HomeMy WebLinkAbout1970-01-05 - Orange Coast Pilot-Costa Mesa7
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.. -.. MONDAY AFTERNOON, JANUA-RY 5, 1970 .. ' ' -' • ltOL. ~ HO. 4. 1 l•C,MINL 11 PAOll
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'l{elinedy Tes1ifi,e~
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TV CAMERAS FOLLOW KENNEDY, WIFE TO INQUEST
Probe Into De•th of Mary Jo Kopechne Starts Tod•y
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HOUS'TOO _ (UPI) -A team of
geoloC11ll ,_.i.a tod>J the moon
a sehtt of layers like 1klni on an onlon
as Jt cooled and solidified. In Jewelry began 11 a molten llquld be~ aiJ9 arew In
~ 'lbe tJieory, based on a study of the
K d S ks f H The theft of almost $10,000 1n jewelry first moon rocb returned from the lunar e, nne y pea or our over New Year's weekend from the home surface, added fresh fuel lo the debate
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' .. ~ - _ .. • --: • ._ · .. ofaLldohle..omiin!w'as-dlaclootd .by .•bw\.lohelherlhemoon.•,..)ved fnpa police today. hqt JJquid or bas always been a solid, cold ~ · Wenzella Ripley, ~. an investor who mass. · -
D' Url.ng-K·-opec-hne-lnq-ue hu another hOll)e ln'·Wa&hlngtoo, D.C_, Dr . .r ... ph-V, Smllh of the University . _ told police i'sbe dlac:oVei-td the Joss of 28 of Chicago propcised tlfe Idea or ·1unar
pieces Of es.peihsive jewelry New Year'• evoluUon in a paper prepared for the
~·EriGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) -Sen. Enard M. Kennedy testified for about otM hour today at the opening of the s;cret inquest into Mary Jo Kopechne's
death. He will be back this afternoon .
The inquest into the death of the 28-
yiir-old secretary began amid tight
1fcurity in a century-old courthouse.
Kennedy seemed cheerful as he emerg-
ed from the courthouse along with five
~en and five men acquaintances who
night. oi;iening session of "': ~nprecc;den~ con-
•, M{'s. J\iRle.Y .. ~llO.e.Lido home is al 229 · · ferenoe · on1 the 'lscl~t1fic r.eiul~ .o! ~,
had at~ndeO i: ,cookoUt party tog er Via 'lido Sou~. told ·officers she came Apollo .11 moon landl!l.1• ·
the nighl Mi.sat Kopechne died In · en-· home1 at 1bout 7:30' .p:1m. and-when 1he · In another paper, Mitzunobu Tatsumato
nedy's car after It ·plunged into a 'dal went to return the jewelry she was wear-of the U.S. ~oglcaJ Survey at Denver,
· ing she discovered her other !term ml.as-Colo., said radioactive daUng methods
pond. ing. · • · sh°"'.ed some of the moon rocks ~ardened
Court clerk ThQmas .A.· ... Teller told Officen said tliere were no signs o( 4.8billionyursago-aboutthetlmeac-
, newsmen he would distribute a statement forced entry Jnto the house. . ceJ>t:t<t lot the birth Of the ~lr iystem.
at 2 p;m., ptesumfibly cooverinl ground The wpma9 said •one kitchen door Before Nell A. Ammron:1 and Edwin
rules _im.--1 hy.,.1Distrlct .Judgi Jam_ es_ lead.in& to terVantJ' quarters had been E. Aldrin lanlied on lhe moon in July, the ~ "; left open . . ~ge estimaf.es for lunar •urface rocks fell
A. Boyle, who presided st the inquest. Officers said most .,of the loot was in 1n the milUons-of-years category -not
Kennedy, whO'llew In frQm lµs Hyannis the .ssoo ra,nge ,wilhr.seversl more el: billions. The o1de!t rock! kno'lfD,OD earth '
Port \hOn_le oD ,the mainland, aald as he pef\sive pieces• included. are .a~t 3.5 billion .yean ok!.
entered the coUM.house, "I'"1.hopeful we 'nle"costllest piece 'of lo.st jewelry was Smith, who deYeloped the moon theory
can 'reach an end to what has become. an a bracelet made up of a large emerald-with the aid ol two colleagues, Dn. A. T.
extraordinary length or di"¥.'~. ~ cut beryl; diamonds, rubles and pearls. Andertaa .and ·-Robert. • NeMoa, tald· tbt •\..-· "···n-c-. ·--.!l'be.!bl~-desianM:bracelet .-was -;-:.:.'J. :.~1,
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lunar rock and mineral samples ex-
amined lndicate that water and other
volatlle substances bolled aWay from lhe
Orfglnal·glob of mol ten moon-material.
Then, as time passed, Smith 11ald,
heavy liquids rich in lron aank tow8rd the
center l<g,~ate a core. ~ thJn criist U>ev
formed A the 1urface and the moon
began to cool .
Heavier minerals crystallized and sank
toward· the moon'• center fonning a 1uc-
ceulve series of mineral shells, ac-COJ'<\lng to the theory, leaving a con-
ctnlration of iron and titanium in the still
molten P.Ofllon, F~ m)nerw then
so1fdlfted and since they "ere lighter
than the liquid, they rose to fonn a
thicker cru.rt.
"During this process, meteorites hit the
moon with such force that the crusLwu_
• ruptured and the molten liquid flo"'ed in-
to the surfai:e," Smith said. This,' he sug-
gested, formed the moon'• vallt dark tell
with the rugged liJghland areu-represen-
Ung part of the original cnuL
•Jn:the flpal stage· of lunar development,
the theOry.goes, a thin.layer al liquid·wa1
•lralft>ed·between .the erust11nd.core. 'This .
JiqliFct was prejUOlably pulled to one side
of the moon -the 11lde facing earth -by
- - -lllee MOON, Pap 1) ~valid Woman,
90; Perish~:_-·
\ • ~ • ! fn Trailer Fi1;e
"I'm hopeful .u~ recor....., wiu, ~ .com'-· I ed 't ~500 ~T-id ·:!:u.-:c:.::;.~r~i~~~~;~·irle" ". .va~ • • ·-~ .. -B.:.1 1-s-le G;-..1, 1.6·_, D1°es
_ Kbmi!cl)( arid;*ly a doz"'1 olher.oub-$oo Pl al .ll
potnieif ,wllbM;&.:;·llr'aceompahied bi\ -. cer -ay er
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lawy'"ers -wllked into the he;vily guanf... !!·~year old lluntlngtoo Beach woman 'ed. cou~. in front of which milled £" _,, Brok Le
dleil Slturda1 afternoon from lojW'lea -about 200· persqo•l'IJl()sll;-newanon: , ~ ' _.~. ', ts. . -• en . . g .auffeted when names or unknown, orlgip •Judge)}GY,le pr~ded-:'0;ver1.he tQQuest.:
--. d her.mobile home. ordered by.District Attorney F.dmund'S. ·A soccer game Sund' ay _, 1 Jn --~~ -~ Amilt Keeling, an inv!llld" who ~cupled. · . . _ , , N~i:t Beach'•· ,Mariner's Park was a Space 13 ot the Driftwood Tra_iler Park lat · Boyle arrived at the . coutthou,,e mo~e. ~iii ' affair · for ' one compeUtor from A Balboa Island girl became Oraop ttje rl1., 'J'he driver Henrtin Klein, 27, of -
214U Pacific coast Highway, was found .than-two ~i;s be.lore Kepnedy. Saft Gabriel. ' ' COUnt)''i fburih ti'lo' tralfk: ·fatality Sun· Pomona, was not held.
face up on the trailer's'bedl"O!Jll1 fl9(1r u \ Nter 1'1111~1~0~. th.e pmmd ~ !or;,• •ilana Gunter . LuCht, i,:, suffered a diy night. .The -qttju two traffic falaliti!a OC· , fl~n ripped through the ,alµminum ~. pr~'lP-1:'9f1e ~as: expected to . broken leg when one ovenealoua com--·atirofnla Highway Patrol. ofOcen ta1d curred Friday. . aMefiog with axes and a power saw: , begin tnterrogalbii Kennedy an:d· 19 petitor mJaed U>e ball and kicll:ed John Susman of Brooklyn, N.Y., who ·J~a desperate attempt to save her life, ~ ,who ~tlendl;d a C?Okout-reu,nlon· iuch\'s li!i; Instead.' _ .•. • Donna 't)rnn Sell; JI, ot 2Z2 :Cor.t\)t.ve. w.u vjalUr1g relaUves in Stanton, was kill-
alt w11 given emergepcy ·resuscltatioQ the ~g~t ~j.sl! Y..o~hne ~ied. 1 . ·, ·, ••. $oUr-"bO!tts ·et ~.,,·1~tt "1ti ·-#'ere . •wai p~nced dead· ,t tbe ~··at J ed by an out of control auto when he tried .
w)>lle being tran•port•d I<> Huntington -Alt?&•\h•>.:-at,-l~~ p>lloitl. lilf~ bri>ileri fytileblow11iolioe said'. · • " --1 'rrif<\&Jii +Jlflcl -illtl!:' 1!1ihleld hl•,5-)'eaMld grandson from the I~unity ltospital by ambulance. been subPoenaed to testify.. •. An amWtance· tdok Lucht to Hoag c · Oeatli T1oll' · ·I · car, O(ficer•sald .. The'bo)', Kenneth Scott ·
She 'fllS prooounced dead on arrtvll. Just as Kenntdy and hll l wife Joan Memorial HOlpit.al Where the fracturtl • · QCrow. fs in llllWadoi'J :coodlUOil today : Nineteen firemen battled the flames for re~ the tntrant't to lht .courtho~,~ ·were eet apd the~ player admitted 11:35 p.m. whenlbe Cit in whJdl<the was. at Los Alamlfoa ae.ner.& Hosj>i\al. r
fQ.UI" -hours but the trailef ,was totally the senator W¥ asked by newsmen : "'.Are His condi~ :,,.,·de1cribed·&111&tllfac: ridirig With thra compan.lorul·""1' out of Garden 'Gro've :tee~ Mlcbtel,Gary ~ed. tt was valu~ al $11,CMXI. The you glad It 's finally under wfy7" • · tory'by' aldeS lOOay .. • coatro~ )Ind 'ltnck I! ttfe;-00' E t Toro Graharil,\ 1e;~illp ilied! Frtdiy afternoon '1
t•aJ1a.cauaed$lOOlnsmokedamage'to ·Kennedy tumed. nodded, and replied : · c·, ,. · .. I f"· • '% .:-•Roaft.. j ; .... \ •• ! ·1. · followiDJ.I'. brb,d!lde·eotµ.ron on lnotl .,
a"hboringmobilehome: • , : ''Yes,tl am." . f · ~ .1 ·Taken •• to: South · Coast · Ccinmunlty · Avenue.Thedrfvetof the.aecondvehJcle,:
&levtral neighbors trained .garden hosts The pro~lngs, which Wete'to ·open •1·F · •• t "' ! : ·, : ,,. luospltal with ' major injuries ·were . the Aldrk tlirata ot'Ani1¥~.· ls reportt!d ln
olllo the b)aze unUI fire, crews -arrived aL Sept., 3,, w~e closed lo lhe P<U• .and Y.ICN 6S. 11-PO INT ' ,dttver, lllln •Dlste!ll10,: a,-of 111 :Poplar critical diidltioo •at 'SI.anion C.mmunlly ,
12:14 p.m public by Order of the Mas,.chl15'ttl · . f •• • ·····, ; St., 1Laguha .888ch and ;hia peaengtt1 HtspltalJ Witnesses a.rted the youth
'l'>!fe F:rranto, 19. or 214112 Padnc-Sur>reme'<;ourl But II wu left lo BOyle r, OJCES SUND ~1' :v ...... l!l)era, 15,-ol 13111 El Pmo, El wulnvolied Jn a drag race ,.hen ho lost
Oidt Highway, surrered first degree to d ether lawym woyld ~ "fll'· 1 .ti. Tero and .GreflO<Y M, :GraJ, 11, o1 21t «Jlltrol ol1JiJ vehlcl( and plowed Into Ii><
bUm1 on blS-.Cace 11. he att:qnp~ 1!fr; ex it1e.wllnt111!1.anclpreseri'"evldente' · Cll!f Drive,'lAON-1Beach. ~~drivea'bt tHtita. 1. • • ·, •
eW the trailer buL w .. seared by the o eir owp.. -, • .J1'.l :_,~~PJ,.-: ~~~ken here t In in acddent l!ltuni'1, a &ena Park -J~ Wesfmlnfl_et, polico aald tqclay they
·Ill El Toro : Road Accident ' I l'
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Carrier -Boy-
-~s ·off· ;~:
Attackers.,_ .,
Bloodied In a savage Ure Iron beating
on a N:!mote mountain. fire trail, a'rCosta
Mesa shoe clerk kktnaped from his home
1qulnned through the iflrt early 'SUnday
lo escape death under; tilt Wheels bf hLs
own car.
Investigators 1 a ·1 d I o·d1a y that
Frederick V. Tedesco; 47, of 145 E. lath
St., probably <Mes his life to a inewsp,~
route deliveryman •who , lllAY h av e
frightened off the three would-be
murderers.
A widespread hunt is under. way today
for the 196CJ PonUac Le &.lln!-l«lan new-
ly purchased by Tedetc0 1nd,Uffif by hll
attackers to flee the 1 acene !fri Trabuco
C&oyon shortly before dawn Sunday.
Tede3co, meanwhile, wu listed in faJr
condition flt Hoag: Memorial Ho&ptial,
where he is under treatment for a \•ariety ·•
ol injuries suffered In the brutal assault.
Physicians said he IUSWned severe
multipfe lacerations, ,_ · fractured ~.
several broken flnien on hii Wt hand, -
fractureQ (lt,s and ma&Sive·welts over his
entire body. ·
Orange County sheriff's d~Ues con-
tacted by John N(\<deen, 14, Fullerton,
said .the newspaper rooteman.'s approech
may have frightened o(f Tedesco~• ,1.
Uickers Sunday morning. •
"l saw thcfinjured min is I dl!ove pall't
and I sped lo a ielephon\ lo pt belp,"
aaid N~een. who')>inpointed"the Ille a!O.g -old· Traboco run ....i •bout «10
18:"is.beyood Cook's Corner ~ ~ . j
Nordeen said . he uw tail lights •
va'nishing around a curve up ahead ol the l
•pill where 'Tedesco lay 'P'Ql\'led In the r
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Weadter . -.
Falr .1kies with lo!:al'&Wlll"Wlnd1 1hnislifal awai the bad Iii' 11 lho '
• p1c10r• !<fr' Tb4oda; •Ione • tllt
t cout. Temperatures contfuUe. lo
itringl Into· the low IO'•·
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INSmE' TODAY
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hilf.-He-was gJven emergency treatment Edgel'town-..P4fict ·Chief 1lomtnlck J: lOJU4¥ ._ lUUUil-1 ~·· ~~41to, .. r Iii atm aetkfui a black 1Nl or t962·EJ
af.Hmrttngton lntercommunity Hospital · Artna1• told~~a ~kfd: ~·· o/iefiJll~ ~~,-~~m· ~· · .._.. ' ti~~f't'iah . Qi.mfno Cheyrolet fn conneciioo wi\h a h!t ca11""'1e 1 'M-.,,.... u.... n
Mdlaierrel..,00. • ·-,, ... ,,JJ.1 Jlay,,nill!ll l..~;,.;,u_.,lllJ'ltel'j . Ci 'Cli~ .. llif~ <. . '" ,...ltllal,.qNtllll!ID B-_alld""1ac<ldent-SaluN1~1whlch-Jted .,_.,"' .l _.,. • ''1ttmen, whO are st.llf investi&aftbf ~ ''to reed at lnquttt. wfth '.urufonneo ty I or • er • Pirlt. ..... : t t ~ • ' < ... • • ,. ., In. the. amputlUon Of the .le& of an eJderly ~ulic'.lf" ""u f =r--:
cau,e fJf the blaze. said it broke out a!ter pollct guardin&. tlCh entt~ lo the _League rortdlhe Wor~ Utl~ . Police 111d Vernon Record, lC, of. 5140 man. ··.,. ._.,, • ' il-..i. 1 ~ :=-.. ~ 11 •
Mn, Keellng's daughter had left the c:OurthoUoe-" , ' '!be -cham~IOMhlp will be deoid--· Clrale w .. Jll'OftOlll)Oed cltod w•taotot. lilfi<leai . G-tt~J-~· 1W, -~ ·11 1 \ .... ....._.,::: !
trailer to"gl:I shopping. Polil't will escort wltntues Into the td betwttn the Chiefs and Vikll\d Sun-. on ini'MI •\Beach OGmmunrif HOIJ&l P'tt119'lld, ;:t. yJ .tet-io\tt :&rt Im-1 ... := • .,: ~ '' •
:The bod1-wa1 i.lien to Wesllnlnster cmirt and keep back a crowd of mort day in the Super Bowl aame at New aner 'he rtpOttedJy stepped Into the l,d-provl*t' · ~" Wal'JY~( ~.... . , .. ::, ;;:. ~ ;,.l
i letnonal ~P~t "~-~fu~r!' ar· .. than 200 newll't;'en ht.re to cover the Orleans. terMC\ioa. t~, to "'Y . aomethlna to ' ~nlty:• · ~~~( Hd,-f """"" '' .__ ~ t4 i i
ran&'emen .are pendlnl. ctlt1*,lecl cue. two l<lenda, and walad into the aide ol ~1.8'1! , ,_.1/ _ -, , · 1 -.......... ·_· ----''...:.' '._,' ...;;.:..' ...... -_.!J
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Toro Wife •
Of POW
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-: 111111-.... Ill! Jljollllii """""'~ ~ P""1 VI loold A, ,...... '~1 .... ..; ="""""" --=~ . "' vi.tmm1 ... ... -lol!ii ...... al .El Tllli· .'ll>e \'allcan City meeting lelt the party i!f. Wf1!D<11 louched and ~lul alter ex-~ gln1 "°""" fOI' 1'<!0C' \rith the Pope, imo distribuled inspirational med1ll Io
4hem. ----:-"It was !Tt06l impressive," said Mrs. Thcrn~:s Stegman, 30, Virginia Beach, Va.
••Qh, I can't explain. But he was most ·~pathetic to our situaUon.
; ••11• said he it (ir1y1J1.-fOI' everim•
Wl!o has lllltored In ,U W8".Jl• 1Js<> uk·
ed WI to Pfl)' fOf ~·" 1. ~
',.JI was tho lln.l Jljne 11~ PJUI h11
•ver mel wj~ WOll!ll' ~ h!!sband•
"""' lislod llJ the u .s. COgip>and .. "mjJslnl ill oetJoii:I•.
-"-Wlth-1\lrl, ~.,a-l!o!mn Catholic,
,welw jwo allier Vlrpua 8-c!J wives -.7'1.... .Robert Duncan, •. U, and Mn.
1iJchar_if Nelson, 26, both Protestants.
· The ftlUr California women who hap-
j.ltned to be in Rome on a tour but whose
llu9bands aJto are misalng in Vietnam
J®ftd '!!11 ab\>IJI the~ and were in-
•!1<4.IO jQ!n ~-~l'!'I grolll!.
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-*R't•'· !"1~ F·our ~· More -~Ile.Id
I'>•·-.. .. ft' J.. .. -..,.,..
.In· Gaming R~i~
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DETROIT (UPI) -/\clloi p~ on crl!Ckdow\! be.an New Year's Pay. • )
inCohnation lllpplied by· Jerome "Dlzey'" · Several more arrests were expect~
Dean, federal., agents have arrested this week. Some of them may Jnvol
uoUlef four per&O!Jl. Ip a crackdown on • prvniI!>ent sporta figures, aaeota said.
ail l!Jqed ft~iift'jlq llll!ot\\Ylde. Dean I"" the Ol}ll sl"{M figure '""lie
• bet1Jnf ring tl!ti !UJ ~· flmOUI . Ueqed lly, Jutl¥>rj!llf ill !he operation Iii
·ljlC>lls llp~, ltw11 ·annowiCed leday. " dale. Ht wu searehed but not erresled lo
James E. Ritchie, apeclal easi.tAnl hla Las Vegas hoteI.IOOfn New Year'~ ~~~ .'~~ ~W'i::~=~~~ ~-··Uera came 1n Biloxi, Mla., during authorities said'": -------
the weekend. Ageqla acted on in-Dean said Nrl~r. "l can't be Involved
, ~Ued by Dean, . a Hall of 1n it (tbe betting ring) because I don't ~ ,lilClllr~e@!.~•.cla!o!wUl'llllllr .. tl.''! . ~· Ch!Clp Oilii diriiliif ;lhe ' Bl(! R,llc~; said , loday Iha! ~
lf30's, and now a si>orts<Uter. · "poqibly' .has been viclimized by P""
• Dean II lurnlll>q.~aUOI\ 1lt4t tht (esslollllh -akers ... (and) abq"'
1•vfMll1)11!t.-1f ''very ~ le 111;" 1nd u~ bj lri•l!dl in •n attempt Iii 1ames H. Brleklty, U.I. lttOmey for ·tl!.e obtf.ln kiform1Uon on 1portiri1 events.
· ~tern district of Micfilgan. told · Raids Conducted during the weektn!J
reporters at a late-morning news con--and on New Year's Day have "revealed
lomoe. "llt••-1'1· IO ·bf very only the llP. of the 1ambllr!I operallnn." ~raUv1, vtry hlJDfllJ." ao far, JUtChil Mid.
'"!'Ill vut lllJJOl'lly of th°" In tht Thilal am!ltd In Blloli were idenllll..i
sporll world "'-1-11-m•n,'1 lrlcklty u Ptltr J~M'1'1!no. 47, deicnbe<I IJ-•
•akl. "JM lht l•cl !!I.It 1 rtltUv• few Blloll 1ambllng bolo: ~11 bio!I>.,, War·
hove had COl!lfclf Cwlth lllf alielad ~t-ren L. M1rlllio, 441 •nd 31lv1tore I .
Un1 .rtn1l 11 implWlant i,: tht oporll &icuro, H. Alt~Jlld lh'f 1el!!'d iJ,11116
world u 1111l!l!porllntlo111. . in Cllntncy .._..1amb1Jns reoordl. wheo
"1'110 IVldOl!CO If tllat U..-...,. .... Martino WU -~d-. .
1,c11 will! mamllora of tht aporll W!ll'ld. ln.NIW York, 1P!Jia ·1eld DY~ Wptr,
Now, Ull• OOll)d bl Hr!o\11 or IOlll•Uilrir a,-wao amlled tn ·1j1a Mtnl!JIWI ,J!'!'I·
relaUvely IN!OClllt -IDIJllll 11upld, but menl. · • ·
; Mn, St<-11kl. besldel Mr1.
.Jla ... d~f wore l\lra, llo<>se•ell W.,., p; J<.; ~' John K. IU!dy Jr., ~Mn.
Arlllli 11-.
8be !!Ii! nol i!llOW 111e1r·JJocne !<>'nl!·
':In fiW ~; 1"1' o,Jlu, TtJ.,
Wrapp~d ~Vp in Work ,
Tl!e Milw@lj]<ee ldllitaire Cadel1 -,.tr• postinC Ille
colP!'• in cornPtlill•n when the ~er raisej! by
DO!)llJ B1111.11l!Ylllki. 13, toppleil ~ coverll<I lier
· ~ta<i, °Like • ~oorl soldier. •h• klllt right on march·
mg. '
relauv•lf 1-1." · . 1• A1••ll have.nlq lh'J• w~l'I in<licatlons
~·r ml!D wu •rruled In Now that tho -•lloll autmptod lo lldl!i•n•:e Vor~. b!'ll!llPI lo II~ ~r llllan In-Ill• outaime ol·litii'le ·......_.,.t N1:p0jqt
lo cutlod1-~· tho 1"81'41 Plllilllnl 1preadl Oii loOINU ·-•. . ~!ll -lo llG!llo in """"' al i>«'sollo1lY uldol Pave p1u1 lo halp trace ifie:IT .. pilOt bU86andi, shot down over
1 Nprth Vietnam. ;;...But they contented themselves with
Wing officials in ·the Vatican secretariat
~-•tale wl)O promise<! lo relay lo Pope
faul ti! ~t ~poo 1boul the
June Allyson Returns
'lnen. ·.. ~ ·'Mrs. ~ and 1"r two travo!lni
~" .-ve ~. !nlormaUOft -
.;e-IaJ , liUJllb<rs, P!lf~I descript!0111,
lime and place ~ missing, eto . ....:
To Stage in 'Carats'
Ii> U. -.WJat:ql !late Friday. They
a1ao arr""9d I« f41!11'1 audlenoe.
The "-fPOI<e In lllllln ,, II>• •U· dience wftll a monsignor translaUng his
words into English, Mrs. Stegman said.
But, she added: "He understood
everything we aaid to him.
.';Y~,cou!d tell )Ila! he te11llJ1 qid sy!l\· ~ "~ ttt.""sbe wP. on. '1We were a1I eo touebed. We coUJdn't believe we
bad reelly shaken handa with the Pope.
Re blesled us and said be would pray for . '"°" of fllll' l!Ulbanda indivldu"1!y. ~.':He pye each of ut·1.mediJ,"
.\Clre11 l\111• All"°n !!I Newport ~h ·
hu been per~ 117 P,.oduoer !)avid
Merrick to end ~ retlrtment and re--
tum to the Broadway stage she left 27
years ago to head for the gliter of Holly·
wood.
The Lido Isle resident will play the role
(If a 40-year-old dlvorsee who fall! in love
with a much younger man1 Merrjck: ag,
nounced. ~
Miss Allyson will take over for JW.ie
ija.rris in ;,Forty Carats," whl.ch recenUy
ce.leQr.a.1'(1. U1 firit anniversary pJayinf
at ·th~ Morosco Theater on the Gr~at
White Way.
Mrs. !!legman laid she and the two
~ Vir&iflia women will return to Paris
l'ueaday and try agajli lo conlacl the
tijlrih VI~ delKOlion lo the peace tajks. ·~ · -· , A naUonal company starring }Jarbara
,!'We are going lo keep lr)'lngunttl they--Ru1li-ilrC!IIT"!!Ufl!l•yt!l1 In Chlc
¥,e UJ," Me said. "We're running short Abe !Jurrow1, the comedy's original di·
Q(.money11but WJ'r~ giong to st.ay uritil it rector, ia direcUn1 Miu Allyaon's entry
EWIJCllll. · •oto th h . h -.llbl wofnen met · wtUt the North V~t· 1 . e 1 ow. torug t. IJIP1* Ioli week 1" Puil but Mia. MiBB Allyson Jut appeared on Broad-
~an · .aid the ddatioo "jUi& went way in "Panama Hattie" in lH31 step-
arOUnd 1n circles." -ping in Ior Betty Hutton a• understudy
; for flve perfOrmanccs before Holywood
,...., ........ J
MOON .••
tJie gravJty of some other celestial body,
prWlbly the earth.
called.
She was signed to a contract by Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer and debuted in the film
"Best foot Forward!" contJnutilg on to ~tar _in fnOte ·than SO !lm1 before appear·
mg ln her own television series.
Mis1 Allyson went int.o reUrement fol·
lowing the death of her "produce"r hu1band
Dick Powell several years ago and later
ENDING RETIREMENT
Newport'• J11Da Allyson·
married 1ociety barber Glenn Maxwell.
The union was stg~ and the CQUflt
parted, only to r1ruarry· later and r~·
divorce asain more reccnUy. '1Meteorite impact couJd only tap the Ji.·
qu\d ~ the aide facing the earth, ·lhu1 ex·
plaJnlN :w~y ~re are seu Ollly. oo the
eartlfl ~·" Smith 11id. 110n the far
.... ol l!Jo p!OOD, lho crud WU lbick and
•QI"! l!lid me!aorllu merely · bl.oiled
era-.!' -
FIO<>d }Jit1 Argentin11
MENDOZA, Argenllna (AP) .:._ J. six·
foot wall ' pf mud and water from a bunt
DoodJcoq'"I dam r~ged through thla city
In t"-~es foolhjlll Suuday -and police
re~d II ptr10ns were known kllled.
Copter Used in Seeking
Injured ·Boy's Identity
..
DAllY PILOT
WtwMt..... Hllllll..,_IHc. ..,__ -""'"' ·--.
Oll'AHC";f: COAST PU.t,.flMING C~PIJ('I'
l•liert N. w •• o1
rrn~1 11'141 l'""tliMt"
•J1cl. t C1ul1y
Viet l'tnlderll lllf C.-11 #o\1111!1"
Tho111~!iri~
Tti11111t A. M11rphl11t
Mfrlt_lllllf J.ritor .......
c .... Mttt: n:rl" ..... ., '''"' Hi9lfl1 ··~I tt\1 . .. .... tO!I~ . , '\.lfllM ... , .. ; '""'' ,_ tfv'l!lllt*! fol<:lll lltlJ lff'll tN•\'ttfi
Doctors and nursu are keeping a close
watch on an eight-year old Huntington
Bench boy today, whoSe auto-bicycle
crash touched oft a ma11lve heliew.t;ei·
mounted search in ·an effort 'to learn his
identily.
The youngster \fhO has now been iden-
. Wied 11 Frecl4ie Dick~son. of 16'12
· Har~ ctro)e, Huntington Bea~, ls In
. guatded cond!Uon today at Huntington
lntercommunity Hospital with severe
he;a,d injuries and multiple cUt:i and
briilses. No !urgery Is planned as of thltl
time, medical officials indicated.
Freddie· ap.pi.rently made B. left turp In-
to a moving automobile near Warner
Avenue and Pacific Coast HJgliway
around t :20 p.m. and was struck by it, ·
accon:lin1 to police reports. '
The blow waa sufficient enouah to
render him unconaclous. He carried no
tdenUflcatlon and wu not recognized by
witQefil1fl of the accident.
Police launched their helicopter over
the area and used ita public addreu
system in asking for idenUficatlon ol ~
boy.
Working from the only clue "they had, a
m1UJ1bllng about a "Cub Scout rln111
before he JOit con1clou1ne11, offlcer1
tracked down the boy'• ldenUty throu1ti a
CUb Scout !elder who Informed tbem that
most or the boys in hlt paick attend
Harbour View Elementary School. ,
• Lyle Lescher. Harbour Vin Prlncipt11,
who wa1 contlattd by officer Rod
Maltby, ldtnllned Fr•dd1 11 the aon of
rellred Navy CJpt. and Mn. Vlnctnl M.
Dickers<>n.
The driver of the automobile. John r.
Bloomfield, 28, of 6601 Christa Palma
DrJve, Hunti~ton Beach, was ·J).O~ cited
or btld by pollcl:.
Fron• PafJe J . .
ACCIDENTS . • •
run accident Saturday afternoon in which
he jOll hi• !ell leg.
Fl~gerald wu ~ck down by » '
automobile at 6:37 p.m. at Goldtn W•t •
$1(401 and llUIJIOoldl Avenue by whl ·~
pe"1'ed lo he a black 11161 or !IQ El
Camino Clhevrolet, police nld.
The dr\~ of the car, ~CC<lrdlng to wtt.nesse•, was a mal'LJH!f_lng a beard
who waa accompanied by a female
pa.saen,er at the time of the accidtnt.
'l'he \lehlcle1 police1ild. wu seen leavln1
the lnteraection at a high rate ot apeed
and may have received slight damage to
the Jen front~fellder u a rtaµlt of tlle col·
lislon.
Fllwera!A, who l)l•ke• -hi• .llome at
13'41 Iowa ~I., ,'!U 1ra~ lo the
ho&pi!'1 bf 11111iul1ne,, 111111rt '·turgoont
had lo remuve 111' sh•llarad !JI. Ila a!IO
suffer~ mu!Uplt l)Ot!lulioj1,I 1 n d
abrfliont jn the t!'Cidenl. iccotdln1 lo a boopltal opohsman.
Prie~l Collll.~.
Tl>t Jlev. John Du!lna Qt.Our Lady ol
Mt. c.iomel Calhollc Churcb collapsed during tbe 10 a,m. 141., Sunday.
•
Drunk Frightens
.Man to Death
. VINELAND, N.J. , (UPI) -Ali ap-
parenlly drunke11, llllf* Wis t1"11ed
·With manslaughter .•~ ~-; lor
.,negedly fngotentn1 1o 4'o!I> • -in. tiis h?me. . · l. · . ; f,
PolJce said Dwla: b : CrP'leY Yf8S
taken inlo cullody j!t•the· •iii Of !Itri• Fred Marchetti, n , who dMill of a heart
attack afer Crowley banged . on 'l back
door, smashed a Window and entered the
house.
Police said Crowley wandered to
Marchetli's home, pounded on the door
and called for the "camaUJ of the gwµ-4"
MarCbelti1 w!io did i!t' know· Crowley,
rap upstairs for a. stii>tguo. Ulen col-
lapsed. Crowley, alfegedly w:der the in-
fluence of alcohol,· wa:s"arrestecr later.
the
city consultants
:recommend
Balboa Bay Club
lease extension!
The City Df Newport ~ hllfd a mpeclld, b!d•Ptndent research firm,
Development Researdi ~iai.s of. Los~ to enluate tf14 -Bay
Qut ltlff pi'apoul. Here is wh•l lhe fi!li!'• nport • 1bout ··
'
. . ..
EXTENDING LEASES OF THIS TYPE
''We believe that it is il!IPort•nt to
point out that 11rqund leas~s of lhla
type are pnmlly txltndetl. thr,ouch
renopllatlon prlot to th•:aclP•! i.r·
111lnatl9ll •1t• of th• orisinal lt1111.
Th• ,..&Qn for this is !hot lh' !HiH
n•rl)lally 1111ke5 a significant capital
inv11t!'1111t ••• and •011tlnuet1 · ~
tn1'""1ift 1taconi11 incr111i111 lnl1tai·
~I• is t~t rtl!lllninc lease tarm it
nduced.
In ,c011clu•ion • .,. '-mntt"' thot .
the F1111t1k • 11,.e ~1111lllil which
is ffl~illble to '10th the Cllf end )ht
Balboa Bay Club which fllfl tlfow for
tho fjlll tcon1M11ic dovttopmtnt pro. sra"' \fhlch ,., btliw• will mond·
'· """ btJll)d tti; •urlwn)ly projte!ed
· t11P1nfionl'flll'1m."
Tho Balboa Bay Club lease ia down '
to 29 YMI'· The Club seek> th• lease
nt1n1l9n 1oth1t it can obt1in fjnanc•
Int to continue Its devaloP!Mnt pro-
1ram end hu ~creed !o tenns Which
ral11 th• 1nnutl rentel, increase tho
percenta .. of lfl>SS sales, and pro•
yid,. for parlodic co1t,of·llvln1
•d)uitm•nts u )'{Oil 11 periodic rene·
1otl1tlon of all terms.
RIALl%f: MORE REVENUE F~ CITY l'ROPERTY
VOTE VEf ON THE l!AY CLU• LEASE
JANUARY J~
"""II'"""' Ttt""" .... ••r ..... GllJl.o l'N M•'*' "of .,,.... ..... ,. c• •.
. .
The hoy'1 lolber 11 "t eun•nl paU.nt al
the Navy Hospital In San oi~go and ""
being visited by Mrt. Dlcktraon •t tht
tlmt of the actldtnt, poll.CJ said. He w11
being. watched bf hl1 oldu abter, Dana,
while tbt couple was away.
Father Dunne, who fain~ at JO :ll
a.rn. was re.vived quleklJ by firemen aummoned to the .services. -·.,;c._;__;_ ___ _;_ ________ ...:.._ __ ..:_ ____ _..:.__;;_;_:._ _ _:_ ______ ..:..:..:......::
• 1 \
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L I • • • • • • 4 -~
•
. D11ntington Beaeh ·-'l 'oday's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoelu
VOL. 63, 0 . 4, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
-,
.Copter Aids '
In ldeµtity
Of Hurt Boy
• InVa'lid Dies in Fire • ' ' ' -
Trailer of Woman, 90, Engulfed
Doctors and nurse s are ketping a close
watch on an eight-year old Huntington
Beach boy today, who5e aut.G.bicycle
crash touched orr a massive heli~ter·
mounted search in an effort to learn his
ide!'ltity.
·i The youngster who has now been Iden-
tified as Freddie Dickerson, or 16842
Harkness Circle, Huntington Beach, is in
guarded condition today at lluntington
lntercommunity Hospitar w i t h severe
head injuries and multiple cul<I and
bruise!. No surgery is planned as of this
lime. medical officials indicated.
Freddie apparently made a left turn in-
to a moving aulomoblle near War~r
Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway
around 4:20 p.m. and was struck by it,
accordlqg to police repo~.
The blow was sufticient enough to
render him unconscious. He cirried no
identification and was not recognized by
wilnesscs of the. accident.
Police launched their helicopl.er over
I.he area and used its public address
Aystem in asking for identification of the
ho:'.
.~ ...,..
t ••
r " •
•
I
l .,
A BO-year old ltunlington B~acb woman
dled Saturday afternoon from injuries
suflered when names of unkllo-\m ori.gia
destroyed her mobile home.
Annie Keeling,.an Invalid, who occupied
Space 63 of the Driftwood Trailer Park at
21461 Pacific Coast Highway .. was found
face up on th e trailer's bedroom floor as
firetnen ripped through the _i;luminum
sheeting with axes and a power saw.
In a desperate attempt \o save her life,
she was given emergency resuscitation
Nixon Grants
1st Clemency
For Negro
By Rl~RD P. NALL
Of tht OtllY ~111'1 Stitt
P AU.f SPRINGS -President Nixon
granted his first executive clemency to-
day as he commuted lhe federal priJon
,.,~ ..,· .;tti: sentence of a Negro self.help leader and
neurosurgeon from New York State. U~I Ttlttftett
\Vorking rrom the only clue they had . t1
tnllmbling about a ''Cub Scout ring"
h2!ore he lost .coni;ciousness, officers
tracked down the boy's identity through a
Cub Seoul leader who informed them that
most of the boys in his pack attend
ltarbour View Elementary School.
TV CAMERAS FOLLOW KENNEDY, WIFE TD INQUEST
Probe Into Deeth of M•ry Jo Kopechn• Under Way
111e President acted in behalf of Dr.
'l'homas W. Mathews, president of the
National Economic Growth a n d
Reconstruction Organization (NEGRO).
Dr. Mathews pleaded guilty Oct. 20, 1969
l(ennedy Speaks for Hour
in U.S. District Court New York to
charge~ of failure to file an income tax
return. HI?' was ·sentenced to one year,
With ooe year suspended, and began serv-
log lhe 1ente;nce Nov. 10 in Danbury,
Conn. federal correctional institute. t.yle Leschcr, Harbour View Principal.
who ·was contacted by officer Rod
Maltby, identifjed Freddy as the gon or
retired NaY)' Capt. and Mrs. Vincent M.
Dickerson.
During Kopechnelnquest Preu Secretary Ron Ziegler· said Dr.
?.1a\hews did not.pay his taxes for several
yµn U. order ljJ ,devo\e ·bis )1<'10llal
fil'lntn io . egra seU -htJp .program• ' . . . ' ' .
The boy'i father Is a current patient at
tht Navy Hospital in San Diego 1nd wall EDGARTOWN, Mass.· <UPI) -· Sen.
being visited by l\1rs. Dicier10n at the Edward M. Kennedy testified for about"
time of the accident, police 11\d. He was 0(\8 hour today at the openlpg of the
being watched by his older ii.Ster, Dina, settet inquest into Miry Jo KOJ>e(hne's
"·hUe the couple was away. death. ,He will be back this afternoon.
The driver or the automobile, John F. The inquest into the death of the 28·
lhe se!'lator was isked ~ newmtn: "Are such u one conducted In Wa~ lo bus
you gh1.d it's finally under way?" Negroe1 to places of employmenb
'KE:nned)' turned. nodded. and repllt!d : ln commuting the physician's aentence,
.. Yes, t am." the President emphasized It was not 1
The proceedings. which were lo opE'n questio n of relief for. an lndividuaJ but
Sept. 3. were closed to lhe press an~a~her relief for the important program
while bfing transported to Huntington
lntercommunlty Hospital by ambulance.
'She was pronounced dead on arrival.
Nineteen firemen battled the flames for
four hOurs but the trailer was totally
destroyed. It was valued at $1t,OOO. The
fire also caused •100 In smoke damage to
a neighboring mobile home.
Severa) neighbors trained garden hoses •
onto the blaze until ftr.e crews arrived at
l2:M p.tn. '(
Dale Ferranto, 19, of 21482 Pacific
Coast Highway, suffered first degree ·
Lositag Catadidate
bums on his face as he attempted to
enter th~ trailer but was aired by the
heat. He was given emergency tre1tment
at Huntington lntercommunity Hospital
and Later released.
Firemen, who are still investigating the
cause of I.he blaze, said it broke out aft.Ir
Mrs. Keeling's daughter had left the
trailer to go sho~ping.
The body was taken to Westminster
Memorial Park wher& funeral ar-
rangements are pending.
Miners~· Figure,.
Family Killed .
CLARKSVILLE. Pa. (AP) -Joseph
"Jock " Yablonski, unsuccessful candi·
date In Lhe election race for the presiden-
cy of lhe United Mineworkers Union was
found murder.ed, 11tat.e police said today.
Officers said they al:iD found the body
of two women b!!lieved to be his wife and
daughter at their home in the heart of
J>er!nsylvania 's soft coal" ~glon.
·Major Howard M. Jaynes, area state I .
Beach Bribery
' '
Suspect Sileµt ..
As Trial -Moved
police commander. said Yablonski •ss
found lying ne}'l to his bed shot once in
the back of the head.
Jaynes said the bodies or the two
\\'Omen "''ere found in two other
l.iedrooms. •
"There wa~ blood 5C81\tred all around
~nd the telephone lines were all ripped
oul." said Jaynes .
•1e said pol~ce belie.ve the shoolini:s OC·
curred somel1111e during the night.
"The appearance of the bodies would
indicate that th.::y were murdered " 11.ld
sljtte·Police Captain Joseph Snyde;.
. The _S9-year-0ld Yablonski started eatly
his challenge of the leadership ol UMW
President W. A. "Tony" Boyle -.,..
nouncing his candidacy for the pres1den-
ry ol the 220,000 membrc. United Mini
'Vorkers union on P.tay 29 •
"Mining is still the most dangerous of
all occupations." he said. "'Ille union ~
falling far short of what it should be
doing. Th~ mine workers orgAAlzation has Bloomfield, 28, of 6601 Christa Palma year-old secretary began amid tight
..-----..i.....,._se"nr ity in a century-old courthouse Drive. lluntington cac • was no~ '"""u ·
1 Kennedy seem~ cheerful as he cmcrg-
or held by po Ice. ~d from the courthouse along with five
public by order or the Massachusetts e head · . . Supreme Crn1rt But..J.Lw.as...lelt IQ Boyle Ziegler , said that Dr. Math~ws 1s cur·
to decide whether lawyers would cross-rently f1hng returns and paying federa l
examine witnesses and present evidence laxes and has arranged to make complete
William D. New, the Phoenix man sc-
cused of attempting to bribe Hnul\ngton
Beach f\1ayor Jack Green for zoning
favors, remained silent today aii his trial
was_..rmv.ed....from....municlpaLco11rt In
Westminster, to Superior Court at Santa
Ana.
beeo stagnant...Tbe..min.ets.n.eed..to.belon11---l
l_o a labor organization that is tota lly
netnocratic so it can be responsive t.o
Beach Studies
Some 01anges
In Penal Code
An emergency ordinance aimed at cor·
recUng erron In the state penal code will
be before the Huntington Beach City
Council tonight for enactment.
City Atty. Don Bonfa has advi~ed coun·
rilmen that a 1969 amendment to the
code by the Legislature failed to provide
that certain acts constitute a miS<le·
meanor violation. Included are engaging
in lewd and dissolute conduct in public,
prostitution. soliciting alms jn public,
loitering, drunkenness, and prowling.
Because of the omission in the state
code, such acl.~ are not now crimes, ac·
cording to Bonfa's interpretation. The
emergency ordinance will enable police
to enforce the laws until the sta\e code is
amended. the city attorney says.
Other matters before the council in·
elude: -An appearance by 1-lal W. Brown Jr,
of the California State Outdoor Advertis-
ing AS80Ciation to discuss «rtain pro-
visions of the city's new sign ordiaance.
-Requests for business licenses for
two clothing businesses in the downtown
area earmarkl'd for col'Miemnation in the
Top or the Pier Plan. Samuel J. and
Kal'f:n Leto, of Torrance seek to establish
a men and womens clothing business at
1091~ Main Street, and Inna E. Turner,
of Orange, wants to open a dress and gilt
1hop 1t 474 Pacific Coast Highway.
-Appointment of two city officials to
r.ommittees or the National ruvers and
Jlarbon Coogrl?S!I. Public Works Director
,Jim Wheeler has been named to the com·
mittee on Inter· Relationship of Irrigation,
itunlcipal, Industrial and Wa t er
Research. and Director of Harbors and
Beaches Vincent Moorhouse to the Flood
Control Committee.
-A petition by residents to change the
name o{ Heatherten Circle to Heatherton
Circle:.
-The pro~ appolntmenl of JMeph ~1. UJI as deputy city attorney to replace
Charles Liberto who has resigned to
enter private practice with 1 finn of at·
torneys in Torrance.
Board Slates ~leet
The ntxt. regular meellng of the Foun·
taln Valley School District will be held at
7:30 p.m. Jan. I 1t the Currlcu!Um
Maten1l1 Centtor, one !Jghthcwe Lane,
f'ounUlln Valley.
• • . ,
women and five men acquaintances who
had attended a cookout ·party together
the night Miss Kop€!(hne died in Ken·
nedy's car after it plunged into a tidal
pond.
Court clerk Thomas A. Teller told
newsmen he would distribute a statement
at 2 p.m., presumably convering ground
rules imposed by District Judge James
A. Boyle. who presided at lhe Inquest.
Kennedy, who flew in from his Hyannis
Port home on the mainland, 1aid as he
entered the courthouse, "I'm hopeful we
can reach an end to what has become an
extraordinary length of time."
"I'm hopeful the record will be com·
plete and 1 can get to the business of
devoting myself to the Senate."
Kennedy and nearly a dozen other sub-
poenaed •·itnesses -all accompanied by
la\\')'Crs -walked into the heavily guard·
ed courthouse, in front of whi ch milled
about ·200 persons, mostly newsmen .
Judge Boyle presided over the inquest,
ordered by District Attorney Edmund S.
Dinis.
Boyle arrived at the courthouse more
than two hours before Kennedy.
After laying down the ground rules for
the proceedings, Boyle wall e.1pecled to
begin interrogating Kennedy and 10
others who attended a· cookout-reunion
the night Mlss l~opechne died.
Altogether, at least 20 persons have
been subpoenaed to testify. ,
Just as 'Kennedy ahd his wife Joan
reached the entrance to the courthouse,
(lf their own. restltullon or back taxes. .
Edgartown Police Chief Dominick J. . The n~ur~rg~n has made the point-. . 1n not fighting hLll own case-I.hat who-~rena . told ~ packed ~ews briefing Sun· ever breaks the law for whatever cause
uay night tight. security .would . be en-should be prepared to pay the penalty, fnr~ro at I~ inquest, with uniformed 7.ieglrr said. Dr. Mathews did not file re-
pohce guarding each entrance to the turns in !96.1.
courthouse. Ziegler sa id: ''The President feels the
Police will escort witnessell Into the interest of the country and the commun-
court and keep back a crowd of more iliell where NEGRO is establishW are
than 200 newsme n here to cover the beter served by the release of Dr. Math·
celebrated case. ~ws and his return to the vital work
NEGRO ls involved in."
Huntington Gets
$87.,653 Grant
An S87 ,65.1 grant to the city of Hunting·
ton Beach ""as announced today by Rep.
Craig Hosmer.
the federal grant under the l~ouslng
and Urban Developmen~ Department
will be matched by Huntington Beach to
acquire property for a new R~k on War·
ner at Nichols avenues, adjacent to the
Oak View Elementary School.
Hosmer said grants o( the type receiv-
ed by Huntington Beach come under the
Open Space Land Program enacted te>
tncourage park development in urban
areas.
The lluntingtoo Beach park will serve
O'r'er more than 2,ollo people and "will
be ai tribute to federal<ity cooperation,"
Hosmer said.
Ziegler said the President was getting
ln 1ome golfing in Palm Sprin15 and
"bearing down" on his State of the Union ~1essage scheduled Jan . 22. He also said
the President and first family might
i;pcnd tonight again at the palatial Palm
Springs home of Walter Annenberg, am·
baSllador to Great Britain.
Ziegler said the President may leave
San Clemente Thursday or Friday. Hlll"
birthday is Friday and a celebration ill"
expected in Washington . But thr. depar·
ture is no t yet firm . Ziegler empha..,ized.
He said the first family will probably
register as California voten some time
after Tuesday. Ziegler said Julie and
David t.:lsenhower returned Sunday from
their Belgian visit.
Slork Markeu
' . NEW YORK (APl -The stock market
maintained a· broad gain in active trad-
ing late today. (See quotations, Pages 14-
11.)
State Legislatur·e Opens
De1n Leader.s Offering Sweeping Reforms
SACRAMENTO (AP).-. An election-forward to if l were elected governor."
year legislature opened today with Dernafl!Jhtg rel,ief for property tax-
Assembly Democratic Leader Jesse M. · payers; U~h ~td ~he levy '.'Is literaV,y
Unruh o(fering a sweeping program in-driving Calilonuans ~t of their homes.
lud . n t li · ._A_ , On the conservation lssue. Unruh c ing a a n\It on •11111uoowners pro-: :d~lintd to 'trlUciiC Reagan directly, but
perty taxes. , he aakt state : government and local
Unruh, a candidate for the Democratic goveOvnents, have . become "one of th&
non'iinatiOn ror go•ernor, made his pn'>-. gre)f 'dttp6lltta or the environment in
posals in 1 unique "st.ate ol. the stalt." the state.."
duals who pay Uttle or no axef ljl all."
And Unruh demanded elimination or
whal be termed "tax loopholes" for big
business -the depletion allowance given
oil companJes and the property tax ex-
empt.Ion granted on the home oltlct
buildings ol Insurance companiu.
New was ordered by Municipal Judge
.James Cook to appear in Department
Five. Orange County Superior Court, at
9:30 a.m. on Jan. 16. His attorneys decld·
ed not to present any defense during the
preliminary hearing concluded today.
The hearing had been conUnucd from
Dec. 15 al which time Mayor Green had
testified that New offered him $4,000 to
influence a zone change on industrial land
near Gothard Strett and Slater Avenue.
New was arrested Nov. 10 Oh lhe park·
Ing lot of the Fisherman Restaurant alter
allegedly making his third offfr of &
•·campaign contribution" to Green inside.
Green 'estifled that lhe la!l meeting
with New was conducted under police and
electronics surveillance. after he had in--
formed the police department of New'a:
offers.
Mayor Green wes not present at
today's wrap up of the preliminary hear·
ing.
Valley Industrial
Unit Selected
A portion of the new citlz.e'ns 'c mlttee
to boost Fountalp Valley . in
development will be appointed at y
council meeting, 8 p.m., Tuesday at city
hall.
·Mayor Edward Just said the city staff
fs already collecting infnrmation to be
used by the citizens commltee and work
will begin as soon as enough committee
riiembers a~ chosen.
The committee will be asked t.o form A
plan for altractlng industr)r to about 400
acres or land between Talbert and
Warner Avenues ne1t to the Santa Ana
River.
Citizen participation was suggested by
the city counc il to help speed·up In·
duBtrial Hevelopment In the area describ-
'd, Committee members will•bt! selected
based on occupaUon and area of
residence.
VIKING S II-POI NT
CHOI CES SUN DAY
message delivered to a news conference And he said he Intends lo keep 1
a day before Reagan ouUJnes his own critical eye on the Reagan administr11itlon
Blasting a"'ay at ReRgan, Unruh uld
"the people of California are being short
cl)anged by 1 do-nothing 1d~stration
which 1lts Idly by while the quality of the
lives we leltd deteriorate •t an ac-LAS .VEGAS, CAP) -Bopkmakers ht!l'fl
celeratina ret.e ." lxlay e.sl1bUshed the National Football plans. through the long session. "f offer my
Llke Unruh, Reagan 11 expected to hit atrvices to the people of CaUfornla on
hard at property tax reUef. what Is being done so they c1n evalu1te
Unruh also offerd a wide ranae of pro-the difference between proml&e and
posits to prtstrvt Cllllomla'a en-performance," he said.
vtronment -also.• top priorltY program Unruh proposed 1 nat limit on·property
for the RepubUcan governor. who is ex· tu:e11 levied on homes occupied by the
pectcd to aee.k a second te.nn. owners.
Unruh aald his program 11comtltutes 1 He called for wiping out tall' e•emPo
prlnclpal program that we could look lions ht says help "very wealthy lftdjvl·
' .,
Striking at lht key conauv.atlon issue, League champion Minnesota VUdnp as ~Unruh called for lelislilion baJililg an oil II.point ravorttes .to defeat the Kansas
drllllna on state controlled Jandl m the City C:hlt!s. of lht American Football
Sula Barbara Cbannd, site of 1 con· Lelgue for the World tltle.
Unulna oil leak. · • The worf~ championship >rill ~ docld-
He allo proimed a Slo\e Co!Jlery~Uon · e<I· between lht Chill• and Viking• Sun-
Authortty ·wllh ihe. powel"; to rtJecl apy day In th~ Super Bowl came •t New
'"'"· local or prJv~i. pro)cCI llltely to ; Orlein1. ' · t
damaa:(\: t~ environment.
'!
thrir needs."
Yablonski's father -1 Polish Im-
migrant -died in a Pennsylvania min9
accident.
Yablonski himself had worked tn the
n1ines for 35 years }le was the (irst
bJard member of the union to lhr~ the
gauntlet to Boyle.
He lost the election Dec. 9 by a Jar gt
margin, despite a campaign that toot
him from coal field to coal field by rented
plane.
Newport Lauds
Beach Beauty
A bouquet has been tossed to ttiint·
lngton· Beach for civic improvement~
11long Pacific Coast Highw ay b y
neighboring Newport Qeach.
In a letter to Mayor Jack Green i nd
the City Cooncll, Newport Mayor Doreen
Marshall cites the Improvement of
Pacifi c Coallt Highway, the new con-
struction and parking lots on the city
bepch and the overall beautilication along
the city's coastline.
These represent "substanti1l progress
not achieved wKboot. dedkat.lon and ef-
fort." Mayor Ma.rshall sta~es.
"May we also wis~ Vie city ot Hun-
tington Beacb continued progress and
suecess with its plans afld program for
redevelopment .of tbe downtown coastal
section," the letter concludes.
Orange Coua
Wead!er
Fair skies with 16cal iusty wind•
brushJnk away the bad air 11 the
pidure . for Tuesday alone lhe
coast. Temperatures contlnuT to
cringe into the loW 60'1.
INSIDE ;TODi\ Y .
Orange Countll tntcra tht
dtca<U of tht Stt1entic.s corettd·
111 e11eing the probltms prr1en'-
ed bu its bwratonina growth..
Paqt 10.
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• • • . J DAl\.Y PILOT H ...... ·J-5, 19711 •
Mesa Man
~~Pf:S ·
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Mu .rder ·Tr y
Bloodied In 1 11vqe tire Iron beating
• m 1 rembte mouqlain fire trail, a Costa
"8a llloe clerk llldnopod frOrn his home 1 ltd throUgll the dirt early Sunday
pe d..ih uodtr the wlle<J1•ol his
I .
gators 11id toda'Y that
rict V. Tedesco, 47, cl US E. lath
probably owea his life to a newspaper
it(ite dtliVff')'maD who may h I v •
~ off the three wou)d.be
~Wi"ead.bunt is under way today t ~ the 1 Pontiac Le Mans sedan new-
1 .purclwed by Tedaco l!ld ulOd by his
c~n to flt< tlle ocene Jn Trabuco
llhorl!y btlore dawn SandO)'.
fdtlco, meanwlUJe, was listed in fair
!kill al Hoq Mtmorlll llolplta1,
ht is under treatrotnt l« a vartet1
tnlurit1 lliflered In the "'1111 oaaau!L
1 i~ aa1d he IUlta1ned 11vere
P~ lacenition&. a ,tract&nd nose,
•&al broken f!ngtn <11 bis.left bond, fCictur«l ribl and mauive Welti OVf!t hll
~body. ~nge County aheri!f'1 depu.Uea con-
l><ted by John Nordeen, 64, Full.non, Jll the newspaper routeman's approach
nlOy have !rllfltened off Tedesco'• at·
~ en Sunday morning.
saw the injured man as t drove put
a I aped to a telepOOne to get help." .
NOrdeen, who pinpointed the lite
1Jting old 'n'abuco Hill road about 400 rant• beyond Coot'• Corner.
Nordeen sald he saw tail lights
vanishing around a curve up ahud « the
spot where Tednco lay sprawled in the
ditctt, bleeding l!ld battered.
Off1"" Leo Jon .. aald In bJa COltl
Meaa POiice Deponment report cl t!>e
ea.W -still sketchy due to the vidimls
cOndition -that auto theft appeared to
be the only moUve behind it.
He said Tedelco knows of no enemies
ond livtl modestly, with no penonal
ha~ita « p!'(lblems which might lead to
vqeance by others.
P4-:e vi~timap';'!,!:t ~~~
p,J11. Saturday by three men -osked
IM number ol his apartment. He refllled
ID tell them.
"'"Tedeeco said at that point be wu forc--
e<l Into hlJ new car -II.Ill bearinll !em·
pilri.ry paper regiltratlon plateo -ind
methodically beaten all Uie way into the
6htl. Ana Mountains.
· · 1'nc< In the Trabuco Canyon areo, he
l6ld dtt.ecttves, he was dragged out of
tJ>occor l!ld t!>e bnilll boating cartlnued
With I tire lrOn beinJ used, althoulh he
tnainta.ined conadoames1.
The •hoe clerk said the men finally (<ll
ha~ into the car and attempted to run
~ him, but be rolled throogll the -Into the dllcb to .... pe being crushed by
W. Count1 Bit-run , ' . . .... ' :H«>.Ii~ay~ ~r~shes
t : ~. '
Take Four -LsaAI •
Wr•pped lJp in Work
The~ MUwafitee Milltaire Cadets were posting the
colors in-competition wb~ the banner raised by
Donna Banaszynsk:i, 13, toppled and covered her
Ul"I Tt.,_..
heaci. Like a good soldier, she kept right on march·
ing.
Attorneys Blast
Pretrial News
In Tate Slayings
Nepalese Children Cheer
Agnw as Others Protest
A Balboa Island girl becamt Orange
County;, fourth 1970 traffic: fat.ality SWI·
day night.
California lUgbway Patrol officers said
Donna Lynn Bel~ 16, of m Coral Ave.,
was pronounced dead at the scene at
11'1t
4 °""'ll' Trotnc Dea~ Toll
1111 z
11 :3S p.m. when the car Jn which she was
riding w!th three c::ompanjons went out of
contn>I and struck a tree on El Toro
ftoo,d.
. Talcen to South Coast Community
Hospital with major injuries were the
driver, Don Dlstefano, 29, of 3%9 Poplar
St., Lagur.a ~ach and hla p~ngers
Vane111a Myers, 15, of 23358 El Perrp, El
Toro. and Gregory M. G,ray, 19, of 110
Clilf Drive, Lagw!a Beach.
Jn an acc::~ent Saturday, a Buena Park
youth lost hls life when he walked into
the side of a se.mf-traller truc::k at Beach
Boulevard and Malvern Avenue ln Bqena
Parl:.
Police said Vernon Record, 16, of 5140
Somerset Circle, was pronounced ~ad
on arrival at Beach Community Hospital
after he reportedly stepped into the i.Jl-.
tersec::tion, turned to say something to
two rrlends and walked into the side or
* * * Huntington Man's
Knee Broken
lnNewportCrash
A Huntington Beach man suffered a
broken knee and bruises early Sunday
morning in a three--c::ar crash in west
Newport Beach.
Police said Jay Williams. 38, 8202
From Wire Services Paestwlc::k Circle, was injured when
AUSTIN, T!x. _Attorneys for Charles KATMANDU, Nepal (UPl) -Leftist another car sideswiped his, forcing the
D. Watson, charged ln the Sharon Tate atudent.a demonstrated today against the ANA LYSIS OF AGNEW'S: man's auto Into a head-on impact with still another car. murden, 11atd today the former Te11s official vi.sit by Vice President Spiro T. MISSION ON PAG E 4 The cause of the crash, police sa"id, was
schoolboy athlete could not get a. fair Agnew to this tiny Himalayan kingdotn alleged failure to yield the right of way trial in California· because of pretrial
the rig. The driver Herman Klein, 27, of
Pomona, was not held.
The other two traffic fatalities oc·
CWTed Friday.
John Susman or Brooklyn, N. Y., who
was visitirig relatives in Stanton, was kill·
ed by an out or control auto w.ben he tried
to slUeld h1I 5-year-old grandson from the
car, ofOcers said. The boy, Kenneth Scott
Ostrow Is in satisfactory condition today
at Los Alamitos General Hospital.
Garden Grove teenager Michael Gary
Graham, 16, also died Friday afternoon
following a broadside collision on Knott
Avenue. The driver of the second vehicle,
Aklra Hirata of Anaheim , ls reported in
critical condition at Slanton Community
Hospital. Witnes!es asserted the youth
was involved lo a drag race when he lost
control of his vehicle and plowed into the
c::ar driven by Hirata.
In Westminster, police said today they ·
are still seeking a black· 1961 or 1962 El -
camlno Chevrolet in connectJon with a hit
and run acc::ident Saturday which resulted
in the amputation of the leg of an elderly
man.
Westminster resident G er a 1 d W.
Fitzgerald, 64, ia in "serious but im·
proving" condiUon today al Westminster
Community HOl.'lpital following a hit and
run acc::ident Saturday_ afternoon in which
he lost his left leg.
Fitzgerald was struck down by an
automobile at 6:37 p.m. at Golden West
Street and Humboldt Avenue by what ap-
peared tG be a black 1961 or 1962 El
Camino Chevrolet, police said.
The driver or the c::ar, according to
witnesses, was a man wearing a beard
who was accompan1ed by a female
passenger at the time of the accident.
The vehicle, police said, was seen leaving:
the intersection at a high rate of speed
and may have received slight damage to
the left front fender as a result of the col·
lision.
Fitzgerald, who makes his home 1t
13641 Iowa St., was transported to the
hospital by ambulance, where !W'geons
had to remove hi.!1 shattered leg. He also
suffered multiple contusions a n d
abrasions in the accident, according to a
hospital spokesman.
publictty. bordering on Communist China. But bun-With King Mahendra." by Susan Colglazier, 20, Whittler.
"Our contention is that Calilornia is not drtda ot other Nepalese, f r o m Nepalese officials said they sus-pected Officefs claim the woman pulled onto FJ d H A
the place to try Charles Watson," aaid at· schoolchildren to the king, made him Ohinese Communist involvement because Pacific Coast Highway from Orange 0 0 its rgentina
tomey BUI Boyd at an extradition hear· welcOme. large numbers of Chinese cars were seen Avenue and hit Williams' auto.
J• g bef M rtln D' J T in Patna before the ri"'1"" started. The third· driver, Jeffrey Shofner, 27, MENDOZA , Argentina (AP) -A 1lx· n on a Jes r., exas ""A anti-American demonstra11·-· In -.. Secn!ta f State iin;: "'"' Agnew, apparenUy unaware of the pro-6508 W. Ocean Front, Newport Buch, foot wall of mud and water from a bunt 7 ° · lhe suburbs of Katmandu and outside a tests, called later on the kJng for a 30-was not hurt in the 12:05 a.m. crash. flood control dam raged through this cily Boyd, oC McKlmey, Tex., where US llbri:irv here were believed provoked jo "II ting! · th Watson ls jaUed, argued against ret\Jm. · · -J mint:de-talk and then were 1Ded·by Mrs. W11 ams was treated at Hwi on in e Andes foothills Sunday and police •·• to Cal" · th ch th by Chinese Communiltt. Police sakl 20 A_,cnew and Queen Ratna . ' lntercommunlty Hospital. • ' reported 2S persons were known killed •
.. 16 uorrua e man aried wJ mxtenCs were arreftt!d Jn Suburban Pat· =~--''---::;::-:::=====-------'-------=~====...,-------'--the JdJlinp of Mils Tate and lix other na, a~t three miles from the center of \
persons. ' the clly and aite of the main demonstra. Bord ~ he ii -rill& a move to tiOM, and 10 more ln Katmandu .
get. chai'ges agaillsi ·Watson transferfed A UPI cameraman was beaten un-
the whttla. .
t-~.,....,....,1o1c1 Clf-lying1n~J
round by ·Nordeen. but wu unable to lfve
•'clear Indication cl the time !opee In·
~ved.
to a federal court ao that they may be c::onscloq." and another cameraman waJ
"!tied &n)'where In the I!nltedll.La.tt.s_,"~-beaten-and-r-obbed---Of.-hig watch-and-rin
Wataon, 24, former higb llChool football during the m.onters.
and track aw in the ama1J Texu towns Agnew. accompanied by hi.I wife and
of Farmersville and Copevllle, was not at two Apollo astronauts, flew here from
-f
··lnveatigator Geny Thompsoo bu been
usjgned to handle the followup report of Ult 11vage usault, as 90<ll u Tedeaco ii
altle to face furtber questioning.
C.ofC Elects ..
New Officers
lltembers ot.t)le Fountain Valley Cham·
ber or Commeri...-e wiU meet to elect of·
Ucers for 1970 at I a.m., Tuesday in the
conference room <i Fountain VaUey High
School.
Plans for chamber activities in the
C!'Jfl"ling year will also be discussed and a
new board of directors will be elected.
..SUgguUons for new acilviUes from
Fountain Valley merchants have been re-
quested by c::bamber president Charles
Otton. Coffee and donuta will be served.
Non-members are welcome to attend the
meeting.
DAILY PILOT
CIAAHGl COAIT l"Ul~llHING c:.OMl"~NY
ll:•b•rf N. w • .J Prn»tllt .,. Mli.Mt
Jeck ... c.,.1 ....
Vk• '°"'ldtnt tfMI ~I Meflltll"
ThoM•• Keevll .....
Th•"'•• A. Mu••\i1te M_,if!e l",1191"
Al&e1t W. lete,
A1-1ti. l<l!IW
H ...... ,_ '-"' OHie•
1117• 1 •• ,h lo4i•Y•r4
M•ifi"t Ad4r•1t1 P.O. I•• 1•0, •2641 --L..-te.IOl1 m ,..,. .. , •~-
C-19 ,,,,..; ,. W.1 ltt '""' Ntwf*I htcflj un W•I .. 1 .... hultwrtl
•
the 30-minute extradition bearing. He is Bangkok for an overnight flay on his tour
In the Collin County Jail at McKinney. of the Far Eut. They made the flight In
Wataon'1 attcrneys: did not quest.Ion 8 U.S. Air Force venion of the propeller·
CaJUornia'a claim that fingerprints !how· driven DC& transport because the landing
ed Wabon was the persoo charged with strip ls not Jong enough for his "Air
the Tate murders. Flngerpint eiperts Force 2'' jetliner.
from Callfornia were not called lo testify The highest-ranking U.S. official ever
alnce the Wue of Watson's Identity wu to visit Nepal, Agnew was greeted at the
not ralJed. Trlbhuvan airport by Prime Minister
Dies said he will meet with Texas Gov. Klrtinldhi Bis1.a and other Nepalese of.
Preston Smith later today and hoped to ficlals ·as well as by U.S. Ambassador
be ready to recommend a decision to ·Carol Lalse. He was given a 19-gun salute
Smith then on California Gov. Ronald and both he and his wife were bedecked Re~·.s request that Wal&On be ex· with flowers~ five Nepalese girls. .
trldited to Califomla. Observers said the crowd lining the
Patricia Krenwlnket, also accused of route of the Agnew motorcade into the cl·
murder and coraplracy in the Tate and ty were "not, of course, as big as Queen
LaBianca slayings, fac::td e1tradition Eliubeth's but still quite good." htarh>IJ todo,y In Mobile, Ala. · The streets were lined by hundreds of
Attorney M. A. Marsal, representlna scarlet-robed monks and school children,
Mias Krenwlnkel, 22, contends there is in· waving small U.S. flags and shouting
sufficient evidence to warrant a return of .. TlmalaJ Subhakamana" (best wishes to
his client to C4Wornia for trial In the you)." Banners along the three·mile
mass murders. route proclaimed "Long Live Peace,"
Circuit Judge Joseph M. Hocklander Jr, "Long Uve World Brotherhood" and
was named to preside and Dist. Atty. "With You a Happy Stay."
Carl M. Booth of Mobile County argued Observers said the welcome ~·as
for extradlUoq o( Miss Krenwlnkel. parUcularly warm because Agnew's vi sit
GWC Seeking
Scholarships
More than l t&,000 for scbo!orlh!p. are
currently being sought by the ocholmhlp ·
commlttee at Golden Wt$t College to
1ubatantially increase funds for deserving
atudents.
The committee proposes to rai6e the
money through per50rlal contact and let-
ter! to more than 500 bustne~, aerviet
groups and inclivktuaJs in Westminster,
Huritington Beach, Fountain Valley,
Garden Grove and Seal Beach.
Donald L. Randol, assistant dean and
scholarahip chainnan, uid the progratn
means the difference between many
capable, talented young people continuing
their education or dropping out or collece.
Scholarships are awarded each sprin1
on the basis of need. ability, leadership,
character and record of service to the
cfOl1on ond rectptenll will 111«1<! • ban-
on and recipients will attend a banque-
quel honoring both 11<'1111·
Chamber Week Set
In H1m tington Beach ·
The week of Jan. 1 ... n hu been
declared "Join the Chamber cl Com-
mer<e Week" by HunUncton Beoch
M01or Joclt G-.
Green lasued a proclamation ~
commending the local chamber cl com· moroe for l!o civic actlvllln Ind c1!Un1
for full !111J1P011 of the chamber.
'
W!U an official one, and not just a side
trip from India as made by most other
distinguished visitors.
Th e anti-American demonstrations
erupted while Agnew wis meeUng with
Bista. Police had arrested a number of
pot.eflUal troublemakers over t h e
weefend bul lefUst students distributed
aDfJ.·Agnew leaflets Sunday night and
maSsed in Palma to shout such slogans as
"Go Back Agnew!", "Down With
American Imperialism!," "Americans
Withdraw FrGm Vietnam l, '' and "Down
Valley Visitor
Burned in Blaze
A visitor to FOW'llain Valley suffered
severe flesh burn1 en the race when an
unknown object exploded as he tried to
douse a fire in 1 trash bin in the Chateau
Blanc condomlnlllllll Sunday nlghL
Noble Dami• S~, IO, cl Los Angeles,
was treated and released at HunUngloJ\
lnteroommunlty Hospital wbere he wal
taken by l"ountaln V11ley firemen . He
was vf1ltlnc friend• in the ChatUu Blanc
area.
Spees wu·foond by the firemen lying
"riear a burnln& trash bin ne1r Sin Miguel
Coiirt. He told them he was trying to put
out the flre when something exploded In
h•s f}'tl. Hos'pital officials said Spets was
blirntd on the race, but no!hlng waa found
In hil f)'es,. Fire ofnc!ats aald Ibero have been • rw Ill truh bin Ores, ~lbly 1el by
youngaters or Individuals unaware of the
danger or exp!odlnf obJectl ouch as paint
or aerotol ·cana or light bulb&.
\ )
the ~ .... ~ ... , -~·
city· consultants
recommend
Balboa Bay Club
lease extension!
The City of Newport Beach hired a respected, in~ependent r~~arch firm,
Development Research Associates of Los Angele~ to. ~lluate: the Balboa Bay
, Club l~ase proposal. Here is what the firm's report sap abouf · ·
EXTENDING LWES OF THIS TYPE
11We believe that it is important to
point out that ground leases of 1his
type are p neraUy extended 1hrough
renecotiation prior to the actual t er·
mi nation date of the original lease.
The reason for this is that the lessee
normally makes a significant capital
lnvestment , •• and continued mod·
emlz~tion becomes increasing inteasi·
bte ·as 1ht remaining lease term is
rtductd.
In conclusion, we recomme nd that
tho Chy aeek a lease extension which
Ii equitable to both tho Clly and the
Balboa Bay Club 'Which will allow for
the full economic dt velopmtnt pro--
cr1m Which We believe will extend
will beyond the curro ntly projected
expansion program."
' The Balboa Bay Club lease is dowrt
to 29 years. The Club seeks the lease
extension so that it can obtain financ·
ing to continue its development pro·
gram and has agreed to terms which
raise the annual rental, increase 1he
percentage cf gross sales, and pro--
vides for periodic cost-of·livinc
adjustments as wen as periodic rena·
&0tlatlon of all terms.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE FROM CITY PROPERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JANUARY 13 .
C..IM!lt!M fW 'Y'n V9f" o. 1. l•f lfU. c:~111.. *' Nltttllat Dr.,~·"'' Nier, Ctlf. r
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Toro Wife .,
Of· POW
Sees Pope
From Wire· Services
ROME -Selling a historic precedent,
Pope Paul VI held an audience today
\\'ith seven American women wbose
husbands are missing i• Vietnam, in-
cluding Mrs. Stephen HJ!ipson of ,El Toro.
The Vatican City meeting left the party
of women touched a~ hopeful after ex-
cha glng hopes for peace with the Po~.
who distributed· inspirational medals to
them.
"It was most impressive," said Mrs.
Thomas Stegman, 30, Virginia Beach , Va.
"Oh, I can't explain. But he was most
sympathetic to our situation.
"He said he is praying for everyone
wl'Krhas suffered in all wars. He also ask·
ed us to pray for him."
It was the first time Pope Paul has
ever met with women whose husbands
were listed by µie U.S. Command as
"missing in action .. "
With Mr&. Stegman, a RomJn Catholic.
were two other Virginia Beach wives -
Mrs. Robert Duncan , 23, .and Mrs.
Richard Nelson, 26, both Protestants.
The four California women who hap..
pcned to be in Rome on a tour but whose
husbands also are missing in Vietnam
found out about the audience and were in·
vited to join Mrs. Stegman 's group.
Mrs. Stegman said besides Mrs.
Hanson, they were Mrs. Roosevelt Wess-
tie Jr., Mrs. John K. Hardy Jr., and Mrs.
Arthur Mearru.
She did not know their home towns.
In early December, two Dallas, Tex.,
women caine to Rome in hopes or
personally asking Pope Paul to help trace
their pilot husbands, shot down over
North Vietnam.
But they contented themselves with
seeing officials in the Vatican secretariat
of state who promised to relay to Pope
Paul all pertinent information about the
men.
Mrs. Stegman and her two traveling
companions gave such inf-armation -
serial numbers, physical descriptions,
time and place reported missing, etc. -
to the secretariat of state Friday. They
also arranged for today's audience.
The Pope spoke in Italian at the au-
<tience with a monsignor translating his
words into English. Mrs. Stegman said.
But. she added : "He under s Io o d
everything we said to him.
"You could tell that he really did sym·
pathize with us," she went on. "We were
all so touched . 'Ve couldn't believe we
had really shaken hand,,· with the Pope.
He blessed us l!Jld said he would pray for
each-of our husbands individually.
"He ga ve tach o{ pa a medal."
Mrs . Stegman said she and the two
other Virginia women will return to Paris
Tuesday and try again to contact the
North Vietnamese delegation to the peace
talks.
"We are going lo keep trying until they
~ us," she said. 'iWe 're running short
of money but we're giong to stay until it
runs out."
Ho spitals Ban Cigs
DUBUQ UE, Iowa (UPI) -Four Dubu·
que area hospitals have joined in the
c1mpaign against cigarette smoking by
discontinuing the sale of tobacco on their
grounds.
•
Moon Onion?
Geologists Sugg~st 'Layer' Theor y
HOUSTON (UPI) -A twn of
geologists sua:ested todiy the moon
began as ~ mollen liquid ball ud grew in
a series ot layers like skins on an onio'n
as it cooled and solidllied.
The theory, based on a study of the
first moon irocka returned from. the lunar
surface, a~ fresh fuel to the debate
about whethel' the moon evolved from a
bot liquid or<llas always been a solid, cold
mass.
Dr. JoSeph V. Smith of the University
of Chicago proposed the ldea of lunar '
evolu'lion in a paper pre.pared for the
opening session ol an unprecedented con·
!ere.nee on the scientific r~sults or the
Apollo 11 moon landm,.
In another paper, Mitzunobu Tatsumato
of the U.S. Geological Survey at Denver,
Colo.. said radioactive .dating methods
showed some of the moon rock1 hardened
4.S billion years ago -about the Ume ac-
cepted for .the birth of tHe solar system.
Before . Neil A. Amistrong" and Edwin
E. Aldrin la.oded on the moon in July, the
age eslimates for lunar surface rocks fell
in the millions-of-yef.rs categorY ._ not
billions. The olde..!lt rocks known on earth
are about 3,5 billion years old.
.6mTUi; ·Who developed the moon theory
wlth the aid of two colleagues, Drs. A. T.
Anderson and Robert Newton, said the
lunar rock and mineral samples ex·
amined Indicate. that water and other
volatile substances bolled away from the
original glob of molten moon material.
Then. as u"1ne passed, Smith said,
heavy liquids rich in iron sank toward the
center to create a core. A thin .:;;rust then
formed at the surface and the moon
began to cool.
Heavier minerals crystalliled and sank
toward the moon's center forming a suc-
cessive series of mlneral '1lells, ac-
cording to the theory, leaving a con-
centration of iron and titanium in the still
molten portion. Feldspar minerals then
solidified and since they we.rt lighter ·
than the liquid, they rose to form a
thicker Cl'\.ISt.
.. 14During this process, meteorites hit the
moon with such force that the crust was
ruptured and the molten liquid flowed In-
to .the surface," Smith said. This, he sug-' gested, formed the moon's vast dark seas
with the rugged highland areas represen-
ting part of the original crust.
In the fina'I stage of lunar development,
the ·theory goes, a thin layer of liquid was
trai>ped between the crust and core. This
liquid was presumably pulled to one side
ol the moan -the side facina: earth -by
the gravity of some other celesUal body,
probably the earth.
''Meteorite impact could only tap the li-
quid on the side facing the earth, thus ex-
plaining why thert are seas only on the
earth's side," Smith said. "On the far
side of the moon, the crust was thick and
solid and me~rites merely . blasted;
craters."
Drunk Frightens
Man to Death
VINELAND, N.J. (UPI) -An ap.
parenUy drunken intruder was charged
witb manslaughter early today for
allegedly frightening to death a man in
his home.
Police said Dennis D. Crowley was
ta ken into custody in the death or Nerio
Fred Marchetti, 62, who died of a heart
attack afer Crowley banged on s back
door, smashed a window and entered the
house.
Police said Crowley wandered to
Marehetti's home, pounded on the door
and called for the "captain of the guard.''
lt1archetti, who did not know Crowley,
ran upstairs for a shotgun, th en col·
lapsed.
June Allyson Returns
To Stage in ''40 Carats''
Actress June All}'1Kln ot Newport Beach
has been persuaded by producer Da vid
Merrick to end her retirement and r~
turn to the Broadway stage she left 'J:I
years ago to head for the gliter of Holly·
wood.
The Li.do Isle resident will play I.be role
of a 40-year-old divorc~e who falls in love
with a much younger ma'.n, Merri ck an-
nounced.
Miss Allyson will take over for Julie
Harris in "Forty Carats," wh)ch recently
celebrated its first anniversary playing
at the Morosco Theater on the Great
White_,W~y._ '
A national company starring Barbara
Rush is currently playing in Chicago.
Abe Burro"°s, the comedy's original di·
rector, is direeling Ml!.1 Allyson'a entry
into the show tonight.
Miss Allyson last appeared on Broad·
way in "Panama Hattie" in lH.1, step-
ping in for 'Betty Hutton as understudy
for five performances before Holywood
called.
She wa:s signed to a contract by Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer and debuted in the film
"Best Foot Forward," continuing on to
star in more than 30 films before appear-
ing in her own televi!ion .series.
Miu Allyson went into retirement fo~
ENDING RETIREMENT
Newport's June Allyson
lowing the death of her producer husband
Dick Powell several years ago and later
married socie ty barber Glenn Mazwell.
The union was stormy and the couple
parted, only to remarry later and re-
divorce again more recently.
I
DiZzy Dean
~dsAgents' .
Game Raids
'
DETROIT (VPiJ -:0,ct~· partly oo
Information supplied by Jerome l<Dlzzy"
Dean, rederal agent! have arrested
another four persons in 1 crackdown on
an 'alleged $100,000.per..day nationwide
betting rin! that may involve famous
sports figures, it waS ~nnounced to41y.
James E. Ritchle1 special assistant
U.S. attorney, said tbe .arrest of thrtt
bookmakers came in Biloxi, Miu., dusi6&
the weekend. Agents~-~ on in-
fonnation supplied by ~· a Han of
Fame baseball pltchei-'Wtth the St. Louit.
Cardinals anct Clilcag/-CUbs -durinCthe
1930's, and now a sporUcaster.
Dean is furnishing inf'ormatlon that the
government is "very pleased to get,"
James H. Brickley, U.S. attorney for the
eastern district of Michigan, told •
reporters at a late-mornirlg news ·con-
ference. "He appears to be very
cooperative, very helpful."
"The vast majority of those in the
sports world are honest men," Brickley
said. "But the fact that a relative few
have had cont.acts (with the alleged bet·
ting ring) is Important to the spOrls
world as it is important to us.
"The evidence is that there were CQn·
tacts "''Ith members of the sports world.
Now. this could be serious or something
relatively innocent -maybe stupld, but
relatively innocent."
Another man was arrested in New
York, bringing to 14 the number taken in-
to custody since the federal gambling
crackdown began New Year's Day.
Several more arrests were expected
this week. Some of them may involve
prominent sports figures, agents said.
Dean was the only sports figure men·
tioned by authorities in the operation to
date. He was searched but not arrested in
his Las Vegas hotel room New Year's
Day, and since then has been cooperating
¥.'Ith lnte[naJ Revenue Service agents,
authorities said.
Dean said earlier, "l can 't be involved
l.n it (the betting ring) because I don't
know anything about it."
But Ritchie said toda y that .Dean
"possibly has been victimized by pro-
fessional bookmakers ... (and ) abused
and utiH1.ed bv friends in an attemot lo
llbtaln infonnalion on sporting events.
County Beaches
Talk Sclieduled
Assemblyman Alan Sleroty {0.Beverly
Hills), will be the featured tpeaker on the
future of Orange County beaches d!Jring A
Jan. 17 conference at the San· Ctemenf.e
lnn .
A morning panel on the county beach
needs In the 1970's will feature William
Penn Mot t, Jr., director or -state parks
and recreation; Kenneth Carr, San
Clemente city manager; Wesley Marx ,
conservationist author; K n u w I t o n
Fernald, Jr .. vice president in charge of
planning for Laguna Niguel Co'rp.; arid
Richard Ruiz, executive assistant to
County Supervisor David Baker.
The conference from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
ls sponsored by the League of Women
Voters of Capistrano Bay Area. The pro-
gram is public.
Registration begins at 9 a.m. and Is Si.
It may be made by mailing the fee.
whk:h includes luncheon, to Capistrano
Bay Area League of Women Voters, Box
2294, Capistrano Beach, 92672.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
• •
Serve them hot from the oven ••• with butter oozing over the flaky tender edges ••. and with jam or
marriialade on the table! •• , and save on either Pillsbury'g or Ballard's ••• 8 ounce tubes!
Ground Round ................ 79~
Ser,•e. a. tender juicy bul'ger ... or fancy it up for Salisbury steak! ..• and kno'v that the meat is fresh!
Meat Loaf ........................ 79~ Tomato Juice ...... :.~ ... 4 1 .. s1
Oven ready ... loan meats, geasoned just right! Bi1 46 ounce ~ns ..• red and luscious! Springfield . '
• • .. .. . ., . "
·.
• M°"'IY' .J1nv"1 5, 1970·-H -·
I
..
Nixon ·Pi~keted
Cliannel Oil Drilling Protested ~
Pickets appeared outside t h e
President's Western White House in San
Clemente Sunday -nearly two miles
outside Jn fact -sta ging an offs)lore pro-
test against oil drilling in lhe Santa
Barbara Channol.
The trio aboard a 68-foot boat
represented the militant Get Oil Out
IGOO J organitation, but had little suc-
CE'S! in maki ng their demands known.
801 Botv.Tight , a GOO spokesman, said
they wanted to deliver a petition carrying
JiS.000 signatures derpanding an end to
ofllhore drilling •on federal· tidelandS olf
•.. 1 . .
Santa Barbara. •!..•
"We displayed the same banner used in
the GOO fish-in last month," 511d
Botwrighl, adding that he hope.a PreSJ}
dent Nixon saw the brigh t-orange denhf;c .,.
c•Jtion V.'hen he flew off for Palii
Springs . .
"Get Oil Out." proclaimed th.e ti.lQit
hirih letters. .·' C> .., ..
The Santa Barbara delegatio n wasri~
ever: able to reach the President's •P-
pcintrnenls__g!J:,eJary, so~tbef_ puL~-_
ta pic_ket outsi@ the 1 )Hnile &ecuri4j
perimet'r established offshore. ·
'·
Fii·e Su1·prises Viejo Chie~
A coun ty fire battalion chief who lived
two doors away from a Mission Viejo
homE th at burned down over the weekend
was una ware of the blaze until alerted by
radio the county Forestry Department
sai,9 today.
~attalion Chief David Mack then rush·
ed from his home to direct operations of
fire fighting units from Mission Vitjo, El
Toro and Laguna Hills as they battled the·
$22.000 blaze at 24231 Castilla Lane.
The fire was reported Friday night by
an off-duty Newport Beach police Officer,
Patric k O'Sullivan, who spotted names in
the kite e_n and living room area of the
•
•
fwo-bedroom wood frame dwelling. . "~
• Not knowing If the house was occuplei.
O'Sullivan broke a window and.£ll_1en!!\.
but the owners, DSvld Lovatto and hit
wife Karen, were away. •!
Awaiting the arrival of fire engi•
Chief Mack and neighbors-used gar6ft
hoses on the bl~t it resisted thei r
efforts and spri.ad thldrigh the honse ..
The fire. origin of which has not ~
determined , took 47 minutes to con'trdl'.
Total damage is esUmated a't $23,000,
Damage to the structure was aet. \t
$15,000 and contents of the bonit
destroyed were valu.ed a~ '8,000.
l
'
Tangerines ............ : ......... 19~ Vegetable Cocktail 4 nr s1
Ripe, g~eet ... flavorful u thty should be! Compare the quality! •• , Springfield, 46 oz. cans I PRICES EFFECTIVE MON.; TUIS., WED.,
JANUARY S, 6, 7, NO S~ES TD DEALERS
ARCADIA:
Sunstt an<I Hunliniton Dr. (El lt.ndlo Cen!o!)
PASADENA:
'
introducing
Veal Bir ·ds.~ .................... 29~
1'hin slicea of tender veal .•• rolled around a tasty dru1i11g. Cookinr instructions, YOUl'S for lht! takinr.
are displayed at our meat counter1. Delicioua I Min . 5-oi. Each
• I
320 WISI Colora4o Blvd.
SOUTH PASADENA:
Fremont ind H11ntinilon Dr.
HUNTINGTON BEACH:
Warner and A11onquln (Boardwalk Center)
NEWPORT BEACH:
2727 Newport Blvd. ind
2555 E111blufl Dr. (E11lb\ull V1ll111 C.nlo r)
l )
l I
f DAii. Y PllDT
~-in ... Diii"' Pliii SletO
Connecticut o f f i c i a t s are
detennined that the slate 11will
Jead the country in facilities for
dogs." That, at least, is the opinion
of Louis Golei, assistant s ta le
canine control officer. w h o s e
department promulgated a new ex-
panded list of regulations for
pounds. kennels, pet shops and
grooming · establishments .. Th e
regulations until now had said only
that pounds had to be "suitable,"
''comfortable'' &Qd ''sanitary.''
Now, th e y • l l require-among
o t b e r amenities -at least 0 30
candlepower" of light "for at least
eight hours a day," and uat least
. . . a bathing tub, a grooming
table, hot and cold running water,
a drier, clippers, combs, brushes
and ahe,rs." •
Chris Brost' dnnonstraticm
of o nttoly-dtvtloped, two-man
aubmorint in San FroneUco Bay
wca-aonuthing less tllan succes,,..
ful lt sank. Brose tseaptd with·
out in;urv and tht vtssel was
lattr refloated.
• From now on Wendy the chimp
will be living a life of ease. She is
being retired by the Yerkes
Regional Primate Center at Emory
University in Atlanta, G a .•
although officials say she will still
provide va1uable information about
~eriatric conditions and diseases.
Wendy was born in 1923 and
brought to the U.S. from West
Africa by a ship's officer. She 'vas
part of the original group of four
chimps studied by the late Dr.
Robert W. Yerkes of Yale Univer·
1;ity, and is the only one of the four
still alive. • Charlie's bar at the Brudunell
Hotel in Adelburg, England refused
to serve Jene Waterfield. The
reason: She was wearing a mod
costume which violated the bar's
house rule that no belly buttons are
allowed In public. •
• AU smiles, Davll Jones, Briti.sh mem-
btr of the American singing group
''The Monkets," arrives with his wife,
Linda, and their 15-month-old daugh·
ter, Talia, at Heathro10 Airport in
London a/Ur a flight from Los An·
gel.es. Tht family is here for a holi·
day but Davy wit! also .hold talks on
plans for somt solo projects. • \Vorkmen In Leeds, England
draped nude $latues in the city
,;quare with black plastic cloaks
\vhile they removed fig leaves to
clean the curvy nymphs.
UPI Tei.,"'°"'
AGNEW REVIEWS THAI TROOPS WITH PRIME MINISTER THANOM KITTIKACHORN !RIGHT)
Some 2,00 Th•ls Turned Out to GrMt Aqnew on Hit Arrival In B•ngkok
Agnew's Mission Working
Vee p Cl earing Air Over 'Nixon Doctrine'
By CARL P. LEUBSOORF
BANGKOK {AP) -Vice President
Spiro T. Agnew appears to be making
headway in eommun.icaUng a clearer
definitWn of the Nixon Doctrine to the
leaders of U.S. allies in Asia.
Conversations. with diplomats and
members of the vlce presidential party
indicate Agnew is off to a good start as a
presidential emissary.
One of the main reasons for his 11-na·
tion Asian tour was to clear up
misunderstandings about the policy
President Nixon ouUined last July in
Guam, a policy comb ining a U.S. pledge
to meet its treaty commitments and pro-
vide a nuclear shield for America's Asian
allies, while at the same time em-
phasiling Asian sell-reliance.
Agnew today completed the first part
of his trip and flew to neutralist Nepal
after vis.its to four finn U.S. allies -the
Philippine.!, South Vietnam, Nationlliat
China and Thailand.
In each country, government leaders
questioned him closely about what tht
United States is going to do. In each, he
has given the same firm reply -'lhat the
United Slates plans to remain an Asian
power and -keep its commitments, but
that they nust take more of the burden of
lheir defense.
American officials in Bangkok told
newsmen they thought part of the pro-
blem has been that the doctrine indicates
more of a change in emphasis than in
basic policy. An Agnew aide termed
it more a change in tone. The difference,
he said, is that when Nixon and Agnew
talk about Asian self-reliance, they mean
it.
"It's a matter of giving teeth to the
platitudes," he said.
This approach appears to have been
especially successful in Thailand. Thai of-
riciala made clear to Agnew they believe
they can handle their own Communist. in·
surgency problem without the assistance
of U.S. troops. Actually, the ofiklals said,
the United States started implementing
something like the NiJ:on doctrine aeveral
yean .ago when it Blopped flying
helicopters into batUe for the Thais.
SBA in Drive to Recover
Loans to 'Mafia' Firms
WASHINGTON• (UPI) -The Small
Business Adminstration (SBA) announced
today efforts are being made to recover
loans made lo Chicago and New Orleans
firms suspected of mafia connections.
The head of the agency said thousands or
dollars may have been channeled to the
underworld in the past.
Administrator Hilary Sandoval Jr. said
the agency's chief of financial assistance
in New Orleans. J .B. Alex:andcr, has been
directed to approve no addilional loans
pending compleUon of an investigation in
that ci ty.
Sandoval, pointing out that the· loans
under investigation were arTanged prior
to the time the Nixon administration took
office, commented at a news conference :
"I have been genuinely shocked and
dismayed by the deplorable conditions
which were permitted to grow and
flou rish unchallenged in some of our of·
fices under previous administrations."
Sandoval said the New Orleans loan
but that the loan.s to firms with alleged
mob connections were processed durtn1
the Johnson administration.
"A considerable amount of my effort
has been directed toward putting out
fires and cleaning up dirt left by my
predecessors," the SBA chief told
newsmen.
11c said other loans to mafia-connected
firms may be still undiscovered.
"Detecting Joans to mafia.controlled
organi1.ations and fi rms is not an easy
task," he commented. "Operators in the
underworld, assisted by astute advisers,
know how to expand a loophole to the size
of a canyon.
"It Is not possible at this point in our
Investigation for me to say just how
many thousands of taxpayer dollars have
been channeled to underworld operations
through SBA loans made in the past."
was given final approval two day~ after
President Nixon entered the Whlte House,
In Nationalist China, Agnew 's efforts
appear to have met with mixed results.
President Chiang Kai·shek and Agnew
got on so well that Chiang accompanied
Agnew to the airport to ¥iish him a good
trip deSpile the fact that the vice
president's message of continued U.S. ef·
forts to normalize relaUona wlth Red
China was displeasing to the 82-year-old
leader.
And after Agnew's ·departure, one of
Taipei's leading newspapers, the China
News, complained that the Nixon Doc·
trine '·has never been spelled out in
detail." It added that while the United
States has offered its help, "the nature
and the amount of the help are not defin ·
ed."
Some of the confusion in Asian minds
appears to stem from the way in which
the doctrine emerged. President Nixon
met with reportera on Guam to give
some of his Ideas at the slart of his Asian
trip, but they were not allowed to quote
him directly.
What he outlined quickly beeame
known as the Nixon Doctrine, but there
was no set definition. Nixon then went to
Thailand and indicated possible U.S. sup-·
-pott against both external and internal
aggression, a contradiction with his
stated intent of staying out of civil war
situations.
Members of Agnew·s party give still
another reason for the confusion -that
the Asian leaders don't want to face up to
a situation where they will be able to lean
less and less on the United States.
' 'Massacre' Deleted l .,
·? .• ' S. Viet My L~i ,
Report Softened
SAIGON (UPI) -The South Viel·
namese Senate ruled tonight that
civilians had been kllled at My Lal by
U.S. soldiers but it softened 1 report by a
Senate committee which held that Presi·
dent Nguyen Van Thieu must be held
responsible.
A three part resolution deleted the
word "massacre" from the ~mittee
report, said such alayings were not U.S.
policy, called on Thieu for greater pro-
te<:tion of civilians and asked the Thieu
government to assume leadership of the
W;ir.
The Senate also struck from the resolu-
tion a demand that the Allied command
in Vietnam be unified. The actual Senate
resolution asked Thieu to "take the in·
itialive to assume the leadership of the
war, coordinating all actions between the
anny and the Allied forces."
Approval of the watered down resolu·
lion was regarded as so mething of a
personal victory for opposition Sen. Tran
Van Don, chalnnan of the Senate defense
committee, which submitted the original
report accusing: the government of trying
to cover up the slayings.
During a recess before the vote Don us-
ed the Senate public add,ess system to
play a t.ape recording of a description or
the alleged mass slayings by a My Lai
survivor. The Senate then amended Don's
report and adopted the three-part resolu·
lion.
"The president rnust be held totally
responsible for t.he Song My (My Lai'
massacre by the people and by history,''
the report said. "Tile massacre did hap.
pen. Why does the government hide it?"
Thieu announced in November a
government investigaUon of the.-incident
shewed some civilians had accidentally
been kiTied by artillery. lle said the caSe
was closed.
Don presented his report with about
one.third of the Senate's 59 members
absent. He declared, ''We cannot .stay
silent in order to avoid responsibility.''
The senator. chairman of the Scnatt
defense committee, sa id the investigating
committee did not attempt to determine
which individuals were guilty at My Lai
but only sought to "put lhe responsiblity
in lhe right plact."
U.S. Copter ,
c,.ewman Hit
Bv DMZ Fire
SAIGON {UPI) -Ground fire from in-
side the demilitarized zone (DMZ>
damaged a U.S. helicopter. wounding one
crewman, in the fourth North Vietnamese
violation or the zone reported in the pa.11t
four days.
Military spokesmen said today that the
number of "incidents" inside the zone
since the bombing of North Vietnam stop-
ped Nov. I, 1968, had surpassed 10,000
last week, 221 of them involving ex-
changes of fire. ·
The latest occurTed Sunday•when guer-
rillas inside the border strip opened up on
a U.S. observation helicopter, wounding
one crewman before lhe 'copter fled to
the safety of a nearby Allied outpost.
fo.teanwhile, a broadcast of the National
Liberation Front (NLF) said today Com·
munist forces in Vietnam will observe a
four-day cease-frre during the Tet Lunar
New Year holiday nett month.
2 GI Newsmen Suspended
F 01· Rapping Censor ship
SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command
today ordered all military newsmen not
to comment on the weekend su.spensian..ot
two of their colleagues, one of whom said
on the air that news to troops in the field
is censored.
A spokesman for the U.S. Command
said the order included the two who were
suspended, Army Spec. S Ro b e r t
Lawrence, 27, of Atlanta, Ga., and
Marine Cpl. Tom Sinkovitz, 21, of tlar·
risburg, Pa.
The censorship charges are being in-
. vestigated by the office of the inspector
general, the spoke:iman said, and all of-
ficial comment will be wllhbeld until the
investigation is concluded.
Lawrence ended his 11 p.m. television
newscast Saturday by saying news on the
American Forces Vietnam Network
(AFVN) ·is censored. The network Is
vi ewed by thousands of Gls.
"As a newsmen I'm dedicated to giving
the public the news and e~ts.
worldwide and on the local level ."
Lawrence.said. "I'm pledged-to tell the
truth at all times. I will always tell the
lurlh. either in the military or as a
civilian. r.
"In the military of Vietnam. I've found
that a newscaster at AFVN js not frtt to
tell the tnlth, and in essence, lo tell tt
like it is ....
"We have been suppressed and T'm
probably in trouble for telling you the
truth tonight. I hope you'll stop ceMor·
ship at AFVN and any st<1,tion under mili·
tary rule. Thank y ou and goodbye.''
Wlien Lawreiice f nded his newscast,
Sinkovitz came on with ·• sports report.
He prefaced his remarks, by saying,
"Thanks. Bob, in more ways than one."
The tv.·o were immediately taken to •
room behind the Saigon studios of AF'VN
and neither has been allowed to broad·
cast since then. Both underwent ques-
tioning by superiors Sunday and today.
Weather Cold Over Nation
Southern California Climate Continues Fair, Sunn:r
'l'emperat11res
Hl1ft \. .. ,.rK,
Alb\/QVl"'lll " ,,
Anct1or1t, " • All1n!t .. " lh-Ottll•ld " " 111,., .. ,,~ • ·• " l\oln " " llos!on " " llrownsvlllt .. " ' " Cllh:1.o " " Cl1K!Mt!1 • " ..,_ " ' ...
0.1 MolnH .. .,
o.troll ~ • F0tl WOt!~ " " " ,,, .... " • Htltnt " ...
H....t11111 " • K1nt11 City • " Ltl Vtt11 " " LOI A"9'lt1 " .. Mleml " " MlnnelNlb " ...
M-00..fll A .. .. M-YOl't " • M..-ttl Pl .. tt • .,
Ott1tl'ld A ll
C*11hlmt Cit)' .. " ....... " ·• P•'"" s .. 1,,., " • PIM ~otlu M " ·-· " • Plttlllu .... • ..
Porlltltlll • " ~ltllf.C.!I\' " ...
~w 11\lff' " " ·~ » ' s., •• ,.., • .,,. • " SIU Lllkl CllV • " Stl'I °''" p " Stn '-•1r.ci•te ·" ..
Sft111t • • ..... M " ..
'~"'"'t .. • W1dl1Mlllft » ...
f
CA PTUR ED LEBANESE SOLDIERS AND CIVILIANS ARRIVE IN ISRAE L TOWN
Israeli Act ion RtPortedly Was in Re taliation for Ar•b Guerrilla Raid
Priso1ae1• Swap Ai11i?
Israel Releases 3 Civilians
TEL AVIV (AP) -Israeli warplanes
staged an hour-long strike Into Egypt le.-
day, pounding targets along the nort.he.rn
sector of the Suez Canal and re.turning
safely, lhe military announced .
Israer claimed two kills and Egypt one
earlier after the first air battle in more
than a month of dall y Israeli strikes.
Israel meanwhile released three of the
l:.ebancse civilians kldnaped by Israe li
commandoa Friday. and sources in Tel
Aviv said they might be tsking home an
nffe:r for 1 new prisoner s...,·ap. The
Israelis captured nine olher civilians and
10 soldiers In the raid of a Lebanese
bordtt vlllage. Jsratl aaid the raid w
retaliation for ihc abduction of an Israeli
watchman from a border outpost earlier
in the wetk.
Hassanein Hci kal, editor of the Cairo
nfV.'Spaper Al Ahram and a confidant of
President Nasser. reported that Algerian
President Houari Boumcdienne decided
during last month's Arab aummit
meeting that Alprla would f I I h t
alongside Egypt in lhe event ol rtncwed
¥.'ar \Vltll Israel.
"The sole object of our efforts to build
e Jgerian army Is to prepare for
participating, with tivt.rything It has. in
!he bolUc," HclUJ llld Bownedlenne told
'
,
Nasser and King Hassan of ft1orocco .
Heikal also said Morocco agreed to
furnish an unspecified amount of
armaments to Egypt, and Saudi Arabia,
Libya and Kuwait agrttd to foot the bill
for a $60 million weapons contract signed
by Egypt wil h :in unidentified foreign
power.
Egyptian offici als had no comment on
reports that Nasser had oipproachcd
f'r3 nce about arms purchaS<?s. Al Ahram
l'iAid a. Lond on newspaper report thot
Egypt had asked France for $200 to S3()(l
million worth of Wt'!apons wiis a "fairy
talc."
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JODEA~ ljASTINGS, 642-4321
M9ml17, ~ll!Ylry L Urt H .... 11
Surprise Adds
Extra Luster
·' A "myslerious" afternoon Is in store for m~mbers ~f the 1-luntinglon
}-~arbour Art Asso ciation when they gather for an tnsta11al1on 11.~ncheon hon·
oring ne\v officers 1'"'riday, Jan. 9, in the Newport Be~ch T~nn1 s C~ub.
An outstanding Southland artist \Vill serve as 1nstalhn~ officer and
speaker for the program which will follow an 11 :30 a.m. social hour and
noon luncheon .
To be seaated are the l\1mes. Joan Moiola, president: Richard Tom
and James Johnson. vice presidents; tloward Banzett,, secretary, and
Scott Neuls, treasurer.
Others on the board v.1ill include the Mmes. John Le Gros and 1-larry
Reigel, directors; James R. Solum. social chairman: Lewis ~irnmerman,
and Robert Knauf, reservations: Luis Benitez and Le!JnY L1ndborg, ex-
hibits; Everett Ricker and George D. Demos. memberst;p; Robert Daisey,
historian : Donald Hartielder, hospitality ; Don Reeves. workshops, and
Bruce Killian and Jane King, lelephone.
Luncheon reservations \v\ll be accepted throu~h tomorrow and may
be 1nade by calli ng l\1lrs. Knauf, 592--2364, or Mrs. Z11;1.1nennan. 592--4234.
t-\ssociation members are urged 1o attend the .luncheon so that the
board \viii be able to arrange interesting \\1orkshops and schedule artis ts
for the coming year.
Old and new board members met last month in the home of retiring
president i\1rs. Le Gros to formulate a list of activities for 1970 .
AL,L FOR ART -New officers of the Huntington Harbour Art
1\ssociation wiUobe in stalled duri.I)g a luncheon meeting in the New·
port Beach Ten nis Club Friday, Jan. 9. Assuming responsibilities
\vi ii be l.left to right) the Mmes. Scott N~uls, Howard Banzett.
Richard Tom and Joan M<Nola, 'vho· are bei :-:;: congratulated by
J\1rs. Ester Oendel I second from right. L A se ries of workshops
and field trips will be arranged for the coining year.
A1nong the plans which were discussed "'ere a trip 10. the ne\v Pasa-
dena Art i\1useum which will take place next month and various workshops
to be scheduled for the coming year.
Additional information regarding the Pasadena trip, \vhich will in·
elude luncheon, may be obtained by calling Mrs. Knauf or Mrs. Zimmer-
n1an.
Barbara -Watson Makes Debut
t.l i~s Barbara C I a I t e
\\latson, daughter of P.ir. and
lo.1Mi. Allon Clovis "'atson or
l1untington Beach. was among
1he 14 young women who. were
formall y presented to society
during the San r.1 a r i no
chapter, Nalional Ch a r i't y
League's Debutante Ball.
Holiday greens interspersed
with spring flowers and silver
candelabra centered e a c h
table and banks or azaleas and '
greens filled the Huntington-
Sheraton Hotel , Pasadena. for
the formal event.
Wearing a lraditional ~·hih!
go\vn and carrying a while
muff decorated with sprigs of
azaleas. ~1iss \Vatson was in·
troduccd to league members.
relati ves and fri ends by Carl
Thompson Long. As each
-,. debutante's name y:as called,
she bowed and then circled the
ballroom with her rather.
The new debutantes then
danced with their fathers,
their escorts and lhe stag line.
Miss Watson was escorted by
Craig Randall Ashby of Los
Angeles.
Following the ball the young
wom en attended a breakfast
in the home of Dr. and Mrs.
Jack Warren Baker where co.
hosts were Mr. and P..1rs.
Richard Allaire MacKaig and
1'1r. and Mrs. Edward James
Spech t. Serving as chai rman
or the ball commillce "'as
?i.frs . Long. Chapter Officers Up Over ' Burn Center ~ •
outstanding chapter in the state last year, are (le~..,
to right) the Mmes. Ronald J\'liller, presidenti Gut;
FORMAL BOW -~1r. and :h-{rs. Alton Clovis Watson of Huntington Beach chat
\vi th their daughter, Barbara (righ1) following her presentation during San Ma-
rino chapter, National Charily League Oebutante Ball in Pasadena.
l\1iss Watson. a graduate of
Arcadia H i g h School, is a
freshman al C a Ii f or n i a
Western University. San Diego
and has been a mrmbe r of
Ticktockers for four years.
Results of a Treat for Treatment candy sale last
l·lalJo\vcen amounted to a $500 donation to the
Orange County Burn Center by members of Zeta
T3cta Chapter. Epsilon Si gma Alpha International.
