11);.6 upset win over the Jet.s. \ Oakland, Kansas City Top 70 Pros Fight It Out In SoCal Open ~ Lock .Horns for Crown OAKLAND (AP) -For all the tom· plainls that the American Football Leaiue'• plaioff oystem. lnsllluteg this year, waa designed mainly to add a cou pl• U extra games to the schedule, It has had me beneficial result : It bas matched the two aeemiogly- st.roagest teams in the clrcult, the. Oakland Raiders and the Kansas City Chiefs, who meet for the Ulle here Sun day. Because tile Ralde.rs and Chiefs are. -both in the Western Oivtslon of their AFL · · none of thelr paat struggles have been for the league championship .. But the new playoff system, which gave the second· place teams a abot at the tiUe, changed all that The Chiefs, who finished second to the Raiden Jn the Weal beat the Eutern champion New York Jet& While the Raiden eully bnllh<d a&lde the Hourton Olien, who finished """'nd In the Eut. Thus there 15 little doubt that the Raiden and Chlitf1 flnlshed the lta50l1 as Oft TV Su11d•lf I p.m., Chcnnel 4 the two best !elms In the league and tllat. perhaps, ii what • t.itle cam• 11 all aboul / · There are aome drawbacks to this matchup. howevtr. The Raiders have already beaten the Chiefs twice this yttr and thus find themHlve& In the pos!Uon of poa:lbly lo&ln1 the tJUe to a team they })ave beaten In two out of three meetlngg. 1be Chlela, for their part. must overcome what ls more and more begin- nl1111o loot IJke a Jtn. ID lllelr lut ei&h t rqular· and~-· meellnp with the Raldfn. have JOit eeven times. !All year, y loll Ille We&lern Olvllloa playoff and this )'Ur they ltlf. f....,. a :r1.s1 defeat 1o tho Raiden Jn Kdou Qty and a I~ lou In OU!and. And' W. fact b• ncit falied 1o Jmprass ltaell .. !Ill Qllefa. '"lliaf tlo't vet"/ rood." 1&)'1 Kanlal qtp -lllllk Stram. ''but I don 't l!Po"' why "" havan'l don• betw. If You'rt peyd>ld. how do yoo espllln ll? It bapptm and lt't more tttJtude than t.aythtna elK." . · Mdt X-City defensive md Jeny Maya, "Dam r1Cht U bothera me. I'd be IY1ns If I aald ft doesn't. We lry 1o propuo for !hi.a aame jut! like It's eny other game. But It'• dllllcldt 1o forget what bu happened belo,.. O&kland coach Jolm Madd"' say1 he I eipOCb Stram and the Chiefs 1o lry to surprise the Raiden much as they have in the past. Jn the last meeting between the two clUb!, Kansas City quarterback Len DIW90D threw only six passes. "It. we get ahead," says Raider defenaive tackle Tom Keating, "I'm sure tliey're not going to keep running at us this Ume." Oakland intercepted Dawson five times in their first game and hu had the abili- ty all year long to force mistakes and capitalize on them. UCI Cagers Host Gators The altuation returns to normal on the UC Irvine campus .,,tonight when coach Tim 'rut's lµcklw Anteaters entertain an old basketball nemesi:;, San Fran- cl&CO State Gators. Tipoff Is 8 o'clock with a frooh irelimlnary against Pep- perdlne at 5,45, San Francl&co State defeated UCI in the first round of the NCAA college division we.stun regional championships last year, 81~: However, tile northerners have been on the road for six games, losing all six dedJJons. Included In the list of teams defeating the Gators are Santa C1ara, USF, MlnlsalppJ Southtm {twice), L.5U of New Orleans and San Diego State. Leading scorer on the team this year ls IOPhOm«e Dave Farr, a 6-2 forward ~ho ls IUtti.ng at a 19.5 cllp. Lone returning starter from last sea· '°" 11 Bill U>cke, a H forward with 88 pointa and a 14.6 average. He 11 hitting a CantutJc 54 percent ol his shota from the floor. Lew Wooten, a ,H cenler who played quh.f,-a bit Wt season. open1 at center along with guardl Bob Beall (6-2) and Vance DeVoot (6-10). Tilt doesn't plan any changts In his probable star!lng lineup. Jo!f Cunnlf18· ham and Bill Moore open at the forward • poalUons with Steve Sabins and MJke Barnet: at the guard poall. The center spot will be open between Bill George, John GlavJPl)!ich and FA Burllngham. The unde'felt.ed frt&hman team return& to action for the flnt time since mid· December. Ttle yearUn&s havt won three stralabt-' ,I~ By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ttw o.r11 •oa1 s11 ff They made par so tough that not one player among the 330 participants io first round play in the 4lst annual Southern California Open golf tournament at Mission Viejo Golf Course was able to equal the mark. Six of the players were under par of 71 and tile balance of the field was over this mark but none of them equalled par for 18 hole$. A field of 120 completed first round competition Friday with Bobby Nichols and Larry Mowry finishing one under al 70. The weather man cooperated with another perfect day and as: a result two players broke par as was the case on li.tonday and Tuesday. The top 70 pros will compete today along with 19 amateurs with the field narrowed to 50 for Sunday's final round (plus amateurs). Today's first tee-off Um.e is at 8:15 with the six under par players closing the ac- tion al 11:10 and 11 :20. Nichols, Tom Gorrell (69) and Chuck Courtney (69) will leave the first tee at 11 : 10. Richard Martinez of Laguna Beach who fired Uie lowest first round of fo1ir under par (!7) will be joined by Rod Funselb (69) and Mowry (70) at u,zo.-. The conclusion of both final rounds will be televised on Channel 11 from 2 to 4 p.m. Among tbe touring pros missing the cut of 76 or under were Charles Sifford, Ray Botu, Pinky Stevenson and John Loi. In the 77 brackeL Tournament officials at first consJdered Jelling the T/1 play loday but protests from tl>Me in the low 70s changed their mJnds. There were 23 players knotted at 77 which would have. s'\\·elled the field to- day to 93. Dave Hill, one of the reuglan on the tour, was seven over par after nine holes and picked up. Others found the. course equally challenging. Paul Qut1Ulebaum had 97 ind high score was 98 by Chuck Osterda.y. Nichols, arriving 1n tile Southland tor the winter circuit. on Sunday, played a practJce round Wednesday. He Is In lhe proceu of building a couple of courses in Ohio. \ l!hat ·!$ .known In the sport aa '.'hqme =~ .. -a~avorable call bJ_ a borne , l!aneglllan •kl the Incident opened up 'all aorta ct penalty posltblliUee. "I ~<d up and the Tnas player · <&1.1ilht m1 en." the Notre Dmno cOach 11kl, 0 He was 'running 1Jke hell and wav· Inc ~. arm.a. I didn't see him say •ll}'(hlno 1o the ileld judge on the o!her aide ct -Ibo field. ' . "fte cOuid have been a 12th men on tbe field ,.. 1he JflcWres will llbow th.lie He oould Jia.ve~penallsed !or being. off. aid.et, for a man In' motion •. in· ~~~!~ p y or '1olaUng the ~- '!be rule Ii one that glve& a team ~ -1o get the play ctf Once lime bu resumed. Stout alternates witll Bobby Miidi.u at I' . .,.1 • Jo!\ IUard In 1 ibu\Ue system llir ruml111 mall Incidents In boWl gam.S. In Uie Col· 111 P.,.,\ •· I4ltchell" ~3& already. IJn~ _UP, _ton· Bowl in 1954 Dick Moej:le of Rice wa!'i , when Stout raced in. Until Tau ~a)ien , radili 92 yards to a touchdown wt>en acknowledged II. even olflclab &ald they · T Lewi f • • •·-· • off the • weren't sure how ml!'.IJ qr9n1e jerseys ammy s o ,....a'!"""'u• ·came were on the field. But the nwnber · wu bench and tackled" h1m: ·acadtmlc. . 'Ijle-tOIJChdown was allowed. Rice won However, Stout's contt\pUon -and ooe 28-4: . backed by the field judge -wu thal·he . LaSt· year, a 12th man blunder by asked for 'time out before tlle ·sn11p was 'K4R4as c().!lt the Big ·Ellht champion a made. . · 1 victdry over Penn State in the Orange "It ·~sn't make any difference Bowl' at Miami. whether 11 men were on the field or 15," Penn State llCOred with seconds left to said Howar4 Gnlbbt., eJ:ecuUve secretary make \he sco~ 14-13 In favor of Kansas. of the SoUtQwfi.« Conference. "Te., can Penn $tale went for a two-point con· substitute freely "and has 25 seconds to verslor) and Kamas held. get ita men in and off the field ." Bµt it v.•as noted that Kansas had l.n "l guess it'& just·a matter of timing,'' extra man on the field . Although time sighed Parseghian. "We ah!ll tee in the had rUn out. Penn State was ~iven movl~.'' another chance. It made the tw~pointer There have. been two .oUter famous 12th and won 15-14. • Minne.so ta, Browns .Clash • NFL Cha~_pio:y.ship ' ·• For MINNEAPOLIS.ST. PAUL (AP) -The said. 0 you have to btat them wiUi ex~ for# tooc::hdowns to Gene Washington man at the controls sa~ it's easy to tune ecuUon." · in. ttwi" November victory a a: a i n s t out the lut game and get ready for the The MinnesoLa <:oach calls Cleveland's / ~ev~lnd. next (Jle when you win, "but we're all pau catching trio of Gary Collins, Paul ~ Mtr.;esota's offensive line is un· ..H1 ..... __.i .... 1 this Wffk,. Warfield and Milt ~1orin ''the best sef 1n d~~· and fiv~ reeeivus caught 20 or g ...... ,. .. t'"'-'&'' • football." . · .l'DPl'-'~s during the regular season. The m~ is Minnesota Vikings coach Grant said Cleveland's ace runqing t ~¥eose set NFL recoz:ds for least Bud Grant . , . . bad: "Leroy Kelly gtves me 1 case of p)IDU'l allowed, 133, and least yardage. 'Ibis week is Minnesota 1 finit Na~! nerves. When they need the blg play ;,.. ll;f.3 fards per game. FootballLeaguecbampionsblpgameSun-psusst he's got It for them . No matter ~· ~ wbat.thew .. theris,they'regoing19tilve •ttEt 'RT ATT. ACK On TV Sulldcy . the hill 1o ,telly on end ... eeps." · '. · n ~ 10 ,. .. _ • "They bive more gaJi,e tnabn than -" •,. .· a.m., ., ... ntte. 2 any oil>« team in the 1..,., .... s.ald · DECKED COACH Grant. "Now with the erner-of Bo · · · dey In Metropolitan Sladlum agafust the Cleveland l!n»ma. . "We're lunlf18 In Cleveland, turning out Los Angeles," Grant said. "It's easier to tune out when you win than when you lose. Maybe ~t Is themeanfiii Of momentwn." . · The Vikings gained that momentum with a 23-20, Western Conference playoff victory over the 1.-0s Angeles Rams last Saturday and Grant expects an equally ruggod le6t this Sunday. In fact, the way Grant Is talking it sounds lite the Browns beat the Viki~s 51.J during the regular season -the same score by which Minnesota manhandJe.d Cleveland Nov. 9. "If you're going to beat them," Grant --• j .... Scott, it gives them even more.'' PAIAOENA· (AP) -It was a heart at· Scott. scand two toucbdoWN: lit ta.~ \bat kept University of Mlchlg"an Clev~and's 38--lf E~ Conference fOOtbait coach Bo Schembechler in ill• runaway <Y(tt Dallas last Swlday. hospital during the New Year's Day Ro!e Grant calls the Browns' offensive line Bowl game with the University !J[ ''one of"'the best in the league. their SOuDJetifCill.fOmia-;-doe~rs satd l"t1dat. defensive 'tine is big and one ol. the best, Earlier ft had been billed as a stoma Ch their secondary gives more coverage ailment. The. hospital described lhe heart than any team we'll ste and they have aitack as "mild." ' great li.nebacken." A spok.eSJ?)tn' for St. Luke's Hospj(aJ "Blll Nelsen showed his true passing said Schembechler Is ~eel to remain ability at Dallas," Grant said. "Fittingly, here for at least two weeks befofe we face a true champkmship oppooent ·in heading home. a championship game. 1bey are a team The athlttic director said that a1lhough you can't let up against for a minule." Schembechler Was not fble to see or 'Ibe Vikings have sparkling personnel listen to the Rose Bowl ghne, he recf:i~- as well led by their defensive frait four . ed periodic reports on how the and quarterback Joe ,Kapp, who paMed Wolverines were doing. NFL WORKHORSE -Cleveland'> Leroy Kelly (44) will be carrying his usual heavy load of grinding out yards when the Browns duel Minnesota Sunday in the NFL title match. Here he's nailed by Dallas' Lee Roy Jordan, who goes against the Rams today in· the Runnerup Bowl. Rams, Co~boys 1Go at Runnerup Bowl Slq.ted Today in Miami MIAMI (AP) -Dallu and Los Angeles, eipecled by many 1o figllt for the National Football League title, mett loday In the Pl1yoff Bowl. ~ Lut. weekend's defeated duo frOm the NFL chimplonshlp will play before about 35,000 rans in the Orange Bowl plus a na- Uonal television CBS audience. The Rams were the talk of pro football when they won 11 straight. but coach George Allen's clan now rides the depths of a four-game losing streak. The latest blow wu a 23-20 playorr setback by Mln- ne!Ota. Dallu -always a contender, but nevtr a winner -dropped it& i•me to Cleveland 38-14 to earn anothFr trip to Miami 's haven (or the aJso-rans. Rookie Calvin Hill from Yale 111, the Cowboys' most potenl )'eapon. The 227· i • pound runner gained 9U yards and avt:rage 4.6, plus catching 20 puses for an 11.6 average. · Craig Morton ~ill go al quarterback for 011 TV Today Noon, Channel z the Cowboys after a seuon that saw him hit 21 touchdown pa55e&. Lance Rcntzel is Morton's favorite rttelvtr, taking in 43 for a 22.3-yard average and 12 touchdowns. Bob Haye.a caught .fO, but scored only four times. NFL Moat Valuable Player Roman Gabriel la an Impressive gtant for the Rams. He completed $4.4 per cent of his throws for 2,549 yards and 24 TDs". Jack SnoW caught 49 for a lS·yard • • average and six 5COrtS. Another rookie ruMlng back is .U>e .cround headliner for Loa Angele•. Lcty Smith of Florida, gained 5$9 yard&.,and averaged 3.6. The 215-pound Tampe. native also matched ff passes for 300 yards. Wt:nd.ell Tuc~er is a Ram.11 »ri.i- d!Slance lbreal. The speedy lhir<l·Yt-lf man from South Carolina State. ~· only 38 passes but scored s · touchdowns and averaged almtlstw , yards a recepUon. , • It Is Dallas' second slralghl trip here" The Cowboys beat Minesota 17-13 la.11 Janu1ry and Jost to the Ba1Umore Col~ :JS.3 In 1961. ,., Los Angeles downed Cleveland, 30~. ltt ill only previ<Xl.' experience here follo~ lng the 1967' season.. . ·,.,,. ' • \Jordan , - Outlasts Corona By HOWARD L. HANDY Of ,_ DllW '""' 1'911" Corooa del Mar's basketball tum came on too late with.. too little and dropped a 11-.15 oon-league decision to the Jar-. dao Panthers Friday lll&ht in the loser's home gym. The • weather in the fri&id am was cold and so were the "'Sea Kings. They had trouble ... finding the hoop unW the , loorth stanza althoogh the7 took almost twice the number or shols Jordan attempted. The Kings llnally bit for !I• In a row !rom the floor but Uie acUoo came in jhe fourt.11 quarter when t.p.ey were play. ing c;Uch up and ~ visitors from LQn& Beach turned lo 'the free throw line lo k'eep the tide' of battle ln their favor. Th"e free~ rtorY was ap. parent in the ihird period when the Kings JCOl"ed on,only three of 11 at.tempts lnclUding five- times when they had two throws coming.' · The Panlhera increa.!led their lead to ~~ points at 49-35 early in the final stanza. lt was at this point the Sea Kings went to wwk lot the on1f W;t dur- ing U>e nlghl The. entire team contributed to the scoring tot.al as the mar· gin was narrowed to four point. wlll> • minute lo play, • , . Newport LAKERS w1N; W INE ROOKIE -Crushes . 'Los ANG= <AP>_ J.,. Warriors ry West and Keith EricUon led the -Loo A!>gelq t:iken tO a 125-15 ~t.humplng of. the San Franciaco w..rrlor1 Friday night in a National Basketball Association con- test. By ROGER CAllLWN West pumped borne 32 polnta Of 1M,11e1~ PlliM Ill'* and Erickson, starting ln Newport Harbor m.c., hj••-place ol the ailing Elgin Bay· ~· k.:..!: lor, s~ 27 as the Lakers flying Sailors, stamped ~1UF111• used a 6listulng fast-break selves as ~team to beat for ot'fen.se to Jeap back Into' sec-Sumel Leqlle Jayreb and one 1 In of the best five teams in ond Pace the NBA'a West- Fri h ern Division. Orange County dJ't nig l, Willie ,McCarter• the Laker!' IS the Tars ~ lilgbly· No. 1 draft Pick from Drake touted Tk'oy_,. '14-41. u . 't lined ·~ ~ It wu the final tuneup for ruvers1 y, was ......, "'ri- both teams before lelg\\_e hos-day for refu!ing to go in to the "'(}UUes next weet .... and Coach game on the orders of Coach Dave Waxman'! Outfit'wuted Joe Mullaney. lltUe Ume in gelling will> It --------- The holt Sailors exploited Tr0y'1 lack or overall_heJ,P.t to clearly dominate the boardi it both ends of the· court as Lee Haven and Dave 'Eccles had a field day in worldn11: over the Warriors. The victory hikes Newport's overall record to 11·2 "While Troy, a team that has beaten Santiago and Katella among others, and lost to Yoothill by a 68.&t tany, ls now 6-4 for the campaign. . The issue wasn 't really settl· ed by halftime as the Blue· jackets held only a seven-point margin after the ~reeway League representatives had employed a man.to-m•n de· feruie Jn the first two st&J)!as. Lions Trip Lynwood; Face Cavs By STEVE ANDREWS 01 1111 o.nr P11t1 St•H Dan Broderick and Richard Mann paced the Westmin!ller LiCll'.W to .a second round win over Lynwood, 72-65, in tne Santiago Holiday basketball tournament Friday in the Santiago gyfunasium. The Lions wltt meet the boo! Cavaliers tonight at 8:30 for the tourney title which Santi- ago has won IOf' the past two DAILY PILOT J J ' Tough Notre ·Dame l Guns Down Edison By DAVE CEARLEY Of ltlf O•llr ,lltl SltH Edi!IOO High was beaten•by lts tougnt!t omionent of 'the season Friday night -itself. The Chargers played ·a su- perlative first hall aod were slaughtered by their own mis· taku and their own poor shootlttg as they 'bowed to a rugged Notre Dame squad from Sbennan Oak.t, 80-55. Four 3Q..fpot jumpers by bubble gum chewing Charger guard Mike Arus lifted Edison to a 35-29 lead with two min· utes left in the half. The Knights' fine guard Jim Sullivan followed with a trio of short layups to knot the cou.pt at~ apiece.at the hair. Sutlivan's perfonnance was an omen of bad ti~ to come. Sullivan opened second half scoring with a soft 10 footer, and Edison center John Fish· er tied the contest for U!e eighth time with a short bank. The Chargers• (U), wm nev- er in the game again. Three mDre bucket, by Sul- li van and single scores by .. Frank and Hank Babcoc) blew the Knights Into a 10. point lead. They made ·the lasl tltir.:d of the game look easy, The contrast in Edison ' 3 style of play in the two haive! was startling. In the first lll{G perlod.1, the Cti~rgers reUed on long 04.ltside shooting and some nifty bait handling. Edi· son repeatedly was able to hil Fisher with a pass under th e basket for a bucket in the nrsl 16 minutes. HOTlla D~l !tt) ·-· F. aek'tdl; ........... H. l•IXKJI; $wll""1n ... _ <• .. c-• ·-· ·-· To" I• B•I .. H~r~ '""" WriOhl .. ~ floWMtn , .... WlllOll A1ylTIDntl ·~· Tol•ll Pli fl • • ' ' • • ' ' " ' ' . . ' • • ' . • • ~ " IOISOM CSU ,. ,, • • ' ' ' . . ' • • ' . . ' ' . . ' • • " " " " • ' ' ' ' ' ' ' ' " • ., ' " ' • • ' ' • " • ..... fp ' ' . ' ' " ' I ' " ' ' ' ' ' ' ' • • ' " " Re'• •'I' OUtrttr• Nolr• O.mit 17 II 21 n -IO Edlsori 10 1$ ? lJ -.U 1be over-eager Sea Kiogs then Committed two IUOCeUlve RC!'S(lnal fouls and the Pan- thers tallied four quiet pc>ints to put the game out a( reacb in the next 40 5eCOOds. . Jordan hit on U of 13 at· .(ernpls from the ·charity line .;,.in the fourth stanza to erase .any dOu&ts ol the outcome. However, Troy switched its tactics at the outset of the third period and it proved dis- asterous aa Newport riddled the nets agalmt a zone with tremendous shooting. Haven aod Taras l:"oung led the onslaught as Newport con-. nected on nine of 10 shots from the fiekl and the first seven · tries from the gratis line tD spurt to a 55-S6 lead at the end ye;.:,~lain Valley, a 66,59106-mr NOW,,._ su• er lo Tuslln Frlday, laces ' 1.·~ -.. -•• Bolsa Grande today at 3:30 for seventh place . The Panther quintet connect-Bqttle '.'e<1 -on-19 of-3J &hclts from-the • floor for a tine average or 5t ,San Clemente Hi 's ~· LOmbardl "(10) arid Huntin gton Beach's Garth Wise percen~ _ • \(30) ~figh~ fOr!'re~d in iuneup for nex.J week's league action. Oiler Wes Corona del Mar hit 21 of 63 T~omas (;J4) fs m:back~d : San Clemente opens Crestview League play attempts or "33 percent of lls TUeSdaY at El Modena while HunU.Ogtop Beach awaits 'Anaheim Wednesday. ·'field goals attempts. JGrdarl. _ _:._:,,:___::::.:.::.:.:::.:c::.:-=:,.;,,:.:::::::~,:;:,.:::=:::.::::.:::::::.;.::;:::::::::_::.::::::::=::::.::__ Jc<red 22 of 30 lrom the free throw line while the Kings could hll only 13 of 24. Chuck Feenstra of the Pan- thers was high point man with 22 points. He hit consistently from the noor, scoring JO field goals and a pair of free :~V Routs [agun~ Estancia .. '' .. .. .wows. Tim Conroy and Mike Sevier pa~ !,he Sea King. iCOrinl attack iith 13 points eacL Corona· de! Mar'1 aeason ecord is now f.7. ·llp.en~e~r.~ ~~e~_ Tourney By CRAIG SHEFF , Of "" O.llY , ... lt•ff Mission Viejo will seek the " , consolaUon championship , in ,; the , Brea .bastettiall toUrna· ,~ , ment tonight and Estancia bat- s; iles for thirtf';ptaee, following ,., li~Ulnal round games Friday. 1: The Diablos polished otr La. 1 . guna Beach, 83-49 while Estan-'! cia £ell to host Brea, 63-S:i. ~ -Mission Viejo will-fact Ser· " vlte, a 71-47 winner over Neff for lhe consolation crown at 6:30. E;slancia meets El Do- rado· at 4:30 and Laguna and Neff tanile at 3 for seventh plate. Tite title game matching Brea and Sonora is at &. $o. nora routed El Dorado, 84-58. Miuion Viejo established a school scoriRg mark with the 83 ~I! .. The old school stAn· dard waa set.last year .against Norco. the: Eaglt!s again ran into· foul problems and the host club won the game at the charity Blripe. Estancia.had a 25-18 edge in field goals, but Brea cormecled on · 'ZT of 40 free throw at· tempts. Coach Bill Wetzel'! ctub COuld only hit Qn five of 2tl free throws (25 percent), The EagleJ. never saw the lead_. ~ Wlldcalt_jumped out to a 9-1 advantage-before Es· tancia warmed up. The Eagles cut the· margin to 1~9 in the . waning moments of the first quarter, but that was as clo.fe as they came.~ Brea held a 34-27 advanlage at the half and maintained 10 to 14 p<>int leads through most of the ~nd half. Center Skip Williams led the Ea1les with 18 points while /fllllSSIOH VllJO llU l..O rT ,~ T" ......., .. )II l ....,.. 1' guard Steve Valiere ·hit 1t. The Wildcats gDt a balanced scoring attack with four play· ers hitting in double figures. The Wildcats got some fine board work from 6·5 center Steve 'Peterson and f.3 flJr· ward JDCk Bickel. Williams aJ6o did a good ·job on· the boards for the Eagles. ~__,__*· * •STAJtCI~ {1$) -' 1'0 ~T " " 0rglt1 ' ' ' • 14ellt• ' • ' Wllll1ms • ' • " \11l1fff ' ' • " H11i • ' • ' • Sh•1111hntU'll ' • • • TllOm11 ' • ' • TOl•l1 u ' H " lltfA (4JI ,. " " " ""'' • • • " llkllel • • • " "*"''"°" ' ' • " "-OO'irlll-' • ' • ,_, ' ' ' ' ·--• ' ' " L..,bstttr • ' ' ' Tot1!s " " " " ,,,,, "' OV.rtws Est1nc11 ' " " " -" ·-" n " " -" of three quarters. Erom -there-it was--0nJy_ a matter of time ..• and not much of if as the fast moving game finished at 9:10 p.m. Newport upped the bulge tD 25 (65-40) with 4:21 to go and then resorted to reserves to mop up. Troy's Glenn Carson was hekt to four points on two field goals again.st Newport 's plagu. ing man-to-man coverage that bottled up the Troy fastbreak . The Warriors were atrocious from the field, hitting only 20 of 70 shots for 28.1 percent while Newport was exactly the opposite. cashing in S2 of 64 at.tempts for a Ditty SO per· cent.· Waxman's c::harges blit~d the nets in tht second half for 64.3 percent (18 for 28). Scoring leader was Young with 17 while Haven (15). Ee· cles (II) and Nels Tahti (10) also finished in double figures: In other action Friday, Foot.. hill bumped Bolsa Grande, 73- 58 and Santiago downed Buena Park-GS-5 -Ma~n. a 5.1 guard for Wesi. . minster, provided the spark fcir the Lion offense-stealing passes and darting through the Lynwood zone press for 18 points. But Broderick was the per. son WestmiMter relied heavi· ly on down the stretch. The senior blocked. numerous shots arid bit ror 19 pcinl! tB lead the Lion scoring attack. Broderick returned just In time in the flnal quarter to stave olf a late LynwOOd charge. ._. ·i Afle:r building up a 40-25 halftime advantage, the Lions saw their lead diminish in the third quarter after Broderick left with his fourth personal fool. However he returned five ,rnjnutes tater, blocked two shots and scored four tru. cial points to give Westmin- ster the win. Ml!W,OllT HA1t•01t (141 '" tt ,, i. Joe Arciniega and Gene Ht ven Vou~t (((:tel Tlhll "" Mlollnoff ll91:kel '''" ..... T11lor .,,_ .,,.,.,1 Tot flt : ~ ! :; Valdez paced the Lynwood ' l o 11 rally in the fourth stanza. ! : ; 1: Valdez-was,lhe game'!I top ' • , , scorer with Z3 markers. 1 0 s l 1 1 1 , For the Fountain Valley Ba· 1 0 1 1 rons and coach Dave Brown 1 0 • 1 1 ' 1 s it wu an afternoon of frustra· • 3: 1: 1~ ,! lion. The Barons shot a dis· t1toY 10 1 mal 31 percent from the floor kllrwdtf ~ ~ ~ ~ (%2 of 73). Mn1tr ' 2 1 10 \\'Ith the poor shooting ex-:'~= l ! ~ 1: h1biUon Fountain Valley could G••11111 1 o 2 4 not lake advantage-of the nu· 't::.":.dl: ~ l : ~ merous mistakes committed Huv.-n o • i o, by Tustin. Allen l I O A1t.11 1 1 o 4 Leading 42-28 at the half, the Tot•ll l<.r• "' ow•rt;• ' 11 '' Tillers returned but appeared NewllO!'t H•rllDf"I' 1• Ji " -1i to leave their shooting eye in 'h'OY flllJU -" the locker room. However the Guards Rick Wadsley and Rudy Holme! led the Diablo attack. WadsJey popped in l 1 field goals and finished with 25 ,points Holmes followed with 18. J:Cirk Meyer! also hit , in double· figures for Mission • Viejo with 12. • irates Ylt• Diablos jumped out lo .• • a 21·13 first quarter advantage ~ " ' ' • ' ' • ' "~ • • J • . 0 '' ' ' ' ' . . ' ' . . D t -.. 0 J 0 ,, l1 IJ tl LAoUMA ••AcH rff1 ,. " " " Anteater Swimmers ~rop Two Dual Meets . . -' Barons couldn't capttalh:e, missing their first 11 shots of the hair. Fountain Valley finally ral- lied in the waning moments of the final periOO behind Rick Power, Bill Champion and Dave Lynch. The Barons pulled to within seven, M-57, but it was too late. t and incrU!ed tt to 39-26 at the • kllml~ ' 0rl'1ge Cout O>Iteae•aJ>u,, half .. A iz .. thb'd quarter put ' ~!f:"' .... ii \tam ~ 009 ~ qte-I~ way·out of reach. /fllleMvrr•r ~ tO get on the winning ~,..!'«" ~· Beach l>ermy ~~""' ' , ' • ' • ' • " • ' ' ' ' ' ' • • • " ' ' ' ,, prior )o the st>rt of the Sclunib jilt 16 wilh 1Uchard ""'"' CoUt COofe"enCe race. Beach 1$.ing 11 IDd Mike Mc· T.r•lt • ' • ' • ' ' ' • " " • a 11·7T""lot!8 to Ri· Mtn'TQ" litd 10. Scwe _,, Ovolrters Vt!i\ide Friday night In the £1t.ancia-Btea game. ~= ~ ~~ :; ~ 11 -IJ u -" The Pirates face Olaf fey to- night at OCC at 8, then open conference play Wednesday at Fullerton. OCC Jost the game at the free throw line. Rivenide con· vetted 19 of S2 free throw at- tern'Pj.s while the .Plrateti1 only We.Q,t to the charlty ~tripe 15 times, hilling nine. Guard Troy Rolph led coach Herb Livsey's club with 23 poohs while Jim Kl.ndelon bit 20. Phil Jorden had 10, his low· est output of the season. Riverside enjoyed a 46-34 halfUme lead. Ftve Riverside playen hit In double flguros, The. loss ran Orange eoan·s -l'f<Ol'dloH, • OIUflfOI COAST rnJ P'9 'T Pf' Tl" • J 2 :tJ • 2 • )Cl ' 1 J • s • ) ,, t • 1 • I I I I I 1 1 • J I I t 2 I O I t ,.. t n n k1Vllll1DI It'll ... ,,,l'" ~ ,t J: :t ;: ~ . ' . ., ··~I 11.IJ $-01• ' , 1 II ttl:· ''j' ~.lk ' •,, 11• '11 . :: lf~lftlrM ttort: IUWf•llHi 40. OCC "'4, • ' ~oss Streak S~pped By Rustlers, 77-68: • Golden West Co 11 e g e's swilched hands nu m e.r o us basketball team snapped a times before Golden West took . nine-game Josing stuak Fri· the 1Ja41 for aood OD a Chris darnllht wlll> a 77-tl victory Thon'lllillt l•y·in with eight Santa D a"°'-minutia, left. r ; over -uara al cu..ta I~ had 22 pnlnll tO' College In San Lui• Obispo, •-'ng bonOrs !or tJi6 -Tonjght the Rustlen try lo i&I!~ Rid Barnea chipped In mate it two in a; row apinlt• !~-~·Jeff Powers had lf. Cueata at S.nta Barbara, 'nle. o:Hef1: Puelk had JO in a only other vl<lory for Golden ~I role. West (2-12) this seam ls ovtr•' t • (,oL•" w11,. 1,,1 Cuesta. ,0 ,T ,, T' Coach Dick Stricklln'a club r= : ~ ; ... '! jumped out to a 11-point lead ~ ! : j 1: in the. first half, bJJt Santa ,."*'*°" 10 ' f n, Barbara baWed back to Wt• ~~ ~ -: : ,, one.point advantage J'llh stV· T•"'' " '' " 11 .en-minutes left. SAHTA •All•Alf'A , .. , Santa Barbara then' stalled wi-ier ': ~ ',' T~ (or the rtmainlng s e y e n ••leil9nt! ' 4 J i. J0rm • • 4 11 minutes. getting a bull.et with ~= t e f ' a few seconds left to 'enjoy a L•~ ; : , ': 34-31 haUtime ..... T•I•• " ,. ,, .. ·tn tbe tecoed half; the lead 4~"~11~ ~trtf ~~ '''°''' .w. ' I I • UC-Irvine dropped a double dual meet decision to UC Davis (SS-52) and UC Santa Barbara (~8) Friday af- lemoon in the Gauch<> Pool. Coach Ed Newland 's Anteaters swept first place 'in both meets in all freestyle compeUtion including the 4QG. yard relay but fGund a lack or depth harmrul in dual meet competition, Steve Farmer won the SO. yard sprint race and placed third against Davis In the 100 as teammate Rich· Easo11 wa s the winner. Eason aJao won the 200 ft~style. ~ Mike "Marttn. junior All· American , from Corona del Mar, woQ the 500 and ,1,000· yard freestyle.events althoogh he was well off his own na· tional records in the early season action. Today the Anteaters will compete in the All-UC Relays in the same Santa Barbara pool wHh an campu&eS of the University system compeUng. \ Sports TV Log Lynch hit seven free throws In the last quart.er and wound up high scorer for the Barons with 13 points. Gaey Valbuepa contributed t 1 before fouling out in the third quarter. weST/fllllMSTl!ll cn1 .. ~ Ne"'lllOW$e 80M H•W141'1' McL•nOOll lroderkk Soull'twick Toi.ti; l••u~kcr M!tltr ,(lf~ri l•ldifrrln Arclnl•tl \l.idtr CGUHr CrltcllOt!d Total1 " . ' . ... ' " ' ' ' ' ' " ' " . " • • " n ' ' . ' ' ' . ' ' ' . ' " " L YMWOOO IHI " • • • ' • • ' • " II '' ,, , l 10 . ' . . ' . 0 J 10 , ' l t 1 t )J ' ' ' . ' . 11 21 " Sew• -,. 0""11rt Wntm.in.tt'r ,1 It It '10-12 l,.yflWllOd ll 12 lf n---4J f'OUlftAIM VALLIY (Jt) GMbw Tl!lriell :=.1 -..... Ch11Mlefl ~rllCh V•llll.lf"' T•t•!1 .. It .... '" t 1 I I ( • 1 t 0 • 1 0 l J ' ' • I I I ' ' . . J 0 ' • I t t 1l I I ' It it lS U " TUSTIN C'91 ""•'"' I I S f t I I 11 • • 1' c I I 2 ' 1 1 t e J l 1 , 1 l I 11 1 2 S I ' ' ' 10 ' , ' . ,,,,ti .. Jar. 'ii D~Nttrt l!wri!I.~ VllltY ll 15 II 7G-Jf lldll" '4 ,, 11 ,,,_.. ·- , . ~·:, .... .. ~. . . ::. , .. , " '.!Y ''.'; ·/A. • Sth Ann11t1/ nuuK DISPU!UF f.lSKIMC TA,Clltt IOATS! cAllt'lttl 111111Mltl1 • ~Sl ~ACAT)DN IDW! • .SU DIVE F11111 CWlll lllTO 11 lllCH1S Of WATIR! :-·sPDRTS. g··: • VACATION SHOW : COMBINED WITH THE R.C,E,A. . • RECREATIONAl : • .. VEHICLE SHOW : • • ··········~··········· • •• • See the ... • ~ lRAYR -Ml'tM e 'i?m TllMLIRS · TIAlllRS e •• :.t:. ffig =~ .: ........................ . NOW l:lu11 DDDISDrf~ WU!DA!SlPM Wll!llllS 11 NOON • j PRICES ADULTS $1,7$ KIDS $1 .DD '> ' -----=--=~· -- ,l,t DAILY PILOT \ Movie Review 'Gypsy · Moths,' 'Marlowe' Stir Cinematic Nostalgia Fast Flops Dot '69' • 20 Broad~y Slwws Fold in Week By TOM TITIJS Of HM Dtllr l'li.t tl1ff A double excurslon into dnemaUc nostalgia it being offered by a pair of movies currently double billed around Orange CQunty theaters. The films are "The Gypsy Moths" and "Marlowe," dissimilar in subject matter. yet calculated -by accident or design -to nudge the moviegoer's memory. . Stunt sky diving , and the motivations that lead men into this dangeroos way or making a buck, comprise the theme of "The _Gypsy Moths," the more notable of the two pictures. Director John Frankenheimer, quenct, the 1969 go-round goes who provided 30me of the glit· all the way, culminaUrig in , ter in the "golden days\' of what may be Miss Kerr's first television, is the man behind nude scene. To the film's the camera, and his prtsnce is credit, it is quite tutefully commanding. done. The nostalg1c part of -The ,balance of "The Gypsy "Gypsy Moths" is a screen Moths" is a rare ac- • reunion between Burt Lan-complishment ·-the suc- caster and Deborah Kerr, cessful blending of dramatic stars of one of Hollywood's profundity and eye-catching finest hours, "From Hert to ;i.ction sequences, in this case Etemity." Their characters -the sky diving scenes which the surly stud and the are truly breathtakirig. The disillusioned and occasionally finest acting is turned in by indiscreet wife are Gene Hackman as the high.llv· remarkably similar to the ing leader of the diving trio , a 'roles they played 16 years boozer and a womanizer who before. also is deeply religious. One can only guess that Less skillfully presented is a F'rankenheimer had one eye subplot involving I h e in. on "Eternity" when he staged articulate Scott Wilson and the seduction scene to begin beautiful young B o n n i e las in the earlier film) in Miss Bedelia, who find each other Kerr's kitchen. All that is during a moment of trq:edy missing i! the rain pounding but part with hardly a word outside -and this conies · the neit day. This lack . of along later. ~solution is Frankenheimer's But while the 1953 movie Only failure in an otherwise · climaxed in what was then compelling picture. considered a steamy beach :;e-"Marlowe" ls, of ttnll'st:, the Drivale .ye created eons ago fly Raymond Chandler and done with melholdlc detachment by James Gar;ner in a modus operandi lbat bas been done belltr In U.. post. · The film cannot be dJsmw..: ed &J a rooUne .fallure -not with the Uke1 of screenwriter Sl~llng Sllllpbant ("In tlle Heal of the Night") and direc- tor Paul Boa;art (TV's "Dear Friends") around. It ls an overplolted eplc with few loose ends secured by the final reel, in which its hero end! up more as an ob!erver than a partlci· pant. ' Jn an attempt to nsurrect 'A Jtl iraefe • • • · • the private eye syndrome - and lhttt's 11till room for the Jo Anne Blaek describes the miraculous restoration ~ood ones, Ilk~. "Harper" and of sight to a child as David Paul listens in this scene Tony Rome -so in e from the drama "The Devil's Advocate " opening pestigious .tal~nt has been Tuesday at the Laguna Moulton Playb~se for' a· chaMeled 1n a questionable three-week run dlrtctlon. The film's virtues -------· --~---~------­ are sporacUc (Garner's disposal and subsequent ex· planaUon or a karate pest is a gem) and heavily oufweighed by its misfiring attempts with material outdone a I m o 5 t weekly on "Mannix." Gayle HUMicutt, R i t a Moreno and the talented newcomer Sharon Farrell are treats one and all for the virl watchers in the aucllence, while Carroll O'Connor breaks the flhn's pace with an ex- plosive outburst that seems singularly out of place. As for G&mer. he pro- gresses lazily, quipping his wey through the picture in the manner of an American ·James Bond, minus the well· mede vehicle into which the 007s fit most comfortably. Music Makers Shrug Shoulders at Future ied1tor'1 .. ,,. Ti.. n..--<1>1nel11• re1lm fl _,\111r ITl\Jtl( CloM'I th~ tou'°'"" s..-lu "° U~I °" en1rr111 ... ,_,, i11 the 1'11'1. TOC!lr J"nlle 0m1M otf«I h« lweca1t.I By JOANNE OMANG United Presa lntematioaal The only thing that,'s sure about popular music in the 1970s la that no 'one yet knows whet It will be. The men who write It, :stage it, play it, deplore it and oc- caalonally try to anticipate it agree, however, that it won't be they who CJ')'lte it. The undergrouDd r e al I t Y Jacked ooly a stage W emerge) and BID Graham of SIM Fran- cisco's Flllmore West gave it the forum. KNOWLEDGEABLE "T1le roct listener U much more knowledgeable today than two years ago," nid Graham. "Young people today appreciate good music, not just simple music." And mainstream rock Is anything but simple .. , "Ten years ago we'd ne ver M SI o •• I\ h d d have predicted acid rock," "A hit is a hit no matter what type it is. There are no 'ID!... tre@s to®.y and !h~e • ass · aVJn:us uvers .· a owe --~r~i:;·~::.1;~ ~~~·~: · J --~ Music, the country's only con· 87 WILLIAM GLOVER NEW YORK (AP) -For 1 lot of Broadw1y 1ngtl1, 11169 wu the year of tlle fast flop. Hope Is 1lw1,Y1 high 1mong actora, IOl:tb, producers and thoet lndflpenaable aoeela. An UllllfUoll7 heavy schedule of ..,..Up during the aecond hill of tlle Illet-70 theater yur 'II In piolPt<I. with IO exhlb)il ~dy IJUlOWlced, ' Tftnty shows ran a week or lea ln 1989, five or them"ba.J'e. ly liJrviving lh\'OUih I sin&le porfonnlllCe. Total Ion lo backers: 1$.2-mlHloo, , 'llleater people cring'. ftdin brooding on · hialy siirvlval atatlstla, ao diere ·ts no wey of knowing whether lite swift coll.pa. of uactly hall of Ute enUre-:ytar's new p~ctJor\ effort M$ a percentegt! ?tcord. ~ring costs. however, hit In· veaton harder than tiver. In addlUon to the woeful week-or-Jess group, eight other comedies, d r am a s and musicals that cost $1.3 mllllon >closed as total losses. 'Ibree hopefuls Involving $S)0,000 col· lapsed d u r in g out-of-town tryoua and never made it to opening night on Broadway. Some sponsors fared better, BxcliufN ltt#rnd Sttl E,...,.,,._tl TONIO:~T AT . 1:00 ,. .... 2001 Hollywood Stories for 1969 servatory of contemporary mWlic. "God knows what's next." No me seems to doubt that current rock reflects the genention gap. the general preoccupation or the yCNng with the fau1U of a society that was created so the kids could have it better than the old man. haven't been for sever&f years," argues Mel Phillips, program director for Boston's top-40 station WRKO. "The acid underground i s ex- aggerated. Few soul sounds are big sellers any more. Sure, early rock is being used, so is folk and blues and country. There's no one source, no ma· By VERNON S00IT HOLLYWOOD (UPI) -The world of the beautiful people, the jet-setters, was shaken during 1969 by tragedy, beset ·by divorce. saddened by· deaths. Blgg:~t story of the pasl year wu the macabre death of actress Sharon Tate and four others murdered with her. lt was the grisliest mass slaying in Hollywood annals, and -unbelievably -a band of hippies atand charged. The clivorce rate for 1969 among celebr\tles a I m o s t qoubled that of marriages. Richard Burton made news by baying Eliiabeth Taylor one of tht Jargut diamonm ertant. "Oliver !" was named best picture of the yea r .. Cliff Roberson won the Osclr for best actor in "Charly" and for the first time two actreases tied for best perfonnance of the year, Barbra Streisand for "Funny Girl" and Katharine Hepburn for "Lion in the Winter." Producers could no .longer claini movies were beUer than ever, only smuttier than ever as nudity and sex romped acrt>S$ the nation's screens. Lana Turner managed to Crossword Puzzle ACRO SS 1 Standard scoru In golf 5 Casa •••• ') Min -·-: 2 words 14 Desce-nded 15 Melville ch.aracter 16 Exact ll lcentss 17 M11t ure lB Reg.al 20 Duck 21 Exped 22 Ch1n9es 2J Re cedl'd 25 Mr. 5hlw 27 K_tnd of en\fanc.e 29 Set tl\e pac• ;30 Weather· 1111n's word il4Puton · 136 Put gem in a n•w mount ing 38 F.r,nc.h scientist 39 Fru it· c.onc:ocllon: · 2 words . ' 51 En"9. 111anu· facturlng city 54 5cu:rtured 58 Kin of -dance bO Hero ic pc em bl H1rsher; 2 word s t.3 Populace: Prefix &4 Catk in t.5 Shake· spearean character !i6 Sly gazl' li7 Devoid cf real va \ut b8 Solemn word "'Besides 9 Ch1111p!ou· ship 10 Neglect l lSptce 12 Culture DOWN _ 111edlum l Resolv e il'llO component "''' Z Out on 2 word s 3 Fruit often used on ctte1 I: 2 Words ll M111's nlctnmt 19 Uttertd 24 5alJ song 26 Nu1t1•rlc1! prl'fhc 2! Kind of shirt 30 --dt•SIC 31 Rh1d: • 2 words JZ Veqlc• 1/J/70 31 Welland Of Erle -·. 40 Bite 41 Flghti11g ..... 46 ltll 41 Goad .. , loU!J!SOllt 50 NCO s . 1\lckna11e 52 Coins 53 Arranttt's proiuct 54 Jultlct Dtpt. e11ploy«: lnlonnal mike all kinds of news during the year. She Oopped in her new televialon series. She divorced ooe man, married another and wu soon stpantlad from him. Another aMual loser was Eddie Fisher whose marriage to CoMle Steftns was dissolv· ed. Dean Marlin's marriage of 20 years came apart at the seams. Others unglued were Groucho Marx, Dick Smothers, Victor M at u r e , Barbra Strelsand, Jill St. John-Jack Jones, Robert Cum· mings, Andy Prine, Margaret O'Brien, Gall Patrick, Loretta Youn&, Herb Alpert, Samantha Eggers, G l e n n Ford, Kim Darby, Burt Lan- caster. Lauren Bacall.Jason Roberds. Rod Taylor, Cass Elliott, V e r a Miles-Keith Larson. Rod Steiger and Claire Bloom divorced and Miss Bloom married Hillard Elkins, producer of "Oh, Cak:utta!" In a vintage year for divorces and separations, a relative handful lrod to the altar. Dorothy Malone was mar- ried and asked for an an- nulment soon after. Little Dustin Hoffman marritd Anne Byrne. Paul McCartney (a Beatie) broke hearts b)' mar· rylng. The ever optimistic Mickey Rqoney took his seventh bride. Julie Andrews wed director Blake Edwards. Otber newlyweds ip 1969 were Natalie Wood , Jul iet Prowse, Ali MacGraw, Richard Zanuck, Goldie Hawn, Tiny Ttm and Leslie Caron. The votce of Judy Garland was silenced In death . She was 47. "Kids are facing problems now which·• lot of Americans haven'l faced," :said Don Law, manager of the rock ballroom- theater The Bos~n Tea Party. "They believe in mu1ic the way 100 years ago they would've believed in religion -it's telling the truth." Whether the social con- sciousness crea{ed the music or vice versa is another ques-' tion. . AWARENESS Social awareness in rock seemed to spring full-blown Crom the heads of the BeaUes, who appeared on a scene not much different lyrically from the Rock Around the Clock which started it all. On(:e the English moptops made it in the mode of the early sos. they put· their gut beat under words of civil rights. politics and f o I k bellads. The result brought the real world and its popular music together, perhaps for the first Ume . Suddenly there were rock groups everywhere, singing '10t only or moons and spoon- ing and hound dogs bul also of "'ar and peace and sex and drugs. There was nother thing about the Beatles. too -their music took some skill to duplicate. "A kid used to be able to go out and buy a guitar, learn three chords and be part or the &eene," said Berk. "Not after that." Amplifiers and electric guitan along with guitar le"°"'· skyrocketed in sales. jor trend .'' l;===========,11 ''Rock and roll hils changed from what it was before, and we don't know what's coming next, sighed Arthur Fiedler, conductor of the famed Boston Popi. "People :ore beP,ning to combine baroque music with jau; now they've got elec:troruc aound music, these ly Po,.ler D••d Continuous Daily Box Office Optn1 9:30 A.M. kids, and It's interesting. But nobody knows what's golng to happen next." "Somethina simple is next," Fir1t Show 10 A.M. Predicted Berk, an observer of 2S years of pop\Jlar music. ''As ); the joong grow up, their idiom t . develops and changes with • ~ them. Like jw: and folk which •• . got more and m6re esoteric, rock has become highly com- plex and eso'teric. "The sound then gels too sophlstlcated to appea1 to the younger kids, who then come up with something new , something simple all over again. lt'5 a cycle." The cycle may heve come complete with the Woodstock Fest.ival, v.·here the promise of the most famous Md most esoteric groups alike drew 400,000 persons to stand in the mud with others who couldn't hear the music either. TOGETHERNESS "The music was tht con- nection." said· one not-so- young participant, "but it was the togetherness idea that rtally made it. It's what k.ids are trying to tell the society - people can get together and not hurt each other evtn when the eoing ls rough. The only way out of trooble is to be natural -to trust one another and share what you have." aDd with 10 of the year's at· as soon as the critlci came. rivala atlll .nmn1n&. the. old saw and scorned were the rule of thtsplc thumb that one mll!lcal ''Bllly," Jack I 1 show ln flvti pa,y1 oU Htmed Mason's dire comedy 1' A secure. Teaspoon Every Four •lours"; Also cheering bankro~ers "The Mother Lover," another nre nine holdover hlta from unfunn,y ; and "The Watering prerioua sea.sons, led by Place," Gothic drama at its "Htillo, Dolly" and "Fiddler wont. on the Roof" still ,...... Efforil al luring profil.mtk· '¥'16 ing audiences to rf:Rttlory Jlckpot rewards at the box Of· displaya were generally dis· flct. During the year, too, mal The A··-1·allon of "Cabaret" clo~ ~th a neat Producing Artist;" ended a $1.3 mlllion profit ; You Know three-year st r u 11 g J e for I ean:t Hear .Y°'!, Wheo ~ . Broadway survival. n.e Circle Waters Runrung, $400,000. in the Square company ''Jimmy Shine." $100,000; and retreated back to off· '"nle Price," $50,000. Broadway. The American The plight , ~f m~ical~ was Conservatory Theater falle<! f:<> the mostrl.gnificant item m the fascinate crowds on a Vl!it Joss column. "Dear World" from San Francisco. with Anfleltl Lansbury droppetl Lincoln Cenler's Repertory the biggest . bundle, $'720,000, found some solace tn its Tint after ISZ futile performances. SRO offering "ln the Matter while "La Strada" achieved of J Rabert 0p ...... t.eJmer n the dubious distinction of los-· t--"' • Ing $650,000 after one official performan~. ~ 'Ibe other shows that existed SHIRLEY 1.W:.LAINE JOHN t,lcMARTIN SAMMY DAVIS, JR , (!) CJ!i ,AH.i,~1$10N• ALSO SILICTID SHO•T SUIJI~ lfe. Show Stem 7 p.M. ' l Collti11•••1 .S1111dey froM 1 p.111. BALBOA 673-4048 OPEN 6:45 7tt I . JalltN 1a1-..hntnsul• li.W yoD an SEE lllylhlDJ )'011 Willi "A!~· .. AUC...,1-'S RESTAl1RAMT" ,, .... , Al!ID fiUTHRIE COLOR by Otluxe lln111d Art1sl1 • 2114 ffft•re "THE FIRST TIME" New Year'• Eve. 1 Show Only -7 P.M.- EXCLU$1VE ENGAGEMENJI I NOW PLAYING I I THE RE!Vl!R is a SCOUNDREL. an OPERATOR and a BRAWLER •••• William Faulkner!> Pulitzer PrizeWinnin~ Novel 'The Reivers. is now a film! Steve McQueen plays Boon in 'The Reivers" ~Z Suptmatural splrll Cl Once inorl' 44 Land of •·· 45 Hit 4• Aslin~·· 4 7 Crew 4 Worried 5 light sou rer 6 -'mtrican no~ellst 7 E1po~ or Indians: 3 words br1ch 33 Proof of property traMfer 34 Pekes and paodles 55 Whtr• the Colosstum IS S6 Eris' llrotntf 57 Ltl out 51 Laboter t.2 Through The yeer took its toll of old-time producers and character ~ctors: Barton MacLane, Y. Frank Freeman. Nicholas Schenck, Howard McNear. Boris Karloff, Gabby Hayes, Cherles Brackett, Alan Mowbray,. Charles Bancroft, F.duardo Cianelli, W i 11 i a m Goetz and Rex: lngram. Suddenly there "'as an under1round, the r a r . 0 u t soo.1d.!I of hyped-up ampllfiers and sit.us, or electronic noises and 20-mlnute renditions. of undisguised sex and drug· oriented lyrics , and or the fascin1ted pushing of sound to the point of pain. "Maybe the next sound will be natural -no drugs, no amplifiers," said Don Law of the Tea Party. "Sometimes orchest ra members CClme in here, fascinated by the lile tn the kid's music. And &ome of the new groups -there's im· provlsatlon and the beat, but theres that flute -a flute ! - out front ." ACADEMY AWARDJ BEST I ~9 !19 quanti1y ' l • lO • • .. 8 Honest - ' 1 35 Russian c.itr )7 Un mpos ~ng I 10 th• 111ediu111 of Such femlliar leading men of yesteryear as R o b e r t Taylor and Rod La Rocque, John Boles and Je ffrt y Hunter. · Dead too were Ben Alex· andtr, Russ !.!organ, Sonja Htinle, Irene CasUe, Thelrna Ritter, Ella Logan, Jimmy McHugh, Mitzi Grten, Rhys Williams, Natalie Talmadge and Dtad End Kid Leo Gore<y, 1961 produced some top- mf]it film" "Tru• Gri~" "Butch Cusldy and the Sun-1 dan~ Kid ,", "The Secret ol Santa Vittoria ," "Anne of the Thousand Days." "Hamlet," "They Shoot Horses. Don't They?", "Midnight Cowboy," "Ttui Sterlle Cuckoo." "Good· !...++-4-ll-~4"'+'-4---l-4 llfx;-f-ll-~-l · bye Mr. Chips" and "Paint Your Wason'' amons: score1 of othcr1. • . - EXCLUSIVE ARIA SHOW!NG SHOW TIMll l'tOO It t :ll MATIHll SUN. 1 ,, J ACTRESS!i BARBRA STREISAND! I I I IXllM!IA l'tTIJR£S'lli RAST AR PIUJlx:~--1 1 t' ' ere""'\lldllest' i': I 4'11.a~I l ,,. -~, ""' ~I ... I i J i I • • • • ' · .. .•. • ,. ••• l ! I l 1 l I ! I ~ l ~ H ,d t: /. ' ! l I ' ,. 