I-reading the four-yea·r old organization, named the
J .. angloi s, ways and means chairman; Curtiss Btrt.. "~
tke, treasurer, and Charles Bosanko, philanthropies, ,
chairman. ~ •
Gran _dparents Boiled, Mom Foiled as Youngsters Spoiled ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS : This ls for the
n1other y,·ho doesn 't know what to say to
her chi ldren because her in-laws never
bring a' gi rt when lhcy come to visit -
u•hich is every Sund ay afternoon .
I \\'otlld love to trade places with her.
l\ly in·la"·s ha ve spoiled our chikfren rot-
l!!n. It Is disgusting the way our kids
have grown to expect. a gift from every
per~on 11;ho walks into lhc house. \Vhen
1hc paper boy came to collect yesterday.
our 4-year--Old asked, "What did you bring
me'" Our children are so bored with their
lnys it makes me sick. They've seen
rvcry gadget and game on the market.
P.ty father..i n-law is going on an African
sart1ri in" March. The kid! have asked for
R baby elephant. I'm scared to death he'll
bring lhcm one.
ANN LANDERS
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Both my husband •and I have pleaded
with them to stop with the presents
alrea dy but lhey say, "It's OUR pleasure.
Don't deprive us."
I hope the mot.her "'ho wrote to
criticize. her in·law~ Jor coming empty
handed will see this letter and feel better.
-LONGVJE\V, WASIL
DEAR LONG :-S. do J. Children who
sWfer from erce1u1 are Invariably more
insecure and po11ess le111 11elf-estcern
than Ole eeonomlcally disadvantaged.
Soo1c ol the most destructive and violent
•
students come from a1nuent _homes .
l\lany were railed by permJsslve parents
"'ho limotbeied them •ilh lhlnp, things
and more tb.lngs .
These unhappy kld11 feel cheated aod
bo11ghl~ff and are rcglslerlng their
resentment by rejecting every symbol of
authority,
DEAR ANN LANDERS : 1 was in-
1.rigued by the letter from the married
man who wrote to say he had an Illicit
love affa ir -that hls wife knew, but re-
mained :i:ilenl and hore up nobly until he
got the "foolishness" out of hls system.
Lover boy COl'fcluded that everyone pro-
fited. lie Mid he had learned a Jot from
it, a ~preciatc<J his wife more thap ~ver,
and , he added . "No one Was hurt." Well,
lhnl's his opinion. J was the other woman
and here's how it looked to me:
I had just gone througti a tragic emo-
tional experience and this man entered
my lire as a friend, a conlidant. 11e said
he "'as separated from hlS wile and ask-
00 n1e to marry him as -5000 a1 his
divorce wa-s fi nal. He introduced me to
hia..:..'li.1.:ter'' with whom he.....was sharing
an apartment. "Sis" turned· out to be a
:sweetheart. ll was she "'00 wised me up,
after several martinis. It seems my
friend spe11t four nights a week with his
wife And family and three nh!hls with
"Sis." When T leaml<t the truth I at-
tempted suicide and nearly succeeded.
I am now trying to recover from 1
complete breakdown and an acute case of
self-hate. I am disgusted, ashamed and
reel as though I will never agaiu.he_ able
lo trust a man. Would you agreti l~
one was hurt?" -MJSS FRUITCAKE
OF 196ll.
DEAR MISS : Thank1 for writing. Your
leller la "must reading" for all married
men who lblak Ibey are bringing joy Into
tbe life of an emollonally starved girl.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In your col-
wnn...yOtUOme1lQles use highly d~llCtlp
IJve adjcetlves. The most recent was
"raw'' sex. How is raw sex dlllertnt
from rooked sex, or rare sex? When is
sex well done? Can It be ever done ?
I aWait your answer. -GOURMET JN
. ' ' • COUlRADO ~
DEAR COLORADO: .4.11 Ill)' gourmet
snows. tast.es vary. What one conool11seurl'
c:onslden well done, might be Jenned'
ovtr done by another. Accordlng tQ
\Veb1ter'1 unabridged -raw means
0 crudt, undre111ed, ancultlvotm." I caa'~
Improve on THAT.
"The Bride's Guide," Ann Landers'
booklet. answers some of the most (f'9t
ciuently asked questions about weddings.
To receive your copy or this com-
prehensive. guide, write to Ann Landers.
in care of-this newspaper, enclosing a
long, self-addr~d. stamped envelopl
and 35 cents irl coin. •
Ann Landers will be glad to help yo11
with yot1r problems. Send them to htr Jn
care of the DAILY PILOT, en<:l<Mling
•PJ.l·atldres~..r. ~tamPCd envelope .
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C 8-D~IL V-PILOT
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MRS. ROBERT BROWN
w Church We,:icfjng
ll ~ri
I! ~11 5.lM JO:·::,~ HILU ltOAtl
~BASSADORS CLUB
I ' INTERNATIONAL
'" : Spect11c:•IClf' lro•el Yolff'I
, if&Wl'ORT 811:.t.CM, CALIF. tJUf
I PHONE: 644·4600 I
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N~wlyweds
To Reside
In Hawaii
• f\1akin& their home on the
Jlawaiian Island,f are li.tr. and
l\1rs. Robert Mark· Brown, who
were marrif<j in tho. United
First Methodist Church· of r;
Garden Grove.
Parents of, the ltrlde) Lile
'torffier CyatJ\ia Ruth Ctaham.
a~ ~ Jl.oger D. Grahams o[
Garden Gro•e.·The
br1&?groom is the $on' or i>r.
and titrs. Mark Brown of
Sedona. Ariz .
Bridal attendants Ytere the
Misses Sharon Malby and Sue
'l'homas. Miss Tracey Rumlell
was "flower girl.
Stan Rundell was h i s
brother-in-law 's best man,
while ushers included J1n1
Harker and Dennis, Glenn and
Gary Grahatn.
The 'bM~ w~ graduated
frmn Bolsa Gfan<lc lllg~
Schoo) 11 3rid -a(t~nded t h e
University of Southern
California wheie-she· was af-
filiated with Alpha Gamma
Delta. Her husband w a ii;
g raduated from Sa n
Bernardino High School and
UCLA and received h i s
masters degree in business
from use.
CM Auxiliary
The first Thursday of the
month members of I he
American Legion Auxiliary,
Costa fl.1esa Unit 455 gather in
the American Legion Hall, a! 8
p.m.
Flared Coat News
.•
The ·short flared coal is "news" from Charles
Le Maire.
The bias collar cu rves around the neck without
binding it. The yoke and front are cur-on the
straight giving a small spare feminine look. The
bais back falls fu!J and swingy and is finished off
with one deep pleat at the center back. The sleeves
are se'I: in and cut with a subtle flare at the wrist.
' ' COSTA MESA Su perb in many fabrics from soft herring bone
tweeds. checks, plaids, gabardines to textured raw
silks a nd synthetic mixtures. 62839 is cut in Misses
sizes Small (11-10 ). Medium (12-14). Large (16-18).
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WO N REDUCES
SIZE 22Y2 TO
SIZE 12
Size ~fedium requires approximately 4 5/8
yards or 60" fabric.
'ro order 62839 ; state size . include na1ne , ad-
dress and zip code. Send $2 postpaid for first-class
postage and handling for EACH pattern. Send ord-
ers for book and patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept.
CX-15. Milford, N.J. 08848.
This precut, preperfaiilted Spadea Designer
.Pattern comes in ready.19.Wear sizes that produce
a better fit and are easier to make. Order normal
ready·te>-wear size and allow one week fo r delivery.
NEW IDEA : First time designers have publish-
ed sewing secrets. Hard Cover Edition $5.
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New Twist for Til)le Markers
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Colorful Calendars for 1970 ' . . ,,.. . \
NEW YORK (UPI -The It makes perplexing the 1970: 1 ....;.."He aid he wasn't !n-
new calendars are lf'lar~ng miller of choosing "the " -On May 15 in 1752 Bin t.erbted in the beiaht of
on us--: nat or fat ones, lWJ\d calendar to keep one's very Fre.nklin new a kite, provina fashion -;-, just I.he' heigbt ol
ooes, slim ones. <\-. persona! one for the new year. lightning 15 electricity. On my skirt. •
Ca1endars on towelil, on desk The very be1t caleltdars io May 16 of that year, "Frtlltklln -"Shall I type this correcUy -o.f'l1am~ts, on ' ~!ls : calen-the •t30 mllllon a year In-geU! higher than a ~it~." q_r the way he spelled it?"
dars w1lh green covers, red dustry are the ooes xou read. -On Jan. 7 in aome y~ar,
covEfi, ~black and .w h I t e lnsplraUonal or comic. Bill Balley ca lled and said he
OOvels. All-color c o v e r a . The "cornlc , relief" calen-would~·1 be home. YOU CAN :.
DO IT! :~ Calendars On throw pillows. dars include Mother Spector'a The comic calendars are
The Calendars with flowers, a I m a n a c . Among her among gift ones, represenUng
buildings, 1 ands capes, housekeeping Ups: •'S i or~ $l5 million of the industry'&
geometrics and other de11$hls galoshes In the bathtub. total· seles.
(or the eyes are to the nght Other advice tells how to boil 0 The fUWre for gift calen-
and left of us. lhe north and water and make ice cubes. dars is Yery bright," says
the south ol us . Hallmark's "Great Moments John J. Oakson, Hallmark vice
Sorority
'
In History Calendar" includ~. pr~ident.
for 1'fay, a sketch o f "There are even gift calen·
Michelangelo falling of( the dars for every room Jn " the
scaffold .in the Sistine Chapel. house except perhaps, the
Says one portly monk to bath."
m1other portly monk : o,1e comical. offering for the THE
S1v1 N
a .. th1r
Ml<~IM,
. -K11lttillf
Launches "Not only would wallpaper somber world of business in
last longer but it would have 1970 : "Papet Quips" by
been mu eh cheaper." Robert \V e i n t r a u b . The KNIT WIT
New Year
Other historical, if not characters, one office femme
hysterical, oddmenlll among talking to another, offer the
the great moments one is en-working girl's point of view.
couraged to cogitate on dur ing They say such things a:!:
Beg.iMing the new year for
Xi XJ Pi Chapter of Beta iJ3 ~ Sigma Pill will be an evening .l l_( ) 7'. . • )""7 "-T 7'.""""
gathering on Wednesday, Jan. •-~J-~ J_..__,._ 1 " "~
7.
The Costa Mesa home of
1'-frs. John Moquin will be the
scene of the 8 p.m. meeting.
with business being conducted
by Mrs. Eldon Dvorak .
On the agenda will be t.he \
chapter's rushing plans and a \....._.
February cocktail pa rt y
honoring Mrs. Robert Shay,
the ch apter's Va I en t in e
princess.
Mrs. Norman Nieberlein will
present a program centered
on ~ethodS of Education from
the group's program book
Life, Learning and Friendship.
The hostess will s e r \'. e
refreshmenb ._ following the
meeting.
Thrift Shop
Cuts Prices
Ass is tan c e League's
Turnabout Shop will do a ,
turnabout on pricelags Jan. 13
as prices are cut in half for I
the remaining days of the
month,
Mrs. Roy Thoroughman,
Thrift Shop chairman, will
reduce prices ~ all men's,
'"'omen's and child ren's cloth-
-) ,,_.'
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THE ~EAUTY SALON 'S
ANNUAL JANUARY DUART'
PERMANENT WA VE SALE
l 0.()() -15.00 "9· 20.0Q.JO
Your f1vorilt pftr.,t n1nl •I Ii • 11 pr;c•!
Chno•• curly, )f!looili (Ir boll!, w1 do ill1m
.11.
• • • '
ing and accessories. Proceeds
Alpha. x,· Delta Offers deri,.•d from sale •f me"han· r dise support League philan-
thropies inc I u ding the I
Friendship Club, craft and ac-
P••m bv M~1,, Sty li1h t5.00 ''9· $JO
P•lit• S1lt111 Ptrl!'I 10.00 r•9 · $20
Both compJ•lt with 11yl, •ncl cul of .,.our
cl>t1ic1.
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11Pou ,,.
AFTER
HERE YOU SEE MRS. BOBBY LEWIS AFTER
REDUCIN G FROM SIZE 22V2 DOWN· TO A SIZE
12. MRS. LEWIS SAYS: MY FRIENDS AND F-!<MllY
CAN'T BELIEVE MY RESULTS, BUT I KNOW
ANYONE WITH "-REDUCING PROBLEM CAN
DO WHAT I DID SUCCESSRJLLY AT SHAPE
SHOPPES INT. I REDUCED FROM 180 POUNDS
DOWN TO 134 POUNDS. l'M STILL ENJOYING
MY TREATMENTS & STI U MAKING RESULTS.
You Wiii'--.
Go From Siz:e
14 to 10 IN 30 DAYS
16 to 12 IN 38 DAYS
18 to 14 IN 38 DAYS
OU'LL REDUCE IN ALL THE
•PLACES YOU SHOULD
IT'S THE NEW YEAR-IT IS BITTER TO INVEST MONEY
tN A NEW FIGURE THAN TRY TO BUY CLOTHES 10 015~
GUISE IT. IF YOU FEEt THAT YOUR FIGURt: PROBLEMS
A.RE NEXT TO 140PELESS, IFYOU TH INK THAT REDUCING
WILL WORK FOR EVERYONE BUT NOT FOR YOU, ~F
YOU TH INK YOU ARE TOO OLD, OR TOO YOUNG, OR
TOO FLABBY, OR THAT YOUR BONE STRUCTURE IS
TOO lARGEORTOO SMALL OR TH AT YOU HAVE WAITED
roo LONG OR THAT YOU HAVE AN IMPOSSIBLE REDUC·
tNG PROBLEM. GIVE YOURSELF A CHANCE -LET US
SHOW YOU HOW YOU CAN REDUCE QUICKLY & EASILY
IN COMPlETE PRIVACY WITHOUT STRENUOUS EXER·
ISE, WITHOUT OISROBING, WITHOUT STARVATION
1 '"l>IETS. CALL US NOW FOR YOUR COURTESY FIGURE
~ ANALYSIS. WtTHOUT COST OR OBLIGATION. IT Will
I OE YOUR DECISION WHETHER YOU REDUCE PROFES.
SIONAllY WITH US OR NOT. IF YOU DO, WE HAVE i PROGRAMS AS lOW AS $1.00 A TRFATMENT
• CALL US NOW
COSTA
MESA
642-7032
1801 Ne wport Blvd.
Mor• 1•vin91 in our wi9t1ry: E•1v '''' h•nd
litcl K1n•••lot1® mod•trylic wi9, I 00.00
W•lu1, )5.00 .
Th, 111 .. ty S1lo11, 601 A Graduate Fellowship ~~~ :::.~sun:0~nt':~~1
abuse clinics in Laguna Beach.I
vanced study h1 the field or ,--:::=.-::::..:::_-~::::..:=:::.:====================='============0 I Alpha Xi Delta agaln is of-
fering a graduate fellowshlR
grant worth $1,~ for ad~
Sl.imnostic
Closs Set
An opportunity to be rid of
the excess poUllds collcct.ed
through the ho J;days,
redistrlbut~ weight, arm and
tone muscles and generally
I m prove ca rdi09ascular
rilness level will be offered
area women.
Sponsored by the Huntington
Beach YMCA. a women's
sli mnastic exercise class will
be meeting Tuesctays and
Thursdays beginning Jan. 13
between 7:30 and 8:30 p.111.
The cight-wcek course v.·ill
n1eet in the Comm un ity
f\.1ethodi st Church. Registra-
tions arc being accepted on a
firsl--eome basis to assu're
small classes and µ,iore time
for personal instruction.
Additional information mav
be obtained by calling Richard
~ollato, executive director, at
894-1548.
social service.
The national social fraterni·
ty for women and member of
~ at i on a I Panhellenic Con-
ference awards this fellowship
beCaase it concurs wilh most
civi~uthorities and juvenile
cou rt fficials that there is an
lncrea · g nted for trained
personrlt.J to work w i t h
youngste'r.s . Comb a t in g
juvenile \~elinquency was
chosen as' the na t Iona J
philanthrop of Alpha Xi Della
in 1958.
To be eligiblo for the award,
the ap plicant must be a
graduate of an accredited col-
lege or university, have a B or
better grade average and be
interested in pursuing a career
of "·orktng with youth to com-
bat delinquency in the· United
States.
Applications rpay be ob-
tained from ~1rs. William
Telkamp, 535 N. \Vayfield,
Orange. Completed ap-
plications should be mailed bv
Jan. 31 to the nation.ii
philanthropy chairman, Mrs.
Robert Batchelder of La Jolla.
In connection with the na-
tional philanthropy the Orange
County Alumnae Club lasl
year chose Joplin Boy 's Ranch
to receive their support.
'
UP TO 50% OFF
TRICOT SLIPS & HALF SLIPS
Sp•tiel Grou p of * CULOTTES * GOWNS * BABY DOLLS * BIKINI PANTY HOSE * ROBES * SLIPPERS
$1 ~4v C1rl1e11
M1ri Gr'"''
'
j "" ~M ... ~.~ 49
"8• Comlort1blt r11 Yt1u• Cu,11''
Sp•ci1li•in9 in 0 l DO
250 I. I 7tfi ''·· Cesre M.,e
Hlll9re1t l1111•r-'42•14JO
SEARS Has Everything ... Including SUNDAY SHOPPING. Sunday Hours 12 Noon to 5 P.M.
Sears
l 'ort Cc111. Le~rn l o
)\nit •.. Beautifully
E1 11'oll ~o'" i11 Sear s
FREE Knilli\'1' School
• }0·\\Ctk COlll":o!C
• l V2-hours. once a Y•eck
Cla:-.:-.es l3e~i11 i\londa~\
.l anuary l:lt h
• Just pick 1he color or ~ar11 to
n1al<'h a skirl or pents • , •
you'll learn the re~t Al Siar1
in JO ea~y le~~on~
• Cla~~t'~ 11ow bcins organizrrl
at 1no~t !"f'an; ~lo rr~ ... enrol l
1101.,, and n1 ake '"o nrlrrrul
p;if!s for ~011rsf'l f or friet1rl~
Orlona Acr}'lic \l'intuk Yarn
• 4-o:r;. hank ikein, n1a·
ciline \'lashable, dryable
• H.andom e.lub or colo r!-
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Be~inn inF Today
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Today's Final
N.Y. St.eeks .
VOL 63, NO. •. 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORAN&! CQUNTY, CALIFOlNIA MOND;i.Y, JANUARY 5, 1970 TEN CENTS
Copter Aids
h1 Identity
Of Hurt Boy
Doctors and nurses are keeping a C'lose
watch on an eight·year old Hunlington
Be:ich boy today, \\'hose auto.bicycle
crash tou chtd off a massive helicopter·
mounted search in an effort to learn hi.!1
id~ntity.
The youngster \\1ho has now been iden-
tified a.5 rreddie Dickerson, of 16842
•1arkness Circle, Uuntington Beach. is in
guarded condition today at Huntington
tntercommunlty llospilal w i l"h severe
head injuric1 and multiple cuts and
bruises. No surgery is planned as of this
Ume, medical orficials indicated .
. Freddie apparently made a left Lum in·
to a moving automobile mar \Varner
Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway
aniund 4:20 p.m. and \\'SS slruck by it,
according to po.ice reporti;.
The blow "''as sufficient enough lt'I
rendl'r him unconscious . He ca rried no
identilication and was nol recognize~ by
witnes:tes of the accident.
Police launched their he1ic~ _over
the area and used ils public address
system in asking for identification of the
bov.
Working from the only clue they had , a
mumbling about a "Cub Seoul ring''
b~~ore he Jost consciousness. officer~
!racked down the boy's identity throuJ:h a
Cub Seoul lcadrr who informed them that
most nr 1 he boys in his pack attend
Harbour View Elementary School.
Lyle Lescher , Barbour View Principal.
who "·as contacted by officer Rnrl
~faltby. identified !lreddy as the son nf
retired Navy Capt and ~1r~. Vincent ~f .
Dickerson. . The boy's fa._l)ler is a t•urr~nt patient at
the iNavy Hospital in San, Diego and wa:
being visited by ?\1rs. Dicker;;on at th~
time of tl1e aetttte:nl, ponce s~id. lie wu
be.ing watched by bis older sister. Dana,
while the couple was away. . •
The driver of the automobile . John F ,
Bloomfield, 28, or fiOOI Christa Palma
Drive, HunlinJ:ton Beach, \113..!I not cited
or held by police.
\ Beacl1 Studies
Some Cl1an ges_
In P enal Code
An emergf'ncy flt'dinance aimed al C'~r·
reeling errors in the state penal code v.:111
he before U1e Huntington Beach City
Council tooighl for enactment
City Ally. Don Bonfa ha~ ad vised coon·
cHmen Lhat a 1969 a1nc~menl to ~
code by the Legislature f~1\ed to pr~v1de
that certain acts constitute a m1s?e-
meanor violation. Included are .engaR1~g
in lewd and di ssolute conduct _in publ~c,
prostitution. soliciting alms in ?ubhc,
loitering, drunkenness, and prowhng.
TV.CAMERAS FOLLOW KENNEDY, WIFE TO INQUEST
Probe into Death of Mary Jo Kopechne Under Wey
J(ennedySpeaksforHour
Dur~ng Kopechnelnquest
EDGARTO\~N, Mass. (VPI) -S.,,. E~ ... d M. Kennedz 1e.a;Qed. lor •bouL
ene -r tOda 11t1He '•mr or lhc
secret inquest into Mary Jo Kopechne'c
death. He will be back this afternoon.
The inque.~t into the death of the 28-
year-old secrelary began amid tight
Sel'Urity in a century-old courthouse.
Kennedy seemed cheerful as he emerg·
~d from the court/\ouse along with fi ve
11·omcn and five men acquaintances \.\'ho
had attended a cookout party together
the night !\1iss Kopechnc died in Ken-
ned y's car after it plunged into a tidal
pond.
Court clerk Thoma" A. Tr1ler told
.newsmen he would distribute a statement
at 2 p.m .. presumably convering ground
rules imposed by District Judge James
A. Boyle. who presided at the inquest.
Kennedy, l"ho new in froqi his Hyannis
Port home an the mainland. said as he
entered the courthouse . "I'm hopeful "'"·e
can reach an end to What has become an
f'Xtraordinary length of timt."
"rm hopeful lhe record will be com·
plet.e and I can get to the business -0r
devoting myself to the Senate."
'Kerlnedy and nearly a dozen other sub-
. poenaed witnesses -all accompanied by
la")"ers -walked into the heavily guard-
ed courthouse, in front of which milled
about 200 persons, mostly newsmen.
Judge Boyle presided over the inque.!I,
ordered by District Attorney Edmund S.
Dini.!. I
Boyle arrj\·ed al the courthouse more
than two 1100rs before Kennedy.
~ 1mator 1'11 aked ~ newsmm : ''Are
iou &lad it's finaU~u ' r way.?" K~nnedy turned, ed, and repliel:
"Yea, I am."
T·he proceedings. "'hich were lo optn
Sept. 3, were closed lo the press and
public by order of the. A11!ssachusetts
Supreme Court. But it was left lo Boyle
to decide ·whethe r la"''yers W-Ould cross-
examin~ wltness2s and present evidence
0f the,ir own.
Edgartown Police Chier Dominick J.
Arena told a packed news briefing Sun-
rlay night tight security would be en-
forced at the inquest, with unifonned
police guanfjng each entrance to the
cnurthouse.
Police will e-scort witntSS<'S lnlo the
court and keep back a croy,·d or more
than 200. newSmen b!re to cover the
celebrated Clise.
Huntington Get,s
$87,653' Gra.nt
An $87,65., grant to the city of HunUng-
ton Beach was announced today by Rep.
Craig Hosmer.
The federal grant under the l~ouslng
11nd Urban Development Department
will be matched by Huntington Beach to
acquire property for a new park on War-
ner at Nichols avenues, adjacent to the
Oak View Elementary School. ·
Invalid Dies in Fire
Trailer_of Woman, 90, ~ngulfed
A to-year old Huntington Beacb, woman
died Saturday aft·emoon from injurie.s
suffefed when flames ~ unknown origin
destroyed' her mobile home.
Annie Keeling, an invalid, who occupied
Space 63 or the Driftwood Trailer Park at
21462 Pacific Coast Highway, was found
face up on the trailer's bedroom floor as
firemen ripped through the aluminum
1JheeUng with axes and •-power saw.
In a desperate attempt to save her life,
she wa.s given emer1ency resuscitation'
Nixo1i Grants
1st Cl.em.ency
For Neg1·0
By RICHARD P. NALL
01 "'4 0-llY ,,.., lllff
PALM SPRINGS -President Nixon
granled his first executive-clemency to-.
day as he.commuted the federal pri!IOn
sentence of a Negro self-help leader and
neurosurgeon from New York State.
The President acted in behalf of Or.
Thomas W. Mathews, p~sident of the
National Economic Growth and
Reconstruction Organization {NEGROJ .
Dr, Mathe111•s pleade4_,guilty Oct. 20. 1969
In U.S. District Court New York to
cha rges or failure to file an income lax
return. He was .sentenced lo one year,
with one year suspended, and began sen'-
ing the sentehce Nov . 10 in Danbury,
Conn. federal correctional institute.
Press Secre~ry Ron Zie~ler said Dr.
Mathews did not pay hi.! taxes.for several
years tn1 order to devofe bis persOnal
finances , lo !'egro self -hel p program~ •ucti n ..,. C<!Dducted ilrW•IJ1.-10-bot-
Nopea tO ~lacu of rmploymtnl. ·
fn commuUnc the phrslcian'1 sentence..
the ,Prcildent emp~as1r.ed it was not a
question of rellef (or an individual but
rather relief for the importint program
he heads. · ·
Ziegler aaid that Dr. Jli.fath~ws is eti~
rently filing returns and paying federal
taxes and ha11 arranged to make complete
restitution of back· taxes.
The neurosurgeon has made the point-
ln not fighting his own case-that who-
ever ·break., the law for whatever cause
should be prepared to pay . the ~nalty,
7.iegler ·said. Dr. ~1alhews did not file re-
turns in 196.1 .
. Ziegler said: "The President feels the
lriterest of the country and the commun·
ities where NEGRO is esttblished are
beter served by the release of~· Math·
ew• and hi• return to the vital work
NEGRO ls Involved· in." ..
Ziegler said the President wa.s aetllng
In some g0Uin1 in Palm Springs ~nd
"bearing down" on his State of the Un1~n
1tfessage scheduled Jan. 22. He also ~atd
lhe President and first family might
1pend tonight again al lhe palatial Palm
Springs home of Walter Annenberg, am-
bassador to Great Britain.
Ziegler ~id the President ~l'IY lea~e
San Clemente Thursday or Fridal'.· Ht.,
birthday Is Friday and a relebrat1on hr
expecttd in WashingtC?Jl. But the d~pj\r· tu~ is not yet flnn, Ziegler emphas1r.ed.
while being transported to Huntington
lntercommunlt)' Hospital by ambulance.
She was pronounced dead on arrival.
Ninetttn firemen battled the names for
fou r hours but the trailer was totally
de.strbyed. It was valued at $11.000. The
fire also caused $100 In smoke damage to
a neighboring mobile home.
Several neighbors trained garden ho.!f'S
onto the blaze until fire crews arrived at
12:M p.m.
Dale Ferranto, 19, of 21462 Pacific
Coast llighway, suffered first degree
Losing Candidate
lbums on his face as he atlempttd let
enter the trailer but was seared by the
heat . He \\'as given emergency treatment
at Huntington lntercofnmWlily Hospital.
and later released.
Firemen, who are stlll !nvestigaling the
cause of the blaze. said it broke out after
Mrs. Keeling's daughter had le lt the
trailer lo go shopping.
The body was taken to Wem.mln.ster
Memorial Park where funeral ar-
rangements are pending.
Miners' Figure,
Family l(illed
CLARKSVILLE, Pa . (AP) -Joseph
"Jock" Yablonski, unsuccessful candi-
date in the election. race for the presiden-
cy of the United Mineworkers UnioR was
found murdered, ~tale police said today.
Officers said they also found the body
of t·wo women believed to be hi., wife and
1laughler at their home In the heart of
Pf'r-nsylvania'11 soft coal region.
fltajor Howard M. Jaynes, area st~le
Beach Bribery
Suspect sµ~nt
As Trial MOved-r--
Wllllam D. New, the Photnlx man ac-
cused 'of atte1nptin11: to bribe Jlnutingtffl
Beach Mayor Jack Green for zoning
favors, remained silent today as his trial
was 1noved from municipal court In
Westminster, to Superior Court at Santa
Ana.
New was ordered by ,.,unlcipal Judge
James Cook tO appear In Department
Five, Orange Counl y Superior Court. at
9:30 a.m. on J an. 16. His attorneys decld·
ed not to present any defense during the
preliminary hearing concluded today.
The hearing had been oontinued from
Dec. IS at which time Mayor Green had
le8ti!ied that New offered him $4,000 to
influe nce a zone change on industrial land
near Gothard Street and Slater Avenue.
New was arrested Nov. 10 on the park·
ing lot or the Fisherman Restaurant after
allegedly making his third offer or a
.. campaign contribution" t.o Green insldt.
Green testified that the last meeting
with New was conducted under police and
electronics surveillance, after he had in--
formed the police department "of New's
offeni.
Mayor Green was nol present at
today 's wrap up of the preliminary he'ar.
ing.
police commander, said Yablonski wai
found lying next to his btd shot once in
the back of the head.
Jaynes s!Ud the bodies of the two
\\"Omen were lound in two . othtr
liedrooms.
.. Thrre was blood i;cattcred all around
;in(t tht' telephone lines were all ripped
out." said .Jaynes.
Ill' ~aid pol!re. hclieve thr shootings OC·
curred sometime during the night.
"!he appearanre or the bodic.!· wouk\
Indicate !hat th:>y were mur~e.red," a.aid
1tate Police Caetain Joseph Snyder.
.The Sg·year-old Yablonskf Marted early
his ~hallenge of the leadership of UMW Pres1~ent \!. A. _"Tony" Boyle -an-
nouncing his candktacy for the P'eJiden-
<'Y J)( the 220,000 member United Mini
\Vorkers union on May 211.
"Mining is still the JTl(llt dangerous of
ail occupations," he said. "The union is
hilling far short of what Jt should be
doing. The mine workers organii.ation baa
been stagnant. The miners need lo beloni
lo a labor organizalion that is totally
ne1nocralic so it can be rll:!pons!ve to
thrir needs."
Yablonski'~ father -a Polish lm-
n1igrant -died in a Pennsylvania min•
accidenL
Yablonski himself had worked In the
n11nes for 3.S years. He was the first
b.1ard member of the union to throw the.
gaunllet to Boyle.
Ht lost the el~ction Ott. t by 1 larg~
margin, despite a campalgn that took
him from coal field to coal field by rented
plane.
Newport Lauds
Beach Beauty
A bouquet has been tossed tG Hunt-
ington Beach for civic improvements
l'llong Pacific Coast Highway b y
neighboring Ne"1>0f1. Beach. '
"
Becau:ie of the omission in the st.ate
code. such acts are not now cri~es, ac·
cording to Bonfa's interpretat1on. i:tie
f'mergency ordinance will enable pohce
to enforce the Jaws until the state code is
amended. the city attorney says.
Other matters before the council in·
elude:
After laying down the ground rules for
the proceeding!, Boyle was expected lo
begin interrogating Kennedy and 10
nthen who attended a cookout.reunion
lhe night Pl-1iss I~opechne died.
H0&mer said grants rl the type receiv-
ed by Huntington Beach come under the
Open Space Land Pr'ogram enacted to
enC10Urage park development in urban
areas.
He said the first family will probably
rcg~ttr as Callfomla voters some Ume:
after Tuesday. Ziegler said Julie and
David t:isenhower returned ·Sunday from
Uleir Belgian visit.
Valley Industrial
Unit Selected
Jn a letter to Mayor Jack Green and
the City Council, Newport Mayor Doreen
M.ars!,lall cites the improvement o(
Pacific Coast Highway, the new ron·
struction and parking lots on the city
beach and the overall beautification along
the city's coa!tline.
I :
' ' ' ' ' I
-An appearance by llal ,v. BrDWn J.r.
nf I.he California State Outdoor Advertis-
ing Auociation to dlscu_ss cei:a:in pro-
''ision1 of the city's new sign onhnaoce.
-Requests for business I.ken~ fur
two clothing businesses in the downtown
area eannarked for condemnation in the
Top o( the Pier Plan. Samuel J. and
Karen Leto. of Torranct seek to establish
a men and womens clothing business at
109~1. Main Street, and Irma E. Turrn;r.
of Orange, wanl3 to open a ~re.~ and gift
shop at 474 Pacific C6ast ~1ghwa~".
-Appointment of two city officials to:i
committees of the National Rivers arid
Jtarbors Congre:t:s. Public 'Vorks Director
.1 lm Wheeler ha~ been named to the com·
miUee on lnter·Relationship of Irrigation,
Municipal, Industrial and \Vat er
Research. and Director of Harbor~ and
Reaches Vincent Moorhouse to the Flood
Control Committee.
-A petition by residenls to change the
name of Healherten Circle to Heatherton
Circle.
-The propo.54!d a:1ppointment ol Joseph
,\f. Lh~i as deputy eity attorney lo replace
Charle3 Liberto who ha.! resigned lo
enter private practict with a firm of al·
torne:y1 in Torranct.
Board Sl~t es ~fee t
The ne:i:t regula r mertling .of the Foun-
tain Valley School District will be held at
7:l0 p.n1. Jan. I at lhc Currtculum
Jliioilerlals Ccn'1Cr, One Lighthouse Lane,
f ountain Valley.
t
Altogether, at leaat 21'1 persons ha ve
been subpoenaed to.testify.
Just is Kennedy and his wife Joan
reached the entrance to the courthouse.
The HUDtington Beach park wlll serve
orJa m~ than 2,000 people and "will
be a tribUte to federal-city cooperaUon,"
Hosmer sa.jd.
State Legislature
Sto(!k Jtlarket1
NEW YORK (AP) -The stock market
mslntained a broad gain Jn active trad-
ing late today. (See quotations, Pagea 14-
151)
Opens
Dent Leader~ Offering Siveeping Reforms
SACRA~ENTO (APJ -An elKllon· forward to If I were elected governor."
year legislature opened today wlU1 DemaJidlng ·rel~{ ' for property tax·
A bl De ocrallc Leader Jes.w: 11-1. payers, Unruh ~ ~ levy '.'I.! litera~l,Y ssem . Y m , . dnv1ng C.aliforn1nns out 0~1r homes.
UnrU}\ Offerhlg a. ~wecp1na. J>~ogra~ _In·. , On the . coqservatidcLi6ue, Unruh
ch1difl! a Oat-llmlt on bomeowncr~·J>i'O' · rlecl]ned to ct'iliclie Reagan directly. but
perty taxes. 1 • • • he said st.alt government and local
Unruh, a candidate for I.hf! DemoerlU\c gpvernmeot.s. bal-'t become "one of the
nomination for ~vemor, made bis pro-great dapoilers of. tilt: environment ln
posals in a uniq~'st.ate of the state" the atate."
message de.li\ie~ to a nev.'I conference And he said he Intends to ketp a
a d:ay before Rea n ootllfie:!I , his own ttltlcal eye on the Reagan administr1Uon
plaits.. , . • \hrouih the long aeuion. "I offer my
Like Unruh, Reag 11 expected '' hit services to the people of California on
hard at property tax relief. what b: being doll': so they can evaluate
Unruh also Offtrd a 'wide rangt or pro-the difference between promise and
p'5al11 to preserve Califomla'1 en-performance," he aa.id. ~ ,
\•ironmenl -also a top arlorlty program Unruh propoRd a rbit limit on property
for the Republican governor, who 11 e1· laxe11 levied on homel. occupted by the
peeled to aeek a RCOnd tttm. owntn.
,Unruh said hls program {'constitutes a He caned for wiping out tn exemp.
principal program that m could look tioo1 be II.YI help "very wealthy lndlvl·
• duals who pay liUle or no axes at all."
And UIU'Uh demanded eUmm.tlon of
w1\3t he termed "ta x loopholes" for big
bu.!lneM -the depletion aUowance liven
oil companies ard Ult property tax ex-
emption granted on the home office
buildings or insurance companies.
Bia.sting away at Rea gan, Unruh aald
"the people ·of California are being short
ch;i.nged by a· do-nothing adrnio.istratloo
which .a .. Idly by while.the. quality of the
livea we lead deteriorate at an IC·
celer1ti91 rate.''
, Striking at the key CONerVatton Issue,
Unruh calkif for lt1lslatfo~ hal~ng all oll
drllllna: on st.ale controJk!d lands tn the
Santa Birbara ehmn:J,, lite of a c:on·
t.lnuin& oil leak, , .
He aleo propoltd a State Conservation
Authority with the power t.o reject any
1t1te, loca.I or private ~j~t llkeb' to
dain11e the environment. ' .,
t
..
A portion of the new citizens commitlef!
to boost Fountain Valley industrial
development will be. appointed at the city
councU meeting, I p.m., Tuesday at cily
hall. · ·
Mayor Edward Jusl said the city staff
Is already collectJng infonnaUoo to be
uud by the citizens commitee and work
will begin as soon as enough cbmmittee
membera are chosen.
The committee wiJI be asked,to form a
plan for attracti.ng Industry lo about 400
acres or land between Talbert and
\Varner Avenues ne1t lo the Santa Ana
River.
Ciliien participation was suggested by
the city council lo help speed.up in·
dustrial development In the area describ-
ed. Commlttet members will be seleded
based on occupation and area of
tts.ldtoce.
VIKINGS ll·POINT
CHOICE S SUN DAY
LAS VEO>\S. (AP) -Bookmaken hen!
t.Jday established the Nation.al Football
Ltague champ!on Afinoe.soti Vikings · as-
11-point ftivorite:s to dt:Ceat the Kansas
City Chle.fs ·of the Amtrlcan Football ·
League fo t. the World tltle.
The v.·orld championship will be" dedd-
ed betwet.n the Chiefs and Vikings Sun-
day In the Super Bowl game at New
Orltana.
These represent "substaolial progress
not achieved without dedlcaUon and t f·
fort.,'' Mayor Pt1arshall states.
"Pltay we also wish ~ city of Hun·
tingt.on Bead! continued progress and
sua:ess with Its plans and program for
redevelopment of the downtown coastal
section," lhe letter concludes.
Orange Cout
W'Mdier
Fair 1kies with local gusty wtnda
brushing away ttte bad .air la the
picture for Tuesday al<>ng the
coast. Temperatures eontlnue lo
cringe into the low ll0'1.
INSIDE TODAY
Orange -Eount11 t11ttr1 th•
decode oJ the St vttntt,s carc/ul-
111 eyttng the proble1.1s prtsl!nf..
ed by ill burgeoning growth.
Pagt JO.
• ' Jt·~ .u H
" It • H \4-lf It It
'-'
,.
I a ..... ; a 't J a
~ OlllY PILOT H
M~·~an
.. Escapes
Murder Try
B~ Ill a 11vaae ui\ lroo beaUnc
Iii • remote mountain fire trail, a Coeta
E clttk kldnoped from his home
throup tbe dirt early &today
pe clealh under the wbeela ot Ilia .
~}&vwtigaton 1 a I d t o d a y that
fitderlck V. Tedeoco. 47. ol 1'5 E. lllh
a;,.probably owet bia life to a newspaper
Mrt9 deliveryman who may h a v e fl'Wit<md off tho three would-be
~erers. -~ · ·~widespread bunl 11 wiler way loday
the 1969 Pontlac Le Mans aedan new· i):,.:;;<:h,ased by Tedete0" and used by his
.. cker1 to flee the ~pe in Trabuco
ahortly before dawn Sunday.
~ meanwtlllt, WU Ust.ed in fair #dJlk" a• Hoag Memorial Hoepltal, he ls.undtr trealmel1t for a variety
lhjurtes oulfered In lh< bnltal .... ult.
~yaicianl said he IUlt&Jned severe
ljlllltiple lacorallonl. a fradllred noo<,
~ b.-.fl ......... his lei! hand.
i-p(tured rib& and maulve welta over bit
-.ii.. body. tbranp County lheriff'a deputies con-taltted by John Nordeen, It. FuJlerton. ttMd ·the DtWJPl.per routeman 's approach
mlty bave f!ightened off Tede>CO's ••-
tl!Ckera Sunday •morning.
a = ,
w. Co•t1 Bit-run.
I
'_H.oliday Cr3:s~es
~ ,, . ., .t ~
, "Take Fuur LsaA1
A Balboa Island g~I became Orange
County'• fourth 1910 traffic fatality SWl·
day nig!lt.
Callfonrla HJctiway Patrol officers nld
Donna Lynn Bell, lf, ol m Coral Ave.,
wu pronounced. dead at the acene at
1'71 llouey· Tnmc 1111
l llulll Toll I
!1:35 p.m. when the car in which she was
riding witb three companions went out of
control and struck a tree on El Toro
Road.
Taken to South C.OUt. Community
Hospital wl~ major injurifll were the
driver, Don Diltefano, ,29, of 329 Poplar
St., La111J1& 1leatjt and his pallHlljfers
Vanessa Myera, 15, of 23S58 El Perro, El
Toro and GrelorY M. Gray. lt, ol 210 CUU Drive, Laguna Beach.
In an accident Saturday, a Buena Park
youtb lost hi• IUe when he walked lntq
the aide of a aemi·traner truck • Beach
BoUJeVard and..Mllvern Avenue In Buena
Park.
Police !aid Vernon Record, JS, of 514G
Somerset Circle, wu pronounced dead
on arrival at Beach Community Hospital
alter he reportedly atepped Into tbt in-
tersection, turned to aay something to
two friends and walked into the side of
• •
the rig . The driver Herman Klein, 27, af
Pomona, was ,not held.
1be other \wo traffic fatalitie1 oc·
curred Friday.
John Swsman of Brooklyn, N.Y., who
was visitb.g relatives ·in Stanton, was kill·
ed by an out of control auto when he tried
to shl.eld his 5-year-old grandson from the
car, ofDcers aald. 'Ibe boy, Kenneth SCott
Ostrow ii in aatisfactory condition today
at Los Alamito! General Hospital.
Garden Grove teenager Michael Gary
Grahamt.. JS, abo died Friday afternoon
JollOwing a broadside collision on ltnott
Avenue. The driver or the second.vehicle,
Akira Hirata o{ Anaheim, is reported in
criUcat condition at Stanton Community
Hospital. Witnesses usert.ed lhe youth
was involved in a drag raCe when he lost
control of his vehicle and plowed into the
car driven by Hirata.
In Westminster, police said today the.Y
are still Sttklng a black 1961 or 1952 El
CamJqo CbevroletJn ~nectlon w:ilh a hi t
and ruri accident Saturday which resulted
in the amputation of the leg of an elderly man.
Westminster re.aldent Ger a Id w.
?!'I NW the injured man as I drove past
8"d I llpod to a telephone to get help."
iratd Nordeen, who pinpointed the site
along old Trabuco HUI road about j()()
yards beyond Cook'• Comer.
Wrapped lJp Ira Work * * *
Fitzgerald, 64, is in "serious but im·
proving" condiUon today at Westminster
9ommunity Hospltal following a hit and
run accid~nt Saturday afternoon in which
he Jost his lqlt Seg.
Fit:.gerald' id struck down by an
automobile at 1:'7 p.m. at Golden. West
Street and HU1Pbo1dt Avenue by what ap-
peared to be a black 1961 or 1"2 El
Camino Chevrt[let, police said. Norde<n said ba saw tail lig!lla
vanilhing amqid a curve up a.'lead of the
&pot where Tedesco lay sprawled in the
The Milwaukee Militaire Cadets were posting Ute
colors in competition when the banner rai100. by
Donna BanaszyJtlki, 13, topp1ed and covered her
heaci. Like· a good •oldier, she kept right on 1?11rch·
ing. H untingtonMan' s
dltcll, bleeding and batttTed.
Officer Leo Jones uid Jn his Cost&
Meta Police Department r<port ol lh<
aase -st.ill sketchy due to the victim's
condiUon --that auto..ibeft.appeared to
be the only motive behind it.
Attorneys Blast
Pretrial News
He A.id Tedelco knows of no enen.:Ues -
and uv .. modestly, w1tb no peroooa1 In Tate Slaym· gs habtls or problem• wblc:b mlgltl lead to .
v..,eance by othen:.
.i. ne victim uJd he was approached From Wire Services ,~ his: apartment house about 11 AUSTIN, Te1. -Attorneys for Ch1rle11
p4 Saturday by three men who asked D. Watson, charged in the 'Sharon Tate
the number of his apartment. He refused murden, saJd today the former Texas
m.tell thein. s~l~ athlete could not get a rair
TedCICO said at that point be wa1 fore-tnal !n Callrornia because or pretrial
ed into his new Cll' -1t1U bearlni tern· publicity.
porary paper regiltration platee _ and "Our contention is that Califor~ia i.s not
methodically beaten all the way into the the place. to try Charles Wa~, said al· ~ Ana Mountains. ~omey Bill Boyd at an extradition hear·
!? Once In the Trabuco Canyon area. he 1ng before Martin Dies Jr., Texas
told detecttvee:, he wu draued oUt of Secretary of State ..
the car and the bnrtal beatln& continued Boyd, of McKinney, Tex., where
witb a Ure 1roo being ueed allhoug!l he Watson Is jallod, argued agalnst retum-
malntalned consdousneas ' ing to California the man charged with
,The shoe clerk aald the men flnaiJ3 got the kJlllna:s Of M1Ja Tate and six other
baC:k into tile car and attem~ to run peT'!Ons. · ·
ovir him. but he rolled lhrooA!t lho duot •. Boyd,aai4 he Is preparlng' I Ill••• to inlo tlMi dltdt to eacape being cruabod by get ~charg,. against Watson transferred
the wheels. to a federal court so that the.y may be
Tedf:ICO told of lying Jn the~ until "tried anywhere in the United States."
fmnd i,, Nordeen, but wis·unibie·to·glve -~Wabon, 24J former high tcbool football
a clear tndJcatioo of the time lapee in-and tract star In tile sm11l Texas towns !Ptved. of Farm~nvtlle and ~ville, !'u not at
-·lnvestJgator Gerry 11tom~ Ms been the 36-mmute extradtbon hearing. He is
a,.ulgned to haiidle the-fOUOwup report of in the Collin County Jall at McKIMey.
tbe 11vage usauJ:t, as aoon as Tedesco is WallOn's attorneys did not question
atile to face further questioning. California's claim that fingerprints show-
.• ed Watson was the pel"IOO chaf1ed with
f,ofC Elects
New Officers
Members of the Fountain Vallty Cham·
her of Commen..<>e will meet to elect or.
fieen for 1970 at a 1.m., Tuesday in the
conference rOOm ol. Fountain Valle). High
School.
Plans for chamber activities In the
~ year wtll also be dlscusaed and ~
new board cl. dirtctort will be elected. .
Suneationl for nrw adiviUes from
Fountain Valley merchants have been rt·
quested by chamber president Charles
Dixon. Coffee and donuts .wW be &trVed.
No01Dembtr1 are welcome to attend the
meetJn1.
DAILY PILOT
C"ANl)f. (0.UT PU•lllHIN<i COM'AN'f"
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the Tate murders. Fingerprint experts
from California were not called to testify
since the issue of Watson'• idenUty was
not ral.sed.
Dies old he will meet with Texas Gov.
Preston Smith later today and hoped to
be ready to recommend a decision to
Smith then on Califomla Gov. Ronald
R!q:an'a request that Wal!!oo be u-
tradlted to California.
Patricia Krenwinkel, also accused or
murder and conspiracy in the Tate and
LaBlanca alayings. faced extradtt1on
heatlng1 today in MohJle, Ala.
Attorney , M. A. Maraal, representing
Miss Krenwlnkel, 22, contends there is in·
sufflcjeot evtdel\Ce to warrant a return of
his client to C&lifornla for trial in the
mass murders.
Circuit Judge Joseph M. Hocklander Jr.
was named to preside and Dist. Atty.
Cart M. ·Booth of Mobile County MiUed
for extradition of Afiss Krtnwlnkel.
GWC Sooking
Scholarships
1.fore lhan $15,000 for 11chotanhips are ·
cumnlly being IOOgb• by lh< llCM]lrshJp
comn'liUte at Golden We1t College to
substantially increue funds for desfrvlng
lludenls.
The cammiltee proposes to raise the
J11<lftt7 thtougli personal contact and let-
ters to more than 500 businesses, servlct
groups and indlvidqala In Westmlt11ler.
Huntington Beach, Fountain Valley,
Garden Grove and Seal Beach.
Donald L. Randol, wlsltnt dean ancf
licholarahlp chairman, lald the program
means the difference between many
capaiblt; talented youn1 people conUnulng
their education or dropping out of college .
Scholuship.'5 are awarded each sprtng
on the basis of need, ability, leadership,
character and m:ord of service to the
donors and recipient.I will attend a ban·
or11 and recipient! will aUend a blnque-
quet honoring both groups.
Chamber Week Set
In Huntington Beaeh
'?be week of Jan. 19-U b11 been
declanld "Join tho Chamber ol Com·
merct Wetk" by Hunlln&Wn Bw:h
Mayor Jack G,.... G....,, l.aood a procloll\lllon Tu<ldoy
cmnnenc:llng the local chamber <Jf com·
merce for ltJ civic activlU~ and callin&
for full .upport ol the chamber.
Nepa"lese Children Cheer
Agnew as Others Protest
Knee Broken
lnNewportCrasli,
A iiurlUngton Beach man IUffered a
broken knee afial:ffii!RS-early Sunday
morning Jn a three-car crash ln west
Newport Beach.
Police said Jay Williams, 38, 8202
Paestwick Circle, was injured when
another car sideswiped his, forcing the
man's auto into a head~ impact with
still another ·car.
The driver of the car, aocorcUnc to
wllneslel, w .. a man wearing a beard
who wu actompanied by a female
panenger at \he time of the accldent.
The vehicle, PoUce said, was seen l!aving
the intersectlod" at a hl&:h rate of 1peed
and marhave tteeived slight damqe~to •
lhe left front fender as a result of the col·
llslon.
Fitzgerald, who makes hi! home at
13641 Iowa SL, was transported to lhe
hospital by ambulance, where 5Urgeona
had to remove hla shattered leg. He also
suffered multiple contuJlons a n d
abrasions in the accident, according to a
hospital spokel!iman.
KATMAN DU, Nepal IUPI) -Leftlsl
11tudenll demonstrated today against the
offtciAJ vi.alt by Viet! President Spiro T.
Agnew to this tiny Himala)'an kingdom
bordering on Communlat China . But hun-
dreds of other Nepalese, f r o m
schoolchJldren to the king, made him
welcome.
The lnti·American demonstrations in
I.he suburbs of Katmandu and outside a
U.S. library here were believed provoked
by Chinese Communlsta. Police said 20
student& were arruted in Suburban Pat-
na, about three mlles from th'e center of
the city and site of the main demonstra.
lions, and 10 more In Kalmandu.
A UPI cameraman was beaten un-
cwclous and another cameraman was
beaten and robbed of his W3tch and rlng
during the disorders. _
Agnew, accompanied by hit wife and
two Apollo astronauts, flew here from
Bangkok for an overnight stay on his lour
of the Far "East."Ther made lhe -rught in
a U.S. Air Force version of the propeller.
driven DC& transport becaU5e the landing
slrlJl'*s ·not long enough for his ''Air
Force 2" jetliner. .
The highellt-ranklng U.S. official ever
to visit Nepal, Agnew was greeted at the
Trlbhuvan airport by Prime Minister
Klrtinldhl Blsta and other Nepalese of-
ficials as well as by U.S. Ambassador
Carol Laise. He was1lven a 19-gµh salute
and both he and his wife were ~ked
with flower1 by five Nepalese girls.
Obse.rvera said the crowd lining the
route of the Agnew motorcade Into the ci-
ty were "not, of course, u blg as Queen
Elluibetb's but still quite good."
The streets: wez:e lined by hundred.a of
scarlet-robed monks and school children,
waving small U.S. flags and shouti ng
"'Nmalal Subhakamana'' (bc6t wishes to
you)." Bannera along the three-mile
route proclaimed "Long Live Peace,"
"Long Live World Brotherhood" and
"Wish You a Happy Stay."
Observers 1ald the welcome was
particularly wann because Agnew·s visit
was an official one, and not Just a si de
trip from India as made by m06t other •
dist.inguished vlslLors.
Th e anU·American demomtrations
erupted while Agnew was meeting with
Bi st.a. Police had arrested a, number of
potentlal troublemakers over t h e
weekend but leftist students distributed
anU·Agnew learlets Sunday bight and
matsed in Patma to !lhoul such !llogans a11
"Go Back Agnew !'', "Down With
American Imperialism !." 0 Americans
Withdraw From Vietnam!,'' and "Down
Valley Visitor
Bm·necl in Blaze
A visitor to Fountain Valley sulftred
s~ere nesh bUrns on the face when an
unknown object exploded as he tr1ed to
doU1e a f~ Jn a trash bJn in the Chateau
Blanc condominiums Sunday night.
Noble Dennis Spee1, 20, of Los Angeles.
was treated and released at lfuntington
Jntercommunlty Hospital where be was
taken by Fountain Valley firemen . lte
was visiting frlend:s in the Chateau Blanc
area.
Speta w1s found by the firemen lying
tiear a burning tra.!ih bln near San Miguel
Court. He toid them he was trying to put
out the firt when 110methln1, exploded In
his eyea. H01pltal offlclala said Spees wu
burned on the face, but notblng was found
In his eyes.
Fire olficiel1 said t~re have been a
T~~ of trllh bin fires, pol!Sibly set by
younes ters or Individuals unaware of the
d11nger of exploding ob}tcts such as p1lnt
or •erc>IOI cans or light bulbs.
ANALYSIS OF AGNEW'S
MISSION ON PAGE 4
With King Mahendra."
The cause of the crash, police said, was
alleged failure to yield the right of way
by Susan Colglazier, 20, Whittier.
Nepalese officials aald they auspect.ed
Chinese Communist involvement because
large numbers of Olinese cars were seen
in Patna before the rioting started.
Officers clai m the woman pulled onto
Pacific Coast .Highway from Orange
Avenue and hit Williams' auto.
Flood Hits Argentina
Agnew, apparenUy unaware of lhe pro-
tests, called later on the klnc for a 3G-
minute taUt and then.were joined by Mrs.
Agnew and Queen Ratna.
The third driver, Jeffrey Shofner, 27,
6508 W. Ocean Front, Newport Beach,
was not hurt ln the 12 :05 a.m. crash.
Williams wa.s trut.ed at Huntington
Intercommunity Hospital.
MENDOZA, Argentina CAP ) -A tix·
foot wall of mud and water from a burst
flood control dam raged through this city
in the Andes foothil ls Sunday and police
repo~ 23 persons were known killed.
the
city cons.ultants
recommend
B·alboa Bay Club
lease extension!
The City of Newport Beach hired 1 mpecltcl, indepehdtnt research firm, ·
Development Research Associates'ol los Angeles, ta>evaluate !fie Balboa Bay ·
Club lease proposal1 Here is whit the firm's report sa)'s about
. ' .
EXTENDING LEASES OF THIS TYPE
11We believe that ft is import ant to
poil\t out that ground lea~ts of this
type are 1enerall1·~endid th rough
ren$tf1tion prior tO the actual ter·
min1tlon date of thi originai l••~e.
The rea$on for this is that the lessee
normally mikes a si1nificant capital
Investment ••• and continutd mod·
t mizltion becorp11 lncre11in1 Jnfeasi·
blo as the rtmalnlnr lea,. tarm I•
...iuced.
In conclusion, Wt recom mend that
Iha Clly seak a leue exlenslon wh ich
ia equilable to both the City and the
' Balboa Bay Club which will allow for.
the full economic development pro·
1r1m · •hk:h we believe will extend
well l>eyond the currenlly projected
expansion prc;1ram.''
The Balboa Bay Club lea.se is down
to 29 years. The Club seeks the lease
extension so that it can obtain financ·
ing to continue its development pro·
,ram and has aa:reed to terms which
raise the annual rental. increase the
percentage of gross sales, and pro-
vides for p eriodic cost-of-living
adjustments 1$ wen as periodic rene·
1otlation of all term s.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE FROM CITY PROPERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JANUARY 13
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Saddlebaek
EDITION
VOL. 63, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES
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~. . ' ORANGE1.~00NTY, CALIFORNIA
• ....
MONDAY, JANUARY 5, '1970
Today's~~
N.Y. Stoeks
TEN CENTS
lXOll rants • emenc
Toro Wife Losi119 Catadidate
• ' ' t
Of POW
Sees Pope
Miners' Figure,.
Family Killed
From Wire Sen·ice1
ROME -Setting an historic precedent.
Pope Paul VJ he ld an audience today
with seven American wumen whose
husbands are missing in Vietnam. in·
eluding Mrs. Stephen Hanson of El Toro.
The Vatican City meeting left the party
fl[ women touched and hopeful after ex·
cha ging hopes for peace with the Pope,
'"ho distributed inspirational meda.1s to
lllem.
"It wal most Impressive," said l.-1rS.
Thomas Stegman, 30, Virginia Beach. Va.
"Oh. J can't explaln. But he was most
sympathetic to our situation.
. "He saki he is praying for everyone
. who has suffered In all wars. lie also ask-
ed us to pray for him.''
Jt was the first lime Pope Paul has
ever met with women whose husbands
were listed by the U.S. Command as
"missing in action."
\Vi th Mrs. Stegman, a Roman Catholic,
were two other Virginia Beach wives -
?i1rs. Robert Duncan , 2.1. and f\1rs.
Richard Nelson. 26. both Protestants.
The four California wopien who hap-
pened to be in Rome oo a tour but whose
husblnds also are missing in Vietnam
loun<f oul aboqt the audience and were in-
tited to join Mn. Stegman's group.
Mrs. sftn)an said besides Mrs.
haDl<IJ, they were Mrs .. Roosevelt Wess·
lie Jr., Mra. John K. Hardy Jr., and Mn.
Arthur Mearns.
Shfl dkl not know-their home t,owns.
In early December, two Dallas. Tex ..
womeg came to Rome in hopes of
personally asking Pope Paul to help trace
their pilot husbands, shot down over
North Vietnam.
But they contenled themserves \\'ilh
seeing officials in the Vatican secrelarial
or 11tate who promised to relay to Pope
Paul all pertinent informalion about the
men.
Mrs. Stegman and her two traveling
companions gave such Jnfonna~i~ -
serial numberli, physical descnpt1ons.
time and place reported missing, etc. -
to the 1ecretariat of state Friday. They
(See WIVES, Pare Z)
CLARKSVILLE, Pa. (AP) -Joseph
"Jock" Yablonski, unsuccessful candi·
date in the election race for the presiden-
cy or the United l\1ineworkers Union, was
found murdered, state police said today.
Olficers said they also fou nd the body
of t.wo women believed lo be his wife and
claughter at their home In the heart of
Per:nsylvania's soft coal region.
1'1ajor Howard f\.f. Jaynes, area state
police commander, said Yablonski was
found lying next to his bed shot once in
the back of the head.
Jaynes said the bodies of the two
y.·omen were found in two other
bedrooms.
"Th ere was blood scattered all around
~nd the lel ephone lines were all ripped
out." said Jaynes.
He said police believe the shootings oc-
curred sometime during the night.
"The appearance of the bodies would
Indicate that th~y were murdered ," said
slate Police Captain Joseph Snyder.
Toe 59-year-old Yablcoski started early
his challenge of the leader~hip of UMW
P resident W. A. "Tony" Boyle -an·
nouncing hi.s candidacy for the presiden·
ry of lhe 2:20,000 member United Mine
\Yorkers union on May 29.
"Mining i5 still the most dangerou1 ol
all ocCupations," be taid. "The unio'1 i1
f1!11ling far short cl ~~ _should bl
doing. The mine workers oraamiation ha~
Burglar Frustrated
At Doctor's Office
A Laguna Beach bu~glar ~tarted the·
New Year in fruslral1on y.•1th an a~
'"pArCntly unsuccessful attempt to break
into a prominent physician's.office.
Dr. Edward R. Nell advised police that
to gla!S lou vers had been broken out of a
. window at his orflce. 632 N. Co.a st
Highway, some time bet,veen 4:1~ p.m.
Dec. 31 and 8 a.m. Jan. 2.
Nothing wa.s reported missing and
police surmise the woukl·be burglar
abandoned h.is task without entering the
building.
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Pier Plata Progresses
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U.S. -Army Corps of Engineers is soliciting comments or objections
on this plan lor 600-fool recreation pier at South Laguna's Aliso
Beach. Plans for pier, which will be lighted for night use, have been
filed with Corps of En gineers by Orange County Harbor Districl Lt.
Col. s. J. Black, deputy district engineer for the corps, says Jan. 16
ls deadline for written comments to reach hi• Loi Angeles office.
County needs permit lrom Corps of Engineers before pier can be
built.
' \
beer. stagnant. The miners need lo belon g
to a labor organization that is totally
democratic so ii can be responsive to
lht>ir needs."
Yablonski'.! fath er -a. Polish im-
migrant -died in a Pennsylvania mine
accident.
Yablonski himself had worked ln the
mines for 35 years. He was the firsl
b;}ard member {If the union to throw the
gauntlet to Boyle .
He lo.st the election E>et. 9 by a large
margin. despite a ca.rnO:aign that took
him from coal field lo coal field by rented
plane.
He was the father of two sons who are
lawyers and one daughter -a graduate
1.oclal worker who helped him in the cam·
paign. ..
Unruh Offers
Property Tax
Reform Plan
S!CRAMENTO (AP) -An doctloo--
r•lll' legi!lalur< opened today with
Auembly Democratic Leader Jene M.
Unruh ottering A sweeping progrlm lr..
eluding a flat limit on homeowners' pr~.
pert.y taxes.
Unruh, a candidate for Lhe Democratic
nomination for governor, made hi.s pro-
posals in a un ique "state of the state"
message delivered to a news C<lnference
a day before Reagan outlines his own
plans. \
Like Unruh. Reagan is expec_tci:I to hit
hard at property tax relief.
Unruh also offerd a wide range of pro-
posals to preserve California's en-
vironment -al so a top priority program
for the Republican governor, who is ex-
pected to seek a,secorxl term.
Unruh said hi§ program ''C<l nstitutes A
principal program that we could look
forward to "if I were elected governor."
~.. .. .
$ENATOR MURPHY, PRESIDINT HUDDLI IN' SAN CLEMENTE
Wbilt Prqfdlftl Rollx11, Pktcot1 .Pvt·lo ·Su
Nixon Pi~keted
Cha1inel Oil Drilling Pratested
•
Pickets appeared outside t h e
President's Western White Hpuse in San ·
Clemente Sunday -nearly two miles
outside In fact - staging an offshore pro·
test against oil drilling in the Santa
Barbara Channel.
The trio aboard a 68-foot boat
represented the militant Get Oil Out
(GOO) organizati<fn. bul had little sue·
ctss in making their dei:nand.s known.
silnta Barbaril.
"W~ displayed the sa.me bal\fler used In
t~e GOO fish-in last month," said
Botwright, adding that ,he hopes fresi-
dent Nixon saw the bright-orange denun~
ciatloo when he ' flew oft for Palm
Springs.
"Get Oil Out," proclaimed th! 12·foot
high letters.
Demanding feliel for property tax·
payers, Unruh said the levy "is literally
driving CallfOmians out of their homes."
On the conservation issue, Unruh
declined to criticiie Reagan direc tly, but
he Said S'tale governmen t and local
governments. have become "one of the
great de.spoilers of .the environment Jn
BJll -lJotwright, a poo ,spokesman, sald
llJey .wanted to d~liver a pi;tiliop car;rylrlg
' 175.000' signatures · qemandiog ail ,ehd !O·
o(f,h;<>re drUling •on ~~erat ,tl_delands off
The Santa Barbara de \egaUon \Vasn't
e.v~. able to J1:~h . the 'President's ap-
pntntm!nt.s secrttary, so they. P\Jl tcr sea
I<> picket outA:ide the ~Yi-mile security
perimeter eslablisf'letl offsbore. ' \ ' .
the state."
And he said he intend s to keep a
critical eye on the Reagan administration
through Ute Jong &ession. "I offer my
~ervlces to the people or California on
\vhal is being done so they can evaluate
the difference between promise and
performance," he said.
Unruh proposed a flat limit on property
taxes levied on homes occupied by the
owners.
.. He called for-wiping out tax exemp-
tions he aays help "very wealthy indivi-
duals who pay UttJe or no axe.s at all."
And Unruh demanded elimination of
what he termed "tax loopholes'' for big
business -. the depletion al lowance given
oil companies and the property tax ex-
emption granted on the home office
buildings of insurance companies.
Courity Beaclies
Talk Scheduled
Assemblyman .Alan Sleroty fO-Be verly
Hills ), will be the featured speaker on th~
rutui-e "' Orange County beaches during a
Jan. 17 conference at the San Clemente
lnn.
A morning panel on the ~ounty beach
needs in the 1970'1 will featurt William
Penn Mott, Jr.\ director ol state parks
and rtcreatioo; Kenneth Catr. San
Clemente city manager: Wesley Marx,
cooser\I ationlst author : K n o w I t o n
Fernald, J r., vice president in charge of
planning for Laguna Niguel JCorp.; and
Richard Ruiz, ~ executive assi!lant lo
County Supervisor Da vid Baker.
The conference from 9 a.m. until 2 p.m.
I~ sponsored by the League of Women
Votera ol Capistrano Bay Area. The pro-
gram Is publk.
Registration beg.ins at 9 a.m. l!lnd is $.f,
Jt may be made by mailing lhe lee,
which inclt>des luncheon, to C.plstraM
Bay ,.rea League of Women Votett , Bo1
2294, C.pl&\rano Beafh, 112672.
Bal Isle Girl · 16 Dies . ' " . . ..
In El Toro Road Accident ·
A Balboa Island girl became Orange
County's fourth trro .traffic fatality SUo·
day nl"eht. ·
California Highway Patiol,officeis gaj~
' Oonoa Lynn Bell, 16. of %22: Coral Ave,.
was pronounced dead at the . scene ·a~
lfll
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!Jet z
11:35 p.m. when the ear in which she· was
riding with three companions went out of
conlrol and struck a trec1 On El Tor9
Road.
Token to South Coast c:ommunity
Hospital with major injurica were the"
driver, Don Dlstefano, 29, <>f 329 Poplar
St., Lagulla Beach and bis pa11sengers
Vanessa Myers, IS, of 23356 El Perro, El
Toio and G'regory M. Gray, 1~, of 210
Cliff Drive, Laguna Beach •• , ,
In an aooldent SllWrday, • B~a: Park
youtll _ lOSt his life wheh 'ht.:_'Wa1ked· tqto ..
the side of a seml-lrailer truck at Beach
Boulevard and Malvern A,Ye.nue. in Buena
Park. -:
Police said Vernon Record, 18, of~$t.O
Som!~t 'Clrcl!, was pronouneed dead
Of! arrival at Be1Gh Community ~otpital
after be r9po1Udly ltA!ppecl into ~ ti>-•
tersedlon. turned to say something to
two lrlendl and walked into the aide of
0)e rtg. The. dr~er HermJD KJeln, ·27, ot
Pomona, wu no! held.
The oihtr two traffic fatalitieJ OC·
CIUTed Frld,Y:
John Susm111 of ·BrooJlyn, N.Y., who
was vlsillkg rtlaUvea Jn Stanton, was kill·
•d by an Oil~ Of control 1uto when be tried
to sllleid bl• '-relMl\I grand,.. from the
~~" olllcer11ald . Tbe boy, KeMetlt Scott
O.trow Is In uUsl1ctory condition tod1y
~·
al-Los Alamitos GJ!;oeral .H0;spital.
Garden Grove teenager f)ilc1'ael Gary
G,rah~m, 18, alao d(<d F'rld'l' ~l~n
fo_llo!ing,a broadside co~. oo ~nptt
Ave'!_ue. The cfFlver.of the~, v~c'le.
Aklra Hirata ot Anahelm, Is reJ)<ited in
cr)lic.a.I condUlpn al Stanton. Co;nmlinity
Hospital. WitnC!seS aw rted tbe y9uth
w'as Involved.In a drag"'race when 'he-lo.St
conti'Ol of hi.t vehicle and plowed Jntb Ole
car driven by Hirata . ·
.In west~stfr. police said today they
a(e.,still seeking ,a black J96l or 1962 a
Camino ch·evrolet in connection with a hit
and run aCcldent Satlirday which resulted
Irr the ·amputatiotf of the Jeg of an eldetly
man.
,Westminster rC;Sident G ,er a l d) W.
Fitzgerald, 6,4, · Is in "serious ~t ,im-pro~ing" condition today at Wes(rnJnster
Cbmmunlty Hospita l following a hit and
nJn accident Saturdaf 8Item0ori Iif whk:h
he lost hlS leJt 'leg. . . , ' :
Fit.zger1ld wu struck · <Sown br an
automol;rile at 6:37 p.m . .at Ool<Len 1West
Street and Humboldto A.Ye(llHl •bY. what ap-
peared lo be a blaci' 1161 or !'2 El
Cimino Chevrolet; pbllce 'Mld: · ·
The drlv!!r of the car1 ·a~rding to
(See ACCI~~ Pqe %)
NEW YORK (AP) -The owck mark it
m1lntalned a broad g1Jn In active trad·
ln1 late today. (See quota!lo111, 'Pqet 14-·
JS.) . . . •
The 1veragei ~Id wttqin • '• narrOw
range In an eff~ lO -eep going the rally
lhiL bulsl 011l Friday in th• rtril !riding
RMion of lt'lO•
Negro Tax
Evader
Commuted
By RICllARD P. NALL
Of l~I Dlllf Pllol lt11f
PALM SPRINGS -President Nixon
granted his fir.st ex ecu tive clemency to-
day as he comm uted the federal prison
sentence or a Negro self-help leader and
neurosurgeon from New York State.
The President acted in behalf of Dr.
Thomas W. Mathewll, president of the
National Economic Growth and
Reconstruction Organization (NEGRO).
Dr. Mathews pleaded guilty Oct. 20, 196t
in U.S. District Court New York let
charges of failu~ to-file an income tax
return. lie was sentenced to one year,
with one year suspended, and began serv·
Ing the senl.ence Nov. JO in Danbury,
Conn. federal correctional institute .
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler .said Dr.
Mathews did not pay his laxes for several
years in order to devote his personal
finances to Negro sr,1r -help program.~
such as one conduc ed in Walts to bus
Negr0€'!s lo places of employment.
In commuting the phrsician 's sentence,
the Presid ent emphas.it.ed it was not a
question of relief for an individual but
rathe r relief for the important program
he heads. .
·Ziegler said that Or. ~tathews I! cur-
rently fili~ returns and paylng-reaaar --
taxes and bas arrangtd to make complete
rcaijtutlon of back taxes.
The neurosurgeon has made the Point-
ln not "fighUnf his own case-that wbo-
f!Ver brea~ the law (or whateft.r cau.~
should be prepared to pay the penalty,
Ziegler said. Dr. Mathews did not file re-
turns in 196.l
Ziegler said: "The Pre3ident feels the
Interest of the country and the commun·
ilies where NEGRO is established art
beter served by the release of Dr.. ,Math-.
ews and his return lo the vital work
NEGRO is involved in."
Ziegle r said the Preside-nt was getting
In some golfing in Palm Spr~ and
"bearing down" on his St.ale of tM Union
Message scheduled Jan. 22. He .tfso said
the President and . first family mlght
spend tonight 'again at the palatial Paint
Springs home of Walter Annenberg, am-
bassador to Great Britain.
Ziegler .said the President may leave
San Clemente Thursday or Friday. Hia
birthday is Friday and a eelebraUon is
expected in Washington . But the depar·
lure is not yet firm, Ziegler emphulzed.
He said the first famJJy will probably
register as California voters some time
<1 fter Tllesday. Ziegler said Julie and
Dav id l<.:lsenhower returned Sunday from
lheir Belgian visit.
Zie gler also said Budget Director Roh-
trt Mayo is wrapping up the fiscal 1971
budget and that all major decisions have
been made. It should be C<tlllplete this
week.
Woman lo Campaign
For Nevada Governor
CARSON CITY, Nev. (UPI) -Mn.
Margie Dyer, ~year~ Sp ark 1
housewife. today became the first woman
ever to run for governor ln Nevada .
She said she' would become the can--
didate {If the "average citizen " wM ha.!1
been "forgot.ten " by the present and past
state administratioM.
Orange Couc
Weatlier·
F~ir skies with loc11J gusty winds
brushing away the bad a1r II the
pi cture for Tuesday along the
coast. Temperatures continue to
cringe into the low 60's.
INSIDE TODA. Y
Orange C.'(l~OltU t1iter1 tht
decade of lht Stv~nlitl co.~ul.
/y tyeing the problerrl$ prtrmt-
ed by its bilrge011ing growth.
Page JO.
'
DAllY PllOT l
:Kei:inedy
Testifies
•
. At I nq_uest
·~"EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) -Sen.
'Edward M. KeMedy tesUUed for about
~· ~one hour today at the opening af the
~iecret tnquest into Miry Jo Kopechne's
'death. lJe will be back this afternoon.
"·'Jbe fnque>t' into the death of the 2&-
rr-old secretary began lmid tight
·security lri a century-old courthouse.
r Kenne<ty seemed theerful as he tmerg.
td fmn the courthouse along with five
Women and five rTien acquati1tances who
had attended a oookOut ~ together
tj>e night Mm l<opechne died In l<en-
sedy's car after it plunged into a tidal
:P!"d· .... Court clerk Thomas A. Teller told
Jiewsmen he would dlltrlbute a statement
'Ar J p.m .• presumably convering ground
iules imposed by Dl!trlct Judge Jame.s
A. Bo7Je, who presided at the inquest.
~: Kennedy, Who flew ln'frorn hls Hya:nni!:
f."qrt borne on. the mainland, said 11 he _entered the courthoute, "I'm hopeful we
'tan reach an end to what has become an
extraordinary length or time."
t .. "I'm hopeful the record will be com·
pete and I can get to the business of
4evoilng myaelf to the Senate."
Kennedy and nearly a dozen other sub-
ix>enaed witnu.se. -all accumpanied by
liwyen -walked into the heavily guard·
'ed. courthouse, in front of which milled
about 200 persons, mostly newsmen.
·Jucf&e Boyle presided over the inquest,
onltred b)' DiJtrict Attorney Edmund S.
Dini>.
<",Boy~ arrived at the courthouse mort
tban two hours before Kennedy.
· After laying down the ground rules for
the proceedlnp, Boyle was expected to
loqin interrogating Kennedy end JO
others who attended a cookout-mmion
the night Miu Y.opechne died. •
.~/lltogether, at least 20 persons have
been subpoenaed to testify.
~Ju.st as Kennedy and his wife Joan
reached the entrance to the courthouse,
the senator was uked by newsmen: "Are
)'OU glad it's finally under way?~'
f(ennedy turned, nodded, and replied:
••Yes, I am."
The Proceedings, which were to open
Sept. 3, were closed to the press and
public by order of the Massachusetts
Supreme Court. But It WU left to Boyle
to decide whether lawyers would cross-
~ witnesses and present evidence
aJ~lhetr own. t!idgartown Police Chief Dominick J.
Arena fold a packed news briefing Sun·
day nJg'ht Ught aecurity w0uld be en·
lorced at the inquest, "ilh uniform~
Jlllli!"! guarding uc:h .. ••trance to. If"
i'Mtho.... .
Police will escort witnesses lnto lM
.court and keep back a crowd of more
U,.n 200 newsmen here to cover the
ctl~brated cue. ..
From P.flfl" l
WIVES ..• · ·-a'Jio arranged for today's audience.
.The ~ spoke in Italian at the au· if1ence Wtlh a monsignor translatlng his
wOtds 1Dto English, Mrs. Stegman said. Bl.it. she added: "He understood
,.ferythlng we said. to him.
"You could tell that he really did sym-~thiu with us," she went on. "We were
all so touched. We couldn't believe \\'e
had re•illY shaken hands wllh the Pope.
He blessed us and said he would pray for
~of our husbands hldlvjdually.
"He gave ef,ch of us a medal."
Mrs. St.gman &aid &he end the t""
Mber Virginia womeo will return to Paris
ru...tay and try again to contact the
North Vietnamese delegation to the peace
lalks. "We are going to keep trying until they
see us," &he said. "We're running short
of money but we're giong lo slay until it
runs out."
The women met with the North Viet·
riameu last week in Paris but Mrs.
Stegman said the delaUon "just went
around in circles."
DAILY PILOT
OUHGE COAST ,Ual,.UHIMG COM,AH'f'
tte!.•tf N. w.,4
Ptftlltnl Ind "'*'ilhl'I'
J•c.lr ti. C11tley
""' .... """' tnf c;..,t Mflltttr
,,.,,,,.,, Kte~il
'"""' ri., .... , A. M ... ,i.in•
M•ft.,"'9 Edllor
~;~~ui P. Nill
l -ltltll Cit( Edi!., . L..t•• ... It Offk• 222 fer11t Avtnu,
M1lUnt A4J,.," r.o. ••• '''· t26s2
°""' --CAt!• M.w: Ut lllftl lty Stf'ffl ~ lndl· nu """'' 111bOI "'°""'.,. ......,H..,..,, lfl"': Ulll lcltll l:>u•"••d
,...,.... ,,,., ······" Ciful"11• e.,t ... 1 .. 111
tenrlfll\ 1"'-Ot....... C....ot ,~11 .... l!ot
, ... ~,. ,.. -1"'1M. """'"'·· .et1'N ~ .,. r•....-.1-" """" _., M ~ w;!Mvf 1J1JCl9I ""° ......... ., *"''''" -· ... ..,. cltu ,_..,.. ,.111 .i N...,.n ••Kfl
tiff C-lot Met. Gol/Mnllt, """''"': ... ..,
C'.""" 0 • -1111" •1 ~tll UJt ll'lfftlll~I , .. ,. ... ,, ••*" ..... tl •• lllOftlll,,, .
1
•
Wrapped ·IJp in Work
The Milwaukee Mllitaire Cadets were posting the ·
colors in competition when the banner raised by
Donna Banaszynski, 13, toppled and covered her
!Socialism'·
hea<i. Like a good soldier, she kept right on march-
ing.
Not Issue
·But Board May Discuss P.arents' Charges
By BARBARA ta!EIBICH
Of tlM OIU'I' ,llfl lhiff
A lengthy report au~mltted b)' Edward
Hind for about two m,or,e • .weeks, Taylor go, regardless of individual financial pre>-
.. 1d today. . blems. •
.. 'Df.~~,,~ lrafornaer · "'' · .
Fo li r M~r~ ·n ~Jd
' . . . -;
I ,G -· . ·R id n . am1ng .a'. ....
I DETROIT (UPI) -Acting partly on
information supplled }>Y Jerome "Dizzy"
Dean, federal • agents have arrested ' another four -ptl'60nl!I IQ ' crackdown pg
an """•"! · 1100,000.per~ay natlonwldii
helling rlrig -~\.mar'.ltivo!ve famoos
1J>Of1s figure<, tt was "'"6uoced todiy.
James· E, Ritchie, llpeClal U.U\ant
U.S. a1torney, said the arrut ol lhrte
bookmakers came in Bllo:id, Miss., during
the weekend. Agents act~ on in·
formation $Upplied by Dean, a Hall ot
Fame baseball pitcher with the St. Louis
Cardinals and Chicago Cubs during the
J930's, and oow a sportscaster.
Dean ii fljrlllshlni lnlormalkln that the
government is "very plea!ed to get,"
Jamea H. Brickley, U.S. attorney for the
eaatern district of Mictiigan, told
reporters at a late.morning news COfl·
Rites Conducted
For Laguna Artist
McCl ellan Cole
Private funeral services were held In
Twentynine Palms for Laguna Beach
artist McClellan A. Cole, who died Jan. I
while visiting the desert c:ommunity. He
was 68.
Ar. exhibitor at the Festival of Arts for
thrtt years, Cole was known for his
whimsical wood carvings.
A native of Kansas, he came to
California at an early age and attended
schools In Pasadena. A commercial artist
for nlany years, he taught and held an
administrative pasiUon at Los Angeles
Trade Technical C-Ollege before reti ring
to Laguna Beach in 1966.
He assisted the Mennaids, women's
division or the Chamber of Commerce, by
designing their beautification leaflet~ and
constructing the Mermaid infonnation
booth at the Festival.
ference . "He appears to be vtl'y
cooperative, very helpful." .
"The vast majority of those In the
sports world are honest men," Brlckley
said. "But the fact tha't a relaUve fe\f
have had contacts (wit!\ the alleged bet·
Ung ring) is important to the spori>
world as it is JmpOrtant to us.
"The evidena is that there were con·
tacts with members of the sports world.
Now this could be serioui; or something
relaljvely innocenl-:-may~ stuJ!.id, but
relatively innocent."
Another man was arrested tn NeY;
York, bringing to J4 lhe number taken in-
to cu•todY' sjjice the feeler~ gambling
crackdown bea:an NeW Year's Day.
Several more arrest.s were expected
this week. Some ot' them may involve
prominent sports figures, agents said.
Dean was the ~y sportl figure men-
tioned by authorities in the operation to
date. He was searched but not arrested in
his Las Vegas hotel room New Year's
Day, and since then has been cooperating
with Internal Revenue Service agenta,
authorities said. ·
Dean said earlier, "I can't be involved
ln it (the betting ring) because I don 't
know anything about it."
But Ritchie said today that • Dean
"possibly has been victimized by pro-
fesSionat bookmakers ... (and} abused
and utilized by friend! in an attempt &o
obtain information oo sporting events.
Raids conducted during the weekend
and on New Year.'s Day have "revealed
only the tip of the gambllneoperation,"
so far, Ritchie said.
Poor Visibility
Accident Cause
A Sunday aft~ collision involving
an Episcopal mi st.er and the son of a
Laguna Beach r aurateur probably was
caused by bushes and parked cars in·
terfering with visibility, pc;ilice said today.
The Rev. Robert L. Cornelison, tt,
31971 C.00.st Highway, South Laguna and
Douglas Yang Hyan, 17, 275 Diamond St.
arrived simultaneously at the intersection
c. 1.orr; chairman ol the Parents Com·
ml~ee for TradiUonal EducaUon, charg-
ing the Laguna U.,Ch ochool l)'llem with
"socialilli.c lndoctrlna.Uon" is not ln 0£.
ficlal item on the agenda for Tueaday
night'• school board meeting.
. Boord Preoident Lanj·Taylor seld the
evaluation of a· study ee!lion held 1aat Ju·
ly 2S hadbttii submitted to the board last
week·, but no request wu made to•have It
placed on the agenda.
One more interview is scheduled with
one of the four final contenders for the
plSiUon, out of 7t original applicants, and
after the interview it is likely that some
board memhen will visit the applicant's
present place of employment before mak·
1ng ,; final choice.
Ullom also will seek board approval of
a proposed lllatement supporting the
school tax override and bond election to
be included with ballota in the Feb. 2t
election.
Citing increased Operating costs, the
statement notes the eliminaUon of some
school programs and delay in purchasing
certain needed materials, thereby in-
curring greater eventual cost, along with
"precariously low" reserves.
lo.fr. Cole is survived by his widow,
Dorothy, of the home: 444 Bluebird Can·
yon Drive ; a daughter, Mrs. Ann Green
of Encino; two brothers, Dallas. of San
Gabriel and Francis of Eugene, Ore., and
one grandson.
Burial wu In the Twentynine Palms
cemetery.
of Catalina. and Pearl Streets at 1':25-..
p.m., police reported.
.. Jr Mr. Lorr or hill committee
membec_s ~~· aL the meetin,a:." Taylor
s8.id, "~ may be s001e d1$CUssion, I
think some ot the board members would
like to answer certain of the charges."
Taylor &aid the July study had been ar·
ranged to give the complaining parent.I a
chance to discuss their criticism of &Orne
of the history and social science courses
being taught in Laguna.
The meeting also was attended by
teachers and members o( the school ad·
ministration. After the se.s&on, Taylor
asked all o( those present to .submit writ·
ten evaluations of the discussion. "We
planned to put all the repon_, togelher
and go ~ver them to determine be &land
the board should take. We have been
waiting for Mr. Lorr's report. Now that
we have it. it will be i;tudied along with
the others.·•
Lorr criticized the "inquiry concept" of
history teaching and the d i g tr I c l
~flllosopby regardtog 1be neceaot~ of
teaching "life adjuslment."
The board will not be ready to name a
new business manager to succted Ed
Student candy salea and car washes
have helped make it po&!ible to keep up a
IChedule of acbbol field trips, despite lack
of funds, Superintendent Dr. William
Ullom will advise trustees.
He will seek board approval of 11
sclence .ticld 'trip to Morro Bay for 50
Thur&ton Intermediate School students
Jan. 13 to 16, at no cost to the district.
Failure of the last tax override left the
district without funds to finance field
trip!, according to Ullom. Howeve r, a
number of trips have been financed by
student fund·raising efforts, assessment
of pupils for all or part of their. share of
the~e<>st and donations by organizations,
Ullom said.
Sludents from Thurston have gone to
Joshua Tree, Colorado River, Havasupai
River and Morro Bay, he said, and
elementary school pupils have attended
concerts through donations of private
groups.
The superintendent will point out to
board members that., under the state
education code, no pupil can be required
to pay any fee, so any such field trip ~n
not be required as part of the education
program. Howevet, be notes,-~ 'candy
sales and car washes so far have pro-
vided enough funds to permi~ the
part.ictpaUon of all students wishing to
June Allyson Returns
To -Stage in 'Carats'
Actress June Allyson of Newport Beiach
has been persuaded by producer ,David
Merrick to end her retirement and re-
turn to the BroadWay stage 11he left 27 .
years ago1o head for ~·a~ter of H~~Y
wood.
'llle'Lido Isle'?eSidenl will pi., the role or a 40-year-old-divorcee who falb in love
wjth a much younger man, Mmkk an-
nounced.
Miss Allyson will take over for Julie
Harris in "Forty Carats," which recenll,y
celebrated its fim anniversary playing
at 1he Morosco Theater on the Gre.at
White Way. .•
A national company starring Barbara
Rush ls currently playing In Chicago.
Abe Burrows, the comedy's original di·
rector, is directing Miss A1lyson'1 entry
into the &how tonight.
Miss Ally!IOR last lppeared on Broad--
way in "Pif•ma Hatue0 In 1"3, stePo
ping in for Betty Hutton u understud1
for five performances be.tore Holywood
·called.
She was signed to a contract by Metro-
Goldwyn-Mayer and debuted In .the 1ilm
"Best Foot Forward." continuing on to
star ln more than 30 Ulms before appear·
ing ln htr own television acrl111.
Mia Allyson went into re:tirement fol·
lowing the death of her prod-husband
Dick Powell several years ago and later
married aoclety barbtr Glenn Maxwell
The wUoa wu stormy and the ~pie
parted, only to remarry later •nd re-
dlvarce aigain more recently.
ENDING RETIREMENT
Newport'• June Allyaon
f'ro1n PQfJfl l
ACCIDENTS. ••
witnesses, was a man wtaring 1 beard
who was accompanied by a · female
~ger at the lime of the aetident.
The vehicle, police said, was lee.ft leaving
\he interstctlofl at a hlah rate of speed
and may h•ve received slight damage to
tile lefl front fender as a result ol lbe co~
llslon.
Fit.t&trald, who maltff his home at
13641 lowa St, ~as tran!ported to the
holpllll by ambula~. wh11re IW'geons
had to remove his shatltttd ieg. lte also
1Uffered mu!Uple contU!lons a n d
abrasions tn the accident, according to a
hospital 11poke$man.
The family has suggested memorial
donations to the Mermaid! for a
memorial tree to be planted in Laguna
Beach.
Both drivers complained of "obstruc·
lions" blocking the view of the other car
until it was too late to stop. Neither was
injun!d but. both cars 1ustained
moderate front end damage.
the
city consultants
recommend
Balboa Bay Club
lease extension!
The City of Newport Beach hired a respected, independent research firm,
Development Research Associates of Los Angeles, to evaluate the Balboa Bay
Club lease proposal. Here is what the firm's report says about
EXTENDING LEASES OF THIS TYPE
11We believe that it is important 10
point out that grourid leas·es of this
type are cenerally extended throUgh
renea:otiatlon prior to the actual ter·
mination date of the original lease.
•
The reason for this ls th<tt the lessee
norm1lly makes a significa nt capital
investment ••.• and continued mod·
emlzatlon becomes increaslnc infeasi·
bit as the rem1ininc li!:ase term is
reduced.
In conclusion, we recommend that
tho City IMk a l111e utenslon which
Is equitable to both the City and the
Balboa Bay Club whiclt .in allow for
the full economic development pro·
cram which we believe will extend
will beyond the currently projected
expansion procram."
The Balboa Bay Club lease is down
to 29 years. The Club seeks the lease
extension so that it can obtain finan c·
ing to continue Its development pro·
gram and has agreed to terms which
raise the annual rental, increase the
percentage of gross sales, and pro-
vides for period ic cost·of·llvfng
adjustments as well as periodic rene·
goliation of all terms.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE FROM CITY PROPERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JANUARY 13
I.
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Bea eh
EDITION
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VOl. 63, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA
• ·IXOD
Toro Wife Losing Catadidate
Of POW
.
Sees Pope
Miners' Figure;_
Family Killed
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' ' '
Pier Pia•• Progresses
U.S. Ar1ny Corps of Engineers is soliciting comments or objection s
on this plan fo r 600-foot recreation pier at south Laguna's Ali so
Beach. Plans for pier, which will be llghled for night use, have been
flied with Corps of Engineers by Orange County Harbor Diilrict. Lt.
Col. s. J , Black, deputy district engineer for \he corps, says Jan. 16
is deadline for written comments to reach b.Js Los Angeles office.
County 11eedJ permit from Corps of Engineers before pier can be
bull~
) (
County Beac hes
T a~k S!,!lteduled
\
, . • • .1rs ..
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A Balboa tsland girt be<:ame Orange
CoUntf'• fourlh 1970 traffic fatality Sun·
day night.
Catilornia Highway Patrol officer1 11ald
Donna Lynn Bell,. 16, of 222 Coral Ave ...
was pronounced dead at the scene at
County Tralllc
Death Toll
•'
Ila z
Today's Flnal
'
N.oY. Stoeks
•
TEN CENTS
em enc
at Los Alamitos Ger1er1l Hoepital.
Garden Gro~e teenager Mlc~atl G·ary
Graham, l&, also died Friday .afternoon
fOllowing · a broadside coJUslon1 on <Knott
Avenue. The driver of the seCorid vehiclt,
· Akira Hirata of Anaheim, 111 reported •In
critical condition at Stanton Comrrtunity
Hospttal. Witnesses asserted the youttr w.as involved· in a drag race when he, 106t
control of his' Vehicle· and 'Plowed intO (he
car driven by Hirata. . •
~tn WestJnlnster: poliCe ,;aid tOOay ,thcy
a,e ~till seeking •a black• 1961 or 1962 El
Camino Chevrolet in connecti on with a hit
aOd run accident Saturday which resulted
in the amputati'2n or the lei: of an elderly
man.
Westminster resident G·e r a Id W.
Fitzgerald, 64, is in ".serious bu( Im -
proving" condition .today at Westminster
Community Hospit.al.followlng a .tut .and
run accident Safurday ane~n th Which
he lost his left leg. , .
Fitzgerald was 11truck down b)' an
automohlle at 6:'37 p.m. 'at Goltieil •West
St'reet and HlltnbOldt Avenue by.w'hat ap-
peared to be•a. bla<k 1161: or 1961 Ell
Camino' Chevrolet. poll~e said. .-
The driv er of the car, according, to
-(See ACCIDENTS, Page Z)
' Stock /tlarkel1
Negro Tax
Evader
Commutedij\
By RICllARD P. NALL
OI ..._ 0.11• "ll•f Sl11f
Wo1nan lo Campaign
For Nevada G'overnor
"i
CARSON CIT.Y, !!"'" (UPI) -Mrs. Margie Dyer, ~year-old Sp arks
housewife, today became the first woman
ever to run for governor in Nevada.
She sakl she .would become the can..
didatc or the "average citizen" wbo has
been "forgotten" by the present and past
state administriUons.
Orange C:out
Weatlier
Fair skies wilh local gusty wlnd1
brushing away the bad air Ls the
picture fo~ Ti.tesday aJong the
coast. Temperatures conlinue to
cringe into the low S0'1.
INSIDE TODAY ·.
Ot'otzge Countt,t entera the
decadt of the Seventies careful-
ly e11etna tl1e problems pre.st11t-
ed by it.t burgeoning growui.
Page 10. ' ..
...
--------------------------------------------.
!:, J DAILY l'ILOT
-Kennedy
• ' Test.if_ies . . .... • . .... ' • • •
At Inquest
· EDGARTOWN, Mass. (UPI) -Stn.
·F.dward M. Ke.nnedy testified for about
icne hour today at the opening of the
·iecret inquest into Mary Jo Kopechne's
.'deaLh. He will be back th.Ls afternoon.
-:rhe inquest into the, Cleath of the »-
")1ear-c)ld secretal}' began amid tight
-4eeurlty in a century-old courthouse.
~· Kennedy seemed cheerful as he emerg-
ed from the courthouse along with five
""omen and five men acquaintances who
had attended a cookout party together
the night Miss Kopechne died tn Ken-
;!!edY'• car alter it plunged into a tidal r!!d· • Court clerk Thomas A. Teller told
n8WSm.en he would distribute a statement
·•t: 2 p.m., presumably converlng cround
1Wes imposed by District Jud&e James
A. Boyle, who presided at the inquest.
J\ennedy, who flew in from h.is Hyannis
Fort home on the mainland, said as he
lntered the courthouse, "I'm hopeful We
an reach an end to what has become an
extraordinary length of time."
~'I'm hopeful tht record will be com·
,RJete and I can get to the business of.
ttevoUng mystlf to the Senate.••
~.Kennedy and nearly a doi.en other sub-
Jl<Jenaed witnesses -all aceompanied by
liJJrYers -walked into the heavily guard-
)ld courthouse, In front of which milled
~t 200 persons, mostJy newsmen.
.; Judge Boyle presided. over the inquest,
ordered by DiBtrict Attorney Edmund S.
J.linis.
... -.Boyle arrived at the courthouse more ~ two hours before Kennedy.
. After laying down the ground rules for 11\e proceedilll!•. Boyle wu expected lo
~gin inlerrogating Kennedy and . JO
-flUier$ who attended a, -cookoat-reunion ~ nlgbt Miss Y.opeclme died.
~~together, at least 20 persons have
Ileen subpoenaed lo testify.
':Just as --Xennedy and his wife Joan
rfacbed the entrance to the courthouae,
i~e 'Senator was asked by newsmen: ·"Are
you glad it's finally under way?" .
Kennedy turned, nodded , and replied:
"Yts, I am." ·
'Ibe proceedings, which Were to OJ)efl
Stpt. 3. were closed to the· press and
public by order of the Massachusetts
Supreme Court. But It was left to Boyle
lo decide whether lawyers would cross-
eramine witnesses and present evtdence
of ·their own. ~gartown Police Chief Dominick J. >kna to1f:1 a -packed news ~efing Sun·
day night tight security wOuld be en-
forced at the inqum, wJth uniformed
rlolico _gua,rJling ·eadl e-IQ !he
t;Ourthouse. .
Police will esc<irt witnesses into the
Coort and keep back a crowd of more
than 200 newsmen here to cover the
celebrated case.
' From Page l
WIVES ...
aJ8o arranged for today's audience.
1be Pope spoke in Italian at the a1;1·
dieQce with a monsignor translating his
W.ords Into English, Mrs. Stegman said.
BlJl,· she added: "He understood
9'VM'ything we said to him.
"You coold tell that he really did sym-
pi.thiu with us," she went on. "We were
all ao touched. We couldn 't believe we
hM really l!llaUn hands with .the Pope.
He blesaed us and !&id he would pray for
each of our husbands individually.
"He gave each of us a medal ."
Mrs. Stegman said she and the t~
111.htt Virginia women will return to Pans
rue.day and try agabt to contact the
North Vietnamese del~gatioo to the peace
lalks.
"We ani going to keep trying until they
see us," l!lbe said. ''We're running short
of money but we're giong to stay until it
runs oul"
The women met with the North Viet·
namese last. week in Paris but Mrs.
Stegman gajd the delatlon '"just went
around in circles."
DAILY PILOT
011.AHGl COAST flUILllHING COMP.I.NV
ltob•i-,J N. w,~,
''"''""' ..,.. flu0111Mr
J•ck II: • .C11rlrt
\liu flrHIO"'"I •r.f·~I MIMfW
Tlio..,•t IC1t...tl Eol!or
Tfto..,11 A, Mvrphi111
Mo"~inl fdllot
lti~~1rd '· N•lt ,., ....... 11111:11
C 1Y fl+llr
Mtt-h•• Office
2J1 F1r11t "'"""ij•
M•ili119 Atlch1t1: P.O. loir 666, •26i?
Ottier Offlt11
tel .. MfMI ~-WQI llY Sf•ttl H ...... I klCll• n11 W"I II-&e..1""1,.
.,Wlll•llflO:I 1i'.&c11: l1f1J lt•c~ 1:i.i.,v11d
~ ,d,~, _,,
Wrapped Vp in W~k
DETROIT (UPI) -Acting partly on ference. "He appears lo be -very
Information supplied by Jerome "Dizzy'' cooperaUve, very helpful."
Dean, federal agents have arrested "The vast majority of llio,,e ~~ sports world are honest men," BJ1cP.ey another four persons in a crackdown on said.. "But the .fact that· a reliUve· few an alleged 1100,IJOO.per-day nadonwlde · ·have had contacts (with l11_e aIJeted bel-
betllng ring. tl>al .may involve .lalllQll' ting rlri&> is 'lmporlalll to. p;e sports
1ports figures, it was annaunced today., world u it ii 'im)>rtan,t \o ~·
James E. Ritchie, special .•r ~~t "'lbe evidence is that \here were con·
U.S. attorney, sai~ the ~rre~t o "'"ee tacts with members of the 'sports: WJ>l'ld.
bookmakers came 1n Biloxi, Miss., during -N · this could be serious or something the weekend. Agents acted on in-ow, . be ... ·d but · ~ -fonnation su pplied by Dean, a ·Hall . of rela~vely !nnocent ~ may 'l'upi •
Fame baseball pitcher with the St. Louis relatively mnocent.
Cardinals and Chicago Cubs during the Another man was arrested in New
1930's, and now a sportscaster. York, bringing to 14 the number taken in.
Dean Is lurnisbing lnfomiaUon that lhe lo custody !Ince the feder,al gambling
government is "very pleased to get," crackdown began New Years Day.
James H. Brickley, U.S. attorney for the Several. more arrests were expected
eastern district or Michigan, ·told this week. Some of them may 1!1volve
reporters at a late-rp.orning news con· prominent sports figUres, agents 1114. ·r Dean was-the only sports-figure men-
. tioned by authorlUes in the· opera:tiOn to
Ri Co d d date. He was searched but not arrested in tes ll UCle his Las Vegas hotel room New Year's
For Laguna Artist
McClellan Cole
Day, and since then has been cooperating
with Internal {tevenue Service aaebta,
authorities said.
Dean said earlier, "I can't be involved
In it (the betting ring) because I don't
know anything about it."
The Milwaukee Militaire Cadeta were ll<>•tlng the
colors in compeUtion when the banner raised by
Donna Banaszynski, 13, toppled and covered her
hea<i. Like a good soldier, ahe kept right on march-
ing. •
Private funeral services were held in
Twentynjne Palms for Laguna Beach
artist McClellan A. Cole, who died Jan. t
~hile visiting the desert community. He
was 68.
But Ritchie said today that Dean
"possibly has been victimized bY.· Pro-
fessional bookmakers •.. (and) lbUled
and utilized by friends in an attempt to
obtain informatioo on sporting events.
Raids conducted during the weekend
and on New Year's Day have "revea~ed
only the tip of the gambling operation.''
so far, Ritchie aaid .
'S . 1· ' __ oc1a ism · Not Issue
An exhibitor at tbe Festival of Arts for
three yea!'!, Cole was known for his
whimsical wood carvings.
But Board M~y Dis.cuss Parents' Charges
A native of Kansas, he came to
California at an early age and attended
.schools in Pas8dena. A commercial artist
for many years, be taught and held an
administrative posiUon at Lo.s Angeles
Trade Technical College before retiring
to Laguna Beach in 1966.
He assisted the Mennaids, WGmen's
division of the Chamber of Commerce, by
designing their beautification leaflets and
constructing the ·Mermaid infonnation
booth at the Festival.
Poor Visibility
Accident Cause
A Sunday afternoon collision lnvolvfng
an Episcopal minister and the IOft of I
Laguna Beach restaurateur probably WU
caused by bushes and parked cars in.
terfering with visibility, police said today.
By BAllBARA JUU!:JlllCB
Of .... Delbr Pn.t ,,.,,
A lengthy report submitted by Edwanl
C. LorT, chairman of the Par<nt. Com-
mittee for Traditfonal F.ducaUon, charg·
ing lhe Laguna Beach school system wit!>
"socialistic lndoctrinaUon" l!; not an of.
tidal item on the agenda for Tuesday
night's 1ehool board meeting.
Board Pre1)dent Larry Taylor said the
evaluation·of a study aess:ion held lat Ju·
ly 26· bad been submitt.d to !he board last
week, but no request was made to have lt
placed on the agenda. .
"If Mr. Larr or hi> committff
members are at the meeUl):g,'' Taylor
iaid, "there may "be some discussion, 1
think some of the board members would
like to answer certain of the charges."
Taylor said the July study had been at·
ran ed to ·ve the com lain arents a
c ance 1scuss r clsm of &Otne
of the history and social science courses
being {aught in Laguna.
The meeting also was attended by
teachers and members of the school ad·
ministration. After the se.ssion, Taylor
asked all of those present to submit writ·
ten evaluations of the discussion. "We
planned lo put all the reports together
and go over them to determine he stand
the board should take. We have been
waiting for Mr. LotT's reporl Now that
we have it, it will be studied along with
the others."
Lorr criticized the "inquiry concept" of.
history teaching and the d is t r I c t
philosophy regarding the necesatty of
teaching ••rue adjustment."
1be board will not be ready to name a
new business manager to succeed F.d
Hind for about two more weeks, Taylor
aald today.
One more intmtew Is 1Cheduled with
one of the four final contenders for the poslUon, out of 74 original applicants, and
after the interview it is likely that some
board members will visit the applicant'•
preaent place of employment before mak-
ing a final choice.
Student candy s:ales and ear washes
have helped make it possible to keep up a
schedule of school field ttlps, despite lack
of funds, Superintendent Dr. William
Ullom will advise trustees.
He ~U aeek board apprqval of a
oclence lleld trip to Morro Bay !qr SO
Thurston Intermediate School students
Jan. 13 to 16, at no cost to the district.
Failure of the last tax override left the
district without funds to finance field
· according to 1JUC1D. However. a
number of tiips have been financed by
student fund .raising efforts, assessment
of pupils for all or part of their share of
the cost and donations by organizations,
Ullom said. ·
Students from Thurston have gone to
Joshua Tree, Colorado River,· Havasupai
River and Morro Bay, he said, l!ind
elementary school pupils have attended
concerts through donations of private
~r·superintendent will point out to
board members that. under the state
education code, no pupil can be required
to pay any fee, so any such field trip ca11<
not be required as part of the education
program. However, he notes, the c9-0dy
sales and car washes so far have pro-
vided enough funds to permit the
participation of all students wishing to
June Allyson Returns
To Stage in 'Carats'
Actress June AIIY90tl of Newport Buch
has bten pertuaded by producer David
Merrick to end her reUretnent and re-
turn to the Broadway stage sbe left 27
years ago to hea~ for the gllter of HollY·
,wood.
The Lldo'lsle resident will play the ro1e
of a fG.year-old divorc:ee who falls in Jove
wllb a much younger man, Merrick an-
nounced.
Misa Allyson will take' over f~ Julie
Harri• ·in "Forty Carats," which recenUy
celebrated its fu'St anniversary playing
at tht Morosco Theater on the Great
. White Way. -
A national company starring Barbara
Rush is currently playing in-Chicago.
Abe Burrows, the comedy's original di·
rector, is directing Mi ss AUyson's entry
into the show tonigh.t.
Miss Allyson last ~pea.red on Broad·
way in "Panama Hattie" jn 1943, ste~
ping In for Betty Hutton u understu<ty
for five performances before Holywood
called.
She wu,lgned to a conlract by Metro-
Goldwyn·1tfayer and debuted In the film
"Best Foot Forward," continuing on to
star In more than 30 films before appear-
ing in her own television series.
Miss Allyson went Jnto retirement fol·
lowing tl\e dealh of her producer husband
Dick Powell several years ago and later
married society barber G"nn Ma~lt.
The ·union wu stormy and. tl\e couple.
parted, only to remarry Tatu and re-
dlvorc(! 14ain more recently.
'
ENDING RETIREMENT
Newport'• June Allyson
From PGfJe J
ACCIDENTS. • •
witnesses, was a man wearing a beard
wbo was accompanied by a female
pauenger aL the time of the accident.
The vehicle, police aald, was eeen leaving
the intersection at. a high r.ate of speed
and may have received 11l1ht damage to
the left lronl fender as a result of the col·
lision.
Filf.gerald, who ma);e1 his home at
13641 lowa St., was tranaported to the
holpttal by ambulance, where surgeons
had to remove hla shattered leg. He also
1uffered multiple contusions a n d
abrasions In the accident, according to a
hoap(ial spokesman.
go, regardless of individual financial pro-
blems.
Ullom also wiD seek board approval of
a proposed statement supporting the
school tax override and bond election to
be included with ballots in the Feb. 24
election. / Citing increased operaUng costs, the
statement notes the elimination of some
school programs~ delay in purchasing
certain needed niaterials, thereby Jn--
cuhlng greater eventual cost, along with
"precariously I~w" reserves.
the
f\1:r. Cole is survived by bis widow,
Dorothy, of the home ; 444 Bluebird Can-
yon Drive; a daughter, Mrs. Ann Green
of Encino; two brothers, Dallas, of San
Gabriel and Francis of Eukene, Ore., and
one grandson.
Burial was in the Twentynine Palma
cem'etery.
Tile family has suggested memorial
doaaUons to the Mermaids for a
memorial tree to be planted in. Laguna
Beach.
city ~onsultants
recommend
Balboa Bay Club
lease extension!
The Rev. Robert L. Comeli.!on, 41,
31971 Coast Highway, Sooth Laguna and
Douglas Yang Hyan, 17, 275 Diamond St.
arrived simultaneously at the intenedion
of Catalina and Pearl Streets at 1:25
p.m., police reported.
Both drivers complained of "obstruc-
tions" blocking the view of. the other car
until it was too late to stop. Neither wa•
injured but both cars IUltained
moderate front end damage.
The .City of Newport Beach hired a respected, independent teseuclr firm, .