5atL1rday, JanLUry 3, 1970 ~ILV PILOT J3 E~·Star leata Peters Newport LEGAL NOTICE Hughes' Wife No · Recluse ' Grad Top Director .,,. ttll (laTIPICA.TI 0, DOINO lllllHl$1 UNDla · ~ P!CTlflOUt HAMI T1le UO!de'"lltl'IH 11tr• c•t1lti.t. th.II h.I ~ dOIM bu1h<wu •I 1152 """" Tvlrl" Avtn\lt, 111 !he CllY fll °''""' C-tl' of Or111M. Sl•l•~C1Mf0!11!a. IH'lffr f!lt llC- 87 VEJINON srorf BEVERLY HILLS (UPJl - '"ll'he my&tery that surrounds 1.l:lbillionalre Howard Hughes In- .. :'eludes his wife, former film actress Jean Peters, who lives · ~incognito and unrecognized . ~ Mn. Howard Hughes la 43 . ~'and has been married to the · sec:reUve Industrialist since : )!IS?. .. -While Hughes make, his ·":home in a vastnegs atop Lal · . ·vegas' Desert Inn Hotel, one ol six resorts he o~·m along ' the ramed Strip of the Nevada • city. his wife has ber cllOict of '-several splendid homes 1n Beverly Hill! and Bel Air. hotel conductinl; business by telephone. But hts wtfe tr~ quenUy visit.a ot.htr hotels to ' enjoy the stars who appear at the various spaa. • A Jong·tim• trlend, of Mrs. Hughes aays she· does not miss her aCting career. allhoo&h tec:hnlcall~s is i;till under contract to Century-Fox where sh made her first pic- ture , "'Cap From Castile,'' In 1948 co-slan'ing with Tyrone Pov.·er. 'The green-eyed star made several films for the stud.lo, one of the lai;t of which was o;Three Coins in the Foun· lain." Htlllut nun1 ANfS .. lllMAalLY. 1"'-l11U me 111d 11"1111 JIKt ef rt1ld""<• o1 11\e """.,.11tl'lld II: llobut D. Howl. Ut Ntwlll Ll~!n, _,,,, Or.n", C11Jlorn11. -D"etl: St!p1!!fl>kr I, lff,. A former drama student at 1toti.r1 o. How• Newport Harbor Hi~h School ~~ti\v0~,,c~i':~Jr1" l-.. 1 and .oran~e Coast College !s d•'::1,~':: 1 'Mo:~ P:•1 .. ":M ~ :i; making his mark as a movie "'''· Hrton111w '''"'" llobert o. direclor wilh a prize·winning Hoyt. known to me lo ii. tht ""'1' ..host ""ml la ~llllKrltled le TM wlllllft short subject now making the ln$1rument al'ld 1e.knowled1N to ,,,. !Piii ds t th . hbo hood ,.,.. ··"'-,... , ....... roun o e nc1g r w1T>1Ess mw "''"' 11\d oflkl•I w11. cinemas. !OFF1c r•L SEALJ , Fr~lldl V . Ntll "A T~st ot Vi o I enc e,' No11,..,. "ub"< h. h • "( b · I SUit of C1111W11l1 w IC y1ews L s s u J e c Pr1N:!p11 Otfk• in Slhrou.ghh c·p~1in\Vtings Of ~Ith e ~:"'l:..~~ IXlll~I pains 1v1 ar, was ~'rt en J1nu••¥ 4 1m and directed by 26-year-old JOHN A. wN1t11 • ,l,fMor•W •I LIW Stuart Cooper, formerly of "" Jl,..1 "'""'' •11111 Newport Beach. ;:,~:;rJ:Zi'!,., A-• Th I I ti as Or-•· <111tent11 ""' e p c ure reet:n Y w P11b11VoM Or•-eo.11 011w io1i.1 selected the outstanding short DIUl'l\tlet u, 20, 21, 1H• '""' J'""""' S: 5Ubject at the Moscow Film 1'1' ~ Festival, and y,·on a similar l~----------- award" at the Dublin Film .LEGAL NOTICE -. S.curlty lll''ds protect the .t:ooe-time Ohio State Unlvers.lty J'.'beallty queen as vigoi'ously as they do Hughes. There Ls a difference 1 .l'liowever. IN UNDATED 'STILL' AND 1954 FILE PHOTO Jtan Peters Hughe• KHpl Active Schedule A native of Cantm, Ohio, Mrs. Hughes was married once prevlou1Jy, io businessman Stuart Cremer lit. The marria'ge flas brief and a divorce was granteC:rrn'" December, 1956. F~ltval. 1 --~------- Cooper Is a 1960 graduate or "·"'" H bo HI h h h l died CfllTl,ICAT• 01' •Uf!NIQ ~ Though Hughes, so far as f nyone knows. rarely if ever li entures out in public, much ess among crowds, Mrs. J !}llJihes moves freely. She at· { irt.ends the opera, ballet, con- , Jterts and sports e v e n t s j l\mrteognb:ed. 1 Without makeup and in In- !' expensive clothes, Jean Peters ~ughes could be mbtaken for ! ,any attractive middle-aged I ~sewl!e on shopping sorties to Beverly Hills department , torts and bouUques. At night she attends a university under an assumed name working for a master's degree in sociology, although she also take.s art courses. She prefers t he C06· mopol jt.an atmosphere of Los hngeles to lhe gambling-resort town which her husband has mede his headquarters. To insure her safety, Hughes has assigned an:iuod·the-clock security officers who ar9 always in the vicinity of his y.·lfe. ~EA111'1FUL . ·But when she expertly ap-SAFE STREET : plies makeup and wears One Beverly Hills police of- 1govrns designed by Europe's ficer said, "One nf the safest , most distinguished designers .streets in this town is the one 1she is breathtakingly Mrs. Hughes lives on. We ~beautiful, according to one hardly bother to send patrol • friend who asked that she re-cars past that block. it's 10 ; main unidentified for fear or well protected by the Hughes I: losing the secretive Mrs. people." 'Hughes' friend.ship. Mrs. Hughes has her hair , : The wife of one nr the done in a , popular beauty ~'·world's richest men attends parlor in tbe center of the i baseball, buketball end foot;. -Beverly Hitfs--s·h-op p i·n g l ball gSmes in Los Angeles, district, but only the owner of ·! frequenUy in the company or a the shop and the operator ; female acquaintance, or ac-kno1v her identity. '4'companled by a Hughes She visits t4e . shop once a _Jecurity men. week. calling only an hqur or During the week she busies so before her arrival to throw herself with charitable worlcs. off any PQSlibility of !etting a One of her favorite con-regular routine which might tributions is reading for the be followed by mtmbera of the Braille Institute in a recording press or others. · 1bJdlo. ~ Durini tht warm months she swims almost daily in her own pool. Each of the homes sprinkled through the Bel-Air, Beverly Hills area owned by Hughes has a pool. Geneally every house has two exits by automobile in the event or unforeseen problems. Mrs. Hughes drives her own la~e model imported automobile, but following it closely is one occupied by members of Hughes security forces. On Fridays, Mrs. Hughes more often than not flies to La s Vegas to spend two or three days with her bu sy bus-- band. She is transported by one of Hughes' private planes which lands nn hls own Las Vegas airstrip, or by com- mercial jeUiner. In either case she is met by a limousine which delivers· her to .. her hu5band. Again, she moves unrecognized !?y-the swarming tourists Intent on gambling or soaking up the sun. One former Hughes security officer said she moves freely In and out of the De1ert Inn without being detected by guests in the hotel. ' VISITS B<Yl"ELS . Hughes choose!! tD remain on the topmost floor of the There is a lighily knit group of £riends who protect Mrs. Hughes from outsldert, amon1 'ar r g w ere es u ll!CTlflOUI NAMI drama under Robert Wentz Ttot 11,..ra .. MCI c1o ur11,., trleY ,,.. and appeared in the title role eonc1~1.., • 11u,1Maa 11 ,,,., °*'"u' of a production of "Abe Lin-~~~i'~:r':;:;'1~~'!'~ ~,·~':E"':;11"m'":~ coin." •le also played in MESS INVeSTMENf COMPANY,,.,.. lhel •• OCC 1•ld !!rm 11 CorT\PoMCI ol 1hl followln• "Cyrano de Bergerac at ..e'"""'· w11os1 ,.me1 lft 11111 '"" pl•cn 11 In \"'"' rtll!lence ••• 11 lt!tk>w1: them actress Jeanne Crain. COAST GRAD NOW PR IZE DIRECTOR Those who discuss Mrs. Stuart Coopar F.llming' 1 Test of Violence' '"'4• . R1lph '"" Phlllp T, Clock. um /\fter leaving Orange Coast. C~•tnul Slrttl. wt' Im I" 1t1,. Cooper 'vcnl lo t.o.1don where c1111ornl•1 D1vld "· 11KC1m. • Art~ lioward Hughes at all, do so -----------""---------- covertly, revealing a1 little as W1v, 01kl11\CJ, C1llftirnl1; •'Id J1mt• he studied at the Royal t11k!v, s10 Monl10!flfrt s1re11. -. .. •cademy o( Dramatic Art Frftnc!1eo, c1111ornl•. ,, · 01~d Ncwrflb..-11, Off. 'fhen foll o\ved a succession of R•loh Clock possible, thereby weaving a web or mystery every bit as intriguing as that whlc.h sur· rounds her billionaire hu.s· band. One confidant, however, said, "Jean leads aS normal a lire as possible considerina: her ·husband is Howard Hughes. -A girl in her posil.ioo just doesn't run around making news. "She's not that way anyhow. Jean ls quiet and thoughtful, and never did believe In all the glamor stuff when she was a&~ actress." It would appear that Mrs. Hughes is happy with her life. Certainly i;he will not h o I d l!iUll long-enough to 1be int.er- \'iewed on the subject. l\fini Thea tcrs HOLLYWOOD (UPI.) ·Jerry IA:wis will open a string of mini-theaters -&eating capacity from .2tlO-alQ -for r o und·tbe-clock, automated film 1howinas. Fullerton's Reims Heads Opera Unit Prof. C.llffor.d 'V. Reims of California State College at Fullerton hes been eted.ed president of the National Opera Alsociation . Relms. associate or music on the campus and dkect~r o{ its successful Opera Theater, will hold the top NOA spot for the next two years. Organized in 1 1 1955 under the auspices of the National Music Council. the NOA seeks to promote opera and Improve operatic techni- ques throughout the United States. . . Indian Ex tras HOLLYWOOD <UPll Warner Bros. employed 7~ Santa Clara Indians ~ extras in the new Anthony Quinn comedy "Nobody Loves Flap- ping Eagle." t I . . . Phllllo T Cloe~ m nor roes 1n motion ptc· 01vld ,..: B••com lures-including "The Dirty J-T111n Do '" b f h t d t Stttr ol C1llloml1, Or11•e1 C"Un+Y; zen -e ore e urne o 0n OK.mblr t. Ifft, 1im1r1 ,..,., , directing Not•rY Pvtil!c lft 1nc1 for ••Ill st•l•. · ~Uv -•ff ll1fpli Clod!. ""'tll• HAPPY H1v1 • h 1 pp y w11k111c:I, St•rt it by r1•di11g th1 WlEK· ENDER 111 th1 DAILY PILOT. 1". Clock. Dt¥Jd F. ltKOm •ftf J 1me1 T111.., klWW!I M me le ~. lfll """"" wt>oat n1mt1 t rt 1ubtcrfbtd le tto. wl""l" lllfl"'-"Mnt 1Jltl 1dl.110WIM1M """' n · l<Utf!'d 1111 ....... !OFFICIAL SEAL! Jlldl1r"ll A. ''"-"•Jr NOllrY ~uhllc-C11!1otnlt ~rlll(!"I Offk:I lft °'"'"" (91111fy M'f C111nml,.lon f.i:11lr.1 Julw ti, lt7? JIOal!JITIOH, HOWJl!ll ANO GAlltlANO, AffwMYI •NI c--Drtn. "--' ·-~. <•llflrlll• ~Vblltl'IM O'lftll Cee1+ 01lly "11-I, ~"""' U, 111. f1, IN• 11111 J1nua,.. ~. 1f10 2.m.., LEGAL NOTICE '"'"'' NOTtC• TO CltlDlfOll IUP•lllOllt COllll:T 01' TH• ITATI! OJ CALIPOllNtA Jell fHll! COUNTY 0~ OllAMO• 1tllll ClNIU~-F"Oi PR{S{NIS Ht.A..fMitt ~ E11•t, el l"AVL M. HALAPO,..~, 1lln k-•t l"AUL MllCI! HALAPOFJ, •1111 •s PAUL HAl.APO~F, Cl«!tHd. NOTICE IS HEttl!IY GIVEN fl lh~ c•ldllorl of ,,,. tbov1 nlfMll ~ Reims will be directing perfonnances of Puccini's •·Gianni Schicchi" and Zador's - "Magic Chair" Jan. a through MntARINE RO§. BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID Talk Sliow·Tv B"ttleground f Networks Locked iJt Struggle for Viewers, Loot 11 in Cal State's RecitaLHall. He 11!1 mullc dtrector for the p roductlonofB lzet' s "Cannen" which will be of· fered on campus ln Marth. fw'l'ISKJW" tilt.Oii ,, flf.llll[ 419@ =:.!!!= l 11111 111 "'""'' "'""'-clllm1 "''""' fll• 11ld dKM""I 111 rMulAd "' 1111 111trn. "'111'1 ltle nKtt.,.,..,. ¥911(111-.. In lhl ~ of Ille Clt•k If tlll tboft 9ft!llled CWFI, II" hi ••tttnl 11ttm, w!tll 1111 ft.Kall .., YOUcller11. "' lhl u ..... -.1..,.. 11 1111 flfflc• of ICUltlAJfDl!tt. SOLOMOM & HA.ltT. ""°"""''-l'IOS Wfff """""" Dou""9,.., Mat1Tebttle. Ct tllornlt t0M0. wllldl b "'°'" t ltct of bll1hie11 of ttoe u"""""""' 111 11t m11t ... 1 Dflrt1l11lnt 11 ''-""'"' ff 111d dt<tdenl, wl!hlft low 11'11111111 eftw th• llAI t!ublltlllOI' of 11'1(1 .... kl. D1!ed D<!etrnblr 10. !Ht By .!ERRY BUCK NEW YORK CAP) -Th e ~st frontier to be fully ex- olted by television is the ' te-night talk show, where the !ompeUtion is mean and the • money is green. The late-night audience is large, and Crom their desk· and-couch command posts the lb06ts of the three network :,!how1 are Jocked in a head-to- ;.head contest for g ue 1 t s , ·rttings and revenues. ~ Thi.I move into the late-night •bours is spurred by the lact ,that there is something for everybody. For the networks , ·the talk abawa: are cheap to :Produce a n d are highly pro- li'table. For the stations, they l>rovide network identification ;And etght or more minutes lo liell to loca1 advertisers. For th! guests, the exposure is of ~nestlmable value. 1 And the audience at ho1T1e gets a comfortable and U'll· pemandlng show that. oftf!T'J as rot , has some of the most fpontaneous entertainment to J>e found. ll"ith a 20-year head start, NBC commands the lion·s Jhare of the 18 mUUon viewers ud of the $50 mUlion-plu.s 9"11,J'ket. Johnny Car8on. host ol. ''The Tonlgbt Shaw" for se- IE ven years, reigns as the Cap- tain Midnight of the talk show set, aloof, confident and one of the highest-paid perlormers on the air. ABC joined the battle 21,-J years ago with Joey Bishop, and CBS last August wilh Merv Griffin. Neither has been able to attract more than one-&illh of the audience and ABC rep!ae<d B~hop with Dick Cavett last month. One of th.e ironies of the business is that the network talk shows must compete not only with each other a11d the old movies on the independent statioru but also occasionally with defecting affiliate sla· tions which opt .!or the higher profits of the movies. "The problem is to get the local affiliate stations to carry your show,'' said Griffin . "If you have a three-station market, the third station, ii he's smart, will run a movie. Some nights the movies rap the hell out of all of us." The defection of stations was the undoing of Bishop, the fir1t casuahy of the late.night war. Alter Griffin Came on, Bishop's roster dropped from 150 staUons tom. Gi1111n liu 152 and Carson 209. Three ehowa on five. nights a week. 52' times a year, add up By Phil lnterlandi ·-. .::... . "". -""··~'1{,.;· ...• "Bring me the papen on U:le Tw'llkcn merger, ca ncel ~ppotb.tlllient with foster, and ... wow, you look -~-' torriflc thll..mornln1- ' I , to a voracious appetite for guests. Jn ad dition, the syn· dicated David Frost Show and the fllike Douglas Show, in Philadelphll, compete for the 1ame pool of guests. GrifUn cracked: "We're going to have to start throwing bags over gue1ls' heads and whiskina them to our stud.lo." "The big scramble for guests Is searching f o r somebody new," said Rudy Tellez1 ''Tonight Show'' pro- ducer. "You need 5011leone who can hold his own but isn't overexposed." In the scramble for guests the shows keep staffs of bookers, conrult the big agen- cies daily, and check the trade papers and bulletins that li st the v.·hcreabouts of celebrities. One time, a Grifnn booking agent stood in the wings or the Fr0$t ehow and lite.ra l ly whisked former Vice Presi- dent Hubert fl. llumphrey away by limousine. Griffin had stopped the taping or his own show~ to await Hum· phrty's arrival. Each lhow pays its guests a flat '215, which is union scale. Because tile. fee i1 small it doesn't l\l&rantee excluslvlty. The bi1-iwne guests aren't in- teruttd in the fee, anyway. '"This Is one kind of &how where the &tars can unwind ~­..... Mllllfltnl•11 S<ltttl Di-llktr '"JCll:AKATOA" tD) "d w ... n1 "ltlND O~ lll!DlfT WAfllt" Ill FOR THE FIRST 41ME ....... DRIVE-IN MATINEES! STARTING CHRISTMAS DAVI ATTENTION PARENTS! SPECIAL HOLIDAY SCHEDULE ALL DISNEY PROGRAM ot PAULO D•IVl-IN NewpDrt 'r""., i nf ltkw ltrtet, CMtt MIN "101 DALMATIA NS " & "DARBY D'Glll" te 9C$DtlllMDdfle thD t'"tftt •111t1Mf ef f9Mlll• '"" ..... di!• .... Dllf klld1r ...ti KhDftlD wfll ff , • , "Darby O'Gill and the Uttlt People" 'Dark' Slated At Chapman '• " '•' F 1.. I I I "F,-. "' LU<Jli4z . ..... ..... PAUL NIWMAN "BUTCH CASSIDY AND THE SUNDANCE KID" "ME, NATALIE" C•llf. Tlt•rs. A l•i:. 1 :JO P.M. Shew11 et l :JI p.11to _, ...... 1 _,.,.. • •-r..,,., ..,..,\11\T'KIPfltl,.' I "l 01 Dalmatlans" ~ ' 9iao "-"'""""" Shn't et 7~ '""' ~VJ Sot thi1 complol• All Dlin1y ahow-1110 H ti 1 S P·m· [!) ...... f.111w IO~ OFFICE OPENS AT 5<00·PM. • • -.. aoc . TIClit<Jcoc.or 1 '******•**************••················· ~ ' I CHARLES It. HAlltT, Jlt, E•"'utor of 1t1a wm II lllt tbove "'"""' dKt!ltnl ~~~~~~~~-JKUltLANOllt, IOLOMOM & HAIT CONTINUOUS PERFORMANCES DAILY HARBOR ol ADAMS, COSTA MESA, PHONE 546·3102 ON HA.'1101 ILVD ... ONI Mill SOUTH OF SAN DllGO FWY• Y(ORLD PREMIERE ENGAGEMENT "ONE OF THE SMA SHtN• l!IOX OFFICE SUCCESSES OF 1•101 -L. A. TIMES "UN 9UllTIONAILY, IT II ONI OP. THI l\IPl ll ACCOMPLllHMINTI ON PILM OP THI TIA•I" -L. A. UAMNlll -ALIO-ANOUl AIMii DI'~ IO•AIDI aOllRT fOUTll , MICHAIL YOll )111 W11t l l'IWIY l l'td, Mlllletllllt, C1lll. "6-11 T.i: ltUI J'll.6311 Dr: ClllJl"IH llt, Hi rt, Jr. l•Kulw lft I~ ttr PublltMd Or•ntt Co11t 0111'1' ,.,..,,, °"'"""' u. 20, ir. '"' 11\d J1MJ.1,.., '· lt10 :r30f ... , LEGAL N<Yl"ICE "'"'" Cl!llTl~IC,l,TI! O~ I UllN•ll, PICTlflOUI MAMI Tiit Uftdtflllllltl dO U rtll¥ 11111 lrt COfld!Kll... I M lr>tH 11 1"'1 Ill<~ lvld., H""'tr"'lwl DtK/\, C1lllor11ll, untie~ 1111 fld!llolll fl"" "._ of LA MOD( 'Alll 1(1 11111 11\t l Hkl llrrn 11 UK"-td ltl' lllt lollowl"' "-. WhM. ""'-• i.. lull •1111 1tlltt1 DI r"ldt11C1 1r1 •• lollow1: Ern1t W!lmt •1111 "°'' •1:11nu, 11'71 Ellubtlt'I W1¥, Tul•I" '"" D1ted Dl(ember 10. 1H' lto.1 Wflrn1 Erllll Wllmt Sl11t of Cllll9r11r1, Orlllft Ceun1Y1 On 0~. 10, lfft, blfore tnl, I N.t•.., ,ubllc In 11141 fOi' ••Id 11•19, --u., IPHotred •otti Wiim• Ind l!rMt Wilm• ll!IPW!I lo IM ffl H !tit ,.,_ w11111t twornet ••• tubKrlbld Ill lllt Wfttll11 I~· ttt'llmt"t Ind •cknowltdffd lhlY tlllCl/ftd ,,,~ ....... (OFFICIAL SEAL! MAltY K. MENltY Not1r., Publl< . C1llf11rnl• Prl11<l•1I Offlc1 111 011 ,..I COll!llT Mv '""'"'Jnll!ft t~itlrt• Nov. 1•. lt1' l"Ubllthlld Or1"1t COltt 0.lly ,Ito!, Ot<1mblr I). JO, 11, 1Hf 1nd J111w,.., S. 1•1' 2JN.ff LEGAL NOTICE ATTEND THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE THIS SUll~Y \ I' \ , , " -~ ... .._ +. ' • J 4 DAil V PllOT !aturdty, ~anllarf ), l 970 SALLY BANANAS By Charles Barsotti .---. ---. r-;:==:::::;:::::::::-711 y ""-~ ikt ~"" \>"';~.~. PEANUTS \ Hello again, boys and girls , and welcome to the first 1970 edition of Uncle Len's Comer. FROi\f THE number of drawings Uncle Len received this y.·eek, it doesn ·1 look like too many of you are ready to go back to school next week. We only had four-and that's a new lo\v for Uncle Len's Comer. So let's make an additional .. .,,,,.,_,,,~~ NOT CNLV1l<AT, LAST WES: l WENT 5KllN6, AND FELL OFF THE CHAIR~LIFT l •· ',. .. " . .. ~ .. • ~ ~ .. ~ • " .. new year's resolution to send ____ ,.....,,__; in at least one entry to Uncle Len every \\·eek. And \Vhi!e )'ou're at it. put one of your other new year's resolutions dO\\'n on paper in the fonn of a drawing -because that 's the theme in Uncle Len's art contest next week. HONORABLE mention win· / By Charles M. Schulz !'VE CO\\E 10 !(X} RJR A WORD OF El<COJRASEMENT S3o c::... \<.., 'To ' Sc..\.-oZ>L ners in this week's art contest ---------------------------------ii art: r Terilyn Kelly, 10, Costa J.fesa ; Je.ffrey JI.larks, 9, South Laguna, and Terrie Howard, 11, Huntington Beach. TllE NEW YEAR The new year brings g o o d cheer: Turn over a new leaf. Do your belief, Be a better person And this v.•ill be a successrul year. * PRIZE WINNER * Pancho 1'1oorc, 11 . 457 Morning Canyon Road. Corona de! Mar .o\ny child under 12 can enter Uncle Len's Art Contest. Here's all you do : (1) Draw pieture on piece or plain, \vhite paper s• inches wide and 4 inches deep. Use black ink ant.I n1ake lines black. (2) Do not copy or trace picture. It n1ust be your 0\1111 'vork. (3) Put your name, age and asJdress on back of dra1viry g. ~1ai1 ii. to Uncle Len's Art Contest, Box 1500, DAIL\L -· PILOT, Costa 1'1esa. \Vinner 1rill receive Kennedy half dollar . • -Ml.,, Ciut!1f!.O'\, Hu",I"'"'" &e•dl '--------------------------------~! HUMPTY DUMPTY l-tu1npty Dumpty sat on the wall. 1-lumpty Dwnply had a great fall ; All the king's horses and all the king·s men Couldn't put Humpty together again. But an American doctor '"ith patieoce and glue Put Hum pty Log ether as good as ne1v. A 1(111nefJ 11111 fflltr tt•t t. 'ftrlffll kt llY, 1 .. ttt Vh!I .. ,,, c"'' Mew. fl• tM wl"ftln1 ..,,.,, 111 ttM ,,..., ·~• -(..,1111. ,,,,_II '''" -tr ,,.,, t9 U11'1t I.ft. I•• lMI. CUii Me.._ C•Hlffftl•. S.11• ydr '1lfttl•111 t• Ask A1uly, •I• Or• ... c ... o.n., ~let, ••• 1160, C•ste Mft41, C•llf. What is the story o f cyctamatn? for preserving foods, keeping them fresh and imPf(lving the flavor. But each one of 'these newcomers must be rigorously tested before it gets to markel M. a rule, this testing is done by the manufacturer ~----Caro l~ Corner ----,i RIDDLES · and JOKES * PRIZl WINNER Dear Carol : What happens to ducks 11·hen they fly upside down? ·dn )lj)l'nb ....... l : .18MIU\f' -K1trllffft litlt l. f , 0~32 L• MUI L•""• Hu"llntllOI: l~IC~ Sister: \Vhat are you doing? Brother : 1'111 1vriting,~a letter to my friend. Sister : But yo u don't kno1Y hO\V to 1vritc. lirothcr: That doesn'l 1natter: my friend doe sn't kno1v ho\\• to read Boy : School isn't fair. 1'lother: Why do you say tJ1al? Boy: Because us students do the v.1ork and the teachers get the money. -Coll!\ Miiier. t, l'!unll"'lon &tech Dear Carol : How do you spell mousE!'trap in three letters? J.•\f'•J !.18MSU\f' _,...,.,, Gu\1•1~. Hu"11..,1~ a11dl You would hardly expect a simple little chemical to stir up a stupendous legal battle . But that is certainly one part of the story of cyclamatcs. And there is still .more to it. Those simple littlt: chemicals invaded our menus. often wilhoul our knov.·ledge. And some scitntist!!I are ve111 ccr· taJn that large doses cl cyclamates should not be In our daily diets. and lhe FDA makes more '----------------------'I tesl!! before g r a n I i n g permission to sell it lo lhe The la\Y is a huge framework made up fro1n countless small p I e c e s., Sometimes the rules and regulatioru o v e r I a p, IOOletbnes they contradict each other. But most of lhe time our legal s y s l e m manages to keep our society working fairly smoothly. This ls ~use the federal govern- ment plans laws ror na· t.iornyide safety and most local lawmaker~ do their bc!!lt to can')' out the details. The public. animals. True, these test doses were larger than we grt in our usual menus. Bul last year \\'C consumed seventeen faster than wri!.ing i n longhand. Sooner or later , somebody w~ bound to invent a shorthand system of writing. This happened much sooner than you might i1nagine. The Romans. it seems w e r e bothered by the tedious pro- cess of writing things down In longhand. Marcu:s Tullius Tiro had a very bad time becal13e he was the .sec:relarx_ ol Cicero, the great Rdman orator. This was around -the year 50 B.C. • /1 Food llnd Drug Administration i:s the branch of the ft:derJI prunment which in!!lpccts diet.s and in our medicine However. the numl>cr or new chemicals is enormous and H re1•" may be extra tr icky. Th!:!y may pass a v.·hole S(ries of tests and everybody feels sure they are safe for human con· sumption. at least in :::mall doses. Sodium cyelnmate and calcium c y c 1 am at e are chemical salts that sneakf<I by the usual tests in the 1950s. Nobody at thf: time dreamtd that they would become so popula r. But the cyclamates arc cheaper than sugar and at least 30 times sweeter. They &ecmed jun right for diabetics who may not eat sugar. But since they ha\'e no food value. lhty "'ere adopted by the manufacturers of diet roods. Th"Y were used to $Wtelen soda pop and chtwlng f!Um, ice creo\lm ;ind gelati n·s , toothpastes and baby toods. cough syrups ttnd c a n d y coatings for pills. • million pounds a n d con· su mption (or this yea r v.•as estimated al thirty mill ion pounds. about a third or a pound for every person in the country. The FDA tried to limit our doses. But the present laws cannot rorce manufacturers to report the presence of cyclamales on the label s of •eir prod ucts. Often we conillme them without knov.•ing. And 1f someone con· sumed too much or tht: foods containing cyclamates, I.he results could be dilastroos. Before this legal upheaval is over. v.·c ~IJ get a lot or new bl'd'S to ~Vt US from the ~'cet ta sting cyclamatts and pro- lt'CI us fr01n other tricky chemicals in U1c future . Marcus solved his problem by inventing a system of shorthand :symbol'!!. So far as "'C know , r his WIS the first shorthand Sy.tern known lo the... world. LetJn, of course, became the scholar's language throughout Europe. This first shorlh.1nd system, with a few improven1enls, was used for some 600 years. The first f.nglish $horthand sy$tem was invr.nted by Timothy Bright in 15118. In 1602, John Wills in- vented the first system based on a sort ot alphabcl of signs. And In the J800sJ Sir Jsaac Pit· man and John urtgg J.nvtnted Improved ahorthand 1)'11ems lhal became world famous. chests. ~ The FDA J1 a federal agency with an Immense Job on its hand&. Countle11 new cbenUClls are cre,.ted every year: Some. ...,.-Hte-uvlng clrup aocl many are lullaj>I< I I ~teantlrne palient scitnlists had been rechecking lht early r.y cl1ma1c tests. Thty dl.Jcovcred that lara:e doses caust lttiouJ damage to ratw. rabbits &Dd: other laboratory \Yho Invented shorthand? Ordinary longhand 1~ a tedious proceitll. \Ve think much futer than we can write and ordinary conversalJon Is 1 TUMBLEWEEDS PLAIN JANE JUDGE PARKER MOON MULLINS MUTT AND JEFf S'TUPJD, YOU CAN'T MARRY FIVE GIRLS! GORDO -B UT ONE GIR.L.. 1S BEAUTl ~UL.. B UT DUMB, AND ANOil-tER iS R.JC+4 B UT UGLY. ANO· MISS PEACH eocouc l!!mLO HAS l!EEN A REAL HliLP,.100! ... FOR THE FIRST TIME IN MONWS IM ABlE 10 RELAX! WHERE'S 1\IE BIG ··FELLA · . NOW? €.:::V. •· i l j'. f By Tom K. Ryan . " ly Saund.-s and · OYergard ~ 15 WHAT M.R.PRIVER TOlD ~E ~ue? .. Tl-IA.T YOU A.~E MA.meti? /'ln--r .. . '!'. n\ERESON~Y ONE GIRL I KNOWWH015 GOT EVER\'1>41NGI trls WAY ,<;oj ST ()(JR .DINNER ;. 11ME/ WHERE'S T/11!-J.ARD OF Ille CAS11E.P A. ' 51'4e SIMPLY l?OES lllOT liN\lO'I MV COMPA/'IV1 MISS PeACH.,, I O>IJ.V! OWi. Y CON'11JE "JOI.JR COW\IEflSATION TO SUS'/NESS•"OR THIS 11Mf I WONT BE PLAY• "'"""~'--"CTIN6 WHEN I PUMCl-I '1t>Ull PRETTY KISSER, FRITZI I By Harold Le Doux VOii ~TU Pl P PAME ! WMAT ARE VOtl Tm Ne; TO PO?' By Ferd Johnson By Al Smith WH AT AND BUST UP THE BEAUTIFUL PREAMSIHAVE! By Gus Arriola By Mel :t EN.JO'( VOU11. COMPAi'\'( Al.M051' A5 MUCMASI IX> ANVBODV ELSE'S ... I .,1 -~ I " . .. " ., T ~ ' ' ' • .. ., . " " .. .. .. . CLOSING BOQKS ON BOOM YEAR Buch Buildl'ng Director Jack Cleveland Boom a Bothe1· Beach Ends Record Year lly TEllaY COVILLE Of tt1t 011tJ r ilf'I Still "f?'Osress is our most im· plrlant problem," says Jack Cleveland, building and safety cUrtet.cw for Huntington Beach. Hls refer ence is to the p,l'lenomenal boom in reslden· ilaJ construction -particular- ly apartments -in the city this year. "PubUC relations w i I h homeowners Is the prime pro- blem." he explains. 1 ' A s homes are built the dust, the noise, the crowds -they all bring-llOmeow.ner _complaints to us ." Huntinaton Beach nO\V rests ntar the IW,000 population mark. Someday il is expected to be a city of 300.000. Growth seems unavoidable and this )'ear the figures prove it. Total evaluation o( all con- syuctkJn -from back yard fences to an industrial com- ple1 -for the first 11 monlhll Ol..-tl• was more than $86. mUUon. For the same period Jut.year it was just over $51· mutton. '"Aparimenls have shown the greatest spu~ in the la.st two years," said Cleveland. To\s year 2,453 multiple family (a~enls) units havt been built or applied for . A total ol 4,220 single family unlt.s came to crop in 1969. Twe or three years ago apart- ment uptjt.s numbered less than a thousand. ' £.ommercial . ... Site Sold • l n Laguna One of Laguna's major com- mercial buildings, located at the ·w6od's Cove intersection of Dlamond Street and South Coast Hl1hway. has been sold to a Huntin1ton Stach woman for $215,0M. The new owner or the l6- 1uite stn.icture that includes MacDonald 's Jewelry, Cornella Bl1e!OW dress shop and the Balcony Tea Room. is Mn. Marjory Davis of Hun- lin,ston Stach. ·· Locatet:I at the site or a former Laguna landmark, the e~ Woods co;ve Inn that btlrntd in the early 160s, the new 1tructure was built in llM. Seller David Sherwood of Northridae was represented by exchange re1ltor P.fill .ijanson 0£ Latuna Beach. The buyer was ripreshlte<I by Jack K1stler Cl( Ne \V po r l each. ...,,, I "1 r I -- ' ·-,. Largest unlt to be built this year is a 448-unit apartment complex at Brookhurst and Hamilton Streets by William Lyons Construction of Newport Beach. It is a $2.l million project. "I can't see any reason for a ~owup next year. As long a5 they can sell. the builders v.·ill build," said Cleveland. Ahal it all means to the city Ot'Course is more people, more tax mwey, a greater economic .base -and more se rvi ces that must be pro- vidl!d . To theOuilding· depaftment ii meant $516.164.02 in building permit fees and $186 ,329.65 collected for parks an d recreation. "\Ve haven't had any serious problems in tlij! 10 years I've been here. but 'of course v.'ith the hurry-hurry pace we can't do the work ltie Way we'd like to." said Cleveland. The .biggest residential con- struction morith was J\.lfle with $20.4 million in assessed val- uation of:.wor-k: .Tea years. ago they didn't even approach that figure in a total year. "In actual v.:ilume or con- struction we're ranked in the st11~ behind Los Angeles. San Diego and maybe Anaheim," salcf. Cleveland. He credits a cooperative city govern _ment and ad- f!iinistration with easing the growing paim. "They try to help you, not .simply criticize. \1/hen you make a mistake they don't laugh, everyone works to try to correct it." Once the city r....e a_c b e s saturation -300,000 people - you might expect the building department to breath a sigh of relief. But Cleveland predicts a new phenomenon : "I think someone v.·ill then start tearing down tract homes now being built and put up high rise dwellings. IC y,ou have people you have-to do something." 1,950-acre Sale Listed The sale of a portion of the Rancho Las Esclnitas situated in northern San Diego County cast of Carlsbad was recorded in San Diego. The 1,950 acre parcel formerly owned by the Lux Land Co. of Brawley. was purchased by a mid-west in- vestment group r or ap- prnxtmately f1 .000.000. The land "''ill be held for future development. Fr~d 0. West, real estate broker of 33.1 E. 17th Street. Costa Mesa, represented all parties in the transaction. I See by Today's Want Ads e THAT e IT'S e DIME eA e LINE e DAYI r. --- I, ' ' J ' • .~ ,) • How about starting a 52 week vacation. The day you move in. Our big new air c;ond itioned Tiburon homes are beautifully nestled in the middle of more year.round family fun things than you can even imagine. (You must see it to believe it.) The year-round Tiburon Club fer instance. Lounges. Kitchen . Volleyball. Shuffleboard. Croquet. Ping pong. Badm inton . Out of sight Bar B Q's. Putting green s. Speotaeu lar ·Oly°'pic-sized· swi,m· ming pool with raci ng lanes. (For swim meets.) Wading pools. Spe· ciaf tot lots for tot s. · LARWIN 'S , That's not enough. There 's a championship golf course prac· tically next door. And a whole ocean full of water fun just 4 min- utes away. Our new homes are enormous. ~It too .. k OU ( designers almost a hear to cr ea te these exciting plans). <.o you and your family car enjoy. And you'll have plenty of time to live it up , too. Alf exte rior maintenance is done for you . By professionals. Come 0.1 over. Today. Tiburon .. This is full on recreational living 1t its finest. This is the beginning of your 52 \veek vacation. The end of the 2 week vacation. ~ Janua'f " 1970 From $23,750. Low FHA and VA terms. !)itections: Tiburon is located in Fountain Valley on Brookhurst. Take San Diego Fwy. to Brook- hurst. south one block to mbdels. By the developers of world famous Tanglewood DAILY 1'11.0T Jf • l ' - • \ • , ~ - I • I, -- • 0-'fl~ Pl~OJ , _ -$ti J, ~ ~. !''"·. • _ -·. . '. t -Women's LiheratiC!n Movement Reach~s ·Orange Coast B1 THOMAS FOllTUNE ...... °"" , ....... In wcuna Boach a S""'P o1 women \S working on 1etting their husbands to take over ~ Of the housework. Al UC Irvine young gals o~ ttte activiit. Women's U~ra.,. t!0111 Front have b e e n scOrchlng ears. Jn Costa i1esa a \\'omen is organizing a Harbor Area- Huntington Beach chapter of NO\V 1..National Organization fOf' Women . "Now" is" when the organlt:ation wants action on women's equality. A women·s JlberatiO'll move· menl, jltst begiM.ing to heal up nationwide. has reached · the Orange Coast. \!.'omen in some quarters are liring of their "slave" status and saying they, like blacks, are rtady to get "uppity." But uppity women are far from realiJ.lng the revolution lhey want in-American life. A majority of women take a skeptical ir not. downright hostile view of the new move- . ment, il they have heard or it at all. So far In the United States there are about 10,000 converts for women's liberation. with upwardS of 100 now involved in the coastal part of Orange County. V.'hat these \\'Omen want to be liberated from are the everyday indignities t P a make them feel inferior to men -things like being regarded o.1ly as love objects or housekeepers, receiving lower wages than their male counterparts, Jaws t h a t discriminate against women. The barriers to equal status for women are formidable, but surmountable when the ·libera- tion movement picks: u p steam, say the propooents. Jt is a matter. they say, ol unleashing the resentment at second class stalu~ present in the psyche of eveey womll\1 but dormant In most. !\1rs. Shirley Bernard of -co!ta M"Ba-;--l'!OW's mem- bership chairman for 1 3 western states, aays women haven't the same burning desire to be free as most discriminated·agains t groups because they have been allow- ed to li ve with the master race. · She compa rPs women to "the house niggen of the South who \\'ere fed well, rlressed well and nol very rebellious." But her brand of n.!he.Uk>n that advocated by NOW -Is tame. and pragmatic com- pared to the dramatic protests elsewhere in the nation of '\'ITCH (Women's Interna- tional Terrorist Conspi racy from Heil). Redstockings and Keep_ on Truck.in' Sisters. No sh~ding bras in pubH c, disrupting bridal fairs, in· filtrating Miss American con- tests or stripping to the burr to protest a speaker expounding the Playb'oy philosophy for the women of NO\V . 1.trs. r Bernard's NOW is pursuing such concrete achievements as passage of an equal rights amendmenl to the Con!tlb.Jtlon, run participation ()f women in politic.al ac- tivities, revi sion of divoree and social security laws. ex- pansion o( child care services, a .change in the mass media's pGrtray&l of women. and aboll· ti<111 of laws penalizing abor- tion. She plans lo call an organi'l.BUonal meeting for <\ lncal area NO'V chapter after the holidays. She said she has names Cf 50 Interested women. · A women's liberation group that has no name began meeting In Laguna Beach three months ago. 1'.1 r s . Eleanor Fag In said she figured they would talk about the movement and Realpolitik. "But the one topic \\'e've talked most aboul -because T guess It's where il's al -is housework," she said. "Some husbands are begiMlng to have another attitude and are more helpful. Othen are a lil· tie nervous." The group of 10 to 20 women m e e t s Thursday nights in someone ·s home . she explain· ed. "Usually the husband is absent and "'hen he comes in there Is a ctrtaio amount or laughter. lie looks hunted ." · Acnm the nation. it ls yout1ur women. part of a rebellious generation. most taken with women's liberation, ·and for them housework is not where It's at. .A Women'• Llbe.r1tion Front came into bein1 this fall al UC J~. the nucleus 0 r meqtbers coming from a<> UYllt organir,aUoos such as sot · the committee r o r rei.riltatemenf' of fired pro- f et so r 1 and the moratorium committee. MOU MORE ••Ja thtH 1roups there was aft •ttitude of male chaV\'iftisn.'' said one spumed female radial "The \\'emt:n i-.,pposed lo make the cof and do the dJUos and Jet 1 men do the ln- teUectuallllng." Seafot lltlldtnl Ann Doyle oaid !lie IO lo IO members ol Women'• Liberation Fronc believe the ~ of Typically! before l h e y ~ lS _..lillcally based. enibar~ on ibtratlon activities· "there is Ute ' psychololical womea--must steep themselves doqble ft.andard, .~ can't in forced-reallzalfoft of their 'be intelligent or agresslv~. secood.,ex status. 'J'hey must But moie important lh;kn that. rea!Jie .rthey 1'eel inferior and we tJ;ink, is ·the political and ghed °*'1selves or that feel· economic exploitation.," she ing. said. "That is the i~ that Mrs. Bernard sees it aa an scares JM!Ol!le.,. upper cl us-lower class lhi:ttl·· f\tlss Doyle said women-of "A~lDC that has to do with the WLF will be considering the .. loY(~,r · cla5' becomes the rifed (or a chii(t care · ta\ot~ '' she sayi "Wornea center ·at Irvine and might be c,n. wear' ~lacks because that lookinJ into pay and working has to do with the upper cl.Ass. conditilms of women employt.S But°'did you ever see a man or UCI. fight to wear a skirt?" • t many women come to such insights about their stalus alone. Group discus!ion is ·the .usual dialectic for awakening. "The first thing that 'hap- pens when -a new ~roup is lo\:"'ed is a (lilch se.ylon." said Ann Hei'achfang of ll'le Union.-for Woinen's Tntema· tional Liberation. "You sit 'lioyr'n and talk-about all the things done to you thaf make' you feel less th1ln human." A Los•Angeles area women's liberation activist, she spoke recently to an UC Irvine Ex· ' temion class on "Wqmt:n,:...'Jbe She said she felt aome of U\e ;na wOmen art ~gle, diyonl- &l pereeol Mioorily." For lh• speak~rt durinl the """,.. ed, widowed, 1<J>(rafed or session oo ~·1 liberation (not the. ones on women's _ de.serted. IJbey-do not. W<lfk.Jor there werf 11& women and liberation} "patroni..tlngly pat-..pin1nooey or out of borfidom. eight men pruent. ted women oo the head saying , -Full time women W9fken Coordinator of the course if they didn(t make If in • .eam an average o( 40· pereent Lynn Olsen said she hopes to_,,..catter-they .can: make It In ln-..1ess than rheru.ln.almilar;Joba_ sef! the status of women terpersonal rel,tionships." in.eye:ry major,lndustr)'. become a whole new academic' fl ia the lneqiaUty In job op-• LThe..:-.~ ~aap be\\\·~ discipline. ' portunitles and.pay for women men ~d women has\been ln· ~'\Vomen have to develop workers that arouses maey, 1 creasing for ·Uf)'ear&.,- ne\v \\'8YS to look at woman's sense of the unfllr. I Another ..rneaiurei~ of 1he themselves and at life,•• she ConYerts are w'on for women'• ;declining itatus or1 women "' said. "They need to claim ex-liberatia,1 when the statistics lh&!-50 seal! they 'have. lost .in pliclt goals of dignity and Ire told.' NOW. in a tract tit led state legislatures the past 10 pride and become initiating jn-"Vive la Difference?", slates: .yeirs,. .a'nd the drop from 17 tp dlviduals." -Forty percent of all wor~-10,_CongressWom,en Im 11168. _ .. I . SOME IMPORTANT FACTS • ' ABOUT THE JANUARY t3•h ELECTION. I (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 BalboaBayClub-Jease·has-approximately-291ears remain· ing. However, the request for extension for an additional 26 years makes the vote mandatory. Q:'-\'@O WORKED OUT THE TERMS OF THE Lf,ASE? A: A City Council committee and the City staff worked over in taxes as a result of the implementatio~· of the Club's master plan. So this election provides the taxpayers of Newport Beach with a unique opportunity to finance many gfj!s capital improvements__M_ new recJe_ation.al projecti without digging into their own pockets. i .- Q; DO THE TERMS REMAIN STATIC UttDER THE EXTENSION PROPOSAL? · A: No, and this is a very favorable .concession.to tbe:City. The -minimum increases every five years with cost.of.living --~.2~t .• ' . M-'-'-S1111th Ia· tho ,..,.~ 'in the • )14 ~,j 1 ' • A: 'Who spok.-,aUt, lo thew ~ clus, sata, '!ft'_s got to t women 'havt : tJie -Jiii fn~. 'J?tey e qDf!Qlh · . to vole.I« I >1'1 l • _ aH~f~. lry to '~4it (O· llave, lo !JOI • ...Cb ·IS~­ Jm they ..... ~ gtttlog ma.le v~ ~!! very •' . • • , ...,._ ....• a year negotiating the lease. They also hired a respected independent research firm,.Development ReseartlliAeso,. tiates of Los·Angeles, to ev&IO'ate1he lease proi>Gslltal\!I' · ' tp advise them. The full City Council unanimously approved the lease document for su bmission to the voters . ,~.u~t'!Jents. F~.rthermq,r-. the. e~ensioq prufid~s for~ · • , , &pij!plete.,rene~liation QI holll \ .Jlij@1lllmJ,od he ·per-. ! _ 1 : .•.. , cen\ages during t e lease term a nunierous times: "'-~ • ' ' ' ... .. . -.. ' ' .. .. I ' 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 the Cily's terms, th e Club considers them 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 years. 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 AGEN- CIES. HOW MUCH WILL THE CLUB PAY UNDER THE NEW LtASE? A: The minimum rental will jump from $45,000 to $150,009 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 $137,0QO in property taxes with $68,000 of the latter sum going to the Q: A: New port·Mesa Unified Schpol District. · WITH THE INTELLIGENT FURTHER DEVELOPMENT OF THE PROPERTY, SALES AND ·P-ROPERTY TAXES ~ill FURTHER INCREASE. WHAT WILL BE THE NET GAIN TO THE CIT!· Z£NS OF NEWPORT IF1HE LEASE IS EXTENDED? 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 ' -' ' Q: NONE DF THESE PERIODIC ADJUSTMENTS ARE PROVIDED FOR IN THE PRESENT LEASE? A: No, and if the extension is not approved, the City will real- ize.very little more from the property than ii does today- and this condition will exist for the next 29 .yeais. < ' Q: ISN'T THERE ANOTHER ISSUE IN THE.CAMPAIGN-THAl> 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 a'lternative. The magnitude of the current level of development (at the Club) -in excess of $7 million in 1968-precludes !tom ·· · an .economic point of view the demolition of these build· ings for a lower use." Even the opponents fo the lease extension concede that the major new structures will:not be torn down in 29 years. ' • ; Q: THEN THE CITY WOULD NOT BE EXPECTED TO DESlROY MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IN BUILDINGS AND IMPRriVE· 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. It could not afford to: .. Q: THEN THE REAL ISSUE HERE IS WHETHER THE ti.TY IS GETTING A FAIR DEAL FROM THE PROPERTY IT OWNS? A: This 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 CLUB HAS AGREED TO THEM EVERYONE BENEFITS FROM A YES VOTE JANUARY 13 -(•!fl.mitt" ft, T" Vtte, D, I . •1.,i.ta. Olft. 1N M1llNr Or~ Ctl'Mt hi Mer, C:•llf, 4 I --~ .. . Orange County's · ; Largest Seledion. -of Trucks OVER : 125 'JO CHOOSE FRO~ Rancheros, ~ickups._:__, __ ·Vans, Camper Units, etc. PRICED RIGHT I: READY FOR MMEDIATE DELIVER·Y - ' -. ' I . -----------~ --~ ( . -~,R-60-1.0-CHOOSE-FAOM- PRICED AS LOW AS . 51678* (*CORTlr.!'A 2' DR . 8<'-92JR~25~2) . . -.. ·-. .. ' ' ' , • I :EXTRA ,SP·ECIAL · > SAVING ON ' . / 1 $ ''t969 Encutlve . Cars&. Demonstrators I ' ' I I' • • I ~ • , ..... . -• • ,.HOUSES FOii SALE HOUSES FOR s~~ HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALE I HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES F()R SALE ·o.n.ret tDOOGeneral 1000 _General 1000 General 1000 G1ner1I IOOOG1n1ral 1000 HOUSES FOR SALE HOUSES FOR SALi ·General 1000 Gener'il 1000 HOUSES FOR SALE ..!t 11111 --~- .; Pete Barrell fea/t'I f'rejenfj . . ,. . BOUNTIFUL BA YCREST · JUST LISTED -Spacious uncrowded 4 bd· · nns family room &: dining room. Desirable . street away from traffic. Attractive decor island kitchen, shake roof. oversized double -· garage. CaU to see this. $691750. " Office Open S1turd1y1 & Sund11y1 PETE BARRETT REAL TY 160S WutcHll Dr., N.9. 642-5200 --------~ ;, DAILY PILOT WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Open Houses THIS WEEKEND (2 Bedroom) 1437 Bonnie D90ne Orvine Terrace) CdM 675·3000 (Sat & Sun 1·5) .......,,.106 Linda 642·8235 fl Bedroom) lie Drive, Newport Beach (Sa t & Sun) 1964 RayfT}ond, Costa ?i.'fesa 645-0303 (Sun 1·5) (3 Bedroom & Family or Den) 4231 Branford, Huntington Harbour 846-0609 1Sal & Sun 12-5) 3430 Seabreeze. Corona del 1'.1ar 833-0700:644-2430 !Sun 1·5) 1700 Samar (Mesa Verde) CM 546-5990 !Sun 1 ·51 4545· Gorham Drive lCameo Shores) CdM 67S-30Co (Sal & Sun 1-5) 1921 Mariners Drive, Newport Beach 646-5511 !Sun 1-5) 512 Seaward Road, Corona del Mar 675-5726 (Sat & Sun 1·5) 1848 Port \Vestbourne, NB 673-8552 (4 Bedroom) 219 Poppy Avenue, Coron~a de! Mar 833-0700:644-2430 !Sat 1·5) *2585 Tustin Ave. (Back Bay\ CM 546-5608 (Open Daily) *4639 Fairfield, (Cameo Shores) CdM 675-3331 (Sun 1-5) (4 Bedroom & Fami:y or Oen) , **333 Morning Star Lane (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 (Sat & Sun) **515 Bayside Drive, Newport Beach 642-8235 1Sat & Sun) 1130 Santiago Drive (Dover Shores) NB 642-8235 <Sal & SunJ 1430 Galaxy Drive (Dover Shores} NB 646-1550 IOpen daily) **1 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle! NB 675-3210 (Sun 11-5) M42 Jersey Circle, lluntington Beach 67~10 (Sun 12-5) **90 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 (Sun 11·5) *2005 Balearic Drive (Mesa Verde) CM 540-7573 (Sat & Sun) *1930 Santiago Dr. (Dover Shores) NB 646-1550 (Sun 1-5r 173.4 Minorca Place (Mesa Verde) CM 541).1151 (Open Daily 12-5) 2900 Alta Vista. Newport Beach 673-8550 (Sal & Sun 1-5) (5 Bedroom) **14 Linda Isle Drive, Ne,vport -Beach 642-8235 !Sat & Sun) **16 Linda lsle Dr. (Linda Isle) NB 675-3210 !Sun 11 -5) (5 Bedroom & Family or Den) 3124 Bern Drive. l.aguna Beach 494-4286 (Fri. Sal & Sun) **58 Linda Isle Dr. (Linda lsle l NB 675-3210 (Sun 11 ·51 CONDOMINIUM FOR SALE (2 Bedrco rnj 1501 Co rnwall (Westclirf Villa) NB 642-7n7 (Sun 12.S) 833 Vista Bonita, Newport Beach 673-8MO (Sun 1-5) 2003 Vista Caudel. N.B. 673-3550 · (Sun 1.S) APARTMENTS FOR SALE fl, 2 & 3 Bedroom) 748 Maln SU...t, Huntinaton Be1ch 5315-~79 (Sat & Sun 1·5) DUPLEX FOR SALE (2 Bedroom each) ~! & Fernleal, Corona de! Mar 673-2 222 !Sal & Sun 1·5) * , .. , , t * Wettffr•llt • • * ,.~ .-. w ... rftW . ofinda J~fe PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES OPEN SUNDAY 11 ·5 I Linde Isle Drive 4 Bedroom, family room, billiard rootn. 5 bath home in final stages of completion. Pa· Jos Verde stone entry & fireplaces. Beauti~ fully decorated. Priced at ........... $155,000 . 16 Lindi Isle Drive Exquisitely decorated 5 Bedroom. 5 Bath ·new home with upstairs view of Corona del Mar hills. 8 fireplaces & BBQ. Can tilevered patio deck. Priced with dock al .... $145,000. 51 Linde Isle Drive Just completed 5 Bedroom, 41h Bath home. Water view from moster BDRM, Jiving rm, din ing rm. family rm & kitchen. 2 frplcs. Crpt'd., wallpaper & Jndscpd ........ $155,000. 90 Lindi Isle Drive. Beautiful 4 Bedroom, 4 Bath home with e-xtra large living room & master Bedroom. Car· pets. & drapes. Landscaped. Boat slip. Near tennis court & clubhouse ............ $135,000 ' 1000 I Genorot 1000 --- NO DOWN LOOK VmRANS -F"a r r _tlflil · -.. WHAT'S IN A NAME \Yell, it's a funny 'Dame. but an elegant hon1e. Orellano is the name ••• 3nd the home ••. 4 Bdrm., 3 bath, farn. rm., formal dining room. The owners of this '39,800 home have been transferred. Hurry and name your terms. MARKET FIRST Hall of lame family home. Sparkling pool, and warm walnut panelling adds to the charm of this r-0-0-m-y 5 Bdrm. home. Own- er says "sell." Priced in mid-lhirties. Call now for your inspection appointment. I REAL AMOR Js you rs with this 4 Bdrm., 2 bath home with p~1vale master bedroom suite. Gigantic lot '"Ith a see forever vie\v. Fireplace. electric built-ins and covered patio. $33,000 on you r terms. 'fou r New Year's retreat. SAIL AWAY. Q_VAlHA.....__--1 Bul don't leave NewPort until you have seen this beachy cutie. 2 Bdrm .. den, J ¥... bath. '26.500 and the . owner wants enough down only to cover his costs of sale. Move in as you like, but don't delay. · 2629 Harbar Blvd., Costa Mesa 546-8640 ---------~ LOW DOWN FHA AT THESE Th"' ;;;;;;;,.m, two bath FEATURES Ge•erol 1000! Generol fully carpeled' and draped'. 1. 1"'25 Separate family room ---------1000 ewu.;." klrd,., wJrh , • ..,,.,.,, " Fonnal Dinh,. Vacant and Rfady FOREST E faci!Jt1es, Double garagt" 3. 3 Be<droom 3 BATI-lS ~ . • 'rcnt't'd yard. !~ acre ranch'. 4. Nearly 1900 sq, it. oI floor E~t 11lde charm '~ found in 0 L s 0 cro at end or cul . de • sac space. this large 3 bcd"?Om 2 bath street only $22.!KlO _ fi. Huge rear yard home. Cedar shingle roof, N 6. Pride ol ownership neigh-hardw~ ftooN, 'va.mt fire- bothood ~ · place _ 1n the iamily room. Inc. Realtors . M. M. LA BORD 7. Quiel street close to every-assumable lo1v intt'rest fin. ~IQ E~·enings C!JI 6~&4579 thin~. ~ · _ anc~. Qu~t neighborhood. Tflls ff~ home \1i0Uld'lie a· -F'IHt' 11hopplfC and .ehoois. bal'J:"ain •l SJj,!XX>, But il's $3.1,000 11 ~TEAL at our price of Up Tight? $31,!195. 