Development Research Associates of Los Angeles, lo mluate ·tlie Balboa liay
Club lease proposal. Here is what"the firm's report says about
EXTENDING LEASES OF THIS TYPE .
"We-believe that it is important to
point out that ground leases of this
type are generally extended through
reneaotiation prior to the ilCtuaJ fer•
mination date of the original lea~e.
The reason for this is that the lessee
normally makes a srghificant capital
investment ••• and continued mod·
emization becomes increasing infeasi·
ble as the remalnlnr lease· term is
reduce~.
lrt conclusion, w1 recommend that
the City SHk • 1t1t .. 111en1lon which
Is equitable to both the City ond the
Balboa Bay Club 10hlch .,Ill allow for
the full economic development pro-
:~:Y~~~ ~~ ~~:~.;'~aj:~::
expansion ~am.''
The Balboa Bay Club lease is down
to 29 years. The Club seeks the lease
extension so that it can obtain 1inanc·
lng to cont inue its dev~opment pro•.
gram and has agree.SS to terms which
raise the annual rental, increase the
percentage of gross sales, and pro-
vides for periodic cost-of-living
adjustments as well as perjodic ran•
goliation of all terms.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE FROM CITY PROPERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JANUARY 13
•
)
I
t
Hauling Bonte the Hardware
Rusi Push Buildup
Safe guard System
Expansion Urged
WASHINGTON (AP)
Some key Pentagon offlclals,
a>ncerned because Russia is
pushing its . missile buildup.
favor expanding the Safe.guard
antimissile system. · ·
No final ded.slon has yet
been made on whether to in·
elude money for such an ·ex-
pansion In the new defense
budget, now lrtually ready
for submission to Congress
later this month. ' ~ move to expand the an-
Umiiillejiiojed beyona the
present limited first phase
would almoilt certainly meet
strong opposlUon in t ~ e
Senate, where t h e , ad·
mhtistratlon's Safeguard pro-
gram barely survived last
&ummer.
R. Laird's estimate or more
than 230 last May.
Laird has warned Congress
that j[ the -Russians continue
insta:::.rg the SS9 at the
present rate, they could mount
1•bout CJ by the lt1f.1975
period. And, wllh expected ac-
curacy improvement, they
prc::.ably could deslroy 9S per-
cent of the 1,000 Minuteman Jn
underground launch silos.
After months of heavy bat-
tling, Cungress approved a
-"phe: figure one" deploy·
.ment..of the Safeguard missile
de(ense at two minuteman
bases In North Dakota and
td'ontana.
honors, too. Fro.m left are OCC speaking champs Pierce Lucas, Rita Wakely,
I \-~0-ta_n_g_e_C_o_a~s-t_C_o_l~e_g_e_F~or-e~n-si_c_s._T_•_am..:..:=c=ap=t=u=red..:..:=s=w=ee=p=s=la=k=e=s=a=w=a-r-d-a-t~re_c_•_nt~ Southern CaJ1forrua championships and brought home most of the individual
· Lyal Herzog, Bill Landers, Nova Hachez and Je.an Blankenship.
Also, some authorities. are.
concerned about th e effect an
exp<Msion would have on the
arms limitation talks due to
gel down to hard bargaining in
April.
But top administration of·
ficials are strongly infl uenced
in their think.In~ by in-
telligence information that the
Russians are continuing ·their
deploymen t of the huge SS9
missile on wha't one source
ca lled "a methodical basis."
The Pentagoo can be ex•
peeled to ask for another '900
million in the new defenSe
budget to continue with phase
one, \\'hich ts designed to get
the two ABM sites in shape to
protect P.flnuteman missiles at
Malstrom Air Force Base,
Monic, and Grand Forks
Air rce Base, North Dakota,
by 1 74. Funds also could be
included for acquiring land for
additiooal sites.
I !
~ Influenza Sleuths Baffled
WASHINGTON (AP
Government influenza sleuths.
reiterating confidence t h e
United States will be spared
any nationwide ep idemic this
winter. said Friday they 're
still trying to determ ine why
six states were essentialJy
bypassed by the wave of Hong
Kong fiu that hit the nation in
1968.
DISeue detectlves or the
U.S. Public..lleallh Service's
Commtmlca6re Disease Center
In Atlanta, Ga., said in
telephone interviews that if
they could solve the puzzle, it
Wo men's
Fashi on Shoes
Were SlJ to S:!2!
697
could have worthwhile signi-
ficance.
The six stales invol ved in
the ril'ldle are \Visconsin.
Nebraska and •lawa ii whose
health departments, sa ys
COC, reported only isolated
outbreaks; and Mississippi,
Oklahoma, and Texas which
reported regional outbreaks.
This contrasts sharply with
the situation reported by the
health departments of the
oth_er « states, l!laid Dr. Alan
Brodsky, head of CDC's in-
fluenza surveillance divi sion.
Dr. James Mason, deputy
directo:' of CDC, termed the
six-stale situation a mystery
-warran ting continued In-
vestigation to d e t e r m i n e
whether some climatic or en·
vironmenla \ fa ctors were in-
volved, or, indeed, so me factor
not yet even thought of.
The disease was s o
widespread in the United
States last winter that most of
the population i.!1 temporarily
·immune to the wily microbe
th&t causes Hong Kong flu.
The SS9, which can hurl a
single 25-megaton warhead or
three 5-megaton warheads, is
considered a threa t to knock
out U.S. Minute man missiles
in a possible surprise. attack
and thus destroy much o( the
U.S. deterrent.
According to c u r r e n t
reports, the Russians have
more than 250 of the SS9
missile operational or under
construction.
This is an increase over
Secretary of Defense Melvin
Men'• Cushioned
Dress Shoe•
Regular $:?.)
O CC P1·esident
lleatls Council
Orange Coast College Presi-
dent Robert B. ~1oorc ha1
been elected president ot the
Southern California Industry.
Education Council.
Mc.:.1e will take office Jan. t
and will serve for one year.
The COllll.Cil__.bring.s togeUler
leaders in the fields o( in·
dustry and education t o
motivate youth to e n l e r
various technical professional
field~.
Assorted Big
Boys'
Dres• Shoes
D r elQiel"e \
Me11•8 p l\ 1997 I. Reg.$7.99io~J0.99
:.:;.~!;cs ,~, • Cboo.e from •up-on• ; 4 9 7
9 ' •nd osford1 in sev~ 9 7 1 l d I -.• Choo,;e fron1 n••••• •': era 11ly e1 an co o.... J i-lyles and colors.
Ideal for 6.clioo/.
Assortm~nt of
Infants' Shoes
· Re!tJ lar SJ.99
lo $6.99
297
•S et1era J i 1y les ror
co mfort •nd l!Up·
por~ assorted 11iie1
Assortmenl of Women'~ Shoes
Were $5.99 lo 112
WCornen'1. <:hildren•1
oz .. "Ii .-...o PPers
-Were SJ.9tJ
lo '6.9') 297
• l "arie1v r . abJc • o cornlort. · 1 bl)'le.s, fabric1 an( ro/on:.
,,~
r\ ' I '
•Gigantic 1election oC
1'eeh, flats and sport
1hoe1.
•Great yariety to 3 9 7
cbOO!le from. Manr
111yle1 and colon.
Prices Effecti ve,
Beginning T oday
. A11k About Sears
Convenient Credit Pl1ns
~-------------------------------------------------, IMJENA PAaK El MOtflE lONO IEACH PICO ot Rlmpau POMONA SOUTH COAST ~ I CANOGA PAIK GlENDAlE OlYMPK: .. $OTO SANTA ~A lOOANC! I
1 COIN'TON HOLLYWOOD OAANGE ~ SANTA Pf. SPllNOS VALLEY f
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I )
•
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of Orange County
Main Oftic.11 the Pl1u in downtown Oran1•
Br1ach Ol ice1 :
Oran.a:•: Tu, Un & Collini; Ch1pm1.n·Prospecl Shopplnl C.W
Co1t1 M t M : Me11 Verde Drive 11 Ad1m1Av1.
Santi An•: 17th St. ti Tu•tin Ave.
Mta1btr F.D.l.C.
)
' ' .
..
I
J 4 DAILY ~LOT L
Sears, Ward Chop
Mail Order Prices
CHICAGO (AP) -Scars.
RoebUct and Co .• lht nation '•
lerge.st mail order house. s~a
It has cul prices on hundred.s
or items h) ~is 1970 s pring-
summer calaolgue in a move
to he1p consumers fight In·
flation.
Montgomery \Vard, the No.
2 mail order retailer, did nol
comment specifically o 11
prices in its spring-summer
book, bot a spokeaman said
Friday that a c hec k' "with our
major competitor shows that
80 percent of our prices are
equal Or lower."
Some 12 million copies of the
Sears_cataolgue and about six
million copies of the Ward
book are being distributed this
week.
LEGX°L NOTICE ...... •A• nn Cl!.TIP'IUTf: OIJ •UllNISJ
P'tCTJTIOUS P'l•M NA .. I
Jn •-letter to M tome;a
receiving ·the sprlng-summtf
catJlogut, Sears sald ll bad
reduced prices on merchan-
dise "to 11elp you lighten your
cost-or .nv ing · problt?ms."
A spokesman said most
price cuts ranged from 5 to 10
percent. adding "Some Items
are reducro a few cents and
others cut more than 2S per.
cent''
He said "thousands of other
prices were not. increased."
The spokesman said Seani
pared prices in the expectation
that incerased volume would
compensate fo'r the lower per-
unit pront 1nargin.
'·Normally, when you re duce
the price of an item, you hope
lo sell more of it." he remark-
ed.
LEGAL NOTICE
<"°"lto•1 al' tl'le. •bow MmN Clkeoent #Ml all HnOllS ,..vi~ ci.1m1 -11111 Ille
11\cl tltcirdent 1r1 l'fQYlred Ill tii., ....,..,
wllh 11\e necnu•• V01.KMr1. fn Ille llftl<.1
NEW ·PLYMOUTH GRAN SPORT MAKES-DEBUT
If F1atur11 Patterned Vinyl Roof With Matching Interior
---------·---------··-..
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N'llldS!.11 .60 2f 121"1 12 /e 1m + 14 !IS pl I ' ,. 7'tii t6 ?~O + ... Gt Pit ,llOtl !ft JlV, ~tt'" $11'1 -'• AUii Chelm •1 21l· tUO ttlli + ... oiu<.11 l.IO -!11 ~· ]!! + l, G11P1c 1111•~ 11 n y; ... 1'14,.f"'l Altiil'llPC...--10 Im lfl~--1.11.\_._V. IUP.kl....U.. ..ll11 0<, ,, -•i ·=fiGl•M• !.lt l' M >,11~ J1'Q.~+.1• All:ot 1.IO H l'l >;, lOt'. -•o Col~h 1." • " .,. G ' ''' !I ? t9•' 7U .481 1 .t\M&AC .JO 1'1 '20~\ I -~ Uh -ti CambE~ 1.111 u I!'' ... , IO•o _.,.. ti 'I' · fl ' 11 17 ••·• ArnPrl! 1 70 ' 211' 21\~ 21" +'" C 1$01v 10 Jl ?•lo 1:1'0 ?I +I~ GeJ!y pf1 ,10 , S 11'1 file f!;O ,\'.'~ A-e1' Pli.,o ' ., • 41\ .. 112 +1 ~::::ISnl 111'.fO 1 Hh 111' 111't ~ 1 Gl~nl II( ·'°. u lO\'. t1l Al'llHtn .ISt 11 2tl't 2'1.1 2t~-.. CM'<WE~1.~ 11 ,.,., ""• JO'~-<-;,G:br~l!.Fln 10 11J,. >152:~ ?'M1 I " I -0'" 1'" 01•• -E •I 3 11 11" 1'!.111 '"' -+ 1 O!dd LtW .IO tt -, ,. 161/t, ~ A"!lln 111 .511 ... 4 .. •.. •• -'" mw · llf ?fll~ ""'. ">O'• -t i.·, Gl11•Ue 1.~ 'tf2 }7'a S? ll!t· ,, ~'Ilr~rn .,_ t\ ~~ ~1 ~ ::3:.1 f::ii0~c1 11,•, u,· •,•, ~~~·. ?~'.! -:':! gr;i"bf!l~~111 ~l! 1~: 31~ 1\? ,: Am lllkff 10 lt'~ U 1 1'~ + " Comul S7 _,,. ,.,~ -. ' ' ' ll ""\k 20\ -a: Amll~N.oft 1 '1 )~ 1lh ~ , •• (-MJIW~ 11 U \<lo IA -4-17• Glob.Ill ""'rn 1 , •v 11• a •-o ... > '2" >• l' ~· " ~ f. '• ~ :nir 31•\ 31._. ~ , GlobeU" ;IQ JG 17li 17\,li 11\rt _,,, r • • -°"'"' t ,,, -1,., '"• -·••Po r;-~r"~ , n 1~1 Jl'• Ullo UV. Amlldnl 1.:HI n :ni1, 7'• "7 V. onEd1 l. ~· '" """""" .... , , Am Ctn ,.20 111 ~l'o •l\.J 41~~ ConEllll pf 6 x 11 1''o &1 +] GocOyetr IS tll llli 10'~ ...,, -'
ACtn Pl 1.71 10 u 1, JS"' :U'~ -ConEdlt of S •1~ '"" ,, .... +1 • Gord:l"'A ~· 27 111.~ 1' 21 .-21' Am Ctm .lO S2 121~ 11,., lllil +H'a cone cifU.•S v1111 ,~ .... "' li)Olt +1~ OlaJ kllnc 1 40 II l7l1' 36'~ :K\11 -.,. ACht lft '·"' '21"1 17 e 1 +'llic.,Foac11.10 6t 41 '• .i ••'•-11iGreceCo 1:50 101 111 .• t 1''> 1ti.:.+\. An!Cttdll JO I ,,.,. 231\ Jl"-t"' ClrlFd Pl•.jO J Ill''• l~l 1"'1• -t s~. Grt~'I' 1 :!Cl lJ lf\• n•. :J.1'4 +t A(rVSUI LllO 4 UV. t)'• 111\!t ~·, CW1ftti11llt I 1S 11•• ll'• 11'~ G11ndUn ·.IO J JSh 1S1 2~0 ' AmC'l'lll 1.:U 1'6 21 2't0 26'Mo -"" (II" LPll'll.... " 1oir. 10'• l~i -'• GrtnlltC SU 1116 1••\ 1:J11i u .+ '• Am Dl11ilt 1 • '° lt'IO 20 -~' ConNMG 1.76 116 ,,,, '~ 14"• + .... Granll6V 1.40 ,. 11 .. 17'-4 l~· +1t.,
AClotlVI o.12 SO I!"" tt• 10 1-"COnPw pU 50 13*! 61 61 •"'> +.Y r1vOro 1.?0 1 11V• 26~ 11 .+ '•
Tht -••llllfd *-lit<'elr/' cerllt..
11111 11\e II .conduetl,,. '" el'(llllll'l'mtnt 1gency •l;lull'.neu 111 tn l<ldhlla~tll t!
20«! WNldlff Drlw. "'"""°"' BffCJl •. Cttl-
lornlt, .........-'1M fltmklu$ llrm "'"'" DI WESTCLIFI' PE•SONHEL AGENCY t<ld
11\al "Id llrfn 11 COSS-lff ol IM toHow·
ln1 .....-, whol• ...,.... ii In lvH tlld
111te1 cf ,..'°"""'• 1$ 11 follows, to wil:
ot lhe tie<~ of lht 1b!J~ enll!IH aMll'I, or
TO prestnl llltm, Wllh Ille l\Ktilltn' Ir::::======="'=====' Vouct>ert, to Ille ·11Mersl11""" In cl,. ofll
J"M!:J l ltUllEL. JR .. AllO!'nl!Y 'et L-. 3oll1 VII 0Por1'0, N.WPGtt hec:h,
Ctlllornl1,, ~. wlll«I It !lie pl.tee Of I
bu1lr•en al' Ill• vnd••nl9""" In Ill m1tl1rt1 1>9'111lnln1 lo Ille; utue ol tlid ~!,I
within '°"" tn0111hs tllff lhC 11.,1 ,VbUc•
Jta High Geo1·
ADlt!Tt! ·-Jl7 2t1t'r 21'1 ""' +no ,_....,, 1.tO 41 ]1\1 ]ll~ lP• + "'1·•11IW I.Ml is .,,, 16l\i ~ -'•
ADotl af ... lJ l 1.1 1111, 12.,., + \Ii (onF'w pU.16 110 .Iii'" ~II'> ·~·,...C.1 ,.. I A~P 1.:lO SI m: 17li, 11Vo _,, • AmEIPw ,IU 116 jl lO\io ll 1-*ConlAlrt. .§0 n1 ll'o IJn, 11~•+'• tNor!r 1.l5<1 )I 1Ji !l~•IJYt+ll'o Am Enkt lt 21 , .... 11'N 21 + '"' Cont (In 11(1 1'' 61,., , ... , ~· -·~ tNOPCIO 1.MI 1S S)U s' "~ .. (.~, Am Ello I"" lot 2 Vo 1G lO -._ C:Ollt Ctlll .:>09 St l' \l>l 11'~ -+ '> <HNorP Cll «> I 111 U ·14 • .... ,~, AE•lnd orA• J260 6" """ U +I C#ll CP 1 J•1 ''" n '1 •«> -1\lt t".t No• P:v J xO ~l'·t •1~ 41~ ~.
•
L0'1't11W J. Cltry, 7''9 Def' Glortlo ltMll. AN!lekn. C..Hlornlt
Otled Dltoternbe• 10~ lt6t Lorr1J.,. J. Cltrv STATE 011 CALIFOltNIA
COUNTY OF OltANGE l u
On De(.ember 10. 19,f, bfllM't me, 1
Naltf'Y Pllbllc: In t nd far ~Id County t!W
s111e. Dll"Ml"tll'I' IPPf!••'d LIM'rtl... J. (lt rv •-n lo mt lo bP Iha oer1oe1n
Whoo• lltme !1 1u1>Krl&ed TO lfll 1111!1\ln
ln1Tr!ff'r4nf, '""' t ckl'IOWl!'dQlcf 11 mt l~lt tlle IXKUltd 111e MIN!.
WllM11 mv httld •NI u•t (OFFICIAL SEAL!
PHYLLIS M. SAL YE ~
Not1rv Public • C1U10-nl1
~Coullf'I Mr Commluion E1u•lr1• OK. •• ,,7t
JOMN C. SAL YEil 1'U Wftkll'f Orl .... s.itt JIJ
.. _... a.di. C•"""* ftMf PublltMd Ora.wt Co.st 01!1Y Pl~, ~Oer :n. Jt, "" '""' J11111c1ry s. "· ltnl 1MMf
LEGAL NOTICE
lion of 11111 nollu, -011!<1 C.:emblr H, !M
/1/ OAHlEL lAlOYSKV
E•fflllo<" ol Ille E1t11t o1 ,.,. ebow 11.1mtd .S.Cfdtnl
JAMIS L. llUIEL. Jll.
.. 11 ..... ., ., l.8•
SUI Yl1 O"rte
~,.._., 111<11. C1li1 .. tlut
T•l9"Wlllt fllO •n.1112
Atltn""' ltr ll~9C'J!tf'
"11bll1hed O"ll~tf Co••I D1rt1 "llol, Oecemt..r 'n. 1'. 1969 1/ld J1n111rv 5, 11,
1'10 1351'-6f
LEGAL NOTICE: ,_,..,
sv'lo~T~~. Tfo~:~o~o~~.
ITATI OP' CAt.IP'O•NIA LllOlt
TME COVHTY 011 OltANGIE
N ... A-MJlt
E11111 cf ANNA LEAH GAEENljOOD, Otcttsed.
NOTICE t3 HEftE9Y GIVEN 10,.1111 o:recUlor1 flf ltw Ibo"' n1rne<1 dftl'Clrnl
Thal 111 oenons ll1v1,.. tt.im1 11111111 Ille
wld !kt tderlt 1r1 rM ulreci lo f!'-,,_....,,
---------------•1 wl1ll tllf r>eeess1rr vout;toer•. In me cifllc• •
,..,,.Jt of m1 clerk of !flt t bovr entllei.j <011rf. or I
c•Rr l,ICATt OP' COR POllATtOH P'Oi;t to Plfttnl them, with Ille nttlH••v
TllAHSACTION 0' IUSIHESI YOUChitrs, I'll trie under,lgned ti the Office UNDlilt J'ICTITIOUS llAME of MIKE MAYO, AHomey, 111 loulll TME UNDERSIGNED COltF'OltATION Gt•!leld AYH\W, MOll1el1ello. Ctllfornll
l ot$ l'lerttlt Cl!f"ll/'f ltltt It ii «Wlduc:Tlnl! I '°'46, ..... lei> ~ IM Pllct of bu1l~1 cl honfnet.S IOUl!ed t i ut E. 17111 Slrfft, 11\t vnderalp~ 1n all m1t_Ht<1 perlt!nl"'ll
Ccnl1 Mnt, Ctlllornlt, under. ltll. flt· ta 11>1 nl•~ of wkl <1ee$nl. wllhln lout 1111~ firm 111-cf PlllME I.II INN .,_,hi tlltr 11\e llr.st oubllctllon of th!~
.. 1 •NI llolt p;,o firm is CO"\POMd el nollct.
lf\e lollowtonti cor""°liof\. -orlnci..t D11td Oec....,Hr u . 1t6f
1111(1 Ill Mlnts1 II IH tollow" lienrv W, GrttMood Prlrtw • Cosll Mesa. ~n .IE. 17trt EJ:Ku~r 51THI, (Oftli Mew, Ct UI. flf lt.t Wiii ol tr.-
WITNIESI Its 111.W t'lll1 ltth tll V Ill t brwe Ptmed *adt/\!
f.IO'IWftllft", !Mt. M11(f MAYO
iCor•1'9 SMIJ lll IW!fl Gl'rlleHI A.,.,
PrllM -Cotti MelJI MOolt .... 111, C1lf. ftt41
Mii< 11.ottn. P~lclenl Ttl: UUI ru'31S!
STATE OF CALIFORNIA. Allor...,. f1r ElKwler
COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES, n . F'ub1!11'1M Ortntt Co11! Dtltv Piiot.
On 11111 lttll 4-Y "' Nov.mllff, A.D. DKtmbllr "' 2t, lt.lt •NI Jl nUl fY s. u. 1..,, btfore ,,,., a Nolllrv Publlc ln 1.W ·1'1' 'Ja.'t
''" .. 1c1 Counlt 1r>c1 sr.t1. per-tty ••1-----,-cc~c--c-,cc-,-,---·
Hirt<!' MK ROien k"°""" tO""' I'll bl lilf, LEGAL NOTICE
1>.-etldHll fl/'"'-c.or1>11rt1ion 11'11! t)(f't\/le<ll----------------I 1111' wllhln ll\atry,.,...nt D'1 behlll ol Ille CITY O' COSTA MQOA t«Mrtllon tMreln n1m!:d, • n d ttknow~td 111 ~Iha\ 1wcll CO•O<Utllon OllANGI! COVMTY, CALIP'O•NIA ,.~ecu~ lht .. mt. NOTICE IN"flTING 110$
(OFFICIAL SEAL} NOTICE •IS HEltEIY GIVEN 11'111 •••\. Estelle Jud9• "" Pl"OPD1tl• 111IM bl! ~el'l'ell t1¥ the Cltf Noi.rv Public of Ccs11 Mttt •I Ille otflct of tf\f CHv
Mv _...1"ion uolrl'.I Cler~ •' !\'It CllY Hill, 11 Ftlr O•lve, J~ ,1. lt11 C01t• Mesi, C•lllcr"I'"• unll1 !ht hour cl
llubtl1htd Ott"'llt Coa~t O~ilv P•lol, 11.(11) t.m. I>" Tutt<ltv. Janu1rv IJ. lf7C, Otctmbe• 22. :If. 1961 Ind Jt nu1rv l, IT Vlllicll !lmt lhev Wiii be OP•ntd Public" 11, 1f10 11'1.ff 11'111 re•d •loud In 111e <ounclt cntmbf!ro
LEGAL NOTICE ,. ..
IVll Ell lOR COURT 0 , TMI
STATI 0 .. CALI P'DRHIA "O•
THI COUNTY OP' o•ANOI
NO.A....n
OllDEll TO SMOW CAUSI
In ll>t Mtttf1" ol Ille AOl>llct lion af GEllALD THVRLAND SESNA tor l11vt
I• t.l\ar.p 111$ nttnl lo GERALD TERllY
WALTERS. GERALD THVllLAND SES,_.A, lltv!M
flle<I h!1 llttlllon !11 111e 11>ov1 enuriea
ct se, t r>cf w ld Petition lll~lnt rMutJ!t<I •ermlulon to clltr>lt F'tlll(oner'1 111m1
!ram GEltALD THVR LAND SESN.t. ta GEtlALD TERltY WALTEltS.
IT IS HEltEllY ORDERED 11111 111
otr-11 1ntrrnl"'1 In t.tld mtlltr IPPt•r
before lhf1 Court In the C011rlll011i.t
loctled ti J'OO Civic Cenltt Orlvt Wnl
llormerty Weit E'811th Slrttll SIMI Ant.
CtWlornl•, •' Oeo1rlmtnt l ltlereol on 11\t
'"' d1v ol Ff:bro1rv, 1t11 at llM hDtlr al t :Jll 1.m .. ttld ltlen Ind 111tr1 ID 1Mw
cwse If '"" ,,,.,. mlV bf, ...,.Y 11111 to·
pl;ltllon 11'oukl ..ol bt 1rt nltd. II 11
lu~ on:tertd Ill~! 1 c..-r 9'I' 11111 Ordtr
be P\lbli"'"' in lhoe 0.-1!>11 C0t1t D•ll'f
F'illll Gl'lt! I wfft. tor lour !~) llH:CtHIV'
wttk1 tr>cf 11>11 11Mt 1>Ubllc111on l>4' <,,,.,..
oltltd orlor tci Ille lle1rlnv ol lhl1 Or&r.
011111 OKtmbf!r 11, IMf. \ • R1vmond Tllomp1on
' Judre JOSEPH R. CARTEll, JR.
•tot V11>lct ,.;11111vt,..
suit• •u C11lttr CltJ, C1tU1rnla tU)t
T111,llefll: {111) IJl·ll1'
All«ntY ,., Ptlllitl'ltr
llubllll>ld o~""" Coa•t D1il• 'Hot,
O•ctmbtr 12. Jt, "" '"" J1nu1rv ~. n, lt11 ')'1·••
tor THE CO~Slll UCltON 01' WALK·
WAYS A"IO &E"ICHE$ AT COSTA
MESA CITY F'AJl l(.
A HI of •l1n1. •HCllica1\ons 1no Dllltr
conlrtcl documtnh mav be ob!tlnea •I Ille olllc• of 11>1 cnv Cler~. n F1lr Drlv•.
Cc1t1 Mes•. C1llfornlt, uoon 1 Oe9of,ll ol
115.00. A ct"'U' DI 11.00 "1111 bf' mtlH' II
llttldl!!d bv m1ij. PLEASE MAIL
SEl'All.t.T E CliECKS.
E1c11 b!d shtll tJo mtdt on lllt or-si t
lorm •nd In tlle m1,..,t r orovlcl!!d !n \llt
conlrtcl llOCUmf'flts. t nO •"'II be •c·
o:otftll•nttd tw • ctrllf!e<I er c•slll1r'1
dleck 0< 1 bid bond ,,,,. not less '"'" lO _.cent of---t of JM bid, mt<fe
01v•ble to lht Cltv of Cos!• Mr.1. NOT!CC IS FUltTHFlt GIVEN 11111 tht Cl!Y Council or said cuv Ill• lltre1o!are
•1l1bll1lled t 11rev1lli"9 rite and 1ca11 of
Wf116, In ~ccord1nct wllh !aw, lo be oaia In Ille co11structlon o/, lllt 1bovt m!U!ed
fmPraVtmenls. Tll11 l<tlcf rtte Ind Kiit
w•• t<lol>lt<I bv lllP Clty COllMI! bv
lttt0lu1Jon No ..... ~ on 1111 15111 dtv O! DKl!frlllf!r, ltff, o<ld ls on lilt In !fie Of,
lie• or !ht cnv Cllrlt of 11ld cnv. TM!
111<1 retr JllCI tc•le i. he~!11 reftrrte! !a
t nO elkl1>l•d In Thi$ nollce 11 lhOlltll lullv
t nd comPltlelv set torth 11 .. reln. tr>cl \ht!
wltl oc•ll', •• -•ed 11'1' '"id 1t1t10lutlon,
Is m-• otrl el this "°'let t1¥ re/1~nc•.
Tiit COtl!rtClor thtll, In I 11 •
Pf:flOl'rntMe o! the work t nd 1 ......
1r0Ytmtnts. conform l'O Ille L•bor Cod ..
ol !~ Slit• al C11ltornl• •<Id olh•r l•w~
ol "'' SMlt "' C1lllornit •PPllt•blO lhet1to, Wllh 11\t t•CtPtlon only or 'ucll vttr!1t!ons •• m•v be r~lre<I 111\d~r II\( tPecl1I 1t1tu1~ 01irSJJ1nt to wlllch P,.,._
ceHtlnsi• ll~r•vncter t.<e_ l~ken end' w111ch
h•v• no! bt e<> '~"eclecf bv ll>t 1>f'D.
vlllll"S ot lh• ltbelr 'Code. P••ltre11t• ro
l1bor shin bl' o;ivrn .onrv 111 t11r m•"""'
p""'IO~d bV !AW, No bid llltll bf c"'"ld•rtd uni.-s• n I•
mldt on 1 bltnll; '°""' turnl,h•d bY th• Clty of Co•I~ MHI, i l'ld i• m•fl• ln •<· conltnce wllh lh• o•ovi1ian1 er ll>t oro
tEGAL NOTTCE ""'' r .. wire,.,...nrs_ .---------------! E1tll bldllfr mu~! bo !1cen1•d 1na 11,0
T·MJ1t
NOTl(f OT CREDITOllS
SUl'ERIOll COURT OF THI:
STATI OP C"Lll'OllMI" FOR
THI COUNTY 0, OllANGI
Nt. ,lt,44111
E1t1l1 ol LYDA IAAll,,ltA KOHL TYN.
Ol'C<'tlH .
Ofl'DUltlfl..,,..•• re<11.rlrNI by ,,,W.
Tiit (l!y Councll el 11\0 (11¥ "' (011•
Mt'I rnttws 1111 r1911t to relocl 1nv 01
111 bl"'· o.ieo l'l•t •mt.er 16. 1'6• llY OltOEll (IF TflE :1Ty :OVNCIL ')F
TlolE CITY (If
COSTA MESA, CALIFORNIA
C. IC, llltlEST
·----~NOT1CIE IS HERESY GIVEN la 11\0 trt11ltor1 cl ~ t bovt t1Amtc1 dttedrnt
ll>tl 111 ""0''1 111vl"9 cltll'll .,11n11 tlW
11id oecfltrnl t •t r..,uletd la 1!14! !Mtn,
Wltll tl>r nKt!Sl'Y ¥oud>e~ Ill Ille O!l!Ct
CITY CLERI( OF
THE CITY Of
C0$TA MESA. C.t.L!FO~NIA
o.<tmblr 22. :If, lt•t i nd J1nu1rv 5.
1'71 17'14t
of 1!lt dtrlt ol Ille tbow t n!lllH COll'"l.,,,. LEGAL NOTICE
le prtllf'I tlltm, wit~ tt.. 1>"«Utrv , ----------------I YOUcl'lt~ ~ IM U!\Oer,l;'lecf ti !f>t' aflkt 1-
ol FEINEAMAN, FUJIMAN. llLDOM
AND KLEI N, Al!Ornt•I. llS $Out!\ llrvtt·
1'1' Orl'lf, Suitt llS, e .... ,11< MIH1.
C1llf01"n!• ff?l), whi<ll Is Ille PllCI or
bu11MU al tllt Vl'<tt,.+1n!'d !n •II m1!!•r1 otf11l~l"9 le tllt e1Tr1t ot Y IO OtctOtn!, ..,n11ln lou• monlkl 111" !flt lir1t ,publltf·
1>.m i•
CEllTll'ICATE OP' SUS!HESS
l'JCTtTIOUJ t<IAME
1101 al 11111 nol\ce. Dtttd tHcfmbtr 1t, 1941
Peter G. Mu,,•• Adml11l1.lr11Qr
o• 1111 11t11e ol lk• 1bow 111mecl llec10•nt
Tht U~'5\tnl'<I <lo CP•tl\¥ 111•¥ .,.
tondwc11.,. 1 bus;ntH 11 1)501 8ttt~
Avid . l'/e,tmin1te•, C•l11Cr"1t , undf r !~~I llchtlous l~m n1t11t er Bab '"" Jonn'• ~1•vlct c ·~• .. ""~ tllal ~.1ld '''"' "' comooHd at ·~' 10\low!nt Pf!•tD"s ... l'>O,. n•mt • 1<1 lull ana oi.cfs ot re1ldtr>et •••
ti lollows
l'llHl:RMAM, ,URMAN, lLOOt.I ~NO
ML•IN Ill '"""I'll •1v1r1J o. .. 11111• 111 t.vrrtf' Miik, Ctlll. tlllt
Tltl1 (tU) CR ,...,.1 ...... Ill l·Mll
A,,__ NI' AW!llnl1tn,.r
PllMltMoll or·-Coat! Ot ll• "•1111, Of«tnlMr n. :If, 1tff tlld Jt 111.11rv S. 17, ,,,. ..... iUt-M
LEGAL NOTICE
ltoberl t. Wl•.,.r. '31'.I Wi it SI , WNltn!l\ller. C•lUOMllt
Jon11 E. Hof1m1n. 1ll12 Y"""llf
We11mln1ltr. Ct !ltornll
Otltd 011<:tmbet lO lfff.
JIDlwrl L. Wltf'ff
J°"" e. l'oflm..,
Stt+,: o1 C1lllo,.,.l1, Or•"'" COUlll'I'!
0.. l>tC•Mbff 10, JJ.w, befort -· • Hotarv Publlc In 1111' lo• 11ld $11M.
H ....... llr ""'~''"' lltllbtl'I L. Weontr INI JOtlft Holtm.tn kllDWll to mt IO bt ll!f
...._ wl'iol• no-1 t rt •ublc:rllltd
---~"'°""""°"'=::::=:c;----l lht wllhtn lntlr~mtnt ""' KkNIW\fdatd
MOT"IC• TO c ••DtTORI ll'l•t •••<vied tilt -· IUl'••tofl COURT OP' THS !OFFICIAL SEAL! STAT• ff° CALll'O•NIA P'OR Mtrv K. Hf'11"1'
THI COVHTY 0 1' OtlAHOI Noltrv Jtubllc.C11IHON1ll J1fe. A"'44'1 ll~lndHI Ofl!(t 1n
Et111t t/A llM•CUEAlf( IM.lllE O••-c-11
L ... zovsKY, 11M 11.-•• M• Comml»lori f""ln1 MAllOUIRITI J. L.UOVSK't'. •fxl Nov. 2•. 1tn ~ M MARGU£11.1Tt" J, lllOllH30N, 11u~••sti"'ll Ottlltl! C-' O•llY P!let,
OKHMoll. Dtc""bt' IS. n. )7. '"'' ,,.., J1n11•••
HOTICE IS H(•IE9'1'" GIVIN It tJlt S. "" ntl-41
For Top Sports Covera ge
Read the DAIL Y PILOT
<
AGtnln• .Sii 111 1n\ 13\'> ,~ + ~Ct (p pl.t.,,50 13 '' ''"\ "'~ _, Gt Wfll Finl 111 10'!4 20\t ?OV. -~· AGnln oll.to JI U'~ 3S ~ t\\lo r1 c o "18'.50 1 •1•~ '" 11•1 G1WnU1>lt .90 37 39 J1'i 31..., -II•
All M•k-All Models
A\llornolllko -TnKk•
"Wh1r1 S1 rvic1
M1k1• th1 OiHertn,•"
Cran Coupe Added.
To Fu.ry Lineup
"-"'Hol1I .XI '202 1•1'1 12\0 '''" l""(onlMICI I.•• SI •• ., ........ -l-'• ewun 1>!1 .1~ 11 21" '' ,, "''~ A Hcme 1.o111 llt n 10 1'1h -,, r onr 011 1_gi Jl' '"• '"~ '"' t •· r.r'Na1hln 50 6 1s1. lS'" 1~ ": 11 Ali-.,, 2 •tos 10• 105 -i•con"!OU I>!, t ;oe·. v.·1 ~···+.'•&GretnGn• .t• 11 ,.,., 71 11111 ·_.i. Am liOIP .1• 101 ..i ..Sl'J •S'i + ~ cont Stt 1 6 ,.,_ ,., • ,_,, · t.rl!t41$1\ 1.20 1 ?0 1''~ 1G .j. '' Amlnvsr J.10 1' 1...-Jl•lt 1~ + !I t°"'t Tiii 71 "" ,,., "11 ~ '"' + ·~ Grevl>ollnd I 1&1 ll<'r 11'• 11 .+. ~. AmMF"" .tt OJ 11v, 11'• "''--· r°Qt11tol ~·~ W 1n'1 1"'1 l""t\ + ... Grolltr ·'° n ll' Jl n ~·, ... AMf'!ClK l.•O 111 U'o ~1'> W1 +•1rnD1t p'''~ rl"' <• " I• -'-1''>G'llfT'mnCP1 11 ?•I-. 'SI.I ~1•,-·~ AMel(I~ ct • 10 •J•. ""• '"• + '•ron-1.1!1~ , " ., " r.1fLIH~ld "° l l ).ti, l''i ).IVt .,..I•
Am MolO>• 233 ''· t'o ''• -'\ ""oo\ u~r1 .<n 1• -....; ·~ ;..11 ~ ' r.lfMC!tl l Ill~ 1 '' A.I 6S l AmN•IGt! 1 61 tt<a 3' 3'' J ~ " ,........,,.,111 1 ;11 1~ ''" 1 "''\ "'' • 4 ·~ r.'11 !Oil I JO .. ~ ll'a 11 l1'• I~ Am P"°lo 11 13' ll 12'1 llU t-'• ,...,,.,,.,., ·•J.I I .., .., .,, -1 Gull ltft•Ct l !16 10'• 10 lO>o \<1 Af!:io:;l)v .IOci UJ 1•1; l•'O ~ 4 •'· ,.OO'!•r 'flt 1 ' lt'o 1''' '"'•-1• !":'JllRe' ol?O i 1''1 l•''. 1'"7 ''1 Am Stll 1 1 f!l , 21 >4 11'• _._ '· r,.....T 11n '' 1 10 1••, 10 -'-1 r.HRn pfl JO I 111• 111~ U'o l'f
Am SMti .10 u 20\1 !II :l'l•~ + '' re""""" l •• '" "" , '" ~ 1 r.u•l~•~ut " ~l tt:i.. 73'T ?Pio ~
By CARL CARSTENSEN
Or1n91 Cowntf
NewPOrl llch.
417t C•m!kli Dr.
014) l•0·312J
Dlilt P+i.t Awtom1Uvt Edl11'
L11 An91lt1 t6' S. Wtil•r• A new model -the G ran
Coupe -has been added to 111l) 7lS-1•7'
INVESTING IN SECURITIES
portfolio
TIH-WIEK COURSE -THUll:SOAY 7·9 :30 r.M.
J1n u~ry 8 l~ru M1rch 19
CORONA DEL MAk H IGH SCHOOL -Room 1'1
LECTURER:
FEE $50
Edw•rd M ~N•ry, Alliod Member N ew Yor~
Stocl1 E.cht"9' •nd ln•11!mtnh ln1 lrY,lor,
UCLA W.1twood.
U•l¥e"iry S1!1'1i1ta1l
N•wport l eoc:h
Ai1oclot•1 Fir lnfor111crtio111 & f 11rellm11t
Colh f7141 •7l·ll''
FREE LECTURE SERIES
THE STOCKBROKERS TO KNOW INVITE YOU TO AN
INFORMATIVE LECTURE \\/HERE you will iearn about
nlutual fund s and unifonn gills, \vhat t hey are , hO\V they
work and their different investment objectives. Also , an
interesting color movie \viii be shown.
SEAL BEACH-Sc1l urday, January 10th
contrnuously /ro1n 2:30 p.n1. to 5.'00 p.n1.
fvtannings CJfetcria, 13900 Bay Boule v ard.
TORR1\NCE-1Vlonday, January 1.'.!.th at 7:30 p.n1.
1·
Bullock's Del Arno-Tc<i Room (41h Floor).
Carson and Ha\v thornc.
!~ESTER-Tuesday. Ja nuary 13th at 7:30 p.n1.
Airport Ma1 ina Hotel-Fountain Roon1.
8601 l incoln Boulevard.
'.BRA-\\lednesday, J.1nua.ry 1 4th al 7 .JO p.1n.
Bullock's-Tea. Roorn,
·1501 \.Yest lmpcria) 1-tigh\vay.
LAKEWOOD-ThursdJy, Janua ry 1 5th at 7:30 p .m.
Bullock's-l<iguni ta Roon1, 5003 Clark Ave.
\\1ESTWOOD-fridJy, )Jnu.iry 16th at 7:30 p.111.
Bullock's-Ba1nl>oo Room,
10861 \Vcyburn Avenue. •
l i\f .. : IA HlllS--Sa1urday, January 171h
conlinuous/y from 10:00 a .n1. Lo 4:00 p.m.
Mannings Ccifeteria, 24031 El Toro Road .
'.\DEL REY-Monday, Ja nua ry 19th al 7:30 p.n1 .
Marina Del Rey Hotel-Chart Room,
13534 Bali Way.
PAI ( ~ VERDES PENINSULA-Tues., Jan . 20th at 7:30 p.m.
\\
L
Hun gry Tiger Rest.aurant,
::?7300 Hawthorne Bou levard.
.\'000-Thursday, January 22nd ill i .30 p .l
Bullock's-Ba1nboo ·Roo m,
10861 \Veyburn Avenue.
JA HILLS-Saturday, January 24th
confinuously fron1 10:00 .a.n1. (o .f :OO p.n1 ,
~\annings Cafeteria, 23031 (1 Toro Road.
/\mplc time \'t'ill be allowed for questions lrom 1he audi-
ence. Admission is free. Re servat ions .1re preferred but
not required. For rREE BOOKLET ·or to make reserva·
1ions, mail the coupon below, or call ,\lary Giroux col·
lect at CR 4-0393. r------------------------, 1 C.ntlcmcn: fleise 1eservt: ( ) seitJ for I
I me ii yQUr free lectur~ in I
I , I I NAMl PAINE I
I AODlESS WEBBER I
I JACKSON I
I &CURTI S I I PHON( "' ..... ,.. I I I
I 424 N. Ctmden Or., Beverly Hills I I CR 4..0393 ........... ,._V"JoeA•foc". ..... I
~----------------------~-~
\
,1r, smell l.tO •115 ,, J?', l'I'• -'\ .,... ..... --~ 1•• ,.,\ 1••, '"'~ -• r.u11su o15N :ll'O\ U A~ 6• 1 II Pl th F 1· r AMSaA!r .10 56 2''1 "'• ,, ,.,,.. .. , ... , I"' 0 1"' 1• ,. ~ ' r.u1r SU "' \ •I~ 6''" ~l 6.:t ,.... I 1e y mou ury 1neup or ,t,mSA1r •n.70 , " 1~,, i•" ,.0,,,, • .,11 ... ., ,, •• ,, .,., ... •· r.u1~u "''"' 1120 <~ 'Ill 51 '!!•Ill 1970. It (eatures numerous Am S•d i let " 34•,, l5 + i~ '"•rr.w •JI"• ,. '"'. ,.. l'"' "'-1''-r.u!fW o1• '" ' •~ •l i~ ':f'l AmS1d ot•.I~ • 100•• ?'10~ 100>., ..-7> ,.,,r~·••I~·.., ·• ••'• "° •• -,. r.ulfW 01.1 ~1 I ""'• •1•"• «1"11' I '< items o r equ1'pmcnl Optl-0031 ,t,m Slt rl! .•I l l'f'• 21' .... 1''• -'• '"n• Pdt"1t '-" '' ,.-, '.,'1i , •.• 4 1' (;u!!W 1>IS IJ 1 lllo ~O'lji 6'11.0 ,1, ' AS..a•r 160 I ! 16\lt 75:~ 2S'~ t-l•1 r1>c tn•1 •10 '" .-·, "''"•+' Gullon Ind on I"'• !ll1 lilt+•
in other models, a s standard. AmS..a or .6' 1 •'• ~1. •'• -"• r,~"· 1 IJI~ '" .... ,. '°'' "''• -' -H·I-1
AmT&T 1.60 lttf Jll.1.• fl~ ~0'• -1-1'\ r,.,tlt"~i• 1 ' '' '' 11 .._' HackWlt 1.~ A two-door spor ts coupe, the :=~•,fs .,J 1:~1 1~.~ l~~+.~1~~:::'!~h., .. •i ~', '"l ~~~ 1,'.,'.~t1; H111Pr1 ·"' f·ff:; j~~ tt~+~
Car aJSO has the COTlctaJed AW Drtl 1.25 l('JO U>o 1'"• 1'"-+ 'h rrow(ol l ~11 •• '"• •1 •», -'-1 • H•lllburl l.QJ 119 '111 4\~ 4 '!• -Iii
h di -I r AW 4.lof 1.,J 1700 ~ 10~~ ~ .. . ,.,_ .. c~... ·~· , ••• ·~·· 1t1-. + •• litmWtl .5'1 20 11 11'"1 li ... "" ea amps previous y DUil "'"' l ine s 1t•1 11\o 1'"" i '• ,.rw~~eu 1 ·~ ,, ,.., v•~ '"' -1,, H1mm "'" 1 • 11 ,,.., » -i. "1
Qniy in the high line Sport::::~.~"'·~ ~~ ~ U* U."? -l ,~ ~~ ~~~·: •:! :::; ;~;~ f.'!~ ~\ .. ~=~ :: 11~ ~t:t ll:~ !1\\,t ~
F ury od I AMK Co .JO l•t JI 7'"1 ~ + >;. ruit•hv r~· 'ti" 1"o ,., , ,.,, J. " loltlld H•r .1J I "'• .,.ta :l'fl'. + •~ m e • . AMII Int .4 107 y. !Jllo ll'4 -I.Ii r,,...,v oil ., '" 1•1, I"• 1••·-'-->< li11111Co 1111 ?O 17'• IS!1 17"" +!••'
A ·S~al walnut eolor and .,.,.,.. eo.0 ,.,. 41"" """' 41"--i.:. ,..o11i... .. ,.,,. 11' , •• , ·•-. ~·.~·: 7 ,'. ",..•nn,~M, '·", 11 ~"1 •t • ll'""'-•"" ,..., ·-·· .. • • • ., 111> .,. ~·· • ~ ··-·· ... • .. ~ "'• . -,, .. "' 4l ·~ ,~ 71 ...... •·~·°"' ..-. _,,.--, Htf!(JI C: I 7' 1flli lfl~ 2(1J~ Lo.._,
patterned vinyl roof and::t~.!..d:nt.'11'1 ~J ~: ~o ~ :l~:::;'."i:?'W,,·1;' ,:~ :;.1 '.:" ~.,_i1!·H1rtSM•x".•o 6, :!7~ n 3'\i..Z\. .....
matching Interior are offered ""'"lioc:k .ao 1~1 '' .,.,, ..,,i . r., .. ·.., .• ~ • 1• .·:•-. 4 1• ~1,1",.','• '.•10 11 n•, 71'\ "'' +1'* · A nro•~Ns~ 1 11 1111~ 1fl i&>i. -" .. ,., .• , Ii 1 "O 1• • ••· · ~ • S ~·· ll< 111 ...,~~ The Gran Coupe is als o Anac1~v 1.10 1 40•, "' oo ., .• -... ·~·· ,.. ..., H•Yt1 Alb 1 1 "'• 1&10 1rv. t ,, ·1 bl . ADPCll..Co ?I llf '"· ''l'~ 1• .,., .. ~.,,,,u•M 1 00 5"• 11•, +' ~'1~lllftt 1! 1'" 1610 1~ .... t"'' ava1 a e with, any s tandard .1r.r ,co1• 1.n1 •1 l1•,, '"It l1•, +11 . · · · ... 11e"•M1tt1 .10 ~1 )"J'1 .,..~ .,.,. _ '~
F, . , AouA (llem 211 t•4o 62 61 . -• ·-Htl"' HJ .tl l'7 J"• ~,,~ ll'~ ,._ \\'' ury vinyl roof and e ,'\tcr 1or -6.RA s~c .ff u 111•, 11~1 • 11•1• -1 ... "01 .. , 1•, , •• ". • , ••. :·.·i c 1 H~''"" c~ri n 11•, 11 •• .... ·~
I · h h · · • Arch0'n 1.60 I J 14'~ ~ ~ -.-~• r ~ , ·• • • ._,,/ c~11 ·"' '' n·, n '1'h .a._,, CO o r v;1t armon1z1ng in· Ari1P~1·c 1.M "" "'"' '1•• ll» + ·, .,.,. ,_ .. ··~ ""' " ,.. '-l111~r Int 60 7~ ,,,., 1.,1 1C •.'
l.r-10 eoJOr Arlam 0$ .:!G St lfl'o 1p, l~>t -''J -. ... Ir~ 'I " •• 1 ,_,~ ./o-' "<time POS ! l! 1•'>1 II '• te•1 + ~
r .'!. ArmcoSt till 11' ,.. • .., ,, . ., ''"' -O "'•"'""'" 1 •• ~" ...,~ .... •"\ -'"-1'ftln,.1<P 19 :ii 17'• ltlo 1m 1 ~'
G lenn E Wh1'le C p ArmcoS Oiwl 147 ""' ,.., "~',... ~ ...... _ ···•• ,, • ..., ~.','' ..... _,_!\ ~·ml1111< (op !J •·~ '" ,;. $'1" · , • Arrr.ou• 1.60 1 tll o 4.'I~ 4.'l'h + 1J ,..~,..,..,. n ·~ < •• li...,lln< .0!• ) 1\Ji 7 ,.~ t '
Division general manager said:~~"~ 1.-f: 'f: !4ti: W. !:~ ;1:% ~;·;1n::. ~ !~ ,:,: ;;1~ ;;;~ :;·• ••1 ~=~~Fc1'·~0 ;: ~{;: ~1~ ~~ ;,;
in introducing the car. ''Many ~~111'°1~ -~ 1j ~.,, ~!!1 ~" !1~ '.!:~ ;:!: : ~ ,j;; ~ ;: ~ +; ~~~~~ ·':o •• " •1~~ ,, r .1?
highly desirable optiorui: have Atllld 011 1.H 1111 ''~ ln; 27to + "' .,PL P'"' 1 a ·•• ... , ·"~ •"~ -·" Hla11 v <>11_.,, 1~~ ·~:: 1~~1 1m: f't\· "" d AMO 8rtw Ill " 11~ 11~ ..• ., ..,_,, r,.' 1'• n •\ '"• •~•,, -1-•~ Hll!otHcltl I 1' St~ Sl''r SI> tl.~.· u.;>;0 mae ·standard equip-A...iDG1.20 ~s '4 •n>.,. +,,.l'J~""~rP I'~ .., ,. ,.,, ·~ "'""Hobtrt t!!I 1, n\\ n ,7'=1~-. J , Aud Spq 1.711 ':iitt~ ~ XIU +1' ,,,.tM,.+e 1 ··~ 1• •••1 ,...., ""' .1. ~ Hotl'l\Wtl tO s lJ
ment at a spec1a price o n the :fr,!.'•""i" 1.•,, ,,',' 11.J~. ,,nit n11l• + •!.l. "l81t1.11r, ,., •1 ,, ''"~ ·•••· -•~ liotl E1rc1 fn ,•,•, ,",',' •• ':.,',: ~,~ -t " Fury Gran Coupe. It offers At1 li1c11110 , •SJ ,t;:; u l'I u 1.:. :!:n~ ~;.',w . .,."' ,,. '1:~ ;;:; ~:;~ 1"', +1 H•lldvlnn 711 lilt
both t I ·d I t At1 1tc11 a!J.7J 1110 s2:i.. 52 n•. + '" t> r:;f• P,-; , .,.., ~;:~ = ~· olldA 1.rib 1 f7\, ~, :~"' .:.:r~ . s Y e an va ue a a con· All R I ~ 01 J 11Sl, iu '". t ';·: ennvllt• 04 101 2.,,. ;~ 1, _, lionySue 110 l '''• 1• ,, ...-I.II
s1derab!e savi(!g to the, buyer !ll:sc~M:~·1Y ~·} fir: tf' ~·· --.: ~=:,-;~vr \'~O 1~ :-;,~ :;:~ i,..., l :· ~:'e~:i' 1 ·;: . Zl 1.!I•'; ,:;: 1~~~ .4'1~
Over the -t r bl All"t Corp 2•6 ""' •\~ t•t .,~. .,.·A ~ '"• •• •~·· ... ,,. Hoo• 8! 1.701 '" 11 ll ''a 32'4 )?l.l -t l ot . .. .,., o a. compara y A,To rnc 0.,ot• 1n 111A 11•\ u·~ .+ •, D~!i: "'11 ,, ,~ «•: .,,.~ .._.,,. H.,.r 1ni1 J6 20 ,,.,,. ~•'\ ,,.._ _ 111: equipped car on whieh the op-Ufo-• • 10 lti, u "' 1.~. -~· ., •• ""~1,... tit • ,, .,.,,, .,,.., _ • .. tto1t! c: .. "'"' " 1t "'" uu. .-.w . , Automt~ lM •t Ill\, 11~o 1'•1 -" •!Fllll 1 '11 .., 7f'f "'"•••?71\ ..1.,... li~"d lr.d IO ]C jlli 1! 1W. .+' '!' t1onal Items \YCre ordered iD" Avco C• 1.10 c1» 'l"' ,,., n·~ . nl,•F~ ..,j 50 .11., ,. •• ,.., • 11o l-i0110 Pf 211 1 • 79 79 +1 . ·. A...:o al.1.711 6 5'."'~ S7 ... S''' -•: !)el Slrl't . '' ., .... llh !•'--., +1 . °"' Mlll ·'° 30 ,1•\,o lS . ts I ., d1v1dually " ,t,v1rv Pd ·'° .,. •1 \~ ..n1, •I'• ~ •; "~"'"' 1" 11 .,., ,,., ..,..,, _ u-H11u •llF .10 21 ti·~ '°" •1 + * • • \AV~! Inc .•O •S) lJU 17'• ,, •• -'-l' n• I'' '" 5 1" l~· ... ~ + 4 1 i21•1 UP~ 11111,.,.. [ Included a.~ lr: t an d a r d _.,,_ P" ,...., 9 n• 111111_ 111•-. +11;, .,1:!.,1~;1~ '""' •t •1 •~ ,..,; ,. ~ * .,. Hou1F •' 1111 1\ ,,,. ff\'t °"-.
r ' . • A.rite 011 G1 •l 17'~ n • .. n ·• l'J'"'""" 1''(1 ,..., ""''" I"• ... 1\ + ... HIN1F pf1.JT ·~ fe1, .,1 ~ I • eatures are the 383·CUblC·lnch -8 -1)1•.c;h .,, r·~ ,, , .... ,,,, .,.,~ _ • lol01J•tL P 1.n Jot '°'' :19'4 '°'•·+,
ty,·o. barrel v • 8 en&ine Tor-~.~, w 1 ,6 , •• ?'I ,,,., ,,,, .,,.s or 01.1"1 '' 11·~ ,.,~ 111\ + • Hov•ING• .m t ~"' .so·~ X.\f t "'
qu. Fl.Lie •ul . 1· ·~.r0,11T .t, ,, n,,:•, ~·,;, ,,.,. ~~!:fon.ia~ :; !;~: f,'1 !;:;7,t\=~ct<~l.f.. ,,~,' •,','·,·. ,~ •. , M,• .. a +·~· 0 ma I C '"~lfr. 110 '• .... j1 •, "-• • .,·r.· 1· ~~ ?• ,.. u •, on -•· Ho· .. m.i .111 "
trans mi s s ion , air con-t~~: .. :~f' . .a 1i~ Hi.. li 111• tl~ 12i 1,ir'~: ·111, 1~ !•'• ,. 1• -" Hu11,n11 J.•M ~. ~,,-··. ',','" IOU1 }""~· d 't'' · u· ed 1 e 1n9P "'1 , 1 ,, +i .• i 1"" DI" i ···~ ,. '"" _.._ • Hue~ H•t ·"° 11 '"i 1 11on1ng, nt g ass. vinyl RanoP no.11 j ,,., ~l! 17., _._ ,, O\llc.,Co .!611 ji \r~ \~~: 1~'' t _~; 1::~r~:11~-6\' . ~i fg:: ~:~ ~~ :-
roof, power steering, po\ver R:: 9/,Nr s! ;~ ::1: a:: ~:·• .+-•:. g!~~;;iu~ti50 1• 1l• 11• 1n -4 1d1•111 o1•.1s 01 ,,..., ,,,, n·l'I J \
brakes l.d t t AM larb(lll 1 Oll I ..,.,.' _._ v. n1stSf•0 1.•n 1 •~ •• '~ -'' 111 Cent ! 1' 11 ',',,, ~,,~.! ',,'. ... 1,.' , ,so I s a e radio 11..,d c 11 · 15 1~1 •1'• ""'' ,.,,• _._ ,, owe"l"d .:16 1J rt•t 11•• 1~<i -.., 111 Ctn P!J ~ .• ..., ~'
Vl·n I lit b k be h 1 $ I I ·,, 1 •" /'"' ' ·' r:11vrM!Q U.. 'C' ;in•., JI' :r< -"" Ill Cen pll,!>Q 11 ''" SI'~ S?'4 ~'" Y sp • 8C OC Seat llC "' 1 lJ'~ 4\~ lSllO-~•OrPeoPer "90 1 ~1'• ~·~ •l•~1 ~tlll POW!!r? ••I 3S"ti 341.li lS'fl :lt• 'th f Id' l\t•k pl 1.50 r1ro 311'1 ~ 31"1 -1-pr. Dom•MI" ·1111 11 ""'' " .. ., , Imp (p Am !t 13·; ll/O 13'1i". ·•· • WI 0 1ng a.rmrest tires llt11!5Mf9 u l 'O •• ,, •'•+•i 0omFdl fh l 1.l''• 17•, 111·-'•INA<o•.• ''I .. ·-· rtt I. h ' ' ~•tn 'Al of I 1 !]t, 1l1" 13;·• _._ ,., I · '' 1• 1 ? • Jl• .,. l .., .. °" ~g t package Wi th headlight :::~!~~rt <.e •S u~ n n + 1 •..:. &,~1~1 ~ ;~ I~ H'lo 1i'; , ,:;: + 1, :~"g'u'.., C•,;,: '' • 15""1 16. i-'
lime delay and w a r n i n g B1u,C.Lb :!o ,! ,,. ,....., """='-\Dor• Otlv"l. 3Sl ~~~ n lt~ +2·~ Indian Hd loO ~ l~l: l~1, l~~ !:Jf' ..... .d I r lltlflrl.~b 1~ 18'1 lOH 29 \i Y<·~-'-,, 'lo\ltr Co _.,,...... 1 ..,., ,,,, • t""pltF'L 1"50 4S I•.,., 1• ?4\4 .. • r..iu.u;e~. OU~J e e ( re1note BayY:kC:l1 :so t ~'~ 10'~ 101, '8~~~';: r:: ~: ~~~: ri:~ ~~ f-"1\to t::la'tic:"~ 1 f l fl 'l +
rearv1ew m irror. three Speed :::~1~: / ~ •no e"-'-;' l'lrf"51<1d l .•O '9 1•~ 151-: ,6 .. 11 ln!ltrAtnll 1 ~[ jJ ii{~ Jf'.t.~ j f 11 k .50 JT'~ l6l't -~ -'Ol'l'>!.t 111110 II ti-:n•• ]:]"' I'! lnoRO oliJS 11 )4 .... J 1 1'/) ~ 1v pers. ull y,·heel covers 8~ ~~ 30 ~ ;~:; 3~ :~ _._ · •• emir "' in ll 211. 11•. 11• ..... 11 tnrit111 sn 2 1,. ,.., ,: 111 nW·] · th k . ' l!tt<:llA i.Jb "' II!\ 1 • • Ore~rusco lb ' ll'• l "• l1\t + ·~ 1111i r>c1 stt 1 ,~ :Ill n 7'1.4' > ree·spo e s te ering ~·heel 9,i,., ,',, · ~ ' 1h i,1" i i .• Dl.>t~Pw 1 'ti ~i "'~ 211. JSl~ -;>.:. 1,_1_ ,, n ,,,, 1,.. ,, ........ •. ' · h h • ·"" 15 '1 J1 1 ,., ~k•F' Ol6 75 1 IOI 101 IGl '"'"' "" · •• •o ,.. ,... 1v11 om ru1g. concealed t~,":r -'Ob 10 )p, 70'• n,,, ~ •·· arc1 1101 ,,l ~" 11 Y -;! ,',"~,,.' •,,.•• ,•,•, l~ .. ,•, .• _,•,5:_ •...
h di bod . ·-~ O '''• 56'• '' '"-,. nran Cn 6 71"~ 16'< 1190 "' _..._ ... r · ea amps. y side molding ll•ll .1n1•rc(WI tn u ·. n•1 11 -• duF'on1 s.i.5<1 ti. 1011'. 101 101•, ... 1, 1n,i1e DfAl 15 •• 25\li 25" 2s·1e .•
W'1lh J k d · I lltm•1 Cc I XI ?I U 11 .1. I'• cfwPont alll •o •10 641> 6• 6~', .., , • ., fnstiir Cep lt I \0 '1'·• 594 5~1-'4 CO or· eye vtny rub •~(!di• 1.to •~ 3~•• 331'7 J~" _,._ •, ouPon1 p1Jjo ~1o s1 S0'' so ·. " 1~••rco I.JD '' 1''• 21 2t~ +1'rl' strip, · tru t 1 Bt11d1~ 01 1 i !1 J.lh 56 .;.p , o.,., Lt 1,.., 1st '"• ,,., '"' , ~· 101er1ksr 1.10 16 11 ,,,,,, ,, • """"' ins men pane \Vood-R•n!!Fln 1.60 11 "''• ·~ •6 _ ·~ °" 11.20p1*.10 ,.0 17 17 11 . 111M ' "' ll.l•r, J.16 l68..., 'f.J.,.
grain appliquc and •·entless ,•,,•',,',' •,1•, .• w 11n s• 111 J• .+ 1 ... °" 11.Ht1U.07' 1ao1 <•1• ,.,, i&··i ... ,, 1n1F11Fr .~b 11 6s•,, ••~• "~ -··1e . , . ' n•) n•• 12'\ +1 D\tQLI.,,, 2 r120 ,. 11 n i-1· Int He•• 1.10 in 11._ 16'~ n'lti ·t~H•· door glass •~F Spl2.SO UlO ll """ JI "l °" l .7-SPll .11 1100 ll , 231, n•, . '. lnlHol<I l.10; 6 'II» Ill~ 11'' ~ . IMt wtl 661 l j" 131\ 13>• _._ '• °" l.IWl,10 l llO ,. i•'• i9 ~,j , '"' ll!dwtt n '°'" ., . ., '2.,., •. ..,., ·The Fury G ran Coupe Is •,~_..,~,.•'",,, •l ''• 111• "'• o.mo1"" .•1t 4' 11·, 11 1''• ,_ ~, 1n11no p11.1t •so .· ss"1 n ·,,,· m • . e,~ . 133 1''• 11'1 "''"-+ •1 D-Am . .00 11! tl" 11'.4 11 , + '-" Int Miner ,. 1'l , Ii:\~ 111t:~i. a~~,l~ble without air con-C:r.."'f11 'f~ "°° fti:: ,::; 2f' .:!:. ~ -E·F-:~:~~ ~f~ 1~ ~'• t;,. · :;\\ 7!' · ·
d1lion1ng and tinted glass. l\':!':[t',·~ ,'ll,, '• •2•~ 4 \•-\i EaQleP,11 .10 11 "'' U'• l&" 1n1 Nici< 110 m t4 •l\.J if::\!'! .... ~ tr tr 1~~ ..... N ' ,,., 73 +2" Easco CP .90 • D lo 111, l l ~ .. Int P"D I.JO ;91 '!I JI\• ~" .A. l !1lrJolln .a 1J 71>, '1?1 '\ tt;. -•;,East Air Lin llJ 1' 15·, 16 +'~ In! Pao of ' 1l0 60 60 T•~ J,..; 81h~ L111t I 3 H l. 'a tt -'• Ea1t GF l?I '4 ,.,, 11•1 11•• -·'•·~II llt"C!I• lo 13•o 131, BIG YEAR SEEN l~11~~ 1-1~ 51 SI~· Js•~ ll\4 -"E.it U•ll i . .io .,•, 20 • 20'• :1011 .1. ·-In! ~au l.•O s 31 n""' n -' . JI sn .. .,..,, "'" -1, E1!1COC1t• M ... •1·~ 11·, I I'• -'• Int T&T 1 OS 1)0 "''• ~·· ,, .. -~ FOR S~JAU. CARS lllullei 11111.1s 1 tJ tJ tJ -'• !atonY• 1.411 •1 40~~ :11•1 :11·1 -Po IMT&T "IE 11 1.o 111'> '!'Ill 111\.la'* 8obbJo llrkt •t II 17" ir e _ <1 clltinll\I n •l ,'nl~ 16 :I<!'•-+•• lntT&T a H 4 5 !11 l 01'1 fll~ .y~ '!We expect s m all. Imported 11,~, ""c 1.,ni.. ?'I l1 •t JO•; 101 • .+ ,.,, c~e•o i ;o .i u J• • 1~1 ~ -•• 1TT 011 •.lJ J 11)' ia. l)t ·• ~
h. I 0 s ••• ...,., • IU I• • n··~ 111• -1'~ Edl1onl rO• 1 II 1.S 1•'· ·1~ -t '• ln1T& 1 plJ 4 J !OJ 101 )OJ ~.:!\
ve tC es to ·account for more aonc1 sirs ' 1 10>, 10•1 20i. -•• EG&G .to ,'" 'I'' 11 11 -1 1~1T&T 11oc• 16 •a '""' 11~·if' l•
th ·11· • loollMlll 1.11 6 n 71'1 11·• EIMUSI< 110 SI '• , , 11• lnTT olL!SO l1YI 7l '''"' ff I{ an one m1 ion sales dunng lordtn 1.1fl 111 ,.,, n•1, l•'t 1 1~,E1M111 1n.1111 • 61• 1•. ~·· int u1u 1.•o • lS•• u •; u~ M
1970 and believe t hat ::~":~; ~.is li r~ .. ~~:t ~;, .. :: ~1·~·.~,~~, ~J~ u:~ 11~·· !r· --'-t~· :~:utt~nor~.J2 ~ Y',? W...: try,v~;JJ1 .
Volkswage n ·11 t 1 101Ed1, 1.ot •1• s.•. ll>1 JJ .. _,__.,..e1MM~o Pf 11 "' ''" ~,.-1 ,, 1n1.-... ,. 1 1 13 •• 11,~ ~fl;!~ \Vl accoun or B011rn1 tnc t ?Ho 21·; 11;, ~ ,, ,101nNAt Ind 61 r , I •'• -'-+ •, lnteroco o• 5 1 '''• i•v. Yt ~l . 600 000 of the to ta l" said 8ran11.1r.1r _JO n1 11·, 10•1 11 v, t:u. IPtM""IG 1 11•,' !.f-,• 1 11 ·11·; •• 1M &rind . .a •"• ,1,",,' ,','!l .i, .~_'.,, ' • BrljiqSI 2.40>! • Sl\·• SJ•, 531 ,-<-,~ ltra 'fi l.?O •• .u:• ltl~-1, lnle•OSlr ,6(1 .,. 'I
Stuart Perkins president of Br1'rMY !?O 1rr.z is u 111..,_· El'!'IO!r 11«--.!, 2, •·· ,~l '''~• ... j1Uuse• 1,.2.1 ,',' j,•,',L Urr ·.:1.l, .~ • · ll1!s1Mv or! )) •J'll ·~ \ II.!"_·. Emer•A ' .... I SI , .• SI .,. '·t owa lie•• ......, _ I Volkswagen of America Inc llOWVMai. 1 1 Jt W\ ll'•-'.i;emn~,, •.,m • d•~ ..,., 0 1. • '• 11 E1L1> l.10 ,, lf" 1t1~,1 ~. 1,
H d . ' ' llkt~11UG 1.12 11 '''• 11'• 1'•t .1. ·~ ma.,.~t ,1, ' 11 ~\, Jt't -1, It 111 GE .JI Jt Wi" 21't '71MI !J e ma e his s tatement at llrQWn co H ,., ,;, ,,, + m-c .. 90 t ,.i, lt1• ''~' ~ a. 1ow•"L' 1.M1 -.10 :n ... 2!l• '2i1,11. 11 th VW I llrown Ce pf 1n1 H•1 lJ'O ll"-,,. Jot<mn 1• 11 n •. 13 +I '"""ePSv 1.J:t ll 11~ • n\lo .11\,i. _ ~
e annua meeting. I""' S~vo I 16 16'1 151;, 1•'.li +1 . F .40 lff fj '• r:~• f;.'• -1 \1 ora Hll'lll .:J.I n ~:'° r, lf,\,( f'
P erkins added tha t among f~ns:'w": .'~ 1~ fl~ n:_; tt:~ !'~ 1·?: 111 n 1• _,,.~ J1'~ = .. i:7~ ~~o .s.s h~ '"'• "" 60._ '""
tha t number they expected f~E(01·.~ !: ~;~ :;::: ::t.: -+~ E1w1re .JO 1i ~l'· fi:: ~·,:-.:;I -J·K-
560.000 to be VW's a nd the re-1=.r,rf'·n ~ 1~c ,~VI 1~ ~~"'~::::'"Ji,~.~ , tt~ !t .. ~~::. i: j:~ir:t'~1:1S tt 1;:: 1~\~.,,~~~J~ madh~inhg 40.000 to be .Por sches I::"~~ 1:: 2~; ~ ~;11 ~~;~ ~1:'~ E.:~~I, ~,.4t~ 'H }:\~ JJ.~ ~::: !1~·1::,~ ·~1190 u~ ~~: !''4 ~ f:\i
an t e new Aud1 sedans llunk A•mo ''l 1~1. u •, 1#1~ ura nd l,JOQ ,.? " II'> lt + ., J1on l~l.4ta ll .... ~ 42\.t ~~'" •"'tt
h , h 'ii llunl<lt p11 JO 113 ..,.. 111 4,.. "-,v•niP .ltClb ..., '1 tO '°'' ;. '• JeUnP1101 .&O SJ JO\• JOI\ 1• 1v 1c w1 go on s a I e in 11o11r:r, 1:111 JHi J••\ Js-· ,~,',',",,'", ,, 11 ,. 2110 ,,,., -'• J••otn~A .so t<1 1•h '2J'll ~ 'Jo" th I th eur .1t • ,,~. fl'• ?l .. + ,, r . " 1l'l ,II-·) 2irt11 ... 1~ Jewtl Co 1,,0 " ~'· ~ ... .... uary roug1 e new 111urr11, ·"' 160 1,,,, J<11•i n~•, +-'• ":,~.:-..ci~4.10• 2u· 3J•, 111•• ).11, -\\Jim W•ll .110 u. n~.· ~ll! ~-¥,"'
dealer network of the Porsche '""vrno, 1•1" 3 "" 1•·· 1••· .. F•irCi.c ~ 1J: #'j~ fr·· ft::!.,,~ il;;:~ .. 1~1~t0, r100 ~ •• ml , .~
Audi div ision. r •bol CD 1111 -C-. ~:i~~' ·\lll '~'I 11 ,!~ lPi ! i: j=:::rr_~" ~ ':,,,~ 1~~'~ ... t~."'i!''
Ct r Fl"'lll ;i l~, l-~~ ~~., + ' F•l11t!I .•l lO 11'4 I '' 10-~ + \lo Johns Svc .IO l ,-,,, s°"' •> t.~-C"t l1t hM .73f 2f1 ,,f', ..._. -1 ~ .1.i. F,!~,~~n, ',~ 11 11·1 17~-1114 + 1,Joll...svc 012 '" C A ., •. , "" '"'' """ ·-» IJ'a 11\.lo ~ 1-\:. JonL-11 "* '1 ''"' s.IVi Ji Hu• ISIIaW c::~:S .. Li~ ~1 11 '''\ 1''·-11•F1rwe.1 Fn J~ ll" 1t1, uv.+1.,.1-u.u 1.lS ",. i• , .\I c inScu ttv 1 ,1:& H" ~ if• ~111 FtttM'I .tot> n·~ u Jones&L 111 l 10> I' "~ tiJ=1;' .. ..., · Cd$fo..-.00• 1, O'> O 0,0 .L "F,~100," ,001 ll 1• o ?~ 241~ +·l!o J«r.nsn I.JI J ' • rl'~ '~ ~· c " 15.~ ~ 111 11 31 • l1l· -v. J•"'" .11 " u·• :M\li ''• r:;I( 'fnJ'.: ~ M !! ~r • -I'• Fl!OM<>11 I IO JS 16'• 2J·, ti;, +I Jll'f Ml'll \ . .0 x2t.J '5 41\t. U'I" .o. \•
P d C•n•IRO I.I• " ,, •.• ,, .. ,, _,__) FtdPIC Ell"C SJ rs . l•. I\ I •• 1(111« _.,,, 1 " • ._ lTt• 1'111'+ -lit
I 0 t . . F Pac on .M J It.la " ,, T~ Kt!. !)flfA.ll 1 !f.l n 11 ... \it · mo e ~:~~.~'"·~~ :~ ~;., H" ;::~11 :~~=r1!~~"~ 1; :i.; l!ti ;r;+1 ·;~1~::~l~"·,~ n 1" ID';,=t.:~ .. Chtll1l1 .ta JI H"; 1!10 l!'t + lf FrdOfp!Slr I ~~I JI 36 1 M<~ _ •,1k•l1C I'll. I). 10 ' 1•· '1•.t. •• (~,.... C.\Oll ' 1lCO ~· '' 6' -11 Ftd M1e Inv J f•o t 'O 90, -'I 1(•11C Pwll i 11 l•'• J l'. .. Ernest T . 1-llns h fnv Jr ofl 'h•~PLl l.o& ~·t 11·, 1J n'~-'--'•F~rrocp .10 10 ?l'• n 11 ZJ l,-\,tec So.,1n0 16 :it·. \\+ •
Nev.•porl Beach has bccii ,-,m. ~:~~1~~<"•'.·.,60 1' 11 1 'l J/'• + « F!ll'"tbrd .10 ~1 11'• )l" l~'· ~1 . • JO'~ }I -'~ l'le!llctM t 00 11 11•, c•~ 2''• -',
ed a director of Cap ital ~:~~C.-1:~: ,l i\~ ~\;: ~\;~ ~ :i ~\~·~~••In ,: ~;;: 11:~ ~f;: t ~;
Research anrl ~·lanagemenl c~~',.,,',', .·• ,, 13· 11•·• 1 "~ + '• Flre5tnt 1.61 111.1 st • 11 • Sl'1 -" e.. ... U ;ioi. 7'4 :1111 .. -Ft! Cll" f,ftt n1-11~, »>-. lJ -• 1 Co:. Los Angeles. c,·,1:rT,,•,,1.:io •,t •1•1 ~1"• •Ho -'• Ft1HC11v '"° '" •J~ e.:.. ~J'• _ '•
Th l l'o ,r.e I .._ 1l f'llNttSt tSt 11 351, 3••1 ~II'• -'• e investment advisory cc1 C• flfl.?s ' 7!'"' 4 11V1 +n•• Flktitld<. .11 1 ,.., 1~ .. 1 t '•
f. . CfC'O C0111 tt ' ""' l\lt n1~ -t-14 Flohr Fd .060 " lf'a 11 i,,, I S I 1rm supervises the portfolios c11•11n1C11 ' 11 12 1.1i 11 -~Fl-Sci " " .u h 11 1.e 1.1·, ~ '• y11tbO .,,
of foor na1ion11Uy distributed s:::, 1~"~·: 1 !t !t-. t'1" ~='-·1• ~ ,r.; ;1.: .:-'t: ~-: •. :
mutual I nd' T•• I tm CIOll l'"dr <Cl 1T ff~ 11'4 11'~ -I~ Flt E Cce~t U ~ h>\I 3l 1 ~ u : nc nves ent ~~ ~ 1."• .. , t1•~ n•-. n•, .1.1 Fii G•s .50 ,, 1t11 lt'• n <, + '• Tl•• ldllllwi!\o " • •tr to •¥""""•~
Co Of America A ' 9!I Ill.I ,.lt 11 1111 I I Jl\1 + .... ill Pow 1.60 » .. h "'·• .,-•.ii -'> Ultcl kl Ille lllldc ""'rllt! r-IL .• • • mer1can ·11 , .,,... ,,. '° '1~1 !9" • I -I i U -,-~ M I F 1 s '" II'• 11 11,~ + 1: : sr~ , ''·l H~.,_ ~1• ~ft, llln 1'9w•• ••• unofttelll. • -, .'· utua Un d . W ashington ~It". ~(1\ 41 ,,,, 11"' n•-i. _Ii llO!'Co t .oii ., i '" 1-j'• 1-A1to u1r1,r. n"""'· b-.4iw'IUll,,..,
Mutual Jnve~ Fund and CIJl\Mi>w 1.1• 61 u•; u•o 1'''°' . tuar p111 "" !f' +•,plus atOJ:k div lftd, <-Llclul&i11r1o ,..,;.
Al\tCAlt.Fund'. 9Net as~ts of S!~l fo~. 1
1·= f: ~49 :::: ~~ 1+ :~ ,~l'ririr ~1/ :f ,,,~ fr: ~:! '.;-:~,ii~. a-, ~~td• ar .,.Id ~ IHl JIM ~ T IV "' ln• 11,_ '1'' ?"-\\ ·" MC. P?.iJ I~·• f"' 311 1 ..... -ov ... 1.,., -P•id ltll ·)'Nr1 ·-.-1he (our fund~ to111I an. r:'f:ree t,@ 111 11t• ''~' 11'~ + ·~ OOdtr-r .90 l '• '"' i"1 .t ~ P•¥•blt in "O(k durll'lo l"'·s · " " c 1'"'4 tD 11 ••• ~,, 'O·~ -"• 0011 Cll .IO J' \ '•'• 11 1114 • 111 tt•h v11111 °"' •••dlvld.,.i °' ~ &itr proximately $11l billion. c:~'·'-" pf.ft 1 ;,.; 11" 11i, + •1 _.., M+n ,, U ~ il'" _, '-'Ion dt!t 1-0tc1••1d Of pa '"' :.t,.
• Hinshnw 1-s presid ent and a <•,,~,·,•, .. ,..ee11 11 ,,,. " tt11i -•1 °"' p12.'° 10 •• 1., 1111• Y••• ll-0.il<"''". °" ,.Id .dlir • • n •, 11•1 11 ->t or-dMOT t.'11 '°' tli • :• -• .. 1roc:k div~ or ~It \IP. k-Dttlllreof
d1rerto r of Ame.rican Funds !111dbr1 1,M• 1r• n·. ,.,, ll'\ -'"'i~fK•~ 19 "" 21,. tt'ii, + 1.,.. 111;a 1h11 '"'· '" •~11111"""°''-... ~am11 " 1" 1•'• n ·, -ao 11. ofl .1 1•,'',• 1•1,,• i"r,'• • , .. wit~ fivlCNnd1 Ill trtttlr't, .._ ... "-·-· Service Co .• the m ajorJi..u-<i\Vn-itrtfY' ' 11 ,,., ~,, .. ~., •I WN •• -" ... -"T .... //\ t llO lCI Jl'• n " $J -1' lllt Wit . I 10 1•'• 1' '' + lo, ~ -... lf\!1 Ytar, ~IQ!'ld ort'tlllW, ... ~ transfer agency subsidiary l" ~ 1e )II , •• 1.,: ,,., 1·~ .. _,. .111 .n ff' ll i1 .... ftrm « 1111 action '""' •t 1111 CO-,iat.>11
( 11-NY '•o ,, '•"• r., 1•, '*"""Sir olO t '• .., '• mecitlnf, •-Dtclll'td "' NiCI ifl ,l.,• 1ll11t O Capital R l!search and """"""" *' ti 1,1, ,,, u" ., •• f•t10)$1/I lMI 1111 ii' 1• 11• +1 ·~ dlvld'"". 1-1>1iil 1n 111ick'1w1nt
ti1anagemcnt Company: a vice ~l:! "1;..~'·~0 .;, i;,, i~~ \;., ! 1:! f:::'1~ 1 .~ ':: ~,,~ .:: ;T;: ':a:1
1
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president and . dirtelor of ~~r;~,M11 1 Jl s~·· Ml 50 • .._ 11 -G-cld-C•llH ••-Ett-tityid.,.,,, .,_,r_..,.;..
Ca · I o h Co ..... 10•, H"' 10'' ~c co 150 's •11, ,.,, " -1!~ ~tna •"" uteo In lwM. •~1•-Er.oJitr .. pita 1\C&ellrC mp&n)', CO!IMS!PP tl )l 11•1 ~·~ ~~! ~; "'' CIM'p~ :!04 lm• "'• ,.,, ..1. 1, tivnon. ••-l!a •IOM. •-Wll\laW \W"Or·
C R&MC's wholly owned in· S~~~P~:lj f lf:~ !'" ,,,~ _.t•J "'&,CJ·r.. -i, 1• ij" ~i., +1 ''""· -w111i ••rr•fts. • ...,._.,,,""' ~"11vf l '1 J•ll H" Ii'" » ! / ~ 4 J ,: !! 1, : \, l~IT!butN Wl-Wh•n luvtd. rtll-HtJll v~stment rtsl!arch subsidiary; ~"''" d u1t ? ~·· '' l •1 ·~ ".: i lo ~ 1, •• 1 1 c11v ftllYt•v. w1-1n 111r11irvo1t~.,, ,Kt l¥· -~ •• dlr~or or Caprta l Data 11R11',,'11•Nw " ,, " •nne!I ... t 21~ It .: .:..~ "11'1111 or "11nt flllrpl l\)lfll liiiltlei' !ft .. m•• "' " II'' IO" \Ill '• t t Wood I' l \, '• ~ 1\ l•nll•lilPlcY At:I llf' 11e11rltl~ by 1w11
Systems Inc ~ llt tCll ~.w 10 ... IOii ... '•GtrdO.n l.lt l ) .• 30'• '• -'1 t omtMRltt 111:.:¥-or•Jon lnut 1w~1-, ... ' • ~fW'ltll ,,4 11 Jiit lO'i Xl~t -!•iGtrlOC~ It 1 ti 111, 11•1 1 " fniwr111 ..wt111111on tt1 ... ·~
itlorke~
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I L DAILY FIL01 JI)
Monday's Closing Prices--Complete New York Stock Exchange Li st
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Walk the orange carpet
into our new office •
in Newport Center.
January 5through10.
You won't go away ~mpty handed.
Special hours: 9 to 5 Monday through Thursday ;
9 to 7 Friday; 9to1 Saturday, January 10.
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•r.>v.h! c.o...,;.r
LOUN l"IY CLUB
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We're celebrating the opening of our new Orange County office
in the beautiful financial plaza at Newport Center. And our
new branch is loaded with oranges during the "Free
Orange Festival." See thousands of fresh oranges
on display. You'll take home a free copy of 'The I Love
Oranges Booklet• showing Umpteen clever ways to
serve fresh oranges to your family. Come join us.
Sip a glass of fresh orange juice, see the
remarkable "fruit salad tree"that grows oranges,
lemons, grapefruit and tangerines all at once.
Visit our spacious interior patio with floral
displays that change with the seasons,
a perfect setting to sit with f.riends and
talk of many things. Take a moment
and ask about our Umpteen ways
to save ... flexible savings
accounts and high-earning
•
investment accounts.
GLENDALE fEDERAL
SAVINGS ···-·-·-
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· Newport BeeCh: SOD Newport Ctnllr Orlvt In 1he Nlwport PllWIClll Pim
Coa'8 M981i 1833. N~wpOrt eoutev8"1 -. . ,
I ~ f '• .. ~ ' ... NATION'S llCOND l.AllQUT FEDERAL WITH ~lll!t clQl(.0.C 11&1,JON ,DCKUl\8/U OFl'ICD
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Newport Barbor Today's Final
N.V. Stocks
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VOL 63, NO. ~. 2 SECTIONS, 32 ~AGES -
TV CAMERAS FOLLOW KENNEDY, WIFE TO INQUEST
Probe Into De•th,of Miry Jo Kopechnt Under Way ' .
' KennedySpeaks 'for Hour
During K-0pechnel nquest
' ' .:. ~ . EDGAJt'l'OWN, Mas1. rUPll Sen.
Edward M. Kennedy testified for about
cne hour today •t the opening of the
1echt Jnquell into Mary Jo Kbpechne'1
death. He will be back Oils afternoon.
The inquest lnto th e death of the 28-
year~kl secretary bea:an amid tight
'"-<>yrlly in a century-old courthouse.
Kennedy seemed cheerful as he emerg.
ed from. the courthouse along with five
women and five men acquaintances who
had attended a cookout party together
the night Miss Kopechne died in Ken-
nedy's car after it plunged into a tidal
pond. .
Court clerk Thomas A. Teller told
newsmen he would distribute a statement
at ! p.m., presumably convering ground
ru1's imposed by District Judge James
A. Boyle. who presided at the inque!ll.
Kennedy, who flew in from his Hyannis
Port home on the mainland, said as he
entt!red the courthouse, "I'm hopeful WP.
can reach an end to what has become an
extraordinary length of time."
"I'm hopeful tne::.record will be com·
t>lete ·and I can get to the business of
deYoling myself lo the Senate."
Kennedy and 11early a dozen other ~ut>
pc>enaed wi tnesses -all accompanied by
lawyers -walked into the heavily gu.ard·
ed courthouse, in fron t of which milled
about 200 persons. mostly ncwsmep.
Judge Boyle presided over the inquest,
ordered by District Attorney Edmund S.
Dinis. Boyle arrived al the courthou~ more
than two hours before Kennedy.
After laying down the ground rules for
the proceedings. Boyle was expected ta
be.11in inlerrogatina: Kennedy and 10
$l0,000 in Gems
Reported Stolen
From Lido Home
The thefl of almost SID,000 In jewelry
over Ne'v Year's \veekend from the home·
of a Lido Isle woman was discl~ed by
police toda y.
Wenzella Ripley, 58, an investor whet
has another home in Washington~ D.C .•
told police iihe discovered the 108.'I of 28
pieces of eii:pensive jewelry New Year's
night, '
Mrs. Ripley, whose Lido·Wo~ls at 229
Via Lido Sood. told offlcert· she, came -
h<lme at about 7:30 p.m. Md. when she
went. tO mum the jewelry sbe: was wear·
in& she diacovered her 'other ltem.!l miss-
ing. Officers uid there Yi'cre no sign.!I of
f<i"c:ed entry. into the house,
1'le woman said one kitchen door
leading to 1ervants' quartu1 had bttn
left open . Officers said mO.!ll of the loot was in
the $500 rangt with several mnre tl·
pen.!live pieces Included.
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others-wtm---att!ncled 1 cooltout-reunlon
the night Mi$S J~opedine died.
AltogeUwr, ~at least 20 ptrsoh.a have
been subpoenaed tO testify.
Just as Kennedy and hi.~ wl(r Joa n
reached the edtrance to the courthouse,
lhe senator was· asked by newsmen : ''Are
you glad it"s finally under way ?"
Kt:nnedy turned, nodded, and replied :
"Yes, 1 am.'1 ·
The proceeding:-;. which were lo open
Sept. 3, were closed lo the press and
public by order of the 1'1assachusetl3
Supreme Court. But it waii left to Boyle
to decide whether lawye rs would cross.
examine \.\1itnesses and present evidence
ol th~r own .
-Stock Jllarkell
NEW YORK ( APl -The stock market
maintained a broad gajn in active trad·
ing late today. tSee quotations, Pa&es 14-
15. !
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* ORANGE couNn-. cA1:rFORNIA • ' ~pNDA Y, JANUARY S, ·r 970 .
TEN CENTS
Nixon Frees Help Leader
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Com~utes -Sente~~ of Head af Negro Program
By 'lllCllARD P. NALL
• or-,,.. DiJIJ 'n•t '""
.. PALM SPRINGS -President Nixon'
granted hi! hrst eXecutive cleMency to-
day as,. he commuted the ·federal prison
sdillence· ota Negro self-help leader and• neurosurkeq'ir.Iffi~r).-Statt.-1
. The Presldent acled in behaU' of Dr.
Thomas \V: Pttathews, president ·of the
Nationa l . Economic . Growth an d
Reronstruction Organization . tNE<JRO ). •
Dr. -~1athewS pl~aded guilty. Oct. 20, 1969
in U.S. District Court New ·York to'
charges of failure 'lo file an Income tax
reLurn. He w.as: sentenced to one }'tar,
Mine .Leader,
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with one year IUS'pended, and bep.n aeJv.
ini'. the aenteoce Nov. "iO. lft o.Dbury,
CoM. federal comcUooal lnllltule.
Pre,. Socrebuy -R<in Zlqle/\ Atd Dr.
Mathews did not pay .hls 1a>ea for -Ji-
yter1 in ordet to devote his ~~
fl naril'.'f!l _~!£0_self _. Mli'mw"}!!IJ suC1i ., ..., ~ucleiflilWatt• to. iilis ,
Negi:qes to1>lact1 or emplO.)'inent. .. ~ •
In co{Tlmuting the physician's sentence.,
the President emphasized it was not a
question of reli ef for an individual but
rat.her relief for the hy1portanl program
he heads.
ZiegJ"r Said that Dr . fl1athe\.\'S is cur·
renUy filing returns and paying federal
. -
tar~ and hu minced to mate g>mplete -;'bearinc down" ~n his S'tate of tHe unpi
rtsUtuUon o( back taxes.. Message scheduled Jan. D. Re ..a.a II.id
;The neuroawaeon 1ii-.made the Point-~. tf'e Pi'e.sident' and Jir&t" ramUJ m.ia:ht
in ~Ughting his own case-that who-Bpend tonJs,ttt again at the palai.lal Palm
eyer brtaks the 1law' for whatevu ca~ SprirJ.!s home oC· Walter i,Annenbera:1• am·
should be. prepared to pay Uie ~alty, •ba.s.sador to G:reai Britain.
Ziegl!t said. Dr. Malhews did 'not file re-Zlelfler saJd the Prejldent. may le1 ve
turrt.t ,It) {$63.1 , Sa!l~ cJemente 'niU.i-s<l'i.Y er ;P'rldaY:--Hlir
Ziegler sild: !''lte President feels the birthday is Friday ,And. a celebratlon ls
lnt.ereat of· the Co,untry and the cOmmun--expected Jn Wa~hlngtQfl; But the aepar·
itles where NEGRO is establishetl are lure ill not yet !itm, Zle(ICler· emphasized. ~ter served by· the release of Dr. Math· He said the first t.amily' will probably
ews and his return to the vital work registe r as California voters som~ time
NEGRO is invo lved in.'' after Tuesday. Ziegler said JuUe and
Ziegler said the President was getting David Eisenhower returned Sunday from
In some goliing In Palm Springs and their Belgian visit. ·
W. Countg Hit-ru1a
Family -Shot . ·Holiday Crashes
ToDeath N·· ·
Cit)'._ foljce,
Schools Tell
OfDrugCurb CI;ARKSVILLE;-Pr.'(Al')~-oseph ' . Take Four ···ves
"iock" l'abl on5k.i, unsuccessful candi· D
date in the eleetion race for the preslden·
cy of the United Mineworkers Union was
found murdered, st.ate police said today.
Office rs said they also found the body
nf t\\'O women believed to be his wife and
daughter at their home in the heart or
PPr·nsy lvania's soft coal region.
ltlajor Howard M. Jaynes, area state
police commander, said Yablonski was
ft>und lying next to his bed shot. orict in
the back or the head .
Jayne! said the bodies or the two
wo.men were found in I wo other
I.Jed rooms.
··There was blood scattered all around
~d the telephone line$ were all ripped
out." said Jaynes. ~ ·
He u id police believe the shootinp OC·
curred sometime during t~ nifPt.
"Th< appe~ance of the )bodies would
(Sec MINER. Pare Ii
Soccer Player
Gds Broken Leg
A soccer game Sunday morning ·in
Newport Beach's Mariner 's Park was a
painful affair for one competitor from
San Gabriel.
Hans Gunter Lucht, 24. suffered 1
broken leg. when 911e oven.e.alous com-
petitor missed the ball and kicked
Lucht's leg, instead.
Both bones of Lucht'11 le.ft leg were
broken by'the blow. police said .
An arnbulaflce -took Lucht to Hoag
fl1emorial Hospital where the fra ctures
were set and the soccer player ad mitted.
His conditloo was described as sati.11fac·
lory by aides today.
A Balboa Island girl became Orange
County's follrth 1970 traffic fatality Sun·
day night.
California Highway Patrol officers said
Donna Lynn Bell. 16, of 222 Coral Ave.,
was pronounced. dead at .the scene at
1170 County Traffic 19'1
' DeaUI Toll l
I I :35 p.m. when the car in which she was
riding with three companions went out of
control and 1trud: a tree on El Toro
Road.
·Takeo to 5ooilh Co11t ~pjlity l~ospllll with m•jor Injuries· were the
driver, Don Dia:ldano,..29, or 321 Poplar
·Si., ·Llgur,.a Beach and his. paaengen
Vanessa Mytr•, 1$, of m5e E1 Perrp1 El
Toro aod Gregory M. Graf, lt, ol 210
Cliff Driyr., Lasuna O.ad\.
ln ap.accidenl SaturQ.ay, 1 Buena Park
youth lost hi! life when he walked Into
the ·side o{ a semi-trailer truck at Beach
Boulevard and ~talvern. Avenue Jn Buena
Park.
.Police said Vernon Betcord, 11, or &140
S9m~t Circle, was pronciunced dead
on arrival al Btach Community Hospital
aner he reportedly stepped into 1he in-
tersection, luroed to say IOttiething to
two !riends and walked into the 11ide or
the ria:. The driver J;lerman Klein, 27, or
PomOna, was not held .
The other two traffic . fatalitie11 oc·
curred Friday. •
JoM· Susman or Brooklyn, N.Y .. whet
was viaiti111 re.laUves Jn Stanton, was kill·
ed by an out of control auto wben he tried
lo shit'!ld his ~year-old·gran<betn from the
ca r. office rs said. The boy. K'"eonelh Scott
Ostrow Is in 1atisfactory condition today
RI Los ~ "'mitos General Hospital.
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Garden Grove teen111ger Michael Gary
Grabam, 16, also died Frld11y a,fternoon
following a broadside colllsfon on Knott
A\'enue. The driver of the second vehicle,
Akira Hirata of Anaheim, is reported in
crlt~cal CQ.ndlUon ai Stanton Community
llospital. Witnesses a1S.1erted the youth
was involved In a drag race when he lost
control of his vehlcle and plowed into the
car driven by Hirata.
In Westminster, police said today they
are still seekh;ig a black 1961 or 1962 El
CJmhlo Chevrolet in connection with a hit
and.'run acddent Saturday which nsulted
I• the amputaUoo of. the 1q: ol •• elderly
man. -·~ ..,.. :Westmlnlter residtnt G er 1 I d w.
Fitp"ald., 6', ls Jn ~'teriou1 ooi im· ~" Condition today lit We&lmlnster ~m11\Unlll' Hoopit.1 following a hit and
run ~~ident Satwrday afternoon In whlcb
~ loot his lett laf. .
Fitzgerald wa~ struck · down by 1n
automobile at 1:37 p.m. at Golden West
Street and Humboldt Avenue by what air
peared.,to be' a bla,ck 11111 or 1962 El
CaminO Chevrolel, pollct ai.ld. ·
The driver of the car, according to
witnesses, was a man wearing a beard
who was accompa11led by a female
passenger at the time of the accident.
The vehkle, police aaid, wu seen leaving
the l.r'lterRcllon at a high rate of Bpeed
and may have received slight damage tD
the Jett tront render u a result of the col·
Usion.
Fitzgerald, who matu· his home at
136tl low.a St., was ttaMpOl'ted to the
hospital . by ambulance, where SurgeOns
had to remove hi! shattered leg. He also
1uffered multiple contusions a n d
abrasions In the accident, accordin& to a
bo!pltal apokesman.
Rector Supports
Probe of Bay
Land Exchange
The Rev. David A. Crump ol St. James
Eplscopal Church, whose cong:regaUon is
oge of New~ Beaeh'1 wealthiest, today
aided with ~rvationfM foes of the Uir
per Bay tldelands uchange.
He 1akt he la "glad and relieved" that
the legality ol 1.he prOJ>()Sed l)Wap of
Irvine Company Uplands":for countt-own-
ed UdeJandl will be rreefy argued In the
courls.
Superior Judge Robert Corfman
recently ruled that hllhdreds of J>Oints ol
updated evidence on the trade may be in·
traduced In the upcoming trial .by six
layman' litigantJ who are challenging the
tran1adlon..
The Rev. Mr. CrumP., aSllOCiate rector
of Sl. James since 1965, said he believu
the widened court Case "at 'least ,slows
this whole matter down ao that ln!dllgent
and up-to:da te thl.,klngµn-l)e-~\ied."
Trial dates th'CexamlnaUon ol the
exchanr re atlll not yet aet. .
1 ,..The Rev. r.1r. Crump 'a views .. which
are penonal, are' con~liled in. • letter to
the NeW)>ort Beach City Council. whlch is
it.self ta kin& 'another look at the Back
Bay b811e. · • · ... r aro frank to ••Y that l have become
"""'·•~1!.at 1U1plclous of ~ the . lrvl_ne
Company and the Board ol Superviaors, ''
the mfdater laid. "Apparently neilhtr
~JP'ia! any in!'ormatlon1wlth ngard to ecOlogy~nvironment, or elae they &imply
don't care. ~ ·
--.iy-mOMAS FORTIJN
Of Ille Dlll'i' .. l11t Sl•rr
Increased palice counseling on campus
and drug ex~lanatory, m,etings for par-
ents will be the response to accusations
Newpart·Mesa school officials aren't tlo-
ing enough about drug use at schools.
Schoolmen and city police. held a_ prl!l!s
conference today to say, in effect. they
haven 't had their heads in the sand and
to proclaim what lhey are doing to coon.
ter student drug use.
.Their declarations were In answer l(t
ll\e wlde\y-publiclzed complaints of two
fathers who pulled lheif daughters out
of Costa Mesa's Davis Intermediate
School after learning the girls had wed
drugs.
Announced at the pre•B conference w11
a Newport 'Beach Police Department pla_n
to uslgn an officer run time lo a1xlOJ
campuses as a counselor-ldviaor. Aleo
toJd was \he intention of holding mttting1
fO'r parents to tell them what narcol.icJ
look lite and · how to identify symptom•
of' users.
Newport-Mesa School Superintendent
William Cunnln'gham said the school ad·
ministration has had a cl<>H and succe11~
ful-warking rtlationshlp with police. He
said school people do recognize they have
a problem, but .said it is no worse than
in other cornmuniUes.
Dr. Cunningham said he believes the
concern staled bY the two ra~ can
ha ve a posJlive effect Attendan(!I tiy par·
ents at meeti!lgs on drugs hu betn poor
in the past and after hearing ol the fath·
ers' alarm maybe more will want to a:et
the word, he suggested.
''l don't thlnk drug control on m' of(
the campw: is a push buton sort or
thing," Dr. Cunninghall\ aakl. "I cannot
honestly say that the situation ls better
today than lt was several weeks ago,
oUier )han we are aware or the problem,
as we think we have been all alona:.''
He said a large majority of students
feel drugs on campus stories have been
"grossly .overplayed. Whether they have
ls difficult lo answer.'' he said, "but
ISee RESPONSE, Pa&e !)
VIKINGS ll-POINT
CHOICES SVN-lJA.Y
LAS VEGASi (AP) -Bookmakers here
too~y establlahed the National Football
. League champion Minnesota Viking• u
II -point favoritea to defeat the Kansas
City Cl\iefs of the American Football
League for the World litle.
The world championship will be decld·
ed between the Chiefs and Vikings Sun-
day in the Super Bowl game '8l .New
Orleans. •• •
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Orange Coaat
Weatlller
Fair skies with local gusty w:lnd1
brushing away Ute bad air Is tht
picture for Tutsday along the
coast. Temperatures continue to
cringe into the low 8011.
INSWE TODA. Y
Orange Count11 enters lht
decoM of the srvemie• careful-
ly tyeing the t»"_Obltnu prtsent.-
td. b11 its b1trQeonlno growth.
Page JO. ~
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!!"he ~tllut piece or lost jewelry was
a bracelet made up of 1 larg~ emefald-
CJt beryl, diamonds, rubles and pearls.
The butterfly-designed bracelet was
,·alued at f2,500, ofiice11 said.
Steelworkers ere pushing new Avco Financial
Tower in .Newport Center toward its eventual 1~
story height. Hlgbrl se, which will house interna-
tional headquarters for Seaboard Finance and Ba h
boa Insurance Companles, la scheduled for comple-
tion in early 1971. A la(ge parldilt bulldinll ls slated for construction nearby. ' -
''111e beautUul part to that· apparenti,
tt wu lht people who 1ot the matter Into
cow1.'1 hi Kid. "ltwauld appe•r that tbe
people ,..,.. def..,..1"'11 aplnst the
'powen th•" be'. 1 am lidin1 with the
peol>lt •nd em takin& an,ldlvt pert In
lhe matter," . . ·
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Mesan Kidnaped,
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~avagely Beat~n
,
Bloodied in 1 savage ·ure iron beatina:
on 1 remote mo_ynta.ln fire trail, a Costa
~ Mesa shlii clerk kidnaped from his home
squirmed through the dirt early Sunday
to escape death under the wheels of his
own car.
Investigators s a i d t o d a y thal
F""1erlck V. Tede!co. 47, ol 145 E. 18th
St., probably owes hi1 life to a newspaper
route deliveryman who may h a v e
frlChlened off the three would·be
Diilrdeters.
A widespread hunt la under way today
for the 1969 Pontiac Le Mans sedan new·
ly purd1ued by Tedeoco and used by his
attaokera to flee the acene In Trabuco
Cany'on abortly befme dawn Sunday.
Tede9co, meanwhile, WIS listed in fair
cOOdltion at Hoag Memorial Hospital,
where he la under treatmtnt for a variety
ol ln)urlet su1r ... e<1 In the brutal .... u1t.
_.ll{~saw the injured man as I drove past
and I sped to a telephone" to get help,"
aald Nordeen, who pinpolnted the site
along old Trabuco Hill road about. fOO
yards, beyond Cook'• C.orner. ,
Nordeen said he aaw tail ligbt.s
vanl&hing around a curve up ahead of the
1pot where Tedeeco lay sprawled in the
ditch, bleeding and bait.red.
Officer Leo Jones aaid in his Colt.a
Mesa Police Department report of the
case -still sketchy due to the victim'•
condition -that auto theft appeared to
be the only mctlve behlnd It.
He said Tedffco know• of no enemies
and live! modestly, with no penonal
habi~ or problem1 which mJjht lead to
vengeance by others.
'I11e vicUm aald be wu-1ppr'OIChed
outside his apartment house apo¢ Jl
p.m. Saturday by three 111"' wbo ... lfktd
the number of his apartment. He refuaed.
FOUND' MURDERED
Miners' Y•blonakl
From Pflfle 1
MINER •.• .,.
lmlicale that they were murdered," said
stale ~c:e'captain Josepi>Snycler.
Ph.yaiclans: aald he auatained severe
multiRle laceraUon!, a fractured nose.
sever81 broken fingen on his left hand,
fractured rlbl and massive welts over his
~nure body.
to tell lhem. 1 i
Tedesco said at that point he was forei-
ed into his new car -rUll beart.ng tem-
porary paper regislration plates -and
methodically beaten all the 'f'IY into lhe
· ''.l'h• si'.y~ld Yablon.it •larled early
"his cha~ge of !Ile leadership of UMW
Preslde:Jlt W./ A. "Tony" BOyle -an.
noun~ his candidacy for the pruiden-
cy of the 220,000 member UDlted Mine r
Workers union on May 29.
,.
Pardon Hls Dust I
_.
·.The dust ;round thi!: Oreo Disposal truck got. a bit
·thick this morning when the hooks on the back ~ door broke aJld assorted trash cascaded into the
·street in tlie 200 'block of Victoria Avenue. The
company dispatched another truck and crew to
DAILY PILOT lttlf ,.._..
clean up the debris. A third truck, dispatched to
continue the regular 1ra5h run, was knocked out
by a fire in its electrical 1ystem shortly after ar·
riving on the scerie.
.
Unruh Asks Tax--R-eform Fro .. Pflfle 1
RESPONSE •••
orange County aheriff'.1 deputies con-
tactid by John Nordeen, 64. Fullerton,
aaid the newspaper iooteman's approach
may have frightened off Tedesco'• ... at·
tackers Sunday morning.
HuntingtonMan's
Knee Broken
In Newport Cras1i-
Santa Ana Mountains. ' '
Once in the Trabuco Canyon area, he
told detectives, he WU dragged out of
die car and the brutal beating continued
with -Ure iron being wed, although he
maintained consdousnf.S!.
"Mining is still the moat dangeroua or
all qccupatlons," he said. "The union Is
flllling rar short of what It should' be:
doing. The mine worbrs organlzaUon bas
been stagnant. The miners need to belong
to a labor organiiatlon that is totaJly
democratic so It can be responsive to
their needs."
Yablonski's father -a Polish tm-
migrant -died in a Pennsylvania mine
accident.
The shoe clerk said the men finally got
back into the car and attempted to run
ovtr him. but he rolled through the dust
into the ditch to escape being crushed by
the wheels.
Tedesco told of lying in the gu!ler until Newport Lauds
found by Nordeen• but was unable to give
a...cle_ar indication of. the time lapse in-vo~~gator Gerry 'lllompsM ba• been Beach -Beauty
· A H ""~" •···• uff ed assigned to handle the followup report of school people-do oot..-want-to appear~de-unwuti .... n uo;cu.;.u p:1an s er I.. ... 1,. T~-· A '---t-has-~ ..... _. ____ ..... u .. -t. ·-k __ , bnd I s·-.1-Lii.e savage aaau ... ll""BOOft"I S o;:uo;;,,...v"L! ~ ~· -w ~I As Legislnture -Opens tensive and are workinc on the usump-UJVke.n ~e a.utbru ,.. eaahar Y . wJUa-Yt able to face further qut!:!lkming. Jngton Beach for civic improvements
tloo it is· a serious problem." monung in a ee-car er m wes Newport Beach. along Pacific . Coast Highway b y
Newport Beach City Manager Harvey Police 18.id Jay Williams, 38, 8202 neighboring Newport Qeach.