546-2313 Then gp~ad ovt In 1h1~ de- lightful 5 btd1oon1 p o o I home hi&h on a hill. For- m.el dining room for grac· lou., rntertalnfng, "'ork l!QV· -';4'isi'iE~O;;'R~Mi=~H:;:U;;G;;E;= I er kit chr n. .Ex 1 ras 1t11.lorf'. Kingdom for Horse s Your ho~ neVf'r -had It ~ good~ flugr 300' lo!. 4 stalls and n.ins. Ct'Oss·fl'n{'('d, Tack roo1n. /\ lovrl.v :i bedroon1 home \1illi formal dining. PLUS gu<'st hoUSC'! Numrr· ous ~Xlras and features your hol'S<'s 11·11l just lovr. Pri1·e<l 11()111 at s:11,.·l(l(), brllcr hurry! Ullil 1)0111 6·1a.C3C3. FINER HOMES • DOVE« SHORES A truly fine home. Over 4200 Sq. ft ; no e:c:· pense spared in construction. 4 Bedrooms, family room, formal dininf room, 6 baths·: custom in every dE!tail. ' 80,000. Call for: app'l. LINDA ISLE Exceptional bayfront buy; 5 bedrooms, 4~ baths; 2-story hayfront home, designed for a _ family who entertains. Huge family room ac- commodates billiard table. Master suite with fireplace; formal dining room, separate maid's quarters. Asking $135,000. Open Sat. & Sun. 14 Linda Isle. DOVER SHORES · Unusual, custom home on large corner lot in beautiful Dover Shores. Superbly decorat· ed. 3 Bedrooms, 3 bRths plus powder room; built·in \Vet bar, family room, breakfast room. Spacious pool & terrace. BeautiCully ~aped. $149,500. Call for app'l. VIEW LOT arge corner To in-Dover Snores wifhPri· vale swimming beach. Vie\v of the back bay & mountains .. <\rchilect's plans available for 4 or 5 bedroom hon1e \Vith pool. Low lease· hold. Asking $35,000. Gtneral john macnab REAL TY COMPANY 901 Dover Dr., Suite 120 642-823S 1000 Gener ii 1000 3700 fl. under mission tile roof. 5 lrg Bd- rms. 30' ~'laster suite w/frplc. Formal din. rm .. lovely Jiv. rm. w/frplc. Paneled family rm. \V/huge frplc., wet tiar. Span· ish tile floors. Custon1 carpets & drapes. Professionally landscaped. Room for Pool 3 car garage, boat storage. EVERY EX· TRA '. . DOV ' RES : itw. ' Orllfnal ~rs tr111ll'er of buaiDeu 1Wation nc«ul· I.ales sale r4. thls bet.utifully lanclscaptd. home \vith cour.t• yard ently leadina: to pan- oramic view, Briaht, i;unny llvinr room 'vlth view of t.bt entire back bay: den: 4 =; ~!~~:~: :.=. dinin&" room; marble ~ pl~. Over 3,(0) sq. ~t. $89,SOO. Open Sat I! SU..; llJQ Santiaa:o Dr. ·, john macnab (7141 642-1215 901 Dover Drive. SUite U> Ne\\'JlOl't Beach DREAM HOUSE .Jui>t right ror 1mall Jamily. 3 bright &: taste- fully dPCOralC'd bdrm~. immaculate k i l ch en· "'ith lots ol h•nd rubbed IC'ak\\•ood C' s b i n e I s. Large back yaril witlt-;--'- C.'OVE"red p a I i 0, VA lt>m11 • $26,950, ~ COATS ~WAL~ACI •EALTOIS 546 4141- COpen l...,ingol ---= ASSUME GI LOAN 3 bdrm1 1~i bath. Immedi- ate poSMsslon. Good atrHt. GI loan with low payment·. try 10% down. S23,500 Newport 11 Victoria 646·1111 . Anytime EXCITING 2 STORY : 2 STORY, 3 BR, 2 BA. exlra lrg fan11fy rm, <:rpts, drp~ !hn1-0ut. all bll-u1i::, t'~· lf'll~ive landi::(·apinh l: patio. Sl iOO dn. Brkr. :>49-2286 ''"k days, 540-5844 f'\'£'S/1vknd~. $22,500-POOL BONUS RM .-Liloice arra clOS<' lo fl'<'f'-way. A vrry cxcll1ng hon1e $32,500 "$44,000. DELUXE TRIPLE X BY OWNER* ~f>-1846 In Dover Shores EARNS $5,800 OPEN SUNDAY 1.5 , C.Ovmd patios. Spacious bed· rooms, 2 baths, "A"''al'd" built.in kitchen, 1-'Ull dinin&: room. Plush ca.rpt"ting, 2400 sq. ft. o( superb living. 2 baths. f'I K:tric kitchen. Open House Fireplace. Entry hall. Huge Sunday from , 12-5:00. Jj()l bonus room lor !hose family Cornwall. Beautiful \Vest· get-togethers. 540-tTlO cliH Villa Condo. 2 bedroom, TARBELL 2955 Herbor 2 1 ~ baths. Mint condition. Tarbell 842·6691 Cus!om drapes and carpets. 1000 General All electric kitchen. Large ================~1 livini:-room \Vith fireplace, Coldwell; Banker OFFERS: FRONT ROW !CAMEO SHORES! • Designed for gracious couple living. Lu sh- ly planted pool·size patio. Extra lge. bmd. c~ltng .lvg. rm. & master suite, both v.'ith Vle\v. Separate guest qtrs.; pan. den with frpl. & \vet ba r. Din. rm. 3 Car garage $147,500 . Kathryn Raulston OPEN SAT. l ·5 219 POPPY. Ocean view from charming 2· story Spanish '''/tile roof. Best patio in Corona del htar. $59 ,500. Carol Tatum VIEW· VIEW. VIEW 1-larbor Vie\V Jlills nicest Cul·De·Sac street -larg~ yard well landscaped. Custom d~apes-3 bdrms. & fam. rm. $59,000. Just Listed! 1'1rs. Harvey LUSK HABORR VIEW HILLS Near. ne'v 3 BR. 2 BA. &. Jge . fam. r1n. opening on lge. sunny terrace & prof. Ind· scpd. yard. Must see . $49,850. J. Clarkson AREA'S BEST BUY Baycrest: 3 Bedroom home w/custom decor.; lg. family room lV/fircplace. T\vo balhs. Attractive landscaping; lg. side vard for l'hildren or pets. $46.500. · !\1ary Lou Marion UNIVERSITY PARK t'ncklsed patio. aub house and pool privile~s. 2 car i:araa:e with automatic door opcnl'r. Solid v a I u e a! $.14,950. Colesworthy & Co. "Agent" ''For A WiK" BJJy" ti4Z.1777 MOVE IN TOMORROW Four large bcdl'oo1ns, sepa· ralt'! master, large 1.'0vered patk> for family Jiving, rozy living room \vith stone fire. plaC'<.', sprink!C'r:o; front and 1Tar for easy maintenance. It \\•ill be a joy to see this one for only f$29.950.00J. 546-2313 \o THI;REAL '~ ESTATERS -' . ' $17,900 FULL PRICE Shnrp :I Bedroom. 2 Ra1h Ca 11 ro rn l1t Style home, NEAR THE BEACll. Car· Pf'I~ and dr~p!'!': 11.nd ALL J-:LEC.7RIC k1teh('11. Sul.Jn11! your do11n 11ayn1t'.'ll1 10 " 1011· $138 per n1on!h lnl"llJdcs lll.'\('S. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES Tremendous value!! 3 la~ I :~~-s:-~-~-~-~~-~-!':-~-~-~-~~-~-!!!-;;~-s:-;;-~~-~-~-;;~-~-~-s:-;;-~~ I 1930 S1rit ..... Qrive. · uni ls. 2 bedroom &nd 2 baths General 1000 86' Ba.y 'view from ~ each. Dehl.Xe kitchen \vith General 1000 room in this lovely-3 bdJ1l' built·in!t. Only $9,IXXI down 3 bath home. Custom built and just 7 years younr. * * * Sl 6,500 by Ivan \Velfs. OnJy 7 Luxury cari>etlna: and drap-TIM DEHOFF FIXER .. UPPER m<>ntlu old. ti.fission tile root es throughout Mviicured 17135 BUTTONWOOD pool & a wine cdl.ar :roU house on l&rte R-2 lot with grounds. Enclosed garaa;es. FOUNTAIN VALLEY room for units. N~ar New. must see. A!!king Sl02,(0). Priced now at S36,9'50. See Roy J. Werd Co. port Hei&ht& and llCl'O!S today, Dial &-i5-0.103, You are the winner of train ihc park. A !cane (Baycre!t OUicel 2 tickets to the item at $16,500. Submit any 1'30 Galaxy 646-1550 BEST BUY DUPLEX Unusually large unit!. 2 laT'l!'c OOJrooms each. 18x13 Living room, lJxlO formal dininr. Dcluxt ki1chcn with lale!f bui\1.ins. Huge 11s· Jot. And only i years yo ung, Earn.~ SJ.780 a sear. Livi' i11 one a.nd IC't 11 pe.y lor i!t.eH. Priced now ar $3l.9j0. Dial ti't).0000. 645·0303 el I I arbor Cent~r :!:.!99 Harbor Blvd ., C.l>T. 1969 Volume $1•5.5 Million FIXER UPPER Priced to liell. 4 bdrms 1•4 baths Eastsid~. OJ. Only $22,500, Appt. only. • • • $12,500 EACH for 10 houas on 2 Jols. Each 60x300'. Owner may split for 2 btzyers makinc I.his East.- !dde Co~ta J\fesa's be1t buy. Don't mis. thi!r. ont'~ • • * Fun Loving Fami~ \.\'Anted for lhi~ CliUhavcn hulTlf" in M-cluded settiru:. 4 hdrms, :! b:iths A· hugr ram· lly ,L.W!ll hcalrd µool. Nam~ )'our t1•r1ns • S44.9.JO. Lachenmyer Re<alfor Southern Ca lifornia Sports, V ec1tion & Recreatlonel Veh icle Show "' the ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January :!rd lht'll l llh Pl~ase call 6-11-5678. exl J29 bem:ttn !I and I pni 10 claim your tickets. !North County 1011-frt<e number is 540-12201 • • • oUer and terms. WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31.MINUTES Walke f'& Lee 3 ACRE RAMBLING RANCHO- ESTATE HOME 2790 Jlarbo.r Blvd. at Adams 5t>0465 Open 'Iii 9 Pl\T Coinmanding vir1v or Sa~i­ Dack l\1ounUi~ l\fogt vti. f li&tile home in o;..n&e cOun. Open Sit/Sun rom 1 ty. CUitom :,uiJt 4 bedrooms' 2043 PALOMA DRIVE .l bath.~. ;}() It.· family ,....; .Just oU lrvi~ Ave. k 20!h, , ·,-M!p;,ircte gues1 con'I•· Ci\I. Rf!al nca! 3 + famlly Great for horse,.;. ExquiSitP:. l'oon1 11·i 1.h good-sized Assum. ly landstaprd. ll!!at~ & lil· a bit'! 51-:: ~ loiln. Hardwood "°""· 1 ""' 1o1. ""'" "'"'b-1"""30."'°'606· 0 Tarb;;'I borhoocl. See it tod:Ay, 91 sca.saao $16,000 (M*e!Mrnltl'llltll) Oltf' •lld cozy ho1ne on TIP TOP HILL TOP LL£GEREALi;.'!: oho;ce lot.,,,,.. from""' Jlll) .... lllHlrOor-Home fir::it in value; first near N e w po rt Heights. in view: first in beauty. I '!!!!"''"""'"'""'""~~!!"' I "Honeymooners" 3pecial al Take your choice it'1 all Assume FHA jmt $16.IXO full price! here in one of Newport WE SELL A HOME Height's linest 2 bdrm. & 5~%. $145 per month. Com-EVERY 31 MINUTES I convertible dtn. This home pl.ttdec.5bdnn2bahome. Walk & L I> reeks or quality, all built· Cpts/ru,,11, bit-ins. Cul~-er ev ins included. This hOme with sac. CALL MR. NELSON view ot channel i.!l for the 5*-1151 Heritq:e Real Estate 20-U \\l~tcliff Dr. discriminate buyer at only i '"'""'~'""'""""'~""'~ l---=-=646-~111~1=~-~l 147•9'°-4 Bedrm_.;$19, 950 $24,950! PAUL•WBlti CABJCABAN 'RSA.I.TT CO. J093 BakC'r, C.,,1. Spaciou.!l tam i I y h<>me. 4 BEDR.M + DEN '. Dream kitchen with luxury Ptfeu Verde! 2 batlls. Built-~ builtin appliances. 2 l>aths. kitche'b, covel"l!d pa.tio ~ Elt"g1nt wnod burning fire-r r helps "ith tht fina"nciria:1 plat't. 54(}.1720 141 0604 TARBELL TARB'ELL 2955 Horber' . ' 3 BR. 2 Ba. hon1e by orig. owner who has outgro'''" same and needs more space. Din. + kitch. table areas. $35,500. Al Fink Walker & Lee 1860 Nrwpon Blvd., CM 2790 llarbor Blvd. •1 Ad11m~ CALL 646-39'28 Eves. 646-2290 :'il5-&191 ()pen 'til !I Plot SHORECUFFS. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5. 277 Morning Canyon. Have a flair for decorating? \Vant a challenge? Then see this channer. Beamed ceilings, pegged floors. Start the Ne\v Year right -o'vn a home In Shorecliffs. Calhryn Tennille COLDWELL, BANKER · & CO. SSO'NEWPORT CENTER OR., NEWPORT eEACH 133-0700 Br•nd New Listing One <1! P.1CM. Verde's finest, Lovely 31.ara:e bdrms ' tam. Uy room in cho!ct lo1arina Series of Pacesellcr hom~s. Owner simply driving too fAr to ,,·ork &: mu!! !f'll. Offer- ed Al $35.950. 546-5!80 f11t1r CintJN lhttlrtl LEGE REALTY l!.CQ AdllM II H•rflll';CM. V.A. Loen A11umptlon With $4.IXKI Total doWn pay· ment fur thil 65' annual G. I. loaJl ls $152, •. no hid· den cost&. Clean l t>Mmom, ready for occupancy. Th-o gorgeous hAths. Olrpcts. Drape~ throughout! Doub], Ca.rage. 'J\l'O patios. Oo11e •o 11ehool & shoppina. Seelns 1~ l>E'li<'vina! ! WE SELL A HOME EVERY 31 MINUTES "!!!'DE~SP~ERA'!"!TE~O~WN~ER!!'1 Walker & Lee 7682 Edlnaer •tust 100""', 3 lxlrm1 1 '-c. ba!h.s C.~I. Ek'aullfu/ back yard, No 00-.vn tn vrti-111n11. DAVIDSON RHlty• jj46.!1460 l·:\·r~ ~'4\l.1~ • 11424455 ()ptn 'Iii 9 PM 3 BR, 2 BA. family room. prof deror. 2 yr old-xlnt l"Ond. $32.!M. 21~2 fiNI La n'" HR. fhvilt'r 646--4323 -. I- .J I -·-, SaW,dtt. JanulfY J, 1~70 DAfLV PILOT J9 . ljOUSl!S FOR SALE • HOUSES FOR SALi! HOUS ES FOR s .• A::L:.:E:_.:.H:.:O.::U.:.S E.:.s,_F;,_0.:.Rc..:::SA.:.L:.:E=-· 1.;.,;H.:.OU.:.S:..:E:..:S...;F...;O..:.R;.;S::.A::L..:;1!:......;,,;H.:.OU.:.S:.:E::S...;F...;O::.R:..:S::.A::L:.:I:_ HOU s Es FOR SAL E RE NT A LS R ENT AL s ·-HouMt Furnlahed Hout•• Unfumlshtcf ·! i: o.n.t1t 1000 "I I;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~ Gtner •I 1000 c-· .,.. Mor 12l0Corono ctot .~Ma='-..:.1250= Huntln9ton leach 1400Huntlngton 8Mch 1400 DuiplexM For Sil• 1'115 _-;;;;...;..::== * Newport INch 2200 N-pot'I luch 3200 liiiiiiiiiiiiliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii ' • ·!1' I 1,ii;iiii1;'!;;tii4mi1;11;;,;;i I GERI KNEISELER t'OLLEGE REALTY is hap. PY to \\"l'IC"Ome back Gerl Kntisekr \\'ho took a short . leave of abSE'nct'. She ii now back to be of service Differtntl Beautl.tul nelghborhood; uniqUe home! 3 sunny bdrm1, handsome pan- dltd den pl.us a tamily room with lta OWll brick fireplace. Formal din- 111:~ room wkh stone 1loor ~n• onto a fasn. ionable living room viith masUve white brick fireplace. Th.is is a ne1v listing priced al only $35,950 &: will ht open 1hi1 Suoday 1-5. 1700 Sa.mar. ''1'·~1'\7',,,.·1',., .,. . .. . . . . \ . ' ' 546-5990 10 all of her old a1'd new 1 ....................... . fi-iends. · Gerl, comes from a family, ·of Realtor11. lier late Graod- , father, Fred Barman Sr. W&S one of the first promi· ne:p t developers in Los An- gele11 and Beverly Hill!, as wt"ll as her father who i5 st.Ul active in Real Estate. She began her career in Jtral Eataie back in 1951. 1Ce1i Kneiseler can account for manr families IX'ing placed in selected home~ of the Santa Monica &. Bel Air area. Among her clients \Vl're n1any promillent peo. pie in the motion pic1ure industry. In 1962 Gt'ri eamc lo Or- ange County on a \'islt:-lJk. Irvine Terrace Luxurious' View Home on !p&.Cious lot in exclusive Irvine Ten-ace 3 Extra siz.e bedroom• Formal dining room Family room opens on~ large pool & yard A beautllully designed home in immaculate condition $124,fiOO Listed exclusiv!ly "''!th ing the area she pu1'Chased I""""""""""""""""""" a home in 1'1esa -Verde. Shortly after, she became CORSICAN • V"'.Y ooliv0 in on;anlution club work. She is still active with Hoag Memorial Ho.<ipi· HOMES t.i ""' """ w"'"'"'" WITH INCOME Morning Club. The latter has been very nwanling u New deluxe 4-plexes. All blt. 11he acquired many friend• in!, shag crpt, dr1>s &: la.nd- through the OUb'i aoci'llJ acaping. Final buildings 1st activities. unit, no1v selling. Call Geri at 546-S68o or drop • 3 BR-2 BA-frplc ., plus by and see her at 1500 Ad· • 2 BR-2 BA-patios 1ms and Hubor Blvd. • l BR-1 BA-deluxe' single Cnnr the Cinem11. Theatre!. SUNFLO\VER AVE. "ll:~~~~~::::~C:::f Bt\\'11 S. i\tain k Bristol Ii Located 12 n1ilc E. of South Coast Plam Shopping Center Call 540-1973 3 UNITS $29,950 Financin"g a Problem? Eastside Costa ~tesa. Span. A11ume 51;,.0;, VA Loan lah tile roof, rentals on large w/monthl'Y pymnts of s1n TbllSO' IOt Jncome $385 incl. princ, int. taxes & ins. . month. Our host income re. 4 bdrms, 2 ha. Jg Jcitch \v/ turn in area. bit-In I.: dishwasher, 'spac Exclusive With li'v rm, \v/w CJ!(s/drps, frpic.. Newport sliding glau ~ open to lncd )'ti 'A'/cust hW pool. l-1agstone decking. On I y at Victorl• $27,9j() • EZ terms. 646-8111 (anytime) PAUZ..WBtl1! CARNAHAN ••&LT'!' CO. 1"'. "'N"'E"'E"'D"""M"""O!!!N~EY~7~1 1ng """""1 family pri ... cy, ALSO a ,big hobby room & To.buy a new hOme? lnvesti-separate se"'ing room. Large ·rate our guaranteed trade protected patio. Over 2CO'.l In plan. Let us answer your *I ft of Jiving area. Only queslions·,vith no obligation. S43.500. Weekdilys by app't. BEAUfl~UL OCEAN VIEW HOME 4639 Fairfield, Cameo ShoNI. 4 BR., 3 b1tht, tporkllng Pool. $11,500. OPEN SUNDAY 1·5 Wm. Winton, Realtor 229 Marine, Balbn Island 675-3331 Open 'tU 9 every night. 1100 Newport Beach Cost• Mesa 1200 L ldo hie , _______ _ NEW HOME , IMMEDIATE MOVE IN 4 IDRMS 11/2 IA THS 1/• MILE FROM BEACH $20.990 HUNTINGTON BEACH Can Now 962· 1353 1351 .Huntin9ton Be•ch 1400 FHA DR YA EASTSIDE REDUCED TO SELL 3 br,1-----·-----IJBR~ 7 -'d LEASE /OPTION . _,,......,, Yallv.i , man 11.1 I.la, Fam. nn. xlnt rxtras. Boat or trlr acres~. VACANT termll. $78.0CKl owr. 646-T:J66 $850. •no .. 4000 li<J. ft. 107 Takt over SI S,700 GI, 5!~ 'le • _ Eboli. 4 BR, 3~: BA, J car at SL"l2 per mo. Ch\'lll'r. Newport Heights 1210 garage, Ca-pts, drps, 2 yrs 817-8737. .. young, Chvner c. R. Ga.oat. 1-========i SPANISH HACIENDA C2ll1 24~-3101, eves <2131 ".. I 2-£-0700. Elegant • uut economica ·I-,,="======= Huntington Harbour 1405 • DAVE SCHULTZ 16702 OLIVE CIRCLE FOUNTAIN VALLEY You are the wtnnt.r ot 2 tickets to the Southern C•llfornf• Sports, Vacetlon & RecrutlONil Vehlcle Show 11.I the ANAHEIM CONVENTION ' CENTER January ~1·d thru 11th Please call 642--5618, cs~ 329 bet"\'ttn 9 and I pm 10 cl111 !m Your tickew. t Nol'th County toll-free numQer is 5'11).12201 * * • $22,950 Cory home on a quiet eul de aac. Lots of fruit trees and room for a garden.· Redemr- .ated interior, move in im- mediately with approved credit. Call today to see this 3 BR. Huntington B••ch home In Prime Area. 1400 LIQUIDATION!~ New tri-Apts. For Sile 1980 level homell. Prices sla!:hed '-"'-'--------Only $49,000 Gr•h•m Riiy. 646-2414 Nev Newport Post Office POOL PAD -unbelievably to SJ 8, 7 50. ~ 2-+6-11 or 24 units. NOWS THE TIME Bldn/A:t,. 846-0609, eves \Valk to beach, Apprec. $4.<XXI Total cash down need· 557-fil.51 iating arta. By Owner/ 646-7171 University Park 1237 'ed ta usume low interest ~~~-579 Lindbora: Co. V.A. loan tor this sharp 5 Fount1ln V111ey 1410 ,,,._. o THE REAL "'-ESTATERS I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.f bedroom hOrt'le with 36' pool, Kt:NTALS Looking Lots of decking and patio. BY O\VNER -4. BR, 2 BA, Hous•• Furnf1htd For An Assumabl• Gorgeom carpets & dl"Bpell. wlw crpts, spnnklers front low interest rate loan. \\re l\fodemgardentypekilc:hen. & T't'&r. Compl t ltly Priced at $77,500 r UL L f'f!mod;I~ .• $28.500. 642-4210 -~~-~~---·I have 1\\'o, Both are 5 br, 2'h PRICE. T 0 ta 1 P•>•tnl'nts days, <>1J-2asl eves. · EMERGENCY!! "'· "°' ''· 11. ,..;,,., ,, ·- ' .... -ClRCUMST'ANCES $36,000. and $l7,9:JO. Call for just tikr. ren1. FORCE TI1IS SALE -dct;iils. WE SELL A HOME '.!:!'.'''."\.~:· :;~:":~: •_red h"1ll WEvaEIRkYe3rl M&INULTeEse alley_. toR ea.sf.Side JQ('ation • don't miss this • S2tCOO. excellent trrms · \\'hat a buy. 646-7171 \o ·THEREAL "'-ESTATERS . ' .. " '' REALTY Univ. Park Center, lr\•inc Call Anytime 833-0820 7682 Edingt'r 8424410 Open 'tit 9 Pl\l List Chance ROMAN TUB Owner may accept friend's Yards of closets & large ()ffcr to lease this choice 4 dressing room in master bdrm Anthi?">:' pool honte U . not sold w1lhln next wttk. MOST BEAUTIFUL bdnn swte. 3 more bdrms. Hu i ...... 5"% GI I t Family room.. Atrium of t -.. .. e . oan. o Near S.A. Countr)' Club on huge living room. Many, take ov~ @ $~91 mclud1.ng comer lot 80xll0. Complete-extras. Large, fenced ror· tax &: lJl5.. le\ s go • wid.? ly moi:lemized 2 bdrm., drn ner lot F'ul.I price $4:3,T.lil. open for oilers. I.: v.·et bar: built-ins & 5 fl. E\'e!. 6-12•5207 wide beaut. brick frpl_ Dbl. Bob Pettit & Assoc. detached gar.: formal din-1 ill£ rm. & 16.'1:16 mstr. bdnn. -===='=3=3-0=0=1===' I-luge Jiving nn. -e Bl LL HAVEN, Rltr. lrv;ne 12381.!!!"'!'~!"!'!"!'~!"!'""' FORECLOSURE 5 BR 2 Ba honu:. Assunie ~· FllA. S:l2.!l;iQ, Dy O\vner, Call !162-8292 L•guna Be•ch 1705 WUTHERING- HEIGHTS Located in the heartland ol Laguna's Riviera coastline. Situated on tree shad~ grounds & sheltered by high brick "'alls in patio ganlen M>lling that aUords a SCEN. TC VIE'\V• OF nIE OCEAN &, CATALINA ISLAND. TllF. ANTIQUATED 3 BO. Rl\f. FLOOR PLAN is rem· inisttnt o( another time & plat~. Massive liv. rn1. in "GRl-.:AT HAU. DESIGN." Gener•I 2000 • * • MR . & MRS. WILLIAM T. McNEALEY 836 SANTIAGO ROAD COSTA MESA .Yo ··n 2 tickets to the Southern California Sports, Vac•tion & Recreational Vehicle Show a l the , ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Jillluary 3rd lhru 11th flREPl.AC't, Paol, 2 bdr., 2 i,.., paUo, adults. ~ide VWage. Unt\I July lii:t. $200. Call l213) 222-4309 ot 673- 5-119. 2 Bdrm-Tak• over lr:ue 'til June 8 $125 mo. Call &n-'632 bet 5 pm 492-1712 after 6 pm TRAILER Available now. Miracle l\1lle, N.B. $80 month. lBt I: last. 6<>-0810 7101 Seashore Dr. Largf' <1 BR, 2 BA. Avail J~ J.July 1. $300 mo. family only, 642-7671, 1213) 624-9567 ADULTS ONLY ' 3 Bclnna 2 bl.this, split iem. 2 car aarage. Avail. Jan. 15 or l'eb, 1. $275/mo. B'3 1: Beach R811fif, toe. 901 Dover Drive, Suite 126 NB 645-2000 Eves. 54S-69lf ALMOST Nu 3 Bdr, den, 4 ba'•. Fittpla~. sun dk. · Bo..t dock.t Incl. $315 mo. yrly. 300a Finley (213) 431-9542 " $715 LEASE. Custom 3 br. 21~ ba. P.tany x I r as. Children OK. Nr eve:rytblnc 642-7468. 2 BR. 2 ba .. den. dm. room. Bilbo• lsl1nd 2355 In Cliffhaven. $300 .:.;..,__~-----'-' Grora:e \\'ilUamson, Realtor' $315 mo/yrly, Avull Jan. 673-4J;JO • 673-1564 Jt'd. 2 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, ~ LOVELY lllWnhse 2 BR. 2 pa~: dock. Adults only. BA. F'rplc, new cptL Im- 675-7880. med. pou. SS. Act . ·--64&-073! V•cltion R1nt1l1 2900 ""'B°'L~u"F=F~S~L~E"A~S"E=s-• * * * Z,3 &4BR,Dbl.prt$1 ' MR. • MRS . all Blufll extras. $275 t . KEN KELLY l<:IS. > 324 VISTA BAVA Eutbluff R•olty COSTA MESA You 1tre ,thg.JMimer ol 2 ticktts to the Southern C11ifornl• srrts, Vac•tion Recre•tionel Vehic:le Show at the Newport Height• 3210 J BR, 2 BA. DR, den. ftp. aJ0o sq ft. Quiet SL Adults. no ptl!I. 646-1460. -.~ N.wport Shores 3220 J BR, 2 BA, Yearly tea.Se~ S.."50 mo. New crpts Ir drps~ · fl40-2991 or S42-Tal9 j~ · ANAHEIM . CONVEN'J.ION-..Uni.v•r.s.ity~.k.___3 CENTER January 3rd thru 11th Please call 642·5S78. ext 329 between 9 and 1 pm ro claim your ticket., (North C.ounty toll·free number is 54().1220) • * * DEWXE 2 Bdrm apt in Palm Desert. Fumished, priva.te pool, on golf couts4!. ITI4l l46-8320 or 646-0119 RENTALS Houses Unfurnished Gener•I 3000 Av•ilable Leases l':~ All have frplcs & bit-~~ •' ·. New 2 txlrm 2 bath ·" 1 Townhouse. @ $260/me.1~ Quick poM. :-.: . ; ' 3 Bdnn l tam. nn. bome'!li: Turtle Rock BRAND ~ Avail. @ IJliolmo. or pailjt; furn. @ $315/mo. $~: Immtd, occup. ;:: ~ ''" -' 3 Bdrms A: HUGE rec. roam_: ~1any ex~"· VIEW. Avj;E: Jilll. U@ $350/mo. ~~. . :.; 2111 E. Coast, Cdi\I 673-311 1 TRANSFERED: 1nust sell 3 bdrms 2 l.latl111. c!ectrlr. 1018 S. flifain, S.A. 541-661:i our beautiful hon1e in Uni-built-in rang1:, ovrn, Jo'A H 0 NEYMOON COTTAGE versity Pa.l'k, tile roof, 4 heat. 60 x 100' fcnt'CtJ • Jol. 81\CI ineo1nf' on corni.'r lot . bdrm + fam. room, crpts Double ga rag r. Carpets. Both houses frnet'd patio11. & drp!l. By o\\•ner. 833-2680 N{"('ds pa1n1. $17.:itKI. Vacanl. Low do\\·n: 7\r'O 1st trust deed. O.vner after 6 pm, >18-2394 B•ck B•Y 12411 ---- HAS COVED CEILINGS .~ Plt'aS€' call &12-5678, ext 329 HEAVY \\1000 BEA~IS. bet"·«n9and ~pm to claim \\lllER~: SOF'T SUNLIGHT your lickel!I'. !North County IS r J LT ER E D THRU loll-free number is S-1~1220) Sn>. J Br + fam rm. '1 Ba. 1'RAN S PARENTSI\\'-* * * Frplc, patio. Family LIGHT. GRANDIOS~: LOG S22j_ 3 Br'.-eif'a,n & sharp. welcome. Blue Beacon , BURN I NG FIREPLACE, Chilrtrrn k pel OK. Broker ,"c.""~lccll:.:•,cC:.c.':c':..· ---- frtunL'll hy rough ht'1~·n lim. :134-6980 $12:i. 2 Br, S<'p, 11..o;c, nr. 1>rr11: &: mantlr . F'ORMAL ========= sc.IKJOIK, children \\'eicome. DINING RM. HAS BIG BAY Rent•ls to $hare 2005 Blue Beacon, &15-0111, C.h-1. WINDOWS OVERLOOKJNG New J bdnn Townhou~· ii:ingle level. lmmed. "~ Pol!. <W $315/mo. ;t~ WE HAVE OTHER~ Bob P;j~1~1A1soQ~ J BR., lam. rm. 2 ba. mi;';· 3 BR .• lam. rm. 2 ba. ~ : 3 BR. 2 ba new tnMe. $325 • 2 BR. 2 ba. 9 mos lR ~..,;, 4 Bdrm, :l ba. Blt-in kitchen. Ooubie garage. North side. 6% % Loan $1,500 dov.'ll. $22,500. Owner Broker 646-4837 • ,.,, ner. 4 BR, 2 BA, Ui1 rm. exec home. Bltns. good cond. Pvt "'a.lled fmt patio, lgc hid 111vim pool \\•/slide k div brd. Prof landscpng. Jo n1aint ~ 540-7573 ~~ P•rk 1115 YES YOU CAN Own 11 4 bdrm home in de· sireable Collrge Park for less than S2'15 per month. $54'.ro down, no points or loan fees. Occupancy in 10 days or less. Ca!I Prrron Rea1ty 642-1771 eves. 540-3984 THE BAlL'ONY \V/OCEAN VIEW. Rtn1odeled kitchen, opens to okle fe!liioned dnidgt>ry & Sl'Wini; roon1 that overlook.'! thC' patio terN-<'C'. THIS UN r. QUE OLDJo: HOUSE HAS BEEN COl\.,LETELY RE- STORED. Holl; n (" "' noor coverings, earprting. dcror- a tini;:. etc. 11 )'OU have been look1n1 for an older hon1e "'/character, consider lhis . " $36,950 FULL PRICE TERMS OPEN TO OFFER MISSfON REAL TY 983 So. Coos! Hwy., Laguna PHONE (7141 494-0731 Eil.1P'O. lady \V/share my home \v/san1e. }\it. priv., pvt. rn1 k ba, $)1.50 wk. M6-321J Cl\f. :l BR. 1 bath $2:i0 ~ e Red Hill Relllty 33.l •. Fair enough! Call t.lr. Robinson B Davis Really 612-7000 Newport each 1200 Nebulous Newport For Lease or Sale 4 BEDRM.-5 % 0/. , • ORANG.E COUNTY'S LARGEST 2629 HARBOR BLVD. 546-8640 OPEN EVES TILL 8:30 PRIDE Acrell &. acres or velvet park grounds across the street fiom this 2':iOO sq. It. home. 3 bath. Carpet.c;, drapes. Huge , family nn. 5~i 'l~ a.n· nual percentage rate Joan on property may be assum- Charming. Large :? bdrrn 2 bath home on 1·hannt'I. Beamed ceilings, huge !il'f'- pla~. built-in BBQ + pier ~ tloat. JEAN SMITH REALTOR A truly c;lelighUul home J ed. ~1T20 646-32a5 l&TEe bdrtns., 2 full baihs, TARBELL 2955 Harbor 1'iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii tam .• din, rm. Sit~·OY!'Jl for-LARGE r• KIDS RUN mica bar. Fully cpt'd. Rear BAL ISLE DUPLEX &: Pde yd. compl_ enclosed 4 BdrmL up, 3 BR down. by 6 rt. bk>ck \\'llll fence. Only 4 yrs. old. Good spend. Enjoy th1~ 12'x30' covt"red able, great tem!:! Exchani'· patio for outdoor living, Full es considert'd. $85,COb price $23.0«J. F~IA or VA Riddl• & Ross 67S-n2s avail. Call 545-8424 {(}pE>n.,----~~--- e'Vt'S.) South Coast Real Es-$38,500 toto. 5 BEDRM -3 BATH $25,960 5 BEDRM.--, TRI-LEVEL Banquel sized dining room. Big rear yard -BBQ • 2 fireplaces. Ol'lf! in ma.~rer bl'dnn. O"'Jler de!perate, :H0-1720 3 baths. Plush carpeting. TARBELL 2955 H•rbor F'ireplace. Park. like profes-LIDO SANDS 11\onal landscaping? 540-1720 TARBELL 2955 Horbor 5 BEDROOMS 2 Bath.,_ Large yard. $29,950 ADULTS WALK to tlH! ocean & live in this 3 lxlnn. 211' bath spacious name. $.1~.9511 ®~ A~,.~ r.EALTY Near Npt, J"Ql;l Ofc. 646-2414 NE\VPORT HEIGHTS Largro 4 bdnn 2 bath home -dining roOm k rumpus room -2 fin:places. 2100 sq n of liv- ing area-needs some paint- priced for immediate sale at $$2,500. FHAIVA-NO DOWN AVAIL. Call 545-3424 (open eves) South Coast Rea] Estate. \-oTHEREAL "'..' ESTATERS ' F •, ' I OPEN SAT /SUN 1-$ 516 FERNLEAF Duplex So. of Hlway 2 BR. ea .. 2 frplcs, 2 Jlti\iOll, Pr!~ reduced for quick sa l~. DON V. FRANKLIN REALTOR • 673-2222 • OPEN SAT. & SUN. . I • 5 P.M. 512 SEAWARD RD. Terrllfc view, 3 BR + ram. rm., 2 BA, 2 frplc's, ~patio\ $54,SOO, Will trade. Scrnic ProJ>t"rties srs.a'l'Ui 1 Q Rtorraf\99 the 6 JOorribled I words below ta mole• 6 ,,.~, 1imple wordt. Ptfnt feller• of ~ch In its liM ol aqucrr•t. I ISEJSU'L I I' I I I I 4 Bdrm, 2 ba, bit-in kitchen. Double garage. North aide C.1\1. $19j. 646-4837 3 Br, 1 bath, (older) on dbl. loL Lease or lease opt iOn rood for handy man. 5'~767 $185. CLEAN 3 BR. I Yi BA, den, dbl gar. 2 Chiklren. \V-ekle. 548--3135. LARGE 2 BR. east Bidrc. Palio, enclosed gar. \Vatcr pd. $140. 54~265.'.i At tM ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER • -. ' " ' • ~ •' ' January ll'd thru 11th •·~ ' Ple:ise call 642-S673, ext ~ betwttn 9 and l pm to cl~ your tickets. !North Cowl&: toll-lzu number ls ~­* * .. Immediate Poss. ·: :. Jmmaculale 3 bdrm I: den'~ NEEDS PAINT George Williamson Well built 2 bdnn homt', ex· REALTOR WESTCUFF tra lart; dOU:ble garage, ac-67J..43SO 67J.1S64 Ev••· ASSUME 61'% FINANCING ! ·ttlWll to n?ar yard. R·2 zone•I========= I YEAR OLD Lusk home: conven. to ocean &: Fashion l&land. 3 BR. & extra lge. fAmily rm. 2 Ba. Fully landscaped. $48.250. ITOEHOS I ::::1:::1=1 ="::::I ~~~ IDEXUTO I l,;;M;e;;";;;V;;•;;rd;;e;;;;;;;;;;;;3;;1;;;10 famUy room, all built~ custom cpWdrps. Newlyii. FOR LEASE Sharp J. + decorated. $275 per family room In Mesa erde . 557-7648, 540-USl. I . room to build. $19,750. Beautiful Exec. Hm , 3 lrir I DUPLEX C ZONE Cott• Mo.. 1100 ~'.· ;.,:,:~ ba~~.:: I 2 bdrms each 5idt. 2 g~.1---------Luxw1oully decorated. Elec :';ii!~:C:::tt~. R11... Fami~ Pacesetter ~~. : .. ~ .. :,~,?...!'~: 1 1810 Newpol'1 Bh·rl .. C.P.1. One story • Cornt-r lot . 4 11hop!I. elc. $48,500. 646-5511 548-1729 644--068-I r,vez. Bdrm!!. Dining Room· llx BLUFFS LINDA 20' F<11mDy Room • Large Tr11.n11t owneT. Under market $28,500 Kltchen • 5ePfl1'8.le f\faster vlllue •t $39.900. l·U:vcl 3 HUGE HUGE Sult• • floom for Pool • BR., w I"""" mur. Now Camptt, • S40.500 • CAU. cptf. tbruoul. F.11~ially HOME 54().1151 Heritage Rt~ Eg.. loveJy patlo';' VacanL i>o.. 4 bedrooms. 2 baths, den + tale (open tves) sible l!lt'/optk>n. f&mily room. Elec:lrlc bUUt· $3),300 .. $173 Total Monthty ;:""';::.;'~"',;:u"ff"Re>J,,;;;;.:ty:........c~:.:.:..::.:1133 in kitchen, di.shw11ther. EiC-payment. Nice I Br In rood BAYFRONT sul!es. Fan. iant tirephu.'t. Room tor Wntskle kM:. Lii )'d, crpll; tutic '\llf:WI Dix l BR, 2 boat or n·all&r. NeaUy llnd· It drps. GI No Down. rnA BA. Doclui. S44,JOO up. oPfd. ~17'20 $950 Do""' + Costs. Prin-Jlr.len l\tcJ<eniic, n It r . TARBELL 2955 Horbor cl.,U.. Only. S<6-8026. "6-0731 ·-- I . Principals only. 644-2958 L;do ltle 1351 -----HERE IT ISi Comt-r -Spact' • Glamornur; Mme w/ 3 Bd., l"onv. den . Vl<'W -be11.u1, c:rdns .• Xlnl tc1-mii:. S195,000. ~fake ofrtr. R. C. GREER RHlly 3355 Via Lldo fi73·9300 BAY FRONT HOMES New or older, with picra A lllps. 3 BR. to 6 BR. Ftom $149,500 t-~l~.-rl--.l_,l_,lr-1 A crab, ·"He remind• you '-""·--'·'-'-· -'"· _. _ __,_ of a Cf'OGOdilt. When he opens I up his mouth, you don't know ~R;;.0;;,::D:..;T;..:A.;.rW;..,._,-t whether he'• try;ng to sm;lo •.-.. 1'_.l.__.l_,,,I_.__,_ ot ge tting ready to -.~;·" I;. • y FI p I O Comp let• die c.hl.l(.Jcle quof9d ·h~,-,.-.r-.-..--..--i bv fi!lrno '' ri>e ml"'ng word• .' I I' I I' . vw davelop~r:.~.: below. 0 PRINT NUM8fREO I' tfnflS r r r r 1· r r r ~ 111•11•1.1 Welker Riiy. 67S.S200 SCR 11'6 Via Lido, NB O,..n Sun. AM•LETS ANSWER IN DIME·A·UNE ·-------------------"----~ lor a 1tr1.i&!tt lease -no 4 DORMS 1"-baths. osrtion. Now vac.nt -Im-lot. Vacant. S month tr mf!dlate poae1Don. ur~ month lca.'le, $240/mo. mo. ~141 ~ !41·$110 3 BR home, crplz, dl'iQ• lllWclnetMttltltlt) bltn1, 2 car pr. A"1ail Ftt, GE REALTY '" or befT. fl25 mo. For~ Adili9111tflttler,CM. fo can 397-9J68 9-1, 1-8. ~, 4 LARGE BR, 2 BA. """' N I ... h 3200 new cpl3 I< drp11;, dbl ..C.: :.::""=po:.:':...:::::.:':::.....,..;= ''°""' baok yd. 125 WATtRrRONT .. S Bdrm. 2 1 --=~-~~----• SAth. sur. 6&ndy Beach. $300 Mo. Up. (ti 174-1241 or 6r>ltm 3 BR pool home. l blk to bnt ~'°"7''7-ii':'='--:i::"::i.I be•ch. $330/ mo. Fam. oply.A .. nt- • \ I l I • • "' . ·- S&lurd11, J111uar1 J, 1'70 I NT L~ ., Ii AL5'" '--, . i>r RINTAllS· .. ftlNTAL$ • · r.:~~~U!'f~"'I"'" Apt<-~~~'! , Apia. UnfurnlllhtMI ·A~ .Unlurnl1hM . Apia. Upfurnhl)td '-!•In '!'!!!!' · MIO Ntwpwtl lucll ' 42~ No~iM!~ ieoch 5)'GCIN-rt B .. <'\' '5200, Cvat• ~ 'BD!tN, 2 JSA: v.·tw .~ts. THE . ' 1----jiiji;iiijjiii;;ij ___ jiij ______ I roR t.eue • 2 BR. view, ~~ .... -o d..._ CA LIFORNIA:t</APTS. ~PAClOUS A'No CONVENIENf ~:::,~ c~i.':i~'· .... ~ BR 2 BA 'homt. Leue '215 Spanish VIiiage De1i9n 1 • 1 c1rport. ·1 child ok, no peu. i:oo. lndudt• 1a.rdene;r. Ne}v 2 and 3 bedroom, 2 baths. Shag carpets, fl.fl) mo.' M6-ft47 -..=Cal~l ,;~=:=='o=c!Ntw 11c 2 Bed room, tumlsh. linen drapes, tile kitchens \Vlth built· Ins. MODERN 2 BR 11pt, w/w ,-fd "' untwmi•hed, aia.condi-• Ge~rous ·stonge .,pace ·pkis deck or patio. cpt.s. Infant OK. No peta:. 3612 Uon~d. dt.hwashers. self-Pool, recreationDldg .. :next to shop"lnc. $140 SUiO mo. fficlu&inr: utll. Ap-'---------1 cleanifll ovena, patJ,o, brft.k· h Ad Its b lilt · I:: Ii' ply: IJS Albert Pl, CM or rut bar, private sun decks, per mont . u ''' o e pr1v~y . ...,;urn· call 82&-4968 . lal'8'e 1to1-age closets,· beat. -ished model by Beals. · • ' ' l f'RONT 2 BR duplex on Sftn-'~;:"=;;;;====""' I •d pool, Soon .. B.B.Q.'a. MARINER' S"'UARE A,'. PA~T"ENTS 1• Ana A". CIHn & •1• .&; ... h •705 .ound proofed \valls, wilk-in 't' , .. , tract!Ye. Miture adultl, .ho .. uni c • cioMltJ;. Covered carports -1244 Irvine. Ave., Newporl:.Beach-64~·0252 pets. 642--9139 ~ l Br, 2 Ba. Atrium. 2A12,'!.:i.~si.v noNpe~. Fn Just north of \Vest~liff Drive , 2 BR, l~i BA, util rm, iar, ~ll dl"P8 \V'hlte \Valer .........._ · e11opon 'Y· !"!!!!!'!~~~~~~~~~ patio. New cpts-'-df1li No V~~-Priv" Bch. L9e. $350. At lt1cArthur &. 1'1aln I~ pets. children Wt'leome , 0..-ner 499--3638 • .:•• 1 AL~ ' • 1 • ~7272 qr $46-4767 CALL 546-2727 Apts. furnished Coste Mut 5100 NE1V 3 BR, 2 BA. ~ * crpts, 1trps. Tmmed occupy. Csplstrano leach 3730 Ne\vpo,rt Beach R9r t or L•••• w/option GRAND OPENING J Jm, 2 BA. bluU area. IMMEDIATE .1 clt>istnno Beach. $26;,. OCCUPANCY I& new. Luwry prden apartment• Thil Hunt sman R•al Esto1te olferinE" complete privacy, 34144 Coeat H~. Dana Point beau!lful landscaping & un· ':i• 49fr.1268 paralleled recres.tional racll- • iUes in a country club ill· ~lexu Ui1fui-n. 3975 mosphere. Now leuina in i;:c!:~;--,--::-:-:---:--:--:-1 Ne11o'PQN Beach. ~ l'Ai BA dpbc. Pri bch. Furnished or unfurnished VWw, frpl.c . Adult&, no peta. 1.fodels open 10 am to 8 pm $335 mo. M&-2290 Rents from 1155 tn SllD. RtNTALS Apt1. Furnished Gonsral · 4000 HOLIDAY PLAZA OAKWOOD GARDEN ' APARTMENTS l~ l61 h street 714: 642-8170 S1nt1 Ana ~20 * * * * O. I. BOSOMWORTH 714 HELIOTROPE AVENUE CORONA DEL. MAR You are the winner o1 2 tickets to the~ Southern Califo rnia Sports, Vacation & RecreatloNI Veh icle Show at the * RU TH H. LEWIS 2119 THURIN AVE . COSTA MESA \"ou art the 1vinneor of 1 tickets to the Southern California $ports, Vacation & Recreational Vehicle Show at th• .ranuary :>rd thru lllh S225. 540·19'7'3 2 BR unfurn apt. Adults, no pets, J\~.;mminE' pool . 2267 Canyon Dr. 6-16-798t DELX ,1 BR. 2 BA. Cpts, drps. dshwhr, frplc. patio. $250. mo. 842-4085 • 2 BR unr: Newly dee. Ni!W crpts & drps. Adults, ·no pet~. 642-2550, 546-6716 2 BR front Duplex on Orana:e Ave. New w/w crpt. Stove, retrla. Refs. 543-1!m 2 BR unfurn 1pt. Adult1, no pets, swlmmipg pool. 2267 canyon Or. 646-7984 Meu Verde SI 10 • l----IDELlJXE.-1pacioe•s 'CLE-AdulJ.s. ~UL)' F"Urn apt $135 plus util. gan!en ain. -\vith country ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER _pie.i-c.alLlil:.l,.llij8._cxL l29_ 2 Bft....._crpi.-.drp&.,_<ocl< ... ~l~-~---­ t>en,·rtn 9 and I pm to claim a:ar. Adults. no pet''. Vic ' ' Heated pool, ample p1rking. C'lub atJnosphert' and coni· .laru.t.a.ry 3rd 1h1·u 11th No children · no pctJ;. plt'IP privacy. SOUTl·f BAY , . ,-. , . 1965 Pomona, C.J\I. CLUB APTS. Trvi.Jie al 16th, Plcsse.1.all 612{'678, e .... 1. ~ 4-PI c 1 Newport Beach. bet\t·ee_n 9 and I pm to claim your ticket.I. !North County Harbor .2 Baker shop'n£. toll-free number is. 540-J220f SI$>. M2-2389 t * * 1----• Newport Beach S200 ~:lB~hild ~K~nvB~~ ITI4) titi-ffi.)(I :;~~c~:~:ro1t~th=. BRAND NE' w 8.con. 64&-tllll, C.?.f. OCEANFRONT l Br, 1~1 BA * • * BEAtrrlFUL Duplex. Tii>-top cond! Nice-NE."\VPORT TOWERS r.,.ta Ma. 4100 ]y crptd &: drpd. Cov. pati,o,1 ------~--Lovely 2-BR, 2 BA. Oce1n I: 1=::;;;;.'--'"-----Gar.smmo.,.,a.iltoJoly. L'.••unt•Btt<h 4705 $150 & .SJ.JO Bay .iew: SUbtomineon * ' * * 646-2986, 774-7465 pk'f, elevators. jaetinl pool. ARTHUR J. WILLIAMS 1 & 2 BR furn k unfurn. 1150 TllE NE\V VILLAGE INN UT.ILITIES ~)JD .Boat slips avail for te~ts. -HUNTINGTON AVE -$175 ,..,.ts d bltmi Formerly Saddleback Inn, ·1 & 2 Bdnn~ 2 sWJQJ.;poola. &12-2'1<rl -., • ..... • rps, • Laguna, from $28 • \lo'ttk. Adult11 onJy no pets. Furn ,.:.:::.::=,-----~ ~1· _ SPACE #412 pool, p1tlo. 1525 Placentia Lo\.·elx apts. All utll's, if dtl!llred" 6'2-37'll . 3 BR. 2 BA. trplc, patio, 1 bl tj_~~TINGTON BEACH 1 BR upstn. Le liv rm, linens, maid, pool, laundry 301 AvOCado &tl c.M. · tp.beaeh. Encl pra~. Vfll"'/ bltnl. Wa t erfront bldg. nn. Steps to beach. 696 S. See r.tq on premoo ,. -. -1iice, S2SO yrfy. 213 : •. You .,. the w;nne, ot P•tlo porch. Sl<O. 646-2290 Coa•t Hwy. 494-9436 HARBOR GR£. ENS 622-9193. ,. \' 2 tickets to the \VATERFRONT \VI boat $100-Small, cozy place, no~·- ·': Southtrn C~llfornia -:Sportl,-V11c1tlon & Recr11tion1I Vahlcla Show ':" at the ANAHEIM CONVENTION '.. CENTER ,· /' , · Jarnu.ry 3rd thru 111 h dock. Lovely 2 BR, patio, Later,. apt $135. Emplayed YrJy lsc. 673·00§0J!r 697-5918 adult. 4S:H2!l0 BACHELOR unfum r r om OCEANFRONT' Bach. Apt l Br Apt. Alw, 81cepin&' rms. -·$110. A1so avail l • 2 ~: 3 S90. Util Paid. Yearly. Call Util pd, tne TV &' radio. Bdrm. Heated pools, c~ild 673--0983 or 646-8402. 2'200 So. Coast Hwy. care center, •cU to shoppmc. No pets. ---------BACHELOR. t'urn or un- Coron1 def Mtr 4250 furn. Nr. beach. &r , kl\vn. 1---------Util. pd. Sll5. 49-1-4!1'£1. 2700 Ptterson \Vay Costa r..tci;a _546-0310 MARTINIQUE GARDEN APTS Excellent park-like surround- ings 1v/healed_.poo.ls_ Extra parkin1;. N ear shoppin£". Adults only. 1 & 3 BR APTS 1TI7 Santa Ana Ave., 0.t.f. Mgr, Apl 11~ 646-5.'">42 ORLEANS APTS. 7 & 3 BR avail. Adults only. LOVELY I BR. w/w, blln~. 1 blk to beach & shp'g. $200. mo. 673-3751 act 7 pm 1741 Tu~tin, Costa J\le53 VEN DOME . 1-M-=-•'7·· '_'"_· cam-==''n'"". "~.';",__. 1 1 sign•! So. 01 o.c. IMMACULATE APTS! F. airway Villa . Apts Fairgrounds 81lboa 4300 ADULT Ir: FAMILY ~,Stfflo & I leihom1 . · SECTIONS AVAILABLE ;:~ ~ :~.&M~th P~~~ u~~·~oov~~~ CloN to sh'op~l.r\t, Park Kl ~" 1 _ be h 150 d from * Spacious 3 Br 1, 2 Ba tchens Ir-i .., 1 !rte • uum ac • . Y 1 * 2 Bedrooms - "Phone 1e~ .• htd pool bay. Yf!Rr round leai:e. $185 * S Im Pool Puf/irttn ~Ma.XI sel'Vlce avail. lurn .. $170 unfum. 67>1573 * F~I. lndiv,/lndr1 fac·is :2176 NIWrOltT ILYD. CT.EAN Bachelor Apts. 1145 An1heim Aw. Ot.-541-9755 All util incl SKi up COSTA l.IESA &u-2824 .b1tCE bl.chek>r, fUll kitchen, 315 E. Balboa Blvd. ~!""""""""""""'""""'""'" ti.ill bath. tum. for responsi· BALBOA 613-!IMa e RENT • Neai; Oran~. Co. ,Airport &. UCJ. Adul ts only. 20122 Sant.a Ana Ave. 540.2796 VILLA MESA APTS 2 BR unJum. pri pa tios, hid pool, 2 car Pncl'I gar: Chil- d~n wt'IC."Omf'. no pets plea.~: $160, n9 \V. \V!lson. 646-12.:il . ble adult $100 mo, \V/util . -220 1'1onte Vbta. 64~18 Huntington Be1ch 4400 3 Rooms Furnitur• SPACIOUS . acan I Br, $lU-Lovely 1 BR. tum $19.95 & UP \\'/w crpt, rlrps, elrl' b11 -ins, '"'-du1t!i. Close to stores HUNTINGTON CAPRI !'.onth-T0-M1mth Rcntab quiet arcff. Nr shops & 'Quid. 1985 Pomona . For Single Adults \\'lDE SELECTION fr.\·ay. /\dlts, no prts. Call .... £G.-0723 NE\V 1-2-J BEDROOi\fS NO OEPO.StT 0 .A.C. '' _S4_0-04~~12====~- •'MERRIMAC WOODS trom .Sl40. Furn & Unt JIFRC Furniture Ren1al.!1 TOWNHOUSE ~ units avail, Ste ad un. Tennis, .Gyms, Sauna' 517 \V. 19th. CM 548-3481 Ne\v 2 BR, l 1li BA & I & 2 ~~r dais 5100_ <IZ5 Merri· 6200 Edinger Ave., Im $1 45. '2 Br duple". New c~ts, BR. C~t.~. cJrPll, self clng ··mac \Vay. 545-6300 Phone 846-0619 . drps, Child OK. e I u~ o\•en. &15-21~. 377 \V. \Vilson :roRN 1 BR, newlYBACHELOR & 1 BR furn &aeon. 64S-0111. C.i\t . LARGE JBH.1 ~, BA.B.llns, ' ~t~d. $125 per mo. Stt s140 up. Adults, no pels. $125. I Br_. RIO-, refrig, rp1s, drps, dsh"''hr, patio. r.trr. Apt. 6. 2135 Elden, 7301 Keel9on Ln. 842_7348 \\r/\V. Child OJ\. Skr. No Pf'l8. 2 children ok. Nr (i.r.r. !\Vnt of Be-ach. nr Slater). ~980 school!!. 5-iS-inl S fll$ 4 ATI'R.ACTIVE 1 $110 1 Br. RJO. relri& DELUXE 2 BR. 1mrmc k "~ up • . • FURN. 1 Bd· .. wah'!r & It. · . • · quiet. Central ht, dshwhr. bdr., pool, uW pt.id, sarden pd mature adults Sl15 Garagr. Chi!rl OK. Blue · Jivinc. adult8, no pelt. 1800 206.:c J oliet. H.B. 5.36-8900 ' Beacon. &1~111 , C.i\f. -~~tio, -adults. $140. \Vallace Ave., C.M . $150. 2 Br, gar, R/0. Ulil =~====~-- '";,B'EAtmFULLY FUflN Orange County 4600 pd. Children OK. Broker 15.'iS ·CORIANDER ,Dr.; 2 -Bfl. Pool. Adul!s. no pets. 534-69&1 Dfoluxe 2 BR. 2 BA. pnl.~. ~~ + ulil. 2272 Maple St . SINGLE Adults, Luxury Sl55 1no. Ad1Jtt1, no pets. if3-.0157 . garden apt~. \lo'/lull recrea-~2Q.14 NfcE 1 BR dplx ,..,.,. 1 Se tion facilities & complete Costa Mesa · 5100 ~ Q~U~l~ET~"'rn°'""'·P~I<-,-. ~,~8-,.~1~1> . · ¥'1" • P .,.,,rivacy. South Bay Cl\lb b 1 d bll' ,l:iy aaraaes. 1 adult avtr 30. Apu. 277 So. Brookhurst BRAND NEW J:~-~;itit ~~ P~~~· ;~ No pets. 548-lOZl Anahel1n (7141 112-4500 ' Scott Pl. 54!1-1806. $107 CUTE Slngle, Ulil Pd. · PT HOME'S Quiet. One \Vo1n11.n. No Garden Grove 4610 .A • QUlET 1 & 2 Br garden apt. : l'fta. :ns ~I Mar. 642-4112 Bltn~. pa\10, hid poo I, tLUXE l SPAC 1 BR SINGLE Adults . Lu s u r y Nevl'r before 1r\-ro In. Prl-adults. no pels. $1&1 mo. ~. ideal for bachelors'. 1arden apt.s \\'lth country vale pa!M> Jivin,. N~r .;,,.._.~;.'°""°"' '"""~.,,.-=~= :'125. 1993 Church. ~3-9633 club atmosphere and com· beach & 5hopp1ng, All nr\\' LOVELY Nr1v 2 BR. 2 BA. t.;:1i<'-:'-~'-::::"":;:;':';'::':"'=: plete privacy _ SOtrnl BAY buill-ins. cJish>A'a.'hcN, w/1v All bltns. shag cpt,., gar. Nr • t Br, no chiltlre:n, no CLUB APTS 13100 Chapman carpPling, drapes, private So. C11! Plaza. & Irvine Ind . peb •• $125. 641 Shalimar Dr. Av,.., Garden Grove (714l Jivin,i:. Pk. 5U--2321 or 540-1973 'iA", C.M. 636-3Ci.10 e J BR-2 BA-frpl1 -., plu~ VACANT .'\ Bdrm t ba1h, '* NASSAU PAU.IS * e 2 BR-2 BA-patio~ 1 J;AN.i.''" large rumpus room I;' l &: % BR. Pool • t BR-t BA.(lelu,~e sinalt \\"i1h firepl11ce. fcnctd yard. 11r l:. 21nd st. ~5 NOW'S THE Corsican Apt. Ho me5 No pell". $175/1110. 67~n SiQ I Mo. 2 Br f\lmished, SUNF'LOV·:ER' AV};. :.! BR. $14:>. 1~1 BA. Elee utilities included. Older Bl\~·n s. :i.ta ln· l: Btiatot : bltn.'I, cptJ;, dt"P&. 2 children trianta only. 6'2--6560 TIME. FOR Locab!(I ''2 mllc E. o! South ' ok. No pct~. 543-8882 BACH£L0Jt. $1.25. Nr OCC. Coe.st Plaza !:'hoppinE" Cent<'r 2 BR,.&ludk> S16$. Crpts, (lrp.!!, Udl pd. 1\fatuft adult only. Call S40.197l bllns. Pvt patio. encl ear. ... ,.,:,.."rt· ~och ~ QUICK CASH 1MERRl1M..,AC1 W002 8~S 2 · ·~~~ ~';:t. Home .,.. u.lt comp et , or "• In a 4-plex, Le 3 BR w/ IAYCLIFf MOTEL THROUGH A !1'nd~W:,1~~1"!':;:t~: everythltJi. Nr Fwy. M6-f016 + JAW WEEKLY Jt.ATES • self clcanltia ~1, """OOd JljE\VLY Cfitd. drpd, elec kit. -• U! d h J I J nd Children OK, Call alter S -K,..__..• .?:!6*JXS1''.· maid te:rv•at. DAILY PILOT et ng11. Ii"' rs, us 1 a . PM. 64&-8153 . _. rvui ac1.plng wilh itrl!:am.s I; \\'•· _:_:;;..:;;:..;;:,=..,,-.,.,--=c- lr.rfaU,, cJovalors, BBQ1, l BR G11.rdon Duplt:il". Clei'ln, dul>housf', iauna1, jacuul & quiet. f\latu~ 1.dull1. rtfs, DELUXE Apt Compl F'un'I. 2 blk'1 from Udo tile. N•u ~ Preff:r Sln1le • Gent. $150 a Mo. Call ·llTM?41 , FRONT 1 Br Furn. lltdo. Aduita, no p<~. $195 WANT AD swim pools, p:i• •"· wl .........,, 11oragr. £.\·erythine n t w. ~,~n~R~--• .,--k~--­o , AUnnf!C , P,T'll~, St1irun, at Sl40. Adult& E·ilid<'. Adult~. s1so. 642 5678 p~alil' •• Ju~t Eut of 2600 :wo-+131 or ~tS.3776 • llarbor Blvd. nMt"' N11bfrt Old!Uac al olZi 1'ferrln'lae 1970 -r RcM>lvr.: 3 Br 2 Ba, W ,, • ~-· Crxs. Drpl, D. \V. Dtlux. $700 mO. 113-«141 or fl l 526--4W -'---------- t.v. ,,t .. 1NIJ\l. 646-411111 ::.::....:=----- Newport Hgt1. 5210 FIREPLACE -Spadous 2 Br apt. Newly decorated. Clo~ «I.in 1;ar. SI55. 6T>-3596 Sa.t & Su~. Back Bay YlE\V, 2 BR. cpls, bltns. Pool. S1S5 mo. * 673-3690 * Corona del Mar 5240 drps, 5250 S\60. 1 BR, ~"tOVf', Retrig, ,i:ar. Crpts & Ot'p!I. Util Paid. Partial Ocean Vw. 1151Ji Dahl~ CdM. 67>4092 2 Br. Nr New. Blt-lns, gar. $200. Util Incl. No pets. Call .,...,,., LARGE 2 Bdrm, util pd .• S185 mo.; garage. fl.tr . • Forney, bkr. 540-3862 $160 l BDR. Modern. Comp! redec. Blf·ins. Dqis.,-crpts. Lrg mi'•. 675--3708. . BUSIEST · marketplace · in town. The OAILY PILOT Cla11ified secUon. Save mont'Y, time &-effort. Look now?!! \V hitc elephants! Dime-a· NO n1atter \Vhat It ls, yo11 can sell it \vlth a DAILY PlLOT \\'ANT AO?? 642-567$ I ' ' ' ., . -• ~ ·"\; I, ' ' ·-r-;,., Re•d Cl4111ficatlon1 For Expert Assistance 6500-6900 in the DAILY PILOT ' . . Are You Letting Cash Slip Through Your Fingers See If You Have Any Of These things A DAILY PILOT WANT-AD-. ' t. Stoye. 2. Guitar 3. Btby Crib 4. !ltctrfc Sew· S. Camera oahor tboard Motor . reo Set 9. Couch · 10. Cl1rlnet 11. Refrlge r1tor 12. ·~iCkup Truck 13. Sewing Machine Will Sell Fast! 29. llcycl• 30. Ty-rltor ~.1 . Bar Stools 32. Encyclopodit 33". V1cuum Cl•aner 34. Tropical Fi1h 35. Hot Rod Equipm't 36, Fiie Cabinet 37. Goll Clubs 38 •. Sterling Silver 39. Victorian Mirror 40. Bedroom Set 41 . Slide Pro jector 57. Elt<lrlc Train 51. Kltton S9. Clanlc Auto ~. ColfM Toblo 61 . Motorcycle 62. "ccordlon 63. ~kit 64. TV St! 65. Worlcbench 66. Diamond W.tch 67. Go·Ktrt 68. Ironer 69. Camping Trailer • 14. Surfboard 42. Lawn Mower 70. Antique Furniture 15. M.achine Toots 16. Dishwasher 17. Puppy 11. Cabll'.I Cruiser 19. Goll Cut 20. Barometer 21 . Stamp Collection 22. Dinette Set 23. Pity Ptn 24. B.Wllng Btll 25. W•tir Skis· 26. frfft•r 27. Sultca1e 28. Clock 43. Pool T•blt 44. Tires 45. Pl ano 46. Fu r Coat 47. Drapn 41. Linens 49. Horse 50. :Airplane !I. Orgtn 52. Exercycle 53. Rare Books 54. Ski Boots 55. High Ch•lr 56: Coint 71 . T•pe Recorder 72. Stllbott 73. Sports Car 74. Mattress, lox Sp91 75. lnbosrd Spetclbott 76. S"9tgun 77. Stddlo 71. Dart Game 79. Punching lat 10. Btby Ctrrltgo 11. ·Drums 12. Rlflt ' 83. Dosk 14. SCUBA Gotr Th••• ar any other extra things around th• house may be tumed Into cash with a DA f LY PI L 0 T WA NT. AD so -Don't Just Sit There! DIAL DIRECT 642-5678 I .. • • " .. .. " ' " FREE . . : * * * * * * .. Da ily Pilot Cla ssified CLASSIFIED INDEX HOUSES FDR SA LE RENTALS GINllAL COSTA MISA MISA OIL MAii 'AISA VlltOf COLLEGE ,AllW'• lllfWl"OllT I E.I.CH • NIWf'Oltl HllGNlS IALIOA COVI S • HIWJOO•T SHOltll , I AYClllST • l,tYSHOIU!S OOYllt SHOR ES ; :::~~';1':1ow1.•Hos : ~ll't!~&flSITY PAltk '. IACK l•Y • IASTI LUl'I" • II. T•r• • lll''VINI TlllllA(ll ~ COllONA Oil MAI • IALIOA PENINSULA • l"!ilo'"Olf IAY : LIJU>A ISLI" • IAY ISLANDS • L1DO ISLE : IALIOA ISLAN D . HUNTINGTON l lACH HUHTIHGTON Nl •IOUll l'OUNTAIN VALLJY SEll.L IEAC14 / W NSIT l f,t,C:H OAltD&.N GltOVt: LONG I EACM LAKIWOOD OJIANGf: COUHTY 0\IT 01' COUNTY OUT 01' STATE STANTON 'Nl!STMINST!:ll Mli:ll'IA'I' CITY S•NT• .t.N" •• SANT.t. 1.'IA HGTJ., ~II.At/GE TUSTl'f 'IOltTH TUSTIN 11.HAHllM ULYl!P.1.00 CANYON HA\to\SU I.AKI! l AOU HA HILLS 1.AGU HA '1111.ACH t .tf'UN.t, HIGUl!I. MISSION VllJO SAN CLEMENTE Sl.H J\JAN CAPIS"'llANO CAP ISTll:ANO a1t:ACM OAHA l>OIHT , L'll L.Sa'D • O(ilAH51 0E ' SAN 'Ollt:GO : IUVEllSIOE CO\!NTY • HOUSES TO llE MO'olEO ' CO)tOOMINI UM :·:~~;~~~:S0;o~A~~L• ·. >RENTALS 1• Apts. Fur"ished 11N OI NI RAL IHS COSTA Mll5A "lllSA ¥111011 1111 Ni!Wf'OttT •l •Cll 1111 NIW,OllT MllGNTI ll'W NIW,Ol!f SH"'lll S 1111 WEITCLI,• 1tU UNIYERSFT' l>AlllC lttt aACk 1•v lttJ Ill.St a LU'tJ ltu COllCHtA OIL MAii 1n1 IAL•OA 11)1 aAV llLANOi ITU L100 ISLll lttl a At.10.t ISLAND TUI MUNTl.H'GTON •I ACN 1141 l'OUNl .. IN YALLIY 1l4t. .S~AL a eACtl 12M LONO lllACM nu Cll!ANO• COUNTY lHI GAllOl!N GllOVI UM Wl!STM!NITEI! 1 Uts MIOW.tY Clf' '* SANT• •Nil ',UI SANTA ANA NllGHTI Ul WITIN 1'55 C:OASTIL UM LAGUNA •EACH lUS L.AOUN .. NIGUEL HU MISSION VI EJO HSt S•N CLEMil'll l ltS! OANA l'OINT un Tll "LE)I, •• ,. 'SH CONOOMI NIUlil . :: RENTALS -... U lt ·-4111 .,,. . .,. '"' ... ..., :: ••• •»• ••• -"" ••• "" ... "" "" "" UH .... -"" .,. .,., "" 4111 .... ''" "" "" Apts. Unf urni1h1d 1'11 GllNlll:AL I ... 1111 corr• AlllllSA "" ''" MI JA Vl!l!Oe •n• 111' NEWPOttT ll"CM J~N :•H NEW,OltT tlllGMlS Jilt ' ,,. Nl"W .. Ol!T StlOl!IS 1no l 1' WESTCL11'F J1H ',641 UN tVEll~l fY l>AlllC S!JJ •U 8ACIC IAV 11'1 :::-llAST 8LUl"tJ tt•l llT~ COl!ONA Dll MAii IU• •ALIOA SlN :;: aAY 15LANOS IJH LIDO ISll llSI :: tlUNTINOTON lllACN S•tl llll FOUNTAIN VALLIV J•ll HH 1 ... 1..0A ISL.AND 11U l 7" Sl"AL •1AeM UH OH LONG •EAC!f JHI 1141 OAANGI COUNTY UH ll'M GAl!D'N GllOVI Sfll un WISTMINSTEI! uu 1 .. MIOWAV CIT' Mil IA.NTA ANA .M2t ~: SANTA ANA HllGHtl U:M TUST IN U4I 1'1' COAI TAI. 1111 1'IO LAOUNA a l!AC:ll 171t l AQUNA NIOUl!L "" MISSION VLI JO J10f S»I CLIMINT• 1111 Houses Furnished SAN JUAN CA1>1sT1tANC s1n '. OINfll.4L """"" DAN• ,DINT J7' .-l!llNTAlS TO IHAl!I !f0$ REAL ESTATE, .; ccsTA MESA ~::: General :· =::: e:~o~·· 1110 f ltl,.Ll!'ll. tic. UN •:COLLEGE ,Al!k 111! CONDOMINIUM ~HI NIW .. OllT ll!•CH HM lt!NTALS W .. NTCO IHI NIW,OllT HOTS. , Ult ltOOMS tJOll tt lNT SHI Nl!WPOl!T SHOlll"S 1211 ltOOM & IOAl!O J9ff l AVSl!Olt!"S ?115 MOVI LS, TllAILllt CCllllTS 1991 1 O(IVEll Sl'OltEI U21 QUI ST HOMES J"" · Wl!STCLI'' UH MISC. RINTALS '"' , UNIVl!llSITY f'A l!K 1711 INCOME PllGl'lllTY ·-• lllVINE HJI a USINISI ,ltO,lllTY me • a•CK tAV 1'141 T8. ... JLlllt PAl!l(J 4fJS : l!i.JT ILUFI' 7141 a ustNISS RINTAL ..... 11' Ttro U"4 Ol'tJICI lllN'TAL .. ,. lilt:\llNll TllllACE 110 INDUITilt:tAL .. ll:Ol>lllTf 6tH ' COilt:ONA OIL M,t.11 n H COMMll!CIAL _, IALaOA Uff tNDUSTlllAL •INTAL ''" • I AY IS\..ANOI UH LOTS 411111 · t.100 Ill.I U!I llANCMll •Ut . M LIOA 1SIJlfO tm (IT"US Gl!OVIS •Us . MUHTINGTON al•CH f-40t •C:ltlAOI! 11tl ,(IUNTAIN ¥ALLI Y 7'11 LAl(I. ELjjNOl!I 1"2 ' •••t. a eACM ,.,. lllSOllT l'llOl'Ell1'V 6!tJ : LONCJ I UCN JJOt OllANGI CO. PllOPlilllT1' '"' • :>"•NGI COUNTY 1•tl OUT 01' STA.Tit PltOP, ,,. : • u.HTA ANA '"' MOUNTAIN & DIJl"T •11• . NI STMIN$l€11 !IU suao1v1StON lAND an1 • ~·n ..... v CIT~ "" l!llAL ISTATE SlllYltl tl\I ; • SANTA ANA Ht:IGMTS UJI ilt:.E. t:llCMANGI •131 .