SACRAMENTO (AP) _ An election· lie called for wiping out tu eiernp. Hurlburt "Id the two city COWlcilmen he Poestwlck Circle, wu injured when Ousted Cost Expert In a letter to Mayer Jack Gre.n .and
ned tod llh tions be says help "very wealthy Jndlvl-has talked to have been very receptive another car sideswiped his, forcing the the City Council, Newport Mayor Doreen ~~ legislature ope ay w duals who pay Uttle or no ai:ea at all." to the idta·of. employing a policeman as man'a auto into a head.on .impact with Ends Federal Career Marshall cites the improvement or ~bly Democratic Leader Jesse M. And Unruh demanded elimination of a campus counselor-advisor. The City sllll ancither car. · • Pacific Coast Highway, the new con·
Unruh offering a sweeping program in-what he termed "tu loopholes" for big Council will have to vote the funds to The cause of the crash, police said, was WASHINGTON (UPI) -Erne st struction and parking lots on th! city
eluding a fiat limit on homeowner&' pro-business -the depletion allowance given pay his ialary. Alleged failure to yield the right of way Fitzgerald, t~e civilian cost expert who beach and the overall beautification along
Perty taxes. oil companies and the troperty tax: e1· The "cop on c1mptl!" would divide by Susan Colglazier, 20, Whittier. stirred up a storm on swollen COflt.s for the city's coastline. ·
Unruh, a candidate for the Democratic emption granted on t e home office time between the two high schools and Officers claim the woman pulled onto the CSA cargo plane, ended His govern· These represent "substantial progress
buildings of insurance companies. two junior high schools in NeW)Xlrt Pacific Coast Highway from Orange menl career quietly today. not achieved without dedication and ef·
llOfllinaUon for governor, made hiJ pro-Blasting away at Reagan, Unruh said Beach. Avenue and hit Williams' auto. Ha.. Air Force job as deputy .for fort," Mayor Marshall states.
posals in a unique "state of the state" "the people of California are being short Assistant Newport Police Chief Harry The third driver, Jeffrey Shofner, 'tl, mana~ent systems was declared ··~fay we also wish the city of Hun·
~ge delivered to a news conference changed by a do-nothing administration Nelson uid it won't be the function of the MOS w. Octan Front, Newport Beach, defunct as part of a Defense Department tington Beach continued progress and
a day before Reagan outlines his own which slb idly by while the quality of the policeman to gather inlonnation on nar· wu not hurt in the 12 :05 a.m. crash. economy drive and the 44-year-old success with m plans and program for
p!ans. ~l:a•~ .. e .. ::: ... dete~ior~te at an •c· ~cs1users bu~he ~ be
111
!an .. ~~ .William& w
1
as trea~1 at Huntington Fitzgerald was headed for a private red~ve~'pthemen1t o
1
r the doludwntown coastal
Like Unnih, Reagan .11 9 .....,....,. lo h1t -. UINJ c Git enou.,. r•~· .. , •w..-• lntarcommun ty Hosp1ta. career. section,. et e[ cprx: es. ~......... Striking at the key conservation Issue, ~,oluntartly would ,tve him such µitonna-1-------.,.;;;;;;;;;1M;;;;;;;;;;;;.--------------;;;;-;;;;;;;;u;;;;;;;;;;-~--.....,--bard at IJ"(lperty t.1:1 relief. Unruh calJed for legislaUon halting all oil ..,00.
Unruh alio offerd a wide ranJe of pro-drilling on state ~lled lands.in~ Costa Mesa Polict Chief Roger Neth ..,..1s to pre.Irv.. Calilonlla's l en-_Sant• jlarbafJ~~ site , 1 · told of his deparJmenl'• practice for the
tinuhig oll'le'ak. . Jut year and a balf of having an Offjcer Vironmalt -also .a lop priority prograni · He also proposed a State ConservaUon on high school campaes two days a
far Ule Republican governor. who ia ex-Authority with the power to reject _any week at the Juncb hour to answer ques-
l----pec:ted-1<>-,..k-.·.......t-leml~----<tale,--local..w-phoate.project llk•'l'-"'----ti..,..~----------1-
Unruh Aid his program "constitutes a damage the eovtronment. "'Ibey are not there In any way to in-
Jtinclpal program that we cou14 look vestigate," he said.
fPi:ward to U I were elected governor." He said younger officers with academic
'Demanding relief for property tax· Alt B.} l background ate pi~ked for the assign.
payers, Unruh 18ld the levy "i1 lllerally Oflleys aS ment (th..., have teaching credenUals).
driving Californians out of their h"omes." He has hopes ol expanding the program
'On the CGnservation iPue, Unruh p • } N to junior high schooll as the manpower
declined to crlUclu Reapn directly, but refrla eWS becomes available, he said.
he said state government and local • The program has been done with e1is-
gQvernmenU., hive become "one of the I T SI . ting manpower and cruet Neth ha,, __not
gr"t despoilers of the environment in ll ate a ymgs go"' to the eost. M"' city counclf for
the at.ate." additional funds.
.And he llid he intends lo keep a From Witt Services Dr. Cunningham said no thought has cri~l eye on the Reagan administration AUSTIN, Tex. _Attorneys for Charles been given to the use of undercover off!.
through the long lt!:Slion. "I offer my D. Watson, charged Jn the Sharon Tate cm pretending to be stud~ U done in servlca to the people of California on murders, sai(I today the former Tens . Los Angeles. ''The use of idenUfiable o(.
what is being done so they can evaluate schoqlboy athlete could not gt! a fair ficen iJ just tbt opposite tactic," he'
the difference between promise and trial in California because of pretrial pointed ouL
performance," he 11kl. publicity. Newport Auistant Chief Nelson aaid
Unruh proposed a flat limit on property "Our contention is that California Is not his department has given 126 different
la;1e1 levied on homes occupied by the the place to try Charles ·Watson," said at-talks to the community on narcotics dur·
owners. tomey Bill Boyd at an extradition hear· ing the last year, reaching an audienct
FloQd H ill' Argentin a
MENDOZA, ArgenUna {AP) - A six·
r11(1t wan of mud and water from a burst
fl ood control dam raged through this city
In the Andes foothills Sunday and police
reported 23 persons were known killed.
DAILY PILOT
OAANGl COAST l'\ltLISMIMG C0M'AfN'
Ito'-••* N. Wo•.I Pro.lltflt Mil ,......,.
J,clt R. C-rl•y
VICI , ........ t •r.11 (.9w1I ~
1~01'111 ICnvil
E<lilor
}~fl"'•' A. Murphift•
MO~Ot1"1 E<1;19r
Jt•o"'• F. Colli~••
N'"'""'' l•tdl C1•y IElllOI'
Ne·,,,.rt .... OWic.•
12 1 I W11I 1•11101 leult¥1r.I
M 1ili~9 Aclcl ron: l'.O. le• 1111, tJ66J
'
O"-' Offl1" C:.t• MeHI m Wnl •• , StrRt
1,.....,. ••Hfl: m '°'"' ..,....,..,. Hllftl!fltt'M &Md!; l111J &udl IN4VI ... . .
'
,
r
estimated at 6,000. "So we haven't really ing before Martin Dies Jr., Texas been dragging our feet," he said.
Secretary of State. H t Id h · J hi h boo Boyd, of McKinney. Tex.. where e 0 ow every sing e g 'SC I and junior high school student has heard Watson is jailed, argued against return· an boor lectUre from polict on drngs and
ing to Callforrua tbe man charged with . he mentioned the program of having
the· killings -of_ Miss Tate and six oth~r teenagers riding around with a patrol of.
persons. ficer at night in a sqllidCar.
Boyd said be is preparing a move to Costa Mesa Chief Neth told of his d~
get ctiarges against Walson transferred partment'1 plans for a day.Jong presenta-
to a federal court ao that they may be Uon in late February by "people from
"tried anywhere in the United Statea." about evuy narcotics program we can
Watson, 24, former higb" school football find."
Md track stor ln the unall Texas lown.t Or. Cunningham said the school district
of Fannenvllle and.CopevUle, was not at has been active alao and that a ~
the 30-mlnule·ex!rad!Uon hearing. He ii garlon througb hlgb school curriculum
in the C,,llin Cooncy Jal! at McKinney. on drugs I• in the !ale stages of-
wataoit's attom11yi did , not question ation for introduction this spring. •
·California's clalm'that ftncerprtnts show-He uld the school district will wort
ed Watson was the person charged with with police in trying to better train tea~
the Tate murders. Fingerprint e1perts ers in recognliinf-drug use. .
froin California were not ca11ed to testify An announced school locker check over
since the issue of Watson's Identity was the Christmas vacation he said WIS in re-.
not raised. sponse to an Inference by lhe fathers \hat
Oles said he will meel with Texas Gov. drugs were being stored in lockers.
Preston Smith later today Md 'hoped to "We dldn·t think it was true, but w.e....
be ready to recommend a declslon to wanted lo let them know that the lockers ·
Smith then on California Gov. Rona ld ,belong to the school, not the students,"
Reagan's request that Watson be 11· he said.
tradlted to California.. · Costa 1'-tesa City Councilmen WOiiam
Patricia Krenwtnkel, also actUsed of St aalr said he thinks the school diltrlct
murder and conspiracy In jhe Tate and has an advantace of. being able to work
LaBianca slaylngs, faced extradition with two ciUes. Both dties can try dllfer'-
hearings today Jn Mobile, Ala. ent tactics, be ·said. and if one w.t~
Attorney M. A. Maraal. rtpm0t1tlnl particularly ...U'1ba other clcy Cll1 plct
Mi" K,.....lnkel, D; cbntenda then! b Jn. It up,
suffident evidence to warrant a reb.lm Of
hi• cu•nt to caurorn1a ror trial 1n th• N . y , ,,.8 . mass murders. ew ear S · oating Cli<:ult Judge Joseph M. Hocklander Jr_ -
was n1111ed to prellde and Dist. Atty. Victim Recovered earl M. B<>oth.<>r Mobil• county ar111ed
for extradil.loo or Miss Kreowlnkel.
Priest Collapse11
The Rev. John Dunne ol Our !Jody •of
Mt. Connel C.lhollc Chur<h coliapoed
during the 10 a.m. MIU SUQdl)'.
Father Dunne, who tainted al 10:11
1.m. V.'ill revived quJctly by llremttl
5ummoned to the services.
MANHA'l'l'AN BEACH (Al'l -' A ...
cond bedy l\ol-beiii'Tecoveo-ed from •
New Ywa O.y bOaUrig accident in which
seven penoos were ~L
The bedy of Pe,.,,.u WJIN"ilon, 12, of
Lot Angelfs llolted Silnday In Ill feet of
water :SOO yards from tlie ·beach. Last
week, the body or fl.farla Sexton, 18.
washed, 11ihore. '-
...
the ~·
city consultants
recommend
Balboa Bay Club
lease extension!
·'
. ' The City of Newport Beach hired a resl18cted, independent research firm,
Development Research Associates of Los Angeles, lo mluale ~ Bal~Baf
Club lease proposal. Here is what the firm's report says about
EXTENDING LfiSES OF T~S TYPE
... "We ~belieYe 1hat it is impcrtant to
point out that ground leases of this
type are pnerally extended lh roush
rtrJe1Qli1tion prior to the actui l t er·
minl tlon date of the orlcln11 tiiaie.
The.reason lof this is that .the lessee
normall.Y niake,s a:slgnlflcant capital
investment •• ._.and contin ued mod·
emlZJltlon becom11 lncru1ln1 lnfaHI·
· blo as tho ·rema!nlnc l111e term ls
Rducod,
. In conclusion, we recommend thot 'tho City look 1 I __ Ion Which
Is equitable to both the City end the
Balbo• Say Club which will allow for
the full economic development pr.,..
cram which we believe will extend
well btyond tho currently proja<ted
exP1nslon proi ram.''
The Balboa Bay Club lease is dbwn
to 29 years. The Club seeks the lease
extension so that it can obtain financ•
inc fo continue its development pro·
'"' ram an11 has •creed to terms·which
i'lli~ 1he ann\111 rental, increase 1he
percentace of eross sales, and pro·
vldes 'for periodic cost·of,livinc
•djustmert.ts as well as periodic rene·
&0tiallon oJ all terms. . . .
.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE l'ROM CITY PR~PERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JAN UARY 13
(lmlflltt.11 fw 'r• Vitt. t . I . t•)'llM. Cit'"'° Ni M.......-or ... tt•ihi Mtr, ttl&. ' " . I
j I
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I.
----r ... -
BEA ANDERSON, EdU°'
-......,. JlfM11'1' .. '"' • .. ... 11 -------
January
idal Gow-ns
ng Memories
•' iliar wedding music \viii fill the Newporter Inn from noon to 2
orrow, but there won 't be a wedding or a bridegroom.
tead, there will be a bridal fa shion show with gowns of yeliteryear
with those or today and tomorrow .
nsor of the ~s howing is the Ne"'·port }<!arbor Christian \Vernen 's
aded by Mrs. Lewis Mertz, chairman.
resses for the whole bridal party, from flo,vcr girl to matron of
ill be shown along with the bridal gowns, and commentary will be
·by Mrs. Robert Chamley.
ridal gowns with interesting histories \viii be put especially in the
ght a.s their stories are recounted by Mrs. Charfil~y. .
Area flori sts will supply bouquets, adding to the color of the occaSJon.
Mrs.--Ditk Day. Balboa Island resident, will be the featured speaker /1.f'l'if"';ing the bridal show, and music will be provided by a n area women's
J\1odeling their own wedding gowns in the panorama oJ bridal fa shions
r the years of 1930 to 1969 will be the Mmes. William T. O'Brien, Glenn
ckson, Jack Hennessee, Evan Wilti3ms-;-Rotiert-Ueem, eorge e V-ri'es
/ d Michael Fisher.
'/ Miss Terri Fischer will model the gown of Mrs. Wayne stan!ield and
·Ii ss Karen Grubb \vi.U 'vear Mrs. Royal Grubb's dress.
'l>E~~RlBING THE GOWN -Jotting down a few
note:; on the details o~ the bridal ·gown worn by Mrs.
William ·T. O'Brien is Mrs. Harold Fischer, who is
pre~Jiog for the J..._ne in January Bridal Fashion
Show planned by' the Ne\vport Harbor Christian
Women 's Club for tomorrow. The Newporter Inn
\viU· be the setting for the showing 1 and lun cheon
from noon lo 2 p.m.
Showing bridemaids' dresses will be Mrs. Garth Gardner and the
l\fi sses Jeannie \Villiams, Tori Lipscomb and Jan Smith.
Completil).g the promenade will .be· Dower girls' fashions modeled by
Lynnette Fischer BJ.Id Christine O'Brien. '
· ··Anyorrtr-wtshlbg-turtlier··ihfoffi'i.ation · a1>011t ·the -c1ob may -ca:Jl Mrs.
O'Brien, 54S..3070. or Mrs. Haro1d Fischer, 557-8989.
Floral Extravaganza
Masques .Take Shape
As Ball Date Nears
If there are any n o,vers left in the Soulhlahd since last Thurs-
day's Rose Parade took its toll of blossoms, then the 1970 Bal Masque
will go on as scheduled.
Not as many blooms are needed for the yearly floral extra-
vaganza sponsored by Damas de Caridad, but the display that results
is equally as impressive. J
All of the nine florists selected this year to create the lavi sh
headdresses for the upcoming edition or the annual benefit for St.
Jude Hospital. Fu.llerton are beginning to envision their creations
r1nd make preliminary sketches and plans.
The floral masques. which \veigh up lo 15 pounds. are paraded
by n1annequin s and judged during a formal dinner party.
Bal Ma sque Carnaval will theme the March 14 event, to take
place in the Anaheim Convention Cenler.
Dames de Caridad. a support group for the hospital. has indi-
cated that the proceeds will go to a fund to buy a linear accelerator
for the hospital for use in lhe treatment of cancer patients.
Floi;ists and their mannequins are John Corriveau arid Keith
\Vhite, Pacific Florist. Long Beach, Mrs . A. C. Bona . Anaheim; Mrs.
Mildred Gluck and Robert llenry, La Crescenta Florist, La Crescenta,
Mrs. William Cummings, La Habra, and Sam Yagashira, Burbank
Florist, Burbank, Mrs. Robert Wells, La Habra.
More are Carl Freeman, Carl'.!! Flowers, Corona del Mar, l\.fr s.
Howard Peltier, La Habra; Dolores Sharar, Shararls-Ftorist. Ui'lla-
bra, l\frs. Charles -Peltzer. Ofan2e. and Ed Stauber, Flowers by Mr.
Ed, Brea, l\·frs. Charles Campbell, Fullerton.
Still others are Carol and Alex Reile, La l\ilirada Florists, La
l\lirada, l\·lrs. I. R. \Vilhelmsen, La Habra; Mace and Susan Taylor.
Golden Llon Florist, Anaheim, Mrs. William McGarvey, Fullerton, and
l\.1rs. Ida Fortner, Chapman Florist, Orange, Mrs. Carl Harvey, Brea.
A special masque will be created for Mrs. Warre'n Bradford of
Balboa by a group of 29 Japanese students who will be studying. at th e
Burbank Florist School of Design, Burbank, for approximately six
\Veeks . ·•
Cha irman of the 1970 ball is Mi'~. Calvin P. Schmidt of Corona
del l\1ar, and mannequin chairman is J\itrs. Fred Kay of Fullerton.
•
EARLY START -Carl Freeman of Corona del Mar. one of· nine
florists \vho will be creatin¥, floral masques for the 1970 Bal Ma s-
que, is making sure he won t be caught in a last·minutc rush when
the ball date. March 14, rolls around. Mrs. Calvin P. Schmidt of
Corona del Mar, ball chaitman, indicates approval of his prelimi-
nary work.
•.
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Grandparents Boiled, Mom Foiled
DEAR ANN"'LANDERS : This is for I.he
mother who doesn't know what to say to
her children because her in-laws never
bring a · gift when they come to visit -
i'·hich is every Sunday afternoon.
I would love to trade places with her.
~Ty in-Jaws have spoiled our children rot·
ten. It is disgusting the way our kid'I
~ave grown to expect a gin from every
person . who ifalks into the house. When
the paper boy came to coiled yesterday.
()Ur 4·year-0kl asked, "What did you bring
me?''
Our children are so bored "'ilh their
loys it makes me sic k. They've ~
~very gadget aod game on the market.
~1y father-in-law is goi~ on an African
•ararl in March. The kids have asked for
1 baby elephant. I'm scared to death he'll
oring them ono. '
ANN lANOE RS Q
Both my husband and I ha~e pleaded
with them to stop with the presentJ
already but they say, .,It's OUR pleasure.
Don't deprive us ."
I hope the mother who 3\Yrote to
criticize her In-laws for coming empty
handed will see this letter aod feel better.
-LONGVIEW, WASH.
DEAR WNG: So do I. Cbildren who
suffer from exces1e1 tre hlvarttbly more
lnteCUre tnd po1sest le11 1elf.-e1ltent
than the economically dl1adv1nUlge4.
Some of the moat dt1tructtve and violent
•
.
'
1t1rlent1 come from aJOuenl homes.
~f1ny were raised by perrnl1slve parent11
who 1moO.ered them with thlng1, thlng11
and more things. Tbete nnhappJ kids feel cheated anfl
boua:ht-of( and are regis tering lheir
rir:senlmenl by rejecting every symbol of
tulhorlty,
DEAR ANN LANDERS: I, w11is In·
tngucd by the letter from the marrierl
mnn who wrote to 11ay he had an illici t
love &ffalr -that his wife knew, but re·
mained silent &nd bore up nobly until he ''Sis.''· When 1 learne.d Uii truth l at.
got the "foolishness" out of hf! 'System. tempted suicide and nearly suc~ed.
Lover boy concluded that evecyone pro-1 am now trying to recovet from 1 . complete breakdown a11(t an "cute case oC
!1ted. He sakl he. had. ~arned a lot from self-hate. J am disgusted, a9hamed and
~t, .apprecj~ hjs. wile .mort.; than~r!'", .. (~q,~gh I will never again be able and;~ add · • "No one Was'h~."'Wtll, ·''~to trusl a man. Would you agree that "no
that'Shis o i\'the otbet 'Woin.dn '. one was hurt?" -~11SS FRUITCAKE
aod here' It looked to me: · · OF 1960.
I had j~st eone tt;ir~gh a tragi~ emo-. , DE~R 1'1!~: Thanks for wrUlng. Your
tJonal experience· and this man ·entered let\e:r 'lt '•1m6d·'readlnt' for all married
my U(e as a friend, a conridanl. He said n\en •bo t~~ tbey jtre brlngln4 joy Into
he was separated from his Wife and ask-, , lbt llfe,ot D eq1e«JdnaUy 1t.arved &lrl.
ed me to marry him as soon as his
di vorce was fimi~U•· lntroductd me to
his ·~sl!ter" with whom he was sharing
an apartment "Sis'' \urned out to be. 3
sweetheart. It wu she who wised me up.
aft.er several martinis. It seems my
frie~OW' nl&hts 1 week wilh..hiJ_
wife aod ramlly and three nlghl3 with
\
DEAR ANN LANDERS: In your col·
umn yoo sometimes tu1e high.Jr descrlp-
llv11 adje<:Uves, The most recent waii
"raw'' set. How ls raw iiex different
from r.ooked sex, or rare sex? When 11
iCX \vell done t,CM It be over don11?-
l 11wall your answer.---GOURMET LN
'
COLORADO
DEAR COLORADO' Aa any purmtl
anows, ta1te1 vary. Wbat one coanof1sev
coo1lden well done, mlpt be termed
over done by another. Actorcllnl ti
Web1ter'1 unabridged -raw mear1
.. crude, 1ndre1sed, wtCultJvated." I c11't
Improve on THAT.
"The Bride's Gulde,'' Ann Landtta'·
booklet, answers some of the mos t .,._
qucntly asked qUestlons about wedding(
To rece've your copy of thls corn.•
prehenslve guide, \¥rite to Ann Landet;91
In care cl this newspaper, endosini' •
IOll!!, sel!-addmaed, stamped <n•••
@nd 3S centJ m COin. I
AM Land<rs WUI be glad lo llelp Yll'
will1 your problems. Send them lo her illl
care ot the DAlLY..J!ILO'l' .. Mcl.Oi.ina:..,. ~lf.,0(tdreue<1. 1tan1ped envelo~,~' ' -· .
• • • • ' • • • • • •
DAILY PltOT
•• .lo> ...
MRS. ROBERT BROW!'!
~ Church Wedding
• 267S IAH JOAQUIN HILLS llOAI)
AMBASSADORS CL UB
INTE RNATIONAL
'" 5,.ctocMlcir Tt•Yef Y•l-
HEWl"OllT l t!ACH. C.lll!'. '"''
PHONE: 644-4600
•
111011
* Mon , Jinll<lrJ S, 197
'Newlyweds
To Resi.de
In Ha waii
!\taking Lhelr ho1ne on the
llawaiian Islands ~ 1\1(. and
l\1rs. Robert Mark Brown, wtio
were marri~ in ~e United
First Methodist.. ~urch of
Garden Grove:
Parents of the bride1 the
former Cynthia Ru th Graham.
are the Roger D. Grahams of
Garden Grove. The
bridegroom is the son of Dr.
and Mrs. Mark Brown of
Sedona. Ariz.
Bridal attendants were the
Misses Sharon Malby and Sue
Thomas. Miss Tracey Rundell
\\'as flower ~irl .
,Stan Rundell WJS hi s
brother,i.Jl.l,aw'i best m a n ,
while: ushers· included Jim
Barker and Dennis, Glenn and
Gary · Graflam.
The · bride was graduated
from Bolsa Grande l~igh
School and attended t h e
University ·QI s' o u t'h e r n
California where she was af·
Ciliated with Alpha Gamma
Delta. Her husband was
graduated from San
Bernardino High Sctiool and
UCLA and received h i s
1nasters. degree in business
from use.
CM Auxiliary
The first Thursday of· the
mouth members of the
American Legion Auxiliary,
Costa Mesa Unit 455 gather in
the American Legion Hall, at 8
p.m.
AFTER
HERE YOU SEE MRS. BOBBY LEWIS AFTER
REDUCI NG FROM SIZE 22V2 DOWN' TO A SIZE
,t2. MRS. LEWIS SAYS' MY FRIENDS AN O FAMILY
CAN'T BELIEVE MY RESULTS, BUT I KNOW
ANYONE WITH A REDUCING PROBLEM CAN
DO WHAT I OI D SUCCESSFULLY AT SHAPE
SHOPPES INT. I REDUCED FROM 180 POUNDS
DOWN TO 134 POUN DS. l'M STILL ENJOYI NG
MY TREATMENTS & STILL MA~ING RESULTS.
You Will-.
Go From Size
,14 to 10 IN 30 DAYS
16 to 12 IN 38 DAYS
18 to 14 IN 38 DAYS
OU'LL REDUCE IN ALL THE
~ "'PLACES YOU SHOULD
•
n's THE NEW YEAR-IT IS BITTER TO INVEST MONEY
IN A NEW FIGURE THAN TRY TO BUY CLOTHES TO DIS-
GUISE IT. IF YOU FEEL THAT YOU,R FIGURE PROBLEMS
ARE NEXT TO HOPELESS, IF YOU THINK THAT REDUCING
Will WORK FOR EVERYONE BUT NOT FOR YOU, IF
YOU THINIC YOU ARE TOO OLD, OR TOO YOUNG, OR
TOO FLABBY, OR THAT YOUR BONE STRUCTURE IS
T00..1.ARGE-ORTOO SMALL OR THAT YOU HAVE WAITED
fOO LONG OR THAT YOU HAVE AN IMPOSSI BLE REDUC·
ING PROBLEM. GJVE YOURSELF A CHANCE -LET US
.SHOW YOU HOW YOU CAN REDUCE QUICKLY & t!ASILY
IN COMPLETE PRIVACY WITHOUT STRENUOU~ EX\R·
/.tlSE, WITHOUT DISROBING, WITHOUi STARVATION
.'DIETS. CALL US NOW FOR YOUR COURTESY FIGU~E
ANALYSIS. WITHOUT COST OR OBLIGATION. IT Will
l&E YOUR DECISION WH ETHER YOU REOUCE PROFES.
;SIONAllY w1rn us OR NOT. IF YOU oo. WE HAVE
PROGRAMS AS LOW AS $1.00 A TREATMENT.
•
I
CALL US NOW
COSTA
MESA
642-7032
1801 N•wport Blvd.
' .
.. Flared Coat News
,"~. \ '\ '
\ .
/
\~
c~ u
The short flared coat is "news" from Charles
Le Maire.
The bias collar curves around the neck without
binding it. The yoke and front are cut on the
straight giving a small spare feminine look. The
bais back falls full and swingy and is fi nished off
'vith one deep pleat at the center back. The sleeves
are sct in and cut wi th a subtle flare at the wrist.
Superb in many fabrics from soU-herr.ing -bon
t\veeds. checks, plaids, gabard ines to textured raw
silks and synthetic m ixtures. 62839 is cut in Misses
sizes Small (8-101. Medium (12·14 ). Large (16-18).
Size Medium requires approximately 4 5/8
yards of 60" fabric.
'fo order 62839; state size, include naine. ad-
dress and zi p code. Send $2 postpaid for first-class
postage and handling for EACH pattern. Send ord-
ers fo r book and Patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept.
CX-15. Milford, N.J. 08848.
This precut, preperforated Spadea Designer
Pattern comes in ready·to-wear sizes that prodUce
·a better fit and are easier to make. Order normal
ready-to-wear size and allow one week for deli very.
Nf::W IDEA : First time designers have publish-
ed sewing secrets. Hard Cover Edition $5.
Alpha Xi Delta Offers
A Graduate Fellowship
Alpha Xi Delta again is of·
fering a graduate fello wship
grant worth $1,500 for ad·
Slimnastic
Class Set
An opportunily lo be rid of
the excess pounds collected
through the hol:days ,
redistribute weight, firm and
tone muscles and generally
I mp rove cardiovascular
fitness level \\'ill !>e orfered
area women.
Sponsored by the Huntington
Beach YMCA. a women's
slimnastic exercise class will
be meeting Tuesdays and
Thursdays beginning Jan. 13
between 7:30 and 8:30 p.m.
The eight-week course will
meet in the Commu n i t y
ti1ethodist Church. Registra·
lions are being accepted on a
first-come basis lo "assure
small classes and more time
for personal instruction.
Additional information may
be obtained by calling Richard
Collato, execulive director, at
894-4548.
vanced study in the field or
social service.
The national social fraterni-
ty for women and member of
N a t i o n ~ I Panhellenic Con-
ference awards this fellowship
because it concurs with most
civic authorities arJd juvenile
court officials that there is an
Increasing need for trained
personnel to work w i l h
youngsters. Comb at i n g
juvenile delinquency w a s
chosen as the national
phiJanlhropy of Alpha Xi Delta
in 19MI.
To be eligible for the award.
the applicant must be a
graduate of an accrediled col·
Jege or university1 havc 11 B or
better grade average and be
inter~sted in pursuing a career
of workb1g with youth to com·
bal delinquency in the United
States.
Applications may be ob·
tained from Mrs. Wiiiiam
Telkamp, ..:.535 N. Wayfleld,
Orange. Co.m p l et e d ap.
plications should bf: mailed by
Jan. 31 to the national
philanthropy ch'airman, Mrs.
Robert Batchelder of La Jolla.
In coMection with the na-
tional philanthropy the Orange
County Alumnae Club last
year chose Joplin Boy's Ranch
to receive their support.
' I
UP TO 50% OFF
"f:RICOT SLIPS & HALF SLI PS
Special Group of * CULOTTE S * GOWNS * BABY DOLLS * BIKI NI PAN TY HOS E * ROBES * SLIPPERS
Send, C•1l1011
M1 '1 G14~11 '
' .
lllEG. s•.oo s40
Limit.cl 01t.1ft!•!I•'
"I• Comforl•ble 111 Yov• C11p1 ''
$p•c:i1li1i"'J ift 0 ' 00
ZSO I. I 7tl! St., Coiro M•••
1illl9Te1t S'1'1ten-44J·5-4 J5
'
New 'Fw ist for Time . Markers
.:Colorful Calendars .for 1970
NEW YORK-1UPI) -i'!ie -· 11 makes perjifeiliig I , 1910, ----------=m -s.1d he w•'1l"I ln·
new calendars are marching matter of choosing "the'' -On ~1ay 15 ln' 1752 Ben terested in the height or
on us -nat or fat ones, round calendar to keep one' a very Franklin flew a kite ·proving· fashion -jus~ the height o! ~a, allm ones. personal pne for the new year. ~htnWg is eleclriclti.'.. On my skirt."
( Cal~nders on towels, on-desk The very biifCilen ars rn-ay t of'\!Uit year, "Frinil n ..,... ~tlfW!tlltS""corrrctty·--
'omaments, on scrolls; calen-the $130 million a year In-geta higher than a ki te." or the \\'ay he spelled it?'_'_
'd@.rs with green covers, red dustry are the ones you read. . --On Jan, 7 in some year,
co~rs, black and w h 11 e Inspirational ,or eom ic. Bill Bailey called and said he coveD~~:cc?~~r cove r s. The "comic relief" calen-wouldn't be home. Calenda~~row pillows. dars inclu<Je Mother Spector'e The comic calendars ari t
J'he calendars wlUt flowers a I m a n a c • Among he r among gift ooes, representing
YOU CA.N
DO IT!
bulldlnga, I a nd s capes; housekeeping Ups; •'s t ore $15 million of the industry's Vt11 c1n k"lt t
geometrics and other delights galoshes in the bathtub.:' total sales. . .
for the eyes are to the right Other advice tells how to boil "The future for gift calen-
and left or us, the north and water and mal;l:e ice cubes. dars is very bright," says
the south of as. Hallmark's "Great Moments John J. Oakson, llallmark vice
r.•t Miii -,.,.
WllH t .. m llllY ,1c111re .r 1 ttyr1
YQll ..ref•rl C-1 lft' -w,..11 1!1lp
't'lll ttl 111r!HI.
in History Calendar" includes, president.
for May, a sketch of "There are even gift calen-
1.flchelangelo falling off the dars for every room in the
scaffold in the Sistine Chapel. house except perhaps,. the
°"' 1119 , ... 111111
Jatl. lift.
Says one portly monk to bath."
another portly monk : o.1e comical offering for the THE
Sorority
Launches "Not only would wallpaper somber world of busi ness in
last longer but it would have 1970: "Paper Quips" by
been much cheaper." Rober t W e i n t r a u b . The KNIT WIT
New Year
Other historical, If not characters, one olllce femme SOUTH COAST PL.414
hysterical, oddments among talking to another. offer the Lo-L•""1 ~tt• woo1-""1
th lrlstol et Soti Di .. o Fwy. e great moments one is en-working girl's point of vieW. P'hoH : 545•2a12
n ~cou~r~a~g~ed~. ~w~co~g~ita~~;::.::on::_::d~ur~i~ng~~Tli~ey[!••~Y~S~u~ch~lli~in~g~s~a~"~~~~~~~~~~~!!:!~ -~~--------
Xi Xi Pi Chapter of Beta iJ3 ~ Sigma Phi .will be an eve•ing .i.--• <~-...> ·7'.. ·..,,I_)°' 1'. .T 7'.....,,
. gathering on Wednesday, Jan. 1L.. _ -'....l'"'":'1 - - ' " V ~ 1 ..
The Costa Mesa ho me of I
,)frs. John Moquin will be the 1
scene of the 8 p.m. meeting, 1
with busii:iess being conducted
by Mrs. Eldon Dvorak .
On the agenda will be the
chapter's rushing· plans and a
February cocktail p a rt y
honoring Mrs. Robert Shay,
the chapter's Va I en ti ne
princess.
Mrs. Norman Nieberlein will
present a program centered
on Methods of Education from
the group's program book
Life, Learning and Friendship.
The hostess 'will s e r v e
refreshmenLs -following-the.
meeting.
Thrift Shop
Cuts Prices
As sis lan c e League 's
Turnabout Shop will do a I
tumaboul on pricelags Jan. 13'
::is prices ::ire cut in half for l
the remaining days of the l
month .
l\.1r<;. Roy Thoroughman,
Thrift Shop chairman. will l
reduce prices on all men 's,
\\'01nen's and children's cloth·
ing 3nd accessories. Pr~eds
derived from sale of merchan-
dise su pport League phil.3n·
th ropies in 'e-1 u ding the
r~riendship Club, craft and ac-
tivity classes and weekly
youth counseling and drugi
abuse clinics in Laguna Beach .I
,
./
THE BEAUT Y SA LON'S
AN~UAL JANUAR Y DUA RT'
PERMANENT W AVE SALE
l 0.00 -13.00 ..... 10.00.1 0
Yo u• f•votilt pe1m•neftt el It . I I pr ice!
Choo•• c:11rly, 1mootlt or bollt, w1 do th11J1
,11. '
p,,m bv M•1t1r Slyl<d1 15.00 •19. SlO
Petite S1lon P1rm 10.00 reg. $10
Both compl1t'f wilh style i nd cul of youT
c ltorc1.
More 11 vin91 in o~r wi9g1ry: E11y c1rit lte"if
lif'd K1ft,loeloo~ mod1crylic wig, !00.00
v1 lue, 35.00.
"l ite s .... ,, s.lon, 601
SE4RS Has Everything ... Including SUNDAY SHOPPING. Sunday Hours 12 Noon · to 5 P.M.
Sears
l'o1t Can Lea rn to
Knit .••• Bea ulifully
E11roll Now i11 Sears
FRE E Knitti n(.( School
• 10·\\eek cour..,e
• 1 11~2-h ours, once a \·reci..
Cla ~ses BcJ.l,in ~lo nll ay.
J anuary J:"!t h
I Ju~t pick Ifie colnr of y11r11 t~
n1at•'h a 11kirt or panls . , •
~011'1l lear11 1l1e rc~l al ~ear~
in)O ea~~· le!s011s • I C la~se.s uow hein{: organizefl
ot n1Q~l ~f'1H· !lore! , , . rnrnll
no1v ;11ul 1nake \1011derfut ,irt~ tor )Oll rsel f or friends
Orlp n• Acr,'lic \l'inluk ,.a 1·n
I .l-01:. hank 11kein, 1na·
l i C Se1"
Hr1-n!,1n,Che1"1-e
chine 1\it!hMble,dr)ahle _ _,
I Random 1lub of colon,
cre1te1 intert&ti11iz df'·
1111fn
Price~ Effteth e
Bep.1n n i n~Today
,-------------------------------------------------, I llilNA ,.U( U /o\OMlf IONO lf.<ICH . ,ICO I! ~:.,-POMONA )()IJf)I COAST 'WA I
CAHOOA ,..,.K OLlNOALt OLY/o\PIC I. SOTO SANTA IV'A TO•tAN(( I co~ HOU't'WOOO a..t.Nor ~ SANTA'' SPRINGS VAUE I' I C:OVINA IMOlfWOOO '-'S.-.tifNA s.-.N"IA MONICA VltMONT et~ '--------------.-------------Sears -----------------'
lh•11 M111tl•1 th,.11th Seh1nlo1 f:JO A.M. le 9,30 P.M., Svnf•r 12 Ntt11 I• J I' .M. • ..... -.... ''$a1idactio"G11otont••d otYowMtneyleclt'"
' .
• •
-o;:,.,,..~~~-,..-,~-~~~~~~-,.~-.,.---~~--~~~~~~~~~~~~ ............... ..,. ...... .,..,""""'""..,.., ..... ~..,-----"""'~=;==-;-:-:::;;:;;:;:;-~~~-~-.,...~-CC--C--·---~.-----~
'('·::.41 -• • . 1
l;osta Mesa .~ Today's Fl•al
N.Y. Stoeks
' .
vo e 63, NO. 4, 2 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, JANUARY 5,· '1970 TEN CENTS
• esa I
Drug Curbs Vowed
• Schoolmen, Police . Answer. Charges
8}' THO~IAS FORTUNE
OI l~t 0.ll't 'Hiit s11n
)ncreased police counseling on campus
and drug expla natory meetings ror par-
enlS Will be lhe response to accu.sations
~ewport-Mesa ~chool ofrlcia\s aren't do-
ing enough about drug use at schools.
'Schoolmeri and city police held a press
conference toda,y to ,say, in effect. they
haven't had their heads in the sand and
to proclaim what they· are doing to coun-
' ter sfudeat drug use.
Their declaratJons were jn ansv.•er to
the 1videly·publicizeri complainls of hro
fathers who pulled their daughters out
of Costa 1'1esa's . Qavls . lnte,rmediate
School after learning the girls had used
drugs. · ·
Anrioul'ICed at lhe prE's.!I conference was
a Newport Beach Police Department plan
ID assign an officer rull time tD school
campuses as a ·counselor.advisor. Also
told was the Intention of holding meetings
for p8rents to tell them what narcotics
. look like and how to identify symptoms
of users.
-Miners'-Officlal, Family -
Founcl Mm·de1·ed iI1 Home
.
CLARKSVILLE, Pa . (AP) -Joseph
••Jock" Yablonski, unsucres,;ful candi-
flate in the eleclion race for the presiden·
cy of the L'niled Mineworkers Union was
found murdered, slate policf' said today:.
Office.rs said they also round the body
nr tl\.'O \\'Omen believed to be his wife and
claughter at tbtir borne in the heart of
Ptc•nsylvania's soft coal region. ·
~fljor Howard M. Jaynes, area slate
P.<Jlice commander •. said. Yablonski \Va11
fnund lying n'cxt to bis bed shot once in
the back of the head.
J4ynes 11.ald the bodies nr the tv.·n
,..·omen "·ere found in two other
bedrooms.
"There was blood scattered all around
.and the telephone lines were all ripped
out." said Jaynes.
He said police believe the shootings oc·
curred son1etime durin g the night.
"The appearance o( the bodies would
J .. .dicate that th~y were murdered,'' said
state' Police Captain Joseph Snyder.
The 59-year-old Yabloriski started early
llis challenge of the leadership of U~l\V
President• \V. A. "Tony" Boyle -an-
nouncing hi s candidacy for the presiden-
cy of the 220,000 member Un ited ~1ine
\Vorkers union on Ma'y 29.
'I i
FOUNO MURDERED
Miners' Yablonski
thtir nt!cds."
''ablonski'~ father -3 Poli sh im·
migrant -died in a PennsylvaniR mine
accident.
Yablonski himself had ~·orkcd in the
mines for 35 years . He was the ftftt
bJard member of the Union to thro"' tltt
gauntlet to Boyle.
Ne"'IXlrt-f\lrsa School Superinlrt'ldenl
• \Villiam Cunningham said lhe school ad·
ministration has had a close and success-
rul' working relationship with police. Me
said school people do recognize they have
a problem. but said Jt is no worse than
in other communities.,
Dr. Cunningham said he believes Lhe
concern stated by the two fathers can
have a positive effect. Attendance by par4
ents at meetings oo drugs has been poor
in the J>i!St and after hearing of the fath-
(Stt RESPONSE, Page Z)
Nixon Grants
1st Clemency
For Ne g1·0
By RICRARO P. NALi~
Of tl1t CNity Pll•I Siii!
PALi\f SPRINGS -President Nixon
granted his fin;t executive clemency lr1-
dsy as he commuted the federal prison
sentenct or a Negro self.help leader and
neurosurg~ rrom New York State.
The Pre~~enl acJ"1 In behaJI of ,Dr.
Thnma1 W. Malhtws. president of the
National Economic Gl'owth-,,, rt
Reconstruction OrganizAlion 'IN&.GRO l.
Vl't Mathews pleaded guilty Oct. 20, lMt
in U.S. District Court. New. York lo
charges of failure lo file an Income tax
return. He was sentenced to one year.
with one year suspended, and began ~rv
ing the sentence Nov. 10 in Danbury,
Conn. federal correctional institule.
Press Secretary Ron Ziegler said pr.
1'fathrw~ did not pay his taxes for i;everal
years in order to devote his per!ional
rinanas to Negro self · help programs
!"uch a11 one l'Onducted in Watts lo bu:ii
Negroes lo places or employment.
In commuting the physician's sentence,
the President emphasized it was not a ·
question of rel ief for an individua l but
rather relief for the important program
he. heads.
Ziegler said that Dr. 1'1a\hew!l is cur·
renUy filing returns and paying federal
taxes and has arranged lo make complete
reslilulion of back taxes.
•
'
TV CAMERAS FOLLOW KENNll!DY, WlFE TO INQUEST
Prahl Into Otath of Mary Jo Kopedine UM..-way
l(ennedy Speaksf or Hour
During /(opechnelnquest
Assailants
Flee in Car.
Of Victim
Bv ARTHUR \'INS EL
Of Hie ~ "lltt IR!f
Bloodied in a savage tire iron beatina
on a •N?mole mountain fire trail, • Coeta
Mesa shoe clerk kidnaped rrom his home
squir1ned through the dirt early SUndlJ
to escape death under the wheels of hiJ
own car.
lnvesllgator11 1 a I d t o d a y thr.
Frederick V. Tedesco, 47, of t4S E. 18th
St., probaJ;ily owes his life to a newspaper
rQUte deliveryman who may ha ve .
frightened oU the three would-be
murderer!.
-A widespread hunt is under way -todaY
for the 1969 Pontiac Le P..1ans sedan Jlew.
ly purchased by Tedesco and iµ1ed by his
~attackers to Ott the scene in Trabuco
Canyon shortly before dawn Sunday.
Tedesco, meanwhile, was listed in fair
condition at lfoag Merilorial Hospital,
where he is under treatment for a variety
o! injuries suffered in the brutal assaulL
Physicians said he sustained severt
multiple lacerations. a fractured noge,
several broken finger11 on his left hand,
fractured rib.! and massive welts over his
entire body.
Orange County sheriff':ii deputies con.
!acted by John Nordeen, &4, Fullerton .
iliaid the newspaper routeman's approach
may have frightened oU Tedesco'• at-
tackers Sunday mQl'Din1.
"I saw the Injured man as I drove past
and I sped to a telm~one to iet heJp."
said Nordeen. who pinpointed the stte
along olri Trabuco llill road about 400
yards beyond Cook '! Corner.
NOrdeen aaid he saw tail lightl
vanishing around a curve up ahead of !,he
spot where Tedesco lay sprawled in the
ditch. bleeding and battered.
Officer Leo Jones said in his Costa
p .. fesa Police Department report of tilt:
case -still sketchy tlue to the victim's
coqdition -th.;it auto. theft appeared to
be the only motive behind it.
He said Tedesco knows of no· enemies
Ind lives modestly. with no personal EDGARTOWN, !ifass . liJPJ) -Sen. ~naed witneMes -all aCcompanied hy habits or problems. which might lead to
Edward M. Kennedy testified for about la\\'}'ers-walked Into tht heavily guard-vengeance by others.
cne hour today at the opening or the td ,courthOU3e, in front of which milled The victim said he was approached
11ccrel inquest into 1'1ary Jo Kopecbne '11 11bout 200 persons, mostly newsmen. nutside his apartment house about 11
death . He will be back ·this afternoon. Judge Boyle presided ove r the inquest, p.m. Salurdsy by three. men who asked the number .of his apartment. He refused The inquest into lhe death of the 23· nrdered by District Attorney Edmund S. to tell them .
year-old 11ccrelary began amid Jight Dinis. Tedesco ll8ld at that pc>int he was forc-
•
"Mining is still the most ~ngerous or
a.II occupations." he said. "The union is
falling far short or 1vhat it should be
doing. The mine workers organization has
been stagnant. The 1niners need to belon~
!OT labo r organization that i11 totally
democratic so it can be responsive to
Hr· lost the election Dre. 9 by ;i l11rgr
marg!n. despite L~muaign lhalJnok.
Jlfn1 from coal field to coal field by rented
plant!.
The neurosurgeon has marle the point-
In not righting-his -own case-that wht>-
ever breaks the law ror whateve r cause
(See NIXON. Page !l
.5ccurily Jn a century-old fOUrlhousr . Boylt arrived at the courthouse more t.d into his new car -still bearing tern·
Krnned,l seemed cheerl'u I as he' ~":Tl"~"~g::_-_t~h;'"~' w~o~h~ot~1~rs~be~fo~r~•;.K~•~nn~e~d~y ·~=-.:'·:---~po~rary::;;!iP6•:l""~'~'i'g~is~trla~t1n· oni/;ip~la~te~•'t.;~'~lld:----• ~ -· ~--"' ; 1 methodically beaten ~D tht way into the ed from the courlhouse along with rive ATler la ying down (he ground rules !or Santa Ana Mountain!.
Pardon His Dust
The du.st around this Oreo Disposal¥ truck got a bil
thick this morning when the hookl'i on the back
door broke and assorted lrasb cascaded Into the
S'lreet in the 200 block of Victoria Avenue. The
company dispatched another truck and crew to
, ---
dean up the debris. A third truck, dispatched to
~nlinue the regular trash run, was knocked out
by a !ire in its electrical system shortly after ar-
riving on the scene.
women and rive men · acquaintances who the proceedings, Boyle wa~ expected 10 Once in the Trabuco Canyon area, he
had attended a cookout party togethe r begin interrogating Kennedy and 10 told detectlvu. he was dragged out m
tllf. night 1'1iss Kopcchne died in Ken-others who ' attended a cookout·reunion the car and the brulaJ beating continued
nedy's car after it plunged into a tidaJ the night Miss 1:opechne died. with a tire Iron being used, although he'
pond. Altogether, at least 20 persons have (See BEATING, Paie Z)
Court clerk Th'1rnas A. Teller told been subpoenaed to testify.
newsmen he Would distribute a statement Just . as Kennedy and his wife Jo;in
at 2 p.m., presumably c'onvering ground reached the entrance to the courthouse,
rules imposed by Di!trict Judge James the senator .was asked by newsmen : "Are
A. Boyle. who presided at the inquest. you glad it's finally under way~"
Kennedy, who flew.in from his Hyannis Ktnnedy turned, nodded, and replied :
Port home on the mainland, said as·he "Yes, I am."
entered the courthouse, '.'I'm hopeful we The proceedings, which wire to open
can reach an ~:id to what has become an Sei!L 3. were cl~ed to the press. and
extraqrdina.ry· \en&lh .of time." puBlic by .order of the . Masaachusetts
''I'm hopeful tne record will be com-Supreme Court. But ·it was left lo Boyle
plet.e and J' calf"jil~ to-tfie'.bllSlhess-'bf. tq ·decide . wj:lej~er lawy.er.s ~ould cross·
devoting myself ta the Senate." examine witntSM"s and present evidence
Kennedy and nearly a d<iien other sub-Oi their own, • '
' Mes a.Council Gets tt~vy
-.
Agenda 1ii First l ~70Meet
' Starting the Ne.w Year ambitiou~1_y, the Priebe has said he ls no e hlmselr,
Costa Mesa City Council rileets lon!ihl to but 1peclallze1 in k~plng the ,planners,
la e on a r,y agend• lncltJdiU& 'nlne• engfneersiand archllects hard 11t the ir in·
items of old business. selection o( a dlvidual 1roJei in: the major pro}ect, ex· :~@!!~~.,._1edeveklpment consultant among t em. ---; peeled to reach, b«;y~Of\d the ~w decade .
The meeting Is atl for 7 p.m., In be Two matters up ror con11iderat1011
rollowed al the same hour Tuesday night, tonight extend beypnd the Costa Mesa ei-
for legislaUVe matters and cquncllmcn'1 ly limit.I, {n ttrm! or st.ate and· national
Individual · repc)rts· and' observations. impacl.
Besides hiring of a consultant for the Discussion iii e1pecUd on proposed
Impending downtown redevelopment pro-regional boundary changes, as requested
~ram, tonighfa agenda inc I u d e 1 by the California Co u n cl 1 on
discusSion of. hlr1ng an expert lo 1tudy lnlcrgovernmental RelaUons.
downtown area trarnc pr~lcrM. • . A proposed re&0lution Is also to be
1'leeUng three wee~ ago. the council discussed, urging amendment ot the
almost hired con11ultant Russell Priebe bylaws or the National League of Cities to
for the redeslgn of downtown Colltil.MeAA, broaden representation of local a:ove'tn·
lhen , voted to ~lay a decillon after the ment oUic:iall ln LeagUe OfUct .
move lo pick Priebe failed. Vice Mayor Robert M. Wilson e1:
He is generaJly preferred by do.wntown plalned at the Dec. II meeting that many
ere.a bus.inessmc11 ind m e r c h • n t • , able membt:ra lose out In elect.Iv" of!iet if
11 sp!Jt on the councll ILself. resolution proposes to correct tN.s trend~ .
VIKINGS JI-POI NT I
CHOI CES SUN DAY
LAS VEGAS, (A P) -Bookmakers here
today estab\lshed the National Football
I:.eague champion Minnesota Vikings u
LI-point favorites to defeat the Kansas
City Chiefs of the American Football
League for the World tille.
The world championship will be decid-
ed · between the Chiefs and Vikings Sun·
day in the Super Bowl game at New
Orleans.
OraJtge Co u &
Wea flier
Fair skies with local gusty winds
bl')lshlng away the' bad air It the
picture for Tuesday along the:
coast. Temper111tures continue lo
cringe. Into the loJ¥ fiP's.
INSWE TOD!l Y
Orange County 1:nttr1 tht
decode of tht Seventies cartfui.
llJ eyeing the problem .. prt.stnC.-
f!d bu ilt burgeoning growth.
Page 10.
Ct1Uor1110 t
(llfc-11111 u, ' Cl1u11:t11 t?·.l'J Ct.,.tct U c,.11_, K
0.111 M.tk" 11
blftl'Ctl 11 ... ,..,, .... _. .
•11ttrt .. 111MM H
111111-t \~If ...__ . ,,
.t.1111 Lltflffn 11 -.
. .:. .,
" ., .
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' .. ._ :.: . • • -=· -=· i:· -t . -
DAILY l'ILOT t
? Wrapped llp in Werk
,. The Milwaultte )fiUtaire Cadets were pooUng !lie
colors in competition when tile banner niaed by
Donna Banaozynski, 13, toppled and covered her
head. Lik•·a cood soldier, 1he k.,,i riaht on march·
ine. -·
M C • 'U l ,, D. ·• Fro• f'ege J .esan · ries Jie p~u.ru_RE-SP6NSE ...
• en' alarm: ma1bt mere will want to get
~imit oo-c-'Faxes Urged
Unriih Pr-oposes Flat Rate on ~roperty
SACRAMENTO (AP) -An tleclioo·
year legislature opened today with
Aallembly Democrat.Jc ~ader Jew hf.
Unruh offering a sweeping program in-
cluding a flat limit an homeowners' pr<r
perly taxes.
Unruh, a candidate for the Democratic
nomination far governor, made his pro-
posal.I in a unique "state of the state''
meaaqe delivered to a news conference
a day before Reagan out.lines his own
plans.
Llke Unruh, Reagan la expected to h1t
hard at property tax relief.
Unruh also o!ferd a wide range of pro-
posab -to presttVe California's en-
vironment -also a top priority program
for the Republican governor, who ia ex·
pected to seek a second term.
Unruh said his program "constitutes a
principal program that we could look
forward to if t were elected .governor. '
Demanding relief for property Uix·
payers, Unruh said the levy "is liter11ly
driving Californians out of their homes."
On the conservation issue, Unruh
declined to criticize Reaa:an directly. bul
he said state government and local
governments, have become "one or the
great despoilers ol the tnvironment in
the state."
And he said he intends to keep a
critical eye on the Reagan administration
througfi the long lll!Sllion. "I offer my
services to the people of California on
what is being done so they can evaluate
the difference between promise and
performance," he said. ·
Unruh proposed a flat limit on property
taxes levied on homes occupied by the
owners.
He called for wiping out tax exem~
tions he says help "very wealthy itldlvi·
Bal Isle Girl, 16, Dies
In El Toro Road Accident
A Balboa Island &irl became Orange Pomona. wu not held .
County's fourth 1970 traffic fatality Sun· The other two traffic fatalities oc·
day night. curred Friday.
California Highway Patrol officers said John Susman of Brooklyn, N.Y., who
Donna Lynn Bell, ts, af m Coral_Ave .. was-visiting relatives In Stanton, was ki!I·
w1s pronou.ncea dead at the scene at ed by an out or control auto when he tried
Jt'll County TnlfHc 190 to shield his >year-old grandson from the
4 De•~ Toll i car, ofDcers sakt. The boy, Kennelh Scott
11.35 •-••· 1 hi h ,__ 06trow is in satisfactory condition today . p.m. Wuen w1e car n w c Sue was . . . . . . at Los Alamitos General Hospital. r1d1ng with three companions went out of Garden Grove teenager Michael Gary
-control and !truck a tree on-Eif-Toro-orabattf,'lO,atso dled""'Friday-afltmoon
Road. fOllowlng a broadside collision on Knott
T1ken to South Coast Community Avenue; The driver of the 6eCOnd vehlcle,
Cii..uatS whOPaYlliifeoTMiiiilfin:
And Unruh demanded elimiraatiOn oC
what be termed "tax loopholes" for bJg
business -the depletion allowance givm
oil companies and the property tax ex·
emption granted on the home office
buildings or insurance compan.ltll. .
Blasting away at Reagan, Unruh 11id
''the people of California art being short
changed by a dt>nothing administration
which sits idl1 by while the 'quality of the
lives we lead deteriorate at an ac·
ce.lerating rate."
Striking at the key comervation issue.
Unruh called for legislation haltint all oil
drilling on state controlled lands in thr.
Santa Barbara ChaMel, .sjte of a ten·
tinuing oil leak.
He also proposed a State Constrvation
Authority with the power to rtled 11')'
state, local or private project llte)y to
damage the environme.nt.
Erom Pege 1
NIXON ...
&hould be prepared to pay ttrle penalty,
Ziegler said . Dr. Mathews d.id not file re.
turns in If)Sl.
Ziegler said : "The President feel! tht
Interest of the country and the commun·
Hies where NEGRO is established are
beter servf!d by the release of Dr. MaU,·
eWs and his return to the vital wor k
NEGRO is involvea in."
Ziegler said the President was getting
In some golfing in Palm Sprinp and
"bearing down" on his State of the Union
Message scheduled Jan. 22. He a1IO said
the President and first family might
spend tonight again at the palaU•1 Pahn
Springs home or Walter Annenber1, am-·
~to Great-Britain.--
Fights Attackers Alone the word, he .... ffted. -Hospital with majar injuries were the Akira Hirata of Anaheim, is reported in
driver, Don Dittefano, 29, of 329 Poplar critical condition at Stanton Community
Zieater slid the President may le1ve
San Clemente Thursday or Friday. His
birthday Is Friday and a celebration is
expected in WaahlngtOn. But tl\e depar·
lure is not Yet !inn, Ziegler emphai4ed.
• _ A 1ai11 .. w1tlder and an aDepd prao-
· .. tltioner " karate chued a CG.ta MtA
· · elm to police h"dquMl<n l)cllinJ for a
· fiJht Satunlay nigh~ but ""' routed by
the Jone victim bimllelf u lawmen raced
CIUt to his aid.
Mesa Offering
' Wide Variety
11
Not .}aw or aoverlnment alMe, but a
rich naUonal beritige binds 200 million
·Americanl -·give or. tue a few
~ -IO O:llta Mesa Mayor Alvin
American Hlllory Month.
He 11\>iitols opecllll -..nc.. during
•· ihe month In which two of Amerk:a 's
·'.bf!st..known Presldenta wece born.
: Baled partly on the birthd1ys of
Alnham Lincoln, Feb. 12. and Glore•
... Wasb.i:ngton, Feb. 2Z. the Daughters of
,. Jhe American Revolution have irornotecl
• February for omervance of Yankee
trldltl<m.
· Gir~ 13, Held
JOie !. TOVl?·Vego. 23, ol IOil .,_ •
Ave., autferM <1nly a alight cut on Jrlis
hand in the batlle. which seat the at·
tackert racing away from the station at
t9 Fair Drive, all their fi~t Cont·
Tovar-Vega aaJd he anticipated trouble
when the pair pullecf up and tried to run
him of! the road -shouting insults -so
ht turned off N•wport Boulevard and
headed for the station.
O(ficer Harry Ehrlich was on duty at
the front desk when hi heard Tovar-Ve11
yeN for help, although "-seemed to hve
the altuaUcm wtJJ in hand. .
The would-be victim saw orte attacker
draw a knil•. IO he whlplM!d oil hia belt
and smashed the man to the ground with
I~ then took on the alleged karate fipter.
Tovar·Vta:i could give OffiCtr Ehrlich
no precise description of the ruffians,
ezcept '111annt~d"1he
other had cull on hb face .
Mesa 'Commune'
Raided by Pc>lice
Over Marijuana
An Interrupted joyride In an all•ledly
stolen car led to the amst of aeveral On Drug Charge pmom at a C05ta M~. hom• Sunday,
where police laid a m.&rlJUlna party ~p-r----A JJ.yN<-dd Colla M.,. girl wound up-pear.d "' be In progress.
tn Orange Countf Juvenile Hall Sunday . Quantities of marijuana Including roll·
night after her mother foond a cache of ed cigar~ttea and · ICOtu-<lf Reds. being
bMr.edrine piD1 in a jewelry bar and prepared for planting and cultivation
ailed police. wtte contisca1ed front the comm1mal
1be youngster and a 1!'.-year-ol.d home at 1214 BeUast Ave., investigators
girlfriend from Cypres.! showed up aJJeged.
-lhorUY--after lnv.Ugaton arrived and SeYeral .tablets believed to be LSD wet•
the second girl was also arrested when also seized .
she told police the pills bekln.ged to her. S~rtly before the impro!llptu raid,
Police said they confiscated a plastic .pohce had &topped a car believed to be
bag cmtaining 10 of the pep pills and stolen and a 17·year-o1d girl pusenger
foqnd another Jingle one lyiDJ oo the told investigators it belonged to two older
bedroom floor. persons. ·
' •
DAILY PILOT
1.•Mrt N. 'WeM
Jult •• ev.i..,
Tio ...... ~
""" T~ ... ,, A. Mu•ehi11•
"'"""' .... ,.,11.,.
c.-. ,. ... OHkti
-
JJQ w ... •••:S*'""'--.-
lil•ilillf AUreu 1 P.O .... 1160, t262' .,_ ......
~ htdt: nu wttt .. "°" ...,...~
~.._,...m,_, .. _
ft•lltiflO!o -.ca: 11111-...,. ~ -·-
A team of lawmen went to the Belfast
Avenue addteu and forced open tJ,ie door
after two )'Ouths ln•id• ailtpd)y tried to
alam it closed when they aaw uniformed
visitors.
Arruted and booted '°" a variety of
car theft and dru' charges were Jeny T.
Howard , 24, Dale A. Yearkey, 11, and the
juvenlle. · all of the Btlfast Avtnue
residence. plus Brian E. Emerich, 20, of
2204 White Lantern Way. Orange and
PSlm!ll L.·Cunnin&bam, 19, of Van Nuy1.
Erom Pagel
BEATING ...
maintained consciousness.
The shoe clerk uid the mm ftnll!y Jilt
back lot• the car and attempted to n1n
''"' him, but ht rolled °'"""'1 the dust Into the ditch to eacape beinr crushed by
the w!Md1. TOd-lolcl ol lyin(t n the l\llttr until
found by NM!een, but wu unable to Jlvt
1 c1'ar lndlcitlon ol the time lapoe In·
valved. lnvulii•l« Gerry Thompoon ba1 been alliiJ1ed lo blodl• the followup report of
&bl savaae 1uault, u soon 11 Ttdetco ill ~ble to , ... futthfr queatloolni-
Priest Collapses
The 11>v. John Dinm o1 our Lady of
ML Cannt1 C.thollc Cburdl oolllpeed
durlnr the JO 1.m. Mua SUnday.
Father Du.... wbo fainted at JO:lt
1.m. wu mitvtcl quickly by flmMtl
wmmoned lo the "rvlctl.
"I dool tblnlt dru( control on or off
the Cllllpul Is a pulh buton -of
thiftl," Dr. Cwminlbtm Ii.id. "I cannot
hoomly 11y !hit the l!tuatlon Is better
today than it wu several wetkl ago,
other lhan we are aware Of the problem,
as we think we have been all alon1."
He said a larae majority ol students
feel dru1s on campus a:tpries have been
"grossly overplayed. Whether thty have
ia difficult to anawer," he said, "ttut
achool people do not want to appe.ar de·
fensive and are workJng on the aasumir
tion It is a serious problem.''
Newport Beech cttY Manager Harvey
Huhburt sat4 'the two city coundlmtn he
ha11 talked to have been very r~ve
to Lhe 14fa of employing a Policeman as
St, LalUJ'_a Beach and his passengers Hospital. Witnesses assqted the youth
VaneS&a Myers, 15, of 233&8 El Pen:o, El wa.s involved in a drag race \\'hen he lo1t
Toro and Gregory M. Gray, 19, of 210 control of his vehicle and plowed into tht:
Cliff Driv(l, Laguna Beach. car driven by Hirata.
In an accident Saturday, a Buena Park In Westminster, poli~ said today they
youth 1ost his life when he walked into are still seeking a black 1961 or 1962 El
the side of a seml·lrailer truck at Beach Camino Chevrolet in connection with a hit
Boulevard and Malvern Avenue in Buena and run accident Saturday which raulterl
Park. iii. the amputation of the leg or an elderly
Police said Vernci.e Record, 16, Of 5140 man .
Somerset Circle, WA J¥'Onoupced dead Westminster resident G er a I d W.
on arrlv1I at Beach Community Hospital Fitzgerald, 64, is in ".serious but im·
~fter he reportedly stepped into the ill-proving" condition today at Weslminster
teriection, turned to f1Y something to Community Hospital following a hit and
two friends and walked into the side of run accident Saturday afternoon in which
Ille rig. The driver H•l'llWl·Xloin. 27, of ht lost hU 1elt Jtg.
Father Receives .Heart.
STANFORD (UPI) -A middl .. a1ed
father of three. who has suffered from
heart tlisease for the past 16 yt.ars, was
in satisfactory condition today after
receiving the first heaffltansplanr·ortlfr "' ·-
year.
The patient is William Van Buuren, 40,
1 builders hardware estimator who lives
in the San Francisco 8Uburb of Mill
Valley. He has a wife, Corry, and three
children nnglng in a1e ffml a to ll.
a eampw: counselor.advisor. The City
-ll-wUl-hav...tGJDte....Ult..1!!1!!!t..!!!!..__
pay h.i.11 aalary.
ne ''cop on campus'' would divide
time betwMri the two high schools and
two jutUor hi&h schools in Newport
Beach .
Asgistant Newpcrt Police Chief Harry
NeJgon iaid it won't be the function of the
policeman to gather information on nar·
cot.ica users but he hopes he can estab--
li!h clMe enough rapport that students
voluntarily would give him such informa-
tioo.
C95ta Mesa Police Chief Roger Neth
toki of his depirlment'1 practioe for the
last year and a h•lf of having an officer
on hish achoo! campuees two days a
v.'te.k at the lunch hour to MS•·er ques·
lions.
"They are not there in any way to in·
vest11ate, .. he said.
Ht sa)d youn«er officers with academic
background are picked for the assign·
mtnt (three have teaching CTtdentials).
He has hopes of expanding the program
to junior high schools as the manpowtr
become! available, he said.
The program has been done with exis·
t.1n1 manpower and Chief Neth has Mt
gMe to the Costa Mesa city council for
addJtibna l funds.
Dr. CUMlngham said no thought has
been gtvtn to the use of undercovtr offi·
cers !ilidin' to be students aa done in Llls el ... •'!'be u,. of ld...Uflable of.
ficen a just tbe opposite tactic " he pointed oul '
Newport A"irta!it Chief Ntblm 11id
hls department baa aivtn US different
taDrs to the community on narcotics dur· ing tht last yt'1r, retching an audien«
estimated at fi ,000. "So we haven't really
been dragginl our feet," he said.
He told how every single high school
and · junlor high schoOI student has heard
~n hour lecture from police an drugnnd
l'le mentioned the program of having
teenagers riding around with a patrol of·
fleer at ni&ht in a .!lqUld car.
Coe:ta Mesa Chief 'Neth told of his M-
partment's plan.s for a day.Jong J)remita·
tion in late P'ebruary by "~ple from
about evt:ry natcotics program we can
nnd."
er. Cllnlllnabam .. id the school dmric;t
h11 been actlv.e also and that a kinder·
fatten lllrouih hli!i school curriculum
on drup ta br ihe late stages of prepar·
auon for tntnlducUon this sprinr.
He. aald \be acl'IOol dJsttlct will work
with police In tryln1 t•'better train teldl·
ert fn rtcogmJJnc drug use.
An ann«inctd ICl>ool lock" dleck ovtr U. Chrlatmu vacation he aatd was in te-
l -to '" Inf ....... by tht· f•thtn t!Jat diup wm btlnr stored In l<><k•n.
"Wo dldn•t thin~ It WU trut. but wt
wanted l4 Jet t!Mm now th•t the locktts
Itel""* 14 tilt stl\Ool, not tile stud!titt,"
hi aid. c..ta Mtaa City COu•cllman William st. Clair 1lld he t!Jlnko the ochool dlstrict
tw an advantap "-betnc able to work:
Wit!J In dU... Both dUOI eon try dlfler.
tOt tlctiCI, ht 11ld. and If one works
pertlculatl:t wtll tl\t otller cit)> can ptc~
it up.
the
city consultants
recommend ·
'" . . . .
Balbo·a Bay Club
lease extension!
The CilY of Newport Beach hirtd a respected, independent reseaith. firm,
Development Research Associates of Los Angeles, to evaluate the ~boa Bay
Club lease pf!>posal. Here is what the firm's report says about
~XTENDING LEASES OF THIS Tif PE . '
1'We believe that It is im~rtant 10
point out that ground leas8s of this
type ar11-1enerafly ertended""throuch
r1n11otiation prior to the actual ter·
mination date of the orlsinal luse.
The reason for this is that the lessee
normally makes. a $lgnlf icant capital
investment ••• and continued mod ·
emlzatlon becomes lncr11slnc infH11i·
bit as tht nmalnlnr 1 .... term ;.
nductd.
·1n conclusion, w1 recommend that
tht City 11tk • l11at extension which
is equitable to both the Ctty anH the
,
BalliO• 'Bay Club which. will 1llow for
the full economic development pro·
1r1m ·which,.. bell1n-wifl m1n<1--
-.11 beyond the currently proiec.ted
e1p1n1ion procram.l? '
The Balboa B•y Club lease is down
to 29 years. The Club se!ks the lease
ex:tenslon so that it can obtain financ•
in& to continue its development pro·
gram and has •&reed to te(ms Which
raise the annual rental, increase the
pen:enllp of eross soles, and pro-
viCJes-for periodrc c6st:Of·living
adjustments as well as periodic rent·
1otiation of ill term s.
REALIZE MORE REVENUE FROM CITY PROPERTY
VOTE YES ON THE BAY CLUB LEASE
JANIJARY 13
(
. -•
• • Mood'1, J,.,.,, 3, 1970 · s " D~LY PJLOT iJ
' ·-
guna Look .~ to. 70's
•
' .
City Manager Wheaton Scans Fut-ure
DAILY PILOT lt•ft ,.,_..
B1 JAMES D. WHEATON
l-.... C:ltt MMlfiMr
The DAILY PlLOT has asked for a
statement that 1ttempts to 1oOtc: tnto the
future for Laguna Beach and what,is In
store during the 70s. 'J'bls Js'not the ·ldnd
ol thinli at whkh l'tn adept. God h's
given me ICNll& gifts; bowev~. prophecy
ls not one of them. 1be tlUe of thi3 arti·
cle, Prospect.s '?O's, gives me. several
ways to go into what is a nearly im-
possible task. A pt'Olll)e<:t can be an ~
"outlook." an ••anticipation," an
"aspect," and an "~ve view" ~
cording to Webster. To approach our city
In the future, each ol these definiliona
could be employed.
RECREATION DEPARTMENT'S NANCY PERRINE, DOUG ALLEN OPEN LAGUNA lEEN CENTER
' .The" Old Barefoot B•r on thl &o.rdwalk Now' Serves Only Soft Drinks
The City bas had itself under rather in·
tense scrutiny for the last year and a half
or so in th~ prellminary stages or a new
genera] plan. During 1970, the plan will
be adopted by the City Council. This ac-
tion will be the single most imporfant
decision Ulat'wlll affect prospecb for the
next 10 years and beyond. This ''p1an will
J
Down tlae
Mission
Trail
determine where our traffic will go,
Laguna Teen Center Gets
where our parks will be located. how the
land will be used and many other factors
affectJng the growth of Lagw1a . And
grow we will.
Population pressures from tbe outside
have not been felt Marty as much as they
will be In the '70s. Ho\ll...Ule City reacts to
those pressures will be seen in how the
City holds onto the goals for Laguna to be
adopted by the City Council eatily in 1970.
With population, unfortunately, comes the
New Games,;Food Machine
Laguna's new beachfronl Teen Center
acquired a shiny jukebox, soft drinks,
candy and snack vending machines and a
pool table Friday. A second pool table
and a ping pong table are due with.in the
week. There's also a piano inherited from
the lasl tenant.
The Teen Center is in business.
Starting immediately, Teen Center automobile.
hours will be 3:30 to 10 p.m. ~fondays St~ wide enough to carry "traffic
through Thursdays for both junior and and parking spaces sufficient in number
senior high rnembers."'Fridays will be to provide for temporary vehicle storage will be needed. Implementation of the reserved. for junior high studenl.!I , with general plan will meet those needs.
hours from 3:30 to 11 :30 p.m. and Economic pressures will also beset our
Saturdays for senior high students only, community. The general plan consultanL It's Principal
Of the Tliin:g --~·ifili'\ei11ate netd,-aays city-recreation \Vith closing at midnight has clearl}' ouUined the needs and poten·
AdmissiOn i!by rriembership card only; tials of the Clly, aOO-tne generaf'"plan
SAN JUAJI{ CAPISTRANO -Harold
Ambuehl, principal of San juan School
knows all too well the truth in the adage
••you are judged by the company you
keep."
director George Fowler, is for yOlunteers
to clean up and maybe even do a lillle
decocating in the boardwalk premises
that once housed the 3Candalous Barefoot Bar. .
Battalio11 Chief
Unaware of Fire
AppUCaUons are available at the Teen itself will determine the appropri<t!e
Center, 111 Ocean Ave. Dues are $1 a sleps to be taken to help guarantee a
year. . strong and growing economy. Tourism
Membership is open to all students or will be 'the keystone of this economic
junior high or senior high age attending _.v.1el)..being, even though this in itself
school in the Laguna Beach Unlffe<f creates other concerns for the c<>m·
School Distrct or resi.dlng in Laguna. munily. The balance between a healthy
Programs will'be developed by the teen
club members themselves and are ex·
peeled t•. include dancing, 1o1k singing, Ret.,naing Todau games, discussiQg. gI'_QUps_aJKLothet ac ________ .,..._,__ ____ .. !!.~
·tivitle'rplir\:ned by teen committees and ·
DAil Y PILOT Sllff ~ .....
LOOKING AH!AD· IN LAGUNA
Crystal B•ll Gaur Wheaton
robust economy and mindless com-
mercial exploitation will be secured by
the proper exercise of the l~gislative and
policy-making funcUon by the City Coun-
cil, based upon the adopted general plan.
On the Who~. until the general plan has ' been adopted, it Is not possible to predict
the shape or particular things to. eome.
However, 1 ·11 risk it and make some
predictions¥that-are-rather safe on mat·
ters not directly related to the general ·
plan program.
-IACal 1ove111ment will cost more.
You might respond by saying, "How
could it? We already have the highest
municipal tax rate in Orange County."
This won't be a attlctly 1 o c • I
phenomeMn; but llnoe we pay our pro-
perty tax bllls here, Ibis bl whet"e It ...,.
cerns us. A simple explanalion Js the
same that we experience bl our faml!t
elanning : i.e., the C08t of things keep
going up. The raise the bread-whwf
TeCeives only begins to catch up with U.
c<>ot of livlnJ; IO it bl with cities. llurlnt
the '70'1, I would expect major ddwnwala ,.
revisions in I.be general property tax, ~
would remind that other tai:es will ~
raised to take the place of those reduc-
tions '. · :"
-Pollu.Uon wW recel\le a sood. deaf.;
1ttentlo1. We bear ol more thq:1. beihk
done these days about pollution o( air ml
water, rather than just taJk. Thil tn!nd
wiU continue and will help to keef
Laguna a nice place, ' .. ~
-New forma of local sovenuneat w,W
be poslulated and tried. The lrend toward
regional organization is under a great
deal of discussion by opnion and po*
makers. How thia treod coulCI al'fect our
. values in Laguna can not be prr'~
now. It could be good, It coold be bacf;
Nonetheless, it is something that beail
watching: Even.the pc>s!Uve argument,lor
regional ~blem .solving would be ~
comfort ifthe City became a part of~
organization not sensitive to the style <if
Laguna and Lagunana. '
This can be the most u:cilini decad1 In
Lsguna 's existence. There will be '"°"'
opportunities for the people of. La~'~
become involved with their destiny ~
ever before. · ~
Plans will be made. Projects will· bl
completed: The 1eneral plan will ~
a living guide·lo~and·a-hlotar]'
of Laguna's progress .during the '709.
Without the people though, the next JO
years can be years of fruatnUoli,
mistak .. and inevltable ml!handli!llf .ol
the natural resources Ulat God hu &ivt1
to us. ... ·,·
A final prediction: Laguna wlllnotfalll
_J ... Ambuehl's constant companion during
the noon hour is the cafeteria garbage
can. He maintains his vigil iil order to ad·
vise lhe cafeteria what foods student.!
--most-ai!lmct-M"tbey'"wonr -prepar"i"lllem--~often. 2 Doors Away
AcountyfrrebaUalionchidwholived r;:::: Arr~ted Nixons Visit Palm Spring~ Misunderstanding this task was one
small primary pupil who when seeing the
principal one day in the grocery st.ore
1houted, "Mommy, Mommy. there's our
lwo doors away from a MisS'lon Viejn
homt: that burned down over the weekend 0 D · Ch · · P.reaidt.nt Nixon waa upected to return
was unaware of the blaze untU alerted by ll · . r ,Ug arge \o hiJ San Clemo ... estate ~ today
radio the county Forestry Department "' after spending part o( the weUenct at the
/ sa.i<f today. A woman driver who struck a gas • plush Palm Springs vacation home of e. ft.oat D~y · S11HdGt1 / Battalion Chief David Mack then rush-pump and a stack of tires while-en route Walter H. Anoenberg, U.S. anibassador
ed from his home to direct operations or to the rest room in a LagUna Beach to Brltian .
tchool garbage man."
begins July I.
The Palm Spring! weather wu
pleasant and sunny but . not appreciably
warmer tQan San Clemente where Nixon
has betn Spending most of his New
Year's holiday in his own home .
own nJne.bole goll course ""1'0W1ded .,
1 high Jnm. fence ~ priv1cy ICftell ·or
evergl'.'eenl. ·
Nixon has pblyed the """" •l leiill once in each of the PIJ't_ two_YJIU:I. ::: \
Here with Nixon .;., bil frlnl "and ife!
casional golfjng. partner, C. G, ~~ LAKE FOREST -Boat enthusiasts are fire fighting units from Mission Viejo, El service station was placed under arrest Accompanied by Mrs. Nixon and their
invited to participate in Lake Forest Boat Toro and Laguna Hills as they battled the Sunda y night on charges of violating drug daughter Tricia, the President flew by
--~D~a.,y~S,ll!lda,c_ _________ _Jl;:;i3~,ooo~;,b~la~u~a~t ~!423~1~C~a~s~tigu,;a ~La~n~e~.""""'-~~-~:-;::;:;::::;-::::-:=:::::;-;::--llelleop~ay morning tO the An· '!'he hre was reported Fri ay mg I by The 7 p.m. incident was reported t'1 nenberg estate
Sunday's hJgh was 60 degrees, virtually
the same as in the San Clemente area.
e c executive spent most o un· Re ym,~,~~:--played nine holes with the Pl · M
the Camp Pendleton Mai'liie Bloe FrldlY, Participants. In the various boat race3 • an off-duty Newport Beach police officer, police by an attendant at the Union sta-Relaxation was Nixon's principal ob-
are asked to sign up by Thursday-for the Patrick O'Sullivan. who spotted flames in tion on the comer of Broadway and South jective, although he brought along a
10 a.m, to 4 p.m. evenl which will be lhe kitchen and living room area o! the Coast Highway. briefcase filled with papers. Two key
climaxed by the awarding ol. ribbons. two-bedroom wood frame dwelling . Checking the car driven by Rita Diana aides, ChM!f ol Staff H. R. Haldeman and
There will be paddleboat races for a Not knowing if the house was occupied, Cessna, 21 , of Anaheim, police said tbey Appointments Secretary Dwight Chapin,
parent and child, kayak races for a child O~ullivan broke a window and entered , found a bottle containing 34 assorted are staying nearby.
but the owners, David Lovallo and his capsules and tablets representing half a Although Nixon conUnues to ptepare
ind father and sailboat races for · a wife Karen, were away. dozen va:rieties of drugs. for his Jan. 22 State o! the Union mcs-
qualiried parent and child. Awaiting the arrival of fire engines, When the wayward motorist returned .sage to Coogress, he annuonced Saturday
Refreshments will be served and the Chief 1ifack and neighbors used garden to her vehicle she was booked on charges he had completed all major decisions on
possibilities of forming a sailing club will hoses on the blaze. but It resisted their of possession of dangttous drugs for saJe. the budget he will send to Congress late
be dlacl,wed. efforts and spread thro~h the house. Bail waa-set at·'5;000:--in the month for the 1971 fiscal year that
-El Rancho-·has the hottest price in town!
•
:::>" • •
Serve them hot from the oven •.. with butter oozing over the flaky tender edges •.• and with jam or
·marmalade on the table! ••• and save on either Pillsbury's or Ballard's ••• 8 ounce tubes!
Ground Round ................ 79~
Serve a tender juicy burgel' , •• Ol' fancy it up for Salisbury steak! •.• and know that the meat is fresh I
Meat Loaf ........................ 79~ . Tomato Juice ............. 4 "' s1 .
Oven reads •.• lean meats. seasoned just right ! Big 46 ounce cans ... red and lusciou5! Sprinrfield --
•
day afternoon in the modern-style An-
nenburg home. whidl Is reported to have
more than 30,000 5<1uare feet of Jiving
space.
Mrs. Nixon sat by the pool while her
husband was indoors watching the
Kansas City Chlefs win the televised
American Football League championship
game from the Oakland Raiden 17·7.
The President emerged briefly at
halfUme and strolled around the grounds
with hi s wife.
The sprawling Annen berg estate. has. M
Rebo1.o aJso k1bltzed w h 1' n Nlxoft
played another nine Saturday, ·jt • North
Hollywood golf cour.e wi~mtertalnefi
Bob Hope, Jam., Slew.,t and l"rOi
fl.facMurray. • t-
Annenberg and hil wife . left Pabn
Springs before the Nixonl ~vld Sun-
day. They were headed back to Landon.
They dined with the NixOna .t Su
Clemente Friday. · 1:;
Nixon is expticted to return ·to
Washlngfa> late In the week.
,
. .
.. .
' , I.
·• '
. . ..
0
' • •
'•
. ·. . ..
• -langerines .......... ~ ............ 19~ Vegetable Cocktail 4 "'s1
Ripe, sweet .•• flavorful as they should be I · Compare the qua1ity ! ... Springfield, 46 oz. e11.ns I . PRICES EFFECTIV~ MON., TUES., WED.,
JANUARY S, 6, 7. NO SALES TO DEALERS •
~ ...
ARCADIA: -' su,..t ond Huntiniton Dr. (D Rancho C.nltr) ' l'ASADOIA: introducing
Veal Bir-ds.~ ...... ; ...... ~ ..... 29~
Thin slice• of tender veal .•• r61led at:ound a ta!t.y dreasing. Cooking instructions. your'& for the taking,
Rre displayed at our meat counters. Delicious I Min . 5-oz:. Each \ • •
.... --------------\
320 Wosl Colorado Blvd.
SOUTH PASADENA:
f1emont llld Huntington Dr.
HUNTlllGTON BEACH:
W•Nll! •nd Al1onquin (Bot~wall C.nter)
NEWPORT BEACH:
212/ N1wport Blvd. snd
2555 bstblutt Dr. (E11lbluH ~11111 Ctnler)
~ "
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• I
•
~·-....... ""-.-..;...;. -·-;. --------------;----'.;..-----==,---=-o:~"'------.--.---....-.-... ----------------------------------r--------
'Iffas•~Deleted
S. Vi~t My Lai -
•
Connecticut of fl c i a I s are
determined that the state "will
. lead the country in facilities for
dogs." That, at least, is the opinion
of Louis Golet, assistant s t a t e
canine control officer, w h o s e
department promµlgated a new ex·
panded. list of regulations for
pounds, kennels, pet shops and
grooming establishments. T h e
regulations until now had said on1y
that pounds had to be "~uitable,''
"comfortable" and "sanitary."
Now, t h e y ' 11 require-among
UPI TlltPllo!t
o t h e r amenities -at least "30
candlepower" of light "for at least
eight hours a day,"· and "at least
• . . a bathing tub, a grooming
table, hot and cold running water,
. a drier, clippers, combs, brushes
and shears." •
AGNEW REVIEWS THAI TROOPS WITH PRIME MINISTER THANOM KITTIKACHORN (RIGHT)
Some 2,00 Th•I• Turned Out to Greet Agnew on His Arrive! in Bengkok
Agnew's Mission Working1
Chris Brose' demonstration
of a n~ly-dtueioped, two-man
1Ubmarine in San Francisco Bay
'°'11 somlthin11 le11 than succest-
fut It sank. Brost escoped with·
out in;urv and the v~1sel Wa.t
later refloated. Veep Clearing Air Over 'Nixon Doctrine' • By CARL P. LEUBSDORF From now on Wendy the chimp . 'vill be living a Jife of ease. She is BANGKOK . (AP) -Vice President
being retired by the Yerkes Spiro T. ~gnew appe~s to be making 1--~Heigional.J>..rimale..Center...at Emory_~~w~y in ~mml!_rucating_~ cl~_!fe~
University in AUanta, G a • • de1in1fion of llie "Ni1:~~1ne to the
although officials say she will 9ti.ll leaders of U.S. allies m Asia.
provide valuable information about Conversations with diplomats and
geriatric conditions and diseases. members or the vice presidential party
\Vendy was born in 19'23 and indicate Agnew is: off to a good start as a
brought to the U.S. from We st pi:esidential emissary.
Africa by a ship'.li ofiicer. She was One of the main reasons for his 11-na·
part of the original group of four lion 'Asian tour was to clear up
chimps studied by the late Dr. misunderstandings about the policy
Robert W. Yerkes Qf Yale Univer· President Nixon outlined last July in
sity, and is the only one of the four Guam, a policy combining ·a U.S. pledge
till I. to met:t its treaty commitments and pro-
s · 8 1ve. \•idea nuclear shield for America 's Asian e allie.s, whife at the same time em-
Cbarlie's bar at the Brudunell pbasizing Asian sell-reliance.
Hotel in Adelburg, England refused Agnew today completed the fim P•"
to serve Jene Weterfleld. The of his trip and flew to neutralist Nepal
reason: She was 1vearing a mod after visits to four firm U.S. allies-the
costume which violated the bar's Philippines, South Vietnam, Nalionalisl
house rule that no belly buttons are Ctiina and Thailand.
allowed in public. In each cowitry, government leaders
.... questioned him closely about what the
United States is going to do. Ia each, he
has given lhe same firm reply -that the
United States plans to remain an Asian
power and keep its commitments, but
lbatJbey..nust take more_aUheJ:iur_cten o
their defense.
Ameri can officials In Bangkok told
newsmen they thought part of the pr~
blem has been tha~e doctrine indicates
more or a change m emphasis than in
basic po licy. Al\ Agnew aide termed
it more a change in tone. The difference,
he said, is that when Nixon and Agnew
talk about Asian seli·rellance, they mean
i I.
"It's a matter of giving teeth to the
platitudes," he sald.
This approach appears to have been
e5peeially successful in Thailand. Thai or-
ficiaJs made clear to Agnew they believe
they can handle their own Communist in-
surgency problem without the assistance
of U.S. troops. Actually, the officials said,
the United States started implementing
something like the Nixon doctrine several
years ago when it stopped flying
helicopters into baUle for the 111ais.
SB-A-in-Drive to Recover
All smiles, Davy Jones, Britilh mem·
ber of the American. singing group
•·rhe Afonkeea," arriw:1 with hi! wife,
Linda. and their 15-~tho-Otd daugh-
ter, Talia, at Heathrow Airport in
London after a /Lighi from Loa An·
geles. The /amity is here for a holi·
day but Da vu will al!o hold talks on
plans for some. to!o projects. • '
\Vorkmen in Leeds, E ngland
draped nude statues in the city
square with, black plastic cloaks
while they removed fig leaves to
cl ean the curvy nymphs.
Loans to 'Mafia' Firms
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Smel l
Business Adminstratton (SBA) announced
today efforts are being made to recover
loans made to Chicago and New Orleans
finns suspected of mafia connections.
The head of the agency said thousjndS or
dollars niay have been channeleft to the
underworld in the past.
Administrator Hilary Sandoval Jr. said
the agency's chie( of financial assistance
in Ne1v Orleans. J.B. Alexander, has been
directed to approve no add!Uonal loans
pending completion of an Investigation in
that city.
Sandoval, pointing out that the loans
under investigation were arranged prior
to the time the Nixon administration took
office, commented at a news confeM!nce:
"I have been genuinely shocked and
dismayed by the deplorable conditions
v,ohich were permitted to grow and
flourish unchallenged in some of our of·
fices under previous admini.strat100$."
Sandoval said the New Orleans loan
but that the loans to Hnns with alleged
mob connections were processed during
the Johnson administration.
"A considerable amOlUlt of my effort
has been directed toward putting out
fires and cleaning up dirt left by my
predecessors," the SBA chief told
newsmen. _
He said other loans to mafia-connected
flrms may be still undiscovered.
"Detecting loans to mafia-controlled
organizations and firn1s is not an easy
task," he commented. "Operators In the
underworld, assisted by astute advisers,
know how to expand a loophole to the size
of a canyon.
"It is not possible at this point in our
Investigation for me to say just how
many thousands of taxpayer dollars have
been channeled to underworld operation s
through SBA loans made in the past."
was given final approval two days after
President Nixon entered the White House,
Weather Cold Over Nation
Southern California Climate Continues Fair, Sunn:y
PMYIROFUSAWUTHl-lllllMIFOlllWTTOJ:ODA .f!'.lST 1 .. , ·10
In Nationalist China, Agnew's efforts
appear to have met with nill:ed resulta.
President Otiang Kai-shek and Agnew
gol on so well that Chiang accompanied
Agnew lo fhe ai rport lo wisll him a good
trip despite the fact that the vice
president's message of continued U.S. ef·
forts to normalize relationS'with Red
China was displeasing lo the 82-year-old
leader.
And after Agnew's d,eparture, one of
Taipei's leading newspapers, the China
News, complained that the Nixon Doc-.
trine '~has never been spelled out in
detail." It added that while the United
States has offered its help, "the nature
and the amount of the help are not defin-
ed.''
Some of the confusion in Asian minds
appears to stom from the way in which
the doctrine emerged. President Nixon
met with reporters on Guam lo give
some of his ideas al the start of his Asian
trip, but they were not aflowed to quote
him directly.
What he outlined quickly became
known as the Nixon Doctrine, but there
was no set definition. Nixon then went to
Thailand and indicated possible U.S. sup-
port against both extemal and internal
• aggression. a contradiction with his
stated intent of staying out of civil war
situations.
Members of Agnew's party give still
another reason for the confusion -that
the Asian Jeader~on't want to face up to
a situation ·where they will be able to lean
Jess and less on the United States.
-
Report Soften~d
SAIGON (UPI) -The Souln Viet-
namese Senate ruled tonight that
civilians had been killed at My Lai by
U.S. soldiers but it softened a report by a
Senate committee which held that Presi-
dent Nguyen Van Thieu must be held
responsible .
A three part resolution deleted the
word "massacre" from the committee
report, said such !layings were not U.S.
policy. called on 'Miieu for greater pro-
te<.iion of civlliam and asked the Thieu
government to a&SUme leadership of the
\¥i.r.
The Senate also struck !rom lhe resoJu.
tion a demand that the Allied command
·Jn Vietnam be unified. The actual Senate ,
resoluUoo asked Thieu to "take Ole in-
itiative to assume the leadership of the
war, coordinaUng all actions between the
army and the Allied forces ."
Approval of the watered down resolu-
tion \¥as regj}rded as sornething of a
personal victory for opposition Sen. Tran
Van Don, chairman of the Senate defense
Pnunittee, which submitted the original
port accusing the government of trying
cover up the slayings.
During a recess before the vote Don us-
ed the Senate public address system to
pl ay a tape recordlng of a·de5cripUon of
the alleged mass slayi ngs by a My Lal
survivor. The Senate then amended.,Don's
report and adopted the three-part resolu·
lion.
"Tilt president must be held tOtally
responsible (or the Song fl1y (My Lail
massacre by the people and by history,"
the report said. "The massacre did hap-
pen. Why does the government hide it?"
Thieu announced in November a
Government investigation of the incident
shewed some civilians had aceidentally
been kllled-byBrtlllery. He said the case
w11s closed.
Don presented his report with 1b0ut
one-third of the Senate's 59 members
.absent. He declared, "We cannot atay
silent in order to avoid responsibility."
The senator, chairman of the Senate
defense committee, said the lnveitlgaUng
committee did not att:mpt lo determine
~·hich indlviduals were guilty at My·Lal
but only sought to "put the responsiblity
in the rtght place."
U.S. Copter,
C1·ewntan Hit
Bv~DMZ Fire ,,,
SAIGON (UPI) -Ground fire from In-
side the demilitarized zone (DMZ)
damaged a U.S. helicopter, wounding <>ne
crewman, in the fourth North Vietnamese
violation of the zone reported in the past
four da ys.
Military spokesmen said today ~at the
number of "incident.s" inside the zone
since the bc:lmbing of North Vietnam stoJr
ped Nov. 1, 1968, had surpassed 10,000
la.st week, 221 of them involving ei-
changes of fire .
The latest occurred Sunday when guer-
rillas inside the border strip opened up on
a U.S. observation helicopter, wounding
one crewm3.n before the 'copter Ued to
the safety ci a nearby Allied outpost.
Meanwhile, a broadcast ol the National
Liberation Front (NLF) said today Com-
munist forces in Vietnam will ob.serve a
four;day-ceas~fire during the Tet Lwtsr
New Year holiday next month.
2 GI Newsme11 Susp_t}_~ded
For RappiI1g Censorship
. SAIGON (UPI) -The U.S. Command
loday ordered all mililary newsmen not
to commen t on the weekend suspension of
two of their colleagues, one af whom said
on the air that news to troops in the field
is censored.
A spokesman for the U.S:-Command
said the order included the two who were
suspended, Army Spec. 5 Robert
Lawre.nct. 27. or Atlanta, Ga.. and
Marine Cpl. Tom Sinkovitz, 21, of Har-
risburg, Pa.
The censorship charges are being in·
vcsligated by the office of the inspector
i:eneral, the spo kesman said , and all of-
ficia l comment will be withheld until the
investigation is concluded.
Lawrence ended his t i p.m. leleviSion
newscast Saturday by saying news on the
1\merican Forces Vietnam Network
(AFVN) is censored. The network is
viewed by thousands of Gls.
"As a newsmen I'm dedicaled to giving
the public the ne\\'s and events •
\.Vorldwide and on the local level,"
Lawrence said. "I'm pledged to tell the
truth at all times. I will always ten the
turth, either in the military or as a
civilian.
"In the military of Vietnam, I've fdund
that a newscaster al AFVN is not free lo
tell the truth, and in essenct, to tell it
like it is •••.
"\\'"e have been suppressed and I'm
probably in trouble for telling you the
truth tonig'tit. I hope you 'll stop cemor-
i;hip at AFVN and any station under mili-
tary rule . Thank you and goodbye.''
When Lawrence ended his newscast,
Si nkovitz came on with a sports report.
He prefaced his remarks, by saying,
"Thanks, Bob, in more ways than one."
The two were immediately taken to 1
room behind the Saigon studios of AFVN
and neither has been allowed to broad-
cast since then. Both underwent. ques·
lionirig by superiors Sunday and today.
• J.lbuC1Utr~u1
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CAPTURED LEBANESE SOLDIERS AND CIVILIANS A~RIVE IN ISRAEL TOWN
Israeli Action Repo rtedly Wea in Re t11iat ion for Ara); Guerrilla Raid
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·" Israel Releases 3 Civilians
TEL AVIV {AP) -lsraeU warplanes
01 staged an hour-long strike into Egypt to-
day, pounding targets along the northern
sector of the Suez Canal and returning
safely, the military announced .
lsratl claimed two kills and l':gypt on~
earlier after the first .air battle l n more
than a m<>nlh or rln1ly lsrae\I strikes .
llJ"eel meanwhile released three of the
Lebanese ci\'lllans kidn:ipe<I by Israeli
command08 Frtdsy, and sources in Tel
Aviv sa id they might be takin~ home an
offer for o ne\¥ prisoner s1\•ap. The
l~r11eli~ cnpturc1t ni ne other clvlli1111s and
10 soldiers in the raid o( a Lebanese
border village. Israel 1aid the raid. wa&
retaliation for the abduction of an Israeli
v.·"alchman from a border outpost earlier
in the v.·eck.
Hassanein Heikal, editor of lhc Cairo
_n!!_S~P£r Al Ahram And a confidant Of
President Nasser, reported lhat Algerian
President lfoua rl Boum&lienne decided
during last month's Arab summit
meeting that Al&eria would f I g h t
alongside Egypt In the event of renewed
war with l!rael.'
"The sole object or o\lr efforts to build
the Algerian arn1y Is to prepare for
particlpatlng, with everything it has, in
the batU.,'t Helkal said Boumedierme told
I
•
Nasser and King Hassan of ~1orocco.I
Hcikal also said fl.1orocco agreea to
furnish an unspecified amount or
armaments to Egypt, and Saudi ArJbia,
Libya. and Kuw8it agreed to foot the bW
ror a $60 million weapons contract 1lgned
by Egypt with an unldcnUfled foreign
pou·er.
Egyptian officials had no comment on
reports that Nasst.r had approacht:d
f'rancc abou t arms purchases. Al Ahrsm
said a London newspaper report that
Egypt had asked r~rnnce ro1 $200 to S308
mlllion worth ol weapons was 1 "fairy
tale."
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UPI Tt lfflMt.
WORKERS PACK EQUIPMENT AS MISSISSIPPI SCHOOLS DESEGREGATE
Equipment Moved From Meridlen High SGhool to Harris High
• Lunar Landing Cut
In Nmv Timetable •
SPACE CENTER, Houston
(UPI) -America's Apollo
1noon exploration program,
scheduled until late last year
to end in 1972, now stretches
into 1974 and contains one less
lunar landing than originally
planned.
<;aneellatlon or the final
moon landing mission and the
two-year ·extension of the
timetable for the seven lan-
dings remaining in the Apollo
5chedule were brought on by
space agency budget limita-
tions.
George M. Low, deputy
director of the agency, said
the Stiurn 5 rocket originally
assigned to the last lunar lan-
ding will be used to blast
America's firsts c i en t If I c
space station Into earth orbit.
Low said Sunday the new
Director
Murdered
SANTA BARBARA (AP) -
Robert B. Sinclair, the veteran
direct.or who Wal! the first to
stage • ' T h e Phlladelphla
Story'' and "The Postman
Always rungs Twice," C1ll
Broadway, has been stabbed
to death in hJs home.
Arra,lgnment was pending
for Billy McCoy Hunter, 25, of
nearby Isle Vista, booked for
Investigation of murder and
burglary after he was arrested
i n s i d e Sinclair's luxurious
home.
Sinclair was found Saturday
night stabbed once ln the
chest.
SJ.nclalr, I(, directed movies
for Metro-GoldW}'Yl-Mayer in
the 1940s and '50s including
"Mr. and Pi.1rs. North , ' '
"Women Against Women" and
''Call of Borneo." He had been
inactive tn ncent years.
schedule calls for four Ian.
dings on the moon with ·
Apollos 13-16 before the end of
1971. The interval between
each ·fl!ght will be determined
primarily by the place on the
moon where the mission is
targeted because-some places
can be reached only at certain
times or the year, he said
After Apollo 16, Low said,
the lunar landlJ!8 program will
be Interrupted ' by the space
station flights.
The three-man station will
be launched ln July, 1972. It
will be visited by three crewa
on separate flight.!, the flnit
remaining up to a month and
the other two staying up to
eight ·weeks. through March,
!973.
Low said the last three
moon landings will be laun-
ched after the three-man
space station flight! are com-
pleted in 1973.
These missions, featuring
longer stays on the lunar
surface and more detailed ex·
ploratlon than earlier flights,
will carry the Apollo program
tnto 1974. The last scheduled
]anding will be Apollo 19.
Laird Seeking
ABM Expansion
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
The Nixon AdminJstration said
during the weekend it will ask
Congress to approve an ex.
pansion, of the Safeguard an·
tiballlstic missile s y s t e m
(ABM). The Democrat s
promptly indicated they would
fight it.
Defense Secretary Melvin R.
Laird told reporters Saturday
the administration would ask
for at least part of "Phase II"
of the Safeguard system.
time now to shop for yourself!
Radiation
In Ovens,
TVs Bared
WASHINGTON (UP!f-
\Yarnings about ·rad i at Io 11
hazards in microwave cooking
ovens and color television sets
have been issued by llEW
Secretary Robert H. Finch and
consumer critic Ralph Nader
in'separate staf"emenls.
Radiation levels Is excess of
an industry-imposed standard
have been detected in 51of151
ovens l!lpot checked in f o u r
states by HEW investigators,
Finch said Sunday. The states
were Massachusetts, N e w
Jersey, New York a ,n d
Mississippi. '
Nader s a Id "radiation
leakage from color television
sets was exposing "millions of
people .... to risk of physical.
genetic and eye damage." He
said children are particularly
susceptible to eye damage
because their eyes are more
sensitive than adults and they
tend to sit closer to television
sets. ·
. Finch 1 n v i t e d represen-
tatives of ove1' manufacturers
to a Jan. 12 meeting ln
Washington to discuss ways to
halt microwave leakage from
the rapid cooking ovens.
He said it waS "doubtful
that any significant damage
has occurred" because of the
leakage. But the department
urged certain safety precau-
tions for oven owners until
their units are checked.
Users should stay at least
one arm·s length from the
oven when it is on ; tum the
unit off before opening the
door and bar children' from
watching through the viewing
port while the food is cooking,
the department sRld.
It said there are now about
100,000 microwave ovens in
use in the United States:
40,000 in homes and the re-
mainder in institutions and
restaurants.
JOSEPH MAGNIN
SHOE CLEARANCE
DESIGNERS' SHOES:
herbert levine, m1 r11ret Jerrold, tony thl shoem1k1r,
cart! Df pans, phlllppe, amalfl, mister]., c1ressa, replarly 20.00 ta 48.00
NOW 13.90 to 24.90.
CASUAL SHOES:
1111lfl, na ell, binde llnos, 1portcast1rs, r1pl11ly 14.00 bl 23.00
NOW 7.90 to 15.90.
SHOP JM AT SOUTM (OAIT l'lAlo\, lllllTOl o\T SAH 01100 ,11tl•W•Y1 MOHOAY, THU11:.SOAY Af'IO ,ltlOA'I', 1t1• fl t1•1 TUllOA'I', WIDHISOA'I' ANO So\Tl,llOAT lt1N le t1M
J
1\'lonlfay, Janu11rr '· 1'71 DAILY ,II.GI' Ji
Mis.sis~ip,pi ·Integration _Day •• Ill
Teachers Quit, Private SclioolS' 0-pen as State Bows to Court .Order
ta de~gregale totally and
completely.
Bell Wllllam1 told a slatewtde
television aupieoce SatW'day
night. , 5J
'nlere appeared I l t t I e
Ukellhood of violence, bul 50
• \
JACKSON, Miss. (UPI) -
insslssippl1 for decades a bas-
tion against racial change,
grudgingly began im-
plementation today of a
Supreme Court order to com-
pl etely desegregate its public
!iChools.
There was grave concem
that the week wauld flnd
thousand'! of white children In
makeshift private schools and
the public systema in several
areas would become almost ,
tot.illy black. No one will know
the ex tent of whlte defections
until later lh1s week when
classes start.
"We've had JS or 16
teachers who have quil In our
district," said Lea~e County
Schools Superintendent Fo,...
rest Munday at Carthage.
"Some or them went to tbe
private schools and some just
quit teaching altogether."
Munday, like numerous
other school officlals, was
busy supervising the physical
overhaul of classrooms and
facilltles for the historic
chanat. Sli:Ly-tlve achoo! boa
rout.es are being altered in ~is
district this week.
U .s. marahals moved into the \
slala during lhe ·-kend just l
in caae. Williams asked for
calm.
Teachers quit, p r I v a l e
schools opened and education
officials hurried to finish up
the overhauling of public
schools for the sweephig
change as the deadline passed.
Private schools opened ln
several towns during the
morning, their rooim occapied
by students who had been ln
public schools prior t o
Christmas. Many of t h e
private school teachers were
in public systems lhree weeks
ago .
"Nothing can be gained
throufh violent acts of any ••.
kind,' the governor said.
"That has been proven time
and time agaln."
Registration and orientation
procedures started today In
nearly hall the SO Mississippi
di stricts ordered b~ t h e
Supreme Court 10 weeks ago
"The inoment that we have
resisted for 15 years -that
·we have fought hopefully-to
avoid; at least to delay -ls
finally a~ hand," Gov. John
More than 18,000 blacks and
55,000 whiles were in the 200
&ehooll covered by t h e
Supreme Court order. Whites
will be In a mlnority in dozens
of schools.
•
53-interest .. ,
It makes serious rs
lighthear
Security Pacific Bank has $100 or more. And you
something that could just can withdraw interest-or
change yo ur whole outlook prin cipal on deposit for a
on lift:.J .t's call<:_d our 5% full calend ar quarter dur-
Prem.1~m Pass~ook Account ing t e firs t tenaays -of
And 1t s for se ri ous save rs. any calendar quarter.
$500 opens an · Otherwise, with 90
acco?nt, and sta r.ts days written notice.
earrung a full 5% We think our 5%
annual interest im-Pre n1 ium Passbook
•
This is the one for serious
•avcn. The 5% Premium
Pa.&1book Account. Y 011
get 5% annua1 interett,
oompoundcd and credited
. quarterly Crom date of
., deposit-the highest
-poWblc bank-rate.
disposition, too. Because
after all, there's nothing
like serious saving to
make you feel a little
li ghthearted.
•
medi ately. Of cou ~se, ~cco un t \viii
you can adq to this have a definite SECURITY PACIFIC BANK
any time with deposits of effect on your •
. '
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~.t.·
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, 'l'lle'll watchclof•·ol COUJity.~ ~ u tht U. Orane< County Grend Jury, have made 'lhe!r
.finll report, a . document not calculated . to majl• \be
Board-cl 5-vJsor& entirely happy~
While the Jwws. fOund good· t¥ng• to say about ~ .government u It moves from rural ,f;o tmlon · oilem.t1on, they alllO came •dowJ> ·lhall'lY ~n 10veral
actions by the•preaent boanl. " '
First, the jury condemoed county.abandomienl of
Sal.I -Creolt Road on the south county coutllne u , "an
unwlle and shortalldlted action," echolnc what many
cltlfAins,.and the. DAlLY PILOT have. been saying s!n<e
the abandomnent flni came•to llglit. There bad 'been
no public hearing; 'the aCtlon was niUlfueJy"cln'leil ouf
wttbout cooslderaUon of the 1011 'to the public:
so. saylnf, the jury noled that out Of ttie error bas
come real &00<!. The silpervlllOn haye set aside.$! mU-
IJog In the coµnty budget for beach acquls!Uon. And
they have ordered the planning dep,.rtment to 1ubmit
an tract.maps ol areas "oceanwanls,from Paclfic Coast
HJshway" to t!!e board for final approval and a mas-
ter plan to determine coastline recreational needs and
prlorlttei.
'11le Upper Newport Bay land 1wap, an even hotter
subject ol controversy over I' longer period than· Salt
Creek ROid, also tlrew Gram Jury criticism. The jury
decided the twe!b was 11not fully explored." Last July
!lie jUJy 'hid eel for both the Irvine Company and
the coun\y to consider the l'""ibility of an alternate
plan to the ..,. now belnr dl"P"ted In a Superior Court
taxpayers' suit. '
Poesibly the moat fundamental sbort<orr\ing in the
aupervlaon' method of opetatioa, u found by the jury,
an the "relatively. Informal -procedures, venat com-
munlcat!ono and asre«nents ,and penonal contacts
Police Can ·Be
Own Worst
Enernies
Dear
-Gloomy •
Gos:
'llw veteran co m·11 back after
filhtinC for private ownership of.
.. -ty and -that the govern.
merit hu raised inttrert rat.ea IO
high the avtrace veteran himself
can't even buy a hoose.
-W.A.