• :0 .. 51Al llW "· I . WAffTEO ,,41 .; LAGUNA IEA(H 11~ .• •Gt•N• N1outL ,,., BUSINESS i nd ;• i,tlSSION 'olllJO 2111 " IAN CLEfAENTI. 111' FINANC IAL ·~ ~N JU6N c•,ISl,~t•O 1715 · :&,.ISTllANO I EA(H !JJI .,,.NA l>OtN T "41 • •IVEl!S!Ol COUtlll " lHI , ~ACATIOn l!l'NT .. Li ·•M • :OtitOOM INIUM rt~I ; )U.l't.EXES FUllN. •II . RENTALS I US1Nf5S W•NTEO JNVEStM::Nl 0lt'l'1~ftll••• aUS11'10:5S 0 ''011TUN•11ES INYf:SIMl!1'11 w•NTED MDNI. V TD LOIN Plll~ONAl LOANS J!:WEl 11 Y t.DANS C0t.l•Tlll .. L l OANI l lt l 111 1 "" tlU '"' ••• "" •m •Houses Un furnished llEAL 1.ST .. TI LOANS MOlltTO.tGl.S. l tvtl OMft MONl:'r WAHTID ... 1'41 ... NUllSllllll IWtMMIN$ ,OOLJ ,AT10S •WNIN~S V"CA'Tlt NI ) lu1ineu kentel 1. I___,, .. • --. *• * * * * (. INTERSTATE ' "J' NATIONAL DISTRIBUTORS -~J Venda-Pak& Metro Vendors ; :.1 ' • • I I . I t ,, REAL ESTATI I ANNOUNCEMENTS .1 General •nd NOTICES ·:~) , . Acre•" 6200 I ~ '•!\ 1 li --------· Loat 64~i ' 2i.,Aein Ranc:lloCapUitrano . .-\~t~1 .; Bea.utiful rollil\i:. rec:rea-LOST female rox TemeJ •' : tional land, 11umiunded by pupp)'. \\'hitc '¥'/brow4 National Fores I. Altitude head & blk spots. Bal lslt:f 3000 II, Roa.d11 & utilities. .sun aflerooon. Reward' for 962-8200 in[o leading: to 1::_crierYil -Whoddyo Wann Whadaya Gotr SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS I Spoclal ll•t• s Li~-s limM-5 buckt STORE Or oUiet' space near be•ch in Hunti n,ton. Ap- prox. tiOO .sq.JI. 536-2579 _ ROOM SUill.ble for aift ahop, men'• shop or ladies shop. Call Jim Berkshire, 613-!MOS ---. -· 6TN'.'l6.1-or OR.S.1063 R. E. W•nted 6240 flE\VARD! Please rflurn ouJ" LARGE houae w/zoning for rest home \\'&ntC!d in N.B .• Cdt.I. LAguna Sch. or DJ. &t.2-0905 or 64~9. Irish Seller. F' em a I e i .. Ramie", 1 yr. Lost U/23 \'iC' Avocado St-t'airviewj Child brokenheart~d • 642-384a • VIC: \V. l'lth & MonrovtJ Office Rental 6070 ltVLEI -A.D MU.ST INCLUDE 1-wtiet .,.., ._.,.. t. tr••· 1-WJ11t rw w1nt "' tr .... HUNTINGTON BE.ACH A.it Conditioned 1-YOUll .tMlll 1M/., MCl,.t . I .JI llM9 tif 14ll~t111flft9.. BUSINE!t~ ano FINAl\ICIAL t-#fOTH1NG POlt .SALi -TP:,&Olill ONLY I PHONE .642..5671 01'.t llACH .ILVO. To Pl•ce Your Tred1r'1 P•r1diM U Desk spaL~ a vailable tn Trade Lake T11.hof lg cal> ntwt'St off ice ~lldinr. at . , e prime location in llunt1n,g- 1n 1' lot, % blck to lak~ '= ion Beach. Atr condJtloned goH courw. 15 min to ~ki i':Seautlful entrance. Front: areas. $20.000 val clear for age on Beach Blvd ., rear boal ol equal vii 1enn11. leads to private .A&t king 610-1250 A!>.1. ' lot $50 l)(!r inomh for ----------!space. Dcilk •no cna1rs TRM>t: a Aere1, apprai11ed available for $5. Buslncu $1130 per acre-. FOR Slip hol.lrs answerin£: service lu1. Opportunities 6300 4 Br, Like Nu Hom• Nr Aut.onetics. in beau. Yorba Woods. {E. Anaheim). Ti'd ror ·I Br in Cd~!. Nwpt Sch Or IN'irft. cau 673-<el!O. 12· Cr:uist'r, 1200 mi' ran~c:. $40,000 val .• "v.·ill l.'Onshl~r TD or 1maller boat. Immcd demand fot charier by I~ cal service. 7J'll : 1?.J..l400. * * * ror ~· boat avallable for $10. All utUi-f62-4fl1 · ties pa.Id C!Xcept telephone-. * DAILY PILOT * 17171 llACH ILVD. HUNTINGTON .llACH Alliliatr ·cANDV SUPPL V ROUTE ------------- !No iJCJlini,: i111.;l\c<l) Exeellenl ln~o111c 101· lc11· hou r~. 1vcckly 11 ork. (0:1ys and l::venln:::~ 1. Rcfilhnt: and collectini:' 1no11C!y l1-on1 c()in ope1-ated dii>j)('nsc1;1 in Or- anae Co. and 1un-oundlng a!'C'a, \Ve C.'!llablish ruulc. (Handles nanie brand candy and 11nacksl. St:i75.00 cash required. 1''0l' pc:r.sona'.l inlr,.. vie111 In Orangt-Co. area, &end name, addrellS &nd phone number lo MULTJ- STATE DIS?'., INC., 1681 \\1• Broad"'ll.)', Anaheim. Cali. fomia 9280'l 17141 TI8-!i060. RIAL ESTATE Gener•I FINE STORE/OFFICE 5990 For Leese Rent1l1 Wanted 5701 On Vlo Liff MIDDLE-ACED ENGLISH .4.pprox. 1500 Sq. Ft. LEASE OR SALE Lacuna Sands Apt. 1700 sq. Jl., while-water view. l BR. Jrg livini:' .rm, 2 lri: b.ltths, fully equipped kitch .. \Y/W crpU I. drps. priv ate dee'.k, pool. elt>\'ator, prage park- ing & l!tOl'age. $390 p<'r mo include!! all, f'XCf'pl f'.lec. k tC'lephone. Owner \Viii sell w/ :rub~tantlal do\\'n k \;ar- l'Y lsl Trus1 Ikt'd Al 7 ~~ in- terest, S62.000. Adulls. lj&;'j S. Cout ~'Y· 499-U69 APTS LEASE OR RENT Ne1v I or 2 bedroom, private sundeck, wall to 111 a 11 carpet. ocean view, kitchen furn. Under;roond par1dne, clolt to beach, 494-9633, Mr. Brad<. 5710 * * * HAROLO D. l)ALE, JR. 1170 llOA VISTA .CIRCLE C05TA MESA \'ou 11"' tllf' lnnrr of 2 tickets t9 th~ Southern California Sports, Vecatlon &. R1creetional Vehicl• 9how at thf' ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTlll couple "'ilh 2 tiny dogs wish SOc Per Ft. to renl 2 Bdnn houge or LIDO REAL TY INC . dup/C!x unit ln CoAta l\le~ 3377 Vie Lido 67J..7300 area or. 1''reed~m _Home11 l\fARINER'S CENTER j Placent111 &. V1clor1al for Offl-.• S1 Bid ~-1'' b 1 \\' "" 1.. Ol"f! &:· ...,nt or e · occupancy. ~ are Lu IF $125 Be t bo rxti'c1nely quit! l: clean. · a-. ' au Y 1 . p. SI»Sl40. mL'l:imum. !\fr. o r II{ me equtp. 149 Rlver.11de ,\tr~ .• Rlcha.rd A t k In 11 on Ave., N.B. 646-2414. 6•12-AA7J . '" w. 1tlll. ""1• Iii- · -•••·111\ ~.,,.111tloll••lltlll•fl. --• lO;MJlt rtl .. (fl SMAU. office, furnished, St> per nionth. Well1-McC•rdle, Rl tr1. 18W Ncwpo1·1 Blvd .. C.~t. :>48-1'129 644--0684 eves. SMALL OOice on busy cot· ner Costa M esa. $35/month utUltiea included. ~ Asso<:iale , ~t~NU1''ACTURER $17 ,5oo Investment into tht: no. 1 BusineH.~ of the day. 2:1 y.j.. history o f success, no1' expariding npcnUions lo So. Ca.Iii. Complete factory in- stalled ~ ready to go. \\'jll train Principal oC Algrnl. abili tie!. Contac1 ln11n('(\. Once In a lifctin1e oppor. to make lhat high Income most people dream of. Startint a.alary $12,000 + subRtantial profit!. Call Ken CliUord (ll41 '174-1050 JANITORIAL Bulllnn11 .$900 ONE 384 SQ. rr. 1 oUice a: reee~ J>tt m o 1ross + truck & YEAR LEASE tion area, adjaeent" t o equip, Hu done $1500. Ideal 4 Bedroom fumi&htd home Oranp Co. Airport._ 50-111.f for ~ple. i.3500 full price, on Lido or Balbol Island. .A.IRPORT CENTER Call 5'&-0364 9 AM-5PM. All Plll!ate Call New 1, 2 I: J room deluxe .:SPM:.;:..:"6-<131::.:.=::L~===" Linde I 111 Development •ult e I . Adj , n fl w LIQUOR lle'a. LOW PRICES! Bill Grundy 675-3210 MacArthur Blvd. From Otl SALE for ORANGE and I -=========111'5. Call 545-7143. SAN DIEGO (])UNTIES. Rooma for Reftt , 5995 LAGUNA BEACH can oolltct for b11!11t p rice! -Air C..Witionld C213l .212-4~ AVA ll. Jan. l~, ~Wt bwil-ON FOREST AVENUE 6320 neg man. q uiet. clean rn1, Deale space avalli!.ble In Money te LOln" pvt home, '?>~le~e p " r k ncweat olfle" bt.lldinc ·at acroa1 from }ia1rv1ew., Share prime location in.downtown 2nd TD Lo n ha.~h, no !l'!'Oke or COOk'I . f..a1'Unt. Beach. Air condl· a ~45 mo. •~ves or \Vknds. lloncd, cai:peted, beautUul Prompt. conlldentlal service 546-3461. entrancti1: Frantace on '42-2171 545-0611 f1.JRNJSHt.."D Room, student Forest Ave., rtar leads IO Servin: Harbor area 20 yra. preferred . .S:>2. mo .• utll pd . Mu nelp aJ parkinr Iota. $50 $iffier Morli•I• Co. 2636 Elden Aw. CM. pc!r month tor apace, DHk . 336 E. l?th t rttt 6424520 and cha.In atta.ilable for·~· -,.:;:;,;;,;~,:::.='-- LARCE Comfortable room, B usiness houn a nswcrtnc and NOTICES ~nient area. $20 wC'ek. service available tar $10. ANNOUNCEMENTS 642-17'"A All vtlllt.its pakl -~ccpt ·==~""";.,:,;~-=I telepbo»e. Found (frM A~tl 6400 ,15 WK A:. up w/ kilchen $30. DA.tLY PILOT wk ttud:lo apt. 2:m Newport 222 FOREST AVENt.IE 1''0UND •"amale ~med. Blvd. 54S-9755. LACUNA BF.AO:I a W)Ute w/tan marks. ~-nYED •~--• ..u..... .... Some G:e)'1lound or Whip. r..M.rlJU ~e. ......... ' pet, No tap. HU Dea col· prlvh ,., mo. ln Coeta r---rc1a1 lu v· Meta. MWO'fl _.......... to15 • JC. , Mta Dr. le Cyprne. 541-aTJ.3 AM · PRIVATE entrance, I'll' bath, mtn only, $45. mo, Call 68M91 I .615 Weit 19th St, fOUND, Youna Doberman l Plncher w /choke ct.tin. *541--3696* Btthe Towent At:,t•. Vie: l>rettlae .Home1, Hun- roRN Room + blttl In priv. 541-l16S <'It fti--'l•l•. Alt-liilaton Bch. Taken, 14-10. ~~le: Men~~~ t ... k lntluttritl RMtel MtO :un~:~ Besh~ E L T & R ' ~:;::=:;;:T=::=;::;,99=1 ·-=N;-;E;:W:;~l:;U::;l;;::LDiNG hrou:;:;;;ND~t::::"":::"'::::T=-,-,.,,-_.-,..-, mv1wl1. rlr. Crta. 5 1 f>~em11.le kitten. Black Ir i.-• 1260 Loran Ave., Coat& P..1eaa 1 1 I "'c.E:KL V. ra1ei1 Sea Lar-k Eich unit t'l'l5 sq It 2 oH· w 1 te,, 4 white , m tttn.s, red llfote.I. 2301 Nawporl Blvcf.. lcea, 2 mt r&ma, il0/220 Rea collar, ~n cyu. Up Costa Mna e ll!!cirlc. Ample puirlftf. 10 10 pm, CaU 6'Tj...4g00 C •-"--N ~--R aJ BLUE a CMomo GirlJ Bil«. G I - S". . r\UUUO a ... ~ e tor v· UH C.O.ta Afts& "2-1"5 IC Carna.Uon I. Bayside P TF. ·· t>r. Cd~t. 673-4().iJ RIVA .• room In lictnsod TORMICA Wort. custo m =""=-~~--~~­Pft homt for ckltrty cabinets. wall l lxtUr••· ~O Sprlr:ctf Spaniel. ,IC!nU man. No u rt th t rr1 Gva.p *1Vtt!, 'bolt 'lt'Ork, ifl&alOtl ~jD erca. IJ>..3.WS mN.11. TLC. C.M.· a.tu. Re~lr ,&, r emode lln1 . )'OUNO At BIJter • A ndf'Oll: 543-5225 '4W215. Gr 54&.1654 . ,wfrt. b me aJ,uMs. st!>-\612 L.:. German 'She pherd 1v choke chain. t yr. R\VD 1~j1 6~1-6.~:I Af! 5PM \\'knds 5,1~ . ' 1 .n~ t·1'0ll1 Albalross _ 1 · 118 iu'C'a : Sabir & 'vti\.t~ - Collie. L.ll~.5ic-typr. 11n1:.,tq Sl1rpr:iir. RE\\'AR'Q'S . _!162-7~-·-···f l:!·:Hi\IAN :-:ilephcrll. MUJle £i tan, ~ yrs old . PliS!Sing sine!! Nc1v Year's r\·{'. Any intq appreciated. Conn. lag NO( ?l:Jj:!, 6-1~ ' Bl::IG~ Tenier. 1''c1nale1 ~ yn. old. Ans\vers to Namej "Siuua11lhs ."' Vic Thurin ., Ralcan1. C.l\1. 548-2147 l Bl.ACJ.;: J\fiTrif"OOdle. SfiVef rarr. Vlc Orange '= Del !\far, C.t.I. 6'12--3689, 64&4981 . P•rsonals 640 FANTASTIC :: I . VOYAGE ;; i . Th" '\vol'lds n1osl t>e11ut1tef . ship lhc !38' Cllppcr BU11~-~I 0 N T E CRISTO leaN(nd · - .won for around the warld{ Roon1 left for five con~tl ing n1en or women t r e .. t membef'!. Also needed :'~ tor, Cook, Strip'• c&J."Pt:nttri · MARINA CORTEZ Sari: p,: t-go. i714) 291-8259.' · ; "l * LICENSED * . : • ~piritual Readin.i, adv\Ce. ! on all matten. Love, •• 1 • Maniq:e, Busineu. 3U N~ El Camino Real, Sailw., Oemcnte, 4~. ~, 10 AM -10 PM '.:~1 WILL The Man ln Green ~ • • who wttncssed accident; t~ volvlng motor bike on ~ : 26, 1969 at 3:45 PM; mntl f{arold Swatc;i: at 546-74lr~j ; ; SEM I-retired, i:ent. lh>flsf rcfii. l>leet lady to 42.:.~~ child. ~nd photo. &%.~.. , 915 Daily PUot. •.. , .. ,: l; ALCOtlOU CS Anon;y~ : PhOne SU.'l217· 01: wnt,..;~ ... ; P.b. Box 1223 O>sta Mn&.:-I ·, Announcements tJj·~ : . : . J• • • ·~11tt • MR. & MRS. ·~~: L. E. OOREY • OOI OciRCHESTER ! ROAD 11: • CORONA DEL MAAi :,. • 'I. : ~. You are the .winne:r ot ·• ' , : l tldce&.a to the , .j: • . Southorn Collfornti ; Sports, V•eetl""' · ;::.. & Rtcreetionel ·:1 Voh lclo Show " ... • ANAHEIM ~;,I I) CONVENT ION •• , • CE NTE R ri , I '~' JtnWU')' 3rd thru lltb.~~ i . Please c•ll su4678, ~ict .: • beJ-n 9 and 1 pm ., <lo'!!\ ,..., ti<ktto. tNorth-~ ~·! toll·frff numbtt ii ~)_ _ , • -+ I I I ' . . ' ., (1 r - JDIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS a IMl'LOVMINT JOIS a IMPLOYMINT JOll a IMPLOVMINT JU. Mon, Wom. 7100 Jobi Moll, -. llO khooloo!Nlruclloft 7 Jobo Mon, Wom. 7100 ~n. Wom. 7100 ,,..,, Mott, w ..... n SEii.ViCE DIRECTORY 'When Yov Want it done right .•• Calf one of .the experts listed below!/ SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY COMPUTER MECHS App&icantai temporary .. Work ov.rttu. Contact HOUSEKEEPER. ~ Ln, Reltaw"l.Dt , UROENTL V Vemon Plorc< n._TT .. '610 l'rtv. -· Call' al ------- Nll!DEO: e COUNTER GIRLS 1,1.,,'30,,,·=-=S<53=,....,,_= * Stcretacy Three-shUta av.&lablc HOUSEKEEPER It chlld * Obi Fric11,y Appl)' cart, 5li da, wk. $50 wk + • P<rOOllJ>el Aillllt. ONTRA CAFETERIA "" ~ brd. ""· vac. S40-92U • Typltt Cleric: Janitorial SERVICE CENTER # 60 FUlllon Wand Cloanina people needed tO< COOK !Short Orders! AND SALADS Ir SANDWICHES EmploynMMt Ae•ncy N<'wport Shopp1nc ~nter apt buUdlna cl1anin1. * ~ Newport ~n1cr Dr. * Padtlc Coast llwy at Reliable, proteMional in· \Ve n!!Cd 1 id\on. order cook tf'aahion Jal ) SUi~ 20Q NB r-.JcArthw·. N .D. dlvlduala only. 1'ruck or 1ta· a.nd a.t90 an cxperienca! Ill.I. By &ppr. 641-4931 COUNTEJ( GIRL. put Um• tion wt.IOI) ntcell&I')', Con-ad and iiandwich maker, Boby1lltl"1 6S5ll Carpet Clunl"I --'----=----6625 Jenltorial 6790 BA8'lSI'ITER, 4:30 pin _ f'\•es. & \\'k. ends. App. tn tact: lo.fr. Berger or ?i.tr Clean modern attractive ]:30am,l\fonthruFri.,nl.)' person to: KENTUCKY Steffens (213) 417-8537, branci new lu~ch counter'. home, 2 ch.lld~n T .& 4. }~RIED ClUCKEN, 693 So. Mon., J'an 5th. Closed Saturday nlahts and 54()..-0884. Coast H"''Y· l..&1::-Bch. )ANJTORIAL \Vork, ~qll Sunday11, 1'-ledical and hOspl. BABYSITTING t.1y llomt'. .Day nr nlaht. \Vann lood. l'ntants OK. Jo'tinL'fli Yd. ~&Q-.S299. fiABYSl'ITING, 1ny home wroekly, daUy, eve a. Rea.9onablr, reliabl e . 642M37. A-OK Shampoo Special $7 .50 tm/Je911 !or halls, etc. Also comp. housecln'a: 871-3182 Diamond Cl.rpet Cleanen 187 2ht St, Costa Meaa Home I Apt Cleaning 64>1317 'Fret e-stimate11 CARPET SJ'EAM CL£AN. ED No toap, no bru1tw;s. For eat. &ii-6971 BABYSITTING. n1y homio:, Qy day or week. Ages Mi. 642-....-.o CM. I======;;; BABYSITl'ING Your llome. ·c1rpet layln_J & DUTCll Maint Serv, crpl clna:. flr waxln.a, \vll'ldow \\'uhlna:· H&n)o van Bcyoen 5.17-1508 U no ana cal.I alt 3 BA~B~Y-S_l_TI_E_R_,_m_y_hom_o_.-8· I DENTAL ASSl!rrANT retired or supplement your t&l benefit1. Urillornt fum- lo 5:30, r.ton-Fii. 3 sirls-T Pfti.tnf!, some exp nee. ply 2 hr'l· day 4:30 to 6;30 ishtd. Ai>ply Llndbtra: Nu. mo's, 2 & 4 yrs. 548-7672 Please call 962-3329 a.m., 5 days a \\>eek SlOO per tritiOn. in rtar ot the Toy BANK Personriel Ex P: DENTAL ASS'T • Ol&trtlde. month. H.8. call 918-6257 World store on lo\\·er level Lendsc1p1n9 6110 1eeretarlal, clerical, NCR Pttvk>us exp re q u I red. befort 12:00 a.m. South Uw;t Plaza ShoWlnl .;;;;....;;.;.;..:;.....:..----450 proof maehlDC openi.ror. Cost.I ll1esa area. call LADY. Over 30, reneral help Center. Cosia fl.1csa. TAKATA NURSERY ~96-5Ta:i; 34001 Doht!ny Patk' M>l06U ror lntd'Vlew. tor take-out B-B-Q. Part BHt De1ifn Dr. Capistrano Sch. DISHWASHER, day or ni&:bl. time from 11-2 Pl\l or full :--.,--,-.,------ Sprinklers Installed * BEAUTICIAN, for bu ... , Good Pay. Must be Exper, Ume. No Sun'a. 646;-8561 ReNun.nt Drain Pl~ Installed UJ Tl'ff trim & Oean-up popular priced C.?.1. salon. See Chef, 1717} Brookhurst, LAWN le GARDENIN G 546-0'lM • Pd. vac. No clltntele req'd. F.V. Service Free e 1timate 1 . Dar •nd Ni9ht 0 SH HELP Mon. thru Jo"ri. Huntlnaton tltp1ir 61t26 Beach af'f:a. Call M7-30t5. . FOR CARPETING Moving, Stor19e BABYSrITING, my hon1e OR CARPET LAYING A,tOVING: Jo'or acce11 N<'w ~ad \velcome. Call * DRIVERS * Reuonable Ir; dependable. 6140 54&-n86 67l-8l68 No Experience BOOKKEEPER N I Machinisu Day and Nlaht BUS HELi' Mesa de.I Mar. a n,y ae:e Ml· c. A. Paae &12·2070 fumitutt or applianc e• «lf?le 546-3001 ---536--1090 or m.11. 536-6126 ruLL CHARGE ecessory. ENGINE LATHE ~~~~~.,",'.' ':°~.:';'.:.:t"'A.c;;uorn1a MACHINISTS EIKtricel 4640 Irick, M11onry, etc. Per,trhenglng A Pq1-ea11lve Co. 'vhich rt-YELLOW CAI CO. e '560 EU.X:TR.ICAI~ N!rvice & p1 ntlng 6150 C'cntly moved headquarters 186 E. 16th St TURRET LA THE 1---------repa.ir. 24 hl'I, 7 days. No -to NY.'Pt i~ looking for "n Coat.a Mesa BUILD, Remodel, repair job too 11mall. Re-model' & e Interior ~ Ext•rlor e alert crea.ili'e bkpcr \\'ho ap.. DRIVERS f2J. 1 w JSJ.lpt!r MACHINISTS COCO'S or REUBENS 4647 MacArthur Blvd. Ne.wport. Beach SAUS * AIRLINI a OUTST-'!101 G TltAVIL CARlllU *' OP POii TU FOR RIC INFOR TION CALL...:. 835-4029 Slt.don Actnt Tkktt Sales Re1~Uons SALES Prof.aalonal Training Program Air F'rtlaht • CatlO Communk:ation1 Trani Asent For recorded information u ll '3>1375 SECTV. -SALES Career position 1n upandtna AIRUNE SCHOOLS PACIFIC u.le1 dept. Mod. MJa. plant Inquire Today toe. In Irvinto; lndUlt. Com· f>43-6596 J pfex. Mutt be 1harp, person· 110 E, 17th St., Slnt.a Ma able A eltptritn~. Olvt111el!"!~~~~--,,.:"'!'!"'~I dut1e11 include telephone con· 11XlKING for a aolid. f\l.ture tact with culitomers. ahort· but atttln& · hand-and typing. NO\Yl!ERE ! Salary open. All &tree bene. Look into a career at a "" Incl, profit 1har!ni. RADIO ANNOUNCIR Call!. lnloctlon Molding m-3800 IX! Brlc&a Ave., C.M. M6-.f460 INdtute ol Near On.n&e County Airport Bro&deut Arts 1601 N. Brl1tol, S.A. SERVICE Station o" d, MIRCHANOISI jiOJt cxp'd r.1an, days, full time, SALE ANO TRAD! perm.anent. Unioa OU. 383 E. 17th St. C.M. Pumfture IOOO • MR. & MRS, JIM HICKS SERVICE Station Atmid. * Exiier Full time. Prtfer older man. Apply S60 W. 19th St., C.l\I. 7202 OCIAN,RONT NEWPORT IEACH S.E.."RY Sta Attendant. exp. nee. 4611 Campua Dr., N.B. .Brick, block. c on c re le. addiuon11. Jf H's ~lcclrlcal, Acous!lc ceilin&:• ptd, 12 yra pN"cialt'!! ~·~~p~ro~f~ro~•u:,•~>rl~~E<:onol=~itte~·!'!l'.''~'/!c~a~r=. == e 1---1·-1~"' "' . b too amall . ...wUix-1~~·~1:;:1 ~"~~=-==! ..__,.. .. -lJc._P"""'"'•• ..most>h=. . _ ..... --+-l'lll'ILL PRES Uc. Contr. 96~·!i" '"=. pnts f>43·1787 portunil)'. Plt'ast call Kul •<-----k 6510 Floors 6665 INT.;EXT. Aver. Ex t . liollcy. 644-4090 Enclneer OPERATORS R E s TA u RA NT-Fountain Airport Texaco -see Mike -Valley-Exp' . WAl'l'RESS> -SHOE cliAL-.SMAN ES both colret" shop &. din· Wanted, exp!!rienced, I u 11 ner eXP. rurnllh exp, age .I: tinie. Apply JOSEPH MAG· refs. Also oombo CASHIER-NJN SHOE SALON. Ask lor HOSTESS, BUSBOYS · !UU Mr. Daniels. )'ou •rt the winner or l _tlckel.S ln..llit Southern California Sports, Vacation & Recreationel Vehicl• Show • C.binetma ing CARPETING $127.50 labor only. 8 yr. BOOKKEEPER -Typll!t PLAN CHECKING Experle:nc«t ln cioM: toler- RESIDENTIAL &: Con1m. Ff'Pe estimate Lie. c..'Ontr. KUar. pa!ntln&: avail Al!IO. Newport Center area Oftlce. _ ENGINEER _ ance. abort nm worit with Cwllom C.bln!'I It Furn. ~TJ62. 5-16-44/S AplS Ir. Comm'!. a.18-1546 Reply Box ~fl.I, O..ily Pilot, ability to make tet\lpl. Nine. 1-'urn Re-1-~iniahitw. 64:H>9!11 I-====="""==== IEX·PAINTt.""R, now 1 c h I N.B. $939. to $1141 . hour day, 4.>hour y,·~k. lime, PORTJ::R. \\'rite Df.ilY &t0-5050 Ext. 21 Pilot Box ?.1\17. S\VING Shilt Workers al the -"'•-Gtnltnin1 ~Ca~·~"";.;;;.;"~'"'"·'''"~''--~-~~~ 6680 lt!achcr will pa.int ~" Ii per month wknd1. xint wortcmanthlp. IUILDJNG Restau:ran1 Preferred. ?.Tan 1.-'\'ife PROFIT SHARING HELP \vant~. [f'malt, ove.r P/limc. 12AM-2AM, 7 ANAHEIM CONVENTION C!NTIR CARPENTRY ~~Compl e t • Free "L 64&-4519. 540-<l002 INSPECTOR -CITY OF - NEWPORT BEACH J . C. CATER CO, 671 W. 1m1 ST. cosrA MESA Sl8-3fl! 21, $2 hOUr. 5«).M6l night• per "'k. Gd Pay. Call --------133-«47 Of' 437-1767. MINOR REPAIRS. No Job EXPERT CL!:AN·UP PAPERHANGING, yo&n of expcr. Call John, 548-21687. "" 548-4903. Too SmalL Cabinet tn pr-PenonaliUd work r or ~ I: o t be r cablneta. p&rtlcu1ar people. 96l-4914.. 5ell75, U no &n11wer 1".ve AL'S Gerot!nlllJ: • Lawn * PAlNTlNG • Int.JExt. f'nJC at 646-2372. H. 0. lilainte Commercial. Local. retereocet. Imm~. Andnwon lndUltri~·naidentiaL I service. 646-5242, &48-3657 CEN. Repair. Add. Cab. . * GfG-3629 * YOU SUpply Thi! Paint. 1 BR Formica Panellna:. Marlite. · apt painted $.'lO. 7 BR $40. 3 '>.nythlna;! CaU Di c k . EXPERT J a ~anese BR $50. 540-71>'6 ..a~ Gardener Right price, nice 1 ~~~=~--~~ :Job, & clca1l up. Jilff c11t. PAIN'I'lNG, Paperin1 17 yrl!I. REPAIR, Partlliom, Small 54&-33.~ in Harbor area, Lie. Ir. -~cl, etc. Nile or day bond•d Roll furn 642-2.156 ,..,.,...., Jll\1'S Gardening & lawn · · · · lteu! c..JI KEN 540-467S maintenance. Re~. k com-Jo'OR BctM Pa In 11 n r, CARPENTRY, Cablnt't!I mrrcial * !-i40-UJ7 lntclior & ex\f"rlor. acouat.ic Re:mod. No job loo small, JAPANESE Ga rd en er, ttiling!I. 646-4077. !'141-lin : Q"!llll v.·ork. Call 646-2516 t'xp'd, COn'llL yard &ervice. PAINTING-Ext-Inf. 18 )'TS, REPAIRS * AL1"ERATIONS Jo'l't'f' f'lllima1f':. 968-2303 Exp. Ins. Lie .. t'rce rost . t CABINETS. Any :oilze job CLEAN·UP SPECIALIST At'cou11t Ce.ilint st&-l.12."i l =;"'="'=::-'"1""=='·=54;s.-67=="=~ I J.1owing, edging, odd jobs. Ctment, Concrete 6600 ,., PATIOS -Drlvewaya • Pt.anten -Block Jo'encr.1 - Room Additions 642-9852. CEMENT WORK. no job too snail, teUGl\lble. Free ,sttm. H. StuDick 54.!J..8615 * CONCRETE l'"LOORS. M.tlot, f':tc. Rea!IOnable, fill Don, 642--6514 Contracton 6620 Additlont * Rcmodellnc }"'fed H. Gerwick, Lie. 673.604il * 549-2!70 C•'J'"' CINnlng 64~ .. * * MRS. ROCK DINTMAN ·JOll VISTA CANDAL . NEWPORT BEACH -You a~ the winner of 2 ticke111 to 1he Souther n California Sports, v .. cetlon & Recreatlonel Vehicle Show 111 th,. ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER Rt-aM>nabll". ~9.'i.l • ANTHONY'S • fl1ow. c.:.dae. Clf'an.up. Mo. i\1ainfeM.nee. 644-4860 • '730 •. * RrallOnable r11.TI"~. 10 ''"A.rs tn atta. Llet!ruied Ir. lnsuri!d. 6~2--0427 Pla1terlng. R.-lr 6110 e PATCH PLASTERING All lypt!1. Free estimates Call,.._ YARD/Gar. Oeanup. Re·l==========o move trees. ivy, trash. Plumltlng 6190 Grade. backhoe. 962-3745 Haull!'f HAULING, Oeanup, loU t:tc. Handyman anytime you call. ••• 64.2-3398 ••• eHaullng. Have ~i ton pickup. licensed & Insured. 494-1003 CINn Up end Haul SlO a loa.d , 646-2528 HOVMCIHnlng 6l1S (21 CLEANING w omen, 11\arting Jan. . 5, Mobile home &: general clf'aning. 536-769'l. * APT CLEANlNG * 'Fast It thorough 64.2-8164 'VilllamA Cleaning Serv. JACK".S J10USEKEEPING Complete Jlousecleaning PLUMBING REPAIR No job loo sml.11 • 642-3128 • Remodel, Repair, 6940 Add-A-Room Rtmodtllng C u•tom Ot1i9n Strvic• Free E1time+t. ~9'4-0751 Sewing 6960 '1 DRESSMAKING ./ Experif'nced-R.M110nlble. .. ...... • Dreumaklng • Alte:ratlons Special on cot.l hem5 ·-* TILE, C•ramlc 6'74 ~148--7243 642-89311--------- BA Y l.: Bca't'h Janltorlal Car'J>f'11'. \11\ndows , noors. ('IC. Rrs &. Comme·1 . 646-1401 e WINDOWS DIRTY? 1'·rce rst. 15 yt':ars exp. Johnny Dunn 64.2·2364 EXPERIENCED * Vcrnro, Th~ Tile i\1a.n • Cu:st. \\'ntk. Install k repairs. No job loo ~mall. Plastrr patch. L.l!nk in~ shower T'epAlr. 841-1957/846-0206. Tr•• Service 6910 Housecleaning, have own TREES Pruned, topped , transp., day work. 541""9357 removed. 26 yr• exper. RPETS W fin Aerial tower eqp\S. CA , lndowl, • ,.0 • •l<N< __. ·~• -· $754. to $91'. per month CITV OF NEWPORT BEACH lncreal!r!d buildl.na: activ- ity neceasltatea creation of an addltiona.I po1ltion in !ht Building Depart- ment. Requirtd h i g h. school diploma, journey· man status in one o{ the building 1rade.1, two years journeyn1an JC'vel t".l(J)('r· iencc. New posjtion 1n the BuU4· Ina: Department req\11~ tn.i df:ln!' in civil, archl- 1ectura1 or •tructural en. 1lneertna and one ,..., or experience eheckinc bulldlnc plans. Apply lo fhl': Pm;onnel 0 I f i c I!, 3300 Nrwport Blvd.. Newport Beach, Calil. 92660, ('114) 673-6633 imml!di11rc!y. ~ SEARS WAITER· for pll.llb Mexican dinner house. Var!OUI lhifbi open. Exp'd onl.y 67S-Gf70 January 3rd ctlrU lllh ask for Jorge. Plf'ue oall 642.$671, ext 321 Equal opportunity employer COSTA MESA WELDER. Machinllt, Ap. bttween 9 and l pm ID da1rn MAIDS WANTID prentic:e Welder. Jobi open )'OU?' ticket• !North County * ~1443 * ANN0UNCIS early Jan. Call 4M4989, toll·fret nuni.ber ta 6t0-JD>> Maid, owr 30, full ttme. OPENINGS FOlt Laguna Sch. * * * 1n Lazun,a Stech WA.ITRESSES Wanted; Split PRICES SLASHIOI .. ...--$mt ,..-..,-Experienced llhilt, lunch, n~ -boat.ua. Up kl 30% $1.Vlnp MALE COOK -PM. Ho1p. T k Tl Apply OO Palisades Rd ., I' Sofa & love ll!at $151.M exp. prel'd. Cont.let Peraon. rUC re S.A. 5 Pc Span 1ame tet $1 •• '6 llf"l Dirrctor. So. Coal!! Salesmen EXP. Day 'Vait..rea!. Apply Kint S:t quilted mattttu A ~omn-i. Hosp. 31872 Cat. lG--11 :30 AJ-1 ·Mon. Ill La bQ)( xprin&:• •.••••• , $98.16 lf\\)'. So. Laguna, 49S-13ll Ce\•c OHice, 169at,; Irvine , 5 Pc BR Kin(::, gp.n $119.96 \* EXPERIENCJo:D Tracer Ext. 356 l:::.'<cellent Earnln;s 12nd Doorl, C.M. Approved Furniture For applic.;utlon and In· Lathe Jl.1achlnist, uu to Plull \VAITRESS ... i.:..,.rienccd 2159 J-larbot, CM 54W660 10,,""llo•> •t• ! t h flfEDICAL Al>ilttant, Iron! e Profit ~harin< • ~ ·-co.. 1• " ,lo•• tol ...... ..,.. , .... rk. M"'' "-t "-.. Sho P I 0,1. "~"" ..... .... ...... ~ "" olfi~. lladlt'y bkkg •""tcm. • H01pitaJiz.atio11 ......, tagl'! .....,..e p. 1-'URNITURE returned from el'l!Onnr 1~· Jo.NU h•·• ow• 1001.<. ~· = W 1~· St CM N Bl d N ~ " ;\lust be versatile & en· • Group life Ins. JV"-• ;TUl • ' d1'""1ay studios, model homo ci1·po11 v " 1 C'Wport • EXPERlENCED Precision ..,., BC'ach. Calif. 9'J660, (1141 Parti Deburring iland. lhusiastlc. Busy GP oUice. •Paid vacation W~TRESS. need an attn.1.'-es, decorators cancellation, 6i3.fi633. Apply in peraoo Jl.lill8ion Viejo l El Toro • S paid holld~• Uve one. for food, coclrtallz. Spanish k Mtdlte.n-antan BOYS ll-14 VARD NEWPORT area. Salary open. 8.17-7520 e Employee d~nt Apply in person. El Moro RD FURNITURE Carrie Rou Ope 2300 Jo' . • Rd c ~I MEN, work oVf'rsea.t. More • 19655 Pac. Coa.st Hlway sun. 1144 Newport II., C.M. r tea n airview · · · jobs than _,,.,pie. Cont.ad Appl)' in Pe!'IK)nncl o.ttl.ce »C!t Sch alter 5:30 every ntte 'W 9· IOI' t'qual opportunity employer ,....y , .,_, .... Bea,,i. So. , ......... E~-r Vernon Pierce 714-n4-26lo Monday thnl Satun:tay \VAITRESS .. eottte Shop. Wed., Sat. &: Swt. 'til I .._,.._ ....., .__,,. ... u-~ 10 AM to 4 PM ....__ 2 r ...... ~ 1- DAILY Pll.OT Assoc. Civil EnglnHr Men 'vanted tor @arly mom-VY"'r 1· Me.a_......, •w 17 Pc. King Sin ·-•-Call '"' dell-of --pa-SU-rior Ave., C.M. ~ $1015. to $1296 per mo: . ·~·J ...... ., ........ SEARS ~ Bedroo COASTAL AGENCY--fornia rr.1i1tration f'f"qUlred . to home. Good IUP. income. 'VOMEN (61, needed for m Professional f'ile application by Jan, 23rd. Must live ,V. of Harbor work at the.telephone order l.af'i~ 9 drawer d~a•er, mlr. Employment For Iorms and detail!, con-Blvd. 14.7-8979 Roebuck & Co. desk, part lime, 9 am to ] ror, 2 bedside stands, kins Assistance 1act Pc~nncl Dept. pm or 4 pm to 8 pm. $2.00 size headboaf"I, frame, qu.llt. CITY OF See Belt)' Bruce at per hr to start. Opening:• in ed mattreas. aheeta, bl&nk- A memhe1• ol COS MES m 6 SOUTH COAST PLAZA Costa J\.tesa ottict. No exP/ eta, etc. Soellinc k Snellina foo. TA A 33ll S. BRISTOL 2790 llarbor Bl, D\I 540-6055 77 ,.~air Dr. TI4-134-5350 i:.t:J xec COSTA MISA nee. cau for Wor. 642·1M2 Choice or Spanith Harbor Blvd. at Adiinll * EXPERIENCED. Special YOUNG Man to manqe well or r.fod•r'D Stylt CASHIER -&-per. Nttd~ 1.fochine Opers. Top pay, ~~t~cy c':it<=:r:~. ~1.~~ An Equal Ol)pOrtunity =~:n·& :c.!!!~Ul:I~~ ., Al( for $249 FOi" Back OUICf! or N.Y. i;tcady -s p o r Is we ar. By appoint. 6f6.39J9 Employer . . .. ~. . .. o dowri Pmta, only S9 mo Bas«! Bro...,.,. n 'm · 642-"72 N.B. ........ I :::~~~~~'.:~I:;:=;;:;;::::.::::;:;:;:~=: I ::·~~ o.'::,'."Pi1:.-"'"' WELK'S WAREHOUSE Salary opt'n. Call {724) FEMALE A11i1tant *MOTEL MAIO* ~ 644-244.2 C . • Sal Mu1t be l'Xp'd &: OVf".r 30 . ..,_,_ S hool I t ti 7600 ~IV ,,. • San ?.lanaa:er. a11h1er • . es ~!t C ... n1 rue on ......, . ua ... t., tt Ana CLERICAL :receptlonmt \\'Omen. F\tll time postuona. App: 2205 Harbor Blvd.. · Open Dlily 9-9 llf'edcd by national finn in 2 Avatlablf' lmmf"dlately. Are ,_eo._t_•~'~''~oa,=Cal~l~t.=--EXCEPTIONAL Sat, 9-6 Sun. U-«i r ir! offiet!. Over age :ll>. 5 21-45. See MrL "T". a t * MOTEL MAID * OPPORTUNITY USED complete I p e day wk, 9-J. Idul cond. O\ris', South Col.lit Plua. Put Tim~ Over 30 We att f"xp&ndfnr our New. .red/told Spanish Jlv. rm Starting Mllary S350 + rnnae For•inn Car ~chenlcs .494-94.36 port Beach operation iand lfOUp. Contitlll or -sot&, bcnefils. Phone 64&--0511. for • NEED ~ ~·., Good co. beneflta, Ind pakl ~me LADY Willtt to bltmlil!w men who Joveseat, hi-back chair, 2 appt. vacation, rroup Ina, unl. Apt. ! out h Lquna. l'or are truly interested In de-end, 1 cocktail tbl, l latn))I. COMPANION F'or elderly fonna tumill~ free. Good 'l\'Ot"klnr rouple. 64.2--3472 tennining the posaibHitles ;; ;: ,-1 :; : $199.~. U!'Cd 2 pc g• told ~~~y 2& ~i~~~1ts.ho~~~;pi~ll~ ~:~oo:~~~o.~~. for ~ newport . ~naan~~tim~e~a7i:id'.n ~ )j \l i!ll :. :~e! ;:'1:~a~:~ ~~ Refrm~.!l. 4g.i-7186 _I have a lone r•na:e tralntna i.:lnt cond. $59.95. The Fae- •DENNIS ~OLLAND * p8rs000BI program covering both the tory, lS&i Harbor, 540-6&t2. 246' SANTA ANA AVE. 8Q80CY a~11.~ 01 est.t.te crc.atlon & USED uphol1tered chain, COOK ... estate conservation. We will UMtrtcd colon, $19 ea. U1· (short Ord.-) COSTA MISA K33 DOVER DRIVE make a substantial cash in· ed occasional c hair•, • • Nl:WPORT BEACl-1 vestment in the men choaen, MEN A WOMEN I uaortcd colors. $10 ea. u .. 'You art the winner o! .. , 3870 AND • Tn addition ro bf-ing a Na-CO~lPUTER PROGRA.i.\II-ed assorted end·tbl• SC et. 2 ticket.I to the w "'I be · · call · I SALADS & ~ \\·u receiving s tiOna. Life Insurance Com. MING IS THE KEY TO Th~ Factory, 1185 Harbor, And applicants early Mon. pany, v.·e have a broker/ YOUR PROnTABLE 5'0-6M2 SANDWICHES Soulharn Californl• day AM. deal" oull<tt Jor '"'" of FUTURE' FRE=~E-TO~-Y~OU~F-or<-,-11-_.-• January 3rd thru 11th Pkue e&1J 642·56'11, e.xt 329 betwel-n 9 and 1 pm to claim your tickm. (North O:Mrty toll-free number lt 540-12l;ll tic. Re• or Cmc'I, Xlnt _,.;•,:,~""~;;o,'"••.,o,M.c-c...c'..,,;.-~~ work. Reu! Rf:tl. M&-41U TREE SERVICE, Jlt':R'I yard We need a abort. order cook cleanup. SP Rt N KL ER -.nd a1.o an experienctd Ml· REPAIRS 6t&-S84& ad and eandwkh maker. $rrt1, Vac1tfon re: our cwnnt job oppor. mutual fu nd.I, If you bave · ..... ity in furniture 1nc1-·iii Recreatlon•I tunltita cUl traln1rw be-a tart ~.... OI V.hlcl. Show . ~. _ , are usea a soon. strreo. 6 mo'a cld. Ptymtn{ NURSES Re&:ilttred • even. twttn the aiea cl 2MO &nd Pilot P1'0rrtm otteirtiii the $38 per :mo. No cub ref, in.,. A .. 1 .. ht .. Utt '""'" and al"I! wUU. to eper1d tlnes:t. equipment and ladl-,,,_ ........, * * * CARPET & }'urn cleanll'1': for 1 day ACNtoe &: quality work. ca.u SterHn1 for brla:hUJeu! 6G-8520 OIARGE IT! -,...,,,,. 6755 m.oNING In My Home. 15c a piece. 1 Day service. Call 536-1602 THE QUICKER YOU CAU.. THE QUICKER YOU SELL Oean, modem, &ttracttvt, Upholmry 69'° brand new lunch counter. ""'...;."'-'""'------ao.ed Satutday n!Pll and C::ZYKOSKl'S 0111tm, Uphol. SUodaya. ?ifechcal and h0$!.U- European Craftsrna.Nhlp tal benerib. Uniform fu.m. JOO?'. fin! 642,..1454 lshed. Apply Lindbere Nu. at ttt. ANAHEIM CONVENTION CENTER January 3rrt 1hru 11th b.~ts. •Appq ~i l(l[l'le time in ordtt to Jevn lttn available! RMl·tlme ~" \ Dlrector, So. Cout eom. more a.bo\it oUr opportunity computer prosrammlnc. BEAtmFUL Ki,. btd • q\lll nft.. H 3l8T2 ...,_.... and your qua I if'~"--cal! The Academy td matttt11, Complete, un. mu v Olp.. ""'-' Mr."""'----« if;'.j'w.on U8l!d SlD5, 111 or th .-; Hwy., So. Laguna. ~95-UU, ........ ,......,., .... ,..,..,,. exl. 356 at 675-0344 for •n appoint· fi ~ OM........:lO e~. 1AS:l Newport Blv, CM . lril.ion. in rear of the TQy ·--~- PAINTERS menl la:h.r&-m USED C")mplett wal nuf LARGE ReaJ Eslalr Com· , IUiUiY bedroom llll!t, consilta ol .. g pan,y secki11£ reliable. pro. PACIFIC MUTUAL dra\\'{'r dres~r w/minor, World Rtore on lol'.-tr level South CMst Plaza Shopplnt Plrll.!le call 6"2°:,67S, r )l.I 329 fc5sional painter!! for LIFE INSURANCE CO. Union lank l~uar• dbl headboard. 2 nlte ANNOUNC•MENTS ind NOTICES JOBS .. EMPLOYMENT I JOBS & EMPLOYMENT Jo~ Want•d, Ct>nlrt. CO!'la i\lr-~a. )Xl'l\•ttn 9 and ! pm 10 cbtin1 permanent po~itlon. i'tlust South T•w•r ttand~. 2 bedroom lampa. 1 ~·our lirketl. fNorth County fl\i•n rnu:kll . Sttlary open. Sales Sult• 40 KCt dbl box 11prlng:o1 l mat- toll·fitt numbrr ls 5·10-12'.'0l r:ontict ~rr. Bf'rgt'r or i\lr. J)o You T11kl" ")rang•, Calif., 92666 trt'~S "'/(ran1e11, ss:;. SamtJ • ,,. * StrrfC'n• t:ZlJl ~71-•·,,111, ~Ion, !SALESMEN C1ll 547.~71 set \\'/h\"in beds SJJO, The COOK-DECK llAND. 1nale. "' """~!!!'!!:~~"~~!!!!!I fac1ory. l~ Harbor . Ann0Unc1ment1 6410 Wom•n 7020 I Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 for <I o1o's trip South on 75' r.ARDENER TrAillf't'. No Jan~;11h. ASTICS WANTED ADSJ JOINT"• FIELD 540-6842. t'REE biuic boatlni: eoursc BABYSIT-lnf1nl o , k ., nffcl'l'd 10 public by BHlboa vicinity or Talbert and Power Squadron cv,ry lllon. Newland, 11.U-36S7 Hnt. Sch. ni&ht for 13 wc<iks be£'lnnJ.ng 1 pm. Mon. Jan. 12 at CASHIER. Rccpt. A/R, a· Newport llarbor yach t per ma~ ~ady. NB--C~f Club, TAJ \Y, 88,y Ave., Atta. Daily Pilot Box P-564 ke""J)Ort 84.'ach. No advance NURSE \Vants babyaltlirlJ, t • i:' I • t r & t I o n 1ftded. ruy homt, I.rel 1 to 2.. liton, Rfcb11u at clau. Bring to Fri., I to 5. 494-3893 nottbcok flrtt nlaht. que,. A Cullu:red retired bU1lne11 dona: Cl1I 873-18$ woman •Inns employment SEN'Sf'MVJTY TRAfN.UiG a• oomp&nion, 6"-()477 WORK SHOP DAY WORKER A proQT&m of lnl~r,>erM>nAI ltonest, d~pt:ndabl• exrrci5cl' for i.1n111l IK'll-dl-Call 11nytlme. 541-7"2 t-clOO groop5. ~l1nirrud dalrit call 6C2·17'30. 10 i\~f. Job'.-Mtri, Wom. 7100 ~ P~I. nNE ORESS~!AKING 81' TO $4ll> CHARLOTTE Omi""s _ At'ro11111lns Oerk;-Ut !«:)' 11dll Sulla -Cotta 332--019L by looch rood typi~t . C•ll J.0""======="-1 Ann 6~2nO Wc..~tcJlft Pf'r· "°"nei. 21).U \Ve11f'tHr Dr .• f\'('W~rt Beach. Cemetery Lots 6411 IOR.. SALE -2 Ct.meter)' Jotl', Pacitk! View. Sf6...'18J8 ]J,.. DAJLY MIDI' \VANT ADS! PLANNING to move\' You'll ttnd an am.ufna nu1nber of homc11 In today'• O.u1fif!d Ada. Check them now. • n1otor !tillf'r. Stair tixp. It. ri.:p. nee. Xlnt opp. 17141 l---~7~==-. --= l't'1'1. Box M·~ The Dally [)'16-908514.!M-5427 day nr Ion ~· !din wl!h a grain of s•il t Ctn'1 \VITH A FUTURE! USED ?.lagnavox AMIJIM Advertising A&ency Sherp S1cret1ry fo r fast -paced Newport Beach Agency. Type 6S.70. Shorth•nd 100, "'il•nlro &. f o II ow thru. Under 35. Phono: '42-3910, 425 N. Newport Blvd. Piiot rvf'. or ~a lllly !hat I bllme :you, I fol. AR:c/t"ducation no bfri..rrler! radio I.:. atert!O, Chlnete --c==--~--· 1 'G"•"tte:--,..-,c-------To \Ycd, thnl sun. lowl!d . a few my1elf only to Let us help )'OU qualify. black cabinel, $50. Uaed ~~iu~~a=~t~orA= Night BROILER l\.tAN, AIM (~fon. l'uc'1. ell,) AD be d11appotnted. The job INNKEEPERS INSTITUTE portable blk/wht 1V eels a.her 3 P?.t, In pet90n • 333 day DJ~ASllER. T 0 p thUta n. Mult be neat aeldom II~ up to t be INTERNATIONAL $58 ea. Ullt'd crtdaut.1 54" ..-.p1. <496-6446 P1 dtptndable. Appl,y a da\ms in thr ad. Mot@l!HoteJ/ Apt M&mt ScbJ lone. l a:old, 1 awcado. $29 ;;;"-=;.;;;d•'-~""'c;"'o"'s.i:':K:---l;o;;ROCER;;';;;;=YMAN=".-•::;11;-:::..,,..="" am 'Ill noon ..i,,. DO YOURSELF ~~~ ~';,..,.~ ~i°"· 1115 TRAINEE ..,...,.-. i.. tmal~ In-~-1~~ !'lac.~. A FAVOlll 1n1 s. BllOOKllU1ltT FORCED to .. u a· Madtt: AIRCRAFT MEOtS. Work 0Vf't'Sea1. Conta ct Vernon Piei'cc 714-714-3HO e ASSEMBLERS e Electro • mtthlnic&l lrw.ln- Pmn&Mnt, f'UD time Job. Over 18. Nett appet.1'1.nCf'. APPLY JN PERSON llob'• 111, lloy 1M E. 17th. C.M. ets. malf' or ftmale. App.ly: * COOK • 111/F. App 1 y : 29.10 Collea:c Avt., c .M. lluntington Va 11 c y Con- ~\'ISS INDUSTRIES YllleK't:nt llorpltal, 1312 A11i1tant Bookk1e.,.r Newman 11'"~· ll.H. SW. Small plcaaant o(lice. COOK • Dln~r, Top Pay. Xl.111 'o. Irvine art'll.. Top 1'fusi be Expt>r. Stt Chef, h,..nt"h11 . c an Kay ~~10 111n Brookhun11 , r .v . JASON BEST COOK, HOUSEKEEPER 'Eo1ploymr.nt Aaency Exper'd, Livt°f'in $~. tlCl7 So. i\l1in, Sllnla Ana 673-J819 SM'1'ER: Llv!-ln. C..re for COMMUNICATIONS TECHS 10 nW> Nit, 1'..''\'es. Jru, lf \Vork avel'tf"as. Cont a ct riro~irt"(f, ~an 1. Vt"roon Plf'l'Ct 714•714--2610 de P • 11 d e n t • non-union 1.,,----.--'·-··--..:...'-'"--AND ANAHEIM, CALiroRNrA IOta. 7 pc Bultt din nn .t, mul<ct. H..-.,.. ttll-R<tna'""'I EXPLORIE Claues fonn ,....., - 5 pc: ea...t BR ,.~ coffoa a dent ~, PHONE FOR APPT. end tble (ll P5-!80 . GIRL FRIDAY PART TIME RELIEF THIS ONE! ""'tor 8"" -2 ustD.s"' dlnetta ""' AJ'lflly In l'lf:MICll'I BOOKKEEPER If )'Oil would like to make * DOG TRAINING * xlnt cond. $2!tU •a. 2 nfl:w KINGS FOR Ml!N $300.per"·ttklmmedlat.eb'. ~.S STARTING : 30" P.• rt.natl, run site 2300 Har bor Blvd. • With an opportunity ror Novtce obedluce Jan ~ ovtn "''JsJau look·tht' Costa Me11 LUNCH WA ITRESSES m\aeh more in the turure, .7:30 Pi\I : KlndefKlU'ttn pu~ door, Sl09 ea. The Factor,y, J1AIRORES.SERS: ~ce to • f would llkt. to talk to )'OU. ~:ialn~a~ 1• l;~ ~J\.f: .lsal H1rbor, !WQ..Q.12 tt:nt In tl('w salon, lJdo. Oya HOSTESSES It )'OUr quallllca~1 match PM . rmat an • :OOhR"E"F"R"l°'G-. -:s",.;~.'°"G ... 11-,!Wce"""'· I 61~1110, <'\'f't 67:,.$767 our rrquirtmcnts. l~lit couldbet MARTJNCR£:ST KENNELS $30. Cl~l!t or Orkv;en, $10. t llou ,E~EEPER -I -+ be the can?cr you ve n ~ Pt. Bdr. 5<'1 O>mpl, "5. ~ " · 1 vr ln, DAY BUSBOYS k>Okinit for. C:.11 for penonal • :>46-0089 • 4206 \V. Isl St.. S.A. e)(pcr. tlrl only, f)rl. room. ltllervlew bf.I. I Aflt l 3 PM AUCTJONEERlNG !O d 9 . I • , __ TV, lop 11a.lary. Huntln,ton 645-(69! , R.EGUL.AR. 2 'V£D\ TERM l l\ , ol llO & a ..,y,. ~ Harbour lt&-0106 or 846-4666 Apply Tn pe1~11 De In bultlntaa fOr )'OW'ltlf! S{l&nlsh fl.ledH. rtd vtl\llC JtOUSl:KEEPER-Ba.byaltl· lT'S 'VONDERF\Jt. tt!e Learn to be an auctlonef'r. wood trim. 54Wlll rr Nl"Cdtct. 2 days wk. Mon Reuben E. LH many buys In apP!lanoes WE.ST-BEST sefiool or Aue-MAHOGANY Dlhinc talii It. Thurs, ~. 511-1311. lSI £. CO.tt Hwy. )'flt.I find In the QuaWed ~,,... )JS W. 4.th, Santa 4Cbc90", 6 chatn 4 i>qttef. N R, Nt\\'J)Ort BNich Ads. Check them nowt Ana, IJS.8147 6SX20. $300. w.G , . • • • -· MlllCHANDlll POil IA~I AND T,ltADI S.lWdlf, J...,ry ,, 1970 ~ OAILY l'lt.OT la Ml:irr=~=· ' FREE TO YOU TRANSPORTATIOk TlAN.:i'OlIDION TRAHIPORTATIOH T1l1vl1l1n ---------1MoblleHOM11 f'lOO hn19'att9d A.,..._ HOO ln••rtM A-.. HOO '205 1 Yr old ctt, black. -- --------HOUMl:lrokan. Half Slamest * * ' * FDIARI 1MH Col« TV or Bl&ek a A bait """'· "'""" • MODEL S •LE 11· WAL TIR DINTON ---'-'-=;...-1 Whit.. Option to buy. rr.. front p&WI ci.-da...i. To " 24.12 NORSI AVI. PlltltAll Office fur"\ture ttrvtc.. No depo11t A·AcUve IOOd home. 5t8-05S7 113 Niw Priv•t• Club COSTA MISA N'IWl'IOrt tmPGf"ta U111. °"" 11ANOSOME t.<s Ma••• . TV a.nta1 eo. • :.ovELv. lliondly c ... , Greenleaf Park .... C.O.l>'• ~ .. -~ t 3 chain. ~. PORTABLE TV SlO. 14~ ~ OLDS PIJ'tl: 2 bucli:eti. li$ Olev)' fl'oot l!'nd $15. l.S? (1) m,.1153 mos., ~. rrey.whl· _ You arc the winner ot lied dMler. Avocado llWivel chr, $10. t88 WE'T suit. "Seuult" Fanner new ltathtr, $25 taeh. 14' ... F(IC'd front end SU. 6 CURTIS Mathes Hom " blk. A hie. pet. Small b~. An Adult Prtvtft Club 2 tickcta to the SAl..ZS-SEJtVJa.p.AJtTI E. 17th. Rm 221. C.M. Call John Yillh Jeal. iood con-tit!.! U ('&ch. &OOd lh&pt. cylinder ~ mol!Ol' $15. Entertainment Ce n t er . tn:.3385 116 Ont Mlle ftom th• Ckatn 3100 W. Cot.It RW)'. MU2.13 d!tkin. r.1111t sell l 2S. Iof" whet.la:' SS' r:ld>. 329 Pont l1e motor S2 5. r.taple Hutch St;yle, sus.s .MON11f old ml.le, hall • SoutMrn Cellfornt1 142• NrNPOtt-...cs:o.i,.. T\\'O O!flce .DeEkl 67S-JUS Poplar, La(una !Mach Tn.nlml11ton tor wnc $15. 54~7 Bel.lie and halt Poodle. tN SMOO FREE Sporta, Vaotiori. Au~ J'ermi DtU., In xlnt. cond. WOOll linl.!h. $35 4 ~ outboard n)()tor $20. G IRL.'~ rink lkatet. Site 7~. 2 \Vheel tnller s 25. UKE new • 12" POR'M&LE Lovts children. To iood Costa Mesa .. RK?MtMft•I ea. 494-$104 I l .Boy 1 Stinaray blk~ $5 precunon wheclJ and stops transmission . $15. 105 2 COLDR TV, $95. bomt. 837-4139 Vthlde Show Blackllte lamp, tou1· rttl $25. 673--9440 Palisades Rd., Santa Ana Phone 675-5478. LONG Halttd pu.pp\411 1 Newport Harbor Offlee lqulprnent IOl 1 Iona and with. plcturts $15. OUYE tiff with larat roor Hel&hti. ffmale, 2 males. l blk &: TYPEW!UTEfl. Larre Vr'Ollderhone S3 8 ball $2S. tc.7035 100 Feet l'r." pipe $5. Doa Hf·l'I A Ste,.. 1210 white. 2 brown It white, _ ,.... aJ-"·tAddln1 mm projector $17. M7-75oo TV 21 .. n,.. _ A-··..t hOuM $S. 160 cement blocks 54l-&c25 116 0'°°9t from 20 Model• ,.,a 1u11••• c "UHi or, vecy ~ ...,, .. -...um, at tile ANAHllM CONVENTION CINTIR rui., xlnt cond. 8:l2-l423, EX~ELLENT portable TV stl!nd, fUttr $25, D:ercycle $10. Show,caae $15. PoY.'er MARANTZ SLT Turntable PICK-UP al 1626 Newport Rtady lo move In liodty1 $Xi. Automstie portable S20, Stack ttools $1 each. lawnmower $7. 1().)2 w/Sbure cartrldJ'!. Cost Blvd. Spe;e 39, CM OLD Orhaveyoun'cu•Mm made' G1r•1•Sal1 1022 recortl player m Guitar 492-8861 Ptli&ade• Rd., Santa Ana ~· MUST SEU.. $170. BUT } IR~f POOL TakellarborBlvd:;;'t9th St. Januuyln! thru Uth !---------anlpllfltt $15. Winter t('nl BED, Clean, complete $20. He ht.&. a.ISM or MZ.1481 TABLE. 1/6 Drive Weit to 1750 Whittler' TWO HOUSE $2.j, Tumbling pad SlO. JCt?9 G&l'fkld C.M 540.1987 II MAGNAVOX multiplex FREE puppies. r.Jolhtt Lab. (714) 642·13SO GlcJU.GE SALE C.R.T. checker and re-B ' ' IRONING Board $3. tronina 1tereo. AM/FM stereo a: Father Genn Shep Calltlt'~'l!'~~>,;;~"!!'"' . Juvenator $2.l. 893-7479 ABY Bathlnette $6. Bil ear board 50c. 2 TV ~· 50c. tul'IE'r. t.ce. speakers. Used 1 f s ·-3571l ' 11sl· Wed., Thun .• F'r1., S.t. BOX Spr1n&1 and mat bed S4. 548-S917 Full sl:a! mattrto • box yr, New cond. 6'-!IM' a ter p.m. 642 • RA RE 0 pp or t un 1 ty. I .et ot rtatter clu~. uHd metal lrJme S25 It!. W= ROLLER Rink Skites Girls spring SL Brown valet t:hair TO Good Home • 2 rabbits, MOBILE LIVING on the Please call &G-5678, ext 329 between 9 and I pm to claim )'OUr UCktt!I, (North County toll·free number ia 540-1220) .. .. * ~7ttMn iro! ~" include• lamP table $20. Rattan chair size 6-,, $15. Boy& site 7lt S15. Swq lamp, never wed Sportln1 Goeds 1.SOQ ~e: . .,,. :._~ w/c8fJi ::~=a: 'f:t~-~ .. _,, • woods I $4. 673-46u $20. Llke new. M5--092l SU.50. Aprtment •lie sas _.... ~ ..,.....,,. b&I -•. io;. I "t of ROTPO':!l . ""''" $10. FUii •IJ• •u ~n"o"··-..M"os'"s,...'su=RTBOAIUl=== 1WO "" <OUChH In back Boach Club Models on AUSnN AMERICA clul>S from the 1 tron lo the T\VIN size box springs and T Re~gerator, range ~ Aluminum folding Bl i..-yard 2451% Eldt:n Ave dl.eplayl 21462 Pac Hwy, ·--------lO iron v.'edp of woods bas rnattreu SlO. Picture bJ' clean, condition $25. bed $3. Sign tutt !ta $5 ue p,. ... en,t on bottom and C M · · H.B. ~ 7513 + bllis -UO .• Baek·pa~k I Robert Wood 29x4L SS. 546-8139 8CB Gown:r sf1 ~,,i blueonrails.D:oellenteon-· · ' AUSTIN AMERICA frame $15. 22 r:1fie 3-7 scope Room divider. be!~ pt!ssed ZENirn 1V and itand sis. M6-&89 " ' d!Uon $75. CaD ~A.Y 56--1574 PETS •nd LIVESTOCK Motorcyclb with mount• SS. Mite. camp 'YOOCI 31>1:89 $5, Shown Sat Aerial $5. Trundle beda, SKIS. Glul Bl1 Boot, Bin. cookiJW equip, 1 womans and S\Jn 9-4. 642-05M solid hantwood with at-HEAT Lamp, IOO!hinc to the dlni1, polea. Xln't Cond. Cop 1125 \YANTED: WW take over bike $.J0.00.·1 stria SchwlM 11VIN beds $25 each. 2 near-tached chests S20 each unit. muscle• ;15. Ultra violet $1DO. Jame1, 543--7059 aft 4.. payments on 1969 500CCI 91:1~ bike na. 1 wicker Jy new bunk bed matlttss of!K-&953 lamp In leather Cue ~ • • * * more. Tr!u:mph, BSA; BMW, chairs; l valel chair, black sets S25 e•ch. Blonde coffee SOFA S20, Chair SS. Maple 54>~ l1nocul1r1, Scopes 1550 WALT HOLLAND Hatley in excel. cond. only. leather l('at $8. Linilerle and 2 matchlfli step tablcs platform roelM $5. Black 6• Wi'iue nauaab)rdwl eoueh 2469 f'.=AIRWAY DRIVE 548-7458 aft 6 pm. 9300 Sales. ~. Parta Immediate Ddlvery AU Models J2t'tupn11 ~l111pu11 ,, drav.'tr chtst $.>. PU.!h mov." $2.l all. Pair maple slrp coffee table $2. New plai1tlc $25. 2 CUJhiON $5. Good con-12~" Tranlportable renee. COSTA MESA '66 HONDA Super Hawk tr, ~~ent 1hape $.l. 1 table1 $20 each. 4 dra:.,,1!r !wls ~ a -t . dition, brown na1.1,1~ tor, 2.4" eulde scope, 4 Lew mlleaie, immaculate: 3100 W. C.out Hwy., N.B. port.a.._, . V;'"Wlth electric--Chert-$1?:50.-wtrltrt-dnr\l"M"' . ~· ftdi~Walnut .tained· Galoe eye pieces. camera You are the winner of lifu1t see 1o ap~te. ""405 540-176' FIAT FIAT 11 IOO Spider. $1195. P. O. Box llH, Nwpt Bell. Call :w;.ua FIAT ~ .## fl IA T "ISO'' Hcftp 2 DR. < PA&\ SMART • STYUSH .. P!nny Pincher" 8'Juldltlf Ermine white wi plush ml vtn,1 bucket seat Inter. ShaW room condi~ ONLY S139S. MARQUIS MTRS: 900 So. Cit Hwy •• Lquna Be a c h. 494-150.1 540-3100. KARMANN GHIA lt6S Kerman Ghl• 2-door Coupe. Xlnt °""'· Immaculat. inalde and oat! One oW'fler. SlCllO. EM 1.t 4IO -.C.M. METRO clock on top &; automatic dregser $25.. Green 9 drawer xpnnr and mattress $15. 2 Bo6ton rocker $20. 2 adapters, Ai u or --2-t1dl1t1 tu the -Evet ~ UlboriJtd..lJG DeaJu tlmt:T $30: RCA table 1'9.d\o, d res 11 r. r S 2 S . r.1 a p I e Conal'f: sncnv and rain tires, I cu Sh ion! SS. RCA portable Ht"avcns. $590 or best offer. '68 y AMAHA Teacher Mullt S.crUlcel -059~~*' biz ~tion n 2. Misc. lt"lephone bench $20. Larg~ ne~w size 7~15 Sl.5 each. 19" TV. TV itand ;ts. 2 536-1797 Southtrn C•llfornl1 lOOCC DrRT BIKE, S250 1969 Austin America. Auto mP1. Good tor •tudent. $325. book1 A: toys, • Phone: seascape pktutt SlO. i\laplc 66-2515 large lamp shade• $5. Sport1, Vac•tion CALL 541).4()63 trana. radio, utru! Sli&OO. ca.u 96&-3864 536-Mll H.B. night&tJnd SJO. Walnut bat PORSCHE Simpren Urt S5.. Hoover e&nlster vacuum Ml1cell1neout l600 & Rtcreation1I FOR Sale: Yamaha 125 * 675-6912 1=========1 GARAGE Slle: Chait1, Sim· 112·50· 64U!T70 Porsch exhau1t system $25. $~. 25 gallon water het.ter V•hlcle Show Endoro. Xlnt. aha.pc ;.ioo. MERCEDES liNz mona hide-a-wa.y bed, ANTIQUE clocks 110 and Double bed. ex~llent con-$10. Baby bUUY, aood eon-* AUCTION * 5'18-5391 alter s. AUSnN HEALEY 1--------- tablts, ktttjl.en utensils, a~ $25. 2 antique silver v.·alehe! dlllon, boll: sprlf'li, mattreu dltion $15. 2 car i;eall SJ..SS. at the plla.nees, t0}1, D~. dishes. $15 each. ~ ... HD drill with and spring $2S. Men'• ski Baby v.'&llter $4. AIM>rted U )'OU wlll .U or buy '66. HONDA 175 dirt bike. --------auorttd l>CI furn\turr, Dbl revt"rse sw\leh S25. 1968 and boots, size a $8. Qilld'• lkt thrOw plllowl 50c. Pile uaed &We Wtnd,y a try ANAHEIM RebJt. cnatne, new betlery, '6S Sprite convtrf. Ir: twin bed1, mise. 408 E. 1969 mint sets S2.60 eaeh. boots. size 13, $8. Hoover White rock $2, Puah mower Auctlons,J'riday 7:ao p.m. CONVENTION M'.Y clutch. $225. 968.672S Lo mlle1, ms. 6'2-1067 18th St. CM. Sat & Sun S.4. Small trunk us. 6'15-&>8 electric broom $12. sun-&nd catcher SS. New Windy S Auotton krn Cl!NTER '67 r.1AIC0 X-4. 360CC. Xlnt c 1109 CANYON View Dr. 19" PORTABLE TV good beam blender attachment ~ble TV stand $5. Cam-2075" Newport. CM &e8686 Never raced. Call 53S42'1'1 IMW Lquna Beach. · 494-7401. $2.1. Di1hmaster aood $22. $5. .9' Fpnnlea kitchen P1nc' box $5. Larae aultq.se Behlnd Tony's BldC. Mat1. J~ 3rd thru 11th &rur 5 PM. -------- Slt. Jan. 3 lOam to 5pm. Chlca&o sink and faucet eountertop $1S. 30' x4 ' $5. Sat. only 21T4 Maple St., MOVING Sale! 2 color r.,;:,A. 1$51 YAMAHA 5.5. NHds W11hlna: madllne, pa I \ o $10.50. Floor poll.lhtt $6. Cyclone: fence SlS and pte C.l\f. 548-3051 or 646-7363 eonaolt TV'o 11~ • Ill"' Ple .. call 642-STI, ext 329 Minor Work. Unulfld For 3 furn, booka. etc. £\oerythillJ Webocr ftCOl'd till.)'tr $10. SlO. Lua:aaae $3. 2'8"x6'8" COINS -Uncoln penny set Antique piano ';'ood eond between 9 and 1 pm to claim Yean. SofS. Call 962--7898. must II'· We ate movlftl. RCA record player $6. 3 1V flush door with hardware ff. (1941-Q) $3. Aut:trta 19SS ;185. Kenmo;.. g cyc1~ your tteketl, (Norlh County NE'\V Yamaha. 125 Enduro TWN sprtnc • mattr, blue atands S2JJO -$(. 3 l'loek Cookware, excellent con-proof aet $5. ~ wuher, A CU dryer $SO ea. toll·frff numbtt 11 540-1220) Only 190 mile1. Illness fore: e BMW• All ldodtla In SU>ck tor Immediate Delivery SALES· SERVICE · PARTS TAM MOTORS, INC:. 8081 Guden Grove Blvd. MG IOla, dtaft. tbl.1._!_!ltt. tbl, radios $5 · $1'. 2 Sunbeam d\Uon SJe -St. 549-lm 26" Ma11'1 SchwlM bike with B It H 16 mm movie * * * tc l!lle. $42:5. 6C2~ lamps. am. ~ -Corvo hair dryera Si-· $8. Ice-car C·H 11.0REN:S .Paperbacks raclc"S20. Boy~1 20'' St1natQ !=ame~a . Misc turniture. BASENJI Barkle11 lnJpples -S2:::=:;:;;~~= CM. 54S-.3IS.S cooler $6. Fok'lil'll 8Ul!eue and comic book•. like new $16. M&.3680 64~ frOi'if'""'Aft'ICl. ChaMp. 11tock; Triller, Tr•Yel 9425 $5. 6 electric clocks SI -$4. Sc -25c (l\tads. Pea.nula, 1965 250ee Yamaha frame POOL TABLE! xlnt mk'gs. tenns. 64S-OS33.:1-""-'""'-..:..;.;:.:..::;__.;_::;: Appllinces 1100 Small suite&M $3. 3910~ A«:hie, Dennis the ~fenace. Secald ~ SAMOYED I'll AKC 19' HOlJDAY Travel -(.bannel Pl .. NB 613-1603 342of E. 18th St .. Costa r.1eaa SJ;';, Font. $2CI. Seit $5. BRUNSWICK ,.~ ,.~ ... -.. _,, pp,y. Ttaller. 5 mo'1 old. 534·2234 Open Sunday 192-s.'m z:, DATSUN-: =Sal:'.:'.' .. -. s.-;~;;;:::.._=::::L lmmtdlat. DeUver,, AD Modoll RC Transistor, two station in· °""'or ... niu ....., $ A ConlOle Color TV · $148 7' SURFBOARD, round tail, St!UTI'ERS -Many, white $2 tm::om $10. 17" SUvt!rtone Custom Slate Tablt Call 56, i075 evti Completft. owner SacrWoe. Retrtaera.tirs · • · · from S38 rood condition. Sacrif.ice l'3Ch. 673-0079 TV portable $25. 250cc Honda From $289 call 6"-619'7 l.ud DAlSUI •• F'rolt Fret 2 dr refria . SIU $25. 67:>-JlI:, PAINT _ Name brand!i, t!&r ,,,~1 S20. Front whttl !00% Fmanclnc 6 MONTH old male, M.lf Recond. W1shera, & Dryers SKIS .~ 1 b' Qu • II ~ Sl.5.. 5 .. L·~i .. ht ,-pe ,.,,. * SFX:ARD POOLS * Bugle A half Poolee. Loves Tr1ller1, Utlllty 9450 DUNLAP'S . <U"' step-n 1nding1, arts lo .. aa on ean1 """ ·~.... ...... ...,. 532-!99:1 chlldren. ~. 937-4239 "Leader In The Bodi Cldta" I) I lll p ll l I ll1 11 pL1i I'· lSlS Newport Blvd ., C.M. good condition, $25. 675-JllS lo S2 a aallon. 5.37-9736, 546-a.!69 4 x I Utility trailer ZIMMERMAN 54&-nU UNUSED golf-sktt game 20192 Bay Vil!w, Santa Ana. HEAD TracUon -1.dju1table, 323 S. l\laln St. Oranp H.,... 1130 &OOd tires ' case (without ~leetronies} SCR·AM LETS new SlO. 545-2529 '56 V\V body all parts: $&!. $50. 962-58.lZ 284S HARBOR BLVD. :::· Ca&st H'wf;:i~ NORGE Auto Washer, cop-aame u you see tn bars $2;;. • TAPPAN Ranae. cood con-Philco TV. black & while S YEAR old. chocolate, ro&n ..,.=.,.,;-o;:T.,l~O""'=rr Author!nd MG Dealfto ~;*· t~te ~~ xlnt Hospital ttnt Scttellt 9 ;( 12, ANSWERS dltion $25.. ~7 MS. 231 Broadway. c.~I. All m&t'C. Good •how p~ Trucks 9500 ORANGE COUNTY'S ·-•IG M"·M ~-· -COnu. ~· ..--ov... or nylon ICtttM ttl m•~ day Saturday. After 4:30 spects!! Hunt " Jump • v• "'"'• .. ,,_ 847-8 camper patto or wnmtt OFFICE Qrsk SM. ouice Mon. Sacrifice $750. S46-625S CAMPER TRUCK NO. I dition. Onb' 13,tlXI mUeia. Anti 1110 house S25 for all four. 20 \V&lktt -Tuuk -Soothe · =..: :e~ books, S R00f\1S of rum: incl 18' 3 Y~R Bay M~. ;reen, % ~ ~M·j ~~· equ.ip., DDOATSTUNDADETSALUENR =/ ~ Q-a¥, 1::::=!+-thenno1tatleally controlled _ Tuxedo ~ Toward -Pac-' retrig., Zenith Med It console Arabian. Sernui on t y . • • $-· th~ speed window fan $25. Uy_ CHEW YOU UP NET Playpen $10. Roller at!:reo all 1 mo. old PhoM 548-9'38 aft 6 pm. ,,.,.5 36 inch Sears 1teel gate: $5. A crab: ''lie remind! you rlnk 1kate1 11Je 9 $&.50. ~798t I" · .... ... UNIVERSITY Ul3l Bncb Blvd, Huntt.._ion Beach SC. rm or 541).(1442 1954 MG Fr. Tola14t nc:GD- dlUonld. See to •PJ!ftde.tlel $1300 or best otter. B3MS8I -Mlscellaneou1travenerods ofaerooodlle.Wbe:nheopens Balh lnette $2. Tapt BEAUTIFUL hand . ted TRANSPORTATION OLDSMOBILE Sl 12 a h 96).-0877 reeonler $2. Record pl•-r . pa.in 2850 Harbor Blvd. • e e . up hi• mouth. yoo don't needs needle $4. Deep tf;;r oU•u""""11t of )'OU or yoor Boats & Y1chts 9000 Cmta Mesa i;;;;:;;;:~;;:=;;,;;:.,.lpORTABLE bar $15. Solid kno1v v.·hethcr he'• tryina to S2 :i0 Boy's clothe• 15c4' c dren rom a photograph. -540-!!640 I' maple end table $10. Corner smile or gettin1 ready to N~l~n hlrt and ~ A v.'Onderful idea for that FRIE .. 7<"-;=~..::::....~,_..,. '67 DATSUN RDSTR Now top. n<w clutch, 4 opd. 1 ____ M_G_l ___ 1 dlr, blue book S1800. Sactl· rice $1400! Small down. will fine prvt prty, TYM412. Call Roy ~9773 or Ms.-06.34. Sewlnt chinn 1120 book 1helve1 $5. M&--8518 CHE\V YOU UP." l2-l4 "11 '111ce1 ..... w ~~ apecial gift. 64&3629 Basie Boeting Courie ottered '".._:ORD 1 ton. Cab &: ~ ' '"" ' .....___.. bli b Balbo Po C1a.aSLI Good cond 1969 SIN R ZIG·ZAG, BOY'S wet suit $5. 20" 2 V\V front tenders S13.9S. Levi jean'a wuhed twice, NE\V ~S~andard) 10' Screen lo pu e Y a ~r '•6f2-49JO .. Sehv.inn 2 speed blke SlS. Abarth 6'.haust $6.50. Ski v.·aist 33 $2.50. Larre ski for slkhng g:la.1111 door. 449 Squadron every Mon. niih•t1 ==,.,.;.=.==-- walnut l!e, butt 0 n v .W. tire• St each. 142-&63 boot•, siie 7 $5.25. Imported s11."tatera "'L"·'· l•omon ton-Seaward Rd., Corona del for 13 weeka btflnnln& 7 SPORT VAN 109 Chevy, Irs 8 ho Je1, estrns etc. _..,,... M J ·~· t EN"-USH FORD Cuarat1tft4: $36.00Caah .>t DINETI"E lltl iio. Swlvtl Holland skOoter $3 .50. nl1 shoe! 50c. Life stride Mar,Calil.~ pm on on., an ..,.u, at ena .• auo, center seat. w euy tenns?i526-6616 rocker maple S18. TO)'s 50c. Stereo Phonorraph $12.50. heel• sire 6-7 $1. Camen Carpet layer hu Hl Lo Newport Harbor Yacht $2150. 1 Owner. Mi-657• .1•!'!'~"!"!11111~--- ---$8. Girl'r clothes size. 5 M a VW rims $3.50. VW openlni $2. Touter $1.50. Men'11ult nylons: $1.99 )'d. Shao Cub, 720 W. Bay Aw.1 New. 1957 FORD Pick Up. Good ORANOI COUNTY'S Mu1lc1I In~. 1125 box. Toy bo:it $3. M.2-7895 rear vo'lndowR S17.50. Clock and sport• coat, 42, $2 each. hm S.50 up + my labor, JIOT"! ~eh. No aavance eonditlon. $350. VOL UM! ENGLISH ~ radio $3.50. Weddln&: dma, CMHS lettennan 111Jtatet 90c per yard. 847-1519 regiatrahon ~ded. Re,ls-642--0427 FORD DEALER GIBSON G; tr. t.e.s Paul MfaOTc•?~~~ ~,,· e~":..,.elt;4: ii:ce 7 $14.50. Fonn&ls. aize 1 11ize 46 S14. Lite aQd Brite BEA'-IFUL Kl ~ u• ter at cl&u, bring notebook '6'1 EL CAMINO top ahape 4 SALES -SERVICE CUstom. u 2 mo 1• Cost ,,_ '::: 1 ,,. ...... SS.50 each. Crib $20. ~lat.-wt $2. Football 1»d• !JOc. u' ng ._.~ ~ first nleht. Que1tions: Call apd still und~ ty ~ Nu. wltb S65 cue. Best ~ tress SlO. 5'>5134. T-shirtii. no--lron 20c-50c. ed mattress. Complet•un-673·1856. Sl~. 5M-&'S20 eves~ • OVER 60 IN STOCK Offer. -.. .. w.. BOY'S suit coe.t, wash and B' Couch &nd chair SZ. Lamps f&. Wing tips 11·0 med. Sll'.6. "' 0 r 1 h $250. tS' TRI CAB. best malnt • 2 A ' Dr. MO!Sels ..,..... 12 Girl' ~ ~t. • 2 6: 4 Dr. Deluxes • wear . • warm snow Kidney i;hapcd c:oflee table $3. Bov.•llrc ball 16 •lb $1. livabrd In Nt. 8. On17 JM 9510 Pl1noe & Ort1n1 lt30 jacket \\ith hood $2. 644-0687 and 2 end tableA Sl5. Lace formal siz:e I $2. CARPET Installer hu one $23,000. ¥ 494-3916 Pl • 2 &: of Dr. GT Modelt HIDE•A-BED, beige, pink. 646-8447 Woman·• COflt size 10 $2. roll, avocado nylon carpet, 17• Ftbe atus 11 1 tri 40 '69 BRONCO, 2 tankJ. R/H, :!;u:t:'~~ automatic Good conrlition $2a. 642.-3683 DRAFTING Table SS. Draf· Raincoat boy's size &-10 7:ie. 'Double jute-backed. Will .ell hp Evl~c ·~~I e ecp~ d 4,000 mlles. tranr., alr. rt.dial Ure., n.. SA.11.,BOAT mast 22 feet, SIS tlfli it"t, lll!W $7.50. Card Americ_an Institute of all or pArt $3/yard. 54{}.-7245 conditio ' 64~' e Call ~ c'Ho vteyl f Ust your X·l'n&g money for riggif\I and like neW jib and table 75c. High chair SA. Car reading set SI. new. wiU I F'Af\flLY f\femberlhlp for • n. aJiAND N~W ~.~~JR. one ot these HAl\f?o.fOND main $25. ll v bronze &Cat seat $3. 2 Potty 11eats 50c:. aell se't l'ttOt"ds $2:). Set t~ Newport Beach. Tennil Cub. 26 Whalebl».t r.lAH/pl&nk. C•mpers tS20 $1785 rou, PRICE BARGAINS! M.J. $6'/J; S-112. bilge or bait tank pump Toaster SJ. Iron 75c. Pocket Jtruetion book Sl5. Women'• Pho~ 549-22.86. Very 80Und. $lOO. Xlnt eond. On.DER NO\V V port knit ~uit size to $ 2. 536-8134 . • New '70 Ford $675: T-200, SJ.593; E·loO or nevt"r used Sli . Ne1v ieneral bookl lOc each. a 101' Hide-4.-bed couch $2:i. l\lat· For Sale Firewood. 25. O~S 'tit w/mooring Thtodort A·IOO $1895; RT 2 w/PR 40 CP·;;.<i :; lb dry/ch ext1n1 $1. Women·• ek>thing iii• treu $25. Utl Dorlet Ln., Or~ .. ! ~e0aiyptus In Nen-Bay. $3950 tncl's ROBINS FORD 1199;: .i .. BALDWIN o, 110. XENON strobo ""''" 9-10 11.50. Man'• Khaki • ·-~· ·~· SUN DIAL CAMPERS ·raaonic S~; GULBRAN· lite S15. 2 new CG approved. work 1el, size 32 $1 .50. Dark C.f.f. 54'"'"""''"u moorln&. Call -5lU6'.>0. 2060 Harbor Blvd. SEN w/eythm $395: ALLEN lilc vests S7 for both. 22 lb. bro1vn cascade $4. Play pen BUNK Beds. nlake into ME'.\fBERSHIP to NE\\-· • Co1!1. Mesa 6C2.ooto db: the1.1tr S2650. se1. cla\• anchor SlO. 3 $4. 1500 rhlneitones (all or •lnrtes $17.50 eaci,. includina PORT BEACH TeMis Oub. S1lllloat1 9010 Deluxe s uper van with OON'T alve it away, set ltAf.fMOND gallons ('po>:Y paint SS eaeh. apart) $2:1. Skill Jli saw ST. mattre11. 3079 Count r 'J Q.ll 646-6346. -L 1 Kl SAi L 1 NG? all the ex.tres. quick cub for with a 1 tn OlfU:liA DEL MAR 1 pair hydaullc cylinders &" New Fury 7" radar 1aw $U. Oub, C.r.t. S4G--l213 FOR SALE: 20 i a 11 on ., Compare Thi& Price $3995 Daily PUot want Ad. 21$4 E Cotrllt 613-8930 1troke $5.1%:" Tobin-bronze CU radio $4.S>. AnUqut DRAPERY An4 eurtaln Aquarium with Olh It ao-DtsLIKE TH!:SE. Optn Ev'e• I ~W)'~tetnoOns ahaft I toot S15. RAM i" Ford motor parts $5 -no. rods, varloul lqth& $24». ct&SOries. $35. M6-&T9 ~.::=~· :~~p 1n~=: T&M MOTORS, INC. ~e .. ~~~· under potilhtr tncludinc Table SJ. 2 Chain need G.E. StMm iron, exc:en.nl GOLF aubs: Cbml)ltote Set. cleanins, huurance, etc, d1ICa and bonnet little u• upholrmY $5 each. ~· · shapt $2. Pott;p chair $1. W\J90n staff, lncludet .... -I a PAD'ER 'r.ftESE? 81E1. Garden Grove BJvd. OAILY PILOT DIME ' A· $15. Near new router with BroekS carbutttortnlmfold Inf&J'llelt $1. Barbecue cart, $60. 675-4059. •·Low cost no WORK&: 892-5951 At Beach 53.f.2284 lJNES. You.can ut them IOme lilt& $!& onoa $2). CD-693 $10. 27' 1Crm Pl., mot« n. Black and Deelcn' STEREO tape recorder wnD CAREl'REE• SAILlNG! OPEN SUNDAY for jut;t pennies a~. Dial YEAR ENI SALE! '17 MGa ~ lllilO. Good oood. New MuHlm I: ftadla&rr. Call 962-16'1'8 after 6pm ·-OPEL OPEL 11163 "LS" Sport Coupe. fully equipped, '1JilO. Prlv. pU'f;y. fl68..3MT ... °"''· .... ;;;;;n-?tfuat •II, new tirM $f'OO neaot. rn..un eve1. POISCHI '66 PORSCHE 912, C IOd, Bahama yellow. 21,DOG ml. Xlnt cond. Pri part)". 963-3060 '61 PORSCHE SUS. Fae. prepared tna. C\ut. paint. All extras, lo miles. (213) 266-6226 or 675-0021 TIME FOR QUICK CASH THRQUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT AD 11' )'OU '"-~Yina a Piano '1t Orran fUI YEAR 6: • .,.. 1nteresleli In some real· 1y treat deals, 11le1se: 11'1op WA.JU)'S BALD\YIN STUDIO l '19 Newpcn1, C.Tlf. .642-8484 536-11.'\4 , C.M. 646-19TI f~?Or, poUaMr $2. Kenner tape1 & aeceSllOrles. $80. Cal 25 little •• Sl4, ~ dly PILOT Cla•ttled ad. 1 °"'"'" 6 d, ... .,.. 4&" K"5 tcM:ttam m•ktt $2. SUrfboud $l0. <9M1M Try Our Club Plan lme!rted Autoo 9600 lmeortod Autos 96001m~ Autos ~ I. No commercial firm' 1ona: szi.so. r.t ir1or. 548-3105 =:=;. .,. Nn'PORT SAtLTNG a.UB ' r;;.;. · or Pflvtl• busln11s m1y ...... ,m '" ,.,. 37'•46'' DROP L"' table 18. 2 IArt' Mlac. Wanttd 1610 • m.noo • , ••••••••••••••••••••••••• Open l.'vtty N11e & Sunday i\flcrooon use thec••HcolluTme~!· I ~l~e~u=le 1::U2()roo!1.:i r~~!c '~t.! ~c~~~~-i;o~~ $WE BUY$ CAL 25 • • DATSUN •• 2. EA M or bed $2. Drt•scr 34'' ivide Bookcase $8. Plate!! l De ... With Slip .. salt must be priced -48" hlc;h Sl5. 5-dra\\<et vani· each. Sandalio:, new 2:x: pair. in Ntwport • J 970 • · no price over $25. ty 48" ntirror "'ilh stool Picture fran1e S3. Pillov.·s 2Sc: $ FURNIT URE $ Sll!Ki. • $22.50. 2 dre~r tablt' for each. \Vhecl balenctr $23. 646-0810 PICKUPS • . PIANOS Ir. ORGANS 1''E\V Ac USED •Yamaha Pi•nos Orpns •Thomas Organs • Kimball Plario& • Kohler A: Cl.mpbtll . C:OAST MUSIC: Nl."WPORT I-HAR.B0R 1 Coat& ti.fesa * ~1 Open 10-6 Fri 11).f SUn 12-5 FREE 3. DIM E • A .. l IN E side of br-d $4. !<'Ire screen r.111.rbl!! coftte table 1011 S23. APPLIANCES • ids are iccepted ind $2. Rotobro i I $.1,j(l, \Va.lnul coffee table top $1\. Col:•,:::.-~i ;;:;;~;•0• LIOO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389,. Tiie Ht. I ltHhlt..,... • b• h d • Bar-b-qUL" 24" }t.j(). Tennis 4j.J Twstiii Avcn, N.8. CAIH IN JI MINUTIJ with traUcr. call 837·1039 • mc.k wltti 41~ ...,......, • P• "' I " • un1qu1 tabt. fl. ,...,653 642-2033 e 41-4 e aft 6 PM • "'' -"H.P • .,..., • service to our petron1 CHILDREN'S Book.! -71 40 Ford tront and rear end 5 53 I • Ar• H•r• N-F.r and the DAILY PILOT Bob.,.Y Twins OOc ••ch. •" eomplote .,,th •Prl"ll $20. SERENDIPITY The "" Power C:rulars 9020 • DELIVERY • NIIMI tHe right to tor P .50. Othtt children:• Earb' 1'ard flathead pM1I needl a amall rattan chalt TODAY! • • • L.· bl' t' --Tlc. Chlldre" 1 $1-15 M o..vy ,.., en4 "'oleep Ill. Site donn't have '!I SKIPJACK 7J: 'tow hn.,. SEI THI INTIRI LINI OP NIW 1970 DATSUNS TOOAY .• 11m1t f"91r pu tel ion 12" LP recordt 50c-41.zs. com;ikt. w1\tl aprinp Sil, much money \0 pay tor It, SIS. FB. Btmtnl top. Mete. • T Kl • to one day each nek. WUson aoll b&f;, -$10, p!UI auto pa/ts ;1-15. 251T lhqh. Hor _,,.. II er. 19!. Xtraa. S5 800. A A TIST OltlVI • • • THEN IUY DATSUN 1970. • DIME-A-LINE 1d1 are now Pl-~ "C" s.nta Ana St., C.11. MD-2m alt 5 PM. il4MMl • • strict! c:uh with aopy DllESSElt And '""°' Ila. MMOOll Mart ....... 9035 • oc, ......J ........... .,;. K•""""' ......... """' tit· MOVIE. Pro-l<iOd -FREE TO YOU ... = ·-• p • ORGAN CLASSES port om,t1 to °'' tle repair $5. Gu '°II UO. dttlon $25. Projectar car-fiO H.P. Ford V-1 Mt up for , · DAll.~r PILOT ~ .. 2'" P>clWd Boll TV 110. ryirc caoe wtth built .... CHILDREN Boud t, mulM ""'· 1311. Call . . • -GOULD MUSIC Department ~ .tofatfono ,,..,. Lion<l tnin nt 110. .,. .... 11$. llo>llt< vie-tucln&Hlll hobby, lru anytime. -• • • ..l.-ot th•• Dtm•A·l.la• ftlU' Portable-t)'ptwrit.er SlO. $8. TV n1ne IOOd $25.. 'Pfl«ma. TI+828-Ctl9 l/3 C2l S HP EvtmJ:Se motot'I ~ N. l\Cain. SA ~7-0681 tat1oca: OOck radio $5.. Bunk beds. Ch-*U•r elaborate mltll 3 Tame p!Jeon.s, eUpp.it $50 eacll. run soocl • • maflle St7 eaeh. Chair, $25. SUwr compote dlah SI. wtnp. ~ 1/S ·~ KAMMONO Steinwsy, 'i&.m· ---------1 mlilple $15. :W&-3767 ShaeUtr' 1norktl dt1k pen 2 ms of twtn bo'¢ _,rinp & • •. Ntw ' .... plan" of nME FOR 2 "''""'"'rack• II ""'s~ "'· ... , and '""""' 18. 2 ! ·-~t!i;-~~·_.;m.Mll~!!!.!-2'~"'1!'~.,..!!!l~le~H~Mt~ml~·-_!92~00 • . rnoc&t makt•· Bffl bu,)•.s In JU'frigt'l'lllor u:;. 5'*1vel Onnete FU dep TftTa Cot· !" So. Calif. at Schmidt '-lusic cMir $2.50. 01, .. n $2). 2 ta arid l')Jd S9 each. J AnU. 2'ii mo. German Shepherd YIAR IND •• eo, 19111 N. Mtln. '"'""A.,. .QUICK CASH Oventuflro choln 110 "ch. quo royol Boyruth muc• S9 ll-.brkn ~!;..."' .. ,., ... CLIAltANc:I SALE Tta V.'1.IDD »· Nl&ht stand each. Small P et• I• n • 119~1-.. IS AU. SIZES 12.00. ,,... lamp fl.!O. ,.,...,. pillow old , II. FREE I yr. old ltmaJ1 NOW ON DISPLAY .-HUNTIN... N CH • vtJlY rvt pla.ytr piano. baby rrand. >'Ith Ampfoo ex'pre1..•lon. • Httr Radlmanlnott play h I • -ht. -· ""' -lion&! - THROUGH A DAILY PILOT WANT A .D Table lamp 11. 4 DI"'"' Ho-Tl °''"'" •tatuo wilt Cock apoo . Friendly, IAY HARIOlt 18835 BEACH wTO llA • ,IJ&l,. ll. tnt1 tabt• "'·'°· """' _,,.,,.,. ...,,. ,.,,"' _..,. po1. w-"' Mllllle Homo s.i.. e I 4 2 • 7 711. 9xl2 Oval ru• 110. Dl"ina and llaml 124. MM!m ADORABLC J .,._ kmal& .lGS.BUot St., Coota -.. 91 \II\ 5 4 0 0 4 4 2 table $2. 2133 en.. C.M. ITONEWAJIE.Cla1, CON t. _.. -· MWm. \I blocl<IUtelllarboflll\'d. ..YU1 SUNDAYS • .. -.,,. "'baa. -119 °* -1114) l&Nl70 •••••••••• • .. .. • TRANSPORTATION • TltANSl'OITATION TRANSPORTATION -Im~ AviM 96j>o A-. ....... '100 Utoo1 Cera "'9 TltANSPOltTATION UioolC-· "'8 TRAN5POltTATION uaad ca;J ·, • 1 '°"'"=.;..;.;.;;...;,..;...;.;..,....;.;....,.....__~;.....,--'""'"..,.-.--.---I VOLKSWAGEN" n P>.r ... • J IUIC~K 1 '"''--------1970 V\f BUI 1,000 mil~ CASH ,' private party. Best offC!r. 536-7848 ~ , . _ _:_COR.:.;:;:..::V.:..;~IR~:... 1 __ _,lf:i...i!'--D'_· _. ,_ .. 1 • '6-1+ •u1cK 1:l~;~;~i!; ~0o~:r..:r.· .~ = SpfdaJ i dr Sedan. Radio Clltan. Only 32,IXXI actual mt find! 9828 Petunia Ave, FV. • U PORSCHE • 9UL, 1 awnt'I'. Lo ml Sllwr G~. ---:ioni Cabd. Call 675-4030 ;. ROLLS ROYCE ·t· ftOW '39, aide mount.. new 1 ll ..int. new wr;w tires. USM. PrtV;-M6-S><l; ""'4:121 ! l"'.T " .. 1 'SUNBM '1 SUNBEAM ... ~AJpine, low •dn. tJo pay. priv. party, -.1 I========-:~ TOYOTA·. !· ' ·--~------~ TOYOTA '62 VW, xlnt con~ 67 interior. for U..S,ean ,f: trucQ JUii NEW "'~= .. =v=:=:v==:==·=615-=m=.1 ~ ~ .BUG> s· -VOLV-0 1 -~~ SEE·.l DR!VE·THE J970 WE.PAY WH .ALL' REMAINING 69'8 MUSI' BE SOLD NOW! 1970,5 P~/~0~:1137a.20, FOR YOUR CAR heater; yg, IJ.ltom&tie trans: · Ckll 642-05'74. i ..=..,.::,,:=.c.,.-~-.,--,.-, 'pat'tt ·~. ~ C3t' '61, 4 dr, Sd." Auto.. tNhl. '61 FMd 1 l:ood cond. see at In· tOwll ., for· its· 'ale<. Lh:. Tn.ns. car-tair lhape:-$100. 2500 Ncwport Sl\14• No. 5, KQBJ.72. 962-IS12 B.lust Ml CORVETTE 1960 FORD Rancheto with '62 engine. Good cond. l35(1. 642-9:..il CORVzyrE ·13 4 spd. ··m·· i-====.;===.== Tri~ -pwr I 1 t b ck w/ MUSTAN"- nmovoble p a ' e I s. Silver ' • w/blk intl!'r. AM/FM 1te-r. -'----~-­ Nu polyil~ tire11. 23,000 mi. 1966 MUSTANG, V-3 enitne. Under ·waIT. Jmmac. Comp] auto, xlnt cond. $XO'& i.ke aerv records. $3895. 644-4270 over payment1-l )'I'. Your 8'11 Deals A,. Still,AI CONNELL ON DISPLAY & READY TO GO 1916 ~~~ c':w~ CHEYROLE1 =~ati6arv~'. --Blvd. daya, ~7304 eves. 675-.5355 COUGAR ''6 .MUSTANG. P/$, ;ul!O. ,~eet condition. ' PrWate .party. $1275. Call 546--00H CHOICE OF COLORS :AND MODELS AT •• , 1967 VOLVO B-18. m.s, Xlnt O.ta Mesa 546-1200 CX>STA MEsA ~,~."":':~·,!;:~Day WE PAY TOP '61 RIVIERA '68 Cougar XR7 OLDSMOBILE: CHICK IVERSON DOLLAR Neunew,fullpwr,dlr,fact Autanatic,air,power steer- t • • •. , • ' Antiqu•, Clinics 9615 tor p)d, clean used can, ~~ ~u if:J,·'"':st t;:,f)J, •. Ing/vinyl roor, etc. '54 Olds -Good transpofta. SEE• DRIVE 1HlC 1910 an makeL See c-. D.... .. __ had , _ _, •• ·~ $2399 tlon $150 or best oUer. :Ask .-AlJ. REMAINING 69 'S , '" Theodore RotJib;"F~._ ·~ 1VV1tlg' ~· Actual • for Bob; S49-16ro MUST BE SOLO NOW! H bo 0 td 57 MORGAN +_. 2000HuborBJvd. mileea:e.20,00'.lm.i.Takeold· ~ 1968 TORONADO. ll'fl· ·l PRICED FROM $1780.60 ~r r· ArfO S nly Authoriz • VW, Porsche Dealer New T:>p. new brakes. Ex. C.M. 642-m!O er car 111 trade, Call Ken: ~ maculatc, every option.al Ser. # 1400 TWO LOCATIONS TO SIR¥1 TOU cellent c 0 f) di ti on $1500 494-9173. A~ avail. Private party 673-2252 ~ Your Best Deals Are Still At 6~2-1724 after 6 Pl\f, , . Auto L•ising 9110 '64 ELECT RA f dr .. 0 .67 OLDS 98 Conwrt. Xlnt ' DEAN LEWIS 445 EAST COAST HWY. at BAYSIDE DRIVE, NEWPORT BEACH CJSITIUA 50 Type 202 Sport , lhougham, ""' w/blk ' ~s i;: & 19 HAR OR BL D COS M 5 Special Omiit very a;d cond LEASE ANY MAKE vinyl top, many custom ao-A. ' ::a_~~. t~~~-.aci.26t~t/Fl\f. P: 1966 Harbor. C.i\t. ~ 70 B V ., TA E A $2IOO/trade. $3912 · OR MOQEL ce1., tac air, full pwr eqp 'd, ~.,. '~ ~~-·-BIIL MAXEY '73°0900 HOME OF THE LOVE BUG SPECIALS 549:3031 •29 Model A . Foril. Pkkup i..t our Jeue experu show p,.m. ""'· xlot ''"'d. '\f ' PLYMOUTr. -· k ·th "'C. ,. . Ex )'OU the be:ilt plan for yoor $1390. 644-4585 J'I !-=========..,.========-:========= u ... c • Wl ena;UW:. • personal needs without Obli-5149-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 r ~ !T!91Y!OJTIAJ Imported Autos 9600 J lmportad A~tot 9600 lmportad Autos 9600 tra pa,,. .. -ptJon. CADILLAC 1970 HAABOR BLVD. '6' PLYMOU.TH o---~-'::i-11111-llEACH BLVD.--VOLKSWAGEN VO'·Ksw·•-GEN Au!Gs Wantad 9700 g~JX~~~ltI1 =="'=ST=A=:M=ESA== "'· ~~~~~::,:,. ,. ': HJ-it. BeKh 141-1555 VOLKSWAGEN lo " ~ Harbor Blvd. "67 COUPE-0.Vllle. 23.000 DODGE-dlo. "''"'· dlr. bhfe °" blu•. ' t l.t lnON.ol O>ut_ Hwy.mlldl YW BUGS Wi'll Buy CO:!!.!~ mi's. Orir. owner. D<><skin Small down. lo pym"'. f ,,,_,_.,, brn, beige vin. top. Ail'. tilt • •69 Dodne \VPS'142. Call Ph : 494-9773 ·, TRIUMPH '62 vw. GOOD COND. LARGE 1-~~~~~~-whl. elect. door '°'"'-n .. 0, """""· :3 StiOO. * "6-Wl >"ROM SELECTION 1Z':".~~".' =::; LEASE • RENT .... -· oUor. 67:l-028! Charger ""'5"""P'°'LY°'>"'m"'UTH='""'valianl"'·c-,.-,, :~ '.Ill 'J'R4. o.d., wttt whls. '65 VW. GOOD CONDITION. $399 of VW or not. Call Ralph lmmedl•te delivery CA81Dn.LAC Brougham, 1967. 2 Door Hardtop, VB, pow~r dr, 3 spd. ·225•, J9x, hew ~ "" _... ..:---' $900 CAMPERS ,,.,.. -on •II ack top,.irey bottom. mk ,steerin;, p o w ~ r brakes, tire!, paint. chreoie 'wheel• , '. ·-··-"'"" ·-· ,,.., . ··~ le t•· ' ' ~ .:,. top.'U!O. 96).0832 1126 Sea La~. QlM GOOD SELECTION 1970 FORDS & a ucr ntenor. Fully equip. automatic trans, b u cket f150 or best off~. 644-31714. ·~1·====-=====-'67 vw wheel ood Harbour v w IMPORTS WAN'l'll> FORD .TRUCKS ·'ped""'."Li"'k'""e"'ne~w.,..,_--=-~-1 scats, vynl roof. Ab!IOIUtely '67 FURY JU 31,000 mi. New :: YOLJ(SWAGEN wheel, 0 radial ti::18Se;; of. 1 ~ , • • ~ ·= All popu1ar makea. Fotd l!fi8 CAD,•family.car. Rwia like new. Lie. YWS..219 bt·ks ale hcavy.dufy-sbocks •!I;,----.,-----I fer -call 831-3774 afltt 6 0 °" AUTAORIZED BILL ~. TQfOt,&· authorized "lei.sine ayatent. &: looks beautiful. 111t $295 $2699 \\'a.rranty, immac. S1150. ,, •59 Volklwqen O:mvertible. '65 VW. TOP SHAPE! ~ SALES & SERVICE llS8l a.ch Blvd. Get Our Competifi¥e Rafa: ca&h takes. 673-42.l.J ~,.~700 ·i R.IH. EICcellent Cond. $1100. $995 s 18711 BEAOI BL., 8424435 ff. Beach. Pb. ..N'l-ISlilS . Theodore ' 1960 Yl.EEnVOOD. clean in· ''"68;-;;P,-LYl\=1"oum='""'Roa,...d'""Rw>-.1. ·-~ c.J1 f13...(JU2 · 962.--'529 after 5 p.m. ' . ~ . HUNTING'JUN BEAOI LATE model .automobn.;.. ROBINS FORD aide Ii out. "'ell maintained. ner $19:;o. Private party_ ... a ..._ . $300. 54~ ... .,li> ~~= ... ... '56 VW OU. + '63 .u.m. '62 VW Bus, '69 Engine. 1"1l ~·' ~.,. ' '65 VW ·Dbl Cib'P:U. ll'ruck. ·ca.sh or trade , up; '62 :DiO Harbor Blvd. ~ U Make reuonabie offtt: Call trans axle, Nu tire!. $1600. ' Xlnt mnd · Gd tire 1 Mercury or '61 Raptble'r. ~ Ml!M. 64UIO.l0 '65 DE VII.J..F; Convt. AU --· "! O:nD'Ch 536-8698 Call 675-M23 w/radio. f2lll 434-8846, L.B. Pri•ate parties. ~1455 xlras. Make olfer. WW tak• PONTIA!:! 1 ! ,!' 1·LA'""'TE='•"1"vw=•surc-•. °'A"'-1~co---nd".1 '60 VW. good' ·Cone!. quick 5L9. JO:U·Ext. 66 or 67 '38 V\V Bug. New aunroor, 1959, 4 dr, Ford \Vagon. fltl' LEA.SE. fJlll' trade, call 89Z-5620. . i=-·~ 1 owner, lite-blue. f1250. We be~ ot ]Dove. $400 1970 HARBOR BLVD. stereo tap!!;, good ct1ndition. Must be in good condition. 1969 ?w1uat~c Hardt09-. v.a, '68 LE MANNS spqri Coupe, -Y; 1:=-=""='======-.=":6--318:;:T ='===•====-'.~"°'·:;;co;;;;ST;;<;A;;:ME:=SA~<':;;':"?:::-"S395,=:':'*="='"=2295-''=" ==:::"'":-=:==*="=6--861==' =*=:':'"·I air. pwr diac brake1, pwr CAMA'RO --· ~ ~ri air. pv.'1'1 vinyl tp. Sharp. : -79 24 ---------:>fS.a(Bl Ext. 66 or ~7 Will brirr1:: car to s¥w :you. 9$00 Ni w Cars 91i:MfNtw C1rs --noo-..ew-C1r1 --,900 · -~!"; S . yer.-~ mo '69 CAMARC>-RS.· Ol'anp. 2.;0 1970-H'iJraoR--BbVD. Cafl 842-233J. 1~------~..;_~..;________ SOUTH COAST -HP, PS, PB, air. $3100. ' COSTA ti.1ESA '68 PONTIAC Firebit'd, j dr. CAR LE'ASING 673-5811 J964 ibbG'E Polara 500. HT, air oond, K~ ? • • WHERE? NOT .AT CONN.ELL: 'CHEVROLET j ~ _ .. • . ' WHY? lt] JOHN CONNEl.l BECAUSE YOU CAN BUY A "NO GLVEAWAY ( NO GIMMICKS",. •'. Ju1t 21 Y••r1 of Ho11•1f • D11li1t9, ~lli"'I Ch...-t•l•t1. BRAND NEW 1970 CHEVROLET 'IMPALA ~-5161 S ORDER YOURS ' TODAY LESS THAN A · NEW '70 CHEVELLE! BRAND NEW 1970 CHEVELLE BRAND NEW 1970 NOVA /i FOR LESS THAN A NEW CAMARO FOR ONLY .5 2459 5 2189 OIDH YOUIS TODAY ORDfR YOURS TODAY · ' Proof That Inflation Does Not Exist at Connell Chevrolet LARGE SEllCTION OF USED CARS '67 CHIYROLIT 'iS t.on pickup. (U29790)) $1295-1 '64 COIYmE $1895 Coupe. 4 speed, radio, heater,, fUPZ 0761 I "64 OPEL StAtion "·ai;on. Radio, hcatC'r. CPIL 80611 '61 CADIUAC $4395 ~.Air, P.S .. radio. (WSB 895) '5' CUTIER UPRESS $1295 Cabin Cruiser &1traile.r. 50 h.p. Johnson motor & '64 '61 Y.W. IUG $1195 Radio and heater. I XOA 717 ) '64 ?>·Jere. Conv('_rt. to tow boat. fRBX 899) '61 ltAMllU!I T7D a.ale Cpe. Alr Con4., $595: '6f .l!ONTW:,GTO .,. 2 Dl'. VS. auto.. P.s..: RkH. /,.T, RAIL (X'VX 900)' ' • '67 .CHmOLIT 'f . im-St& w.,on. Auto., 1395 ndJo. Mater, 9 paaena:er· (W6121 CllSS 3021> '64 CADILLAC Coupe ~Vllle. Full P"T., fact. air. (JTE 742) .$25f5 ' I . I ' 064 Y.W.:VARIANT ' ' SQu&reback. l500S 11erlcs, 4 spd., R&H. (FXG 805l ' . . $1395 '66 CONTINENTAL 2 Dr~ Cpe. n..u ~er. ( . , .. ,.,., .... CS8C ~7) f f ~ ' I , ' ' ' • I • I' 11 • . • ' ,$495 ~ W. C!it Hwy, NB 64&-21!2 Xlnt cond. 35,500 mi's. Air whls, make oUcr ~64 CHEVROLET cord. bkt. "'-roMOI. Gold alt 5 l WA \Yf b\k vin uphllitry, 891-7519 '65 GRAND Prix ·'fact. aJr '"-'-""-~;.;:._--__:'.:.;;;~ --------. . --'67 CAPRICE -2 dr., 327 eng, '6~ DODGE Dart. Coocl lires, full power. loacht!, l:ood BLUE CJ-flP AUTO SALES factDry air, 6 way power ne\v batlery. Runs \\'ell. C!Ondition. $1350. 53$..8740 YEAR END 11eat, radio, hydromat ic Sacri!ice-<$400.673-5122 '63 BONNEVrLLE4drbrdlp CLOSE OUT SALE trans, oversize w.w. tireg, auto trans. air cond, tu'JJ '59 Cllevy wagon, mechanic's good cond, priced for qui.ck FALCON p'vr, l owner, $495. S4~7335 special ............... · $69 sale. 542-3377 -;;;::;::;;;;;::;::;;;;;;;;;;.1196.i PONTIAC Cu st om :~ Oldll, 4-dr\o.~an .... s79 '&f CHEV Nova '\:agon 283 "":61 FALCON WAGON Tcmpcst, V-8. fact. air/ "Pis. ::i9 T·Blrd. haratop .... 199 . 4 pd y I s·n~ r. ·a1 Piletro-i;tan '"'"""' m#L cu. 1n., 5 , new rear end S'" ..... _, . . cry c ean. 1.,.,; RAMBLE'E !"'-'-' .. ,_, .. ~ .. -and trans., brakes and tires. ..... .... a,"' transmission, radio, chanic'1 apecial ...... $99 Very cll'an. $925 or best of· heat.er, dlr, real clean! $~ '62 Chevy Monza, coupe $199 324 or 'vill take trade. POU686. '62 Falcon, 2-dr ...•. ••• S299 ~'7°'7• ~>174--=,..'·~-~--Call Ken: '63 Plymouth Club Cpc. S399 '64 J\lALIBU, xlnt con<!. nc\v 494-9TI3 or ·~;).(1634 '64 Pontiac Catalina, 4-dr tires, 1 O\\'ni:r ~ firin. !!!!~~"!"!!!!"!"!!!!!!!!"' IECONO:'>tY special.· Amer . Vacon. o• 8edan ·" .. "" ...... • $399 673-3663 or s.18-6203 '66 Falcon Futura 1Lo·can !:,~ Station' ·53----.... ,.,vy, 2 dr •••••• $588 '63/64 MONZA Spycler, 1 Fully fa ctory equipped. Dlr, 67~24·!0. '63 Lincoln, full pwr/air S899 spd. 968-2290. aft 6 pn1 $695. ;;-.;;;;;--,,==ii--=,-1 2145 Harbor Blvd., C.i\I. 5?.6-6391 Phone 642·60'23 f9li3 990 Ambas 54().4392 \Vagon. Pwr. air, '6.) CHEV. · 327 Motor · ·I '64 F'alcon Futura 4 dr, 170. Sell Now! 673-41 + FLEET SALE * 11pd. Bucket seats, gd. i>a;int. Clean. $500. ===-'"-="===IF== ($) 1961, (J)e9y lmpali15 Cheap. 642-1532 , , * tJ!t-1463 * 2 Docir,:r .............. $1700 1967 EL CAJ\1INO, "'hitc, '61 rALCCJN. S.tn \\'g11. f.dr, STU DEB (5) 1968 Otevy Impal..s auto, R & Ii, lo n1i. $1750. ~OOd motor. body & rubber. 4 Door ............... , Sl 650 Call 64~169l. eves 546-J.348 $250 ca~h. !)62-2265 '6'.: Studebaker wk CT, V-8. 00, bkt s~. nu lires, paint. Xtra l\arp $1.10. CJ) 1968 ford Country sedan i;lalJon "'ag , , . , $1900 Cl) 1968 Ford Galaxie CHRYSLER FORD 592-isso I · ·;;7 F11irlanr Conv. S300. gd T .91JD 4 Door ............... $1600 .ri:it-5290 '67 Chrysler JOO. 2 dr HT. full P"l', air cond.. nu lircs. pa.inc. Very ulcan. $2100 :'192-ttil:iO• condition. BUICK c,u c.,., ''"-1"1 .66 T.alRD '65 cNTRY, Scd_ \~,.~~;,-,-.. ~'572 -To"·n Sedan, :un P\Vr k a.Ir, Buick Special Convt. Very clean · but n e c rl s mechanical 1101"k. $J 7j . 644-2S66 COMET --------1963 CO,\Jl::T \\'agon. 2 dr. r&h. Xln'\ Cond. SJOO. Call :)45..6140 evening~ otll). V-8, PS, PB. ;i ir. SI:?OO. aqua blue rvith matching 673-5811 in1.. dtr. snail dn, km, '68 FORD Lh! (·~11 ry Sq1111-:C [lyn11s. TASl-9. Call Roy:, Sta \\'ag:. !U 1.i;"-'-.\11· 'un.I ·19~·97i:: QI' 545-0634 '&t Buick Special, 1 dr, 1970 lit . $'.!S~Ki. •J !l-?11\i 61 · Lalldau, ~D.!XXI mi. Aft. FORD c:ala\U' _·,!!. Low full poll'('t', 111'\V radial tires. EXCELLENT <;ON· I. n1ilcai(•. I 0 11 llL'r Gd r"t111d. l 111111:ic. Fife. \1·arr. 2 yr oi· DITIOi\'~ ! $870. * S.16-S610 CONTINENTAL $22;). 514.u::~1 :ro.ooo p1;. St!..fl.i'j'of. 1 DIAL direct G4:!.j(jiS,ch~·1·i;;c -l:J.·,T T·EIR'~o;"·--'67 Buick Sports \'l'agon, fully equipped, air cond. * ... 49~291:) * * '62 CONTINENTAL, of door, air , tull po"·er. Good con· dition. 673-7076 your ad. !hen sir h<i ck and , lllJO 111ilcs.' listen to U1c 11honc ring! ~1 IO:i • :>18-7:>17 evCT HOR.NETS NOW AV-AILABLE-.IMMEDl:A TE-0-EtlV ERY ORANGE COUNTY'S NEWEST AMERICAN MOTORS DEALEr! Oo n •4il•t•l'I is ro•dy t• 11n 1 yo~ •It~ • ocre1 of Sales •nd $1r.,ic1 f=icil:ric1. ~nrl o co.,,pl,tr lino •f 11e• 1970 ftlo41l1. C:hKll ••r wi d1 •elKti•t ol A· 1 Used C:on. FAC:TORY '1£11ns Dl~C OUNT~D I I I 69 AMX $1000 NEW '69 LEFTOVERS UP TO $600 · OFf -:'63 CORVETTE r:;. '"1 '1799 '66 PLYM. l'·I, SATlll lTE A'i!TO. !TAU 16tl ·::-:---=----:-.,.---~~~~-.-~~~"--~~~~-:1- 1 •64 T·•IRD 'i ~ .. ::;,, '1299 '64 PONTIAC \~~:~:.~uro . .'6' 9 '6'5 BUICK CIUND SPORT 4·Sl'llD (RGC 2711 '1299 DOR SA - '59 FORD rlCK·U•, ••• STIC:K. !LSOJJI) MOTORS ' Orange County's Newest American Motors Dealtir .. 842·1640 842·8340 t .. 21 llACH I LVD.. HUN'f. .... TON llACH MA.JN AT llAClf ' l 2 ' -, • •. . . -. . ' I I • • ' ' ' D.l.llY Plli!i . . .~ • JANUARY CLEARANCE START THE NE\v YEAB ·OFF RIGHT. /. THANKS AGAIN ORANGE COUNTY FOR MAKING US NUMUR 1 WE HAYE BEEN DEALING WITH PON11ACS AND PONnAC PEOPLE FOR 3 GEMERATIONS ••• WHY NOT GIVE US A TRY B!FORE YOU BUY! -- 1st (;LEABAN(;E For ~10 We Must Make Room Now! - LARGEST SELEt;TION · ~70 PONTIACS IN · ORANGE COUNTY - BONNEVILLE · • GR .. <i_ND PRIX • GTO • TEMPEST • CATALINA • . - HOW ABOUT THIS SELECTION OF GREAT 1969 PON·TIACS TO CHOOSE Fl.OM? ALL PRICED BELOW FACTORY INVOICE MOST MOOELS e BODY STYLES e EQUIPMENT e COLORS ~-" 1969 BONNEVILLE · $3681 27 2 dr.1 Y·8, auto~tic, radio, h11tar, power steering; power brakes, ·power windows, focfory air conditioning, vinyl top. Serial '# 262379C I 04820. 1969 EXECUTIVE s3419°6 2 dr. haidtop, V·B, automatic, raCl io, heater, power steering, power brakes, factory air conditioning, white wan tires, vinyl top, tinted 9l•ss. Serial '#; 256379C 103456. 1969 CATALINA '334926 2 dr. hardtop, V-8, automatic, power st11rin9, power i)r1~ts, factory air con .. ditioning , white wall tires, tinted glass, vinyl top. Striel '# 252379C108808. $2941 12 1969 ·leMANS -.. .. -. ~2709"31 2 dr. Hardtop, v.a, automatic, radio, power steering, white wali tires , tinted glass. 360 CID. XKH 676:· 1969 CUSTOM ··~~ '284267 2 dr. h•rdtop, automatic, radio, heater~ power steering, power bra~es, whit• w•ll tires, tinted gl•n. Dacor trim. ZAE 611 . 9'9 FIREBIRD · '298412 , 350 CID, v .. e, •u+ometic, r1.dio, heater, power steering, factory air condi. ". tionlng, tinted gl•is. Cordovo top console. YRV 323. 1969 TEMPEST . '2794 18 . 1969-GTO . - \ • . · ,, 2 dr. harqtop, 4-speod, r1\lio, hea !er, powar staoring, vinyl top. Serial '#: .350 v.,, outomelic, radio , hH!er, power stoorin9, power brakes, factory oir : ' • .-~.242379811~047. ' conditioning, t inted glass. ZAO 612. -· ' · t, ..__ •• -------~~-------------------~I %~~o~~H1°G~~~= i.itov1 FlHWAY AT ~CH LET US HELP YOU ARRANGE , DOWN PAYMENTi AND TERMS' To· FIT YOUR BUDGET Your Own lank or Credit Union Welcome' • Severed Excellent Financing Plans . SHOWROOM HOURS: ·MONDAY tllnl SATURDAY, t A.M. te 10:00 P.M.; SUNDAY, 10 A.M. te 7 P.M. "EW YEAR TIRE SALE POLYESTER ' RBER G,LASS ~.' illAND NIW .--. 99' 50 GLASSUNID TIRES · Plus Fed. Ex. Tix • I ' • • .. ' ) " • :o<;,;-• -• ..,. r • - • • • • ) -... ~: . ·' • ' -~ " • ~ .... ~ . ·~ • ' ·+ • - ... ---~ . ..;-, .... . ~. . ' ... -..... '~~· j • I " J ' . • . . - J . • • • I I C~DlfJLA,<; :iVXNETE'#;N SEVENTY · 6.. . . .. . •, J .... ' ·EXCELLENT SELECTION . . . OF MODELS & COLORS AVA ILABLE FOR ' . ~ . . . . · LEASE OR P URCHASE . . Even when measured by Cadillac standards of ex- cellence, the 1970 Cadillac iS sure to exceed your greatest ex{lectations. Let's get tog~ttier soon for a demonstration drive. . . A Magnifi~ent Experien~~-. . . • I ••• ,. • • • . ' • ~, ,a .... .... ""'' • .I~' I l ( Over 89 Q:uality Cadillacs. To. Select ·-From!! LARGEST SELr:CTION 1966 OLDS STARF-IRE 1967 F-LEETWOOD · • •• . , IN ORANGE COUNTY! - l twtl>tm. lllt....00., flt_., will! b1•tk fOll 91'111 llll Ck IM!l\er l"foerlol' . Full '°""*'' IKl•rv •Ir, lilt wtlffl, •'e•fO AM/FM. pOWf• -ioc;;.., pOwtr ,,,,.,. ,.., .. , •• l lt .• ti~. (UPS nll '$ SALE 3444 PRICE 1966 ·CADILLAC 1965 CADILLAC . 5td4" ~Vint. Olym,.Jc 'bronit """' """"' IOp •NI 111'611lt Cllllfl 1nd (Ot'IVI. DeV"''· 'C"'~ bfiM wllh Wl'llte• kip I nd beitjf! ~~,,_. IMth~r ..,,t..rior. Full pa-, ttdOry t lr, 1111-.. lel<OPk •lffrlnt il>tll'f'IDr. Futl pawtr equiomml JIJUs •l!lntl •Mkltlo r.cllo. flefft ""'"'· --IM.1<1. ·--l>J/l1FM. ('VD w \ '•"'· 1..ow...,11e1. tNOP nu .. SALE $2555 PRICE 1968 CONTINENTAL Soda". Gltcoer t rHr> will! 'lrHf! !Nlhlr lnt1rlcir, "ull Jl(IW1r, llttory 1lr, AM.FM red!(>, pawrr CIOOT loc~s. 1!11 Whlll, 1i.aMt11 bf•u111ul. !~•O\IOho~IJ (VWK "'2! SALE $3777, PRl~E 1965 ·cADILlAC .. . . . SALE $1333 PRICE ' . SA~E $1666 PRICE 1969 PONTIAC · · l onn1vlH• •roUO:~rn I OOiot hai:tnOo. """'Jadt-:-t-rl~ WH~ llTtck Vll'IYI rool Ind green l1pe11rv fntrrior. Full pawrr, faciory 1lr c-Ul""(ro• AM /FM rldlo, POwtr door llldll, till 11,.rlrog· """"'• new 9l1H IMl!I· llCI tlrn , with i ll °"'IDn•. •XNIC 121) SALE $3222 PRIC~ SA~E $5333 PRICE 1969 SEDAN D.E V.ILLE 1968 CADILLAC CO\IPI 01Vill,. GGlll Ur1mi•t wot~ b!ttk ltlo 11111 blatk l1t!ller ,,,f1rlor. ~ult pgwe•, l1cto•y 1h' t!lndlrionlno, 11trf0 AMIFM radio, •111-"I"" otopit •tttr1"9 "'htel, PC;Wt• Cloor loc~1. twlligM umlnrl, r!c. A 1g.,,,. ly ti<. (VG'I' till 1967 CADILLAC I Door ha•dl09. Mi"I 9r~n exlttior with metthlna r~th a.. IMlh~r Interior. Full pOWIPr. ltcla'~ air, fill wheel, pawer <!oar loc.l<s, tr~11t C""lrol. AM-FM, lWlligMI 51nline1. (VCL n6t • • 'SALE ' SALE $4333 PRICE ~ ~ ' j SALE $2999 PRICE ... Plll~l .... 1968. MERcµRY , . . 1969 :j AVELIN ' ' A . . . ' ' ' (OUgtr lltrdlOP coVoe. \II, 1utorNlic tr1n1ml1•fon. -r •l-lf'll, • • _.. dly; br•k•, lactor'I" •Ir conditjonlnfl, wtl h1 wtll llrtl, llme I'-• with bl~'iltfy1 tMl61t , .. , tnMlllJI', (VtT 16'1 H•rdlall c1>11pe. Li~ !I•~ :Vl!h. ~lte vlo!'l'f 1'1!.,.lor. tt'Jd~. -J.w. -,,~ t>Utkel,utJ;'" flf\lrtlrH, ·fJICtllf'nt condlllon, IYCN J!11~ USED'iLOW MILEAGE ·· Soo1n Do ViU.~&n11ne· whi!e·wifh, exqu.i.it. oquo cloth and · leather Delphinr interior. Full power, l1cto.ry ·1ir conditioni ng , cAM:FM rad io. (ZRF 112). • SALE $2222, PR~CE . , SALi .s2222 PRICE -- .------.NABERS . . .., . • 2600 'Harbor Blvd., Costa M·esa . . '·5 ,40•9100 • I ~ ·1, SALES DE . RTMENT OPEN ' 3:30 Al'II to 9:00 P I ]\Ion.. thr11, Fri. • 9:00 ~I to 6:00 Pi\1 Sat and Sun. ' . ' ~ • NABERS CADILLAC I LEASE DIRECT Immediate delivery • Excellent Selection Over four acres of factory author • ired tatal Cadillac focilit ies desi9n· ed to better HU and service new and used Cadillac autamobiles. " ALL CARS SUBJECT TO PRIOR ,SALE. /Ill SALii ~RICES EFFECTIVE THROUGH TUESDAY', JANUARY 6, 1970 ' • 1 Ii • • . . . !.~f!!ily weekly DAILY PILOT ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA . J A~ U A R Y 3 , 1 9 7 0 i I I 1· . I ' POR PATBER D.4NIEL EGAN, IM "junkie prnlf' ltl•r1ore1 Mead, IAe .,.. llaropolop&, luu ursed a Senate •ubc ... .,.llUe lo ie,.u.e ....n1 ...... Flaa1 u your opilllo11 on tu1-Leo S..Ula, Clako10, IU. • ft wu ·an exception rather than the rule when I met a heroin addict who hadn•t ,got starte<I on marijuana. Enough said, don•t you think? · l'Olt JOHN YOLPE, Secretary of Transport11tio11 Tlw ri6lat la1UJ on MO•I inler•late lai1la••Y• """' deteriorate lfWre rapidly llao11 t"-le/I lane •ine• 1/t.e wide laiu u a.Md primarily /or paabtf tlnly. Btu 1Au aUaudioA been 1ou11 into colUlderalion bt preM!n. lal11&. ll'CI)' buUcli.111P-Chnrlea .4. LincUy. Rapid Cily, S.D. • It js true that the right• lane usually carries the majority of the heavy loads and des~ably ~hould have a stronger pavement than the inside lane. However. the heavy-axle trucks use alJ lanes. so those on the left cannot be structurally designed for passenger can onJy. A few at&tet have built the outside lane heavier, but moet hlghw~y departments ar~at the additional cost ofheta the advant . FOR EUUBETB POST, etiqueiu e~rt I• ii proJMr lop. an oW p*'8 o/ •rlinf •il- "n tu • ..-.iu.1 Iii•' II ao, alao.U one es· pl4ri.11 llaal II .. "°' IMWP -Mn. R. GorJora, Ye,.,.,.., C•li/. • Yes, it is. If it is aim ply bought aa an impersc)nal antique piece, yoU need aay ' nothing apecial about it. If il is a family heirloom or a piece about which you know some particular history, include that information with your card. FOR BIU YEECK Are you eon~ toillt bueb.ll •I ~u prue111 tU...1 I/ nol, wul are you tloin•P-M. L. Rel-, C...io11, Ohio e I ha•e no connectio:n with bueball, except as an occasional fan, having for. salten the diamond for the sport of kings. At present I am getting .. on-the-job train- ing .. operating Suffolk Downs Race Trac~ in Boston. What In t.llo World I Antf·Smoldng Aide Smokey Sam is probably the most gruesome mannequin .Min history-and the mosi effective. A "member" of a new anti-cigarette club, Smokey Som ' ~Sam chain smokes •as a .-iaual aid to show what happens to one's lun~ after just two packs of cigarettes. The aimulated lungs turn black I White apun-glaas is in two clear glass jars and protrude out of Sam's chcsL The real-life memben of the group meet for mutual aid and com· fort. plus lectures 'on how to stop amok· ing, how to prevent weight gain, and what to do for withdrawal s~toms. If you're interested in join;ng or starting such a franchised business, contact: Smoke Quit. ters International, 116 S. 7th St., PhiJa. • telphia, Pa. 19106. Borrowed Sleep If you aleep on bor· rowed time provided by sleeping pills, you must repay it, according to The Journal o/ the American M edical As· socialion. A recent experiment showed pills effective for on)y 12 lo 14 days, then tolerance sets in. Sleeping became short and restless. Whe~ pills were with· drawn after 26 days, it \ook 14 days lo restore a normal sleep paltern. list of Lousy Lookers Fashlon designer Mr. Blackwell sees so many badly dreased women that a few yea.rs ago be inaugu- rated a list of tlle "~orld's 10 Worst Dressed Women." The names of this 8/ackwel/ o!t#te '6lad lid year's worst dresser• are about to be announced, but Blackwell told Family II' eekly that he bas yet another list. "There are AO many candidates that I FOii JOHNNY CARSON I• IM .erlp1 for IM "T.,.a,AI S'laowl' •ril- tea o., bt U..il or u ii ..,,.dy •4 U61 B°"' , ..aAy sr#Mn •r• OA yoar •••/IP-Carol Nlt:Jwl., ..tulln, Tu. • It i!!-ad Ub except for the opening monologue. There preeendy are five writ· ers on my atafl. FOii REP. ARNOLD OLSEN o/ M OlllilM Flaaa .,.Jo, bfn&e/ila .o.U ,.,.,, fro• llae JH1t1Utf o/ IAe .4Lub Bisla..,.1--llra. Sine Moyer, Re1i1111, Saa· bteutN11, t;G"""- e Alaaka, western Ca~ada. and the Northwestern United States are linked economically, llOciaily, and geographical- ly. But our commerce ties are very poor. Certainly the railroada have opened up our •ul expanses. but only for eaat-west traffic. What we need now ia a north- south route. Such a route woald do a great deal lb alleviate the pmient trade imbaJe.noe between Canada and the United States. FOii MllS. RICB..tllD M. NIXON ..ta • laif lwcltooll teael- er, tolaol aabjeeta tlill you ee.cM--Mn. MU.- ale Stefle,.•, C1'i"• '1-"· c.µ1. '-' e I taught typing and ahorthand ar Whittier (Calif.) IDgb School POR Snl LEYENSON, comedian . .4. • for.er &ecelulr, aJaiela -"Ject "° 1"" eoJUUler MOSI U..por- lanl /or .,. '"'"'' A•erlcaAP-T. M .• Faeo, Tesa e Engliah ia the most important subject for any American on any Jevel of educa- tion. The manner in which you express yourself orally Ol in writing ia the surest index of the extent of your education. 'W'ana lo uli a r-penoa a ....-.? Y-eaa diroqh alala col.an. aad we'll set die •-from lite ,..._i-1 .--,._ ..._le. Sead qaa&Jon. preferably om a pon aril, lo Aak T'ltna Y-11, Famlly Weekly, 641 Le:xiaston An., N-York, N.Y. 10022. We eumot .a-wledp f111ftbo•, !.at IS will be paW 1--" -...... retire any woman if she appeara more tlian three times in a period of five years." Like who? .. Zsa Zsa Gabor, nat· urally. And Streisand almO&t got on when she attended the Oscar awards in that see-through. Liz Taylor is on the list, too." In Liz's case, people can look at her jewelry, not her costumet1. _,. Literary Dropouts Seems that certain reading claasiC8 are enduring bot not nee· essarily enjoyable. That's the opinion of faculty members of the Famoua Writers School, who proffered their candidates for "the moat unreadable classic." According to-"Today's Education," among those un- readables and the voters were Dante's "Inferno" (Bergen Evans' choice), "Pil- grim's Progret1s" (Bennett Cerf)• "The Deerslayer" (Max Shulman ). and "Can· terbury Tales" (Bruce Catton). Read any bnd books lately? William Windom and tv cohort Wedding Fob Actor William Windom (star of NBC-tv's .. My World and Wei• come to It") doesn't like to wear jewelry btlt didn't exactly wanl a single-ring ceremony when he got married recently. So Bill designed a wedding ring for bis bride, Jacqulyne {her own spelling). and cut a part of it off for himself. It's a gold cube with the corners smoothed and the center removed; it serves as a watch fob for Bill. Sort of a golden switch on the Adam and Eve rib story. Family Heek(y , .. N....,,.,,,., Magozl .. Ja.nuory -'· 1970 llONAllD S. OAYIDOW P~ MOnON FltANK ~ W. PAGE THOMPSON Acl11.,.tiri110 °'"•etor A-W.u A4•. llr.: D.eW M. tt.ffw4· &..'- Ab. •r·: ....... 1 •• ..._.; N,,., Yorlr Sol.'; llllf'.: 0-.W W,..1IU~Bal.11,,,..: a-... J. ~; ,......_ Acl•. 11,,,..: .._.., L ~; c,.._,. ~""".:-.ii-, •.1 ,,.,,..., &u .. llllf'.: W.._ I . • •s " Jr. P MMCMw B*Hou: ........ D. C:-,, Lee 11119, ....... M. M.rriett, n.-. N. O'Netl. lOUlT flTZOlllOH Blit--411.Cltt.J -'AQ( ltYAH MaMgitto B<IJUw MAllUS N. Tl:INQUI A rt Dir•elAJ• Mii.AHif DE PlOfl 1'oo4 ScfitJJr A..oeW.u BtUUwe: bMlp ~. tW ""'"'-• Miit le-.. 1tty, Teny Sdlwtef1 ,_ ,1. o, ............. c:..t. Arit.tlt Ari lXNOC4>r. 0-..,. a- B4Uorlal .t Ab~ H•tlilM'f'kn: 641 ............ Ave., New YMI ... Y. 1"22 ~ 1979, FAMILY WEEklY, INC. Alt •19hte _,..941 You ire invited to mall your questions or comments about any article or advertisement that appears In F1mlly We~ly. Your letter will receive a prompt answer. Write to Se,._lce Editor, Ftmily Weekly, 641 Lexington Avenue, New York, N. Y. 10022 . 10 \ISllllll\01 • NO PRE -RINSING OR SCRAPING DOES COMPLETE SERVICE FOR 6IN10 MINUTES! Now even if you have the smallest kitchen, you can enjoy a fully-automatic dishwasher that worb just like big, expensive models-but requires absolutely no plumbing, no installation. No pre-rinsing or scraping, either, not even for egg and milk dishes! Washes, rin&e8, dries crystal-clear without spotting .. . and you never put your hands to water. Amazing speed-does complete service for ~inner plates. salads, desserts, cups, glasses, silver, the worb-in 10-minutes flat. " HOMEMAKERS, SEND YOUR DISHPAN TO THE SMITHSONIAN I Join the thousands of delighted wmien (and men!) who've already purchased this little miracle worker since it first burst ueon the scene a few short months ago! The first machine of its talent, ever! 100% aafe even for your best., most. delicate crystal, even for plastic ware! Gentle, yet thorough. Even gets rid of penristent food odors. Even scrubs up pots and pans. Utilius water hotter than the hands can stand -sterilizes as it washes. And bear thi&-you don't hear this! Operates in complete, blia&tul silence. BE A GUEST AT YOUR OWN PART!::SI TAKE ALONG ON VACATION-LIVE! Unit stands on countertop, is inf~nioualy deeiped to store right in .diah cabinet. Stac.tin« ia at finiertip- level..: no st.oop111g to load, unload. Automatic deter- gent dispenser. CO.ts !ess than 2• a wash to ~rate . So. hand"y, so economical, many folb with big ma- chines prefer the ~ntertop. Lets you be a guest at your own parties. See-thru dome 201h" x 20~" x 181h". Unit 18 completely portabl~tUe it along anywhere, and really have a vacation! Precision manufactured in U.S.A. for years of top-quality per- formance. Full-year guarantee on all parts. FREE 10-DAY HOME TRIAL >.. -SEE FOR YOURSELF ~ash 10 day's worth of diahee entirely at our risk. Give a party. Do all your beet china. Then if you are not thrilled and delighted, we want y~ to uk for your money back. Send today! • o • It I MAISON oo MIC E'* h4. Oepl PW·lO Mlc:Mt Bldg., New Hyde Perk, N. Y. 11040 Ill llW $3 I 98 llTllllUCTllY PRICE:. Ill Y MAIL NO·RISK COUPON ~----------------, I Me.i.on Mlchel, Ltd., Dept. PW· 10 I I Michel Bldg., New Hyde ltertc, N. Y. 11040 I I Gentlemen: Kindly ruah · Automatic Countertop Diabwuhen at $39.98 eech. plua I .. I expreee charJ• collect. If I am not delighted, I I I may retum for full refund or cancellation of all charges within 10 days. I I N. Y.C. a1td H. Y. St•tt "'"r""· 1144 1alt1 tu I I O Check 0 Money Order ~nclo1ed. Charae my I I 0 Dlnen Club or 0 Carte Blanche account I I I TOTAL I I I I ( •i6n.ature) I I Name I I Addrt111 I I City State Zip I ~-----------------• • t I FORECAST FOR THE 19708 ' .... Women Will Challenge Men ~ SIXTY YEARS ago Alice Ram- sey chugged her way cro~untry in a 1909 Max- well to become the first wo- man to drive from New York to California--3,800 miles in 41 days. ~ Tod~ there is studied speculation that ariother American woman, u yet unknown, will make the croa&- space trip and become the Arst wom- an to travel from earth to the moon -250,000 miles in three days. How close is the American wom- an's entry aa an aatronaut into the U.S. apace program? Judging by her entry lut year into traditionally male professions, not too far away. ln 1969 the American woman nlade her greatest peacetime surge into heretofore unattainable segments of American profeaaions. Busineaa, sports, education, iabor uniona, trans- portation, and government experi- enced the entrance of women into conventionally male strongbolda once thought aa inacessible u landing on the moon ueed to be. Breaking a 212-year, aU-male tra- dition, attractive and business-ori- ented Carol Jan Ovitz became the first woman trader on the floor of the Chicago Board of Trade, the world's largest commodity exchange. .,# ' 4 Fawtilll WHklw, Ja'"'4'114, 1170 By BE'ITY A. THEOBALT The largest union local in the Up- per Midwest (over 12,000 members) selected Mrs. Peg Miezwa as their business agent. Mrs. Helen D. Bentley, who was a knowledgeable Baltimore maritime reporter, was.named the first female Federal Maritime Commiuioner and thus the ftnt woman ever appointed .. chairman of a Federal reauJatory comm.iaaion. A lexu airline, Air Eaat, ha.a our nation's t\nt female commercial co- pilot, pretty Jo Claire Welch. A for- mer tlirht instructor ·(and elemen- tary-school teacher), Mi88 Welch has only one more rating to gain belorf' qualifying as a commercial captain. (A major airline is now involved in litigation, charged with discrimina- tion by a female pilot who was re- fueed a job.) Early this year the ~rte world was visibly shaken by the possibility of a pTofeuional female jockey. Big- ti me racing had always been strictly a man's preserve. The pouibility be- came a reality•hen Delaware's new Dover Downs scheduled the world's first fully mix" professional race. Now half-a-dozen female jockeys are grabbing for rail positions against their male counterparts. Diane Crump, 20, the first woman jockey to race at Hialeah, whipped home a winner her sixth time. Tues- Barbaro Jo RHbi,., jocktt11 dee Testa, 27, won at Santa Anita in her second race. And Barbara Jo Rubin, 19, rode two winners on the same day and won at Aqueduct on an untried 13-1 shot. Hardly had the ladies risen above the jockeys' "boycott of the broads" movement when virile sportsmen re- ceived the news that Mrs. Bernie Gera had entered baseball's all-male world u a professional umpire. Syndicated sports columnist Elinor Kaine showed up in the Yale press box-along with 365 male writers and sporbcutenh-to view the New York Jets and the New York Giants, and thereby opened the professional press box to women. And the foolllall field itself WU secretly,, if unofficially, sexually in- tegrated thiir fall during the first intercollegiate football game ever played between the boys at newly co- educational Va.saar;land Sarah Law- rence schools. Diminutive Debbie Dey of Sarah Lawrence. with carefully padded jersey and hidden tresses got through the pregame meeting with the referees. waited on the be:nch, and substituted aa a flanker. thereby in- tegrating the all-boy team and the he-man sport. The echo of falling tradition car- ried into the hallowed halls of the University of Pennsylvania as the 84-ye&M>ld male monopoly of the journalism ftefd fell to Judith Teller, 20, the first coed editor-in-ehief of the university'• Da.il11 PnU¥lt10ftUJft. Sl&irlq E,.gellwnl. fl'l'O golfer Traditionally all-male California Institute of Tec~olO«Y easily suc- cumbed to the ·charm and academfo- prowesa of Dr. Jenijoy La Belle, who, as the ftrit fem~ profeuor at Caltech, considers heraelf "primarily a professor and only coincidentally a novelty!' What's ahead for women? A female Army genenl, for one thing. For the first time since CoD,1Te88 opened that rank to women, a review of candidates for brigadier general is under way. Among the 10 WAC colo- .. .. l ----~~----------------------~. Family~/ /Gnuarv -'· 1970 More in Every Field 1969 saw American women invade strongholds long sacred to men~ but that's only the beginning of what they are expected to accomplish in the coming decade nels being considered, along with the men, for one-star rank is WAC Director Col. Elizabeth P. Hoising- . 