"'" ...... rwfllds ,....,... '"'"' -.....,..,,, .... "' .... ---· ...... ,_ ............. ......, .... Dtlllr Plfllt.
"Shut up, )'OU," the cop MUied at llJm.
"When I want lo hear from yau, I'll uk
you a iiuesUoo." He inlpecled' the toy,
loued ,it back to the boyo, • .,,-, Col
bid< Into the squad COi' and -elf -leavbis· two more 0 r 1d1 cal i·• •d"
,.,.,,._. in his mllerable ww.
NOW OF ~ 11 I've told my
ton. nobody can &tnerallze from one cue,-or even from a few. But this cop'1
aWtudt WU more cbancterlstlc than
not; even if he reprt:Mnts a mlnortty, it
11 1 Jarse ·11111 voluble ·minority, who l\lill&l<eoly imq!ne that -.. a n d rudeneu I.bow power and authority, even
wlfen pleasantness would wort better.
, A few _. encowitm of this m, snd
all my aon'a IC.boobDatn will --be
ttpnllnl the police u pip, not lhlnkinc
of them as tndivtduall but limply a.s
brutes in tmH'anna. Tbls la how the
reprd for llw breaks ·down -not '° much by the atltude o! 'crtmlnols or 1he
qttaUon'of Communllll, but by 1he very
imq:e .projected by 1be police tbemtelves.
When.you accolt a Nee kid with a popcun
u lhoulh be ...... delinque!I~ be is
..... to loolt upon the polJce u the enemy, not u the protector.
Trading WithRedChina
when.111t)' an Jooltlnc at tt. How Jong
mutt reality esist before you apprehend
it? '1111 , .. nty II fllat Mao has gol by for
over 20 yean without our tnde.
IT ,IS NOT DUE to oor em.bargo that
llao la battly &<!Unl'by atll!. It ii due to
his own bumbUnt faadnation with a
IOC!o-lndustrial lytltm dedlca"'1 to
"""""'"" 1eon:lty and bureaucraUc
chaoL ' He, trill• not of count change and
-mellow. He b wholly fascina"'1 bJ hfll postUre u an A.aatic left' and law·
giver, and blJ occuJonaJ 11irrlpsea from
1he sbrine ol·hll cl"1Chod·fb( 1tr..i rsJ>.
ble. .
'But lhe aw.... people art another
matter. ~110 won't be around long, but
11)1)' will. ,SOp>e way Ibey must be
bn>ulhl Into the f11111Jy o/ n1tlona, where
theli' ~ lDlt1ncb can emerie. Inste1d
of !Mr -a, "'1lch il·Mao'a «>ncern. True. the flmily cl natiol'\S, 11 we u~
the lmn, ii hanlly for bragalnl 11 1he
moment. But lt etves more promise than
a mm compri&ing one-fourth o f
ma'11tlnd, L'°laled and perm<aled willl ln-
du<:<d hatr<d.
Yet if we don't ldmJre their IO!f·lm•
po9td lJolaUon, we shoWdn't be too ado
mlttn&'of our ..U·lmposed laolatlon !tun
them. AD man&lnd b ddlnl thiJ planel In
too lil!lt a opot to de•! with tu dilloca·
tlons by llavlshly punuin1 nonesaentlala.
1be main gi>al Is to bufld a ~ Iha(
woo't el'Plodt or dillolvt with fruttr•·
Uon, as Western itat.esmen shoukf have
diteovered by now. TtJe most promising
lhltld asalnst aucb collapie h11 1lw1y1
be<n lrade.
which may have been feasible just a few years earlier
(but which) no' longer 5uffice."
The jury suggested that l.bio has led in some il)-
'atancea to ae«ptance by the supervisors of inadequate
i(lformaUon JUppHed by department heads • or otller
aources, and. to acting without sufficient eva1uation ot.
the lnformaUon. This the jury blamed for conflicts be-
tween various elected and appointed coonty department
heads and between the supervilors and the, public.
The Grand Jury did commelid the supervisors for
''the general .overall operating efficiency ·of Orange.
County ii:ovemment in the face of continuing explosive srowlh." WhUe the~Grand Jury itself bad internal factional
problems, its final report appears to be a temperate,
well reasoned critique from which county ge\rernment
ahould benefit.
The Hairy . Era
A nation chuckled a.s word got around that a lot of fDllnJ and l)Ol-sooyoung business executives were buy-
ing sideburns, mOIJ.!taches, beards and long-haired wigs
to use onlY. on weekeQ:ds as they joined the swingers and eot with 11.
Now there's a reverse twist. according to ads ap-
pearing in the underground press. It seems those who grew Jllrsute ad6rmnents for real are now buying crew-
cut and other.:sb6rt-haired wigs to wear so they can get
and hold Establlsjunent jobs during the week. Then
they revert to bairit)ess on the weekend .
If the switcffl.og continues for long, wigmakers may
well become ampna:-the most properous artisans in
American history.
'
Strongest Evidence Supports Bis V ersi.on
Was jjBj Driven -From -Presid-eney?
WASHING'roN -Wu be driven from
lhe pmldency? Or did he go of hls own
accord? w .. b1I peace bid • grandstand
play? Or 80 act ol the utmost sincerity
and sacriftct?
It b cor-t with Lyndon Johnson 's
exptrlenct that t b e historians and · in·
terpreters aren't about to accept at race
value hia own explanaUm for oot nmning
in J96S.
Johnsoo'• opecla! fat. Is nol lo· be
believed by thooe "1lo have· aatillied
thernRlves that Gene McCarthy and -~
by Kennedy -~to give up the
presidency b e c a a t e they had
demomtraJed be couldn't be roelecled.
De fomwr prelldenr1 o9rn venkln is
q.U. dHl<nlll. lie "'1loves ablolutoly, 11
ht atated in bir neeat: television in-
terview, that be could have won. 1be irlnarY camp&Jcna ol McC1rthy snd
Kennedy c:roMed no pre9Umptlon Iha(
Jolnon '""1Jd faU of nomination or lose
the elecUon. He gave up the presidency
he had prvmloed !In. Johnaon he would
do so and because the divisive tnOuences
at work in the .nation made it impossible
to be lhe kind of )ftSldeot he wished to
be.
rr MUST !IE SAID tfla( Jolwoa'o
version of why be dldn1 nm carria more
credJbillty than the myths whJcb are
Richard Wilson ' . . . ,
b e i n g created. by the incredulous
historians and interp"tters. The rlldence
of the 1!168 elect.ion -its unexpected
closeness -lends crtbil!ty to Johnson's
belief that he woold bave been a stronger
candidate _ than Hubert H. Humphrey,
Johnson's cbok:e u hla successor.
There are other postulatkm which
have credibility, One is that Johnson
woukf have taken action to iniUate
f<riner Sec. ol -Clark Clill""1'• ,...,..,1 for the beginning ol an ...terly
withdrawal from Vietnam and that this
would have had a aalutary effect oo his
election prospects. Eri.lrely aside frun
lhat, Johnson's conviction that the nation
would not reject ao American president
in wartime carries credibility.
A GREAT DEAL hu been lmagined
about the slgni:ficance of events pri<lr to
the Democratic natkmal convention,
McCartl'ly did not win the New
Hampshire primary. As a formal can-
didate he lost it to a write-in for Johnson.
Kennedy did not win a smashing victory
in the California primary. His failure to
win-over McCarthy on an ihlpre..-iive
scale was convincing to many political
observers that be could not have won the
presidential nom~ion against Johnson.
The "new polilics ' was, In fact, a flop.
Jt did not represent a nationwide uprising
of youth any more than youthful
participation in previous political cam·
paigns. But this manilestaUon of youthful
energy did attract the charmed attention
of what Johnson, in his telmsion in-
terview, called the "molders of public
opinion" who were creating the political
climate adverse to hi& presidency.
IN PRACTICAL EFFFX:I', the Wallace
movement ol 1968 was, studies at the
University.of Michigan show, far"mott: ol
a political factor then, and for tbe future,
than the flower dlildren and more signill·
cant than the reV'oh.rtiooary-led hippies at
the Chicago convent.ion.
This is not the verskln or events which
plea5e5 the interpreters and historians
who see the wave of the future in the
weird behavior and political thought ot
the youUl faddists.
• IC Nixon and Wallace proved nothing
.. ise in 1968 it was that by far the
heaviest weighl. of public opinion lay
against the new politics and all its prac-
titioners. '
The mythology of what eauaed the
political events of 1968' will, however,un-
doobtt.dly persist because it fits the
pol.iti.cal purposes of poliUcians who have
been so swept off their feet as to let their
sideburns grow Jong. (Johnson, ·m.
cidentally, noted this tendency in Vice
President Humphrey in the 1968 c~
paign. "Every time l see Hubert ·his
sideburns are a little longer," Johnson
observed.)
THE STRONGEST evidence is on the
aide of President Johnson's version ci
why he didn't run again. 'nliJ bi mt too
comforting to those who believed a[ lht
time, and believe now, that hla greater
responsibility WU to -lhnlagh tho
Vietnam War regardlea._cl b cttmtve
effect Oil the countcy_./
Events ~ well .have been no dif.
ferent after hiS reelection than now, with
the beginning ol military di&mgagement
which was then W>der irtmslve Mudy in
the Johnson administration. ,
Aside from that, the evidence 1upportl
Johnson's position that he was DOC.
frightened aut of running by his poliUcal
opposition but did so out of personai,cm-
viction that his relinquishment ci the ol·
fice would reduce divisiveness ;ind ¥'
the road to peace. Unfortunately, bis act
ol abnegation has done ntRber.
How Things Were • Ill Mid-Thirties
Then I 10, !urchin& tnlo this joint, and
I take a small UtUe greeh pieee of paper
out of my wallet, and I write about 15
words on it, and I give it to the guy, and
the next !bing you know I have a hundred
dollars 1n my hands -all twenties and
guaranteed by this country.
I do thh Ui.ing from time to lime, and
never think about it. For some reason,
this timt 1 thought about it.
When t became leg11Jy a man, which
was in 1936, an obscure man from Topeka
named Alf Landon wu persuaded to run
apinst the rp-eatest man in the world,
F .D.R. The idea that 1 could ever have a
hundred dollars whJch actually belonged
to me: was nothing which could have
entered my mind. Except maybe I went
up to the Broru: and joihed a 1ang and
stole it.
PIX>PLE WHO are under 40 cannot
conceive of a world where a quarter was
big money, and where pennies, far from
being a nuisance, were things you could
buy things with.
1be most tm1ble words you could hear
In 1936 were:, "Why don't you ro out and
cet a job?"
!Ard knows, you knew that to be true.
A man Is supposed to work, and is only
truly hippy when he It working. and you
knew all that, but you also knew the
unalterable fact that If you went down to
Wall Street, and hit all the hoo11e11 which
might need runnen, you would run into
guys who wouldn't even talk to you,
because thert were a hundred men for
every job.
AND FOR TJUS hoptle11s ent.trprise of
Jookinc for 1 job you had ' a quarter,
which took care: ol carfart and a ham-
lrurg<r.
You coukl get 111 hamburgtr1 for a
quRrt.er in a white Tower, and thel'f! were
lads I knew who had that kMd of money
to throw llOllnd.
...---81f Geo,.,.--~
cl.N!'IOENTIAL TO ARTHUR
TREACHER : Yes. I have noticed
It's 1ettln1 dark eatlitr these days.
, ,
Charles ,McCabe
'
Being poor in the richest country in the
world was an experience that most
Americans shared. I'm sure it did funny
things to us, but I'm oot sure what they
were.
Just being poor is good knowledge. It
makes you both value what you haven't
got, and contemptuous in the end of it
when you get il
.
Yoo are thrown, far more than you
wish, back on yourself. You develop
reticences which never leave you. Those
silly things which parents teU you
nowadays, like Money Doesn't Grow On
Trees, are the very texture of your life.
I SELDOrtl, IN those days, ever-saw
what we call folding money. A dollar was
more important to me, then, than a hun-
dred dollars ls now. Or so I believe,
verily.
Gene Fowler said money was
something you threw off the rear ends ol
trains, and he said it in the middle of the
He Told Sam the Truth
The: Ace Health Insurance Company
promoted a sales: contest among it&
salesmen. Before Sam, a top salesman.
sold Olarles a policy, he a5ked about
Charles' blood pressure and possible
diabetes. Clwlrles said his blood pressure
was trifling aTMl. his mild diabetes v.•as
"controlled" by pillll and diet. Nothlng
more. ,
On the blaruts sam wrote "no" to both
questions:, and Charles bought the policy.
Ont month later he had a heart attack,
and the e<mpany got many 1 hospital and
doctor bill. It rtfused to pay them, on the
ground that the 1pplicatJon wa1 not ac-
curate.
In court Char~ WOil : He had told
salesman Sam lhe truth, Wha t Sam wrote
down was no concern of his. At any time
the com.pany cquk1 have checked Charles'
health bef<n handing over the policy.
But tt did nol,
SA.ID 111E COURT. people oll<!\ buy
l:nlurance like other thlnp, relyin1 on the
silesman'11 good faith. Few the courts to
pruume thlt they know what the policy
aay1 Is atmpty contrary to fact. Most ~
pie don't know until IOmethlng goes
wrong and It is too late.
Remembtr, though : The l n s ured
himself cannot mlsrtpresent an Im·
portant fact In his appllcation. If he does
'" 1he polJcy Is void.
I
Law in Action . -
"" • ... ¥
Tn buying insurance, U»e court sakl, the
buyer cannot really bargain, since the
company fixes the terms, and. that is
that. Besides, the buyer has to rely on
v."hat the agent tells him. '
THE COrttPANY'S action may also ex-
tend the C'O't'erage of a policy. For ex·
ample, Pete had a general liability policy
in case he hurt !O!Tleooe accidentally; but
not ii be lntenUonally assaulted someone.
Pele got into a ligh~ and slugged his
neighbor. The neighbor sued Pete. Since
Pete claimed self-defense, the comp..'lny's
lawyer said that the company would de-
fend Pete in court and cover his liability.
The neighbor won a fl0,000 judgment
against Pete which the insurance com-
pany rtfused to pay, strictly In ic·
cordance with lhe written terms of the
policy.
Still, the court held that U.s represtn·
tatJve had led Pete to bclleve It would
cover the claim. Tut company had to J>liY
anyhow.
Nott: Califoniin lawyers offe r tl1f1
col11rnn 10 U!)l.t ntOfl know about Oltf'
Jaws.
Depression, and he was right, alt.bough be
was doing quite well in those d1y1 as a
Hearst city editor. '
For a dollar, you could buy a woman fn
Harlem or get into a restaurant. The
idea, in 1936, that 1 could ever buy a mtaJ
in a restaurant was quite as beyond me
as the fact that I might ever have a bun·
dred doUars. -
Of course. you say to yourself, U I h;1d
my life to live over again, I would do it in
the same way, or whoever ordained it
would do it iR the same way.
But l~ not surC that grind.in& pove(1y
is all ~t attractive.
TO HA VE YOUR food brought Into liJe
home In a blg brown bag by a chuttable
organlulUon is not the most ennobling, ex·
perience ln'the world. It's like bx>Wfhg
that you are absolutely at the mercy of
circumstances. -
Those hamburgers, by the w1y, w~
damned good. They put a lot of bread
crumbs in them, to space them out.· btrt
the gravy made up for that. The buns
were soft, and the tummy was grate!
Very. ,-"
I v.•on't do il; but I like to think I
The next time I cash a hundred
check, I should tithe myself more or~a.((
and send a fa ir share of it to those ~
everywhere who are poor in the mldit~
plenty. '.(. :·
---WWW-=-•
Monday, January 5, 1970 -:
Th• edftorlal pap• oJ u.. Dail~
Pilot Mek1 to inform and 1rnn-<
tAlatt r14dn1 by prt1nUng th·
ne101paper'1 opiniona and c
nten tar11 on topic• of fntcr
ond 1ignt/iconce, b~ protndtng
forum /M th11 tiprtulon
our ,.eaders' opinions, and
prt1nU11g the d'Vtnt
poi-nta of informed obs
and 1pokemitn ott topica of Cfe: c1o,. • .
Robert N. \Veed, Publishq ~
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1
' 1
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t
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n • ,1 • I-
d
n
it
y
c • :· g
d
• d
II • ~
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~-
CHECKING
•UP•
:·A-Woman's Blinks
Re.veal · H~.r Mood
• I -·
By L. M. BOYD
WHY ARE a!OST
m a t T lmonial engaaemen~
broken, if at an, between 9
l»M. and midnight? Now
tbi)'• a my1tery that has our
Loft and War man atum-
ped. o-:AM '.\BKED TO
•J)EFJNE a "Yar1K>niuch" in
lhi~ge. That's a bmd with no
cinl hlgber than a nlnt.
Chances againlt getting a
Yarboroogh ruo I to 1,127.
SUlaD~ -What follows
Is abo9t men who die young,
'a?KI t wenli dwell overlong on
-OM~ matter, but this much ill
Odd: ln ge,ierat, of the men
who die bet\veen the qes of 25
and SD, ~e in 11 is a auk:lde.
However', of the doctor• who
die between the ages ol 2S and
Jt, one .1D. four is a suicide. ·,'Why are young doctors so
much more apt to t 111
· themselvt!· than young men in
other wcfessions? M o s t
mysterlowi.
CUSTQMER SERVICE : Q.
"Does wine get ·monger as it
age!?" A. Sherry does, but
don't think any other w1oes
..do_._._, ,Q, l!QW MANY
SLAVES did George
Washington own ? ' ' A.
188 ... Q. • I w HAT PRO-
PORTION of the men get
bald?" A. T() some degree,
···four out of five .•. Q. "THE ~U$'f!IALIAN QANTAS ia U.e
olaest of ~ air-lines. ls It
not?" A. Second oldest KLM is
the oklest. .. Q. "DO IDEN·
TICAL TWINS tend to have
moles and birthmarks in the
.same places on their bodies?"
.,A. Almost never. ,
·~ EY~ OF WOMEN -When
.a ,voman is happy. hope(ul
and fascinated by something
she sees she closes her eyes ·~at a r!i~ of about 15 blinks a
Utinute. When she is relu:ed,
.. Businessmen Find
Cold Latin Reception
" WASHINGTON (AP) -The
U.S. businessman. once
assured a hospitable reception
almost anywhert in Latin
'America, is now one of the
. most unloved Individual! in
the region.
~ · He is accused or plundering
··the region's natural re!O\lrces.
· lte is charged with making
'deals with corrupt or!iclals or
·past eovernmenta. And hJs in-
··depicted as so pervasive that
· nuence in ·washillJUln lw been
the U.S. g()vemment would
protect his interests even at
the expense of friendly diplo.
maUc relations.
As a ruult., the investment
game in Latin America iJ one
y,·hich many U.S. buslnes.smen
consider no longer worth
playing.
··American foreign in-
vestmellta Jumped by 121
billion from 1980 to 1987 but
·nowhere · was the percentage : or inc:eaae lower than in LaUn
,America.
CANADA STARTS
Canada started the decade
~-with American investments of
: ·1n.1 blllfon and bf 11117 they
had reached Ill billion. In
Europe, the Jump over the
seven-year period was almost
three-fold -from $8.8 billion
to $17 .8 billion. There we rt
'tu billion In U.S. investments
1n Asia two years ago, up from
j2.l bllllm In 1960.
. In Latin America,
meanwhile, the increue was
. JeQ then 20 percent -from
fa.3bllli<>nlo110.1 billion ..
While there are no reliable
.sUmates on how mu c h
•
lortlgn Investment hu beoo
withheld in ~nt years, thert
is general agreement the
figure is high. ,
1n LaUn America's search
for identity and control over
its national ecooomtc and pollUcal de.tlny, the American
business eat ab Ii s hm en t pr"'"u a vlsable target.
Tbe new surge of na-j.r
tionallsm has produced !l()tne t~
d r a m a ti c confrontattom •
between government a n d
business, such u the takeover
of the U.S . ..owned Intema-
tiooal Petroleum Corp. by
Peru'• military junta i n
October 1968.
PERU At"110N
Peru also bu decreed that
all banks must be 75 percent
owned by naUonals within a
year. Argentina has followed
sull Despite vigorous op.
pot;IUon by Ule Anaconda Co.,
ChUe nationalized two copper
mines at Chuquicamata and
El Salvador but ls offering
compensaUon. La.st October,
Bolivia look over Gulf Oil
Corp. propertJis valued at
some $140 mllllm, and thert la
c:xaiderable doubt whether
tbal naUon'• frq!lt e<onmny
can bear the burd<n of pro-
mlaed compematlon.
American businellu also
have been plagued by l<m>rilt
attacts. Jn J u o e, 13
supermarkets tn Bueoos Alrea,
belongiQg to the U.S.-con-
fnllled Internallonal Buie
Ecanomj Corp. ~ burned,
Slmllar tnddenb have. been on
the rise recently in Brull and
Uruguay, •
Happy New Year!
COME TO OUR
·--Open House Celebration
JANUARY. 2HD-THIOUOH JANUARY 1 OTH
O,_. SAMDAY, 'AN, IOTll, 9 A.M. TO I P.M. ~ ·r , r9fre1hmenU ---
KEYS TO NE SAVINGS
AND lOAN ASSOCIATION
Ronald W. Caspers, President
FREE ASTROLOGICAL FORECAST
FOR YOUR SIGN!
by Sydney Omarr
I By Phil lnterlandl
Fora
limited time only!
Sue Cory 'Select'
permanent wave
reduced!
REG. 12.'°, NOW 8.88
in<l..i.. ohcn•poo. Mt aod u,led hal.cut
USE YOUI nNN!Y Cl!ARGE CARD -
HO APPOINTMENT NEClSSAR'f
'"l.'-lltTOff
~tlr Cf!llW
Inf new. 111·44
I
'
MUNTIM•TOfl llACM
Kunlfntflol'I CW\ltt'
w ''°"• m.nn
MIWl"OltT l lACM
'"lllefl llllflll
,.... fleer, mu1'
.,
'
Monday, JlftUl,Y 5, 19711 DAllY l'llOT t
•
enne~1,.-
MJNAY8 FIB8'I' QUAUTY ' ' .
----ONE WEEK ONLY/-, . . . .
• •, ' ... . . .. . . .. .
, • .,. ' •• ' I •••
¥o' ..
:J:(J n.ua ry Dia m<>nd· .-SQJ·@-~--~.;
.. : .. ' ..
..
-.
. ·: •..
" . i• ..
• IRIDAL sns
• WRINIS '
. ' . ·. -
SAVE 20%.
ON OUR ENTIRE STOGK OF .,
DIAMONDS;:~ ,'~ ' .• .I
7
• MEN'S DIAMONDS
•PENDANTS
• SOllTAIRES
• DINNER RI•as
•WATCH AlTMllH 12111"
• W!DDINI RINll · . "' " '
What a fantastic collection of diamond jewelry! And -•. fantastic oppcrtunlty for you to SAVEi Seldom Is su~h • !tao •,
mendous reduction made on diamond Jewelry as fl..;q 11\11. ,. • _,
Check the outstanding selection! Check the remarbb~ vaillell , 1 -
Toke advantage of them both! I , · -,
-.
' ...
WMPLUr t -o11onf1t1. .. 'fi;iilr.'.~-:: ;~:~.·~· --
, liltl Re~ ... WIJ~l~•lo "'~ • U . -L :O~otlCllllN _ , m.oo 111.11 , r. SPo!IJin1_......,._.1!1!JC m.-. ,1 __ _
I. u.u..;.1'1'i.riocihl&btworaet,ICll... 125.0D 1DIM ' I. llle~dl-tlotltJIOhtocJl(• I« l•a Slla
.. • uutllY "'-""'.I(-! JI\ 7 • --1. 111.:auhoni.1111a.-ow•flll!l4L289.50 :Illa l --• •0-11141'*~ -
I
.. a-i...d'1iic ·..W,,_·hrtl!t-00.00. 1 lloldlO<l-1411 .... ..,. .. _, ... _ .••
" 6fllctJal• . II.II lnltlll rtnc ' : .. '-.;Ill ... '~ l
. CHARGE IT AT YOUR PENNFrS FINE JEWELRY -~ " ..
S, l .. c'f.W..DI 114 .. ....,,,,_, ..... ~ ... __ •
'• .. ' •' .
• 7
,.
' . .. • ,,
\-. " , . ·· .. '
-NciWI TruESE VALUES AT A Y ONE OF THESE PE NEY ,STORES! . ' .
C..."NoaAPAAK .oew""v' .IfuLLERTo" HUNTINGTON eEAcH SHoi>suNoAv, roo
l.Al(EWOOO MONTCLAIR · i-.-' 12 to !I P.M,I. " NEWPORTBEACH VE~'"""'·.._ __ ..... .., ___ ol!
I ~ ,.
,, '. \' :.\1{ ' It. •;o
i
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•
•· o,m Y PILOT Mond~, J1nuary· 5, 11J70
---•• ML MUM . ' .
"
U.S. Too Costly
Kidney Patient Leaving
Anti·smog
Bill Uses . .
Fee Plan
How Fast • Reagan Sets Ta~
Ca1i You Environment, TaX Refor1n · Spotliglited R ad?
S~CRAMENTO lAP) -Tax message to the. Calllornla the newly r e-d e-c orated e
SACRAMENTO (UPI) rerorm and protection of Legislalure Tuesday. Asse'mbly chamber in the cen-A noted publisher in Chk:•go
California's resources are ex-The 11 ·a.m. address to a Id .1 1 · reporll ihere Is 1 simple tech-
Leglslatlon d e 5 I g n e d ·to peCted to be the maln points or joint session of the legislature tur~~ capi ~ · . n.jque or tlpid reJtdlng whlch
discourage use of smog p{o-Gov. Reagan's an nu a I will be color tele<:ast live from Since bls inauguration -should enable you tO increase
ducing caz:s by Charging · ' Jan. S, 1967 -restraint in your reading speed and yet
hlgher 'rees for vehicles "hich -.(:r '*. * * 'tr '(:( state apending and a hold-the-retain much more. Most people
' line policy on government pro-do not realize how much they
""11"" the ~r w .. proposed
10
• •• Vet Senators MeCarth. y, gptnll h•v• been keystones of tould il)C"'". th~lr pteasu.re. lhe legislature today~ t h e Republican governor's success and income by reading
Republican· ., Assemblyman p • Says •) . policy. faster and more accurately.
W. Craig Biddle, ruverskic, rison B Pl Q . ? ' "We will put our fiscal Accof11ing Jo lhi1 publishe~.
and Henry Ar kt in, L 0 ' urns an to Ult hoose in order ... Reagan said many people, regardless ol the~
Angelu, offered the measures M d -. -'. • In hls inaugural address. pr_ese~L reading _skill, · c_an use
which base the motor vehicle Ur erer His office Is preparing a ma-this simple technique to improve
llcen.s:e and registration fees · SACRAMENTO (UPI) -close (rier\d,s. jor, .new taX reform program their readin_g abiUty to a re--
OD the amount of air poUulants M b D _ _J Veteran "senators llugb M. They were two o( the with the help of GOP leaders markable degree. Whelber .read • .a vehicle discharges. , ay e euu in ' both houses of t h e ing SloriE:S, b O O k S, technical ~leslslatkln _w,.Q!J~ affect Bums of Fresno and John F. legi.slature'1 most powerful legi~lature. · matter, il beooO)es possible to
most Cars produced before T R A C y (UPI) _ ,Officals h1c:Carthy ·ot San Rafael-pro-membeis until-last year when This cooperative slrategy rea~ sentences. l t a gl41\Ce a_nd
1966 and .those ·with super bably will announCe ·soo1 they a Rep u. b lican-Oemocratlc might produce a c<impromise ~re · pages m •seconds with
powerful engil)eS to be made at Deuel Vocational lnstltule wlll not run thls year for re· coalltion led by Way took over. r,ackage tbat (he goven"IOr and Uns ·meth~. · .
later than 1971. said· SundaY, convicted rapist· election, fri ends "said today as leaders.hip.of the Senate. egislature can agree on this . To acquaint ~he readers of this
The basic fee of any pr~l~ murdered tleonard E. Maine be election y_ear. n~wspaper with the . easy·l?-
motO!' vehicle ~d mcrease mav have frozen to death the 1970 legislature convened, Friends, who asked not to ReSgan i.s expected to an-folio" rule~ for developmg rapid
from $.1 to $30. · h·'; h'd" • • h . "d Burns, who Will be 68 next identified, said Burm has nounce in tit.arch his candidacy re~ding skill, th~ com~ny has
The current fee based on w 1 e 1 mg somew ert lflSI e month, has been a legislator . decided to retire due to age for a second term and the pri~led full details. ~r tls inter.
market value ·would remain the grounds of the maximum l~nger than any man in and McCarthy wants to return seats of i!-11 80 assemblymen ~~ting and self-lr~01n.1ng method
unchanged for 1966: through security facility. , history. He wa_s elected to the let private business in Marin an~ 20 of the 40 senatorS are in a new ho!:>klel: How t.~ Re~d
1970 vehicles. But. J971 af)d "It Could easily happen if he assembly in 1936, elected to County. ·up rOr election this ytar. Faster and Re_ta1n_ More, ~ail·
later.cars would pay fees on . . the Senate In 1942 and served1.-=-=--'==================;led free. No obllga t1on. Send your an. Increasing scale based en ·were outside night after night 13 years as President Prolr name, address and zip code to:
engine size. in ·the 25 degree tempera-Tern until being replaced last 1795 LA~UNA m /) I Reading, 835 Di versey~ Dept.
Addi t Ion a 11 y, any car tures." according ·to prison year by Sen . Howard Way (R-· CANYON · C Lot•micll 30a-9Jl, Chicago, Ill. 60614,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -It's.
too expensive to live in
America when you're a kidney
machine patient, ·says a
Dutchman returning to
Holland with his f a m 1 l Y
because he says he tan't af·
ford mecJJcal costs in this
country.
powered solely by gasoli~e · spokesman R0bert Reese, who Exeter), in a House revolt. ROAD
doctors told him he had kidney would pay an extra $1 while ·.i the h f th McCarthy, 45, was tht LAGUNA BEACH di5elJSe. cars using natural gas or· 581~. searc 0;, c young youngest senator in history I
bu 1:1t. 000 other noogasoline means fugitive has f:>een drastically when first elected in 1950. He
He ·had lo Y ~ ""' would pay no license fee at all. reduced." was Senate Republican leader MORTUARY
kidntiey dli!a1lY$iS11 mats ~: ,.,,!.0 A vehicle driven by an in· Maine serving 10 years to fer several years unlil 1968. F•d, f.;,, f•ct w•I. Tho••
FAIR
con nue v ng. cos ..... \l\N""" t t' bust' g1· with · All"-"gh B" r n s and •. h d f t H ema com ion en ne life for the slaying of a Ukiah '"' t r•• wor 1 sum 11p .,tori i11 SS.DOD a year to opera e. e a displacement of le'.ss than 200 . . ~1cCarlhy are of opposite op•r.itio11 011 the DAILY PILOJ
was al.so dependent upon ex· cubic Inches would pay a fee· teenager and the kidnap.rape parties Burns is a 494-9415 •cl'itori•I p•g• •v•ry 41y,·
pensive weekly hospital treat·,_jo~f~l30~-~The~~ra=t~e~w~ou~ld:ln:·Jol~th~e~v~ic~ti~m~·s~g;ir~l~£r~ien~d.~w~a~s~De~m~ocr;•;t~.,,~d~M~cC~ar~th~y~ls~a~I L::::~~!~~~~~~;:=~~=J~~~~~~~~~~ ments. crease lo $250 for 450 or more missing at a ~ c h e c k last Republican -they crten see 1 • Van der Sande said his sav· cubic inches. Wednesday night. eye-to-eye politically and are S•rvi119 Th• Er1tir• South Co•1t Ar••
"We )eve America, we love
Callfomla, but we just can't
afford to live here any
longer," said John van der
Sande, 46, who new to tfolland
Scmday with his wife Jean·
nette and their two American
children.
ings, medical l n s u ra n ce,
money from occasional book·
keeping job& and contributions
by Arcadia businessmen and
civi~ leaders m.elt~ µ~er the
weight of medical costs.
His wife took part-time jobs.
But "what I earned hardly
paid for the drugs my husband
needed," she said . . van der Sande, who came
with his wife to the United
States 13 years ago, h&d to
qnlt his $12,000-a-year jcb as
an a~nt in suburban
Arcadia last January when
Two months ago Van •der
Sande decided to return to
Holland .,.,here he · Is eligible
for free government medJcal
care.
'
THESE
PENNEY STORES •
WILL BE OPEN
SUNDAY
AFTERNOONS
12 TO 5 P.M.
•AZUSA
•BUENA PARK
•BURBANK
• CANOGA PARK
•DOWNEY
• E .. MONR
•FULLERTON
• GARDEN GROVE
•GLENDALE
• HUNTINGTON BEACH
•INGLEWOOD
•LAKEWOOD
• LC>NG BEACH
•LOS ALTOS
•MONTCLAIR
• NEWPORT BEACH
• NORTH HOLLYWOOD
• SAN BERNARDINO ' . • SAN FERNANDO
• SANTA MONICA
•TORRANCE
•VENTURA
• WESTCHESTER
• WEST COVINA
• WHITTWOOD
• WHITTIER DOWNS . \
Fashion Manor
f . • I I urn·1ture o.n sa e. .. ,
(THRU SA TU RDA Y ONLY) . '' ;'_\."" · ::""-
3 PIECE
FAMILY ROOM ,\GROUP!
REG. '388 NOW
$333
This 'Contemporary' style fomily room group Includes on
ao· sofa, a swiYel rocker ond matching ottomon, Kiin dried
hordwood frome ii doweled, screwed, glued and nailed.
Semi-olfached polyurethane foam 1eot and bock cushion.
No sag spring bo1e ond bock cua.hiol\. Priced indlYlduolty, , •
• SOFA
•
Rog. $219 NOW $119
• SWIVEL ROCKER
Rog. $129 NOW $109
• MATCHING OTTOMAN
Rog. $40-.NOW $35
to bladi .. iy
UR PINNlY5
TIMI P~YMINT PLAN
Prices inch.id• del iYery tn our locol .dtlivtry oreo.
. -.,.. ..~:: t~. . . .
.I ..... "' ,,.. ' •' s _, . ' ' { . ....
,,. tj +,,.( _,,_ ...
. 6 -... .,, ; " ~..,,. ., ... l>~,;f t'.
I , .~ t•> ..... ~ ,, . -~m<:· -~"., t ·' ' . . . -~ -~ ,. '·• \. •. ,,,_
. . . . '\ ·' . ' ,,. ,. ~ -
. '
· SOlO SEPARATELY:
• LOVE SEAT Reg. $1~9 .•••• _.NOW $134
•MR. CHAIR Reg.$1J9 ___ •• NOW $105
• MRS. CliAIR Reg. $109._ •• NOW $ 95
• ROCK·A-lOUNGER
Rog. $159 ... __'. _____ NOW $141
I
.-~~~~~~---.
11
NOW! THESE VALUES
AT ANY ONE OF
THESE PENNEY STORES L
CANOGA PARK
LAKEWOOD
DOWNEY
MONTCLAIR
FULLERTON HUNTINGTON BEACH
NEWPORT BEACH VENTURA
I
· SHOP SUNDAY, TOO
12to 5 P.M.!
' .•
' • t
' v
• I
r • • ,
I-,,
0
d
b
• • d
' .
d
d
I-
t
-:
" •
,
Stock your linen closet now and save
on white, fashion colors, prints
Nationwide• bleached shee.ts
63•108 shffbot
72x 108 flat OI' twin Elmto·fit bottom
leg. 1.99 ••••••••.••.•••••••••.•• NOW· 1.38
II x 101 flat or full fitted bottom
R91. 2.29 ••••••••........•.•••••. NOW 1.68
42x36ccnu
Reg. 2/1 .09 ·-········ ....... , .. NOW 2/86c
Penn Pres~ bleached percales
nx104 flat or twin Elasta·fit bottom
Reg. 2.99 ........................ NOW 2.37
11x104 flat or full fitted bottom
Reg. 3.99 ••••••••••••••••.••••••• NOW 3.37
42x36caMs
Reg. 2/1.99 ..................... NOW 2/1.67
Twin fitted top
Reg. 3.59 ........................ NOW 2.97
full fitted top
Reg. 4.59 •••••••••.•••.•....•.••.• NOW 3.97
Queen 1ize f1ot or fitt•d
Reg. 6.99 ........................ NOW 5.94
King size flat or fitted /'
Reg. 8.99 .....•....•............. NOW 7.64
Q.-ncatn
Reg. 2/2.99 ..................... NOW 2/2.54
Ki~caMS
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' ~· DAILY PILOT
County Ente~s '70s ~arefully ~y-ing· · Gro~n ···P:rohlems
it · ' · , . · " * . I ·j B1 JOANNE REYNOLDS biggest challenges. ••in 1970 CountY Schools growth Is Olle with a series of 10 events bav· In a deHberate fashion before.-·-will trobble Wty manago. menttd. "It will ~veto come1-;:=======:::.:;:::::; : °' .-O.llr "'t ''•tt we'll face .evtral probler'lllri. of many pfiblemi pf!rulng Ing a mixlmum value of 10,000 ·~under thl& type of plan. ment In the aevenUes ls alr . about through a JoJnt effort ~-J .As :Ori.ice COIJldlans btlng but the blgest ii not Ibo, ""'l"'Y ad>OOls. "OVertlf, .our polnls. Studenls compete in rung, a policy will be selocted, polluUoQ. within the concerned are11 of ~. :~' the Seventies, th& men nodl one -it's growth aad most urg~t .need is ,to three divisions, according lo then plans wlll be prep8.rtd Bpker la~ed air polluUon the basin. And I thlnh the All :jesponai'ble for aU._ Jev.d* of chln&t. 1 • d.iminlsh7drug ·abuse on , our grade average in subjects and programs developed tn ac-~ . lro41,._ ... ,~ INDllemtDt an JOoi· "We haw the unUIU&I pro-campuses.," be aaid. whJch 1 n c I u d e aestheUC!, cor~,wilh that pOlJcy; "the single· large.st problem" state governmert ii going lo -~.., ~g ~.to the 11"' decide bleih of -""" UflAAl(on DRUGS IMPORTANT Engllsh, literature, matdl, . "In the past it haa always for the decade ahead. "I bave lo be Involved." ~
t tth ooty oae thlnl on lbelr ot program.t and we 11on't "The drua: sib.latioft has to pracUcal arts. science ~d been done in reverse. County ·believe that tn 1970 the Dickason aatd the prOb1em
#!inds -bow to handle the know '_YbaC to anticfpa~ from , be weighed with some other aoclal studies. departments were carrying automobile lndulU')' will take has become ao ·Imme~ that
tounty's.growth problems. upcom1!18 .. state .or fedtral .• big problems, like growth,•but "The decathalon gives the C out expensive prc:1grarhs. that :e~f:te1:ci:1:~ = ~ g: public demand Wm • force
: Supervisor David Baker sees legislation, he said. it ts the most important " the and B stu:ient.s just as good a were not r$.!Iated to anyo11e strlgent cmtroll on air PollU·
rrowth as a continuing pro-Peoples estimated that nn superintendent u:plained. "I chance as the A students," Dr. else's program or pollcy," machinery. Oll •companJ'es will lion. "Air polluUon b all of
blem in the county. "It tends fiscal 197()..71, 10,000 Orange would say the situation is hPr· Peterson said. Dickason explained. . ~el:'~ r king on non-foSsll southern Calllornia'• J>roblem,
\I threaten open space. the County families will be rece.lv4 rendoua." NEW INSTITI11'E The planning director s,a1d Bolh Baker and Dickason not just Orange County's.
...... -.. IDllllll · mea
leaches and the parkways." ing aid ~ families with depen-Dr Peterson Aid be will be The Marine Studies Institute he feels th~t conscrvaflon said they see the air pollution "On a national level I think le said. "To meet ·t be dant children. · plannirig is one of the most the i·-·--• combullio· n --'•e -· 1.t~ ands created by oul-rapid "If the President slgns the writing: a monthly Qewspaper ls a program for the seventies, urgent proi·ects for the seven-problem being worked on by ,,.g • ..., d d .... ,--,!!!!'· --•• •
I I •··· b II column in l!r70 to. try and accor.dlng to Dr. Peterson. all goverirlmental auencies 1n wlll be pushe asi e or TOILD TANK a,.. b, we must cona:ntrate soc a security uiuease I , The Institute, which will be tie~. "Tlm~·s runnin~ out for the Los An~eles basin. something else or made so ._........_.,., · ""'"entire effort on it, thereby that will probably'have a llWe educate parents .. In tbe drug conservation. If we're going to d 1 n...._w........,......, .... -a~----•tem We will have built In the D•na Point Harbor "I on't Ink any single city that it is no onger a smog .. ,_ " --~ =. llting manpower and money deprtsslng effect on our aid to .,...._ .,.vv ' · do anything, we have to do it producer in the sevenities. The ..... .....,......-.:
. m recreational art a the aged. We'll probably have 450;000 studenll ~ed-in will tie used for students from quick if we want to make a l--o~r".,_le~gl!~ta~.U~ve~bod_.!' y~can~~c~ur~b:_~~~~-~-~-!.~"~~Ji~e~;;·:!-"~-·~·_:~':':':•:'=":•:•:•:W:A:;l:l:I:'"="='= -l ' ,....., .. ,.e r ..... ..tv -~Is -the elementary level th-•gb air pollutlnn." Baker_ corn-~ w.u ~velopment." about a 1ve percent incruse "' '""6 .....,.... .. ,. -•"" meaningful impact." . in 12 months bringln&: UI to fall, and I feel evefY~ or the oollege graduate level. He {40 PROBLEMS »500 or MOO cases," he stated. a ~ool age child oughi to .says he sees it as a means of CITED SBOREUNE
"" Kenneth Sampb'I, director In aid'· to the disabled, realiu: that the spector of inspiring students by showing Dickason specifically cited
"' perks and recreP,tion ·Did Peoples said be It lflf.L-lbatlng drup ls banaiP& 9VF ~ Ullm a IUUe ot the neat level the conservation of the couD-
Qie growth factor Will not U'n· an lncreast of 10 j pt!rcent .chiJaren jwt 88_ J)oliQ wa~ the )Yhile teaclling them the basics ty·s shoreline as a prime
ilediately troubte · ·park bringfnc lhe dinbltd' lllt to ~r hanging, over,, school or oceanology. target i·,1 conservation plan-
:levelopment, allhouch it could 4200 by &ht end ,of' lt70. children 20 years ago. "'11tis will be an opportunity 111ng. ··A Jot of importance is
tfiect land aquisition in the He said then! is a graduate for students to experience ll ttachcd lo ocean rosource .6i.Wre. ''Land values are going INCREASE PROGRAM course for teachers wbkh their environment a.11d become development, and all Lhose op-
•pP faster than taxes. so that it The county food stamp pro-deals exclusively 'with the inclividually involv~ in 8 com· portunltiell as well as '5 possible to fall behind on gram w1ll probably see an in· drug problem. "Unfortunately, mitment to mah)latn it," Dr. responsibilities go along with
1quisilions," he said. crease in 1970, depending on only 100 teachers ptr year can Pet~rson added. being a shoreline county."
I Not ·11 I th f 1 d federa l. legislation, he stated. th h th " h d e · B k d "· a o e men nvo ve go roug e course. ea · One of the men most closely .,u 1>erv1sor a er an parr.;, ~ ruming Orange County see ''Right now, after having the ded. t'<lnnected with the difficulties diroctor Sampson agreed with
Cpulalion growth as a poten-program for three months we i'nvolved m· the co u n I y , s Dicka son.
I oh' Coo I sse sor have 20,000 people using it, in· ANOTHER CHALLENGE · I t · h pr em. n Y a s ldrei population boorb and its ef· · expcc to con tinue to pus ;~drew Himhaw said he feels eluding chi dren. If v.•hat I AnoUter challenge to the rects on environment i.s Forest Aquisition." Baker said. "l ·~ population explosion will read is correct, another! year schools in 1970 will be .. the Dickason, county Planning think v.·e should r e open ·~Unue, 'fiwhicb means that v.·ill see that figure doub ed." need to recapture the luster 'llegoti ations with the Na vy fo r
-. have to provide housing Peoples said the adoption that uaed to go with the Director. aquisition and development of
. ich has a direct impact on rate is leveling off in the coun· gaining of knowl edge and the "The decade. of the sixti~s more of Sunset Bay. We also
· alualion procedures." ty. as the program becomes a c c o m p I i s h m e n t o( a saw the most significant and need acl'ess to public tidelands .~Hinshaw ·explained that his established. "Ne1t year will diploma,'' he stated. greatest growth yet, and we from the highways. we !~ice is looking\_~orward to probably 'tee us place 500 "The.•studenls are with us think the seventies will easily already have the cooperation
f001pletion of t~ six.year children In adoptions,'' he er.-pbys.ically, but we loose them exceed the sixties," he com· of coastline property owners
!'-!aluation program in fiscal plained. inspirationally. They just turn mel)ted. . in planning a beach master Jt71. With the revaluation .''In general. t'err,ns I think. we us off -develope a calousoess Dickason says .be sees the plnn.''
: pleted, he said, "I see vn.tl . see . lej:JSl~ti.ve and ad· toward many things that effects of growth divided into Sampson stated that access
·Cntially our problem wiJI be ininistrati~e activJly to change should be appealing.·• three priority areas -con-to publicly held beaches is a
·L k th the operaUonal procedures of 1· I · 1 · 1 r th 1· "W :., ma e sure at p~ogram fl.1edl.Cal It's difficult to The superintendent said Uic scrva ion p ann1ng, po 1 c Y 1nus or c seven 1es. e
fl'ocedures are streamlined so . . · . forgotten "C.B's" _ student~ planning, and transportation need more access to·Ute ocean 'tiieWill be able toreattrurthl"-predlCLJu.sl w~t. will !1aPpen. wtio mairiftlin their graileifi planning.--tb~t have parking, sanitary -ry rapid cont!nuing gT'O'ol'lh but all the act1vtt1es will prob-the C and B range -are the f<.tcililies and lifeguards. We fl the county" ably be pulled under one ad-ones most often turned off. BREAKTUROUGIJ don't have lo make a Big · ministralive roof." the wellare In 1970, Dickason says he Corona out of every pocket
'BIG CHALLENGE direclor speculated. "Right "We have special programs sees a breakthrough in the beach in the county. but peo-
·• )Yelfare Director Granville now it's fragme-,1ted between for educationally handicapped area of policy planning. ''For ple oughl ·to be able to get
·Pie001es agree with Hinshaw the departments of health and and for gifted students, but the first time we may have Uicre. The area should pro-P.a! keeping his office's pr<>-welfare." the 1'C-B 's" are pretty well policy formulated by joint ?C·~ bahly be left more natural
Spms up to date with the Dr . Robert Peterson isolated from the inspirational tian o! the board of· t.pan developed.''
'ji'ovlth factor was one or his superintendent of 0 rang e type of teaching," he ex-supervisors and city councils
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.s;_.: """"11t.emeni plained. that are related lo the total NEW PROBLEM f. r nvironmenl of Orange Coun-li nothc>r problem resulting
Sc-1·ence Shrinks p .. ;.,.ful SEVERAL APPROACHES _itY~-~T~h~is~h~as~n~"~e~r~he~•'.'_•~d~o~ne:_~rrim~n~i~"'~'~"<J'' s~cid£po~P~•~tla~l~io~n~ll1§at~--=:::==========================::::'.:__:_ a.L.1..1. According to Dr. Peterson,
>-.· Hemorrhoi'ds . there ar' .... v ... 1 •PP"""" • to inspiring the students.
",Stops Itch-Relieves Pain ;!~,':~:t ,:::~~~ :~
l Finds· Way That Both Relieves Pain jects, but this Is a slow pro-
d Sh k PI I M r-___ cess. We need some programs
an . rin s i es n oat '-'UCS which of themselves will spark H.j,, York. N.Y. (Special): Sci· age) 1ook place. The secret is things llp.'' ~ ha_s found ~ .1pec!al for-Pr~pa.r•ti.ow H•. There i• no Two such programs are the ~a with th~ ab1ltty, In m_ost other (orroula for hemorrlroid• t -to ahnnk hemorrho1d5, 1.k .1 p . H 1 academic decathalon and the
itching and relieve pain 1 e 1 • • reparation a •0 Marine Studies Institute, he case a!teT cate docto'ra aootbas irritated ti11ue1 and indicated. •.f9Ted, while genUy relieving helps pnT•nt further infection. The deacthalon is similar to ~actual nductioft (ahrink· lnointmentor1upposito17lorm. the a cad em I c deeathalOfl
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Bad Marks
To Nixon -. By D~mos . ' WASHINGTON (UPI) -AJ • ! ·
might be expected, th e '
Democrats are living Presi·
dent Nixon b~ srade5 for
thite maln ~ri he ralsed
dur)ftg 111-campaign -Viet.
nam, inftation and crime.
The Democfatic naUonal
: cha.lnnan, Sen. Fred R. Har·
rii. • (D-Okla.), was inter· ----------vie"Ji ·on qali~ television
and severar questions asked
f« his .assessment of the Re-
~1icmi adm.inlstratlon. Poll Shows
No Concern
At My La~
1'M ol now,'' Harris said in
reference to Vietnam, "I
would have to give him, if you
were grading A, B, C and so
forth, an I, an incomplete. I
hope this plan for Viet-
namizatiOn works ouL l have
some grave doubts about it." NEW YORK (UPI)
"And what worries me.'' Ame~ans are not parUcular-
Harris said, "is up to now we ly upilet. over di5closurea of
have not had any indication the alleged My Lal massacre,
that there is an alternative according to a recent poll,
plan if it doesn't work." Viet-Time Magazine rt:vorted Sun-
namizaUon ~fers to a policy day·
of turning more and more of Time· said a Louis .Harris
the conduct of the war over to pqll 'Conumsslontd by the
South Vietnam so American magatine showed "by a
combat tJwps can be brought substantial 85 percent. to Z!
home. percent. the public shrug~ -off
Hanis said polls show Nixon My 41. reasoning Uiat 'In·
Is getting. a 'll percent cidents 'such as this are bound
negartve rating on his effort.! to ha~ in a war.'. "It·ilso re"-'· by a marain to halt inflation. Jn reCettnce ~"" e·
to crime, Harris said '3 per· of 65 percent to 24 percent the
I d I N. charge1 that My Lai' proves cent of those pole fee txon that the U.S involvement Jn
is doing a poor job and 43 per-the war. bas been morally
cent feel ·he is doing-0nly fair wrong all tJ;le time," the
to good. · magaZine said.
Hairis also spoke about At the same time the poll ,
what he cans the "new gathered from 1,608
popplism" for the ~ratic households, indicated that a
Pf;"Y· ~subslan!ialmajorjty..=J • 'The Congress, --iiy 'llie cent -·were criUcal of pres.!
Democrats, reduced t be and 'IV handling of the story,
President's m 111 tar Y ap-believing•that the news media
proprlaliOlll! · ttque.rt by ls.I sboold not have reported
billion, and We decided to add statements by soldiers in-
on in such things as clean volved prior to a trial."
water and health and educa-The poll also s h o w e d
lion. "consider-able sympathy for
''Tllat is an example or Lt: William Calley, the platoon
p e o pie-oriented priorities,'' leader charged with more than
Harris said. 100 of·the deaths at My Lai.
' ' . :PenUi(on Skept!eal
•
V olunte.er · Force No Good? • ·' ,
WAS!llNGTON (AP)
Even before It reporta~ certain
key dolenxe olftclali conalder
I prosldenttaJ eommiaiCln'I
propoaala for an aJl.tolunteer
mllltan< force ...W b e unrea!i>tlc.
'lbeae olflclala hue their
Ju<tgment on reporli the
panel's reconm:teildatioos will
stress ·higher pay for lower
rank servietmen while recomr
mendifll caJ)Cellation · o r
reduCtion of fringe benefits.
According to their view , the
c:oounlsstoo bu paid too little
attention to relatning men
heymd their first enli!bnent.
The-commisalon, headed by
former ·o e fen 1 e Secretary
Thomas Gales, ~ti late this
week to complete action on its
report and forward its recom-
mendaUons to President Nix-
on.
ptt-Vietnam war1 ltvtl. .ervlcemtn -.Ftcularly
Some Pentagon authorities v I t al .non~ed of:
su81'est'"' the praidenUll com-flcers -mtaltt' f e e I 1
dlacrtmlnated against and be
mls&ion is trying to IOlve the Jess likely to ~ on duty.
problem too cheapty. Reported comm!Sllon pr<>
bean William H. Meckling posals to cut out or cut down
ot the University _of Rochester, On-J>l.Xlt housing for Dillitary
execuUve director of the com-. families and medical care-for
miulon, indicated last week military dependents Jn post
much ol the additional cost in hospitals also are considered
raising an all-volunteer force by some Pentagon authorities
would ·IO to push up the pay u actually hani'ltul to the con·
of men In the lower ranU. : ctpt of an all-volunteer forct.
Evk!ently, the idea Is to at-'Under commission UCQl'll·
tract men into the service for mendatloos tbe loss of frf'nge
the first lime with more pay· benefits would be o f f s e t
The commission staff has somewhat by 1alary Increases.
been reported to have pro-The apparent aim of ,, the
posed raising the pay of first-commission io ellminiililg of ·
term enlistee. as much as 100 trimming fringe benefits Is to '
perce,llt, wit~ a figure ~ $5,500 bring, servicemen closer to lbe
a year mentioned u a desired malnstrtam of civilian life.
level. 1p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i';;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;;o
NO SPECIFIC TERM
In advance of that action, a The commlsslOn also has
top member of the com-been conslderiiig follow-up
mission ' said the lf>.member enlistments without a n y
·group has agreed an all-specific tenn. Thus, a soldier
volunteer Army of about 2.5 agreeing to stay on after first
million men should b e enlistment would not serve
established at an. estimated any set term but, like officers,
cost of an addiUooal $2 billion would remain in unHonn until
to $4 billion a year. asking to resign or retire.
COST ESTIMATED However veteran military
HAL AUISCMll
HEARING AIDS
C:vt'-Aurol A""'lflc.._ MO SAl.CSMIM
Before President N i x 0 n manpower experts say the ,_ .t.,,.iu_.,
began v i·e t n am trOQp already serious. problem of re-675-3933
3409 E. COAST HWY.
CORONA DEL MAR
withdrawals and total U.S. talning enlisted men f o r 1~~~~~~~~~~ military manpower stood at military careers would be ag-1;
3.5 million men, the govern-gravated, r a.. th e r than
ment estimated ·the yearly tlt:lped, by commission pro. STARS
cop at $41 billion. posals. Syd111y Orn•rr ii 0111 of th•
The commission cost figure Uriles.s there also was world'• t•••• 11trolot•••· Hi1 significantly higher pay a11 1oli11•1~ i1 0111 of tl'lo DAILY is one of the lowest ever clt¢d ai....... the lne, vet 0 r 1 n . 'ILOT S t•••• foofur••·
by those who have studied the! i"~~~ .. ~~~~;;;,:~~~~iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii=iiiii~\ problem. 11
Last July, Secretary of
Defe~ Melvin R. Laird told
a .~ C?f_g2-vemment in~
tntextra"" cost a vo unteer
force, as opposed to tbe cur-
rent draft-hued • m i 1 i t a r y
structure, "certainly ••• will
be in the area of around '8
billion."
Studies durin'g the Johnson
administration concluded itm ••• would cost as much as $17111
billion more a year to aupPort
an all-volunteer force at the
• JOB PRINTING
-~tl.!JL~ATIONS_
• NEWSP ,'.PERS
Ouefffy Prir1ff111 •Ml De,-IMl1~I• S-ic• ~
f•r ~ fti•• • Ou•rt., .t • Cor1t11ry.
MIWPOIT llACH
Sears Choice of Fine Fabrics! Men's Custom Tailored
BOLT-END SUIT
CHARGE IT On
Sean Rl!'t'Ol•ing
Charge
• Seva ot•dn:a taiJori .. alMUre8 yOtl a
.,..Ceet fiL Toa pick the fabric •••
Sean upert enRlmen do the Fe!I
• Cbooee freaa lhe blffl ia 1970 eolors
and~ at tbeee low, ]ow prices
yoa.'ll 1N11t more than one
Regular$9S
7488
.
Regular$129
s99
Regular $1.W
'109
RegulorSl65
,s129
. . -·-------------------------------------~----------, ._ ·-I!\ MOtllt IOHG lfAO< ' l'ICO o1 -l'OMONA *"1fH COMT J'IAZA I ,_,_ Olfhl>Atl °''"'"'."''° $ANTA.... f<*ANCI I
I CXlMPTON HOU'IWOOO O<ANG! ~ SAN!•" -YAUIY I COYl-i!A INGlfWOOO ,A$ADENA SANTA M0HtCA " V!IMONT ot SloUMlt , '-'-------------------------ears-------------------' Shop N ..... ...._ lfnusili s ... ., t:31DAJ4 te NO "A. 5wMlarr 12 ,..._ ,_ J P.M. ..-.--• "s..w'DllioftGllf ...... ldor'tewMIMyhclr."
·--------·. -. -"
••
o.!LY l"!LOT J l
A
Sylvania Chairside
Color Control TV
Tune it from.~ wtiere you watch it
with the Sylvania lolill Chainide
C.olor TV control. Leta you turn
your set on or off, change UHF
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tint and color •.. all from .the·
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the ups and downs out of your
TV viewing.
A. Model CD82WR-Color on
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remote con~l.
Now Only 479.95
B. Model CF605Wll-Bigpack·
age-bud1et pric;e. Hu the ~t
color screen available (295 aq.m.
viewina: area), AFC (Automatic
Fine Tunin~ Control) electronlcal·
Jy "locks in ' a perfect picture
every time you turn· on :yo Ur set
or.chaD&e cbirnnelll. Comple!e with zemote control.
Sn• SID New Only 549. 95 c: Model CF631 WR-Walnut
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hilbliKht thia Scandinavian·
: ~tY_l~ coiilole. Has Irutant Col of ;u.
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Complete with remote control.
SlvtSSO--ClldJ 649.95
D. Model CF635BTR-An
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SIYI SID New Onlt 649. 95
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three stage videoJF amplifier
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Gives excellent reception even
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S..1$75 NowOnly 599.95
F. MndelCF641WR-Now
you see it ••. then you don't.
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:finished in Walnut veneen and
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Slvo$75 NowOnlJ 745.00
G. Model CF57 4CR-A com·
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center.in one elepnt cabinet.
Hu solid state FM/ t,M plus
· FM atereo radio, stereo IfCOrd'
. pla:r.er and Jaqest color screen
avallable.(295 aq.in. viewtn1
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Slvt$100 Now 01111195.00 . TM.-Tiodo-rt S¥i•oo;,, l lK'lrlc ~"Ill(.
TV reception 1imulated
HURRY! QUANT111ES UMITm AT THESE LOW SAll PRICES!
41f E. 17th St.
CO.ta Mesa
646 ~614
D1ily 9·9, Stt. 94, Cl6Md
I
' I
i
•
l '
•
,..
JJ DAIL V PILOT
For the Record .
MEETINGS
Death l\'otlen
HAHM
let'tlll Ht M. 1'7 C1~1tr St., CDlll MMI, 01M ef !HJ "', J•n111N J, ~NI*\'~
dl\ltfll..,., Mn. ltk~i.. ol Colli Mn.1 br°"""r, r..w1rd 5•nlotd, N"" 'Y«lu
ll'lnll 1r1MIC~Hdr•n. S1NICH wlll bl !Mid 'r""°''' 1 PM, w11!cHH C.111111l '"""' IY'l'llf, H•rtlor Rtll M-\11 P•l'll· Wllt-
<lltf Clltll'I Mor11111"1 . ..--411. Olrecton. MALI OM
Frint $. M•lbon. Aff 71 of tlt l!v•r· ,,. or..., P'l•c•, (osll MUI. 0.01• of Ot•lll.
Jt""'ll'Y ~. su,...!wlll b1 wlft, M•r1111erlt1;
"'"" -·· Frel'lk 11\d 511Pl'lln. Lot M-"tn 1 DIYld Ml(tlOl'I, T 11lu~Dll brallWr.
Sr ........ ot Ml..,,100111 1l•!lrJ. Alie• II· l"M W•th lniJ!lrll Mlrlon Voll, Norlh 01·
klll•. 11\d M1fTlet l-llatll, MlnnilMll J 10 ••ll!ddolldrf'!I. HolY' llOllJ"I, T.,.ld1¥, 1
P'Ml 1tw111tm MIU, WMnHdl¥o t AM. tdl'I et S1. .llldlefN C•ff>Ollc C1ur·<;11.
'"''""""· S•n Fe•nel'ldll Mlulol< ,.,.... hr'J', e111 BfOldW•v Mortv1rv, Dlrec!ort.
MATU.Clll EdWI .. I. M•IMI(•. J0t M1rt1Nrlt1, COi'·
-dlt M•r. o.rt of dt•lft, Jin. J. 51n'kft.. Tueld11, 10 AM. Wnlclltl ci.1111. ln11tm111t, P•c1llc View MlfriOI·
Ill P11'11. Olr«ltd 1>1 W11tcUll Chi.Pc!
MIW1U•r¥· ......... MEWTOM
Si.r!lnl NewlCl'I. JIW New-1 •1w ..
C•I• MtM. O.lt of dMlll. J1ft.. J, !.r¥kH pendlntl •I Wnl(llff Chl,.i
~'"" ...... 001.• ~· A. Odtl'. 1162 N. S1nl1 An!!I, Ar· c:ldil. Doll ol 0.•111, Jl~Ull'Y 4. S\lf" ¥1Ved 1w l>roT~ft'I, GMM W. VOii OfHr,
& 1tCIOlrt 8 . VCl'I o;.r Coltl ,,.._/ P1111
,.. ()'()er, A"'ht lmt 11st11' • ...-11 Ann 8.-. Arcadl•. Gr•ttllllf _.,,le.ft, Wed· 111141¥, 11 AM, P1clllC VlllW IMmOf'lel
p1flt, w11n or. P1ul G. HIW!llallll offkl .. tln11. OifKIPd b\I •eclllc Vltw MOrtu.rr. NICKOLSON ,,......,., s. Nlc.hohon. nan e11i-ClrQI,
Munllntllon Btacn. Survived tl'f' wlhl. JtHJI/ 4111Dlll1r, NOl'fTI• Thon'llltM. Pr1v1!1 l1mll\I i.trvlcn, Wrdnlld•Y· l """' Pltk F1mll1 coi,,..•11 funt••' Home. .... fnd Ito-. AD• 6', ol 211 Me1rlOlll st., CDlll Me••· SurwlYtd IS WI .... Mrt._s.im.,., Rowel lo<!< 111ftn, ...... Vloi.t 1ti1<1f,. Hl'l'4t; Mr1. Minn Ht l•, H.-..ori &ffc:t'll Mrl. EIMI MllllOfl Ind ~_:... ... > P-'9f"1'1;1n, bCltl'I ol Vl'llld. -• -.
T""4»· l P"I• .. H 1~1 Ol•"L tn,.,!Mftl, 1-11..-ltnl •l P.-., I.di ln*!n¥ Morho•l'Y• rl(IOn. STllL., Jlt,
L•rTY H. ''""" Jr. AH a, 01111 t~ ..__. Piia, f:"ll ~. 1 t ..-OM!fl J1nu•l'Y , lwYI,,... b'I' wllt, VlrtlftitJ IOI\, G.,.,I • ...,..,.,.,., K1!11Y
Stee-. of 1111 "°""' m..twr, Mn.. JOIM 0-P..-dtMI bnltl'llf, EdW1r1 J. 1-'wnl CIWIN. ,,.,.,,....111 ~ ..
...,, ,,..,.~. J:» -1141 ·~· Cl\-', wlrti Dr. l(Olldlll 1'"'8 Ill· flc:l.t!M Flfl'llly w-tl W.. wllllllM '9 m-. "*-111 -lr1bu'*", ...... c-. 1r1!NM to 11'11 Or•-C4Uf!T1 C~lldrtM N....r!lol. 8tll 8rOldwl¥ Mortulf'Y, OlrK•
IWt. WATH•M Lolllt w1111en. A~ 11, 111 1t"1 wt:w"N LlfllO, H11nl1nt1lon 8•.ch-0111 d•1lh,
Marriage
Licenses
LAS VEGAL Nt¥.. -IMrllfl•
llcen$M luuecl l'Mlr• IM.lulkt
GlllltlEATH.()UVN -k . t\, CPMl•llt. d, ri1W111rftlruft'r,1rw:I Gt1dYt. q, fll s-v•. ELZEA-AMES -0«. 21. f11"lrr lt1y,
32, of $anl1 -Ana, Ind J\111, 2'. of
Naw"'1 lltlcf\,
&PENCl!lt• Pll'Ellt -a.c. ''· Jtrrv. 24, of Al\flltfrn, INI Wtndr AM, It,
of Fount1l11 Vtlit'Y.
tll DONATO-HANNA,011.D -Dec. 'lt,
Mlcllttl llrtnt, 21, of Coslt MH ..
'"" LDrlt. "· of COi"-dtl Mt r. QUARRY·JCHULTHEIS -OK. 11,
C!!ltortl Ed'wlfl, 1J. at Co•ll Mts.t.
tnd Ctrol, 26. d Redof!do 8t1ch,
WALl,.ICK·ERll -DK. 22. Sltwt n S .. II, of Tl,lf,fln. tnd Dtt>blt JIM, 17, fll ,..__, .. Kii.
MOISMAN·McCLUNG -O.C. !i, Cltrlt
H., 2', tnd P1-l1 Alla. t4. itofh of
H11nl l,..lon &ffdl. JONES.ZOTTOLl-0..c. n. •Jdl•rd Lte, ,6, 11'111 hncltl Jo. 21, Mt11 crf
Nuntlrletan ... ch. WILIOH·IAltLES--Dtc. n, OoMWI Gr1v. Jr., 2.t, 11' ltlv1r1olde, 11'111 A.ff!L 11, of ,._, llKl'I. ltYAH·KELl T -Ore. 1f. T1rr1nc. 0., n, -:! JOlft M .. 2S. tloll'I ol toa t1
MHI.' KAltT.OIXON-OK. ,4, Jll"ftft J., 1S,
If C.11 Mlt.t. lll'ICI K1lhlffol TherUI,
It, fll 01rden Grtl'tt. ltEESE-WNITECAJl:-Oec:. 25. ltt¥· ,,_.., P., U of Cosll Mftt, I nd
Violet Frtncts. Sfi, llf ~ht Viii.¥, GltOTT A.OAUltlA-MA.ltl"INU:N-Dlc. 1.J, Atltllo11¥ X.~ Jr.,-:n. If P1rtm1M.1nl, Ind l(frtft Jl/f'lf, It. ol Hunfl11911)11 kKll. HOl'"l!!!lt<AltLION-Oec. U, Dot'Jl,ld W1vne, 21, ol Cost1 M~. tNI o.rvJ. ,4, er l"uslln. IOWOE'N<Hltl$TENSEH -DK. ,., Mld\HI John. )0, of COlll Mn1, Incl
L'fl!l'ldt Marie, u,., 0tano1. 'YE!l(l!-OONCAN-Oec. 26, W1U1r E.,
. l1, of Coste Me51, tnd Htlen M .. SI,
lo $1nl1 All9. $WENSOM·SNOW-DK. 2f, H1rold V., 4 , of M111111 ... 1 ... 8"9d1, end ldl Mii \.1¥, AD, If 1(1.-.slon, Ul1h, 1t,IOOLl!.ftANIO$--OK. 24, J t m I 1
(tydf, Jr., 'h, Ind 0..-a, 21, tlo!ll ol ......__., l<l!ach. NICH04..-0AVl$--OK.. !), J1:111 Ptul, Jl,
ol L-llffd'I, tnd 51$1\lnle Jo. n,
fll W"'"°IM11<". llENO-GREEN-Oec. ?7, Robttl 11 ..
llftft, M. f1f Hut111 ... IClll letdil Incl Llndf, 21, ol Wntm1nl1 .... WOOO-TltOMP-D'9(. 27, Pr I~ c: e CDlumbul, J.r. oM, of Cost. Meia, 11'111
~ l!lolM, St, ol ANM!m.
1£.\Vl!lt·SOUTHWORTN -Dtc. 1'. Kemetl'I lteblrf, ,., ot $.oulll Otlt.
Md ... IJ LoralM, 22. ol H1111tlntlilfl ,_.,
Births
•
Ftatad Lack Blat1aed
Kidney Drug Bank
Oosed in C~unty
By JOANNE REYNOLDS
Qt ,,,. Diii>' 'Hll 11111 reallied the full meaning <1f
this program were those wbo
YORBA LINDA -About t76 had in tbe years paued spent as much as SS,000 a year to ·who suffer from kt d n e Y slay alive," she stated.
dlaease and who have been One of the foundations
gtt.Uhg their medicaUon free dJsease detection programa -
or at M>oleaale prices through the first of Ill kind ln the U.S.
the Orange County Kidney -will slso have to be tern·
F~Uon drug b~. will be porarlly discootinued, she ad-
.farced to pay retail prices for ded.
the llfe-savlng drugs when thl! Since llJ lncepUon In 196'7.
drtlg bank ii discontinued in the Kidney and Urinary Tract
February. Infection Detecti~ Program
Boa1·d OKs
Discipline
Of Officer Mra., llel!!I L. Reafly, ex· has been conducted ln the
ecutive direelor of the fou,i· Cypress, Westminster, Los
datiori said the drug program A 1 am it o s, Savannah BUENA PARK The
and k1dney disease detection Fullerton, and Orangtf school
Arrested Youth ·
Back to Sclwol
TUSTIN -·Slxteen-year .. ld
Brian Waite .,.UI rtturn to
TusUn Hlch llcbool with hb
cllumates aeit week after
the COunty Board ol l!ducatton ·
overtumed his suspension by
the Tustin Union High ~I
District board ·
Watte Is charged w i t h
possession ol marijuana but
hl8 case has not yet come to
court.
His readm.lttance, voted th~
week by the county board, is
coatingeat upon the findings in
the court case.
Waite, who was a passenger
in a car in which marijuana
was found in Malibu, cootl!nds
he was not involved and has
pleaded Innocent.
disposlUon In such cases bul
his Cale WU transferred ti
the Orlllltl• County ProbaUon
Department and then back to
Los Ange lei County where th•
alleged offense was t..'Dm·
mlt{td, c11.11ing a1 dela):, said
Counly Schools Supl Rober!
Peterson,
Dr. Peterson explalhed
school board& have t H e
authority to suspend studenlll
arrested for drug offenses
prior to court dlspooJUon. He
explained the theory, saying it
is looked upon u sort of an lD-
fectuous disease ln which you
protect tM: student bod)'
again.st the posslbillty of in-
fection.
program for school children dl~tricts. At the completion of Buena Park Clly""'Personnel
• ·will be dbcontlnued because of the current program in the Board has upheld police Chief Usua11y there ls fairly quick ;::;,========= Only Ono
LECTURES AT UCI
Arnb.11edor Akar
Sierra Leone
Ambassador
At Irvine
Jack of funds . Newport.Mesa distrtct, said Dudley D. G o u r I e y ' s
'!We have 176 people in Mrs. Ready, the program will disciplinary action against Lt.
0r'"'"'e and Riverside counties be discontinued. --o Robert T. Reber wbo appealed who either get tbeit drugs free "This is the first program of or pay wholesale pr Ice a Jts kind In the U.S. It's a his three-day auspension !rom
throuJh the" dnq: bank," she preventaUve approach t 0 the department .
Folk Dance That's a big deal? It ls In Orange
County. The DAILY PILOT ls the
only dally nrwspaptt that delt'-l Final stocks In all hOmt tdltlons.
At U CJ ers the package.
explained. "11ie cost -has just kidney disease. Doctors tell us The disciplinary actlon was
gotten to be too much. We that 75 percent of the people taken in June when Lt. Reber
thought the pubUc would con· who use artificial kidney allegedly faUed to conduct a µtVINE -Two folk dancing
tribute to this program, but machines, would not have to if proper investigaUon of a hit seS9tons will be held on the UC
thls has not been the case." their 11ilments had been pro-and run "fender bender" traf-lrvlne campus weekly starting
Mrs. Ready said the foun-perly dia11nosed earlier," she fie accident Involving a police Jan. li.
dation had to put up $2·300 explained. car drivl!n by capt. David A class sponsored by the
over the budgeted amount for Mrs. Ready sLressed the Hopkins of the department. UCI Folk Dance Club will met
the drug bank ln 1969. polnt that the close-down of The board absolved Lt. In Gat~way Commons from.. 7
A THOUGHT
FOR TODAY
T" """' ,..,i. 11\11 t. ll'llldl Ill lfll ,.II. Thll p.91! """' M I I,,...
....ff, ,.., I '°''· -H1nlll MlcMllllil The drug progr:J.Q!_ 1vas the two programs will be only Reber of a charge of p.m. to 10 p.m. Sundays.
IRVINE -John J. Akar, established in 1963 a'nd ran for temporary. "We're having a disloyalty and recommendl!d The International Folk Dan·
ambassador lo the U.S. from a time on a completely free meeting Wednesday to get that the disciplinary action be cing Club wiU meet in the
PltESENTED AS A
PUILIC 5EltVICE EVERY DAY IY1
Sierra Leone, will give a basis, switching to wholesall! started on a fund raising cam· stricken from h1s record afte:r Cave, Mesa Court, from 7:30 LEE ROOFING CO.
series of three public lectures price• for those who could pay palgn, so we can oet back to onl! year if he hB.1!1 no other p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Fridays. •• f J • ... ch l4 ..... ,.. Ill ........ at UC Irvine the weu. o an. in 1967, according to Mrs. lheSI! r,rograms as qui1.A1y as arges filed against him in Both beginning and ex·
IZ under sponsorship or UCI's _:R:::•::a::d'._Y·:_'_'Th=•:.:•::nl:::y'....':peo~p:::l•:..w::.:J.i)O:_..'.J>O=SS:::lb::•::,_".:sh::•:..:sla=ted.=-----=th:.:•:_ln=te::rhn:::. _______ '.:pe::r.::l•:::n:c•::d:,:d::an:_:c•::rs:.:ar::•:_m:' ::_vi::ted=.'.':==''"='=-="'="=·==="'=·""==' Department of Comparallve ,·
Culture.
He will speak on "Africa's
Un1que Dance Culture" Jan.
12, at 8 p.m. in 101 Phylical
Scll!nces. The ll!cture wiU be
illustrated with a color film of
the internationally famous
Sierra Leone Dancers .
"The Problems of Develop-
ing Counlries in Africa ' wlll
bl! the subject Jan. 14, at' a
p.m. in 178 Fine Arts. The
concluding topic will be "The
Role of Womanhood i.n
Africa," scheduled for Jan. 18.
al 8 p.m. in 1114 Physical
Sciences.
A.Ur has been a broad·
cast.er, short story writer, ac·
tor, playwright, journalist,
director of the Sierra Leone
?ttuseum and founder and
director of the National Dance
Troupe of Sierra Leone. He
composed the Sierra Leone
national anthem.
Sears
•
SA VE 25%! Sears
Ga,uze Diapers
22
Arelllll llt1'ncti, 81ktnllliltl Glfll 'S'ir"' vorces • Jtnlltn' 1 511rvlYMI 11¥ four" 1'91Mn, Di ~
JJC''--:~T~_:.,~~ u'il! I K MCC11.,. •1'111 Mr-... "" '''""''~''" ~-c•n•"•"• ___ c; ... ,e e-, ----1 --+-~--;,-'::.., ,.,..._, 5,,...,1cn ind lnlin'f'•nt ... ~ n bl' Merfiii"iti'.-ver&-J: Yi itobiri wnie~ U1 ;:.. · · ""•
Regular
'2.99
htld 11 J, P1Yn1 lo lol'lt Mlh•vl J"I n 11111 Judlfti K. n Allon E •· Bftllflfltld. 81!! lrotdw•J' Mort111rv, 'i'tt!fl'1.111tt\' JllWtllt ¥1 Otto L1vtrnt • -~ f'Drwanllno dlreclo~. Du""I "'I"' 8. ¥1 Drrrtll T. a b B ild . \ CHAl'MAM !flllf ltl', Ktrlft Ann YI lllllM u u s
Senti Anii. 01!t of d11lh, Jtn. "-SUNI""" ttld'llr, LN Rlllz YI Kenneth W, •lf'll'll J C1'1111rr,.n JU T1 .... rl11t L1n11 iook, ltl!Y Jttn ¥1 A:oblr1 IOWHll ;,'•
""lltllllt!len Flortnea ll:lddlt Cor""' IHI J-1, .... .., Lynn VI w •• ,,,. L\lk t
M4#/ Mltle( !Miiton An•hflm/ P111t1 H•tc!. ltr1~1 L. ¥1 K'nntlh It. '"t•r-. WIKOl'llin· ·-·· Herold c111.. Jl:otl •ir H. ¥1 RIChl•d c. R f p d mlfl, M-rt 8tecl.1 ClltMCI Cfl1pm1n, llrlt, -hie A. YI ltld\1r<I I(. e uge on ""=n1rdl110I 111 tr. Au91i111 Smith, ollomt, •mes Edwerd ¥1 S/\1r.., Nttll' 11 11 grl!ldclllldrtn .... t grNI• Ell11belh \" 1 lkl rft'I k rv1DP• Wtdntldl1 II Worlll, JK'CIUtll'n M. ¥1 Johft W, 1 ,,..--·
rM. ,tc:Jllc. Vlew ch-!. lftlrrmtnl, L, .... ,.n, Judl!h,vi Rlc:t>trd P1ul 'IODJESKA u s,. n • "' PKlffc vi-Mtmorl•I P1•k. O!reclf!d 11'1' rec a. k,°"n . vs Alblrl A. It & • ('• PKlflc: view ~t'lt• ~;'~.,J~1~ "j·~1:.":: It. volunteer funds raised by
Frink •· "*· 1m1 Go1h1rd s1 .. H11"" wI::rili J1C011MllM 11"' ,,. wmi"" serving as ushers, members of ... lt1"9IOll 8tlldl. ktrvlved "•' .,u,, ~l'\ld1le. LlrN o. ... ¥1 Kn' Su11nM Cal s···· Fullerton's c1·-1e K EHl.IOlth • dl\llhltr, 81~r• dWlr ll llllwl, Bell¥ J VI ltDbtrt Olt'llet ...... • ... broT!ltf",. C~•rln L. f1111r1 """ 1!1ttrs. rlC:f, hftNt it"' ..., Roblrl All•" of the' L~lu MM t+flr,,, Ell"' ltl"'' fron..1 .,,.,. $1'11~ L ¥1 RO'I' L Club ha\•e spent pal1 l1' 81rflll'tl! -1r1nfd!Ud K•JIT I!. Hlc:ll.1( ~t trll 'L n 0111! £, A...1 • b 'JdJn ~ ''"w~. Femlll' "'""'1 "'°" wl&lilM dW.....,., L ""' 1e.r ... vi 1m Joe \Au 1stmas vacatioo u1 g to "' e m-111 ~•rtbutloftl l>lt111 , o-·LM"' Ptler 01v1d J~lcal pond at Tucker contr! 1 to si. WIMted'• EolKoo•I yrloUd, ll r1 llfdll 0 1rm1 otiore1 an eco "e Cll\lt'dl, 1-iuntlntoton l<l!•U.. S.Nltft. 1Ckft'11t1. 1111 o. n Grice \Vildlife Sanctuary. Tu"41J, 11 AM. SI, Wlllrtd"• Eoltcoo•I 11¥1, J\'r,; L ...... M1-I ~
(r.,,f'dl, HunllMIOn Bffcll. ,o;;ldfld ~ =· T~"!:r~!~:eiro:· Dllran \\'hen It is completed, the 3IJ.. Pl'lk F1tnlll' Colonlll FUMr1 om•. MltllU. Jr., l""rlclt A. YS AJtierl It. by-J2-toot pond W!'JJ pro,•'de A OOUllL•Y li'l'lllncl, l!ldfv F."' D1vid E. JCl'I c.Gourtn-. im1 Jl:otlllf'I• c1rc1t. H""",, ...,........, lr\IC.t Lee ~· Jb1~ C1ro1 settino where visitors to tbe "~Beacn. ~ .... 1vtod b¥ 11r1nll, ~'•• Pllo1 oi.ne M. ¥1 Jotin . 11 1 ni111t111 r11v6· """""r, 01 d •,. s"°ti , Evervn l""r.01 "' Fr1t*; sanctuary can see nature at Gour : !WO I,.,,, I"' K. Ind err • Hit •Ill, l!ltvtrl'r 8. ¥1 N.-wt I A L Goutllv1 tr1nC1111r1n11. Mr•, H1n1 w •·Joni M..,.11 ¥1 P~lll<• Norm•n wurk at the ri.1odje'Ska Canyon c,;,,.,rltv 1...:1 Mr. ,.,. M ... •n•~ho L-· E•stwood, Donr\11 Lvrm vs 111IM lltnll. St"'lcn. T11••d•1. ' PM, Pnk •r1~11t site. Fltnl" Colonl1I !'"~'~' '"lame. R1.,.w11<1, Gwen """' ~· R1vmond K•ILING G•lt An ave.rage of 40,000 per!011S
Mf1. Aftn!• M•uG K"11"t.· A~• .e, °' 11 ~~ i·~~~~ Ml;fJ~fl-~"'·v:'J':..~11~' J, visit lhe sanctuary each year, P1tlllc: C1111t HllJl\•1¥, un, I l'ID~v~'.,.; fT1tr, J•"'"' l(evln ¥1 Linda LH D•ll' o1 dHll'!. Jinu•,..., · 5u.fY ~-Lind• K•1 111 0 3ie •..ion ,·ncludlng ~udenls fr om c1J111ht.r. ·Mr•, C.Cll lrun11n •••nd10ll. 1 tr, bOrott'lv A. n D1vld w1111.,., "' ,,=SM,.. Or•v•11c11 '• r v r c e'' 111. M1rt•re1 L. v1 11o11e11 "'· Orange County i;chools and W 111111 ClfMllrJ, CI t v I I Ind • "!NAL OlrCltl:ES Oli.11 1, We1trnlMllf Mlm, ~",!. P1rk Hern1Mltt, trlltodttt ' v• O~vld D•nltl COJltgeS, Mortu1rv, IOcll dlrKIOn. k 1m " 111,", Sir-M1r on M. YI P•ul E. tntl """' w11t11 ... 10 me • mttnO!' 1 p:;1e;·M.A,..., M. 111 Joh/!"'' e. The pool will be located next tonlf1butlont. o111M conlrltl\/!1 to 11>1 Hotiiloii, -Jllhn 0.. ¥1 111 "'"" h c1P>Cer :i.oc111'1'. rr:rllf, 1to1>en P. •• "' l. to the entry path of t e 1rt, VI~ I• L. ¥1 R1cn1rd "' JU be fJJJ cc.rill. rec• It. v1 8ruce w1~1fol'I wildlife refuge and. W ·
ARBUCKLE & SON ,.,.:.~1 \11 Jr.':."~':m~~ i~1o J•m•i ed by a recirculating pump
'Vestcllff Mortuary ~~.,_.nc1":':!. ":0•:,,~"~1~1~· drawing water lrom a nearby
117 E. I~• S' ~~-•teu ltoudl1"U, Jr .. Altll"' Dtwt¥ P1111 "'eJJ. 11• ... ""'19 .. l1 Rodrl1~i. M1rt1r•I Yf F••t'>k " ••• •-M0111'1. llOrll'lll ' .. ¥1 W1 111m H. -I.I Ml'MTS
• Prlld\lnl, Evrlln• Mlrlt YI 1(11to11 It.-,. (11111Ulrnen1J.
BALTZ r.10RTUARJE3 ""Tm::.::~~· P. cr111 •• 1"1111r J.
~-d I 'I 08 S-H'" "'HAL Dl'Cltl'l!S ..,__,a e 11 at "" C11101.., F"r1nce& A . .,. H1relll It. Cotta Ptlt58 Ml 1-UU ~ici 8111¥ Ann ~111111 ... Jor.11
• BELL BROADWAY
MORTUARY
UI Broadw11, Costa Mua
IJ 1-1113 • DILDAY BROTHERS
Huatlngtoa Valley
fl.lort11ary
17tll Bench Blvd.
Uuntlagton Beach
IU-7111 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMOJllAL PARK
c.meceiy e M-.,.
Cllapel
-P..tlloVlewllrm
Newport -· Callforwll ~
ltncha. lt11111 "' Vlnc:tnl It, EIQ1, Hfrbtrl •· Ill H•ltn M. C•mobl t. Join 1(11t111fn YI L1WrtMI m-Slfff11111t.T1*'1'1H J. w P1trlcl1 I!. Mer1lfl, Mtri. Y-(iln1!1t YI
lltollllft 0. 8v1r, ltuU ltulh"' Gii¥ Lee W1rndlh~ Jdln I.Gui• ¥1 MlfV J11e11 Sl1r1I., Mlcl!MI A. 111 S\l_.11 M . ~~.,,,__~~ .!; :: y~1r11n1~tl·
''llor. E. Vo'lf"' G1 z. ~ ftlbtry, ,. E'. "' "' 0. uflhl, Alln . Y• .krh1'I A. idfr, Rotlllt Annll '°'Leu A:O'I' Orbt•tr, Annttt1 lellt •• Ktlllltlll f lmt• C•l<I~, Jull~n A. '(t. Manut11 L•,,.., 011l1f Jubo~1:Wst A.
Prr.en, ll~fl Lot•n ¥1 """' LM C1:\f.''°"w illlN'I It. VI 0.bbll (. t.l.rrnulm1t11 , f•":,},::.'t';/),lllffllM JOHoh WI L .. l•n•
'\nw. M1!drt4 l(tll'f v1 A:111Mll C..rrtn •IWOUll't'ltftH.
New Board
At Chapman
ORANGE -Justin ?tf. Ken-
nedy of Santa Ana, retired
Orange Counly D i v I s I o n
r.1ana11er for the Southern
Counties Gas Company, has
been reelectl!d president of the
Board of Governors at Chap-
man College for 1970.
Re-electl!d as vice president
of the 78-member advisory
board wa,, Joseph A. Long .
Mrs. Laura Warren of Orange
wos rHlected as setrl!tary.
Prices Effective
B eginnins Today
Cotton Knit Gowns
Regular
'7.99
Infants' Snapoide Shirts • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL FUNERAL
DOME
Sierra Sets
Noise Study
Orange Counly residenti
reappointed to five year terms
on the Chapman Board of
Governors include Donald B.
Todd of Newport Beach ,
reallor; and Or. Robert R.
\Yasher ol Corona del Mir, Regular $2.39
Pl<c.o(2 187 Rcpilu $1.89
Pkg. of3
}37
'1111 IWfe ,\YI. ........ ~ •. ,.
•
SANT A ANA -Orange
County's Sierra Club wlll ex·
plore the dfects of noise as t11
agenL ol. pollution at a Jan. I
me«lng here.
ft1-or2
Wide neck optning, mitten style,
drswstriq bonom, fullr 'ut
to fit longer. lnfatns' size.
Pq.nrs
COtton rib Jen.it, sn1pside, full
double front for rxua protection.
Newborn. small and medium.
• Prefold gauze diapers of permanently
fo lded 100% cotton. With 6-layer cenler
panel, fray-proof selvage edges. Aheol"t
bent and durable •• , just the softest touch
ever for baby
)
• I-leavy\\'eigl1t gau ze diapers ••• our best
-l'lua lity 100% cotton. Soft , absorbent, easy
lo wash. Fast drying. long-wearing' and
economical Excellent buy.
USE SEARS
REVOLVING CHARGE
Thernial Crib Blnnk~t Waterproof Panties
Rerullr
$.l.99 297
Sof((y napped acrylic, light·
""eight yrt .-arm. White-, yellow
and Kafoam. 36x,O-ioch aiie.
Re,,.lmr 3 77c 3 forSl.19 for
Packqc o( 3 vinyl pult-<>n style:
pan1ies. FrO$t whire-. NC'tll~
$mall, medium, lar8"', l!Xtl'I large.
' llllltl'll'!ll MORTUARY
i_.-8'-Ull
S..-le ......
Elizabeth Cuadra 1v i 11
, _____ * ___________________________________________ ,
IUENA PAIK fl MONTf tONO llACH PICO ot lllmpcru: POMONA SOUTH COAST PtAlA.
• IMJ'l'llS' MOR1UARY
11%1 M.lll SI.
lluU.,.-
' '
• ·-
present the program. enUtJed
"Noise PolluUoo and What
You Can Do About It"
The meet.Ing will at.rt 1t 8
P.-_m_. in the Smedley .Junior Hl"1 School auditorium at ll:IO w. Edinger Ave.
I CANOGA,.... G\fNDAl! OlYWIC & SOTO SANTA ANA TOllMNC! I I COMITON HOLLYWOOD ORANGE ~ SANTA fE Sl"llJNGS VAllEY I COVINA INGlEWOOO PASADENA SANTA MONICA VERMONT at Slc111.on '------------------------• ears-------------------' ShopHltha.MtndoJ""'"9lt SGfunloJ9:JOA.M. t• t i30 P.M., Swwl1;11 l2 NHn , • .5 PM. • 11.1&1,.ao~.,,... ..So1lsfac1lonGuorant11dorYourMontyBaclt"
-
Russ Push Buildup
Safeguard Sys tem
Expan.si_on Urged
Hauling Ho11ae the Hardware
Orange Coas~ Col!ege Fore~ics. Team captured sweepstakes a\vard at recent
Southern Cahforma champ1onsh1ps and br6ught home most of the individual
honors, too. Fro.m left are OCC speaking chan1ps Pierce Lucas, Rita \Vakely,
Lyal l;lerzog, Bill Landers. Nova J-Iachez and Jean Blankenship.
Influenza Sleuths Baffled
WASHINGTON I AP
Governm ent influenza sleuths,
reiterating confidence t h e
United States will be spared
any nationwide epidemic this
winter, said Friday they're
still trying to determine why
six states were essentially
bypassed by the wave of Hong
Kong flu that hit the nation in
1968.
Disease cfelectlves of the ·
U.S. Public Health Service's
Commwicable Disease Center
in Atlanta, Ga., said in
telephone interviews that if
they could solve the puule, it
could have wor1hwhile signi-
ficance.
The six states invol ved in
the riddle are Wisconsin,
Nebraska and Hawaii whose
health departments, says
CDC, reported only isolated
outbreaks; and ~1ississippi,
Oklahoma, and Texas which
re_pgrted .tel2onal outbreaks.
'This contra.its sharpl y with
the situation reported ~by th e
health &partments of the
other 44 states, said Dr. Alan
Brodsky,4 ~ad of CDC's in-
fluenza surveillance division.
Dr . James Mason, deputy
directo• or coc, termed the
six-state situation a 1nystery
-warranting continued in·
vesligaUon to d e t e rmin e
whether some climatic or en-
vironmental ractors were in·
volved, or, indeed, some factor
not yet even thought of.
The disease was s o
widespread in the United
States last winter that most or
the population is temporarily
immune lo the wily microbe'
that causes Hong Kong flu.
• f:,.,)f>,,/
(. y l'"'·r. incsr ·••led fl(
WASHINGTON (AP)
Some key Pentagon officlalll,
concerned because Russia is
pushing its missile buildup ,
favor expanding the Safeguard
a!_ltimissile system.
No final decision has yet
been made on whether to in·
elude money for such an ,ex-
pansion in the new defense
budget, now virtually ,ready
for submission to Congress
later Utls month.
A move to expand the ao-
tlmisslle project· beyond the
present limited first phase
would almost certainly meel
strong opposition in t h e
Senate, where t b e ad·
ministration's Safeguard pro-
gram barely survived last
summer.
Also. some authorities are
concerned about the effect an
expansion would have an the
arms limitation lalks due to
ge~ down to hard bargaining in
A~il . ut top administration of·
r cials are strongly influenced
in their thinking by in-
telligence information lhat the
Russians are continufng their
deployment of the huge SS9
1nissile on what one source
called "a methodical basis.''
The SS9, which can hurl a
single 25-megaton warhead or
three 5-megaton warheads. is
considered a threat to knock
out U.S. Minuteman missiles
in a ~ible surprise attack
and thus destroy much of the
U.S. deterrent
Accordfng to c u r r e n t
reports;-the -Russians--have
more than 250 of lhe SS9
missile operational or under
construction.
This is an increase over
Secretary of Defense Melvin
.Atany sly1 tna1 er; a Is. es. •
Lillie Gi rls' Fashion.Shoe•
Rl'!ru1l ar S·l.9'J
Assortment of
Infants' Shoes
Rrgular $J.99
10 S6.99
lo '8.IJ'J
• Wi rle choice of
~1ylet11 and col·
on1. In broken
R. Laird's estimate of more
than 230 last May.
Laird has v.·arned Congress
that if the ' Russians conUnue
installing the SS9 at the
present rate, they could mount
about 420 by the 1974-1175
period. And; with expected ..,.
curacy improvement, the~
probably coelld des.troy _tS·per.
cent of the 1,000 .Minuteman in
underground launch. silos.
After months of hea~ bat·
tling, Congress appro~ed a
"phase figure one" deplGr.·
ment of the Safeguara missl e
defense at two minuteman
bases in North Dakota and
Montana.
The Pentagoo can be ex·
peeled to ask for another $900
million In the new defense
budget to continue with phase
one, which is designed to get
the two ABM sites in shape to
protect Minuteman missiles at
Malstrom Air Force Base,
Montana, and Grand Forks
Air Force Base, North Dakota,
by 1974. Funds also could be
included for acquiri!lg land for
additional sites.
OC C President
Heads Council
Orange Coast College Presi·
dent Robert B. Moore has
been elected president of· the
Southern California lndu stry-
Education Council. ·
Moore wiU take office Jan, I
and will serv'e for one year.
The council brings together
leaders in the ·uetdS ot: In·
dustry and education I o
motivate youth to ·e h t er
variotl! techni cal profeuional
fields.
Wo rnen'.s, Child . •
Cozy Sli '""' PPers
Were $J.9'J
Ill $6,99 297 297 • \'aric1y f
1 1 ° comforr.
Wome n'1
Fashion Shoes
Were $13 to S2:!'.
697
e Ci11ntic selection or
ht>cl11, fla1S and SfH)ft
~hoel'.
'
• !Se ver-1 1 ityles for
c omfort •nd ll up.
8-"0rtt!d Sitt !!
Assortment of Won1e n~s Sl1ocs
•Great V•ricl y lo
choose rrom. Many
slyle.s anJ colora.
397
Prices Effective,
Begin ning Today
a> e ~lvJel! f, b . •nd I . • • ric.s CO Ol"Jj.
'
Monday, January 5, Jq10 DAILY PILOT J 3
• '
The Book With
More Interest I'
Our Gold Passbook Savings Account
pays you 5% annual interes t .. , with ban k
fia fety, •. and First National's personal service
of 63 years' slanding. Here's how it works •••
To open a Gold Passbook Savings Accou nt,
n1ake an initial deposit as low as $500 .
Additional deposils af $100 or more ca n be
made at a ny lime. !l's that easy. What we do
is pay you 5% inl erest on all your funds kept
on deposit for a full calendar quarter. We can
mail you a cashier's check, credit your
checking account, or compound the interest
quarterly •.. as you wish.
ll's that easy and profilable. And your deposilf
are federally insured up to $15,000. •
The First Nationp.l Bank
of Orenge County
Main Office •t the Pl11z1 ln downtown Orange
Br1.nc:h Olic11:
Or1n11 : Tustin & Collini; Chapmln·Prospec:I Shoppina Cnltr
Co1l1 M1u1 Metil Verde Drive at Ad1m1 Av1.
S1nl1.An1: 11th St. at Tustin Ave.
MtmMr f .D.J.C.
•
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•
• •
• ..
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f
I
Jf DAILY ,!LOT s MOlld1y, Ja11111ry S, }q70
•I
Sears, Ward Cl1op
Mail Order r'rices
CIDCAGO (AP) Sean,
Roebuck aod Co., tht natloo's
largw mail or:!"l,Jioose, says
JI has cut ~ • hundreds
of items 111 Its 1'19 spting-
sW'l).mer utaolpe tn a move
to help consumers fight In-
flation. •
Montaomery Ward, the No.
2 mill. order retailer, did nol
comment specilica1ly o n
prices In its spring-summer
book, but a spokesmM &aid
1''riday that a check ••with our
major <:911lpetitor shows that
80 percent or our prices are
equal or lower."
Some 12 million copies of the
~a'rs cataolgue and about six
million copies .,f the Ward
book art being distributed this
~·eek.
LEGAL NO'TICE
LEG AL NOTICE
'""" IU,l!!ltl(llt COURT OP. THI! ITATI! 0, CALl,OltNIA P.Olt
TNI! COUNTV op. OltANOI!
NO.A~
OltOElt TO SKOW, CAt.ISt
T•5'1lt
NOTICI! OT Cltl!DITDltS
IU,1!11:1011: COU RT D' THf
ITATI: 01' CALll'OltNIA ,Olt
TNI COUNTY 0' OltANOI
• . ,
In a letter lo bJ.st,on\el'I
rectlvlng :the spriDg·Stll'NDU
catalogue, Sears said tt had
reduced prices on merchan-·
dlae "to help you lighten your
cost-of-living problems;"
A spokesman said niost
price culs ranged from 5 to iO
percent, adding ·•Some items
are reduced a rew cents and
others cut more than 25 per·
cent ."
He said "thousands of other
prices were not increased."
The spokesman said Sears
pared prices in the expectation
lhat incerased volume would
comperiSate for the lower per·
unit profit margin .
"Nonnally, when you {educe
Lbe price of an item, you hope
to sell more of it." he remark·
~d.
LEGAL NOTICE
CITY 01' COSTA Ml!JA
OltANGI! cou111n. CALll'OltJrlllli
llOTICI! INVITING •10J
NOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN Uuol Pli-ed .,,._.II wlM K rtai'f'MI b'I' ftW! Ci..,
ol CClllll ~ 1t the offla et tb! Cl..,
Clln •I "" CIW H•H. n 'f•lr Dt'hr.
CClllll Meu, C1lltonll1, ""Ill tM '-r crl
For Top SPo~ts Coverage
Read the DAILY PILOT
...
"
' '
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Oil Firm
·!ax Fight
Studied
WASH!l'IGTON (AP) -A
major oi l company'1 expenses
111 fighllng the re ce n t I y
enacted taz reform bW have
~ under scrutiny of the
lnternal Revenue Service.
· 'Ole IRS action results from
a complaint by Sen. WUUam
Proxmire (J>..Wis.), who cOn-
lended Shell Oil Co. forced lb
employes to attemd "brain--
washing" sesslona giving the
company's vleW of Oil deple-
tion and oil Imports.
P.roz:mire said be eq>ected
Shell would try to deduct the
cost or the sessions --which
be. tenned lobbying -as
business expenses. He said
this clearly would be in viola·
lion of tax ocdes.
In a letter made public by
Proxmire, the Internal
Revenue service wrote him:
NEW PLYMOUTH GRAN SPORT MAKES DEBUT ''The facts ... are not suf.
ficiently detailed to Jann the
tiasis of any firm conclusion
on the matter. However, we
agree with you tha"t if these
activities do in fact constitute
It Features P11tte rnecf Vinyl Roof With Matchin9 lnter~or
In Higla Gear
lobbying within the meaning of
the applicable statute, the fact
that the lobbying is directed to
employes would n o t t'Onvert
It to a deducti b le ex·
pendilure."
Gran Coupe Added
To Fu.ry Lineup The IRS added lhat the
comp laint requires a finding of
act and the matter ii being
referred to the district direc·I
tor having jurisdiction over I
Shell.
By CARL CARSTENSEN
0.llr '1191 AUNll'IClllYt lldlbr
INVESTING' IN SECURITIES
For tl.1 111w or 01p1 ri1~c1d i11vo1fot i11t1111ttd i11
1111111jt1f1111I t~d c:1piltl 1ppr1ci1lio11.
portfolio
TIN°WEEIC COU RSE -THU•SDAT 7•f :JO r .M.
J 111u"'V I ihru M1 rch I•
CORONA DEL MAit HltiH SCHOOL -"oom 2•1
FEE J!iO
LECTUR!lt: Edwt<d MtNt ry. Alli1d M1m b1r New Yor~
Stock E•ch11191 •nd lrw11lm111h l111lruc:lor, ·
UCLA Wt tlwoocl.
U11iYenity Seml11on Auoc:l•tes
N-p•n 1.-ch
Fer l11ftnlfatl•• & l•r•lllftfft
C•I: (7141 67J·1166
'
FREE LECTURE SERIES
THE STOCKBROKlRS TO KNOW INVITE YOU TO AN
INFORMATIVE LECTURE WHERE you will learn about
n1utua l funds dnd uniform gifts, \vhat they are, how 1hey
\vork and 1heir different investment objectives. Al~o. an
inleresting color movie will be shown.
SEAL BEACH-Satu1day, January 10th
1 oniinuously from 2:30 p.n1. Lo 5 :00 p.n1.
rv1,1nnings Cafeteria, 13900 Bay Boulevard.
TO' i' .NCE-Mo11cJ,1y, J..inuary 12t h ot 7:30 p.m.
Bullock's Del Amo-Tea Room (4th Floor).
Carson and Hawthorne.
\>\I
IA
... HESTER -Tuesday, January 13th at 7:M> p.rn.
Airport Marina Holel-Fou ntain Roon1,
8601 Lincoln Boulevard.
"HA-\Vednesday, January 14th at 7:30 p.rn.
Bullock's-Tea Room,
1501 West Imperial Hig_hw.iy.
LAKE'vVOO D-Thursday, Janu.ory 15th at 7:30 p .n1.
Bullock's-Lagunita Room, SOOS Cla rk Ave.
WESTWOOD-Friday, January 16th at 7:30 p.m ..
Bullock's-Bamboo Room,
10861 Weyburn A9enue.
LA(,L \ HtllS-S.iturday, January 17th
conlinuously from 10:00 a.m. lo 4:00 p.rn.
M.onnings Cafeteria, 24031 El Toro Road.
M/\Ri: JA DEL REY-Monday, Janu ary 19th at 7 :JO p.n1 .
Marina D el Rey Hotel-Charl Roon11
13534 Bali Way.
PALOS \'ERO ES PENINSULA -Tues., J.in. 20th al 7 .JO p.m.
., Hungry Tiger Restaurant,
27300' Hawthorne Boulevard.
W E~, \'000-Thursd.iy, J.inuary 22nd .il 7:30 p 1 •
Bullock's-Bamb.oo Room,
10861 Weyburn Avenue.
lAGUNA HILLS-Saturday, J.inuary 2-4th •
continuously irom 10:00 a.n1. 10 4:00 p.m.
Mannings Cafeteria; 23031 El Toro Road.
A1nplC time \.,.111 be allowed for queslions fro m the audi·
encc. Adm ission is free . Reservations are preferred but
rio( required. For FREE BOOKLET or 10 make reserva·
1lons,·mail 1he coupon belo• .. v, or ca ll ,\\arv Giroux col -
lecl at CR 4-0393. r------------------------, I Geti lltmen: Plc~se reserve I } SCYIJ fol' I
I me at youf ftec lecture in I
: N'"" PAINE : I •DDRESS WEBBER I
I JACKSON I
I &CURTIS 1
I PHONE HT ...... ,.. I I I
I '424 N. Umden Dr , 8eYerly Hills I
the Plymouth Fury lineup for
1970. It features numerous
items or equipmenl, optional
in other models, as standard.
A two-door sports coupe, the
car also has the concealed
headlamps previously found
only in lhe high line Sport
Fury model.
A special walnut color and
paUemed vinyl roof and
matching interior are offered.
The Gran Coupe is also
available with any standard
Fury vinyl roof and exterior
color with harmonizing in-
terior rolors.
Glenn E. White, C. P
Division e.eneral manager said
in introducing the car, "Many
highly desirable options have
been made standard equi!>'"
ment at a special price on the
Fury Gran Coupe. It offers
qboth style and value at a con·
siderable saving to the buyer
over the cost of a comparably
equipped car on which the oir
lional items were ordered irt-
dividual!y .. ,
Included as s tandard
features are the 383-cubic-inch
two· barrel V. 8 engine, Tor·
que Flite automa tic
l rans mis sion. air con.
dilli._oning, tinted glass, viny l
roof, power steering, power
brakes, solid slate AM radio,
vinyl spilt-back bench seat
with folding armrest, tires,
light package with headlight
time delay and warn.in g
buzzer, outside left remote
rearvie1v mirror, three speed
wipers. full wheel covers,
three-spoke steering wheel
with horn ring. concealed
headlamps, body side molding
with color·keyed vinyl rub
strip, instrument panel wood·
gr~in appliquc. and vcnlless
door glass.
The Fury Gran Coupe is
available "'ithout air con·
ditioning and tinted glass.
{:r f.: -<:r
BIG VEAR SEEN
FOR Si\1ALL CARS
'"We expect small, imported
vehicles to account for more
than one million sales during
1970 and believe that
Yolksv.•agen will account for
600,000 of the total," said
Stuart Pcrki"-presidcnt of
Volkswagen of America, Inc.
He made hi s statement at
the V\Y annual meeling .
Perkins added lhat among
that number lhey expected
560,000 lo be VW's and the re·
maining 40.000 to be Porsches
and the new Audi sedans
\vhich will go on s a I e in
January through the new
dealer network of U1e Porsche
Audi division.
Hinsha,v
Pr(imoted
When asked for comment, a
Shell executive referred to a
statement issued by lhi: com·
paoy when Proxmire made the
complaint in October. The
company responded then :
"Because of the present
number of issues of ex·
traordinary importance which
could substantially affect the
oil business. and the people
who work in it, we felt it
desirable lo acquaint our
emptoyes wilh our views on
these is.sues. We believe thal
we have a right and, indeed, a
duty to do so."
The tax refonn bill, signed
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Into law Tuesday by President
Nixon, included numerous pro-
visions which the oil industrv I
vigorously opposed. •
It lo\ve red the mineral I
depletion allowance from 27 1f.i
to 22 percent, applied a new
10 percent income tax to
otherwise shellered earnings
and knocked out other tax
benefits by holding production
paymeol!l to be loall!! instead
of income. ~
Proxmire has also com·
plained to IRS aboui the ae-
t.iviUes of seven other oil com·
panics against the new tax
bill .
These con1panies -whose
offlcials, Proxm ire said, con·
!acted employes or
stockholders suggesting they
\\Tite friends and congressmen
-are Texaco, Cities Service,
Phillips Petroleum, M o b. i I
Oil, Sun Oil. Conot'O and Stan·
dard Oil.
The IRS has not yel
responded to these complaints.
In one instance cited by the 1 senator, officials at Texaco
Research Center in Beacon.
N.Y., furnished employes with
a letter which they suggested
be sent to congressmen. The
letters, 20 or which 'A>'ere
received by Sen. Charles
Goodell, I R·N .Y.). who voted
for the bill , said in part:
"1 feel 1he presently pro-
posed changes are ill·con-
ceived, have been given very
little consideration as to their
errcct on some or the country's
major companies and on
thousands of their employes·
and most important, they do
not accomplish the purposes or
tax reform."
Texaco's vice president for
pubilc relations, Karyn King,
said letters discussing the tax
bill were written to all f
stockholders and employe s. j
Asked U Texaco \vould a!J
tempt to deduct cost or the lel·
te.r·writing campaign as a
bw;iness expense, K in i i
replied, "If Sen. Proxmire is 1 correct we would not take the
dcdcution: if he is not correct, l
we would take it.
" ... f\.1anagement has the
responsibility to its employes
Ernest T. fllnshaw Jr. of and customers to keep them
Newport Beach has been oam· advised of Important events
ed a director o{ Capital that affect lhen1 directly IU)d
Research and litAnagcment \ve're golng lo keep on dOlng
Co .. Los Angeles. that."
The inveshnent advisory A spokesman (pr l RS ,
firm supervises the portfolios without menUbning a n 'J
of four nationally distributed spectOc case, said that lt ap-
mutual funds : The lnve!tment ' pean any expense for con-
Co. or America . Amtrlcan tacting stock ho Ider s or
lifutu1il F u n d . Washington employcs and urging them to ~1utua1 lnvestorlt Fund. and write their congre!!men would
A~JCAP Fund. Net assets of nol be allowable deduction.
Lhe four funds total ap. ~~~~~~~~~~~] pro>:imately $1.~4 billion.
Hln.~aw is president and a
director of American Funds
Service Co .. the majoMty~wn· Makes 'Cents' ed trAnsfer agency subsidiary
or Capital Research and Pinch pennltJ. M11kt dOl1¥s. ll't
Management Compeny; a vice tile btit Oral rou'w bttn orftt·
president and director of rtf today, can 642·5678 for tht
Capital Research Company, d!rn:t llnt' to profits .
Wlio Reads ·the Stars
·For the Stars?
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It's Sydney Omarr
And now this articulete writer who hes
been celled the "ostrologer's ostrologer"
reads the stars for yoU. Sydney Omerr1 ,
longtime personal estrologer to many
of Hollywood s ond the literory
worl d's most famous stars, is e DAILY
PILOT columnist.
Omerr's record for accurecy of
predictions based on astrological enelysis
is amazing. Whether you reed
estrological forecasts for fun or os a ......._
serious student of star-gazing, you 'll
enjoy Sydney Omorr's doily column
in the
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DAILY PILOT ... __ ....... , ... .._. I
I CR <-0393 ~------------------------~ CR&ti1c·s wholly ow~ In· ~~~~~~~~~~~ll ________ ~~~~~~~~~~J vestment rt.search 8Ubsidlary :
and a dlrtctor o( CapiUll Data
Systems, Inc • -
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A.II ·1,000 of Us Had a Busy Day T~day
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:we created and deli vered an0ther f~esh . editiOn of The DAILY PILOT
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~TEAMWORK produces each day'! all-new DAILY PILOT. Of~ special·
ists like·Thomas Fortune (left), v.•hose beat is education, work wilh a .
• :.laf! photographer like Patrick 9 'Donnell to get the story both in words
1 and pictures. The staff shot 70,000 pictures last year to illustrate the
varied story of Orange Coast life. Nobody knows how many local stories
y.·e wrote. Not everi us.
CREATIVITY helps adverlisers tell thcir stories and sell their goods in
; the affluent market served by the DAILY PILOT. ?\1aury Gardner of dis-
, play advertising department looks over layou~ with DAILY PILOT staff
artists Anne Hamblin (left) and Charlolle Andersen. The ad they're dis·
, cussing will be ready to appear in the ne\vspaper only hours after artists
put final touches on the layout and it is approved by the advertiser, a I~ i caJ retail merchant. •
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~QUICK llANDS place lines of type, ad1 and cuts (the metal plates used
18 reproduce pictures) into page forms as the day 's product begins to
take shape. Compoaitor Arden l\talsbury is only one of a platoon of
~rinters who "build" lhe n.ews pages under pressure. of de_adllnes, .\\1or~-
1ng against the clock to Pring readers the latest available 1nformatlon 1n
each edition during the day.
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DELIVERY of the newspaper is a speed event, too. Conveyor belta cai'ry
lhe papers through the mailroom where lhey are automatJcally Ued 1n
bundles of 50 and tossed to wailing circulation district ma.nager1 (like
blaine Robrets shown here, (right) who speed them via a 40-vehlcle
fle-i!t to carrie~s for delivery. Mailroom foreman Geor&e Arauz (left):"
and his crew can move 211,000 newspapers an hour. ·
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' . THE WORDS are ready . Marjorie Jackson feedl lbem Into a ~.000
computer, a DAILY PILOT investm_ent in speed and accuracy, which uses
a logic system to hyphenate words u it reads characters al the rate of
1,000 a second and punches a new ta~ wl:Uch Y!'tll ~vate .another mach~e
fqr automatically setting type at high speed. Thi~ei can ;e, type ~
at the rate of 6,000 lines per hour. ~ .. ~ ~ .._ ·"' ·:' ·
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'Rl!:llSUllB'hm i. both phy1lcal 1'14 menW. Charlel Haubrick, llereo-t:Jpe foreman, checks lmpreulon pl&de by paa:e full of type on a ma~
squeezed by 1,800 pounds o( ~esture per aquare inch In the mat roller.
Mat can be curved and UJed •s a •mold •to form the curved plates which
• , 1 fll onto cyllnden o( hW!-speed )rJnUng presses which print the DAILY
PILOT. It's part of_ the quick-paced dally process of reproducing 100,000
words for OAIL Y PILOT 1t1bscr1btfs to read.
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MODBRN equipment helps lbe occowilinl.<lt~ .Dip up wtUt lbe
"today" pace at the DAILY PJLOT. Even u the day's nenpaper ls
being aped to ill readen, SUMie ·Chauvin begins feeding figures into a
• deK m6del computer'! 11<COUn~n1 COOIOle. It belpo koel> tract ol bUllQ&I for •dis and aub6crlpUom. The machine, one ot aeve.·al'tled In to 'the miin
computer. he!~ bandte 5,000 accounu ~ ~· 1 • • • •
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-RAPID communication is the name of the game. Supervisor Juanita Frey
and her crew ot "ad-visors" handle 1.000 transactions a week by phone,
resulting in publication of 5,000 classified ads -words which help people
buy, sell, rent or I c a s e ... even find lost dogs. l\1any of the DAILY
PlLOT;S 150 phone li nes are plugged in here. lhc classified advertising de-
partment, home of "Want Ads " and Dime·A-Lii:.:ies.
PlCTURES, too, geL the benefit of skilled. efficient handling by master
craftsmen who re-photograph them and then transfer Vie imagf lo a
ICl'!fiU!~d metal plate~ w}lic;h. are Ulied ·io reproduge t~e 'Photo• read-
ers wUI see them in the newspaper. Here, Chuck Ryan lake1 really
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clc>11e look a~ a negative which will be used to etch the image on the
metal pla~e. --. ., • i
FINISHED PRODUCT is checked by Elwood Anderson, press crew chief.
even as high-speed presses continue to roar al 60,IMX) imprtt.ssions per pour
completing the day'li run on press units which represent an inve5t.ment of
$3.5 million. Elevoq·man pre~s crew will feed into lhe1c n1ac~ines the
equivalept of a roll of paper one page wide and 110,000 ·miles Jong in
prltlting the DAILY PILOT this year.
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,.u.MOST before the fut ls dry, the product of our busy day is tossed
deftly on your lawn or porch iJ'y one of our 700 newspapcrboys who itre
lmportaot ll~ ln thei c.haJn ol pk>ple it takos to bring ygu today's news aoct ttatures loday ln the ~JLY PILOT. And as our yo\jng independent ~ti, Uke John Melton here, make their delivcric.s, we 're gearing
up for llllOUter buJy day -all J,000 of us. ,
The 'Now!) Newspape~:.for· AIJ ~The Coillmuitities
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Of The Growing ~Orange . Coast
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Walk the.oran.ge carpet
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~to-o·~~-· . . ' '· .ii ,•. • • • .... ' I '}.. f·' . m NeWpett'.Ce~ter.
~ ··~ • ! ( J~uacy 5t~gb10~
You won't go away. empty banded.
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&pecl1I houra: I to 5 Mond•J lhr~gh ThuradoJ;
I to T Friday; I to 1 Saturday; J1nu1ry 10~
0 • • < • ~ 2 -, , g • x • ' • z • ' g • , • < • , • 0 • • • z
a 0 <
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lRVINE COAST
~TRY CLUB
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We're celebrating the opening of our new Orange County office
in the beautiful financial plaza at Newport Center. And our
new branch is loaded with oranges during the 'Free
Orange Festival.• See thousands of fresh branges
on display. You'll take home a tree ~opy of 'The I Love
Oranges Booklet' showing Umpteen clever ways to
se rve fresh oranges to your family. Come join us.
Sip a glass of fresh orange juice, see the
remarkable •truit salad tree' that grows oranges,
lemons, grapefruit and tangerines all at once.
Visit our spacious interior patio with floral
displays that change with the seasons,
a perfect setting to sit with friends and
talk of many things. Take a moment
and ask about our Umpteen ways
to save ••. flexible savings
accounts and high-earning
investment accounts.
GLEND.\LE FlOER.\l
S.\VINGS---
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t41'WPOl't Beach: 500.~~ beQter Drive In the Newport Flnanci.I Pim
" ' Coeta Mesa: 1833 Newport•Boulevard •
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BARBARA 'DUARTE, 4'4-9466 .........,, ,...,.., .. ltrt • , ... ,,
The Lagu11a Line
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White Elephanl
·can · Be a Jewel
I By BARBARA DUARTE
Of"'-Delhi' PllM Staff
·1 H•ppy New Year. Now that the tree has been filed for another·.y~
.,, and everyone is showin~ off their new finery, perhaps someone ha~ a, whiJe
elephant or two in the )e\\·elry line which could be taken out of biding for
·t.b.6 .~enefit of Lagwta·Moulton Playhouse.
I .. 1 Costume jewelry of all types, colors and condition {even broken) will
~ sold at the Winter Festival Flea Market by three enterprising playhouse
sµpporters, Mrs. Nonnan Stoddart, Mn. Helen Vail and Mrs. Robert ~of
lett: Proceed,s, we're told, will go toward purchase of some undetenruned
lt'em needed at the new theater. Trinkets can be dropped off. at the play·
liowe. . ·-' • ~A multlevent welcomed 1970 in celebration of housewarmings, honey-
: ·~ mm'riages, birthdays and related events occurring during the past
1 year. ~rectors of the grand event that began in the afternoon and con-
tinued on, and on , and on, were Mn. Maggi Conrad Swope who opened her
Moongate residence and Jack Seymour who warmed his ne'v beach home
below Moongate and just oU the sand of Vict<m.a Beach .
' Among some 150 nota~es invited to toast •1freed001, trips, liberty-and
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BAUS.LES, BANGLES ·A"'9BEAlls:.{--1iecotai\ng the Laguna-
J\-JouJ t()n Playhouse bougalnville~..f~ith beaas ~ floral pins are
(lc!i 1 r'.glj'tlf.'1r~, Mart¥,;.Mfller\ ana ~.?'·Hele~ Vail. The WOUl•
en are c~U~ting jewelry of all kinds and condition to sell in the
\Vlntcr_ Fe.stlval Flea ~arkcl. Proceeds Crom the sale will purchase
a special item needed 1n lhe new tlieater faciLi t)'.
equality'" were television actor ~GJU.ck Chandler and his ·Broadway actress
wife; David Tihmar, director of Milodyland for 12 years ; actress-director
Gwenn Yarnell ; Russell Lewisi ~uctr of Music Circus, Sacramento Civic
Lig ht Opera and bis actress-songs!Rss wile Evelyn Bell; publis!)er George
H. Crosbie Jr.: actress Barbanl"Morrison and actor Sk1p Young, both· of
Hollywood, and many, many arei peypfe connected with the arts and civic
groups. ..• s •
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An Important Question
Can You Render Aid
If Disaster Strikes?
\Vould you kno\v \\•hal to do if you "'ere faced \\'_ilh an cn1ergcncy
iituation?
Could you give first aid trealment for a broken leg. <1 badJ y
bleeding \Vound, an emergency childbirth situation ?
Could you take care of yourself and your fan1iJ y if faced \Vith a
natural disaster or nuclear attack when no doctor ,or supplies <1re
available for days or even weeks?
If the answer to any of the above questions is in the negative,
you're a candidate for the Medical Self-help 1·raining Course begin-
ning Jan. 20 in Laguna Niguel.
The course, scheduled for seven conseculi\'e l'uesday.~ at 8 p.m.
in Crown Valley Elementary Sc hool, consists of fil1n-leclurc 1neetings
conducted by Sgt. Charles Goodwin.
Subjects to be covered \Viii include radioactive fallout and
shelter: he~thful living in emergencies : artificial respiration . bleed-
ing and bandaging. fractures and splintiI'lg ; trans~r1ation of the in-
jured; burns; shock; nursing care: infant and child care and e1ner-
gency childbirth.
A1nong educational film s is a first-hand look at 'I.he di sastrou'I
Alaskan earthquake with fantastic shols of giant \va ves pouring over
coastal cities.
The course \WIS developed by the Public Health Service \vith the
cooperation of the Office of Civil Defense. It is endorsed by the A111er-
ican ?i·Iedical Association, the American National Red Cross and nlany
other national health organizations.
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ganized &y thC Laguna Niguel Coordinating Council or niay phone
coofdinator·lrtrs-.. fu!ne Beaumont, 496-2758, for infor111ation.
FIRST AID COMES TO THE RESCUE -Mrs. Rene
Beaumont, coord inator of a Medical 'Self-help Train·
ing session which begins Jan. 20, t?andages the arm
of her hµsband as daughter Patricja WatChes. Mrs.
Beaumont is demo .. trating training which will aid
persons in time of emergenlY or natural disaster ..
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Grandparents Boiled, Mom Foiled as
~' 11 Young ·~t~.rs Spoiled ::~
DEAR ANN LANDERS : This is for the
mother who doesn 't know what to say to
her children because her In.Jaws never
bring a gift l\'ben they come lo visit -
which is every Sunday afternoon.
I v.•ou\d love to trade places wilh her.
~fy in-laws have spoiled our chikiren rot·
1en. It. is disgusting the ~'ay our kids
have grown to exped a gift rrom every
person who walks into the house. When
the paper boy came lo collect yesterday,
our 4-year-okl asked, "What dld you bring
1ne?''
Our children are so bored with their
loys it makes me sick. They'\le seen
"''ery gadget and ga1ne on the market
~ly father-in-law is going on an African
snfari in ~farch. The kids have asked for
a baby elephant. I'm scared to de.alb he'll
bring lhe1n one.
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ANN LANDERS A ~~
Both my husband and 1 have pleaded 1
"'ilh UJem to stop with the presenlS
already but they say, "It's OUR pleasure.
Don"l deprive us.''
I hope the mother who 'titOte "to
criticize her In-laws for coming empty
handed will see this letter and fee~~er.·
-LONGVIEW. WASll.
DEAR LONG: So do I. Children who
1•ffer frem e1ces11e1 art Invariably n1ore
Insecure and pos1ets less 1elf-ftlee.m
tha1 ftle teonomlcall1 dl1advanta,;cd.
Some of the most deslnlcU\'e. and violen t
'."lt•dent1 C9flle. from ·affluent homes.
r.tany were raised by perml11lve parent11
who, smolbered them with thin gs, things
and more lhing1.
• TbtM l.u\bappy kidJ feel cheated an d
bqught-off and are registering their
·'-'sentmen l by rejecting evcey symbol of
authority.
DEAR ANN LANDER.Ii · I was in-
lriguert by the leitcr rrom the married
man who wrote to say he had a11 illicit
IO\'C affalr -lhat his wire knew . but re·
·~··j mnlncd ~rlent and bore up nobly unlll he '.'Sis.'', When t learned the truth I at· OOLORADO 1 1,:
got the ''foolishness" out of hj.e: systyn. tempt.ed·1Uickle and nearly ~-~DEAR COLORADO: A1 uy ......-·~
Lover boy concluded thal everyone P~ I am now teying to recover ~ a lltOWI, ~1tt1 vary. Wluit IDt ctllllOU-V"
{·•-• H 'd h •·• I---~ lot 1 COfllplete breakdown and an · acute cate of 'te11tdtf:t well do9e, ml1tat M tt.,.,ii ~ _11.CU. e sa1 e.'iou. c.u•~ a rom self-hale.' I am disgusted, uhamed and • "'~ doM by ...u.er. Accordiq' .. ,
It, appreciated h1s Wlfe more than ever, feti as though t will never agaln bt able Webalu'1 1m&brldSed -nw mealfl•~
and. he added, "No one Willi hurt." Well, lo tru9l a man. Would you agree that "no ucrade, udrn1ed1 acaldva&ed." I caa,'t 'i
that's l1ill opinion. I was the other woman.t \ one J.o~ jurt?" -MISS FRUITCAKE • lm,PfOve on THAT. '::..U
arid here's how It Jooketl to nie: .. ' OF 1911. t-1, t:I~
I had Just gone tJ)rough a tragic 4!!me>-~ • .DEAR MISS : Thaab ror wrldnf. YOClr "The Bride's qulde," Ann Landert-11
tional experience and this man entered 1et&a' 11 "mat reHlq" for all 11\lrrted booklet, anawer1 i6rne 'JI. tbt most ~·f
my life as a friend, a confidant. He said men wllo tlalnt they are brin&fn1 joy"* quently asked quesUon1 about wedSf~ ~
he was separated from his wife and •sk· tlMi"Hf•ol.11•mttl.tnaUy 1tarved. rfrL To, rl!celive your copy of UU. ·eorft.11
ed me to marry him as soon as bis -prehenslve ,uide, Write to Ann Lander•, l
divorce was linal. lie Introduced me to · DEAR ,~NN ~DEIµi :, Jn your col· in care ol UUs new1p1pe:r, enclolini
his "sister'' with whom he "'as sharing umn you BOmelimts u.se highly delCl'IJll\' long, aeU-llddrelled, stamped 1r1ltiope,
an apartment. "Sis" turned oot to be a Uvt adjed.ives. The most recent wu and 35 centt In coin.
swceUleart. ll was she who wised me up, "raw'' sex.-How iJ raw sex dlfftttnt AM LaDdeni will be glad to help y"
after se\'cral martinis. It seems my from cooked ae.x. or rare aex1 When ii with your problems. Sftld tbem to her 11 1
rriend srien~ four nights 11 weelc with hit ux well done? Can it be over dont? care of the DAILY PltoT, encbin, • j
wife and fa1nlly and three nights with J await your answer. -GOUR.~Ei' Il'f "'-lf·addruled. stamped envelope.
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ljlRS. llo't•RT IR()WN
i. C~urch Wedding
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'"' St.ft 10.UVIM MILLI IClloO ~~445AD0R5 CLUI l INTIRHATIOlllA~ ' •w • S,.'9111w Tr...i , .....
. i1wH>•T llACH, CA.Lii". tJ'6t
I flHONE: 644-4600
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To Reside
In Hawaii
Making their ho~ on iiio
11awaiian 13~ tre Mr. and
Mr1.· Robert Marti Bl'OJ"ll. '!'liq
were morri!jl iJJ IM lhil\ed
First M.ethodbl Cllurct> qi
G41fden Grove.
"'·-Of 1111 !!ride. ·tho· ,.,..... CyJ\lllia 11111/i.lil~"'· are the .Roger p, Dra'harn1 °''•
Garden Grote . Th•
bridegroom is .the sou pf Dr.
and Mn. Mart ' Browo CJI •
Sedona, Ariz.
Brid-1 aUendants were the
Mis.vs Sha(pD Malby and Sue
Thomas. l\fllo Trocey Rundell
wu flower ')ill. -. .!.
. Stan' RuJl(lell WU h'! I
brotMr-in-law's belt m I ft ,
while us&ers included Jim
Barker and Dennis, Glenn and
Gary 'Graham. "~ -.:file briilef• WU gradu.otqd I
from Bolsa Grande Hlab'
Scl>ool and ''filletidld· I II e
University of ·Sou~bern
California where1 she~'' .,,. ·
flllated with· Ajpba G"ll""8
Della. !fer husltand w a 1
graduated f1"9m San
Bernardini> High Sd}ooJ and
UCLA and · received h I ·1
ma11ters degree in bu11MJ1
from use.
· CM Auxill•ry
The firat !J'hursd1y of tht
month members of th•·
American Leiton AuliUary, Costa Mesa Unit 4M gather in
the American Le~ HaU, at I
p.m.
->
..
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. .;. c -i.i .
Tho 1horl flared coat ir'"pew1" from 'Charles
Le Maire. •
The bias collllf curvu ol'Olllld lhe:neclt wj!liout
bjndinl it. :rile ypke !'f"I lroitt "" l'llL ~ <the ~1111111 liviOI f. 1mall •P~ feminine lqoli. The
bai• ~•ck lalfl uJJ and 1wlil1y and t1 fln!Jbed off
with one aeep pleat ai the center back. Th•·•letVll
are 1ot in aJld cut with a 1ubU1 flare at 11)1 wrllt.
Superb in mJ!ly fal!!.lc• fl'Ol11..Q h•J'l'.inl Jlopa _ tweWi, cfiecki;l>raias, 1al)art1lne1 ta leJIUred raw .
silk• and ·•7nlhetic mixt9r11. 62139 11 ·cut In Ml1111 · sizi1 Smal (3-IO). Medlllm (12-1'). Larae (l&-18).
Size Medium requlrOI approxlm1tely f 6/8
yards ~I llO" fabric. • · ·
· To order 62839 ; state size, include name, ad·
dre11 and zip code. Send H i><>•lpald for llnklau
postage and handling for E/!.CH peit~rn . Send onl·
ers for book and patterns to SPADEA, Box N, Dept.
CX-15, Millon!, N.J. 0118411.
This precut, preperforated Spedea Desi1ner
Pattern eome1 in ready·t~wear .sizes that produce
a better fit and are easier to make. Order normal
ready-tcrwear size and allow one week for delivery .
NEW IDEA: Finl Lime dliil(ntn hive publi•h·
ed sewing secrets. Hard Cover Edition '5.
Slimncstic
Closs .Set
An opportunify lo be rid ol
Iha <l .. N l'°"ndl collecled
111rou"1 tlli h O l l d I y I ,'
redlllrlbulo well)l~ firm llltf
lone IJllllCIU and _.IJJ.
Imp r o" 1 ca rdlovucular"
lltneu lenl wlU be offered
HERE YOU SEE MRS. 801BY t!WI& Amt
REDUCING FROM SIZI ~\oi DOWN' TO A SliE
12. MRS. LEWIS SAYS1 MY FRIENDS AND.fAMILY
CAN'T BELIEVE MY RESULT$, BUT f ICNQW
ANYONE WITH A REDUCING PROBLEM CAN
DO WHAT I DID SUCCESSFULLY AT Sf!,tJ'~
SHOPPES INT. I REDUCED FROM 180 POUNDS
DOWN TO 134 POUNDS. t'M $TILL eNJOYING
MY TREATMENTS & STILL MA1'1NG ~1$ULTS.
· area women.
You Wlli-
Go From Sise ' •
. '
OU'LL RIDUCI 'IN ALL THI
PLACES YOU SHOULD
IT'S THE NEW YfAR-IT IS IEITTR TD IN\llST MONEY
• tN A NEW FIGURE THAN TRY TO BUY CLOTHES TO DIS.-
GUISE IT. IF YOU FEEL THAT YOUR RGURE PROQLEMS
ARE NEXTTO HOPfLE~S, IFYQ\J THIN~THAT REOUG!NG
WILL WORK FOR EVERYONE BUT NOT FOR YOU, IF
YOU THINK YOU ARE TOO OLD, OR TOO YOUNG, OR
.i. TOO FLABBY, OR TH.AT YOUR BONE STRUCTUPE IS
> T()9 IARGE ORTOOSMAU.ORTHATYOU HAVE WAITED
TOO LONG OR THAT YOO tfAVEAN IMPOSSIJLEREDUC.
ING PROBLtM. GIVE yOU~SELF A CIWICE -lfT VS
ON YOU HOW YOU CltH REDUCE QUICKLY .. ~S~Y
COMPiETE PRIVACY WlfHOUT STRENUOUS EXER·
f C:tSE, WITHOUT DISROBING, WITH<;IUT STARV/\TIQN I DIETS. CAI.I. us NOW FOR YOUR ct>URTl•V flGU)I
ANALVSIS. WITHOU~ COST Ot 011.JGATIO~ .. IT Wiil. \If \'OUt DECISION WHETHlt \'Oil ~EDUCl ·l'ttORS.
11lONALlY WITH US OR NOT. IF YOU ,DO, wt H.'VI
\PtOGAAMS "5 LOW "5 $1.00 A Tfl~TMINf
1 CALL US NOW
COSTA
MESA ·
642-7032
1101 Newport llvd.
-•
8P01110red by the Hunllqlon
BeJch YMC.\. a women'•
allmnutic exercill cl au' wjll
bl mt1lln1 Tulldaya and
Th'!j'edoy1 lte&1"'1inl Jon. ii
belWMn ltlO and l :Jo p.m. 'I'll•. ll1~w11k CGUrH wlll meet ~n the Community
Mtthodlit Church. Refiitra-
tlont are beln1 aoceptfd on a
flrat-come buJ1 to 111urt
11nall cl111e1 1nd more Ume
for peraon1l lnttrucllon.
AddlUonal lnlOl)tlaUon may
bl obtllned by calUn1 Richard
Coll1t.o, e1:ecuUv1 director, at
19M541.
(': J~ y.JJ PRE -INVENTORY
Jt1l~I lnt;~6\~~1
UP TO 50% OFF
TRICOT SLIPS & HALF SLIPS
• Specl1I &roup of * eULOTTIS * •OWNS * IABY DOLLS * llKINI 'ANTY HOSE * ROIES * SLIPPERS
'
.... •44 "·" L""ll'lll OV.n!it•
"It Comfo,t•~lt 111 y,.,, c,,, ..
l11•t ioli1l11t i11 D & DD
Ill I. IM It .. C"'9 .....
Hlllt"91 S..•.,.._.42·1411
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New Twist for Tim• M~rktr1
Col.6rful Calenda·rs for· 1970
NEW YORK (UPI) -The
n1w caltndan art m1rchln1 on UI -fiat or flt Onll, f'OIJnd
ODU, .Um onu.
II makoa perpl11In' the
matttr at .ch(IOllns "t.h•"
c1lendlr-to U.P. ont'• very
pel'IOUl ON for u., new )'ttr.
.The very belt caltndan in
ll70:
--On Moy II lit 17U lien
Franklin fitw I kit1, provln1
lllltlnln1 11 tlaclrlclty. On
M"ay LI ol that yoar1 "Fr1>1111Jn
l(ela hlthor than a 1lle.''
"-"ff• nid ho Wiii!~ ,,,.
lore&led In lh• l1llllll of
laahlon -Juel tho heipt of
my 1klrt."
C1l1nd1r1 on towtll, on delk
omament1, on acro!ll ; calen~
d1r1 wlth ar"n oover1, red
tO\'trl. black and w h I t t
cqver.. All-color c o V 1 .r 1 ~
C1l1nd1r1 on throw plllow1.
the fllll ·m1111oo a year ln-
du1try art Utt ont1 you read.
Jn1plratlon1l or comic.
-"Shall I lypo lhil OGrr.cily
or the WIY be I lied Lt!' '<
Thi calendan wllh llower1,
bulldlnp, hnd•••P"· pamlllrlci and othor dlllllllt
for Ihe •YH are lo tho rlpt
and loll ol u1, 111• norlh and
tho IOUlh ol UI.
The 11c11rnto rtllel" c1len-
dan Include Mother Spector'•
1l"'en1c. Amoni htr hou11ke1D1n1 Up1: 1 t 1 i or a 1•'""" · ln the bath!Ub.'' Other advice t1ll1 how to boll
water and make ice cubu.
-()n Jan. 7 In tome )'tar,
Bill Balley call1d and Hid ho
wouldn't bt home. The comic calend1ra art
amona lift on.,, repreNntlna
Ill mllfion of 111• IndU1Lry'1 lot.11 11111. .
11Tb1 fUture for atrt oalen-
d1r1 11 very brl1flt," 11)'1
John J, <>Won. Hallmark vlct
pre1ident.
YOU CA
DO, ITI'
Sorority
Launches
Hlllmark'1 "Orut M0mtnta
In H11tory Calondlr" Includul for Mt)', a akttch o
Mlcltelanplo l•Uln1 oll the
1e1llold In the 811Urie Chapel.
Say1 -one portly, monk to
""°"1er portly monk :
'0I'hetc ire -even atft caltn·
dan for every room In lht
houie exctpl porh1pa, Ill•
bath.'' -
...... ' -~ ""'"*
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New Year
'1Not only would w1Up1per
last Ion1or but II would hovo
been m~ clieaper."
Olher hb\orlcol, II not
hy1terlc1l, oddment• 1mon1
the 1re1t momentl one 11 tn·
~~rared to ca1ILa1' on durln1
0.le comlcat offerlna for tht
1M1btr world of bullnou In
ll70' "Paper Qulpa" b 1
JlobeJI W1lntr1•b . Thi chll'ICttn, one ottJce femme
l1Iiln1 to anolhar, aller tho
workln1 1lrl'1 point ol view.
They II)' IUch thin u :
" . .
THI
KNIT WIT
. IOllTM COAIT, Pr.!iou .....,.., Lw1r °"'91f1t WtolwWll'l'I .......... -..... ...... , ...... ,,
Be1lnnln1 the new year for
XI Xi Pl Chapt0r of Bela
8lfm• Phi will be an evenln1
1•lhtrln1 on Wedneeday, Jan. 1. .
-t@3I lClA'I. >WAY ,
The ColtA Me11 home of
Mn. John Moquin will be the
1cene of tht I 1>1m. ipttUni,
wllh bu1ln1N bel~I condut:lld
by Mrs. Eldon Dvor•k. •
On the •1end1 wm be the
chapter'• ro1bln1 plan• and a
February ~klaU p a r t y
honortn1 Mn. Robert Shay,
the e!'lipttr'1 V a I t n t I n 1
prli1c111.
Mra. Nonn1n Nieberleln wpl
prennt a proaram ctnttrld
on M1thad1 ol Educ1Uoa from
Ihe ""°P'• prosram book Wfe, LHrnlnc and Frl1!1111hlp.
1be ho1te11 will 1 1 r v 1
relrtshmooll lollowi,,. Ibo
meeUn1.
•Thrift Shq,P
Cuts Prices
'
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THE BEAUTY SALON'S
ANNUAL JANUARY DUART'
PERMANENT WAVE SALE
l 0.00 -15.00 '"9· 20.00-10
------------------
\l.1\HS ll .1~ E1ery thin g .. lnrludin g SUNDAY SHOPPING. Sunday lluur s I:! Noon lo 5 P.M.
Sears
You Can Learn Io
Knit ... Beautifully
Enroll Now in !Sears
FREE Knitti11!' School
• 10.\\.eck cuur~e
e Jl/:z.hour~. once a ''"cc "-.
Cla:;ses Begin J\lo11d1~.
January l~th
e Ju~t pi r.k th e cul or of ~arn lo
n1iitch 1t ~kirt or panls •••
)ou'll lcarn.the re1t 11 Sear•
in 10 easy le•!ons
• Cla11sea now being organized
11 niost Sean stores ... enroll
now '"d n1ake wonderful
iift• for yo11r~11r or friends
Orlon• 4cryllo Wintuk '\'•l'n
• 4·oz. h•nk 1kcin. n1•-
chinc w11h1blt, dry1bl1
• R•ndom stub of cqfort
cre11tc1 intcreslinp: dr·
11,-n
Pric11 Eff10Uv1
B1,.innin,'Tod1y
•
I
• ' i
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~·-•-•••••••••••-••••••••••••••••••·•~•••••·~~·-..._ I I llUIN4 Pl# '1 ,tiOITt I.CHG ""CiH PICO « ...... roMONA. IOUTH COAff nMA l I =tMI OWM.I OtYMl'IC'~ 10tO ~A MiA ~ • 1 .._,. ~.~ c,•~ .. a.!.. ~ ~At!._~" VAUl'f I '1 ............ ,.... .. ~............ "~,_ ears _.,,. ........... _ VUMONf ......... ~-----------------~--------_________________ , .
Sh•11 M•l'HI•• ltln1,11't s.,.,,,., t:JOA.M ... tllO P.M., lttlltl•r 13 NH1l l1 S P.M..'.... __ ,__ "Setld1ctl•n0Ht11n ... t1.r1'twM.n1r..... -
\.
.,
HS Auxiliary
Twice a month the Ladles'
~u1iUary to Huntington Beach
Vetera"" ol Foreign Wars,
Post 7368 meets at a p.m. ~
first Friday of each month
they gather in Odd Fellows
Hall for • busJness meeting
and the thir<I Friday they
socialize in various locaUons.
' ' rurther information nµty be
'· ·~by calling Mn. LeRoy
,H.,..arm at :>36-3580.
''
Wou ld you like
to iose woight "I>
and keep it .;i
off for good? · '
WEIGHT~ ... WATCHERS.
Tt> avoid disappointmerit, prospective
brides are reminded to have thtir wedding
stories with black and white Jllossy P.hoto.
graphs lo the DAILY PILOT )\'omens De-
partment one 1week before the Wedding.
Pictures recej'ed following the wedding
will not be used.
For engagement announcements it is
imperative that the story, also accompanied
by a blacR: and wl:Ute glossy picture, be sub-
milted six weeks or more before the Wedding
date. lf deadline is not met, only a story will
be used.
To help fill requirements on both wed·
din~ and engagement stories, forms are
available in all of the DAILY PILOT offices.
Further questions will be ans\vertd by
\Vomen's Section staff members at 642-4321
or 494-9466.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ...
Horoscope
Mental Health Award Winner
'One Step at
By MARGARET KILGORE
WASHINGTON (UPI) -
"When you work with anyone
who ia mentally retarded, one
step is a long way."
This is the pbilooophy which
had led Mrs. Mack Bright, or
Black.foot, Idaho, to receive
the nat'ion's highest mental
health award from the Na-
tional Association for Menta l
Health.
Essentially, It is the type of
volunteerism • which · M r s .
• Bright, a sliglil, d>eerfur
• ~ widow, hu done" which is
bei.pg encouraged by ' the na·
tion's first lady, Mfs. RJchard M. Nixon. .
-Helping too,,e who are
.
Monday, J111u..ry .S, 11170 DAIL y PILOT ro
I, Time' Says Worke·r· a
Leo: Be Alert
Second Reduction in our
Semi-Annual QualiCraft
~rnmrn ~&~mg
.A~
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • •
were
8.99
to
10.99
2
prs.
for
$9
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • • were
5.99
to
7.99
Now even bigger savings on America's best-sellin g
fashion shoes! Still lots of great stY1es to pick.
Hu rry in to enjoy the best selection in your size.
Handbags reduced, now 1.97 to 4.97 ....
FASHiON ISLAND, HUNTINGTON CENTER, SOUTH COAST PLAZA
NEWPORT IEACH e HUNTINGTON IEACH e COSTA MESA
Buffums' magic
Shamppo, lamp cut anti BtslM llHlmenl 5.50 . .
Reg. 9.00. Rad iant beat ean detect even me
slightesl lendency your hair may have lo
curl or wave! The skilled halllis of our stylists
combined with this mag ic curl inducer will ·
shape your hair into a swirling, easy-
to-carc-for hair style. Ca ll for an appoiotroont now '
Beeu ty Studi o, all stores except Marina
Manicures . Ped icure s· Facials · Electrolysis
Buff urns·
I
ffewparl •I F1ahlon l1llnd Ntwport C.llW • 144·2200 •
Mon.,Th111.,f'fl. lO:gcl tlll 1:30 Otner Dtyl 10:00 tlll 5:30.
'I
Virtuoso
Entertains
Piano virtuoso V i v I a 11
FJorian, a • protege of Pad-
erewski ·at $ and winner of
the Paris Conservatory or
Music Grand Prix at 10, will
entertain members or South
Coast Clu of Laguna Beach
on Wednesday, Jan. 7.
~1embers will gather for
11 :30 a.m. social hour In the
Towers with luncheon planned
for noon.
Miss Florian has performed
in major citi1:1 in the United
State1 u well as in Europe
and Canada. Sht plays a
repertoire of Liszt, Bach,
Ravel and Beethoven.
'Mlose interested in making
reservations may phone PhiUp
Towne chairman, 4~1S31; M¥r~:·~1ble Nichols, 49MIM, ~.-Clay WeJttr, 137-7605.
Thin/<
SA ·LE
Think
JElllo lnhQ
Wm.Rff ,._. Olty
Ml·2444
BEST
I
YEAR
-''
END
'COSMlTiC
GIFT ITEMS
• . ·-
AT
* IEllllE FILL IATllAL COLOR PORTRAITS!
Not t\>e old style tinted or painted blaclr: Ir white photos. * SATISFACTIOI CIAUITEEI or your mon~ refu,nded. ' * FOi ALL ACES! llabi~. cliil<lren, adult<.
ELEGANT COLOGNES • oustlNG. POWDERS
SOAPS e TRAVEL CASES ., !
* llMITEI OffEI! One per subject, two per family,·
Januar,y 2 thru 11th
.... $],
.. $25. 1/3 OFF
• • :
• IUENA PARK
TODAY
IS
JANUARY
Size 2~? ............. Be a size 20 by Jan. 21
Size 20? ............. Be a size 18 by Jan. 21
Si:.~ 18? ............. Be a size 16 by Jan. 23·
Size 16? ............. Be a size 14 by Ja~. 24 ..
5th Size 14? ............. Be a size 12 by Jan. 25
Size 12? ............. Be a size 10 by Jan. 26
WANHD 1
D• II "' 1tlPlY _,.,II 1J111ti ' "lllfPI-.... fl .. -If I rl!lrl .... 1111 fl C .. 111111 •I !Ml"""' itlo 1llllM ~ ..... two WI wt i11M11f,r1lltll11pll, Al·
tr..U.1,111tn-••-
M-rs ti 11W lrlcatllu. Wltlt II
-11"""11 ,.,....., at 311 L
-lllf. 110( -· CalKor•I• ...
•• , the time it takes for each individual to achieve her . cOal may vary depending on age and other Jacl.o1'8. How·
ever, 'at" Gtoria .. Manihah rest.ills for eve,.Yone is auaran-
teed. Tell us the dtee11 size you want to weal', we will tell •
you how many visits it takes and guarantee that you wiJL
.reach your goa1, In fact, ao positive are we that you will
oblilin 10ur objective we will even Jet yoo have FREE
011' CHARGE' any and all further visit.a until you reach .,
your goal. J
We are the world's Jaraest owned and opcraled Jo~i,ure
C.OObol 8,VStem. (26 JocatioM in California alone).
r Calllot' :f11EE Sample vi.;t A~
uae, under 1uperv'6ion, the Gloria. Matot '
Mall madiinea jncludinr our i-,.t.enblci
"'Ciro-I:a-Ma.tic. tt No Cbal'le. No Qbli.,
1aLion. • ,·
r' Private playroom !acilitieo Im: llDOll ,
children. '-
,1 Come m comfortable casual do!heL ·~
D.iari:>bint unnecasuy, ·
ALSO IN
AMhel111. hfftff Hllfl. cm ... c......,., o....;. •'•••• .. ...,..
weH, Le•t ...... N .. pert lffclt, N. fWtywe.4, Otttwl•. r..-.il.,
In Diet•. S... AM,,_,...,._.,, ....... T11n--. ~
s.i ........ i. ,, .... ~. s.. ~s ••• , ..... w .. -! c...
• • ' . '
(c) Cop11rlgh 1 1970 Gloria A!arahall Jl ot. Co. Inc.
-• •
1
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I
I
I
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ft DAILY PILOT
Home
By HOWARD L. HANDY ., .. ~ ............
Rld!arcl Ma<1i!Je> ol Laguna ll<ad! Is
the new SoutberD CaHfomla Open golf
champ6m.
The )'OWll pro who irew up on the
Orange Coast area links. demoruitrated
that practice makes perfect as he swept
10 vk:t.ory, "by the back door," in hls
words, when playing partner and run-
nerup Larry Mowry hit a ttt sbo\ out or
bounds on the eighth hole in ~'y'a
final round of play at M1.asion VltJO golf
course.
The two atroke peruilty cost Mowry the
championship. He seltltd for secoad
place and 5',080 u compared to
Marti°"' wtllllin( sum ol 17,000. A c.,,.rcl
of I.IX! was oo hand Sunday with the
overall totll for the to u r n a m e 1' l
estimated at IS,000.
Martmer.. the first_rouod lead« by two
strokes with 67 (lhree over Mowry ), fell
to a 74 on Saturday. Thia p.rt him twb
I Allen Spikes
I
i Meador
Trade Story
LOS ANGELES -Loo Anc•Ju Ram
<OaCh G«qe AllM today oquelched
rumors that all-pro free-safety Eddie
Mead« misbt be traded to tht Dallas
Cowboys.
Meador. an 11-year veteran with the
Rams who enjoyed another brilliant
seuon in 1969, was quoted in an LA
paper as saying he woo.kl like to play for
Dallas becaUSf he has business interest.'!
there.
•11 have-a Ford deaknhip there and
I'm vice president ol a life insurance
company," 1t1eador said.
"Moreover, I would like to raist my
family in the DaJW area. I grew up Jn
Abilmc and Texas is my borne."
But Allen spiked the rumors shortly
after the story broke.
"Ye.s, I know about Eddie's feelings,''
Allen said. "But I haven't talked trade
with Dallas involving F.ddie and I won't
talk tracie with Dallas involving Eddie."
"Yoo can 't improve your ball club by
trading 90lid people. That's an erToneoui'I
reprt. He'll be with the Rams next year.
He's a key man in our drive f<r a cham·
p;ordip in 1970 ... • TAMPA, Fla. -North coach Duffy
Da.p.rty o1 Michigan State blamed
himself fw a third.quarter gimbie that
failed m:t then aCCU9ed oftidals ol a bid
call that c.'Olt his heavily favored team
tho wimlinC toudidown In the •e<ond
American Bowl football ~e Saturday.
The Rebell evtrilually won 2~23 before
• crowd ol only 17,JJOJ) lbal braved ll(ht
rain and cmJly -atuns.
It was a later play, with about two
minutes remaining, tll;lt b r o u I b t
Deugherty'a dlarge « a b.t call.
It came on a 9eOODd down at the South
four where San Diego State's Dennis
Shaw dumped a pua to Jim McFatlond
of Nebraska, who made a falling catch at
the bact « the end zone.
Daugherty claimed McFarland landed
Oil a one-yard strip of gr&st llllTOUJldinC
a chalked design in the end :.one. The of.
ficial ruled he caught the ball out of
bound!.
"I'm not criticizing the officiating, bot
th.is is: the Y(eirdest end zone marttlng
I've ever seen and l'm sure the game
fihns will !tJOW McFarland 9C'Cl't'd." • ARCADIA -The strike that prevented
Dpening of Santa Anita Pa r k ' 1
thoroughbred race meeting here and a
harnesa meeting at Bay Meadows near
San Francisco continues as the first full
ll'tt:k " 1970 begins.
The tracks were 1o have opened Dec.
21.
Robert Fluor, p-esident of l h e
California hone racing board, sald he
had liked representatives ~ both skies
to be on hand today for a mtetin& bot
ndlher lid• promiMXI to -up. • LOO ANGELES -Los Angeles Laker
attendance is boominc this NaUonal
.Basket.ball Asaociation seuon despite the
1-cl lllan Elgin Baylor and Wlll Cbem-
beriain. What, then, are the people
paying to see? •
Defeme, apparentJy.
"Our defense i! really getting better."
uld Coach Joe ~tullaney after his team
wm. it& fifth game in six ouUngs Sunday
ni&hl by "11ipping Pboeni>. 120-112.
. . .. . . •
'Does It for Martinez
slfQkcs behind Mowry and Chuck
Courtney going Into SUnday'a final round.·
After be made good on 'tt_ pr~
packed two-foot putt on lhe lath green
with Mowry already holed-001, ~Pi1artinez
smiled broadly and accepted con·
gralulations to close out telecast or the
event.
1n the press room he thanked his,man)'
frlehds in the galltry ror continued en-
couragement,.
••My friends . In the iallery kepi me
from getUng depressed after a · stupid
shot," he e1:claimed. "They wOuld come
up and encourage me after! would make
• IMd lhot.
"Hom&cooted meals and the number
o/ practice rouiids I had hett, helped a
great dea.I." be added . He played at lea.'Jt
20 rounds prior to the tournament.
The victory was his biggest in thret
yeara.of.professional compeUHon by S400.
He teamed with Bob Lurm in the Haig
tournament at La Costa sevetill years '
aQo for second place and $6600 prlze
money.
"Normally I seem to do better on a
more demanding course like this one. The
greens here are grainy but the distance is
tonger than the card shows because of
the exacting natuiY of the shots.
"~tlssion Viejo is a little tougher than
tn06l.ol the courses we play on the tour."
Turning to his round for the day, he got
off to a bad start wiUt bogies on the se-
cond and fourth boles. All three players
in his group (Mowry aod Rod FunsetlhJ
birdied the fiftll hole with Martinez coo-
tinuing the hot hand on the sixth and
seveath for two more birda.
Martinez then placed his tee shot on the
green on No. B and watched as Mowry hit
one out of bounds to the right then hit a
provi.!ional ball down the hill to the left.
The Laguna pro picked up ~ valuable
.Jltokts. llS Mowry bad a triple bogey six.
On the ninth hole, Martinez pushed his
tee shot to the right. II hit the blacktop
cart path and bounced well over a
trooblesome ditch for one of the longetit
tee shots ever seen at Mission Viejo. He
was in a trap on his second shot but
recovered"for a par to make the tum one
under.
Three straJght bogies to start the back
nine did lilUe to embrace hil confidence
but bis friends in the gallery came to the
rescue and be parred the nex:t sil holes to
finish two over for the day and one over
for the 54 holes at 214.
On the 15th hole, be had a difficult chip
sh"ot downhill and over a sand trap to the
t'Up. He pitched lO within a foot of the
cup and said afterwards, "that was the
best ch.ip shot I have made in a long
time. I used a nine iron that ha! a pitch
like a wedge . I bought It from the bar·
gain barrel here at "fission Viejo several
years ago for $5. ·• •
Undoubtedly the IM$t $S ii:ives.tment the
young pro · has made and despite new
clubs every so often. this one \Yill remain
SODA POP CELEBRATION -\Vith one game. the for the AFL championship. Linebacker Jim Lynch
Super Bowl, to play, the Kansas City Chiefs cele-of the Chiefs is covered with soda in the jubilant
braled with soda pop instead of champagne Sun~ \•'~Kansas C·ify dressing room at the Oakland Coliseum
day after knocking over the Oakland Raiders, 17-7, following the· game.
'.
We've Done It _B,ef~--Kapp'
Vikes Eye Supe r Bo wl Aft,er 27-7 Ronip
ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Joe
Kapp set the tone for the Minnesot~ Vik-
ings' a~ch to SUnday's Super Bowl
game after beating·, the Cleveland
Browns, '¥1~1, last Sunday for their first
National Foot.ball League tiUe.
"We've dooe it before," sakl the Vik·
inp' blood-spattettd quarterback ... Now
we just have to do it (lne more time.··
Kapp , of course, refelTed to the Vik ·
ingl'I' uphill batUe to the league cham·
pionshlp as a ninth-year expansion team
by whipping Los Angeles for the con-
ference erown and then manhandling
Cleveland before 47,900 frozen fans in
ei&ht-degree chill at M e l ro p o I i t a n
Stadiwn.
Bud Crant, the steel~yed tooch of the
Vikings, took the usual cautious coaehly
outlook on next Sunday'!! Super Bowl
game with Kamas City, the Amerk:an
Football League champs. in Ne\\· Orleans .
"I thought the best team won." said
Grant after watching the final stages of
Kansas City·s 17·7 viclory over Oakland
on television.
"They impressed us with the ir ag-
gressiveness and control of the game, at
le Mt the part we saw .~·
The Vikings and Chiefs have met only
once. in a 1968 preseason game won by
Kansas City 13-10.
"They Wert immense," said Grant .
"We have heard people say that Min.
!'leso&-a and Kansas City are both physical blocking on in.:•
team's. Pt1aybe so, ~ut not ·quite In the · Two passes .by Kapp to Gene
same sense. They are a mudl bilijer ~;Washington 'on which Cleveland defel'lsive
le2.1TI ~ we are. ~ t. _ \ meq·su~ and fell he!~ open up a 14·
.. We don't ha ve people· to m·&tch the 0 le'lld i:tl'~ fin( quarter and made the
siie of Buck Buchanan, Aaron BroWn art:t Bl'O\\·ns try lo play catch-up football .
Jerry Mays. Their offensive line is just' Erich Barnes slifl'P.ld llnd fell while
as big. The physical matchup isn't the \ ,trying t9 cover Washington who too~ the
sa me in the sense that they ·re so darned ball all.alone on the 40 and raced 1n to
big." • complete a 75-yard play for the second
""A Vlkin°s scheduled a squad m~~ toucbdown .. 11~ ''f!t Cl•¥•11rwl Mlftftf'Hll Monday and plan to fly to New Orle, l'W1t Cown1 1• 11
I Tu d · ""-~ a.AJ 'JI ) 1'u1nl1>9 r•rd-O• '' 'n ear y es ay mof"l}lpj. 111e11 un;, w1 •1111119 v1r<1t11• 111 111
really begin to start' iefting rejidy [or the Retum r•rd.. n 1
l"1nn 11·1l·i l·ll·O Chiefs. Puftt1 J·Jl J -•'
"\Ve didn't scout them," said Grant.
"We will have lo depend on Ute game
films we exchange."
TIK' Vikings are lucky they sun ha\'C a
football team in one piece after the ex·
uberant celebration by the fans in U1e
final seronds of Sunday's game. Kapp
was pu1nmeled by ll~ll·wishers on hi s
way to the locker room.
"It was even worse than the Cleveland
rush," said Kapp \\'ho scrambled seven
yards for the first touchdown on a broken
play, after fullback Bill Brown ' bumped
i!'l(O him,
"That was supposed to be an off Lackie
shot by Brown.'' explained Kapp. "But
Bill slipped on the ice and we ran
together so I just tried to follow the
Fumbles l<>1t 1 o
Yt rd1 PMlll1td I .,
Pettv Blasts
" NASCAR Chief
RANOLE1'1AN, N.C. -Rkhard Petty,
whose enll'y blltl.k to the Jan. 18' Motor
1 Trend 500 in Riverside, was returned
after ht! scratched out a "good faith
pledge" on the form , Sunday criticized
NASCAR president Bill France for trying
to be an unofficial ciar of racing.
Stram:
WALKS OFF WITH TJT'LE
Laguna Beach's Richard Martinex
Similar
OAKLAND (AP) -The way coach
Hank Stram feels about it, the Mirmesota
Vikings his Kansas City Ch.iels will meet
In Sunday's Super Bowl game may very
well be the Green Bay Packers in
disguise.
st.ram's memories of the Packers are
colored by the passage of time and the
reflections on the Green Bay team that
whipped his Chiefs 35-10 three years ago
in lhe first Super Bowl game. But Stram
does remember, and he does find
resemblance! in the Vikings.
"In a lot of respects they are very
much alike," Stram said after his Chiefs
had gained entry to pro football's
premier event with a 17·7 victory over
Oakland. "Both teams have simplicity
approach and executed very well.
"They don't do a lot of things -bot
what they do. they do well."
As for his Chie fs, Stram said frankly :
"I don '! think there's any comparison.
Our team is much better than the 1966
learn. We're much better defensively."
That improvement is reflected in the
fact that ooly four defensive starters re-
main from those Super Bowl losers and it
was reflected on the floor of Oakland
Coliseum Sunday as the Oliefs' defense
played the key role in bringing Kansa!'I
City the American Football League
championship. ·
They put on a furiousl y fierce J>aAS rush
on Oakland quarterback Daryle
Lamonica that f<rced him out of the
game at one point with jammed finger!
on his throwing hand and dumped him
four times for losses and so harassed him
that he had three passes intercepted.
And, after the Chiefs had sputtered to a
17·7 lead, the defensive unit four times
stopped the Ralders inside the Kansas Ci·
ty 40 in Uie fourth quarter when any suc·
cessful offensive tbr.ust by Lamonica
might have changed the momentum of
the teams and the result of the game.
"Our great desire -our will to win -
v.·as expressed' by our defensive lint.''
said Stram as he stood in the Olief dress.
ing room, resplendent in his Kansas City
traveling uniform, a black jacket with the
Chief crest -and his ever-present rtd
vest.
"We were a very tight offensive club st
the beginning. The d,efense kept us in the
game." . . They did for the first 27 minutes,
limiting Oakland to a 7.0 lead on Charley
Smith's three-yard run fo!IOW"ing a 24+
yard pass to Warren Wells, the .fleet
Raider receiver ·who played despite a
shoulder separation suffered three week;;
'i•· Then the Chiefs broke the tint ol t\\'o
important offensive plays Stram singled
out as the keys to the Yictory.
With the ball on the Oakland 42,
quarterback Len Dawson sent Frank
Pitts straight down the sidelines for a 41·
yard pass that defender Nemiah Wilson
couldn't break up. Wendell }!ayes smash·
ed the final yard on the next play and Jan
St.enerud's conversion made it 7-7.
"The play to Pitts provided us wiUi a
great lift," said Stram , ''and we were irt
dire need of it. We were tight offensively
but I felt if ll'e eould get untracked we
could relieve the pressure.·•
The pressure was t h e r e again,
however. midway of the third quarter
when Dawson went back to pass with a
third·and-1 4 situation on his own two yard
line and was chased into the end zone by
the Oakland defense, arching a pass down
the sidelines to Otis Taylor just bef«e he
was reached.
·•oos wasn't the primary receiver.·•
Dawson explained. "I was looking lot
Robert Holmes across the middle but he
got banged. I couldn 't wait much longer
so I threw it so it would have gone out of
bounds if he didn't catch it ."
Taylor caught it -and he caught it in
bounds, making a brilliant over the head
grab for 35 yards that took tbe Chlefs ou t
of trouble and sLartOO a drive that didn 't
end until the goal line had been crossed
by Holmes oo a five-yard run.
'~"'· •11t1ff1
Ftr.I da"'M " " R"'~"'lil Y•"'•9~ • ..
P1111t19 y1rt11ue '" '" Rllvrn y11'd191 "' ' Pinn 1·11.0 17-'5>• p""'' .. ,) ..,.
Fumbltl ... • • Y1"'5 pe~ailll'CI ,, •
NFL Backdoor Classic Dead
''ThiJ man st.ill wants to k~ control
110 percent and II can't be done," Petty
said. "The spgrt ha s outgrown a one man
operation."
Petty's remarks came after France an-
nounced that his fonn. and !hose of
drivers James Hylton and E. J . Trivette,
had been rejected.
MIAMI (AP) -Pm football's moot Jn-
!amous llepchild is dead. Roman Gabriel
gave the 10.year"l>ld NFL Playoff Bowl a
four-bomb salute and the O a 11 a s
Cowboys stood around as pallbeam&.
If thttt wu any reason for the NI·
tfllnal Football L .. pe'• backdoor clU&lc
Jt was $1.25 mHUon funneled the playen'
pll'Ulion fund durine the 1960s. But after
• decade a1 t hlYen !or champiomhip
pllyatf lottrat the misnamed event la no _.._
Loi Alllelel clobb•,..Mbo Cowboys. 31·
fl, Sabrdiy at ll,151 fans braved a
rlfnstorm to see the mlahty Gabriel
•nrow a wet ball ror l?uchdowns of 17, 49,
lS aJll( l1 y1rd!.
,
11le NFL 's contract "'Ith Ult sponsoring
Orange Bowl Committee ran out Sa tur·
day, but the Miami group \Yanls mote.
A spokesman said the group would like
to match runners up of the A1nerican and
National conferences afler lhe NFL
merges with the American Football
League next season.
Gabrit:·s efforts earned $1 ,200 for t'acb
Ram. The Dallas troops made $000 11
head. Both team! could only drearn 11bout
the $25,000 due the MlnncsoU1·Kansss Ci·
t,y victor in thl$ week 's Super Bowl in
New Orleans.
••J had no e:rcui;es, It's just lhe SC<'{)nd
part of a bad dream," said Craig 41orton,
the Dallas quarterback . The flrsl ac1 ~·as
11 38·1• loss to Cle\·eland in the NfL
semi finals .
Coach Tom Landry said Dallas· 1n·
effectiveness on scoring drives lef t liltle
doubt v.·hal was ahead. "\\'hen you get
down close on two or three octasions and
can 't even salvage a field go81, there·s
not much more yOu ca n expect than a 31-
0 licking," he said.
l..os Angele.; took a more positive ap-
proach to the affair. It was somewhat
like dancing with your sister. but the
Rams at least pretended it was a pretty
sister.
"It gives U!I n \\'inning mrl ror next
sumn1er·~ 1r11ining camp1'1 said massive
[)coacon Jones, voted the game's top
d<'fensh·e player
All three France said, had mark~ out
a clause which forbade drivmi from pull-
ing but of a race for v.·hlch they had
qualified without pennission of NASCAR
officials.
Last year, a number ol members of the
Prof~onal Drivers .Association pulled \
out or the Talladega 500 after they said r
the track was unsafe .
Petty is president of lhe POA , and the
other two are· also members.
Pttty said he did not feel the return of
his rntry blank was a "personal thing.''
Petty 11dded. "If this had been just mine
returned , then I might lhJnk so."
Petty said he had not been In contact
wilh ~ranee since the m~ll pullout of
POA members at the Talladega race .
•
Ul"IT ........
READY FOR MOTHBALLS -Greg B'ro\vn , 14, of Afinneapolis,
offers assl1tance in loading Cleveland Bro\vns baggage for lhe long
lrlp back lo Ohio after lhe Browns Josi. 27-7, to lhe Vikings Sunday
in lhe NFL litle iame.
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~RSIDE -With tbe
d1Mllne·1Ull day1 away, more Uiall 40 driven haV< filed tbetr
entries for the Jan. 18
ruVerslde Motor-Trend 500 at
Riverside InternatJonal Race.
way.
Twenty-nbie of the entries
are from West Coast drivers,
indicating that major league
atock car racing hu anived in
this part or the country.
Among the West Coast en-
bies were those of Ray Elder,
Fresno, and Jack McCoy, of
Modesto, who finished sixth
and seventh respectively in
the Texas 500 last month, the
final NASCAR race of the 1969
season.
Eldef', 28, Is considered tht
most talented stock car driver
in the west and in his very
first major stock car race In
For Your
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Monda1, Jan11ary '· 1'l70 OAILV PILOT 21
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the souttr. flnbhed loth. That ..... , . ,.1o
was in the Daytona 500 {tut
:vear and he followed that)wlth
bis sixth place finl!h at Texas.
Elder will be 4rivln,g a 1970
Dodge Charger Daytona, one
of Chrysler Corp. '11 exotic new
winged sedans, capable of
spee4s Jn excess of 180 miles
per hour along RJverslde's
long baek straightaway.
A husky cotton farmer by
trade, Elder made a name for
himseU early on dirt tracks In
tM San Joaquin Valley and
now appears on the threshold
of becoming a 1tar 1n major
league stock car racing.
McCoy, 32, owns a tire
manufacturing company in
Modesto and unlike Elder, has
no desire to make the Grand
National circuit, preferring in-
stead the smaller tracks on
the West Coast. Although he's
been in four previous
Rivenlde 500s, his best finish
being 15th In 1968, his onlY
super speedway appearance in
the south was the race at Tex-...
They will all be compeUng
against some of the gre1te1t
drivers of all branches of auto
racing: Marlo Andrettl, Dan
Gurney. A. J. Foyt, Richard
Petty, David Pearson, LeRoy
Yarborough and many more
Grand National drivers.
Pro Cage
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College Cage Roundup
~:Pacific-8 Chase ..
~. Un.der ~ ay Friday
" ' : By THE ABSOCIA'IED P1111118
• ~ The UCLA lkulns, ·~ after
elgfll -... enc< gamtJ, """deftnK
ol thelr Pacilk:-1 beitr.ttball till< l"r1day
nigh! at home agalnll Onpl.
that o0 a ~ven nlpt we could take any·
one. I won t 1ay we're the best, but we
rank up there with ll>e best and Klnlucky
ranlu up ther~ too."
Wooden m1ght have CONidered tht
Notre Dame lame ao artistic triumph.
but little elle. Southern Calilomla mtertains O!<JOO
State In the ooly -F!'ldly night
1ame. All teams will be in conference
play Saturday with ~ State al
UCLA, Oregon at USC, 'Califcrnia at
Wasll!nglon -SUie, •nd Stanlonl •I
Wa>flinglon. ·'
The: Bruins, ranked No.. 2 behind Ken-
tucky last week, ran away from 13th-
rat.ed Notre DI.me, 10&-'l'l, Saturday night
before a oaUonal television audienct.
Coocl1 Jdm Woode!) cleared tu ben<h,
~ with m.r. Ulan 13 mlnutes left In ~ Pme. 1be Bruins' John Vallely and
NOtn J?ame~I Austin Carr IOOf'ed 14
•Pieet.
USC froze the ball againn Florida
State to protect a 71-68 victory. ll was
USC 's e!Jhth win in 11 games.
C&llfornla lost to the University of San
Francisco, 69-67, wben Pete Cross netted
a ~root jwnp shot at the final buu.er.
Only IJ secondJ before, Cal had tied the
game.
"'lbt game wu not that important."
said the Wtra-suca:uful co.cb. '"l'he only
thing we really care 1botlt is the con-
ference season, because if we win our
conference, we make it to the NCAA
tournament ... and that's our goal."
Upstlll MW!sdppi had Kentucky ll'y
teven points at the end of the fint hall,
OOt then the Wildcat& Jet loose some
deadly art.Wery in the person oC Dan
L!sel. Issel. Kentucky'• 1-foot..a jumping jack
whom coach Adolph &pp calls the best
college center in America, ICCftd 3l
pointa.
UCI to Host
Nebraskans
Wednesday \Yashington State downed Ganzaga, '1S.
6' Saturday, and the Wuhinglon HUJkies
won 14·70 over Yale. George Irvine By HOWARD L BANDY
1corM 31 poinLs for wasblligton. °' llM 0t1,.. , • ..., s11tt
Santa Clara dumped Hayward State, San Francisco State Colle&e hasn't
ta~. Pacific Coast Athletic Associ1tlon posted • basket.ball victory in eight cut.
action this Friday, Long Beach State ings this season and UC Inine kept the
meell San Diego State, Los Angeles State streak intact Saturday nieht with a 95-ll
plays at San Jose State and UC Santa victory over the bay city quintet in Craw·
Barbara wiU be at Fresno State. --ford Hill
. Elsewhere in the Top Ten . s~turdar Boastini the most famed colk!ge presi-rught, Kentucky shot down Misai&slpp1,
§-73· fourth-ranted North Carolina whip-dent on the west coast, Dr. S. I.
ped ' Rice 9t-72 . fifth-ranted Ohio Hayakawa, the G1Urs may be putting
Un1versily 'bela~ Kent State, 71-62; basketbaJI where ~cl~ has been
Tennessee, No. 6, clipped Mississippi for several yean with d1ssHient students.
State $8.56· Houston No. I defeated Last season they wtf'e the West.em
Hawaii· 115.M and ~inth -'r•nked ' Regional reiresentatives in the NCAA Washington~ Yale, 14-70. ~Uege division playo(rs. ~ their
ln garnet involving the Second Ten, No. clunb to the top In westeln divis:Jon play,
11 Davkilon whipped The Qt.adel, 56-41, the Gaton ~pied UC Irvine and
SL Bonaventure. No. 12, ripped Baldwin· Saturday night 1 victory was doubly
Wallace 9"3· No. IS North Carolina sweet for vetentn1 m the Anteater five.
State ~feate<i Virgi~ 71-M: No. 16 "1 thcught we played a bit sluggishly,"
Columbia walloped Cornell, IU3; No. JI coach Tim nit •id foUowin& the game.
M""lU"lle subdued Detroit, at.fl. "But titer lhat pme Monday nl&fit (lhe
Two ranked teams were upset Saturday Antea~ lost in triple overtime to
-No. 17 Purdue lOft to Iowa H-88 and Northern Arizona ), 'ft ezpected it.
No. 20 Colorado bowed to Oklahoma 73-72. "The kids perked up when they needed
Notre Dame, which lost by two points to and made the big play lo stay in front
to Kentucky and by one in overtime to when they Wt!'t Ureat.ming."
Sooth Carolina, never wu in Saturday'• Tift's team upped its aeumaJ mark to
game with UCLA. Wooden attributed the U with the 'Victory and hopes to incrM8e
impmslve vtdory lo "a 1ood, weli· lhat lo • .ilOlO mart durin& the C<llllini
balanced team efforli' week.
"We weren't giving them the good Wednesday evtrrirJ& the Anteaters host
ahots early In the game," Wooden said. John F. Kennedy College of Wohoo,
OWi que on: an &ar-Netnski: am on Friday cveuiug they
Kentucky? entertain Cal State (Fullerton) in a
"I have no idea if we can beat Ken· rematch, (If one of their vlct«ie!.
lucky," said Wooden. "t haven't seen Saturday night the winltA Gat.cn look-
Kentucky. But we're a good enough team ed like an)'thln& but a loser at out.set of
the 1ctton. 11>ey pulled in front with a
pair of bul<el.s by Jlod Otto and ....
TEXAS NO. 1
lN FINAL POLL
Texas. the No, l football team ln the
natton, will have a tough t1mc repeating
as national champion next lt'UOft. The
ll>nghoms will k>5e quarterback: Jame.a
Street and halfback Ted Koy, a top pro
Jl'o.specl.
The A.!soc.iated Press' final p:>ll ol
aport.swri\ers and spcrtscuters, after the
Jan. I bowl games, made Penn Sta~ No.
2 and USC third. Ohio State WU fourth.
Notre Dame climbed from ninth to fith ;
Missouri remained sixth, ArlcanSu fell
from third to seventh, Michigan c:bopped
from seventh to ninth and Loulaiana
State, which did not play in.a bowl, was
lhi.fted from eighth to No. 10.
UCI Fourth
In Swimfest
The UCl..A Bruin swim team dominated
the annual UC Relays held Saturday at
Santa Barbara with the Berkeley campus
of the family group finishing """'1d and
UC Irvine fourth behind host Santa Barbara.
The Anteaters were stron1 \n the
f~)e events With Steve Farmtr,
Duane OloOn, Mike Martin and Rich
Euon pa)-uclpeting on the four·man
teams. In other compeUtlcn, a lack of
depth •sill> hampered the Irvine con-
Un&ent.
mained then until Irvine loot< command
at 11 :21 when the Anteaten ran off 13
straight points In a -m1nute opan while the visitors were l«ftless. nu. brought the ""'nt lo 26-15 and
Irvine held the lead tht balance of the
nighl.
W:rth four minlltes Jett In the second
half, the Gatcn cbed the margin to 77-
72, but Irvine ran up 11 poinll to three for
the Gal«s and the ou1«1me wu oettled .
Steve Sabino paced UC! scoring wllh !4
poinb u all five Nrters hit in double
ft .......
Sophomore Bill ?.ioore had t great first
half, hltling II of his 20 points, including rune· field goa]J. He tlso led the team
with seven rebounds with another
outstanding periannance.
Mike Barnes had 10 assists and Jeff
Cunningham seven to lead In that depart· menL
The Anteaters hit on 57 percent of their
shota from the floor and 1'l percent at the
lrte throw line. SF State hit S1 percent
from the n00r and 87 percent at the line.
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IT'S "L.L MINE -Saddleback College's Jim Helm
grabs a rebound during action Saturday njght
again.st Santa Ana as the Gauchos fell to the Dons.
72-48. Other Sadd.Jeback players in the picture in-
clude Randy Lawrence (21) and Cam Smilh (32).
Laguna, Estancia Win
Holmes' Free Throws
S-av-e Dmblos,6-4-63
By STEVE ANDREWS
Of tlle OallY ,llltl' llltf
Rudy Holmes' two crucial tree throws
with nine seconds remaining gave
liiisskln Viejo a hard fought 64--63 win
over Servit.e and the consolaUon title of
the Brea basketball toornament Saturday
in the Brea gym.
In other clashes. Sonora downed Brea
for the champlonship, 72-M, Estancia
belted El Dorado, 6&-54, for third place
and Laguna Beach nipped Neff, 56-SS, for
seventh spot.
Servile missed a chan~ aL taking the
lead with 30 seconds left as John Dunn
was called for three seconds in the key.
In desperation the Frian had lo in-
t.entionally foul Holmes, who put lbe
game away with his pair ol. charity .......
Hobnes later named on the all-tourna-
ment team hit a jumper shot and Dan
Kratz added a free throw in the first two
minutes of play in the final period lo give
Mission Viejo the lead, *53, Jt never
relinqul.shed.
Pi.fission Viejo, \Vhich won this tourney
crown a year ago, played the en~ game
with the same fh1e men. Four cl those
were in double figures with Kirk Myus
leading the way with 16. Holmes and
Kratz hit for 14 and Rick Wtldsley added
12.
Estancia jwnped off lo a IO-point ad-
vantage during the first quarter but had
to flght off El Dorado's Golden Hawks to
gain third place laurels.
The Hawks, down SM6 with 3:20 left, -
oubared Estancia, 6-2. and found
themselves behind ooly 60-S1 with 1:36.
However, quick buckets by Steve Buller
and Mike Hays and a free throw by all-
loumament player Skip Williams pro-
vidtd the Eagles wrth a commanding 65-
52 lead with 4• seconds left.
For a while it looked as if Estancia
~"OO!d make it a nm-away. The fast
breaking Eagles accelerated to a 7·2
margin in the first two minutes of the
gaµie but El Dorado fought back and took
a 9-7 lead.
·But in the next five mi notes Estancia
outcUd the Hawks by a 13-4 count and
toot a 22-12 advantage at the buzzer.
Williams' fine board play and 11 points
led the Eagles. Butler contributed 16
points and Hays 14.
Mite McMurray's twu free throws with
three seconds on the clock gave Laguna
Beach its win over Neff.
Neff's Tom Peonhallegon turned from
hero to goat as he gave the Trojans the
lead ~&4 on a short bank shot from the
right side with II seconds left. However.
·he turned right around and fouled
lifcMurray setting the stage for the
crucial ooe-and-ooe situation.
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Gauchos Fall;
Desert Citcuit
ppener Frida}'
.Saddleback College's basketball team
has four days to prepare for its Desert
Conference opener, following a 72-48 \05s
to Santa Ana Saturday night in the v.'in-
ners ' gym.
The Gauchos open the conference race
against a tough College of the Desert
quintet Friday night at ~fission Viejo
High. The Gauchos also have a Saturday
night conference game at Imperial
Valley.
The Jos5 to Santa Ana ran Saddleback 's
pre-conference record to 7-6, \be best of
lhe three area junior colleges.
Although playing one of lb worst
games of the season, coach.Boy Stevens'
club still held its own to the first half
against Santa Ana, trailing .the Dons at
intennifsion, 30·25. • ; ·
Saddleback failed to warm up in lhe R·
cond 20 minutes and the Gauchos were
forced to extend their defense in an effort
to catch up.
Cam S'tnith was lhe only Saddleback
player to hit in double figures . The
former Laguna Beach star canned 14
poinLs.
Santa Ana's Jim Huckestein was hot
from the ouLside in the first half, hitting
eight bas~ts in It attempts. He settled
for 2{) poinls for the night. The DoM got a
balanced scoring attack with five playei's
in double figures.
Guard Bill Noon, Sad41eback's leading
scorer last season, returned to action for
the first time in nine games. Noon has
been Ineligible because af a lack of suf-
ficient uniLs in the opening semester.
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Htll!lm. KO<I; S."11 ...... )Cl, SlltdltbllC~ U. HighesL. rini.sh for Irvine came in the 4
x 100 (reelt.yle event when it finished se-
cond to UCLA.. The Bruins rirushed In
~:15.4 with Irvine second at 3:21.0.
UCLA donUnated the action from start
to finish. winning every event. Santi
Barbar• wu second in both dJvtna events
and the brtllt.strote relay race In Id·
dition to trvl.oe11 runnerup spot in the 400-
yard relay. Otherwise, Cal Berkeley
1nbbed nmenup honors lo< ll>e blJ.
"""" of the .-.
Pirates Find Themselves, 119-71
The Brulba aet two meiet records lfld
tied anolher. They tied a mark held by
Irvine in the USO yard freestyle •t 1;27.8.
The marks .tere ltl in \he t x 200
(l'ftJlylo and Ille 4 I JOO bacUtroke .......
• With the e1rl1 1eu«1 action In Santa
Barbora .-behind them, lhe Anlealers
~an conce:ntr1te on duaJ competition until
Ille NCM med In Dt!Joll In M•rch .
,. Nm. meet for Lbe Anteater 1wimmert ,
b al San !Jle&I' SUI< Jan. 17.
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of tll9 Ott1¥ Pu.t Stell
Herb Livsey, Oranp Coast Colleae's·
buketbtll coach, has talked about con-
sistency all i;euon Iona.
He hu reptatedly uki that lf his club
can put It all tos;ether the Pirates wlU
win basketball 1ame1.
They dW just that S.turday nicht in an
lmprusive 119-71 victory over Chaffey at occ.
It came 1t the rtght time. Orange Col!!t
oPf:RS the South Coast Conference race
Wednesd•Y 11 Ful~rton and Jr the
Pirates can retain thla conslsttncy, they
may ourprlle qulle a few people.
Although Chaffey is a below-average
junior college ba.skttball team. the
Pirales ·probably wou)d have gl\ltn &rtJ
club In the two-year bracktt a tough
1ame Saturday.
It was all thert. Some brilliant
shooting, control cl both boards. good
defervie and 1 lack of turnovers. ·
Sophornore forward P b 11 Jordan. tM
team leJder, had one cl his best
performances cl the season, II not the
be!I.
Jordan, hi!Ung from In close and
out.side •. poured through 31 points fur
1ame honors. fie had Ii at the half, con-
necting on st\'en of ti shots.
ln the second 20 minutes, the rormer
Corona del Ml'r Star canned seven af
C?!lht shots from lhe field while playing
only the first 10 minutes. Jordan also
hauled In 11 rebounds, eight off the
defensive boards.
The game was a rout fro1n the opening
tipoff. The Pirates hlJd little trouble
buik:lina up a 11·Point halltlme margin
(51-lll).
In fact, the g1me got '° out of h11nd
that Livsey started rubstituting v;ith IS
minutes left in the second hall and
Orange Coast hoklJng 11 71-38 lead.
Four other Pirates hit Jn double
figures. Jim KJndeloo followed Jordan
with 19 and Paul Holmes had 1$. Ron
Love, in a starting role. hit JO and
Preston Spellmeyer also had 10 while
playing the last six minutes.
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ll212011
Lions Come
'
Close 42-41;
Barons Fall
By ROGER CARI.SON ot .. n.llf ,,., tNff
Holiday buketball toumamentl are a
thlng ol the past for WeMllnNr and
Fountain Valley tqday and both !Oall\J
could probably. care less aft.er Saturday's
actlon in the fourth annual SanUago
Tournament.
Westmlnsler drOpped a one· point ~ion in the final four seconds· of the
dwnpiooship game lo host Santiqo, '2·
41, wlule Fountiin Valley was IUC·
cumblng again, this time to Bolsa Grandt
by a 67-59 count.
In other tourney action, Foothill dlspos-
. ed of Tustin, 74-6.1, for coMOlalton honors
and Lynwood took third with an 17-61 win
over Buena Park.
• Y,'est~er's final game before Sunset
League hostilities open was a rematch
v.1th iLs recent television opponent, but
the game didn'1 even remoi-....ly reeemble
tll£ 70-54 crusher that Santiago planted on
\Vestminster the previous week ..
Instead, the Lions crossed up the Cav1
with some excellent defensive measures,
including a surprising m a n -t o • ma n
coverage in the final period that nearly
pulled it off.
\Vestminster took the lead (39-31) and
v.·ent into a stall with 3:5.5 to go, then up-
ped it to 41-38 \\'ith 2:12 lelt.
Santiago got a bucket back -then
regained possessian '!rith 36 seconds.left
after Wesbninster b)ew a one-and-<>ne
situation at the free throw line. ·
Cav ~1ark Dekker then hll with a clutch
18-footer with four secol)ds remaining to
give the hosts their third straight San·
tiago Utle.
Steve McLendon aod Dan Broderick
were the only Liom in double figures with
14 and JI.
Broderick and mate Richard Mann
were accorded all-tourney honors •
Fountain Valley's final tuneup before
entering Irvine League play Wednesday
was another in a series of frustrating
losses for coach Dave Brown and hi!
Barons.
The inability to connect from the field
and at the free throw line underlines the
Barons' eighth loss in nine games u they
coold hit only 31.4 percent from the field.
Despite the poor shootlnk percentage
again. Fountain Valley opened up with a
spirited attack, hitting six af il! first
seven shots from the field and held a 14-
13 advantage with 1:40 left in \he first
period.
1 And, the Barons still h3d a Ue (22-21)
with 2:49 left in the half before the roof
caved in on the strength of Bolsa Grande
guard Andy Miramontes.
The 5-7 senior quickly hit four gratis
~hots and field goal to give lhe Matadors
a six-point cushion and the winnml)ed by
no worse than three polnl! ror the dura·
lion of the contest.
He finished with 22 counten along wilh
his ball-hawking to add to mate Dave
Kerlin's 27.
-Dave -r;-ynch le<lill B"aron scoiirs with
24.
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Golden West
Awaits Opener
•
After 2 Wins
After a successful two-game northern
trip, Golden West College's basketball
team will now prepare for Its SOuthern
California Conference opener Wed!lell!af
night against LACC at Orange Coast.
Coach. Dick Strlcklin'a club completed 1
two-game sweep Saturday with a 71-71
victory over Cuesta at Santa Barbara.
The night before, the Rustlers ,clipped
Santa Barbara. 77-68.
In Saturday night's game, the RusUen
led from start to finish, enjaytr11 a com-
fortable 12-Point bulge l:lf.21) at the hall.
Galden West had a 75-$$ leld wtth
seven minutes left in the game, but with
reserves playing were only able io acort:
two points.
Chris 'I'h<anpson again led the way both
offensively and derenstvely for th•
.Rustlers. Thompson. topped all 8C'Orers
with 23 point.! and alao held Cutsta'a
hlgh-eeoring forward Dennis C a t e t acore)ess. ·
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,,
/Hore Sports
Pages 23,24
.·
·FAMED COSTA MESAN
Oan Gurney
•Baron Mat Star
MVP for Tour11ey
Fountain Valley finished in
second place Saturday during
the Mira'" COifi invitational
Wrestling tournament and the
Barons' 157-pounder, Dan
Ltwis, was named t h e
tourney's most v a I u a b I e
~estler.
'J1Je Bal'O\UI, who downtd
Palos VirdN, a winner of 17
straight dual malcht•1. U·ll,
In their Jal oullnl, ttauld thl
. l\fater Dei
Bags 13th
·Triumph
tourney champ Brawley, &78.
Mira. Colla waa third, South
·Torrance, f~ and Nogala,
!11th.
Lewis pinned his final foe in
3:03 to take bis weight class'
title.
In th e four matches Lewis
w•s Jnvolyed .in during the
day, he pl"""' lllroe op-
ponenll arid lta4 on~ two poilJll lcond ·Oii him. \wo
•em• In the~ oha1!I Ollllllp
m•tch. •
~ountaln Valley lta4 l1lo other. chamPlena. P a u I Lill ano WOii the I~
dlvl1lon with a lhrtlllnfl J.O win
In overth'flt.
Mike ttolllnden ""' the Ill· pc>11nd winner IAl'lllftl Illa
madal will! e W docl1lon, alff
ln qverUme.
the top four wtrt 'nm , Other 81ron1 end'"'~
VICTORVILLE -MJter aeoond In Ille !II-pound ,
Dei Hiib's varsity ba1kolb11J J111'1')' Combe, f~n tlla team chalked up another vie-!IS-pound dlvialon a M
·-. --. ~ M-. ""'°"' 5, 1970 D.lll.Y l'Mf 13
Gurney Co~pares Se .. If to G~ur:riey of ·1:955
Dan G.,..111 j\111 llD lllo rut of UI. He11 qtnc,
America'• moa vtrllilll'
auto racet 1m 't ID)'WMre
clooe to belnl thtoueh. ol c:oorH, but he ~II ho'I OD
lllo ..... 1 lido ol hll carw'.
Four months away from hla
l9th blrtMly, Gum<y 1111lle1
when be'• ul<ed about bow
lon1 ho will eontlnue to dr!V•.
"It could be a year and It
aiuld bl tlehl r._t•n," he &aja.
, "I jult haven t mad& up my
J!llpd. ,,__ ett a Joi o( lac-
tan ·lnvolvod.
.,,.. .,._ Juan Manuel
FMP! dldA'I ..U.. UDlll l>e
WU 4'. U ''111 allle lo oflanl1e
mJ Ufe to concentrtte on rao-
ln& and bop up 1llY .,,.
thwlum, I ""1eelVabl7 could
10 that Iona."
The you!hlul.lootJng
Gurney, who be1an 1111 Jl.
lustrloul -In • lporU cu race at TorteY Pjne1 In
1151, ~ hit yean. Hll •~
maMOI' and lnlectlOUI 1rtn hll race car bulldln& com-
ar• qqlck to win him lrieodl. pany, All American 'Racers,
GunieJ eCNllpared hlinfOK Inc., ol Santa Ana.
todly to the Gurney of JOU. "There are only 2t hours a
"I'ro more ~ after a race dlY and )'OU can do ooly so now thu 1 111ed to be 11 be . ,
&llllled.. t•Jt'• more dtfno1it much in the Ume Y,OU re not
'"''me to mabltaln myHK In '"°'plng,"'th•W~ ~pound top c:oadlUGo. I'm abou~ 20 veteran esplaloed. "vie have
poundf hllvitr than t .sbo\lld ~ people work1ng for my com-
bo. To be .at Yollf top polel)tlll,, pany. It takes quite a chWlk
you have to be in your be!lt qut of my We.'~ .
physical Iba~.'.' . , The man who w:u the nm..
Gurney.11• UR J1 ,buill arowkl nerup in I.he last lndlanapoliJ
,, r~ct 1to'l 1redllt1!1' letlf'i "Ill or ra~ "· hl1 l!llall
amounl ol driving 1n1 1!9 11ll· ......
In !act, he plans on driving
in ':•about 30'.' nentl nut
year. That'• U m1ny racu u
he's ever tackJtd ln one year
before. 1
Hll lt'IO llCbedule lnclucltl '
four USAC events -the lady
600, the Ru Mays 300 at
Riverside; lhe ·Dan GuflltY 200
were yau wl1en Cali'°'11ia
paid over -68 .million .dolla~
in interest last year?
al Kllll, Wub., .;. -Ille
Califcrnla SOO at • ~ new Ontario Motdr Speedwa)I ••
Gumey will race In all the
Cen-Am and Trant-Am evento.
Gurney, who lut cb'QJ:e a
Formula I car In 1111, aldlles
oul hll lte7 vlcia'y Jn.I th•
Be!1tan Grind· P.rtx 11U ' my
bluat ever."
The !ale Jimmy Clark ol
SCOtlaDd ratu u the! beat the
SOuthtm CIUtomll native ha1
competfd q~.
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,,
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,•
tory Saturday night to add to Walker nolched a.I Ill lbt f(! Ifflpressive 13-2 mark itlh -1~ lfflJJ; ----
a 65--60 triumph over ho1t Vic-. '
tor Valley }ligh of the Ool4en
League.
Coach Jerry Tardie'.•
Monarchs took advant~1e al a
hot second quarter to 1r1b a
10-point lead at the hair a!ld
never trailed in the thlrfJ lfld
fourth periods.
Tom Walktr sparke4 the•
cond quartar4Jll!fl wlth·a cou-
ple ol a .. •14alo and •ubae-
quent layun1,
: He fin!~ the n! Ill 'with II
points to il!)ara tha ~l1h point
bonors fot Mater Del lfllh
Ralph Chandol.
• Chandol ltd Qle winner• In
reboundlnl wltb 12 l hd Tom
McMenalT\Jn chlppe<! In with
. 11 poin~ to itve Mater Del
three pla)'ert Jn d o u b I e
figures. ~ •
D.,e · ~!Ht· td~ . nl11t
points to tho total liioludlng
seven good ones from the tree
throw line.
Kiley had seven assists to
add to his night's 'A'ork.
~1ater Dei has some time
out coming to it this week with
the next non·league action Fri·
day night with invading Loyola
High.
MA.Tl" 011 {U) ftflitf .. ... ........ w.•~ l'MMe!Mmln ... ' ' 1 , • 1 2 2 ,,
J 1 I 11
0 1 7 I
KlllV 1 1 1 ' -1 0 1 ' l 0 , '
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,, 17 " .,
Sc1r1 by Qv1rt""'
M•Mr O.t H 11 11 11-4.S Victor V1ll•V lf 11 U lt-¥1
·;f'ro Hockey ,,
. Standings
~~ YO!'k ......
Man!"'ll .....
ClllctlO ,....,.
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1!111 Oivitklll
W L T l"tt. G,. GA
711 r .s11n~
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11 11 1 ':I lot to
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Wttl DW!tl911
SI lllU~ It ll • iU l:U ~ ~1111"'111 ' U 11 :Ill IOI 110
P!lltlM,lrtll 11 ii • 71 rt lOI
PMl,MtlPlll• I lS 11 11 Ill lt!I
OAlllllW'f t 71 J 73 IJ • 17$
Let 0jlill1l'!'lts 1 '1 .s 1' n 1'1
' ~.~1'~.""o!r~.!'i""' 1 Niw Yatk '· M'""'scile J, I~ Dch<ol! A. Phlltdtlollll l
St. l~ f , Pl"tllv~ 0 ~le f, Chic-l
Bo110n 6, Lei AnwlU 7
·-· Svll4lr'1 It-lit T01'1111to ~. PUtat.l•t~ ._ lk
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TllllJ"t 0-
Na .. !Mt IClltdl.li.:I
LA ·Meet .
GetsKeino
For -Mile
Klpcbogo Kelno, the lllllc
ta.Uc K_,ya Olympia "metric
mile" told medal wlnntr, ls
comlns back to lht Ul!lltd
StateJ and wtl! nm Ille mlle In
the Sunkist Invitational Jndoor
meet Saturday night, Jan. 17,
at the Los Angeleo Sparta
Arena.
Kelpo will •-r •I
Phlladelphla on Jan. 14 on hi•
br!,r IWIHl\MI •bll to lhi
country.
The amazing K@nyan star-
tled the track world wlth hiJ
smashing Olympic record vic-
tory of 3:34.9 for 1500 meters
at the Mexico City Olympiad.
He won the race by the
ridiculous margin of more
than ZO yards over Jim Ryun.
Kelno's time for the distance
(the equ ivalent to a S:52 or
3:53 mile) is the second
fastest ever run despite the
fac t the Olympics were eon·
tested al Mexico City'• 7800-
foot altitude.
Ke.ino figures he can run
from M seconds faster at sea
level, which meam he ran a
3:50 mile on his way to bis
Olympic victory,
KJp says be Is In fine shape,
having run 3:37.2 for 1500 at
n1ore than ~reet altJtude ln
September. Hlll goal here will
be the world indoor mile
record of 3:56.4 held by Tom
O'Hara.
AJso coqling from Kenya Is
the new wonder runner, Naf.
tall Bon, who will take on
Olympic Champion R a I p h
Doubell of Australia in the
1000.yard run. Bon shocked
Ooubtll in Europe last Sum·
mer and recorded sb:zllng
times in doing so.
Doubell Is taking Bon
seriously, having knocked off
a new Australian record ¢
J :4&.8 for 800 meters the other
day.
TickcL~ for the meet are on
sale at the SporU! Artna, Rt~
6131, Mutual and Uberty
ticket agencies and Com·
pulicke t.
1
Were ran amonr oar depositms
who had more. than 350,000 savinp
actounta at the Nation's Largest
Fedtral? We hope you11 be among
ta. ATerS who11 earn the highest .
inlm'Mt on insured savings
at Callfomia Federal thia y-1
Why not start the New Year righ '
by opening an account soon?
diooee the one that's best far you.
Our most popular plan is
California Federal's Regular Passbook
Account. Leave money and
interest in your account for a year
and receive an aruiual yield of
5.18'/. !! our current rate of 5Y. and
dally compounding of interest
continue far the year.
And we have new 6-Mopt'it7Jonus
Accounts that pay 5.2/iY. per anhum.
.These new eertifieate -ma eam
our regular 5'/, current annual rate, ·
compounded ciaily and payable day In
to day out-plus a bonuil-paid at Uie
end Of 6 months at 1/~ annual rate.
After 6 months, you reeelte reeuJar
interest-plus a quarterly bollllll.
· :To qualify, open.a ~WI _ _,,...,.it
a,lid inlintain a balance of $1,000 or
more. The minimurq. ~la 6 ~
Califomia Federal, 5avi"9s
and Loan AssociaUon •Assets over $1.6 Billion · '
'
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f'·fJQns'· TV Tilt .a Success;
~ .. . . ... ' \ ~Mesa Changes GrUl Foes
~-.. Westminsltf fflJ[h 's first encounter vdth
t.elevlstd bUketba11 eamea turnd out to be a
•.first rate success -tecbnlcally.
Unlol\Jnately !he Lions dropped Ole ver·
diet, 70-M, to Santiago, but the televisJon crew from NBC did an excellent job.
Principal Ferren Christensen related after·
wards he'i: very much in iavor Of repeating
next yest on the.tube -but with 1 Win.
A special five-minute segment at flalrlim~e
depicted _ Westmj~ter . High student~ Jn a ,. . .
wif's---------ROGER
CARL.~N "'-"--------·
special science oriented school project in-
volving chinchillas. •
It eo5l NBC in the neighborhood of $2,500
for the five-minute special.
What's more, the game was played without
commercial interruption.
• • •
Costa Mesa Hip Us dropped Orange as
tis tenon opening football opponent and. re-
pl~td· the Panthers wllb Katella of tbe
Oraage League.
; It's a t\vo-yrar pact "'lib the 1970 tesl at
Newport Harbor Davidson Fleld.
' I . ; . • • •
Perhaps the most unique nickname of all
belongs lo the Yuma High Criminals.
The students "'e~ housed Jn the Arizona
, Territorial prison rrcm 1910 lo 1913. Assem-
blies "'ere held in what had been the prison
hospital. a1llJ classes were conducted in the
cellblock area.
l 'he · infonnatlon Is by way of the touma-
ment program from the elght,h awiual ·New.
port Harb« Optimist basketball lnvllaUonal. . . • • •
John Vallely of UCLA, end f0rmer Corona
del !\tar whiz. bolds Jive or tbe six lodlvldual
records hi tbe Newport Optimist affalr.
Jn 1"5, be led the Sea KJnga with most
points In one game (4!), most points In
three games (95), most field goals 111 three
games (SO). most free tbrow1 In one game
(%0) a.ad most free tbrGws for lhree games
US). • • •
The 1,000-yard freestyle in prep swimming
Is not on the ClF agenda. but it Is a possi·
bility tb~t the Crestview League will adopt
the event this year or next.
San Clmente s\vimmer Corby Lloyd paced
a 10:58.8 for the event recently and Randy
Smither swam a 9:34.0 for the 880 freestyle
in exhibitions to illustrate lbe feasibility of
the longer distances.
I • • "
Tbe recent lhfftt111 of 1wlmmlng from a
spring sport to a winter sport by the CIF
brings the tliree seasons I.mo a better bal-
anced setUng.
• ....-Wbe'I you consider the weathtr facton la
other areas of the United St.ltet, however,
lbe thought of staging outdoor swim meets
In Jannary and February l1 staggering.
.Cha,.ger-s Win, 42-37,
In Fi11al W armup
Area Duo
Stands Out
John Blanpied of Corona del
BELLFLO}VER -Edison until the fi:.1al quarter. \\·hen it P.tar and Chris Horpel of
High School opens up i\s h1itial "'as able to hold the hosts to Newport Harbor captured first
varsity--basketball season in-nine points en route to break--places at the an nu a I
the Irvine League \\'ednesday Ing a 28-28 tie .at the end of night against host Corona del three quarters. Hawthonie J n v i t a l i o n a I
Mar ;in<l th~ Chargers "·ill Takedo,vn to u ma men t
~nter play on the heels of a 42-Tuesday.
37 victory Saturday night in CaJ~u· dat• Blanpied won in the t23-
non·league action . ~ pound d1v:lsion \\'hile , Horpel
The Chargers snapped a .Twm1.,. , three-game lost.1g streak \\'ilh •••k~1~1t _ v11 .. P1r1< ,, L•tu"• \'.'as dominating the 148-powid
their "~in over the Santa Fe &P1ch, Foo1h11t 11 Mtu1on v;~10. s.n class. '""'"''-'•! E4 Moael'll (Ill 11 7). Leagu·e. representatiYes . and wr11111n1 -cos11 .v.t~ • ' The tourney features three
J hn F. h I d' l-1krwi>OO, Jord.., 11 EdbOl1 lt>oth •' o ts ~r was ea 1ng J:nJ. 11.1nd10 A .. mnos •' sin one-minute rounds \\'ith the figure for the victors. c1erneni1 1•1. °""~' coa.i 11 CH•rtn
Fisher, a junior, led his 11'301· • completion of taking an op-w~., mates in the scoring column B•1kt1beH -Coli• Mes• 11 Est•,.. ponent off his f e e t and 'th 18 I · h II cl1, S•nll Al'lil 11 NeWPOrl Htrbor, · · I I nd ' '"• \\1 , a ong .,.,.,l exce enl ...,,.11e1,,, ,, 1111~11r,;ion 8ffcti. Edi..... gauung COJI ro e 1ng um rebounding. at Coton.i c1t1 """', Fount1111 vathtY 11 rowid.
I h h I Mltnollf, Wwtttern 11 · We.tmln1ter, F s er as not ailed to M1•ln1 11 w1~ (111 •' n, o •• ,.. Other Orange Coast area
score al ltast 16 in every fr~~ t:i;".tti~~c ~~~t, -.,',~ wrestlers with high finishes in
game· to date. u :tjL .. . . the field of 782 were Check
And 'Ilk B l h" ......i • Wrnlllnt -WllsM 11 M1rln1 ll:lSl. 11 e a es c 1p"'°" In sw1mm1..,.. _ e1i.ncia and cost• Kehler of Estancia (2nd in the
with 13 to help offset Bosco's M-11 Mllllk•,.. ....... 11e1m 11 Coron• Corona def Mar (2nd in 157)
J k Bl l 6 a.I Mir, G1r0tn ~""" 11 Fount1IR ac ea I I. Vtllr/, L•tUM Beien ., Brei, Msl•iof< 98-lb. class~. Tim Bandel or
Coach Oa\•e f\.tohs" outfit Z~1~''c1f1'!~1"i:it~ Clem"''' •• LO$ Corona del ~tar (2nd .in 178J.
didn't put it away. ho"·ever. ~i::iiii;iiiii;;ii;;ii~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;i;;;i;;;;;;;;"il
110110" ,.,, Ir
gs, i' LI ~ CHALLENGE!
An11 o oea
"-""" 1 0 01 funkt 1001
To11l1 11 I n •21 fT, JOHN aosco 1111
It fl 11 11
M1tio111
ERKI! Bltt
lrwift ...
Arte
&crlwf•r ·-Tot1!1
' 0 1 41 a G o o "' ,,. . ' ' ' ' . • • • ' ' . ' • • ' . ' 15 1 12
:1 •' •' " It ...... , 0Wlr1tn
Ii: dill'
Sf. Jollft 901ct
11 ~ 10 ,.__.,
1 1 Ut-JJ
I
DOLLAR FOR DOLLAR
WE DO NOT BELIEVE
YOU CAN BEAT THIS •
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1.'so114 °' 1.55114 ......................... s11.25
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120·15 .. 915·15 ......................... •$21 .ts
t'XClll
'" o.n
1.t4
'·" t .H
•••
J.11
••
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Footllill
.Tabbed·
'For Title
·Basketball action ln the·
Crestview League Tuesday
opens up !eague play in
,Orange County with all games
slated for 7 p.m.
. The annual DAILY PILOT
dope sheet pegs Foothill to ,ri.
taih Jts Ie8-gue championship
With Villa P8'rk give'n the.best
8bot to dethrone the Knight!.
After that it's a dogfight ,
belween Orange, San
Clemente, MWion Viejo and
Tustin.
·san Clemente has shown it's
a\>le lo knock off highly-rated
teams but seems to lack. the
-abiDty to put consistent games
together -back to back.
The same holds true for
Mission Viejo, an outfit that
ripped San Clemente by 20 in
:tournament play.
Laguna Beilch c o u I d
surprise and place anywhere
between fourth and eighth.
The Artis~ are Q.ampered
with a schedule that has their
last seven league games away.
The Handicap
1.1 Foothill
2. Villa Park .
3. Ocange
4. San Clemente
5. Mission Viejo
6.· Tustin
1. El 1t1odena
8. Laguna Beach
•
r:-:=..--':-:7'---:---:---,---~~ ._. w•th 2· I Win -.. ~~~ AWfd .;4'~ . . ~ .''."·,,~·~~-~·"''"''."" _. · . :Jt#gefs Return
TOE OUT RIGHT FOOT TO LENGT~EN l~KSWING I
l'<e never felt any great com· • To . T1"tle Chase' punction to extend the length Of : _
my backswing. ActUally , I don't .'
think any golfer should swing_
back so far that the club move!
beyond horizontal at the top Q,f
the $~ing. ~
Howev~r. there are some ·
golfers who would do better if
they could . move their hands'
bft h)gher on their backswing: l·: a-.:::7--
Freelng up their backswing turn ~
woufd' allow tkem to ge nerate f
better club control and poWer /
as they start back down . .. ~.Toeing out slig htly with the
right foot will enable you to make
a fteer backswing turn, •Try·
it if you feel your swing is too' ..--.... ' . short. / .. _,.._
.,, .,. . . I ' ... ·.-... I
•'1',.\_"J:N<.\,> '•' ~I"' ''1<r, .. ·•·•. I ,. l,;~.~~ ,~:..,_, i~1,,;·: . "/ , I
• ,. ,1 ' ' I./ .. ,,:_ { ,. ,,,7¥,1 .·,,,:,,; I " .. ,.. ' ,, I . ' \' ' '· , ',., . ,
'•'1" "·~··' v· ·~~~I r ::, -..' ""''''• ,.1 ' •j :1 However, remember that you ~;.'·11' ·~ ~·, ~~11/r.J,'. should feel sometens1on1nyour 1~· ~.I ·~1,,\-·back and left.arm.atthetopof ~ 1 't""" ',; /ttle swin~ Jf 'YOU don't, you
i,. ~.,7 l·~~ ,•ha~en't ca:mpleted your back·
•-''· /111 ,.,, • swing, af}d ,yo will not derive
'I •l ' '" ~ II f h ' 11 • ,: ~ a o t e distance you are ca.
fr< • / pable of generating. · ,
, I
PUT POWER BAc K" INTO YOUR SWING!-With the help of A1nold
Pelmer's i!luslrited booklet, "Teo Shots ilnd Fairway Woocl :s."
SIJ'ld 20c. and 1 :self.1ddre:s:s1d, stemped envelope lo Arnold
P.1lmer, tn tare of 1hts newspaper.
,
The Coast Rangers got ba<!k But'lhen McCaughey got Jn.
Jn ;contention for the Pacific to the act and fired in the SocJer Lea~e ,eham,pionshlp Joose ball for the wlrming l&U,y.
by edf!;lng .lea,BUe. I e ad J. D_J -·Temple Clty bad taken a :1-0 Temple City, Z-1, Suriday .
afternoon at Newport Beach's lead two minutes into the
Mariners ,Park~. . game on 1 Ranger defensive
r Rah.g~ reserves were Jes;; milh~p. ·Jfowever, the-boll.a
fort~te.1 bow9.ver, taldng a 7·. tie4 it 15 minutes Jater when
O lambasiiJJg ffom Temple Ct-: Eric Smith cro1sed a · loOse
ty1 sUbs In fhe preliminary tiff. ball The te.r half under Coach Brian McCaughey's · cen •
Rm1gers are still in third great pressure _from Steye
place, ·three 'points behind Johnson, tried J.o get the ~I
Temple City -~ two behind back to his goelle' but idrtead
Dlnubla. However, they have fired It into the goal tor-a
games JVl!h ~ach bf the'"t.op Ranger point~
two teams and 09 have a slim This Sm:iday the Rangers
Chance of ret'a\ning the title and . their reserves tr•vel to
they bagged a year ago. Bell Gardem to b l t t I e
~cCaugbey lauded his out-Southeast United. 'lbe lrelim
fit's performance Sunday, begins at 12 :30 with the main
calling It the best or the year event at 2:30.
(it should be -they've only The Rangers Jopped.'SEU, 4-
played ooce since Jan. 1). He 3, in the loop opener.
was referring to the entire
season1 ·01 course.
He said Brian Gallagher was
the st8\'ldout but went .on to
say Qlat e,veryone pl~yed well.
It w•s Mceaughey who
pumped In the winning shot
\vlth IO minutes remaining in
the hard fought contest.
Leif Werneid took a corner
kick, which floated in front of
Temple City 's goal. Tries to
shove the ball into the net in·
ltially failed.
Marina High
Boosters Meet
' Marina Hlgl[' ' Basketball
Boosters' Club meeting for all
levels will be held in the
school's faculty ca f et er 1 a
lonigh.t at 7:30. .
All interes!ed parties are In-
vited to attend. 1 I
Ever hing·s1osy al the BIG Pl -
' '·~ ;
COME IN f .OR YOUR FREE ROSE BUSH JAN. 2 THRU 10
Right now, everything at Mutual Savings is extreme-
ly rosy for you. Visit us and you'll see why we say
your personal Rose Parade starts at the BIG M. You
can have beautiful outdoor rose plants growing for
you. The "Complete Book of Roses" is yours for the
asking -FREE while they last.
If you like the idea of growing things, why not open
a savings account at the BIG M. Your savings will
\V. It. Samn1ons
Smior Vice Prt.Wnt&
Rtgimtal Loan. Ma.llllger
COVINA W•8TARCADIA
660 West Duane Road
Telephone ""6-0166
200 North Cltru1 Avenue
Telephone 339·5476
grow at 5% per annum compounded daily, credited
quarterly, on insured passbook accounts. Or, you can
earn even more on SIX-MONTH BONUS CER-
TIFICATES ($1,odo minimum), which pay an ad-
ditional .25% per annum bonus if held six months or
looger.
Visit the BIG M office near you where everything is . ' coming up roses.
Robert D. Aslon
Vies Prt1frfrne
Brauch ~fanagtr
MUTUAL
SAVINGS
and 1aan asucialion
CO.RONA DEL MAR
OL•NDALE
336 Nor1h Br1nd Boulev1rd
Telephone 242 .... 146
2867 East.coast Hlgh~ay
Telephone 675·5010
"A8AD•NA
(Ht1d Offtct )
3t5 East Cotortdo 8ot.1ltvard
TB!tpJlont 448-2345
NOW! ACCOUNTS INSURED TO $20,000
.
\
.. '
•••
""!1--... ------------------------------------------....---..------~-~·-·-----------·-·-~··---.....--· .... ·~---::-~
TUFSDAY
·-" ..... (C) (!b) ... b!MI hlahll&flt:L
·-'"" -(CJ (00) .,.. ... -tel (60) • ,a •11••• TllMlr\ <mi • .DDVl ":.... (30) ,l)rlJIM NI• rirl&lllit'~.
·-....... <""""~) ... -Tame11 'T111rM11M, Gl'llGIY P«l.
12:118 .. -" -(-·~ IMfttwJ) '55-kt\ltl ftlm If ~
.DAYTIME MOVIES "'"' " -.,,_ II. "' _ U1111a OIMtr 11tn"lttt.
1:09.•w a. n., Wn 111triM" l:•IDCC> ........ C111tl$ttl1•t" "-"""> 'U -llltlllrt MlkttuM. Cdf•IM) ·~uartt.JoM 11.t, tterst
•""'-SlfllOIL Frink.
2:t1iit(C) ---l:M .. ,.._.. _, .. ·s1-Mtrt W•IW. D1br1 httl.
' ) •41-Qinooi W'Ht, -.. ......... l1e,• (lrtMI) ~
• ... ~ ...... Mt•Jorit ........
I
I
,.,
PLAIN JANE
MUTT ' AND ~EFF •
0J'IFF, IN 1969. W~EN ..
EVE~ 'l<:>lJ LOST YOUR
Jo& I ALWAYS GOT
YolJ AN9T+IER. .. l11GMT?
MISS PEACH
1·5
1~69. w+IEN YoU WEl<E
DOWN AND OUT I
1'00K )'OU IN AND
GAVE )'OU FooD AND
1SHEL.TER.-. RJGMi?
' •
HE
OI01
l
f ,
l
SAL~ Y BANANAS
IN 1969 l
+IELPED )'OU
ADVANCE
l'INANCIALLY,
sor•ALL.Y
,
AND ?oLITICALLY..
'RIGM"T?
ly Harold Le Doux
'!'OU WEllE ~G>HT, HE W"SMT
MR. PllVER! ME U.l'ASlE OF
WASN'T IN LOVE l.DVIN6 ANYC>N
"'WlrH ~ ! MISS J'A'SPER !
IN 1969 l
DID YoU
MANY
MANY
FAVORS •••
RtGi.IT?
ly Al Smith
1970-·--
Now YoU ARI'
ALL MINer;
?
ly Men
ly Chartet ........
I ...
TEUWISION VIElt'.S· ~"
Quiet Charm
Appealin_g
~ .... .. '. . .
'.f · 1 • ' l .,;
' .
•
NEW YORK" (AP) '--<rhert ff ·so ,:;.~· ;qu!~t
charm -and warmth packed lnlo C!IS's " a R<i{lle, ..
With Li>ve" that!~ •<10ms,a pity it is sett uled ~
posite NBC's powerful "Wonderful World di Qis-
ney." Given a chance. the half'hoiir mlJht build
the same kind of audie'nce 'acht.ev.ed ~_b_y~~
Affair."
Sund1y night'• episode wao .typ!c!ll of the 14ftr
tle and low-key hwnor of the 1eries. Attractive •
believable· Jot>n Fo,sythe pla}'L a wJdO)Yed profes· :
sor teaching and living in Rome with h~ lh11t' :
young ,daugh~rs. ·
• The program had the first•romantic overtones·of ;
the series -the professor's chance eJ\coWi\er, "in
a library, w1th a beauWul Italian woman .playfld :
by Anna M~rla Alberghell, who turns -out ·lo ht :
a famous ballerina. The romanDc inter1uda endecl :
when the girl left for an American tour.