'ton. With 26 years of excellent work in the service, she is the best bet for First Lady General Women have applied for positions 'as astronauts in our American space program, but so far none bas been accepted. NASA consultant and vet- eran pilot Jacqueline Cochran sees piloting a spaceship aa no enormous barrier to experienced American women pilot&. The world's only female apace traveler, Soviet cosmonaut Valentina Tereshkova, predicted in a recent interview that there will be many more women in future space-research programs. 1970 just may see Jack Nicklaus and Kathy Mann teeing off in a mixed professional golf tournament. While not making par with PGA's cur, Joe Dey, 29-year-<>ld Shirley Engelborn's current drive for mixed golf may open the door for others. Miss Engel- horn, with an impressive $115.000 in winnings on the ladies PGA tour, responded to Dey's "males only" de- cree with, "Golf is golf. If I could qualify., why not?" Mrs. Elizabeth D. Koontz, director of the Department of Labor's Wom- en's Bureau, sees "a use of people talent" rather than specifically male '· Judith T«lln', editor-in-chief or female talent in America's future labor force, adding that "we have not begun to tap the female sex as a resource." She believes that we will look at the conditions that prevent women from accepting jobs and prof e88ions other than t hQee traditionally opened to women and will work toward al- ternatives, such as child-education centers and trained household man- agers and technicians. Mrs. Koontz says that our com- puterized space age has made changes in our living procesaes which we have accepted as a matter of course. Many of these changes, such u the ad- vances in packaged foods derived Dr. Jmi;o11 La. Belk, f"'Ofu1or from the Apollo space program, are already working for the 'woman com- bining homemaking, motherhood, and employment. Penny Kaniclides, who believes she is the 1\rst woman president of a computer company, says that women will particularly appreciatcf the many uses envisioned for the computer. "It may be 1984ish, but I see the housewife of the future with a com- puter 'terminal in her home, con- nected to a central terminal. This would enable the housewife to order groceries. vote, and carry on many other tasks by merely pushing a but- ton." Penny admits that there are many problems to be conaidered in home computerization, but "that'R the .~hallenge of the future." Carol Jax Otiitz, tra.tUr Miss Elizabeth Kuck, a commis- sioner of the Equal Employment Op- portunity Commission, who feels that a "woman should be considered on her abilities as an individual rather than as a class," sees more oppor- tunities opening for women. While concerned with some areaa, such as the need for apprentice train- ing, upgrading of employees within a business, and better implementa- tion of equal pay for equal work. she (eels that the Commission, along with other groups and individuals, is mak- ing headway with the problem of discrimination. Legally there can be no diacrimi· nation on the basis of eex in em- ployment or in pay. The Fair Em- ployment Act, Civil Service rulings, and ensuing legislation relating to the status of women opened the legal door to many closed professions. Miss Kuck stated ~hat decisions of certain court cases have had tremendoue in- fluence in this area, while Mrs. Koontz sees the whole matter of le· gality in this area undergoing per- haps one of the most dramatic changes in our history. Early in 1970 the Labor Depart- ment's Office of Federal Contract Compliance will issue the discrimi- nation guidelines to insure against sex discrimination in jobs covered by Federal contracUI. (The OFCC hu the power to revoke Federal con- tracts from firms that discriminate .. RelMt Bentle11, FedMa.l ec>mmi8'i0fter but never has done so.) In addition, the new 20-member panel for the Citizens Advisory Council on the Status of Women will advise the Government on efforts to improve the participation of women in Ameri- can life. If 1969 shook up the jockeys' locker rooms and the ftoo r of a commodity exchange, it's only the beginning. Next come a space~vehicle compart- ment, the War Room-and who knows what else? • J" Claire Welch, co-i>Uot Famil11 W••kl11, Jattl4af'11 .4, U10 J .f ' EXQUISITE IMPORTED MUSIC BOX FIGURINE IN DELICATE PORCELAIN WALTZES TO ,) 6 ~SOMEWHERE MY ILOVE~ Magnificent Statuette (Fine Glazed Porcelainl Adds Decorator Beauty ... Plays the Music of from ]D)JR{o ZJHIIIW&CG(Q) • J Creates Charming Old World Atmosphere• In the Tradition of World Famous Figurines Long the favorite of collectors and decorators, '-music box figurines edd a classic touch to any setting. f;'iow this exquisite figure is combined with the haunting meJody of Lara's Theme from Dr. Zhivago, "SOMEWHERE MY LOVE." As the jewel like notes chime out the nostalgic melody, the charming figurine revolves in stately grece es if to an Old World Waltz. Unfortunately it is impossible to capture the moving beauty and grace in the small black and white photograph here. Only when you actually bring this regal piece into your home, listen to Its wistful melody, can you fully appreciate its charm and appeal. OFFER WILL NOT BE REPEATED THIS SEASON We urge you to order this exquisite decorator piece now, while our specially imported supply lasts. Each full-color glazed ceramic figurine is over 7" high and 4" wide, and is yours for only $4.98 on full money back guarantee if you are not absolutely delighted with the beauty it brings to your home. Hurry._ order noy.', this offer will not be repeated this season in Fam ily Weekly. : -------·----------------COLONIAL STUDIOS, DEPT. TF·18 20 Bank Street. White Plains, New Yoft( 10606 Please send me the Classic figurine Music Box that plays "SOMEWHERE MY LOVE" for only $4.98 post- paid on full money back guarantee If I am not abso- lutely delighted. Enclosed is $ . . .............. . (Print Clearly) .. Name ...................................... . Address .................................... . City ....... ~. . .... State ......... Zip ........ . 0 SAVEi SPECIAL OFFER: Order two Music Boxes for only $8.95. Save $1 .00. ---------------------------~~~~~~~--------------------------------.-.----------............. .. Furniture 1970'- HOME IMPROVEMENT Action Design, Mottern Lo0k! By ROSALYN ABREVAYA MODERN IS making it! That was the clear edict at the recent furniture market in High Point, N.C., where almost every major company showed its version of it from '80s "modern° to up-to-the--minute combinations of chrome, lucite, and glass. But tl"aditional furniture is hardly biting the dust. English, particularly 18th-century Chippendale and Hep- plewhite, was revived, and French assumed new im- partance in case pieces and upholstery. Mediterranean and Spanish, looking less massive and more refined, con- tinued strong. Oriental motifs and silhouettes, oft.en in accent pieces, were popular, used to enhance and mix with modem. UphQ.lstery fabrics emerged in strong greens, bright yellows, reds, oranges, and some pinks. Leather and suede .(or their man-made look-alikes) piled up honors in ele-- • gant sofas and armchairs, often tufted. Chenille, in cot- ton or rayon, was a star revival, usually in soft shaded stripes or solids. Woods range from the very light in oliv~ash burl and bleached pecan to rich deep-colored African rosewood or dark walnut. If there is one keynote word for 1970 furniture design, it would be "action"-in a double sense. First because of increasinif technology, more and more furniture, especial- ly contemporary and modern, is being turned out grace- fully curved. You see this in a round~ sectional sofa, polyurethane--molded chairs, or stainless steel crafte~ into gentle ovals or circles to frame a rocker. Second, many of today's furniture pieces are dual-purpose, featuring handy pull-out, fold-over surfaces, or snap-open storage compartments. So the 1970 highlights in furniture stress modem de.- sign and action-a reflection of our ti¥! .. Giant Decoration look-Save $31 Wont to add /resit at11le attd color to 11ou.r It.om~ a"4 aclt.ine ift.Ur- etti1111 look. for bedroom., litlixg ro01u, kitcltsK, attd plat1 or.ad Send for tA• Sl"'#tl!%" iUiutraud book. "DecoratiO'JI U.S.A.," (orig- inal 1mblialt4r'a price $1!!.95). Mail $9.95 to "Decoration" 50801, Dept. !Oto, UOO N.W. 185th St., Miami, Fla. Rock the modffn wa11 i?& Selig'• 01Jal-frame rocker of brigl!t green. butt~tuf ted uphoUt6rJI and ch.rome- /inialud ateel. Two identical piuu form thu exquilfite buff et, of olive-<Uh. burl and per- aimmon, duigned br Rola.nd Carter for Latu. Har la.miMted pul~ out ah.elf, ·atorage apace. H 010 to achieve c<mtinuoua aeating in the round? Combine one aofa, a pair of cun1ed l.oveaeata, and a atraight lovueat. From Tha.11er Coggin. In the French manner i3 Bro11hiU'1 charming Bom.be lowbo11, from a group of " imported accent piece•. It'• made of native Spaniah 1:4bin.et wood8. Famil'JI Wukl'JI, Januaf'fl •· 1910 7 4 ____ __J I ; .. On Call Our children alway& eome when calJf'ld, , ... Come with a joyful shout- Not when we call them in, but when Their playmates call them out. -Riclaard Armour I QUIPS AND QUOTES I ~teen-age girl went to her father and complained about troubles in her math class. ..Why do I have to study this stuff?" she demanded. "I'll never have any use for it later.'' "Learn it anyway," suggested her ' dad. '4The way you're going, some day you'll have to flgure out your welfare payments." -Herm Albright Moat Amet"ico.ns drive la.at 11ear'11 cara, teeM thi8 year's clotheB, and live ... on next year'a income. -Dan H ebding A salesman in a swank leather- goods store suggested to a male cus- tomer, "Could T interest you in a beautifully embosaed letter opener?" Sign poated at 4 drugat<we new1- 8tand: "Pay now--rea.d later." -William Lodge Does That Answer Your Qufftlons? The school board• bicker pro and eon About sex education: Should it be taught at school or home? A grave dellberation. And while the controver&y grows, The kid& leaftl what they pleaae By strolling past the theaters And staring at marquees. -Peuy McCeitigan 1 •• "No, thank you,'' replied the cus· When we were borrowing c?tstoms from older civiliuz.tions and other countries, who was t.lte idiot tchn paased up the afternoon siuta? tomer. "I married one." -Dorothea Kent -Lucille J. Goodyear Ski beaut· Where you'll find our slopes without moguls (we pack them every night). You'll find them fun and friendJy (-and exciting too). And you won't lose your family- or your boyfriend (because our runs all end in the same pJace). Our weather won't freeze you blue either (we're 10° warmer-on the average-and windless). And you can find a ski patrolman when you want one (the Na- tional Park Service directs our patrols). Quick snacks or a n elegant buffet is offered (our buffet is from the Ahwahnee-we make 1000 hamburgers an hour). We operate the oldest and best Ski School in the Sierra (Bill Jones' school has 30 full time instructors-Amer- ican techniques). With lift lines that are shorter than usual (4 T's, l chair-4000 ~r hour). You can also ice A charitable organization enlisted the aid of teen-age girls in a door- to-door effort to raise funds. One girl happened upon the house of a ha-ndsome movie star and found him at home. In a good mood, be wrote her a check for $1,000. check, he was aghast. "Where's the signature!" he exclaimed. "Oh, that," the teen-age heroine sighed. "I cut that off for my auto· graph book." -John Shotwell The director of the charity waa ecstatic when he beard the news. He called all his helpers to announce the contribution, but as be looked at the A <'Ompany has grotun too big when it takes gosBip a week to travel from one ena of the office to another. -James Shuf'lttek "The aound of the Burf iB being brought to you throu,gh the courtesy of the Lobster Pot Restaurant. 208 Main Street. Free parking .... " Yosemite. skate (on our new, outdoor, ice-all-the-time rink). The places you stay are comfortabJe and attractive (we have the splendid Ahwahnee and the contemporary Yosemite Lodge). And of course, the natural beauty will take your breath away. All of which makes Yosemite your place to ski. And we have two all expense plans for you to choose between. The Midweek or Weekend Ski Specials. These include ski lessons, special rock climbing courses and unlimited use of the ice rink and ski Jifts. Not to mention your comfortable stay and the delicious meals at the Ahwahnee or Yosemite Lodge. For reservations, call your travel agent or Glen W. Fawcett, Inc. at (213) 388 -11 51. Or contact the Yosemite Park & Curry Co .. Yosemite National Park, California 95389. (209) 372·4671 . • • -~-~--------~..........;.....:..-_ ....... '-_________________ _ ( ( ~ ( -..: " A fa er s . ) JUNIOR Let's Dnw •n llsklmo By Ann DGt1id010 A figure 8 as we shall show Can be a jolly Eskimo. I REAS URE CHEST .. Hlde·•·N•m• Hidden in this sentence is the name of a musical instrument: Some of his schoolmates used to laugh at him tor saying that when he grew up he wouldn't stay in the country: he wanted an urban job. (See Amwer Box) Repe•tTwo Repeat the two letters in an ex- clamation you might use when you make an unpleasant discovery, and get a laugh. (See Amwer Box) Rlddle Me This When are you sure to have music in your sole? (See Anawer Box) Minus One From a five-letter word tor an im- portant happening, take away the first letter and get a small opening. (See Am1<1n-Box) (See Amwer Box) Siiiy? If a friend tells you that he won't touch a certain thing with a nine- foot pole, what should you do? (See AMwer Box) Answer Box '(edv~·S) -edv~a3 :n amwN nox ·ofuvg :amwN·•~PIH 'J{Venbs ivql seoqs • U9t{M : IJJ\(J, ew arPPJll 'lueA--lUeA3 :auo sn"!w 1 vH pra-i va :o"\L indeu ·e1od lOOJ-Ol '8 W!l{ pU'BH :.&ms let's. Drow Animals loolr Attn Dcwidow /ta ptlbli•Md Avtulr.O. of f a•cinating drowi1lg Le••c»u for childre11 in n deligAtfull11 stimulating boolt. Tn ut of tlwiuanda •old at l t.50 i>i hard cover. For i,iour cow i?t. •oft cover, •.nd onli,i II pliu t 5t f or •hipping to "Let'• Drow AnitlUlla," D•pt. tOtl, .4500 NW 135th St., Miami, Flo. 3305.4. LIKE HAVING A RACE TRACK AT HOME* ENJOY ALL THE THRILLS OF REAL 3 FREE PHOTOS YOURS TO KEEPI A racing fan's dream ... three 8 x 10 photos of wor1d· famous Jockey Eddie Arcaro up on such racing champions as Kelso, Citation. and Whir1away. SATISfACTI) GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK WIN ·PLACE & SKOW All on this 5-foot long racing boara ... Let EDDIE ARCARO show you with his own game RIDERS UP Eddie Arurt w11ttad Ulls p111 to be accurate in every detail. That's why RIDERS UP has weights, odds, payoffs, claiming racesi dead heals! entries and even a daily double. Everything from " furlong spr nts to 2 mile classics. AIY nu•lltr can play RIDERS UP. Players may wager on the same horse or on several for win, place and show. Tlltrt art different IJIYOffs and odds for every horse in the race. The huge 5-foot playing board has a built-in dice tray, dice cup, daily double cards and tickets, play money, ten different race pards, starting gate, card holder and sturdy mounts with colorful jockeys. Eddie Arcart's RIDUS "' belongs in the winners circle and it definite!~ deserves a Gold Cup Award. D11't ret "11l1t•tr'. Order your RIDERS UP set today. Racina excitement right in your own clubhouse tor only $15.00. ~------------------------, lllASTIJt.CltAFT. ~end lel'Ylae,., ....,., U.lfw 149 F1fth Avenue, H-Yott!, H.Y. 10010 \ Pleas• Hnd 1ames e $15.00 plus $1.00 for poatap and handlln1 for Heh 1ama plus appllcable .. , .. tax (6" for NYC ,..!dent.). Enclosed la check or money order In the amount of$ _____ _ I I I I I I I I I Cttr I l n. I '---------------------~--/ i I : ,I I I . I II ,: I 1! •' I [ You c.n make thousands of extra dollars sr..tina now, without imes1inc 1-Ind without tnini.!'.(_ or experience. PART TIME, FULL TIME, M'f TIM£! AU you do is show buslaess people and friends how to save blc money on business ens, let· terttelds, etMlopes, Siies books, and printed forms. Simply write order and collect cash commisstonS ON THE SPOT. m1mH•"" 1111 -nat We send you our bi& "Quick.Cash" kit but1ing with exclti111 ~pies of top- selllng money-makers It lowest prices anywhere. Pl.US 100 business cards with your own name, address and phone. All FREE!.Mall coupon"°"'· IUfltUl PllU Oeot. 005, Nonll c lliaco, 111. 60084 . "'· le....... -·-utitlf ... us6..n ,--------------------~ IUTlMA&. PIUS Ckpt. 005, lltrtll Clli~ Ill. 60054 Start 1111 1111111edi1telr. 111111 siM lltOlleJ· 1111lilW outfit flt££! POSTPAID! lllCllldt htt l>vliness c1rda. (Clrtfullr llafllll print 10 ,_ CM'ds •ill De p11nttd conect11.I Print lf-'-------- Addru,.._ _______ _ Cit1~---StllL• ---Jllp..p -- ~NO-A&L--t c;ooo OfflY llf CONTIN£WTAL U.S.A. t L--------------------~ J ump1n1 on • ch1ir won't help. But d-CON MOU SC· PRU FE will! M OUSE-PRUF"E Is t he 1m11in1 mouse killer th1t's ... MOST EFFECTIVE . . hu twice as much mouse-lulfinc ine red.- ent es othe< leadina brtnds. And lhis iftare- dtent Is reoornmended by lhe U.S. GoYemmenL Cl.EAN~AHDEASIEST ,.,_,,~...___. ..• Just pull tab, bait feeds 1utom1Hc.lly. SAFE ... contains no vio- lent PO•SDns ... when used (Ii~=!.} H directed1 safe around -- chioUTSiW ALL f't.9 OTBDStWBOO:D - PlllmMS A FAIULY AFFAIR Fldieting, lossof aleepand a tormentr in,c Itch are often telltale 1irn11 of Pin-Worme ... ~ly parult.ee that medical expeTtAI say infest 1 out of every 3 penonaexamined. Entire fam- lliee may be victina and not know it. To set rid of Pin-Wormt1, they muet. be ldlled In the larre inu.tine where they Hvund multiply. That'uxactly what Jayne'11 P-W tableta do ... and here's how they do it: Firat-a .. ientiflc coatina carrleit tbe tableta into the bowel.I before they diMolve. T hen-Jayne'• mod-em, medically-approved incredient (OM rlcht to worlc-killa Pin-Worrna quickly, euily. Aelr f10i" plMrl'IWt:Ut. Don't take chancee with d.anrer- ous, hirhly contaaioWI Pln-Wonna which Infect entire lam.Ille.. Oet cen- ulne Jayne'11 P-W VermiCuce ... 1mall, euy-t~take tablet.t ... special .tu. for children and adult&. rtfOTO CREDITS ~1 Dofl W. Jo"", 'oee 21 NIC. ~ 4 a. 51 Wide World. ~ 12 & 131 Dofl w. Jo,,.., 'oee 151 "'ICf 'John fno•'-Od. - FAMILY WEEKLY COOKBOOK MELANIE DE PROFI' Food Editor Curried 1hrimp seried o'f1er tocuted raiain bread i1 delicioua with Quick Rauin Reluh, 1hredckd coconut, an.cl toa.t1ted alivered a-Imondi. • Three .. vory dial.tea ••. all worthy of \op billing ••• Shrimp Cuny and Spinat'h Gn0ttbl rating hi«b for their ea.e of preparation (new bridee take noter) and Deviled Ham Soaftle Roll reeeiving top honors for epiearean company fa re ( b111 with more inl'olvement of preparation). Shrimp Curry on Raisin Toast S tah\Hpoou ktter or aargari.De 1 teupooa carry powcltt 2 tahlnpoou bely dtopped l1'ff:ft oaioa with topa ~ cap bely dtop_pecl celery 2 caps dnelaed cooked ahri•p 2 to S tahletlpoou loar 2 caps milk 1 lnapoon leaoa J..- 1 teaspoon eeuoned aalt Yt teaspoon groud ginger ~ teaapooa prlic powder 12 alien rai.ein hread, toaated Qujc:k Raiaia ReU.• I. Melt butter or margarine with curry powder in a saucepan. Mix in onion, celery, and sbrimp. Cook, stir- ring occasionally, 2 to 3 min., or until vegetables are soft. Blend in ftour and heat until bubbly. Gradu- ally add milk, stirring constantly. Bring· to boiling; stir and cook 1 to 2 min. Remove from beat; mix in lemon juice and a blend of dry seasonings. Keep the shrimp curry hot until ready to serve. 2. Put 1 slice of toast in each of 6 individual serving dishes. Cover with hot shrimp curry. Cut remain- ing toast into triangles and place around edge of curry. Top each with a spoonful of raisin reJisb. 6 aerving1 Quick Raisin Relish 1 Yi capa dark or golden Nedlea raialu % tableepoon.e 'riaegar % cop packed broWB aagar l tableapoou iMtaat saineed onion 1 cu (8Y1 oa.) CTU.Bhed pine- apple (aadl'aiaed) l. Combine all ingredients in a saucepan. Cook over low heat 10 min., stirring occasionally. 2. Cool and store in covered jar in refrigerator. About % cup& 10 Famil'll Wuklv. Jam&arJI ~. 1110 Spinach Gnocchi 1 ~ CGP9 •ilk 1 tablespoon batter or •argarine % teupoon aalt Few vaiu grooad aatmq- % cup craaalu what cereal Yi cap weD-draiaed cooked chopped 11pinadt 1 egg, well beaten l tableepoon chopped ollio-. lightly browned in 1 teaspoon butter or margarine 1 ~ cupe shredded Swiu dlff8e % egga, well beaten % cap .Uk 1 tahleapooa ftoar 1 teupoon ult Few graiu IJOUM .. tmeg 1. Bring first 4 ingredients to boil- inJ in a saucepan. Gradually add the cereal, stirring constantly over low heat until mixture thickens. ;. Stir in the spinach, egg, cooked onion, and 1 cup cheese; blend well. Set aside to cool slightly. 3. Drop mixture by tablespoonfuls close together in a well-greased, shallow 9-in. baking pan or cas- ~ serole. Sprinkle some of the remain- ing cheese over each mound. 4. For topping, combine eggs and remaining 4 ingredients, blending well. Pour ove r the spinach mounds. 5. Bake at 850°F. for 35 to 40 min., or until golden brown on top. Serve at once. \ -' to 6 servinga Deviled Ham Sonme Roll % cap hatter or margarine Ya cup all-purPQM flour Y! teupoon aalt % cape •ilk 'enyolb 4 egg whites IH•iled Baa 'a' Mukroom Filling (aee recipe) Saace (8ee recipe) 1. Grease and ftour a 151hx10~x 1-in. jelly-roll pan. Set aside. 2. Blend flour and salt into bot but- ter or margarine in a saucepan. Add milk graduaJly while stirring; bring to boiling and boil 1 to 2 min. 3. Beat egg yolks until very thick. Beat in sauce a small amount at a time ; cool. 4. Beat egg whites until stiff, not dry, peaks are formed. 5. Gently spread eg~ yolk mixture over the beaten egg whites. Care- fully fold togther until just blended. Turn the souffle mixture into the pan and spread evenly. 6. Bake at 325°'F. 50 to 55 min .. or until golden brown. Loosen edges of souffie and invert onto a sheet of aluminum foil on a large wire rack. Spread with Filling. <rllntly roll lengthwise and wrap in foil; al- low to stand 10 min. 7. To serve, remove roll from foil, place on a warm serving platter, and surround with watercress. Ac- company with a bowl of the sauce. About 1! .ervingB Deviled Ham 'n' Mushroom Filling l tablespoon batter or margarine 1 can (8 oz.) muhrwm .u .. and pieces, drained. or Yi lb. fresh muabrooaa, c.bopped % can11 <•Yi os. each) de•iled ham Yi cup dairy aoar cream 2 tablespoons lemon Juice % cup chopped chives 1. Add the mushrooms to hot butter or margarine in a skillet and cook l'i min., or until mushrooms are light- ly browned ; stir occasionally. 2. Blend a mixture of the deviled ham and remaining ingredients with the mushrooms. ! cup8 filli1'g Sauce: Empty 1 pkg. mushroom 1Tavy mix into a saucepan. Gradu- ally add 1 cup cold water stirring until smooth. Bring to boiling over low beat and simmer 5 to 7 min. or until thickened. Blend in 1h cup dairy sour cream and heat thor- oughly. About 11h cups le. a >t :I. .e 1r ], r, :- r !C i l 7 l r r r -. As your Introduction, choose 8-TRACK CARI RIDGES ~~~19::2 If you Join now, and acree to purchaM u few .. four additional airtrtdps durtna the c:omln1 year, from the more ~n &00 to be off9nd THAT'S RIGHTI You may have any 3 of the best·selllng 8-track cartridges shown here-All 3 for only $1.001 That's the fabulous beraaln the Columbia Stereo Tape Cartridge Service Is offering to new membe11 who join and agree to purchase as few as four additional selec· tlons in the coming year. Have you ever heard of a better buy In B·track cartridges-anywhere? As a m.mber you will receive, every four weeks, • co~ of the Service's buying guide. Each Issue contains scores of different carttld1es to choose from-the best· sellers from over 50 different labels! If you want only the regular selection of your music.al interest, )'OU need do nothing-It will be shipped to you automatically. Or you may order any of the other car· tridges offered ... or take no cartridge at all ... just by returning the convenient selection card by the date spec· lfled. What's more, from time to time the Service will offer some special cartridges which you may reject by returning the special dated form provided ... or accept by doing nothing. YOUR OWN CHARGE ACCOUNT. UP<>n enrollment, the Service will open a chars• account In your name. You pay for your cartridges only after you've received them- and are enjoyin1 them. They will be malled and billed to you at the rqular Service priee of $6.98 (Clutlcal and occasional special cartridget somewhat hl1her). plus a mailing and handling charge. ' YOU GET FREE CARTRIDGES! Once you've completed your enrollment agreement, you'll 1et a carttidl• of your cholca FREE for every two cartridges you buy! That's like 1ettln1 a 33~% discount on all the 8-track cartridges you want ... for as lon1 as yqu wantl Fiii In and mall the coupon today! COLUMBIA STEREO TAPE CARTRIDGE SERVICE !•rre Haute, lftd&Me 47IOI ,__did•llt•l&t•1:1w511ttn1g.m4.u• Columbia ShtNO Tape Cartrlclee Service TerN Haute, Indiana 47801 Pl ... enJ'Oll me u a member of.-th• Sentce. I'T• lnd.lca\ed below the S cartrldpe I wlab to recelH tor •1.00, plua ~ and bancWna. I acne to purcbue tour mon Mleo-~~cter ~:::.re: ~~~:n~i ID&)' cancel fD7 membenblp aD7 Um•~. U I oon-ttnue, I am to -in an 1-&ncllt car\ddp of my cbotoe PRD tor nerr iwo addlUonal 181ectk>na l ~. SIND Ml THISI J CAITalDGll (fll ift '"'flllten INlow) I I My main muslc:al Interest 11 (chedl one box only): 0 EasJ LlttHI• 0 Yt1• St•a 0 C.Htry IUta DP------ L -- --- ---- - - - - -----~2~--~ - [ I Science Finds Way To Shrink Painful Hemorr/loids And Promptly Stop The Itching, Relieve Pain In Most Cases. A scientific research institute has discovered a medication with the ability, in moat cases- to promptly stop burning itch and actually shrink hemor- rhoids. . In one hemorrhoid case after .another very striking improve- ment was reported by doctors who conducted the testa. Pain and itching were promptly re- lieved. And while gently reliev- ing pain, actual reduction (shrinkage) took place. Testa conducted on hundreds of patienta by doctore in New No Nagging Backache Means a Good Night'sSleep Naab" be.cli.ack bftdache Hd mu. cu.lar aehft and pa Ina may -on with o•er .. •ntlon. emotional upa•l• or noer.rday at._ and llra!JI. Ir l.bla nq-~ badtacbe. with rwU.-. a.lftpa- nlchta. la wearlns you <:>at. maklq you mi,e1'11ble and Irritable. don't welt try Doan'• PD.It -an anals•lc. a pain ,.... IWvcr. Doan'• paln-N>lk-vins action on naftln• backache I• often 0-an.aw•r. Get Doan'• Pilla -not a babit.formlns clrus but a weU-lrnoW11 etandard ~· t'dr UMd •~fulb' by mWiona for Oftr 70 yan.. See If I.My don't brlas )'OU the Min• ••lcotne relief. For C'OD· YetWnee. alwa,. bll)' Doan'• i.,... alM. r ~MAPS-, : 12coloral 12 sq:tt.I : I 0 UlllW States SUI• I I 0 V......s.112 I I 0 W.W Mtn • 1 0 Older $place M11u : a.di bole". 8Md ontr $1 for Md\ I ,... cw ii far .n " Reblrn Mtlr. ed. I MAPS. .,..... ,024 I 4800 N.W. ~ ............. Ple. I I ,..... I I M1raa I L cttJ st.ta ZJ11---------------' York City, in Washington, D.C. and at a Midweat Medical Cen- ter proved this so. And it was all done without narcotics or stinging astringents of any kind. The secret is Prepa.ra.tioJLH• There is no other formula for the treatment of hemorrhoida like it! PreparatioJl Kalso lubricates, soothes irritated ti.asues and helpe prevent fur- ther infection. Preparation H comes in ointment or sup- pository form. No prescription is needed. LARGEST SELECTION c!f tmy. all·in·the-ear, be· , • htnd the ear. eyeglass , .: and pocket models. FREE HOME TRIAL. No obligation. Money bxk guarantee. No down payment. Easy terms. No salesmen or dealers Order direct and save 65%. Wirte for free catalog. PRESTIGE. Oept. o UiO • Box 10947, Houston, Tex. 77018. T11aaau11• f Ind buned .,W. lllvew, cm..~ s,._,.,....,.. ..... .. ... '='.:;·~-~· ... LC0 ~11r. I COMPUTER MATE IS NOT I A DATING GAME \Ille successfully f11ld partoefs for I INlrtmonv •lld compatible lriend5hiPS. 1 All AGES -ENTIRE U.S.A. At>5olutely conltdenlial (give 11el. Write tor free bl'ochure alld QuesbonNllre I Ow li&Mtlc .,.m1111~ _..co_a JIOU. COMPUTER MATE ~ -~.131 I East 42 St .• New Yorll. N. Y. 10017 I When y IU Order By Mail Fr111 F•ily Weekly ••• Denture Invention .. ~..: For People With u uppen" and .. Lowers" For the first time, science now oft'ens a unique plL'ltic cream that holds false teeth-both ''uppers" and "lowers" -as they've never been held before. It forms an elL'!tic membrane that nctuall11 hol<h ckn- htru to mo1tllt a1td gMm &Mrfcuu ! It's FncooENT-a revolutionary discovery for daily home use. So different it's protected by U. S. Patent /3,008,988. F1xooENT not only holds den- tures firmer, but tt holds them more comfortably, t oo. It's so elastic you may bite harder, chew better, eat more naturally. You may even eat a nd enjoy apples, 11teak, and com-on-the-cob again. The11pecial pencil-point dispenser lets you put FIXODENT exactly where it's needed. Resists oozing over and garrina. Just one application may last round-the-clock. Dentures that ftt are esselitial to health. See your dentist regularly. Get easy-to-use FIXODENT Denture Adhesive Cream at all drug counters. -+ ':Jlj--ll'l•ll.J• BalloOning-Thrills Propane bumera ~k up air, 1t.e4t it, 4M 8eft.d it into tlflUm ba.U.o<m, 40-feet wide. THERE ARE 250 licensed balloon- ists in this country· at last count, which hardly makes bal- looning a "booming" sport. But just wait, say the balloonists- this is the sport that's going t.o lift America off its feet. Darrell Sonnicksen of Menlo Park, Calif., or example, drifts over the spectacular enery of the San Francisc9 Bay area. e pointa out freighters plying the exotic out.es to the Far East, the graceful span the Golden Gate Bridge, the lovely land- s, the crowded suburbs. There is no jet r r· no sense of fearful speed: in- stead,a fee 1 of euphoria-a freedom of spirit and body. "And you wonder why we think bal- looning is going to be a big sport?" Darrell asks rhetorically. "You are as free as a bird up here. You go where the winda blow, with the clouds." Sonnicksen claims flying a balloon is easier than driving a car. "It's merely a matter of regulating the propane burners that suck up the air, heat it, and send it into the bag, which then rises due to the colder air surrounding it. To ascend or descend, you merely tum the valve up or turn it down." Sonnicksen is just one of a growing number of weekend ftyers who is bent on reviving the t e:.-year-old sport. And although most "balloonatics," as they wryly refer to themselves, live in Southern Cali- fornia, there are enthusiast11 all over the country. Balloon clubs have sprung up in Akron, Ohio; Houston, Tens; and Swarth- II Famil11 W••kl11, JaJ&uar11 .6, 19'10 This cen turies-old more, Pa. In Tolland, Conn., t here's even a school to teach students the fine tech- niques of pilot ing balloons. For sport, balloons filled with hot air have replaced the old, more expensive ones filled with such gases as hydrogen. Heated by propane-gas buniers, the nylon balloons and gondolas range in price from $3,600 to $11,000. Flyers justify the crafta' high cost with the fact that they are relatively cheap to operate. One pilot of a three- paaaenger balloon says he gets aq hour of flying time for approximately SO cents worth of gas. And in the tradition of fun- loving sportsmen, the balloonists choose gaily decorated bags, some with murals painted on the sides. 6-ttlng wind of a trend in sport bal- loon ing, the Federal Aviation Agency set new standards for licenses last year. The rigid rules compel an ..applicant · to make 10 ascents, one of which m ust be to an altitude of 10,000 fee!, and they must pass a test on meteorology and navigation. Perfect weather for ballooning requires little wind. If the wind is over 12 miles an hour, it is impossible to inflate the bal- loon. Once aboard in the wicker basket under a hot-air balloon. the navigator turns on a gas burner for about 10 seconds. The 32,000 cubic-foot-round balloon quickly in- flates and pops into the air. The craft is guided up and down by turning the burner on and off accordingly. The di'?'ection the balloon goes, of course, depends on shifts of wind. One danger balloonists must avert is flying near power lines or towering tv antennas. They folJow the good rule, "Never fly over any terraln you wouldn't want to land in." Landing a balloon takes skill, experi- ence, and the judgment of a professional pilot. The burner is turned otf, and the balloon drops quickly but smoothly. Ap- proximately 20 feet from the ground, the En.tlw.ai&ta get ready for a balloon ral.ly- a competition. in flight and I.anding akiU•. J s and Serenity High in the Sky >ld pastime may be "the sport of tomorrow" because you can soar with the wind, drift with the clouds By JIM SCOTI BaUOOfliat. experience a tra?tquilit11 in flight jet~ge travelera nevn-ncount#. pilot gives a quick blaat of beat in order to steady the craft and to cuahion the landing. Then he pulla a line opening the rip panel at the top of the bag, and the bal- loon begins to deftate. It hits the ground with a alight bump. The deflated nylon bag crumbles into a colorful heap away from the basket, but it can be readied for another flight simply by blowing • it up again. The riae in ballooning interest came quickly, note.9 the F .AA. Recently there were more than 125 hot-air balloons regiltered, a marked increaae from the 75 regiatend just four years ago. One whole family from Albany, N.Y., for example, got involved in bal- looning, and all went to school to learn ita fine arts. After a two-month course, Gilbert Lewis bought a balloon for $5,000 and he, his wife, and two daugh- ters, ro up, up, and away on weekends. Balloonists have banded together in clubs and hold rallies and races as do auto enthusluta. Reno, Nev., is ab~ bed for balloon competitions, for in- stance, with the sportsmen tTying for records in distance and in accuracy of pinpoint JandJnp. There's no doubt about the fact that balloons have come a long way in both design and interest since 1782, when two brothers not iced in their Paris kitch- en that a paper bag ascended in the hot air over their stove. They adapted the idea to soar with the clouds. And now-belatedly but enthusiaatically- ao are hundreds of Americans. • Fw Af8ht Enthvslasbl Y °" co" ordn ott 8W' ~ 11 .. pictorial 1'U- t<W11, "Tliv Wa. Air Traw•r'-fill•d toitA 4W0114Mtieol f oou ou illutnltiou from potner.d /108 l>a11• to today• j•t h~t 14 off tM fJ'lbUd . ..-'• pri« of ll J .95. Moil $7.15 Co "Air Tra11•r' 5()()()(), D•pt. 6'>11, '500 N .W . 136t1' St., Miami, F'la. '. . Worlc With Lovely Flowers Lilce These W.1111 C8llll ,, .. ........ ...,..,,, "",.."""Alt -.. l .. ......... ., .. ,..,,.. .. ...... c.w.1 .......... .. ...., flf ,..,.. ......... ,... .... .-t_.... .. .. ...................... ... ....,. .......... .., ... ... ,.. ..... , .... ......., ..................... TN ,_, wt"-t ,_, ...,.. ..................... ..... ....._, ... ,, , u............-....... ~ ...... c..... Cash In On Rower Power ••. m.1111111 MM'WIMJ., FloNI M1 61""-'t #1'1: , .............. . .•.. ....,. ............. ... .... cm! .. ........ . ~ .. ... . ... -. - ' I I I l I t I t 1 t 1 T 8111"'1 i1 ju11 OM o/ tltr d~ligltt/.U d~1'6111 /rom °"'All Ottasioff "Sporkliffl P~11·· Assortmrttt ~ Mail Coupon Today for W e•n send you FREE 80 page Catalogue plus FREE Album of Personalized Christmas Cards plus fast-selling boxes of Greeting Cards on approval! ) .FREE CHEERFUL CATALOGUE This beautiful FREE 48-paae catalogue illustrates over 300 attractive items in full color from the 1970 Cheerful line: excluaive areeting cards, stationery, toys, aifU and household items-all thinp your friends will love to buy ... espe· cially when Cheerful offers such great values. The CHEERFUL PLAN shows you how you can make substantial profits on every sale. And it's so c.asy ... so simple! Send for it now. MAIL COUPON-ENVELOPE NOWI c ...... Dettetll L'--._, ('••te w T ... ) -4 Mell. Ne ,., .... "-4MI ----~-,........ _,,:;;.__ ___ _ This little bunn can help you ma e EXTRA MONEY every day· with CHBBBFTJL Greeting Cards & Gifts Because he's one of the many charming new designs in the 1970 Cheerful line of all-occasion greeting cards for birthdays, anniver- saries, get-well, etc. Cheerful bas over 300 money-making items to help you make easy extra money including cards, notes, stationery, gih wraps, toys, household items and gifts from all over the· world. You'll be amazed how easy it is and what fun you'll have making the extra money you want the easy Cheerful way. - ' ENTERTAINMENT .... )UDY CARNE: She's a Rich Hippy-- But Is ·she Happy? ONE EVENING, Judy Came and her boy friend, photographer Dean Goodhill, ·were having din- ner in a Los Angeles restaurant. Another patron, who recoani.zed her aa the "sock-it-to-me" girl on tv's "Laugb- ln," nudged his friend and aaid, "Now /'U sock it to her!" Without warning, be walked over to Judy and dumped a dst- fu) of bread crumbs over her bead. "I was very nice about it because I hfte ecenea," Judy told me later, ''but the next guy who tries to sock it to me is going to get it! For three years they socked it to me on the show. I've been dropped through trap doors, doused with water, waJloped by mall eta, and for the same three yean5, people otf stage socked it to me as well. I've had it with that character! "It used only 30 percent of m~nd I've got a Jot more to offer than that. So I uked ont of my contract." • Jvcfy does not look on her yea~ with NBC with regret, except for the fact that once the show caught on, she felt she shou ld have gotten more money. "Let's face it. 1 needed a successful show. 'Laugb- Jn' gave me the exposure I needed, even if my part was one-dimensional." Now Judy's concentrating on tv spe- cials, stage appearance8 in Florida and Lu Vegas resorts, and a new ftlm. "All the Right Noises." She like.s appearing in dif- ferent media and in a variety of roles. To the devoted audiences· of "Laugb- ln," Judy (bom Joyce BotterilJ in North- ampton, England) may seem like an over- night succesa. Actually, she has been in show business since she was six, when her parent8 realized she was talented and gave her singing and dancing lessons. "In tboee childhood days, my life was 90-percent theater and 10-percent school," recalls Judy, who feels that in the long run it ilJ-prepared her to face life. ''The show-biz training was fab, but it was like you've been exactly nowhere. You can sing, act, do 20 dialects-but you can't under- stand words people say. You miss the nec- eaaities .of an education, and you have no tools to deal with everyday life." Whlle ahe, at SO, is probably one of the most versatile of actresses, she is also one of the few who is thoroughly identified with the Now Generation. Judy refers to herself as a "rich hippy." "I believe in free love, anti-war, doing your own thing-I am a free thinker. My only shortcoming is that I don't believe work is a dirb' word at all." "I can remember bleak times," she adds. "I've been broke in England and America, Jtul'V CarM aim.t for 0'4m<w01UI image and BAUM the slapatick. too. It's better in A!nerica-the au~ shines." She admits she has never outgrown he·r poor-girl background. "1 am still impressed by limousines and aJl the ach.lag, although I am not fascinated by the usual things girls buy when they first get a lot of money. I don't believe in furs and dia- monds. I put my money into antiques and stereo equipmeqt." The latter ia the influence of boy friend Dean Goodhill, five yea?15 her junior. The two met when Goodhill was taking still photos of Judy on "Laugh-In." He clicked the abutter just as a pie smacked in her face. ''Even then she looked beautiful,'' he recalled, "and I told her so." Although a few montha ago J udy an- nounced that she would marry Dean, she has since changed her mind. And not just because her first marriage to actor Burt Reynolds ended in divorce. "My marriage hurt me terribly," Judy admita readily. " I don't see any reason for marriage right now. If I wanted a family now, it would be ditrerent." \ Although Judy bas the reputation for being outspoken and sometimes tough, she actually is very vulnerable. "I always have been. But I don't get hurt as easily as I used to. I've been hurt in business, in my marriage, by friends who have taken ad- vantage of me. But now I know who 1 am, and that's a big breakthrough." Judy conaider8 herself a true child of today, of the Now Generation. She was poorer and just beginning when I dnt met her, shortly after she t\rst came to this country. She since bas become more affluent---as sbe puts it "a rich hippy." But not a happy one, I feel. -PEER J. OPPENHEIMER this QUICK ancl EASY WAYI ART OPENS MANY NEW CAREERS Ewrycmo has Ill• own priv11e re.uoas fOf' dr:w:lopina hls ability lo an-Jelf-cq>ra.Uoe, ~luatioa, jua plain fun -but then are allo a multitude ol dillerent. fMcinatin1 carurs ~ to the telf•trai.ncd utiu. For rumple: mapzlDc i!Mlratioo.. tcll:visioo an. ad¥atilia1 layout. C'UtOO.htg. fuhloo daip. dcpenmcnt llOtt '"-ll'Chilee· 1\lnl 111, poster an, lmmlls. pectaae dclian. ponrai11 and land- -pc an. Artisb hmiauic prcpma you '°' Ill lhae and 1 numba of otbtrs. Artisu lmntute svpplics you with tM buk toolt and tcdlniquel illdlldin1 oUI. '°'**· pesteb. -tcrcolon. c:harcoel, pen and ink. ------.... -~ ..... lil 1J.:1 r: MnSft M11T\lft ~~----1621 £at MtOowell "* lffO "'-I•. ArllOlll 15006 ------------ ' IUSH DfT AILS • ,_ e111t " -mm & ,. .. ,. .... All_....,..,_.._.,. ""' ...w.., 11., 111111t......... a,.__ __________ _ I L MEI-WO MEI-COUPLES MOTEL CAREERS AVAILABLE Wo.lld you lib • new ucitinf car.., in the A powi"I motet indmtry 1 Uniwwut Motel Sdtoot• un tniin you f« • ltintuletint. weH· PllYt"I PCl'itklft •Mo• ~. Alliltent il;iiili ~"· Ca.ic1, Houtelc....-. end Host· ...,. -. Meet f-...,.. '"--int ~; .,..., ;t you went to; join in tociel ectivitift.; W.. In.......,., .,nou...._. ~t uwatty fumithed. Aee no Mn-'-- -Writy .,.~. Trein et hCNM In yow....,.. time fottowed by two '"8kt R..Wettt Tr_... • ei1her of our two mot111 ... aLUE SEAS, MIAMI aEACH. FLORIDA« SAVOY ,LAS VEGAS. NEVADA. K .. ,,,...._ .. .W tTein et ho.-utttit ...ty to IWhdt dwOUlh our euelteftt ........,,..., ....._. F« FREE infonNtion fill out _. ....w eoupon .....,, , ------UNiViwLMi>iiLiCHOOLi"'o;t:""Fw----- -I 1801 N.W. 7 Street I Mleml, Florida 33125 I Piute Prlnt I Name ----------------AH __ _ f Add~u --------------------~ I CUy Stale Zip ---- Phone VIOBIN ~~:~r Oil , gives Vigor More Stamina Endurance Less Heart Stress •Don •1 beliere it 1 You WILL when you read FIH Bulletin # 15 18 yeara res.arch World hpert P'hytical fitneu HPUSI SUBSTITUTES -Only Violin Oii prov•d •ffHtlv•. VIOBIN, Y··· . · · · .· · At Any Time Don'' be eo aLraJd that )'OUr falM teeth wUJ come looee or drop Jun•' the wrong ume. For more aecurtty and more comfon. aprlnllle famoua PASTU'IH Dent.Ure Adhe•iY• Pow· der on your pla\98. PMID'JH hold• denturff ftrmer longer. Mak• eating euler. PABTErl'H 11 allta· llt•f'--won't eour under denture.. No rummJ. gooey, put.y tut.. Den· turee \h&Ult are -.eO\lal to bealtb. 8ft ~ur dent.lit. fttCU)arty. Get PA8l IH at all druK counwre. GITTING UP NIGHTS =:~ANY Common K ldne)' or Bladder lrrlln-llons mnke mon~· men end women h~t·I Lt'nae and nf!'rvoua rr11m frequent burnlnic or ltc.hlntc urination nll(ht and day . Sttondarlly. vou mav ION •ll'<'P and havf!' Hf!'adac-hl', Boc'kac:he and fffl 'Older. tired. depr~At'd. In IUl"h l'MeS. CYSTt;X u1u11lly hrl nita rcfa,ln(C l'tlmfort by c."1.ltbln(C lrrltn1- ln1C $:erms In acid urine and Qulc'kl)I t'Ulln.: pnln.G<'I CYST EX nt dru1oclsl• •- ' I ~ ( 1 I I I ,.r I t. Let us send you, for the token price of only $1 each, three books that have served as comentones in many a 6ne home library. The complete wom of Shakespeare This beautiful 1300-page vol- wne contains every word Shakespeare ever wrote. All 3 7 of bis plays. All of his comedies, tragedies and historical dramas including Halnlet, Romeo and Juliet, Macbeth, etc. Also all of his poc.ms and sonnets. The works of Kipling Actually eight books in one. A • complete novel and 139 stories, ballads and verses loved the world over . . . including Fuzzy-Wuzzy,Mandalay, Gunga Qin, The Phantom Rickshaw and others. The works of De Maupuwit 128 matchless tales by the great- est master of the short story the world has ever known. Every story complete and unexpurgated. Includes The Diamond Necklace, A Piece of String, The Will. Each volume is clothed in a handsomely-tooled binding of antique ecru that has both the elegant look and feel of leather, a binding that should last a lifetime. The page tops of every -volume have been gilded. And, as a delightful added touch, each book has a permanently attached page marker of crimson ribbon. You will enjoy reading these books, just as millions before you have. Your friends will admire them, perhaps even envy you for owning them. And your children will gain a real advantage with books like these always close at hand. Why do we offer you three books of this calibre for only $1 each? W e simply want to introduce you to our new Golden Giants Series. We think you will be impressed with the books we send you. And we hope you will want to own others in the Series, as they become available. They will include: Hugo. 36 complete works in- cluding Huncnback of N otte Dame, A Woman of the Streets, The Souls, etc. Stevenson. 39 novels, stories, poems. Treasure Island, Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, Kidnapped, etc., all complete. Tolstoi. 27 novels and stories: Anna Karenina, Kreutzer Sonata, The Cos- Regularly $14.67. Now only $1 each. sacks, Love and many more. Ibsen. His daring plays, each absol utely complete, including A Doll's H~use, Ghosts, Hedda Gabler, etc. Doyle. All the best of Sherlock Holmes -The Sign of The Four, Red- Headed League, plus other great works. Poe. 91 tales, poems, essays of this great American writer: Annabel Lee, The Raven, The Gold Bug, Murders in the Rue Morgue, The Black Cat, etc. The full series will also include the works of Cellini, Wilde, Browning, Longfellow, Emerson, Dostoevsky, Byron and many others. Normally, you would expect to pay $10 each or more for deluxe editions of books like these. But through our direct·t~ the-public method of book distribution (which we have specialized in for over 30 years) we are able to make these volumes available to you for only $4.89 each, plus few cents postage. Send no money now. Simply mail the coupon to get your 6rst three volumes for only $I each and to reserve the privilege of examining future volumes as they come from the press. You will receive advance descrip- tion of all upcoming volumes. You may reject any books before or after you receive them. And you may cancel your reserva· tion any time you wish. Black's Readers Service, Roslyn, New York 11576. ~-----------------------------------------------------~ I I I I I l I I I O·EC : Blacli's Readers Service · ROSLYN, NEW YORK 11576 I I : i't... ttarft IA IDJ MlllCI the banchomrlr bound """-ol the oew : • Golden Gianis Serio. Send -11 once the 6tll thtte. uua.tna..u. llll'LmO 1 : ud • M.UPA&&AWT. I c:ndoec no .