Forsythe plays his part "1th maturity, symp• :
thy and understanding. Other characters· In the ,._. ·
ries are three very cute children. Joyce Menges,
playing the oldest, had a pleasant bit as a ronunc~
minded teen-ager urging her father to swing a l(tut
in the Etel'l)al City . / \
The nfle1 also has the valuable services of K4Y
Medford who11e comedy talents &re not, alas, even
faintly visible in the sour-laced rnlt of Aunt Harriet,
the professor's sister. She plays· a sulky, homesl<!k
woman I.roar the Midwest who constantly mourns
that In Rome there Is no Ainertcan .. pe.anut butter;
. chunky style, ln the markets, alld who hate• Italian
shopping bags. .
The other competition Is ABC'S' "Land ·t>f ' Gf..
ants," a on•dlmensional adventure sertes. Once ,
the viewer his ceased beina: arnu~ed at ..the lngen--'
ious p~ps ·of telephones the slie "of a sJ)Wl iyt;>m ;
and pencils that look as long as telephOll<I ' pOl'I'.<
the hour is likely to become • bore. It· con1lats rar
wild adventures of a band of earthllng1 ntaiided ·im
a planet of En,llsh·speaklng, contempol'Uy. hu-
mans -most of them bad guys -·who art· About
18 times :the stze of the bunted alient. · ~ '
It •Hm• likely that In vleiv of the .weak raUn~•
of "To Rome. With J..ove" and "Land of thi!}Gianta''
neither will be around after this seaSoh. The fonn~ ·
er does seem 11.•orth .Javing.
Now that king football's retirement !rom TV;~
stage center is upon us, some ·other sports wi11·s~
having their weekends of glory. CBS~ ~1Go1f CtasstC''
series start Jan. 10: NBC's "Woildmul World" Of
Golf" begins a _week later. ABC Wffi·Mume wlth4ts
.. Pro Bowlers' tour" on Jan. 10, Basketball and
hockey will also be given a network· whirl.
''Tht Survivors'' tonh{hl Starts· Jt r emergent)'
wrapup of the ,series so that all loose end1 will be
tied up upon Its departure al~r 15 epioodti. Geo110
Hamiljon wJj! 'llOI skip a week of petwort e1posute
between·th .. ehd of bis old show and themlld.Janu-
arY)>reilli!re of his new one, "Paris 7000,'"1 roma.
tic ~c;Jo~ <Series. '
D.~nfs the Jflenaee
..
•
'
' .
• I
. • . •
• •
'
I
' .
.,~ JW!.V Pl\.9I M...,,., JantNY 5, 1'170
• L~: ~w Movie8 Mo1·e · Matitre, Less· Costl y DAILY :PILOT
.. ..
' n~ r~RNON scon
flt)Ll Y\\'OO!l (UPfl -The
~ii-11r ~l'°uld 5lgnA.i a
._, •' pf motion pie--
• 1 1· 'ucrrs and director,
1-:v, 1 "" 1. 4ht \lo'h1P on diHlcult
'"~~1·rt1Tmt1:. ;111ri call'h up with
Jf'·.1 ,.hf:n:c fr\t.'llW.l1t)'·
• · .• II t ~lt\•i!ton 1~ guided by
l~-oru.~.0L:1n,: $hO\l.S for U1c 12·
• _,i... .. ltiJ11J. tbc.:1 11\ms ::i.r
' ., '
·'
'' o c.••1 Dlt.CO ,...,..,,
..... lltJUTIN<.;rQH ., .... e ... •VJ Al Pl"ll'Ul..Ak
: .. I.'" "W PlllCiS
..
"
.,. E'OWAR D S
·i~ ~~~· ,,
f"' . ~-~)ll~;d J'\ "\HL·~"IH•E
,
...
·'
,. . ·'
-
• "
,.
•
'
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...... ... . ' . ,.
. . . -··. ·-.....
... ,. .. .''. !T
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,. ., "
'
·.rn'ZSM iiif1liins i!:iri'~ii1Ylt .............. -.. . ......
,q lN.S ~ '.Y l'jll(i ""'"' ·'"
USTI NE'
-1
l , ut rour ton11m•111ty llkf
l. tt tor"' "Uttit1 dlrly ntN'l)aprr
1Yt1. Llf lrwt DAJLY FILClT.
• r
atmtns for more and more
mature minds. '
Among the pictures to be
released ln 1970:
outside IOll!ldstages and nv. curloe!ty WIU be sallslled. But
ing money. not until alter the 5e.I act has
Just u "Easy Rider" and been lully exploited.
t• John and Mary" came oul of 'lbe star system. which ~as WA NT ADS
.. Cat.ch 22." "The Great
\\'hite ~Io p e, • ' •;Myrl
B r e c klnrtdge," "Airport,"
"Tischalkowsky" and ''The
Andromeda Strain." ·
?.fore movies will be made
in the coming 12 moplhl
because t h e overburdened
studios have finally recognlzeP
that thr day of the super
bl.ldgeted film Is over. Every
majoi' studio is c u t t I n g
overhead, ta~ c a m e r a 1
E.'fclu1l11e R~srrvtd
Star E1111ai•m#'ltl
TONIOHT AT
t tOO p ,M, ·
nowhere to deUgbt audiences, been proclaimed dead for the
so should the new year put decade, will ttmaln very
surprise audiences w l t h. much alive.
Ill t "llttl " 1-&.... The emergence of Rober& sign can e P"-'""ea. Redrord, 1'1ia Farrow, Dustin
The rOad Show movie-that Hoffman, Jon Voight, Raquel
extravaaatlza wh!ch requires Welch, Clint Eastwood and a
patrons io buy. tickets in ad· dozez::i others will cause movie ..
vance at inflated prices -will bu.ffs to run to the box office.
becom·e more ·ana more rare. Nor have ·such oldUmers as
Youni j>e6pJe, who comprise . Steve Mc Que e n , PJl.ul
the m11Jorlty of movttgoers, Newman,. Joanne Woodward,
can'\ afford to pay $5 for a J'ohn Wayne, Warren !Jeatty,
I toda which they can ·8 u rt LancaMer, Elizabeth move Y . Ta1lor or Julie Andrews lost see four months hence for $2. · t.helr Juster ' 1970 should b:e the peek year ·
for nudity and sex on screen. Somewhere fn the 19801
Thereafter, according to many movies lost touch wltb their
producers, mo vie goe r 1 • audience.
George Villain
HOLLYWOOD I UPI)
List year picture maken
discovered that they mtm do
niore than overwhelm the
customers with sheer size to
combat television.
HOUSES FOR SALE
1000
Vac:ant and Ready
~,,_,1 EutsltJc charm ls found in
:-..1 thi11 larie 3 bedroom 1 !>3th
home, Cedar shingle rtflf,
hardwood lloots, war1n tire.
place in the family room.
assumable low interest lln-
l!\dng, Quiet neighborhood.
near shoppinG" and schools.
$33,000.
'
.~
Chris George; star of the
defunct "Rat Patrol ''
television eries, wlll piny a
villa!nous sheriff in ''Chisum,"
John Wayne's new western.
Jnstea.d, producers found
adult themes, mature C(lmedy,
sophistication and superlative
acting provide entertalnment-
bent Americans with an .. od Mod Indian aliernative to television. Jf._ ' '
Colesworthy & Co.
SHIRLEY MacLAINE
JOHN McMARTIN
SAMMY DAVIS, JR.
, I!)~ P""'-'VllilOfo!I
ALSO SELECTt:D
SHORT SUBJECTS
E••· Show Storti 7 p.M.
Co1tln11on S1111d1Jy ftNI J I'·"'•'
ly Pop11l11r Dimond
Continuous Daily
" "THE FIRST TIMe"
SHOW TIMU
7:00 • t :JO
MATINll SUN. 2
TONIGHT AT
7:15 ••• 9:45
EXCLUSIVE ORANGE COUNTY ENGAGEM ENT
ACADEMY AWARD WINNER!
BEST Af'tRESSI BARBRA STREISAND
: i , COLUMBIA "ICfUlt(S ••• ltASlA!f ,._OOUCTl<»-IS 1 :
• '~ --tMl WILLIAM W¥LVl·RAY SfAltl( •
l ~ NN GI ~ . 'II ... H.,..,t. ..... ,. ... ~ . . .,. . . . ~:: . . . ;,.\.. : ! OMA.I IHAllll e IAY MID,Ol lt • ...........••. , ...... -.·····•i ·•············ . .
~ . ~. ... ... .
Hollywood has wrested the Chief Dan Rowan, above, plays hoat t o James
Initiative from French, Garner tonight at 8 p.m. on Channel 4 \I.' hen "Laugh-
English and Italian Innovators Jn" is aired. Garner plays the roles of an lndian, a
"A~nt " "FM A \Vise 'Buy"
61'.!-7717
1 to bring to ~e ~reen stories policeman and a convict. Comic Stu Gilliam. also is
dealing with tbe ec:onomic and a guest on the show with au the regulars in their
FOREST E.
OL SON 50Cial problems 1n America through tPe eyes of Individual~ _P_l_ac_e_s_. __________________ 1 caught Up in our changing
times.
Movles in 1970 s hould
forecast a booming decade for
films and their makers.
TH! •llVI"' h I SCOUHDRIL,, an O,IAATOfl and I BftAWLltt ,,,.
Steve McQueen
·rhe Reivers"
COLOll ... A Ctnema c.nm flllnw Pr-n1•tlon -A N1tlonal G•Mfal Plc:1u,_ A•l-
Olt1'11'1tllt :Jhow 1'llno
f ;l0,3:40,l ;IO,l :00,• 10:00
TURN ON
TV WEEK kHp• yoa f11n.d
lo wh1t'1 h1pp•1tl., l:ithlnd th•
tub• -E"•rv S•turd•y 111 tti.
DAILY PILOT.
Inc, Realtors
Jose Says Britain's
Dog Laws for Birds
Kingdom for Horses
\'our bor.;C's never had it ~o
&oocl! J{U!;C' 300' luL ·l ::.tails
and runs. C1o~s-Icnccd. TaC'k
room. A lovely 3 bl!dronm
home wilh rornial di1uni::.
PLUS guest house ! Nun1~·1·
ous c:t1:ll'll.s tjnd fC'aturcs your
horses \1i\I just love Pri<'f''I
oow al $37.5CK\ better hurn !
Dial now 615-0303.
HOLLYWOOD <UPI)
Jose Feliciano of Newport
Beach, the sightless giutarist.
1lnger who to uched off a
minor national oulr~ge by
warbling a soul version of the
~
National Anlhe m at a World
St'ries game last year, is
aboot to sUr up the Britlsh.
Last October he flew to Brl-
lain lora concert and to ap· 645-0303
pear on several television at llad1.:11 (clllcr
shows. 279'1 Jl,,rb:'ll r.hrl., C :'II.
He traveled without his 1969 Volume
guide dog, Trudy -a llmoolh· $145.5 Million
hair~ collie -.becau se GREATPOOL-HOUSE-
E111lisb law forbids entry of GREAT PRICE
dogs form abroad unless they :O.Iove in NO\V 10 this j()\ ,,•y
undergo six month.! quaran· J bedroom home 11ith S\Vl'!·
tine; a safeguard against ~lING POOL. Carpet~ anri
rabies. drapt!s. Glcrimir.~ JJAnn-
''I took Trudy to England \VOOD l-"LOORS~ A~s·11n~
two years ago and they put 6% FIL\ per annum lo~~·
her in a "Uarantlne kennel for SubmH 11.s lov.• ns s:' .• 5-0 ~ Du11 n, T ut:i.l p41yf1v•nts a!\ two weeks," Feliciano said. loiv a~ ~l.'6 m,.,11n1t".
"Jt almost killed her. WE SE LL A HON.E
"My wife helped me find my EVERY 31 MIN UTES
way around. But because I'm w 1 k 0 L
blind I £eel restricted without 8 er Cl ec
my dog. I didn 't have any
mobility, and I found myself 7i90 ~~arbor Blvd: ~I Adsms
asking Hllda, my \\'ife, to obey _ 54>9191 Open tJl 9 P~l _
commands I usaully give P'r.Hfuil~: Trudy. It was confusing." a~1...:.wa.. •
Feliciano plans to return to ,
the British Isles this spring for POOL
mon! concerts.
Crossword Puzzle
"When I get there I plan to
petition the queen through the
Royal Society for the Preven·
Uon of Cruelty to Animals to
change the laws for guide
Best pool buy! 3 hilnn,
d~p shag C'arpe1s & cu!c
decor. l..n ri;:C' P011l 11 ilh
genrt"r.ll8 1uno11nt ('<f u .. 1·l1-
in;. l.t•ll' in1~rrst lo1n
a\atl. $Jt~.OO .• \'o'r \,l-
"an!. Chi nl'r an>.ious !or
<.•flrr.
2 word s
32 Member of
the salmon
family
JT Kind of
blemlsh 38 Edd ie --: Hock.ty great
39 tiemp
product
40 A c~demic periods _
42 Pisa feat ure
43 Alr
44 E'(rress dil ertnce or op inion
45 Pre pared
49 G!tl in 1
song
50 Not now
51 Opposlte o'.
lmparllelity
53 Short pro-
Jtcting part
57 l:111b1lll$h-
1111nt
59 Endinll' ustd wHh
rne111 and te1e 60 Th ickness
units
bl Kind of
irritation
, 62 High ly
$t11ng1 fl) European b4 Hudson Bay and
the Medf·
te111nean
fi.5 Runs at a
certthl pace
DOWN
l Almo sOOellc condi tion
2 Rootst0tk 3 Vulgar
4 WWI song:
Z words 5 Via b Celes tial
body 7 Norse god
J P lno~lile
playets'
word
9 Put !ht
QUIS!l'n
10 Olshone.
for shipment
' 3 • ' ' •
Saturdlly's Putl e Solvtd: •
...
12 l!mpl~
2 words
13 Promising
person
19 British
wtighl un it
·21 Lumber
sourc• 2~ Un lied in
1111trlmo11y 25 Sting
2& Omit
27 "·-·· In 1
Blue Moon''
28 Publrc
conveyanc t'
2'J BH of work
JO Vtntllates 32 "How
soon?"
33 Seeker of
Northwest
Passage
34 Where Siou:or
City Is
35 Barrac uda
311 In this
\'iCinity JS Gambling
game
I •
l /5fl0
41 Ship
section
42 Pro ·--
44 Prefl:or us td
with cover
and ltmJl er
45 Holding
device 4b Amos and .. ,,.,
medium
•7 81klni,
49 e·r,~f ant
pithy
49 Algebra,
grornelt!;,
etc .: In·
formal
51 ----noire
5l QuechLJan lndla11
54 Animal b1ed
for combat:
Sp.
55 One
56 Insects
~8 Evil: Prefl:or 59 Kind or nam e
" 13
dogs," he said.
"Trudy's been with me for
seven years, and I'm as
dependent on her as she I!! on
me. Maybe one of the English
minl!ltrle!I will help get my
message acroas. 5 BEDROOMS
"Their law!! ere even more 5!vc bcrlroon1s _ 11 gianL null;·
dJfOcult !or English citizen!!. A tf'r hedL'0011l. L..argo family
blind Englishman can come to roon1 \\1th a \1Tt bar _ for·
the United States with his dog, n1al dining roont. Garden
but when he get.s back home kitchen. Very C'leen. A ror-
the dog is quarantined for the ncr lot • 2700 sq. fl. Pr!de
usual six months. of oivnership nrf'a, walk !n
"It's a hardship £or schoo\i;. $3.300 rloo n -$32,950.
everyime." 546-2313
Feliciano, a native of Puerto
Rico, minimizes his blindness
as much as possible. He
believes a perfonner, sightless
or not, should entertain an au· 10..-.,.,..-..,.__..., __ _
dieoce and win It over on DOVER SHORES talent alone, not sym pathy. .
Rarely does he appear with A truly f1fl(! homt'. O\t-r
Trudy. Most often Hilda will 4200_sq. ft.: noc~nsr ~rar.
lead him to a stoo l on stage or ed 1n cons~rt1cL1on. •I !3cd-
before the televis ion can1eras 1'00ms, fa1n1ly roun1, forn1.1!
to perform. dini~ 1"00m, ~ hath~: {I cu•·
•·The television p e op I e tom tn every, dl tail . S 3 .t'OO,
sometimes think I shouldn't Ci.It fl)t app t.
appear wilh rn'\< dog because ii john mac nab
detracts from the en-(Jl4) 6"42-8235
tertalnmenl aspccl of the 901 DovC'r Drh·r ~111 t c l:!ll
show. Nc\\'J>O'l'I B·~·11ch
Brand New Li~tin g
One of 1'1f'sa \'l'rdr·s Hr:• st.
J.O\'l"ly 3 largc btln11~ ... ran1 .
IJy l')Oltl Ill o·hQi('1• 1'!;,111111
Scrt"s or P:i•i.'s1•!!rr hnn1r,
O\\<ner simply •lri\·1n~ ,,.,,, rnr
lo Y.iirk & must sell. Ofter·
cd a1 S:~f1.!l!"Xl.
546 !.18~1)
Int.Ir c•nMl,) !l,r,,he)
LLEG E REALTY
1500 Ad.11?!5 11 H11b0t,CM.
Cllffh~ven -VIEW
l:::-.:C'lu~11•r .. v ours. rht~ 2 htf,
rill, dron horn" hil" lu1·rJv
I 1 ll'w ul Ti.iv ,(. ll!'f'~n. En·
(']ascd patio .Ii i:;arJcn. \\ c1l I rrtc.'Cd 111 s·:i.l o.
Barrell Reall y
16ffi \Vc .. r .. 1111 I Ii., NFl
642·5200
3 BR, 2 DA. ittnlll>• l'IX1.t1.
pm( decor. 2 ~r l'ltl-,Jnt
t COnd. $.t:.:iOO. 71 ~<::2 J."!1"1; I
'-------............ ( Lanc._!_l_R_C_"-\'l('r ("" '"~
I
I
HOUSES FOR SALE
Gereral 1000
FIX ER UPPER
PdC'ed to fit>ll. 4 bdrms l "'l
baths Eas1s1dt, Clil. Only
S22.500. Appt. only.
* * • $1 2,500 EACH
!u1· 10 huuljrs on 2 lots. Each
60x300', Owner may split for
2 b~ers 1naldng this East..
side C0t>ta ~1esa'.1 best buy.
lkin'l n11ss this one~
* * • Fun Loving Family
1• an11•d for !h1~ Cliffh.1\'en
honLC' 111 M"cludcl se!{~. 4
bdtrn~. :! baths & huge fam-
ily 100111 + h('attd pooL
N'a1nc your terms . $44,950.
J.86r:J Newport Blvd., CM
C.\LL 616-3928 Evrs. 646-1290
HEAVY
SHAKE ROOP
UPPER BA\' 1-.:.xcLusrv't
Cul·de-sac S\J.1.'el. Expensi\'C
e.11'J)l't~. drapes and exquis-
ir{· d<'co1J ring grceta you as
.;ou \1,dk into lhe elcganl liv-
u1;: room. Th1·ee large bed-
1wn1s, 1\10 pullman baths.
liri.r,hl 1·/\eC'ry kitchen has
l•u1 lt-1ns, in~·l udlnG" new dish-
1•1shct. Fanuly room with
shd111g glass doors to hug'
:i't1n1u1u n11,.'0vcrcd paliogur.
r 11u1t!cd by be:i utUuJ la11·n·.
Thi~ hon){> o!fel!'f pride OI
1 11 '1Cr,l-i1p and clfn bl! youri;
lur •only ~J 1.950.
I.\·, •11.· :<. Cali 616-2:.!jg
ASSUME GI LOAN
~ I 11 nt<: 1 'o ba1h. lmn1edl-
.~te '"JS<f.'!'.~!on. G(.IOcl strt"el.
•~[ lr.111 11uh \01v pa)ntcnt •
tr.; Ii.I'} do11:1.
$23,500
Newport
••
Vi ctoria
646-8811
Anytime
$1 5,500 EACH--
2 HOUSES
nn In~" tro x i;,o R·2 Jot
11ilh Cn:;ia ".le5a Back Bay
\'JC'1\' unl.} a 5 iron shot Irom
ll1l' C"J/ Course. \\'hat an i11.
\C'.'.tn1(•11t fvi· il S:l l,000 total
p1Jce, One tcn·lfic 3 Bc-d-
1'0U111 honu.• and enolher nol
.'. l l••rrifir
WE SELL A HOME
EVE RY 31 MINU TES
V~alk er & Lee
:!7'11 !!a1 bo r Blvd at Arlams
_ _:-1'.1-!'lG.l Opc'n ;Ill 9 Pl\!
Unbelievable Value
Only S:l J.950 in the heart of
C ~~'1 :O.Jc-,.1. J1n1naculate nil
11 • Iv p1un!c•d !n & out. llii,-:h
11111:1ry 1\·11v carprts thru·
l'lUI J bdrnis 2 baths. fa111.
il.v room, all bullt-ins Beau.
1:.111 I 1~:1 1ork firr>pincc in
!. : \I .1111 10 ~C'ho1JI.~.
PAUL• Wllfl'E
CARNA HAN
11.XALTT CU,
. " l'. :'I!.
VIEW · VIEW · VIEW
Jin! bor \·1('11 Hills nl(.'('>.I
C'l1t·DC'-.<:;nc slrcrl • lnr~
.\ 11 I 11rll lanrl!i1·aT1Crf Cus·
1. ·"l d, ;1pt·s • .1 Bdrni. & fain.
rrn S:i9,C(l('I. Just L1stl"rl!
!'oil·~ 111.H"\"C'Y l1•,,,, .,,.,
r "iell, Banker & Co.
550 Ne wport Center Dr.
Newport Beach, Calif.
8 3~0700 644-2430
BALBOA ISLAND '
HOME
Bt>"t flrl~s1blr ter1n ' on 3 BR
"''"..:ry lge. beatned ceil; Jiv. rm, Nice family rm. IJ
"'~ttlltd pt&tlo. Neat .t clcl.n;
S.'ir..IX'!l.
Rlddlo & Rou 675-7225
-NRar VIEW Homes"7
() ,,,. ~'.l'""t''i h IHI \r1•1Jsi 3
t.r.,nd 11C'v. hom<is: •I bdrmo;.
:I h:1. iiuwd•-r rm, lam. 1·m
\\ f1·1~1~. C'"Ut'ly;u~I n 0 0 I~.
F·~i11 srro.:.r!Xl. n.iy J. \\'in,1 c. I !~O Ga.I)">' 01'. b~l550_
1 s•1 U~'li-:-J .. B~fl~ 2 ll;\~
!, f «i} t Ill. •'J'T't.~. dqJ~
·1!. n!J ldl·•ll~. '-\•
tC"11~1vt' J:uic:li;caplni;; & palln.
5lit11 rin. Brkr :111)...
"k•t-i•~ a 10-;;s>11
r vr
HOUSES l'OR SA(I
o.ne1•1 • uoo
DOYER SHORES
VIEW
Original ownen: tran&fer ol
businna location nece11i·
tate1 y.le ot lhia bmuUfully
la.odsc~ !'lome wtlh court·
yard entry ltadlrc to ~
()1'9.nrlc \lkW. Brl&h,t, IUl\l\Y
living room with view of the
entire back bay; den: 4
lar&;e bedroom•: 4 1pacious
baths; all electric kitchen;
dining roon1; marble II~.
place. Over 3,000 sq. ft.
~.SIXI. Open Sat. & Sun.;
1130 Santiago Or.
john macnab
(714) 642-IZJS
901 Dover Drive, Suite 120
Newport Bl!ach
~=' Irvine T errac:e
Lu>:urlou1 View Horne on spiclous lot in
l!Xc:lusive Irvine Terrace
3 Extra s12e bedroon1s
Fotmal dining room
Family room ·opens onto
large pool & yard •
A beautUully designed home
in Immaculate condition
Sl24,"" Listed exclusively with
DREAM HOUSE
J ust right for small
famUy_ 3 bright&: taste-
fully decorated tx:lnns,
lmmacula!e k I t c-h e n
"'ith lot.s of hand rubbed
teakwood cabine11.
Large back ye.rd with
covered p a t i o.
tetml! • $26,950.
Jti111ar. COATS ~WA~AC!
REALTOR.I
--s.46-4141-
topon· EvonllljlS)
DAii. Y l'tl.flf
lll NTA LS RENTALS RE T L~ o(cN 1M.a ...i;
HOUlff Unfumt~ l-.!:H~1~0~11!!·~U!!ftf~urn~l~1t!!Wf~.1·:...:A~pe!tt.~!Fu~~nt~W~·~-!_,.:._ 1-.!.~~!!!:-!!""!!~lu!!•:!!•!!!,!•~-
Colto-. itoo L-•• lleoch 3705 Newport looch· 4* ~Goo~--~;tl~!__..__,!•~oo . •LOW DOWN* 1---------_, -
3 UNITS NEW HOME ......,. >Int loon ml .... SUS.a.EANS BR. Ill BA 1--------1145.~Br-.-..... In !ht. ,..,..,, I BR, 1% BA den, dbl .... 2 cbildr<n" CHARM 2 Br, 2 Ba, Atrlwn, Newport BeacJ> • 'dip. Cbtld 01<. Bl oe IMMEDIATE MOVE IN -.. n ...... !30)00. w.-~ . opts. •""· ll'hlt• Wat" GRAND OPINING ' .-. -.u. CM.
1707
HOUSES F OR SALE HDUSIS FDR SALE HOUSES ,Oft SALE HOUSES FOR SALi
1000 Hun~noton INdl 1400Huoth>fhn looch 14111 L••• Nlguol Gonor1I
$29,950 PLACE REIJ.'JY • .._LARGE. l BR, ..., aide. =.~Loo mo. IMME DIATE ll2S-l Br 11/0, ttMtJ,
E •·"· ~ .. M Spa 4 BDRMS 11/2 BATHS Pa•~ _ .... ~ -· '"a•-OCCUPANCY W/IV. Ciill<f OK. -· u-~ ..a. "' Apia. For Solo 1'111 ... -11:~.:-· "' -C 1 ... 30 Lwrury 1&n1e• _.,. 534-GIO "" tile"'°'· ... 1a1o an .. ,... l/4 MILE FROM BEACH · ~-~·~ ap strono ch 37 •ft•ritw --.;:.;=:..,,o.,...,=-~1 Trxl.50' lot. Income S38S ~ 2-oM-12 f# 24 unUa. .... ___ Vo-'-beautitUl 1Md$capU. £i W:, $110. 1 Br; RIO. rtfl1a,
month, Our best Income re-$2QI(• J'"\0 Walk to beach. App~ -.--3110 R•nt or l •••• w/optlol'I paralleled recrtt.tlonal fadl-Gange. Child OK. aa. NMl in art'&. lattnr; area. By OY.'Dtf'/ 3 BR, 2 BA. bluff &1'1!&. !ties ln a country club •t· Btaoon. 664111. C.M.
Exclusive With Bl~. Liodbors Co. FOR LEASE Sharp ! + Caplatn.no Beach. $265. Jn011FMre. Now le..U. in . JlOO
Newport HUNTINGTON BEACH 53&4579 famfl>o room in M ... Verde Uke new. Newport Beach. Cosio -.
ot Call Now 962· 1353 """ ''ALS for. a ab'alebl luae • no Tho Hunh man Roil E•ltlo >lirnlahod or un!Umlsbed ,;;;;:;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.J Houses Furnllhecl option, Now vac&nt -Im-34144 Cout ttwy, Oe.na Point Modela open lQ am to a pm MER.RIMAC WOODS
Vlctorl• Gener•I 2900 mediate possession. $275/ .tM--12111 Rents front $1$ '" SSl4. JUlt completed, 1 or 2 an. 2
1---------1225. ' Br, clean & ...... ~ ~ GARDEN """'· oompl 1ot1nd•111-. 646-1111 Coll-Pork 1115 :L::ld~o .;.1:::•1•:_ ___ _:1::35::,I mo~. "l · .. 10 Duploxn UnfUt'n. 3975 OAKWOOD BA fllrn or unfltrn wl!JI
(onytimol YES YOU CAN LEASE/OPTION o.uru.n • pet OK. Brol<or -G-E -2 Bit, 1\0.BAta ptx. Prl bch. APARTMENTS oelf clean•nc ow ... wood "l:::=i:=iill::!ill::!::i:l:=i=:i::l Own a 4 bdrm honle In 11~ $8j(), mo., 400o sq. ft. !OT ~ ~-11ft£ALTY View, trplc. AdultS, no petl. ceill.rl11, dswhrt, Juab w.t-
ii Eboll. 4 BR, 3~ BA, J ear ~ $225 mo. 64&-2290 lTQJ 161.h street sctpl~ with atream1 Ii wa.-
sU-eable College Park for 1ara,ge. Crpts, drps, 2 yrs Rtntal1 to Share 2005 ~~~~~~~~~li~ift~:i'"=.---1 n': 60,ll'll terfalls, elevatort, BBQt, DOWNTOWN
C.M. 0C¥;e to Q ty Park &:
shopping. Thi& cute 2 bdrm
& den home fearurea • large
fenced lot, hardWOOd floors,
Heatilator fireplace, lnlit
trees etc. Priced right at
$22,750
•• -PERRON
-... . ...-* 642·1771 Anytime *
~~~~--$~no per lnnts1oflh. young. Owner C, R. Gangl, SH '"~ bachelor h eav•n u -rt lo .L 3200 R~~TALl'S I L.• ======== clubhou.tt'. aaunu, jacuui ~ _,.,.. ....,...,,, po or t:?13) 2#..3101 , eves 1213) ~ n.wpo '""' _,..,,, um •~ Corona d1I Mir 4250 IWifll JIOOlt, p.."'iv 1ar. w/ bin fees. Occupancy in IO 246-0700. with 3 conee nlal pro. -----I ______ .__:::.;: storaae. Everythlna: n ew,
days or Jess. Call Perron __ fessional men. St rali;hl. ADULTS ONLY 0.nera'I 4000 2 BR, 1 BA, blkJ~an 4 Startin&: at $140. Mui
Realty 642-tm eves. 540-3984 Hunting ton Beath 1400 ~~ re~nces to Box 4126, 3 Bdmu 2 baths, split level, J>..y, View. Pri pa t Io . pleaae. J ust Eut of
Newport Se ach 1200 POOL PAD _ WANT woman 20-3) to Share 2 car pn.ge. _:'vail. Jan. 15 DEL~~c~~Bdrm ~7~ no pets. $200 yrly. =Bl;~ =t =.=
NOWS THE T IME Apt &: Expenses w/aamt. or Feb. l. $273/mo. FUrn apt Sll5 plus utll.1,,;;,;,;;:;:;,=--:--..,....,, Way. 56'300
$4,ln) Tutal cash down need· One boy child acceptable. Bay " Bee~h Realty, Inc, Heated pool, ample parkina:. SINGLE tum. apt. w/balh I ,....,...,_,.,. ___ mj
ed to aSJSume low interest call 548-297! aftr:r 5P~1. ~Dover Dnve, Suite 126 NB No clillclren ·no pels. for illg): \\"Orki~ lady. $85 N MS.~ Eves. 548-6966 1965 Pomona. C.M. mo ll>c. all utll s, 615-2005 BRAND EW V.A. loan for th.is she.?p !i WANTED: Mature lady (30--alt !i Pfl.1 Channi11g, La.rs;e 2 bdAn 2 bedroom home with 36• pool, 45 ) to aha.re . t .,.. ,,, LEASE. Custom 3 br, $125 1 Br 4-Plex Conv klea· · '
bath homl! on channel. Lots or decklng and patio, horn~ HunUn&:ton P~:~ 2~1 ba. M•ny x t ras. Uo~. Child ci.K. 81ueBACtlELOR $100 w/util. No Beam~ ceilings, hUge lire--Gorgeou.ii carpets & ·drape a. 963--3422 Oiild.ren OK. Nr evuythlne. Beacon, 64.5--0W, C.M. Pets. No cooking. Oean. Call $150 & $170
place:""b1ilt·ln BBQ + pier Modern garden type kitcben. , 64~7468. 6'5-6737 ·
For Lease or Sale
& Coat. Prlct'd at $27,500 F u L L EMP D. lady w/share my LOVELY t\IWl'l!\Se 2 BR, 2 COit• MeN 4100 LRG. Bach. studio. Full UTILITIES PAID NEED MONEY? JEAN SMITH PRtC>; Tot at paymeni.. home w/Mm•. KIL prlv., BA. Frplc, new opts. Im· kltch. Conv. Joe. Gent pref. 1 & 2 Bdrm, 2 1wbn pool.I.
To bu_v a new home! Investl. REALTOR just Jl~ rent. pvt. rm & ba. S11·50 wk. med. poss. $250. Ag t , * * * No pets. $125. 615-4275 Adults only, no pets., rum
gate our guarant-.. tradl! WE $EL'-A HOME 546-3215 CM. 646-0732. MRS. IRENE u d_,_ .. _ _.._.,...., """' 646-3255 1.1 LOVELY 1 aR. w/w,_bltns. C1UI~. VM"'J ,,..
in plan. Let us amwer your ~-~,:.:::,:.::::___ EVERY 31 MINUTES Cost• Men 2100 WATERFRONT -3 Bclnn. 2 ISIOKOERTATNEGREERAVE. 1 hlk to beach Ii: shp'g. $200. Jal Avocadt> St, C.M.
quest.ions with no obligation. NE\VPORT 1-JEIGHTS Large w lk & L Bath. Slip, Sandy Bl!acb. mo'. 673--3751&ft7 pm -~S..="M&r~o'""n"'p°'mn=""='-I
Fatr •noogb ! • bdrm 2 both hom• I dining a er ee EXECUTIVE home.""'... $300 Mo. Up. COSTA MESA HARBOR GDrrlll'
room & n.imf)Us room -2 n. ~ BR, tam rm, frplc, (1) 774-7241 or ~1005 lalboa 4300 llUIW
fireplaces. 2100 sq ft of !Iv· 842~682~K~til'• PM 1Sx40 pool; water-pool 3 BR pool home. 1 blk to best You are the wiMl!r ol
ing area-nel!ds son1e palnt-
1
........... ~.......... .......
1
maint. & gardener. 6 mos beach. $330/ mo, Fam. 2 ticket& to the PENINSULA • Ocl!an Vn.
ORANGE COUNTY'S priced for immediate sa.Je at plus le~. ~~13 only. Agent 968-4362 Lra: -2 BR upper. 100 yd.I
LARGEST $32.500. FHA/V A-NO Las t CIMnce Southern Callfornla trooi beaf,h, 150 yd.a trom
BAQIEU)R unturn from
$110. Aho avail 1 • 2 a: S
Bdrm. Htated poob, child
care center, adj to Jboppinc. 2629 HARBOR BLVD. DOWN AV A IL. Call Owner may accept friend's Newport Beech 2200 .,,_ rt H I ht 3210 S~rt1, Vacation bay. Yeitr round ltue. $135 545-8424 fopen '""' Soulh offer to lease this choice 4 nwwpo _e 9 1 f I 110 f -•~ S46-a640 -Recreat on• lum ... s un um. o::11r.w•.J
OPEN EVES TILL l ,30 Coa ·='::'c.Re::al::;..:"-':::::1•=''.:.· ~-b::lnn Anthony pool home u ELEGANTLY fuml&hed, 2 3 BR, 2 BA. DR, den, f/p. Vehicle Show BAYrnQNT A'D'1'C.' • be ch 2700 ~tenon.Way
· N EEDS DEVELOPING not sol.d within next "·eek. Bdrm, view home. DX! sq fl Quil!t SL Adu1ta ...... ·~ pn a Coif& Mna 5t6411'll
PR•I DE 8 Prime C·2 Lats. Total 240' Has large 5"°~ GI loan 1° Fireplace, garage, patio, no peta. ~1460. ' at the ~n:t2 ~ ~ = MARTINIQUE
\Vide. Some Inc. ?10\\'. $22.S~J take over @ $191 including wuher/d~r. grand piano, =='=======~I _ U GTh"678 ,~, & hu. Lor, go • ""'' TV. Aduli.. oouy. $300. Klnp N_ow_ ...... Shorot ... 0 ANAHEIM -P. GARDEN Am A truly delightful home. 3 ea., or Sl80i\1. total, Gd. 1 ,~ , ft •• d uo ~ aft 6 ..-• _. CLEAN ft.~ .... Ap'•
Subm. open or Ou<;rs. n.ua • .....,.-......,.. er pm. CONVENTION ou;i-=wi-'°' Exc:ellent "'"""'·U.lce "'"'"""hj lllil:e bdrms., 2 fuU baths, tenns. it. 1 BR, 2 B' y ·"-1 All util Incl -up ~-· fam .• din. rm. Sit-down for-R. C. GREER Realty ~ 545·5&80 FIREPLACE. Pool, 2 bdr., 2 ,.. e .... .,. ea.w, CENTER f<W 1nga w/bet.ted ~ Extra
mica bar. Fully cpt'd. Rear 673-0000 (nwemNU.bt) ha., patio, &dult1, Bicyslde $250 mo. New Crpta & drpe. 315 E. Balboa Blvd. parking. Near aboppq.
id.:> yd. compl. enc-losed BAYFRONT wites. Fan-,!!--EGE,.R-EAL~. ~lU .... ('~~)tU_J~-~~ St0-299l or &U--T5l
9
January 3rd thru 11th ~~~O/YRLY. ~~ ~ Adu1~~-BR' APi's'
by 6 tt. blodrwall ----fe~;-lastic viC\\•! Dli 2 BR. 2 uw ·-.-~ "" ·--U lvenlty P rk 3237 Enjoy this 12'x30' covered BA. Docks, $44,300 up. """"'"""~~~l!!!!O!!!!! 673-5419. n ~ e -Pleue call 6't2-S678 ~xt 329 -apt.-Uti!~tnd. can 5.l)...3101 -1-m Santa•Ana •Ave. •CM'o
patio for 01.ltdoor living. Full J-lelen McKenzie, R I t r . C• 1 FIREPLACE, Pool, 2 bdr., 2 NEW 3 hr, 2 ba. blt-lna. between 9 and 1 ~to claim or 673-5342 ~· Ap~~··~ill~-~~~
price $23.000. FHA or VA 646--0731 B h Bl d f ba., patio, adulUI. Bay1lde Avail now. $.115. Call~ tlckem. <North County H ·11~...._ ... ~1.. '••"" r , :~:!'.·) ~~~ =~!i°~: REDUCED TO SELL 3 br. ~a~q ft :Id~ .• =~~t. ~~~nt~~ 1! $:: 497-1542 :u·frtt num': ia M0-12'm~ -un ""'""' · ~· _, O~NS APJS,
1% ba, Fam. m1, xlnt Good financing. 5419 8 k a. •240 tatl'. term" S28.000 o.,.. 64&-7566 *BRASHEAR REALTY '* . IC y • * SUNNY * HUNTINGl:ON ~PRI 2 & 1 BR avail Adult. °"4'•
V.A . Loan Ass umption $25,960 16952 Beach Blvd., HB 2 Bdnn-Take over lease 'tU 2 Story Colonial 4 BR. 21,~ For Single Adults
With $4,000 Total down pay· 5 BEDRM.-Newport He ights 1210 SfT-8501 Eves. 842·2123 June 8 $125 mo. Call BA $295 mo. Ref & deposit. ACRES NEW J.J.J BEDROOMS 174.l Tu1Un, Cost• Mesa
Mgr. ritn. canon, &t2-*U ment for this 650 annual 837~ bef 5 pm 492-1712 2405 Bonnie Pl. 758-0328 * * From $140. Furn &: TJnf
G.r. loan i• 1102. , .no hid· TRI -LEVEL Priced to Sell .. ..,. s pm T•M ia, Gym,, Saww
.den COS'IS. Oean 3 bedroom, SPANISH HACIENDA 3 bclnns 2 baths, 1500 sq fl, TRAILER. EXECUTIVE Hoqie !i BR, 3 M t I A ! 6200 Edinger AJte., HB
ready for occupancy, Two 3 balhs, Plu.sh carpeting. Elegant • but emnomical. L"'(>ts/dfP!i, blt·ins, boat door Available now. 1'1lracle li!Ue, Ba. Cpls, drps. elee bltm:. *. Q e . p S * Phone 846-009 bath ea t Fireplace, Park like profes-Call today to see 1his 3 BR. S300 546-6740 gorgeous s. rpe s. sional landscaping! 540-1720 home in Prime Area. in double garage to fenced N.B. $80 month . 1st It Iut. . 1 ~-" So f 0 C. Drapez throughout! Double back yard. 60x120' lot. Be-645-0810 • ..,,... • o · BACHELOR It 1 BR furn
Sl40 up. Adults, no pets.
1301 Keel!on Ln. 842-1848
(Wnt of Beach. nr Slater).
Neer Orange Co. Airport A
Uct. Adults only. ~· TY.-o patios. Oose TARBELL 2955 Ha rbor Only $49,000 1 --'· ...., Corona del Mir 3250 Fairgrounds
Gra h a m Rlt y. 646-2414 ow m .... -...et •-·500· Submit ShlCllo & 1 ......... : =i~~ing. Seeing NEEDS PAINT 'Near Newport Post OUiee Oil ~ei~J R I Balbo• l1lend 2355 Charming 3 BR. 2 BA, WfW $30 WK a UP
WE SELL A HOME au on es ea ty ~ 1 1 A il J cptt, trplc, patio. 2 c.ar aar. ~ W_..;. M-
Santa Ana A~. So&G-2196
\Vell built 2 bdrm home, eX· BEAtrr Ocean view, new 847-12fi6 Eve 53G-6358 .,...,,, mo yr y, va an. A all J 26 m Pb! tt -r• --.. VIL £$ EVERY 31 MINUTES tra '"...,... doubl, ...... ,..._ ac-crpt.s & drpg, iresh paint, 4 _....;.;-.-..,:c..:.o·.=:= 3rd. 2 BR, 2 BA. Frplc, 2 ,.::._ ~··-· Sa Jn,. •3· e Kltchl!n1 & TV'1 incl Oren-County 4600 LAM A APTS ....... -·-..-. $18,SOO patio&, dock. Adult• only. ....-t"'n ,..,.._ t an · • •-2 BR unJurn, pr:I pt.Hol, htd Walker & Lee cess to rear Yard. R-2 wne :1Ft;1 ~ ~':."f~! ~ 3 lxirms 2 baths, 1250 sq ft, 615-7880. 6D-M42 : r= :~ h!!r. SINGLE Adults, Luxu r y pool, 2 eu encl'l gv, Qill.
7682 Eld,_ ·D""'"UPLEto XbuildC. Slz9,7Sfl0.NE Jolla s::ricm. 5'8-S766 or 548-~16' living room eleclrlc RENTALS 2 BR, 2 BA •. crpts, drpl, 2J76 NEWPOIT m.YD. Pfden apts, w/full iecrtt· dl'fn welcome, "° Pe t a
M ... ~. 5371 built-ins range, oven beau· frplc, patio, VJeW. <4111 Ac•· 541-t1S5 tlon facilities &: compll!te please! $160, n9 W. WU.On.
11"2-«lS Open 'tll 9 Pf\f 2 tx:lnns each side, 2 garages tiful carpets. enclosed front .HouMI Unfurnished cia.. (J) 772-0367, 5304)99 or privacy. SOU.th Bay Cub 646-lZJ.
5241950 $29,750 with ternis. Baycrest 1223 porch & patio, G(b(-100' fenc-General 3000 837--077 NICE bachelor, full kitchen, Apta. m So. Brookhunt, SP=A~C~IOU,,;,.,s-.-0~ •• -n-l _Br_f
Wells-Mccardle, Rltrs. '--'-------ed lot. Landscaped. DUPLEX -zro sq. ft. 4 BR, lull bath, furn. for respon1l· Anaheim fTI4 ) 7T2-4:iOO w/w crpt, drpe, elec bJt.fnl;
FAMILY RM + DEN 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. Ch mpanne Li" 't " ~ $2"J5 3 Br + tam nn, 2 Ba. 2~~ BA, blfnll, frpl c. Gar. ble adult i;oo mo, w/utll. qUiet area. Nr ahopl Ir:
25 fl aiv•red patio, King ;;48.772!1 644-0084 eves. a , y n,. n1r1atUEl!llilll Fr-Pie, patio, F am 11 y $325 mo/lee. 541)...7573 220 Monte V11ta. 64U618 Garden Grove 4610 flWay. Adlt.; no Pl!la. Call
bedrooms, 2 bath!!, Red ~~~~~~~~~1 On A Sheer 1T!!'T'mr welcome. Blue B e ,con , $135 Lovely 1 BR rum SINGLE Adult.II L uxu ry 54!MM12 ~:~~;·f~7J~~gb~ Costa Mes• 1100 Budget! EXECUT.IVESI 645-0111. C.M. Huntington Be•ch 3400 Ad.ults. Close to itores rarden apt. with country _.._T"OWN=o;H"=Du"'$"1!,--.. 1
B. ._ utlful BAYCREST $125. 2 Br, sep, hse. nr. • ~~e~728· 1985 Pomon a . club ai.-....her• and com-New 2 BR, 1% BAL 1 • •
5-11).1720 •• ~· Spanish motif w/pool .., ... 1,, <hlldren w.1,,,,,,.. lmmed••te Poss. ~ . ··~-• • • TARBELL 29SS Harbor EMERGENCYl.I, home wiU1 5 bedrooms, 3 A discriminating buver will Blue Beacon, 645--0lU, C.M. IA MERRIMAC WOODS pl~e privacy_ SOtn'H BAY BR, Ctpta:, drJ)lj sell dnz b 11. t h s, 36' ENCLOSED ..,, ~UB APl'S 13100 Otapma.n oven. ,66-21Cll. 377 W. Wllaon
Assume FHA -CIRCU?.fSfANCES PC>OL, badminton court and apprec. this. lovely 4 BR w/ $225. 2 Br, 2 Ba. fm rm. Immaculate 3 bdrm' A den . Furn wUta avail. See ad un. Ave., Garden Grove {Tif) LARGE 3 BR. l" BA. Bltn&.
FORCE TIIIS SALE _ beautifully landscaped lot. fam rm, atrium & huge frplc, Many extru:. ChUdre:n It pet family room, all bullt-tru, der clus 5100. 425 Meni· 636-3000 cpts drps dihwhr patio•
J bedroom home plus guest out of Area owner has: Prir-HAFF DAL REAL TY welcome. Bkr. !i341980 eustom cpta/drps. Newly re. mac Way. se..6300 No Peta. 2' chOdren' ok. N; 5~%. $145 "Pl'!' monlh. Com·
pl. ~. 5 bdrm 2 ba home.
Cpt&'drtis. bit.Ins. Cul-de·
sac, CALL loiR. NELSON
54G-US1 Heritage Real Estate
SUCCESSFUL
Dry cleaning business, pro-
fessK>nally equipped + Jaun.
cttunat. Excel loc. on Har-
bor Blvd., Costa Melia.
CAUDELL REALT Y
546-5460 Eves. 545-3310
LIDO SANDS
5 BEDROOMS
2 Baths. Large yanl.
$29,950
Georg• W il liamson
REALTOR
673-4350 673-1564 Evoa.
$24,950!
4 BEDRM +DEN
Mesa Vm!e! 2 bathl. Built·ln
kitchen. covtred patio, Qwn.
~r helps with the fini.ncing.
540-1720
TARBELL 2955 H1rbor •••••••••
NOW'S THE
TIME FOR
QUICK CASH
THROUGH A
house • large garage off ed so LO\V we don't wanl 842-4405 $140, 2 Br, gar & yard. decorated, $275 per monlh. FURN 1 BR, newly Laguna &eadt f70S schools. 545-3215
aUey . top ea.st.side location· to upset the neighbon by 3 BR, $23,500, 7 yn: old, man ChildrT.n OK. 557-7&48, 540-llSL decorated. $125 per mo. See ntE NEW VJu.AGE INN DELUXE 2 BR. immac· a
don't miss this • $24,COJ. mentioning it. See this "OP. extras. Boat or trlr access. Broker 534-6980 4 BDRMS 1%. baths, earner Mgr, ApL 6. 2135 E!dl!n, ~--rl Saddlebaclt 1 qull!t Central ht, dahwhr,
excellent tcnns • "''hat a PORTUNITY" to better liV· Take over $16,700 GI, 5%.% lot. Vacant 6 month or 18 C.lif. ~,~'.:.':" Y from $28 ~ Gar patio adults. $140
buy. ill:" TODAY! at $152 per mo. Owner. Costa Meu 3100 month lease, sit)/mo. Bkr. $145 A: up . ATmACTIVE, 1 :--:-"1""• .. Aila ""'w· · ~ ' ' 646-7171 WE SELL A HOME 847-8737. M6-tl.41 ...... vey ap... u i, -=='='========-I LOVELY 3 Br 2 Ba Fam bdr., poof, utll paid, prden linen1, maid. pool laundry QUIET Trl-Plex. 2 Br, 1%
EVERY 31 MINUTES Huntington rm crpts 1t.' drps • trplc' 4 LARGE BR. 2 BA. trplc, llvlna:, adulll, no peta. 1lOJ rm. Steps to beadh. 696 s. ba, crpls, drps, bll·lns, IOP
Walker'& Lee Harbour 1405 d.hwsht, bit-Ins. 0coYl!red new cpla;. drps, dbl 1ar, Wallace Aw., C.M. Coast Hwy. $-9436 1ar. Adll1 No Pell. 7$2
. patio, 1225. Call 838-3790 =back yd. $250 . NICE 1 BR dplx. Quiet. Sep CHARJ.tING 2 bdrm, uni t." Scott Pl. 549--1806.
MOST BEAUTIFUL 20-l.1 \V~tcHH Dr. LIQUIDATION!! New trl· 3 BR, 2 BA. la: fam rm, pcie! ' ~ ~~:t over 30. Newly r e de c., w/w QUIET 14 2 Br garden apt!
N SA Coun Cl b 646-Tnl level homes. Prices &lashed &: maln tena r.ce. New 3 BDRM., blL ins, carpets. pe · carpc!ling Ir; d r apes, Blfnll, patio, htd poo l ~ :i~er ·1o1. 80xll~~ Co~ple~e~ unbe1Jevably to s 3 8, 7 50 . cpts/drps, bltnl, trplc. Avail quiet street lg. yd. and dbL $107 CUTE Sina:le, Util Pd. Completl!ly furn. Lee. tree adults, no pets. $160 mO
I mod . 2 d Univ_•rslty Park 1237 Bldn/Agt, 846-0609,· eves now ~, 642-2TI8 1an ge S3'.lS mo. 544-9506 Quiet One Woman. No shaded patio. 120 yds. from 546-5163 l
y erru;wd bd1·m., en I ;;;;.;;.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;, 1 ~·· & wPt bar; buiH-ins & 5 fl. I• 557..fil51 CLEAN ~ 2 B Di, 3 BR, 2 BA Hom!!. $190. per Pets. 319 Del Mar, 642-4112 Wood1 Cove Beach $175 mo. LOVELY New 2 BR. 2 BA:
1\"ide bt'auL brick frpl, Dbl. Do YOU FIT? • Beamed 'ceill~. "Ja~h mo, All references ttqUittd. DELUXE &: SPAC _1 BR, Mlislon Realty 494-0731 All bltns, shag cpls, pr. N(
detached gar.: formaJ din· Retired Couple or newJy. Fountain Valley 1410 frplc, some cpt'f, E-slde 962-5852 pool, ideal for bachelors. $l(M)..Smali, eozy place, now. So. Cit Plua It Irvine Ind
ing rm. & 16xl6 mstr. bdrm. weds'! If so this is for you. BY O\VNER • 4 BR 2 BA $150. 548-6680 3410 $125. 1993 Church. 548-9633 Latl!r, apt $135. Employed Pk. 54~2321 or 54()..1973
I-luge living rm. 2 .br + den with lot1 ol w/w crpts, sprinkle;.. tronf FOR Leue $250 mo. 3 br, 2 Fount•ln ,Y~lley * NAs.sAU PALMS * &dull, 49'"'4200 VACANT 3 Bdrm 1 bat)I,
e Bl LL HAVEN, Rltr. pnvacy. $34,200. & rear. c 0 m P 1 e t e 1 y ba, Nu crpt & drps. Elec 4 BDRA1', 2 BA, wfw crpts. l le 2 BR. Pool 1 Br ApL Also, sleeping nns. garage, large rumpus rooin
2111 E, Coast, CdM 673-321 1 • ed h"ll remcxleled. $28,500. 642-4210 stow. East.side. 646-0Mll $245 mo. 64M210 da,yi, 171 E. 22nd SL 'W2-3645 Utll pd. Free TV & raclio. with fireplace, fenced yard1
1018 s. l\1ain, S.A. f>41-6613 r I days, 545-2.583 eves. LEASE 1.rg 2 br, !amlly rm, 545--2583 eves. $130 I Mo. 2 Br tumlshed, 23)(1 So. C.oa1t Hwy. No pel.91 $175/mo. 613-fS7f , Family Pacesetter 5 BR 2 Ba home. A.uume 5%. p.r. 1951 Tustin, C.M. Call 5 BR 2 BA home. Leue $275 utllitlel included. Older BAOIELOR. Furn or un-FRONT 2 BR duplex: on~
REALTY F1-IA. $32.950. By Owner. 826--1223, 828--9120 mo. Includes ganiener. tenants onl,y, 64~ turn. Nr. bl!ach &: town. ta Ana Ave. Clean Is a t.
One story • Corner Joi _ 4 Univ. Park Center, Irvine Call 962--8291 4 Bclnn, 2 ba, blt-ln kitchen. Call 962-3292 BACHELOR, $125. Nr 00:. UtU. Jiii, $1.15. 494-4925. tractive. Malunl adulbl,
Bclnns • Dining Room • 18x Call Anytime ~ Double garqe. North i lde Util pd. t.tature ad.ult only. • ,:;pe~ls.::;..;64'":l-'-9L19~-~-~-1
20· Family Room • Large ~~~~~~~~~I ~L"1g._u"n"•;...;:lo=•c:ch;__1;.:7..::os c.M. $195. 646-4837 Westminster 3612 No pets. 54&-8B82 Hotels 4'75 2 BR. J',ii BA, util nn, d".
Kilche11 • Separate lt1a.ster • Br 2 Ba N •• ( 1 dbl -UDO Sho Hotel 1: ft!arina patio. New cpbl A: drpl. No
Su. Irvine 1238 " . . ear Nu, Ocl!an 3 Br, 1 .,..th, oder) on . 3 BR 2 BA. cpts, drps, bltt ..,_w_. Be.ch 4200 res pell. cblldren we lcome •
ite -Room for Pool A: --------Vw. Blt-ins. $3.\950 or LM Joi. Lebe or lea.M! option IN, hid pool. Pets OK. Walk R9 t""' Special winter monthly rat· 968-72'12 or 546...fMT
Cam!>M'. • $40.500 • CALL TRANSFERED: must sell Option. Call 497-100 good for handy man. 54&-3767 to achl. S36-9533 SINGLE Adults Lu x u r y n : Ba,yfront Lanai Suite ""'='-"'' ""~~=-~-&40-llSl Heritage Rea.I Es-L.. 'f t --·~ ·N· ·"th _... ... -. ••M_ View Stud\o Suitt $285. NEW 3 BR. ' BA. Shaa our ,,.,,autl u home in Uni--....,_.. ..... .., .. _ ... ,,. .,.__ ~"-"~("""~-·~v-"'-1----1 versity Park. tile roof, 41..::G..;'..:"';;'..;';.;.l ____ ..;l-;:;DG:;.0;.;.Go;.;;;n:;;•;:.r;:;•l;_ ____ ..:3:.:0-:.:D-;:;D_Go:::..:;noc;::r;:;•:.I ____ :;Ja::•:DI club atmolphtre and com· up. Maid, pbooe, cofftt, Ice, Cl'Jlll, drpl. 1mrDed occup)\
$3),300 -S17S Total Mo"thJy bdrm + tam. room, crpU 1 • plete privacy. SOl!rH BAY Day-Week. k Dr _.. """" $225. $40-1973 ,
payment. Nice 3 Br in good &; drp5. By owner. 833-2680 a.us APTS. Irvine at 16th. $17 Lido Par · v•............. 2 BR unrorn aJ)t. Adulll, llO
\Vestside ioc. Lrg yd, c-rpts S~\\~\l-/&£f!iS• Newport Beach. RIENTALS pets, •wtm.mJrc pool. mT &:: drps. GI No Down, FHA E1stbluff 1242 {TI4) fi45.(f{i(J A-. Unfurnished Canyon Dr. 646-19&1 S9SO Down + Costs. Prin. ,..,_
clpals Only. ,.,..,..,._ OWNER 7< a / l l / 1 BA YCLIFF MOTEL Go 1 5000 DELX S BR, l BA. C!>ts. drpo, OFFERS ne rtnl e wiln In• lui 1°/n Cnud/e LOW WEEKLY noro dahwhr. frplc, patio. l)OO.
H 0 NEYMOON COTTAGE For JI.nil time her choice * ' ,RATES * mo. 84l-t085
::h 1';:1: ~~n:,~,:~!: Bluff11 '"Llr-ia" plan. 3 Br. e:::':lftb~ WO: ::. ~~~c:e~· ~t· mdd servb. · VEN DOME 2=-"'s=R~tinl~ • ...,,tlew...,ly....,d,..oc-.~ .. -ew-I
Low down: 71h ,1f lst ll'USI 2 Bo, lanai, one &tory in low to form foil, .imp&. word1. ~ crpta Ir drps. Mh:llts.
adult area. W"· build•<'• I I · pel> ... " -.. 1U4_..,,, deed. Owner alter 6 pm. ....., ~ LIM TI 0 DELUXE A,pl CompJ Furn. 2 IMMAcut.ATE APl'Sl ' '"r......,, ...............
548-ZJ!M E~eai' Ila~~~~ .. / ... ev"'l••~bc!ll blk'• •-Lido , .... N-" . AOOLT • FAllD..Y_ 2 aR tro,it Puple:x on, °"'• ~---'" ..I I 11 I I I uvm -· -·-·-• 0 N I . ~ S 4 B<lnn, 2 ha. Bit-in kitchen, . Shopplnl. PtTler Slnsle SECl'JONS AV~~ n'V'e. ew w " .,..,... tovt.
Double garage. North 11ide. L inda Isle ___ .;.1;:;306:: GenL $150 a Mo. Call Clole te lhW ..... Partc ttfrla. Refs. 548-Jl(ll
122.500. O.-ner B '° k" I Lindo lalo Ddv1 H 0 CA I J OCEANFRONT 3 B" !\\ BA : ~ Plrtl-• p.u, """'"'Inc ~ 6~ % Loan $1.SOO &iwn. ... I I 675-4747 * SpKklul 3 Brls. 3 II& 2 BR untum 11pt Adults,
646-4837 4 BR, ~ BA home In final • I r I I' J n:.pln:. Tip-top condl Nice-• l'Jpl. lndN/lndey·b.,~11 • Canyon•Dr-. 646--i"IM
DAILY PILOT IMo __ ••_v_._n1_, ___ 11_10 ~~~~~:;~~~-r~~~ ·J le=~~ 1,v crptd ·~-aw. patio. 1141 Anaheim Aw.
2;ts.3 :;-:mi~·~,
Fom Rm + bUilanf rm. IL IN f 0 11 ""~---....... -~l~vall to luly. oos:rA lllESA -C.M. -1 .
Beaut. '"'· $155,000. 1-'-':.l;..;.;..,;I :.._ -.(r -.-
1
_, About on okltrmo ontor· 1 • 2 Bit""" • unturn. 11so e RENT e i BR, n4'.· 1~ BA. Elec
WANT AD
642-5678
POPUI..AR. T-plp.n, assume
M( '>(, F11A. $179 pays 11.ll! 3
BR, fam nn, 1% M. Blt·lns.
lot~ of extras Incl. likt--ncw
cpta, treah paint throughout.
Dtnt.·11. prof. landscpd
comer lot. $29.!rSO. 545-0H • ,.,.,net.
DON'T JUST Y.'l.bll tor
JOmetbing to fw·ni$h your
IM>me ••• find great buy11 In
••• • • • •• ...;.today=:..'•.;....0..;.a_"U_led"-A--'da...,. _
Linda Isl• O.velopment I ll>LIA .L-.. ....--.. ...._ w·--bit .. d , .<n~ I G ':~~;;=:::::....., ta ner1 ,.,. NlWld be gl'iln • •~'"' ... .,_ ... .,., ..... nfl, cp · , rps. W l'UllFn Bil rvndy 675-3210 r. mudord goo. 11 goea _with pool, patio. 15%! PU"'ntta 3 R_,,, flltmlturo ok. No pots. -
Lido l alo 1351 '------:..:::..:
BAYFRONT
HOMES
New or old~r. with pl1!1'1
le 11Ups. 3 BR. to 6 BR.
1 From $149,500
Walker Riiy. 675-5200
3366 Via Udo, NB Open SUn •
ILOUIED ,-." '°' 1 BR upab'I. tc nv rm. $19.95 & UP lBR,1tudloSlt11.C>pta, h&r-il"'-rl-rl ...,,-T,-1 O ~i... th. chut~le quo4itd hlrna. Wat•rlront bids. l~U..To-'Mteth Rent.alt b'tm. Pvt patlo. tnel or.
by fllll~ In th. mltling worch P•tto PorCh;--JJEll. M6--Zl90 WIDE SEtXC?'l(W Adults. 5Ct4W
• • • )W, deote~ ffOlft ap No. i Mlow. OCEANFRONT Bach. Apt NO DEPOSIT O.A.C. 2 BR. .undedr. pno. e ~~~~:trl8~~~f\f"t•s r f r r r 11 r I' I ~ !~&rl,v. c.tJ 61~~1~~ ~~ ~Ad: .. ~ e UN•o~.·NAMat.SW!'• llTIUS I I I I ff" I I I BAYFRONT l Br Furn. $150. ' Br, pr, RIO. UUI l!llt! I I Rttolve: 3 9' i ... , . . . . .C::.'.! . . . Patio. M ulti, no polo. rut! pd. Chtl&n OK. -tr Q>ls. Drps, D.W. Dtlux. '20tl ---~---~--------~--------'~"'°:::..:·67:H1:::..:..•~1~ .. :....::(1~)5:::J6.4:...::258= ll.141980:..:..;::::::. __ ~---'-..... --""-.-----
I
F EE
* * * * * *
""" 5110 Whaddya Want? Whaddya Got?
R
* * * * *
When You
Wont it done
right •.•
Coll one of
the experts
listed below/I
2 BR. erpl, drpr, enclosed
gar. Adulta, no pets. Vic
Harbor • Baku ahop'nc.
SllS. 642-2389
SPECIAL CLASSIFICATION FOR
NATURAL BORN SWAPPERS
Special Raio
Are Eligible 'for The Grand Prize SERVICE DIRECTORY SERVICE DIRECTORY
Babysitting 6550 Carpet CIHnlng 6625
SERVICE DIRECTORY
L1ndsc1plng 6110 ---"-..=..---
S Lln11 -S timff -5 buck•
llULEI -AD MUI T INClUOI
Drawing 8 P.M. Wed .. On Stage at the Show~ Di.amond C8.rpc!:t Cleanen TAKATA NURSERY
BABYSJTI1NG My Home. 187 21.&t St, Costa Mesa Be1t Design
,_....., _, 111t¥1 .. fnlM. 1-Wlltl -WIM Ill frtclt.
... YOUll ...... tllllfW ....,_ •-t lr>tt of lld'tertlllnl-.....,.OTMIHO p.o11 SALi!! -l'.A01!$ ONLl'I
PHONE 642-5671
Day or night. Warm food. Home & Apt Cleaning Sprlnklera Installed
Infants OK. Fenced Yd. ~1317 n-ee estimates Drain Pi""' Installed 64l-S299'. ~ 5200
CAMP'tNQ CARPET STEAM a.EAN· Tree trim & Clean-up
To Place Your Trtd1r'1 Par1dl11 Ad TUILDS BABYSITIING: For worll:;. ED N brusbe1 546-0n4
SPACIOUS MW 2 bdrm @l]i) ... mothen. Wkly ham. F"' .. ~ ~no . 1 o~RD~ER--N~OW-, -..,--,~arno-.,,-1
2 Nth. Nr. shopping. 4 Br, Like Nu Home Nr Lake Tahoe lge cab. Either school area. Refer. :::=:,;:=::::=== Stark Dwarf lrult trees It. $2~ ,_, mo. Aut.ontt:lcs, in b@au. Yorba & lot, 11' blck to lake 4 =.::;, 962-9190 Cerpet Laytng & other nurRry stock for your
Wood&. (E. Anaheim), Trd gol1 COUl"M!, 15 min to ski BABYSITTING. my home _ _!t.epilr &'.26 yard. Call 54().48411 or see me
M1rln.r Squire Apts. for 4 Br ln CdM, Nwpt Bch ~a!I. $20,IXX> val clear for JAN 3 weekly, da.izy, e ves , ----at 20352 Cypreu St &A.
1244 lrvlne Av.., N.B. or Irvine. Call m.-0980. :.~~ ~ val, tenns. • •]] ReaMmable, r e liable. FOR CARPETING Hd&M!.
72' """"'' 1200 mi range DOORSOPIN 642-6037. OR CARPET LAYING l.!!"'"""!B!'!EA~UTI>m.!""'~!!'!"'"!!! luo,IXXJ val;, will conside; What do you have ta trade1 wtEkDAYS%PM BABYSITTING, my home, C. A. Page 642-2070 Moving, Stor1ge 684b
NEWPORT TOWERS TDorsmauerboat.Immtd List It Mre -in Orange WEOONDSt2 1fODN by day or week. Ages J.5. Ei;;;;j;_,-· 6640 MOVING: For ac ce ss
Lovely 2 BR, :r BA. Ocean & drmand for charter by Jo. County'• Wxest read trad-642-0560 CM. furn iture or a pp 11 an c e g
Bay view. Subt.rn'anwl cal !ervioe. nt: 72!J..3.400. t.rw post -al"f make a deal. BABYSITI'ING Your Home. ELECTRICAL Service & 536-1000 or mf&, ~Uli
pk's, """'-jaamt pool _. * * * * * REAL E.STATI! BUSINESS and BUSINESS and Mon. lhru Frl. """"""'°" repair. 24 hn. 1 da,ys. No
Boat .sliPI avail far ~ta.1°!!!"!!!!J!!'!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!i!!!ll'!!!!!!!!!!J!!~!!!!!!!!!!!!!!li!I General FINANCl .. A;;:L:..., __ _..:.F.clNccA:....N..:C.clA:.:L~----Beach area. Call 847-3045. job too small. ~model I P1perh1ngfng 6tz 23ll I~ --·-------BABYSITMNG, my home, additions. U It's electrical, P•inting
3 8~ 2 BA. ttplc, patio, 1 bl R-EApl-N-TALUSnfuml"'-.a REAL ESTATE Office Rent1I 6070 l ;;B;;";;';;' ;;Op;,;;;pe;;rtu;;;;;n;;l;;tt;;e;;1;;6;;300;;;;B;;u;;1;;.;;0p;;;po;-rt,;;u;;n;;lt;;lo;;1;;6;;300;;;l:_M~e~,.~v~e~rd~e~....,~··~lnlan~ts _w=:'='=:"'='=:"=:646-<==m===
6150 _______ ,
to beach. EDcl ~· Veryl---~'-·--------Gener1f okay. Phone 540-1132 ... e Interior· Exterior e
nke, $250 yr(y. '"' Hunttngton Baac:h 5400 Room1 for Rent 5995 HUNTINGTON BEACH ,..,.,, .. , SUPP'v R011TE WILL Ba.,,,,t our hoai.,, Floors 6665 A'°""'c ceil""'' ptd, """' 622-9193. Air Conditioned """UI I.I Mesa del Mar area. CARPETING exper. State lie. Pitubqh
FURNISHED Roo d ON IEACH ILVD. Man Ot' WOrrian needed to restock ·new type coin 546-1692, 549-~78 Free estimate Lie. contr. =P,,"~"°"· =543-~J7-87 __ _,~c I * * * !all Bluff 5242 MRS. ESTHER E .
MILLER
31906 ffh AVE.
1 rred $52. m. stu enl Desk 15pac.:e available tn dispensers with high quality candy products. BABYSITI'ING, yoUr home 540-Tai2, 5464478 · INT./EXT. Aver. Ext. ~ e Eld :!:0•• u~ pd. newest ornce building at WE ARE . LOOKING FOR THE INDMDUAL by the Wttk or evening. You ==="=='==='== $127.SO labor only. 8 )'?'. VIEW APT. Ic. 2 BR, 2 Ba, crp'td, drp'd.
2 oov'd. ~· Xlnt k>c.
Jll' lhoWtn&. IChl•. a-cburch-
n . 816 Ami&w: Way # D.
1250. per mo. Cyrty.)
SOUTH LAGUNA
642-8520 en ve. M. hirinm:e!~~u.~~ ~nHdl':J'ottnned.g· WHO WILL WORK THIS BUSINESS LIKE IT tum. tra.nsp. &12-1407 G1rdenin9 6680 guar. painting avail. Alao. ~ '" W E WHO WOULD Apts & Comm'I. 54&-1546 $15 \VK & up w/ kitchen $30. beautiful entrance. Front· AS MEAN:r TO BE -ON BABYSlTTING, my home HERRING S C 1
You are the winner ot
2 tickets to the
\li'k stud.lo apL _23!6 Newpart age on Beach Blvd. ttar UKE TO BECOME FINANCIALLY INDEPENO-Mna.dd Mar. any qe.wel: * ' omp ete EX-P~ now acbl Blvd "'"o non:.c leads to private parking ENT-A PERSON ASPIRING TO VERY HIGH come 546-3003 Garden Service. teacher will paint eves " · .........,,...., lol $50 per month for M NTH v r•n WH WO EXPERT .c..&AN·UP wknds. Xlnt workmanslllp, EMPLOYED r~e. kitc:h. space. Detik ano cDalrl 0 L.:1 IUV\NINGS. ONE 0 ULD Personali~ work for ~ est 646-4519 54G..oJ62
M &71-6050 0 _,,,, ...... Southern C1llfornla
Sports, Vacation
& Recreatlon1I
Vehicle Show
prlvl. ·~ mo. in· "-ta ava..tlable for $5. Business UKE TO BE IN ·BUSINESS FOR HIMSELF, Brick, Mlisonry, etc.' partt-"'--._....le ...... ~91'4 · '
Mesa. ~6 '-""' hours answering service ANO HAVE THE OPPORTUNnY OF BEING 6560 ...,wo..i.-.... ~ .. • ~...-. • PAPERHANGING, years of ===------r available for $10. All utili· HIS OWN BOSSI 1-------...;.o"-AL'S Garoenlni 4: Lawn exper. Call John, ~2687.
PRIVATE entrance, nr bath, tle1 paid except telephone. BUILD, Remodel, repair Maintenance. Cornmerclal. 548-490!.
e NEW DELUXE e men only. S45. mo. Call DAI LY PILOT We hlYI I limited number of positions enRabft Brick, block, con c r e t e, tndu.strtal I: resldentiaL "*-,P"AJNTIN=="G---1n=t."'1Ext.""' *548-3696* 17175 IEACH ILVD. In the aru. Both fUll time 1ncfpart time. We do carpentry, no job too ama11 1 __ _c:*c.."6-J629==:...::*__ Loca! referencei. Immtd. 3 Br, 2 Ba apt. for leue
Ind. spac. muter suite, din
rm il dbl pniae. auto.
door openn-avail. Pool &
rec. a re a. Nr. Catbollc
Churd:ri:
at lb< FURN Room + bath m priv, HUNTINGTON llACH however, require en exchange of references befwlt Uc. Contr. 962--6945 Ex PERT Japan e l!ie service. 646-5242. 64G--3657 CM home $20 week an Interview is granted. You do need $1950 to Gardener Right price, nice I .
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
w/kltchen. Men. 646-&'ilJ '42-4)21 $37~ cash, for inYentOIY and equipment. C•blnttm•klng 6580 job, & clean up. Free est. YOU ~pply The Pa.int. 1 RR ~3.354 apt painted $30. 2 BR $40. 3
e ONLY S2S6 e
865 Andaot Wt::t, N.B. January 3rd thr1l 11th
Coron• dtl Mir 5250 Pkue call 642-MTB, ext 329 ltiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii[~n 9
and
1
pm to claim )'Ollr ticket.. !North County
Motol1. Trlr. Cm. S997
WEEKLY rates Sea Lark
Motel, 2301 Newport Blvd.,
Costa Meaa
Gue1t Hom" 5998
toU.fM numbtt ti 5f0.-1220) ~ -* * * PRJVATE room In licensed V I~~==~-~==· r guest home for elderly ~ ..... 2 BDRM$.• 2 BATH geoUema~ No"rhhlng meals. TIC. C.M. area
ON TEN ACU:S SJMJM.o. HEATED l'OOL 548-5225
FINE STORE/OFFICE
For L•••• On Via Lido
Approx. 1500 Sq. Ft.
50c Per Ft.
LIDO REAL TY INC.
33n VI• Lido 673-7300
lilARINER'S CENTER
Ott.ice in Store Bldg. Rent ot
IM. $7S-$125. Beauty shop.
scme eqUlp. 149 Riverside
Ave., N.B. ~2414.
1 • 2 BR. rum 6 Ullfum fncd, cpVdrpa:, Kids OK
P1replaces I prlv. p&ticl I DELAWARE STUDIO AptJ. Misc. R•nt1l1 5999 Commercl1I =;;;_.;==-_:;= 6085
Write giving phone number lo: RESIDENTIAL • Comm.1 -=-=-=::.:..----~ BR sso. 54t).7t>l6 · ~·-·m ~b•-t & Fum JIM'S Garden!n<> Ii: lawn INTERSTATE DISTRllUTllG oo. 1110. ,;;; Ro-fini;hln.. 645-099i m>Jnt<nu.,,, ;.-;,, & rom·
DEPT. S merclal • 540-4837
535 Sauth Second West Cerpeinterln,,g,_ _ _;65,;.90;.; JAPANESE Ga rde ne r,
Sall Uk• l c•RPENTRY exp'd, comp, y.nl ""';ce. Lalot City, ,... 8410 ~ Free "tlmot" '"3-2303 MINOR REPAIRS. No Job
INTERS7ATE
TO(\ Small. Cabinet in pr-CLEAN-UP SPECIALISf
ages • o t be r cablneta. Mowing. edgtna-, odd joba.
M&-8175, U no answer leave Reuonable. 548-695.5
PAINTING, Papering 17 yn,
in Harbor area, Lie. &
bonded. Reta. rucn. 64l-2356.
FOR Better Patntln1 ,
Interior le exterior, 8COUltiC
ceilings. 646-4077, 541-3502
PAINTIN<rEict-tnt. 18 yrs.
Exp; Ins. Lie., Free e1L
·""""'· Cd!'"" 548-M25 mC at M6-2312. IL 0. Andenon f:t.:•:.:•:.:11:.:n:!gc.. _____ 6;;.7;.:3:.oO Plast•rlng, R•p.ir
fO Sucoeisl GEN. Repair. Add. cab. YARD/Gar. a ... up. Re-
•-;:;;;:;:;;:;;:;;;-::'-.__.~~;;:;:;;::;:';;:i'l<i<i<"-BF;onn~lca Paneling. Marllte, move· trees, ivy, trash.
Pools. Tamil • O>ntnn 8ldlt.. 2620 Delaware, H.B.
tQJ Sea i..ne, OIM 6f.f.2&l.J. &a.mi anytime 5J6.l8t6 FULLY enclosed garages.
(MaeArthur nr. Quist Hwyl CHEZ ORO APTS. 8234 $25 per mo. See ?.fgr. apL 6,
NATIONAL DJSTRIBOTORS ""' Call Dfok. Grode, backhoe. """"'
686-698 & 615 West 19th SL V da Pak & M Vend . ~613-44=.:::::59:__~----e Haullng. Have ~6 ton Bethel Towe.rs Area ell • etro or& REPAIR, Partitions, Small pickup, licensed & insured.
e PATOI PLASTERING
All types. Free estlmate1
Call ,.,...,.
Plumbing 6890 2135 Elden, C.lit.
BRAND NEW Atlanta, HB. Nu, l , " 3 ==="==·=== 548-1768 or 646-7414, Agt. I ""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'""'"~!'!!!'"'!'!!'.""'""'""'""I remodel, etc. Nile or day 4.94-1003 8U::t1Nl:5::t ana and NOTICE-S Reas! Call KEN 54M679 Clean UP ind Haul PLUMBING REPAm
No job too Hmall
• 642-3128 • lndu1trl1I Rental 6090 FINANCIAL ANNOUNCEMENTS CARPENTRY, Cllblnets 110 a load. 646-'52'
Bus. OpportunltiM 6300 Found (frH Ads) 6400 Remod. No job too mi.all,
2 BR. 2 BA, upttain . duplex br'i . Prlv. pr, pool. Util Income Property 6000 w1tb IUJl de-ck patio! t)>td. rm. 536--8038 or 536-2777. ~·d -~ r•~•e p1' ASSUME 7'!. LOAN I--------bit".~. a;;.-;.;;,;.i~ ~'!_A~~-·---5_62_0 2 BR bo"" + 4. I BR •• ~ "NEW BUILDING
Orchid. $250. per mo. CY~) FOR TENANTS WHO + 100 x 63 additional lot. 12SO Logan Ave., Costa Mesa •. ln..&o•e 0 WANT nra B~! S61.SOO. Prin. only. &42-8579 Eacb unit. 1'125 sq ft, 2 oH· --coco PALMS--DUPLEX COM. 2 bou"" loe" ' r<•t """"'· 110/220
-•
0 ± I a.& $.SS,{Q), $8,000 down. J.noome electric. Ample parking. SANDALWOOD 1415 Mo. 6"""44 C. Robert Nat'"'" Realla<
ROUOO APrS. 2 Br. t STY GARDEN APTS I=========: Costa Meaa 642-1485
~r leveb, ·•tudloll. pent. Lwrurlouipark-llke1WTOUJ1d. Buslnftl Rent1I 6060 FORMICA Work, custom
houle, Frple1 .• pool, dbl. lnp. Pr! patios, pools, cll>fJ, ATTRACT 1200 sq ft bldg. cabinets, wa.11 fixtures.
carport&, patios. UBO • $220. drps trplcs All elec bltnl Garage shelves, boat work,
G"f3..3378 Nr i?th ,·Tustin shop'c: Nr. Lido Ille, Nwpt. Off st Repair & remodel ing. Prkng. Small Home zoned
NICE lge 2 BR upper. New Adults only. for bus. Nr Lido Isle, live ,&1=&.S21=;';:,:·:0;'::54=""=1£54===
I cpts, drps, relrlg-, range, 1·2.J BDRMS. 2101 Ponderosa here & have your bus. too. ~
pr. New decor, Adulll,:lc::Sa=n:;ta;A=na"'====='""'='·ll20= $135 mo. Agent 6IS-f747 Loe. $170 Owner. 1041
+ Natclulll. leguni Beach 570S STORE or office space on Balboa Peninsula, W .
i160. 1 BR, Stove. Rdriz. LEASE OR SALE Balboa Blvd at 15th St. Ap-
1
pr. Crpts It: Drps. Util Laguna Sanda ApL 1700 prox. 450 sq. rt. Terms open. P&ld. Partial Ocean Vw tq. -051ii Dahlia. CdM 675-4092 ft., white-water view. 3 BR, 675-1573
"'"'~~~"'-"=',;;·,.:..;.:...::: lrg living nn. 2 lrg bathll, STORE Or otfice space near
12 Br. Nr New. Bit-Ins, 1ar. fully equipped kltch., w/w beach tn Huntington. Ap-
1
~~til Incl. No pets. CaU crpt.1 A: drp11, private deck, prox. 600 sq. ft. 536--2579
"''""""" pool, elevalm', garage park·
Acreage 6100
2 1~ Ac In Rane.ho Capistrano.
Beautl1ul rolling, recrea·
Uonal land, surrounded by
National Forest. Altitude
3000 ft. Roada le utilities. ,....,.,
BUSI NESS ind
FINANCIAL
E 2 Bdrm, utll pd., Ing & storage. $390 per mo Office Renl1I 6070 Bui. Opportunities 6300
mo., garq:e. Mr. Include• all, except elec. le -;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;,;;;;;;;;;;;,,;;,I
omey, bkr. 5t0-3862 telephoflt'. Owner will sell • ---
'" ... $160 1 BDR. Mod Co 1 w/ substanllal down & car-SMALL oHlcf!, furnished, $75 AUiliate
qua! work. call ~2576 Houseclt1nlng 6735
A ONE-MAN IUSINESS FOUND Female dog-med. REPAIRS * ALTERATIONS * AP"r CLEANING * IN~STMENT sz. Whl~ w/tan marks. * CABINETS. Any dtt iob $2,000 "15 Some Greyhound or Whip-25 yrs exper. 548-6713 Fa.st & thorough 642-8164
IC S , Tl ) peL No tagB. Has flea col· Williams Cl91\lng Serv.
an ton art r,nt C 6600 JACK'S HOUSEKEEPING lar. Vlc. Mesa Dr. & Cement, oncret1
Light, pleasant, EX· Cypress. 54&--0713 AM C.Omplele Housecleaning
TREMELY PROFITABLE PATIOS • Driveways • 548-7243 &\2-8931
BUSINESS scrvlclng local FOUND, Young Doberman Pl11nter1 -Block Fences -BAY & Beach J11.nHorial l'itores, etc. with a NA· P.lnch<.>r w/choke chain. Room Add itions TIONALLY FAMOUS 60 Vic: Prestige Homes, Hun-642-9852 Carpets, windows. floon, etc.
YEAR OLD FOOD BEV· tington Bch, Taken, l-2-70,1--~,,._;c:,.,:::;:___ R!s & Commc'I. 646-1401
ERAGE product which is to ANIMAL SHELTER CEMENT WORK, no job too e WINDOWS DIRTY!
Remodel, Rept1lr, 6940
Add-A-Room
Remod1lin9
C ustom 011i9n Strvic•
Fre• Estimet•. -49-4-075 I
Sewing 6960
• Dressmaking • Alterations
Special on coat hems
*646'446*
a. HOUSEHOLD WORD IN Huntington Sch. ' small, reuonable. Free Free es' lS '"'an ... .-n. AMERICA. ls consumed by estlm H Stufllck 548-8615 ., J~ ....... TILE, Cer1mlc 697~ the THOUSANDS DAil.Y FOUND Irvine Terr area; . . Johnny Dunn 00.2364 --'-~·--'--..;;...;..,;'I
In this community, and Female kitten. BIS.ck &-* CONCRETE FLOORS, EXPERIENCED
enjoys LIFETIME REPEAT white. 4 whlte mltten1. rt<! patios, etc. Reasonable, Call Housecleaning, have own
BUSINESS. flea collar, rreen eyes. Up Don. 642-8514 transp., day v."Of'k. 541-9357
No SELLING! to IO pm, Cali 61>-4800 Contr1ctort 6620 CARPETS, WlncloWI, nrs, MtITE TOY poodle. male. -:;::;.;:.:;:;.:;c;_ __ ._:_:.:;; t R C 'I XI t AS PRODUCT (BIGGEST .. e c. es or me . n NAME JN FOOD INDUS· Vic. 38th St. &: Balboa NB Additions * Remodeling v.'Ork. Reas! Refs. 548-'4lll
TRY) IS PRE-SOLD TIIRU _G_7'-<_>tt_______ k"'red H. Gerwlck. J,.lc. C 0 J\f PL~ TE qua I I I y
EXTENSIVE AND CON· BLUE&: Chrome (;Iris Bike, =='='=-='==*==549-=="='='= I housecleaning. Walls, wln-TI0NNUTVOU0SRAADD!VOE,R;r1AS!NGA~ Vic Carnation & Bayside C t Cl 6625 doWI, floors. SJS..3053
* Verne, The Tile Man•
CUst. work. Install le repairs.
No job too small. Plaster
patch. Leaklng s hower
repair. 847-1957/846--0206.
Tree Service 6910
TREES Pruned, t o p p e d ,
remo\."ed. 26 yn aper.
Aerial foW!T t>qp0J. ZINES, NEWSPAf.Ens, Dr. CdM. 673-4055 •rpt Hnlng
ETC., (C0J\1PANY PROD-GERMAN SHEPARD, malt-CARPET A: F\im cleaning: Janitorial 6790 494-C505. and 638-1234
DUTCH 1.f I Serv t =TRE=E~SER='VJ'="CE~. " .. -n°"•1"yarc1-.,I UCT SALES I N EXCESS w/chaln vie. ~Isler A: Idaho for 1 day serv1ce & quality
OF 1 'it BlLLION OOL--Sts. 563629 v.'Ork, Call Sterlin& for ~~ A~~u~~J1Jgfa FOUND Springer Spaniel. brightness! 64~ ant ' crp cleanup. SPR0INKLE R clng, fir waxing, window
'
I
rmec. BJt·lns. ~ ~~-ry lat 'l'nllt Deed at 7% in-per month. CANDY SUPPLY Lra nn' 675-3708 -.-tereit, $62,0IXI. Adults. 1585 Well .. McCardl•, Rltr1. ROUTE
'· , S. Coast Hwy . 499--1169 1810 Newport Blvd., C.M. (No seW111 involved) ~ BR. l BA. den, crpta. drps, REAL ESTATE "548-"'"T7'l9 ...... ,...,-,.. ... • .,ev.,",.· 1 Excellent Income for rew
F 0 R l\IERCHAr-.'DtSE Mission Viejo area. 83G-3105 A-OK Shampoo Special $7.50
SOLD AND REPLENISH· FOUND At Bak<.>r & Andros: rm/le:ws for halls, etc. Abo
ING INVENTORY. wire frame glaMe!I. 54~1612 comp. housecln'g BZ'l-3182
washing. Harry van Beynen _REP==AIRS==-===== I 537-1508 If no ans call aft 3 ~
BUSIEST marketplace In -U~p_ho_l•_le_rv,,_ ___ 6_990_ "·
bltne, view. (1) m-0367, hours weekly work. (Days
530-S or 83?-4177. Gener1J SJ\.fALL Office on busy cor-and Evening!), Retllling and ~·•~uG ------ner Co1ta Mesa. $55/month coll .,M ..__ In •···-~··~·•wnu~· 3 Bdrm 2 Bath Rtnt•ll W1nted 5990 utilities Included. ~ ec,u.g money uv111 oo
$Z5(I mo, Leue or mol1tbly. 1---------openlted dispensel'9 in Or-
i MS--3342 MIDDLE-AGED ENGLISH 3IW SQ. FT. 1 oHtce &: recep-ange C.O. and surTOunding
'""-=======I couplt with 2 tiny dog& wish tlon area, adjacent to area. We establish route. lela.. 5300 to rent 2 Bdnn house or Orange Co. Airport. 540-8814 (1111.Mles name brand cand
L dupliex unit In Coe-ta Mesa AIRPORT CENTER and sn11.cksl. SJ515.00 cuh
BAYfRONT Aptl. Pr1 beach area of Frttdom Homes New 1, 2 A 3 room delWC"e required. For p<.>nional inter·
A dock. )deal location! (Plactnlla &: Vlctori&) for suite•. Adj. new vle1v in Orange Co. area.
Wtoter ftftt&I. 2 BR to 4 Feb. 1 oceupancy. We are MacArthur Blvd. From send name. 11.ddreSll and
BR. S225 up. 6rr>-3S'1S extremely qU.ltt &: clean. $l25. can ~7843. phone number to MULTI·
~$140. maximum. Mr. or I ~"'"~='°"'--=B .. E"A"C"H,,--SfATE DIST., INC., 1681 \V.
Lide bfe 5351 Mn:. Richard Atkinson LAGUNA Broa.d\vl\y, Annhelm, eau.
[---.-:--'-'.'---642-#15 Air Conditioned fomla 9280'.2 (n41 778-506(). E 2 BR, 1~, I'll BA,I..;,"'-"'-'------ON f'(JRESf AVENUE
cpts., .,_, adults. rio pets. Delk 1pac1 avatla.ble 1n Associate
Leue. OR S.'1&02 newest ornce bulldlnr et L RENTAL FINDERS prime location In downtown ~t....,_ hec:h 5400 ffM T• Lu tr• Laguna Beach. Air c:ondl·
ca •· , .... c..t11 ,,,.. Uoned, carpe:ed, beautifUI
BR. trple,. S-~ cpta, drpl, '4M111 entrance1: Fronlage on
Avail mw. Avail 211. 1 A: 21~~-~~~-~"'~'"~·~-~m~• Forest Ave., rtar leads to -·-l'l lm!Cll BR. °"' aptl. LlDdboq Co. Munelpnl parkin&' lot•. SSO -.n YOUNG executive needs 3-4 per month for spac.. Dt>sk
LX J Br. 2 BL. edults to Bdrms. untum home. and chain avaUable for $5.
..iat ill ?'!ftttnr. Children, &&'ff 2 1 14. J\rlell BlUlntu hoW'I anl"•crlng
14747'1 fle"1ble. MUst locate bc!ore strv1.:4 8vaDable for $10.
.nnu• • n.1. _ ..... tio, Frb. 1, Max. $350. xlnl nfa. All utilltle1 paid • e.xctpt .DW~ • -,.,,. ... ttlrphol1f.
bntlCI pool, wuber-A 1-'<9MJ!S:;:.,,:=,~~==-,,-DAlLY PILOT '"°' -ap. -WANTED TO LEASE' Vc:tJI 222 f'DREST AVENUE
mJOIO Apt. $160 I mo. 2 O.C.C. s-t Br unturn house. LAGUNA BEAOf
bdnnl 1\i a.u., bullt·tm. OccuP1 Jan 2>, pv1 J)tl. Box 0.1-9466
cptotdrptl f0..lll09, M 111 Dolly Pllol I S YOUR AD IN
TJ'RACT, 2 Bdr All Xtn.o. e LANDLORDS e CLASSinED! Someone will
$JA t7iC Quee.. LaM, f1tEE R£NTAL SERVICE be lookl.na tar h. Dlal SO.
JLB. -..mo or NT-15&4 Broker 534-6962 5678
f.tANUF ACTURER
S17.~ lnve!trnent into the
no. 1 Bu!ines.s of the day. ~
yr. history of succeu. now
expanding operations to So.
Calli. Complete. factory tn-
stalled & ready to io. Will
train Principal of Mgmt.
ab!litles. Con111ct lmmed.
Onc:c In a lifetime oppor. to
mnkt Iha! high Income mO!l
JK'Ople drerun of. Startlna
M.lary $12.COO + substantial
profit~. Cl\ll Ken Oittord
{TI~) 774-70,l'.0
LIQUOR Uc'1. LOW PRI~!
ON AAl.E for ORANGE and
SAN DIEGO COUNTtES.
Call collect tor best prl«!
1213) '1i2"'4249
REQUIREMENTS: DIAL direct 642-5678, Charp;e
Must asplre to _L_o_11 ______ 640.;_;...I Your ad, then sit back and
INCOMI! OF LOS"l' female Fox Terrier lliten to the phone ring!
$300 WEEK UP puppy. \Vhltc w/brown
head le blk spots. Bal lsle.
have l'iervlceable car, Sun afternoon. Rev.·ard for
START IlitJ\.fEDIATELY If info Jeodlng to recovery. accepted and HA VE the
nccc'-!ary $2,000 for lnven· f ~67>-3563o=-~'--0<~0~R~5--!~063~~
tory NOW in the bank. VIC: \V, 17th &: ri.ionrovia
Lr. Germ11.n Shepherd y,•/ For local ln tervlt>w, Jn. choke chain. 1 ....... RWD! elude yt'nr car, specific J •
tlme (durtng busftiest (9--5) 642--6943 Aft 5Plif &:
hours) NO\V nvailablt tn Wknds 645-0962
1ervlee accounts, and GERMAN Shepherd, 58.blt> &:
phone number. Box P878 tan. ~yrs old. Missing slnce
JANITORIAL Business $g)() New Year's eve. Any info
per mo irross + truck Ii appreciated. Conn. tag No.
e<rulP. Has done SlSOO. ldt>a1 ~:Z. 645--0355
for ()O!Jple. S350CI tun price. BEIGE Terrie'r, Female, 2
Call stua&I 9 Mt-5P~1. Att 5Pl\f 64&--0331. yrs. old. Answera to Name.
"Samantha." Vic Thurin &
Ralcam, C.M. 548-2147 Money to loan 6320
2nd TD Loan
BLACK f.Un. Poodle. Silwr
f11ce. Vtc OranRe &. Del
f.1nr, C.li1. 642-3689, 646-4983
town. The DAILY PILOT
Oaulfied section. S a v e
money, time & e.Uort. Look
now!!! -
C"ZYKOSKJ'S Custm. Uphol.
European Craftsmanship
100% fin! 642-1454
1831 Newport Blv, CM.
----------~
I
----------
Mondat, Jan111r1 5, 1970
JOBS ,. .IMPLOYMINT JOBS & IMPLOY O &
IWLV PILOT ~ ~ ,., ANNOUNtiMENTS JOI & EMPLO~l\IENT JOIS & IMPLOYMINT JOIS &.l~LOYMINT JOIS & EMPLOYMENT -~1nd~N~O~T~lt~E~S!..__~...J'i.i:;:'.:j~:';;;;;;;"'t,'jjjj ::.:.;.,,,,; Joi» Man. Wom. 7100 Jobs-Men. Wom. 7100 lot..--Mtn. Wom. 7100 Jolot Man, Wom. 7100
Peraonals 6405
Job-lft, Wom. 7100Jobe Mtn, Worn. 7100 Jobe --Worn. 7100 Jobi M..,, Wom. 7100
ACTING
Do YoU want to be "a full time
1vorklna profeuional ! Do
yeu have the .ell discipline
to 1tubject ,vouraell to a rig-
id Brllbh ttalnJna: COW'le Ir.
I.hr artistic hwnlllty to ac-
C..'f'Pt minor roles until t h e
tra.inin& period la con1plete '!'
It !t1,1 THE WNOON LA·
GUNA ACTORS WORK.
SHOP miaht bto able to l'lelp
yoU. No previout experience
necessary, no age ba.rTler.
Membc>rs o! this exclmive:
group will only be accepted
upon a satisfat:tory personal
interview with tho director.
Call 494-«N for appt.
FANTASTIC
VOYAGE
T!K' y.·orlds most beautiful
ship !he 138' Clipper Barque
l J\i 0 N TE CRISTO ieavil'IG'.
soon for around t~ world.
I ftoom left for five contribut.
( ing men or women cr ew
members. Aho needed: Doc. I tor, Cook, Ship's carpt"nter.
r-.1ARINA CORTEZ, San Di.
Pgo. cn4> 291-8259.
*LICENSED *
.-iptritual Reading, advice
on all matten. Love,
?ilarriage, Business. 312 N.
El Camino Real, San
Oemente. 492-9136, 492--0076
lOAM -IOPM
\\'ILL The Man ln Green Cad
ll'ho witnessed accident In-
volving motor bike on June
26, 1969 at 3:45 PM. contact
Harold Swatez at ~7411.
Announcements 6410
• • • JOAN McOONNEL
1010 SANOPIPER
CORONA DEL MAR
You are the winner of
2 tickets to the
Southern Californi•
Sports, V •cation
& Recreation.I
Vehicle Show
., the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
January 3rd lhru 11th
·r!t'il5l" call 642-5678, cxl J29
l>elween 9 and 1 pm to claun
your tickclll. (North O:iunty
IOll·frec Dumber is ~1220) • • •
FREE b!uilc boating mursc
Offt'red to pUblic by Balboa
Power Squadron every ~fon.
night for 13 v.·eeks beginnini;
7 pm Mon. Jan. 12 at
Newport Harbor Yacht
Club, 7a1 \V, Bay Ave.,
Newport Beach. No advance
rr gi stration needed.
Register at class. Bring
notebook first night. Ques-
Uons: Call GT.l-185.'l
SENSlTIVITY TRl\INING
\VORK SllOP
A program o! interpersonal
exercises for small sell.Ci·
reeled groups. Minimal
charge call 642-8730. 10 AM·
5 PM.
FINE DRESSf\1AKING BY
CHARLOTTE Dresses -
Suits -Coats 832-0191.
Cemetery Lots 6418
rOR SALE -2 Cemct~ry
lobl:, Pacific Vicw. 646-4658
JOBS & EMPLOYMENT
Job W•nted,
Women 7020
~ABYSIT-Infant o , k .,
vicinity of Talbert and
Newland, 842·3657 Hnt. Bch.
CASHIER, Reep!. AIR, ex·
per mature lady. NB-C l\f
area. Daily Pilot Box P-564
NURSE WMIB babysl11ing,
n1y home, ages 1 lo 2. !\ton.
to fr\., 8 to 5. 494-3893
1\ Cultured retired business
won1an seeking employment
all companion. 644-0477
DAY WORKER
llOllC!!it, dependable
Call anytime 541·ZT12
Jobs-Men, Wom. 7100
TO $450
,\c('(lunting Cede, 10 key add
by totJCh good typist. Call
Ann 64&2770 Westcli!f Per·
!<>nriel, 2043 WestcllU Dr.,
Nt'WPOrt Beach.
Advertising Agency
Sharp Secr•tary f o r
fa1t • p•ced Newport
Beach Agency. Type
65-70. Shorth•nd 100,
organize & f o 11 ow
thru. Under 35.
Phone: 642-3'10. 425
N. Newport Blvd.
AIRCRAF"T MECHS.
l'o1ic overseas. Co n t a c t
Vl"mon Pien:-e 114-714-2610
e ASSEMBLERS e
'l~ro . mtthllnlcal train.
es. mile or female. Apply:
Col.lqe Aw ., C.M.
SWISS lNDUSTRJES
ppUcanf'li. temponll'Y
URGENTLY
NEEDED:
• ~tary
• Gi rt F'Tiday
• Pff9oonel A11nt.
•Typist ~rk
SE RVICE CENTER
mployment Agency
;i(X) ~wporl Cl!n«ir Dr, w
Uhion Isl) Sulit 200 NB
By appt. 644-4381
Cheek Here
WITH THE
Job Kings!
MALE
COMMERCIAL
Mgr. Tr•inH to $650
4 yrs college, sales bk·
grnd.
Senior Buyer $800
Exper In buying compon-
ents In electronics.
Customer Service
Tr.1inH $~8/wffk ~per ln elr: oni.c equip-
ment.
Busine11 Mgr. Tr•inff
$700
Sharp young, collt>g'°. y,•/
sa1cs or bus.ineu bk~nd.
Production Mgr. $900
SomE"One with production
bkgrnd In elec:tronics,
able to \vork \Vith y,·omen.
P•rts Order Dask
lo $52S
Mechanical bkgrnd, able
to handle phone & paper
work.
S1le1 Engineer $1000 +
Engineering degree or 3
yrs in credited Enginet"r·
ing college. Good sales
bkgrnd.
Counter Man/
Order Desk $525
Lumber & sales bkgmd.
TECHNICAL:
Jr. Or1ftsman tp $500
2 yn1 college Gl' equiv.
board time.
Jr. Account•nt $550
Good-math bk~. -Able
to l''ork w/controllor.
SKILLED
Marine C•rpenter to
$3.95 hr.
~1ust be exi,:ier in marine
carpentry,
Fibergls. Molder
to $3.35 hr.
6 mos expe r. in YG mold·
Ing.
Centerless Grinder
from $3.50
2 yn expcr, read BP's.
Sr. W•lder-Fitter
$4.31 hr.
Able to read BP's & do
fitting.
Sr. l•y-out M.n
$4.37 hr.
S yrs f'xper In steel shop.
Turret Lathe Oper.
$3.50 hr.
Job·shop l'xper. Able to
do set up, & work on own.
Tool M•ker $5 hr.
Exper in jlgs & fixturl'S.
8 yrs exper a5 ml'Chanic.
UNSKIUED
F•ctory Trainees
to $2.94 hr.
Cook• $3.00 hr.
Cook-As1ist•nt $21 /d•y
f.EMALE
Stena/Typist $120 wk.
SH 80, Acc. typing 50.
Gener1I Office $350
Lite bkkpg. \Vill train.
Bkpr./Girl Frid•y $450
Able 10 do 1wg board.
Collection Girl $425 + C.O.L.
Sharp i:al w/collectlnn
l"XJX'I" in de pt .!!tore or fi·
nancc Co.
F /C Bkkpr from $550
Through P&t..
Recpt·Typist ta $500
Sharp front office 11;al,
able to deal w/infl uential
peopl1'.
C•shier $346 Ma.
\Vill \ftlin sharp, depend·
abl(' girl
F•ctory Trainees to
$2.05 hr.
Nurse's Aide1 $2.03 hr.
6 11\0S f'Xper.
Nut1e'1 Aide $1.80 hr.
Traince!i.
HousekHper $1.75 hr.
ExJX'r in hospital helpful.
Hospit1l Cook $2 hr.
Will trAi n good pl w/
rl"&\.aurant exper.
APEX
Employment Agency
*The e1ty w1y
{1sk uswhyl
1173 HAR BO L VD.
(l/J block So. of 19th)
COSTA MESA
$48-3-426
------Assl•t•nt 8ookkffP9r
$450. Sma.11 ploua.nt Qfl:itt.
Xlnt Ch. lrvtne arn., Top
btntlits, CU.I Kay St&-SUO
JASON BEST
Employmtnt ........
m1 So. Main, Santa Ana
ATTENDANT at 0.vron
Station I: Hem .Rent-A-Car
in l.quDa Beach. O>Uege
student pttf. :Ip hri'.prr wk.
Muat be 18. No long hal",
Good pay fOC' aood man.
49<-9003
BABYSlTJ'ER, 4:30 pm ¥
1:30 am, Mon thru Fri., my
home, 2 cblldren 7 & 4. -· BABYSITI'ER. my home, 8
to 5: ll, M~Frl. 3 glrt.7
Mo's. 2 I= 4 yrs. 548-7672
BANK PCl'IOMC!l Ex p :
8eO'elaria1, clerieal, NCR
450 proof mtM::hlne operator.
496-S155; 34061 Doheny Parli:
Dr. Cap\&tr&no Sch. * BEAUTICI~. tor busy,
popular priced C.M. 11alon.
Pd. vac. No cUcntele req'd.
New grad welcome. Call
5'16-1186
BOOKKEEPER
FULL CHARGE
BOOKKEEPERS
TAKE NOTICE
A Prog1't!&.Sive Co. which re.
cently moved hee.dquarters
to Nwpt is looklng for an
alert creative bkper who ap.
preclates a profess at·
mosphcre. An Excellent Op-
portunity. Please call Karl
Holley. 644-4090
BOOKKEEPER -Typist
Newport Centet" area office.
Reply Box S2M, Daily Pilot,
N.B. -
COA,TAL
• ' f AGENCY
540-6055
Wishes you a
Prosperous 1970 !
RKeptfonlst
You can't ·top thlll exl.':itlng
po&! Xlnt CoJ Pleuant
people~ Sound good? Jt'11
tenilic! Start $450. Call
Jean Brown.
Deta Prpc"' Rottr
F inished your keypunch
scl>oollng! Xlnt opty lo get
tome &ood exper w/an old
established finn. St ar t
$347, Call Jean Brown
lookliffper
COOK • Dtrmu. Tap Pl.J,
MUil be Exprr. See 0et. lnn Btookhunt. r .v.
000~, HOUSE:Kt:£PER
Expet"d. Llvo-ln_l2!<o.
673-1819
COMMlJNICATIONS TEOlS won OV9nitu. Contact
Vemott Patte 'l'Y..174-4810
(;Ndlt Tral-
A>mtaot to Credi), Mir. 1100
week to .tart. !'i!e reimbun-
ed after 9o days. Ot.bor fee
& fl'fll ,Jobi avalJ,
lndapond1nt
Personne1 Agency ine Orange Ave, Suite c
C.M. 642-0026, ~79
FULL TIME <XX>KS, DlSJ-J.
WASiER. PART TIME BUS
BOYS Awly in Pcnon lx'-
tween 3 & 5 daily Snack
Shop 230CJ 'E, Coast 1-Uway
CdM
COMPUTER t.fECHS
\Vork OWl'!leU. Co n t a c l
Vernon Picra" T14-TI4-2610
• COUNTER GIRLS
Three llT'lifts available
Apply
ONTRA CAFETERIA
Con1true tlon bkgmd.
helpfµt. Xlnt JX>S. Very
reliable firm. S u p e r
benefits. he reimbursed.
To SS50. Call Jean Brown. # 60 Fashion laland Newport SboppLns Cenrer
Clerk Typist PacWc Coast Hwy at
Dancing fingen can land McArthur. N.B.
you this challenging pos, ' COUNTER GIRL. part time
Tremendous Potential for & eves. & wk. ends. App. in
real ~tter. Start $390. penon to: KENTUCKY
Call Jean Brown FRIED CHICKEN, 693 So.
ReceptlHlst
Variety Spices up thi!i pos,
Type, Sll, & nice phone
personality \Viii land this
one. Start $450. Call-·Sally
H•rl
COB.It Hwy, Lag. Bch.
DENTAL HYGIENIST
One day a v.·eek. Beach area. ,.., ... n
DENTAL A~SfANT
Dear Applicents:
ilnewport .
penonnel
agency
833 DOVER DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH
642-3870
Please be •ppri1ed thet the
counselo rs •t Newport Per1onnel
would very mu ch lilre the ple•1ure
'of ·•s1isting you in findln9 your job
obJectives. We •re not only interest-
ed in the result, of o ur ende•vor•-
we •r• concerned thet you are
ple•sed with our efforts.
M•ny fine cornpenies In O r·
•ng• County us• our profe11ionel
·~~vie•'· Ther~fore, we •re in • po·
s1t1on to •dv11e •nd d irect you in.
telligently.
It is our 1peci•I wish th•t you
h•v• a haalthy and prosperous 1970;
but do see us for ''Prosperity In.
sur•nce"!
newport .
penonnel
agency
833 OOVER DRIVE
NEWPORT BEACH
642-3870
Th e S!1ff
••
Newport Personnel
Oftk•
Proud to be an
Ame . m r1can ...
Glad you're a
GIRL???
Join up with uolll '
AMERICAN
GIRL
. ALL NEW
Red, Whit• &
Blue
temporary service
Marching ol0ng with
TOP RATES
Cllfk Typt.t
P/time, some ~p nee. 1----------1 ---------11 Pt..,. call '"""329 GIRL FRIDAY Male MAJOR
BUILDING
INSPECTOR A glamour Co. looking tor
a sharp typist. Interesting
job, Xlnl Co. benefits. Start
$390. Call Sally Hart.
DENTAL ASS"T ~ Cha.iralde. Apply in penon SEE OUR AD UNDER.
Prevtou• ,,. reo•tred . KINGS FOR MEN BUSINESS ASSIGNMENTS
Coota Mosa area. Calt 2300 Horbor Blvd. OPPORTUNITIES
$754. to $916. per month
CITY OF
NEWPORT BEACH
Increased bulldi .. acliv·
ity neceS11itate1 creation
of an additional position
in the Building Depart-
ment. Required h I g h.
school diploma, journey.,
man status in one of lhc
building trades, two years
journeyman level exper.
ience.