-.cy in odwnu. A wuk efta recd""'c my : ! boob. I will nhcr ftNnl tMni and -nocJ,;,,c. °' '-11 tbmi for the special : : inrroclaaory prier ol only $1 nd.. plw • few crnu inaiU"I cha,.a. • Tbm: as they •rr printed, I will -enritlcd to ruei1'1t .ddidonal oolwnn : on appl0¥'a). for ..,ty $-4 ~ eKh, p1.,. • fr# ttnU nw1lna cba,.a. 1 am to 1 Rafwe .dnnce "-riptloru of future ooiu1ftn. I _, reject ony books I.Jore : ot Jut I ttai1'e tJ-. And I _.,can«! my .-mrion 01 any 0-. (BooL ! shipped In v ...... only). : ' ;;t~~~~~~~-,-..--..,,--......,...~~~~~~-·: -~ ( j)kUC print jil.;ftJY) I ............ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~: I : : I Q'TT lSTe za I I I L--------·-····--··----------·-···••··-···-··-··---~~.?_J __ , ... -·--· COSTA MESA NEWPORT BEACH LAGUNA BEACH HUNTINGTON BEACH FOUNTAIN VAUEY SADDLEBACK .. Prom the Moutbl of. Babel Dept.: A tiQy tau reptJed to bet madla' when uted It lhe knew what tbe three colored Ucbta oa ~ .... ~!fl~~: "Red IDMDI ltop. Green IDUDI p . Yellow meam p a little futer." Rere11 another one about tJdi. Overheard at the Automoblle Show: "Sorry, I didn't mo. yciu had a trailer'' aakl a rather rotund lady u lbe bumped Ink> a man boldlnl onto bla amall dau&bter'I b a D d. =kt· ol Auto Showa, j( you 't lee it, you lhould haft. No doubt Jt ... the molt out-atandina coDecUoa ol ..... btla ever aaembled andel' one root. Al uual, Ford baa an ez. cellent eztUblt and why aat? . . .the areal new 1111 line from Ford WU well fepi BHDled. Llke all auto lbowa, it pve the buyer the opportunity to COJD-' p1re wltbqut drivinl ma 'n y, ~ml.lea. Molt vllltor1 .... tbM "" bu tbe mcJlt Of ........ collectlan of .... mobilel e¥lr oftered to the pUblie. Apln. rant wu ~ ta1t o1 tbe ~-!lea Fw e:ump1e, tbe .,,. ord ~ .... ii Mthlnc llbc,t ol llN8tloa9l. We bav. ahraya been the aU-t1me ........ la ..... and tbil Year: la DO acePticm. J.eedtni our uJ( ol 1J SUt Wl(CllLt for '?O is _. '·~ LTD Country Squire. avalllble in two mod- ela. for Ila PM1e1119"1 or efahl Bath bave the elepnt LTD srme. J:Udeaway ffeedlamps, • ...... doorpte ftldow, full wheel COftl'I -power froat d1* brakes. The Galule 500 CountrJ 8edanl are a1ao avail- able u m or eight ~ modei.. The Custom aod cm. tom ... Ranch .......... value ..Uen who .,_..-a. Iii& ..... a down tQ .......... Both are available • * ~ ,.... modell. With "nmeruate · •••),OD nlOlt modlill,.tfwll pay ,..... ao w ... ••·w ., ~ here at 11151~ THE DAILY P'ILOT. lV W0X. JANUARY S1 1970 DICK WILSON'S ----~ WILS.ON FORD SALES 18255 IEACH ILYD., .. HUNnNGTON BEACH auusua .. ·aazss111a1 .. aaae1a11aaaaaaaaaa1aa11a1121111111~• ... ••••••• L FORD , _______ J see all the g .... newest ones for TORINO BROUGHAM 2-DR. HARDTOP TEST·DRIVE THE ONE OF YOUR CHOICE. TODAY JUST 2 MILES SOUTH OF THE SAN DIEGO FRWY •. ON BEACH BLVD. 18255 BEACH ·BOULEVARD 842-6611 HUNTINGTON BEACH SAUS DtPr. ' ...... 1 .. , ... 7 hrs iimCI OPIN TMS . ..,. M ......... I , .•• ...:s., ....... ' , .•. 592-5511 I I 6:0 6:3 7:( 7: 1 I I SATURDAY JANUARY 3 fV[Nll'llG he unwlttlnfly enters 1 cate where 1 robbe~s In proareu. 0 cm im t..wrtnce .... (C) {60) lhe ampagne Music Mak1111 open 1970 with • rousina rendition of "Hey, Looll Me Over.'' Pamel1 Tedesco, Queen of the P1S1dena Tournament of Roses, and her 6:00 I a' ..... (C) (60) court. plus band leader Woody m """ Herm1n guest. • ~ ir.1.:1 HuntleJ·lrin.i., (C) m Roller Dtrby (C) {60) Bey OM Mi~ Sltow (C) (30) Robert Bombers vs. Northwest Clrdin1ls. Kina auest.s. Bos.i City (C) (30) 1:45 fil) I f!ICIXL I Decade of Frustr. Anluls, Action Hd Adventure tion (30) 43lrth and Death." (30) "Skllna Austria's Alps." t :OO fJ Qi (j) GrMn Ami (C) (30) lntttn1tlon1I P11yfto111t (30) Oliver and Usa Douatas re·enact 6:30 • KNBC Ntwt Conftrenc. (C) the story of a turn·of·the·etntury Melody Rind! (C) (60) showman and his movie-star wife louy Grief (C) (30) Lynn Kel· Tmle. IOH and Irwin C. Watson guest. 0 fil (i) fE NBC S.lllrdlJ Mov· Judd tor the DtfenM (C) (60) le (C) ''N1mu, tht Kiiier Wh.1le" Dr. Hudlon's Seutt Journal (30) (adventure) '66 -Robert Lansing, ; To Saft To•orrow (30) (R) Lee Meriwether, John Anderson. • Edge of Eternity (C) (30) fE Horse Oper1 (60 ) fhn From UNCLE (C) (60) 9:30 I) Qi (1) Pettlc:olt Jundion (C) 7:00 CIS Evenina Newa (C) (30) (30) Meredith MacRae and Greg • KNIC Survey (C) (30) Mullavey (husband and wife) play Anniversary G1me (C) (30) Billie Jo Bradley and her newest • Dt.U. Valley Dayt (C) (30) boyfriend. "The Kin~ of Uvalde Road." D ()1) (}) (E Hollywood Plltct m i lfli•l I David frost Presents (C) (60) BinK Crosby hosts. Guests Frankie Howtrd (C) (60) Satirist lndude opera star Mary Coste. David Frost introduces hi.s choice Sergio Franchi end The Establish· for "Eniitand's funniest comedian." ment. Frankie Howerd . demonstrates his O Ptiilbln's f'IOClle (C) (90) Guests comedic talents that have made are Dom Deluise, Darren McGavin, him the hit of British music hells Patricia Hardy, Harold Robbin.s, and and the star of his own television Hal March. series. m Buell Owens (C) (30) I S.naet Trtils (60) CUiis M11tef Cius (30) 10:00 I a (j) Mennl'C (C) (60} Do-l•MI (30) Ntwa (C) (30) Rlt Pl1fol (C) (30) litl Andtnon (C) (30) Twi!lpt Zone (30) Rnttldt Round1p (60) 7:30 ~ (j) J1~t G111aon (C) (60) • Box cit Medco (90) Special musical s~lute to the months 10:301 Nm (C) (30) Hal Fishman. of the year features ori(inal sonas News (C) (30) Bill Bonds. by ~ Duddy and Jerry Bres!er. Film FestlVll (2 hr) "Way Ou 0 Q3 00 m Andy. Wlllla111s (C) West" and "Bohemian Gir1," with (60) Guw 1re Jimmy Durante, Laurel and Hardy. · Leslie UHams, James Garner and Q) Kitty Wells (C) (30) Judy Clrn!;. G) Passport to Tmel (C) (30) 0 Jeny "tit Show (C) UCLA Al l· • American Gail Goodrich and the 11.00 fJ 0 0 m QJ Ntwa CC> Milwaukee Bucks' Lew Alcindor 0 Bruins BasUtball (C) UCLA vs. guest. Notre Dame. Tape delay of game D @ CI) a> Datin& ;,.. (C) played earlier at Pauley Pavilion. 0 Million $ Movie: "Kid G1lalled" 0 Twlll&frt Zone (musictl) '62-Elvis Prutey, Lola m Country Music Time (C) AlbriKhl Gir Young. 11:15 f) Fabulous 52: (C) "Gunun'a m Wonders of tht WOftd (C) (30) Wallr'" (western) '53-Van Heflin, ;'The Wonders of Quito.'' James Darren. Kathryn Gr1nt. fil) I l!lc!XCI Dtcldt of Frustra-D Saturday Nl&frt Movie: (C) "In Uon (45) ''Beginnings end End· Lowe end War" (drama) '58-Robtrt lngs" 1, the topic for this final Wagner, Dana Wynter. Jeffrey Hunt· evening of specials on the past er. Hope Laniie. Bradford Dillman. decade. • @!) LOI Caudlllos (30) 11.30 0 m .Johnny Canon (C) 7:55 0 Laker& B•etb•ll (C) (2'/2 hr) 0 M~!9: (C) "~1" of tilt Wit· The Llkers meet the Supersonics at derness (drama) 6S-Adam West, Se1ttle (Wash.) Coliseum. m News (C) 1:001 (ii) Cl) G) Netrlywed Ga!H (C) 11:45 m Movft: ''lM Dtwtl ind Denltf USC Basbtball (C) (2 hr) USC Wtbstlf" (drama) '41-Jamn Craig, rojans meet the Florida St1te Sem· Edward Arnold. lnotes. live from the Los Angeles 12:30 IJ Movft: "StrHt of Chana" (dra· i rU Arena. ma) ·42-aur1ess Meredith, Claire HIWlll Calla (C) (30) Trevor. s...-Tllutre (60) m AJl-Nlpt Show (C) "Devil's Nodle de &tr.no (2 hr)· Canyon," ''The Horrible Doctor 1:30 IJ fa (j) MJ Tine Softl (C) Hlchcock." "Hunter of the Un- (30) steve finds himself cast as • known." tree In Dodie's school play, mote 0< Im proYlnii Robbie's point that females are Instinctive menipul1tors. o@m m Ac11111-12 <C> "tog 34 -HOstage." Officer Malloy ls wounded and taken prisoner When 1:00 I) Mme: '"'-Juatef" (drarna) '53 -Kirk Douatas. Miiiy Vitale, Paul Stewert. ONews (C) 1:30 D Ac!Vtntura ,, a. S.llPf'IY <C> oY "1'-•~' "cos-r~ 'tl0._ l Brakes relined on ANY car! FREE LOAN CARS AVAILABLE . FREE SAFETY FLARE JUST DRIVE IN NO MATTER WHAT YOU'RE DRIVING, OR WHERE IT CAME FROM, NEW BRAKE LININGS AND LI NING INSTALLATIONS COST YOU HALF AT THE BIG BRAKE. WE USE ONLY BENDIX LININGS, THE BEST YOU CAN BUYI BETTER THAN FACTORY STANDARDS FOR NEW CARS. GIVE US 90 MINUTES. AND WE'LL PRECISION GRIND THE LININGS TO THE DRUMS, REPACK l'HE WHEEL BEARINGS, REFILL WITH BRAKE FLUID, AND ADJUST BRAKES ON ALL FOUR WHEELS! WE GUARANTEE: OUR BRAKES IN WRITING FOR 30,000 MILES OR 3 YEARS. AND WE ADJUST YOUR BRAKES FREE FOR THE LIFE OF YOUR CAR. CHARGE IT ON BANKAMERICARD, MASTER CHARGE, OR MOST OIL CO MPANY CREDIT CARDS. OR USE OUR OWN FINANCING. 3 BIG LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU COSTA MESA 3181 Harbor Blvd. 549·2259 HUNTINGTON BEACH 1609-1 Beach Blvd. 842·5548 GARDEN GROVE 13388 Brookhurst 638-0911 Open 7 days a weelcl Hours: Mon.-Frl.: 8 A.M.·9 P.M. Sat.: 8 A.M.·5 P.M.; Sun.: lOA.M.·5 P.M. Pa1e 3 ntE DAILY PILOT, TV WEfK. JAHUARV 3, 1970 SUNDAY 8 ai.Mq HIP CC> 8 Mewtt: ..... .._ Croat DlwW' RIOTIAU. CHAMPIONSHIP QAMES {iilsttm) '51 -Kirt DoullU, Vlr· Winners of tht lnter·Dlvislon•I JANUARY 4' "~ () I/ •. '• clnla M.,o. Playoff Games will dtlermlnt loca· dt ...,_ 111111 ... (C) Uon end st1rtln1 time of .aame (fl) (I) ...., nr. brotdclsts. All prorrammln& on i11ii:a (I) hi --... ...., CBS and NBC 1$ sub feet to chan1e. liU'1 ._... If Mlnnetota Vlkin1a defeat LA. All 1t1Uo!11Je1erve the rl1ht to C'l'bl• proer1m- mlng without advance ne- tlce. fm 'nit S1i1rJ (C) Rams on Dec. 27, they will meet t:OO ! ,_... r..tllen (C) the winner of the Dallas Cowboys· NJ fMfftl SerlHll (C) Dr. Cleveland Browns clash (Dec. 28) an Echo!-, C-ntr1I Chr1stlan for the National Football Learue Church, Glendale, 1uelll.. Championship (today), televised ~. OaJ of DilawwJ (C) lift and in color on C8S Network $:15 1:30 1:55 7:00 11lt Cllrtstoplltn (C} ea.,.. Prlfllt from MinnelOl.I. TM llblt Antwtn 50lpll fll'* (C) However, ahould the R1m1 d• = :.~ °('c,(C) w= lalllu11 (C) ~~~":f~~ 'l'c:s 1:,,r;1:11a~ Mr. WlsllbtM (C) r .. ud Jtr7J (C} televised, via tape delay, at Mid· 7:30 ....._ (C) • • Ma• bildltr9 nl&hl ...,_. Talltfude CMk (C) Tllla ta tilt lie (C} In the Aft Leatut. Kansas City • Henld of Trd (C) A(riatltat a.rt Chiefs will pl1y the Oakland Raid· Secrtd Hurt (C) 9:JO a ta(I) M\. Qa•ploMliif 11• ers on NBC today. 7:4511J TM CllrlmplMrs (C) ~) T .. ms to bt announced. Today's Aft and Nfl Champions @ (]) Dlwy and 8ollatll (C) • 813 Slutlltnl ...... How (C) will meet in the Super Bowl to 1:00 8 Qt (j) 1.a., Ullte NJ fttt (C} ~ ilivlt: .. Dutll Yallly" (western) decide the Wor1d Football Cham· •'lfoty tmaaea." lkoni from SOUth· 6-Robert lowefJ, Holen Giibert. pions. nstem Europe and Alla Minor and 11::~::!'' O.mpt (C) '-----------' are studied, (R) 11m111 ;,v 11:00 HtlltbUJtrs' C111dt (C) their meanlnr In orthodox tradition Or.I 1 <C>(""). I: Seu• Strttt (C) (R) m 11lt ~ (C) lO:tOl Tlia .... lh (C) (ill(]) a> '""""Ide (C) Catlltdral If TtlMnW (C) (ft) (I) E!J f_... v.,... (C) Mtwtt: (C) ....... of a. 0., of D1sc.wwJ (C) • Mtwta: (C) "Mlllfllll" (ldvtn· Ofid"' (sci·fi) '61-Vincent Price, Wonclen.. (C) ture) '56-.lohn Bromfltld, Barbara Henry Hull. Allen Rtwiraf How (C) Nlctiob. I Cllwdl In die Ho• (C) (]) ,.... I AINzilll 111.... e1 .... s. tau Ci) Oect la tlat A..... (C} Ci) Ant a.,tilt Chrdl 11:30 (ill (]) Q) DbcOWt'J (C) "Am· 1:30 ft Loot Up aftd LM (C} "I Need fiilttr lwlew (C} p ibiana." To Hear From You." Artist Mar1aret 10:30 D @ Ci) Afl Clla•plo_..., latH fJ Movie: 1'Dl111eroua1J TMJ lM" Rig is featured. , (C) K.C. m.;ets vs. O.kland Raiders. (drama) '42-John Garfield. Nancy / .. I I ..... ~ 'I : "\, D Mrs. Alplla W (C} Prachool I (i7J (])&J Fntlltic. f .. (C} Coleman. children visit the Los Anatlts Zoo Fakla fw T°"J (C) to view the tirm. @ SMtlltnl lapllst Hts (C) Yes! lZ:GO & Mtiwit: (C) ..... lttM lltnde Frt11 llalMlll hlMI"' (musical) '50 -8etty Grable, Cesar Romero. lllflllll&Ht Plfltlt (C) (]) stDrltl tf s.cau (C) lftll&M (C) litftt Autry . Oral hbtrts "-ents (C} (]) T1lls •• .. Life (C) ,...... ,., Llwhl1 1:00 Mtwle: "T.,.._,. (western) '53 -William Elllott, Phyllis Coat Rick Vallin. •@mm DhdlMs <C> "A COnveBatlOn With Malcolm Mu1· pridae." I .... Htl- INCLUDES: War Movit: "Totptdo lay" (ad· venture) '64 -James Maaon, Lilli Palmer. _ , ..... Flm(C) TettbMJ di tu&tet -C.._ tuer •cl c•trok - An ... ceu.ry Mlf-twtettts -D.,......"' -ce1or scr.et1 ..,..., -Sttlttc cenerten. C.'OMPLETELY GUARA1~n'EED SERVICE ON COLOR&B/W AU BRANDS FROM ADMJ)\AL TO ZENITR "TOO~YS SfRVICE WITH TOMORROW'S KNOW-HOW" 18931/i Park Ave. Costa Mesa ..... 4 @ Mott Ult ~-(C) ftlllval tft Madrid l:JO 11 I wi.r.. tilt Act1N 11 ( A =w of thb yoer's Na· tional Hocby Lt11ue. 81 ......... Z... (C) "MiSliOn to Africa." (fl)(f)OJ l-•IMI ~ Ytka of C.., (C) Ci) ...... Trala (C) AiTIMtlMefta 2..... C.... line (C) ~·UM (C) ,... c..t ... (C} ._..._._m Cl)....., ......--r.Pltd "-· er of Hemtffn." Van Joti ...... 2:JO I ;:':.·~~drama) ~Ry1n. D °" ea.,_ (C) "Thia ta West· rnonl" A look at various •ttllttlc profra. ma on e1mpus, studtnta end faculty, and • mean:h Protrlm lnvolvlna 10,000 cockroecbes. 8 Mowlt: "n.....,.. Clllld" (com- edy) '43 -Stewert Grenpr, S.lly Ann Howes. fl Movie: (C} "Prine.a of Ill Nift" (spectacular) '54 -Dtbra Paaet. Jeffre( Hunter, Michael Rtn· nle. 8 MUllon $ Mewte: (C) "left ti COdzllll" (ho11'0r) '62 -Godzilla, Akiro Kubo. 11111 Ande19911 (C} Cl)Flltuft fetturo 3:GO CJ Mowlt: (C) "1'1le TI-. t1at l't«e aftd the lirf'' (romance) '46 --Oennls Morren, Jania Pal1e. Jack Cerson . • ... !l""ifj""'c"W""'I So. Callflfllla Open Qolf (Cf Go:fdom'a lnderi tab to the par· 72 courw of the ruued Mission Viejo GoH Club at San Juan Capistrano for finals of the $52,000 tournament. Tom Kelly and Don la· rnond are mlkealde. fl) Mewit: (C) "Cfy TtlllW' (dra· ma) '59-John Suon, Linda Cris· tal. ta @ f .. t.. FJI• (C) "Destry.H Audie Murphy. fECllllC:ht al RotD 3:30 G Mowlt: (C) "Oii Mtft, Otl W.. •" (comedy) '57 -Dan Dalley, Glnaer Roaera, David Niven. f.11) Mlatelopra' Ntl~ (C) 4:001 Aaltlur HMr (C) Ted Midi Dr. Klldart (]) l.ara111t : n.t'a M•? (R) • Sports s,tdacllar (C} 4:301!. Cl) fec:e Ult"-'* (C) fa11lly fll11 F...,: "Blondie's B Event" • :-: .. if.?. .... n Ci) f1l11 foatM (C) "To Ca'tch a RrilOO." m Adwtntur9: "Snakes Alive." 8' 11lt Rtftt .. n 5:00 ....... a.. (C) Los Anlelts District Attorney Evelle Younftf dis- cusses the recent Yiotence Commis- aion report, I Sp-' Up (C) Bill Leyden. t..st In Space Mtwta: "T....,.....,.. (drama) 6--GlnPf ROPfS. Midlael Ren- nie, lrepe HeMJ. A 15-year-old alr1 who has 'bttn in the custody of her divorced f1thar for ellht years mikes her first visit to htl mother, who realtzes the 1lr1 b badly In need of parental love. I Daktlrl (C) hHJ.,. m Sewtt1 Ma 11Miltrt: "How Be Very, Very Popular." Betty Grable. l @My w.w (C} .... 11..t (C} (R) (l)f .... ,. mu• f .... Secar. Soocer matches from M11cico. 1!3Htft C...tllt 9tMa (C) II!!) """ for ,.. .... (C) 5:30 9 lllXT ..... {C) a.t. Robtrtl. B AIU••taa C1i11' ._ (C) ,,.-natl.ts: Allan ltutlldn, Qolf Flnlll, Lorin ltv9t •nd Cyntllla a ..... Judres: Glenn Ford, Devkl Ja"*11 and John Forsythe. ll)lildWt'1...., r 10 I :st· rtlc Ind •m ,.,.. Illy 11111 ,,. tn· of Ila, ... '46 •ck ,.. to led Jin JOO ti· Ira· 01· ry." ,.. ley, C} act itch na) :en- ~d DCfy Jlrt her Is :ctr l s. .. t Tral Cl) Tiie Wor'd ToMmW (C) Frtndl Cllef: Jull1 Child pr• ~'" dinner In 1 pol ta Cl).,..., .... (C) FVFNING 5:00 R I UICW I If You NEID 1 Drink ce-> 0) Rebroadcut of the thouaht·provoklnr examination of the tr11edy of heavy, h1bltu1I drlnklnf. Jerry Dunphy serves IS reporter end host Mercedes Mc· Cambrid1e ind Edward G. Robin· son are 1mon1 the speci1I ruests. Nao featured are recovered 1k:o- hollcs who talk about their own drlnklnr exper1ences. ind 1 12· question tut th1t home vieweri cu like to determine alcoholism and measure its deiree. I C! ... Up (C) (30) ro1u ,,,.. <C> (60) The 8roovy SM (C) (60) Pro· 1r1m moves to a new time slot. Scheduled ruests IAI Steppenwolf, end Sh1neo. ID I frsbY I Now and Tllen (C) (60) arilyn Kin&. youn1est of the f1med Klnf Sisters, and her musi- cian-husband, Kant laraen, star In a prorram featurlni P<>i>Ular sonp of yesterday and today. Special ruests Include John Carradine and The P911permlnt Rainbow. m AnhHls, Action and Advtftture I (30) "Rio Grande." 00 Futur. (30) Cl) Fil• F..wre (30) SpecNtion (C) (60) (R) M111 Frt• UNa.E ~C) '=30iO@ma.E. c.1 .. , ..... (30) ltH for Yow Life (C) (60) Sa_.... TMttrt (60) Ci) s.Jppr (C) (60) 7:00 IJ Qt (I) Lutit (C) (30) In the flrwt of a four.part adventure, 1 trifle accident in San Francisco's Chln1town p:unres lassie into the lost ind lonely wor1d of the 1m· Msl• victim. a @ oo m Wild 111.,.. cc> (30) "Experiment on the Ocean Aoor." Marlin Ptftlns and Stan Brock t1ke part In en unusu1I vtn· lure lnvoMn1 the capture ind train· '.!!I of I l*J)OI• In H1wall. a n.. ._.. <C> <60> 9 EERIE NIGHTMARE * AND SUSPENSE ON LAND OF GIANTS 0 @ (]) Ul Land .. tile llantl (C) (60) "Nl111t.m1re." A (lint 1tltntlst fives the [lrthllnp I mt· dl1nlcal device for ttieir ~Ip th1t haa danprous side effects. 0 Joe .......... (C) (30) .............. (C) (60) Gues1s Include The Turttq, EtMI Wlttrs, Ed McM1hon, ind Roy Ap- plecate. m n.. ~-<C> <60> ti) Co•lcn ., C.ndoMI (30) 7:JO R 9 Ci) To Ito• Wltll L8" (C) <60> Miko Endicott meets a f1med b1llenn1 (pest Anna M1ri1 Alber· ahttti) and it swept Into ttio •· dttmtftt of I ctlebrity'I lift. D a (i) !D Wilt Dluey (C) (60) ''Ytifowstone Cubs." A pol(· nant comedy-1d¥tnture filmed tn· tlrely IJI Y el lowstont P1rt dtplctln1 1 mother be1r'1 frantic •n:h fof 10:00 B 9 Ci) II..._: 1., rite (C) htr two f'O'lfnf roun1 cubs. Ru (10) Guests Noel Haniton Ind Diane Allen narr1tu. (R) Baker ire dmm Into 1 darin1 IMF fJ MllllN $ flMlt: (C) ...... dwlc» thlt Ute a tr1JMd ftlcoa l~ard •Ad tile Cnlt.adtn" (od· to htlp In a crown )twel theft, In venture) '54--Ru Harriaon, Vlraln· Plrt I of 1 thret·part episode. 11 M1yo, laurenee H1rvey, Qtll(1e D 0 (i) m 1llt lt'.d ha (C) Slndtts. ' (60) "Tir.i Of I Mttlolo." RlcNtd m Puaport tll Travel (C) (30) Conte ruests IS 1 convict. Ml'Vln1 •'Jewels of Mexico." time, who 11 determined to pin his fl) Hol1t Opera (60) freedom despite Mall• thrt1ts on ll)l.os C.uclllles (30) his Ute ·If he Is rtlNsod, l;OO ut Mo Tll• To .•• (C) (60) Im ..... cc> <lo> fJ TEMPTATIONS & OLIVER L*r ..._. <C> (30) * ED SULLIVAN Tonitel 11.-. Fwu• 1J a Cl)~ S.IU.1n (C) (60) C.st.:~ r:.w11 (C) (90) "Cl"lnko's D ROLLER GAMES-Uvel (C) @I),,.. Tt1tro (60) * T BIRDS DETROIT 10-.lO IJ Tiie Wortd ,...,,.. (C) (30) • VI. "1969-Tr111dy and Triumph." D loller 81Mo (C) (2 ht) LA. Part I. f.Blrds vs. Detroit Devils.. 91 Squre Wtt1d If ~ llltltr (C) 'Communication Rewotutlon.'' Guests include Fulton lewts. Dr. Stanfonl Green, Don Pap, R1lph Benner. John Aultln and JMnne Rtlaunler. fJ FORD MOTOR COMPANY * presents THE FBI MICH.UL 1..vcao. STANTON. CALl,.OllNiA . • . with the Sunday Mail! 0 (i7J CI>a> Tiie fll (C) (60) ilfh1t1tal Impostor." lnspedo< Er· 11J KATHRYN KUHLMAN The fact 11, several Independent lklne loses all trace of fu1itivt Vic * AND GUESTS IN COLOR deelers with Sundey Mall, Inc. Kiley when the robber likes a wom· an aml her son hostare and um m ~ Kdltu• (C) (30) meke over $400 fo( their one day's them as a cover . .$peclal 1uests ire 11 U Cl) 9 CCI) Miry nckett and Ger1ld O'loufhlln. 11:00 (J)G) itwi (.:-(C) wo~ on Sunday. They enjoy e one m Mevte: "Citillft KaW' (dram1) atlltdnil tf TtlMnW (C) dey work week. '41--0rson Welles, Joseph Cotten, • Wiiiia• F. ledlty a.. (C) I Ruth Warrick. Academy Award·win· former Gov Edmund G Brown d!. Sunday Mall Is the publisher of nln1 film about the life of 1n . • · · 1 eminent publlsher from poor boy ~U::S Pa~• .. Future of the Demo-Tempo. the Sunday Joornal, and to a men o! VIit wealth. who H• m f11tow1t: ~ Wte't 1oMeft Mt" is among the netion's fastest if'OW• plred to politics ind WH ruined by (dram•) '47-Robert Younc. Susan ptrtOnal sctndal. QJ hMic SMvlc:t f1m (30) Heyward. m "' r1n1t• s.re <60> "eon . m c.n .AS f:lct." m ~ .... .,. <60> a:JO a @oo m • ....., ...,<c> (30) "Rules Is Ruta." Chet Klnc1ld llku on the battle of 1ehool •d· ministration red tlpe, • IDPnlbt (C) (30) fl) Wtl'td To..,...ow (30) "Trapdy Ind Triumph." Part II. t:OO IJ QI (I) "" c..,w (C) (60) Guests Include Walter Brenntn, Joey Heatherton and Norm Crotby. ing. eggresslve young companies. Tefllpo continues to breek all .cS· vertising and circulation records wherever it is Introduced. Tempo rivals the U.S. Mall In reaching virtually every home, apartment and business listed in Its zone of distribution. Now Sun· day Mell Is expanding Tempo's distribution nationally. DU @m .... au (C) (60) 1 · "lt'a a Small World.'' Spumed by ll:lS 0 M"*' (C) .,,.,..,... Wiiia A ground floor opportun ty u1sts townSl*PI• btcauM of his size .V-.t" (ri 'Sl -Esther Wit· now for dealers. They are the back· •nd backlround, • clrtus mldpt tltms. F ndo l &. bone of Sundey Mell and they are lronicllly becomes very much In U:JO _ • (C) .,...,.. (IMtt- demand when tn&tdy strikes. Ml· -• • Independent entrepreneurs In busl· chael Dunn and £.dw•rd BlnM 1uest. lure) 7-&rol Flynn. Cbmoll 11«· This epltode written ind dlrec:tod Ertckton. by Mldl1e4 Landon. u1 l a.rtlty (C)" 0 t17} (])I&) UC S.lldlf ,._.: CIM•! S4tlldlJ (C) M1anifl· (C) liflit NaUd Prflf" (tctv.nlure-nt Doll. drama) '66-Comtl Wiidt. $tOfY of (1) lllll&M (C) one m111'1 battle for aurvlnl lZ.-OOD s,.dll Futwe (C) "The Hit.I· •&•Inst dazena of nerc. w•rrlcn CliT Symphonf Otcheltr1." A half· A white hunter Is hired by a 1rwctJ hour prorram trtdn1 the Ol'Cfles. Ivory hunttt to lead a Slf1r1, which tta's wolution from lta ear1itlt Is ambushed by warriors ind .,.,.,. days In • company dlnlnrroom. one Is ldlltd but tM white hunter. throuati Its debut 1t tM Hltadll Ht is 1tlowtd to lift to partldplte Concert Auditorium, to the flnal In the lifHnd·death ordeal the reaoundinr crtteendo fl Dvor1k'1 tribesmen call, "Qlance of the New World Symphony. lion." 12!JO II !ptlljn1 F....., (C) Or. Nonnen QJ Ntwl (C) (30) lany McCormick. Vincent ,tall, cltroman Ind IU· m ....... .._.., <60> ttior. avesb. fE) ........ (C) (60) (R) 8) Dt•I• ... ...,_ (30) .... 0 ..... (C). (30) Doul Dudley. ID nie 1pe1ta s.t <C> (30) ., c......-, Celtllrf• .... (C) 1,0011 Mn: "T1lt ..,.... 111a1 ... • fmmtdy) '51 -Robert Cummlnp. Terry Moore, Jerome Courtl1nd. l:lOIJ ..... (C) t.'tOll ..... (C) ness for themselves. Many men end women have started their busl· nesses with the Sunday Mall fOr es little es $3750. If you've ever been Interested In your own business or the one day work week. write now for additional Information. WrtW ot call (213) RI 7-6111 Sunday Mail, Inc. Deeler M•ll•l!W Dept. 1J ll L Oltv. ttNM L. A. Cellf. tOOll ,.,. 5 • ~soLE SURVIVOR' "Sole Sunlvor," starrln1 Vince Edwards, RJcbard Buebart and WUliam Sbatner, the first film produced by Cinema Center 100, bas Its world premiere on The CBS Friday Night Movie at 9 PM in color. Daianed for Initial presentation on television, "Sole Survivor" revolves around tbe clilcovery of a 8-25 bomber in the Libyan desert 17 years after its dluppearaqce durln1 a World War D bombln1 mission to SlcHy. The navigator, Hamner (Buehart), ls the lone survivor, having been rescued from the Mediterranean after parachudng from the crippled plane. In baiUng out, be left his fellow crew memben without a bearing for their home but. The pim task of lnvesdpting the circumstances of the crash-700 miles oft coune -falls to Major Devlin (Edwards) and Lt. Col. Gronke (Shatner). Now a brlpdier general, Hamner ls required to aid the invea1&adn1 team uncover the truth behind the disuter. During the probe, the battle of wll.la between DevUn and Hamner is intendy observed by five unseen specta- ton-tbe spirits of the dead crew. GHOSTLY TRIBUNAL ~ When Oaymore Greg (Charles Nelson Reilly, center) tries to cheat Mrs. Muir on her Gull Cottage lease renewal, Capt. Greg (Edward Mulhare, right) causes him to dream that he bu M>ld bis soul to the devD, "Mr. Turner" (Joe Flynn). The dream finds the captain defendlna Oaymore before a jury of bis&ory's most Infamous vUJains-on ABC's The Gboa and Mrs. Muir, Thursday at 7:30 PM. evE ex< vit die tuc be cit Ni for IS ho ttw "s. toe as pe: Co SOI yo an se ph pb so fol ' m rie es ce t), be 11e se ll, I 11g' :a- er m 1e "s Looking bade m the inglorious year just mk.ed in by Father Time it is 00\'ious dlat television has two entirely different sides. In \¥hat bas become the major ore, coverage ot NOW events and topJcs tn news and documentary ~ the medium excels. In the second one, supposed:ly the commercial( baokbme of TV, the seriies, it lags. What was good enough to exclte and bold mllliom of viewers a decade ago in series form, hardly causes a ripple any more ... with several notable excep- tions. The reason is obvious: ln an era when man has S'lepped upon the surface of the moon, when he .is beset by racial problems, infilatlion and vtolence in the streets, miany situatian c:omeddes and hackneyed dramas are simply too un- RICH realistic. New escapism ~are roday has m be vital and in tune wli1h the times. ' . Who can remember when Milton Berle was Mr. Television. d·ialed dn by ·so many millions of viewers nationwide that it ac- tuaJly affected Tuesday night theater and restaurant business? Un())e Miltae and his outrageous humor would have little im- pact iri a similar series today. 1bere is l'OO much else going oo in the world for trivia, without social meaning. to attract the public. · Except tbat portion of the public whiCih as yet is hardly dry behind the ears. A case in point is the enormous rating achieved by a cbilldren's special, Frosty the Snowman, which was tJhe No. I Nielsen show during a recent week. What, in a broader sense, did the r::iLing prove? As a guideline to adult public taste the rat.Ing system now In force is pedaaps as obsolete as are•evcnts which trampired 10 or IS ye.y.s 880· One of llllle major problems facing teleV'islon is to attract and hold the young adults, who presumably have better things to do than sit before a television set and watch series which they deem "square" and with Wlbich they have llit£.le identification. · In it!his respect, perhaps .the most ur.derrated series on the air today is Mod Squad. Nielsen has it only 28th in ttie ratings, or did as this is being written. Mod Squad is a rare combination of lntell.lgElll scripts and perfect casting. The cbemfstty betwen the prlndpals Michael Cole. Clarence Williams Ill, Peggy Lipton and Tlge Andrews Is something to behold. The ·today topics eadl week arc enjoyed by not only the young, but by most everybody. My World aJ1d Welcome To It, based on Thurber's works, is another series which exllibits a rare degree of c·reativity. So, too, does Room 222. On the other hand, Music Scene end New People, a pa.ir of series arimed at youthful audiences have failed to click. Considering the vast resources or the television ~tty, lt Is perhaps wrprlslng that the percentage of good serieis is not higher. · On the other hand, the medium has often become such a 'Whip- ping boy that many people overreact to its various facets. In rt:he fnal anailysis, !f you want to put television in its proper place it is not a panacea for tlbe ills of the world, but a tit'tlle screen that can bnng many boors of pleasure and enlightenment tor dle SELECTIVE viewer. THREE 51\0RIES ... Three stories, "Love a~4 the Proposal," "Love and the Pickup," and "Love and the Fighting Couple" will be the stories on Love, American Style on ABC, M~nday at 10 PM. Warren Berlinger, Joan Hackett and Joan Van Ark star in "Love and tire Proposal," the story of a young man who just can't help proposing to every girl-much to his later regrel~ Dorothy Lamour, Edd Byrnes and Patricia Harty star in "Love and the Pickup," the story of a young wife who, perturbed because her marriage has become pr,PSaic, talks her husband into re-staging their first meeting in a singles bar. Dick Sargent, Mariette H:trtley, Imogene Coca and Shecky G reene star in "Love and the Fighting Couple," the story of an engaged couple who go for pre-marriage counseling to Dr. Sigmund, expon- nenl of "fight therapy." When the shy couple is unable to bicker, the therapist and bis wife show them how. Pa1e 7 SUNDAY, JANUARY 4 9:00 D @ Cl) (C) ''The NaJcad Prey," the story of a game of life and death In Africa, stars Cornet Wilde as a white hunter stripped naked in a hostile wilderness and stalked by a bend of the greatest hunters In the wor1d. Co-$tarring are Gert Van Oen Berg. Ken Grampu, Patrick Mynhardt and Bella Randel•. MONDAY, JANUARY 5 9:00 B U Ci) (C) "Chartie Bubbles." Albert Flnney and ll.z.a Min· nelli star In this drama of a famous young writer who can obtain neither happiness nor peace of mind from his success and resorts to the bottle more than occasionally. Colin Blakely and Billie Whitelaw CO·atar. TUESDAY, JANUARY 6 8:30 D @ (]) (C) "Black Water Gold." Keir Dullea, Lana Woo<J. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 7 9:00 D @ Cl) (C) "Red Mountain." Alan Ladd and Lizabeth Scott star In story of the life and career of General Quantrlll who led his band In the sacking of pro-Union towns In Kansas and Missouri. THURSDAY, JANUARY 8 9:00 8 9(1) (C) "My Blood Runs Cold" (drama) '6~Troy Dona· hue, Joey Heatherton. FRIDAY, JANUARY 9 9:00 8 9 Cl) (C) "Sole Suntlvor." Vince Edwards, Richant Base- hart and Wiiiiam Shatner star In tense d"'ma mncemi(it-tbe rnvestlgation Into the crash of a B·25 bomber. SATURDAY, JANUARY 10 9:00 BU (I) (C) "How To Mwder Your Wife." Jack Lemmon and Vlma Lisi star In this comedy about a cartoonist who plots to sever his hasty mamage to an Italian beauty queen. I I I I I ...... ------. -, > di .. ,r ' Fine Quality PRINTING 642-4321 Offset & Letterpress , '~ ~ ,,-• I - * ......... _____ . "A Complete Printing Service" Free Estimates PILOT PRINTING 2211 W. B•lboa Blvd. -Newport le•ch " I I I I I THE DAILY PILOT. TV WEEK. JANUARY 3, 1970 MORNING 5:55 II Clvt Us This DIJ (C) 6:00 tJ Sunrise St•tlttr (C) 6:25 D Education Eldlan&t (C) "Char· acter In the Arts Series." 6:30 1J Odyssey (C) D Project Know (C) "American Lit· erature Before the Civll War." m Elplorln1 Los An1elts @E Law for tht Layman (C) Wed. 1:55 0 KNIC Ntw1trvice (C) 7:00 CBS News (C) Joseph Bentl. Q) @ m The Today Show (C) The His and Htr of It (C) Mr. Wbtlbont (C) Bozo tltt aown (C) C..modity /stock Report : Stsa111t Strfft (C) 7:30 • It Is Written (C); Prince of Puc. (C) Tues. ,.arent-Yo~ For· a (C) Thurs. Wondtrl•a (C) Ctel Md:tel tttd friln4a (C) Cl) CIS News (C) 8:00 S Cl) Ctptaln Kanproo (C) D..,..., Cartoon CutJt.. (C) li1111bf (C) N ... /S.tock Marttt 1:15 (]) VldtO Dipst (C) 1:251) Co1111Hnlty lullttift Board (C) 1:301 Mr. M•roo (C) Elerdse W'lttl liloria (C) • MomJn1 Wttdl (C) Ted Meyert. M..._ loJ (C) Rocbt Robin Hood (C) (I) Rody Hd His Friends (C) 8:45 IJ Your Money's Worttl (C) Wed. 9:00 B Qt Cl) 11M Lucy Sllow (C) D @@ E?':'lt Tata Two (C) Guests are Abby Dalton, John Sax· on and their spouses; Char111 Nel· son Reilly and his date, Elizabeth Allen. 1J Love Tlltt lob: Bob Cummings. O Movie: See Daytime Movies. Jackie Joseph is hostess. I @ (]) Jac:t La lanM (C) Undwdor (C) Ftabu'a 9:25 D ~ 00 El:' NBC NtWs (C) 9:301 lffi Btverly Hillbllllts • 6 El:' Conceetrltion (C) • Movie: See Daytime Movies. IE CartDofts and Ftatura (C) @ CV Hayden's Happenill& (C) 10:00 B Andy liriffitll (C) D ~Cl) m Salt of ~· Century (C) Jack Kelly hosts. ti) News/stodl Market .. a full ninely minules of lun. fashionable and frankly funky happenings! J:()().8:l()AM(i)l>.\ILY/MEC·n' 1C i: 1 1 no (C) ers. (C) I. (C) :u . ,,,. .eth 1($. ies. me . ., PRl"1CfRAM5 i th ru FRIDAY U Cl) S.IJ Tedey (C) lt:JO •a Cl) Lewe " Life (C) BUOO IDHellt •• S.--(C) Guests ire Stu Gllll1m, Paul Winchell, Mickey Rooney, William Sh1tner, Connie Hines and Join Rivers. e T,..I Filas (C) u• I sCIJ ..,. tile Heert •• (C) 9 oo m *""" <C> Art Flemln1 hosts. 8 Tiit Cano,in1 Co...t Graham Kerr. I T..,o (C) Baxter ... ,. .... (C) 11:25 8 Qt Cl) CIS ..... (C) 11:30 u Cl) Surd! fOf ToMnW (C) 900mT11t wi.o, n.t _. Ca•t (C) I .....,,,.. (C) Tiit All"'"""1 c ... (C) PllOllEIE Lts ....... CitJ Sc:Mela 1Y Claslroell: A half -hour of In-school classl'OCMI pn>IJllm· mlna. presented In cooper1tion with Los An1tles City Schools. llJhid " ..... (C) fl) S.... S1rtlf (C) (R) 11:55 8 9 Cl) G NIC ..._ (C) "\ • ~. I\, J ... 12:0018Mtilt• (C) u 00 ., Uft ~ U.klttt• I Jack ind Art Unkletter. lllewlt: See Daytime Movies. @Cl)ltwftdled(C) SWlff Jell• (C) Jim H1wthomt hosts for ncationln1 Sheriff John Rovick. I ..... (C) Bill Johru. Stllct Marbt a.. Cl) Wy Crtffta (C) 12:30 I a. Ci) As tM Wertd T•m (C) 9 oo m.,.,. .. 0ur Uves (C) Macdon1ld Carey stars. I @ CJ) 1'8t Clrt (C) Dialiel fw Dellara (C) Stllct llarMt ....,. TNt llrt (C) Wed. only. 1:00 8 9(1) Uwl la • MUJ Splett· dered Till11 (C) I ~ oo en. .,..,. <C> @ CJ) PllOllEIE Ml fllJ Qi!. drt1 (C) A new series, which stars Rosemary Prinz IS Amy Tyler, a liber•I politle1I 1ctiYlst who mar· rles into a conservltlw family. I QtMet1 for • 0., (C) Office " tile Pr..W.t Tiie Cll..,lq CMfJMt (C) I Deir Jll6a ..... (C) tffJ CIJ a,.....,_. .... it> .... liiilt Mtwlt: See Dey· mt Movies. I M.wir. See Daytime Movies. C.......,/Mllbtll Fad 2:30 e ca oo f.dp ., "'"" <C> .. u 00 ., ..... .,,.,,.... (C) Al Lohman and ROiif Bartley. 8Clrt Tall (C) • @(})ti!) Dltlq c. .. (C) 9 Stock M..vt/fMtw• 3:00 9 (j) .._ Pyte (C) It'• '"' "' (C) ~:"9' ...... 1 ......... (C) lln'a lie r., .._ (C) Watllfrtnt (i)Mltlnee • MltiMI: Don Wilaon. 3:30 IJ Llldly Pair (C) Guests are Rudy V1llee, Pat t11rty (MOil.) Willl1m Shatner. Nita Talbot (Tu.s.-Thura.), TI pl Hedren, Dietl Kallman (Frl.) ..... Dt•at-(C) 8ait IM tt.ntet @ Cl) G 0.. Llf• Te U.. (C) ,.,.,. ..... ,,.. (C) HM l.ellJ (C) Dr. H.-..•1 Secret JMrMI (() ...... Ca"9NI (C) 3:45 ti) fNtlnt 1114 ..... (C) 4:001S.. Hllllt Tiie N1kM T rdt (C) rm rn m nart ..... <e> fie Mewte c ... <C) Sonny fox hosts. Guests are James Fr1ncllcus, Ann Blyth, Glenn Ford and Abby Dalton. I MIPtJ MHae (C) ,..... Cua1 Alt ... 4:15 fil) Tiie frtell4ty Clallt 4:30 Movie: See Oaytlme Movlet.. Dlwora C..rt (C) a ... <C> . Hazel (C) TlleM•llltlrl (1)""1 ..... . =::•;, (R) Cll Tiie n•••• (C) 1:.:::.-- s:00ew ..... ~ <C> 9...,.. (C) Tom Rlddln. IJ '""" (C) • .... (C) Geor1e Putnam. mlltalft<C> 9 @ Ji.., n--'(C) 9 (I) lktlllt'• ..., eu.c.... .. ..... 1:15lm,..,. g,U1p1'1 ...... (C) 1:30 I Cll. , ..... , Uallt (C) IE!) .......... (C) ~~..:~iii 5:JOl(H)Cl)O)MC ..... (C) tile W.rtd (C) Wed. CllNIW Ca•rt l ~(l)S)Llfa Mai. • Deel ,....,, lllatid (C) UOnty Hall hosts. s-et r,.r11 Mowie: See Dtytlme MOiiie&. @ Tilia .., 1• (C) Ttdlttlcal ConMr 1 ........... Net.......-ud (C) 1:50. Fasllllna lit Sew1111 (C) Qt (j) ..... (C) Mike folly. i.• ea Cl) Secrwt ..,.. <C> I vir.te , c.11u 8 9 @ 8' lrt&llt ,,_... (C) • Ton Talll (C) Gifts For The Handyman ... Versatile Voltmeters 111°·17 •25•5 ........... en.It -,.,. ...... 4 .. *911 tt~. 1 ...... 4 A( ,,,...._ ,..,_ e 4 DC ....... ,___, 4 ell111 ,....._ • 11 ~"' ~ • OC • 1 ~"' 111.-• AC 41o't", * •A IMtW • aa"wy .....,... ....... .-.~--UN Willi ... (HW A ........ i!Ki9"1 ........ 1111«• IW lett IN• • .............. Clnclt •aN -"""'*'· Doe& !Wndred• of Evwyday MNwr-11 for ~-.. hoOl>ylttt. llCMlten, model bu11den, c aer•1, hama, ev., TV servk-. F"tur• tour ,..,.,_ on AC arAI OC. volt~ !NI meewre trom I lo 1000 volls full tcale • . . tour reslal•nce r•nee 110 Oflms center teal• •I, •100, atOK. •lMI hi .__. from O.l oflm IO '°°° megohms. All ranees .,.. mum- ClCNOl'ed, •ncl tlleA't en .. ire l.O IO oonnect acaslOf')' Pf'OOel to extenel Its tapeblllltes. aa1t.fy .....,... Te wen Mlywtten ... run& on a .. C .. c.11 •nel e,4v, mercury cell, """' H UMd 11'1 lramlttor recllOt, ...... Weftl ............ "-' Of ,_ •• ,.,._..... Wltll Cll'Ctlltl TMt AA Saf-. •-.Cet .... I & R .. lty w..11. e c.talfts •• 111atena• A lll&tne· ..... fer .. ,...... lt •lttweltt .... lrwlc It-• ,hi, M...,._ 111!.rtn .. ty" C-11en e O•a ... ... .... ~I ftetlllltllt Ml· ~ IMl ilWW..). .... ,.CT .. 0. ANY YOUNeST•R .... WAlllTS TO •>1 .. LO•• TN• MYIT••tH OP •L•CT•OMICS. Cpnlaln• car10on-llluslr&Md pttnc'-' of operation •nel tlrnple, 11on-l'Kflnlcal lrwlrvctklN tor Dvlldlno If dlffertflf HEATHKIT® P"Olect• • ' cod• , .. ~. tMlrll .. , alarm, P<ltlllc address 1yatet11, S dlf· ,.,...,, transistor rldlol, electronlc timer. TV tllenctf'. etK1rlc ..,., mal,_, cod• lrensmltter, voice ,.,.nsmltter, , .. ~. Intercom, eudlo slonal lnlector, capacity a. voice OCl- w•ted relays. $01det'lfts, sprll\o-type connectors •P"d HHMbly. encl cen bo used ~•telly for bulldlno •••• cwlle prolects. Oc»er•t• on lolK Mte C-tlt• fl&ahllohl batteries {not lnclud· ldl. Melt• •" ldNI 9ltt for any Voun91ler at blrtflday, ChrltlmH cw 91'Mwtlon time... . . , . ELICTIONIC CINlft Te"" rNdl Neatllli'lt •lectf'Mk c.tw, l&lle N•r'Mr alwl. .. aell Aff .. _. • .... e .... lilert ~ACb .. »I .... aa• er l&lle IHI• AM ,.,_ wy" ".,.., a1w1..Naner 8MI ....... • ,_ ....,, MKti• .... .-crt ..... STOii HOUU: ........... t-6. ht. SAL.II I PAIT1 MIATMKIT 11...... n• IAST 'uu. AMAHllM lllYICI 77&-t•n ...... MONDAY JANUARY 5 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAY· TIME PROGRAMS. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:00 0 "Stell•" (drama) ·so -Ann Sheridan, Vlct0< Mature. t:JO O ''Tills Woman II Mine" (drama· adventure) '41 -Franchot Tone, Carol Bruce. B ''Opet•tien Sn1tct1" <comedy) '62-Terry-Thomas, Georie Sandtrs. m "A Uttlr to ThrM Wives'' (dra- ma) '49-Jeanne C<aln, Linda Dar· nell. 12.:00 O "Thi Udy In Questien" (dra· ma-mystery) '4G-Glenn FOfd, Rill Hayworth. , 1:30 m "Dear Murderer" (drama -mys. tety) '47 -Eric Portman, Greta Gynl 2:00 B "lnsldt tile Wilts of FobM rr&on .. (drama) '51-Steve Cothran, David Brian. m ''M,...loUI DoctDr" (mystery) '43-John Loder, Eleanor Parter. 4:30 IJ ""-Man Inside" (mystery) :ss -Jac.k Palance, Anita Ekberr. f V r N I N C~ 1:001 Bi& News (C) (30) Jerry Dunphy. · m Huntlty·lrinkley <C) (30) Stilwe Allen Sllow (C) (90) I) Guests are save Lawrence, The Happeninr. Morty Amsterdam, Rlch· erd Deacon and Paul Norri& fJ Sil O'aodl Movie: (C) "Coed D1y for a Hanalnt' (western) '59 -fred MacMurray, Robert V1ughn, Maule Hayes, Joan Blackman. A former lawman resumu the rnle when he sees a lotal hoodlum aun down the town marshal. Diet Yan O,U (30) The Flinbtones (C) (30) Stir Tift (C) (60) (]) Miu Douctaa (C) (90) : What's NtWl (30) ()) CBS News (C) (30) • Paaion Cilttna (30) • N.. (C) (60) Jeck White. 5:30 KNIC NtwMtvlu (C) (60) Tiit '''" GaN (C) (30) My flVOftt. Martian (30) Office of .... haldent (30) 00 Huntley-BrfnkleJ (C) (30) . Probe (C) (30) Ci) TM Munsttrs (30) NOtidero 34 (C) (60) • OUR Nws (C) (30) 7:001 CIS Evenln& News (C) (30) • W111l'1 MJ Unt? (C) (30) I Love Lucy (30) Beet the Clock (C) (30) ComMOclltJ /Mutual fund (30) (6) MondaJ Show (C) (2 hr) " 0 POunds of Trouble." Tony CUr· i Suzanne Pleshette. Abora! (30) ()) Tnrtll 0t Coutquencn (C) m Cesar's World (C) (30) ltl) ni.t Girt (C) (30) 7:30 tJSCI) Guns1u11t (C) (60) "The War Prle$l" Kitty is kid- napped by Apache war priest Gr~ BEN&ITS OF LEASING THE FAMILY CAR laueuing ftuntlMn of Am•ricens now l•u• th• ftmily cer. Apttar.ntly, t+i• i d•• is: "W..at's g.oocl for co•t-contcious bvsin.ss m•n, is •lso •ood for th• #amity man." In Oran9• County '?'.,,Y fa.,,lflet er• +.lnfMJ J.ant•9• of a r•- ..,.,hbl• kuiAf ,,-ocJram offer•d by Gard•n Grove lhicoln M•rcury. T1'i1 very diff•r•nt pro- 9r•fft ltnd• i+.ef# •o femily bud9•tin9 by includ- ing 1trviu •n4 m11lnt•nence et no additional i:h•f9•: oil, oil c~an9e1, sHls, transmission 1trv· ic•. •tc., ,,c. I" addition, th. dHl•r buys your pjoHftt ctf, fN•IMJ upltal for investm•nt in tho merk•t or tut nce+ion prop•rt)' on the riv- tr. A,.d ~•ry two yHrs, you get a brand new car. For An &eele"t Booklet On This Subiect C.I our LNsing Secretary-Just ask for W inona. hp 10 THE ~ILY PILOT, TV WEE}(, JANUAR'f' 3. 1970 aorlo (Richard Anderson), an a.-are subpoenaed by Sen. Jennlnp' caped cavalry prisoner, who holds committee. he< hosta1e u he flees his own fE NET Journtl (60) "Dlctc GftlOIY C!J>tOr (Forrest Tucker). Is Alive and Well." 0 m MJ Wotld and Welcome to 0) ltnpKtos Musle1I• (30) It <Cf (30) "Darn That Dream." * RATED "M" for Mature A late dinner at the Monroe home causes Lydia's nlahlmeres, which Audience 11 PM-KTTV her father explain~everting to 9:30 childhood fantasy-run in the fam-T BE. ST BET! Uy. Sheldon Leonard and Ruth Mc· tJ TONIGH 'S . Devitt auest. * THE DORIS DAY SHOW! 1J Stump die Stars (C) (30) 1J Qj CJ.) Doris D~ (C) (30) Larry Guests are Don Matheson. Don Storch guests as Duk1t Farenllno, a Marshall and Deanna Lund, boxer who'd rather dance than 0 @(])G) TM MllSlc Scent f h wh d I I h (C) (30) David Steinbera hosts. ill t. o eve ops a arge crua on B Million $ Movie: "lost Woffd• Doris while she's tryin& to Interview , (sci-fl) '60--Mic~ael Rennie, Jill St. lh~m.News (C) (30) Balter Ward. John, Claude Rains. A zoolo0 pro-Bill Johns News (C) (30) lessor leads a rroup on a South Horse Operl (60) Ame~can ~xped!tion where they ~a~· , RWista Muslcil (30) tie l'fnt·stzed insects, cannibahst1c Indians and flee through subter· 10:001J ~ (j) Carol Burnett (C) (60) ranean cavetll$. Kaye Stevens and Audrey Meadows I Truth or Cons.q11911ces (C) (30) 81ues~t N (C) (60) Maior Ad••• (60) en Tecllnlul Comer (30) (I)la) Lon, A•erlcu I IJ•<W I Fence Atound tilt style (C) (60) "Love end the Pick· Amisll (30) Through charcoal up," with Dorothy Lamour, P1lticla sketches by f!Ofence Taylor, the Marty ond ~d ~ymes; "Love ind Amish way of life is surveyed. the Proposal, with W•!~~n Berlin- g) Chucho el Roto (30) ger and Joan Hackett; LOYe and the Fighting Couple," with Dick 1:00 0 m l.aupln (C) (60) Guest Saraent Mariette Hartley Sh~y James Gamer plays Indian, jailbird, Greene 'and lmogen1t Cota: a.nd poJlceman makln1 a student I Della! (C) (60) locker search. Perry Mason (60) I ~~~e1'i": i~~ (C) (30) B~c:r~~I Line (C) (60) Willi1m F Stock M11tet/f11tur1 (30) a:J c11ct1 de Mujti.s (30) World Press (C) (60) Pandorama (30) 10:30 al Cristina Guzman (30) * BEDTIME STORIES FOR ll:OO fl~ ve:::~c> ADULTS ONLY Tonight at 8 Movie: (C) "FantDmu'' (com· 11 ON KTTV Channel 11 edy·drama) '6&-Jean Marais. Louis 1:15 0 (ill @ G) T1tt New hople Defunes, Mylene Demonieot. m TURN OFF THE TALK * TURN ON THE ACTION WITH CONNIE TONIGHT AT 11 ON KTIV-11 (C) (45) "The Siere ol Fern's Cas- tle.'' Fern, whose home in the wrecked plane Is threatened by a live mfn1t, insists that It be removed rather than exploded. Susan Howard and Dennis Redfield guest. I P.,ton Place 1:301J 9 ()) tter .. 1 LUCJ (C) (30) He Said. Siie Slid (C) ~ Llbtr1ee auats as Lucy mistakenly C1J Clne1H 17 <C> "Red Pony." thinks Crai1 took Liberace's can· Robert Mitchum. del1bra without permiuion and @ ~~ ~ News (C) tries to sneak It back. El!lJ•: C11I Sandbeq .. 0 B ut 1 ........ _ (C) (30) B membered: A tribute to the poet r ns n '"'"'"" 15" who was born January 6, 1878. ln-ketball hi1hllghts. I DIVid frost Sltow (C) (90) eluded are a portion of his memo- Tlte 111 Valley (C) (60) rial service, with euloties dellvtr1CI Sa'*"* Tbutrt (60) by P~esldent Johnson, Archlblld DOUT ...,. (30) Oram• star· MacLeish and. Mut Van Doren. 1nd nna Lilia Lazo. recotded readinp by Sandbura. mmmN ... cc> 9:00 II a Cl) MIYIMrrJ R. f . D. (C} U ·30 I ! (j) Merv Qrftfin (C) (30) Emmett bretks his arm and • , (i) m Johnny Cinon (C) hires an earer t~a1er to help In up's Show (C) Guests are Welt his fix-It shop. Elliot Street 1uests. Rostow special assistant to JFK B -9 00 m NIC Mond11 Mowlt: d L ' . . (e} "Qirlit Bllbbles" (drima) •68 an BJ on nat~nal atf1lrs, atomic -Albert Anney, Liz• Minnelli, Colin research oolumn1~ Bob Considine Blakely, Billie Whitelaw. A success-and Cart Rowan, and atomic sci· fut youn1 writer cannot find hap· entist Prof. Erne.st Stemf1ass. piness in spite of wealth ancl fame. I rm Didi C.V.tt (C) 1J Hm ColH Ute Stirs (C) (60) Stran~ ~tradlte (C) Rod Se<ling Is toasted and taunted Movl~. Hundl'N·Hour Hunt" by Jean·Pierre Aumont. .Rory Cal-(drama) 54-Anthony Steel. houn, Carol 8 urn ett, Mickey 12:00 m Movie: "P1radtae Alley" (cdtn· Shaughnessy, Rich littlt, Ralph edy·dram1) ..!ii.-Huro Haas. Helson, Joey Adams and Marty 1:00 II Movie: "Dian Citizen" (drama) ln1els. 'S8---Gene Evans. Keith Andes. O @ (])a> TM S41rvfwors (C) I fJ News (C) (60) Phllip 1nnounc:es he and Elea· Cotll111unltJ Bwlletin .._4 (C) nor will filf\t BaylOf's will; Sheila Action Theatre: "Munier Will retut'M to Tom; Duncan and Belle Out,'' with Jama Robtrbon Justice. I l TUESDAY JANUARY 6 For morning and afternoon Ustlnp, please see DAY- TIME PROGRAMS. DAYTIME MOVIES t!C10 D "And So T1MJ Wife Manted" (drama) '46 -Robert Mitchum, Simone Simon. • "° B "A T1MaalMI and One N1&Ms" {lintuy) '49-Comel Wilde, Evelyn Keyes. 0 "T1le lip•llt'' (drama) '53- Joan Fontaine, Edmond O'Brien. tD "0111 or &lory" (adventure) '44 -Tamara Tournanova, Gre&Of'Y Peck. 1%."CIO II "A QuMtl la Crwiied'' (docu· mentary) 'SS-Actual flfm of coro- nation of Queen Elizabeth 11. Sir Laurence Ollvilf narrates. 1:30 m (C) "$pedal C.Cm1..,--lld.-Mt"'t" ("drama) ·~arlt·Jose Nat, Horst Frank. %.:cMI O <C> "The Tartars" (adventure- drama) '62 -Oraon Welles, Liana Orfer, Victor Mature. Q) "Mobs, Inc," (drama) '55- Reed Nedley, Marlor'-Reynolds. 4:30 R .. fow Faces Wiit" (western) 'U-Joel McCrea, Frances Dee. f • I ~ I N r, L-0011~ NNS (C) (60) Jerry Dunphy. @?3 Hunllty·lrinkltf (C) (30) 5'lwe Allen Sllow (C) (90) Guests are Allan Sherman, Archibell and The Drells, Chelsea Brown, Jimmy Edmondson auelt. fJ Sil O'Clock Mowlt: "'"''""' (comedy) 51-James Stewart, Jose- phine Hull, Charles Drake, Pem Dow. Nobody understands Bwood P. Dowd, a aentle man whose best friend Is an invisible rabbit named "Harvey." Diet Yan Dytie (30) T1-FlltltltlDnes (C) (30) Star Trek (C) (60) CV Mi .. Doulla (C) (90) : Wl11t'1 ,._l (30) Cl) CIS N ... (C) (30) ...... &lta1111 <30) · r.... (C) (60) Jack White. 6:30 I DIC NewMmce (C) (60) • 111e la• &a.. (C) (30) MJ FIW'lfb Martian (30) Office ef till Presklent (30) (6) H...U.,.lri11ki., (C) (30) : iild>onntll·Douit11 Fll•a (C) (30) A look at the historical launch· Inf and successful utlllzatlon of Early Bird, the first commercial communiCltions satellite. I (() "" M11nst.rs (30) ~ l4 (C) (60) DAIR News (C) (30) 7:00 CIS EVlflln1 News (C) (30) Wllat's My llntl (C) (30) I low Lucy (30 ) ... t ttle Clocl (C) (30) C:O.IHdltJ/Mutual Fund (30) • (6) lrNded (C) (30) : MOnl (30) (j) Trvtll er ~uenc. (C) Islands In U.. Scm (C) (30) TW &lrf (C) {30) 7:30 fJ IS Ci) lAncer (C) (60) John· ny's past u Johnny Madrid catches up with him when ht Is reco&nlzed by a bounty hunter who II purauin1 a youn1 woman found livll\I on uncer property. Lynn Lorina and Joe Don Baklf fllesl D 0 (]) m I Dr••• of Jeannie (ej (30) "Please Don't Give My Jeannie No More Wine." Junnie uses her maiic to produce an an· clent bottle of wine that cause.s trouble for all concerned. Allen Oppenhelmlf and Mary Grover iuest. 8 Sbl•~U.. stars (C) (30) @ 0) Mod Sql&ICI (C) (60) "Sweet hlld of Terror." Mistaken for someone else, Julia Is abducted by 1 dlscruntled h1ndyman. Robert CalYlo ma~es his TV debut as Ed Bonney. Mutine Bartlett andn Den· nls Patrick iuest. a M1111on • Movie: (C) HScorpio letttra" (drama) '67 -Alex Cord, Shirley Eaton, Laur.nee Naismith. An American and his beautiful rival are hired by two British aovemment 11endes competin1 to smash a blackmallin& rina headed by a man known only as Scorpio. Ttdlnlcal Corner (30) I Trutll or Coaseq111ncea (C) (30) Major Ada .. (60) City Wlldlm (C) (60) Qlldto el Rote (lO) a.-oo B O @ m Debbi• leynelds (C) (30) "Games (Married) People Play." Debbie's tournallstic a~lra­ tlons are tested when Jim decides to teach her a lesson. I Jact lenny (30) To Tell U-. Trutll (C) (30) S1Ddl Maf\et/ feat.re (30) Dbcltlleque .CO.Ce (C) (60) 1:10 11 a oo Red Shho11 <t> <60> Vincent Price and Frank Sinatra Jr. 1uest. 11 0 @ m Jllla (C) (30) "The Prisoner of Brenda." Julia dells with an ultra·lnttlliaent babysitter and an overly efficient maintenance man. Phyllis Thomp30n and Wllliam Brimley fUesl 1J c.ldetl Y•Jll'I (C) (30) "The Hi&fl Andes." O @(])l(!)AIC Me'llt of till WeH: (Cf "l&ad Water 5.ad" (ed· venture) ·~elr Dulle•, Bradford Dillman, Lana Wood, .Ricardo Mon- talban, France Nuyen. Criminal forces and a team of aclenM vie for sunken treasure. I DMll F!Mt Sllow (C) (90) T\e Bit Valley (C) (60) ~ Tlleatr• (60) llltlriKe (C) (30) "Some Sim· ulators." lnterfece traces the de- ve!Ot>mtnt of the "lar1e ampllt\Jde" fll&ht simulator, a device which duplicates cockpit motion. 9:00 0 ~ (i) m F1m TUlldaf (~ (2 hr) NBC News' monthly telm· slon ma1azine includes a report on student life at Moscow University. Sander Vanocur is anchorm1n. ''The End of Boosterism" Is also dla· cussed by Professor Frank Tyson, urban ecologllt 1t USC. 8 JOIN Al HIRT AND * SARAH VAUGHAN For An UNFORGETTABLE HR.! D sa.c... s (C) (60) "The Al Hrrt Show." Sarah Vau1han )oina Al for an hour of New Or1una Jazz· (Continued) TRAINED FALCON IN . MISSION: IMPOSSIBLE DRAMA ' You wouldn't expect the super-smart lmpollible M;. 1ions Force to recruit a bird- brain for a vital usjpment. But in lb.is case it's a real one, feathen and all. A blahly tnincd falcon belpe io the accomplishment of an IMF mi.Ilion in the ftnt part of a three-part epitode of Mis- sion: Impouible on Sunday at 10 PM, in color on CBS. In the show the bird is put of a maaic act stqed by Leon- ard Nimoy and guat aw Lee Meriwether, both in the rold ol IMP aaeata. to impress a simple-minded kina. played by Noel Harrieon. The IMF proj- ect is to aave a friendly mon- archy by preventina the mar-, ri.aae of a royal eoUlin (&uat star Diane Baker) to a villain- OUI usurper (John Vemon). • A measure of the ~ oa the.eet when tbe faJoon worked could be eeen when tbe ... tant directors can for "Quiet, tt normaDy bellowed. came in I wblaper, ''We doU:t want to diatract the bird~., aaid handler Mike Ortep. u1'hey can be very skittish .... Ortep worked almolt three Wttb to aet bis falcon ready for its M.iaioo: Impouible appearance. He bad to map out lO aeparate bits of action, a complex task for a bird accustomed just to ala~ mindedly apottina and aeizina prey. Ortep, who specialir.es in providing eagles and faloom for movie work, trained the IMP bird to attack an actor, fty toward the cam- era, aliabt on the floor, take off for a perch on a sate. then tly alona a corridor and around a comer-.nd all done on cue. "In the wild it's no problem getting a falooo to fly. But oo a movie set they get all shook up at ~ people, liahts a.od noi.e and don't like to work," said Ortep. .JI' He used little bits ot'raw meat to help lure the bird· from point to point, being careful not to overfeed it. . '"The minute be geta enoogh. he'll just ao to aleep," Ortep l&.id. He values h.is half-dozen trained prairie falcons at $1000 each. ..1 can use only male birds." Ortega added. "The females are too mean." FIRE SCREEN SPECIALISTS CUSTOM MADE SCREENS -S DAY SERVICE S..utlful decor•tive colors In m1ny flnllhel. Wide Hlectlon of GAS LOGS. FREE E1tim1tn given. (Since 1920) SlllTA Alll TUT ~ lWIUll co. 2202 S. MAIN -545-0491 SANTA ANA ,...u ·. TuESDAY (Continued) oritntad musical tare. Featured ere Dizzy Gillespie, Pete Candotl and Don Ellis. fE NET F•stlval (C) (60) "11 Some· body There?" Ell W1tlac:h, Anne Jackson and Brock Peters prwnt a program of dramatic readin&s which reflect the outlook of Ameri· ca's poor minority. g) C11udto Awtt1Mt (C) (30) * BEDTIME STORIES FOR ADULTS AT 11 PM-KTTV 9:30 II GOVERNOR ANQ J.J. * HIT OF THE SEASON WEDNESDAY JANUARY 1 For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAY· TIME PROGRAMS. Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. All sta- tions reserve the right to change programming with· out advance notice. DAYTIME MOVIES fl 9 ([)The 'ovemor and JJ. (C) (30) Alexis Smith guests as a 9:00 fJ (C) "Tiie Diamond QUNn" (ad· airl out of Governor Drlnkw1ter's venture) '53-Arlene Dahl, Feman- torgotten past. do Lamas. Gilbert Roland. I Ntn (C) (30) Baxter Ward. 9:lO B "To the Ends of the E1rt11• Bl!I Johns News (C) (30) (drama) '-4S--Oick Powell, Signe Horse Open (60) @!) Mualca J Estrellas (C) (30) ~Hon& Kone Affair" (drama) 10':00 II ~ Cf) CBS Ntws Hour (C) 'SS-Jack Kelly, May Wynn, Richard (60) llll.oo l tD News (C) (60) m .. 'Cott.p To Lef' (mystery) '41 @(])(})Marcus Walby, M.D. -Alastair Sim Leslie Banks (60) "The Soft Phrase of ' · Peace.'' Or. Welby treats a college 12:00 0 ''Two-Ooti.r httlH'' (drama) '52 student inju~e y a policeman dur· -John Litel, St. eve Brodie. Ing a demon tion. 1:30 m "Swln& Time" (musical) '36-1 Della! (C) ( ) Fred Astaire Ginger Rogen.. hrrJ M 60) ' Specula n (C) @VA eon. 2:00 fJ ''Tittf c.,.. To Blow Up AIMfi.. vel'llltion With Or. 'i:ouis Leakey." ca" (adventure) '43 -Anna Sten, The noted anthropolo&lst's fossil· Geor1e Sanders. !zed findinp have added more than al "Sttlftft Tr'-nite" (mystery) 19 million years to man's history '46-Preston Foster, Signe Huso. m Carce! de Mujeres (30) •:30 II (C) "Ew.ythlnc But tlle Trutfl" 10:30 @!) DEBUT Cynttll1 (30) Story of a (comedy) 'SS-Maureen O'Hara, John youn& woman who marries tor Forsythe. wealth. 11:001Q0 NIWI (C) 111• Westerners • Movie: (C) "DIVJ" (comedy) '57 -Harry Seeombe, Ron Randell, Alexander Knox. tD RITA SUFFERS BRUTAL * REJECTION 11 PM-KTTV ! Peyton Pltu H• Said, She Slld (C) Cl) Cinema 17: "letter From an Unknown Woman." Joan Fon· talne. I @ ~ CJJ News (C) Rt11an l'ra:s Conflftnct ma>N111r1 (C) 11 :30 I Q;) (j) Mtf"f 'rinln (C) • @ @ m JollnnJ C.r11Dn (C) Mowie: "Another Part of tht orat" (drama) '48-fredric March, Ann Blyth. I (!) 1Dlck Cavttt (C) Stnnre Paradise (C) MOVW. "TM forMtn Went to franct" (drama) '42-Robert Mor- ley, Constance Cumminrs. 12:00 m Movie: "Wlnp of tM Momlna" (comedy·romance) '37-Henry Fon- da, Annabella. 1:00 II Movie: ''Th• Seventti Victim" (suspense) '43-Kim Hunter, Tom Conway. f V r N I N c; 6:00 I Bi& Ntn (C) (60) Jeny Oun'phy. HunUty·8rinkley (C) (30) Steve Allen Show (C) (90) Ula Alvarez, Al Jarreau, Jerry Van Dyke, Mary Futemick, and Skiles and Henderson guest. fJ Six O'CloQ Movit: "Tiie Deleft fox" (drama) '51-James Mason, Sir cedric Hardwicke, Jessica Tandy. • Did Van Dyle (30) 11le Flintstones (C) (30) Star Trat (C) (60) C m Mike Douflu (C) (90) : iil1ts New? (30) 00 CBS News ~C) (30) • Pasion Citana (30} • News (C) (60) Jack White. 6:30 0 KNBC N....mt• (C) (60) fJ The Game '•me (C) (30) ''How Cautiou~ Ate You?" This question is con5idered by guests Jaye P. Mor- gan. Scoey Mitchlll and Barbara Heller. My fnorit. Martian (30) Office of th• Pmident (30) @ Huntt.,·BrinkleJ (C) (30) : 'uten T11 (30) (j) Tiie Munst.n (30) • Notidero 34 (C) (60) • lMIR fMWI (C) (30) OfJNews (C) Q) Action ThNtre: "Badlands of 7;00 Montana." CBS b1t1ln1 News (C) (30) Whirs My Une? (C) (30) 1:300 Cofttmunlty Bull.tin loud (C) G) All·Nlltrt Show: "Jungle Hell," "The But Generation," "Robot vs. the Aztec Mummy " t:JO IJ ..... (C) Pap 12 I Lon lUCJ (30) Beat UI• Clock (C) (30) ComlllOditJ I Mutual fund (30) (i) America! (C) (30) : AtiOn! (30) (j) Trvtlt or ConMqu.nces (C) THt""fDAILY PILOT, TV WED<, JANUARY S, 1970 . m Wanderlust (C) (30) '51-Alan Ladd. llubeth Scott, John GJ 11'1t 'lri (C) (30) Ireland. Storr of the notorious IX· 7:30 IJ 9 Cl) Ht• Hn (C} (60) ploits of a ren.11de Confader1te Guests Include Wanda JllCkson and general In the closlnc of the Civil Henson Caralll. War. D 9 @ m TM Vlrefniln (C) Ell) News Ill Ptraptedve (C) (60) {§0) "You ~n Lead a Ho!'le to g, 8oJ d• 11.U. (60) water." Strother Martin and Biu-* ARE YOU LOOKING FOR beth Hubbard cuest in this comedy abOut 1 Southern Be!le's plirht THE ACTION? KTTV IS when she heads West to marry. WHERE IT'S AT 11 PM! I Stv"'..!... tilt Stari (C) (30) .::!:\ u.-Opn (60) @ W a> 11le flJln& Nun (C) U1 ...,.._ ( ) "My Sister. the Doctor." Sister 9:30 fJ Nan (C) (30) Baxter Ward. Bertrille's efforts to &ive her sister, aJ BUI Jollns News (C) (30) a medical doctor. a vacation from work cause a misunderstanding. 10:0011 tit Ci) Hl'!f~ll riv.-0 (C) (60) Elinor Donahue 1uests 15 1enniter. A supposed suicide of Wanda Puk-0 Mllllon $ Movie: "La Milera· er (Pamela Murphy), .the beautiful !ires" (classic) '51-Mlchael Ren· dau&hter of a prominent psychi- nle Robert Newton Debra Pa&et atrist (Wiiiiam Smithers), seems le; Edmund Gwenn. ' · lnvotve htt malin1ertng boyfriend I Truth or Consequences (C) (30) (Don Quine). Major Adams (60) 0 @@ m I lflcllt I The Wast Tec:hnlul Comer (30) of Cl1111tS Russell (C) (60) Milburn Ell) Joye• Chtn Cooks (30) "Barte· Stone of Gunsmoke is on·camera cued Spareribs." storyteller for this special that de· m Chucho el Roto (30) picu the Old West through the paintings of Charles Russell. The 1:00 0 Jact lknnJ (30) Project 20 production utilizes their fJ @@a> The Courtship of special still·picturu-in·motlon tech- Eddle'a faUI« (C) (30) ''How Do nique to brina Russell's 1ction You Know If It's Really Lover' At palntinp to life. Charles Russell a party arran&ed to Impress little was both a cowboy and an artist Elsie, Eddie is dazzled by Margaret and has been cal'ed "the 1rute$1 and almost loses them both. painter or Western life." He was m To Ttll die Trvttl (C) (30) also a masterful storyteller and fE ~ Martel So1•1111ary (30) much of the script draws generous Ef:) llle forayta Saf' (60) (R) ly on RuS3ell's own words. fl) DEBUT Tremendl Corte (30) g m News (C) (60) Courtroom comedy ft Del'a! (C) (60 1:30 IJ Cjj CJ) Tht llewerty Hillbillies m Perry Ma.ton (60) (C) (30) Jed joins Hooterville farm· flll Homewood (C) <60) er Howard Hewes In providing a ai) C1reef de Mujeres (30) ne~ plane and hangar for Steve's 10:30 m Cynthia (30) tlyinf service. 1J DEBUT Prus 8o1 (C) (30) Dick 10:-45 Q ro New1 (C) (45) Enberg Is host.moderator of a no-@ @ Cinema 17: "Force of Evil." holds·barred l\I sports press con· John Garfield, Marie Windsor. lerence-type show. John Hall of the 11:00 ft Q aJ g) m Ntw1 (C) L.A. Times, and Bud Furillo of the g The Westerners Herald·Ellaminer, and Bud Tucker O ''Th• Main Attraction" (drama) of the San Gabriel Valley Tribune '63-Pat Boone, Nancy Kwan. Mai bombard sports world personalities Zetterling. with p~obina questions: .J~ck Kent m THIS IS THE PLACE Cooke 1s scheduled as initial guest. 0 Ci1J @ a> Room 222 (C) (30) * PEYTON AT 11 ON 11! ''Operation Sandpile." Mr. Kaufman m Peyton Pl1ct finds a way to cope with toddlers m He Said, Sitt Said (C) (30) brouifit lo school by students. ~ '6',.... rTI Ntw1 (C) !D•vlcl frost SMw (C) (90} ltil l.!!.I ~ ~ I IJlclX4 I Holiday on Ice Pre-fD NET lourn1I (R) • Covtna• (C) (60) A behind-11:30 II Qj 00 Merv 'ritftn (C) the-scenes looll at the opening night 0 @ @ m JollnnJ C.non (C) of the Ice Follies at the Forum. Bill O Movie: (C) "Sliver Loda" (west- Burrud and Dave Reeves host ern) '54 -John Payne, Ljiabeth EE S1atbntsb lllutre (60) Scott, Dan Duryea ' m Sonrlns (30) Im~ Cavett (C) 9:00 II Qj 00 Medical Center (C) (60) ~np Pandit. ~C) Or. Joe Gannon gel! a mysterious Action Tbeatre: 'The Sava&e turndown when he asks the mother Horde." of a &irl needing a kidney trans· 12:00 m Movie: "Diary of I Cll.nibtf· plant to become her daughter's maid" (drama) '46-Paulette God· donor. Carrie Snod1ress. Inga Swen-dard. Bur&ess Meredith. son and Pat Hingle guets. l :OO II Movie: ''While tM City SIMpt" 0 KRAFT MUSIC HALL (mystery) '56-0ana Andrews Ida * Alan King, Michele Lupino. ' Lee, Paul Lynde O O News (C) 0 @ @ m Krart Music Hill (C) ID ~ion ThMtrt: ''four In a (60) "Alan King Rings in the New Jeep. Year and Wrings Out the Old." Alan 1:15 O CommunitJ Bulletin Be1rd (C) Kin& is host to Michele Lee. Paul • • .. Lynde, David Frye and Gene Bayloa. 1.30 m ~11·,~latrt ~· Captain B~. §Wrestling (C) (60) col t. Mr. Pemn and Mr. Traill (il) C'3l G) ABC WednesdlJ and "Crimes of Stephen Hawk~." ovia: (Cf"'R..t Mountlin" (drama) 2:30 II News (C) i g 10 2 3 8 11 11 1 2 3 4 5 7 11: • • ( TV !PORT! HIOH//()HT! SUNDAY, JANUARY 4 9:30 AM tJ Qt Ci) NFL Championship Game (C) Winners of the LA.· Minn. clash of Dec. 27 meet winners of the Dallas-Cleveland game of Dec. 28. Winners will play the AFL Champions in the Super Bowl. If the Rams compete in today's game. it will be blacked out in Los Angeles area and shown on tape at Midnlaht. 10-.30 D @ AFL Ch•mplonshlp Game (C) Kansas CIN Chiefs vs. Oakland Raiders. Game time subject to change.· 2:30 tJ f IJlc1iL I Where the Action Is (C) A preview of the upcoming National Hockey League season. 3:00 m Southern C•llfomla Open Golf (C) Final day of the $52,000 tournament for pros at the 6,912-yard, par-72 Mission Viejo Golf Club course at San Juan Capistrano. THURSDAY, JANUARY 8 8:301J Boxing (C) Tentative schedule: Jimmy Robertson vs. Jose Luis Cruz in lO·round lightweight bout. FRIDAY, JANUARY 9 11:00 1J UCLA Basketblill (C) Bruins vs, Oregon Webfoots. Taped. SATURDAY, JANUARY 10 11:00 AM D Ci) 00 Senior Bowl Football (C) Outstanding college seniors compete at Ladd Memorial Stadium in Mobile, Ala. 1:30 0 @ CV ABC's Wide Wor1d of Sports (C) Hula Bowl Football Game from Hawaii. 2:30 IJ til 00 RETURN Pacific 8 Buketball (C) USC vs. Oregon WebToots at L.A. Sports Arena. 3:00 tJ Ci!) (j) RETURN CBS Golf Cluslc (C) Leading pros com- pete in tournament at the Firestone County Club 1n Akron, Ohio. 4:30 IJ Los Angeles Open Golf Tournament (C) Semifinals from Rancho Park Golf Course. 'fJ @ @ RETURN Pro Bowters Tour (C) The $45,000 Wichita Centennial Open from Crestview Lanes, Wichita, Kan. !5:25 9 la'kers Basketball (C) LA. Lakers at Chicago Bulls. 7:00 mi sJlclAI Pro Football: Big Game America (C) Burt Lancaster narrates review of football's past five decades. 11:00 9 UCLA Basketball (C) Bruins vs. Ore. State. ame taped. NATIONAL HOT ROD ASSOCIATION PRESENTS 1970 1f/N1'BRNJ1'/0NJlS rr.~ ,_,_, CHAMPIONSHIP DRAG RACES . ._. JANUARY 30-FEBRUARY 1 POMONA RA EWAY Los Angeln County Fairgrounds, Calif. RESERVED SEATS ARE AVAILABLE IN ADVANCE • Drag Racing NHRA Style ---------------I ICHllA WllfnJIHAT!OftAU l411 Wnt ""''St•-I lo• Anc••••· Ca lll 90004 PteaM 1end me ,.,. foHow'lna ret.•NM ~·: Selunlty ... .... et J1 .. ch. lncludln1 ad min ion I Sunday ti H .. ch, tnch1dl"• admtu lon I lnclo .. d I~ n i pot!•~• ;~~ ht~"",;11n1 ,;~•I u•lt I ' : HAM[ ...... ' ' City Sitt• -· Zip Mtb ~ P'ty-lie MHltA Wlntomet ..... la 1000 BEAUTIFUL STICK-ON LABELS $1.00 tax included Use as return address labels or 1.0. stickers for books, records, photos or any number of personal items. Also sticks on glass and may be used to mark food items. Labels are printed with stylish vogue type on fine qualify white gummed paper. FREE BONUSES • Set of Package Mailing 'labels _ • ReusAble..M.gic S.al-+op-Containir ~ htdude your Zip Code PILOT PRINTING LABEL DIV., BOX 1875 NEWPORT BEACH, CAUF. 92663 JUST PLANE COMMON SENSE • • • BUT EXPENSIVE Writing a script about the crew of a B-25 bomber is one thina, comma up with this vintaae craft for filming is another. Composing the story for "Sole Survivor," the new motion picture that bas its world premiere on The CBS Friday Night Movie at 9 PM, wu the concern of Guerdoo liueblood, but ftndina the plane and then aetting it to the production site was the problem of the executive producer, Steve Shaaan, Providing authenticity and ra.lism is always the goal of any film- maker, so uaina a mock-up of a B-25 wu considered only u a last resort. Not one, but two, of the bombers were found at the Air Museum ltS-WlllloM SMltWt ,,.,,) -' AJdMrtl ...,,..,., .,., • .. ,. U.W>lwd ln an lnvatifollon ~"'6 co""w"d lltlo tlw c,..,,, o/ • ~' 1""'1dlsoP.~d17 1HTf ._.,111r wltlk on a World w.,. II ~ to Skfb, U. 'Sol1 SID'l'IW>r." in Ontario, California~oe sleet and airworthy and another used for display only and appearina juu u it did when it had ftown dur-ins the war yuii. Now the problem was lo tel ooe of the plana to the Mojave Daert 81ming site some 120 miles from the mUICWD. PlyinJ the airworthy bomber to the ftat bed of the E.l Mirage Dry Lake would have been a simple operation, but the idea that the B-25 would have to be mauled to resemble a crash-landed plane didn't sit well with museum otlicials. A member of the museum sta1I offered a sugatioo and his aervices to dismantle the display plane, truck it to the location ,site on three ftat-_bcd rip and reassemble it to recreate the aftermath of a belly laoding. Flyina the ftyable plane would have entailed a 12-minute ftigbt with an dpenditure of $80 for hiab-«tane fuel, but the trek tbroup the Cajon Paa eocompasxd three days of convoying the plane in three leCtiom on three trucb with a lead and fOllow truck. u required by California traffic laws. The convoy could only travel by niabt. between the boun of 9 PM and 4 AM, IO u oot to impede the normal flow of tra1lic durina the business day. :row ~ for the men and equipment totaled approximately Upon arrival at tbe location title the plane wu prepared to por-ll'llJ tbe .. Home llun," tbe ICript'a derelkt bomber Jest for 17 yean in the IUldl of tbe Lt"bya.o dae.rt tome 700 miles oft c:ounc. The World Wu ll model a.25 bomber, named the Mitchell bomber iD booot ol Ocneral Billy Mitcbell, wun't c:boeen arbitrarily "1 IU1bor TNeMood to be tbe craft involved in his atory. True- Wooc&•a Ire Ill 1811 tnow)edae of aircraft bu a Jona history. Hia bowleql of the lllbject com. utunlly. for be ii tbe Fand9oo ol alDy NJtcbeJl. no after a !:f. dnlgk IDally forced ttc:Oplitjon ~ 11M U.S. Army ol dlle tr•""JUI pocmtial of military airpowu . ....... THE ~ILY PILOT, TV WE£K, JANUAJrf 3, 1970 THURSDAY JANUARY a For morning and afternoon listings, please see DAY- TIME PROGRAMS. "Below, for your convenience, are the day's movies. All sta· tions reserve the right to change programming with- out advance notice. DAYTIME MOVIES 9:000 ...._. C... lie........,. (com· edy) '52 -Ozzie Incl Htrriet, Div· id ind Rielly NellOn, Rock Hud11>n. 9:30 IJ "'Cenlttlt 1·225" {ldventur• dram•) '43-Rindolph Scott, Ell• R1lnes. fJ (C) "'T1lt Old Dltt ....... (comecly·dram1) '63-Tom Poston, .llnette Scott l;. m (C) "lletlltr II I 1f,......•" (comedy) '49-torettl Yount. Vin Johnson. 1%:00 U '11lt hll•IN" (sports.drama) 'SO-Jerome Courtl1nd, Bevetty Ty- ler. 1:30 m (C) ..... leenUt" (comtdy- dram•) '56 -Biii Traven, Norah Gorsen. %:00 fJ "Cral9Ht'' (mptery·dram1) '55 -William Beodlx. Bfverty Miduef&. m "Air ...... (dt1m1) 'SS-Rich· •rd Dennlni Gloria Jan. 4:JO II (C) "J1le ..... .....,. Cactw.- ture) '53 -Red Hudton, Piper Laurie. I 'v I •, I \ (' H•U.,..lrlftkllf (C) (30) 6.'tlll lic Ntws (C) (30) Jeny Dunphy. StM Allttl (C) (90) Guests are rtls Mayfield and The lmpres- lic>ns, w1:1y Cox, Rip T•1'« and Professor Jullus Sumner Miller. u Six O'Clecl .... (C) '11lt Leq sailpl" Part I (adventure) '64 -Richard Widmar\, Sidney Pott*. Russ T1mblyn. Viklnc advtnturera •rch for • lecendary bell of IOfld cold which hid been looted from the Saracens by the Crusaders, Diet Van DJM (30) n. AlfttltiMI (C} (30) Stlt Trtk (C) (60) (1) Ml'-Doa&tll (C) (90) : ~. New? (30) CJ) CIS Ntwl (C) (30) ""'°" Clta111 (30) Ntws iC) (60) J1clt White. &:301 MIC ,..._-a (C) (60) · n. ca .. c .. e <C> (30) My f...nte Martiln (C) (30) Office of tilt rr..w.t (30) : To Save TMORW (30) "Hori· zon House." NET probes Ptllladel· phlas half WIY hou• fOI the meft• tally Ill, where •·patients Join trained staff members In the ,... h1bilitatlon proceu. la Cf) TM Muftttln (30) fl) NOtidtro 34 (C) (60) 7:00 8 CIS Ewtt1lllC hn (C) (30) winer Cronkite. fJ n.t's My Uoo? (C) (30) dWft. Piper I I art 1pra. 1nd """ ) '64 Mt*, :urers IOlld from I. tO) 1) ,Hof!. adtl· mtfl· toln I ,.._ (30) m I Lowe luq (30) UJ hat U.. Clock (C) (30) EE Co••odity Report (30) @ 00 TIM A111eriun Wnt (C) (30) tl1) Ahora! (30) Qt Cl) Truth Of Consequtnca (C) ED That Clr1 (C) (30) 7:30 I) 9 Cl) Fe•llJ Alfllr (C) (30) The grandfather the children have not seen for five yea11 and whorn they scarc.iy remember p1ys 1 call on Cissy, Buffy and Jody. Paul Fix auats. 0 @ (i) m Daniel leont (C) (60) "An Anael Cried." A novitiate nun, the sole survivor of an Indian attack. is asked to make a cruci1I decision. Mariette Hartley guests. fJ @ (]) &) Tiit Cltost Ind Mrs. Muir (C) (30) "Not So Faust." Jot Flynn guests as Mr. Turner, a devil in Claymore's nightmare. (;J Miiiion $ MCIN: (C) "JeSlt i..... (drama-biorraphy) '39 - Tyrone Power, Henry Fonda. Nancy D *BOB NEWHART, TOP *COMICS IN "A LAST LAUGH AT THE 60'S" o @ mm 1 "'<!Al 1 A Lat Lauifl at UM &O's (60) Star Bob Newhart will be joined by many of the funny men who areatly lnflu· enced comedy styles In this decade. Godfrey Cambridae. Don Adlrns. Don Rickles. Tiny Tim. Allan Sher· man. Mort Sahl and Dick Benjamin are amona those featured. * ALLISON RECEIVES A REQUEST 11 PM-KTTV 9:30 D ~ Ct( m Drapet (C) (30) "Narc IJna Hype." Sgt. frid•J and Officer Gannon search for • 19-year-old former nercotiC\ addict who Is feared to have returned lo dope. Len Wayl1nd, Virginia Vin- cent. l(e'ley Sebrina and Marshall Reed auest. I Ntw1 (C) (30) Baxter Ward. 1111 Jolina News (C) (30) Hone Opt11 (60) Kelly. The story of Jesse and Frank 10:00 0 @ (i) m Dun Martin (C) James: the circumstances that set (60) Petula Clark. Peter Graves, them on the road of crime. Gale Gordon and Don Rice 111 auest m Trvtll °' eonsequeftCel cc> c3o> B m ..... cc> c3o> an @ (I)(!) I me IA I {>Inner u:1 Mai« Adam (60) 1t Howard K. s.'s (C) (60) A fE Ttdlnlcal Com• (30) black tie catherlna of ABC News f1l) Theatre leat (C) (30) Hal Mari· correspondents will diacuss the m1· enth1I looks 1t scenes of the East· Jor neW$ events of the past year West Play81's production of "Raah· ovef coff" at Smith's home In omon." Maryland. P1rticip1tlna will be Wll· E Chldo el RftD (30) llam H. Lawrence, Jules Beraman, John Scali, Edward P. Morian. Ted a.119 Cl) JI•. N.,. (C) (60) Kippel, Russell Jones, Barrie Duns· Tennessee Esme Ford and 5lnaer m«e and Tom Jarriel. Julie Budd . (;J Dtfla (C) (60) a Jade ltnny (30) m ''"' ....... (60) o uzi (])Q>n•t e1r1 <C> <Jo> m n. Mvoc11a <C> ceo> <R> ''Openln& Nl&ht." Ann drums of II) Carce! dt Mufal (30) reeeivin& caustic reviews of her 10:30 @I) cr-t111a (30) Broadw1y openin&. but &ets her finaer stuck in the kitchen faucet 11:00 I a o ..... (C) before curtain time. Columnists Tit w~ Anny A.reherd Joyce H1ber and • Mevlt: "flit on Thttu Jordal" Vernon Scott 'auest as themselves ( rama) '49 -Barbara Stanwydc, In the dream MQUenct. Wendell Corey. m Te Tell die Tl'tlttl (C) (30) m TAKE l PEYTON PLACE fl) hide Mlltet/Fettllrt (30) * BEFORE BEDTIME: KTTV e f1l) Wasllln"9n Week In Review (C) I""" Pl (30) ... Slid. ;: Slid (C) ., ~",. (C) (2 hr) "Un Rayo CD a~ 17: "lifeboat" T•I· de Lui. Story of in ltallln count lu •h Bankhnd, John Hodlak. who secmtJ mames • Spanlth l@QI Cl),. ... (C) alnaer. : WaMlftatu Wetl Ill IMtw (C) a:• o a m m ,,..... <C> <60> mm ..... <C> •'Dora." -Th, und«wond attempta • crtmtt to take O¥tr Sin Fnnciaco'a whol• 11•301 • ~ Men (C) ule produce area.· Hank Brandt l'owte: !JL~:::n.C::. ~ and Ann Doran iuest. liii &...r (elaalk·romanu) '53-11 leal"' (C) (90) Jim'"' Robert· MldlHI Rtdarave. Joan GrMnwood, .,., VI. JoM Luis Cna In 10.round Dame Edith Enns. lllhtwellht bout (ttnt.atlvt card). I aJ Dk* c.u (C) 1J@ (Dff> ltwttdlM (C) (30) Stnn .. Ptnldlle (C) ''Stm1nth1'1 Lost W•ktnd." Sim M..w. "HenpW' "(dnme) '53 aoes on a marathon eetln1 si>rtt -Sttr1ln1 Heyden, .lotn letllt. tfttt drinkllll milk which tM wlteh lZ:OO ID Mtiwlt: "A .,.11,.,... ....,... Eamtr1ldt hn fiPd fOI' Tabitha. • M " CmYstefY) '49--¥at O'Brien, m Dwld frtlt (C). (90) Ella R1lnn. Ol 11lt lie YdtJ (C) (60) ....... "'*' (60) GD 11rr ,...,.._ (C) (10> ''Vol· pone." A new production from Ctn· ada of Btn JoMOn's eluslc 17th ctfltury farce atarTln1 Jack Criley. ,_"9 (f) CIS ~ .... : '"TiMl 1 .. CM' (drarM) '65 -rt1f Donahue. Joey Heethertoft. 1:00 IJ Mewit: Hiii Old Qka .. " (drl· rM) '38-TJront Power, Alica fe,e. 1 0 ..... (C) a.. n.tN: "Wlltn Gana· l•nd Strikes." 1:3011 C..••ltJ .... IMhl (C) All-ftlclrt aw. "Kind HMrtl and Corontb." '-o-t War," "Mon· ttar Otmolllhtr." Van Johnson's 'Brass Ring' Is the Role of a Heavy "I've reached the inevitable point in a leading man's career in which I live to play 'heavies,'" says Van Johnson who, at 53, and with scores of motion pictures behind him, looks a decade younger and remains the ftip, bappy-go-!ucky guy he's always been. Johnson guest.stars this week in the "Brass Ring" episode of Universal's Name of the Game. Starring alongside old friends Robert Stack and Celeste Holm, Van portrays an enterpriaina manager of a youna Me.r- iaco priuftghter. In the end, Van tuma out to be a scoundrel. It's the second time ln a Stack~tarri.og "Oune" that Johnson bu wouod up the baddie. Lut lea· son. in a ahow called .. Speed," viewen will re.- member him u an ap- parently ni~ aJfabJe truck driver who turned out to be the "~t of the big-time inuei;eodent dope pushers." The freckle(l.faced, slightly red-haired veteran now makes New York bis home, in an apartment penthouse on Eaat S4th Street. He commutes to Hollywood when be gets a role, then it's back again aa soon aa the role's complete. · "1 love New York," Van aaya. "Althouah after my last Name of the Game I made a two-hour picture in Sao Francisco, 'S.P.X.,' aod I must admit I've got a tremeodoua affection for that tO<p and may take an apartment there too." Van is relaxed about hia career tbae days. "I've reached the point where I'm too old and too rich to concern m)'IClf with the whole Hollywood syndrome of 'getting that part,'" he amila. "A lot of parts I turn down if they have no depth. I keep aettiQa calls for leading man roles, especially airplane pilots," be aw. wryly. "l've done thaL Bverytime I play a pilot, the audieace lcnow1 that plane is going to laod safely. "But I'm still on the lookout for par1I In which I tum out to be the heavy. They're intrlauina. They lend an actor some vi- brance to hia character ••• a special aatiafaction you don't 8ad in leading rolea ... A voracious reader, Van QODIWDa five to IC\'eD boob a w..t when be'a not wortiq. He confeuea to baviq abo become IOG»- wbat o! a gourmet chef aa of late with a penchant for wbippiia up Mexican dishes. He keepe ftt by wort.ina out rq:ularly in a New York. om. oot far from bia pentbome. Thia month ha returna to Hollywood to make a pilot for C~ called "Mao in the Mjddle." A half-hour situation comedy, if the show eella, Van admits be may be a rep lar oommu1er. But poua1>1y from Sao Fraocilco, be winb. .. Brua Rina" ain Friday olaht at 8: 30 PM ow:r NBC. ,... 11 .. • TME ~ILY f"ILOT, TV WEEK, JANUARY 3, 1970 A·.T • T-1-N-T -1-0-N IMPORT CAR BUYERS NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY! PRICES WILL NEVER IE LOWEil SO VISIT THE DEALERS SHOWN HERE AND PfCK OUT THE SPORTS CAR OR IMPORT YOU'VE ALWAYS WANTED• ftlUMPH SPlllTE • SPITFIRE AUSTIN HEALEY· GT6 SALES & SERVICE Always a-large Hlectfon of new and used cars. 'FllTZ_WARREN·s SPORT CAR CENTER 710 E~ First St., SA 547..0764 THINK ·~ S.. and Drive them Durlnt our Model Clearance Sale· on NOWl HEii FRIEDLANDER 13750 Beach Blvd., Wmstr. 537-6824 ORANGE COUNTY'S • f [!][Q]lY)[Q][!]~ Of.Al LEWIS ·.a1TS 191& HDr, C.M. 641-9303 ..... 11 HEAD9UAITEltS ..... ~ .. -& ... .. ......_a.._.,. • ..,,.... .nc.-.... ~~. OPE LS CiALOIE! H ............ , ....... . ..... ~ .. ,nc.i ..... • • .... ., TEllY IUICK YOUI •ST SPORTS CAI IU . "-..... I It T.-, ....... 1-.IZ IMPOITS ......... ...., .... I , .... ......., MCTOIY AUTN4MllD MALa COMPLETE FOltllOM CMt SHVICE 411 MAIM HUNTtNGTON 81ACH Your Authorized VW - Porsche Dealer in the Harber ArH Im @Home of tho Love Bug~ Speciale 445 I . CMlt Hwy. . ..,... '""· ..... '7J·ottt 54t·JH1 at. 5J ut. 54 & II SPORTS MINDED? Then Newport Imports 11 Your kind of place. Your Autherhrttl • AllSti• AIMrial Lar .. stock of used Porsche• J .. s, MG's, Austin HHley1, etc. PruqJ 01 i h liqJ Ol I S IOI W. Coast Hwy., N.I '42-M05, 54t-17'4 In tile ff ner Area tile Ecemy Hne f• till lualty ••• • 1970 P! I 1tc. fRIOAY JANUARY t For morning and afternoon li1tinp, please see DAY- TIME .-ROGRAMS. lelew, for your convenience, are the day's movies. All sta· tions reserve the right to chance programminc with· out advance notice. DAYTIME MOVIES t:OO D "'Tiie All·Amtricln" (dr1m1) '53 ~ony Curtis, Lori Nelson. 9:30 8 ''TM Awfld TnN' (r.omedy) •J7-t1ry Grant, Irene Dunne. fJ (C) .. Down A.n1 a.. SMltltr· lftf ,.,_., (comedy) '53 -Mitzi Gaynor, William lundi11n. • "ranlc In tfl• Str'ltts'' (drema) '50--Richard Wldftmk, Paul Doua- lu. 12:00 8 "Ap~ Qilf" (western) 'SO- 'SG--Alan Curtis, Tom Neal. 1:30 • '"fotlr Men and a rra,.r" (dra· ma) '3~ichard Green, David Niv- en. Loretta Youn1. 2:00 6 •'X • • • 11lt Unknown" (ICl·fl) •5] -Dean Ja11er, Edward Chap· man. m "Drl&Mf"' (mystef'J) '47--ffen· l'l._ Wilcoxon, Mary Brian. 4:30 9 (C) "St111 Strudl" (drama) '57 -Susan Struber&. Henry Fonda. 1.-00111' News (C) (30) Jerry Dunphy. 8D Hv.ae,.lrinkltf (C) (30) S.W. Allen Sllow (C) (90) Bob ane. Lyn Roman, Bill Dally, Paul Smith and Edward Mable 1uest. II Sil O'Cloct Movie: (C) ...,.. l.oft1 Ships" Conclusion (spectacu· lar) '64-Richard Widmark. Sidney · Poitier, Russ Tamblyn. I Diet Yan ope (30) 1't F11ntn1Mta (C) (30) Stir Tm (C) (60) m Mlb Do..,._ (C) (90) l1lT Chltd1111'a Sptdaf (60) e Muppets on Puppets." Rolfe the Muppet and his friends demon· strate their antic art.~ pantomime, dance and short skit Ci) cas Ntwa cc (30) , ... , ...... (30) l:JO DIC NtW111 •Ice (C) (60) • TIM aa .. I•• (C) (30) My fMritt MartJan (30) Office ., th Pr..w..t (30) ElltltJ-lrfMllJ CC) (30) MU..-. (30) 34 (C) (60) Diii .._. (C) (30) J:OO CIS &tnhlt N... (C) (30) wr..t'a My Lint? (C) (30) I lMt l.ecJ (30) hat tilt C1ed (C) (30) C..MllftJ/Mllbiaj f_, (30) 00 CJ111111 ...... (C) (90) " an From the Al11no." Glenn Ford. Julle Adtms. 1-.1 (30) (f) lirwll " c..11,1111• (C) fret lilt (C) (30) 7:l0 @(I) let s.art (C) (30) Max end 99 ao to London to ltwatlptt a 1trlta ot crlma commttt.d bJ wu dummies ot femous people slons to Sidly. Tht navlfalof, Ham· broo.(flt to lift. ntr \Basth•rt). i. the lone survivor, D tD Ci) m HIP Q1parql (C) hrtln1 been rttcutd from the Medi· (60) •11ii Journal of Death." A ttn1nean after p1rachutln1 from former prison physldan taclnc ar· tht crippled plane. In baillnc out, rest char1es for wtllfully causln1 ht left his fellow crew members the deaths of many at his convict without a bearinc for their home patients btcomei the only man beae. John Cannon can ask to try to save &I PllJbor After Dark (C) (60) his 1ravely Ill wife. John Co'.lcos ilehael <:line, Mort Sahl, Meredith 1uest1. MacRae, Grer Mullavey, The Clara I Sbl•_e_ Ult 9tara (C) (30) Ward Sinaers. The Sir Ooulf 11 Quin- (ffj CV Q) ltt'a Mike • Dt1I tet and Sammy Shore 1uest. (JO) Monty Hall hosts.. 0 li1l (1) GD Httt eo.. th fJ Mlflloft $ MM: '11le M*'-illdei (C) (60) "Obie Brown and ••br" (comedy) '58 -Shlrfey the Black Princess." A bleck lo11er Booth, Anthony Per1dna, Shirley plans to quit the Bolts unless they Maclalne. come up with a bride for him. I Tnrtll or Conllquencet (C) (30) (Rescheduled) M1tor Ada• (60) 1 (]) Theatre 17 ~ Technical Cotner (30) : David SUutlnd (C) (2 hr) TM frtndl Ctiel (30) Julia HtJ Con Mena ltfl (30) Child prepares dinner In a pot. (R) 9:30 • News (C) (30) Baxter Ward tm Clttdo ti ltotlD (30) 1111 Jollas Ntw1 (C) (30) 1;08 8 Q) Ci) lllt hod Sup (C) (30) Mont Opere (60) To boost llufus' eco. Bert and Nodlel f apatias (30) Claudia hlYt his famlly tne dmm 10:00 QI (i) fD lracbn's World (C) '!!:_ ( ) 'The Money Men." Bia money •Jedi ltnnJ (30) Raymond Burr moves In to chal:enae Breckan as euests. heed of Century Pictures at the II @ 00 a> Tllt lradr llltd samt time Sylvia Caldwell quits the (C) (30) "54-40 and F1"1t." Th• studio to marry a banker. Carl Betz Brady kids fllht over what they are end Jen Ster1ln1 1uest. aolnc to trade for 94 books of 11,.._ (C) (60) tradin1 stamps. (})G) li•lllJ Duralltt f're. I To Tt:I tile Trd (C) (30) Mnta TIM lennen Siltm (C) (60) S11ock M1tt.t/f1atm (30) Mel Torme, Kaye Bellard and Monty 1..-... (C) (30) Dr. Albert Hell 1uest. HibbL. (R) 10.llal (C) (60) Im luceclta (Cl (30) hny Mnon (60) * THE HONEYMOON IS Cucel dt Mllitres (60) OVER TONIGHT AT 11! 10:30 CyntMa (30) l•lO. 9 (j) Hopn's ....... (C) 11:00 D a Newt (C) . (30) Col. Klink 11 ordered to shape • ~BRUINS TAKE up physically or ship out. * ON OREGON WEBFOOTS! D 9 00 m ..... tf .... ,,_ • ucu lalttlHJI (C) Bruins vs. (C) (90) "Brasa Rina." Dan Farrell University of Ore1on Webfoots. (Robert Stick) tries to help a JOun1 Game taped eerlier. Mexican-American bolter thread his fJ Mn: ''Tht Dlte9bodltd" way throulfl lits and corruption to (horror) '57 -Paul Burke, Alllton • boxlnc title. Lazaro Perez auests Hayes. 11 boxer Paco Zapata, and si>ecl1I e THE BRIDE AND GROOM 1uests are V1n Johnson, Celeste * RETUR~ TO PEYTON AT Hol~d :c~e~u (C) (30) 11 TONIGHT ON KTIVJ "· Sunshine Shancrl·la." I PIJfDn Piie. II @(I) U) Mr. '"* a.. tit Ht Slid. Site S.ld CC) Town (C) (30) 'The Mama1e S.V· (I) ca.. .. 17 (C) "Bullwhlp." er." Deeds Is suspected of btln1 uy Madison, Rhonda Flemlna. "the other min" When ht tries to I (6) a (I) ..... (C) llW a couple's mamaae. fit fonyte Sap (R) m Dntd F• (C) (90) DEBUT Esta Nedle 1 lu O.ce IB 11lt lie van., (C) (60) (30) Suspenae series. fl) Sa ..... Tllutr1 (60) 11 Ntws (C) fl1) c.sels Maaw Claa (30) Cuall 11:30 ~Mtn Crttfln (C) Ind student Bonnie Hampton per· 6 m Joll1t11J Carlell (C) form Brehms' "Sontta "°· 2 In F Cavett (C) Major." Sb11ttt Parldlst (C) ., """"Cite ...... (30) . Movtl: • .,...... t.... hrll" t:to (COmtd)') 'SS-Forrest Tu~«. Mar· • Premiere! New Picture! ir•t Whlt1nc. * "SOLE SURVIVOR" 12:00 ::!:."° .,_:, C: 111t WM" (ed . Vince Edwards Stars ~nturt) '35-Clark G•~le, Loretta CBS FRIDAY MOVIES Youn" 8 QI (I) CIS frldlJ Mewl« (C) 12:30 8 Movtl: (C) HAppolllbltllt In .._ _..,.. (dr1ma) 's-Yln· ....._.... (adventUf'lt) '53-Cltnn cent Edward&, Wiiiiam Shatntr, Font, Ann Sheridan, "Zechary Scott Richard B1tth•rt,,.~~~ CaMJ, Lou l:tO 8 Mowlt: (C) .. ,_. fnua Holl" Antonio, Dtftnls ~. 8rld David (western) '61-Audlt Mufl)hy, John and Patrict Wept. ~ bJ Saon. Gutfdon TrutbtoM, 1wd ftlmtd N 1 • .._ (C) locttlon flt Callfomla'a Mojave 0.. MtlM n..tn: "Pluncttre11 of trt. th• ltofJ rM!Ves around tht 1lnttd Rata." diacovtfy at a B-25 bomber In the 1:30•AD-Niot Sltew (C) "Sand," Libyan O..rt 17 ,..,.. after Its •'f:ack Sabb•th'' and "Swap dl11ppnr1nc. chlrtn1 bombln1 ml• Grlnro." lllGllE YOURSELF IEHllD THE lllCROPHOIEI WHICH OF THESE 'FISClllTllG CllEEIS llTEIESTS YOU1 O DISC JOCUY O NEWSCAMI 0 SPOITSCASTtl 0 COMMtlCIAl ANMOUMCO Fiii VOICI ANAL VSIS TllU YOU IF YOU HAVI "HIDDIN TAllN'J"I TRAI" AT HOME Oii iN OUll ltAUTIP'Ul NCW STUOIO ICH00l1 You ean lllfdJ broeduat ttcllnl~H •t llollle, 111 JOut tPlrt time, or Ill our MW lrMc.fft-111& kllool-LOCAT£D lllGHT HUIE. IN LOS ANCELU-11riffr tllt aupemaMMI of out Dlrtctina f1c11lb of 11 f11110 .. brotdUttert. lltdlo-TV ttltlont Mt)Wllere llftt 111 IMMCOIATt OlMAND for bottl "'"' and womtn to t1k1 °'" I"'"""'' t:::i ruit't...~:: ~:n"::cc":.11:·~ c•tl Tu1tlOll wltt.oflct aw11.t111, Sand to CAll(U ACADCMY'I cllwttl411 of f1mo11a ll'Oldc11t111 fOf fltU Hoa· let, rlCOfcl, allcl voice 111alnlt clttllla. N011CEI INROLL NOW P'Olt CAMElt ACADQIY'I NEXT Cl.Mii THta COULD • YOUll CHAHa lO "1T YOU .. &# 9QtlND THE Ill~ •Alt ec:crwdtt.d m~ of the N• tJonal Home Studv Council and "'9 • N.tlon11 Aaaoc:latlon of Tt'Mt and T~nlcal Sdloola • ~ved hw Vltenln T~ • Member of Callfomlt atl°" fM Priwte f.duc.tion •All ellclb4e Institution under the fldarally Insured Student Lottn ~m. ,--------------------· : CAREER ACADEMY ~: J 7• ....,.... ........ . : lei _... CaNfefwla llml I ~ (%1S) U..mzr ••1e-.w1 .... ....._. .. ...................... ,... ... .. -. w..u.. Name City, St1t./Zlp I em f"*'"t.d In 0 ClnM"OOm 0 HonM liMly 06AAA1'1 --------------------- Plael7 'The West of Charles aussell' "The Old West with the lid off!" That's the way Charles Russell, the cow- boy, knew it. And that's the way Charles Russell, the artist, painted it. 's Project 20 will take a close look at ' West o barles Ru~ll" in a one- hour r spe ial of that ti on NBC, Wednesda 0 PM. "Spencer Tracy could have done a won- derful job, I think, playing Charles Russell in his later years," says Frederic Renner, the man who is generally acknowledged as the foremost expert on the cowboy-artist. A. •· boy Renner knew Charles R-0 back in Great Falls, Montana -lived six blocks from Russell's studio and watched him paint. "He was always very good with kids," says Renner. Fifteen years ago, he recalls, the movies were going to do a film on Charles Russell. ''Fortunately, it never came off," he says. "I got a chance to look at the script, which was based on the most inaccurate of books about Russell. It would have been disastrous.'' Several years back on television, Renner notes, The Virginian had Robert Taylor playing C harles Russell in two or three epi- sodes. Renner says he was not impressed. Now Charles Rmsell is coming to tele- vision through hundreds of bis own action paintings brought to life by the still-pictures- in-motion techniq\Je that Project 20 intro- duced to television and has used in a dozen programs that critics have hailed as TV classics. "Actually, Russell wasn't any too keen on that word 'artist'," Renner says. "But right from the start-way back when he first be- gan to be mentioned ih newspapers like the Fort Benton (Mont.) River Press and the Helena (Mont.) Weekly Herald-they took the curse off it by always putting 'cowboy' in front of it. There was a time when he'd oome off the range with a sketch or painting he'd done, and be glad to get as much as $S for it. Not long ago, one of his paintings sold for $1 S0.000." Over a period of 30 years Renner has made eight-by-ten photographs of about 3000 of RusselJ's paintings. Donald B. Hy- att, producer-director of Project 20, and members of his staff went through those and picked out between 500 and 600. They made a selection of about 300 of those and photographed the originals in color in vari- ous museums and private collections through- out the country. Charles Rossell bas bttn called "the greatest painter of Western lite." Born in St. Louis, he went West to Montana at 16, in 1880, and died there in 1926. As a work- ing cattlehand he spent 11 years of his life on the open range; as a picture-painting storyteller he captured on canvas tbe Old West as it was fading into the past. Through use of an on-camera storyteller (Milburn Stone), new film shot in Charles Russell country, historic stills and film. and ,. .. 18 the Russell paintings themselves, the Project 20 program will, in its producer's words, "give viewers the chance to meet a marvel- ous personality and become acquainted with the sheer excitement of his art." No matter what Russell painted -the clash of Indian war parties, a blazing gun- fight in a cattle town, the lassoing of a steer, or the authentic ways of a cowboy-the West came vividly alive. He recorded a great American experience with a flair for Milburn Stont of Gunsmokt Lr tht on<amtra narrator /or "Tht Wtst of Char/ts Ru.utll." drama and a passion for accurate detail that set him apan from a,11 the 01l)er artists of the Old West. For those who knew him. Charles Russell was more than a fine artist. As his friend Will Rogers pointed out, "He oot only left us a great living picture of what our West was, but he left us an example of how to live in friendship with all mankind. A real, downright, honest to God human being." Chutes RwiseU also was known u • writ- er and a masterful storyteller. ''I always did say you could tell a story better than any man that ever lived," Will Rogers once told him. (Richard Hanser's script for "The West of Charles Russell" will draw gener- ously on Russell's own words.) Russell himself said, "I'm not much for writing. but I'm better than a green hand for talking." He had a gift for the vivid phrase. Of a man who was shot: "He's as dead as he'll ever be." The first time he saw bathing girls, on a beach in California, be said: ''They weren't wearing enough clothes to pad a crutch." When he was broke he said: "The money l got left wouldn't choke a chickadee." He remarked about a not-too-bright fel- low: "His brain cavity wouldn't make a drinking cup for a canary bird." A man named Dumb Dumb Bill be culed "a quiet lovable man, always shooting to kill to save unnecessary pain and suffering." On a trip East he looked at the Catskills and remarked later to a friend, "I felt sorry for people who had to put up with potato hills masquerading under the name of moun- tains." He visited New York and said, "A wom- an in New York can go farther with a lipstick than a man back home with a Win- .... ~ester and.ca side of bacon." · New Yorkers he called "clitrdwellers" and automobiles he termed "skunk wagons." Of cowboys and Indians he said, "With- out guns either cowpunchers or Injuns are harmless--they can't do nothing but pull hair." Speaking of the morning after, he said, "I had a taste in my mouth like 11 had supper with a coyote." And, he said: "Only a fool argues with a skunk, a mule or a cook." The West receded further into the past with the passing of Charles Russell on October 24. 1926. "They say there was the sound o f Indian tom-toms in the Montana hills when be died," Milburn Stone will say at the close of the Project 20 program. "There was sor- row on the range and ranches, and there was mourning in the cities. Something that could not be replaced was gone. "Once he said: 'T he Old West is dead.' "But he knew it could never fade entirely into the past, for he added: 'You m ay lose a sweetheart-but you won't forget her.'" '· 1970 I that :ts of usselJ riend I left WC3t •W to real, tg." writ- ways than once "The ener- l for hand dead on a :reo't 1 . ., oney fel- <e a alled g to ing." 1kills ;orry Jtato oun- /Offi· 1h a Nin- aod .. lit h- are pull ~aid, had itb. past OD :Jian be lose sor- here that I.' rely lose " 1 1~-=:.-=-~ 1%:••u.(~-t.-=-~-1t:·Pktln (C) ~ ,...,,... r.'atem) '60 -Rlndolph Scott 3:30 llewlt: (C) .,._ tf Ille .....- 10:00 a([) ......... ....., (C) m Mwlt: .......,.,. (acMtiturt) (drama) 'SS-Sidney Poitier, Elrtl\I SATURDAY JANUARY 10 ~(I) EB 9J MIWb (C) 'SO-Spencer Trq, James Stewart. Kitt. _ lllewlt: "'I• Wt"' (western) '53 I OpH HHlt (C) I Wilp te Alw•l•• (C) '.~ 0 R N I N (, -Georre Montcomeiy, Tab Hunter. • ...,,_lq (C) 4:00 Mewle: '11111 ...,., ni., F.r llJlllewlt: "'bid te tllt lic ...._,. 1:00 9(1)---(C) (drama) '56-Humphf'IY Boprt. 7:00 I fljl.~ &(C)Jedle (C) (drarnal '47-John Shelton, Ann • Mewlr. '11M 1eat Frt11 20,000 D 1 s,, (C) • _ Dorin. ...._.. (ICl·fl) '53--f»aul Chris· tB SaM s.w.ty (C) Holt Ja1 I ,... liltlu tlln, P1ull Raymond. Reynolds welcomes 81111 Jot Roy1I, Mr. WllMHI (C) 10'.JO Qt([) Sa119J Dee (C) F..r.. Film The Or11inals, The Cuff Llnb, Solo- 7:25 = : :::-~C) (C) ~Ci) e;, Tiie fllatltlMI (C) Calal • ........ mon Burtt, The Clnn1mon Empfrt 7:30 S.,._ Selllller (C) li1tN: '11M U ..... CMf M • Spefts w.td (C) and The Rituals. ~(I) U) SMey tlle ... (C) (myst1t1) '4~1enn ford, Nina · ,..._. tf3 blip O'T .... ...... Wiiii y Qlld Foch, James Whitmore. .. l:JO ft([) ...., Q9.a (C) 4:JO . ns.ltll <Cl D tHHDEB ...... tt ttie .._. tl!(l)O>UC-a Wt -.w 9 LIVE FROM THE LINKS! l:OO IB Tiie W..s (C) g; :!..: "Bl M• n. DIM Har. (C) The Hula Bowl from * L.A. OPEN GOLF! NOWI QI ID""' c... ... -T..,. (mysteiy) '58-Rod Clmtr· I Wmlll1t1 (C) .... Allples 0,.. .... r .... ~ on Vera Ralston 2:00 Tiie Ntw Sedlt1 (C) .-(C) Semifinals, llve from Ran· D tn> E!)CattaMOI• CMI (C) 11:00U9([)Tlle Arale 511ew (C) • Hlcll Sdlell luketlMln (C) cho Partl Golf Courae. An1l1 '" a.~ (C) "Tht Honeymoon· D 9 @ m S..lef lewl ,..... Ge me of the Week. telecast tomorrow from 3 to 5 PM. ers. (C) from Ladd Memorial stadium Z:JO 8 C)drMJ (C) D @ (I)! llOUIN PltfullH I T.._ .r Wtlll Ferp In Mobile, Ala. 8 SEE PAC·8 BASKETBALL 11 ....... .. (C) The $45.ooo C••"I (C) D @(J)aJ set It Toptlltf (C) Wichita Centennial Open. 1:30 tBCIJl11p IH191/RNd bit-Proar•m of contemporary mualc. *USC vs. U. of OREGON! ls.a.on (C) • "'• (C) 11 ·30 D @ (])a> AIMrtca• .. ....._. 8U00 11ETUR11 hc:lflc I ... • ,,... 19 @ m PIM hntller (C) • IJ Milllolt $ Movtt: (C) "Tomr II ketbell (C) USC Trojans vs. Unlver· 5:00 Ira ~le (C) C..pa Pnlfite 1 Teus TOWft" (wutem) '58 -slty of Ot110n Webfoots. llvt from • Tllo Mweltllf'I (C) Movie: "Y1lo lndeslrlldiblt Mal" Ster1ln1 Hayden Sebastian Cabot the Los Anaeles Sports Arena. Mewle: (C) "All t11t ,,..._. (horror) '5&-lon Chaney. m Award n.b-r. "Blonde B•lt." I ..... Trei.. (C) . • .... YlllMr'. (dr1m1) '53-ftobtrt G) Cla lid Beverly Mlchffls. Qilor T • Stewart Gr1nllf, Ann Blyth. m Mowie: .,.. C.nllltala" (drama) • Tiie AaRf (C) ,..., Dile '39-Ertc Portman, June Duprez. 3:00 ta Cl) 1£TUIN C8S W ci.. PM C1u t:OO 8 9 Cl) IE H.I. f'llfut9f (C) lie (C") Thirty-two of the wot1d'a ~ Cllea Ceela (R) Mewlr. '11M ..,. Frt• l...t· ludln1 pn>fmional aottors com· C-. • la..,. Ip" 1comecf1) '52 -Bela Lupi. 12:0019 ([) Tiie ......_ (C) pete for 1 priie purse of $2.25,000 5:25 &.-.. 1.aw (C) I (17) (l)&J Net Wlloela (C) Tutr. fallfllaf In ttlt 7th Annual Goff Clmic. from 5:JO llllC flN•wlcl (C) Movie: (C) "II• U,..." (ro-• Sot Ille USA (C) tho Arutone Country Club In McHale'a ...., mince) '49-Jean Simmons. 12:15 U Mw1t: ,..._ ..,.. (drama) Akron, Ohio. lleM•au Im C.adow J Mlliu '39-William Holden, Barblr1 stan· II) Mwlt: "ffWdll Hollidde" (mys. • ..... ta ,_..... (C) (R) t-.JO 8 18 Cl) o-.rdtf l Mltltef (C) wydc, Adolphe Menjou. ttiy) '5~r1fftth Jones. Acr!altlt1t USA (C) Daughter of Late Lennie Bruce Guests on 'A Last Laugh at the 6<Y.s' One of the hiablfabtl of "A Lut Laup at the 60'9," atarrina Bob Newhart, will be the appearance o1 K.itty Bruce, daqbter of the late oomedi'D Lennie Bruce. The attnctive 14-year-old airl. who liWI in Loe Aqelea, praentl her movJq tribute to her father on tbe AIC apecial Thunday at 9 PM. When produceNtinctor S1eve Binder linecl up hia peat.---incl\16. ma Allan Sherman. Tiny Tim, Mn. Miller, llicbard Pryor and Mort Sahl-for the Jntemew -ament of tho c:omedy prosram, be bad mwr .._ beard ol. Kitty. It w .. tbe pt'a lfUldmotbcr, Sally Marr, who broatbt tbe two toeadm. Mn. Mur, wkh wlaom Kitty liwa, ncei.ed a eaO o.ne day from Binder ~ permillloa to Ule a ftJm clip OD ber late 10D, Lemde Bna. lie explalned it WM for a telniUoa ipldal bll8d -comedy ol. tbl 60'L Mn. Marr 1Ugated in tum that be 1JltllD to a tribut9 to Leale written by hil daupter Kitty, ... WfrJ talented and \111\MUal dlUd," for poaiblo inclusion in Cbe prosram. Binder belitated, reluctant to lilt bbwlf be tnpped lab .... . valuable time aucfitlontna a cbUd, but IDADy ..-S to lilllD to .. . "Can lhe COIDe in to • me comouow,.. be uted. Kitty aDlwered the quadoa ha.at. ~ot w1ow," IM 1114 clecilhely. "rm bavina an ..,._ .._" Tbo foJJowhta day WM ap'eld on foe tbe JDMtina. XJuy ant...s with bet pudmotber, read ber 1dbute to a faeber ebe ,...,......._ iritb fonctne. and love, and overcame any doubts tbe abMbed ar... Binder hid eatertaioed. reprdina ber ability. After the readlna. Mn. Marr tioJd Binder that Kitty bid .m.... tbe .,.. oa • &irplw bitwwww N• York wt Loi ADJ ' ... ,_ ...... quildy ill ...... and .... It .. -·.... . Mn. Marr. UUb I told you, lbe'a a vsy caleated IDd -• dMJd." . 1-11 .,.. woald ................ to ..... ...... TRADE-IN YOUR OLD TAPE RECORDER NOW ON A NEW SONY CASSITTE, CARTRIDGE Oi REEL-TO-REEL! PRICED AS LOW AS $49.50! Big Trade-in Allowance, Regardless of Condition! BONY ' Model 50 Solid State Pocket CatMtte -( ) ..... "\ ~ .. : .. _ . ......,. ---6 • • -.a..11 ... . .----. ,.. .. -.. -- 80NV Meclel • Automolalle Cattette Player Syttem SONY 540: MUSIC-LOVERS DREAM! With the Mtf SonJ 540, edvancement In modem ,_. c•n ..,.,... two of the tldtnoloo, lncludin1 four ., .. ken in the non-m111Mtidn1 record he.cl, Quadredlal apeaker s1stem up scrape flutter filter, automltlc to 15 het for the most tape liften, Retn1ctom1tlc tttritHnc stereo sound pinch rollers, bullt·ln sound·· waHable. A full 20 wltts of OR·sound, and •utomltlc music poWer lets ,_. fltl the shut-off. In flld the 540 hn room with a curt.in of sound. more fHturn for less money This excitinc new three-1peed than anJthin1 elae In its price ttereo tape s1stem h•s Just ranp. Come on In -he1rtn1 about every r.cent la betieYin1. Miit m.