For application and In-
formation cnntact 1 h e
Personnel Olrice, 3300
Newport Blvd ., Newport
Beach, Calif. 92S60. en.ii
67><633 ..
GI~ Friday
Sharp person to run oUice
for upmming Co. Duties
varied, Xlnt Co. benefits.
Start $450. Hurry? Call
Sally Hart.
Accnts. Payable Clerk
Fast.growing Co. n e e d It
Mlmeone w/construction ex-
per for busy A/P desk.
Hun')'! to $550. Call Sally
Hart.
ltcepttanist
Need pel'llOnable J1Cr&Oll to
handle busy phone. Lite
typ e , S H h e lpful.
Interesting Co. Start $450.
Call Billie Beck.
Secrftr(!ll BOYS 10-14
cattier Routes Open tor Need sevl!l'al with ~siness
I.a:una Beach, So. Laiuna exper. SH, &/C'r die·
DAil..Y PILOT taphonl". Need gen' I
6C2-43:l1 ;~c~~ to ~. Call
COASTAL AGENCY' .
Profession•I Bookkeeper
Employment New offices, convenient
Assistance Joe:. U~to-date record
A member of keeping, Small firm dOt"s
Snelling & Snelling Inc. big business. To $650. Call
2790 1-lart>or Bl, CM ~ Billie Beck.
Harbor Blvd. at Adams
CASHIER • Exper. Needed
For Back Office of N.Y.
'Based Brokerage Firm.
Salary open. Call (724)
644-2442
Cterlc Typist
J1'un place to 11,'0l'k. Go up
the ladder, start $390. Call
Billie Beck.
A11nt. Office MfJr.
Expanding Co. Un1 imiled
645--1060 for interview. Cost• Mesa "A QHE.MAN BUSINESS
DISHWASHER, day or ni&ht. HAIRDRESSERS: Space to S:Z,00'.J JNVESI'MENT"
Good Pa.y, l\1ust be Exper. rent in new salon. Lido. Dys (CAN SfART PART TIME)
See Cbef, 1nn Brookhunt, 675-1330, t?ves 67S--5'167 Mal~, owr 30, full time,
F.V. HOUSE~EPER, l~vc in, m Laguna Beach * DRIVERS * •xper. liri •"''· pn. n>Om. * * 4>1-8521 ••
N Exp • TV, lop salary, Hunt~.n MALF; COOK • PM. Ho.8p,
0 ertence Harbour 846-0106 or 84S-4ti6t; exp. pref'd. Contact Pet'llOn. Necessary! H o u s EKEEPER-eaey,111_ no1 otrrctor. s.. eo..1
?t1ust have dean Ca.Ufornla er Needed, 2 d&y1 wk. Mon Comm. Ho.tp, 31872 Cat clriv~ ttec'lrd. Apply & 'l'hurs. 644·96, 547.&ll, Hwy. So. Laguna, 49!}..Ull
YELLOW CAB CO. N.B. ,,Ex=t.~3'6~~~---11
186 E. 16th SL llOUSEKEEPER, live in. MEDICAL Aasl1tant, front
Costa Mesa Prlv, quar1err;. Call a!ter oUice. Hadley bkk& 1y1tem.
DRIVERS (2). 1 w /Super
Econolinc • 1 w/ car. * 540-6266 •
Engineer
PLAN CHECKING
-ENGINEER-
$93'. to $1141 .
per month
-CITY OF-
NEWPORT BEACH
6:30, sa&.24S3 ft.twit be veraaUle &: en-
HOUSEKEEPER & child thuslaatic. Busy GP office, l\1lsslon Viejo &: El Toro care, ~ da . .wk. $50 wk + Sal 837 rm & brd. Pd vac. :>40-9212 area. ary open. -Ta20
MEN, work OYel"leU. r.ton lnsur•nce Man•g•ment ;obs than people. Contact
Trainee. Salary open, + Vernon Pierce 714-714-2610
comm. Fee reimbursed,
Other tru It ff!1! jobs a~-f\1en Wanted for early morn-
able. ing delivery of new.papen
Independent to home. Good sup. Income .
Personnel 4 ..,ency Must ltve \V. of Harbor ~ Blvd. 847-8979 1716 Otafl[e Ave, &Ute C
C.M. 642-0026, 56-0079
Janitorial
New position In the BuilcJ.. J Cleaning people needed for mijj lxec ing Dl!partrncnt requir-apt . building <:I ea n t n g.
ing degree in civil, archi· Rehable, profeuional in-
tectural or structural en-divlduail only. Truck or ala·
gineering and one year tim wqon nece:llSl.l')'. Con·
of experience checking tact: Mr. Berger or Mr.
building plans. Steffens 12131 4 7 7 -8 5 8 7 ,
~1on., Jan 5th.
Apply ro the J>crsonnel
0 ff I cc, 3300 Newport
Blvd., Newpor1 Beach,
C.a.Ilt. 92660. 1n4> 6T.Hi633
.immediately.
Jenltarlal
$400 mo. Over 21.
1,,dependent
Agency for
Career Girls
Secret•ry to $700
SH 80, typing 60, mini llkirt
type & single. Muat be
•harp.
Leg•I Sec. to $550
CLERICA L reeeptionist
needed by national tirm ln 2
girl officr. Over age 20. 5
day y,•k, 9-5. Ideal oond.
Starting salary $350 + fringe
benefits, Phone 646-0521 tor
possibilities. 2 yn exper in 1 7---,=====~-finance field. To $7800. * E>..'PERlENCED Tracer
Very gd. Co. benefits. Call Lathe Machinist. use to
Per1annel Ag•ncy
1716 Orange Ave, SWte C
C.lt1. 642-0026. 545-0979
JAi'JITORIAL Work, semi
retired or 11.1pplement your
pay 2 hrs. day 4:30 to 6:30
a.m., 5 dayg a week $100 pPr
month, H.B. call 968-6257
before 12:00 a.m.
SH 100, type 80, 2 yrs.
Calif. law. Knowl. of
personal injury, •ma I I
corp, subrlga1lon.
Gl"rry White. close tolerance work. Muat
have own tools.
appt. Dtd9n £1M)fftff1' -'-'-~C~o~ll~i-c~li~on-,---I Growing Co. 4 yn exper in
Exptt. in oollecting deHnqu-automatic fire sprinkler
ent acxnts. Start S·IOO. design. Good fri~.
Independent benefits. Co. pays rec. To
Personnel Agency $l2.000. call Gerry White.
ln6 Orange Ave, Sui1c C Manaciement Trainee
C.M. 642-0l!6, 5"4S-O'J79 Moel progreuive Co. in tts
COMPANION For elderly Ueld. Terrific opty for ex·
lady &. light house:kceping -serviceman. Tr a i n t n g
for 2 adul111, 1leep ln. depends on individual. Can
ReferenCf"s. '194-7786 manage own office in less
COOK
!Short Orders)
AND '
SALADS &
SANDWICHES
We need a short order cook
and a1ao an experienced 11&1-
ad and sandwich maker.
Clean, modem, attractive,
brand ~w· -lunch countei.
CJoscd Saturday nietit1 and
SUnda)'1. Medical and bos))l-
tal benefit'!". Unilonn furn.
ished. Apply Lindberg Nll-
trilion, io rear .or the Toy
\York! store on lower level
South Cout Plaza ShoppUc
Center, Costa Mesa.
than 2 yn;. Start to $5001
Outstanding Co. benefits.
can Gerry White.
A ... t. Chlo! Accnt.
Ideally loc: growing Co.
Prefer college ed .
wf11l'ength in Accounting,
Recent construction exper.
Xlnt Iringc benefl.ts. Start
$0000. Call Gerry Wtute.
$ol111WDll
~ Co. wants stable.
clean-cut salt.man for
rnpid advancement. Sta.rt
$7800. Xlnt Co. Benefits. cau FTank Rand.
loakk->F/t;;, ' Growing Co . XJnt
btneflb. To $780J. call
Frank Rand.
Accoantcllllt
=~=------I \Vork In So. Calif beach COOK·DECK 1-IAND, male, area. Xlnt salary, to
for 4 mo'• trip South on Th' $11,000. Call Frank R.Jnd
n10tor sall!!r. State exp. &
ref'1. Box llot-563 The Daily
P\101
* . . COOK needed lor new
exciting 1fttaur1nt. Apply
after 3 PM, in pcrwon • S33
Ba.y!lidr Dt. N.B.
-COOK-
TRAINEE
' M'ilmt. Tndnee
Xlnt opty for n..(;t. Nn ex•
per nee. Start $MOO, climb
10 the top. Call Frank
Rand.
OTHllt Fltll AND I'll
JOIS AVAtLAILI
* EXPERIENCED Precilion
Parts Deb~ Hand.
Apply in person
VARD NEWPORT JANITOR FUU. TIME
Five days a week 2300 Fairview Rd. C.M.
equal opportunity employer
E · APPLY z=. Civil En,.inur e DESMOND'S· e • #3 Fashion l&land $10lS. to $1296 per mo: CaJI.
rom ia regislrntlon requin':d. N~ Beach
rile> application by Jan. 23rd. LADY, Over 30, general help
For forms and details, con· for ~t B-8-Q. Part
tact Personnel Dept. tln1e lrom 11-2 PM or lull
CITY OF time. No Sun's. 646-8561
COSTA MESA LAWN & GA RD EN ING
77 Fair Dr. 714-8US350 Service Free est lma te s . * EXPERIENCED. Special Rc8.llOnable &: dependable.
Machine Open. Top pay,, ,.6ii1'-8268iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
steady • sportawear . l'
642·34Tl N.B. 499-39!18.
1''EMALE A11 !1tant
Manager. Cuhicr & Sales
W'Otnen. 1'Ull time poa1Hona.
Available immediatelf. Are
' 11-45. 5eoe Mn. "T". al
Chris', South Coast f>Jai.a.
Foreign C•r Mech•nlc1
Good co. bene:fll1t Incl p&kl
va.cati6n, group ins, um.
fonn1 turntshed ~. Good
conun. schedule. Ask for
Joe Moore Ph. ~1764.
FI C BookkHpor
ror EneJneerln1 Co. Santa
Ana, Ste.rt $500,
lnd1pondont
Per1annel Agency•
1716 Or11nge Ave, Suite C
C.ltt 642-0026, 545-0979
GARDENER Trainee. No
exp. ntc. X1nt opp. (714)
546-9085/494-5427 day or
eve.
General
Nishi BROILER MAN. Alao
day OISHWASUER. Top
Y,'8.gH. 496-6446
Generel Office
Type 45-50. $325 lo st.rt.
ENGINE "THE
MACHINISTS • TURRET LATHE
MACHINISTS • DRILL PRESS
OPERATORS
Expcrlcnced in <:~ ful'tr-
11nee. stx>rt run work wlth
flhtllty to make !letups. Nine.
hour day, 45-hour week.
PROm SHARJNC
J. C. CATER CO.
671 W. lrrH ST. rosr• MESA
>18-3421
General Ofc. to $400
Must have ap .. 10 key ad·
ding, type 45. Divtn.lfled
duties.
S.cret•ry $550 Up
Statistical typing, SH 80,
front otc. appearance.
Short skirt OK.
General Ofc. $450
Must have escrow or title
exp., famil, with R.E.
oriented documents. T~
Ing 65. Fantastic company
and benellta.
Secret•ry to $500
De:p!lrtment handles In-
ternational attain of Com·
pany'. Sl:I 80, good typist.
A/ P Construction $450
Heavy exp., famll, with
contract billing ,i lien
releases. Able to work
under pressure.
Secret•ry $SOO
To regM>nal operation of
sales. Must have &ood
telephone technique. SH !K>,
,,,.. 111.
CollKllon Clerk $456
llandle total group oon-
tracls, receivables, ski p
lrlll"ing. Able to setup own
correspondence.
Girl Friday $400
For Executive Producer.
\Viii review lllm ld'ipta,
gen. olc. gd. tel. tech.
F /C Bkkpr to $500
Qu11.rterly reports, thru
P&J... Matu~ and stable.
Accurale typtne.
• P•rt T ime
Motel manqtr. Lquna
Beh. Couple only. No
childttn or pets. No «XJI.
nee. can be: over 55. 5 to U
Pt.f. Nice accom'a,
410 W. c .. ot Hwy.
TOP BRASS
COMPANIES
'
We're recruiting
NOW for:
Newport Beach
Office
& •II Or•nge County
& leach c111 •••
"Master" Stenos
'Firit Class" Typists
11Priv•t•" Sectys.
'Rank & Fila" Clarkr
"Typist" with
creotive writing
ability.
"Legal" Secys.
"NCR11 Oper.
'.#: 482
"Medic•I" Secys.
"Keypunch" Opers.
"Bookkeeper-Secy11
"Convention''
Hostesses
"Statistical" Typists
"Manuscript"
Typist
AMERICAN
GIRL
needs YOU
Call our NEW
Nowport loe<h No.
for eppolntment
~73-4176
REGISTIR NOW!
Pmnanent, fUIJ time Job.
Over lS. Nest ·~· APPLY JN PERSON
Bob's Big Boy
154 E. 17th. c.M.
COASTAL
AGENCY s.• .. & s..ai.,
lndapondont
Personnel Agency
1716 Onitlli:i! Ave, S\ttte c
C.M. 642-<Xlll!, 56087tl
GROCERYMAN, all ltOUnd
l!XPl'rienced, fot small, ln-
dependent , non-union
tnArket. lfarbor ana rnl-
dent. 673--.•.
Newport .... h
.,,,,.i °""""""'' ""-~ AMERICAN MAIDS WANTED ...,...,_.,. __ ,_II * 646-7445 * * MOTEL MAID * * COOlC * M/F. A ppty :
•tunt.ington Valley Con-
valeftce:nt !TOI.pita I, t 3 8 2
Newman Ave,. 1-1.B.
TI-IE QUICKER YOU CAU..
nlE QUICKER YOU SELL
"
540-6055
Whlte elcpllanll! Dlme+llne
llELP WANTED: MAID 4 Must bo Cj!p'd A OYtr JO.
openll'll• Aval!. Exp.tr 11ttr. ~!!: Mmi 'eaularbort Blvd., GIRL .I _, t ....... ta eu., . uet a.,.,.y n pe:tS>n Jam-1---------
•
&Jca Inn Motel CdM 1'ftt QUtCKEn. YOU CALL.
DAILY PILUf WANT AJllil TIIE QUTCKER YOU SELL
' I ..
NEED Q.EANING LADY
' '
Apt. So ti t h Laa:tU'IA· f'or
working couple. 64J..Mn
NURSES Rqistered • even-
ing I: nllbt ahifta. Ex. \
benefilL AIJPb' Penonnel I!;.: J
Dlrtttar, So. Cout Com-• .~
munity Holp., SlS'12 c.out 1...,
Jlwy., So. J..a&\lM. 499-1311. • i
P:;;::RS • :: l
LARGE Real Eltah1 Com-• • 1
pany teeking rellabhl ... pro-.h !
fel!.slonal palntera for 'w' ,
permanent position. Mu.st , •
own trucks. Salary open. , !
Contact Mr. Berger or Mr. 1 , , , • !
Stettcns {213) 4T1..a587, Mon, , .~ •.. I
Jan 5th. -I . ,
PLASTICS -_'_ I Injection ~ "oldlnr _
Oper'1. or Trainees
To work WI!<!. thru Sun. ..:.i:~ (Mon. le Tues. oil) All -
shitta opin. Must be neet ~
and drpendable, APPiy I ""
am •w noon ont.Y. ::
Orange Cout Plutica , • ~ 1
850 W. 18th St., C.M. t ... . ' ~i
PA:RT TIME RELIEF _.,!
BOOKKEEPER .. '
* r !
LUNCH WAITRESSES • I . . l
.i I * HOSTESSES
--~l • • DAY BUSBOYS . Apply ln per90n •' f
Reuben E. Lee .·.·_.:_-! 151 E , Coe.st Hwy,
Newport Beach
Restaur&l'lt
Day ond Night
DISH HELP
' ' l ..
' . ···~
Doy ond Night ' _-: I BUS HELP
COCO(°' REUBENS ':.
1 4647 MacArthur lllvd,
NtfWPOl'l Beach "
ESTAURANT·Founta1n I
Valley Exp'd. WAITRESS. •>:
ES both collee shop & din-& • ) ~· ner exp. Furnish exp, age ~
refs. A1110 mmbo CASHIER.-•:1•
HOSI'ESS, BUSBOYS • ruu ~' I
time, PORTER. Write Dally .,...;
1
,
Pilot Box M·17, •.•
Restaurant •, ! I
HELP wanted, female, awr l
21, $2 hour. 545-9863 ••
Receplloni!t . ·"'1
YOUNG dynamic firm hu .... : !
e.n open.Ina: !or a bri&hl Pi · ·1 "'ith front of I Ice ap. • ..;•
fc~e~-.; ~bl~ : 1 ;!: ~
Ing """"'· / • Knowl«lp of l "call~trector te I e phone
eoruole" ~nendal. Xlnt op-
port u n It y. Contact . •J
Karen/Vanguard Data ,·~,
Systems 714:~'™0 ·:·.~j
Receptionist
Front ottlce exper. Medical : '.':.l
office bkgrnd only, SWt ".'~I
$400. !nd1ponclont · .. •:!
Per10Mel Ag1ncy
1n6 Orqe Ave, SuUe C
C.M. 642-0026. 560019 -------~
SEARS
COSTA MESA
ANNOUNCES
OPENINGS FOR
Experlenc:ecl
Truck nre
Salesmen
Ex«llent Eamina;1
Pt"-'
e _Proftt sharlni: e H01p1t:allr.aUon e Group We in1. e Paid vacation
• 8 paid holidays
• Employee dtacount • Apply In Penormel ~
Monday thru S.turday
10AM lo4PM '
SEARS
Roebuck & Co.
SOU"fH COAST PLAZA
3333 S. BRISTOL
COSl'A MESA
..
I .. :.~
' . -·~I
• .• • 1
'~.:· .... , -"
.-.. ,: ... . ... '
I 1,1. .. ...
··-~.
---.., ...
-' ' -
.-.-
'-" An Equal ()pportunJ17. .• • Empl-. ,.,,,. I
--~«.-:" --· ... --_. --·---.{.ti
Sales ~:-:
$1,2ll . .50 IN A MONTH WQ .. ~..!t
averaa:e commlllkln ~ 1 "'.J
our full tlrM men M.tlon. ~ I
wide last )'CltU'. Opening for .:.:,
aood man OYOl' 30 ln the ... -.. -... "":,
Beach CIUee afta 1o •II ,'·,.ti;
aame produets. Air-ma.il -~
F.A. Crawford. Prea., "!C~
PantMr Chcm.lcal Co., Bax • 1' ~
52, Fort Worth, Tnas mm. i1B I
SAW :::.
OUTSTANDING . ~'1
OPPORTUNITY. ""'
FOR RECORDED .-; _I
INFORMATION ''
CALL-835-4029 ··~1
SALES "•:t
Profe11'9nel Trelnl"f ~~!
Proer•m
FOT' recorded ln!ormaUoa
all 83S-Jm
---. . '· .
----------------------. ··--·------~--------~-~~-~~-~--------------•
a,.ILY Pit.OT Moodq, J.n>lrJ S, 1970 ~~~!~~~~~J~D~~~~~~mM~£~"11CHANDISI fOlt MlllCHANOISf P0tt Mll!!:HANDISl 'l'Olt TRANSPOllTATIDN TRANSPORTATION · TRANSPORTATION
SALi! ANO TllAOf SALi ANO TllADI ·fALl.ANO TllADI ~EE TO YOU MolMla H-9200 tmpot tad Autot 9600 Imported A•IH 9600 "· wam. 1100 Mon, wom. 11oe ------------"----·1 1·=:::::.::.:::::__.:.::.:1 ~~~Kiil'u\in l • ' '~,~u~m~ltv~ ... ~~~~1~11~1 ~"•~m~1turo~~~~·-~1.spo;ii~~· l500 '~:11!..ioldllalt...,.~1 · END ENGUSH FORD VOLKSWAGEN"':.
Sak• EXP. °"" W&lu.a. Am 1'10" M9SS SUllTDOARD ,_ -To ...,.j Yl!AR · '
Jf).!l•lll AM Mon. al La Blue plam<nt on bol!Om.,., -~ ~ CLEARANCE SALE YW BUGS
EXCEPTIONAL
OPPORTUNITY
We ~ C"XPB.ndlna: our New-
port Beach operation and
wi5b io interview .men WhO
are truly intere11tKI In de-
1r:nnin1,. the po11ibilltie1
Caw Ott.let, 1695\i lrvlnt, b!ue °" railJ. E:xoe~ con-' AU. SIZES
1""' Jl<>or). C.M. HALF PRICE ' dlllo• "~ c.n JAY 5G-IS14 LONG IWrod PJ:IPI'"' 1 NOW ON Dlp>l.AY Of!ANGE COUNTY'S 1VAl1'RES.S. ,,..,rieo<ed !•male, 2 main. 1 blJc l 8AV HARllOR VOLUME ENGLISH
-Collage Oille Shop, SKIS, Glut l \i ~ Bin-whltt. 2 brown A white. Mobf .. Hom• Sal.1 FORD DEALER
562 W.19th St. CM JANUARY. CLEARANCE dlnp, ...... lCln t Cond. -l/6 142$ Baktr St., ea.ta""' SALES . SERVICE $l00. Jarries. ~'1009 aft 4. PICK..tJP at 1626 Newport ~ block East ol Harbor BIYd. OVER 60 IN STOCK w~ need ari a1u.c-~·-~
live one, for food, coclrtaU., ifnocul~ Seo;.. 1550 Blvd.~ 39, CM OLD CMl:a Mesa {TI4l 540-!M70 • 2 I: 4 Dr. Model!4
Apply in penon. El Moro -400 pieces of used furn iture on stle 121, .. ~ble n ote-~~. 1'I RM P O~/~ MOOR SALE! : i: ! ~ ~l:~ls ~i~,~~:.~d:ld~n ~:::
have a long range tralnln1
program covering both the
a1~a1 ol e5ta le cres tion &
ratate conservation. \Ve v.•ill
make a sul>slanti1d ca.sh in-
\l<'Stmeot in the men chosen.
Jn addition ttl being a Na·
t'°'1al l.Afe Insurance O>m·
p&.nY, v.·e have a broker/
(!ealer ouUt'.'t Jor sales o(
n1ulual fu11d1. If you ha\lt'
college u-aini"I:;. are be'·
tv.•ttn the agl'll of 23-40 and
and are '''I~ 10 :;pend
!iQllle ti~ in order 10 learn
m~ about our opportunity
and )'OUr qualificalions, Call
fl1r. Thompson or l\1r. J~lson
at 675-03i4 Jor an appoint·
men\.
16656 Pac. Cout Hiway Sun. dt one-.helf off from elready ,Low·Low · set &h after 5; 30 lor, 2.4':.4 ~ llCope, 4 FREE Pl.lwit•. P.tothtr Lab. • Station \l.'agons
d · GIJoc eyt piece•, camera & l"ather Germ. Shep. Call ONE MIJ..E Jo~ROM OCEAN Many "1.'ilb fully aotonl&tic \VAITRES.S -Coll~ ShOp. use prices. COSTA MESA
1103 tadapMn. · AUu of the niter 5 p.m. 6U-3570. 1/6 trans., air, radial tires, rs.
Over 71. Me51l Lanes, I L-..1 Heawns. J59I) or best otter. GREENLEAF· dio, vinyl roof, wsw Ures.
Super)or Ave., C.M. l. Tw n -· compo•.d 50-/. OFF 5.16--1791 TO Good Home -2 rabbill, MOBILE HOME BRAND NEW STD, 2 DR.
\VOM.F.N • Full, part-time of heildbo.lrd, frame, w,,. -males, 3 tincbes w/cqt4 SALES $1785 F'UL.L f'RlCE n~dcd.for:· child care. com· motel box spring• & tl&.Ot e-»G ·oo Mkcel_l1neeu1 l600 call 830-M.l86 • 116 n4; 642-1350 ORDER NO\V
panion. Ages 20-65. mattrei1. <f67• -----MATTRESS,. box .springs & Theodore
-we Sit Better, I~. * * * met.al standard size. frame. RA RE Oppo r tu nJly, ROBINS FORD 5-19. 3031 Ext. li6 Or ti7
191tl HARBOR BLVD.
l'OSTA MESA South Coast Agent.-y LOW•LOW POLLY OBER 540-195a CA LL eve aft 6 pm. MOBILE LIVING on the -Pl a••a BEACH I'.Jmited a"""""" tn 2060 II bo Bl d .. '3274 2 End tobl PllCI ·-~ TWO ~--··~-. m" .. ~A.. ........... ar r v . v • e• -W*'• u-.:.:: .. """''-"'<' ,_....,. new addition lo Driftwood ,.,__ta •I "A'J IVIJO LARGE
SELECTION
'VOMEN (6/. needed for Cockt.til tables SI.GO NEWPORT BEACH yard. 2451% Elden Ave. Beach Club Models on ....,,, e!l!l '"""VU
v.·ork at lhe tele~ order $3.50 .cJ. C.P.t. dlspla,y! 21"62 Pac Hwy,
PACIFIC MUTUAL
LI.FE INSURANCE CO.
Do You Takr
I SALESMEN
WANTED ADS!
with a grain of salt? Can'1
sat that J bla~ you. I fol.
lowed a f('w n1ysclf only to
be digappointcd. The job
seldom lived up 10 I h r
claim~ in 1he ad.
DO YOURSELF
A FAVOR!
/\ND
EXPLORE
THIS ONE!
' rr you would like to 1nak<'
$300. pl'r v.·etk imm«liately.
\Vith an opportunity for
much more in !he futurr.
I would like to talk to you.
ll your qualifications match
our requirt'menls, this could
be the caret"r )'Ou've ~n
looking for. Call for pt'l"&lnal
in tervie"I\' bet. 9 A!l.1 &. 3 PM
645-0091
d<'sk. part time, 9 am to 1 You2 ~: :i:;r o.I KnTEN, 6 months old, ma!@, H.B. 536-Ta.13
pn1 or 4 pm to 8 P~· $2.~ TOUI to li:(IO(I home, 836-'493
per hr ta stat1. Openings in ... Oc I I h I "•'-"" CHOICI PETS and LIVESTOCK Cost.a ro.tesa office. Not'xp/ ... cat one c • r1-,. Southern 'CalJfornla Motorcyclff 9300
...-. Call for inlor. 642·1532 All typo1 111t.ot $19.00 Sporta, VHatlon Dot> H25
YOUNG to.tan to 1nanage "1rell &-Recreational • • • -.----.----. CAROL TRIPSANSKY
13021/J S. BAY FRONT known, !>'Uceessful dinner V~icfe Shott
~ & lounge. t.tust hav~
('Xpefience. Send TeSumt
Box P-696 Daily Pilot
Sc hools--lnstruct io" · 7 60f
MEN & WOMENI
COt\IPUTER PR0GRA1'1·
!'.llNG IS THE KEY TO
YOUR PROFITABLE
FUTURE!
Classes 5tart soon.
Pilot program offering the
finest equipment and fac1l·
iti<'s available! Real·time computc1· programming.
4. New 30'' kitchen
ra"hg" with gl•s•
look·through ovens
USED •
FURNITURE
LOW-LOW
·N.ICI ~14f.OO
't•IM $95.00
Tt=tE ·" FACTORY.
1885 f"l•rbOr Blvd., at 19th St., Costa Mt••
540-6842
Fur"niture -I Sewlnt Machin" 1120
·at-the
A(!IAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
JanU&f)' 3rd lhn1 11th
Pleaae e&ll 642.SSTS, ext 329
between 9 and t pm to claim
~ ti.cftts. <North County
toU-tree number is 5f0..1220J • • •
*AUCTION*
U you will eell or buy
gjve Windy a try _ --·---------------·I Auctions Friday 7:30 p.m.
17 Pc. King Size '""' SINGER Zl G·Z A G. Windy'1AuotionS.rn Bed walnut console, bu t ton 20?51,S; Newport. Clot 646-8686 ro9m ho l e I, des I g n 1 e tc . Behind Tony's Wd.a" Mat'J
Large 9 drawer dresser.-mlr. Guaranteed. $36.00 Cash .ir • ·
ror, 2 bedside stands, Irina euy terms! 521Hi616 MOVING Sale! 2 color RCA
size headboar1, frame, quilt. =========' J "Ct>n90le 'IV'f $150 A: $175.
ed mattress, sheets, blank,. Mu1lc1I Ind. 112.S Antique piano, good cond,
els, etc. $18.'.j. Kenmore 8 cycle
a-,·c· of ~-·J•b BSO washer, &: ras dryer $50 ea. .... .. .,.,..... GI N Guitar. Les Paul B • H 16 0• ·•ooom Slyl• "" mm movie • "' ... Custom. Used 2 mo'a. Cost Mi · All For $249 • .. ·.:n;.~ " furnl ..... $550 Nu, With $65"case. Best ._..,.,,
)/"o down Pmts. only $9 mo Offer. SSf-4~16·
WELK'S W~RafDUSE Pltnff & Organs •!.30
POOL TABLES
Socard Pool
BRUNSWK.'K-AMF
Cwstom Slate Table 600 '';;~~ ~~u~~""' YEAR £ND SALE! From 1289
Sat, 9-6 Sun. lJ-6 100% F lna.nclris:
PRICES.. SLASHED I Use' your X-mas money tor * SECARD POOLS *
MRS. OONALD .N. BALBOA ISLAND MONTGOMERY '\.
16l5 DOROTHY LANE Yoo \re the \vinner oI
NEWPORT BEACH 2 tickets lo the
You are the. winner of
2 tickets to lhe
Southern California
Spoi-h, Vacation
& Recre.tt1onal
Vehicle Show
at the
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
January ~rd thrU 11th
Pieaae call 642·5678, ext 329
between 9 and 1 pm to claim
your ticket.a. (North County
roll·free number is 54()..1220) * • •
BASENJI Ba.Jideas puppieg
trom Africa. Cha.mp. stock.
"'Xlnt mk'p, terms. ~5-«533.
6 MONTH ,old male, hall
Beagle &: hall Poolee. Loves
children. Free. 837-4239
OIIHUAHUA PUPP IES
2 MonU1s old. AKC
Ca.II 546-8746
Honft
Southern California
Srrt1, Vacation
Recreational
Vehicle Show
a1 !he
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER
January lt'd ttu·u llth
Plea.st call 642-5678, C,'l:t 329
between 9 and 1 pm to claim
your Udet.s. IN01'th County
toll-~ number ls 540-1220> • • •
'68 YAt.1AHA
IOOCC DffiT BIKE,
CALL 540-4063
FOR Sale: Y ainaha 125
Enctoro. Xlnt. shape. S.100.
MS-5391 after 5.
'66 HONDA 175 dirt bike.
R"eblt. engine, new ball.Cry,
new clutch. $2:?5. 968-ti1'26
1966 YAMAHA Big Bear
Scrambler. Xlnl Cond. $325.
Call~3 .
one of these HAMMOND .532-1992 up to 80<;-t. Savings BARGAINS! M.J. $675; S-ll2, :W S. l\Ja1n SL Oran:e ---IUO Triller, Travel 9425
FERRARI
FER~RI
Newport Imports Ud. Qr.
a.nee County'• only 1uthor-
ol VW
CAMPERS
Harbour V.W,.
~ dealer. AUTllORIZED
SALES·SERVJCE·PARTS SALES &. SERVICE ,
3100 W. Coast Hwy. 18TI1 BEACH BL 842~
Newport Beach 1-IUNTINGTON BEACH / 642·9405 540..1764 ~
Autboril.ed Fertari Dealer '6.i VW Dbl Cab P.U. fi~ =========! Xlnt cond. Gd tl f(a
w/radio. (2L1l 4348846, !.:."-FIAT
1970 VW Bug 4,CXXI mil~ FIAT '68 850 Spider. Sl495. P. private party. Bes~ off
0. Box 141t Nwpt Bch. Call 536-7M8 ~
_'4;1>-"l"3">l======= 1'67 VW, Wlle<'I l:OVCr.i, \\"<Kid
-wheel, radial tires. Best Of-
KARM*NN GHIA '". '"" 837-3774 '"" • ~
1965 K•rman Ghi• "GJ V\V. TOP SH.APE! ., ., , S99j . ;:
.·door Co1.1pe. Xlnt Cond. !162-2:>29 after 5 p.m. •' Immaculate inside and out! . '
One 01vner, $1050. See at 480 '62 V\V Bus, '69 ~ng1ne. _
Bn:iadway C.~1 trans axle, Nu \lttS. $1 . . Call ~423 ..
MERCEDES BENZ '62 vw. GOOD COND;
$600. * &.l&..81'1
VOLVO •
1------,"I
VOLVO .
SEE & DRIVE THE 1970:
ALL. REMAINING 69'S •••
• -l\-TUST BE SOLD ~ow~ :::
"=~~=====1 PRICED FRO!\if S2618.2(1:·• -Ser # 7860 • :~
'{our Best Deals Are Still ~I MG
MG
Sil.Jes. Servic~. Pa11s
lmmediaLe Delivery,
AU lllodels
J1rtuport
Jl111ports
DEAN LEWIS :~·
l!l66 I-I.arbor, C.M. 646-9~
Antiques, -~l111lc1 961 ~
* * '~ JANET TAUCHERf ::
P.O. BOX 348 ;•
SECTY. -SALES
~r position in expanding
sales dept. f\1od. fl!fg. plant
loc. In lrvint" Indus!. Con1·
pl~x. r.lust be_shai11, person·
, able &. experienced. Diverse
dulies include te-lephonc con-
tact '~·ith <'UStomen, short-
hand and typing.
Salary open. All fringe bcne.
fit.a incl. prolit sharing.
Calif. Injection MoJding
%lO Brigg!! A\lr., Ct\I . !H&.-4400
Near Orang, Counly Airport
Union lank Square
50uth· Tow1r
Suit• 4D
">ran91, Callf., t2666
Coll 547-9471
S' Sora & love seat $159.9.i $6'75; T-2CO, $1.595: E-lOo or '58 V\Y body all. parta $j(), 5 YEAR old, chocolate, roan 5 Pc Span gllflle :set $lG9.~ A-100 $1895; RT 2 wlPR 40 Philco TV, black & white mare. Good show pro-
King Sz quilted matlt't!p &: 11~'·. al-BALDWIN dr-$4.5. 231 Broadway, C.M. All 11pects! ! Hunt & jump bo' ·pnn· g< 199 95 =.J "" ~100 \V. Coast H11•y, N.B. s ........ · guonic J.195; GUI.BRAN· day Saturday. Aller 4:30 Sacrifice $750. 546-625a
19' JiOLI DAY Trave l
Trailer. ~ mo·s o Id,
Complete. 01vner Sacrifice.
Ca.II 644--6197
CORONA DEL MAR ;:
LOOKING FOR A SOLID
FUTURE BUT CEITING
5 Pc BR King, Span $179.90 SEN w/-.u..m •-=:· ALLEN to.ton. 612-9405 540-1764
Approved Furniture ,,-u• -.. . TRANSPORTATION Authorized r.JG Dealer
You an-Uic winner ol '.
2 tickets to the
dlx theater S2650. 3 ROOMS of rum: incl 1s· T-•ck1 9500 I ~""°'=-,,o..,-~~~--2l!"il 1-farbor , CM 548-9660 • v '67 ~tG Midegt. Good con·
HAMMOND refrig., Zenith to.Jedi! console Boats & Yichts 9000 ---------rlition. Only ll.000 miles.
I
NOWHERE? FURNITIIR.E retw·nw from In CORONA DEL ldAR glereo, an 1 mo. old. -------CAMPER TRUCK
digpJay studios, model horn. 2854 E. Coast Hwy, 613-8930 646-7981 * * * 1970 G.i\t.C. ~ 11.D. eq"u1p., \\'hi1e w/ blk. S1300. Cralg,
Southern Californl• ·I
Sports, Vacation ,
SECRETARY $500
To financ, n1andger
·ACC'. Jyping tl)0.65 V.'pn1l Sii
(81J.90l: Gd. at fi~Ul't'8.
SERVICE CENTER
DO YOU \VANT TO CO es d t JI · O 67~2Ta3, &14-1131 , ecora ora cance auon. pen Eve& a: SUn a.l'temoons BE.AUTlFUL hand painted MR. & MRS. V8. Ser. # 2'.!50531. I ~"'"='""'~~c-o-.,-,, & Recreational · J
Vehic:le Show SOMEWHERE1? Spanish & Ml"dilerrancan oil ~It of """'' or """''" JOSEPH T. HINE $2995 I!&! ritG FT. Totally reron· RD FURNITURE ~·-,.. .--u~IVERSITY ditloncd. SC'C to appreciate~ T!IEN LOOK lNTO A, children h"Om a photoiraph. 9161 CHRISTINE •• :Sl300 or best off<T. 838-6593
CAREER 1844 Newport Bl., C.M. A 14·onderful Idea for that ORIVE OLDSMOBILE at the
' Employment Agency * 500 Newport Center Dr. *
{fashion ls.II Suite ~ NB
every nlte 'tU 9 IF you are bu_ying a Pia.no special gift. 646-3679 HUNTINGTON BEACH :.'850 Harbor Blvd.
AS A \Ved .. Sat. &. Sun, 'til 6 or Organ lhill YEAR & , Cost1t ri·11.>sa. MGB ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER RAOlO ANNOUNCER BEAUT are interested in some real· NEW 1.S~ard> lD Screen 5'10.96•10 CLASSES f'OR]\11NG NOW IFUL King bed. quilt-ly great deals, tilease shop for shdmg glass door. 449 ... You are the winner or "67 i'llGl3 -Sl!KlO. Good cond.
N1·1v ,\·Jufflers & Radiator.
Ca ll !~~-lij7$ after 6p1n
By appt. 614-<1981 ed ry:ialtn-5!. Co1nplele, un.. \VARD'S BALDWIN SfUDJO Sea~ Rd., Corona dcl 2 tickets to the
LEARN: used $105. worth $250. r-.1 car t. 675--2022 SECRETARY, part l.in1e, g.3 In a radio 1;tation on profes--842-6536 eves. 1819 Newport, C.M. 642-8484 ar, 1 •
· Pl\1, S day1 r.lon-Jo"ri. t.lusl' sionaJ equipment from work-:o==-,--~----1 Open Every Nitt COLOMBIAN .emerald rings
be good lyptlit and 1ake ing D.J 's. DESK· large oak executive &: Sunchty Af leroooc $32.95 to $149, co pp 'r
, shorthand. Call 64 5-12 0 0 CAL·L 772-3800 niodel. Xlnt con<!. $6S. artifacb, muks, pictures,
from lG.12 noon. Jnst.itute of '8h:iadeasl Arts 968-5873. 9171 f.1adeline Dr., purses. elc. 4~19'13 JIB
SERVICE !ital ion need s
('1(p'd !lo-lan, days, full time,
perrn&l"X'nl. Union Oil, 393
. E. J7th St. C.l\1.
kERVICE St.atlon /\HernJ.
'Expcr Full time. Prcfi>r
,older man. Appl)' 560 \\.'.
'19th St.. C.l\t.
SERV Sta Attendant, <'XP.
nee. 4678 Campw; Dr .. N.B.
Airport Texaco -5Ci! Mlk~ ,
1601 N. Bristol, S.A. Carpet layer has 1ii Lo
Student Loan~ FORCED lo sell 8' i\lcdit. PIANOS & ORGANS nylon~ $1.99 yd. Shags
Free Placement ScrviL'f: sofa, 7 pc Bas.o;et din rm set, NE\Y &: USED f.rom 3.SO up + n1y labor,
5 pc Basset BR S<!l. t.'Oflcc & • Yamaha Pianos O!'ian.'S 90c per yard. 847-15.19
*AIRLINE & .
TRAVEL CAREERS *
Station Agent
Ticket Sales
Rest'n'alion~
Air F1~ight -C~o
Communications
Tr11vcJ Ai;t>n\
end Ible. (1) 826--0980 • l'hom&.11 Organs
R.EFRJG. $25. Gas Ranie. • Kimball Pianos
SJO. Chest or Ori1.11'('rs. $10. 9 • Kohler & Campbell
Pc. &Ir. Set Con1pt, SGJ. COAST MUSIC
4206 \V. Isl SI .. S.A. N"E\VPORT &: HARBOR
BEAUTIFUL King bed.quilt.
ed mattress. Comph~le-un
used. $105, w o r t h $250.
8il-6536 eves.
CARPET ln!laller has one Costa t\lesa * 632·2851 1 i\10. old 9' so(a & lo\le 11Cat, Open IG-6 Fii l0.9 Sun 12•5 roll. a\.'OCldo nylon carpel,
Spanish l\icdit. l'l'1t velve>t, ~--~~~---IDouble jute-backed. Will llt'll ""°" 1r;m. 544-2180 fREE .u or port SJ/yard. ;!{).ms
,,f FAl\1"1LY Membership for
Southern California'
Sports, Vacation
& Recreational
Vehicle Show
at Hie
ANAHEIM
CONVENTION
CENTER .
Janua1y .:ird thru Uth
Plea.sc c411 642-5678, ext 329
bc-11veen 9 and 1 pm to claim
your ticke~. (North County
roll·h"'Ce numbt'r is MG.12'!01
* • * SHOE SALESMAN
\\'anted, experienced, I u It
lime. Apply JOSEPH MAG·
NIN SHOE S,\LQN_ Ask for
, Mr. Daniels.
Ne"'POrt Beach Tenni:5 Club. FREE AIRLINE Two Oflltt Desks Phone 549-2286. Ba$1c Boalhlg Course 0He1·cd
Of.fice Furniture 8010
SCHOOLS in xlnt. cond. wool: finish.$~ GOULD MUSIC for Sale Firewood. lo public by Ba.Jboa Po11~r
PACIFIC ea. '19-l-9'ro4 Orange &· Eucal)·ptus Squad1'0n t'Vcry ;o.1on. nighl
~KJ..5050 Ext. 'nl
. 204a N. !\lain, SA 547.()681 838--6670 ror 13 1reeks beginning 7
Inquire: Today Office Equipment 8011 MO.-ffiERSHIP to NEW· pn1 on !I.ton., Jan 12th at
SITTER for our family only, 5~3-fi.l96 HAMMOND Stcin1vay, Yam· PORT BEACI! T·····, Cl"b. Nt'.'11·port Ha.rbo1· Yacht 610 '' 111h SI Sa 1 Ana TI'PE\VRITER. Add l n g ~'"' .. available 1vhen nce>ded : .:.. ·· na aha, New & used pianos of C.ll ""''6. Club, 72(1\\l. BayAVC' .. Nrw-machinc, calculator. VCl'Y """""""' some days, sonic <'Vcnlna:s. nlOlt n1ake~. Best buys in ==~-~~~~~ 1 pol"t Beach. No advance o c caslonal \VEEKENDS. JOIN THE F IELD reas., xlnt cond. 89'l-242J. So.' Ca111. at Schmidt Music GO_LF Oubs: Complt'le Se!. rC:G:i1111·ation needed. Regis·
Six children (age 10 and \VITl-1.'A FUTURE! Co. 1907 N. ~1 .. 111, Sant.a Ana \Vllson Staff~ lnc}ucles bag&: !er at class, bring notebook
under). light C90kinp:, ov.·n Age/education no bfl~'Tier! I A_,,p~p_l;_•n_c_•_• ____ llOO cart, $60. 67:>-4059. first night. Questions: Call
tr11nsporlatlon, Call for in· Let us help you qualify. * * '* v=ER=v--.,-.,,-p-1..,.-,-,~.-;.-,,.-.1 STEREO tape rccor_drr "'/10 6T.:-18:>:i.
1•-,,·,, •. 67" l!KIO !Lido Islcl. ll\'NKEEPERS INSTITUTE N S l•peo •· , .......... .,,.,.1cs $80 I=~==~~----'~ • ~ INTERNATIONAL FRANCOIS JO KER baby gl'and, \\'ilh Ampico ~ ~..,._,,.,,,, : · 2.1' 0\VENS ·lit 1vfmoor\ng
SlTIER: Live-In. Care 1or r.tateVHotel/Apt Mgmt Sehl '41 SEAL ST. e;'l(p r csglon. Hear Surlboard $50. '199-<IWl In Ne1vport Bay. $3950 incl°s
10 mo old. Eves. tree, if A DtVISION OF COSTA MESA Rachmaninoll play his---· nlOOring. Call -531-{r,JD.
dt'sired. 54:>-6869 art 3. ANTHONY SCHOO~..S niusk: .hii v.'ay. Ask ques-Misc. Want~~ __ 1_6_10
SWING Sl:ufl \Vorke-r~ 1n7 S. BROOKHU~"7 You a.rt' the winner v'. liolll!l 494-63il $ WE BUY $ ~ii~~-J!,;~-'l~!, \\'if~ ~":I~:~~~=: 2 tickC'lS to the "R"a=d°'lo======8=2=00=
night.I! per v.·k. Gd Pn,y. Call PHONE FOR :APPT. Southern California $ FURNITU RE $
833-#47 or 437-1767. Ask for Betty 776-a&l)) Sports, Vacation sc·R·AM·-LETS APPLIANCES .:::::..::c::...:;:T'"°e.;;ll;:.e..:r='----1 LOOKING for a solid futurt & Recreational C•lor TVt-N•1101-St1ra111
Tralnet, or expo,r. i:;81 lo but gelling Vehicle Show R 1 PIM• •r "•°" F11ll
stal"I . NOWHERE? ANSWE S CASH IN 30 MINUTIS
Independent Look Into a career as ;i at 11~ • 541-4531 •
Personnel A,gency RADIO ANNOUNCER GimlC'l -Roach -Felon -====,,--:---..,. 1n 6 Orange Ave, Suite C 77'2·3800 ANAHEIM Double -GOOD \\'ilh HAM SERENDIPITY The ca!s
C.M. &42-0026, 545-0979 Instl lutr. or CONVENTION About a.n oldtime entertain· needs .a . sins.II ratla~ chair
B-•d•••t A•· CENTER ••ij '-·'-' ..... · to sleep 1n. She docsn I have D' .J.. '" .. '~ er: -,e Snvwu ~ gt\lt'n mU.'S· h f . Typist· 1c1a..,..one 160I N, Bristol, S.A. tard gas. It goes GOOD iviUi niuc n"IOney 10 pay or 1.t.
Fee reimbursed. "* DOG TRAlNlNG * January 3rd Uu·u 11th HAM" h>ugh. Hl!r nu1nbt'r is
Also fee, job!;. CLASSES ST A RT JN G : . 5'10-7179 ft ft 3 Pi\f-
S1ilbo1t1
CAL 2S
• \Vllh Slip •
In Nc\\·port
""'· ~01110
9010
LIDO 14 Sailboat, No. 2389,
11·it h h'ft.ilcr. Cnlt 837-7039
aft 6 P;\I
BAU30A 20 11·/truilC'r. A.II
extrass, I }'rnr otr.J, a~klng
S30TJ. 96.i-S.153
Power Crui1er1 9020 ---UNL~~~l~JENCY Novice obc<licnce Jan 5, Please call 642-5678, f'Xl S29 _T_.1_._.;_.1_._n ____ ._20_s -FREE TO vou·
488 E. l?th Suite 22• 7:30 p;..1: Kindergarten pu~ between 9 and I p111 io clain1 '68 SKIPJACK 20: low hrs.,
t "PY training Jan 7, 7:00 Pro.I: )'OUr t.icktUi. (North County Lease Color 'IV or Black & SIS. F'S. Bimini top. i\lnrc.
O::ILIC:a Mesa . &1'1-l.t'lO Confirmation Jan 7, 8:00 toll·h~ nun1ber i~ ;H0-1220) \\'hitc. Opt)on to buy. F1tt LOVELY. ~ricfll!ly cat, 7 er. 100.' Xtraa. $58 00.
WAITER -for plush Mexican PM * • • servi«. No deposit A·Active 1nos., spa)'t"d, grf'y-11•ht· • 548-4843
dilU'lc.>r house. Various &hlJCJ llARTINCREST KENNELS TV Rentnl Co. blk. A h~. pet. S1nall brttd. i "'· =======~
'qien. Exp'd onl.y 67s.o470 • ~ • RCA CoflllOle Color TV, $1411 (11 ~1153 673--3385 . 1/6 Marine Equip. 9035
J Refr\et'tlllors ..•. from $38 2, r. ~-rd uk lor or'le. -''-!ON-"ING ' F-01 F 2 d r•· 1148 i mo . ......-nnan .311-.:phe """"'ER. Machinist, AP" t::.:;!. 'R~~,"WE'K' TER•t '" rtt r re ... • HI.fl & Stereo 12l0 pup.s. · male. no p&pel'I. C3) 3 HP Evlnrude motors ..-~ ni;..uu.-r;.. " ~'Ond, \Vashcrs Ii D"l')lrr11------'-----I Hsbrkn 646-'12S5 116 SJO each. run good pre:ntlce Weldtr. 'Jobi open Be In bullncu for )'(JW"self! DUNLAP'S ritARANTZ SLT Turntable ·~
nrly Jan. call 4M--8989. J.,eam to M an 11.uC'Uonttr. 181;) Ne"'fl0•1 Blvd., C.lll. 11•/Shure. ca.rtridae. Cost FREE l )ti'. old fen1alc I;=======:='
Lq\l!l!,Bch· WEST·BEST' School of Aue-548-7711 $2$, l\IUST SELL $l70. Cockapoo; Friend l y, Boat Slip Mooring 9036
W .. _,.,..,<"'I:'<' \Ventro: ~-lit tlonettlng. 206 W. 4th, Sant• Mz..8584 or 642-1461 loveable pet Sf1-9M7 1/6 "' ... ~ "'I' ....... ,17 1009 GE cite dryer. model
Wit, lunch. nlirht holtelll. Ana. ~ • 820 D. Top of the line. Ulf'd Stero romponenl system 6 ADORABLE l mo. female
Apply 1262 Pallaadt& Rd .. MERCHANDISE FOR l mo. Sale or tra.t!e for com· months old $600 vllut only Shl:pherd Huskkl. 6-12-4623.
S.A.. SALE ANO TRADE J!llrable g1111 dr.Yff. 968-U73. uoo +l"f'C'Otds. See at 2300 lll
WANT TO RENT slip for 30'
S..ilboll.t in Newpoft Harbor
area. ~ aft 6 pm.
9171 ri11\(lel!ne Or .. HB. N~"''l>Ort Blvd #l 2 SETS of twin tm sprtna;s It Mobile Homet 92;eG
DAIL'.'" PILOT DJ M £·A· Furniture 8000 NORGE A t \V ~ IS y OUR A D 1 N n1allreue1. 61344U 116 ----------UHD. You can UM them u o as.~r. cop.
... lull ~ • day Di.J MAJ-fnf:ANY Dl.ninR; lablcti prrtone, lale n\Odt'I. xlnt CLASSIF!ED? Someone will NO mattl!r '1-'hat It 111. you '~ 20!<"3 DELUXE 2 BdJm
-
penn • Mbt90'\ 6 chairs &. buUet cond. SGa .frl6.8672 or ~ lookinc for it Otal 642-can ~II It 'frith • 04.IL'' A\\'111t1"Skh1g Ctm patio Cor
ti6x20~ $300. ~ 847--SUS 56'7& P,•_LOT.;..._w_ANT __ AD_,_,_._l"'6_'.....,'8=:'-"~· -'"-"-"-"-·-•_tI-_326< ___ _ ..
I
, I
'63 ~"'ORD I !on. Call &
chassis. Good <"Ond.
*612-4930 •
SPORT VAN 108 Che'"~'. ll":; G,
rng., au1v, L'('lllcr !;l'aL
$2Jjl). 1 0\l'OC'l". 612...():ii J
1,, T Chevy fi£>rtsi1lc P.U.
v.s R/l·I illk. Nl'IY 1min!,
ladder 1-ack $695. 6·12-li>~
J!lj7 FORD Pick Up, Good
t.'Oixlition. $.:GO.
&12--Q.127
.67 EL CAt\IINO. top Shll f)('. 4
spcl .• !1!111 undrr v.·a1T11nty.
$17:10. ~HN120 cv<',:.
Jeeps 9510
.January 3rd thru 11\h '' . -·--.. ' ' Pl ease call 642·5678, ext 329 ; OPEL l1Cl11("Cn 9 and 1 pm 10 claim ·---·---~ . l Ol'l•:L 1:.lli8 "LS" Spol'I }uu1• tickets. (No_rth County;
Coupt". fully equ1p['lf'<l. $1300. toll-free nun1b<>r Ill 540-1220)
P riv. party. 96S-lro7 • * *'
'6:1 Opel, g;ood n.indilkin. '57 MO RGAN + 4
i\lu~! ~ell. nr1v 1 1~s SiOO NCIV T:ip, n<'W brakes. Elc!
5-· 1272 i: ecllent c o n d i I i o n. $150Q, ~-~--ri-f' · 6-12-1724 after 6 PM. ;
~O_P-_. S_C_H_E __ Auto1 Wanted
'66 POR~H~: ~J::. I ~pd. \VE Pi'Y .
9700
;'\lnl l,,11d . l'n J•tt r 1y
!16._~X)W
Rah:111w ~··!!·'" :.ii:.voo 1111 CASH
'69 BRONCO, 2 tank~. P./11, ;-68 POP.~Cll!·:-•1 11~. l•"iu·
4,000 milrs. 1 c· 1 , rn1 u~t'.! cars ,'(: trucks ju.st.:
1·:·!1 11~ !:>1 free eaUmale. Call 6'\li-j.l\S(j p1"'C'f1i11\•• •'II", 11.~1 1··1 11 . =========I ,\!I C\lf;!<;, lo 1n1li•s. t2].~1
Imported Au•"s 9600 ~!i"..".lii "I" t;~:i .wJI
----'68 P-0\:SC.J !I·; · ~111,, 1 GP.OTH CH~'VROLE(:
AUSTIN AMERICA
AUSTIN AMERICA
Sides, Ser\ iL·r , Pai·ls
Jn1n1ediure D.:'l111r11·
/\ll l\lorlt'.'ls
J1rtuport
Jlin orts ·
3100 \V. Coast Jh11y., N.8.
642.94ig 540-1764
Authorized ~IG Dealer
BMW ---~~--
.BMW•
All i\fod('IS in Stock
for hnmedialc Delk•c1·y
SALES -SERVICE -PARTS
T&M MOTORS, INC .
8Ml Garden Gro\·(' Blvd.
~·ZlS I Open Sunday 892·5.151
DATSUN -----·----
..... I DA']"'""
''LN.dt'r In "l'hc &!a1·n L1t1cs"
ZIMMERMAN .
2e4S HARBOR BLVD.
54U410
ORANGE COONTY'S
NO. 1
DATSUN DEALER
DOT DATSUN
18833 Be11.t'b Blvd.
Jtun~ton Beach
&t2-i.l.Sl or 5'G-4.1442
''7 DATSUN RDSTR
New top, ne.w clutch. 4 IJ)d,
dlr, blue book $!Im. Sacri-
fice $1400! Sm11ll dO\\'n, will
fine prvt prty, TYM41t Call
Roy ~~9T73 or 5-15-C6ll.
01\111·1·. Lo 1111. ~1h ~r 1 ;:11~
Xln'1 Cun•I. ("ull 1;7,:,._·1,::'l
ROLLS RO Y C~ I
nOLLS ·:;!'!. :i1dc 1noun1 ~. nr"I
paint. new 11·s\\' 1ll'l'~. $!~"-0.
l'nv. ]ll'l.I' s.i~:io.11. 6!1~1~\
TOYOTA ---
,\sk tor Sll!Cs Manapr ,:
1.~.'ll 8i>,1rh Blvd. °'
l!l111l'ng•nn Beach " 1..::1 9.3331 ~--+I WE PAY CASH
F::H YOUR CAR l:
:
TOYOTA
CONNELL
CHEVROLEl :,
I :::-.''illa1tx1rCh1I. j'
SEE & OR.IVE THE J!l7D ,., ., ~ff"~a ~JG l~Jl" !
ALL REl\-tA1N1Nc tl!l ., --vie PAvToPl~
l\IUST BE SOLD NOl\1 DOLLAW :
PRICED FRO:'l-1 51;sl'.&1 •"! i.:w.t, clC'•n u,;cd CAr1
Ser # J 1;,n ,1!1 111;1kt's. See GCQrge P..&X '
\ uu1· BC'st Ul·al~ ,\n• Still 'I J'hc,.1dc1't!' P.ob111~ Jo"ord •
DEAN LE\'llS I ""' ""."°' "'"d. '
1!16ti lla1Uu1·, !".\I '. \1 &11-001
• BTLL l\l <\ \ !'.Y Will Buy
I!J@m.l i ~ ~· .. 111 v .. 11.~1· ···~en ••r Porsckt
: P·'"'·' tnrt Unllar5, Paid foi-
or nut. Crill F::1lph ' '
18881 BEACH Bl VD. I "13·0000 .
1-tunt. Beach 847-BSSS I U.TP<lRTs \\ A:-rrrn
3 mt N of Coast ~hv11. on B1·h Or11nge :)1Hntit-ll
TOP S KUYER
VOLK-SWAG--EN BILI MA:<EY TOYOTA ISSSI ~ach 81\ld.
'68 VolkS\\agen Cun1·l-rl+blc If. Al'a<'l'I. Ph 847~
R&H. 1-.:.-<ct'lle>nl ConU. Sli00.
1
Auto Ltasing
Call 673--0132 -· -.... ·-~--981
'56 V\V Oia~is -' '6.~ rr11n~
:'ll•ke ffitMJnahlc offer. C•ll
Cl1urch 5.16-SG~
LEASE · RENT
Immediate delivery
on all
1970 FORDS I.
FORD TRUCKS "
All poc!ijlar makca. F'o1 ,J
'00 VW, Rood cond, quick su1~ ll!aSu1r l)"~nt
Mil' beca.u!le or mO\'('. $400 Get Our Competltiva Ralf'&
,M6-3761 Theodore
l. .. ATE '67 V\V Bug, A-1 cond.
1 owner, lite blot', f12.'.i0.
~18'17
DON'T JUS!" WISH Im· ROBINS FORD
lJOn1ethlng 10 lumtSh your 2t'60 llnrbor Blvd
home .•. n~ ;rreat bu~s tn Cas111 i\fi-s11 61~ ""11 lod11y·~ Ch1s111f1t'd Ad~. v1
..
.. •
' ... ,.
O·. . :··
' ·.: ,~:
·'.'i ~I . (·
..
·i :;
.:1
:I
' 329·
Jm' . ' 1ly1
20)\
* I
""; m;
' ' ~ _,
'00
.isl .. ...
:r :: ;1 ··1
' r ;:
i·
" --+, .. .
•' ::
' • .. • •'
ii· -.;.i i;
" ~:
I '
:A.
~
116 -, -• . ' : .
I .
".102" ~·41. P..!"!f!,1t•r!!nt·-, ower fle-br•'•• •II"'-"" le tr1111., AM-FM '1t1•10
r1di.o, tint1d 9l1tt. Lie,
YRW 094
'68 FAllLANI $2Zil
Tori110 2 ir, 'H•rdtop. R1-
"jio, h11t1r, 1uto~1tic
tt1n1., power 1t1triftg, v.a,
vinyl roof, lro11,h1m i•t•r· ~·· lie. VIX ~II
~~7 GA~AXIE $17'7
JWllPOltTltTION
South•rn Californi1
~l°itl.t, V".fl"11 ' _.,,.,..,
VtJiJcr. SflCIW'
&t the
k••t•f1 111to1111tic fflll,., COlilV N•!,¥10N .,, loo. i ir. h•fdtop. R1dio, ANi
,.w,, ''''""'' v... t i, Ji ' to11diJiop!~I· Lie:. TUU 171 CE , T-~fl · 'ff ·vw : · $'91 JP.lllJ&l'1 3rd tbru 11th 4 1~., r1dio, ht1t1r, 1y11•
~"c,"1;;,· ,,uc.,".,,1;.15;.· ;'''='-· -..=• 11f'lea.ft pe.l1 642-5673, ~t ~ !'6 'MJlCUl'f $H7 between 9.&n<! 1 "°'to claim
4111,t V,y191r 9.,,,,. A.11· ·)'OUr ticketa, (North Cow)ty
orn,tiC, p•w•r •*••rltc,r•· toU·free nuqiber 11 ~1220)
dio, h••f•r. ""p 956. * jr . , * ~69 CAMAlO $247' *'FLEET SA1¥ *
'_•rdt•P· Y.t, •uto. tr1111., (5) 1968 CheY)' Iinpf.i&ll
llo••r •f•trin!, r1clio, h•••· 2 Door , ,,,,,,., ,,,1 •• '17'1
9r, 14,00Q 1111 ••· Li•• 11•wl (5) 1961 Ch, evy Im""'"• Uc. YCL 276 ,,._. ~~~o'--== 11 I Do!>r ., .............. 11650 'H FOID $14"4 Ill~ fpfd Col!lltry
f•irl•11• 500 2 Dr, Htrcltop, sedan 1tatiorfwq-.... $1900
y..t, tul•m•lic, r11'i•. 11111· (1) l9S8 Ford Ga~i'
.,, ''w1r 1t1•ri111. f1ctor:( 4 Poor •..•. ""'''", i1600
1i' co11ditio11!11.!t_!hit• will 53,_lg_
,tfr••.Tiiltitt l•••· srr·tos:-11•===-<~~!S::=:=
'H FAIRLANE $1271 11,JICK 4 Dr. v.1, 111to. tr1111., f1c· I I·---'"--'---
tory 1ir conclitionin9, pow· ••1 l"ICK
'' 1t .. ri1191 • pow1r llr1k11, _ -l!f
ff•t1r. Lie. YCU 201 . Special, 4 dr Sedan. ltadio, ~·1 COUGAR $1917 heater, VI, t.utomatic trans, ~ powe-r steerin(. Qeaneit ca: Y-11 ,uto. tr111s.1 f1clory in
1lr c•11clltio11i111, pow•"r ~ W ltl~·qe. Lie.
.t.tri119, pow1r br1k11 , ,,; KQijl'l'l. ':; _j .,; 1
4io, h11l•r, vi11yl ro•f. L;c. $4"-• • ·
1YT "' 1 G\)1)0 SELi QN ;~I FORD $1H5 ' .,.
&1!. 100 <f cir. H.T. Y·I,
outom1tic, f•ctory • i r,
powor 1t•1rin9, r•dio, h11!0
,,, l.fo. WTE 516.
'H TORINO $U'7
tr1n1., f1ctory •ir co11cli-# F11th1elr. 293 Vt, 111to. '"
ti•ninf, p ow'• r 1t1•ri11q,
pow1r br1lr•1, r•clio, ht•f· 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
•'· lie.. ZDX 11 •. 1970 HARBOR BLVD.
''7 CHEVY $1196 ll--~oosr"'°""°A"=M;::E;::SA::__
l111p1l1 St1tio11 Wo1011. R1· . .,61 RIVIERA
clio, h11t•r, pow1r 1t••r· Neu new, full pWl', dlr, fact
int. v.1, f1ct•ry 1ir. lie. air, la~u top, tilt whl,
UQ& Io• brand new Pol,ya:las tire&,
'J7 PONTIAC $1676 has had loving Cl.ft'. Actual
·t;TO 2·Dr, H1rclfop. V-1, ntilea&e 20,000 m.i. Take old-
•r.'•'"otic +r•n1., f1clory er c.ar in trade, Call Ken:
1 r co11clitio11i119, pow1r 49f-9'1'13 .
•f11rl11g, pow•r llr'1•••• liC. 11 •-±'=-'.,..,.~----JYS QO I • '67 Buick S~. W~n,
fully equipped, ~ cond.
. '61 TOllNO' , $ZHI *>' ,,._'915 '**
•T. YI, 111lo11J11tic tr1111., II·~~:_;~:;;;:..:;..:;__
{tctory •ir, po\.r1r li1•rin9, C4DILLAC .
p,..,,, elite .,r1lr11. r•oli1, II·---"':..:.::=:..;.;:__
h1•t1r. whilo w1ll1. Lie. 1958 CAO, family car. Runs
"'ZOX 116 & JookE beaptifu1 . lat ~
·'H CHIVY $1210 cash take•. 67:hll53
l i1e1yn•. VI , 111tom1fi c 1960 FLEE'IV/000, clean fn.
tr1~1., f•ctorv 1ir, po..,1r aide Ii out, well maintained.
1!11ring. No. I O'll I $300. 548-6365 ·n· VALIANT $H1 11 .=.ss~o~E~v~1~cJ~E~eo-.. -,-. -An
200. YI, •utom1tlc tr1n1., xtra1. Malie offer.-WUI take
r1dio, h1•t1r, whit• w1ll1. trade. Call 892-6620 .
Lie. NGI 714
tu cHnr 11 $917 CAMARO
2 Dr. 6 cyl., sticlr, r1clio,l l·--------
l'lt1t1r. svs 517 '69 CAMARO-RS, oran&e. 2"lO
'U M~RCURY '61i ~~s, PB, .~. SSIOO.
~·t•or C111tom . 6 cyl., •11 · II~:;,;.~;,===== i~';•tie, rfclio, h1•f••· VQU CHEVROLET
'fl i!6RD LTD $1'71 '67 CAPRICE· l dr., 371.,g,
2 Dr, H.T, VI, •utom•tic, factory air, 6 ·way 1>9wer
feet. •ir, pow•r 1l•1rl111, seat, n.dlo, bydromatlc
po••' clJ1c br••••· rtdio, trans, oversize w.w. tires,
ht•t••· •l11yf' r••f, t int•d gQ!>d cond, priced for quick
1!111\ TIJ' P,1~ sale. 54~?7
''7 MU$TAl!G $1411 '8' CllEV Nova W•aon '83
H.T. Vt, 1tick, r•clio, h1.•t· cu. il)., 4 1pd, new rear end
•r1 vi11v! ro1f, ti11ttol 91111. and tran.v., braliea and liJ'es.
WIF 500 VerY clean. $925 or best of-
'H MUSTANIO $961 II~!':!';.:· 544::;::;~;;;;:·~~~-·i . + 2. YI, 1ulo'"•*ic '64 MALIBU, Xlnt cond, new
~''"" pow•r 1to1rln9, r•· tires, 1 owner $850 firm .
cliO, kt1ttr1 whift .,..,11 tir•1, 673-*3 or ~
tint.d ,r, ... Lie. PC" 0.-6 l l,.65;,;;.,CH=EV="'. -.~;m:=-.;.M~o-ior-.~,
!ii MUSTANIJ $1fll u ..... , ~ 1pd. ~ seatJ, .... paint.
H1rif•P· 6 cyl .. 111f1t11tffc Cheap. &U-1032
fr1111., pow1r 1t11ring , r•· 1967 EL CAMINO, white,
.clio, h••t1r, 1t11I .,. 1tyl1 R •. H lo I •t750 wh••I•. auto, .. , m , • , can 645-1691' eves 546-5348
'67 COUIOAR H0t6 'II CHEVY Impala 4<fr. 1nd
X"J, YI, •11to'"1tic tr•n•.. owner. 348 cu in V-8 $600,
f1$t1rv oir, pow1r 1l11rinf, 543-8556
, • ..,,, cli1e bt•lr11, r1di1. II====:-:=====
h11tor. vi11.,J ,,,,, tint•cl CHRYSLIR
11,1• \.le.· us' 414
''6 MllCUlf $14'2 '67 Chey•ler 300. l dr HT. full
·Mtntcl•ir A Dr, Hirdtop. pwr, air cond .. nu tit'f'I,
·v1·, t11~m•ti' tr1n1., ,.,. paint. V.•fY cleaq. $i100 ••rv 1lr. '""'''' •t11rlllf, ~16(1() •:t•r di,c •r••••• r•dlp, 11..:;.,;;=====-.
••ltr, whit• w41ll1, tf11t•d COMIT
'-''!!•Lie. R'6 102
llll;1 CDMET Waion, 2 dr,
DUNTON ~-"."'..:'.rAh.==:Xln't Com=:. $500:==.. Call
11
~'° eveni11g1 oJlly.
RD CONTININTAL f O '62 CDNTINENTAL. 4 door, \.,! air, CJ,tll PQW81'· ~ cop.
2''240 S. Mtlin dltion. 67:1-lON .
11 Your -.\d In our
546 7076 classUi~! Someo~ wtll be
___ • __ ...,., looki"i for It. Dial_ 61~"6'18
I.
DAILY l'IL8T
• NOT AT Joh·n1on .& Son's
JANUARY USED CAR . CLEARANCE SALE
•
With all the talk of lnflatloft & ~i9her prices, there s+Jll Is som1thb11 th•t hasn't J,11n ''~
. f•cted by hfgbtr prf~••• .. d that's a ·quality used car from Johnson & Son. . . . . ..
•
. oR•NGE coutiT-v·s -PINEST-USED CARS ·-
......... 6 _lot1 .... T•e Re .. IP;fl&Jop
Of Off~n9 Tlsf! Finest Sele~tion of IJ9ed fldr• In the Co•ntut ,. ·
~ ' .. .
CONTINENT AL MERCURY Otker Makes
'69 CONTINENTAL
. ··-
C•uP•· k111 woolll '"lltlli& finith with "l1tk l1•tli1r I whlft
l111d•u roof. lu11urv: •q11ipp1d, Ftetory tir, tis. Xl~ l tO
'5495
' '68 CONTIJllENTAL
4 Dr. S1i . .Attr11tivo litht chr•1111 Y1ll1~ with lilttk l11tti1r lfl•
terior 11111 l1~cl111 ro•f. full p•w1r •quipp•tl· .Ftcfory 1ir. •••·
WXF JJS
'4195
'68 CONTININTAL
" Dr. S.J. A••••'! gold li11.i1h, .,,,...," l•rtl•11 r•tf. !••lhor if!·
l1rl•r. All #11 lu11ury fo •t11r•• litil. ft,t·,,. 1lr. VT,116 ~
'3895 '
'67 CONTININTAL
I TO CHOOSI FlOM
<4 Dr. S14. l11utif11/ B1rm11d• lilu1 1111t1llic fi11ith with '"'tch·
ing l1olhtr int1ri•r. ll1ek lond1u ro tf, fully lux~ry 111ul'"''
•ni f1ctory •ir eondltionin9, AM-FM r1cli•, 1t1•10 t1p1 i11k.
o,,,.,..,.n1r ,,,, l••utlfully rn1!nt1ln•d. Lie. TIN 020
$3195
'67 CONTINENTAL
Co11•1rtibl,. '•l1r whli1 with bl•11cl l11th1r I: ,.hito ft,. Full ..... ,,.; .... •1!'$2995
'66 CONTINl,.TAL
C•ttv1rtlbl1. C1r4i11•I rod with blk. l11tll1r 6 •lk. t•it· 'Ull'f
lurury 1qwlpp1d I f1clory 1ir, SQA 97~ ,
'2495
'6$ CQNnN~NTAL ,
4 i•••· DP••rt 11191 fini1h ..,.ah •lotti l11lh1r i~ttrf•r. •~Uy
luaury ,111uipp1~ includ1119 f11Q. 'ow•r 6 f1cfory 1lr. U11utu•U'f
"''' u •. OUW Ul$1995
'64 C:ONTl,.INTAt. ,
4 clt1r 't•f•"· Y1l•1t I.lick fh1i1h wit~ J.l1•k l11th1r t11t,ri•r· F~Uy lu11u1y 1ciulpp1cl ineludln9 full p1w1r t ft1t1ry 1ir. Lia.
OY$ 515
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'69 MIRCURY
M4r1wit l rtu1h1111 C:twft•· M1~l~11 61lcl m1t1llit fi11i•h wit/t
t111t1hi11t 11\f•'rltr I ~11k 11114111 rotf. full p•w•t '~"1''''•
f11t•ry •Ir. ~·4 APL . $4195
'69 MlllCURY
Mfr41ui1 C•f•"V ,,,It tff· wl"'· t eJ"· ••II '"''' 11~11lppti • '••••~ tir. Cl N@•4195 .
'61 MlllCUltY
Col111y Ptrk 1f1. Wtf•ll~ CJ t1 1h.t•t• frt1'1 XIV OJJ M•iiu"'
''''" ':J'.t1IUc f111llh with oll •i11YI l11ttrl1r, t 11111. F11ll p•w•' .,,;,. . '"''~ ,;$3~9.5 .
'69 MONTIGO
MX f ''· t14e~1 It ft th•tt• fr1111I AU ht•• 111 ... IP1111. r1• ~ h1fttr, pow1r •forir., ,_,, .. , •• ,,, f1t .. ,Y t fr, l1Jt4111 rttf. . lOll-t,000 ••3170
'6t titOHfl•O
MX f ,,, H.T. M•cllu111 lth10 1111t1lllc fh1l1~, •1t1hi1tt i1t1rlor
··~·hit·'·" .... ,3·1"70"
'69 COUtAl\S
12 t. th•••• f,,,., YWT 214 •11t1. tr1111., ,,41,, h11t•r. P••••
•*••rh!ti ,.w1r ltr1kf'• 610 '111111, tl11ffi 11111, w/w tlr11, etc.
'2990
'67 COl(CiAR Z·DOOR
~'"'' f,ttt .wfth ,.,,1,~1111 vjrtl "~~••t1, 1uto., 2tt t,llli"'' ,,$., lttH, '9W i1r fr~•·l11, •~I .,..~tr ' \ltlll ·1•rvi1t4 ltv tut ltf!I•
"'"Y· vpa 111 ·
'2195
t
'69 D~U ff $4115
lu111ry 1t4111. Arttft f111lth with ~l11k hp a 1111tohi11t l11ttrltf•
Full !''"'!'' 1ciwlpp14, ''"'· f11t.ry 1lr. 0 11t t•111r. Xllt 40.
'67 BUICK ~MERA $3891
'••11fif11I mtftltl• fi .. hh with tll•••· i11t•ri•r, l!~lliftpti with 111
th• l11 .. 11ry ''wit otc111, l•11 .. tit1111Jy tlltl• L.11. UVU II,
'67 PDNTIAC &TO $1995
2·Dr, H.T. ••14 lflf&t t"•t•lli• fl11l•h' with ~I;•• ~t~pt •••ti,
1uff, h•111., '•"'' I , ~,.1er, itfwtr 1ttorft1f , t•t•rv fir, litlf"
tiful co11clltl•11· T~J t•J . · ..
'68 FORD FlOO 8' PICKllP $1885
Rtif,, h•1t1r, ,urc~ett-111w ~., J4"i111•11 I S111. l1&tlltllt 9tll• '
tl iff•ll· l ie. Qtltl7
'67 MUSTANG $1795·.
2 Dr. H.T. lrit11h r1ti111 ffftll fi1i1h w/ltl••~ ltyckff •••fl,' 1tt
VI 1ntl11, c.•111•11, ,,if!•, h11t1r, ,,.,, t*'t .. pt111•r 'It'•~·~
•ut1, '''"'··•le. TWY ti~
'&& DODGE CHARGER $1715
~ .... 111t1111•t1c, tr1111., ••lilt I ht1lor, ,,.,..,, 1t••rl"I· power brt~••· f1ctory 1ir, lurlflu•l•f Ji11hh with llltf•~lllt i~f1rifr, lie.
SQ" 440
'69 TOYOTA COROlLA
BARGAIN CO~NER
In C?\fr l•rt•ln Corner,.,., "'~ qumerout
uotd Clrf• ~ cl"~-"" H llHn. So"" '~" ••• d~jlflfll -.,.~ b•4 '" l~ln 1ny ....,, • .,, .,, '"I
l11rt1ln1. LOOJS 'II!\ OVllll
'66 Mll•Ult fliONICl,All toil. \Jc. .... , 164 MlllCUlf rAll 14NI
, -4 Dr. OTU •it '65 MllCUIJ 2·IOOl . .. M ....... , H.t . H• It~ 166 '°IUI •Al.4111 l't , .... ....,,,,,m111 '66 l~ICI ll.ICTIA COllYllTllU u..'"' "" . '68 ~M.""""•T '65 ~-II.WI IN~M . P~IU U.. rtA 41l
lli T·'1•t ""!!' --~!t7H '69 ... , 1e,IMO cw,.,, ....... ,
I
'137$
'675
11275
'157$
'1675
'2275
'1175
~%07$
'WI'
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~ Pays up to $10,000.00tax·free cash for each hospital stay .it Pays ali cash direct to you (not to doctor or hospital)
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~ No age limit-no medical examination required ic Pays in addition to all other coverage you have-Including Medicare
~ Pays you cash benefits that increase each year ••• to a n:taxitnum of $130.00 A-WEEK.~;-at n·o extra-co-st to you * Pays $100.0,0·A-WEEK cas.h.eaclttime you go to thtl ttospita~. :.even up-to 100 weeks *No .salesma·n·will.calr
· EXAMINE POLICY. IN YOUR OWN HOME-MONEY .BACK IF NIT 100% SIUSFIED!.
ACT NOW_YOUR ENROLLMENT FORM MUST BE MAILED ~y MIDNIGHT, THURS., JAN. 8, OR IJ CANNOT BE ACCEPTED ,
OJI:£ cut of t.wo familiell will ha't't eomeo~ in tbe bo.pital this
year! It could be you-or some Mloved member of your family
tomorrow ... next week ... next month. Sad to ..,, Yety ·_few
f,_milies have anywhere near enough ccwerage to meet tOda.fT•·
Marini-ho.pit.al~tl\. These costs have n'!Ore than doubled in
just a few ahort years. They are exJ)6Cted to double again in the
few years ahead. S~pfor a moment. Think how mut·h a long stay•in the hospital
'Will tost jou or a loved one. Ho~ wouJd.l'o.\l l!VM ~for coat_ly,_
but necesaary, X-rays, doctor bills, druga and medii:inea! What ·
<would you do if your pay check stopped, but living expenses
'kept going on the same as ever? The aame rent, phone, food, all
•the day-to-day e:s:pen&M that never st.op.
What is the aver11ge Jireadwinner to do? We. believe. we have the
an1wer in the f,.mous Prraidential EXTRA CASH Plan that .••
,.,._$100.00•-kla.freo ..... ~ ... -........... ..,. 'Now. Prttidential's tt0nom.y }ll•n t'!l.ables YoU to enjoy thia
protection. Mail the Enrollment Form tc>day. We will aend )'OU
the. actual Poliey to look ovr-r at home. No rush. No agent will
«.all or phone )'OU. Take 15 days to decide. Show the Policy to a
frie.rul, a family adYiser fir1t. You lose nothing if you don't "''ant t~olicy . ..By.t if yoJ1Ji9 warit it,you'..re e.~ltl~to Preaide.ntia!'s ~
low rates de.11eribed be.low. So lo111, you'll find 7ou get protection
at ayric.c that's Ju.it a fr~ion of what you'd e.xpect to pay. ,.. ........ ..,,,. ............ ....,._
. .. ... ...,._ .. ,,..,,_ .~ ~
Your ealh benefits at1tomaticall7 rlM Jtar after )'tar. You get
11f¥t!olmind eoyou don't.have to WOM'J about rilling coats. ur
protection automatically int-ttasea $3.00 a wetk each year fo 10
)'ears. The. first year you get $100.00 a week. You get $103.00 a
week in tbe.ffeond year. $106.00 a week ln the third year. $109.00
a week in the.fourth year. By the eleventh fear, your Policy will ~worth a fuD #130.00 a '(!eek in benefit payment.a_. .• at no in:.
~reaae In c<11t to you! Thi& gtnerous c:ash re!erve prot.ec:tion ·will
lieJ~'t.oJOD'far aa long u JOU keep Ute Policy. You t l!,n $Ile that
)'O'llr hurun.nce wll1 be. worth muc:h MON than Uie pre.sent "face
'Y&1oe" (Jf the Policy. Certainly, our increased pa7menta to you
...Wbelpkeeppacewith riling.co.ta-and beat of a.LI •••
.,..,,,.,~ .... ....,111_ .. ,.. .... --. Y• .a f/lli'/ ... ,...,., ,_ ,,..,,l11Mf P••luJttl
'Wltat --Jlan proterlg ru like this-todayt whlat other ~an
keeps prot«thiJ 7ou qatnlt rilling Jiving cOlta in the years a head without increasing your premiumllf And that'• not all.
TbiasJ*:ial Pre&idential EXTRA CASH Plan-(HP 18L·1067) ...
""8-$1-·•-.. CAllf
. t .. •~N-at""-
Y-.m addition to lhe $100.00 weekl1 checka we send you durinr ~r ltl;ieptt.1 atay, we pay you an •i:tra $100.00 •week if the .Cl~ hu )"Ob .enaare a full-time Regi11terfld Nurse to take care
elYo••thom... . -How c:om!orting :it ia to know that-after your 11la7 in lhe hos.
})Ital, if )'ott'Te been there. three day11 or more., you can return
liome to te(;Uperate and yet not be a burden to your ,loved ones.
PAYS Up to $10,000.00 CASH for· each accident or
·illntu. starting the very first day In the hospital.
lllAVS I Ur> to $7,000.00 CASH at the rate of $70.00 A rftl WEEK if you are 65 or over ••• In addition to
Medicare.
P.1AVS S100.00·A·WEEK CASH-if you need a full· · ft I · time Regi1>te.red Nurse when you come home
from the hospital-up to 50 weeks.
PAYS
PAYS
PAYS
PAYS
PAYS
$1.000.00 EXTRA CASH for accident.II death.
Up to $2,000.00 CASH for accidental loi>s of
Umbs or eyesight.
$100.00·A·WEEK CASH for each pregn.1ncy,
when you go to tht' hospital, assuming both
husband and wife h<'ve been enrolltd '" 1he
Family Plan With Maternity.
Up to $5.000.00 at the rate of $50 00 A WE[K
wtiiiri a ch•ld goes to thP..hosp1tal for any acc1 ·
dent or illness when you are enrolled 1n the
F amity Pian.
you cash benefits for hospitalization for any
.eecident Immediately. Any sickness is covered
btgiMint30daysafter Effec:tivt Date of Policy.
65 OR OVIR? YOQ ct>wcr
$70.00.A·WIEK ~SH~N ·
ADDITlON .TQ' ("EDICARE BINIFnl
\Ve have designed this pla~ a~ the iMpoTltt11i tiddih'o1t
to whaL you receive from Medic~re-or anr other
health insurance you may have. Repiember, al checks
will be sent directly to you (not to the doctor or ho~
pital) to give you that "extra" help just when you
need it most. Use the tax-free cash any way you see fit,
And you will be glad to know the checka will be big
on.11! In addition.to what ill paid by Mr-di care, Presidon.
tial pays you $70.00 a week •.. EVEN t'OR 100 \VEEKS
if neceszary! }"01t eoi~ 1"t!Cti111 a11Y11uekcu17,000.00 for
ea.4Jk i.Jb&e11 or injurv when lr.o•pito.liud!
''es, it your dottor hu you eniage a Registered Nurse full-time
within 6 days aft,er.yQU come home, .we11 itend you <:hecks for
•100.00 a w1ek---filr-Bs·Jonr'Uyotrneed-tfie-,Jitine -even-up tet
~(1 week•. It's like hav:ing a reserve of $5,000.00 cash to d raw on
when you need it. These benefits also increase each year !or 10
years by $3.00 a week. Another exceptional !eatur1 you have
with Praldentlal ••. ·
,..,.,.. •• 00.00. ·"~---'Ir. .... ,,,.,
Ordin•ry hMpit.11 in•ortnce may take t'are of part of your ex-penses when you go to the hospital to have a baby. But what
policy can you think of that gives ,rou cash to help bu y all t11e
things you need for the new baby. Now, if both husband and
wife·are insured in the wonderful Fanti/11 Pktu with. Alatemil,11
f or the entire pe.rlod of the pregnancy, you get extra cash to use
.any way you want. If a prefnancy. childb'irth'or'even mill<.'arri-
age puts you in the hollpita for one day, five day~. JO day~-o.~
Jong aw ncce1wary-you get $100.00 a week for eYery day of )'our
conl\nement, up to 100 weeka.
Nl,._.U.., _ _,,,.,
Added cash btnefiUl $1,000.00cashtoyourfamily, if death occurs
within 90 daya from 11ny accidental injU"l'J'. Think how handy
the eaah can be in time. of loss. Jtcan take care of burial expeuses
without burdening your loved ones.
Addt'd caah benefit: Up to $2,000.00caJJh tor accidental loss0Climb11
or eyesight, when the loss occ:uns any time within 90 daya of the
accidenL The IMs of a limb or eyeaight ia a terrible thing. Noth·
inr can replace the loss, but a cheek for $1,000.00 or.$2,000.0Q
will bring creater peace ofrnind during the period of adjustment.
Added ca1h benefit: Choose either l"amilr Plan .•• and your
c hildren will be cuvered, too! Pru.ide~µa pa,rll up to $5,000.00
any time your youngster goe"S to· the hospi£a1,·., {or removal of
tonsils, appendix or l1ny orh.er illnes11 or injury! Yes, you will
receive $50.00 ca~h, week after week-for as many as" 100 wcek1,
if necessary.
w.,.-,rour,,.••lsZLt•...,.,_.,.,..,..w •.
As a special cohaidtratJon to yo11-tf JOU, 7our 1poust or other
adult dependtnts are hospitlllite'd just 6 w«ks er more, all f""
miums that come due, for the pe.raon confined, while 11til in
t he h011pltal after this period will be paid by Presidential. And
your protection continues as if you were paying the premiums
yourself! Then if you leave th~ hospital and must return for the
same condition before fOU have resumed full normal activities
fo r 90 day11, President1al.will again PAY ANY PRE!\I IU!\IS
\VHILE YOU ARE IN TI-IE HOSPITAL-TO A A!A}.'/J\IUM
OF' JOO JVEEKS per confinement! )'our tull protection remains
in force-you collect 11p l.o $10,000.00 for each. eo11.fi11e111011t!
T-•• ... -Ye....,,...r
<::et ready for a welrome au·,,,rise. Your Poliey covers everv.
thing except conditions caused by: \\'ar or act of war; a)'ly men.
tal disorder; pregnancy except a11 provided under the !\laternity
Benefit provision~ and expenaes rellU,lting from nny sickness or
injury fOU had before the f;ft'tttive Dak!.of your Pol icy-hut
even this "exclusion" is done away with after you have heen a
policyowner for only two years. Thi11 is a real help if you already
ha\'e a health problem, It mcana that if you were sick before
you took ou~ this Policy-you will even be. covered for that c<>n •
cli~ion alter the Policy has· been in effect for only two years •
l\teanwhile,every new condition is in1mediately covered. You ani
cove.red for care in the hollfital of your choice ~xcept.. of course,
a U.S. Govemmentho11pita or a nuraingorconvalescent facility.
' LICENSED BY THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
1· ~;;;-.. -;;;;;;:.~~==--------riiE'PiiESiOiN'riAL'lirr1NSURANCEC;OFAMERicAl
I WITllYOUIFIRSTllONIH'SPIElllUM.llNClOSI$ ~ 11401 ROOSEVELT BLVD., PHILADELPHIA, PA. 19154-I
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Appl~!~ion to: The Presidential life lnsuranc~ Company of America, Ch!cago, JU., for The Presidential Hospltal·Nurse Pia~. =E MRS.
""' :!,~s,, ,,_, '·OJ60.o.1 J ""' '. . ....... lnttltl I.alt
ADDRESS·------------=c:=-==----------s1 .. 1e1 or RD# CITY---------------S.TATE ______ ZIP ____ _
--:-:::::::---:::----=--"GE _____ SEX
"4orr111 D•y Yt•r OCCUPAT""':----:-:---~---------------1 also hereby apply for cove1a1e for the members of my famlly listed beloW: !DO NOT Include n1me that 'ippeart above.) ~ne list additional dependents on separa\e pae:e.
DATE Of BIRTH NAME (Pleale Print) RELATIONSHIP StX Month Do Year
='::~ · Ol-WMdWit{a)"O!ilJ Plan . · Q ll-fMftllyPltnWlth Mttemltyt o 111..:F•mllJPfan WlthoutMltemftJ -Oo yo• cony other insur111e1 witli this C.1111>1ny! Ill "Yes" plene llst policy n111nbers.l-----------
To the best of my krlowledJt ind b~itf neither I, nor any person listed.above, his been nfused any heallh. tiospital or life insur· net• I undemal;d that ~ 11141~ pttlOl1 lislod abott, wlll,be toveced unde; this Policy for any injuiy or slclrne" I (wt) hid bt-
fart tilt £ffocti¥t Oall ol the Policy bvt riot •nlil it has been ln ·lorce for 1 continuous period ol two (2) I"'" and that !his Polley shlll Jib! be In force Until tlie Effective Dall shown In lhl Polley Schedule. '
. ____________________ _,,111 ______ _
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Miby_....,.._"'flr·
Think 1lowco1Uy a hospital conftnernent will be.. Imagine payfn~
for thoae indispensable x·rays, doctor bills, medicines and drug&
that are not covered by your preaent inaurance.
Would you be able to atrord.the quiet and privacy ot a private
room and a private nurse, 11hould you 10 deaire1 Or a telephone
to keep in touch with loved ones? Or the rental of a TV set to
help pa11aaway the lo11ely boura? Who would pay your bills that
keep on coming in·athome·~ Many 'folk! have· lost their life sav.
ing11, their cara, even their homea trying to meet auch expenses.
And no one knows whose turn it will be next.
w11y,..-111t11or.., ..................
' ·-·-· ,..,._.,._...,. \Vhr must you •ct before the. deadlirie' Because thfs fs a ape<:ial Enrollment Per-iod-and we mwt re.ceive)'Olff' Enrollment Form
the iame tinu 0:1 all tr.1 other• in order to· paa& on to You tbe
savings that come !rom processing ma:nU" policies 11t oJU time,
Medical COst$ Skyn;cketlng!
"SOUrce:.WallStrettJoumal
ISO INDEX: 1957·59 =JOO
II 1966
MEDICAL CARE COSTS rose in September to 157.6t,li
ot the 1957-59 &\/era~ from 1&6.8% a month earlier.
The11e costll are compooenta o! tht Co••rnme.nt conaumer
price index.
We mail you tht. Policy 1111001\ as we receive tht. EnroTiment
Form. When the Policy a Nives, examine it in the.priv,acy of your
own home. Take. all tl)e time yoµ need. lt'11 a very ahort docu·
ment, and you'll be pleasanlly surprised t:o diJ>COver there is NO
FINE PRINT. Then-show it, 'if you wUTt., !11101neone vou trust.
Perha.p!i your lawyer, ac<ountant or banker. Better still-1how it
W 11010• 01v11 ina11ra11ce m411 •• -ev'cn t1Loug1L l&e 11toy tiery wel{
be working far another iunro.11et1 eoptpa.n11l IC he is a personal
friend, he has your best intere11t11 in mind. So you can:believe
him when he tells yo11 there ia no better bargain available anr·
y,;here -at any price?
GRATEFULPOUCYOWNIUWRm •••
"\Ve are very pleastid with the prompt service -we have
•rec('ived. I have never h11d 11uch pron1pt 11ervice on a claim
before. K('ep up the good llCl'\'ice and I'd re('on1mcnd your
con1pany lo any one v.·ho ha11 n<:ied of good roverage."
LARRY r.t. llOLLISTER, Os1tio, IV i1co111in:
.. Thsnk you for the prompt attention given our family's
three t'laims since the fi rst of the. year. Presidential h11.s
"lived·uP" to its policy 100'!~-\Ve cert11.irily woUld Y.econ1·
mf'nd thill Coinrany lo.anyone inte.rested in havin$' extra
hospitnl protection."
~IRS. Euw ARI.I A. AllSEr-i AULT 't Duena. Park, Calif ornitt
,,.,,.,,,,,,....,,.,.,.., ...... ....,,.nt.•
Dunne's TMUrahi:oe Retx>rt, thf! world's largtst re~?ting st!rvitt.
gives Pre~idential a rating of "A+ SXCELLENT ."There ia no
high.er rating a company· can attain. •••• , ... , •••. , •• , ... ,_1•• •••,.. ......
Evrn alter you mail your Enrollment Form provided on thi•
page ... even arter you examine the Policy in your own fiome and talk it over with anyone you wish ••• even after all this you
are still free to return the Policy within 15 days af\er you re--
ttive it. 0111! f'Vir11 pe1111y 11ou. 'pai(t will be ~fu11.ded at 011.ee.
There \\'ill be no oblig&tiori whatever.
f.lean\\·hile, all durinr t.he 15.d'-Y' )'OU .are making up your
mind-you'll be protected by·$100.00.A-WEEK extra cash bene.
fits: just as if you had already said "ye11." That's right, you will
be fully covered all this time for any accident which puts you in
the hospital, even i! you finally decide to return the Polley at the en~ of that time. 1'lowev11~" efteT you've zetn the Polley for.yourself, rou w.ill
aurely ar~e thAt thia is a tremendous yAlus and.ycu'll want to
continue this $H)O.OO~A-W£EK EXTRA.CASH protection under
the Plan that' a beat for you.
NANl-~llJCIMF.....,
It you want to cover yourself -o'r yourself and one or moni
adult dependents (including your spouse) -then thia i11 the
Plan f or you. Each adult, 18 or over, pays the rate applfcahle to
his or her age. N11.turally, at these low rates, we. can lssu.e only
one policy o! this type per person. NOTE : Where there are no
dependents, PLAN I is the most economi<:al to choose for a hus· band or wife (or both) •
Aa• et lnl'Gllm111'l Monttlly Pt.,,.lum
18'39 . _ ... , .onfy $3.95
40-49' •.•.•.. only $4.95 50-.59 ..••••. only $5.95
60-74 , , , •• , .only $6.95
75 aM over .•. only $8.95
HOTI: Tht ,.._..,, '"°"""' ....-mlinn thoWn ,,.,. (!or .,. et tlll'lt ti 1nro11.
mtnt) i. llM ttfM ktw f"91¥1111m )"ell 1'111 eontlftut .. pey. It wltl not tut.
m1t1c,11' l1tC.'8111tM ••)'DU ,.,, ""'" .,.. •P ..,,c11;11 • the M•tt once )'01.f f'l.lvt tn111Utd tit this '°'"ldlnll•I l"l•n. Ylll.lf ,.It Ull '""'' M 1h1npd Mctus• ol how muclt ff how ttltn 11111 Ulltet frotn 111-w ble1utt or i14. Vt~ ~·t-b11,t 0"1)' JI lll1r1 I• t,pllftll 1ae. itdjllltment. 1,1J _, dtwn, On
tll P6'IC!flef o,Js '1'tfl In )'IUr en"'9 State! . '
lbl PnSfientlll e
Extra Cull Plan
11401 Roosevelt Blvd.,
Philadelphia, Pa.
1'19 Preald111tnll1l Life ll'!IUtlAU Company of Amwk:I (Home Office:
Clllc•so. ll!!!'Ols) 11 ll"nsed by ycur St•!• •n<I ~rrlas Ml Itta! R·
"rvu lpf' lht prvtctton ol p:WIQ'O'Nnera. •
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THESI 22 QUiSTIONs 4ND Aft~'
T•lt yo11 flow' 1'tf1ttl•ntTel'1 COtt 0, UVIHO INCOM( U..'.
1',AC:IMENT HIALTH ANO ACCIOEHT'l'tAN t lll'fl )'ff tit•
ptof•ctlon you nted -at aina1ln1l'f low coail
1. How miM:h wllt m)' Polley pt)' fM when Ip tothl hotpltaJt
Tl1' full 1mo11nt1You1r11 p1ld $100.00·A·WCEK U•h every ti""'
Wiik. And it 111111 Ill• W.ry llnl d11y )'OU .... In th• hosplt11I. (tt-you 1r1 ov1r 65, you 11re paid $10.00, • w1ek. In 1ddltlon to 1n'' : '
M1dk1re benelJts _you t1e1iv1.) 't'Q!.I ''' p1ld $~.00.• We.tk up I• JOO WMkl I very bm1.yo11r dlildr1n i:o to lllf ho101t•I wt11n you. •••enrolled in Ill• F1mily Pf1n. • ,
2. Will I blllt peld If I am flotpitallttd fOt Ins than• tun ..-r :
Vou c1rt1Jn1y will ... reaardless of wt11th1r you ar1 in tilt hot+
pit al for.-1· •ttort • tim1 11 one <lay ... or •• .lofll • llm• ,, ...
w11k. month, Jl••r or mor1. -'
3. Does this Piln pey mt front the first d•Y of holpitalizatfofl!
Yttl YoU reuiv11 rull cast.. b1n1fit1 or $100.do • W.ek .i.rtlns 1"41 very first d1y you ent1r th• hospital. Tht r:Ovtr11e l:lt1ln1. wtlen .,,. 11c1iv1 )'OU• fl tlt premium -11111 i1 th1 d1y 1011 ,,..
cov1rld for 1ny 11ecfd1nts. S!ekn1s1 cov1r111 be1ln1 30 d1ye tfttr thl·Effectiv. l>ttl or th• Polley.
4. How much do I reui..,. for• Rtei1tered Nurse et Hom•?
SI00.00 A WEEK up 10 t m••imum of $5,000.00 •tttr )'OU hfte
bnn ho1plt1lfz1d far 3 di)'$' or mo rt, end yaur dOGtor "•• )'Cit 1mp1oy t f[ifl.flme Rtl1'1tred Nurse wtthllt .5 d•y1'.' efter> )'811 le1v1 th1 hosplt1I. Tin y11r1 from rll)W /twill h1V1 lnert11td '-
$1 30.00 1 w11k Jn ben1flt1 ... 1t no ..:Ir• wst to you!
I. Are tl'lera an)' •ccldenltl death bllltnefill?
Y11. SJ,000.00 ea•h II p1!d to your 11st1t1 wtltn dt,th ~rs •llY time wlttlln 90 dtYI of 1n •~ldent.
1. Wiii i be ptfd utra 11 t loae a Hmb or.,-elictrt?
Ytt. "Pr .. ldtntltl p1y1 Sl,000.00 for eomol•I• 11eeld1ntat lo1s ef on• f11nd or ont foOI or si(llJ of on• eye: $2,000.00 tor·loll el
tiolh handt or both feet or 11111t of botll •r•• ... wh•n di•mtnt-b111t1m1nt Oc"unr .. ny titl)t within 90 d1Y, o tlltl aa:ldlnt.
7. How much do.,. recelva for prqMnclff7
if )'t>V l'ilYI tile f"•ml1y fi'11n wlttl M.111t1rnity, you recelvt SlOO.O&
A WEEK for 1aelt p r1fn1ncy, chlldbirtn· or misc1rr11a1 th.It results In hotolt1! ·con ln1m1nt when botll husb1nd and wlfo
1r1 tnrolltd under tllll Plan lor the .nUrt poiriDO of preptnc;y.,
I . luppott I ant paid iitnefitl: fof' •ny 1ickne11 or aeddent. Whit
happen. It I am apln flolpltalind for U.. semecondltion? •
Oan·t wor'/. Yo11 11111 col11ct $100.00 A WEEK for 1 total of IOOI' we1~•. An If You have tlnr;iody resumtd full norm1I aetiviti11 fOf'
lull 90 days, It'• co"11d1rt1! 1 new confllf1m1nt, ind you e1n·coi. •ti for en tddltlonal 100 w11U. Of oou"''· t ny Nw eondltion '* co .... nrd lmmec111ttr1 for• full 100 "''kl-... t . How ma, , .,.. ~ btMflt pa)'mentsr 1
You m11 vu thtm In tn)' "'"Y you wllh-for hospittl Ind deceiw
l:l!U1. ''"t, rood, hou1thoJd,1xoensts. to repl1c1 salrinp }'M spent or anytlllns el.._ This is 1ntirely up to )'Ou.
10, M•1 1applylfl•nt0ftr65! ,
v.,s, you m1y. Folks 1ny •l• •re weleomt to •ririry-!Mre Is M ~4• llmll! Memblr• 6S or (We• art p..1ld $70.00 1 wtek pl1.11111 Medicare b•ntfit•.
1 J. Ctn I coiled from PrMidflltl•I -n Ir I call'J othw imura"Qt?
'Of course. Thl1 Plan will pay )'OU In 1ddition lo wh•tGw•t you m•y receiv1 from policies wlttl tn)' otll1c eompaniff indudin&
M...:lica,.. for folks over 65.
lZ. Wh)' do I Med tf'liS PnsfdenU1I Pt1n In tddltton ta ll'IY ottlll"
hosplt•t and he11th Insurance?
Wh ile hD•plUJ ~ti h11vt doubled in reotnt ~·"'· v1ry ftw .,.,.-pl1 lltvl doubl1d tll1lr in1ur1ne1. Tn. ct11nce1 ••• onl '" .......... 1n1t )'OU will nffd money to,t•ke c•r• of 111 )'Our 01n.·r •r.pen1tt.
11 w11I •s your hosplt•I bill•. Yotw Presld1ntltl dl"k' ,,.
•u•hed to rou by t !r m1U to_ us••• J10U "''flt.
ll. Whot benefits do my ellgible, d•pendent children aetr
If )'DU choos1 • f"1mlly Type Plan. You• d1pend1nt tlialbl• d!ti.
C1r1n. •a• 3 monthl to undtr 19 ytars, would..-c1iv1 Sb% of .it the ct•h ben1lltaof the PJen (other thin Weiver of PremiWTI).
14. May I ..td f\ltuie d1P9ndent chlldren tG my htlcy ofltar It ta lnforaf
...... lndlf1d. If )'llU h•v• th• FAMILY PLAN wrnt MATERNITY. J111t notify 111 when tllty t r• J months old end tl'lty w1H ti, eov•
1r1d without evld1nc• of lnturtblllty tnd wilhOlll 1ny tdditlQntl
ct11r11.
l!I. Wiii my protldlon be uncalled beeouH I hive toom•11Jdllmaf
No, d1flnit1ly notl Pr1sid1nllal 1u1r1ntee1 nt\11r to c1ncel your
pf1)!11Ction beeeust you ll1Yt too many cl1im1 or blceust of ad-
Yanc•d •8•· We 11.o gu1r1nt•• n1v1r to r1lu11 to rtn-)'DUr Pollc;y unl111 th1 premium is not p1ld bifor1 tll• end of th• 31·
"' 1rec1 Pl•lod. or unl11ss rentwtl 11 d•elintd on tH POllcitl nf th 1 type in your 1ntlr1 11111.
11. Wiii my rete1 M rtil«I as I lfCIW older lf I tteve tOIJ manr clalmsr
No matter how many cit/ms )'Du """· w nra•rdlffs of tiow Jons • you keep your Polley, your r111 WI!! r1m1ln th• •amt •J" It •••
for your 111 when you ;ioppti1d. President11L 1ru1tant"1 ntv1r to adjli1t this rate unl111 th• rites••• adjuUed on 111 Po11cltt of this type In your enlire 1tete.
1 T. What ii not covered by this Po1lcyf
The or!ly conditions not c.ov1red trt thost ctuted by. me,,.11 df1.'
ord1rs; lnto1lc1nt1 and n1rt.0tlc5; •~pensts r11ultinr fl'Om tnlf 1lckn11s or ln]ury you had before th.I Policy Effectiv1 D.tt {du,..
ins Ill• rlrtt t y11.-. only); ect of war; wher• c••• lt in e' U.S. G0"11rnmenl tlo1pltal. EVERYTHING ELSE IS COVERE'D--lndUd•
ina pr-.:nancy wtlen bolh hu1b1nd 1no wift h•v• blen .wrl'Olled f
in tile f"AMIL'!' PLAN WITH MATERNITY for the tntl,.. ptr)od of pre1nancy.
11. Wfi•t ara the requirerMnts to enron In one of thtH '1fffdtntltt Plan•?
You must not hive """ •~fuffd 1ny he•lth. hotplll l or nr• l111urancie: and. lo 0111llly durlns tt1i1 £nrollment Pariod, )'(l!I;
mu1t enroll belor1 mldni1t11 ol tn1 <1111 1hown In !ht Enroll<•
mlfnt Fo1m. ••:
lt. WhY 11 th!1otf1r rood for o llmited time only? '
Bec1us1. by 1nrornn1 t l1rg1 numb1r of poioplt tt the 11m9 t1"111
uncllrwrlUna. prOG1s11n1 tnd poUcy lssuanct co1u etn bt klpt 1t • mlnlmum-nd wt c1n p11s tllest savings on to )'OU.
20. Bttides thll savlnp, ere tti.N other KVtnt.,.. to JolniAI:
,.,...kl•nlia1 d11rina thl1 Enrollment Ptrlodf
Y1s. ltltrt certtinly i re. A v1ry import1nt ont 11 tfl1t you do not
n111d to compl1 .. 1 len11h)', dt;l~led lf.Pl'.llitatlo'!-iust )'llut'brief for~o lh• low1r lelt t111nd_corn~r of lhls P•I•· !\TM>, du•lnl ""' Enronrn1mt P1i1oil tll•r• are no oUf•r~t.ciuiremoecs for .. H1 bl!it, -•nd n(> "wtlvt ra" or r1str!~tlv1 1ndor11mtnl1 Ciln be put on your Pollcy1
21. c.n other membera Of,,,,. family taM advlnte" of tfll"• splCW
of'Hirl
V1t,.· 11 to11a '' lh•)' qn mttl tilt 1-,..qulrtmtntn ft sled 111"1ttf" •Ql.ltstlonll.· '
'U . How dct I pt tht Policy fof n11minatlon with Moniy·leck
Guo,.ntetl
J\rtt fill out your firiff En111llm1nt f"orm and m1il It with ,.OUf'flfllt "1Dnth01 pr1m111rn to Th1 Pr•t ldtnllll Liii ln1ur1nc1 COnlpe"y OI
Am111trlt1, ll40l Roos""tlt 81wd .. Phll1delphi1, 1'•o l,JIS4.
...... ,..., ...... ..., ••..
Thia Plan la for the family thsl ls atill ~-rifl.f. T(J the total ct
tht monthly premium for the adult.I to be ln&ured. j 1.1st add 15..
This entiLlta YOli to all anaternity benefit&. It alao 1:oven all 70ut-
unmarried, dependent children ~tween th• are ot 8 1nOntha
and 19 years "''ho live •t home. Future de.pendent childrtn will
he covettd •hen they reach 3 mont.ha ot ap and without any additional charge,
1UN•,.1Mar11ANWWU:-h
Thia Plan i1 tor tht. family that la no lonnr r:rowin,r. To tt;11
total o( th~ monih!f premium for the adults to be. insuttd, ju'ti
, add $3. \\'1th-exception of tbfldrtri )'tt to be born, PLAN tit
eovt~ •tl.rour un,n,.rried, dependfnt c:hildren be.tween the ap ot a montli1 and I!) ytcllrs whb Hve arbome.
.,_~.,.,.,...., .. _~
TJME IS PRECIOUS I Act qu tclrlr! (No aal~anwillcaH.) Get
)'OUr Enrollment Form lnt.o tht 'rnail todol( with _your firtt
month's premium tceording t.o lhc Plan you chooae. Remember,
r_ou ,mu1t be compls~ly 1ati~fttd or your money will be re.runded.
Bu1 you must act right now. Secauae, once you tulfer an 11.ccl..,
dent or tlcknt~s, it's TOO LATE to buy prottetton at 011r 0011t., Tbat'•~•h7 we u~ you to act today-6c:fora anytblnr un"" pocted .. ,_
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